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CAP Employment

EXTENDED OUTLooK
O.lo Extendtd OUtlook - .
'l'!linday lllnNIIII Saturday:
Turnla« eolder with
· ehance of saow Tbanday
and chuce of snow Hurries
'only · Ia norlheaot portion . ·
Friday; Salllrdlly fair .ad .
Hllllaued cokl. Rlgbs Thursday from llle UPIJIIIr ZIUorlh .
·
lo llle low !"' lllfd 3h south,
lalllq to ceneraUy In the 2h
Richard G. Sayre, executive
· Salunlay. Lows at night In·
director
of the Gallia-Meigs
lbe\!JiperZos early Tbanday
Community .Actioil Program
morning, dropping by
said
today that during 1971 ihe
Saturday morning to bet·
agency reached a record high
ween 5 and 15.
in furnishing elilployment to
cum:::. area citizens. IRS W2 forms
have been. distri~ted to · 564
employees indicating gross
wages of $i03,390. Many of
these employees worked on
short-term · programs or on
part-time basis. Ninety per
•
cent of the employees come

At All-Time

AWARDS MADE - President Arthur G. Green, left, of
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Company at its annual
Sales Awards banquet recently, presented the Distinguished
Salesmanship Awards to Wen (Jell Hoover, second from left,
General Sales Representative, Middleport District, and to

Patulski of

Notre Dame

enttne

a record 1971 crop, but have
been recovering in response to
factors including a heavy
movement of the grain into the
goverrunenl support program.
Some farm leaders had attri·
buted part of the strengthening
to congressional consideration
of a bill boosting support rates
which was killed last week.
The report said lower prices
for eggs, milk, tomatoes, pears
and cabbage in the month ending Jan. 15 partly offset the in·
creases for livestock and other
commodities.
Farm costs, according to the
report, rose 1 per cent during
the mon!IJ and were 5 per cent
above a year earlier.
Th.e combination of higher
farm prices and a Smaller in·
crease in cost lifted prices to 72
per cent of the traditional "fair

.
•
IXOn. Inner
In Newest Poll
BY United Press

International
The man expected to become
President Nixon's · next attorney generill has told Florida
voters that Nixon deserves to
. be rtielectid. because he has
restored ''relative. domestic
peace" to the nation by -virtually eliminating the Viet·
nam issue and keeping his
campaign pledges.
Deputy Attorney , General
Richard G. Kleindienst, who
apparently will succeed Allor·
ney General Jo)Jn N. Mitchell
when Mitchell resigns to run
Nixon's 1972 campaign,
defended the Nixon record in a
speech Tuesday to a medical
society meeting in Jacksonville .
As Kleindienst spoke, Sindlinger and Co., an opinion
·research finn, said a poll it
took lale in ;January showed
"nobody could beat President
Nixon" if the national elections
were held today. The poll gave

Coaches Shifted

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
chairmen of the Kent State
University biology department
testified today that the best
With More Comfort way to reclaim strip mined
They know ll denture adbClllve can
help. FA STEETHe P owder 1tives land is to terrace them with
denture11 a \onKer, firmer, BtP.adier short, steep slopes and wide
hold. You feel more comfortable , ..
eat more naturally. Why ~·orry? Get flat areas, and to leave the
FASTEETH Den t ure Adh e11ive surface rough to absorb water.
Powder . Dentures that ftt are essen·
Charles V. Riley testified
tial to health. See your Jentist
rerularly.
before the Senate Urban and
Highway Affairs Committee,
which is considering a strip
mine control bill ..
. Riley, who said his testimony
wa s supported by the Ohio
Tonight, Feb. I
Reclamation Association, said
WILLY WONDA AND
runoff should be reduced to a
THE CHOCOLATE
minimwn
and water should be
FACTORY
{Technicolor)
allowed to seep into the soiL
"G"
He said this would be
Disney Cartoons
prevented by provisions in the
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
bill requiring backfllling to
contour with long , gentle
slopes.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
"Long slopes and a smooth
February 2·3
NOT OPEN
·soil surface are pleasing to the
publis's eye and to you," Riley

FALSE TEETH

MEIGS THEATRE

•
B
e
rze
,
.
ews ln

Our Full-Service Means:
FAST LOAN service
BANK BY MAIL makes
it easy. Just a quick seep

Slip an ArtCarved diamond on
her finger this'\hlentine's Day.

• .Will Rememh
LegtOnS.
. er De8day

'

Sacrifice of Otaplains

to the post box.

CHECKING SERVICE
that makes it easy to pay
bills, keep a record,

SAFE DEPOSIT vaults
where all valuables and
documents are secure.

SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
and Savings Certificates
that pay highest permis·
sible interest rates.

Try Us Out

alional
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
·Member Federal DepOIII llllurr. nee Cerporatt011

t

An ArtCarved diamond
engagement ring is the perfect
. symbol of love.
Choose from one of eight
distinct and exquisite
collections of diamonds
sparkling in the most beautiful
and fashionable settings.
.Ji_...
FROM SlOO
~Carved oevON .

STORI;
GOESSLER'$ . JEWELRY
Court St., POmeroy

Feeney-Bennett PQst 128,
American Legion, Middleport,
and Drew Webster Post 39 of
Pomeroy will
observe
Religious Emphasis Week,
Feb. 5-U, and Four Chaplains
Day on Thursday, Feb. 3.
These observances . are in
commemoration
of the
dramaUc sacrifice of four
armed forces chaplains during
Worid War II when a Jewish
rabbi, Roman Catholic priest,
and two Prolestant miniSters
i..ued life belis to American
servicemen aboard the sinking
U!jS Dorchester.

SH

'fiNISHING
., SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5
· Use Our F,... Parlclftt Ut

,,

I. 211111,

a..s
Pecuoaror

Wl1e11 the supply of
preservers was exhausted, the
chaplains removed their own
anq gave them to four soldiers.
Then, with their arms around
one another's shoulders, and
their heads bowed in prayer,
they went down with the
stricken ship. ·
The .story of the four
chaplains.was one of the most
moving of World. War II. 'fhey
were credited with saving
more than 200 Uves.
Each year the ~can
Legion marks the anniversary
of the Incident -this Ia the 28th
year - through special ,e..
·vices and programs. . ' ,
Serving IS chairman of the
obaervance for the Pomeroy
Post Ia Ja• Gilmore and
Tony Fowler II ietvlllg as ·
chalnnan of the Middleport
post.
For Renl

4 R~house. furnlshf(l, at 124

Laurel St., Pomeroy. Cill·;925136 or Jnqutre al 126 Laurel
51.

.

~------...::...2-1-Sip

/

'

'

Just Receiuld New Shipment
. BARONO AUTOMATIC
.

Nixon 48.6 per cent of the vote
to 13.9 per cent for his nearest
competitor, Democratic front.
runner Sen. EdmiBld S. Muskie
of Maine:
,
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,
D-Minn., was third with 7.1 per
cent and Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass., who insists
he is not a eandidate, received
7 per cent.
Democrats today launched a
fund-raising drive for the
presidential election. In adver·
tisements in several large
newspapers, the Democratic
National Committee declared
that "the Democratic party is
just about broke."
"You know-we know it. The
telephone company knows it.
And most o( all, the Republi·
cans know it," the ads said.
In other political developments:
- Thirteen Democrats and
three Republicans were or-

dered placed on Wisconsin's
April 4 presidential primary
election ballot. Democrats
included Sen.s Muskie,
Humphrey, Kennedy, George
McGovern, Henry Jackson,
and Vance Hartke, former Sen.
Eugene 'McCarthy, Reps.
Shirley Chisholm, Patsy Mink ·
and Wilbur Mills, New York
Mayor John lindsay and Los
Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty, and
Alabama Gov,
George ·
Wallace. Kennedy was expected to file a disclaimer to
remove his name. Republicans
put on the ballot were Nixon
and Reps. John Ashbrook and
Paul McCloskey. .
-Wallace announced he had
sent qualifying papers to West
Virginia to get his name on that
state's May 9 primary ballot.
He already has qualHied for
the Florida and Pennsylvania
primaries and has said he will
run in Maryland.

.Strong Campaign Promised

Mrs. Lightfoot
Died Tuesday

'

,

,MARGUERITE MEYER, right, who has owned •nd opera led ~arguerite's Shoe Shop the
past 30 years, turned over the keys Monday to Its new owner, Mrs. David (Betty Gress)
Ohlinger, Middleport. !YIIII'gHerite will leave Friday for a month visit in Floridli after which!
she w!ll reside in Colwnbus with her slater, Mrs. Wllllain Griffith, '130 Brevoort Road. Mrs.
Oblinger's husband, David is the manager of Economy Savings and Loan, Pomeroy, They are
the parents of three daughlers, Mrs. Ed Baer, Middleport; Mrs. Tom lannarelli, Wooster, and
Sonya at ~orne. Mrs. O~er is a member of the Sacred Heart catholic Church. Assisting Mrs.
Ohlinger m the operation of the store will be Mrs. Fred Goeglein and Mrs. Charles Lytie.

Prqfessor Says Terracing
Best Reclamation System

Now Many Wear

TEN CENTS

.
N

from low-income or underprivlleged famllles. Spj!cial
considerations have been given
'to the hllndlcapped,, espeei2lly
those that have lesilthan a high
school education, Sayre said.
In 'addition 1q gr6ss wages,
$24;156 was paid out In employee's .fringe benefits and
$35,6o4 for travel expenses.
. $7,810 wa.s used to purchase
supplies and equipment,
$11,568 for foOd and food stamp
supplement; ~.625for postage, ·

·Cattle Prices Highest Ever
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Beef cattle prices hit an all·
time high and average prices
for all farm commodities rose 3
per cent in the month ending
Jan : 15, the Agricullure
Department reported Monday.
It was the fourth consecutive
monthly gain in average prices
for all raw farm products,
leaving them.13 per cent above
a year earlier,
The beef cattle increase,
which can be passed on to conswners under the Phase II eco·
nomic program, was 5 per
cent. It left average cattle
prices at $31.40 per hundredweigiJt, breaking a record
of $30.30set nearly 21 years ago
in April, 1951. Calf prices, at
$39.60 a hundredweight, also
hit record highs.
Corn prices at the farm level
as of Jan. 15 averaged $1.09 a
bushel, up I per cent from a
month earlier. The new report
showed prices well below the
year..ago level of $1.42 and above this seasons lo-reached in
mid-November of 97.4 cents a
bushel.
Corn prices had sagged after

•

DevotP.d, To The lntere.t. Of'lYu! Meigi~M- · Area
.;.;N.-.O..:.; XX.: . .IV:__;N:.:.:;O. :. ;2:;.06:.-..........:.P~O!!!:ME~R~OY~-M~ID~DL~EP~n:.:RT~.
.
O!!!.Q_.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1972
PHONE 992·2156

rent, and utWilea, and S3i,l~
for medical iervlces and
medical supplies lrom the local
Doctors, Dentillts, Hospitals,
and drug stores.
..
Sayre said that in~ of the
President's veto of Senate Bill
S2007, appropriatlons · have
been made by Congress to
extend the COnimunlty Action
Programs to July l. 1972, Two
new bills, Senate bill ~10 and
house bill HR12350 have been
Donald .McGowan, second 'from right, Residential eon.
submitted
to Congress
struction Sales Representative, Columbus Division. Robert
requesting a two-year e~L. Rannells, right, former manager at GaiUpolia, is Vice
tension for the Office of
President, Distribution • and Service. The Distinguished
Economic Oppor tunity.
Salesmanship Award is presented each year to the outConsiderable ·work Is now
standing salesman in each division.
·
NEW YORK (UPI)-Walt
being done to produce a bill
Patulski today became the ftrst
suitable to Congre1111,~ well as
Notre Dame player in 22 years
Four sudden administrative Pleasant Junior High.
the President.
to be made the No. I choice changes recommended by
Sponsors of the above bills
Virg!l Burris, assistant
when the ·Buffalo Bills selecled Charles Withers, Mason principal at Point Pleasant are hopeful that they will be
the All-America defensive end County School Superintendent, Junior High has been trans- · enacted during the mcm!Jt of
earning power" parity ratio. a IS per cent increase in hogs, to open the 1972 college player today may have rocketed !erred to principal of Hannan February. Comments for or.
This compared with.71 per cent and wa~ 21 per cent above a dr~~iulski, a 6-foot-6, 250· Mason County's school High· School. The moves, not against the bills should be
situation into another turmoil. yet approved by the Mason forwarded
to · your
last month and 68 per cent in year earlier. ·
Withers
has
switched
Grant
Average mid-January prices pounder from L!verpo,;l, N.Y.,
County Board of Education, CongreSsman, The Honorable
January, 1971.
Barnette,
former
football,
for
.
some
leading
commodities
started
every
I!II.~De
in
his
three
could
leave Don Upton's Clarence E. Miller, Congress of
'rh.e report also gave a
basketball
and
baseball
coach
basketball coaching post at the Unlled States, Room 128
second ration based on 1967 compared with month-ago and varsity seasons at Notre Dame
at
Wahama,
from
his
prin·
year-ago
levels
included:
and
was
one
of
the
inain
Wshama up in the air If Bar· C&lt;tnnon Building, Washing~
price.eost relations. By this
reasons why the Fighting Irish cipal's post at Hannan .High nette takes.over, The board is D.C. 20015, or to the ~r of
standard, the Jan. 15 farm
Hogs f22. 70 per cwt, $19.70 ranked among the nation's top School to Wahama. Don .van scheduled to meet in special the bills as follows: senate Bill
price.eost ration was 98 per
and
$15.20; beef cattle ·$31.40 10 defensive teams. He ra~ked Meter, athletic director and session Thursday evening.
83010, . Honorable, Jacob K.
cent of the 1967 base compared
per
cwt,
$29.80
81ld
$2S.90;
fourth
oo
the
club
in
tackles
head
football
coach
for
the
past
Javlts, United States Senale,
with 95 per cent a month ago
wheat $1.33 a bushel, .$1.:14 and last season with 74, threw two year~jllt Wahama, ·has
and 91 per cent a year ago.
Withers and the personnel Senate Office Building,
The index of prices received fl.40; soybeans $2.92 a bushel, opponents for 129 yards in been elevated to the post of moved were not available for Washington, D. C. ~15, and
by farmers stood at 120 per n.93 and $2.86; broiler losses and lroke up six games, assistant principal of Point comment lh!s morning.
· House Blll HRI2350, Honorable
Despite the fact that Notre
cent of the 1967 base compared chlckena (live) 13.4 ' cents a
~!lillll!~ll!'lt'llmllm~~~--~~-Micl!&gt;':lo\~•~Pll
Carl D. Perkins, Congress of
with 116 per cent a month ago po~md, 12.1 cents and .13 cents; Dame has traditionally been
~
the United Stales, 2181
and 106 per cent a year ago. eggs 21.9 cents a dozen, 34.1 one of the leading producers of
Rayburn
House
Office
cents
and
35.8
cents.
pro
talent,
Patulski,
who
was
The index of farm costs was 123
..
• •
'
.
Building, Washington, D.C.
Milk (all grades) $6.14 per selected lineman of the Year
per cent of the base compared
(Continued from page 1)
20515.
_. , ..
« 96 ; sorg hum .. last season for his outstanding
...18 and .,..
with 122 per cent 'a month ago ....
Mines.
The
amount
represents
money
yet·
to
be
collected
for
tn1n $1.89 per cwt, $1.86 and play, is the first Fighting Irish
and 117 per cent a year ago.
The overall index of livestock $2.10; cotton)(upland) 30.25 player to be made the first pick ;wme 104,000 violations recorded by the bureau inspectors since
prices jumped 8 per cent dur· cenUI a pound, 29.10 cebts and since Heisman Trophy winner AprU, 1970, when the act took effect.
·
Leon Hart in 1950.
Although the act went into effect in 1970, assessments were
. 1 cents.
ing the month, spurred also by 211
The Cincinnati Bengals, not levided IBltil Jan. 16, 1971, because the bureau was enjoined
seeking to bolster their by a federal court from taking sucp action. In all, the bureau
defensive line, took Sherman assessed the·operators $12.5 million during 1971, but $2,672,120 of
Mrs. Rena King lightfoot,
White, a ~. 245-lb. defensive that was removed by the bureau during the apPe&amp;l process.
tackle from California. White
Pomeroy Route 2, died
arrived at California as a
. ; COLUMBUS -CHILDREN BETWEEN the ages of one and Tuesday morning at Veterans·
basketball player before five should be immunized inune!llately because an outlreak of Memorial Hospital. Mrs.
turning his interest to football. measles is expected in March and April in Ohio, a state Health , Lightfoot was preceded in
He never played high school
death by her parents, J~hn and
Department official said Monday.
football, but is regarded as one
Ida Young; her first husband,
Dr. John H. Acket:man, chief of the department's Bureau of
of
the
best
pass
rushers
in
the
Albert · King i her second
told the committee. "At least flat surface as possible an~ the
. Preventlye Medicine, said, however, he did not expect the oul· husband, A. 0: Lightfoot; two
college
ranks.
at the moment the grading is slopes as short as possible."
Chicago, using a choice lreak to be as severe as last y~r.
completed. If an immediate And the surface s~puld be' left
daugh!era,,;;.• ~·· · AVfrY
. '
obtained from the New York · · COLUMB1:!9 · - INITIAL PETrl'ION'S filed by seven &lt;GladYs) ~In; and Mrs.
blanket of vegetation could be rough and furrowed.
established it would result in
Riley also urged the use of Giants, took Lionel Antoine, a ~ublican state representatives to place tile state income tax Alex (Florence) Henry; a son,
good reclamation."
water impoundments, which 11-7, 246,1b. offensive tackle issue on the November ballot were expected to be rejected today · .Fred King,.ancl a brolller, Otho
"But because of the time have been a subject of con, from Southern Olinois. Antoine by state Attorney General wluiam.J. Brown.llrown said he was Ypung.
needed for the growth of troversy during the bill's long was a star light end for the "likely" to reject the petitions filed Jan, 19 on the basts of in·
She Is survived by two
Saluld!l
until
the
1971
season
plants, and the seasonal fac- journey
correct language . The petitions, bP.arlng 291 signatures, were a daughters, Mrs. Everett .
through
the
when he move&lt;! to offensive sample presented to Brown so he could rule on their legality: .
tors, this can't and doesn't legislature.
(Helena) Howell, Pomeroy
tackle.
A
rugged
blocker,
he
is
happen, " Riley continued.
"It is absolutely esSential
"We don't think the iallgllage on the petitions IS a .fair and Route 2; Mrs. Della Riffle, .
·'Rather, with the first rains that both off-site and on-site also a possibility for the truthful summary of the contents of the queatloq,' • Brown eald. Pomeroy Roule 2; four aona,
erosion begins and sediment impoundment basins be con- defensive line.
The language, according to the attorney general, falls to tell the David King, Steubenvllle;
and chemicals are carried sidered.in the pre-plan and as
voter of the purposes of the proposed constitutional amendment Harold King, Pomeroy ~oule
away as drainage."
SON
BORN
ON
15TH
2; Emmett King and Everett
an integral part of the total
and ''fairly.dlsclose Its effects."
' ·
·
Riley suggested that grading plan for mining, reclamation
Mr. and Mrs. Roger E. ·
.King, both of Peru, N, Y.; a
Carpenter, Long Bottom Route
should be done with "as much and future use," Riley said.
sister, Mn. Ida Christy, ·
MEETING CHANGED
SALEI PLANNED
PomeroyRoute2;abaHGier, .
" Certain
very
basic 1, are announcing the birth of
A,
regular
meeting
of
the
their
second
child,
a
seven
Members of Eleanor Circle
Mrs. Edna Woods, Akron; 23 '
guidelines for development of
pound
six
ounce
son,
Gregory
Eastern
Chapter
of
the
Ohio
will
hold
a
rwrunage
sale
grandchildren,
and several
SON BORN THURSDAY
those impoundments need to be
·
Bryan,
on
Jan.
15
at
Holzer
Association
of
Public
School
beginning at 6:30 a.m., both
great and great.great.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Johnston, established and strictly
Reynoldsburg, are announcing adher.ed to and enforced, yet Medical Center. Maternal · Wednesday and Thursday, at Employes originally scheduled grandchildren.
Funeral services will hi! held
the birth of their first child, a sufficient leeway must exist for grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. basement of Heath Uriited for thia evenil!l! has tieen
changed
to
,
T
hursday
ev~·
Mayfcird
Harris,
Long
Bottom
Methodist
Church
In
Mid·
at I p.m. Thuraday at the
six pound 10 ounce son, Cecil changes if the overburdened
at 7:30. There will be a guest Ewing Funeral Home where
Dale, born Jan. 27 at St. Ann's conditions change as minihg Route 1, and Mr. and Mrs. dleporl.
speaker.
·
Perry Carpenter, Long Bottom
in Columbus . proceeds," Riley said. .
friends may call ,any time.
Hospital
Route 1, are the paternal
DIGI'i' Sl.rPPED
Maternal grandparents are
·Burial will be in Beech Grove
grandparents. Great·
Southern High Saturday
Cemetery.
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Brogan,
SERVICES
CONTINUE
grandmothers
are
Mrs.
Helen
night
was
·
defeated
66-61
by
ACCIDENT
NOTED
Dexter and paternal grand·
Revival services at the Faith
The Meigs County Sheriff's Harris, Portland; Mrs. 'Molly Glouster, not 66-51, as a
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. headline said in error Monday. Tabernacle Church on Bailey
Eugene Johnston of Langsville. Dept. investigated a minor Suck, Ravenswood, and
.
Run Road will continue
Maternal great-grandparents accident Monday at 6 p.m. on Dora Carpenter, RUtland. Mr.
SERVICE SET
thi-ough this week with the
are Mr. and Mrs. Chester SR 338. Robert S. Shain, 18, and Mrs. Carpenter have
SALE PLANNED
Funeral services for WIIUam
Brogan and Mr. and Mrs. Racine , Rt. 2, traveling west, another son, Roger, Jr.
RACINE - The Racine Fire Rev. D. D. Rollins as speaker. (Carle) Carleton E¢1vards, 83,
Gerald Green, Charleston, W. struck a large tub full of
Dept. Auxiliary will sponsor a The public is Invited, singers Syracuse, who died Sunday at
Va ., and paternal great- animal entrails in the highway.
rummage sale Friday and especially.
MARRIAGE UCENSES
the Arcadia Nursing Home in
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. There was damage to the
James Michael Smith, 29, Pt. Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. ,
Coolville, will be held at 3 p.RL
Julius C. Johnston of radiator of the car. There were Pleasant, and Marjorie Louise in the Simpson Building next to
Wednesday at the Ewing
Ewington .
· no personal injuries.
the Club Restaurant.
Darst, 27, Racine, Rt. I.
Funeral
Home with the Rev.
PACK TO MEET
Pomeroy Cut Scout Pack 249 M. C. Larrimore officiating.
Burial will be in Gilmore
will meet at 7:~ p:m. Wed- Cemetery.
at the IOOF hall. . .

Bills Take

•

.~ (

1

·

RECEIVES CARD - Mrs. Joseph Beaumont, a new resident of 1\liddleport due to .the
Gavin Plaqt where her husband Is employed, receives a new Ubrary,card at the llfiddleport
·Public Ubrary ataff began jsauing the new cards which entitle the holder to take books from
either the Middleport or Pomeroy Public libraries. Presenting the card is Librarilin Miss Jane
Balle~, ~lght. The Ubr:ary Will.IIUJlPiy new cards to (l!ltrona as they come to tht library. Also for
the first lime, a car4 file Is being compiled of patrons v.l.siting tlie library. These are only two
innovations being carried out in the operation of the Ubrary.

Mrs. Mary Martin, Pomeroy
Route 3, was the only candidate
filing for a major county
political nomination with the
Meigs County Board of
Elections Tuesday.
Mrs. Martin filed for the
nomination of the Democrat
Party to, run for the office of
'Me'igs County Qlerk of Courts
ne~t fall.
Mrs: Martin who attended
school at , Point Pleasant, W.
Va., ·and Marslulll University
--~·~~~~t~~ l!llia she II) tends
..
a person-to-pers'on
· .campaign to ·talk to· as many
constituents· as possible.
Active
in
charitable
organizations, Mrs . Martin,
while living in Gallipolis, was
secretary of the Gallla County
Crippled Children's Society for
several years and was a
supervisor of the ground 'ob·
. servers corps for the U. S.
Army.

'Hope' Grant Made in Meigs
,
Jack Yf, Crisp, president of
the Leading Creek ·Con.
servancy D!.strict, disclosed
today the district has received
the "good news" that ihe
Bureau
of
Vocational
Rehabilitation, through the
Rehabilitation · Service Com,
mission, has approved an
Esta~llshment Grant in the
amountofU8,4941obeusedfor

traiping, equipment, staff, etc.,
under the new Hope Program.
Crisp said such a grant is a
first not only in Meigs County,
but southern Ohio.
Both the local Bureau of
~habilitation District office in
Athens and the state office in
Columbus had been in·
strumental In ~e preparation
and the approval of this grant.

GOBBLER's KNOB, Traditionhasitthatwhenthe
Crisp said he wished to com- Punxsutawney, Pa. (UP!)- furry creature sees his shadow
mend the people in the Bureau Residents of this community on Feb. 2, it means keep the
of Vocational Rehabilitation nestled in the foothills of the snow shovel handy and don't
for their concern and Allegheny Mountains gave up put away the winter clothing.
cooperation .
hope for an early spring today No shadow means an early
The Hope program will deal . and prepared for six more spring.
·
primarily with training and job weeks of winter.
The tradition of the Utile
placement of the handicapped
This became evident at 7:30 furry animal, sometimes
and the deprived of south· a.m. when the Punxsutawney known as the woodchuck or
eastern Ohio. Crisp has high groundhog bounded from its Whistle Pig, began 88 years
(Continued on page 10 )
burrow and saw its shadow. ago.
Punxsutawney residents
were startled by the prediction
of six more weeks of winter
because they ha~e enjoyed

vo1unleer help.
Walls, woodwork, floors and
windows in the large upstairs
apartment were cleaned. One
of the next projects is to paint
The first women's work the living room.
session was held Tuesday Painting upstairs and
but only five were there to ~elp. cleaning downstairs will begin
Another session has been set nexl Tuesday at 10 a.m. and
for next Tuesday and at that · continue to mid-afternoon.
time the hope is for more Work by carpenters, electime at the new museum site on
Butternut Ave. and volunteers
to help with the work are
needed.

,
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Early Spring Ru]ed Out by Shadow

Help!- Help! on Museum Fix-up Job
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Handy with a mop, a scrub
rag, a paint brush?
·
Wllllng to donate, say, five
hours next Tuesday to a real
·Worthy cause?
Then the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society
wants YOU! . •
It's clean-Up, paint-up, fix-up

Mrs. Martin has been active
for 24 years in the American
Legion Auxiliary serving as
president of the Gallipolis unit
in 1955. She now belongs to
·Drew Webster Post 39
Auxiliary in Pomeroy and is a
past president of that group .
She served on the Eighth
Distric! level for three years
and is now serving her fourth
year as the state represen·
tative ror veterans at the
Athens Mental Health Center.
' She has been responsl)lle for
the staging of over 200 parties
at the hospital for children,
men and women other than
veterans.
'
.
Mrs. Martin has worked in
the promotion . of "Operation
Santa Claus" in Meigs County
MRS. MARTIN
to help insure a Chrislmas
observance for patients at the
Athens hospital.
Mrs. Martin belongs ·to the
An active member of the Homebuilders Sunday school
Middleport Church of Christ,
(Continued on page 10)

mild weather. The mercury hit
70 degrees in January and
there have been only 14 inchm
of snow since Thanksgiving.
Community leaders, attired
in formal morning clothes and
top hats, climbed to Gobbler's
Knob to watch the groiBldhog
emerge for his annual
February 2 appearance,
Pulll&lt;311tawney is not the only
town to claim an animal
weather forecaster. Quarrey.
ville, Pa., and Sun Prairie,
Wis., boasts of their ground·
hogs . .

tricians. and plumbers mostly volunteer - has been
completed.
Securing a site for a museum
took a heap of perseverance on
the part .of many people.
Readying it for the display of
iteirn~ of historical significance
will require a heap of volunteer
labor.
Want to lend a hand?

{;g~~~er - Rayon and Cotton !lend. Nylon T~. atltchld

Fully Automatic - Control adJust&gt; to roun temperature
Plnk, Gold, A-ldo. l!lut.
Wallablt- .Ntn ~l.......lc.

~hnnglts. AsiOHed colors -

Mot..,_,

'

Elbllfelds In Pomeroy.

Letart; Mrs. Patrick Lochary, Mrs. Pllul Chapman, Mrs.
'fed Reed, Jr.,andMrs. Asron Kelton. The five Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society volunle~s scn:bbed away
several hours.
.
' ·
.

MANNING WEBSTER

Webster Files
Manning D. Webster, prominent Pomeroy attorney, has filed
his petition of candidacy with the Meigs County Board of Elections for the republican nomination for Common Pleas Court
Judgeship, probate division.
Webster, born and educated in Meigs County , graduated
from Ohio state University and has practiced law in Pomeroy
since 1932.
From 1935 to 1945, Webster served as Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney when he entered the U. S. Army during
World War II.
Returning to Pomeroy, he continued his practice ollaw and
in 1956 was joined by his present partner, Bernard Fultz.
During the war he was stationed in the Philippine Islands
where h.e was prosecutor and chief of the prosecuting section in
MacArthur's Headquarters.
A director of the Pomeroy National Bank, Websler is a
member of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, Pomeroy.
Webater and his wife, Mary, who reside on Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, in the oldest home In the town, have two children,
Diane, whose husbsnd, Dr. Lysle Meyer, is head of the history
deparlment at Morehead Slate University, and Joe Reichman, a
graduate of Ohio State University who is presently serving with
the U. S. Army in Germany.

Senator Collins
Files for House·
Stale Senator Oakley C.
Collins today filed petitions for
nomina lion to the office of
State Representative In the
newly created .92nd House
District
composed
of
Lawrence, Gallia, Meigs, and
part of Athena Counties.
Collins said, "I am continuing my coqunlttment to the
people of southeastern Ohio.
These people have entrusted
me with their legislative ·
proble!llB in the Ohio House or
Senate the past 20 y~rs."
His present term , as Stale
Senator for these counties
terminates December 31, 1972.
Earlier this year the
Democrat-controlled board,
headed by Governor Gilligan,
re-apportioned many of the
present Republican legislators
out of their districts, including
Sen. Collins.
"Elimination of many
polential candidates whom· the
Democrat administration felt
would not lend support to 118
program the next two years
must be challenged at the polls
where possible," he said.
Because the future of
Ohioans wm be affected for
many years by activities of the
next legislature, "We must be
(Continued on page 10)

SEN. COUJNS

$200 Bonds

ELECTRIC BLANKETS.

WoRK BREAK- "All worhnd no play .... ," so the~ sat
right doWJI and had a picnic! Making ~p the work force at the ' ·
new Meigs Museum site on Butternu~ Ave. Tueacln were,
from the left around the "table," Mra: Robert All!teY,

'

Two Forfeit

'

· Twin size ..;. by 14" single control . Full ~lze
72" by M"'.llngle control- Full size 72" by 14"
Du11 c.,m-ol.

.

"

DOIN' HER THING - Mrs. Robert Ashley was handy
with the mop as the clean-up work went on Tuesday at the
Meigs museum site.

Two defendants forfeited
bonds on charges of driving
while Intoxicated and a third
was fined on the same charge
in the court of Middleport
Mayor John Zerkle Tuesday
night.
Forfeiting $200 bonds were
William T. EatOn, 40, Mason,
and Leonard R. Smith, 32,
Clifton. Fined $50 and costs and
given a three.day jail sentence
was Joe Powell, 23, Mid·
dleport.
Others fined were Donald A.
Hartung, 20, Middleport, $10
and costs, reckless operation;
Hugh C. Rousey, Pomeroy, $25
and costs, reckless operation;
Joe , Powell, Middleport, $25
• and costs, indecent exposure,
and $15 'nd costs, inlolication;
Franklin 0, Hendrix, Darryl
Young and Jim F. Barnett,
each $10 and costs, (no addresses listed), intoxication,
and Wade L: litU$ (no ad·
dress ), intoxication, assessed
,costs only.
Forfeiting bonds were
William R. Hayes, 21,
Syracuse, ·~. speeding, and
Lloyd S. Rollins, 57, Columbus,
$30, intoxication.

JOE DENISON

Denison in

Primary for
Commission
Joe Denison, Middleport, has
filed his petition to run for the
Democrat Party nomination in
the May primary elections as a
county commissioner can.
didate, lerm beginning Jan. 3,
1973.
In filing, Denison said that
Meigs County is on the verge of
progress but has not advanced
as it should. He stated that
most counties have landfills
and hard surfaced roads.
He pointed out that lack of
industrial development has
made it necessary for young
men after graduating from
high school to leave ,MeigR
County which reduces our
population each year, "Until
these things are corrected, our
attraction is nil compared . to
other counti~s,'' Denison said;

�•
2- The DIIIJ Seatillel, M!dd!eport-l'&lt;aleroy, 0 ., Feb. 2, 11172 :

WIN AT-IIRIDGI!

The Tourist

fDnORIAI.S

line of Play .
Shade Better ·

The ~ob'le Redman:
A $9-Million
Miff
.
It is difficult to believe that a $9·million suit has really
been filed against the Cleveland Indians baseball team.
alleging. among a whole list of things, that the teams
symbol, dubbed "Chief Wahoo," degrades the Indian race.
!Incidentally, r,J-million is· •·umpteen" dollars in any·
body's vocabulary, including that of the original Chiet
Wahoo, the comic strip character, who coined the word. I
But the suit is real enough, and it reads like something
that might have been brought against a defendant at the
Nuernberg trials.
"Wahoo." say s the plaintiff, the Cleveland American
Indian Center, is not an Indian word but " is a slander
upon all Indian languages and subjects them lsic ) to
public ridicule . . .
.
''No other nationality, group or race would be expected
to tolerate such a caricature of themselves . Only the
American Indian, whom this country has taped, robbed,
ruined and murdered. can be so depicted as a big.toothed ,
pointed·head, grinning hillf-wit while we Indians are ex·
peeled to endure such a racial slur ."
Furthermore, the center claims, the symbol ridicules
the political and social system of the Indian nations as
well as promoting detribalization and denying the Indians
their right to self-determination. It also mocks the heroism, courage, wisdom and statesmanship of many Indians.
Such a heavy burden for such a little guy to carry.
The " racism" behind Chief Wahoo will be news to millions of people who have followed the baseball Indians
over the years and who no more associate their symbol
with real Indians than they believe that Englishmen are
short, pot-bellied, run, around in knee breeches and wear
a Union Jack for a vest.
It's even possible that just the opposite is true- that
Chief Wahoo inspires affection for real Indians.
Nevertheless , the suit is genuine and is part of a na.
tional campaign to change the stereotype of the American
Indian. Similar actions are said to be under consideration
against the Atlanta Braves, Washington Redskins and
California Warriors.
·
It's true lhat 'reallndians were not literally redskinned ,
not· were they " Wahoos. " But are their descendants suggesting that they weren't brave ~arriors ?

Japanese businessmen are reportedly stunned by President Nixon:s new economic policy. But they can alway s
turn to Zen Buddhism to cushion the impact.
Many leaders in Jaranese Industry favor Zen training
to infuse the virtues o enthusiasm, discipline and loyalty
in the new breed of ''economic samurat," says the National Geographi'c Society.
.
Large firms such as Matsushita Electric Co. offer to
send their employes to temples for long weekends of
training . Tlfe volunteers receive instruction, clean the
temple grounds and purge their minds by sitting in meditation .
There are two main schools. The lar~er , Soto, holds that
the enlightenment of inner understandmg can be attained,
gradually. The Rinzai sect believes that it comes in a
flash of insight after gruelln~ hours of meditation-frequently accompanied by phystcal blows and shouts.
"A strange experience but good," said a participant at
a weekend Rinzai session for businessmen . " You reach
your limit, yet can't make a sound . You yearn for the
beating which pulls you up straight again."
Judging by that, President Nixon sounds like a Rinzai
practitioner from way back.
·
(NI:WSPAP£R ENTERPRISE: ASSN.)
.,

~ 1;'1

d

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"

GtOBAI. V&lt;lfW

Red Elections--You Vote as Told
By RAY CROMLEY
WASHINGTON !NEA l
It is interesting now to recall a fact which has remained obscured these many years :
That in all probability the Vietnam war occurred be·
cause Hanoi refused at the Geneva talks almost two
decades ago to agree to internationally supervised elec·
lions throughout Vietnam .
It has been customary of late to blame President Diem
of South Vietnam, and the United States . News reports
these past few years have claimed that the elections were
not held because the United States and South Vietnam
refused. The facts are otherwise. ·
During the Geneva talks, a considerable part of the
discussion centered around how it should be finally
decided whether North · Vietnam and South Vietnam
should be joined together.
Elections were recomnfended . The United States agreed
in principle, but said elections would have meaning only
if they were free. To insure their honesty they would
have to be run by some international agency . The United
States recommended the United Nations.
If the elections were not so run and supervised, the
United SlAtes said, this country could not go along. For
the American representatives were certain there would
be rigging. Americans had been observing Communist
elections with their 97 per cent turnout and their 93 per
cent approval for whatever the government proposed.
But Ho Chi Minh refused internationally-run and supervised elections. The United States and South Vietnam
therefore did not approve the proposal. There were no
U.S. government or South Vietnamese signatures on the
document. And there was no official North Vietnamese
signed agreement, either, to hold free elections.
This reporter has had long discussions with Asian
Communists on the matter o! elections. They believe in
elections- but or a certain type. Elections are to be con·
trolled. They are not to determine who is elected: that
has been determined in advance.
The proper method in Asian Communist theory is lor
the men at the top, as the most "knowledgeable," to
make the decision as to what men shall be elected.
Selection by the men at the top, their ideologists explain,
is the "scientifically correct" method. The average man,
they believe, does not have the bac~ground or the knowledge of the men or the job to be done to make the right
decision .
But Communist-run elections have a purpose. By showing a heavy turnout and a landslide for the approved
candidates (who may be unopposed ) elections .are run to
give the people a sense that they are a part of the
victorious majority approving the good man selected by
their leaders.
Elections have some of the same purpose award
ceremonies have in this country . They honor the man
elected. They give people a sense o! participation. They
get people involved. The Communist mdoctrinations this
reporter has heard or read in Japan, in mainland China
and in South Vietnam equate democracy not with the
right of all individuals to help make decisions but rather
with getting all individuals involved in carrying out the
decisions of the "wise" men at the top 'or the ladder . .
(NEWSPAPER E"fTfRPitiSE ASSN.)

THOUGHTS.
Whatever your hand ji11ds I .do not believe in a fate
to do, do it with your might: that falls on men however
for there is ng work or they act, but I do believe in

thought or knowledge or a fate that falls on them un.
viafon in Sheol, to whicl1 you less they act.7'G l 1bert K.
Chest~rton , English novelist.
are going.-Eccl. 9:10.

-

2

•s

•

Us.

By Helen &amp;ttel

••

t AQ642
. • K852
PEOPLE .mE~ ... CONT.
WEST
EAST
Dear Helen:
• 97
' .106H
My wife and I have separated aevnlllmell. Tbe fact II, our
• KJ973
.QlO
marriage wae a mistake from,lbe start- a have-to thing before
t87
• Jl095
• Q10643
.J9
we were :11.
SOUTH (D)
Pl!rha[lllhe s,Msed I Dele~' really loved ,her, and she look lt
• KQJ2
I out tO nagging. rm not blaming ~ or trying to exct~~e myself•
.A8642
We have both been WI'Otl8 -and (I've always lbciu8hl) wrong for
tK3
each
other.
·
·
.A7
None vulnerable
!lfy relatives were loud In their dl.saPPf9V&amp;I of her. Tiley
'
Wtst North Eost South
co!lllder her bossy and demanding, also a spendthrift .:..:,and
1.
alwaysbeforelhey'vechwedmeonwllenwe18J11111led.
Pass' 2t
P...
Bulthlstlmeit'sdlfferenl. Ifounda·woman I can really love'
Pass , 3 •
l'ass 4N.T.
an&lt;! I'm hoping to ma!Tyher. Therefore I'Ve Biked my wife for a
Plllls
P... 5N.T.
Pass 6t
Pass 6.
divorce. Before, she aeerned quite willlng to divorce me, but now
Pass Pass
Pass
abe's fighting It-begging for ant more chlnce 10 that lhe can
Opening lead-• 4
change.
.
And this II what throWs me, Helen. My relatives have
.By. 01wald &amp; .J ames Jacoby SW!lched to HER ilde! They appeat shocked that I could be
We can't burst into paeans "untrue." They spout "the sanctity of marriage."
or praise for the bidding to·
lf we've been incoliJpallble for 10 yean, Is there any hope of
day, but six' spades is a very 'our marriage 'gett~ better? Especially since I know my new
good contract.
love II right for me? Incidentally, I met her during one of our
South "!'ent right up with
dummy's ace of spades ; led aeparat1o111, and she 18 not trying to "steal me away." In fact,
try.
a heart to- the ace ; ruffed a abe urged me to go bsck to my Wife and make one
heart; returned' to his hand
Should I? - PRESSURED BY RELATIVES'
with the king or diamonds
+++
and ruffed another heart. Dear PBR:
East was unkind enough to
Are your relatives niosUy female? This might account fOI'
overruff and to return a club.
South won with the ace and the sudden change of altitude toward your marrlag~. When a
drew trumps. He had to use wife 18 'ulrealelled by ''the other woman;" even '"hating-eislers"
all of his trumps to pull close ranks against the intruder.
West's last tooth and when
Don't let guilt or Imagined need for [XIIllshmenl cement 'you
diamonds failed to break
toamarrlageyou both know Is wrong. Uyou can't return to your
South was down one .
wife
because you love her, then don't return at all.-H.
All this represents a lot of
+++
bad luck. Yet there was another line of play at South's Dear Helen:
disposal that would have
When our children were small, my.wife was always one to
brought the slam home.
.P"Omote family awareness, something I feel hi Often mlasing In
All South had to do at Irick homes today. The procedure Is simple and It takes only a few
two was to lead a low diamond from dummy and duck millllea a day.It helped our family, and I'd like to pa88 it on to
it. It wouldn't matter which your readers :
I. Ellery evening, without fail, regardless of haw trying the
Ce'fender won or what was
led back. South would have day, when you tuck the youngsters Into bed, lelllhem sqmelhlng
time to ruff one heart in good about their brothers and illslers - alii what a wonderful
dummy; draw trumps and Mom they have. And mean II! Then, after a departing kiss, Mom
wind up with 12 tricks made
up of four trumps, one heart, Will coma ·in and repeat 11\e me&amp;88ges, telllpg them the great
things about each other alii their Dad.
·
2. We say a simple grace at tile dinner table but always end It
Send $1 lor JJ.COBY MODERN 6ook
to: "W;, af lridtt,H (c/a tltir ,...,. with, "'~)lank you for this yery good family."
paper), P.O. lox 489, .IIDdio Cily
Try II-you 'U like II! -JOHN
Stotion, New York, N.Y. 10019,
Dear John:
Everyone should! Thanksforyourgoodletter. -H.
one h e a r t ruff, four dia+++
monds and two clubs.
Dear Helen:
' We must say that this
A town in our state now allows the black ' community to
South was rather unlucky. "'-Ia liB flag 1n ch sch001c1a
The line ol play he adopted """' Y
ea
saroom with the llllpulaUon that
only failed because hearts II be no larger nor of better quality than the Stan and stripes.
broke 5·2 and trumps and The court gave perml.salon. Does this mean that we llhaU 10011 see
diamonds 4-2. The winning our scbool ·rooms clu~ with Bags of evttyllltlon ::..: I!Vrjval "
line
of play• is' just
thisgetoulofhand~-M.S
b't
h•U
' .0 the least •theU.N..' ?Won't
•Oc
.t --"" . ~r suwqt ,.ep~n!ls on
.. • .
+++ .' &lt; . ', , ' •'
. ...
dtamonds breakmg 3-3 or 4-2
and falls miserably if they Dear M.:
happen to break 5-1.
· ''Might could" (as they say down in Te:ras, :where five flaga
(NEWSPAPER tNTIRPR(St ASSN .J
have waved at different times}. But I doubt thai other
nationalities will make a test case of this, unless there's a sudden
Bare-up between blacks and whites·. - H.

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2.

s•

"st

Voice along Br'W~y
devoured by real bunnies ... Rabbit Stu? ... Our
kids are wild about a new item called Coolite.
CHAPLIN SCOR&amp;'l A
Safe, nameless, batteryless, gasless • non~oxic
COUPLE OF HITS
illuminating gadget that Jock wpitney's backed
NEW YORK (KFS) - Charlie Chaplin's ... Add Anne Francine to our last-week list of
composed his own musical score for his 1957 "society singers" of the prewar Stark-El
"King in New York" warmover. Ditto for "The
Morocco erp.
Kid," co-starring Jackie Coogan some 50 years
Daily Newsman Ed Wilcox had his voice
ago ... Quoth Victor Borge: "Never has so many box removed at Memorial Hospilill and
had it so good and been so disgusted with it" ... emerged with morale undenied·: "I'm okay.
Actor Frank Albertson's widow Grace retook Now !learn totillk again a Ia Bill Gargan" ... P.
Frank's surname after her split from husband- J. Clarke's owner Danny Lavezzo bought a
decorator Gene Meredity. Houston beauty home in the Miami Beach area: To be near his
Janice Lynde of "Applause" and Forth Worth horses ... Son Danny m Is major domoing the
dazzler Joy Garrett of the collapsing "Junior greatest saloon in N. Y. while pop's fililig his
City" met for the first time - at The Dallas mutuel money.
Cowboy spot, of course .
Stockbroker Don Wilson, her longtime
Oscar-nominee Sylvia Miles is starring in a admirer, rode shotgun at Michel Kazan's
pastiche of Gloria Swanson's "Sunset Blvd" beauty salon while Barbara Cavanaugh Wagner
smash. It's an underground flick, and Sylvia got gussied up. Barbara's ,the ex-Mrs. N. Y.·
explained what underground means : "No Mayor Bob W... Unlove Is having to say you're
unions" ... Twiggy got the musical bug: after sorry- "Love Story" scrlpter Erich Segill split
"The Boy Friend," her next is "Gatta Sing, withactressJeanNorman. Thoughlbe'dretired
Gatta Dance" ... "Inner City" is grossing ... Gagwriters' WorkshQP members entertain
disastrously .lll•Wonder If 'th'e Peace· of Mind • · , Tombs Prison inmates tWice aweek - ·isn 'I that
Insurance Co. of Baltimore is mentally,peaceful. l:ruel,and inhuman punishment? · " .
abolltlt:-it has~,OOO invested·inthe blintz.
··- 1 Nancy Gunderson very beautifully
An old clergyman once confided In us, decorated Louise's. Ten years ago she ran. a
"There are dollars in decency," and the alllime beauty shop across from the Stork Club. Now
movie grosses back· him up: top money- she's Frank Sinatra's main N.Y. gal. Tenn.
collectors of aU celluloid time are "Gone With city police dept. had a N. Y. ad agency hire
the Wind" (more than $75 lilillion} and "The models to impersonate Nas!tv;Ue prostitutes for
Sound of Music" (more than $72 million} ... a public service TV apollo be Shown there.
Former Cornell Coach John O'Neill coughs this
They call him "another Sonny Uston with a
sneezy irony: in his Greenwich, Conn., Happy Ending" : Ron Lyle,. fine heavyweight
hometown, "Asian Awareness Week" was P'Ospect who served seven years In )aU (for
m.arked by more than 35 students being absent manslaughter}, at 'tl has a great amateur
wtth Hong Kong flu .
record and an increasingly good proUst ofwlna.
We've had films with all sorts of animals ' His pop and two brothers are ministers. Good
and birds devouring the people. Now comes TV feature - if TV's ever interested in good
"Rabbits," with Stuart Whitman attacked and news.
BY JACK O'BRIAN

Zen Buddhism Beats All

.

