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'

~ Now
•'

You.Know
,. ,,

'

Weather

I

ARebozo Is a long lK:arf worn
chiefiy by Mexican women.

t:RIEND, A'MANDA,.

L.IN6·AT 'YOU. ·
'

I

Ch8nce of light snow north,
otherwiJe moa.Uy cloudy lind
not a1 cold tonight. Low In the
lower 30s south. Warmer and
windy Tuesday. IUgh In the 60s
south.

.·'
Devol«~ To 7lae Inter~" Of 7lae Meigl- M010n Area
•
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
MONDA¥; MARCH 6, 1972

VOL. XXIV . NO. 229

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

'

Nixon Leans
Away From
No 'Bus Law
·32

.Fenwick
Building

.• ·;-5

Eastern Victorious·in Final Game

\

All the Comforts
· of Home
®

'

'

'

'

'-"E'RE. PUTTING AUDOGPATCH ON El'.HIBITION
AT THE GOVEP.NMENT
'
HOUSINIGSHOW!!
"
'
.

wt=. LO\II'.S, Rt=.&amp;Pt=.CKS
· AN' 1-\0NORS TH ' U .S.
GO\/AMINT.'.'- ~,...-'\

HVRRIC:ANE

NOW.'

DOG PATCH
IS TH'.WA':/

HAI"-l 1 T

IT AI:J.U5 ·

THARrf

'

WAS!!'.

CAPTAIN EASY
EA$Y, ME:6i 'M,l&lt;E:!:. INPU5&gt;fRII:5' ~e:WE5-T
I'ECRUif.-li'OO ~TRON6FO()T. ACB MAIIJHU~TEF&lt;..
OF TH6 N~TIONAL. COU~T61'~PY . AGE:NCY!

MOPJ:!&gt;TY
FORBID~ M&amp;
TO DI5-CU5~
MV MANY
t:XCITI~6

CA$SG!

'

THE: REAL. MODeL.'$ 1'-1 TI-ll!&gt; ·~W~Eii
$TORE:HOU$E;,..THE BUYER, HORACE:',
FI6B'I, 1$ COMifJ(S TO IN5PE:CT
.
ON TUE$DAY!
'
'

.

•:•;o,-;;o;-x
... .....
;;;
...._~,f••f,.~

• ·~.o;v.q~;w
'11 T~-w·'"'~'·"~~·.

ews.. in Briefi . $20,000

TI-IANK '7'0! SON-

. L-LUCKY
I&gt;OGPATCH .

GRABS REBOUND - Eastern's Randy Young (23), above, grabs a rebound from the
outstretched hands of NorthGallla's Larry Justus (32) and Arthur Clark (30) during action in
Saturday's finals of the Class ASectional Tournament at Meigs High School. Clark played the
entire contest with a chipped bone In his right ankle. He scored only 10 points. Eastern avenged
two earlier losses to North Gallia in the 7~ triumph.
CALDWElL SCORES -Bob Caldwell, at right, senior guard for Eastern, pwnps in two
points during the championship game of the Class A Sectional Tournament Saturday night at
Meigs High School. Caldwell had one of his better nights against North Gallia in helping
Ea9terndown the favored SVoACchamps, 70-55. Eastern advanced to the district tournament al
Chillicothe. The Pirates' Arthur Clark (30) is at the right.
CHEERING FANS - Emolions were high Saturday night as a large crowd packed the
Meigs High School Gym for the finala of the Class A Sectional Tournament. Eastern won its
thlrd.stralght trip to Chillicothe by dropping North Gallia 's powerful Pirates, 70-55. See Page 3
for details.
. . .•.

..
8ACKHOM£.,

Hit Hard

by Crooks &amp; LawreDce.
I'L.L.. REI-'1' 01-J ·VOU TO GUARD·
OUR '-lEW MUL.TIMILL.JOI\rOOU.AR
51JPER COMPUTER BUILT fOR
Flc313'r'
.....$PI\C!: LAS$!

BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
HEAVY SNOW WARNINGS were issued for portions of the
East today whlie Cdld ~tabbed the centrlilliiid Soilllieast sections
of the coimtry. 'Travelers'warilings were 'iii effect lor northern
and eastern Maine with 41nches of snow expected.
Cold wave warnings were ln effect for Alabama, northwestern Florida and portions of Georgia and South Carolina.
The mercury was expected to dip well below freezing before
dawn as far South as northwestern Florida. There was locally
heavy snow in the vicinity of Lake Ontario Sunday night with
Boonville, N. Y., receiving &amp;'Inches ina !Hiour period.
LORDSrOWN, OHIO - A 39-HOUR marathon bargaining
session between General Motors aiid the· United Auto Workers
broke off without agreement early today as the str~e at the giant
complex here went into its third full day. George Morris, Jr., GM
vice president of industrial relations, announced the cessation of
talks. Earlier in the morning, a spokesman for UAW Locall112
had warned if the talks were broken off this .morning without a
settlement, ''we're going to be in for a long strike."
"It now appears thai the local union is more concerned with
exerting its muscle than continuing to work for a responsible
settlement for the approximately 7,800 hourly employes at this
plant," Morris said. "The ' union's belated 'package proposal'
was rejected because it fell far short as a basis for·a fair settlement."

Loss Set
Property' loss ri'e stini'atect at
$20,000 as the result of a fire
which leveled the frame home
of Mr. and Mrs·. Charles R.
Sheils ori Cook -Road in
Hemlock Grove Sunday
evening.
Chester and Pomeroy
volunteer firemeQ were at the
scene after the · home was
· discovered engulfed in names
by a neighbor after 6 p.m.
Sunday. The Chester Depart·
ment 's Fire Chief, Ross
Cleland, said the fire was out of
control when his department
arrived. The
Pomeroy
department received its call at
6:48p.m.

J

Farm Set-aside
Deadline Near

With the March 10 deadline
for sign up in the 1972 ·feed
grain and wheat programs
drawing near, over 100 farmers
are expected to visit the Meigs
County
Agricultural
. COLUMBUS -A GROUP OF TEACHERS from Ohio plans
Stabilizalion and Conservation
to meet with Republican congressmen from the state in
office during this final week.
Washington on Tuesday to seek for their help in getting federal
About 300 producers in Meigs
· Pay Board approval of new mi~imum teacher salary schedules.
Countf were sigQed up for one
William C. McDonald, president of the Ohio Education '
or more of the set.aside
Association, said the new statewide teachers salary schedule
progra'ms offered this year,
goes into effect this month if the Pay Board gives its approval.
according to Orion Roush,
LAST DAY NEAR
The Ohio General Assembly in December raised the
All Pomeroy Peewee, Pony county ASC committee
minimum salary schedule from $5,200 for a beginner with a and Utile League baseball chairman .
bachelor degree to $5,~ beginning this month and to $6,400 players must register for
"We've heen recording about
beginning July I.
participation from 1 to 3 p.m. 20 signups pel' day, but we
Sunday at the Pomeroy €ity expect that average to climb
NEW YORK - ALMOST TWO-THIRDS of all Americans Hall. Boys not register~ by sharply during the last week,"
favor school desegregation, but even more - 60 pet. - o!)pose the March 12 deadline will not Roush said.
0
Farmers have been waiting
compullory busing to achieve racial balance, a Gallup Poll be permitted to piay in the
published today in Newsweek magazine indicates. ''Opposition to summer program: Following to sign up early, he reported,
racial busing cuts · across geographic, · economic and - to a the 3 p.m. signup closing starting at 7:45a.m. when the
surprising extent-even across racial lines, acCording to the Sunday, a planning session will local ASCS office opens. The
telephone survey of a national cross section of 548 adults," the be held at city hall for all office closes at 4:30 p.m. Any
managers and interested men producer who is in the office
Newsweek article reported.,
Sixty-eight pet. of Northern whites and 74 pet. of Southern and women, Tom Grueser, before closing time will be
whites are opposed to compulsory busing, Newsweek said. And president of the Pomeroy enrolled that day.
program, said.
In the 1972 voluntary farm
(Continued on Page 10)
programs, participants agree
•••••~m~IMI!m~.!lml.lll~~W.~~;~m:®~»=~&lt;~IMIISIIIII.m~m-'~W~m;;r,·olm1'm!1'm!mll!mi.MIIII!I·----~
Cleland said the entire
contents of the home, which
was being remodeled, were
destroyed . The fire apparently
'
slarted from a wood
burning
stove. Mr. and Mrs. Sheets had
left the home about 5 p.m.
There was no insurance on the
house or its contents.

Damages were expected to
run into thousands of dollars in
recent valdalism at the Bishop
Fenwick High School Building
- unused since 1963 - near
Cheshire.
Gallia County sheriff's
deputies late Saturday afternoon were called to. the
building located north of the
Cheshire corporation. Thomas
L. Goett of Pomeroy
discovered the vandalism.
According· to the sheriff's
department, eight doors were
destroyed ; the fire alann and
PA system were severely
damaged; a piano was
demolished, and the lK:hool's
clock and bell systems were
demolished in every room In
the Jlld.l41l1g. AlSo damage&lt;!
were· gym curtains, stage
lights, an office window and
several classrooms.
Deputies investigated three
separate home burglaries. Ray
Waugh , Davis Rd ., said
someone eniered his home
Sunday night by going through
the back door. Nothing was
reported missing.
Joyce Newell , Rt. 35,
reported her mobile home was
entered by removing a lK:reen
on the back door . Again ,
nothing was taken.
Jack Lane, Chillicothe Rd.,
said someone entered his
basement and threw paint over
the floor.
City pollee officers continued
investigating acts of vandalism
involving pellet guns. City
Chief of Police John Taylor
said all three Gallipolis banks
had windows broken by BB
pellets over the weekend.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Nixon will not endorse a
constitutional amendment to end busing, it was learned today.
Jnstead, he probably will ask Congress for a moratoriiun on new
court-&lt;lrdered busing, and propose legislation to ensure quality
education for every school chUd.
The cabinet-level committee which Nixon asked for a policy
recommendation on the forced busing lssue was expected to offer
Its advice 1100n, possibly this week. Nixon called the panel to the
White House today, aloog with top black officials within the
administration, to discuss the question.
But sources close to the schools.
committee said this much was
In the meantime, it would
clear: Nixon will not choose propose a moratoriwn on new
the Constitutional amendment busing decrees from the courts .
route. Not only have the
By itaelf, the moratoriwn
committee members-form- idea likely would be defeated in
er Attorney General John N. the Senate, where a strong
Mitchell; Elliot L. Richardson, an tibuslng proposal offered by
Secretary of Health, Education Sen. Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich .,
and Welfare ; and Budget died last week. When tied to an
Director George · P. Shultz- education • Improvement
publicly opposed that route, but proposal, it might win strong
the amendment idea still lacks election
year
support,
the two-thirds support it would especially since it would offer a
need to clear the House and chance to lower the busing
Senate.
issue temperature while
The cabinet committee plans Congress attacks the root of the ·
to recommend, and Nixon Ukely question .
will request, that legislation be
It could not be learned
offered to attack the problem immediately just how it may be
by eliminating educational Ine- proposed that Congress perquities which have prompted suade-or force-the courts to
courts to order black children respect a moratorium on new
and whites bused to other busing ord~s.

Three G Is Die
In Ammo Blast
SAIGON (UP!) - Three
American soldiers were killed
today when ammunition they
were stacking exploded.
The three, who were not
identified, were stacking old
ammunition In an exclosed
area at Long Binh, the U. S.
headquarters in VIetnam, 18
miles from Saigon.
The blast was tremendous,
much larger than the normal
ammunition for rifles and
machineguns would have
caused, officers at the base
said. They added lhat an investigation was ordered into
the possibility of sabotage, a
stray guerrilla mortar round or
the chance that land mines or
bombs. had been Improperly
sto~ed in the area.
Elsewhere, guerrilla rockets
hit the big U. S. Alr Base at
Cam Ranh Bay an hour before

dawn today, slightly injuring
one man with shrapnel. It was
the first tbne Cam Ranh Bay
had been rocketed since Jan.
16.
The U. S. command reported
that Navy planes new two
more "protective reaction"
strikes against antiaircraft
guns in North Vietnam on
Sunday. Results of those
strikes were not known.
In South VIetnam's Central
Highlands, where North
Vietnamese infiltration is
reported at its highest In years,
allied .patrols found secUons of
a brand-new guerrilla road
leading east from the triborder area of Vietnam, Laos
and Cambodia.
South Vietnamese engineers
were sent in to blow up sections
of the road and felled dense
jungle trees with dynamite so
the road could be seen from the
air.
All told, 116 men were killed
or wounded on both sides including one American
wounded at Cam Ranh Bay in the 24 hours ended early
today.
Military sources also
disclosed a new South Viet·
namese drive that started
Friday against the Com.
munists' key "base area 114"
staging area in Quang Tri
Province , adjoining the
Demilitarized Zone.

to set aside 25 pet. of their
farm 's feed grain base - corn,
barley, graih sorghum - of
whatever crop or crops they
sign up for, and for wheat
agree to set aside acreage
equal to 83 pet. of the !ann
domestic allotment.
,\M;@ffli%~.$.l.1.l!frl!nl&lt;llr"
Options are offered for ad·
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
ditional voluntary set..aside in
Ohio Extended Outlookthe wheat and feed grain
Wednesday through Friday:
programs in order to aid
Turning cooler Wednesday
fa rmers in bringing produclion
and Thunday and not much
into better adjustment with
change
Friday. A chance
market demand. In return for
or
snow
setting aside a portion of their of · rain
The Meigs County Sheriff's
productive land, producers Wednesday and again Friday.
.
Highs
mostly
Dept. reported a single car
earn set-aside payments based
In
the
50s
Wednesday
aod
lo
accident
Sunday at 7:30 p. m.
on their farm's established
yields for the program crops. the 30s and lower 40s 'lbnn· on the Albany-Carpenter Road,
day and Friday. Overnight three miles north of SR 143.
Additionally, program crops
Rosemary Landers , 17,
on participating farms are lows In the 30s and lower 40s
Wednesday
morning,
Albany, Rt. 3, was traveling
eligible for support loans.
dropping
to
the
20s
Thunday
south
on the Albany-Carpenter
The chairman reminded
Road when she hit an icy area
producers tha t they may and Friday mornings.
~.w::~~:~:*-~»-~@m®=
.
;@'
~~i
:
·&amp;1i~
.
mm11m•
causing her car to go off the
request se t·aside inspection
highway on the right and over
and measurement service at
Marriage Ucense
an embankment. Miss Landers
LOCAL TEMPS
the same time they sign for the
Mickey Hay Hutton, 2l,
Temperature in downtown was taken to a physician in
farm programs. This service,
Rutland,
Rt. I, and Rachael
provided at cost, offers a Pomeroy Monday at 11 a.m. Albany by private car. There
quali ty and quantity guarantee was 30 degrees, under sunny was heavy damage to her car, Katheryn McGrath, 28,
Rutland .
skies.
but no arrests.
~ on set..aside acres.

Teenager's Car

Goes off Road

Subpoena Accepted in HospitaljJunior Fair Planning Underway

DENVER (UPI) - Washington lobbyist Dita Davis Beard,
a key witness In the International Telephone &amp; Telegraph '
Corp. (m) antitrust case, has
accepted a federal subpoena in
her hospital room but will not
appear immediately before 'he
Senate Judiciary Committee.
Dr. David Garland of- the
Rocky Mountain Osteopathic
Hospital said Sunday that the
federal government had
agreed to 1\elay the testimony
because Mrs .. Beard might
sustain " permanent heart
damage Or death from such an
appearalice."
Mrs. Beard, 53, was the
purported au!h ~r of a., memor' ,;,

.'

'

andum which linked the settlement of an ITT antitrust case
with a $400,000 donation to help
finance the 1972 Repubiican
National Convention.
Attorney General-elect Richard Kleindienst and other
federal officials have ·denied
any direct connection between
settlement of the ITT matter
and the convention finance
pledge.
Two FBI agents who had
been camped outside Mrs.
Beard's hospital room served
the subpoef\a on the· woman
Salurday night alter her
personal physician from Washington , D.C., arrived and
rer"i ved assurao&lt;:c !hat she

would not haye to appear that the requirements of
before the committee Tuesday compliance with It would not be
necessary due to Mrs. Beard's
as scheduled.
The physician, Dr . 'Victor condition," Garland said.
"This inade the .serving of
llizka, said it was obvious she
couid not appear unless there the subpoena more of a benefit
was a drastic improvement in than 11 detriment to the'
her condition, "and this would patient's condition, since it
decreased the tension and ,
be a miracle," he said.
stra!n
of the Impending service
Mrs. Beard is suffering from
acute angina pectoris, a heart of this on her. Add! tiona I stress
disease, and dQCiors expect she could have precipitated (corothrombosis with
will·remain hOspitalized for at nary l
least 10 days. Garland said the . resultan t permanent heart
stress of the past few days damage or death ;" Garland
' ·
could have been a factor in her said .
condiUon.
Garland said Mrs. H··&lt;~ rd 's
"Dr. Liszka was able to eondition had impro1w! somearrange the presentation or the what 'ince her hospilalization
suhpoo•na with l!u· "~stlr an &lt;'&lt;' Frirt"''

There will be a bigger junior ,
fair board in 1972 if first plans
for the fair launched Saturday
at the county extension office
materialize .
Representatives of 4·H clubs,
th e Future Farmers of
A.'Tierica and the . Junior Fair
Advisory Board scheduled a
special meeting for 7:30 p.m.
on March 22 when o!licers to
head I he annual junior fair will
be selected.
Te mporary officers were
appuinled tu notify members of
lhc juni~or b~om·d of the up·
cuming meeting. Tcniporary
11ffi ccrs a"e Steven Stanley,

president ; Charles Yost, vice
president, and Daniel Midkiff,
secretarY:treasurer.
Adult advisors attending
Saturday's meeting were Pat
liolter, C. E. Blakeslee and
Randall Roberts ; Tom Hamm,
oulgoing president of the
Junior Fair Board, and Gloria
Cross. pu:•licity chainnan
Yost will Invite the
Southern High School Future
Homemakers of America
Cha~ter to be represented on
the junior board. The FHA
Chapters or Melg~ County
sthools have not pU·
ticlpa!l'd t•xtensively · In the

junior lair. This year,
however, 'southern High
School, has Indicated Interest. The chapter will be
asked to send two delegatea
to the board.
Roberts reported that he has
made arrangements with the
senior fair board to include
judging of rabbits in an open
class division th~ year and to
make the class open also to
senior parlicipation.
The group discussed the ·
method of !H!Iecting the, junior
fair king and queen this year,
Directors, some 'of whom
have another year to serve,

Include Ruth Jordan , Margie
Jeffers, Rhea Mora and Jean
Whitehead, re~resenttng 4-H
girls; Mike Benedwn, Alan
Holter, Steven Stanley and
Rick Pierce, 4-H boys; TOm
Harnm, 'Dan Midkiff, Charles
Yo.! and Frank Broderick,
Future Farmers of America,
and Ann Ohlinger , Millsa
Rizer, Jo Ellen Diehl and
Becky Wright, Girl Scouts.
Members of the advisory
board are Pat Holter and
. Carroll Pierce, 4-Q; Clayton
Coffee and Everett Holcomb,
FF A, and Donna Ohlinger and
·Carol Ohlinger, Girl Scouts1

I

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l

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•

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S'-:-TheDIIIJIInlntl,W..... t-Pwoeroy,O,, Marclil,lt'/2
'
..

2-,. n.ll1 Settlnei, Micklepart.l'uo'*llf, 0 ., ~ l,lt72

"A little Sor:nething I' Brought Home for You!"

!DITORIALS

A Lot of Waste
Is Going to Gas

·'. '

Chalk up one ·more ecological crisis. This one has to do
with the spontaneous generation of methane gas from
animal droppings and other organic wastes.
Balloon and rocket observations indicate that this gas
rises into the upP-er air in s.ulficient quantities ro redu~e
the stratosphere s ozone content. And the ozone layer IS
all that stands between us an&lt;! the sun's harmful ultraviolei radiation.
·
It is not clear who worried about the situation over past
eons when all the world was a zoo. or as recently as 100
years ago when 60 million ftatulent bison roamed the West
with nobody to pick up after them. Most people will conclude that there are more urgent problems on the eco·
logical agenda.
·
But one of those problems is the world's shrinking reserves of the kind of natural gas we pump out of the
ground and which has become urgently desirable as a
source of pollution-free energy even as supplies dwindle.
It could be that the methane problem will help solve the
natural gas problem.
It is reported that some farmers on Taiwan are already
using pig-prod·uced methane to heat their houses. A gentleman in Devonshire. England, runs his car on methane
obtained (rom chicken droppings.
According to a scientist with the University of Arizona .
the technology is available for converting urban and agri ·
cultural wastes on a large scale into usable methane. The
manure from a feedlot producing 100,000 cattle could
supply the fuel gas needs for 30,000 people, says Hinrich
· Bohn in Environment maga.zine.
Speaking of technology, by curious happenstance a U.S.
company has just claimed an "environmental break through" in the area of municipal solid waste disposal
by developing a process that converts organic wastes,
such as paper and garbage, into a premium .fuel gas.
Not only that, says Linde Division of Union Carbide.
but solid wastes. including everything from metals . plas·
tics, ~lass , tires and furniture to the kitchen sink , arc
fused 1into a slag which has several potential applications .
The company is looking for a municipality in which to
demonstrate the system on a full-scale basis.
A lot of gas has been generated in recent years over
the energy· and pollution crisis facing the world .
Not all of it, fortunately, has been hot air.

/'·.:.'

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6

• J 102

.AQ9654
WEST

EAST

.QJI02
"Q982

.A7653
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tA981

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SOUTH (D)

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Both vulnerable
West North East South .

