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·.,

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.

�•
~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan

• 3- The Dal)y Sentinel, MidcDeport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan.19,

19,1972

"bU :0:" b 7 0., ,., , 'T

·west
Nips.
~ast
.

Redmen Need Win
To Stay hi Race

JUDGE ROBBED
TOLEDO
(UP11
Municipal Jud&amp;e Andy
Deyloe was robbed Tltadly
night as he wa1 leaving hill
home 1D Toledo's wtlt end.
Devine said a man with a
riDe was atandlq acatuat
h~ ear In bla drlve~ay aDd
robbed him of $300 and a
wristwatch. Tbe man then
ordered DeviDe to back out
of the driveway and not look
back.
~,
... r .. ·o::twnw·~

ew to Speak· in Cleveland
CLEVELAND (UP! )- Sen.
Hubert H. Humphrey of Minneaota, admitting be IS only No. 2
In Ohio, Tuesday set up the
machinery to win the state
away from Sen. Edmund S
Muskie in tbe May Democratic
presidential primary . Today
the No. 2 Republican was
expected to drop in.
H~phrey spent most of the
day in Columbus where his
delegates were chosen fer the
primary and then came here to

.....

'

~· With

to select delegates, "I'm going
•
to :ake my campaign to we the
people of Ohio."
Urbana College continues to lead the Mid-Ohio
"You're not going IAI ~
Conference standings with a. 4-0 record in, league
bossed and you'.-e not going to
play.
be presSured," he sald. "I'm
Urbana won a big game outside the leagtie last
· to UlSprre
· · and encourage
golllj(
week, knocking Defiance College from the ranks of
you. I ask for no special favors
the unbeaten. The Blue Knights won easily as M11rk
and I'll give none."
· HopesforMajorlty
Todd f!Ot 49 points in a 117-78 victory.
Hwnphrey said he wants to
Maione got into the win
"
0
d
Ral"in
«a
column in the teague Sa"·"day Rio Grande
2·2
7.0
cap ture as many hio ele"'e'~&lt;'
..... "e"'
•w
Malone
13
5-10
gateS" as humanly pqssible"
1
with an 86-80 victory over Rio Cedarville
o3 2·9
and said he believes he can get
Grande. Maione had lost 74-73 Field Goals
A M P~.
a mat'ority of the 1""'
NEW Press
YORKInternational
(UP!) - The
Urbana
"" that Unoled
lop at Rio Grande.
Ohio
Domlnocan 1293
793 695
374 5~
47
makes Ohio the fifth largest 20 small college basketball
This week Urbana will risk Rio Grande
1083 507 47
delegation at the national teams with forst place votes its perfect MOC mark Wed· Malone
1&gt;136 518 45
and won-losf records as of Jan nesday at Rio Grande. Rio (2- Ced arv 111 e
830 ""
•
convention in Miami, Fla.
.1
16 ;n parentheses: (seventh
Free Throws
A -M Pet.
He said he was not complain- week)
•
3) needs a win to stay in the Urbana
579 415 71.6
ing about Muskie's !lead start Team
' Points conference race.
Ohio Dominican 246 173 70.
1. Eau Clair 126:(( 11·01
321
Mal
44 29
with party chlefta10s, bu! 2 LoulsianaTechl 6l 11301287
Theleaguescoringchaseisa
. one
94 3 65.2
1 ~;s sr..i
was given a massive file from "would have respected" neu- 3. StephenF.Austlnl13 1l 226 hot race between Jim Un- · ~~~:~~~~e
trality
from
Gilligan,
who
4.
CEheyney
State
(10
1)
160
derwood
of
Ohio
Dominican
Rebounds
Tot.
Avg.
which to make a selection,
126 College with 28.5 points per Urbana
1H10 ·31
5
·umped
on
Muskie's
band·
vansvollel
823
48.5
·
At first, he declared, he was )
6. TennesseeState(7-1) 124
Rl 0 G d
7. KentuckyStatel7·21
93 game and Mark. Todd of Ur- Malone
ran e
592 43.8
45.5•
657
"cautious, even timid." The wagon last month.
"!think
my
struggle
here
is
8.
Fairmont
Statel9-t
I
76
bana
with25.4
pomts
per
game.
Ohio
Dominican
433
.
39.0
,
fighting was still going on and
.ll
b
tU
b
9
Capotal
10.1
110·01
61
U
d
ood
Ced
11
n erw
got 44 on Wed·
arvt e
414 37.6
he had to determine that he an uph1 a e, ut I'm not go- 10 . EasternMochlgan 110.41 60
Team Aver·ages
would print no military ing to shrink from it," he said. 11 Assumploon (6·21
53 nesday against Walsh.
Humphrey
said
his
real
12.
Sam
Houston
St.
(11.1)
51
Paul
McLoughlin
of
Ohio
Urbana
&lt;&gt;:'06 ~i
secrets. •
13
2
0
4
strength
is
with
the
labor
·
Westrn
Wash
ll
·
1
8
Dominican,
who
was
top
Ohio
Dominican
83 88
~t became evident to him, he
1 ~ Fla.Southern(11·11 '
41
Rl 0 G
'
as Malone
rande
97 90
sa1d, that there were no movement, the National 15 A'' ron (11·11
••0 ranked most of last season
·
88
92
19 the leading NAIA foul shooter Cedarville
, Bl 93
military secrets involved, only Farmers Organization and 16 Calif -lrvlnel10·41 1
Youngslown(ll ·l)
16 ha his 1eague-1ea din g average Scoring
FG FT ' TP Avg.
potential embarrassment.
other farm groups, students 17
18 Della State 110 .2)' •
15 1 s
Underwood
"And if something is classi- and the black community, and 19 HowardPayne(ll .JI
13 up to 86 pet'.
when
be
was
here
Tuesday
20
Phla
Textile
(8
21
(M'd
oh·
!ODI
131 51 313 28 5
11
fied 'secret' just because It night he tried to meet with as
'A
;•}'"'\~tics)
Todd (UI
165 101 431 25.4
--~-'7--., St d'
so a~.
Ov
Plunkett (U) 159 109 427 25.1
could be embbarrassing, then
many,lof
those
groups
as
time
an
lngs
~oop
erall
Townsend
secrecy no . longer means
1
The Dai.~ ~~inet , ~~~monican
~-~ (MI
113 56 2~0 18.6
anything," he added, "I said to would permit.
TalksWithLabor
DEVOTEDT!!THE
.
Anderson
my staff, 'Let's publish all we
INTEREST
(U)
126 58 310 18.2
He
visited
some
100
elderly
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
I'
---1
Shooting
A M Pel.
can get until the government
persons
at
a
west
side
center
CJi.ESTER
L.
TANNEHILL
lAJCBl
.l&amp;.ll.l@i
Plunkett
(UI
265
159 60.
adopts a sensible policy on
an~ later went to Cleveland
ROBE~~e~o'itF~ICH '
Wednesday Lltte
~~krT(~ tul 13295 5378 59.1
classification."
56
State
University
for
a
"rap"
Cotv
Edttor
'
.
.
Mixed
League
A
·'
His staH said no member of
.
Pubtoshed daoly except' lndovodua!HlghGame(Menl
nderson lUI 227 126 555
saturday by The Ohio vattey - F Morrow 217; E. Voss 2041 Harrison (C)
63 34 ~4.5
the administration or the session with students.
D
Oneofthemasked:
"Why
do
PubltShono
Company
11
Rosenbaum
199.
Free
Throws
1
embassies involved had conCourt Sl. Pomerov , 'Oh•o, ' Individual High Game
A M Pet,
tacted them about the columns. you now oppose the war in 45769 Busoness Offoce Phone (Women) - N Carsey 177 5 Me Lough! on (OD) 43 37 86.
Vietnam when in 1968 you fa· 992 2156. Ed oto,.at Phone 992 · ONen 167, J. Bentley 158. ' · Hart IRI
23 17 83.4
2151
vored it?"
Individual High Se · (Me 1 • Watson (C)
30 25 83 5
Second class postage paod at
FM
roes
n Todd (U)
124 101 at 's
"Time has changed us all,"
Pomeroy , Oh•o
orrow 567; E ~ Voss 554;
·
·
Natoonal advertising D Rosenbaum 530.
W)aurer(ODI
57 46 80.5
he replied. "Maybe some day represenlatove Bottone! to
lndlvtdual 'High Series Rebounds
Total Avg.
you'll change your mind too."
Gallagher. tnc , 12 East 42nd ' (Women I - N. Carsey. 475. s Underwood (ODI
161 14.6
He also met with local labor St • New York Coly, New York O.Ven 455; L Ros~nbaum 448 Anderson IU)
227 13.4
Subscroptoon rates oe . . High Team Series - Cassell. Marz!ck (MI
163 10.8
1
leaders who have yet to en- a'vered
by carroer where · Carsey 1909 ; Rosenbaum : Plunkett (U)
171 10.1
two spades, two hearts. four dotse a candidate. The Ohio B~a~~~~; ~~uc,~n~sh~r": c~:r· Meadows 1872 , Morrow-Moore Bentley IRI
111 8.6
Last week's result:
clubs and fIve diamonds United .Wto Workers, with serv•ce not available c);i; ' 1844.
The count of the East hand 250,-000 members, recently and
month
By mad
Oh•o
' Morrow.Moore
Team Standings
86 Rio Games:
Grande 80
w sus
va , One
year inSlot
oo 11
12 Malo.ne
Thts Week's
would show that 1t had beenwentovertoMUBkle'ssideand s .. months Sl25 Three ' Cassell Carsey
8 Urbana at Rio Grande
dealt JUSt two diamonds
Hwnphrey hOpes to woo the mo("hs s• so Subsmptoon Rosenbaum.Meadows
8 Bluffton at Cedarville
Therefore, the odds would ·Ohio AFJ:..CIO to support him
~~~t~n';,cludes Sun day Times ~~liz-Bentley
8 Findlay at Urbana
be 5-2 that West would hold
· _- .
- ----,-- .1 vwen
Holler
8
Ohio Dominican at Wilberforce
Blakeslee-Hoyt
4 Deftance at Malone

do some campaigning in Ohio's Council The occasion IS Prmt- Gilligan .
"I want to fight for the nomi~argest city with Its giant tabor
mg Week, commemorating the
force the fonner vice president birth of Benjamm Franklin. nation, tiut I'm not a spoiler,"
hopes to win over.
Humphrey was on Columbus Humphr,ey said. "I want to deToday VIce President Spiro to attend the selection of 38 at- feat Richard Nixon and I'm a
T. Agnew takes over the pol!tl· large delegates to run on his spoiler," Humphrey said. "I
cal spotlight. He was to ad- slate on May 2 and he admitted want to defeat Richard Nixon
dress some 2,000 businessmen that the support already bned and I'm sorry we have all this
at a noon luncheon here up in Ohio for Muskie would be spring training before the season starts."
sponsored by the Prmtmg tough to fight.
The Minnesota senator told
Industries Association of
"Not a Spoiler".
the
statewide ca~cus which
Northern OhiO and the
That support included an enCleveland Graphic Arts dorsement from Gov. John J. gathered in the state's capital

By MARGARET A. KILGORE

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
white-walled
office
of
colummst Jack Anderson looks
like any other business office,
but in recent days it has taken
on a festive air of excitement.
Telephone messages
requesting television and
newspaper interviews slack up
each morning awa1tmg
replies.
Members of the staff of eight
drop in and out of each other's
small cubicles to exchange
pleasantries and gossip with
visitors. They all speak with
awe and respect of "Jack's
story.''
The "story" concerns a
series of columns carried in
Anderson's "Washington
Merry-Go-Round" cleaned
from secret government
reports on discussions of·
While House and State
Department policy during the
14-day India-Pakistan conflict.
It has sparked renewed
discussion on the government's
methods of ctassify10g security
documents and resulted in a

won't reveal his source
Anderson toid The New York
Times that he had obtained the
documents this way :
"During the India-PakiStan
war, one of my sources told me
we were bungling. Here w.S a
conDict betweenr a military
dictatorship and the world's
second largest democracy, and
whose side did we -the largest
democracy -come out on' The
dictatorship."
Needs Documents
Anderson said he had· persuaded his sources that 1f they
wanted him to wnte about their
fears he would have to have
access to documents to authenticate the reports.
"They gave me a dozen
representative documents,"
Anderson said. But he 10s1sted
that he could not rely only on
selected papers and m time, he

' INGLEWOOD, Calif. league record ,33 consecuti~e
: (UP!)- How do you top a 33- triumphs in rolling up a 41-S
:: game win streak?
first half record, was in high
~erry Weill came as close as humor after West's tate
you can in the All-Star Game heroics.
Tuesday night.
"Just say !knew we had it all
. With two seconds left and the way," joked Sharman, who
New York's Walt Frazier was the game's MVP in 1955.
: ho11uling bim, the Los Angeles "There was never a doubt.
Lakers' "Mr. Clutch" dropped Serously, I'm glad Jerry
in a 20-foot jump shot from the f10ally won the.award."
top of the key.
Down by 10 points at hail·
Tbat amounted to a 112-110 time, the West outseored the
victory for the West over the East 33-20 in the third quarter
Eastin the National Basketball to go in front 87-34. With 2:56
Association's 22nd annual All· • left, the W~rn Conference
Star Game and the Laker club was ahead 105 -96
superstar was voted the conTwin Torped'oes Strlk~ '
Boston's twin torpedoestest's MVP.
West, the NBA's scoring John Havlicek and Dave
champion two seasons ago, Cowens-nearly sent the game
mllde 7 of his 13 points in the beforeaForumthrongof 17,214
exciting final period'. Playing into overtime.
27minutes, he mllde six of nine
With 43 seconds left,
field goal attempts, assisted on Havlicek connected on an 18- '
' five other baskets and grabbed foot jump shot from the left
six rebounds.
side. With 11 seconds to go
BeROn Defense
after Golden State's Cazzie
The 12-year pr,o was at his Russell failed to hlt for the
best on defense, however, West with 19 seconda on the
making eight steals.
clock, Cowens drilled a 10-foot
"It's an incredible thrill to jumper from the right side.
win this honor in front of the
Connie Hawkins of Phoenix
home fans," said West after also had 13 points for the West,
being presented the MVP while Milwaukee 's Kareem
Award for the first time in his Jabbar, sitting out the entire
illustrious career. "We didn't last quarter, finished with 12
play good defense in the first points and seven reboun'ds.
haU but I knew we could come
In the All-Star MVP
back in the second half."
balloting, West had 23 votes to
Bill Sharman, the West 21 for Hawkins and 13 for
coach whose Lakers set a Cowens.

ColZono

I

J

I

By Helen Bottel

J

I

WIN AT BRIDGE

NORTH
4Q8 7
¥A Q7fi

19

+K 10 7

oft K r, l

WEST

¥ 95

EAST
. 9fil32
¥J IIIA2

• 98,32
olo l09R7

o1o 14

.104

• Q4

SOUTH (D)

1

THE FAMILY CLAIRVOYANT

Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN
to ''Wm at Bm/ge," (c/o th1s newsStat1on, New York, N.Y. 10019.

+ AH

the diamond queen and a
mere counter would fmesse
agamst Wes(
2N.T
A. person who knows how
Pas~
fi N T
Pass Pas"
to count to fullest advantage
Pass
would know that West's last
Open1n~ lf:'ad- • 10
four cards were three diamonds and one c I u b He
would
have planned h1s play
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
lo wm the mnlh tnck m hi&gt;
There IS a lot of cot•ntong own hand and would simply
m loday 's ha nd. South counts throw West m With that club
22 pomls and opens two no- West would be forced lo lead
'' ump North counts 14 more a dtamond and 1l would not
and raiSes to s1x
matter who held the queen
West opens the 10 of clubs
(NEWSPAPEJt ENTERPRISE ASSN)
South looks at dummy and
( Ounts 11 top tncks He can
score a 12th 1f e1ther club,
01 h e a r t s break 3·3 If
The b1ddmg has been
ne1ther of those su1ts behaves mcel y South sttll has West Nnrth East
a lwo-way fmesse for the
Pass 2 tft
Pass
queen of diamonds
Pas..,
Pass 3 NT.
All m all 1! IS the sort of Pa ~ 5 +
?
Pass
gilt -edge slam yo ur banker
You. South. hold
would lend you money on
A stud1ous So u t h would • AKQJ1065 ¥A32 tK l oft2
cash three lop cards m every
What do you do now?
su1t but diamonds w h 1 I e
A-Bid six spades .. Your part\\ atc hmg the fall of ca rds ncJ i5 clearly showing- one ace
f 1 o m the East and West and new ·' ou want to gamble on
ha nds He wo uld note that a slam At worst, ll ~hould deWest showed out after two pend on a rinesse.
leads of each maJor sUit and
TODAY'S QUESTION
had d1sca1 ded two diamonds
Instead of reb1ddmg three now h 1 i e East would have t! ump, your pa rtner has conchucked a spade on the th1rd tmued to lour cl ubs over your
club lead
three spades What do yo\l do
This would tell h1m that now ''
West had been dealt exactly

and save 60•.
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Seattle
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Gold. Stale 17 19 587 14
Houston
16 30 348 25
Portland
12 37 245 30 11&gt;
Tuesdoy's Resulls
West 112 East 110

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2'1.

Heidelberg's losing streak
went to 19 games, includmg 10
this season, with a ~ loss to
Ohio Northern.
Mike Merchant was high for
the winning Polar Bears with
27points. Art Dilncan got 26 for
Heidelberg. Northern is &amp;-6.
In other games, Duquesne
got by Steubenville 72-54; Muskingum whipped Kenyon 93-71;
otterbein beat D\!DISOn 75-59 ;
Hiram edged Baldw10-Wallace
80-76; Clarion (Pa.) downed
Walsh 81-71, and Bluffton beat
Cedarville 91-74.
' Ford scored a careerGene

high 3,1 pomts to lead Mus·
kingum over Kenyon. The host
Muskies led by as many as 30
pomts in the Jasl half of the
Ohio Conference game.
Steubenville, led by 6-foot~
freshman guard Joe Hamilton,
proved.to be a stubborn o(lp&lt;&gt;nent for Duquesne, which led
only 36-30 at tbe half. Hamilton
collected 22 points. High for the
Dukes was Mike Barr with 20.
John Brown and Clair
Recker combined for 55 points
for Bluff!on as 1t gained Its
eighth win against six losses
this season with the game at
CedarVIlle. ·
Brown had 30 and Recker 25

'

I.IBA Standtngs

By Un11ed Press International

as Bluffton took it easy in the
second half, coastmg to the
wm. .
In other contests· Larry McCall scored 27 points for Hiram
m the game against BaldwmWallace, which was led by Al·
vin Lane's 21 points. Herb
Bowen scored 27 points and
grabbed 10 rebounds for Walsh
in the loss to Clarion. Jack
Mehl scored a game-high 20
points for Otterbe10 in Its
eighth win in 12 starts.
Tomght's schedule includes
Cincinnati at Dayton, Mianu at
Marshall, Bowl10g Green at
Toledo and Virginia Tech at
Ohio U.

East

Kentucky
V1rgtma
New York
Flor1d1ans

Pitts

Carolina

,
Utah

w.

l. Pet. GB

36 9
29 18
22 27
20 27
19 30
16 31
West
W. L
32 15

800 ..
617 8
J49 16
42617
388 19
340 21

Pet. GB
.681

28 19 :596 4
21 27 .438 ll'h

lnd1ana

Memphos
Denver
Dollas

Four SVAC Tilts On Tap This Week

18 27

400 13

20 31 392 14
Tuesday's Results

New York 123 Floridians 102
lndoana 130 Ptllsburgh 116
MemphiS 96 Dallas 94
IOnlygamesscheduled)
Wednesday's Games
Virg1n1aat Kentucky
Ftor1d1ans vs Carolina

AI Charlotte, N C
MemphiS at Utah
Dallas at Denver

(Only games scheduled)
NHL Standings
East
W L T. Pts
30 7 7 67
287763
25 1I 7 57
20 1J 10 50
18 19 7 •J
9 26 10 28
11 25 5 27
West
W L T Pis
29 9 5 63
22 15 7 51

Boston
New York

Montreal
Toronto

Delroot
Bulfalo

Chocago
Monnesota
Ca l1forn1a

1.4

23

10 38

Los Angeles

11 31

4 26

51 Louis
Phtladelphia
Pottsburgh

Four league games and tw(\
non-league encounters are on
tap this weekend in the
Southern Valley Athlellc
Conference
Friday mght, the leagueleading North Galha Pirates
travel to Mercerville for a
clash with the Hannan Trace
Wildcats and Southwestern will
meet Kyger Creek in the SV AC
contests. Coach Bill Phillips'
Eastern E~gles Will play at
Glouster while Southern's hot
Tornadoes host Wahama in the
other non-league battle.
Coach Jim Foster's North
Gallia Pirates are 7-1 m the
SV AC and 8-2 overall followmg
two important games last
weekend
r North Gallia defeated
Eastern for the second lime
lh1s season, 67-61, and bombed
Symmes Valley, 103-89. The
wm over the VIkings dropped
SV mto second place. Eastern
holds the th1rd spot with a 6-2
slate The EAgles have not
played Symmes Valley They
will meet for the first time

15 23 '7 37
12 22 6 32
12 2• 8 32

Tuesday's Results

Saturday night.
The Ptrates have scored 696
points 10 eight league games
for an average of 87 per game.
Coach Paul Dillon's Wildcats
are 3-5 m the league and 5-5
overall Hannan Trace posted a
74-56 lopsided victory over
Kyger Creek last Friday but
were stunned 58-50 the
followmg mght at Southern.
The Wildcats are m fifth
place in the loop's standings.
Hannan Trace is averagmg
56.1 pmnts per game North
Gail!a won the first game
between the two schools, 90-44.
Coach Richard Hamilton's

Three Keep

Mat Record

Boston 2 St Lou1s 0
Mmnesota 1 California 1

(Only games schedule"dl
Wednesday's Games

New York at Los Angeles

Minnesota at Oetro1f

Vancouver at Potts burgh ._

Cahforn1a at Ch1cago' "'

·- .

I0ntygames scheduled!

- AHL Standings
By Untied Press International
· East
w. L. T. Pts
25 12 7 57
Boston
22 13 9 53
NovaScot1a
17 14 8 42
Springfoeld
14 21 9 31
Providen ce
14 23 5 33
Rochester
West
W. L

CollegeBasketb•IIR ..ults
By Untied Pres• International
Lafayette 87 West Vor 83
LA Tech 118Cameron78
Dalla ~ Bapl 94 Au~ ton Coli 52
St Louls64 Bradley 59
_
Vanderbilt 101 Cornell 80
Minnesota 65 Wisconsin 59

Memphis St 81 Drake 70

Trt Sta te 79 Goshen 7l
Tra nsy lvama 71 Hanover 60
Dartmouth 94 Harvard86

Mars HII IB I Presbytenar\76

South Car St 9J Benedoct 87
Nrthwstrn 76 M lch 69 of

lll onoos St 107 Wonona St 91
Gordon 86 Babson 78

Mass 71 Vermont 49

Nrtheastrn 65 Boston U 51
Sho ppensburg 104 York82
Ohoo No 90 Heodelberg 84
Yngstwn St BO Cleve Sl 69
Hram 80 uBidwn-WIIce 76
Otterbein 75 Dentson 59

Clarion ( Pa I 81 Walsh 71
Sa lem 64 Oav1sE1k1ns6J

T. PIS

Hershey
20 12 6 46
Baltomore
20 17 s 45
Conconnatl
18 18 9 45
Cleveland
18 18 6 42
Rochmond
17 19 6 40
Tidewater
10 28 4 24
TuesdayS Results
Balli moreS Boston 3
Cmcinnatl A Prov1denceJ
Nova Scot1a 4 Cleveland 1

IOnly games scheduled I
Wednesday's Games

Boston at Hershey
Springfoeld at Richmond
Cincinnati a1 Rochester

IOnly games scheduled)

CLINE RELEASED
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cmcmnati Reds today announced they had given outfielder Tye Chne, a veteran of
12 major league seasons, his
unconditional release.
Cline, 32, batted .196 in 1971
for the Reds, appearing mostly
as a pmchhltter. His best year
came with the Mihf'aukee
Braves m 1964 when he batted
.302 in 101 games.
Chne was origmally signed
by the Cleveland Indians.
Cline's release leaves the
Reds' roster at 38 players, two
under the hmit.

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Marauder wrestlers
came up w1th their first win ln
three outings here Saturday
night, defeating the South
Point Pointers, 40-28.
Coach Fenton Taylor's "Big
Maroon" grapplers take on the
powerful Pt. Pleasant B1g
Blacks at Pt. Pleasant today at
2 p. m. The next Meigs home
match IS this Saturday mght
against the Wahama White
Falcons startmg at 7·30.
Thr'le Meigs wrestlers
remain undefeated. They are
Johll Thomas, 157 lb class ;
Robbie Harris, 114 lb. class,
and Mike Hamson, 100 lb.
class. One other Marauder is
undefeated m one match, Jim
McClure, 107 lb. class.
The complete results with
Souther Pomt were:
100 lb. class, Mike Hamson
(M) (3-0) pmned Jeff Hunter
(SP).
107 lb. class, J1m McClure
(M) (1-0), pmned Dave
Mansfield (SP) .
114 lb. class, Robbie Harris
(M) (:J..O) pinned Lonme Triplet ·
(SP).
121 lb. class, Tony S10ozich
(SP) deciswned Kenney Moore
(M) (1-2).
128 lb. class, j'toger Pearch
(M) (0-2-1) drew with Rick
Pullen (SP) .
134 lb. class, Alan
.McLaughlin (M) (1-2) pmned
Paul Lewis (SP) .
140 lb. class, R1ck Gaul (M)
(1-1) won by forfeit.
147 lb. class, Greg Michaels
(SP) pinned Terry Pickens

(M) (11-J).
TWINS SIGN PANELGE
157 lb. class, John Thomas
BLOOMINGTON, Minn.
(UP!)- The Minnesota Twms (M) (3-0) won by forfeit.
167lb. class, Ted Lehew (M)
.h~'~av~;e:eJ~~:~epa ~r:i~~ghtl\anded
of Akron, (D-1·2) drew with Paul Ke~rns
Ohio. He was
baseball (SP).
177 lb. class, Randy Smith
team's third choice in the
regular phase of the recent (SP) decisioned John Lehew
draft. Panelge attends Parsons (M) (0-3) .
187lb. class, Ron South (SP)
College in Iowa.

1

100% Octane Eth~

.9

Southwestern Highlanders
wmless m 10 games Will seek a
victory over the Bobcats of
Coach Jim Arledge. Kyger
Creek 1s l-71n the SVAC and 1-8
overall. KC's only victory was
a 76-48 wm over Southwestern
10 December.
The Bobcats are averagmg
55 points per game m seven
league encounters. Kyger
Creeks' major problems have
been the lack of consistent field
goal hitting. The Bobcats have
done will in the rebounding
departmen t but have not
scored from the field.
Southwestern has suffered a

Indian Valley South
Tops Class A Poll

P1kevllle 81 Berea 50
Thoma s More 114 Centre 83
Muskingum 93 Kenyon 71

St Jos I Pa I 87 Orexel 6•
Duquesne 72 Steubenvl52
Cedar vo ile 85 Bluffton 52
Dav tdson 75 VMI 57
Lakeland 90 Carthage 71
Similar fate .
Stout95
70
Coach Asa Bradbury's Os hkoshLacrosse
87 Stevens PI 70
Southern Tornadoes, 3-4 lnd Cent 94 Rose f.lulman 77
against SV AC opponents and 5· Ferros St 92 Aquinas 76
Coil 8J Hous Bapl 81 ot
5 overall will seek the1r thtrd LA
Ft .Lewos89 Coif Santa Fe75
straight victory Fnday agamst Colorado St 47 Denver 45
the Wahama White Falcons EauCiaore 80 Rover Fa lis 64
Wahama (2-5 ) has had Its
LUCAS WINNER
share of problems this season.
LOS ANGELES (UP! )
Southern posted Impressive
Jerry
Lucas of the New York
v1ctones last weekend over
Hanna, W Va and Hannan Kmcks edged Don May of the
Atlanta Braves, 20.16, m a first·
Trace.
Eastern Will be trymg to get round match of the National
back mto the win column Basketball AssociatiOn $50,000
followmg last Friday's six ''one-on·one'' contest.
The taped highlights of the
point loss at North Gallia. The
game
were televised at half·
Eagles are 6-2 m the SVAC and
7-2 overall Eastern 1s lime of the NBA's All.Star
averagmg 67.6 points m eight Game Tuesday mght
A total of 34 players - two
league games . The Eagle
from
each of the 17 NBA clubs
defense, however, has yielded
only 399 points or an average of - are participating in the
49.8 pomts per game.
contest with a $15,000 first pnze
Eastern will travel to gomg to the winner.
Symmes Valley Saturday mght
m a crucial SVAC meeting
Symmes Valley, coached by
Wayne White, has lost two in a
row following an eight game
winning streak. The Vikings
are 6-1 in the league and 6-2
overallr'Fhey are averaging 8(1.
2 pomts per game in seven
league Ults.
In the other Saturday game,
Southwestern plays
at
Southern .

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Ind1ap&lt; -the first week of the voting,
Valley South has replaced continued to drop. The Polar
Marion Pleasant as the No. 1 Bears fell to thll'd last week
Class A team 10 this week's and slid another notch this
Umted Press International week despite an impressive 690hio • High School Board of 411 win over AAA Canton LinCoaches' ratings, but Board- coin, ranked eighth at the time.
man and Wellsville in AAA and
Newcomers to the top ten
AA lengthened their leads over lists this week include Printheir nearest challengers.
ceton (8th), Toledo Scott (9th)
IVS, located at Gnaden- and Cincinnati Elder (lOth) in
button and coached by Char· Class AAA, Newton Fails (tie
ies Huggins, was second for 9th) in Class AA, and
to Pleasant the first two weeks Lora10 Clearv1ew (lOth) in
of the ratmgs but trinuned the Class A.
Spartans' margin to only seven
On tap this . weekend are
points a week ago.
three gap1es which could cause
This week the unbeaten (9-0) quite a reaction among the
Rebels roo~ed past Pleasant AAA top teJ_I. They will find No.
witpplentytospare, picking up 6 Walnut Ridge at No.3 South;
223 points from the 37 voting No. 8 Princeton at No. 7
Class A coaches to 191 for Hamilton Taft; and No. It
Pleasant (9-1).
Cincinnati Purcell at No. 10
Strasburg, where Huggins Elder.
coached a stqte championship
COLUMBUS IUPII - Thos
team in 1967, finished third in week 's United Press In
Class Afor the second straight ternallonal Ohio Hogh School
Board of Coaches' basketball
week. The Tigers, unbeaten in rat1ngs
w1lh f1rst place votes
10 games, had 172 po10ts, mak- and won lost records in
ing them a serious challenger parentheses :
CLASSAAA
to Pleasant for the runnerup
Team
Points
spot.
1. Boardman ( 16( ( 19 1) 266
Columbia Station (11.0) with 2 Celona (4) (11 -0)
219
3
Cols
South
(
10
11
193
122 points grabbed off the No. 4
4
Clev
.
East
Tech
(2)
(11
·11
spot in A with Licking Heights
167
(8-1) finishing fifth for the sec- 5 Ftndlay (1) (10 1)
163
6. Cols. Walnut Rodge 121 (9 t)
ond straight week .
160
Uttle Trouble
7. Ha moltonTaft(1) 19·11 81
Boardman, boast10g a 9-1 8 Princeton (11 -01
68
64
record, had little trouble 9 Toledo Scott (8·11
53
besting the field in AAA, rolling 10. Cine Elder (41 (9-0I
Second Ten: 11 Moddletown
up 16 first place votes out of a 44 . 12 Springfield North 38, 13
possible 32 and totaling 266 Canton Lincoln 30 ; 14 Lorain
Admoral Kong and Cinclnnato
points.
Purcell 28 each, 16. Barberton
Runnerup Celma, which 26:
17 Akron Cenlrai-Hower
moved up one place from last II I 22. Toledo Central Cathol ic
week, had four first place votes ( 1) 15, 19 Warren Howland
North 12 each
and 219 points With its 11.0 and Columbus
CLASSAA
mark.
Team
Pornts
Columbus South (10-1 ) 1 Wellstvllle (121 (10 01 214
2.Col Ready(4)( ll ·ll
164
finished third with 193, 3.
Rosstord [3) (11·11
124
followed by Cleveland East 4 Can Lehman (1) (10-2) 121
Tech (11-1) with 167, Findlay 5. Soutll Point (3) 112-0) 120
113
(10-1) with 163 and Columbus 6 Lexington (2)110-0)
7 Steubenville C C (7-21 80
Walnut Ridge (9-1) with 160. 8 Granville (1) (9 1)
77
Walnut Ridge, last year's 9. (toe) Waverly (8-2 )
48
state champion, which had 9 Itiel Newton Falls (1) (9 0)
48
taken over the No. 2 position
Second Ten : 11 Big Walnut
last week, lost 65-63 to (1) 42 ; 12 Poland 41; 13.
Columbus North Friday night Middletown Madison 32. 14 ·
Loveland (21 28 ; 15. Bndgeport
and dropped all the way to 25
, 16. Huron 24 ; 17 Colonel
sixth in the hotly-contested Crawford 22. 18 Oak Harbor
race. The Scots' loss snapped 20 ; 19 Cleveland Holy Name
therr 34-game winning streak. and Youngstown North 18 each
Olhers w1th 10 or more
In Class AA , Wellsville, points . Bexley, Coal Grove,
which moved into the top spot Napoleon, Warren Kennedy,
only last week, stretched its Portsmouth West, Twtnsburg,
Joseph, Norwalk.
margin to 50 points over Fremont St.CLASS
A
run"erup Columbus Ready this Team
Potnls
1 Indian Valley So (7) (9 O)
weeil, 214-164.
.
223
Lehman Drops Again
2 Maroon Pleasant (7) (9·11
Following Wellsville · (10.0)
191
172
and Ready (11·1) in AA was 3 Strasburg (3) 110·01
Rossford (11-1) with t24 points, 4. Col Statton (4) 111-0) 122
5 Licking Hts 121 (8·1I
102
Canton Lehman (10-2) with 121, 6. Hardon !Ito' (1) (9-0)
82
South Point ( I~) with 120 and 7. Lowellvollel11 19 0)
70
9,
Sebnng
II
1)
60
Lexington (10.0) with 113.
Lor Clearvoew (1) 19-11 56
Lehman, the No . 1 AA team 10.Second
Ten: 11 Lorain
Catholic (1) 53; 12. Ridgedale
51. 13. Alexander (2) 49; 14.
won by forfeit.
Garaway 44, 15 Bettsvtlle, 39;
Unlimited class, Bernard 16 Maplewood and Ross
South pinned Jon Grueser (M) Southeastern, all 20
Others woth 10 or more
(().2) .
points New Boston, Lakeland,
Win : 6 pts; Decision 3 pts; Yellow Springs (1). Newton
Draw 2 pts each.
(1), Richmond Heights, North

"FI RESTON~
Your Best

BATTERY

BUY

Gophers

Spotless

Toronto at Montreal

Regular Gas

•

beaded by Dave Dronzek with

Wednesday's Games

Give Us A Try!

•
•

R·esults

Uno on IKy ) 85 Ky St 73

•

•

SLEEPING PIL~•·

lliE OFFICERS OF MEIGS AERIE 2171

By Upited Press lnlemalional
The last time Cleveland State
beat Youngstown State in basketball was during the Great
Depression of the 19:W's.
Cleveland, then named Fenn
College, beat the Penguins in
1936 10 what must have been
quite a defensive bout, 23-23.
That was the last Cleveland
win to date.
Tuesday mght Youngstown,
rated 17th among small college
teams in the country, got past
the Vikings 86-69 for the 12th
win this season 10 13 outings.
Blll McMeans sparked
Youngstown with 22 points and
Bill Johnson added 21 for the
win. Cleveland, now ~.a. was

(No games scheduled)

l

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A meeting will be held
Thursday, January 20, 1972, at
7:30 p.m. Purpose of meeting
is to start a. Women's Club.
Everyone is eligible to belong
who has a relative . in good
Eagle standing or a widow of a
deceased member. Food and
refreshments will be served.

a'

Bemcofoam for a
Healthy Sleeptng
Surface

Pet. GB
20 25 4'4
17 30 362 4
15 31 326 5'12
14 31 .311 6

W. L. ·

Baltimore
Atlanta
Qeveland
Clncl

•

for Extra Ftrmness

26 19 .578 4112
20 28 .417 12
13 Jt 297 17

CentraL OIYISIOR

..
Coil-Guard~ Support

(~ollege

.Penguins. Top· Vikings 80-69

Atlanttc Dtvtston '
W l Pet. GB
Boston
32 \6 .1Jb7 ,

•
Scle ntlfi call y
Destgned Matchtng
Foundatron wi!h
Super Firm
Support Cotls

.

Eastern Conference-

NEW YORK (UP!) -Sandy those five seasons he compiled
Koufax, the most dominant a record of 111-34.
pitcher In baseball !tom 19632 In three of those seasons he
66, seeks to beat tremendous struck out .. over 300 batters,
odds today when he tries to setting a major league record
; become only the fifth player in of 382 strikeouts tn 1965, and
~ baseball hjstory to be elected to during that span he also pitthe Hall of Fame in his first ched a record four no-bitters.
•: year of eligibility.
Three times he was selected as
•
In tbe 36 years of voting for the Cy Young Award winner
••• Hall of Fame membership only and inJ963 he also was chosen
: Ted Williams, Bob Feller, as the NL's most valuable
, Jackie Robinson and Stan player.
: MpaUII 'we.re , named tO 1the
Beat Clutch Hitter
coveted shrirle ' in their first
Uwinning an MVP is a major
• ' · yea~ of eligibility. Under criteria-for election then Berra
:': current rules a player must should be a shoo-in. Yogi won
: have been retired from active three of them, in 1951-M.SS and
:. play for five years.
was a key figure in the
:
Koufax, who .Pitched 12 Yiin\tees winning 14 pennants
seasons for the Brooklyn and from 1947~2. Berra, regarded
: Los Angeles Dodgers befor.e an as one of the best clutch hitters
• arthritic elbow forced him to the game ever produced, hit
reUre in 1966 at the young age 358 career homers, a record for
' ol31, is one of four players who catchers, and compiled a .285
stand an excellent chance of - balling average. He holds 10
• being voted into \he Hall of World Series records among
: Fame today by the Baseball his list of achievements.
• Writers Association of
Kiner was the most feared
•• America.
home run hitter in the NL
••
The other three are Yogi during his seven seasons with
: Berra, a standout catcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates from
: the New York Yankees for 18 1946-62. He led or tied for the
: seasons; Ralph Kiner, one of · league lead in homers in each
: the game's most feared slug- of those seasons and on two
: gers from 1946-52; and Early occaslons -In 1947 and 1949 : Wynn, baseball's last 300-game cracked more than 50 homers.
• wlnne~. Berra, Wynn ·and
Wynn's career spanned four
: Kiner just barely missed out on decades from 1939 to 1963 and
: memlx!!'ahip in last year's during that Ume he compiled a
record of 300 victories and 244
: balloting.
:
The argument for Koufax is losses. The burly righthander
: that during the years he was at won 20 or more games in five
• his peak few pitchers ever seasons and he is one of only 14
: dominated the game so com' pitchers in baseball history to
' pletely, He led the National have reached the 300-victory
• League in earned run average circle. His 23 seasons as ' a
• for five straight seasons !tom pitcher also is a major league
; 1962-66 with marks of 2.54, 1.88, record.
• 1.74, 2.04 and 1.73 and during

.. -Rest· Suprem~

5

NBA Stondings

Vancouver

•

Trade it
Bemco

Pro Standings

Koufax Has Good
Chance For Fame Today

•

,

oftA Q32
Both vulnerab lE'
West N01 th
r~'i•
Suulh

Dear Furious:
What's "depraved" for the gander is "depraved " for the
goose. If you disapprove of oghng, why suggest that the wife ogle
too? Shame on you ' - H.
Dear Helen ·
'
Speaking of husbands who "look" but don't touch here's one
for Y?U : We we.nt to a party where there was somewhat
ovempe female 10 one of those crocheted fishnet type dresses
very open, very decollete. Sbe was defimte ly braless Everything
showed.
"
I asked my husband afterwards what he thought of her a nd
he said, ' ~Personally I prefer salmon in that kind of net " Do you
think he IS '
. I. Getting old?
2. A, good liar?
3. An avid fisherman ? - HAPPY WIFE
Dear Happy:
Let's setUe for Number 3, with a dash of Number 2 added
Or maybe the gal just &lt;!td' 't shape up to that kmd oi bait _

'

-

'

By Un1ted Presslnternat1onal

•

pop.,), P.O Box 489, Rodoo City

¥ K43

••

IJowUn..,

SOuth Contracts Job Out

.AK J
Dear Helen :
My husband uses as an excuse for not going out going on a
vacation, going ANYWHERE, tbe fact that we might' get robbed
and he points to all the news stories in tbe papers to prove 11 Thi~
has been going on for 25 years.
Well, after he said it at least 500 times, we fmally d1d get
robbed when we went away for a weekend.
So now he says, "I told you so!" I pomt out that we've been
away from home 500 times and got robbed once, which doesn't
exactly make him a prophet. But he won't budge from the house
from now on.
What can I do? - BETTING ON THE ODDS
Dear BOTO:
!our husband is like the hypochrondriac who had engraved
on hiS tombstond, "See -I TOW you l was sick!"
Why don't you buy him a burglar alarm system for his birthday? - H.
(Which reminds me of a story I did last year about my
burglar-conscious husband, Bob. Inasmuch as I'm still
rec;uperating from surgery (says the doctocJ, I'll print 11 10 the
Frid~y Column. After all, I owe Bob one for the article he
publiShed on "What is a Wife?" Which riled up Women's Lib1sts
considerably. - H.)
Dear Helen :
I have a great wife, but like lots of men 1 wondered what
freedom would belike. So we had an agreement. I'd move out for
SIX months, get my head back together, learn whether
bachelorhood was what I really wanted, while she'd stay at the
house with the kids.
Well, I learned you don't swmg that much as a bachelor It's
a lonely life, after bemg mamed to a wonderful girl and having
t(lose kids underfoot. Maybe they bothered me, but I sure missed
them.
I went back at the end of the fourth month .. To f10d my wife
had taken a JOb and was seeing another man regularly!
She says she thanks me a lot for giving HER lime to thmk _
that it really wasn't a very good marriage and she has decided
she and the kids cando better without me. In fact, s)le has started
divorce proceedings, so she can marry this other jerk. Says the
kids are crazy about him.
Helen, that wasn't in the agreement! What gets mto women
anyway, and how can I put some sense into her brainless head ?
-T. J .
Dear T:
Sorry, lelia, "You calls your shot · and you takes your
ch~ces. " I'd suggest you do the wine-dme, woo and roses
routine; heavy on the woo. Maybe she's only trying to teach you a
, lesson . - H.
Dear Helen:
. .How dare you stand up for the husba;d who likes to •ead
81flie-type magazines and go to topless bars! That kind of
depr~ved st~f isn't exactly the same as your metaphorical "not
wanting to ptck every flower he sees mthe park !"
Why didn't you tell her to get a bunch of male nude pictures
and start raving_ ~bout them, also to eye every good-iook10g man
~~~walks down the street. That would fiX him! - FURIOUS AT

i·1

1

r---------------------------~

!Helen Help Us!

J:

0,

:02 Left

.1, •

Jack's Story Exciting Nation
planned congressiOnal mvestigation of the problem.
For Anderson, publication of
the documents and the ensu10g
publicity, is a culmination of
two years and three months of
hard work, patience and
muckraking s10ce the death of
his mentor, Drew Pearson.
One Jnfiuenlial Column
The column which he inherited IS regarded as one of the
most mfluential m the country,
used by more than 700
newspapers.
He says he approaches the
trnduction of his column •'with
a sense of outrage, because
public office is a public trust."
He -and Pearson before him
-have survived by po10ting
out the foibles and missteps of
public officials. They have had
their share of libel suits along
the way.
"We carry a big stick," he
lldds.
Anderson said he would be
willing to appear before congressional committees investigating the leak of the documents to him, although he

19~

9

Certified Gas ·Stations
992-9981
538 W. Maon
Pomeroy, 0 .
We Honor BankAmericard and Master Cttarqe

Grab Big:

,.

Ten Lead

Ohio High School
Basketball Scores
Un1ted Press lnlornahonal
Weorlon, W. Va Madonna 75
Toronto67
Troadeiphla, w. Va . 58
Martins Ferry 54
Marletta 69
Parkersbu rg. W Va 60

Gallia, Anna , New Knoxville,
Zanesville Rosecrans, Ottawa

Hills (11 , Fort Recovery,
Con tinental (1), Columbus
Grove, Nurth Central. Ml
Pleasant, Mansfie ld Sl
Peter 's , Eastern Me1gs,
Monroevolle, Kirtland. Collons
Western Reserve ( 11. Unloto
and Rittman

By United Press International
The musical chairs race in
the Big Ten now finds Min·
nesota on top.
The Gophers surged into the
conference lelld Tuesday mght
as sophomore Keith Young,
who has averaged only 6.4
points per game, hit a careerhigh 27 as Minnesota downed
Wiscons10, 65-59. Ron Behagen
added 17 points for the 18thranked Gophers, the only rated
team in action Tuesday night.
Elsewhere, Mark Sibley's six
straight po10ts in overtime
helped Northwestern beat Mi·
chlgan State, 7H9, and hreak a
seven-game ~osing streak and
Harry Rogers hit 21 points in
St. Louis' 64-59 victory over
Bradley.Uje triumph was the
300th for coach Bob Polk.
Bill Ligon scored 16 points to
lead Vanderbilt to a 101-80 rout
of Cornell and Larry Finch's 28
points carried Memphis State
to an 81-70 victory over Drake.
Bill Raynor scored 35 points
to lead Dartmouth to a 94-86
victory over Harvard and
Tracy Tr1pucka erupted for 29
points to lift Lafayette to an 8783 upset of West Virginia.

SAVE WITH

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�•
~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan

• 3- The Dal)y Sentinel, MidcDeport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan.19,

19,1972

"bU :0:" b 7 0., ,., , 'T

·west
Nips.
~ast
.

Redmen Need Win
To Stay hi Race

JUDGE ROBBED
TOLEDO
(UP11
Municipal Jud&amp;e Andy
Deyloe was robbed Tltadly
night as he wa1 leaving hill
home 1D Toledo's wtlt end.
Devine said a man with a
riDe was atandlq acatuat
h~ ear In bla drlve~ay aDd
robbed him of $300 and a
wristwatch. Tbe man then
ordered DeviDe to back out
of the driveway and not look
back.
~,
... r .. ·o::twnw·~

ew to Speak· in Cleveland
CLEVELAND (UP! )- Sen.
Hubert H. Humphrey of Minneaota, admitting be IS only No. 2
In Ohio, Tuesday set up the
machinery to win the state
away from Sen. Edmund S
Muskie in tbe May Democratic
presidential primary . Today
the No. 2 Republican was
expected to drop in.
H~phrey spent most of the
day in Columbus where his
delegates were chosen fer the
primary and then came here to

.....