NORTH

.A8 3

Helen Help

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Hypnosis Isn't A Magic Spell
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb - I was
under hypnosis to s to p
smoking. I cut down from
one and one-half packs to
about live or six cigarettes a
day and then started to increase. I had about three
sessions with the doctor after
the fir st time. Four weeks

have gone by and now I am
back to the one and a half
packs a day with an added
10 pounds. Can you explain
something about hypnosis?
What is the reason it doesn't
work· when it did at !irs!'!
llear Reader - Hypnosis

often helps a person do what
he wishes to do anyway.
Thus, the person who wants
to stop smoking can get
some help in stopping the
habit, if he really wishes to
quit. Hypnosis is not successful in getting a person to slop
smoking when he really does
not want to. Physicians who
have used hypnosis to help
patients stop smoking say
that after several sessions it
often became evident that
the individual did not wish to
slop smoking at all and often
was g o i n g through the
motions to satisfy his mate's
desire that he quit smoking
Or, it became evident that
the desire on the part or the
person to have hypnosis was
for some other problem and
not the desire to q u i t
smoking.
Some individuals actually
· sabotage the mate's efforf.to
stop smoking, Such individuills are , very much like the
a 1coho I i c · s mate who is
really part of the problem
and actually steps in to en·
sure failure if it looKs as if
the mate will really Kick the
habit.
.·
Of course, the .dominating
mate is badly in need of
psychotherapy . These and
other factors all play a role
in quillillg smoking.
Hypnosis has not been
strikingly successful in enabling people to suddenly
quit smoking and continue to
avoid cigarettes. A few enthusiasts have claimed such
resulls: but the reliable
workers in lhP field have disputed this. In my own
'
" Don't tell me, let me guess- you went to another one
limit ed experience J would
ol tho'• women's lib meetings today!"
be inclined to agree that it
would he very ' unusual for
one, or two episodes of hyp.
-..,,...---- ' - - - - - - - -----'-- - - ' - - -- - - no:-: 1 ~ tn h(l ~ uc.·cr!'i ."rtll in rllm -

BERRY'S WORlD

The bidding has been:

West

North

Ea.ot

~~~~h - - -

Pass

1 "'

Pass

1•

2•
Pass
'
You, South, hold :
• 98654 • AQ8 t A3Z
What do you do now?
A-Bid three no-trump. This
is a very slight overbid, but two
no-trump is a decided underbid.
TODA Y'S QUESTION
Instead of rebidding two clubs
your partner has raised to tw~
spades. What do you do now?
Answer Tomorrow

TIMELY QUOTES

----~

Pass

"'H

The fundamental result o!
heavy reliance on property
taxes is that the quality of a
child's educatio.n is ver~
largely deter m 1ned by
whether he had the good
sense to be born to wealthy
parents living in a wealthy
school district or whether he
made the mistake of being
bam to poor parents in a
poor district.

trois are working.
- Price Commission Chair·
man C. Jackson Grayson
Jr.

Now that the dollar has
been devalued and we have
n e w monetary agreements
and more new trade agree· ·
ments, American products of
all kinds are more competitive abroad than they have
been for some years.
-Dr. R. L. Johns , who
headed $2-million federal - Robert Beshar, Commerce
Department direct or of
research on ·school f i·
inating a long·time habit of
International
Commerce.
nances.
heavy smoking. It can be
very help!ul in enablin(! a
person to decrease his ctgaWith friends like HEW
BARBS
rette smoking and in the long Secretary Richardson, the 80·
By PHIL PASTORET
term it may enable a person called women's action proto stop smoking, but it would gram of HEW may need no
The lib movement is mak·
ing headway despite the fact
require a considerable lenl!th enemies.
of time and a sincere des1re - Wilma Scott Heide, Nu· that the gals hate a new
wrinkle.
on the part of the patient .to
t i o n a l Organization for
'
stop.
Women president.
If
the
dollar
is floating,
In many ways hypnosis
why
is
it
so
hard
til launch
teaches the subject how to
a
l.
o
an?
use his own will power and
I believe in forgi"e and
• •
how to reinforce his basic de- forget,
but this is an impos.
It'~
nice
to consider that 1
sires. It has many very use- sible part of forgive and for- we won't have
to
;.
lui applications. It cannot get.
be used , however, to induce
a person to do something - Premier Sheik Mujib
against his own will; hence , Rahman of Bangladesh, on
atrocities.
its lack of success in many
individuals who do not wish
We will not look at decon. · other 29 days of Felbru:ai:.V
to quit smoking.
· trois until we see the con- for another four years.

..

•

Meigs Shot Dow-, 69-48 at 'Athens ·
Last Nwht's Box Scores .·
.

BY u:rrH WIBECUP
. ATHENS - The Athena
Bul1dGp owned ua lock, 1lock
alii barrel here Tuelday night.
They outodefensed, outoffelllld, and outplayed the

shooting won't win many did not start due to a sllghUy, pressure the Bulldogs, outgames, and certainly not this sprained knee) to score 10. pointing the home team, 8-4,
one.
Tony Vaughan did a fine job on minutes into the second canto
On tbe other hand, Coach the boards with 13 retrieves. to trail only 17-15.
Charles McAfee's 'Bulldogs hit Adding to Smith's 19 was · From lhere on, the Bulldog
a hot 50 per cent from the field, Mark Mace with 13. Mike scent grew fainter and fainter
making 29 of 58. Albens had the Green, although fouling out to the Mar a uders. Athens
lead the enlli'e night after with six minutes to go, got ~2 showed Its backside to Meigs,
jumping oft to a quick 3.() rebounds while ·Smith hauled upping the advantage to 21-15,
margin in lbe first 30 .aecDI!ds. down 13.
then shot out of sight in the
Steve Dunfee, 6-0 senior
DOWN TOW
final eight points of the first
fcirward, couldqotqultepull off The loss dropped the half to go into the lockerroom
the almost lmposalble · job he Marauder&amp; to 6-6 for the year with a comfortable 29-17
·did last Friday against and 4-6 in leagu'e play. Meiga, · margin.
.
Waverly which was· won by Coached by Carl Wolfe, Ill in
With 4:22 r.emaining in the
Waverly, 51-60. The Marauder fifth place In the SEOAL. third quarter, the lead went to
co.eaptain hit 12 points, two Athens, coming off successive 37·21, the Bulldogs getting the
below his average, while let. heart-breakers of 60-59 to bsll llll!ide to their big men,
ting the Bulldogs' super pivot Ironton and Gallipolis, rose to ·Smith and Green, while Mace
man, Dave Smi~, pop in 19 iJ.5 overall while improving kept the defense honest with an
markers, not really a bad their league ledger to 6-4, good ·occasional long jumper.
defensive job.
· for fourth place, a game out of
Athens got out to ill!·biggest
Dunfee had held Mike Oyer, lliird.
.
lead around the 2: 40 mark of
Waverly's , answer to ·Jerry The Marauders feU behind the fourth quarter with a
Wes~ to only 10 pointa. 1
11-3 in the first qU8l'ter but commanding 63-39 advantage.
Besides Dunfee's 12, Jinuny trailed only J$-7 at the period's
On the boards, the
Bogga came oft the bench (he end. Meigs came bsck to Marauders were beaten for the
'.
.

MEIGS.ATHENS CAGE STATISTICS
MEIGS .
FG.FTC fT.fTA RB PF TP
Dunr..
~· 16
... 7
3
3 12
T. Vaughan
2- 8
2··1 t3
2
6
, I
·A. Vaughan
upeet.mindecl Marauders 69-48
1- 2
2· S
S
I
4
Boggs
•
in
a Southeulet'n Ohio Athletic
24
6S
2
2
10
i
Batley
3-11
3- 6 2 , 4 9
Leagye baskelhall game:
Werry
0- 0 1· 2 1 1 I
Meigs, which played ' the
8. .Vaughan
0-2 0- 0 ' 1 1 0 Bulldogs on· even Ierma in the
.Ash
.
2- 3 0.0 ,0 0 4
Silyre
..
J. 4
o. 0 2 0 2 ' first meeting before lOSing 56TOTALS
Mabouta month ago, h!Jd their
JS.5o 11.30 n 14 q
ATHENS
new style running and gunning
D. Smith
J
9·17
1- 2 . 13
1 19 taken away early by a
Mac~
e
S:12
3- 4
5
3 13
tenacious Athens defense .
Green
3· 5 2- 3 12
5
8 Forced to play the game
H~ndley
J. 4
0- 1 3 4 2
Athens' way, Meigs could·cope
s. Smith
2- 2
1- 1 • 3
3
5
Wood
4-5 0.0 2 2 8 less and less as the, game
,Mcinturf
0- 0 0.0 0 0 Q. progressed.
Ackerman
I· 5
I· 2
0
I
3
Not close to the · same
Chonko
0.1
0.0 3 I 0 shoollpg club the Marauders
Topping
0- 1 0.0 0 0 0
WIJIIams
0- 0 0-0 0· 1·, 0 have .~n in lbeir past six
Inbody ·
PJ~~ea, in which tlteY won.five,
2- 4
2- 2
2
0
6
Essex
Meigs
managed bu\ 15 tleld
2- 2 1- 1 1 0 5
TOTALS
29·58 11-16 44 21 69 goals In 50 atlemplll for a frigid
BY QUARTERS •,
30 per cent. That kinil of
Athen•
13 16 17 23 - 69
Mtlg•
•'
7 10 11 2~-,18
OfficialS&gt; Qverly and Hamrick.
IRONTON TIGERS {$7)
PLAYER-Pus.
FG-A FT·A PF RB TO TP
NBA Standings
Bud Chrl•ten, g
5-9
o.o 3 2 8 10
By United Presslnlernetlonal
Jeff Hannon, f
5-11 o.o 3 1 2 10
EuternConlerence
Mark Fergooon, I ·
Atlantic Division
10.20 1·2 I
4 3 21
s·
Rick Boykln, f
W. L. Pet. GB
Bill Markin, c
~:~~ ~:~
~~ '- ~ ~ ~~
Bo•IOI'I
38 18 .679
Dave Schuyler, g
New
York
31 21 .596 5
0-1 0-0 2 0 1 0
'
.
.
Hal Spears, g
Phlladetphla
22 31 .415 14'1•
0-0 o,o I
0 0 0
A fast start and strong finish gave Coach Jim Bullalo
15 !16 .294 20'11
Jim Payne1 g
Central Division
TOTALS
68·57
2 ~:~8 ~:~o 1 ~ 2~ ~ ~ Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Devils
. L. Pet. GB
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS (681
Southeastern.Ohio League basketball triumph over Baltimore W
24 28 .462
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP visiting Ironton befor,e approximately 1,000 fans On Atlanta
20 33 .377 4'11
Cleveland
37 37 .315 8
Rod·Ferguson, t
8-13 •. 2·2 1 7 2 18 . the GAHS hardwood TUesday· night.
Rick Boone, g
J.8
H
I
1 1 6
Cincinnati
16 35 .314 7'11
Gil Price, c
6,12 1.1 ~ 12
Hitting
seven
of
their
first
Wntorn
Conference
1 13
overall, dropped to lblrtl iD
MidWHt Division
LarrySni&gt;wden,g
6·18 1·1
1 3 2 19 nine shoti from the field, the
lhe.Jeque. wltb a 7-3 record.
W. L. Pet. G~
Jimmy Noe, I
4·9 H
1 10 2 12 Blue Devils shocked Coach
Mike Oyer and Butch Work·
Milwaukee ~~ 11 .BOO
TOTALS '
25·60 18·20 8 33 8 68 Dick Myers Tigers by piling up
Waverlt bombecl Jackson 81· ChtcaQo
38 16 .704 5112 man combined for 47 points
Score By Quarltrs:
·
53 Tuesday to remain Ia first PhoeniX
32 24 .571 12111
Galllpolls 'Biue Devils
a
I~ l011d in the f~t 2:22 of
23 8 13 24
68
place wHit a 1~ mark.
Detroit
18 36 .333 2s112 Tuesday night as the Waverly
Ironton Tigers
,
· 10 18 12 11
play
behind
Gil
Price,
Rick
Tigers remained undefeated in
51
Ironton, although held below
Pacific Division
Officii Is-· Dick Hyland &amp; Lowell Shope.
Boone, Jimmy Noe and Rod
W. ~. Pet. GB SEOAL competition with an
Its season s))oo~ng (51. pet.) LosAnaeles 44 7 .863 ...
LOGAN(601-,.Norrls5-2-12; · Dar•t 3·5-11; Smith 2.o.4; Ferguson.
:·
average, managed to outscore Golden St. 33 21 .582 12112 easy 81-53 victory over the
Culberl1on 10-1-21; Shaw 2·0-4; McCarty 5·2·12 and Hudson 0.1 Thea, during the aut four
Jackson Ironmen.
GARs fr
the field
Seattle
32 23 .582 14
Pierce 10·0-20; Whitcraft 1-0-2 : · I. Tot11s 22·14-58.
mlautes, veteraa GAHS
om
•
'll-25.
,
Houston
19
J.4
.358
26
Since a ~I loss at Athens
Krebs Q.J .J. TOTALS 21·440.
By Qulrltrs: .
Gallipolis shot a sizzling 90 pet. Portia nd
t2 44 .214 34'11
WELLSTON (521- Stewart Hannan Trace 15 '11 15 2 1 ~ 2 11!11nl Larry Suowdeu, wbo
on
Dec. 11, 1970, the Tigers
from the foul circlea, sinking 18
Tuesday's Rnults
3,2·8: Settles 6-2'14; McKtnnlss Kyger Creek IS 18 11 14-58 paced the 'willllen with 19
have racked up 21 consecutive
"" tte· •· 1r 1on
New York liS Detroit 106
of ""
4-0·8: Souders'244: Denney 7NORTH GALLIA 0171 _
poiata, kepi lbe Devils
a
mp..,,
on
was
a
Cleveland
104 Buffalo 99
COtiference
triumphs.
0.1~; Martin 0-2-2; Warrington J t
C
•~~
._..
cool30 pet. at the charity Unes, Buff 91 Cleve 90, (Dec. 3 gml
1·0·2. TOTALS 234 ,52 ,
us us, 4-1-9; rosswhllt, 13-1- mov...,.. With l:U....,,ID the
Coach Carroll Hawhee's
27 : Clark, 11 -3· 2~: Stout, 10.4; lint euto, the G•lll••• beld
making only three of 10.
Boston l15 Baltimore 108
Score by quamri:
,
Tigers hit a fantastic 64 pet. of
Logan
_ •
of
Seattle 121 Chicago 103
16 16 15 13-60 24, Brown, 4-2-10, Smith, 1·0.2 ,
The
Tl
ed ...
·
gers
cann
••·
53
Phoenix
129
Portland117
Wellston
6Gla5sburn,
t.0,2;
Egghiton,
1·2a
commudlag
.....,
lead.
their shots in the first half in
14 12 10 1 52
Reserve score· Logan 61 4; Robinette, 1-0-2; Ju•tua, 2-0·
From this point, hqwever, sholll from the field. GAHS was Mllwoukee 108 Golden State 97 building a 50-21 lead and
&lt;On~gamn•chedutedr
Well•ton 59 · ·
' 41 Robinson, 1·1-3; Wed· untll3:44remalnedlnthefinal 25 of 110 for 41.6 pet.
stretched it to 69-37 after three
51
15
·JACKSON !531 - Morrow 1- , tl~~ton, 2-J.S. TOTALS " · period, the Tigers came
The Blue Devils controlled Chicago~~l;;,Gtmes
quarters.
2-4; Davidson J.6-12: Ketter 8-0SOUTHWESTERN (221 - roaring back to outscore GAllS the bsckboards, 33-26. Price New York at Cincinnati
The tenacious Tiger defense
16; Whhlte 2-0-4:, Conroy 1-1·3: Trowbridge, 2-0.4; Dillon, 0-1- 43-:l1,butthatquickBlueDevU liauied down 12 rebounds and Cleveland at Detroit
DeStop en2·1-5, Billman 1·0-2; 1· Whitt 2 o 4' Wood o o o·
limited
Jackson to just four
Merlin 0-7·7. TOTALS 11·t7.53. ~Is 00 0: 'earter' .C:0:8: start was too much of a. deficit Noe 10 fDI' the 'Blue Devils. Bill Seattle vs. Houston
At San Antonio
WAVERLY fill - Mlloy 8· Watker,
' 2·1·5.
. . ' TO TALS' 10-2-22.' (or the Tig ers to overcome. Markin picked off 10 rebounds Bullalo at Philadelphia
0,16 . Oyer ·13 .J.2 7. F•trchlld 2
Milwaukee at Phoenix
'G ·
' "
.
By Qu•mn:
GAHSoutscorediHSI~Inthe for the Tigers.
0-4; ulllon 1-0-2; Workman 8- North Gallla 47 27 18 2s-117
. .
Bobcats Winners
·Only
21
personals
were
!Onlygamesscheduledl
~·20;
Shoemaker 5-0-10: ·Southwestern 2 4 10 6- 22 ' lmal3:44 of play to win going
Sl'lindler
1·0·2.
T9J.. ~S• JI,Hl ._,. BE"'E•·(-•l
, A'n'tte rson
v•
• · . away',• • ,. ,. ' ~. I-'" • '1 call~ 1 13 against 'Ironton and
8..,.
SCore by
quamrs·
K ~ ov ' ABA St1ndlngi
~TIIENS, Ohio (UPI) Jackson
8 tj 16 16-,.53 ]6; Baclqualupl, 3-2·S; Brbome
Ironton led only twice. Mark eigh~ agalnal GAllS. ' IrontOn By.Uniltd Press
tntern1tion1 1 Ohto University now 8-8,
Waverly
2~ 26 19 22-81 :4-1·9: Brunner 2·2-6; 'fox 2·1-5; FergusOn, Irhnton•s ~ freah- ·coounitled 18 costlf!UtnoV'ers ·
Eost
, ... r ·Ou.tscpr-ed VIrginia Military
Reserve scare: Waverly 58; Mtynard 2·4-8; Miller oi-O.B; man forward, put the Tigers on GAHS ilad oitiy eight. · · • ·
W.
L.
P,d.
GB Institute 53-29 in the second
Jackson 36.
.
Smith 9·2-20. TOTALS 34-tl-10.
40 12 769
·Four Blue O.vlla IIDIIbed Kentucky
1
RIO GRANDE (81] lop for the first lime, 45-44,
VIrginia
32 23 :582 9&lt;i2 half Tuesday night and easily
Hannan TriCe U21 - Bartram 3·0-6; Bentley 5·1·11· · with 7 21 left tn the
Ia double figures ID IICOJ'Iag.
New
York
2~ 29 .~73 15\'2 overwhelmed the Keydets, 9t;.
Caldwell 9·9-27: Sheller 1-0.2 ; Bollinger 4·0-8; Hairston 11-i
:
·
game ·
Lusher 1·8·9; Wells 8-1-17 ; 24, Hart 2. 0.41 Jordan 3.0.6, foll'lWing a technical foul on llelldet Saowdea's lt, Rod Floridian• 21 32 .396 191fi 110
.
Ferpaoa had 18; Price 13 Pittsburgh 20 32 385 20
Pack 0·2-2; Kohler 0·1-1; Ours Lambert ol-1·9: Martin 4-t-9; the GAllS bench.
Carolina
20
34
:370
21
The
Bobcats immediately
1·2-4. Totals 20·2242.
Rouse 1·2,4. TOTALS 37-7~1.
Jll1lmy Noe's layup with 7:01 llld Noe 12.
otRr GAHS
West
look
the
lead and beld a 16-3
Kyger Crttk (58)
H1lltime Scare - Rio 44
''"'t pu( GAllS back on lop ••
36 18 .667 ... edge with 13:41 remaining in
Thompson 611-18: Curry 6·0·12; Berea 44.
' ''"
"" ltarler, (the ltlluq live Utah
Indiana
32 22 .593 4
45. Mark Ferguson hit a lhort weal the eallre diiUDc:e)
Dallas
25 33 .431 13
the first half. Ohio U. held a 45jwnper at 3:1lf to give IHS ill! Rick Boone, fiDIIbed with 1b: Memphls
23
31
.426
13
31lead
at intermlaelon and the
polatl.
second
lead,
47-18.
Rick
Boone
Denver
21
30
.m
13'12
Keydelll
never threatened the
ATHENS - The Meigs
Coach Bill Wickline's lltUe
Tuelday's R8ulls
Ued
It
up
47..0
with
5:44
VIrginia 111 New York 105
rest of the game. Ohio U. was
Marauders reserve bssketball Marauders are now 5-6 In
Memphl• 98 Dallas 87
led by Todd LaUch and Denny
squad feU behind .early and league play and U overall. remaining.
Carolina 117 Denver 108
R h
h lth 15 I Is
Nee caaoed two l~e
never caught up here Tuesday ,4-thens Is 6-41n SEOAL reserve
(Onlygomenchtduled)
usc ' eac w
po n ·
lbrows
with
5:
07
tell,
then
ALL
GAMES
Wodntsdly's Gtmos
night, losing to the Athens play. Meigs won the Ieason's
TEAM
W L P OP Carolina at Dalla• ·
taDiecl a twln-polaler on a
Bullpups 38-33:
first meeting, 'll-25.
Waverly
12 2 989 743 Denver at Utah
drlvlag layup wltb 4:31 Gallipolis
liitL ·standings
'-...
Bill Chaney lopped Meiga
11 2 892 719
(Only games scheduled I
By
Uniled
Pre•s lnlernationat
remalalllg
to
ctve
GAJIS
a
Athen•
9 5 878 757
The .Daily Sentinet. with 15 polnls followe,d by 51-47 advaD1a1e.
East
Chesajieake
8 5 904 811
DEVOTED TO THE
FioydBurneywltheight. 4,rry
w. L.· T. Pis
Port.mouth
.
8
6
t003
983
. Mark Ferguson cut It to-51-49
INTERESTDF
[)aj)
ledAthe
'th
AHL
Standings
Boston
3~
7 8 76
7 6 876 853
MEIGS·MASON AAEA
ey
ns Wl 15 and with4:12left, GU Price made II Ironton
By
.United
Prosslnlernatlanat
New
York
31
9
8 70
6 8 1161 891
CHiESTEA L. TANNEHILL,
John Locke had 12.
Melo•
Eost
Montr.,.l
28 13 8 64
53-49 at lbe 3:5$ mark.
Fed·
Hock
lng
s
9
838
914
ADIE=~·~o~dFLICH,
Melga hit 12 of 37 from the
W. L. T. Pts Detroit
22 21 8 52
~ 10 764 934
Jeff Hannan, 5-11 junior Logan
Toronto
Boston
30
15
7
67
20 21 10 50
.
tltr Editor
field for 32 pet. and 9 of 16from
3 10' 783 1040
Wellsion
forward, reduced It to 53-51 Jackson
Nova Scotia
27 14 10 64 Vancouver
Publl5he~ dauy exeopt '"· 'foulltne Athe sh
. 14 28 5 33
2
·n
768
?40
Sat.ur~ay by rhe Ohio Valley · ""'
•
ns 0113 of
. 20 17 o.. so Buffalo
Springfield
10 29 12 32
Pub(ish(ng Company, 111 33fromthefieldfor39pel.and with a driving layup at the 3:44
Providence
1722943
West
SEOAL VARSITY
mark.
C9Urt it. . Pomeroy, Ohio, 12 of 17 from the free thr
16 28 6 38
W. L. T. Pis
TEAM
W L P OP Rochester
d\'69. Busln"'s Office Phone
OW
Rod Ferguson, 11-1 senior Waverly
Ch1cago
34 11 5 73
West ·
· 992 2156, Editorla( Phone 992· stripe.
10 0 731 473
27 15 8 62
W. L. T. Pts Minnesota
forward, tallied from un- Gallipolis
8 2 663 565
ll~~·con~ c(ass pootage pal~ at
MEIGS (33) - Price ~2-2,
California
17 25 10 44
Baltimore
2&gt;
18
7
53
Ironton
7 3 698 613
Pom'eroy . Ohio.
Myers 2-1-6, Chaney fhl-15, derneath at the 3:29 mark, then Athen•
Hershey
22
16
7
51
St.
Loul•
17 27 1 41
6 4 640 551 Cincinnati
canned
two free throW&amp; with Meigs
. Na.tional advertising Fl dB
a-•·•Ge
21 21 9 51 Philadelphia
14 26 8 36
4
6
·
611
632
, representotlw~ Bottlnelfl.
oy urney .., Dl'ge1-l·
22 20 6 50 Los Angeles
14 33 6 34
2 B 570 702 Cleveland
Gollogher , me ., 12 East 42n~ 3, FredBurney04G,Couch~ 3:00 showing on . the clock to Jackoon
Richmond
17
24
1
41
Pitt.burgh
12 29 9 33
Logan
2 8 540 698
glve GAllS a 57-6llead.
St ., New York Cily, New York . 0 T •-•· 1" • ••
Tidewater
12
32
A 28
Tuesday's
Resulls
Subscrip(lon
roles:
De
,
·
o...,.
.........,,
Wellston
1
·
9
.569
788
1
Ferguson·
(Rod}
came
back
Tutldoy's
Resvlls
'
Detroit
A
Toronto
0
nvered• by corrler where
ATHENS (38}- Skinner I+
TOTALS
40 .41 5022 5022
Montr.,.l
Boston
8
Sprlnglleld
3
3
St.
Louis
1
available 50 cents per week ; 2 Dailey • •15 M head · with a tipin at the 2:28 mark
TUESDAY'S RESULTS:
By Molor R,oute where corrler
•
""' , ore
1-1· (59-61} and Snowden hit a short Gallipolis
Los Angelts7 Chicago A
Nova S&lt;OIIa 6 Rochnter 0
68
Ironton
57
: serv ice not ovollob(e : One 3, EUowood ~1-1, Locke 4-1-12.
fOnlygamiSscheduledl
!Onlygamouclteduled)
Athens 69 Mllgs 41
jumper (2:09} then sank a free Waverly
mon(h
sus.
By
mail
in
Ohio
Mansfield
1+2,
o
.
'
n
•
o •.
Wedneecloy's
Gomes
·
Wedaesdey'a G•mas
81 Jackoon 53
1 "''~"6 ~
, and w. va .. One veer $1 •.00.
Providence
at
Baltimore
Boston
at New York
throw,
completing
a
threeLogan 60 Wellston 52
• Six monlhs S7·.2S . Three Totals 13-12-38.
Minnesota
at Toronto
Cleveland
at
Htr•hey
SEOAL
RESERVES
point play. The Blue Devils
months suo . Subscr iption
BY QUARTERS
Richmond
at
Tidewater
Vanoouver
at California
prile Includes Sunday Times TEAM
W L P OP
were
rolling
once
apln,
62-111.
(OnlygamMscheduledl
(CJnlygamesscheduledl
Ironton
6 ~ 53) 366
' SenHnel.
. I Meigs
8 6 10 9- 33
Noe'atwo charity tosses (1:40} Waverly
8 2 ol48 396
·--'- - ~·
· Athens
9 11 ·. 87 3 .455 ~15
gave the Galllans a 13-polnt Logan
Athens
6
4 409 360
edge, and assured GAllS liB Meigs ·
5 5 ~13 381
first winning seaaon in SEOAL Jackson
4 6 &gt;UJ 47 ~
play in 13•years.
Well.ton
2 8 .&lt;100 578
o 10 338 469
Durlq lbal beclk drive, Galltpoli•
TOTALS
40 40 3439 3439
the G•Dians oallcored DIS
TUESDAY'S RUUL TS:
ll.. la I ipU of 2:21 to wrap Ironton 51 Gallipolis 33
ap lllelr lllh vletory Ia u Athens 38 Meigs 33
._
Waverly 58 Jaci&lt;son 36
ltuiB Wa wtater. Inside the Logan 61 Wellston 59
FRIDAY'S 'GAMES:
SEOAL, GAllS took over
••disputed pasa~uloa of Gallipolis at Meigs
Wellston at Ironton
aectad place wtth aa a.z Waverly at Logan
,milrk. lroatoa, now 7-i Athen• at Jackoon

Blue DeVils Start.
Fas1, En d .trong

:

1 5

More SportS
Pages 6&amp;8

SEOAL Victory

R esenJeS LoSers 38•33

Standings

SAVE WITH

TIRES FOR lARGE ·CAR
OWNERS-PRICED RIGHT
TO SELU
4-PLY
NYLON

.

Urbana 109 Melone 103
Denison 71 Kenyon 51
OTHER · COLLEGE
Babson 100 Lowoll Tech 89
SMU 85 Texa• 80
Glenville 97 ·Salem 65
Georgetown (Ky.) BA Thos.
More73
Towson St. 73 Johns Hopkln568
Loyola (111.1 83 West. Mich. 77
Drake 74 West Tex. St. 68
Richmond 15 Citadel 68
Nebraska 61 t&lt;an. St. 60
Baylor 93 TCU 77
Te•as Tech 76 Arkansas 73
W. Va . Tech 87 Davis &amp; Elkins ·
67
Ind . Central 80 Manche•ter 73
Mich. Tech 80 WU-Green Bay
76
Bates 78 Bowdoin 74
Mich . St. 98 Notre Dame 74
Lehigh 72 Muhlenberg 66
Lafayette 8S Bucknell 66
Bo•ton U. 65 Holy Cross-64
Missouri 64 Kansas 60
Texas A&amp;M 80 Rice 70
Davidson 92 East Car. 79
Long Beach St. 83 UC Irvine 62

Southem Wins
Pair of Games

·21st Straight

ne

,OH 10 COLLEGE
Ohio State 12 Iowa 77
Otterbein 71 Heidelberg 64
Ohio University 98 VMI 60
Rio Grande 81 Berea (Ky.)IO
Wilmington 110 Centre (Ky.] '19
Akron 78 Baldwin-Wallace 4.5
Steubenville 88 'Wntern New
England 79
Ohio Wesleyan 74 Wittenberg
65

•

second straight week. The
sn'lilll Meigs squad lost that
batUe, 44-29. Meigs was 18 of 30
from the foul line for 110 per
cent while Athens was II of 16
for 69 per cent .
The Marauder showing
against the Bulldogs was not by
any ways poor, they just
couldn't hit the shots they've
'been makinS the past few
weeks. Meigsis~!Oagainst the
Bulldogs in their five-year
history .
The Marauders return home
this Friday against the
powerful Gallipolis Blue Devil
squad. Coach Jim Osborne's
boys whipped Meigs at the
French City earlier in the
season, 67-67, and last night
dumped strong Ironton IJ8.57.

-Waverly Cops

a·

CoJleae Score~

RACINE - Southern Junior
High's basketball squada won
twice over Federill Hocking
Tuesay here, the seventh grade
47-31 and the eighth grade, 5444.
For Southern Bass was the
big gun with 15 followed by
Boso with 12 and for Federal
Hocking Tanthory had a and
Brandberry 6 In the seventh
grade game. Southern Ia now
12-0.
In the eighth grade game, for
Southern Dunning had 17,
Schultz 14, and Brown 13. For
Federal Hocklllg, Ashcraft got
14, Russell 11. Southern's
record Is Jlh'l.
Southern will play at
Wahama today at 4:30 p.m.

free throws in the first six
minutes of play unUI Artie
IleStephen's 20-foot jumper at
the 2:52mark cut the lead to 174.
After blistering the nell! with
24 of 37 shota in the first half the
Tigers finished the contest with
38 of 70 for 54 pet. They converted five of 10 free throws
and pulled down 38 rebounds
with Mike Oyer getting nine.
The lronmen, who dropped to
2-8 in league play, canned 18 of
50 shall! for 36 pet., made good
FOUNDER RETIR&amp;'l
on 17 of 23 free throws, and had
AKRON, Ohio !UP!)- Joe
'tl rebounds with Steve Keller's
Antenora
has been named
six the top figure. • '
Oyer led aU scorers with 'll executive director of the
points, including 13 of 16 field Professional Bowlers
goal attempta, with Workman AaloclaUon, succeeding PBA
. getting 20, and Bill Maloy founder Eddie Elias.
adding 16.
Steve Keller's 16 markers
topped the Jackson attack,

Lefthander Signs
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Tom
Hall,. a fireballlng lefthander
who struck out 137 batters in
130 innings !list year for the
Minnesota Twins, has Signed a
1972 contract with the Cincinnati Reds.
Hill, 24, was traded to the
Reds in exchange for pitcher
Wayne Granger. Hntarled 11
games last year and had a 4-7

$
each

.Reg.
Retreads
Pass.- Car

rec~d.

·Size On~
TALK; NOT MANAGE
CLEVELAND ( UPI}
Former Cleveland Indians
slugger Rocky Colavito, who
put in an unsucceasful bid to be
named manager of the club,
will instead help broadcast
Indians games this season.
WJW·TV said Tuesday night
Colavito will team up with
veteran broadcaster Harry
Jones for the telecaslll.

Exdllllge

GENERAL
TIRE SALES
992-7161

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M!less plus
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. $2.29 and old
tire.,

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SA¥E UPTO'

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Certified Gas Stations

FINDING our WHO'$ TI&lt;E BtG
oP&amp;RAltlR. IN THE GET'·

'

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.IN A
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USED CAR

538 W. Main
Pomeroy, 0.
We Honor BankAmerlcii'd and Master Charge

KEITH .GOBLE FORD
NEW USED CAR.LOT

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3RD AVl.

MIDDlfPORJ, 0.

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�•
2- The DIIIJ Seatillel, M!dd!eport-l'&lt;aleroy, 0 ., Feb. 2, 11172 :

WIN AT-IIRIDGI!

The Tourist

fDnORIAI.S

line of Play .
Shade Better ·

The ~ob'le Redman:
A $9-Million
Miff
.
It is difficult to believe that a $9·million suit has really
been filed against the Cleveland Indians baseball team.
alleging. among a whole list of things, that the teams
symbol, dubbed "Chief Wahoo," degrades the Indian race.
!Incidentally, r,J-million is· •·umpteen" dollars in any·
body's vocabulary, including that of the original Chiet
Wahoo, the comic strip character, who coined the word. I
But the suit is real enough, and it reads like something
that might have been brought against a defendant at the
Nuernberg trials.
"Wahoo." say s the plaintiff, the Cleveland American
Indian Center, is not an Indian word but " is a slander
upon all Indian languages and subjects them lsic ) to
public ridicule . . .
.
''No other nationality, group or race would be expected
to tolerate such a caricature of themselves . Only the
American Indian, whom this country has taped, robbed,
ruined and murdered. can be so depicted as a big.toothed ,
pointed·head, grinning hillf-wit while we Indians are ex·
peeled to endure such a racial slur ."
Furthermore, the center claims, the symbol ridicules
the political and social system of the Indian nations as
well as promoting detribalization and denying the Indians
their right to self-determination. It also mocks the heroism, courage, wisdom and statesmanship of many Indians.
Such a heavy burden for such a little guy to carry.
The " racism" behind Chief Wahoo will be news to millions of people who have followed the baseball Indians
over the years and who no more associate their symbol
with real Indians than they believe that Englishmen are
short, pot-bellied, run, around in knee breeches and wear
a Union Jack for a vest.
It's even possible that just the opposite is true- that
Chief Wahoo inspires affection for real Indians.
Nevertheless , the suit is genuine and is part of a na.
tional campaign to change the stereotype of the American
Indian. Similar actions are said to be under consideration
against the Atlanta Braves, Washington Redskins and
California Warriors.
·
It's true lhat 'reallndians were not literally redskinned ,
not· were they " Wahoos. " But are their descendants suggesting that they weren't brave ~arriors ?

Japanese businessmen are reportedly stunned by President Nixon:s new economic policy. But they can alway s
turn to Zen Buddhism to cushion the impact.
Many leaders in Jaranese Industry favor Zen training
to infuse the virtues o enthusiasm, discipline and loyalty
in the new breed of ''economic samurat," says the National Geographi'c Society.
.
Large firms such as Matsushita Electric Co. offer to
send their employes to temples for long weekends of
training . Tlfe volunteers receive instruction, clean the
temple grounds and purge their minds by sitting in meditation .
There are two main schools. The lar~er , Soto, holds that
the enlightenment of inner understandmg can be attained,
gradually. The Rinzai sect believes that it comes in a
flash of insight after gruelln~ hours of meditation-frequently accompanied by phystcal blows and shouts.
"A strange experience but good," said a participant at
a weekend Rinzai session for businessmen . " You reach
your limit, yet can't make a sound . You yearn for the
beating which pulls you up straight again."
Judging by that, President Nixon sounds like a Rinzai
practitioner from way back.
·
(NI:WSPAP£R ENTERPRISE: ASSN.)
.,

~ 1;'1

d

'

"

GtOBAI. V&lt;lfW

Red Elections--You Vote as Told
By RAY CROMLEY
WASHINGTON !NEA l
It is interesting now to recall a fact which has remained obscured these many years :
That in all probability the Vietnam war occurred be·
cause Hanoi refused at the Geneva talks almost two
decades ago to agree to internationally supervised elec·
lions throughout Vietnam .
It has been customary of late to blame President Diem
of South Vietnam, and the United States . News reports
these past few years have claimed that the elections were
not held because the United States and South Vietnam
refused. The facts are otherwise. ·
During the Geneva talks, a considerable part of the
discussion centered around how it should be finally
decided whether North · Vietnam and South Vietnam
should be joined together.
Elections were recomnfended . The United States agreed
in principle, but said elections would have meaning only
if they were free. To insure their honesty they would
have to be run by some international agency . The United
States recommended the United Nations.
If the elections were not so run and supervised, the
United SlAtes said, this country could not go along. For
the American representatives were certain there would
be rigging. Americans had been observing Communist
elections with their 97 per cent turnout and their 93 per
cent approval for whatever the government proposed.
But Ho Chi Minh refused internationally-run and supervised elections. The United States and South Vietnam
therefore did not approve the proposal. There were no
U.S. government or South Vietnamese signatures on the
document. And there was no official North Vietnamese
signed agreement, either, to hold free elections.
This reporter has had long discussions with Asian
Communists on the matter o! elections. They believe in
elections- but or a certain type. Elections are to be con·
trolled. They are not to determine who is elected: that
has been determined in advance.
The proper method in Asian Communist theory is lor
the men at the top, as the most "knowledgeable," to
make the decision as to what men shall be elected.
Selection by the men at the top, their ideologists explain,
is the "scientifically correct" method. The average man,
they believe, does not have the bac~ground or the knowledge of the men or the job to be done to make the right
decision .
But Communist-run elections have a purpose. By showing a heavy turnout and a landslide for the approved
candidates (who may be unopposed ) elections .are run to
give the people a sense that they are a part of the
victorious majority approving the good man selected by
their leaders.
Elections have some of the same purpose award
ceremonies have in this country . They honor the man
elected. They give people a sense o! participation. They
get people involved. The Communist mdoctrinations this
reporter has heard or read in Japan, in mainland China
and in South Vietnam equate democracy not with the
right of all individuals to help make decisions but rather
with getting all individuals involved in carrying out the
decisions of the "wise" men at the top 'or the ladder . .
(NEWSPAPER E"fTfRPitiSE ASSN.)

THOUGHTS.
Whatever your hand ji11ds I .do not believe in a fate
to do, do it with your might: that falls on men however
for there is ng work or they act, but I do believe in

thought or knowledge or a fate that falls on them un.
viafon in Sheol, to whicl1 you less they act.7'G l 1bert K.
Chest~rton , English novelist.
are going.-Eccl. 9:10.

-

2

•s

•

Us.

By Helen &amp;ttel

••

t AQ642
. • K852
PEOPLE .mE~ ... CONT.
WEST
EAST
Dear Helen:
• 97
' .106H
My wife and I have separated aevnlllmell. Tbe fact II, our
• KJ973
.QlO
marriage wae a mistake from,lbe start- a have-to thing before
t87
• Jl095
• Q10643
.J9
we were :11.
SOUTH (D)
Pl!rha[lllhe s,Msed I Dele~' really loved ,her, and she look lt
• KQJ2
I out tO nagging. rm not blaming ~ or trying to exct~~e myself•
.A8642
We have both been WI'Otl8 -and (I've always lbciu8hl) wrong for
tK3
each
other.
·
·
.A7
None vulnerable
!lfy relatives were loud In their dl.saPPf9V&amp;I of her. Tiley
'
Wtst North Eost South
co!lllder her bossy and demanding, also a spendthrift .:..:,and
1.
alwaysbeforelhey'vechwedmeonwllenwe18J11111led.
Pass' 2t
P...
Bulthlstlmeit'sdlfferenl. Ifounda·woman I can really love'
Pass , 3 •
l'ass 4N.T.
an&lt;! I'm hoping to ma!Tyher. Therefore I'Ve Biked my wife for a
Plllls
P... 5N.T.
Pass 6t
Pass 6.
divorce. Before, she aeerned quite willlng to divorce me, but now
Pass Pass
Pass
abe's fighting It-begging for ant more chlnce 10 that lhe can
Opening lead-• 4
change.
.
And this II what throWs me, Helen. My relatives have
.By. 01wald &amp; .J ames Jacoby SW!lched to HER ilde! They appeat shocked that I could be
We can't burst into paeans "untrue." They spout "the sanctity of marriage."
or praise for the bidding to·
lf we've been incoliJpallble for 10 yean, Is there any hope of
day, but six' spades is a very 'our marriage 'gett~ better? Especially since I know my new
good contract.
love II right for me? Incidentally, I met her during one of our
South "!'ent right up with
dummy's ace of spades ; led aeparat1o111, and she 18 not trying to "steal me away." In fact,
try.
a heart to- the ace ; ruffed a abe urged me to go bsck to my Wife and make one
heart; returned' to his hand
Should I? - PRESSURED BY RELATIVES'
with the king or diamonds
+++
and ruffed another heart. Dear PBR:
East was unkind enough to
Are your relatives niosUy female? This might account fOI'
overruff and to return a club.
South won with the ace and the sudden change of altitude toward your marrlag~. When a
drew trumps. He had to use wife 18 'ulrealelled by ''the other woman;" even '"hating-eislers"
all of his trumps to pull close ranks against the intruder.
West's last tooth and when
Don't let guilt or Imagined need for [XIIllshmenl cement 'you
diamonds failed to break
toamarrlageyou both know Is wrong. Uyou can't return to your
South was down one .
wife
because you love her, then don't return at all.-H.
All this represents a lot of
+++
bad luck. Yet there was another line of play at South's Dear Helen:
disposal that would have
When our children were small, my.wife was always one to
brought the slam home.
.P"Omote family awareness, something I feel hi Often mlasing In
All South had to do at Irick homes today. The procedure Is simple and It takes only a few
two was to lead a low diamond from dummy and duck millllea a day.It helped our family, and I'd like to pa88 it on to
it. It wouldn't matter which your readers :
I. Ellery evening, without fail, regardless of haw trying the
Ce'fender won or what was
led back. South would have day, when you tuck the youngsters Into bed, lelllhem sqmelhlng
time to ruff one heart in good about their brothers and illslers - alii what a wonderful
dummy; draw trumps and Mom they have. And mean II! Then, after a departing kiss, Mom
wind up with 12 tricks made
up of four trumps, one heart, Will coma ·in and repeat 11\e me&amp;88ges, telllpg them the great
things about each other alii their Dad.
·
2. We say a simple grace at tile dinner table but always end It
Send $1 lor JJ.COBY MODERN 6ook
to: "W;, af lridtt,H (c/a tltir ,...,. with, "'~)lank you for this yery good family."
paper), P.O. lox 489, .IIDdio Cily
Try II-you 'U like II! -JOHN
Stotion, New York, N.Y. 10019,
Dear John:
Everyone should! Thanksforyourgoodletter. -H.
one h e a r t ruff, four dia+++
monds and two clubs.
Dear Helen:
' We must say that this
A town in our state now allows the black ' community to
South was rather unlucky. "'-Ia liB flag 1n ch sch001c1a
The line ol play he adopted """' Y
ea
saroom with the llllpulaUon that
only failed because hearts II be no larger nor of better quality than the Stan and stripes.
broke 5·2 and trumps and The court gave perml.salon. Does this mean that we llhaU 10011 see
diamonds 4-2. The winning our scbool ·rooms clu~ with Bags of evttyllltlon ::..: I!Vrjval "
line
of play• is' just
thisgetoulofhand~-M.S
b't
h•U
' .0 the least •theU.N..' ?Won't
•Oc
.t --"" . ~r suwqt ,.ep~n!ls on
.. • .
+++ .' &lt; . ', , ' •'
. ...
dtamonds breakmg 3-3 or 4-2
and falls miserably if they Dear M.:
happen to break 5-1.
· ''Might could" (as they say down in Te:ras, :where five flaga
(NEWSPAPER tNTIRPR(St ASSN .J
have waved at different times}. But I doubt thai other
nationalities will make a test case of this, unless there's a sudden
Bare-up between blacks and whites·. - H.

-

2.

s•

"st

Voice along Br'W~y
devoured by real bunnies ... Rabbit Stu? ... Our
kids are wild about a new item called Coolite.
CHAPLIN SCOR&amp;'l A
Safe, nameless, batteryless, gasless • non~oxic
COUPLE OF HITS
illuminating gadget that Jock wpitney's backed
NEW YORK (KFS) - Charlie Chaplin's ... Add Anne Francine to our last-week list of
composed his own musical score for his 1957 "society singers" of the prewar Stark-El
"King in New York" warmover. Ditto for "The
Morocco erp.
Kid," co-starring Jackie Coogan some 50 years
Daily Newsman Ed Wilcox had his voice
ago ... Quoth Victor Borge: "Never has so many box removed at Memorial Hospilill and
had it so good and been so disgusted with it" ... emerged with morale undenied·: "I'm okay.
Actor Frank Albertson's widow Grace retook Now !learn totillk again a Ia Bill Gargan" ... P.
Frank's surname after her split from husband- J. Clarke's owner Danny Lavezzo bought a
decorator Gene Meredity. Houston beauty home in the Miami Beach area: To be near his
Janice Lynde of "Applause" and Forth Worth horses ... Son Danny m Is major domoing the
dazzler Joy Garrett of the collapsing "Junior greatest saloon in N. Y. while pop's fililig his
City" met for the first time - at The Dallas mutuel money.
Cowboy spot, of course .
Stockbroker Don Wilson, her longtime
Oscar-nominee Sylvia Miles is starring in a admirer, rode shotgun at Michel Kazan's
pastiche of Gloria Swanson's "Sunset Blvd" beauty salon while Barbara Cavanaugh Wagner
smash. It's an underground flick, and Sylvia got gussied up. Barbara's ,the ex-Mrs. N. Y.·
explained what underground means : "No Mayor Bob W... Unlove Is having to say you're
unions" ... Twiggy got the musical bug: after sorry- "Love Story" scrlpter Erich Segill split
"The Boy Friend," her next is "Gatta Sing, withactressJeanNorman. Thoughlbe'dretired
Gatta Dance" ... "Inner City" is grossing ... Gagwriters' WorkshQP members entertain
disastrously .lll•Wonder If 'th'e Peace· of Mind • · , Tombs Prison inmates tWice aweek - ·isn 'I that
Insurance Co. of Baltimore is mentally,peaceful. l:ruel,and inhuman punishment? · " .
abolltlt:-it has~,OOO invested·inthe blintz.
··- 1 Nancy Gunderson very beautifully
An old clergyman once confided In us, decorated Louise's. Ten years ago she ran. a
"There are dollars in decency," and the alllime beauty shop across from the Stork Club. Now
movie grosses back· him up: top money- she's Frank Sinatra's main N.Y. gal. Tenn.
collectors of aU celluloid time are "Gone With city police dept. had a N. Y. ad agency hire
the Wind" (more than $75 lilillion} and "The models to impersonate Nas!tv;Ue prostitutes for
Sound of Music" (more than $72 million} ... a public service TV apollo be Shown there.
Former Cornell Coach John O'Neill coughs this
They call him "another Sonny Uston with a
sneezy irony: in his Greenwich, Conn., Happy Ending" : Ron Lyle,. fine heavyweight
hometown, "Asian Awareness Week" was P'Ospect who served seven years In )aU (for
m.arked by more than 35 students being absent manslaughter}, at 'tl has a great amateur
wtth Hong Kong flu .
record and an increasingly good proUst ofwlna.
We've had films with all sorts of animals ' His pop and two brothers are ministers. Good
and birds devouring the people. Now comes TV feature - if TV's ever interested in good
"Rabbits," with Stuart Whitman attacked and news.
BY JACK O'BRIAN

Zen Buddhism Beats All

.

NORTH

.A8 3

Helen Help

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Hypnosis Isn't A Magic Spell
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb - I was
under hypnosis to s to p
smoking. I cut down from
one and one-half packs to
about live or six cigarettes a
day and then started to increase. I had about three
sessions with the doctor after
the fir st time. Four weeks

have gone by and now I am
back to the one and a half
packs a day with an added
10 pounds. Can you explain
something about hypnosis?
What is the reason it doesn't
work· when it did at !irs!'!
llear Reader - Hypnosis

often helps a person do what
he wishes to do anyway.
Thus, the person who wants
to stop smoking can get
some help in stopping the
habit, if he really wishes to
quit. Hypnosis is not successful in getting a person to slop
smoking when he really does
not want to. Physicians who
have used hypnosis to help
patients stop smoking say
that after several sessions it
often became evident that
the individual did not wish to
slop smoking at all and often
was g o i n g through the
motions to satisfy his mate's
desire that he quit smoking
Or, it became evident that
the desire on the part or the
person to have hypnosis was
for some other problem and
not the desire to q u i t
smoking.
Some individuals actually
· sabotage the mate's efforf.to
stop smoking, Such individuills are , very much like the
a 1coho I i c · s mate who is
really part of the problem
and actually steps in to en·
sure failure if it looKs as if
the mate will really Kick the
habit.
.·
Of course, the .dominating
mate is badly in need of
psychotherapy . These and
other factors all play a role
in quillillg smoking.
Hypnosis has not been
strikingly successful in enabling people to suddenly
quit smoking and continue to
avoid cigarettes. A few enthusiasts have claimed such
resulls: but the reliable
workers in lhP field have disputed this. In my own
'
" Don't tell me, let me guess- you went to another one
limit ed experience J would
ol tho'• women's lib meetings today!"
be inclined to agree that it
would he very ' unusual for
one, or two episodes of hyp.
-..,,...---- ' - - - - - - - -----'-- - - ' - - -- - - no:-: 1 ~ tn h(l ~ uc.·cr!'i ."rtll in rllm -

BERRY'S WORlD

The bidding has been:

West

North

Ea.ot

~~~~h - - -

Pass

1 "'

Pass

1•

2•
Pass
'
You, South, hold :
• 98654 • AQ8 t A3Z
What do you do now?
A-Bid three no-trump. This
is a very slight overbid, but two
no-trump is a decided underbid.
TODA Y'S QUESTION
Instead of rebidding two clubs
your partner has raised to tw~
spades. What do you do now?
Answer Tomorrow

TIMELY QUOTES

----~

Pass

"'H

The fundamental result o!
heavy reliance on property
taxes is that the quality of a
child's educatio.n is ver~
largely deter m 1ned by
whether he had the good
sense to be born to wealthy
parents living in a wealthy
school district or whether he
made the mistake of being
bam to poor parents in a
poor district.

trois are working.
- Price Commission Chair·
man C. Jackson Grayson
Jr.

Now that the dollar has
been devalued and we have
n e w monetary agreements
and more new trade agree· ·
ments, American products of
all kinds are more competitive abroad than they have
been for some years.
-Dr. R. L. Johns , who
headed $2-million federal - Robert Beshar, Commerce
Department direct or of
research on ·school f i·
inating a long·time habit of
International
Commerce.
nances.
heavy smoking. It can be
very help!ul in enablin(! a
person to decrease his ctgaWith friends like HEW
BARBS
rette smoking and in the long Secretary Richardson, the 80·
By PHIL PASTORET
term it may enable a person called women's action proto stop smoking, but it would gram of HEW may need no
The lib movement is mak·
ing headway despite the fact
require a considerable lenl!th enemies.
of time and a sincere des1re - Wilma Scott Heide, Nu· that the gals hate a new
wrinkle.
on the part of the patient .to
t i o n a l Organization for
'
stop.
Women president.
If
the
dollar
is floating,
In many ways hypnosis
why
is
it
so
hard
til launch
teaches the subject how to
a
l.
o
an?
use his own will power and
I believe in forgi"e and
• •
how to reinforce his basic de- forget,
but this is an impos.
It'~
nice
to consider that 1
sires. It has many very use- sible part of forgive and for- we won't have
to
;.
lui applications. It cannot get.
be used , however, to induce
a person to do something - Premier Sheik Mujib
against his own will; hence , Rahman of Bangladesh, on
atrocities.
its lack of success in many
individuals who do not wish
We will not look at decon. · other 29 days of Felbru:ai:.V
to quit smoking.
· trois until we see the con- for another four years.

..

•

Meigs Shot Dow-, 69-48 at 'Athens ·
Last Nwht's Box Scores .·
.

BY u:rrH WIBECUP
. ATHENS - The Athena
Bul1dGp owned ua lock, 1lock
alii barrel here Tuelday night.
They outodefensed, outoffelllld, and outplayed the

shooting won't win many did not start due to a sllghUy, pressure the Bulldogs, outgames, and certainly not this sprained knee) to score 10. pointing the home team, 8-4,
one.
Tony Vaughan did a fine job on minutes into the second canto
On tbe other hand, Coach the boards with 13 retrieves. to trail only 17-15.
Charles McAfee's 'Bulldogs hit Adding to Smith's 19 was · From lhere on, the Bulldog
a hot 50 per cent from the field, Mark Mace with 13. Mike scent grew fainter and fainter
making 29 of 58. Albens had the Green, although fouling out to the Mar a uders. Athens
lead the enlli'e night after with six minutes to go, got ~2 showed Its backside to Meigs,
jumping oft to a quick 3.() rebounds while ·Smith hauled upping the advantage to 21-15,
margin in lbe first 30 .aecDI!ds. down 13.
then shot out of sight in the
Steve Dunfee, 6-0 senior
DOWN TOW
final eight points of the first
fcirward, couldqotqultepull off The loss dropped the half to go into the lockerroom
the almost lmposalble · job he Marauder&amp; to 6-6 for the year with a comfortable 29-17
·did last Friday against and 4-6 in leagu'e play. Meiga, · margin.
.
Waverly which was· won by Coached by Carl Wolfe, Ill in
With 4:22 r.emaining in the
Waverly, 51-60. The Marauder fifth place In the SEOAL. third quarter, the lead went to
co.eaptain hit 12 points, two Athens, coming off successive 37·21, the Bulldogs getting the
below his average, while let. heart-breakers of 60-59 to bsll llll!ide to their big men,
ting the Bulldogs' super pivot Ironton and Gallipolis, rose to ·Smith and Green, while Mace
man, Dave Smi~, pop in 19 iJ.5 overall while improving kept the defense honest with an
markers, not really a bad their league ledger to 6-4, good ·occasional long jumper.
defensive job.
· for fourth place, a game out of
Athens got out to ill!·biggest
Dunfee had held Mike Oyer, lliird.
.
lead around the 2: 40 mark of
Waverly's , answer to ·Jerry The Marauders feU behind the fourth quarter with a
Wes~ to only 10 pointa. 1
11-3 in the first qU8l'ter but commanding 63-39 advantage.
Besides Dunfee's 12, Jinuny trailed only J$-7 at the period's
On the boards, the
Bogga came oft the bench (he end. Meigs came bsck to Marauders were beaten for the
'.
.

