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~e President,.is ~di11g

U. s.·into New Relation~ps

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Vietnam:

a·t Have We Learned?

Eclltor'snote: This is the first ol a series of , : the change.
Former President L)'IKion B. Johnson recognized it in the
· weekly articles dealing with "great decisions ,
- 1972." In these articles, United Press In· · · closing days of his administration.
President Nixon won omce on tt.
ternatlonal reporters who are spedalllts In
Negotiation; to date, haa failed to end the war that has cost
their fields will report on, and assess •.· great .
·decisions that fac-: nations, their people and
•Great Decisions
·
their leaders this year.

nearly 50,000 American !Jves and at its peak approximately $2'
billion a month . ln his latest effort to break th·e negotiation
: By PHD.. NEWSOllf ·
deadlock, with his' eight.jJoint proposal announced Jan. 25, the
· UPI ·Foretp News Allllyst
President said the United States had "g011e the e)&lt;tra mile In of"lf peace lito come to All&amp;, the United :States wiil play Its part ·'fering a settlenent th&amp;t ls fair to everyone concerned." The
and proYide Its fair share. But peaee In Asia cannot col!le from ·,· Communists did not think so.l{anol and the Vl~t CoDR were quick
~ United States. It must come from Allia. 'lbe people of Asia, " to denounce the plan as jW!t another American ploy, a "cuming''
.the govertunents of Asia, they are the ones who m~ lead the .effort to snatch victory from defeat.
way to1peace in ASia."
· .
...;; President Richard M. Nixon, July 26, 1969
On April 25, 1969, on Guam at t.he start of his elobal swin".
President Nixon ouutned for accomp~myjng newsmen the Nixon
In the Philippines where the preBident had arrive\! that morn- doctrine, No direct quotes were penni~,
ing on the first leg o( a global tour, he waa enunciating publicly
But he declared:
for the first tbnetllepollcynow known astheNixondoctrine.
-The U.S. would not become irivolved in any more wars like
. Under It haa come the.winddown.of the VIetnam war, a sharp that tn Vietnam.
turntn U.S. policy towardMalnlahd China,planned presidential
...:.It would reduceits!Jlilltary commitments in Asia,
viatts to both J?eld!ig and Moscow, and· major shifts globally
- It would keep Its treaty commitments and watch Asian
':'ffiODR natl0111 seeking to adapt to·the new U, S. attitude.
developments .
Avast.war wearineBB amoftR the American people bad forced
- Emmciation of that doctrlr\e marked the end of an era. hi the

@ 1972 by NEA, Inc.,

OKAY '..APY. l
. MP~~ . ~IK5' YOU

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l'~L ~~Wf YOU~

l-OCATION ANI'
C"ONPITION TO .
.' IT'HUOA5T

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1940s the United States had abandoned.iis traditional isolationist a matter of debate.
role and became the aggressive pro~r of Democcracy
So loll!l as Generalissimo OJiang ~l.shek occupi..d the
eveeywhere. In the 1~ it initiated treaties to contain Com- Olinese tnainland the Uotted States recogn!ZE!!l,Formosa aa an
munism around the world. In Asia there was SEATO (1964), integral part of Olin&amp;,
ANZUS, (1951), and CENTO (195S), not to mention bilateral
When the mainland fell the United States first declared it
would
remain aloof in an internal Chinese quarrel. With the
agreements with smaU individual nations such as Thailand, the
Phllllppines and Nationalist China on Taiwan.
beginnfDR of the Korean War it reversed itselt, It declared the
It was the policy which led Secretary of State John Foster future of Formosa would be settled by international tribunal
Dulles to declare on Jan ; 16, 1965, that the United States had after peace had come to O!ina.
''walked to the brink Qf war" three times ln:I9f&gt;3 and 1954 and bv
With establishment of SEATO and its avowed interest in the
the threat I)( maaaive retaltatlon preventell war in Kqrea, In- defense of South Vietnam, the U, S. also had reversed itself in
Southeaat Asia,
dochina and Formosa.
But there were differences over the question of U. S, vital interests and where they began and ended in the Pacific,
Within the free world there were few who eould quarrel with U,
They began coming into the open after the fall of the O!inese S. Intent when It undertook in 1954 to supply military aid to south
mainland to the conununists,
Vietnam in response to a plea from the then President Ngi Dinh
A secret State Department me,mo of the time declared there Diem.
was nothing the United States could do to prevent the fall of
From this beginning came growing involvement, at first alFonnosa to t!le Communists,
most imperceptible, and with it, almost hand4n-hand, mounting
, ln early 191i0, the then Secretary of State, Dean Acheson, dissent .
ouutned in ·a speech before the National Press Club in WashIn the light of histoey there also was an amazing official
ington what he defined as the U. S, Defense perimeter in the naivete as to the way the road was leading,
Pacific~ It Included Japan, Okinawa and the Phillippines, It
These examples illustrate:
omitted Formosa and Korea.
Feb, 24, 1963: From a report to the U.S. Senate by a panel
Within w~eks, the Conununlsls invaded South Korea, whether headed by Sen. Mike Mansfield : "'There is no interest of the
or QOt because of a misinterpretation of the American attitude is
(Continued on page 8)

GUAIZI?.

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.NO ..XXIV NO. 204

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Devoted To The lnterall Of The Meigi·MOIOII Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1972
PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS
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North's Secret

Fa,i- and ·
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Wormer ·:~"~.: ·.
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PARIS (UPI) -North Viet- Adviser Heney A. ~Kissinger in the cancellaUon of a secret
meeting scheduled for Nov. 00
its own secret nine-point
Nixon disclosed !11' mee!IDR, between' Kissinger and Le Due
one
of 12 he ·said Kissinger hld Tho, a r•nldng member of the
Vietnam peace plan .and accused ·President Nixon of ln Paris w,ith Hanoi off!clals, In Hanoi polltburo.
They said Kissinger called
"duplicity" in disclosing his nationwide speech on
off the meeting the dsy before
details 18st week of secret Vietnam last week.
as serving no purpose because
Hanoi Washington negoA week later, President Tho was ill. Hanoi said their
tjations.
At a'news conference, Nguy. NixOn said,. the Communists delegation leader to the talks,
en Thanh Le, the press presented the Vietnam peace Xuan Thuy, was prepared to
spokesman for the North talks with another plan, this meet Kissinger instead.
VIetnamese delegation to the time of seven points, signed by . "In decic!inR now to unllater·
ally make pubUc the subltance
Vietnam peace talks, handed the Viet COng.
. out IQ newsmen the nine-point
'lbe North Vietnamese today of the private meetinga bet- ·
program tiM1 Commllhlsta pre- also published what they said ween North Vletnani and· the
seilted to u.s. Presidential w~ th~ exchanges leadiJJilto United Stat~. the )'llxon adnam disclosed today details of Paris last June 26, last year,

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FILES FOR OFFICE - Bernard· Fultz, Middleport,

Incumbent Republican Meigs County Proeecuting Attorney,
S.turdl!y filed hll petition of candidacy with the Mejgs
County Board of Elections. He will seek the JIOIIlinatlon to
rep1 esent the party tn the November election.

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.New$•..·~n Briefs
·CAPTAIN. EASY
IT.
OF THE:

FIND
THINK ·

P05~1B~~
PAMAG~ GiJIT;&gt;

, AGAINGT Mel&lt;t;IS
INDUGTI?IE5!

MIDNIGHi. AND HE: ~TIL.C
HOME:!,.. OH, MOTH!:~! WHAT AM
G01WS'1'0 00 WITH
TH'A'f Wli:fOTCH 1!

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Reality Urge·d on Nixon
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BY UNITED PRE.'IS INTERNAnONAL
WAsJUNGTON - DEFENSE SECRETARY Melvin R.
Laird says there will be no draft calls through March, marking
the longest Planned break in contiCI'Iptlbn sinCe the end of the
Korean War. ''We're moving ln the direction of an all-volunteer
force wo.rldwlde during this first quarter of the year," Laird aaid
&amp;mday when he revealed that there would be no draft calls in
either Februaey or March, No men were drafted in Januaey,
Laird cited three reai10118 for the decision ,to suspend the
draft this quarter: Substantial pay Increases effective Jan. 1, the .
slowing ol the VletiiiiJft\ War ·and conl!l'fSSlonal .requlrements to
trim the .\m~Y by 70,000 men.

RENO, NEV. - SKIER FEIJX OROZ smashed Into a lree
and hung 011 while 1110w thundered by hbn. "We never thought
we'd have any trouble," said Oroz, lf, who .later helped
searchers fl!lll the burled bodies of.llls two companiOns.
·
'lbe avBiaoche IIIII'Vivor and two 16-year-old Reno youths
Ignored warning signa at Mt. i\ose ski resort saturday. They cut
ac1'0811 a slope of·loose 1110w onto a dangerous cornice and appara~tly trtaered the anow-tllde, said resort manager John
Purdon. Richard Lyon and Steve Brown were killed when snow
tumbled 800 feet down the slope. Two other youths were partially
burled by the slide but were able to dig themselves out.
SAN FRANCISCO - A CHAINED and padlocked teen-81!e
escape irtllt plunged Into San Francisco's Bay's 48-degree
weather Sunday and emerged freed 00 seconds later, It took
HarryHoudlnl57secondstodoaslmllarstuntin the same spot,in
190'7,
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Geoffrey Ha111011, 18, of nearby Orinda, performed the fest
chained with 48poundaoflinksaild padlocka. About 2,000 persoos
watched from .OOre.as he hopped Jrom a cruiser Into seven feet ·
of water .. Horntlnl !)ad sheriff's deputies fasten the chains 65
yean ago. HaDion used hll own njghnts. '111e)'outh lliB9 had a
U!Hine fUI.ed to hll waist aRci tiny, floata attached to his
trunks Ill cue ol an ''emerilerJcy" or ''luper~gency."

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WASHINGTON (UP!)
established for that purpose
House Democratic leader Hale and "in times of controls one
Boggs said today that could make a great deal of
President Nixon shoUld face up money if one does, not adhere to
to the fact that his wage-price ·the rules and regulatiOIIB,"
controls are unreallstlc so long
BOggs made the comments in
aa they•cannot be enfor~.
a UPI ''Washington Window"
"What I'm saying," Bogga· · lntervleiv.
added, "Is that this thing
In another
economic
c~nnot be effective .unle!IB .development, tbe Cost of
there
Is
considerable 'living Council said that its
buresua-acy to enforce the weekend decision to exempt
regulations, And if you dori't . 'Americans making less than
enforce them It means thilt all $1.90 per hour from wage
of the · honest people are ·con\J'OIB 1!111 mean that an
penalized and those· who are estiJrulted 12 million persoM
not honest are rewarded."
now will be eltglble for raises
He IIBid the Internal Revenue -U their employers decided to
Service, handed tbe enforce- grant them -without regard to
ment job by the ad- the 5.5 per cent annual
was
not guideline or other rules
ministration,

Cowt Denies Union Appeal
Mel&amp;• CoUnty Common Pleas Judie Jolla c. Bacon
dealed aaemploymeat beueflla to memben ol tile Ill·
ternll_. Brotllerbood. of Eledrlcl Worker~, Loeal
Jil7, lavolved ll a labor dlapate wltll 11be Imperial
Electric ComPIIJY.
All earlier clecllloa lly lbe Board of .Review, Oblo
Bureau of Employmeat, dnded tbe workers Uem·
ploymeat COMI'CIIRIIOD 011 the lfO•dl that ' lillell!·
plo)'lllellt W.. duetulabor dllpllteolberthu alocteat.
, AIIIIJipea!Wumade by AriYie Deeler, presldeat ol
tbe woa, lllld tlben. Tile court dealed tlle'appeal.
.
'lbe Imperial ComJIIIDY plaat bas beeU operatlllg on
a limited scale wltb a-.ervlloey penouael sluee Juue s..
Laat week the comJ18!1Y aiiDouaced reacbiDg a lhreeyear' ~&amp;l eeln.mt with the llllioa:

governing wage increases.
The council adopted the $1.90
figure even though the pay
board, in advising the council
earlier this month, had
rejected the ftgure as too low.
'lbe federal minlmiDII wage is
$1.60 an hour. Labor members
on the pay panel earlier had
rejected a · $2.00 figure aa
inadequate.

Miller Reviews
Year in Letter · Alumni Lists
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WASHINGTON
Congressman Clarence
Miller's annual summation
newsletter "The Year In
Review" was mailed today to
lOth District residents.
The newsletter highlights the
activities .of the first session of
the 92nd Congress by providing
a capsule accounting of the
bills Miller has Introduced, the
measures he has vo!el! on, and
the project developments that
have taken place in
Southeastern Ohio during 1971.
The newsletters are being
mailed on a postal patron basis
and will be sent to eveey
household throughout the 13
counties of the lOth District,
Should any individual fail to
receive a copy, they may do so
by contacting the Congressman's Washington_ Office: Room 128 Cannon
House Office Building,
Washington, D. C. 20515,

said
Saturday, · "The
manll8(2'jpt might be genuine
Howard Hughes, but the
material might not have
readied Irving in the way .he
cl8tmed."
lrv(ng claimJ to have complied the autobiography from
the triJIIClripts, of a series of
interview• with Hughes. &amp;t
H\lllhel, Jn I tl!iephone i!lter·
view fnim hll a.hamu rdreat
an~
tbrou's h
·~vera\
lp0ke1111811, has deniell that he
evf,r collaborated with Irving
on tbi! book, and Jlid. he
received DOf!e Qf the McGra'I'Hill money.
Meanwhile, Irving Is sche.
duled IQ appear befor:e county
and f!!de~"al grand juries today,.
But he is expected- to seek a

delay in order to brief his new
attorney, criminal lawyer
M,urtce H, Nessen.
The federal grand jury is
believed to be tnvest!Ratlng the
possibility of mail fraud while
the county grand jury is said to
be looking Into possible
charges of obtaining money
under false pretense and
perjury,
'lbe perjury charge would
stem from an ~ffidavit Irving
IUbmitted to the state supreme
court cWelllDR tl)e times and
places he pve two checks to
Hughes and one to a Hughes
representative.
CBS quoted Irving as sayir:g
that $450,000 of the $650,000
paid to "H, R. Hughes'.' for the
book .is still available in a
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Being Updated
Officers of the Pomeroy
Alwnnl Association are updating their membership
mailing list in preparation for
the May reWlion.
New addresses of alumni
may be telephoned or mailed to
Mrs, Gene Mitch, 305 Wright
St., Pomeroy,
Residents having lnfonnation on Pomeroy High
~hool graduates who have
moved recently are asked .to
call Mrs. Mitch, Including date
of graduation,
r.trs. Don Mayer, Alumni
president, said ·plans are
moving forward for the annual
rewlion of Pomeroy graduates,
but that volunteers are needed
to assist with preparations,
Persons willing to help are
asked to contact Mrs, Mayer,

What Now, Indict a Computer!

NEW YORK (UPI) ·-The
purported Howard Hughes
autobiography buat McGraw-Hill
Book
Co .
paid •500,000 for may
be based on material froni a
computer printout produce!! by
the bUUonalre's aides lnltead
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of on P!ftOnal lnten!ewa, tt
BONO KONG -CHINA TODAY aCCilsed President Nixon of waa reported Sunday. '
udD8 ''bm:{aced threatl" to plunder ~ ~ developiJIR nations
Both Time and. Newsweek
!itln America, Alia and Atria. 'lbe charg~ waa Ollna'a ofllctal magazines and the CBS proCOIIIIIIIIIIarY on NIIon'a llatement cin aid to deVelopiJIR countries gram "60Mtnutel" ,.u1 author
m.te Jan. II,
Clifford lrvtng'a b9ok on
'lbe offida\ New China News Agency (NCNA) said "U. S. Hughes may have been wrt~n
imperlalillll II the main nplotter and plunderer of the · from informatiOn co~tained tn
deve~ countries." Ollna analystl said Peking's mtenstfled
a computerized biograpbtcal
crltlcllm of the United States was to reasaure Its nervoW! VIet· prlntou( ordered Hveral years
nimele aWes u the Niloll'a Piking trip n88\'l.
ago by · Hughea Tool Co,
executive Bill Gay.
SAIGON - AMERICAN BA BOMBERS carried ~t their
Life magazine, which had
cconunuec!' on Page 8)
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planned to lel'laliH the book,

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ministration hss furt~r laid
bare its duplicity," Le said,
''This way of acting is aimed
at deceiving world public
opinion in the United States
and the world, at serving Mr.
Nixon's political objectives in
this election and sliowing him
to pursue a Vletnamlzatlon of
the war and not to serve the
cause of peace as he·Claims."
The :!ecret HanoLplan called
for the total 'witlidrawal of all
u.s. and allied' forces before
the end of 1971. n said releue
of military and civillail prisoners WI)Uid be carried out In
parallel alld ,cbnipleted at the •
t11ne ·u the troop with·
drawal.
These proposals were restated In the public Viet Cong
plan a week lliter. 'lbe Hanoi
program also repeated Ita.call
for the overthrow of Saigon
P)'esident Nguyen Van Thleu
and hi$ then vice president,
NI!IIYeJ\ Cao Ky, and Premier
Tran Van Klem.
The Hanoi plan also demanded \he United ·States pay lull
reparation for all damage
caused to the people of all
Vietnam and called for international guarantees. of the
neutrslity of all Indochina.

Zurich bank, $50,000 has been
spent and the other •150,000 is
somewhere on the tsland of
lbiza of • Spain's Mediterranean
cost
where
Irving has a home,
Time reported that '1t Is said
that Itvtng is now frantically
trying to raise $200,000 in order
to replace the money tflat haa
been . spent, should he be
required to refund it tg
MCGraw-Hill."
Irving admitted Frtdey to
the New York county district
attorney's fraud bureau that
the mysterious "Helga R.
·Hughes" who deposited the
$650,000 publisher's advance in
a Swiss bank and then with·
drew It was his Swiss-born
wife; Edith Sommer Irving,

FIRST SWEETHEART - Sherry King, a Meig~~ High
&amp;lhOOl ,Miillit, dlill&amp;liler Qf Mr. and Mrs, William King,
Bradbury, 'nil crownel! the ·first alleetheart of the Meigs
County DeMQiaJ ~ter ~~Y night in Middleport.
, l'lJIC)In« the tWa on MIAI King II her escort from the chapter,
Paul Darnell, Jr., Pomeroy. (Picture of· four contestants on
page 5.)
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, Weather

3 Autos
Damaged·

Mostly cloudy and not a~ cold
tonight and Tuesday with
·chance of · some light anow'
north portion. Lows tonight 10
.
to 18 and the highs Tuesday .
from the mid 20s to the lower
Three cars were heavily
30s.
damaged and two men were
Injured In an accident on Route
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
7 near the Beacon Service
Ohio exteuded outlook, Station tn Pomeroy at 7:52 p.
Wednesday lhreu&amp;h Friday: m. Saturday.
Olauce of raiD or snow
Pomeroy police said a car
Borth aud raiD south portloa traveling west driven by
Wedneaday .aud 'lbunday Michse1Hlll,2l,Racine, struck
becomlllc partly cloudy and a parked car owned by Levi
colder Friday with chance of Partlow, Pomeroy, which
snow flurries uortbeas.t _ rebounded into another parked
portion.
car owned by Larry Lee,
High temperatures Pomeroy.
Wednesday and Tbunday Ia
Hill and a passenger, Robert
the upper 30s aad·tbe lower White, Racine, were taken to
40s north and Ia tbe mid to Veterans Memorial . Hospihal
upper 40a south portion. by the Pomeroy E-R squad.
Lowaat ulgbt from the 20s to Htll had lacerations around his
the middle 30s.
mouth and was hospitalized,
~T ·wwn'l'····~ White, suffering scratches
about the head, was treated
and released,
Police said Hill is being
charged with driving while
intollicated and White with
intoxication,
Meigs County farmers will
At 11 :58 p, m, Sunday, the
receive their Form CCC 182, Pomeroy E-R"squad answered
Report of Payments, late, the a caii to the Waller Wilson
Meigs County Agrtculture, home on Peach Fork Road,
Stabilization and Conservation Mrs . Rena Lightfoot, who was
office said today,
ill there, was taken to Veterans
It is expected, however, that Memorial· Hospital where she
all forms will be distributed by was admitted.
Feb. IL Farmer~ who have
participated in any ASCS
program for 1971 may call the
ASCS office, 992-3687 and
receive the necessary information ,
The Pomeroy Fire Dept.
February 15 is the final date
for farmers to ftle for a new answered a call to the Victor
burley tobacco allotment, Young Home on East Main St.
Applica lions may be picked up at 7':29 a, m, today where a car
at the ASCS office. March 10 is owned by VIckie Young had
the late date to make ap- caught fire.
plication for a 1972 feed grain · Fire Chief Henry Werry said
base. Applications may be the vehicle apparen tiy flooded.
picked up ~t the local ASCS and threw gasoline on the ·
office located in the Masonic motor which ignited jt ..
Temple ·Building at .Pomeroy. Damages were ·estimated at
about $200 to the motor, The
· · family had gotten the fire out
using rugs before the departHAS TEXTBOOK
CINCINNATl (UP!) - A ment arrived .
thief broke into the car of
LOCAL TEMP
Steven F . .Wo!f, 21, during the
The temperature In downweekend and took a thick town Pomeroy at · 11 a, m.
textbook entitlted Mondey was 20 degrees undet'
"Criminology In America,"
sunny lkles.

Farm Fonn

To, he Late

Fire Damages

Motor of Auto

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1-Tbe o.JIYSemlnel, Mldclleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 31,1972

3-..,.,DIUySemlnei,Mltltller!orl~Y.O.: Jan.ll,1fl2

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fDnORIAl.

War Ending,
Despite Hanoi

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Voice along Broadway l

Pro Standings
NHLSt-..dings
'Y'o nittd
Press lnltrntllout
Eost
W. L T. Pis
Jiloslon
3• 7 8 76
New York
31 9 8 '70
Montreat
27 13 8 62
Detroit
21 21 8 50
Toronto
20 20 10 50
Vancouver
U28 .533
Buffalo
10 29 12 32

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surreiallaUc sCillptol' Edwin Cork wu ·comBY JACK O'BRIAN
mlsaloned to create a gold 11atuette precilely
LAUREN'S BfiLL LIVING
ihe
length r1 a !lfth, to be ca1led a ''foGY";
HER MEMOIRS ·
NEW YORK (KFS) - Laur1!n S.caU was further plans reiDIIn abeyant, If ~
remembers anything about the whole blamed
offered Jli,OOO ln:lrontiO do her memoln; she
That lo·n~-ago-{!iscredited ··ught at the end of the tun.
nel" may be no· more a reality· than it ever was. but some
said ''No -lor1bt time beil!l" ... The Howard - project alter 0111! lull, prOIJI!I' WIOI'd. evenlllti .,. _ ..
things about the Vietnam war have fallen Into better
Hughes • whoftal11-wrote-wbat.autobiograplly '!be st. &amp;p CIITholiB Club i'emllnl !IIIOOtlli
perspective as a resu)t of President Nixon "s dramatic
sweepetakea lnclucte. Lana Turner's ex, Bob ObllvloiiS ~f the upstart group, and 110 lnlerclull
television bid for a peace settlement.
Eaton, wbo hired barri11er .Roy M. Cahli to aplaahdolm Iii contemplated; too distractlni,
Most commentators immedtately predicted that Hanoi
protect blm fnllll the llilclpateCI Hugbes- the st. &amp;i!IB lads alirugged."
would reject the President's eight·point proposal out ·
The Hillalde Singers are nine gifted alngerOIIIillught •.• ·~ one conclusion I have and
right, or at · best reply with a counterproposal of their
own which would amount to a rejection .
that everybodY wlllbave," Eaton wrOte to Cobn, muslclanl whoee •first Melronledla Record, "I
Want to Teach the World to Sing" (lil hartDony),
This prediction was not difficult to make. especially in
''is Mr. Hugheli,mlght be the rlcheat man in the
view of the fact that the United States, as the President
wotld, but with all hla enormou. wea)th, he got Is· whirling high atop the chartll: four r1 the
revealed, had made no less than 13 offers to the North
Hlllsides are sons of great gul~ Frank
Avis for hla attorney ... And I get Hertz!"
Vietnamese in Paris over the past eight months- all of
Marino (for years on the Tonight Sbow); two
them rejected-and that since October he had been wait·
BUddy Hackett's ~bowing lor a Rolls- others are Mary Mayo, who can slog so blgh
ing for a reply to the same program which he now made
only blrdll can hear her, and blir equally gifted
·· public.
Royce; arui lfthatisn'ta contra~,! In terms.
What was not so predictable was the reaction of some
Raquel Welch's late dates are with C!arles daughter ... They have a gre~~t cbance 10 lll'lng
of the domestic critics of the war. tncluding some who
trUe singing talent' to the roi:k-W«Id.
EVBDB, brother of Ali MacGraw's husband, Bob
./
had been chastizing the Prestdent for refusing to make
, HO'I!"anl Hughes' ex.gal Ava Gardner will be
'
.., .
... '!be ~ Houle on Central Park South just
any peace overtures to North Vietnam.
i /)
50 this year; sorry, pop•... Mall. Sen. Ed!vanl
spent f8,000,000 lo~ top:to.bottbm redecol'l!lion
Sen. J . William Fulbright , the ·· senior statesman'" ot
w. Brooke bought a St. Maarli:l, West lndlea
.:. They didn't need air condlllol)(ng at the
the antiwar school. observed that while the President's
home; 12.rooms, guest house; Preview11 offered
offer seemed reasonable to him t Fulbnghtl and to the
telecast aDi party lor the Today Show's ~
President and probably to the Western world, it would not
it at ~.ooo ... Tom Edwards, oldUme member
anniversary: Helen O'Connell and Joe
' be considered veasonable by Hanoi.
rlthe Revelersquartetnowrevlved (at the a,y
Garaglola sta~ at o!lllOSlte aides of every
We had not given the North Vtetnamese what they
!MB),!Ostbls wife ... ey Howanl.says be got the
' room, and the chUI was Alasil:an ... Thumazlng
really wanted. said Fulbright, and that was withdrawal
idea for Victor Mature's comebac!t In Cy's
gultarlsll at the St. RegiB, Bucky II Barnes, split
of our support of the Thieu regime in South Vietnam.
"Every LiWe CrOOk and Nanny" when he 11w
up; Bucky joined Benny Goodman.
Presidential hopeful Sen. George McGovern. D·S.D..
blm on an old Late Show flick from the 3tlll.
.
Two ptllt midtown ~pots have their own
commented that the President had merely offered to set
When we saw "Vlvat, Vlvat Regina!" In
a date for withdrawal of all U S. military forces . he had
· speclalgrwpa: the St. Regis' King Cole Bar bas
not actually set that date.
I.oodon last year, we reported It had a IIJI)elldl!l·
its ''CirrhoatsClub," a rolllldtable of substantial
Another crillc went so far as to complain that the Presi·
first
act,.a nolsuy shouted second that couldn't
wteran bibulous buslneasmen who meet li1 the
dent had onlv promised withdrawal based upon an a~ree ·
match the first, thltl it was weD acted, dealgned
fir-left corDer near the bar every 4 p.m.-on; the
ment with North Vietnam but had not in fact achieved
and costumed; it opened on Bdwy, at the
TmnrSW~atopthe~eB~g~a
. ,that agreement
Broadhurst Theater with the same problem:
group that ~ Bk~er restaurant staff
In other wo~ds . the President has bent over backwards ,
Claire Bloom, beautiful and regal, If not
dubbed "Hl.G.H." "H.I.G.H." clalms it Is
but the top of his head isn't touching the ground yet.
majestic as Mary Queen r1 Scots, Eileen Atkins
A thought for today: French strictly eliCiusive: no tennis players, oor
Increasingly , however, it is the war critics, and the
effectively
Bette Davlslsh as Queen .. Elizabeth
enemy in Hanoi. who are putting themselves in an awkscientist Blaise Pascal said, golfera, nor quarterbacks, nor polo players, oor
~ard position.
I; authbr Robert Bolt ("A Man For All
"Between us and hell or heaven squash racqueteers - only thlll!ll with wounded
One thing is certain : The war is ending as far as active
Seasons.'' etc.) runs to neo-c'aulcally pedantic
there is nothing but life, which elbows suffered li1 Une qf bartending lire (from
American military participation is concerned. Because of
mahogany. to lllGUth) are eligible ... H.I.G.H. dialogue, fascinating in the llrat act, ·
I of all things Is the fraillst."
that, it is becoming increasingly irrelevant whether Hanot I
means "Heada In Great Hazes," or any other · fubnlnating In the last, whose shouts and fllltlan
agrees to our peace offers . or comes up with an offer we l
By Helen Bottel
1
couldn't cllllOuflage Its drooping dramaturgy.
Iitle a member might wish to attempt; aU such
.can agree to.
Peter Fo~ ln Playboy seemed atr&amp;!liely
creative !lubes are honored, or counfenanced
, , It has been said that the more our troop strength goes
POST-cHRISTMAS
REFl..ECI'IONS
old
fashioned,
out of it. deaperatelv sill in Ills
,down, the less bargaining P.ower the President has. But
Q-flow long does the ba· and deplored, and the club's logo Is W. C. Flelda
insistence that "LSD is a teacher. mescaline 'Is a
conversely. the more our nulitary involvement goes down . Dear Helen:
nana plant bear fruit?
' elevating a boWe or bourbon against a bloodshot
,the less need he has to bargain.
ChriBbnas Is hardly over, yet I'm wondering if it Is the last
teacher." Go take a look at Dr. Leary,
A-The plant dies a Iter backsround, elbows akimbo.
Whether Hanoi agrees to peace or not, we are getting one I will see as I remember lt.
·
bearing one bunch of rruit.
Teachers' Pet.
'lbere even will be an annual award out. We are doing in essence what Sen. Geor..:e Aiken of
It all began with the discontinuation of prayers in the
.Vermont once recommended-declare the w4r oyer and schooL!. Next It was the nativity scene which was eliminated
just leave.
from public places -schooL!, buildings, etc. Now, the last straw,
Eventually, the North Vietnamese will wake up to real·
lze that the Americans are gone. that they have lost their Chrisbnas Jrees were banned in our schooL! last year.
Why a non-Christian minority should force the majority to
bid to take over South Vietnam by force and that Jhe Communists· are in a far weaker position politically in South give up these very real symbols of Clristmas - the birth of
,Vietnam than they l\'Ould have been had the American Clirlst and the Christmas tree - when we respect THEm
.:President's peace offer been accepted in January, 1972 .
holidays, I cannot comprehend. Can you? - ???
.'-, By their .stubbornness , the North Vietnamese will actually have helped make President Nixon's "VietnamizaDear ???: ·
tion" plan a success.
Have Christmas trees .and nativity scenes been banned
Unfortunately, they will still hold American prlsoners ·of
because
of non-Otrlstlan sentiment or for other reasons? Lack of
'.war and, undoubtedly, some people in this country will
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. allowed a portion of the lin- are circular and some are good, regular bowel habIts
space or time, fire danger, budget cutbacks might be tbe culprits
lind some way to blame that on their own government.
ing !mucosal of the intes· lengthwise .. Finally, the promoted by forming a reg..
Dear
Dr.
Lamb-!
have
lines
to protrude out in a whole wall is bounded by ular habit, usually in the
here,
right?
.
(NE:WSPAPER ENTI'RPRIU ASSN.l
pockets
in
my
intestines
and
little
pocket or diverticula. tough membraneous mate· morning, and al de d by
No matter what, it's a pity. We sometimes forget that
can n o I eat food that has The lntestln~l tube has sev· rial. The little pockets most drinking two or three cups
Chrisbnas Is "Christ's Mass" and should be celebrated as such: skins
IU
I
•
or seeds.. I have ~en ~r~l laY,ers m tis waiL ,The often •occur in people who of warm water .or liquid .ea~h ·
-H
.
,.
'~
told that there ts a m~dtcme mner .~ayer . ls the - mucOsa.· have had an over~ctive ' di- ' mornmg.- ~ltelillcal· l~atlves
P. S. Here's another point of view:
you can take that Wtll dis· or .linmg, that produces ~II gestive' system. Oftei\ theie ·· or any m~~k:lll~ · that Atl!flU·
1
sotv; these pockets. Is that · t~pes !II secretiOn~ to ald. m' are the people who have ex- lates the bowel to forteful
+++
true.
dtgeslton a~d Is the locallon perience4 constipation, diar· contractiOns ts bad.
Dear Helen:
ror absorption of foodstuffs hea and other evidences of
Some lndividuall w!U find
Whatever you may have heard or the ""Green RevoLaat year a group of us decided to "put Christ back in
Dear Reade r-These oc- mto the bloodstream.
spasm and the build-up of certain foods ~ravate the
.lution" during the past year or so. chances are It came Christmas," and we began an investigation which soon
cur where the muscular wall
· h"
h ·
l·
1y a tilet
wrapped as good news .
of
the
intestinal
tube
has
There
·
a
re
muscular
layllressure
w1t
m
t
e
mtes·
cond
tton.
Us
u
a
astounded us.
. .'
· "Green Revolution" is .the totally appropnate label for
given away or ruptured and era in the intestinal wall that tine.
·that contams a lot of frult
It
didn't
take
us
long
to
discover
that
Christ couldn't be JK!l
Diverticulosis of the large and vegetables I~ prescribed
what well may be one of man's greatest success stories
intestine, or colon. is com· to provtde additional bulk
to date in altering his environment constructively, in back Into Christmas because He was never there, All the en·
this case to meet his most basir need-food.
mon, occurring in one out of for the stool11nd help to de·
cyclopaedias and magazilles we read clearly showed that
WIN AT BRIDGE
five of the American popu· velop good bow e I habits.
In a decades·long research effort, worldwide in scope everything about Chrlsbnas was pagan and had its origins long
Jation older than 40. Most However, there are 10me
but largely American·inspired and financed , agncultural before Ouiat. The date of December 25 was ,the birthday of a sun
people don't even know they foods in this eatego17, that
scientists succeeded in developing fantastically produc· god. The Jree has nothing to' do with religion, and many other
have these and they are ob· individual patients w1U not
Uve new varieties of basic food grains, much greater in
C!riBtmas
CU/ltoms
feasting,
merrymaking,
decor~lions, gift
by X-ray examination t o I e rat e. Individuals with
served
food value and yielding much larger crops. Most im·
exchanges,
etc.go
back
to
the
Roman
Festival
of
Saturn
beld
,------....,.---,
·
bid
two
no-trump,
it
fails
or
au
I
o p s y examinatl~n . this problem should 'IVold
mediately significant are new strains of rice, the basic
NORTH (D)
3t
dismally in a most important . Only . a.bout . one ou~ of f1ve the rtch, starchy foods. This
In late December.
food of much of Asia , where the revolution has taken
2
~
~!
"
requirement _ preparation of the mdlVIduals w1th these . Includes cake, pastries and
place.
The whole idea of teaching children that a mythical Santa
.
•
K
for
the opening lead "
have any symptoms, and nch desserts. Sweet drinks,
In the few years since the introduction of "'miracle
9875
Claus brings them gifts Is a lie that breeds selfishness and
.
..
·
only
about one out of 100 such as sweetened coffee
r.ice," alon11 with improved growing methods and self· ingratitude. Even ~lied good Christians use the holiday
WEST oltKJ 10
~tm : South found that out who have these develop an and alcohol, should be
help educallon programs for farmers, the results have
EAST .
qmckly. West opened the inflammation of one of the avoided. During episodes of
season as an excuse fo~ overeating, ovet;drinking, and loose
been spectacular.
6/
=~
•QJ.l!Li
queen of he~rts . So~th cov- little pockets which we call pain, a heating pad over tbe
conduct. And department stores are the center of attraction, not
1092
India, long the world's needtest case, this year suc·
t Q 10 3
¥ A8 s 3
e!ed w' t h dummy s kmg . diverttculitis.
abdomen will sometimes pro.
4 42
t 64
East plunked on the ace and
vide some relief
ceeded in producing enough rice for its own needs. Dense· · the churches.
Also, nowhere In the New Testament Is there mention of the
ly populated , land·short Japan. which five years ago
&lt;It
8
7
s
the
defense
had
five
tricks
When
this
does
occur,
the
·
SOUTH
· the inflamed pocket behaves
There are no medicines
belore So uth cou ld gam
imported a h~Jr.million tons of rice. now has a surplus
need to celelrate the birth of Jesus.
.K93
lead."
that dissolve the pockets:
approaching a million tons. In ali , a wide swath of
Our decision therefore was to rid our family of tbe entire
.76
very much like the inflamed The medicines tJiat decrease
southern Asia where hunger and even mass starvation pagan mess that only causes frustration, greed, financial burden
tAJ2
Oswald : "I can imagine pocket we call the appendix.' spasm of the digestive tract
oltAQ963
historically have been endemic, is approaching grain and has robbed us of joy. We have decided to l!lve gifts through
South's wails of anguish. He The location for the pain are sometimes useful,
must have pointed out that and s y m P. toms, however,
self-sufficiency with the likelihood or a net surplus withBoth vulnerable
the year wben they are more aptreciated (because they're
IHIWSrAPER IHTIRPRISI ASSN.)
In another year or so.
West North Ea.t!t South if We S I held the ace of may be dtfferent, since the
unexpected),have
get-togethers
at
quieter
times,
and
thank
God
hearts
or
if
any
other
su1t
pocket
extending
from
the
And now for the bad news
1•
Pas., 2 N.T.
had been led, he would have colon may vary in its loca·
Pass . 3 N.T. Pas.o; Pass
Pleose J.nrl your 41ttdions OfHI
The economies of what had been the more fortunate. each day for the birth of Christ. -INGRID
scored
game and rubber."
lion. ·
·
Pass
Dear
Ingrid:
C"ommtllh
to lowrt1tce E. Lamh,
rice·exportmg nations of the area are feehng the backJim
:
"He
sure
did.
What
The
treatment
for
diverti.
M.D., in core ol tM1 poper. WMio
Opening lead- • Q
My encyclopaedia e111laina:
lash of the leapfrogging production in the former havehe
didn't
point
out
was
that
cuI
o
sis
is
essentially
the
Dr. Lamb con ..l on,_ lndivldMI
not countries. Burma and Thailand. in particular, both
"Many popular Christmas customs originated long before
if
he
had
responded
two
same
as
for
constipation
or
lettftJ,
h will Oltswtr leftttt ol ;
heavily dependent on grain exports. are reported hard the time of Christianity. The festival of Sol, the unconquerable By Oswald &amp; Ja~es Jacoby
dubs
then
North
would
bid
irritable
colon.
This
includes
genet~!
int1r1Jf
in lutur. colum111. ·
hit as former markets not only dry up but threaten sun, was celebrated by the Romans late in December: This was
two
no-trump
and
it
wouldn't
to become competitors.
0 s w aId : "Losing brid!1e
ADOPTED BY TilE CHURCH as the greatest feast of the year in pI ayers like to complatn matter w he r e the ace of
Something like a rtce glut may be in the offing for
hearts was or what was Jed."
• once chronically hungry Asia. Grappling with its mount· honor of the birth of Christ, the Light of the World. There may about their bad luck. Luck
{Ht:WSfiA,EI IMTilPIISE A.SSN .J
does play a major part in
"'·"'ing surplus. Japan has begun to pay farmers not to grow have been a connection, too, with the Roman Saturnalia."
rice and is turning some of its output into ammal food.
We all know that the exact date of JI!SUI's birth has not been .rour .results in any one ses·
Sound familiar ? It would be appropriate if an answer establisbed. But in the fourth century the date of December 25 SJOn. However, in the long
nm, luck tends to even out
to Asia's new problem could be found in the American was generally adopted.
and it is the skill· factor that
The blddin~ has been:
experience. Unfor1unaiely, this nation in which both great
I LIKE our Christmas customs -from caroUng to Santa to determines the winners and West Norlh East
South
abundance and chronic need have coexisted for so long
losers."
making
cookies
for
neighbors
and
it
needn't
be
overly
comPass
has yet to find a formula that is both economically prac·
?
Pass
I
oTo
Pass
merclall2ed
unless
we
make
it
so.
Jim : ""One class ot players
Ileal and humane for handling its own agricultural sur.
You, South, hold .
... And somehow I feel a little sorry for your chUdren,lngrld.- who sufier from this 'hard
plus.
.
.
luck' is the one who rushes .98654.AQ6.A32oToJ,4
About the best that Asta may be able to look for is an H.
to
bid no-trump .when his
What do you do now?
object Jesson or two on what not to do.
holdmg calls ror S?me other
A-Bid one spade uniy. You
Hopefully, the distressed economies will be able to
b1d Here ts a good exam· have 1 ne•r·maxlmum pass, but
diversify and adjust. In any event . there should be no
pie. "
•1
should .~till P.rot:ccd slowly,
profit in hunger. The '" Green Revolution "" on balance is ,:-;-'$'f;."{JJ •• ' •• ;.:; ;: :
'oswald : "With 14 high··
•
TODAY'S QUES'l:ION
still very good news.
· r ard points the South' hand
You do bid one spade and
., But it just goes to show again that when tt comes to
meets one requirement for a your partner bids one no-trump
man and the environment. it isn't necessarily so that
two no-trump response. Un· What do you do now ?
nothing succeeds like success.
fortunately lor the man who
Answer Tomorrow

' , Now Grow

E~t;~~ . . ~

• •I I

' '

'

