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'·

•

WASHJNGTON (UP! · . PreiiCitnt Nixon today 1e11t
Cclnlnaa.-.3blllionbudget
caUlng for ~.5 billion. deficit
spending which be descri~ as
"lllrmg bUt nei:ellllfy medlcine" for Ute still .sluggish
economy. .
The deficit for Ute 19'13 flacal
year beginning July 1 was Ule
largelt deliberately budgeted

•

'

.

25~;5

•

Billio_n s In Red
••

,

.

national defense, 45 per cent
for human resources, 10.~ per
cent-for physical resources, 8.6
per cent for interest on Ute
national debt and 5 per cent for
other programs.

· by a president IInce World War we lille it."
and oUter~ . .
.
locome Taxes Pared
. D, but It ·was well below Ute
'!be Otief Executive unNixon made no effort to pare
. $38.8 bllllen by which Nixon veUednomajornewprogr,ams.
now predicts the current But as he did laSt week !n his Ute deficit with higher taxes.
llldget will run in Ute red..
State of Ute. Union addre,ss, On Ute con~ary; he stressed
•'Deficit speilding at this Njxon urged Congress jo act on that since be took office three
time, Uke temporary wage and - administratiQ!I programs left years ago, individual incqme
~Ice controls, iB strong but over from , the · past yeartaxes have ~ cut .fY $22 . Here is how the new budget
necessary medicine;" he aalcL . revenue sharing, welfare billion a yea_r~;~f:•-;:.
·
compares · with estim~ted
. "We iake that medicine be- reform, government . Nixon said'''hls new budget spending in Ute current !!,cal
cause we need It, riot' because reorga!l!.!:a~}on, htalth care l!reaks down to 31.8 per cent for year (billions of dollars):

1972 '1973
Outlays
236.6 246.3
Revenue
197.8 220.8
Deficit
38,8 25.5
Ahigh official in the Office of
Management and Budget .noted
Ut~ deficit for the current fiscal
year dwarfs both the projected
deficit for 1973 and the actual
deficits -for aU previous Y~81'll ·
exceot during World ·war ·11.

spending by a thin f100 mUUo.n
if the economy were at full
employment.
If Ute economy were operating at capacity, Nixon estimated revenues would be $24.2
btlllon higher and spending
would he $2 billion less than
actually anticipated.
"1 strongly urge the
(Continued on page 2)

Deficits, of course, are no
novelty. The budget' was
balanced just once since 1960.
That was in 19611, a year
divided .evenly between the
Johnson and Nixon administrations.
· Despite the deficits, Nixon
insisted that his 1973 budget
would not SJXlr Inflation hecause income would exceed

.

Weather

Now You Know

Cloudy, windy and mild with
rain or showers likely tonight
low mosUy In Ute 30s. Tuesday
mosUy 'cloudy and colder ovt"'
the state chance of snow
Hurries northeastern sections.
High Tuesday in the upper 30s
north to Ute upper 40s south .

·'

Cleopatra, as well 'as other
ancient Egyptian qpeens, wore
a wig and a fir.lse beard when
she aat on the royal throne.

'

DevotC!d To 'l7u! lntC!re&amp;ll Of1'1u! MC!igs-Ma.on .Aroo
•

VOL. XXIV. NO. 199

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PHONE 992·2156

MONDAY, JANUARY 24, 1972

TEN CENTS

New Kin of School Moves Out,doors
Pictures and Story
· · By Charlene HoeRich

Spoken .L.ike
a Ma.n ·. . . . . . . .

®

(NO TALKING
o iLENCE

-but yo' !!lOt rnanv
chapters ahead o·
yo·. So yo· now -SQI!(.
gotta leave James
K.PoiK - but he'll never

leave yo•!! He'llallut

protect yo·-

Teachers and administrators
wentoutln the rain Saturday in
a workshop at.Bradbury School
for first-hand Information on
"resident outdoor education."
Sporsored by the State
Department of Education, the
purpose of the workshop was.to
familiarize teachers with the
oper~lion o! Ute new resident
outdoor ·education program
and Its · relaUonship to the
overall school curriculum.
Such a program actually
takes students out of the
classroom and Into learning
centers of nature.
According to Eugene A.
Knight, conservation 811d
environmental supervisor of
the State Department of
Education, who arranged .
Saturday's all day program for
school personnel from six
southeastern Ohio counties,
.
,
.
environmental edu.cation
MRS. i&gt;Hnus HACKETl', team leader at the Bradactivities are on Ut~· increase In
KATHY LOGAN, a Worthington teacher,.used her tenor
bury School, demonstrated Ute use of the Jacob's stick In
Ohio in direct response to ·Ute banjo for group singing during her WOfkshop session on
.: ~~J!ilabt of. ~ telephon~ pole d~ jhe o)ltdo9r. ,c9nce~.ll .fpt ll.!IY)f.bPI!len~I ae~tivlty, art,._in~ anddrama ill~ setting.
niath ri'klhop.
.
quality spreading through Ute f
• . .
nation.
day into three sessions - session on environmental math
Purpose of Saturday's environmental math, usln'g a Jacob's stick, a
workshop wa·s to provide creativity in art, p1usic and clinometer
an·d • other
.
homemade
Instruments
.to
educators with Ute necessary drama, and Ute economics of
information and resources to na\ural history •nd· geology. measure height, angles, cirinitiate and conduct resident ·Sessions were·held out-of-doors cumference, widths and
outdoor programs of their own. ' despite a corui~nt drizzle of distances. . To each of Ute
educators attending he
Assisting Knight was Duane rain.
Bf UNlTED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Plymale, area extension agent,
Doyt Larrimore, a Columbus provided plans for making the
~l(l()N- 'l1IE U. 8. MILlrARY command today reported
(Continued on page 2)
Ute heavlelt aerial combat over North VIetnam and Laos sinCj! 4-H, Jackson. They divided Ute teacher, had char_ge of the
former P)'eildent Lyndon B. Jolmaon halted Ute American
bombing north rl the Demllltarlzed Zone in 1988.
In South Vietnam, Conununlst gunners shot down another U.
S. obeervation bellcopter, B528 carried out more raids aimed at
halting a COmmunist offensive in the Central Highlands and
..
llllll't! fight~ was reported on Ute Central coast. Tl,le U. S.
Three vericles
were bankment.
reckless operation.
Command aald the heavy air action O'ler North Vietnam and damaged, the driver of one
TheBoylescarwentontoUte
At 9:10p.m. Sunday a car
Laoa erupled Saturday when U. S. warplanes struck North Injured, in three accidents sidewalk and knocked down dtlven by John ~· OW, 57,
Vletnlnieee mlaaile and antialrcratt guns In four separate so- investigated Sunday by Sheriff · two . mailboxes and .a post . Middleport, was damaged
Robert Hartenbach's Dept.
before striking a large sand- when it hit a deer which ran
called protective
.. reaction raids. . .
Three autos were damaged stone.
into its path on County Road 28,
Boyles was taken to Yeterans. four miles west of Route 124.
QUI NHON 1 VIETNAM- THE U. o. Anny has opell!ld Its in one of the accidents
Memorial
Hospital by the The deer was killed. There was
ptea to VIetnam• ~olllltutes at several bues in South Viet- .at
11 : 30
p.m.
Sunnam and Army llpOkesman said such a thing Is apparenUy all day on Route 7, three Middleport E-R squad for medium damage to Dill's
tenths of a mile southwest of treatment of a back injury. vehicle.
rJpt by current regulations.
But officers said there are considerable security risks and a Ute Middleport Business loop. Boyles has been cited to county
EDITOR DIES
According
to
Ute
report,
a
car
court
on
a
reckless
operation
,, ·strong poulbWty al narcotics smuggling. Many said they supHUNTINGTON, W. Va.
driven
by
Charles
W,
Boyles,
charge.
Damages
to
the
Boyles
port lhe pnictlce anyway to keep peace within Increasingly
(UPl) - Boyd Jarrell,
33,
Middleport,
going
norand
Voss
vehicles
were
heavy
managing
editor of the Hundisgruntled l'llllkl of the Americans still left In Vietnam.
!beast, attempted l'o pass while medium damage was tington Herald-Dispatch, died
Saturday night He was 55.
WASHINGTON - TREASURY SECRETARY John B. another driven by Edward reported to Snyder's car.
Voss,
44,
Pomeroy,
Boyles'
At
2:50a.m.
Sunday,
a
car
Coonally today admjtted that lowering the nation's unemLOCAL TEMPS
vehicle apparentiy hit ater driven by Kenneth Leon
plo~nt rate to 5 pet. by the end of'thls year Is ''probably the
The temperature · in downand cUpped Ute left side of Ute· Cozart, 25, Ravenswood, went
bell we can do."
·
Voss car which· went off the . out of control and damaged 25 town Pomeroy at 11 a. m.
This figure Is halfway between the present 6.1 pet, jobless
right of-the highway and struck feet of guard railing on Route 7 Monday under cloudy skies
. rate and the 4pet. figure around which Pre~dent Nixon bas built a parked car owned by Roger near the Arthur Nease home, was 50 degrees.
his "full employment llldget" concept. Connally told reporters Snyder, Middleport Route 1, northeast of Pomeroy. Cozart
at a budlet briefing that the 5 pet. figure wu .not Ideal but, before going over an em- was c1ted to county court for
REVENUE HERE
nevertheless; reallstlc under present economic conditions. ·
Meigs County communities
received $5,852 in gasoline tax
cAJRo.- mousANDS or EGYPTIAN students demanrevenue in 1anuary, State
ding lnltant war with Israel and a to~ policy agalnat Ute
l1'IDg
, Auditor Joseph T. Ferguson
United slates ramp118ed through the streeta rl Cairo today and
reported today. Aino'bnts
hurleclltoneiatpolice.·Pollcedlspersedl,hemwithte\rgas.
Earlier thla month, a very yoimg man named Kurtlss received by each village were
The dlmonltradons began early · in Ute day at Cairo Franklin English received. a flock of prizes from bualness and Middleport $2,052, Pomeroy
Viilveralty ·where pollee spelled several hundred stud~ts professional people for being Ute first baby born in 1972 of Meigs . $2,228, Racine $284; Rutland
a sit-In there ani! arreated student leaders. Tbe cam- Cowity parents. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William (Bill) $408 and .syracuse $880.
·(111111 of Cairo University and Ein Shams University were English, Middleport.
Naled off. •
•
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.

News... in Briefs

S'pose

yo· wonders
whyah
tauQhtyo'
to make
unwormly

&amp;ounds-

Three Autos Wrecked

namely

hoomint!

.

'

CAPTAIN EASY

by.Crook.&amp;&amp; · L~wrence

He 's T •· to Say .'Thanks'
..

,..._!ding

.THEN• CONFOUND lli AT 1-.E:A?T
l-OCK THIS DOOR: ANP POSi
A "I&lt;Eil' OUT" 716N~

·
.

COMe OUT OF

.

'

!7, INDe:ep,
SXCITIN@
W THING!7'

THIS MCI&lt;E:IS ·
INDU!&gt;T~Ift:it

· RE~EiARCH ·
D6PA~TMeNT!

WASIIINGTON .. -

PRI!'.$IDENT NIXON , today asked

Coogrelil for an stra $3.3 million to provide Secret Service
prolecdCf for himlelf and Ute rauneroua presidential ho~ in
• thla year'• tllectio111. The lncreue would pulh the total Secret
Service budlet for the 12 montha beginning July 1to •· 7mUUon.

Almost aD of It wouid so for aaiarieland eJLP61*.
,
Allo, current aid to educ~lon prognu111 would be cut $282
miWcli under the budlet Preeldent Nixoolllbmltled to Coilgress ·
' today. But N!Jiln ·told the lawmakers that If they accepted hl8
revebue lhariuC plan and paaaed hll achool deaegregadon aid
bill, total educatloo ependlng would lncreaae by more than P28

million.
PICKUPS PLANNED
Free pickup aervlce will be
provided Middleport l'l!lldenta
for thllr lltves and other
trub. Mayor lohn Zettle laid
. todly'. J. 'fllilp truck will
1111111 -~~~ !111'1)' tl.dB week.
R di'-111 are to place leaves
and lruh at their c,arlllln frlmt
allhllr bcimel.
·I

CALL ANSWRREJ)
The Pomeroy emersency
squad anawered a call to the
Eunice Nutter horile on Owl
HoiiCIII Road at 10:30 a. m. .
Sullday. Mrs.. Nutter who luld
i'ecelved a bite from either a
anake or i rat wu taken to
Veteradl Memorlll Hoapltal, it
!"U reported.

'~If I could talk, I would
say, 'TIIInks,' ~ut since 1
c1n't, Mom and O.d say it
for ·me.".

EUGENE A. KNIGHT, conservation and environmental education aupervlsor for Ute
Department of Education, left, and Duane Plymale, area extelllion agent, 4-H, Jackson Area,
planned and·coordlnated SatUrday's residen~utdoor edilution ~am.
•

AppWitchian Program
Would Be·Phased Out
WASHINGTON (UPI)President Nixon proposed
today Ute Appalachian regional
development progrartl, which
Congress gave five yeats of
new life last year, be discontinued on July 1, 19'13 and Its
funds converted into the rural
development revenue-eharing
program.
At the same time the President aSked Congress to authorize $302 million for commission
~o jects, a decrease of $40 rnUIlon from the current fiscal
years authority.
Actual estimated · expenditures for fiscal 1973, however,
would be $292 million, a $3 rnUUon boost over that anticipated
in the current fiscal year.
Congress Rejects Proposals
"Since the economic
development of local areas is
largely the product of combined state, local and private
planning, it is proposed that
these new programs be · converted to the rural conununl\Y
development revenue sharing
program proposed to become
effective on July 1, 1973,"
Nixon said.
"In the interim, the Appalachian and . other regional
commissions, as well as the
~ograms of the Economic
Development Administration,

will be continued."

The 13-!itate Appalachia regional program was ea~­
marked by Nixon a year ago
for Inclusion in the revenue
sharing plan, but that ~o(lOiil!l
was not accepted by Congress.
The area includea the state al
Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky,
Maryland, Mlaalssijlpl, New
York, North C&amp;rollna, Ohio,
Pemsylvanla, South Carollna,
Tennessee, Vl1'8inta and West
VIrginia .
-The Appalachian T.eglonal
Commission, Ute federal-elate
partnership which administers
Ute program, nearly died laat
year when its previoua authorization expired June 30. Congress, however, extended its

Ufe another five years, when
Ute revenue-eharing Idea falled
to gain approval.
VelDa Exteoslon Measure
President Nixon vetoed an
extension measure because Ute
House added a $2 billion accelerated public works program
to the legislation.
But in his June 29 message
about Ute veto, Nixon denounced the accelerated public
works program as Inflationary,
oot praised Ute ARC, 'saying It
"has been a very useful experimental development program
that can be Improved upon and
can serve in many ·respects as
a model for a national program.u
(Continued on Page 8)

Two Accidents Investigated·
Pomeroy Pollee Investigated
two accidents Sunday .
At 12:05 a.m. a car driven by
Terry Michael, 24, Pomeroy,
after going out of control on
Mulberry Ave., struck a metal
post at the Rainbow Inn.
1\lichael told officers he was
attempting to get his windshield wipers to work when he
lost control, There were minor
damages to his vehicle. He was
cited to mayor's court on a
charge of failing to have his car

under control.
At 7:30p.m. on West Main
St., a car driven by Thomas
Cooke, 17, Middleport, went out
of C"lltrol when it went Into
water standing from six to
eight inches deep Qri the street.
The car struck a wall. A
passenger, Julia Hutchison,
flutland, was taken to Veterans
Memorial ijospital for obS&lt;!rvation. Cooke's vehicle was
a total loss, officials said. No
charge wa~ filed .

Some Towns a Right to Die
COLUMBUS (UPI)
State
Development Diri)Ctor Davld.Sweet is
developing a study to determine what
kind of Industry can be matched up with
towns in. the Appalachia area in Ohio,
but he admits "setting and expending
Industry is tough."
The economic development study
undertaken by the Depariment of
Development Is funded by an ·$85,000
grant from the Appiilachian Regional
Commission.
Initial targets of the study were' Ute
region's .three ·largest cities Zanesville,
Portsmouth
and
Steubenville. But other towns heard
about the study, and an estimated 50
towns are hoping for aid.

Because of Ute present economic
picture, according to Sweet, not all
towns are going to be able to receive
help.
." Some towns should have the right
to die," he said.
"We're trying to avoid giving some
communities false hope," Darwin said.
"The truth is, getting and expanding
lndustl'y is tough and Ohio as a whole
has been ·· slipping economically in
relation to the rest of the nation."
Darwin aald OhiQ's sl)are of the
gross national product 15 years ago was
5.1 pet., but it has dropped to 5.3 pet.
last year. ·
.
• Some comni1111itiEis, accor?ing · to

the project director , should view
themselves as "bedroom towns" for
Appalachia's primary growth areas.
Thus, they should work on developing ·
amenities to make living there more
attractive. .
•
Sweet aaid he hopes the project, when
concluded, can be applied to all of rural
Ohio. H e . to Une up a community's
indu,trial potential with specific
companies.
"Since lnner•clty problems are
spawned In part by migration of rural
people looking for employment, we
think Ute state as a whole stan!IS to galll
from redevelopment of rural Ohio,"
Sweet said.

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2.- The O.Uj Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 24,1972

/

~----~--------------~
c.mstmttwe Lelten II Os I t-, Ia , ... ....., .,. ..

Saturd~y

· tern Dumps Symmes Vailey, 66-62,

welcomed!ne ecUw.- reterVetllle rtplt. ••~e~t~n. ~
All lelterl QJul be llpecl, wllll I 'f ill I 'S IM, rftr. . ,:
bdllllil may be ared UJIOII reqaell.
;,
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•

Club Takes OVer
.Second Place in SVAC

Angels with Long Hair · "
ANGWWITHWNGHAIR
St. Peter stood at' the golden gate, ·
With records in hand, all up to date
To check the deeds of every man
Who enter in the Hply Land.

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The trumpet sound,ed loud and clesr
To teD the world, judgment was bere.
The long haired angels sang a song,
For this day, .they had walled long.

••
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.

St. Peter said, "Stand in line and walt your tum,
' I'll teD you wbowillenter,andwbo'llburn. ·

••n

..••

·~

There were many great men standing there
Each with long and curly hair.

ENVIRONMENTAL MATH - Homemade instrUments suitable for use"by fifth and sixth
·graders to measure height, angles, circumference, and distance were explained by Doyt
Larrimore, Columbus.teacher, at the Resident Outdoor Education Workshop held Saturday at
· the Bradbury School. Shown as they worked with the instruments in the field back of the school
in a drizzling rain are, left to right, Larrimore, Mrs. Greta Suttle, Meigs School supervisor,
Mrs. Marjorie Goett, Bradlxlry teacher, John F. Underwood, Jackson area extension agent,
and Mrs. Marjorie Laske, Jackson educator.
·
.
·

. SOIL, ROCK FORMATIONS, trees and plants were studied by the workshop group in a
field across from the Bradbury school. Chris Shields, geologist and educator, teft 1 discussed a
plant With Glenna LeGrand, third grade teacher at Jackson, center, and Sally Hayes, Jackson
reading enrichment teacher.
·

•
COngresS Natlon

"•

Peter opened up the book,

..•

J

...

With not a verv happy look.
"l'rn sorry, friends, you can't come in

.,. , .

With hair so long and whiskers on your chin."
relating her comments to the
. Bradbi!I'Y area . Working in the
fields across the road from the ·
Bradbury school, the educators
studied soil, rock formations,
trees · and p!ants. · They
discussed water · levels and
vocations open to young people
interested in environment
improvement.
Kathy Logan, a Worthington
teacher, dealt with creative
awareness through art, music

------'---_..:.___ _.:....___ ·Outdoor
h
.
k.
Budget Given Wor S op
·
(Continued (rom page I)
instnunents.
Chris Shields, Columbus
geologist and educator, condueled a workshop on natural
history and economics,

Honest Abe, George Washington, William Penn, ·
And also lots of Holy Men,
Matthew, Mark, Luke, John and Moaes,
Wlth .hair so long and cheeks like roses. ·

~

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and drama. Highlighting her

The workahop served' as a

session was a "sing" with. follow-up to a program which

accompanilpent on a tenor
banjo.
The 18 educators attending
the workshop were welcomed
by George Hargraves, Sr.,
superintendent of the Meigs
Local
School
District.
Teachers at Bradbury hosted
the meeting and served coffee
and cookies. following a sack
lunch at noon.

"·-'

You know the rule we've made up here,
Your hair must be above the ear.
TheY. all were sad and began to shout,
"St. Peter! We don'tknowwhat you're talking about!"

Bradbury carri~d out .last
spring. The students spent
three days at Canter's Cave
near Jackson. A similar
program Is planned, for this'
spring.
A discussion on experiences
of the outdoor program by the
Bradbury group and an ex·
change of ideas and
information on ways of improving the one to be offered
this year concluded the
workahop.
Meigs participants in the
workshop were Mrs. Phyllis
Hackett, Mrs. Betty Full2, Don
Hanning, Mrs. Marjorie Goett,
Mrs. Maxine Philson . of the
Bradbury Sch09l; Mrs. Nonga
_ Roberts, Pomeroy Elementary
.School; Miss ~olyri Smith,
Chester Elementary School;
Mrs. Greta Suttle and Mrs.
Nellie Vale, Meigs County
School supervisors.

..

•

. Far back in line, boys from Meigs Hi ·-·
Waited their ·turn, with a heavy sigh
They whispered in a voice very low, ·
"They are as strict up here as they were below.''

·"
w

'"

They knew if men of which they'd teamed
Had a chance of being burned
·
There was no use for them to walt,
For they surely couldn't enter in the gate.

(Continued from Page I)
' the second largest since
billion.
Congress to respect the full- World War II. 11 estimates the
"
for the current fiscal
employment spending deficit
year at $38.8 · billion. The
Then a voice so loud and clear,
guideline Ibis year," he !!ald. President originally estiry~ated
Echoed out for aU to hear,
There was a veiled hint that If that deficit at S11.6 billion, but
"St. Peter! Step aside and let them in
economy's !allure to
· Congress votes increases in the
rebound tram the slump of
I, too, have longhair and whishersonmychin."
spending, Nixon would 1970-71 resulted in a sharp
chaUenge the lawmakers to dawn-turn in government ta)(
So I say to aU teachers, If you want to get in,
couple them with a boost in collections.
Marianne B. Campbell of :Public Affairs Coinmittee of
Then
grow long hair on your hesd and chinny chin chin.
taxes.
Source of Revenue: 38 per Gallipolis, an executive with a the Cbamlier of Commerce of
There won't be any scissors when you get up tht!re,
cent of government revenues Cincinnati broadcasting firm, the United Staies, Past
. Upgrading Requested
come from Income taXes
So you may as weD get used to seeing long hair.
Nixon asked the lawmakers will
paid by Individuals, 14'per cent bas been appoinled to the Presideqt of the Association of
(Nillle Wilhbeldaa Reqaat ~
to autborize the pentagon to from cor~orafe Income faxes , newly created position of Vice Broadcasters ~nd the Ohio
bejlln a time-consuming 26 oer cent from Socia I President of Development, Federation of Business and
Security
taxes. 10 ~ per
process of · upgrading the cent
Hair Not the Issue
Holzer Medical Center in Professional Women's Clubs.
from
borrow~
nation's nuclear force, lngs, 7 .per cent from Gallipolis.
She was the first and only
"·
providing more modern flhlps exctse taxes and 5 per cent
Worthington,
Ohio
4301111
John W. Rafferty, executive woman director of the.Nalional
• REcaul'r SIGNED
for the Na./y and generally from other sources. mcluding . vice-president, Holzer Hospital Association -of ·Broadcasters,
' •
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"!'11Jill11lirY 21; 18'/t
MORGANTOWN,
W. Va.
tariffs and estate and gift
boosting research
and faxes .
The length of hair is, of course, an lrrelevant.lsaue. llulve ~
Foundation, said Mrs. Camp- and the first woman' appointed
(UP!) - West Virginia
development.
bell will assume her duties to the Radio Code Board. In
University signed its 14th had students with long hair who were excellent lludentl and ,
He asked that the Iiefense · Philosophy: Nixon says the February 14.
1971
she
received
the
Out.
recruit when · Emil Rose, a conversely, some others with long hair who were poor lludenll. 1
.
· large del/cit "Is strong but
Depart ment be pernutted
For the .past five years she standing Achievement Awar~
to necessary medicine" to stlmusoccer-style kicker on the have seen Uttle.correlation between bair length and ed11C1tlonal .:
obligate $81.7 billion in the late the economy. "We take bas been Director of Com- from the Ladies Auxiliary of
·
1
Steubenville (Ohio) Central standards.
coming fiscal year, $6.3 billion that medicine because we need munity Affairs for the Avco the Veterans of F1lreign Wars,
I would instead like to bring up a new point in the illlue. 1 :
Catholic football team, acmore than during the current it. not because we like it," he Bradcasting Corporation in
at their National Convention in
says. " As our economy suecepted an athletic granl,ilwlld. quote from the best seDer "Future Shock" by Tl!lfler: ".. .a ·
year.
cessfully
combats
un· Cincinnati. Before joing Avco Dallas.
The left-loot kicker, who was response to future shock Is obsessive reveralon •to pnvloualy
Nixon noted that Congress employment, we
in 1967, she was general
Mrs . Campbell and her
born in Czechoslovakia, was successful adaptl':S routines that are now lrrelev8nt and tnap. t.
cut his defense budget in each will
stop
taking
the manager of WJEH-AM-FM, husband, Bill C. Campbell,
named UPI's Ohio "kicker of projrlate. The ReVersionist stlcka to his prevloualy PfOIIl'ammed '.
medicine well before we
of the Iast two years. He urged become addicted to it."
Gallipolis 17 years, after reside on the Lower River
the year" and placed on the decisions and habits with dogmatic desparatlon, The more ;
the lawmakers not to do it
putting the station on the air in Road in Gallipolis.
MARIANNE CAMPBELL
UPI All-state Class M first change threatens from without, the more melicti!ou.ly he
Debt: The budget anticipates 1950.
again.
team hist season.
$37 .4 billion increase in the
repeats past modes of action. The social outlook Ia iegr rive.
But Nixon also stressed that aNational
In her· new position she is
Debt, pushing if to
Shocked
by the arrival of the future, he offers byllerlcaJIUPPort
the portion of the total budget S493.2 bllllon- 30 per cent responsible to the Executive
for the notof!O-tlatus quo, or he demands, in one roaMed form or
taken by defense continues to higher than 1970.
Vice President of Holzer
another, a return to the glories of yesteryear,"
shrink.
Taxes: The budget calls tor Hospital Foundation for long
H!IIDBD Resources Speodlog no major new tax Increases or range planning in publlc
. Thus, perhaps, an explanation of our over-reaction to an
ISSue so minor as length of hajr. .
"Human resources spending tax cuts, except tor Social relations, working directly
Security taxes. It proposes that
will be 45 per cent of the 1973 the
SlnCIIl'I!Iy )'Ollfl,
Social Security tax , now with the media, and the
BY JACK O'BRlAN
Howard on the interview-tape ... Mrs. Hal
budget,
while
defense scheduled to rise on Jan . 1, development of volunteer
Unda Crow Beegle
BING HAS A
LeRoy, wife of the great old vaudevllle«:reen
programs will be 32 per cent. 1973, to 5.65 per cent for each services within the complex.
CONSTANT REMINDER
hoofer, goes back In for serious surgery ... The
Our policy of ending our in- worker and his employer, be
Holzer Hospital came into
kept af Its present rate of 5.2
NEW YORK (KFS) - Bing Crosby's been New Yorker mag's readying another piece on
volvement in the VIetnam War per cent. But he wants the tax existence in 1910, founded by
.
bas helped make Ibis posJible levied on the first Si0,200 of a Dr. Charles E. Holzer, utilizing named 1972 Nat'l chairman of the Arthritis Dick Cavett.
I
worker's
earnings
Instead
of
· by freeing resources to keep us ·
Foundation lor a simple, painful reason: Bing , The New Yorker seems to have emerged
first 59,000, the figure now a remodeled residence to serve
strong externally as well as the
fr~m a decades-long humorless monotony, fine
In law. He aIso proposes to the people in Gallipolis and (like 17 million in the U. S.) bas arthritis ... Bea
internally.''
eliminate the month S5.60 fee surrounding communities. The Lillie won't do any more stage shows: can't be bnght pieces and profiles of the sort that made
Since Nixon took office three people over age 65 now pay lor first of many building bothered learning lines ... Sammy Davis bought it a penthouse word for decades ... The ·masterly
years ago, general taxes have supplemental medical in- programs started In 1917, a new mink coat- lined also in mink ... Would Brendan Gill piece on Cole Porter set the new
: suurance under Medi cc;~re. if
By Helen Bottel
been cut twice, more than 'they want it.
continuing until1960 when a 194 you believe it? Lionel Hampton entertained at a stylish tone; and the ourrent Kenneth Tynan
I
offsetting the continued climb
bed capacity was reached. The benefit in Queens - against the controversial Boswellish trailing-after his Johnson fine
in the payroU tax lor Social
HOW TO BEAT THE BAND
Defense: One of the few Holzer Medical Center, Forest Hills low-income housing.
. Scottish actor Nicol Williamson, is a flamboyant
Security.
Dear
Helen:
areas where Nixon calls for a planned since 1964, is
Now they're hanging all those dumb ethnic case in potnt ... Tynan's ego is more in evidence
Since 1969, the federal budget substantial
Increase
in scheduled to open new hospital jokes on actors: such as the actor who decided than Williamson's herein somewhat put-down
. After the last of our three children was hom my huaba d ,.
spending
is
in
the
has been unified to show both defense
started playing ina bandon weekends, partly as a'hobby, part~ :
budget. He seeks and clinic facilities , three
general programs and pro- a S6.3 · billion Increase miles west of Gallipolis in to commit suicide, jumped off the Empire State personality in the portside gospel according to becalllle we needed the extra money.
: ,
Bldg. - and got loSt ... Sign of the Dove is the . Tynan; and Tynan's Freudian slaps at
grams like Social Security over the $75.4billion autnorozea April. It will bave a
bed
265
When ~last chUd started to school, we made a deal.! would
latest chic East Side spot to holler panic ... Top Williamson in the guise of reporting plus his
.
which are financed from trust this year. but only $900 million
of the new money would capacity. The present Holzer executive investigator will be querie&lt;l about a unwitting chul2pah in admitting he horned ill on go back toworkparttimeandhe wouldquittheband. At first thl8 , '
funds. Since the trust funds a_stually be spent in the current . medical facilities will service
,
N. Y. City housing case.
the trip and tried to get Nicol to take a polltlcal worked fine -he was tired of playing anyway,
traditionally operate · at a fiscal year. The rest would be long term care palients
A year later the. good ole band players flhowed up IIIIBin ;
World's Greatest Jazz Band (headed by swat at Pres. Nixon during Williamson's
C
tl
·
surplus, the unified budget authomed lor use In future
years.
urren Y Mrs. Campbell is Yank Lawson and Bobby Haggart) was sold by . triumphant White House 'Oile-man-(]azzle (he claiming they lust couldn't get along without him So for a ~
tends to mask at lesst some of
serving as National President its Denver financier Bob Gilson (made millions falled) gives the piece a second level of webothworked.You'dthinkwewoutdfaveaaved'money but :
the deficit in the general • Science: The budQet outs
of American Women in Radio with the water pic) to John Barker Hickocks, 40- fascination.
just blew it, and went deeper in debt for bigger Clll'l artt bet we ·
new ·emphasis on spendprograms.
and
Television.
She
is
iming
for science
ap~llances
willch weren't really needed.
·ter
ExCluding the trust fund and technology " lri the
.'
Victor Borge's · "My Favorite Inmediate past member of the yesrlilld Arizonian big in Chi,, banking (Nat'!
This_BlmiJier I took a fuU-tline job and thought
sure my ,
surpluses, the budget deficit ~rvlce of man ." APpropriaCity Bank of Chi.) for $350,000; Gibson probably termlssions" is a best-seDer Indeed: 5th prinLr 1972 would be $44.7 billion trons here would total S17.8
husband
would
quit
the
~d,
since
:we
can
get
along
witboat
the .
broke even at best... Those garish pimp-suits on ling, 60,000 copies. Why Loqlse Lasser and
JEANS MAKE IT
billion,
a
$1.4
b
illion
Increase,
and for 1973 would be $36.2
Jeans, which are becoming the insolently proud whore-mongers around Woody Allen are so happily divorcee\: Louise ext;ra Income. But now he talks of a nicer home a bOat et I ;
but not all of it fo be actually
billion.
spent in fi scal 1973.
accepted dress for almost Times Square cost up to $700 each ; plus the says one night in bed Woody nudged her to say · don't really want them as much as I want a one-job h~ ~~ ·
an .v whcre, now come in agonies of uncounted young kids ... Hop.- our he'd heard a noise downstairs _ and sent her tired of sitting home alone·every Friday 'and Saturday night· and '
Pretty shades of pink and
lt'sworsetogoandsltwith the band wives," exchangmg recipm,
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - A
blue with matehlng jackets. Ldng Island paper (The Pl:ess) gets the scoop on down to investigate. Charlie Chaplin brushed off
summary of President Nixon's
.
the FBI•investlgatlon of $99,000 allegedly , llhy artistic delight in having 11 of his old flicks ~federal budget for fiscal 1973,
POMEROY
LANES
I'm also tired of working and trying to lieep up a hom that
which starts next July 1.
delivered by a pol to an elected offlciBf
· ·revived : "It'slhe money," be said. "I juat like
January 5, 1972
·
e
. we aren't in enough to enjoy.
Winebrenner
194.
High
Series
Early Wednesday Mixed
Bob Mitchum's "Wrath of God" standin money!" ... Chaplin's8011S~eysaldonTVhts
Income: The budget est/.
- Dick Dugan 562 and Linda
I'd feel Uke an ogre asking my husband to quit the bind for
Pis Winebrenner 531 , Team High during Mexican filming was Trinidad VIlla, son pop had maybe f20 million in old bullion
mates government receipts In Smith-Nelson Motors
14
even though he gripes, he enjoys playing, However I keep ooPtn
fiscal 1973 at S220.8 billion, a
and Series - Racine of P~ncho ... Mkhael Caine gets the ·~Sleuth" stashed In Swlsa vaults.
g
Soh/a
1i Game
S23 billion Increase over fiscal Otler's
Food
Market
682
and
1971
.
Sport Shop
8
movie rol~; we Wish him nolfling better than to
Otto Preminger'li. delighted with his Dyan thatklnglfI make enoll(lh money, be,wlll. Which 11
1 don't ~~ ,
1972 estimates, continQenl on Zide's
w~
.
e
Young's Market
6
he.as brilliant as Anthony Quayle in the Bdwy. , Cannon feud over his. "Such Good Fii nds"
an expected revitalization Nelson's Drug
6
of the
economy.
The Tenth Framers
origi~al ... Everything Is reversed tpday: He's disappointed sbe. doesn't do
of 'It WIDO"; do we break out of \Ills vtcloua circle? _ WE~
3
Early Bird League
ligure
would
be
S6 9.
High Ind. Game - Speed
January 19,1972
there s even a hustle on to make a "national publicly, wbere the .picture would belieflt
blltlon hlghet were . it n~t Russel/246 : High Ind. Game Dear W.W.:
.
'
..
Pis
lor the tax cut. Nixon proposed Sonja Wayland 193. High Series' D. G. Plnnettes
32 hero~· of H: Rap Brown, jailed on~ helst.asaault David Frost didn't let Yoko Ono'a cheap llttl~
and Congress enacted In 1971 to - Speed Russell 588 and Evelyn's Grocery
I don't think a wife (or husband) flhould EVERaalta mate lo
22 rap mvolvmg his own people ... Deep thanka, nastlneaa (let . by on his TV-klatch H ·
sllm~latethe economy.
Isabelle Cooch 516. Team High Rawlings Dodge
14 Dick Doudna of WAMR, Venici, Fla. (reads us genllelnanly enllllflh not to say lhe ~·~= give up the Job he enjoys, Preclouafewpeopteevenflnd IUch III
Game ,and Series - Smith- King Builders
14
ol
Outgo: The budget antici- Nelson Motors 7JO and 2042 .
Meigs Mobile Homes
8 _m the Sarasota Journal), for sending along a invltedtotallionTVlflhehadn'twed Beetle -and they have the rlcht to savor them, IVIID lhoup tbe
pates federal expenditures of
.the
famllyiJIUitadJuat
to
•lbDewlwtamniChedale
Larry's Ashland
6 tape of Gershwin's almost-lost "Walklng the Yoko broU(Iht 11011(1 an upetale Indianaeltlef ~
' $246.3 billion, an increase of
T•.am Hlah Game - D G. Dog Music" f~om "Sball We Dance,'' circa 1936; add to her . ranlilip _ and couldR't even da ~ adjuat? Stop thlnldnt that "we 11 •Idl" .,. btlllll1
SU bllt/on or 4.1 r,r cent. This
Pinnelles
827, · Evelyn's
Increase Is abou equal to the
ya o
WICk. If ' " flO back to put-time WWII W W .
She
• Early Sunday Mixed
Grocery. 810, D. G. Pinnettes Dick taped 11 off an old Andre Kostelanetz remember hll1 tribe (Onondap)
amount · of Inflation the
January 9, 1972
800.
gain IIIClU8b enqy 10 tMt )'OU llld the flllllly
~
Columbia Records 78 RPM "and if Bob Grimes, Irked because she 11ebl atteaiiGn "'
administration expect. this
Team High Series - D. G.
Pis
daya
llld
JQU and )'0111' hUiband Cli ... dlmen aat, . , .•
ve•r.
sa
in
non -ln- Tom's Carry .Ou't
14 Pinnettes 2410, Evelyn's ;ho wrote you fir5t •.~ut It, wanb) a tape I'D Lennonlzlns, but archltect-lnven:r R. Buell· etc, on the. other live mtOCeupled Dlcbta 11_..., ...._._ •
1/atlonary
terms
Nixon Racine Food Market
14 Grocery 2326, Rawlings Dodge
ub one ~or ?im, too.
.
minister Fuller was canclldlf dellgltllld lhatltla
foresees no real increase In Eagles Club
Satutdap lll'e the lrorat pollllile ' Umee. · - · ··-·llld
14 2244.
Fascmatmg
symposium
notion:
have
all
of
.
philosophizing
now 11 harllened to an1y becll
19 back lit' crowdl.
Forest Run Block
IP'!"dlng·. '
.·
Knock .... that .......... d
· Ind. . High Game, - Mary
4
uu
"-en
aYIJHirolne
"111d
'"'"'llltap
"-ft
,Howard
H~hes'
old
girl
friends
from
Billi
e
he
became
a
world
fl(lure
1f1er
inYIII
:
·
F~rmer's Ba'nk
'
2·' Voss, 221 , 2ps, 203.
1
the band.
•
,vv
. Deficit: The budget forecasts Roseberry's Sohlo .
,Ind. High Series - Mary Dove ~J!ell s Angels) through Katharine geodesic dome, without which "I wvuldn~t be
0
I deficit In flsta/ 1973 of 125.5
High Ind. Game - Chuck Voss 629. Maxine Dugan 471 ,
. "' And, QIOOIIIS )'0111' blllbew! lmon )'OU . . _ , lpbrt bll
Hepburn to Lana TU:ner and Ava ·Gardner very well known "headmilted'APia '-·
Wlne~renner 196 and Linda
Elaine Spires 470.
1- 1 mag. IJIIYinl-hobiJy, be DIIYIIGp llllni tt~Wwd mi'PI' 1111
poll«~ for their opinion whether that really was
· '
.1"
to keep __IL- H.
·
r
I

Mrs. C8mpbell is Accepthig
Post with Medical Center

i

r --------------~
~---------1

!Helen Help

Usl

I

I

fill'

l..ocal Bowling

·-

wb,-·

mor:

·

,e!