'

~· With

to select delegates, "I'm going
•
to :ake my campaign to we the
people of Ohio."
Urbana College continues to lead the Mid-Ohio
"You're not going IAI ~
Conference standings with a. 4-0 record in, league
bossed and you'.-e not going to
play.
be presSured," he sald. "I'm
Urbana won a big game outside the leagtie last
· to UlSprre
· · and encourage
golllj(
week, knocking Defiance College from the ranks of
you. I ask for no special favors
the unbeaten. The Blue Knights won easily as M11rk
and I'll give none."
· HopesforMajorlty
Todd f!Ot 49 points in a 117-78 victory.
Hwnphrey said he wants to
Maione got into the win
"
0
d
Ral"in
«a
column in the teague Sa"·"day Rio Grande
2·2
7.0
cap ture as many hio ele"'e'~&lt;'
..... "e"'
•w
Malone
13
5-10
gateS" as humanly pqssible"
1
with an 86-80 victory over Rio Cedarville
o3 2·9
and said he believes he can get
Grande. Maione had lost 74-73 Field Goals
A M P~.
a mat'ority of the 1""'
NEW Press
YORKInternational
(UP!) - The
Urbana
"" that Unoled
lop at Rio Grande.
Ohio
Domlnocan 1293
793 695
374 5~
47
makes Ohio the fifth largest 20 small college basketball
This week Urbana will risk Rio Grande
1083 507 47
delegation at the national teams with forst place votes its perfect MOC mark Wed· Malone
1&gt;136 518 45
and won-losf records as of Jan nesday at Rio Grande. Rio (2- Ced arv 111 e
830 ""
•
convention in Miami, Fla.
.1
16 ;n parentheses: (seventh
Free Throws
A -M Pet.
He said he was not complain- week)
•
3) needs a win to stay in the Urbana
579 415 71.6
ing about Muskie's !lead start Team
' Points conference race.
Ohio Dominican 246 173 70.
1. Eau Clair 126:(( 11·01
321
Mal
44 29
with party chlefta10s, bu! 2 LoulsianaTechl 6l 11301287
Theleaguescoringchaseisa
. one
94 3 65.2
1 ~;s sr..i
was given a massive file from "would have respected" neu- 3. StephenF.Austlnl13 1l 226 hot race between Jim Un- · ~~~:~~~~e
trality
from
Gilligan,
who
4.
CEheyney
State
(10
1)
160
derwood
of
Ohio
Dominican
Rebounds
Tot.
Avg.
which to make a selection,
126 College with 28.5 points per Urbana
1H10 ·31
5
·umped
on
Muskie's
band·
vansvollel
823
48.5
·
At first, he declared, he was )
6. TennesseeState(7-1) 124
Rl 0 G d
7. KentuckyStatel7·21
93 game and Mark. Todd of Ur- Malone
ran e
592 43.8
45.5•
657
"cautious, even timid." The wagon last month.
"!think
my
struggle
here
is
8.
Fairmont
Statel9-t
I
76
bana
with25.4
pomts
per
game.
Ohio
Dominican
433
.
39.0
,
fighting was still going on and
.ll
b
tU
b
9
Capotal
10.1
110·01
61
U
d
ood
Ced
11
n erw
got 44 on Wed·
arvt e
414 37.6
he had to determine that he an uph1 a e, ut I'm not go- 10 . EasternMochlgan 110.41 60
Team Aver·ages
would print no military ing to shrink from it," he said. 11 Assumploon (6·21
53 nesday against Walsh.
Humphrey
said
his
real
12.
Sam
Houston
St.
(11.1)
51
Paul
McLoughlin
of
Ohio
Urbana
&lt;&gt;:'06 ~i
secrets. •
13
2
0
4
strength
is
with
the
labor
·
Westrn
Wash
ll
·
1
8
Dominican,
who
was
top
Ohio
Dominican
83 88
~t became evident to him, he
1 ~ Fla.Southern(11·11 '
41
Rl 0 G
'
as Malone
rande
97 90
sa1d, that there were no movement, the National 15 A'' ron (11·11
••0 ranked most of last season
·
88
92
19 the leading NAIA foul shooter Cedarville
, Bl 93
military secrets involved, only Farmers Organization and 16 Calif -lrvlnel10·41 1
Youngslown(ll ·l)
16 ha his 1eague-1ea din g average Scoring
FG FT ' TP Avg.
potential embarrassment.
other farm groups, students 17
18 Della State 110 .2)' •
15 1 s
Underwood
"And if something is classi- and the black community, and 19 HowardPayne(ll .JI
13 up to 86 pet'.
when
be
was
here
Tuesday
20
Phla
Textile
(8
21
(M'd
oh·
!ODI
131 51 313 28 5
11
fied 'secret' just because It night he tried to meet with as
'A
;•}'"'\~tics)
Todd (UI
165 101 431 25.4
--~-'7--., St d'
so a~.
Ov
Plunkett (U) 159 109 427 25.1
could be embbarrassing, then
many,lof
those
groups
as
time
an
lngs
~oop
erall
Townsend
secrecy no . longer means
1
The Dai.~ ~~inet , ~~~monican
~-~ (MI
113 56 2~0 18.6
anything," he added, "I said to would permit.
TalksWithLabor
DEVOTEDT!!THE
.
Anderson
my staff, 'Let's publish all we
INTEREST
(U)
126 58 310 18.2
He
visited
some
100
elderly
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
I'
---1
Shooting
A M Pel.
can get until the government
persons
at
a
west
side
center
CJi.ESTER
L.
TANNEHILL
lAJCBl
.l&amp;.ll.l@i
Plunkett
(UI
265
159 60.
adopts a sensible policy on
an~ later went to Cleveland
ROBE~~e~o'itF~ICH '
Wednesday Lltte
~~krT(~ tul 13295 5378 59.1
classification."
56
State
University
for
a
"rap"
Cotv
Edttor
'
.
.
Mixed
League
A
·'
His staH said no member of
.
Pubtoshed daoly except' lndovodua!HlghGame(Menl
nderson lUI 227 126 555
saturday by The Ohio vattey - F Morrow 217; E. Voss 2041 Harrison (C)
63 34 ~4.5
the administration or the session with students.
D
Oneofthemasked:
"Why
do
PubltShono
Company
11
Rosenbaum
199.
Free
Throws
1
embassies involved had conCourt Sl. Pomerov , 'Oh•o, ' Individual High Game
A M Pet,
tacted them about the columns. you now oppose the war in 45769 Busoness Offoce Phone (Women) - N Carsey 177 5 Me Lough! on (OD) 43 37 86.
Vietnam when in 1968 you fa· 992 2156. Ed oto,.at Phone 992 · ONen 167, J. Bentley 158. ' · Hart IRI
23 17 83.4
2151
vored it?"
Individual High Se · (Me 1 • Watson (C)
30 25 83 5
Second class postage paod at
FM
roes
n Todd (U)
124 101 at 's
"Time has changed us all,"
Pomeroy , Oh•o
orrow 567; E ~ Voss 554;
·
·
Natoonal advertising D Rosenbaum 530.
W)aurer(ODI
57 46 80.5
he replied. "Maybe some day represenlatove Bottone! to
lndlvtdual 'High Series Rebounds
Total Avg.
you'll change your mind too."
Gallagher. tnc , 12 East 42nd ' (Women I - N. Carsey. 475. s Underwood (ODI
161 14.6
He also met with local labor St • New York Coly, New York O.Ven 455; L Ros~nbaum 448 Anderson IU)
227 13.4
Subscroptoon rates oe . . High Team Series - Cassell. Marz!ck (MI
163 10.8
1
leaders who have yet to en- a'vered
by carroer where · Carsey 1909 ; Rosenbaum : Plunkett (U)
171 10.1
two spades, two hearts. four dotse a candidate. The Ohio B~a~~~~; ~~uc,~n~sh~r": c~:r· Meadows 1872 , Morrow-Moore Bentley IRI
111 8.6
Last week's result:
clubs and fIve diamonds United .Wto Workers, with serv•ce not available c);i; ' 1844.
The count of the East hand 250,-000 members, recently and
month
By mad
Oh•o
' Morrow.Moore
Team Standings
86 Rio Games:
Grande 80
w sus
va , One
year inSlot
oo 11
12 Malo.ne
Thts Week's
would show that 1t had beenwentovertoMUBkle'ssideand s .. months Sl25 Three ' Cassell Carsey
8 Urbana at Rio Grande
dealt JUSt two diamonds
Hwnphrey hOpes to woo the mo("hs s• so Subsmptoon Rosenbaum.Meadows
8 Bluffton at Cedarville
Therefore, the odds would ·Ohio AFJ:..CIO to support him
~~~t~n';,cludes Sun day Times ~~liz-Bentley
8 Findlay at Urbana
be 5-2 that West would hold
· _- .
- ----,-- .1 vwen
Holler
8
Ohio Dominican at Wilberforce
Blakeslee-Hoyt
4 Deftance at Malone

do some campaigning in Ohio's Council The occasion IS Prmt- Gilligan .
"I want to fight for the nomi~argest city with Its giant tabor
mg Week, commemorating the
force the fonner vice president birth of Benjamm Franklin. nation, tiut I'm not a spoiler,"
hopes to win over.
Humphrey was on Columbus Humphr,ey said. "I want to deToday VIce President Spiro to attend the selection of 38 at- feat Richard Nixon and I'm a
T. Agnew takes over the pol!tl· large delegates to run on his spoiler," Humphrey said. "I
cal spotlight. He was to ad- slate on May 2 and he admitted want to defeat Richard Nixon
dress some 2,000 businessmen that the support already bned and I'm sorry we have all this
at a noon luncheon here up in Ohio for Muskie would be spring training before the season starts."
sponsored by the Prmtmg tough to fight.
The Minnesota senator told
Industries Association of
"Not a Spoiler".
the
statewide ca~cus which
Northern OhiO and the
That support included an enCleveland Graphic Arts dorsement from Gov. John J. gathered in the state's capital

By MARGARET A. KILGORE

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
white-walled
office
of
colummst Jack Anderson looks
like any other business office,
but in recent days it has taken
on a festive air of excitement.
Telephone messages
requesting television and
newspaper interviews slack up
each morning awa1tmg
replies.
Members of the staff of eight
drop in and out of each other's
small cubicles to exchange
pleasantries and gossip with
visitors. They all speak with
awe and respect of "Jack's
story.''
The "story" concerns a
series of columns carried in
Anderson's "Washington
Merry-Go-Round" cleaned
from secret government
reports on discussions of·
While House and State
Department policy during the
14-day India-Pakistan conflict.
It has sparked renewed
discussion on the government's
methods of ctassify10g security
documents and resulted in a

won't reveal his source
Anderson toid The New York
Times that he had obtained the
documents this way :
"During the India-PakiStan
war, one of my sources told me
we were bungling. Here w.S a
conDict betweenr a military
dictatorship and the world's
second largest democracy, and
whose side did we -the largest
democracy -come out on' The
dictatorship."
Needs Documents
Anderson said he had· persuaded his sources that 1f they
wanted him to wnte about their
fears he would have to have
access to documents to authenticate the reports.
"They gave me a dozen
representative documents,"
Anderson said. But he 10s1sted
that he could not rely only on
selected papers and m time, he

' INGLEWOOD, Calif. league record ,33 consecuti~e
: (UP!)- How do you top a 33- triumphs in rolling up a 41-S
:: game win streak?
first half record, was in high
~erry Weill came as close as humor after West's tate
you can in the All-Star Game heroics.
Tuesday night.
"Just say !knew we had it all
. With two seconds left and the way," joked Sharman, who
New York's Walt Frazier was the game's MVP in 1955.
: ho11uling bim, the Los Angeles "There was never a doubt.
Lakers' "Mr. Clutch" dropped Serously, I'm glad Jerry
in a 20-foot jump shot from the f10ally won the.award."
top of the key.
Down by 10 points at hail·
Tbat amounted to a 112-110 time, the West outseored the
victory for the West over the East 33-20 in the third quarter
Eastin the National Basketball to go in front 87-34. With 2:56
Association's 22nd annual All· • left, the W~rn Conference
Star Game and the Laker club was ahead 105 -96
superstar was voted the conTwin Torped'oes Strlk~ '
Boston's twin torpedoestest's MVP.
West, the NBA's scoring John Havlicek and Dave
champion two seasons ago, Cowens-nearly sent the game
mllde 7 of his 13 points in the beforeaForumthrongof 17,214
exciting final period'. Playing into overtime.
27minutes, he mllde six of nine
With 43 seconds left,
field goal attempts, assisted on Havlicek connected on an 18- '
' five other baskets and grabbed foot jump shot from the left
six rebounds.
side. With 11 seconds to go
BeROn Defense
after Golden State's Cazzie
The 12-year pr,o was at his Russell failed to hlt for the
best on defense, however, West with 19 seconda on the
making eight steals.
clock, Cowens drilled a 10-foot
"It's an incredible thrill to jumper from the right side.
win this honor in front of the
Connie Hawkins of Phoenix
home fans," said West after also had 13 points for the West,
being presented the MVP while Milwaukee 's Kareem
Award for the first time in his Jabbar, sitting out the entire
illustrious career. "We didn't last quarter, finished with 12
play good defense in the first points and seven reboun'ds.
haU but I knew we could come
In the All-Star MVP
back in the second half."
balloting, West had 23 votes to
Bill Sharman, the West 21 for Hawkins and 13 for
coach whose Lakers set a Cowens.

ColZono

I

J

I

By Helen Bottel

J

I

WIN AT BRIDGE

NORTH
4Q8 7
¥A Q7fi

19

+K 10 7

oft K r, l

WEST

¥ 95

EAST
. 9fil32
¥J IIIA2

• 98,32
olo l09R7

o1o 14

.104

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SOUTH (D)

1

THE FAMILY CLAIRVOYANT

Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN
to ''Wm at Bm/ge," (c/o th1s newsStat1on, New York, N.Y. 10019.

+ AH

the diamond queen and a
mere counter would fmesse
agamst Wes(
2N.T
A. person who knows how
Pas~
fi N T
Pass Pas"
to count to fullest advantage
Pass
would know that West's last
Open1n~ lf:'ad- • 10
four cards were three diamonds and one c I u b He
would
have planned h1s play
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
lo wm the mnlh tnck m hi&gt;
There IS a lot of cot•ntong own hand and would simply
m loday 's ha nd. South counts throw West m With that club
22 pomls and opens two no- West would be forced lo lead
'' ump North counts 14 more a dtamond and 1l would not
and raiSes to s1x
matter who held the queen
West opens the 10 of clubs
(NEWSPAPEJt ENTERPRISE ASSN)
South looks at dummy and
( Ounts 11 top tncks He can
score a 12th 1f e1ther club,
01 h e a r t s break 3·3 If
The b1ddmg has been
ne1ther of those su1ts behaves mcel y South sttll has West Nnrth East
a lwo-way fmesse for the
Pass 2 tft
Pass
queen of diamonds
Pas..,
Pass 3 NT.
All m all 1! IS the sort of Pa ~ 5 +
?
Pass
gilt -edge slam yo ur banker
You. South. hold
would lend you money on
A stud1ous So u t h would • AKQJ1065 ¥A32 tK l oft2
cash three lop cards m every
What do you do now?
su1t but diamonds w h 1 I e
A-Bid six spades .. Your part\\ atc hmg the fall of ca rds ncJ i5 clearly showing- one ace
f 1 o m the East and West and new ·' ou want to gamble on
ha nds He wo uld note that a slam At worst, ll ~hould deWest showed out after two pend on a rinesse.
leads of each maJor sUit and
TODAY'S QUESTION
had d1sca1 ded two diamonds
Instead of reb1ddmg three now h 1 i e East would have t! ump, your pa rtner has conchucked a spade on the th1rd tmued to lour cl ubs over your
club lead
three spades What do yo\l do
This would tell h1m that now ''
West had been dealt exactly

and save 60•.
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Los Ang
41 5 .891
Seattle
29 19 604 13
Gold. Stale 17 19 587 14
Houston
16 30 348 25
Portland
12 37 245 30 11&gt;
Tuesdoy's Resulls
West 112 East 110

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2'1.

Heidelberg's losing streak
went to 19 games, includmg 10
this season, with a ~ loss to
Ohio Northern.
Mike Merchant was high for
the winning Polar Bears with
27points. Art Dilncan got 26 for
Heidelberg. Northern is &amp;-6.
In other games, Duquesne
got by Steubenville 72-54; Muskingum whipped Kenyon 93-71;
otterbein beat D\!DISOn 75-59 ;
Hiram edged Baldw10-Wallace
80-76; Clarion (Pa.) downed
Walsh 81-71, and Bluffton beat
Cedarville 91-74.
' Ford scored a careerGene

high 3,1 pomts to lead Mus·
kingum over Kenyon. The host
Muskies led by as many as 30
pomts in the Jasl half of the
Ohio Conference game.
Steubenville, led by 6-foot~
freshman guard Joe Hamilton,
proved.to be a stubborn o(lp&lt;&gt;nent for Duquesne, which led
only 36-30 at tbe half. Hamilton
collected 22 points. High for the
Dukes was Mike Barr with 20.
John Brown and Clair
Recker combined for 55 points
for Bluff!on as 1t gained Its
eighth win against six losses
this season with the game at
CedarVIlle. ·
Brown had 30 and Recker 25

'

I.IBA Standtngs

By Un11ed Press International

as Bluffton took it easy in the
second half, coastmg to the
wm. .
In other contests· Larry McCall scored 27 points for Hiram
m the game against BaldwmWallace, which was led by Al·
vin Lane's 21 points. Herb
Bowen scored 27 points and
grabbed 10 rebounds for Walsh
in the loss to Clarion. Jack
Mehl scored a game-high 20
points for Otterbe10 in Its
eighth win in 12 starts.
Tomght's schedule includes
Cincinnati at Dayton, Mianu at
Marshall, Bowl10g Green at
Toledo and Virginia Tech at
Ohio U.

East

Kentucky
V1rgtma
New York
Flor1d1ans

Pitts

Carolina

,
Utah

w.

l. Pet. GB

36 9
29 18
22 27
20 27
19 30
16 31
West
W. L
32 15

800 ..
617 8
J49 16
42617
388 19
340 21

Pet. GB
.681

28 19 :596 4
21 27 .438 ll'h

lnd1ana

Memphos
Denver
Dollas

Four SVAC Tilts On Tap This Week

18 27

400 13

20 31 392 14
Tuesday's Results

New York 123 Floridians 102
lndoana 130 Ptllsburgh 116
MemphiS 96 Dallas 94
IOnlygamesscheduled)
Wednesday's Games
Virg1n1aat Kentucky
Ftor1d1ans vs Carolina

AI Charlotte, N C
MemphiS at Utah
Dallas at Denver

(Only games scheduled)
NHL Standings
East
W L T. Pts
30 7 7 67
287763
25 1I 7 57
20 1J 10 50
18 19 7 •J
9 26 10 28
11 25 5 27
West
W L T Pis
29 9 5 63
22 15 7 51

Boston
New York

Montreal
Toronto

Delroot
Bulfalo

Chocago
Monnesota
Ca l1forn1a

1.4

23

10 38

Los Angeles

11 31

4 26

51 Louis
Phtladelphia
Pottsburgh

Four league games and tw(\
non-league encounters are on
tap this weekend in the
Southern Valley Athlellc
Conference
Friday mght, the leagueleading North Galha Pirates
travel to Mercerville for a
clash with the Hannan Trace
Wildcats and Southwestern will
meet Kyger Creek in the SV AC
contests. Coach Bill Phillips'
Eastern E~gles Will play at
Glouster while Southern's hot
Tornadoes host Wahama in the
other non-league battle.
Coach Jim Foster's North
Gallia Pirates are 7-1 m the
SV AC and 8-2 overall followmg
two important games last
weekend
r North Gallia defeated
Eastern for the second lime
lh1s season, 67-61, and bombed
Symmes Valley, 103-89. The
wm over the VIkings dropped
SV mto second place. Eastern
holds the th1rd spot with a 6-2
slate The EAgles have not
played Symmes Valley They
will meet for the first time

15 23 '7 37
12 22 6 32
12 2• 8 32

Tuesday's Results

Saturday night.
The Ptrates have scored 696
points 10 eight league games
for an average of 87 per game.
Coach Paul Dillon's Wildcats
are 3-5 m the league and 5-5
overall Hannan Trace posted a
74-56 lopsided victory over
Kyger Creek last Friday but
were stunned 58-50 the
followmg mght at Southern.
The Wildcats are m fifth
place in the loop's standings.
Hannan Trace is averagmg
56.1 pmnts per game North
Gail!a won the first game
between the two schools, 90-44.
Coach Richard Hamilton's

Three Keep

Mat Record

Boston 2 St Lou1s 0
Mmnesota 1 California 1

(Only games schedule"dl
Wednesday's Games

New York at Los Angeles

Minnesota at Oetro1f

Vancouver at Potts burgh ._

Cahforn1a at Ch1cago' "'

·- .

I0ntygames scheduled!

- AHL Standings
By Untied Press International
· East
w. L. T. Pts
25 12 7 57
Boston
22 13 9 53
NovaScot1a
17 14 8 42
Springfoeld
14 21 9 31
Providen ce
14 23 5 33
Rochester
West
W. L

CollegeBasketb•IIR ..ults
By Untied Pres• International
Lafayette 87 West Vor 83
LA Tech 118Cameron78
Dalla ~ Bapl 94 Au~ ton Coli 52
St Louls64 Bradley 59
_
Vanderbilt 101 Cornell 80
Minnesota 65 Wisconsin 59

Memphis St 81 Drake 70

Trt Sta te 79 Goshen 7l
Tra nsy lvama 71 Hanover 60
Dartmouth 94 Harvard86

Mars HII IB I Presbytenar\76

South Car St 9J Benedoct 87
Nrthwstrn 76 M lch 69 of

lll onoos St 107 Wonona St 91
Gordon 86 Babson 78

Mass 71 Vermont 49

Nrtheastrn 65 Boston U 51
Sho ppensburg 104 York82
Ohoo No 90 Heodelberg 84
Yngstwn St BO Cleve Sl 69
Hram 80 uBidwn-WIIce 76
Otterbein 75 Dentson 59

Clarion ( Pa I 81 Walsh 71
Sa lem 64 Oav1sE1k1ns6J

T. PIS

Hershey
20 12 6 46
Baltomore
20 17 s 45
Conconnatl
18 18 9 45
Cleveland
18 18 6 42
Rochmond
17 19 6 40
Tidewater
10 28 4 24
TuesdayS Results
Balli moreS Boston 3
Cmcinnatl A Prov1denceJ
Nova Scot1a 4 Cleveland 1

IOnly games scheduled I
Wednesday's Games

Boston at Hershey
Springfoeld at Richmond
Cincinnati a1 Rochester

IOnly games scheduled)

CLINE RELEASED
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cmcmnati Reds today announced they had given outfielder Tye Chne, a veteran of
12 major league seasons, his
unconditional release.
Cline, 32, batted .196 in 1971
for the Reds, appearing mostly
as a pmchhltter. His best year
came with the Mihf'aukee
Braves m 1964 when he batted
.302 in 101 games.
Chne was origmally signed
by the Cleveland Indians.
Cline's release leaves the
Reds' roster at 38 players, two
under the hmit.

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Marauder wrestlers
came up w1th their first win ln
three outings here Saturday
night, defeating the South
Point Pointers, 40-28.
Coach Fenton Taylor's "Big
Maroon" grapplers take on the
powerful Pt. Pleasant B1g
Blacks at Pt. Pleasant today at
2 p. m. The next Meigs home
match IS this Saturday mght
against the Wahama White
Falcons startmg at 7·30.
Thr'le Meigs wrestlers
remain undefeated. They are
Johll Thomas, 157 lb class ;
Robbie Harris, 114 lb. class,
and Mike Hamson, 100 lb.
class. One other Marauder is
undefeated m one match, Jim
McClure, 107 lb. class.
The complete results with
Souther Pomt were:
100 lb. class, Mike Hamson
(M) (3-0) pmned Jeff Hunter
(SP).
107 lb. class, J1m McClure
(M) (1-0), pmned Dave
Mansfield (SP) .
114 lb. class, Robbie Harris
(M) (:J..O) pinned Lonme Triplet ·
(SP).
121 lb. class, Tony S10ozich
(SP) deciswned Kenney Moore
(M) (1-2).
128 lb. class, j'toger Pearch
(M) (0-2-1) drew with Rick
Pullen (SP) .
134 lb. class, Alan
.McLaughlin (M) (1-2) pmned
Paul Lewis (SP) .
140 lb. class, R1ck Gaul (M)
(1-1) won by forfeit.
147 lb. class, Greg Michaels
(SP) pinned Terry Pickens

(M) (11-J).
TWINS SIGN PANELGE
157 lb. class, John Thomas
BLOOMINGTON, Minn.
(UP!)- The Minnesota Twms (M) (3-0) won by forfeit.
167lb. class, Ted Lehew (M)
.h~'~av~;e:eJ~~:~epa ~r:i~~ghtl\anded
of Akron, (D-1·2) drew with Paul Ke~rns
Ohio. He was
baseball (SP).
177 lb. class, Randy Smith
team's third choice in the
regular phase of the recent (SP) decisioned John Lehew
draft. Panelge attends Parsons (M) (0-3) .
187lb. class, Ron South (SP)
College in Iowa.

1

100% Octane Eth~

.9

Southwestern Highlanders
wmless m 10 games Will seek a
victory over the Bobcats of
Coach Jim Arledge. Kyger
Creek 1s l-71n the SVAC and 1-8
overall. KC's only victory was
a 76-48 wm over Southwestern
10 December.
The Bobcats are averagmg
55 points per game m seven
league encounters. Kyger
Creeks' major problems have
been the lack of consistent field
goal hitting. The Bobcats have
done will in the rebounding
departmen t but have not
scored from the field.
Southwestern has suffered a

Indian Valley South
Tops Class A Poll

P1kevllle 81 Berea 50
Thoma s More 114 Centre 83
Muskingum 93 Kenyon 71

St Jos I Pa I 87 Orexel 6•
Duquesne 72 Steubenvl52
Cedar vo ile 85 Bluffton 52
Dav tdson 75 VMI 57
Lakeland 90 Carthage 71
Similar fate .
Stout95
70
Coach Asa Bradbury's Os hkoshLacrosse
87 Stevens PI 70
Southern Tornadoes, 3-4 lnd Cent 94 Rose f.lulman 77
against SV AC opponents and 5· Ferros St 92 Aquinas 76
Coil 8J Hous Bapl 81 ot
5 overall will seek the1r thtrd LA
Ft .Lewos89 Coif Santa Fe75
straight victory Fnday agamst Colorado St 47 Denver 45
the Wahama White Falcons EauCiaore 80 Rover Fa lis 64
Wahama (2-5 ) has had Its
LUCAS WINNER
share of problems this season.
LOS ANGELES (UP! )
Southern posted Impressive
Jerry
Lucas of the New York
v1ctones last weekend over
Hanna, W Va and Hannan Kmcks edged Don May of the
Atlanta Braves, 20.16, m a first·
Trace.
Eastern Will be trymg to get round match of the National
back mto the win column Basketball AssociatiOn $50,000
followmg last Friday's six ''one-on·one'' contest.
The taped highlights of the
point loss at North Gallia. The
game
were televised at half·
Eagles are 6-2 m the SVAC and
7-2 overall Eastern 1s lime of the NBA's All.Star
averagmg 67.6 points m eight Game Tuesday mght
A total of 34 players - two
league games . The Eagle
from
each of the 17 NBA clubs
defense, however, has yielded
only 399 points or an average of - are participating in the
49.8 pomts per game.
contest with a $15,000 first pnze
Eastern will travel to gomg to the winner.
Symmes Valley Saturday mght
m a crucial SVAC meeting
Symmes Valley, coached by
Wayne White, has lost two in a
row following an eight game
winning streak. The Vikings
are 6-1 in the league and 6-2
overallr'Fhey are averaging 8(1.
2 pomts per game in seven
league Ults.
In the other Saturday game,
Southwestern plays
at
Southern .

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Ind1ap&lt; -the first week of the voting,
Valley South has replaced continued to drop. The Polar
Marion Pleasant as the No. 1 Bears fell to thll'd last week
Class A team 10 this week's and slid another notch this
Umted Press International week despite an impressive 690hio • High School Board of 411 win over AAA Canton LinCoaches' ratings, but Board- coin, ranked eighth at the time.
man and Wellsville in AAA and
Newcomers to the top ten
AA lengthened their leads over lists this week include Printheir nearest challengers.
ceton (8th), Toledo Scott (9th)
IVS, located at Gnaden- and Cincinnati Elder (lOth) in
button and coached by Char· Class AAA, Newton Fails (tie
ies Huggins, was second for 9th) in Class AA, and
to Pleasant the first two weeks Lora10 Clearv1ew (lOth) in
of the ratmgs but trinuned the Class A.
Spartans' margin to only seven
On tap this . weekend are
points a week ago.
three gap1es which could cause
This week the unbeaten (9-0) quite a reaction among the
Rebels roo~ed past Pleasant AAA top teJ_I. They will find No.
witpplentytospare, picking up 6 Walnut Ridge at No.3 South;
223 points from the 37 voting No. 8 Princeton at No. 7
Class A coaches to 191 for Hamilton Taft; and No. It
Pleasant (9-1).
Cincinnati Purcell at No. 10
Strasburg, where Huggins Elder.
coached a stqte championship
COLUMBUS IUPII - Thos
team in 1967, finished third in week 's United Press In
Class Afor the second straight ternallonal Ohio Hogh School
Board of Coaches' basketball
week. The Tigers, unbeaten in rat1ngs
w1lh f1rst place votes
10 games, had 172 po10ts, mak- and won lost records in
ing them a serious challenger parentheses :
CLASSAAA
to Pleasant for the runnerup
Team
Points
spot.
1. Boardman ( 16( ( 19 1) 266
Columbia Station (11.0) with 2 Celona (4) (11 -0)
219
3
Cols
South
(
10
11
193
122 points grabbed off the No. 4
4
Clev
.
East
Tech
(2)
(11
·11
spot in A with Licking Heights
167
(8-1) finishing fifth for the sec- 5 Ftndlay (1) (10 1)
163
6. Cols. Walnut Rodge 121 (9 t)
ond straight week .
160
Uttle Trouble
7. Ha moltonTaft(1) 19·11 81
Boardman, boast10g a 9-1 8 Princeton (11 -01
68
64
record, had little trouble 9 Toledo Scott (8·11
53
besting the field in AAA, rolling 10. Cine Elder (41 (9-0I
Second Ten: 11 Moddletown
up 16 first place votes out of a 44 . 12 Springfield North 38, 13
possible 32 and totaling 266 Canton Lincoln 30 ; 14 Lorain
Admoral Kong and Cinclnnato
points.
Purcell 28 each, 16. Barberton
Runnerup Celma, which 26:
17 Akron Cenlrai-Hower
moved up one place from last II I 22. Toledo Central Cathol ic
week, had four first place votes ( 1) 15, 19 Warren Howland
North 12 each
and 219 points With its 11.0 and Columbus
CLASSAA
mark.
Team
Pornts
Columbus South (10-1 ) 1 Wellstvllle (121 (10 01 214
2.Col Ready(4)( ll ·ll
164
finished third with 193, 3.
Rosstord [3) (11·11
124
followed by Cleveland East 4 Can Lehman (1) (10-2) 121
Tech (11-1) with 167, Findlay 5. Soutll Point (3) 112-0) 120
113
(10-1) with 163 and Columbus 6 Lexington (2)110-0)
7 Steubenville C C (7-21 80
Walnut Ridge (9-1) with 160. 8 Granville (1) (9 1)
77
Walnut Ridge, last year's 9. (toe) Waverly (8-2 )
48
state champion, which had 9 Itiel Newton Falls (1) (9 0)
48
taken over the No. 2 position
Second Ten : 11 Big Walnut
last week, lost 65-63 to (1) 42 ; 12 Poland 41; 13.
Columbus North Friday night Middletown Madison 32. 14 ·
Loveland (21 28 ; 15. Bndgeport
and dropped all the way to 25
, 16. Huron 24 ; 17 Colonel
sixth in the hotly-contested Crawford 22. 18 Oak Harbor
race. The Scots' loss snapped 20 ; 19 Cleveland Holy Name
therr 34-game winning streak. and Youngstown North 18 each
Olhers w1th 10 or more
In Class AA , Wellsville, points . Bexley, Coal Grove,
which moved into the top spot Napoleon, Warren Kennedy,
only last week, stretched its Portsmouth West, Twtnsburg,
Joseph, Norwalk.
margin to 50 points over Fremont St.CLASS
A
run"erup Columbus Ready this Team
Potnls
1 Indian Valley So (7) (9 O)
weeil, 214-164.
.
223
Lehman Drops Again
2 Maroon Pleasant (7) (9·11
Following Wellsville · (10.0)
191
172
and Ready (11·1) in AA was 3 Strasburg (3) 110·01
Rossford (11-1) with t24 points, 4. Col Statton (4) 111-0) 122
5 Licking Hts 121 (8·1I
102
Canton Lehman (10-2) with 121, 6. Hardon !Ito' (1) (9-0)
82
South Point ( I~) with 120 and 7. Lowellvollel11 19 0)
70
9,
Sebnng
II
1)
60
Lexington (10.0) with 113.
Lor Clearvoew (1) 19-11 56
Lehman, the No . 1 AA team 10.Second
Ten: 11 Lorain
Catholic (1) 53; 12. Ridgedale
51. 13. Alexander (2) 49; 14.
won by forfeit.
Garaway 44, 15 Bettsvtlle, 39;
Unlimited class, Bernard 16 Maplewood and Ross
South pinned Jon Grueser (M) Southeastern, all 20
Others woth 10 or more
(().2) .
points New Boston, Lakeland,
Win : 6 pts; Decision 3 pts; Yellow Springs (1). Newton
Draw 2 pts each.
(1), Richmond Heights, North

"FI RESTON~
Your Best

BATTERY

BUY

Gophers

Spotless

Toronto at Montreal

Regular Gas

•

beaded by Dave Dronzek with

Wednesday's Games

Give Us A Try!

•
•

R·esults

Uno on IKy ) 85 Ky St 73

•

•

SLEEPING PIL~•·

lliE OFFICERS OF MEIGS AERIE 2171

By Upited Press lnlemalional
The last time Cleveland State
beat Youngstown State in basketball was during the Great
Depression of the 19:W's.
Cleveland, then named Fenn
College, beat the Penguins in
1936 10 what must have been
quite a defensive bout, 23-23.
That was the last Cleveland
win to date.
Tuesday mght Youngstown,
rated 17th among small college
teams in the country, got past
the Vikings 86-69 for the 12th
win this season 10 13 outings.
Blll McMeans sparked
Youngstown with 22 points and
Bill Johnson added 21 for the
win. Cleveland, now ~.a. was

(No games scheduled)

l

.

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SAVE $50 p~r set on queen size.
SAVE $80 pe~ ~et on :ing size.

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A meeting will be held
Thursday, January 20, 1972, at
7:30 p.m. Purpose of meeting
is to start a. Women's Club.
Everyone is eligible to belong
who has a relative . in good
Eagle standing or a widow of a
deceased member. Food and
refreshments will be served.

a'

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Healthy Sleeptng
Surface

Pet. GB
20 25 4'4
17 30 362 4
15 31 326 5'12
14 31 .311 6

W. L. ·

Baltimore
Atlanta
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for Extra Ftrmness

26 19 .578 4112
20 28 .417 12
13 Jt 297 17

CentraL OIYISIOR

..
Coil-Guard~ Support

(~ollege

.Penguins. Top· Vikings 80-69

Atlanttc Dtvtston '
W l Pet. GB
Boston
32 \6 .1Jb7 ,

•
Scle ntlfi call y
Destgned Matchtng
Foundatron wi!h
Super Firm
Support Cotls

.

Eastern Conference-

NEW YORK (UP!) -Sandy those five seasons he compiled
Koufax, the most dominant a record of 111-34.
pitcher In baseball !tom 19632 In three of those seasons he
66, seeks to beat tremendous struck out .. over 300 batters,
odds today when he tries to setting a major league record
; become only the fifth player in of 382 strikeouts tn 1965, and
~ baseball hjstory to be elected to during that span he also pitthe Hall of Fame in his first ched a record four no-bitters.
•: year of eligibility.
Three times he was selected as
•
In tbe 36 years of voting for the Cy Young Award winner
••• Hall of Fame membership only and inJ963 he also was chosen
: Ted Williams, Bob Feller, as the NL's most valuable
, Jackie Robinson and Stan player.
: MpaUII 'we.re , named tO 1the
Beat Clutch Hitter
coveted shrirle ' in their first
Uwinning an MVP is a major
• ' · yea~ of eligibility. Under criteria-for election then Berra
:': current rules a player must should be a shoo-in. Yogi won
: have been retired from active three of them, in 1951-M.SS and
:. play for five years.
was a key figure in the
:
Koufax, who .Pitched 12 Yiin\tees winning 14 pennants
seasons for the Brooklyn and from 1947~2. Berra, regarded
: Los Angeles Dodgers befor.e an as one of the best clutch hitters
• arthritic elbow forced him to the game ever produced, hit
reUre in 1966 at the young age 358 career homers, a record for
' ol31, is one of four players who catchers, and compiled a .285
stand an excellent chance of - balling average. He holds 10
• being voted into \he Hall of World Series records among
: Fame today by the Baseball his list of achievements.
• Writers Association of
Kiner was the most feared
•• America.
home run hitter in the NL
••
The other three are Yogi during his seven seasons with
: Berra, a standout catcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates from
: the New York Yankees for 18 1946-62. He led or tied for the
: seasons; Ralph Kiner, one of · league lead in homers in each
: the game's most feared slug- of those seasons and on two
: gers from 1946-52; and Early occaslons -In 1947 and 1949 : Wynn, baseball's last 300-game cracked more than 50 homers.
• wlnne~. Berra, Wynn ·and
Wynn's career spanned four
: Kiner just barely missed out on decades from 1939 to 1963 and
: memlx!!'ahip in last year's during that Ume he compiled a
record of 300 victories and 244
: balloting.
:
The argument for Koufax is losses. The burly righthander
: that during the years he was at won 20 or more games in five
• his peak few pitchers ever seasons and he is one of only 14
: dominated the game so com' pitchers in baseball history to
' pletely, He led the National have reached the 300-victory
• League in earned run average circle. His 23 seasons as ' a
• for five straight seasons !tom pitcher also is a major league
; 1962-66 with marks of 2.54, 1.88, record.
• 1.74, 2.04 and 1.73 and during

.. -Rest· Suprem~

5

NBA Stondings

Vancouver

•

Trade it
Bemco

Pro Standings

Koufax Has Good
Chance For Fame Today

•

,

oftA Q32
Both vulnerab lE'
West N01 th
r~'i•
Suulh

Dear Furious:
What's "depraved" for the gander is "depraved " for the
goose. If you disapprove of oghng, why suggest that the wife ogle
too? Shame on you ' - H.
Dear Helen ·
'
Speaking of husbands who "look" but don't touch here's one
for Y?U : We we.nt to a party where there was somewhat
ovempe female 10 one of those crocheted fishnet type dresses
very open, very decollete. Sbe was defimte ly braless Everything
showed.
"
I asked my husband afterwards what he thought of her a nd
he said, ' ~Personally I prefer salmon in that kind of net " Do you
think he IS '
. I. Getting old?
2. A, good liar?
3. An avid fisherman ? - HAPPY WIFE
Dear Happy:
Let's setUe for Number 3, with a dash of Number 2 added
Or maybe the gal just &lt;!td' 't shape up to that kmd oi bait _

'

-

'

By Un1ted Presslnternat1onal

•

pop.,), P.O Box 489, Rodoo City

¥ K43

••

IJowUn..,

SOuth Contracts Job Out

.AK J
Dear Helen :
My husband uses as an excuse for not going out going on a
vacation, going ANYWHERE, tbe fact that we might' get robbed
and he points to all the news stories in tbe papers to prove 11 Thi~
has been going on for 25 years.
Well, after he said it at least 500 times, we fmally d1d get
robbed when we went away for a weekend.
So now he says, "I told you so!" I pomt out that we've been
away from home 500 times and got robbed once, which doesn't
exactly make him a prophet. But he won't budge from the house
from now on.
What can I do? - BETTING ON THE ODDS
Dear BOTO:
!our husband is like the hypochrondriac who had engraved
on hiS tombstond, "See -I TOW you l was sick!"
Why don't you buy him a burglar alarm system for his birthday? - H.
(Which reminds me of a story I did last year about my
burglar-conscious husband, Bob. Inasmuch as I'm still
rec;uperating from surgery (says the doctocJ, I'll print 11 10 the
Frid~y Column. After all, I owe Bob one for the article he
publiShed on "What is a Wife?" Which riled up Women's Lib1sts
considerably. - H.)
Dear Helen :
I have a great wife, but like lots of men 1 wondered what
freedom would belike. So we had an agreement. I'd move out for
SIX months, get my head back together, learn whether
bachelorhood was what I really wanted, while she'd stay at the
house with the kids.
Well, I learned you don't swmg that much as a bachelor It's
a lonely life, after bemg mamed to a wonderful girl and having
t(lose kids underfoot. Maybe they bothered me, but I sure missed
them.
I went back at the end of the fourth month .. To f10d my wife
had taken a JOb and was seeing another man regularly!
She says she thanks me a lot for giving HER lime to thmk _
that it really wasn't a very good marriage and she has decided
she and the kids cando better without me. In fact, s)le has started
divorce proceedings, so she can marry this other jerk. Says the
kids are crazy about him.
Helen, that wasn't in the agreement! What gets mto women
anyway, and how can I put some sense into her brainless head ?
-T. J .
Dear T:
Sorry, lelia, "You calls your shot · and you takes your
ch~ces. " I'd suggest you do the wine-dme, woo and roses
routine; heavy on the woo. Maybe she's only trying to teach you a
, lesson . - H.
Dear Helen:
. .How dare you stand up for the husba;d who likes to •ead
81flie-type magazines and go to topless bars! That kind of
depr~ved st~f isn't exactly the same as your metaphorical "not
wanting to ptck every flower he sees mthe park !"
Why didn't you tell her to get a bunch of male nude pictures
and start raving_ ~bout them, also to eye every good-iook10g man
~~~walks down the street. That would fiX him! - FURIOUS AT

i·1

1

r---------------------------~

!Helen Help Us!

J:

0,

:02 Left

.1, •

Jack's Story Exciting Nation
planned congressiOnal mvestigation of the problem.
For Anderson, publication of
the documents and the ensu10g
publicity, is a culmination of
two years and three months of
hard work, patience and
muckraking s10ce the death of
his mentor, Drew Pearson.
One Jnfiuenlial Column
The column which he inherited IS regarded as one of the
most mfluential m the country,
used by more than 700
newspapers.
He says he approaches the
trnduction of his column •'with
a sense of outrage, because
public office is a public trust."
He -and Pearson before him
-have survived by po10ting
out the foibles and missteps of
public officials. They have had
their share of libel suits along
the way.
"We carry a big stick," he
lldds.
Anderson said he would be
willing to appear before congressional committees investigating the leak of the documents to him, although he

19~

9

Certified Gas ·Stations
992-9981
538 W. Maon
Pomeroy, 0 .
We Honor BankAmericard and Master Cttarqe

Grab Big:

,.

Ten Lead

Ohio High School
Basketball Scores
Un1ted Press lnlornahonal
Weorlon, W. Va Madonna 75
Toronto67
Troadeiphla, w. Va . 58
Martins Ferry 54
Marletta 69
Parkersbu rg. W Va 60

Gallia, Anna , New Knoxville,
Zanesville Rosecrans, Ottawa

Hills (11 , Fort Recovery,
Con tinental (1), Columbus
Grove, Nurth Central. Ml
Pleasant, Mansfie ld Sl
Peter 's , Eastern Me1gs,
Monroevolle, Kirtland. Collons
Western Reserve ( 11. Unloto
and Rittman

By United Press International
The musical chairs race in
the Big Ten now finds Min·
nesota on top.
The Gophers surged into the
conference lelld Tuesday mght
as sophomore Keith Young,
who has averaged only 6.4
points per game, hit a careerhigh 27 as Minnesota downed
Wiscons10, 65-59. Ron Behagen
added 17 points for the 18thranked Gophers, the only rated
team in action Tuesday night.
Elsewhere, Mark Sibley's six
straight po10ts in overtime
helped Northwestern beat Mi·
chlgan State, 7H9, and hreak a
seven-game ~osing streak and
Harry Rogers hit 21 points in
St. Louis' 64-59 victory over
Bradley.Uje triumph was the
300th for coach Bob Polk.
Bill Ligon scored 16 points to
lead Vanderbilt to a 101-80 rout
of Cornell and Larry Finch's 28
points carried Memphis State
to an 81-70 victory over Drake.
Bill Raynor scored 35 points
to lead Dartmouth to a 94-86
victory over Harvard and
Tracy Tr1pucka erupted for 29
points to lift Lafayette to an 8783 upset of West Virginia.

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MIDDLEPORT, 0•.

�4 -The DailY, Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 19,1972

Letters of
Opinion

.

'

.·,

.

~

',

Folk

Singer~Guitarist
·

. .
The second offermg of the
.
,
. .
. Tn-County Community Con- .
cert Assoc1atwnshould prov1de
a delightful afternoon of en' ·
· all ages.
· Flk
tertamment
~9r
o.
smger-guotanst !.ngus Godwm
wo·11 present a concert at 3 p. m.
Sunday at the Gallia Academy
High School auditorium.
God · •
· · th
.
A
ngus
won s mus1c 1s e

.' '
·
·
classical training, his deepest
prOduct of a .nch ~nd colorful 11. 't "·J
t lk. must·c 8
k
rid · ~·-" " .
" 1m y.,., ongs o1o
,
bac grou . .s""'"""'· m grass natural result of his .varied
roots experience and scholarly h .Ia H'
. nces u a
training . A. native of North etrtl ge. d 'tosbaexpenefl'eld hand
Ca
coNortli
onanCaro!iruiceo
. ro.1·ma, ofScttih
o s • Eng l''.sh• in
and Virginia
Fr.ench and Cherokee Ind1an .
k' ·
·1r d labor
· a gra dua teo1 th e· w,or mg hon a rao
descen t• he os
. k' oa . the
JuiJiiardSchoolofMusicwhere c:~·or"v:'~· P~ mg ~"other
he spe9t four years on a s .del ·das mg " · aunpat'lons
h 1 h'
wo e y 1verse occ
scD::r~tt
have led him to the field of folk
P
his extensive music and folklor.e.
- ....,-- -- - - - -- - - - - - -....,--:-Thus he .has arrived on the
concert stage with a wide
DAUGHTER BORN
IN COLUMBUS
RACINEc..~ · Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Dorothy Johnston was repertoire of Appalachian and
Roger Manuel of Racine are in Col\unbus last week to at- contemporary American
announcing the birth of their tend the winter conference of songs, spirituals, the music of
first child, a daughter, Angela the Board of Elections. She Jacques tlrel, Rod McKuen,
Michelle, at Holzer Medical also visited over the weekend and folk songs in French,
Center Jan. 12, weighing 51bs., with Mr. and Mrs. Will German, Russian , Spanish and
12 oz. Malernal grandparents H~llerman and family of Hebrew.
Some of his more familiar
are Mr. ·and Mrs'. Lester Columbus.
songs are "Guantanamera",
Roush; _great-grandparents
are Mrs. Edna Roush, Racine,
Michel LeGrand's "Windmills
and Mrs. Lillian Duffy, of
of
Your Mind," Paul Me·
TWO FINED '
Syracuse; paternal grandRUTLAND - Two defen· Cartney's "Let It Be", "Gentle
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Max dants were fined Monday night on My Mind;" Kurt Wei1l's
Manuel Jr.; great • grand· in Rutland Mayor Eugene. "Lost in the Stars," Simon and
. P&lt;!rents are Mr. and Mrs. Tho~~son ' s court. Richard · Garfunkle's "Bridge Over
Douglas Johnson, Sr. of Racine Lewos, Patriot, was fined $5 Troubled Waters"
and
and Max Manuel, Sr. Mr. and and costs, defective exhausts; ''Piai.Sii' d'Amour.''
Mrs. Manuel and new baby are Edward Reese, Cheshire ,
While serving . in the U. S.
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Lester $11 .50 and costs; excessive Army in Japan·, Godwin
Roush for a few days.
directed several choirs, toured
speed. )...
with Army shows, sang with a

.

.~

Letten ill oplnloa are welcomed. They sbould be less·
~ lllaa 300 words loag (or be subject to reductl1111 by the editor)
and llnlli be signed wllb lbe signee's address. Names may
tJi'Wllbheld upon publlcaUOD, however, oo request; Leltera
· ~ .-bould be in good taste, addressing Issues, not penonaUiies • .

I
..

Contrary to Scripture! ·
Pomeroy, Ohio
Jan.l4, 1972

•.

Dear Sirs:
With all the talk about boys and men with long hair, it tells us
in God's Word in 1Corinthians 11 : 14, if a man has long hair it is a
shame unto him.
I have belonged to churches over 50 years, and you cannot
tell a boy from a girl. Some boys don't have enough money to get
it cut, but that is no excuse, someone should offer to take him to
the barber as they do look dirty and foolish.
.
Name withheld on request.
P.S. : We raised two sons and three daughters.
Syracuse, Ohio
Jan . 16, 1972
Dear Mr. Editor:
I'm Writing in regard to the hair bit , not only at Meigs, but at
Southern too, which is just as bad.
What has hair length have to do with a person's mind? All
that rounts is the person's personality not his looks.
Some people have said that long hair interferes with other
persons•·thinking. Well, girls have long hair, so why don 't they
have to get theirs cut? Thls msy seem dumb, but it only shows
how dumb making the boys get theirs cut is.
If the boys want to have long hair, LET THEM! It's their
hair, and they're living in a Ire~ rountry (or are they? ). Besides,
they want to do their own thing . How would you, the parents or
teachers,like to be told how to dress or how to wear your hair. I
have an idea ii wouldn't go over too great.
Well, what makes you think the kids are so different?.
That is the main reason why kids quit school and don't go on
to college . I personally know of five kids who quit because of their
hair.
So come on people, WAKE UP! And let the hair grow .
An interested S.H.S. student.
(Name withheld on request ).