... aonr;unmt orglllllzaUon,

IIIII thlt If aD the paper 111ed

llr ... penmen! wen piled
•-",.ar,amancouldwalk
a ( ' wa; to the moon.
'l'lttlaJ, be probably could
IBIIllle It to Man.
Mtt · • the new year II~

halftime advantage and ap·
peared to have the game under
control. But the Eagles
probably played thelf best
quarter .of the season in the
third. Tbe "Big Green" went
26-9 to take a cormnanding 57·
45 lead.
Coach Bill Phillips' Eagles
are now 11·2 overall and
remain at 7-2 in the Southern

Alan' Duvall , 6·2 junior Jim Schloss followed willl 12. both sides on the floor, 1he final Saturday night, th~ Eagles hot1t
forward, added 17 points and
As a team, Eastern dropped margin dwindled to nine.
the Glouster TomcaiB. Eastern
nine rebounds while 5,-11 senior in 47 pet. of its shots, 30 or 6J.
won that flfst meeting, IJII.Sl.
guard Bob Ca)dwell chipped in Individually, Duvall hit on 6 of
EASTERN (79)- Duvall 64The litUe Eagles, caached by
17. Randy Young , 6-0 seni~r 10 from the field for 60 pel., Bob Ord, revenged an earlier 17, Eichinger 9+22, Young 4'SWest )
forward, added 13 points and II Caldwell, 7of 14 for 50 pet., and defeat to the little Lancers, l3, Caldwell 7-J-17, Boring 4-2W.LTPis
Chicago
rebounds and Randy Boring, 5,- Eichinger ma(\e 9 of 20 for 45 winning 38-32, to raise their 10. Totals 30-19-79.
34 10 s 73
Mlnn..ota
9 junior guard, had 10 for the pet.
27 15 8 62
FEDERAL-HOCKING (70)
record to 1thl. Tim Spencer led
C.tllornla
17 25 10 ~
Eagles.
Federai-Hockins
gunned
to
a
Schloss 5,-2-12, Smith 4-1-9,
Eastern
with
11
while
Larry
St. Louis
t7 26 7 41
Danny Hall paced the 19·14 first quarte~ lead . Athington followed with 7. Dunfee $-2-8, Daugherty 4-1-9,
Philadelphia
14 26 a J6
Pittsburgh
12 29 9 33
Lancers with 19 points while Eastern came back to tie the Jarvis· was the game's top Hall 8·3·19, Meeks 3·3·9,
i.os Angeles
13 33 6 32
score at 21, bullet the Lancers scorer as the Lancer scored 12. Mahorney 1~2, Springer 1~2 .
Suncloy's Results
get away to a 36-31 halflime
New York 1 Mlnnasota 1, all.
The Eagles wlll return to Totals 29-12-70.
C.llf. 2 Vancouver 0, aft.
margin.
SV AC play nexl Friday wtth
Buffalo 2 Los Angel" 2
Eastern
had
elevated
its
lead
the Kyger Creek Bobcats at
Pl\tia 4 Pittsburgh o
BY QUARTERS
to
18
with
two
minutes-left
in
Boston S St. Louis 2
Kyger Creek. Eastern won the Fed-Hocking 19 17 9 25-70
Chicago 4 Detroit 2
the game . With reserves from firs! meeting , 85-53. On Eastern
14 17 26 22-79
(!Jnlygamesschedutedl
GLOUSTER- The Southern dropped to 6-0 overall and defensive effort, stealing the record at 7·7 with a 45-35 win
Mondoy's Gomes
Local Tornadoes were upset by remained at ii-4 in Southern ball several times. Bruce Hart, over Glouster reserves. Coach
(No games scheduled)
the Glouster Tomcat! here Valley Conference action. 6-1 senior forw~rd . also hit Duane Wolfe's Tornadoes, who
AHL Standings
Saturday night, ~1. snapping Glouster, also having defealed double figures and played ..i!. shot 37 pet.from tbe field, were
the MeIgs ""
- V8 ., "'"'"'
'" •• fine game for the Tornadoes, led by Norman Curfman with
.ly United Prlilllnternationot
East
""un tians •fi ve game s·t. J oseph.'s.,- w.
w. L. T. Pts winning slreak.
Friday, raised its record to 4-9 scoring 18.
21. Other ' Southern scorers
Boston
29 15 1 65
Coach Aaa Bradbury's overall.
Tim Seevers, a promising were Mitch Nease and Vern
Nova Scotia
26 14 10 62 Tornadoes, perhaps looking
Southern played poOrly In the sophomore, paced the Tomcats Ord, seven each; Bob MiUer,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Springfield
1
Ohio State basketball coach
~~ ~~ ~ ~ ahead to Friday's game with fU,t three quarters, according with Tl points after tallying who had a fine floor game, with
Providence
Roch&amp;ster
t6 21 6 38 league-leading· Nortli Gallia, to Coa~h Bradbury, once only a single point the first five; Randy Forbes, who came
Fred Taylor aaid Sunday night
West
falling behind by as much as 16 quarter. Coach Bradbury was off the bench, with four, and
he hopes university of!icials
will take legal action against
Baltimore
~· 1\ T. Pis ·U .
points in U\e third quarter The all praise for this lOth grader, Barry Theiss, one. Hartley and
the
Minnesota players involved
Coach
Virgil
Grandy
's
Hmhey
22 16 ~ ~~ ~~
Tomcats, coached by . Bill mainly because of his fine Lean! paced Glouster with 11
Lawrence Tabor led lhe
Cincinnati
21 21 9 51
"'e' ,
KilkeUy, led after the first shooting. Mike Crow, a junior, and eight respectively. Nelsonville-York Buckeyes losers with 13. Joe Stidham in the brawl last week in which
Cleveland
22 20 6 so
Richmond
quarter,13-12,atthehalf,32-29,
dropped in 15 for the Tomcats . Southern made 19 of 36 from placed four players in double and John Rumley had 10 points three OSU players were in·
17 24 7 41
jured .
The Tornadoes were plagued the foul line while the !igures Saturday night in each.
Tidewater
12 32 4 2S
and after three periods, 4&amp;-39.
Taylor said he was "not
defeating the Kyger Creek
Kyger Creek will host
Cteveta~~~~;:l,":Xut!s
In the one .quarter that the by foul trouble from the first, Tomkittens hit on 12 of 26.
SOUTHERN (61) - T. !hie 0- Bobcats, 66-41, in a non-league Hannan Trace in a SV AC satisfied" with just the suspenSprinnfteld8
Roches ers
Tornadoes looked like a team Glouster going to tbe foul line
•
United Press International
sion of Ron Behagen and Corky
contest Tuesday night.
Cincinnati 3 Tidewater t
Cambridge 76 Wintersville 65 with their 8-8 record, they 30 times. Jerry Hubbard, the 1-1, Jim Hubbard 12-3-T/, Bruce game at Butchel.
Nova Scotia 3 Boston I
Claymont 62 Coshocton 60
rallied to come within two Tornadoes leading scorer, Hart S.S.l8, Jerry Hubbard 3..tJ.
Taylor for the year,
The win pushed NelsonvilleKyger Creek (U)
Providence SRichmond]
LakewOod 60 Parma 52
points of the eventual Winners. picked up four fouls in the first 6, Brett Hart 1-1-3, N. lhle 2-0-4, York's record to 5-11 on the Thompson, 6-7·19; Curry, 346;
Behagen and Taylor were cut
Mondoy's Games
Euclid 34 Cleve. Brush 30
from
the team for their conduct
year.
Kyger
Creek
dropped
to
Smith,
tJ.O.O;
Cremans,
tJ.O.O;
INogamesscheduled)
Revere 44 Brecksville 42
That came with a minqte quarter and later fouled out as Jenkins 142. Totals 24-13-61.
Columbia 87 Cuyahoga Heights remaining and the' score attf3. did his cousin, Jim Hubbard.
GLOUSTER (66)- Seevers :1,.7 in the SVAC and 2-10 Darst, 0-2-2; B. Roush, 2-ll-4 ; last Tuesday night in the game
- NBA Stoildlngs
74
.
61.
Glouster, however,
Howard, 0-2-2; McCarty, 2-1-5; with Ohio State. Fights broke
Southern hit on 24 of 64 from 9-9-TI, M. Crow 7·1·15, Patton 3- overall.
ByUnittdPresslnttrnotional Cleve. Chane! 87 Cleve. CC 63
in l · 1
Mike Koker led the way with Johnson, 0-1-1; Hudson, 1-ll-2. out with 36 seconds left and the
EosternConftrenct
Wickliffe 68 Cleve. Byzantine rega ed ts' coo to score the the field for a cool 37 pet. while 2-8, Gillott 346, Locke 142,
Atlontlc Division
51
last three points of the game to making 13 of 18 from the Cardaras 3-2-8. Totals 26-14-66. 20 points and six baskets and TOTAl.'l14·13-41.
Buckeyes' Luke Witte, Mark
W. L Pet. GB Geneva 64 Ashtabula sa tot)
pull out their second sttalghl charity stripe for 72 pet.
and Mark Minor were
eight free throws. He scored
BY QUARTERS
Nelsonville-York (86) Boston
37 18 .67J
Amherst 69 Brook&gt;lde 63
·
Glouster made ·only 14 of 30 Southern
12 17 10 22--61 eighl points during the Koker, 6-8-20; Pritchford, 3-2New York
30 21 .set 5
Clearvlew 59 Vermilion 47
WID.
Philadelphia 22 31 .415 14
Midpark 77 Rocky River 49
Jim Hubbard, 5,-11 senior from the free throw line for 47 Glouster
. 13 18 17 17-$ Buckeyes' big 18 point second 8; Seckinger, 6-1-13; Smathers,
Buffalo
14 JS .286 20
Strongsville 74 Brunswick 62 forward-guard, had the finest pet.
quarter. Hoy Seckinger, high 5-1-11; R. Smathers, 1~2;
Reserve) by quarters
C.ntrot Division
Cleve. Max Hayes 71 Cleve. St. game of his career with Tl
scoring
forward, finished with MiUer, 1-8-10; Lengyel, 0.2-2.
In
the
reserve
game,
the
Southern
8
8
21)
9-45
W. L. Pet. GB
Edward 63
Baltimore 24 27 .411
Steubenville BO Wheeling tW. points and a magnificent Southern reserves evened their ~ Glouster
4 11 B 12-35 13 points after being forced to Totals 22-21-C&amp;.
Atlanta
20 33 .377 5
Va.) 69
sit out most of the second and
By Quarters:
Cincinnati
16 35 .314 8
Whaellng IW. Va.) Central "114
all of the third periods. Qreg Kyger Creek II 9 8 U-41
Cleveland
16 J6 .308 81!2
Bellaire St. Johns 53
Smathers had 11 points and Nels.-York
U 18 16 23-68 ·
Western Conference
Wheeling (W. Va.) Llnsly 8t
Midwest Division
Mingo Junction 63
center Dave Miller canned 10.
W. L. Pet. GB Huntington (W. Va.) 71 Ports·
Roy Thompson, 6-2 senior
Milwaukee 43 11 .796
mouth 70
till
1
center,led
the Bobcats with 19
Chlcaoo
38 1S .717 4/2 Cadiz 76 Warwood (W. Va .) 71
BROKEN
ANKLE
Phoenix
31 24 .564 12112 , (oil
points. He also grabbed 19 of
Detroit
18 35 .340 241/2 Peden City tW. Va.) 82 Rlver73
NEW YORK (UP!) -De·
the 'Cats 45 rebounds. George
Pacific Division
Massillon 62 Akron North 60
fensem8n
Ab DeMarco suf.
'
Curry, junior forward, had six
W. L. · Pet. GB Alliance 58 Akron Garfield 56
fered
a
fractur.
e
d
right
ankle
LosAngeles 44 7 .863 ... Ashland 61 Canton CC 57
points and a dozen rebounds
Golden St. · 33 20 .623 12
Doylestown 68 Northwest 53
prior to fouling out in the third last week, tbe New York
Seattle
· 31 23 .574 14'12 Malvern 86 Brunnerdale 57
Rangers announced Sunday.
stanza.
Houston
19 34 .358 26
Columbus East 58 Akron
Portland
12 43 .2t8 34
Centrai·Hower56
Kyger Creek led at the end of Ranger coach EmUe Francia
Sund•v's Rt•ults
Akron St. VIncent ~5· Akron
the first period, 11-8. Nelson- said x:.rays taken Saturday
Boston 130 Pl\lla 114, aft.
East 44
revealed the halrllne fracture
Chicago 109 Detroll99, alt.
Kent Roosevelt 77 Akron Eitel By United Pras l:llematloul after busting the game open at that held · the ball without ville outscored the visitors, 18- that wiU sideline DeMarco
Milwaukee 116 Billmre 112 all
73
taking a ~ot for almost seven 9, to take a 26-20 lead at the
The beat laid plans, IIOllle the start with a 20-2 streak.
from"four to six weeks.
Bullalo 99 Cleveland 98
Tallmadge 58 Akron Kenmore people say, occaslonall)' do
Bo8rd Streqgth
minutes in the second hall.
half. The Buckeyes• blew it ·
Pl\oenlx 105· Atlanta 103 ·
51
Poise and alertMst paid off wide open the final half as the
Lqs ).lng. 153' P..t~~:tland 131
Da_tl9n Roosevelt.6J, ~uy,ahoga work. JU$ ask Unlveulty of. Led by the towering boara
t0111ygafnesJ&lt;lbtduled)
Fall• 59
• , , .- . Pacific. C9lch Dick Edwards, strl!llgth, of.. s.foot-10 senior for the Cardlnala, howevec, aa Bobcats' offense b'Jcame v~
p· IV
hu11: ~our 'Valu.les
MondiYIJ,O.mts
Springfield Twp. SO Akron whos.e :unrllnked :Tigers center Johri · Gianelli ('!1 re- ' they forced Bradley to lose the ' Inept. · · ·· · ·
·
ft I
INogamesscheduied)
. Hoban '48
Don't take chances!
knocked off lourth-ranked btiunds) ~ Pacific pulled down baU and then held on after ibe
N-Y hit 22 of 57 field goals for
Stow 61 Walsh Jesuit 51
Insure your home, car,
Long Beach State Sunday in a 80 rebounds, 32 more than the Braves clo,sed to witliln two at 38 pet. KC sank 14 of 51 for a
Fairview 85 Slry~er 69
boat
and all of your
Montpelier 75 Fayette ~
49ers. All five Pacific players 48-l6.
,
stwmlng I~ upset.
assets. Whatever your
Von Wert 67 Bryan 63
Fifth-ranked North Carolina
reserves
.
''Our plan," said ~warda, hit In double figures, with
Tinora 63 North Central 54
needs, we've got the
"was to give (Ed) Ratleff his Bernard Dulaney and John proved more than a match for stormed from behind II) the
Ayersvtlie 53 Paulding 51
right policies for you.
Liberty Center 77 Holgate 59 points and try to shut off Errecart paclilg the way with the Tom McMillen~ed Mary· third period to snap the LitUe
Stop in Today
Celina 73 Defiance 37
211 apiece.
land Terps as the Tar Heels ·Bobklttens three game wtnnllig
Middletown Fenwick 87 Kings .everyone else."
383 N. Second Ave.
Ratleff, Long Beach State's Top-rank,ed UCLA once pounced on the nation's 16th streak, 66-17. Kevin Carter and
'
59
Middleport
Preble
Shawnee
75
Edgewood
highly talented 6-loot~ guard, again proved its versatility and ranked team 92-72 in a battle of J. R. Coe paced the winners
By United Preu tntornotlonil
992-3555
S8
overall superiority Saturday Atlantic Coast Conference with 22 and 19 points respecEost
got
his
points
(a
career
high
43)
Phone H2-2f66
Franklin 67 Forest Park 6S
Authorized
Agent
Delaware 83 Latayette 70
114
Court
St.
Pvmtroy
tively.
Ctn. LaSalle 63 Ctn. Western but he feU well short of com- by overwhelming a very weak powers.
St. Bonavnlre 76 Niagara 73
In other key contests Satur·
Hills-IS
pensating lor the Tigers' torrid Notre Dame and forced the
Manhattan 67 Navy 62
Frankfort
Adona
85
Paint
first hall shooting. Hitting on 59 Irish to abandon their day, seventh-ranked Southern
Duquesne 69 Army 62
Valley 81 (ot) ·
Provdnct64Mas~55
California suffered its third
Chillicothe Flaget e1 Hun· per cent from the field before slowdown tactics.
Penn St. 74 Pittsburgh 62
tlngton 81 lot)
intermlsslon, Pacific walked Notre Dame, which had loss of the week, 83-73, at the
Gellysburg6t Rutgers60
Zane
Trace
(RO$S)
74
Unloto67
off the court with a 50'12 ·lead trevloualy this season lost to hands of Santa Clara.
Colgate 88 Bucknell 83
Alexander
97
Starr
Washington
Fairfield 71 Boston U. 56
UCLA by an embarrassing 11443
Sin Hall 73 St. Frncs t NY) 7t
56,
tried to hold down the score
Laurelville 84 Berne Union 7S
St. John's 100 Dartmouth 66
St. Henry 69 Minster 57
by stalling and succeeded In
Conn 63 Vermont 52
Celina ICHS 91 Ohio City 7J
doing so, only to lose by less of
PIM 12 Prtncetoo 59
Spencerville 71 Botkins SJ
La Salle 87 Canlslus 78
a margin, 57-32.
Findlay 102 Fremont Ross 74 '
Yale 79 MIT 56
Bruins le.4
Col.
Mifflin
67
Grandview
57
Syracuse 84 Temple 77 ot
Grove
City
80
Marysville
70
.
The victory, which gave the
South
London 73 Hilliard 48
Cincinnati 89 Richmond 10
Bruins
a 16-0 record for the
Newark C.lhollc 70 Centerburg '
Geo. Wash. 72 W.Va. 69
year,
extended
their two
Bill Dressel's 45 points
sa .
No. C.rollna 92 Maryland 72
Col. Academy 7S Danville 73
season wiMing streak 10 31. It carried Ironton St. Joe to a 75,Fla. St. 84 Fla. Southern 63
New
Albany
75
Lucas
72
was all!o the lowest point 61 victory over Southwestern
Kentucky 89 LSU 71
Granvllle90 Watkins Memorial
Devldson 80 Wake Forest 66
troductlon
by UCLA since iiB Saturday night in a non·
67
. Tenn..see 79 Alabama 77
Heath 75 NdriHrldge SO
46-44 · loss to Southern conference basketball contest
Va . Tech 87 W&amp;M 65
CINCINNATI
(UP!)
The
Col.
Whetstone
65
Cot.
De
Sales
Callfornla
last year.
at Sou~hwestern Saturday
H. Cross 85Geolown (DC) 83
51
.
Cincinnati Reds announced
W. Ky. 106 Austin Peay 73
Marquette, the nation's No. 2 night.
.,
Springfield South 74 Col. today Greg Slnatro of West
Vanderbilt 8.5 Auburn 77
ranked
team
ran
liB
record
to
.
The
victory
left
St.
Joe
with a
Brookhaven 59
Furman 86 Brown 72
Hartford,
Conn.,
their
No.
1
Col.
Hartley
100
Hamilton
Twp.
t&amp;.o, too at' the expense of 3·8 mark. Southwestern
Beo. Tech 83 Clemson 70
63
draft choice in the regular Loyola of C!lcago with a come- dropped to 0-12 on the year .
Midwest
Lancaster Fisher 75
Marquelte69 Loyola ( 111.167
Paul Trowbridge paced the
Zanesville Rosecrans 73 phase of the winter draft this from-behind ~7 Jriwnpll.
UCLA 57 Notre Dame 32
month, has signed a 1972
Col.
St.
Charles
70
Guernsey
The Warriors, who were losers with 22 points.
.
Louisville 52 Bradley ,j6
C.thollc 52
.
contract.
Michigan 88 Ohio St. 78
topped
by
junior
center
Jun
St.
Joe
led
1H2,
3&amp;-29
and
58East Kno• 62 Ohio Deal 48
Michigan St. 83 Indiana 73
The
6-2,
1851Jound
catcher&lt;l!ones' 23 points, had to 50 at the quartermarks.
Delaware 71 Buckeye _,ailey 59
Miami (0.1 68 Bali St. 65
third baseman is a sophomore overcome a seveniJOint half·
Circleville
69
Teays
Valley
S4
Box score :
Minnesota 61 iawa SO
Fairbanks 66 Triad 40
· at Miami (Fla.) Dade South time deficit and a 32-polnt
Detroit U. 76 Boston Coli 68
SOUTHWESTERN
(81)
New Knoxville 79 Coldwater 70 Junior College. He originally
Drake 90 Tulane 82
performance by the Ramblers' Trowbridge, 22; Dillon, 9;
Marton Local 52 Ansonia 49
Akron 54 Youngstown 53
was drafted by the Reds in Larue Martin.
Sidney
71
Lima
Bath
39
Whitt, 6; Lewis, 9; Wood, 2;
Purdue 78 Northwestern 75
Sidney
Lehman
63
Parkway
61
June
1970.
Kansas St. 70 Oklahoma 58
The Marquette comeback Carter, 6; Walker 7.
Lima Senior 95 Delphls St.
Slnatro, 20, who hits capped a Ollcago Stadium
Kansas 57 Nebraska 55 ot
ffiONTON ST. JOE (75) John 91
Villanova 94 DePauf'l3
righthanded,
had
a
.487
..,
Dayton Stebbins 73 Northmont
double-header which saw Dressel, 45; Hanker, 7;
Southwest
sa
average
in
his
senior
year
at
TCU 69 Rice 55
Dayton Chamlnade 70 Cen· LaSalle Military Academy, eighth-ranlted South CaroUna Motycka, 4; Waginger, 7;
New Mexico 61 Arizona 55
Everybody wants to save money.
Th at ex tr.l ~ %, pa yable as a
drop Northern Illinois, 83'72, Scherer, 6; Kline, 2; Clay, 4.
tervllie 53
McNMse 10 Tex. Lutheran 76 Miamisburg
Oakdale,
N.
Y.He
is
to
report
in
bonus at maturity, applies to all
61 Troy 60
Unfortunately, most of us seem
behind the 34-point Shooting of
By Quarters:
Grmblng t05 Pra View 104 ot Springfield North
mid-March
for
spring
training
82
Graham
to have a rough time actually
&lt;&gt;-foot-10 fOI'Ward Tom Riker, Southwestern 12 17 21 11--81
Bonds issued si nce June 1, 1970
Hrdn-Smns 89 Mtdwstrn 77 .
J6
with the Reds' minor leaguers
Pa
LoulsvJlle WIDI
Iron. St. Joe
18 20 21l 17-75
doing it. We start, then we s top.
. .. with a comparable improvement
Twin Valley North 65 Cen- at Tampa, Fla.
Amer. 82 Ark. St. 10
terville
(Ind.)
63
Third-ranked
Louisville,
Reserves
Ironton
St.
Joe
for all older Bonds.
The money never piles up.
Cor Christi 97 Hous. Bapt. 82 Valleyvtew 66 New Miami 48
Slnatro
attended
the
faced with an even colder won.
West
The Payroll Savings Plan is the
Join the Payroll Savings Plan
Carlisle 67 Mason ~ t
,
University of Connecticut as a freeze than the one thrown ·,- Brig. Youn 101 Wyoming 74
__
easy way to start saving; the
where you work. It's a great way
Ft. Laramie 82 Mtsstsstnawa freshman, but transferred to
Sa. Clara 83 So. C.lll. 73
against UCLA, managed a 52The
Sentine'l.
painless way to keep saving.
to make today's good intentions
Valley 62
Stanford92 Air Force 66
Dade South to play more · 46VJctory Over 8 Bradley team
DEVOTED TO THE
San Joee 51 6.5 S.D. St. 63 ot National Trial 74 Eaton ss
pay off tomorrow.
, Your money gets a chance to pile
UC Rvrsdt 79 Cal Poly Sio 77 Franklin Monroe 62 Miami ba~eball.
INTEREST OF
up
because
the
amount
you
East 48
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Hawaii 84 Redlands so
., .. ,, r
U:IJJO:::U Ill
rru;n ;; ::; n.w:: .. CH.ESTER L. TANNEHILL,
specify is automaticall y set aside
Yellow Springs 69 Greenon 55
Exec . Ed.
Lynchburg
65
Blanchester
56
from your paycheck and used to
•NINDL EVENS SCORE
RDIERT HOEFliCH,
Toledo Woodward 65 Toledo
City
Editor
buy U. S. Savings Bonds.
HUN'l'ER, N. Y. (UPI) DeVIlbiss 43
Published daily except
You actually salt away savings,
lfulo Nktdl, defeilted Spider Spencer Sharples 87 NorSaturda-v by The Ohio Vallev
thwood
75
•
Publishing
Com-pan)'.
111
Slbltdlln lilt llalom &amp;lllday to Toledo Whitmer 70 Maumee 65
paycheck after paycheck.
GAME · Court St ., Pomerov, Qhio ,
pin a tit with Salilcb for the Genoa 63 Oak Harbor 49
45169 . 8uslnfts Office Phone
And now there's a bonus
PLAYER
G TP AVG. HIGH
992·2156,
Editorial
Phone
992.
oomblnld tide li1 the two-day ' Lake 57 Lorain C.tHollc 56
Steve Dunfee
IJ 175 IJ .S 25
interest rate on all U. S. Savings
2151
Bond• .,~ ufe. If \on, 1tokn, or deltro)'ed.. · AfiiJ 'th.
Valley 81 Deerfield 75 . Tony Vaughan
• • Ilea. . and Heqea llltll Maumee
13
ISS
11.9
2S
Second'class pottage paid at
Bonds- forE Bonds, 5~ %
Norwood 79 Lockland 74 )
· Rich Bailey
\I' ll repl ace thcn1 . Wh en needed, they C:ln lx
Pomerov
.
Ohio
.
13 105 8.1 13
Pror.Iona!Skl racing claulc. Batavia 73 Wtillamsburg 67
cu hc:d at )'o:)ur bank. Tu may be dd crred •
•
when
held
to
maturity
of
5
years,
. · National advertising
u
n
t1lu'd
~
mpdo
n.
And
1\w ay1 rem ember,
\..
~r::;;,l
Jimmy
Boggs
13
89
6,9
t.5
Clermont East 61 Western
representative
Bottinelll .
10 months (4% the first y'ear).
Bomh u~ 1 pi"oud w &amp;y to u vc.
, ,Andy Vaughan
13 68 s.2 10(x) Gartagher, Inc .• 12 Eut o42nd
Brown
60
~
CANADIAN GAIB
St , New York City, New York
Bill Vaugha"n
11
48 u
10
Goshen 51 ~lhel .,
HOLLYwooD, Fla. (UPI)- Amelia 66 New Rlchmond 39 Mike Sayre
Sut;es.cription ratu: ..,, :
12 . 48 H
14
l1vt.red
~ by carrier ,Wh&amp;rl!
Canadlli!l Dale Shaw and Ly~chburg Clay 65 Blanchester Mark Werry
11
17
1.6 5
av.a1lable 50 cents per wtek;
56
Rick Ash
10
1 0.7
3
Marilyn Palmer defeated Wellsvllle97
By Motor Route where carrier
Jefferson Union 34 txx) Jell Morris
service
n~t available: One
6
102·
17.0
21
Alnel'lcllll Jane Butanchlll')' Flnneytown 12 Colerain 53
month $1 .15 . B)' ml!lll 1n Ohio
TOTALS
.
1J
814
62.5
2St
x)
dlalb 1114 Napcy &amp;DIIb ~7 Ctn. Moelltr 68 Prtncetoo 53
l and w. Va ., One vear $1-t .Oo.
(K) - twice
I
Six months S1 25 . Three
Anderson
83
Greenhills
65
aandi:y li1 lbe llnall of the Whtr-k 97 ·Wesl Union 75
mo(lths $4 . 50 Subscription
(Kx) - Morrlsouttor seasonwtlh Injury after SIK games.
women's inter'nallllll.ll Four- Cter.mant Northeastern 79
pr ife Includes Sunday T1mes,.
Sentinel
Fellc)ty 61
lllllltlf taun~E~nt.
!1!!1.. ll!IU I
"!Lbbb:tt .. ;
"MP WP . "T

JIMMIE'S ·
Pasby Shop

Dais-Warner Ins.

Reds Sign
Top Draft

SW Beaten
By St. Joe

Choice

are
goiatgto
slarl

of
i1tlettlions?

DaiiJ

,

Marauder Cage Scoring

by Ualted Preas illlenlau.al
point of World War n on .the
EaJtem Fronl
In 1953 ' more than 2,000
persona were I!Uled when North
Sea elormll nODded Holland,
In 19118"thti U.S. launched Its
lint saieWte into orbit ..:.
Explorer I.

' 1968 North Vietnamese
In
gumlllas raided the U.S.
embaally In Saigon, marking the
ope~lng of the Viet Cong's new
year's Tet offeilllvP..

Legal Action
May Be Taken

""

~~:.~:ie-York's

r

Todsy is Moro.y, Jan. 31, the
31st day of 1972. ·
The moon Is between Its full
phase and Jasi quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and 'Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and saturn. ·
ThOI!e born on this day in
his lory:
In 1942 the Soviet Union
announced the virtual annlblla·
tlqn of ~.ooo Nazi troops at
Stalin~r~d. It wu a turning

Valley Conference. FederalHocking is 5,-9 overall and 4-2 in
Tri-Valley Conference play.
Eastern .won the first meeting
of the two teams, 66-52.
The Eagles placed ali five
starters ·In double figures with
Dennis Eichinger leading with
22. The 6-3 senior center had 18
rebounds, also lops for the
Eagles.

Results

Potomac Paper, Words,Growing
word and paper production, as
usual, Is e~ealatlng.
President Nimn delivered to
1
Congress not one but two State
of the Union messages. One
half-llour apeech wu given In
pe11011. Alld he dellvere 10
'Congress lhouaanda of copies
of a 15,000.word message,
expanding on the main points.
There wm be another big
lllelll&amp;e-ooe devoted to the
worl~ ait~~atlon-lollowlng the
economic message, or course,
•
the budget. 1

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tbe
Eagles came out clawing
In ·the third quarter
to
eraie
a five
point Federal-Hocking lead
and go on to defeat the Lan·
cen, 79-70 near here Saturday
nlght in a non-league game at
Eastern High School. .
. The Lancers, coached· by
Mark 5mith, beld a 36-'11

College

Wa.shington Window

!loris from listeners.
That escalated the word
co.unt too. The telephone
company says that 200,000
people called long distance, but
only six got on the air.
Of courae, an· thil! doesn't
even make a dent In the
bureaucratic paperwork in·
valved. The federal govern,,,ent, people working for the
government, and bualnessea
living off It, throw away dally
almost 4,000 tons of paper and
trash. That's jus1 what they
throw away.

Eastern Runs over Federal Hocking79-70

TV BIUS Ar

· BE~Rrs WO~LO

The President's budget
breakdown ran only 1,103
pagea this year; tresumably
renectlng Nixon's lower
budget deficit for flscal1973 of
t25.5 billion. Last year's budget
book ran 1,112 )l88es and that
budget deficit comes to ~.8
biUlon.
The Democrats couldn't let
Nixon get away with even one
State of the Union message
without a reply. So, they staged
an hour'-long talkathon on
national television, with a new
~immlck-telephoned
ques-

'

r-----!!1!1!1

South Unlucky in Skill

than a month old,ll1e domestic

,,

Upset 104-86

.

WASIUNGTON (UP!)
Wpldncton, a one-Ume swamp
· oa tile Potomac, beads Into Its
lOIII f'll' lllpported on an
""-trowing mountain of
..,.. llld words.
Alllr Wotld War ll, the
Hu :w Co:nmllllon, looking

.-

Long Beach Is

·oiverticulosi·s Is Fairly Common

'

. . -

..

;uh" School .
Sco·res

Many Don't Know 1hey Have It

"''

.....

Kyger Creek

DR.l.AWRfNCf f.l.AMB

o

.

Buckeyes Trip

!Helen Help Us !

Nations ,.. .

'

. _....

..-

.

Southern Upset 66-51

r---------------------------1

".!i~ ,,r.~ung.er.

.

."

'"'\b'

"There's nothing wrong with buildt"nt the L" 1 .....
Ed b· h d •
· 1nco n Image,
i •I w ~ on t ~ou see what appens
at tht
,convent1on before you grow the beard?"

Take stock in America.

"
'
.'

-----:-------~-:-"

Now Bonds pay a bonus at maturity.

' hili "

�.

'• '

1-Tbe o.JIYSemlnel, Mldclleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 31,1972

3-..,.,DIUySemlnei,Mltltller!orl~Y.O.: Jan.ll,1fl2

. I
r------------------- -----------------------

.

fDnORIAl.

War Ending,
Despite Hanoi

1
.

Voice along Broadway l

Pro Standings
NHLSt-..dings
'Y'o nittd
Press lnltrntllout
Eost
W. L T. Pis
Jiloslon
3• 7 8 76
New York
31 9 8 '70
Montreat
27 13 8 62
Detroit
21 21 8 50
Toronto
20 20 10 50
Vancouver
U28 .533
Buffalo
10 29 12 32