0:

c.:

from'::

-•II

=

ra••-

1

I

•

.

'

,

'

'

'

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'
'

;.

...

Coa\)b B.W Piillllp~' Eastern Eagles rallled from a 31-28 halftlroe ~licit at Synunes Valley Saturday night to hand the host
Vlkjnga a 118-62 Soull!em Valley Athletic. Conference setback.
'J'be triumph: kep( the Meigs . 51 Jict. Tile Vikings bad 49 , ·
COIUltians' title hopes alive, rebounds. Keith Roach was
and knocked the Vikings out of high With 19 snags for the
undisputed second place.
• losers.
·
The. Eagles are now in
Scoring honors went to
secorid, .all alone, with a 7-2 . Eichinger, who pumped in 26
mark lll!d. 9-2 overall.
points. Bob CaljlweU finished
The Vikings of Coach Wayne with 14 for the winners.
White suffered their their
Danny Wilson, also an AUstraight setback after recot- Ohio candidate in Class A
ding eight wins in a row. Inside circles paced the losers with 24
the SVAC, the VIkings dropped points.'
to ·thlrd ~t 6-2 mark..
The Vikings will play HanNorth Gallla, the undisputed nan Trace at M~rcervllle
leader, leads 'the pack with an Tuesday. The Eagles' Will hoilt
6-1 mark with three gaines Miller Friday and Federalremaining against league Hocking Sat)lriii!Y in •apair of
competition.
none-league games,
,.
Randy Youn'g's two free
In the prelimina.-y game, the
throws with two se~onds . Little Vikings upset the
remaining iced Saturday previously unbeaten Eastem
nlgltt's victory for the Eagles. reserves, 47-41. Jaye Myers led
Srmmes VaUey was on top 14- the winners' attack with 13.
11 after one perlod 1 The Sheets had 14 for the Little
Vlkinp held a 31-27 halftime Eagles, whp still remain in
lead.
first place with an 6-1 marl\.
The Eagles stormed back to The Little Vikings are now ii-3
outscore the Vikings 38-31 in in league play.
the final half. Eastern led 49-44
·Box score of the varsity
lifter three periods of play. · game:
The Eagles hit 28 of 65 field
EASTERN (661- Eichinger
goal attempts for 41 pet. From 13-0-26 ; Caldwell 6-2-14: Duval
• cles, "--tern -~ot a 0-2-2 ; Boring 3-2-8; Young 4-2the four Clr
"""'
.,,
10; Mil/hone 1-0-2 ; Sheets 1-2-4;
cool47.6 pet., sinking 10 of 21. TOTALS 28-10-66.
The E gl hauled down 51
SYMMES VALLEY 1621 · a es
Wilson 9-6-24; Roach 5-4-14;
rebounds, 28 by All-State Taylor 3-1-7; Myers 3-3-9: P. l
candidate Dennis Eichinger. Robinson 3-2-8: TOTALS 23-16TheVikingshit23of84for35 62BY QUARTERS:
pet. from the field. The home Easterh
11 17 21 17- &lt;16
clubhadapoornightattheloul s. Valley
14 17 1318-62
circles, sinking only 16 of 31 for
Reserves - S. Valley 47
Eastern 41

Sports

Ted Lehew, right, was pinned later by Tim
John Thomas. on top, 157 lbs. Class, is pinning
Drake.
' Tom Samsel,

Falcon Wrestlers Edge Meigs

Ro~dup

By United l'retlll lnleiuatlooal

. P!'rrSBURGH (UPI) --Infielder Jose Pagan and southpaw
pttCber·Luke Walker have signed their 1972 contracts with the
world champion PI\IBburgb ~!,!rates. Pagan, 38, batted .241 in 57
~last season, lhlaslng the final two months of the campaign
becalllle Of a broken arm, while Walker posted a 1().8record.
. r.a'l' r· ~ ' r« '• · 2!!!f!J1o•l - ,~~oRK ~l,JPI) -Bob Lanier of the Detroit Pistons beat
Pete Maravlcll of the Atlanta Hawks ~16 in a first round match
in tiHi National Basketball As80clstion's one-on~ne · charnpionablp and will next meet the winner of the Paul Silas-Lee
Winfield match. The taped hlgh!igllts of the Lanier-Maravlch
contest were seen Sunday at halftime of the ABC-TV nationally
televised same between New York and Seattle.

-

PlnLADEIPHIA (UPI)- Quarterback Roger Staubach, who
Dallaa Cowboys to their first Super Bowl championship, -"d Ed Marinaro, Cornell's record-shattering runner,
will be honored tonight by the Maxwell Football Club.

gul~ ·the

GUADALAJARA, Mexico (UP!) -The United States used a
goal by John carenza Sunday to gain a 1-1 tie with Mexico lh itS
Olympic IIClccer qualifying match.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!)- Sharif Khan, a professional from
Toronto, defeated Victor Nlederhoffer, an amal(ur from New
York, ~Yin the finals of the North American Open Singles
Squash cllaUwlonshlps.
'

'

-

FREEPORT, Bahamas (UP!)-Top seeded Jose Hlgueras of
Spain won the Lucayan Towers International Junior Tennis title
Sunday with an 8-6, 6-4 eash victory over .. countryman Jose
Moreno.

· By United Presslnternatlon.,
East
w I t pts gl 81
Boston
31 7 8 70 186 102
NewYork 30 8 7 67 203 103
Montreal 26 12 8.60 177 127
Toronto .•. 20 17 10 50 129 12t
Uetrott
1U :.tU 1 41 14/ l~l
Vancouver 13 26 5 31 112 150
Buffalo
10 27 11 31 127 182
. West
· wltptsgfga
Chicago 31 10· 5 67 152 85
Mlnn
25 15 7 57 •124 100
Calif
IS 15 10· 40 142 190
St.Louis 16 24 ·7 3'1 133 155
Phi/a .
13 24 8 34 107 144
Plltsbgh . 12 26 9 33 112 150
LosAngeles
12 33 4 28 109 193
Sunday's"Rtsults
Boston 3 Bflo.. 3
Chlcagq 4 Tilronfu 0
Montreal 3 Plltsbg 3
Detrolt 3 $1.l;.ouls 1
. Mlnn '5 Lo~ Ang~les a
eaut J Ph !Ia '1
,
Ionly pmtSschOKiuledl
MQnday's Games
(none I
RECORDS SET
COLUMBUS (UP!) -'three
new Oblo Stale field bouse
recorda. 1 were
set at the U. s.
•t
Traclt 11111, 1\'!eld Federation's
Ml~t meet whlC\1 attracted
more than 1 000 albletes here
'
Saturday. Marks were sert by
Miami's Scott Wallack, who
. cleared 16 feet, 4 lncbes In the
pole vault; Jessie Stewart of
the Western Kentucky Track
Club, who tossed .the shot 62
feet, 10\1 inChes; and Homer.
Hoffm1n of Mid-Tennessee,
wlio won ·the 600 in 1: 12.
'
'

'

-RAGGEDY
ANN
I
,
Tlie Raggedy Ann dol!
rage has caught on in fash·
ioit. A bounCy red and white
long gingham checked dress
with a white . apron on top
.. giws 1/(111 the look of Raggedy' Ann, the long-time doll
taiiOTite.

'

· RACINE ~"'fhe Sout~e;'ri
Local Tornadoes won their
fourth straight game here
Saturday night, an e~sy 75-46
affair, ov.er their · Southern
Valley Conference foe Southwestern Highlanders.
The Tornadoes were unexpectedly hard-pressed in the
·first quarter by the winless
Highlanders who are plainly in
an off-year. Southern was on
top by only four, 19-15, after
one period. The Tornadoes,
however, poured on the coal in
the second eight minutes,
outscoring the Highlanders, 2().
7, to talle a 39-22 lead that was
never threatened . , .
Coach Asa Bradbury's
Tornadoes are 7-4i overall and
¥4 in league play. They have
come far since losilig their first
three games on the Sl)ason.
Of three of their five
losses, one was by one

AHL Standings

.

Wod

Meter (W) pinned Alan
McLaughlin (M, 1-4)
24-9
140 lb. class - Morgan
(W) pinned Jim Mash
(M, ().2)
.
24-15
145 lb. class - McFarland
( W) pinned Terry ,
Plckens,(M.~)
24-21
157 lb. class - John
Thomas (M, 5-0)
pinned Samsel (W)
30-21
167 lb. class - Drake
(W) pinned Ted Lehew
(M, 0-3-2)
30-27
177 lb. class - Machir
(W ) pinned John Lehew
(M, 0-5)

30-33

Unlimited class - Morris
( W) decisioned Mike .
Haley (M, 0-2)
30-36

CONo:JRD, M.ass. (UPf.) Services were to be held today
for Richard J. Loftus, 70,
major and minor baseball
player who retired in 1940 with
a combined lifetime batting
average of .300.
Loftus, who died Friday,
played three seasons with the
Cincinnati Redlegs and two
with the Brooklyn Dodgers in
the 1920s, and then played
another 16 years in tbe minors.

WW FQp~h. Straigl,t,'

point, another by five; and the
third by only six. Coach
RIchard Ham i Ito n 's
Highlanders continued to have
their problems and are now 012 overall and 0-9 in SVAC
action.
Bruce Hart led the Tor·
nadoes in scoring with 20
points. Nick ' !hie added 14
points and led Southern with 15
rebounds. Jerry Hubbard and
Stan Kiser contributed II and
nine respectively. Jim Hubbard, Southern's leading
scorer, was ·off the entire night
and collected but three 'poin!B.
Phil Lewis led the
Highlanders wjth 15 and K.Vin
Walker hit 10.
•
The scrappy and quick
Tornadoes had 40 rebounds
overalL The winners also shot
37 pet. from the field, making
29 of 70. The Tornadoes cashed
in 17 of 31 from the foul line lpr
55 pet. while Southwestern

coul&lt;t oniy'\lrop in''six of 20'16~ a
dismal 30 pet.
The little Tornadoes,
coached by Duane Wolfe ,
evened their overall record at
6-li with a 71-39 thrashing of the
Southwestern reserves,
The Tornadoes will bave
their fourth straight home
game this Tuesday against the
Kyger Creek Bobcats In &amp;
AVAC tilt. Southern won the
first meeting, 60-41, at Kyger
Creek in Southern's initial
victory of the season. This
Friday the Tornadoes are idle,
but play the foUowing night at
Glouster in a non-league affair
with the Tomcats.
SOUTHWESTERN (46) Trowbridge 3-2-8, Dillon 3-1-7,
Lewis 7-1·15, Whitt 2-l-4i, Wood
0-1-1, Walker 5-0-10. Totals 20-646.
• SOUTHERN (75) - Jim
Hubbard. 1·1-3, Bruce Hart 9-220, Jerry Hubbard 4-3-11, Brett

Hart 1-G-2, N. Ihle li-4-14, fl. Hill
346, Jenkins 1).2-2, Kiser 2-5-9,
Holman 2-0-4, Mike Nease 2-0-4.
Totals 29-17-75 .
BY QUARTERS .
Southwestern 15 7 8 16-48
Southern
19 20 i2 24--75

tl
. INSURE .wlll.• - .•
A'pi)

I . II

For the shine and sparkle
that looks so good on your
hair, wash· your hair as usual
then give yoursell a vinegar
rinse.

Whether you .
euto,
life

PAY CABLE

TV BIUS AT
··· ·JIMMIE!S ,".
Pastry Shop
' -'"

"

383 N. Second Ave.

a

lndlv.ldiUII• .

•.

requlrttments
Dl~uss your sp~tdflcl
needs with us.

Davis Wamei' l~a.

Middleport
992-3555
Authoriled Agent

10 54 173 133

114

Yes ... we can supply

$5
... and more!

10 46 153 124
9

41 152 174

Lead

6 38 137 190

W. L. T. Pis. Gl
Baltimore
22 17 6 so 140
Hershey 21 14 6 48 ]55
Cincinnati
19 20 9 47 172
Cleveland
19 20 6 44 158
Richmond
17 21 7 41 134
Tidewater
10 30 4 24 118
Sunday's Result.
Ball/more 2 Cincinnati 1
Providence 7 Tl!lewater 5
Cleveland ,3 Richmond 2
Rochester 9 Hershey 4
(Only games scheduled)
Mondly's Game
Nova Scotia at Bostori
lOlly game scheduled)

G•
134
126

J~ior

WS ANGELES (UP!) Place kickers ar~ people too.
185
Don't tell Jan Stenerud of the
Kmisas
City Chiefs he's a
161
robot. He kicked the American
132 Football Conference all,atats
117 into C9ntention Sunday in the
Pro Bowl and put them ahead
of the NFC 9-0 in the third
quarter. Up to that point, the
AFC had not scored a toUchdown but later tallied two to
win gobtg away -by a 26-13
score.
Mined Twice
Stenerud, 28, who learned to
k'lck
' soccer-style In' Oslo,
ABA Sllndtngs
United Press lnttrnatlon.ill
Norway, Where ·he was bom,
East
W. L. Pet. GB missed field goala from 38 and
2t yards In the first qulirter 39 10 .796
Kentucky
120 .6089 · through no fault of his own. The
VIrginia
24 27 .,471 16
N.WYork
first one was blocked by the
21 30 .412 19
Floridians
waving hands of Mike Lucci,
19 32 .373 21
Pitt. burgh
18 32 .360 21 1h linebacker from the Detroit
Carolina
Lions. On the secolld, Len
West
W. L. Pet. GB Dawson, the holder, said he let
33 18 .647
Utah
the bail faD bj' accident.
30 21 .588 3
Indiana
Dawson, 38, also a Kansas
21 28 ,'429 11
Denver
City
man, got ~e AFC's first
' 23 32 .4f8 12
Dol/as
21 30 .412 12
MemphiS ·
touchdown when he hit Cleveland's Milt Morin with a fiveSunday's Resulfl
yard toss at 10:15 in the· third
Kentucky 130 Utah 94
quartet:_. After Stenerud conPollas 113 India~• 110
Denver 130 Vlrgihla 123 .
verted, the AFC led 16-6 ..
New York 116 Floridians 105 · With jll8t nine seconds gone
(Onl~mes scheduled)
in the final period, Stenerud
d1y's Gimts
(Nanel
kicked his fourth field goal Ill
1

the afternoon --this one from
42 yards' -and the AFC ied 196.
Wlthlessthantwomlnutesto
play, Denver's Floyd Little ran
six yards for a TD and
Stenerud's conversion milde It
final, 26-13.
The NFC seemed to be the
favorite of the crowd of 53,647
ahd Roger Staubach, Dallas'
SUper Bowl bero, got a big
hand when he first came out.
The cheers turned · to boos
tater.
Staubachcompletedonlyone
pass out of the six be threw. His
·
total Output in the air was 14
yards gained. On the groUild,
he looked better. He .was the
leading rusher for the ' NFC
with 27 yards gained on four
scrambles.
Greg Landry of Detroit,
backup man for Staubach,
looked much better than the
former Navy star,. Landry
threw a pssa good ~or 50 yards
and . a touchdown to Minnesota's Bob Grim at S:4&lt;! in
the second quarter.
The . conversion attempt
failed . .The first try by Curt
Knight of Washington was good
but was nullified because the
NFC did not have enough men
on the line of scrimmage. He

Loop
tried again fl'om five yards
back but Smith got a hand on
the baD and deflected it.
Anyway, the NFC led &lt;MI
until Stenernd got cooklQg with a field goal of 25 yards, a
'23-yarder to tie ,it and the goahesd 46-yarder.
The NFC got a second TO at
7:27 of the fourth quarter with
the help of a· pass interference
call after Lucci intercepted a
Dawson pass.
~
"

The ..D;.ily ~tiriel · I

j
Are you pay ing out too large a share of your in co me
in monthly paym e r~t s? Wh en this happe ns. !here's not
enough left over for your own personal use-and
famil Y' fin ances beco me a real problem.
Here's a l ip. A large loa n can pay off th ose present
bal ances- and elimi nale those paym en ts. Yo ur one
'
loan paymenl
will probably be much less th an yo ur
com bined paymen ts te la/ now- and ·you' ll have the
exira spending money you need. To take ad vanlage
of thi s service sim ply c all for information. Th ere's no
obl igation. Your inqu i ry is al ways welco me here .

DEVOTED TO THE . J
·.
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CH.ESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Em . Ed .
ROBERT
HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Pub lis hed daHy excepl
Sot,urday by The Oh io valley
Puolishing

Court

4~69 .

St.,

COmpany ,

Pom e roy ,

111

Oh lo ,

Bus ine-ss Offi ce Phone

9'12-21 56, Ed itorial Phone 997.
2157 .
Second closs postage pa id a I
Pomeroy , Oh io .
Not ional advertis ing
t epresenlat lve Boltlnelll .
Gallagher, h"' C., 12 East 42nd
51.. New York City , New York .
Su~scr·lption ra1es: De,

992-2171-

li vered• by carr i er WhE-re
ava ilable so cents per week ;

. By Motor R.ou• e wh ere carrier ·
service not avail able ; One
month \1 .75. By mall in Ohio
and w. Va., One year tu .oo.
' s;~ months S7 .25. Three
moplhs .. .50. Suo sc r iption
p r l (~ Includes sunda y Trm••·
Sen hn el .
•
', _ __:_::::-- ---~~

------~-------------------------------------.--~----~--"··----•· •
· ·••--------------------

. is the answer
'.

-

·J

--~ ~

POMEROY

125 E. MAIN
I

..,

'

LOANS OF $5000 AND MORE - THE CITY lOAN COMPANY
'

or
ln .

hq,meowners
surence, we will d~~~~
pollci ,to fit

Stenerud's 4 FG

Gl Ga
63 165 119

W. L. T. Pt•.
7

welcome.
The resul Is of the Meigs·
Wahama mateh:
M-W
1()()' lbs. class - Mike
Harrison (M, 5-11 ) won
6-0
by forfeit
107 lb . .class - Jess
Musser (M, J.l)
12-11
pinned Yonker (W )
114 lb. class - Robbie
Harris (M 5-0)
16-0
pinned Buzzard ( W)
121 lb. class - Kenny·
Moore (M, 2-3) ·
24-11
pinned Wolfe (W)
128 lb. class - Hesson
( W) decisioned Roger
Hysell, (M, 0-1)
24-3
134 lb. class - Van

LOFTUS DIES

'

TQ.madoe~e

Unit111d PrP.U lnt,.rnatinnAI

Boston . 28 12
Nova Scotia
22 14
Springfield
18 14
Providence
16 22
Rochester
16 24

all picked up wins to remain
unbeaten in five outings this
year. Harrison has won his five
by two pins, two forfeits, and a
decision; Harrison tiy four pins
and a decision; Harris by four
pins and a decision, and
Thomas by three pins, a forfeit,
and a deCision.
Other Marauders picking up
wins against the Falcons were
Jeff Musser and Kenny Moore,
both by pins.
The next meet for the
Matauders will be here against
the Pt. Pleasant Big Blacks on
Feb. 2 at I :45 p.m before the
high school student body. The
public , of course, also is

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Marauder wrestling
squad dropped another contest
that went undecided to the last
match here Saturday night to
the Wahama White Falcons, 3630.
Coach Fenton Taylor's
grapphers, who are now 1-4 on
the year, hav'e had their last
two matches go to the wire and
come up short. To prove the
improvement
of
·the
Marauders, they were defeated
by the same Wahama squad 4120 earlier in the season.
Mike Harrison, 100 lb. class;
Robbie Harris, 11.4 lb. class,
and John Thomas, !57 lb. class,

1HE BROTHERS LEHEW - John, right, a sophomore,
and Ted, a senior, await tbeir turn Satutday in the MarauderWahama matches at Meigs Hlgh. Th~)' are t.be sons of Mr.
and Mrs: William Lehew, Pomeroy. Ted toils in the 167 lb.
class, .fohn in the 177lb. division.

'

�'

'
,_,

'

.

._,

2.- The O.Uj Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 24,1972

/

~----~--------------~
c.mstmttwe Lelten II Os I t-, Ia , ... ....., .,. ..

Saturd~y

· tern Dumps Symmes Vailey, 66-62,

welcomed!ne ecUw.- reterVetllle rtplt. ••~e~t~n. ~
All lelterl QJul be llpecl, wllll I 'f ill I 'S IM, rftr. . ,:
bdllllil may be ared UJIOII reqaell.
;,
'

•

Club Takes OVer
.Second Place in SVAC

Angels with Long Hair · "
ANGWWITHWNGHAIR
St. Peter stood at' the golden gate, ·
With records in hand, all up to date
To check the deeds of every man
Who enter in the Hply Land.

-~

•'

' .'.i

·'

.~·

The trumpet sound,ed loud and clesr
To teD the world, judgment was bere.
The long haired angels sang a song,
For this day, .they had walled long.

••
...

.

St. Peter said, "Stand in line and walt your tum,
' I'll teD you wbowillenter,andwbo'llburn. ·

••n

..••

·~

There were many great men standing there
Each with long and curly hair.

ENVIRONMENTAL MATH - Homemade instrUments suitable for use"by fifth and sixth
·graders to measure height, angles, circumference, and distance were explained by Doyt
Larrimore, Columbus.teacher, at the Resident Outdoor Education Workshop held Saturday at
· the Bradbury School. Shown as they worked with the instruments in the field back of the school
in a drizzling rain are, left to right, Larrimore, Mrs. Greta Suttle, Meigs School supervisor,
Mrs. Marjorie Goett, Bradlxlry teacher, John F. Underwood, Jackson area extension agent,
and Mrs. Marjorie Laske, Jackson educator.
·
.
·

. SOIL, ROCK FORMATIONS, trees and plants were studied by the workshop group in a
field across from the Bradbury school. Chris Shields, geologist and educator, teft 1 discussed a
plant With Glenna LeGrand, third grade teacher at Jackson, center, and Sally Hayes, Jackson
reading enrichment teacher.
·

•
COngresS Natlon

"•

Peter opened up the book,

..•

J

...

With not a verv happy look.
"l'rn sorry, friends, you can't come in

.,. , .

With hair so long and whiskers on your chin."
relating her comments to the
. Bradbi!I'Y area . Working in the
fields across the road from the ·
Bradbury school, the educators
studied soil, rock formations,
trees · and p!ants. · They
discussed water · levels and
vocations open to young people
interested in environment
improvement.
Kathy Logan, a Worthington
teacher, dealt with creative
awareness through art, music

------'---_..:.___ _.:....___ ·Outdoor
h
.
k.
Budget Given Wor S op
·
(Continued (rom page I)
instnunents.
Chris Shields, Columbus
geologist and educator, condueled a workshop on natural
history and economics,

Honest Abe, George Washington, William Penn, ·
And also lots of Holy Men,
Matthew, Mark, Luke, John and Moaes,
Wlth .hair so long and cheeks like roses. ·

~

'

and drama. Highlighting her

The workahop served' as a

session was a "sing" with. follow-up to a program which

accompanilpent on a tenor
banjo.
The 18 educators attending
the workshop were welcomed
by George Hargraves, Sr.,
superintendent of the Meigs
Local
School
District.
Teachers at Bradbury hosted
the meeting and served coffee
and cookies. following a sack
lunch at noon.

"·-'

You know the rule we've made up here,
Your hair must be above the ear.
TheY. all were sad and began to shout,
"St. Peter! We don'tknowwhat you're talking about!"

Bradbury carri~d out .last
spring. The students spent
three days at Canter's Cave
near Jackson. A similar
program Is planned, for this'
spring.
A discussion on experiences
of the outdoor program by the
Bradbury group and an ex·
change of ideas and
information on ways of improving the one to be offered
this year concluded the
workahop.
Meigs participants in the
workshop were Mrs. Phyllis
Hackett, Mrs. Betty Full2, Don
Hanning, Mrs. Marjorie Goett,
Mrs. Maxine Philson . of the
Bradbury Sch09l; Mrs. Nonga
_ Roberts, Pomeroy Elementary
.School; Miss ~olyri Smith,
Chester Elementary School;
Mrs. Greta Suttle and Mrs.
Nellie Vale, Meigs County
School supervisors.

..

•

. Far back in line, boys from Meigs Hi ·-·
Waited their ·turn, with a heavy sigh
They whispered in a voice very low, ·
"They are as strict up here as they were below.''

·"
w

'"

They knew if men of which they'd teamed
Had a chance of being burned
·
There was no use for them to walt,
For they surely couldn't enter in the gate.

(Continued from Page I)
' the second largest since
billion.
Congress to respect the full- World War II. 11 estimates the
"
for the current fiscal
employment spending deficit
year at $38.8 · billion. The
Then a voice so loud and clear,
guideline Ibis year," he !!ald. President originally estiry~ated
Echoed out for aU to hear,
There was a veiled hint that If that deficit at S11.6 billion, but
"St. Peter! Step aside and let them in
economy's !allure to
· Congress votes increases in the
rebound tram the slump of
I, too, have longhair and whishersonmychin."
spending, Nixon would 1970-71 resulted in a sharp
chaUenge the lawmakers to dawn-turn in government ta)(
So I say to aU teachers, If you want to get in,
couple them with a boost in collections.
Marianne B. Campbell of :Public Affairs Coinmittee of
Then
grow long hair on your hesd and chinny chin chin.
taxes.
Source of Revenue: 38 per Gallipolis, an executive with a the Cbamlier of Commerce of
There won't be any scissors when you get up tht!re,
cent of government revenues Cincinnati broadcasting firm, the United Staies, Past
. Upgrading Requested
come from Income taXes
So you may as weD get used to seeing long hair.
Nixon asked the lawmakers will
paid by Individuals, 14'per cent bas been appoinled to the Presideqt of the Association of
(Nillle Wilhbeldaa Reqaat ~
to autborize the pentagon to from cor~orafe Income faxes , newly created position of Vice Broadcasters ~nd the Ohio
bejlln a time-consuming 26 oer cent from Socia I President of Development, Federation of Business and
Security
taxes. 10 ~ per
process of · upgrading the cent
Hair Not the Issue
Holzer Medical Center in Professional Women's Clubs.
from
borrow~
nation's nuclear force, lngs, 7 .per cent from Gallipolis.
She was the first and only
"·
providing more modern flhlps exctse taxes and 5 per cent
Worthington,
Ohio
4301111
John W. Rafferty, executive woman director of the.Nalional
• REcaul'r SIGNED
for the Na./y and generally from other sources. mcluding . vice-president, Holzer Hospital Association -of ·Broadcasters,
' •
.
I ' •
"!'11Jill11lirY 21; 18'/t
MORGANTOWN,
W. Va.
tariffs and estate and gift
boosting research
and faxes .
The length of hair is, of course, an lrrelevant.lsaue. llulve ~
Foundation, said Mrs. Camp- and the first woman' appointed
(UP!) - West Virginia
development.
bell will assume her duties to the Radio Code Board. In
University signed its 14th had students with long hair who were excellent lludentl and ,
He asked that the Iiefense · Philosophy: Nixon says the February 14.
1971
she
received
the
Out.
recruit when · Emil Rose, a conversely, some others with long hair who were poor lludenll. 1
.
· large del/cit "Is strong but
Depart ment be pernutted
For the .past five years she standing Achievement Awar~
to necessary medicine" to stlmusoccer-style kicker on the have seen Uttle.correlation between bair length and ed11C1tlonal .:
obligate $81.7 billion in the late the economy. "We take bas been Director of Com- from the Ladies Auxiliary of
·
1
Steubenville (Ohio) Central standards.
coming fiscal year, $6.3 billion that medicine because we need munity Affairs for the Avco the Veterans of F1lreign Wars,
I would instead like to bring up a new point in the illlue. 1 :
Catholic football team, acmore than during the current it. not because we like it," he Bradcasting Corporation in
at their National Convention in
says. " As our economy suecepted an athletic granl,ilwlld. quote from the best seDer "Future Shock" by Tl!lfler: ".. .a ·
year.
cessfully
combats
un· Cincinnati. Before joing Avco Dallas.
The left-loot kicker, who was response to future shock Is obsessive reveralon •to pnvloualy
Nixon noted that Congress employment, we
in 1967, she was general
Mrs . Campbell and her
born in Czechoslovakia, was successful adaptl':S routines that are now lrrelev8nt and tnap. t.
cut his defense budget in each will
stop
taking
the manager of WJEH-AM-FM, husband, Bill C. Campbell,
named UPI's Ohio "kicker of projrlate. The ReVersionist stlcka to his prevloualy PfOIIl'ammed '.
medicine well before we
of the Iast two years. He urged become addicted to it."
Gallipolis 17 years, after reside on the Lower River
the year" and placed on the decisions and habits with dogmatic desparatlon, The more ;
the lawmakers not to do it
putting the station on the air in Road in Gallipolis.
MARIANNE CAMPBELL
UPI All-state Class M first change threatens from without, the more melicti!ou.ly he
Debt: The budget anticipates 1950.
again.
team hist season.
$37 .4 billion increase in the
repeats past modes of action. The social outlook Ia iegr rive.
But Nixon also stressed that aNational
In her· new position she is
Debt, pushing if to
Shocked
by the arrival of the future, he offers byllerlcaJIUPPort
the portion of the total budget S493.2 bllllon- 30 per cent responsible to the Executive
for the notof!O-tlatus quo, or he demands, in one roaMed form or
taken by defense continues to higher than 1970.
Vice President of Holzer
another, a return to the glories of yesteryear,"
shrink.
Taxes: The budget calls tor Hospital Foundation for long
H!IIDBD Resources Speodlog no major new tax Increases or range planning in publlc
. Thus, perhaps, an explanation of our over-reaction to an
ISSue so minor as length of hajr. .
"Human resources spending tax cuts, except tor Social relations, working directly
Security taxes. It proposes that
will be 45 per cent of the 1973 the
SlnCIIl'I!Iy )'Ollfl,
Social Security tax , now with the media, and the
BY JACK O'BRlAN
Howard on the interview-tape ... Mrs. Hal
budget,
while
defense scheduled to rise on Jan . 1, development of volunteer
Unda Crow Beegle
BING HAS A
LeRoy, wife of the great old vaudevllle«:reen
programs will be 32 per cent. 1973, to 5.65 per cent for each services within the complex.
CONSTANT REMINDER
hoofer, goes back In for serious surgery ... The
Our policy of ending our in- worker and his employer, be
Holzer Hospital came into
kept af Its present rate of 5.2
NEW YORK (KFS) - Bing Crosby's been New Yorker mag's readying another piece on
volvement in the VIetnam War per cent. But he wants the tax existence in 1910, founded by
.
bas helped make Ibis posJible levied on the first Si0,200 of a Dr. Charles E. Holzer, utilizing named 1972 Nat'l chairman of the Arthritis Dick Cavett.
I
worker's
earnings
Instead
of
· by freeing resources to keep us ·
Foundation lor a simple, painful reason: Bing , The New Yorker seems to have emerged
first 59,000, the figure now a remodeled residence to serve
strong externally as well as the
fr~m a decades-long humorless monotony, fine
In law. He aIso proposes to the people in Gallipolis and (like 17 million in the U. S.) bas arthritis ... Bea
internally.''
eliminate the month S5.60 fee surrounding communities. The Lillie won't do any more stage shows: can't be bnght pieces and profiles of the sort that made
Since Nixon took office three people over age 65 now pay lor first of many building bothered learning lines ... Sammy Davis bought it a penthouse word for decades ... The ·masterly
years ago, general taxes have supplemental medical in- programs started In 1917, a new mink coat- lined also in mink ... Would Brendan Gill piece on Cole Porter set the new
: suurance under Medi cc;~re. if
By Helen Bottel
been cut twice, more than 'they want it.
continuing until1960 when a 194 you believe it? Lionel Hampton entertained at a stylish tone; and the ourrent Kenneth Tynan
I
offsetting the continued climb
bed capacity was reached. The benefit in Queens - against the controversial Boswellish trailing-after his Johnson fine
in the payroU tax lor Social
HOW TO BEAT THE BAND
Defense: One of the few Holzer Medical Center, Forest Hills low-income housing.
. Scottish actor Nicol Williamson, is a flamboyant
Security.
Dear
Helen:
areas where Nixon calls for a planned since 1964, is
Now they're hanging all those dumb ethnic case in potnt ... Tynan's ego is more in evidence
Since 1969, the federal budget substantial
Increase
in scheduled to open new hospital jokes on actors: such as the actor who decided than Williamson's herein somewhat put-down
. After the last of our three children was hom my huaba d ,.
spending
is
in
the
has been unified to show both defense
started playing ina bandon weekends, partly as a'hobby, part~ :
budget. He seeks and clinic facilities , three
general programs and pro- a S6.3 · billion Increase miles west of Gallipolis in to commit suicide, jumped off the Empire State personality in the portside gospel according to becalllle we needed the extra money.
: ,
Bldg. - and got loSt ... Sign of the Dove is the . Tynan; and Tynan's Freudian slaps at
grams like Social Security over the $75.4billion autnorozea April. It will bave a
bed
265
When ~last chUd started to school, we made a deal.! would
latest chic East Side spot to holler panic ... Top Williamson in the guise of reporting plus his
.
which are financed from trust this year. but only $900 million
of the new money would capacity. The present Holzer executive investigator will be querie&lt;l about a unwitting chul2pah in admitting he horned ill on go back toworkparttimeandhe wouldquittheband. At first thl8 , '
funds. Since the trust funds a_stually be spent in the current . medical facilities will service
,
N. Y. City housing case.
the trip and tried to get Nicol to take a polltlcal worked fine -he was tired of playing anyway,
traditionally operate · at a fiscal year. The rest would be long term care palients
A year later the. good ole band players flhowed up IIIIBin ;
World's Greatest Jazz Band (headed by swat at Pres. Nixon during Williamson's
C
tl
·
surplus, the unified budget authomed lor use In future
years.
urren Y Mrs. Campbell is Yank Lawson and Bobby Haggart) was sold by . triumphant White House 'Oile-man-(]azzle (he claiming they lust couldn't get along without him So for a ~
tends to mask at lesst some of
serving as National President its Denver financier Bob Gilson (made millions falled) gives the piece a second level of webothworked.You'dthinkwewoutdfaveaaved'money but :
the deficit in the general • Science: The budQet outs
of American Women in Radio with the water pic) to John Barker Hickocks, 40- fascination.
just blew it, and went deeper in debt for bigger Clll'l artt bet we ·
new ·emphasis on spendprograms.
and
Television.
She
is
iming
for science
ap~llances
willch weren't really needed.
·ter
ExCluding the trust fund and technology " lri the
.'
Victor Borge's · "My Favorite Inmediate past member of the yesrlilld Arizonian big in Chi,, banking (Nat'!
This_BlmiJier I took a fuU-tline job and thought
sure my ,
surpluses, the budget deficit ~rvlce of man ." APpropriaCity Bank of Chi.) for $350,000; Gibson probably termlssions" is a best-seDer Indeed: 5th prinLr 1972 would be $44.7 billion trons here would total S17.8
husband
would
quit
the
~d,
since
:we
can
get
along
witboat
the .
broke even at best... Those garish pimp-suits on ling, 60,000 copies. Why Loqlse Lasser and
JEANS MAKE IT
billion,
a
$1.4
b
illion
Increase,
and for 1973 would be $36.2
Jeans, which are becoming the insolently proud whore-mongers around Woody Allen are so happily divorcee\: Louise ext;ra Income. But now he talks of a nicer home a bOat et I ;
but not all of it fo be actually
billion.
spent in fi scal 1973.
accepted dress for almost Times Square cost up to $700 each ; plus the says one night in bed Woody nudged her to say · don't really want them as much as I want a one-job h~ ~~ ·
an .v whcre, now come in agonies of uncounted young kids ... Hop.- our he'd heard a noise downstairs _ and sent her tired of sitting home alone·every Friday 'and Saturday night· and '
Pretty shades of pink and
lt'sworsetogoandsltwith the band wives," exchangmg recipm,
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - A
blue with matehlng jackets. Ldng Island paper (The Pl:ess) gets the scoop on down to investigate. Charlie Chaplin brushed off
summary of President Nixon's
.
the FBI•investlgatlon of $99,000 allegedly , llhy artistic delight in having 11 of his old flicks ~federal budget for fiscal 1973,
POMEROY
LANES
I'm also tired of working and trying to lieep up a hom that
which starts next July 1.
delivered by a pol to an elected offlciBf
· ·revived : "It'slhe money," be said. "I juat like
January 5, 1972
·
e
. we aren't in enough to enjoy.
Winebrenner
194.
High
Series
Early Wednesday Mixed
Bob Mitchum's "Wrath of God" standin money!" ... Chaplin's8011S~eysaldonTVhts
Income: The budget est/.
- Dick Dugan 562 and Linda
I'd feel Uke an ogre asking my husband to quit the bind for
Pis Winebrenner 531 , Team High during Mexican filming was Trinidad VIlla, son pop had maybe f20 million in old bullion
mates government receipts In Smith-Nelson Motors
14
even though he gripes, he enjoys playing, However I keep ooPtn
fiscal 1973 at S220.8 billion, a
and Series - Racine of P~ncho ... Mkhael Caine gets the ·~Sleuth" stashed In Swlsa vaults.
g
Soh/a
1i Game
S23 billion Increase over fiscal Otler's
Food
Market
682
and
1971
.
Sport Shop
8
movie rol~; we Wish him nolfling better than to
Otto Preminger'li. delighted with his Dyan thatklnglfI make enoll(lh money, be,wlll. Which 11
1 don't ~~ ,
1972 estimates, continQenl on Zide's
w~
.
e
Young's Market
6
he.as brilliant as Anthony Quayle in the Bdwy. , Cannon feud over his. "Such Good Fii nds"
an expected revitalization Nelson's Drug
6
of the
economy.
The Tenth Framers
origi~al ... Everything Is reversed tpday: He's disappointed sbe. doesn't do
of 'It WIDO"; do we break out of \Ills vtcloua circle? _ WE~
3
Early Bird League
ligure
would
be
S6 9.
High Ind. Game - Speed
January 19,1972
there s even a hustle on to make a "national publicly, wbere the .picture would belieflt
blltlon hlghet were . it n~t Russel/246 : High Ind. Game Dear W.W.:
.
'
..
Pis
lor the tax cut. Nixon proposed Sonja Wayland 193. High Series' D. G. Plnnettes
32 hero~· of H: Rap Brown, jailed on~ helst.asaault David Frost didn't let Yoko Ono'a cheap llttl~
and Congress enacted In 1971 to - Speed Russell 588 and Evelyn's Grocery
I don't think a wife (or husband) flhould EVERaalta mate lo
22 rap mvolvmg his own people ... Deep thanka, nastlneaa (let . by on his TV-klatch H ·
sllm~latethe economy.
Isabelle Cooch 516. Team High Rawlings Dodge
14 Dick Doudna of WAMR, Venici, Fla. (reads us genllelnanly enllllflh not to say lhe ~·~= give up the Job he enjoys, Preclouafewpeopteevenflnd IUch III
Game ,and Series - Smith- King Builders
14
ol
Outgo: The budget antici- Nelson Motors 7JO and 2042 .
Meigs Mobile Homes
8 _m the Sarasota Journal), for sending along a invltedtotallionTVlflhehadn'twed Beetle -and they have the rlcht to savor them, IVIID lhoup tbe
pates federal expenditures of
.the
famllyiJIUitadJuat
to
•lbDewlwtamniChedale
Larry's Ashland
6 tape of Gershwin's almost-lost "Walklng the Yoko broU(Iht 11011(1 an upetale Indianaeltlef ~
' $246.3 billion, an increase of
T•.am Hlah Game - D G. Dog Music" f~om "Sball We Dance,'' circa 1936; add to her . ranlilip _ and couldR't even da ~ adjuat? Stop thlnldnt that "we 11 •Idl" .,. btlllll1
SU bllt/on or 4.1 r,r cent. This
Pinnelles
827, · Evelyn's
Increase Is abou equal to the
ya o
WICk. If ' " flO back to put-time WWII W W .
She
• Early Sunday Mixed
Grocery. 810, D. G. Pinnettes Dick taped 11 off an old Andre Kostelanetz remember hll1 tribe (Onondap)
amount · of Inflation the
January 9, 1972
800.
gain IIIClU8b enqy 10 tMt )'OU llld the flllllly
~
Columbia Records 78 RPM "and if Bob Grimes, Irked because she 11ebl atteaiiGn "'
administration expect. this
Team High Series - D. G.
Pis
daya
llld
JQU and )'0111' hUiband Cli ... dlmen aat, . , .•
ve•r.
sa
in
non -ln- Tom's Carry .Ou't
14 Pinnettes 2410, Evelyn's ;ho wrote you fir5t •.~ut It, wanb) a tape I'D Lennonlzlns, but archltect-lnven:r R. Buell· etc, on the. other live mtOCeupled Dlcbta 11_..., ...._._ •
1/atlonary
terms
Nixon Racine Food Market
14 Grocery 2326, Rawlings Dodge
ub one ~or ?im, too.
.
minister Fuller was canclldlf dellgltllld lhatltla
foresees no real increase In Eagles Club
Satutdap lll'e the lrorat pollllile ' Umee. · - · ··-·llld
14 2244.
Fascmatmg
symposium
notion:
have
all
of
.
philosophizing
now 11 harllened to an1y becll
19 back lit' crowdl.
Forest Run Block
IP'!"dlng·. '
.·
Knock .... that .......... d
· Ind. . High Game, - Mary
4
uu
"-en
aYIJHirolne
"111d
'"'"'llltap
"-ft
,Howard
H~hes'
old
girl
friends
from
Billi
e
he
became
a
world
fl(lure
1f1er
inYIII
:
·
F~rmer's Ba'nk
'
2·' Voss, 221 , 2ps, 203.
1
the band.
•
,vv
. Deficit: The budget forecasts Roseberry's Sohlo .
,Ind. High Series - Mary Dove ~J!ell s Angels) through Katharine geodesic dome, without which "I wvuldn~t be
0
I deficit In flsta/ 1973 of 125.5
High Ind. Game - Chuck Voss 629. Maxine Dugan 471 ,
. "' And, QIOOIIIS )'0111' blllbew! lmon )'OU . . _ , lpbrt bll
Hepburn to Lana TU:ner and Ava ·Gardner very well known "headmilted'APia '-·
Wlne~renner 196 and Linda
Elaine Spires 470.
1- 1 mag. IJIIYinl-hobiJy, be DIIYIIGp llllni tt~Wwd mi'PI' 1111
poll«~ for their opinion whether that really was
· '
.1"
to keep __IL- H.
·
r
I