It
Pass

Pas:;
'Pass

2•
Pass
3 N.T... Pass
"'

2 N.T.

Pass

Oponing lead- • Q.
By Oswald &amp; James J~coby
'Oswald: "West was an expert. East a good player.
That is the sort of partnership that is not likely to slol'
the defense but this time 1t
managed to let South steal a
no-trump gam e. West
opened the Queen of spades.
East held back his ace because he did not want the
. suit to block. At the same
time he signalled strength
by dropping the six."
Jim : "That is the sort of
play that seems fine to almost everyone but i\ violated one of the most important principles of defen.
sive play which is to signal
with the hi£hest card you
can spare. He should have
played the seven."
Oswald: " If West hadn't
been an expert it would not
have hurt. Now let's see
what happened. South took
the trick with his king and
played two rounds or clubs
East discarded a diamond so
South shifted to that suit.
East hopped on with his ace
and led back the three of
spades. South played the
mne . West was in with the
10 and led the heart deuce
•'

BfRRr~ W~RLO

•.&lt;: .'•

••

MIAMI !NEAl

What makes George Wallace run'
Here he is, gomg hard in the 1972 Florida presidential
primary. You check back and discover that he has been,
with one exception, involved in a major political campaign every two years since 1958.
He ran for and lost the governorship of Alabama in
1958, then won it in 1962. In 1964 he entered Democratic
presidential primaries and scored surprisingly high percentages even as he lost in Wisconsin, Indiana and Maryland. In 1966, legally barred from seeking reelection as
governQr, he successfully put up his laie first wife Lurleen ,_for lhe job and did the heavy campaigning. In 1968,
he got 10 million votes as a third party candidate for the
presidency. In 1970 he won the Alabama governorship a
second time . Only 1960 saw him idle.
Whatever drove him at lhe outset when few in the najNlWSPA.PlR lNTUPliSl ASS,., .)
tion knew of him, it is clear that great zest for the game
spurs him now .
He loves the sounds and sights of battle. He relishes
lhe
national spotlight which has never left him since
Th~ bidding has been:
·
1964.
Most of all, he loves to shake up the northern estab:
West
North Ea." · South
lishment - which usually' means the national Democratic
'
Party and its aspiring leaders .
·
You, South, hold :
Recently, he joined his fellow Democratic governors
.98654 .A2 tJ .AKQ16
at
a party caucus in Annapolis, Md . Wallace just toyed
What do you do?
with
them , dropping hints to governor after governor that
A-Bid one club. This is the
one exception to the rule 1bout he might enter their primaries and upset "the applecart.
opening with the higher ranking Said Gov. John Gilligan of Ohio :
"I never heard more nervous laughter in my life. "
of two five•Cird suil5. You have
bad sp1dcs, very a:ood clubs and
Speaking of !hose governors, a political observer ob·
• minimum hand.
served :
TODAY'S QUESTION
"Have you ever heard a man 's voice turn white ' "
You bid one club and your
Most of Wallace's many detractors concede that he can
partner re s ponds one heart. be very effective as he punctures the pomposities and
What do you do now?
hypocrisies of his northern colleagues and rivals . But
An~wer Tomorrow
the. tougher part of his game is trying to upset the serious
political calculations of presidential candidates. That's
really what he is talking about when he says, as he did
In 1836 Mexican forces the ~!her mght m Wesl Palm Beach: "I am a serious
captured the Alamo at San candtdate."
Antonio, Texas, killing the last
Wallace never wearies of recounting his 1964 primary
of 187 Americans who had held votes, nor his big 10 million in 1968. Right now, in Florida,
out for 13 days, including he leads a pack of 11 presidential candidates and is thus
famed frontiersman Davy a source of maximum annoyance to such contenders as
Senators Edmund Muskie , Hubert Humphrey, Henry
Crockett. From the slaughter Jackson , George McGovern and New York Mayor John
arose the cry "Remember the Lindsay . A s1zable Wallace victory in Florida could quickAlamo."
(
ly crush the hopes of one or two aspirants.
In 1857 the U.S. Supreme
And it won't etid with Florida. He expects to compete
Court handed down its land- , hard in other 1972 ~rimaries in Tennessee, Indiana , Wismark Dred Scott decision. It consm, Pennsylvanta, Maryland . He believes he can win
ruled that Scott, a Negro slave, at least two of these.
could not sue for his freedom in
His ambition burns so hot that he doesn't like to hear
federal
court.
anything
negative about his prospects. He was disap8
proving as he told a reporter recently :
"I saw your piece the other day . You said I was slip.
In 19611, long-time U.S. pin,."
Representative Joseph Martin,
Probably Wallace is not as strong nationally as he was
R-Mass., former speaker of the
in 1968 .. Polls edge him down a bit. But he has not yet
House, died at the age or 83. truly shpped. Indeed, the school busing issue may have
given him a new lease on life.
George Wallace is not going to win the 1972 Democratic
nomination. Nor will he determine who will win. But he
will have an effecl on the race. And that is what the
nation 's head political disrupter wants at the very minImum .
{NEWSPA.P(R lHTEIPRISl

.USN . ~

.

.

l.ly BRUCE BIOSSAT

with disastrous results ...
Jim: "West really should
have played out his jack of
spades on the theory that the
heart shift was hopeless but
experts go wrong on occasion and when they do go
wrong they are inclined to
go th~t way with a real bang.
His excuse was that he had
never seen the seven spot.
Hence either South was
false-carding or East wasn't
strong enough to sel the
hand with spades.

' ' f. I
.

, I.,

You Wonder What
Makes George Run

Bad Signal, Defense Loses
NORTH

•

BRUCE BIOSSAT

WIN AT BRIDGE

.4¥A65

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The Almanac
By Unlttd PressiDternatloaal
Today is Monday, March 6,
the 66th day of 1972.
The moon is in Its last
quarter.
The mortling star is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Pisces.

Vo~ce

along Br'Way

exempt, doein'~ II? ... it's their 51Jt Atlantic
BY JACit O'BRIAN
crossing ... Pen&amp;: Pencil sleakho- owner John
Bruno, smashed up in a car a-aib, won't quit:
ALLS001T'S BELTS
resumed !peed-car piloting in .April at ~
AREN'T BLACit
Rock,
Conn.
. .
.
NEW YORK (KFS) - George C. Scott
Woody Allen scouted Heather f,lacRae In
better had practice his karate: at a ocreenlng ol
hla Paddy Clllyetsky-taipled ''Holpltal" flick, ·"Hair"- (ibe did.the nude-bit therein),llld now
he opined that bil pet actorl.ll peeyealDduded she'll be really....n In Wood,y'a "Ewrytling
"the blPIY Milled actor who pu1ll back and lets YouAiwaysWant!dloKnow About SG" film :..
hlmseH be ued by the ayllmn. Lee Marvin Is The latter book always reminds • of wb1t
one. Richard Burton Ia the epitome ol wbat I'm Oscat Levant s8id about Leonard llerDI!ela'•
talldnllabout" ... ScoU got bil biggest laurela in TV mualc-ap!anatlons: ''He reveala aecnts
"system"fllma: notably "Patton" ...Lee Grant that have been known forbundreda of yean." ...
ol ''Tbe'Priao!IOf of 3rd Aw." could be another Rodney Dangerfield's pop, a vaudev!Win
Zelda: dances till dawn with the local most· · (named PhU Roy, of "Roy &amp;: Arthur''), wu
eligibles ... James Fox, leading British actor jack Benny's roommate, Rodney IIIYI· UniD
('"'be Servant/' "King Rat". etc.), quit films Jack decided Mary· Uvlngaton wu a better
and oow Is a preacber in Australia. Never sleep-mate ... Flip Wllaon on lll:llnes bearing
cocktail hour. planO)I: ''Tbe nell bljaclrer wtJI
bappler, h~ writes friends.
Veteran stage«reen star Joseph Cotten · demand, "fake me to Uberace.' "
New actress Deborah om jull became. a
during the "l..e!wl:~ ,intermiulon r~
about his days as a_pro.lootballer. Said he got 'Sa"tnt. Making her bow tn' the' ' 1lleiling of the . .
100 a game and IOIDe ol his teammates were President" Bdwy. musical, she wu Informed
ringers whO also plafed Saturdaya with by Actors E4uity another ac~ already bad
Georgetown U. -Wider nom de pigskin 10'1 not registered in that name. Tllll$, ibe's now
to lose their collegiate amateur !'BftkiDgl ••. Llno "Deborah Saint Darr" ... She could've !raveled
J:.,anaro's Uno's UN ReltaUI'IIIIt \2111e al age: 21 beiter as Deborah St. Christopher.
years old, an epoch theM l'I!Cellion days.
The always unseen "4th wall" In all 'stage Since there Ia no Mafia, they say, wbat's
wrong with the title of a new film - just plain plays wUl be seen In the new suspense play
"MAFIA" It's called ... Controversial priest "Night Walch" due at the Morosco Theater ...
Jaml!l Gropp! went 1to France for the Paris . Set designer George Jenkins Innovated a set
World Assembly of l'eace and lndepelldence ~ revolving three Urnes to ibow the complete
the lndocbineae · Peopll!l ...:. supporting the envlrorunent of Ita main characters.
David Ca8Bidy abnciat got tossed out of the
CoiiUDunist cause in Vietnam. Does he au~
Viet Cong mass murder of children, womei). chic Dorchester in London -buill wasn't his
hOspital patients and other hiHide obacenitles? fault. His teeny-pel' fans all blit vandalized that
Two more N. Y. area judges will face hotel for the staid set. Even Liz &amp;: Dick behave
Federal raps on land spe«;U)atlon charges ... themselves when In residence.
The NY Rolls-Royce showroom at 57th &amp;
New BriUah pop-rock alnger Harry Nlls8on has
2nd
highlights
a 1931 blond-red Bentley dangling
a new alblllil: ''NIIs8on Sclunilsson" ... "The
French Connection" is London's biggest flbn a nlfiy use&lt;kar pricetag: $100,000 ... Gifted
actor-writer Robert Shaw's next book Is "Flesh
hit, too.
The BriUah alnger Dave Denton In I~ "To &amp; Blood," about "an old people's crusade" ...
Live Another Summer" ruck also Is Dave Someone around the White House Is scheduled
Carroll, whoopensarunat the EIAvramcafe ... to leak the tre of Pres. Nixon at Soviet welshing
Roseland owner Lou Brecker &amp;: his Dorothy on the money they owe at the UN: $67 million,
waltz to Europe on a 74.7 (they fiy pianos, don't which neatly would retire the $65 million deficit
they?) to "seoul for talent"; that mew tax· the UN suffers right now.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
'American Way' Not Best

Dear Dr. Lamb-My husband is a hardworking executive who is primarily a
steak, sal~d and egg man.
He I oath e s fish, and we
guard against his tendency
l&lt;!."be overweight constantly.
I want to keep him healthy.
but I am somewhat at a loss.
This morning we had twoounce chunks of Cheddar
cheese , one-half fresh pear
and nonfat milk. This and
the cottage cheese route are
a poor and unappetizing sub·
stitute for a warm breakfast
on a cold day. Finding proteins really worries me. Can
you offer suggestions?
Dear Reader-No other
single dietary habit has contributed so much to atherosclerosis and heart attacks
in the. American population
than the American breakfast. Breakfast was essentially unknown until a few
centuries ago. Most people
in the world started the day
by drinking a tankard of ale
with bread. The British introduced the breakfast habit
because they didn't have
lunch.
The egg yolk at breakfast
is the major source of the
large intake of cholesterol in
many Americans ' diets. The
American Heart Assn. has
recommended ']imiting con·
sumption of egg yolks to only
three a week, including those
used in cooking.
"
It is too bad your husband
doesn't like fish: They make
an excellent dish for breakt·ast. Cheddar cheese, how·
ever, is loaded with fat and
contains a moderate amount
of cholesterol.
You could always give him
a hot cereal for breakfast,
such as hot o~tmeal with
sugar and fortified skim
milk .

Of course, you can use hot
cakes and. if you are worried about I i m Hi n g your
saturated fat intake, you can
always use-one of the soft,
tub margarines made from
corn or safflower oil.
Salmo.n patties ' are. 'excel·
lent for ·breakfast: You could
try chicken a Ia kiftg, leaving the fat out of the cream
sauce you make. This served
on toast is excellent. You
can do the same for creamed ·
dried beef.
Occasionally you could use
some lean ham. If you trim ·
away all of the fat and use
lean ham, it contains conslderably less fat than liacon,
sausage or even Canadian
bacon.
For people who love eggs,
I would llke to mention Egg.
stra, which you will probably
find in the dietary section of
your supermarket. This Is a
powdered egg product which
contains only one-fifth the
amount of cholesterol and
fat of ordinary eggs. Even
sticking by the American
Heart Assn. requirement of
less than · three egg yolks,
this would mean that you

M.D.,

....

By ltElTH WISECiJp
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Eulel'n Eagiels advance to the
""-" ·Chillicothe District this
Thursday after winning .11\eir
third Blralpt BeCtional till&lt;!,
this time over the sb!te's .tsthranted North Gallia Pirates,
70-55, ~ Saturday night.
Coech Bill Pbllllpa' Eagles
played near perfect ball all
evening limg. The "Big Green"
put up the stin~leal defense the
Pirates have·gone against thla
year, lbnltlng them to only a
ctiuple of twO:POinters by fast
breaks. And the Eagle&amp; con:
il'olled the tempo of the game
from the·opening tipoff. 'lbese
were the biggest contributing
factors to the Eagles' upset.
Balanced scoring by the
Meigs Countlans, something

.,

Play-by-Play of Finals

.. "

·'\-

•.d.

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...,...
H-1

,,,

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7-7
9-7
9-9

11-9
11·11
11-13
13-13
U-13
16-13
16-15
18-15

,,
•

'·

in~irldwl ftllt«&lt;/

inte,.Jf in lutvn columns.

·-

Us.

By Helen Hottel

·.

••

.·.

NO WAY TO WIN AHUSBAND

'
'·

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Third Quarter

Duvall, short, 7: 57
Clark, short, 7:38
Boring, short, 7:25
Young, short, 6:58
Justus, short, 6:42
Elchlnqer, long, 6:31
Eichinger, long, 5:56
C'whlte, short, 4:31
C'whlte. short, 3:58
caldwell, short, 4:10
Crosswhite, short,
Borlnq, short, 3:22
Boring; FT. 2:59
Justus, short, 2:31
Duvall, long, 2:12
Stout, FT, 1: 58
Duvall, FT, 0:57
54-40
Stout, short. 0: 45
54-42
Brown, long, 0: 09
Fourth Quarter
56-42
Boring, long, 7:50
Caldwell, long, 7:12
58-42
58-44
Justus. long, 6:37
59-44
Eichinger, FT, 6:21
Boring, short, 5:55
61-44
63·44
Duvall. short, 5:13
65-44
Eichinger, short, 4:56
. 67-44
Duvall, short, 4:31
67-45
Crosswhite, FT, 4:05
67-46 Justus, FT, 3:12
69-46 . Duvall, FT-FT, 2:46
.69·41
Clark, FT, 2: 32
69-49
Crosswhite, long, 2:25
69-51
Stout, long, 2:·03
·
Stout, long, 1:14
69-53
70-53
Eichinger, FT, 0:33
70-55
Stout,- long, 0: 24

Boring, 13 points and five
assists, and 6-~ senior Randy
Young, nine points and a great
defensive game.
Pacing the North Galli&amp;
· attack was Pat Stout with 17,
Larry Justus, 14, Gary
CrosSwhite, 12, and Arthur
Clark, 10. The Pirates closed
.lhelr season at 18-3, this being
their worst defett of the year.
North Gallla, ranked sixth In
the state In AP "A" poll, lest to
the. Eagles In last year's sec·
tiona! finals, 81~. They had
defetted the Eagles 7o-65 and
67-61 in two meetings this year.
Eastern moves on to the
Chillicothe District this
Thursday where there will be
two winners of the five teams
advancing to the Reglonals In
the Convocation Center in
Athens. And believe me, there
will be some talent at the
Chillicothe tourney In teams
like Alexander and some Ross
and Pike County teams, where
"A" basketball thrives. In
their two past games at the

district, the Eagles ba.ve lost to
Portsmouth Clay In 19'10, 79-58,
and to CrooksVIlle last year, 7456.
' Things could be different thla
year.
Coach Jim Foster's Pirates,
closing out me of the lllOIII
heralded Gallia County teams,
led 2-0, 4-2, 7-S, and 13-llln the
first quarter but never
regained the upper hand after
falling behihd 19-15 at the end
of the first quarter. VoW1g and
Duvall led the Eagles with five
points etch. Stout and Justus
led the Pirates with six each.
The Eagle lead swelled to 2215 In the firs(' two minutes of.
the second period. Eastern had
a 34-21 margin at the half.
Caldwell led Eastern with eight
in the second quarter while
Clark led the Pirates with six.
Leadli'lg 40-31 opening the
second half, Eastern's letd
jwnped .to -16-31 on i)u-ee rapid
twin-pointers by Eichinger, all
from far outside. '!be Eagles
had a li4-42 margm after three

C HI LJ..tCO"THtr

quarters. ·Eichinger led th~
Eagles with six while
Crosswhite aild Justua paced
the Pirates wlth four apiece.
. Ahetd 118-44, Eastern ripped
in nine straight points in two
minutes to go up 67-44 with 4:31
left. At thla point, the packedhouse at Meigs High School
was filled wJth the chants and
cheers from the many Ea:stern
fans. For all pracUcal. pur·
poses, the game was over at
the four minute matk.
The ocene in each team's
dressing room after the game
reflected the outcome. .
The North Gallla dreaaing
room was dead quiet except for
a few sobs - and ~ were
tears, too - while the Eastern
dressing room bad a drenched
Bill Plillllps fiesh from a cold
shower dancing with jubilance.
Eastern made 28 of 82 from
the field for 34 pet. The Eagles
had .shot a much better per·
centage until the fourth
quarter when they missed
several and couldn't care less,

for victory was their thing.
They made 14 of 22 from the
foul line.
North Gallla hit on 23 of 57
from the field for 38 pet. and
only nine of 14 from the foul
line. The Pirates controled the
boards, 43-40, with Clark
leading with 16 and·Justus and
Crosswhite nine each. Clark,
playing with a schipped bonetn
his ankle, blocked five shots.

N'CAA Lineups

DIS (ftC/

7t30

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The Daily Sentinel
E•tc . Ed.

ROBERT HOEFLICH.

+++

.

Dear Helen:
,.
'I1Iele moderns who say they'll LOVE tGgellt« blil not IIIIIT)'
becaUM th• lictlllll! ruins the relattonlhlp: How .can a lliP ..r
paper ruin anything? Maybe they're just afraid ~ conuulinit)·
property apUII or alimony- Ill' the blgh eDt ol diVOI't'f la:it')'I!U
... or ol really committing themselves. -FORMARIUAGt
~

f

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8 50

West

at Chillicothe

... ,··· ..

t;-~&lt;-·:-,.

•.

. GREAT FINISH
MIAMI (UPJ) ~ This
year's $150,000 Dora!
Eastern Open gol! tour·
ILimeot has been rocked by
controversy and plagued by
rain. But In today'• final
round It turned lato a
competitive muterplece.
Superstars Jack Nicklaus
IUid Lee Trevino tee oflln the
windup locked In a tie lor tbe
lead at llkmder·par 208 for
three rouads and just one
stroke back are oldUmers
Sam Snead uti Paul Har·
ney. The final rouad had
been set lor Sunday, but
heavy rains just after noon
lorced po&amp;lponement until
today. It was the secoDCI rain
delay In two days.
Saturday, a downpour
hall-way through lbe tblrd
rouad waabed out all scores•
ID a hoUy-cllaputed move, ·tbe
PGA eUmlnated 30 aollers
who scored U7 or wone
after two rounds and
scheduled 31 holes for the
re~mlnlag 5Z soUen Sunday.
··But tbe raiDs &lt;!ame again
after tbe 18 boles of lbe tblrd
round, publilg tbe flalab Into
Monday.

MontreallPhlladtlphlt o
!Only~:' scheduled)
•
y's .. mes.
1No games scheduled)
NBo\.Stendllllf
By United Press lllWMIIMII
Eastem Cenlere11ct
Atlontlc Division
W. L. Pd. Gl
&amp;.ton
.19 24 .611 •••
New York
43 28 .606 5
Philadelphia 28 43 .3U 20
Buffalo
19 51 .271 28'12
· Centro I Dtvlslon .
W. L. Pd. GB
Baltimore
32 39 .451 ..
Atlanta
28 43 ,394 4
Cincinnati
23 48 .324 9
Cleveland
21 so .296 11
Westem Conference
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Mllawukee 56 16 .771 .. .
Chicago
51 22 .699 5'12
Phoenix
43 30 .519 13 112
Detroit
23 4 . .324 32 112
Pociflc Division
W. L. Pet. GB
x-LosAngeles 59 12 .831 ...
G6idenState 45 26 .634 U
Seattle
46 21 .630 14
Houston
28 43 .394 31
Porlland
15 59 .203 45112
x-cllnched division title
Sundly's Res•lts
Cincinnati 125 Boston 114, aft
Phlla 100 New York 98, aft
Phoenix 131 Buffalo 103, aft
Chicago 128 Houston 91
Balli more 108 Los Angeles 94
Seattle 112 Atlante 110
IOniygamesscheduledl
Mondly's gtmes
Boston et Milwaukee
IOnlygamescheduled)
ABA Standings
By United Press lntomatlonal
East
W. L. Pd. Gl
K,ntvcky
57 14 .803
Virginia
41 30 .sn 16
New York
35 36 .m 22
Floridians
30 41 .43 27
Carolina .
28 43 .394 29
24 47 .338 33
Pitts.
west
W. L. Pet. GB
Utah
49 21 .700 ...
Indiana
39 30 .565 9'12
Dallas
33 o10 .452 17'12
Denver
29 oiO .420 19'12
Memphis
24 47 .338 25'12
Sundly's Results
Kentucky 134 Pllllbrgh 124, all
Indiana 110 Dallas 99, oft
Denver 137 Memphls129, aft
New York 114 Caroline 96
(Onlygamesachedultdl
Mondly's games
(No games scheduled)

•

NATil&gt;NWIDE's new Fam·
ily Plan ruarant&lt;ll your
child can· aet bia oWn life
insurance when he's 22,
regardltss ot hta/th. Call
Joday.