I

surreiallaUc sCillptol' Edwin Cork wu ·comBY JACK O'BRIAN
mlsaloned to create a gold 11atuette precilely
LAUREN'S BfiLL LIVING
ihe
length r1 a !lfth, to be ca1led a ''foGY";
HER MEMOIRS ·
NEW YORK (KFS) - Laur1!n S.caU was further plans reiDIIn abeyant, If ~
remembers anything about the whole blamed
offered Jli,OOO ln:lrontiO do her memoln; she
That lo·n~-ago-{!iscredited ··ught at the end of the tun.
nel" may be no· more a reality· than it ever was. but some
said ''No -lor1bt time beil!l" ... The Howard - project alter 0111! lull, prOIJI!I' WIOI'd. evenlllti .,. _ ..
things about the Vietnam war have fallen Into better
Hughes • whoftal11-wrote-wbat.autobiograplly '!be st. &amp;p CIITholiB Club i'emllnl !IIIOOtlli
perspective as a resu)t of President Nixon "s dramatic
sweepetakea lnclucte. Lana Turner's ex, Bob ObllvloiiS ~f the upstart group, and 110 lnlerclull
television bid for a peace settlement.
Eaton, wbo hired barri11er .Roy M. Cahli to aplaahdolm Iii contemplated; too distractlni,
Most commentators immedtately predicted that Hanoi
protect blm fnllll the llilclpateCI Hugbes- the st. &amp;i!IB lads alirugged."
would reject the President's eight·point proposal out ·
The Hillalde Singers are nine gifted alngerOIIIillught •.• ·~ one conclusion I have and
right, or at · best reply with a counterproposal of their
own which would amount to a rejection .
that everybodY wlllbave," Eaton wrOte to Cobn, muslclanl whoee •first Melronledla Record, "I
Want to Teach the World to Sing" (lil hartDony),
This prediction was not difficult to make. especially in
''is Mr. Hugheli,mlght be the rlcheat man in the
view of the fact that the United States, as the President
wotld, but with all hla enormou. wea)th, he got Is· whirling high atop the chartll: four r1 the
revealed, had made no less than 13 offers to the North
Hlllsides are sons of great gul~ Frank
Avis for hla attorney ... And I get Hertz!"
Vietnamese in Paris over the past eight months- all of
Marino (for years on the Tonight Sbow); two
them rejected-and that since October he had been wait·
BUddy Hackett's ~bowing lor a Rolls- others are Mary Mayo, who can slog so blgh
ing for a reply to the same program which he now made
only blrdll can hear her, and blir equally gifted
·· public.
Royce; arui lfthatisn'ta contra~,! In terms.
What was not so predictable was the reaction of some
Raquel Welch's late dates are with C!arles daughter ... They have a gre~~t cbance 10 lll'lng
of the domestic critics of the war. tncluding some who
trUe singing talent' to the roi:k-W«Id.
EVBDB, brother of Ali MacGraw's husband, Bob
./
had been chastizing the Prestdent for refusing to make
, HO'I!"anl Hughes' ex.gal Ava Gardner will be
'
.., .
... '!be ~ Houle on Central Park South just
any peace overtures to North Vietnam.
i /)
50 this year; sorry, pop•... Mall. Sen. Ed!vanl
spent f8,000,000 lo~ top:to.bottbm redecol'l!lion
Sen. J . William Fulbright , the ·· senior statesman'" ot
w. Brooke bought a St. Maarli:l, West lndlea
.:. They didn't need air condlllol)(ng at the
the antiwar school. observed that while the President's
home; 12.rooms, guest house; Preview11 offered
offer seemed reasonable to him t Fulbnghtl and to the
telecast aDi party lor the Today Show's ~
President and probably to the Western world, it would not
it at ~.ooo ... Tom Edwards, oldUme member
anniversary: Helen O'Connell and Joe
' be considered veasonable by Hanoi.
rlthe Revelersquartetnowrevlved (at the a,y
Garaglola sta~ at o!lllOSlte aides of every
We had not given the North Vtetnamese what they
!MB),!Ostbls wife ... ey Howanl.says be got the
' room, and the chUI was Alasil:an ... Thumazlng
really wanted. said Fulbright, and that was withdrawal
idea for Victor Mature's comebac!t In Cy's
gultarlsll at the St. RegiB, Bucky II Barnes, split
of our support of the Thieu regime in South Vietnam.
"Every LiWe CrOOk and Nanny" when he 11w
up; Bucky joined Benny Goodman.
Presidential hopeful Sen. George McGovern. D·S.D..
blm on an old Late Show flick from the 3tlll.
.
Two ptllt midtown ~pots have their own
commented that the President had merely offered to set
When we saw "Vlvat, Vlvat Regina!" In
a date for withdrawal of all U S. military forces . he had
· speclalgrwpa: the St. Regis' King Cole Bar bas
not actually set that date.
I.oodon last year, we reported It had a IIJI)elldl!l·
its ''CirrhoatsClub," a rolllldtable of substantial
Another crillc went so far as to complain that the Presi·
first
act,.a nolsuy shouted second that couldn't
wteran bibulous buslneasmen who meet li1 the
dent had onlv promised withdrawal based upon an a~ree ·
match the first, thltl it was weD acted, dealgned
fir-left corDer near the bar every 4 p.m.-on; the
ment with North Vietnam but had not in fact achieved
and costumed; it opened on Bdwy, at the
TmnrSW~atopthe~eB~g~a
. ,that agreement
Broadhurst Theater with the same problem:
group that ~ Bk~er restaurant staff
In other wo~ds . the President has bent over backwards ,
Claire Bloom, beautiful and regal, If not
dubbed "Hl.G.H." "H.I.G.H." clalms it Is
but the top of his head isn't touching the ground yet.
majestic as Mary Queen r1 Scots, Eileen Atkins
A thought for today: French strictly eliCiusive: no tennis players, oor
Increasingly , however, it is the war critics, and the
effectively
Bette Davlslsh as Queen .. Elizabeth
enemy in Hanoi. who are putting themselves in an awkscientist Blaise Pascal said, golfera, nor quarterbacks, nor polo players, oor
~ard position.
I; authbr Robert Bolt ("A Man For All
"Between us and hell or heaven squash racqueteers - only thlll!ll with wounded
One thing is certain : The war is ending as far as active
Seasons.'' etc.) runs to neo-c'aulcally pedantic
there is nothing but life, which elbows suffered li1 Une qf bartending lire (from
American military participation is concerned. Because of
mahogany. to lllGUth) are eligible ... H.I.G.H. dialogue, fascinating in the llrat act, ·
I of all things Is the fraillst."
that, it is becoming increasingly irrelevant whether Hanot I
means "Heada In Great Hazes," or any other · fubnlnating In the last, whose shouts and fllltlan
agrees to our peace offers . or comes up with an offer we l
By Helen Bottel
1
couldn't cllllOuflage Its drooping dramaturgy.
Iitle a member might wish to attempt; aU such
.can agree to.
Peter Fo~ ln Playboy seemed atr&amp;!liely
creative !lubes are honored, or counfenanced
, , It has been said that the more our troop strength goes
POST-cHRISTMAS
REFl..ECI'IONS
old
fashioned,
out of it. deaperatelv sill in Ills
,down, the less bargaining P.ower the President has. But
Q-flow long does the ba· and deplored, and the club's logo Is W. C. Flelda
insistence that "LSD is a teacher. mescaline 'Is a
conversely. the more our nulitary involvement goes down . Dear Helen:
nana plant bear fruit?
' elevating a boWe or bourbon against a bloodshot
,the less need he has to bargain.
ChriBbnas Is hardly over, yet I'm wondering if it Is the last
teacher." Go take a look at Dr. Leary,
A-The plant dies a Iter backsround, elbows akimbo.
Whether Hanoi agrees to peace or not, we are getting one I will see as I remember lt.
·
bearing one bunch of rruit.
Teachers' Pet.
'lbere even will be an annual award out. We are doing in essence what Sen. Geor..:e Aiken of
It all began with the discontinuation of prayers in the
.Vermont once recommended-declare the w4r oyer and schooL!. Next It was the nativity scene which was eliminated
just leave.
from public places -schooL!, buildings, etc. Now, the last straw,
Eventually, the North Vietnamese will wake up to real·
lze that the Americans are gone. that they have lost their Chrisbnas Jrees were banned in our schooL! last year.
Why a non-Christian minority should force the majority to
bid to take over South Vietnam by force and that Jhe Communists· are in a far weaker position politically in South give up these very real symbols of Clristmas - the birth of
,Vietnam than they l\'Ould have been had the American Clirlst and the Christmas tree - when we respect THEm
.:President's peace offer been accepted in January, 1972 .
holidays, I cannot comprehend. Can you? - ???
.'-, By their .stubbornness , the North Vietnamese will actually have helped make President Nixon's "VietnamizaDear ???: ·
tion" plan a success.
Have Christmas trees .and nativity scenes been banned
Unfortunately, they will still hold American prlsoners ·of
because
of non-Otrlstlan sentiment or for other reasons? Lack of
'.war and, undoubtedly, some people in this country will
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. allowed a portion of the lin- are circular and some are good, regular bowel habIts
space or time, fire danger, budget cutbacks might be tbe culprits
lind some way to blame that on their own government.
ing !mucosal of the intes· lengthwise .. Finally, the promoted by forming a reg..
Dear
Dr.
Lamb-!
have
lines
to protrude out in a whole wall is bounded by ular habit, usually in the
here,
right?
.
(NE:WSPAPER ENTI'RPRIU ASSN.l
pockets
in
my
intestines
and
little
pocket or diverticula. tough membraneous mate· morning, and al de d by
No matter what, it's a pity. We sometimes forget that
can n o I eat food that has The lntestln~l tube has sev· rial. The little pockets most drinking two or three cups
Chrisbnas Is "Christ's Mass" and should be celebrated as such: skins
IU
I
•
or seeds.. I have ~en ~r~l laY,ers m tis waiL ,The often •occur in people who of warm water .or liquid .ea~h ·
-H
.
,.
'~
told that there ts a m~dtcme mner .~ayer . ls the - mucOsa.· have had an over~ctive ' di- ' mornmg.- ~ltelillcal· l~atlves
P. S. Here's another point of view:
you can take that Wtll dis· or .linmg, that produces ~II gestive' system. Oftei\ theie ·· or any m~~k:lll~ · that Atl!flU·
1
sotv; these pockets. Is that · t~pes !II secretiOn~ to ald. m' are the people who have ex- lates the bowel to forteful
+++
true.
dtgeslton a~d Is the locallon perience4 constipation, diar· contractiOns ts bad.
Dear Helen:
ror absorption of foodstuffs hea and other evidences of
Some lndividuall w!U find
Whatever you may have heard or the ""Green RevoLaat year a group of us decided to "put Christ back in
Dear Reade r-These oc- mto the bloodstream.
spasm and the build-up of certain foods ~ravate the
.lution" during the past year or so. chances are It came Christmas," and we began an investigation which soon
cur where the muscular wall
· h"
h ·
l·
1y a tilet
wrapped as good news .
of
the
intestinal
tube
has
There
·
a
re
muscular
layllressure
w1t
m
t
e
mtes·
cond
tton.
Us
u
a
astounded us.
. .'
· "Green Revolution" is .the totally appropnate label for
given away or ruptured and era in the intestinal wall that tine.
·that contams a lot of frult
It
didn't
take
us
long
to
discover
that
Christ couldn't be JK!l
Diverticulosis of the large and vegetables I~ prescribed
what well may be one of man's greatest success stories
intestine, or colon. is com· to provtde additional bulk
to date in altering his environment constructively, in back Into Christmas because He was never there, All the en·
this case to meet his most basir need-food.
mon, occurring in one out of for the stool11nd help to de·
cyclopaedias and magazilles we read clearly showed that
WIN AT BRIDGE
five of the American popu· velop good bow e I habits.
In a decades·long research effort, worldwide in scope everything about Chrlsbnas was pagan and had its origins long
Jation older than 40. Most However, there are 10me
but largely American·inspired and financed , agncultural before Ouiat. The date of December 25 was ,the birthday of a sun
people don't even know they foods in this eatego17, that
scientists succeeded in developing fantastically produc· god. The Jree has nothing to' do with religion, and many other
have these and they are ob· individual patients w1U not
Uve new varieties of basic food grains, much greater in
C!riBtmas
CU/ltoms
feasting,
merrymaking,
decor~lions, gift
by X-ray examination t o I e rat e. Individuals with
served
food value and yielding much larger crops. Most im·
exchanges,
etc.go
back
to
the
Roman
Festival
of
Saturn
beld
,------....,.---,
·
bid
two
no-trump,
it
fails
or
au
I
o p s y examinatl~n . this problem should 'IVold
mediately significant are new strains of rice, the basic
NORTH (D)
3t
dismally in a most important . Only . a.bout . one ou~ of f1ve the rtch, starchy foods. This
In late December.
food of much of Asia , where the revolution has taken
2
~
~!
"
requirement _ preparation of the mdlVIduals w1th these . Includes cake, pastries and
place.
The whole idea of teaching children that a mythical Santa
.
•
K
for
the opening lead "
have any symptoms, and nch desserts. Sweet drinks,
In the few years since the introduction of "'miracle
9875
Claus brings them gifts Is a lie that breeds selfishness and
.
..
·
only
about one out of 100 such as sweetened coffee
r.ice," alon11 with improved growing methods and self· ingratitude. Even ~lied good Christians use the holiday
WEST oltKJ 10
~tm : South found that out who have these develop an and alcohol, should be
help educallon programs for farmers, the results have
EAST .
qmckly. West opened the inflammation of one of the avoided. During episodes of
season as an excuse fo~ overeating, ovet;drinking, and loose
been spectacular.
6/
=~
•QJ.l!Li
queen of he~rts . So~th cov- little pockets which we call pain, a heating pad over tbe
conduct. And department stores are the center of attraction, not
1092
India, long the world's needtest case, this year suc·
t Q 10 3
¥ A8 s 3
e!ed w' t h dummy s kmg . diverttculitis.
abdomen will sometimes pro.
4 42
t 64
East plunked on the ace and
vide some relief
ceeded in producing enough rice for its own needs. Dense· · the churches.
Also, nowhere In the New Testament Is there mention of the
ly populated , land·short Japan. which five years ago
&lt;It
8
7
s
the
defense
had
five
tricks
When
this
does
occur,
the
·
SOUTH
· the inflamed pocket behaves
There are no medicines
belore So uth cou ld gam
imported a h~Jr.million tons of rice. now has a surplus
need to celelrate the birth of Jesus.
.K93
lead."
that dissolve the pockets:
approaching a million tons. In ali , a wide swath of
Our decision therefore was to rid our family of tbe entire
.76
very much like the inflamed The medicines tJiat decrease
southern Asia where hunger and even mass starvation pagan mess that only causes frustration, greed, financial burden
tAJ2
Oswald : "I can imagine pocket we call the appendix.' spasm of the digestive tract
oltAQ963
historically have been endemic, is approaching grain and has robbed us of joy. We have decided to l!lve gifts through
South's wails of anguish. He The location for the pain are sometimes useful,
must have pointed out that and s y m P. toms, however,
self-sufficiency with the likelihood or a net surplus withBoth vulnerable
the year wben they are more aptreciated (because they're
IHIWSrAPER IHTIRPRISI ASSN.)
In another year or so.
West North Ea.t!t South if We S I held the ace of may be dtfferent, since the
unexpected),have
get-togethers
at
quieter
times,
and
thank
God
hearts
or
if
any
other
su1t
pocket
extending
from
the
And now for the bad news
1•
Pas., 2 N.T.
had been led, he would have colon may vary in its loca·
Pass . 3 N.T. Pas.o; Pass
Pleose J.nrl your 41ttdions OfHI
The economies of what had been the more fortunate. each day for the birth of Christ. -INGRID
scored
game and rubber."
lion. ·
·
Pass
Dear
Ingrid:
C"ommtllh
to lowrt1tce E. Lamh,
rice·exportmg nations of the area are feehng the backJim
:
"He
sure
did.
What
The
treatment
for
diverti.
M.D., in core ol tM1 poper. WMio
Opening lead- • Q
My encyclopaedia e111laina:
lash of the leapfrogging production in the former havehe
didn't
point
out
was
that
cuI
o
sis
is
essentially
the
Dr. Lamb con ..l on,_ lndivldMI
not countries. Burma and Thailand. in particular, both
"Many popular Christmas customs originated long before
if
he
had
responded
two
same
as
for
constipation
or
lettftJ,
h will Oltswtr leftttt ol ;
heavily dependent on grain exports. are reported hard the time of Christianity. The festival of Sol, the unconquerable By Oswald &amp; Ja~es Jacoby
dubs
then
North
would
bid
irritable
colon.
This
includes
genet~!
int1r1Jf
in lutur. colum111. ·
hit as former markets not only dry up but threaten sun, was celebrated by the Romans late in December: This was
two
no-trump
and
it
wouldn't
to become competitors.
0 s w aId : "Losing brid!1e
ADOPTED BY TilE CHURCH as the greatest feast of the year in pI ayers like to complatn matter w he r e the ace of
Something like a rtce glut may be in the offing for
hearts was or what was Jed."
• once chronically hungry Asia. Grappling with its mount· honor of the birth of Christ, the Light of the World. There may about their bad luck. Luck
{Ht:WSfiA,EI IMTilPIISE A.SSN .J
does play a major part in
"'·"'ing surplus. Japan has begun to pay farmers not to grow have been a connection, too, with the Roman Saturnalia."
rice and is turning some of its output into ammal food.
We all know that the exact date of JI!SUI's birth has not been .rour .results in any one ses·
Sound familiar ? It would be appropriate if an answer establisbed. But in the fourth century the date of December 25 SJOn. However, in the long
nm, luck tends to even out
to Asia's new problem could be found in the American was generally adopted.
and it is the skill· factor that
The blddin~ has been:
experience. Unfor1unaiely, this nation in which both great
I LIKE our Christmas customs -from caroUng to Santa to determines the winners and West Norlh East
South
abundance and chronic need have coexisted for so long
losers."
making
cookies
for
neighbors
and
it
needn't
be
overly
comPass
has yet to find a formula that is both economically prac·
?
Pass
I
oTo
Pass
merclall2ed
unless
we
make
it
so.
Jim : ""One class ot players
Ileal and humane for handling its own agricultural sur.
You, South, hold .
... And somehow I feel a little sorry for your chUdren,lngrld.- who sufier from this 'hard
plus.
.
.
luck' is the one who rushes .98654.AQ6.A32oToJ,4
About the best that Asta may be able to look for is an H.
to
bid no-trump .when his
What do you do now?
object Jesson or two on what not to do.
holdmg calls ror S?me other
A-Bid one spade uniy. You
Hopefully, the distressed economies will be able to
b1d Here ts a good exam· have 1 ne•r·maxlmum pass, but
diversify and adjust. In any event . there should be no
pie. "
•1
should .~till P.rot:ccd slowly,
profit in hunger. The '" Green Revolution "" on balance is ,:-;-'$'f;."{JJ •• ' •• ;.:; ;: :
'oswald : "With 14 high··
•
TODAY'S QUES'l:ION
still very good news.
· r ard points the South' hand
You do bid one spade and
., But it just goes to show again that when tt comes to
meets one requirement for a your partner bids one no-trump
man and the environment. it isn't necessarily so that
two no-trump response. Un· What do you do now ?
nothing succeeds like success.
fortunately lor the man who
Answer Tomorrow

' , Now Grow

E~t;~~ . . ~

• •I I

' '

'

... aonr;unmt orglllllzaUon,

IIIII thlt If aD the paper 111ed

llr ... penmen! wen piled
•-",.ar,amancouldwalk
a ( ' wa; to the moon.
'l'lttlaJ, be probably could
IBIIllle It to Man.
Mtt · • the new year II~

halftime advantage and ap·
peared to have the game under
control. But the Eagles
probably played thelf best
quarter .of the season in the
third. Tbe "Big Green" went
26-9 to take a cormnanding 57·
45 lead.
Coach Bill Phillips' Eagles
are now 11·2 overall and
remain at 7-2 in the Southern

Alan' Duvall , 6·2 junior Jim Schloss followed willl 12. both sides on the floor, 1he final Saturday night, th~ Eagles hot1t
forward, added 17 points and
As a team, Eastern dropped margin dwindled to nine.
the Glouster TomcaiB. Eastern
nine rebounds while 5,-11 senior in 47 pet. of its shots, 30 or 6J.
won that flfst meeting, IJII.Sl.
guard Bob Ca)dwell chipped in Individually, Duvall hit on 6 of
EASTERN (79)- Duvall 64The litUe Eagles, caached by
17. Randy Young , 6-0 seni~r 10 from the field for 60 pel., Bob Ord, revenged an earlier 17, Eichinger 9+22, Young 4'SWest )
forward, added 13 points and II Caldwell, 7of 14 for 50 pet., and defeat to the little Lancers, l3, Caldwell 7-J-17, Boring 4-2W.LTPis
Chicago
rebounds and Randy Boring, 5,- Eichinger ma(\e 9 of 20 for 45 winning 38-32, to raise their 10. Totals 30-19-79.
34 10 s 73
Mlnn..ota
9 junior guard, had 10 for the pet.
27 15 8 62
FEDERAL-HOCKING (70)
record to 1thl. Tim Spencer led
C.tllornla
17 25 10 ~
Eagles.
Federai-Hockins
gunned
to
a
Schloss 5,-2-12, Smith 4-1-9,
Eastern
with
11
while
Larry
St. Louis
t7 26 7 41
Danny Hall paced the 19·14 first quarte~ lead . Athington followed with 7. Dunfee $-2-8, Daugherty 4-1-9,
Philadelphia
14 26 a J6
Pittsburgh
12 29 9 33
Lancers with 19 points while Eastern came back to tie the Jarvis· was the game's top Hall 8·3·19, Meeks 3·3·9,
i.os Angeles
13 33 6 32
score at 21, bullet the Lancers scorer as the Lancer scored 12. Mahorney 1~2, Springer 1~2 .
Suncloy's Results
get away to a 36-31 halflime
New York 1 Mlnnasota 1, all.
The Eagles wlll return to Totals 29-12-70.
C.llf. 2 Vancouver 0, aft.
margin.
SV AC play nexl Friday wtth
Buffalo 2 Los Angel" 2
Eastern
had
elevated
its
lead
the Kyger Creek Bobcats at
Pl\tia 4 Pittsburgh o
BY QUARTERS
to
18
with
two
minutes-left
in
Boston S St. Louis 2
Kyger Creek. Eastern won the Fed-Hocking 19 17 9 25-70
Chicago 4 Detroit 2
the game . With reserves from firs! meeting , 85-53. On Eastern
14 17 26 22-79
(!Jnlygamesschedutedl
GLOUSTER- The Southern dropped to 6-0 overall and defensive effort, stealing the record at 7·7 with a 45-35 win
Mondoy's Gomes
Local Tornadoes were upset by remained at ii-4 in Southern ball several times. Bruce Hart, over Glouster reserves. Coach
(No games scheduled)
the Glouster Tomcat! here Valley Conference action. 6-1 senior forw~rd . also hit Duane Wolfe's Tornadoes, who
AHL Standings
Saturday night, ~1. snapping Glouster, also having defealed double figures and played ..i!. shot 37 pet.from tbe field, were
the MeIgs ""
- V8 ., "'"'"'
'" •• fine game for the Tornadoes, led by Norman Curfman with
.ly United Prlilllnternationot
East
""un tians •fi ve game s·t. J oseph.'s.,- w.
w. L. T. Pts winning slreak.
Friday, raised its record to 4-9 scoring 18.
21. Other ' Southern scorers
Boston
29 15 1 65
Coach Aaa Bradbury's overall.
Tim Seevers, a promising were Mitch Nease and Vern
Nova Scotia
26 14 10 62 Tornadoes, perhaps looking
Southern played poOrly In the sophomore, paced the Tomcats Ord, seven each; Bob MiUer,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Springfield
1
Ohio State basketball coach
~~ ~~ ~ ~ ahead to Friday's game with fU,t three quarters, according with Tl points after tallying who had a fine floor game, with
Providence
Roch&amp;ster
t6 21 6 38 league-leading· Nortli Gallia, to Coa~h Bradbury, once only a single point the first five; Randy Forbes, who came
Fred Taylor aaid Sunday night
West
falling behind by as much as 16 quarter. Coach Bradbury was off the bench, with four, and
he hopes university of!icials
will take legal action against
Baltimore
~· 1\ T. Pis ·U .
points in U\e third quarter The all praise for this lOth grader, Barry Theiss, one. Hartley and
the
Minnesota players involved
Coach
Virgil
Grandy
's
Hmhey
22 16 ~ ~~ ~~
Tomcats, coached by . Bill mainly because of his fine Lean! paced Glouster with 11
Lawrence Tabor led lhe
Cincinnati
21 21 9 51
"'e' ,
KilkeUy, led after the first shooting. Mike Crow, a junior, and eight respectively. Nelsonville-York Buckeyes losers with 13. Joe Stidham in the brawl last week in which
Cleveland
22 20 6 so
Richmond
quarter,13-12,atthehalf,32-29,
dropped in 15 for the Tomcats . Southern made 19 of 36 from placed four players in double and John Rumley had 10 points three OSU players were in·
17 24 7 41
jured .
The Tornadoes were plagued the foul line while the !igures Saturday night in each.
Tidewater
12 32 4 2S
and after three periods, 4&amp;-39.
Taylor said he was "not
defeating the Kyger Creek
Kyger Creek will host
Cteveta~~~~;:l,":Xut!s
In the one .quarter that the by foul trouble from the first, Tomkittens hit on 12 of 26.
SOUTHERN (61) - T. !hie 0- Bobcats, 66-41, in a non-league Hannan Trace in a SV AC satisfied" with just the suspenSprinnfteld8
Roches ers
Tornadoes looked like a team Glouster going to tbe foul line
•
United Press International
sion of Ron Behagen and Corky
contest Tuesday night.
Cincinnati 3 Tidewater t
Cambridge 76 Wintersville 65 with their 8-8 record, they 30 times. Jerry Hubbard, the 1-1, Jim Hubbard 12-3-T/, Bruce game at Butchel.
Nova Scotia 3 Boston I
Claymont 62 Coshocton 60
rallied to come within two Tornadoes leading scorer, Hart S.S.l8, Jerry Hubbard 3..tJ.
Taylor for the year,
The win pushed NelsonvilleKyger Creek (U)
Providence SRichmond]
LakewOod 60 Parma 52
points of the eventual Winners. picked up four fouls in the first 6, Brett Hart 1-1-3, N. lhle 2-0-4, York's record to 5-11 on the Thompson, 6-7·19; Curry, 346;
Behagen and Taylor were cut
Mondoy's Games
Euclid 34 Cleve. Brush 30
from
the team for their conduct
year.
Kyger
Creek
dropped
to
Smith,
tJ.O.O;
Cremans,
tJ.O.O;
INogamesscheduled)
Revere 44 Brecksville 42
That came with a minqte quarter and later fouled out as Jenkins 142. Totals 24-13-61.
Columbia 87 Cuyahoga Heights remaining and the' score attf3. did his cousin, Jim Hubbard.
GLOUSTER (66)- Seevers :1,.7 in the SVAC and 2-10 Darst, 0-2-2; B. Roush, 2-ll-4 ; last Tuesday night in the game
- NBA Stoildlngs
74
.
61.
Glouster, however,
Howard, 0-2-2; McCarty, 2-1-5; with Ohio State. Fights broke
Southern hit on 24 of 64 from 9-9-TI, M. Crow 7·1·15, Patton 3- overall.
ByUnittdPresslnttrnotional Cleve. Chane! 87 Cleve. CC 63
in l · 1
Mike Koker led the way with Johnson, 0-1-1; Hudson, 1-ll-2. out with 36 seconds left and the
EosternConftrenct
Wickliffe 68 Cleve. Byzantine rega ed ts' coo to score the the field for a cool 37 pet. while 2-8, Gillott 346, Locke 142,
Atlontlc Division
51
last three points of the game to making 13 of 18 from the Cardaras 3-2-8. Totals 26-14-66. 20 points and six baskets and TOTAl.'l14·13-41.
Buckeyes' Luke Witte, Mark
W. L Pet. GB Geneva 64 Ashtabula sa tot)
pull out their second sttalghl charity stripe for 72 pet.
and Mark Minor were
eight free throws. He scored
BY QUARTERS
Nelsonville-York (86) Boston
37 18 .67J
Amherst 69 Brook&gt;lde 63
·
Glouster made ·only 14 of 30 Southern
12 17 10 22--61 eighl points during the Koker, 6-8-20; Pritchford, 3-2New York
30 21 .set 5
Clearvlew 59 Vermilion 47
WID.
Philadelphia 22 31 .415 14
Midpark 77 Rocky River 49
Jim Hubbard, 5,-11 senior from the free throw line for 47 Glouster
. 13 18 17 17-$ Buckeyes' big 18 point second 8; Seckinger, 6-1-13; Smathers,
Buffalo
14 JS .286 20
Strongsville 74 Brunswick 62 forward-guard, had the finest pet.
quarter. Hoy Seckinger, high 5-1-11; R. Smathers, 1~2;
Reserve) by quarters
C.ntrot Division
Cleve. Max Hayes 71 Cleve. St. game of his career with Tl
scoring
forward, finished with MiUer, 1-8-10; Lengyel, 0.2-2.
In
the
reserve
game,
the
Southern
8
8
21)
9-45
W. L. Pet. GB
Edward 63
Baltimore 24 27 .411
Steubenville BO Wheeling tW. points and a magnificent Southern reserves evened their ~ Glouster
4 11 B 12-35 13 points after being forced to Totals 22-21-C&amp;.
Atlanta
20 33 .377 5
Va.) 69
sit out most of the second and
By Quarters:
Cincinnati
16 35 .314 8
Whaellng IW. Va.) Central "114
all of the third periods. Qreg Kyger Creek II 9 8 U-41
Cleveland
16 J6 .308 81!2
Bellaire St. Johns 53
Smathers had 11 points and Nels.-York
U 18 16 23-68 ·
Western Conference
Wheeling (W. Va.) Llnsly 8t
Midwest Division
Mingo Junction 63
center Dave Miller canned 10.
W. L. Pet. GB Huntington (W. Va.) 71 Ports·
Roy Thompson, 6-2 senior
Milwaukee 43 11 .796
mouth 70
till
1
center,led
the Bobcats with 19
Chlcaoo
38 1S .717 4/2 Cadiz 76 Warwood (W. Va .) 71
BROKEN
ANKLE
Phoenix
31 24 .564 12112 , (oil
points. He also grabbed 19 of
Detroit
18 35 .340 241/2 Peden City tW. Va.) 82 Rlver73
NEW YORK (UP!) -De·
the 'Cats 45 rebounds. George
Pacific Division
Massillon 62 Akron North 60
fensem8n
Ab DeMarco suf.
'
Curry, junior forward, had six
W. L. · Pet. GB Alliance 58 Akron Garfield 56
fered
a
fractur.
e
d
right
ankle
LosAngeles 44 7 .863 ... Ashland 61 Canton CC 57
points and a dozen rebounds
Golden St. · 33 20 .623 12
Doylestown 68 Northwest 53
prior to fouling out in the third last week, tbe New York
Seattle
· 31 23 .574 14'12 Malvern 86 Brunnerdale 57
Rangers announced Sunday.
stanza.
Houston
19 34 .358 26
Columbus East 58 Akron
Portland
12 43 .2t8 34
Centrai·Hower56
Kyger Creek led at the end of Ranger coach EmUe Francia
Sund•v's Rt•ults
Akron St. VIncent ~5· Akron
the first period, 11-8. Nelson- said x:.rays taken Saturday
Boston 130 Pl\lla 114, aft.
East 44
revealed the halrllne fracture
Chicago 109 Detroll99, alt.
Kent Roosevelt 77 Akron Eitel By United Pras l:llematloul after busting the game open at that held · the ball without ville outscored the visitors, 18- that wiU sideline DeMarco
Milwaukee 116 Billmre 112 all
73
taking a ~ot for almost seven 9, to take a 26-20 lead at the
The beat laid plans, IIOllle the start with a 20-2 streak.
from"four to six weeks.
Bullalo 99 Cleveland 98
Tallmadge 58 Akron Kenmore people say, occaslonall)' do
Bo8rd Streqgth
minutes in the second hall.
half. The Buckeyes• blew it ·
Pl\oenlx 105· Atlanta 103 ·
51
Poise and alertMst paid off wide open the final half as the
Lqs ).lng. 153' P..t~~:tland 131
Da_tl9n Roosevelt.6J, ~uy,ahoga work. JU$ ask Unlveulty of. Led by the towering boara
t0111ygafnesJ&lt;lbtduled)
Fall• 59
• , , .- . Pacific. C9lch Dick Edwards, strl!llgth, of.. s.foot-10 senior for the Cardlnala, howevec, aa Bobcats' offense b'Jcame v~
p· IV
hu11: ~our 'Valu.les
MondiYIJ,O.mts
Springfield Twp. SO Akron whos.e :unrllnked :Tigers center Johri · Gianelli ('!1 re- ' they forced Bradley to lose the ' Inept. · · ·· · ·
·
ft I
INogamesscheduied)
. Hoban '48
Don't take chances!
knocked off lourth-ranked btiunds) ~ Pacific pulled down baU and then held on after ibe
N-Y hit 22 of 57 field goals for
Stow 61 Walsh Jesuit 51
Insure your home, car,
Long Beach State Sunday in a 80 rebounds, 32 more than the Braves clo,sed to witliln two at 38 pet. KC sank 14 of 51 for a
Fairview 85 Slry~er 69
boat
and all of your
Montpelier 75 Fayette ~
49ers. All five Pacific players 48-l6.
,
stwmlng I~ upset.
assets. Whatever your
Von Wert 67 Bryan 63
Fifth-ranked North Carolina
reserves
.
''Our plan," said ~warda, hit In double figures, with
Tinora 63 North Central 54
needs, we've got the
"was to give (Ed) Ratleff his Bernard Dulaney and John proved more than a match for stormed from behind II) the
Ayersvtlie 53 Paulding 51
right policies for you.
Liberty Center 77 Holgate 59 points and try to shut off Errecart paclilg the way with the Tom McMillen~ed Mary· third period to snap the LitUe
Stop in Today
Celina 73 Defiance 37
211 apiece.
land Terps as the Tar Heels ·Bobklttens three game wtnnllig
Middletown Fenwick 87 Kings .everyone else."
383 N. Second Ave.
Ratleff, Long Beach State's Top-rank,ed UCLA once pounced on the nation's 16th streak, 66-17. Kevin Carter and
'
59
Middleport
Preble
Shawnee
75
Edgewood
highly talented 6-loot~ guard, again proved its versatility and ranked team 92-72 in a battle of J. R. Coe paced the winners
By United Preu tntornotlonil
992-3555
S8
overall superiority Saturday Atlantic Coast Conference with 22 and 19 points respecEost
got
his
points
(a
career
high
43)
Phone H2-2f66
Franklin 67 Forest Park 6S
Authorized
Agent
Delaware 83 Latayette 70
114
Court
St.
Pvmtroy
tively.
Ctn. LaSalle 63 Ctn. Western but he feU well short of com- by overwhelming a very weak powers.
St. Bonavnlre 76 Niagara 73
In other key contests Satur·
Hills-IS
pensating lor the Tigers' torrid Notre Dame and forced the
Manhattan 67 Navy 62
Frankfort
Adona
85
Paint
first hall shooting. Hitting on 59 Irish to abandon their day, seventh-ranked Southern
Duquesne 69 Army 62
Valley 81 (ot) ·
Provdnct64Mas~55
California suffered its third
Chillicothe Flaget e1 Hun· per cent from the field before slowdown tactics.
Penn St. 74 Pittsburgh 62
tlngton 81 lot)
intermlsslon, Pacific walked Notre Dame, which had loss of the week, 83-73, at the
Gellysburg6t Rutgers60
Zane
Trace
(RO$S)
74
Unloto67
off the court with a 50'12 ·lead trevloualy this season lost to hands of Santa Clara.
Colgate 88 Bucknell 83
Alexander
97
Starr
Washington
Fairfield 71 Boston U. 56
UCLA by an embarrassing 11443
Sin Hall 73 St. Frncs t NY) 7t
56,
tried to hold down the score
Laurelville 84 Berne Union 7S
St. John's 100 Dartmouth 66
St. Henry 69 Minster 57
by stalling and succeeded In
Conn 63 Vermont 52
Celina ICHS 91 Ohio City 7J
doing so, only to lose by less of
PIM 12 Prtncetoo 59
Spencerville 71 Botkins SJ
La Salle 87 Canlslus 78
a margin, 57-32.
Findlay 102 Fremont Ross 74 '
Yale 79 MIT 56
Bruins le.4
Col.
Mifflin
67
Grandview
57
Syracuse 84 Temple 77 ot
Grove
City
80
Marysville
70
.
The victory, which gave the
South
London 73 Hilliard 48
Cincinnati 89 Richmond 10
Bruins
a 16-0 record for the
Newark C.lhollc 70 Centerburg '
Geo. Wash. 72 W.Va. 69
year,
extended
their two
Bill Dressel's 45 points
sa .
No. C.rollna 92 Maryland 72
Col. Academy 7S Danville 73
season wiMing streak 10 31. It carried Ironton St. Joe to a 75,Fla. St. 84 Fla. Southern 63
New
Albany
75
Lucas
72
was all!o the lowest point 61 victory over Southwestern
Kentucky 89 LSU 71
Granvllle90 Watkins Memorial
Devldson 80 Wake Forest 66
troductlon
by UCLA since iiB Saturday night in a non·
67
. Tenn..see 79 Alabama 77
Heath 75 NdriHrldge SO
46-44 · loss to Southern conference basketball contest
Va . Tech 87 W&amp;M 65
CINCINNATI
(UP!)
The
Col.
Whetstone
65
Cot.
De
Sales
Callfornla
last year.
at Sou~hwestern Saturday
H. Cross 85Geolown (DC) 83
51
.
Cincinnati Reds announced
W. Ky. 106 Austin Peay 73
Marquette, the nation's No. 2 night.
.,
Springfield South 74 Col. today Greg Slnatro of West
Vanderbilt 8.5 Auburn 77
ranked
team
ran
liB
record
to
.
The
victory
left
St.
Joe
with a
Brookhaven 59
Furman 86 Brown 72
Hartford,
Conn.,
their
No.
1
Col.
Hartley
100
Hamilton
Twp.
t&amp;.o, too at' the expense of 3·8 mark. Southwestern
Beo. Tech 83 Clemson 70
63
draft choice in the regular Loyola of C!lcago with a come- dropped to 0-12 on the year .
Midwest
Lancaster Fisher 75
Marquelte69 Loyola ( 111.167
Paul Trowbridge paced the
Zanesville Rosecrans 73 phase of the winter draft this from-behind ~7 Jriwnpll.
UCLA 57 Notre Dame 32
month, has signed a 1972
Col.
St.
Charles
70
Guernsey
The Warriors, who were losers with 22 points.
.
Louisville 52 Bradley ,j6
C.thollc 52
.
contract.
Michigan 88 Ohio St. 78
topped
by
junior
center
Jun
St.
Joe
led
1H2,
3&amp;-29
and
58East Kno• 62 Ohio Deal 48
Michigan St. 83 Indiana 73
The
6-2,
1851Jound
catcher&lt;l!ones' 23 points, had to 50 at the quartermarks.
Delaware 71 Buckeye _,ailey 59
Miami (0.1 68 Bali St. 65
third baseman is a sophomore overcome a seveniJOint half·
Circleville
69
Teays
Valley
S4
Box score :
Minnesota 61 iawa SO
Fairbanks 66 Triad 40
· at Miami (Fla.) Dade South time deficit and a 32-polnt
Detroit U. 76 Boston Coli 68
SOUTHWESTERN
(81)
New Knoxville 79 Coldwater 70 Junior College. He originally
Drake 90 Tulane 82
performance by the Ramblers' Trowbridge, 22; Dillon, 9;
Marton Local 52 Ansonia 49
Akron 54 Youngstown 53
was drafted by the Reds in Larue Martin.
Sidney
71
Lima
Bath
39
Whitt, 6; Lewis, 9; Wood, 2;
Purdue 78 Northwestern 75
Sidney
Lehman
63
Parkway
61
June
1970.
Kansas St. 70 Oklahoma 58
The Marquette comeback Carter, 6; Walker 7.
Lima Senior 95 Delphls St.
Slnatro, 20, who hits capped a Ollcago Stadium
Kansas 57 Nebraska 55 ot
ffiONTON ST. JOE (75) John 91
Villanova 94 DePauf'l3
righthanded,
had
a
.487
..,
Dayton Stebbins 73 Northmont
double-header which saw Dressel, 45; Hanker, 7;
Southwest
sa
average
in
his
senior
year
at
TCU 69 Rice 55
Dayton Chamlnade 70 Cen· LaSalle Military Academy, eighth-ranlted South CaroUna Motycka, 4; Waginger, 7;
New Mexico 61 Arizona 55
Everybody wants to save money.
Th at ex tr.l ~ %, pa yable as a
drop Northern Illinois, 83'72, Scherer, 6; Kline, 2; Clay, 4.
tervllie 53
McNMse 10 Tex. Lutheran 76 Miamisburg
Oakdale,
N.
Y.He
is
to
report
in
bonus at maturity, applies to all
61 Troy 60
Unfortunately, most of us seem
behind the 34-point Shooting of
By Quarters:
Grmblng t05 Pra View 104 ot Springfield North
mid-March
for
spring
training
82
Graham
to have a rough time actually
&lt;&gt;-foot-10 fOI'Ward Tom Riker, Southwestern 12 17 21 11--81
Bonds issued si nce June 1, 1970
Hrdn-Smns 89 Mtdwstrn 77 .
J6
with the Reds' minor leaguers
Pa
LoulsvJlle WIDI
Iron. St. Joe
18 20 21l 17-75
doing it. We start, then we s top.
. .. with a comparable improvement
Twin Valley North 65 Cen- at Tampa, Fla.
Amer. 82 Ark. St. 10
terville
(Ind.)
63
Third-ranked
Louisville,
Reserves
Ironton
St.
Joe
for all older Bonds.
The money never piles up.
Cor Christi 97 Hous. Bapt. 82 Valleyvtew 66 New Miami 48
Slnatro
attended
the
faced with an even colder won.
West
The Payroll Savings Plan is the
Join the Payroll Savings Plan
Carlisle 67 Mason ~ t
,
University of Connecticut as a freeze than the one thrown ·,- Brig. Youn 101 Wyoming 74
__
easy way to start saving; the
where you work. It's a great way
Ft. Laramie 82 Mtsstsstnawa freshman, but transferred to
Sa. Clara 83 So. C.lll. 73
against UCLA, managed a 52The
Sentine'l.
painless way to keep saving.
to make today's good intentions
Valley 62
Stanford92 Air Force 66
Dade South to play more · 46VJctory Over 8 Bradley team
DEVOTED TO THE
San Joee 51 6.5 S.D. St. 63 ot National Trial 74 Eaton ss
pay off tomorrow.
, Your money gets a chance to pile
UC Rvrsdt 79 Cal Poly Sio 77 Franklin Monroe 62 Miami ba~eball.
INTEREST OF
up
because
the
amount
you
East 48
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Hawaii 84 Redlands so
., .. ,, r
U:IJJO:::U Ill
rru;n ;; ::; n.w:: .. CH.ESTER L. TANNEHILL,
specify is automaticall y set aside
Yellow Springs 69 Greenon 55
Exec . Ed.
Lynchburg
65
Blanchester
56
from your paycheck and used to
•NINDL EVENS SCORE
RDIERT HOEFliCH,
Toledo Woodward 65 Toledo
City
Editor
buy U. S. Savings Bonds.
HUN'l'ER, N. Y. (UPI) DeVIlbiss 43
Published daily except
You actually salt away savings,
lfulo Nktdl, defeilted Spider Spencer Sharples 87 NorSaturda-v by The Ohio Vallev
thwood
75
•
Publishing
Com-pan)'.
111
Slbltdlln lilt llalom &amp;lllday to Toledo Whitmer 70 Maumee 65
paycheck after paycheck.
GAME · Court St ., Pomerov, Qhio ,
pin a tit with Salilcb for the Genoa 63 Oak Harbor 49
45169 . 8uslnfts Office Phone
And now there's a bonus
PLAYER
G TP AVG. HIGH
992·2156,
Editorial
Phone
992.
oomblnld tide li1 the two-day ' Lake 57 Lorain C.tHollc 56
Steve Dunfee
IJ 175 IJ .S 25
interest rate on all U. S. Savings
2151
Bond• .,~ ufe. If \on, 1tokn, or deltro)'ed.. · AfiiJ 'th.
Valley 81 Deerfield 75 . Tony Vaughan
• • Ilea. . and Heqea llltll Maumee
13
ISS
11.9
2S
Second'class pottage paid at
Bonds- forE Bonds, 5~ %
Norwood 79 Lockland 74 )
· Rich Bailey
\I' ll repl ace thcn1 . Wh en needed, they C:ln lx
Pomerov
.
Ohio
.
13 105 8.1 13
Pror.Iona!Skl racing claulc. Batavia 73 Wtillamsburg 67
cu hc:d at )'o:)ur bank. Tu may be dd crred •
•
when
held
to
maturity
of
5
years,
. · National advertising
u
n
t1lu'd
~
mpdo
n.
And
1\w ay1 rem ember,
\..
~r::;;,l
Jimmy
Boggs
13
89
6,9
t.5
Clermont East 61 Western
representative
Bottinelll .
10 months (4% the first y'ear).
Bomh u~ 1 pi"oud w &amp;y to u vc.
, ,Andy Vaughan
13 68 s.2 10(x) Gartagher, Inc .• 12 Eut o42nd
Brown
60
~
CANADIAN GAIB
St , New York City, New York
Bill Vaugha"n
11
48 u
10
Goshen 51 ~lhel .,
HOLLYwooD, Fla. (UPI)- Amelia 66 New Rlchmond 39 Mike Sayre
Sut;es.cription ratu: ..,, :
12 . 48 H
14
l1vt.red
~ by carrier ,Wh&amp;rl!
Canadlli!l Dale Shaw and Ly~chburg Clay 65 Blanchester Mark Werry
11
17
1.6 5
av.a1lable 50 cents per wtek;
56
Rick Ash
10
1 0.7
3
Marilyn Palmer defeated Wellsvllle97
By Motor Route where carrier
Jefferson Union 34 txx) Jell Morris
service
n~t available: One
6
102·
17.0
21
Alnel'lcllll Jane Butanchlll')' Flnneytown 12 Colerain 53
month $1 .15 . B)' ml!lll 1n Ohio
TOTALS
.
1J
814
62.5
2St
x)
dlalb 1114 Napcy &amp;DIIb ~7 Ctn. Moelltr 68 Prtncetoo 53
l and w. Va ., One vear $1-t .Oo.
(K) - twice
I
Six months S1 25 . Three
Anderson
83
Greenhills
65
aandi:y li1 lbe llnall of the Whtr-k 97 ·Wesl Union 75
mo(lths $4 . 50 Subscription
(Kx) - Morrlsouttor seasonwtlh Injury after SIK games.
women's inter'nallllll.ll Four- Cter.mant Northeastern 79
pr ife Includes Sunday T1mes,.
Sentinel
Fellc)ty 61
lllllltlf taun~E~nt.
!1!!1.. ll!IU I
"!Lbbb:tt .. ;
"MP WP . "T

JIMMIE'S ·
Pasby Shop

Dais-Warner Ins.

Reds Sign
Top Draft

SW Beaten
By St. Joe

Choice

are
goiatgto
slarl

of
i1tlettlions?

DaiiJ

,

Marauder Cage Scoring

by Ualted Preas illlenlau.al
point of World War n on .the
EaJtem Fronl
In 1953 ' more than 2,000
persona were I!Uled when North
Sea elormll nODded Holland,
In 19118"thti U.S. launched Its
lint saieWte into orbit ..:.
Explorer I.

' 1968 North Vietnamese
In
gumlllas raided the U.S.
embaally In Saigon, marking the
ope~lng of the Viet Cong's new
year's Tet offeilllvP..

Legal Action
May Be Taken

""

~~:.~:ie-York's

r

Todsy is Moro.y, Jan. 31, the
31st day of 1972. ·
The moon Is between Its full
phase and Jasi quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and 'Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and saturn. ·
ThOI!e born on this day in
his lory:
In 1942 the Soviet Union
announced the virtual annlblla·
tlqn of ~.ooo Nazi troops at
Stalin~r~d. It wu a turning

Valley Conference. FederalHocking is 5,-9 overall and 4-2 in
Tri-Valley Conference play.
Eastern .won the first meeting
of the two teams, 66-52.
The Eagles placed ali five
starters ·In double figures with
Dennis Eichinger leading with
22. The 6-3 senior center had 18
rebounds, also lops for the
Eagles.

Results

Potomac Paper, Words,Growing
word and paper production, as
usual, Is e~ealatlng.
President Nimn delivered to
1
Congress not one but two State
of the Union messages. One
half-llour apeech wu given In
pe11011. Alld he dellvere 10
'Congress lhouaanda of copies
of a 15,000.word message,
expanding on the main points.
There wm be another big
lllelll&amp;e-ooe devoted to the
worl~ ait~~atlon-lollowlng the
economic message, or course,
•
the budget. 1

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tbe
Eagles came out clawing
In ·the third quarter
to
eraie
a five
point Federal-Hocking lead
and go on to defeat the Lan·
cen, 79-70 near here Saturday
nlght in a non-league game at
Eastern High School. .
. The Lancers, coached· by
Mark 5mith, beld a 36-'11

College

Wa.shington Window

!loris from listeners.
That escalated the word
co.unt too. The telephone
company says that 200,000
people called long distance, but
only six got on the air.
Of courae, an· thil! doesn't
even make a dent In the
bureaucratic paperwork in·
valved. The federal govern,,,ent, people working for the
government, and bualnessea
living off It, throw away dally
almost 4,000 tons of paper and
trash. That's jus1 what they
throw away.