Mrs. C8mpbell is Accepthig
Post with Medical Center

i

r --------------~
~---------1

!Helen Help

Usl

I

I

fill'

l..ocal Bowling

·-

wb,-·

mor:

·

,e!

0:

c.:

from'::

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=

ra••-

1

I

•

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'

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'

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...

Coa\)b B.W Piillllp~' Eastern Eagles rallled from a 31-28 halftlroe ~licit at Synunes Valley Saturday night to hand the host
Vlkjnga a 118-62 Soull!em Valley Athletic. Conference setback.
'J'be triumph: kep( the Meigs . 51 Jict. Tile Vikings bad 49 , ·
COIUltians' title hopes alive, rebounds. Keith Roach was
and knocked the Vikings out of high With 19 snags for the
undisputed second place.
• losers.
·
The. Eagles are now in
Scoring honors went to
secorid, .all alone, with a 7-2 . Eichinger, who pumped in 26
mark lll!d. 9-2 overall.
points. Bob CaljlweU finished
The Vikings of Coach Wayne with 14 for the winners.
White suffered their their
Danny Wilson, also an AUstraight setback after recot- Ohio candidate in Class A
ding eight wins in a row. Inside circles paced the losers with 24
the SVAC, the VIkings dropped points.'
to ·thlrd ~t 6-2 mark..
The Vikings will play HanNorth Gallla, the undisputed nan Trace at M~rcervllle
leader, leads 'the pack with an Tuesday. The Eagles' Will hoilt
6-1 mark with three gaines Miller Friday and Federalremaining against league Hocking Sat)lriii!Y in •apair of
competition.
none-league games,
,.
Randy Youn'g's two free
In the prelimina.-y game, the
throws with two se~onds . Little Vikings upset the
remaining iced Saturday previously unbeaten Eastem
nlgltt's victory for the Eagles. reserves, 47-41. Jaye Myers led
Srmmes VaUey was on top 14- the winners' attack with 13.
11 after one perlod 1 The Sheets had 14 for the Little
Vlkinp held a 31-27 halftime Eagles, whp still remain in
lead.
first place with an 6-1 marl\.
The Eagles stormed back to The Little Vikings are now ii-3
outscore the Vikings 38-31 in in league play.
the final half. Eastern led 49-44
·Box score of the varsity
lifter three periods of play. · game:
The Eagles hit 28 of 65 field
EASTERN (661- Eichinger
goal attempts for 41 pet. From 13-0-26 ; Caldwell 6-2-14: Duval
• cles, "--tern -~ot a 0-2-2 ; Boring 3-2-8; Young 4-2the four Clr
"""'
.,,
10; Mil/hone 1-0-2 ; Sheets 1-2-4;
cool47.6 pet., sinking 10 of 21. TOTALS 28-10-66.
The E gl hauled down 51
SYMMES VALLEY 1621 · a es
Wilson 9-6-24; Roach 5-4-14;
rebounds, 28 by All-State Taylor 3-1-7; Myers 3-3-9: P. l
candidate Dennis Eichinger. Robinson 3-2-8: TOTALS 23-16TheVikingshit23of84for35 62BY QUARTERS:
pet. from the field. The home Easterh
11 17 21 17- &lt;16
clubhadapoornightattheloul s. Valley
14 17 1318-62
circles, sinking only 16 of 31 for
Reserves - S. Valley 47
Eastern 41

Sports

Ted Lehew, right, was pinned later by Tim
John Thomas. on top, 157 lbs. Class, is pinning
Drake.
' Tom Samsel,

Falcon Wrestlers Edge Meigs

Ro~dup

By United l'retlll lnleiuatlooal

. P!'rrSBURGH (UPI) --Infielder Jose Pagan and southpaw
pttCber·Luke Walker have signed their 1972 contracts with the
world champion PI\IBburgb ~!,!rates. Pagan, 38, batted .241 in 57
~last season, lhlaslng the final two months of the campaign
becalllle Of a broken arm, while Walker posted a 1().8record.
. r.a'l' r· ~ ' r« '• · 2!!!f!J1o•l - ,~~oRK ~l,JPI) -Bob Lanier of the Detroit Pistons beat
Pete Maravlcll of the Atlanta Hawks ~16 in a first round match
in tiHi National Basketball As80clstion's one-on~ne · charnpionablp and will next meet the winner of the Paul Silas-Lee
Winfield match. The taped hlgh!igllts of the Lanier-Maravlch
contest were seen Sunday at halftime of the ABC-TV nationally
televised same between New York and Seattle.

-

PlnLADEIPHIA (UPI)- Quarterback Roger Staubach, who
Dallaa Cowboys to their first Super Bowl championship, -"d Ed Marinaro, Cornell's record-shattering runner,
will be honored tonight by the Maxwell Football Club.

gul~ ·the

GUADALAJARA, Mexico (UP!) -The United States used a
goal by John carenza Sunday to gain a 1-1 tie with Mexico lh itS
Olympic IIClccer qualifying match.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!)- Sharif Khan, a professional from
Toronto, defeated Victor Nlederhoffer, an amal(ur from New
York, ~Yin the finals of the North American Open Singles
Squash cllaUwlonshlps.
'

'

-

FREEPORT, Bahamas (UP!)-Top seeded Jose Hlgueras of
Spain won the Lucayan Towers International Junior Tennis title
Sunday with an 8-6, 6-4 eash victory over .. countryman Jose
Moreno.

· By United Presslnternatlon.,
East
w I t pts gl 81
Boston
31 7 8 70 186 102
NewYork 30 8 7 67 203 103
Montreal 26 12 8.60 177 127
Toronto .•. 20 17 10 50 129 12t
Uetrott
1U :.tU 1 41 14/ l~l
Vancouver 13 26 5 31 112 150
Buffalo
10 27 11 31 127 182
. West
· wltptsgfga
Chicago 31 10· 5 67 152 85
Mlnn
25 15 7 57 •124 100
Calif
IS 15 10· 40 142 190
St.Louis 16 24 ·7 3'1 133 155
Phi/a .
13 24 8 34 107 144
Plltsbgh . 12 26 9 33 112 150
LosAngeles
12 33 4 28 109 193
Sunday's"Rtsults
Boston 3 Bflo.. 3
Chlcagq 4 Tilronfu 0
Montreal 3 Plltsbg 3
Detrolt 3 $1.l;.ouls 1
. Mlnn '5 Lo~ Ang~les a
eaut J Ph !Ia '1
,
Ionly pmtSschOKiuledl
MQnday's Games
(none I
RECORDS SET
COLUMBUS (UP!) -'three
new Oblo Stale field bouse
recorda. 1 were
set at the U. s.
•t
Traclt 11111, 1\'!eld Federation's
Ml~t meet whlC\1 attracted
more than 1 000 albletes here
'
Saturday. Marks were sert by
Miami's Scott Wallack, who
. cleared 16 feet, 4 lncbes In the
pole vault; Jessie Stewart of
the Western Kentucky Track
Club, who tossed .the shot 62
feet, 10\1 inChes; and Homer.
Hoffm1n of Mid-Tennessee,
wlio won ·the 600 in 1: 12.
'
'

'

-RAGGEDY
ANN
I
,
Tlie Raggedy Ann dol!
rage has caught on in fash·
ioit. A bounCy red and white
long gingham checked dress
with a white . apron on top
.. giws 1/(111 the look of Raggedy' Ann, the long-time doll
taiiOTite.

'

· RACINE ~"'fhe Sout~e;'ri
Local Tornadoes won their
fourth straight game here
Saturday night, an e~sy 75-46
affair, ov.er their · Southern
Valley Conference foe Southwestern Highlanders.
The Tornadoes were unexpectedly hard-pressed in the
·first quarter by the winless
Highlanders who are plainly in
an off-year. Southern was on
top by only four, 19-15, after
one period. The Tornadoes,
however, poured on the coal in
the second eight minutes,
outscoring the Highlanders, 2().
7, to talle a 39-22 lead that was
never threatened . , .
Coach Asa Bradbury's
Tornadoes are 7-4i overall and
¥4 in league play. They have
come far since losilig their first
three games on the Sl)ason.
Of three of their five
losses, one was by one

AHL Standings

.

Wod

Meter (W) pinned Alan
McLaughlin (M, 1-4)
24-9
140 lb. class - Morgan
(W) pinned Jim Mash
(M, ().2)
.
24-15
145 lb. class - McFarland
( W) pinned Terry ,
Plckens,(M.~)
24-21
157 lb. class - John
Thomas (M, 5-0)
pinned Samsel (W)
30-21
167 lb. class - Drake
(W) pinned Ted Lehew
(M, 0-3-2)
30-27
177 lb. class - Machir
(W ) pinned John Lehew
(M, 0-5)

30-33

Unlimited class - Morris
( W) decisioned Mike .
Haley (M, 0-2)
30-36

CONo:JRD, M.ass. (UPf.) Services were to be held today
for Richard J. Loftus, 70,
major and minor baseball
player who retired in 1940 with
a combined lifetime batting
average of .300.
Loftus, who died Friday,
played three seasons with the
Cincinnati Redlegs and two
with the Brooklyn Dodgers in
the 1920s, and then played
another 16 years in tbe minors.

WW FQp~h. Straigl,t,'

point, another by five; and the
third by only six. Coach
RIchard Ham i Ito n 's
Highlanders continued to have
their problems and are now 012 overall and 0-9 in SVAC
action.
Bruce Hart led the Tor·
nadoes in scoring with 20
points. Nick ' !hie added 14
points and led Southern with 15
rebounds. Jerry Hubbard and
Stan Kiser contributed II and
nine respectively. Jim Hubbard, Southern's leading
scorer, was ·off the entire night
and collected but three 'poin!B.
Phil Lewis led the
Highlanders wjth 15 and K.Vin
Walker hit 10.
•
The scrappy and quick
Tornadoes had 40 rebounds
overalL The winners also shot
37 pet. from the field, making
29 of 70. The Tornadoes cashed
in 17 of 31 from the foul line lpr
55 pet. while Southwestern

coul&lt;t oniy'\lrop in''six of 20'16~ a
dismal 30 pet.
The little Tornadoes,
coached by Duane Wolfe ,
evened their overall record at
6-li with a 71-39 thrashing of the
Southwestern reserves,
The Tornadoes will bave
their fourth straight home
game this Tuesday against the
Kyger Creek Bobcats In &amp;
AVAC tilt. Southern won the
first meeting, 60-41, at Kyger
Creek in Southern's initial
victory of the season. This
Friday the Tornadoes are idle,
but play the foUowing night at
Glouster in a non-league affair
with the Tomcats.
SOUTHWESTERN (46) Trowbridge 3-2-8, Dillon 3-1-7,
Lewis 7-1·15, Whitt 2-l-4i, Wood
0-1-1, Walker 5-0-10. Totals 20-646.
• SOUTHERN (75) - Jim
Hubbard. 1·1-3, Bruce Hart 9-220, Jerry Hubbard 4-3-11, Brett

Hart 1-G-2, N. Ihle li-4-14, fl. Hill
346, Jenkins 1).2-2, Kiser 2-5-9,
Holman 2-0-4, Mike Nease 2-0-4.
Totals 29-17-75 .
BY QUARTERS .
Southwestern 15 7 8 16-48
Southern
19 20 i2 24--75

tl
. INSURE .wlll.• - .•
A'pi)

I . II

For the shine and sparkle
that looks so good on your
hair, wash· your hair as usual
then give yoursell a vinegar
rinse.

Whether you .
euto,
life

PAY CABLE

TV BIUS AT
··· ·JIMMIE!S ,".
Pastry Shop
' -'"

"

383 N. Second Ave.

a

lndlv.ldiUII• .

•.

requlrttments
Dl~uss your sp~tdflcl
needs with us.

Davis Wamei' l~a.

Middleport
992-3555
Authoriled Agent

10 54 173 133

114

Yes ... we can supply

$5
... and more!

10 46 153 124
9

41 152 174

Lead

6 38 137 190

W. L. T. Pis. Gl
Baltimore
22 17 6 so 140
Hershey 21 14 6 48 ]55
Cincinnati
19 20 9 47 172
Cleveland
19 20 6 44 158
Richmond
17 21 7 41 134
Tidewater
10 30 4 24 118
Sunday's Result.
Ball/more 2 Cincinnati 1
Providence 7 Tl!lewater 5
Cleveland ,3 Richmond 2
Rochester 9 Hershey 4
(Only games scheduled)
Mondly's Game
Nova Scotia at Bostori
lOlly game scheduled)

G•
134
126

J~ior

WS ANGELES (UP!) Place kickers ar~ people too.
185
Don't tell Jan Stenerud of the
Kmisas
City Chiefs he's a
161
robot. He kicked the American
132 Football Conference all,atats
117 into C9ntention Sunday in the
Pro Bowl and put them ahead
of the NFC 9-0 in the third
quarter. Up to that point, the
AFC had not scored a toUchdown but later tallied two to
win gobtg away -by a 26-13
score.
Mined Twice
Stenerud, 28, who learned to
k'lck
' soccer-style In' Oslo,
ABA Sllndtngs
United Press lnttrnatlon.ill
Norway, Where ·he was bom,
East
W. L. Pet. GB missed field goala from 38 and
2t yards In the first qulirter 39 10 .796
Kentucky
120 .6089 · through no fault of his own. The
VIrginia
24 27 .,471 16
N.WYork
first one was blocked by the
21 30 .412 19
Floridians
waving hands of Mike Lucci,
19 32 .373 21
Pitt. burgh
18 32 .360 21 1h linebacker from the Detroit
Carolina
Lions. On the secolld, Len
West
W. L. Pet. GB Dawson, the holder, said he let
33 18 .647
Utah
the bail faD bj' accident.
30 21 .588 3
Indiana
Dawson, 38, also a Kansas
21 28 ,'429 11
Denver
City
man, got ~e AFC's first
' 23 32 .4f8 12
Dol/as
21 30 .412 12
MemphiS ·
touchdown when he hit Cleveland's Milt Morin with a fiveSunday's Resulfl
yard toss at 10:15 in the· third
Kentucky 130 Utah 94
quartet:_. After Stenerud conPollas 113 India~• 110
Denver 130 Vlrgihla 123 .
verted, the AFC led 16-6 ..
New York 116 Floridians 105 · With jll8t nine seconds gone
(Onl~mes scheduled)
in the final period, Stenerud
d1y's Gimts
(Nanel
kicked his fourth field goal Ill
1

the afternoon --this one from
42 yards' -and the AFC ied 196.
Wlthlessthantwomlnutesto
play, Denver's Floyd Little ran
six yards for a TD and
Stenerud's conversion milde It
final, 26-13.
The NFC seemed to be the
favorite of the crowd of 53,647
ahd Roger Staubach, Dallas'
SUper Bowl bero, got a big
hand when he first came out.
The cheers turned · to boos
tater.
Staubachcompletedonlyone
pass out of the six be threw. His
·
total Output in the air was 14
yards gained. On the groUild,
he looked better. He .was the
leading rusher for the ' NFC
with 27 yards gained on four
scrambles.
Greg Landry of Detroit,
backup man for Staubach,
looked much better than the
former Navy star,. Landry
threw a pssa good ~or 50 yards
and . a touchdown to Minnesota's Bob Grim at S:4&lt;! in
the second quarter.
The . conversion attempt
failed . .The first try by Curt
Knight of Washington was good
but was nullified because the
NFC did not have enough men
on the line of scrimmage. He

Loop
tried again fl'om five yards
back but Smith got a hand on
the baD and deflected it.
Anyway, the NFC led &lt;MI
until Stenernd got cooklQg with a field goal of 25 yards, a
'23-yarder to tie ,it and the goahesd 46-yarder.
The NFC got a second TO at
7:27 of the fourth quarter with
the help of a· pass interference
call after Lucci intercepted a
Dawson pass.
~
"

The ..D;.ily ~tiriel · I

j
Are you pay ing out too large a share of your in co me
in monthly paym e r~t s? Wh en this happe ns. !here's not
enough left over for your own personal use-and
famil Y' fin ances beco me a real problem.
Here's a l ip. A large loa n can pay off th ose present
bal ances- and elimi nale those paym en ts. Yo ur one
'
loan paymenl
will probably be much less th an yo ur
com bined paymen ts te la/ now- and ·you' ll have the
exira spending money you need. To take ad vanlage
of thi s service sim ply c all for information. Th ere's no
obl igation. Your inqu i ry is al ways welco me here .

DEVOTED TO THE . J
·.
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CH.ESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Em . Ed .
ROBERT
HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Pub lis hed daHy excepl
Sot,urday by The Oh io valley
Puolishing

Court

4~69 .

St.,

COmpany ,

Pom e roy ,

111

Oh lo ,

Bus ine-ss Offi ce Phone

9'12-21 56, Ed itorial Phone 997.
2157 .
Second closs postage pa id a I
Pomeroy , Oh io .
Not ional advertis ing
t epresenlat lve Boltlnelll .
Gallagher, h"' C., 12 East 42nd
51.. New York City , New York .
Su~scr·lption ra1es: De,

992-2171-

li vered• by carr i er WhE-re
ava ilable so cents per week ;

. By Motor R.ou• e wh ere carrier ·
service not avail able ; One
month \1 .75. By mall in Ohio
and w. Va., One year tu .oo.
' s;~ months S7 .25. Three
moplhs .. .50. Suo sc r iption
p r l (~ Includes sunda y Trm••·
Sen hn el .
•
', _ __:_::::-- ---~~

------~-------------------------------------.--~----~--"··----•· •
· ·••--------------------

. is the answer
'.

-

·J

--~ ~

POMEROY

125 E. MAIN
I

..,

'

LOANS OF $5000 AND MORE - THE CITY lOAN COMPANY
'

or
ln .

hq,meowners
surence, we will d~~~~
pollci ,to fit

Stenerud's 4 FG

Gl Ga
63 165 119

W. L. T. Pt•.
7

welcome.
The resul Is of the Meigs·
Wahama mateh:
M-W
1()()' lbs. class - Mike
Harrison (M, 5-11 ) won
6-0
by forfeit
107 lb . .class - Jess
Musser (M, J.l)
12-11
pinned Yonker (W )
114 lb. class - Robbie
Harris (M 5-0)
16-0
pinned Buzzard ( W)
121 lb. class - Kenny·
Moore (M, 2-3) ·
24-11
pinned Wolfe (W)
128 lb. class - Hesson
( W) decisioned Roger
Hysell, (M, 0-1)
24-3
134 lb. class - Van

LOFTUS DIES

'

TQ.madoe~e

Unit111d PrP.U lnt,.rnatinnAI

Boston . 28 12
Nova Scotia
22 14
Springfield
18 14
Providence
16 22
Rochester
16 24

all picked up wins to remain
unbeaten in five outings this
year. Harrison has won his five
by two pins, two forfeits, and a
decision; Harrison tiy four pins
and a decision; Harris by four
pins and a decision, and
Thomas by three pins, a forfeit,
and a deCision.
Other Marauders picking up
wins against the Falcons were
Jeff Musser and Kenny Moore,
both by pins.
The next meet for the
Matauders will be here against
the Pt. Pleasant Big Blacks on
Feb. 2 at I :45 p.m before the
high school student body. The
public , of course, also is

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Marauder wrestling
squad dropped another contest
that went undecided to the last
match here Saturday night to
the Wahama White Falcons, 3630.
Coach Fenton Taylor's
grapphers, who are now 1-4 on
the year, hav'e had their last
two matches go to the wire and
come up short. To prove the
improvement
of
·the
Marauders, they were defeated
by the same Wahama squad 4120 earlier in the season.
Mike Harrison, 100 lb. class;
Robbie Harris, 11.4 lb. class,
and John Thomas, !57 lb. class,

1HE BROTHERS LEHEW - John, right, a sophomore,
and Ted, a senior, await tbeir turn Satutday in the MarauderWahama matches at Meigs Hlgh. Th~)' are t.be sons of Mr.
and Mrs: William Lehew, Pomeroy. Ted toils in the 167 lb.
class, .fohn in the 177lb. division.

'

�I.

4- Tbe De.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 24, 1972

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL RECORDS
ByMict.Americ•11
United f'rtsslnltrnotlonol
Conhr.nc•
Leal"' O.veroll
W· L W L
4 . 1 12 2
Toledo
3
I
7 7
Ohio Univ,

Uclans ·Just Roll Along
By Ualted Prell lllleniiiiGaal
UCLA continues to llland out

hardly added to its credentials
as the No·. 2 team In tbe

decision In 13 games when Rick
wl.llliims ICOCed 441 points for
iii the world of coUege country.
Iowa. The Hawkeyea played a
~etbaD like the Empire
UCLA went over the 1CJG. light defensive game throughSt!lte .ll\llldlng on a Kanaaa point mark for the nlntb Ume out and three Soutb Carolina
!l"alrle.
tbll - . scofed ;Its 14th players fouie!l out In tbe final
No. 1ranked UCLA,the five- straight victory tbiJ ee8aon and four mtnutes: Kevin Joyce bad
time def= NCAA cbam- stretched Its unbeaten string 23 points for South Csrcri!D..
plon, roU along with an euy over two seuons to 29 games.
Fordham (10-4) anapJ)ed
ltJB.t1 vi
over Denver HI!IIO' Bibby and Larry Far- Prlncetoo's.flve-pme wtmlng
Satlltday night wbUe three mer each scored 19 points for streak and banded tbe n&amp;era
· "pretenders" to the national UCLA.
their first loss at home In more
lille were upael.
Duke ended North .Carolina's than a year, when George
While UCLA was making lG-«ame ~ streak when Zambelli converted both ends
winning look easy, third- Robby West connected wltb a of a one-and-one foul situation
ranked North Carolina was 20-foot field goal with five to give the R8ms an inbeaten by Duke, 76-74, fourtb- seconds left. Dennll Wuycik, surmountable four'PO!nt lead
ranked South Carolina bowed who seored 2:1 points for North witb six seconds left. The
to Iowa, 91-«i, and 13th-ranked Carolina, mlsaed wjtb a last- Tigers bad rallled from an 11Princeton lost to Fordham, 79- gasp shot 1bat would have put point deficit in tbe final four
75.
the game Into overtime. Duke, minutes. Marquette stretched
Secondoi"anked Marquette oow 8-6, was led by Riehle its wliming ~treak to 15 games
scored Its second triwnpb of O'Connor and Chris Redding, although pressed by DePaul
the week when it beat DePaul, who scored 24 points each.
throughol!t the contest. DePaul
7().81, but that bard.fougbt win
South Carolina lost its third rallled from a 13-point halftime

deficit to within three pOint.! of
tile Warriors but Jim Cbones
iced tbe game with threepoint pin.
·
In other games Involving the
top 10, fifth-ranked Loulsv!Ue
edged Drake, 79-77, ,Allan
Hornyak scored 36 points as
siJtb.ranked Ohio Sta!ll beat
Indiana, ~74; Long Beach
State,.: lied for the ~lxth­
l'anking, beat "}.O):Ola of
Cbi~gl, 79-68, with. lfie help of
Ed Ralleff's 22 points; and
lOth-ranked Florida State
downed Georgia Tech, 71-69.
Elgllth-ra'nked :soutnern
Callfornla and ninth-i"anked
Pennsyl~ were Idle.
Eau Caire, tbe No. 1 ranked
small college team, ran Its
reoord to 13-4 with an l!5.al
victory · over Stout as center
Mike 'Ratliff scorek 33 points
and pulled down 11 .-eboiuids.

Miami

Kent State
W. Michlgan
Bowling.Grn.

a

II

High School Results
United Press International
N.Wark 62 Limo Senior 61
Claymont 72 Dover 62
,
St. Marys (W. Va .) 70 Frontier
59
Cambridge 83 Marietta 60
Fort Frye 59 Belpre 58
Mortlns Ferry 92 Bellaire 72
Bellaire St. Johns 7S River 77
Yorkville 66 Adena 62
Conotton Valley 78 Smithfield
57
Barnesville 54 Shenondoah Sl
Jewell Sclo 85 Madison 72
Bishop Donohue (W. Va.) 87
Beallsville 65
Garawav 71 River VIew 56
Ridgewood 69 Tusky Valley 61
Strasburg 56 Newcomerstown
55

.

New Concord SO Tri-Valley 45
Sidney 65 Lemon-Monroe 46
Springboro 80 Lillie Miami 65
Cleve. Max Hayes 58 Cleve.
Rhodes 48
Maple Helghl&gt; 73 Bedford 58.
Midpark 71 Mentor , 56
Brecksville 52 Brooklyn 46
Madison 81 Jefferson 74
Brookside 67 Avon 62
Kent Roosevelt 83 Painesville
Harvey 79
Firelands lOS Wellington 81
Keystone 80 Western Reserve

Patrick Henry 85 Tlnora 48
Ayresvllle 68 Elida 47
Continental 76 Hicksville 64
Cois. S. 86 VCols. Wainul Ridge
75

Cols , N. 95 Cols. Northland 92
12 oil
·
Cois. Linden 78 Cois. East 76
Cols. West 57 Cols. Brookhaven
48
Cols. Cenlral 94 Cois. Eastmoor 79
Cols. Whetstone 48 Cols. Marn
Frankln 45
Waverly 71 Cols. Mohawk 60
Upper Arlington 611 Westerville
. 67

Franklin His. 82 Cols. Westland
79
Ohio Deaf 72 St. Rita 35
W. Jefferson 77 Maddison
Plains 73
Bloom Carroll91 Llberly Union
54

Conal
Winchester
61
Plckerlnglon 41
Buckeye Valley 37 Marysville
36 "

Mt. Vernon 66 Ashland Sl
Amanda Clearcreek 86 Folrfield Union 71
Circleville 85 Westfall 63
Columbus Hartley 72 Gahanna
71
59
Columbus Wehrle 61 Teays
Elyria 71 Soulhvlew 59
Valley 54
Borromeo 46 Lake Catholic 38 Man slid St. Peters 76 Akron St.
North Bloomfield 61 Perry 60
Vincent 59
Marion 57 Willard 55
Akron South 72 Wadsworth 52
Nordonla 67 Manchester 57
Waterloo 75 West Branch 69
Cleve. Benedictine H Cleve. Indian Valley N. 79 E, Canton
Glenville 58
62
C.eve. Lincoln-West 81
New Knoxville 60 Ft. Recovery
Cleve. John Marshall611
53
C' 've. West Tech 96 Cleve. ·Paint Valley 86 Chillicothe
South 75
Flaget 62
'
Independence 64 Buyahoga Ross S. Eastern 98 Frankfort
Heights 45
Adena 75
Cleve. Lutheran Easl 63 Zane Trace (Ross) 73 Hun- ,
Fairport 35
tinglon 61
,
Hawken School 71 Ledgemont Weslern !Pike) 64 Portsmouth
38
Clay 57
Maumee Valley 62 Gilmour 53 Celina ICHA 62 Sidney Lehman
48
.
Cleve. Holy Name 71 Cleve. St.
Ignatius 64 .
Celina 97 St. Marys 37
Elyria Calhollc6S Vermilion 63 Arcanum 51 Covington 46
Amherst 60 South Amherst Si St. Henry 72 Ansonia 66
Highland 57 Smithville ss
Convoy Crestview 55 Van Wert
Cleve. John Adams 66 Cleve.
so
John Hay SO
Piqua 61 Troy 52
Wooster 84 Medina 68
Lima Shawnee 79 Lima Central
Cleve. CC 75 Aurora 59
49
Lorain Admiral King 7·1Canton Maumee Valley 62 Cleve ..
Lincoln 64
Gilmour 53
Warren Harding 70 Canton Ravenna 70 Walsh Jesuti 49
McKinley 58 .
Woodridge 101 Green 110
Warren JFK 74 Canton Tlmken Highland 57 Smllhvlllt ss
46,
.
.
Perry 59 North Canton 54
Alliance 52 Akron East 49
Creslwood 57 Roolslown Sl
Akron Buchtel 63 Canton C. C, Hudson 66 Coventry 33
57
'
AI&lt; ron North 68 Stow 67
Meatlllon 76 YoungJiown East Cuyahoga Falls 83 Youngstown ,
57
s. 61
C.nton South 74 Jackson 45
Springfield 57 Akron Garfield
Loullvllll n Mlrllnglon 79
55
Falrleu 64 "Glenwood 46Akron Firestone 57 Akron
l'wry 5f Canton Hoover '54
Hoban 53
S.ndy Valley 52 Carrolllotl 51
St. Marys IW. Va .l 70 Frontier
Field Local 53 Lake so
59
l'alrland eo Barboursville ·(W. Waynesfield n Lima Ptrry 73
Va.) ,. .
Pando~I-GIIboa .4 McComb 62.
l'av-~N ,,. Hilltop ·eo
Dayton Dun!Hir 85 Delphos St.
llliln 6$ Mantpeller 53
John 71
'
kalida SO Bluffton u
l'llllcllnll . Bryan J3

f

former Buckeye Bobby Knight
for the first lime, felt the game
was "a little more sticky than
we would have preferred." '
Knight, who played at Ohio
State on the 19fl6.62teams, is a
native of Orrville and coached
six yeara at Army before taking the Indiana post.

The loss was the fourth In a
row for Indiana, third ·In the ·
conference, after winning eight
of their first nint
. "Bobby takes a loss II"Obably
as hard as anybody 1 know,"
Taylor said, "and having lost
three in a row, it made It a little
more importsnt that they win
here."

Boxing Tournament
Winners Announced

7

1

2

2

11

1

3

4

9

0

3

2

0

OTHERS

Defiance
Youngstown St.
Urbana .·
Akroo
Ashland
Case West . Res.
Hiram
Findlay
Ohio Northern
Cincinnati
Bluffton
Dayton
.

Ohio Dominican

Cleve. State
Rio Grande
Steubenville
John Carroll
Malone
Central State
Walsh
Cedarville

3

8

W
14
13
17
13
11
7
7

9
7
8
8
7
4
6

6

10

7
5

3

L
1
1
2·
2
4
4
4
6
7
7
6

9
9

9

6
11
4 10
3 i2
2 11
5

.