Eastern will play on the last game advances to the Athens March 7. Zane Trace Ia 16-5 and
CIULUCOTHE - The topsb ··~seeded Easter~~;: Eagles dtew ·night · of the tournament, ,regional In the Convocation Ross Southeastern is 19-4. Both
have been bitter Ross County
the bye in the fivt-team "A" Thursday, March 9, • at 7:30 Center March 17 and 18.
rivals
sever~! years . The
In the lower bracket, two
district tournament to be held against the winner of the
here March 7, 8, and. 9. The Alexander (2~3) and ·Ports- Ross County schools, Zane winner goes to the Athens
regional.
·:= ' ~:- ..•
. ~ ~
By UDlted Prl!ls IDtematloaal No. 8 Long Beach State Eagles have drawn the bye the mouth East ( 12-10) game. The Trace and Ross Southeastern
To
get
to
the
district,
square
off
at
7:30
on
Tuesday,
winner of that championship
The NCAA basketball (PCAA) duel in a battle of last two years.
Alexander defeated Crooksregional playolfs assumed a repealing conference cham·
P. J. PAULEY
ville
(6-15), Zane Trace beat
more detlnlte ibape as the pions. Long Beach completed
PARKER, Ariz. (UPI) -Bob
PH. 992-2318
Lynchburg Clay (15-7), Portsits regular ~ason with a
result of weekend acUon.
307
Spring Ave.
35,
al
Patker,
Ariz.,
was
Ellis,
mouth East won over Por!4·
East Reglooals: Harry U· record of 23-3. BYU split two
Pom@roy,
Ohio
mouth Clay (1~) in a slight killed Sunday at the start olthe
The man from Nllionwtdc i1 on your Jiclc.
twak's Temple Owlll, who won games .over the weekend,
upset; Ross Southeastern nine-hour Parker Enduro boat
the Middle Atlantic Conference losing to Texas El Paso 73-69
\leleated Peebles (16-5), and race on the Colorado River
IItle with a 15-67 victory over Friday night and edging New
Meigs' own Eagles outscored when his craft went out of
St. Joseph's, will face sixth- Mexico 81~ Saturday.
the state's sixth ranked team, control and sliced through a
N1tionwidc life ln1ur•nc:e Com_pati)'
ranked South Carolina, one of Undedded Cooferen&lt;e O.ampa
dock.
Hom.Otna: : Columbus, Ohto
North
GaUia,
70-56.
The
Pirates
Drawing a first-round bye is
nine at-large entries In the
Meeting In Jackson on player honors.
work this year as the scribe~ . ended at 18-3.
toumament. The Gamecocks UCLA, six-time champion of
Oyer, who finished second In and casters placed Gil Price qf
downed Clemson Saturday, Tl· the Paclfic-ll conference and Sunday, Feb. 21, members of
letgue
scoring, and anchor Gallipolis on the second team
the
Southeastern·
Ohio
Sportsseeking its sixth straight
84.
man on Coach C. D. Hawhee's and Jim Pierce of Logan on the
Ivy wgue champion and national championship. 'lb_e writers and Broadcasters
well balanced championship third unit.
fourth-ranked Penn, which Bruins (25-0) closed out their Association selected 23 players
team, Is one of the top
The Marauders' t;-2 Tony
beat Brown :17-33, will lake on season with a 102-73 win ,., ·r to the 1972 edition of the AlireboW1ders·ln
the
league,
plays
·· EOAL · Basketball Team,
Vaughan was a second team
Providence while East Caroll· Stanford.
defense with the best, and Is a . choice. He is a senior.
'Jmed
Mike
Oyer
of
Waverly
na, · which · clinched the
deadeye shooter.
Selecting the coach of the
Southern Conference crown by
Conferences whose ch .Ill- -•s the league 'a most valuable
He was the only unaniinous year was dif{lcult as the
player,
and
picked
Carroll
edging Furman Tl-75, will meet pion bas not been decided a.;
selection to the first team in members'realiztd what a great
VIllanova.
yet Include the Southeastern, Hawhee o( WaverlY and Jiin
balloting by the 13 represen- Improvement Jim Osborne has
Mld-Eut :
The
Mid· the Big El&amp;ht, the Atlantic Osborne ol Gallipolis as co- tatives atte ding.
brought to Gallipolis basketAmetlcan Conference Coast, the Big Ten, the coaches of the year.
Larry
Snowden
of
GAHS,
a
Of the 15-man, three-team all
ball as he guided the Blue
champion will be decided Missouri Valley and the West
leag~e squad, nine are seniors, third teBIJl pick 1n 1971, 1s the Devils into a second place
'l'lleaday at Bowling Green, Coast Athletic Conference.
Ohio in a playolf between · Len Kasmalski scored 24 three are juniors, two are only repeater to this year's finiSh with an 11-3 league
record, the best in 16 years of
Toledo and Ohio University, polnta Saturday .night to help sophomor.es, and one is a fresh· team.
Mark Ferguson, a potentially any GAHS team.
man
.
whO' tied for lite COnference Tennessee maintain Ita SEC
Waverly, • w~ich swept great player' for the IrOnton
Coach Hawliee, now in hla
lead during the regular 111!810D. lead. The Vols can wrap up the
Tigers and one of their best this 26th year at the helm ol the
through
the
league
W1defeated
Toledo ~t~.iteaked by Kent State conference crown with vicyear, is the first freslunan to be Waverly Tigers, saw mOAt of
5&amp;-67 and Ohio U. blasted tortes against Vanderbilt in 14 games, placed jllJiior
named to the team In nearly 10 his taU players graduate from
Bowling Green 105-84.
tonight and Kentucky on Mike Oyer on the first team as
a W1anlmous selection and then yetrs, as he was voted a berth last year's championship
The Toledo-{)hlo U. wlmer : Thursday,
had hlin nose out Gallipolis' on the third team.
team, but came back with a
will confront flft!H:anked Mar'
· Two sophomores gained smaller group that went
fine
senior
guard,
Larry
quette, a 73-411 loller to New
Kanaas State lul.u ooe game
berths for their remarkable through league competition
Mexico Slate Saturday.
letd tmll' Missouri in the Big Snowden for most valuable
W1defeated ¥fd with every
Oblo ValleJ Conference
Eight with the two cia~ on
team pointing toward his.
The Ohio Valley Conference Tueaday: Both won Saturday,
1~72 All·SEOAL Basketball Squad
season wound up In a tangled with Mlsaourl having It the
Both coaches drew the same
web that one ol three teama rougher of the two. '!'he n&amp;er!l
number of votes in the
FIRST TEAM
will have to unrawl. Western accomplished wtuil no other
balloting and the members
11'1'. YR. voted to let the tie stand and
Kentucky will challenge .More- Big Elsbt tellll! had done this PLAYER -SCHOOL
t;.l Sr. accord both coaches the honor
head State on Tuetsday, with year -win at Nebraska. Dave Smith -Athens
1972 is our 60th year financing Ohio people. All told.
5·~
Sr. as co-coaches of the year .
the winner to play Eastern Mllsourl took the Huakers 81-64 Larry Sriowden -Gallipolis
we have made over 6 million loans and financed nearly
Kentucky on Wednelday. The while Kansas State trounced Bill Markin -Ironton
6-4
Sr.
All of the players named to
4 million purchases for our customers .. . for a total
evenlull aurvlVGr will then Colorado, 73-55.
6-3 Jr · ·the first three teams and the
Mike Oyer- Waverly
play No. II Florldl Stale, an Ill,
amount exceeding 5 billion dollars . We invite you to
6-2 Sr. honorable mention players will
Dan Settles - Wellston
64 lotser to In lnapired ClnSl!cond-ranlii!d North CarollSECOND TEAM
be honored guests at the Lake
find out for yourself about full-range City Loan service.
clllnati team led by ·Derrek na, beliind the 11-point effort ol Mike Green -Athens
6-2 Sr. White Qub In 'Waverly on
When money is the question . . .
Dickey's 20 'potnts.
Robert McAdoo, beat Duke 93- Gill Price -Gallipolis
6-3 Soph. Thursday, April 6 at the All·
Midwext Regional: Tenth- 89 to clinch the ACC regular- Rod Ferguson -Gallipolis
6-1 Sr. . SEO Basketball Banquet.
ranked Mlrlblll and 12th- season title aa Maryland Tony Vaughan -Meigs
The league's eight head
6-2 Sr.
tabbed Sou t h 1' eater n eliminated ninth-ranked Virgi· Butch Workman -Waverly
coaches
attended the meeting
6"-1 Sr.
Loulllana wlllta~le in a battle nla from contention with a ts-42
to recommend players that
. TIIffiD TEAl-l
of at:.laiae entries.
victory. However, the Ta~
6-11 ·Jr. they felt should · be placed on
The Solillnntlt Conference Is Heels must survive the ACC's Jeff Haiinon -Ironton
8-0 Froib. . the team and Included &lt;llarlie
anotberloopwhlchmustgotoa own post«ason tournament Mark Ferguson -Ironton
6-3 Sr. McAfee, Athens; Jim Osborne, ·
pJayolf before Ill ctwnpon Is before qualifying for the NCAA steve Keller - Jackson
Jim Pierce - Logan
6-9 Soph. Gallipolis; Dick Myers,
decided. SMU faces TWIB lhowcaie. ·
Bill Maloy- Waverly
6-2 Jr. Ironton; Carl WoHe, Meigs;
TUtlday,night with the wtmer
ID the BIJ Ten ...
Dick Taylor, Log1n; AI
HONORABLE MENnON
meettnc 14IIH'Inked HOUlton
Mlmeaola has a one~me
992-2171
ATHENS: Mark Handley: GAU,IPOUS: Jimmy Noe; Berger, JackSon;· Tom Evans,
in lht regional. Both te81118 lead In the Big Tep, Memphis
Wellston : and Carroll Hawhee,
were victorious over the State clinched a share ol the IRONTON: BlidChristian; JACKSON: Don Davidson; LOGAN: Waverly .
wulcllld, wilb SMU whipping Missouri Valley crown by Ken Culbertson; MEIGS : Steve Dunfee: WAVERLY : John
125 l MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.
Representing Gallipolis and
Baylor IHT and Tuaa·turnlne comtna from I&amp; pointa behind Shoemaker: WElLStON : Ra} McKinnlss.
Melgi at the meeting were Bud
aide T- Christian '12-l!O.
in the flnltl seven minutes to
'
MOBI' VALUABLE PLAYER
McGhee, WMP.O, Middleport:
Wilt Rtlional•: Weber defeat Dralte 7o.89 and San
Mike Oyer, Waverly
Bill Gray, WJEl!, Gallipolis,
State, lbe B1c Sky !rlngpin lOeB . Francisco has a one-game
CO-COACHES OF YEAR
and Od(e O'Dl-nnell, Gallipolis
' 1!112 • I'INANCING OHIO PEOPLE FOR 60 YEARS • 1172
il&amp;inlt Hawaii, 'Rhlle No. 7 advantage .Ver Santa Clara In
('.arroll Hawhee , Waverly
Tribune,
. BHehlm Youn~ (WAC) and the WCAC,
Jim 011borne. Gallipolis

~ ape

•

Oyer of Waverly Most
Valuable in SEOAL

t)ationwide

UJUrtto

City Losn
oftoatsel

~

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEAUTOF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,

Dear Helen: .
I love my gentleman friend very much-but every time we'r.
. _alone in hla apartment or mine, he .ends up raping me. 1 dou't
really mind but wlah I could talk to him more. -HELP?
Dear Helep:
Now I've heard everything:. rape between two conse11ting
adults! You'w got Your definitions sa-mbled, friend.
Maybe you ibould try COIIUDunlcating by teleJihone? - 11.

Mar. 9

12 ao·
13 67
10 54

J.4 11
27 24
22 30
21 J.4

W. L. T. Pis
Baltimore
28 24 10 66
Hershey
27 22 10 «
Cleveland
27 28 9 63
Richmond
25 29 10 60
Cincinnati ·
23 26 13 59
Tldewaler
17 37 8 42
Sundoy's R11uhs
Richmond 5 Cleveland 3
Nova Scolla 5 Providence 3
Baltimore 4 Rochesler 2
(Onlygamesscheduled)
Mondty's g1m11
I No games scheduled)

11!1!11\!!&lt;.'111~

CH/1-/..ICOTHlf ,OHIO

Eastem Eagles Play

~- ~- T;~~

NH.L $landings
With the win, the Phillips· By United Presslnternetlontl
East
men are 1fl.2 for the season.
W. L. T. Pis
They are 38-8 In the last two Bost.t
48 9 9 105
years under Coach Phillips. ·
.. 11 10 98
New York
39 14 12 90 ·
EASTERN. (70) - Caldwell Montreal
28 27 11 67
7-1;15; Young 4-1-9; Eichinger Toronto
2929967
Detroit
6-S-17; Boring t;.J,13; Duvall 5- Buffalo
13 38 15 4t
6-16. TOTALS 23-14-70.
Vancouver
16 43 6 38
W. L. T. Pis
NORTH GALIJA (55) o10 17 9 89
Justus 6-2-14, Stout 8·1-17; Chicago
Minnesota
33 23 9 75
Clark 3-4·10; Brown 1·0·2; Sl. Louis
23 35 9 S5
Philadelphia
21 33 11 53
CrosSwhite 5-2-12. TOTALS 23California
18 32 16 52
!h'i5.
Pittsburgh
21 36 9 51
By Quarters
Los Angeles
17 43 7 41
Sunday's Re1ults
Eastern
18 16 20 16--70
2 Chicago 1, aft
No. Gallia
15 12 15 13-55 Minnesota
New York 6 Vancouver!
Officials: Benne~! and Smith Los An~eles 2 Boston 0
St. LouiS 6 Buffalo 2
Detroit 6 Pittsburgh 3

sir 1

,,

v

32-25

;J?-27
34-27

36-27
36-29
38·29
ol0·29
40-31
42-31
·«·31
46-33
-435
4 -33 -·.
•8·35
50-35
51·35
51-37
53-37
53·38
54-38

k
.
.
........
a
tiig
·
T

+++

• I

20-15
22-15
22-16
22-11
24-18
24-19
24-21
26-21
26·22
28-22
28-23
30-23
:tq-25

!'flyer Shot Time
Justus, long, 7:56
Eichinger, long, 7:28
Justus. long, 7:01
Eichinger, FT, 6:47
Clark, FT, 6:15
Caldv;ell, FT, 5:52
Duvall, FT, 5:43
Crosswhite, long, 5:25
Duvall, FT-FT. 5:14
Duvall, tong, 4:46
Stout, short, 4:30
Coldwell, long, 4:11
Stout, short, 3:42
Stout. long, 2:27
Young, short, 1:53
Young, FT, 1:53
, Y!)Ung, short, 1:33
Justus, long, 1:20
Boring, ihort, 0:06
Second Quarter
·
Coldwell, long, 6:54
Caldwell, short, 6:17
Crosswhite, FT, 6:07
Stout, short, 4:59
Coldwell, long, 4: 44
Justus, FT, 4:34
Clark, long, 4:·07
Caldwell, long, 3:30
Clark, FT, 3:15
Young, long, 2:56
Clark, FT, 2:4
Eichinger. short, 1:53
Clark, short, 1:38
E'lnger, 2 FT, 1:28
Cr'whlle, _short,. 0:3_5
Boring, short, 0:03 ·

they have not had an abun·
dence of this year, was abo a
key in the win. Four Eagles hit
in doubl~ figures and a fUth
had nine points. Eastern had
tremendous teamwork, as
neatlythrown passes under the
baiket accoW1t!d for !leveral
iay~ns over the much taller
Pirates. It was by far the .best
game the Eagles have played
this year.
Dennis Eichinger, an Eagle
slando,ut his fourth straight
year, played his final game In
Meigs County with a
dominating 17 points and 22
rebounds. The other four
E8gles who aided the victory
were 6-2 jW1ior Alan Duvall
with 16 points and six
rebounds, 5-11 senior Bob
CaldwaU, 15 markers and six
assists, 5·9 junior Randy

1

Dr. Lam.&amp; ccrnnot ,,.....,

Boston
.
Nova Stolle
Springfield
Rochester

in care ol this pop.r. WhJ/e lttltrJ lte will answar letfm ot

,,.., .,,4 ,.., ,...

1115769. Busine-ss Office PhO'I"'t
992 .2156. Edilor ial ~hone 992 2157 .
Stcond clan postage pa id at
Pomeroy , Ohio .
National adwerli\ ln;
reprutntattvt
Bottinelli Gallagher , Inc .. 12 East 1112nd
St , New Yor k City . New York .
Subscription rates. : De livered by carr let whe-re
available 50 ctnts J)er week ;
By Motor Route where carrier
strvice nOt availablt : On!
month 51.75. Bv mail in Ohit'
and W. Va ., One year Sl•.OO .
Sll( months :.:r 25 . Thru
montl\s 14 .50 . Subsa ipllon
pr ice inclu.~ts Sundclv Times Sent inel.
·· •

E-NG
0-2
2-2
2-4
3-4
3·5
4-5
5-5
5-1

'.

Dear Helen:
I' ·
·
m young, attractive and divorced for seven years. I work
for a company where there's little opportunity to meet young
single men, and I avoided the married ones, until two·yetrs ago,
when I began a wonderful relatloniblp with an execuUve who
said he didn'tlove his wife, but only stayed with her out of ioyalty
or maybe pity.
Afew months ago he broke up·with me, saying his wife had
1 d t bo
Aller lha he
oun ou a ut us.
t gave me several nice glft8, and
once .or twice (when he had been drinking) he carne to my
apartment. Not recently, though. ·
I still feel very emotional about him. He's terribly attractive,
doesn't ibQw his age (17 years older than me), and bas channed
all the women In our organlzaUon with his marvelous per·
sonallty. Besides, he's my best (perhaps last) chance.'
· Here Is ,my question, Helen: Why ibould three ol us be
miserable (me, hiS wile and him) when two alus could be 10 very
0
~su!:g~s! :.k"1~i~~~- ~9 :J bappy, If hla wife would just accept our love and bow out? For
Eggstra. These taste quite this reason,_I want to tell her about the glfta and visits -so that
good and are suitable for she'llknowhelsn't "over"meandneverwillbe.Surelywhenshe
omelettes and scram b I e d learns about us ''the second time around," she'llthrow him out
eggs.
andhe'Ub4ve nootherplacetocome but tome.
Now, that is a pretty good
Amutualfriendtoldmetbatbeforethlsmanmetme,heand
list of things you can do,
particularly when you con- hla wife seemed the most contented of couples &amp; he would never
sider that there are a num- letve her because of his builiness and social afflllatlo118 In our
ber of people who merely small town.However,lfSHE left him, he'd bave oo choice, Don't
grab a cup of coffee and youthlnkl'dbewisetohaveatalkwlthher?-HOPING
that's breakfast. I am not an Dear Hoping:
enthusiast for e a ti n g big
breakfasts, but the; coffee
NO!!!
habit. on an empty stomach
Face it, you were an interlude, posalbly one of several.
may not be too good either.
"Qtlter women" seldom win husbands vla cliats with their
tNIW!PAPII INTIIPIISI ASSN.I
wiVeS. Even If you succeeded in causing trouble (your story IJ
~... om1 more apt to bring on pitying smiles from a woman who knows her
&lt;0111mont• to IAwrtnCo E. Lomb, man all too well), you'dlose the campaign. Do you really think a
man would retW'Il to a good-time girl whose big mouth upset his
bUsiness and social life? -H.

City l:dltor
Pliblishtd da il y ncept
Saturday by TP'It Oh io Valley
Publishing Company , 111
Courf St ., Pomeroy , Ort io.

ain!

oes It

,..

AHL Stendlngi By United Press lnternetl0111l
Eest

Providence

'.

Bre·akfast Feeds Heart Disease
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

as·t ern·

•

i$ the answer

'r,.
'·

•,
•

�·'

•

..

S'-:-TheDIIIJIInlntl,W..... t-Pwoeroy,O,, Marclil,lt'/2
'
..

2-,. n.ll1 Settlnei, Micklepart.l'uo'*llf, 0 ., ~ l,lt72

"A little Sor:nething I' Brought Home for You!"

!DITORIALS

A Lot of Waste
Is Going to Gas

·'. '

Chalk up one ·more ecological crisis. This one has to do
with the spontaneous generation of methane gas from
animal droppings and other organic wastes.
Balloon and rocket observations indicate that this gas
rises into the upP-er air in s.ulficient quantities ro redu~e
the stratosphere s ozone content. And the ozone layer IS
all that stands between us an&lt;! the sun's harmful ultraviolei radiation.
·
It is not clear who worried about the situation over past
eons when all the world was a zoo. or as recently as 100
years ago when 60 million ftatulent bison roamed the West
with nobody to pick up after them. Most people will conclude that there are more urgent problems on the eco·
logical agenda.
·
But one of those problems is the world's shrinking reserves of the kind of natural gas we pump out of the
ground and which has become urgently desirable as a
source of pollution-free energy even as supplies dwindle.
It could be that the methane problem will help solve the
natural gas problem.
It is reported that some farmers on Taiwan are already
using pig-prod·uced methane to heat their houses. A gentleman in Devonshire. England, runs his car on methane
obtained (rom chicken droppings.
According to a scientist with the University of Arizona .
the technology is available for converting urban and agri ·
cultural wastes on a large scale into usable methane. The
manure from a feedlot producing 100,000 cattle could
supply the fuel gas needs for 30,000 people, says Hinrich
· Bohn in Environment maga.zine.
Speaking of technology, by curious happenstance a U.S.
company has just claimed an "environmental break through" in the area of municipal solid waste disposal
by developing a process that converts organic wastes,
such as paper and garbage, into a premium .fuel gas.
Not only that, says Linde Division of Union Carbide.
but solid wastes. including everything from metals . plas·
tics, ~lass , tires and furniture to the kitchen sink , arc
fused 1into a slag which has several potential applications .
The company is looking for a municipality in which to
demonstrate the system on a full-scale basis.
A lot of gas has been generated in recent years over
the energy· and pollution crisis facing the world .
Not all of it, fortunately, has been hot air.

/'·.:.'

'

'

6

• J 102

.AQ9654
WEST

EAST

.QJI02
"Q982

.A7653
¥J74

t3

tA981

... J1082

.3

SOUTH (D)

.K98

• K103
t KQ654
.K7
Both vulnerable
West North East South .

It
Pass

Pas:;
'Pass

2•
Pass
3 N.T... Pass
"'

2 N.T.

Pass

Oponing lead- • Q.
By Oswald &amp; James J~coby
'Oswald: "West was an expert. East a good player.
That is the sort of partnership that is not likely to slol'
the defense but this time 1t
managed to let South steal a
no-trump gam e. West
opened the Queen of spades.
East held back his ace because he did not want the
. suit to block. At the same
time he signalled strength
by dropping the six."
Jim : "That is the sort of
play that seems fine to almost everyone but i\ violated one of the most important principles of defen.
sive play which is to signal
with the hi£hest card you
can spare. He should have
played the seven."
Oswald: " If West hadn't
been an expert it would not
have hurt. Now let's see
what happened. South took
the trick with his king and
played two rounds or clubs
East discarded a diamond so
South shifted to that suit.
East hopped on with his ace
and led back the three of
spades. South played the
mne . West was in with the
10 and led the heart deuce
•'

BfRRr~ W~RLO

•.&lt;: .'•

••

MIAMI !NEAl

What makes George Wallace run'
Here he is, gomg hard in the 1972 Florida presidential
primary. You check back and discover that he has been,
with one exception, involved in a major political campaign every two years since 1958.
He ran for and lost the governorship of Alabama in
1958, then won it in 1962. In 1964 he entered Democratic
presidential primaries and scored surprisingly high percentages even as he lost in Wisconsin, Indiana and Maryland. In 1966, legally barred from seeking reelection as
governQr, he successfully put up his laie first wife Lurleen ,_for lhe job and did the heavy campaigning. In 1968,
he got 10 million votes as a third party candidate for the
presidency. In 1970 he won the Alabama governorship a
second time . Only 1960 saw him idle.
Whatever drove him at lhe outset when few in the najNlWSPA.PlR lNTUPliSl ASS,., .)
tion knew of him, it is clear that great zest for the game
spurs him now .
He loves the sounds and sights of battle. He relishes
lhe
national spotlight which has never left him since
Th~ bidding has been:
·
1964.
Most of all, he loves to shake up the northern estab:
West
North Ea." · South
lishment - which usually' means the national Democratic
'
Party and its aspiring leaders .
·
You, South, hold :
Recently, he joined his fellow Democratic governors
.98654 .A2 tJ .AKQ16
at
a party caucus in Annapolis, Md . Wallace just toyed
What do you do?
with
them , dropping hints to governor after governor that
A-Bid one club. This is the
one exception to the rule 1bout he might enter their primaries and upset "the applecart.
opening with the higher ranking Said Gov. John Gilligan of Ohio :
"I never heard more nervous laughter in my life. "
of two five•Cird suil5. You have
bad sp1dcs, very a:ood clubs and
Speaking of !hose governors, a political observer ob·
• minimum hand.
served :
TODAY'S QUESTION
"Have you ever heard a man 's voice turn white ' "
You bid one club and your
Most of Wallace's many detractors concede that he can
partner re s ponds one heart. be very effective as he punctures the pomposities and
What do you do now?
hypocrisies of his northern colleagues and rivals . But
An~wer Tomorrow
the. tougher part of his game is trying to upset the serious
political calculations of presidential candidates. That's
really what he is talking about when he says, as he did
In 1836 Mexican forces the ~!her mght m Wesl Palm Beach: "I am a serious
captured the Alamo at San candtdate."
Antonio, Texas, killing the last
Wallace never wearies of recounting his 1964 primary
of 187 Americans who had held votes, nor his big 10 million in 1968. Right now, in Florida,
out for 13 days, including he leads a pack of 11 presidential candidates and is thus
famed frontiersman Davy a source of maximum annoyance to such contenders as
Senators Edmund Muskie , Hubert Humphrey, Henry
Crockett. From the slaughter Jackson , George McGovern and New York Mayor John
arose the cry "Remember the Lindsay . A s1zable Wallace victory in Florida could quickAlamo."
(
ly crush the hopes of one or two aspirants.
In 1857 the U.S. Supreme
And it won't etid with Florida. He expects to compete
Court handed down its land- , hard in other 1972 ~rimaries in Tennessee, Indiana , Wismark Dred Scott decision. It consm, Pennsylvanta, Maryland . He believes he can win
ruled that Scott, a Negro slave, at least two of these.
could not sue for his freedom in
His ambition burns so hot that he doesn't like to hear
federal
court.
anything
negative about his prospects. He was disap8
proving as he told a reporter recently :
"I saw your piece the other day . You said I was slip.
In 19611, long-time U.S. pin,."
Representative Joseph Martin,
Probably Wallace is not as strong nationally as he was
R-Mass., former speaker of the
in 1968 .. Polls edge him down a bit. But he has not yet
House, died at the age or 83. truly shpped. Indeed, the school busing issue may have
given him a new lease on life.
George Wallace is not going to win the 1972 Democratic
nomination. Nor will he determine who will win. But he
will have an effecl on the race. And that is what the
nation 's head political disrupter wants at the very minImum .
{NEWSPA.P(R lHTEIPRISl

.USN . ~

.