Eastern Runs over Federal Hocking79-70

TV BIUS Ar

· BE~Rrs WO~LO

The President's budget
breakdown ran only 1,103
pagea this year; tresumably
renectlng Nixon's lower
budget deficit for flscal1973 of
t25.5 billion. Last year's budget
book ran 1,112 )l88es and that
budget deficit comes to ~.8
biUlon.
The Democrats couldn't let
Nixon get away with even one
State of the Union message
without a reply. So, they staged
an hour'-long talkathon on
national television, with a new
~immlck-telephoned
ques-

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South Unlucky in Skill

than a month old,ll1e domestic

,,

Upset 104-86

.

WASIUNGTON (UP!)
Wpldncton, a one-Ume swamp
· oa tile Potomac, beads Into Its
lOIII f'll' lllpported on an
""-trowing mountain of
..,.. llld words.
Alllr Wotld War ll, the
Hu :w Co:nmllllon, looking

.-

Long Beach Is

·oiverticulosi·s Is Fairly Common

'

. . -

..

;uh" School .
Sco·res

Many Don't Know 1hey Have It

"''

.....

Kyger Creek

DR.l.AWRfNCf f.l.AMB

o

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Buckeyes Trip

!Helen Help Us !

Nations ,.. .

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..-

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Southern Upset 66-51

r---------------------------1

".!i~ ,,r.~ung.er.

.

."

'"'\b'

"There's nothing wrong with buildt"nt the L" 1 .....
Ed b· h d •
· 1nco n Image,
i •I w ~ on t ~ou see what appens
at tht
,convent1on before you grow the beard?"

Take stock in America.

"
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Now Bonds pay a bonus at maturity.

' hili "

�p

~

4'
•

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..

~

...

~·

...

'"

..

,

'I

r . - -·

I

..#

•

•'

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C- The Dilly Sentinel, MldcDeport-Pomeroy, o.. Jan. 31, 1972

· ~arden

•
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)

.

By

Ulllt~ Preu IDlematloul

There

are

enough
challengers breathing down
the neck of Toledo Coach Bob
Nichols to keep him warm even
• in the sub-uro weather of
recent d!lys.
After the first three g!lffies of
the Mid-American Conference
basketball race, it looked like a
two.team battle between
Nichols' Rockets and the
Bobcats of Ohio University.
After Saturday's action,
however ,there are at least four
teams with definite title hopes
still burning brightly and Wes-

-

Kent got its best overall perfonnance of the year from Ruben Vance, the defending conterence scoring champion, as
he scored 27 points. HiS running male !II guard, Bob
McEvoy, chipped In with 20 as
· the Flashes upped their oversU
mark to HI.
•
Ohio University, which is
now l-6on the road, feU to 7~
overall and lost its second
straight conference contest.
Kent, which led all the way
after taking a 13-12 margin
with 12:31 remaining, didn't
put the game out of reach unUI

E:E.Ch~g~U:~ ~~ea::. ~~~~r~~~~:i~s;
Kent State, with its 88-74viclory over Ohio University,tied
Tom Corde scored 18 points
the Bobcats and defending to lead Ohio University and
ch!lmplon Miami at 3-2 for Denny Rusch contributed 17.
second place In the conference,
Broncos CUp Faleou
trailing Toledo at 4-1.
Western Michigan, mean-

Gomez, Harridge And
Youngs Are Honored
NEW YORK (UPI)-Vernon
(Lefty) Gomez, former New
York Yankee pitcher whose wit
was as quick as hill fast bsU,
was voted into basebsU's llall
of Fame Sunday along with exAmerican League president
Will Harrldga and Ross
Youngs, 1111 outfielder with the
New York Glanill from 1917
through 1928.
The tJiee were voted Into the
lllrillt by a special Old Timers
COmmittee which Is empowered by the Baseball
Writers Association of
America to cmsider the meri\5
·ol playen 1111d executives who
retired more than 20years ago.

Rock-Hill Jolts
Vikin•gs, 7:6•67
•·

,
Rock Hill's Redmen paced
by the hot shooting of Jack
Deer defeated the Symmes
Valley Viki~gs Satursay night,
76-67 in a non-league encounter
on the winners' hardwood.
Deer dumped In 22 points in
pacing the Redmen to their
fifth victory of the year. Big
Jim Stewart, 6-6 senior center,
has 16 points.
Coach Wayne White's
Vikings were led by Jack
Taylor's 16 points. Others in
double figures were Dsnny
Wilson and Phil Robinson with
14 points each and Jaye Myers
with II markers. The Vikings
led 29-25 at the hslf but fell
behind 48-40 going Into the final
eight minutes of acUon.
Rock Hill sank 31 of 62 field

Master Wit
One of the sharpest men ever
to throw a quip, Gomez was as
famous for his hwnor as for his
pitching skills and at 61is sliD a
popular after-dinner speaker In
his role as an executive with
Babe Ruth League BasebsU.
Asked once to evaluate a
rookie who was going grest
guns, Gomez replied, ''be's
hitting with one foot in the
American Association." On
another occasion he held up a
g!lme to stsnd on ihe mound
and watch an airplane Oy over
Yankee Stadium. And on still
another occasion, he was asked
to explain why be slumped
011 Aq. 7
from :!II victories in one season
They wUI be formally induct- to 13 in the next.
"They told me to add 15
ed Into the Hall on Aug. 7 along
with Sandy Koufax, Yogi Berra pounds to my weight (Uld I'd
GREENVILLE, Tex. (UP!)
and Early Wynn, who recently make 'em forget Lefty Grove," - Duane Thomas, the moody
were elected In bsUoting by 11). he replied. "I added the 15 running bsck who seven months
ye!lr members of the BBWAA. pounds and almost made 'em ago said the Dallas Cowboys
Atotal oliiO players has been forget Lefty Gomez."
could not win the Super Bowl
elected to the l!brlne, including
without him, was slopped by
49 by the BBWAA and 61 by the
pollee on a north Teras
ad Timers group.
highway Sunday and taken to
Gomez, a lean leftollander
jail on a charge of possession of
from Rodeo, Calif., was a fourmarijuana.
roiV'V • WI;i~e., Pinl!~ •'!.h.o
MEE1'1N6DELAYED
,Five hours af!er .hill arrest,
compiled a .189-102 record for. .. The stiltetl · meeting of Thomas and hill brother Bur~'Y'an~ and Washington Evangeline Chapter, Order of trand, also charged with drug
Senators from 1931 through the Eastern Star, hss been possession, were out of jail on
1943. He led the American postponed from Thursday $5,000 bond each.
League In strikeouts three night to Feb. 10, due to a
Still Mum
times and in. earned run district school of instruction to
But as is hill custom, Thomas
average twice and ltlll holds bepeldatMeigsHighSchool. A ha,d nothing to say about the
the World Series record of six business meeting for the incident to the press, and
victories without a lou. In 1934, - District 25 School of Instruction Cowboy officials were just as
. lie achieved a rare pitchers' will begin at 4 p. m. A dinner silent.
triple crown by leading the will be served at 5:30 p.m.'and
The incident occurred 12
league in victories (~ re- the school will start at 7 p. m. miles west of Greenville, a
cord), percentage (.839) and All OES members are Invited town of less than 30,000 persons
esmed run average (2.33).
to attend.
50 miles northeast of Dallas.
Thomas, 24, and his brother,
21, were ln a 1972 PonUac
heading toward Dallas on

Every thild ·should
be a welcome
addition. Not an
accidental burden.

And that takes planning.
Which is what we're
all about.

for good at ~On a jumper by
· steeJe with 11;48 remaining.
Mlaml, after leading by 15
points early in the first ·half,
had.to come !1'(1111 behind in the
final 10 minutes to down Ball
State.
Sophomore guard Phil
Lumpkin led the Redskin$ with
15 points and Darrel Qunlap
andTimMeyer13eachtopace
them to their eighth win 1n u
games overall. Meyer hit 8
pair of free llrows In the cl01ing seconds to put the game out
of the Cardinsls' reaCh ,

eon-

while In the ohly other
terence game handed Bowling
Green a 9243 lou at
Killamazoo, Mich.
The Bt'on001, now ~ in amfereace play, bad five players
in double figures, paced by
sophomore center Mike Steele
of Toledo with 26,.;.. ·
Bowling Green, in dr9PPing
ita ninth game in a row and
fifth straight In the Mid-Am;
was led by Dalynn Badenhop
with 19 points an.d l.e Henson
with 16. Western led only 49-39
at halftime and took the lead

goal attempts for a hot 50 pet.
SV hit 29 of 77 for 37 pet, The
visitors held a 46-45 rebouridlng
edge, Keith Roach, 6-0 senior
center, grabbed 16 for the
Vikings, Stewart had 1.6 for the

Redm!m.
liockHillmadeitacomplete
sweep by takin• the reserve
"
game, 55-43. Symmes Valley
now 9-4 on the year travels to
Southwestern Saiurday night.
SYMMES VALLEY 167) Wilson, 7-0-14 ; Taylor, 5-6-16;
Robinson, 6-2-14; Roach, ~ ;
Myers, 4-.'1-11; WlUis, ~;
TOTALS 28-11-11.
ROCK HILL 1761 -Stewart,
8-0-16; Steed, 5-2-12; McFann,
4-3-11; Shug, 4+14; Deer, 11).222 · Watts 1).1-1 TOTALS 31-14·
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78.

Dallas Ace Faces

Marijuana Charge

THIS WEEK'S
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
United Press International
Monday
Dayton at Niagara
Cincinnati at William &amp; Mary
Cleveland Stale at Bowling

Green

Tuesdoy
Iowa at Ohio Stale
VMI at Ohio University
Akron at Batdwtn-Wallace
Denison at Kenyon
Otterbein at Heidelberg
Wooster at Obertln
Wittenberg at Ohio Wesleyan
Cedarville at Wllbertorce
Central Stale at Shaw
Malone at Urbana
Berea at Rio Grande
Western New England al
Steubenville
Centre at Wilmington
Wednesday
Toledo at Miami
Wisconsin (Milwaukeel at
Xavill!lr

Findtay at Northern. Kentucky
Capita at Marietta
Hiram at Mount Union
Ashland at St. Vincent
Bluffton at Ohio f'lorthern
Allegheny at Case Western
Reserve

Walsh at Youngstown Stale
Thursday
Cleveland Slate at Marshall
Cedarville at Urbana
Marian at Case Western
Reserve

'

At Dayton, the Flyers bad all
they could handle In downing

Wittenberg 44-42fur their ninth
win in 16 game!i.
Wittenberg, of the Ohio Conference, pulled out to a 19-11
lead with 4:21 to go in the half,
but the Flyers, paced by Donaid Slnith with 12 points,
narrowed the gap to 23-19 by
lntennission.
o.yton moved ahead 34-33
with 1::!11 reinaining and the Tigers,now 1·7trailed the rest of
the way. Pat Beasley's 16
.points was high for Wittenberg.

Bearealll Wla Ea1Uy
Cincinnati, led by guard
Olive Johnson's 22 points,
picked op its ninth win in 16
games with an liN) decision
over Richmond.
! ,·
The Bearcats piilled away
from RicbmOnd late in the first
half and Jed by 30 points in th~
second 20rrilnutes. Lloyd Batts
chipped in with 17 points for
Cincinnati and Jesse Jemison
add~ 16.
, In Ol!io Conference J181Des,
seventh-ranked Capital ran its
. record to 1~ overall and 6-0 in

the conference with a

over Mount Union. Wooster
also stayed unbeaten in OC
play with a M-74 wjn ,over Ken-

yo~krori, the natidn•s lOth
ranked college divillion te!lffi,
edged Yoimgstown State, rated
No.1!, 54-63, the second win for
the Zips over Youngstown thiS
season. Akron is 15-2, the
Pl!nquins 14-.'1.
In olhel: g!lmes, Baldwih·
WsUace downed Marietts 00.
76, Otterbein stopped Hiram 8911, Findlay took Cedarville Ill).
' ·
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New uniforms for the fifth
and sixth grade cheerleaders
at· · ' the
' Harrisonvilie
~ementary School. will be
provided by .the Harrisonville
PI'O.
.
'
MeeUng In special 8ession
rec~nUy, the PI'O voted to

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL RECORDS
By United Press ln!ernational .
Mid-American Conference ·
League Overall
W L W L

Mrs•.Rayhum ,

,Toledo
4 1 12 3
Ohio Unlv,
3 2 7 s
M•aml
3 2 8 7
Kent State
3 2 4 11
W. Michigan
2 3 5 10
Bowlint;r:c~nte~enJe 2 12
League Overall
WL w L

Of Mason Dies

:;

Iowa

1

3

7

7

Interstate 30 shortly after noon Northwestern
I 5 3 11
0 4 . 8 6
Sunday when they were slopped Indiana
Others
by Hunt County deputy sheriff
WL
Norman Gray and highway Defiance
:~ ~
Urbana
patrolman W. E. Jeter.
· Akron
15 2
Sniffed Pol
Youngstown St.
14 3
Gray said he asked Thomas Ashland
1
~
for some idenUfication, not Case West. Reserve
10 7
Findlay
knowi~g at the t!me whom he Hiram
8 6
was speaking to. While Thomas Cincinnati
9 7
wa.a reaching for his driver's Wilmington
~ ~
Northern
Uctilse, Gray said, be smelled Ohio
Bluffton
9 8
the odor of burning marijuana. Rio Grande
~· :
Gray tOld county judge Gale Xavier
7 9
Carden he found one marijuana Steubenville
Malone ·
7 11
cigarette in the car, along with John Carroll
1(
enough marijuana to fill two Cleveland State
s 10
Ohio Dominican
matchboxes.
Central State
4 12
Thomas was in jail by shortly Cedarville
~
after I p.m., and five hours Walsh
lster bond was posted by Larry
Green, a Greenville attorney.
In Dallas club officials
quickly conferred by telephone,
and general manager Tex
Schramm summed up the
conference with a brief "no Holly HoWs Martin, 81, of'
146 State St., Athens, forcomment."
merly of Middleport, died
.
Sunday morning at the
O'l!leness Memoria!' Hospital
In Athens.
·
Mr. Martin was employed as
an engineer by the New York
Central Railroad 53 years. He
,
was a member of Middleport
Coach Paul Dillon's Hannan Masonic Lodge 363• F&amp;AM,
Scottish Rite, Columbus, and
Trace Wildcats snapped a Aladdin Shrine Temple'
three game losing streak Columbus.
Saturday night by routing the
He was born July 6, l890, the
Hannan Wildcats, 64-34. The son of the late Edward and
win pushed Hannan Trace's
record to 5-7 in aU g!lffies and 3- Sarah Rayburn Martin at
7 in the sv AC.
Buffalo, W. Va. Besides hill
Big Mike Caldwell pumped In parents, he was preceded In
21 points In pacing the Wildcat death by three brothers.
attack. Don Wells, 6_4 Surviving are a .d!lughter,
sophomore forward, added 13 Miss Georgia C. Martin, Point
points and Keith Swain, 1&gt;-IO Pleasant: three brothers,
senior guard, canned 11 points. Mack, Fred and Charles, and a
HoOey and Smith led the losers sister' Mrs. Lucy Cain, sU of
with 12 points each. Hannan Buffalo, and several nieces and
Trace led 16-5 at the first nephews.
period, 3:t-14 at the hslf and 49Funetal services wiD be
23 moving into the final sbmza. · conducted at 2p.m. Wednesday
The Wildcats sank 27 of 85 at the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
field goal attempts and 10 of 17 Home with the Rev. Father
foul shots. Hannan hit only 14 of William Black officiating,
58 field goal attempts and six of Burial wiD ·be In Beech Grove
15 free 'throws. Hannan Trace Cemetery, Pomeroy. Friends
· had 58 rebounds with Caldwell may call at the funeral home
snaring 23.
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
TUesday. Masonic rites wiD be
Hannan Trace also captured conducted at the funeral honte
the reserve game by for(elt. by the Middleport Masonic·
The Wildcats travel to Kyger
e at 7,30 p.m. 'Iiiesday.
' Creek 'Iiiesday night.

!

!

g

Holly Martin
Died Sunday

•
H •T W
. mner
On Saturday

Waynesburg at Malone
Steubenville at West Liberty
. Fridoy
Rochester at Ohio Wesleyan
Saturday
Wisconsin at Ohio Stale
Miami at Bowling Green
Hllllllan, W. Va. (34) Norlhern Illinois at Kent State
Western Michigan at Ohio Holley, 4-4-12: Barnell, 1-0-2;
University
Edmunda, 1-0-2; Smith, 5-2-12: , McLAIN SIGNS
Toledo at Cincinnati
Dayton al Xavier
HiD, 1-0-2; and Black, Z-0-4,
.ARLINGTON, Tex. (UP!)_
Youngstown Stale at Atllance Totals lf-4-34.
Denny McLain, who had a 11).22
(Pa.)
Hannan
Trace
(
84)
Swain,
record
fOr the Washington
Central Michigan at Akron
B.oldwln.WatlaC$ at Oberlin
4-3-11 ; Caldwell, 10' 1-21; 5enstors after being obtstnetl
Urbana at Capital
L~sher, 3-3-9; Our&amp;, 3-2-8; from ~~~it !sst year, has
Rochester at Denison
Wells, IH-13; Shafer; 1-0-2. signed hill 1972 contract with
Kenyon at Heidelberg
Total•
27-10-64. ,
the American League club
Otterbein at Marietta
Mount Union at Wittenberg
By Quarters:
which now operate• as the
Musklngum at Wooster ,
Hannan
5 14 23 34 Texas "···-.,...rs. Me Lain llgned
Cleveland Slate at Ashland
Hannan Trace
Bluffton at Malone
Case Wester·n Reserve at . .--'!'!'""'!'!1!16•3211!1491!6411!11!11for an eatilnlted IID,OI!O.

JUSTICE LEACH
,

L
h
e
eac
JU dg
.
·
Asking for
Election

MASON - Mrs. Juanita M.
Rayburn, 60, Mason, died
Saturday evening at the Holzer
Medical Center. Mrs. Rayburn,
who operated a convalescent
.home here, was born · at
Spencer, W. Va., Dec. 18, ISIJ.
She was the daughter of the
late Homer Blaine and Pauline
Casto Vance.
, SUIIvivlng are a son, Frank
Young, Jr., New Haven: two
daughters, Mrs. DotUe Van
Meter and Mrs. Agnes Roush,
both of Mason; 12 grandchildren; a sister, Mrs .
Johnnie Mae Stukey, Mason,
and a brother, Robert Vance,
of Spencer.
Funeral services will be at 11
a.m. Tuesday at the St. Joseph
Catholic Church with the Rev.
Father H. A. Ryan officiating.
Burial Will he In Kirkland
Memorial Gardens. Friends
may call at . the Foglesong
Funeral Home any time.
Rosary services will be con- ·
dueled at the funeral home at 7
tonight.

Children by choice.
. ·Not .chance.

For further information, write

Planned Parenthood, Box 431
Radio City Station, N.Y. 1001!1
Mftrtlsll\l contributed lor tile Publi t soGd In toopmtlon with
'fM AdftrtiSiftC Cou_nc:il IIMI tt l'! lnftrnlllonil l'ttWSPIDti,Adwtrli\inc [•Kill in\ ,

Hiram

-~!

C)tPn tv.-nvitle at Gannon

OPTOMETRIST

,

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT
('N THURS.) -f;AST COURT ST.,

purc])a~ the"ne.:V cheerlejider
outfits but not ' to buy new
uniforms for the fifth ·~adil :
bali team this year. ' .
,!'r&lt;lviding a sitting service ,
for children during the.meeting •
were Darlene l!arrett, Debbie ,
Nutter, Julie Gleem, Beverly '
Bishop and Brenda !lishQJl. ·
Ad!llts attending were 1 Mr~.
Betty Oliver, Mrs. Ruth .
Reeves, Mrs. Mary Ash; Mrs.
Judy Stime\Z; Mrs. Kathryn
Weaver, Mrs. Kevin COllins,
Mrs. Sally W~lch, Mrs. Am\
Barrett, Mrs. Carol Gl~ and
Mrs. Betty Bishop.

:~

'I~

Creen Thumb

A debate on organic gar- gardens in which pol~riS have always chan![ing anq man
dening venus pesUcides for been used, but to ·successful can
only
shift
the
inaecl conorol' highlighted a gardening lo general. Areas balance in hi!!Javor by using
•••
meeting of the Rutland discussed by the author and insecticides...
·
Friendly Gardeners ThurSday Included in Mrs. Williamson's · Mrs. Parker reported on the
. A wtekly fea!Ufe of Meip
night at the home of Mrs. Joe review, were composting and work of chemical msnufacCounty Gatden Club members.
Bolin.
•.
!J!ulchlng, the use of humus, turers .through research in
11
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· .'
Hamilton Tyler '~ . hook, companion plantings, treat- coming up with practical pest
·'·
"~ani.c Gardening · Without ment of plant diseases, en- controls. , She suggested
p, • ettia ~ ·
C'L
Poisons,"· served as 'the bssis couragement of beneficial combining natural control
· , OIPS
· .s Jl)r · very··,,nristtnas..
of a report presented by Mrs. ilisects and birds.
which Includes planting .
· II)' MRS. AARON KELTON
Howard Birchfield for Mrs. Bill
Location of a • plant was vsrielies and species resistant
' WladingTraUGardellOIIII
,.
',
Willtalnson who was'unable to discussed in the review, with to insects and diseases, and
..........las · ·are give.n annually as attend.' Mrs. Homer ' Parker Mrs. Williamson pOinting out r using approved chemicals
of .potted, ·~...,..
gifts to molhin, wives and sweethearts. Uo- gave a rebuttal to 1\lrs. that some plsnts lil\e to be next judiciously. '
lortunatmf,niOitoflhesebeautlfulplantsendupin. tbe.trashcan Willilimson's review, using as to each other, while others are
In her comments, Mrs.
her
.
topic,
"Insects,
Why
I'm
.offended
by
.
c
erta.
l
n
company.
·Parker
named aphids, the
after a tew wlleQ. I. lilY !~~~fortunately beea~ thli is a sheer
ute o1 1 tl
.
· for .pesticides." '
She 'recommended · Tyler 's European red spider mites.and
w
pel~ Y good plant miletiQI. '
In her report, .. Mrs . · book to aU gardeners, where thrips as the most troublesome
The polnaettiaa (EuP~orbla pulcherrlma) came to us from ' , Williamson. pointed out that , tl)ey have tried organic gar- insects and gave suggestions
Mexico where l!JeY are 1lled chlel)y as .found!llioil plantingS. milCh w~ich is precious, even 'denlng arid are familiar with' on cpntroi.
They are also found In the frost4reeaectlolis of our country such , irreplsceable, in milo's en- the principles and rew~rds, or
Slle reported · that sa&lt;alled,
88 the southern Up of F1orlda. 'l1H!re they grow Into huge bushes
vironmeqt has been destroyed have never explore!! the "organically growti" fruits and
llllothered with a mullltu~ ol heads Of pink, glistening white, or · by man Himself. She said that subject. '
'·
vegetables cosi 50 to 100 pet.
the more popular IC8rlet' ted, depending on variety.
the ,)lome gardener - not
· REBUTI'AL MADE .
more than superior comIf YOU recelvecra RCJinaettla for Cllrlltm8s, and would like to · usually thought of 'as a
In her rebuttal, Mrs. Parker mercia! produ~ts. She further
tryyourhandatpropapting,plliceitlna)Varmroomaway from despoiler - has contributed to said tl)at "organic gardening said that commercially grown
drafts to keep It weD ant! haWY· "_ '
· this destruction by using or biologic pest control would foods are equally nutritious
, In order to maintain h!lh bu,mldity, Rlsce the pot on an In- poisoqouil insecticides and be fine, if it worked, but most and safe and of superior
verted 8811C« in a (llln of water with the bottom I'! the pot just · chemical fertilize~s.
research shows thst tliis ·isn't quality. She spoke of the food
above the water level. ThuoU in the pot should be moderately . Tyler in hill book, she said, possible for the home gar- ,problems which would exist if
IIM!ill at all tmlu.
.•.· ~. ·
,,
recbmmends that "health be dener. She noted that the pesticide use was outlawed.
, · NtK,ibo!Qamonth,rouwtUnotieethit the lower leaves are reiltilred'to the home garden by ''natural balance" or "bsiance
Mrs. Harold Wolfe served as
gradullly llliniD8 yellow and falling 'olr, It li llllterln3 into a r~tutning io natliiai gardening of nature' ' condition would be moderator for a group
clormaDIItlile to rest before resuming growth in the~: At methods. " Mrs. Williamson one in whlch there is a' bsiance discussion on the topic with
this time, remo~ yourpla)lt to.the bssement, Ill" to ~'dry rOopi, note«! .that n11ture can benefit bet weer\' pests and their most of the members agreeing
and allow the aoU to dry out.
,
the gardener if he does not natural enemies, and this that it is necessary to use
. After all !he leaves bsve dried, snip off 2or 3 inches from the interfere with its complicated would be achieved only if soil pesticides for their own garlop iiem, then place In 8 dry spot where the temperature will and delicate balsnce by u,sing and climatic conditions are dening experiences.
remain arourid 1111 degreel. Since the ptants are asleep, so to
synthetic insecticides and · favorable for the slistanance of
The possibility of organizing
speak,
Med neither
or water. ·
fertilizers.
pests and Ute parasites and an adult garden club ln the
,
' Mr~. Williamson de$Cribed predators which • prey upon Langsville-Salem CenterAbc!ut tile middle of May take thla dormant plant outdoors, the book as .a practical guide them.
Danville area was .discussed
WB111J olf with a hoM, than groom, by removing aU of the dried not oidy to the creation and
and plans were . made for
leaves and by cutt!Dg back each stem to 4" dOrmant buds. Then main,tenance of natural garShe noted that this several members to begin
·sink the pots in the garden, ~ter lbem down :irell for they ·' dens ' and the restoration of condition is not-static, contacts. Mrs . Robert
require agreat deal ofmolature In the spr~. '
SOME GARDENERS clairilthey can root ll)eir cuttings in a
.• · ·
glasa of water On the kitchen sink. As soon as the tiny roota apo
·pear, plant them in pots of molal sand until a good root system
,
forma, then pot them In tiny clay or plastic pots, and put In shade
until growth resumes. Best growing tem~rature is ~bout 60 ·
degrees. Always shelter from hot afternoon .a,m. . .
·
FlnaUranspolanllrig tihouJd be into a 6-?" pot. Place four plants
In one large clay pot, However, if you wish, you can plant one oil'
two ill a pot. This llpal trslll))lanling,ls entirely up to you, and
should depend on the I!U of yGIII' window; ' , · '
'
Grower• often pinch beck the young rshoots after the fitSt
potting to encourage size branclllng. ~ creates ~ore but
~
.
smaller bracts.
•
··
1
Poinsettias like aoU that consillls largely of firbroos IO!IM,
such as one rich iii compost. Three parts of ~.IICh soil, qlixed with
~·
Clle part, In equal . proporll01111 of wellol'otled cow 'manure
\
(dehydratedcowmanuremaybellled),leafmoldand81lnd,
\
the
llhoo
the -'ulre 1
Oisture A
As
yourig
ts msture, Y .... . ess m.,
·
weekly waterliic, to which a 'dUuted llquld fertilizer has been
added, sbould b,e,glven·lfler the first potting and continued until
1he lncts are well'deft]~,'~nd the tiny yellow flowers begin
' ·"

Notes.

E

•

BEAT .
lltE HIGH

COST OF
BUYING A:

NEW CAR
Financt yOur new car wltlt

'Collonwldo.

.LOW COST INSURED
AUTO FINANCING
BY NATIONWIDE

~

'AUUY .

T

to open. '

Largest Supply In Stock
.
Shop l_ngels before you buy; Buy

today, mstalled tomorrow by Ingels'
expert craftsmen.

BU!fl
501 MYLON
I

SQUARE
YARD ·

Ingels Furniture
H2·263S

''

'

'

gra&lt;!ually bellirnlni about the middle of.September. For the first
few times bring them In only for the night, then increase the
length of ~ until they finally take ilp their permanent
reaidence on your IIUJIIlYwindoW sili.·Once indoors, keep them
out of drafil, keep the temperature around 60 degrees, and
maintain bl8h bllnildity.
Jfinaeclaca~~~etrouble,washthemolfwithwater.Neveruse

Insecticides, u they Injure the foliage.
WITH PROPER CARE, there ill no reuoh why your new
plantslhouldnot bloom 81 well for Chrtslma&amp; 81 the original one
did. By repeating tlila propagating proceu each May, you can
grow new plaDII each aprins to adorn YOU!' borne at Christmas
time. YoucallalaoglveBUchplantsasOniatmaaglfts.
If you were lucky enoUgh to receive a poinseltill for
'Chrtslma&amp; last year, try YOU!' hand at propagating. It ill not only
easy,andalotolfun,butcanbeveryrewarding.
·

surMct
with itsDlinois.
Home Saturday
night.
Office inSociety
Rock Island,
Miss King
and three ' other
Of the Society's more than members of Job's Daughters
300 Junior. Service Clubs competed for the sweetheart
throughout the nation, 103 title, each presenUng a tslent
attained Merit status lhill year. act and undergoing an inThelocalclubdetermlnedits tervlew.'.Robert Morris served
own merit rating throlll!h I~ as master of ceremonies 11nd
performance Md honte office Robert King, advillor of ·,·the
evaluation ol monthly acUvlty DeMolay Chapter, made gift
reports. Club members' efforts , presentations · to the four
in montllly meetings and candidates.
Jli'OI!rams, community servict
Besides Miss Kirig, other
events ilnd membership in- candidates were Brenda
creases were all rated by · Taylor, daughl4:rnof Mr. and
Modern Woodmen Home Office Mrs. Paul Taylor, Pomeroy,
personnel.
,
who was runnerup': Mlllsa
Mrs. Hart; the local club's Rizer, daughter of Mr. and
junior director, earned special Mrs. Franklin Rizer, Pomeroy,
recognition from Modern . and Elizabeth Blaettnar,
Woodmen for the rating. d!lughter of Mr. !lftd Mrs. John
~ge Hart, Pomeroy, the
William Blaettnar of Pomeroy.
club's aasilltant junior director,
Judging f!ie contestants were
was also honorl!ll.
Mrs. Lois · McElhinny, Mid·
The local club received a dleport; Mrs. Hild!l Quickel,
special citation ribbon Cheshire;
Lt.
Ernest
denoting its status as a merit . Wiggies~orth , Gallipolis, and
club for its decorative axe Kenneth Grover, near Chester,
tro]lhy.
a photographer. The decision
·
of~ judges counted 76 pet. of
the total vote with the DeMolay
members' vote counting for 25

and
wasShe
homecoming
queen
last faiL
is active In school
and church affairs.
Sl\e received a $50 savings
. bond contributed by the Racine
Home-National Bank, a tiara
and roses. The other contestsnts received, $25 savings
'bonds contributed by the
Citizens' National Bank of
Middleport: The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy, and the
Pomeroy National Bank.
· Each contestant also received a Rift certificate.
Providing these were the New
York Clothing ~ouse, lola's,

Social
Calendar
MONDAY
MEIGS County Gardeil Clubs.
Auoelatlon, 7:30 p.m.
E~tary

School.

' TUESDAY
MEIGS TEMPLE 1&amp;3,
Pythlan Slatln, Tueaday ~t
Amerlcln IAglon hall, Mldalijx;rt, lnalallallon ol ofllcers
by Mrs. Martha Cbildl.
Memben to take tither cookitl
cr lllldwlcbeiJ All membtrl

·

1971. Modern Woodmen of
·America Is a Fraternal In-

MIDDLI;PORT Lodge. 363,
F&amp;AM, ·regular sesalon, 7:30
p.in. ,'rueaday at temple. All ·
Master Masons Invited.
YOUtH WEEK.,observance
at 1lanville We.leyan Cluch.
Youth In charge of' Sonday
HELPS FATHER
IChool and prayer meeling,
Mrs. Wilbur · l!alley,
Wednead!ly. Youllt meeting at Pomeroy, has been In
paraonsge Thursday evening. Columbus. the past wee~
relreshmenh. Weekend s*i~Ung In the csre of her 91revival Feb. I, 7, I with Bar· year~ld fsther, a patient at
bara
Hiuenbotham, · Grant H01pltal,
Colum.bua, 17-year·ol4
evanceiiJt, apeall:lnc. · PubUc

iny)ted.
~

WEDNE8DAY
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, I p.m. Wadnladay II the
bene ol Mrs. Dwilbl WaUac:t.
Mn. Arthur Strnll·to nvlew

'"nni Wblte Dawn." Member~
Ill 1D111t1' toO caU with I
eGIIUllllll on the hook.

omcERS ELECI'ED

'

plsnters located at the corner firemen who placed the 1trilip
of Main-Salem St. had been of colored ligllts ' along the
demolished by an automobile . streets, and homeowners who
Mrs. · Larry Edwards and participated in the, ~tell!.
Mrs. James Carpenter conMrs. Parker used a poem,
dueled the January garden "Lessons from Flowers," for
therapy session with the devotions . Members named
special education class at Several garden pests for roD
Rutland Elementary School, . call. The club voted to ,send JZ
when..-..wltchitS and Valentines to the Ohio Roadside and Civic .
were made,
Beautificatlon and $5 to the
Mrs. Homer Parker reported Wahkeena Fund for uplleep of
on .her attendance of the open th~ nature preserv~ near
meeting of the Wildwood Lancaster.
Garden Club at the Ohio Power
A card will be sent to Larry
Co. in Pomeroy Wednesday Morrison, asailltant superlnnight when· Mrs. Horace Karr tendent of the Meigs Local
of the Chester Garden Club Schools, who Is hoSpitalized in
showed a movie and slides she COlumbus.
hsd taken at local fiower shows
The next meeting will be held
at Royal Oak Park showing Feb. 23 at 7:30p.m. at the home
wild fiowers and winter scenes. of Mrs. Birchfield. She wiD
" Here's . My Heart," give the devotions .and March
arrangements suitable for gardening lips. Mrs. Bolin will
Valentine's Day, were brought demonstrate "Making Dried
by members for judging. Mrs. Arrangements" and moderate
William Willford won a blue a question and a1181!1'er period
ribbon and Mrs. Tom Stewart a on the subject. Members are to
red ribbon. Judges were Mrs. tske dried materials for roD
Wolle and Mrs. Bolin.
call, and "Snow Fall"
The traveling prize donated arrangements featuring white
by Mrs. Bolin lj'as won by Mrs. wiD ·be judged.
Richerd Fetty and the door
prize was awarded to Mrs.
Willford. Mrs. Howard BirchA THOiJGil1' i
field distributed copies of the
revised constitution and by·FOR TODAY
laws of the club. It was noted
Don ' I fight with the:
that the club will have the
pillow,
bul lay down your il
Msrch "Garden Club on the
head, and kick every il
Air" program over WMPO . worry out of the bed.
il'
~dio, Middleport, March 6,
-- E. V. Cooke :
with Mrs . Richard Fetty, :
chsinnan.
/(UJctc
,
Mrs. Bolin presented gardening tips for February. She
lfs Quick! Easy
said now is .the lime to order •
new seed catalogs, make plans
for your gardens and order
needed seeds, fertilizers, etc:;
paper white narcissus bulbs
·i!
. may be planted In pebbles,
Fridays Only
'il
sand or vermiculite and ·i&lt; The·Orive-hl:wlndow il
!lmaryilis bulbs with one third
isOpen
~·
· ofbulb above soil level; live i&lt;
9 A.M. to 7 ·P.M.
.i l
evergreen Christmas trees il
I Continuously)
il
should be set out as soon as
Other Binlclng Hours 9
possible: it is important to
il
and
s. lq 7• •• us.. l on
keep bird feeders and racks • Fridays.
'
filled with grain, seeds, suet
cakes and to provide a water
supply for 'them during
freezing westher, and to send
power mowers and garden
i1
POMEROY, ·OI;IIO
•
tractors for overhaul,
i1
Member
FDIC
·
A vote of thanks was ex- il · Me~~;~btr Federal ·
tended to the merchants who
.Resei&lt;ve System
helPed d,efray eXP!I{'M~ of the
Christmas lightiJlg'"ton!est, the
;"1
~J 11 mtn
~

-

Mrs. Gomer Phillips in her
letter thanked members for the
18 gifts sent to the Gallipolis
State Institute at Christmas for
members of the Nature 's
Garden Club. slle also sent a
copy of the .club's progress
report in therapy in Region 11.
Thank you notes were read
from several residents for
decorated Christmas fruit
plates given them.
The county meeting tonight
at the Pomeroy Elementary
School will be attended by
several members. Mrs. Bolin,
Region 11 director, and Mrs.
Carpenter, Meigs County
garden thefapy chairman, will
be assisting with this.
Personal items for Gallipolis
State Institute male patients
whose cottage and belongings
were destroyed by fire this
month were brought to the
meeting by members. They
will be taken to the county
meeUng and turned over to
Mrs. Robert Kuhn, county
contact chairman, who Is
heading the drive for garden
clubs of the countv.
·:The"club p.urch~sru!"'a liook,
"Making Things &lt;irow Outdoors" as an addition to the
club's library, It also agre" to
lllake 12 dinner tsbie lioral
pieces for use at the District 25
tneeting of the Eastern Star
this Thursday. Mrs. Wolfe,
chainnan of the civic committee, led a discussion on a
project for this yesr. Mrs.
Parker announced thst 1,00(!
seed packets will be furnillhed
by ' the Rutland Branch,
Pomeroy National Bank for

i
t
:

it

.,RIVE-IN
BANKING

t
t
t

I~ 3;~

£ FARMERS BANK

$35;00' l)own"Belan~e · on

1

! ..
****'**'*~·~···~
Love to Eat?

.

..

. DRIVE-IN
FOR
FAST SERVICE
AND

use in this. .
The bank W1U iliso be conI I !acted in regard to landscaping
plans for.the new hsnk building
Babr Clothier, and Chapman being burl! on Salem St.
Shoes. PresenUng the bonds
It was noted thst one of the
and gift certificates was King., shrubs placed in the complete
DeMolay escorts for the girls landscaping of Ruiland
were Paul Darnell, Jr., Bill Elementary School !sst year
Quickel, John Ksuff and Tim has been damaged, and that

GOOD FOOD

McCLURE'S

.!==================::

1!Ki~·n~.--------~
··o:ne~o:f~the~l~a~rg;::e~c:eme::n~t~str:ee~t

· Middleport,

992-5248

4th &amp; Locust

QUALITY FACTORY FINISHED

GP

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAM~ bAY
SE~VICE

29

In At 9-0ut At 5

PRICES
START FROM

Use OUr·Free Parking Lot '

Robinsoo's Qeaners
l16 E. 2nct, Pomeroy

~OMEROY

·CEMENT BLOCK.CO.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

'FURNITURE
w. vi.

i

·£and SAVINGS 00. ~

· NEW~ .

FURNITURE
.' '349.95 '

'

t--·~*'!*********1
l
.t

~ompete .

3 ROOMS

Convenient
The elecUon of several of.
:rerms.,
' ,,
ncers by the Council of. Tr:inlty
Church wu ratified by the
CODiftplion SUI1day morning.
New deacon iJ Cheater Knight
"lib Mrs. Ray Riggs as 1
deaconess, and the elders are 'i ·Mason,
Joe Struble and Marvin l!urt. '
" ·

Snowden; ' Mrs . William
Willford, Mrs. Parker and Mrs.
Tom Stewart are in chsrge of
this work. At least 10 members
are required to fonn a new club
and ln~resled persons in the
three communities are invited
to contact a member of the
Rullsnd Friendly Gardeners.
Named to make libra!
arrangements for the Rutland
branch of the Pomeroy
National Bank were Mrs.
James Carpenter and Mrs.
Birchfield, During January
arrangements were provided
for the Salem Center PTA by
Mrs. William Willford ; the
Rutland Post Office by Mrs.
Parker and Mrs. James
Carpepter; and to the Rutland
bank by Mrs. Willford, Mrs.
Parker and Mrs. Larry Edwards.
CONTESl' NOTED
A letter was read from Mrs.
Naomi Shephard, OAGC officer, regarding the outstanding garden club contest.
She noted that entries for this
year must Include the work of a
club over a three year period
with the report due on July 15.
In the future only the work of
two years will be required to

DeM0 la'Jr11Names,swee thea¥t
Brenda Taylor, runner-up, and BID Quickel, and Uz Blaet~sr and Tim King.

.
pet.
Miss King, who is the first
sweethe~rt to be chosen by the
DeMolay Chapter since its
organization, is head majorette
of the Meigs High School Band

7 b T1 T' · M
C,u
' yy tns .en't Rank

Mrs. George Hart, Pomeroy,
.Junior Director of Modern
Woodmen Junior servtct Club
11335, )Jiddieport, has led the
group to Merit Club ststus for

crlHIESi

IN
-These four members of Job's Daughters competed for the title of
Sweeihesrt 'of the Meigs County DeMolay Chapter Saturday night. Shown with their escorts
from the chapter sre Mllisa Rizer, John Ksufl; Sherry King, winner, and Paul DarneU, Jr:;

.
Miss Sherry King, d!lughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Willl!lffi King,
Bredbury. was named the first
sweetheart of the Meigs Cqunty
DeMolay Chapter at the
Middleport Masonic Temple

1

qed ·to anena.