FOOD fOR AMERICANS

Columbus
Five 71-60

~

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCORES
United'' Press International
Ohio State so Indiana 74
Miami 91 Ohio Universily 77
Detroit 70 Xavier 66
Steubenville 74 Northern
Kentucky State 65
Kenyon 82 Marletla 79
Marshall 103 Bowling Green 80
Daylon 58 kenl State 56
Walsh 77 Cedarville 73
Wright Stale 83 Rio Grande 81
Defiance 97 Malone 90
Capital 63 Otterbein 62
Cincinnati 81 Tulsa 74
Toledo 89 Western Michigan lf2
Akron 93 Wayne Slate 49
Capilal 63 Otterbein 62
Ohio Wesleyan 78 Mount Union
72
Wilmington 83 Bluffton 77
Baldwin-Wallace 71 Denison 67
St. Francis (Pa.) Cleve 96
Cleve. State ?s
Woosler 93 Case Western
Reserve 69
Wittenberg 82 Oberlin 65
Youngstown 74 Westmlnsler Sl
Alleghtny ( Pa .) 95 John Carroll
82
Ashland 78 Oakland (Mich .) 77
(ot)
Urbana 100 Dinalay 98
Ohjo Northern 127 Ohio
Dominican 98
Centra) Michigan 109 Cenlral
State .65

FORTUNATO FETED
STEUBENVILLE, Ohio
(UP!) -Joe Fortunato, Mingo
Junction native who was a
Winners were determined
(Junior Middle)
Sunday afternoon during the
Nelson Bostic, Beach AC, Chicago ·Bears linebacker 14
declsloned Tom Arkel. Hun· years, was honored at the sbtth
finals of the Sixth Annual llngton VFW.
annual Sports Award Banquet
!Middleweight)
Southern Ohio and West
Ed Bell, Beach AC. here .Sunday along with former
Virginia Golden Gloves Boxiilg declsloned Mike Neville, Pt. Wheeling (W. Va.) high school
. Tournament, held in the Lyne Pleasant.
basketball coach· Everett
Center at Rio Grande College.
&lt;Light Heavy)
Brinkplan.
·h
Rick Callihan, Beach AC,
REDS SIGN ONE
For the six th stra;g t year, declsloned Bob Snauffer, Rio
the Beach Athletic Club, Grande.
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Bidwell, captured team
I Heavyweight)
COACHES ro MEET
Cincinnati Reds announced
champion honors In the Novice
Don Mills, Beach AC, over
COLUMBUS (UP! ) _ The today the signing of recently
Clinton Bays, Cedar Coal.
Division, compiling 56 points to
(OPEN DIVISION)
annual clinic of the Ohio acquired outfielder Ted
runnerup Westwood of
I Banta~welghtl
:Association of Track Coaches Uhlaender to a contract for the
Ashland l(v. vthi"ch totaled 21
Dan Childers, Barboursville Will J1e held here Friday and coming season . Uhlaender,
· ts' "' ~, ' ' ·
1 · ·AC, ,c IJdeclsloneA H..i"' )J.o.hn.
pom .
..
Loudenbclck, ~hia~, ((y1 , 'Satlirday. Roy Gl'iak, 14in-' .llcquil'ell&lt;' ill' a. !If~ with the
In· the Open Team Champion '
' !~eothe..Wei' 'il '
· nesota coach and assiStant 'Cleveland Indians. last month,
event Huntington VFW edged
Gerald Arthur, untington Olympic mentor this year, will is the eighth Cincinnati player
. 1 1• 17
V~W, over Junior Deel, Cedar
South'p Oln
, g- •
Grove.
be the Friday banquet speaker. to agree to terms.
In
the
champion-ofI Lightweight)
champion awards Novice
Steve Morrison, South Point,
.
'
over Leon Smith, Cedar Coal.
DiviSion honors went to Larry
(Junior Welter)
Howell, Bidwell, arid Nelson
Fred Johnson, South Point,
Bostic
Gallipolis
both over Ray Mosley,_Dunbar,
'-:
OPTOMETRIST
'
'
.
IWtlterwtoghtl
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12. 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
members of the Beach Athletic
Leroy Johnson, South Point,
Club.
over Mike Howard, Huntington
AT NOON Oft'THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
POMER Y.
Champion of; Champlons in VFW. (Junior Middle)
the Open Divwon went to
Vernon Jackson, Huntington
Vernon Jackson, Huntington VFW, declsloned John Mooney,
VFW.
Huntington VFW.
,___
hi
d
(Middleweight)
The spor..,uans P awar
Jim Brown, Barboursville,
went to John Loudenback, over E. Howard, South Point,
Westwood Boys AC of
I Heavyweight)
Ashland , Ky
'
Frank Bellomy, Huntington
• ·.
VFW, over Mike Cable,
The local wmners will take Huntington Modern Press.
part in the West Virginia Stale
Golden Gloves Boxing Tour- •' ..·.·.··.··.·.·.·.·....···.·.·.·. ·.·.·:·:···:·:···:·.-''·•
nament at the Charleston Civic
nJCSON, Ariz. (UPI) Center this week. They will George Archer doesn't Uke
also take part In the national 18-hold playoHs aDd MIUer
regional tournament, to be held Barber does, but despite
in February at the Memorial tbelr feeliDga they faced
Field House in Huntington.
each otber ID just such a
Here are Sunday's individual playoff loday for the Dean
results :
Martin-Tucson Open title
(NOVICE DIVISIONI
and a lop prlJe of t31,0011.
I Flyweight) :
Barber and Archer tied at
Mike George, Beach AC, 15 d
... t tb d f
detlsioned Don Sheets, Beach
UD er psr ••• 1 e en o
AC.
tbe regulation 7% boles
I Bontamweightl
Sunday after Barber made a
Donald Price, Dunbar AC,
lzz"ftd
fr
t f ""
TKO 1:28 firsf round, Rick s """run om ou O "'"
Renfrow, Westwood AC.
pack.
·
IFtathorweightl
Itmlgbtbave been a threeJim Walsh, South Point, way playoff but for a bsd
declsloned Roy Meade, Beach drive oa the fiDal bole by
AC.
! Lightweight)
third I"OIIIId leader Bobby
Mike Artrip, Westwood AC, Nichols. Hll drive went over
t!:'e~'~:r~ Butch Maynard, the fairWay and rolled IDto
(Junior Welter&gt;
one o1 two lakes on tbe lith
Larry Howell, Beach AC, fairway. He eaded up laklDg
Ko'd Don Kazee, Westwood, In a doable o...ey. sis en the
1:28 or f)rst round.
_,.
IWott-eighll
bole and fbdahed two strvkes
Rick Smith, Beach , AC, beblDd Barber and Archer.
declsloned
Earl Howell, Beach \ 't'l!~~~~~~ii;8;1~~
Ac.
~ ;;:!t!&amp;; u; u mn:o· :rr
1

N. W. COMPTON, O.D.

The Waverly Tigers coasted
to their lOth win of the season
as they defeated the Indians ol
Columbus Mohawk 71.00 in a
Saturday night non-league
basketball game.
Bill Malloy led the Waverly
attack with 18 points as · the
Tigers notched their fifth win
In a row. He was followed by
Mike Oyer with 17 points and
Don Guilllom with 11 points.
Mohawk, now 3-9 .for the
year, was paced by Ruben
Ware and Joe Wade with 13
points each. Ray . Christie
poured in 12 points.
· COLUMBUS MOHAWK (60)
-Litsey 6, Tolliver'9, BuUer 7,
Ware 13, Christie 12, Byrd 0,
Wade 13.
WAVERLY (71) - Malloy
18, Oyer 17, Gullion II, Workman 8, P!elfer 2, Shoemaker 9,
Sallyers 6.
By Quarters:
Waverly
16 19 17 19- 71
Mohawk
17 13 16 14-jjO

. ..

Minute Beef Stew ·Is in ,the Bag

Tilt .To WSU Raiders

s

7
7

5- Tbe}'ralq Sentinel, MlddleJibrt-PCI"lee""y, 0 ., Jan. 24, b,.;

·

Tigers Rip

Crucial Week on Bucks·
ferrl!ig to the Bucks 68-66 win
In which they came from 14
points behind midway In the
second half.
• ,
Tuesday night's game Is expected to attract a capacity
WlDlama Arene crowd of more
than 19,000.
In Saturday night's win over
Indiana, Allan Hornyak seored
38 points. one less than his
career, blgb and sparked tile
Buckeyes to a 40-30 halftime
lead with 19 in the first 20
minutes.
Luke Witte, the Buckeyes' 7foot center, chipped in with 21
points and pulled down 16 rebounds to lead the Bucks to a
41-32 domination of the boards.
Witte's Inside defense also
shut off the Hoosiers 2 big
seorera, . Steve Downing and
Joby Wright, both averaging 20
points per game going in, to 15
and )2 respectively.
Ohio State jumped out to an
early 13-alead, saw.It whittled
to two points and then pulfed
away again to lead by 10 at
halftime. .
Rlller Sparks Rally
Again in the second lialf the
Hoosiers, paced by John Ritter
who led them In scoring with
"ll, Indiana made a run at the
Buckeyes to cut the margin to
four points.
Two field goals by Witte and
a tbree'J&gt;Oint play by Hornyak,
however, moved tbe Buckeyes
back out to an 11-polnt edge.
Taylor, coaching against

2

•

"R ·z.o ,R edmen rop
' 83,-.81.
n·

Ohio.Conferenc~
Coach Art Ljlnbam's Rio bad 22.
Loague Overall
w L w L Grande College Redmen blew a The Redmen, now 1-8 on the
Capital
4 o 12 o 16-poi~tlead with five minutes year, collected 36 rebounds Wittenberg · 4. · 0 7 s remaining in the game and 14 in the final half. Capt.
Wooster
3 0 II 4
Ohio Wesl'n
4 t 6 6 went down to a heartbreaking Bentley hauled down II for the
8ald.-Wal. , 3 2 6 8 fl3.81 defeat against Wright 16sers. The Redmen hit33 of 68
Musklngum
32 32 . 87 55 State University at Dayton Iroin the field, and 15 of 17 free
Otterbein ,
.
thrOl)'S.
Marietta ..-- ·~ 2 4 9 ·Saturday night.
Wright Stale hit 31 of 78 from
Oberlin
2 3 5 6
The Redmen held ·a niile
Mt Union
22 34 65 61 point advantage at . halftime, the field, and. 21 · of 25 free
Denison
Kenyon
1 4 .. 4 10 43-34, boil the host Raiders, now throws. The Raiders hauled
Heidelberg
1 5 0 10 ' ii-9 on' ·the year, came back. down 37 rebounds, 25 in the
BIG TllN· ', ,
' strong on the boards in the final half.
League Overall second ·half and took advantage · The.Redmen will be idle until
• W L W L of ilevetal Rlo,turnovers 1to turn
Minnesota
a o 10 3 defeat Into victory.
Ohio Slate
"30112
Harrv Hairston paced the
Michigan
3 1
8 6
WisconSin
2 2
9 5 Redmen with 17 points. Capt.
I
1
7 5 Roger Bentley tallied 16.
Iowa
1 1
7 5
Purdue
John Lucas was high for the
Illinois'
1 2
9 3
winners
with 23. Tim Walke.r
Mich. State
1 3
7 6
Northwestern 1 4 3 10
.....
Indiana.

COLUMBUS(UPI) -It may
be too early in the season for
"crucial" games, but Ohio
State's two contests this week,
Tuesday night at Minnesota
and Saturday at Michigan,
·come about as close as you can
get.
.
The Buckeyes, who handled
Indiana in workmanlike
fashion if not spectacularly ~
74 Saturday night for their
third Big Ten win without a
loss, wiD be meeting their top
two challengers within a space
of five days.
Minnesota, directed by former Aabland College Coach Bill
Musselman, leads tbe conference with a 4-0 record and the
Wolverines have only an 84-73
loss to Ohio State marring their
conference record in four
games.
"Some games have a way of
building up to mean more, although they aren't suwose&lt;l
to," Taylor said. "I know
Michigan Ia looking forward to
our game up there next
Saturday, but we have to be
concerned about Minnesota
first,
MusseimaJ\, in hla first year
at Mfunesota, bas loaded up
with junior college translers
and has turned a .so-ao team
last year into a solid contender.
Outlook Cool
"We dodged a bullet up there
last year and we're going to
have to get excited about playing up tbere," Taylor said, re-

3

\ ... ,

'•

'saturday's Mid-Ohio Conference game at , Ollio
. Dominicap, beginning at :z p.
m. Next home game II Feb. 1,
against Berea, Ky., in a nonconference game.
Box score .of , Sa\urday's
contest:
RIO GRANDE (11) Bentley7·2·16; Halrslon6-~17;
Lambert 4-3·111 Jordan '2·11-4:
Bartram 1-0.2 ; Rouse 1-0:2;
Hart 9-1-19; , Bollinger 2-0-4;
Martin 1·4·6. TOTALS 33-15.11.
WRIGHT . STATE (83) ..,. 'r'
Fogt 7-5-19; ~ucas 8·7·23;
McCurdy 4-1-9; Minch 0·1·1 ;
Walker 9·4-22; McKee 3·3·9.
TOTAI;S 31·21-83.
SCORE AT HALF:
Rio 43, Wright Stale 34.

HOLD ITr
WHEN BtiYING .
YOUR NEW CAR
1. Pick out your model.
2. Line up your deal.
3. Then hold lt_;_and
phone t(1e man frqm
Nationwide:

By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Food Editor
A busy housewife who
~es to. serve her family .
home-&lt;; ooked nl~als can
streamline her cookery . by
preparing favorite entrees
ahead ·of time, sealing them
ill plastic pouches for freezln~ and quick re)lealing In
botling water. There 'is ,a
heat.sealer appliance which
aids sucll a project. Whether
this is ·used or not, always
use durable plastic (mylar
polyethylene) ,bags that are
boilable. These come in sin· ·
gle, double ,or (amily-size
capacities. ~qr those wlio do
plan a meals-iii-a-m In u t ~
project, th~ , Sear$ Home
E co 11 p m I c s Service~ sug.
~ests using only to_p.quality,
mgred.ients. Co o k 1n g ,and
freezing of such things as
soups or stews, meats or
vegetables does ,not improve
upon poor-quality ingredi·
ents. Concentrated cream
soups and canne.d gravies,
with their modified starches
that , are good binder~ for
·home-frozen foods, are ··a
help. Also cut meat or vege.
tables into uniform pieces
for :even healing and . fill
pouches so they are only an
mch thick. Such meals are
ideal for families always on
the run to after-school activi·
ties and adult community
meetings during the week.
(

MINUTE-MINDED
' BEEF STt:W
'I• cup Dour
2 teaspoon• sal!
I teaspoon cblll powder
J;, teaspoon pepper
3 pouads bollt!less beef
chuck, cut Into
!:bleb cubes
3 t.ableiJIOODI sbol1enlag
1 cup chopped onloa ·
1 envelepe (1 ounce)
browa gravy mix
HI cup1 water
1 can (10 ounces)
tomatoes
18 small wblte oalons
2 cups 1-IDch carrot
chunk a
1 can (4 ounces) sliced
mushrooms,
undrained .

P.LPAULEY
PH. 992-2318
307 Spring Ave.,
Pomeroy, Ohio
Tht• mun l"r.' lll P.ob ti••mriJc is on ~nur siJc.

O~!!~~n!!~e
~~ t i&lt;• n ll ,,_... ti rl' l n ~ unt ncc Co.' ·
II" me om,..,:('; llumh ll~ Ohto

3 ROOMS

( Al l

NQtes • •••

About lilies

Group II
P.'' AnS "z'/ent
A uc·tz'on

PTA Committee

The Kukla, Fran &amp; ·orlle
series of specials continues,
with the second show
scheduled tonight at 6:30
p,m.. Ch. II .

++ +

Everything you always
wanled to know about Dr.
David Reuben, but were
afraid to ask, will be answered tonight on the "Best
of Phil Dona·hue" show,
when the famed author of the
"popular sex manual appears
as Phil's guest. 7:30 p.m.,
Ch. 4.

'I 9 7

NEW
.FURNITURE
'349;95 .

A program on nationar
se~~!ID be\~nled "at
the l~y night meeting of
the
American
Legion
AuxiliarY, Qrew Webaler Post
39, 7:30 p. m.
· Mrs.
Ben , Neutzllng,
Depariment of Ohio Natlonal
Security chairman, will have
charge of the program.
Representatives from · the
Pomeroy Police Depariment;
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Depariment, and the Pomeroy
Fire
Department
and
Emergency Squad will be
present. Members of other
organizations lr\terested in time wear.

us,oo,"Down·
11alan~e

On
Convenient
Terms.

'
''

,,

II

I

the

I

tt1meto
have ababy?
'

.

When-you really want one.
~. Just remember that
more than half of all the
pregnancies eac_h year are
accidental.

·,

Is , a placid creature,
although you wouldn't want
your son to marry one,
perhaps, Bp.m., Ch. 6.

+++

sea

mammal.

Tonight, Jacques Cousjeau
presents one of his on-an~under water specials,
' starring the manatee, which

Pllued
'
Children by choice:

++ +

MOVIES: Robert Taylor
stars In a prime-time film,
"Johnny Tiger.'' 9 p.m., Ch,
4, Also: "5,000 Fingers of Dr.
+++
T," 4 p.m,, and "Crack..
What's a mermaid? Many man," 11 :30 p.m., both Ch.
people think the legend · 10.
really got Its start with the
+++
manatee, a big, ponderous. · TUESDAY: The new Ch. 6
harmless

Rain doesn't always make things grow.

·series, "Whaf Every Woman

Wanl&gt; to Know," Is turning
up some stimulating gu~ts.
Today: Sesame Street's
creator, Joah Ganz Cooney,
10 a.m.

LISt year bad weather helped kill over 11,000
people. ·Good-weather drivers did the rest.. Drivers
who drive like trs summer all ~ar long.
Slick streets Qr&amp;atly Increase tht chances of a
skid. but that doean't make the gOOd-weather driver
go any slower. Rain, Ice, and snow almoal double the
dlatance needed to stop. but that doesn't atop him
from following too closely. Bad weather can draatl·
cally limit visibility, but lhel doesn"t make him any
more.cautioua.

You know lhe kind of driver we mean, Watch out
for him. And make sure you're a good
•
bad,waather,driver. We wa:nt you and
your family to be around to enjoy the
good weather.
DltiM dllptayino thil "'I IUblcribe to lt'te NAOA
COde or Bullnell Prattle... ~.. co"npondenc:tlo eon.Umer

Rllallofto lotvlce, 10110 "'K'" S,_ N.W........ lli"OIOn. O,C, ,20001

NatiOnal Automobile Dealers Association

~

For fut•ther inform11tion, yrrite
Planned Pat:enthood, Box 431
Radio City Station, N.Y. 10019

Ollie-. ~•tlol'rinhorl'ol ll.fMrlcl'• "•IICfll.r neW ear Wtruc~ IINitn , ............ D.q.

One.in4 serle• Pl"lltnttd by N:A.O.A.. Tht Dally Sontlnolandtlle Tri- Cou~ty , Auloinoblle DH!tn ~IOC.
1

·Not chance.·

_,I

'

'

.

ee

POLLY'S POINTERS

ry

Shower Given forM rs.

Every Shoe

'.

~

) '• 0 ',

One of last Ieason's besl
dramas, "Paradise . Lost,"
lhe Clifford Odels play, hot
the MillO(! poem. m51ces ,a
reappearance on NET
Playhouse, I p.m., Ch. 11.

M t Thu da

Program to be On Security

with Paul Crabtree
P0 IN TVI~ W

·Green Thumb

MONDAY
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club
BETHEL 62, International will have open meeting, 7 p." m.
Order of Job's Daughters, .7:30 , Wednesday at Ohio Power Co.
p,m. Monday. Initiation office, Pomeroy. Slides to be
scheduled. Practice for Shown.
. . A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club meml!ers.
initiation to be held at 2 p.m.
AMERICAN , LEGION
Sunday. Houseware orders are Aurillary of Feeney Bennett ·
to be In to Mrs. Debbie Finlaw ·Post 128, Middleport, Wedby Friday evening.
nesday at post home, 7:30p.m.
TUESDAY
RUTLAND Friendly (JarOHIO ETA pHI Chapter, deners, Wednesday, 7:30, hilme
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 of Mrs. Joe Bolin with Mrs.
ByMRS.FR~BISE
p.m. Tuesday, Cohunbus an&lt;! Robert Snowden and Mrs .
Riverview Garden Club
·
Southern . Ohio Electric Co. Harold Wolfe, co-hostesses.
Llliei! II a name of herbs oftbe genus ..There are 60 diffllfent Cultural program drama by
LYDIA CIRCLE, Pomeroy
species ill North America and Eurasia. Lllie Dowers have three Mrs. Ruth Riffle and Mrs. United . Methodist Church,
petals and tbe'e are 20 species in tbe United States. Ulles are Doris Ewing. Mrs. sue Zirkle Wednesday, 7:30 p·. m.
easily grown and prefer sun. There are a few that wiD tolerate will be hostess.
POMERO,Y - Middleport
SOnie shade. Shade from high trees suits well and they look very
JUNIOR AMERICAN Legion ..• Uons Club, Wednesday noon,
much at home on the edges of woods, among azaleas and Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett United Methodist Chur~h
rhododendrons. Where ferns and wild Dowers grow so w!U Wles. Post 128, 7 p.m. Tuesday night social room.
The taD regal trumpet Wles will grow in sunny apots. If at the hall.
OHIO VALLEY Conunandrr
planted next to a building or close to a high fence, they will lean
PAST MATRONS Club , 24, Knight Templars, stated
toward the light and need staking. It is good to stake all IIIII- PomeroyChapterBO, OES, 7:30 conclave, 7:30 p. m. Wedgrowing llliesbecause the bloom becomes quite heavey. Ahnost p.m. Tuesday at home of Mrs . nesday. Regular business with
allWiesaresuitedforpottlng. Thls1SanexceDent'waytoh&amp;n91e J. W. McMurray, MasQn.
Red Cross and Malta Degrees
spring purchased bulbs, or bulbs received too late in the fall for
RACINE AMERICAN to be conferred in long form.
planting In tbe garden.
·
.
Legion Auxiliary meeting 7:30 Sir Knights to attend in full
· Wl)en planting In yoiD" garden goo&lt;! drainage Is required for p.m. Tuesday at post home .
uniform.
SO\ITHERN BAND Boosters
lllles.lf .not the lilies 'will rot. Planting on a ~bt slO(?e assures
good drainage. U drainage Is not a problem all you need to do is will have short business
mURSDAY
dig deeply and widely and e~rlch soU with humus, peat moss, meeting, at .6 p. m. Tuesday,
TWIN CITY Shrinetles, 7:30,
bark of sugar cane. Agenerous poftion of aand and gravel miXed before game at high school.
Thursday night, Columbus and
wltb heavy soUls good. Ulles look best planted in groups.
DREW WEBSTER Post 39 Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
When spring arrives watch for emergblg noses, when Au~iliary
and
Junior · Middleport. Carl Hysell to
cleaning up the garden. Frost 11 sometime troublesome. Pull Auxiliary, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.· show film on drug abuse. Roll
salole winter mulch 1n early Sll"ing to warm the soil, but keep it at post home . Program call will be payment of dues.
nearby to toss over the stalks If frost threatens. Trumpet Wles · chairmen are Mrs. Don Hunnel
are most likely to get frosted. AJ weatber grows warmer, cover on natural security, and Mrs.
the soU around the lllies ·with thick sununer mulch. If you con- J. M. Thornton, legislation.
serve moistute, it discourages weeds and keeps the roots cool.
REVIVAL UNDERWAY
~
ttl
b
through Jan. 30, at Syracuse
With good air circulation Insects and "ligbts give II e trou le. Church of the Nazurene with
When lllies bloom you may want to cut them for .the house.
UJ
Jj
the Rev. Edward J . Hundley,
Leave twiKhlrds of the stalk and leaves to feed tbe bulb for next Columbus, speaker. Special
year. As lily blooms fade snip tbem oH. When the stem turns music, public invited, 7:30each
Homemade beef stew frozen in plastic POuches makes meols-in-minutes simple.
yeUow, remove lt. Cleanll)g up and destroying old stems and evening.
foliage in the faD II good Insurance against spread of dlaease.
WEDNF.'iDAY
Cpmbine flour, salt, chili tomatoes . Mix well. Cover. To heat. drop sealed bag
In late smuner seeds can be collected and planted lUte peas
AM E R1CAN LEG I 0 N
powder and pepper . .Dredge Cook in 325-degree oven un- from freezer into uncovered
in
a
nurseybed.
Some
sprout
the
same
year,
but
usually
will
not
Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett
A silent auction of baked
nieat cubes in flour mixture. til meat is almost tender, pan of boiling w~ter. Bring
Brown meat slowly in Dutch about Jlh hours. Add whole water to bOil again. Reduce make blooming plants for a year or two. LUy seed/! can be bought Posii2B, 7,30 p.m. Wednesday .. goods was planned for the
and boil gently until from seed houses. You can also raise lilies from your own seed. night at the ball. Mrs. Ben February meeting when Group
oven In hot shortening, turn· onions, carrot chunks and heat
food
is
hot. Reheating lime:
mushrooms ; mix carefully.
If rodents are a problem, sink a fence or hardware cloth Neutzling, department II of the Middleport First
ing meat cubes to brown Cover;
cook until vegeta· 2 servings-20 minutes. Re· around ibe bulbs when planllng. Inspect all bulbs before plan- national defense chairman, United Presbyterian Church
evenly on all sides. Sprinkle bles and . meat are tender, move bag from water ; open
met recently at the home of
any remaining flour mixture about 45 minutes . Packa~e and serve. Makes 10 cups, 8 ling. Break off bQdly Injured scares. Soak the bulb on~~ hour will be the speaker.
in one part bleach in 20 parts of water. Spring planting shoUld be
Mrs. Joe Bailey.
over meat. Add c h o p p e d in 2 serving portions. Seal m servings ,
done early. If you receive bulbs at a lime you can't get outdoors
Members were also asked to
onion, gravy mix, water and boil -in-bag, label and freeze.
(NEWSPAPER ENTU.PRISE ASSN.)
to plapt, put them in J)OIB of soil or in plastic bags fiUed with soil.
take a favorite recipe to the
• .. ................ .. ••• '.'J'
~;;;:;g;:;:;:~;::;;~~:~;g_~;
u you have seed pods ripening in the garden and frost
meeting and these will be sold
threatens you can cut siems and conllnue the ripening process In
for 10 cent.! each. It was '
ATTE~DCAPPING
-NEW SEERSUCKER
the bouse. A teaspoon of sugar and honey added to a glass of
decided that Group III will be
Mr. and Mrs. "Charles , t Seers~ker isn't sedate water in which you plaee the stems, w!U keep feeding the stem
S
fS,
invited to join GroUp Jl for
Bradbury, Mrs. Evelyn Lewis, s r1pes any more. Tins year ion
h fo eds 1 .
.
.
monthly meetings.
Mrs. Asa Bradbury, Mid- it's bold madras plaids and · 8 enoug r se . 0 ripen.
. '·
A ~eeling of the execultve
Mrs. William Morrll gave
national security 'are invited to dleport; Mrs. Robert Reibel, P'aisley, bold g e 0 m, e t ric
Ulles may be grown from scales, seeds, and bulbets. Scales comrmt~ of ~e Meigs County devotions "The Bible History
ailenct ,(qu~tion @110 answer Morristown 1 1\WJo Canl Wolfe::."sJripes, and J&gt;r,ig ~ .t, c~!~r,~, .. , are_ produced~'~-~- Y~ ~~~~·\hem apart and plant tbem ill,,. goun~l,l, ;~f . : Parent~ , ~n,4 · and Otialllill,tl\e.~l!rl4'~ ~ ~' '~
period will be held.
and Wendy; , Gallipolls; ,,Pat·. Seers.~cke~. IS o11e '?f the big· . fitoiBt soil'.i(~~~sow m:a~~iilllldsespx:,co~~lram~ 111,!ate (all ,. Teacf;ers will 'be-'\ktd l(t tlie theme. She read •poem,.i!How &lt;
Hostesses for the meeting O'Brien, a student at Ohio gest new fabn c s bemg or outdoors m early Sll"lng.
home of Mrs. Richard Readelh Thou.' ' The book
will be Mrs. Neqtzllng, Mrs. Wesleyan, and Mrs. Walter used.
ThewUdyellowormeadowiUyhasyellowororange ooddlng Vaughan, Middl~porl, 10 a. m. study was given by Mrs .
flowers spotted with brown. It Is a nati~e to wet places in the Thursday .
,
. Dwight Zavitz on · the topic
Grace Pratt, Mrs . Russell Burns Harris. and daughter,
Moore, Mrs. Gladys Cwnmings ,~ Jill, Mason, W. Va. attended
RAINSUIT
United States and Canada. Tl1e wood lilY is a native today of
Mrs . Vaughan , Council "Can, We Know God Perand Mrs. Don Hunnel, who Is the capping ceremony of the
sandy regions in North America. It has reddish-orange erect pre~ident, has asked that all sonally?" She recited a poem
the chairman of .national Holzer School of Nursing
The newest thing for rainy no,.ers with purple spotted throats. The American Turk.Cap lily c_bamnen of . com'"?lttees, of- "When 1 Meet My Master Face
security for the unit.
Friday night at Grace weather Is the canvas rain· bas ooddlng orange flowers spotted with purple. It is a native of fleers, and un1t presidents be at to Face." Prav,er by Mrs. Paul
suit. That's raincoat with
th
11 Tb
b
1
''
Methodist Church. Mary fashionable rain pants · to low areas of North America. The Tiger LUy is an orange flo~
e mee ng. ose w 0 canna Haptonstall concluded the
Bradbury, daughter of Mr. and match. The jacket is styled native of East Asia. The Regal LUy is a nati~ of Asia. Easter lily attend are asked to contact meeting.
LONG DRESS
Mrs. Charles Bradbury, was after the· classic blazer and ISaJapanesespecleswhicbbearssnowywbiteflowers;
Mrs. Vaughan.
.
Refreshments were served
Long dresses are really one of the student nurses the pants are long and
The Feb. 3 meellng of by Mrs . Bailey and Mrs
p8pular today. Not only for capped.
flared.
. Council will be held at Racine. Haptonstall
·
evening wear, long dresses,
U'TT
At
that
lime
past
presidents
·
dane in ruffles with printed
rosebu(is, come out for day·
11t!J!J will be honored.
, . . ._ _ __

· ~(\~\\ .,,
. HIGHLIGHTS
.

Social Calendar

Achtrtialna: etntribvttcl for lfJI pullllc _IOOd in cooper;uon wittr
Tilt Adrirtlllftl Counclll alld the lriterhltloMI Jlltwsp~per Adverllsi"C h~vl i 'IU

Use Plants for Lawn
Cover Instead of Grass
By POLLY CRAMER

Mrs. Roger E. (Jane Ann)
Hill was recently honored with
a layette shower at the home of
Mrs. Bernard Diddle, Racine.
Gifts were placed on a table
covered with a receiving
blanket and centered with a
stork replica. Games were
played with prizes going to
Mrs. Inez .Hill, Mrs. Boone
Adams · and Mrs . Robert
Flaher. Mrs. Jerry A. Powell
won the door prize.
After Mrs. HiU opened her

DEAR POLLY-My answer for Ruth who wants to use
a ground cover for a lawn area instead of grass. Recom·
mended plants for such use are ivy, pachysandra and
periwinkle. Baltic .ivy Is heartier than' English ivy, espe·
cially in the winter months. Pachysandra is recommended
for shade areas only. Ivy and periwinkle will grow in
either shade or sunlight.
To prepare an area for planting, the grass should be
tilled well into the topsoiL Additional topsoil may be
added if needed. Each ivy or periwinkle plant should be
, 12 to 15 inches from its neighbor. Pachysandr,a should WOLF PEN
Mrs. Eugene Haning and
be planted 6 to 9 inches apart. Heavy mulch should be
. used .at the til:ne of planting.
Ronald visited Wednesday witb
It is important to k~ep such an area weeded. Weeding Mr. and Mrs. James ·Reeves,
will facilitate rapid establishment of the plants and· pre· Unda and Bryan Lee.
vent "choking out." Aside from carefu weeding, one
Mrs. Lee Roush and family
need only water the area during "dry spells and feed the of Logan visited wltb Mrs.
plants in the fall with 5·10·5 ferliiizer (depending on the
type of soil) to maintain healthy plush ground cover.- Helen Johnaon, recently.
MR. G, F. E, , Mgr., Landscape. Dept.
of - ,- Nurseries
.
.
CHECK THIS
DEAR READERS-Mr. G. F. E. lives in Pennsylvania
Get checked in this season.
so those livln~ In completely different climates might Checked
suits, short dresses
check with their local nursery man for any variations and ~inf!ham
jumpers are
due to.weatlter condllions.-POLLY
brightenmg up the winter.
Blazer jackets are worn over
~i!IM@li\1\!illl-~m~ Polly's Problem -~i!!! · rw"al'" wide trouser pantS in brown
DEAR POLLY- I have a new pair of shoes that I
and white or black and white
checks with a so1ld brown
; • like very much, but after wearing them they have
knit vest or a bolder check
developed a squeak. I work in a very quiet office and
: · cannot wear ·them to work so would, like to know of
vest. And try the checked
accessories for an added
• a way.to stop this squeaking.-SANDY
touch. There are checked
!lit-:Wi!IL'iiiiJI!Ziiit!rlliiliiif•'mi'I:!W&amp;"-"IIl'lli!:J:&gt;--*shoulder bags, checked
DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with the size of dpuble scarvPs and even checked
sinks. How is one supposed to wash a roasting pan or a boots.
·
broiler in these small sinks?-RUTH
I
THINK GEL
- DEAR POLLY-If baby's
For
those
who bave olller
bottle brush has been mis·
eomplexloDB, but still aeed
placed, a sure, quick way
protection a«alnst the wlaler
to get the botUes sparkling
winds,
try a moisturizing «el
clean is to stuff a paper
Instead
of a cream. The gel
towel into tlie bottle, fill
Is
len
greasy than cream
half full of water, rub the
still
protects the sllla.
yet
towel around the inside of
the bottle with a fork and ;...
STEEL FOR GOLD
then sterilize. Sometimes 1
Some
people who are aller·
this is even more effective
gic
to
fake
gold jewelry are
than a bottle br"ush, espestill. &amp;.ble to wear costume
cially .for getting the very
je~elry. Stainless steel ' can
bottom of the bottle clean.'-M.
be a gond substitute.
DEAR POLLY-Rather than discard plastic air matROl-LED PANTS
tresses that have leaks or tears I use them to make rain
ponchos for my husband and the children. They are great
Rolled-up pants have become a popular lo~k of nos· to keep in the car lor emergency use ,-MRS , J. L. J .
talgia. Rolled-up pants with
' '
(NEW!tPA.PU fNTERPRISE ASSN .)
bruthtly, colored stockings
You ,wUI reeelve a dollar If Polly u1e1 your favorite and ' strapped !hoes b.as to
homemaldnl( idea, Pel Peeve, Polly's ,Problein or 111lutlon have the make-up to go with
it. red lips anrl rheeks and
to a problem. Write Pollv In ~•r~ nr thls~~ewspa-r.

.

.

'i-

~moky ryt"~.

,

·

1 •

gifts, refreshments of cake,
sherbet, cookies, nuts, lea and
coffee were serv~ to those
named and Mrs ..Austin Wolfe,
Mrs. Henry Hill, Mrs. Earl
Custer, Mrs. Oval Diddle, Mrs.
Brady · Huffman, Mils Beth
Ann Huffman, Mrs. Denoie
Hill, Miss Sonja Hill, Miss Pam
Cleek and Mrs . Darrell
Dugan. Sending a gift were
Mrs. Charles ,Cobb and Heidi.

LASH CURLERS
Eyelash curlers, so popu·
lar a few years back, are
being used by women who
can't handle false eyelashes
but are makipg the most of
what they have. Start at the
base of the lash, squeeze the
curler, and there you hav!!
a wide-eyed, but n at ural
look.

On Sale!
SAVE AT. ••

' EAR RINGERS
Making your own earrings
can be fun and iriexpensi&gt;e.
Tiny colored beads strung
on wire can be twisted into
any shape. The 14-karat goid
wires for .your ears can be
easily purchased to attach
to the inexpensive wire.

CHUBBY JACKET

Short furty jcu:kets called
cllubbies look just as cuddly ·
in wool. You can .. crochet a
bulky chubby sweater to go .
with a favorite double-knit
woo! skirt.

SPRUCED DENIM
Spruced-up denim is still
a great look fot a casual
f I a r e. Separates including
tailored jackets, skirts and
pants, even he a v i I y lined
coats can be switched ·
~round lor the go-anywhere
look.

We Also Have
Chicken, Shrimp, 0~~:;:1
Dinners and Short 0,
HOURS
Mon., Tuefi.,.Wecl., Thun.

8 a.m. 111112 midnight
Fri. &amp; Sat.
8a.m. IIIII a.m.
,sunday
2 p.m. Tillll p.m.

J&amp;F

·PIZZA HUT

PII.ISl-2416 ,
Nevi Haven, w. Va.

IOMAtOlOI

GIANT·SCREEN 2J:CONSOLE

C4112W3

The FREMONT
Compact console in genul
olllinlshed Walnut veneers/lRRY/
and select hardwood solids.
• C,hromacolor Picture Tubt • AutomoUc Fine-tuning
• OlaN-IIn PlctuN l'ooe
• THan IOChenla
• Super Y1deo Range Tliller
• CuttomiHd Tuning

Rl.....lll Only Zenith hcis Chromoeolorl
'·

INGELS FURNITURE
992·2635

'

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�I.