.

l.ly BRUCE BIOSSAT

with disastrous results ...
Jim: "West really should
have played out his jack of
spades on the theory that the
heart shift was hopeless but
experts go wrong on occasion and when they do go
wrong they are inclined to
go th~t way with a real bang.
His excuse was that he had
never seen the seven spot.
Hence either South was
false-carding or East wasn't
strong enough to sel the
hand with spades.

' ' f. I
.

, I.,

You Wonder What
Makes George Run

Bad Signal, Defense Loses
NORTH

•

BRUCE BIOSSAT

WIN AT BRIDGE

.4¥A65

.

.
'

·~

'

The Almanac
By Unlttd PressiDternatloaal
Today is Monday, March 6,
the 66th day of 1972.
The moon is in Its last
quarter.
The mortling star is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Pisces.

Vo~ce

along Br'Way

exempt, doein'~ II? ... it's their 51Jt Atlantic
BY JACit O'BRIAN
crossing ... Pen&amp;: Pencil sleakho- owner John
Bruno, smashed up in a car a-aib, won't quit:
ALLS001T'S BELTS
resumed !peed-car piloting in .April at ~
AREN'T BLACit
Rock,
Conn.
. .
.
NEW YORK (KFS) - George C. Scott
Woody Allen scouted Heather f,lacRae In
better had practice his karate: at a ocreenlng ol
hla Paddy Clllyetsky-taipled ''Holpltal" flick, ·"Hair"- (ibe did.the nude-bit therein),llld now
he opined that bil pet actorl.ll peeyealDduded she'll be really....n In Wood,y'a "Ewrytling
"the blPIY Milled actor who pu1ll back and lets YouAiwaysWant!dloKnow About SG" film :..
hlmseH be ued by the ayllmn. Lee Marvin Is The latter book always reminds • of wb1t
one. Richard Burton Ia the epitome ol wbat I'm Oscat Levant s8id about Leonard llerDI!ela'•
talldnllabout" ... ScoU got bil biggest laurela in TV mualc-ap!anatlons: ''He reveala aecnts
"system"fllma: notably "Patton" ...Lee Grant that have been known forbundreda of yean." ...
ol ''Tbe'Priao!IOf of 3rd Aw." could be another Rodney Dangerfield's pop, a vaudev!Win
Zelda: dances till dawn with the local most· · (named PhU Roy, of "Roy &amp;: Arthur''), wu
eligibles ... James Fox, leading British actor jack Benny's roommate, Rodney IIIYI· UniD
('"'be Servant/' "King Rat". etc.), quit films Jack decided Mary· Uvlngaton wu a better
and oow Is a preacber in Australia. Never sleep-mate ... Flip Wllaon on lll:llnes bearing
cocktail hour. planO)I: ''Tbe nell bljaclrer wtJI
bappler, h~ writes friends.
Veteran stage«reen star Joseph Cotten · demand, "fake me to Uberace.' "
New actress Deborah om jull became. a
during the "l..e!wl:~ ,intermiulon r~
about his days as a_pro.lootballer. Said he got 'Sa"tnt. Making her bow tn' the' ' 1lleiling of the . .
100 a game and IOIDe ol his teammates were President" Bdwy. musical, she wu Informed
ringers whO also plafed Saturdaya with by Actors E4uity another ac~ already bad
Georgetown U. -Wider nom de pigskin 10'1 not registered in that name. Tllll$, ibe's now
to lose their collegiate amateur !'BftkiDgl ••. Llno "Deborah Saint Darr" ... She could've !raveled
J:.,anaro's Uno's UN ReltaUI'IIIIt \2111e al age: 21 beiter as Deborah St. Christopher.
years old, an epoch theM l'I!Cellion days.
The always unseen "4th wall" In all 'stage Since there Ia no Mafia, they say, wbat's
wrong with the title of a new film - just plain plays wUl be seen In the new suspense play
"MAFIA" It's called ... Controversial priest "Night Walch" due at the Morosco Theater ...
Jaml!l Gropp! went 1to France for the Paris . Set designer George Jenkins Innovated a set
World Assembly of l'eace and lndepelldence ~ revolving three Urnes to ibow the complete
the lndocbineae · Peopll!l ...:. supporting the envlrorunent of Ita main characters.
David Ca8Bidy abnciat got tossed out of the
CoiiUDunist cause in Vietnam. Does he au~
Viet Cong mass murder of children, womei). chic Dorchester in London -buill wasn't his
hOspital patients and other hiHide obacenitles? fault. His teeny-pel' fans all blit vandalized that
Two more N. Y. area judges will face hotel for the staid set. Even Liz &amp;: Dick behave
Federal raps on land spe«;U)atlon charges ... themselves when In residence.
The NY Rolls-Royce showroom at 57th &amp;
New BriUah pop-rock alnger Harry Nlls8on has
2nd
highlights
a 1931 blond-red Bentley dangling
a new alblllil: ''NIIs8on Sclunilsson" ... "The
French Connection" is London's biggest flbn a nlfiy use&lt;kar pricetag: $100,000 ... Gifted
actor-writer Robert Shaw's next book Is "Flesh
hit, too.
The BriUah alnger Dave Denton In I~ "To &amp; Blood," about "an old people's crusade" ...
Live Another Summer" ruck also Is Dave Someone around the White House Is scheduled
Carroll, whoopensarunat the EIAvramcafe ... to leak the tre of Pres. Nixon at Soviet welshing
Roseland owner Lou Brecker &amp;: his Dorothy on the money they owe at the UN: $67 million,
waltz to Europe on a 74.7 (they fiy pianos, don't which neatly would retire the $65 million deficit
they?) to "seoul for talent"; that mew tax· the UN suffers right now.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
'American Way' Not Best

Dear Dr. Lamb-My husband is a hardworking executive who is primarily a
steak, sal~d and egg man.
He I oath e s fish, and we
guard against his tendency
l&lt;!."be overweight constantly.
I want to keep him healthy.
but I am somewhat at a loss.
This morning we had twoounce chunks of Cheddar
cheese , one-half fresh pear
and nonfat milk. This and
the cottage cheese route are
a poor and unappetizing sub·
stitute for a warm breakfast
on a cold day. Finding proteins really worries me. Can
you offer suggestions?
Dear Reader-No other
single dietary habit has contributed so much to atherosclerosis and heart attacks
in the. American population
than the American breakfast. Breakfast was essentially unknown until a few
centuries ago. Most people
in the world started the day
by drinking a tankard of ale
with bread. The British introduced the breakfast habit
because they didn't have
lunch.
The egg yolk at breakfast
is the major source of the
large intake of cholesterol in
many Americans ' diets. The
American Heart Assn. has
recommended ']imiting con·
sumption of egg yolks to only
three a week, including those
used in cooking.
"
It is too bad your husband
doesn't like fish: They make
an excellent dish for breakt·ast. Cheddar cheese, how·
ever, is loaded with fat and
contains a moderate amount
of cholesterol.
You could always give him
a hot cereal for breakfast,
such as hot o~tmeal with
sugar and fortified skim
milk .

Of course, you can use hot
cakes and. if you are worried about I i m Hi n g your
saturated fat intake, you can
always use-one of the soft,
tub margarines made from
corn or safflower oil.
Salmo.n patties ' are. 'excel·
lent for ·breakfast: You could
try chicken a Ia kiftg, leaving the fat out of the cream
sauce you make. This served
on toast is excellent. You
can do the same for creamed ·
dried beef.
Occasionally you could use
some lean ham. If you trim ·
away all of the fat and use
lean ham, it contains conslderably less fat than liacon,
sausage or even Canadian
bacon.
For people who love eggs,
I would llke to mention Egg.
stra, which you will probably
find in the dietary section of
your supermarket. This Is a
powdered egg product which
contains only one-fifth the
amount of cholesterol and
fat of ordinary eggs. Even
sticking by the American
Heart Assn. requirement of
less than · three egg yolks,
this would mean that you

M.D.,

....

By ltElTH WISECiJp
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Eulel'n Eagiels advance to the
""-" ·Chillicothe District this
Thursday after winning .11\eir
third Blralpt BeCtional till&lt;!,
this time over the sb!te's .tsthranted North Gallia Pirates,
70-55, ~ Saturday night.
Coech Bill Pbllllpa' Eagles
played near perfect ball all
evening limg. The "Big Green"
put up the stin~leal defense the
Pirates have·gone against thla
year, lbnltlng them to only a
ctiuple of twO:POinters by fast
breaks. And the Eagle&amp; con:
il'olled the tempo of the game
from the·opening tipoff. 'lbese
were the biggest contributing
factors to the Eagles' upset.
Balanced scoring by the
Meigs Countlans, something

.,

Play-by-Play of Finals

.. "

·'\-

•.d.

. I;
I•

' · ·1

,I:

,.'

.

...,...
H-1

,,,

'•

.

'

7-7
9-7
9-9

11-9
11·11
11-13
13-13
U-13
16-13
16-15
18-15

,,
•

'·

in~irldwl ftllt«&lt;/

inte,.Jf in lutvn columns.

·-

Us.

By Helen Hottel

·.

••

.·.

NO WAY TO WIN AHUSBAND

'
'·

,.

.'

Third Quarter

Duvall, short, 7: 57
Clark, short, 7:38
Boring, short, 7:25
Young, short, 6:58
Justus, short, 6:42
Elchlnqer, long, 6:31
Eichinger, long, 5:56
C'whlte, short, 4:31
C'whlte. short, 3:58
caldwell, short, 4:10
Crosswhite, short,
Borlnq, short, 3:22
Boring; FT. 2:59
Justus, short, 2:31
Duvall, long, 2:12
Stout, FT, 1: 58
Duvall, FT, 0:57
54-40
Stout, short. 0: 45
54-42
Brown, long, 0: 09
Fourth Quarter
56-42
Boring, long, 7:50
Caldwell, long, 7:12
58-42
58-44
Justus. long, 6:37
59-44
Eichinger, FT, 6:21
Boring, short, 5:55
61-44
63·44
Duvall. short, 5:13
65-44
Eichinger, short, 4:56
. 67-44
Duvall, short, 4:31
67-45
Crosswhite, FT, 4:05
67-46 Justus, FT, 3:12
69-46 . Duvall, FT-FT, 2:46
.69·41
Clark, FT, 2: 32
69-49
Crosswhite, long, 2:25
69-51
Stout, long, 2:·03
·
Stout, long, 1:14
69-53
70-53
Eichinger, FT, 0:33
70-55
Stout,- long, 0: 24

Boring, 13 points and five
assists, and 6-~ senior Randy
Young, nine points and a great
defensive game.
Pacing the North Galli&amp;
· attack was Pat Stout with 17,
Larry Justus, 14, Gary
CrosSwhite, 12, and Arthur
Clark, 10. The Pirates closed
.lhelr season at 18-3, this being
their worst defett of the year.
North Gallla, ranked sixth In
the state In AP "A" poll, lest to
the. Eagles In last year's sec·
tiona! finals, 81~. They had
defetted the Eagles 7o-65 and
67-61 in two meetings this year.
Eastern moves on to the
Chillicothe District this
Thursday where there will be
two winners of the five teams
advancing to the Reglonals In
the Convocation Center in
Athens. And believe me, there
will be some talent at the
Chillicothe tourney In teams
like Alexander and some Ross
and Pike County teams, where
"A" basketball thrives. In
their two past games at the

district, the Eagles ba.ve lost to
Portsmouth Clay In 19'10, 79-58,
and to CrooksVIlle last year, 7456.
' Things could be different thla
year.
Coach Jim Foster's Pirates,
closing out me of the lllOIII
heralded Gallia County teams,
led 2-0, 4-2, 7-S, and 13-llln the
first quarter but never
regained the upper hand after
falling behihd 19-15 at the end
of the first quarter. VoW1g and
Duvall led the Eagles with five
points etch. Stout and Justus
led the Pirates with six each.
The Eagle lead swelled to 2215 In the firs(' two minutes of.
the second period. Eastern had
a 34-21 margin at the half.
Caldwell led Eastern with eight
in the second quarter while
Clark led the Pirates with six.
Leadli'lg 40-31 opening the
second half, Eastern's letd
jwnped .to -16-31 on i)u-ee rapid
twin-pointers by Eichinger, all
from far outside. '!be Eagles
had a li4-42 margm after three

C HI LJ..tCO"THtr

quarters. ·Eichinger led th~
Eagles with six while
Crosswhite aild Justua paced
the Pirates wlth four apiece.
. Ahetd 118-44, Eastern ripped
in nine straight points in two
minutes to go up 67-44 with 4:31
left. At thla point, the packedhouse at Meigs High School
was filled wJth the chants and
cheers from the many Ea:stern
fans. For all pracUcal. pur·
poses, the game was over at
the four minute matk.
The ocene in each team's
dressing room after the game
reflected the outcome. .
The North Gallla dreaaing
room was dead quiet except for
a few sobs - and ~ were
tears, too - while the Eastern
dressing room bad a drenched
Bill Plillllps fiesh from a cold
shower dancing with jubilance.
Eastern made 28 of 82 from
the field for 34 pet. The Eagles
had .shot a much better per·
centage until the fourth
quarter when they missed
several and couldn't care less,

for victory was their thing.
They made 14 of 22 from the
foul line.
North Gallla hit on 23 of 57
from the field for 38 pet. and
only nine of 14 from the foul
line. The Pirates controled the
boards, 43-40, with Clark
leading with 16 and·Justus and
Crosswhite nine each. Clark,
playing with a schipped bonetn
his ankle, blocked five shots.

N'CAA Lineups

DIS (ftC/

7t30

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"

The Daily Sentinel
E•tc . Ed.

ROBERT HOEFLICH.

+++

.

Dear Helen:
,.
'I1Iele moderns who say they'll LOVE tGgellt« blil not IIIIIT)'
becaUM th• lictlllll! ruins the relattonlhlp: How .can a lliP ..r
paper ruin anything? Maybe they're just afraid ~ conuulinit)·
property apUII or alimony- Ill' the blgh eDt ol diVOI't'f la:it')'I!U
... or ol really committing themselves. -FORMARIUAGt
~

f

.

.

8 50

West

at Chillicothe

... ,··· ..

t;-~&lt;-·:-,.

•.

. GREAT FINISH
MIAMI (UPJ) ~ This
year's $150,000 Dora!
Eastern Open gol! tour·
ILimeot has been rocked by
controversy and plagued by
rain. But In today'• final
round It turned lato a
competitive muterplece.
Superstars Jack Nicklaus
IUid Lee Trevino tee oflln the
windup locked In a tie lor tbe
lead at llkmder·par 208 for
three rouads and just one
stroke back are oldUmers
Sam Snead uti Paul Har·
ney. The final rouad had
been set lor Sunday, but
heavy rains just after noon
lorced po&amp;lponement until
today. It was the secoDCI rain
delay In two days.
Saturday, a downpour
hall-way through lbe tblrd
rouad waabed out all scores•
ID a hoUy-cllaputed move, ·tbe
PGA eUmlnated 30 aollers
who scored U7 or wone
after two rounds and
scheduled 31 holes for the
re~mlnlag 5Z soUen Sunday.
··But tbe raiDs &lt;!ame again
after tbe 18 boles of lbe tblrd
round, publilg tbe flalab Into
Monday.

MontreallPhlladtlphlt o
!Only~:' scheduled)
•
y's .. mes.
1No games scheduled)
NBo\.Stendllllf
By United Press lllWMIIMII
Eastem Cenlere11ct
Atlontlc Division
W. L. Pd. Gl
&amp;.ton
.19 24 .611 •••
New York
43 28 .606 5
Philadelphia 28 43 .3U 20
Buffalo
19 51 .271 28'12
· Centro I Dtvlslon .
W. L. Pd. GB
Baltimore
32 39 .451 ..
Atlanta
28 43 ,394 4
Cincinnati
23 48 .324 9
Cleveland
21 so .296 11
Westem Conference
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Mllawukee 56 16 .771 .. .
Chicago
51 22 .699 5'12
Phoenix
43 30 .519 13 112
Detroit
23 4 . .324 32 112
Pociflc Division
W. L. Pet. GB
x-LosAngeles 59 12 .831 ...
G6idenState 45 26 .634 U
Seattle
46 21 .630 14
Houston
28 43 .394 31
Porlland
15 59 .203 45112
x-cllnched division title
Sundly's Res•lts
Cincinnati 125 Boston 114, aft
Phlla 100 New York 98, aft
Phoenix 131 Buffalo 103, aft
Chicago 128 Houston 91
Balli more 108 Los Angeles 94
Seattle 112 Atlante 110
IOniygamesscheduledl
Mondly's gtmes
Boston et Milwaukee
IOnlygamescheduled)
ABA Standings
By United Press lntomatlonal
East
W. L. Pd. Gl
K,ntvcky
57 14 .803
Virginia
41 30 .sn 16
New York
35 36 .m 22
Floridians
30 41 .43 27
Carolina .
28 43 .394 29
24 47 .338 33
Pitts.
west
W. L. Pet. GB
Utah
49 21 .700 ...
Indiana
39 30 .565 9'12
Dallas
33 o10 .452 17'12
Denver
29 oiO .420 19'12
Memphis
24 47 .338 25'12
Sundly's Results
Kentucky 134 Pllllbrgh 124, all
Indiana 110 Dallas 99, oft
Denver 137 Memphls129, aft
New York 114 Caroline 96
(Onlygamesachedultdl
Mondly's games
(No games scheduled)

•

NATil&gt;NWIDE's new Fam·
ily Plan ruarant&lt;ll your
child can· aet bia oWn life
insurance when he's 22,
regardltss ot hta/th. Call
Joday.

Eastern will play on the last game advances to the Athens March 7. Zane Trace Ia 16-5 and
CIULUCOTHE - The topsb ··~seeded Easter~~;: Eagles dtew ·night · of the tournament, ,regional In the Convocation Ross Southeastern is 19-4. Both
have been bitter Ross County
the bye in the fivt-team "A" Thursday, March 9, • at 7:30 Center March 17 and 18.
rivals
sever~! years . The
In the lower bracket, two
district tournament to be held against the winner of the
here March 7, 8, and. 9. The Alexander (2~3) and ·Ports- Ross County schools, Zane winner goes to the Athens
regional.
·:= ' ~:- ..•
. ~ ~
By UDlted Prl!ls IDtematloaal No. 8 Long Beach State Eagles have drawn the bye the mouth East ( 12-10) game. The Trace and Ross Southeastern
To
get
to
the
district,
square
off
at
7:30
on
Tuesday,
winner of that championship
The NCAA basketball (PCAA) duel in a battle of last two years.
Alexander defeated Crooksregional playolfs assumed a repealing conference cham·
P. J. PAULEY
ville
(6-15), Zane Trace beat
more detlnlte ibape as the pions. Long Beach completed
PARKER, Ariz. (UPI) -Bob
PH. 992-2318
Lynchburg Clay (15-7), Portsits regular ~ason with a
result of weekend acUon.
307
Spring Ave.
35,
al
Patker,
Ariz.,
was
Ellis,
mouth East won over Por!4·
East Reglooals: Harry U· record of 23-3. BYU split two
Pom@roy,
Ohio
mouth Clay (1~) in a slight killed Sunday at the start olthe
The man from Nllionwtdc i1 on your Jiclc.
twak's Temple Owlll, who won games .over the weekend,
upset; Ross Southeastern nine-hour Parker Enduro boat
the Middle Atlantic Conference losing to Texas El Paso 73-69
\leleated Peebles (16-5), and race on the Colorado River
IItle with a 15-67 victory over Friday night and edging New
Meigs' own Eagles outscored when his craft went out of
St. Joseph's, will face sixth- Mexico 81~ Saturday.
the state's sixth ranked team, control and sliced through a
N1tionwidc life ln1ur•nc:e Com_pati)'
ranked South Carolina, one of Undedded Cooferen&lt;e O.ampa
dock.
Hom.Otna: : Columbus, Ohto
North
GaUia,
70-56.
The
Pirates
Drawing a first-round bye is
nine at-large entries In the
Meeting In Jackson on player honors.
work this year as the scribe~ . ended at 18-3.
toumament. The Gamecocks UCLA, six-time champion of
Oyer, who finished second In and casters placed Gil Price qf
downed Clemson Saturday, Tl· the Paclfic-ll conference and Sunday, Feb. 21, members of
letgue
scoring, and anchor Gallipolis on the second team
the
Southeastern·
Ohio
Sportsseeking its sixth straight
84.
man on Coach C. D. Hawhee's and Jim Pierce of Logan on the
Ivy wgue champion and national championship. 'lb_e writers and Broadcasters
well balanced championship third unit.
fourth-ranked Penn, which Bruins (25-0) closed out their Association selected 23 players
team, Is one of the top
The Marauders' t;-2 Tony
beat Brown :17-33, will lake on season with a 102-73 win ,., ·r to the 1972 edition of the AlireboW1ders·ln
the
league,
plays
·· EOAL · Basketball Team,
Vaughan was a second team
Providence while East Caroll· Stanford.
defense with the best, and Is a . choice. He is a senior.
'Jmed
Mike
Oyer
of
Waverly
na, · which · clinched the
deadeye shooter.
Selecting the coach of the
Southern Conference crown by
Conferences whose ch .Ill- -•s the league 'a most valuable
He was the only unaniinous year was dif{lcult as the
player,
and
picked
Carroll
edging Furman Tl-75, will meet pion bas not been decided a.;
selection to the first team in members'realiztd what a great
VIllanova.
yet Include the Southeastern, Hawhee o( WaverlY and Jiin
balloting by the 13 represen- Improvement Jim Osborne has
Mld-Eut :
The
Mid· the Big El&amp;ht, the Atlantic Osborne ol Gallipolis as co- tatives atte ding.
brought to Gallipolis basketAmetlcan Conference Coast, the Big Ten, the coaches of the year.
Larry
Snowden
of
GAHS,
a
Of the 15-man, three-team all
ball as he guided the Blue
champion will be decided Missouri Valley and the West
leag~e squad, nine are seniors, third teBIJl pick 1n 1971, 1s the Devils into a second place
'l'lleaday at Bowling Green, Coast Athletic Conference.
Ohio in a playolf between · Len Kasmalski scored 24 three are juniors, two are only repeater to this year's finiSh with an 11-3 league
record, the best in 16 years of
Toledo and Ohio University, polnta Saturday .night to help sophomor.es, and one is a fresh· team.
Mark Ferguson, a potentially any GAHS team.
man
.
whO' tied for lite COnference Tennessee maintain Ita SEC
Waverly, • w~ich swept great player' for the IrOnton
Coach Hawliee, now in hla
lead during the regular 111!810D. lead. The Vols can wrap up the
Tigers and one of their best this 26th year at the helm ol the
through
the
league
W1defeated
Toledo ~t~.iteaked by Kent State conference crown with vicyear, is the first freslunan to be Waverly Tigers, saw mOAt of
5&amp;-67 and Ohio U. blasted tortes against Vanderbilt in 14 games, placed jllJiior
named to the team In nearly 10 his taU players graduate from
Bowling Green 105-84.
tonight and Kentucky on Mike Oyer on the first team as
a W1anlmous selection and then yetrs, as he was voted a berth last year's championship
The Toledo-{)hlo U. wlmer : Thursday,
had hlin nose out Gallipolis' on the third team.
team, but came back with a
will confront flft!H:anked Mar'
· Two sophomores gained smaller group that went
fine
senior
guard,
Larry
quette, a 73-411 loller to New
Kanaas State lul.u ooe game
berths for their remarkable through league competition
Mexico Slate Saturday.
letd tmll' Missouri in the Big Snowden for most valuable
W1defeated ¥fd with every
Oblo ValleJ Conference
Eight with the two cia~ on
team pointing toward his.
The Ohio Valley Conference Tueaday: Both won Saturday,
1~72 All·SEOAL Basketball Squad
season wound up In a tangled with Mlsaourl having It the
Both coaches drew the same
web that one ol three teama rougher of the two. '!'he n&amp;er!l
number of votes in the
FIRST TEAM
will have to unrawl. Western accomplished wtuil no other
balloting and the members
11'1'. YR. voted to let the tie stand and
Kentucky will challenge .More- Big Elsbt tellll! had done this PLAYER -SCHOOL
t;.l Sr. accord both coaches the honor
head State on Tuetsday, with year -win at Nebraska. Dave Smith -Athens
1972 is our 60th year financing Ohio people. All told.
5·~
Sr. as co-coaches of the year .
the winner to play Eastern Mllsourl took the Huakers 81-64 Larry Sriowden -Gallipolis
we have made over 6 million loans and financed nearly
Kentucky on Wednelday. The while Kansas State trounced Bill Markin -Ironton
6-4
Sr.
All of the players named to
4 million purchases for our customers .. . for a total
evenlull aurvlVGr will then Colorado, 73-55.
6-3 Jr · ·the first three teams and the
Mike Oyer- Waverly
play No. II Florldl Stale, an Ill,
amount exceeding 5 billion dollars . We invite you to
6-2 Sr. honorable mention players will
Dan Settles - Wellston
64 lotser to In lnapired ClnSl!cond-ranlii!d North CarollSECOND TEAM
be honored guests at the Lake
find out for yourself about full-range City Loan service.
clllnati team led by ·Derrek na, beliind the 11-point effort ol Mike Green -Athens
6-2 Sr. White Qub In 'Waverly on
When money is the question . . .
Dickey's 20 'potnts.
Robert McAdoo, beat Duke 93- Gill Price -Gallipolis
6-3 Soph. Thursday, April 6 at the All·
Midwext Regional: Tenth- 89 to clinch the ACC regular- Rod Ferguson -Gallipolis
6-1 Sr. . SEO Basketball Banquet.
ranked Mlrlblll and 12th- season title aa Maryland Tony Vaughan -Meigs
The league's eight head
6-2 Sr.
tabbed Sou t h 1' eater n eliminated ninth-ranked Virgi· Butch Workman -Waverly
coaches
attended the meeting
6"-1 Sr.
Loulllana wlllta~le in a battle nla from contention with a ts-42
to recommend players that
. TIIffiD TEAl-l
of at:.laiae entries.
victory. However, the Ta~
6-11 ·Jr. they felt should · be placed on
The Solillnntlt Conference Is Heels must survive the ACC's Jeff Haiinon -Ironton
8-0 Froib. . the team and Included &lt;llarlie
anotberloopwhlchmustgotoa own post«ason tournament Mark Ferguson -Ironton
6-3 Sr. McAfee, Athens; Jim Osborne, ·
pJayolf before Ill ctwnpon Is before qualifying for the NCAA steve Keller - Jackson
Jim Pierce - Logan
6-9 Soph. Gallipolis; Dick Myers,
decided. SMU faces TWIB lhowcaie. ·
Bill Maloy- Waverly
6-2 Jr. Ironton; Carl WoHe, Meigs;
TUtlday,night with the wtmer
ID the BIJ Ten ...
Dick Taylor, Log1n; AI
HONORABLE MENnON
meettnc 14IIH'Inked HOUlton
Mlmeaola has a one~me
992-2171
ATHENS: Mark Handley: GAU,IPOUS: Jimmy Noe; Berger, JackSon;· Tom Evans,
in lht regional. Both te81118 lead In the Big Tep, Memphis
Wellston : and Carroll Hawhee,
were victorious over the State clinched a share ol the IRONTON: BlidChristian; JACKSON: Don Davidson; LOGAN: Waverly .
wulcllld, wilb SMU whipping Missouri Valley crown by Ken Culbertson; MEIGS : Steve Dunfee: WAVERLY : John
125 l MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.
Representing Gallipolis and
Baylor IHT and Tuaa·turnlne comtna from I&amp; pointa behind Shoemaker: WElLStON : Ra} McKinnlss.
Melgi at the meeting were Bud
aide T- Christian '12-l!O.
in the flnltl seven minutes to
'
MOBI' VALUABLE PLAYER
McGhee, WMP.O, Middleport:
Wilt Rtlional•: Weber defeat Dralte 7o.89 and San
Mike Oyer, Waverly
Bill Gray, WJEl!, Gallipolis,
State, lbe B1c Sky !rlngpin lOeB . Francisco has a one-game
CO-COACHES OF YEAR
and Od(e O'Dl-nnell, Gallipolis
' 1!112 • I'INANCING OHIO PEOPLE FOR 60 YEARS • 1172
il&amp;inlt Hawaii, 'Rhlle No. 7 advantage .Ver Santa Clara In
('.arroll Hawhee , Waverly
Tribune,
. BHehlm Youn~ (WAC) and the WCAC,
Jim 011borne. Gallipolis