In Big Bend Area

4 88

l. l g h t

. If your plants have been growing outdoors, bring them In

Prmeroy

CARPETING

•

1

they

~)!;!~~

~·

Centra! State University at
Kentucky Stale
Manchester at Defiance
Wash. &amp; Jeff. at John Carroll
Wilbertorce at Ohio Dominican
Wright State at Ohio Northern
Rio Grande at Georgetown

B~ugpt

Supreme Court Justice
Robert E. Leach announced
today he will he a candidate to
retain the office to which he
was appointed in September
1970. JusUce Leach, before he
was appointed to the Supreme
CALL
Court of Ohio, had been a Tenth
District Court ·of Appeals
-P.J.
t.'
:.)
."'I ·:·
·;; ' :
Judge for Ilk yea(S. "'··!lad
r~-r· 1-,aa1fm.utl r. 11t !.,.
PARENTS VISIT
307 Spring Ave., ~...., 1'·
also Served as judge ot, the
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Clsrence
W
.
Franklin County Com"mon
Pleas Court from 1954 to 1968. Kuhn, Minerai City, were
He ,was the Adjunct Saturday evening guests of
Professor of Law, Capital their son and daughter-In-law, HAfl(lfiiWIDl liFl lfi~E COM,Aff
University from 1965 to 1970; the Rev. and Mrs. Robert Kuhn
faculty advisor, National and family, Pomeroy.
College of State Trial Judges,
University of Nevada from 1966
to 1968; and Appellate Judges
COnference, Louisiana State
· University in 1971, and
'HIGHLIGHTS
President of the Ohio COmmon
.w ith Paul Crabtree ·
Pleas Judges Association In
CALL POINTVtEW: 992 - 2505
1967.
A graduate of Ohio State
Th~ early evening hours
University with a Juris Doctor
But If basketball Is nOt
should
be pleasant ones for your bag. you tan catcH
degree Cum Laude in 1935, he
!~e l!tlle people tonight. regular
network
fare
served as the first editpr of the
Hodgepodge Lodge" starts (" Here' s Lucy," "Doris
showing up each weeknight Day ," and "Sonny and
Ohio State University Law
at
5:30 on Ch. tl. It's tiahl Cher") at their regular
Journal from 1934 to 1935.
fare
- but .surprisingly ljmes on Ch. 10.
Justice Leach served In Ute
lnlormatlve, Then there's
+++
United .States Ar,my during
another classic return of
MOVIES:
"In Old
Kukla, Fran and Ollie at 6 Chicago," Tyrone Power, ~
World War II, including
p.m, !Another run of KF&amp;O p.m. , and ''Gunman's
overseas service in Gennany
can be seen Friday at 6 p.m., Walk," Van Heflin, 11 :30
with the Counter lnteiUgence
Ch. 111 .
p.m., both Ch. 10.
Corps.
+++
+++
George Plimpton, the jet
T,U E S DAY :
Ph II
set's Walter Mi1ty, relives Donahue's Cincinnati-based
anolher Improbable first- show is catching on and now
person adventure as he Sets appears on Ch, 8, at 10 a.m.
SENIOR'S TITLE
out
as a wild-game You can catch other versions
ST. l'AUL, Minn. (UPI) photographer assigned to at 10: 30 a.m., Ch. 4, or 9
Barth Levy of Colorado
"shoo1" the world's largest a.m., Ch. 7.
elephant In Africa. To see
. Springs, Colo., captured the
+++.
how he fared , tune in Ch. 6 at
ALSO TUESDAY: Can a
Senior Men's title Sunday in
8 p.m.
big rough linebacker for tlie
the 73rd annual National Speed
+++
Ci ncinnati Bengajs make II
Skating outdoor chamTonight, Ch. 8 brings In a as a concert pianist and
good
basketbatl game _ composer? Yes! Mike Reid
pionships. Levy scored in six of
Maryland
vs. North Carolina shows why on Bob Braun's
the !even events in his divillion,
State, at 9 p.m. .
· 50.50 Club today. Noon, Ch. 4.
winning three of them.

L
,
o d g

Planned Parenthood

.

'

118, Ohio Wesleyan dO wiled
Geneva (Pa.) 118-79, Urbina
ran :over Ohio Nortllern llC-85,
John Carroll dumped 'I'IIiel&amp;7·
53 ABhlaixl beat Point Park .
(Pa.) 79-64·, Steubenville edged
St. Vincent's (Pa.) 7~ 75 •
Denison nipPed Heidelberg 7472, Eastern t&gt;fichig81) ~
Central; State I09IS, Rio
Grande downed Ohio ' Doml•
nicin 118-79, Malone o~l'ejl
lliusklngum 85?0', Chicago
thumped' Oberlin ~. and
H72-ano.ver (Ind.) got by ll~·n,
71

Uniforms To be

College
Standings._

~~:r~r
~ ~
~
Wittenberg
4 1 7 7
Otterbein
3 2 10 5
~:~.w;~\Tyan : ~ ~ ;
Muskingum
4 3 8 6
Oberlin '
2 3 6 7
Marietta
2 3 4 10
Mount Union
2 5 7 8
Kenyon
2 5 5 11
Den1son
2
5 4 8
Heidelberg
0 6 0 12
Big Ten
League Overall
W L W L
Michigan
5 1 10 6
Minneso1a
5 1 11. 4
Ohio Slate
4 1 12
3
Purdue
2 1 8 6
Wisconsin
2 2 9 5
Michigan St.
2 3 8 6
1 2 9 3
Illinois

~win

'

Club J!)ebates Pesticides '

'

'
'

o. ·

�p

~

4'
•

'

..

~

...

~·

...

'"

..

,

'I

r . - -·

I

..#

•

•'

' '•
.

I .

'

C- The Dilly Sentinel, MldcDeport-Pomeroy, o.. Jan. 31, 1972

· ~arden

•
'
)

.

By

Ulllt~ Preu IDlematloul

There

are

enough
challengers breathing down
the neck of Toledo Coach Bob
Nichols to keep him warm even
• in the sub-uro weather of
recent d!lys.
After the first three g!lffies of
the Mid-American Conference
basketball race, it looked like a
two.team battle between
Nichols' Rockets and the
Bobcats of Ohio University.
After Saturday's action,
however ,there are at least four
teams with definite title hopes
still burning brightly and Wes-

-

Kent got its best overall perfonnance of the year from Ruben Vance, the defending conterence scoring champion, as
he scored 27 points. HiS running male !II guard, Bob
McEvoy, chipped In with 20 as
· the Flashes upped their oversU
mark to HI.
•
Ohio University, which is
now l-6on the road, feU to 7~
overall and lost its second
straight conference contest.
Kent, which led all the way
after taking a 13-12 margin
with 12:31 remaining, didn't
put the game out of reach unUI

E:E.Ch~g~U:~ ~~ea::. ~~~~r~~~~:i~s;
Kent State, with its 88-74viclory over Ohio University,tied
Tom Corde scored 18 points
the Bobcats and defending to lead Ohio University and
ch!lmplon Miami at 3-2 for Denny Rusch contributed 17.
second place In the conference,
Broncos CUp Faleou
trailing Toledo at 4-1.
Western Michigan, mean-

Gomez, Harridge And
Youngs Are Honored
NEW YORK (UPI)-Vernon
(Lefty) Gomez, former New
York Yankee pitcher whose wit
was as quick as hill fast bsU,
was voted into basebsU's llall
of Fame Sunday along with exAmerican League president
Will Harrldga and Ross
Youngs, 1111 outfielder with the
New York Glanill from 1917
through 1928.
The tJiee were voted Into the
lllrillt by a special Old Timers
COmmittee which Is empowered by the Baseball
Writers Association of
America to cmsider the meri\5
·ol playen 1111d executives who
retired more than 20years ago.

Rock-Hill Jolts
Vikin•gs, 7:6•67
•·

,
Rock Hill's Redmen paced
by the hot shooting of Jack
Deer defeated the Symmes
Valley Viki~gs Satursay night,
76-67 in a non-league encounter
on the winners' hardwood.
Deer dumped In 22 points in
pacing the Redmen to their
fifth victory of the year. Big
Jim Stewart, 6-6 senior center,
has 16 points.
Coach Wayne White's
Vikings were led by Jack
Taylor's 16 points. Others in
double figures were Dsnny
Wilson and Phil Robinson with
14 points each and Jaye Myers
with II markers. The Vikings
led 29-25 at the hslf but fell
behind 48-40 going Into the final
eight minutes of acUon.
Rock Hill sank 31 of 62 field

Master Wit
One of the sharpest men ever
to throw a quip, Gomez was as
famous for his hwnor as for his
pitching skills and at 61is sliD a
popular after-dinner speaker In
his role as an executive with
Babe Ruth League BasebsU.
Asked once to evaluate a
rookie who was going grest
guns, Gomez replied, ''be's
hitting with one foot in the
American Association." On
another occasion he held up a
g!lme to stsnd on ihe mound
and watch an airplane Oy over
Yankee Stadium. And on still
another occasion, he was asked
to explain why be slumped
011 Aq. 7
from :!II victories in one season
They wUI be formally induct- to 13 in the next.
"They told me to add 15
ed Into the Hall on Aug. 7 along
with Sandy Koufax, Yogi Berra pounds to my weight (Uld I'd
GREENVILLE, Tex. (UP!)
and Early Wynn, who recently make 'em forget Lefty Grove," - Duane Thomas, the moody
were elected In bsUoting by 11). he replied. "I added the 15 running bsck who seven months
ye!lr members of the BBWAA. pounds and almost made 'em ago said the Dallas Cowboys
Atotal oliiO players has been forget Lefty Gomez."
could not win the Super Bowl
elected to the l!brlne, including
without him, was slopped by
49 by the BBWAA and 61 by the
pollee on a north Teras
ad Timers group.
highway Sunday and taken to
Gomez, a lean leftollander
jail on a charge of possession of
from Rodeo, Calif., was a fourmarijuana.
roiV'V • WI;i~e., Pinl!~ •'!.h.o
MEE1'1N6DELAYED
,Five hours af!er .hill arrest,
compiled a .189-102 record for. .. The stiltetl · meeting of Thomas and hill brother Bur~'Y'an~ and Washington Evangeline Chapter, Order of trand, also charged with drug
Senators from 1931 through the Eastern Star, hss been possession, were out of jail on
1943. He led the American postponed from Thursday $5,000 bond each.
League In strikeouts three night to Feb. 10, due to a
Still Mum
times and in. earned run district school of instruction to
But as is hill custom, Thomas
average twice and ltlll holds bepeldatMeigsHighSchool. A ha,d nothing to say about the
the World Series record of six business meeting for the incident to the press, and
victories without a lou. In 1934, - District 25 School of Instruction Cowboy officials were just as
. lie achieved a rare pitchers' will begin at 4 p. m. A dinner silent.
triple crown by leading the will be served at 5:30 p.m.'and
The incident occurred 12
league in victories (~ re- the school will start at 7 p. m. miles west of Greenville, a
cord), percentage (.839) and All OES members are Invited town of less than 30,000 persons
esmed run average (2.33).
to attend.
50 miles northeast of Dallas.
Thomas, 24, and his brother,
21, were ln a 1972 PonUac
heading toward Dallas on

Every thild ·should
be a welcome
addition. Not an
accidental burden.

And that takes planning.
Which is what we're
all about.

for good at ~On a jumper by
· steeJe with 11;48 remaining.
Mlaml, after leading by 15
points early in the first ·half,
had.to come !1'(1111 behind in the
final 10 minutes to down Ball
State.
Sophomore guard Phil
Lumpkin led the Redskin$ with
15 points and Darrel Qunlap
andTimMeyer13eachtopace
them to their eighth win 1n u
games overall. Meyer hit 8
pair of free llrows In the cl01ing seconds to put the game out
of the Cardinsls' reaCh ,

eon-

while In the ohly other
terence game handed Bowling
Green a 9243 lou at
Killamazoo, Mich.
The Bt'on001, now ~ in amfereace play, bad five players
in double figures, paced by
sophomore center Mike Steele
of Toledo with 26,.;.. ·
Bowling Green, in dr9PPing
ita ninth game in a row and
fifth straight In the Mid-Am;
was led by Dalynn Badenhop
with 19 points an.d l.e Henson
with 16. Western led only 49-39
at halftime and took the lead

goal attempts for a hot 50 pet.
SV hit 29 of 77 for 37 pet, The
visitors held a 46-45 rebouridlng
edge, Keith Roach, 6-0 senior
center, grabbed 16 for the
Vikings, Stewart had 1.6 for the

Redm!m.
liockHillmadeitacomplete
sweep by takin• the reserve
"
game, 55-43. Symmes Valley
now 9-4 on the year travels to
Southwestern Saiurday night.
SYMMES VALLEY 167) Wilson, 7-0-14 ; Taylor, 5-6-16;
Robinson, 6-2-14; Roach, ~ ;
Myers, 4-.'1-11; WlUis, ~;
TOTALS 28-11-11.
ROCK HILL 1761 -Stewart,
8-0-16; Steed, 5-2-12; McFann,
4-3-11; Shug, 4+14; Deer, 11).222 · Watts 1).1-1 TOTALS 31-14·
'
'
·
78.

Dallas Ace Faces

Marijuana Charge

THIS WEEK'S
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
United Press International
Monday
Dayton at Niagara
Cincinnati at William &amp; Mary
Cleveland Stale at Bowling

Green

Tuesdoy
Iowa at Ohio Stale
VMI at Ohio University
Akron at Batdwtn-Wallace
Denison at Kenyon
Otterbein at Heidelberg
Wooster at Obertln
Wittenberg at Ohio Wesleyan
Cedarville at Wllbertorce
Central Stale at Shaw
Malone at Urbana
Berea at Rio Grande
Western New England al
Steubenville
Centre at Wilmington
Wednesday
Toledo at Miami
Wisconsin (Milwaukeel at
Xavill!lr

Findtay at Northern. Kentucky
Capita at Marietta
Hiram at Mount Union
Ashland at St. Vincent
Bluffton at Ohio f'lorthern
Allegheny at Case Western
Reserve

Walsh at Youngstown Stale
Thursday
Cleveland Slate at Marshall
Cedarville at Urbana
Marian at Case Western
Reserve

'

At Dayton, the Flyers bad all
they could handle In downing

Wittenberg 44-42fur their ninth
win in 16 game!i.
Wittenberg, of the Ohio Conference, pulled out to a 19-11
lead with 4:21 to go in the half,
but the Flyers, paced by Donaid Slnith with 12 points,
narrowed the gap to 23-19 by
lntennission.
o.yton moved ahead 34-33
with 1::!11 reinaining and the Tigers,now 1·7trailed the rest of
the way. Pat Beasley's 16
.points was high for Wittenberg.

Bearealll Wla Ea1Uy
Cincinnati, led by guard
Olive Johnson's 22 points,
picked op its ninth win in 16
games with an liN) decision
over Richmond.
! ,·
The Bearcats piilled away
from RicbmOnd late in the first
half and Jed by 30 points in th~
second 20rrilnutes. Lloyd Batts
chipped in with 17 points for
Cincinnati and Jesse Jemison
add~ 16.
, In Ol!io Conference J181Des,
seventh-ranked Capital ran its
. record to 1~ overall and 6-0 in

the conference with a

over Mount Union. Wooster
also stayed unbeaten in OC
play with a M-74 wjn ,over Ken-

yo~krori, the natidn•s lOth
ranked college divillion te!lffi,
edged Yoimgstown State, rated
No.1!, 54-63, the second win for
the Zips over Youngstown thiS
season. Akron is 15-2, the
Pl!nquins 14-.'1.
In olhel: g!lmes, Baldwih·
WsUace downed Marietts 00.
76, Otterbein stopped Hiram 8911, Findlay took Cedarville Ill).
' ·
'
·

New uniforms for the fifth
and sixth grade cheerleaders
at· · ' the
' Harrisonvilie
~ementary School. will be
provided by .the Harrisonville
PI'O.
.
'
MeeUng In special 8ession
rec~nUy, the PI'O voted to

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL RECORDS
By United Press ln!ernational .
Mid-American Conference ·
League Overall
W L W L

Mrs•.Rayhum ,

,Toledo
4 1 12 3
Ohio Unlv,
3 2 7 s
M•aml
3 2 8 7
Kent State
3 2 4 11
W. Michigan
2 3 5 10
Bowlint;r:c~nte~enJe 2 12
League Overall
WL w L

Of Mason Dies

:;

Iowa

1

3

7

7

Interstate 30 shortly after noon Northwestern
I 5 3 11
0 4 . 8 6
Sunday when they were slopped Indiana
Others
by Hunt County deputy sheriff
WL
Norman Gray and highway Defiance
:~ ~
Urbana
patrolman W. E. Jeter.
· Akron
15 2
Sniffed Pol
Youngstown St.
14 3
Gray said he asked Thomas Ashland
1
~
for some idenUfication, not Case West. Reserve
10 7
Findlay
knowi~g at the t!me whom he Hiram
8 6
was speaking to. While Thomas Cincinnati
9 7
wa.a reaching for his driver's Wilmington
~ ~
Northern
Uctilse, Gray said, be smelled Ohio
Bluffton
9 8
the odor of burning marijuana. Rio Grande
~· :
Gray tOld county judge Gale Xavier
7 9
Carden he found one marijuana Steubenville
Malone ·
7 11
cigarette in the car, along with John Carroll
1(
enough marijuana to fill two Cleveland State
s 10
Ohio Dominican
matchboxes.
Central State
4 12
Thomas was in jail by shortly Cedarville
~
after I p.m., and five hours Walsh
lster bond was posted by Larry
Green, a Greenville attorney.
In Dallas club officials
quickly conferred by telephone,
and general manager Tex
Schramm summed up the
conference with a brief "no Holly HoWs Martin, 81, of'
146 State St., Athens, forcomment."
merly of Middleport, died
.
Sunday morning at the
O'l!leness Memoria!' Hospital
In Athens.
·
Mr. Martin was employed as
an engineer by the New York
Central Railroad 53 years. He
,
was a member of Middleport
Coach Paul Dillon's Hannan Masonic Lodge 363• F&amp;AM,
Scottish Rite, Columbus, and
Trace Wildcats snapped a Aladdin Shrine Temple'
three game losing streak Columbus.
Saturday night by routing the
He was born July 6, l890, the
Hannan Wildcats, 64-34. The son of the late Edward and
win pushed Hannan Trace's
record to 5-7 in aU g!lffies and 3- Sarah Rayburn Martin at
7 in the sv AC.
Buffalo, W. Va. Besides hill
Big Mike Caldwell pumped In parents, he was preceded In
21 points In pacing the Wildcat death by three brothers.
attack. Don Wells, 6_4 Surviving are a .d!lughter,
sophomore forward, added 13 Miss Georgia C. Martin, Point
points and Keith Swain, 1&gt;-IO Pleasant: three brothers,
senior guard, canned 11 points. Mack, Fred and Charles, and a
HoOey and Smith led the losers sister' Mrs. Lucy Cain, sU of
with 12 points each. Hannan Buffalo, and several nieces and
Trace led 16-5 at the first nephews.
period, 3:t-14 at the hslf and 49Funetal services wiD be
23 moving into the final sbmza. · conducted at 2p.m. Wednesday
The Wildcats sank 27 of 85 at the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
field goal attempts and 10 of 17 Home with the Rev. Father
foul shots. Hannan hit only 14 of William Black officiating,
58 field goal attempts and six of Burial wiD ·be In Beech Grove
15 free 'throws. Hannan Trace Cemetery, Pomeroy. Friends
· had 58 rebounds with Caldwell may call at the funeral home
snaring 23.
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
TUesday. Masonic rites wiD be
Hannan Trace also captured conducted at the funeral honte
the reserve game by for(elt. by the Middleport Masonic·
The Wildcats travel to Kyger
e at 7,30 p.m. 'Iiiesday.
' Creek 'Iiiesday night.

!

!

g

Holly Martin
Died Sunday

•
H •T W
. mner
On Saturday

Waynesburg at Malone
Steubenville at West Liberty
. Fridoy
Rochester at Ohio Wesleyan
Saturday
Wisconsin at Ohio Stale
Miami at Bowling Green
Hllllllan, W. Va. (34) Norlhern Illinois at Kent State
Western Michigan at Ohio Holley, 4-4-12: Barnell, 1-0-2;
University
Edmunda, 1-0-2; Smith, 5-2-12: , McLAIN SIGNS
Toledo at Cincinnati
Dayton al Xavier
HiD, 1-0-2; and Black, Z-0-4,
.ARLINGTON, Tex. (UP!)_
Youngstown Stale at Atllance Totals lf-4-34.
Denny McLain, who had a 11).22
(Pa.)
Hannan
Trace
(
84)
Swain,
record
fOr the Washington
Central Michigan at Akron
B.oldwln.WatlaC$ at Oberlin
4-3-11 ; Caldwell, 10' 1-21; 5enstors after being obtstnetl
Urbana at Capital
L~sher, 3-3-9; Our&amp;, 3-2-8; from ~~~it !sst year, has
Rochester at Denison
Wells, IH-13; Shafer; 1-0-2. signed hill 1972 contract with
Kenyon at Heidelberg
Total•
27-10-64. ,
the American League club
Otterbein at Marietta
Mount Union at Wittenberg
By Quarters:
which now operate• as the
Musklngum at Wooster ,
Hannan
5 14 23 34 Texas "···-.,...rs. Me Lain llgned
Cleveland Slate at Ashland
Hannan Trace
Bluffton at Malone
Case Wester·n Reserve at . .--'!'!'""'!'!1!16•3211!1491!6411!11!11for an eatilnlted IID,OI!O.

JUSTICE LEACH
,

L
h
e
eac
JU dg
.
·
Asking for
Election

MASON - Mrs. Juanita M.
Rayburn, 60, Mason, died
Saturday evening at the Holzer
Medical Center. Mrs. Rayburn,
who operated a convalescent
.home here, was born · at
Spencer, W. Va., Dec. 18, ISIJ.
She was the daughter of the
late Homer Blaine and Pauline
Casto Vance.
, SUIIvivlng are a son, Frank
Young, Jr., New Haven: two
daughters, Mrs. DotUe Van
Meter and Mrs. Agnes Roush,
both of Mason; 12 grandchildren; a sister, Mrs .
Johnnie Mae Stukey, Mason,
and a brother, Robert Vance,
of Spencer.
Funeral services will be at 11
a.m. Tuesday at the St. Joseph
Catholic Church with the Rev.
Father H. A. Ryan officiating.
Burial Will he In Kirkland
Memorial Gardens. Friends
may call at . the Foglesong
Funeral Home any time.
Rosary services will be con- ·
dueled at the funeral home at 7
tonight.

Children by choice.
. ·Not .chance.

For further information, write

Planned Parenthood, Box 431
Radio City Station, N.Y. 1001!1
Mftrtlsll\l contributed lor tile Publi t soGd In toopmtlon with
'fM AdftrtiSiftC Cou_nc:il IIMI tt l'! lnftrnlllonil l'ttWSPIDti,Adwtrli\inc [•Kill in\ ,

Hiram

-~!

C)tPn tv.-nvitle at Gannon

OPTOMETRIST

,

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT
('N THURS.) -f;AST COURT ST.,

purc])a~ the"ne.:V cheerlejider
outfits but not ' to buy new
uniforms for the fifth ·~adil :
bali team this year. ' .
,!'r&lt;lviding a sitting service ,
for children during the.meeting •
were Darlene l!arrett, Debbie ,
Nutter, Julie Gleem, Beverly '
Bishop and Brenda !lishQJl. ·
Ad!llts attending were 1 Mr~.
Betty Oliver, Mrs. Ruth .
Reeves, Mrs. Mary Ash; Mrs.
Judy Stime\Z; Mrs. Kathryn
Weaver, Mrs. Kevin COllins,
Mrs. Sally W~lch, Mrs. Am\
Barrett, Mrs. Carol Gl~ and
Mrs. Betty Bishop.

:~

'I~

Creen Thumb

A debate on organic gar- gardens in which pol~riS have always chan![ing anq man
dening venus pesUcides for been used, but to ·successful can
only
shift
the
inaecl conorol' highlighted a gardening lo general. Areas balance in hi!!Javor by using
•••
meeting of the Rutland discussed by the author and insecticides...
·
Friendly Gardeners ThurSday Included in Mrs. Williamson's · Mrs. Parker reported on the
. A wtekly fea!Ufe of Meip
night at the home of Mrs. Joe review, were composting and work of chemical msnufacCounty Gatden Club members.
Bolin.
•.
!J!ulchlng, the use of humus, turers .through research in
11
''
, .
· .'
Hamilton Tyler '~ . hook, companion plantings, treat- coming up with practical pest
·'·
"~ani.c Gardening · Without ment of plant diseases, en- controls. , She suggested
p, • ettia ~ ·
C'L
Poisons,"· served as 'the bssis couragement of beneficial combining natural control
· , OIPS
· .s Jl)r · very··,,nristtnas..
of a report presented by Mrs. ilisects and birds.
which Includes planting .
· II)' MRS. AARON KELTON
Howard Birchfield for Mrs. Bill
Location of a • plant was vsrielies and species resistant
' WladingTraUGardellOIIII
,.
',
Willtalnson who was'unable to discussed in the review, with to insects and diseases, and
..........las · ·are give.n annually as attend.' Mrs. Homer ' Parker Mrs. Williamson pOinting out r using approved chemicals
of .potted, ·~...,..
gifts to molhin, wives and sweethearts. Uo- gave a rebuttal to 1\lrs. that some plsnts lil\e to be next judiciously. '
lortunatmf,niOitoflhesebeautlfulplantsendupin. tbe.trashcan Willilimson's review, using as to each other, while others are
In her comments, Mrs.
her
.
topic,
"Insects,
Why
I'm
.offended
by
.
c
erta.
l
n
company.
·Parker
named aphids, the
after a tew wlleQ. I. lilY !~~~fortunately beea~ thli is a sheer
ute o1 1 tl
.
· for .pesticides." '
She 'recommended · Tyler 's European red spider mites.and
w
pel~ Y good plant miletiQI. '
In her report, .. Mrs . · book to aU gardeners, where thrips as the most troublesome
The polnaettiaa (EuP~orbla pulcherrlma) came to us from ' , Williamson. pointed out that , tl)ey have tried organic gar- insects and gave suggestions
Mexico where l!JeY are 1lled chlel)y as .found!llioil plantingS. milCh w~ich is precious, even 'denlng arid are familiar with' on cpntroi.
They are also found In the frost4reeaectlolis of our country such , irreplsceable, in milo's en- the principles and rew~rds, or
Slle reported · that sa&lt;alled,
88 the southern Up of F1orlda. 'l1H!re they grow Into huge bushes
vironmeqt has been destroyed have never explore!! the "organically growti" fruits and
llllothered with a mullltu~ ol heads Of pink, glistening white, or · by man Himself. She said that subject. '
'·
vegetables cosi 50 to 100 pet.
the more popular IC8rlet' ted, depending on variety.
the ,)lome gardener - not
· REBUTI'AL MADE .
more than superior comIf YOU recelvecra RCJinaettla for Cllrlltm8s, and would like to · usually thought of 'as a
In her rebuttal, Mrs. Parker mercia! produ~ts. She further
tryyourhandatpropapting,plliceitlna)Varmroomaway from despoiler - has contributed to said tl)at "organic gardening said that commercially grown
drafts to keep It weD ant! haWY· "_ '
· this destruction by using or biologic pest control would foods are equally nutritious
, In order to maintain h!lh bu,mldity, Rlsce the pot on an In- poisoqouil insecticides and be fine, if it worked, but most and safe and of superior
verted 8811C« in a (llln of water with the bottom I'! the pot just · chemical fertilize~s.
research shows thst tliis ·isn't quality. She spoke of the food
above the water level. ThuoU in the pot should be moderately . Tyler in hill book, she said, possible for the home gar- ,problems which would exist if
IIM!ill at all tmlu.
.•.· ~. ·
,,
recbmmends that "health be dener. She noted that the pesticide use was outlawed.
, · NtK,ibo!Qamonth,rouwtUnotieethit the lower leaves are reiltilred'to the home garden by ''natural balance" or "bsiance
Mrs. Harold Wolfe served as
gradullly llliniD8 yellow and falling 'olr, It li llllterln3 into a r~tutning io natliiai gardening of nature' ' condition would be moderator for a group
clormaDIItlile to rest before resuming growth in the~: At methods. " Mrs. Williamson one in whlch there is a' bsiance discussion on the topic with
this time, remo~ yourpla)lt to.the bssement, Ill" to ~'dry rOopi, note«! .that n11ture can benefit bet weer\' pests and their most of the members agreeing
and allow the aoU to dry out.
,
the gardener if he does not natural enemies, and this that it is necessary to use
. After all !he leaves bsve dried, snip off 2or 3 inches from the interfere with its complicated would be achieved only if soil pesticides for their own garlop iiem, then place In 8 dry spot where the temperature will and delicate balsnce by u,sing and climatic conditions are dening experiences.
remain arourid 1111 degreel. Since the ptants are asleep, so to
synthetic insecticides and · favorable for the slistanance of
The possibility of organizing
speak,
Med neither
or water. ·
fertilizers.
pests and Ute parasites and an adult garden club ln the
,
' Mr~. Williamson de$Cribed predators which • prey upon Langsville-Salem CenterAbc!ut tile middle of May take thla dormant plant outdoors, the book as .a practical guide them.
Danville area was .discussed
WB111J olf with a hoM, than groom, by removing aU of the dried not oidy to the creation and
and plans were . made for
leaves and by cutt!Dg back each stem to 4" dOrmant buds. Then main,tenance of natural garShe noted that this several members to begin
·sink the pots in the garden, ~ter lbem down :irell for they ·' dens ' and the restoration of condition is not-static, contacts. Mrs . Robert
require agreat deal ofmolature In the spr~. '
SOME GARDENERS clairilthey can root ll)eir cuttings in a
.• · ·
glasa of water On the kitchen sink. As soon as the tiny roota apo
·pear, plant them in pots of molal sand until a good root system
,
forma, then pot them In tiny clay or plastic pots, and put In shade
until growth resumes. Best growing tem~rature is ~bout 60 ·
degrees. Always shelter from hot afternoon .a,m. . .
·
FlnaUranspolanllrig tihouJd be into a 6-?" pot. Place four plants
In one large clay pot, However, if you wish, you can plant one oil'
two ill a pot. This llpal trslll))lanling,ls entirely up to you, and
should depend on the I!U of yGIII' window; ' , · '
'
Grower• often pinch beck the young rshoots after the fitSt
potting to encourage size branclllng. ~ creates ~ore but
~
.
smaller bracts.
•
··
1
Poinsettias like aoU that consillls largely of firbroos IO!IM,
such as one rich iii compost. Three parts of ~.IICh soil, qlixed with
~·
Clle part, In equal . proporll01111 of wellol'otled cow 'manure
\
(dehydratedcowmanuremaybellled),leafmoldand81lnd,
\
the
llhoo
the -'ulre 1
Oisture A
As
yourig
ts msture, Y .... . ess m.,
·
weekly waterliic, to which a 'dUuted llquld fertilizer has been
added, sbould b,e,glven·lfler the first potting and continued until
1he lncts are well'deft]~,'~nd the tiny yellow flowers begin
' ·"

Notes.

E

•

BEAT .
lltE HIGH

COST OF
BUYING A:

NEW CAR
Financt yOur new car wltlt

'Collonwldo.

.LOW COST INSURED
AUTO FINANCING
BY NATIONWIDE

~

'AUUY .

T

to open. '

Largest Supply In Stock
.
Shop l_ngels before you buy; Buy

today, mstalled tomorrow by Ingels'
expert craftsmen.

BU!fl
501 MYLON
I

SQUARE
YARD ·

Ingels Furniture
H2·263S

''

'

'

gra&lt;!ually bellirnlni about the middle of.September. For the first
few times bring them In only for the night, then increase the
length of ~ until they finally take ilp their permanent
reaidence on your IIUJIIlYwindoW sili.·Once indoors, keep them
out of drafil, keep the temperature around 60 degrees, and
maintain bl8h bllnildity.
Jfinaeclaca~~~etrouble,washthemolfwithwater.Neveruse

Insecticides, u they Injure the foliage.
WITH PROPER CARE, there ill no reuoh why your new
plantslhouldnot bloom 81 well for Chrtslma&amp; 81 the original one
did. By repeating tlila propagating proceu each May, you can
grow new plaDII each aprins to adorn YOU!' borne at Christmas
time. YoucallalaoglveBUchplantsasOniatmaaglfts.
If you were lucky enoUgh to receive a poinseltill for
'Chrtslma&amp; last year, try YOU!' hand at propagating. It ill not only
easy,andalotolfun,butcanbeveryrewarding.
·

surMct
with itsDlinois.
Home Saturday
night.
Office inSociety
Rock Island,
Miss King
and three ' other
Of the Society's more than members of Job's Daughters
300 Junior. Service Clubs competed for the sweetheart
throughout the nation, 103 title, each presenUng a tslent
attained Merit status lhill year. act and undergoing an inThelocalclubdetermlnedits tervlew.'.Robert Morris served
own merit rating throlll!h I~ as master of ceremonies 11nd
performance Md honte office Robert King, advillor of ·,·the
evaluation ol monthly acUvlty DeMolay Chapter, made gift
reports. Club members' efforts , presentations · to the four
in montllly meetings and candidates.
Jli'OI!rams, community servict
Besides Miss Kirig, other
events ilnd membership in- candidates were Brenda
creases were all rated by · Taylor, daughl4:rnof Mr. and
Modern Woodmen Home Office Mrs. Paul Taylor, Pomeroy,
personnel.
,
who was runnerup': Mlllsa
Mrs. Hart; the local club's Rizer, daughter of Mr. and
junior director, earned special Mrs. Franklin Rizer, Pomeroy,
recognition from Modern . and Elizabeth Blaettnar,
Woodmen for the rating. d!lughter of Mr. !lftd Mrs. John
~ge Hart, Pomeroy, the
William Blaettnar of Pomeroy.
club's aasilltant junior director,
Judging f!ie contestants were
was also honorl!ll.
Mrs. Lois · McElhinny, Mid·
The local club received a dleport; Mrs. Hild!l Quickel,
special citation ribbon Cheshire;
Lt.
Ernest
denoting its status as a merit . Wiggies~orth , Gallipolis, and
club for its decorative axe Kenneth Grover, near Chester,
tro]lhy.
a photographer. The decision
·
of~ judges counted 76 pet. of
the total vote with the DeMolay
members' vote counting for 25

and
wasShe
homecoming
queen
last faiL
is active In school
and church affairs.
Sl\e received a $50 savings
. bond contributed by the Racine
Home-National Bank, a tiara
and roses. The other contestsnts received, $25 savings
'bonds contributed by the
Citizens' National Bank of
Middleport: The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy, and the
Pomeroy National Bank.
· Each contestant also received a Rift certificate.
Providing these were the New
York Clothing ~ouse, lola's,

Social
Calendar
MONDAY
MEIGS County Gardeil Clubs.
Auoelatlon, 7:30 p.m.
E~tary

School.

' TUESDAY
MEIGS TEMPLE 1&amp;3,
Pythlan Slatln, Tueaday ~t
Amerlcln IAglon hall, Mldalijx;rt, lnalallallon ol ofllcers
by Mrs. Martha Cbildl.
Memben to take tither cookitl
cr lllldwlcbeiJ All membtrl

·

1971. Modern Woodmen of
·America Is a Fraternal In-

MIDDLI;PORT Lodge. 363,
F&amp;AM, ·regular sesalon, 7:30
p.in. ,'rueaday at temple. All ·
Master Masons Invited.
YOUtH WEEK.,observance
at 1lanville We.leyan Cluch.
Youth In charge of' Sonday
HELPS FATHER
IChool and prayer meeling,
Mrs. Wilbur · l!alley,
Wednead!ly. Youllt meeting at Pomeroy, has been In
paraonsge Thursday evening. Columbus. the past wee~
relreshmenh. Weekend s*i~Ung In the csre of her 91revival Feb. I, 7, I with Bar· year~ld fsther, a patient at
bara
Hiuenbotham, · Grant H01pltal,
Colum.bua, 17-year·ol4
evanceiiJt, apeall:lnc. · PubUc

iny)ted.
~

WEDNE8DAY
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, I p.m. Wadnladay II the
bene ol Mrs. Dwilbl WaUac:t.
Mn. Arthur Strnll·to nvlew

'"nni Wblte Dawn." Member~
Ill 1D111t1' toO caU with I
eGIIUllllll on the hook.

omcERS ELECI'ED

'

plsnters located at the corner firemen who placed the 1trilip
of Main-Salem St. had been of colored ligllts ' along the
demolished by an automobile . streets, and homeowners who
Mrs. · Larry Edwards and participated in the, ~tell!.
Mrs. James Carpenter conMrs. Parker used a poem,
dueled the January garden "Lessons from Flowers," for
therapy session with the devotions . Members named
special education class at Several garden pests for roD
Rutland Elementary School, . call. The club voted to ,send JZ
when..-..wltchitS and Valentines to the Ohio Roadside and Civic .
were made,
Beautificatlon and $5 to the
Mrs. Homer Parker reported Wahkeena Fund for uplleep of
on .her attendance of the open th~ nature preserv~ near
meeting of the Wildwood Lancaster.
Garden Club at the Ohio Power
A card will be sent to Larry
Co. in Pomeroy Wednesday Morrison, asailltant superlnnight when· Mrs. Horace Karr tendent of the Meigs Local
of the Chester Garden Club Schools, who Is hoSpitalized in
showed a movie and slides she COlumbus.
hsd taken at local fiower shows
The next meeting will be held
at Royal Oak Park showing Feb. 23 at 7:30p.m. at the home
wild fiowers and winter scenes. of Mrs. Birchfield. She wiD
" Here's . My Heart," give the devotions .and March
arrangements suitable for gardening lips. Mrs. Bolin will
Valentine's Day, were brought demonstrate "Making Dried
by members for judging. Mrs. Arrangements" and moderate
William Willford won a blue a question and a1181!1'er period
ribbon and Mrs. Tom Stewart a on the subject. Members are to
red ribbon. Judges were Mrs. tske dried materials for roD
Wolle and Mrs. Bolin.
call, and "Snow Fall"
The traveling prize donated arrangements featuring white
by Mrs. Bolin lj'as won by Mrs. wiD ·be judged.
Richerd Fetty and the door
prize was awarded to Mrs.
Willford. Mrs. Howard BirchA THOiJGil1' i
field distributed copies of the
revised constitution and by·FOR TODAY
laws of the club. It was noted
Don ' I fight with the:
that the club will have the
pillow,
bul lay down your il
Msrch "Garden Club on the
head, and kick every il
Air" program over WMPO . worry out of the bed.
il'
~dio, Middleport, March 6,
-- E. V. Cooke :
with Mrs . Richard Fetty, :
chsinnan.
/(UJctc
,
Mrs. Bolin presented gardening tips for February. She
lfs Quick! Easy
said now is .the lime to order •
new seed catalogs, make plans
for your gardens and order
needed seeds, fertilizers, etc:;
paper white narcissus bulbs
·i!
. may be planted In pebbles,
Fridays Only
'il
sand or vermiculite and ·i&lt; The·Orive-hl:wlndow il
!lmaryilis bulbs with one third
isOpen
~·
· ofbulb above soil level; live i&lt;
9 A.M. to 7 ·P.M.
.i l
evergreen Christmas trees il
I Continuously)
il
should be set out as soon as
Other Binlclng Hours 9
possible: it is important to
il
and
s. lq 7• •• us.. l on
keep bird feeders and racks • Fridays.
'
filled with grain, seeds, suet
cakes and to provide a water
supply for 'them during
freezing westher, and to send
power mowers and garden
i1
POMEROY, ·OI;IIO
•
tractors for overhaul,
i1
Member
FDIC
·
A vote of thanks was ex- il · Me~~;~btr Federal ·
tended to the merchants who
.Resei&lt;ve System
helPed d,efray eXP!I{'M~ of the
Christmas lightiJlg'"ton!est, the
;"1
~J 11 mtn
~

-

Mrs. Gomer Phillips in her
letter thanked members for the
18 gifts sent to the Gallipolis
State Institute at Christmas for
members of the Nature 's
Garden Club. slle also sent a
copy of the .club's progress
report in therapy in Region 11.
Thank you notes were read
from several residents for
decorated Christmas fruit
plates given them.
The county meeting tonight
at the Pomeroy Elementary
School will be attended by
several members. Mrs. Bolin,
Region 11 director, and Mrs.
Carpenter, Meigs County
garden thefapy chairman, will
be assisting with this.
Personal items for Gallipolis
State Institute male patients
whose cottage and belongings
were destroyed by fire this
month were brought to the
meeting by members. They
will be taken to the county
meeUng and turned over to
Mrs. Robert Kuhn, county
contact chairman, who Is
heading the drive for garden
clubs of the countv.
·:The"club p.urch~sru!"'a liook,
"Making Things &lt;irow Outdoors" as an addition to the
club's library, It also agre" to
lllake 12 dinner tsbie lioral
pieces for use at the District 25
tneeting of the Eastern Star
this Thursday. Mrs. Wolfe,
chainnan of the civic committee, led a discussion on a
project for this yesr. Mrs.
Parker announced thst 1,00(!
seed packets will be furnillhed
by ' the Rutland Branch,
Pomeroy National Bank for

i
t
:

it

.,RIVE-IN
BANKING

t
t
t

I~ 3;~

£ FARMERS BANK

$35;00' l)own"Belan~e · on

1

! ..
****'**'*~·~···~
Love to Eat?

.

..