MEIGS.ATHENS CAGE STATISTICS
MEIGS .
FG.FTC fT.fTA RB PF TP
Dunr..
~· 16
... 7
3
3 12
T. Vaughan
2- 8
2··1 t3
2
6
, I
·A. Vaughan
upeet.mindecl Marauders 69-48
1- 2
2· S
S
I
4
Boggs
•
in
a Southeulet'n Ohio Athletic
24
6S
2
2
10
i
Batley
3-11
3- 6 2 , 4 9
Leagye baskelhall game:
Werry
0- 0 1· 2 1 1 I
Meigs, which played ' the
8. .Vaughan
0-2 0- 0 ' 1 1 0 Bulldogs on· even Ierma in the
.Ash
.
2- 3 0.0 ,0 0 4
Silyre
..
J. 4
o. 0 2 0 2 ' first meeting before lOSing 56TOTALS
Mabouta month ago, h!Jd their
JS.5o 11.30 n 14 q
ATHENS
new style running and gunning
D. Smith
J
9·17
1- 2 . 13
1 19 taken away early by a
Mac~
e
S:12
3- 4
5
3 13
tenacious Athens defense .
Green
3· 5 2- 3 12
5
8 Forced to play the game
H~ndley
J. 4
0- 1 3 4 2
Athens' way, Meigs could·cope
s. Smith
2- 2
1- 1 • 3
3
5
Wood
4-5 0.0 2 2 8 less and less as the, game
,Mcinturf
0- 0 0.0 0 0 Q. progressed.
Ackerman
I· 5
I· 2
0
I
3
Not close to the · same
Chonko
0.1
0.0 3 I 0 shoollpg club the Marauders
Topping
0- 1 0.0 0 0 0
WIJIIams
0- 0 0-0 0· 1·, 0 have .~n in lbeir past six
Inbody ·
PJ~~ea, in which tlteY won.five,
2- 4
2- 2
2
0
6
Essex
Meigs
managed bu\ 15 tleld
2- 2 1- 1 1 0 5
TOTALS
29·58 11-16 44 21 69 goals In 50 atlemplll for a frigid
BY QUARTERS •,
30 per cent. That kinil of
Athen•
13 16 17 23 - 69
Mtlg•
•'
7 10 11 2~-,18
OfficialS&gt; Qverly and Hamrick.
IRONTON TIGERS {$7)
PLAYER-Pus.
FG-A FT·A PF RB TO TP
NBA Standings
Bud Chrl•ten, g
5-9
o.o 3 2 8 10
By United Presslnlernetlonal
Jeff Hannon, f
5-11 o.o 3 1 2 10
EuternConlerence
Mark Fergooon, I ·
Atlantic Division
10.20 1·2 I
4 3 21
s·
Rick Boykln, f
W. L. Pet. GB
Bill Markin, c
~:~~ ~:~
~~ '- ~ ~ ~~
Bo•IOI'I
38 18 .679
Dave Schuyler, g
New
York
31 21 .596 5
0-1 0-0 2 0 1 0
'
.
.
Hal Spears, g
Phlladetphla
22 31 .415 14'1•
0-0 o,o I
0 0 0
A fast start and strong finish gave Coach Jim Bullalo
15 !16 .294 20'11
Jim Payne1 g
Central Division
TOTALS
68·57
2 ~:~8 ~:~o 1 ~ 2~ ~ ~ Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Devils
. L. Pet. GB
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS (681
Southeastern.Ohio League basketball triumph over Baltimore W
24 28 .462
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP visiting Ironton befor,e approximately 1,000 fans On Atlanta
20 33 .377 4'11
Cleveland
37 37 .315 8
Rod·Ferguson, t
8-13 •. 2·2 1 7 2 18 . the GAHS hardwood TUesday· night.
Rick Boone, g
J.8
H
I
1 1 6
Cincinnati
16 35 .314 7'11
Gil Price, c
6,12 1.1 ~ 12
Hitting
seven
of
their
first
Wntorn
Conference
1 13
overall, dropped to lblrtl iD
MidWHt Division
LarrySni&gt;wden,g
6·18 1·1
1 3 2 19 nine shoti from the field, the
lhe.Jeque. wltb a 7-3 record.
W. L. Pet. G~
Jimmy Noe, I
4·9 H
1 10 2 12 Blue Devils shocked Coach
Mike Oyer and Butch Work·
Milwaukee ~~ 11 .BOO
TOTALS '
25·60 18·20 8 33 8 68 Dick Myers Tigers by piling up
Waverlt bombecl Jackson 81· ChtcaQo
38 16 .704 5112 man combined for 47 points
Score By Quarltrs:
·
53 Tuesday to remain Ia first PhoeniX
32 24 .571 12111
Galllpolls 'Biue Devils
a
I~ l011d in the f~t 2:22 of
23 8 13 24
68
place wHit a 1~ mark.
Detroit
18 36 .333 2s112 Tuesday night as the Waverly
Ironton Tigers
,
· 10 18 12 11
play
behind
Gil
Price,
Rick
Tigers remained undefeated in
51
Ironton, although held below
Pacific Division
Officii Is-· Dick Hyland &amp; Lowell Shope.
Boone, Jimmy Noe and Rod
W. ~. Pet. GB SEOAL competition with an
Its season s))oo~ng (51. pet.) LosAnaeles 44 7 .863 ...
LOGAN(601-,.Norrls5-2-12; · Dar•t 3·5-11; Smith 2.o.4; Ferguson.
:·
average, managed to outscore Golden St. 33 21 .582 12112 easy 81-53 victory over the
Culberl1on 10-1-21; Shaw 2·0-4; McCarty 5·2·12 and Hudson 0.1 Thea, during the aut four
Jackson Ironmen.
GARs fr
the field
Seattle
32 23 .582 14
Pierce 10·0-20; Whitcraft 1-0-2 : · I. Tot11s 22·14-58.
mlautes, veteraa GAHS
om
•
'll-25.
,
Houston
19
J.4
.358
26
Since a ~I loss at Athens
Krebs Q.J .J. TOTALS 21·440.
By Qulrltrs: .
Gallipolis shot a sizzling 90 pet. Portia nd
t2 44 .214 34'11
WELLSTON (521- Stewart Hannan Trace 15 '11 15 2 1 ~ 2 11!11nl Larry Suowdeu, wbo
on
Dec. 11, 1970, the Tigers
from the foul circlea, sinking 18
Tuesday's Rnults
3,2·8: Settles 6-2'14; McKtnnlss Kyger Creek IS 18 11 14-58 paced the 'willllen with 19
have racked up 21 consecutive
"" tte· •· 1r 1on
New York liS Detroit 106
of ""
4-0·8: Souders'244: Denney 7NORTH GALLIA 0171 _
poiata, kepi lbe Devils
a
mp..,,
on
was
a
Cleveland
104 Buffalo 99
COtiference
triumphs.
0.1~; Martin 0-2-2; Warrington J t
C
•~~
._..
cool30 pet. at the charity Unes, Buff 91 Cleve 90, (Dec. 3 gml
1·0·2. TOTALS 234 ,52 ,
us us, 4-1-9; rosswhllt, 13-1- mov...,.. With l:U....,,ID the
Coach Carroll Hawhee's
27 : Clark, 11 -3· 2~: Stout, 10.4; lint euto, the G•lll••• beld
making only three of 10.
Boston l15 Baltimore 108
Score by quamri:
,
Tigers hit a fantastic 64 pet. of
Logan
_ •
of
Seattle 121 Chicago 103
16 16 15 13-60 24, Brown, 4-2-10, Smith, 1·0.2 ,
The
Tl
ed ...
·
gers
cann
••·
53
Phoenix
129
Portland117
Wellston
6Gla5sburn,
t.0,2;
Egghiton,
1·2a
commudlag
.....,
lead.
their shots in the first half in
14 12 10 1 52
Reserve score· Logan 61 4; Robinette, 1-0-2; Ju•tua, 2-0·
From this point, hqwever, sholll from the field. GAHS was Mllwoukee 108 Golden State 97 building a 50-21 lead and
&lt;On~gamn•chedutedr
Well•ton 59 · ·
' 41 Robinson, 1·1-3; Wed· untll3:44remalnedlnthefinal 25 of 110 for 41.6 pet.
stretched it to 69-37 after three
51
15
·JACKSON !531 - Morrow 1- , tl~~ton, 2-J.S. TOTALS " · period, the Tigers came
The Blue Devils controlled Chicago~~l;;,Gtmes
quarters.
2-4; Davidson J.6-12: Ketter 8-0SOUTHWESTERN (221 - roaring back to outscore GAllS the bsckboards, 33-26. Price New York at Cincinnati
The tenacious Tiger defense
16; Whhlte 2-0-4:, Conroy 1-1·3: Trowbridge, 2-0.4; Dillon, 0-1- 43-:l1,butthatquickBlueDevU liauied down 12 rebounds and Cleveland at Detroit
DeStop en2·1-5, Billman 1·0-2; 1· Whitt 2 o 4' Wood o o o·
limited
Jackson to just four
Merlin 0-7·7. TOTALS 11·t7.53. ~Is 00 0: 'earter' .C:0:8: start was too much of a. deficit Noe 10 fDI' the 'Blue Devils. Bill Seattle vs. Houston
At San Antonio
WAVERLY fill - Mlloy 8· Watker,
' 2·1·5.
. . ' TO TALS' 10-2-22.' (or the Tig ers to overcome. Markin picked off 10 rebounds Bullalo at Philadelphia
0,16 . Oyer ·13 .J.2 7. F•trchlld 2
Milwaukee at Phoenix
'G ·
' "
.
By Qu•mn:
GAHSoutscorediHSI~Inthe for the Tigers.
0-4; ulllon 1-0-2; Workman 8- North Gallla 47 27 18 2s-117
. .
Bobcats Winners
·Only
21
personals
were
!Onlygamesscheduledl
~·20;
Shoemaker 5-0-10: ·Southwestern 2 4 10 6- 22 ' lmal3:44 of play to win going
Sl'lindler
1·0·2.
T9J.. ~S• JI,Hl ._,. BE"'E•·(-•l
, A'n'tte rson
v•
• · . away',• • ,. ,. ' ~. I-'" • '1 call~ 1 13 against 'Ironton and
8..,.
SCore by
quamrs·
K ~ ov ' ABA St1ndlngi
~TIIENS, Ohio (UPI) Jackson
8 tj 16 16-,.53 ]6; Baclqualupl, 3-2·S; Brbome
Ironton led only twice. Mark eigh~ agalnal GAllS. ' IrontOn By.Uniltd Press
tntern1tion1 1 Ohto University now 8-8,
Waverly
2~ 26 19 22-81 :4-1·9: Brunner 2·2-6; 'fox 2·1-5; FergusOn, Irhnton•s ~ freah- ·coounitled 18 costlf!UtnoV'ers ·
Eost
, ... r ·Ou.tscpr-ed VIrginia Military
Reserve scare: Waverly 58; Mtynard 2·4-8; Miller oi-O.B; man forward, put the Tigers on GAHS ilad oitiy eight. · · • ·
W.
L.
P,d.
GB Institute 53-29 in the second
Jackson 36.
.
Smith 9·2-20. TOTALS 34-tl-10.
40 12 769
·Four Blue O.vlla IIDIIbed Kentucky
1
RIO GRANDE (81] lop for the first lime, 45-44,
VIrginia
32 23 :582 9&lt;i2 half Tuesday night and easily
Hannan TriCe U21 - Bartram 3·0-6; Bentley 5·1·11· · with 7 21 left tn the
Ia double figures ID IICOJ'Iag.
New
York
2~ 29 .~73 15\'2 overwhelmed the Keydets, 9t;.
Caldwell 9·9-27: Sheller 1-0.2 ; Bollinger 4·0-8; Hairston 11-i
:
·
game ·
Lusher 1·8·9; Wells 8-1-17 ; 24, Hart 2. 0.41 Jordan 3.0.6, foll'lWing a technical foul on llelldet Saowdea's lt, Rod Floridian• 21 32 .396 191fi 110
.
Ferpaoa had 18; Price 13 Pittsburgh 20 32 385 20
Pack 0·2-2; Kohler 0·1-1; Ours Lambert ol-1·9: Martin 4-t-9; the GAllS bench.
Carolina
20
34
:370
21
The
Bobcats immediately
1·2-4. Totals 20·2242.
Rouse 1·2,4. TOTALS 37-7~1.
Jll1lmy Noe's layup with 7:01 llld Noe 12.
otRr GAHS
West
look
the
lead and beld a 16-3
Kyger Crttk (58)
H1lltime Scare - Rio 44
''"'t pu( GAllS back on lop ••
36 18 .667 ... edge with 13:41 remaining in
Thompson 611-18: Curry 6·0·12; Berea 44.
' ''"
"" ltarler, (the ltlluq live Utah
Indiana
32 22 .593 4
45. Mark Ferguson hit a lhort weal the eallre diiUDc:e)
Dallas
25 33 .431 13
the first half. Ohio U. held a 45jwnper at 3:1lf to give IHS ill! Rick Boone, fiDIIbed with 1b: Memphls
23
31
.426
13
31lead
at intermlaelon and the
polatl.
second
lead,
47-18.
Rick
Boone
Denver
21
30
.m
13'12
Keydelll
never threatened the
ATHENS - The Meigs
Coach Bill Wickline's lltUe
Tuelday's R8ulls
Ued
It
up
47..0
with
5:44
VIrginia 111 New York 105
rest of the game. Ohio U. was
Marauders reserve bssketball Marauders are now 5-6 In
Memphl• 98 Dallas 87
led by Todd LaUch and Denny
squad feU behind .early and league play and U overall. remaining.
Carolina 117 Denver 108
R h
h lth 15 I Is
Nee caaoed two l~e
never caught up here Tuesday ,4-thens Is 6-41n SEOAL reserve
(Onlygomenchtduled)
usc ' eac w
po n ·
lbrows
with
5:
07
tell,
then
ALL
GAMES
Wodntsdly's Gtmos
night, losing to the Athens play. Meigs won the Ieason's
TEAM
W L P OP Carolina at Dalla• ·
taDiecl a twln-polaler on a
Bullpups 38-33:
first meeting, 'll-25.
Waverly
12 2 989 743 Denver at Utah
drlvlag layup wltb 4:31 Gallipolis
liitL ·standings
'-...
Bill Chaney lopped Meiga
11 2 892 719
(Only games scheduled I
By
Uniled
Pre•s lnlernationat
remalalllg
to
ctve
GAJIS
a
Athen•
9 5 878 757
The .Daily Sentinet. with 15 polnls followe,d by 51-47 advaD1a1e.
East
Chesajieake
8 5 904 811
DEVOTED TO THE
FioydBurneywltheight. 4,rry
w. L.· T. Pis
Port.mouth
.
8
6
t003
983
. Mark Ferguson cut It to-51-49
INTERESTDF
[)aj)
ledAthe
'th
AHL
Standings
Boston
3~
7 8 76
7 6 876 853
MEIGS·MASON AAEA
ey
ns Wl 15 and with4:12left, GU Price made II Ironton
By
.United
Prosslnlernatlanat
New
York
31
9
8 70
6 8 1161 891
CHiESTEA L. TANNEHILL,
John Locke had 12.
Melo•
Eost
Montr.,.l
28 13 8 64
53-49 at lbe 3:5$ mark.
Fed·
Hock
lng
s
9
838
914
ADIE=~·~o~dFLICH,
Melga hit 12 of 37 from the
W. L. T. Pts Detroit
22 21 8 52
~ 10 764 934
Jeff Hannan, 5-11 junior Logan
Toronto
Boston
30
15
7
67
20 21 10 50
.
tltr Editor
field for 32 pet. and 9 of 16from
3 10' 783 1040
Wellsion
forward, reduced It to 53-51 Jackson
Nova Scotia
27 14 10 64 Vancouver
Publl5he~ dauy exeopt '"· 'foulltne Athe sh
. 14 28 5 33
2
·n
768
?40
Sat.ur~ay by rhe Ohio Valley · ""'
•
ns 0113 of
. 20 17 o.. so Buffalo
Springfield
10 29 12 32
Pub(ish(ng Company, 111 33fromthefieldfor39pel.and with a driving layup at the 3:44
Providence
1722943
West
SEOAL VARSITY
mark.
C9Urt it. . Pomeroy, Ohio, 12 of 17 from the free thr
16 28 6 38
W. L. T. Pis
TEAM
W L P OP Rochester
d\'69. Busln"'s Office Phone
OW
Rod Ferguson, 11-1 senior Waverly
Ch1cago
34 11 5 73
West ·
· 992 2156, Editorla( Phone 992· stripe.
10 0 731 473
27 15 8 62
W. L. T. Pts Minnesota
forward, tallied from un- Gallipolis
8 2 663 565
ll~~·con~ c(ass pootage pal~ at
MEIGS (33) - Price ~2-2,
California
17 25 10 44
Baltimore
2&gt;
18
7
53
Ironton
7 3 698 613
Pom'eroy . Ohio.
Myers 2-1-6, Chaney fhl-15, derneath at the 3:29 mark, then Athen•
Hershey
22
16
7
51
St.
Loul•
17 27 1 41
6 4 640 551 Cincinnati
canned
two free throW&amp; with Meigs
. Na.tional advertising Fl dB
a-•·•Ge
21 21 9 51 Philadelphia
14 26 8 36
4
6
·
611
632
, representotlw~ Bottlnelfl.
oy urney .., Dl'ge1-l·
22 20 6 50 Los Angeles
14 33 6 34
2 B 570 702 Cleveland
Gollogher , me ., 12 East 42n~ 3, FredBurney04G,Couch~ 3:00 showing on . the clock to Jackoon
Richmond
17
24
1
41
Pitt.burgh
12 29 9 33
Logan
2 8 540 698
glve GAllS a 57-6llead.
St ., New York Cily, New York . 0 T •-•· 1" • ••
Tidewater
12
32
A 28
Tuesday's
Resulls
Subscrip(lon
roles:
De
,
·
o...,.
.........,,
Wellston
1
·
9
.569
788
1
Ferguson·
(Rod}
came
back
Tutldoy's
Resvlls
'
Detroit
A
Toronto
0
nvered• by corrler where
ATHENS (38}- Skinner I+
TOTALS
40 .41 5022 5022
Montr.,.l
Boston
8
Sprlnglleld
3
3
St.
Louis
1
available 50 cents per week ; 2 Dailey • •15 M head · with a tipin at the 2:28 mark
TUESDAY'S RESULTS:
By Molor R,oute where corrler
•
""' , ore
1-1· (59-61} and Snowden hit a short Gallipolis
Los Angelts7 Chicago A
Nova S&lt;OIIa 6 Rochnter 0
68
Ironton
57
: serv ice not ovollob(e : One 3, EUowood ~1-1, Locke 4-1-12.
fOnlygamiSscheduledl
!Onlygamouclteduled)
Athens 69 Mllgs 41
jumper (2:09} then sank a free Waverly
mon(h
sus.
By
mail
in
Ohio
Mansfield
1+2,
o
.
'
n
•
o •.
Wedneecloy's
Gomes
·
Wedaesdey'a G•mas
81 Jackoon 53
1 "''~"6 ~
, and w. va .. One veer $1 •.00.
Providence
at
Baltimore
Boston
at New York
throw,
completing
a
threeLogan 60 Wellston 52
• Six monlhs S7·.2S . Three Totals 13-12-38.
Minnesota
at Toronto
Cleveland
at
Htr•hey
SEOAL
RESERVES
point play. The Blue Devils
months suo . Subscr iption
BY QUARTERS
Richmond
at
Tidewater
Vanoouver
at California
prile Includes Sunday Times TEAM
W L P OP
were
rolling
once
apln,
62-111.
(OnlygamMscheduledl
(CJnlygamesscheduledl
Ironton
6 ~ 53) 366
' SenHnel.
. I Meigs
8 6 10 9- 33
Noe'atwo charity tosses (1:40} Waverly
8 2 ol48 396
·--'- - ~·
· Athens
9 11 ·. 87 3 .455 ~15
gave the Galllans a 13-polnt Logan
Athens
6
4 409 360
edge, and assured GAllS liB Meigs ·
5 5 ~13 381
first winning seaaon in SEOAL Jackson
4 6 &gt;UJ 47 ~
play in 13•years.
Well.ton
2 8 .&lt;100 578
o 10 338 469
Durlq lbal beclk drive, Galltpoli•
TOTALS
40 40 3439 3439
the G•Dians oallcored DIS
TUESDAY'S RUUL TS:
ll.. la I ipU of 2:21 to wrap Ironton 51 Gallipolis 33
ap lllelr lllh vletory Ia u Athens 38 Meigs 33
._
Waverly 58 Jaci&lt;son 36
ltuiB Wa wtater. Inside the Logan 61 Wellston 59
FRIDAY'S 'GAMES:
SEOAL, GAllS took over
••disputed pasa~uloa of Gallipolis at Meigs
Wellston at Ironton
aectad place wtth aa a.z Waverly at Logan
,milrk. lroatoa, now 7-i Athen• at Jackoon

Blue DeVils Start.
Fas1, En d .trong

:

1 5

More SportS
Pages 6&amp;8

SEOAL Victory

R esenJeS LoSers 38•33

Standings

SAVE WITH

TIRES FOR lARGE ·CAR
OWNERS-PRICED RIGHT
TO SELU
4-PLY
NYLON

.

Urbana 109 Melone 103
Denison 71 Kenyon 51
OTHER · COLLEGE
Babson 100 Lowoll Tech 89
SMU 85 Texa• 80
Glenville 97 ·Salem 65
Georgetown (Ky.) BA Thos.
More73
Towson St. 73 Johns Hopkln568
Loyola (111.1 83 West. Mich. 77
Drake 74 West Tex. St. 68
Richmond 15 Citadel 68
Nebraska 61 t&lt;an. St. 60
Baylor 93 TCU 77
Te•as Tech 76 Arkansas 73
W. Va . Tech 87 Davis &amp; Elkins ·
67
Ind . Central 80 Manche•ter 73
Mich. Tech 80 WU-Green Bay
76
Bates 78 Bowdoin 74
Mich . St. 98 Notre Dame 74
Lehigh 72 Muhlenberg 66
Lafayette 8S Bucknell 66
Bo•ton U. 65 Holy Cross-64
Missouri 64 Kansas 60
Texas A&amp;M 80 Rice 70
Davidson 92 East Car. 79
Long Beach St. 83 UC Irvine 62

Southem Wins
Pair of Games

·21st Straight

ne

,OH 10 COLLEGE
Ohio State 12 Iowa 77
Otterbein 71 Heidelberg 64
Ohio University 98 VMI 60
Rio Grande 81 Berea (Ky.)IO
Wilmington 110 Centre (Ky.] '19
Akron 78 Baldwin-Wallace 4.5
Steubenville 88 'Wntern New
England 79
Ohio Wesleyan 74 Wittenberg
65

•

second straight week. The
sn'lilll Meigs squad lost that
batUe, 44-29. Meigs was 18 of 30
from the foul line for 110 per
cent while Athens was II of 16
for 69 per cent .
The Marauder showing
against the Bulldogs was not by
any ways poor, they just
couldn't hit the shots they've
'been makinS the past few
weeks. Meigsis~!Oagainst the
Bulldogs in their five-year
history .
The Marauders return home
this Friday against the
powerful Gallipolis Blue Devil
squad. Coach Jim Osborne's
boys whipped Meigs at the
French City earlier in the
season, 67-67, and last night
dumped strong Ironton IJ8.57.

-Waverly Cops

a·

CoJleae Score~

RACINE - Southern Junior
High's basketball squada won
twice over Federill Hocking
Tuesay here, the seventh grade
47-31 and the eighth grade, 5444.
For Southern Bass was the
big gun with 15 followed by
Boso with 12 and for Federal
Hocking Tanthory had a and
Brandberry 6 In the seventh
grade game. Southern Ia now
12-0.
In the eighth grade game, for
Southern Dunning had 17,
Schultz 14, and Brown 13. For
Federal Hocklllg, Ashcraft got
14, Russell 11. Southern's
record Is Jlh'l.
Southern will play at
Wahama today at 4:30 p.m.

free throws in the first six
minutes of play unUI Artie
IleStephen's 20-foot jumper at
the 2:52mark cut the lead to 174.
After blistering the nell! with
24 of 37 shota in the first half the
Tigers finished the contest with
38 of 70 for 54 pet. They converted five of 10 free throws
and pulled down 38 rebounds
with Mike Oyer getting nine.
The lronmen, who dropped to
2-8 in league play, canned 18 of
50 shall! for 36 pet., made good
FOUNDER RETIR&amp;'l
on 17 of 23 free throws, and had
AKRON, Ohio !UP!)- Joe
'tl rebounds with Steve Keller's
Antenora
has been named
six the top figure. • '
Oyer led aU scorers with 'll executive director of the
points, including 13 of 16 field Professional Bowlers
goal attempta, with Workman AaloclaUon, succeeding PBA
. getting 20, and Bill Maloy founder Eddie Elias.
adding 16.
Steve Keller's 16 markers
topped the Jackson attack,

Lefthander Signs
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Tom
Hall,. a fireballlng lefthander
who struck out 137 batters in
130 innings !list year for the
Minnesota Twins, has Signed a
1972 contract with the Cincinnati Reds.
Hill, 24, was traded to the
Reds in exchange for pitcher
Wayne Granger. Hntarled 11
games last year and had a 4-7

$
each

.Reg.
Retreads
Pass.- Car

rec~d.

·Size On~
TALK; NOT MANAGE
CLEVELAND ( UPI}
Former Cleveland Indians
slugger Rocky Colavito, who
put in an unsucceasful bid to be
named manager of the club,
will instead help broadcast
Indians games this season.
WJW·TV said Tuesday night
Colavito will team up with
veteran broadcaster Harry
Jones for the telecaslll.

Exdllllge

GENERAL
TIRE SALES
992-7161

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FINDING our WHO'$ TI&lt;E BtG
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'

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.IN A
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�'

..
.. :

4- Tile Dally Sentinel, ~~rt·Polnero.y, ~-· Feb . 1,1972
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CAKE .MIX

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FROSTINGS

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PORK:LOIN

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f - The !)ally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Feb. 2. 1972

Bio Nips Berea
'

'

Beach Higher

Wildcats Edge Bobcats

'

l Pira~es Tumble .~ts

J •·

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

·
. . Coach :nm trilster's Norlh
NorthGallia moved\nto U7·
Qannan Trace rallied late in ' )(C jumped into a 10 point GalUa Pirates hit 54 RC~·· from 2 lea~ after the ~lpe:!s~i
the fourth . quarter Tl•esd~ · lead midway m the second the noor Tueaday mght In The Pirates were~ ""'7
night to nip Kyger Creek, 6
period only to see it dwindle pn rolling to an easy 117-22 victory the half and 112-18 ~Into the
in a thrilling Soutbem Valley the Wildcats' hot.foul shooUng. over Southwestern , in a final per!od. Freshman~
Athletic Conference game at Curry Thompson and Greg Southern Valley Athletic Carter paced the
Cheshire.
M~ty paced the Bobcats to Conference game.
with eight points
ev1n
John Lusher, &amp;-2 sophomore their lead which jolted them
The win pushed the Pirates' Walker, anotherfre , • bad
and Mike Caldwell, 6-6 junior, into a 33-26 advantage' at the leagUe mark ' to 9-1. North five points.
·;, •-~. ·
both forwards, were the big half.
'
Gallla Is 11·2 In all games.
North Gallia had .'r• ~·
bounA··wt""
guns in the Wildcat comeback:
Hannan Trace bounced back
The Plnltes are ranked 13th re
"" '" Clark .11ettlng""
.
·
Lusher canned two foul shots In the third period outscoring . ill ·the state In the latest .UPI ' The Little .Pirates ;· overr'!l
with 1:07 remaining giving the h011t team; 15-11. Caldwell, ratings.
. the UtUe Highlande~ 75-2.'1 111
Hannan Trace a live poin! lead. Lusher and Wells were qaln
Gary Crosawhite's 27 point! the reserve pme. Keith
Following Greg McCarty's . the big guns, Thompeon and pa~ · NG Tuesday. . Arthur Weddi!lgtonllldlhewaywllh
layup, Robert Pack was fouled McCarty paced the Bobcats. Clark, 6-6 senior center, had 25 points. Da_ve Robinette anll
but missed both ends of a two
Hannan Trace played point!; Pat Stout, senior guanj, Don Juslu.i had 13
each.
shot situation. The· reboimd wilhout the services of . Keith canned 24. poir!ts, and , Haryy
North
ho~t
was taken away from KC.'sRoy SWain, 5-10 senior guard, who Brown, senior guard, added 10 · So~thern
night
Thompson. Caldwellp.utitinat was ill with strepthroa. t.
po~'nts.
·
Valley
at .Soutbthe buzzer for the final margin
Kyger Creek was in serious
of victory. .
foul trouble throughout the
Kyger .Creek led 44-41 going . second J\aH. Curry and Darst
into the fourth period. With both fouled out in the fourth
4:14 left, Don Wells, · 6-4 quarter.
sophOmore center, ·canned a
Caldwell was the game's
jwnj,er cutting the Lead at one · leading scorer with 27 polp~ on
point, 49·48. Caldwell was nine basllets and nine free
fouled at the 3:43 mark.· He throws. 'W~IIs . wu the only .
connected on both tosses to other Wild¢at In dou~le figures place the'Wildcats Into a three with 17. ·
.
·,
·,
point'lead.
Thompaonpaced th~ Bobca'is
.
'·
.
~
The Bobcats' Mark Darst, 1&gt;-0 with 18 points. Curry ' and
.
'
I
junior forward, was· fouled at McCarty had U points each
the 3:06 mark. He converted while Darst had 11 points.
one of two attempts in cutting
Kyger Creek sank 22 of 51
the lead to ii3-/il.
field goal attempts for 42 pet,
Lusher, however, was the big while the Wildcats converted 20
hero for Coach Paul Dillon's of 61 for 32 pet.
Wildcats. He converted live
The Bobcats hit 14 of 22 free
free throws when the pressure throws. Hannan. Trace made 22
was on. Caldwell had 14 of his of 47 from the charity stripe.
27 points during the fourth The Bobcats held a slight · .
period. Several of those were rebounding . edge, 38-37,
layups against Thompson who Thompson grabbed 21 for the .
was playing with four per· losers. Caldwell had 12 · for
sooals.
Hannan Trace.
Coach Jim Arledge's BobCoach Arledge's reserves
cats came on strong in the final increased their league mark to
minute of the opening stanza to 6-4 wilh a 41-29 victory over lhe
knot the score at 15-15.
Lillie Wildkittens.
Darst led the Bobcat attack.
John Rumley and Dave Wise
JOPS OR BOTTOMS
with seven points, Thompson paced the winner:s with 11 and
and George Curry, junior eight points respectively.
..
forward, added four points
Mark Swain led the losers
S-M-L &amp; XL
.each. Wells and Caldwell led with 11 points.
the Wildcats during the first
Kyger Creek will host
period. Wells had seven points Eastern Friday night. Hannan
while Caldwell canned five.
Trace travels to Coal Grove.
FOR
..

In BeSt Ring

Ron Smith's 20 markers pet.
iuo Grande College held on
Rio plays at Georgetown,
In the final minute of play to paced the losers. Ron Anderson
Ky.,
Saturday. Next home
nip visiting Berea 81-80 In a tallied 16.
Rio zoomejl ahead 1&gt;-0 in the game is Feb. 9, against
non-conference basketball
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -Bill
game at Lyne Center Tue.sday first minute of play behind Don power.ful . Capital .l!niversity. Beach of Shll!'on, Pa., e~~~erged •
Bolll$&gt;ger's hot hand, but the
night.
in the top echelons of the Professional Bowlers Association
visitors fought back and it was
With the Redmen on top 81· tied 44-44 during the halftime
eamings ~on the hasis of his
78, Berea's Bill Broom~ hit a intermission.
f/,500 first prize In lhe Do!!
Rio was ahead 63-53 midway
twin;&gt;Oinoor and sank a foul
Carter Clasoic last week.
shot in the final seconds to through the final period.
Thewinandlesserprizesthis
Rio hit 37 of 75from the field
reduce lhe final margin to one '
year give Beach $9,035 in Wlnn·
point. Rio held the ball out of for 49 pet. The Redmen were 7
·
i!lg~. good for third place bebounds during tlie final four of 16 from the foul circles ( 43.7
hind Don Johnson of Akron,
secOI)ds of play to. pick up its pet.)
Ohlo,-and Gus Lampo, of Endl·
Rio hauled down 42
ninth' victory against eight
.
oott, N.Y.
Johnson, who got $317.50 for
rebounds.
Capt.
Bentley
pulled
setbacks. Berea dropped to 8-13
his
38th place Ue in the . Don
By
United
Press
IDternatlonal
down 10 to pace the winners. ·
on the year.
Carter
Classic, leads the pros
Things appear to be baCk ,19
Berea hit 34 of 64 shots from
Harry Hairston's 24 points
with $2!,3&amp;8. Lampo, who fin·
normal for Ohio State.
paced · the Redmen, Capt. the field for 53 pet., and was 12
Luke Witte, the seven.foot lshed lStl) in the classic for $900
of 17 at the charity lines for 75
Roger Bentley had U.
center ·injured iii last week's is in second place with 11 total of
melee , with Minnesota,
returned to action Tueaday $!~~\ext stop on the PBA
night and contributed 17 points tour Is the Mercury Cougar
and 14rebounds to complement Open at San Jose, Calif. this
Allan Hornyak's 37-point week with a !l'ize fund ·of.
performance as the ~ighth· $85,000. The first !l'ize Is $10,
ranked Buckeyes meuured 000 and a new car. The Saturday finals will be televised.
Iowa, f!J..77.
Witte sat out last Saturday's
83-731oss to Michigan~nly the
third for the Buckeyes-with a Top 20 Winners
Coach Dick Taylor's Logan first half.
AKRON, Ohio !UP!I - The
major ooncussion and bruises
top
20 bowlers in 1erms of
Statistics
show
Logan
getting
Chieftains survived a last
and .cuts about the eyes and winnings
on .the 1972
quarter surge by the host 28 of 57 shots for 49 pet., and chin following the fracas Professional
Bowlers
Wellston Golden Rockets converting four of 14 free against Minnesota lour nights Association lour this week:
·1. Don Johnson. Akron.
Tuesday night to notch their throws.
earlier.
Ohio
$21,368
second SEOAL victory o( the
The Rockets fared badly as
Hornyak, in matching his 2lGus Lampo, Endicott,
season in a 60-S2 win ,
they managed just 23 of 59 field career high, tallied nine of his N.Y.
12,816
goals for 34 pet. and six of 13 team's last 11 points and pulled 3. Bill Beach, Sharon, Pa.9,035
The loss dropped Wellston
~ . Jimmy McHugh, New .
free throws. Ray McKinniss the Buckeyes up from a 7241 York
Into sole po•sesoion of the
8,828
league. ceDar wllb a 1-9
picked off 11 of the 24 Wellston deficit on a jumper with 2: 25· 5.
Johnny
PelraQila ,
7,925
record while Logan moved
rebounds.
left in the game and hit on two Brooklyn, N.Y.
Into tie with Jackson for
free !l!l'ows after the Hawkeyes · 6. Larry Laub, San Fran.
7.300
seventh place al %-ll In loop
had asswned the lead once cisco
7. George Pappas, Charlotte,
competUi011,
N.C.
,
6,~70
WESTPHAL LOST
more at 74-73.
_·'l:l!e.Chieftains led by quarter
8. Dick Weber, St.louis 6,0oo
LOSANGELES(UPI)-Paul
RiCk Williams led Iowa with
9. Gary Dickinson, Ft. Worth,
scores of 11&gt;-14, 32-26, and 47-36 Westphal, star University of 26 points, .and Kevin Kunnert,
Tex.
5,325
but with, just over three &amp;luthern California guard, was Witte's seven-loot oounterpart,
Mike McGrath, El Cerrito,
minutes remaining In the game lost lor the rest of lhe netted 23 points and grabbed 15 10.
Calif.
5.133
Wellston surged to wilhin two basketball season Wednesday rebounds.
ll . Earl Anthony, Tacoma,
points, at 51·49, and the when It wu learned he had
Wash .
5,120
.
, .
12.
Ernie
SchlegeL
Rockets were hopeful.
torn cartllqe and probable
Ohto Sta~, uppmg tts record
New BurQh, N.Y.
4.1~0
However, Ken Culbertson to ligaments in his left knee. to 13-3, gamed a share of the
13. Paul CowelL Tucson,
rn
· Big Ten lead with Minnesota Ariz.
canned a fielder and Jim
~,000
Pierce bagged two quick goals CHOICE GIVEN
and Michigan, all with 5-I 14 . Butch Soper, Tustin,
cant.
4,000
to shoot the Chiefs back Into an
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) _ conference marks.
15. Curl Schmidt,
.
Long Beach State also
eight point lead and slammed
3,790
Wayne, Ind.
George
Eaton,
lhe
Canadian
a loss on 16.Fori
Bobby
Williams,
the door on the Wellston rally. who recently was named the rebounded from
.
.
.
Detroit
3,500
Culbertson led Logan with 21 first "Rookie of the Year" on Sunday to Umverstty of Pactfic · 11.
Barry Asher, .Costa Mesa,
points with Jim Pierce getting th U it d St t A to Cl b as the fifth.f'anked 49ers posted
Calif.
3,250
lAs of Jan. 301
FrH Tbrows
e
n
e
.
a.
es
u
u
an
113-62
win over UC Irvine, 18. Craig Mueller, Union,
20.
Slondings
A M Pet.
dtamplonshtP.Cll'Cuit, Monday behind the 18 points of N.J .
3,100
ICon IAllgamesl McLoughlin (00) 56 49 87.5
Handy Norris added 1% was named driver of his choice
ising Leonard Gra a 10. A. w. " Bill" Johnson,
Team
W L W L. Stephenson IMI
70 58 82.8
points for lhe winners and of two entries fo~ the 1972 In· ~o:r
New Orleans
3,050 Urbana · x
6-0 19- 2 Todd 1Ul
143 117 81.8
from Kansas. Y'
20 . Gary Madison, San Ber· Rio Grande
aloo pulled down 33 of lhe 511 dlanapolls 500 mile race.
3·3 B· 8 · Bartram I Rl
46 35 78.3
a eree
nardlno,
Calif.
3,008 Ohio.Dominican
2·3 5·10 Maurer (ODI
75 59 78.2
Chieftain rebowtds, possibly
Malone
1·3 1·12
Rebounds
Gray, .a &amp;-foot~. · 245-pound
;;: a Dl\~ leaSJie record lor qdAUrt..PIJROHASEO
Cedarville
:
0·3
3·12·•
·-,
';"t.
~.'
' Total Av.
.. Individual effort.
lrr. LOUIS (UPI)-The St . sophomore forward, made his High~ool
x - Clinched title.
Underwood (00) 219
14.6 ,
·
Anderson (U)
,272
12.~ ,
Rick Denney and Danny Louis Blues announced college debut notable for
Field
Goals
A
M
Pet.
·
·
Marzlck
(ml
209
11
.0
shooting
accuracy
as
he
oonSettles each netted 14 points for Tuesday that goalie Jim
Urbana
1561
8~1 53.9 . Plunkett lUI
195
9.3
the Rockets, with the high McLeold has been purchased nected on all seven floor shots
1297 616 ~7 . 5 Bentley (R)
140
8.8
COLUMBUS (UP!) - This Rio Grande
scoring SetUes limited to just by the Portland Buckeroos of he took and snagged six week's United Press In- Ohio Dominican llOB 525 47.4
1440 656 ~5.5
ternationa l Ohio High School Malone
two points by Culbertson in. the the Western Hockey League. rebounds.
1052 ,473 45.0
Troy Rolph, featuring a long- Board of Coaches' basketball CedarvilleFrH Throws
ratings
(with
first
place
votes
distance jmnp shot, led the and won-los1 records in
,
·'' A M Pet.
Anteaters with 21 points.
Urbana
703 505 71.8
parentheses) :
Ohio Dominican 319 225 69.0 DRAFT CHOICE SIGNED
,
ClassAAA
Mike Robinson and Bill
·3~2 233 68.0
CHICAGO (UPI)-The
Points Rio Grande
Kilgore oombined lor S4 points 1.Team
572 37~ 65.3 Chicago White Sox TUesday
Boardman 1121 (1311
319 Malone
as Michigan State whipped 2. Celina (13) 115·0)
434 249 57.4
310 Cedarville
reported the slgni!lg of their
Rebounds
3.
Columbus
South
(21
(13·1)
264
Notre Dame, 93'74, to run Its
No.
3 draft choice In the
Total Av.
record to 9-6. Gary Novak led ~. Cleveland East Tech
Urbana
969
46.1
Ill (14·11
234
regular draft this winter,
the Irish, now 3-12, wilh 25 s. Findlay 121 (lJ. l)
720 45.0
188 Rio Grande
827 43.8 outfielder !'ostell JohMon, 19,
6. HamlttonTaff(ll 112-l} 120 Malone
points.
'
Ohio
Dominican
615
41.0 from Miami Dade South Junior
$35.00 'Down- ,
I. Toledo Scott (lt-11 ·
106
535
35;7
Cedarville
B
.
Cincinnati
Elder
(5)
(11
.
Collete.
'Selan~e On
Off. Av. Del. Av.
0)
104
Convenient
Urbana
104.4 90.7
9. Columbus Walnut Ridge
91.5 86.0
(ll.l)
88 Rio Grande
Terms.
88.7 90.0
10. Sprlngttetd North I 13·0) 72 Malone
Second ten: ll. Middletow~ Ohio Dominican 85.0 91.9
79.7 9'2.9
63 ; 12. Barberton Sl; 13. Akron Cedarville
Breath of s.pr!nu.
Individual Scoring
Centrai·Hower and Princeton
FG FT TP Av.
20 each ; 15. Toledo Central
catholic I11 18; 16. Alliance 15; Underwood I ODl
179 65 423 28.2
17. Upper Arlington 12; 18.
Put A Touch of Spr~ng 1
!95117 507 24.1
Columbus North ll ; 19. Canton Toddl.u)
Your
Life.
.
Lincoln, Warren Howland and Plunkett I Ul 186 124 496 23.6
Anderson
(U)
159
81
399
19.0
5
Warren Harding 19 each.
Delivered .
Maurer (00) 102 59 263 17.8
'
Class AA
Individual Shooting
l. Wellsville 191 IIJ-0!
220
·
A M Pet.
2. Columbus Ready W (13·
1)
!54 Plunkett ( Ul
305 186 60.9
Serving: Middleport,
89 52 58.4
3. Canton Lehman 1'21113·21138 Harrison ICI
Pomeroy, !HIIipofis, 0.
4.lextngton (4) (14·01
130 Aikman lUI
170 96 56.5
&amp; M"'on Co., W.Va.
287 159 55.4
5. Rossford 131 ll3·11
110 Anderson !Ul
liS 63 54.7
6. Sooth Point ( U-01
79 Hart(RI
7. Big Walnut (21 (IJ.O)
76
B. Newton Falls (2) 112-11
73
9. Steubenville Central (11 (1021
57
10. (fie) Poland {ll-1)
41
10. (tie) Granville (\2·1)
41
Second nine: 12. Norwalk 39 ;
13. Middletown Madison (1) 35;
1~ . Bridgeport and Claymont 32
each ; 16. Cleveland Holy Name
STORE OPEN ALL DAY THURSDAY,
(1) and Waverly 28 each ; 18.
Napoleon 26: 19. Huron 2~; 20:r
Delphos St. John 21.
Every Item Still On Sale In
Others with 10 or more
points: Loveland (1l, Bexley, ..
West
Holmes. , Colonel
New York Clothing's Semi-Annual
Crawford, Youngstown North.
Twinsburg, Canfield, Patri ck
----~
Henry, Oak Harbor, Warrens.
ville Heights and Warren
Kennedy I1), and Gallipolis

Of Bowlers

Witte in

Top Forlll

Norris Has 33
Snags In Win

a

.MOC Cage .Stats

Children's Sport Sneakers

:p

.REGULAR 1.59
.

Big Table Last Years!
Whites

'

POMEROY, 0 •.
~

'

Open Fri. &amp; Sat Nithts Until 9

• DAYS

• •••

All Items From .Stock •

1'29.MILL STREET..
MIDDLEPQRT, OH.IO .·~

DRESSES
Grou.
p
·
1
val.ues to 9.99 ' 4·
~--~..,_-·_No_w_o_NL.-Y_.
GrOup 2. Values to 11.99 6

•

NOW ONLY

'

.

I'

._------------------------------------·
EXTRA! EXTRA!
KAHR TAILORING CO. REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE IN OUR STORE . ..

THURSDAy FEB. 3
I

STORE OPEN ALL DAY, 9:00 TO 5:00
•,.

BARTON WEIDEL Will be with us Thursday to
Show you new Fabrics and Designs by Kahn
Tailoring Co.

.New York Clothing House .
'

KERM'S KORNER .
POMEROY, OHIO

l.lndta~

Class A

Valley South (13)

(12.

01
246
2. Marton Pleasant (21 (13·
11
~00
3. Hardin Northern (2) (14·
0)
173
4. Lowellville (5) (lJ.OJ
160
5. Columbia Station (4) 114·
0)
116
. 6. Sebrlngll1·tl
93
' 7. Strasburg (12·21
87
8. LorainCatholict 1lltt ·31 84
9, Alexander (2) (13.1,)
70
10. Bettsville ()3·11
53
~cond ten: ll . Brlsfolvllte
43; 12. Ridgedale (11 42 ; 13.
North Gallla 36; U. Garaway
29; 15. ' Monroevilt, 27; 16.
Lancaster Fisher Ill 23 ; 17.
Canal Winchester 22; 18.
Maplewood and Newton (1) 21
each ; 20. Columbus Grove and
Lakeland 20 eac~ . ·
OtherS with 10 or mor~
points: Licking Heights,
Garrettsville Garfield, .Lorain
·C'earvlew. · Newark Catholic, .
New Boston, New Knoxville,
Ottawa,. Hills ( t ), Eastenl
(Meigs (1). Kirtland, Rtltmon, .
Yorkville, Vanlue, Ross South·
eastern, Lockland Ross Zane
Trace, Me Donahl and 01lo• ltle.

INFANTS'
TRAINING
PANTS ··

~

GROUP TWO

Values

Values

'

B.lg Februa[Y .clearance group of famous Bobbie Brooks and Eileen iunlor
•portswear In popular fall and winter styles. Brilliantly highlighted
plaids, bold solid colors, sutidued tones In famous sportswear for mix or
match or coordinated costumes. You can add to your sportswear war.
drobe now at these greatly reduced prices. Come In today, as the quantity
limited.
.

.

OFF

2 REGULAR ·PRICE
REMNANT DAYS

3.49

88

to

EA.

.3.99

GROUP THREE

Values

Ladiea' Latest Styles!

88

to

'

Values to 14.99

EA .

5.99

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

' 4~~·100

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

Ladies' Regular 5.'19 and 6.99
·Fancy Quilted! · .
Fancy Stripes!
Assorted Plain Colors! ea.

RUG
RUNNER
,

i

4 88
·

•

Big Assortment
Fancy Patterns!
Sizes: S-M-L

, I

Bulky Knit Sweaten

Sweaters &amp; Shells

Assorted Colors!
. B1g Gr.oup!
S1zes: S-M· L ,..

Large Group!
Smart Styles!
Out They Go Now

··8.oo

Size 22x44"
Florals, Plain Colors

Bonded Place Goods

PLASTIC DRAPES

yd

1e77

'

. Ready to Hang!
Extra Wide Width
A Su
Value!

Qearance! Values to 7.99 and ·8.99

MEN'S
WINTER JACKETS
.

'

'!Jilt Styles! Aaorted Colors!
.

'

'

. ' Sizes 36 .to 44

.

oo·

MASON
•

37$

FAMOUS MOHAWK BRAND WHITE
GUARANTEED COnON MUSLIN

81x99-72il0S.1WIN FIITED
Famous brand sheets made of fine
count

w~Jte

muslin -

wide hems.

Take your choice of 3 sizes at this
low price.

8lx108-0R DOUBLE FITTED
Fine count while ,nuslln sheets that
will wear thru hundreds of
washings. Choice of full double bed
size. Flat or'full fitted .

.J

Assorted Colors!
44" &amp; 45" Widths
Closeout Gr,DuD
Regular 2.49 Latex Gloss

SHEETS
.

PIECE GOODS

PAINT
INTERIOR! .
EXTERIOR!
REG. 2.49 VALUE

gal.1.99

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

~INE

"

pr.

•
1 97

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

'

• PlASTit

MATERIALS CO.

1
00
ea. •

58" Wide Machine Washable

.

ea.

44" &amp; 45" Widths, Values to 1.00

RE~NANT DAYS SALE!
Regular 59c Fully Lined

Regular 2.98 Yard
Assorted Patterns
58" Width .

Cardigan Sweaters!
100 pet. Polyester
Ladies' Shells! ·

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

BATH TOWELS

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

;Famous · Brands!
Long Sleeve!
Sizes: S-M-L

3e88

ea.

Size 22x44 Regular 1.79 Val.

WINTER JACKETS

for .

CANS

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Ladies' Regular 3.99 to 4.99

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

.

'

s

FOIL

2 e00

Boys' Regular t9 16.9'1

MEN'S
SHIRTS
,1SPORT
-

~

ea.

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

Ladies' Regular 5.99 Values

DAYS SALE!

VALUES TO 4.99

HOUSEHOLD
ALUMINUM

·'

FANCY DUSTERS

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

CANDY STRIPE

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

Ladies' Regular 2.99 Values .·

FANCY .DUSTERS

GARBAGE

I'

EA.

REG. 51.17

.

We Delver

88

to

'

For bath11111ms, shoWeJS, utility roams, etc.
.. (Mouldinp &amp; Adhesives Avallble)
.
.

773-5554

GROUP ONE

FULL SIZE "

•

•

I

5~$1 00

.4x8
SHEET

,

. .

12''x25'

.SJYLEBOARD .

•JUMPERS
eSKIRTS
eSWEATERS
•PANTS
•VESTS
•BLOUSES •SHELLS .
eHOT PANTS •OOORDINATES · eSPORT TOPS

GIRLS' ·
DRESSEs ·
In A Final
Clearance!

REMNANT DAYS

Girls Dresses

GOLD LACE

( ll .

&amp; Eileen

NOW ONLY

I'

"Let's Go See ...

HOGG &amp;'ZUSPAN

AND

QO
00
_G_ro_u..,.p_3__val_u~-~-y~7-J9 8.00
~roup 4
13.00

BROOMS

HELD OVER

I.

and More

Values to 22.00

NYLON

Dudley's Florist

AT

Save To

'hOFF

2 300 ,

5.95

THIS SPECIAL

Odds &amp; Ends, Short Lots, Leftovers From Our January Sales! Hurry In!

REMNANT DAYS

THERMAL
UNDERWEAR

ITURE
'349.95

9:00 TO 5:00

• •

.

NEW

THURSDAY • FRIDAY • SATURDAY

pr.

l*

· 3ROO..s

The Weather Was Against Us! I I

• •.

.

'

Ratings.

BOUQUET

REMNANT DAYS SALE! ·

~

'·

.DUDLEY'S

'

.

WHilE MUSLIN- 42x36 SIZE

PILLOW CASES

$164 .
EACH

�'

.

f - The !)ally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Feb. 2. 1972

Bio Nips Berea
'

'

Beach Higher

Wildcats Edge Bobcats

'

l Pira~es Tumble .~ts

J •·

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

·
. . Coach :nm trilster's Norlh
NorthGallia moved\nto U7·
Qannan Trace rallied late in ' )(C jumped into a 10 point GalUa Pirates hit 54 RC~·· from 2 lea~ after the ~lpe:!s~i
the fourth . quarter Tl•esd~ · lead midway m the second the noor Tueaday mght In The Pirates were~ ""'7
night to nip Kyger Creek, 6
period only to see it dwindle pn rolling to an easy 117-22 victory the half and 112-18 ~Into the
in a thrilling Soutbem Valley the Wildcats' hot.foul shooUng. over Southwestern , in a final per!od. Freshman~
Athletic Conference game at Curry Thompson and Greg Southern Valley Athletic Carter paced the
Cheshire.
M~ty paced the Bobcats to Conference game.
with eight points
ev1n
John Lusher, &amp;-2 sophomore their lead which jolted them
The win pushed the Pirates' Walker, anotherfre , • bad
and Mike Caldwell, 6-6 junior, into a 33-26 advantage' at the leagUe mark ' to 9-1. North five points.
·;, •-~. ·
both forwards, were the big half.
'
Gallla Is 11·2 In all games.
North Gallia had .'r• ~·
bounA··wt""
guns in the Wildcat comeback:
Hannan Trace bounced back
The Plnltes are ranked 13th re
"" '" Clark .11ettlng""
.
·
Lusher canned two foul shots In the third period outscoring . ill ·the state In the latest .UPI ' The Little .Pirates ;· overr'!l
with 1:07 remaining giving the h011t team; 15-11. Caldwell, ratings.
. the UtUe Highlande~ 75-2.'1 111
Hannan Trace a live poin! lead. Lusher and Wells were qaln
Gary Crosawhite's 27 point! the reserve pme. Keith
Following Greg McCarty's . the big guns, Thompeon and pa~ · NG Tuesday. . Arthur Weddi!lgtonllldlhewaywllh
layup, Robert Pack was fouled McCarty paced the Bobcats. Clark, 6-6 senior center, had 25 points. Da_ve Robinette anll
but missed both ends of a two
Hannan Trace played point!; Pat Stout, senior guanj, Don Juslu.i had 13
each.
shot situation. The· reboimd wilhout the services of . Keith canned 24. poir!ts, and , Haryy
North
ho~t
was taken away from KC.'sRoy SWain, 5-10 senior guard, who Brown, senior guard, added 10 · So~thern
night
Thompson. Caldwellp.utitinat was ill with strepthroa. t.
po~'nts.
·
Valley
at .Soutbthe buzzer for the final margin
Kyger Creek was in serious
of victory. .
foul trouble throughout the
Kyger .Creek led 44-41 going . second J\aH. Curry and Darst
into the fourth period. With both fouled out in the fourth
4:14 left, Don Wells, · 6-4 quarter.
sophOmore center, ·canned a
Caldwell was the game's
jwnj,er cutting the Lead at one · leading scorer with 27 polp~ on
point, 49·48. Caldwell was nine basllets and nine free
fouled at the 3:43 mark.· He throws. 'W~IIs . wu the only .
connected on both tosses to other Wild¢at In dou~le figures place the'Wildcats Into a three with 17. ·
.
·,
·,
point'lead.
Thompaonpaced th~ Bobca'is
.
'·
.
~
The Bobcats' Mark Darst, 1&gt;-0 with 18 points. Curry ' and
.
'
I
junior forward, was· fouled at McCarty had U points each
the 3:06 mark. He converted while Darst had 11 points.
one of two attempts in cutting
Kyger Creek sank 22 of 51
the lead to ii3-/il.
field goal attempts for 42 pet,
Lusher, however, was the big while the Wildcats converted 20
hero for Coach Paul Dillon's of 61 for 32 pet.
Wildcats. He converted live
The Bobcats hit 14 of 22 free
free throws when the pressure throws. Hannan. Trace made 22
was on. Caldwell had 14 of his of 47 from the charity stripe.
27 points during the fourth The Bobcats held a slight · .
period. Several of those were rebounding . edge, 38-37,
layups against Thompson who Thompson grabbed 21 for the .
was playing with four per· losers. Caldwell had 12 · for
sooals.
Hannan Trace.
Coach Jim Arledge's BobCoach Arledge's reserves
cats came on strong in the final increased their league mark to
minute of the opening stanza to 6-4 wilh a 41-29 victory over lhe
knot the score at 15-15.
Lillie Wildkittens.
Darst led the Bobcat attack.
John Rumley and Dave Wise
JOPS OR BOTTOMS
with seven points, Thompson paced the winner:s with 11 and
and George Curry, junior eight points respectively.
..
forward, added four points
Mark Swain led the losers
S-M-L &amp; XL
.each. Wells and Caldwell led with 11 points.
the Wildcats during the first
Kyger Creek will host
period. Wells had seven points Eastern Friday night. Hannan
while Caldwell canned five.
Trace travels to Coal Grove.
FOR
..