~ ape

•

Oyer of Waverly Most
Valuable in SEOAL

t)ationwide

UJUrtto

City Losn
oftoatsel

~

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEAUTOF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,

Dear Helen: .
I love my gentleman friend very much-but every time we'r.
. _alone in hla apartment or mine, he .ends up raping me. 1 dou't
really mind but wlah I could talk to him more. -HELP?
Dear Helep:
Now I've heard everything:. rape between two conse11ting
adults! You'w got Your definitions sa-mbled, friend.
Maybe you ibould try COIIUDunlcating by teleJihone? - 11.

Mar. 9

12 ao·
13 67
10 54

J.4 11
27 24
22 30
21 J.4

W. L. T. Pis
Baltimore
28 24 10 66
Hershey
27 22 10 «
Cleveland
27 28 9 63
Richmond
25 29 10 60
Cincinnati ·
23 26 13 59
Tldewaler
17 37 8 42
Sundoy's R11uhs
Richmond 5 Cleveland 3
Nova Scolla 5 Providence 3
Baltimore 4 Rochesler 2
(Onlygamesscheduled)
Mondty's g1m11
I No games scheduled)

11!1!11\!!&lt;.'111~

CH/1-/..ICOTHlf ,OHIO

Eastem Eagles Play

~- ~- T;~~

NH.L $landings
With the win, the Phillips· By United Presslnternetlontl
East
men are 1fl.2 for the season.
W. L. T. Pis
They are 38-8 In the last two Bost.t
48 9 9 105
years under Coach Phillips. ·
.. 11 10 98
New York
39 14 12 90 ·
EASTERN. (70) - Caldwell Montreal
28 27 11 67
7-1;15; Young 4-1-9; Eichinger Toronto
2929967
Detroit
6-S-17; Boring t;.J,13; Duvall 5- Buffalo
13 38 15 4t
6-16. TOTALS 23-14-70.
Vancouver
16 43 6 38
W. L. T. Pis
NORTH GALIJA (55) o10 17 9 89
Justus 6-2-14, Stout 8·1-17; Chicago
Minnesota
33 23 9 75
Clark 3-4·10; Brown 1·0·2; Sl. Louis
23 35 9 S5
Philadelphia
21 33 11 53
CrosSwhite 5-2-12. TOTALS 23California
18 32 16 52
!h'i5.
Pittsburgh
21 36 9 51
By Quarters
Los Angeles
17 43 7 41
Sunday's Re1ults
Eastern
18 16 20 16--70
2 Chicago 1, aft
No. Gallia
15 12 15 13-55 Minnesota
New York 6 Vancouver!
Officials: Benne~! and Smith Los An~eles 2 Boston 0
St. LouiS 6 Buffalo 2
Detroit 6 Pittsburgh 3

sir 1

,,

v

32-25

;J?-27
34-27

36-27
36-29
38·29
ol0·29
40-31
42-31
·«·31
46-33
-435
4 -33 -·.
•8·35
50-35
51·35
51-37
53-37
53·38
54-38

k
.
.
........
a
tiig
·
T

+++

• I

20-15
22-15
22-16
22-11
24-18
24-19
24-21
26-21
26·22
28-22
28-23
30-23
:tq-25

!'flyer Shot Time
Justus, long, 7:56
Eichinger, long, 7:28
Justus. long, 7:01
Eichinger, FT, 6:47
Clark, FT, 6:15
Caldv;ell, FT, 5:52
Duvall, FT, 5:43
Crosswhite, long, 5:25
Duvall, FT-FT. 5:14
Duvall, tong, 4:46
Stout, short, 4:30
Coldwell, long, 4:11
Stout, short, 3:42
Stout. long, 2:27
Young, short, 1:53
Young, FT, 1:53
, Y!)Ung, short, 1:33
Justus, long, 1:20
Boring, ihort, 0:06
Second Quarter
·
Coldwell, long, 6:54
Caldwell, short, 6:17
Crosswhite, FT, 6:07
Stout, short, 4:59
Coldwell, long, 4: 44
Justus, FT, 4:34
Clark, long, 4:·07
Caldwell, long, 3:30
Clark, FT, 3:15
Young, long, 2:56
Clark, FT, 2:4
Eichinger. short, 1:53
Clark, short, 1:38
E'lnger, 2 FT, 1:28
Cr'whlle, _short,. 0:3_5
Boring, short, 0:03 ·

they have not had an abun·
dence of this year, was abo a
key in the win. Four Eagles hit
in doubl~ figures and a fUth
had nine points. Eastern had
tremendous teamwork, as
neatlythrown passes under the
baiket accoW1t!d for !leveral
iay~ns over the much taller
Pirates. It was by far the .best
game the Eagles have played
this year.
Dennis Eichinger, an Eagle
slando,ut his fourth straight
year, played his final game In
Meigs County with a
dominating 17 points and 22
rebounds. The other four
E8gles who aided the victory
were 6-2 jW1ior Alan Duvall
with 16 points and six
rebounds, 5-11 senior Bob
CaldwaU, 15 markers and six
assists, 5·9 junior Randy

1

Dr. Lam.&amp; ccrnnot ,,.....,

Boston
.
Nova Stolle
Springfield
Rochester

in care ol this pop.r. WhJ/e lttltrJ lte will answar letfm ot

,,.., .,,4 ,.., ,...

1115769. Busine-ss Office PhO'I"'t
992 .2156. Edilor ial ~hone 992 2157 .
Stcond clan postage pa id at
Pomeroy , Ohio .
National adwerli\ ln;
reprutntattvt
Bottinelli Gallagher , Inc .. 12 East 1112nd
St , New Yor k City . New York .
Subscription rates. : De livered by carr let whe-re
available 50 ctnts J)er week ;
By Motor Route where carrier
strvice nOt availablt : On!
month 51.75. Bv mail in Ohit'
and W. Va ., One year Sl•.OO .
Sll( months :.:r 25 . Thru
montl\s 14 .50 . Subsa ipllon
pr ice inclu.~ts Sundclv Times Sent inel.
·· •

E-NG
0-2
2-2
2-4
3-4
3·5
4-5
5-5
5-1

'.

Dear Helen:
I' ·
·
m young, attractive and divorced for seven years. I work
for a company where there's little opportunity to meet young
single men, and I avoided the married ones, until two·yetrs ago,
when I began a wonderful relatloniblp with an execuUve who
said he didn'tlove his wife, but only stayed with her out of ioyalty
or maybe pity.
Afew months ago he broke up·with me, saying his wife had
1 d t bo
Aller lha he
oun ou a ut us.
t gave me several nice glft8, and
once .or twice (when he had been drinking) he carne to my
apartment. Not recently, though. ·
I still feel very emotional about him. He's terribly attractive,
doesn't ibQw his age (17 years older than me), and bas channed
all the women In our organlzaUon with his marvelous per·
sonallty. Besides, he's my best (perhaps last) chance.'
· Here Is ,my question, Helen: Why ibould three ol us be
miserable (me, hiS wile and him) when two alus could be 10 very
0
~su!:g~s! :.k"1~i~~~- ~9 :J bappy, If hla wife would just accept our love and bow out? For
Eggstra. These taste quite this reason,_I want to tell her about the glfta and visits -so that
good and are suitable for she'llknowhelsn't "over"meandneverwillbe.Surelywhenshe
omelettes and scram b I e d learns about us ''the second time around," she'llthrow him out
eggs.
andhe'Ub4ve nootherplacetocome but tome.
Now, that is a pretty good
Amutualfriendtoldmetbatbeforethlsmanmetme,heand
list of things you can do,
particularly when you con- hla wife seemed the most contented of couples &amp; he would never
sider that there are a num- letve her because of his builiness and social afflllatlo118 In our
ber of people who merely small town.However,lfSHE left him, he'd bave oo choice, Don't
grab a cup of coffee and youthlnkl'dbewisetohaveatalkwlthher?-HOPING
that's breakfast. I am not an Dear Hoping:
enthusiast for e a ti n g big
breakfasts, but the; coffee
NO!!!
habit. on an empty stomach
Face it, you were an interlude, posalbly one of several.
may not be too good either.
"Qtlter women" seldom win husbands vla cliats with their
tNIW!PAPII INTIIPIISI ASSN.I
wiVeS. Even If you succeeded in causing trouble (your story IJ
~... om1 more apt to bring on pitying smiles from a woman who knows her
&lt;0111mont• to IAwrtnCo E. Lomb, man all too well), you'dlose the campaign. Do you really think a
man would retW'Il to a good-time girl whose big mouth upset his
bUsiness and social life? -H.

City l:dltor
Pliblishtd da il y ncept
Saturday by TP'It Oh io Valley
Publishing Company , 111
Courf St ., Pomeroy , Ort io.

ain!

oes It

,..

AHL Stendlngi By United Press lnternetl0111l
Eest

Providence

'.

Bre·akfast Feeds Heart Disease
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

as·t ern·

•

i$ the answer

'r,.
'·

•,
•

�.•

~

,r

..

~~.,~~ort·~~~~.~~

5..:.. The Dally Selilnel, ~port-Pwnaoy, 0., March 6,1972 ·

OI!Weone.-

Powell Signs; .Torre Holds Out

.. ,ka ... ll k:tlldPie
,
11 Utllt.d .............tiorwll

~11 dey
Canatiut at X.vier
NAIA Dlltrlct22 Pllvoffs
Rio Grande· at Dtllance

By Ualc.l PrM llllnalh ' stgnm. left Merv l\elll!mUDd,
BoogPolreJiandJoeTorre,.a who Is trying for ,50,010
pail' ~ slugging MVPs, found against an Dlfer o1 $42,000, as
themsel\'t!i · dickering In !he tile onlY ~ned Oriole.
· ne~-newr land of baseball
Torre, who turned In a .363economjcs ~Y and reacted 24-131 performance In batting
In different ways.
•verage, homen and runs
Powell, the · American l!atted In last 111!118011, W8l olLeague's Most Valuable fered a two-year contract 101"
Playei&gt; In 1970, took the ..,,ooo· $130,000 1n 1972 and •150,~ 1n
trCIOl the Baltimore Orioles. 1973 but turned it down. His
. Torre, the National League's basic position is tllat he wants a
MOlt Valuable Player In tm, three-year contract.
lllid ''no thariks" to the St.
"I wasn't particularly in!A!rLouis Cerdlnalll and is con- estec1 In two years," said
tlnulng to negotiate.
Torre. "But when I asked
Powell who was bidding to ab&lt;Jut three years they weren't
join ba*U's $100,00kalary ·Interested."
club, accepted the same
Torre joined the cardinals 1n
. anount he made last aeason' 1!169 as a catcher earning
a!IA!r his 1970 MVP aeasoil. His ~.000 a year.

,.....,,

. Wilmington at Findlay
Mlchlg.n Slate at Ohio Slate
Ohio Conference T011rney
·Finals at MI. Union
Mid· A,.,.Icu Conf. Pllyoff
Ohio U. vs. Toledo.
At Bowling Green
NCAA MldH1t bgiOIIII
.

..

AI Aki'OII

Youngstown State

vs. Gannon, Pa.

w.clt~e1411r

NAIA District 22 Finals
Thui'MIIy·
No games scheduled
Frlct.y
NCAA Mideast Regional at
Akron
Saturday
NCAA Mideast Regi~l at
Akron
HEERENVEEN, The
Netherlands (UPI) -Atje
KeulenDeelstra, a Dutch
mother of three children,
&amp;mday caplured the women's
speedskatlng world cham·
plollllhlp for the second Ume In
three years.
Mn. Stlen Baas-Kaiser, also
~ Holland and a former world
champloo, wu second and
Dianne Holum ~ Northbrook,
ru., was third.

Royals Hot .i n .Celtic~ ·w in.
.

NEW HAVEN CHEERLEADERS- The m-Jeader COI'JIB for the New HsVI!II Elementary teams In the Big Bend 5-«h Grade Basketball League tbla season is com[Xll!ed ~front row
across, from left, Helen Gui'tis, Rhonda Kay, April Parsons, Belinda Zerkle. Second row, Karla
Richards, Tracey Roach, Joni Clark and Dianna Abel.

Unseeded Ironton advanced to the Rio Grande
Class AA District Tournament Saturday night
following a hard-fought 57·52 victory over second
seeded Gallipolis in the finals of the Class AA
Sectional Basketball Tournament at Willow Wood.
Coach Dick Myers Tigers, now 14·7 on the year,
were paced by the fine inside and outside shooting of
5-11 senior guard Bud Christian, who pumped in 18
points.

Tigers Cop
OC SOuthern
Division Title
In Ohio Conference Tour·
nament action Saturday,
Wittenberg tripped capital 7571 to capture the Southern
Division title and Kenyon
downed Baldwin-Wailace 76-41
for the Northern Division
crown.
Wittenberg, the regular
season champ, now with a 1~
record overall, was paced by
Pat Beasley with 29 poinls.
Marty Hunt led Kenyon to ils
victory with 32 points. The
Tigers and Lords will meet
Tuesday night at Mount Union
for the tournament title and
Great Lakes Regional NCAA
bid ,
Ashland, meanwhile, wound
up Its season with a stirring
108·107 overtime win over
seventh ranked Cheyney State
IPa.) . The Eagles' BiU Higgins
scored 29 points and had help
from Rob Spivery with 19 and
Kirk Minteer with 16. Ashland
finished tile season with .a 19-7
record . Antoine Harrison
scored 34 and Charles Kirkland
30 to pace the Wolves.

.

By UDited PM8 lllterllatloul

Blue Devils Go Cold·, Lose 57-52

BackJng up Christian with !:&gt;.
point performances were Jeff
Hannan, 5-11 junior guard and
Mark Ferguson, IMI freshman
forward.
Ironton, which averaged 50
pet. from the field during the
14-game Southesstern Ohio
LeaglM! campaign, cinned 24 of
50 field goal attempts sa tip-day
for a nifty 48 pet. That was tile
big difference In the game's
final outcome.
Coach Jim Osborne's lads
bowed out with a fine 16-5
mark, best GARS record in 16
years.
Tile GaiUau played their
usual goad defensive gime,
holding the bl«h·oaorlng
Tl(ers 13 poiDis below their
70-poiDt per game season
average. GARS committed
oaly lZ penonal fouls, had
ooly nlae tanaoven, and
co~trolled ihe boardl,, 38-31.
The Osbornemen, however,
went cold In the final period
from both the field and foul line
after playing three periods of
nip and tuck basketball.
It was an unusuo¥ ending
indeed for the Galllans. In their

GAHS-Ironton Box

CLASS AA SECTIONAL FINALS
IAI Symmes Valley)
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS IS2)
PLAYER-Pas,
FG-A FG.A PF RB TO TP
Rod Ferguson, f
4-12
2- 2 3 4
I
10
Rick Boone, 9
~ 2- 6
0- 2 2 8 2 4
Gil Price, c
5-13
2- 2 0 14 3 12
Larry Snowden, 9
5·15
o. o 4 2 0 10
6·11
2- 7 2 9 3 14
first 20 games, the fourth · Jimmy Noe, f
Kev
Sheets,
g
1- 4
0- 1
1
1
0
2
period had been their most
TOTALS
23-61
6-14 12 38
52
productive (362 points)
IRONTON TIGERS (S7)
PLAY ER-Pos,
FG-A FT·A PF RB TO TP
quarter, an average of 19
Bud Christian, g
6·15 6- 7 I
2
3 18
points per game.
Jeff Hannan, g
7-11
1- 2 0 6 2 IS
In the first three periods, · Bill Mark in, c
3- 6
0- I
4
8
I
6
lck
Boykln,
f
R
01
01
2
I
GAHS was up to par, hilling 18
2
0
Mark Ferguson, f
7-15 1- 2 I
7
2 IS
of 38 from the field (47 pet, ) Rodney Bonks, f
1. 1
J. 2
I
7
I
3
and four of seven free throws TOTALS
24-50
9-14 9 31 11 S7
Score By Quirters:
(57 pet.).
Gallipolis
Blue Devils
IJ 13 14 12- S2
Then , all of a sudden, it Ironton Tigers
11 19 13 I 4-S7
appeared somebody put a lid
Officials - NPwman and Barker .
on the GARS bucket. Still
playing their deliberate game,
working for the good shot,
GAHS managed to get a man Ironton stole the ball just years. The Tigers won the Oak
open time and time again in lhe before halftime and Jeff Hill Sectional back in 1967-68.
final stanza, but the ball just Han nan popped in a long South Point had won three
wouldn 't go in the hole ,
jumper at the gun to give the straight sectionals and was
When the final gun
'Jligers a 30.26 lead at in· Aop-seeded, and favored to
I
"" •
'
oounded, GARS had hlt only
tenmsston.
'lnake !l four straight trips to
five of 23 from the field (21.7
·
GARS battled back to knot the district this ·wtn'ter, 'but
pet.) In the fourth period,
the count 36-all on Noe's long Ironton upset the state's
and lwo of seven free throws
jumper with 3:01 left in the number two ranked team 64-56
(:18 pet.)
third period. However, Rod last week enroute to the title.
Final statistics show GAHS Banks, who replaced Rick
GAHS has never made it to
hit 23 of 61 from the field for a Boykin in the second perioQ, the district since sectional play
cool 37,7 pet. From the foul put the Tigers back on top with began in 1955-56.
circles, GARS managed only a free throw at the 2:53 mark.
Following the game, Dave
six of 14 for 42.8 pet. In their The Tigers were never headed. Dunfee, tournament manager,
first 20 games, the Devils
Gil Price's crip cut Ironton 's presented Coach Myers the
averaged 45,6 from the field lead to one, 41-40, witlll :311eft' championship trophy.
(479-1051) and 67,3 from the in the third period, Hannan's
Ironton joins Waverly and
foul circles (349-518),
short jumper (1:01) gave the New Lexington in the Rio
In closing out their 1971-72 Tigers a 43-40 lead after three Grande AA District this
campaign, the Blue Devils periods.
weekend.
placed four men in double
Ironton built up a seven point
figures . Jimmy Noe's 14 points lead at the 4:50 mark, 49-42.
led the Gallians' attack. Gil Closest GAHS came after that
Price added 12, Larry Snowden was four points, 50-46 with 3:23
and Rod Ferguson each left, 54-50 with 58 seconds left,
finished with 10.
and 56-52 with II seconds left.
Snowden actually tallied a
Irontoa weal IDto a semi·
twin.pointer two seconds
stall the !loa! lour minutes,
before the gun sounded
forcing lite GalllaDB to come
following a steal, but the ofoulaad foul. Iroalon sank six .
ficials apparently didn't see it.
of nlae free throw attemps Ia
When the official scorer asked
the final staaza-Bud
it the last bucket counted one of
Christian was fl.of-7 at lhe
the officials waved his hands
charity stripe In this period.
and said "no" .
It will be Ironton 's first trip
The first ·period was ail to the Class AA District in four
Gallipolis Saturday as 1,300
persons jammed their way into
the Symmes Valley gym.
GARS started out like a Ironton Tigers
house afire, zooming to a 13-6
lead (biggest Blue Devil Win AA Tourney
spread of the night) in the first
5:30 of play,
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The ·
Ironton, however, bounced
35th annual Ohio Hlsh School
back with some great Inside
Wrestling
Tournament will be
and outside shoaling, scorlag
10 stralghl points to take a held here Friday and Saturday.
Columbus DeSales is
l&amp;-13lead with 7:42 left In the
defending champion In Class A·
second period.
It was nip and luck the AA and Cleveland Maple
remainder of the first half. IHS Heights will be back to meel
never led by more than five. challengers in Class AAA.
The ~ ore was tied 20-20 with Ironton. a member of the
4:18 left in the half. After Rick SEOAL, won the Class AA
Boone cut the Tigers' lead to District Title Saturday, and
two, 28-26, with I: 29 left, will now take part in the state
meet.