One Evil Worse Than

ANGUS GODWIN
Folk Singer-Guitarist

Half-way Houses for Rthtaway
Teenagers May Ease Problem
By BRUCE STEVENSON
PROVIDENCE, R . I.
(UP!)- A recent ad in Rhode
Island newspapers staling
"Donna Jean - Please come
home, everything will be fine.
We love you, Mom and Dad,"
points out a growing problem
in Rhode Island and other
slates- the .problem of the
runaway teenager.
The situation here is getting
some attention through the
efforts of a Warwick school
official and a state legislator.
Sen . Thomas N. Wilson, DWarwick, said, " The serious-

Another Says Anderson

Fr:Qm .Varied ·Heritage

home.
Solution Sought
The attention being given to
the runaway probfem is mainly
through the efforts of Mrs.
Dorothy Mayor, supervisor of
the Warwick school department's health and family life
prog~am. Mrs. Mayor says a
statewide central agency is
needed to help these teenagers. "Putting them in the
state's training schools is not
the answer because the 'youths
come out worse than when they
went in and also they are not
criminals.' '
Mrs. Mayor said she came up
with the idea of halfway houses
for the runaways primarily to
get them off the streets until a
solution could be worked out
with the youths and their
parents.
. •
. ,
She said it is easier for boys
to Jive on their own than it is for
girls. • She said many of the
runaway girls go to the cities
and become prostitutes just to
get a place to stay for the night.

return home, but stayed away
through fear of what might
happen when they go back to
their parents or those who stay
away through a false sense of
pride.
Teen·Agers' Fears
It would also be for1he teenager who cannot return home,
she said.
Mrs. Mayor said " some
children run away because
they are constantly beaten by
their parents and in many
cases girls leave because they

•

Japanese dance band, ta11ght
courses , in ~n•lish Con·
.
~·
.
versation, and late~ · m~c 11t , ·
the Horace Mann and .Rhodes ' .
Schools in New York City.
Some · ,of his appearanco:s
have included New York's
. . Julius Monk's
Town· Hall
"Piaza 'a R~vue" at the Plaza
· Hotel in New York, the
..
"T~day" . . Show,
.Yale
Umversity, the Bitter End. ln
New York; the She,!'I~um Holll!ll
in C\"cago, Woodstock, N .. Y.,
and In colleges throughout thll
.country . .
Fluent in nine languages, the
.versatile Mr. GOdwin perfo1'1118
Broadway show tunes as well
and bas
featured on
national radio and television.

YOu haven't seen ptices
·~

Lovely Long Lasting

cur UP·
.

From '3.00
Dudley's Florist ~

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ness of the problem is more
than just the heartache it
CLEVELAND (UP! )- Wash- kinds of blunders and indiscret- causes many parents. It aIS() is
ingtoncolumoistJackAnderson tions and misrepresentations.
a serious problem in society
who recently published classibecause it often results in
"Then when some of these get adding to the growing problem
(ied government papers on the
India - Pakistan war, Monday published the government among teen-agers of venera!
m:oo·l&gt;own,
sai&amp;somemay be "apPalled" at launches an investigation," An- diseases, illegitimate. children
'Salan~e
On
derson
said.
"The
investigators
!'"&amp;eeinr government secrets on
prositution, drug abuse, auto
Convenient
the front page of a newspap;er· seldom get to the reporter and theft and shoplifting."
Terms.
not
intended
to.
They
are
are
"but it is better that way than
Wilson, chairman of the
to have the government tell us intende'd to intimidate the Rhode Island :&gt;enate Comsources."
what to print."
mittee on Health, Education
Anderson, in a luncheon ad· . "No responsible reporter or and Welfare, says he plans to
Mrs. Mayor said a halfway
dress at the City Club Forum, paper is going to reveal any- intrOduce legislation to provide house
would serve two purpothing
that
will
risk
the
nationsaid thegovernmentcannotcenfor halfway houses for teen- ses. It would act as•a mediator 1.' Ma·s on. W.Va.
sor news, "so it classifies all al security ," he added.
agers who run away from with children who wanted to '1 .----- - : - - -- - - - ----__:·.:.·...:J•
I

like tlleae., ifl.l years

,,~,

.

THIS SPECIAL .
AT
HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

are molested by their fathers."
She said S()me parents don't
want them to return because
they are on drugs or something ·
and considered a bad influence
on other children in the
household. These children cannot be returned to their homes,
she said.
In these cases, according to
Mrs. Mayor, the halfway
houses would be places for the
teen-ager to live while they
receive S()me kind of training
to sujlport themselves.

.

-

\

REG.

· 95'

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&gt;&lt;

�4 -The DailY, Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 19,1972

Letters of
Opinion

.

'

.·,

.

~

',

Folk

Singer~Guitarist
·

. .
The second offermg of the
.
,
. .
. Tn-County Community Con- .
cert Assoc1atwnshould prov1de
a delightful afternoon of en' ·
· all ages.
· Flk
tertamment
~9r
o.
smger-guotanst !.ngus Godwm
wo·11 present a concert at 3 p. m.
Sunday at the Gallia Academy
High School auditorium.
God · •
· · th
.
A
ngus
won s mus1c 1s e

.' '
·
·
classical training, his deepest
prOduct of a .nch ~nd colorful 11. 't "·J
t lk. must·c 8
k
rid · ~·-" " .
" 1m y.,., ongs o1o
,
bac grou . .s""'"""'· m grass natural result of his .varied
roots experience and scholarly h .Ia H'
. nces u a
training . A. native of North etrtl ge. d 'tosbaexpenefl'eld hand
Ca
coNortli
onanCaro!iruiceo
. ro.1·ma, ofScttih
o s • Eng l''.sh• in
and Virginia
Fr.ench and Cherokee Ind1an .
k' ·
·1r d labor
· a gra dua teo1 th e· w,or mg hon a rao
descen t• he os
. k' oa . the
JuiJiiardSchoolofMusicwhere c:~·or"v:'~· P~ mg ~"other
he spe9t four years on a s .del ·das mg " · aunpat'lons
h 1 h'
wo e y 1verse occ
scD::r~tt
have led him to the field of folk
P
his extensive music and folklor.e.
- ....,-- -- - - - -- - - - - - -....,--:-Thus he .has arrived on the
concert stage with a wide
DAUGHTER BORN
IN COLUMBUS
RACINEc..~ · Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Dorothy Johnston was repertoire of Appalachian and
Roger Manuel of Racine are in Col\unbus last week to at- contemporary American
announcing the birth of their tend the winter conference of songs, spirituals, the music of
first child, a daughter, Angela the Board of Elections. She Jacques tlrel, Rod McKuen,
Michelle, at Holzer Medical also visited over the weekend and folk songs in French,
Center Jan. 12, weighing 51bs., with Mr. and Mrs. Will German, Russian , Spanish and
12 oz. Malernal grandparents H~llerman and family of Hebrew.
Some of his more familiar
are Mr. ·and Mrs'. Lester Columbus.
songs are "Guantanamera",
Roush; _great-grandparents
are Mrs. Edna Roush, Racine,
Michel LeGrand's "Windmills
and Mrs. Lillian Duffy, of
of
Your Mind," Paul Me·
TWO FINED '
Syracuse; paternal grandRUTLAND - Two defen· Cartney's "Let It Be", "Gentle
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Max dants were fined Monday night on My Mind;" Kurt Wei1l's
Manuel Jr.; great • grand· in Rutland Mayor Eugene. "Lost in the Stars," Simon and
. P&lt;!rents are Mr. and Mrs. Tho~~son ' s court. Richard · Garfunkle's "Bridge Over
Douglas Johnson, Sr. of Racine Lewos, Patriot, was fined $5 Troubled Waters"
and
and Max Manuel, Sr. Mr. and and costs, defective exhausts; ''Piai.Sii' d'Amour.''
Mrs. Manuel and new baby are Edward Reese, Cheshire ,
While serving . in the U. S.
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Lester $11 .50 and costs; excessive Army in Japan·, Godwin
Roush for a few days.
directed several choirs, toured
speed. )...
with Army shows, sang with a

.

.~

Letten ill oplnloa are welcomed. They sbould be less·
~ lllaa 300 words loag (or be subject to reductl1111 by the editor)
and llnlli be signed wllb lbe signee's address. Names may
tJi'Wllbheld upon publlcaUOD, however, oo request; Leltera
· ~ .-bould be in good taste, addressing Issues, not penonaUiies • .

I
..

Contrary to Scripture! ·
Pomeroy, Ohio
Jan.l4, 1972

•.

Dear Sirs:
With all the talk about boys and men with long hair, it tells us
in God's Word in 1Corinthians 11 : 14, if a man has long hair it is a
shame unto him.
I have belonged to churches over 50 years, and you cannot
tell a boy from a girl. Some boys don't have enough money to get
it cut, but that is no excuse, someone should offer to take him to
the barber as they do look dirty and foolish.
.
Name withheld on request.
P.S. : We raised two sons and three daughters.
Syracuse, Ohio
Jan . 16, 1972
Dear Mr. Editor:
I'm Writing in regard to the hair bit , not only at Meigs, but at
Southern too, which is just as bad.
What has hair length have to do with a person's mind? All
that rounts is the person's personality not his looks.
Some people have said that long hair interferes with other
persons•·thinking. Well, girls have long hair, so why don 't they
have to get theirs cut? Thls msy seem dumb, but it only shows
how dumb making the boys get theirs cut is.
If the boys want to have long hair, LET THEM! It's their
hair, and they're living in a Ire~ rountry (or are they? ). Besides,
they want to do their own thing . How would you, the parents or
teachers,like to be told how to dress or how to wear your hair. I
have an idea ii wouldn't go over too great.
Well, what makes you think the kids are so different?.
That is the main reason why kids quit school and don't go on
to college . I personally know of five kids who quit because of their
hair.
So come on people, WAKE UP! And let the hair grow .
An interested S.H.S. student.
(Name withheld on request ).

One Evil Worse Than

ANGUS GODWIN
Folk Singer-Guitarist

Half-way Houses for Rthtaway
Teenagers May Ease Problem
By BRUCE STEVENSON
PROVIDENCE, R . I.
(UP!)- A recent ad in Rhode
Island newspapers staling
"Donna Jean - Please come
home, everything will be fine.
We love you, Mom and Dad,"
points out a growing problem
in Rhode Island and other
slates- the .problem of the
runaway teenager.
The situation here is getting
some attention through the
efforts of a Warwick school
official and a state legislator.
Sen . Thomas N. Wilson, DWarwick, said, " The serious-

Another Says Anderson

Fr:Qm .Varied ·Heritage

home.
Solution Sought
The attention being given to
the runaway probfem is mainly
through the efforts of Mrs.
Dorothy Mayor, supervisor of
the Warwick school department's health and family life
prog~am. Mrs. Mayor says a
statewide central agency is
needed to help these teenagers. "Putting them in the
state's training schools is not
the answer because the 'youths
come out worse than when they
went in and also they are not
criminals.' '
Mrs. Mayor said she came up
with the idea of halfway houses
for the runaways primarily to
get them off the streets until a
solution could be worked out
with the youths and their
parents.
. •
. ,
She said it is easier for boys
to Jive on their own than it is for
girls. • She said many of the
runaway girls go to the cities
and become prostitutes just to
get a place to stay for the night.

return home, but stayed away
through fear of what might
happen when they go back to
their parents or those who stay
away through a false sense of
pride.
Teen·Agers' Fears
It would also be for1he teenager who cannot return home,
she said.
Mrs. Mayor said " some
children run away because
they are constantly beaten by
their parents and in many
cases girls leave because they

•

Japanese dance band, ta11ght
courses , in ~n•lish Con·
.
~·
.
versation, and late~ · m~c 11t , ·
the Horace Mann and .Rhodes ' .
Schools in New York City.
Some · ,of his appearanco:s
have included New York's
. . Julius Monk's
Town· Hall
"Piaza 'a R~vue" at the Plaza
· Hotel in New York, the
..
"T~day" . . Show,
.Yale
Umversity, the Bitter End. ln
New York; the She,!'I~um Holll!ll
in C\"cago, Woodstock, N .. Y.,
and In colleges throughout thll
.country . .
Fluent in nine languages, the
.versatile Mr. GOdwin perfo1'1118
Broadway show tunes as well
and bas
featured on
national radio and television.

YOu haven't seen ptices
·~

Lovely Long Lasting

cur UP·
.

From '3.00
Dudley's Florist ~

cLB.

FRYERS---------~

Serving: Middleport,

Pomeroy. ·Gallipolis, 0.
&amp; Mason Co., W, Va.

.

.

"Let's Go See • • •
BEEF ·
&amp; PORK

KAHN'S. POPU(AR

SLICED
BACON -

FRESH
DRESSED
WHOLE ,

2

·1 .
pkgs.

'

EAGLE

12 oz. 39~

.

PRID~ WIENERS·-------·P"'
.

FRYERS

.....,

~

IUOCIT ,., CH

'' arsr •acrN
.4 '"' h . Plrcrs
lls
4W

4 Breasts

•

(Mouldings &amp; Adhesive$'"'! _.ble)
,:..,.'(IIJ
\"1

l. ,,

~

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO•

;\

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart,

PORK
'STEAK

'

'

s 19

OUR HOME MADE

PORK SAUSAGE

BY BETSY ROSS

I

I
I

'

.SLICED
JO.WL BACON••.....

•

AU~TIN LEMON

.

.

3 ~ oz. 39~

.

D1sh Detergent. ••••••••••• ~·.
BE~F AN~ PORK

· lO% oz.

.

59~

V1.ett1 Barbecue...........c~~. ·
STEELE'S BRAND

3
·

·.

'

.No. 2 %89~

.cans

rI

EXPIRES 1113/12

.BEllY
CROCKER

CAKE
MIXES

.3 19boxes
ot

PIES
REG.

sr

Bananas ... --~~~ o~
_Pears ...-.. .:a~Io~
Cabbage.-~:1 o~

'

·CHOC.

--~~~---

,. Stokelys

, I.G.A.

SALTINE
CRACKERS

VIVA

' TOWELS.
_,

Large Roll

lib. box
'

-·-,

29~

'

3

b

'

$1'00

CORN

'

Cream or
/

Whole Kernel

5

16 OZ.
·cans

$100

QUARr . 29~

'

only at

-

Cut Rite
WAX
f

tlbE

.ER

$ 29

27~

box

••••••••••• ••••••

.

WITH nilS COUPON

RACINE FOOD MARKET

Expires. J;Z&amp;-72

FAMILY
..·\. SIZE

p~~~D · IN BASK£1:;. f

32 oz.
King Size

MILK

,,

' ...

LIQU~D

FAIRMONT

cans

cans

DAIRY FEATURE!

10" Produce Buys!

.00

,~

29oz.

I

..

M&amp;R FOODLINER
.

I

I

1 COUPON PER PERSON

' 100

lb.
for

.

12 lb. and Iinder

JELL0.--~-.2 a: 39~ .~~ II

303
cans

_CUT YAMS ............. ·

Our Own Particular Recipe •• • •••• •••••••

'Jet1Jfil:1fi

.LARGE.SIZE .

'

PEARS................... ·3 $1

••••t

iin11•1•• COUPON •

STOKELY BRAND

SLICED BACON
OHIO
VALLEY
lb.69~

lb.

Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00

CLOSED SUNDAYS

$1

2~
$1
3
CATSUP••••••••••••••••••

)

'

TURKEY

STOKELY BRAND

Prices Effective Jan. 19-26

Saturday 9 to 9

cans

'

FABRIC SOFTENER ••••••~~. 69~

Right reserved to limit quantities

We Gladly
Accept Fed. Food Stamps .
.

45oz.

.OSAGE
PEACHES

FROZEN

BIG VALUE

You, WE LIKE"

,,

1

LB.

lb.

·poTJED MEAT••••••••·•••

4Leg.

MASON

MARGARINE
.

,..,.

3-

We Deliver

773·5554

·

'

Royal Scot (Hb•.Solids)

LEAN &amp;TENDER SLICED

·~

&gt;

•
For bathrooms, showers, utility 1001!15, etc.

ARMOUR

.I

To

Cheer The Sick

•

MASON
·.·fURNITURE

.

· Foliage Gardens

4x8
SHEET

••

'

!·

CHICKEN ,L£GS
CH.ICKEN

bee"

STYLEBOARD

3 ROOMS
NEW·
FURNITURE
S349.95

. i,

j

GOLD LACE

ness of the problem is more
than just the heartache it
CLEVELAND (UP! )- Wash- kinds of blunders and indiscret- causes many parents. It aIS() is
ingtoncolumoistJackAnderson tions and misrepresentations.
a serious problem in society
who recently published classibecause it often results in
"Then when some of these get adding to the growing problem
(ied government papers on the
India - Pakistan war, Monday published the government among teen-agers of venera!
m:oo·l&gt;own,
sai&amp;somemay be "apPalled" at launches an investigation," An- diseases, illegitimate. children
'Salan~e
On
derson
said.
"The
investigators
!'"&amp;eeinr government secrets on
prositution, drug abuse, auto
Convenient
the front page of a newspap;er· seldom get to the reporter and theft and shoplifting."
Terms.
not
intended
to.
They
are
are
"but it is better that way than
Wilson, chairman of the
to have the government tell us intende'd to intimidate the Rhode Island :&gt;enate Comsources."
what to print."
mittee on Health, Education
Anderson, in a luncheon ad· . "No responsible reporter or and Welfare, says he plans to
Mrs. Mayor said a halfway
dress at the City Club Forum, paper is going to reveal any- intrOduce legislation to provide house
would serve two purpothing
that
will
risk
the
nationsaid thegovernmentcannotcenfor halfway houses for teen- ses. It would act as•a mediator 1.' Ma·s on. W.Va.
sor news, "so it classifies all al security ," he added.
agers who run away from with children who wanted to '1 .----- - : - - -- - - - ----__:·.:.·...:J•
I

like tlleae., ifl.l years

,,~,

.

THIS SPECIAL .
AT
HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

are molested by their fathers."
She said S()me parents don't
want them to return because
they are on drugs or something ·
and considered a bad influence
on other children in the
household. These children cannot be returned to their homes,
she said.
In these cases, according to
Mrs. Mayor, the halfway
houses would be places for the
teen-ager to live while they
receive S()me kind of training
to sujlport themselves.

.

-

\

REG.

· 95'

.
~~------------~---------------1·----~--~---------------------------------------------------------------------------

•

&gt;&lt;

�..

•.

e-:: Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-PomeroY· 0 ., Jan.l9,1972
·.

Fun With Food

~

.

'

plans·were discussed for Heart members to attend her capping
The Equal Rights A\Jlend- )l;lign to the President as well United States, whether she Sunda'y sollcta lion in Mid- ai· Grace Methodist Church,
'l"orks .cir stays at home."
as the !;enators.
You who missed the Appalachia Culture program sponsored ment and the Equal Em·"The amendment affects · dleport. Mrs. Wilma Sargent is Gallipolis, Jan. 21, at 8 p. m.
ployment Opportunitie~ 1 Enby the Meigs County Extension Homemakers' CooncU last week
Mrs: Pratt ~lso rea!! a letter your right to schooling, to · a chairman anci asked lor ·Miss Wood attends the Holzer
fo rceme nt Act, the 1 Immissed a rare treat in not meeting Edelene Wood who is koown plications of passage or fa,ilqre, from Congresswoman Martha livelihood, to your family volunteers tQ assist in can- School of Nursing·· under
sponsorship of the club.
throughout the mountain state lor her fabulous· "wild" parties. and what can ~ (\one to W. Griffiths, 17th · District, inheritance, and even your vassing the town.
'
.
.Presented. at the meeting
Miss Wood teaches wild plant indentiflcstion for the adult
promote passage,
was Michigan, advising thai the drivers' license," said Miss
.Mrs~Pratt reported that an '· wa~ ale~ from Opal Berry,
education section of the Wood Counly School System and to discussed Mon~y night at a Equal Rights Amencjment will Griffiths. Members of the local
conclude each of the sessions stages parties at her Parkersburg meeting of the Middleport ~o before the Senate by club ·will direct letters · to equipment of the hospital loan MeJgs H~gh School student,
home where only wild foods are served. She provided us with a Business and Professional February and urging that President Nixon and 1Q Senator center maintained by the club asking the club to sponsor her
1s in use. The club endorses training at the Holzer Medical
Senators be telephoned, Saxbe of Ohio.
menu for one of the recent PIJrlies, and what can be done with Women's Club.
Also read was a letter from Elizabeth Yerian for district Center. The club annually
milk'l"eeds, acorns, poke stem •. and violet syrup is almost unMrs. Grace Pratt, president, telegraphed, or otherwise
governor, and Faye Thompson award$ a scholarship.
.
believablec
f
presented literature from the communica·ted with asking Mrs. Virginia Nickell, state for the district nominating
A
brochure
about
the
family
OPENING
Anyway, with these classes Miss Wood teaches, the ~m­ National Federation of . support of the bill. She said in BPW president, regarding committee. .
planning
clinic
was
read.
It
phasis is on coming up with a new way to serve something wild .. Business and Professional the letter that she could not legislation in the area of equal·
S}JECIALS
An ·invitation from Debbie . was noted that Mrs. Beulah
.
J!:xperimentipg is the key to flavor with wild plants, she says.
Women's Clubs, Inc:, urging a emphaslze too much that "it · rights for women.
During the business meeting Wood was read inviting Stra~ss is confined to the
· Now baCk to that recent wild party. There were 41 wild foods massiv~ letter writing cam- affects every woman In the
hospi~i. Mem~rs signed a
served at the dinner and each dish had been prepared in gourmet
get-well card for Mrs. June
style. Miss Wood assured us that to the uninitiated nothing there
Roush, a former member, who
would have held an unpleasant vision or odor. Incidentally, the
remainS a patient at University
oWner &amp; Operator
foods for the party were-prepared by students in the class.
Hospital.
'
Virginia Hayman
The menu, in part, consisted of wineberry punch, violet
A program on public affairs
Phone 667-3041 r
,
SYruP over Ice, cream of sorrel soup, cream of knotwood soup,
was presented by Mrs: Rose
Located: On Co. ROjld 46
Reynolds. She introduced Mrs.
squab with wild rice dressing, acorn mufflnil, Jerusalem ar(Success Road I, between St.
Rt .. 7 &amp; Chester Rolld 241. :
Beulah Jones who spoke on
tichoke sticks milkweed sprouts with mushrooms and almonds,
newspaper work . and the
poke greens, ~ew green maple seeds, rt'leQ pqke,' wild asparagus
WED~ESDAY
THURSDAY
' '··~
and mildweeks creamed, buttered burdock root, poke stem
WINDING TRAIL Garden
WOMEN OF Eastern
_....... .. .
salad, sorrell and fern salad, poke pickles, wUd rose jelly, can- Club; Wednesday, 7:3() p.m. at . Athletic Boosters meet at ~igh
died violets (see recipe below), sassafras tea, sarvlce berry tarts home of Mrs. Lloyd Moore. , school 8 p.m. Thursday to plan
Three
Meigs
County c~nference will be Robert
and candied ginger root.
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, for jitney supper to be staged American ·Legion Auxiliary Eickel of Elmore , Ohio's ·
It would seem that everyone should have some knowledge of
7:30 p.m. Pomeroy .Masonic at 5 p.m. on Fnday, Jan. 28, at units will tie among the six lh representative to the Freedom
wild plant identification and some basic concept of pre_paration.
Temple. Regular business school.
Disirict 8 to . receive mem- Foundation Seminar at Valley '
Who knows, it might be a matter of life and death someUme ...and
meeting followed by the conEXECUTIVE Board bership awards at the Forge, Pa.; and Dr. Nam Chin
!erring of the select master meeting, Pomeroy Elementary Department midwinter con- Cha, P. H., N., Ph D., founder
that's no joke.
For instance did you know that the dandelion is one of the degree in full . form. All com- PTA, I p.m. Thursday at the ference to be held in Columbus and director of the Korean
school.
most versatile of the wild foods and Is rich in food value. While pan ions urged to attend .
at the ·Neil House, Jan. 28 and Bible Mission, Inc. Both williMi
MIDDLEPORT
LITERARY
MIDDLEPORT
Child
you may not be inclined to tell your hungry child to "go eat a
speaking on the Saturday af29.
~
dandetion",itmight be good for hlm, if you haven't peppered the Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, home Conservation League, 7:30
The six in District 8 are a ternoon program.
Entire stock on
of Mrs .. 0. B. Stout. Mrs. p.m. Thursday, Columbus and part of the first 100 units in
The conference will convene
: i plant with a pesticide or a fertilizer.
s'
a le of our
: :·
Dandelion omelets, pancakes and greens for salad$ are just a DwlghtWallacetorevlew "The Southern Ohio Electric Co.; Ohio to reach the goal. They on Jan. 28 at 7:30 p.m. with
regular 3.98 to
4.49 values .
~ few of the uses aniUater we'D be giving you the recipes for this House on Jefferson Street" by skit entiUed "The Room Up- are Middleport 128, Racine 602, greetings from Mrs. Sloan.
Horace
Gregory.
Response,
a
stairs."
Each
member
to
give
wild plant provided us by Miss Wood.
Pomeroy 39, Vinton 161, Following that workshops will
favorite
poem.
a
nickel
for
each
year
in
CCL.
And now the recipe for preserving the violet Crooksville 222, and Lithopolis be held on Americanism,
PAST
PRESIDENTS,
Drew
ROCK
SPRINGS
Better·
CANDIED VIOLETS
677. According to Mrs. Charles children and youth, civil
Webster
Post
39, American Health Club, 1:15 p.m. Thurs1cup hot water, 2cups granulated sugar, About 4 cups fresh
Kessinger; District 8 now lacks defense, national security,
Leglon Auxiliary, 7:30 Wed- day home of · Mrs. George 117 members of being a goal community service, junior
stemmed violets washed and drained, but not bruised.
nesday night at the· home of , Skinner. Mrs. Gladys Morgan, .
district. As of Dec. 31, the activities, foreign relations,
Dissolve sugar thoroughly in hot water. Add flowers, set on
Mrs . George Hackett, Sr., program; Mrs . Amos Leonard,
d•slrict was in third place in and poppies.
medium flame and let syrup simmer until it reaches the soft ball Middleport.
contest.
At 9 p.m. a coffee and social
the state. ·
stage in cold water.
FRI.DAY
WILLING WORKERS Class,
hour
.will he hosted by the
The membership awards will
·Stir flowers gently with a wooden spoon. Remove from the Enterprise United Methodist
SOUP SUPPER, beginning
flame and continue to stir until the syrup begiriS,to granulate and Church, 7: 30 Thursday night, 4:30 p.m. Friday, Wesleyan be presented during the Friday distJ:ict presidents.
The session on Satu,rday will
United Methodist Church, afternoon skit when Mrs.
reaches the consistency of coarse meal. Empty over a wire rack home of Mrs. Eldon Weeks.
Donald Miller, chairman, in open at 9a.m. and following the
or colander and shake off the e:w:lra sugar. Cool, pack into jars
THIRD WEDNE$DA Y Racine, soup , sandwiches, II'&gt;\' role of the teacher, and the processionals Mrs. f!ertha
and seal. TheY will keep indefinitely.
Homemakers Club, Wed- coffee.
district presidents as her Parker, National American
Serve in little glass compotes or use them to decorate cakes, nesday, 10 a.m. at meeUng
SOUP SUPPER will be held students, carry out the Little Legion Auxiliary president,
· garnish fruit salads, or tea plates.
house on Syracuse Municipal beginning at 4:30 p.m. Friday Red School House theme of the will be pr&lt;Mnted and will
Park grounds. Potluck dinner at the Wesleyan United
speak to the assembly .
NOW, I DON'T KNOW about you, but pegonally I can hardly at qoon. All Interested Methodist Church in Racine. state president, Mrs. Raymond
Greetings at the afternoon
Sloan . At that time also ,
wait 'till violet time. Imagine this see~~~
homemakers invited.
Soup, sandwiches and coffee quarters will be presented by session will be extended by
PAST PRESIDICNTS, will be available.
Tired and frayed from an anything-f!l\t-lun day at the office,
goal units to Mrs. Sloan for a Mrs. Lester L. Nlmon, national
the man of the house eats a hearty ~in course. Then the American Legion Auxiliary,
chaplain; Mrs. Arthur Hrabak,
special project.
Inevitable question: "What's for desse~T"
Drew Webster Post, 7:3() p.m.
DANCE PARTY Friday, 9:30
Principal speakers at the central division national
"Candled violets," comes the reply in the most nonchalent Wednesday, home of Mrs. p.m. to midnight;' Wahama
security chairman; Mrs.
Melvin J)lnge, national vice
GROUP POLYESTER
manner she can muster.
Rhoda ~~::?DA~ddleport. High School sponsored by
chairman,
children
and
youth;
Silence....Then, pow!
CLASS 12, Heath Methodist sophomore class . followmg
COMPARE
Mrs. William M. Gill, national
She picks herself up off the floor
'Church 7:3() Thl!l'sdaY 11ight. '·•!!'~~~~ game. Jays em.
AT 5.98t , I'•.
Yd. · .
vic~ , .. chaiqn,aq
C9mt
,. , • • ceeh~ ··
Dessert smorgasbord followmg
· SUNDAY
munications; Mrs . Homer
Smith, Area D chairman for
to take
HYMN SING, Stiversville
J
TWIN CITY Shrine Club .Community Ch)!rch, 2 p.m.
Several lund raising projects National Girls' State ; Sue
. '
· Th d , 7. 30 P m at Sunday. Pastor Edsel' Hart werediscussedduringarecent Stroull, Department Junfor
Mrs. 0. A. Martin,
1... 1;..·..'/I
clu~~~::·ln ~cine. R.eiresh- extends invitation to public. me~ting of the Wome~·s president;
U::-Uf U
J
.
/Y
ments.
AUJollary of the Racine F1re Pomeroy, departmental
cHapeau, Eight and Forty; and
Department.
Charles Green, Commander,
RACINE - Open house was No~~''aod Iva Orr served
Objectiveoltheyearist.oget American Legion, Department
j
'J'
ZUUl
con~truction started on the of Ohio.
·~&gt; held Sunday, Jan. 9, from 2 to 4 coffee. Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman
SINGER SALES 8i SERVICE
~
(''! :•
· · ,.
add1hon t? the f1rehouse.
p.m . in honor of Mr. and Mra. registered the guests. .
McCALL'S
&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERNS
A reception honoring the
Others ass.lstinll wete Mrs.• lT' .1 •'tJ,
T?:•
Current officers were elected national president will be held
Herbert Roush, who were
V
for another year. A rummage
celebrating their 25th wedding Harriett Neigler: Mrs. Em\a. · ;J.
992-2284
115 'II· Second
Pomeroy,O.
Wilson,
Jeff
Miller
and
MrS.
and bake sale was planned for at 5:30 with a banquet In her
anniversary, by their son,
·honor at 7:15p.m. and a ball at
Tuppers
Plains School Feb. 4and 5 and res•dents With
Roger Roush .\ assisted by Janette Laurence.
Relatives
and
friends
who
The
concept
of
the
Middle
Boosters.
rum~age or baked goods to 9p.m.
Raymond Adams at the
contribute are asked to
Shriners Club House in Racine. sent card$, gifts and called to School was discussed by
Eddy spoke on the operation
or
The bride's table was congratulate the Roushes were Gordon Eddy, superintendent of the Middle School, tl&gt;· telephone 949-3421 ' 94&lt;.J293
•.
'
of
the
Warren
Local
Schools
at
992
7315
covered with a white lace cloth Mrs. Edna Roush, Mr. and
problems and successes, an d
A• vote• of thanks was ex ·
over white, centered with a Mrs. Marshall Adams, Mr. and a meetinR Monday night of the answered questions.
. . . .
•
three-tiered wedding cake, Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner, Mr.
James Stout, president, tend~ to. the mdiVIdua~ and
decorated with white roses, and Mrs . Floyd Norris, Mr. and Roy !luck.
conducted the business session orgamZjlbons contributing to
green leaves and silver bead$ Mrs. Robert Hill, Mr. and Mrs.
Also, Rev . and Mrs. opening with a reading "What the Chns!mas treat for
topped with a miniature bride Frlti .Buck, Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Glusencamp and Kind of Member Are You?". children of the co~unity a~d
~nd groom the Roushes had Robert Ashley and Heidi, Mrs.
Nicklti; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Robert Sanders Jed in the to Santa who distributed II.
used 25 years ago on their Ada Norris, Mrs. Mildred Roush of Portland ; Mrs . pledge
to
the
flag . Refres~ents were served by
wedding cake. It had silver Spencer, Mr ..and Mrs. Ralph MaymeHartenbach, Kent; Mr. Arrangements were made for Jdyce Sisson and Anna Mae
candle · holders with white D. Shain, Mr. and Mrs. Critt . and Mr¥. Ke11.~eth Wolfe, an ice cream treat for each of Obltz.
candles on each side.
Bradford Sr., Mr. ~nd Mrs. Rutland ; :Mr. 8fid Mrs. Robert the children on Valentine's
Roger Roush, assisted by Early R,oush, Mr. , nd Mr . Beegle, Dorcas; Miss Effie . Day.
Raymond
Adams
and Herbert L. Sayre, Mr. and f,{r
Pickens, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Mrs . Augusta Barnhart's TIIEFf REPORTED
3 most popular cabinet styles
Margaret Gloeckner, opened Randall Robtl'!s. children 11)Sargent, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald fifth grade won the room
TOLEDO (UP!) - Mrs. Marthe gifts and displayed them on Todd, !.kslle arid Chad; Mr . . Russel!, Middleport; Mr. and banner and the $3 award for garet Sheehan, 71, reacting to
ONLY
·, a table covered with a white and Mrs . Lester Roush, Mrs. Dana Lewis, Clifton, W. having the most parents in reports of bombs hidden in bank
lace cloth over white.
children, Vicki, Mike and Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Howard attendance . . Refreshments safe deposit boxes, withdrew
Presiding at the punch howl Johnnie, and Mr. and Mrs. Roush, Mansfield; · Mr. and were served by the fifth grade $55,000from her safedeposlt box
were Florence Adams and Larry O'Brien, children Linda Mrs. Chester Dlll'8t, Niles; Mr.- mothers, Mrs. Martha Durst, and kept it at home .
Nancy Russell. Serving _cake and Carol Ann.
and Mrs. Everette Parsons and Mrs. Helen . Dorst, Mrs. Rose · Mrs.Sheehan told police Monwere Mrs. Etta Mae Hill and
Also Mr. and Mrs. Gary family, Negley; Mr. and Mrs. Carr, Mrs. Florence Spencer, day all her moner had been
Roberta Lewis and Mrs. Pearl Wilford, Mr. and Mrs .. Henry Gerald Ow;s, Huntington, W. and Mrs. Ntta Jean Ritchie. stolen while she visited friends
Roush and Mildred, Mrs . Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Charle · Mrs. Goldie Story's fourth in Detroit ov.er the weekend.
Mattie Circle, Mr. and Mrs. Gaskill, Wellston; George ' grade room mothers will
Jack Sargent, Mr. and Mrs. Fick, John Day and Andrea provide the refreshments for
Chester Simpson, Mr. and Mrs. llill, GaUipolis,-' and Mr. and, the Feb. 14 meeting. Prayer by
tor only
Herbert Miller and Jeff, Mr . Mrs . Olden Thaxton of Sanders concluded the
WITH INTEREST
and Mrs. Jack Bostic and Bradenion, Fla.
meeting.
T... HANDEL • Model C830W
'
IS A
family,
Mrs.
Dorothy
Glenn,
Sleek
Contemporary
styled cabinet with
SAVINGS ACCOUNT
Scandla·styled
base and pivotal
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Manuel,
. ·' ·'· .
Op~n a passbook savings
louvered
doors
In
gerfulne
oil-finished
Mrs. Ruth Tucker, Mr. and
account for your family ...
Walnut
veneers
.and
select
ha1dwood
that earns a top return with
__
(HA.'-M.Att'S
TWICE-YEARLY
Mrs: Virgil Walker, Mr. and
\·~'\ .,
solids,
e&gt;cluslva
of
decorallve
front.
, insured safely . Open that
Mrs. Virgil Roush, Mr. and
acCount with us for jusl a
I '
'
The GRIEG • Model cti7M
Mrs. Jtm Spencer, Mr. and
few dollars. Your family
will
love
you
for
it.
Classic
Eorly
American styled cabinet In
Mrs . John Young, Mr. and Mrs .
....
genuine
Maple veneers and Hlect
"• .
You 11 love our Passbook
Russell Roush and family; Mr.
hardwood
solids,
exclusive of special
Rate, it's
•
and MrscHerschel Roush, Mr .
•
decorative front.
and Mrs. Robert Smith, Mr. ,
•
and l!{rs . George Yonker,
Roger Roush, Mrs. Gladys ,
Shields, Mrs. Garnet Ervine,
SHOES
COIII!W • Modtl CISIDE
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons,
M-lve Medltlfrranean styled ~ablnet In
27 Pairs Only.
Mrs. Iva Orr and Mr. and Mrs.
genuine dark finished Oak vene~rs and
· select hardwood ~ollds, exclusive of
CAftDLIHa UIIO
ot.LIO ,110M
waDPINO I'IINO 75
MAN ' I 125
7.68, 8.65, 9.6~
distinctive decorative lrorit.
Women's · - - · - -

Beauty Parlor

3 Meigs .Units

To Win Awards

..

'

Salel Washable

BoNDED ACRYDcs

98

·

Love

$

[haS~.,.

Mason Aiea
News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. ilarvey
Newland, Mason, have
returned from a week's
vacation · at HOUlton, Texas
where they visited their
daughter 'and SOfloiQ-Iaw, Mr.
and Mra. Douilas Carroll.
Mrs. Mlchail Mc:Cirthy, ~
former Ann Newland, Is to
undergo lllll'gery on Friday at
the Climden C18rk Hoepltal in
Parkenburg. '
·
, Mrs. Enel Adkins reportedly
unclllnlentlllll'gery ~n MOI'IdaY,
at Pleuant Valley Hospital.
She would appreciate carda
from her friends.
'
Mr. Jim King Is rep«ledly ill
at hla home In Ma11011.

$1 Table
00

DUDLEY'S

Breath of Spri119

BOUQuET

Savings &amp; Loan Co.
" ,I

'

I

296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Put A Touch of Spring in
Your Life.
·

All Accounts lnsu.-ed To

5.95 Delivered
Dudley's Florist

$20,000.00 by FSLIC.

I
.I

I

'

Debra Ann· Bowman, Mrs.
Cora E.' Davis.
Janice K. Lee, Hugh . G.
Leach, Carolyn A. :Cook,
Hobart N. Marr, Gerald D.
Johnson, Mrs. A. Wayne
Thoma.s and son, Mrs. Rodney
L. Smith and daughter , Mrs.
Barry ~ . Mahley and son,
tlellie B. Fulk, Mrs. Mauda
Corder, Mrs. Trula J. Hackler,
Infant Female Porter, Mrs.
Bessie M. Walton, Alva L.
Davault, Mrs. Roger .Pierce
and son, Early T. ~ie
Grueser, · Matthew Gffibs,
Wanda M. Taylor, Ross Roush,
Mildred Lois Roberts and
daughter , Mrs . William
Johnson and son, Eva P·. Ives,
Stanley M. Harrison, Mrs.
Wilma Geer, John A. Cunningham, Dorothy Cullison,
Gene M. Abels, MD, Joseph A.
Luikart, Wanda P. Penick.
Jean Warner, Mae E. Plants,
Mrs . Nora M. Loomis, Judy
Dempsey , Helen Michael ,
Mary E. Wilson, Mrs. Archie L.
Webb and son, Kathryn Fae
Markin, John R. Dandridge ,

Lloyd G. Swan, Clara K.
Pullins, Mrs. Oljver E ..
McKinley, Jr. and daughter, ·
Roger T. Manuel and daughter,
Carole D. Donley, Mrs. Jennings Beegl~ and daughter,
Tara Burdette, Illene M; Toto,
Jesse Lee Blant.on, Diane L.
Burdette, Donald B. Polcyn,
Olivet R. Eblin, Mrs. Ruby
Franklin,
Kathleen
E.
Thompson , Leonard Mark
Smith, Elsie L. Shaffer, Bertha
F. Hale, Carol L. Davi&amp;, Terri
Denise Criner, and ~rs. Lonnie
R.- Shinn and son .
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave.' and Cedar St . General
visiting hours 2-4 and -7~ p. rn;
Maternity visiting hours 2: 3Q to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon R.
Sims, Galli~olis, a daughter;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Eltiott,
Radcliffe, Ky., a daughter, and
Mr. and Mrs. Heber J.
Eisnaugle, Jackson, a son.
Discharges
Parmer Taylor, Dianna
Lynn
Drederick,
Olie
Wolfenbarger, Fannie
Vaughan, Myron Morgan, Mrs.
Terry Mahley, Mrs. Beverly J .

1bacvr, Martha J . Long, Mrs.
David Stapleton and. •on,
Naomi Brandeberry, Lonnie
Boggs, Mrs. Nellie E. Powers,
Neva V. ·German, 'Esta M.
Carter ahd Mrs. Darrell L.
Fink and son.

s:

SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Hogs, 200-230, 24.75; No. I,
2f&gt;; 2:10-240, 24.50; 240-260 24;
250-280, 23.25; 190-200, 24.2f&gt;;
1110-190,'23.50,
Sows, 300-4~5. 20.50-20.80 ;
400-550, 22.30-22.90.
· Boars, 19.70
Stock hogs, 18-23.
CatUe, choice steers, 35.'036; good, 32-34.40; choice hf ;.
33.80-34.50; good cows, 2: ~. !).
24.60; utility, 20-22; canner · d
cutter, 18 down .
Bulls, 2:&gt;.75-29.50; H·~'-· ' Y
steer ca lv~s steers, 32.50-42;
heavy stock calves hfrs., 27-_
35.50 .
Veal Calves, choice, 54.50;
good, 45; med. 38.50; baby
calves B.H., 24-72.
Lambs, choice, 28-7ii-29.60;
good, 26-27.

Firom
9 A.M.. to
12 Noon .
.
To repair and s'rvtce
hearing aids.
'.
Batteries and supplies
for all make.s for sale.
Mr. Mullen will be glad
to .give

you a free

hearing test with the
latest Beltone' Elecfronlc equipment.. .'
If hearing is your. '·

problem Beltone is ·
the answer ··

·~

.

We've checked the company that makes it.
We've checked'to be sure the product is all the package says it is.

If you ever buy anything at A&amp;P you're not happy with,
you don 't have to bother to \\Tite a letter to the company that made it.
Just tell your A&amp;P store manager. He!ll give you your money back.
.We'll get in touch with that company for you ... and for us.
· That's A&amp;P's guarantee.
No matter who makes it, if A&amp;P sells it, A&amp;P guarantees it.

Canned Hams=:· • a•••$689 Skinless Wieners a:,~~ .!~.59
Chuck Steaks .:"'eo. • 7'r Ground ·Chuck= "!~· .~.·· ·b· 89·
Delmonico Steaks -:: $239 Ocean Perch ~= . ~· .··59
lh.

Not every store can offer you a guarantee like that.
'

n

'

A&amp;P Cl!fl ... and does. Shouldn't A&amp;P be your store?

•• b.

lb.

Prices Good,Tilru Sat., Jan. 22nd. In

MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO STORE . ·
•

We A~e Happy To Redeem
FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS
.
.·

BELlONE ·.
.
\

HEARl NG AlP CENTER
•

SOHentl\ St.
Huntington, w. Va.
Philne 5~5-7221 .

$2()00 .

.

"

5

Servlnt: Middlepo.rl
Pomeroy, Gallipolis. o.
&amp; l\ollion Co., W. Va.

Men's and

Boys'

YoU can·paymore, but you can't
buY a finer diamond ring than
a Kerpsake . . . and that's, something to remember.,

"

Ultrophonlo ltorooldund Splom
•

· RIDENOUR

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

ST. RT. 7

POMEROY, OHIO

:GHL..JGHTS

.

with Pall! Crabtree
.

Jono

2 '&gt; 0 ',

992
; &gt;4

Jon• Porh•
·
Fr'"ch Rolh • · •

0.
••

C1nn1morr

3pkr•S100
•
3-·$100 91°/o Caffein Free ~r.~

Kitchen Cup Dispenser wd'~p~0 •
Shave Cream A~P .• •

•

..
'

''li

•

'+++

.

..

Ol; lll.
~ . ...,+ + +
Faithful vlften of "Bob ·
one ttma. ' BraUII'a Jl-50 Club" art ln .
•• funny .. · • ,fOr 1 treat. Tho Jli'OIIf'am will
11 f..- acting
be Interrupt~. as II ahould
kJ1oW.
bt, lor the Nixon addrell +
,
,bul then II resumft an hOIIr
prlmt·llme
later tor the balance of Its
features 1M
full 90·Minute time. Ch, •·
Ballad of
,_, •'!d 1:30 p.n\ ·
a Vlttnalll'.
which
'

I•

Plti~-,- S•g•r

.

P•rker • . •

MOVIES: "Devil Makes
ThrM.'' ~p.m., and "tall Ma .
Madam,~ ; 11:30 .p.m., llol~
Ch. 10. + '+ +
THURSDAY: My 1fellow
American., If you can gel to
a TV set (or oven ·a ·radio)
you · Sh~JUid listen lo the ,
President and his Stale of the
. Untonmessegeal12:30p.m:,
almost all channels. (And
there'a an analysts at 1 p.m.,

THESE MODELS FEATURE:
• 100W Sotld-Stolo Amplifier
• Mlcro-Touo~· :10 Tono Arm

1

Brown 'I •.:.rve
liJC

,.

know tlnle about, exceptlhot
II has Joey Haalhorton, on
asset to any scene. 9:30 p.m .

• Delun Sttreo "'"'""" Rocord Ch-~
I Bolcl·htt ,M/ AM/I- fM llodlo '

Reg . 11 .99 up - - - - - - -- - · - - - - - 12.00
14.99 to 17 .00 Values - - · · · - - · · - - - 10.00
11 .99 to 14.00 Vi!lues - - - - - - - - - - - - a.oo
Up To 10.99 Values - - - - - - - - - - - - - 7.00

'

',.H

CA ll P0 I N T V I E W :

LADIES'

VALUES TO 14.99
Chtldren's Group --------- Sale 6.88

.

\.\\~\\

SHOES FOR' lHE FAMILY

''

fil•-----!""iti
BEL'WIONE
HEARING AID
SERVICE CENTER

oo·

1

I

.. ' .

CIRCLE MEETS .
· ·'
· Tbe Esthei Circle ~ the
•
Lutheran Church Women of St.
PaUl Lutheran ChU.:ch met
'
•I '
·~esday evening with Mrs.
David RouBb, Circle leader,
·serving as .~oat2u and also _in
.
charge of the Ieason study for
the evening. Those attending
were Mrs. Melvin Knapp, Mrs.
'Mr. aill Mullen
Harry Layne, Mrs. H~
· Wiii!Je At
Lliyne, Mrs. Lloyd Roush, Mrs.
La Salle Hotel
James Layne and the h0111e88.
Middleport, Ohio
LADIES AT RlrrARY
On
' "Ladles' Nile" was observed
Thursday, Jan. 20, 1972

. ~\i

The Alhtn• County

!-~ · .HOSPITAL NEWS

see,

1

S'IEREO

.

......

·o
sh0 old w·
tee·.·
g·=
··l
Otl1er
· p· eo'p" £'..
·pmd
. u·as?
. •
.

Silver.Weddin:gA nniversar1J ~y ~:~· aMd~~~~~
ted-b1J Roush Goull/e
Ce
Conce'llt o\'M;;t;tle
School is
'J
'if •t • S•n k
0 · ,zc •,0 . tSt tng '.Yea er
,

r--------------.. ------ -----,

H.'rrr

398

KNITS

E

we

yd.

Fund Raising
l Dis .ed
s cuss

-ia}

are

Virginia's

Social ·Calendar

'

N
. ew...BaVeft

service role of the newspaper ·.
in the COJIIIIIunity.
·Mrs. Mary· Kun!elman w~
actlrig secretary In the absence
of Miss Freddie Hou~shelt.
Mrs. Alw~ werner gave the
treuurer's report. Refrelbments were served following
the meeting held in the
Golwnbla Gas Go. office. Mrs.
Loretta OUrs won the traveling
prize.