In BeSt Ring

Ron Smith's 20 markers pet.
iuo Grande College held on
Rio plays at Georgetown,
In the final minute of play to paced the losers. Ron Anderson
Ky.,
Saturday. Next home
nip visiting Berea 81-80 In a tallied 16.
Rio zoomejl ahead 1&gt;-0 in the game is Feb. 9, against
non-conference basketball
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -Bill
game at Lyne Center Tue.sday first minute of play behind Don power.ful . Capital .l!niversity. Beach of Shll!'on, Pa., e~~~erged •
Bolll$&gt;ger's hot hand, but the
night.
in the top echelons of the Professional Bowlers Association
visitors fought back and it was
With the Redmen on top 81· tied 44-44 during the halftime
eamings ~on the hasis of his
78, Berea's Bill Broom~ hit a intermission.
f/,500 first prize In lhe Do!!
Rio was ahead 63-53 midway
twin;&gt;Oinoor and sank a foul
Carter Clasoic last week.
shot in the final seconds to through the final period.
Thewinandlesserprizesthis
Rio hit 37 of 75from the field
reduce lhe final margin to one '
year give Beach $9,035 in Wlnn·
point. Rio held the ball out of for 49 pet. The Redmen were 7
·
i!lg~. good for third place bebounds during tlie final four of 16 from the foul circles ( 43.7
hind Don Johnson of Akron,
secOI)ds of play to. pick up its pet.)
Ohlo,-and Gus Lampo, of Endl·
Rio hauled down 42
ninth' victory against eight
.
oott, N.Y.
Johnson, who got $317.50 for
rebounds.
Capt.
Bentley
pulled
setbacks. Berea dropped to 8-13
his
38th place Ue in the . Don
By
United
Press
IDternatlonal
down 10 to pace the winners. ·
on the year.
Carter
Classic, leads the pros
Things appear to be baCk ,19
Berea hit 34 of 64 shots from
Harry Hairston's 24 points
with $2!,3&amp;8. Lampo, who fin·
normal for Ohio State.
paced · the Redmen, Capt. the field for 53 pet., and was 12
Luke Witte, the seven.foot lshed lStl) in the classic for $900
of 17 at the charity lines for 75
Roger Bentley had U.
center ·injured iii last week's is in second place with 11 total of
melee , with Minnesota,
returned to action Tueaday $!~~\ext stop on the PBA
night and contributed 17 points tour Is the Mercury Cougar
and 14rebounds to complement Open at San Jose, Calif. this
Allan Hornyak's 37-point week with a !l'ize fund ·of.
performance as the ~ighth· $85,000. The first !l'ize Is $10,
ranked Buckeyes meuured 000 and a new car. The Saturday finals will be televised.
Iowa, f!J..77.
Witte sat out last Saturday's
83-731oss to Michigan~nly the
third for the Buckeyes-with a Top 20 Winners
Coach Dick Taylor's Logan first half.
AKRON, Ohio !UP!I - The
major ooncussion and bruises
top
20 bowlers in 1erms of
Statistics
show
Logan
getting
Chieftains survived a last
and .cuts about the eyes and winnings
on .the 1972
quarter surge by the host 28 of 57 shots for 49 pet., and chin following the fracas Professional
Bowlers
Wellston Golden Rockets converting four of 14 free against Minnesota lour nights Association lour this week:
·1. Don Johnson. Akron.
Tuesday night to notch their throws.
earlier.
Ohio
$21,368
second SEOAL victory o( the
The Rockets fared badly as
Hornyak, in matching his 2lGus Lampo, Endicott,
season in a 60-S2 win ,
they managed just 23 of 59 field career high, tallied nine of his N.Y.
12,816
goals for 34 pet. and six of 13 team's last 11 points and pulled 3. Bill Beach, Sharon, Pa.9,035
The loss dropped Wellston
~ . Jimmy McHugh, New .
free throws. Ray McKinniss the Buckeyes up from a 7241 York
Into sole po•sesoion of the
8,828
league. ceDar wllb a 1-9
picked off 11 of the 24 Wellston deficit on a jumper with 2: 25· 5.
Johnny
PelraQila ,
7,925
record while Logan moved
rebounds.
left in the game and hit on two Brooklyn, N.Y.
Into tie with Jackson for
free !l!l'ows after the Hawkeyes · 6. Larry Laub, San Fran.
7.300
seventh place al %-ll In loop
had asswned the lead once cisco
7. George Pappas, Charlotte,
competUi011,
N.C.
,
6,~70
WESTPHAL LOST
more at 74-73.
_·'l:l!e.Chieftains led by quarter
8. Dick Weber, St.louis 6,0oo
LOSANGELES(UPI)-Paul
RiCk Williams led Iowa with
9. Gary Dickinson, Ft. Worth,
scores of 11&gt;-14, 32-26, and 47-36 Westphal, star University of 26 points, .and Kevin Kunnert,
Tex.
5,325
but with, just over three &amp;luthern California guard, was Witte's seven-loot oounterpart,
Mike McGrath, El Cerrito,
minutes remaining In the game lost lor the rest of lhe netted 23 points and grabbed 15 10.
Calif.
5.133
Wellston surged to wilhin two basketball season Wednesday rebounds.
ll . Earl Anthony, Tacoma,
points, at 51·49, and the when It wu learned he had
Wash .
5,120
.
, .
12.
Ernie
SchlegeL
Rockets were hopeful.
torn cartllqe and probable
Ohto Sta~, uppmg tts record
New BurQh, N.Y.
4.1~0
However, Ken Culbertson to ligaments in his left knee. to 13-3, gamed a share of the
13. Paul CowelL Tucson,
rn
· Big Ten lead with Minnesota Ariz.
canned a fielder and Jim
~,000
Pierce bagged two quick goals CHOICE GIVEN
and Michigan, all with 5-I 14 . Butch Soper, Tustin,
cant.
4,000
to shoot the Chiefs back Into an
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) _ conference marks.
15. Curl Schmidt,
.
Long Beach State also
eight point lead and slammed
3,790
Wayne, Ind.
George
Eaton,
lhe
Canadian
a loss on 16.Fori
Bobby
Williams,
the door on the Wellston rally. who recently was named the rebounded from
.
.
.
Detroit
3,500
Culbertson led Logan with 21 first "Rookie of the Year" on Sunday to Umverstty of Pactfic · 11.
Barry Asher, .Costa Mesa,
points with Jim Pierce getting th U it d St t A to Cl b as the fifth.f'anked 49ers posted
Calif.
3,250
lAs of Jan. 301
FrH Tbrows
e
n
e
.
a.
es
u
u
an
113-62
win over UC Irvine, 18. Craig Mueller, Union,
20.
Slondings
A M Pet.
dtamplonshtP.Cll'Cuit, Monday behind the 18 points of N.J .
3,100
ICon IAllgamesl McLoughlin (00) 56 49 87.5
Handy Norris added 1% was named driver of his choice
ising Leonard Gra a 10. A. w. " Bill" Johnson,
Team
W L W L. Stephenson IMI
70 58 82.8
points for lhe winners and of two entries fo~ the 1972 In· ~o:r
New Orleans
3,050 Urbana · x
6-0 19- 2 Todd 1Ul
143 117 81.8
from Kansas. Y'
20 . Gary Madison, San Ber· Rio Grande
aloo pulled down 33 of lhe 511 dlanapolls 500 mile race.
3·3 B· 8 · Bartram I Rl
46 35 78.3
a eree
nardlno,
Calif.
3,008 Ohio.Dominican
2·3 5·10 Maurer (ODI
75 59 78.2
Chieftain rebowtds, possibly
Malone
1·3 1·12
Rebounds
Gray, .a &amp;-foot~. · 245-pound
;;: a Dl\~ leaSJie record lor qdAUrt..PIJROHASEO
Cedarville
:
0·3
3·12·•
·-,
';"t.
~.'
' Total Av.
.. Individual effort.
lrr. LOUIS (UPI)-The St . sophomore forward, made his High~ool
x - Clinched title.
Underwood (00) 219
14.6 ,
·
Anderson (U)
,272
12.~ ,
Rick Denney and Danny Louis Blues announced college debut notable for
Field
Goals
A
M
Pet.
·
·
Marzlck
(ml
209
11
.0
shooting
accuracy
as
he
oonSettles each netted 14 points for Tuesday that goalie Jim
Urbana
1561
8~1 53.9 . Plunkett lUI
195
9.3
the Rockets, with the high McLeold has been purchased nected on all seven floor shots
1297 616 ~7 . 5 Bentley (R)
140
8.8
COLUMBUS (UP!) - This Rio Grande
scoring SetUes limited to just by the Portland Buckeroos of he took and snagged six week's United Press In- Ohio Dominican llOB 525 47.4
1440 656 ~5.5
ternationa l Ohio High School Malone
two points by Culbertson in. the the Western Hockey League. rebounds.
1052 ,473 45.0
Troy Rolph, featuring a long- Board of Coaches' basketball CedarvilleFrH Throws
ratings
(with
first
place
votes
distance jmnp shot, led the and won-los1 records in
,
·'' A M Pet.
Anteaters with 21 points.
Urbana
703 505 71.8
parentheses) :
Ohio Dominican 319 225 69.0 DRAFT CHOICE SIGNED
,
ClassAAA
Mike Robinson and Bill
·3~2 233 68.0
CHICAGO (UPI)-The
Points Rio Grande
Kilgore oombined lor S4 points 1.Team
572 37~ 65.3 Chicago White Sox TUesday
Boardman 1121 (1311
319 Malone
as Michigan State whipped 2. Celina (13) 115·0)
434 249 57.4
310 Cedarville
reported the slgni!lg of their
Rebounds
3.
Columbus
South
(21
(13·1)
264
Notre Dame, 93'74, to run Its
No.
3 draft choice In the
Total Av.
record to 9-6. Gary Novak led ~. Cleveland East Tech
Urbana
969
46.1
Ill (14·11
234
regular draft this winter,
the Irish, now 3-12, wilh 25 s. Findlay 121 (lJ. l)
720 45.0
188 Rio Grande
827 43.8 outfielder !'ostell JohMon, 19,
6. HamlttonTaff(ll 112-l} 120 Malone
points.
'
Ohio
Dominican
615
41.0 from Miami Dade South Junior
$35.00 'Down- ,
I. Toledo Scott (lt-11 ·
106
535
35;7
Cedarville
B
.
Cincinnati
Elder
(5)
(11
.
Collete.
'Selan~e On
Off. Av. Del. Av.
0)
104
Convenient
Urbana
104.4 90.7
9. Columbus Walnut Ridge
91.5 86.0
(ll.l)
88 Rio Grande
Terms.
88.7 90.0
10. Sprlngttetd North I 13·0) 72 Malone
Second ten: ll. Middletow~ Ohio Dominican 85.0 91.9
79.7 9'2.9
63 ; 12. Barberton Sl; 13. Akron Cedarville
Breath of s.pr!nu.
Individual Scoring
Centrai·Hower and Princeton
FG FT TP Av.
20 each ; 15. Toledo Central
catholic I11 18; 16. Alliance 15; Underwood I ODl
179 65 423 28.2
17. Upper Arlington 12; 18.
Put A Touch of Spr~ng 1
!95117 507 24.1
Columbus North ll ; 19. Canton Toddl.u)
Your
Life.
.
Lincoln, Warren Howland and Plunkett I Ul 186 124 496 23.6
Anderson
(U)
159
81
399
19.0
5
Warren Harding 19 each.
Delivered .
Maurer (00) 102 59 263 17.8
'
Class AA
Individual Shooting
l. Wellsville 191 IIJ-0!
220
·
A M Pet.
2. Columbus Ready W (13·
1)
!54 Plunkett ( Ul
305 186 60.9
Serving: Middleport,
89 52 58.4
3. Canton Lehman 1'21113·21138 Harrison ICI
Pomeroy, !HIIipofis, 0.
4.lextngton (4) (14·01
130 Aikman lUI
170 96 56.5
&amp; M"'on Co., W.Va.
287 159 55.4
5. Rossford 131 ll3·11
110 Anderson !Ul
liS 63 54.7
6. Sooth Point ( U-01
79 Hart(RI
7. Big Walnut (21 (IJ.O)
76
B. Newton Falls (2) 112-11
73
9. Steubenville Central (11 (1021
57
10. (fie) Poland {ll-1)
41
10. (tie) Granville (\2·1)
41
Second nine: 12. Norwalk 39 ;
13. Middletown Madison (1) 35;
1~ . Bridgeport and Claymont 32
each ; 16. Cleveland Holy Name
STORE OPEN ALL DAY THURSDAY,
(1) and Waverly 28 each ; 18.
Napoleon 26: 19. Huron 2~; 20:r
Delphos St. John 21.
Every Item Still On Sale In
Others with 10 or more
points: Loveland (1l, Bexley, ..
West
Holmes. , Colonel
New York Clothing's Semi-Annual
Crawford, Youngstown North.
Twinsburg, Canfield, Patri ck
----~
Henry, Oak Harbor, Warrens.
ville Heights and Warren
Kennedy I1), and Gallipolis

Of Bowlers

Witte in

Top Forlll

Norris Has 33
Snags In Win

a

.MOC Cage .Stats

Children's Sport Sneakers

:p

.REGULAR 1.59
.

Big Table Last Years!
Whites

'

POMEROY, 0 •.
~

'

Open Fri. &amp; Sat Nithts Until 9

• DAYS

• •••

All Items From .Stock •

1'29.MILL STREET..
MIDDLEPQRT, OH.IO .·~

DRESSES
Grou.
p
·
1
val.ues to 9.99 ' 4·
~--~..,_-·_No_w_o_NL.-Y_.
GrOup 2. Values to 11.99 6

•

NOW ONLY

'

.

I'

._------------------------------------·
EXTRA! EXTRA!
KAHR TAILORING CO. REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE IN OUR STORE . ..

THURSDAy FEB. 3
I

STORE OPEN ALL DAY, 9:00 TO 5:00
•,.

BARTON WEIDEL Will be with us Thursday to
Show you new Fabrics and Designs by Kahn
Tailoring Co.

.New York Clothing House .
'

KERM'S KORNER .
POMEROY, OHIO

l.lndta~

Class A

Valley South (13)

(12.

01
246
2. Marton Pleasant (21 (13·
11
~00
3. Hardin Northern (2) (14·
0)
173
4. Lowellville (5) (lJ.OJ
160
5. Columbia Station (4) 114·
0)
116
. 6. Sebrlngll1·tl
93
' 7. Strasburg (12·21
87
8. LorainCatholict 1lltt ·31 84
9, Alexander (2) (13.1,)
70
10. Bettsville ()3·11
53
~cond ten: ll . Brlsfolvllte
43; 12. Ridgedale (11 42 ; 13.
North Gallla 36; U. Garaway
29; 15. ' Monroevilt, 27; 16.
Lancaster Fisher Ill 23 ; 17.
Canal Winchester 22; 18.
Maplewood and Newton (1) 21
each ; 20. Columbus Grove and
Lakeland 20 eac~ . ·
OtherS with 10 or mor~
points: Licking Heights,
Garrettsville Garfield, .Lorain
·C'earvlew. · Newark Catholic, .
New Boston, New Knoxville,
Ottawa,. Hills ( t ), Eastenl
(Meigs (1). Kirtland, Rtltmon, .
Yorkville, Vanlue, Ross South·
eastern, Lockland Ross Zane
Trace, Me Donahl and 01lo• ltle.

INFANTS'
TRAINING
PANTS ··

~

GROUP TWO

Values

Values

'

B.lg Februa[Y .clearance group of famous Bobbie Brooks and Eileen iunlor
•portswear In popular fall and winter styles. Brilliantly highlighted
plaids, bold solid colors, sutidued tones In famous sportswear for mix or
match or coordinated costumes. You can add to your sportswear war.
drobe now at these greatly reduced prices. Come In today, as the quantity
limited.
.

.

OFF

2 REGULAR ·PRICE
REMNANT DAYS

3.49

88

to

EA.

.3.99

GROUP THREE

Values

Ladiea' Latest Styles!

88

to

'

Values to 14.99

EA .

5.99

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

' 4~~·100

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

Ladies' Regular 5.'19 and 6.99
·Fancy Quilted! · .
Fancy Stripes!
Assorted Plain Colors! ea.

RUG
RUNNER
,

i

4 88
·

•

Big Assortment
Fancy Patterns!
Sizes: S-M-L

, I

Bulky Knit Sweaten

Sweaters &amp; Shells

Assorted Colors!
. B1g Gr.oup!
S1zes: S-M· L ,..

Large Group!
Smart Styles!
Out They Go Now

··8.oo

Size 22x44"
Florals, Plain Colors

Bonded Place Goods

PLASTIC DRAPES

yd

1e77

'

. Ready to Hang!
Extra Wide Width
A Su
Value!

Qearance! Values to 7.99 and ·8.99

MEN'S
WINTER JACKETS
.

'

'!Jilt Styles! Aaorted Colors!
.

'

'

. ' Sizes 36 .to 44

.

oo·

MASON
•

37$

FAMOUS MOHAWK BRAND WHITE
GUARANTEED COnON MUSLIN

81x99-72il0S.1WIN FIITED
Famous brand sheets made of fine
count

w~Jte

muslin -

wide hems.

Take your choice of 3 sizes at this
low price.

8lx108-0R DOUBLE FITTED
Fine count while ,nuslln sheets that
will wear thru hundreds of
washings. Choice of full double bed
size. Flat or'full fitted .

.J

Assorted Colors!
44" &amp; 45" Widths
Closeout Gr,DuD
Regular 2.49 Latex Gloss

SHEETS
.

PIECE GOODS

PAINT
INTERIOR! .
EXTERIOR!
REG. 2.49 VALUE

gal.1.99

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

~INE

"

pr.

•
1 97

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

'

• PlASTit

MATERIALS CO.

1
00
ea. •

58" Wide Machine Washable

.

ea.

44" &amp; 45" Widths, Values to 1.00

RE~NANT DAYS SALE!
Regular 59c Fully Lined

Regular 2.98 Yard
Assorted Patterns
58" Width .

Cardigan Sweaters!
100 pet. Polyester
Ladies' Shells! ·

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

BATH TOWELS

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

;Famous · Brands!
Long Sleeve!
Sizes: S-M-L

3e88

ea.

Size 22x44 Regular 1.79 Val.

WINTER JACKETS

for .

CANS

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Ladies' Regular 3.99 to 4.99

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

.

'

s

FOIL

2 e00

Boys' Regular t9 16.9'1

MEN'S
SHIRTS
,1SPORT
-

~

ea.

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

Ladies' Regular 5.99 Values

DAYS SALE!

VALUES TO 4.99

HOUSEHOLD
ALUMINUM

·'

FANCY DUSTERS

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

CANDY STRIPE

REMNANT DAYS SALE!

Ladies' Regular 2.99 Values .·

FANCY .DUSTERS

GARBAGE

I'

EA.

REG. 51.17

.

We Delver

88

to

'

For bath11111ms, shoWeJS, utility roams, etc.
.. (Mouldinp &amp; Adhesives Avallble)
.
.

773-5554

GROUP ONE

FULL SIZE "

•

•

I

5~$1 00

.4x8
SHEET

,

. .

12''x25'

.SJYLEBOARD .

•JUMPERS
eSKIRTS
eSWEATERS
•PANTS
•VESTS
•BLOUSES •SHELLS .
eHOT PANTS •OOORDINATES · eSPORT TOPS

GIRLS' ·
DRESSEs ·
In A Final
Clearance!

REMNANT DAYS

Girls Dresses

GOLD LACE

( ll .

&amp; Eileen

NOW ONLY

I'

"Let's Go See ...

HOGG &amp;'ZUSPAN

AND

QO
00
_G_ro_u..,.p_3__val_u~-~-y~7-J9 8.00
~roup 4
13.00

BROOMS

HELD OVER

I.

and More

Values to 22.00

NYLON

Dudley's Florist

AT

Save To

'hOFF

2 300 ,

5.95

THIS SPECIAL

Odds &amp; Ends, Short Lots, Leftovers From Our January Sales! Hurry In!

REMNANT DAYS

THERMAL
UNDERWEAR

ITURE
'349.95

9:00 TO 5:00

• •

.

NEW

THURSDAY • FRIDAY • SATURDAY

pr.

l*

· 3ROO..s

The Weather Was Against Us! I I

• •.

.

'

Ratings.

BOUQUET

REMNANT DAYS SALE! ·

~

'·

.DUDLEY'S

'

.

WHilE MUSLIN- 42x36 SIZE

PILLOW CASES

$164 .
EACH

�'

I

'

...
1- The llllily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 2,1972

J

Bengals ·Draft Again to
' - The
NEW YORK (UPI)
Onclnnati Bengals took. as
their top college draft choice
S!erman White, a consensus
All-American defensive tackle
fiom the University of Callfor-.
nia , while the . Cleveland .
. Browns chose defensive back'
Tom Darden of Michigan in !he
'
first round.
Seven rounds of the !annual
college draft of football players,
were completed Tuesday night.
The remaining ten rounds will
be held todsy, and among !hose
players expected to be picked
up early was Chuck Ealey, the
University of Toledo quarter- ·
back who led !he Rockets to a
35-&gt;!ame w1n string and who
has never played in• a losing
game.
White, considered by Cincinnati as the best of Ule college
crop, said Tuesday he was
pleased the Bengals had drafted him and "glad the wait is all
over."

"I feel good to be chosen by
Cincinnati," he said at Berkeley, Calif. "It's a team that is
going to be a Super Bowl challenger."

The 6-foot-li, 245-{lounder did
oot play football in higli school
at Portsmouth, ' N.1:1. and
played only briefly whUe at·
tending junior college In
California before transferring
to uc.
Darden In Dispute
The Browns' top pick, Dar-

den, a r.foot-2, 195-{lound defensive back, is a native of
Sandusky, Ohio. fle has played
bolh cornerback and stroog
!lllfety whUe at Michigan and
was the focal point of a disputed call in the Michigan-Olio
State football game last fall
which Michigan won.
\he rest of Cincinnati's picks
in the first seven rounds, in
order,
were ;
Tommy
Casanova, back, Louisiana
State; Jim LeClair,linebacker,
North Dakota; Bernard
Jackson, .defensive back,
Washington State; Tom
DeLeone, center, Ohio state;
Steve Conley, running back,
Kansas.
The rest of Cleveland's picks
in Ule first seven rounds, in order, were: Clifford Brooks, defense back, Tennessee state;
Lester Sims, defensive end, Alabama state; George Hunt,
kicker , Tennesse; Greg
Kucera, runnlngback, Northern Colorado ; I:.ebnard
Forey, guard, Texas A&amp;M;
Don Wesley, tackle, Maryland
State.
The Miami Dolphins, who
lost to Dallas In the .. Super
Bowl, picked up two Ohio play·
ers, running back Gary Koslns
of Dayton In the second round,
and tackle AI Benton of Ohio U.
In the fourth round.
The Los Angeles Rams took
defensive back John Saunders
of Toledo in the fourth round.

The Oakland Raiders chose
defensive tackle .Melvin Lunsford of Central State In the
fourth round.
"SmaU Town Boy"
O'aig Clemons, a cornerback
at Iowa who halls from Piqua,
Ohio, says he "really wanted to
go to the city," and will get his
chance to do that since the
Chicago Bears drafted him. in
the second round Tuesday.
Although Iowa went 1-10 last
season, Clemons, at 6-loot-1,
193-iJDLDids, was considered the
best defensive back in the Big
Ten.
. "I'm just a small town boy
and I really wanted to go to the .
city," Clemons said at Iowa
City, Iowa, where he was contacted. "I guess I was hoping
for the big apple - New York
- but I'm reaUy happy about .
Chicago. It's just O.K." ·

By UnliM Press lnlernallonal
It's not unusual to have
Cleveland and Buffalo, two of
the weakest learns in the
National Basketball Association, play on even IA!rms, but
for them to exchange wins in
one night is out of the ordinary.
The Cavaliers took the
regularly scheduled contest
Tuesday night, 104-99, as Austin

1-

Clemons said the Bears·call- be going into Chicago IQOD."
ed hjm right after he was seaemons Ia 1.0 hours llhort of
lected and "I'm sure we'll graduation, but bas no qualms
probably get together and I'D about leaving sch.JOI. "I know I

'

,

NEW YORK (UPI)-Act I of
the National Football League
college player draft ls over complete with Its • surprises.
And now enters George Allen
for Act II.
Allen, the master trader
from Waslllngton, dealt away
his·first seven picks last season
and completed a series of
stunning deals at last ·year's
draft meeting. This year, he
joined In a session which has
seen an unprecedented tendency toward )lnemem.

I

The first three players taken
were linemen .-defensive end
Wall Patulski ·of Notre Dome
(Buffalo), defenseman end
S!errnan White of California
(Cincinnati) and offensive
tackle . Lionel Antoine of
Southern Dlinois (Chicago) as were five of the first 10
players picked and nine In the
first round.
Of the first 52 players taken,'
~ were llnemen arid of the 182
selected in Tuesday's first
seven rounds;64 were linemen.

lO;

KALE .................;.........

HALVES....:..... J~:. 73~
~

SUPERIOR

FRANKS. . . !~·..79
ALL MEAT

PETER PAN

VANCAMP

PORK &amp;BEAN

4

89~

.

29

PosrPoNED baton clasies
of . Mrs. •• Judy
Riggs
reilc:beduled fill' Wedniaday at
Royal Oat Park;. beilnnera,
5:30; . Intermediate, , 0:30;
· ·
c..-ps, 7:30 and team, 8:30.
WOMEN'S AUXIUARY to
the Middleport Fire' Department. 7:30 Wednelday llightai
the hall. Mia.
. ~~er
· David Ohu
._.,.
and' lllrs. ·Kenneth Imboden,
h!lfJieaesTiwRsoAY ,

~

'

AT IIACIIIE
WAID CIISS llfiS

• 1

NEWS

(."
RIGHT
RESEAVED

io

·c

Holzer Medical Center; First
Ave, and Cedar St. General
vlslting !lours Z-l and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting boura 2:30 to
4:30 p.m.' Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.

LIMIT

.QUANTITIES

illrdul

32oz59~
..

/

Mr. and Mra. Rbbert W.
.Milstead, Himtlngton, a son
and Mr. and Mrs. Roger L. ·
Maynard, .McArthur, a
daughter.
·Dllcllarges
Evelyn E. Winter, Cheryl
Mae Perry, Mrs. Lloyd Rouse
and daughter, Katherine- ,L.
Scott, Steve Wall, Melvin R.
Smith, Danny L flayman,
Hfllller R. Hill, Sr., Robert J.
Taylor, Roger Barrett, . Mrs.
Doria Rudy, D. Aaron PhllU.., ··
Tonya Lee Joner, Mrr.
F'rancel_Gll'lk\W, Mrs. John
~:~~1, Rlridolpb Fraley,
· wrrn1 ~ and William C.

••

•i

..

GQ00 .AT BIG 3 MA~KETS ·

Mlllel-,•

1

SlOKELfS

CATSUP
STOKELfS
CUT GREEN

BEANS

BANOUET .

FRIED ~ICKEN

DUNCAN HINES.
I '

!!:..-. . ~~.~.~ 1.79·
~ SPI:CIAU
BAKERY
1

BETSY ·Ross·
..

.

·

)J

CAKE MIX
3 BOXES 89~·
Wl1ll COUPON

.GOODATBIUlfMl£1!

i

California Beef Roast • • •
Eye-0-Round .~:T . . . . ·•· 5151
Charcoal Steaks • • • • . 5129 Fresh Ground Chuck ~...:= . ••-It
Cube Steaksc~~.. . . • • ,•b. 51~' Skinless Wieners -~~. • •~ 5t
lb. gge

lb.

Pork Steaks s':?P.
Pork Roast ~~H~rg~~ •
Hall Steaks~=. •
I

I

I

I

• •
• •
I

I

.·lb.Jt Sliced Bacon ~~D

...
•

•

• • 2,.\!';.5149

. . ;:ec
Fis• Sticks ~=
Wbiting Fillets ~: •. • .. ::5t

DEL .MONTE CANNED GOODS SALE!

Whole Kernel Corn • 4~: 88c.
-Cream Style Corn •• 41:.-:88~~ ­
Cut Green Beans •.• 4~= 88c
Tender Spinach •••• 4 sac

SECOND SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Wlnn Rees of
Weste~ are announcing the
birth of a son, Matthew Wlilchester, born Jan. U, at
University Hospital, Colum·
bus. Mr. and Mrs; Reel have
another ·son, Bradley Clark,
age·two. Grandparents are Mr.
·and Mrs. Robert Clark,
Columbiana, and Mr. and Mrs. ·
James Rees, Sr., "Racine. Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Rees,
Mayallck, Ky., and Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Follmer, Maysville,
Ky. are greal-gandparents.

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Zirkle
are announcing the birth at a.
daughiA!r, Pamela Lynn, born
Jan. 27 at the Holzer Medical
Center. They have another
daughter, M~bele, age tine.
Mr. and Mrs, Paul Haptonstall,
Middleport, and lllrs. Ruth
Zirli:le, Pomeroy, are , the
grandparenla. Robert Sharp,
Middleport, Ia a maternal
great-grandfather.

IN ROOM !'Ill
Randy Batey, ellbt year old·
·~·
~ of· Mr. and Mrl. Andy
Bai:IJ, Mlddleparl, Ia a p~~tient
at tile HtiMr Madical Center,
'
SON HONORED
Room 170.
younpter
Mr. and Mrs. RGbei1 Riffle,
suff•rtd nllmlrOIII intamal
Letart
Falls, entertained
injarill wbln lllllled eolllded
with a p1rlted trailer on Wednesday nilbt wllh a party
RuUud Street Saturday hCIIorlnc their 1011, Paul, on hil
loth birthday. Cau,lee Cl'lllll,
eVeninl.
candy and soft drlnta W8l'8
served. B8uoona were.siV.n u
IN IIOIIPITAL
favora. Alte!JdinC were Janlee,
Mra. RGIIert MeBUIInny, 2M Uncia and T-... Cain, EdM
South Third 81., Mlddlepqrt, ill and Ellen Gr.N, Nile, AlaR
a medlc:ll palielital the Holzer and Robart Rlflle, brothen,
M••l c.11r, Roclm rn.
~ hla lii!tr. Penny.

:n-

•,

Seroices Held on january 7th

'·'4. . '·,. ,.

'

Hos.PJTAL

AT TUPPERS PlAINS
LYONS MARKET

provided by Mrs. Jack Robspn; February . mentioning the
Me~ resPonded to roll
importance
of
gettlng
the
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, Mrs. Roy
call by ~ a spot they
Snowden and Mias Ruby Diehl. .lawnmower and garden fur- would like to see beauWled.
The .county workshop held nitur~ ready for ·spring, Mrs. Bishop ~ Luke 6 for
Monday night was noted. A cheCking stored bulbs; and devotions. ~nts were
, ·
"bakeless" sale will be held ~t determining winter damage \o served by Mrs. Bishop and
~~~------ the February meeting.
plants.'
Mrs. Rolison, co-hostess. '
The traveling prize furnished
TO ENROLL AT GBC
by Mrs. Russell LitUe was won
LONG BOTTOM _ Miss by Mrs. Robson. Mrs. Lewis
Kathy Diane Dill, daughler of gave gardening tips for
M d M G R o·u· ha
Funeral services for Ralph for the services included Mr.
r. an rs. ary · ·• • · s
Spencer were conducted on and Mrs. Edward Mcintosh,
been
. • TESTING COMPLETE
B 1 accepted
c 11 at Gallipolis
f
th
Jan. 7 at 2 p.m. at the En- Dayton; Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs.
s:~:~sQua~te~g~gi;~g i~
Meigs County Tuberculosis terprise United Methodist Audrey Rowan, Mrs. Robert
J
M' Dill
be f _: nurse Mrs . Jane Brown, Church by the Rev. Stan ten Berry, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs.
0
une.
ISS
'
a
.
mem
' ., have Smith. Burial was in Rock Chancellor Pullins, l]rbana:
tb 97
d
tin
1a r f assts· ted by Terry Sham
1
2
0
8
e
gr~ ua
c ss .
completed TB skin testing of Springs Cemetery.
Mrs. Harry Pugsley, South
Eastern . High S~hool, Will residents of the Meigs Collnty
Solon; Mrs. Hattie Shiveler, ·
e~r?l! ~n Bu~mess Ad· Home , Children 's Home,
Pallbearers were Kermit Springfield; Mrs: Logan Myer,
miniStration studies.
Syracuse and Elmwood Walton, James Will, Edward Mr. and Mrs. Michael Spencer,
Nursing Homes and the Meigs Bowen, Fred Blaettnar, Edgar Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
County Jail.
Mitch, Carl Moore, Alva Will, Donald Spene~r, Marietta;
and Max Folmer . Robert MrS. narry
u.
0a VIS,
· ea nton ; Mr.
FEBRUARY SKIPPED
Next meeting of the Laurel
Davis, Edward King, Homer and Mrs . Don Davis,
Cliff Better Health Club wlU be
Pearl, coral, amber and Winebrenner, and Louis Reibel Louisville; James Spencer,
held in March. There will be no jet are the four or g a n i c were honorary Pallbearers.
llaclne; Debra Spencer and
gems_.
meeting in February.
Relatives and (riends here . Mrs. John Weeks, Gallipolis.
Canaday served on the judging
corrunittee.
During December flower
arrangement fo~ business
places and churches we-re

A 52-week club banquet meeting Mrs. Clifford Smith
You can see the top side of the meat but not the bottom.
honoring Sunday scliool will have devotiona and Mrs.
members with perfect ·at- Morris will be the hOstess.
~
. vou .wonder.
tendance last year will be held · . Mr. and Mrs. Giil!;ey served
The.ste&lt;.k looks good, but is the bottom all bone and fat?
Saturday night at8 p.m. at the. refreshments to Mrs. Morris
Bradford Church of Christ.
and Carol, Mrs. Rife, Mrs.
Plana for the affair were Pickens, .Mr. and'Mrs. Clifford . It's a problem ... a problem we've !!iven a lot of thought.
.
'
mar. at}, recen\D!e~"·of·,,:Smithh, Christi Slpi\11, Mrs,
'
We•I'think we rhave·' the ·answer.
thei ~ . AdUlt . ClasS. The · Painter, Mr. and Mrs, Homer
,,
clara also. will carry out aome 'Flll'l'e3t, Belinda and Edie
We have a policy.
• project thlB month with the Grimm, and Mr. and Mrs.
chll~n : at lbe MeiSS County Richard Gilkey and Mark.
We put the best side down.
home. Volunteerr were
solicited to visit new famlllea
The side you don't see is guaranteed to be equal to
and thole w'!o are W in tlie
or b.:tter than the side you cali see.
C(JIIJilunity.
100 AT INSPECTION
Officers for 1m were elected Approximately loO attended
Simple? 11$ ABC.
and illchlde Guy Hysell, the . inspection . It Pomeroy
president; Mrs. Ralph l&gt;ainler, Chapter 80, Royal Arch
l!.'ffective? No more gamble.
vice preslllenl; . Mrs. Walter Masons, Monday niiht at the
Morris, secretary; Mrs. Ben Pomeroy Masonic Temple. · Fair and square? Sure because "We Care."
Rife, tre,surer; and Min lnipecting officer was Rl. Ex.
Boriilie Rife, card cbairmah. . Companion, Herbert s. Taylor,
Richard 'Gilkey presided at dlatrict deputy grand high l(s this a good reason for shopping A&amp;P? It's one of many.
the meelihg, and devotions priest. He waa accompanied by
were givelj by Mrs. Larry hla wife. AmOIII the other
Pickens wltl\ with ICI'ipture dlaflniuiahed guests at the
from I,uke 10. At the February ·Inspection waa Dwight L. Kane
of Lancasler, .Most W~U~trious
Gr~ High Priest, and his
wife. The dinner preceding. the
meeting waa served by the
. Order of the Eastern Star.

WllH !XIIJPON

PEANUT zs oz.
JAR
BUTTER...............

ee , r, evan_ge s. pee ,a
singers Friday niiht. Public
invited. .

Prevention of visual' refreabmenla and favors for
pollution was ,the pl'OIII'I!IIl the Children's Home •nd the
toplcatlllrs. Harry Wllliamlon Meiga Coonly Infirm!lry. Gifts
at 1 recent llleeliDc at the for the male patienla at the
~ Garden ·Club beld at GaUipoll.a state Institute who
the 1IOIIIIi ol Mrl. C. E. Bilhop. lost their ~r=l..,. In a lire
,..._, Wllll•ml"' apolle at which struck their cottage last
lruh •accumulations and month "were brought by
dam.. and noted the way In members.
which club members, can . Tba~k you notes .were read
suppcll't Civic 8I'OUilll ill COIIII'ol from Mrs. \l'ern111 Weber for a
measure~~.. She suggested ways . planter sent her during a
to prev~t destruction or·fish recent · illness. Mrs. Harold
.
.
andwlldlifeando;ommentedon
Brown, radio
chairman,
the dan)ages of stripminlng thanked the members for
andtheloasofwaterbyrun'&lt;lff. participating !¥ith a program.
She reminded members that Anote of thanks was read from
"thislandiaouriand;" a public Mrs. Edward Miclnko for a
resource for public good. The monetary g.lft sent to the
role of private business In AlllensGood Luck Garden Club
prevention of . poUullon and for Chrislmas gifts.
.zoning ordinances were A report was given on the
discussed. . .
Chrisimas lighting contest of
Mrs . Harvey Erlewine the Pomeroy Chamber of
presided at the meeting during Commerce. Mrs. Lewis, a
which time Mrs. Kate Jarrell member of the Rutland club
and Mrs. Charles Lewis were . was general chairman, and
appointed to handle valentine Mrs. Erlewine and Mrs. Robert

SEil·SERVICE,.
PRE·PACKAGm MEATS
52-,Week Banquet Set ·CAN BE APROBI,EM!

••

IVORY .LIQUID.·

MILK :49~

~teh Feb. i3l,i !RevS. Rioyl

,

.we care-------

~

.NICE'N LITE - LOW FAT .·

te~~VIVAL, E~gle

,
Ridge
Community Cburch Thurlday

Control o Visual Pollution Needed

REG ULA R • me e t I n g ,
~ Chapter OAPSE, 7:30
p.m.
Speali:er. .· ·
, ' Thursday·
, FRIDAY
DANCE FRIDAy Wahsma
High SchOOl 9 to 12 followlng
powder puff basli:etball game.
MEIG'S CHAPTER, Jiys will emcee. School
American Cancer Society, 7;30
T)I1JI1day 1 t office Cole 8pO!Isored.
.
.p.m. · ..
·
'
.•
SA'n!RDAY
St., Mlddlepqrt. All board
SQUj) SUPPER, 'Saturday 5
members llllad to attend.
OES, b!STiucr Zl, SchOOl of to 7 p.m, Eastern High School
bdore Elllltern.Glouster game,
, lnslructioD at l!leigl High spo!!Sored bg' Eastern F .H.A.
School, Blllineia meeting 4 SQUARE DANCE, Sali)rday, .
p.m.; dinner ·8~ S:3jl p.m., Racine Legion HaU, 8:30 to
schOOl at 7 p.m.
midnight, music by King
SOUTHERN LOCAL Kords, Belpre.
•
Education Assn., 7:30 p.m.
SUNDAY .
1
Tbursday al the high schOOl.
SENIOR CITIZENS
Syracuse teachers to have meetil)g, 3 p.m. Sunday at the
program; David Nease, Qnited · Methodist Church,
president of lhli Southern Local f?omeroy. (Meeting lichedliled
School ~rd to be a special for last Sunday cancelled due
guest. ' Mrl.' Dale McClurg, to weather).
president. in charge. Refresh·
. MONDAY
.menta by Racine -rade school
MIDDLEPORT Garden
teachers. ·
Club, 7:30 Monday llight,"home
BIG BEND Neighborhood of Mrs. H. J. Russell. with Mias
Girl Scout; lei'Vice team, 9:30 Hallie zerkle and lllrs. Rita
a.m. 'fh!!rSdly, home of Mrs. Hamm · as · co-hostesses.
WUUam Ohlinger.
. Program on ''The Romance of
MEIGS .COUNTY Council, Lucy Audubon 1' by lllrs. Sibley
PTA, 7:30 Thursday, Southern Slack. Members to take tray
..
High School, Elni St., with past favors for hQSRital8.

.'

WHOL£ WHEAT OR HONEY MEAL
LOAF
•

_,.,eel

.. f

·

SOIIWoRTH OOUNCU. t1,

"*

ba'*

POTA~ToE5.~.8 9

WHOLE
HAMS..... ~~:.

3
r!is 79~.

,

..

5 &amp;-Pwvj, 0., Peb. 2, 1t7:1

D-al · and -...
...._. M ., aa,
._,
''Tbe Wldlt Dna." M"''ben lp'leiahalll- 'l'llllnda1f:30
to
roll ea11 wllb a p:m.
Muoale , Temple,
NI'IHt 011 'lbe b4jot. '
I'Uoeloy. Royal ~ lleJe¢t
~y CUB seout Pact llllllirdlcaiH to be
2ft, 7:«1 p.m. Wellnn'ay, 111 10 ~-- All Clllfk:era
IOOF Hall.
lad ~n!QCII urged io at.

The big nime players of the
Two quarterbacks, Jerry Darden
of
Michigan
1971 college season, quarter- ·Tagge. of Nebraska (Gteell (Cleveland), wide receiver
back Pat Sullivan, the Bay) and John Reaves of Terry Beuley of Aubllm (San
Helsman Trophy wilmer frOm Florida (Philadelphia), were Francisco), wide receiver
~burn anc) Ed Marinaroi the taken on the flnt I'OIIIId before . .Mike Sian! • .of :vmanova
NCAA · rushing
record Sullivan, and . five running (OHland), Unebac:¥r Mike
smasher from Cotnell, were backs were chosen before.· Taylor of Mlchlgan (Jet.s),
completely Ignored for almost Marinaro.
'
offensive llelde Tom Drougas ·
two full rounds. Sullivan was
Two . other . wish-bone. · (Baltilnore), riiiiiiUW
Jelf
taken by Atbuita oo the second quarterbacks .::..Jacli: .Mllcnn Kinney of Nebraska (Ka!!JU
round as the tool pl8yer picked of OklahOma and Eddie Qly), defensive end Larry
and Marinaro went to Min~ · Phillips of ·Texas -were Jacobson of Nebraaka
nesota on the saine round as selected as defensive bacb, . (Giants), defensive· tackle'
the 50th player chosen.
· Mllilren goq to Baltimore on Mike Kadish of Notre Dame
Two QBs Cbosea First
the second round and Phlllipll (Mlamt) and rwming back BID
·
. beq taken by Los Angeles on Thomas of Boston College

WE ACCEPT
FEDERAL
FOOD
STAMPS

FRESH AND CRISP

POTTED MEAT

•

•Ill
2"

.
. . 11 Mn. -...... Wallace.
-MrL ""'-Ita
••·1o ret lew

known passers still reniain, . defenatve end Fred Dryer 1o
Including Clluck Ealey, who led . New England for the Patriols'
·earr hit for 12 of his 19 points lead Into the final stanza, but handed a 129-117 blow to Toleotl to a :Jii.ilame unileaten first and sixth ro11111 draft
In the third quarter. But the five straight points by DeBuss- PorUand, as the TraU Blazers string, Brian Slpe of San Diego choices this year and second
Braves held on to a 91-90 lead chereearly In the fourthj)eriod reeled to their ninth straight . State and Gary Wlcbard ot c. nell yeir. Dryer bad. been
as !he final four seconds of the cut the margin to BN13 and six loss, and Oscar Robertson W. Post. Al,so available is Rhett outspoken of the- ' Giant
proiA!sted game of Dec. 3 were consecutive points by Bill wowed 9,018 f~ns at San Diego Dawson, the wide receiver management throughout the
replayed.
Bradley gave the Knicb the with !kif~ from the floor and from Fkrida State who ranked seaiOII and was a certainty to
Cleveland won its protest lead for good at 92-91.
a perfectfive free throws for 33 third nationally.
be deall.
because it was given the ball
DeBusschere wound up with points as Mllwaukee seared
Atlanta made four separate
under its own basket instead of 22 points, Jerry Lucas chipped Golden State, 1011-97.
As for the rest of the first deals during the day. The
at half-couri following a techni-· In with 20 and Bradley paced
round, .St. Louis took Bobby Falcona sent runilinl bacli:
calfoul.
the victors with 29. The trio's
Moore, a wide receiver•-'--~
back
fr
Or
d
Sonny
Campbell
and"""'""'
· ve
.
running
Rick Roberson of the Cavs efforts offset an explosive
P.almer•Sharp
om egon an ·
·
d
back
Rudy
Redmond
to
Detrotl
D
passed the ball in-bounds to scoring night by the Pistons'
enver gra bb ed ti ght en
for a seconcko!lld pick; traded
Bobby Smith, but Smith bad Bob Lanier, who wheelhorsed
Riley Odoms of the University ~ defenllvelleldeGregLI!nland
trouble bandUng the pass and for 42 points:
HONOLULU (UPI) - Ar- of Houston. Houston took ·
~f
t
sh
h't
Celtlcs
Maintain
Lead
nold
Palmer, the golf wizard defensive tackle Greg Samp. defeilsive end RandY Marshall
hi d
te
00
01 1
s. espera """
The Boston Celtics mam
· _ from Latrbbe, Pa., hasn't won son of Stanford and Green Bay to Buflalo for a fifth-round'
the rim at the buzzer as Buffalo
t 1this
choice, sent g!lll'd Dick. En11 to
preser.ved its win.
. tainedtheirfive-"•me lead over a go urnamen ye
year grabbed cornerback Willie derle to the Giants for I -'-~
-.....
but he has his eyes set on the Buchanon of San Dieg0 State
INAWr
Carr Breaks Tie
New Yorloi as Dave Cowens'
• round ielection and traded
Carr broke a 69.$ tie on a overpowermg·
performance. $200,000 HawaUan Open which
New Orle811B went for Royce
u. 1 .,.~
ef ·
.
getsunderwayhereThursday. Smith, a guard frOm Georgia defensivebackJohn ..'"!"""',
to
jumper with two minutes I t m helped down Baltimore, 115-108.
Palmer arrived here over the and the New York Jets selected New Orleans for another sixththe third quarter to put the
The second-year pro from weekend and played part of Jerome Barkum, a wide . round pick.
Cavs in front for good in the Florida State poured In 32· practice round Sunday. receiver-tight end from
regulation game. Carr paced points and ~ared 21 ~ebounds Allhough he didn't bother to Jackaon Stale. Stanford's Jeff .
the Cleveland scoring while a_ s the Celtics won tljelf fourth keep score those who w•re Si. .
a
tb . . 11 t
For the sake of Christh,
Walt Hazzard led Buffalo with In a row
,
•
emon w s
e
rs then, I am content wit
C
· d Do N Is led ' watching him marveUed at his . linebacker taken, going to weaknesses, Insults, hard26·
owens an
n e on a accuracy with his irons and Minnesota and the Packers ships, persecutions, and caDave DeBusschere, unfazed late B~ton surge that sa~ the predicted he would be one of took hometown product Tagge. 1amities, /or when I am
by a trip to the hospital after Ce!Ucs ~pe out Baltimore s 65- the top finishers in the tour- Cllicago took defensive backs weak, then am strong.-ll
sufferlngafirst.quarterinjury, 57 halftime le.ad and a four- nament
Cr
Cl
f
Pitts- Corinthians 12:10.
returned in time to score 14 point Bullet advantage at the
·
a1g emons o 1owa,
points In the final period as the end of three quarters. Nelson
burRh chose futlback Franco
New York Knicks handed wound up with 18 points while
Ha-:_rls of Penn State,
COTTON SUEDE '2.00 lb.,
Detroit its sixth straight loss, Archie Clark paced Central
Philadelphia selected Reaves,
. ..
.
the NCAA passing-recordZIPPERS
5' h
115-106.
DiVISIOn - leading Baltimore
vANCE TOPS
breaker from Florida . and
,___ eac
DeBusschere suffered an With 30
·
injury to his pinkie after the
In other contests, Seattle got
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Ru~n Atlan~ , ~ ,cl!!'~r:~~-~ •-• ,BQNQED"'"" ,,,_, ,. ,, . •. .... .
'first six minutes of play and double.figurescoringfromeach Van~eofKentSta~; defendlng ' Cl~ce · ~N~ If'"'"' •WO.QL &amp;'NYLQN.11.98 y&lt;f". ... •:
1
was taken to a New York of its five starters as the Su- scormg champiOn of the Mid• •• ··Otbei' ~!.·!· · ··--.·::
60'' wide• '·'
·
. ··'
hospitalfor X-rays. Detroit took per Sanies downed the Chicago American Conference, was Otiiet flrR'round pickll in- .
advantage of the bard-working . Bulls,l21-103, for the first time named MACplayer of the week eluded defensive end H,erb
PLAIDS 60" wide12 29 yd
forward's absence to take a 31- this season. Phoenix, movtDg for directing the Flashes to two Orvis of Colorado (Detrdjt), ·
'
•
.
20 lead.
behind the .12 points of Connie wins over Bowling Green and defensive back Eldridge Small .
COTTON GIN
The Pistons carried an 82-75 Hawkins in the .third quarter Ohio U.
of Texas A&amp;l (New York
.
Giants), defensive back Tom
Rt. 7Addlaon,O.

HAM

ARMOUR

:·

PRODUCE SPECIALS

lb.

"I fl&amp;1n 1111 ~~~~~. ln pnI'm go!JW to mate a tot .of
• feiiiOMI football ',II Rood,'' lie
lllOIIiey."
Clemona uld he thlnb the ald. "Every,jldnl is fine, It's
all right. .baby."
Bears are "0~."
·

.

,.

I

WIIJNIIIDAY
·prelldenta to be honored.
MIDDLIPORT Ll.tar•PV Election at ncmh•lln&amp; c:omOub, 2~~&amp;. N
,.., at~ m111111:

Pro Football Draft Full of St1rpris·es·

SUPERIOR
SEMI BONELESS

5

wun'llin18b up thlB ye!ll', bui 1
will eventuaDy. ru.,t now, pro .
fqotb8u and mopey are the
biggest things for me. I think

"

·Social Calendar

en Defenses

PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU FEB. 5

HAM SLICES....

• '1111 DIIIJ I

1

Weakest Club~ SWap Victories :~~~~==::: :£i,~stci:~.0:e~

'

CENTER

"·

••

1
::

•

•

•'
'

!

A" I!AND

OUIUQUi

Fruit Drinks •3 ':::· 'J9c
JANE PARKER

Potato Chips •

'=- Stc

12&lt; OFF lfiiEL COLIOATi

h\outhwash . • ·~ J9c

.-

Chopped Ham ...... ,~ .:•
DUIUQUE ENDS I PIECES

Vienna Sausage
5' ~ Sl
. .
•'

SUNNYFIILO

''
•
•
I

Frozen Waffles 'i::lOc ·'•'
•
'
'•
•
\
I

"ALWAYS PLENTY
OF

•
'•

~

FREE
PARKING

{

'•
•

IN OUR LARGI LO!.

'••
I

•

'

�'

I

'

...
1- The llllily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 2,1972

J

Bengals ·Draft Again to
' - The
NEW YORK (UPI)
Onclnnati Bengals took. as
their top college draft choice
S!erman White, a consensus
All-American defensive tackle
fiom the University of Callfor-.
nia , while the . Cleveland .
. Browns chose defensive back'
Tom Darden of Michigan in !he
'
first round.
Seven rounds of the !annual
college draft of football players,
were completed Tuesday night.
The remaining ten rounds will
be held todsy, and among !hose
players expected to be picked
up early was Chuck Ealey, the
University of Toledo quarter- ·
back who led !he Rockets to a
35-&gt;!ame w1n string and who
has never played in• a losing
game.
White, considered by Cincinnati as the best of Ule college
crop, said Tuesday he was
pleased the Bengals had drafted him and "glad the wait is all
over."

"I feel good to be chosen by
Cincinnati," he said at Berkeley, Calif. "It's a team that is
going to be a Super Bowl challenger."

The 6-foot-li, 245-{lounder did
oot play football in higli school
at Portsmouth, ' N.1:1. and
played only briefly whUe at·
tending junior college In
California before transferring
to uc.
Darden In Dispute
The Browns' top pick, Dar-

den, a r.foot-2, 195-{lound defensive back, is a native of
Sandusky, Ohio. fle has played
bolh cornerback and stroog
!lllfety whUe at Michigan and
was the focal point of a disputed call in the Michigan-Olio
State football game last fall
which Michigan won.
\he rest of Cincinnati's picks
in the first seven rounds, in
order,
were ;
Tommy
Casanova, back, Louisiana
State; Jim LeClair,linebacker,
North Dakota; Bernard
Jackson, .defensive back,
Washington State; Tom
DeLeone, center, Ohio state;
Steve Conley, running back,
Kansas.
The rest of Cleveland's picks
in Ule first seven rounds, in order, were: Clifford Brooks, defense back, Tennessee state;
Lester Sims, defensive end, Alabama state; George Hunt,
kicker , Tennesse; Greg
Kucera, runnlngback, Northern Colorado ; I:.ebnard
Forey, guard, Texas A&amp;M;
Don Wesley, tackle, Maryland
State.
The Miami Dolphins, who
lost to Dallas In the .. Super
Bowl, picked up two Ohio play·
ers, running back Gary Koslns
of Dayton In the second round,
and tackle AI Benton of Ohio U.
In the fourth round.
The Los Angeles Rams took
defensive back John Saunders
of Toledo in the fourth round.

The Oakland Raiders chose
defensive tackle .Melvin Lunsford of Central State In the
fourth round.
"SmaU Town Boy"
O'aig Clemons, a cornerback
at Iowa who halls from Piqua,
Ohio, says he "really wanted to
go to the city," and will get his
chance to do that since the
Chicago Bears drafted him. in
the second round Tuesday.
Although Iowa went 1-10 last
season, Clemons, at 6-loot-1,
193-iJDLDids, was considered the
best defensive back in the Big
Ten.
. "I'm just a small town boy
and I really wanted to go to the .
city," Clemons said at Iowa
City, Iowa, where he was contacted. "I guess I was hoping
for the big apple - New York
- but I'm reaUy happy about .
Chicago. It's just O.K." ·

By UnliM Press lnlernallonal
It's not unusual to have
Cleveland and Buffalo, two of
the weakest learns in the
National Basketball Association, play on even IA!rms, but
for them to exchange wins in
one night is out of the ordinary.
The Cavaliers took the
regularly scheduled contest
Tuesday night, 104-99, as Austin

1-

Clemons said the Bears·call- be going into Chicago IQOD."
ed hjm right after he was seaemons Ia 1.0 hours llhort of
lected and "I'm sure we'll graduation, but bas no qualms
probably get together and I'D about leaving sch.JOI. "I know I

'

,

NEW YORK (UPI)-Act I of
the National Football League
college player draft ls over complete with Its • surprises.
And now enters George Allen
for Act II.
Allen, the master trader
from Waslllngton, dealt away
his·first seven picks last season
and completed a series of
stunning deals at last ·year's
draft meeting. This year, he
joined In a session which has
seen an unprecedented tendency toward )lnemem.

I

The first three players taken
were linemen .-defensive end
Wall Patulski ·of Notre Dome
(Buffalo), defenseman end
S!errnan White of California
(Cincinnati) and offensive
tackle . Lionel Antoine of
Southern Dlinois (Chicago) as were five of the first 10
players picked and nine In the
first round.
Of the first 52 players taken,'
~ were llnemen arid of the 182
selected in Tuesday's first
seven rounds;64 were linemen.

lO;

KALE .................;.........

HALVES....:..... J~:. 73~
~

SUPERIOR

FRANKS. . . !~·..79
ALL MEAT

PETER PAN

VANCAMP

PORK &amp;BEAN

4

89~

.

29

PosrPoNED baton clasies
of . Mrs. •• Judy
Riggs
reilc:beduled fill' Wedniaday at
Royal Oat Park;. beilnnera,
5:30; . Intermediate, , 0:30;
· ·
c..-ps, 7:30 and team, 8:30.
WOMEN'S AUXIUARY to
the Middleport Fire' Department. 7:30 Wednelday llightai
the hall. Mia.
. ~~er
· David Ohu
._.,.
and' lllrs. ·Kenneth Imboden,
h!lfJieaesTiwRsoAY ,

~

'

AT IIACIIIE
WAID CIISS llfiS

• 1

NEWS

(."
RIGHT
RESEAVED

io

·c

Holzer Medical Center; First
Ave, and Cedar St. General
vlslting !lours Z-l and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting boura 2:30 to
4:30 p.m.' Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.

LIMIT

.QUANTITIES

illrdul

32oz59~
..

/

Mr. and Mra. Rbbert W.
.Milstead, Himtlngton, a son
and Mr. and Mrs. Roger L. ·
Maynard, .McArthur, a
daughter.
·Dllcllarges
Evelyn E. Winter, Cheryl
Mae Perry, Mrs. Lloyd Rouse
and daughter, Katherine- ,L.
Scott, Steve Wall, Melvin R.
Smith, Danny L flayman,
Hfllller R. Hill, Sr., Robert J.
Taylor, Roger Barrett, . Mrs.
Doria Rudy, D. Aaron PhllU.., ··
Tonya Lee Joner, Mrr.
F'rancel_Gll'lk\W, Mrs. John
~:~~1, Rlridolpb Fraley,
· wrrn1 ~ and William C.

••

•i

..

GQ00 .AT BIG 3 MA~KETS ·

Mlllel-,•

1

SlOKELfS

CATSUP
STOKELfS
CUT GREEN

BEANS

BANOUET .

FRIED ~ICKEN

DUNCAN HINES.
I '

!!:..-. . ~~.~.~ 1.79·
~ SPI:CIAU
BAKERY
1

BETSY ·Ross·
..

.

·

)J

CAKE MIX
3 BOXES 89~·
Wl1ll COUPON

.GOODATBIUlfMl£1!

i

California Beef Roast • • •
Eye-0-Round .~:T . . . . ·•· 5151
Charcoal Steaks • • • • . 5129 Fresh Ground Chuck ~...:= . ••-It
Cube Steaksc~~.. . . • • ,•b. 51~' Skinless Wieners -~~. • •~ 5t
lb. gge

lb.

Pork Steaks s':?P.
Pork Roast ~~H~rg~~ •
Hall Steaks~=. •
I

I

I

I

• •
• •
I

I

.·lb.Jt Sliced Bacon ~~D

...
•

•

• • 2,.\!';.5149

. . ;:ec
Fis• Sticks ~=
Wbiting Fillets ~: •. • .. ::5t

DEL .MONTE CANNED GOODS SALE!

Whole Kernel Corn • 4~: 88c.
-Cream Style Corn •• 41:.-:88~~ ­
Cut Green Beans •.• 4~= 88c
Tender Spinach •••• 4 sac

SECOND SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Wlnn Rees of
Weste~ are announcing the
birth of a son, Matthew Wlilchester, born Jan. U, at
University Hospital, Colum·
bus. Mr. and Mrs; Reel have
another ·son, Bradley Clark,
age·two. Grandparents are Mr.
·and Mrs. Robert Clark,
Columbiana, and Mr. and Mrs. ·
James Rees, Sr., "Racine. Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Rees,
Mayallck, Ky., and Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Follmer, Maysville,
Ky. are greal-gandparents.

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Zirkle
are announcing the birth at a.
daughiA!r, Pamela Lynn, born
Jan. 27 at the Holzer Medical
Center. They have another
daughter, M~bele, age tine.
Mr. and Mrs, Paul Haptonstall,
Middleport, and lllrs. Ruth
Zirli:le, Pomeroy, are , the
grandparenla. Robert Sharp,
Middleport, Ia a maternal
great-grandfather.

IN ROOM !'Ill
Randy Batey, ellbt year old·
·~·
~ of· Mr. and Mrl. Andy
Bai:IJ, Mlddleparl, Ia a p~~tient
at tile HtiMr Madical Center,
'
SON HONORED
Room 170.
younpter
Mr. and Mrs. RGbei1 Riffle,
suff•rtd nllmlrOIII intamal
Letart
Falls, entertained
injarill wbln lllllled eolllded
with a p1rlted trailer on Wednesday nilbt wllh a party
RuUud Street Saturday hCIIorlnc their 1011, Paul, on hil
loth birthday. Cau,lee Cl'lllll,
eVeninl.
candy and soft drlnta W8l'8
served. B8uoona were.siV.n u
IN IIOIIPITAL
favora. Alte!JdinC were Janlee,
Mra. RGIIert MeBUIInny, 2M Uncia and T-... Cain, EdM
South Third 81., Mlddlepqrt, ill and Ellen Gr.N, Nile, AlaR
a medlc:ll palielital the Holzer and Robart Rlflle, brothen,
M••l c.11r, Roclm rn.
~ hla lii!tr. Penny.

:n-

•,

Seroices Held on january 7th

'·'4. . '·,. ,.

'

Hos.PJTAL

AT TUPPERS PlAINS
LYONS MARKET

provided by Mrs. Jack Robspn; February . mentioning the
Me~ resPonded to roll
importance
of
gettlng
the
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, Mrs. Roy
call by ~ a spot they
Snowden and Mias Ruby Diehl. .lawnmower and garden fur- would like to see beauWled.
The .county workshop held nitur~ ready for ·spring, Mrs. Bishop ~ Luke 6 for
Monday night was noted. A cheCking stored bulbs; and devotions. ~nts were
, ·
"bakeless" sale will be held ~t determining winter damage \o served by Mrs. Bishop and
~~~------ the February meeting.
plants.'
Mrs. Rolison, co-hostess. '
The traveling prize furnished
TO ENROLL AT GBC
by Mrs. Russell LitUe was won
LONG BOTTOM _ Miss by Mrs. Robson. Mrs. Lewis
Kathy Diane Dill, daughler of gave gardening tips for
M d M G R o·u· ha
Funeral services for Ralph for the services included Mr.
r. an rs. ary · ·• • · s
Spencer were conducted on and Mrs. Edward Mcintosh,
been
. • TESTING COMPLETE
B 1 accepted
c 11 at Gallipolis
f
th
Jan. 7 at 2 p.m. at the En- Dayton; Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs.
s:~:~sQua~te~g~gi;~g i~
Meigs County Tuberculosis terprise United Methodist Audrey Rowan, Mrs. Robert
J
M' Dill
be f _: nurse Mrs . Jane Brown, Church by the Rev. Stan ten Berry, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs.
0
une.
ISS
'
a
.
mem
' ., have Smith. Burial was in Rock Chancellor Pullins, l]rbana:
tb 97
d
tin
1a r f assts· ted by Terry Sham
1
2
0
8
e
gr~ ua
c ss .
completed TB skin testing of Springs Cemetery.
Mrs. Harry Pugsley, South
Eastern . High S~hool, Will residents of the Meigs Collnty
Solon; Mrs. Hattie Shiveler, ·
e~r?l! ~n Bu~mess Ad· Home , Children 's Home,
Pallbearers were Kermit Springfield; Mrs: Logan Myer,
miniStration studies.
Syracuse and Elmwood Walton, James Will, Edward Mr. and Mrs. Michael Spencer,
Nursing Homes and the Meigs Bowen, Fred Blaettnar, Edgar Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
County Jail.
Mitch, Carl Moore, Alva Will, Donald Spene~r, Marietta;
and Max Folmer . Robert MrS. narry
u.
0a VIS,
· ea nton ; Mr.
FEBRUARY SKIPPED
Next meeting of the Laurel
Davis, Edward King, Homer and Mrs . Don Davis,
Cliff Better Health Club wlU be
Pearl, coral, amber and Winebrenner, and Louis Reibel Louisville; James Spencer,
held in March. There will be no jet are the four or g a n i c were honorary Pallbearers.
llaclne; Debra Spencer and
gems_.
meeting in February.
Relatives and (riends here . Mrs. John Weeks, Gallipolis.
Canaday served on the judging
corrunittee.
During December flower
arrangement fo~ business
places and churches we-re

A 52-week club banquet meeting Mrs. Clifford Smith
You can see the top side of the meat but not the bottom.
honoring Sunday scliool will have devotiona and Mrs.
members with perfect ·at- Morris will be the hOstess.
~
. vou .wonder.
tendance last year will be held · . Mr. and Mrs. Giil!;ey served
The.ste&lt;.k looks good, but is the bottom all bone and fat?
Saturday night at8 p.m. at the. refreshments to Mrs. Morris
Bradford Church of Christ.
and Carol, Mrs. Rife, Mrs.
Plana for the affair were Pickens, .Mr. and'Mrs. Clifford . It's a problem ... a problem we've !!iven a lot of thought.
.
'
mar. at}, recen\D!e~"·of·,,:Smithh, Christi Slpi\11, Mrs,
'
We•I'think we rhave·' the ·answer.
thei ~ . AdUlt . ClasS. The · Painter, Mr. and Mrs, Homer
,,
clara also. will carry out aome 'Flll'l'e3t, Belinda and Edie
We have a policy.
• project thlB month with the Grimm, and Mr. and Mrs.
chll~n : at lbe MeiSS County Richard Gilkey and Mark.
We put the best side down.
home. Volunteerr were
solicited to visit new famlllea
The side you don't see is guaranteed to be equal to
and thole w'!o are W in tlie
or b.:tter than the side you cali see.
C(JIIJilunity.
100 AT INSPECTION
Officers for 1m were elected Approximately loO attended
Simple? 11$ ABC.
and illchlde Guy Hysell, the . inspection . It Pomeroy
president; Mrs. Ralph l&gt;ainler, Chapter 80, Royal Arch
l!.'ffective? No more gamble.
vice preslllenl; . Mrs. Walter Masons, Monday niiht at the
Morris, secretary; Mrs. Ben Pomeroy Masonic Temple. · Fair and square? Sure because "We Care."
Rife, tre,surer; and Min lnipecting officer was Rl. Ex.
Boriilie Rife, card cbairmah. . Companion, Herbert s. Taylor,
Richard 'Gilkey presided at dlatrict deputy grand high l(s this a good reason for shopping A&amp;P? It's one of many.
the meelihg, and devotions priest. He waa accompanied by
were givelj by Mrs. Larry hla wife. AmOIII the other
Pickens wltl\ with ICI'ipture dlaflniuiahed guests at the
from I,uke 10. At the February ·Inspection waa Dwight L. Kane
of Lancasler, .Most W~U~trious
Gr~ High Priest, and his
wife. The dinner preceding. the
meeting waa served by the
. Order of the Eastern Star.