'

while John Havlicek led the
Celtics with 29 and J 9 Jo White
had 28.
In other NBA action, Phoenix
routed Buffalo 131-103,
Plilladelphia edged New Y9rk
100-98, Chicago crushed
Houston 128-97, Baltimore
downed Los Angeles 108-94 and·
Seattle nipped AUants 112-JIO.
Neal Walk and Clem Haskins
comhin.ed for 50 points as the
:;uns rolled over Buffalo.
Phoenix broke open the game
with. a If&gt;.I burst In 'the third
perlnd,
Billy Cunningham's basket
with 52 seconds left enabled tile
76ers to defeat New York.
Omnlngham, held In check
most of the game, broke a 96-98
lie with his basket and then
•
Ohio College
Baske!H II Resulls
By United Press International
Toledo 59 Kent State 57
Ohio lOS Bowling Green SA
Cincinnati 88 Fla . Slate 64
Indiana 65 Ohio State 57
Xavier 78 Ml~ml 74 (ol)
Ohio Conference Tournament
Northern Division
Kenyon 76
Baldwin-Wallace 65
Division Championship
Saulhern Division
Wittenberg 75 Capitol 71
Division Championship
Dayton 86 Notre Dame 74
Ashland 108
Cheyney State, Pa. (ol)

Indians' Sale

Rumored Again

, ,_ ..,. ,..,..~ llli~ Ill IMI m0111h, lhe
n;.a..,.. 1,, 11. ,...., f:W. •""- lriHD Houwa beat
llitiii,Au "1UJin'f ........,f:wto, _,llolddy Bakf.'f of
Utt1. ne, 111. c~ ,. •
cild
Ia•tUiaPJ on
tt'

~

0:::

Social
Calendar

_
..

•-•J
.......

!

"Electric Heating
is the best
heating
we have
ever had ...
and
probably
ever will have."

Yu· Ma~s

Is Lumpy-·
Your Rugs Are

Wom ... Your
Uvfng Room Suite
Is Faded, and

.

event.
The program is aet up so that
an Individual may attend three
sessions each day In !he threeday workshop. Registration
deadline is Thursday, March 9.
The lees are~ lor one·ctsy, $3
for two days, and $4 for three
days, All who do not preregister by Thursday will pay
~ per day whelher attending
one or more days, Some
classes ·wiD be closed when
they are filled ,
.Any class with less tllan 10
registered may be cancelled.
Registration forms are
available from the Meigs
County Extension Office, and
any quesUons · concerning the
program should be directed to
Mrs. Sheets.
Two Meigs Countlans will be

Council·
Will Meet
Thursday

Beauty in My World is
Theme of .A rts,Exhibits

-~-e~~-gd:_~s-~hoo_.03'._Fe-b.-.

Lamps Al'e Dingy
And the Stove

Won't Cook.

6, 064 families
In qur sarvlca 11:,111
have
Electrically Haaled homes.

0

Perfect warmth! Wall to wall, ceiling
to lloor.
·
.
O No 'egutar servicing! Great! Just
· turn the dial.
0 No pollutants, inside or out.
0 Clean as an electric light bulbi

0 lnslant comfort! Pleasant as

sunshine.
O Modern' Tomorrow as well as to-day.

Come five

Yellow
Pages

in the Electric Climate,

COLUMBUS AND .

..,1.'1'""'

OHIO ELECTRIC , COMPANY

.

.

\

TOUCH
CONTROL
SINK FAUCET

1777

·Druas
Discussed
0'

POMEROY

TI

"- - --

If

-

Il lI

REG. 36.95

Gold flec.ked pre-&lt;.ut panels,

NEW

FURNITURE
$349.95

MASON

~ ~.

FURNITURE

·.

"Straighten Out Those
Kitchen CUpboards," Sharon
Myers,lnslructor. She wiU give
tips and techniques· to follow
lor better Kitchen storage
arrangements.

BASKET STRAINER
UG.1.79

0

139

CEIUNG
FIXTURE

lEG, 1.99

20 INCH

20 INCH

MEDITERRANEAN
VANITY

PROVINCIAL VANITY
INClUDES VERMONT MAIIBLEIONE

10PANDI0Wt

INClUDES VERMONT.MARILElONE

TOP AND BOWL

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Wt111e t ablnet hos gold lrlm;

18"li. 20"JC31" high

18" X 20" X 31" hig h.

ourall,

WHITE WOODEN

BATHROOM SEAT
288

lEG, 96.90

lEG, 91 .90

7498

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Ct~.

69!8 •

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CTH.

MAOHOLIA
WILliAMS

WILliAMS

'•

I

"

}

I

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FROSTED

HEAT LAMP

as~
lEG. 1.69

lEG. 25.9S

1718

Fin ltghl c.handeller has dear
21 " diameter. (leu

HEAT LAMP
HOLDER

REDWOOD
BIRD FEEDER

SALE
PRICE

444

lEG, 6.59
Hold1 2·1/ 2ll . ...d orw:l2

WOODS WIRE

Proledive reflec.tor,
clamp·on brockel.

50 LB.
WILD BIRD
FEED

HEATH
12 COMPARTMUU

REDWOOD

MARTIN

HOUSE

lEG, 4.1.90

2995

WITH POLE

POLE ADJUSTS
FROM 5' I 0" TO

HOUSE ALONE

POLE ALONE

REO,

lEG.
JUS

23.95

1777

REG, 6.79

1-4'HIGH

1577

FEEDEl ONLV
lEO.
I0.9S

777

REDWOOD
DOUBLE
BIRD FEEDER
with pole

11.44
6FT. POLE ONLV
lEO,
7.49

WILD BIRD
FOOD
WILSON

VALUE

649

SUNFLOWER

ADVENTIST DiURat

3 ROOMS

, .

29~~

•

Carmel News

can

Tom··· The

.,

'

'"'!

members will participate ,
instructor. Considerations 1o
"Our Furniture Heritage" by be ·made before remodeling
treatment.
· Ruth DevoL Slide presentation such as lrafllc patterns ,
" Antiques
Junk or on antique furnishings.
plumbing and wiring, wall
Jewels," by Mrs. Chapman.
"Plan Your Do.Qvers - supports, etc:· will be
" Fabrics , Fabrics, Remodeling," Dorothy Teater, discussed.
Fabrics," Norma Deyo, in·
structor , She will discuss
selection and handling of new
fabrics by the home sewer and
give poinlers on .selecting
ready-to-wear clothing,
"Rush and Splint Seats In
Chairs," Harry Henry, in·
struclor. His demonstration
will be on the aelection and
choice of materials and basic
steps to follow In resealing
chairs with rush and splint.
" Inexpensive Home
Decorating- Ideas that Won't
Break the Budget," Darlene
Lambert, instructor . Her
program will be on ideas for
decorating that are easy on the
pocketbook.
Thursday's program at 10
a.m. will feature Judith
Matthews on "Design Prin·
lEG, 21.95
clples - How They Relate to
Accessories in tile Home,"
"The Modern
Classes at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m.
To Control Water"
that day include:
Elegant, :r.ingle-hcnd!e conveni ence lo en· "Braiding Rugs and other
ho nc:e your kitthtn. VerHcol pos!tio'n volvme
Things" by . Edna Borden.
control.
Those enrolled wiU have an
WIUjjMS
opportunity to begin work on a
DELUXE 5 FOQT
braided item.
MELAMINE TUB Kif
"Is the Consumer Being
"SrACE MATE"
Exploiled?" by Norleen
MI!DICINE
Ackerman . This class will
CABINET
relate to the merchants
responsibility, the consumers'
lEG. 39.91
responsibility, and getting the
most lor a dollar.
"Weaving," Beverly Louden,
•
instructor. She will demonCT~ .
strate how to set up and weave
IB" wlcle, 37" high oYeroll.
on various looms. Class

Locliary will be conducting an .class on · the decorative and
ali-day clinic on chair can!ni, useful art of knotting, how to
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on March)5, make belts, wall hangings,
and those enrolling are to take purses, etc.
a eliair. Supplies can be
''Simple Household Repairs"
aecured. tllere.
by Dave Boothe. This aession is
. Mrs. Paul Chapman will be a ''how to" on stuck windows,
the instructor for a t p.m. locks , leaking faucets and
session on Wednesday entitled simple plumbing repairs,
"Antiques- Junk or Jewels." patching cracks on walls and
She
will
demonstrate ceilings, fixing electric sockets
· techniques for recpgnlzlng and and plpgs.
refinishing antiques, WIIYB to.
"Slip Cover Techniques" by
distinguish between antiques Edith Anderson, showing
and reproductions, and .talk on techniques on measuring for
woods and finishes .
yardage, pin fitting, making
Registration and coffee hour contit\uous bias, cording ,
will be held each morning at 9 closures and sec11,ring the
a.m. The schedule on Tuesday, cover to the chair.
March 14, caila for a welcome
All of the classes except the
from Ezelle Hawkins who will one on hooking will be repeated
lead in a discussion oil the topic at 3 p.m.
"Changing Honie'!'akers,
On Wednesday In addition to
Families and Homes."
Mrs. Lochary's class on caning
Afternoon ~iasses that day an other ali-day program will
are as follows:
be presented by BID Gill on
· "Hooking Rugs and Other cleaning, adjusting and using a
Things" · by Edna Borden sewing machine,
(continuous class from I to 5
At 10 a.m. that day, Jim
p.m.) The art and techniques of Caldwell and Jim Utzinger will
hooking, with class mem)lers conduct a class entitled "Year
MONDAY
to have the opportunity to start Around Color in Your Yard and
OPEN HOVSE and family
work on small hooked items. Garden."
niglil when salem·Center PTA
"Decorating Your WaDs with
At 1 p.m. and 3 p.m, on
meets at 6:30 p, m. Monday al
"Fashion and Foods" wlll be Pictures and ... " by Enid Wednesday the classes are as
the school: There wiU be a tile theme of the Meigs County Moore who will discuss follows:
" Yard Maintenance,
covered dish dinner and en- Extension Homemakers choosing, using and hanging
tertainment by the Grate Council meeting' Thursday at wall decorations.
Pruning, Fertilizing and
"What's New in Home Ap· Planting," Jim Caldwell, inSt, Paul's Lutheran Church.
Family.
POMEROY GARDEN Club,
An Informal style revue will pUances" by Judith Wessel, a struclor , Techniques of
7:30 p. m, Monday, home of be presented by the 40 women program on learning the latest . pruning, fertilizing, mulching,
Mrs. Fred Blaettnar. Mrs. E. who have been enroUed In the up-to-date Information on and planting trees, shrubs and
W, Coates, assisting hostess. eight week sewing course household equipment such as evergreens.
"What's New in FurMIDDLEPORT 'Garden which they · will complete trash compactors, selfMrs.
Robert cleaning ovens, and the newer nishings," Dorothy Teater,
Club• 7: 30 p.m., home of Mr s. Tuesday.
instructor. She wiU discuss lhe
C. M, Hennf4f with Mrs. Crary Bwngarner will narrate lhe· small appliances.
"The
Art
of
Knotting
latest in fabrics, fibers and
Davis and Mrs. B. B. Zeigler, . review ·and also comment on
co-hostesses. Miss Lucille fitting problems solved, difSmlth to give the program ferent construction !e¢niques,
"Witchcraft In Your Garden". · and materials. The home
RoD caD, a bird you like and sewers review wiil begin at I
why,
·
p.m.
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
At 2 p.m. Mrs. Louise WeD ·
DeMo lay, 7:30 Monday at will give a cake decorating
Middleport MasMic Temple. demonstration. Mrs. Well has
RACINE Chapter 134, OES, had five years of professional
will honor an past matrons, fexperience and has decorated
'
past pail'ons and those having cakes for the Ohio University
Winners In tile cultural arts on the theme of "Beauty in My the cultural arts exhibit at the
March birthdays, at a meeting College Birthday Service.
Ohio Convention in Columbus
show In local PTA units and the World."
at 9 p.m. Monday at the temThere will be lime and Meigs County Council of
Essays- Theme, "Beauty in in Oct. 1972. First place winple. Members to pay dues at equipment for U!ose attending
ners from the state contest wiU
to practice a few basic Parents and Teachers will My World."
Entries wiD be judged on be sent to tile National PTA
meeting, TUESDAY
decorations with a small have their entries exhibited at
originality, imagination and Exhibit arid Contest.
the
Disll'ict
16
spring
conMIDDLEPORT Lodge 363, charge for the supplies used.
Mrs. Lohae advises tllat all
ference to be held at Jackson perceptivity in depicting the
F&amp;AM, TUesday, 7:30p.m. at
Mrs. Mildred Betzlng will on April 29.
"Beauty In My World," and entries in music, poetry and
temple. AD Malter ,lof18oftJ conduct , a brie! , ~uslness
!. r.¥'"
evidence of c•eativity and . essays must be sent to the
invlied. Grand Master's vialt meeting at 1:45 p.m. RefreshMrs.
HaPold
Lohse, talent.
conference general chairman, .
&amp; 30
ments wiU he served at the Pomeroy-, district director,
According to the .rules, each John Underwood, 103 North
Wednesday, dinner, : p.m., conclusion of the , cake ·
ladies invited.
today announced plans for the entry must be identified by the David, Jackson, before April
GOLDEN RULE Class of decorating demonstration . .
third annual event which is student's name, address, city, 21. Theae entries wiU be judged
Pomeroy Church of Christ, 7:30
aimed at Jirovidlng an op· school; council, unit, and prior to tile conference. No
p.m. Tuesday at home of Mrs.
portunity for youth to express district, and must designate music or literature entries wiU
Louis Osborne,
artisticaily their feelings and the category in which it is be accepted on conference day,
impressions about their world. being entered.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
All entries in the visual art
It
is a part of the PTA's work in
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
On
the
district
level,
entries
category
is to be laken to the
Mrs. Mary Circle ac·Tuesday, B: 15 p.m. Columbus companied by Mrs. Ronald the children's emotional health will be Ndged by a jury of conference, April29, between 9
and Soulhern Ohio Electric Co. Beegle and Mrs. Hattie Powell program. Theme is "Beauty In specialists selected by the a.m. and 10 a.m. when judging
Becky Anderson and Donna and daughter Addle of Racine My World."
conference cultural arts will begin. No entries wlll be
Mrs. Lohse has requested chairman, Mrs. Lohse Suggests accepted after that time.
Neaae to give cultural procram R. D. vialted Mrs. Virgil Roush
tllat each unit and council In that on the local unit and
on dance. Election ~ officers; at Letart lasl week.
First, second and third place
District 16 accept respon- counclllevellocal professional ribbons wiD be awarded In aD
Phyllis Bennett and Martha
Flocence Circle viall!!d hl!r sibilily lor Initiating activity
McPhail as hostesses.
aunt, Mrs. Laura El!elsteln of and working witlltlle schools to artists, school psychologists, or categories. Participant ribbons
POMEROY Chapter 186, Pomeroy on Sunday,
art supervisOrs not directly wiD be given to aU other ensee that children have an op- involved with entrants be used tries. Winners will be anOES, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at
Visitors at tile home of Mr.
temple, Members requested to and Mrs. Douglas Circle portunity to participate.
for judging.
nounced at the conference.
· Age categories for compay dues at that time.
Each
PTA
Council
or
unit
not
recently were Mr. and Mrs. pelltlon, .as listed by Mrs.
WEDNFSDAY
Ernest Johnson ol Belpre, Mr. Lohae are as follows: Primary, in council wiD be permitted one
WHITE ROSE Lodge, I :30 and Mrs. Glenn Ables of Long l.J; intermediate, grades ~; enl!'y In each category for the
p.m. Wednesday, Middleport Bottom R. D., Mr. and .Mrs. junior high, 7·9, and senior high district display. Students
submitting poetry, music and
Legion Hall, Initiation of Glenn Tuttle and son of Eagle · 10.12.
'
literature are to keep a carbon
candidates.
Ridge and Mrs. Thomas Holter
The categories as listed are copy ln the event of
WORLD DAY of Prayer, 2 of Morning Sta'r.
as follows: ·
misplacement since the Ohio
p.m. Wednesday, sacred Heart
Mr. andMfs. James Circle of
Visual Arts - drawings, oil, PTA Is not responsible should
catholic Church, (poetponed New Haven aad William . water color, water base,
Friday due to the snow.)
Carleton cif Ractne called on coUages, sculpture. No pottery an accident occur. All work,
however, is regarded as
Mary Circle a recent·Sunday. permitted.
valuable and excellent care is
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E.
H happen ID JOU!
Music
any
original
song
or
.
given
an entries.
Gardeners, Wednesday, 8 p. Johnson and family called on
At the district conference, an Ufe can be better I You can
m., Columbus and Soutb«it Mr, and Mrs. Douglas Johnson music written by an individual
student.
first
place winners in all become a new person ... You
Ohio Electr'ic Co. social room. of Racine recently.
Poetryany
form
of
poetry
categocles will he entered In can solve your problems.
Mrs. Edgar Reynolds, Mrs.
Twenty-eeven were preaenl
Guy Reynolds,. Mrs . Nina
Attend this great aeries of
27
Bland, co-hostesses.
Bib)eo()rlented discussions
POMEROY -MIDDLEPORT
designed to help you live
Uons Club noon lunCheon,
more abundantly In every
THURSDAY
Wednesday, Pomeroy Uni\ed
way In the world of the 70's.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Methodist Church.
Athens Attorney Michael of a proposed prpgram of
RAM, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.,
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, special aesslon at temple; most . Nolan discussed the drug visitation and assistance to
TUESDAY'S ·TOPIC:
· RAM, slate coiiYocatlon, 7:30
exceUent
masters
degree
to
be
problem
at
a
meeting
of
the
patients
being
discharged
from
:p.m. Wednesday at temple.
How to have a happy
conferred. AD officers and Nativity ·of Mary Deanery · the Athens Mental Health
home In an unhappy
MEIGS COUNTY Fish and companions invited.
meeting held Sunday afternoon Center.
Game Association, 7:30 p. m.
The next deanery meeting world.
BRADBURY PTA,1:30p. m. at the St. Patrick's C.thollc
Wednesday, club rooms, at the Bradbury School Church In BuchteL
7:30P.M.
will be held on June 4 at St.
Syracuse.
Tues. thru Sat.
Going from the sacred Heart Paul's Church in Athens. The
auditorium.
Church, Pomer'oy, for the annual Diocesan convention
meeting were Mrs. Tom will be at Steubenville on June
Hennesy, Mrs. Don Muilen, 14.
Mrs. Helen Handley, and Mrs.
HIGHLIGHTS
First successful photo·
Paul easeL
graph of the sun's corona
with Paul Crabtree
Mulberry Heights Rd.
In · his talk, Nolan gave was taken in 1851. Total ob·
·
Pomeroy
CAll POINTVIEW 992 ·2~ 05
statistics on punishment for str·;ing time since then has
having possession of drugs and been less than three hours.
fumy
moments.
Tht
cullng
Match
a
master is eKcellent (although I can't
spoke of the necessity of
playwright with a superb get
warning children and young
so lmpr~ssed when they
actor, andwethlnk lht result try to
be
serious).
7:30
p.m.
adults on the dangers of use
will be worlh ,watching ,
+
+
+
and possession, He displayed
Walter Mltthau stars 'In
Alabama Gov. George
samples of several drugs and
Clifford Odell' production of
Is ruMing in lhe
"Awake and Sing," a Wallace
barbiiurales.
West VIrginia primary as a
Depresslon·baed drama . on Democra1, and he's In·
The Rev. Fr, Frank Baudo in
Ch. 11 al 8 p.m.
tervlewed by Charleston
In
troduclng Nolan listed three
+++
newsmen . tonight
on
us.oo Down
reasons for tile teenage drug
A world-wide look at "Viewpoint," Ch. 8 at 11 :30,
9alance On
amateur athl«n- many of
problem - curloslly, to
+++
whom hope to be htrotl of
Convenient
MOVIES: Back-lo-thebecome part of the "In" group,
the summer Olympics - Is lungle
with "Tarzan
Terms. ·
and to ·defy authority. He
the aubjectof special tonight and the day,
Valley
of
Gold,"
4
thel might be worth a look. p.m.• and the Mau-Mau
cautioned that using drugs is in
It's "Champions," on Ch. 6 horror story. "Somelhlng of
violation of the commandment
at,B p.m.
Of , , '
Value," Rock Hudson and
+++
Po iller , 11 :30 p.m. ,
The meeting opened with the
"Traffic Court," a Ch. 10 Sidney
both
Ch.
10,
,
staple, hal 110me very, very
rHsary, sermon and prayer by
Mason, W.Va.
~
the Rev , Fr , Baudo, who spoke
collection of educational
classes in liOJ18lnc, lurnlfhlngs
and IWToundlngs will be held
MarCh 14, 15, and t6' at Rio
Grande CoUege.
The thr.ee day event Is
cooperatively 8pollsored by the
Athena, &lt;' Gallla, Hocking,
Jac)laon, Lawrence, Meigs,
Pike, Scioto and Vinton County
coopera)lve extension services: and features Instructors
!rom 'the c~unty extension
offices, residents of the area,
OhiQ Stale University and Ohio
University.
.
Emphasis of the program Is
on the "how to" with lots of
practical help. . Bulletins,
booklets, exhibits and books
will be available . Mrs .

,_

Hare's what they like:

ARE EASILY SPOil ED
in the

the.;::
':e

N. W. COMPTON, ,O.D.

filet',....,.
I'""

.....,.,_.,...,.».,...-c.-lit."

'

"Hoaies '72,'' described by · Sheels emphasized that Homes conducting ' .programs ~t Macrame " by Emmogne
shapes , floor
furniture
Mrs.. Jennifer . Sheets; Meigs '72 ls '.not a. -;,women only" Homes · '72.. Mrs. Patrick
Borden who ·will Instruct the coverings, and window
home · eltenlion agent, as a

Davis-Warner Ins.

SEE BAKER'S IN MIDDLEPORT
FOR THAT BRAND NEW LOOK !