By Charlene Hoeflich

'·

· 7 -The DIIIJIIeiKineJ,MI "'e$w'""'-'o,,O., Jan.lt, 1972
Q_
Plckenl and Leiter Adkins. · Moryanne Blackburt Gorrell of
"LJUt;
. ~ents
RilnnleBradlef, younaiiiiiiDf l22HowardSt.,HavenHeigbts,
··
,
Mr . .OOMrs.JeeBradley,wu wereMr.WilllamPauiHauaer
FILM SHOWN
at the Tbunday evening a recent medical P,.tient at · and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Rev. William DeMosa dlnner-lneelinl of . the ·New Holter Medical Center.
Benedixon, lin of Huptington;
:
showtcl • very ln~linl film Haven 'Rot.ry Club.· Harry ·
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Flesher . Mr. and l!{rs. John Ankunding
Holzer Medical Center, First
on "Golf" at ·the Thurlday M11Jer presided at the •meetinil. ~lilted tl!elr son in Tenneasee • and daughter, susannah of Ave. and Cedar St. 'General
evening .dinner meeting~ the. The lnvocatlan 'lfiB gi'Ven ·by during the holiday Bel!son:
Pikeville, Ky.; and Mr. and vlsltin~ hours 2-4 and 74 p.m.
New ~Rotary Club. . · Rev. Wllllam DeMosa.
· Mr. and. Mrs. Kermit Ford Mrs . Rusaell . .Straight of Malernityvisitlng hours 2:3() to
Members attending were
)'be program for the evenbltj
vacaUoninl! in Florida.
Denver, Color.do. Also vi,titina 4:3() p.m. Parents oniy on
Dick Onl, John Tllorne, Karl was pruli!nted by Mra. WUIIam
Mr. and- Mrs. Howard his mother and sister was Pediatrics Ward.
Wlle8; Floyd Carmack, Jamee DeMCIII, whO Is an oullltandlng· Wagenhals ~nt the Cluist- United States Merchant
Birjbs
N. Roush, Lloyd Rqush, Doaald venlrlloqulat. She and her mu holiday with relatives in Marine Academy Midshipman
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Eugene
F. Roush, Jacll Flilher, Hafu friend, uctlllck," bad the IJVup Kingsport, Te'V'. .
Gary Allen Blackhurst, who Payne, Cheshire, a daughter ;
MIJier,JphnMarsltail, WWiim laughing contlnuolllly during · • Franklin ·Brookhart of was on Chtis!Jnas leiiVe.
Mr . and Mrs. Cloyd GinDeMosa, DoOaid Fosiesoha; . lier presentation. She has Parkersburg, and a second
dlesberger, Rt. I, Gallip~lis, a
Rome WilllamaoD and Rwllleli appeared before several year student at the Lutheran
On December 28, Gary was son; Mr. and Mrs. Darrell L.
. gnrupi in the Bend A,rea, but . Th,ologlcal seminary in enterfllined .with a pizza-card Fink, Gallipolis, a son; Mr .and
Capebl!rl.
, .
. this Is the fil'st lime !hit many Philadelphia, · was guest party at his home. Attehdlng Mr§. George A. Ehman,
' ·
~those attending hild heard ~ker ' at St. Paul Lutheran were Messrs. James Artis of Galtipolis,adaughter; Mr. and
PROGRAM ON BIRDS , her
··
·
... Church 1¥1 Sunday.
... . ,. Mason; Ralph Sayre, Jr. of · Mrs. Roger Carpenter, Long
· Mrs. · Howard · Burris
Memb.ers and 'guests al-~ Mr. and Mrs. John Fry·have · New Haven and Cade~ Brent Bottom,' a. son and Mr: and
presented a very intereslinl .tending were Mr. and Mrs. spent'the past week visiting at Clark of West Colurnhl8, who Mrs. Alfred Harry Dye, Jr.,
program on "Native~ ilnd Karl Wiles, Mrs. Marie . ~Max Eiching~r home near was ~orne on Christmas leave WeUston, a son.
Their Care" at the New Haven Oon9Van, Mi ;and Mrs. Do!lald Pomeroy .. They . have been from the United State!'MIUtary
Discharges
Guiding; Thursday Ml!lng, F. RoUill, Mr. and Mrs, James staying with their grand- Academy at West Pomt.
.
Glen D. Watterson, Jr., Mrs.
which was held.at the, home of N: Roush, Floyd · Carmack, children, ·Becky and Max
Vicki Bumgardner, who .IS Robert E. Stevens and son,
Mi.!s Lelah Jane Powell wi~ . Harry Miller, A. K. McClung, . Eichinger, Jr., while Mr. and attending school in Parkers- In(ant Female Napper, David
Mrs. Howard Wagenhals as co. Mr. and~. Dick Ord, Bonnie 1 Mi's. Eichinger have been burg, spent the weekend at her B. Cross, Connie G. Woodruff,
hostess. . .
. . · ., Ord, JyJr. a_nd Mrs. Donald . visiting in Florida.
c
home ·in ·New Hayen. Her Wanda·.Sergent, Mrs.. Michael
.The meetl,ng openec!' with . Foglesong, Rev. and Mrs.
William Dye -bUs returned weekend guest was MISS Linda A. Schukert .and daughter,
devotions in c.banle ; of ~rJ, · · WilllaDj DeMoss, W: T, sl.ol)e, . home a,fter being a medical Conoway of St. Ma~s.
Stacy L. H~dson, Mr~ . .Zenith
Wagenhals.,This vias•followed Mr.. and Mrs. John Marsha~, ·patient. at Veterans ·Memorial , Mr. ,am! . ~rs. Wilbur W~l&gt;b 0. Beaver and daughter, Mrs.
with 1!Je flig .salute; club llixi8v Mr, .ani( Mrs. Jack Flesher, · Hospital. . ·
, are .va~at10~nng Ill ~lorida:
Clarence Woodall, Christina E.
. and collect. Memtiei's !Ill· :, Mr.,and Mrs. John Thorne, Mr.
New Year's holiday weekend
D1ck1e ,Gnnstead IS a pa~ent Russell, Moriha D. McDaniel,
swered roll call ' wllbi' '~P. · af1C1 ,Mrs. George' Ingels, Mr. · guest§; at the home of Mrs. at Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal. Johnny A. Kleil), Rea Roush,
• Plan to do for the Betteinlent .arid Mrs •.Uoyd R'oush and MJ:,
· ··
··
,
· of My Garden ,Club." ·
and Mrs. Hennan. Layn,,
care-~--~------...
Miss Lelah Jane Powell
' CLUB DINES OUT
· .
presided at the bu1iness ' Tbe Coupi!!S.Ciub celebrated .
session, at which tim• the New Year's Eve by going to the·
- regular tePor.ta were given. Napolis Restaurant in Belpre ·
Several projects · were for dinner and the teturning .to •
disciiSiied, work': to be~in on the · home of ·Mr. and Mrs. ·
them later this ~~~· ,. 'f, • •
.f~!Uie~ in New Haven'.
~efreshments were served to .JVhere they were served.
Mrs. OtUe J\oush, Mrs. Donald dessert, and , .~n spent the
A. ·Smith, Mrs. Donald F. . evening, welc'oriling ,In the l!ew
Roush, Mrs. Martin Ohlinger;. Year. · Tl)ose enjoying the ·
Mrs. Lloyd Roush, Mrs. Ray . evening W!re· l'l!t,. and Mrs.
Proffitt, ' MrS. Patrick Riley, Eilri CJ8rk, Mf. and MJi.
Mrs. He~ Layne, Mrs. Ge«irge BUJ11i,. Mr. and M~"
Harry Layne, Mrs. .Vebna James · Dlelil, Mr. and Mrs.
Roush, Mrs. Howard Burrla Reiber! Cooke, Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Zerkle, guests, Mr. and
. and the hostesses.
~tuB MEETS
Mrs. ReggiJ Hart, and the host
The · Rhododenrdron · and. hostess~ Mr. and Mrs. ·
'Homemaker's Club met Thurs- · Miller. .. . ,.
. day afternoon a~ llie home . ~ •
BIRTIQ)~Y - NOTED
·
Mrs. Velina Roush with !'drs: ' LETAR'l\;W. Va. - 'Friends . ,.
at~n
·
Cllarenct ' Thomu. ae ·i:o- . atKI relatives of ·Mrs. Leater . . . . .
-U ~ _.·
. '
·.,_,'
hoale88. "'~ Mary · Phillips (Nellie) Adkins " helped
~
presided at lhe meeting. The celebrate her birthday on ... .·
.
~
rilguJar reporll were given, January 13 at her home. At~
and ~rs selec!ed projects iendi1,1g
the . surprise
for )lie~ year. '!be lessoo, celebraUoo w~ Mrs. Ethel
''Facti About Your Weight" Rayburn, Mrs. ··Laura GibbS, '
wasdiaculsedbyMissPhlllipa. . Mrs. Naomi ·yeager, Mrs.
ThQ~~e attending were Mrti. Nancy Smilli, Mr. and Mrs.
G. B. Hadett, Mrs. Robert Shirley Sayre, John Sayre,·
Hoffman; Mrs. Charles Jewell, Mta. Ne!lie ·Casto and JQm. ' If we didn't, we coul8~'t honestlysay WE CARE. CQuld we?
Miss ltfa~y Phllllps, Mrs. _ berly .~aslo, Mrs. Loulise
You
before any product is allowed on our shelves.
Albert Roulh, t.~rs. 0. 0 . .Adldria Stanley Adkins, Loren
tsa~; l(aJ ~. and' I!Je' '· ',, ' · ·.' f '~
c ·we've checked it out pretty carefully.

B&amp;PW Membeis Will Back Lib Acts
.

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. 5:::.S100 Stewed Tomatoes f.:d • .• 4~ s1oo

�..

•.

e-:: Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-PomeroY· 0 ., Jan.l9,1972
·.

Fun With Food

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'

plans·were discussed for Heart members to attend her capping
The Equal Rights A\Jlend- )l;lign to the President as well United States, whether she Sunda'y sollcta lion in Mid- ai· Grace Methodist Church,
'l"orks .cir stays at home."
as the !;enators.
You who missed the Appalachia Culture program sponsored ment and the Equal Em·"The amendment affects · dleport. Mrs. Wilma Sargent is Gallipolis, Jan. 21, at 8 p. m.
ployment Opportunitie~ 1 Enby the Meigs County Extension Homemakers' CooncU last week
Mrs: Pratt ~lso rea!! a letter your right to schooling, to · a chairman anci asked lor ·Miss Wood attends the Holzer
fo rceme nt Act, the 1 Immissed a rare treat in not meeting Edelene Wood who is koown plications of passage or fa,ilqre, from Congresswoman Martha livelihood, to your family volunteers tQ assist in can- School of Nursing·· under
sponsorship of the club.
throughout the mountain state lor her fabulous· "wild" parties. and what can ~ (\one to W. Griffiths, 17th · District, inheritance, and even your vassing the town.
'
.
.Presented. at the meeting
Miss Wood teaches wild plant indentiflcstion for the adult
promote passage,
was Michigan, advising thai the drivers' license," said Miss
.Mrs~Pratt reported that an '· wa~ ale~ from Opal Berry,
education section of the Wood Counly School System and to discussed Mon~y night at a Equal Rights Amencjment will Griffiths. Members of the local
conclude each of the sessions stages parties at her Parkersburg meeting of the Middleport ~o before the Senate by club ·will direct letters · to equipment of the hospital loan MeJgs H~gh School student,
home where only wild foods are served. She provided us with a Business and Professional February and urging that President Nixon and 1Q Senator center maintained by the club asking the club to sponsor her
1s in use. The club endorses training at the Holzer Medical
Senators be telephoned, Saxbe of Ohio.
menu for one of the recent PIJrlies, and what can be done with Women's Club.
Also read was a letter from Elizabeth Yerian for district Center. The club annually
milk'l"eeds, acorns, poke stem •. and violet syrup is almost unMrs. Grace Pratt, president, telegraphed, or otherwise
governor, and Faye Thompson award$ a scholarship.
.
believablec
f
presented literature from the communica·ted with asking Mrs. Virginia Nickell, state for the district nominating
A
brochure
about
the
family
OPENING
Anyway, with these classes Miss Wood teaches, the ~m­ National Federation of . support of the bill. She said in BPW president, regarding committee. .
planning
clinic
was
read.
It
phasis is on coming up with a new way to serve something wild .. Business and Professional the letter that she could not legislation in the area of equal·
S}JECIALS
An ·invitation from Debbie . was noted that Mrs. Beulah
.
J!:xperimentipg is the key to flavor with wild plants, she says.
Women's Clubs, Inc:, urging a emphaslze too much that "it · rights for women.
During the business meeting Wood was read inviting Stra~ss is confined to the
· Now baCk to that recent wild party. There were 41 wild foods massiv~ letter writing cam- affects every woman In the
hospi~i. Mem~rs signed a
served at the dinner and each dish had been prepared in gourmet
get-well card for Mrs. June
style. Miss Wood assured us that to the uninitiated nothing there
Roush, a former member, who
would have held an unpleasant vision or odor. Incidentally, the
remainS a patient at University
oWner &amp; Operator
foods for the party were-prepared by students in the class.
Hospital.
'
Virginia Hayman
The menu, in part, consisted of wineberry punch, violet
A program on public affairs
Phone 667-3041 r
,
SYruP over Ice, cream of sorrel soup, cream of knotwood soup,
was presented by Mrs: Rose
Located: On Co. ROjld 46
Reynolds. She introduced Mrs.
squab with wild rice dressing, acorn mufflnil, Jerusalem ar(Success Road I, between St.
Rt .. 7 &amp; Chester Rolld 241. :
Beulah Jones who spoke on
tichoke sticks milkweed sprouts with mushrooms and almonds,
newspaper work . and the
poke greens, ~ew green maple seeds, rt'leQ pqke,' wild asparagus
WED~ESDAY
THURSDAY
' '··~
and mildweeks creamed, buttered burdock root, poke stem
WINDING TRAIL Garden
WOMEN OF Eastern
_....... .. .
salad, sorrell and fern salad, poke pickles, wUd rose jelly, can- Club; Wednesday, 7:3() p.m. at . Athletic Boosters meet at ~igh
died violets (see recipe below), sassafras tea, sarvlce berry tarts home of Mrs. Lloyd Moore. , school 8 p.m. Thursday to plan
Three
Meigs
County c~nference will be Robert
and candied ginger root.
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, for jitney supper to be staged American ·Legion Auxiliary Eickel of Elmore , Ohio's ·
It would seem that everyone should have some knowledge of
7:30 p.m. Pomeroy .Masonic at 5 p.m. on Fnday, Jan. 28, at units will tie among the six lh representative to the Freedom
wild plant identification and some basic concept of pre_paration.
Temple. Regular business school.
Disirict 8 to . receive mem- Foundation Seminar at Valley '
Who knows, it might be a matter of life and death someUme ...and
meeting followed by the conEXECUTIVE Board bership awards at the Forge, Pa.; and Dr. Nam Chin
!erring of the select master meeting, Pomeroy Elementary Department midwinter con- Cha, P. H., N., Ph D., founder
that's no joke.
For instance did you know that the dandelion is one of the degree in full . form. All com- PTA, I p.m. Thursday at the ference to be held in Columbus and director of the Korean
school.
most versatile of the wild foods and Is rich in food value. While pan ions urged to attend .
at the ·Neil House, Jan. 28 and Bible Mission, Inc. Both williMi
MIDDLEPORT
LITERARY
MIDDLEPORT
Child
you may not be inclined to tell your hungry child to "go eat a
speaking on the Saturday af29.
~
dandetion",itmight be good for hlm, if you haven't peppered the Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, home Conservation League, 7:30
The six in District 8 are a ternoon program.
Entire stock on
of Mrs .. 0. B. Stout. Mrs. p.m. Thursday, Columbus and part of the first 100 units in
The conference will convene
: i plant with a pesticide or a fertilizer.
s'
a le of our
: :·
Dandelion omelets, pancakes and greens for salad$ are just a DwlghtWallacetorevlew "The Southern Ohio Electric Co.; Ohio to reach the goal. They on Jan. 28 at 7:30 p.m. with
regular 3.98 to
4.49 values .
~ few of the uses aniUater we'D be giving you the recipes for this House on Jefferson Street" by skit entiUed "The Room Up- are Middleport 128, Racine 602, greetings from Mrs. Sloan.
Horace
Gregory.
Response,
a
stairs."
Each
member
to
give
wild plant provided us by Miss Wood.
Pomeroy 39, Vinton 161, Following that workshops will
favorite
poem.
a
nickel
for
each
year
in
CCL.
And now the recipe for preserving the violet Crooksville 222, and Lithopolis be held on Americanism,
PAST
PRESIDENTS,
Drew
ROCK
SPRINGS
Better·
CANDIED VIOLETS
677. According to Mrs. Charles children and youth, civil
Webster
Post
39, American Health Club, 1:15 p.m. Thurs1cup hot water, 2cups granulated sugar, About 4 cups fresh
Kessinger; District 8 now lacks defense, national security,
Leglon Auxiliary, 7:30 Wed- day home of · Mrs. George 117 members of being a goal community service, junior
stemmed violets washed and drained, but not bruised.
nesday night at the· home of , Skinner. Mrs. Gladys Morgan, .
district. As of Dec. 31, the activities, foreign relations,
Dissolve sugar thoroughly in hot water. Add flowers, set on
Mrs . George Hackett, Sr., program; Mrs . Amos Leonard,
d•slrict was in third place in and poppies.
medium flame and let syrup simmer until it reaches the soft ball Middleport.
contest.
At 9 p.m. a coffee and social
the state. ·
stage in cold water.
FRI.DAY
WILLING WORKERS Class,
hour
.will he hosted by the
The membership awards will
·Stir flowers gently with a wooden spoon. Remove from the Enterprise United Methodist
SOUP SUPPER, beginning
flame and continue to stir until the syrup begiriS,to granulate and Church, 7: 30 Thursday night, 4:30 p.m. Friday, Wesleyan be presented during the Friday distJ:ict presidents.
The session on Satu,rday will
United Methodist Church, afternoon skit when Mrs.
reaches the consistency of coarse meal. Empty over a wire rack home of Mrs. Eldon Weeks.
Donald Miller, chairman, in open at 9a.m. and following the
or colander and shake off the e:w:lra sugar. Cool, pack into jars
THIRD WEDNE$DA Y Racine, soup , sandwiches, II'&gt;\' role of the teacher, and the processionals Mrs. f!ertha
and seal. TheY will keep indefinitely.
Homemakers Club, Wed- coffee.
district presidents as her Parker, National American
Serve in little glass compotes or use them to decorate cakes, nesday, 10 a.m. at meeUng
SOUP SUPPER will be held students, carry out the Little Legion Auxiliary president,
· garnish fruit salads, or tea plates.
house on Syracuse Municipal beginning at 4:30 p.m. Friday Red School House theme of the will be pr&lt;Mnted and will
Park grounds. Potluck dinner at the Wesleyan United
speak to the assembly .
NOW, I DON'T KNOW about you, but pegonally I can hardly at qoon. All Interested Methodist Church in Racine. state president, Mrs. Raymond
Greetings at the afternoon
Sloan . At that time also ,
wait 'till violet time. Imagine this see~~~
homemakers invited.
Soup, sandwiches and coffee quarters will be presented by session will be extended by
PAST PRESIDICNTS, will be available.
Tired and frayed from an anything-f!l\t-lun day at the office,
goal units to Mrs. Sloan for a Mrs. Lester L. Nlmon, national
the man of the house eats a hearty ~in course. Then the American Legion Auxiliary,
chaplain; Mrs. Arthur Hrabak,
special project.
Inevitable question: "What's for desse~T"
Drew Webster Post, 7:3() p.m.
DANCE PARTY Friday, 9:30
Principal speakers at the central division national
"Candled violets," comes the reply in the most nonchalent Wednesday, home of Mrs. p.m. to midnight;' Wahama
security chairman; Mrs.
Melvin J)lnge, national vice
GROUP POLYESTER
manner she can muster.
Rhoda ~~::?DA~ddleport. High School sponsored by
chairman,
children
and
youth;
Silence....Then, pow!
CLASS 12, Heath Methodist sophomore class . followmg
COMPARE
Mrs. William M. Gill, national
She picks herself up off the floor
'Church 7:3() Thl!l'sdaY 11ight. '·•!!'~~~~ game. Jays em.
AT 5.98t , I'•.
Yd. · .
vic~ , .. chaiqn,aq
C9mt
,. , • • ceeh~ ··
Dessert smorgasbord followmg
· SUNDAY
munications; Mrs . Homer
Smith, Area D chairman for
to take
HYMN SING, Stiversville
J
TWIN CITY Shrine Club .Community Ch)!rch, 2 p.m.
Several lund raising projects National Girls' State ; Sue
. '
· Th d , 7. 30 P m at Sunday. Pastor Edsel' Hart werediscussedduringarecent Stroull, Department Junfor
Mrs. 0. A. Martin,
1... 1;..·..'/I
clu~~~::·ln ~cine. R.eiresh- extends invitation to public. me~ting of the Wome~·s president;
U::-Uf U
J
.
/Y
ments.
AUJollary of the Racine F1re Pomeroy, departmental
cHapeau, Eight and Forty; and
Department.
Charles Green, Commander,
RACINE - Open house was No~~''aod Iva Orr served
Objectiveoltheyearist.oget American Legion, Department
j
'J'
ZUUl
con~truction started on the of Ohio.
·~&gt; held Sunday, Jan. 9, from 2 to 4 coffee. Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman
SINGER SALES 8i SERVICE
~
(''! :•
· · ,.
add1hon t? the f1rehouse.
p.m . in honor of Mr. and Mra. registered the guests. .
McCALL'S
&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERNS
A reception honoring the
Others ass.lstinll wete Mrs.• lT' .1 •'tJ,
T?:•
Current officers were elected national president will be held
Herbert Roush, who were
V
for another year. A rummage
celebrating their 25th wedding Harriett Neigler: Mrs. Em\a. · ;J.
992-2284
115 'II· Second
Pomeroy,O.
Wilson,
Jeff
Miller
and
MrS.
and bake sale was planned for at 5:30 with a banquet In her
anniversary, by their son,
·honor at 7:15p.m. and a ball at
Tuppers
Plains School Feb. 4and 5 and res•dents With
Roger Roush .\ assisted by Janette Laurence.
Relatives
and
friends
who
The
concept
of
the
Middle
Boosters.
rum~age or baked goods to 9p.m.
Raymond Adams at the
contribute are asked to
Shriners Club House in Racine. sent card$, gifts and called to School was discussed by
Eddy spoke on the operation
or
The bride's table was congratulate the Roushes were Gordon Eddy, superintendent of the Middle School, tl&gt;· telephone 949-3421 ' 94&lt;.J293
•.
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of
the
Warren
Local
Schools
at
992
7315
covered with a white lace cloth Mrs. Edna Roush, Mr. and
problems and successes, an d
A• vote• of thanks was ex ·
over white, centered with a Mrs. Marshall Adams, Mr. and a meetinR Monday night of the answered questions.
. . . .
•
three-tiered wedding cake, Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner, Mr.
James Stout, president, tend~ to. the mdiVIdua~ and
decorated with white roses, and Mrs . Floyd Norris, Mr. and Roy !luck.
conducted the business session orgamZjlbons contributing to
green leaves and silver bead$ Mrs. Robert Hill, Mr. and Mrs.
Also, Rev . and Mrs. opening with a reading "What the Chns!mas treat for
topped with a miniature bride Frlti .Buck, Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Glusencamp and Kind of Member Are You?". children of the co~unity a~d
~nd groom the Roushes had Robert Ashley and Heidi, Mrs.
Nicklti; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Robert Sanders Jed in the to Santa who distributed II.
used 25 years ago on their Ada Norris, Mrs. Mildred Roush of Portland ; Mrs . pledge
to
the
flag . Refres~ents were served by
wedding cake. It had silver Spencer, Mr ..and Mrs. Ralph MaymeHartenbach, Kent; Mr. Arrangements were made for Jdyce Sisson and Anna Mae
candle · holders with white D. Shain, Mr. and Mrs. Critt . and Mr¥. Ke11.~eth Wolfe, an ice cream treat for each of Obltz.
candles on each side.
Bradford Sr., Mr. ~nd Mrs. Rutland ; :Mr. 8fid Mrs. Robert the children on Valentine's
Roger Roush, assisted by Early R,oush, Mr. , nd Mr . Beegle, Dorcas; Miss Effie . Day.
Raymond
Adams
and Herbert L. Sayre, Mr. and f,{r
Pickens, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Mrs . Augusta Barnhart's TIIEFf REPORTED
3 most popular cabinet styles
Margaret Gloeckner, opened Randall Robtl'!s. children 11)Sargent, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald fifth grade won the room
TOLEDO (UP!) - Mrs. Marthe gifts and displayed them on Todd, !.kslle arid Chad; Mr . . Russel!, Middleport; Mr. and banner and the $3 award for garet Sheehan, 71, reacting to
ONLY
·, a table covered with a white and Mrs . Lester Roush, Mrs. Dana Lewis, Clifton, W. having the most parents in reports of bombs hidden in bank
lace cloth over white.
children, Vicki, Mike and Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Howard attendance . . Refreshments safe deposit boxes, withdrew
Presiding at the punch howl Johnnie, and Mr. and Mrs. Roush, Mansfield; · Mr. and were served by the fifth grade $55,000from her safedeposlt box
were Florence Adams and Larry O'Brien, children Linda Mrs. Chester Dlll'8t, Niles; Mr.- mothers, Mrs. Martha Durst, and kept it at home .
Nancy Russell. Serving _cake and Carol Ann.
and Mrs. Everette Parsons and Mrs. Helen . Dorst, Mrs. Rose · Mrs.Sheehan told police Monwere Mrs. Etta Mae Hill and
Also Mr. and Mrs. Gary family, Negley; Mr. and Mrs. Carr, Mrs. Florence Spencer, day all her moner had been
Roberta Lewis and Mrs. Pearl Wilford, Mr. and Mrs .. Henry Gerald Ow;s, Huntington, W. and Mrs. Ntta Jean Ritchie. stolen while she visited friends
Roush and Mildred, Mrs . Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Charle · Mrs. Goldie Story's fourth in Detroit ov.er the weekend.
Mattie Circle, Mr. and Mrs. Gaskill, Wellston; George ' grade room mothers will
Jack Sargent, Mr. and Mrs. Fick, John Day and Andrea provide the refreshments for
Chester Simpson, Mr. and Mrs. llill, GaUipolis,-' and Mr. and, the Feb. 14 meeting. Prayer by
tor only
Herbert Miller and Jeff, Mr . Mrs . Olden Thaxton of Sanders concluded the
WITH INTEREST
and Mrs. Jack Bostic and Bradenion, Fla.
meeting.
T... HANDEL • Model C830W
'
IS A
family,
Mrs.
Dorothy
Glenn,
Sleek
Contemporary
styled cabinet with
SAVINGS ACCOUNT
Scandla·styled
base and pivotal
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Manuel,
. ·' ·'· .
Op~n a passbook savings
louvered
doors
In
gerfulne
oil-finished
Mrs. Ruth Tucker, Mr. and
account for your family ...
Walnut
veneers
.and
select
ha1dwood
that earns a top return with
__
(HA.'-M.Att'S
TWICE-YEARLY
Mrs: Virgil Walker, Mr. and
\·~'\ .,
solids,
e&gt;cluslva
of
decorallve
front.
, insured safely . Open that
Mrs. Virgil Roush, Mr. and
acCount with us for jusl a
I '
'
The GRIEG • Model cti7M
Mrs. Jtm Spencer, Mr. and
few dollars. Your family
will
love
you
for
it.
Classic
Eorly
American styled cabinet In
Mrs . John Young, Mr. and Mrs .
....
genuine
Maple veneers and Hlect
"• .
You 11 love our Passbook
Russell Roush and family; Mr.
hardwood
solids,
exclusive of special
Rate, it's
•
and MrscHerschel Roush, Mr .
•
decorative front.
and Mrs. Robert Smith, Mr. ,
•
and l!{rs . George Yonker,
Roger Roush, Mrs. Gladys ,
Shields, Mrs. Garnet Ervine,
SHOES
COIII!W • Modtl CISIDE
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons,
M-lve Medltlfrranean styled ~ablnet In
27 Pairs Only.
Mrs. Iva Orr and Mr. and Mrs.
genuine dark finished Oak vene~rs and
· select hardwood ~ollds, exclusive of
CAftDLIHa UIIO
ot.LIO ,110M
waDPINO I'IINO 75
MAN ' I 125
7.68, 8.65, 9.6~
distinctive decorative lrorit.
Women's · - - · - -

Beauty Parlor

3 Meigs .Units

To Win Awards

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Salel Washable

BoNDED ACRYDcs

98

·

Love

$

[haS~.,.

Mason Aiea
News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. ilarvey
Newland, Mason, have
returned from a week's
vacation · at HOUlton, Texas
where they visited their
daughter 'and SOfloiQ-Iaw, Mr.
and Mra. Douilas Carroll.
Mrs. Mlchail Mc:Cirthy, ~
former Ann Newland, Is to
undergo lllll'gery on Friday at
the Climden C18rk Hoepltal in
Parkenburg. '
·
, Mrs. Enel Adkins reportedly
unclllnlentlllll'gery ~n MOI'IdaY,
at Pleuant Valley Hospital.
She would appreciate carda
from her friends.
'
Mr. Jim King Is rep«ledly ill
at hla home In Ma11011.

$1 Table
00

DUDLEY'S

Breath of Spri119

BOUQuET

Savings &amp; Loan Co.
" ,I

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296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Put A Touch of Spring in
Your Life.
·

All Accounts lnsu.-ed To

5.95 Delivered
Dudley's Florist

$20,000.00 by FSLIC.

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Debra Ann· Bowman, Mrs.
Cora E.' Davis.
Janice K. Lee, Hugh . G.
Leach, Carolyn A. :Cook,
Hobart N. Marr, Gerald D.
Johnson, Mrs. A. Wayne
Thoma.s and son, Mrs. Rodney
L. Smith and daughter , Mrs.
Barry ~ . Mahley and son,
tlellie B. Fulk, Mrs. Mauda
Corder, Mrs. Trula J. Hackler,
Infant Female Porter, Mrs.
Bessie M. Walton, Alva L.
Davault, Mrs. Roger .Pierce
and son, Early T. ~ie
Grueser, · Matthew Gffibs,
Wanda M. Taylor, Ross Roush,
Mildred Lois Roberts and
daughter , Mrs . William
Johnson and son, Eva P·. Ives,
Stanley M. Harrison, Mrs.
Wilma Geer, John A. Cunningham, Dorothy Cullison,
Gene M. Abels, MD, Joseph A.
Luikart, Wanda P. Penick.
Jean Warner, Mae E. Plants,
Mrs . Nora M. Loomis, Judy
Dempsey , Helen Michael ,
Mary E. Wilson, Mrs. Archie L.
Webb and son, Kathryn Fae
Markin, John R. Dandridge ,

Lloyd G. Swan, Clara K.
Pullins, Mrs. Oljver E ..
McKinley, Jr. and daughter, ·
Roger T. Manuel and daughter,
Carole D. Donley, Mrs. Jennings Beegl~ and daughter,
Tara Burdette, Illene M; Toto,
Jesse Lee Blant.on, Diane L.
Burdette, Donald B. Polcyn,
Olivet R. Eblin, Mrs. Ruby
Franklin,
Kathleen
E.
Thompson , Leonard Mark
Smith, Elsie L. Shaffer, Bertha
F. Hale, Carol L. Davi&amp;, Terri
Denise Criner, and ~rs. Lonnie
R.- Shinn and son .
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave.' and Cedar St . General
visiting hours 2-4 and -7~ p. rn;
Maternity visiting hours 2: 3Q to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon R.
Sims, Galli~olis, a daughter;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Eltiott,
Radcliffe, Ky., a daughter, and
Mr. and Mrs. Heber J.
Eisnaugle, Jackson, a son.
Discharges
Parmer Taylor, Dianna
Lynn
Drederick,
Olie
Wolfenbarger, Fannie
Vaughan, Myron Morgan, Mrs.
Terry Mahley, Mrs. Beverly J .

1bacvr, Martha J . Long, Mrs.
David Stapleton and. •on,
Naomi Brandeberry, Lonnie
Boggs, Mrs. Nellie E. Powers,
Neva V. ·German, 'Esta M.
Carter ahd Mrs. Darrell L.
Fink and son.

s:

SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Hogs, 200-230, 24.75; No. I,
2f&gt;; 2:10-240, 24.50; 240-260 24;
250-280, 23.25; 190-200, 24.2f&gt;;
1110-190,'23.50,
Sows, 300-4~5. 20.50-20.80 ;
400-550, 22.30-22.90.
· Boars, 19.70
Stock hogs, 18-23.
CatUe, choice steers, 35.'036; good, 32-34.40; choice hf ;.
33.80-34.50; good cows, 2: ~. !).
24.60; utility, 20-22; canner · d
cutter, 18 down .
Bulls, 2:&gt;.75-29.50; H·~'-· ' Y
steer ca lv~s steers, 32.50-42;
heavy stock calves hfrs., 27-_
35.50 .
Veal Calves, choice, 54.50;
good, 45; med. 38.50; baby
calves B.H., 24-72.
Lambs, choice, 28-7ii-29.60;
good, 26-27.

Firom
9 A.M.. to
12 Noon .
.
To repair and s'rvtce
hearing aids.
'.
Batteries and supplies
for all make.s for sale.
Mr. Mullen will be glad
to .give

you a free

hearing test with the
latest Beltone' Elecfronlc equipment.. .'
If hearing is your. '·

problem Beltone is ·
the answer ··

·~

.

We've checked the company that makes it.
We've checked'to be sure the product is all the package says it is.

If you ever buy anything at A&amp;P you're not happy with,
you don 't have to bother to \\Tite a letter to the company that made it.
Just tell your A&amp;P store manager. He!ll give you your money back.
.We'll get in touch with that company for you ... and for us.
· That's A&amp;P's guarantee.
No matter who makes it, if A&amp;P sells it, A&amp;P guarantees it.

Canned Hams=:· • a•••$689 Skinless Wieners a:,~~ .!~.59
Chuck Steaks .:"'eo. • 7'r Ground ·Chuck= "!~· .~.·· ·b· 89·
Delmonico Steaks -:: $239 Ocean Perch ~= . ~· .··59
lh.

Not every store can offer you a guarantee like that.
'

n

'

A&amp;P Cl!fl ... and does. Shouldn't A&amp;P be your store?

•• b.

lb.

Prices Good,Tilru Sat., Jan. 22nd. In

MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO STORE . ·
•

We A~e Happy To Redeem
FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS
.
.·

BELlONE ·.
.
\

HEARl NG AlP CENTER
•

SOHentl\ St.
Huntington, w. Va.
Philne 5~5-7221 .

$2()00 .

.

"

5

Servlnt: Middlepo.rl
Pomeroy, Gallipolis. o.
&amp; l\ollion Co., W. Va.

Men's and

Boys'

YoU can·paymore, but you can't
buY a finer diamond ring than
a Kerpsake . . . and that's, something to remember.,

"

Ultrophonlo ltorooldund Splom
•

· RIDENOUR

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

ST. RT. 7

POMEROY, OHIO

:GHL..JGHTS

.

with Pall! Crabtree
.

Jono

2 '&gt; 0 ',

992
; &gt;4

Jon• Porh•
·
Fr'"ch Rolh • · •

0.
••

C1nn1morr

3pkr•S100
•
3-·$100 91°/o Caffein Free ~r.~

Kitchen Cup Dispenser wd'~p~0 •
Shave Cream A~P .• •

•

..
'

''li

•

'+++

.

..

Ol; lll.
~ . ...,+ + +
Faithful vlften of "Bob ·
one ttma. ' BraUII'a Jl-50 Club" art ln .
•• funny .. · • ,fOr 1 treat. Tho Jli'OIIf'am will
11 f..- acting
be Interrupt~. as II ahould
kJ1oW.
bt, lor the Nixon addrell +
,
,bul then II resumft an hOIIr
prlmt·llme
later tor the balance of Its
features 1M
full 90·Minute time. Ch, •·
Ballad of
,_, •'!d 1:30 p.n\ ·
a Vlttnalll'.
which
'

I•

Plti~-,- S•g•r

.

P•rker • . •

MOVIES: "Devil Makes
ThrM.'' ~p.m., and "tall Ma .
Madam,~ ; 11:30 .p.m., llol~
Ch. 10. + '+ +
THURSDAY: My 1fellow
American., If you can gel to
a TV set (or oven ·a ·radio)
you · Sh~JUid listen lo the ,
President and his Stale of the
. Untonmessegeal12:30p.m:,
almost all channels. (And
there'a an analysts at 1 p.m.,

THESE MODELS FEATURE:
• 100W Sotld-Stolo Amplifier
• Mlcro-Touo~· :10 Tono Arm

1

Brown 'I •.:.rve
liJC

,.

know tlnle about, exceptlhot
II has Joey Haalhorton, on
asset to any scene. 9:30 p.m .

• Delun Sttreo "'"'""" Rocord Ch-~
I Bolcl·htt ,M/ AM/I- fM llodlo '

Reg . 11 .99 up - - - - - - -- - · - - - - - 12.00
14.99 to 17 .00 Values - - · · · - - · · - - - 10.00
11 .99 to 14.00 Vi!lues - - - - - - - - - - - - a.oo
Up To 10.99 Values - - - - - - - - - - - - - 7.00

'

',.H

CA ll P0 I N T V I E W :

LADIES'

VALUES TO 14.99
Chtldren's Group --------- Sale 6.88

.

\.\\~\\

SHOES FOR' lHE FAMILY

''

fil•-----!""iti
BEL'WIONE
HEARING AID
SERVICE CENTER

oo·

1

I

.. ' .

CIRCLE MEETS .
· ·'
· Tbe Esthei Circle ~ the
•
Lutheran Church Women of St.
PaUl Lutheran ChU.:ch met
'
•I '
·~esday evening with Mrs.
David RouBb, Circle leader,
·serving as .~oat2u and also _in
.
charge of the Ieason study for
the evening. Those attending
were Mrs. Melvin Knapp, Mrs.
'Mr. aill Mullen
Harry Layne, Mrs. H~
· Wiii!Je At
Lliyne, Mrs. Lloyd Roush, Mrs.
La Salle Hotel
James Layne and the h0111e88.
Middleport, Ohio
LADIES AT RlrrARY
On
' "Ladles' Nile" was observed
Thursday, Jan. 20, 1972

. ~\i

The Alhtn• County

!-~ · .HOSPITAL NEWS

see,

1

S'IEREO

.

......

·o
sh0 old w·
tee·.·
g·=
··l
Otl1er
· p· eo'p" £'..
·pmd
. u·as?
. •
.

Silver.Weddin:gA nniversar1J ~y ~:~· aMd~~~~~
ted-b1J Roush Goull/e
Ce
Conce'llt o\'M;;t;tle
School is
'J
'if •t • S•n k
0 · ,zc •,0 . tSt tng '.Yea er
,

r--------------.. ------ -----,

H.'rrr

398

KNITS

E

we

yd.

Fund Raising
l Dis .ed
s cuss

-ia}

are

Virginia's

Social ·Calendar

'

N
. ew...BaVeft

service role of the newspaper ·.
in the COJIIIIIunity.
·Mrs. Mary· Kun!elman w~
actlrig secretary In the absence
of Miss Freddie Hou~shelt.
Mrs. Alw~ werner gave the
treuurer's report. Refrelbments were served following
the meeting held in the
Golwnbla Gas Go. office. Mrs.
Loretta OUrs won the traveling
prize.

By Charlene Hoeflich

'·

· 7 -The DIIIJIIeiKineJ,MI "'e$w'""'-'o,,O., Jan.lt, 1972
Q_
Plckenl and Leiter Adkins. · Moryanne Blackburt Gorrell of
"LJUt;
. ~ents
RilnnleBradlef, younaiiiiiiDf l22HowardSt.,HavenHeigbts,
··
,
Mr . .OOMrs.JeeBradley,wu wereMr.WilllamPauiHauaer
FILM SHOWN
at the Tbunday evening a recent medical P,.tient at · and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Rev. William DeMosa dlnner-lneelinl of . the ·New Holter Medical Center.
Benedixon, lin of Huptington;
:
showtcl • very ln~linl film Haven 'Rot.ry Club.· Harry ·
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Flesher . Mr. and l!{rs. John Ankunding
Holzer Medical Center, First
on "Golf" at ·the Thurlday M11Jer presided at the •meetinil. ~lilted tl!elr son in Tenneasee • and daughter, susannah of Ave. and Cedar St. 'General
evening .dinner meeting~ the. The lnvocatlan 'lfiB gi'Ven ·by during the holiday Bel!son:
Pikeville, Ky.; and Mr. and vlsltin~ hours 2-4 and 74 p.m.
New ~Rotary Club. . · Rev. Wllllam DeMosa.
· Mr. and. Mrs. Kermit Ford Mrs . Rusaell . .Straight of Malernityvisitlng hours 2:3() to
Members attending were
)'be program for the evenbltj
vacaUoninl! in Florida.
Denver, Color.do. Also vi,titina 4:3() p.m. Parents oniy on
Dick Onl, John Tllorne, Karl was pruli!nted by Mra. WUIIam
Mr. and- Mrs. Howard his mother and sister was Pediatrics Ward.
Wlle8; Floyd Carmack, Jamee DeMCIII, whO Is an oullltandlng· Wagenhals ~nt the Cluist- United States Merchant
Birjbs
N. Roush, Lloyd Rqush, Doaald venlrlloqulat. She and her mu holiday with relatives in Marine Academy Midshipman
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Eugene
F. Roush, Jacll Flilher, Hafu friend, uctlllck," bad the IJVup Kingsport, Te'V'. .
Gary Allen Blackhurst, who Payne, Cheshire, a daughter ;
MIJier,JphnMarsltail, WWiim laughing contlnuolllly during · • Franklin ·Brookhart of was on Chtis!Jnas leiiVe.
Mr . and Mrs. Cloyd GinDeMosa, DoOaid Fosiesoha; . lier presentation. She has Parkersburg, and a second
dlesberger, Rt. I, Gallip~lis, a
Rome WilllamaoD and Rwllleli appeared before several year student at the Lutheran
On December 28, Gary was son; Mr. and Mrs. Darrell L.
. gnrupi in the Bend A,rea, but . Th,ologlcal seminary in enterfllined .with a pizza-card Fink, Gallipolis, a son; Mr .and
Capebl!rl.
, .
. this Is the fil'st lime !hit many Philadelphia, · was guest party at his home. Attehdlng Mr§. George A. Ehman,
' ·
~those attending hild heard ~ker ' at St. Paul Lutheran were Messrs. James Artis of Galtipolis,adaughter; Mr. and
PROGRAM ON BIRDS , her
··
·
... Church 1¥1 Sunday.
... . ,. Mason; Ralph Sayre, Jr. of · Mrs. Roger Carpenter, Long
· Mrs. · Howard · Burris
Memb.ers and 'guests al-~ Mr. and Mrs. John Fry·have · New Haven and Cade~ Brent Bottom,' a. son and Mr: and
presented a very intereslinl .tending were Mr. and Mrs. spent'the past week visiting at Clark of West Colurnhl8, who Mrs. Alfred Harry Dye, Jr.,
program on "Native~ ilnd Karl Wiles, Mrs. Marie . ~Max Eiching~r home near was ~orne on Christmas leave WeUston, a son.
Their Care" at the New Haven Oon9Van, Mi ;and Mrs. Do!lald Pomeroy .. They . have been from the United State!'MIUtary
Discharges
Guiding; Thursday Ml!lng, F. RoUill, Mr. and Mrs, James staying with their grand- Academy at West Pomt.
.
Glen D. Watterson, Jr., Mrs.
which was held.at the, home of N: Roush, Floyd · Carmack, children, ·Becky and Max
Vicki Bumgardner, who .IS Robert E. Stevens and son,
Mi.!s Lelah Jane Powell wi~ . Harry Miller, A. K. McClung, . Eichinger, Jr., while Mr. and attending school in Parkers- In(ant Female Napper, David
Mrs. Howard Wagenhals as co. Mr. and~. Dick Ord, Bonnie 1 Mi's. Eichinger have been burg, spent the weekend at her B. Cross, Connie G. Woodruff,
hostess. . .
. . · ., Ord, JyJr. a_nd Mrs. Donald . visiting in Florida.
c
home ·in ·New Hayen. Her Wanda·.Sergent, Mrs.. Michael
.The meetl,ng openec!' with . Foglesong, Rev. and Mrs.
William Dye -bUs returned weekend guest was MISS Linda A. Schukert .and daughter,
devotions in c.banle ; of ~rJ, · · WilllaDj DeMoss, W: T, sl.ol)e, . home a,fter being a medical Conoway of St. Ma~s.
Stacy L. H~dson, Mr~ . .Zenith
Wagenhals.,This vias•followed Mr.. and Mrs. John Marsha~, ·patient. at Veterans ·Memorial , Mr. ,am! . ~rs. Wilbur W~l&gt;b 0. Beaver and daughter, Mrs.
with 1!Je flig .salute; club llixi8v Mr, .ani( Mrs. Jack Flesher, · Hospital. . ·
, are .va~at10~nng Ill ~lorida:
Clarence Woodall, Christina E.
. and collect. Memtiei's !Ill· :, Mr.,and Mrs. John Thorne, Mr.
New Year's holiday weekend
D1ck1e ,Gnnstead IS a pa~ent Russell, Moriha D. McDaniel,
swered roll call ' wllbi' '~P. · af1C1 ,Mrs. George' Ingels, Mr. · guest§; at the home of Mrs. at Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal. Johnny A. Kleil), Rea Roush,
• Plan to do for the Betteinlent .arid Mrs •.Uoyd R'oush and MJ:,
· ··
··
,
· of My Garden ,Club." ·
and Mrs. Hennan. Layn,,
care-~--~------...
Miss Lelah Jane Powell
' CLUB DINES OUT
· .
presided at the bu1iness ' Tbe Coupi!!S.Ciub celebrated .
session, at which tim• the New Year's Eve by going to the·
- regular tePor.ta were given. Napolis Restaurant in Belpre ·
Several projects · were for dinner and the teturning .to •
disciiSiied, work': to be~in on the · home of ·Mr. and Mrs. ·
them later this ~~~· ,. 'f, • •
.f~!Uie~ in New Haven'.
~efreshments were served to .JVhere they were served.
Mrs. OtUe J\oush, Mrs. Donald dessert, and , .~n spent the
A. ·Smith, Mrs. Donald F. . evening, welc'oriling ,In the l!ew
Roush, Mrs. Martin Ohlinger;. Year. · Tl)ose enjoying the ·
Mrs. Lloyd Roush, Mrs. Ray . evening W!re· l'l!t,. and Mrs.
Proffitt, ' MrS. Patrick Riley, Eilri CJ8rk, Mf. and MJi.
Mrs. He~ Layne, Mrs. Ge«irge BUJ11i,. Mr. and M~"
Harry Layne, Mrs. .Vebna James · Dlelil, Mr. and Mrs.
Roush, Mrs. Howard Burrla Reiber! Cooke, Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Zerkle, guests, Mr. and
. and the hostesses.
~tuB MEETS
Mrs. ReggiJ Hart, and the host
The · Rhododenrdron · and. hostess~ Mr. and Mrs. ·
'Homemaker's Club met Thurs- · Miller. .. . ,.
. day afternoon a~ llie home . ~ •
BIRTIQ)~Y - NOTED
·
Mrs. Velina Roush with !'drs: ' LETAR'l\;W. Va. - 'Friends . ,.
at~n
·
Cllarenct ' Thomu. ae ·i:o- . atKI relatives of ·Mrs. Leater . . . . .
-U ~ _.·
. '
·.,_,'
hoale88. "'~ Mary · Phillips (Nellie) Adkins " helped
~
presided at lhe meeting. The celebrate her birthday on ... .·
.
~
rilguJar reporll were given, January 13 at her home. At~
and ~rs selec!ed projects iendi1,1g
the . surprise
for )lie~ year. '!be lessoo, celebraUoo w~ Mrs. Ethel
''Facti About Your Weight" Rayburn, Mrs. ··Laura GibbS, '
wasdiaculsedbyMissPhlllipa. . Mrs. Naomi ·yeager, Mrs.
ThQ~~e attending were Mrti. Nancy Smilli, Mr. and Mrs.
G. B. Hadett, Mrs. Robert Shirley Sayre, John Sayre,·
Hoffman; Mrs. Charles Jewell, Mta. Ne!lie ·Casto and JQm. ' If we didn't, we coul8~'t honestlysay WE CARE. CQuld we?
Miss ltfa~y Phllllps, Mrs. _ berly .~aslo, Mrs. Loulise
You
before any product is allowed on our shelves.
Albert Roulh, t.~rs. 0. 0 . .Adldria Stanley Adkins, Loren
tsa~; l(aJ ~. and' I!Je' '· ',, ' · ·.' f '~
c ·we've checked it out pretty carefully.

B&amp;PW Membeis Will Back Lib Acts
.

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. 5:::.S100 Stewed Tomatoes f.:d • .• 4~ s1oo

�... .

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'

a -'!,'he DaUySelltlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O.,
. Jan. 19, 1972

.,

.

Teen,agers' Maste.r Race Sche"!:e !?}]!!.~.;..