WllH !XIIJPON

PEANUT zs oz.
JAR
BUTTER...............

ee , r, evan_ge s. pee ,a
singers Friday niiht. Public
invited. .

Prevention of visual' refreabmenla and favors for
pollution was ,the pl'OIII'I!IIl the Children's Home •nd the
toplcatlllrs. Harry Wllliamlon Meiga Coonly Infirm!lry. Gifts
at 1 recent llleeliDc at the for the male patienla at the
~ Garden ·Club beld at GaUipoll.a state Institute who
the 1IOIIIIi ol Mrl. C. E. Bilhop. lost their ~r=l..,. In a lire
,..._, Wllll•ml"' apolle at which struck their cottage last
lruh •accumulations and month "were brought by
dam.. and noted the way In members.
which club members, can . Tba~k you notes .were read
suppcll't Civic 8I'OUilll ill COIIII'ol from Mrs. \l'ern111 Weber for a
measure~~.. She suggested ways . planter sent her during a
to prev~t destruction or·fish recent · illness. Mrs. Harold
.
.
andwlldlifeando;ommentedon
Brown, radio
chairman,
the dan)ages of stripminlng thanked the members for
andtheloasofwaterbyrun'&lt;lff. participating !¥ith a program.
She reminded members that Anote of thanks was read from
"thislandiaouriand;" a public Mrs. Edward Miclnko for a
resource for public good. The monetary g.lft sent to the
role of private business In AlllensGood Luck Garden Club
prevention of . poUullon and for Chrislmas gifts.
.zoning ordinances were A report was given on the
discussed. . .
Chrisimas lighting contest of
Mrs . Harvey Erlewine the Pomeroy Chamber of
presided at the meeting during Commerce. Mrs. Lewis, a
which time Mrs. Kate Jarrell member of the Rutland club
and Mrs. Charles Lewis were . was general chairman, and
appointed to handle valentine Mrs. Erlewine and Mrs. Robert

SEil·SERVICE,.
PRE·PACKAGm MEATS
52-,Week Banquet Set ·CAN BE APROBI,EM!

••

IVORY .LIQUID.·

MILK :49~

~teh Feb. i3l,i !RevS. Rioyl

,

.we care-------

~

.NICE'N LITE - LOW FAT .·

te~~VIVAL, E~gle

,
Ridge
Community Cburch Thurlday

Control o Visual Pollution Needed

REG ULA R • me e t I n g ,
~ Chapter OAPSE, 7:30
p.m.
Speali:er. .· ·
, ' Thursday·
, FRIDAY
DANCE FRIDAy Wahsma
High SchOOl 9 to 12 followlng
powder puff basli:etball game.
MEIG'S CHAPTER, Jiys will emcee. School
American Cancer Society, 7;30
T)I1JI1day 1 t office Cole 8pO!Isored.
.
.p.m. · ..
·
'
.•
SA'n!RDAY
St., Mlddlepqrt. All board
SQUj) SUPPER, 'Saturday 5
members llllad to attend.
OES, b!STiucr Zl, SchOOl of to 7 p.m, Eastern High School
bdore Elllltern.Glouster game,
, lnslructioD at l!leigl High spo!!Sored bg' Eastern F .H.A.
School, Blllineia meeting 4 SQUARE DANCE, Sali)rday, .
p.m.; dinner ·8~ S:3jl p.m., Racine Legion HaU, 8:30 to
schOOl at 7 p.m.
midnight, music by King
SOUTHERN LOCAL Kords, Belpre.
•
Education Assn., 7:30 p.m.
SUNDAY .
1
Tbursday al the high schOOl.
SENIOR CITIZENS
Syracuse teachers to have meetil)g, 3 p.m. Sunday at the
program; David Nease, Qnited · Methodist Church,
president of lhli Southern Local f?omeroy. (Meeting lichedliled
School ~rd to be a special for last Sunday cancelled due
guest. ' Mrl.' Dale McClurg, to weather).
president. in charge. Refresh·
. MONDAY
.menta by Racine -rade school
MIDDLEPORT Garden
teachers. ·
Club, 7:30 Monday llight,"home
BIG BEND Neighborhood of Mrs. H. J. Russell. with Mias
Girl Scout; lei'Vice team, 9:30 Hallie zerkle and lllrs. Rita
a.m. 'fh!!rSdly, home of Mrs. Hamm · as · co-hostesses.
WUUam Ohlinger.
. Program on ''The Romance of
MEIGS .COUNTY Council, Lucy Audubon 1' by lllrs. Sibley
PTA, 7:30 Thursday, Southern Slack. Members to take tray
..
High School, Elni St., with past favors for hQSRital8.

.'

WHOL£ WHEAT OR HONEY MEAL
LOAF
•

_,.,eel

.. f

·

SOIIWoRTH OOUNCU. t1,

"*

ba'*

POTA~ToE5.~.8 9

WHOLE
HAMS..... ~~:.

3
r!is 79~.

,

..

5 &amp;-Pwvj, 0., Peb. 2, 1t7:1

D-al · and -...
...._. M ., aa,
._,
''Tbe Wldlt Dna." M"''ben lp'leiahalll- 'l'llllnda1f:30
to
roll ea11 wllb a p:m.
Muoale , Temple,
NI'IHt 011 'lbe b4jot. '
I'Uoeloy. Royal ~ lleJe¢t
~y CUB seout Pact llllllirdlcaiH to be
2ft, 7:«1 p.m. Wellnn'ay, 111 10 ~-- All Clllfk:era
IOOF Hall.
lad ~n!QCII urged io at.

The big nime players of the
Two quarterbacks, Jerry Darden
of
Michigan
1971 college season, quarter- ·Tagge. of Nebraska (Gteell (Cleveland), wide receiver
back Pat Sullivan, the Bay) and John Reaves of Terry Beuley of Aubllm (San
Helsman Trophy wilmer frOm Florida (Philadelphia), were Francisco), wide receiver
~burn anc) Ed Marinaroi the taken on the flnt I'OIIIId before . .Mike Sian! • .of :vmanova
NCAA · rushing
record Sullivan, and . five running (OHland), Unebac:¥r Mike
smasher from Cotnell, were backs were chosen before.· Taylor of Mlchlgan (Jet.s),
completely Ignored for almost Marinaro.
'
offensive llelde Tom Drougas ·
two full rounds. Sullivan was
Two . other . wish-bone. · (Baltilnore), riiiiiiUW
Jelf
taken by Atbuita oo the second quarterbacks .::..Jacli: .Mllcnn Kinney of Nebraska (Ka!!JU
round as the tool pl8yer picked of OklahOma and Eddie Qly), defensive end Larry
and Marinaro went to Min~ · Phillips of ·Texas -were Jacobson of Nebraaka
nesota on the saine round as selected as defensive bacb, . (Giants), defensive· tackle'
the 50th player chosen.
· Mllilren goq to Baltimore on Mike Kadish of Notre Dame
Two QBs Cbosea First
the second round and Phlllipll (Mlamt) and rwming back BID
·
. beq taken by Los Angeles on Thomas of Boston College

WE ACCEPT
FEDERAL
FOOD
STAMPS

FRESH AND CRISP

POTTED MEAT

•

•Ill
2"

.
. . 11 Mn. -...... Wallace.
-MrL ""'-Ita
••·1o ret lew

known passers still reniain, . defenatve end Fred Dryer 1o
Including Clluck Ealey, who led . New England for the Patriols'
·earr hit for 12 of his 19 points lead Into the final stanza, but handed a 129-117 blow to Toleotl to a :Jii.ilame unileaten first and sixth ro11111 draft
In the third quarter. But the five straight points by DeBuss- PorUand, as the TraU Blazers string, Brian Slpe of San Diego choices this year and second
Braves held on to a 91-90 lead chereearly In the fourthj)eriod reeled to their ninth straight . State and Gary Wlcbard ot c. nell yeir. Dryer bad. been
as !he final four seconds of the cut the margin to BN13 and six loss, and Oscar Robertson W. Post. Al,so available is Rhett outspoken of the- ' Giant
proiA!sted game of Dec. 3 were consecutive points by Bill wowed 9,018 f~ns at San Diego Dawson, the wide receiver management throughout the
replayed.
Bradley gave the Knicb the with !kif~ from the floor and from Fkrida State who ranked seaiOII and was a certainty to
Cleveland won its protest lead for good at 92-91.
a perfectfive free throws for 33 third nationally.
be deall.
because it was given the ball
DeBusschere wound up with points as Mllwaukee seared
Atlanta made four separate
under its own basket instead of 22 points, Jerry Lucas chipped Golden State, 1011-97.
As for the rest of the first deals during the day. The
at half-couri following a techni-· In with 20 and Bradley paced
round, .St. Louis took Bobby Falcona sent runilinl bacli:
calfoul.
the victors with 29. The trio's
Moore, a wide receiver•-'--~
back
fr
Or
d
Sonny
Campbell
and"""'""'
· ve
.
running
Rick Roberson of the Cavs efforts offset an explosive
P.almer•Sharp
om egon an ·
·
d
back
Rudy
Redmond
to
Detrotl
D
passed the ball in-bounds to scoring night by the Pistons'
enver gra bb ed ti ght en
for a seconcko!lld pick; traded
Bobby Smith, but Smith bad Bob Lanier, who wheelhorsed
Riley Odoms of the University ~ defenllvelleldeGregLI!nland
trouble bandUng the pass and for 42 points:
HONOLULU (UPI) - Ar- of Houston. Houston took ·
~f
t
sh
h't
Celtlcs
Maintain
Lead
nold
Palmer, the golf wizard defensive tackle Greg Samp. defeilsive end RandY Marshall
hi d
te
00
01 1
s. espera """
The Boston Celtics mam
· _ from Latrbbe, Pa., hasn't won son of Stanford and Green Bay to Buflalo for a fifth-round'
the rim at the buzzer as Buffalo
t 1this
choice, sent g!lll'd Dick. En11 to
preser.ved its win.
. tainedtheirfive-"•me lead over a go urnamen ye
year grabbed cornerback Willie derle to the Giants for I -'-~
-.....
but he has his eyes set on the Buchanon of San Dieg0 State
INAWr
Carr Breaks Tie
New Yorloi as Dave Cowens'
• round ielection and traded
Carr broke a 69.$ tie on a overpowermg·
performance. $200,000 HawaUan Open which
New Orle811B went for Royce
u. 1 .,.~
ef ·
.
getsunderwayhereThursday. Smith, a guard frOm Georgia defensivebackJohn ..'"!"""',
to
jumper with two minutes I t m helped down Baltimore, 115-108.
Palmer arrived here over the and the New York Jets selected New Orleans for another sixththe third quarter to put the
The second-year pro from weekend and played part of Jerome Barkum, a wide . round pick.
Cavs in front for good in the Florida State poured In 32· practice round Sunday. receiver-tight end from
regulation game. Carr paced points and ~ared 21 ~ebounds Allhough he didn't bother to Jackaon Stale. Stanford's Jeff .
the Cleveland scoring while a_ s the Celtics won tljelf fourth keep score those who w•re Si. .
a
tb . . 11 t
For the sake of Christh,
Walt Hazzard led Buffalo with In a row
,
•
emon w s
e
rs then, I am content wit
C
· d Do N Is led ' watching him marveUed at his . linebacker taken, going to weaknesses, Insults, hard26·
owens an
n e on a accuracy with his irons and Minnesota and the Packers ships, persecutions, and caDave DeBusschere, unfazed late B~ton surge that sa~ the predicted he would be one of took hometown product Tagge. 1amities, /or when I am
by a trip to the hospital after Ce!Ucs ~pe out Baltimore s 65- the top finishers in the tour- Cllicago took defensive backs weak, then am strong.-ll
sufferlngafirst.quarterinjury, 57 halftime le.ad and a four- nament
Cr
Cl
f
Pitts- Corinthians 12:10.
returned in time to score 14 point Bullet advantage at the
·
a1g emons o 1owa,
points In the final period as the end of three quarters. Nelson
burRh chose futlback Franco
New York Knicks handed wound up with 18 points while
Ha-:_rls of Penn State,
COTTON SUEDE '2.00 lb.,
Detroit its sixth straight loss, Archie Clark paced Central
Philadelphia selected Reaves,
. ..
.
the NCAA passing-recordZIPPERS
5' h
115-106.
DiVISIOn - leading Baltimore
vANCE TOPS
breaker from Florida . and
,___ eac
DeBusschere suffered an With 30
·
injury to his pinkie after the
In other contests, Seattle got
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Ru~n Atlan~ , ~ ,cl!!'~r:~~-~ •-• ,BQNQED"'"" ,,,_, ,. ,, . •. .... .
'first six minutes of play and double.figurescoringfromeach Van~eofKentSta~; defendlng ' Cl~ce · ~N~ If'"'"' •WO.QL &amp;'NYLQN.11.98 y&lt;f". ... •:
1
was taken to a New York of its five starters as the Su- scormg champiOn of the Mid• •• ··Otbei' ~!.·!· · ··--.·::
60'' wide• '·'
·
. ··'
hospitalfor X-rays. Detroit took per Sanies downed the Chicago American Conference, was Otiiet flrR'round pickll in- .
advantage of the bard-working . Bulls,l21-103, for the first time named MACplayer of the week eluded defensive end H,erb
PLAIDS 60" wide12 29 yd
forward's absence to take a 31- this season. Phoenix, movtDg for directing the Flashes to two Orvis of Colorado (Detrdjt), ·
'
•
.
20 lead.
behind the .12 points of Connie wins over Bowling Green and defensive back Eldridge Small .
COTTON GIN
The Pistons carried an 82-75 Hawkins in the .third quarter Ohio U.
of Texas A&amp;l (New York
.
Giants), defensive back Tom
Rt. 7Addlaon,O.

HAM

ARMOUR

:·

PRODUCE SPECIALS

lb.

"I fl&amp;1n 1111 ~~~~~. ln pnI'm go!JW to mate a tot .of
• feiiiOMI football ',II Rood,'' lie
lllOIIiey."
Clemona uld he thlnb the ald. "Every,jldnl is fine, It's
all right. .baby."
Bears are "0~."
·

.

,.

I

WIIJNIIIDAY
·prelldenta to be honored.
MIDDLIPORT Ll.tar•PV Election at ncmh•lln&amp; c:omOub, 2~~&amp;. N
,.., at~ m111111:

Pro Football Draft Full of St1rpris·es·

SUPERIOR
SEMI BONELESS

5

wun'llin18b up thlB ye!ll', bui 1
will eventuaDy. ru.,t now, pro .
fqotb8u and mopey are the
biggest things for me. I think

"

·Social Calendar

en Defenses

PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU FEB. 5

HAM SLICES....

• '1111 DIIIJ I

1

Weakest Club~ SWap Victories :~~~~==::: :£i,~stci:~.0:e~

'

CENTER

"·

••

1
::

•

•

•'
'

!

A" I!AND

OUIUQUi

Fruit Drinks •3 ':::· 'J9c
JANE PARKER

Potato Chips •

'=- Stc

12&lt; OFF lfiiEL COLIOATi

h\outhwash . • ·~ J9c

.-

Chopped Ham ...... ,~ .:•
DUIUQUE ENDS I PIECES

Vienna Sausage
5' ~ Sl
. .
•'

SUNNYFIILO

''
•
•
I

Frozen Waffles 'i::lOc ·'•'
•
'
'•
•
\
I

"ALWAYS PLENTY
OF

•
'•

~

FREE
PARKING

{

'•
•

IN OUR LARGI LO!.

'••
I

•

'

�-.

...

'
10- The O.lly.Sjlntinel, Middli!port.l'&lt;lrneroy, 0., fe,b. 2, 1972

Muskie in . ,....,W~tb;·~
Ohio Race.
COLUMBUS CUP!) - Sen.
Ednill!ld S. Muskle, D·Maine,
has officially entered a lull
slate of at.Jarge party con·
vention delegates and alter·
nates in the Ohio primary
election May 2 and is expected
to enter slates from 21 of the
state's 23 congressional
dis~ icts today in his bid lor the
Demo cra ti c presidential
nomination.
Gov . John J. Gilligan
Tuesday filed petitions bearing
4,900 signatures from all 88
counties for Muskie. One
thousand signatures fr om 30
counties were required by
today's 4 p.m. deadline for
filing .
Gilligan was listed as second
choice for the 38 at·large
delegates and 19 alternates
pledged to Muskie.

1

•

.

JN~iv~::·in B~~t4

'

Family planning services
are ·available in Mei~s County
- lree of charge c..: through
Family Planning of Southeast
Ohio.
Mrs. Phyllis Bearhs is the
county bealth serv.ice wor~er
and will maintain office hours
in the near future in quarters
on the ground floor of the
courthouse.
The service is offering a free ·
clinic on the first and third
Thursdays of each month at··
Veterans Memorial Hospital. A
registered nurse is in charge of
the clinic. A local doctor is
handling the examinations
being conducted in conjunction
with the family plannir.g
service.
Regardless of the economic
status of the individual, there is
no charge for the services
being offered through the
program which is operating on
an Appalachian RegionalCouncil grant secured through
the Ohio Valley Health Ser·
vices.
The phone number of the new
office for which office hours
will be announced in the near
future is 992-5912 or' Mrs.
Bearhs can be contacted at
home 99Ui6&amp; by anyone interested in participating in the
family
'
l "•

. SHI
FIN.ISHING
·SAME DAY
SERVICE

In At 9-0ut At s

u.. Our Free Parking Lot
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

WTOrk Or·

I

'

Meigs Girls Win _41-24

Coolville Rates Raised

e

;

The Winter Olympics are
gelling under way , and
ton ight brings all the
spectacle and pageantry of
theopel"!lng ceremonies from

Sapporo. Japan, tonight at 10
p.m., Chs . 2 and 7. If you
choose to watch something
el se, there's to be a rerun

with most of the highlights
on Thursday morn ing at 8:30

a.m:, Lhs. 2 &amp; 7.

+++

Another show In the series
about Amer ica's welfare

problems appears ton ight on
Ch. 11 at 1:30 p.m.

+++

A new series (w hi ch will

bow ton ight : "A Public
Affair : Election '1972 ."
Aimed at looking deep Into
the complicated process by

which

Americans

piCk

a

President, it features Sander
Vanocur and Robert MacNeil L 8 p.m., Ch . 11 .

+++

Dick Cavett interviews the
Nobel Prize physicist Ed·

ward Teller (and a leading
conservative

emcees .

"

MEETING SET
The Meigs County Chapter of
the Amerjcan Red Cross will
meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday in
the dining room of the new
addition of Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

" hawk " )

ton ight . 11 :30 p.m., Ch. 6.

+++

MOVIES: "Three Guys
Named Mike." ~an Johnson,
4 p.m., and "Kis met,"
Howard. Keel, 11 : 30 p.m'/

Veterans Memorial Hospital
DISCHARGED - Edith
MC

c oy, Dori~ Lee, Debra

appear
from
10._ _ _ __. Young,
Carol Hall,
loiiiiiii
__
_ time
_ _to_time
_ _ _both
_ Ch.
__
mond, Monte
Wolfe.Edna Rich-

'Hope' Fund

(1) 5 lb. Ground Beef
10 lb. Sliced Poik Loin
8 lb. Sliced Slab Bacon

The

Freezer

5 lb. Bulk Sausage

5 lb. Cube Steak
(2) 10 lb. Chuck Roast
5 lb. ·Ground Beef
5 lb. POlk Shoulder .
or Roast
;;,..,..t (3) · 5 lb. Round Steak

Phone Us
.Your Order!

IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH

YSIVERSJR
.

THERMO~·WARE '

UA.IR''.
n

•

10 lb. Chuck Roast
a lb. Sliced Slab Bacon
·s Fresh Chickens
WIIUie or Cut

FEBRUARY 5-13-QHIO STATE
FAIRGROUNDS COLISEUM ·
la&amp;entate tl - &amp;xl&amp; at

nt• .r 11tl Ate.

Satul'day and Sunday

Weekdays

I P.M. to 11 P.M.
Lut s....,

6 P.M'. to 11 P.M.

$1.75 A1&gt;ULTS

75 CENTS

fonioool lo"h

• Forward, revene, still • ·' 4()().foot reel ·
capacity e Aluminum die-cast body • Self·

cased

•

$6488

ICE CRUSHER
Mounds of crush1d i(e •. . fast en you con toY " lu·O·
Mot ic" llilt hopper- molar whir·r-rs into octlon . No
button i to pu5h , no $witch to turn . Stoinleu steel
blade, , Pvll ·ovt ice drow~r . Nonmor '"'·

HECK'S
REG .
$9.88

HECK"S REG.

$21.96

13212
Pl Pleasant Store Only

Pt Pleasant Store On~
'TRIUMPH

WELTRON

~

!

.

p:l

1:

, •._

,._, 1

~·

WELTRON

STEREO HEAD SET

HEAD HUGGER RADIO
.'

l""' ""'' · ,...i·9; ..

WEDGE STYLE SPEAKER

.

,,...,."beu M(llt 1~ '"'h.,.., .. '""·

'

'""ll'" 1ttrtt fNI bfiJOOd((lll, '""'~ af! ltoP'I . Tn Vt

._,

Eliminate ouhidt noise w~th thi• AMJr,a dio'by,

••kl•toL iW~Ia~t(ll,o"' o!! u•••nol W~~•tn .t oi l...

hot lion , •~••tol.lttdtcl bp 01'11,...,. "'Ogl&gt;il ilt nl ..lw.C
ol you• lo-itt •t10•ol1 or ''"" f,., , No ftloQit'"
"'~ttt y O ~ j,jl, )'(I~ '" or tl&gt;e ~ft(l lfNI to kNr
unl'-ntly "PIIfOitd Utt to , l it;~htw.Ogh t ..,, , ;..:;_.
and "'" l ootr~plo•"• t or....,H• inctto.- y&lt;&gt;~&gt;r
ong &lt;u,..lurt, i.oll ro~ '""'' lan g h-1 ol ~~ng
wolho"' iml olion.

Triumph. Soft cushion ear pieces. Volun'fe control
and station selector , Keeps all outside noise ·
away from your reception : Ideal for adults, teen ·

DElUXE. 3"x5" 8 OHM
Speaker Cased in Vinyl
Wedge Shaped Hou s·

w.._,..

agers, or all ages.

ing.

HECK'S
REG.
$16.96

$

7-7

$488

·'

HECK'S REG.
$14.96

/

•

HICK'S lEG.

$6.96
WS-102

TIMEX

MEN'S·&amp; LADIES'
.

HECK'S

$~~?..

WATCHES

I

pock in case perinits shaving with·
out recharge. Racer fast "QUICK·
CHARGE." Sebring Green.

MV-3

•

f '
'\'
)j . ·.,

$2888

HECK'S
REG.
$18.88

, 200Jo OFF

\ ,·( - !_ .:. \
,, .
\
..

:-.··:

11'( .', · .:

SM-121 .

I

..

~

·. · .
.,......,....

Pl Pleasant Store

IIWRir 191.
'

.

RADIO BATTERIES

Extension Cord .
lncludeo: Jock • Plug

2 FOR 2t

$277
JEWELRY BOX
HECK'S .
REG.
$7.88

-

$488

NO. YJ

HECK'S REG. 29•, EACH

HECK'S

SYLVANIA

$117

HECK'S REG.

WITH SPEAKERS
HECK'S

1.27

DUAL 8 EDITOR-.VIEWER

·REG.

Simple, inexpensive, easy·tO· use ond attractive. This editor is made for Duo I
8 film formals . large Screen, built in film marker, focusing, framing 'controls'
and line.co.rd storage posts.
~,• •

559.88

I

•

'

NO. A-50

' YARD

Ingels Furniture
992-2635

;,- .

..

Pt Pleasant Sbe

STEREO TAPE PLAYER

FOI SOliS'I CAMDAS

Pl Pleasant Store Only

:HEC:.§~:3.96
8 TRACK

MAGICUBES
I'

•

On~

33 MM CAMERA·IIT

9-VOLT

30 FT. TELEPHONE
-,

GENERAL ELECTRIC

PORTABLE VAC

MFG. LIST PRICE

'. , ' . - . - ) I

•

FOR CAR STEREO .

'

SQUARE

I

110

HECK'S REG. $1 7.96

488 ,

1•

HECK'S REG. $84.96

RIVAL

K-320

Use with or without cord . Power

•

88

$
M·6B

HAIR SETTER

~ '

'

HECK'S REG. $74 .96

M.IST CONDITIO.NER

.

e f/1.5 lens • Wood· grained

vinyl ponels.

PROaOR
STEAM IRON

$1788

KODAK

SUPER 8MOVIE PROJECTOR

501 NYLON

• Boats
• RrereaUonaJ Vehicles
• Sporting·Equipment
o Vacation Information
• OnQ Hour Stage and Tank Shaw
·
o Stnte, Sectional, and Canadian Travel ' Exbiblts
Children Under

.

SHAVER

81181

l l.ll: .. ' • .•.

'ADMISSION

88

MAN'S CO~DLESS

·

:Prodaeea "' Bart Prod1ett-.

.

~9.!~e~im~~~~'~"

CLAIROL

nkal h1ndmadt Milk Glus thll wt'vlll'lf
11111. .We're 11111ots kllhow k to )IIU. HurtJ
fnl You11 find klll1 &amp;Ills for MIJ 'KCIIioA.

Shop Ingels before you buy. Buy
today, installed tomorrow by Ingels'
expert .craftsmen.

Sponsored by DisPa.tch Charities ·

SUPER 8 .

SUNBEAM

In Big Bend Area

Sports Vacation and Travel Show .

'

t•chnica l advances. COS E~ctric-Eye automatically ~dj111h
for a vor~tr of film ) including the new la1t color film de signed for low-light 1ituations. The 1oom len$ adch that pro-

_______.

A ltiW IIIJ,tlul )lilt ll!lvld If 1111

'Largest Supply In Stock

COLUMBUS

OUR WELRYDEPl

Pt Pleasant Store
.. On~

;j

Oakley Colllns and his family Springs Road.
Filing also on Thesday were
are deeply rooted in this area.
Parkersburg - 20 a 22 19- 69 He is a graduate of Ohio three Republicans and 12
Big Blacks·- 17 9 15 1a - 59 University, was an educator 19 Democrats for central com. mlttee posts.
Little Reds _ 16 7 19 17 _ 59 years, and with his ·brother,
Republicans were Clarence
Little Blacks _ 9 1a 6 6 _ 39 has opera ted the Collins Lawrence, Portland Precinct,·
- Mining Company several
WHS
18-23·!1-1~0 • ·
Jeanne Morgan, Middleport
Spencer 21-19-15-74
years.
Third; Otis' F. Knopp, Racine
He has served two years in Precinct.
Reserve Score-Spencer 42· the Ohio House of RepresenWHS 28
tatlves and is now completing
Qemocrats were Henry L.
his lath year . in the Ohio Hunter, North Chester;
Raymond H. Boatright, South
Se nate.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Che
In his present Senate post he
ster; Russell Well, Alfred;
DISCHARGES:
John
is
Chairman
of
the
Education
Chesler
W· Erwin, Middleport
Hussell, Mrs. Richard McDade
and daughter ; Mrs. James and Welfare Committee, and a· Precinct; Steve H. Eblin,
Henry and daughter, owen member of the Rules Com- Pomeroy Precinct; Francis
Watson, Randall Boles, Mrs. mittee, and Highway and Andrew, Long Bottom; Donald
Anna Jqingensmith, Millard Urban Affairs Conunittee. In R. Thomas, Pomeroy'Three-A;
Davis, Mrs . Hennon Potter, addition, he represents Ohio in Wilbert Barber, Ollvedale;
Mrs. Lora Brown, ·Mrs. Ira two national organizations, as Ernest A. Wingett, Racine
a commissioner t'n the Village; Dale R. Proffitt, Great
Potts and Karen Cowger.
Education Commission of the River; Donald B. ADen, Letart
Stales, and a member of the Precinct, and Hollie E. Green,
NOW YOU KNOW
Pomeroy First.
Figure skating on ice, now Council of Interstate Govern·
one of the major events of the ments..
.
Winter Olympics, was held ' Havm~
flll~d · many
during the Summer Olympics leadership roles m the Ohio
ol1908 in London.
legislature, his efforts for rural
Ohio
are
recognized
LOCAL TEMPS
throughout the State. Locally,
Temperature in downtown he is chairman of the
Pomeroy Wednesday at 11 a.m. Republican Executive Com·
was ~2 degrees under sunn'y mittee and a member of
skies.
several district civic and
fraternal

.

HECK'S REG. 59.88

\

FEB.'&amp;, WHILE

BELL &amp; HOWELL

HS-300

'

Mary Martin

D''R'YER

4p

4'%%
.

CARP.ETING~,

For

..

'

Meigs Co. Branch

Collins

until November) makes ifs

'

'

•

POINTVIEW: 992· 2505

•

•

Cage Scores

CALL

. ...

I' -

•

Love·

Bill Now Law

DANCE SATURDAY
Adance party will be held at
the Meigs Junior High School
from 8 to 11 p.m. Saturday,
sponsored by the Meigs Band
Boosters, wi\h the Jays as

.

-·

All Bank's Directors are Reelected

Nationwide's
Rates Down
Average 10%

.

·

Snow north, wet snowcentral
and rain south tonigh t,
BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
·Changing to snow or snow
ISRAEU NATIONAL RADIO SAID '1'9DAV the laraeU
Ourrles throughout the state as cabinet accepted aU. S. offer to initiate indirect talks with Egypt
it turns colder Thursday. Lows on reopening the SUez Canal.
·
tonight mosUy in the 305, ·
The radio quoted Foreign Minister Abba Evan as saying the
temperatures lowering to low cabinet made ils decision after hearing a report on the U.S. role
~by late .Thursday.
from Yitzhak Rabin, Israeli ambasSador to Washington. The
canal has been closed since the 1961Middle East War.
EXT~DED OUTLOOK
Oblo extended outlook
OOLuMBUS- SEN. GEORGE McGOVERN, D-S.D., today
Friday lbroiJilb SliDday
A told period Is Indicated was officially entered ·in the Ohio Democratic presidential .
with partly cloudy skies and primary with a state of delegates Jll!l(le up of "UtUe shots"
chance of snow flurries chosen in open caucuses. Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine has
THESE EIGUTMEN WERE REELEC'I'En to the board
Friday aad In northeast already entered and Sens. Hubert l!umphrey and Henry Jackson
lmlaon. '!bey artl ironithe ~ Horace Karr, MIIUiing D.
portion of lbe stale on of Washington were scheduled to enter before the deadline of 4 . of directors of the Pomeroy !'lalional Bahk 'IUesday af. Webster, Roger Martian, Dr. R. E. Boice, Eldon Weeks,
Saturday. Highs Friday .In p.m. today.
Alfred Ii:lberfeld ~nd Warren Pickens.
·· • ' ,
McGovern's nominating petitions were fUed by Robert B.
the 20s and from the teens
north to the low ZOs central McAlister, his state campilign chairman. ''Our slates, chosen in
aDd south portion Saturday open causes, are truly representative of a cross.aection of rank ·
and the coitstruclioq qf ~
, ' ·. ' I
and SUDday. Lows at night and file democrats," said McAlister. "Notable by their absence
baniling ho~ for the RuU.04,
from zero to 10 above.
are party 111111IDaries, past office holders _and traditionally un·
Edison Hobstetter, president They were Dr. lk E. Boice, and Eldon. Weeks,
· Branch in Rulla!1d. .
~
successful candidates.
. of the Pomeroy National Bank, Alfred M. Elberfeld, Edison
Present officers were also
The bank's ,totals lilt an all!:
reappointed.
time-high
of over $lji Qlillion ar~
said today all qirectors were Hobstetter, ·Horace Karr,
reelected at the annual Roger Morgan , Wanren ·They are Mr. Hobstetter the year-end. ·Dw?ng the yeat:
meeting 'IUesday afternoon., Pickens, Manning D. Webster, J)nlsident; jlepnis Keney, vi~ 1971, deposits intnased nearJJ(,
PRISON NAMED
president; Richard Chambers $2'4 million, he said.
~
COLUMBUS I UP I)
vice president; George Ho~ ' ;·- ....----·~-1
Officials annou~ced Tuesday
stetter,
vice president; Maxine
the new maximum security
. The Meigs County Senior
Grifli th, cashier;
Joan
prison at Lucasvllle which
Citize ns organization will
Harrison,
assistant
cashier;
wlll · replace the Ohio
present a program at 3 p.m.
The girls basketball squad at
For Southern, Pam Hill had L~ra K. ~ones, ·assistant ·
WITii INTERESt
Penitentiary will be named
Sunday at the Pomeroy United
Nationwide Mutual Fire Meigs High School dumped 10, Reese and West 4 each, and cas~ier; Richard Poulin, " '"
IS' A ·
.
the Southern Ohio Correc' Insurance Co. announce it will Southern Saturday 41 to 24. For
Methodist Church . The
Michael, Proffitt and Warner 2 assistant cashier; Marilyn Lc
SAVINGS ACCOUNT
tiona! faclllty.
program will include recent
reduce rates an average of 10 the winners, Debbie Ohlinger each.
Wolfe,
assistant
cashier
·
()pen a passbook ~vlngs
W. J. Wheaton, superin- pet: for homeowners coverage was high with 13, Sherrie King
color films on "National Parks,
account for your family ... ·
WiUiam
J.
Hobstetter,
branch
tendent of the new faclllty,
Our American Heritage ",
Meigs will play Satu,raay at manager and vice president,
thaf earns a top return with
for Ohio policy holders, P. J. had 9, Pat Harris a, Leanne
said lbe name will Pauley, local agent, reported Sebo 7, Mary Weyersmiller 2, Nelsonville at II a.m.
insured safety . Open• that
"The Holy Land," and Hans
· , and Edith K. Wllliamson
account with us for just a1
correspond
io
the
inChristian Anderson's "The
14 26 3:! 41 assistant branch manager. '
today. Nationwide Muturl Fire Sharon Cogar and Jane Meigs
few dollars. Your family
stitution's emphasis on is the second largest Thomas one each.
will love you for it.
Ugly Duckling.'~
Southern
2 10 15 24 Hobstetter also reported
modern concepts of training homeowners insurer in the
There will be a report from
You'il love o~r Passbook
progress being made on the
and
rehabilitation.
Rate, it's
the steering conunittee whose
state.
IOOth Anniversary celebration,
membership includes both
The reduction is effective
senior citizens and other
S
. tarv
Feb. I for new policies and
coon ty leaders pn the com- W'
March I for renewals.
,,
The Southeastern . Ohio
mittee's work in preparing and
Telephone rate increases
Dean W. Jeffers, president of
distributing a questionnaire lor
Nationwide, said a formal have been approved for the Telephone Co. will continue to · (Continued from page I)
senior citizens across the
request for the rate cut has Southeastern Ohio Telephone make the latest developments hopes, .and even greater ex,
county. Refreshments will be
COLUMims ·(UP!) - Gov. been approved by the Ohio Co., Coolville area, Richard R. in telephony available to its, pectations for this program.
served. All interested persons John J. Gilligan today allowed Insurance Department.
Myers, company president, customers in accord,nce with _ "Now it will be possible to
the company 's concern of assist individuals from the age
are invited.
legislation requiring able- . Jeffers noted that "like ~ther announced today.
Myers said that the new local quality cOmmunications equal group of 16 through 21 and
ilodied welfare recipients to · Insurance
compames,
work lor their relief checks to Nationwide had to seek a series rates approved by the Public to the finest anywhere, Myers above, who have previously
The Athen• County
said.
been denied training because
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
BILLS PAID
become Jaw without his of homeowners· rate increases Utilities Commission of Ohio in
296 Seccind St.
Routine business was con· signature.
in rece~t years to meet rapidly its order No. 36363 became Myers added that the service of other program limitations,"
Pomeroy,
Ohio
\mprovement
in
the
he
said.
effective Jan. 11, 1972. He
dueled including payment of
The bill, sponsored by Rep. '"~.reas1ng cla1?'s costs.
Ali Accounts Insured To
Crisp added, "Anyone
bills when Rutland Town Rodney H. Hughes, R·Bellefon- . · Loss expertence has now ftirther related that the Ohio Southeastern area totaled
S20,000.00
by FSLIC.
$708,000
in
1970
with
an
adwishing to apply for training in
Council met Tuesday night. . Iaine, would require relief re· Improved
for
several regulatory standards im·
Attending were Mayor Eugene cipients to participate in state categortes of homeowners pfemented' in the order are ditional $1 ,503,500 lor im· · this program should contact
Thompson and
Harvey and local work projects to earn pohcles and this Lmprovement consistent with the purposes of provement service being spent the Leading · Creek Con·
for 1971 and 1972. The last in· servancy District in Rutland or
•
•
Erlewine, Jim Fry, William their welfare checks.
enables Nationwide to reduce the Economic Stabilization Act
crease
granted
to
the
company
of
19iO.
~·A,·
1
~
the
Athens
office
of
the
Bureau
Brown, Ernest Nicholson, all
In refusing to sign the bill, rates for those policy owners,"
The new rate will be which serves a large portion of of Vocational RehabfUtation.
council members, and Vernon the governor said the ]egisla· Jeffers said.
.
.
eastern Meigs County was in
Weber, clerk.
ture had failed to finance con·
The rate reduction applies to reflected in Customers' 1961, it is reported.
siderable administrative costs all policy holders with in· .current bills ·along with an
of the proposal. He also said surance coverage of $14,000 or insert explaining the rate
Valanti~e's Day
CASES DISMISSED
he has been advised the con. more and to all holders of adjusiment, Myers reports.
Three cases dismissed in stitutionality of the nieasure is tenants ' -homeown ers in·
Flbnlary
14th
Meigs County Common Pleas questionable.
surance.
~.
t
• ·t
c;,ourt are Joy Mitchell versus
"This bill would require the
Reductions vary according
·•
(Continued from page I)
(Continued from page I)
Elmer ' 'Niitchell , Sterling expenditures of large amounts to the size 'of the policy. Rate
'
Gordon Neville versus Bonnie of state funds in terms of the cuts start at two percent for determined that southeastern class, the Pilllathea "Society ·
Lee Neville, and Yvonne Moore time required to administer the $14,000 policies and increase Ohio be equally recognized and and works with youth groups.
versus Marvin Moore.
programs, "Gilligansaid. "That gradually to a maximum of 20 considered as an important S~e is now serving her seventh
as part.time secretary for
money could be far better used pet. for policies providing for part of Ohio's future th(ough year
the church.
!his crucial period," he said.
to improve the administration $24,000 or more protection.
Senator Collins resides at . Mrs. Martin is married to
DANCE SET
of current welfare programs so
A10 pet. reduction will apply
1005
Kemp Lane, Ironton with Osby A. M~rtin and the couple
A dance will be held that we can spot welfare cheat· to all tenant homeowners
Saturday from a: 30 to 11:30 ers and get them off the rolls." policies. Nationwide estimates his wife Juanita, and two sons. has four married children,
p.m. at the Racine Junior High
When the governor neither thai more than half of its Ohio Clark is a second year law Linda Jones, Gallipolis; Frank
School with music by "Foxx", signs nor vetoes a bill within policy holders will benefit from student at Ohio State Kelton, Houston, Tex.;
University. Mark .Allen is a Patricia Wine, Cleveland, and
sponsored by the senior class of 10 days after it is sent to him, the reduction.
second
year student at Ohio Robert Martin, Alliance. The
Southem High School.
·
it
automatically
becomes
law.
University, Athens.
Martins reside on the Rock
'

Older Citizens
Free Planning Giving Program
Senice Here

.

I I
'

I

/

�-.

...

'
10- The O.lly.Sjlntinel, Middli!port.l'&lt;lrneroy, 0., fe,b. 2, 1972

Muskie in . ,....,W~tb;·~
Ohio Race.
COLUMBUS CUP!) - Sen.
Ednill!ld S. Muskle, D·Maine,
has officially entered a lull
slate of at.Jarge party con·
vention delegates and alter·
nates in the Ohio primary
election May 2 and is expected
to enter slates from 21 of the
state's 23 congressional
dis~ icts today in his bid lor the
Demo cra ti c presidential
nomination.
Gov . John J. Gilligan
Tuesday filed petitions bearing
4,900 signatures from all 88
counties for Muskie. One
thousand signatures fr om 30
counties were required by
today's 4 p.m. deadline for
filing .
Gilligan was listed as second
choice for the 38 at·large
delegates and 19 alternates
pledged to Muskie.

1

•

.

JN~iv~::·in B~~t4

'

Family planning services
are ·available in Mei~s County
- lree of charge c..: through
Family Planning of Southeast
Ohio.
Mrs. Phyllis Bearhs is the
county bealth serv.ice wor~er
and will maintain office hours
in the near future in quarters
on the ground floor of the
courthouse.
The service is offering a free ·
clinic on the first and third
Thursdays of each month at··
Veterans Memorial Hospital. A
registered nurse is in charge of
the clinic. A local doctor is
handling the examinations
being conducted in conjunction
with the family plannir.g
service.
Regardless of the economic
status of the individual, there is
no charge for the services
being offered through the
program which is operating on
an Appalachian RegionalCouncil grant secured through
the Ohio Valley Health Ser·
vices.
The phone number of the new
office for which office hours
will be announced in the near
future is 992-5912 or' Mrs.
Bearhs can be contacted at
home 99Ui6&amp; by anyone interested in participating in the
family
'
l "•

. SHI
FIN.ISHING
·SAME DAY
SERVICE

In At 9-0ut At s

u.. Our Free Parking Lot
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

WTOrk Or·

I

'

Meigs Girls Win _41-24

Coolville Rates Raised

e

;

The Winter Olympics are
gelling under way , and
ton ight brings all the
spectacle and pageantry of
theopel"!lng ceremonies from

Sapporo. Japan, tonight at 10
p.m., Chs . 2 and 7. If you
choose to watch something
el se, there's to be a rerun

with most of the highlights
on Thursday morn ing at 8:30

a.m:, Lhs. 2 &amp; 7.

+++

Another show In the series
about Amer ica's welfare

problems appears ton ight on
Ch. 11 at 1:30 p.m.

+++

A new series (w hi ch will

bow ton ight : "A Public
Affair : Election '1972 ."
Aimed at looking deep Into
the complicated process by

which

Americans

piCk

a

President, it features Sander
Vanocur and Robert MacNeil L 8 p.m., Ch . 11 .

+++

Dick Cavett interviews the
Nobel Prize physicist Ed·

ward Teller (and a leading
conservative

emcees .

"

MEETING SET
The Meigs County Chapter of
the Amerjcan Red Cross will
meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday in
the dining room of the new
addition of Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

" hawk " )

ton ight . 11 :30 p.m., Ch. 6.

+++

MOVIES: "Three Guys
Named Mike." ~an Johnson,
4 p.m., and "Kis met,"
Howard. Keel, 11 : 30 p.m'/

Veterans Memorial Hospital
DISCHARGED - Edith
MC

c oy, Dori~ Lee, Debra

appear
from
10._ _ _ __. Young,
Carol Hall,
loiiiiiii
__
_ time
_ _to_time
_ _ _both
_ Ch.
__
mond, Monte
Wolfe.Edna Rich-

'Hope' Fund

(1) 5 lb. Ground Beef
10 lb. Sliced Poik Loin
8 lb. Sliced Slab Bacon

The

Freezer

5 lb. Bulk Sausage

5 lb. Cube Steak
(2) 10 lb. Chuck Roast
5 lb. ·Ground Beef
5 lb. POlk Shoulder .
or Roast
;;,..,..t (3) · 5 lb. Round Steak

Phone Us
.Your Order!

IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH

YSIVERSJR
.

THERMO~·WARE '

UA.IR''.
n

•

10 lb. Chuck Roast
a lb. Sliced Slab Bacon
·s Fresh Chickens
WIIUie or Cut

FEBRUARY 5-13-QHIO STATE
FAIRGROUNDS COLISEUM ·
la&amp;entate tl - &amp;xl&amp; at

nt• .r 11tl Ate.

Satul'day and Sunday

Weekdays

I P.M. to 11 P.M.
Lut s....,

6 P.M'. to 11 P.M.

$1.75 A1&gt;ULTS

75 CENTS

fonioool lo"h

• Forward, revene, still • ·' 4()().foot reel ·
capacity e Aluminum die-cast body • Self·

cased

•

$6488

ICE CRUSHER
Mounds of crush1d i(e •. . fast en you con toY " lu·O·
Mot ic" llilt hopper- molar whir·r-rs into octlon . No
button i to pu5h , no $witch to turn . Stoinleu steel
blade, , Pvll ·ovt ice drow~r . Nonmor '"'·

HECK'S
REG .
$9.88

HECK"S REG.

$21.96

13212
Pl Pleasant Store Only

Pt Pleasant Store On~
'TRIUMPH

WELTRON

~

!

.

p:l

1:

, •._

,._, 1

~·

WELTRON

STEREO HEAD SET

HEAD HUGGER RADIO
.'

l""' ""'' · ,...i·9; ..

WEDGE STYLE SPEAKER

.

,,...,."beu M(llt 1~ '"'h.,.., .. '""·

'

'""ll'" 1ttrtt fNI bfiJOOd((lll, '""'~ af! ltoP'I . Tn Vt

._,

Eliminate ouhidt noise w~th thi• AMJr,a dio'by,

••kl•toL iW~Ia~t(ll,o"' o!! u•••nol W~~•tn .t oi l...

hot lion , •~••tol.lttdtcl bp 01'11,...,. "'Ogl&gt;il ilt nl ..lw.C
ol you• lo-itt •t10•ol1 or ''"" f,., , No ftloQit'"
"'~ttt y O ~ j,jl, )'(I~ '" or tl&gt;e ~ft(l lfNI to kNr
unl'-ntly "PIIfOitd Utt to , l it;~htw.Ogh t ..,, , ;..:;_.
and "'" l ootr~plo•"• t or....,H• inctto.- y&lt;&gt;~&gt;r
ong &lt;u,..lurt, i.oll ro~ '""'' lan g h-1 ol ~~ng
wolho"' iml olion.

Triumph. Soft cushion ear pieces. Volun'fe control
and station selector , Keeps all outside noise ·
away from your reception : Ideal for adults, teen ·

DElUXE. 3"x5" 8 OHM
Speaker Cased in Vinyl
Wedge Shaped Hou s·

w.._,..

agers, or all ages.

ing.

HECK'S
REG.
$16.96

$

7-7

$488

·'

HECK'S REG.
$14.96

/

•

HICK'S lEG.

$6.96
WS-102

TIMEX

MEN'S·&amp; LADIES'
.

HECK'S

$~~?..

WATCHES

I

pock in case perinits shaving with·
out recharge. Racer fast "QUICK·
CHARGE." Sebring Green.

MV-3

•

f '
'\'
)j . ·.,

$2888

HECK'S
REG.
$18.88

, 200Jo OFF

\ ,·( - !_ .:. \
,, .
\
..

:-.··:

11'( .', · .:

SM-121 .

I

..

~

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Pl Pleasant Store

IIWRir 191.
'

.

RADIO BATTERIES

Extension Cord .
lncludeo: Jock • Plug

2 FOR 2t

$277
JEWELRY BOX
HECK'S .
REG.
$7.88

-

$488

NO. YJ

HECK'S REG. 29•, EACH

HECK'S

SYLVANIA

$117

HECK'S REG.

WITH SPEAKERS
HECK'S

1.27

DUAL 8 EDITOR-.VIEWER

·REG.

Simple, inexpensive, easy·tO· use ond attractive. This editor is made for Duo I
8 film formals . large Screen, built in film marker, focusing, framing 'controls'
and line.co.rd storage posts.
~,• •

559.88

I

•

'

NO. A-50

' YARD

Ingels Furniture
992-2635

;,- .

..

Pt Pleasant Sbe

STEREO TAPE PLAYER

FOI SOliS'I CAMDAS

Pl Pleasant Store Only

:HEC:.§~:3.96
8 TRACK

MAGICUBES
I'

•

On~

33 MM CAMERA·IIT

9-VOLT

30 FT. TELEPHONE
-,

GENERAL ELECTRIC

PORTABLE VAC

MFG. LIST PRICE

'. , ' . - . - ) I

•

FOR CAR STEREO .

'

SQUARE

I

110

HECK'S REG. $1 7.96

488 ,

1•

HECK'S REG. $84.96

RIVAL

K-320

Use with or without cord . Power

•

88

$
M·6B

HAIR SETTER

~ '

'

HECK'S REG. $74 .96

M.IST CONDITIO.NER

.

e f/1.5 lens • Wood· grained

vinyl ponels.

PROaOR
STEAM IRON

$1788

KODAK

SUPER 8MOVIE PROJECTOR

501 NYLON

• Boats
• RrereaUonaJ Vehicles
• Sporting·Equipment
o Vacation Information
• OnQ Hour Stage and Tank Shaw
·
o Stnte, Sectional, and Canadian Travel ' Exbiblts
Children Under

.

SHAVER

81181

l l.ll: .. ' • .•.

'ADMISSION

88

MAN'S CO~DLESS

·

:Prodaeea "' Bart Prod1ett-.

.

~9.!~e~im~~~~'~"

CLAIROL

nkal h1ndmadt Milk Glus thll wt'vlll'lf
11111. .We're 11111ots kllhow k to )IIU. HurtJ
fnl You11 find klll1 &amp;Ills for MIJ 'KCIIioA.

Shop Ingels before you buy. Buy
today, installed tomorrow by Ingels'
expert .craftsmen.