ONTARIO, Calif. (UPI) - A. J. Foyt, tile per·
f~llaalsl from Tes., waiD'I )lappy with blmself. Forget
lbllle ... lliiMftDdiii'IIJPt Miller HJ&amp;h LHe otock car
Ftl'lfllllellle - has put toe ether back~o­
illdl Y1rt.riH .. NAIICAR Mt c!Jen.
HJ ~·t .._.. III!Mlt weD,. lnfflc aU day," tald
III aiiJi flit U Ill .lrilmpll OVf.'f Bobby AUison
f/1 If )I41Wa, Aia.; ,.llltW... IInl.lt'lZMercury.
''11:81 .,_ J11111 ttl lllfal I ....ne II lnffic .aad
..._....._ JW _.I," lie e.tlww••· "l'tday was oae of

'Homes '72' Program Will 0 er Lots o 'How To '

N~ter during the San Franclaco
.GUUlts' Intra~:: V~:
N~-coster ca er
,
rey s homer off Mike .Pazllk •
3-2 .pitch leadlngc::.
lllnmg gave the over
Net!
Sox a I~ victory
York Yankees.
x
·
The Boston Red ~
one unearned run~
. c
Bosman, Paul Lindbla~ and
caaey Cox to best theRa auCulp,
Rangers, 3-!,. while . Y
checked tile Rangers on two
bits .... Rusty Staub worked out
with. the Montreal ~s .for
tile first lime after signlni a
Me-year contr~ctlor less than
s1x figures. He had been
seekln« $100,000 a year for
three years ... Garry Jeslsdt
and Jerry Mor,ales each drove
in two runs as !be san Diego
Padres scored an 11-2 triumph
over the Mexico'' City Red
Devils in Mexico City ...
Newlyacquired Denny McLain,
one-,llnle 31-game winner for
the ()etrolt Tigers, has advised
tile Oakland Athletics that he
will arrive In !bell' Mesa, Ariz.,
camp lof)ay, .

pulled down the final rebound
as the Knlcks attempted to tie
the game, He ·finished with 12
.points. Fred Foster led the
76ers with 7,4 points, 16 of them
In the second period. Dave
DeBusschere was high man lor
New York with 24.
Chet Walker scored 31 points,
16 of them In the second j)eriod.
Dave DeBusschere was. high
man for New York with 24,
'Chet Walker scored 31 points
and Bob Love added 24 to boost
the Bulls over Houston.
Chicago outscored the Rockets
34-161n the third period to turn
the game Into a rout calvin
Murphy led HolllliM with 28
points.
Jack Marin's 29-polnl effort
lifted Baltimore past the
ti,n'
.
Lakers and an but killed Los
Angeles' chances of setting
. DaleiiWfl•~•-r
NBA records lor most victories
In a season and most victories
at home. Jerry West's 25polnts
led the Lakers, who were held
to !hell' lowest output of the
season.
Walt Beilamy's goaltendlng
YOUR insurance
infraction with three .seconds
coverages
are too valuable
TUCSON, Ariz, (UPI)- Releft on a field goal attempt by
to trust to an amateur. See
ports surfaced again Sunday
a Pro.
Lenny Wilkens provided the
that the Cleveland Indians
margin of victory for Seattle
were on the verge of being sold
over the Hawks, Jim Mcby owner Vernon Stouffer to
Daniels
then
blocked
Stop In Today
Cleveland sports entrepreneur
Bellamy's last second shot to
Nick Mileti.
clinch the victory for the
The latest report said ihe
Sonics, moving them into a tie
deal needs only the approval of
HAMPTON, Va. (UPI) - with Golden Stale for second in
Phone 992-2966'
tile American League to be fi- Stan Smith of Pasadena, calif., the Pacific Division.
Court Sl.
Pomeroy
nal, and that action was to he the top United Stales seed, won
taken at a meeting called by the $35,000 World Indoor tennis
AL President Joe Cronin for championship Sunday by
WednesdaY' In sarasota, ·Fia: , defeating llle Nastase of
· MUeU owns the Cleveland Romania, 6-3, •&amp;.2!" 1&amp;-7, 6-4,
..
OPTOMETRIST " ...
Barons of the American Hock- Nastase was the to!Hited In the
OFF ICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12. 2 TO :i ( C:LOS E
ey League and the Cleveland foreign division. Smith pocked
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
cavaliers of tile National Bas- $10,000 in prize money,
POMER Y.
ketban Association already.
Recently sale reports had
circulated, but were not con·
fll'llled by Stouffer.
Meanwhile, at the Indians
training camp here, emphasis
was on getting In shape for the
coming season. Mllllager Ken
Aspromlmte said tile Tribe, for
the first time in years, wlll use
a four-man rotating pitching
staff.
The Bolton Celtics watched
almost In disbelief Sunday
as Nate Archibald and Tom
Van Arsdale ·put on an
astounding shooting liisplay to'
lead the Cincinnati Royals to a
126-114 victory over Boston.
Archibald, one of the
smallest players In the
National Basketball
Association and Van Arsdale
scored 39 points each, In·
cludlng 17 apiece during a
fourth-quarter barrage that
buried Boston. Boston led 87-78
af!A!r three periods, when Ar·
chibald and Van Arsdale went
to work.
The Royals bit 78 per cent 11
!bell' shots In the final period
and outscored the Celtlcs 47-21
to snap Boston's five-game
winning sil'eak, Nate WilliBms
added 18 points for Cincinnati

Foyt Wins but Dissatisfyingly

•w
.......... .........

In other camps: Outfielder
Willie Montane~, the NL's
runner-up In r:ookie ~the year
.· polling In trTI, sig~ witlltlle
P!illadelphla . Phlllies for an
· estimated P?,SOO ... Steve !!rye
two-cun ~ In the fourth
inning enabled the ~
· Twins to beat the DetrOit
Tigers, 2-1. Jim Perry also
slarred for !he Twins, allowing
one hit In three Innings .. .
Frank Robinson delivered a
sacrifice fly In !he Los Angeles
Dodgers' intra-tJquad game.
Paul Popovich and Frank
Fel'MIIdei homered In the
Chicago CUbs' intra-11quad
game ... Willie McCovey, who .
was hobbled by bad knees in
1971, hit a homer as a pinch·

. lEG, 8"

lEG.
7.99

551f

399

WilSON

~ US TROW ARE

Locki ng meial llandles seal
block cover', Gr11 n,

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
The Department Store
of Building since 1915

�.•

~

,r

..

~~.,~~ort·~~~~.~~

5..:.. The Dally Selilnel, ~port-Pwnaoy, 0., March 6,1972 ·

OI!Weone.-

Powell Signs; .Torre Holds Out

.. ,ka ... ll k:tlldPie
,
11 Utllt.d .............tiorwll

~11 dey
Canatiut at X.vier
NAIA Dlltrlct22 Pllvoffs
Rio Grande· at Dtllance

By Ualc.l PrM llllnalh ' stgnm. left Merv l\elll!mUDd,
BoogPolreJiandJoeTorre,.a who Is trying for ,50,010
pail' ~ slugging MVPs, found against an Dlfer o1 $42,000, as
themsel\'t!i · dickering In !he tile onlY ~ned Oriole.
· ne~-newr land of baseball
Torre, who turned In a .363economjcs ~Y and reacted 24-131 performance In batting
In different ways.
•verage, homen and runs
Powell, the · American l!atted In last 111!118011, W8l olLeague's Most Valuable fered a two-year contract 101"
Playei&gt; In 1970, took the ..,,ooo· $130,000 1n 1972 and •150,~ 1n
trCIOl the Baltimore Orioles. 1973 but turned it down. His
. Torre, the National League's basic position is tllat he wants a
MOlt Valuable Player In tm, three-year contract.
lllid ''no thariks" to the St.
"I wasn't particularly in!A!rLouis Cerdlnalll and is con- estec1 In two years," said
tlnulng to negotiate.
Torre. "But when I asked
Powell who was bidding to ab&lt;Jut three years they weren't
join ba*U's $100,00kalary ·Interested."
club, accepted the same
Torre joined the cardinals 1n
. anount he made last aeason' 1!169 as a catcher earning
a!IA!r his 1970 MVP aeasoil. His ~.000 a year.

,.....,,

. Wilmington at Findlay
Mlchlg.n Slate at Ohio Slate
Ohio Conference T011rney
·Finals at MI. Union
Mid· A,.,.Icu Conf. Pllyoff
Ohio U. vs. Toledo.
At Bowling Green
NCAA MldH1t bgiOIIII
.

..

AI Aki'OII

Youngstown State

vs. Gannon, Pa.

w.clt~e1411r

NAIA District 22 Finals
Thui'MIIy·
No games scheduled
Frlct.y
NCAA Mideast Regional at
Akron
Saturday
NCAA Mideast Regi~l at
Akron
HEERENVEEN, The
Netherlands (UPI) -Atje
KeulenDeelstra, a Dutch
mother of three children,
&amp;mday caplured the women's
speedskatlng world cham·
plollllhlp for the second Ume In
three years.
Mn. Stlen Baas-Kaiser, also
~ Holland and a former world
champloo, wu second and
Dianne Holum ~ Northbrook,
ru., was third.

Royals Hot .i n .Celtic~ ·w in.
.

NEW HAVEN CHEERLEADERS- The m-Jeader COI'JIB for the New HsVI!II Elementary teams In the Big Bend 5-«h Grade Basketball League tbla season is com[Xll!ed ~front row
across, from left, Helen Gui'tis, Rhonda Kay, April Parsons, Belinda Zerkle. Second row, Karla
Richards, Tracey Roach, Joni Clark and Dianna Abel.

Unseeded Ironton advanced to the Rio Grande
Class AA District Tournament Saturday night
following a hard-fought 57·52 victory over second
seeded Gallipolis in the finals of the Class AA
Sectional Basketball Tournament at Willow Wood.
Coach Dick Myers Tigers, now 14·7 on the year,
were paced by the fine inside and outside shooting of
5-11 senior guard Bud Christian, who pumped in 18
points.

Tigers Cop
OC SOuthern
Division Title
In Ohio Conference Tour·
nament action Saturday,
Wittenberg tripped capital 7571 to capture the Southern
Division title and Kenyon
downed Baldwin-Wailace 76-41
for the Northern Division
crown.
Wittenberg, the regular
season champ, now with a 1~
record overall, was paced by
Pat Beasley with 29 poinls.
Marty Hunt led Kenyon to ils
victory with 32 points. The
Tigers and Lords will meet
Tuesday night at Mount Union
for the tournament title and
Great Lakes Regional NCAA
bid ,
Ashland, meanwhile, wound
up Its season with a stirring
108·107 overtime win over
seventh ranked Cheyney State
IPa.) . The Eagles' BiU Higgins
scored 29 points and had help
from Rob Spivery with 19 and
Kirk Minteer with 16. Ashland
finished tile season with .a 19-7
record . Antoine Harrison
scored 34 and Charles Kirkland
30 to pace the Wolves.

.

By UDited PM8 lllterllatloul

Blue Devils Go Cold·, Lose 57-52

BackJng up Christian with !:&gt;.
point performances were Jeff
Hannan, 5-11 junior guard and
Mark Ferguson, IMI freshman
forward.
Ironton, which averaged 50
pet. from the field during the
14-game Southesstern Ohio
LeaglM! campaign, cinned 24 of
50 field goal attempts sa tip-day
for a nifty 48 pet. That was tile
big difference In the game's
final outcome.
Coach Jim Osborne's lads
bowed out with a fine 16-5
mark, best GARS record in 16
years.
Tile GaiUau played their
usual goad defensive gime,
holding the bl«h·oaorlng
Tl(ers 13 poiDis below their
70-poiDt per game season
average. GARS committed
oaly lZ penonal fouls, had
ooly nlae tanaoven, and
co~trolled ihe boardl,, 38-31.
The Osbornemen, however,
went cold In the final period
from both the field and foul line
after playing three periods of
nip and tuck basketball.
It was an unusuo¥ ending
indeed for the Galllans. In their

GAHS-Ironton Box

CLASS AA SECTIONAL FINALS
IAI Symmes Valley)
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS IS2)
PLAYER-Pas,
FG-A FG.A PF RB TO TP
Rod Ferguson, f
4-12
2- 2 3 4
I
10
Rick Boone, 9
~ 2- 6
0- 2 2 8 2 4
Gil Price, c
5-13
2- 2 0 14 3 12
Larry Snowden, 9
5·15
o. o 4 2 0 10
6·11
2- 7 2 9 3 14
first 20 games, the fourth · Jimmy Noe, f
Kev
Sheets,
g
1- 4
0- 1
1
1
0
2
period had been their most
TOTALS
23-61
6-14 12 38
52
productive (362 points)
IRONTON TIGERS (S7)
PLAY ER-Pos,
FG-A FT·A PF RB TO TP
quarter, an average of 19
Bud Christian, g
6·15 6- 7 I
2
3 18
points per game.
Jeff Hannan, g
7-11
1- 2 0 6 2 IS
In the first three periods, · Bill Mark in, c
3- 6
0- I
4
8
I
6
lck
Boykln,
f
R
01
01
2
I
GAHS was up to par, hilling 18
2
0
Mark Ferguson, f
7-15 1- 2 I
7
2 IS
of 38 from the field (47 pet, ) Rodney Bonks, f
1. 1
J. 2
I
7
I
3
and four of seven free throws TOTALS
24-50
9-14 9 31 11 S7
Score By Quirters:
(57 pet.).
Gallipolis
Blue Devils
IJ 13 14 12- S2
Then , all of a sudden, it Ironton Tigers
11 19 13 I 4-S7
appeared somebody put a lid
Officials - NPwman and Barker .
on the GARS bucket. Still
playing their deliberate game,
working for the good shot,
GAHS managed to get a man Ironton stole the ball just years. The Tigers won the Oak
open time and time again in lhe before halftime and Jeff Hill Sectional back in 1967-68.
final stanza, but the ball just Han nan popped in a long South Point had won three
wouldn 't go in the hole ,
jumper at the gun to give the straight sectionals and was
When the final gun
'Jligers a 30.26 lead at in· Aop-seeded, and favored to
I
"" •
'
oounded, GARS had hlt only
tenmsston.
'lnake !l four straight trips to
five of 23 from the field (21.7
·
GARS battled back to knot the district this ·wtn'ter, 'but
pet.) In the fourth period,
the count 36-all on Noe's long Ironton upset the state's
and lwo of seven free throws
jumper with 3:01 left in the number two ranked team 64-56
(:18 pet.)
third period. However, Rod last week enroute to the title.
Final statistics show GAHS Banks, who replaced Rick
GAHS has never made it to
hit 23 of 61 from the field for a Boykin in the second perioQ, the district since sectional play
cool 37,7 pet. From the foul put the Tigers back on top with began in 1955-56.
circles, GARS managed only a free throw at the 2:53 mark.
Following the game, Dave
six of 14 for 42.8 pet. In their The Tigers were never headed. Dunfee, tournament manager,
first 20 games, the Devils
Gil Price's crip cut Ironton 's presented Coach Myers the
averaged 45,6 from the field lead to one, 41-40, witlll :311eft' championship trophy.
(479-1051) and 67,3 from the in the third period, Hannan's
Ironton joins Waverly and
foul circles (349-518),
short jumper (1:01) gave the New Lexington in the Rio
In closing out their 1971-72 Tigers a 43-40 lead after three Grande AA District this
campaign, the Blue Devils periods.
weekend.
placed four men in double
Ironton built up a seven point
figures . Jimmy Noe's 14 points lead at the 4:50 mark, 49-42.
led the Gallians' attack. Gil Closest GAHS came after that
Price added 12, Larry Snowden was four points, 50-46 with 3:23
and Rod Ferguson each left, 54-50 with 58 seconds left,
finished with 10.
and 56-52 with II seconds left.
Snowden actually tallied a
Irontoa weal IDto a semi·
twin.pointer two seconds
stall the !loa! lour minutes,
before the gun sounded
forcing lite GalllaDB to come
following a steal, but the ofoulaad foul. Iroalon sank six .
ficials apparently didn't see it.
of nlae free throw attemps Ia
When the official scorer asked
the final staaza-Bud
it the last bucket counted one of
Christian was fl.of-7 at lhe
the officials waved his hands
charity stripe In this period.
and said "no" .
It will be Ironton 's first trip
The first ·period was ail to the Class AA District in four
Gallipolis Saturday as 1,300
persons jammed their way into
the Symmes Valley gym.
GARS started out like a Ironton Tigers
house afire, zooming to a 13-6
lead (biggest Blue Devil Win AA Tourney
spread of the night) in the first
5:30 of play,
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The ·
Ironton, however, bounced
35th annual Ohio Hlsh School
back with some great Inside
Wrestling
Tournament will be
and outside shoaling, scorlag
10 stralghl points to take a held here Friday and Saturday.
Columbus DeSales is
l&amp;-13lead with 7:42 left In the
defending champion In Class A·
second period.
It was nip and luck the AA and Cleveland Maple
remainder of the first half. IHS Heights will be back to meel
never led by more than five. challengers in Class AAA.
The ~ ore was tied 20-20 with Ironton. a member of the
4:18 left in the half. After Rick SEOAL, won the Class AA
Boone cut the Tigers' lead to District Title Saturday, and
two, 28-26, with I: 29 left, will now take part in the state
meet.

'

while John Havlicek led the
Celtics with 29 and J 9 Jo White
had 28.
In other NBA action, Phoenix
routed Buffalo 131-103,
Plilladelphia edged New Y9rk
100-98, Chicago crushed
Houston 128-97, Baltimore
downed Los Angeles 108-94 and·
Seattle nipped AUants 112-JIO.
Neal Walk and Clem Haskins
comhin.ed for 50 points as the
:;uns rolled over Buffalo.
Phoenix broke open the game
with. a If&gt;.I burst In 'the third
perlnd,
Billy Cunningham's basket
with 52 seconds left enabled tile
76ers to defeat New York.
Omnlngham, held In check
most of the game, broke a 96-98
lie with his basket and then
•
Ohio College
Baske!H II Resulls
By United Press International
Toledo 59 Kent State 57
Ohio lOS Bowling Green SA
Cincinnati 88 Fla . Slate 64
Indiana 65 Ohio State 57
Xavier 78 Ml~ml 74 (ol)
Ohio Conference Tournament
Northern Division
Kenyon 76
Baldwin-Wallace 65
Division Championship
Saulhern Division
Wittenberg 75 Capitol 71
Division Championship
Dayton 86 Notre Dame 74
Ashland 108
Cheyney State, Pa. (ol)

Indians' Sale

Rumored Again

, ,_ ..,. ,..,..~ llli~ Ill IMI m0111h, lhe
n;.a..,.. 1,, 11. ,...., f:W. •""- lriHD Houwa beat
llitiii,Au "1UJin'f ........,f:wto, _,llolddy Bakf.'f of
Utt1. ne, 111. c~ ,. •
cild
Ia•tUiaPJ on
tt'

~

0:::

Social
Calendar

_
..

•-•J
.......

!

"Electric Heating
is the best
heating
we have
ever had ...
and
probably
ever will have."

Yu· Ma~s

Is Lumpy-·
Your Rugs Are

Wom ... Your
Uvfng Room Suite
Is Faded, and

.

event.
The program is aet up so that
an Individual may attend three
sessions each day In !he threeday workshop. Registration
deadline is Thursday, March 9.
The lees are~ lor one·ctsy, $3
for two days, and $4 for three
days, All who do not preregister by Thursday will pay
~ per day whelher attending
one or more days, Some
classes ·wiD be closed when
they are filled ,
.Any class with less tllan 10
registered may be cancelled.
Registration forms are
available from the Meigs
County Extension Office, and
any quesUons · concerning the
program should be directed to
Mrs. Sheets.
Two Meigs Countlans will be

Council·
Will Meet
Thursday

Beauty in My World is
Theme of .A rts,Exhibits

-~-e~~-gd:_~s-~hoo_.03'._Fe-b.-.

Lamps Al'e Dingy
And the Stove

Won't Cook.

6, 064 families
In qur sarvlca 11:,111
have
Electrically Haaled homes.

0

Perfect warmth! Wall to wall, ceiling
to lloor.
·
.
O No 'egutar servicing! Great! Just
· turn the dial.
0 No pollutants, inside or out.
0 Clean as an electric light bulbi

0 lnslant comfort! Pleasant as

sunshine.
O Modern' Tomorrow as well as to-day.

Come five

Yellow
Pages

in the Electric Climate,

COLUMBUS AND .

..,1.'1'""'

OHIO ELECTRIC , COMPANY

.

.

\

TOUCH
CONTROL
SINK FAUCET

1777

·Druas
Discussed
0'

POMEROY

TI

"- - --

If

-

Il lI

REG. 36.95

Gold flec.ked pre-&lt;.ut panels,

NEW

FURNITURE
$349.95

MASON

~ ~.

FURNITURE

·.

"Straighten Out Those
Kitchen CUpboards," Sharon
Myers,lnslructor. She wiU give
tips and techniques· to follow
lor better Kitchen storage
arrangements.

BASKET STRAINER
UG.1.79

0

139

CEIUNG
FIXTURE

lEG, 1.99

20 INCH

20 INCH

MEDITERRANEAN
VANITY

PROVINCIAL VANITY
INClUDES VERMONT MAIIBLEIONE

10PANDI0Wt

INClUDES VERMONT.MARILElONE

TOP AND BOWL

I

Wt111e t ablnet hos gold lrlm;

18"li. 20"JC31" high

18" X 20" X 31" hig h.

ourall,

WHITE WOODEN

BATHROOM SEAT
288

lEG, 96.90

lEG, 91 .90

7498

.t

I~

Ct~.

69!8 •

•

CTH.

MAOHOLIA
WILliAMS

WILliAMS

'•

I

"

}

I

\

FROSTED

HEAT LAMP

as~
lEG. 1.69

lEG. 25.9S

1718

Fin ltghl c.handeller has dear
21 " diameter. (leu

HEAT LAMP
HOLDER

REDWOOD
BIRD FEEDER

SALE
PRICE

444

lEG, 6.59
Hold1 2·1/ 2ll . ...d orw:l2

WOODS WIRE

Proledive reflec.tor,
clamp·on brockel.

50 LB.
WILD BIRD
FEED

HEATH
12 COMPARTMUU

REDWOOD

MARTIN

HOUSE

lEG, 4.1.90

2995

WITH POLE

POLE ADJUSTS
FROM 5' I 0" TO

HOUSE ALONE

POLE ALONE

REO,

lEG.
JUS

23.95

1777

REG, 6.79

1-4'HIGH

1577

FEEDEl ONLV
lEO.
I0.9S

777

REDWOOD
DOUBLE
BIRD FEEDER
with pole

11.44
6FT. POLE ONLV
lEO,
7.49

WILD BIRD
FOOD
WILSON

VALUE

649

SUNFLOWER

ADVENTIST DiURat

3 ROOMS

, .