Bomb . Scare. Empties School

• •.•.••n. ·~•.....
..··~·:.:.·.:·····~.:....;.;....•...·.~···b·~·"'•:O:O:·~~~~
~- .. ...: ..... .:
-...............,...............
-v.h.l'o-...-.o;•,.o; .... ~-.-.·""""·-·.-.·.-.····. ;-&gt;
•
•
VINTON
Vinton ""h»'A
' CHICAGO (UP! )~It read Police SUperintendent James ''There is no indication of any
Elementary
S.chool was
likeatelevlslonscript-kilUng B. Conll:ik Jr. and Water infection . of pul!Uc water or
evacuated Tuesday afternoon
off a major city's pop)llatiorrto Commissioner James ' 'w . other public facUlties."
after a bomb threat was
a "new master race" · .Jardine appeared at the ex- c "Investigation disclosed that
MADISON, Wis. (UPI) - The Wisroo.sin Senate
~§;. establish
received at 1:50 p.m.
-but
to
Chicago's
top officials · traordlnary news conference an organiZation called Rise, of
finally made Its cboice between cows and bogs
~
Nanette JuStus, an eighth
gathere&lt;l at a news conference after the alleged plot was which Schw&amp;nder and Pera
TUesday alter a ball-hour debate. The Senate passed a
grade student, who answered
to verify thatthe water supply uncovered . They .assured Werl! organizers, hsd allegedly
measure designallng the dairy cow as Wlscoosm's
the telephone call, · said the
was safe it was a "harebrained Chicagoans that proper plam\ed poisOning water SliP:
domestic animal.
,
caller announced that a bomb
scbeme."
precautions had been taken. plies and · streadlng deadly
"I tblnk Ibis is a racial dlscrimlllallon BDIOIIII
was planted in the school and
Two college youths who
State's attorney Edward V. diseases in Illinois and elsecaltie," said Sen. Dale McKenna, a Democrat from
would explode in thirty
allegedly harbored the master fllmrahan said the alleged plot where," Hanrahan said.
Jefferson.
minutes. Miss Justus said the
race · dream were charged extended beyond Chicago to
"Members bf Rise were
"Ibis calls for a Holstem as the state dairy cow
caller had a masculine voice
Tuesday
with
conspiracy
to
other
cofi\munlties
in
the
allegedly
to .be inoculated and
~·:·
and appeared to be an adult.
and all my Guernsey people wiU be oo my back."
commit murder in a plot to Midwest. Ft . Sheridan, an immunized, enabling l!Iem to
Minutes
later,
ap·''Maybe there Is a Utile dlscrtminaUon," said
i~ poison Chicago's water supply Army base north .of the city, survive the . poisonings and
proximateiy 3110 students were ·
Senate Majority Leader Ernest Keppler, a Republican
~ wi.th typhoid and other deadly . was a possible tarset, police lliseases and t'\ form the basis
quietly ushered out of the two :
from Sbeboygao. "I UDderstand tbe Black Angus are
bacteria.
said.
. of a new master raee.
buildings to wait at a safe :
marcblng and going to take over tbe Senate chamber." __ !:&lt; The youths, Alan Schwander,
Authorities said substances
"Water filtration plants in
.• distance. The children were not ·,
"I'm a Ullle disturbed about what bogs wiU think in :?: 19, Chicago, and Steven Pera, found In the far North Side · the Midwest were allegedly to
immediately told the reason ~
my area," aald, Republlcan sft. Gordon Roselelp.
~j 18, Evanston, were held on home ·where the youths were be infected with typhoilj and .
for the evacuation and there ~
''They· are Important animals, too. I am a UUle :::; $250,000 bond each on the arrested were. identified as deadly bacteria," be said.
was no sign of alarm .among ":·~\
~ charges.
typhoid micro-organisms.
Conlisk told newamen the
dlltW'bed we are JeaviDg tbe bog out."
:~;
~
either the students or teachers. J~ : :::;·~&gt; :· ·;• :
Mayor
Richard·'
J.
Daley,
However,
Hanrahan
said,
. . .. . .. .. . .. : .. . .te;&amp;.--=.;w-.,;:-~.::::3."*~
The Vinton Volunteer Fire
Department was called and the
TREATMENT GIVEN
firemen, with the assistance of
Four defendants forfeited
Roy. Russell, 207 South
a few teachers and local
Fined Tuesday were John E.
residents, searched both
·
Second Ave., Middleport, was bond in the court of Middleport Nelson,~. Chauncey, $.100 ·and
buildings. No bomb was . Pomeroy Village funds as of active fund respectively were taken to Veterans Memorial Mayor John Zerkle Tuesday costs and three !lays in jail,
discovered. The threat aJ&gt;- Dec. 31, 1971 totaled $1110,061.76 $~3,190 . 10,
$24,149.70, Hospital by the Middleport E-R night. They were Steve E. driving while -intoxicated, and
parently was a hoax.
according to the report of Clerk $85,219.65.
squad at 2:15 p.m. Tuesday Mullen, 24, Parkersburg, $200, $50 and costs, resisting arl-est,
David C. Campbell, North Jane Walton submitted to
Receipts, disbursements and where be was treated for an and George Horak, 55 1 and .Bernard D. GUkey, 45,
GaTiia Local School Superin- Pomeroy Council Monday clerk's balance respectively in injury suffered in a recent fall Pomeroy, $200, both for driving Middleport, $100 and costs and
tendent, was on the scene night. Receipts, disbursements the inactive fund include, at his home.
while intoxicated; John Roush, · three days in jail, driving while
within minutes as was Vinton's and clerk's balance, respec- special street bond retirement
48, Pomeroy, and Leo Young, intoxicated and 115 and costs
Mayor Ludena Stollings. Jtrn lively in the active fund were: fund, $694.74, $34.07, $1,87~.63 ;
West' Columbia, $30 each for for intoxication.
DIVORCE ASKED
Crace of the Gallia County
General, $10,231.24, $5,648.89, bond 'retirement, $3,473.69,
intoxication.
Mary L. Woods, Middleport,
Sheriff's office arrived shortly $10,555.30; boat dock, no $13,468.82, $12,918.48; cemetery
afterwards.
receipts, no expenditures , improvement, no receipts, no has filed suit for divorce in
Firemen and their assistants $402.95; sewer; $4,643.34, expenditures, $45. · Receipts, Meigs County Common Pleas
wenf into the classrooms and $4,161.10, $25,824.32; Fire disbursements and balances in Court against Thomas K.
(Continued from page 1)
collected the pupils' coats after department, $1,257.89, $513.17, all funds respectively totaled Woods, Middleport, charging
gross
neglect
of
duty
and
exthe bUildings had been search- $2,488.22; cemetery fund, $37,358.53,
$37,662.59,
launch an all-out boycott of merchants following the third
treme cruelty.
ed. Students were not allowed $1,307.50, $1,090.47, $146.46; $100,061.76.
shooting death of a young black by Memphis police within two
to re-enter the buildings and . street fund, $3,784.01, $6,376.46,
.·
weeks.
dismissal was at the regular $7,977,51; state highway fund,
Raymond Stewart, 22, was shot and killed Tuesday night
time.
$306.27, $29.54, $2,360.24; utility
after fleeing from an apparent burglary at a grocery. Two other
Fred A. Eastman, 62, a Rev . Bill Knittle officiating. young blacks, Eddie Hugh Madison, 14, and Fred Lee Berry, 16,
Mayor Stollings said the fund, $2,315 .79, $972 .08,
teachers, firemen and others $15,379.81; water operating, Meigs County farmer, died Burial will be in Meigs County were shot and killed under similar circumstances earlier this
who assisted are to be com- $7,843.45, ·$4,233.99, $7,302.51; Tuesday at his Pomeroy Route Memory Gardens. Friends month. In addition, Rickey Valux, 15, remiuns in serious conmay call at the funeral home
mended for the fine manner in water improvement, no 3 residence.
dition after having been wounded by pollee Thursday.
Mr. Eastman is survived by anytime.
which they handled the receipts, no expenditures,
situation.
$15.61; guaranty meter, $125, three sisters, Mrs. Velma
$124, $3,750.74; parking meter Stout, Albany Route I; Mrs.
fund, $1,375.50, $l,ooo.oo, . Elma Epple, Minersville Route
$8,710.40; sanitary sewer 1, and Mrs. Elsie Phillips,
construction, no receipts, no Cambridge; four brothers,
George, of Pomeroy Route 3;
expenditures, $5.58.
Total receipts, disbur- Charles, North Lewisburg,
sements and the balance in the Ohio; Frank, of Akron, arid
Homer, in Minnesota, and
nieces and nephews.
Naomi Weatherby several
F. Guy Mutchler, 95, died
He was the son of the late
Tuesday at the Plymouth
Samuel and Ida Smith EastDied
on
Tuesday
PRICES
Manor
Nursing
Home ,
man. Besides his parents, be
'
was preceded in death by a
Plymouth, Indiana. Mr.
TODAY
THRU
Mrs. Naomi Weatherby, 62, sister, Etta, and a brother,
Mutchler was a long time
resident of Meigs County, a Atbens Route 4, died Tuesday 'Wilbul'. Funeral services will
SAT., ·JAN. 22nd
retired teacher in the Meigs evening at the Hillcrest Nur- be at · 1 p.m. Friday at the
County schools and served for sing 'Home in Athens following Ewing Funeral Home with the
20 years · on the Board of a long Illness. Mrs. Weatherby
QUANTITIES
Directors of The Farmers was a former resident of Meigs
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
County but had resided in
Bank &amp; Savings Company.
ADMITTED - Earl Custer,
He was a member of the Athens County most of ber life.
Syracuse;
Effie Pyle, ReedsUnited Methodist Church, She was employed at the
GIRLS' SIZES ·
Pomeroy, a former member of Athens State Hospltal13 years ville; Dixie Snyder, MidBOYS' VINYL
dleport;
Franklin
Casto,
the Harrisonvllle Grange and and was a member of the
for many years was overseer of Rolling Hills Apostolic Church Pomeroy; James Autherson,
Syracuse; Grant Hickman,
the Meigs County Pomona In Athens.
Surviving are her husband, Hartford; Minia Givens,
Grange.
REG. 97'
REG. 88'
He was preceded In death by Lester; a daughter, Mrs. Gay Portland; John Connolly, Long
Bottom.
his first wife, Florence Norman, of Pomeroy; her
DISCHARGED - John
Rawlings Mutchler. He is 'father, Jack Stanley, New
Roush,
Carolyn Thompson,
survived by his wife, Myrtle Lexington; e,ight grandRoss Mutchler of Walkerton, children; a sister, Mrs. Dee Wanda Mohler, Lori Casto,
Indiana, one son, Hugh, of Lee Cavey, Glouster, and a Judy Ginther, Ardith Barton.
PAIR
PAIR
Cleveland, three grandchildren brother, Hanford Stanley,
and a nephew, Dwight Mut- Pomeroy. Her mother,
Amanda stanley, preceded her
chler, Athens.
REG. 12.11 "G.L' EUCiliiC
D!ILIOR .
REG. 7.18
I CUP
m
death.
Th'e funeral service will be
Funeral services will be beld
held Friday at 2 p.m. at the
ENTIRE STOCK
at
1 p.m. Friday at the Hughes
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
MISS WONDERFUL
REG. 24.18
in Middleport, with the Rev. Funeral Home in Athens with
t.ADNUNIWI
R~ ltU
IOSIUIIA 12 CUP
Mr.
Jolm
Pollard
officiating.
Robert Card officiating.
Friends may be received at Burial will be in Clark's Chapel
the funeral home from 7p.m. to Cemetery. Friends may call at
REG. l44 l 2.11
!I.UM. DR mt.ORS
9 p.m. Thursday or until the the funeral home from 2 to 4 p.
m.
and
from
7
to
9
p.
m.
time of the service Friday.
Burial will be in the Miles Thursday.
Cemetery at Rutland.
·' '

.~ Se'f¥1te in Heavy Judgm~nt

I

'*

:1

f

Funds Exceed $J (}()' (}(}()

.

mvesll~tion was con uaung, cult to polson~ water~·
buthedidnotbel!eve~more
"It:s pretty (anllll!llc," .he
persons wegreedre
mvo~:Conllsk .md. :•1n fact, l'r8Cal'll it aa a
Dale~ a
w
te ~ harebrained · ~,"
.
He said, ''Whatev: sh P
~t Aulstlnt Stale's Attorshould have been Ia n ave ney Jack B. Scllmettenr aald
been tl'Jten."
.:
the . !lie, IIUbllallca .ldel)tlfled aa
"Remember ·~ ~a~968 ., typhoid nil~O:Organllma waa
same ~ ~ '
de~ejoped by Per~ In a
Daley said, m =re~:r,to.:~ l~bor.atory at ,.th~ Mayfair
alleged ~t ~
P . .
C81)1JU. ~ Clllcaao Cl!t ColLake Michigan during the lege,' where lloth Jl!l!ll were ,
Democr~tlc National Con- students. He aald a q~Uty of
ventlon;disord~rs.
deadlygerrnsallowaafound in
· Jardme said the. 20•000 the college labore!ory.
square miles of .water m Lak.e · .
·
·

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MINI HAIR

GENERAL
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FRIDAY - 9-9 SATURDAY ,

. \Needs Oothing
The jerry Searles family of
Albany Route 4 whose home
was destroyed by fire Sunday
morning, is in need of clothing
and furniture, it was reported
today.
The Searles have two small
;ons, age three and four. The
four-year-old wears size four
.rousers, shirt and coat and the
three-year-old wears size Uu'ee
in these garments.
The four-year-old wears size
10'h shoes and the three-yearold wears fl&gt;. The mother and
father are in need of clothing.
Residents having ·clouiing or
furnishings which they wUI
donate may call 742-3872. The
family members are presently
·at the Ray Hanning home ·in .
Harrisonville.
•

The distinctive
elegance of Traditional

FINISHING .
SAME DAY
SERV.ICE
In At9-0ut At S
Use Our Free Parking Lot

Robinson's aeaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomtro 1
'

REG. 10.97 WESTIIIGitOUSE

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• Con Opener up·front - Eosy to see ond use

15 Ll. RIWVIILI.

\

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releqse: ;

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REG •.
$10.96

Sf199

HECK'S REG.

$24.88

HECK'$ REG. $14.9 6

REG. 94' 10 1.28

OVENWARE

fi ••9

• ANatOII.fKICXING

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\;i~t
EA.

Plenty of steam for easier ironing . Clean-view
heel for. ironing in ony dire(t ion . .. lets you ~ee
as you tron . Easy-to-see fa bric dial. Leak -proof.
lightwe ight. Black handle , ch rome cover, 1200
watts, 120 volh . AC only.

DRINK

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STEAM .IRON

\-~[]

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b)~
GENERAL ELECTRIC

• laii11Ct4 nrryllc Handle - camlortobfe to hold and IJ S~ .

PUNCH

THERMOWARE
' 'HIS 'N HERS

G.E.

HAIR

WALL

DRYER

CLOCK

PORTABLE VAC
• c••

,ut lli•• t.,illlt-weigt\1 le~s than 5 lbi. to go
• Po•erllllotor - s~cks in 4 gallon s of oir each second

II£G. Ul

• 11 Fo1t

88

..... hereyau
·

Coi"t1 -- gh•.,, odded reach lor cleaning in worbho p or

auto.
• hsy-1o·Ust llhchllttllls- include Upho lsttry and fobri c non.le
'
floor and wall brush_, and 3 ext.,mion wands.
• lklwer Dllllft ·- for rema~ i ng hard-to -reach dirt .

HECK'S
REG.

$9.88

HECK'S REG. $9.88

HECK'S
REG.
$18.88

•

HS-300

P1 Pleasant Store On~

77
HECK'S

REG; sug
.

2501

Pt Pleasant Store On~

"CEEUUIIY"

REG. 1.19

1 OIILT

1£6. 61'

SUNSET

9 L1. RMI/12 II. 110AST

FLANNEL ROBES

REOORDING

1[6. 47'

TAPE·

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l'IESCUT

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II£G.. 54' · 10 nfl~

I10USEIIJU)

4 · SOAP PADS

-- 3~· i 150 ft
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4tar

SYLVANIA
90MINUTE

.CASSEnE
TAPE

KODAK
1·135-20~10

KX flS-iO

20 EXPOSURE
KODACHROME

'SLIDE FILM

~•_ ]_00

G.L

ELEC. KNIFE

or

lith 31
COI.OIICUFT ,_acES SING

150:A3

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So glamorous yet 10 livoblel Crafted
witl! core far yout tnjoy.,.nt, Luah pottemtd ond crushed velvet enhance the
b"uty of thia , 84" looae pillow-back
sola with contoured bolst.r orma and
ch~lra wltho11achtd podarma and bock.

• 11 position swi tch • 10 speeds 1e'Twin powerfu_! _chrome _beaters • Lightweight for portable
mtxmg • Ftngertip control • Automatic beater

~Ht~f:i·l

REG. Ul IEII'S

36&lt;46

SHELf:

S699

Reliable performers ... each watch· is
shock resistant and ha s unbreakable
mainspring . Assorted styles far men and
ladies.

1[6. 1.19 BOYS'

IJYS'

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12 alUM!

.

'

GARBAGE
CAN
R£G. 1.99 '

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
•

~....

FRAM

FESTIVAL

TRASH CAN
LINERS

r ,.

Pt Pleasant
$In Only·

FLASH
CUBES

HECK'S

9VOLT
-- G.E.
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RADIO

TYPE X

A. fo~e: o lon.g companion, fhis G.
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good Frn; AM lis h!ning wherever
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$117
HECK'S
..

HECK'SRIG. 39• EACH

· JIWiliY 11!1.

l&amp;a2011,

10 OOUIIT

'

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FURNACE ·
FILTERS

REG. '1.27

HECK'S REG.
$2.99
HECK'S REG. $2,98

BUIXl

'D xl

36

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•·
.I

2 OlltT

~

ENAMEL ROASTER .

.

.10 SPEED
MIXER
CHROME MIXER

WRIST WATCHES

BELT

22EA MEN'S COVERALLS

SPORT SH

lEG. 12.11

17 JEWEL

'FACE
II OlllT

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HECK'S REG. $73.96

LADIES' &amp; MEN'S
VAN
WYCK ·

lEG. 17'

DUST MOPS

lEA. 2.44

$6]88
WALTHAM

VW-59

PANTY HQSE

lEG. 10.97 WESTINGHOUSE

.Pl Pleasant Store On~

OPENER

lEG. 1.21

DINNERWARE SETS

FLEXSTEEL

J•pltce .,...1116/1

'SHIR

II 1'C.

and par a lia. mar.ings . ec flashgun Ull!~ AG· l bulbi .

No. 2156

CAN

ELEC. P

REG. 3JI ,

6C lla~ hgtm . Yalhinon 4)mm 1/:2' .8 lens, Copoll/75 to 1/ 300
~ec0r1cf ihtJ I!er . V1ewl inder j rang e -fi nder ha~ br ight fram e

HECK'S REG. $9.96

'· J I

IIWEliY DIPT.

35 MM CAMERA KIT

Kit inc lude\ Yo1hoc a '( J camera , lt'Otf!er E ~eryday ca se ond

R.GULAR
$:4.9.96

HECK'S REG. $59.88

WHILE

ELEC. PERCOLATOR

99

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372

YASHICA

POMEROY

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SJ788

COME RIGHT TO .

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line llyl ing . Ad j u~tnb l ll eye prece .

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I "· -, '• "
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window vie wfihde r. Slop/go
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·

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dicotor . Rit1 / lock w ntrol . Picture

Has 2 speaker$, all solid·state circuitry, automOt -

Dies Tuesday
.In Indiana .

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

loading. Eieo:tric film drive. Prt ·

ci~ior. f/ 2.8 lens. Film ~upply i

AUTO TAPE.PLAYER

1(

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A~50

LEAR JET

PROFESSIONAL TUNE-UP

Mr. Mutchler

129 MILL STREET

BISSEL
CARPET
SWEEPER

, Md~IE

Fred Eastman Died Tuesday.

. Searles Family

' .(._.

'

Four Forfeit Court Bonds '

News•.. in.~riefs

SALE

,

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•

Pt Pleasant
Store On~

-•'

'

ienl carrying lhong. Nine Tronsi~­
tor ~. 2 Y
4" dynamic speaker.

RADIO
BATTERIES

%"DYMO

LABEl
MAKER ·

ROTARY
SLIDE .
TRAYS
Fih mo'st rofory
sl:de Pr•j ector s,
including Sawyers
and Kodak .

2 · FOR

29(

HECK'S REG.
29' EACH

HECK'S
REG.

$3.99

HECK'S
REG, .

$2.49

�... .

' ..

--~··~·

.....

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

....

'

.

. .. . ....

\

· ---~

-

,

. ...

.

.

! •
'

a -'!,'he DaUySelltlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O.,
. Jan. 19, 1972

.,

.

Teen,agers' Maste.r Race Sche"!:e !?}]!!.~.;..

Bomb . Scare. Empties School

• •.•.••n. ·~•.....
..··~·:.:.·.:·····~.:....;.;....•...·.~···b·~·"'•:O:O:·~~~~
~- .. ...: ..... .:
-...............,...............
-v.h.l'o-...-.o;•,.o; .... ~-.-.·""""·-·.-.·.-.····. ;-&gt;
•
•
VINTON
Vinton ""h»'A
' CHICAGO (UP! )~It read Police SUperintendent James ''There is no indication of any
Elementary
S.chool was
likeatelevlslonscript-kilUng B. Conll:ik Jr. and Water infection . of pul!Uc water or
evacuated Tuesday afternoon
off a major city's pop)llatiorrto Commissioner James ' 'w . other public facUlties."
after a bomb threat was
a "new master race" · .Jardine appeared at the ex- c "Investigation disclosed that
MADISON, Wis. (UPI) - The Wisroo.sin Senate
~§;. establish
received at 1:50 p.m.
-but
to
Chicago's
top officials · traordlnary news conference an organiZation called Rise, of
finally made Its cboice between cows and bogs
~
Nanette JuStus, an eighth
gathere&lt;l at a news conference after the alleged plot was which Schw&amp;nder and Pera
TUesday alter a ball-hour debate. The Senate passed a
grade student, who answered
to verify thatthe water supply uncovered . They .assured Werl! organizers, hsd allegedly
measure designallng the dairy cow as Wlscoosm's
the telephone call, · said the
was safe it was a "harebrained Chicagoans that proper plam\ed poisOning water SliP:
domestic animal.
,
caller announced that a bomb
scbeme."
precautions had been taken. plies and · streadlng deadly
"I tblnk Ibis is a racial dlscrimlllallon BDIOIIII
was planted in the school and
Two college youths who
State's attorney Edward V. diseases in Illinois and elsecaltie," said Sen. Dale McKenna, a Democrat from
would explode in thirty
allegedly harbored the master fllmrahan said the alleged plot where," Hanrahan said.
Jefferson.
minutes. Miss Justus said the
race · dream were charged extended beyond Chicago to
"Members bf Rise were
"Ibis calls for a Holstem as the state dairy cow
caller had a masculine voice
Tuesday
with
conspiracy
to
other
cofi\munlties
in
the
allegedly
to .be inoculated and
~·:·
and appeared to be an adult.
and all my Guernsey people wiU be oo my back."
commit murder in a plot to Midwest. Ft . Sheridan, an immunized, enabling l!Iem to
Minutes
later,
ap·''Maybe there Is a Utile dlscrtminaUon," said
i~ poison Chicago's water supply Army base north .of the city, survive the . poisonings and
proximateiy 3110 students were ·
Senate Majority Leader Ernest Keppler, a Republican
~ wi.th typhoid and other deadly . was a possible tarset, police lliseases and t'\ form the basis
quietly ushered out of the two :
from Sbeboygao. "I UDderstand tbe Black Angus are
bacteria.
said.
. of a new master raee.
buildings to wait at a safe :
marcblng and going to take over tbe Senate chamber." __ !:&lt; The youths, Alan Schwander,
Authorities said substances
"Water filtration plants in
.• distance. The children were not ·,
"I'm a Ullle disturbed about what bogs wiU think in :?: 19, Chicago, and Steven Pera, found In the far North Side · the Midwest were allegedly to
immediately told the reason ~
my area," aald, Republlcan sft. Gordon Roselelp.
~j 18, Evanston, were held on home ·where the youths were be infected with typhoilj and .
for the evacuation and there ~
''They· are Important animals, too. I am a UUle :::; $250,000 bond each on the arrested were. identified as deadly bacteria," be said.
was no sign of alarm .among ":·~\
~ charges.
typhoid micro-organisms.
Conlisk told newamen the
dlltW'bed we are JeaviDg tbe bog out."
:~;
~
either the students or teachers. J~ : :::;·~&gt; :· ·;• :
Mayor
Richard·'
J.
Daley,
However,
Hanrahan
said,
. . .. . .. .. . .. : .. . .te;&amp;.--=.;w-.,;:-~.::::3."*~
The Vinton Volunteer Fire
Department was called and the
TREATMENT GIVEN
firemen, with the assistance of
Four defendants forfeited
Roy. Russell, 207 South
a few teachers and local
Fined Tuesday were John E.
residents, searched both
·
Second Ave., Middleport, was bond in the court of Middleport Nelson,~. Chauncey, $.100 ·and
buildings. No bomb was . Pomeroy Village funds as of active fund respectively were taken to Veterans Memorial Mayor John Zerkle Tuesday costs and three !lays in jail,
discovered. The threat aJ&gt;- Dec. 31, 1971 totaled $1110,061.76 $~3,190 . 10,
$24,149.70, Hospital by the Middleport E-R night. They were Steve E. driving while -intoxicated, and
parently was a hoax.
according to the report of Clerk $85,219.65.
squad at 2:15 p.m. Tuesday Mullen, 24, Parkersburg, $200, $50 and costs, resisting arl-est,
David C. Campbell, North Jane Walton submitted to
Receipts, disbursements and where be was treated for an and George Horak, 55 1 and .Bernard D. GUkey, 45,
GaTiia Local School Superin- Pomeroy Council Monday clerk's balance respectively in injury suffered in a recent fall Pomeroy, $200, both for driving Middleport, $100 and costs and
tendent, was on the scene night. Receipts, disbursements the inactive fund include, at his home.
while intoxicated; John Roush, · three days in jail, driving while
within minutes as was Vinton's and clerk's balance, respec- special street bond retirement
48, Pomeroy, and Leo Young, intoxicated and 115 and costs
Mayor Ludena Stollings. Jtrn lively in the active fund were: fund, $694.74, $34.07, $1,87~.63 ;
West' Columbia, $30 each for for intoxication.
DIVORCE ASKED
Crace of the Gallia County
General, $10,231.24, $5,648.89, bond 'retirement, $3,473.69,
intoxication.
Mary L. Woods, Middleport,
Sheriff's office arrived shortly $10,555.30; boat dock, no $13,468.82, $12,918.48; cemetery
afterwards.
receipts, no expenditures , improvement, no receipts, no has filed suit for divorce in
Firemen and their assistants $402.95; sewer; $4,643.34, expenditures, $45. · Receipts, Meigs County Common Pleas
wenf into the classrooms and $4,161.10, $25,824.32; Fire disbursements and balances in Court against Thomas K.
(Continued from page 1)
collected the pupils' coats after department, $1,257.89, $513.17, all funds respectively totaled Woods, Middleport, charging
gross
neglect
of
duty
and
exthe bUildings had been search- $2,488.22; cemetery fund, $37,358.53,
$37,662.59,
launch an all-out boycott of merchants following the third
treme cruelty.
ed. Students were not allowed $1,307.50, $1,090.47, $146.46; $100,061.76.
shooting death of a young black by Memphis police within two
to re-enter the buildings and . street fund, $3,784.01, $6,376.46,
.·
weeks.
dismissal was at the regular $7,977,51; state highway fund,
Raymond Stewart, 22, was shot and killed Tuesday night
time.
$306.27, $29.54, $2,360.24; utility
after fleeing from an apparent burglary at a grocery. Two other
Fred A. Eastman, 62, a Rev . Bill Knittle officiating. young blacks, Eddie Hugh Madison, 14, and Fred Lee Berry, 16,
Mayor Stollings said the fund, $2,315 .79, $972 .08,
teachers, firemen and others $15,379.81; water operating, Meigs County farmer, died Burial will be in Meigs County were shot and killed under similar circumstances earlier this
who assisted are to be com- $7,843.45, ·$4,233.99, $7,302.51; Tuesday at his Pomeroy Route Memory Gardens. Friends month. In addition, Rickey Valux, 15, remiuns in serious conmay call at the funeral home
mended for the fine manner in water improvement, no 3 residence.
dition after having been wounded by pollee Thursday.
Mr. Eastman is survived by anytime.
which they handled the receipts, no expenditures,
situation.
$15.61; guaranty meter, $125, three sisters, Mrs. Velma
$124, $3,750.74; parking meter Stout, Albany Route I; Mrs.
fund, $1,375.50, $l,ooo.oo, . Elma Epple, Minersville Route
$8,710.40; sanitary sewer 1, and Mrs. Elsie Phillips,
construction, no receipts, no Cambridge; four brothers,
George, of Pomeroy Route 3;
expenditures, $5.58.
Total receipts, disbur- Charles, North Lewisburg,
sements and the balance in the Ohio; Frank, of Akron, arid
Homer, in Minnesota, and
nieces and nephews.
Naomi Weatherby several
F. Guy Mutchler, 95, died
He was the son of the late
Tuesday at the Plymouth
Samuel and Ida Smith EastDied
on
Tuesday
PRICES
Manor
Nursing
Home ,
man. Besides his parents, be
'
was preceded in death by a
Plymouth, Indiana. Mr.
TODAY
THRU
Mrs. Naomi Weatherby, 62, sister, Etta, and a brother,
Mutchler was a long time
resident of Meigs County, a Atbens Route 4, died Tuesday 'Wilbul'. Funeral services will
SAT., ·JAN. 22nd
retired teacher in the Meigs evening at the Hillcrest Nur- be at · 1 p.m. Friday at the
County schools and served for sing 'Home in Athens following Ewing Funeral Home with the
20 years · on the Board of a long Illness. Mrs. Weatherby
QUANTITIES
Directors of The Farmers was a former resident of Meigs
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
County but had resided in
Bank &amp; Savings Company.
ADMITTED - Earl Custer,
He was a member of the Athens County most of ber life.
Syracuse;
Effie Pyle, ReedsUnited Methodist Church, She was employed at the
GIRLS' SIZES ·
Pomeroy, a former member of Athens State Hospltal13 years ville; Dixie Snyder, MidBOYS' VINYL
dleport;
Franklin
Casto,
the Harrisonvllle Grange and and was a member of the
for many years was overseer of Rolling Hills Apostolic Church Pomeroy; James Autherson,
Syracuse; Grant Hickman,
the Meigs County Pomona In Athens.
Surviving are her husband, Hartford; Minia Givens,
Grange.
REG. 97'
REG. 88'
He was preceded In death by Lester; a daughter, Mrs. Gay Portland; John Connolly, Long
Bottom.
his first wife, Florence Norman, of Pomeroy; her
DISCHARGED - John
Rawlings Mutchler. He is 'father, Jack Stanley, New
Roush,
Carolyn Thompson,
survived by his wife, Myrtle Lexington; e,ight grandRoss Mutchler of Walkerton, children; a sister, Mrs. Dee Wanda Mohler, Lori Casto,
Indiana, one son, Hugh, of Lee Cavey, Glouster, and a Judy Ginther, Ardith Barton.
PAIR
PAIR
Cleveland, three grandchildren brother, Hanford Stanley,
and a nephew, Dwight Mut- Pomeroy. Her mother,
Amanda stanley, preceded her
chler, Athens.
REG. 12.11 "G.L' EUCiliiC
D!ILIOR .
REG. 7.18
I CUP
m
death.
Th'e funeral service will be
Funeral services will be beld
held Friday at 2 p.m. at the
ENTIRE STOCK
at
1 p.m. Friday at the Hughes
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
MISS WONDERFUL
REG. 24.18
in Middleport, with the Rev. Funeral Home in Athens with
t.ADNUNIWI
R~ ltU
IOSIUIIA 12 CUP
Mr.
Jolm
Pollard
officiating.
Robert Card officiating.
Friends may be received at Burial will be in Clark's Chapel
the funeral home from 7p.m. to Cemetery. Friends may call at
REG. l44 l 2.11
!I.UM. DR mt.ORS
9 p.m. Thursday or until the the funeral home from 2 to 4 p.
m.
and
from
7
to
9
p.
m.
time of the service Friday.
Burial will be in the Miles Thursday.
Cemetery at Rutland.
·' '

.~ Se'f¥1te in Heavy Judgm~nt

I

'*

:1

f

Funds Exceed $J (}()' (}(}()

.

mvesll~tion was con uaung, cult to polson~ water~·
buthedidnotbel!eve~more
"It:s pretty (anllll!llc," .he
persons wegreedre
mvo~:Conllsk .md. :•1n fact, l'r8Cal'll it aa a
Dale~ a
w
te ~ harebrained · ~,"
.
He said, ''Whatev: sh P
~t Aulstlnt Stale's Attorshould have been Ia n ave ney Jack B. Scllmettenr aald
been tl'Jten."
.:
the . !lie, IIUbllallca .ldel)tlfled aa
"Remember ·~ ~a~968 ., typhoid nil~O:Organllma waa
same ~ ~ '
de~ejoped by Per~ In a
Daley said, m =re~:r,to.:~ l~bor.atory at ,.th~ Mayfair
alleged ~t ~
P . .
C81)1JU. ~ Clllcaao Cl!t ColLake Michigan during the lege,' where lloth Jl!l!ll were ,
Democr~tlc National Con- students. He aald a q~Uty of
ventlon;disord~rs.
deadlygerrnsallowaafound in
· Jardme said the. 20•000 the college labore!ory.
square miles of .water m Lak.e · .
·
·

KEEP GOING THIS WINTER WITH

Moore's Car Care.
BELL &amp; HOWELL
SUPER 8

CAMERA
:B~nERIES -

ANTI-FREEZE
~RAKE SERVIa

·STRETCH TIGHTS

track change, lighted program indicator , vol-

SHOES
~: 45% OFF

MINI HAIR

GENERAL
ELECTRIC ,

FRIDAY - 9-9 SATURDAY ,

. \Needs Oothing
The jerry Searles family of
Albany Route 4 whose home
was destroyed by fire Sunday
morning, is in need of clothing
and furniture, it was reported
today.
The Searles have two small
;ons, age three and four. The
four-year-old wears size four
.rousers, shirt and coat and the
three-year-old wears size Uu'ee
in these garments.
The four-year-old wears size
10'h shoes and the three-yearold wears fl&gt;. The mother and
father are in need of clothing.
Residents having ·clouiing or
furnishings which they wUI
donate may call 742-3872. The
family members are presently
·at the Ray Hanning home ·in .
Harrisonville.
•

The distinctive
elegance of Traditional

FINISHING .
SAME DAY
SERV.ICE
In At9-0ut At S
Use Our Free Parking Lot

Robinson's aeaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomtro 1
'

REG. 10.97 WESTIIIGitOUSE

ELEC.

ELEC. CAN OPENER
IE&amp;. II'

REG. 1.39

• No radio or TV interference.
• ·A,vr;dlable in Avocado, Harvest, or
White .
• FeatureS " Ea~y-Ciean " removable cutter
and pierce ./ever-assembly .
• Con Opener up·front - Eosy to see ond use

15 Ll. RIWVIILI.

\

IE&amp;. Ul

~s

releqse: ;

t). ,,

.

f:,.~

'·'IJ

SJ988

' '

'

REG •.
$10.96

Sf199

HECK'S REG.

$24.88

HECK'$ REG. $14.9 6

REG. 94' 10 1.28

OVENWARE

fi ••9

• ANatOII.fKICXING

"GRE£11 MEADOW

\;i~t
EA.

Plenty of steam for easier ironing . Clean-view
heel for. ironing in ony dire(t ion . .. lets you ~ee
as you tron . Easy-to-see fa bric dial. Leak -proof.
lightwe ight. Black handle , ch rome cover, 1200
watts, 120 volh . AC only.

DRINK

- --:J

I

PROCTOR
STEAM .IRON

\-~[]

':b

MV-3

b)~
GENERAL ELECTRIC

• laii11Ct4 nrryllc Handle - camlortobfe to hold and IJ S~ .

PUNCH

THERMOWARE
' 'HIS 'N HERS

G.E.

HAIR

WALL

DRYER

CLOCK

PORTABLE VAC
• c••

,ut lli•• t.,illlt-weigt\1 le~s than 5 lbi. to go
• Po•erllllotor - s~cks in 4 gallon s of oir each second

II£G. Ul

• 11 Fo1t

88

..... hereyau
·

Coi"t1 -- gh•.,, odded reach lor cleaning in worbho p or

auto.
• hsy-1o·Ust llhchllttllls- include Upho lsttry and fobri c non.le
'
floor and wall brush_, and 3 ext.,mion wands.
• lklwer Dllllft ·- for rema~ i ng hard-to -reach dirt .

HECK'S
REG.

$9.88

HECK'S REG. $9.88

HECK'S
REG.
$18.88

•

HS-300

P1 Pleasant Store On~

77
HECK'S

REG; sug
.

2501

Pt Pleasant Store On~

"CEEUUIIY"

REG. 1.19

1 OIILT

1£6. 61'

SUNSET

9 L1. RMI/12 II. 110AST

FLANNEL ROBES

REOORDING

1[6. 47'

TAPE·

·, .

l'IESCUT

·PLATE
II£G.. 54' · 10 nfl~

I10USEIIJU)

4 · SOAP PADS

-- 3~· i 150 ft
·

4tar

SYLVANIA
90MINUTE

.CASSEnE
TAPE

KODAK
1·135-20~10

KX flS-iO

20 EXPOSURE
KODACHROME

'SLIDE FILM

~•_ ]_00

G.L

ELEC. KNIFE

or

lith 31
COI.OIICUFT ,_acES SING

150:A3

·PlASTIC ,
So glamorous yet 10 livoblel Crafted
witl! core far yout tnjoy.,.nt, Luah pottemtd ond crushed velvet enhance the
b"uty of thia , 84" looae pillow-back
sola with contoured bolst.r orma and
ch~lra wltho11achtd podarma and bock.

• 11 position swi tch • 10 speeds 1e'Twin powerfu_! _chrome _beaters • Lightweight for portable
mtxmg • Ftngertip control • Automatic beater

~Ht~f:i·l

REG. Ul IEII'S

36&lt;46

SHELf:

S699

Reliable performers ... each watch· is
shock resistant and ha s unbreakable
mainspring . Assorted styles far men and
ladies.

1[6. 1.19 BOYS'

IJYS'

!'I ENAMEL

12 alUM!

.

'

GARBAGE
CAN
R£G. 1.99 '

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
•

~....

FRAM

FESTIVAL

TRASH CAN
LINERS

r ,.

Pt Pleasant
$In Only·

FLASH
CUBES

HECK'S

9VOLT
-- G.E.
PORTABLE
RADIO

TYPE X

A. fo~e: o lon.g companion, fhis G.
E. mlntohf re radi o brings you
good Frn; AM lis h!ning wherever
you go , lt leaturn GE ' s bottery
Hlver circuit for longer botfery ·
Ide. With earphone ond con'tln·

$117
HECK'S
..

HECK'SRIG. 39• EACH

· JIWiliY 11!1.

l&amp;a2011,

10 OOUIIT

'

"'

FURNACE ·
FILTERS

REG. '1.27

HECK'S REG.
$2.99
HECK'S REG. $2,98

BUIXl

'D xl

36

'.

•·
.I

2 OlltT

~

ENAMEL ROASTER .

.

.10 SPEED
MIXER
CHROME MIXER

WRIST WATCHES

BELT

22EA MEN'S COVERALLS

SPORT SH

lEG. 12.11

17 JEWEL

'FACE
II OlllT

l1EG. II' .

HECK'S REG. $73.96

LADIES' &amp; MEN'S
VAN
WYCK ·

lEG. 17'

DUST MOPS

lEA. 2.44

$6]88
WALTHAM

VW-59

PANTY HQSE

lEG. 10.97 WESTINGHOUSE

.Pl Pleasant Store On~

OPENER

lEG. 1.21

DINNERWARE SETS

FLEXSTEEL

J•pltce .,...1116/1

'SHIR

II 1'C.

and par a lia. mar.ings . ec flashgun Ull!~ AG· l bulbi .

No. 2156

CAN

ELEC. P

REG. 3JI ,

6C lla~ hgtm . Yalhinon 4)mm 1/:2' .8 lens, Copoll/75 to 1/ 300
~ec0r1cf ihtJ I!er . V1ewl inder j rang e -fi nder ha~ br ight fram e

HECK'S REG. $9.96

'· J I

IIWEliY DIPT.

35 MM CAMERA KIT

Kit inc lude\ Yo1hoc a '( J camera , lt'Otf!er E ~eryday ca se ond

R.GULAR
$:4.9.96

HECK'S REG. $59.88

WHILE

ELEC. PERCOLATOR

99

'

372

YASHICA

POMEROY

c

CAN OPENER

SJ788

COME RIGHT TO .

GooD

DRESS GLOVES

line llyl ing . Ad j u~tnb l ll eye prece .

~ECI('S

Moore's Service Center

I "· -, '• "
' '!. ··.

window vie wfihde r. Slop/go
eJO:po~ure ihdicoton . New ~ lim ­

ume, tone, and balorice contro ls, exclusive dra matic styling, famous lear Jet name and guaran tee .
.
·

·MUFFLERS - SNOW TIRES

·

'O, t\1\t.!.

dicotor . Rit1 / lock w ntrol . Picture

Has 2 speaker$, all solid·state circuitry, automOt -

Dies Tuesday
.In Indiana .

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

loading. Eieo:tric film drive. Prt ·

ci~ior. f/ 2.8 lens. Film ~upply i

AUTO TAPE.PLAYER

1(

SHOCKS -

Super B drop-~n mrtridge film

A~50

LEAR JET

PROFESSIONAL TUNE-UP

Mr. Mutchler

129 MILL STREET

BISSEL
CARPET
SWEEPER

, Md~IE

Fred Eastman Died Tuesday.

. Searles Family

' .(._.

'

Four Forfeit Court Bonds '

News•.. in.~riefs

SALE

,

. ,,
•

Pt Pleasant
Store On~

-•'

'

ienl carrying lhong. Nine Tronsi~­
tor ~. 2 Y
4" dynamic speaker.

RADIO
BATTERIES

%"DYMO

LABEl
MAKER ·

ROTARY
SLIDE .
TRAYS
Fih mo'st rofory
sl:de Pr•j ector s,
including Sawyers
and Kodak .

2 · FOR

29(

HECK'S REG.
29' EACH

HECK'S
REG.

$3.99

HECK'S
REG, .

$2.49

�.

. I .

'

.

I

.-,

.

'

12

PRIME

GAS LINE
ANTI ..FREEZE .

4FOR ·

$100
ANTIFREEZE
COOLANT .,:l"'..o••
.. ' .. . ...

mr.

·----·-- -

~--

WAGNER

. . ' ..

BRAKEJLUID
..

,_,_

39c

HECK'S REG .
31' Ea.

For protection on the highways
after dark , th is hi g h wa y emer -

gency fla re is your ideal buy.

3PACk

This co~centrot.d windshield
cleaner is good all ~sJ'asons

•'

MOTOR OIL

24

.-

HECK'S REG.

~9;

QUART

AI/TOMOTIVE ·

IE,,

59' QUART

.

~

'
'

NO IRON SHEETS

AfroMT/VIII'r.

Beautiful decorator colors and patterns
are availabl e iri these luxuriou s Don ·
River Dontrell sheets. 50% Fortrel ond

18" WIDE ·

.

'CABLES

50% Cotton.

MAGIC

rage.

HEC:K'S REG.
' 991,

OR FULL FITTED

MATCHING

$J99

CASES

tlOTHIIIUE,,

CI.OTHIHG DI1T.

BATH

These washab le, color fast bedspread s ore
made of cotton Chenille . Full bed size·o-nly-.
Choose from o large se lection of cHarted
colors.

TOWELS

c

HECK'S REG.
$9.99

HECK'S REG.
$2.29

BEDSPREAD

CANNON

84

$

PAIR

CHENILLE

'.66

$266

II" XI04"

HECK'S REG. 38'

Al/1011()11'11 DII'T. '

$188

OR TWIN FITTED

4: ya~ •1·

HECK'S'
·REG,
. $1.28

Enha nce the decor in yo~:~r bath room
with t hi s 2-pi ece set. Set·jnclud es:
Tonk cover with matching lid cover.

Co mp le!ely woshable.

72"X 104"

COVER

144

X

BROADLOOM ·
CARPET
RUNNERS

DAIIIYER ..
DAITRELL

HECK'S REG.

PACKAGE of Z

AUTOMOTIIIE DEPT.

. 10 TO 9

'

SQUEEGEE-SCRAPER
Ideal to have in the home or go·

'
AUTOMOTIIIE
DE1T.

10T09

, ,; 10W40

REPLACEMENT

HECK'S REG.
99'

OPEIUMILY

VALVOi.INE

;WINDSHIELD CLEANER

i

TAIL, SIGNAL, OR
STOPLIGHT ·
......
BULBS

ONIHal

334j

AUTOMOTIIIE •
DE/IT.

AUTOMOT/'11 DEl' f.

, STP

oft~eyea r .

HECK'S 99 ,
REG.

-- &gt;

· SAFETY FLARE .·

'

'.

.,

12

AIITOIIfJT/'11

\ '

'

OPIINaY
10 _
TO 9 .

HECK'SREG.
$1.49

.. . .. ..-

HAND TOWELS •••• .•.
WASH CLOTH . .. . .. ..

ti.()TIIIIfUII'T.

CI.OTHIHC

Pt Pleasant Store On~

""·

$

&amp;9c
39c

66

HECK'S REG .
$4.49

ClOTH/tiC DE1T.

· !'f. Pleasant Store

20GALLON
TRASH CAN

BERNZ.O·MATIC

LINERS

KIT

ENTERPRISE ·
ALUMINUM
4 QT. COVERED

WINDOW:SHADES
Look allroctive in
roundings.

SPONG.E MOP

most qll sur -

No. 9095

LARGE SIZE

SAUCE PAN

99~:

JT- 10

HECK'S REG. s&amp;,gg

HECK'S REG
$3.88

l '

HECK'S REG. 1.5.8
1

llfJIISIWAII

Pl Pleaant Store Only

HECK'S
REG.
$1.29
lillr.

270Z.

The teri towlfl i~ four layers thick and reinforced with nylon . This allows it to ob wrb
fa Ster and mo re than the co nve ntiona l

. Pl Plealt Store On~

POUIDIAG

ROLL
HECK'S REG.
47' Ea.

HECK'S
REG.
19'
Ea.

HOUSEWAIE
DE,T.

12FOR

HECK'S
REG.
. $1.29

$1 oo ·

WASTE BASKET

'1''
HECK'S REG. •188

FESCO PLASTIC
WICKER

BASKET

PLASTIC
-MIXING BOWLS
-··

Pt Pleasant Store On~

- - -11"

(
20

Reg. •t.53

Pl Pleasant Store

.
HECK'S REG. 64'
Pl Pleaant Store On~

~

Reynolds .
·Wrap
•
Heck's
Reg. 67'

$
FOR
Pl Pleasant Store Only

• •

.HECK'S REG. s1.39

f

Pt. Pleasant Stun Onl1

'

:

·

Pl Pleart Store Onlv

HECK'S REG .
62 '

PAIR
(40' pkg.)

8 OUNCE
JERGENS

.

LOTION FOR MEN

Poir

60UNCE

ROYAL BATH OIL

DIAL

• Lavender
• Floral

HECK'S REG.
99'

COSMETIC
IJE1T.

. COSMETIC

COSMETIC

mr.

...._...

'

'

EASTERN

FOLDING DOORS :
• Fwll ·l.~ .,..1,..... .....
~I I

l... r. ri(O I Io~

pol~ tt llr! ut

'0"1"' • loh d •fl•!ll tll!lll
Tr iM: ~ • P rl(f ~ ~ lrPt latch •
SMa rt 6ttitft •-'-'*! ~

'

ss99

..,,.,

HICIC'I RIG. $1.99

l60UNCE

HECK'S .
ALCOHOL

DAYTIME 30's ..... ... ...... $1u
DAYTIME IS's .............. 78c
NEWBORN 30's ••. •. . ••. . . . •• s1 17
OVERNIGHT12's .. .. .. .. .. .. 78'
ClOTNIN' Dli'T.

6% oz.

dial
Mtto Mt · thloll

.llmJWIWI

-

fOSMETIC DE/IT. ·

.

HECK'S REG.
$1.38 '

COSMETIC DE1T•

FORMULA44
COUGH MIITUR£

ANACIN tOO's
HECK'S
REG.
$1.28

J

$ 08

I .