Sponsored by DisPa.tch Charities ·

SUPER 8 .

SUNBEAM

In Big Bend Area

Sports Vacation and Travel Show .

'

t•chnica l advances. COS E~ctric-Eye automatically ~dj111h
for a vor~tr of film ) including the new la1t color film de signed for low-light 1ituations. The 1oom len$ adch that pro-

_______.

A ltiW IIIJ,tlul )lilt ll!lvld If 1111

'Largest Supply In Stock

COLUMBUS

OUR WELRYDEPl

Pt Pleasant Store
.. On~

;j

Oakley Colllns and his family Springs Road.
Filing also on Thesday were
are deeply rooted in this area.
Parkersburg - 20 a 22 19- 69 He is a graduate of Ohio three Republicans and 12
Big Blacks·- 17 9 15 1a - 59 University, was an educator 19 Democrats for central com. mlttee posts.
Little Reds _ 16 7 19 17 _ 59 years, and with his ·brother,
Republicans were Clarence
Little Blacks _ 9 1a 6 6 _ 39 has opera ted the Collins Lawrence, Portland Precinct,·
- Mining Company several
WHS
18-23·!1-1~0 • ·
Jeanne Morgan, Middleport
Spencer 21-19-15-74
years.
Third; Otis' F. Knopp, Racine
He has served two years in Precinct.
Reserve Score-Spencer 42· the Ohio House of RepresenWHS 28
tatlves and is now completing
Qemocrats were Henry L.
his lath year . in the Ohio Hunter, North Chester;
Raymond H. Boatright, South
Se nate.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Che
In his present Senate post he
ster; Russell Well, Alfred;
DISCHARGES:
John
is
Chairman
of
the
Education
Chesler
W· Erwin, Middleport
Hussell, Mrs. Richard McDade
and daughter ; Mrs. James and Welfare Committee, and a· Precinct; Steve H. Eblin,
Henry and daughter, owen member of the Rules Com- Pomeroy Precinct; Francis
Watson, Randall Boles, Mrs. mittee, and Highway and Andrew, Long Bottom; Donald
Anna Jqingensmith, Millard Urban Affairs Conunittee. In R. Thomas, Pomeroy'Three-A;
Davis, Mrs . Hennon Potter, addition, he represents Ohio in Wilbert Barber, Ollvedale;
Mrs. Lora Brown, ·Mrs. Ira two national organizations, as Ernest A. Wingett, Racine
a commissioner t'n the Village; Dale R. Proffitt, Great
Potts and Karen Cowger.
Education Commission of the River; Donald B. ADen, Letart
Stales, and a member of the Precinct, and Hollie E. Green,
NOW YOU KNOW
Pomeroy First.
Figure skating on ice, now Council of Interstate Govern·
one of the major events of the ments..
.
Winter Olympics, was held ' Havm~
flll~d · many
during the Summer Olympics leadership roles m the Ohio
ol1908 in London.
legislature, his efforts for rural
Ohio
are
recognized
LOCAL TEMPS
throughout the State. Locally,
Temperature in downtown he is chairman of the
Pomeroy Wednesday at 11 a.m. Republican Executive Com·
was ~2 degrees under sunn'y mittee and a member of
skies.
several district civic and
fraternal

.

HECK'S REG. 59.88

\

FEB.'&amp;, WHILE

BELL &amp; HOWELL

HS-300

'

Mary Martin

D''R'YER

4p

4'%%
.

CARP.ETING~,

For

..

'

Meigs Co. Branch

Collins

until November) makes ifs

'

'

•

POINTVIEW: 992· 2505

•

•

Cage Scores

CALL

. ...

I' -

•

Love·

Bill Now Law

DANCE SATURDAY
Adance party will be held at
the Meigs Junior High School
from 8 to 11 p.m. Saturday,
sponsored by the Meigs Band
Boosters, wi\h the Jays as

.

-·

All Bank's Directors are Reelected

Nationwide's
Rates Down
Average 10%

.

·

Snow north, wet snowcentral
and rain south tonigh t,
BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
·Changing to snow or snow
ISRAEU NATIONAL RADIO SAID '1'9DAV the laraeU
Ourrles throughout the state as cabinet accepted aU. S. offer to initiate indirect talks with Egypt
it turns colder Thursday. Lows on reopening the SUez Canal.
·
tonight mosUy in the 305, ·
The radio quoted Foreign Minister Abba Evan as saying the
temperatures lowering to low cabinet made ils decision after hearing a report on the U.S. role
~by late .Thursday.
from Yitzhak Rabin, Israeli ambasSador to Washington. The
canal has been closed since the 1961Middle East War.
EXT~DED OUTLOOK
Oblo extended outlook
OOLuMBUS- SEN. GEORGE McGOVERN, D-S.D., today
Friday lbroiJilb SliDday
A told period Is Indicated was officially entered ·in the Ohio Democratic presidential .
with partly cloudy skies and primary with a state of delegates Jll!l(le up of "UtUe shots"
chance of snow flurries chosen in open caucuses. Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine has
THESE EIGUTMEN WERE REELEC'I'En to the board
Friday aad In northeast already entered and Sens. Hubert l!umphrey and Henry Jackson
lmlaon. '!bey artl ironithe ~ Horace Karr, MIIUiing D.
portion of lbe stale on of Washington were scheduled to enter before the deadline of 4 . of directors of the Pomeroy !'lalional Bahk 'IUesday af. Webster, Roger Martian, Dr. R. E. Boice, Eldon Weeks,
Saturday. Highs Friday .In p.m. today.
Alfred Ii:lberfeld ~nd Warren Pickens.
·· • ' ,
McGovern's nominating petitions were fUed by Robert B.
the 20s and from the teens
north to the low ZOs central McAlister, his state campilign chairman. ''Our slates, chosen in
aDd south portion Saturday open causes, are truly representative of a cross.aection of rank ·
and the coitstruclioq qf ~
, ' ·. ' I
and SUDday. Lows at night and file democrats," said McAlister. "Notable by their absence
baniling ho~ for the RuU.04,
from zero to 10 above.
are party 111111IDaries, past office holders _and traditionally un·
Edison Hobstetter, president They were Dr. lk E. Boice, and Eldon. Weeks,
· Branch in Rulla!1d. .
~
successful candidates.
. of the Pomeroy National Bank, Alfred M. Elberfeld, Edison
Present officers were also
The bank's ,totals lilt an all!:
reappointed.
time-high
of over $lji Qlillion ar~
said today all qirectors were Hobstetter, ·Horace Karr,
reelected at the annual Roger Morgan , Wanren ·They are Mr. Hobstetter the year-end. ·Dw?ng the yeat:
meeting 'IUesday afternoon., Pickens, Manning D. Webster, J)nlsident; jlepnis Keney, vi~ 1971, deposits intnased nearJJ(,
PRISON NAMED
president; Richard Chambers $2'4 million, he said.
~
COLUMBUS I UP I)
vice president; George Ho~ ' ;·- ....----·~-1
Officials annou~ced Tuesday
stetter,
vice president; Maxine
the new maximum security
. The Meigs County Senior
Grifli th, cashier;
Joan
prison at Lucasvllle which
Citize ns organization will
Harrison,
assistant
cashier;
wlll · replace the Ohio
present a program at 3 p.m.
The girls basketball squad at
For Southern, Pam Hill had L~ra K. ~ones, ·assistant ·
WITii INTERESt
Penitentiary will be named
Sunday at the Pomeroy United
Nationwide Mutual Fire Meigs High School dumped 10, Reese and West 4 each, and cas~ier; Richard Poulin, " '"
IS' A ·
.
the Southern Ohio Correc' Insurance Co. announce it will Southern Saturday 41 to 24. For
Methodist Church . The
Michael, Proffitt and Warner 2 assistant cashier; Marilyn Lc
SAVINGS ACCOUNT
tiona! faclllty.
program will include recent
reduce rates an average of 10 the winners, Debbie Ohlinger each.
Wolfe,
assistant
cashier
·
()pen a passbook ~vlngs
W. J. Wheaton, superin- pet: for homeowners coverage was high with 13, Sherrie King
color films on "National Parks,
account for your family ... ·
WiUiam
J.
Hobstetter,
branch
tendent of the new faclllty,
Our American Heritage ",
Meigs will play Satu,raay at manager and vice president,
thaf earns a top return with
for Ohio policy holders, P. J. had 9, Pat Harris a, Leanne
said lbe name will Pauley, local agent, reported Sebo 7, Mary Weyersmiller 2, Nelsonville at II a.m.
insured safety . Open• that
"The Holy Land," and Hans
· , and Edith K. Wllliamson
account with us for just a1
correspond
io
the
inChristian Anderson's "The
14 26 3:! 41 assistant branch manager. '
today. Nationwide Muturl Fire Sharon Cogar and Jane Meigs
few dollars. Your family
stitution's emphasis on is the second largest Thomas one each.
will love you for it.
Ugly Duckling.'~
Southern
2 10 15 24 Hobstetter also reported
modern concepts of training homeowners insurer in the
There will be a report from
You'il love o~r Passbook
progress being made on the
and
rehabilitation.
Rate, it's
the steering conunittee whose
state.
IOOth Anniversary celebration,
membership includes both
The reduction is effective
senior citizens and other
S
. tarv
Feb. I for new policies and
coon ty leaders pn the com- W'
March I for renewals.
,,
The Southeastern . Ohio
mittee's work in preparing and
Telephone rate increases
Dean W. Jeffers, president of
distributing a questionnaire lor
Nationwide, said a formal have been approved for the Telephone Co. will continue to · (Continued from page I)
senior citizens across the
request for the rate cut has Southeastern Ohio Telephone make the latest developments hopes, .and even greater ex,
county. Refreshments will be
COLUMims ·(UP!) - Gov. been approved by the Ohio Co., Coolville area, Richard R. in telephony available to its, pectations for this program.
served. All interested persons John J. Gilligan today allowed Insurance Department.
Myers, company president, customers in accord,nce with _ "Now it will be possible to
the company 's concern of assist individuals from the age
are invited.
legislation requiring able- . Jeffers noted that "like ~ther announced today.
Myers said that the new local quality cOmmunications equal group of 16 through 21 and
ilodied welfare recipients to · Insurance
compames,
work lor their relief checks to Nationwide had to seek a series rates approved by the Public to the finest anywhere, Myers above, who have previously
The Athen• County
said.
been denied training because
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
BILLS PAID
become Jaw without his of homeowners· rate increases Utilities Commission of Ohio in
296 Seccind St.
Routine business was con· signature.
in rece~t years to meet rapidly its order No. 36363 became Myers added that the service of other program limitations,"
Pomeroy,
Ohio
\mprovement
in
the
he
said.
effective Jan. 11, 1972. He
dueled including payment of
The bill, sponsored by Rep. '"~.reas1ng cla1?'s costs.
Ali Accounts Insured To
Crisp added, "Anyone
bills when Rutland Town Rodney H. Hughes, R·Bellefon- . · Loss expertence has now ftirther related that the Ohio Southeastern area totaled
S20,000.00
by FSLIC.
$708,000
in
1970
with
an
adwishing to apply for training in
Council met Tuesday night. . Iaine, would require relief re· Improved
for
several regulatory standards im·
Attending were Mayor Eugene cipients to participate in state categortes of homeowners pfemented' in the order are ditional $1 ,503,500 lor im· · this program should contact
Thompson and
Harvey and local work projects to earn pohcles and this Lmprovement consistent with the purposes of provement service being spent the Leading · Creek Con·
for 1971 and 1972. The last in· servancy District in Rutland or
•
•
Erlewine, Jim Fry, William their welfare checks.
enables Nationwide to reduce the Economic Stabilization Act
crease
granted
to
the
company
of
19iO.
~·A,·
1
~
the
Athens
office
of
the
Bureau
Brown, Ernest Nicholson, all
In refusing to sign the bill, rates for those policy owners,"
The new rate will be which serves a large portion of of Vocational RehabfUtation.
council members, and Vernon the governor said the ]egisla· Jeffers said.
.
.
eastern Meigs County was in
Weber, clerk.
ture had failed to finance con·
The rate reduction applies to reflected in Customers' 1961, it is reported.
siderable administrative costs all policy holders with in· .current bills ·along with an
of the proposal. He also said surance coverage of $14,000 or insert explaining the rate
Valanti~e's Day
CASES DISMISSED
he has been advised the con. more and to all holders of adjusiment, Myers reports.
Three cases dismissed in stitutionality of the nieasure is tenants ' -homeown ers in·
Flbnlary
14th
Meigs County Common Pleas questionable.
surance.
~.
t
• ·t
c;,ourt are Joy Mitchell versus
"This bill would require the
Reductions vary according
·•
(Continued from page I)
(Continued from page I)
Elmer ' 'Niitchell , Sterling expenditures of large amounts to the size 'of the policy. Rate
'
Gordon Neville versus Bonnie of state funds in terms of the cuts start at two percent for determined that southeastern class, the Pilllathea "Society ·
Lee Neville, and Yvonne Moore time required to administer the $14,000 policies and increase Ohio be equally recognized and and works with youth groups.
versus Marvin Moore.
programs, "Gilligansaid. "That gradually to a maximum of 20 considered as an important S~e is now serving her seventh
as part.time secretary for
money could be far better used pet. for policies providing for part of Ohio's future th(ough year
the church.
!his crucial period," he said.
to improve the administration $24,000 or more protection.
Senator Collins resides at . Mrs. Martin is married to
DANCE SET
of current welfare programs so
A10 pet. reduction will apply
1005
Kemp Lane, Ironton with Osby A. M~rtin and the couple
A dance will be held that we can spot welfare cheat· to all tenant homeowners
Saturday from a: 30 to 11:30 ers and get them off the rolls." policies. Nationwide estimates his wife Juanita, and two sons. has four married children,
p.m. at the Racine Junior High
When the governor neither thai more than half of its Ohio Clark is a second year law Linda Jones, Gallipolis; Frank
School with music by "Foxx", signs nor vetoes a bill within policy holders will benefit from student at Ohio State Kelton, Houston, Tex.;
University. Mark .Allen is a Patricia Wine, Cleveland, and
sponsored by the senior class of 10 days after it is sent to him, the reduction.
second
year student at Ohio Robert Martin, Alliance. The
Southem High School.
·
it
automatically
becomes
law.
University, Athens.
Martins reside on the Rock
'

Older Citizens
Free Planning Giving Program
Senice Here

.

I I
'

I

/

�I

.

"'

.

..... "

.

'~

,

.

SLEEPING
BAG

A 99

.HECK'S REG.$
' $6.99
..

No. 100

Pl Pleasant Store On~

. REEL

•j •

EVEREADY
..
' .

.

e Wide~ronge drag, se,uitive po~er selection.

e Self-lubricating gears run smooth, silent:
e Complete with premiu~ monofilament line.

6 VOLT LANTERN.

-'

WITHIAnERY

Heck's

· S]99 .

. ~eg.
1
12.97

HECK'S REG.

Red, White and Blue

:

FLASH BULB$ .. ·.

.• .

'

.

POCKET KNIFE
The handiest, most universal
tool made. This Precise pocket
knife comes with two blades.

··466
ss.gg

HECK'S
REG • .
$3.99

Pt Pleasant
Store On~

. ,.OQ

HECK'S REG.
. $1.29

HECK'S REG. 18.88

SPORTS DEPT.

BASKETBALL RIM

TAPE
IIWili'IDIPT.

IIWiliY DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $6.9«1

Pl Pleasant Store On~

KODACOLOR P.RINT

FILM

STACKING
BINS ·

25( •.•.·.·~

21&lt;
HECK'S lEG. 17' Each

HOI/SEWAII DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
39 1

I

PEARL DROPS

77e

49(

. DROPC~OTH

2 FOR
$10~

$100

'

TOOTH POLISH

HARDWAIE DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

$1.36
COSMETIC DEPT.

EXCEDRIN I'.M.
30's

-

Excedrin P.M.
'.. .

•

22

$

HECK'S REG.

1'

.,

88•
COSMETIC DEI'T.

IHECK'S REG. $1 •99

..

9 ....... 011411:
!lEG. OR HARD-TO-HOLD

68(

HECK'S REG.

~

$2.14
HOI/SEWARE DEPT.

HOI/SIWARE DEPT.

6.2 5

oz.

.66

.

SCOPE

REG. OR MENTHOL

c'

ir-l:
.....,.;
'

HECK'S REG.
HECK'S REG.

98'
COSMETIC /JEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$1.88

00

HECK'S REG.
$1 ;99
.

SHITS
IJII'T.

HECK'S .
REG. 51.38

1

HECK'S REG. ·
$1.19 .

.

5'x7'·' PLASTIC TARP

$100

HECK'S
$1.41

HECK'S REG.
$1.3i

~EG.

s1 00

SHITI /JII'T.

SHITS /Jli'T. ·

·GOLF BALLS

LARGE.SPOOL FISH LINE
6·1·1 0·15·20 POUND TIST

4 · FOR

2 FOR

$100

$100

HECK'S REG.48'
. .. ,. EA.

HECK'S lEG. 99' EA.

SI'OITS II'T.

SI'UTS DII'T.

'

TARGET

ARROWS

ASSOITIIi ~ENG THS ·

GUTMAN

HICK'S "Du SIZE

POCKET KNIVES

FLASHLIGHT BATTERIES

12 FOR

3 FOR

2PR~S]00
HECK'S REG. 9St .

.

$ ·1·00

s1oo ·

'

•'

,

TACKLE &amp;UTILITY'BOX ,

$100

$100
•'·

·'l

HECK'S IK. T054•EA.
1/WTIIPT.

..
1\,i

.

NAIIWAIIIJE,T.

$1.19

l

. 00

FILTER FUNNEL AID
TWOMAITLES

BEDROOM LIGHT FIXTURE

THERMAL OR
ATHLETIC. SOCKS .

1a oz~

EDGE PROTECTIVE SHAVE

FRICTION PROOFING .

COLEMAN

'MAGN
..FLASHLIGHT
HECK'S .. a
·
REG. .UP •
.TO '1.59
. Pt. Pleasant Store

' IIWII.IUII'I•

15 OZ. WYNN'S .

$1:00 ' :

BOTTLE ·

HECK'S REG.
$1.19

Pt. Pleasant Stcre_On_.~--+-'""·ll.•'•u·'"~r.-----·

IIAIIIWAIE /lilT.

HECK'S REG.
. $1.$2

BIN

. SJOO

'

PLUNGER

VACUUM

MOVIE REEL &amp; CAN ·

J'WIIli'T.

'

PINT PLAID

400 FT. DUAL 8

$ 00

CLOG BUSTER .

HECK'S REG. 11.03

SWING TOP .

94(

$100

2 FOR'

'

HECK'S REG.
69' EACH

HECK'S lEG. 24' EA.

00

FOR

· FESCO PLASTIC

BEN-GAY
GREASELESS-51'AINLESS

••

10-MINUTE
RA~IATOR FLUSH

FIRE LIGHTER~

.9'x.1 2' PLASTIC

MEMO
MINDER$

CHEFS
SKILL-IT

'I• OUNCE

:nor

PRESTONE

; ., IIWII.IY DEPT.

NAIDWAIIDE,T.

2.75 oz.

......

AUTOMOnVE DEI'T.

I •

1101/SEWAM DII'T.

Pl Pleasant Store On~

HOI/SEWA/11 DEPT.

ANTI-FREEZE

rn
•

AIITOMOTIVIIJI,T.

.

, IEWil,I~IJ.JtT.

8 ·FOR

Heck's Reg. 11.18

,

WINDSHIELD
WASHER

HECK'$ RIG. 99 1 EACH

HECK'S REG.
$1.19

. $1.09

EACH

NOUSIWARE DEPT.

CLOTHES PINS ·

GALLON

HECK'S REG.
$1.48

SJOO

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. $7.77

50 COUNT

AiiTDMOnVE DII'T.

' One-Step, Solvenl Cleaner

$1 ~00

FESCO PLASTIC

99

IIHSIWAM III'T.

AUTOIIOTIVIIJIPT.

0 TO FIT MOST CARS ·

600FT. 5" REEL
RECORDING TAPE

KODAKCX 126-12

SPORTS DEPT.

Fits neatly under the sink. Aconvenient sp~~tlisaver
that is ideal for storage of detergents and otne,r
cleansing items.

HECK'S
REG.
$2.04

. SJOO

·-;;:;;.

.... ~..........

SUNSET

HECK'S REG.
$3.99

STORAGE CABINET

sru..

BRME
FWIO

HECK'S REG •..89' EACH

. $100

HECK'S REG. 39' EACH

2 for

HECK'SREG.
51' lach

180°

HECK'SREG.
79'

.

AUTO 'THERMOSTATS

$100

·$ 88

DOWN-UNDER

3Pc.SAUCE PAN SET

3.F0~1 OO

2 FOR

TARP

BRAKE
FLUID

·.·HAND CLEANER

HECK'S
REG. '1.34

5SIDED PHOTO CUBE

10 OZ. 6 FT. X 8 FT.

$

SPORTS DEPT.

COLUMBIAN ENAMEL

2FOR

·.··.· "'''· &lt;; ·····

Pl Pleasant

150Ft. 33/dNCH

12 Ounc•

D&amp;L

ENGINE a.EANER

. $100

.

Available in Avocado color.

I POUIDCAI

GUNK

IIWiliiY IJII'T. ·

Heck's Reg.

ASH TRAY OR COASTIR

16 oz.

$4.48

SCHRADE 2-BLADE .

BASK DB ALL

SYLVANiA

e TotQIIy salt waterproo~, maintenance-free

L

Pt Pleasant Store Only

KENT .

10 To·9

ZEBEO 909

'

HECK'S REG; $42.99

SPOITS DEPT.

$gas

Heck's Reg. s7.99

...

.

COLEMAN

$3588

SPOITS DEPT.

ZEBCO 33 REEL

99

• "'

... .,

tesf new hooter in: the Colomon line. Adj~stoble
from 5000 to 8000 BTU's of portable comfort.

ue .•. by Coleman.

.

~

8000
BTU HEATER
This is tho Model 5.15A704 O.lu•o "Cat" ... hot-

No jug anywhere kHps o gallon
cool or warm longer and pro vide! as much style, and g~rod
looks ond dependability for the
price .. . as this eueptionol val-

$

~

.......,

tO TO, .

GA

•••

..

_..,

10 TO 9

HICK'S REG.•

'

!

.......,

'

.

.

"' ~

HECK'S REG.
TO .$1 .44 EACH

.

.

HECK'S REG.
12 4 IACH

SIWTSIJII'T. •

�'

,

-

'

-.

'

.

I

~-

OPII:IAI.Y

_ua,

10 TO 9

10 TO 9 .

PRICES II EFFECT THROUGH

Y, FEB. 6, WHILE QUAmTIES LAST..
'

..

v•rsotil8 HUSK'!: tpol Mt gual-onteu p lifetime of too ~rlormt;mct .
Jdeol for o ! l . and o~1o "'ointen~~· and o perlec:t odditiofl to
'
·
· \')
1 the trailer or bOat!
·,• ...

,.

'

'

.

4

Top

3 PACKS ·

TOILET
TISSUE
2 ROLLS nil PACK
4 PACKS
.

/$ 100

$100

( 12 ROLLS)

$100
HECK'S REG.
33'

HECK'$ REG.
49' Pack

DI~T.

'

,.
· 30QUART

.
·
.
W
ASTE
BASKET
· - FLORAL DESIGN

$100

.

HECK'S REG.

'

HECK'S REG.
41 1 Each

4 -IN PACK .

. DISHIPAN
$JOO

MUSHROOM DESIGN

2PACKS

SJ·oo

13 QT. PAIL

HECK'S REG.

$1.42

$1.4'2 '

s

ASSORTED COLORS

$JOO
. 1

140Z.

~~~~ii

DIAL

12 TITLES

4 FOR

ANTI-PERSPIRANT

$100

REG.
39' Each

HECK'S REG. $1.88 Each ·

TOY IJ,T.

COSMETIC IJEPT.

15 oz.

11.5 oz.

DIAL

SHAMPOO

2 FOR
·.

'\

$100

~

.......,,

.

[Vita lisI
" "'

. ..

- .. .....

$1.58

--

••

/IDISEWA.E
IEPT.

.

PLASTIC STRIPS SO's

.

~~

2FOR

SJOO
HECK'S UG. 73 1 Each

~

)

.

IOLL-01 DEODORAIT

2 FOR

IIAHWARE DEPT• ...._,_,

HECK'S REG.

.•-·

-. -

REG.
791 Each

.

..

• PLATINUM PLUS

SJOO

$100 .

HECK'S REG. 88 1 Ea~h

HECK IS REG 84 1 EACH

1

.'

s. .

''

these the finest seat covers you con buy. These covers fit
a s th ough they were built right into the cor. Tl1e beouti·
ful styling. and protection of these popular se.o t covers
of~er years of comfort and. elegance. For split or solid

bock.

•

s

ssoo.,
•r.

LATE:X·.. :,.'

' . ~T WALL p~INf :·
.

..

ECK'SREG.$2.9t1At~;"

.

IIAIIIWAII

CAIMAn

\

1·piece vinyl auto rug set for front and rear. Fits mo1ot
cars . Choose from wide assortment of color1o.
·

$3.22 n:;;;n
REAR •• J$2.66

FRONT •••

'

HECk'S .
RE~.

HECK 'S JIEG.

TO $4.99

$4.99

AUTOMDTIVEDIPT.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

. PRESTONE

SEALER&amp;
STOP LEAK

·With 54" Lead Wire,
'

'

WRENCH

Ideal for todoy's high pressure c~oling systems.

2 FOR

•

$2.9~

0

.

SJOO

HECK'S REG.
'

Allt'DMOTIVE IJEP,T.

12

oz.

PRESTONE

LEE OIL FILTER

(

HECK'S REG. 74' EACH'

'AIITDMDTIVI IJEjlf.

•
;

~ VIN~L

Of the fine st nylon and foam construction that makes

.

. HICK'S IEG.,, a·a• EACH

- -

'

. '

--- SJOO ·

FOAM

SEAT COVERS

AIITDMOTIVEDIPT.

·BATH OIL BEADS

2JOR

2CALLOIS

. TE

HECK'S R.EG.
77'

Ea sy to in•talt. Ideal for better reception .

SOFTIQUE.·

·~to:! .

• IIA.DWARE DEPT.

.· 38(

AUTO ANTENNA
170Z.

'

II "btllot• b~~ " ot Hftk't , , , ri&gt;DCIIIt•ftltn "'&lt;'d"ft (Gtotl J)lut. 1-'9 ..,.;... , ift tt.io

SU~:~::DRY .5222

CARBURETOR
CLEANER

"

COSMETIC

WALL PAINT
.

'

SNAP

AIITDMOTIVE DEPT. .

$1.39

.

IIA.IIWA•E DEPT.

'·

RIG.

.

VINYL LATEX

PINT

HICK'S

.

ltECK'S . ·

25LBS. '

AUTOMOTIVIIJEPT.

Ta $2.38

·-HECK'S REG.

·GILLETTE.BLADES
5
2 FOR

IIAHWARE IJEPT.

:.~:;;:~~ ~':: ::'.:~ -~ ~=~:

oz.

2 FOR' ~. ~ECK'S

$100

.-

$2.99

MOTOR
OIL
6 PACK HD 01 REGULAR

TOOTHPASTE

WITH IIEI DEIIDGIAIT

5GAL CAN

PRI~tPENN

·PEPSODE,NT

HAl KARATE
AFTER SHAVE

.

.,

Comes in. a .5 Gallon can. 'rhe mos t idea l point for your
bos.emenf. · ·

$4.97

•

~UZZLES.

6.75

$4.99

HARDWARE
DEPT.

NAIDWAIE DEPr. "'==~

HECK'S REG.

HICK'S RIG. 62' lac"

40Z.

I .

48 '

OLD ANCHOR PAINT

HECK'S REJ&gt;. $1.79

~

I 00 PC. JUVEIILE .
500 PC. ADUL1

2 FOR
SJ 00

S]~!...

HECK'S
REG.

$1.38

88'

COSMETIC IJEPT.

$p6

BAN ·

&gt;

~

PICTURE PUZZLES

HECK'S REG.
78 1 Each ·

HECK'S REG.

1.5 oz.

BAND-AID BRAND,

REG. '

~"(~

o1h11 .. ., n .,.,,..,, o1 on ,
1u1pmad

p~aKIMfr

HECK'S
REG.

GALLOI

"

••

SCORE
2FoRs 1oo

COSMmt
J

....

~

HECK'S REG. $1.29 Each

·~

. HECK'S

s.. 39 .

.-•......
'

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
38' YD.

,,.,,

VITALS
$JO

'

,/

.,. .. , '"''"

1~11 ""'- &lt;ool , paon l ·~ . . "";;;~~,.:=:
1h.o ot ~tnong Compo•~ £C• S

88&lt;.

t.

.Aim FREEZE

$,00

DIY COITIDl' FOI HA.

~~00
HECK'S

LAUNDRY
BASKET
FLORAL DESIGN
.,

NOIISIWAII

70Z.

e.,t "'

on ~

DOW

~.

IIDISEWA•E
. IJEPT.

GIANT COLORING BOOKS

the
thr &amp;e ,t ' '""' 14t(~'" Ov~lo!r '"~'
wpll ""'"'' ,.,.,,lobi• '" o ... ;,jt Ht~lion of dtco·
oot&lt;:u 1hn~•
J'lul .. h.tn, to '"" on1ont\
lo••• · lh" ... .,n tO&lt;I I•n&lt;;~ ,,.,.,. m"" ~alo" wilh

·I

$100

4 YDS.
$1.39

An e~~ee llent rust

PREMIUM WALt PAINT

MASKING TAPE

preven tive .

4~

PLASTIC

ADHESIVE
PAPER

$1.58

32 az.

HECK'S

.. lf•INCH

}

. MAGIC COVER

HECK'S REG.

SPRAY
ENAMEL

.

'

,, ~ .
AITDMDTIVE DEPT.

NDUSEWAM IJ9T.

HECK'S REG.

60Z.
DURO

LIQUID
PLUMR

HECK'SREG • .
$1.99 GAL.

HECK'S REG. $1.39

HECK'S REG.
331 EACH

'HECK'S REG.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

'

BUBBLE LAMPS -

$· 00

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
'-77• Pack

-

ASSORTED SIZES .

$1.18

. ZEREX
-·
ANTI-FREEZE

•

FLORAL DESI'I

FLOiAL DESIGN l

HICK'S REG.
.
991 .

''·

$1.58

FESCO PLASTIC

.

CREAM'WAX

, IIAIIJWAII HPT. .

'

FESCO fLASTIC

SCREWDRIVERS
.

HIGH GLOSS
.
. '

HECK'S REG. $6.99

•

aVERAGE GLASSES

·.

'

ss•a

HECK'S REG.

$1.58

DIPf.

-

,t'

$JOO

Pow erf ul l V.. HP motor handl es tougre s t jobs with
eo~e . Wri:lp·oround sturdy steel sho·e f •• r added &amp;up·
port. b:hou ~ l kee p s s.awdusl away from cuttin_g line.

--· , _..

HAIDWAIE '

SQIIEGEE·SCRAPER

Ideal to have in the h"me or ga·
rage.

ideal tarcM. kh for home, auto, 1hop ,
lorm - ollthe wonted o w~'uo rie s - 1·alid
~i..ou pencil llome bu rn er unit , fu,l &lt;yHode.,
tlame spreader , $oldering tip , blow to
head, 1porlt lighter. Complete
handsom e trJame .. d Jlultool che1t. ·

$ 00

36QT. W~STE
BASKET

.:;: -.~

NAIIJWA.E DEPT.

BERNZ-0-MATIC ,
KIT

4 ROLLS

· FESC:O

'

..

JUMBO TOWElS

FESCO PLASTIC

'

REG.
$14.66

HARBrtAJE
•

.HECK'S REG.
33 1 PACK

fo r one hand con·

II nosHuh, r i p ~ . !.crolls,

HECK'S

HECK'S REG. $8.88

(8 ROLLS)

POWER-SAW

no tches - e~e t1 moke i it~ own
starling hole, e Th umb ~wi tc h
fo r 11uick ON -OFF con trol •
Rom speed ~000 ~ trol.;e s pe r
minu te.

·

.

hondl~t

SOFt~WEVE

BATHROOM
TISSUE
4 ROLLS IN PACK
.

BOXES

. I

SABRE·SAW

BLACK&amp; DECKER

f; 81i ghJ alum inUm l in·i~h •• .
110) •

handyman 1s worksttop. Wetr ba'loftced and comfortable. ( # 7000)

McGRAW EDISON

,.

,Great gen~ral purpose drill for all ~aterials. A fine
first tool for any man's home or an ideal addition too

' 200COUNT

•••

..

'

Packed in HUSKY'.S 'poc:e·o9e, compOIIifterJfeil plastic tool box, this

%".DRI·LL

SCOTTIES FACIAL TISSUE

. ·. .

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

. .

· . ll PC. soon sn

..

.

.

FAMILY SCOTT

'

lOW THROUGH SUI DAY, FEB. 6, WHILE QUAIITinES LAST
BLACK &amp; DECKER

•

.

•

I

. RUST
UOR

.. .

•'~
'

HECK'S REG. 99'

.,'

$100
'

AIITOMDTIVE
· · IJEPT.

.

HECK'S
REG.
74 EACH
'
.
1

AITOMDTirE •r.

uoz.
'

�...

. .... .

.

.

•

'

'

.

•

I
.17-ftleDIIIJSe•••..,~MJ''sput-P-.,,o., Feb. 2, 1m

Teresa Ferguson to ·Wed Strip Mining is Helping Lake Pie.d mont
Steven ·Fields February 11

-UI.Y'

·OPHIAILY
10 T0 .9

'

10TO 9

r

CADIZ, Ohio - Believe it or'
· oot - strip mining 18 helpinq
curlaii deadly acid pollution of
Piedmont Lake.
. For sometime now concern
has been made public, either
by the news media or word of
mouth that Piedmont Lake is
dooll)ed dpe to strip mining at
its southern headwaters.
.The News-Herald made an
Investigation of· the· area and
interviewed top personnel In
the COI!llndustry as well as the
·. State Health Dept. and
Muskingu'!' Watershed
, District to come up with the
following Information:
Oddly as It may seem, strip
mining ill actually helping to
limit the acid pollution of the
lake,
Ralph Hareh, president of
Hanna Coal, whose company .is
just one of four operating In the
headwaters of the lake, said, "I
.am more concerned with silt
than lam with acid pollution."
Hanna Coal's stripping
operation is known
"Egypt
Valley" and at the present
· state of economics has a life
expectancy of 15 to 20 years.

M~.

and Mrs. John T.
Fer(uon , of New Haven,
ilnnounce the enelll!ement and
· forti!\.-Gmlng !ftdcllng of tbelr
, ,9ull!ter, Teresa, to Mr.
. Sth!l!l Fiflds, 8011 of Mr. and
Ml1, ~I Fields of Harlford. '
The marrl!ige :will be
aOiemniled Febniary II at the ·
New llmll United Methodist
· :Churi:h. The Rev. William '
OeMoie will · read the
Cel M~y and Wedding musiC
: will ~ played by Mlia Sherry _

PRICES IN

.

~

.

M.; F*R\iaon

h&amp;s

'

asked

'.)1111 Marilyn · Gibbs . to

Never Ending
Song of Love
DJCKEYLE~

Sounds of today by Grass Roots,
Three Dog Night, John Denver,
Charlie Pride, Freddy Hart
Steppen Wolfe and Dickey .l ,e.e

SPECIAL GROUP

ALSO AVAILABLE.
ON ~8 TRACK TAPES

1111 111•111R • IIIYIU . . · 1111 ....

1i

IIIII l rMLIIII !TAll· Dill MS · liYir lWII
Tllrlll.llll

MORE
GOLDEN

.....

Gfd5§
he

it~

.$

•

RETAIL VALUE
$5.98

\

SPECIAL GROUP

The latest and greatesi ."Sale Priced" at Heck's.

0

Save on selections by Alice Cooper, Grand Funk

r

Railroad, Freddie Hart and "All In The Family,"

•

at Heck's and Save.

$

Inn. Her guests were employes

'

•

.

•

ALSO AVAILABLE ON 8TRACK TAPES

SELL v·ouR· DON'T
NEEDS
.
.

1

WITH A
.BARGAIN .QFFER
-

1
I
I

$ 00

~~

.

Zeigler said, "stripping In
the area -Is neutralizing the
acid by breaking up the earth
and limestone. "
As · for 'silt, Zeigler also

showed·concern. He said there
is definitely a large area of
land uncovered north and sOuth
of 1-70. Not all of this Is by
stripping as l~e highway
construction also provides a
means of silt to get Into the
streams. However, as yet
Zeigler said he had not

I
1
1
I
I .
I
I
I
I
1
1
I

00N'T WAIT
MAll youR
AD NQw~

I

Phone - - - - -

City

MAIL TO:

THE
. DAILY SENTINEL
.

· PomeniJ, OhiD

·MEAT .LOAF MIX
(BEEF &amp;PORK)
·2 lbs.
50
OIOICE

. •••••••••••••••••••••.

AFTER

CAMDEN "Double Ploy" ,

Boots

Nice 'N Lite

YOGURT............ !.~~-2 for 49'

Nice 'N li1e

DIP •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I oz. 29' ·

(At th1 Girl I love)

with Chet

TH[ ORIGIUL RfCOROI!GS BY

Randolph

and

BEEF UVER

many more.

I'm Throwing Rite

Relaxin'

•nd .,..., f•~~e~rlmlly

EOO'f ARNOLD

FAIRMONT

€·•··'•")

GLENN
MILLER
UO HIS ORCH.

Sliced
Per lb."'

*

SPECIAL GROUP

Hurry!

44

I
I
I
1
1
I
I

· from Mancini, Como,

CHET ATKINS

. more.

COTTAGE CHEESE ....... !~.~~·. 29'
Nice 'N Lite HOM. MILK ....... ~!.~~~.2 for .89'
Nice 'N Lite CHOC. M'ILK ............ ~.~~I; 49~
Nice •N Lite I.C
. E. M
..IlK
,,., ge r. 69'

Stereo Albums. Choose

Instrumentals,

Country and Western and

I
I

'

lll Court St

. .

..

Select group of RCA

Topes. Included ore Show
Tunes,

I1

I
I
Ad! Please Print. Use One Space For Each Word 1
1
1
1
I
I
I
I1
Nome
· • •·
. ...., .. ' '"'"" I
Address
1
1

11 Write

Nice 'N Ll!e

.

assortment of 8 Track

1

0

Let's get with it . . . enjoy your
calorie watching with Fairmont
Nice 'N Lite Lowfat Dairy Products.

..

Choose from a wide

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

water analysis at the Piedmont I
reservoir showed a P.H. of 4.3. I
· . .
•
The Dept. of Health engineer 1
said when the P.H. is helow 4.5 1
you can expect. a fish kill.
I
If the P.H. In water Is 7 it is
··
·
neutral. Anything above 7 is I
alkaline, anything below is I
acid. Sulphides also appear in I
the water, but this will not kill , I .
..
vegetation or fish.
I
TO QUALIFY FOR THIS SPECIAL LOW RATE,
He went on to say that a I .
. Ad mu~l be pland by an indi'lidi.IOI • Cancellation privit.get when...
dormant deep mine south of I- I . Ad mu\1offer good\ lor sole
not 0 bulintu
·\IIIII or• obtoirwd
70 flows d' -Uy into Stillwater I
S. llin'illor $?5 or under
• Ad muil rema in un&lt;hong•d for
• $1 minimum chor;~ .for I 0 dopt
0110
Creek, ;n~.. of the major .~-·-P-ri&lt;_
.. ..,•• _~··-··-~_·"_."r;~o"'_·_rin_•_'_..;'.;."'.;..;.' - - - - - - - · - · - " ' - '- - - - - - streams feeding Piedmont.
During dry weather, he
Yo~r
commented, the acid water
from this mine supplies I
practically all .the water In this · I

. Beginning To Show?

·RCA CAMDEN ALBUMS
BOOTS RANDOLPH

I
I
I
I
I
1
1
1

FAM ILV WANT AD

I

·Those Christmas Pounds

RETAIL VALUES '6.95

SPECIAL
GROUP

I1

•

I1

I

.

,

cAsH?

PRAQTICAL SUGGESTIONS FOR WEIGHT WATCHERS!---

$46.6

. Rail

··

I
1
1I
1

...

RETAIL VALUE$5.98

8 TRACK TAPES

Piedmont
If
proper
rtclamatlon II dane.
Hanna Coal has already
begun reclamation of territory
now st'ripped by the big shovel,
the Gem of Egypt.
It is certain the publlc.cP,n be
assured a constant orl!r- '
veillance of pollution, not only
by acid water but sill as well,
will be C\inUnued as long as
strip mining remains. Reprinted from the Harrll!on
News Herald, Cadiz.

NEEo· /.Ex·TRA

---'"---· _ _ _ years ago. "This Is wh4jre·l)lost
of the acid flow into the lake
. HAS DINNER PARTY
originates," be said.
Miss Marguerite Meyer
In fact, Zeigler pointed out
entertained Tuesday night with thai in November of 1966,
a dinner party at the Meigs before stripping even began,
of her shoe store, recenUy sold

Tire same can be true lor

r•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

de:'·!~~~y~~~
.. ~~~ti~~t :!~~~·d!~m~~!~of:
will give off acid. However, at lake that were sealed many

•

66

ANNE MURRAY
GLEN CAMPBELL

•s

to Mrs. David Ohlinger: their
.husbands, and several friends.
'
In Ute group were Mrs. Ralph
· Walter Meinhart Of lluntington Died on Tuesday
Poston and Mrs. William
••
Grifflih, Columbus; Miss Sybil
. Waller J. Meinhart, 72, of331 the C. K.. Oxley Clothing Store club playground in Huntington Ebersbach, Mrs. Doris
lOib Ave., Huntington, W.Va., during his career. He ·also was and obtaining !lCIUipment used Rinehart, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
formerly of Pomerqy, died vice president of the Ross to check lhe eyesight of Goegleln, Mr. and Mrs. David
Tuelday at his bome.
Huntington school children.
Concrete Co.
Ohlinger, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. Meinhart was·born April
He was a past president of
A graduate of the Booth Charles LyUe.
21, 11191n Pomeroy, the son of the Huntington Uons Club In Business College, Mr .
the late . Ewndell and Eva 1945 and 1946 and helped Meinhart is survived by his
Schoenleln . Mell)hart. He organize the first Uons club wile, Ethlyn Long Meinhart; a
WATsONS CONFINED
located In Huntington In 1921, Halloween party in Hun- sister, Mrs . Guy Martin,
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Watson
~ a grocery store and tington , He was Instrumental Lancasrer, Ohio, and several
are both confined to their home
becoming credit manager of in obtaining land for the Uons nieces and nephews:
In Racine. Mr. Watson was
Funeral services will be beld returned· home from the
at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Pleasant Valley Hospital
Kllngel-Carpenter Funeral Tuesday after a confinement
Fred Dunfee Sr. Died on Tuesday
Home In Huntington with the there for several days. Sunday
Fred D. Dunfee, Sr., 56, two sisters, )Irs. Dana (June) Rev. Mack Thomasson of- evenlhg Mrs. Watson fell on the
formerly of Rutland, died Hysell, Grove City, and Mrs.' ficlating. Burial will be in ice and fractured her right
Tuelday morning at his home Nathan (Bette) Biggs, Beech Grove Cemetery at shoulder.
In ~ly.
P~roy, and two brothers, Pomeroy. Friends may call at
!
l~: JuJy, 7, ..l8~1f!:!~r~ Harold of Middleport and the funeral home any time
bi\~tlieaonoflfie~~tenuya ~~ Ot Westerville. · ·• irteH Jl'ln. todliy. '
•
LOCKS CLOSED
!IDd 'Ounet· Dunfee. Two
Funeral Services will be held
' 17 ELECI'IIOCUTED
SAULT
STE, MARIE, Mich.
brotben also preceded him in at 2 p.m. Thursday at the . HILMAR, Calif. (UPJ.) _
death.
McCurdy Funeral Home In · Seventeen dairy cows were (UP!) -The Soo Locks closed
Survlvlng .are his wife, the · Beverly. Mllltary services will · electrocutedberewhenashort- following the passage of the
locolel' Irene Pblppa; a son, be held at the Waterford circuit occurred 1n a motor Enders M. Voorlrees Tuesday,
Fred, Jr., of Lowell; a Cemetery !'here Mr. Dunfee operating a fann's milking ending the longest iron ore
shipping season in history.
dal!llhler, Paulilie,
equipment.
. at home; will be burled.

RETAIL VALUE
$6.95

SPECIALLY PRICED·ROCK FAVORITES

be . her . mald"Df-honor .
.. The groomsman's honor
attendant will be Milton-"
,. Tennant, Open church will be .
· obuned and a ~pUon will
follliW 1In the church social
room lnunedlately aftter the
.ceremony. The · couple will
~ ·tbelt hOme In Burdette
. Addltloa,, Point .Pleasant.
Mlia Ferguion Is a 19'10
K!'iduate of Wal\ama High ·
School where she was a
majorette an!l a member of
the Wahama Band. At the
present time she Is a secretary
in the ' office of Lakin State
Hospital. Mr. Fields also Is .a
1970 graduate of Wahama
High School where he excelled
In baa~etball and other
atbletics. He Is an employe of
the Federal Morgul in
GaUipolls , Ohio,

Aanna Coal we take steps to discovered any sanjlbars cbmpleted in 1938, The lake
neutralize the acid before. 11 building up and belielled !hal was built for flood control but
gels into the lake."
with proper reclamation has grown into a fine
Hanna Coal ··IB making u- silll!.tion could be cootrolled. recreation facility.
tensive 'l'ater analysis In the
Raymond lckle,. executive
Questioned as to. the life
streams that feed Piedmont secretary of the Muskingum expectancy of Piedmont Lake,
lake. Tire company all!o QSes a · Watershed Conserv·ancy the MWCD official said, "il is
two-pit system where the water District, said the MWCD was probably in the hundreds of
from the number 9 pit ·is concerned with pollution of the years."
·leached thro1111h earth Into the lake and was working wit!)
He said .a survey by the
number 8 pit and then through Hanna Coal on control and Corps of Engineers of Leesville
more earth before it flows Into surveillance of this problem. Lake show it to have a life. of
tlie streams.
Ickle said
Piedmont well over 1000 years. lckle said
Hareh commented that !be reservoir, as well as all the tree planting on the shore has
company hopes to curtail silt lakes in the MWCD was :increased the life of Leesville.
as much as possible by construction of careh basins where 1
·
the water can set idle until the 1
:li ~
.
sediment is gone, and then flow 1
into the feeding streams. One
such careh basin will be built I
\ · ·I
. .. .
.Inside the railroad loop at the I
\__../ ·
Egypt Valley loading dQI!k.
I
As for the pollution problem I
of the lake, George E. Zeigler, I
an engineer with the Dept. of 1
Health, shed more light here. I
Mr. ~igler conducts state 1
. .
water sample . tests at 12 or I
more sites along the streams
·
that feed the lake.
I
"Our biggest problem is I
dormant deep mines," said I

RATH'S

.

• Jv-r~

1

'.

v

•

JIM REEVES

RETAIL VALUE

lin_, I Tftltl t'a,. l .tllf'l,r
'f ll•l II,Off. t'-.u!

$2.98

'•

1
I

'

I

'

,

SAVIN&amp;S

-VALUES AT

$239
6
·
$
1·
CHEESE DINNER......
COFFEE .........................:.. .. .
3
$1
10
.rPEACHES..............,
TOILET TISSUE......
6
s·
AP.PlE SAUCE........... .
AERO WAX .....................
,
g•
3
,
$1
4
WNcHE~N LOAF...... !:s~.
DISTILLED WATER .........
kraft Macaroni

and

.

boxes

·stoktly

.

'

.

,

~·"•

·

303

LUC~Y Luf

~~~

Rons·sg~

Georgi.an

for

•

0

Shines and Proteds

27

'

oz.

~~.~..

cans

BIHmore Brand

u;.

3

·

No. ·2,12

1'....

.

Folger's CAll Grinds)

71/z ·oz.

Pure and Sparklina

·

·

gal.

?~.'.~.
...

•

.•

3 lb.

$239

Canned P1cn1cs . ~.~~.
c~. 99~
W1eners .....................~.~!:... .

...

GOOD 'II' COIIWTIY

•

39~

g~

~

FRENCH CITY 20

PROJ)UCE DEPT. SPECIALS!

Ieiah~ Potatoes•• ! 0 79~
1

·lb.

Large Golden Ripe .

.

'

1

o~

Bananas ••• ~ ••••••~
POT.AJOES "8' size 50 $ 49
1

••••••• •• lbs,

PAN ROLLS
'
4

BAKERY
FEA TUR El Be1sy Ross

FOR

5th and PEARL STS., MaNE
"The Store With AHeart;
You, WE li.KE" .
Hight reserved to limit quantities
We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food .Stlmps
Prices Effective Feb. 2-9

· MondaY Tbrti Friday
9:00 to 7:00

s.tll!diY 9 to 9
CLOSED SU.NOAYS

•

�...

. .... .

.

.

•

'

'

.

•

I
.17-ftleDIIIJSe•••..,~MJ''sput-P-.,,o., Feb. 2, 1m

Teresa Ferguson to ·Wed Strip Mining is Helping Lake Pie.d mont
Steven ·Fields February 11

-UI.Y'

·OPHIAILY
10 T0 .9

'

10TO 9

r

CADIZ, Ohio - Believe it or'
· oot - strip mining 18 helpinq
curlaii deadly acid pollution of
Piedmont Lake.
. For sometime now concern
has been made public, either
by the news media or word of
mouth that Piedmont Lake is
dooll)ed dpe to strip mining at
its southern headwaters.
.The News-Herald made an
Investigation of· the· area and
interviewed top personnel In
the COI!llndustry as well as the
·. State Health Dept. and
Muskingu'!' Watershed
, District to come up with the
following Information:
Oddly as It may seem, strip
mining ill actually helping to
limit the acid pollution of the
lake,
Ralph Hareh, president of
Hanna Coal, whose company .is
just one of four operating In the
headwaters of the lake, said, "I
.am more concerned with silt
than lam with acid pollution."
Hanna Coal's stripping
operation is known
"Egypt
Valley" and at the present
· state of economics has a life
expectancy of 15 to 20 years.

M~.

and Mrs. John T.
Fer(uon , of New Haven,
ilnnounce the enelll!ement and
· forti!\.-Gmlng !ftdcllng of tbelr
, ,9ull!ter, Teresa, to Mr.
. Sth!l!l Fiflds, 8011 of Mr. and
Ml1, ~I Fields of Harlford. '
The marrl!ige :will be
aOiemniled Febniary II at the ·
New llmll United Methodist
· :Churi:h. The Rev. William '
OeMoie will · read the
Cel M~y and Wedding musiC
: will ~ played by Mlia Sherry _

PRICES IN

.

~

.

M.; F*R\iaon

h&amp;s

'

asked

'.)1111 Marilyn · Gibbs . to

Never Ending
Song of Love
DJCKEYLE~

Sounds of today by Grass Roots,
Three Dog Night, John Denver,
Charlie Pride, Freddy Hart
Steppen Wolfe and Dickey .l ,e.e

SPECIAL GROUP

ALSO AVAILABLE.
ON ~8 TRACK TAPES

1111 111•111R • IIIYIU . . · 1111 ....

1i

IIIII l rMLIIII !TAll· Dill MS · liYir lWII
Tllrlll.llll

MORE
GOLDEN

.....

Gfd5§
he

it~

.$

•

RETAIL VALUE
$5.98

\

SPECIAL GROUP

The latest and greatesi ."Sale Priced" at Heck's.

0

Save on selections by Alice Cooper, Grand Funk

r

Railroad, Freddie Hart and "All In The Family,"

•

at Heck's and Save.

$

Inn. Her guests were employes

'

•

.

•

ALSO AVAILABLE ON 8TRACK TAPES

SELL v·ouR· DON'T
NEEDS
.
.

1

WITH A
.BARGAIN .QFFER
-

1
I
I

$ 00

~~

.

Zeigler said, "stripping In
the area -Is neutralizing the
acid by breaking up the earth
and limestone. "
As · for 'silt, Zeigler also

showed·concern. He said there
is definitely a large area of
land uncovered north and sOuth
of 1-70. Not all of this Is by
stripping as l~e highway
construction also provides a
means of silt to get Into the
streams. However, as yet
Zeigler said he had not

I
1
1
I
I .
I
I
I
I
1
1
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00N'T WAIT
MAll youR
AD NQw~

I

Phone - - - - -

City

MAIL TO:

THE
. DAILY SENTINEL
.

· PomeniJ, OhiD

·MEAT .LOAF MIX
(BEEF &amp;PORK)
·2 lbs.
50
OIOICE

. •••••••••••••••••••••.

AFTER

CAMDEN "Double Ploy" ,

Boots

Nice 'N Lite

YOGURT............ !.~~-2 for 49'

Nice 'N li1e

DIP •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I oz. 29' ·

(At th1 Girl I love)

with Chet

TH[ ORIGIUL RfCOROI!GS BY

Randolph

and

BEEF UVER

many more.

I'm Throwing Rite

Relaxin'

•nd .,..., f•~~e~rlmlly

EOO'f ARNOLD

FAIRMONT

€·•··'•")

GLENN
MILLER
UO HIS ORCH.

Sliced
Per lb."'

*

SPECIAL GROUP

Hurry!

44

I
I
I
1
1
I
I

· from Mancini, Como,

CHET ATKINS

. more.

COTTAGE CHEESE ....... !~.~~·. 29'
Nice 'N Lite HOM. MILK ....... ~!.~~~.2 for .89'
Nice 'N Lite CHOC. M'ILK ............ ~.~~I; 49~
Nice •N Lite I.C
. E. M
..IlK
,,., ge r. 69'

Stereo Albums. Choose

Instrumentals,

Country and Western and

I
I

'

lll Court St

. .

..

Select group of RCA

Topes. Included ore Show
Tunes,

I1

I
I
Ad! Please Print. Use One Space For Each Word 1
1
1
1
I
I
I
I1
Nome
· • •·
. ...., .. ' '"'"" I
Address
1
1

11 Write

Nice 'N Ll!e

.

assortment of 8 Track

1

0

Let's get with it . . . enjoy your
calorie watching with Fairmont
Nice 'N Lite Lowfat Dairy Products.

..

Choose from a wide

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

water analysis at the Piedmont I
reservoir showed a P.H. of 4.3. I
· . .
•
The Dept. of Health engineer 1
said when the P.H. is helow 4.5 1
you can expect. a fish kill.
I
If the P.H. In water Is 7 it is
··
·
neutral. Anything above 7 is I
alkaline, anything below is I
acid. Sulphides also appear in I
the water, but this will not kill , I .
..
vegetation or fish.
I
TO QUALIFY FOR THIS SPECIAL LOW RATE,
He went on to say that a I .
. Ad mu~l be pland by an indi'lidi.IOI • Cancellation privit.get when...
dormant deep mine south of I- I . Ad mu\1offer good\ lor sole
not 0 bulintu
·\IIIII or• obtoirwd
70 flows d' -Uy into Stillwater I
S. llin'illor $?5 or under
• Ad muil rema in un&lt;hong•d for
• $1 minimum chor;~ .for I 0 dopt
0110
Creek, ;n~.. of the major .~-·-P-ri&lt;_
.. ..,•• _~··-··-~_·"_."r;~o"'_·_rin_•_'_..;'.;."'.;..;.' - - - - - - - · - · - " ' - '- - - - - - streams feeding Piedmont.
During dry weather, he
Yo~r
commented, the acid water
from this mine supplies I
practically all .the water In this · I

. Beginning To Show?