4- Tbe De.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 24, 1972

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL RECORDS
ByMict.Americ•11
United f'rtsslnltrnotlonol
Conhr.nc•
Leal"' O.veroll
W· L W L
4 . 1 12 2
Toledo
3
I
7 7
Ohio Univ,

Uclans ·Just Roll Along
By Ualted Prell lllleniiiiGaal
UCLA continues to llland out

hardly added to its credentials
as the No·. 2 team In tbe

decision In 13 games when Rick
wl.llliims ICOCed 441 points for
iii the world of coUege country.
Iowa. The Hawkeyea played a
~etbaD like the Empire
UCLA went over the 1CJG. light defensive game throughSt!lte .ll\llldlng on a Kanaaa point mark for the nlntb Ume out and three Soutb Carolina
!l"alrle.
tbll - . scofed ;Its 14th players fouie!l out In tbe final
No. 1ranked UCLA,the five- straight victory tbiJ ee8aon and four mtnutes: Kevin Joyce bad
time def= NCAA cbam- stretched Its unbeaten string 23 points for South Csrcri!D..
plon, roU along with an euy over two seuons to 29 games.
Fordham (10-4) anapJ)ed
ltJB.t1 vi
over Denver HI!IIO' Bibby and Larry Far- Prlncetoo's.flve-pme wtmlng
Satlltday night wbUe three mer each scored 19 points for streak and banded tbe n&amp;era
· "pretenders" to the national UCLA.
their first loss at home In more
lille were upael.
Duke ended North .Carolina's than a year, when George
While UCLA was making lG-«ame ~ streak when Zambelli converted both ends
winning look easy, third- Robby West connected wltb a of a one-and-one foul situation
ranked North Carolina was 20-foot field goal with five to give the R8ms an inbeaten by Duke, 76-74, fourtb- seconds left. Dennll Wuycik, surmountable four'PO!nt lead
ranked South Carolina bowed who seored 2:1 points for North witb six seconds left. The
to Iowa, 91-«i, and 13th-ranked Carolina, mlsaed wjtb a last- Tigers bad rallled from an 11Princeton lost to Fordham, 79- gasp shot 1bat would have put point deficit in tbe final four
75.
the game Into overtime. Duke, minutes. Marquette stretched
Secondoi"anked Marquette oow 8-6, was led by Riehle its wliming ~treak to 15 games
scored Its second triwnpb of O'Connor and Chris Redding, although pressed by DePaul
the week when it beat DePaul, who scored 24 points each.
throughol!t the contest. DePaul
7().81, but that bard.fougbt win
South Carolina lost its third rallled from a 13-point halftime

deficit to within three pOint.! of
tile Warriors but Jim Cbones
iced tbe game with threepoint pin.
·
In other games Involving the
top 10, fifth-ranked Loulsv!Ue
edged Drake, 79-77, ,Allan
Hornyak scored 36 points as
siJtb.ranked Ohio Sta!ll beat
Indiana, ~74; Long Beach
State,.: lied for the ~lxth­
l'anking, beat "}.O):Ola of
Cbi~gl, 79-68, with. lfie help of
Ed Ralleff's 22 points; and
lOth-ranked Florida State
downed Georgia Tech, 71-69.
Elgllth-ra'nked :soutnern
Callfornla and ninth-i"anked
Pennsyl~ were Idle.
Eau Caire, tbe No. 1 ranked
small college team, ran Its
reoord to 13-4 with an l!5.al
victory · over Stout as center
Mike 'Ratliff scorek 33 points
and pulled down 11 .-eboiuids.

Miami

Kent State
W. Michlgan
Bowling.Grn.

a

II

High School Results
United Press International
N.Wark 62 Limo Senior 61
Claymont 72 Dover 62
,
St. Marys (W. Va .) 70 Frontier
59
Cambridge 83 Marietta 60
Fort Frye 59 Belpre 58
Mortlns Ferry 92 Bellaire 72
Bellaire St. Johns 7S River 77
Yorkville 66 Adena 62
Conotton Valley 78 Smithfield
57
Barnesville 54 Shenondoah Sl
Jewell Sclo 85 Madison 72
Bishop Donohue (W. Va.) 87
Beallsville 65
Garawav 71 River VIew 56
Ridgewood 69 Tusky Valley 61
Strasburg 56 Newcomerstown
55

.

New Concord SO Tri-Valley 45
Sidney 65 Lemon-Monroe 46
Springboro 80 Lillie Miami 65
Cleve. Max Hayes 58 Cleve.
Rhodes 48
Maple Helghl&gt; 73 Bedford 58.
Midpark 71 Mentor , 56
Brecksville 52 Brooklyn 46
Madison 81 Jefferson 74
Brookside 67 Avon 62
Kent Roosevelt 83 Painesville
Harvey 79
Firelands lOS Wellington 81
Keystone 80 Western Reserve

Patrick Henry 85 Tlnora 48
Ayresvllle 68 Elida 47
Continental 76 Hicksville 64
Cois. S. 86 VCols. Wainul Ridge
75

Cols , N. 95 Cols. Northland 92
12 oil
·
Cois. Linden 78 Cois. East 76
Cols. West 57 Cols. Brookhaven
48
Cols. Cenlral 94 Cois. Eastmoor 79
Cols. Whetstone 48 Cols. Marn
Frankln 45
Waverly 71 Cols. Mohawk 60
Upper Arlington 611 Westerville
. 67

Franklin His. 82 Cols. Westland
79
Ohio Deaf 72 St. Rita 35
W. Jefferson 77 Maddison
Plains 73
Bloom Carroll91 Llberly Union
54

Conal
Winchester
61
Plckerlnglon 41
Buckeye Valley 37 Marysville
36 "

Mt. Vernon 66 Ashland Sl
Amanda Clearcreek 86 Folrfield Union 71
Circleville 85 Westfall 63
Columbus Hartley 72 Gahanna
71
59
Columbus Wehrle 61 Teays
Elyria 71 Soulhvlew 59
Valley 54
Borromeo 46 Lake Catholic 38 Man slid St. Peters 76 Akron St.
North Bloomfield 61 Perry 60
Vincent 59
Marion 57 Willard 55
Akron South 72 Wadsworth 52
Nordonla 67 Manchester 57
Waterloo 75 West Branch 69
Cleve. Benedictine H Cleve. Indian Valley N. 79 E, Canton
Glenville 58
62
C.eve. Lincoln-West 81
New Knoxville 60 Ft. Recovery
Cleve. John Marshall611
53
C' 've. West Tech 96 Cleve. ·Paint Valley 86 Chillicothe
South 75
Flaget 62
'
Independence 64 Buyahoga Ross S. Eastern 98 Frankfort
Heights 45
Adena 75
Cleve. Lutheran Easl 63 Zane Trace (Ross) 73 Hun- ,
Fairport 35
tinglon 61
,
Hawken School 71 Ledgemont Weslern !Pike) 64 Portsmouth
38
Clay 57
Maumee Valley 62 Gilmour 53 Celina ICHA 62 Sidney Lehman
48
.
Cleve. Holy Name 71 Cleve. St.
Ignatius 64 .
Celina 97 St. Marys 37
Elyria Calhollc6S Vermilion 63 Arcanum 51 Covington 46
Amherst 60 South Amherst Si St. Henry 72 Ansonia 66
Highland 57 Smithville ss
Convoy Crestview 55 Van Wert
Cleve. John Adams 66 Cleve.
so
John Hay SO
Piqua 61 Troy 52
Wooster 84 Medina 68
Lima Shawnee 79 Lima Central
Cleve. CC 75 Aurora 59
49
Lorain Admiral King 7·1Canton Maumee Valley 62 Cleve ..
Lincoln 64
Gilmour 53
Warren Harding 70 Canton Ravenna 70 Walsh Jesuti 49
McKinley 58 .
Woodridge 101 Green 110
Warren JFK 74 Canton Tlmken Highland 57 Smllhvlllt ss
46,
.
.
Perry 59 North Canton 54
Alliance 52 Akron East 49
Creslwood 57 Roolslown Sl
Akron Buchtel 63 Canton C. C, Hudson 66 Coventry 33
57
'
AI&lt; ron North 68 Stow 67
Meatlllon 76 YoungJiown East Cuyahoga Falls 83 Youngstown ,
57
s. 61
C.nton South 74 Jackson 45
Springfield 57 Akron Garfield
Loullvllll n Mlrllnglon 79
55
Falrleu 64 "Glenwood 46Akron Firestone 57 Akron
l'wry 5f Canton Hoover '54
Hoban 53
S.ndy Valley 52 Carrolllotl 51
St. Marys IW. Va .l 70 Frontier
Field Local 53 Lake so
59
l'alrland eo Barboursville ·(W. Waynesfield n Lima Ptrry 73
Va.) ,. .
Pando~I-GIIboa .4 McComb 62.
l'av-~N ,,. Hilltop ·eo
Dayton Dun!Hir 85 Delphos St.
llliln 6$ Mantpeller 53
John 71
'
kalida SO Bluffton u
l'llllcllnll . Bryan J3

f

former Buckeye Bobby Knight
for the first lime, felt the game
was "a little more sticky than
we would have preferred." '
Knight, who played at Ohio
State on the 19fl6.62teams, is a
native of Orrville and coached
six yeara at Army before taking the Indiana post.

The loss was the fourth In a
row for Indiana, third ·In the ·
conference, after winning eight
of their first nint
. "Bobby takes a loss II"Obably
as hard as anybody 1 know,"
Taylor said, "and having lost
three in a row, it made It a little
more importsnt that they win
here."

Boxing Tournament
Winners Announced

7

1

2

2

11

1

3

4

9

0

3

2

0

OTHERS

Defiance
Youngstown St.
Urbana .·
Akroo
Ashland
Case West . Res.
Hiram
Findlay
Ohio Northern
Cincinnati
Bluffton
Dayton
.

Ohio Dominican

Cleve. State
Rio Grande
Steubenville
John Carroll
Malone
Central State
Walsh
Cedarville

3

8

W
14
13
17
13
11
7
7

9
7
8
8
7
4
6

6

10

7
5

3

L
1
1
2·
2
4
4
4
6
7
7
6

9
9

9

6
11
4 10
3 i2
2 11
5

.

FOOD fOR AMERICANS

Columbus
Five 71-60

~

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCORES
United'' Press International
Ohio State so Indiana 74
Miami 91 Ohio Universily 77
Detroit 70 Xavier 66
Steubenville 74 Northern
Kentucky State 65
Kenyon 82 Marletla 79
Marshall 103 Bowling Green 80
Daylon 58 kenl State 56
Walsh 77 Cedarville 73
Wright Stale 83 Rio Grande 81
Defiance 97 Malone 90
Capital 63 Otterbein 62
Cincinnati 81 Tulsa 74
Toledo 89 Western Michigan lf2
Akron 93 Wayne Slate 49
Capilal 63 Otterbein 62
Ohio Wesleyan 78 Mount Union
72
Wilmington 83 Bluffton 77
Baldwin-Wallace 71 Denison 67
St. Francis (Pa.) Cleve 96
Cleve. State ?s
Woosler 93 Case Western
Reserve 69
Wittenberg 82 Oberlin 65
Youngstown 74 Westmlnsler Sl
Alleghtny ( Pa .) 95 John Carroll
82
Ashland 78 Oakland (Mich .) 77
(ot)
Urbana 100 Dinalay 98
Ohjo Northern 127 Ohio
Dominican 98
Centra) Michigan 109 Cenlral
State .65

FORTUNATO FETED
STEUBENVILLE, Ohio
(UP!) -Joe Fortunato, Mingo
Junction native who was a
Winners were determined
(Junior Middle)
Sunday afternoon during the
Nelson Bostic, Beach AC, Chicago ·Bears linebacker 14
declsloned Tom Arkel. Hun· years, was honored at the sbtth
finals of the Sixth Annual llngton VFW.
annual Sports Award Banquet
!Middleweight)
Southern Ohio and West
Ed Bell, Beach AC. here .Sunday along with former
Virginia Golden Gloves Boxiilg declsloned Mike Neville, Pt. Wheeling (W. Va.) high school
. Tournament, held in the Lyne Pleasant.
basketball coach· Everett
Center at Rio Grande College.
&lt;Light Heavy)
Brinkplan.
·h
Rick Callihan, Beach AC,
REDS SIGN ONE
For the six th stra;g t year, declsloned Bob Snauffer, Rio
the Beach Athletic Club, Grande.
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Bidwell, captured team
I Heavyweight)
COACHES ro MEET
Cincinnati Reds announced
champion honors In the Novice
Don Mills, Beach AC, over
COLUMBUS (UP! ) _ The today the signing of recently
Clinton Bays, Cedar Coal.
Division, compiling 56 points to
(OPEN DIVISION)
annual clinic of the Ohio acquired outfielder Ted
runnerup Westwood of
I Banta~welghtl
:Association of Track Coaches Uhlaender to a contract for the
Ashland l(v. vthi"ch totaled 21
Dan Childers, Barboursville Will J1e held here Friday and coming season . Uhlaender,
· ts' "' ~, ' ' ·
1 · ·AC, ,c IJdeclsloneA H..i"' )J.o.hn.
pom .
..
Loudenbclck, ~hia~, ((y1 , 'Satlirday. Roy Gl'iak, 14in-' .llcquil'ell&lt;' ill' a. !If~ with the
In· the Open Team Champion '
' !~eothe..Wei' 'il '
· nesota coach and assiStant 'Cleveland Indians. last month,
event Huntington VFW edged
Gerald Arthur, untington Olympic mentor this year, will is the eighth Cincinnati player
. 1 1• 17
V~W, over Junior Deel, Cedar
South'p Oln
, g- •
Grove.
be the Friday banquet speaker. to agree to terms.
In
the
champion-ofI Lightweight)
champion awards Novice
Steve Morrison, South Point,
.
'
over Leon Smith, Cedar Coal.
DiviSion honors went to Larry
(Junior Welter)
Howell, Bidwell, arid Nelson
Fred Johnson, South Point,
Bostic
Gallipolis
both over Ray Mosley,_Dunbar,
'-:
OPTOMETRIST
'
'
.
IWtlterwtoghtl
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12. 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
members of the Beach Athletic
Leroy Johnson, South Point,
Club.
over Mike Howard, Huntington
AT NOON Oft'THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
POMER Y.
Champion of; Champlons in VFW. (Junior Middle)
the Open Divwon went to
Vernon Jackson, Huntington
Vernon Jackson, Huntington VFW, declsloned John Mooney,
VFW.
Huntington VFW.
,___
hi
d
(Middleweight)
The spor..,uans P awar
Jim Brown, Barboursville,
went to John Loudenback, over E. Howard, South Point,
Westwood Boys AC of
I Heavyweight)
Ashland , Ky
'
Frank Bellomy, Huntington
• ·.
VFW, over Mike Cable,
The local wmners will take Huntington Modern Press.
part in the West Virginia Stale
Golden Gloves Boxing Tour- •' ..·.·.··.··.·.·.·.·....···.·.·.·. ·.·.·:·:···:·:···:·.-''·•
nament at the Charleston Civic
nJCSON, Ariz. (UPI) Center this week. They will George Archer doesn't Uke
also take part In the national 18-hold playoHs aDd MIUer
regional tournament, to be held Barber does, but despite
in February at the Memorial tbelr feeliDga they faced
Field House in Huntington.
each otber ID just such a
Here are Sunday's individual playoff loday for the Dean
results :
Martin-Tucson Open title
(NOVICE DIVISIONI
and a lop prlJe of t31,0011.
I Flyweight) :
Barber and Archer tied at
Mike George, Beach AC, 15 d
... t tb d f
detlsioned Don Sheets, Beach
UD er psr ••• 1 e en o
AC.
tbe regulation 7% boles
I Bontamweightl
Sunday after Barber made a
Donald Price, Dunbar AC,
lzz"ftd
fr
t f ""
TKO 1:28 firsf round, Rick s """run om ou O "'"
Renfrow, Westwood AC.
pack.
·
IFtathorweightl
Itmlgbtbave been a threeJim Walsh, South Point, way playoff but for a bsd
declsloned Roy Meade, Beach drive oa the fiDal bole by
AC.
! Lightweight)
third I"OIIIId leader Bobby
Mike Artrip, Westwood AC, Nichols. Hll drive went over
t!:'e~'~:r~ Butch Maynard, the fairWay and rolled IDto
(Junior Welter&gt;
one o1 two lakes on tbe lith
Larry Howell, Beach AC, fairway. He eaded up laklDg
Ko'd Don Kazee, Westwood, In a doable o...ey. sis en the
1:28 or f)rst round.
_,.
IWott-eighll
bole and fbdahed two strvkes
Rick Smith, Beach , AC, beblDd Barber and Archer.
declsloned
Earl Howell, Beach \ 't'l!~~~~~~ii;8;1~~
Ac.
~ ;;:!t!&amp;; u; u mn:o· :rr
1

N. W. COMPTON, O.D.

The Waverly Tigers coasted
to their lOth win of the season
as they defeated the Indians ol
Columbus Mohawk 71.00 in a
Saturday night non-league
basketball game.
Bill Malloy led the Waverly
attack with 18 points as · the
Tigers notched their fifth win
In a row. He was followed by
Mike Oyer with 17 points and
Don Guilllom with 11 points.
Mohawk, now 3-9 .for the
year, was paced by Ruben
Ware and Joe Wade with 13
points each. Ray . Christie
poured in 12 points.
· COLUMBUS MOHAWK (60)
-Litsey 6, Tolliver'9, BuUer 7,
Ware 13, Christie 12, Byrd 0,
Wade 13.
WAVERLY (71) - Malloy
18, Oyer 17, Gullion II, Workman 8, P!elfer 2, Shoemaker 9,
Sallyers 6.
By Quarters:
Waverly
16 19 17 19- 71
Mohawk
17 13 16 14-jjO

. ..

Minute Beef Stew ·Is in ,the Bag

Tilt .To WSU Raiders

s

7
7

5- Tbe}'ralq Sentinel, MlddleJibrt-PCI"lee""y, 0 ., Jan. 24, b,.;

·

Tigers Rip

Crucial Week on Bucks·
ferrl!ig to the Bucks 68-66 win
In which they came from 14
points behind midway In the
second half.
• ,
Tuesday night's game Is expected to attract a capacity
WlDlama Arene crowd of more
than 19,000.
In Saturday night's win over
Indiana, Allan Hornyak seored
38 points. one less than his
career, blgb and sparked tile
Buckeyes to a 40-30 halftime
lead with 19 in the first 20
minutes.
Luke Witte, the Buckeyes' 7foot center, chipped in with 21
points and pulled down 16 rebounds to lead the Bucks to a
41-32 domination of the boards.
Witte's Inside defense also
shut off the Hoosiers 2 big
seorera, . Steve Downing and
Joby Wright, both averaging 20
points per game going in, to 15
and )2 respectively.
Ohio State jumped out to an
early 13-alead, saw.It whittled
to two points and then pulfed
away again to lead by 10 at
halftime. .
Rlller Sparks Rally
Again in the second lialf the
Hoosiers, paced by John Ritter
who led them In scoring with
"ll, Indiana made a run at the
Buckeyes to cut the margin to
four points.
Two field goals by Witte and
a tbree'J&gt;Oint play by Hornyak,
however, moved tbe Buckeyes
back out to an 11-polnt edge.
Taylor, coaching against

2

•

"R ·z.o ,R edmen rop
' 83,-.81.
n·

Ohio.Conferenc~
Coach Art Ljlnbam's Rio bad 22.
Loague Overall
w L w L Grande College Redmen blew a The Redmen, now 1-8 on the
Capital
4 o 12 o 16-poi~tlead with five minutes year, collected 36 rebounds Wittenberg · 4. · 0 7 s remaining in the game and 14 in the final half. Capt.
Wooster
3 0 II 4
Ohio Wesl'n
4 t 6 6 went down to a heartbreaking Bentley hauled down II for the
8ald.-Wal. , 3 2 6 8 fl3.81 defeat against Wright 16sers. The Redmen hit33 of 68
Musklngum
32 32 . 87 55 State University at Dayton Iroin the field, and 15 of 17 free
Otterbein ,
.
thrOl)'S.
Marietta ..-- ·~ 2 4 9 ·Saturday night.
Wright Stale hit 31 of 78 from
Oberlin
2 3 5 6
The Redmen held ·a niile
Mt Union
22 34 65 61 point advantage at . halftime, the field, and. 21 · of 25 free
Denison
Kenyon
1 4 .. 4 10 43-34, boil the host Raiders, now throws. The Raiders hauled
Heidelberg
1 5 0 10 ' ii-9 on' ·the year, came back. down 37 rebounds, 25 in the
BIG TllN· ', ,
' strong on the boards in the final half.
League Overall second ·half and took advantage · The.Redmen will be idle until
• W L W L of ilevetal Rlo,turnovers 1to turn
Minnesota
a o 10 3 defeat Into victory.
Ohio Slate
"30112
Harrv Hairston paced the
Michigan
3 1
8 6
WisconSin
2 2
9 5 Redmen with 17 points. Capt.
I
1
7 5 Roger Bentley tallied 16.
Iowa
1 1
7 5
Purdue
John Lucas was high for the
Illinois'
1 2
9 3
winners
with 23. Tim Walke.r
Mich. State
1 3
7 6
Northwestern 1 4 3 10
.....
Indiana.

COLUMBUS(UPI) -It may
be too early in the season for
"crucial" games, but Ohio
State's two contests this week,
Tuesday night at Minnesota
and Saturday at Michigan,
·come about as close as you can
get.
.
The Buckeyes, who handled
Indiana in workmanlike
fashion if not spectacularly ~
74 Saturday night for their
third Big Ten win without a
loss, wiD be meeting their top
two challengers within a space
of five days.
Minnesota, directed by former Aabland College Coach Bill
Musselman, leads tbe conference with a 4-0 record and the
Wolverines have only an 84-73
loss to Ohio State marring their
conference record in four
games.
"Some games have a way of
building up to mean more, although they aren't suwose&lt;l
to," Taylor said. "I know
Michigan Ia looking forward to
our game up there next
Saturday, but we have to be
concerned about Minnesota
first,
MusseimaJ\, in hla first year
at Mfunesota, bas loaded up
with junior college translers
and has turned a .so-ao team
last year into a solid contender.
Outlook Cool
"We dodged a bullet up there
last year and we're going to
have to get excited about playing up tbere," Taylor said, re-

3

\ ... ,

'•

'saturday's Mid-Ohio Conference game at , Ollio
. Dominicap, beginning at :z p.
m. Next home game II Feb. 1,
against Berea, Ky., in a nonconference game.
Box score .of , Sa\urday's
contest:
RIO GRANDE (11) Bentley7·2·16; Halrslon6-~17;
Lambert 4-3·111 Jordan '2·11-4:
Bartram 1-0.2 ; Rouse 1-0:2;
Hart 9-1-19; , Bollinger 2-0-4;
Martin 1·4·6. TOTALS 33-15.11.
WRIGHT . STATE (83) ..,. 'r'
Fogt 7-5-19; ~ucas 8·7·23;
McCurdy 4-1-9; Minch 0·1·1 ;
Walker 9·4-22; McKee 3·3·9.
TOTAI;S 31·21-83.
SCORE AT HALF:
Rio 43, Wright Stale 34.

HOLD ITr
WHEN BtiYING .
YOUR NEW CAR
1. Pick out your model.
2. Line up your deal.
3. Then hold lt_;_and
phone t(1e man frqm
Nationwide:

By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Food Editor
A busy housewife who
~es to. serve her family .
home-&lt;; ooked nl~als can
streamline her cookery . by
preparing favorite entrees
ahead ·of time, sealing them
ill plastic pouches for freezln~ and quick re)lealing In
botling water. There 'is ,a
heat.sealer appliance which
aids sucll a project. Whether
this is ·used or not, always
use durable plastic (mylar
polyethylene) ,bags that are
boilable. These come in sin· ·
gle, double ,or (amily-size
capacities. ~qr those wlio do
plan a meals-iii-a-m In u t ~
project, th~ , Sear$ Home
E co 11 p m I c s Service~ sug.
~ests using only to_p.quality,
mgred.ients. Co o k 1n g ,and
freezing of such things as
soups or stews, meats or
vegetables does ,not improve
upon poor-quality ingredi·
ents. Concentrated cream
soups and canne.d gravies,
with their modified starches
that , are good binder~ for
·home-frozen foods, are ··a
help. Also cut meat or vege.
tables into uniform pieces
for :even healing and . fill
pouches so they are only an
mch thick. Such meals are
ideal for families always on
the run to after-school activi·
ties and adult community
meetings during the week.
(

MINUTE-MINDED
' BEEF STt:W
'I• cup Dour
2 teaspoon• sal!
I teaspoon cblll powder
J;, teaspoon pepper
3 pouads bollt!less beef
chuck, cut Into
!:bleb cubes
3 t.ableiJIOODI sbol1enlag
1 cup chopped onloa ·
1 envelepe (1 ounce)
browa gravy mix
HI cup1 water
1 can (10 ounces)
tomatoes
18 small wblte oalons
2 cups 1-IDch carrot
chunk a
1 can (4 ounces) sliced
mushrooms,
undrained .

P.LPAULEY
PH. 992-2318
307 Spring Ave.,
Pomeroy, Ohio
Tht• mun l"r.' lll P.ob ti••mriJc is on ~nur siJc.

O~!!~~n!!~e
~~ t i&lt;• n ll ,,_... ti rl' l n ~ unt ncc Co.' ·
II" me om,..,:('; llumh ll~ Ohto

3 ROOMS

( Al l

NQtes • •••

About lilies

Group II
P.'' AnS "z'/ent
A uc·tz'on

PTA Committee

The Kukla, Fran &amp; ·orlle
series of specials continues,
with the second show
scheduled tonight at 6:30
p,m.. Ch. II .

++ +

Everything you always
wanled to know about Dr.
David Reuben, but were
afraid to ask, will be answered tonight on the "Best
of Phil Dona·hue" show,
when the famed author of the
"popular sex manual appears
as Phil's guest. 7:30 p.m.,
Ch. 4.

'I 9 7

NEW
.FURNITURE
'349;95 .

A program on nationar
se~~!ID be\~nled "at
the l~y night meeting of
the
American
Legion
AuxiliarY, Qrew Webaler Post
39, 7:30 p. m.
· Mrs.
Ben , Neutzllng,
Depariment of Ohio Natlonal
Security chairman, will have
charge of the program.
Representatives from · the
Pomeroy Police Depariment;
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Depariment, and the Pomeroy
Fire
Department
and
Emergency Squad will be
present. Members of other
organizations lr\terested in time wear.

us,oo,"Down·
11alan~e

On
Convenient
Terms.

'
''

,,

II

I

the

I

tt1meto
have ababy?
'

.

When-you really want one.
~. Just remember that
more than half of all the
pregnancies eac_h year are
accidental.

·,

Is , a placid creature,
although you wouldn't want
your son to marry one,
perhaps, Bp.m., Ch. 6.

+++

sea

mammal.

Tonight, Jacques Cousjeau
presents one of his on-an~under water specials,
' starring the manatee, which

Pllued
'
Children by choice:

++ +

MOVIES: Robert Taylor
stars In a prime-time film,
"Johnny Tiger.'' 9 p.m., Ch,
4, Also: "5,000 Fingers of Dr.
+++
T," 4 p.m,, and "Crack..
What's a mermaid? Many man," 11 :30 p.m., both Ch.
people think the legend · 10.
really got Its start with the
+++
manatee, a big, ponderous. · TUESDAY: The new Ch. 6
harmless

Rain doesn't always make things grow.

·series, "Whaf Every Woman

Wanl&gt; to Know," Is turning
up some stimulating gu~ts.
Today: Sesame Street's
creator, Joah Ganz Cooney,
10 a.m.

LISt year bad weather helped kill over 11,000
people. ·Good-weather drivers did the rest.. Drivers
who drive like trs summer all ~ar long.
Slick streets Qr&amp;atly Increase tht chances of a
skid. but that doean't make the gOOd-weather driver
go any slower. Rain, Ice, and snow almoal double the
dlatance needed to stop. but that doesn't atop him
from following too closely. Bad weather can draatl·
cally limit visibility, but lhel doesn"t make him any
more.cautioua.

You know lhe kind of driver we mean, Watch out
for him. And make sure you're a good
•
bad,waather,driver. We wa:nt you and
your family to be around to enjoy the
good weather.
DltiM dllptayino thil "'I IUblcribe to lt'te NAOA
COde or Bullnell Prattle... ~.. co"npondenc:tlo eon.Umer

Rllallofto lotvlce, 10110 "'K'" S,_ N.W........ lli"OIOn. O,C, ,20001

NatiOnal Automobile Dealers Association

~

For fut•ther inform11tion, yrrite
Planned Pat:enthood, Box 431
Radio City Station, N.Y. 10019

Ollie-. ~•tlol'rinhorl'ol ll.fMrlcl'• "•IICfll.r neW ear Wtruc~ IINitn , ............ D.q.

One.in4 serle• Pl"lltnttd by N:A.O.A.. Tht Dally Sontlnolandtlle Tri- Cou~ty , Auloinoblle DH!tn ~IOC.
1

·Not chance.·

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POLLY'S POINTERS

ry

Shower Given forM rs.

Every Shoe

'.

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) '• 0 ',

One of last Ieason's besl
dramas, "Paradise . Lost,"
lhe Clifford Odels play, hot
the MillO(! poem. m51ces ,a
reappearance on NET
Playhouse, I p.m., Ch. 11.

M t Thu da

Program to be On Security

with Paul Crabtree
P0 IN TVI~ W

·Green Thumb

MONDAY
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club
BETHEL 62, International will have open meeting, 7 p." m.
Order of Job's Daughters, .7:30 , Wednesday at Ohio Power Co.
p,m. Monday. Initiation office, Pomeroy. Slides to be
scheduled. Practice for Shown.
. . A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club meml!ers.
initiation to be held at 2 p.m.
AMERICAN , LEGION
Sunday. Houseware orders are Aurillary of Feeney Bennett ·
to be In to Mrs. Debbie Finlaw ·Post 128, Middleport, Wedby Friday evening.
nesday at post home, 7:30p.m.
TUESDAY
RUTLAND Friendly (JarOHIO ETA pHI Chapter, deners, Wednesday, 7:30, hilme
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 of Mrs. Joe Bolin with Mrs.
ByMRS.FR~BISE
p.m. Tuesday, Cohunbus an&lt;! Robert Snowden and Mrs .
Riverview Garden Club
·
Southern . Ohio Electric Co. Harold Wolfe, co-hostesses.
Llliei! II a name of herbs oftbe genus ..There are 60 diffllfent Cultural program drama by
LYDIA CIRCLE, Pomeroy
species ill North America and Eurasia. Lllie Dowers have three Mrs. Ruth Riffle and Mrs. United . Methodist Church,
petals and tbe'e are 20 species in tbe United States. Ulles are Doris Ewing. Mrs. sue Zirkle Wednesday, 7:30 p·. m.
easily grown and prefer sun. There are a few that wiD tolerate will be hostess.
POMERO,Y - Middleport
SOnie shade. Shade from high trees suits well and they look very
JUNIOR AMERICAN Legion ..• Uons Club, Wednesday noon,
much at home on the edges of woods, among azaleas and Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett United Methodist Chur~h
rhododendrons. Where ferns and wild Dowers grow so w!U Wles. Post 128, 7 p.m. Tuesday night social room.
The taD regal trumpet Wles will grow in sunny apots. If at the hall.
OHIO VALLEY Conunandrr
planted next to a building or close to a high fence, they will lean
PAST MATRONS Club , 24, Knight Templars, stated
toward the light and need staking. It is good to stake all IIIII- PomeroyChapterBO, OES, 7:30 conclave, 7:30 p. m. Wedgrowing llliesbecause the bloom becomes quite heavey. Ahnost p.m. Tuesday at home of Mrs . nesday. Regular business with
allWiesaresuitedforpottlng. Thls1SanexceDent'waytoh&amp;n91e J. W. McMurray, MasQn.
Red Cross and Malta Degrees
spring purchased bulbs, or bulbs received too late in the fall for
RACINE AMERICAN to be conferred in long form.
planting In tbe garden.
·
.
Legion Auxiliary meeting 7:30 Sir Knights to attend in full
· Wl)en planting In yoiD" garden goo&lt;! drainage Is required for p.m. Tuesday at post home .
uniform.
SO\ITHERN BAND Boosters
lllles.lf .not the lilies 'will rot. Planting on a ~bt slO(?e assures
good drainage. U drainage Is not a problem all you need to do is will have short business
mURSDAY
dig deeply and widely and e~rlch soU with humus, peat moss, meeting, at .6 p. m. Tuesday,
TWIN CITY Shrinetles, 7:30,
bark of sugar cane. Agenerous poftion of aand and gravel miXed before game at high school.
Thursday night, Columbus and
wltb heavy soUls good. Ulles look best planted in groups.
DREW WEBSTER Post 39 Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
When spring arrives watch for emergblg noses, when Au~iliary
and
Junior · Middleport. Carl Hysell to
cleaning up the garden. Frost 11 sometime troublesome. Pull Auxiliary, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.· show film on drug abuse. Roll
salole winter mulch 1n early Sll"ing to warm the soil, but keep it at post home . Program call will be payment of dues.
nearby to toss over the stalks If frost threatens. Trumpet Wles · chairmen are Mrs. Don Hunnel
are most likely to get frosted. AJ weatber grows warmer, cover on natural security, and Mrs.
the soU around the lllies ·with thick sununer mulch. If you con- J. M. Thornton, legislation.
serve moistute, it discourages weeds and keeps the roots cool.
REVIVAL UNDERWAY
~
ttl
b
through Jan. 30, at Syracuse
With good air circulation Insects and "ligbts give II e trou le. Church of the Nazurene with
When lllies bloom you may want to cut them for .the house.
UJ
Jj
the Rev. Edward J . Hundley,
Leave twiKhlrds of the stalk and leaves to feed tbe bulb for next Columbus, speaker. Special
year. As lily blooms fade snip tbem oH. When the stem turns music, public invited, 7:30each
Homemade beef stew frozen in plastic POuches makes meols-in-minutes simple.
yeUow, remove lt. Cleanll)g up and destroying old stems and evening.
foliage in the faD II good Insurance against spread of dlaease.
WEDNF.'iDAY
Cpmbine flour, salt, chili tomatoes . Mix well. Cover. To heat. drop sealed bag
In late smuner seeds can be collected and planted lUte peas
AM E R1CAN LEG I 0 N
powder and pepper . .Dredge Cook in 325-degree oven un- from freezer into uncovered
in
a
nurseybed.
Some
sprout
the
same
year,
but
usually
will
not
Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett
A silent auction of baked
nieat cubes in flour mixture. til meat is almost tender, pan of boiling w~ter. Bring
Brown meat slowly in Dutch about Jlh hours. Add whole water to bOil again. Reduce make blooming plants for a year or two. LUy seed/! can be bought Posii2B, 7,30 p.m. Wednesday .. goods was planned for the
and boil gently until from seed houses. You can also raise lilies from your own seed. night at the ball. Mrs. Ben February meeting when Group
oven In hot shortening, turn· onions, carrot chunks and heat
food
is
hot. Reheating lime:
mushrooms ; mix carefully.
If rodents are a problem, sink a fence or hardware cloth Neutzling, department II of the Middleport First
ing meat cubes to brown Cover;
cook until vegeta· 2 servings-20 minutes. Re· around ibe bulbs when planllng. Inspect all bulbs before plan- national defense chairman, United Presbyterian Church
evenly on all sides. Sprinkle bles and . meat are tender, move bag from water ; open
met recently at the home of
any remaining flour mixture about 45 minutes . Packa~e and serve. Makes 10 cups, 8 ling. Break off bQdly Injured scares. Soak the bulb on~~ hour will be the speaker.
in one part bleach in 20 parts of water. Spring planting shoUld be
Mrs. Joe Bailey.
over meat. Add c h o p p e d in 2 serving portions. Seal m servings ,
done early. If you receive bulbs at a lime you can't get outdoors
Members were also asked to
onion, gravy mix, water and boil -in-bag, label and freeze.
(NEWSPAPER ENTU.PRISE ASSN.)
to plapt, put them in J)OIB of soil or in plastic bags fiUed with soil.
take a favorite recipe to the
• .. ................ .. ••• '.'J'
~;;;:;g;:;:;:~;::;;~~:~;g_~;
u you have seed pods ripening in the garden and frost
meeting and these will be sold
threatens you can cut siems and conllnue the ripening process In
for 10 cent.! each. It was '
ATTE~DCAPPING
-NEW SEERSUCKER
the bouse. A teaspoon of sugar and honey added to a glass of
decided that Group III will be
Mr. and Mrs. "Charles , t Seers~ker isn't sedate water in which you plaee the stems, w!U keep feeding the stem
S
fS,
invited to join GroUp Jl for
Bradbury, Mrs. Evelyn Lewis, s r1pes any more. Tins year ion
h fo eds 1 .
.
.
monthly meetings.
Mrs. Asa Bradbury, Mid- it's bold madras plaids and · 8 enoug r se . 0 ripen.
. '·
A ~eeling of the execultve
Mrs. William Morrll gave
national security 'are invited to dleport; Mrs. Robert Reibel, P'aisley, bold g e 0 m, e t ric
Ulles may be grown from scales, seeds, and bulbets. Scales comrmt~ of ~e Meigs County devotions "The Bible History
ailenct ,(qu~tion @110 answer Morristown 1 1\WJo Canl Wolfe::."sJripes, and J&gt;r,ig ~ .t, c~!~r,~, .. , are_ produced~'~-~- Y~ ~~~~·\hem apart and plant tbem ill,,. goun~l,l, ;~f . : Parent~ , ~n,4 · and Otialllill,tl\e.~l!rl4'~ ~ ~' '~
period will be held.
and Wendy; , Gallipolls; ,,Pat·. Seers.~cke~. IS o11e '?f the big· . fitoiBt soil'.i(~~~sow m:a~~iilllldsespx:,co~~lram~ 111,!ate (all ,. Teacf;ers will 'be-'\ktd l(t tlie theme. She read •poem,.i!How &lt;
Hostesses for the meeting O'Brien, a student at Ohio gest new fabn c s bemg or outdoors m early Sll"lng.
home of Mrs. Richard Readelh Thou.' ' The book
will be Mrs. Neqtzllng, Mrs. Wesleyan, and Mrs. Walter used.
ThewUdyellowormeadowiUyhasyellowororange ooddlng Vaughan, Middl~porl, 10 a. m. study was given by Mrs .
flowers spotted with brown. It Is a nati~e to wet places in the Thursday .
,
. Dwight Zavitz on · the topic
Grace Pratt, Mrs . Russell Burns Harris. and daughter,
Moore, Mrs. Gladys Cwnmings ,~ Jill, Mason, W. Va. attended
RAINSUIT
United States and Canada. Tl1e wood lilY is a native today of
Mrs . Vaughan , Council "Can, We Know God Perand Mrs. Don Hunnel, who Is the capping ceremony of the
sandy regions in North America. It has reddish-orange erect pre~ident, has asked that all sonally?" She recited a poem
the chairman of .national Holzer School of Nursing
The newest thing for rainy no,.ers with purple spotted throats. The American Turk.Cap lily c_bamnen of . com'"?lttees, of- "When 1 Meet My Master Face
security for the unit.
Friday night at Grace weather Is the canvas rain· bas ooddlng orange flowers spotted with purple. It is a native of fleers, and un1t presidents be at to Face." Prav,er by Mrs. Paul
suit. That's raincoat with
th
11 Tb
b
1
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Methodist Church. Mary fashionable rain pants · to low areas of North America. The Tiger LUy is an orange flo~
e mee ng. ose w 0 canna Haptonstall concluded the
Bradbury, daughter of Mr. and match. The jacket is styled native of East Asia. The Regal LUy is a nati~ of Asia. Easter lily attend are asked to contact meeting.
LONG DRESS
Mrs. Charles Bradbury, was after the· classic blazer and ISaJapanesespecleswhicbbearssnowywbiteflowers;
Mrs. Vaughan.
.
Refreshments were served
Long dresses are really one of the student nurses the pants are long and
The Feb. 3 meellng of by Mrs . Bailey and Mrs
p8pular today. Not only for capped.
flared.
. Council will be held at Racine. Haptonstall
·
evening wear, long dresses,
U'TT
At
that
lime
past
presidents
·
dane in ruffles with printed
rosebu(is, come out for day·
11t!J!J will be honored.
, . . ._ _ __

· ~(\~\\ .,,
. HIGHLIGHTS
.