•

COSMETIC
DE1T,

15 OUNCE

c
HECK'S REG.
28'

HECK'S REG.
99•

6 OUNCE VICKS

INTENSIVE CARE
LOTIO~

CORICIDII MEDLETS
~24's

I,

c

HECK'S
REG.
79'
Co1metlt Dtpt.

VASELINE

'

lfECK'S
RIG.
69'

PAMPERS

GlEEM. TOOTHPASTE

Dli'T.

CNilDIEII'S

'

fttpiiCf iOOfl In tilht piiCtl, •

-•·] .gaa

TABlETS

'

2 PAIR
$1 00

·----

HECK'S REG.
99 1 •

,' ~ ET TYPE

Pt Plelslnt Slott Only

ClOTHING DE1T.

-

HECK'S REG.
$1.09

~.REUEF

;,

.HEcK'~ REG. •26.88
I . .

CtfJTNI*' Dlf'f.

DEODORANT

c

·=coLD•
_..._

PlAYPEN
. .

HECK'S REG. $2.99

ANTI-PERSPIRANT

.--'

I

HECK'S IIG. To $3 .99

ClOTHIM DEPT. ,

HALF GALLON

~

Heck's
•

$199 .

·

The combination of .soft Acetate Trico!
a nd white or pastel colors make these
pan ties a must for the woma n of today.
Sizes S th ro ugh 7 only.
·

ClOTHIIIC D,T.

.

·99~·

77~

ASST. ct)LORS

c
Heck's
Reg. 11.52

'

FLOOR WAX

QUART

-uTILITY DISH

I •

HECK'S REG. "
Pl Pleaant Store On~ .

1~

WASTE BASKET
l

$299

LADIES'
BE.;. fREE
BRIEF PANTIES

2 PAIR IN PACKAGE

HOUSEWAIE DE,,,

· mFESCO

GLO COAT

DII'T.

Beige e nd Cinnamon colors. Sizes: A, 8,
C.,

sa~~

.HICK'S
REG.
$1.28

Pl Pleasant Store On~

27 Ol.

'

HOUSIWAIE
DE,T.

.
3Qt. COVERED SAUCE PAN

I

FESCO SLIDETOP
•

HECK'S REG,
TO $1.12

ALUMINUM
.,

HECK'S REG. 7'/

DE1T.

ClOT/1111{ DIIT.

SIZE 24" X36"

27" X48" ••• $4.66
36" 160" .. , $7.66

HOSE

IIRRO

c

1101/SEWAII DEIT.

·MOP&amp; BROOM
COMBINATION

99~

P~PER.

ggc

BATH SOAP

ClfJT/1111{

LADIES'
NYLON MESH

'

towel.

24" X 90" • • , • • , • $1:.88

Decora tive Velvet to ss pillows. Removable
cover, with t ipp er, is completely washable.
large an ortment of colors.

'I

TYPING,'
.

FLOOR WAX

·s·t oo ~-

24" 136" ••• , •••
24" 160" ... .. ... $1.88
24" 172" .... . .. $2.66

HICK'S REG.
88'

Excitin g colon and patterns or e
a va ila b le in these ar ea rugs .
Choose from : Plush Ve lvet in
stri pu or solid . colo rs and FIIJ IIy
Da cron and Nylon rvg' with o
fr inge. All rvg1 have a late• non ·
s~ i d b acking .

·TOSS PILLOWS

Extra plur11p, Iorge bed pillo ws
filled with o DacrOn a nd Polyester fiber. Choose from asso rted
color ticks.

A~EARUGS

'

200 COUNT

FUTURE .

items.

'---.--;.--'
size 37'/o" x 61"

77(

Excellenl fill ing for loss pillows, bed pillow!, otuffed an imal! ond many other

Reg. '1.44 .,.,

IIOIIUWAII i

19" X33"

SHREDDED FOAM

Heck's

· Pl Pleasant Store On~

TERI TOWELS

BED PILLOWS

RAG RUGS

HECK'S
. RIG.
$1.62

CfJSJIITIC

'
COSMETIC DE,,
.

'

fJEIT.

�"'---..

•
.

. ..

..

'

.. .. ..
•

I

· !3- The,Dally ~ntlnei,Middleport-Pameroy, o.. Jan.l9. 1972·

'·

Meigs

·At:ea Meeting Planned ·
·'

OPIII·DAILY
'
10 TO 9

OPEl lAlLY

10 TO 9

·'

COLEMAN · STOVE

$1366

WILSON

SCHRADE WALDEN .UNa.£ HENRY

BASKETBALL

POCKET KNifE

$ 99

REG.

HECK'S
REG. 116.99 ·
425

·•s••- HECK'S
S7'1J

Pl Pleasant Store On~
.

5 x 7 TARP

PLAYIN'GCARDS .

ACCESSORY SAFE
ence .

Price s4.66

LANTERN

Pt. Pleasant Store On~

PORTA
LAMP
HECK'S
REG. 15.99
'"

Pl Pleasant Store On~

·6AMP

BAnERY CHARGER
large 'liew ammeter. Continuously indica tes rote of
charge. Moderately r9ted at 6 amps. Heavy duty han ·
die . May a lso be used as co rd wrap around . Case vent·

c

SHELLS

73e

' Packed in Moi sture-Proof , Polyethy lene beg . Suitable
for carrying in tackle box, boot, cor, etc

6PAC

HECK'S
REG. 9!r
' '
Pt · Pleasant Store Only
. /.1

,,,

,.,

. . .HECK'S liE~.

$1

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.
13 oz.

EASY WAY

SPRAY PAl
• ASSORTED COLORS

991',

'1

~w·

&lt;

HECK'S REG.
ll$11.'3'fl' ll!Ht

DISPOSABLE ,

FLASHLIGHT

Ideal for around the house, garage, car, etc.
for any emergency.
GUARANTEED
FOil YUR.

SET OF TWO
TO FIT POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE TERMINALS .

.177 Cal.

PELLETS

SOOCOUNT

$ 22

HECK'S REG. 99' SET

HECK'S
REG.
97'

HECK'S REG.
$1.39

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

SPORTfDEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

REEVES

ALL -PURPOSE TOOL BOX

10 Qt.e HAND_
Y PAIL

An al l pu rpose box. Particularly good fo.r . Serviceme~ .
Th is is full sized with en extra Iorge parlthoned canhl·
ever 'troy . fits ju ~ l abo ut e very tool and part needed on

'

.

.

Galvanized-and wiie rein-

forced .

30

20

10

0

37

28

16

6

·5

10

48
40

40'
28

16

·9

15

36

22'

9

4
-5

20

32

1-8

4

25

30

16

b

30

28

13

·2

35

' 27

11

4o

26

10

Calm

50

·10

-20

-58
·72

· 53
·59

k '
•liJ7

-29

·39
-!;4

-10

·33

-48

-63

-79

·94

-4 '

·20

·35

-64

-82

·98

-6

·21

•37

-49
·53

-'69

-85

-102

,·•

Little Danger if Prop!! rly Clothed

-74

-82

-83

\

Danger of Freezing Exposed Flesh

handed when in a bospltal recently. Now there's no excuse
for unwittingly suffering frostbite ; just check your chart,
your thermometer, and your clothing, and be safe.

CIUlL EFFEC'I' - Mrs. A. R, Knight, Lincoln Drive,
provided the Wind Chill chart above which she had been

A ~•orum was n~ present
"" 'Mason Town Council
for the
meeting Monday evening as only
Mllyor Roy Harless, Recorder
productivitY gains," he said. Gary Gibbs, Councilman Joe
. Produ~Uvity is already the
central issue in some labor
negotiations, the magazine
said. In danger of losing their
jobs becauo;e of competition
A number of area students
from newer plants elsewhere, · have been named to the.dean's
members of United Rubber list lor the fall quarter at the
Workers Local 5 a&amp; ·the B. F.
Goodrich Co. plant in Akron,
Ohio, voted overwhelmingly to 32,000 in 1955 to about 14,000
open negotiations lor changes today.
If Goodrich workers agree to
in their contract with the
proposed
changes, they will
company, Industry Week said ,
Goodrich cited excessive join a growing number of union
labor costs per unit of product members in other cities who
and low productivity · as the have agreed to work rnle
reason for eliminating jobs In changes and even pay cuts,
Akron when it, Goodyear Tire Industry Week said.
Meanwhile, demand for steel
&amp; Rubber Co:· 11nd Firestone
scrap
has leveled off followiJtg
Tire &amp; Rubber Co. submitted
proposals last spring for an increase in law December
changes that would allow them and early January. As a result,
to stabilize Akron employment Industry Week'~ price comand perhaps even Increase It, posite on No. I heavy melting
the magazine said. Blue.;:ollar steelmaking scrap held at
Akron employment of the three $33,17 per gross ton, the
companies has declined from previous week's figure.

.

•******
** ******"t
A Thought

Street Paving Discussed

For TOday

Jones and Russell Barton and
Water Secretary Lottie Jenks
were present.
The proposed street !nformatlon meeting was conducted and

i

* *' * i

Several Place On Dean's list

lfS Quick!

IVE-IN
BANKING

BANK t

m.

and

.....*.*****II II*** UJ

l.
I

l

WILL FIT MOST .
STANDARD DOORS

\TOILET TISSUE

ANTIQUE KIT

New fortifying lotex bose leh you antique in two easy
step~ same day . Included are base coat, glaze, sand- .
paper and cheese-doth.
·

39'

•

. HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. $1.99

HARDWARE DEPT.

HAIDWAIE IIPT.

'

'

/

GOLDEN ISLE

.Fro%en Food Dept. ·

NARIJWARE

·SPAM.______;a!_
-

AUTO

.

12oz.

sg~·

POTATOES
2% lb. b.ag 49$
JUICY
Bakery Buys

12-vo lt chrom e sealed beam fog light in Your choice of
deer or amber.

lENDER

8ETSY ROSS

'7.44

ftEW FRESH

Pl Pleasant Store On~

_

•

Dairy Specials

lb. g~

5g·

ORANGES___~.:. ·

~
l

SHERBEI!:. 49~
Niee 'n Ute

COTTAGE CHEESE
. 15 oz.

:

·. I

-·

•

$1 09

STEAK

ED •

$1·29

BOLOGNA .

lb.

V.GOABLE SOUP
4 ~~ 51 59c
ERS

ORANGE

32 oz .

Bottle

29$

JOHNSON'S ·

LEMON·
PLEDGE
'

14 oz.

••

Bottle

Several·Flavors

CABBAGE----~-·
· 5 lb.

,

ROUND STEAK--------~·-BEEF STEW MEAl-------~~ 894,

.....__.·cuBE

FrwJh Prodrree SpeciAls

bag

CAMPBELL'S

'

FOG LIGHT

5 lb.

SUGAR

Quik Sfix-Shoe String

rl.ORIDA

.,

LIMIT
QUANTITIE S

$7'9

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

$3.99

TO

AT IIUTINID
RUIWID DEPT. STORE

CRACKERS
l.Jii. box

18"x36"x75"

RED DEVIL

'

RIGHT
RESERVED

NABISCO PREMIUM

afARMIN

""·

ALUMINUM

DOOR GRILL

AT nJPP£11$ PlNNS

$699

NARIWARE DEPT.

NAIDWARE
DEPT.

I

WAID CROSS 11115

12"x36"x75"

HECK'S REG.

$8.88 .

•

AT RACINE

LYONS MARI£1'

(

-tci

information sheets were given
R.Spectwill
yourself
and tnen
to the 25 town c!tlzens pr esent M otners
respect
you . M
with Recorder Gibbs reading :;
.
l :;
the Information sheet and dis. -tc ,
'-Confuc u.s -tc
cussing each Item.
.~
~
A letter against the paving of
Adams street was presented ey
Charle s L. Kitchen with seve- . .
ral property owners voicing ~
·
opinions against the proposed
t'-. . •
Hocking State Technical paving, Maey present, how.
· WNJ it
College in Nelsonville,
ever, also voiced opinions for ..,
D,R
,
~
Ju&lt;lith A. Lamp of the the project,
Coolville area scored a four
A decision will be Jllllde at
point average for the quarters. the next regular .council meet.
Named to the dean's list with ing on Februarf 7 at 6:30p.m.
Friday~ Only
,
averages ranging from three whether to have Attorney Mich. -tc
point to .3.999 were Robed K. ael filaw formulate a street -tc The Drive~ In Window ·
is Open
Grinstead, Carl E . Long, paving ordinance. Since such a -tc
9A.M. to7 ~·
Albany a!ea; MiUard Coe, small percenta!l'e ot property -tc
(Continuously)
Clarence L. Owens, Coolville owners d. streets Involved
area ; John F. Holcomb, were present at the meeting,
Other oonking Hour• 9 to l-11
and 5 fo 7 •• usual on-11
Ewington ; Otlene R. Cullums, the Mayor urges all property
F.rldays.
;
Jeffrey )'1. Koehler, Guyes- owners on said streets to con.
ville ; -Terry M. Stethem, 'Long tact ·the Water Department or
' FA~MERS
Bottom; Stanley R. Lemley, Recorder Gibbs to expresswis. .
Middleport; Thaddeus S. Dye, hes concerning the paving pro.
~VINGS
Marvin J. Gilmore, Charles J. ject to help council decide whet.
I'OMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Stearns, Pomeroy; Elson D. "' her to continue or not.
Member Federal
O'Connor, Lynn L. Mallory,
Additional Information sheets
Reserv_e System
-tc
Gary P. Norris, Racine, and can be obtained at U.e water -tc
•
1'
Robert C. Baker, Syracuse.
department.

12"x36"x60"

HECK'S REG.

1/AIIWAII IIPT.

Barbara · S. Shuler 'to
Buckeye Rural Elec. Coop,
Inc., Ease., Bedford,
· Hazel Congo, Gene Congo to
J. W. Scarbr,ough, Ella
Scarbrough, I ~ Acres,
Lebanon.
, Marie Eddy to Elbert E.
Eddy, 106 Acres, Olive.
.
Edna Heilman, dec'd., to
Albert E. Hellman, Mf. of
"Trans., Salisbury.
Harley A. Smith, Georgia
Smith to Charley D. Smith, Roy
0 . Smith, Parcels, ~ord.
Roger L Riebel, Hazelee
Riebel to Clarence Schmucker,
Wenola Schmucker, 70 Acres,
Chester.
Joyce A. Davis, Gdn., Ronald
Dailey, by Gdn., to Basil L.
Haynes, Doris J. Haynes,. ' S
Acres, Lebanon.
Myron Bailey, Ann C. Bailey
to Marvin L. Kelly, .18 Acre,
Middleport.
Leona J . Sisson Cline to
Russell M. Cline, Leona J.
Cline, (larcel, Olive.
Kenneth McLeod, dec. to
Pearl McLeod, Cert.lor trans;,
Lebanon.
Raymond K. Ginther to
Uoyd Hoffman, Peggy Hoff.
man , 4.2 Acres, Chester.

·30

What It Equals in its Effec t on Exposed Flesh

MPIL

'

HECK'S REG.
$2.66

•20

Speed

· ·STEEL SHELVES

$1.44

·20GALLON
GARBAGE CAN

·10

.Ul

HECK'S REG.

REEVES .

0

•

GALVANIZED

~h:di~~~kl~eol for home, shsoutos, boa9'9"

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

10

,,

PARK

HECK'S REG.
99'

1

SPORTS DEPT.

BAnERY
TERMINAL ENDS

oss

HECK'S REG. $1 S .99

6VOLT LANTERN
BATTERY

SPORTS DEPT.

ed fo r ai r co ol ing, Rubber feet . Cords mounted in rear

. fo, eosy ponel •iewing

EVEREADY

.MANTELS

HOLLOW POINT

$499

Pl Pleasant Store On~

SPORTS DEPT.

RIF~E

22 LONG

20

Is .Predicted During 1970s

$133

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

HECK'S REG.
$2.99

HECK'S REG•.2 for 59'

30

Wind

New . Breed of Bargaining

H.IPWELL 6-VOLT

each

99

Transfers

\'/hat the Thermom~ter Actually Re ~ dl

Homemakers was · agam
discussed. Mrs. Gene Jewell
was appointed \0 work with the
cormnlttee to see about the
possibility of ' buying a case
already made.
.
A thank you note was
acknowledged fr&lt;nu Mrs.
Cathy Olsen, 4-H Club Agent, to
the Homemakers for·thelr help
_In making the Achievement,
Night Supper a ~uccess.
Mrs. Ray Fox presented
devotionals at the opening of
the meeting. Mrs. Jess Brown,
County couneil treasurer,
reported, and .Mrs. Keefer ·
gave ·the secretary's report.

historY

COLEMAN ·

Holds most all accessories for your conveni·

Heck's Reg.

/

M.

HECK'S REG. $7-.99

Pl Pleasant Store Only

The trophy ' case · for the
library of the M,son County

OVI'e Make·rs T\_aw·
Blame
Mrs, . G~nevieve Lewis,
memorial book chairman slid
1.1r:
historian, ·reminded .!!Je club
WASH!Ny'I'ON (UP!) - A to prostitution, theft or podmembers to give herthe.ti8ines--L'1llheran pastor.in New York's dling drugs to surv.lve.
0! deceased club members or Greenwich Village said "A preposterous fantasy
their liusb&amp;nds. Books will be Saturday movie producen , about the life in communal
placed in local libraries in their were partiY.JQ blame fyr luring centers has grown up,"
memory, '
teen-agers into running away Eckhardt said. "TV and teen
Mrs. Lewis again asked the lr~m home because they had movies show relaxed, · happy
history of the clubs in the created a , "preposterous ki~ playing cops and robbers
county. She said tl)ese would fantasy" abont the glamor of with stupid police ~nd foolish
become a part of a pennanent commnnalllfe.
parents, and invanably wmrecord and possil&gt;ly pnt the
Instead of a carefree life in ning.
of the combined' clubs the hippie subculture, the .Rev.
"No hint is ever given of the
in book form. .
Fred Eckhardt told the Senate unbelieveable filth , greed,
Mrs. Keefer asked~ group Juvenile Delinqu~ncy sub- violence, and endless bours of
for ideas pertaining to committee, runaways "find an boredom awaiting most
workshops. Those present were lrori-fisted boss in every crash· runaways."
interested mainly in macrame • pad" who forces them to tum
and crocheting. Jim Lockhart,
a representative of Tandy
Leather of Charleston, will
teach macrame , '!'he workshop
has been scheduled for
February 16, from 10 until 3
p.m. at Courthouse Annex, Pt.
Pleasant.
Mrs. Keeler reported th!lt
' '
between 40 and SO pairs of
CLEVELAND (UP!) - productivity bargaining will
glasses had been collected by Collective bljrgainlng will give usher in a new era . of
Mason County Homet!Uikers to way to productivity bargaining cooperation between managers
be given to· the Rev. Waldo in this decade, lndustzy Week and workers.
·
Jackson for Nicaragua Editor-In-Chief Walter J..
"Some important changes in
citizens. Rev.
Jackson Campbell ·forecast in the attitude will be required. Both
reporteply already had the magazine today.
labor and management will
number requested. '!'he council
"Instead of two antagonistic have to scrap the belief that
voted to give these 40 to SO to parties sitting at a table at their interests are antagonistic
the Lion's Club to pass on to which labor makes outrageous and realize that without labor
persons in need of glasses.
economic demands and in· there can be no production and
Mason County has one of 2ll dustry grudgingly gives as without increased productivity
learning labs In West little as possible, we will tend industry cannot provide the
Vlrglnla loeated at Mason toward bargaining • to raise jobs that Americans need. The
County Vocational Center, productivity and to make inwrests of both are best
Ohio River Road, In Point America more competitive in served by a healthy and
Pleasant. Most of the classes the world market," Campbell prosperous Industry."
are free. Aceordlng to Mrs. said.
.
Campbell predicted that
VIcky
Keefer,
home
''-True collective bargaining labor would agree to give up
d:..Ooutratlon · agent, If Implies n~oUaUoA,.. beliireen &lt;.old work rules in favor. of new
more people do not us~ this equals," he said. "One party and more efficient ones desired
learnlllllab, it wW be taken should be as free to make by managers and that
oilt.
demands as the other."
management would return to
Subjects are offered in, Campbell said, however, that the workers some of the gains
economics, treating In- a move toward productivity of increased efficiency.
vestments, insurance, income bargaining would not be easy.
"At long last we will be
tax, howiehold bndgeting, 'wise "It will not be marked by quick making progress toward
buying and pay checks; success," he said. "But In time relating compensation to

81352

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

. P'l'. PLEASAN'l' - Among Foreign Languages,
.the plans for the coming year · Chemistry, Biology, Science,
made by the ·Mason County History, Report on Vietnam,
Homema~ers Council at .the world .H"IStor y, Our Natt on, U.
Courthouse Annex, Point s. "'-tory
""" , Our Democracy, u.
Pleasant Jan. 12, was the s. Constitution; General Math,
Charle~ton area meeting in Algebra, Work with Numbers,
Muon County in May. 'l'IH! Refresher
Math, ·. Basic
area is ,composed ·oi five Essence of Math, and-many
counties, Mrs, David.O'Neal is ·others; including vocational
chain1Jan of the event. Mrs. skills:
Ray Fox, Clifton, is Charleston
Mrs, Vurl Rand,olph,
area representative. Adefinite chaltrnah of the Cultural ·Arts
date and place for the meeting Coptmittee, said ientatlve
will be announced, Mrs. dates bsve been set for the
Howard Garland; president, · afghan and quilt show at the
presided during the morning. Courthouse Annex in Point
· It was reported that 315 cook- Pleasant. Sbe reported April
books have. been . sold and • 4th, Sth and 6th : are dates
$34jl.30 earned. Thirty books chosen by the committee.:
hmialn 19 be sold.

Property'

. . . llllillllll'

GIANT .SIZE

INSJANT

OOFFEE
8 Oz.

$169

TIDE

with coup.on
Expires : 1.-22-72

3 MKTS. ,

sge

I

Willi C..p• ..
I

....... 1-22·72 •

I

�"'---..

•
.

. ..

..

'

.. .. ..
•

I

· !3- The,Dally ~ntlnei,Middleport-Pameroy, o.. Jan.l9. 1972·

'·

Meigs

·At:ea Meeting Planned ·
·'

OPIII·DAILY
'
10 TO 9

OPEl lAlLY

10 TO 9

·'

COLEMAN · STOVE

$1366

WILSON

SCHRADE WALDEN .UNa.£ HENRY

BASKETBALL

POCKET KNifE

$ 99

REG.

HECK'S
REG. 116.99 ·
425

·•s••- HECK'S
S7'1J

Pl Pleasant Store On~
.

5 x 7 TARP

PLAYIN'GCARDS .

ACCESSORY SAFE
ence .

Price s4.66

LANTERN

Pt. Pleasant Store On~

PORTA
LAMP
HECK'S
REG. 15.99
'"

Pl Pleasant Store On~

·6AMP

BAnERY CHARGER
large 'liew ammeter. Continuously indica tes rote of
charge. Moderately r9ted at 6 amps. Heavy duty han ·
die . May a lso be used as co rd wrap around . Case vent·

c

SHELLS

73e

' Packed in Moi sture-Proof , Polyethy lene beg . Suitable
for carrying in tackle box, boot, cor, etc

6PAC

HECK'S
REG. 9!r
' '
Pt · Pleasant Store Only
. /.1

,,,

,.,

. . .HECK'S liE~.

$1

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.
13 oz.

EASY WAY

SPRAY PAl
• ASSORTED COLORS

991',

'1

~w·

&lt;

HECK'S REG.
ll$11.'3'fl' ll!Ht

DISPOSABLE ,

FLASHLIGHT

Ideal for around the house, garage, car, etc.
for any emergency.
GUARANTEED
FOil YUR.

SET OF TWO
TO FIT POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE TERMINALS .

.177 Cal.

PELLETS

SOOCOUNT

$ 22

HECK'S REG. 99' SET

HECK'S
REG.
97'

HECK'S REG.
$1.39

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

SPORTfDEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

REEVES

ALL -PURPOSE TOOL BOX

10 Qt.e HAND_
Y PAIL

An al l pu rpose box. Particularly good fo.r . Serviceme~ .
Th is is full sized with en extra Iorge parlthoned canhl·
ever 'troy . fits ju ~ l abo ut e very tool and part needed on

'

.

.

Galvanized-and wiie rein-

forced .

30

20

10

0

37

28

16

6

·5

10

48
40

40'
28

16

·9

15

36

22'

9

4
-5

20

32

1-8

4

25

30

16

b

30

28

13

·2

35

' 27

11

4o

26

10

Calm

50

·10

-20

-58
·72

· 53
·59

k '
•liJ7

-29

·39
-!;4

-10

·33

-48

-63

-79

·94

-4 '

·20

·35

-64

-82

·98

-6

·21

•37

-49
·53

-'69

-85

-102

,·•

Little Danger if Prop!! rly Clothed

-74

-82

-83

\

Danger of Freezing Exposed Flesh

handed when in a bospltal recently. Now there's no excuse
for unwittingly suffering frostbite ; just check your chart,
your thermometer, and your clothing, and be safe.

CIUlL EFFEC'I' - Mrs. A. R, Knight, Lincoln Drive,
provided the Wind Chill chart above which she had been

A ~•orum was n~ present
"" 'Mason Town Council
for the
meeting Monday evening as only
Mllyor Roy Harless, Recorder
productivitY gains," he said. Gary Gibbs, Councilman Joe
. Produ~Uvity is already the
central issue in some labor
negotiations, the magazine
said. In danger of losing their
jobs becauo;e of competition
A number of area students
from newer plants elsewhere, · have been named to the.dean's
members of United Rubber list lor the fall quarter at the
Workers Local 5 a&amp; ·the B. F.
Goodrich Co. plant in Akron,
Ohio, voted overwhelmingly to 32,000 in 1955 to about 14,000
open negotiations lor changes today.
If Goodrich workers agree to
in their contract with the
proposed
changes, they will
company, Industry Week said ,
Goodrich cited excessive join a growing number of union
labor costs per unit of product members in other cities who
and low productivity · as the have agreed to work rnle
reason for eliminating jobs In changes and even pay cuts,
Akron when it, Goodyear Tire Industry Week said.
Meanwhile, demand for steel
&amp; Rubber Co:· 11nd Firestone
scrap
has leveled off followiJtg
Tire &amp; Rubber Co. submitted
proposals last spring for an increase in law December
changes that would allow them and early January. As a result,
to stabilize Akron employment Industry Week'~ price comand perhaps even Increase It, posite on No. I heavy melting
the magazine said. Blue.;:ollar steelmaking scrap held at
Akron employment of the three $33,17 per gross ton, the
companies has declined from previous week's figure.

.

•******
** ******"t
A Thought

Street Paving Discussed

For TOday

Jones and Russell Barton and
Water Secretary Lottie Jenks
were present.
The proposed street !nformatlon meeting was conducted and

i

* *' * i

Several Place On Dean's list

lfS Quick!

IVE-IN
BANKING

BANK t

m.

and

.....*.*****II II*** UJ

l.
I

l

WILL FIT MOST .
STANDARD DOORS

\TOILET TISSUE

ANTIQUE KIT

New fortifying lotex bose leh you antique in two easy
step~ same day . Included are base coat, glaze, sand- .
paper and cheese-doth.
·

39'

•

. HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. $1.99

HARDWARE DEPT.

HAIDWAIE IIPT.

'

'

/

GOLDEN ISLE

.Fro%en Food Dept. ·

NARIJWARE

·SPAM.______;a!_
-

AUTO

.

12oz.

sg~·

POTATOES
2% lb. b.ag 49$
JUICY
Bakery Buys

12-vo lt chrom e sealed beam fog light in Your choice of
deer or amber.

lENDER

8ETSY ROSS

'7.44

ftEW FRESH

Pl Pleasant Store On~

_

•

Dairy Specials

lb. g~

5g·

ORANGES___~.:. ·

~
l

SHERBEI!:. 49~
Niee 'n Ute

COTTAGE CHEESE
. 15 oz.

:

·. I

-·

•

$1 09

STEAK

ED •

$1·29

BOLOGNA .

lb.

V.GOABLE SOUP
4 ~~ 51 59c
ERS

ORANGE

32 oz .

Bottle

29$

JOHNSON'S ·

LEMON·
PLEDGE
'

14 oz.

••

Bottle

Several·Flavors

CABBAGE----~-·
· 5 lb.

,

ROUND STEAK--------~·-BEEF STEW MEAl-------~~ 894,

.....__.·cuBE

FrwJh Prodrree SpeciAls

bag

CAMPBELL'S

'

FOG LIGHT

5 lb.

SUGAR

Quik Sfix-Shoe String

rl.ORIDA

.,

LIMIT
QUANTITIE S

$7'9

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

$3.99

TO

AT IIUTINID
RUIWID DEPT. STORE

CRACKERS
l.Jii. box

18"x36"x75"

RED DEVIL

'

RIGHT
RESERVED

NABISCO PREMIUM

afARMIN

""·

ALUMINUM

DOOR GRILL

AT nJPP£11$ PlNNS

$699

NARIWARE DEPT.

NAIDWARE
DEPT.

I

WAID CROSS 11115

12"x36"x75"

HECK'S REG.

$8.88 .

•

AT RACINE

LYONS MARI£1'

(

-tci

information sheets were given
R.Spectwill
yourself
and tnen
to the 25 town c!tlzens pr esent M otners
respect
you . M
with Recorder Gibbs reading :;
.
l :;
the Information sheet and dis. -tc ,
'-Confuc u.s -tc
cussing each Item.
.~
~
A letter against the paving of
Adams street was presented ey
Charle s L. Kitchen with seve- . .
ral property owners voicing ~
·
opinions against the proposed
t'-. . •
Hocking State Technical paving, Maey present, how.
· WNJ it
College in Nelsonville,
ever, also voiced opinions for ..,
D,R
,
~
Ju&lt;lith A. Lamp of the the project,
Coolville area scored a four
A decision will be Jllllde at
point average for the quarters. the next regular .council meet.
Named to the dean's list with ing on Februarf 7 at 6:30p.m.
Friday~ Only
,
averages ranging from three whether to have Attorney Mich. -tc
point to .3.999 were Robed K. ael filaw formulate a street -tc The Drive~ In Window ·
is Open
Grinstead, Carl E . Long, paving ordinance. Since such a -tc
9A.M. to7 ~·
Albany a!ea; MiUard Coe, small percenta!l'e ot property -tc
(Continuously)
Clarence L. Owens, Coolville owners d. streets Involved
area ; John F. Holcomb, were present at the meeting,
Other oonking Hour• 9 to l-11
and 5 fo 7 •• usual on-11
Ewington ; Otlene R. Cullums, the Mayor urges all property
F.rldays.
;
Jeffrey )'1. Koehler, Guyes- owners on said streets to con.
ville ; -Terry M. Stethem, 'Long tact ·the Water Department or
' FA~MERS
Bottom; Stanley R. Lemley, Recorder Gibbs to expresswis. .
Middleport; Thaddeus S. Dye, hes concerning the paving pro.
~VINGS
Marvin J. Gilmore, Charles J. ject to help council decide whet.
I'OMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Stearns, Pomeroy; Elson D. "' her to continue or not.
Member Federal
O'Connor, Lynn L. Mallory,
Additional Information sheets
Reserv_e System
-tc
Gary P. Norris, Racine, and can be obtained at U.e water -tc
•
1'
Robert C. Baker, Syracuse.
department.

12"x36"x60"

HECK'S REG.

1/AIIWAII IIPT.

Barbara · S. Shuler 'to
Buckeye Rural Elec. Coop,
Inc., Ease., Bedford,
· Hazel Congo, Gene Congo to
J. W. Scarbr,ough, Ella
Scarbrough, I ~ Acres,
Lebanon.
, Marie Eddy to Elbert E.
Eddy, 106 Acres, Olive.
.
Edna Heilman, dec'd., to
Albert E. Hellman, Mf. of
"Trans., Salisbury.
Harley A. Smith, Georgia
Smith to Charley D. Smith, Roy
0 . Smith, Parcels, ~ord.
Roger L Riebel, Hazelee
Riebel to Clarence Schmucker,
Wenola Schmucker, 70 Acres,
Chester.
Joyce A. Davis, Gdn., Ronald
Dailey, by Gdn., to Basil L.
Haynes, Doris J. Haynes,. ' S
Acres, Lebanon.
Myron Bailey, Ann C. Bailey
to Marvin L. Kelly, .18 Acre,
Middleport.
Leona J . Sisson Cline to
Russell M. Cline, Leona J.
Cline, (larcel, Olive.
Kenneth McLeod, dec. to
Pearl McLeod, Cert.lor trans;,
Lebanon.
Raymond K. Ginther to
Uoyd Hoffman, Peggy Hoff.
man , 4.2 Acres, Chester.

·30

What It Equals in its Effec t on Exposed Flesh

MPIL

'

HECK'S REG.
$2.66

•20

Speed

· ·STEEL SHELVES

$1.44

·20GALLON
GARBAGE CAN

·10

.Ul

HECK'S REG.

REEVES .

0

•

GALVANIZED

~h:di~~~kl~eol for home, shsoutos, boa9'9"

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

10

,,

PARK

HECK'S REG.
99'

1

SPORTS DEPT.

BAnERY
TERMINAL ENDS

oss

HECK'S REG. $1 S .99

6VOLT LANTERN
BATTERY

SPORTS DEPT.

ed fo r ai r co ol ing, Rubber feet . Cords mounted in rear

. fo, eosy ponel •iewing

EVEREADY

.MANTELS

HOLLOW POINT

$499

Pl Pleasant Store On~

SPORTS DEPT.

RIF~E

22 LONG

20

Is .Predicted During 1970s

$133

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

HECK'S REG.
$2.99

HECK'S REG•.2 for 59'

30

Wind

New . Breed of Bargaining

H.IPWELL 6-VOLT

each

99

Transfers

\'/hat the Thermom~ter Actually Re ~ dl

Homemakers was · agam
discussed. Mrs. Gene Jewell
was appointed \0 work with the
cormnlttee to see about the
possibility of ' buying a case
already made.
.
A thank you note was
acknowledged fr&lt;nu Mrs.
Cathy Olsen, 4-H Club Agent, to
the Homemakers for·thelr help
_In making the Achievement,
Night Supper a ~uccess.
Mrs. Ray Fox presented
devotionals at the opening of
the meeting. Mrs. Jess Brown,
County couneil treasurer,
reported, and .Mrs. Keefer ·
gave ·the secretary's report.

historY

COLEMAN ·

Holds most all accessories for your conveni·

Heck's Reg.

/

M.

HECK'S REG. $7-.99

Pl Pleasant Store Only

The trophy ' case · for the
library of the M,son County

OVI'e Make·rs T\_aw·
Blame
Mrs, . G~nevieve Lewis,
memorial book chairman slid
1.1r:
historian, ·reminded .!!Je club
WASH!Ny'I'ON (UP!) - A to prostitution, theft or podmembers to give herthe.ti8ines--L'1llheran pastor.in New York's dling drugs to surv.lve.
0! deceased club members or Greenwich Village said "A preposterous fantasy
their liusb&amp;nds. Books will be Saturday movie producen , about the life in communal
placed in local libraries in their were partiY.JQ blame fyr luring centers has grown up,"
memory, '
teen-agers into running away Eckhardt said. "TV and teen
Mrs. Lewis again asked the lr~m home because they had movies show relaxed, · happy
history of the clubs in the created a , "preposterous ki~ playing cops and robbers
county. She said tl)ese would fantasy" abont the glamor of with stupid police ~nd foolish
become a part of a pennanent commnnalllfe.
parents, and invanably wmrecord and possil&gt;ly pnt the
Instead of a carefree life in ning.
of the combined' clubs the hippie subculture, the .Rev.
"No hint is ever given of the
in book form. .
Fred Eckhardt told the Senate unbelieveable filth , greed,
Mrs. Keefer asked~ group Juvenile Delinqu~ncy sub- violence, and endless bours of
for ideas pertaining to committee, runaways "find an boredom awaiting most
workshops. Those present were lrori-fisted boss in every crash· runaways."
interested mainly in macrame • pad" who forces them to tum
and crocheting. Jim Lockhart,
a representative of Tandy
Leather of Charleston, will
teach macrame , '!'he workshop
has been scheduled for
February 16, from 10 until 3
p.m. at Courthouse Annex, Pt.
Pleasant.
Mrs. Keeler reported th!lt
' '
between 40 and SO pairs of
CLEVELAND (UP!) - productivity bargaining will
glasses had been collected by Collective bljrgainlng will give usher in a new era . of
Mason County Homet!Uikers to way to productivity bargaining cooperation between managers
be given to· the Rev. Waldo in this decade, lndustzy Week and workers.
·
Jackson for Nicaragua Editor-In-Chief Walter J..
"Some important changes in
citizens. Rev.
Jackson Campbell ·forecast in the attitude will be required. Both
reporteply already had the magazine today.
labor and management will
number requested. '!'he council
"Instead of two antagonistic have to scrap the belief that
voted to give these 40 to SO to parties sitting at a table at their interests are antagonistic
the Lion's Club to pass on to which labor makes outrageous and realize that without labor
persons in need of glasses.
economic demands and in· there can be no production and
Mason County has one of 2ll dustry grudgingly gives as without increased productivity
learning labs In West little as possible, we will tend industry cannot provide the
Vlrglnla loeated at Mason toward bargaining • to raise jobs that Americans need. The
County Vocational Center, productivity and to make inwrests of both are best
Ohio River Road, In Point America more competitive in served by a healthy and
Pleasant. Most of the classes the world market," Campbell prosperous Industry."
are free. Aceordlng to Mrs. said.
.
Campbell predicted that
VIcky
Keefer,
home
''-True collective bargaining labor would agree to give up
d:..Ooutratlon · agent, If Implies n~oUaUoA,.. beliireen &lt;.old work rules in favor. of new
more people do not us~ this equals," he said. "One party and more efficient ones desired
learnlllllab, it wW be taken should be as free to make by managers and that
oilt.
demands as the other."
management would return to
Subjects are offered in, Campbell said, however, that the workers some of the gains
economics, treating In- a move toward productivity of increased efficiency.
vestments, insurance, income bargaining would not be easy.
"At long last we will be
tax, howiehold bndgeting, 'wise "It will not be marked by quick making progress toward
buying and pay checks; success," he said. "But In time relating compensation to

81352

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

. P'l'. PLEASAN'l' - Among Foreign Languages,
.the plans for the coming year · Chemistry, Biology, Science,
made by the ·Mason County History, Report on Vietnam,
Homema~ers Council at .the world .H"IStor y, Our Natt on, U.
Courthouse Annex, Point s. "'-tory
""" , Our Democracy, u.
Pleasant Jan. 12, was the s. Constitution; General Math,
Charle~ton area meeting in Algebra, Work with Numbers,
Muon County in May. 'l'IH! Refresher
Math, ·. Basic
area is ,composed ·oi five Essence of Math, and-many
counties, Mrs, David.O'Neal is ·others; including vocational
chain1Jan of the event. Mrs. skills:
Ray Fox, Clifton, is Charleston
Mrs, Vurl Rand,olph,
area representative. Adefinite chaltrnah of the Cultural ·Arts
date and place for the meeting Coptmittee, said ientatlve
will be announced, Mrs. dates bsve been set for the
Howard Garland; president, · afghan and quilt show at the
presided during the morning. Courthouse Annex in Point
· It was reported that 315 cook- Pleasant. Sbe reported April
books have. been . sold and • 4th, Sth and 6th : are dates
$34jl.30 earned. Thirty books chosen by the committee.:
hmialn 19 be sold.

Property'

. . . llllillllll'

GIANT .SIZE

INSJANT

OOFFEE
8 Oz.

$169

TIDE

with coup.on
Expires : 1.-22-72

3 MKTS. ,

sge

I

Willi C..p• ..
I

....... 1-22·72 •

I

�.

.

.'

•

'
.

'.

..

"

.&gt;

..
LEGAL NOTICE

..

1'11E Gar ecncR. '1111 '-!G!&gt; ·
TO DO '11-\A"-l '51\ A~D LOOk
AT THIS GN&gt;.'Y'G€

11LL CALL THAT
DIME AN'
'IE
TWO .HEN APPLES

Al L N IGJ-1\T !

-- - --

OI!DINANCE NO. 424
TO PI!OVIDE FOR THE
ISSUANCE OF Sl2,000.00 OF
~·8WR8~ ,THOEHYJ~L~;E A0:
TICIPATION
OF
THE
IS SUANCE OF BONDS FOR
THE PURPOSE OF RESUR ·
FACING SUNDRY STREETS
IN THE VKLA GE, AND
DE C LARING
AN
EMERGENCY .
11':1 1t11.., NlA, lor~ l .tot looj . U.$. ' -'· lllf.

W,HER:EAS , the Vlt l age',s
ti;: a.t off ic er has ce rtified as to
th e est.imated life of the

property to be acquired from
the procee9s of the notes here in
author ized as ex ceeding five
year s, and has - certified the
ma xi mum maturity of bOhds as
tw enty years· and of su ch notes
as fiv e years or on e year if sold
pri vately ;

ro me stoc .1

'nJ fHE SlOE!

'

. WATS

IT!
'IOU'RE

GOOD LUCK WITH
'IOU ~ !RAFFle Dt.ITY,
, SENOR.

RE ADY

10 FACE

NOW , THEREFORE , BE IT

1t1EM !

ORDA I NED by the Coun c il Of
the Village of Pomeroy , Meigs

County, ·ohio :
Sec tion 1. That it is hert.b y
de emed nec essary to Issue
bonds of the Village of F»omeroy
In th e principal sum of
S1 2, 0DO .OO for the purpose of
resurfa c ing
the following
str eets in the Village:
Three blocks of Main Street
One bloc k of Butternut
A venue
Riverview Dr ive
On e half of Mu lberry Av enue
from Cemetery to Union
Avenue
Cemetery Lane - Mulberry
Hei ghts
Second Street
Sec tion 2. That said bonds
shall be dated approximately
the f irst dl!ly of March, 1972,
sha l l bear Interes t at the
estimated rate of six per cen t um (6 pet.) per annu'm ,
payable sem 1-annually until the
princ ipal sum Is paid ; and shall
mature in ten substantially
equal annual installments after
the Issuance ther·eot .
Sect ion 3. Thaf for the pur .
pose of raising money In an .
ticipation of the issuance of said
bonds for the aforesaid purpose,
it is hereby declared necessary
to issue and this Council hereby
determine that notes ()f said
VIllage in the aggregate
princ ipal sum of $12,000.00 shall
be issued.
Sect ion 4 . That such an ·
ticipalory notes in the amount
aforesa i d shall be issued
bearing Interest at such rate not
exceeding six per centum (6
pet . ) per annum as may be
f ixed by the Clerk in her award
of said notes l!lt private sale .
such Interest to be payable at
maturity . Said notes shall be
dated as of the date of Issuance,
shall mature on December JO,
1972, and shall be In such
denom inat i ons as may be
requeste-d by the purchase of
such notes.
Section 5. That such notes
shall be executed by the Mayor
and Clerk and bear thet.s.eal of
the corporation ; sh.illl be
payable at the office of Village
Clerk , Pomeroy, Ohio: and
shall express upon their face the
purpose for wh Jch they are
Issued l!lnd that they are Issued
pursuant to this ordinance .
Section 6. That said notes
shall be first offered to the of .
ficer In charge of the Bond
Retirement Fund and if said
Off icer refuses to take sa id
notes. they shall be sold at
private sale by the Clerk at not
less than par and accrued in·
terest and an Interest rate not
exceeding a six per centum (6
pet.) per annum . The proceeds
from such sale shall be paid Into
the proper fund and used tor the

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
i'PMEROY, OHIO

.@)

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'

s5.55
Notice

Mobile Homes For Sale

I WILL NOT be responsible for
any debts contracted br.

5113.

12·31-lfc

and
aluminum
awning,
aluminum skirting, com .

pletely setup, Beautiful
location. Owner leaving state.
Phone 949·4892 or 992-5272.
1-IO.tfc

mysel .

TAX service, daily
Signed : Harry W. Pickens, . INCOME
except S'Unday, evenings by
Sr .
appointment . Mrs. Wanda
1·19·31p
Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road, I
mile
west of Meigs County . - - - - - - - - - - - ,
RUMMAGE SALE at Mid·
Fairground on Rt. 7 bypass.
dleport Cab Office, 3rd &amp;
Phone 992·2272.
Main,
formerly
Duke
I.J.JO!c
Cleaners, starts Thursday at 9
a.m.