·RCA CAMDEN ALBUMS
BOOTS RANDOLPH

I
I
I
I
I
1
1
1

FAM ILV WANT AD

I

·Those Christmas Pounds

RETAIL VALUES '6.95

SPECIAL
GROUP

I1

•

I1

I

.

,

cAsH?

PRAQTICAL SUGGESTIONS FOR WEIGHT WATCHERS!---

$46.6

. Rail

··

I
1
1I
1

...

RETAIL VALUE$5.98

8 TRACK TAPES

Piedmont
If
proper
rtclamatlon II dane.
Hanna Coal has already
begun reclamation of territory
now st'ripped by the big shovel,
the Gem of Egypt.
It is certain the publlc.cP,n be
assured a constant orl!r- '
veillance of pollution, not only
by acid water but sill as well,
will be C\inUnued as long as
strip mining remains. Reprinted from the Harrll!on
News Herald, Cadiz.

NEEo· /.Ex·TRA

---'"---· _ _ _ years ago. "This Is wh4jre·l)lost
of the acid flow into the lake
. HAS DINNER PARTY
originates," be said.
Miss Marguerite Meyer
In fact, Zeigler pointed out
entertained Tuesday night with thai in November of 1966,
a dinner party at the Meigs before stripping even began,
of her shoe store, recenUy sold

Tire same can be true lor

r•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

de:'·!~~~y~~~
.. ~~~ti~~t :!~~~·d!~m~~!~of:
will give off acid. However, at lake that were sealed many

•

66

ANNE MURRAY
GLEN CAMPBELL

•s

to Mrs. David Ohlinger: their
.husbands, and several friends.
'
In Ute group were Mrs. Ralph
· Walter Meinhart Of lluntington Died on Tuesday
Poston and Mrs. William
••
Grifflih, Columbus; Miss Sybil
. Waller J. Meinhart, 72, of331 the C. K.. Oxley Clothing Store club playground in Huntington Ebersbach, Mrs. Doris
lOib Ave., Huntington, W.Va., during his career. He ·also was and obtaining !lCIUipment used Rinehart, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
formerly of Pomerqy, died vice president of the Ross to check lhe eyesight of Goegleln, Mr. and Mrs. David
Tuelday at his bome.
Huntington school children.
Concrete Co.
Ohlinger, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. Meinhart was·born April
He was a past president of
A graduate of the Booth Charles LyUe.
21, 11191n Pomeroy, the son of the Huntington Uons Club In Business College, Mr .
the late . Ewndell and Eva 1945 and 1946 and helped Meinhart is survived by his
Schoenleln . Mell)hart. He organize the first Uons club wile, Ethlyn Long Meinhart; a
WATsONS CONFINED
located In Huntington In 1921, Halloween party in Hun- sister, Mrs . Guy Martin,
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Watson
~ a grocery store and tington , He was Instrumental Lancasrer, Ohio, and several
are both confined to their home
becoming credit manager of in obtaining land for the Uons nieces and nephews:
In Racine. Mr. Watson was
Funeral services will be beld returned· home from the
at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Pleasant Valley Hospital
Kllngel-Carpenter Funeral Tuesday after a confinement
Fred Dunfee Sr. Died on Tuesday
Home In Huntington with the there for several days. Sunday
Fred D. Dunfee, Sr., 56, two sisters, )Irs. Dana (June) Rev. Mack Thomasson of- evenlhg Mrs. Watson fell on the
formerly of Rutland, died Hysell, Grove City, and Mrs.' ficlating. Burial will be in ice and fractured her right
Tuelday morning at his home Nathan (Bette) Biggs, Beech Grove Cemetery at shoulder.
In ~ly.
P~roy, and two brothers, Pomeroy. Friends may call at
!
l~: JuJy, 7, ..l8~1f!:!~r~ Harold of Middleport and the funeral home any time
bi\~tlieaonoflfie~~tenuya ~~ Ot Westerville. · ·• irteH Jl'ln. todliy. '
•
LOCKS CLOSED
!IDd 'Ounet· Dunfee. Two
Funeral Services will be held
' 17 ELECI'IIOCUTED
SAULT
STE, MARIE, Mich.
brotben also preceded him in at 2 p.m. Thursday at the . HILMAR, Calif. (UPJ.) _
death.
McCurdy Funeral Home In · Seventeen dairy cows were (UP!) -The Soo Locks closed
Survlvlng .are his wife, the · Beverly. Mllltary services will · electrocutedberewhenashort- following the passage of the
locolel' Irene Pblppa; a son, be held at the Waterford circuit occurred 1n a motor Enders M. Voorlrees Tuesday,
Fred, Jr., of Lowell; a Cemetery !'here Mr. Dunfee operating a fann's milking ending the longest iron ore
shipping season in history.
dal!llhler, Paulilie,
equipment.
. at home; will be burled.

RETAIL VALUE
$6.95

SPECIALLY PRICED·ROCK FAVORITES

be . her . mald"Df-honor .
.. The groomsman's honor
attendant will be Milton-"
,. Tennant, Open church will be .
· obuned and a ~pUon will
follliW 1In the church social
room lnunedlately aftter the
.ceremony. The · couple will
~ ·tbelt hOme In Burdette
. Addltloa,, Point .Pleasant.
Mlia Ferguion Is a 19'10
K!'iduate of Wal\ama High ·
School where she was a
majorette an!l a member of
the Wahama Band. At the
present time she Is a secretary
in the ' office of Lakin State
Hospital. Mr. Fields also Is .a
1970 graduate of Wahama
High School where he excelled
In baa~etball and other
atbletics. He Is an employe of
the Federal Morgul in
GaUipolls , Ohio,

Aanna Coal we take steps to discovered any sanjlbars cbmpleted in 1938, The lake
neutralize the acid before. 11 building up and belielled !hal was built for flood control but
gels into the lake."
with proper reclamation has grown into a fine
Hanna Coal ··IB making u- silll!.tion could be cootrolled. recreation facility.
tensive 'l'ater analysis In the
Raymond lckle,. executive
Questioned as to. the life
streams that feed Piedmont secretary of the Muskingum expectancy of Piedmont Lake,
lake. Tire company all!o QSes a · Watershed Conserv·ancy the MWCD official said, "il is
two-pit system where the water District, said the MWCD was probably in the hundreds of
from the number 9 pit ·is concerned with pollution of the years."
·leached thro1111h earth Into the lake and was working wit!)
He said .a survey by the
number 8 pit and then through Hanna Coal on control and Corps of Engineers of Leesville
more earth before it flows Into surveillance of this problem. Lake show it to have a life. of
tlie streams.
Ickle said
Piedmont well over 1000 years. lckle said
Hareh commented that !be reservoir, as well as all the tree planting on the shore has
company hopes to curtail silt lakes in the MWCD was :increased the life of Leesville.
as much as possible by construction of careh basins where 1
·
the water can set idle until the 1
:li ~
.
sediment is gone, and then flow 1
into the feeding streams. One
such careh basin will be built I
\ · ·I
. .. .
.Inside the railroad loop at the I
\__../ ·
Egypt Valley loading dQI!k.
I
As for the pollution problem I
of the lake, George E. Zeigler, I
an engineer with the Dept. of 1
Health, shed more light here. I
Mr. ~igler conducts state 1
. .
water sample . tests at 12 or I
more sites along the streams
·
that feed the lake.
I
"Our biggest problem is I
dormant deep mines," said I

RATH'S

.

• Jv-r~

1

'.

v

•

JIM REEVES

RETAIL VALUE

lin_, I Tftltl t'a,. l .tllf'l,r
'f ll•l II,Off. t'-.u!

$2.98

'•

1
I

'

I

'

,

SAVIN&amp;S

-VALUES AT

$239
6
·
$
1·
CHEESE DINNER......
COFFEE .........................:.. .. .
3
$1
10
.rPEACHES..............,
TOILET TISSUE......
6
s·
AP.PlE SAUCE........... .
AERO WAX .....................
,
g•
3
,
$1
4
WNcHE~N LOAF...... !:s~.
DISTILLED WATER .........
kraft Macaroni

and

.

boxes

·stoktly

.

'

.