Social Calendar

Achtrtialna: etntribvttcl for lfJI pullllc _IOOd in cooper;uon wittr
Tilt Adrirtlllftl Counclll alld the lriterhltloMI Jlltwsp~per Adverllsi"C h~vl i 'IU

Use Plants for Lawn
Cover Instead of Grass
By POLLY CRAMER

Mrs. Roger E. (Jane Ann)
Hill was recently honored with
a layette shower at the home of
Mrs. Bernard Diddle, Racine.
Gifts were placed on a table
covered with a receiving
blanket and centered with a
stork replica. Games were
played with prizes going to
Mrs. Inez .Hill, Mrs. Boone
Adams · and Mrs . Robert
Flaher. Mrs. Jerry A. Powell
won the door prize.
After Mrs. HiU opened her

DEAR POLLY-My answer for Ruth who wants to use
a ground cover for a lawn area instead of grass. Recom·
mended plants for such use are ivy, pachysandra and
periwinkle. Baltic .ivy Is heartier than' English ivy, espe·
cially in the winter months. Pachysandra is recommended
for shade areas only. Ivy and periwinkle will grow in
either shade or sunlight.
To prepare an area for planting, the grass should be
tilled well into the topsoiL Additional topsoil may be
added if needed. Each ivy or periwinkle plant should be
, 12 to 15 inches from its neighbor. Pachysandr,a should WOLF PEN
Mrs. Eugene Haning and
be planted 6 to 9 inches apart. Heavy mulch should be
. used .at the til:ne of planting.
Ronald visited Wednesday witb
It is important to k~ep such an area weeded. Weeding Mr. and Mrs. James ·Reeves,
will facilitate rapid establishment of the plants and· pre· Unda and Bryan Lee.
vent "choking out." Aside from carefu weeding, one
Mrs. Lee Roush and family
need only water the area during "dry spells and feed the of Logan visited wltb Mrs.
plants in the fall with 5·10·5 ferliiizer (depending on the
type of soil) to maintain healthy plush ground cover.- Helen Johnaon, recently.
MR. G, F. E, , Mgr., Landscape. Dept.
of - ,- Nurseries
.
.
CHECK THIS
DEAR READERS-Mr. G. F. E. lives in Pennsylvania
Get checked in this season.
so those livln~ In completely different climates might Checked
suits, short dresses
check with their local nursery man for any variations and ~inf!ham
jumpers are
due to.weatlter condllions.-POLLY
brightenmg up the winter.
Blazer jackets are worn over
~i!IM@li\1\!illl-~m~ Polly's Problem -~i!!! · rw"al'" wide trouser pantS in brown
DEAR POLLY- I have a new pair of shoes that I
and white or black and white
checks with a so1ld brown
; • like very much, but after wearing them they have
knit vest or a bolder check
developed a squeak. I work in a very quiet office and
: · cannot wear ·them to work so would, like to know of
vest. And try the checked
accessories for an added
• a way.to stop this squeaking.-SANDY
touch. There are checked
!lit-:Wi!IL'iiiiJI!Ziiit!rlliiliiif•'mi'I:!W&amp;"-"IIl'lli!:J:&gt;--*shoulder bags, checked
DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with the size of dpuble scarvPs and even checked
sinks. How is one supposed to wash a roasting pan or a boots.
·
broiler in these small sinks?-RUTH
I
THINK GEL
- DEAR POLLY-If baby's
For
those
who bave olller
bottle brush has been mis·
eomplexloDB, but still aeed
placed, a sure, quick way
protection a«alnst the wlaler
to get the botUes sparkling
winds,
try a moisturizing «el
clean is to stuff a paper
Instead
of a cream. The gel
towel into tlie bottle, fill
Is
len
greasy than cream
half full of water, rub the
still
protects the sllla.
yet
towel around the inside of
the bottle with a fork and ;...
STEEL FOR GOLD
then sterilize. Sometimes 1
Some
people who are aller·
this is even more effective
gic
to
fake
gold jewelry are
than a bottle br"ush, espestill. &amp;.ble to wear costume
cially .for getting the very
je~elry. Stainless steel ' can
bottom of the bottle clean.'-M.
be a gond substitute.
DEAR POLLY-Rather than discard plastic air matROl-LED PANTS
tresses that have leaks or tears I use them to make rain
ponchos for my husband and the children. They are great
Rolled-up pants have become a popular lo~k of nos· to keep in the car lor emergency use ,-MRS , J. L. J .
talgia. Rolled-up pants with
' '
(NEW!tPA.PU fNTERPRISE ASSN .)
bruthtly, colored stockings
You ,wUI reeelve a dollar If Polly u1e1 your favorite and ' strapped !hoes b.as to
homemaldnl( idea, Pel Peeve, Polly's ,Problein or 111lutlon have the make-up to go with
it. red lips anrl rheeks and
to a problem. Write Pollv In ~•r~ nr thls~~ewspa-r.

.

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'i-

~moky ryt"~.

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gifts, refreshments of cake,
sherbet, cookies, nuts, lea and
coffee were serv~ to those
named and Mrs ..Austin Wolfe,
Mrs. Henry Hill, Mrs. Earl
Custer, Mrs. Oval Diddle, Mrs.
Brady · Huffman, Mils Beth
Ann Huffman, Mrs. Denoie
Hill, Miss Sonja Hill, Miss Pam
Cleek and Mrs . Darrell
Dugan. Sending a gift were
Mrs. Charles ,Cobb and Heidi.

LASH CURLERS
Eyelash curlers, so popu·
lar a few years back, are
being used by women who
can't handle false eyelashes
but are makipg the most of
what they have. Start at the
base of the lash, squeeze the
curler, and there you hav!!
a wide-eyed, but n at ural
look.

On Sale!
SAVE AT. ••

' EAR RINGERS
Making your own earrings
can be fun and iriexpensi&gt;e.
Tiny colored beads strung
on wire can be twisted into
any shape. The 14-karat goid
wires for .your ears can be
easily purchased to attach
to the inexpensive wire.

CHUBBY JACKET

Short furty jcu:kets called
cllubbies look just as cuddly ·
in wool. You can .. crochet a
bulky chubby sweater to go .
with a favorite double-knit
woo! skirt.

SPRUCED DENIM
Spruced-up denim is still
a great look fot a casual
f I a r e. Separates including
tailored jackets, skirts and
pants, even he a v i I y lined
coats can be switched ·
~round lor the go-anywhere
look.

We Also Have
Chicken, Shrimp, 0~~:;:1
Dinners and Short 0,
HOURS
Mon., Tuefi.,.Wecl., Thun.

8 a.m. 111112 midnight
Fri. &amp; Sat.
8a.m. IIIII a.m.
,sunday
2 p.m. Tillll p.m.

J&amp;F

·PIZZA HUT

PII.ISl-2416 ,
Nevi Haven, w. Va.

IOMAtOlOI

GIANT·SCREEN 2J:CONSOLE

C4112W3

The FREMONT
Compact console in genul
olllinlshed Walnut veneers/lRRY/
and select hardwood solids.
• C,hromacolor Picture Tubt • AutomoUc Fine-tuning
• OlaN-IIn PlctuN l'ooe
• THan IOChenla
• Super Y1deo Range Tliller
• CuttomiHd Tuning

Rl.....lll Only Zenith hcis Chromoeolorl
'·

INGELS FURNITURE
992·2635

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Notice

Carpenter

INCOME TAX service, dally
except Sunday, evenings by

Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cheadle
81ld Rexie were recent guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Bill St. John at
Jwnestown. Rexie is spending
time at the St. John

LEGAL NOTICE

The undersigned will sell lit
Public Sale for cash ' the
follow i ng
motor
vehicles
retaken from Frank Wolford .

some

h~e .

1966 Mack Tractor Serial No .

F719ST - 1019
1965 Hill Dump
No . 1222

cfuesls of Mrs. Murl
Q~1way were her grandson
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Woodrum, Tracy and Timmie,
McArthur.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were in ColumbUs on Saturday
to . see his brother, Eldon
S*key, who is seriously lll
81ld confined to Grant Hospital,'

ROom 921.

OF
QUAliTY

Eblin. Laurel Cliff Road, 1
mile west of Meigs County
Fairground on Rl. 7 bypass.
Phone 992-2272.
1-3·301c

News, Event

The

sale

Trailer Serial

will

be

held

at

Contractors Service. Rosemar

ROad &amp; Hazel Street, Parkers burg , West· Virginia at four
(,. :00) o'clock P .M . on the lrd
day of February. 1972.
Th.e undersigned reserves the .
right to bid .

OHIO VALLEY NATIONAL
BANK OF VIENNA

BY: Robert P . Lam bert,
Assistant Loan Manager

Ill 24,

.

The Busy Bee Society of the
Carpenter Baptist Church met
atjhe church for their January
session. Metta Fisher led
devotions. Others present
included Mrs. Ida Cheadle,
Mrs. Vivian Gaston, Mrs .
Emma Whittington, Mrs.
Freda Smith, Mrs. Bonnie
Cbliadle, Mrs. Anna Lich and
'Mrs. Helen Jeffers.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cheadle
entertained with a supper
rece~tly for Mrs. Maude
Holcomb, Mrs. Laura Krebs
and Biff, Mrs. Florence
Staneart, Julia Johnson, Mrs.
Carol Escue, Mr. and Mrs.
William Cheadle, Mrs. Mella
Fisher and Steve and Mark
Hamon.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frazier
· and Jerry of Galtipolis 'visited
her mother, Mrs. Goldie
Gillogly and other relatives in
the area on Sunday.
Mrs. Donita Mayne gave a
very impressive pledge service
when Temple Church WSCS
held their January meeting at
the home of Mrs. Roxie Arbaugh on Wednesday evening.
Each one joined in the service
of prayer and thanksgiving.
The theme was a celebration of
Living and Giving. She concluded with the paasing of
. peace. Reports were given
concerning remembering of
members in the area at
Cbrllbnas time. The hosteas
ae~ed aalad an.d cookies at the
cl
of the meeting.
.
r. iind Mrs. Rex Cheadle
and Kathy were in Charleston
where they visited A. R. Caster
and Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Spencer at the Spencer home
there.
Columbia Grange No. 2435
held their January meeting on
Friday evening. Norman Will,
delegate to State Grange from
Meigs County, gave a report of
activities there to the group.
Bertha Crippen, lecturer, led
an -interesting discussion on
ecology, what it means; and
what we might do to make our
conununities better places to
live ln. The Women's Activities
Conunittee told of the National
Grange Program for 1972 with·
the theme, "Ughls From Many
Lamps." New projects were
listed and plans made to have
contests earlier this year,

II

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Cue No. 20195

Estate of William P. Grueser,

Deceased .
Notice !s hereby given that
John M. King, of Route 1,
Rutland, Ohio, has been duly
appointed Executor of the
Estate of William F'. Grueser,
deceased, late of Meigs County ,
Ohio.
Creditors are required to tile
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months.
Dated this 18th day of
January 1972.
John C. Bacon
~robate Judge
of said County

2A, 31 12) 7, Jl

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2

appointment. Mrs. Wanda

196HHEVROLET
ST695
"' Ton 8' Stepslde, V-8 engine. H. Duty 15" tires, std.
trans .• H. Duty sprgs ., radio, low mileage, 1 owner. unit.

1967 CHEVROLET
$1495
8' Fleetslde. V-8 engine, std. trans .• clean cab, good tires.
color white .

1966 C~EVROLET
$1695
2 Ton 84" . cab to axle . 292 cu . in. engine. Good 825x70
tires, 2 speed r . axle, solid cab &amp; was used on paved roads .

Potneroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
fPMEROY, OHIO
WANT ADS
Female Help Wanted
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P.M.
Day
Before EXTRA INCOME. 3 hrs. a day
ca·n average you SlO. Work
Publication
from your own home,
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
pleasant customer contact
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
work
. Write
Personnel
Will be accepted un1119 a.m . for
Shopper
Dept..
Box 10,
Day of Publication
Watkins
Products,
Inc .,
REGULATIONS
Winona.
Minnesota
55987.
The Publisher reserves the
1-24-ltc
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed . objectional. The
publisher will not be
responsible tor more fhan one
Incorrect Insertion.

Wanted To Buy

RATES
For Want Ad Service

WE·UNS CAN'T
. LET OUR,
l SHORE THANKY
MAIL
FER TH' HOT VARB TEA, . TOTERS
LOWeeZ.Vi...IT THAWED TARN INTO
ME OUT wMPLETE
ICE SUCKLES

ForSale

WE HAVE one new 23
Diagonal Zenilh Table Model
for $399; one new 23"
Diagonal Zenith Console tor
S45B; one new Motorola
·Quasar, . '1'at&gt;le console for
$578; one new 23" Oia·ganal
Motorola Quasar console for
$499.95; one used RCA Maple
· Stereo for $99.95. Ridenour TV
&amp; Appliance, phone 985-3307
or 985-3308.
1·20·61c

For Sale
'

S cents per Word one insertion

Two Speed Rear Axle, 17,000
lbs . or larger.
Heavy Duty Battery .
Heavy Duty Oil Filter.
Frellh Air Heater &amp; Defroster .
Increased Capacity Cooling .
Front Tow Hook
Rear Tow Loop .
Hravy Duty j!:ront &amp; Rear
Springs with Auxiliary Springs .
Custom Cab .
Turn Signals with Hazard
Switch &amp; Marker Lights .
Power Steer ing .

.I

EXPERT

Se~ices

-GUARANTE'EDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

.LONELINESS

e

tt0.,

.

. •.

' ?

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'1'0 Ill! I'Wl 1..090P111CAL
. 1180\!TIT

Open1Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Po!lleroy, 9·

Aluminum
.
Sheets
USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20*
8 for $1.00

The
Daily Sentinel

ALL WEAntER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
&amp; PLUMBING

BILL NELSON, 992·3657
TOM CROW, 992-2580

CALL
HILTON WOLFE, 949-J211
DALE DUTTON, 992·2534

CO.

U'L ABNER ·

nui
Orchid
. Room
.

240 Lincoln .$!.
. Middt.port, Ohio
·Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete Home
Maintenance Service the
year around. No molter what
your need. Complete roof or
spouting repair. Interior or
exterior carpentry. Ceiling
tile and Paneling and Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Healing.
Day ~umber 992-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.
742-3947
992·5803
992-3898 742-4761
We are tully insured

·Make reservatiOns for your
private parties, banquets, ·
special occasions.
Ideal tor meeting place with or without kitchen
privil!ges.

For Rent

IXJN'T e&gt;E Si-1'1,

HONEST A~E!!
READ 'fOUR

r:\?EM '[0 THE
CI,.ASS

OFFICE SUPPLIES •

ROsEs/5 . R£0. .

n;

.;..!

VIO/..ETS/5

8/..UE- .

Z:...- -':1 t".,~

FUMHAIPTD
FEET,
AH /..OV£5 YO'--

and

Phone

Slop lo and See Our
'Floor Display.

992-5786

. YAS'M-BltfoH!".

.

~UNIA

SAID HER
WOULD lie
OVEII; HlillE!

BC)OT~

ALL KINDS OF
GLASS
For Every Purpose

'TEAFORD·,.
Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy,Ohio

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

FURNITURE

992-3975

Virgil.B.
SR•

HOME &amp; AUTO

Individual Catering
Will seat up to 150 people.

Real Estate For Sale

.

pOMEROY

ti

From the largest T"""
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. 'Pomeroy
INC.
Ph. 992·2174

I HAD AHUNCH 'tOJ'D ~f
FAVORA~LY IMPRESSED

We specialize in auto glass ·
on the spot installation.
Mirrors . Table Tops . Plate
Glass. Small home repairs •
.screens • storm

WITH 'THAT )OUNGMAN1MI$5 WINKLE.

REALLY?

WHY II; 'THAT,

cJANlCE?

windows

repaired. ·
FREE ESTIMATE
Point Pleasant &amp;Mason

AUTO GLASS
AI Conard, Mgr.
Phone 30~·773-5710
Route J3
Mason, W.Va.

,,'ll&lt;lif'U. PUl' AN END lO HIS
ROBOT- BUILDING ACTIV111ES
FOR AWHILE:, ~AYJ

DANCE

Wolfpen

Whispering Pines
Nite aub

News, Notes

YOU (iOIIHA

-------

~"&lt;~ll

THE

COP&amp; !tOW JiiADoy•OR 11M'
~ART

Fat THEM l'

!!.TI!IPPIN '
THe. HOOSE!'

....,

'
1 :).

JWJMlJ3)1)];11.1~.-'IJ-J,_ "t
milady's
wardrobe
U. Paint
1%, Withdraw
16. Physicist
Otto
It. Join
force~

DOWN
I. Impress

a. Bower
S. Slght-

seeinl
t.Ottoman
ruler
5. Vipers
II. Decorate

Ueland

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

.2

We talk to

like .. penoo.

,,

,

-----

WMP0/1390

'

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ZZ. What to

do Ina
trattoria
Tnllted,
with
.. upon"
U.Bantu
country
Z&amp;. Short .
letter ·

u.

I
21. Vivacious
Zt. Racehorse
10. Sphere of
conftict
II. Grow
towarda
nltlhl
16. Life ·
(comb.
form)
·s1. Perched

...-;.:,;;,.....;:,;~ "'-..,lo;;~_. ZI. StockiDa
.

flalM M

Cllltl'lCT

I!APEK, T i l t LWI' UARNS :;oM~
f'AC!e At!OIJT THE
INMAlr~ Of' THE

AAciifOL061CAL
"re-NC&gt;CllM~

10 A 'TAI!TliNI;
Cl:*CLU510N .

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CAPI'AIN EASY

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thread
H. Czech
river '
fl. Worsted's
bane
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lnp
dient
Zt. One of the
·kincdoms
SL Stationery
item •
SS. "-Got
Sixpence"
St. Time
period
Zl. Fltlor
eatinc
11. Term In
ediUnc

I

FRIDAT

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TURRET

S•turd•y'•

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lCT

MARRIED 'IOU CAN'T
HAVE 1HI5.
j;

Now &amp;rranre lhe circled !etten

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auiletted by.the above cartoon.

i:;

(Antwen lomo'rrow)

'•
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,

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to lorm the turpriH anawer. u

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.· ,A X Y D L I A A X R
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply standa lor another. In this ••mple A is
Uled for tbe three L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Sln&amp;le letters,
apo.tropb11, the lenJtb and formaUon of the words are all
hints. ~tl! d_, the code letlers are different. ·
A CrJptoar•• Qaoullon
YKT RHM.SMYL.EY , WLPT YKT UVTY ,
· DVHF••

I llfOECT I

Jumbt. .. TAffY

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to -work It:

LE

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arrest

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21, Bowlcalh;
' U. Colored,,_

;Realty

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

UnscramblelhtH four JumbiH,
' one letter to each I4UIIn, to
form four ordinary wordo,