. DRIVE-IN
FOR
FAST SERVICE
AND

use in this. .
The bank W1U iliso be conI I !acted in regard to landscaping
plans for.the new hsnk building
Babr Clothier, and Chapman being burl! on Salem St.
Shoes. PresenUng the bonds
It was noted thst one of the
and gift certificates was King., shrubs placed in the complete
DeMolay escorts for the girls landscaping of Ruiland
were Paul Darnell, Jr., Bill Elementary School !sst year
Quickel, John Ksuff and Tim has been damaged, and that

GOOD FOOD

McCLURE'S

.!==================::

1!Ki~·n~.--------~
··o:ne~o:f~the~l~a~rg;::e~c:eme::n~t~str:ee~t

· Middleport,

992-5248

4th &amp; Locust

QUALITY FACTORY FINISHED

GP

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAM~ bAY
SE~VICE

29

In At 9-0ut At 5

PRICES
START FROM

Use OUr·Free Parking Lot '

Robinsoo's Qeaners
l16 E. 2nct, Pomeroy

~OMEROY

·CEMENT BLOCK.CO.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

'FURNITURE
w. vi.

i

·£and SAVINGS 00. ~

· NEW~ .

FURNITURE
.' '349.95 '

'

t--·~*'!*********1
l
.t

~ompete .

3 ROOMS

Convenient
The elecUon of several of.
:rerms.,
' ,,
ncers by the Council of. Tr:inlty
Church wu ratified by the
CODiftplion SUI1day morning.
New deacon iJ Cheater Knight
"lib Mrs. Ray Riggs as 1
deaconess, and the elders are 'i ·Mason,
Joe Struble and Marvin l!urt. '
" ·

Snowden; ' Mrs . William
Willford, Mrs. Parker and Mrs.
Tom Stewart are in chsrge of
this work. At least 10 members
are required to fonn a new club
and ln~resled persons in the
three communities are invited
to contact a member of the
Rullsnd Friendly Gardeners.
Named to make libra!
arrangements for the Rutland
branch of the Pomeroy
National Bank were Mrs.
James Carpenter and Mrs.
Birchfield, During January
arrangements were provided
for the Salem Center PTA by
Mrs. William Willford ; the
Rutland Post Office by Mrs.
Parker and Mrs. James
Carpepter; and to the Rutland
bank by Mrs. Willford, Mrs.
Parker and Mrs. Larry Edwards.
CONTESl' NOTED
A letter was read from Mrs.
Naomi Shephard, OAGC officer, regarding the outstanding garden club contest.
She noted that entries for this
year must Include the work of a
club over a three year period
with the report due on July 15.
In the future only the work of
two years will be required to

DeM0 la'Jr11Names,swee thea¥t
Brenda Taylor, runner-up, and BID Quickel, and Uz Blaet~sr and Tim King.

.
pet.
Miss King, who is the first
sweethe~rt to be chosen by the
DeMolay Chapter since its
organization, is head majorette
of the Meigs High School Band

7 b T1 T' · M
C,u
' yy tns .en't Rank

Mrs. George Hart, Pomeroy,
.Junior Director of Modern
Woodmen Junior servtct Club
11335, )Jiddieport, has led the
group to Merit Club ststus for

crlHIESi

IN
-These four members of Job's Daughters competed for the title of
Sweeihesrt 'of the Meigs County DeMolay Chapter Saturday night. Shown with their escorts
from the chapter sre Mllisa Rizer, John Ksufl; Sherry King, winner, and Paul DarneU, Jr:;

.
Miss Sherry King, d!lughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Willl!lffi King,
Bredbury. was named the first
sweetheart of the Meigs Cqunty
DeMolay Chapter at the
Middleport Masonic Temple

1

qed ·to anena.

In Big Bend Area

4 88

l. l g h t

. If your plants have been growing outdoors, bring them In

Prmeroy

CARPETING

•

1

they

~)!;!~~

~·

Centra! State University at
Kentucky Stale
Manchester at Defiance
Wash. &amp; Jeff. at John Carroll
Wilbertorce at Ohio Dominican
Wright State at Ohio Northern
Rio Grande at Georgetown

B~ugpt

Supreme Court Justice
Robert E. Leach announced
today he will he a candidate to
retain the office to which he
was appointed in September
1970. JusUce Leach, before he
was appointed to the Supreme
CALL
Court of Ohio, had been a Tenth
District Court ·of Appeals
-P.J.
t.'
:.)
."'I ·:·
·;; ' :
Judge for Ilk yea(S. "'··!lad
r~-r· 1-,aa1fm.utl r. 11t !.,.
PARENTS VISIT
307 Spring Ave., ~...., 1'·
also Served as judge ot, the
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Clsrence
W
.
Franklin County Com"mon
Pleas Court from 1954 to 1968. Kuhn, Minerai City, were
He ,was the Adjunct Saturday evening guests of
Professor of Law, Capital their son and daughter-In-law, HAfl(lfiiWIDl liFl lfi~E COM,Aff
University from 1965 to 1970; the Rev. and Mrs. Robert Kuhn
faculty advisor, National and family, Pomeroy.
College of State Trial Judges,
University of Nevada from 1966
to 1968; and Appellate Judges
COnference, Louisiana State
· University in 1971, and
'HIGHLIGHTS
President of the Ohio COmmon
.w ith Paul Crabtree ·
Pleas Judges Association In
CALL POINTVtEW: 992 - 2505
1967.
A graduate of Ohio State
Th~ early evening hours
University with a Juris Doctor
But If basketball Is nOt
should
be pleasant ones for your bag. you tan catcH
degree Cum Laude in 1935, he
!~e l!tlle people tonight. regular
network
fare
served as the first editpr of the
Hodgepodge Lodge" starts (" Here' s Lucy," "Doris
showing up each weeknight Day ," and "Sonny and
Ohio State University Law
at
5:30 on Ch. tl. It's tiahl Cher") at their regular
Journal from 1934 to 1935.
fare
- but .surprisingly ljmes on Ch. 10.
Justice Leach served In Ute
lnlormatlve, Then there's
+++
United .States Ar,my during
another classic return of
MOVIES:
"In Old
Kukla, Fran and Ollie at 6 Chicago," Tyrone Power, ~
World War II, including
p.m, !Another run of KF&amp;O p.m. , and ''Gunman's
overseas service in Gennany
can be seen Friday at 6 p.m., Walk," Van Heflin, 11 :30
with the Counter lnteiUgence
Ch. 111 .
p.m., both Ch. 10.
Corps.
+++
+++
George Plimpton, the jet
T,U E S DAY :
Ph II
set's Walter Mi1ty, relives Donahue's Cincinnati-based
anolher Improbable first- show is catching on and now
person adventure as he Sets appears on Ch, 8, at 10 a.m.
SENIOR'S TITLE
out
as a wild-game You can catch other versions
ST. l'AUL, Minn. (UPI) photographer assigned to at 10: 30 a.m., Ch. 4, or 9
Barth Levy of Colorado
"shoo1" the world's largest a.m., Ch. 7.
elephant In Africa. To see
. Springs, Colo., captured the
+++.
how he fared , tune in Ch. 6 at
ALSO TUESDAY: Can a
Senior Men's title Sunday in
8 p.m.
big rough linebacker for tlie
the 73rd annual National Speed
+++
Ci ncinnati Bengajs make II
Skating outdoor chamTonight, Ch. 8 brings In a as a concert pianist and
good
basketbatl game _ composer? Yes! Mike Reid
pionships. Levy scored in six of
Maryland
vs. North Carolina shows why on Bob Braun's
the !even events in his divillion,
State, at 9 p.m. .
· 50.50 Club today. Noon, Ch. 4.
winning three of them.

L
,
o d g

Planned Parenthood

.

'

118, Ohio Wesleyan dO wiled
Geneva (Pa.) 118-79, Urbina
ran :over Ohio Nortllern llC-85,
John Carroll dumped 'I'IIiel&amp;7·
53 ABhlaixl beat Point Park .
(Pa.) 79-64·, Steubenville edged
St. Vincent's (Pa.) 7~ 75 •
Denison nipPed Heidelberg 7472, Eastern t&gt;fichig81) ~
Central; State I09IS, Rio
Grande downed Ohio ' Doml•
nicin 118-79, Malone o~l'ejl
lliusklngum 85?0', Chicago
thumped' Oberlin ~. and
H72-ano.ver (Ind.) got by ll~·n,
71

Uniforms To be

College
Standings._

~~:r~r
~ ~
~
Wittenberg
4 1 7 7
Otterbein
3 2 10 5
~:~.w;~\Tyan : ~ ~ ;
Muskingum
4 3 8 6
Oberlin '
2 3 6 7
Marietta
2 3 4 10
Mount Union
2 5 7 8
Kenyon
2 5 5 11
Den1son
2
5 4 8
Heidelberg
0 6 0 12
Big Ten
League Overall
W L W L
Michigan
5 1 10 6
Minneso1a
5 1 11. 4
Ohio Slate
4 1 12
3
Purdue
2 1 8 6
Wisconsin
2 2 9 5
Michigan St.
2 3 8 6
1 2 9 3
Illinois

~win

'

Club J!)ebates Pesticides '

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'

o. ·

�f

•

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t

•

I

"

_

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_

.

_

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_ .

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~

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•

MASON BOWLING CENTER .
Tuesday Women
1. Hair Harbour 20-4; 2.
Roush · Construction 20-4; 3.
Mason Furniture 16-8; 4. Harts
Used Cars 16-B; 5. M&amp;R
fOQdllner 10-14 ; 6. Tom Rue
Motors 10-14; 7. Ingels Fur niture 4-20.
Team High 3 games - Harts
Used Cars 1783, Mason Furniture 1748; Team High Game
- Mason Furniture 6.13, Harts
Used Cars 644.
Ind. High 3 games - Mary
Roush 489, Calista Searls 485 ;
Ind. High Game - Calista
Searls 221. Judy Young 177.
Sporn
1. Rejects 35-13; 2. King Pins
30-18; 3. Wild Men 30-18; 4. A
Shift 26-22; s. D Shift 18-30; 6.
Unit 3 18-30; 7. The PO 18-30; 8.
B Shift 17-31.
Team High 3 Games - King
Pins 2518, A. Shift 2457; Team
High Gam,t.: - King Pins 907, A
Shift 863. .
Ind. High 3 Games- Michael
~. Bennett 561 ; Ind. High
Game - Kincaid 237, Bennett
221.

.

6

PolltrOJ·

· '69 DODGE Swinger, 2 dr.
hardtop, V-8, standard, 36,000
miles. still under warranty.
$1,095; phone 992-6048.
1-25-61p
·- : - -

Motor -Co.

For Rant or Sale

mo CAMARO COUPE

$2795

JSO V-8 engine, ctutomatic, power steering console,

beautiful dark green, finished with green vinyl rOof. Less
than 22,000 miles by local owner. radio, new w-w tires. A
sharp model priced to please.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES, 1:00 P.M.
i'~I!ROY, OHIO

KOSMETICS and wigs
tor sale. Brown's. Phone 992-

5113.

12-31 -ftc

Wednesday Mixed
WANT WORK at home ad1. Try Hards 14-2; 2.
dresslnj and stuffing en ·
Shamroc_ks 10-6; 3. Alley
vel opes. Rush self-stamped
Gators 10-6; 4. H&amp;H 8-8; 5.
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36,
Smith &amp; r'oush 8-8• 6. Son-0.
Albany, Ohio, 45710.
Guns6-10; 7. Pin Spotters 4-10;
8. Woo lies 4-10. .
High Team 3 Games - Try AT HAYMAN ' S Auction ,
Hards 1951 , H&amp;H 1915. Team
Fr iday, Feb. 4, 1972, we
High Game - H&amp;H 685, Son-0.
should have rugs, jewelry,
Guns 669 .
fools , furniture, clothing,
Ind. 3 Games High - Men :
appliances .
Items
too
C. Yeager 591 , D. Miller 589;
numerous to mention. One
Women : M. Capehart 490, B.
you can't afford to miss. Sale
Robinson, 476.
starts at 7 p.m.
Ind . Game High - Men : c.
1-31 -llc
Yeager 231, D. Miller 229;
:-:E:-=-E-::
D-:-L-:E::C:-:R~A~F::cT:-::S:-:h o p,
Women : B. Rcbinson- 194, M. -:N
Capehart 192.
Syracuse, Ohio . Beginner

.

'

'

&gt;

, r ' ' r

POLLED
HEREFORDS .
Breeding age bulls, also cows
to •freshen ihls spring. Royal
Oak Farm, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Byron Miller, rhone 614-9926639' or 614-98.1-3341.
1·30-Jtc

24" SNOWBLOWER, 5 h.p.
12 x 63 mobile nome, engine, like new, Frank
adults, no pets. 30 x 60 store Dodderer, Box 162, Coolville,
room , 2 bedroom apartment, Olllo.
Sale or Trade - 12 ft . meat
1-30-3tp
case, 10 ft. vegetable .case, - - - - - - - - coin Cola machine,_ grocery TROPICAL FISH, fancy
guppies, angels and breeders,
carts, meat block, 6 x 6
walkln, automatic washer &amp; · Bellas and supplies. Phone
dryer . M &amp; G Food Market •. 3 992·5443,
12-JO.Ifc
miles south of Middleport on
Rt. 7.
- -- - - , - - - - ' 1-28-Jtp
HEATH 4 channel Amp. - $80 ;
electric Hawaiian guitar For ~ent
$30; Antlqu~ fancy ladder
back arm chair - $40; Call
NEW, 12x60, 2 bedroom mobile 992-6083.
horne ·across from Bradbury
1-28-3fp
School . Call 992-5301 or see
Charles Lewis, 2nd house
south from Bradbury School.
Mobile Homes For
Pets welcome.
1-27-lfc
· 60X12, 2-bedroom, all-electric,
FURNISHED and unfurnished
air conditioned, 8x20 ft. Porch
and · aluminum awning,
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5434.
aluminum skfrllng, corn 10-18-tfc
pletely setvp. Beautiful
- - -- - - - - location. Owner leaving state.
Phone 949-4892 or 992-5272.
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Racine area. Phone 992-6329.
1-10-tfc
12-14-ftc
-~---5 ROOMS &amp; bath, ground floor
aparlment, Albert Hili ,
Racine 949-2261.
1-21 -8tc

Sale

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P.M.
Day
Before
Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; CorrectiQI'Is
Will be accepted until9 a .m. for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
rlgh!'!o edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The
publisher will not be
responsible for more than one
Incorrect Insertion.

RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive Insertions.

FER 'fE

r------------,

2 BEDROOM mobile home, 12 x
60, adults only. Phone 9925443.
1-11 -tfc

Auto Sales

18 cents per word six con'68 FORD pickup, custom cab,
secutive insertions.
wide bed, 6 cylinder, 3 speed,
25 Per Cent Discount on paid

.

For Sale

REI~T -

1970 NOVA CHEVY 114 DOOR
$2195
5,000 miles by local owner, p. steering, automatic trans .. 6
cy l. engine, P.B., radio. white wails, beautiful beige finish
&amp; blk. interior. like new .

~OS COT

'

.:n;sT NAME IT,
, AUNT LOWEEZ'f-t'LL WHITTLE IT

'

For Sale or Trade

1971 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE.
· $3595
Sandalwood with brown vinyl top, factory air conditioned,
V-8 engine with turbo hydromatlc, power steering, E.
clock, P. 8., radio, Rally wheels with w-w lires. Frt. &amp; rear
guards . Retail S4155. Co. official car &amp; specially priced.

Notice

'

•

,

Sentinel Cla·ssifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results. ·
2SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

.'

\

6- Tbe Daily Sentinel, J'dkldlePOrt-Pomeroy. 0 ., Jan. 31, 1972 _

Weal Bowling

.
,,,,,,,,,,,
,, 1,

12' - 14' • 24' • WiDE

MJ.LJ.ER
MOBil£ HOMES

Business Services
'

.

_EXPERT
Wh,el Alignment
' .
$5.55 .
-GUARANTEEDPhone 99;1-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
, Open I Til 5
Mond.ly thru Siturd.ly
6N E. Mtin, Pomeroy, 0 .

AU. WEATHER ROOFING ·
&amp; OONSTRUCTIQN
&amp; PWMBING CO.
240 Lincoln st.
'Middleport, Ohio
Obo Anthony Plumbing
We 'have 1 camplete Ho111e
Maintenance Service the
yoor 1round. No m11ter whot
your need. Complete roof or
spouting ..-.polr. Interior. at
exterior c1rpentry. Ceiling
tile ond Paneling 1nd Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Healing.
Day Number 992·2550
We hove 24 hr. e mergtncy
service.
992-5103
742·3947
992-3898 742-4761
We are tully insured

The
Orchid Room

·/- )1

·~ke reservations' for your
prlvale parties, banquets, •
special occasions.
Ideal for meeting· place with or without kitchen
privileges.. : ··
Individual Catering
· Will·seat up to 150 people.

"-'one
992-3975

992-5786

Service

'

.........I""V'''-' HE WA6 A6KED 10
WORK PLAIN CLOTHE6
FOR A WEEKI

SMI11f NElSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pit. 992-2174

H£16 ElEEN LIKE
1WiT EVER SINCE
1l4f. 'DElCCTIVE
Bt.IREALI HAD
TWO MEN SICK ..

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME.IN RACINI'
TWO HOMES IN ~YRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
tOO PCT, FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom' $16;900.00 home can be purchas..r ·with •
monthly peymenjulow as $65.00 lor a family '!lith a base
salar~ of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1-&lt; Pd. annual
. perc.ntage rate.
·
'

BILL NELSON, 992-3457
TOM CROW, 992-2510

I

ALIM. ~T6
WITH BEN 1.

From the largest Trt"ck
Bulldozer Radiator to the
-Smailesi H~er Core.
·
Nathan Biggs .
'Rod II lor Spoclollsi

e,AREL'i
COVER
EXPEfJSE&amp;BUTAH'I..L
TAKE. IT!.'

CNL'i WA\f1051!WEMI55
f&gt;WJEBIP.D FUI&lt;\ MAAR-/IN'
MR. SlvEETPANTS i$ TO
GIT HIM TANGLED UP
WIF'HOTHIP.GAL-

BUT I«) MAfJ
WOULD OPIJTHE.R
HAVE NO OTHI.R
GAl.., IF HE. WflB
IN HI&amp; RIGHT
i'JI,J.''1·"

CALL
.
Hll TON WOLFE, 949·3211
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534

ALWAYS A

PLEASI.IRE T'

SiE YA,

ALL KINDS OF
GLASS ·
For Every Purpose

POMEROY

1220 Washington Blvd.
26.000 miles, $1 ,400 ; phone
ads and ads paid within 10
Belpre, Ohio
&amp;
992-6048'.
days.
lessons in knitting or
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna We specialize in auto glass ·
1-25-6fp
l------------1
Kyger Creek
crocheting will
begin
CARD OF THANKS ·
Service. Phone 992-2522.
on lh.e spot instailelion.
992·2094
FOR THE BEST deal In a new
1. Day Maint. 22-10; 2. Odd
&amp; OBITUARY
Tuesday and Thursday, 7 fo 8
6-10-tfc Mirrors . Table Tops · Pl1te
606 E. Main Pomeroy
Balls 22-10; 3. Timber Splitters
$1.50 for 50 word minimum. · 1910 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442,' or used mobile home, try '
p.m. and Thurs~ay at 1 p.m.
18-14; 4. Rejects 18-14; 5.
automatic, factory stereo Kanauga Mobile Home Sales, SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Free Glass, Small home rfpoirs .
Each additional word 2c.
1-31 -ltc
scrHns - storm windows
Stfugglers 16·16; 6. C. Shift 14lape. Lotsofextras. Like new. Kanauga, Ohio.
BLIND ADS
pipe Inspection . · Paul Stein· repaired.
-SUPPUES
18; 7. A Shift 14-18; 8. B Shift 4·
Call 992-2441 after 5 p.m.
·
12· 17-90tc
Additional 25c Charge per
LEGAL NOTICE
metz, phone 742-5864,
ESTIMATE
FREE
28.
DANNY ELWOOD BOWERS,
Advertisement.
11-28-ttc - -- - - - - and
1-26-12fp
Point Pleasant &amp; Mason
Team 3 Games High - Odd whose last known p!ace of
MOBILE HOMES . Large
OFFICE HOURS
Balls 2599, C Shift 2560; Team ·res idence is 352 East Ma in
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally, '57 CHEVY, 321 cu. in ., solid selection 8 . 10 . 12 wides, 1 to 4 SEPTIC tanks cleaned. 'Miller
AUTO GLASS
l·llgh Game - Odd Balls 936, Street. Pomero y, Oh io , Is
bank
repos
and
bedrooms,
8:30
a
.m.
to
12:00
Noon
Ollio.
Ph.
Sanitation,
Stewart,
AI Conard, Mgr.
lifters, Cam, 3 speed, new used, some practically .new.
hereby notified that on the 24th
Odd Balls 922.
Saturday .
·Stop In and See Our
662-3035.
.
day of January, 1972 ROY A .
Phone
304-773-5710
interior
and
racing
slicks,
Ind. 3 Games High - G. ROUSH filed his pet ition in the
Save
up
to
•
!
,.
R.
A.
or
Don
'Floor Display,
2-12-tfc Route JJ
Mason, W. Va,
good cond Ilion . Phone 992- Miller, _705 Farson Street,
Shrlmplln 643, R. Cremeans Probate Court of Meigs County , Notice
5663.
600. Ind. High Game - G. Oh io to adopt ROBERT
' I
Belpre, Ohio - by Kaiser ';;BA~C;::;K;;H=,:;O~E:::A~N:7:D;::::;:D';;O;;:ZE;::;R;:-work.
COLONIAL Auto Body,,537 High DRY WALL Finisher conMitch 245, R. Cremeans 243. EUGENE BOWERS and lor
Aluminum, phone 423-9531.
Septic tanks installed. George
change of name of said child to
St ., Middleport,
Ohio.
Steelworkers
Now's Time To
'68 CHEVY Impala, automatic, .
1-18-121c
tractor. R. I. Oubbeld, Phone
{Bill)
Pullins. Phone 992-2418.
Complele
body
repelrs
' and
1. Rejects 42; 2. Wonders 40; Robert - Eugene Roush ; sa id
742-5825.
power·
steering,
power''
;;;;;;:~-.:-=---:--:-:­
4-25-tfc
IS set for hearing at 10 : 00
paintings, glass Installation,
3. Nuts &amp; Bolts 34; 4. Skips 26; cause
brakes, 327 cu. ln., grey with MOBILE home on nice lot, -~---1-31·5fc
ORDER
a.m . on the 18th day of 'M arch,
free loaner
cers and
5. Ferros 21; 6. Foote Heels 15 ; 1971.
black vinyl top, phone 985- forced air heat, air con- INTER lOR and exterior
estimates, also mechanical INTERIOR and exterior
7. Stingers 14; 8. Wheels 0.
3598.
dltlonlng In Racine area.
Roy A . Roush , Petit ioner
'fiELD
SEEDS
painlllig, roofing and gutter
repeirs. ·Phone 992-3793.
High·--.. T~m 3 Games
J . B. O'Brien , Attorney
1-21 -t21c
Phone 992-6329.
painting . R. I. D~bbeld, phOI'Ie
work ·done. Phone 843-2826.
1-28-6tc
Rejecls 2630, Wonders 2517;
for Petitioner .
742-5825.
- - - - - - - - llr..
1-23-lfc
1-18-121C
High Team Game - Reject$ It) Jl. 1217, 14, 21.28131 Ht
FERTILIZER
1-31-Src
1965 FORD •;, ton , V-8, Custom -- - - - - - - - 953, Wonders 876.
READY-MIX CONCRETE decab,
with
overdrive,
radio,
in
Real
Estate
For
Sale
POMEROY LANES
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Ind. High 3 Games - B.
livered right to. your project. O'DELL WHEEL alighment
good condition - $1,075;
SEED CORN
Pomeroy Bowling
~EASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
White 599, H. Whitlatch 597;
Fast and _ easy . J'ree
Phone Coolville, Ohio 667located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W. Va .
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
Lanes League
Ind. High Game - B. White
Order Now &amp; Save I
3593.
eslim.afes . Phone 992-3284.
Complete front end service,
- 8 room house, newly
Owner &amp; Operator.
254, L. Lanier 224,' '
January 26, 1972
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
tuna up and brake service.
1-28-3tp
painted on two-thirds acre lot, .
S-12-lfc
Sund.ly Mlxod
· Won Lost
Middleport, Ohio.
Wheels balanced eiec·
~-:-::::::-:~--:58 30
3 bedrooms downstairs, 2 ~==:::-::-:~-----:­
I. Fergusqn &amp; White 14-2 ; 2. · Baum's Lumber
1961
'
1
2
TON
Chevrolet
pickup,
6
6-30-ttc
l ~oAicai ly. ·
Ail
wo~~ ,
50 38
Goodrich &amp; Roush 14-2; 3. Hood Team No. 4
cylinder- 5400; phOI'Ie after 5 upstairs, come see. Cl~ to . AUT-OMOBILE insura~ce ~!eon
guara~te,ed . ~o __ Reasonable
46 42
cancelled?
Lost · your
&amp; Greene 10-4; 4. Wright &amp; Gaul's Shake Haven
· '· rate$. Phone 9'12-3213.
p.m., John A. Jeflers, 992- hard road, store and church,
45 43
only
s1o;ooo.
Phone
Pt.
operator's
license?
Call 992Smith 8-8; 5. Fearsome Four 8- Welker's Ashland
6773.
· M7-tlc
Pieasant 675·2946.
2'166.
44 44 INCOME TAX service, dally
8; 6. Duncan &amp; Sines 6-10 ; 7. Team No. 1
NOTICE OF
l-28-3tc
•
Ridenour's
TV
21
61
APPOINTMENT
1-27-4tp
Cremeans &amp; Smllh 2-14; 8.
6·15-lfc
OKcept Sunday, evenings by
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
CIS. No. 20595
High Ind. Game - Barbara
Blake &amp; Withers 2·14.
appointment . Mrs. Wanda
Complete Service
Estate
of
Wtlllam
P.
GrutSer,
MINERSVILLE on Welchtown
Murray
149,
Charlene
Team High 3 Games Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road, 1 For Sale
Phone 949·3821
Decea5ed.
Hill - 1'4 acre lot with old Real Estate For
Ferguson and White, Duncan Frederick 146; High Series mile west of Meigs County
Racine, Ohio
Notice
is hereby given that
house, all utilities, $600.
and Sines; High Team Game- Barbara Murray 391. Florence
Fairground
on
R!.
7
bypass.
John M . King, of Route 1.
Crill
Bradford
STEREO,
Early
American
Phone 992-6021 .
Ferguson and White, Ferguson Guinther 377.
Phone 992-2272.
Rutland, Ohio, has been duly
5· 1-tfc
Slereo,
radio
combination,
Team High Game and Series
and White.
·
l-27·61c
a
p
po
I
n
ted
E
x
e
c
u
to
r
of
t
h
t
:-::::-::-:::-:-:-:-:::::':':':::--:1-3-30tc
AM-FM radio, 4 speaker
Ind. High 3 Games- Men: - Gaul's Shake Haven 259 and
Estato of William P. Grueser, SEWING 'MACHINES. Repair
sound system . Balance $79.81 . 4 ROOM house In Anllquity. See
deceased,
late ot Meigs County, service, all makes. 992-2284.
C. Ferguson 615, D. Duncan 738.
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
Use our budget terms. Call
Ohio.
Th F
Charles -Wolfe, Racine.
599 ; women : C. Roush 490, S.
overweight· ladles, teens and
992-7085.
Crodllors are required to file
o abrlc Shop, Pomeroy.
Asking price $1500; phone 247Hood 477.
Q-How often is there an men Interested In a Weight
their
claims
with
sold
fiduciary
Authorized
Singer Sales and
l-26-6tc 3155.
Ind. High Gam&amp;-Men: C. eclipse of the sun that can
within tour months.
Service. WeSharpen 'Scissors.
Watchers
IRJ
Class
in
-::-:-:-:-:-:-~--1·27-121c
Ferguson 221, B. While 2\4;
Dated this 18th day of
3·29-ttc
be seen from the same place
Pomeroy write : Weight WALNUT, Modern style,
Women : C. Roush 189, C.
Jtnuary 1972.
!RJ.
1863
Section
Watchers
(rom
th
e
earth?
stereo-radio,
AM-FM
radio,
4
Roush 180.
John C. Bacon
Rd., Cincinnati, Ollio 45237.
speaker sound system, 4 HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
A-About once every 360
Probate Judge
Biaiier
10-3-tfc · .speed automatic changer . 985-3529.
of said County
110 Mechanic Stree1
~e ars, on the average .
Late Sunday Mlxod
· NOTICE OF
Ill 24, 31 (2) 7, 31
::-:-:::----$68
.59.
Use
our
Balance
1-28-tfc
Pomeroy,
Olllo
1. Roberts 14-2; 2. Sines 10-6;
APPOINTMENT
. ' .
SAVE
up
to
one
half.
Bring
your
budget
terms
.
Call
992-7085.
3. Miller 10-6; 4. Youngs 8-8; 5.
CuoNo.2o,m
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
1-26-6tc HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Estate of Clara E. Gartend,
Capehart 8-8; 6. Gibbs 6-10; 7. Auto Mart 8-8; 6. Mason Co.·
OFFI.CI&lt;"L NOTICE
151
B
_
ufternut
Ave
..
Pomeroy.
·
Call Danny Thompson, 992·
NEW LISTING
The Township Trustees of Deceased .
Duncans 4-12; 8. Paughs 4-12. Bank 6-10; 7. W. Va. National
Phone 992-5080.
1971
ZIG-ZAG
Sewing
Machine
2196.
2
APARTMENTS9
rooms,
6
Chester
Township
will
receive
Notice
Is
hereby
given that .
Guard
21~;
8.
Hoflmans
2-14.
Team 3 Games High 11 -21-ltc
with bath, 3 and bath. Near seolod bids until 8:00 p.m .. Mary Harris of Minersville,
lefl in layawar. Beautiful
7-18-ffc
Team High 3 Games ~ ­
Roberts 1061, Youngs 965.
pastel color, lui size model. - - -- -- - - Pomeroy stores. Both for February 11, 1972 at which lime Ohio, has been duly appointed ·
. Team High Game - Roberts Mason Co. Bank 2890, Harts WILL DO furniture refinishing
built-In
lo
buttonhole,
do
·All
$7,500.00.
blda will be opened, for one .executrix ot the Estate of Clare
Used
Cars
2833;
Team
High
381, Roberts 376.
3 BEDROOM modular home,
E . Garl•nd, deceaud, tate of
repairs;
also
some
and
siretch
sewing
and
fancy
POMEROY
dump
truck, IS ,!Oiiows: G.V.W . Minersville,
Game - W. Va . National
Ind. High 3 Games whole
house
air
Meigs County,
total
electric,
upholstering of small chairs.
MODERN-6rooms, 1'12 baths. of 24,000 lb . or larger; Proper , Ohio .
stitching. Pay-just 548.75 cash
Richard Sines 559, Don Duncan Guard lOIS, Harts Used Cars
of
land,
conditioning
&gt;
5
acres
Phone
949-2405.
Nice
kitchen,
carpeting.
Wheelbase
tor
7
x
9
dump
bed,
I
or lerms available. Trade-Ins above ground pool with pool
Creditors are required to file
SIS. Ind. High Game - Russ 1007.
beam front axle 7·,000 lbs. or their
F
$19 500 00
l-28-3tc
accepted. Phone 992-5641.
Ind. High 3 Games - D.
claims with said fiduciary
Capehart 209, R. Sines and J.
urnace . RURAL
• · ·
larger. Frame Reinforcement .
equipment; all . kitchen apwithin four months.
l-26-6tc pliances including new dishMason 671. W. King 660. Ind. ::=-:-:----Paugh_195.
4 ACRES - Modern S room Heavy Duty Brakes.
Doted lhls 13th day of
High Gme - Snyder 265, FOR A lasting gift - Landwasher. Phone 882-2481 or 882house, bath. Chester water . . 3-40 cu . ln . engine or larger, v. January 1972.
scapes
painted
or
drawn
to
VACUUM
Cleaner
brand
new
Nelson
258.
1 Engine.
·T uosay lnduslrlol
2335 In New Haven, W. Va.
John c . Bacon
order. Call David and Lynn
1971 model. Complete with all
$10,500.110.
Five Speed, Direct In tlftn ,
t: · Penn Centr&amp;i 20-4; 2.
l-25-6tc
Probate Judge
Lynas, 992-6083.
cleaning
fools.
Small
paint
Synchromesh
Transmission
.
MIDDLEPORT
Burton Sunoco 20-4; 3. Coca1-28-61p
damage in shipping. Will take
2 apartments- S to each side. . 9.00 x 20 Ton Ply Tires with II) 17, 2&lt;, 31 , 31 atsaid Coonty
Cola 16-8; 4. Mason Agg . 12-12;
Gas heal. All utilities . Mud end Snow Tread on Rear.
121 cash or . budget pian 4 BEDROOMr bath &amp; half,
S. New Haven Furniture 4-20;
utility room, built-In kitchen,
$3 500 00
7.00 Rims.
·
available.
Phone
992-5641.
INSTRUCTION
in
organ
and
6. Carolina Lumber 0-24.
wall
to
wall
carpet
&amp;
garage.
PQMEROY
Two
West
Coast
Mirrors.
BID ADVERTISIMENT
plano. Gerald Hoffner, phone
1-26-6tc
High Team 3 Games Located
•
;,
mile
north
of
y
Cast
Spoke
Wheels
The
Tuppers Pialns .Chester
NIF
992-3825.
~
Burton Sunoco 2633, Coca-Cola
- S rooms, bath, oak
Duel Electric Windshield Water District, a public body,1
Eastern
High
School.
House
Is
l-19-12tc HAY. Eulah Wolfe, Racine,
floors. Gas heat, basement. Wipers, Variable Speed &amp; hereby advertises for bids tor
2372. Team High Game - Penn
almost finished and others
Only 16,000.00.
Weshers.
. tho following :
·
- -----phone 247-2278.
Central_ 895, Coca-Cola 860.
being bull!. Call 985-3598.
19
ACRES
Two
Speed
Rear
AMie,
17,000
One
{1)
solenoid
volve
unit,
1-30-3tc
Ind . High 3 Games - B.
Help Wanted
1-21 -JOtc MODERN ~ 3 bedroom home lbs. or larger.
.
ailitude·c type, complete with
Davis 618, D. Roush 616. Ind .
and 2 others rented. FREE
Heavy Duty Bottery .
following :
High Game - B. Davis 233, D.
HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS . 1957VALIANTIOO, verygood ; 2
GAS
fteavy
Duty
011
Flifor.
.
2 eacn M J gate valves and
Oni
16
$
000
00
1
Roush 222.
•
Y • • ·
Fresh Alr Heat~tr &amp; Defroster
boxes,
nice ponies; 5 h.p, Rotolllier;
Enlist now - stay home until
DEXTER
1 1 d C1
it C00 II .
1· I t
after graduation . Guaranteed , McCullough Mini mac Chain
BUSINESS BUILDING - 30 x
Fni'~n't
~~w
H
fo~c
V.
ng .
_.,!nc~ef:;s:l':e~
gauge,
Monday Mtrchonts
assignments to Europe, saw ; Model It Winchester
44.
Neat
6
room
home,
bath,
Rear
Tow
Loop,
4"
solenoid
valve
;
1. Harts Used Cars 14-2; 2.
Korea, Hawaii , or selected
Automatic 12 gauge shotgun;
drilled well . 2 acres.
Heavy Duty Front &amp; Rear
sump pvmp,
Millers Insurance 14-2; 3.
locations In the U. S. See your
7'h h.p. Evlnrude outboard;
RURAL
Sprlngo with Auxiliary Springs.
altiiude gauge,
Keefers Service Station 10-6; 4.
local Army representative for 1 Sklllsaw; phone 949-21JJ.
4
Penn Central 8-8; 5. Mason
7 rooms, Mth, 3 or bedrooms.
i~:~omSI;~:j, with Hazard ~~~=rdlschargt
facts aboui lhe 180-day ,
1-J0.31c
Gas heat. 2 gardens. $7,000.00. Switch &amp; Marker Lights.
entrance hatch
Delayed Entry Program and
608 East Main
f!.9MEROY
.
.
Power Steering.
light switch
the Army's ·new pay raise.
SIDE GLANCES
NICE -7 rooms, 1'h baths, ga$
.
· DUMP lED
vapor proof light
POMEROY
by Gill Fox
For more Information call
furnace. Storm doors and
7 x 9, 19" Sidts ond 30" Head
power panel
593-3022.
2'12 LOTS
windows. $7,500.00.
'and
Tall
Gate.
Holt In Tailgate
prtssure switch and
1-31-Stc
POMERov· -~ I story frame,
MINERSVILLE
. for spreading materials.
Inlet pressure gauge w.
2
bedrooms,
porNICE
-'6
rooms,
bath
gas
~~It Cab Protector.
snubber
.
.
1
36" X 23" X .009
1 Hoist or largtr.
ches, deep well, ·room for
furnace. Basement. Large lot.
·Piaru. for fhls soleno!Ct valve 1
EXPERIENCED Beaullflclan.
-r~!l
$8 000 00
Mud Flaps.
uri It are on file at· the water
trailer, good neighborhood.
Must have manager's license.
$1111f L&lt;l
'
·NEW
LISTING
pe~net~d
.to
be
mounted
and
Office
located in Chester Ohio
$3,375.00.
Must
be
able
to
do
high
'\W&lt; • "!BUSINESS
ROOM
.
fashion with both short and
UNDER LEASE - Business
The Board ot Trustees :~gsp~~~iv:tldvJ:~ed by any
TUPPERS PLAINS - cement
long hair. Guaranteed salary.
down, 6 rooms, and bath, Up. rtStrVts lhe right to r.t fect any
All bids must be received by
. block building, large 95 x 264 $16,000.00.
Send resume c-o The Daily
or ell bids. '
10 a.m . on February 10 1972
level lot, located on Rt. 7 In
Senllnel, P. 0. Box 729-B, •
NEW LISTING
Bidders are requested to end the District reserves the
lown . VERY LOW AT MOBILE HOME 2 bed
Pomeroy, Ollio 45769.
• ·
submit with their bid tor tho right to reject anf}j' or ail bids.
rooms, above equipment a further bid
T
·
16,900.00.
1-28-Jtc
USED OFFSET PLATES
10 x 50. Two additional rooms. for a 1965 International 1700
uppers. Is ins Chester
I
Cellar, carporl. $5,000.00. serin Truck .
Water Dialrlct
-::-:-:-:-:----:::==
HAVE
INVESTMENT PROPERTY
RE SPONSIBLE perso~ork
Nearly 1'12 ACRES.
WILl-IS FROST, Clerk
Ch t O Box 1
MANY USES
RACINE- large tile building
and manage route. Pick-up
HELEN l. TEAFORD,
(1) 2,4, J1 (2) 7. 31
Ill 17, 24..31, 3 er, hlo 45720
with ~rick front, business
and
delivery .
A. B.C.
Al~il~
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .
Cleaners, Mason, W. Va .
room with 3 apartmenis over,
992·3325
992-2371
with
apartment
ov.er,
garage
1·25-ttc
' 1·30 ·6tc
storage r09m , 3 apartments
8 for $1.00
are furnished, one Is not, RACINE ..:. 10 room house,
'
about 25 years old, ail
Employment Wanted
balh, basement, garage, two
apartments are rented.
lots. No reasonable offer
LOTS and' yards cleanea . Write
$21,500.00.
refused. Phone 949-4313.
Box 321 , Rutland, Ohio.
1 STORY FRAME
All HOMES,ON LOT OR BY CUSTOMER
l-21·121p
l-2Hfp
MIDDLEPORT-~ bedrooms,
ORDER DISCOUNTEDS PER CENT
bath, full basement, paneled,
filed, carpeted, gas lurnace, 3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
WE ARE NOTmoviiJv auf at Meigs Couirty as others ha
Wanted .To Buy
Arba!J!Ih Addition, TupPers
extra lot. $8,900.00.
but
we will conllnu~ to "Service l"hatw~ sell", Come.:
SOLD DOWN !WE NEED ,Plains. All . new with total
-111 Co"rt St.
OLD
POCKET
knives,
see
the new GREEN BRIAR. The hon(tl.for !bote Who
central
air
electric
and
LISTINGS.)
especially Case XX . Also
Pomeroy, Ohio
, COI'Idltionlng, bath and :w fully
appreciate tht better things ol life. Manu!ec:turtd by lh
HENRY
CLELAND
have other old knives to trade
carptltd, full basement,
iergtlt builder of mob!it homes.' Our 12' wide Arllngt e ·
REALTOR
or sell . Phone 992-2343.
garage in basement. S.. by
HOI'Its start at $3495.00. Delivered and set up.
on ·
Offld
992·2259
·1-18-lfc
appointment, phOI'Ie ft2·21H '
Residence 992·U61
COAL, limestone . EJ('celsior
'
f.J0.6fc or 992-3515. Danny ThomJ!ICIII .
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
We Stltcilllte in OtdtrlnU Hoinoi to Suit tht Cu•tom ...
'
OLD fURNITURE, Round Oak
Fina~ing evaillblt.
,
·
1
Pomeroy.
Phone
992-3891.
tables. · Bross beds, dishes,
·
12.JO.trc·
4-9-tlc NICE 2-st~ry home with lull
clocks, and -or complete
I .
: '
basement, 2 lots, new for cod SIX ROoM houM, 133 IUtttnJut
households . Write M. D. POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
air
furnace.
Near
Pomeroy.
Mliior, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Olllo.
"Maybe I'm a hair styliat and maybe I'm pot . .
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Park view Kennels, Phone 992.
Elementary Scl)ool. Pho"'
Call
992-6271.
.
J
.
TUPPIIIS PLAINS, 0.
Wedsworth
Drive, Columbus.
Depends on how sweet you l'llll&gt;t to look!"
54-tJ.
•
992-7214 to see.
&gt;
12-17-flc
Oltio, phone 237·433oi.
........., ...1
'·
. :'·
8-15-tlc
I
11-7-lfc
ll-2t·HC

HOMI

PtlTUNIA .. ,

WINNIE .WINKLE

AUTO

. W111i 1HE 51-iAPE

OFFICE

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FURNITURE

.