,

~·"•

·

303

LUC~Y Luf

~~~

Rons·sg~

Georgi.an

for

•

0

Shines and Proteds

27

'

oz.

~~.~..

cans

BIHmore Brand

u;.

3

·

No. ·2,12

1'....

.

Folger's CAll Grinds)

71/z ·oz.

Pure and Sparklina

·

·

gal.

?~.'.~.
...

•

.•

3 lb.

$239

Canned P1cn1cs . ~.~~.
c~. 99~
W1eners .....................~.~!:... .

...

GOOD 'II' COIIWTIY

•

39~

g~

~

FRENCH CITY 20

PROJ)UCE DEPT. SPECIALS!

Ieiah~ Potatoes•• ! 0 79~
1

·lb.

Large Golden Ripe .

.

'

1

o~

Bananas ••• ~ ••••••~
POT.AJOES "8' size 50 $ 49
1

••••••• •• lbs,

PAN ROLLS
'
4

BAKERY
FEA TUR El Be1sy Ross

FOR

5th and PEARL STS., MaNE
"The Store With AHeart;
You, WE li.KE" .
Hight reserved to limit quantities
We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food .Stlmps
Prices Effective Feb. 2-9

· MondaY Tbrti Friday
9:00 to 7:00

s.tll!diY 9 to 9
CLOSED SU.NOAYS

•

�.

"

••
.18- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleporf-Pom•.roy, 0., Feb. 2, 1m

·'

'

·
--@-~

!Sentinel
Classifieds
Get
Action!
Sentinel
Classifieds
Get
Results!
.
~

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P.M.
Day
Before
Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m .

Alfred

2 SIGNS

.Po11eroy
Motor Co.

1

For Sali

Business Services ~

__

AU.

EXPERT

ROOFING
CONSTRUCTION

Whf8l Alipment

.

.CO.

Help Wanted

u. ;.,, ....

... GIVING SPEEDING AND \.
RECKI.E66 Ofi:RA110N 'TICKE16
ISM( 1HING.

OF COURSE
'DIG' 'IOU,""'"·-'
ANV llt4T !:AT
WHEN T~EV
MEET!

Auto

For Sale.

Aluminum

sheets

OFFICE

j

WHA'T 'ttlU PONT
SEEM 10 REAJ,JZE

151HAT...

. The
Orchitt Room

- ------

I

II} Mn .. 141.1., ...:. T.lll ...

'5.55 .

Pomiloj Hon!e

Pomeroy kor Co.

--

~~i

SUJiday School attendance on
: t960 INTERNATIONAL panel
Jan. 30, was 47, the offering
lruck ; 1938 Buick Coupe; 196.1
$17.57.
Cancellation &amp; CorrectiO(ls
• dr. Ford F~lrlane ; Arabian
'
Perfect attendance awards Will be accepted unlll9 a.m. for
mare, 112 reglslered ; G. E.
Day of Publication,
Automatic washer; 4'1:1 acres
i; were passed out allhe fiOSe of
R.EGULATIONS ,
with
trailer ; phone m -9943.
. ALL KINDS OF
Sunday School to the follow ing:
WEAtHER
The Publisher reserves the
2·2-61c
_.....:.._
__:_:
1966
VOLKSWAGEN
SQ.
BACK
Slf,DAN
$1095
·• Pins &amp; lsl yr. bars~Lynn . right to edit or reject any ads
GLASS
•
New ring job, clean interior, good tires, radio, heater.
deemed
objectio
nal.
The
For Every Purpose ·•
., Flanders, Timmy Flanders;
&amp;
Sharp black finish .
COAL, llmes!one. Excelsl~r
publisher
wUI
not be
We
s,eciolize in ouiG glus ·
Second-year bars - Howard
Sal! Works, . E. Main St.;
responsi ble for ~ore than one
.on
.!he
spo! instollotfon.
POmeroy.
Phone
992·3891
.
Flanders, and Chas. D. Woode;
1967 CHEVROLET IMPALA
St495
Incorrect lnsert1on.
&amp;
PLUMBING
Mirrors
Table Tops - Pllht
4·9-!fc
RATES
4 Door H.T. Se dan, local owner. sharp interior, vinyl roof
Six-year bar to Kathy
Gtus.
Smell
homo repoirs For Want Ad Service
&amp; dark blue finish, factory air, good w-w tires, radio &amp;
---~--.-GUARANTEEo-:.
Dillinger; Seventh year bar to 5 cents
screens
.
storm
windows
POODLE
puppies,
Sliver
Toy,
240 Lincoln 5!.
~ater .
.
per Word one insertion
view
Kennels.
Phone992.
repaired.
Park
Pt!one
992~2094
·
Ricky Dillinger;. Eighth year
.
.
Middleport,
Ohio
Minimum Charge75c
5443.
FREE ESTIMATE
12 cents per word three
Dba Anltlony Plumbing
·· bar to Vickie Carr; Tenth-year
1965 CHEVROLETSTA. WAGON
SS95
8·1.S.!fc
Poin!
Pt.annt &amp; Mason
&amp;
1 bar . to Helen Woode; and consec ut ive Insertions.
We hoV. a compleht !tome
V-8 engine, std. trans ., good tires. d ea n interior, green
18 cents per word six confinish, radio.
AUTO
GLASS
Main!onanct
Service
!ht
• . Open I nl5
Eleventh year bar to Ernest secutive irlsertions ..
- -~ -~ -year oround. No maHer who!
AI Co"" rd. Mgr.
Mondoy t.hru So!urdoy
25 Per Cent Dlscou n! on paid·
Taylor. Several others missed
.
your
nttd.
Complete
roof
or.
Phone
304-713-5710
ads and ads "paiq within 10
6G6 E; Matn, Pomeroy, o.
very little.
spouting ·ropolr. Interior or
Roult 33
· Mason; W. Vo.
da ys.
exterior
ear~n!ry.
Ctiilng
. Worship services were held
CARD OF THANKS
36''x 23" x .009
tile alief Paooling'anjl Siding.
&amp; OBITUARY
at lJ o'clock with Rev. Jacob
$1
.50
for
50
word
minimum
Complete
• Plumbing.. &amp;
POMEROY
Lehman spea king from Luke
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
Each additional word 2c.
Heating.
'
18: 18-30. "On ly the bloodfPMEROY, OHIO
BLIND ADS
boy Number 992.2550
HOME &amp; AUTO
Additional l5c Charge per
. washed gel in to Heaven."
We
have
·24
hr.
emergency
Adver!lserrl~nl.
Call to Prayer &amp; Self-Denial
service.
Make reservations for your
992-2094
OFFICE HOURS
Notice
prlva!e pilr!les, banquets, •
992-5803
. 742·3947
Services were held at the
8:30a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Daily,
606
E.
Main
Pomeroy
in my home in
special
occasions.
992·3898
742·4711
8:30 a .m. to 12: 00 Noon 1(0SCOT KOSMETICS and wigs BABYSIJ:TER
church here on Tuesday
USED OFFSET PLATES
for sale. Brown's. Phone 992· Mi.ddleport. Phone 992·2012.
Ideal lor mee!lng place Saturday .
We ire fully Insured
HAVE
evening, Jan. 25, with an at2·2·6fc
511J.
wl!h
or wl!h'ou! kl!chen
.
.SUPPLIES
MANY USES
tendance of 27 from Tuppers
12·3l.!fc
privileges.
and
TEXAS 01 L COMPANY has
Individual Ca!erlng
Plains, Long Bottom and Master, . Let Me Walk With
opening In Pomeroy area . No
Will seat up to 150 people.
20~
WANT WORK at home ad·
Alfred.
Thee." "Interpretation of the
FURNITURE
experience necessary. Age
.
.
dresslna
and
sluffing
en·
not
Important.
Good
June Stearns of the Alfred Art" was given by Nora Rice of
Phone
velopesf Rush sell·slamped
Stop
In
and See Our
character a must. We train.
8 for $1.00
group was program chairman, . Tuppers Plains ; and "The
envelope !o F. Uribe, Box 36, Air
992-3975
992-5786
'Floor Display .
mail C. E. Dickerson,
Albany, Ohio, 45710.
Service
Ni na Robinson was pianist. Author" by Nellie Parker,
Pres
.,
Southwestern
J.6.1fc
From !he largos! T •• ;:;;
The program " Open Up Your Alfred 's Pres . A generous
Petroleum. Carp .. Fl. Worth,
TeM
.
Bu lldozer Radiator !o
Life '' was presented with offering was received, and sent
2·2·1tC
·Smallest
Healer Core.
FOUR NEW HOMES
NEEDlECRAFT Shop.
music and readings on in.
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
Sy racu se, Ohio . Beginner
Nolllao Biggs
Stilln ess, Thanksgiving,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Swartz
lessons In knitting or
ONE HOME IN RACINE
Rtdiotor Speciofis!
Awareness, Examination, and family of Willia111Stown,
croche!ing will
beg in
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
Tuesday and Thursday, 7 !o 8 OLD
POCKET
knives ,
Now, Openness, Giving, Doing W. Va., were recent Sunday
111 ·Court St.
ONE HOME IN MIODLEPORT
p.m.
and
Thursday
a!
1
p.m.
Case
XX. Also
especially
NO MONEY DOWN .
and Mission by members from afternoon guests of his parents,
Pomeroy, Ohio
have oth~r old knives to trade
1·31 ·31c
100
PCT.
FINANCING AVAILABLE
both Societies. Mrs. Hackney Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Swartz.
or sell . Phone 992.2343.
Ph. 992-2174
A 3 bedroom .516,900.00 hom~ con bo purchased wf!h a
1·18·1fc
from Tuppers Plains sang,
Rev. and Mrs. Elmer Wright
-·
mon!hly
payment as low as ·S6.5.001or a family with a bas~
TROPICAL
FISH,
laney
- --,---=-=---=
"How Great Thou Art," ac. and Jennifer of Zanesville, 0.,
DELL WHEEL allghmen!
salary of S5,000.po and !hree children. 71(, Pd. annual
guppies, angels and breeders, . O'loca!ed
OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak
a! Crossroads, Rl. 124.
companied by Florence visited Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
per&lt;~n!age role.
·
Bellas and supplies. Phone
fables, Brass beds, dishes.
front end service,
Comple!e
Spencer . The program opened Henderson and the Dave
clocks, and -or complete 992·5443.
tune up and brake service.
12·30·1fc
househaldJi. Wrile M. D.
with the hymn, ''Open My WiUiams family , last weekWheels balanced elec.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
!rooically.
All
work·
Eyes" and closed with "0 end.
Call 992·6271.
'le
Homes
For
guaran!eed
.
Reasonable
12.J7.1fc Mobl
rates. Phone 992·3213.
60Xi2. 2·bedroom; aiTeiec!ric, ·
7-27·11C
air
conditioned,
8x20
ft.
POrch
------Friday &amp; Saturday
and a luminum awning, C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Night, 10 Til2
4 ROOM house. furnish ed, at 124
Complete Service
aluminum skirting, com.
CALL
Laurel Sl ., Pomeroy . Call992·
plete ly setup. Beautiful
Phone 949·3821
BILL NEL.SON, 992·3657
Music By
HILTON WOLFE, 94~·321
5836 or inquire at 126 Laurel
location. Owner leaving state.
Racine, Ohio
TOM CROW, 992-2580
DilLE DUTTON,
Red Stewart &amp;
. Sl.
Phone 949.4892 or 992·5272.
Crill Bradford
The Ambassadors
2·1-51p
J.JO.Ifc
S·l·IIC
DRY WALL Finisher con· READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
"'H"'A"'R"'R-:-1S"'O::-:N
-cc,:S-::T:V,-a-nd
- An,-.,-terina
'R•E•V•I•V•A•L•
, -•E•ag•l•e-•R•i•dg•el N
- E-W-. -t-2x_60_,_2_bed
__
roo
_ m_ m_oblle
traclor. R. I. Dubbeld, Phone
livered right Ia your 'proled.
742·5825.
Service. Phone 992-2522.
Com m 0 n i t y c h 0 r c h , home across !rom Bradbury
Fast and easy. Free
__,_
6·10·1fc
1-3J.Sic
Ry RAY CROMLEY
es!lmo!es . Phone, 992-3284.
Feb,uary Jrd lhru lllh . Rev. School . Call 992·5308 or see
Charles Lewis, 2nd house
Goeglelri Reody· Mix Co.,
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Free INTERIOR and exterior
Roy 0 eeter , evangelist.
so~h from Bradbury School.
WASHINGTON t NEA I
Middleport,
Ohio.
pipe
Inspection.
Paul
Stein·
Special singers Friday night.
Pel welcome.
painting.
R.
I.
Dubbeld,
phone
6-JO.!fc .
President Nixon's budge t .message brings into the open
Public lnvl!ed .
metz, phone 7&lt;12·5864.
742·5825.
1-27·1fC
-::-:-~-'-.,.-.,..,.....an admtmstratwn-congresswnal fight festering here for
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2_·2·31p . _:.......,_-::c---:--'---:--:1-26· t21p
l·Jl·SrC COLONTAL Auto BOdy, 537 High
years: It concerns influence of special interest groups on
S!., Mlddlapbr!, Ohio .
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run FURNISHED and unfurnished
!anks cleaned. Miller _S_E_W~IN_G_MA~-C-H-IN~E-S-.-R-epair
Congress. the waste this "congressional -s pecial-interests
12' • 14' - 24' • WIDE SEPTIC
Complete bOdy repairs ·and
apar!ments. Close to school.
Sportsman Club, also rifle
Sanl!a!lon, S!ewar!, Ohio. Ph. service, all makes. 992·2284. ·paintings,
co~plex " pt·oduces, and the resulting higher taxes, in·
Phone 992·5434.
glaos Installation,
matches - open sites only,
662·3035,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
JO.J8.!fc
flahon and slowdown in vital national priority programs.
free
loaner
cers and
Sunda y, Feb. 6, 12 noon .
2-12·tlc
Au!horlzed Singer Soles and
Htlmot~s.
also
mochonlcat
Says Mr. Nixon : "Government expenses increase each
2·2·31c
~B-A-::C-K"'H"o"E-A,...N-:-0-D"o"'z-E"'Rwork . .
Service. We ShorP.n Scissors . . repa!rs. Phone 992·3793.
2
BEDROOM
mobile
home
in
year because special interest groups, representing only
Septic tanks Installed. George
~·29· tfc
Racine area . Phone 992-6329.
1·l8-4fc
those.who sta nd to benefit from their programs, persuade
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·2478. - - - ' - - - - - - - ' - mo Washing!on Blvd.
12·14-lfc
dectston-makers that more resources are needed' for those
Belpre, Ollio
4·25·1fc
~ ,.
Now's Tiri1e To
programs witho~t ~egard to (he effect on the total budget.
' '
2 BEDROOM moune nomt, cl x L------------1
NOTICE
ON
FILINO
The .co~t ts multtplted by geometric progression when thi s
SEPTIC
TANKS
CLEANED
60, adults only . Phone 992· FOR THE BEST deal In a new
ORDER
QF INVENTORY
REASONABLE ra!es. t&gt;h. 446tache ts repeated for literally hundreds of programs."
5443.
AND APPRA ISEMENT
or
used
moblle
home,
try
·
4782,
Gallipolis.
John
Russell,
J.J J.Ifc
T-he Stah of Ohio, Meigs
This is strong stuff. The President's advisers believe
'FIELD SEEDS
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
O.Vner &amp; Operator.
.
Countyi Pnbate Court.
this route. is necessary if Mr . Nixon is to get any significant
Kanauga , Ohio.
5·12.!1c
To the Executrix ot the
12·17·901c
part of hts .Progra!lls through. And if he is to keep Con·
FERTIL.IZER
est11te ; to such of the following
Auto
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been as aro residents of the S!ato of
g_ress m thts electton year from voting a slew of expen.
cancelled?
Lost
your Ohio, vis: - the surviving
1
'57 CHEVY, 327 cu. in ., solid Mcistu:· -tiome ori nice tol,
stve vote-gettmg pr~grams that throw his already heavily
report
SEED CORN
operator's license? Call 992- spouse, the ne)(t of kin, the to be
lifters, Cam , 3 speed, new forced .air heat, a1r conunbal.anced budget mto a tatlspm that would bring more
beneficiaries under the will ;
Alma E . Smlth
interior and racing slicks, · ditioning In Racine area .
mOalion.
Order Now &amp; Save I
2966 .
Township Clerk
6_15_tfc and to the attorney or attorneys
good condition . Phone 992· Phone 992-6329.
representing ony of the
SUMMARY 01' CASii .
1·23·1fc
But anyone with experience in politics will recognize
5663.
1·27·6fc
aforementioned persons .
BALANCES 1
POMIROY ·
that this strong dramatizing of a Congress and special.
Clara E. Gortand, Deceastd,
' R CIIPTS
AND
EXPENDITI.IRES
Jack W. ClrMJ', Mtr.
Mlnersvllle, Ohio, No. 20.S93.
Blfonu
Jon. t, tf7t
mterest lobbies tieu)l' and its effects on taxes, unemploy.
'68 CHEVY lmP.Ia, automa!lc,
P-tft·lll1
3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
You are hertby notified that General Fund
$1 OIS 37
me~t . and meqUtty for ordinary folk is good political mapower . steering , power
the
Inventory
and
'
Ap
Moto
v
hi
1
Ll
' ·
HOUSE,
1642
Lincoln
Heights.
Arbaugh
Addition,
Tuppers
327
cu.
in
.,
grey
with
brakes,
tenal for runmn g for re·election in November.
pralsement of the estate of th~ · Ta~Fuendc e censt
Call
Danny
Thompson,
992·
Plains.
All
.
new
with
!alai
black vinyl tap, phone 985· 2196. .
aforementioned, deceased, late GasoiiM Tax Fund
3·~U· ~:
The political va\ue is especially high since it is almost
electric and ceo!ral air of
3598.
·INCOME
TAX
service.
daily
said
County,
was
flied
In
thiS
·
Totals
9m'o7
certain Mr. Ntxon s Nove mber opponent will be from the
con~l!ionlng, bath and 'I• fully Court. Said Inventory and
except Sunday, evenings by
Total Receipts ' ·
1·21·12!c ,..,.,=:::-:-:---::--:-:--7...,·18-lfc
carpe!ed, lull basement, Appraisement will be for General Fund
Senate . The more Mr. Nixon can tie his opponent, even
•
3 990 .n
appointment . Mrs. Wanda
in Long Bottom, phone
garage In basemen!. See by hearing btfort this Court on the Motor Vehicle License .' :
mdtrectly, wtth special i~terest groups, the more votes
Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road. 1 '62 FALCON, good condit ion, ·HOUSE
985.3529.
appointment, phone 992·2194 11th day of Febru~ry, 1972, ot
lox Fund
e07 17
mile wes! o! Meigs County
the. Prestdent should wm . He thereby discredits his
phone 949·3221.
1·28·11&lt;
10:00
o'clock
A.M.
Gasol
ine
Tax
Fund
·u:.oc)oo
or
992-3585.
Danny
Thompson.
Fairground
on
Rl.
7
bypass.
voctferous congressiOnal attackers and defends his own
Any ,person dtllrlng to file Totals '
25 107.$8
2·2·61c -~------Flna.nclng available.
Phone 992·2272.
exceptions thereto muat "file
Tot 1 t Receipts a lalaftc11'
proerams. Note then these additional words :
-MINERSVILLE
on
Welchldwn
12·30-tfc'
1·3·30!c
them at least· five days p·rlor to General Fund
· .5 005 78
. "The admi,nistration will vigorously oppose Irrespon·
Hill - 114 acre lot wl!h old
the date set for h,arlng .
Motor Vehicle License· , .
house, all u!lll!les, S600. SIX ROOM house, 133 Bu!!ernut
s t~le. short-stghted spending proposals that would com·
Given under my hand and
Ta:K Fund
12 2.t6 71
Ave. Con!ad Ed Hedrick, 2137 seal of nld Court, this 24th day Gasoline Tax Fund
WALNUT
STEREO,
Modern
Phone 992-6021 .
17,03 · 16
mtt laree sums ?f federal money to schemes that are
FOR A lasting glf! - LandTolels
;~,~; 3216: 65
Wadswor!h Drive, Columbus, of February 1972.
1·27·61c
scapes painted or drawn to Walnut Stereo·radlo com .
polt.hcally attrachve but endanger an inOation·free prosOhio, phOne 237·4334.
, JoM C. Bacon
Expondllurts l
·
pertly.
order. Call David and Lynn bination, 4 speaker sound
Judge and ex-officio Clerk General Fund
, r ... 597 -47
system,
4
speed
changer.
11·21·tfc
4
BEDROOM,
bath:
&amp;
hall,
lynas, 992-608~.
ofsaitt Court Motor Vehicle Lfctn1e!
·
" There will. be those who contend th at in this budge t
Balance $68 .70 . Use our
utility room, buJif.Jn kllchen,
1·28·6tp
Ta:KFurid
8,15752
budget terms. Call 992·7085. wall to wall carpet &amp; garage.
favonte progt ams are not fmanced , or are not financed
· ·
·
· .
•; ·,
By A!'ln B. Watson Gasoline Tax Fund ·
10,315:99
----~as they want them to be .
2·2·61c
Located 'h mile north o!
Depu!y Clerk Totals
.
,
23,140.98
-----Eastern High School. House Is
a . ; ll 26 C2l 2, 21 , .
Btllnct Doc. 31, 1971
"They will be absolutely right."
ABOUT YOUR WEIGH T ... .COLONIAL
Maple slereo.radio almos! finished and others 1
:
•
General Fund
408.31
•
· ··-.. . .
overweight'
ladies.
teens
and
In this attack , Mr. Nixon is on sure grounds. For so
AM·FM radio, 4 speakers, 4 being built. Call 985·3598.
Ill THE COMMON PLEAS
Motor Vehicle License
men ln!eres!ed in a Weight
speed automatic turntable.
COURTOF
TaxFund
•.129.19
.
,
l~ng as man . can re':"ember, many con~ress ional bills
' 1-21 ·30!C
Watchers ( R) Class in
,
MEIGSCOUNTY:OHIO
GasolineTaxFund
6,650.17
Balance $79 .32. Use our
have been ~ntten to msure s~me of the funds will go to
Pomeroy wri!e : · Weight
LAWRENCE
A.
HYSELL,
TotalS
11,
187 .67
Call
992.7085.
11
budget
terms.
RACINE ·- 10 room house,
or be used m a way spectal mterest groups desire.
Watchers I Rl. 1863 Sec! ion
·
Plaintiff
CASH
BALANCE,
0
2·2-6tc
ba!h, ba'semen!, garage, two
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
vs.
RECEIP.TS AND
Each senator and representative must look out for the
:-:-:-:~--=---­
lois
. No reasonable offer i
.:"er
·.
CHARLES
E.
HYSELL,
ET
EPXENDITURE$
10·3.1fc
Br""
votes he needs to get himself re-elected . Groups with
NEW 1971 Zlg ·Zag Sewlhg
~ AL.,
8Y FUND
refused. Phone 9'*9·4313.
pressure power ~et a heari~g . Contrary to public opinion
Machine
in
original
lac!ory
110
Mechlnie
S!roet
,.
Doftndonts.
Oenont Fund
SAVE up toone half. Bring your
t·21 ·121p
·•
NO. 14,941 Balance, Jan. 1, 1971
Pomeroy, Ohio
carton. ZJg.Zag to make
these a,re not always the nch or economically powerful •
914.00
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
•. • .,,.WLISTING
,
LEGAL NOTICE
.
Cem . Fund - Port
buttonholes, sew on buttons, NICE 2·slory home· with lull
mdustr!al alliances . They may be unions. associations of
151 Bul!ernul Ave., Pomeroy.
'"'
Pursuant to an Order of Sole
of Gen .
'
31 .37
monograms and make fancy basemen!, 2 lois, new forced 2 APARTMENTSp~of~sswnal m ~n . such as doctors. ~r lawyers . or non·
9
rooms,
6
Issued
by
the
Common
Plees
Rocolpls
·
designs with lusl !he twist of a air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
wiJh bath, 3 and bath . Near Court of Meigs county , Ohio, 1 General Property Tax ·- Real
pt oft! assoc1all.ons of pnvate mdtvtduals working for
ll ·21·1fc
single·dial . Left in lay.away
Elemen!ary School. Phone
Pomeroy stores. Both for will offer for sale · at public
Estate (Gross)
· 2,827.7-t
causes they bel~eve to be worthy
and never been used. Will sell . 992·7284 !o see.
57,500.00.
auction at 10:00 A. M. on Tangible Personal Property
for only $47 cash, or credit
Special interest legislation all too frequently diverts
POMEROY
February !9th, 1972, at the
Tax (Gross)
127 31
n .J.Ifc
terms available. Phone 992MODERN 6
b
Court House steps in Pomeroy, Local Government
·
moneys rrom urgent national pro~rams which help th e
- rooms, 1'/, aths. Ohio, the fallowing described
Distribution
•60.80
5641 .
many mto programs whi ch help the few.
Ni ce kitchen, carpeting. real estate :
Cigarette License Fees
2·2-6tc
LADY for part time work.
SitUate In the county of
and Fines (Grassl ' -55.69
Furnace. 519,500.00.
'
RURAL
Meigs,
in
the
State
of
Oh
io,
and
lntanglblo
Tax
453.87
Apply
to
Marvin
Glasgo
at
by Gill Fox
Vacuum
4 ACRES - Modern s room In the Towrlship of Rutland , and Sate of Cern. lots
65 oo
Modern Supply, Friday, 5 ELECTROLUX
Cleaner
complete
with
ol·
house,
bath
.
Chester
water.
bounded
and
described
as
Total
Receipts
3,99o:..c1
p.m. to 9 p.m. or &lt;!II day
tachments, cordwinder and
$10,500.00.
follo~s : ·
Topta 1 BRtginn rno Balance
Saturday.
I~
1us oco 1pts
pain t spray . Used but In like
MIDDLEPORT
Beginning at the N.W. corner
5,005.78
2·2·3fc
2
1
1
Of Section No . 2, Town 6, R.ange
lllpenclltUrll
new condlllon. Pay $34.45
apar mens- 5 to each side. 1~, Ohio Company's Purchase ; Total Expenditures
~----cash or budget plan available.
601 Eu! Main
Gas heat. All utilities . thence East 48 rods and Slinks;
BEAUTY Operalor with Ohio
- Administrative
3.86.!.12
Phone 992·5641.
POMEROY
S3,500.00.
thence south ~ deg . E. 66 rods~
- ·Ctmeterles
718 64
license. Wrile &lt; · O P.O. Box
':7."
2·2-6fc
POMEROY
ond 22 links; thence west 49
- Lighting
13'71
122, Middleport, Ohio.
2'12 LOTS
NIFTY
5
rooms,
bath,
oak
rods
and
1
link
;
thence
North
Grant
lotel
_
E:Kpendlturts
-·
2·1·3tc . .
POMEROY";:_ 1 story frame.
floors. Gas heat, basement. llh deg . Eut 66 rods and 22
General Fund
4,597.-47
2 HOUSETRAILERS, 10 x 50 2
bedrooms,
por .
On! S6 000 oo
links to the place of beginning, Bot., Dec. 31, 1971
•01 31
HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS. and 8 x 35. Ph . 367·7533.
ches, deep welf, room lot
Y 'l.f ·ACRES
containing 20 1/o ocros, more or To~ot , ~r~e ~~1tures Plus Bel.
Enlist now - stay home until
2·1·31c trailer, good neighborhood. MODERN _ 3 bedroom home less, exce~t '12 acre out of the
ec. ,
5, 005.
t
Northeast corner conveyed to
Motor Vthlclt Llctns1 78
after
graduation. Guaranteed --~-----$3,375.00.
•"
"
I
and 2 others rented. FREE Royal Church . Also exc:ept the
Tax Fund ·
assignments to Europe,
.BUSINESS ROOM
GAS. Only $16,000.00.
coal and all r ights· hereto ilatonce, Jen . l, ]971
l,869.54
Korea, Hawaii , or selected USE D Narg~ wash.er and dryer, TUPPERS PLAINS - cement
DEXTER
deeded to Emmett Diehl . Also
lltetlpta
locations In the u.s. See your . good ~on d •llon - $751or pair ; block bulldhig, large 95 x 264
BUSINESS BUILDING- 30 x except "' acr, out .of lh,o Nor . Motor Vehtcte Llconoe
local Arm y representative for Hol porn t ele~tric dryer - $40.
level lot, located on R!. 7 In
44. Neat 6 room home, bath, t heast corner conveyed to
Tax
·8,.. 17 17
fac ts about the 18 o.day Ingels Furmlure, Middleport.
town . VERY LOW AT
Frank Hysell .
Total Receipts
a•.tl7· .
d
Ill
d
II
. Delayed Entry Program and Phone 992·2635.
r e we · 2 acres .
· Except therefrom tt"!e one Total Beginning Balance ·17
$6,900.00.
the Army 's new pay raise.
1.-1-Jtc
•
RURAL
ac re parcel conve'Jed to · Plus _Rtcelpts ·
1~,286.71
bath, 3 or 4 bedrooms. Lawrence Hysttl an Nellie
· lxptndltures · ·
For more information call
INVESTMENT PROPERTY 7 rooms;
Gas heal. 2gordens. $7,000.00. Hysell by deed recorded In Yol. Total Expenditures
J
593·3022.
COME and see our February RACINE - large tile building
POMEROY
w,
Page
m
,
of
the
Deed
Mlactllo~tous
II' t2.
1·31 ·51c Sate at Parson's. 2 pc. livi ng
with brick front, business NICE -7 rooms, 1'12 baths, gas Records of Meigs County, Ohio .
- Motn!tnonce
t.l6.! 41
room suite with Herculon
room with 3 apartments over, · furnace. Storm doors and
Except therefrom tt'te ' one Grand Totaf Expendlturts ' 11
covers - $129.95; 3 pc. table
garage wlth apartment over,
acre parc•l conver,•d to i;lmer
Motor Vehicle License·
Id
$7
sels - $16.95 ; bedroom suite
w n ows. •500·00·
Hysell and Floss e Hysell by
Tox Fund
1 157 s•
storage room, 3 apartments
Bot " Doc. 31, 197 1
·•
- 599.95; All cedar bedroom
rooms,
""lh,
~as
dHd
recorded
In
Vol.
142,
Pooo
T
4,' 12919
are furnished, one is not, NICE ._MINERSVILLE
6
ua
472,
Of
lilt
Dttd
'
Rocoras
·
of
otol
Expenditures
Plus
'
suiles with big post bed about 25 years old, oil
furnace.
Baseme~t. Lorge of. Meigs county, Ohto.
Bot
.,
Doc.
31,
1971
12,2l6.7l
$299.95;
dishwasher ,
apartments are rented. sa,ooo.oo.
·
Excopt therefrom tho one
Guollllt Tox '•••
Westinghouse - $199.95; We
$21.500.00.
.NEW
LISTING
ocre
parcel
conveyed
lo
Nor·
Botonco,
Jon. I, 1971
~.23 6 .i 6
will finance your eccounl with
1 $TORY FRAME
UNDER LEASE - Business m'on Hy&amp;tU ond Dora Hy111t by
Rtcolpts
a low-low finance charge at MIDDLEPORT- 2 bedrooms, down, 6 rooms, and bath, up.' deed recorded In Vol. 143, Page ~Uollnt Tax
12100 00
. Parson's In Kana~a, , Ohio,
balh, full basement, paneled,
. :J~jg:'c~~~ty~~~t/'&lt;O~ds of . T~::t ~:~~~',',~ Botoni{IOO:oo .
Stale Roule 7, 2 m1les N. of
liled, carpeted, gas furnace, S16,000N.OOEW. LIS.TiNG
lhferonce Deed : v ot. 126,
Plus Rocotp11
17 036 16
Silver Bridge.
extra lot. $8,900.00.
1
MOBILE
HOME
2J&gt;edrooms,
·
Page
6,
Meigs
Coun
y
Dttd
T
,
.
l•pondltu'rts
' ·
I
2·1·3tc SOLD OOWN (WI&lt; NEED lOx 50. Two ,oddiiiOt)OI rooms. Records.
·
•
· otal Exptndlluros
·
LISTINGS.)
•
Cetlo.r carport. $5,000.00.
Torms ol Soto:· Ctlh for not · - Mttcollanoous
o
;:-37:Y::E-:
.tt::R- o-ld-,,.-R~g-is-1er.,-.ed -PO
- lled
HENRY CLELAND
Noerly 1'1:1 ACRES.
leu thon two·lhl(do .q! the ap . ·G- Molnttnonco
6:073
:76
12
Hereford Bull.; no price .
REALTOR
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
pralot&lt;l voiUt, ' tho tpprolotd
nnd Totot l!x~tnGitur" _23
quoted over phone ; phone 9.119votuo
btingiSOO.OO,
ond
oubltcl
OaiOIInt Tox Fund 10 315"
A
Office tn-m•
111•
"Thi• i• our Miu W.eadowil. She replaced three
2726 or 949·4401.
__ .!.*
!:.
.
•
to
tho
root
utott
loxH
tor
1972.
Tl~l
. , Doc,. 31, 1m
i 11 •
Ruldenca tn-2568
5 m 2371
"
'
•
ROIII'f
C
..
HARTINIACH,
8111
E.,..,altur"
Ptuo'
'
computara .at &lt;!Ur lut office party!"
2·.1·31p
1·30·61c
1·30·61G c1) s1~~·~~,·::1·:~~~f:."IT.; o•to C2r~~··1r··· 3).1971
1Ul6. t6

Of
QUAliTY

. CAN I
.. I.WfiJG?

2-2

U'L

.

The

Wanted To Buy

Daily Sentinel

SMITH NELSON .
· MOTORS. INC. ·

BUT IF 'iOIJ DON'T FIX THAT
L&amp;AI&lt;V PIF'Iii TCIDIIIY, 'I.'M
&lt;OOIN~ '10 CALl. AN~R

'DANCE

RAY CROMLEY

WHISPERING
PINES
NITE Q.UB

PLUMBER!

Sale

For Rent

Congress Critics
Give Nixon Ammo

__ ___

M_(UER
MOBILE HOMES

..$"'.· •

'. ·: . "EGAL ·

.

.

GASOUNE AILEY

.

6tore won't take
"-- with a jillion
back! I'm 6tuck

You've

qot a
lot of

.
Ciovia?

~..-(, ,,q

cru~t.

Slim ...

after
what's

rcwrcm:. .
IF IT'S A MAll ·
ORf&gt;..WO~

... Wfl,&amp;.T

Sales

Real Estate For Sale

r&lt;eal Estate For Sale

~

For Sale ·

ACROSS
1. Volcanic
matter
5. Circle
segment
B. Germanic
deity
9.-for
one's
·breeches
13. Forearm
bone
14. Famous
horror
films star
15. Nervous
twitch
16. Mon's
nicknaml'
17. Scepter
18. Under
%0. Exasperate
%1. Final
22. Bungle
23. Place of
worship
25. Consist·
ingof
wood
;!i. Backslide
17. Actress
-Hagen
:18. Artificial
bait
29. Tangle '
31. Swiss
canton
32. !olet
33. Toss
35. Withdraw
37. Malay
'Moslem
38. Early
lunch

• gil B •;(
Vll'
'
TEAFORD
SR
·
1

l

------

Help Wanted

Oeland
Realty

,,
n·

..
=#:·
1

l= 11·-~J~-,~-:"";.

f

I • f

- - - -- -

9

•

I

LFS

i.

•

, I

I FEfOR

I
I I t)

·ROH..IR

I

IIARJWR'

I

I

tJ

I
I

MI~;HT 3E MAD
Aec&gt;UT THE E.NGINE.

.

Now ll'l'IUIP the elreled lotton
to form the lllrprioe I!NWer, u

Co\anrrtft
Yu1erd•1'•

nut"' Nnual to have onJy halfof

thu-TWINS

T

IPF . WK II .

M FTW! IIX
I'ZCWFHB .

UJWF.-PFULX

I ZCF ,
PT W

T

C KLQFL

lo.orrow)

J•,.hle" ANNUL SCOUT GaATfS MIDWAY
Anewer1 II"•

Y..tenlay'o Cryptoqunte: .'\ GOOD LEADER C AN'~ GET
TOO .FAR AfiEAD OF JIIS FOLLOWERS.-F.RANKLIN j).
!lOOSEVELT
. ,
\&lt;e 10'12 Kin~ Featur...Sfndicale, Inc.)

,.

Unoc:ramblo tht~tl'our Jumblea,
one letter 19 each oquaro, to
form four ordinary words.

Jied brlheabo•oe.noon.
I.~=J~~~~~~~~·u=·=·=
Millie SlUG MSWIUn
"( I I I Y'

7. W
NPFU

JJ(!l1Ml13~®~ !:::!!!-:c

I I I

A Cryptoll'am Quotation

..e

I ,...,

zn.

AXYDL8AAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter Nimrlv .111lands for anorher. Jn this sample A is
used lor ~the three 1: •. x r.. ,. th&lt; two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and !ormation of the words ore all
]lints. Each day the code letters are different. .

like .a person.

,

6. Debacle
7. small
queen
wheel
41. Southwest 10. Famous
wind
star of
horror
DOWN
films
I. Lummox 11. Tristan's
beloved ' 'll'!lltf'rd•,·'• An•wer
Z. Extem·
porize
12. Judge of
3. Contem·
Israel
30. Famous
porary
16. "-Dame ·
horr.or
star of
de Paris"
ftlms star
horror
19. Rent
32. An Arab
films
Lariat
land ,
4. Anecdotal Z2. Get on
34. Churl
gather· · 23. Charm
36. Early
ings
:14. Bay tree
~irdener
5. Attorney Z9. ltalian
37. Lamb
city
talk

. DAILY CRYP1'0QUOTE- Here's how to work It:

you

WMP0/1390

39. Hair style
40. Spanish

hnm

We tJJlk to

'r .

Kl~

IS IT?

' .

�.

"

••
.18- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleporf-Pom•.roy, 0., Feb. 2, 1m

·'

'

·
--@-~

!Sentinel
Classifieds
Get
Action!
Sentinel
Classifieds
Get
Results!
.
~

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P.M.
Day
Before
Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m .

Alfred

2 SIGNS

.Po11eroy
Motor Co.

1

For Sali

Business Services ~

__

AU.

EXPERT

ROOFING
CONSTRUCTION

Whf8l Alipment

.

.CO.

Help Wanted

u. ;.,, ....

... GIVING SPEEDING AND \.
RECKI.E66 Ofi:RA110N 'TICKE16
ISM( 1HING.

OF COURSE
'DIG' 'IOU,""'"·-'
ANV llt4T !:AT
WHEN T~EV
MEET!

Auto

For Sale.

Aluminum

sheets

OFFICE

j

WHA'T 'ttlU PONT
SEEM 10 REAJ,JZE

151HAT...

. The
Orchitt Room

- ------

I

II} Mn .. 141.1., ...:. T.lll ...

'5.55 .

Pomiloj Hon!e

Pomeroy kor Co.

--

~~i

SUJiday School attendance on
: t960 INTERNATIONAL panel
Jan. 30, was 47, the offering
lruck ; 1938 Buick Coupe; 196.1
$17.57.
Cancellation &amp; CorrectiO(ls
• dr. Ford F~lrlane ; Arabian
'
Perfect attendance awards Will be accepted unlll9 a.m. for
mare, 112 reglslered ; G. E.
Day of Publication,
Automatic washer; 4'1:1 acres
i; were passed out allhe fiOSe of
R.EGULATIONS ,
with
trailer ; phone m -9943.
. ALL KINDS OF
Sunday School to the follow ing:
WEAtHER
The Publisher reserves the
2·2-61c
_.....:.._
__:_:
1966
VOLKSWAGEN
SQ.
BACK
Slf,DAN
$1095
·• Pins &amp; lsl yr. bars~Lynn . right to edit or reject any ads
GLASS
•
New ring job, clean interior, good tires, radio, heater.
deemed
objectio
nal.
The
For Every Purpose ·•
., Flanders, Timmy Flanders;
&amp;
Sharp black finish .
COAL, llmes!one. Excelsl~r
publisher
wUI
not be
We
s,eciolize in ouiG glus ·
Second-year bars - Howard
Sal! Works, . E. Main St.;
responsi ble for ~ore than one
.on
.!he
spo! instollotfon.
POmeroy.
Phone
992·3891
.
Flanders, and Chas. D. Woode;
1967 CHEVROLET IMPALA
St495
Incorrect lnsert1on.
&amp;
PLUMBING
Mirrors
Table Tops - Pllht
4·9-!fc
RATES
4 Door H.T. Se dan, local owner. sharp interior, vinyl roof
Six-year bar to Kathy
Gtus.
Smell
homo repoirs For Want Ad Service
&amp; dark blue finish, factory air, good w-w tires, radio &amp;
---~--.-GUARANTEEo-:.
Dillinger; Seventh year bar to 5 cents
screens
.
storm
windows
POODLE
puppies,
Sliver
Toy,
240 Lincoln 5!.
~ater .
.
per Word one insertion
view
Kennels.
Phone992.
repaired.
Park
Pt!one
992~2094
·
Ricky Dillinger;. Eighth year
.
.
Middleport,
Ohio
Minimum Charge75c
5443.
FREE ESTIMATE
12 cents per word three
Dba Anltlony Plumbing
·· bar to Vickie Carr; Tenth-year
1965 CHEVROLETSTA. WAGON
SS95
8·1.S.!fc
Poin!
Pt.annt &amp; Mason
&amp;
1 bar . to Helen Woode; and consec ut ive Insertions.
We hoV. a compleht !tome
V-8 engine, std. trans ., good tires. d ea n interior, green
18 cents per word six confinish, radio.
AUTO
GLASS
Main!onanct
Service
!ht
• . Open I nl5
Eleventh year bar to Ernest secutive irlsertions ..
- -~ -~ -year oround. No maHer who!
AI Co"" rd. Mgr.
Mondoy t.hru So!urdoy
25 Per Cent Dlscou n! on paid·
Taylor. Several others missed
.
your
nttd.
Complete
roof
or.
Phone
304-713-5710
ads and ads "paiq within 10
6G6 E; Matn, Pomeroy, o.
very little.
spouting ·ropolr. Interior or
Roult 33
· Mason; W. Vo.
da ys.
exterior
ear~n!ry.
Ctiilng
. Worship services were held
CARD OF THANKS
36''x 23" x .009
tile alief Paooling'anjl Siding.
&amp; OBITUARY
at lJ o'clock with Rev. Jacob
$1
.50
for
50
word
minimum
Complete
• Plumbing.. &amp;
POMEROY
Lehman spea king from Luke
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
Each additional word 2c.
Heating.
'
18: 18-30. "On ly the bloodfPMEROY, OHIO
BLIND ADS
boy Number 992.2550
HOME &amp; AUTO
Additional l5c Charge per
. washed gel in to Heaven."
We
have
·24
hr.
emergency
Adver!lserrl~nl.
Call to Prayer &amp; Self-Denial
service.
Make reservations for your
992-2094
OFFICE HOURS
Notice
prlva!e pilr!les, banquets, •
992-5803
. 742·3947
Services were held at the
8:30a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Daily,
606
E.
Main
Pomeroy
in my home in
special
occasions.
992·3898
742·4711
8:30 a .m. to 12: 00 Noon 1(0SCOT KOSMETICS and wigs BABYSIJ:TER
church here on Tuesday
USED OFFSET PLATES
for sale. Brown's. Phone 992· Mi.ddleport. Phone 992·2012.
Ideal lor mee!lng place Saturday .
We ire fully Insured
HAVE
evening, Jan. 25, with an at2·2·6fc
511J.
wl!h
or wl!h'ou! kl!chen
.
.SUPPLIES
MANY USES
tendance of 27 from Tuppers
12·3l.!fc
privileges.
and
TEXAS 01 L COMPANY has
Individual Ca!erlng
Plains, Long Bottom and Master, . Let Me Walk With
opening In Pomeroy area . No
Will seat up to 150 people.
20~
WANT WORK at home ad·
Alfred.
Thee." "Interpretation of the
FURNITURE
experience necessary. Age
.
.
dresslna
and
sluffing
en·
not
Important.
Good
June Stearns of the Alfred Art" was given by Nora Rice of
Phone
velopesf Rush sell·slamped
Stop
In
and See Our
character a must. We train.
8 for $1.00
group was program chairman, . Tuppers Plains ; and "The
envelope !o F. Uribe, Box 36, Air
992-3975
992-5786
'Floor Display .
mail C. E. Dickerson,
Albany, Ohio, 45710.
Service
Ni na Robinson was pianist. Author" by Nellie Parker,
Pres
.,
Southwestern
J.6.1fc
From !he largos! T •• ;:;;
The program " Open Up Your Alfred 's Pres . A generous
Petroleum. Carp .. Fl. Worth,
TeM
.
Bu lldozer Radiator !o
Life '' was presented with offering was received, and sent
2·2·1tC
·Smallest
Healer Core.
FOUR NEW HOMES
NEEDlECRAFT Shop.
music and readings on in.
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
Sy racu se, Ohio . Beginner
Nolllao Biggs
Stilln ess, Thanksgiving,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Swartz
lessons In knitting or
ONE HOME IN RACINE
Rtdiotor Speciofis!
Awareness, Examination, and family of Willia111Stown,
croche!ing will
beg in
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
Tuesday and Thursday, 7 !o 8 OLD
POCKET
knives ,
Now, Openness, Giving, Doing W. Va., were recent Sunday
111 ·Court St.
ONE HOME IN MIODLEPORT
p.m.
and
Thursday
a!
1
p.m.
Case
XX. Also
especially
NO MONEY DOWN .
and Mission by members from afternoon guests of his parents,
Pomeroy, Ohio
have oth~r old knives to trade
1·31 ·31c
100
PCT.
FINANCING AVAILABLE
both Societies. Mrs. Hackney Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Swartz.
or sell . Phone 992.2343.
Ph. 992-2174
A 3 bedroom .516,900.00 hom~ con bo purchased wf!h a
1·18·1fc
from Tuppers Plains sang,
Rev. and Mrs. Elmer Wright
-·
mon!hly
payment as low as ·S6.5.001or a family with a bas~
TROPICAL
FISH,
laney
- --,---=-=---=
"How Great Thou Art," ac. and Jennifer of Zanesville, 0.,
DELL WHEEL allghmen!
salary of S5,000.po and !hree children. 71(, Pd. annual
guppies, angels and breeders, . O'loca!ed
OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak
a! Crossroads, Rl. 124.
companied by Florence visited Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
per&lt;~n!age role.
·
Bellas and supplies. Phone
fables, Brass beds, dishes.
front end service,
Comple!e
Spencer . The program opened Henderson and the Dave
clocks, and -or complete 992·5443.
tune up and brake service.
12·30·1fc
househaldJi. Wrile M. D.
with the hymn, ''Open My WiUiams family , last weekWheels balanced elec.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
!rooically.
All
work·
Eyes" and closed with "0 end.
Call 992·6271.
'le
Homes
For
guaran!eed
.
Reasonable
12.J7.1fc Mobl
rates. Phone 992·3213.
60Xi2. 2·bedroom; aiTeiec!ric, ·
7-27·11C
air
conditioned,
8x20
ft.
POrch
------Friday &amp; Saturday
and a luminum awning, C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Night, 10 Til2
4 ROOM house. furnish ed, at 124
Complete Service
aluminum skirting, com.
CALL
Laurel Sl ., Pomeroy . Call992·
plete ly setup. Beautiful
Phone 949·3821
BILL NEL.SON, 992·3657
Music By
HILTON WOLFE, 94~·321
5836 or inquire at 126 Laurel
location. Owner leaving state.
Racine, Ohio
TOM CROW, 992-2580
DilLE DUTTON,
Red Stewart &amp;
. Sl.
Phone 949.4892 or 992·5272.
Crill Bradford
The Ambassadors
2·1-51p
J.JO.Ifc
S·l·IIC
DRY WALL Finisher con· READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
"'H"'A"'R"'R-:-1S"'O::-:N
-cc,:S-::T:V,-a-nd
- An,-.,-terina
'R•E•V•I•V•A•L•
, -•E•ag•l•e-•R•i•dg•el N
- E-W-. -t-2x_60_,_2_bed
__
roo
_ m_ m_oblle
traclor. R. I. Dubbeld, Phone
livered right Ia your 'proled.
742·5825.
Service. Phone 992-2522.
Com m 0 n i t y c h 0 r c h , home across !rom Bradbury
Fast and easy. Free
__,_
6·10·1fc
1-3J.Sic
Ry RAY CROMLEY
es!lmo!es . Phone, 992-3284.
Feb,uary Jrd lhru lllh . Rev. School . Call 992·5308 or see
Charles Lewis, 2nd house
Goeglelri Reody· Mix Co.,
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Free INTERIOR and exterior
Roy 0 eeter , evangelist.
so~h from Bradbury School.
WASHINGTON t NEA I
Middleport,
Ohio.
pipe
Inspection.
Paul
Stein·
Special singers Friday night.
Pel welcome.
painting.
R.
I.
Dubbeld,
phone
6-JO.!fc .
President Nixon's budge t .message brings into the open
Public lnvl!ed .
metz, phone 7&lt;12·5864.
742·5825.
1-27·1fC
-::-:-~-'-.,.-.,..,.....an admtmstratwn-congresswnal fight festering here for
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2_·2·31p . _:.......,_-::c---:--'---:--:1-26· t21p
l·Jl·SrC COLONTAL Auto BOdy, 537 High
years: It concerns influence of special interest groups on
S!., Mlddlapbr!, Ohio .
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run FURNISHED and unfurnished
!anks cleaned. Miller _S_E_W~IN_G_MA~-C-H-IN~E-S-.-R-epair
Congress. the waste this "congressional -s pecial-interests
12' • 14' - 24' • WIDE SEPTIC
Complete bOdy repairs ·and
apar!ments. Close to school.
Sportsman Club, also rifle
Sanl!a!lon, S!ewar!, Ohio. Ph. service, all makes. 992·2284. ·paintings,
co~plex " pt·oduces, and the resulting higher taxes, in·
Phone 992·5434.
glaos Installation,
matches - open sites only,
662·3035,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
JO.J8.!fc
flahon and slowdown in vital national priority programs.
free
loaner
cers and
Sunda y, Feb. 6, 12 noon .
2-12·tlc
Au!horlzed Singer Soles and
Htlmot~s.
also
mochonlcat
Says Mr. Nixon : "Government expenses increase each
2·2·31c
~B-A-::C-K"'H"o"E-A,...N-:-0-D"o"'z-E"'Rwork . .
Service. We ShorP.n Scissors . . repa!rs. Phone 992·3793.
2
BEDROOM
mobile
home
in
year because special interest groups, representing only
Septic tanks Installed. George
~·29· tfc
Racine area . Phone 992-6329.
1·l8-4fc
those.who sta nd to benefit from their programs, persuade
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·2478. - - - ' - - - - - - - ' - mo Washing!on Blvd.
12·14-lfc
dectston-makers that more resources are needed' for those
Belpre, Ollio
4·25·1fc
~ ,.
Now's Tiri1e To
programs witho~t ~egard to (he effect on the total budget.
' '
2 BEDROOM moune nomt, cl x L------------1
NOTICE
ON
FILINO
The .co~t ts multtplted by geometric progression when thi s
SEPTIC
TANKS
CLEANED
60, adults only . Phone 992· FOR THE BEST deal In a new
ORDER
QF INVENTORY
REASONABLE ra!es. t&gt;h. 446tache ts repeated for literally hundreds of programs."
5443.
AND APPRA ISEMENT
or
used
moblle
home,
try
·
4782,
Gallipolis.
John
Russell,
J.J J.Ifc
T-he Stah of Ohio, Meigs
This is strong stuff. The President's advisers believe
'FIELD SEEDS
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
O.Vner &amp; Operator.
.
Countyi Pnbate Court.
this route. is necessary if Mr . Nixon is to get any significant
Kanauga , Ohio.
5·12.!1c
To the Executrix ot the
12·17·901c
part of hts .Progra!lls through. And if he is to keep Con·
FERTIL.IZER
est11te ; to such of the following
Auto
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been as aro residents of the S!ato of
g_ress m thts electton year from voting a slew of expen.
cancelled?
Lost
your Ohio, vis: - the surviving
1
'57 CHEVY, 327 cu. in ., solid Mcistu:· -tiome ori nice tol,
stve vote-gettmg pr~grams that throw his already heavily
report
SEED CORN
operator's license? Call 992- spouse, the ne)(t of kin, the to be
lifters, Cam , 3 speed, new forced .air heat, a1r conunbal.anced budget mto a tatlspm that would bring more
beneficiaries under the will ;
Alma E . Smlth
interior and racing slicks, · ditioning In Racine area .
mOalion.
Order Now &amp; Save I
2966 .
Township Clerk
6_15_tfc and to the attorney or attorneys
good condition . Phone 992· Phone 992-6329.
representing ony of the
SUMMARY 01' CASii .
1·23·1fc
But anyone with experience in politics will recognize
5663.
1·27·6fc
aforementioned persons .
BALANCES 1
POMIROY ·
that this strong dramatizing of a Congress and special.
Clara E. Gortand, Deceastd,
' R CIIPTS
AND
EXPENDITI.IRES
Jack W. ClrMJ', Mtr.
Mlnersvllle, Ohio, No. 20.S93.
Blfonu
Jon. t, tf7t
mterest lobbies tieu)l' and its effects on taxes, unemploy.
'68 CHEVY lmP.Ia, automa!lc,
P-tft·lll1
3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
You are hertby notified that General Fund
$1 OIS 37
me~t . and meqUtty for ordinary folk is good political mapower . steering , power
the
Inventory
and
'
Ap
Moto
v
hi
1
Ll
' ·
HOUSE,
1642
Lincoln
Heights.
Arbaugh
Addition,
Tuppers
327
cu.
in
.,
grey
with
brakes,
tenal for runmn g for re·election in November.
pralsement of the estate of th~ · Ta~Fuendc e censt
Call
Danny
Thompson,
992·
Plains.
All
.
new
with
!alai
black vinyl tap, phone 985· 2196. .
aforementioned, deceased, late GasoiiM Tax Fund
3·~U· ~:
The political va\ue is especially high since it is almost
electric and ceo!ral air of
3598.
·INCOME
TAX
service.
daily
said
County,
was
flied
In
thiS
·
Totals
9m'o7
certain Mr. Ntxon s Nove mber opponent will be from the
con~l!ionlng, bath and 'I• fully Court. Said Inventory and
except Sunday, evenings by
Total Receipts ' ·
1·21·12!c ,..,.,=:::-:-:---::--:-:--7...,·18-lfc
carpe!ed, lull basement, Appraisement will be for General Fund
Senate . The more Mr. Nixon can tie his opponent, even
•
3 990 .n
appointment . Mrs. Wanda
in Long Bottom, phone
garage In basemen!. See by hearing btfort this Court on the Motor Vehicle License .' :
mdtrectly, wtth special i~terest groups, the more votes
Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road. 1 '62 FALCON, good condit ion, ·HOUSE
985.3529.
appointment, phone 992·2194 11th day of Febru~ry, 1972, ot
lox Fund
e07 17
mile wes! o! Meigs County
the. Prestdent should wm . He thereby discredits his
phone 949·3221.
1·28·11&lt;
10:00
o'clock
A.M.
Gasol
ine
Tax
Fund
·u:.oc)oo
or
992-3585.
Danny
Thompson.
Fairground
on
Rl.
7
bypass.
voctferous congressiOnal attackers and defends his own
Any ,person dtllrlng to file Totals '
25 107.$8
2·2·61c -~------Flna.nclng available.
Phone 992·2272.
exceptions thereto muat "file
Tot 1 t Receipts a lalaftc11'
proerams. Note then these additional words :
-MINERSVILLE
on
Welchldwn
12·30-tfc'
1·3·30!c
them at least· five days p·rlor to General Fund
· .5 005 78
. "The admi,nistration will vigorously oppose Irrespon·
Hill - 114 acre lot wl!h old
the date set for h,arlng .
Motor Vehicle License· , .
house, all u!lll!les, S600. SIX ROOM house, 133 Bu!!ernut
s t~le. short-stghted spending proposals that would com·
Given under my hand and
Ta:K Fund
12 2.t6 71
Ave. Con!ad Ed Hedrick, 2137 seal of nld Court, this 24th day Gasoline Tax Fund
WALNUT
STEREO,
Modern
Phone 992-6021 .
17,03 · 16
mtt laree sums ?f federal money to schemes that are
FOR A lasting glf! - LandTolels
;~,~; 3216: 65
Wadswor!h Drive, Columbus, of February 1972.
1·27·61c
scapes painted or drawn to Walnut Stereo·radlo com .
polt.hcally attrachve but endanger an inOation·free prosOhio, phOne 237·4334.
, JoM C. Bacon
Expondllurts l
·
pertly.
order. Call David and Lynn bination, 4 speaker sound
Judge and ex-officio Clerk General Fund
, r ... 597 -47
system,
4
speed
changer.
11·21·tfc
4
BEDROOM,
bath:
&amp;
hall,
lynas, 992-608~.
ofsaitt Court Motor Vehicle Lfctn1e!
·
" There will. be those who contend th at in this budge t
Balance $68 .70 . Use our
utility room, buJif.Jn kllchen,
1·28·6tp
Ta:KFurid
8,15752
budget terms. Call 992·7085. wall to wall carpet &amp; garage.
favonte progt ams are not fmanced , or are not financed
· ·
·
· .
•; ·,
By A!'ln B. Watson Gasoline Tax Fund ·
10,315:99
----~as they want them to be .
2·2·61c
Located 'h mile north o!
Depu!y Clerk Totals
.
,
23,140.98
-----Eastern High School. House Is
a . ; ll 26 C2l 2, 21 , .
Btllnct Doc. 31, 1971
"They will be absolutely right."
ABOUT YOUR WEIGH T ... .COLONIAL
Maple slereo.radio almos! finished and others 1
:
•
General Fund
408.31
•
· ··-.. . .
overweight'
ladies.
teens
and
In this attack , Mr. Nixon is on sure grounds. For so
AM·FM radio, 4 speakers, 4 being built. Call 985·3598.
Ill THE COMMON PLEAS
Motor Vehicle License
men ln!eres!ed in a Weight
speed automatic turntable.
COURTOF
TaxFund
•.129.19
.
,
l~ng as man . can re':"ember, many con~ress ional bills
' 1-21 ·30!C
Watchers ( R) Class in
,
MEIGSCOUNTY:OHIO
GasolineTaxFund
6,650.17
Balance $79 .32. Use our
have been ~ntten to msure s~me of the funds will go to
Pomeroy wri!e : · Weight
LAWRENCE
A.
HYSELL,
TotalS
11,
187 .67
Call
992.7085.
11
budget
terms.
RACINE ·- 10 room house,
or be used m a way spectal mterest groups desire.
Watchers I Rl. 1863 Sec! ion
·
Plaintiff
CASH
BALANCE,
0
2·2-6tc
ba!h, ba'semen!, garage, two
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
vs.
RECEIP.TS AND
Each senator and representative must look out for the
:-:-:-:~--=---­
lois
. No reasonable offer i
.:"er
·.
CHARLES
E.
HYSELL,
ET
EPXENDITURE$
10·3.1fc
Br""
votes he needs to get himself re-elected . Groups with
NEW 1971 Zlg ·Zag Sewlhg
~ AL.,
8Y FUND
refused. Phone 9'*9·4313.
pressure power ~et a heari~g . Contrary to public opinion
Machine
in
original
lac!ory
110
Mechlnie
S!roet
,.
Doftndonts.
Oenont Fund
SAVE up toone half. Bring your
t·21 ·121p
·•
NO. 14,941 Balance, Jan. 1, 1971
Pomeroy, Ohio
carton. ZJg.Zag to make
these a,re not always the nch or economically powerful •
914.00
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
•. • .,,.WLISTING
,
LEGAL NOTICE
.
Cem . Fund - Port
buttonholes, sew on buttons, NICE 2·slory home· with lull
mdustr!al alliances . They may be unions. associations of
151 Bul!ernul Ave., Pomeroy.
'"'
Pursuant to an Order of Sole
of Gen .
'
31 .37
monograms and make fancy basemen!, 2 lois, new forced 2 APARTMENTSp~of~sswnal m ~n . such as doctors. ~r lawyers . or non·
9
rooms,
6
Issued
by
the
Common
Plees
Rocolpls
·
designs with lusl !he twist of a air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
wiJh bath, 3 and bath . Near Court of Meigs county , Ohio, 1 General Property Tax ·- Real
pt oft! assoc1all.ons of pnvate mdtvtduals working for
ll ·21·1fc
single·dial . Left in lay.away
Elemen!ary School. Phone
Pomeroy stores. Both for will offer for sale · at public
Estate (Gross)
· 2,827.7-t
causes they bel~eve to be worthy
and never been used. Will sell . 992·7284 !o see.
57,500.00.
auction at 10:00 A. M. on Tangible Personal Property
for only $47 cash, or credit
Special interest legislation all too frequently diverts
POMEROY
February !9th, 1972, at the
Tax (Gross)
127 31
n .J.Ifc
terms available. Phone 992MODERN 6
b
Court House steps in Pomeroy, Local Government
·
moneys rrom urgent national pro~rams which help th e
- rooms, 1'/, aths. Ohio, the fallowing described
Distribution
•60.80
5641 .
many mto programs whi ch help the few.
Ni ce kitchen, carpeting. real estate :
Cigarette License Fees
2·2-6tc
LADY for part time work.
SitUate In the county of
and Fines (Grassl ' -55.69
Furnace. 519,500.00.
'
RURAL
Meigs,
in
the
State
of
Oh
io,
and
lntanglblo
Tax
453.87
Apply
to
Marvin
Glasgo
at
by Gill Fox
Vacuum
4 ACRES - Modern s room In the Towrlship of Rutland , and Sate of Cern. lots
65 oo
Modern Supply, Friday, 5 ELECTROLUX
Cleaner
complete
with
ol·
house,
bath
.
Chester
water.
bounded
and
described
as
Total
Receipts
3,99o:..c1
p.m. to 9 p.m. or &lt;!II day
tachments, cordwinder and
$10,500.00.
follo~s : ·
Topta 1 BRtginn rno Balance
Saturday.
I~
1us oco 1pts
pain t spray . Used but In like
MIDDLEPORT
Beginning at the N.W. corner
5,005.78
2·2·3fc
2
1
1
Of Section No . 2, Town 6, R.ange
lllpenclltUrll
new condlllon. Pay $34.45
apar mens- 5 to each side. 1~, Ohio Company's Purchase ; Total Expenditures
~----cash or budget plan available.
601 Eu! Main
Gas heat. All utilities . thence East 48 rods and Slinks;
BEAUTY Operalor with Ohio
- Administrative
3.86.!.12
Phone 992·5641.
POMEROY
S3,500.00.
thence south ~ deg . E. 66 rods~
- ·Ctmeterles
718 64
license. Wrile &lt; · O P.O. Box
':7."
2·2-6fc
POMEROY
ond 22 links; thence west 49
- Lighting
13'71
122, Middleport, Ohio.
2'12 LOTS
NIFTY
5
rooms,
bath,
oak
rods
and
1
link
;
thence
North
Grant
lotel
_
E:Kpendlturts
-·
2·1·3tc . .
POMEROY";:_ 1 story frame.
floors. Gas heat, basement. llh deg . Eut 66 rods and 22
General Fund
4,597.-47
2 HOUSETRAILERS, 10 x 50 2
bedrooms,
por .
On! S6 000 oo
links to the place of beginning, Bot., Dec. 31, 1971
•01 31
HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS. and 8 x 35. Ph . 367·7533.
ches, deep welf, room lot
Y 'l.f ·ACRES
containing 20 1/o ocros, more or To~ot , ~r~e ~~1tures Plus Bel.
Enlist now - stay home until
2·1·31c trailer, good neighborhood. MODERN _ 3 bedroom home less, exce~t '12 acre out of the
ec. ,
5, 005.
t
Northeast corner conveyed to
Motor Vthlclt Llctns1 78
after
graduation. Guaranteed --~-----$3,375.00.
•"
"
I
and 2 others rented. FREE Royal Church . Also exc:ept the
Tax Fund ·
assignments to Europe,
.BUSINESS ROOM
GAS. Only $16,000.00.
coal and all r ights· hereto ilatonce, Jen . l, ]971
l,869.54
Korea, Hawaii , or selected USE D Narg~ wash.er and dryer, TUPPERS PLAINS - cement
DEXTER
deeded to Emmett Diehl . Also
lltetlpta
locations In the u.s. See your . good ~on d •llon - $751or pair ; block bulldhig, large 95 x 264
BUSINESS BUILDING- 30 x except "' acr, out .of lh,o Nor . Motor Vehtcte Llconoe
local Arm y representative for Hol porn t ele~tric dryer - $40.
level lot, located on R!. 7 In
44. Neat 6 room home, bath, t heast corner conveyed to
Tax
·8,.. 17 17
fac ts about the 18 o.day Ingels Furmlure, Middleport.
town . VERY LOW AT
Frank Hysell .
Total Receipts
a•.tl7· .
d
Ill
d
II
. Delayed Entry Program and Phone 992·2635.
r e we · 2 acres .
· Except therefrom tt"!e one Total Beginning Balance ·17
$6,900.00.
the Army 's new pay raise.
1.-1-Jtc
•
RURAL
ac re parcel conve'Jed to · Plus _Rtcelpts ·
1~,286.71
bath, 3 or 4 bedrooms. Lawrence Hysttl an Nellie
· lxptndltures · ·
For more information call
INVESTMENT PROPERTY 7 rooms;
Gas heal. 2gordens. $7,000.00. Hysell by deed recorded In Yol. Total Expenditures
J
593·3022.
COME and see our February RACINE - large tile building
POMEROY
w,
Page
m
,
of
the
Deed
Mlactllo~tous
II' t2.
1·31 ·51c Sate at Parson's. 2 pc. livi ng
with brick front, business NICE -7 rooms, 1'12 baths, gas Records of Meigs County, Ohio .
- Motn!tnonce
t.l6.! 41
room suite with Herculon
room with 3 apartments over, · furnace. Storm doors and
Except therefrom tt'te ' one Grand Totaf Expendlturts ' 11
covers - $129.95; 3 pc. table
garage wlth apartment over,
acre parc•l conver,•d to i;lmer
Motor Vehicle License·
Id
$7
sels - $16.95 ; bedroom suite
w n ows. •500·00·
Hysell and Floss e Hysell by
Tox Fund
1 157 s•
storage room, 3 apartments
Bot " Doc. 31, 197 1
·•
- 599.95; All cedar bedroom
rooms,
""lh,
~as
dHd
recorded
In
Vol.
142,
Pooo
T
4,' 12919
are furnished, one is not, NICE ._MINERSVILLE
6
ua
472,
Of
lilt
Dttd
'
Rocoras
·
of
otol
Expenditures
Plus
'
suiles with big post bed about 25 years old, oil
furnace.
Baseme~t. Lorge of. Meigs county, Ohto.
Bot
.,
Doc.
31,
1971
12,2l6.7l
$299.95;
dishwasher ,
apartments are rented. sa,ooo.oo.
·
Excopt therefrom tho one
Guollllt Tox '•••
Westinghouse - $199.95; We
$21.500.00.
.NEW
LISTING
ocre
parcel
conveyed
lo
Nor·
Botonco,
Jon. I, 1971
~.23 6 .i 6
will finance your eccounl with
1 $TORY FRAME
UNDER LEASE - Business m'on Hy&amp;tU ond Dora Hy111t by
Rtcolpts
a low-low finance charge at MIDDLEPORT- 2 bedrooms, down, 6 rooms, and bath, up.' deed recorded In Vol. 143, Page ~Uollnt Tax
12100 00
. Parson's In Kana~a, , Ohio,
balh, full basement, paneled,
. :J~jg:'c~~~ty~~~t/'&lt;O~ds of . T~::t ~:~~~',',~ Botoni{IOO:oo .
Stale Roule 7, 2 m1les N. of
liled, carpeted, gas furnace, S16,000N.OOEW. LIS.TiNG
lhferonce Deed : v ot. 126,
Plus Rocotp11
17 036 16
Silver Bridge.
extra lot. $8,900.00.
1
MOBILE
HOME
2J&gt;edrooms,
·
Page
6,
Meigs
Coun
y
Dttd
T
,
.
l•pondltu'rts
' ·
I
2·1·3tc SOLD OOWN (WI&lt; NEED lOx 50. Two ,oddiiiOt)OI rooms. Records.
·
•
· otal Exptndlluros
·
LISTINGS.)
•
Cetlo.r carport. $5,000.00.
Torms ol Soto:· Ctlh for not · - Mttcollanoous
o
;:-37:Y::E-:
.tt::R- o-ld-,,.-R~g-is-1er.,-.ed -PO
- lled
HENRY CLELAND
Noerly 1'1:1 ACRES.
leu thon two·lhl(do .q! the ap . ·G- Molnttnonco
6:073
:76
12
Hereford Bull.; no price .
REALTOR
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
pralot&lt;l voiUt, ' tho tpprolotd
nnd Totot l!x~tnGitur" _23
quoted over phone ; phone 9.119votuo
btingiSOO.OO,
ond
oubltcl
OaiOIInt Tox Fund 10 315"
A
Office tn-m•
111•
"Thi• i• our Miu W.eadowil. She replaced three
2726 or 949·4401.
__ .!.*
!:.
.
•
to
tho
root
utott
loxH
tor
1972.
Tl~l
. , Doc,. 31, 1m
i 11 •
Ruldenca tn-2568
5 m 2371
"
'
•
ROIII'f
C
..
HARTINIACH,
8111
E.,..,altur"
Ptuo'
'
computara .at &lt;!Ur lut office party!"
2·.1·31p
1·30·61c
1·30·61G c1) s1~~·~~,·::1·:~~~f:."IT.; o•to C2r~~··1r··· 3).1971
1Ul6. t6

Of
QUAliTY

. CAN I
.. I.WfiJG?

2-2

U'L

.

The

Wanted To Buy

Daily Sentinel

SMITH NELSON .
· MOTORS. INC. ·

BUT IF 'iOIJ DON'T FIX THAT
L&amp;AI&lt;V PIF'Iii TCIDIIIY, 'I.'M
&lt;OOIN~ '10 CALl. AN~R

'DANCE

RAY CROMLEY

WHISPERING
PINES
NITE Q.UB

PLUMBER!

Sale

For Rent

Congress Critics
Give Nixon Ammo

__ ___

M_(UER
MOBILE HOMES

..$"'.· •

'. ·: . "EGAL ·

.

.

GASOUNE AILEY

.

6tore won't take
"-- with a jillion
back! I'm 6tuck

You've

qot a
lot of

.
Ciovia?

~..-(, ,,q

cru~t.

Slim ...

after
what's

rcwrcm:. .
IF IT'S A MAll ·
ORf&gt;..WO~

... Wfl,&amp;.T

Sales

Real Estate For Sale

r&lt;eal Estate For Sale

~

For Sale ·

ACROSS
1. Volcanic
matter
5. Circle
segment
B. Germanic
deity
9.-for
one's
·breeches
13. Forearm
bone
14. Famous
horror
films star
15. Nervous
twitch
16. Mon's
nicknaml'
17. Scepter
18. Under
%0. Exasperate
%1. Final
22. Bungle
23. Place of
worship
25. Consist·
ingof
wood
;!i. Backslide
17. Actress
-Hagen
:18. Artificial
bait
29. Tangle '
31. Swiss
canton
32. !olet
33. Toss
35. Withdraw
37. Malay
'Moslem
38. Early
lunch

• gil B •;(
Vll'
'
TEAFORD
SR
·
1

l

------

Help Wanted

Oeland
Realty

,,
n·

..
=#:·
1

l= 11·-~J~-,~-:"";.

f

I • f

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9

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i.

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I

IIARJWR'

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I
I

MI~;HT 3E MAD
Aec&gt;UT THE E.NGINE.

.

Now ll'l'IUIP the elreled lotton
to form the lllrprioe I!NWer, u

Co\anrrtft
Yu1erd•1'•

nut"' Nnual to have onJy halfof

thu-TWINS

T

IPF . WK II .

M FTW! IIX
I'ZCWFHB .

UJWF.-PFULX

I ZCF ,
PT W

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lo.orrow)

J•,.hle" ANNUL SCOUT GaATfS MIDWAY
Anewer1 II"•

Y..tenlay'o Cryptoqunte: .'\ GOOD LEADER C AN'~ GET
TOO .FAR AfiEAD OF JIIS FOLLOWERS.-F.RANKLIN j).
!lOOSEVELT
. ,
\&lt;e 10'12 Kin~ Featur...Sfndicale, Inc.)

,.

Unoc:ramblo tht~tl'our Jumblea,
one letter 19 each oquaro, to
form four ordinary words.

Jied brlheabo•oe.noon.
I.~=J~~~~~~~~·u=·=·=
Millie SlUG MSWIUn
"( I I I Y'

7. W
NPFU

JJ(!l1Ml13~®~ !:::!!!-:c

I I I

A Cryptoll'am Quotation

..e

I ,...,

zn.

AXYDL8AAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter Nimrlv .111lands for anorher. Jn this sample A is
used lor ~the three 1: •. x r.. ,. th&lt; two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and !ormation of the words ore all
]lints. Each day the code letters are different. .

like .a person.

,

6. Debacle
7. small
queen
wheel
41. Southwest 10. Famous
wind
star of
horror
DOWN
films
I. Lummox 11. Tristan's
beloved ' 'll'!lltf'rd•,·'• An•wer
Z. Extem·
porize
12. Judge of
3. Contem·
Israel
30. Famous
porary
16. "-Dame ·
horr.or
star of
de Paris"
ftlms star
horror
19. Rent
32. An Arab
films
Lariat
land ,
4. Anecdotal Z2. Get on
34. Churl
gather· · 23. Charm
36. Early
ings
:14. Bay tree
~irdener
5. Attorney Z9. ltalian
37. Lamb
city
talk

. DAILY CRYP1'0QUOTE- Here's how to work It:

you

WMP0/1390

39. Hair style
40. Spanish

hnm

We tJJlk to

'r .

Kl~

IS IT?

' .

�11-The I)IUySenUnel,Middlepott-Pomeroy,o., Feb. 2,1972

.103 Earn Honors
At Junior High
Dewhurst, Mary Durst,,Nancy
Ebersbach, Patty Edwards,
Paulli Eichinger, Teresa Ellis,
lllird aii week! grading period. Timmy Ellli, ~ecky Fultz,
Making a grade of "B" or. Sandy Garnes, Jenllifer Grate,
above In all their subjects to lle· Debra Hartenbach, Ro,nnie
named to the roll were:
Hawkins, Mary Hoffma.o,:,
EIGHTII - Peggy Aleshire, Leora Hutthlloil, Tony Hut~.
Anita Ash, Debbie Bailey, Tom Vicki Johnston, Cj\etyl KenBatey, Bruce Blackston, Gary nedy, Jackie King, Paul Klein,
Boggess, Brenda Bolin, Lorain&lt;! McElhaney, Rhimda
Elizabeth Burns, · Sandra McGrath, Duane McLaughliri,
. Carleton, George Carper, Denise Marshall, Debbie
Pamela Clonch, Karen Osborne; John ParUow, Faith
Coleman, Ginger . Cullums, Perrin, Bobby Powers, Trudy
Marty Dugan, Patty Eblin, Roach, Suey Samuels, Timothy
Elaine Fish, John F'llllz, Cindy Sictas, Debbie . Shelton,
·Glaze, Crystal Glaze, Darla Rebecca Thomas, Diana
Harper; James Hawley, An- Thornton, June Wamsley,
drew Hoover, Laura Hoover, Duaoe Weber, Beverly WllcOll,
Debbie Janey, Bonita John- Beverly Will and Kelly Wilson.
ston., Joseph Justis, Debra
Kauff, Mona King, Amanda
Lee, Taml Lee, Mike OPERATOR CONDEMNED
Magnotta, Charles Marshall,
PHNOM PENH (UPI) - A
Tammy . Mowery, Carmel military. tribunal has con- ·
Murphy, Kimberly Ohlinger, demned to death a C8mbodlan
Redina Pratt,. Cindy Reedy, air force. radio operator 'conSteve Rife, Rebecca Roush, victed of coll8borating with the
Kathy Rupe, Mary Ruschell, Communists. Sgt. Eap Han will
Bobby Schneider, Dale Sisson, face a firing squad. He, adJudy Smith, Tammy Snider, mitted he · gave . · radio
Tamra Stanley, George frequencies and time of
Stewart, Robert Stewart, communications to his enemy.
Michael Swick, Usa Thomas,
Donna Thornton, Gregory
Let each of you look not
VanMeter, Jeff . Walburn,
only to his own interests, but
Barbara Whittington, Lo.ah also to the int~rests of othWill and Earl Woods.
ers.-Philippians 2:4.
SEVENTH - Mary Blaett.
nar, Tammy Blake, Teresa .
Those
who
bring sunshine
Brawn, Dale Browning, Kellee
Jimmy, age 8; Mark, 7, and Gospel Church at Gallipolis Haven have "been so nice" ... Burdette, Kathy Campbell, to the lives of others cannot
Stacy, 6. Jimmy and Mark both Ferry.
she has "never lived in a place Marilee Cassell, Cathy keep it from themselves.James M. Barrie, British
attend New Haven Grade
She said the people of New where they were so friendly." Coleman, Mark Davis, Robin dramatist.
School and Stacy ~!tends
kindergarten at Hartford.
Mrs. Duncan, a native of
Point Pleasant, attends Faith

·.- ELBERFELD$

Meigs Junior High School

has named 103 p;&amp;plls to Its
honor roll at the cl011e II. the

Mrs. Janice Kinnaird Duncan, Instructor in Ceramics

.Loneliness Eased in Ceramic Oasses
NEW HAVEN - Mrs. James
(Janice) Kinnaird Duncan of
New Haven is occupied these
days with her ceramic classes
in her home in New Haven on
Rt. 33.
With four children, the
youngest, Pam, age 2, Mrs.
Duncan couldn't get aut very
often· to meet the people of the
area; so she l!id the next best
thing - she brought people to
her home! After starting
ceramic classes on Tuesdays
and W~nesdays . she has met
several interesting persons.
Fallowing the death of her
husband, SFC James Duncan
by mortar fire In Vietnam on
March 3, 1971 at Plei Trap
Valley, Mrs . Duncan took up
ceramics as a hobby to ease
her loneliness. She has expanded to the place where she
has purchaSjid a ~iln, and
paints and pours her own
molds.
Other members of her
family, in addition to Pam, are

MEIGS niEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursday
February 2-3
NOT OPEN

Friday &amp; Saturday
February 4-5

RED SKY
AT MORNING
{Technicolorl

Richard Thomas
CatherinE.

~ urns

" GP"

Featurotto: Three Stooges

The Almanac
By United Presslutemallonal
Today is Wednesday, Feb. 2,
the 33rd day of 1972.
The moon Is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Jupiter.
Tbe evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
Those born on th.is day are
under the sign of l\quarius.
Austrian violinist Fritz Kreisler was born Feb. 2, 1875.
On this day In history:
In 1&amp;18 Mexico signed
treaty giving Texas, New
Mexico, Arizona, and California
to the United States for $15
million.
In 1876 the National Baseball
League was formed with teams
from Boston, Chicago, Cincinnati, New York, Philadelphia, St.
Louis, Louisville and Hartford,
Conn.
In 1933 Adolf HiUer, the new
Nazi chancellor, ordered dis·
solving of the Reichstag.
In 1969 2 deaths in the world .
of arts- actor Boris Karloff at
age 81 and metropolitan opera
star Giovanni Martinelli at 83.
A thought for today : Roman
poet Ovid said, "to be loved, be ~
lovable:"

Colorcartoons :

Deep End
The Hunt
SHOW ST ARTS7 P.M.

Three races for major county treasurer.

positions face . Republican
voters in the Meigs County
Ma~ primary etectiollS. ·• , ·
This was as8Ured in the final
filings of .candidates ·with the
Meigs . County Board of
Elec;tions at · 4 p. m. Wed·
nesday. Races will be for the
nDmihatlon of the Republican
party for cldrk of courts,
county'
commissioner and
.

.

New VC Peace
Plan Proposed
'

Come to ,Elberfelds Busy_
Ready to Wear Department
See the outstanding values In wom,~tns ·new
spring blouses- long sleeves and roll sleeves tailored styles in solids, prints, stripes and
plaids. Beautiful easy care fabr.ics require
. little or no Ironing - All top name brands,
. Sizes 30 to 38 ant! 40 to 44. See the many new
arrivals each day Including coats, suits.
blouses, slacks, Wrangler jeans - chlldrens
. wear. The latest iti styling, fabrics and colors.

Flare leg styles - 10 ounce denim - 100 per
cent cotton- all western style- doub[e sewn
seams - belt loops · zipper front. Many
colors t~ choose from.
Sizes 6 f!l 18

"WRANGLER"
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New style [us! in. Sizes 8 to 18 in

regulars and slims featuring
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cut flares with white stitching.
Saddle pockets. Brown or plum.
Snap front .
"I

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Also boy!i zipper front low .
cut flare leg jeans in 14 oz • .
plus denim. Regular and
slim sizes 8 to 18.

The Ferry Boat, Champion No. 3

News Notes

Brought L~vestock from Pomeroy

By Alma Marshall

Ran

To Mason for Shipment by
I joked about every promi· MASON-The boat above Is the ferry boat Champion No. 3
docked
at
Mason,
W.
Va.
In
years
past
this
boat
plied
the
Ohio
nent man in my lifetime, but
I never met one I didn't like. River between Mason and Pomeroy.
The ·B&amp;o stock train carne up from Kenova on Saturday
- Will Rogers, humorist.
According.to a story by Millard Gress, the boat was a sturdy
craft, well built in every way. It had two steam boilers with evenings and tbe cattle were driven up a ramp into two 10 three
ple~ty of power. Her hull, which was covered with plated steel, . cattle cars. It was difficult at times to get them up the ramp;
sheep and hogs, he reports, were the worst. A "judas goat"
could and often did cut through thick ice.
The only time the boat was lied up was when ice floats were sometimes was tied in the cars so the sheep would follow their
from bank to bank, with no open spaces. Then it was tied up leader. Then the judas goat would be taken out unUI the next
shipment.
behind the ice piers at Pomeroy.
Gro111 recalla that one time when the Olampion No. 3 Wlllt
The floats were steel plated too; heavy ice would push these
floats up on the shore and crush houseboat~, !lklffs, steamboats lringlng over a herd of sheep to Ma1011 for shipment the top bar
on the boat waa not ln posiUon. All we~~t well unW the !~ got
or anything In its path.
near
the middle ollhe river when a large towboat coming down
When this picture was taken it Is believed that Capt. Charles
.
Jividen, father of Lucille Swackhamer, Mason, was captain and with loaded barges blew lor a pauing.
The lheep were quiet unW the Cbamplon blasted her loud
owner; Dale DeWol!, lhe pilot, and Roy Sherman, fireman.
whistle.
Alter that ihrl!l whistle, a big bucli: ram went over the
In the center of the picture is the horse-drawn Gress Bakery
top bar lnto the river. !hell two by two the whole flock followed:
wagon. The floating wharf is visible on the Pomeroy !ide.
Gress said cattle in tbosedays were brought over .from Meigs all swiming back to the Ohio shore,
Getting them back on the boat waa ablg II'Obiem.
County and driven to the stock y~~~ocated ~-~~ason. He
recalls how the children o{ the town would help the men drive the
catUe, blocking side streets and alleys so the cattle went in the
right direction.

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CHAPMAN'S ·sHOES
POMEROY, OHIO

')

Attendance at · Nazarene
Mr, and Mrs. Clayton
Sunday School Sunday, Jan. 29 Schartlgar attended the
wa's 51, collection was $12:50. funeral of a relative in West
Those thai called. at the Virginia and spent a night with
Ridenour home to see Mrs. . their daughter .'
Wickham were Mrs. Mary
Bobbie Lynn Wood and slsl!!f
Genbelmer, Fr~ Mill and Debbie Wood of Gallipolis
Mrs. Edith Osborn.
.
spent tile week end with their
Mrs, Weber Thoma took : parents Mr. and Mrs. Robet't
dinner one day this week with and Sandra.
Mrs. Erma Heilman.
··
Mrs. Mae Burke Is real sick
Freda Miller called on Mrs.
with nu .
Untus . Ludwlclt Monday afBradley Porter Is in hospital ternoon.
· real sick.
Charles King and family of
Glendale, W. Va. CJ)lle to his ·
sister from Florida aild spent
Cheer ·rhe Sick
the day with his mother Mrs.
With A
Edith !{ing .•
Beautiful
Mrs. John Hoffman·Ia j~ulte
poorly. She spent llnie
with ber granddaughter Mn.
Margie Goett. Mrl. Hoffman
received a surprile phone call
from ber brother Harold from
Illinois Jut week.
Sorvl"': MicllllePort,
Pomoro,, CJ~lliPOIIa, 0.
Mn. Moon visited her
&amp; Mila Co.,
v•.
brother in Springfield one day
recently . .

Wrangler
Wear
WORK
UNIFORMS
'

ews•• in Briefi

FIORI '4.00
• Dudefs Fbist .
w.

II
(

By Ulllted l&gt;reu lutel'llllloual

·,

BELFAST, NOR111ERN IRELAND - BRITISH Prime
Minister Edward Heath sent an appeal to Northern Ireland's
Rmlan Catholics today to call off a new protest·march Sunday,
but a civil rights leader .said the parade would go ahead anyway.
In Londonderry, six persona were lnjiD'ed when . gumnen
bombed a shop and bus station during the )unchtlme rush hour. It
waa lheflrstmajor violence ln the city since 13 dvllialll died in a
clash there with British troops Sunday. ~rillsh officials said
Heath made the plea ln a letter to Cardinal WUilam Conway,
jl'imate of ail Ireland, and warned that the scheduled march In
the town of Newly, near the border with the Irish Republic, could
lqd ,\Q ~.. ~. . .. .
-·. ' ..

Pants are made with heavy drill pockets •
gra~,uated rise for 'p~oportlonal fit. EKpertly
made., Sizes 29 to SO waist' measure. Matching
sh!rts are In ·stzes 14112 to 17. Full tails .that
won't ride out. Lined dress si\Irt collar- Two
l)utton through flap pacl!.ets.
·

RECORD ALBUMS .'

Anothe~ , big shipment of yo~r favorite
record albums Including Countrv. Western.
Easy listening - Popular • Sacred and
Marches.
'
'
'

1~9- each.
'

...

_

Be ntriftJI SM Mof You'r S1i 'ps Fmm,

.

West Bediord, Robert L.
Jones, Shade, RI. 1.
Norlh Chester. Robert Wood,
Long Bollom, Rt. 2.
South

Chester,

David

Koblentz, Pomeroy, Ri. 3.

?

Columbia, Rolland C~abtree,
Albany, Ri. 1.
_

(Continued on page 12)

. POM EROY-M IDDLEPnin. QH 10

THESE FOUR MIDDLEPORT miniBters, and the Rev. Henry Key, Jr., pastor of the
Middleport Mt. Moriah Baptist Church, are planning thetr annual Community Evangelistic
Crusade set for Feb. 27-March 5 at the Middleport Elementary School. Speaker for the services to be held at 7:30p.m. each evening will be the, Rev. James A. DeWeerd of Pennville, Ind .
Ministers planning the crusade Wednesday, from the left, .are the Rev. Charles Simons, First
· Baptist Church ; the Rev. Robert Bumgarner, Heath United Methodist; tbe Rev. Dwight
Zavitz, First United Presbyterian, and the Rev. Audrey Miller, 'Church of the Nazarene .

THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 3, 1972 ___
PH_ON_E_9_
92_
~ 2_15_
6 _ _ _ _____;J;.;:.E:.:. N.: . : CE::.:. NT§..:l.

service appllcatloas to twoGeneral Telephone Co. of years for this area.
Ohi~ has bui!Beted $157,400 for
Kenley Krinn, commercial party iD urban localities ud
expansion of telephone ser- manager at Athens, said major no more lban five-party In .
vices this year In its Meigs emphasis will be put on up- rural areu. At the Iaiiie
County exchanges which in- grading party lines. Numerous 'time urban busllless 1ervlce
elude Pomeroy - Middlepo~t. projects are scheduled will be limited to one-party
Letart Fails, Portland, Racine throughout the Meigs County and rural, tw..,arty, he
and Rutland serving nearly area to expand necessary cable IBid.
This stems from new
6,030 telephones in 95.2 square and switching facilities.
miles.
By Dec, 31, 111'11, the minimum standards issued
·- This Is part of the _$1,607,700 , company. muat be prepare!i
(C:ontinlied on page 2)
· bUdgeted for the next three
to limit new realdenllal

Crisp ·Files for Congress
,

AWARD RECEIVED ~The Melga SoU and Water Colieervitlon District bon of Illpervisors received an excellent rating for distinctive aervice in 1971 when Rex Shenefield, right,
accepted the award presented during the 29th annual meeting of the Ohio Federati9n of Sail
and Water CoMervalion Districts in Columbus, January 18-20. Purpose of the distinctive
aerV!ce recogrlition program Is to guide the district boards of supervisors in plaming annual
conservation programs, to develop conservation awareness on the part of all Ohio citizens, and
to urge the use of Ohio land according to its capability and the curcent needs of the people and
area involved.

Ex-Addicts Tell Drug Story
Two inma les from the
Federal Corrections Institute
at Chillicothe outlined their
experiences in drug addiction
for students of the Meigs High
School Wednesday .
The Inmates - John A. Gay
and Ralph Gholston - were
accompanied by Harry Kinder,
Jr., of the Institute staff.ln the
IIIOI'IIinj! the lwo prisoners

addressed
some
250
sophomores
while
the
remainder of the day was spent
in classroom situations.
Brought to Meigs High School
by Harold Sauer of the
Guidance Dept., the prisoners
explained their addiction to
drugs and the problems they
had enciruntered.
One of . the twa finally

committed armed robbery to
secure money for drugs while
!he other, · who was a
businessman, embezzled funds
to purchase dope.
The sessions were opened to
question and answers. The
'prisoners warned students
against experimenting with
drugs.

LANGSVILLE - Jack W. as much Federal assistance as
Crisp, Democrat of Langsville, · it could or should have.
announced his candidacy today
He also slated, "I feel that
lor the Democrat nomination the people should have a choice
for the office of Tenth District between left and right w\ng
Representative to Congress in politics and since I am a
the May Primary.
moderate, niy candidacy will
Crisp said he had decided to ~provide a voting choice for the
run for this office because In people of the Tenth District. I
his opinion the district Is hope I will not be mlsuninadequately represented.
derstood in what I am saying,
"The main issue that or that I am promising to solve
motivates me to run Is that we all problems. f make no
the people are tired of our promises; other than to
district being ignored. When honestly and fairly represent
elected, I shall do every tiling in the people of the Tenth District my power to change it. In to the best of my ability. "
voting, my first consideration
Crisp Is President of the
will always be the needs of the Leading Creek Conservancy
people and the district, and not District and Chairman of the
the needs of special interests." Leading Creek Watershed
Pointing to his own record of Assoc1aUon. He was elected to
bringing funding into the area, this office in 1966. Crisp Is also
Crisp charged that, overall, the a licensed minister, a member
Tenth District haa not received . of the Middleport Masonic
· Lodge F&amp;AM No. 363, National
Rifle Association of America,
Aircraft Owners and · Pilots
Association, and a Commercial
Aircraft Pilot.
J. Sherman Porter II,
Gallipolis, did not file a
petition for the Democrat
nomination lor the office of

JACK CRISP

Tenth District Repreaenlallve to Congress ;while to
Zanesville, Wednesday.
Porter told Ibis newspaper
Wednesday nlgbtlbatlle wfll
support Crisp for the party'a
nomination on May 2.
Crisp said today :
"I realize that it will take a
(Continued on page 12)

Drew Webster Post Will
Elect Legionaire of '71

•

COl,UMIIUS -SEN. HUBERT H. HUMPIIREY, D-Mlnn.,
waa uked aleedlng question wbtn he visited the borne ground of
Ohio state Wednesday: What did he think of the brawl at Minnesota last week In which two OSU basketball playen were
ilcked and bea!ell?
......,_ "ll waa a rearettable development," Humphrey said,
nluing to c11acu1a punl.lbmenta. "I doubt that a man who Ll out
l'll1lllnl fiJr the prealdency abould try to be the commlasloner of
l!)e Big 'h", I'd rather be Preside11t ofthe Big 50."
COLuMBUS -PER80NB WITII THE NAME of Brawn bave
~on~· beeli 'involVed ln Ollio 1t11e gonnment and the lHnd to

.cailltallle on it apparently will continue lhil year. Three BroWIII

ZIPPER DEMONSTRATION- Mn.

Jemdre, Sheets,

·aaalstant extension agent of home econamlcs, demonstrates
a simplified way of Inserting a zipper as tlfre~· begloners

w. Brown.
. ~I

Quivey, Pomeroy, Rt . 2.

Devoted To The lntere~IJJ ()f'l'he Meigi-Ma&amp;On Area

CLEVELAND- U. .S DISrJUCI' COURT Jlldge Ben C.
deadline for flling . f~ Ohio's
!rimarY election May 2 until Feb. 17. The previous deadline waa
4p.m.~.
·
Green extended the deadline at the request of supporters of
Sen. Henry Jacksoil, D-Washlngton and former 'Minnesota
senator )!:ugene McCarthy, both candidates for the Democratic
presidential nomination.

llled Wednesday for the May 2 primary election for the &lt;lllo
&amp;lpreme .Oltri.
'
Tiley wwe Incumbent · Justice Uoyd 0. Brown, former
Justice~ w. Brown and WUilam B. Brown, of Olilllcothe, a
111nner •w•D•t.e Judce. Tbree other BroWIII are among the
ute'a top elected~- Ulutellant'Gov. Jo!V' W. Brown,
Atlcimey Genll'll WIDIIm J. Brown and Secretary .of State Ted

list of central committee
candidates to be elected May 2.
The only. race involved is in
Racine Precinct where Grover
C. Salser, Jr., and Otis F.
Knopp have both filed for the
post on the central committee.
Democrats filed almost a
complete licket of central ·
committee candidates.
Precincts in which no candidate filed include West
Bedford, Tuppers Plains,
Dexter , Rock Springs and
Pageville. The · Democrats
have races for the central
committee post in three
precincts shown in the
following list of the committee
candidates or both parties:
Easl Bedford, James H.

G-T Upgrading Telephone Service ·

~N,W. VA.-GOV.ARCHA.MOORE,thebest
RepUbllc8n wte-getter ln. recent Weal Virginia hiBtory, an- _
rxnmced Wednesday he would seek re-electiQn, instead of run-. ,
nihg for the Senate.
The 'dedsion ensured that mllllonalre John · D. "Jay" ·
Rockefeller, 34, leading Democratic gubernatorial candidate.
would have a stiff fall electoril battle.

COLUMBUS-GOV. JOHN J. GIWGAN announced today
that 4,000 air polluters in.Ohio will be put on notice of new and
tougher ~Ir pollution control laws thai went lnto effect. last
Friday. Vlolatio!UJ carry fines of up to $10,000 a day in an eff~rt to
eliminate "hazards to olD' health ... " ·
"I bell eve people in this country and thla state can and should
be able to·ptnUe a eatisfying We, free from the fear that their
water and air may be polson, or that ugliness, ste!ICh. filth and
disease lie ratting over the next ridge," said Gilligan. "By
' working together with theae plana for Collection, dliposal,
recycling and recovery In solid wastes and emission control in
air pollution, we can eUminate these hazards to our health and
abuses to OlD' e~~vlrOnment which could literally destroy our
. society," he added.
·
·

•

primary race will be for the
nomination
as
county
treasurer . Howard Frank,
Racine, incumbent, will be
opposed .bY .William S. Cross,
Racine.
Other Republican candidates
for major posts with no
Democrats filing for any of
these positions ilftlude Eleanor· Robson, incumbent,
recorder ; . Rankin
Ray
Pickens, incumbent, for
coroner; Berna~d V. Fultz,
incumbent, for proseculing
attorney; Manning D. Webster
for judge of the court of
common pleas , probate
division, ·and Robert ·c. Harten bach, incumbent, for
sheriff.
Also filed with the county
board of elections Wednesday
was a .2 mill tax levy, for a
three year period, to all voters
of Meigs County for the
Community Mental Health and
Mental Retardation Progr~m .
The Republicans filed a full

ar- Wednesday extended the

Perman.ent press. Work pant's of SO percent .
Fortrel Polyester and •50 per :cent ,Cotton.
S&lt;;otchgard finish. Work shirts to match.
Oioose navy blue, Forest green or Oiarcoal
9rey.

I

NO. XXIV . NO. 207

'.

SAIGON -THE U. S. COMMAND today reported five Glil
woulded lna tiiD'geolllghting involving the U. S. 1st Air Cavalry
Division and the Viet Cong In an area where two American
soldiers were killed earlier iri the week ..As the fighting increased
In the area 50 miles from Salgon,lhe South Vietnamese reported
their aircraft hsd destroyed sltNo_rth Vietnamese tanks and·four
trucks ln a Communlat stronghold in the Central Hlghlailds.
With the latest ~eup of fl8bUng involving Americans, the
casualties totaled two dead and 18wounded. But U.S. sopkesmen
said the increaSecl acti~ was not necessarily because of lncreued guerrilla inflltratiojlln the area of Saigon's outer envlrona but to bicreaaed U.S. patrollng to forestall an expected
Communist offensive on the eve of President Nixon's Feb. 21 visit
to Peking.

Chester East· News Notes

1

PARIS (UPI)-The Viet
Cong submitted a new and
somewhat sofler ·peace plan,
to4ay, prom!sing to ielease all
American prisoners of war the
day all U.S. trOOjia are withdrawnfromSouthVIetnamand
to begln .peace negoUatiollS
with the Saigon government If
Prea!dent Nguyen Van Thieu
resigna.
The plan, submitted at the
ltrd regular session of the
VIetnam: peace talks, was
roupled with an appeal by the
Viet Colli for the South Vietnamese anned forces to join
Hanoi's side ln1he war to force
withchwalof American troops

Just
of Womens Wrangler Jeans

,.

only Democrat to file for the
· The nominatlon.for the clerk nomination for lhat position.
of courts will be a three-way · The nomination for the·
race with.candldates includlni! candidate to run in the fall for
Mrs. Evelyn L~cke, in- the term beginning'J!'n. 2, 1973 .
cum bent, Syracuse; Larry . on the Meigs County Board of
Eugene Spencer, of Racine, . Commission.ers will also be a
and Charles Richard Karr, Jr., three-way race in May. The
Middleport. Tbe nominee will candidates are Ralph W. Ours,
be. opposed in the November . incumbent, Lebanon Townelection by Mrs. Mary Martin, ship; Daniel E. Thompson of
Pomeroy Route 3, who was the Pomer.oy, and Richard F.
· Jones, also Qf Pomeroy. The
nominee in tho fall will be
opposed by Democrat, William
E. Snouffer, Pomeroy, the- only
Democrat to file for the Jan. 2
term.
Incumbent Republican
&lt;:ommissioner Robert Clark,
Harrisonville ; is not opposed i~
the May primary. He is seeking
the term beginning Jan. 3, 1973.
and "liberate the south."
However, in the fail Clark will
The appeal was addressed to be qpposed by Democrat Joe
·the people of South Vlelnlllll a8 Denison of Middleport, only
well as the ai'IDed forces, Democrat to file for the Jan. 3,
urging them ''to close their 1973 commissioner.'s term:
rank!to11)81'chforward ... with
The third Republican
the determinati(ln to loll the
U.S. Vietnamization plan to
fight so as to bring about the
compJete withdrawal of all
u.s. trQOPII and the collapse of
the puppet 81111): and ad!Jiinistratlon to liberate the
south, to defend the north and
to proceed to the peaceful
reunification of the coUntry."
The peace plan and the
appeal both were presented by
(Continued on page 12)

'

'

•

The Legionnaire of the Year
· will be selected by popular vote
when Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, meets on
Tuesday , Feb. 15.
•
The name of the post
member selected for the honor
will be kept in secret until the
annual birthday part~ In
Mar ch when he will be
honored.
Durilig Tuesday night's
meeting of the post, Clarence
.Schmucker, retired from ·the
U. S. Marine Corps, and a
veteran of both the Korean and
Vietnam Wars, was accepted
as a new member.
Charles Swatzel announced
that a bus will be chartered for
members and guests for a trip
to a Cincinnati \&gt;llseball game
observe. Left to rigbt are Mrs. EvtreU Llchlfoot, Mrs. Gary
on July 30. Residents wishing
Swope, Mrs. Sheets, and Mrs. Loren Hoffman . See page &amp;lor
to make reservations for the
more pictures and a report by Charlene Hoeflich of a Meigs .
trip are to contact Swatzel or
County Extension Service Sewillg Course in progross.
Leonard Jewell.

A trustees meeting was
announced for Feb. 29 and
members are reminded that a
Valentine dance will be held at
the hall on Saturday, Feb. II.
Swatzel reported on the
department winter conference
held in Colul)lbus last Sunday. ·
Others attending from the post
are Leonard Jewell, commander; Frank Vaughan,
departmen~
Americanism
chairman, and Paul Casci,
. district Gifts for the Yanks
Who Gave chilirman. Refreshments were served by Roy
Reuter.
TO MEET FRIDAY
The Middleport Chamber of
Commerce and Retail Mer.chants Assn. will meet at 7:30
p. m. Friday in the social room
of the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co.

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