·'lo"-a
· camera"
I. Item in

Jim Encourages Bad Play

I

•

CHE.CK

U-PHOLSTERING SERVICE,
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
PAINT DAMAGE, 1971 Zig-zag
complete selection of fabrics REASONABLE ·rates. Ph. 446sewing
machines
.
Still
In
WE HAVE 36 .
FURNISHED and unfurnished
and vinyl to choose from .
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
original cartons. No at - PROPERTIES FOR SALE
apartments. Close to school.
Pick.up and dellwery. Slater
ORDER
Owner
&amp; Operator.
tachments
needed
as
our
Phone 992- 543~.
Upholstering, Rl. 3, Pomeroy,
S.12-tfc
controls
are
built
in.
Sews
LAND
CONTRACT
10-18-tfc
phone 992·3617.
"FIELD SEEDS
with 1 or 2 needles, makes $1,500.00 DOWN wllh $53.42 a
12 ·27·301P AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
bullonholes, sews on buttons,
monlh. 6 room house. Good
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
,-----o.-:::
_
..
::-=:
.
=
.
=""-· · - cancelled? Lost your
monograms, and blind hem
well. Out-cellar and other
FERTILIZER
Racine area. Phone. 992·6!29. stitch . Full cash price, $38.50
READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
operator's license? Call 992·
buildings . 3 ACRES.
1Fivered rlghdt. to your project.
12-14-tlc or budget plan available.
2966 ,
1
SEED CORN
as
an
easy
,
Free
A.IS-tfc
Phone 992-5641.
29 ACRES
estimates. Phone 992-3284 .
DUMP lED
1 BEDROOM troller aparl·
1·19·61c
FREE
GAS
6
rooms,
balh,
Order Now &amp; Snel
1 x 9, 19" Sides and ~ lO" Head
~:•·'l.j..m..ep ,t ~ deal ~,for ~~pies. - - - . , . . - - - - - " c~llar,- YOWIQ fru f1. Serace for
Goeglel~ Ready -Mix . Co .. ' IN:t'!i-RIQ!!.,~I.""~~or palnll~ll\:
'and Tall Gate. Hole In Tailgate
·.
·
,
C
&gt;!1'ntatt1y\cCture:s
Dlilr~ Isle. VACUUM ' C·lEANER :1 New ·,., '·mObile home. Spri~Ji: 1 waler. . Middleport, Dhlo. ·
, J:i. ~. 'tl '"" !'~1
ne 742-5823.
tor spreedlnQ materials .
6
·
992'5248
or
992·3436.
•
•
:
'
·
.30.Ifc
'· " ~:'ll .,., ·
T·24-5tc
I'OMIROY
.
Salesman's Demonstrator
Asking \13,500.00: '"
Halt Cab Protector .
T
·9·12tc
.t•cll
w.
Cartey.
Mtr.
has
cleaning
attachments
7" Holst or larger .
O'DELL WHEEL allghment
-tft·JIIl ·
-'-------plus the new Electro Suds for
RUTLAND
Mud Flaps.
located al Crossroads. Rt. 124.
LEGAL NOTICE
Bed to be mounted and '---------~ NEW 2-BEDROOM. double
shampooing carpet . Only 3 BEDROOMS, nice kllchen,
Complete
front end serVice,
palnled.
. INSTRUCTION in organ and
$27.50
cash
price
or
terms
bath,
lots
of
paneling
.
Large
wide, mobile home on lot in
The Board ol Trustees
tune up and brake service.
NOTICE OF
Syracuse . Completely fur - available . Phone 992-5641.
lol . Only $6,000.00.
piano. Gerald Hoffner, phone
reserves the right to reject any
Wheels
balanced
elet·
APPOINTMENT
1-'19-61c
nished. Phone 992-2441 after 5
992-3825.
or all bids.
trP"Ically .
-All
work
Case No. 70,593
p.m.
100 ACRES
1-19·12tc
Bidders are reque-sted to
guloiranteed .
Reasonable Estate ot Clara E. Garland,
1·3·1fc GOOD HAY. Phone 992.3658.
S bedrooms, 11 room home,
submit with their bid fOr the
rates. Phone 992-3213.
Deceased .
above equipment a further bid
- - - - -- - 1-19-ttc balh, shower In basement.
• If
Notice is hereby o lven t~at
7
-.~..7- c · Mary Hllrris of Minersville,
for a 1965 International 1700
· Plenly of barn room. Good
5 ROOMS &amp; bath, ground floor
Series Truck .
Ohio, has b!en duly appointed
terllle land. Chesler. water. ----:--:--:--:--:--apartment , Albert Hill, COAL limestone . Excelsior
WILL IS FROST , Clerk
C. BRADFORD, Audloneer
Executrix of the Estate of Clare
·
Will
sub-divide
for
housing.
Racine
949-2261.
Salt
Works,
E.
Main
St.,
Ill 24, 31 12) 7, Jt
Friday &amp; Saturday
Complete Service
E . Garland, deceased, late of
1·21 -8tc Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
Phone 949·3821
Minersville, Meigs County .
Nighls-1 o Ti 12
2 APARTMENTS
4·9-lfc
Racine.
Ohio
qllio.
11 ROOMS - 5 up with bath, 6
Critt Bradford
Credilors are required to file
2 BEDROOM mobile home, 12 x - - - - - - - - down, bath. Large porch.
their claims with said fiduciary '
60, adults only. Phone 992· POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
5-T
·IIc
within four months .
·Nice yard. In town near
5443.
Par.kview Kennels, Phone 992·
Dated this 13th day of
stores.
1. 11-ffc 54~3 .
SEWING MACHINES. Repair January 1972.
8-15-Hc
se·rvlce, all makes. 992·2284.
John C. Bacon
4 ACRES
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Probate Judge
Music by Red Stewart BEDROOM and 2 bedroom
4 BEDROOMS, 1'12 balhs ,
of said Coonty
Authorized Singer Sales and
mobile homes. Adults only. Wanterl To Buy
modern kitchen . wl1h cook
(I) 1), 24. 31, Jl
and the Ambassadors.
Service.
We
~harpen
Scissors.
Phone 992-5592.
units. Large closets, hardOLD FURNITURE, Roun&lt;! Oak
Mrs, Charley Smith was a
3-29·1fc
12-19-lfc
4 PC. BAND&amp;
wood floors. Basement, One
tables,
Brass
beds,
dishes,
Sunday morning visitor of Mr.
BID ADVERTISEMENT '
2 FEMALE SINGERS ·
mile of Middleport.
clocks, and -or complete
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
The Tuppers ~lalns - Cheste-r 1
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
HOMES,
FARMS,
and Mrs. Harley Johnson.
households. Write M. D.
Septic tanks Installed. George Water District, a public body ,
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse, Ohio
BUSINESSES, LOTS,
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Mrs. Ethel Hatfield returned CHILD care In my home. Can
(Bill) Pullins . Phone 992-2~78 . hereby advertises for bids for
992-2951 .
AND COMMERCIAL
Call 992·6271.
4-25-lfc the following :
furnish references . Mrs .
home after spending some time
4·2-lfc
LOCATIONS.
12-17-ttc
One (I) solenoid valve unit,
Glenn Smith, Rock Springs -----~
with ber daughter, Irene, who
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
altitude
Rd., Phone 992-6T87,
SEPTIC Tanks Cleaned. Free following :type , complete with
ASSOCIATE
has been in the hospital but is
1-23-61c Mobile Homes For Sale
pipe Inspection . Paul Stein2 each M J gate valves and
992.!325 992-2378
Auto Safes
metz, phone 742·5864.
now at hom~ and improving in
boxes,
1-23-6fc
1-18-6tc
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT .. . MOBILE home on nice lol, '68 CHEVY Impala, automatic,
1 inlet pressure gauge,
Everyone in Bengal is now Detroit, Mich.
4 " check valve,
overweight ladies, leens J!!ld forced air heat, air con.
power
steering,
power 4 BEDROOM, bath &amp; half,
Mrs. Maury Mlller, Sandra,
a Bengali and we must live
4" solenoid valve ,·
men interested In a Weight
and exterior
brakes, 327 cu. ln .• grey with
ditioning in Racine area .
utility room, built-In kitchen, INTERIOR
sump pump ,
together.
painllng, roofing and gutter
Janie,. Mary and VIcki were
Watchers I R) Class In
black vinyl top, phone 985·
Phone 992-6329.
altitude gauge,
wall to wall carpet &amp; garage.
--Sheik Mujibur Rahman, visitors of Mr . and Mrs.
Pomeroy write : Weight
work done. Phone 843·2826.
3598.
1·23-ttc
112 mile north of
heater
Located
Watchers I Rl. 1863 Section
T·18-121c
leader of Bangladesh .
1·21 ·12tc
s.um p discharge
Eastern
High
School
.
House
is
Richard Jeffers and family . .
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237. 60X12; 2-bedroom. all-electric,
entrance hatch
almost finished and others
10·3-tfc
light
switch
SEPTIC
tanks
cleaned.
Miller
air conditioned, 8x20 11. Porch 1969 CHEVROLET Impala 4
being built. Call 985-3598.
vapor proof lighl
Sanitation,
Stewart,
Ohio.
Ph
.
and aluminum awning,
J.2T.JOic
door V-8. automatic trans·
power panel
WIN AT BRIDGE
SAVE up to one half. Bring your
662-'J!J35.
aluminum skirting, com .
mi~sion, power steering ,
pressure switch and
sick TV .to Chuck's TV shop,
2·12-Hc
pletely
selup
.
Beautiful
factory
air,
light
green
finish,
RACINE
TO
room
house,
1nlet pressure gauge W ·
151 Butternut Ave .•. Pomeroy.
snubber .
location. Owner leaving state . dark green vinyl top, low
bath, basement, garage, two
Phone 992-5080.
· ~lans for thIs sottnoitL valve
Phone 949-41192 or 992·5272.
lots. No reasonable offer HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
mileage, very good condl·
11 -21 -lfc
are on file at the&gt; water
un•t
Service.
Phone
992-2522.
1-10-tfc lion, good tires. Phone
refused. Phone 949-4313.
office located In Chester, Ohio,
6·10-ltc
742
·
47~5.
1-23-3tc
T
·2T
·T2fp
not Blackwood. Needless to REDUCING Inventory .
and can be viewed by any
NORTH
24
·
prospectiv-:
bidders.
say you passed. How did you
Discount
on
most
allllems.
20
DRY Wall finisher contractor.
IIIAJ5
All ,bids must be recel't'ed by
pel.
discount
on
shoes.
Open
7
1969
CUSTOM
Ford
pickup.
play
the
hand'
"
,
I.
Pubbeld,
phone
742-5825.
R.
¥KQ5
10 a.m. on February 10, 1~72,
clays a week . Edna's Grocery,
Phone 992-6372.
1·24-Stc and
Jim : "1 won the heart lead
the District reserves the
t5
Porlland,
Ohio.
1-T9-61c
with my ace and carefully
right to reject any or all bids .
... K JI0654
1-23·61p
Tuppers.p Ia lns·Ches ter
Berets In multlcolor quilt,
led the three of clubs. West
TVEST
EAST
Water District
and
Ooppy,
are
fashion
big
low
.
I
made
the
best
played
1970 W-'J!J OLDSMOBILE 442,
WANT WORK at home ad·
llolO
Ill Q 8 7 3 2
Box 7
top-ofh to a classic taUored
automatic, factory stereo
percentage play and stuck in
Chesler, Ohio 45720
dressing and stuffing en .JI094
.832
11) 17, 24. 31 , 31
tape. Lots of extras. Like new.
lUll.
·
the jack. East took his queen ,
velopes? Rush self-stamped
+Q10863
t K942
12'
14'
24'
WiDE
608 East Main
Call
992·2441
after
5
p.m.
·
envelope to F. Uribe. Box 36,
thou·ght a while and led back
POMEROY
lloA72
4oQ
11-28-ttc
Albany,
Ohio,
45710.
a
heart,
whereupon
I
sailed
MIDDLEPORT3 bedrooms, ' SIDE GLANCES
by Gill Fox
SOUTH (D)
1-6-lfc
NICE
8
ROOM
·HOME,
TV2
contract."
home
with
the
Ill K964
balhs, · porches, double
Oswald : "East made a bad
• A 76
Real
Estate
For
Sale
garage,
level lot, excellent
play. But you played the KOSCOT KOSMETICS and wigs
•••
tA~7
neighborhood,
Call
for
price.
clubs in a way to encourage - for sale. Brown's. Phone 992·
1220 Washington Blvd.
,f.983
5113
Belpre, Ohio
him · to try a stand-pat de·
·
East. West vulnerable
HARD TO BELIEVE
12-31
-lfc
fense
.
If
you
bad
led
your
POMEROY
- 1112 slory frame,
West North E110t South
3
bedrooms,
bath, utility
nine
of
clubs
East
would
FOR THE BEST deal In a new
It
room.
porches,
gas
forced-air
or
used
mobile
home,
try
have
seen
that
the
club
suit
Business
Opportunities
Pass 2 ,f.
Pass 2 N.T.
George
HobsteHer,
furnace,
some
hardwood
would set immediately. When
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales.
Pass 4 N.T : Pass Pass
Rut Estate Broker
Man or Woman
floors . $3,500.00.
Kanauga, Ohio.
, Pass
you
led
the
three
he
visual·
HARRISONVILLE
- Grocery
RELIABLE
personal
from
this
' .
12·17·901c
ized four clubs to the ace- arell to service and collect
slore . Including stock and
Opening lead- ¥ J
EXCELLENT
nine in the West hand. That from automatic dispensers.
equipment, llvfng ·quarters,
LOCATION
doing a good business and In a RACINE - 2 story frame, bath,
No experience needed. We MOBILE HOMES. Large
would leave West \VIth two
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby more club stoppers and the establish accounts tor you. sele&lt;tlon 8- 10 . 12 wides, 1 to 4 good locality. Price $18,000.
4 bedrooms, porches, gas
bedrooms , bank repos and
Phone 949-3211 .
Car, references, and $995 to
forced -air heat, outbuilding, 2
heart
lead
might
well
be
the
Oswald : "Anything can
used, some practically new.
1-23-3tp
S3490 cash capital necessary.
extra level tots.
Save up to •t.. R. A. or Don - - - - - - - -4 to 12 hours weekly could net
happen 'in a catch·as-catch- winner ." ..
(NlWSPAPU lHTlRPIIISE ASSN,)
Miller. 70S Farson Street,
STORY RIC
good part time Income. Full
can rubber bridge game."
Belpre, OhJo by Kaiser HOUSE , 1642 Lincoln Heights.
IV•
B K
lime more. • · Fo~ local in·
Aluminum, phone 42 3-9 531 .
Call Danny Thompson, 992· MIDDLE,PORT- 2 bedrooms,,
Jim· "It usually does, I
terview, wrlt·e: (include
2196.
•
bath, carpeted, dlnlng room,
telephone number! EAGLE
sat South and, while I don't
- - - - - -- -1·_1_&amp;-_12....,fc
porches, storage building,
.18.tfc
7
INDUSTRIES. Dept . BV, 3938 .have an opening bid, I felt
-,
level
lot. JUST U,fSO.OO. '
The h!ddint&lt; has been:
Meadowbrook Road, St. Louis
tbat the vulnerability situa- l\'est North
.
'
3 BEDROOM ranch type home, THE ANSWER TO YOUR
East
South
Park: Minn . 55426.
tion called for some action. I
Arbaug~ Addition, Tuppers
1·24·21p
lllo
HOME HUNTING ,CAN
chose to open one diamond. 2 •
Plains. All . new with total
?
PROBABLY BE FOUND
PallS
Po..
When my partner responded
electric and central air
WITH US.
yOu
You, South; hold :
I l
conditioning, bath and 3,4 fully
two clubs. I had to rebid, but
HENRY CLELAND
'·
I
J Lt. •
loAKQJ1065
'A3Z
.KS
carpeted,
lull
basement.
REALTOR
wasn't going to pau; raise
~ ~llt.ll
garage In basement. See by
What do you do now?
· 1
Office 992·2259 '
cl.ubs.: rebid a three-card suit
\
appointment,
pltone
992-2196
~
Restchnce
992-2561
A-Bitl three spa d c s. Yt•u
or show·my spades. That left
' \. I
I· . .
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson.
tl&gt;'f•l' 11..11
1·23·61c
me with two -no·trump and r want ynur pllrlrter to take· you
Financing available.
~)aly.
I
,I
~~~
.
l vt 11
bid It My partner jumped to tn p~ wUh 1lmo"l ln,ythlnJC.
12·30-flc
(L
1,'
: 'l'ODA Y'S QU[STION
NICE llstory home ~ith full
four and t~ere I was flying
,.,,
•
I
SIX
ROOM
house,
133
Butternut
·
baseri'ient,
2
lots,
new
forced
in the stratosphere with no
You do bid thl'i.!f.! !i;ptu.Jcs. We~t
11MirrMM. ... TA ... U.M.
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrfck, 2137
air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
fuel."
.
hida lour clubs und .your partner
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
Eltl!'enlary School. Phcino
O.ald: "Your ,partner's doubks. What ~o you do now'!
"Will you ltiU love .mt when I'm 30, and ttartlnc
Ol]lo, phone 237·4334.
992-7284 lo see.
ON
YOUR~
An~w~r Tnmnrruw
,
.·
to lh&amp;Ye ?" .
·
'•
i
T·21
-tfc
;
11-1-Hc
four. 110-tfmp ,"las a rui•·,
.J
•
Now's Time To

...

WITH A

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME 'IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
TOO 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 $5,00\).00 and lhre&lt;t children. 7'1• Pel. annual
percentage rate.

Wh!!ll Alignment .
'5.55

•

FIGHT

36" x"23"' x .009

OLD
POCKET
knives,
especially Case XX. Also
have other old knives to lrade
Minimum Charge 75c
111 Court St.
OFFICIAL NOTICE
or sell . Phone 992·2343.
12 cents per word three
The TownShip , Trustees of
Pomeroy,
Ohio
· 1-18-lfc
Chester Township will receive consecutive Insertions.
sealed bids until ·8:00 p .m.,
18 cents per word six con ·
February 11, 1972. for one dump secutlve Insertions . .
truck, as follows: G.V ,W . of
WALNUT Stereo-radio com ·
25 Per Cent Discount on paid For Rent or Sale
..
'24,000 lb . or larger; ~roper
ads and 'ads paid within 10 STORE room SO x 60. nice 2 binatlon. dual volume control,
Wheelbase for 7 x 9 dump bed, I
4 speed intermixet;l changer, 4
days.
beam tronf axle 7,000 lbs . or
bedroom apartment, for rent.
speaker
sound system,
CARD
OF
THANKS
larger. Frame R:einlorcement .
For sale - T2 fl . meal case. 10
Balance $67 .83. Use our
Heavy Duty Brakes .
&amp; OBITUARY
II. vegetable case. 6 x 6
budge! lerms. Call 992-7085.
J.fO cu. ln. engine or'larger, V ST.SO lor SO word minimum .
walkin, Cola cooler , coin
1-19-61c
8 Engine.
Each' additional word 2c.
operated, automatic washer
Five Speed, Direct In llfth,
BLIND
ADS
&amp; dryer . For rent - Camp MAPLE . Early American
Synchromesh
Tr1nsm iss ion .
Additional 25c Charge per
9.00 x 20 Ten Ply Tires with
Sites, 1,000 ft. Olllo River
stereo-radio combination,
Adverllsement.
Mud and Snow Tread on Rear .
frontage, pick your lot now.
AM-FM radio, ~ speakers, 4
OFFICE
HOURS
7.00 Rims.
No
drunks
.
M
&amp; G Food
speed
changer, separate
Two West coast Mirrors.
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
Market , 3 miles soulh, conlrols . Balance $79.45. Use
Cut Spoke Wheels
8:30 a.m . to 12:00 Noon
Middleport, Rt . 7. .
Dual Electric Windshield
our budget ler.ms. Call 992·
Saturday.
1-21 -3tp 7085.
Wipers, Variable Speed &amp;
Washers .
1-19-6tc
Notir.A
(I )

Business

TROPICAL FISH, . fancy
guppies, angels and breeders,
Bellas and . supplies. Phone
992-5443.
T2·30-Hc

___...,

---·· - -

HAVE A
HAPPY DAVIN
KIODVGARDEN,
TATER

UH·- ·
THAR IS
ONE "LEETLE"
THING .

FVY

SMRT .- BLWWLMS

BLFYTH

Sa'untoy's ('ryptoquote: THERE IS NO SUCH THUiiG.•AS
AN UNDERESTIMATE OF AVERAGE INTELLIGENCE•..:.
H. B. ADAMS1
·(0 1072 Kint F· •''lrl''' ~yndit-h• , lflr '

L.L==::==:::i..J . ·'
1

HATE 6£1NG ACC~EP

\•

of . t:

13EA6LE CHAUVINISM!

,

..

�I

.•

I

•

•

,

'··'

i

•

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

Notice

Carpenter

INCOME TAX service, dally
except Sunday, evenings by

Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cheadle
81ld Rexie were recent guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Bill St. John at
Jwnestown. Rexie is spending
time at the St. John

LEGAL NOTICE

The undersigned will sell lit
Public Sale for cash ' the
follow i ng
motor
vehicles
retaken from Frank Wolford .

some

h~e .

1966 Mack Tractor Serial No .

F719ST - 1019
1965 Hill Dump
No . 1222

cfuesls of Mrs. Murl
Q~1way were her grandson
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Woodrum, Tracy and Timmie,
McArthur.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were in ColumbUs on Saturday
to . see his brother, Eldon
S*key, who is seriously lll
81ld confined to Grant Hospital,'

ROom 921.

OF
QUAliTY

Eblin. Laurel Cliff Road, 1
mile west of Meigs County
Fairground on Rl. 7 bypass.
Phone 992-2272.
1-3·301c

News, Event

The

sale

Trailer Serial

will

be

held

at

Contractors Service. Rosemar

ROad &amp; Hazel Street, Parkers burg , West· Virginia at four
(,. :00) o'clock P .M . on the lrd
day of February. 1972.
Th.e undersigned reserves the .
right to bid .

OHIO VALLEY NATIONAL
BANK OF VIENNA

BY: Robert P . Lam bert,
Assistant Loan Manager

Ill 24,

.

The Busy Bee Society of the
Carpenter Baptist Church met
atjhe church for their January
session. Metta Fisher led
devotions. Others present
included Mrs. Ida Cheadle,
Mrs. Vivian Gaston, Mrs .
Emma Whittington, Mrs.
Freda Smith, Mrs. Bonnie
Cbliadle, Mrs. Anna Lich and
'Mrs. Helen Jeffers.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cheadle
entertained with a supper
rece~tly for Mrs. Maude
Holcomb, Mrs. Laura Krebs
and Biff, Mrs. Florence
Staneart, Julia Johnson, Mrs.
Carol Escue, Mr. and Mrs.
William Cheadle, Mrs. Mella
Fisher and Steve and Mark
Hamon.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frazier
· and Jerry of Galtipolis 'visited
her mother, Mrs. Goldie
Gillogly and other relatives in
the area on Sunday.
Mrs. Donita Mayne gave a
very impressive pledge service
when Temple Church WSCS
held their January meeting at
the home of Mrs. Roxie Arbaugh on Wednesday evening.
Each one joined in the service
of prayer and thanksgiving.
The theme was a celebration of
Living and Giving. She concluded with the paasing of
. peace. Reports were given
concerning remembering of
members in the area at
Cbrllbnas time. The hosteas
ae~ed aalad an.d cookies at the
cl
of the meeting.
.
r. iind Mrs. Rex Cheadle
and Kathy were in Charleston
where they visited A. R. Caster
and Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Spencer at the Spencer home
there.
Columbia Grange No. 2435
held their January meeting on
Friday evening. Norman Will,
delegate to State Grange from
Meigs County, gave a report of
activities there to the group.
Bertha Crippen, lecturer, led
an -interesting discussion on
ecology, what it means; and
what we might do to make our
conununities better places to
live ln. The Women's Activities
Conunittee told of the National
Grange Program for 1972 with·
the theme, "Ughls From Many
Lamps." New projects were
listed and plans made to have
contests earlier this year,

II

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Cue No. 20195

Estate of William P. Grueser,

Deceased .
Notice !s hereby given that
John M. King, of Route 1,
Rutland, Ohio, has been duly
appointed Executor of the
Estate of William F'. Grueser,
deceased, late of Meigs County ,
Ohio.
Creditors are required to tile
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months.
Dated this 18th day of
January 1972.
John C. Bacon
~robate Judge
of said County

2A, 31 12) 7, Jl

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2

appointment. Mrs. Wanda

196HHEVROLET
ST695
"' Ton 8' Stepslde, V-8 engine. H. Duty 15" tires, std.
trans .• H. Duty sprgs ., radio, low mileage, 1 owner. unit.

1967 CHEVROLET
$1495
8' Fleetslde. V-8 engine, std. trans .• clean cab, good tires.
color white .

1966 C~EVROLET
$1695
2 Ton 84" . cab to axle . 292 cu . in. engine. Good 825x70
tires, 2 speed r . axle, solid cab &amp; was used on paved roads .

Potneroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
fPMEROY, OHIO
WANT ADS
Female Help Wanted
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P.M.
Day
Before EXTRA INCOME. 3 hrs. a day
ca·n average you SlO. Work
Publication
from your own home,
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
pleasant customer contact
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
work
. Write
Personnel
Will be accepted un1119 a.m . for
Shopper
Dept..
Box 10,
Day of Publication
Watkins
Products,
Inc .,
REGULATIONS
Winona.
Minnesota
55987.
The Publisher reserves the
1-24-ltc
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed . objectional. The
publisher will not be
responsible tor more fhan one
Incorrect Insertion.

Wanted To Buy

RATES
For Want Ad Service

WE·UNS CAN'T
. LET OUR,
l SHORE THANKY
MAIL
FER TH' HOT VARB TEA, . TOTERS
LOWeeZ.Vi...IT THAWED TARN INTO
ME OUT wMPLETE
ICE SUCKLES

ForSale

WE HAVE one new 23
Diagonal Zenilh Table Model
for $399; one new 23"
Diagonal Zenith Console tor
S45B; one new Motorola
·Quasar, . '1'at&gt;le console for
$578; one new 23" Oia·ganal
Motorola Quasar console for
$499.95; one used RCA Maple
· Stereo for $99.95. Ridenour TV
&amp; Appliance, phone 985-3307
or 985-3308.
1·20·61c

For Sale
'

S cents per Word one insertion

Two Speed Rear Axle, 17,000
lbs . or larger.
Heavy Duty Battery .
Heavy Duty Oil Filter.
Frellh Air Heater &amp; Defroster .
Increased Capacity Cooling .
Front Tow Hook
Rear Tow Loop .
Hravy Duty j!:ront &amp; Rear
Springs with Auxiliary Springs .
Custom Cab .
Turn Signals with Hazard
Switch &amp; Marker Lights .
Power Steer ing .

.I

EXPERT

Se~ices

-GUARANTE'EDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

.LONELINESS

e

tt0.,

.

. •.

' ?

(

~IJr=====:r::::::::~======·~·~L~·~::::::~~~~==~====:r~.;~...~

'IU.. .... . T ot ... U.l . ""'· M ,

..

t LEAAN&amp;I&gt;

'1'0 Ill! I'Wl 1..090P111CAL
. 1180\!TIT

Open1Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Po!lleroy, 9·

Aluminum
.
Sheets
USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20*
8 for $1.00

The
Daily Sentinel

ALL WEAntER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
&amp; PLUMBING

BILL NELSON, 992·3657
TOM CROW, 992-2580

CALL
HILTON WOLFE, 949-J211
DALE DUTTON, 992·2534

CO.

U'L ABNER ·

nui
Orchid
. Room
.

240 Lincoln .$!.
. Middt.port, Ohio
·Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete Home
Maintenance Service the
year around. No molter what
your need. Complete roof or
spouting repair. Interior or
exterior carpentry. Ceiling
tile and Paneling and Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Healing.
Day ~umber 992-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.
742-3947
992·5803
992-3898 742-4761
We are tully insured

·Make reservatiOns for your
private parties, banquets, ·
special occasions.
Ideal tor meeting place with or without kitchen
privil!ges.

For Rent

IXJN'T e&gt;E Si-1'1,

HONEST A~E!!
READ 'fOUR

r:\?EM '[0 THE
CI,.ASS

OFFICE SUPPLIES •

ROsEs/5 . R£0. .

n;

.;..!

VIO/..ETS/5

8/..UE- .

Z:...- -':1 t".,~

FUMHAIPTD
FEET,
AH /..OV£5 YO'--

and

Phone

Slop lo and See Our
'Floor Display.

992-5786

. YAS'M-BltfoH!".

.

~UNIA

SAID HER
WOULD lie
OVEII; HlillE!

BC)OT~

ALL KINDS OF
GLASS
For Every Purpose

'TEAFORD·,.
Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy,Ohio

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

FURNITURE

992-3975

Virgil.B.
SR•

HOME &amp; AUTO

Individual Catering
Will seat up to 150 people.

Real Estate For Sale

.

pOMEROY

ti

From the largest T"""
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. 'Pomeroy
INC.
Ph. 992·2174

I HAD AHUNCH 'tOJ'D ~f
FAVORA~LY IMPRESSED

We specialize in auto glass ·
on the spot installation.
Mirrors . Table Tops . Plate
Glass. Small home repairs •
.screens • storm

WITH 'THAT )OUNGMAN1MI$5 WINKLE.

REALLY?

WHY II; 'THAT,

cJANlCE?

windows

repaired. ·
FREE ESTIMATE
Point Pleasant &amp;Mason

AUTO GLASS
AI Conard, Mgr.
Phone 30~·773-5710
Route J3
Mason, W.Va.

,,'ll&lt;lif'U. PUl' AN END lO HIS
ROBOT- BUILDING ACTIV111ES
FOR AWHILE:, ~AYJ

DANCE

Wolfpen

Whispering Pines
Nite aub

News, Notes

YOU (iOIIHA

-------

~"&lt;~ll

THE

COP&amp; !tOW JiiADoy•OR 11M'
~ART

Fat THEM l'

!!.TI!IPPIN '
THe. HOOSE!'

....,

'
1 :).

JWJMlJ3)1)];11.1~.-'IJ-J,_ "t
milady's
wardrobe
U. Paint
1%, Withdraw
16. Physicist
Otto
It. Join
force~

DOWN
I. Impress

a. Bower
S. Slght-

seeinl
t.Ottoman
ruler
5. Vipers
II. Decorate

Ueland

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

.2

We talk to

like .. penoo.

,,

,

-----

WMP0/1390

'

'

ZZ. What to

do Ina
trattoria
Tnllted,
with
.. upon"
U.Bantu
country
Z&amp;. Short .
letter ·

u.

I
21. Vivacious
Zt. Racehorse
10. Sphere of
conftict
II. Grow
towarda
nltlhl
16. Life ·
(comb.
form)
·s1. Perched

...-;.:,;;,.....;:,;~ "'-..,lo;;~_. ZI. StockiDa
.

flalM M

Cllltl'lCT

I!APEK, T i l t LWI' UARNS :;oM~
f'AC!e At!OIJT THE
INMAlr~ Of' THE

AAciifOL061CAL
"re-NC&gt;CllM~

10 A 'TAI!TliNI;
Cl:*CLU510N .

.'

CAPI'AIN EASY

-·

··· -

·--~~ --

.,

--

-

thread
H. Czech
river '
fl. Worsted's
bane
.Z8. Varnlah
lnp
dient
Zt. One of the
·kincdoms
SL Stationery
item •
SS. "-Got
Sixpence"
St. Time
period
Zl. Fltlor
eatinc
11. Term In
ediUnc

I

FRIDAT

(J

III

tJ I I

I. (. I )
I~~~~~~~~~~J
I I
TURRET

S•turd•y'•

'
t·l+

I

'IOU'~E

lCT

MARRIED 'IOU CAN'T
HAVE 1HI5.
j;

Now &amp;rranre lhe circled !etten

I ;l

auiletted by.the above cartoon.

i:;

(Antwen lomo'rrow)

'•
"••
,

' 'j

to lorm the turpriH anawer. u

"'"w .. rt

OLDI~

..•:

PAUNCH ' ILAZII

"

TltU if dt~ n•uh of a Mt~licnl

",,'

llrik•- A NOTI
;

''·

.. '·'·
'"
h,

tit, II,

Lll

, .'
,," •'.
':
. '

l'ltll
I IIIII

II IIIII,

l t I 11

1~11

1

;

lll \'

.
I,

'

J~

.· ,A X Y D L I A A X R
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply standa lor another. In this ••mple A is
Uled for tbe three L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Sln&amp;le letters,
apo.tropb11, the lenJtb and formaUon of the words are all
hints. ~tl! d_, the code letlers are different. ·
A CrJptoar•• Qaoullon
YKT RHM.SMYL.EY , WLPT YKT UVTY ,
· DVHF••

I llfOECT I

Jumbt. .. TAffY

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to -work It:

LE

S/RUJI

L Pril-.suaaiiiSWIUn I A (I I I I I I ) )

arrest

..•.

,·

,.

a, Make an

-

'

d'

•...,

core
21, Bowlcalh;
' U. Colored,,_

;Realty

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

UnscramblelhtH four JumbiH,
' one letter to each I4UIIn, to
form four ordinary wordo,

·'lo"-a
· camera"
I. Item in

Jim Encourages Bad Play

I

•

CHE.CK

U-PHOLSTERING SERVICE,
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
PAINT DAMAGE, 1971 Zig-zag
complete selection of fabrics REASONABLE ·rates. Ph. 446sewing
machines
.
Still
In
WE HAVE 36 .
FURNISHED and unfurnished
and vinyl to choose from .
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
original cartons. No at - PROPERTIES FOR SALE
apartments. Close to school.
Pick.up and dellwery. Slater
ORDER
Owner
&amp; Operator.
tachments
needed
as
our
Phone 992- 543~.
Upholstering, Rl. 3, Pomeroy,
S.12-tfc
controls
are
built
in.
Sews
LAND
CONTRACT
10-18-tfc
phone 992·3617.
"FIELD SEEDS
with 1 or 2 needles, makes $1,500.00 DOWN wllh $53.42 a
12 ·27·301P AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
bullonholes, sews on buttons,
monlh. 6 room house. Good
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
,-----o.-:::
_
..
::-=:
.
=
.
=""-· · - cancelled? Lost your
monograms, and blind hem
well. Out-cellar and other
FERTILIZER
Racine area. Phone. 992·6!29. stitch . Full cash price, $38.50
READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
operator's license? Call 992·
buildings . 3 ACRES.
1Fivered rlghdt. to your project.
12-14-tlc or budget plan available.
2966 ,
1
SEED CORN
as
an
easy
,
Free
A.IS-tfc
Phone 992-5641.
29 ACRES
estimates. Phone 992-3284 .
DUMP lED
1 BEDROOM troller aparl·
1·19·61c
FREE
GAS
6
rooms,
balh,
Order Now &amp; Snel
1 x 9, 19" Sides and ~ lO" Head
~:•·'l.j..m..ep ,t ~ deal ~,for ~~pies. - - - . , . . - - - - - " c~llar,- YOWIQ fru f1. Serace for
Goeglel~ Ready -Mix . Co .. ' IN:t'!i-RIQ!!.,~I.""~~or palnll~ll\:
'and Tall Gate. Hole In Tailgate
·.
·
,
C
&gt;!1'ntatt1y\cCture:s
Dlilr~ Isle. VACUUM ' C·lEANER :1 New ·,., '·mObile home. Spri~Ji: 1 waler. . Middleport, Dhlo. ·
, J:i. ~. 'tl '"" !'~1
ne 742-5823.
tor spreedlnQ materials .
6
·
992'5248
or
992·3436.
•
•
:
'
·
.30.Ifc
'· " ~:'ll .,., ·
T·24-5tc
I'OMIROY
.
Salesman's Demonstrator
Asking \13,500.00: '"
Halt Cab Protector .
T
·9·12tc
.t•cll
w.
Cartey.
Mtr.
has
cleaning
attachments
7" Holst or larger .
O'DELL WHEEL allghment
-tft·JIIl ·
-'-------plus the new Electro Suds for
RUTLAND
Mud Flaps.
located al Crossroads. Rt. 124.
LEGAL NOTICE
Bed to be mounted and '---------~ NEW 2-BEDROOM. double
shampooing carpet . Only 3 BEDROOMS, nice kllchen,
Complete
front end serVice,
palnled.
. INSTRUCTION in organ and
$27.50
cash
price
or
terms
bath,
lots
of
paneling
.
Large
wide, mobile home on lot in
The Board ol Trustees
tune up and brake service.
NOTICE OF
Syracuse . Completely fur - available . Phone 992-5641.
lol . Only $6,000.00.
piano. Gerald Hoffner, phone
reserves the right to reject any
Wheels
balanced
elet·
APPOINTMENT
1-'19-61c
nished. Phone 992-2441 after 5
992-3825.
or all bids.
trP"Ically .
-All
work
Case No. 70,593
p.m.
100 ACRES
1-19·12tc
Bidders are reque-sted to
guloiranteed .
Reasonable Estate ot Clara E. Garland,
1·3·1fc GOOD HAY. Phone 992.3658.
S bedrooms, 11 room home,
submit with their bid fOr the
rates. Phone 992-3213.
Deceased .
above equipment a further bid
- - - - -- - 1-19-ttc balh, shower In basement.
• If
Notice is hereby o lven t~at
7
-.~..7- c · Mary Hllrris of Minersville,
for a 1965 International 1700
· Plenly of barn room. Good
5 ROOMS &amp; bath, ground floor
Series Truck .
Ohio, has b!en duly appointed
terllle land. Chesler. water. ----:--:--:--:--:--apartment , Albert Hill, COAL limestone . Excelsior
WILL IS FROST , Clerk
C. BRADFORD, Audloneer
Executrix of the Estate of Clare
·
Will
sub-divide
for
housing.
Racine
949-2261.
Salt
Works,
E.
Main
St.,
Ill 24, 31 12) 7, Jt
Friday &amp; Saturday
Complete Service
E . Garland, deceased, late of
1·21 -8tc Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
Phone 949·3821
Minersville, Meigs County .
Nighls-1 o Ti 12
2 APARTMENTS
4·9-lfc
Racine.
Ohio
qllio.
11 ROOMS - 5 up with bath, 6
Critt Bradford
Credilors are required to file
2 BEDROOM mobile home, 12 x - - - - - - - - down, bath. Large porch.
their claims with said fiduciary '
60, adults only. Phone 992· POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
5-T
·IIc
within four months .
·Nice yard. In town near
5443.
Par.kview Kennels, Phone 992·
Dated this 13th day of
stores.
1. 11-ffc 54~3 .
SEWING MACHINES. Repair January 1972.
8-15-Hc
se·rvlce, all makes. 992·2284.
John C. Bacon
4 ACRES
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Probate Judge
Music by Red Stewart BEDROOM and 2 bedroom
4 BEDROOMS, 1'12 balhs ,
of said Coonty
Authorized Singer Sales and
mobile homes. Adults only. Wanterl To Buy
modern kitchen . wl1h cook
(I) 1), 24. 31, Jl
and the Ambassadors.
Service.
We
~harpen
Scissors.
Phone 992-5592.
units. Large closets, hardOLD FURNITURE, Roun&lt;! Oak
Mrs, Charley Smith was a
3-29·1fc
12-19-lfc
4 PC. BAND&amp;
wood floors. Basement, One
tables,
Brass
beds,
dishes,
Sunday morning visitor of Mr.
BID ADVERTISEMENT '
2 FEMALE SINGERS ·
mile of Middleport.
clocks, and -or complete
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
The Tuppers ~lalns - Cheste-r 1
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
HOMES,
FARMS,
and Mrs. Harley Johnson.
households. Write M. D.
Septic tanks Installed. George Water District, a public body ,
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse, Ohio
BUSINESSES, LOTS,
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Mrs. Ethel Hatfield returned CHILD care In my home. Can
(Bill) Pullins . Phone 992-2~78 . hereby advertises for bids for
992-2951 .
AND COMMERCIAL
Call 992·6271.
4-25-lfc the following :
furnish references . Mrs .
home after spending some time
4·2-lfc
LOCATIONS.
12-17-ttc
One (I) solenoid valve unit,
Glenn Smith, Rock Springs -----~
with ber daughter, Irene, who
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
altitude
Rd., Phone 992-6T87,
SEPTIC Tanks Cleaned. Free following :type , complete with
ASSOCIATE
has been in the hospital but is
1-23-61c Mobile Homes For Sale
pipe Inspection . Paul Stein2 each M J gate valves and
992.!325 992-2378
Auto Safes
metz, phone 742·5864.
now at hom~ and improving in
boxes,
1-23-6fc
1-18-6tc
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT .. . MOBILE home on nice lol, '68 CHEVY Impala, automatic,
1 inlet pressure gauge,
Everyone in Bengal is now Detroit, Mich.
4 " check valve,
overweight ladies, leens J!!ld forced air heat, air con.
power
steering,
power 4 BEDROOM, bath &amp; half,
Mrs. Maury Mlller, Sandra,
a Bengali and we must live
4" solenoid valve ,·
men interested In a Weight
and exterior
brakes, 327 cu. ln .• grey with
ditioning in Racine area .
utility room, built-In kitchen, INTERIOR
sump pump ,
together.
painllng, roofing and gutter
Janie,. Mary and VIcki were
Watchers I R) Class In
black vinyl top, phone 985·
Phone 992-6329.
altitude gauge,
wall to wall carpet &amp; garage.
--Sheik Mujibur Rahman, visitors of Mr . and Mrs.
Pomeroy write : Weight
work done. Phone 843·2826.
3598.
1·23-ttc
112 mile north of
heater
Located
Watchers I Rl. 1863 Section
T·18-121c
leader of Bangladesh .
1·21 ·12tc
s.um p discharge
Eastern
High
School
.
House
is
Richard Jeffers and family . .
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237. 60X12; 2-bedroom. all-electric,
entrance hatch
almost finished and others
10·3-tfc
light
switch
SEPTIC
tanks
cleaned.
Miller
air conditioned, 8x20 11. Porch 1969 CHEVROLET Impala 4
being built. Call 985-3598.
vapor proof lighl
Sanitation,
Stewart,
Ohio.
Ph
.
and aluminum awning,
J.2T.JOic
door V-8. automatic trans·
power panel
WIN AT BRIDGE
SAVE up to one half. Bring your
662-'J!J35.
aluminum skirting, com .
mi~sion, power steering ,
pressure switch and
sick TV .to Chuck's TV shop,
2·12-Hc
pletely
selup
.
Beautiful
factory
air,
light
green
finish,
RACINE
TO
room
house,
1nlet pressure gauge W ·
151 Butternut Ave .•. Pomeroy.
snubber .
location. Owner leaving state . dark green vinyl top, low
bath, basement, garage, two
Phone 992-5080.
· ~lans for thIs sottnoitL valve
Phone 949-41192 or 992·5272.
lots. No reasonable offer HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
mileage, very good condl·
11 -21 -lfc
are on file at the&gt; water
un•t
Service.
Phone
992-2522.
1-10-tfc lion, good tires. Phone
refused. Phone 949-4313.
office located In Chester, Ohio,
6·10-ltc
742
·
47~5.
1-23-3tc
T
·2T
·T2fp
not Blackwood. Needless to REDUCING Inventory .
and can be viewed by any
NORTH
24
·
prospectiv-:
bidders.
say you passed. How did you
Discount
on
most
allllems.
20
DRY Wall finisher contractor.
IIIAJ5
All ,bids must be recel't'ed by
pel.
discount
on
shoes.
Open
7
1969
CUSTOM
Ford
pickup.
play
the
hand'
"
,
I.
Pubbeld,
phone
742-5825.
R.
¥KQ5
10 a.m. on February 10, 1~72,
clays a week . Edna's Grocery,
Phone 992-6372.
1·24-Stc and
Jim : "1 won the heart lead
the District reserves the
t5
Porlland,
Ohio.
1-T9-61c
with my ace and carefully
right to reject any or all bids .
... K JI0654
1-23·61p
Tuppers.p Ia lns·Ches ter
Berets In multlcolor quilt,
led the three of clubs. West
TVEST
EAST
Water District
and
Ooppy,
are
fashion
big
low
.
I
made
the
best
played
1970 W-'J!J OLDSMOBILE 442,
WANT WORK at home ad·
llolO
Ill Q 8 7 3 2
Box 7
top-ofh to a classic taUored
automatic, factory stereo
percentage play and stuck in
Chesler, Ohio 45720
dressing and stuffing en .JI094
.832
11) 17, 24. 31 , 31
tape. Lots of extras. Like new.
lUll.
·
the jack. East took his queen ,
velopes? Rush self-stamped
+Q10863
t K942
12'
14'
24'
WiDE
608 East Main
Call
992·2441
after
5
p.m.
·
envelope to F. Uribe. Box 36,
thou·ght a while and led back
POMEROY
lloA72
4oQ
11-28-ttc
Albany,
Ohio,
45710.
a
heart,
whereupon
I
sailed
MIDDLEPORT3 bedrooms, ' SIDE GLANCES
by Gill Fox
SOUTH (D)
1-6-lfc
NICE
8
ROOM
·HOME,
TV2
contract."
home
with
the
Ill K964
balhs, · porches, double
Oswald : "East made a bad
• A 76
Real
Estate
For
Sale
garage,
level lot, excellent
play. But you played the KOSCOT KOSMETICS and wigs
•••
tA~7
neighborhood,
Call
for
price.
clubs in a way to encourage - for sale. Brown's. Phone 992·
1220 Washington Blvd.
,f.983
5113
Belpre, Ohio
him · to try a stand-pat de·
·
East. West vulnerable
HARD TO BELIEVE
12-31
-lfc
fense
.
If
you
bad
led
your
POMEROY
- 1112 slory frame,
West North E110t South
3
bedrooms,
bath, utility
nine
of
clubs
East
would
FOR THE BEST deal In a new
It
room.
porches,
gas
forced-air
or
used
mobile
home,
try
have
seen
that
the
club
suit
Business
Opportunities
Pass 2 ,f.
Pass 2 N.T.
George
HobsteHer,
furnace,
some
hardwood
would set immediately. When
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales.
Pass 4 N.T : Pass Pass
Rut Estate Broker
Man or Woman
floors . $3,500.00.
Kanauga, Ohio.
, Pass
you
led
the
three
he
visual·
HARRISONVILLE
- Grocery
RELIABLE
personal
from
this
' .
12·17·901c
ized four clubs to the ace- arell to service and collect
slore . Including stock and
Opening lead- ¥ J
EXCELLENT
nine in the West hand. That from automatic dispensers.
equipment, llvfng ·quarters,
LOCATION
doing a good business and In a RACINE - 2 story frame, bath,
No experience needed. We MOBILE HOMES. Large
would leave West \VIth two
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby more club stoppers and the establish accounts tor you. sele&lt;tlon 8- 10 . 12 wides, 1 to 4 good locality. Price $18,000.
4 bedrooms, porches, gas
bedrooms , bank repos and
Phone 949-3211 .
Car, references, and $995 to
forced -air heat, outbuilding, 2
heart
lead
might
well
be
the
Oswald : "Anything can
used, some practically new.
1-23-3tp
S3490 cash capital necessary.
extra level tots.
Save up to •t.. R. A. or Don - - - - - - - -4 to 12 hours weekly could net
happen 'in a catch·as-catch- winner ." ..
(NlWSPAPU lHTlRPIIISE ASSN,)
Miller. 70S Farson Street,
STORY RIC
good part time Income. Full
can rubber bridge game."
Belpre, OhJo by Kaiser HOUSE , 1642 Lincoln Heights.
IV•
B K
lime more. • · Fo~ local in·
Aluminum, phone 42 3-9 531 .
Call Danny Thompson, 992· MIDDLE,PORT- 2 bedrooms,,
Jim· "It usually does, I
terview, wrlt·e: (include
2196.
•
bath, carpeted, dlnlng room,
telephone number! EAGLE
sat South and, while I don't
- - - - - -- -1·_1_&amp;-_12....,fc
porches, storage building,
.18.tfc
7
INDUSTRIES. Dept . BV, 3938 .have an opening bid, I felt
-,
level
lot. JUST U,fSO.OO. '
The h!ddint&lt; has been:
Meadowbrook Road, St. Louis
tbat the vulnerability situa- l\'est North
.
'
3 BEDROOM ranch type home, THE ANSWER TO YOUR
East
South
Park: Minn . 55426.
tion called for some action. I
Arbaug~ Addition, Tuppers
1·24·21p
lllo
HOME HUNTING ,CAN
chose to open one diamond. 2 •
Plains. All . new with total
?
PROBABLY BE FOUND
PallS
Po..
When my partner responded
electric and central air
WITH US.
yOu
You, South; hold :
I l
conditioning, bath and 3,4 fully
two clubs. I had to rebid, but
HENRY CLELAND
'·
I
J Lt. •
loAKQJ1065
'A3Z
.KS
carpeted,
lull
basement.
REALTOR
wasn't going to pau; raise
~ ~llt.ll
garage In basement. See by
What do you do now?
· 1
Office 992·2259 '
cl.ubs.: rebid a three-card suit
\
appointment,
pltone
992-2196
~
Restchnce
992-2561
A-Bitl three spa d c s. Yt•u
or show·my spades. That left
' \. I
I· . .
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson.
tl&gt;'f•l' 11..11
1·23·61c
me with two -no·trump and r want ynur pllrlrter to take· you
Financing available.
~)aly.
I
,I
~~~
.
l vt 11
bid It My partner jumped to tn p~ wUh 1lmo"l ln,ythlnJC.
12·30-flc
(L
1,'
: 'l'ODA Y'S QU[STION
NICE llstory home ~ith full
four and t~ere I was flying
,.,,
•
I
SIX
ROOM
house,
133
Butternut
·
baseri'ient,
2
lots,
new
forced
in the stratosphere with no
You do bid thl'i.!f.! !i;ptu.Jcs. We~t
11MirrMM. ... TA ... U.M.
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrfck, 2137
air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
fuel."
.
hida lour clubs und .your partner
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
Eltl!'enlary School. Phcino
O.ald: "Your ,partner's doubks. What ~o you do now'!
"Will you ltiU love .mt when I'm 30, and ttartlnc
Ol]lo, phone 237·4334.
992-7284 lo see.
ON
YOUR~
An~w~r Tnmnrruw
,
.·
to lh&amp;Ye ?" .
·
'•
i
T·21
-tfc
;
11-1-Hc
four. 110-tfmp ,"las a rui•·,
.J
•
Now's Time To

...

WITH A

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME 'IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
TOO 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 $5,00\).00 and lhre&lt;t children. 7'1• Pel. annual
percentage rate.

Wh!!ll Alignment .
'5.55

•

FIGHT

36" x"23"' x .009

OLD
POCKET
knives,
especially Case XX. Also
have other old knives to lrade
Minimum Charge 75c
111 Court St.
OFFICIAL NOTICE
or sell . Phone 992·2343.
12 cents per word three
The TownShip , Trustees of
Pomeroy,
Ohio
· 1-18-lfc
Chester Township will receive consecutive Insertions.
sealed bids until ·8:00 p .m.,
18 cents per word six con ·
February 11, 1972. for one dump secutlve Insertions . .
truck, as follows: G.V ,W . of
WALNUT Stereo-radio com ·
25 Per Cent Discount on paid For Rent or Sale
..
'24,000 lb . or larger; ~roper
ads and 'ads paid within 10 STORE room SO x 60. nice 2 binatlon. dual volume control,
Wheelbase for 7 x 9 dump bed, I
4 speed intermixet;l changer, 4
days.
beam tronf axle 7,000 lbs . or
bedroom apartment, for rent.
speaker
sound system,
CARD
OF
THANKS
larger. Frame R:einlorcement .
For sale - T2 fl . meal case. 10
Balance $67 .83. Use our
Heavy Duty Brakes .
&amp; OBITUARY
II. vegetable case. 6 x 6
budge! lerms. Call 992-7085.
J.fO cu. ln. engine or'larger, V ST.SO lor SO word minimum .
walkin, Cola cooler , coin
1-19-61c
8 Engine.
Each' additional word 2c.
operated, automatic washer
Five Speed, Direct In llfth,
BLIND
ADS
&amp; dryer . For rent - Camp MAPLE . Early American
Synchromesh
Tr1nsm iss ion .
Additional 25c Charge per
9.00 x 20 Ten Ply Tires with
Sites, 1,000 ft. Olllo River
stereo-radio combination,
Adverllsement.
Mud and Snow Tread on Rear .
frontage, pick your lot now.
AM-FM radio, ~ speakers, 4
OFFICE
HOURS
7.00 Rims.
No
drunks
.
M
&amp; G Food
speed
changer, separate
Two West coast Mirrors.
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
Market , 3 miles soulh, conlrols . Balance $79.45. Use
Cut Spoke Wheels
8:30 a.m . to 12:00 Noon
Middleport, Rt . 7. .
Dual Electric Windshield
our budget ler.ms. Call 992·
Saturday.
1-21 -3tp 7085.
Wipers, Variable Speed &amp;
Washers .
1-19-6tc
Notir.A
(I )

Business

TROPICAL FISH, . fancy
guppies, angels and breeders,
Bellas and . supplies. Phone
992-5443.
T2·30-Hc

___...,

---·· - -

HAVE A
HAPPY DAVIN
KIODVGARDEN,
TATER

UH·- ·
THAR IS
ONE "LEETLE"
THING .

FVY

SMRT .- BLWWLMS

BLFYTH

Sa'untoy's ('ryptoquote: THERE IS NO SUCH THUiiG.•AS
AN UNDERESTIMATE OF AVERAGE INTELLIGENCE•..:.
H. B. ADAMS1
·(0 1072 Kint F· •''lrl''' ~yndit-h• , lflr '

L.L==::==:::i..J . ·'
1

HATE 6£1NG ACC~EP

\•

of . t:

13EA6LE CHAUVINISM!

,

..

�•

.

'

f

Water Projects ·

'" "( ' .