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,';: ," t.~~~~G~9:-;,:."'M'~111!1';
;:; _

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------

WMP0/1390

ME$U'

l'fiiQ,\ ~m~·

CO\.'!N!

-.
I 6HOOl D ~Ave

IT'S

SU&amp;I'ECTfD A ~
MW 1!1 'I'O!Jlr'

~0

USE, PROF , .. I ClOTTA SlAY

All' TRY T'

~XPlAI~

CHARACTER. •• ft

~ QF IIOII;d}TY

1iiiif'JITIM'IW
AT
ATIME WHeN WE AI!E
A80UT TO PUlL OFF~
1!101!ST 1!018SlY91ttC!
SOME 'llllevf6 S'TOLE

THE •MOttA ltsA"!

ACROSS

r::::::;::;-"'[lr.::;::-':;:;;';;;'"1
TilE

tion

Vacillate
;~~~~~~ 19.18.21. Wrath
Paris

\

manners

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i4tlwl4 .-l , _

hi" HI NIH 1\HN&lt; II IJ

Unter~mble theae roor Jumbl..,
one letter to each ~quare, to
form four ordinary words.

"'d H()fl I I (

limel

Ye.terdar'•ADIWer

40, Italian
W. W. JI
batilo
site
U. Egret
42, Idles
' DOWN
! ..Panama
gum tree
%. Manifeol
%3. Last
3. Joe
Supper,
DiMaggio,
in art
in his
24. Suppress
heyday
25. Conjugal

1,.

%6. Flashy
Z7.Homo
sapiens
Z9. Eucharist
plate
30. Unearthly
34.New
Mexican
resort
vlllage
36, One, in
Palermo
38. Putspot

o

LIRLT

I

r· ,.

II
I TAYFUL±
I r IJ

,.,.
THI5 \\OULD INDICATE
THAT 50\\EONE HAS
Ju5T S10f'PEOSMOKIN6.
Now orranre the dr&lt;ied !etten

to form tht aurprise answer, as
au nested by the above cartoon.

24. Great
quantity
25. Fermented
honey
drink
26. Overlay .
with gold
27. "Budden·

(AiliWI!'n lomorru w}

S•turday't

Mnbl •., IDIOM PIPER OPAQUE

TER~OR

Ant..,er: With o (;Ouple yo u conform it - A TRIO

brooks"

author
28. Moham·

med'sson·
in-law
29. Proces·
&amp;ion
31. Necktie
fabric
SZ. Black
cuck•-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYLL8AAXR

Is

LONGFELI:OW

.

'

.

flnr letter simply sland• for another. In this sa mple A is ...-----------.,..._,
used for the three L's, X for the two O's; etc. Si ngle letters.
lj)OStrophes, the length. and formation of the words are all
hint.. 'Each day the rode let ten are dllferent.
I

NEVE&amp;

~ARE

'

'100R PAD

WITH A. RE5TLESG 61RD !

A Crypt•ll'•m Quobtlon
G XGKKPRGS PH

TP~

KWPJTRED

G VGK.· C TE

CPAT

SEUWH

HGYXW . - ZWGK

DPJGYM

l

-·.--,.- -"\

Salarday's (Jryptoquole: 111\TING PEOPLE IS LIKE BURN·
JNG DOWN YO I!J R OWN HOUSE TO GET RID OF A RAT .- .._~------'---'
H. E. FOSDICK
·
~.f) lll72 K i1•1i l't&gt; ~t.tul't'~ ~pHiiruh· , lnr . I

'

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crown
39. Display
of bad

JllYMOOlbrn®/J..i

nickname

MID-WINTER
MOBILE HOME SAL£

MEIGS MOIIU HOMIS

4, Greek ·
letter
5. ConsanguineoWI
6. Up to now
7, Samuel's
mentor
8. Bourbon
Street
olferlng
9. Turned
inside out
10. Take out
of pawn
Not him
20. Knightly
oath

season

r•

===-=---.-

33, Gush
35, Computer
material
37, Papal

22. German
river
23. Man';

Aluminum
Sheets ·

The
Daily Sentinel

1. More
buhful
&amp;.Jewish
feut
11. Egg.
shaped
12. Kind of
branch
13. lnftlctlng
punish·
ment
1f. Mended
15. Noachiait
craft
18. Sur·
priser's

exclama-

For Sale

- - -- -

T' ANNIE Atl'

MR. WARBUCKS!

Oeland
Realty

ON YOUR DIAL

''

1".1:

CAllWT 'OJ m»eoo

' .
+

--------

...... .

&lt;;0'® 1WE

y

Sale

TEAFORD

1
~'.

=.;~~ ~!a.i~ro~~~~~9:
.
l IIEeP

'1S;:11£;
. :_;

Virgil~~

- ---

.We talk to you
like a persOrL

il

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•

'

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•

I

"

_

.

_

.

_

.

_ .

.

~

,

•

MASON BOWLING CENTER .
Tuesday Women
1. Hair Harbour 20-4; 2.
Roush · Construction 20-4; 3.
Mason Furniture 16-8; 4. Harts
Used Cars 16-B; 5. M&amp;R
fOQdllner 10-14 ; 6. Tom Rue
Motors 10-14; 7. Ingels Fur niture 4-20.
Team High 3 games - Harts
Used Cars 1783, Mason Furniture 1748; Team High Game
- Mason Furniture 6.13, Harts
Used Cars 644.
Ind. High 3 games - Mary
Roush 489, Calista Searls 485 ;
Ind. High Game - Calista
Searls 221. Judy Young 177.
Sporn
1. Rejects 35-13; 2. King Pins
30-18; 3. Wild Men 30-18; 4. A
Shift 26-22; s. D Shift 18-30; 6.
Unit 3 18-30; 7. The PO 18-30; 8.
B Shift 17-31.
Team High 3 Games - King
Pins 2518, A. Shift 2457; Team
High Gam,t.: - King Pins 907, A
Shift 863. .
Ind. High 3 Games- Michael
~. Bennett 561 ; Ind. High
Game - Kincaid 237, Bennett
221.

.

6

PolltrOJ·

· '69 DODGE Swinger, 2 dr.
hardtop, V-8, standard, 36,000
miles. still under warranty.
$1,095; phone 992-6048.
1-25-61p
·- : - -

Motor -Co.

For Rant or Sale

mo CAMARO COUPE

$2795

JSO V-8 engine, ctutomatic, power steering console,

beautiful dark green, finished with green vinyl rOof. Less
than 22,000 miles by local owner. radio, new w-w tires. A
sharp model priced to please.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES, 1:00 P.M.
i'~I!ROY, OHIO

KOSMETICS and wigs
tor sale. Brown's. Phone 992-

5113.

12-31 -ftc

Wednesday Mixed
WANT WORK at home ad1. Try Hards 14-2; 2.
dresslnj and stuffing en ·
Shamroc_ks 10-6; 3. Alley
vel opes. Rush self-stamped
Gators 10-6; 4. H&amp;H 8-8; 5.
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36,
Smith &amp; r'oush 8-8• 6. Son-0.
Albany, Ohio, 45710.
Guns6-10; 7. Pin Spotters 4-10;
8. Woo lies 4-10. .
High Team 3 Games - Try AT HAYMAN ' S Auction ,
Hards 1951 , H&amp;H 1915. Team
Fr iday, Feb. 4, 1972, we
High Game - H&amp;H 685, Son-0.
should have rugs, jewelry,
Guns 669 .
fools , furniture, clothing,
Ind. 3 Games High - Men :
appliances .
Items
too
C. Yeager 591 , D. Miller 589;
numerous to mention. One
Women : M. Capehart 490, B.
you can't afford to miss. Sale
Robinson, 476.
starts at 7 p.m.
Ind . Game High - Men : c.
1-31 -llc
Yeager 231, D. Miller 229;
:-:E:-=-E-::
D-:-L-:E::C:-:R~A~F::cT:-::S:-:h o p,
Women : B. Rcbinson- 194, M. -:N
Capehart 192.
Syracuse, Ohio . Beginner

.

'

'

&gt;

, r ' ' r

POLLED
HEREFORDS .
Breeding age bulls, also cows
to •freshen ihls spring. Royal
Oak Farm, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Byron Miller, rhone 614-9926639' or 614-98.1-3341.
1·30-Jtc

24" SNOWBLOWER, 5 h.p.
12 x 63 mobile nome, engine, like new, Frank
adults, no pets. 30 x 60 store Dodderer, Box 162, Coolville,
room , 2 bedroom apartment, Olllo.
Sale or Trade - 12 ft . meat
1-30-3tp
case, 10 ft. vegetable .case, - - - - - - - - coin Cola machine,_ grocery TROPICAL FISH, fancy
guppies, angels and breeders,
carts, meat block, 6 x 6
walkln, automatic washer &amp; · Bellas and supplies. Phone
dryer . M &amp; G Food Market •. 3 992·5443,
12-JO.Ifc
miles south of Middleport on
Rt. 7.
- -- - - , - - - - ' 1-28-Jtp
HEATH 4 channel Amp. - $80 ;
electric Hawaiian guitar For ~ent
$30; Antlqu~ fancy ladder
back arm chair - $40; Call
NEW, 12x60, 2 bedroom mobile 992-6083.
horne ·across from Bradbury
1-28-3fp
School . Call 992-5301 or see
Charles Lewis, 2nd house
south from Bradbury School.
Mobile Homes For
Pets welcome.
1-27-lfc
· 60X12, 2-bedroom, all-electric,
FURNISHED and unfurnished
air conditioned, 8x20 ft. Porch
and · aluminum awning,
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5434.
aluminum skfrllng, corn 10-18-tfc
pletely setvp. Beautiful
- - -- - - - - location. Owner leaving state.
Phone 949-4892 or 992-5272.
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Racine area. Phone 992-6329.
1-10-tfc
12-14-ftc
-~---5 ROOMS &amp; bath, ground floor
aparlment, Albert Hili ,
Racine 949-2261.
1-21 -8tc

Sale

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P.M.
Day
Before
Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; CorrectiQI'Is
Will be accepted until9 a .m. for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
rlgh!'!o edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The
publisher will not be
responsible for more than one
Incorrect Insertion.

RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive Insertions.

FER 'fE

r------------,

2 BEDROOM mobile home, 12 x
60, adults only. Phone 9925443.
1-11 -tfc

Auto Sales

18 cents per word six con'68 FORD pickup, custom cab,
secutive insertions.
wide bed, 6 cylinder, 3 speed,
25 Per Cent Discount on paid

.

For Sale

REI~T -

1970 NOVA CHEVY 114 DOOR
$2195
5,000 miles by local owner, p. steering, automatic trans .. 6
cy l. engine, P.B., radio. white wails, beautiful beige finish
&amp; blk. interior. like new .

~OS COT

'

.:n;sT NAME IT,
, AUNT LOWEEZ'f-t'LL WHITTLE IT

'

For Sale or Trade

1971 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE.
· $3595
Sandalwood with brown vinyl top, factory air conditioned,
V-8 engine with turbo hydromatlc, power steering, E.
clock, P. 8., radio, Rally wheels with w-w lires. Frt. &amp; rear
guards . Retail S4155. Co. official car &amp; specially priced.

Notice

'

•

,

Sentinel Cla·ssifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results. ·
2SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

.'

\

6- Tbe Daily Sentinel, J'dkldlePOrt-Pomeroy. 0 ., Jan. 31, 1972 _

Weal Bowling

.
,,,,,,,,,,,
,, 1,

12' - 14' • 24' • WiDE

MJ.LJ.ER
MOBil£ HOMES

Business Services
'

.

_EXPERT
Wh,el Alignment
' .
$5.55 .
-GUARANTEEDPhone 99;1-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
, Open I Til 5
Mond.ly thru Siturd.ly
6N E. Mtin, Pomeroy, 0 .

AU. WEATHER ROOFING ·
&amp; OONSTRUCTIQN
&amp; PWMBING CO.
240 Lincoln st.
'Middleport, Ohio
Obo Anthony Plumbing
We 'have 1 camplete Ho111e
Maintenance Service the
yoor 1round. No m11ter whot
your need. Complete roof or
spouting ..-.polr. Interior. at
exterior c1rpentry. Ceiling
tile ond Paneling 1nd Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Healing.
Day Number 992·2550
We hove 24 hr. e mergtncy
service.
992-5103
742·3947
992-3898 742-4761
We are tully insured

The
Orchid Room

·/- )1

·~ke reservations' for your
prlvale parties, banquets, •
special occasions.
Ideal for meeting· place with or without kitchen
privileges.. : ··
Individual Catering
· Will·seat up to 150 people.

"-'one
992-3975

992-5786

Service

'

.........I""V'''-' HE WA6 A6KED 10
WORK PLAIN CLOTHE6
FOR A WEEKI

SMI11f NElSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pit. 992-2174

H£16 ElEEN LIKE
1WiT EVER SINCE
1l4f. 'DElCCTIVE
Bt.IREALI HAD
TWO MEN SICK ..

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME.IN RACINI'
TWO HOMES IN ~YRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
tOO PCT, FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom' $16;900.00 home can be purchas..r ·with •
monthly peymenjulow as $65.00 lor a family '!lith a base
salar~ of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1-&lt; Pd. annual
. perc.ntage rate.
·
'

BILL NELSON, 992-3457
TOM CROW, 992-2510

I

ALIM. ~T6
WITH BEN 1.

From the largest Trt"ck
Bulldozer Radiator to the
-Smailesi H~er Core.
·
Nathan Biggs .
'Rod II lor Spoclollsi

e,AREL'i
COVER
EXPEfJSE&amp;BUTAH'I..L
TAKE. IT!.'

CNL'i WA\f1051!WEMI55
f&gt;WJEBIP.D FUI&lt;\ MAAR-/IN'
MR. SlvEETPANTS i$ TO
GIT HIM TANGLED UP
WIF'HOTHIP.GAL-

BUT I«) MAfJ
WOULD OPIJTHE.R
HAVE NO OTHI.R
GAl.., IF HE. WflB
IN HI&amp; RIGHT
i'JI,J.''1·"

CALL
.
Hll TON WOLFE, 949·3211
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534

ALWAYS A

PLEASI.IRE T'

SiE YA,

ALL KINDS OF
GLASS ·
For Every Purpose

POMEROY

1220 Washington Blvd.
26.000 miles, $1 ,400 ; phone
ads and ads paid within 10
Belpre, Ohio
&amp;
992-6048'.
days.
lessons in knitting or
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna We specialize in auto glass ·
1-25-6fp
l------------1
Kyger Creek
crocheting will
begin
CARD OF THANKS ·
Service. Phone 992-2522.
on lh.e spot instailelion.
992·2094
FOR THE BEST deal In a new
1. Day Maint. 22-10; 2. Odd
&amp; OBITUARY
Tuesday and Thursday, 7 fo 8
6-10-tfc Mirrors . Table Tops · Pl1te
606 E. Main Pomeroy
Balls 22-10; 3. Timber Splitters
$1.50 for 50 word minimum. · 1910 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442,' or used mobile home, try '
p.m. and Thurs~ay at 1 p.m.
18-14; 4. Rejects 18-14; 5.
automatic, factory stereo Kanauga Mobile Home Sales, SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Free Glass, Small home rfpoirs .
Each additional word 2c.
1-31 -ltc
scrHns - storm windows
Stfugglers 16·16; 6. C. Shift 14lape. Lotsofextras. Like new. Kanauga, Ohio.
BLIND ADS
pipe Inspection . · Paul Stein· repaired.
-SUPPUES
18; 7. A Shift 14-18; 8. B Shift 4·
Call 992-2441 after 5 p.m.
·
12· 17-90tc
Additional 25c Charge per
LEGAL NOTICE
metz, phone 742-5864,
ESTIMATE
FREE
28.
DANNY ELWOOD BOWERS,
Advertisement.
11-28-ttc - -- - - - - and
1-26-12fp
Point Pleasant &amp; Mason
Team 3 Games High - Odd whose last known p!ace of
MOBILE HOMES . Large
OFFICE HOURS
Balls 2599, C Shift 2560; Team ·res idence is 352 East Ma in
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally, '57 CHEVY, 321 cu. in ., solid selection 8 . 10 . 12 wides, 1 to 4 SEPTIC tanks cleaned. 'Miller
AUTO GLASS
l·llgh Game - Odd Balls 936, Street. Pomero y, Oh io , Is
bank
repos
and
bedrooms,
8:30
a
.m.
to
12:00
Noon
Ollio.
Ph.
Sanitation,
Stewart,
AI Conard, Mgr.
lifters, Cam, 3 speed, new used, some practically .new.
hereby notified that on the 24th
Odd Balls 922.
Saturday .
·Stop In and See Our
662-3035.
.
day of January, 1972 ROY A .
Phone
304-773-5710
interior
and
racing
slicks,
Ind. 3 Games High - G. ROUSH filed his pet ition in the
Save
up
to
•
!
,.
R.
A.
or
Don
'Floor Display,
2-12-tfc Route JJ
Mason, W. Va,
good cond Ilion . Phone 992- Miller, _705 Farson Street,
Shrlmplln 643, R. Cremeans Probate Court of Meigs County , Notice
5663.
600. Ind. High Game - G. Oh io to adopt ROBERT
' I
Belpre, Ohio - by Kaiser ';;BA~C;::;K;;H=,:;O~E:::A~N:7:D;::::;:D';;O;;:ZE;::;R;:-work.
COLONIAL Auto Body,,537 High DRY WALL Finisher conMitch 245, R. Cremeans 243. EUGENE BOWERS and lor
Aluminum, phone 423-9531.
Septic tanks installed. George
change of name of said child to
St ., Middleport,
Ohio.
Steelworkers
Now's Time To
'68 CHEVY Impala, automatic, .
1-18-121c
tractor. R. I. Oubbeld, Phone
{Bill)
Pullins. Phone 992-2418.
Complele
body
repelrs
' and
1. Rejects 42; 2. Wonders 40; Robert - Eugene Roush ; sa id
742-5825.
power·
steering,
power''
;;;;;;:~-.:-=---:--:-:­
4-25-tfc
IS set for hearing at 10 : 00
paintings, glass Installation,
3. Nuts &amp; Bolts 34; 4. Skips 26; cause
brakes, 327 cu. ln., grey with MOBILE home on nice lot, -~---1-31·5fc
ORDER
a.m . on the 18th day of 'M arch,
free loaner
cers and
5. Ferros 21; 6. Foote Heels 15 ; 1971.
black vinyl top, phone 985- forced air heat, air con- INTER lOR and exterior
estimates, also mechanical INTERIOR and exterior
7. Stingers 14; 8. Wheels 0.
3598.
dltlonlng In Racine area.
Roy A . Roush , Petit ioner
'fiELD
SEEDS
painlllig, roofing and gutter
repeirs. ·Phone 992-3793.
High·--.. T~m 3 Games
J . B. O'Brien , Attorney
1-21 -t21c
Phone 992-6329.
painting . R. I. D~bbeld, phOI'Ie
work ·done. Phone 843-2826.
1-28-6tc
Rejecls 2630, Wonders 2517;
for Petitioner .
742-5825.
- - - - - - - - llr..
1-23-lfc
1-18-121C
High Team Game - Reject$ It) Jl. 1217, 14, 21.28131 Ht
FERTILIZER
1-31-Src
1965 FORD •;, ton , V-8, Custom -- - - - - - - - 953, Wonders 876.
READY-MIX CONCRETE decab,
with
overdrive,
radio,
in
Real
Estate
For
Sale
POMEROY LANES
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Ind. High 3 Games - B.
livered right to. your project. O'DELL WHEEL alighment
good condition - $1,075;
SEED CORN
Pomeroy Bowling
~EASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
White 599, H. Whitlatch 597;
Fast and _ easy . J'ree
Phone Coolville, Ohio 667located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W. Va .
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
Lanes League
Ind. High Game - B. White
Order Now &amp; Save I
3593.
eslim.afes . Phone 992-3284.
Complete front end service,
- 8 room house, newly
Owner &amp; Operator.
254, L. Lanier 224,' '
January 26, 1972
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
tuna up and brake service.
1-28-3tp
painted on two-thirds acre lot, .
S-12-lfc
Sund.ly Mlxod
· Won Lost
Middleport, Ohio.
Wheels balanced eiec·
~-:-::::::-:~--:58 30
3 bedrooms downstairs, 2 ~==:::-::-:~-----:­
I. Fergusqn &amp; White 14-2 ; 2. · Baum's Lumber
1961
'
1
2
TON
Chevrolet
pickup,
6
6-30-ttc
l ~oAicai ly. ·
Ail
wo~~ ,
50 38
Goodrich &amp; Roush 14-2; 3. Hood Team No. 4
cylinder- 5400; phOI'Ie after 5 upstairs, come see. Cl~ to . AUT-OMOBILE insura~ce ~!eon
guara~te,ed . ~o __ Reasonable
46 42
cancelled?
Lost · your
&amp; Greene 10-4; 4. Wright &amp; Gaul's Shake Haven
· '· rate$. Phone 9'12-3213.
p.m., John A. Jeflers, 992- hard road, store and church,
45 43
only
s1o;ooo.
Phone
Pt.
operator's
license?
Call 992Smith 8-8; 5. Fearsome Four 8- Welker's Ashland
6773.
· M7-tlc
Pieasant 675·2946.
2'166.
44 44 INCOME TAX service, dally
8; 6. Duncan &amp; Sines 6-10 ; 7. Team No. 1
NOTICE OF
l-28-3tc
•
Ridenour's
TV
21
61
APPOINTMENT
1-27-4tp
Cremeans &amp; Smllh 2-14; 8.
6·15-lfc
OKcept Sunday, evenings by
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
CIS. No. 20595
High Ind. Game - Barbara
Blake &amp; Withers 2·14.
appointment . Mrs. Wanda
Complete Service
Estate
of
Wtlllam
P.
GrutSer,
MINERSVILLE on Welchtown
Murray
149,
Charlene
Team High 3 Games Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road, 1 For Sale
Phone 949·3821
Decea5ed.
Hill - 1'4 acre lot with old Real Estate For
Ferguson and White, Duncan Frederick 146; High Series mile west of Meigs County
Racine, Ohio
Notice
is hereby given that
house, all utilities, $600.
and Sines; High Team Game- Barbara Murray 391. Florence
Fairground
on
R!.
7
bypass.
John M . King, of Route 1.
Crill
Bradford
STEREO,
Early
American
Phone 992-6021 .
Ferguson and White, Ferguson Guinther 377.
Phone 992-2272.
Rutland, Ohio, has been duly
5· 1-tfc
Slereo,
radio
combination,
Team High Game and Series
and White.
·
l-27·61c
a
p
po
I
n
ted
E
x
e
c
u
to
r
of
t
h
t
:-::::-::-:::-:-:-:-:::::':':':::--:1-3-30tc
AM-FM radio, 4 speaker
Ind. High 3 Games- Men: - Gaul's Shake Haven 259 and
Estato of William P. Grueser, SEWING 'MACHINES. Repair
sound system . Balance $79.81 . 4 ROOM house In Anllquity. See
deceased,
late ot Meigs County, service, all makes. 992-2284.
C. Ferguson 615, D. Duncan 738.
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
Use our budget terms. Call
Ohio.
Th F
Charles -Wolfe, Racine.
599 ; women : C. Roush 490, S.
overweight· ladles, teens and
992-7085.
Crodllors are required to file
o abrlc Shop, Pomeroy.
Asking price $1500; phone 247Hood 477.
Q-How often is there an men Interested In a Weight
their
claims
with
sold
fiduciary
Authorized
Singer Sales and
l-26-6tc 3155.
Ind. High Gam&amp;-Men: C. eclipse of the sun that can
within tour months.
Service. WeSharpen 'Scissors.
Watchers
IRJ
Class
in
-::-:-:-:-:-:-~--1·27-121c
Ferguson 221, B. While 2\4;
Dated this 18th day of
3·29-ttc
be seen from the same place
Pomeroy write : Weight WALNUT, Modern style,
Women : C. Roush 189, C.
Jtnuary 1972.
!RJ.
1863
Section
Watchers
(rom
th
e
earth?
stereo-radio,
AM-FM
radio,
4
Roush 180.
John C. Bacon
Rd., Cincinnati, Ollio 45237.
speaker sound system, 4 HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
A-About once every 360
Probate Judge
Biaiier
10-3-tfc · .speed automatic changer . 985-3529.
of said County
110 Mechanic Stree1
~e ars, on the average .
Late Sunday Mlxod
· NOTICE OF
Ill 24, 31 (2) 7, 31
::-:-:::----$68
.59.
Use
our
Balance
1-28-tfc
Pomeroy,
Olllo
1. Roberts 14-2; 2. Sines 10-6;
APPOINTMENT
. ' .
SAVE
up
to
one
half.
Bring
your
budget
terms
.
Call
992-7085.
3. Miller 10-6; 4. Youngs 8-8; 5.
CuoNo.2o,m
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
1-26-6tc HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Estate of Clara E. Gartend,
Capehart 8-8; 6. Gibbs 6-10; 7. Auto Mart 8-8; 6. Mason Co.·
OFFI.CI&lt;"L NOTICE
151
B
_
ufternut
Ave
..
Pomeroy.
·
Call Danny Thompson, 992·
NEW LISTING
The Township Trustees of Deceased .
Duncans 4-12; 8. Paughs 4-12. Bank 6-10; 7. W. Va. National
Phone 992-5080.
1971
ZIG-ZAG
Sewing
Machine
2196.
2
APARTMENTS9
rooms,
6
Chester
Township
will
receive
Notice
Is
hereby
given that .
Guard
21~;
8.
Hoflmans
2-14.
Team 3 Games High 11 -21-ltc
with bath, 3 and bath. Near seolod bids until 8:00 p.m .. Mary Harris of Minersville,
lefl in layawar. Beautiful
7-18-ffc
Team High 3 Games ~ ­
Roberts 1061, Youngs 965.
pastel color, lui size model. - - -- -- - - Pomeroy stores. Both for February 11, 1972 at which lime Ohio, has been duly appointed ·
. Team High Game - Roberts Mason Co. Bank 2890, Harts WILL DO furniture refinishing
built-In
lo
buttonhole,
do
·All
$7,500.00.
blda will be opened, for one .executrix ot the Estate of Clare
Used
Cars
2833;
Team
High
381, Roberts 376.
3 BEDROOM modular home,
E . Garl•nd, deceaud, tate of
repairs;
also
some
and
siretch
sewing
and
fancy
POMEROY
dump
truck, IS ,!Oiiows: G.V.W . Minersville,
Game - W. Va . National
Ind. High 3 Games whole
house
air
Meigs County,
total
electric,
upholstering of small chairs.
MODERN-6rooms, 1'12 baths. of 24,000 lb . or larger; Proper , Ohio .
stitching. Pay-just 548.75 cash
Richard Sines 559, Don Duncan Guard lOIS, Harts Used Cars
of
land,
conditioning
&gt;
5
acres
Phone
949-2405.
Nice
kitchen,
carpeting.
Wheelbase
tor
7
x
9
dump
bed,
I
or lerms available. Trade-Ins above ground pool with pool
Creditors are required to file
SIS. Ind. High Game - Russ 1007.
beam front axle 7·,000 lbs. or their
F
$19 500 00
l-28-3tc
accepted. Phone 992-5641.
Ind. High 3 Games - D.
claims with said fiduciary
Capehart 209, R. Sines and J.
urnace . RURAL
• · ·
larger. Frame Reinforcement .
equipment; all . kitchen apwithin four months.
l-26-6tc pliances including new dishMason 671. W. King 660. Ind. ::=-:-:----Paugh_195.
4 ACRES - Modern S room Heavy Duty Brakes.
Doted lhls 13th day of
High Gme - Snyder 265, FOR A lasting gift - Landwasher. Phone 882-2481 or 882house, bath. Chester water . . 3-40 cu . ln . engine or larger, v. January 1972.
scapes
painted
or
drawn
to
VACUUM
Cleaner
brand
new
Nelson
258.
1 Engine.
·T uosay lnduslrlol
2335 In New Haven, W. Va.
John c . Bacon
order. Call David and Lynn
1971 model. Complete with all
$10,500.110.
Five Speed, Direct In tlftn ,
t: · Penn Centr&amp;i 20-4; 2.
l-25-6tc
Probate Judge
Lynas, 992-6083.
cleaning
fools.
Small
paint
Synchromesh
Transmission
.
MIDDLEPORT
Burton Sunoco 20-4; 3. Coca1-28-61p
damage in shipping. Will take
2 apartments- S to each side. . 9.00 x 20 Ton Ply Tires with II) 17, 2&lt;, 31 , 31 atsaid Coonty
Cola 16-8; 4. Mason Agg . 12-12;
Gas heal. All utilities . Mud end Snow Tread on Rear.
121 cash or . budget pian 4 BEDROOMr bath &amp; half,
S. New Haven Furniture 4-20;
utility room, built-In kitchen,
$3 500 00
7.00 Rims.
·
available.
Phone
992-5641.
INSTRUCTION
in
organ
and
6. Carolina Lumber 0-24.
wall
to
wall
carpet
&amp;
garage.
PQMEROY
Two
West
Coast
Mirrors.
BID ADVERTISIMENT
plano. Gerald Hoffner, phone
1-26-6tc
High Team 3 Games Located
•
;,
mile
north
of
y
Cast
Spoke
Wheels
The
Tuppers Pialns .Chester
NIF
992-3825.
~
Burton Sunoco 2633, Coca-Cola
- S rooms, bath, oak
Duel Electric Windshield Water District, a public body,1
Eastern
High
School.
House
Is
l-19-12tc HAY. Eulah Wolfe, Racine,
floors. Gas heat, basement. Wipers, Variable Speed &amp; hereby advertises for bids tor
2372. Team High Game - Penn
almost finished and others
Only 16,000.00.
Weshers.
. tho following :
·
- -----phone 247-2278.
Central_ 895, Coca-Cola 860.
being bull!. Call 985-3598.
19
ACRES
Two
Speed
Rear
AMie,
17,000
One
{1)
solenoid
volve
unit,
1-30-3tc
Ind . High 3 Games - B.
Help Wanted
1-21 -JOtc MODERN ~ 3 bedroom home lbs. or larger.
.
ailitude·c type, complete with
Davis 618, D. Roush 616. Ind .
and 2 others rented. FREE
Heavy Duty Bottery .
following :
High Game - B. Davis 233, D.
HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS . 1957VALIANTIOO, verygood ; 2
GAS
fteavy
Duty
011
Flifor.
.
2 eacn M J gate valves and
Oni
16
$
000
00
1
Roush 222.
•
Y • • ·
Fresh Alr Heat~tr &amp; Defroster
boxes,
nice ponies; 5 h.p, Rotolllier;
Enlist now - stay home until
DEXTER
1 1 d C1
it C00 II .
1· I t
after graduation . Guaranteed , McCullough Mini mac Chain
BUSINESS BUILDING - 30 x
Fni'~n't
~~w
H
fo~c
V.
ng .
_.,!nc~ef:;s:l':e~
gauge,
Monday Mtrchonts
assignments to Europe, saw ; Model It Winchester
44.
Neat
6
room
home,
bath,
Rear
Tow
Loop,
4"
solenoid
valve
;
1. Harts Used Cars 14-2; 2.
Korea, Hawaii , or selected
Automatic 12 gauge shotgun;
drilled well . 2 acres.
Heavy Duty Front &amp; Rear
sump pvmp,
Millers Insurance 14-2; 3.
locations In the U. S. See your
7'h h.p. Evlnrude outboard;
RURAL
Sprlngo with Auxiliary Springs.
altiiude gauge,
Keefers Service Station 10-6; 4.
local Army representative for 1 Sklllsaw; phone 949-21JJ.
4
Penn Central 8-8; 5. Mason
7 rooms, Mth, 3 or bedrooms.
i~:~omSI;~:j, with Hazard ~~~=rdlschargt
facts aboui lhe 180-day ,
1-J0.31c
Gas heat. 2 gardens. $7,000.00. Switch &amp; Marker Lights.
entrance hatch
Delayed Entry Program and
608 East Main
f!.9MEROY
.
.
Power Steering.
light switch
the Army's ·new pay raise.
SIDE GLANCES
NICE -7 rooms, 1'h baths, ga$
.
· DUMP lED
vapor proof light
POMEROY
by Gill Fox
For more Information call
furnace. Storm doors and
7 x 9, 19" Sidts ond 30" Head
power panel
593-3022.
2'12 LOTS
windows. $7,500.00.
'and
Tall
Gate.
Holt In Tailgate
prtssure switch and
1-31-Stc
POMERov· -~ I story frame,
MINERSVILLE
. for spreading materials.
Inlet pressure gauge w.
2
bedrooms,
porNICE
-'6
rooms,
bath
gas
~~It Cab Protector.
snubber
.
.
1
36" X 23" X .009
1 Hoist or largtr.
ches, deep well, ·room for
furnace. Basement. Large lot.
·Piaru. for fhls soleno!Ct valve 1
EXPERIENCED Beaullflclan.
-r~!l
$8 000 00
Mud Flaps.
uri It are on file at· the water
trailer, good neighborhood.
Must have manager's license.
$1111f L&lt;l
'
·NEW
LISTING
pe~net~d
.to
be
mounted
and
Office
located in Chester Ohio
$3,375.00.
Must
be
able
to
do
high
'\W&lt; • "!BUSINESS
ROOM
.
fashion with both short and
UNDER LEASE - Business
The Board ot Trustees :~gsp~~~iv:tldvJ:~ed by any
TUPPERS PLAINS - cement
long hair. Guaranteed salary.
down, 6 rooms, and bath, Up. rtStrVts lhe right to r.t fect any
All bids must be received by
. block building, large 95 x 264 $16,000.00.
Send resume c-o The Daily
or ell bids. '
10 a.m . on February 10 1972
level lot, located on Rt. 7 In
Senllnel, P. 0. Box 729-B, •
NEW LISTING
Bidders are requested to end the District reserves the
lown . VERY LOW AT MOBILE HOME 2 bed
Pomeroy, Ollio 45769.
• ·
submit with their bid tor tho right to reject anf}j' or ail bids.
rooms, above equipment a further bid
T
·
16,900.00.
1-28-Jtc
USED OFFSET PLATES
10 x 50. Two additional rooms. for a 1965 International 1700
uppers. Is ins Chester
I
Cellar, carporl. $5,000.00. serin Truck .
Water Dialrlct
-::-:-:-:-:----:::==
HAVE
INVESTMENT PROPERTY
RE SPONSIBLE perso~ork
Nearly 1'12 ACRES.
WILl-IS FROST, Clerk
Ch t O Box 1
MANY USES
RACINE- large tile building
and manage route. Pick-up
HELEN l. TEAFORD,
(1) 2,4, J1 (2) 7. 31
Ill 17, 24..31, 3 er, hlo 45720
with ~rick front, business
and
delivery .
A. B.C.
Al~il~
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .
Cleaners, Mason, W. Va .
room with 3 apartmenis over,
992·3325
992-2371
with
apartment
ov.er,
garage
1·25-ttc
' 1·30 ·6tc
storage r09m , 3 apartments
8 for $1.00
are furnished, one Is not, RACINE ..:. 10 room house,
'
about 25 years old, ail
Employment Wanted
balh, basement, garage, two
apartments are rented.
lots. No reasonable offer
LOTS and' yards cleanea . Write
$21,500.00.
refused. Phone 949-4313.
Box 321 , Rutland, Ohio.
1 STORY FRAME
All HOMES,ON LOT OR BY CUSTOMER
l-21·121p
l-2Hfp
MIDDLEPORT-~ bedrooms,
ORDER DISCOUNTEDS PER CENT
bath, full basement, paneled,
filed, carpeted, gas lurnace, 3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
WE ARE NOTmoviiJv auf at Meigs Couirty as others ha
Wanted .To Buy
Arba!J!Ih Addition, TupPers
extra lot. $8,900.00.
but
we will conllnu~ to "Service l"hatw~ sell", Come.:
SOLD DOWN !WE NEED ,Plains. All . new with total
-111 Co"rt St.
OLD
POCKET
knives,
see
the new GREEN BRIAR. The hon(tl.for !bote Who
central
air
electric
and
LISTINGS.)
especially Case XX . Also
Pomeroy, Ohio
, COI'Idltionlng, bath and :w fully
appreciate tht better things ol life. Manu!ec:turtd by lh
HENRY
CLELAND
have other old knives to trade
carptltd, full basement,
iergtlt builder of mob!it homes.' Our 12' wide Arllngt e ·
REALTOR
or sell . Phone 992-2343.
garage in basement. S.. by
HOI'Its start at $3495.00. Delivered and set up.
on ·
Offld
992·2259
·1-18-lfc
appointment, phOI'Ie ft2·21H '
Residence 992·U61
COAL, limestone . EJ('celsior
'
f.J0.6fc or 992-3515. Danny ThomJ!ICIII .
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
We Stltcilllte in OtdtrlnU Hoinoi to Suit tht Cu•tom ...
'
OLD fURNITURE, Round Oak
Fina~ing evaillblt.
,
·
1
Pomeroy.
Phone
992-3891.
tables. · Bross beds, dishes,
·
12.JO.trc·
4-9-tlc NICE 2-st~ry home with lull
clocks, and -or complete
I .
: '
basement, 2 lots, new for cod SIX ROoM houM, 133 IUtttnJut
households . Write M. D. POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
air
furnace.
Near
Pomeroy.
Mliior, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Olllo.
"Maybe I'm a hair styliat and maybe I'm pot . .
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Park view Kennels, Phone 992.
Elementary Scl)ool. Pho"'
Call
992-6271.
.
J
.
TUPPIIIS PLAINS, 0.
Wedsworth
Drive, Columbus.
Depends on how sweet you l'llll&gt;t to look!"
54-tJ.
•
992-7214 to see.
&gt;
12-17-flc
Oltio, phone 237·433oi.
........., ...1
'·
. :'·
8-15-tlc
I
11-7-lfc
ll-2t·HC

HOMI

PtlTUNIA .. ,

WINNIE .WINKLE

AUTO

. W111i 1HE 51-iAPE

OFFICE

l

FURNITURE

.

il

H
•

,...

,';: ," t.~~~~G~9:-;,:."'M'~111!1';
;:; _

. SR.

------

WMP0/1390

ME$U'

l'fiiQ,\ ~m~·

CO\.'!N!

-.
I 6HOOl D ~Ave

IT'S

SU&amp;I'ECTfD A ~
MW 1!1 'I'O!Jlr'

~0

USE, PROF , .. I ClOTTA SlAY

All' TRY T'

~XPlAI~

CHARACTER. •• ft

~ QF IIOII;d}TY

1iiiif'JITIM'IW
AT
ATIME WHeN WE AI!E
A80UT TO PUlL OFF~
1!101!ST 1!018SlY91ttC!
SOME 'llllevf6 S'TOLE

THE •MOttA ltsA"!

ACROSS

r::::::;::;-"'[lr.::;::-':;:;;';;;'"1
TilE

tion

Vacillate
;~~~~~~ 19.18.21. Wrath
Paris

\

manners

'
i4tlwl4 .-l , _

hi" HI NIH 1\HN&lt; II IJ

Unter~mble theae roor Jumbl..,
one letter to each ~quare, to
form four ordinary words.

"'d H()fl I I (

limel

Ye.terdar'•ADIWer

40, Italian
W. W. JI
batilo
site
U. Egret
42, Idles
' DOWN
! ..Panama
gum tree
%. Manifeol
%3. Last
3. Joe
Supper,
DiMaggio,
in art
in his
24. Suppress
heyday
25. Conjugal

1,.

%6. Flashy
Z7.Homo
sapiens
Z9. Eucharist
plate
30. Unearthly
34.New
Mexican
resort
vlllage
36, One, in
Palermo
38. Putspot

o

LIRLT

I

r· ,.

II
I TAYFUL±
I r IJ

,.,.
THI5 \\OULD INDICATE
THAT 50\\EONE HAS
Ju5T S10f'PEOSMOKIN6.
Now orranre the dr&lt;ied !etten

to form tht aurprise answer, as
au nested by the above cartoon.

24. Great
quantity
25. Fermented
honey
drink
26. Overlay .
with gold
27. "Budden·

(AiliWI!'n lomorru w}

S•turday't

Mnbl •., IDIOM PIPER OPAQUE

TER~OR

Ant..,er: With o (;Ouple yo u conform it - A TRIO

brooks"

author
28. Moham·

med'sson·
in-law
29. Proces·
&amp;ion
31. Necktie
fabric
SZ. Black
cuck•-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYLL8AAXR

Is

LONGFELI:OW

.

'

.

flnr letter simply sland• for another. In this sa mple A is ...-----------.,..._,
used for the three L's, X for the two O's; etc. Si ngle letters.
lj)OStrophes, the length. and formation of the words are all
hint.. 'Each day the rode let ten are dllferent.
I

NEVE&amp;

~ARE

'

'100R PAD

WITH A. RE5TLESG 61RD !