1·19·3tc

Male Help Wanted

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy
1

&amp; PLUMBING CO.

ji,
240 Li~cofn ,~t.
. Ml!ldleport, Ohio
Dba Anthony Ptumbln~
We have a complete Home
Maintenance Service the
year around. No matter what .
your need. Complete roof or
spouting 'repair. Interior or
exterior carpentry. Ceiling
tile and Paneling and Siding.
·complete Plumbing &amp;
Healing.
Day Number 992·2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.
742·3947
992-5803
992·3898 742·4761
We are fully insured

•

:-GUARANTEED. Phone 992-2094 ,

l«lSCOT KOSMETICSand wigs 60J&lt;:12. 2·bedroom, all.electrlc,
.. for sale. Brown's. Phone 992·
air conditioned, 8x20 ft. Porch

Notice
anyone other than

'

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

0pen8Til5
Mondoy.thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomero~, 0.

and"

FURNITURE

'

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

FOUR NEW HOII\ES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE '
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY OOWN
1
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low.as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of 55,000.00 and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
.percent4ge rate.,
·

I

'REFINERY CORP.
INSTRUCTI'ON in organ and TEXAS
offers opportunity for high
plano. Gerald Hoffner, phone
. Income PLUS regular cash
992·3825.
bonuses, convention trips and
1·19-12tc abundant
fringe benefits to
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
mature man in -Pomeroy
Septic tanks Installed. George
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
area
.
Regardless
of
ex
( BHI) Pullins. Phone 9'12·2478.
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
perience,
air
mail
I.
I.
Pate,
4-25.ffc
Jan. 23, 12 noon .
Pres,
,
Texas
Refinery
Corp.,
"
" - ..
1·19·3tc
Bo• 711. Fort Worth, Texas
1220 Washington B.lvd.
READY·MIX CONCRETE de·
livered right to your pro( eel.
SHOOTING MATCH, Saturday, 76101.
Belpre, Ohio
Fast and easy . , Free
Jan . 22, at the Racine Planing
1·16-4tp L - - - - - - - - - - ' - . L
estimates . Phone 992·3284 .
Mill at 6 p. m. Factory choke
LEGAL NOTICE
Goegleln Ready.Mix Co.,
guns only. Assorted meats. TEXAS OIL COMPANY needs
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
Middleport, Ohio.
Sponsored by the Syracuse good man over 40 for short FOR THE BEST deal In a new
CALL
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
or used mobile home, try
F'lre
Dept
frlps
surrounding
Pomeroy.
6·30·tfc
OHIO
,
BILL NELSON,992-3657
HILTON WOLFE, 949.3211
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
·
1·19·31c Contact customers. We lraln.
TOM CROW, 992·2580
Kanauga, Ohio.
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534
Air mall B. G. Dickerson,
O' DELL WHEEL allghment
MARY ALICE SAMUELS
12·17·90tc
Pres . ,
Southwestern
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
816 W. Main Street,
Petroleum Corp. , Fl. Worth,
Complete front end service,
Pomeroy , Ohio ,
MOBILE AbMES . . Large
Plaintiff,
Tex .
· tune up and brake service.
-V$ Real
Estate
For
Sale
1·19·1fc selection's · 10 . 12 wldes. 1 to 4 For Sale
Wheels balanced olec.
NATHANIEL SAMUELS,
bedrooms, bank repos and
All
work
Ironically
.
Address Unknown
Friday &amp; Saturday
OUSE Ph
7
used, some practically new. 4 WHEEL wagon , sel ol
TEXAS
OIL
COMPANY
has
guaranteed.
Reasonable
harrows.
Phone
247·2161
.
H
·
one
992·
394.
Defendant . l
Nights-10 Til2
opening in Pomeroy area. No' Save up to 'I•. R. A. or Don
rates. Phone 9'12·3213.
No. 14m
1·16·61c - - - ------,-1·..,13=61c
·
Miller, 705 Farson Street,
experience necessary. Age
7·27·tfC
NOTICE
Belpre, Ohio by Kaiser -.5-2- FO
not
Important.
Good
- :R-D- Tr_a_c-to-.r-,-good
- -con. NICE 2·Siory home with full ~~-=-=..,..,.--~
Nathaniel Samuels, whose
Aluminum, phone 423·9531.
character a must. We train.
place of residence It unknown
C. BRADFORD, Auctleneer
dition , new rubber ~""'"' $650;
basement, 2 lots, new forced
and cannot with reasonable
1·18·12tc
Air mail C. E. Dickerson,
Complete Service
phone 992·6048.
air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
diligence be ascerta ined, will
Pres . , Southwestern
Elementary
School.
Phone
Phone 949.3821
1·16·6tc
take notice that on the 13th day
Petroleum
Corp.,
Ft.
Worth,
992·7284
to
see.
Racine, Ohio
of December. 1971 , the un.
For
Sale
Music
by
Red
Stewart
Te•
.
11·7·tfC
Crill
Brad!ooti
dersigned, Marv Allee Samuels,
1·19·1fc GOOD HAY. Phone 992-3658.
5·1·tfC
fried her Complaint against him
and the Ambassadors.
INVENTORY SALE
- '- ' - - - - -- 1·19·1fc
In the Court of Common Pleas of
MIDDLEPORT - 6 room house - - --.,.---- Meigs County, Ohio, demanding
4 PC. BAND4
. ~n!lbalh ._:JB~ . Hamil~o~ ~V.' SI;OV.:ING.,A\AC!:!INI;S. i!'!P"Ir
-·... ...
dlvo~e-, eustody of minor child
Femctl'
e
Help
Wanted
prfl!lid reasQnably. Phone w2~ '' 'servlcili all 'lllak8. 992·'22841
2
FEMALE
SINGERS
10·
HEAD
Holstein
cows,
fresh
of the par1les, and other relief.
2044.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
and
close
up
Springers.
5 LADIES needed lmmedlateiy.
You, the said Nathaniel
Buy Any Fuel Oil
1·18·3tc
Authorized Singer Sales and
Homer
Circle,
phone
949·2177.
Samuels , are required to an - ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
full or part time, $50 to $60 a
Service.
We Sharpen S.clssors.
1·18·3tc
swer said Complaint w ith in
wee!&lt;. no lnlll!stment. Phone
overweight· ladles, teens and
J.29.tfc
twenty eight days after January
949.4J65.
3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
men Interested In a Weight
.
g~~:ros~rC~:~:;a!~da~~r 1~hl~~ 19, 1972.
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
1·19-Jic LONG BOTTOM _:· Five roo!ll
Watchers I Rl Class In
purpose·r$aid money Is hereby
SEPTIC
TANKS
CLEANED
house,
bath,
business,
or
Plains.
All
.
new
with
total
Pomeroy write : Weigh!
Mary Alice Samuels
approppiate'd .
storage building - 56.500. 200 Gallons Fuel 011 When
electric and central air REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
·
Plaintiff
Watchers
I Rl. 1863 Section
Sectlon)7 1·sa ld notes shall be
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
Wanted
To
Buy
Phone
985·3529.
conditioning, bath and 'I• fully
Rd..
Cincinnati,
01\lo
45237.
the full gen~ral obligation of lhe
You Buy Any Siegler Heater
ONner &amp; Operator. ·
Webster
and
Fultz
12·19·301c
carpeted,
full
·
·basement,
10·3·1fc
V i llage o·~ Pomeroy and the full
Thru Jan, IS.
OLD
POCKET
knives,
·
• S.l2.1fc
P
.O.
Box723,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
garage
In
basement.
,
See
by
faith , credit and revenue of sa id
for Plaintiff SAVEuptoonehalf. Bring your
especially Case XX. Also TROPICAL FISH. fancy '
appointment, phone 992.2196
Village a're hereby lpledged for (12) 15, 22.Attorneys
2911) 5. 12. 19, 6t
POMUOY ·
have olher old knives to trade guppies, angels and breeders,
the prompt · ~ayment of the
or 992·3585. Danny Thorn. pson. AUTOMOBI~J; Insurance been
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
.leek w. CarMy, Mer.
same . The par value to be
or sell. Phone 992·2343.
Bellas and supplies. Phone
cancelled?
Lost
your
Financing ~vallable.
ttfleM fn·flll
151
Butternut
Ave
.•
Pomeroy
.
recei ved from the sale of the ARCHER RETAINS LEAD
1·18-ffc
992·5443.
Call
992·
operator's
license?
12'
.
JO.Ifc'
Phone 9'12·5080.
bonds anticlpatfd by said notes,
2%6.
12·30.tfc
11·21·1fC
NEW YORK ( UPI) -George
and any excuse fund resulting
OLD FURNITURE, Round Qak
6·15·tfc
SIX ROOMhouse,l33 Butternut
Auto Sales
from the issuance of said notes, Archer retained his lead in pro
tables,
Brass
beds.
dishes,
Ave.
Contact.
Ed
Hedrlc~
!1!137
shalt. to the extent necessary,
WANT WORK at home ad·
WALNUT Stereo.radio com . 1972 MERCURY, 4,000 miles.
Wadsworth Drive, Coluhlbus, CONTRACTOR, Dry Wall
be used only for the retirement golf's money standings today
dressing and stuffing en· clocks, and -or complete
binalion, dual volume control,
Call 773·5119.
finisher
and
painting.
of se ld notes at matur ity , with a total of $41,071. Jack
01\lo, phone 237·4334. ',: •.f .
velopesf Rush self.stamped households. Write M. D.
-4 speed intermixed changer, 4
1·14-6tp
Miller,
Rl,
4,
Pomeroy,
01\lo.
together with interest thereon ,
Richard
I.
Dubbeld,
phon,
1l'it'·lfC
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36,
speaker
sound
system,
and Is hereby pledged tor such Nicklaus is second with the
Call
992·6271.
'
742·5825.
Albany, Ohio, 45710.
Balance $67 .83 . Use our 1969 CUSTOM Ford pickup.
purpose .
12·17·1fc
$28,470 earned in Sunday's Big
1·17·5tc
1·6·tfC
budgel terms. Call ?92·7085.
Section B. During ..the period
Phone 992·6372.
.
-·
Crosby national pro-am.
while such notes run there shall
1·19·61c
1·19-6tc
WANTED to buy, Hardesty's
SEP 111. 1an•s cleaned. Miller
b:e levied on all the taxable
Hlslorlcal and Geographical MAPLE, Early American
property in the · VIllage of
Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Ph.
Encyclopedia llluslrated ,
Pomeroy. In addition to . •II
662·3035.
.
stereo .radlo combination,
other taxes , a direct tax an.....
containing outline map and
Real
Estate
For
Sale
2·12·tfc
AM·FM.
radio,
4
speakers,
4
nually no't less than th~t which
history of Meigs County ,
speed
changer,
separate
would h~ve been lev ied If bonds
published 1883 by H. H.
HARRISON'S TV and Anteri~e ·
controls. Balance $79.45. Use HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
had been Issued without the •
Hardesty and Co., Publishers.
Service. Phone 9'12·2522. •
our budge! lerms. Call 992· Call Danny Thompson,· 992·
pr. ior Issue of such notes . Sald
Write Oneita M. Hutton, 301
2196.
tax sh'&amp;ll be 'and Is hereby or 7085.
6·10·1fc
b. o~tl
Kenilworth Dr., Akron, Ohio
1ered ·!computed, certified,
fiB· tiC
1·19-6tc
10 Mechoni~ Street
levied and extended upon the
44313.
- - -- - - UPHOLHERitl.G SERVICE~
pomeroy, Ohio
tax duplicate in the same
1·13·6tc PAINT DAMAGE, 1971 Zig.zag
complete selection of fabrics
manner and at the same time
and vinyl to choose from .
sewing
machines.
Still
In
that taxes for generl!ll purposes
4 ROOMS
Plck·up and dell~ery. Slater
for such of sa ld · years are
WASHINGTON (UPI)- A California offlclal argued before
For
Rent
original cartons . No at·
FULL basement, nice corner
Upholstering, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
certified,
extended
and ·
.
tachmenls needed as our ,
lol. Room for mobile home,
2 B~DROOM mobile home. conlrols are built ln. Sews
phone 992·3617.
collected . Said taxes shall be the Supreme Court Monday that the death penalty is part of the
$2,500.00.
placed before and In preference natlon'smoralandrellgiousherltage.Butaclvillibertleslawyer
12·27·301p
fu ~nlshed , utilities paid ,
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
2 ACRES
to all other Items and tor the full
sai!litwasascruelllsbolUnginoil,
a,valiable
now.
Phone
992.
buttonholes,
sews
on
butlons,
All utilities available. Located St:PTIC Tanks Cleaned . . Free
amount thereof . The fund$
·
7Je,H.::,
monograms, and blind hem
derived from said tax levies
on blacklop road. $2.500.00.
pipe Inspection . Paul Stein·
Ronald M. George, deputy attorney general of Califbrnla,
'I' · ·,
1· l9·31c
stitch. Full cosh price, $38.50
608 East Main
hereby requ ired shall be placed
3 BEOROOMS
melz,
phone 742-5864.
\'
or budget plan available.
POMEROY
in a separate and disti nct fund tcld the high court in a spirited defense of capital punishment
Large modern kitchen, and
1·18:6tc
wh ich, together with interest th I 'tis "I gltlmat fo
of unlshm t
2 BED .Q)OM mobile home, 12 x 'Phone 992·5641.
EXCELLENT
dining . Nearly n~w gas fur ·
col lected on same, shall be
a t
a e
e rm P
en ·
o,
adults
only.
Phone
992·
1·19·61c
INVESTMENT
BUY
6
nace. Garage. Carport. Large INT.ER lOR and exterior
irr evocabl\1 pledged for the
The arguments in the massive marble hearing chamber
. )
POMEROY - large brick
5443
lawn .
payment of the principal and brought the efforts tAl end the death penalty to a new and historic
p~lnllng, roofing and gutter
1-11 ·1fc VACUUM CLEANER . New
.( 1
building, 2 story, has $90.00 a
OHIO RIVER
interest of said notes or bonds In
1
'
.wDrk
done. Phone 84J.2826.
·
Salesman's
Demonstrator
month
Income
now,
3
other
ant icipation of which they are
FRONTAGE
stage
for
694
persons
now
on
death
row.
Opponents
of
capital
·
·I·
I!
I
has
cl,aning
attachments
lois
lo
sell,
CALL
FOR
tNl-18.12tc
Issued , when and u the same
FEET. Some land above
punlslunent want the Supreme Court tAl declare lt. "cruel and BEDROOM p~d 2 bedroom
plus lhe-new Electro Suds for
F 0 RMAT 10 N T0 DAy 1200
fall due .
tiood, some low for boal
Se c tion 9 . It Is hereby lUlUSual punishment" prohibited by the 8th Amendment to lhe
mobile hol1)es .. Adults only. shampoolng·~c~rpet. Only
$8,SOO,OO .. I '" .
'
launching. Drille&lt;l,;we!l: Ideal
99
592
determined that all acts , con 'tutlon.
Phone 2-5 · ', '"
$~7.50 cash prlce:t 0r,.Jer,rns ..·
I; PRACTICALLY
for resort. ·
1
1
dition~ and things required to be. Con.ti
12· 9·1fc available. Phone19'12.5641." . \ ·.
' NEW BRICK ·
Auto Sales
·
4
BEDROOMS
.H
done precedent to and In the
Prof. Anthony G. Am·
TRAILER LOTS, B~,· ~" '&lt; Mnblle - - - -·- - - -·_ '_·19_
.6tc .POMEROY - . No children MODERN kitchen wit~, cook '68 FORD pickup, 25,000 miles,
Issuance of sa id notes, In order
Swnmlng up, Amsterdam
cour1, Rt · 12-4, s Yr,~cuse,
" '"'Ohi
hazards In this dead end
to make them legal, valid and sterdamofStanford University
units. Steel sink . R~dlant
0
.
street , 3 bedrooms with
·
·
wide bed, custom cab binding obligations of the
heat . Carport. 7 room In all. 2 $1,400:
Law
School
in
his
arguments
said
executions
were
a
dlsa-1992·2951.
'
COAL,
limestone.
hcelslor
double·
•
closets,
p;,
balhs,
'65 Muslang, v.a, 4
Village of Pomeroy , have
drilled wells. Foundation lor
said minatory plll11slunent because
' ' 4-2·tfc Salt Works,. E. Main St.,
beautiful kitchen wllh all
speed
l225 ; Phone 992-6048.
happ ened , been done and against the death s_entonce
2nd house. 10 ACRES.
, ..
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
performed in regular and due
•.
··
•
1·16·61c
H ·tlc
b u iII · in 5 • carPeted
45 ACRES .
form as required by law ; and those who defend capital ilot all states aUow capital NICE trailer, 1 bedroom, Ideal
·
throughout,
fullroom.
basement
' ha t no limitat ion of in · pumshment
use the same punlshmen1 a nd the changin g
for couple, 10 miles nor!~ of _ - -- -,---.,..J
·
with
recreation
utility
'69 VOLKSWAGEN , 1 door
debtedness or taxation. either arguments as they would in attitude toward lt as a punish- . Pomeroy, $65 a month. Phone POODLE· puppies, Silver Toy,
room
,
1
acre.
ALL'
OF
THIS Modern 3 bedroom home .
!;edan, deiuke, 4 speed, radio
$tatutory or constitutional, will
Beautiful
kllchen.
Full
·
992 7479
Park view Kennels, Phone 9'12·
f- $1 ,100; '69'~Dodge Swinger,
to
J
'uslify
boiling
1n
oil.
menthasresulted
ln
the
drop
of
·
·
FOR
JUST
$28,500.00.
""'ing
have been exceeded in the
basement with den and
~,
1·4·tfc 5443 ·
SAVE YOUR CAR
2.door hardto ; v.a. standard,
Issuance of said notea.
fireplace. Garage, 2 barns.
But the youthful looking executions to just 20 a year in - -;;C;'- - - - - - 8·15-tfc
AND YOUR MONEY,
Section 10. The Clerk Is
yellow wllh ack vinyl lop;
1
Young fruit . Minerals. ·
hereby authorized and directed collegeprofessorsaidthecourt the 1960's from a yearly NEW '' 2. BEDROOM, double
CLOSE IN
36,000
miles, still under
HOT WATER HEATING
to forward a certified copy of would prevent any state from average of 175 earlier.
warranly
- $1,075. phone 992· •
wide,
mobile
home
on
lot
In
.POME'ROY1'12
story
frame,
Modern 3 bedrooms, l&gt;asement.
this ordinance to the County
6048.
\'.. '
enforcing
such
torture
Just
as
Amsterdam
said
"the
death
Syracuse.
Completely
fur.
balh,
6
roorns
In
all,
3
Auditor of Meigs County , Oh io.
Nice kllchon, dishwasher .
•. 1·16·6tc
section 11. This ordinance is he maintains II should O\lllaw penalty
Fully carpeted . Carport.
Is
virtually
n•shed. Phone 9'12·2441 after 5
,
.
~."r~~of~.s·Gb~~Gb~;e~~~'f
hereby declared to be an
Fenced.
Wlanimously repudiated and \l;p; m·,
1·J.tfc
36"x 23" x .00~
u,soo.oo. WHY PAY RENT ·
emergency measure nectssary lhe death penalty.
1970 W.JO OLDSMOBIL'E!: ~'-;"
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
for the Immediate preservat ion
"Is
.bolling
In
oil
more
condemned
by the conacience
EACH
MONTH.
Assoclote
·•
automatic, tactorr storeo
of the public peace , he-alth and
tape. Lots ot extraa. Ike new.
?92·3325
1 BEDROOM trailer apart:··
safety of said VIllage for the shocking?" asked Amsterdam, · of contemporary society."
WE HAVE SOME ACREAGE
ea11 992·2441 after s p.rn . I
992·2378
But
Geo
'd
thin
h
ments,
•
I
deal
for
couples
.
reason that the Immediate
h I
Ifillated with the
COMING UP IN THE NEAR
rge sat no g ils
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
lssuance and sa'le of the notes w o s a
1·16·61c
11·28-lfc .
FUTUitE.
herein authorized Is nec•ssary American Civil Uberties Union changed since 1791 to alter the
9'12·5248 or 992·3436.
HENRY CLELAND
to provide funds tor the con . (ACLU) and who with Jack fact that capital p1U11shment is
l-9·12tc
struction of said street lm ·
REALTOR
'
Rrovements Wh ich are urgently Greenberg of the NAACP part of the nation's history and
Office 9'12-2259
needed for the safety of Legal Defense Fund (LDF) has
for 300 years has been a Hduse, 1632 Lincoln Heights, 4
USED OFFSET PLATES
Restdt~ce 9fl-25Q
pedestrian
and
veh icular
. rooms and bath, basement,
HAVE
·- 1·16-6tc
.
.
trefflc ; wherefor, this ordl · been for several years leading
"legitimate form ol punishpicl.ure window, ' fenced In
MANY
USES
nanctshall take effect and be In the effort to outlaw capital ment."
\ yar'd, oil newly ·pointed .
forCe Immediately after Its
punishment.
"The
history
of
capita!
Phone 992·2780 or 992·3432.
pessege .
1
Pessed : Jan . J, 1972
.to
punishment In, this country,1·18-lfc
William G. Baronlck ARESEADDED
and the deep.n)bietj orllilis of UNFURNISHED 3 room and
Mayor
a for Sl.OO
Attest : Jane Walton
bal.h, see al 408 Spring
. NEW YORK (UPI) ~Fran­ that fonn -of punislunentin the
Th~ tax books are now open for the.
· Clerk
Avenue
.
')'VU
cesco
Arose
of
Italy,
1,500religious
and
moral
herilage
of
·
11112, 19, 7t
Dec.ember or first'half collection of the
l · l~:ifc
meterchampionofEurope, was contemporary AmeriCBN, pro1971 . Rea I Est'ate Taxes. Also for
added Monday to the' Wanama- vide clear Indications that the 2 BEDROOM 'mobile home In
. '
likea~n.
delln~uent t~x. Closing date will be
Racine area. Phone 992·63~9 .'
ker Mile · fold for the Jan. 28 death penalty lB no barbaric
.
\
12·14·1fC
February
.,
Mlllroee Garnes at Madison relic of the past," George
lmmJR.IUII WlftiA
.. 3, 1972. .
Square Garden. Marty ·Liquori, · argued.
FURNISHED -~nd unfurnlshOd
the.defending Wanamaker tit.
111 Court St.,
apartments. Close to school.
The coli'! Ia exl]Octed to rule
Phone
992·5434.
llst, will miss the event because 10metlme before lhe current
Pomeroy, Ohio ,
10.18.tlc
of leg Injury.
terma ,ends In June.

12' - 14' - 24' • WiDE .

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

"

~· 1

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

,,

..•

U'l. ABNER

DANCE

Wtrispering Pines

... -. -- r

Nite Cub

.

Cleata~~ce Sa~!

...

•

"
fiO.V COUI.P

SIEGLER HEATER
GET FREE

~ 'IJHE»
M~~K~
Tl.m'D~

•J
!

~

'

•
~

I

- - - - --

j

WE'LL PlAY IT BY
MA'(R F liE HNEW
I!AR, 'INIIIE! IF THE
l Yol\fl IIOI.Dirt'
80'1' IS Get1UINELY 1\.fiFI'(·I.iRAifD
lliTERE61W 11'1
Cf1ECI&lt; 'FOR. HIM,
TURNING HOtreST, HE'D lHINI\ TWICE
HE'LL GET HIS
A800T TURHIN'
CHAHCE!
FUlL•TIMe CROOK!

- ---,--- -- -

Court

~-

Virgil B~

...

SR.

Cleland
Re8Ity

For· Sale

Alum 1'num

Sheets

-

MEIGS COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS

·we talk

· The
Daily Sentinel .

-

LEGAL

.

WMP0/1390

ltowad E. Frank
I

-*·

:;":'

..

~~MIDM;u.t '"·"·~ ....~
ACROSS
1. Dieter's
lunch
6: Incline
11. Girl of
the blue
gown
U. 200 milligrams ·
13. Loathe
15. United

DICK TRACY

16.llease

holder
11. Not yours
18. Sum total
21. Yachting
Jli. Griping
fl. By mouth
18. Accule
Z9. Sorry
sight
3G. Rankle
33.Memory
laden

'6. Stone
20. Palm leaf
of 21. Skipper
1. Dalal..:._
of ftction

I

8. Algerian 22. 11 Dear"

port

follower
9. Agree·
%3. MIT grad ·
ment
(abbr.)
10. Suffix Q1 Zt. Statistical
ordinal
flgure
numbers 26. A Bach
14. Like an
specialty
octopus 29. Fashionn. Think
able way

Yeolerdor'• Auwer

32. Arctic
vehicle
33. Beige
34. Marsh
grass
35. "Rule
Brit·

I K I I I

anoia"

• composer
36. Lay odds
37. Roman
goddess
of night

'

, .•WFOAJII

r] I I I
(;AMlVf:A I
'J I
I I
1

t

TWICE A MOTHER.

Now uranre the circled letlert
to form the 111rpriH amwer, ..
~=L]~=~·:;::~~·;:::::::·::;:~:.•:uc~r~•:•t:::ed:_::by~the abovocartoon.

-

years

TERRY

HARCI

.

of life

over

18. Cain·
30. Trepida·
eroons
lion
tribe
31. Wag19. Debussy'~
nerian
"La.- "
heroine

. _ I_

36. Near East
'~-.1
danseuse
38. Artist's
support
Ponti's
r;;;::::-::-:::-----~-....,...--....:.,39. mate
Kind of

,

_

Prill
......
· ......
~.:.:SUII=PRISl=AHSWIII=~-::._____tl

t xr

n

IAnlwett tomorrow)

Jumble" DRAMA LINGO MODERN CELERY
•

· Antwe'r: ) 'ou hm•p lo htw f' K"IIIWIIlltu fu•

thu - A LANDLORD

name

Ooze

DOWN
1. River in
Maine
!. Astronaut
Shepard
3. Array
4. Vaude·
ville
feature
5. Fate

•
lH~E DECIDIN6
M~ CA5E NOW,
SNOOP&lt;{.,.

.
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
·'
Ia L 0 ·N G F; I L L 0 W
One letter simply sllnda for 1111olher. In this sample A is
1lsed for \he three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length end formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code !etten m dllferent.
A Cryptofii'Hi Qllotatlon ,
XHDKEEKTD
~ Q!..E_ YN

,_.

Unocramble theH four Jumblea,
one letter to each ""uue, to
form four ordl1111r7 word1.

•\

Requires Death

want Ad

I

TEAFORD

.Told Code

•i

YHHZEN

Y GYH
QLKit,.,.L ·Y EFS A.

QYDK.

NJ

D, SXHq'I ; ~ .SK

XN

KGKLNJH

YellerUJ'a ~le: NEVER SAY YOU KNOW A
MAN TILL YOU HAVE DIVIDED AN INHERITANCE WITH
HIM:-JOHANN KASPAR LA VATER

�.

.

.'

•

'
.

'.

..

"

.&gt;

..
LEGAL NOTICE

..

1'11E Gar ecncR. '1111 '-!G!&gt; ·
TO DO '11-\A"-l '51\ A~D LOOk
AT THIS GN&gt;.'Y'G€

11LL CALL THAT
DIME AN'
'IE
TWO .HEN APPLES

Al L N IGJ-1\T !

-- - --

OI!DINANCE NO. 424
TO PI!OVIDE FOR THE
ISSUANCE OF Sl2,000.00 OF
~·8WR8~ ,THOEHYJ~L~;E A0:
TICIPATION
OF
THE
IS SUANCE OF BONDS FOR
THE PURPOSE OF RESUR ·
FACING SUNDRY STREETS
IN THE VKLA GE, AND
DE C LARING
AN
EMERGENCY .
11':1 1t11.., NlA, lor~ l .tot looj . U.$. ' -'· lllf.

W,HER:EAS , the Vlt l age',s
ti;: a.t off ic er has ce rtified as to
th e est.imated life of the

property to be acquired from
the procee9s of the notes here in
author ized as ex ceeding five
year s, and has - certified the
ma xi mum maturity of bOhds as
tw enty years· and of su ch notes
as fiv e years or on e year if sold
pri vately ;

ro me stoc .1

'nJ fHE SlOE!

'

. WATS

IT!
'IOU'RE

GOOD LUCK WITH
'IOU ~ !RAFFle Dt.ITY,
, SENOR.

RE ADY

10 FACE

NOW , THEREFORE , BE IT

1t1EM !

ORDA I NED by the Coun c il Of
the Village of Pomeroy , Meigs

County, ·ohio :
Sec tion 1. That it is hert.b y
de emed nec essary to Issue
bonds of the Village of F»omeroy
In th e principal sum of
S1 2, 0DO .OO for the purpose of
resurfa c ing
the following
str eets in the Village:
Three blocks of Main Street
One bloc k of Butternut
A venue
Riverview Dr ive
On e half of Mu lberry Av enue
from Cemetery to Union
Avenue
Cemetery Lane - Mulberry
Hei ghts
Second Street
Sec tion 2. That said bonds
shall be dated approximately
the f irst dl!ly of March, 1972,
sha l l bear Interes t at the
estimated rate of six per cen t um (6 pet.) per annu'm ,
payable sem 1-annually until the
princ ipal sum Is paid ; and shall
mature in ten substantially
equal annual installments after
the Issuance ther·eot .
Sect ion 3. Thaf for the pur .
pose of raising money In an .
ticipation of the issuance of said
bonds for the aforesaid purpose,
it is hereby declared necessary
to issue and this Council hereby
determine that notes ()f said
VIllage in the aggregate
princ ipal sum of $12,000.00 shall
be issued.
Sect ion 4 . That such an ·
ticipalory notes in the amount
aforesa i d shall be issued
bearing Interest at such rate not
exceeding six per centum (6
pet . ) per annum as may be
f ixed by the Clerk in her award
of said notes l!lt private sale .
such Interest to be payable at
maturity . Said notes shall be
dated as of the date of Issuance,
shall mature on December JO,
1972, and shall be In such
denom inat i ons as may be
requeste-d by the purchase of
such notes.
Section 5. That such notes
shall be executed by the Mayor
and Clerk and bear thet.s.eal of
the corporation ; sh.illl be
payable at the office of Village
Clerk , Pomeroy, Ohio: and
shall express upon their face the
purpose for wh Jch they are
Issued l!lnd that they are Issued
pursuant to this ordinance .
Section 6. That said notes
shall be first offered to the of .
ficer In charge of the Bond
Retirement Fund and if said
Off icer refuses to take sa id
notes. they shall be sold at
private sale by the Clerk at not
less than par and accrued in·
terest and an Interest rate not
exceeding a six per centum (6
pet.) per annum . The proceeds
from such sale shall be paid Into
the proper fund and used tor the

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
i'PMEROY, OHIO

.@)

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'

s5.55
Notice

Mobile Homes For Sale

I WILL NOT be responsible for
any debts contracted br.

5113.

12·31-lfc

and
aluminum
awning,
aluminum skirting, com .

pletely setup, Beautiful
location. Owner leaving state.
Phone 949·4892 or 992-5272.
1-IO.tfc

mysel .

TAX service, daily
Signed : Harry W. Pickens, . INCOME
except S'Unday, evenings by
Sr .
appointment . Mrs. Wanda
1·19·31p
Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road, I
mile
west of Meigs County . - - - - - - - - - - - ,
RUMMAGE SALE at Mid·
Fairground on Rt. 7 bypass.
dleport Cab Office, 3rd &amp;
Phone 992·2272.
Main,
formerly
Duke
I.J.JO!c
Cleaners, starts Thursday at 9
a.m.

1·19·3tc

Male Help Wanted

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy
1

&amp; PLUMBING CO.

ji,
240 Li~cofn ,~t.
. Ml!ldleport, Ohio
Dba Anthony Ptumbln~
We have a complete Home
Maintenance Service the
year around. No matter what .
your need. Complete roof or
spouting 'repair. Interior or
exterior carpentry. Ceiling
tile and Paneling and Siding.
·complete Plumbing &amp;
Healing.
Day Number 992·2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.
742·3947
992-5803
992·3898 742·4761
We are fully insured

•

:-GUARANTEED. Phone 992-2094 ,

l«lSCOT KOSMETICSand wigs 60J&lt;:12. 2·bedroom, all.electrlc,
.. for sale. Brown's. Phone 992·
air conditioned, 8x20 ft. Porch

Notice
anyone other than

'

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

0pen8Til5
Mondoy.thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomero~, 0.

and"

FURNITURE

'

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

FOUR NEW HOII\ES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE '
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY OOWN
1
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low.as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of 55,000.00 and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
.percent4ge rate.,
·

I

'REFINERY CORP.
INSTRUCTI'ON in organ and TEXAS
offers opportunity for high
plano. Gerald Hoffner, phone
. Income PLUS regular cash
992·3825.
bonuses, convention trips and
1·19-12tc abundant
fringe benefits to
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
mature man in -Pomeroy
Septic tanks Installed. George
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
area
.
Regardless
of
ex
( BHI) Pullins. Phone 9'12·2478.
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
perience,
air
mail
I.
I.
Pate,
4-25.ffc
Jan. 23, 12 noon .
Pres,
,
Texas
Refinery
Corp.,
"
" - ..
1·19·3tc
Bo• 711. Fort Worth, Texas
1220 Washington B.lvd.
READY·MIX CONCRETE de·
livered right to your pro( eel.
SHOOTING MATCH, Saturday, 76101.
Belpre, Ohio
Fast and easy . , Free
Jan . 22, at the Racine Planing
1·16-4tp L - - - - - - - - - - ' - . L
estimates . Phone 992·3284 .
Mill at 6 p. m. Factory choke
LEGAL NOTICE
Goegleln Ready.Mix Co.,
guns only. Assorted meats. TEXAS OIL COMPANY needs
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
Middleport, Ohio.
Sponsored by the Syracuse good man over 40 for short FOR THE BEST deal In a new
CALL
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
or used mobile home, try
F'lre
Dept
frlps
surrounding
Pomeroy.
6·30·tfc
OHIO
,
BILL NELSON,992-3657
HILTON WOLFE, 949.3211
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
·
1·19·31c Contact customers. We lraln.
TOM CROW, 992·2580
Kanauga, Ohio.
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534
Air mall B. G. Dickerson,
O' DELL WHEEL allghment
MARY ALICE SAMUELS
12·17·90tc
Pres . ,
Southwestern
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
816 W. Main Street,
Petroleum Corp. , Fl. Worth,
Complete front end service,
Pomeroy , Ohio ,
MOBILE AbMES . . Large
Plaintiff,
Tex .
· tune up and brake service.
-V$ Real
Estate
For
Sale
1·19·1fc selection's · 10 . 12 wldes. 1 to 4 For Sale
Wheels balanced olec.
NATHANIEL SAMUELS,
bedrooms, bank repos and
All
work
Ironically
.
Address Unknown
Friday &amp; Saturday
OUSE Ph
7
used, some practically new. 4 WHEEL wagon , sel ol
TEXAS
OIL
COMPANY
has
guaranteed.
Reasonable
harrows.
Phone
247·2161
.
H
·
one
992·
394.
Defendant . l
Nights-10 Til2
opening in Pomeroy area. No' Save up to 'I•. R. A. or Don
rates. Phone 9'12·3213.
No. 14m
1·16·61c - - - ------,-1·..,13=61c
·
Miller, 705 Farson Street,
experience necessary. Age
7·27·tfC
NOTICE
Belpre, Ohio by Kaiser -.5-2- FO
not
Important.
Good
- :R-D- Tr_a_c-to-.r-,-good
- -con. NICE 2·Siory home with full ~~-=-=..,..,.--~
Nathaniel Samuels, whose
Aluminum, phone 423·9531.
character a must. We train.
place of residence It unknown
C. BRADFORD, Auctleneer
dition , new rubber ~""'"' $650;
basement, 2 lots, new forced
and cannot with reasonable
1·18·12tc
Air mail C. E. Dickerson,
Complete Service
phone 992·6048.
air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
diligence be ascerta ined, will
Pres . , Southwestern
Elementary
School.
Phone
Phone 949.3821
1·16·6tc
take notice that on the 13th day
Petroleum
Corp.,
Ft.
Worth,
992·7284
to
see.
Racine, Ohio
of December. 1971 , the un.
For
Sale
Music
by
Red
Stewart
Te•
.
11·7·tfC
Crill
Brad!ooti
dersigned, Marv Allee Samuels,
1·19·1fc GOOD HAY. Phone 992-3658.
5·1·tfC
fried her Complaint against him
and the Ambassadors.
INVENTORY SALE
- '- ' - - - - -- 1·19·1fc
In the Court of Common Pleas of
MIDDLEPORT - 6 room house - - --.,.---- Meigs County, Ohio, demanding
4 PC. BAND4
. ~n!lbalh ._:JB~ . Hamil~o~ ~V.' SI;OV.:ING.,A\AC!:!INI;S. i!'!P"Ir
-·... ...
dlvo~e-, eustody of minor child
Femctl'
e
Help
Wanted
prfl!lid reasQnably. Phone w2~ '' 'servlcili all 'lllak8. 992·'22841
2
FEMALE
SINGERS
10·
HEAD
Holstein
cows,
fresh
of the par1les, and other relief.
2044.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
and
close
up
Springers.
5 LADIES needed lmmedlateiy.
You, the said Nathaniel
Buy Any Fuel Oil
1·18·3tc
Authorized Singer Sales and
Homer
Circle,
phone
949·2177.
Samuels , are required to an - ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
full or part time, $50 to $60 a
Service.
We Sharpen S.clssors.
1·18·3tc
swer said Complaint w ith in
wee!&lt;. no lnlll!stment. Phone
overweight· ladles, teens and
J.29.tfc
twenty eight days after January
949.4J65.
3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
men Interested In a Weight
.
g~~:ros~rC~:~:;a!~da~~r 1~hl~~ 19, 1972.
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
1·19-Jic LONG BOTTOM _:· Five roo!ll
Watchers I Rl Class In
purpose·r$aid money Is hereby
SEPTIC
TANKS
CLEANED
house,
bath,
business,
or
Plains.
All
.
new
with
total
Pomeroy write : Weigh!
Mary Alice Samuels
approppiate'd .
storage building - 56.500. 200 Gallons Fuel 011 When
electric and central air REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
·
Plaintiff
Watchers
I Rl. 1863 Section
Sectlon)7 1·sa ld notes shall be
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
Wanted
To
Buy
Phone
985·3529.
conditioning, bath and 'I• fully
Rd..
Cincinnati,
01\lo
45237.
the full gen~ral obligation of lhe
You Buy Any Siegler Heater
ONner &amp; Operator. ·
Webster
and
Fultz
12·19·301c
carpeted,
full
·
·basement,
10·3·1fc
V i llage o·~ Pomeroy and the full
Thru Jan, IS.
OLD
POCKET
knives,
·
• S.l2.1fc
P
.O.
Box723,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
garage
In
basement.
,
See
by
faith , credit and revenue of sa id
for Plaintiff SAVEuptoonehalf. Bring your
especially Case XX. Also TROPICAL FISH. fancy '
appointment, phone 992.2196
Village a're hereby lpledged for (12) 15, 22.Attorneys
2911) 5. 12. 19, 6t
POMUOY ·
have olher old knives to trade guppies, angels and breeders,
the prompt · ~ayment of the
or 992·3585. Danny Thorn. pson. AUTOMOBI~J; Insurance been
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
.leek w. CarMy, Mer.
same . The par value to be
or sell. Phone 992·2343.
Bellas and supplies. Phone
cancelled?
Lost
your
Financing ~vallable.
ttfleM fn·flll
151
Butternut
Ave
.•
Pomeroy
.
recei ved from the sale of the ARCHER RETAINS LEAD
1·18-ffc
992·5443.
Call
992·
operator's
license?
12'
.
JO.Ifc'
Phone 9'12·5080.
bonds anticlpatfd by said notes,
2%6.
12·30.tfc
11·21·1fC
NEW YORK ( UPI) -George
and any excuse fund resulting
OLD FURNITURE, Round Qak
6·15·tfc
SIX ROOMhouse,l33 Butternut
Auto Sales
from the issuance of said notes, Archer retained his lead in pro
tables,
Brass
beds.
dishes,
Ave.
Contact.
Ed
Hedrlc~
!1!137
shalt. to the extent necessary,
WANT WORK at home ad·
WALNUT Stereo.radio com . 1972 MERCURY, 4,000 miles.
Wadsworth Drive, Coluhlbus, CONTRACTOR, Dry Wall
be used only for the retirement golf's money standings today
dressing and stuffing en· clocks, and -or complete
binalion, dual volume control,
Call 773·5119.
finisher
and
painting.
of se ld notes at matur ity , with a total of $41,071. Jack
01\lo, phone 237·4334. ',: •.f .
velopesf Rush self.stamped households. Write M. D.
-4 speed intermixed changer, 4
1·14-6tp
Miller,
Rl,
4,
Pomeroy,
01\lo.
together with interest thereon ,
Richard
I.
Dubbeld,
phon,
1l'it'·lfC
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36,
speaker
sound
system,
and Is hereby pledged tor such Nicklaus is second with the
Call
992·6271.
'
742·5825.
Albany, Ohio, 45710.
Balance $67 .83 . Use our 1969 CUSTOM Ford pickup.
purpose .
12·17·1fc
$28,470 earned in Sunday's Big
1·17·5tc
1·6·tfC
budgel terms. Call ?92·7085.
Section B. During ..the period
Phone 992·6372.
.
-·
Crosby national pro-am.
while such notes run there shall
1·19·61c
1·19-6tc
WANTED to buy, Hardesty's
SEP 111. 1an•s cleaned. Miller
b:e levied on all the taxable
Hlslorlcal and Geographical MAPLE, Early American
property in the · VIllage of
Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Ph.
Encyclopedia llluslrated ,
Pomeroy. In addition to . •II
662·3035.
.
stereo .radlo combination,
other taxes , a direct tax an.....
containing outline map and
Real
Estate
For
Sale
2·12·tfc
AM·FM.
radio,
4
speakers,
4
nually no't less than th~t which
history of Meigs County ,
speed
changer,
separate
would h~ve been lev ied If bonds
published 1883 by H. H.
HARRISON'S TV and Anteri~e ·
controls. Balance $79.45. Use HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
had been Issued without the •
Hardesty and Co., Publishers.
Service. Phone 9'12·2522. •
our budge! lerms. Call 992· Call Danny Thompson,· 992·
pr. ior Issue of such notes . Sald
Write Oneita M. Hutton, 301
2196.
tax sh'&amp;ll be 'and Is hereby or 7085.
6·10·1fc
b. o~tl
Kenilworth Dr., Akron, Ohio
1ered ·!computed, certified,
fiB· tiC
1·19-6tc
10 Mechoni~ Street
levied and extended upon the
44313.
- - -- - - UPHOLHERitl.G SERVICE~
pomeroy, Ohio
tax duplicate in the same
1·13·6tc PAINT DAMAGE, 1971 Zig.zag
complete selection of fabrics
manner and at the same time
and vinyl to choose from .
sewing
machines.
Still
In
that taxes for generl!ll purposes
4 ROOMS
Plck·up and dell~ery. Slater
for such of sa ld · years are
WASHINGTON (UPI)- A California offlclal argued before
For
Rent
original cartons . No at·
FULL basement, nice corner
Upholstering, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
certified,
extended
and ·
.
tachmenls needed as our ,
lol. Room for mobile home,
2 B~DROOM mobile home. conlrols are built ln. Sews
phone 992·3617.
collected . Said taxes shall be the Supreme Court Monday that the death penalty is part of the
$2,500.00.
placed before and In preference natlon'smoralandrellgiousherltage.Butaclvillibertleslawyer
12·27·301p
fu ~nlshed , utilities paid ,
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
2 ACRES
to all other Items and tor the full
sai!litwasascruelllsbolUnginoil,
a,valiable
now.
Phone
992.
buttonholes,
sews
on
butlons,
All utilities available. Located St:PTIC Tanks Cleaned . . Free
amount thereof . The fund$
·
7Je,H.::,
monograms, and blind hem
derived from said tax levies
on blacklop road. $2.500.00.
pipe Inspection . Paul Stein·
Ronald M. George, deputy attorney general of Califbrnla,
'I' · ·,
1· l9·31c
stitch. Full cosh price, $38.50
608 East Main
hereby requ ired shall be placed
3 BEOROOMS
melz,
phone 742-5864.
\'
or budget plan available.
POMEROY
in a separate and disti nct fund tcld the high court in a spirited defense of capital punishment
Large modern kitchen, and
1·18:6tc
wh ich, together with interest th I 'tis "I gltlmat fo
of unlshm t
2 BED .Q)OM mobile home, 12 x 'Phone 992·5641.
EXCELLENT
dining . Nearly n~w gas fur ·
col lected on same, shall be
a t
a e
e rm P
en ·
o,
adults
only.
Phone
992·
1·19·61c
INVESTMENT
BUY
6
nace. Garage. Carport. Large INT.ER lOR and exterior
irr evocabl\1 pledged for the
The arguments in the massive marble hearing chamber
. )
POMEROY - large brick
5443
lawn .
payment of the principal and brought the efforts tAl end the death penalty to a new and historic
p~lnllng, roofing and gutter
1-11 ·1fc VACUUM CLEANER . New
.( 1
building, 2 story, has $90.00 a
OHIO RIVER
interest of said notes or bonds In
1
'
.wDrk
done. Phone 84J.2826.
·
Salesman's
Demonstrator
month
Income
now,
3
other
ant icipation of which they are
FRONTAGE
stage
for
694
persons
now
on
death
row.
Opponents
of
capital
·
·I·
I!
I
has
cl,aning
attachments
lois
lo
sell,
CALL
FOR
tNl-18.12tc
Issued , when and u the same
FEET. Some land above
punlslunent want the Supreme Court tAl declare lt. "cruel and BEDROOM p~d 2 bedroom
plus lhe-new Electro Suds for
F 0 RMAT 10 N T0 DAy 1200
fall due .
tiood, some low for boal
Se c tion 9 . It Is hereby lUlUSual punishment" prohibited by the 8th Amendment to lhe
mobile hol1)es .. Adults only. shampoolng·~c~rpet. Only
$8,SOO,OO .. I '" .
'
launching. Drille&lt;l,;we!l: Ideal
99
592
determined that all acts , con 'tutlon.
Phone 2-5 · ', '"
$~7.50 cash prlce:t 0r,.Jer,rns ..·
I; PRACTICALLY
for resort. ·
1
1
dition~ and things required to be. Con.ti
12· 9·1fc available. Phone19'12.5641." . \ ·.
' NEW BRICK ·
Auto Sales
·
4
BEDROOMS
.H
done precedent to and In the
Prof. Anthony G. Am·
TRAILER LOTS, B~,· ~" '&lt; Mnblle - - - -·- - - -·_ '_·19_
.6tc .POMEROY - . No children MODERN kitchen wit~, cook '68 FORD pickup, 25,000 miles,
Issuance of sa id notes, In order
Swnmlng up, Amsterdam
cour1, Rt · 12-4, s Yr,~cuse,
" '"'Ohi
hazards In this dead end
to make them legal, valid and sterdamofStanford University
units. Steel sink . R~dlant
0
.
street , 3 bedrooms with
·
·
wide bed, custom cab binding obligations of the
heat . Carport. 7 room In all. 2 $1,400:
Law
School
in
his
arguments
said
executions
were
a
dlsa-1992·2951.
'
COAL,
limestone.
hcelslor
double·
•
closets,
p;,
balhs,
'65 Muslang, v.a, 4
Village of Pomeroy , have
drilled wells. Foundation lor
said minatory plll11slunent because
' ' 4-2·tfc Salt Works,. E. Main St.,
beautiful kitchen wllh all
speed
l225 ; Phone 992-6048.
happ ened , been done and against the death s_entonce
2nd house. 10 ACRES.
, ..
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
performed in regular and due
•.
··
•
1·16·61c
H ·tlc
b u iII · in 5 • carPeted
45 ACRES .
form as required by law ; and those who defend capital ilot all states aUow capital NICE trailer, 1 bedroom, Ideal
·
throughout,
fullroom.
basement
' ha t no limitat ion of in · pumshment
use the same punlshmen1 a nd the changin g
for couple, 10 miles nor!~ of _ - -- -,---.,..J
·
with
recreation
utility
'69 VOLKSWAGEN , 1 door
debtedness or taxation. either arguments as they would in attitude toward lt as a punish- . Pomeroy, $65 a month. Phone POODLE· puppies, Silver Toy,
room
,
1
acre.
ALL'
OF
THIS Modern 3 bedroom home .
!;edan, deiuke, 4 speed, radio
$tatutory or constitutional, will
Beautiful
kllchen.
Full
·
992 7479
Park view Kennels, Phone 9'12·
f- $1 ,100; '69'~Dodge Swinger,
to
J
'uslify
boiling
1n
oil.
menthasresulted
ln
the
drop
of
·
·
FOR
JUST
$28,500.00.
""'ing
have been exceeded in the
basement with den and
~,
1·4·tfc 5443 ·
SAVE YOUR CAR
2.door hardto ; v.a. standard,
Issuance of said notea.
fireplace. Garage, 2 barns.
But the youthful looking executions to just 20 a year in - -;;C;'- - - - - - 8·15-tfc
AND YOUR MONEY,
Section 10. The Clerk Is
yellow wllh ack vinyl lop;
1
Young fruit . Minerals. ·
hereby authorized and directed collegeprofessorsaidthecourt the 1960's from a yearly NEW '' 2. BEDROOM, double
CLOSE IN
36,000
miles, still under
HOT WATER HEATING
to forward a certified copy of would prevent any state from average of 175 earlier.
warranly
- $1,075. phone 992· •
wide,
mobile
home
on
lot
In
.POME'ROY1'12
story
frame,
Modern 3 bedrooms, l&gt;asement.
this ordinance to the County
6048.
\'.. '
enforcing
such
torture
Just
as
Amsterdam
said
"the
death
Syracuse.
Completely
fur.
balh,
6
roorns
In
all,
3
Auditor of Meigs County , Oh io.
Nice kllchon, dishwasher .
•. 1·16·6tc
section 11. This ordinance is he maintains II should O\lllaw penalty
Fully carpeted . Carport.
Is
virtually
n•shed. Phone 9'12·2441 after 5
,
.
~."r~~of~.s·Gb~~Gb~;e~~~'f
hereby declared to be an
Fenced.
Wlanimously repudiated and \l;p; m·,
1·J.tfc
36"x 23" x .00~
u,soo.oo. WHY PAY RENT ·
emergency measure nectssary lhe death penalty.
1970 W.JO OLDSMOBIL'E!: ~'-;"
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
for the Immediate preservat ion
"Is
.bolling
In
oil
more
condemned
by the conacience
EACH
MONTH.
Assoclote
·•
automatic, tactorr storeo
of the public peace , he-alth and
tape. Lots ot extraa. Ike new.
?92·3325
1 BEDROOM trailer apart:··
safety of said VIllage for the shocking?" asked Amsterdam, · of contemporary society."
WE HAVE SOME ACREAGE
ea11 992·2441 after s p.rn . I
992·2378
But
Geo
'd
thin
h
ments,
•
I
deal
for
couples
.
reason that the Immediate
h I
Ifillated with the
COMING UP IN THE NEAR
rge sat no g ils
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
lssuance and sa'le of the notes w o s a
1·16·61c
11·28-lfc .
FUTUitE.
herein authorized Is nec•ssary American Civil Uberties Union changed since 1791 to alter the
9'12·5248 or 992·3436.
HENRY CLELAND
to provide funds tor the con . (ACLU) and who with Jack fact that capital p1U11shment is
l-9·12tc
struction of said street lm ·
REALTOR
'
Rrovements Wh ich are urgently Greenberg of the NAACP part of the nation's history and
Office 9'12-2259
needed for the safety of Legal Defense Fund (LDF) has
for 300 years has been a Hduse, 1632 Lincoln Heights, 4
USED OFFSET PLATES
Restdt~ce 9fl-25Q
pedestrian
and
veh icular
. rooms and bath, basement,
HAVE
·- 1·16-6tc
.
.
trefflc ; wherefor, this ordl · been for several years leading
"legitimate form ol punishpicl.ure window, ' fenced In
MANY
USES
nanctshall take effect and be In the effort to outlaw capital ment."
\ yar'd, oil newly ·pointed .
forCe Immediately after Its
punishment.
"The
history
of
capita!
Phone 992·2780 or 992·3432.
pessege .
1
Pessed : Jan . J, 1972
.to
punishment In, this country,1·18-lfc
William G. Baronlck ARESEADDED
and the deep.n)bietj orllilis of UNFURNISHED 3 room and
Mayor
a for Sl.OO
Attest : Jane Walton
bal.h, see al 408 Spring
. NEW YORK (UPI) ~Fran­ that fonn -of punislunentin the
Th~ tax books are now open for the.
· Clerk
Avenue
.
')'VU
cesco
Arose
of
Italy,
1,500religious
and
moral
herilage
of
·
11112, 19, 7t
Dec.ember or first'half collection of the
l · l~:ifc
meterchampionofEurope, was contemporary AmeriCBN, pro1971 . Rea I Est'ate Taxes. Also for
added Monday to the' Wanama- vide clear Indications that the 2 BEDROOM 'mobile home In
. '
likea~n.
delln~uent t~x. Closing date will be
Racine area. Phone 992·63~9 .'
ker Mile · fold for the Jan. 28 death penalty lB no barbaric
.
\
12·14·1fC
February
.,
Mlllroee Garnes at Madison relic of the past," George
lmmJR.IUII WlftiA
.. 3, 1972. .
Square Garden. Marty ·Liquori, · argued.
FURNISHED -~nd unfurnlshOd
the.defending Wanamaker tit.
111 Court St.,
apartments. Close to school.
The coli'! Ia exl]Octed to rule
Phone
992·5434.
llst, will miss the event because 10metlme before lhe current
Pomeroy, Ohio ,
10.18.tlc
of leg Injury.
terma ,ends In June.