' '"

I· I .,.. •'

oUt

9

WASHJ!iGTON (UPJ) - Presldeftt NIJ:on will aimoimce Scott of Peimllylvania and Sen. Edward W. Brooke, R·Mass., said
lhortly hla wiiUngnesl to set a date for IDtal u.s. withdrawal NIJ:on wu prepared ID set a date.
.frcm Vlelnlm ·once American priaoners of war are released, a
Scott said In an Interview with UPI that Nb:on would offer to
high administration official said today.
.
get out li Vietnam ''lock, stock and blrrel" in eJEChange for a
. The of!iclal, whO asketf not to be identified,' !iaid Nixon . release of rows. Scott said the offer would come ''well before
~blbly ,l.ould make a·pilblic annOWJCement prior to Thurs- the electlonB."
1 day's wee!ily sealon of the Paris peace talk8.
.
.
Brooks, in a speech to the Greater Boston Young
Nbbn'~ amb8188dor ID ttie Paris talkll, William J . Porter, Republicans Club Monday night, said "I have heard that we will
conferred With' top acbiJiriiJtratlol) officials In Washington ~ very soon - and I ~ct very soon - make an offer ·to North ·
dByslast·week llllliagainonMooday and returned to Paris today.' Vietnam to set a date for withdrawal If they will turn over to us
The off~ gave no lbdlcation whether NIJ:on was.prepared the 1,500 .'..mericans who remain ill North Vimamese prison
to set a withdrawal date or whether be would Insist that the camps."
~be released first . Both Senate.Republicail
Leader. Hugh
Neither Scott nor Brooks cited
the source of his information.
,
'
.
,

Kept ~ · Budget
· WASHINGTON (UP!) - $275,000; MillCrevk flood .conNixon today asked trol, $225,000; Newarlt
Congress to approve $71.9 eontror, $110,000; Chillicothe
million in water rei10Urces flood control, $100,000, and
development projects for Ohio Lakeview Park, Lorain, beach
which he included in his $248.3 erosion project, $60,1100.
1illllon fiscal 1973 budget.
General investigation funds
The amount for the Buckeye for flood control projects were
State was $13.3 million more sou~ht lor Beaver River
than the wtal sought last year Basins, $25,000;· Central Ohio
for the state.
· ... -Survey, $50,000; Cuyahoga
Of the total, $62.3 miiiion was River Basins, $100,000; Miami
for construction work.
River, little Miami River and
Heading the list was $14.7 Mill Creek Basins, $160,000,
million for the $49.1 million and Muskingwn River Basin,
Alwn Creek lake flood control $75 ,000, and navigation
project, and $14.5 miiiion for projegts .at Clevelar)d Harbor,
continued work on $80.8 million · $20;000 and the Lake Erie
Hannibal Locks and Dam on coast, $20,000.
·
the Ohio River between West
In addition, $8,331,000 was
Virginia and Ohio.
other construction money budgeted for operation aod
'
'
was for the Willow Island maintenance of 25 existing
BECOMES DEPUTY~ Recently appointed "Honorary Dodge Deputy," Dick RawUngs,
Locks and Dam on the Ohio corps projec~ .
Presi~nt of R. W. Rawlings Sons, Middleport, receives his certlflcate from famous TV sheriff
other budgeted requests of
River between Ohio and West
Virgiliia, $8.7 million; Ceasar interest to Ohio, but not includ- . Joe Higgins. The ever.amiling Higgins explained that ''tliere's nothing funny about being
Creek lake control, $6.4 ed in the state's list, included · appointed a deputy. It's a hard-earned honor given only to our top Dodge dealers for pro1tid"ll!·
outstanding service to .not only the custonier but also the conununity." Picking up on the
million; East Fork Lake flood Appalachian region flood consheriff's contagious humor, Rawlings remarked, "Before this, good service was kind of an
control, $4.7 million; Clarence trol study, $50,000; Cross
unwritten law around here .. .now that I'm a full .fledge deputy, it's official!"
J. Brown Dam and Reservoir Wabash Valley waterway'
flood control, $4.5 million; navigation investigation,
Paint Creek Lake flood control, $70,000; Great Lakes flood
$3,986,000; Lorain Harbor control investigation (parnavigation, $3.3 million; ticularly Lakes Erie and OnVennilion Harbor navigation, tario), $530,000; investigation
$517,000; Salt Creek lake flood of extension of Great Lakes St.
control (land acquisition), Lawrence Seaway navigation
By BERNARD BRENNER
lance Program -a conserva- plans to step up rural houalng
$500,.000; Youngstown flood season, $1,600,000; Lake Erie
UPI Farm Editor
tion subsidy -from $195.5 loans by ~ farmers. borne
control, $265,000, and north coast navigation investigation,
WASHINGTON (UP!) - million in the 1972 crop year administration to $2.1641illllon,
branch of the Kokosing River $20,0001 Shenango River lake Crop subsidy payments to down to $140 million for 1973. up some $542 mlJllon from the
flood control construction, fanners would rise by more He' also proposed a $10 million
lake flood control, $236,000.
current fiscal year. ·
$840,000,
and investigation of
Funds were sought for ad·
than
$1.1
billion
and
rural
cf;
-to
$93
million
in
the
Most of the increase ~
vance engirieering and design water levels of the Great housing loans would be inpopular
school
milk
subsidy
mlllion
-would be con·
for Utica Lake Hood control, Lakes, $356,000.
creased sharply - but overall program. He refused to centra ted In a program of loans
the proposed Agriculture propose any increase at all in for single-family low and
Department budget for the rural electrification loans.
moderate Income , housing,
business year beginning July I
OveraU farm support spend· which would go to a new level
calls for trimrnil)g net spen- ing for the new budget year of $2.059 billion. This would
ding to $11.005 billion, down was estimated at $4.374 billion provide mortgages for about
$600 · million from the current compared to $4.546 billion for 142,000 rural families oom·
fiscal year.
the current year.
pared to about 112,000 in the
The budget disclosed.plans to
Growers woUld be paid $1.1 current fiscal year.
up food aid programs run by billlon more in the new fiscal
the department to $4.1 billion, year to hold land out of veterau Memorial Ho1pn,l
WASHINGTON (UP!) - the aged include:
$269 million higher than the production in an effort to
SATURDAy DISCHARGES
President Nixon asked
- A fivefold increase over current fiscal year and reduce surpluses. But, officials _ Charles Yoimg, Iris carr,
Congress today to. give the 1972 spending ·to $100 mlJlion possibly even more. But these said, the lower pr01juction Barbara Snider, Loretta
nation's 21 million older for the administration on aging and other increases, including levels wlll automatically Beegle, Anna Wines, .Joseph
citizens a $1.5 billion break by to provide more homemaker the bigger direct crop sub- reduce the need for crop Halfhill, James Durbin.
eliminating the monthly services, borne health aides, sidles, would be more than support loans -and the. lower
SUNDAY DJSCHAP.Gtll premium most of them' pay for transportation and nutrition offset by cuts, including outlay on crop loans would "Ho;.ard Largent, J..yle Hysell,
Medicare. · ·
,..
services to keep the aged in reduced crop support loans, more thlu! offset the higher Lydia ~y~;-.f!Jlnla Gl~,
· The premium, scheduled to their own homes.
lo'wer lirterest c/iS!!i, a cut in ,spending on land rettrement Elizabeth Wlc1iham, Mary
rise from $5.60 to $5.80 this
-Social Security and food for peace aid, and shifting payments.
Ford, Robert Bunch, Gregory
July, is matched by the Welfare benefits changes in the to the use of · governmentEffort In HouslDg
Roush, Harri~on Robinson,
government from general rev- Housepassed Welfare Reform insured private funds for farm
For rural areas generally, Rena Ughtfoot, Elsie Pooler,
enues.
Bill, which is pending in Uie operating loans.
the budget outlined several Cheryl Dillon.
Under Nixon's proposal the Senate, that would add $5.5
Expect Protests
st·,,s in the administration's
premium would be eliminated billion to their income.
Some oiher proposed cuts, "rural developll!ent" program
and increased payroll taxes
- Additional funds to help and decisions not to ,increase -a bundle of activities aimed
SPEAKER NOO'ED
would make up the $1.5 billion foster grandparents who now current programs, were ex- collectively at halting · the
Leonard Sankey, who has
difference.
work with children expand pected to bring protests from fann-I&lt;K:ity population drift.
spent
eight years In the mission
"A new commitment to the their services to other aged farmers and their friends in
one major effort would come fields of Central America, will
aging is long overdue to add persons ; biw more elderly Congress . President Nixon in housing. With rural areas
dignity and usefullness to their workers for community jobs, proposed, for example, to trim still reporting a disproportion- be speaker at missionary
lives," Nixon said in his budget and increase volunteer ac- authorizations for the popular ate share of ,~ubstandard sel"!ices at 7:30p.m. Friday at
the Pomeroy Lower Light
message.
tivities for the aged.
Rural Environmental Assis- dwellings, the bUQget included Church, The publlc is invited,
Nixon said he wants to spend
The President also urged
$50 billion next year on behalf
of the aging, an increase of $16 security
Congress benefit
to tie future
social
incre;,c;es
to . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
billion during the past four changes in the cost of living,
years.
saying older Americans who
other Nixon proposals for live ' on social security
payments have "waited long
enough" for the change.

nooa

Rreside~t

,

.

.

FIRST RUN- Sl~ of the seven bus drivers, members of the ''bus ministry" of the First
Baptist Church of Middleport, checked out for their first run Sunday evening when 60 wor·
shippers were bused to the Racine Baptist Church for a revival service. The driver was Clifford
Hayes. Kneeling are, lto r, Tony Fowler and the Rev . Charles Simons, pastor; standing, Milton
Hood, Lacey Barton, Kenneth lmboden, and Mr. Hayes. Robert Parker was absent.

Breakout Stopped By Guns
COLUMBUS iVP!) - Three
inmates attempted to break out
of the Ohio Penitentiary early
Sunday using a 35-foot ladder
they had secretly built, but
they were stopped short of the
wall by tower guards who
peppered the ground with
submachinegun fire .
Two of the inmates
surrendered immediately, but
the third, a convicted armed
robber, was shot and critically
wounded after scrambling
about the prison yard for ·10
minutes in a futile attempt to
elude his pursuers. Warden

Harold Cardwell said guards
fired at least 72 bullets at the
trio in e ')~i ng the daring
breakout 1.\"Y.
"I think' it was an almost
impossibl~ plan they had, but
as long as you have maximum
securityh nstitutions, you 're
going to have escape attempts," Cardwell said, noting
the last successful breakout at
the 'pre-Civil War penitentiary
was about 20 years ago.
The wounded prisoner was
Louis J. Aratari, 28, of St.
Charles, Ill. Aratari was
serving 12-65 years for three
counts of shooting with intent

to wound and armed robbery.
The other two were Joseph
Sanders, 66, Columbus, and
Donald Nickerson, 43, Dayton.
Nickerson was convicted of
killing a policeman.
A fourth man was found
critically stabbed, the knife
still in him, after the break was
subdued. He was believed an
original co-conspirator who
backed out at the last minute
and was attacked by the
others.
Gordon "Spunky" Firman,
33, Warsaw, Ohio, was found in
the hospital dormitory where
the escape attempt started.

Appalachia
1Continued from Page 1)

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio extended oullook
Wednesday through Friday
Rather cold with dally
highs In the ZOs and lower
30s. Overnight lows 5 to 15
north and central and 15 to 25
south. Chance of· snow
flurri es northeast Wed·
nesday and Thursday and a
chance of snow over the slate
Friday.

Later, Sen. Jennings Ran·dolpb, D-W. Va., reintroduced
the ARC extension provisiqn
which passed intact and was
signed into law Aug. 5.
In addition to giving the commission and its general development program authorization
until 1975 with $611 million including a special airport safety
program, it extended the Appalachian highway - development program until 1978 with
$925 million in
new
authorization.
,.
The $40 million decrease in
the fiscall973 authorization request, occurs because of a $42
million decrease caused by
nonrecurring contract authoriJohn H. Lewis, 19, Route 2,
ty, and a $2 million increase in Patriot, was cited for driving
Appalachian housing funds .
left of center by the GalliaMeigs Posl Ohio State Patrol
after a two-car accident
~ *************~
~ Sunday at 11 :00 a. m. 4.6 miles
: A THOUGH1 : west of Route 141. The westbound Lewis car struck the
: rOR TODAY +: front
of an eastbound car
il Failur• 10 hit the bullS· : driven by Alex Lee Halley, 20,
~ eye is not the ta ult ot the il
il target. To Improve your il of Route 2, Cheshire, the patrol
.., 31m , Improve yourself . .. said.
il'.
4iilbert Arland ~ A single-car accident ocil
~ curred at 4:40p. m. Sunday on
ir
ll U. S. 33 in Meigs County, 2.4
il
ll miles North ol Route 881.
,: lfs Quick! Easy
ll Joseph J. Stanley, H, Route 1,
! ·
~ Shade was South bound when
~
il the left front brake of his
..,
+: vehicle locked causing him to
ir
go off the right side of the road
:
.
·ll . and through a guardrail
il
Fn.days Only
il causing moderate damage to
iC The DrTve · lrl Wmdow : the vehicle. He was uninjured.
:
is Open
... . No citation was issued.
iC
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
+: The third and last accident
iC
(Continuously l
: reported Sunday occurred at 11
: other Banking Hours 9 to 3 +: p.. m. on Johnson Road two
+: and S to 7 as usual o.n il mtles East of Lincoln Pike
il Fridays.
il when Lester L. Wells, 21, Route
.-t&lt;
: I, Crown City, attempted to
il make a left turn. He lost
-t&lt;
ir control and struck a parked car
belonging to Charles R.
:
POMEROY, OHIO
t&lt; McGuire, Route 2, Northup.
-t&lt;
Member FDIC
il There was moderate damage
~
Me~t,~ber Federal
: to the parked car ahd slight
j;. Qese~~e System
« damage to the Wells car. No
·1·
'*'~~ citation was issued.

Driver
Cited

. ..

'*'***•

DRIVE•IN
BANKING :

·: fARMERS BANK
... and SAVINGS

co.:

************

James Deweese

Died on Smulay
DEXTER - James S.
Deweese , 72 , died u~ex­
pectedly Sunday morning at
his Dexter Route · 1 residence.
Mr. Deweese retired from
the U. S. Steel Co. in Lorain in
1963 following 16 years of
employment with the company .
He is survived by his wife,
Fannie; a son, Burton, at
home ; four-daughters, Mrs. L.
W. McQuaid and Mrs. Jean
McQuaid, both of Lorain, and
Mrs. Jane Drummond and
Mrs. Charles Schoonover, both
of Dexter Route I; two sisters,
Mrs . Lottie Oatin, Point
Pleasant, and Mrs. Ona
Bowser, McArthur; a brother,
Ray, Gallipolis Ferry; 16
grandchildren and nine greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 2p, m. Wednesday at the Old
Dexter Church with the Rev.
Willard Dutcher officiating.
Burial will be in the Standish
Cemetery at Deder. Friends
may call at the Martin Funeral
Home in Rutland anytime
Tuesday and until one hour
before the funeral on Wednesday when the body wiU be
taken to the church.

Berrigan Action Quh

(Technicolorl

lorcartoons :
Gold Dusl Bondit
Rock1byt

2-HOUR

CLEANING

Walter Matthau
Maureen Shipleton
''GP"

Slnbld

Tile l!nllrttr
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

~= ·

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S ·

CLEANERS

210 E.•lnll

Pomeroy

Phtlltt tn-5421

CLUB TO MEET
The Friendly Neighbors Club
will meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday
at the home of Mrs. George
Buchanan.
DIVORCE GRANTED
Three devorces have been
granted ·in tile Meigs County
Cciriunon Pleas Court, aU on
ground~ of gross .neglect and
extreme cruelty. Granted
divorces were Edna C. King
from Walter E. King with
custody of three children to
Mrs. King, lluzanne Beeler
from Mark A. Beeler, one chUd
to Mrs. Beeler, and Janet N.
Stafford from Jack H. Stafford,
Jr., with custody of four
children to Mrs. Stafford.

READY TO RUN AGAIN - Congressman Ctarence E.
Miller has aruiounced tllat he will seek a fourth term as U. S.
Representative to the loth Congressional District. Miller andlo
Administrative Assistant Robert Relntsema (left) ]Klint out
the new loth District llnl!!l as drawn up by the State
Leg!Jhlture .. The new lOth District - geographically, the
largest lo the State - includes all or part of 13 Southeastern
Ohio counties. The n~ loth Congressional District adds •
Lawrence County and the balance of Muskingum ' County '
whUe eliminating Monroe County and Harrison Township In
Vinton County and a large part of NOble County. Total
population of the area Is approximately 463,000 citizens.

.

'

News~~-;in 'Briefs·
.

ByUaltedPre11~
COWM8U8- VOC~TIONAL EDUCATION in Ohio

should
be IIPllraded becaWM! many students have !oiDid that a college
educfillan "is not always the answer to leading a meaningful
Ufe,'' the Ohio AFL-CIO says In its monthly ma'gazlne, "Focus."
"Most students who enlej' the school system )rill never
.complete college," the article staled. "Others have found that a
college education Is not always the answer to leadirig !I
meaningful life, ihat there are many persons with college
degrees who'are not capable of earning a living in today's world.
. COLUMBUS -A )JILDER VERSION of the Hong Kong flu
tbathitObloin the winter of 1968-69 is back, Dr. John Ackerman,
head of the Communicable Disease Division of the Ohio Health
~I, said today. Ackerman said his division has "con·
finned laboratory reports that It Is the same virus" as before,
"but In mUder form." He said it should run its course in a month.
"The disease is bitting more chUdren and fewer adults this
time,'' Ackennan said. The symptoms are much the same as
those of a bid cold, he said, and the nu can be treated In slmi1ar
ways- bed rest, drinking plenty of liquids and taking aspirin.
MESA; ARIZ. -IT WAS ltlZ and Arizona had been a state

\

for only five 4ays when the former sheriff of Maricopa County
stepped off the train in Washingwn to claim his 'seat as the new
state's first congressman. Carl Hayden, a man who didn't like to
talk much, Stayed and set a longevity TeConl - 56 years In
Congress, He 011ce stood·thil'd in line fbr the presidency, but said
If It came whim he would pass it on.
Jtaycten, 94, was In a semi-coma today, near death. "We're
·811 just waiting. He's In a real bad shape and It's just a matter of
~e," said a nephew, Larry Hayden of TUcson. ' ·

:
THE. UPPER MIDWEST WAS VIRTIIALLY paralyzed
today aa hiln'icane force winds whipped snow into bUzzard-like

conditions across northern Minnesota, W~onsin and Michigan.
Allthorltlea in Minnesota recommended late Monday that no
one venture out Into the st~r~~~ ' ihat even forced highway road
crewi Into ditches. Hundreds of schools were closed In the state
Monday when the first psrt of the storm struck and thousands of
eveiJiilg eventa were canceDed.·

VISIT THE 3RD .FLOOR. SPECIAL SAl£
PRICES ON ,
,
LIVING ROOM SUITES, EASY CHAIRS, BmROOM SUITES, DINETfE sm
AND DINING
ROOM SUITES, TABLES, DESKS.·CEDAR CHESTS AND
'
' .
.
CARPET FOR YOUR HOME.
-

.

I

Use-Ow- Sensible Credit Servwe( .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'v

·TOLEDO-A lJ.YEAR.OLDBOYwho either jumped or fell
15 reet·Into a polar bear pit at the local zoo last week was alive
wilen he lalided ind was immecliately attacked, killed and eaten·
by !our 800 pound-bears, the Lucas CoiDity cortmer said Monday.
Dr. Harry Mlperey rolecl the death of Richard Hale, 19,
IC!cldental. He aald he had learned Hale had recently taken drugs
.,
and did' not know If lt was suicide.

Thieves in Two Steals
Pomeroy police are ln- St.' There, too, glass was
vestieatlng the breaking and broken froln a side window to
entering of • two business gain .entrance. About $20 in
eitablishmen~, ·
,
change was stolen. ·
Pollee Chief Jed Webster
Herman Henry of the Bureau
said ' he was notified at 5:56 of Criminal Identlflcatlon and
a.m. Tuesday that the Green Investigation, LoJldon, was
Lantern cafe, at the corner· of called to help in the In·
Court and Main .Sts. was vestigatlon. He was assiStiltg
broken into. Glass was broken Chief Webster Tuesday
out from a door on Court St. to morning.
. pll1eotrance. From $40 to $80
In chllllle was ·stolen. .
LOCAL TEMPS
.At ·? a.m., the department:
The temperature in tlownwu . noti!ied of brealdng and .'-town Pomeroy at II a.m.
enterlns at Welker's Ashland1. Tuesday was 30 degrees under
.Service Station on West Ma~ . sunny skies.
,

...

I.
'

.

TEN

CE~TS

•

Action by ·Town wuncil

SEE OUR BIG SELECTION OF BED PillOWS IN THE CURTAIN
AND DRAPERY DEPARTMENT ON THE 2nd FLOOR.

SAVE NOW ON THE FURNITURE AND CARPET YOU NEm•.

'

Strike Settled

'

'

Now at sale prices .- Choose fr_om Ki(lg, Queen or Standard size pillows.
Serene Fortrel f1lled . bed pillows will not mat or lump. Machine
washable . Non allergenic. Wedgewood blue on white or while qJVer.

'

Increase Retro~ctive To
Jan. 1 in Unanimous

Meeting .Set
· Don Moyer, president of the
lOth District Democratic
Action Club, has called a
special meeting Wednesday,
January 26, to discuss the
upcoming Congressional and
State House and State Senate
elections.
The meeting will begin at
7:30 p.m. in the Athens City
Council chambers in Athens
City Hall on Washington Street.
Members of the club will have
the opportunity to meet
prospective candidates and to
discuss the spring primary
campaign.
All loth District candidates
are encouraged to attend, and
all interested southeastern
Ohio Democrats are welcome.

Devoteil To 'I7U! lntere~t. Of The Meigi·Mawn Area
fOMEROY-MIDDLEPORJ. OH.!O
TUESDAY, JANUARY. 25, 1972
PHONE 992-2156
'

Middleport Workers Get ·5% Raises

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

HARRISBURG, Pa , (UPl) The Rev . Philip F. Berrigan
and six other antiwar activists
go on !rial today accused of
,plotting to kidnap presidential
adviser Henry A. Kissinger, ·to
blow up the Washington, D. C.
heating system in winter, and
to vandalize draft boards in
nine states.
The trials could be a social as
well as legal milestone. Six of
the seven defendants either are
or have been priests or nuns of
the Roman Catholic left. They
contend the government is
harassing !hem for opposing
the Vietnam war and that pretrial publicity prevents a fair
trial.
All four prosecutors are
Catholics, at least two of them
of traditional bent. The federal
court middle district of Pennsylvania, from which a venire
of 175 was drawn for today's
start of jury picking, is a
predo.minantly Protestant
section of conservative
political thought.

January 24·25
Neil Simon's
PLAZA SUITE

. NO. 'XXIV' . NO. 200 .

Offered More.

RACINE - Southern Jr.
High teams split at Union
Furnace Saturday.
The 7th grade won 33-32 with
Call for Union Furnace high
with 20 points. High scorers for
Racine were Carl Johnson with
12 and Eric Dunning with 10.
The 7th grade is 10-0.
Tbe 8th grade last 43 to 50.
High scorers for Union Furnace were See! with 16, Carter
with 13 and Harden with 13.
High scorers for Racine were
Schultz with 16, Dunning with
II, and Roberts with 9. Racine
8th grade is 8-3.
The next game will be played
at Meigs against Meigs B
Wednesday, Jan . 26.

Tonight&amp; Tuesday

a1.

.

.

despite the wincUng down of the war' the "Democrats will ·~­
tempt to revive the war IBiue." ,
Scott said Republican campaign lllaues would be peace,
either achieved or greatly advanc!Jd; prosperity; the economy;
the "President's achlevementa u a world statesman;" reduc·
lions of tensions In the world; and the cllecking of lnflation.
He conceded that If unemployment remained around the
current 6 per cent, It would work against Nixon. But he quickly
pointed out that ''more people are worklng in America today
than ever in history ."
According ID the polls, Scott said, Sen. Edmund S. Muslde of
Maine would be the hardest Democrat wdefeat riatlonally and
added "if the public hss forgiven Senator KeMedy for past
events, be might be second."

••

Older Citizens

On Trial

MEIGS THEATRE

'

Farm Subsidies, Loans Up

Southern Splits
At Union Furnace

SERVICES SET
WEST COLUMBIA
Funeral services for Hobart N.
Marr, West Columbia Rd., who
died at his home Saturday will
be held at 1:30p. m. Tuesday at
the Salem Community Church
in West Columbia.

'

'\

· Communist negotlator.s in Paris have insisted that· there
would be no proble!ll a1J9ut release of American POWs 'once
Nb:bn set a definite date for complete U.S. withdrawal from
Vietnam.
•
, The Pent~~goli says 378 Americans are "conftnned"
prisoners In North Vietnam and 64 in South Vietnam. In addition,
four Americans are listed 8s missing in action in North Vietnam
and 506 in South Vietnam.
Both Scott and Brooks expressed support for NiXon, and
Brooke said he • would back Nixon in the Massachusetts
presidential primary AprU 25 if he runs there.
Scott made his statements while discussing the impact of the
war on the 1972presidential election campaign. He predicted that

The strike at .~g~peraial
Electric Co. in Middleport
BY BOB HOEFUCH.
apparently is ended.
All Middleport Village employes were given a five liercent pay
Unofficial spokesmen said
increase, effective Jan. I, by Middleport Village Council in a
today aq end-the-strike vote
. regular session )lfonday night. Council suspended rules and gave
was taken last night on a
proposal arrived at through
the three required readings to the ordinance.
' recent negotiations. The vote
Meeting with the council briefly so that the measure could be
by members
of
the
passed was CouncUwoman Mrs. Roger Morgan, who suffered
Brotherhood of Electrical
burns
of bothhandsearlierather
South
Third Ave. home.
.
I
.
Workers Local1567 was 43·to 23
Mrs. Morgan waa ~cusi!d as soon as the meJ!sure had won
to .accept the package and
unanimous apProval by the five members pre~t. Mrs. Morgan
return to work.
was burned when a pan caught fire in the kitchen &lt;!,f her home
The strike began last June I,
Monday evening and she carried It outdoors to prevent the blaze
CANDIDATE FOR and ran through a course of
from spreading.
CONGRESS - J. Sherman hearings in the courts on the
The ordinance governing the Hoffman, Mrs. Morgan.
Porter
II,
associate question of whether or not it
pay increases · provides also
Street: Stumbo, Ohlinger,
professorofPoliUcalSelence
that secretarial, ~lerk anc)4 Vaughan.
at Rio Grande College, threw
bookkeeping · record-keeping
UWities: Hoffman, Stumbo, hl1 bat loto the poUtlcal ring
MYSTERY• PENNY
hourly employes be employed Morgan .
today lo announciDI hb
BETHEL, Ohio (UPII a maximum of. ' 35 hours per
Recreation: Vaughan, candidacy for the United
KeiUietb
Mason recently sold
week except m emergency Hoffman Walters.
Slates Cong
p rter
't
t.i
bj
to th
•
·
reu. o , a
a Uncoln ]IeDDy be foDDd 10
S• .ua ons, .su ~ct
e liPInsurance: Mrs: Morgan, Democrat, will be seeking
yean
a1o for $25,000 bullbe
proval of c~
, il. It provides Ohljnger, Hoffman.
the aeat beld by laCIUilbeat
world may never know wily
alsothatemp -h~re~ll~or . -l&gt;.rdinanee: Ohlinger,-.. -cla"reace E. Jllmer...r Lao'
If
-turned- out to be so
legal hollda · tc~ will Ill- Valll!han, Stumbo. . . ·
caster. Porter said be Is
elude New · .Year_s D~.y,
Cemetery : Hoffman, runnlng ill an effort to baUd . valuable.'
A Califorala businessman
. theDemocrstlcParly!orthe
Chmtmas, Memorial Day, Walte'rs, Morgan,
agreed
to buy the colD on ihe
lndependencei~ay, Labor Day
Sidewalks:
Walters, fqllire 1o this dlllrict. "Any
stipulation Mason never
and Thanksg•vms Day:. , Each Vaughan, Hoffman.
, Democrat who expects to
reveal its odd charac·
employe is g~ven ~e and oneBuilding: Mrs. Morgan, beat Clarence MUier bas
terlstlcs.
fourth days of stck leave a Walters, Hoffman. .
delusiou of graadeur," he
" I can't tell you the defects
mon~ accruable to 90 days.
Equipment :. Walters , said. Jack Crisp of Rutland
on the colD," Mason said.
' It~ also provlded .that each Ohlinger, Mrs. Morgan. .
and Professor Wbealey of
"But I can say there were
full-lime employe mcluding
The mayor ai&amp;G nam~ .Athens are also seeking the
tbtee
million of lhe pennies
full time hourly employes, are advl~ra to · tile council on
Democratic nomination.
made and I doa't belltve
entitled during each year after improving and beautifying
there's
another in the wd'rld
the first year to two weeks the village. They . are
Uke U,fs one."
vacation , excluding legal Kathleen DaviB, Alwllda ..
• ,
·•
W,,i,.m:&gt;;:::::::::-«=::::::::,:.~.w·· ,.,...,....,
holidays, with pay. Employes Werner, ,.iean Moore and
with 15 or more years ~rvl~ Jeanne Morg8D. The · first
Three Democrats and one
are entitled to three. weeks liamed In all of the above
vacation each year.
commllteeBil the chairman. Republican filed petitions of
candidacy for central comI
Counei committees for the
CoUfli:ll voted to , remove mittee posts of their respective
year · appointed by the new from the ·village records
h
kl
prec 1nets with t e Meigs
mayor, John Zer, e, were:
financial pledges made to the County Board of Elections
Sewer and water : Dick Middleport Fire Department M da
Vaughan, Mrs. Morgan, towards the construction of a
on. y.
I
Cliff rd Stumbo
•
They are Loverne ~ck,
o
·
new headquarters. These Oyesville; Mendal w. Jordan,
Meigs Countians - in the
Safety: ~~id Ohlinger, Mrs. pledges were stricken because Columbia Precinct, and
Morgan, Wtlliam Walters.
of the passage of a bond issue Sa
1B
M R tla d heart of Appalachian limd Finance: StumbO, Ohlinger, by Middleport voters in v·~ue rlluceDe ay, tsu nd paid $275,241.06 in sales tax on
Vaughan
. :
,
1 ..,ge, a
m!)Cra , an
motor vehicles they purchased
,
.
,
Novembertoprovtdefundsfor .· Grover c. Salser, Jr ., in 1971.
Ftre - Ohlinger, Fred
(Continued on page 81
Republ"1can, Ra cme
· Pr ecmc
· t,
This figure was revealed in
the report of Mrs. Evelyn
Lucke, Meigs County Clerk of
Court, on income for her office
during last year.
Besides the quarter-milllon
The three-judge Fourth courts in which the decision is ' L. Reeves.
appealed.
Cases
may
have
State
of
Ohio
vs.
Pearl
sales
tax collection on motor
District Court of Appeals will
.
.
vehicles, the office of Mrs.
convene Wednesday, Feb. 2, In been tried In conunon pleas, Searls.
Russell Bailey, . as ad- Lucke collected $22,481.53 for
the Meigs County courthouse to probate; juvenile, municipal or
county courts and· may be minlstrator of the estate of the county's general fund,
hear five cases.
either civil or criminal. Barbara
Jean · Bailey, $759.46 in fees for the sheriff's
PrOceedings will start at 9:30 Scheduled for review next deceased, ys. Harry Glen deparlment, $3,878.95 as the
a.m. in the common pleas Wednesday are :
Brown.
.
.
state's share in tiUefees, $27.7~
courtroom with Judge Homer
The fourth district court of in boat tlUe fees; $144 for
(Pete) Abele of 1-fcArthur
AnnaL. Roush, vs. the hoard appeals serves 15 southern hunting and fishing licenses,
presiding. Other judges are of educ~tlon pf Southern 'Local Ohio counlies including $57,318.12 in support and
Earl 1!:. Stephenson of Ports- School District, Racine, and Adams, Athens, Brown, Gallia, alimony collections, and $3,330
, mouth and Gordon B. Gray of Charles Norris, Cierk.
Highland, Hocking, Jackson, in inspections on vehicles
At(lens.
Grange Mutual casualty Co. Lawrence, Meigs, Pickaway, brought in from another state.
The court directly reviews vs. Don Uonel Wood.
Pike, Ross, Scioto, Vinton and
The total ol the collections
all cases heard or tried in lower
Sheila A. Reeves vs. Rober! Washington.
amounted to $363,180.89.

was a strike or a lockout, and
later on the eligibility of
workers to receive unemploymeht benefits. Judge John
C. Bacon of the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court this week
was reviewing testimony In an
appeal by the union against an
unfavorable ruling earlier
denying compensation. He was
to make a finding later this
week.
Representatives of the
company and union were
scheduled to meet at noon
today to begin final settlement
of minor language questions in
the agreement. Its details were
withheld pending final signing.
One of the problems to be
discussed today was how soon
work can be resumed, and the

$275,241 Taxes
Paid on Autos
&amp;ught in 1971

Chnrches. AdVised·
To Change Face
c

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Rev. Joseph Connolly, chaplain
to the Baltimore, Md., catholic
Inter-racial Colllcil, said here
Monday It is the duty of the
church and its clergy to
become "agents of liberation."
Connolly, keynote speaker
for the Ohio Pastor's Convocation, said the church has
been "on the side of the oppresaor since the time of
Coostantlne" and this must be
changed.
·
God, he said, "is at work today where the oppressed Strive
for liberation."
"It Is the duty of the chiD'cb

Therapy Work

Props Needed ·

Court to Review Five Cases

Meigs Eagles to Host Zone Conference
Meigs Aerie 2171, Fraternal Order \If Eagles, will
hold a Southeastern zone conference on April 14 and
15 in Pomeroy. ·
The conference is exP,ecle4 to' bring as many as 400
to 500 visitors to the community, most for the
weekend. Approlimately 30 Aeries are involved.
Meigs Aerie officers Biked today !or Information
on sle!\lng rooms available !or conference delegates
• and o~rlals u lVell as Information on cbiD'ch services in the co""ty.
Residents having roo1111 they would be wUUng to
rent during the conference wee)tend are Qked IQ send
the lnfonnatlon on how many persons they can accommodate and the cost to the local Eagles Aerie at
P. 0. Box 427, Pomeroy. InfonnaUon on the schedule
of churcll services for the Slllday is also requested to
~ aent to the same post office box.
ThiD'ston Stone, Jr., chairman of the zone event,
'

Unofficially, it was reported
that Union President Argyle
Deeter threatened last night to
resign if the return to work was
approved, and did, after the
vote was counted. Other officers are Robert Mllsl!er, vice
president; Marie Romine,
secretary; Lewis J.nng,
treasurer, and William Harris,
Chalnnan of the executive
commlttee.

'

and its clergy to become agents
of Uberation," CoMODy said.
The Rev. Ronald Osborn,
professor of chiD'ch ~lstory at
Christian Theological
Seminary at Indianapolis, Ind,
clllded cllurch members !Dr too
often settl.lng Into little com·
m111lties instead of striving for
lrotherhood.
"On the !road seale, the 111·
timate goal of the church Is
human community,'' Osborn
said. "Don't forget that the
great big brotherhood of man
started as a religious visum,
not as a commerlcat for
somebocly's brew.
"And If some people find
their warmest feeling of
fraternity at a beer bust, It Is
because the cbiD'Ch's responae
w the divine purpose Is not
getting through to them,'' he
sald.
Mrs . Marion Francis of
''Ironically, modern mobility
Middleport will begin a has destroyed the community
therapy program with the that an olD" ancestors knew,''
retarded children of the Meigs he added. "But still we long for
Community Classes in March. it, for a sense of belonging w
She will need milk .carlo!ls and meaning 10methlng to oth(half-pint), empty egg cartons, er human beingl!."
crayons, coffee and juice,
The Rev. Malcolm Boyd,
candy, baby food jars, beads, author of "Are You Running
marbles, pill bottles, match With Me, Jesus?", WBI to
sticks, bottle caps, television appear at the convocation
dinner trays, used flash bulbs today.
or cubes, and cigar boxes.
Residents with such items to
contribute are asked to contact
TWO TO STATE
Mrs. Francis at 992-58IK or
Feeney-Bennett
P011t 128 of
leave them on her porch at 620
Americap Legion, lias voted to
Locust St.
send two boys to Buckeye Boys
•
State this summer, Paul
Hap tonstali, commander, said
today. HaptonstaU also noted
that any member of the post
interested
in applying for the
'
.
janitor's job at the hall should
and Benjamin O'Donnell, coordinator said the . reserved for the social functions in conjunction with read the duties of the · job
estimated 400 visiting Eagles wU1 spend monoey. for
the conference. Zone conferences are held twice a POIIted there and if Interested
housing and food and will buy gifts and souv~lrs In year.
mfiike application to a member
0
Me••s
cornniittee.
the county.
..,..
... Aerie led the state three str•i•ht
-.. years for . Th .the texecutive
iU
Stone said this will be the first time since the 19405 new members percentage-wise, and received state · e POll w meet at 7:30p.m.
that a zone conference has been held loc~.' Com- awards for ·41. Officers of the aerie are Bernard Wednesday.
·
pletion wai helpful toward getting the conference Neutzling, president; Stone, secretary; Robert
ldleduled here. · Stone said that the women's Salser, vice president; Harold Duckworth, Homer
auxiliary of ihe lodge wlll be holding Its sessions at
Smith, Marvin Moore, trustees; Herbert !ll.lon,
REUNION PLANNED
the Inn while the men's business sessions will be held treasurer; Lyl~ Hysell, conduct«; Tonuny Hysell,
Plans lor the annual alunmi
at the Orchid Room on East Main St.
chaplain; Bill Ratliff, inside guard; Victor Neutzling;
reunion
will get underway
Every effort wUI be made to house locally- inside ~rd.
district, state and grand aerie officers and delegates
Stone. said that officials of the local aerie invite when the Pomeroy !Jigh School
who will come to the conferenCe. Any· overflow will suggestions from any group on 1\Bnd.ling the con- Alwnni Association meets at
7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the .
have 'to go to Gallipolis for hou~ing. if local ac- ference in order to help make the stay of the vl.iltors basement of Trinity Church.
commodations are not adequate.
most pleasant and impressive. Suggestionnhould be Anyone Interested in helping
Remodeling of the local aerie quarter~ on East
sent to P. 0. ilox 427, or contact can be made with with the event is asked to be'
.
Main St., is near completion. That buiidjng will be
stone or O'Donnell.
present.
1

PetitiOns Filed

.

schedule of reswnption. Information will be needed on
which former er.:ployes
remain available before
departments of the new,
modem plant that manufactures custom-built electric
motors can return to full
operation.

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