A Crypt•ll'•m Quobtlon
G XGKKPRGS PH

TP~

KWPJTRED

G VGK.· C TE

CPAT

SEUWH

HGYXW . - ZWGK

DPJGYM

l

-·.--,.- -"\

Salarday's (Jryptoquole: 111\TING PEOPLE IS LIKE BURN·
JNG DOWN YO I!J R OWN HOUSE TO GET RID OF A RAT .- .._~------'---'
H. E. FOSDICK
·
~.f) lll72 K i1•1i l't&gt; ~t.tul't'~ ~pHiiruh· , lnr . I

'

.' \ )

crown
39. Display
of bad

JllYMOOlbrn®/J..i

nickname

MID-WINTER
MOBILE HOME SAL£

MEIGS MOIIU HOMIS

4, Greek ·
letter
5. ConsanguineoWI
6. Up to now
7, Samuel's
mentor
8. Bourbon
Street
olferlng
9. Turned
inside out
10. Take out
of pawn
Not him
20. Knightly
oath

season

r•

===-=---.-

33, Gush
35, Computer
material
37, Papal

22. German
river
23. Man';

Aluminum
Sheets ·

The
Daily Sentinel

1. More
buhful
&amp;.Jewish
feut
11. Egg.
shaped
12. Kind of
branch
13. lnftlctlng
punish·
ment
1f. Mended
15. Noachiait
craft
18. Sur·
priser's

exclama-

For Sale

- - -- -

T' ANNIE Atl'

MR. WARBUCKS!

Oeland
Realty

ON YOUR DIAL

''

1".1:

CAllWT 'OJ m»eoo

' .
+

--------

...... .

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y

Sale

TEAFORD

1
~'.

=.;~~ ~!a.i~ro~~~~~9:
.
l IIEeP

'1S;:11£;
. :_;

Virgil~~

- ---

.We talk to you
like a persOrL

il

'

'
'

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'

•

..

,

'

'

8-'"" DIIUySentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Jan. 31, 1972

Vietnam Decision

~.··

(Continued from page I)
United States in Viet N;un which would justify in present circumstances the conversion of the war ... primarily into an
American War to be fought with American lives." (Th~ report
noted that at the time more than 50 American lives already had
been lost, about half in combat.)
. Oct. 2, 1963: AWhite House statement issued by President John
F. Kennedy : "The security,of South Vietnam is a major interest
of the United states as of otlkr freil naiions. We will adhere to our
policy of working with the people and government of South
VIetnam to deny this coiUltry to Commi.Uiism ... "
.i:.tly 31, 1967 : President Lyndon B. Johnson says he believes
the United States is "rich enough" to carry on the war in Viet·
nam and to meet d~estic responsibilities.
March 31, I~ ; President Johnson announces a "unilateral"
halt to air and naval bombardment of North Vielnam and issues
a new call to Hanoi to enter peace talks. At the conclusion of his
address, he makes this surprise announcement:
'"I shall not seek, and I will not accept, the nomination of my
party for another term as your president."
When President Nixon first enunciated his Nixon doctrine, its
details remained to be fleshed out, not only for Asia but for the
remainder of the world as well.ln many ways this has been done.
By the first of May, 1972, American troop strength In Vietnam
will be down to aroiUld 60,000 men.
The White House bas disclosed it intends to leave a so-ealled
residual force in South Vietnam indefinitely, or for at least .as
long as the prisoner of war issue remains unsettled.
The White House clearly intends to continue its support of
President N~UYen Van Thieu's 2overnment. both with military
supplies and from the air, presumably ~rom Thailand and sea·
based aircraft.
In Europe, the president has made it equally clear that he
believed a continued U. s . Military presence is vital to U. s. in·
leresis.
In Latin America he Intends to promote stability, even at the
expense of democratic processes.
His assertion that the United States wllllive up to its military
commitments leaves other questions unanswered.
What for instance, would the United States do in the event of an
open invasion of Thailand by China or of South Korea by North
Korea?
President Nixon apparently believes neither is about to happen, and that the mere fact of a military commitment from the
Unilefl States Is in itself enough of a deterrent.
It would seem that the great lesson the United States has
learned from its involvement in Vietnam is that intervention with
military action in an internal situation-Mort of au-aut war
utilizing all the nation's military resources with the objecl of
crushing an enemy-Is a thankless, futile exercise.
·
Yet who is to say that this president, or some future American
govenunent, under some new set of clrcumstances deemed
dangerous to the security of the United States, might not do the
same again? The best that can be said is that, remembering
Vlelnam, It is not likely to happen again, at least in the foreseeable future.
Thia ts not however, a tikeUhood that comes with any guarantees. Too many mistakes and misjudgments have been made
In the past to leave complete assurance similar mistakes might
not· be made again ..

Surprise Vigor
'
'

In Arizona

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES - Mrs .
George Green, Geo~ge
Vanover, Cathy Bush, Arlee
Blake, Mrs. Guy McWilliams,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dobbins,
Mrs. Donald Nitierh Georgia
McCoy, Illlvid Gillispie, Jr.,
l(n. Charles Oliver, William
Divault, BesSie Mount; Mrs.
Jalln Carter, Mrs. Willlam
Dllplnan, Mrs. Jaclde Large,
1111'1. lAIIIe Adama and Mrs.
Doyle Mcilllniel'.

.

Market Report
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Saturday, Jan. 29, 1972
SALES REPORT OF
Ohio Valley Uvestock Co.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 27 to
27.50; 220 to 250 lbs. 27 to 27.25;
Fat Sows 22.50 to 25.60; Stags
19.50 Down; Boers 19.50 to
21.10; Pigs 8 to 16; ShoeIs 14 to
25.
CA TrLE - Steers 27.50 to
38.50; Heifers 22 to 31.25; Baby
Beef 33 to 45.50; Fat Cows 18 to
21.50; Canners 16.50 to 23.85;
Bulls 24.50 to 28.70; Milk Cows
135 to 285.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
51.90; Seconds 47 to 50;
Medium 44 to 46.75; Com. &amp;
Hvs. 42 to 47;. cUns 42 Down.
BABY CALVES - 15 to 65.

News•.. in BriefS
(Continued from page I)
heaviest raids inside South Vlelnarn In four months today. The
South VIetnamese command reported Its airerafi deslroyed
three North Vletnamese tanks as the pace of the war increased
from the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) to the Mekong Delta.
Six waves of the Thailand-based B521!1 hammered suspected
North Vietnamese positions and dropped at least 540 tons of
bombs in the attacks. Waves of 8521!1 hit infilboatton routes near
the former U. S. marine base at Khe Sanh and In the A Shau
Valley, a guerrilla slronghold for 20 years.
COLUMBUS- THE OHIO HIGHwAY Palrol gains some
new powers in March which wlll allow It to operate on other than
just state property, but its conunander doesn't see the patrOl as
emerging as a type of "gangbuster" force.
For the first time In the 39 years of the patrol, it Will be able
to intervene in riots and civil disorders if requested by local
sheriffs or mayors. The law takes effect March 3. The 1,266 men
of the patrol, however, won 'I be turned into a state pollee force,
Patrol Supt. Col. Robert Chiaramonte said ioday, but
"only as a backup force to local authority."
COLUMBUS - WNG-TIME WCAL television newsman
Chet Long died Sunday at Riverside Hospital after suffering a
heart attack a week before. He was 56.
Long joined WBNS.TV here in )949 after being with WBNS
radio four years. As anchorman of the television station's nightly
news hour, he became the most well-known broadcast personality In central Ohio, noted for ending the program with a
philosophiCal saying.
CHICAGO -TAX BREAKS and subsidies may be the proper
ball for llD'ing doctors to rural areas and the inner city according
to a anclnnati physician. "It should be obvious that physicians
congregate, juat as other people, In large cities 'because that's
where the mooey b,' as WUJie SUtton is reputed to have said
when asked why he persisted In robbing banks,'' Dr. Charlea D.
Aring said In an article in the CUI rent Issue of the JOUI'IlJ] of the
American Medical Association.

TWIRL TONIGHT
Baton classes this evening of
Mrs. Judy Riggs, -~lch were
cancelled,
have
been
rescheduled for Wednesday at
Royal Oak Park. Beginners'
will meet at 5:30 p. m., in·
termediates at 6:30, the C9rp.9
at 7:30 and the team at 8:30 P·
m.

second full term. Mrs. Myers
was elected to Ule post In Nov. ·
1968 to fill the unexpired term.'
created by the death of the late
Mary Wetherholt. She .ts a
111elllber. of the Grace United
Methodist Church, Wesleyweds
class, · preald~nt of : the
Gallipolis Emblem Club, and'a
member of the Ohio IU!cpnj~s·
Association. Her husband,
Robert, is .an Ashland Oil
-distributor. '·
Incumbent Republican Clerk
of Courts; Marjorie Rinehart,
also filed a petition this ·mor·
ninj! seeking reelection. Miss
Rinehart, a resident of Kelton
· Rd., Ga!lip!&gt;lis, has served the

STAR BOOTED
SAPPORO, Japan (UPI) The International Olympic
Committee (IOC) booted
Austrian ski star Karl Schranz
' out of the wlnler games today
for being a proletalonal. The
Austrian Olympic Committee
said it would appeal the
decision .

Uaited Press lntemallonal
Wilt Chamberlain added
another foolnote to the Los
Angeles Lakers' fabulous
season Sunday night as he set
his
seventh
National ·
Basketball ~Ociation record.
Chamberlain, who helped the
Lakers to a pro-record 33
·consecutive victories and the
best ~ecord in the NBA this
:season, shattered Bill Russell's
career rebounding-record as he
pulled down 27 in a 153-131
route · of the Portland Trail
Blazers.
Chitmherlain, who scored 'l1
points, stretched his 12-yearrebound total to 21,734 to
surpass the 21,721 mark set by
Russell, the iormer Boston
star. The 7-foot-2 Laker captain
broke the record on his 12th
rebound of the game and was
presented with the game ball
and a wooden backboard with
his name engraved on it.

Divorce Granted
Adivorce was granted and a
suit for money has been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Kate Marilyn Moore was
granted a divorce from Carl E.
Mpore on charges of gross
neglect of duty. The money
action, In the amount of $612.78,
has been filed by Ralph Hutton,
Jr., Marietta, and the Ohio
Casualty Insurance Co .,
Hamilton, against Wliliam S.
Kennedy, Long Bottom, for
damages as the result of an
automobile aecident that occurred on Jari. 2, 1971 on SR
248.
TAKENTO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
was called to the home of Mrs.
Mildred Johnson, Gravel Hill,
at 12:23 a.m. today. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was admitted for treatment of a neck
injury.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
former Ohio state University
football player says he and a
number of friends have
decided to move to a deserted
South Pacific island and fonn a
new 'nation without taxes or
any other form of government
control.
"I have a right to my life and
the product of my labor,'' says
Thurlow. (Tad) Weed, 39,
Columbus explaining the
reason for founding the
Republic of Minerva. "We are
tired of govenunenl controls.
"This Will he a demonstration to the world that there
is another way to govern."
Weed, placekicker on Ohio
State teams 1~2 through 1954,
is now an independent oil and
gas producer.
He became interested in the
Island venture alter talking it
over with the group's prime
backer, Carrlbean-Paclflc
Enterprises, Inc.
Tbe Island Is located 40!1
miles southeast of Suva in the
Fiji Islands, and after Weed
and the others decided it was
unclaimed territory, they
erected radar reflectors,
navigation lights and began the
frame for the first building.
"We have now met all the
requirements under international law establishing
sovereignty," .. Weed said.
"And we have sent letters to ·
all the governments of the
wotld
announcing
our
sovereignty."

public the put !I yean.
l
She WBI appointed In Oci.
1946 to fill the upeEJIIred tenil
of. the .late Howard Hardway.
Hardway had been c~ one
term, then resigned to return to
teaching.
Democrat
Robert~;:;,;
Jenkins,
attorney
and
of Jenkins. Concrete
filed on the Democratic DCI:e v
for the po3ition of probate
juvenile judge. R~~· :c:~!
John W.. Howell, is r1
seeking reelection.
Common Pleas Court Jwllgd:
llona)d R: Calhoun, also
Democrat, bas already
for the post.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Ernest Stockton, Minnie
Johnson, Velma Zuspan,
Charles King, John Ash, Jean
Taylor, George Christy, Arthur
Goodin.
· SUNDAY DISCHARGES James Whittington, Jennie
Whittington, Louise Bartels,
Lisa Persons, James Hock·
man, Lillian Triplett, Tona
Boring, Lena Wolle, Charles
Klein, Rodney Swartz, Michael
Hill, Kimberly Maddox.
OES TO MEET
Pomeroy Chapter 186, OES,
will meet at 7:45p.m. Tuesday
at the Masonic Temple in
Pomeroy.

SPECIAL PlJRCHASE AND SllLE

LAWN .BOY MOWERS
At Elberfelds Warehouse On Mechanic Street
19" Push Type
119.95 LAWN BOY

l~dude~ famous quick and quiet featur.es Fmgerttp start in~ . · quiet o~eration . Fingertip
handling · Fingerttp height adjustment . Magnallte

Sale 94.95
,, l" Pt.tm Type ·
129.95 LAWt4 BoY .

lnclu~es famous quick and quiet f&lt;N~tures
- Flngerllp starling • quiet operation .
Fingertip handling • Fingertip height
adjustment . 5-way adjustable handle . ·
magnallte deck . Horn-0' Plenty catcher.

Sale 109.9'5 · .·
Be Thrifty! Save All of Your Sales! ips From

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Devoted To The Interest~ Of The
.

THAN

81/NITEA
PICTURE THAN ANY
OTHER 18HCOLOR TV

VOL XXIV NO. 205

'

Black Matrix·
...
....
....
....

.·...

...

'

~~~~~

~~~ ...
....~

""
""
~

-Picture Tube·.
THE DAYTON • MOOEL 8TI50
Bi~k finish 011 hi·imPict polyltyrene ·
cab~net. (Oelux• dtconttor stand oPtional).·

Tonight I ' Tuii"-Y
Jan. 31 , Feb. 1
WILLY WONDA AND
THE CHOCOLATE
FACTORY
CTtchnicolorl

·FURNITURE

"G"

MIDDLEPORT, O.

SHOW START&gt;! P.M.

.

GARDEN THERAPY- Mrs. James Carpenter, right, the Meigs CoiUlty garden therapy
mairman, used a variety of handcrafted items made by uie Rutland special education class to
demonstrate what can be done with culturally deprived yotmgsters, the physically or mentally
hl!ndicapped, senior citizens, or shut-ins ~ Then she challenged women attending a therapy
workShop at tile Meigs Cotmty Garden Club Association meeting Monday night to develop such
a project themselves. Here with Mrs. Carpenter, looking over the craft items, is Mrs. Hiram
Fisher of the 'Wildwood Garden Club.

I

I

PHONE 992·2156

TU.~DAY, FEBRUARY l; 1972

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
. A Big Bend Regatta flower ahow _ 8 first for the Meigs
CounlyGardenClubAssociallon-willbestaged in the Pomeroy
Junior High .School building June 16 and 17.
TentaUve plans for the show were detailed by Mrs. Reid
Young, ~n. at Mqntlay nigtit's meeting of the·Association
at Pumet:oy Elementary School:Mrs .. Young .reported that a
thel'lle fai''the ih ,• iill I tie "le1itell . itil'llie
' 1 . tl\ . '
u- Ua Ia
~ in':c, tingse that
h th me~ e
·-e1 . anno
•
a
s ow erne
appro:tdmate the Raga~ .theme .
Anumberofinnovationswlll judge the entries and a junior
be l?troduced, accordmg to the division will not be Included in
chaun~. All classes, . s~e the show schedule, according
said, l'ill be open for exhibtts to present planS. ·
· by the public. In most flower
Mrs. Young reported a $25
shows only cer~ln classes are . contribution against show
open to the public and the rest expenses has been offered by
are limited to garden club the Athens County Savings and
members:
.
Loan, Pomeroy branch. She
Instead of a smgle best of suggested also that a silver
show, Mrs. Young proposed offering be taken during the
that a first, second and third viewing hours.
place best-of-show awards be
Mrs. Tom Stewart will serve
•·• from the indl' vt'dual
selec ""'
as co-ehairman for the show.
class blue ribbon winners. She Chairmen appointed already
also suggested a sweepstakes include Mrs. Robert Thompaward for the horticulture, son~ hospitality ; Mrs. Wyatt
division.
Chadwell, entries, Mrs. Bert
An ·accredited judge will Grimm, horticulture, and Mrs.

u:

w·

Briefi
1

affairs coordinator at the
Gavin Plant, has indicated
eight representatives, some
from New York, will attend the
meeting. The Ohio Power Co. is
building the power complex.
The deep mine near Salem
Center b expected to employ
2,000 and the Gavin plant at
Cheshire another 400.
The meeting will he informal, permitting .questions
and answers . Chamber
members expect Pomeroy and
Middleport village officials,
county officials, building
contractors, businessmen and
'
Middleport
and Pomeroy
Chamber members to be in-

terested in the meeting.
"The Industry comlllg to
Meigs County is bigger than
any of us think," Crow said.
"This meeting with lop
power company officials will
give us the trilth of w~
expect In Meigs Co ty,"
Crow concluded.
Serving on the committee for
the dinner-meetiilg are Crow,
Earl Ingels and Paul Casci.
Tickets may be purchased
from any of the three committeemen.
Tentative plans are to hold
the meeting at the new Meigs
Inn. The sale of tickets is
limited, since only ap-

Bids

ened

Pickups

Show to Be June 16-17
1. B. Walker, judges and

Bids for two lllilf-ton pickup
trucks were opened today at
the re_gular meeting of the
Meigs County commissioners.
A 1965 Dndge half-ton pickup
was the lrade·in on Proposal
No. I and a li)651nternational,
the trade-in on Proposal No. ·2.
Submitting bids were R. H.
Rawlings Sons, Proposal!, for
K 'th
$2,430; No. 2, $2,415; e1
Goble~ord,No.jandNo.2,for
. .. u,~35,, Polll'roy. ~M.ptot
Company, No. I, $2,653, and

Demson
•
Candidate

Al R

Two
"wrHe
your
Congressman" projects were
launched when Albert Roush of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, Middleport,
and Mrs. Charles Kessinger,
01110 REP. JOHN M. ASHBROOK, who is trying to puSh president ot .the Eighth
Prelident Nmon'to llle right by challenging him Jn Republican District, American Legion
pretldenllalprimarlell, bas persuaded a 1968NixorifJ!nd raiser to Auxiliary, attended the midwint.e r conference of the
become hill finance cbairman.
• ·
:
American Le~ion at the Youth
Alhbroot annoUIICtd Monday the finance post would be !Wed
'center .on the Ohio State
by Lelaod M. Kaiaer ol Atherton, Calif., a long-time GOP money ·
Fairgrounds Sw\day.
ra!Mr who helped aollctt $30 million for the .Nixon-Agnew camAspecial membership award
1
paign folD' yean ago.
•
•
was presented to Marlin Bush,
Eighth District toiJ1Dlander,
WASHINGTON -COAL OPERATORS IN the United Slates
who reported district mem·
owe the govermnent $8.4 milllon for viOlations of the Federal bership over goal.
CoaJ .Mine Heallll and Safety Law, according to'.the Bureau of
Legionnaires and auxiliary
(ConUnued on Page:8)
members were asked to write

Rural Areas Program Proposed
WASHING:OON (UPI) - Pmldeal Nixon today
reeommtDCied to Coagrela a $U blllloG tniiJ'IDI
desiglled to ''revllallle rural area" tbnqh lollllt lor
rural developm1:11t ud federal aid for water eooservallon and other p!lhllc worb.
The heart of NIJIIo'e plao II a· ~~ew ~
developmeQt credit full wblcb WGOid be eatablllbed to
provide lOBJB~ 1010 lollU'IIICe ud loaD pal'lllleel to
the stain lor ue In developmeal Ulllllllce.
UDder hill )II8D credit would be made available
tlu'OIIgb lbe Farmen Home Admbllltratlon lor ap to 81
pel. ol the cell ol eetablllblnl or improvlnc bulne-.ea
which help create economic growth In 1.'111'11 anu.

Salisbury Water
Graded under
.500
".

Veterans Memorial Hospital
DISCHARGED - Eddie
Casto, Tura Hunter, Ted
Swartz, Paul Stewart, Joan

3723). There Is no charge lor
the testing which II voluntary .
Bartels will alsot~rcivlde aid to
any resident in developing a
water supply system.
Bartels will begin work in
Letart Township Monday, Feb.
7. Any resident not contacted
for free ·sampling in Letart
Township b urged to call the
health department if sampling
is desired.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E·R squad
answered a call · to the
Woodrow Daugherty residence
on South Front St. at 10:35 a.m.
Monday. Daugherty, . beUeved
to have suffered a stroke was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was ad·
mitted.

Is Tonight the Night?

Tonight is the night the Mark Handley out front.
The Marauders (&amp;-7 overall,
Meigs Marauders may decide
~league),
with a shot at tying
to change the normal course of
Evans, Dixie Snyder.
basketball events with Athens Athens for fourth place, bad a
four-game winning streak
High School.
About 8 p.m. In the new gym broken last Friday at Waverly,
losing 5!-50, the narrowest
loff U.S. 33 at The Plains, the
.
Marauders •. G-9 against the margin the league leaders
Bulldogs, will try to make It 1- have been held to since coming
into the league two years ago
occurred at 10:45 p.m. Monday 9.
.
on Roush Rd., 1.6 mile west of Word from Athens, suffenng (excepting its single loss to
Rt. 7.in Cheshire Twp., where through one of its less brilliant Athens).
Michael E. Warren, 19, seasons. (8-5 overall, 5-4
Coach Carl Wolfe can start
Kanauga, lOit control of his league) IS that Coech Charles
any
five of se_ven boys, Tony
auto on an icy spot.
McAfee has all hands ready.
The car slid off the left side of These likely will be fv!ark Vaughan, Andy Vaughan, Bill
the road and turned over. Mace, Mike Green and Dave Vaughan, Jim Bogga, Rich
There was moderate damage: SJ"?lth In ~he wings and the Bailey, Steve Dunfee, or Mike
No charge was filed.
rruddle, With Stu Smith and Sayre.

Emhankmefi

Two Projects Launched

'

proximately li5 people can . be
accommodated.
In other business William
Grueser reported C. E.
Blakeslee will go with him to a
meeting today of the Ohio
Development Corporation in
. Columbus In regard to
publicity for this year's Big
Bend Regatta.
Grueser reported that a
Friday night program has been
arranged and several · new
events have been entered .for
Saturday's prog~am.
Crow also announced that a
meeting of the Ohio Society for
the promotion of Bull Frogs
will be held Sunday at his home

No . 2, $2,603, and Meigs
Equipment Company, No. I,
$2,625, and No. 2, $2,486.25.
Bids,will be studied and sold
at the next meeting.
Re-appointed to the Meigs
Regional Planning Commission were Carl Barnhill,
Tuppers Plains; Carl Qualls,
Pomeroy; !1arold Carnahan,
Racine ; Thereon Johnson,
Racme, Rt. . 2. and Rober!
' Ml).ler.. ., . ' . . . ..
.. - . ·- - ,. ___ _
~n other business the comOver half of 72 rural water
m1sstoners approved a samples taken in Salisbury
resolution to place on the ballot Township have les.ted out
at the May 2 primary a two unsafe for drinking, Charles
tenths of a mill levy for the Trl· (Chuck) Bartels, Meigs County
County Mental Retardation water inspector, discloseq
Program for a three year today.
pertod.Othercountieslnvolved
Bartels .said 40 of the 72
are Jackson and Gallia, which samples were found unsafe.
will vote on the levy for a Ill- Residents with unsafe water
year period.
are advised of action they may
Attending were Charles R. take to correct the problem,
Karr, Bob Clark, and Warden Bartels stated.
Ours, commlssio~ers, and
Bartels made 122 visits in
Martha Chambers, clerk.•
Salisbury Township from Jan.
10 to Jan 31 collecting
·
samHEAD INJURED
pies. He will spend the
The Pomeroy E-R unit an- remainder of this week in
swered a call to the Ed lUng Salisbury Township. Anyone
residence in Harrisonville at wishing to have a sample of
II: 10 p.m. Monday for Walter water taken for testing may
King who had fallen on Ice and call or write the Meigs County
suffered a head injury. He was Health Department (phone 992taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was lreated
and released.

clerks.
Mrs. Robert Kuhn, Mellis
County contact chairman,
Presided at the meeling which
featured several workshops.
Mrs. Harry S. Moore had
·Charge.of:ane . workllllop . on the
publicity-book, noting that four
books from Meigs County W1Xilm
garden clubs were entered for
competition Jast.year.
POOR MAN OUT
They were the Rutland
DELAWAI\E, Ohio (UPI)
Friendly Gardeners, the - Rep. Kenneth B. Creuy,
Winding Trail Club, the Ben o• R-Delaware, chairman of
the River Club , and the the , House Eaviroa111ent
Rutland Garden Club. Mrs. Committee, said today be
Jack Hart conducted the would not seek reeledlon
workshop on junior clubs, and becaUS$ he can't afford
Mrs. Kuhn presided .at . the campaign coats.
conference for club ·presidents.
Creasy has been placed In
A display of garden therapy the 16th district with In·
projects made by the special cumbent Rep. Lawrence
·
H b Ru
A l'w•to
(Continued on Page 2)
ug es, • pper r""" n,
under . tbe legislative
o
reapportlooment plan drawn
IS up by the Democratic
Controlled Apporllonmea.l
Board.
The new district Includes
tbe soutbero ball of
Joe Denison of Middleport Delaware County and nor·
became the first Democrat to thwesteni Franklin County.
Delaware Couoty and
file for a major county post nortbwestern Franklin
Monday afternoon.
Colinty.
Denison filed his petition to
"I saw no way of lloaoctog
run for a county commissioner a realistic effort for. the ·
post, term beginning Jan. 3• elecUon," said Creasy.
1973, · with the Meigs County
Board of Elections.
,!:'IJL&amp;S.W . ·ww. ; SI!!&amp;IO....
. The son of Eli Denison, longlime mayor of Rutland,
Denison is a graduate of
Rutland High School. He has
U 0
antS
resided in Middleport for the
past eight years. He is a
Rickey Blake, 18, Reedsvllle,
veteran of the Korean War and suffered minor injuries i~ a
belongs to the American single car accident at 7 p.m.
Legion . Denison has been Monday on Rt. 7 at Chester.
employed at the Kaiser
According to the GalllaAluminum Corp. at Ravens- Meigs Post State Highway
wood for 13 years.
Patrol, Blake was a passenger
. He, his wife, Kathryn and a ·in a ·car operated by Audith
step-daughter reside at 541 Graham, 16, Rt. 1, Long BotHigh St. in Middleport.
tom, which went Otit of conlrol
Filing for central committee off the left side of the highway
posts Monday were two other and rammed Into an emDemocrats, Celia Bailey, South bankment. The case is under
Chester, and Dale L. Priddy, ·investigation.
East Rutland.
A Gallia County mishap

&lt;

i

Area

f

.First Regatta Flower

NEW YORK - mE INQUIRY INTO possible fraud involving tile "autobiography" of Howard Hughes spanned the
Atlantic today with arrests warrants for author Clifford Irving
lslued in Switzerland and the promise of an official investigation
made in the United States.
.
fn Zurich. the situation was more serious for' Irving, an
Ameri~ citizen; and his Swiss-born wife Edith, 36. Officials
lllere lllued arrest warrants for tile couple on, ''Urgent suspicion
of fraud, falllflcation of official documents, and investigation of
llleee crimea."

'

-

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

What Meigs - coun_ty may
expect dilring constrilction and
later of the James M. Gavin
Power complex at Cheshire
and Meigs Mine at Salem
Center will be disclosed at a
dinner meeting March 6
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
Fred Crow, Pomeroy attorney, revealed plans for the
event to the chamber Monday
·. following luncheon at Bower's
Drive-In , Restaurant. Approximately 55 tickets can be
sold for the dinner which wlll
be held at Meigs Inn in
Pomeroy.
Crow said John Reece_,public

WASHINGTON - DF3PITE CLAiMS from Treasury
Secretary John B. Connally that the administration plans no tax
Increase this year, House taxwriters believe President Nixon
will propose a hike later this year.
Cona)ly and Nixon Budget Manager George P. Shullz in·
stated Monday before the House Ways and Means Committee
tllat there are no plans for tax hikes to lower soaring budget
deficits. But Acting Committee Chairman AI Ullman, D.Ore.,
said he ~Ueveit Nixon will propose a value-added type tax - a
form of .national sales .tax - sometime later.

WITH ADMIRArS NEW

Meiga~Ma.wn

~··

BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND -A GROUP of men
wielding submachineguns shot and wounded an Ulster law enforcement officer today as he was feeding pigs a1 his farm In
County Fermanagl), a British army spokesman said. He ·escaped
by playing doiad for an hour. ,
.
'Rioting Which swept Northern Ireland Monday in the wake of
llle killing of 13 clv!Uans In Londonderry Sunday by British
trooPB subsided today but more was expected Wednesday at the
funeral of the victims. Crow~ of 15,000 were expected.

MORE

tonight. Snow likely Wednesday' postllbly changing to
rain south jlortion in the a!- .
ternoon. Lows tonl&amp;ht In the 2011
and higha Wednoaclay again
moatly in the 3011.

/

By Uolled Press International

GOAL EXCEEDED
SAIGON (UPI) - President
Nixon's order to get the
number of American soldiers
In Vielnam to below 139,000 by
midnight tonight, was easily
be!llen four days ahead of time,
the U. S. command reported
today.

Disney Cartoons

lluld, Australia.

ews •• in

SALE PLANNED
Eleanor Circle will hold a
rummage sale begi!llling at
8:30 a.m . Wednesday and
Thursday in the basement of
Heatl! United Methodist
Church, Middleport.

MEIGS THEATRE

'"" world'• tone•~ fence S,4S'I mllellq- enck.l the
1111111 llbeep .~ Jn Queens-

~

deck..

.

cto:tay wltlt clwlce of snow

TEN CENTS

0

LONDONDERRY, Northern spo!&lt;esman said. The other Sunday,killing13ctvWansand:.
lrela!)d (UPI) -Bombs ex- bomb was put in a suitcase . wounding 17 olllers. ·
:
ploded outside a department outside a nearby milk bar.
An Army spokesman aald the :
store and a . milk bar in
&amp;!!per fire also wounded i troopa only med 'after gunmen ;
downtown Belfast today, soldier In one of several and bombers in the' crowd ;
within hours alter an Irish shooting Incidents . in Belfast · began shooting and throWing '
Republican Army (IRA) vow amid IRA calla for a general nail and acid bombs at them..:
to avenge the Sunday slaying of . strike in Londonderry.
:
13 civilians 1n a Londonderry
The Belfast bombs went off
He said three paratJ:ooJiers , .
gun ·battle with British as emergency
cabinet · were Injured, two by thrown1
paratroopers. ·
meetings were called into acid bomb!!,•incl. tllat four of
The department store blast sesslon •l!l Lo\ldon and Dublin the dead c;t;¥~~'irefe on tile
injured at least 10 persons, a by Prime' Minister Edward army's w~ &gt;IIIIa, of IRA
British Army I!Jl0kes1!1811 said. Heath atid Premier Jack gunmen. An&amp; hall four nail
Tw~ more polleemen, one of Lynch,
bombs In his poswshn and
whom apparently lost a leg and
A similar emergency debate two of the woi.Uided admitted
was reported In serious condi· was called for in the British being armed, he Said.
lion.
House of Commons.
Both )'lngs of the IRA acHijacked Van
13 Killed, 17 Wounded
cused the paratrooptl of l1rlng
The bombers apparently hiThe · Criais was pro'lllked indiscriminately Into the llojacked a British Home Stores when British paratrooptl fired man Catholic crowd and vowed
van, placed a 100 pound bomb on giDIInen during a civil rights they would revenge the deaths
in it and pa~ked It behind one of demonstration 'in Londonderry . by Jdlling British .lloldlers.

IN HOLZER
Stephanie Radford, 11-year
old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Phillip Radford, Pomeroy, Rt.
3, is a patient at Holzer
Medical Center. Her room
number is 273.

We.ther .

·Now You Know

I

William Edwards Dies

Pearl Arthur Lanning, 80,
Lancaster Route 6, a former
resident of Meigs County, died
Saturday evening at the
Lancaster-Fairfield Hospital.
Surviving are his wife ,
Mona; a daughter, Mrs .
Merrill C. Cottrill, Lancaster
Route 6; a stepdaughter, Mrs.
Gelnn Grooms, Columbus ;
three stepsons, Robert Eblin,
Westerville; Richard Eblin,
Coiwnbus. and Donald Eblin of
Aurora, Colorado; 11 grandchildren ;
16
greatgrandchildren, two greatgreat-grandchildren; two
brothers, William Lanning,
Fairborn , an·d Herbert, of
Frankfort, and several nieces
and nephews .
·
Mr. Lanning was the son of
tbe late Oswin and Electa
Martin Lanning .
Funeral services will he held
at 2 p. m. Tuesday at the
Rutland Church of Christ with
the R!!v. Keith Wise officiating.
Burial will be in Miles
Cemetery. The body will lie in
state at the Rutland Church
from noon Tuesday until time
of the services. Friends may
call at the Frank E. Smith
Funeral Home, 405 North
Columbus St., in Lancaster
today.

Elections office.
Sgt. James E. Baldwin, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, a member of the
,Gallia County sh'erif!'s
department for the past 20
years, filed a petition on the
Republican .ticket for sheriff.
Bald!'in, a graduate qf
Gallia Academy High School
and Crawfordsville, Indiana
Business School, is a member
of the Gallla-Meigs 'Fraternal
Order of Police, Gallla County
Gun Club, National Rifle
Association and all Masonic
bodies. ·
Incumbent Republican
Evalee Myers, 190 BrentWood
Dr:, Gallipolis, filed for her

.

SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Hogs: 200-230, 28; No. I,
28.25; 230-240, 27' 75; 24().260,
27.25; 260-280, 26.25; 190-260,
'l/.50; 180-190, 28.50;. Sows: 300425, 23-24.20; ~. 24.5(1.
24.70; Boars: 19-21.20.
Cattle Choice Steers, 35.3536:50; Good Steers, 33-34.75;.
Choice Heifers, 33-34.75; Good
Heifers, 31.50-32.25; Good
Cows, 23.6G-25; Utility, 20.85
William (Carle) Carleton Syracuse; two sons, Emmett of 22.10; Heavy Feeder Steers,
Edwards, 83, Syracuse, died Grove City, and Ellsworth of 30.5G-36; Stock Calves, 32-44.50;
Stock Calves Heifers, 28.5G-37;
~d~f at the Ar~dia Nursing ·Galloway; a nephew, Robert
)Jome in Coolville.
Weedy, Logan; 21 grand· Holstein F~ers, 2&amp;-29.70.
Mr. Edwards, the son of the children,
Veal Calves: Choice, SG22
great·
late Adna and Alma Carleton grandchildren, and several 55.50; Good, 48.75; Medlwn
Edwards, besides his parents other nieces and nephews.
40.50; Baby Calves By The
was preceded In death by his
A lifelong resident of Meigs Head, 11-45.
Wife, Helen Crooks Edwards in · County, during his career Mr.
Lambs : Choice, 29-29.70;
1~7; four children In infancy
Edwards had been in the Good, 27.25-28.50; Ewes and
and a sister, Mrs . Ethel Weedy. mining business, · was an Lambs By The Head, 21.50.
Surviving
are
seven employe of the White Rock Salt
ALL CLOSED
daughters, Mrs..Austin Bukey, Co . and of the Marietta
All
schools
of Meigs County
East Liberty ; Mrs . Frank Manufacturing Co ., Pt.
were closed again today due to
Bright, Columbus; Mrs. Pleasant.
icy
condition of roads,. par·
William Kriesel, .Delaware ;
Funeral arrangements are
Mrs. Vernon Seely, Hopkinton, being completed at the Ewlilg ticularly those outside of
Mass.; Mrs. Robert Holstein, Funeral Home. Burial will be towns. It was the second day
for schools to be closed due to
Mrs. Donald Weese and Mrs. in Gilmore Cemetery.
the cold wave and resulting ice .
•
Eleanor Wingett, all of

Pearl Lanning
Died Saturday

Halliday File~ For House Seat

Undsay Shows

their representatives urging
that Veterans Day be returned
to Nov. 11, and to oppose
amnesty for draft dodgers.
Distinguished guests were
the Department 'officers of both
the Legion and the Auxlllary,
Mrs. Robert Parker, national
president of the auxiliary; Col.
Robert Chiaramonte ,
superintendent. of the State
Highway Patrol; George
Schlee, national organization
representative; Air Force
f;lrig. Gen . Daniel James, Jr.,
deptity secretary of defense 'for
public affairs; and John
Oelge~, Chicago, Ill. national
commander.

....r

in Syracuse at 2 p.m.
Jack Kerr, president, announced that he has been· informed by Martha Chambers,
clerk for the Meigs County
Commissioners, that the office
on the first floor of the courthouse b being cleaned and
painted lor a part-time
chamber s.ecretary.
Attending were Jack Kerr,
.president; Crow, Ingels, Bob
Jacobs, Ted Reed, Tom
CaitseU, Richard Chambers,
Dennla Kenny, Dale Warner,
Grueser and Jack Carsey. The
next meeUng of the chamber
Will be at the Meigs Inn.

Milk .to
Bottler
Price Up
Milk prices paid by the
bottlers to the producer
cooperativ~s in central Ohio
were raised effective today 18c
c.w.t.
Co-op officers said prices of
raw milk used to make cottage
cheese, Ice cream and other
manufactured· dairy products
has Increased several times ·
during the ptiSt few months.
However,. grade "A" raw
milk price for mUk used for
botUing has not increased to
.the.:...l\ai~y_ Jar.met . elnce
November, 1970.
Illliry ' farmers costs have
risen sharply during the past
year. ·A price s,dvance was
contemplated on September 1,
1971, and although the
government· price-freeze did ·
exempt raw milk, ·It was not
until the present time that a
consideration to increase
prices was taken.
Central Ohio Co-operative
Milk
Producers,
Inc.
President, Harmon Wells,
Pataskala, said that "In a
move to recover some of the
higher costs we are announcing
an !Be per hundred,welght
increase In milk used fpr
botUing, to become effective
February 1, 1972."
COCMP and other Great
Lakes-Southern Milk, Inc ..
cooperatives, as well as
cooperatives in areas west of
Ohio, will make similar Increases In milk prices to the
dairy companies.

Eagles to Plan
Conference for
'

April8 and 9

Further plans for the spring
zone conference of the Ohio
Fraternal Order of Eagles Will
he made at a meeting to be held
at 2p.m. on Sunday, Feb. 27, at
2 p.m. at the Meigs Aerie, E.
Main St., Pomeroy.
Thurston Stone, Jr., chairman of the zone conference and
a member of the Meigs Aerie,
reports that the zone conference originally scheduled
for Aprillhnd 15 in Pomeroy
bas been changed to Saturday
and Sunday, ~pril 8 and 9.
Approxinnately 400 visitors Will
polnted out tans might be be coming to Pomeroy to atralaed locally, but Individuals tend the affair.
·
still would pay 10 per cent less
The Meigs Inn will be used
than IIIey would have If the
lor the seulons by the women's
legblature bad not acted.
organization attending the
conference while the Orehlt!
Kurfesa conceded the 36 per Room will be used for the
cent order would force taxea up
men's group altendlilg. '""
In diatrlc:tl now leV)'illl taxee headquarters of 1he local aerie,
oo a lower percentage of true
undersoins ntenaive
value. He Aid lellalatl~ cmn- remodellng, wiD be Uled 101' the
milteea are prepartns
toclal events IICheduled lor the
legtlllatlon to mandate a ·
conference.
red~on 1n millage 1n thoae

Taxes Clipped by 10%
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Real
estate taxpayers will receive a
10 per cent acro~rd
reduction with this year's .tax
bills regal'dless of reappraisals
or a change In the percenlage
of their property that is
taxable, according to Ollio
House Speaker Charles F.
Kurfesa.
At the same Ume, the BowlIng Green Republl~ said
.Monday, the leglalature will
act thb year to mandate "at a
minimum"~ reducUon In local
mlllages to ~set the effects of
a directive by the state Board
of Tax Appeals (BT.A)
requiring real estate taxea tO
he levied on 36 per cent of tile
trile value \]1 peoperty.
"Re~ardless of reappraisals
that might be taking place in

some counties and regardless
of orders of the Board of Tax
Appeals, the 10 per cent
reduction In real estate taxes Is
firm and wUI take place
commencing with the bills for
the second llalf of 1971 which
taxpayers will be receiVing
sometime In the middle of
1972," Kurfess told a news
conference.
The General Assembly
adopted . the 10 per cent
reduction as part of the ·tax
package which Included the
one-half to 3\'z per cent
graduated personal state income tax.
Kurfess said it was "one of
the major contributions to tax
reform" and denied reports It
would be wiped oat ' by reap.
praisalsand the BTA order. He'

diltrlcts.
"I would hope we wvuld do
even more," be wd, exASKS DIVORCE
.
~ be la;vcn lellllltUon , RACINE - Lillian Weese,
prohibiting lllmillr reducllont Racine, filed suit for dlV'Orce in
In uUllty and tlftllltle p~nonal Meigs County Common Pleaa
pr~~perty taxes which otherCourt against Don C. W-,
· wile would bmt to be 1111de up Racine, cbarglna groa nealect
by lndlvi4mlllallpiJen.
of duty and extreme cruelty.

(

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