12' - 14' - 24' • WiDE .

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

"

~· 1

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

,,

..•

U'l. ABNER

DANCE

Wtrispering Pines

... -. -- r

Nite Cub

.

Cleata~~ce Sa~!

...

•

"
fiO.V COUI.P

SIEGLER HEATER
GET FREE

~ 'IJHE»
M~~K~
Tl.m'D~

•J
!

~

'

•
~

I

- - - - --

j

WE'LL PlAY IT BY
MA'(R F liE HNEW
I!AR, 'INIIIE! IF THE
l Yol\fl IIOI.Dirt'
80'1' IS Get1UINELY 1\.fiFI'(·I.iRAifD
lliTERE61W 11'1
Cf1ECI&lt; 'FOR. HIM,
TURNING HOtreST, HE'D lHINI\ TWICE
HE'LL GET HIS
A800T TURHIN'
CHAHCE!
FUlL•TIMe CROOK!

- ---,--- -- -

Court

~-

Virgil B~

...

SR.

Cleland
Re8Ity

For· Sale

Alum 1'num

Sheets

-

MEIGS COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS

·we talk

· The
Daily Sentinel .

-

LEGAL

.

WMP0/1390

ltowad E. Frank
I

-*·

:;":'

..

~~MIDM;u.t '"·"·~ ....~
ACROSS
1. Dieter's
lunch
6: Incline
11. Girl of
the blue
gown
U. 200 milligrams ·
13. Loathe
15. United

DICK TRACY

16.llease

holder
11. Not yours
18. Sum total
21. Yachting
Jli. Griping
fl. By mouth
18. Accule
Z9. Sorry
sight
3G. Rankle
33.Memory
laden

'6. Stone
20. Palm leaf
of 21. Skipper
1. Dalal..:._
of ftction

I

8. Algerian 22. 11 Dear"

port

follower
9. Agree·
%3. MIT grad ·
ment
(abbr.)
10. Suffix Q1 Zt. Statistical
ordinal
flgure
numbers 26. A Bach
14. Like an
specialty
octopus 29. Fashionn. Think
able way

Yeolerdor'• Auwer

32. Arctic
vehicle
33. Beige
34. Marsh
grass
35. "Rule
Brit·

I K I I I

anoia"

• composer
36. Lay odds
37. Roman
goddess
of night

'

, .•WFOAJII

r] I I I
(;AMlVf:A I
'J I
I I
1

t

TWICE A MOTHER.

Now uranre the circled letlert
to form the 111rpriH amwer, ..
~=L]~=~·:;::~~·;:::::::·::;:~:.•:uc~r~•:•t:::ed:_::by~the abovocartoon.

-

years

TERRY

HARCI

.

of life

over

18. Cain·
30. Trepida·
eroons
lion
tribe
31. Wag19. Debussy'~
nerian
"La.- "
heroine

. _ I_

36. Near East
'~-.1
danseuse
38. Artist's
support
Ponti's
r;;;::::-::-:::-----~-....,...--....:.,39. mate
Kind of

,

_

Prill
......
· ......
~.:.:SUII=PRISl=AHSWIII=~-::._____tl

t xr

n

IAnlwett tomorrow)

Jumble" DRAMA LINGO MODERN CELERY
•

· Antwe'r: ) 'ou hm•p lo htw f' K"IIIWIIlltu fu•

thu - A LANDLORD

name

Ooze

DOWN
1. River in
Maine
!. Astronaut
Shepard
3. Array
4. Vaude·
ville
feature
5. Fate

•
lH~E DECIDIN6
M~ CA5E NOW,
SNOOP&lt;{.,.

.
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
·'
Ia L 0 ·N G F; I L L 0 W
One letter simply sllnda for 1111olher. In this sample A is
1lsed for \he three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length end formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code !etten m dllferent.
A Cryptofii'Hi Qllotatlon ,
XHDKEEKTD
~ Q!..E_ YN

,_.

Unocramble theH four Jumblea,
one letter to each ""uue, to
form four ordl1111r7 word1.

•\

Requires Death

want Ad

I

TEAFORD

.Told Code

•i

YHHZEN

Y GYH
QLKit,.,.L ·Y EFS A.

QYDK.

NJ

D, SXHq'I ; ~ .SK

XN

KGKLNJH

YellerUJ'a ~le: NEVER SAY YOU KNOW A
MAN TILL YOU HAVE DIVIDED AN INHERITANCE WITH
HIM:-JOHANN KASPAR LA VATER

�'

'

•

LEGAL NOTICE .

'

'

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

Ol~~~d- Lunchr~om

412.63
Total E)l(pencUtures OF THE BOARD
Lunchroom F'-'nd
$2,971.27
OF ED.UCATION
.Balance, D~c. 31 , 1971 S.621 .74
For Flsul Yelt: Ending
Tolal Ew.penditures Plus
Dectmbtr 31 , 197l
Bal .. Oec . 31.197l
68,593.01
E.urern Loul School District
Uniform School
•
Meigs c.ounty
· Supplies Fund
At. 1 Rttdnllle, Ohio
Balance, January 1,
39.94
Jan. u , 1972
1971
I certify the following report
Rece ipts ...:... Income
to be correct.
Sale of Work books
2,001.15
C. O. Newland Tofa l Receipts- .
· Clerk. Treasurerofthe Income
2,001 .15
Board of Educalion .
Recelph - Transfers
From General Fund
738.84
CASH RECONCILIATION . Total Recei pts ·r738.84
Total Fund Balances,
Transfers
Dec..3l. 1971
$ 5.. ,4,. 9 _87 Total Receipts (Income
Depos1tory Balan ces:
Clr'!d Transfers
2,739.99
Pomeroy Nit. Bank 54 ,9.u.al Tolal Beginning Billan ce
Tri ,County Bank
2,779.93
24 096 74 Plus Receipts
Total Depository
' ·
Expendifures
rJalances
. 79 ,0.41.5S Purchase of Workbooks 2, 11'9 ,93
O•Jfstand lng Warrants , Dec . 31 , Total Expenditures - Un iform
1971 (Deduct)
2 4 • 59 ~, 68
Sc hoo l Supplies Fund 2,779.93
Total -. Clerk -Treasurer's
Total Expenditures ~lvs
Batance, Dec . 31 ,
Sal., Dec.. 31. 1971
2.779.93
1971
,44'9.87
N. D. E . A. Title Ill Fund
64
SUMMARY OF CASH
(Include Appalnhia)
BALANCEs·, R£CEIPTS
ReceiPts
AND EXPENDITURES
Coord inator - Title Il l 1,219.09
Balance Jan . 1( 1971
Tolal
1,219.09
General Fund
67 ,440 .17
Receipts - Transfers
Bond Retlremenl
14, 093 .96 From General Fund
3,307.25
,507 .36 Total Transfers
Lu~ctlroom
3,307.25
4
Un1form School
Total Rece ipts (Receipts
Suppl ies
Plus Tran.sfers)
.4 ,526.34
39 _94 Totll
·E•SEA
l Beginn inn,. Balance
• • • T'll
1 e 1
5,021
.84
Tota l
91,1 03_27
Plus Receipts
4,526.34
Total Receipts
Expenditures
16.00
General Fund
466.267 .24 A l6-2
I,3 11 .31
Bond Rie lirement
28,596.11 . ::
570.34
lu~ch room
64,085.65 H"A
1,409.60
Un1form School
_.,
Supp lies
3,307.25
2 739 99 Total Expenditures
N.D.E.A. Tifleltl
'
·
Transfers
4 526 3 To Generllll Fund
1,219,09
E sEA T'tl
23 ·' 79 1.·3"&lt;1 TotaiTransfer·
E·s·E·A·
T!
le
s
1,219.09
·
·
·
.
11
e
II
1,278.13
T
t
I
E
Total
591 ,2u .80 o a xpendltures
Total Recelph &amp; Balilnces
' Includ ing Tra nsfers 4,526.34
Genera l Fund
533 ,707 _41 Total Expenditures Plus
Bond Retirement
42. 690 _07 Sa~, f~cAJ\\~71 F 4,526 .34
Luunctlroom
68,593.01 Ba lanc'e' J·an· ' e 11 und
niform School
•
vary .
Suppl ies
1971
23.791.34
2
779
99
• ·
No
Tola l
23.791.34
11
1
4
526
34
.E.A.
Tille I
Total Beginning Bal ance
• ·
E·s
.
.
E.A.
Tille
28,Q
1
}
18
E sEA T'tl
It
Plus Receipts
28,813.18
· · · ' 1e
1, 27 ·13
Expenditures
Tolal
682,388.07 A2
333.26
Expendilu""es
Al6.1
21.089.05
General Fund
504,888.87 B6
82.28
Bond Retirement
26,332.02 E2D
305.52
Lunchroom
62.911 .27 HSA
711 .65
Uniform School
Total Expenditures
22.521 .86
Supplies
2.779.93
Trilnsfers
N.D.E.A. Title til
4.526.3&lt;1 To General Fund
2,639 .78
E.S.E.A . Title I
25.1 61 .64 Total Transfers
2,639.78
1,278.13 Total Expend itures Including
E.S.E.A. Title II
Total
627,938.20
Transfers ,
25,161 64
Balance
Ba"
t o
31 • 1971
General
Fund Dec. 31, 1971
28,818 . 5~., Tot,al
ec.
Expend itu res Plus3,651. 54
Bond Ret irement
16,358.05
1.. Dec . 31 ' 1971
Lunchroom
5,621 .74 BaE.S.E.A.
28,813 .18
Title tt Fund
ESE
. . .A. T itle I
3.651 .5&lt;1
Receipts
Total CASH BALANCE,
54,449.87 Federa 1 SubSldy
· Fund 1,056.76
Total
1,056.76
RECEIPTS AND
Receipts - Transfers.
EXPENDITURES
From General Fund
221 .37
BY FUND
Total Transfers
221.37
General Fund :
Total Receipts !Receipts
Balance, Jan . I, 1971 67,440.17 Plus Transfers)
1.278.13
Receipts - Revenue
Tot al Beginning Ba lance
General Pro perty Ta" Plus Receipts
1.278.13
Real Estate (Gross)
Expenditures
• 115,5.tl4.]8 B5A
1.278.13
Tangible Personal Property
Total !fxpend ltures
1,278.13
Tax (G ross)
5,19.4.71 Total E:-tpend itures Including
Foundation Fund
Tran,fers
1.278.13
(Grossi
319,290.54 Total Expenditures Plus
Federal Subsidy Bat., Dec . 31 , 1971
1,278.13
P. L.874
4,588.00
ASSETS' AND
State of Oh io LIABILITIES
Vocational Ed ucation 102.87
DECEMBER 31, t971
State of Oh io Assets :
H~nd l capped Stude nts 100.00 Depository
Balances {Act ive
State of Oh io and Inactive) , Dedu ct
School Bus Purchases 4,849.00 Outstanding warrantsState of Ohio .
54,449 .81
Olher
L650.00 Accounts Receivable (For
Tuition - Parents and ·
Supplies, Textbooks ,
Patrons
105.00 .e Qu 1pment, etc .)
Total
Revenue
16,995.64
Receipls
,
•.
Inventory
Supplies
and
451 42 ., 50 Mllterials
2.500.00
Receipts - No"revenue
Lands (Cost) (Bu ilding
Adjustments and
Sites , Equipment.
Refunds
7,'4 13.95
etc .)
19,000.00
sate of Non -Real
eullru(lgs &lt;coso &lt;ALL
Property
900.00
' 1S lid I
Olher - Nonrevenue
2,52
1.12 Sc .!?0
u ngs
710,000 .00
Total Nonrevenue
Equl ment &lt;CosO CALL School
Receipts
10,895.07 Building Equipm ent)
Receipts - Transfers
216,000.00
From (Fundi
Tote! Assets
1,018,9-45.51
liabil ities :
Title IIllFund
Fund 1,219.09
1s p aya ble
N.O.E.A
E.S .E.A..Tille
2,639.78 A
ccovnIndebtedness
3,697 .80
Bond
152,000.00
Bon d ReI ·
88.80 Tote I Lia bilities
155.697.80
Total Tran sfer s
3,947.67 E:-tcess or Deficiency
Total Receipts (Revenue,
Of Assets
863,2-47 .71
• Nonrevenue and
Total
1.018,945.51
Transfers )
466,267 .24
SCHOOL DEBTTota l - Beginn ing Balan ce
BONDS
Plus Receipts
533,707 .41 Purpose for Wh ich Bond
Expenditures
Debt Was created
Total Expend itures Bldgs. &amp; Equ ipment
Adm inistra tion
23,939.95 Outstand ing Ja n.
- lnslruc1ion
291,962 .93 1, 1971
111 ,000.00
- Librar ies
1.032.71 Redeemed Dur ing Year
- Transportat ion of
1971
19,000.00
Pupils
62.506.66 Bal ance Outstand ing
- Playgrounds and
Dec. 31 , 1971
152,000.00
Community Centers
97.85 Rate of Int .
p -.
- Auxil iary Agencies
Oa_te ot Fi nal Mal.
12-1-79
59,166.49 (1 ) 18, It
- Operation of
School Pla nt
•9.521.50
- School Plant
NOTICE OF
Ma intenance
10.656.30
APPOINTMENT
-Capital Outlay
1,737 .02
Case No. 20600
Total Expenditures Estate
of
Thomas
R. savage
Transfers
4,267 .46
.
Grand Total Expenditures - Deceased
is hereby given that
General Fund
504,888.87 InaNotice
Mae
of Route 2
Balance, Dec . 31,1971 28.818.54 Alba~'f, OhSavage
io, has been dulY
Total Expenditures Plus
1nted E:-tecutrix of the
Bal., Oec. 31 , 1971 533,707 .41 appo
Estate
of Thomas R. Savage,
Bond Retirement F\.lnd
, late of the village of
Balance, Ja n. 1, 1971 14,093.96 deceased
Albany
,
Meigs
County. Oh io.
Receipts - Revenue
Creditors
are
required to file
General Property Tax the
ir.
claims
with
said fiduc iary
Real Estate (Gross) 27,365.78 wlth1n four ·months.
Tang ible Persona l Property
Dated this 7th day of Ja nuary
Tax I Gross)
1.230.33 1972.
Total Revenue
F. H. O'Brien
Receipts
28,596.11
Judge
Total Receipts (Revenue.
(11 12, 19, 26, 31
Nonrevenue and
Transfers)
28.596.11
Total Beg inning Balance
NOTICE OF
Plus Receipts
A2 ,690 .07
APPOINTMENT
Expenditures
Bonds Matur ing
19,000,00 Estate
of Cas~~~ ~~~ol
Interest on Bonds
6,412.50 WILLIAM.SO N Deceased.
Other - Bond
Retirement Fund
919.52
Notice IS hereby given lha t
Total Expenditures - Bond
Sarah Gibb s of R:O.. 2,
Retirement Fund
26,332.02 Pomeroy , Meigs County, Ohio,
Balance, Dec . 31, 1971 16,358.05 ha.s . been .du ly appointed Ad ·
Tota l E
d'l
PI
.mmJstratr x of lhe Estate ol
xpen I ures us
Georgia William son, deceased
Bat. ,Lunchroom
Dec . 31, 19ZIFund42,690.07 late of R·D : 2• Pomeroy, Meigs'
B'alan ce, Ja nuary 1.
County, Oh iO.
4,507.36 Creditors are required to fi le
1971
Rfceipts - lnc:ome
.th.eir. cla ims with said fiduc iary
W1 thm four mon lhs.
Sal e of lunches
28,774.26 Dated th is 7lh day of Jan vary
Federal Subsidy 1972.
Lunc hes
32,288 .58
F. H. O'Brien
Federal Subsidy Probate Judge
Milk
2,880.72
Other - RevenUe
1.42.09 {1.) 12, 19 . 26 , 31 of sa id County
Total Receipts- Income
. 6&lt;1,085.65
Total Receipts
&lt;Income
64,085.65
Total Beginn irig Balan ce
Plus Receipts
68,593.01
E xpendl1ures
·
Personal Service - Manager
- Salaries and Wages 590.10
..,.. Cooks - Salaries and
Wages
12,995.77
PT. PLEASANT
Other - Personal Service Salerles and Wages 1.010.20 !,IVESTOCK SALES CO.
Supplies and Food
47 .091.?A
Pl. Pleasanl, W. Va.
Eaulpment
557.61
Repairs to Equipment ·3.11.68
Saturday, Jan.15, 1912
HOGS .- 175 to 22i1 21.60 to
. .
.
24.60, . Heavies 18 to 20.40,
Ughts 18.to 19, Fat Sows 20.30
to 21, Boars 20.30 to 21, Pigs 9 to
tonight &amp; fhursday
.January 19-20
15.25, Stock Shoats 17 to 19.
NOT OPEN
CATTLE - Sieejs 25.50 to 32,
Heifers 24.50 to 29.75, Fat Cows
Jon.,;,r.y 21-22 ·
20.50 to 23.10, Canners 17 to
HOW TO FRAME
18.110, Bulls 22.85 to 25.60, Stock
A FIGG .
ITechnlcolor)
Cows and Calves 175 to 285
·stock Steers 30 to 34, Stock ·
Don Knotts
Heifers. 27 to 30, Stock Steer
.Joe Flynn
Calves 32 to 36, Stock Heifer
RAIOON ROMMEL
CalVes 32 to 33.
ITechnicolor) Rich~rd
VEAL CALVES - Tops 52
Burian
Seconds 51.75, Mediwn 41.ti t~
John Collcos ,
"GP"
42.75, Common &amp; Heavies 34 .to
SHOW5TART57 P.M.
39, Culls 34 to 34.75.
FUfANCIAL

..

r

'.,

lb :-The Dally_Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 19, 1972 •

'

0

SALE at ELBER·.FELDS .IN POMEROY

1

Market Report

MEIGS THEATI\t

WASHINGTON (UPI)President Nixon prodded a·
Democratic Congress In an
election year State of the Union
message today to act on a
· stalled backlog . of his
legislative measures aimed at
achieving "a new prospeity
withoul war."
Frankly acknowledging th8t
1972 is a political year, and
even noting that he was
speaking to nwnerous Democratic Pr~idential hopefuls,
Nixon urged the newly con• vened members of the House
and Senate to make it "a year
of action" in which Alilerican
scientific know-how can be
directed to solving everyday
prolileins afflicting the people,

Thursday 9:30 A.M. to 5 P.~. - F~ . and SaJurday r----::::=:=-:·:-:-:::~~~._.:..
· --.......,_.;,____..........,.----.....:.--~
$1.29
9:30 A.M. to"9 AI Night
COSTUME1 JEWELRY
Eirrings . Pin'5 '~1 , Necklac'es Our entir"e stock is reduced lor this sale.

WOMENS DRESSES

32'1:!.

100~

REG. 3.00 JEWELRY
. . .
. .
SALE 1.49
. REG. 2.1111 JEWELRY ·
· . - - . . . . SALE '1'/c
REG. 1.00 JEWEL:RY . . . . .
. . . . SALE 49c

360 _Dresses from our regular stock. 12.95 to 29.50 Dresses . ·
Juntor si zes 5 to 13. Misses sizes 8 to 20 . Half sizes 12v2 to
All well ·known qualities.

·
.
.
.
. . ·
-

-

--

. SALE
SALE
SALE
. · SALE
SALE
· · SALE
SALE
. SALE

;r

WOMEN$ SCARFS

7.75
8.75
9.75
10.75
11.75
12.75
16.75
18.75

25 .00 WDMENS COATS
16.50 WOMENS COATS
19.50 WOMENS COATS
29 .50 WOMENS COATS
WOMENS COATS
I 35.00
39.50 WQMENS COATS
59.50 WOMENS COATS
49.50 WOMENS COATS
69.50 WOMENS COATS
79.50 WOMENS COATS,
89.50 WOMENS COATS
99 .00 WOMENS COATS

- · · ·
· · · • · · .
.· · · · . .
·
- .. .
.. .
.. .

·
· ·
·
·

... . .
-

·
·
·
·

Hats · Scarfs
Gloves • Mittens

Sale ~ Price

36"

regulars ~ nd longs.

sale 3.oo
Sale 4.oo
Sale 5.00
Sale 6.00
Sale 7.oo

Robes and Dusters . . .

7 ,95

RObes and Dusters

·

Weekend Special
'

3 yards 1.29

·

Sale6.74

P-------------------~---~·
Little Boys 5. 95 Lined Western Jackets
Sizes 2to 6x ·

Sale 4.74

Blouses ~ Jumpers_
· Slacks • Dn:sses
..
.
. .

14.95
12.95
11 .95
10..95
9.95
8.95

.

12.95 - - Sale 7.50
16.50 - - Sale 10.50
_,...,_ ............_..

SWEATERS
SWEATERS
SWEATERS
SWEATERS
SWEATERS
SWEATERS

1.09
$4.49

3 Pc. Bathmat Sets

,Girls_Wear Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 14

Girls

Jumpers
·

. . . . Sale
. • . . Sale
- · · • Sale
· · · • Sale
· · · · Sale

Sale! .Boys Sweaters

2.50
3.50
4.50
6.50
7.50

A good selection of slipovers and coat styles. Juvenile sizes 2
. to 6. Boys sizes 8 to 20.

·---~--------------------·
Sizes 2 to 6x "and 7 to 14
2.95 . - . . . . Sale 2.00
Gi~s ·
,

3.95 • . . . . . Sale 2.50
4.95 - . . . . . 5ale 3.00
~ 95 . - . . . . Sale 3.50

Sk1rls

9.95 SWEATERS
8.95 SWEATERS
7.95 SWEATERS
6.95 SWEATERS
5.95 SWEATERS
4.95 SWEATERS

•
· · · ·· ·• ·· •.
· • · •

- -. -

.
·.
·

·
·
.
·.
·

·
·
.
·.
·

SALE 5.00
SALE 4.50
SALE 4.00
SALE
SALE 3.50
3.1111 .
SALE 2.50

100 .P er cllnt VIscose Rayon Rug, Lid 1..over,
Conto~r Mat. Good colors. Machine washable,
machtne dryablec

3 e3 9
t-----------------------1
Special
Sale Price

CURTAIN RODS

----------'-'--------------+----:------------------~
Sizes '7 to 14

Girls Skirt and
VeSt Sets

5. 95
10.95
12.95
13.95

L....

. . .
. . .
. . .
.•.

. . .
. . .
. . .
.••

Sale
5ale
5ale
5ale

WOOL TOBOGGANS

3.5o
6.50
7.50
8.50

.

~------------------------··~----~,--~~------~
Girls·Vests • 1.95 to 12.95
BIG TOY SALE
Sizes 7 to 14. While they last .
Girls•

7.95 - · . · . • Sale 4.50
8.95 · · · · . . Sale 5.5o

-----------J2.0£-~.;.~.;.;..~J!.£·~-·

Girts Pants Suits

5.95
8.95
10.95
16.50

Sizes 7 to 14

Pants suits .
sale 3.5o
Pants Suits
Sale 5.50
Pants Suits
. Sale 6.50
Panls Suits .
Sale 10.50

7.95 Slacks ..... . Sale 4.50
6.95 Slacks ..... . Sale 5.50
!o.95 Slacks ... .. - Sale 6.50

Also teen sizes.

B glasses in a set .

Aluminum
with
colorful
heat
resistant finish .

wheal decoration .

2.00 a set

1.95 Rockingham

0

LINGERIE SALE

Mugs and

REG. 15.00 LINGERIE
· · · · · • - - SALE 8.25
REG. 13.00 LINGERIE
· . SALE 7.25
REG. 11.00 LINGERIE
· · SALE 6.25
REG. 10.00 LINGERIE
- · SALE 5.25
,REG. 9.00 LINGERIE
· · SALE 4.75
REG. 8.00 LINGERIE .
· · SALE 4,25
REG. 7.00 LINGERIE
· · SALE3.50

AshTrays

Famous Maker
.
- ·-"

STOCKINGS

Vinyl
Handbags

Shee r

or

mesh

con ·

strudion. Si2:es 81;, to 1Pn
L. Quantities limited.

'k09. 1.75 pr. and l.Ji pr.

Sale 1h Price
•

\

Sal&amp; 7r pair

Decolatiwe
Mirrors

Gold or Brown

98~.·each
2.95

Square, round and
rectangular shapes.

Changes. drloks to slush
instantly. Red, yellow and

avocado.

.

While They Lasi

Weekend Special

'44* yd.

yard

'

Living Room - Bedroom .- Dining Room
and Kitchen Furniture.
.
Well known makes - .all at sale prices. :
Pro":lpt delivery - sensible credit.
. Furmture and Carpet department, 3rd
' flOor.
·-

Warehouse Sale!
·

.

.JUtlllllllo

GQod selectlin of reconditioned
.

.

ELBERF~LDS INJ~OMIROY
,I

I

'

.

from

'

By United Preaslntematlonal
·
MARIE'ITA, GA.- THE LpCIQIE~EORGIA Co. says
It will use Its "employment.Jn-l'ever8e" program In an attempt to
lind jobs for 672 employees W)1o wui be cut off by the dosing of C5
Gl)axy suiHlssembly plants In four states. The job ellmlnations
are the result of·a declining work load on lite giant cargo airPlane
program, the company said.
.. '
·
The biggest loss will be at Chattanooga, TeM., where a
subassembly plant will be shut down soon and the building sold to
the Koeliring Co. of Milwaukee.
'
Other plants to be phased out are at Martinsburg, W. Va.,
with 132 employees; Logan, Ohio, with 120 and Uniontown, Pa.,
with 133. The MArtinsburg plant wi1J close in March and the
others in May.

He also served notice he
would ask for greater defense
spending this yell' .
In a personal appearance
before a joint session of
Congress which was natiqnally
televised, Nixon declared : "In
reaching the moon, we saw
what miracles Alilerican technology is capable of achieving.
Now the ·time has come to
move more deliberately

By United Press International
Alabama Gov . . George C.
Wallace plans to take his
campaign for the Democratic
presidential nomination to the
North and predicts he will
"shock" both the Democrats
and Republicans when he runs
in
the
Pe~nsylvania
primary.
Wallace said he was giving
"high consideration" to enter·
lng primaries in four other
states.
"Of course, I don't have the
money to run the kind of
campaign that the other
candidates have, but I feel that
I will get an excellent vote in
Pennsylvania -enough to
shock the Nalio~~Bl Democratic
party and the Republican
party," Wallace said.
Wallace was Interviewed by
CBS News.
Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D;
Wash ., one of Wallace's opponents in the Florida
primary, said Wednesd;ly at
Oklahoma City that a vote for
Wallace would be a vote
wasted, because WaUace could
never win the Democratic

.

.c.

.· ..
· ,~

I

I

nomination for president.
"Why thrown away your
vote?" Jackson said. "Every. one knows he's not going to get
the nomination."
In other political. developments :
-Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,
0-Minn., new to Detroit in an
apparent attempt to head off
early endorsement by the

member American Federation
of State, Coll!ltY and Municioa,
Employes. Muskie . then
dedicated his eight-story
campaign headquarters in
Washington and announced
creation of a youth coalition.

United Auto Workers of Sen.
Edmund Muskie , D-Maine,
Humphrey's chiel rival for the
nomination.
- Muskie , who has been
orchestrating a bandwagon
effect by spacing out the endorsements of prominent
. Democrats, accepted the endorsement ol Jerry Wurf,
president of the 500,000

R·eel~cted .

TEN CENT~

Woman Rescued
An off-duty state highway
Hunter quickly lowered all
patrolman today was credited the car windows, and had his
with saving the life of a Rt. 1, wife rush. to the fiearest
Crown City woman , wiici ap- telepliilne · tp SWllll\pn · help.
parently was attempting • While waiting for an amsuicide.
bulance, Patrolman · Roger
Mrs . Kathleen Grace Hyden arrived on the scene.
Spurlock, 41, is listed in Both Hyden and Hunter then
satisfactory condition at the placed Mrs. Spurlock on the
Holzer Medical Center where hood of the vehicle where she
she was admitted at 2:45 a. m. could get more iresh air. Mrs.
from
carbon Spurlock had regained con·
suffering
monoxide poisoning.
sciousness by the time the
Ptl. D. M. Hunter, Gallla- Waugh -Halley-Wood amMeigs Post, a resident of bulance arrived as a result of
Burkhart Lane, Gallipolis, and first aid administered by. the
his wife were driving north on two patrolmen.
Rt. 7 at 1:50 a. m. when Pti.
Hospilalauthorities reported
Hunter.noticed a car parked at Mrs. Spurlock was sWI In
the roadside reslarea north of satisfactory condition at 10 a.
. Crown City.
m. today.
Ptl. Hunter was assigned to
. Stopping to investigate,
Hunl:er discovered a hose had · the Gallla·M~igs Post last
been led into the car's window September from the Athens
from the exhaust system. He Post State Highway Patrol.
opened the door and found Mrs.
Spurlock slwnped over in the
front seat.
·

THESE FIFTH GRADERS are leading the cheers for the Racine Elementary School fifth
grade basketball team this seaaon. The team will play siJ:: games with teams from nearby
schools. Costuming for the cheerleading corps, in t:edand white, was created by mothers of the
group which includes lrom the left, Penny Smith, Carol Morris, aH:aptain; Becky Crow,
Peggy Nelgler, captain; Tam Bowers, Janis Carnahan, Teresa Ervin, Linda Norris, Beverly
McLain and Marie Pickens.

Income Tax Repeal Launched

Elderly Woman
Dead by Fire
In Her Kitchen
MR. CHILD.ERS

Orllders
Promoted
•
I '

- Democratic . convention
-Mayor &amp;un Yorth, of Loa
· planners, hewing to a policy of Angeles, c;ampalgning for the
'neutrality in the party's pres- New Hampehire primary, said
idential nomination race, al- the federal government should
lowed 10 candidates to pick provide a guaranteed annual
hotel headquarters space at ln~ome for all of America's 20
Mlaml Beach.
million retired citizens.

'

An 86-yearoOid Long Bottom
woman died Tuesday night as a
result of severe burns, suffocation and shock when her
clothing caught fire in the
kitchen of her home.
Dead is Mrs . Ethel c.
Chevalier. Her body was found
about noon Wednesday by her
daughter, Mrs. John Hensley,
who lives next door. Dr. R. R.
Pickens, cQUnty C&lt;lroner, said
•'death apparently occurred
between 6 and 7 p.m. Tuesday.
Sheriff Robert c. Har-

SECOND TO FILE
embargo on moving military cargo during the dock strike was
RALPH W,\RDEN O!JRS,
not intended ''to Imperil the national inteMts;" have withdrawn
Republican, became the
..
the ban after an appeal from the Defense Department.
second candidate to file for
Administra(9r
William
E.
Ed Flynn, president of ll)e, Pacific Maritime Association,
nomination to run for a
· Garnes of the Ohio Bureau of
said Wednesday that the sole purpose of the ban had been to deny
major
'county position In the
Employment Services, has
striking longshoremen an income, since their union has no strike
May primary election• In
announced the appoinlments of
benefits.
Meigs County, WedDesday.
Robert Bennett ·as Acting
Ours, Incumbent, !Ued for
District Manager; Frank
MORGANTOWN, W. VA •...:.FATE DEALT the West VITginia Childers as Assistant District
nomination to run for a
second 'term as a Meigs
Unlverlllty basketball team .another tragic. blow Wec!nesdaY in a Manager
and · Di'strlct tenbach said Mrs. Chev'llier Countv
Commissioner. A
highway accident that t()9k the life of a suspended player and Unemployment Compensation was believed to have been
&lt;
resident ·of
Lebanon
seriously hurt his replacement. Larry "Deacon" Harris, dropped Supervisor of District Five,
dinner
when
her
l'ewnsblp,
Ours
II
aeelllng
preparing
from the squad earlier in the month for low grades, was klUed QBES . .
clothing caught fire as she · nomination for the term
Instantly in the on~ar mishap just south of Fainnont on In·
In the recent organization of attempted to use the oven. She
beg1nnlng Jan. !, 1972.
·
th ki
lerstate 79.
OBES, District Five was set up wflas foulnldfIymg
on e tchen
Robert Clark, tbe other
His replacement on the learn, Sam Oglesby, remained a to include Franklin (Colwnoor, a o her clothing burned
In cumbeat commlls1oner,
(Continued on page 8)
bus ), Union, Delaware., fr om .her bod Y·
has filed for the term
Licking, Madison, Fayette ,
The only fire damage to the
beg111lllng Jan. 3, 1972.
Pickaway, Fairfield, Ross, horne was to th e floo r where
Hocking, Pike, Vinton, Athens, she was found lying and a
Scioto, Jackson, Meigs, section of 'the ta~le cloth on the
VeleraDA Memorial Hospital
Officers and directors were Dr. Fred R. Carsey, Ma59n, W. Lawrence and Gallia Counties. kitchen U.ble.
ADMITTED .
Irene
Under'
the
new
structure,
all
. The body w~s taken to the Gilmore, Pomeroy ; Carol Hall,
reelected Wednesday af. Va.
ternoon at the annual
Officers reelected were Local Office Managers in Spencer Funeral Home in · Gallipolis; Nora Curtis,
shareholders meeting of The Theodore . T. Reed, Jr ., District Five will report to Belpre.
Pomeroy; Chrissie Powell,
Farmers Bank and Savings president; Thereon Johnson, Bennet's office and he fu turn
Mrs. Ethel Chevalier; was Racine ; Monte Ray Wolfe,
el(ecutive vice president; Paul will report to the Central Office born ln. Meigs County the Minersville ; Doris Hay,nes,
Company.
.
DireCtors reelected were E. Kloes, vice president: in Columbus.
daughter of the lllte Tom and Middleport; Lorena Bissell,
·Theodore T. Reed, Jr., Roger W, Hysell, cashier, and
Frank Childers has served 23 Alice Snodgrass Coates. She Long Bottom ; Florence
Ponleruy; Thereon\ Johl180n, Dorothy B. Will, lloanne J. years with the Bureau. He is a spent her entire life in .Meigs Chaffin, Athens; Joan Evans,
Racine; E. Robert Schellhase, Russell, and Evelyn G. Lan· ~alive of Gallia County .and ,County. She was married to Reedsville; W2llace Hill ,
Canton; Leslle F. Fultz, C. ning, assistant cashiers.
IS a member of the Amencan .John R. Chevalier who Racine.
Wayne SWilher, lind Richard
Mr. Reed reported to the L~g~on
·Veterans
A&lt;l· preceded her in death in 1952. DISCHARGED - Faurice
~
Fullrod, ill of Pomeroy; shareholders that .1971 wa5 il numstratlon ~nd the. Mason!c · Mrs. Chevalier 11 survived Neece, Dorothy Mcl&gt;anlel,
· •Fred W. Crow and Harold E. "very successful year", total Lodge. These. positions w11l by two sors, Carl, ,If Water- James Autherson, Ralph
Smith, both ol SyrRcuae, and resources increalllng 10.6 pet. become effec}1ve Januar~ 24. ,1continued ~n pqe I)
Fi&gt;ster, Nancy ·cole. 1. ,

Officers

· We're Having ASal&amp; at our Waret.ouse
Ill . MechaniC' ~
1 .

approprlatldn·sultln Gallia County Comlnon Pleas Caurt against
Pavld W. Brigs, Merrill P. Briggs and Bea\rlce B. White, all of
Rt. 1, Cbesb!re'; Carl M. Poston, Worthington; Ohio Fuel das
. Coolpany, ColwnOO.; Calumbua and Southern Ohio Electric ·
CGrnpanf, and ~ 9hlo {leU Telephone Company. ·
·
Plainll!f !11111.eie clefendlntl are owners or claim legal 01'
equltable Interest .in certain property located in Cheshire Twp.
Ohio Power ill seeking 4.712
acres of land which It claims Is another transfer station at
'
.' ~ry fOI' an overload, which point the coal is
. conveyor b!llt and associated weighed, sampled and
equipment which will feed coal distributed to the furnaces, a
to the James M. Gavin Plant. stock pile and the service road.
The uWity further contends
According to the petition, a
facility will be erected on 3.142 that there has been a
acres ·sought to receive coal disagreement over the COin'
transported
the Meigs pensation for the property and
Mine. The facility will. conalst rights sought. Ohio Power
of a transfer station where the asked the coutt to take the
coal ill aceejrted, a coqveyor necessary steps needed to
belt, about 1,500 feet. l011g, appropriate the property.

SAN JIRAl\ICI8CO - WEST COAsT shippers, saying an

. · 2.50
Black and White and tolar 1V Sets
BE THRIFTY! SAVE ALL OF YOUR SALEsLIPSFROM ·
I

.to

._1.29 ·

f I or· a I

Excellent
,

· ELBERFELDS JANUARY
FURNITURE SALE

·Egg Plates
~~~o~~t~~~.

45" wide Patterns.

l

' 1h Price

Salad and devil.ed egg
plate. While with

· Aannelette

On The 3rd F1oor

4,95

Slush Mugs

Printed

~II colors and widths .

5~

Sale 150

, Reg . 4.00

59c

Ribbon

7.95 Electric

Tumbler Sets

28". 48'l L- Sale 39c

Specia~

I'~FFa:m~o~u~s~M~a~ke~r~----------~------------~~--~::::_:~::___Jk-----~~~~:_--~

Womens

.

1------.:--..,....--------J
150 Glass

1---~---------------------~
2.95 Slacks . . . . - . Sale 2.00
3.95 Slacks . - .. - . Sale 2.50
Girls Slacks
4.95 Slacks .. - .. . Sale 3.00
Sizes 7 to 14.

. Speciaf Sale- including chairs . riding toys .
dolls · games · doll furniture and many other
items . ·

Snack Keepers

care.

'

News... in BriefS

Reg. 1.09 Double Curtain Rods
·
· 28" - 48" L -:;- Sale 79c

Save on the toys you need
Thursday · Friday and Saturday

------------------------Sl1pcwer Sweaters

such as snarled city transportation and better health

,
Devoted To 17ae. lntereatl Of 17ae M~iga·Mason Area
POMEROY·MiDDLEPORt, QH!O
TliURSDAY, JANUARY
20, 1972
PHONE 992·2156
..

NO. 19Z

- '

Reg. 55c Single Curtain Rods

2•69 .

auo Power Company, Canton, Wednesday atternoon filed an

.NO. XXIV

•..

White heavy gauge steel baked enamel finish.
Brackets and nails .

"Kyger Creek" scarlet and grey and "Southern" purple anc
gold with school name embroidered on In script.

Half-Price • 9r to 6.48

Station in Coal Conveyor
From Meigs Mine to Gavin

Skid resistant · Decorator colors . Washable.
Included in group - 26" Round, Contour, and
21 x34.

....
SALE 7.50
..•
· · · · · · · SALE 6.50
. - ..
SALE 6.00
SALE 5.50'
- ..
· · · • • . SALE 5.00
.
SALE 4.50

'

'

Regular $1 .19 • $1.39 - $1.49

Coat style and slipovers. Good selection of sizes,
colors and styles.

0

. 4. 772 Acres Land .Needed for

1 Group·Th,.Ow Rugs

·SALE! MENS SWEATERS

•

0

Blue • Green · Yellow Border.

---

FLAG RAISED- Edgar Vanlnwagen; left, World War
U veteran and survivor of the Bataan Death Marctl, and
Lawrence Smith, World War I ~teran, members of Drew
Webster Post 119/ Amerlcati Legion, raiae a .1ew American
nag as pupils oft~ schoollaok on at C!)rernonies Wednesday
afternoon at the Salisbury Elementary School. The flag,
whicn Oe'W over the capitol in Washington, was secured by
Mrs. J. M. Thorn\011, a member of the Drew Webster Post
Auxiliary, from Cong. Clarence Miller. Mrs·. Edith Fox gave
a prayer' and Pam Powers, junior auxiliary chairman of
Alpericanism, led the children in thepl~ge to the flag. Mrs.
Kenneth Harris, auxiliary Alilericanism chainnan, made the
presentatiOll to Principal John Lisle. Others on hand from the
auiill'fY unit were Mrs. Harty Davis, presjdEmi, Mrs.
Thornton and Mrs. Grace Pratt, as was Eddie Whaley of the
po~,
. .

Ohio Power
Files .Suit

..

.

c

· Sale 3.00
Sale 3.50 ·
Sale 4.50
· Sale 5.SO
. . site 6.5o

3.95 .· 5.95 . •
7.95 - ·
10.95 . ·
12.95 · ·

~rown .

Bleached Unen Toweling
.

Snap front coat style.

---------------------Boys 7.95 Lined Western Jackets ·

Sizes B'h to 10112. Well known brand .

____

Heavy vinyl. Black

Stevens P

Sale 8.44

TEENS AND CHUBBY SIZES

8.95 .. Sale 5.50
10.95- . Sale 6.50
......

Wide-All Colton .
{Stock on hand)

Special 8.00

WESTERN JACKETS
Blu e denim or brown . Corduroy collar.
Washable. Sizes 36 to 50 .

---1

FLIG,HT
BAGS

Sale 9.69

Sizes8to 18

8.95 Robes and Dusters
10.95 Robes and Ousters

-

Check.
Gingham

COVERALLS

2nd floor
5.9~

0

'_6.95;_21x27 Standard
- - - sale 5.95·
- .
8.95-21x31 Queen ••. -- - -- Sale 7.95
10.95-21x37 King. - -- ---. Sale 9.95

Sale! Lee 10.98

WOMENS ROBES AND DUSTERS
4.95 Robes and Dusters

0

....

Mens Wrangler 9.95 Scherpa Lined
5.95 Skirts
7.95 Skirts
· 8.95 Skirts
10.95.Skirls
12 .95 Skirts

.•

legislators: ."HOI'e at home, we
are making progress toward
our goal of a new prosperity
without war.
" Industrial production,
consumer spending, retail
toward makin~ full use of that sales aqd personal income all
technology here on earth, in have been rising. Total em.- ·
harnessing the wonders of ployment and real income are
sciencetotheserviceofman." the highest in history. New
Sees Economic Progress
home-building starts Qlis past
He announced he would year reached the highest level
subl:nlt in the near future a new ever . Business and._consumer
programoffederalpartnership . confident have both been
in technica,l r esearch and riSing. Interest t.ates are down
development which would in- and the rate of lnnation is
elude government incentives to down. We can look with con·
achieve new breakthroughs in fidence to 1972 as the year
day-to-day living.
when the back of inflation will
Of the laggard economy, the fmally be broken ."
President told the assembled
(continued on page 8)

Urges Demoeratle Congress to enact
backlog of legislation for a ''new prosperity,
without war. "

0
'

Mens 29,95 Sport Coats in Sizes
36 to 46 . • . . . • • . . . • . . • · 5ale 19.90 · 1-......,-----~-;,_--69c
$9.95
Boys 15.95 Sport ·coats in Sizes
6 to 20 - · - · · · - . -· . . . . . . 5i1le 11.90

Womens
Skirts .

Knit
Accessories

'
, r ·'b

While Fortrel Filled - · will not mat or lump.
Stays buoyant and resilient . Machine .
washable · machine dryable.

Grey Fi sher stripe cloth or CMivewood caftan twill . 100 per
cent cotton. Sanforized shrunk . Sizes 36 to so. Shorts .

Womens and Girls

Special .
yard

·5Pecial Sale! Sport Coats .·

SALE 15.00
SALE 10.00
SALE 11.00
SALE 18.1111
SALE 21.00
SALE 24.00
SALE 36.1111
SALE 30.00
SALE 42.00
SALE 48.00
SALE 52.00
SALE 60.00

18" wide. Good selection
paHerns. Regular 59c yd.

1.49
3
Serene·Bed Pillows

· SALE 99c
· · · SALE l9c
. SALE 49c

Well 'known makes, big savings in the Ready ·Ia
Wear Sale, 2nd Floor.
·.

While they last .

•

many other uses.

Sale! Womens uniforms,
Uniform Dresses and Uniform .Pants Suits

WOMENS COATS

Stick-on Plastic '

Pure Polyester

Chiffons, lwills, prints. ,solids.
REG.1.98SCARFS . • . . .
REG. 1.25 SCARFS . . . . .
REG. 1.00 SCARFS

'AI! Vinyl .

New! Washable. Ideal for
filling: Pillows, Cushions.
Toys, Comforters and

.

11.95 DRESS ES
13.95 DRESSES
14.95 DRESSES
16.50 DRESSES
17.50 DRESSES
l9.SO DRESSES
25.00 DRESSES
29.50 OR ESSES

.CLING

Poly-Fil -

Rings

1

1

Fresident··Points Nation
To More Bread, Guns

~THURSDAY·---FRID4Y.. SATURQAY

RCPOAT

I

COLUMBUS (UPI )-The
first legal step to let the voters
of the state. decide whether or
·not they want a personal in·
come tax took place . Wednesday in the offices of state
At!Drney General William J .
Brown.
Seven Republican state
representatives filed pilot
petitions with Brown showing
the form of their proposed
C&lt;lnstltutional amendment,
which they hope to get on the
November ballot.
If the petitions are approved,
the group wl! l be allowed to

circulate them across the state
in hopes of obtaining ' 318,414
signatures by Aug. I, enough to
place the Issue on the ballot.
If voters get the issue and if
they approve lt, the state would
be preventeil from collecting
the graduated I&gt; to 31&gt; per cent
state income tax starting Jan.
I, 1973 and a vote ·oi the people
of Ohio would be needed before
it could be collected again.
Rep. Joseph P. Tulley, R·
Mentor, spok~an for the
group, said he expects petitions
to be on the street in every
corner of the state by Feb. I if

Brown's offiee acts swiftly.
Tulley said the job of collect.
ing signatures will be turned
oves" .to tnpayers of all pollti·
cal affiliations. He said the
campaign's cost - $7,000 to
$10,000 - would be borne pri·
vately by donations.
The oilier six legislators are
Reps. Raymond Luther of
Newark, Cllester T. Cruze of
Cincinnati, Richard G. Reichel
ol Maaslllon, Robert E. Netzley
of Laura, Howard A. Knight of
Fremont and Robert E. Levitt,
House majority leader from
Canton.

Saigon Troops Fight Back
SAIGON (UPI )-South Vietnamese tr9ops backed by
American planes launched a
new 45,00Q.man drive around
Saigon today m
' an effort to
slow the ·tempo of Viet Cong
attacks wh1'ch rose by 72 per
cent throughout South Vietnam
last week.
Th e South 'Vietnamese
military. cotp111and announced
the new operation and said it
was spearheaded. by Saigon
troops withdrawn last week
· from Cambodia to meet the
increasing Communist threat
Inside South Vietnam.
· To the north in the Central
Highlands, four waves of
Thailand-based 852 bombers
hit a communist stronghold
known as base area 609 near
the point where Laos, Cam·
bodla 'and South Vietnam come
together .
· ·
lJPI eorr,espondent l)onald
A. navis reported from ·Pleik~.

230 miles north of Saigon, said
the B52s dropped more than 350
tons of ex~loslves In the
highlands in the fourth C&lt;ID·
secutive day of the most
sustained aerial attacks in the
area in nearly two years. _
The aim of the raids ani! the
new campaign near Saigon was
to take the steam out of a
Conununist \!ulldup apparently
planned for the Tet or lunar
new year, which lalla Feb. 15
this year. That would be just
before President Nixon's visit
to Peking on Feb. 21.
Five Gls Killed ·
As the new ·South Vietnamese
operation was disclosed, the
U.S. command aMounced that
fiveGis were killed In Vietnam
battlefield action last week to
Iring to 45,637 the ·itwnber of
American• killed Ill more than
n years of fighting in Vietnam.
Atotal of 390 South Vietnamese
were killed!

The South Vietnamese death
toll when compared with the
221 killed the previous week
alohg with the 1,034 Canununist
troops killed following the 800
slain the week belore served to
reflect the stepped-up groUJ!d
fighting .
A South Vietnamese ranger
unit was shelled .by Communists Wednesday and later
ambushed 25 miles northwest
of Saigon near the Michelin
rubber plantation. •
The South Vietnamese com·
niand said the rangers killectlO
Viet Cang while suffering one
killed and four . wounded. All
five South Vietnamese casualties were· caused by a land
mine, military spokesmen
said.
'
The U.S. conunand said one
Alilerican helkopter Cfei'Til8n
wu wounded Wedne.day when
a U.S. Atmy AHI Cobra
(Continued on pege 8)

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52672">
              <text>January 19, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2623">
      <name>eastman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6509">
      <name>mutchler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3404">
      <name>weatherby</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