29~~

•

Carmel News

can

Tom··· The

.,

'

'"'!

members will participate ,
instructor. Considerations 1o
"Our Furniture Heritage" by be ·made before remodeling
treatment.
· Ruth DevoL Slide presentation such as lrafllc patterns ,
" Antiques
Junk or on antique furnishings.
plumbing and wiring, wall
Jewels," by Mrs. Chapman.
"Plan Your Do.Qvers - supports, etc:· will be
" Fabrics , Fabrics, Remodeling," Dorothy Teater, discussed.
Fabrics," Norma Deyo, in·
structor , She will discuss
selection and handling of new
fabrics by the home sewer and
give poinlers on .selecting
ready-to-wear clothing,
"Rush and Splint Seats In
Chairs," Harry Henry, in·
struclor. His demonstration
will be on the aelection and
choice of materials and basic
steps to follow In resealing
chairs with rush and splint.
" Inexpensive Home
Decorating- Ideas that Won't
Break the Budget," Darlene
Lambert, instructor . Her
program will be on ideas for
decorating that are easy on the
pocketbook.
Thursday's program at 10
a.m. will feature Judith
Matthews on "Design Prin·
lEG, 21.95
clples - How They Relate to
Accessories in tile Home,"
"The Modern
Classes at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m.
To Control Water"
that day include:
Elegant, :r.ingle-hcnd!e conveni ence lo en· "Braiding Rugs and other
ho nc:e your kitthtn. VerHcol pos!tio'n volvme
Things" by . Edna Borden.
control.
Those enrolled wiU have an
WIUjjMS
opportunity to begin work on a
DELUXE 5 FOQT
braided item.
MELAMINE TUB Kif
"Is the Consumer Being
"SrACE MATE"
Exploiled?" by Norleen
MI!DICINE
Ackerman . This class will
CABINET
relate to the merchants
responsibility, the consumers'
lEG. 39.91
responsibility, and getting the
most lor a dollar.
"Weaving," Beverly Louden,
•
instructor. She will demonCT~ .
strate how to set up and weave
IB" wlcle, 37" high oYeroll.
on various looms. Class

Locliary will be conducting an .class on · the decorative and
ali-day clinic on chair can!ni, useful art of knotting, how to
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on March)5, make belts, wall hangings,
and those enrolling are to take purses, etc.
a eliair. Supplies can be
''Simple Household Repairs"
aecured. tllere.
by Dave Boothe. This aession is
. Mrs. Paul Chapman will be a ''how to" on stuck windows,
the instructor for a t p.m. locks , leaking faucets and
session on Wednesday entitled simple plumbing repairs,
"Antiques- Junk or Jewels." patching cracks on walls and
She
will
demonstrate ceilings, fixing electric sockets
· techniques for recpgnlzlng and and plpgs.
refinishing antiques, WIIYB to.
"Slip Cover Techniques" by
distinguish between antiques Edith Anderson, showing
and reproductions, and .talk on techniques on measuring for
woods and finishes .
yardage, pin fitting, making
Registration and coffee hour contit\uous bias, cording ,
will be held each morning at 9 closures and sec11,ring the
a.m. The schedule on Tuesday, cover to the chair.
March 14, caila for a welcome
All of the classes except the
from Ezelle Hawkins who will one on hooking will be repeated
lead in a discussion oil the topic at 3 p.m.
"Changing Honie'!'akers,
On Wednesday In addition to
Families and Homes."
Mrs. Lochary's class on caning
Afternoon ~iasses that day an other ali-day program will
are as follows:
be presented by BID Gill on
· "Hooking Rugs and Other cleaning, adjusting and using a
Things" · by Edna Borden sewing machine,
(continuous class from I to 5
At 10 a.m. that day, Jim
p.m.) The art and techniques of Caldwell and Jim Utzinger will
hooking, with class mem)lers conduct a class entitled "Year
MONDAY
to have the opportunity to start Around Color in Your Yard and
OPEN HOVSE and family
work on small hooked items. Garden."
niglil when salem·Center PTA
"Decorating Your WaDs with
At 1 p.m. and 3 p.m, on
meets at 6:30 p, m. Monday al
"Fashion and Foods" wlll be Pictures and ... " by Enid Wednesday the classes are as
the school: There wiU be a tile theme of the Meigs County Moore who will discuss follows:
" Yard Maintenance,
covered dish dinner and en- Extension Homemakers choosing, using and hanging
tertainment by the Grate Council meeting' Thursday at wall decorations.
Pruning, Fertilizing and
"What's New in Home Ap· Planting," Jim Caldwell, inSt, Paul's Lutheran Church.
Family.
POMEROY GARDEN Club,
An Informal style revue will pUances" by Judith Wessel, a struclor , Techniques of
7:30 p. m, Monday, home of be presented by the 40 women program on learning the latest . pruning, fertilizing, mulching,
Mrs. Fred Blaettnar. Mrs. E. who have been enroUed In the up-to-date Information on and planting trees, shrubs and
W, Coates, assisting hostess. eight week sewing course household equipment such as evergreens.
"What's New in FurMIDDLEPORT 'Garden which they · will complete trash compactors, selfMrs.
Robert cleaning ovens, and the newer nishings," Dorothy Teater,
Club• 7: 30 p.m., home of Mr s. Tuesday.
instructor. She wiU discuss lhe
C. M, Hennf4f with Mrs. Crary Bwngarner will narrate lhe· small appliances.
"The
Art
of
Knotting
latest in fabrics, fibers and
Davis and Mrs. B. B. Zeigler, . review ·and also comment on
co-hostesses. Miss Lucille fitting problems solved, difSmlth to give the program ferent construction !e¢niques,
"Witchcraft In Your Garden". · and materials. The home
RoD caD, a bird you like and sewers review wiil begin at I
why,
·
p.m.
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
At 2 p.m. Mrs. Louise WeD ·
DeMo lay, 7:30 Monday at will give a cake decorating
Middleport MasMic Temple. demonstration. Mrs. Well has
RACINE Chapter 134, OES, had five years of professional
will honor an past matrons, fexperience and has decorated
'
past pail'ons and those having cakes for the Ohio University
Winners In tile cultural arts on the theme of "Beauty in My the cultural arts exhibit at the
March birthdays, at a meeting College Birthday Service.
Ohio Convention in Columbus
show In local PTA units and the World."
at 9 p.m. Monday at the temThere will be lime and Meigs County Council of
Essays- Theme, "Beauty in in Oct. 1972. First place winple. Members to pay dues at equipment for U!ose attending
ners from the state contest wiU
to practice a few basic Parents and Teachers will My World."
Entries wiD be judged on be sent to tile National PTA
meeting, TUESDAY
decorations with a small have their entries exhibited at
originality, imagination and Exhibit arid Contest.
the
Disll'ict
16
spring
conMIDDLEPORT Lodge 363, charge for the supplies used.
Mrs. Lohae advises tllat all
ference to be held at Jackson perceptivity in depicting the
F&amp;AM, TUesday, 7:30p.m. at
Mrs. Mildred Betzlng will on April 29.
"Beauty In My World," and entries in music, poetry and
temple. AD Malter ,lof18oftJ conduct , a brie! , ~uslness
!. r.¥'"
evidence of c•eativity and . essays must be sent to the
invlied. Grand Master's vialt meeting at 1:45 p.m. RefreshMrs.
HaPold
Lohse, talent.
conference general chairman, .
&amp; 30
ments wiU he served at the Pomeroy-, district director,
According to the .rules, each John Underwood, 103 North
Wednesday, dinner, : p.m., conclusion of the , cake ·
ladies invited.
today announced plans for the entry must be identified by the David, Jackson, before April
GOLDEN RULE Class of decorating demonstration . .
third annual event which is student's name, address, city, 21. Theae entries wiU be judged
Pomeroy Church of Christ, 7:30
aimed at Jirovidlng an op· school; council, unit, and prior to tile conference. No
p.m. Tuesday at home of Mrs.
portunity for youth to express district, and must designate music or literature entries wiU
Louis Osborne,
artisticaily their feelings and the category in which it is be accepted on conference day,
impressions about their world. being entered.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
All entries in the visual art
It
is a part of the PTA's work in
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
On
the
district
level,
entries
category
is to be laken to the
Mrs. Mary Circle ac·Tuesday, B: 15 p.m. Columbus companied by Mrs. Ronald the children's emotional health will be Ndged by a jury of conference, April29, between 9
and Soulhern Ohio Electric Co. Beegle and Mrs. Hattie Powell program. Theme is "Beauty In specialists selected by the a.m. and 10 a.m. when judging
Becky Anderson and Donna and daughter Addle of Racine My World."
conference cultural arts will begin. No entries wlll be
Mrs. Lohse has requested chairman, Mrs. Lohse Suggests accepted after that time.
Neaae to give cultural procram R. D. vialted Mrs. Virgil Roush
tllat each unit and council In that on the local unit and
on dance. Election ~ officers; at Letart lasl week.
First, second and third place
District 16 accept respon- counclllevellocal professional ribbons wiD be awarded In aD
Phyllis Bennett and Martha
Flocence Circle viall!!d hl!r sibilily lor Initiating activity
McPhail as hostesses.
aunt, Mrs. Laura El!elsteln of and working witlltlle schools to artists, school psychologists, or categories. Participant ribbons
POMEROY Chapter 186, Pomeroy on Sunday,
art supervisOrs not directly wiD be given to aU other ensee that children have an op- involved with entrants be used tries. Winners will be anOES, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at
Visitors at tile home of Mr.
temple, Members requested to and Mrs. Douglas Circle portunity to participate.
for judging.
nounced at the conference.
· Age categories for compay dues at that time.
Each
PTA
Council
or
unit
not
recently were Mr. and Mrs. pelltlon, .as listed by Mrs.
WEDNFSDAY
Ernest Johnson ol Belpre, Mr. Lohae are as follows: Primary, in council wiD be permitted one
WHITE ROSE Lodge, I :30 and Mrs. Glenn Ables of Long l.J; intermediate, grades ~; enl!'y In each category for the
p.m. Wednesday, Middleport Bottom R. D., Mr. and .Mrs. junior high, 7·9, and senior high district display. Students
submitting poetry, music and
Legion Hall, Initiation of Glenn Tuttle and son of Eagle · 10.12.
'
literature are to keep a carbon
candidates.
Ridge and Mrs. Thomas Holter
The categories as listed are copy ln the event of
WORLD DAY of Prayer, 2 of Morning Sta'r.
as follows: ·
misplacement since the Ohio
p.m. Wednesday, sacred Heart
Mr. andMfs. James Circle of
Visual Arts - drawings, oil, PTA Is not responsible should
catholic Church, (poetponed New Haven aad William . water color, water base,
Friday due to the snow.)
Carleton cif Ractne called on coUages, sculpture. No pottery an accident occur. All work,
however, is regarded as
Mary Circle a recent·Sunday. permitted.
valuable and excellent care is
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E.
H happen ID JOU!
Music
any
original
song
or
.
given
an entries.
Gardeners, Wednesday, 8 p. Johnson and family called on
At the district conference, an Ufe can be better I You can
m., Columbus and Soutb«it Mr, and Mrs. Douglas Johnson music written by an individual
student.
first
place winners in all become a new person ... You
Ohio Electr'ic Co. social room. of Racine recently.
Poetryany
form
of
poetry
categocles will he entered In can solve your problems.
Mrs. Edgar Reynolds, Mrs.
Twenty-eeven were preaenl
Guy Reynolds,. Mrs . Nina
Attend this great aeries of
27
Bland, co-hostesses.
Bib)eo()rlented discussions
POMEROY -MIDDLEPORT
designed to help you live
Uons Club noon lunCheon,
more abundantly In every
THURSDAY
Wednesday, Pomeroy Uni\ed
way In the world of the 70's.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Methodist Church.
Athens Attorney Michael of a proposed prpgram of
RAM, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.,
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, special aesslon at temple; most . Nolan discussed the drug visitation and assistance to
TUESDAY'S ·TOPIC:
· RAM, slate coiiYocatlon, 7:30
exceUent
masters
degree
to
be
problem
at
a
meeting
of
the
patients
being
discharged
from
:p.m. Wednesday at temple.
How to have a happy
conferred. AD officers and Nativity ·of Mary Deanery · the Athens Mental Health
home In an unhappy
MEIGS COUNTY Fish and companions invited.
meeting held Sunday afternoon Center.
Game Association, 7:30 p. m.
The next deanery meeting world.
BRADBURY PTA,1:30p. m. at the St. Patrick's C.thollc
Wednesday, club rooms, at the Bradbury School Church In BuchteL
7:30P.M.
will be held on June 4 at St.
Syracuse.
Tues. thru Sat.
Going from the sacred Heart Paul's Church in Athens. The
auditorium.
Church, Pomer'oy, for the annual Diocesan convention
meeting were Mrs. Tom will be at Steubenville on June
Hennesy, Mrs. Don Muilen, 14.
Mrs. Helen Handley, and Mrs.
HIGHLIGHTS
First successful photo·
Paul easeL
graph of the sun's corona
with Paul Crabtree
Mulberry Heights Rd.
In · his talk, Nolan gave was taken in 1851. Total ob·
·
Pomeroy
CAll POINTVIEW 992 ·2~ 05
statistics on punishment for str·;ing time since then has
having possession of drugs and been less than three hours.
fumy
moments.
Tht
cullng
Match
a
master is eKcellent (although I can't
spoke of the necessity of
playwright with a superb get
warning children and young
so lmpr~ssed when they
actor, andwethlnk lht result try to
be
serious).
7:30
p.m.
adults on the dangers of use
will be worlh ,watching ,
+
+
+
and possession, He displayed
Walter Mltthau stars 'In
Alabama Gov. George
samples of several drugs and
Clifford Odell' production of
Is ruMing in lhe
"Awake and Sing," a Wallace
barbiiurales.
West VIrginia primary as a
Depresslon·baed drama . on Democra1, and he's In·
The Rev. Fr, Frank Baudo in
Ch. 11 al 8 p.m.
tervlewed by Charleston
In
troduclng Nolan listed three
+++
newsmen . tonight
on
us.oo Down
reasons for tile teenage drug
A world-wide look at "Viewpoint," Ch. 8 at 11 :30,
9alance On
amateur athl«n- many of
problem - curloslly, to
+++
whom hope to be htrotl of
Convenient
MOVIES: Back-lo-thebecome part of the "In" group,
the summer Olympics - Is lungle
with "Tarzan
Terms. ·
and to ·defy authority. He
the aubjectof special tonight and the day,
Valley
of
Gold,"
4
thel might be worth a look. p.m.• and the Mau-Mau
cautioned that using drugs is in
It's "Champions," on Ch. 6 horror story. "Somelhlng of
violation of the commandment
at,B p.m.
Of , , '
Value," Rock Hudson and
+++
Po iller , 11 :30 p.m. ,
The meeting opened with the
"Traffic Court," a Ch. 10 Sidney
both
Ch.
10,
,
staple, hal 110me very, very
rHsary, sermon and prayer by
Mason, W.Va.
~
the Rev , Fr , Baudo, who spoke
collection of educational
classes in liOJ18lnc, lurnlfhlngs
and IWToundlngs will be held
MarCh 14, 15, and t6' at Rio
Grande CoUege.
The thr.ee day event Is
cooperatively 8pollsored by the
Athena, &lt;' Gallla, Hocking,
Jac)laon, Lawrence, Meigs,
Pike, Scioto and Vinton County
coopera)lve extension services: and features Instructors
!rom 'the c~unty extension
offices, residents of the area,
OhiQ Stale University and Ohio
University.
.
Emphasis of the program Is
on the "how to" with lots of
practical help. . Bulletins,
booklets, exhibits and books
will be available . Mrs .

,_

Hare's what they like:

ARE EASILY SPOil ED
in the

the.;::
':e

N. W. COMPTON, ,O.D.

filet',....,.
I'""

.....,.,_.,...,.».,...-c.-lit."

'

"Hoaies '72,'' described by · Sheels emphasized that Homes conducting ' .programs ~t Macrame " by Emmogne
shapes , floor
furniture
Mrs.. Jennifer . Sheets; Meigs '72 ls '.not a. -;,women only" Homes · '72.. Mrs. Patrick
Borden who ·will Instruct the coverings, and window
home · eltenlion agent, as a

Davis-Warner Ins.

SEE BAKER'S IN MIDDLEPORT
FOR THAT BRAND NEW LOOK !

ONTARIO, Calif. (UPI) - A. J. Foyt, tile per·
f~llaalsl from Tes., waiD'I )lappy with blmself. Forget
lbllle ... lliiMftDdiii'IIJPt Miller HJ&amp;h LHe otock car
Ftl'lfllllellle - has put toe ether back~o­
illdl Y1rt.riH .. NAIICAR Mt c!Jen.
HJ ~·t .._.. III!Mlt weD,. lnfflc aU day," tald
III aiiJi flit U Ill .lrilmpll OVf.'f Bobby AUison
f/1 If )I41Wa, Aia.; ,.llltW... IInl.lt'lZMercury.
''11:81 .,_ J11111 ttl lllfal I ....ne II lnffic .aad
..._....._ JW _.I," lie e.tlww••· "l'tday was oae of

'Homes '72' Program Will 0 er Lots o 'How To '

N~ter during the San Franclaco
.GUUlts' Intra~:: V~:
N~-coster ca er
,
rey s homer off Mike .Pazllk •
3-2 .pitch leadlngc::.
lllnmg gave the over
Net!
Sox a I~ victory
York Yankees.
x
·
The Boston Red ~
one unearned run~
. c
Bosman, Paul Lindbla~ and
caaey Cox to best theRa auCulp,
Rangers, 3-!,. while . Y
checked tile Rangers on two
bits .... Rusty Staub worked out
with. the Montreal ~s .for
tile first lime after signlni a
Me-year contr~ctlor less than
s1x figures. He had been
seekln« $100,000 a year for
three years ... Garry Jeslsdt
and Jerry Mor,ales each drove
in two runs as !be san Diego
Padres scored an 11-2 triumph
over the Mexico'' City Red
Devils in Mexico City ...
Newlyacquired Denny McLain,
one-,llnle 31-game winner for
the ()etrolt Tigers, has advised
tile Oakland Athletics that he
will arrive In !bell' Mesa, Ariz.,
camp lof)ay, .

pulled down the final rebound
as the Knlcks attempted to tie
the game, He ·finished with 12
.points. Fred Foster led the
76ers with 7,4 points, 16 of them
In the second period. Dave
DeBusschere was high man lor
New York with 24.
Chet Walker scored 31 points,
16 of them In the second j)eriod.
Dave DeBusschere was. high
man for New York with 24,
'Chet Walker scored 31 points
and Bob Love added 24 to boost
the Bulls over Houston.
Chicago outscored the Rockets
34-161n the third period to turn
the game Into a rout calvin
Murphy led HolllliM with 28
points.
Jack Marin's 29-polnl effort
lifted Baltimore past the
ti,n'
.
Lakers and an but killed Los
Angeles' chances of setting
. DaleiiWfl•~•-r
NBA records lor most victories
In a season and most victories
at home. Jerry West's 25polnts
led the Lakers, who were held
to !hell' lowest output of the
season.
Walt Beilamy's goaltendlng
YOUR insurance
infraction with three .seconds
coverages
are too valuable
TUCSON, Ariz, (UPI)- Releft on a field goal attempt by
to trust to an amateur. See
ports surfaced again Sunday
a Pro.
Lenny Wilkens provided the
that the Cleveland Indians
margin of victory for Seattle
were on the verge of being sold
over the Hawks, Jim Mcby owner Vernon Stouffer to
Daniels
then
blocked
Stop In Today
Cleveland sports entrepreneur
Bellamy's last second shot to
Nick Mileti.
clinch the victory for the
The latest report said ihe
Sonics, moving them into a tie
deal needs only the approval of
HAMPTON, Va. (UPI) - with Golden Stale for second in
Phone 992-2966'
tile American League to be fi- Stan Smith of Pasadena, calif., the Pacific Division.
Court Sl.
Pomeroy
nal, and that action was to he the top United Stales seed, won
taken at a meeting called by the $35,000 World Indoor tennis
AL President Joe Cronin for championship Sunday by
WednesdaY' In sarasota, ·Fia: , defeating llle Nastase of
· MUeU owns the Cleveland Romania, 6-3, •&amp;.2!" 1&amp;-7, 6-4,
..
OPTOMETRIST " ...
Barons of the American Hock- Nastase was the to!Hited In the
OFF ICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12. 2 TO :i ( C:LOS E
ey League and the Cleveland foreign division. Smith pocked
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
cavaliers of tile National Bas- $10,000 in prize money,
POMER Y.
ketban Association already.
Recently sale reports had
circulated, but were not con·
fll'llled by Stouffer.
Meanwhile, at the Indians
training camp here, emphasis
was on getting In shape for the
coming season. Mllllager Ken
Aspromlmte said tile Tribe, for
the first time in years, wlll use
a four-man rotating pitching
staff.
The Bolton Celtics watched
almost In disbelief Sunday
as Nate Archibald and Tom
Van Arsdale ·put on an
astounding shooting liisplay to'
lead the Cincinnati Royals to a
126-114 victory over Boston.
Archibald, one of the
smallest players In the
National Basketball
Association and Van Arsdale
scored 39 points each, In·
cludlng 17 apiece during a
fourth-quarter barrage that
buried Boston. Boston led 87-78
af!A!r three periods, when Ar·
chibald and Van Arsdale went
to work.
The Royals bit 78 per cent 11
!bell' shots In the final period
and outscored the Celtlcs 47-21
to snap Boston's five-game
winning sil'eak, Nate WilliBms
added 18 points for Cincinnati

Foyt Wins but Dissatisfyingly

•w
.......... .........

In other camps: Outfielder
Willie Montane~, the NL's
runner-up In r:ookie ~the year
.· polling In trTI, sig~ witlltlle
P!illadelphla . Phlllies for an
· estimated P?,SOO ... Steve !!rye
two-cun ~ In the fourth
inning enabled the ~
· Twins to beat the DetrOit
Tigers, 2-1. Jim Perry also
slarred for !he Twins, allowing
one hit In three Innings .. .
Frank Robinson delivered a
sacrifice fly In !he Los Angeles
Dodgers' intra-tJquad game.
Paul Popovich and Frank
Fel'MIIdei homered In the
Chicago CUbs' intra-11quad
game ... Willie McCovey, who .
was hobbled by bad knees in
1971, hit a homer as a pinch·

. lEG, 8"

lEG.
7.99

551f

399

WilSON

~ US TROW ARE

Locki ng meial llandles seal
block cover', Gr11 n,

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
The Department Store
of Building since 1915

�.. .

Industry's Retooling Lagging
CLEVELAND (UP!) Industry in the United States
must Increase its investment in
new tools if the nation Is to
regain its lost competitiveness,
Industry Week Magazine
reported todsy.
But before the country ('lin
step up its Investment, industry must ha~ an improvement in profits, the
ma~azine pointed out.
Between 1965 and 1970, corporate after-tax profits went
down 11.4percent,a big reason
for the drop being increased
taxes to support government
spending which ballooned from
about $100 billion in 1955 to
$341.1 billion in 1970.
Despite reduced profits, industry sustained Its capital expenditures sufficiently during
tlie 1965-70 period so that they
were some 20 per cent higher in
relation to the volume of
business done by the corporate
system than during 1947.:Q4 period.. But this has not been
enough, Industry Week said.
The nation's investment in
better toots is among the lowest
in the world. Nearly 70 per cent

of Ja(ian 's machine tools, for
example, are less than 10 years
old. In contrast, the magazine
said, only 3S per cent of U.S.
jndustry's machine tools are
less than that of age. and Japan
continued to add output per
man hour with a rate of investment in better toots double
that of the U.S. in 1968-70, the
magazine said.
First to Dead Last
Historically, output per manhour in the U.S. rose 3 per cent
annually. During the last four
years, it has slumped to an
average rate of 1.1 per cent, the
lowest four-:.rear average
growth in oulput per. manbour
since the end of World War II.
In a single generation, the
U.S. has plummeted from first
tD dead last among industrial
nations in output per manhour
growth, Industry Week said.
The U.S. with tools twice as
old as tho6e of its major com- ·
peti!Drs, Is attempting tD sustain hourly employment costs
two to four times those of its
competi!Drs.
The survival of U.S. industrial jobs demands that hourly

Tournament Results
Ohio Hi11h School
Tournament Scores
By United Press lnlernofionol
CLASS AAA
Cleveland John F. Kennedy 78
Maple Helghls67
Brecksville 57 Normandy 38
Lorain 90 Br.unswlck 52
Alliance 57 Glenwood -18
Chardon 49
Painesville Harvey 43
Cleveland Lincoln West 73
Cleveland St.lgnallus63
Up. Arlington 61 Cois. Linden
55
Cols. Central 76 MI. Vernon 65
Revere 68 Cuyahoga Faits 38
Greenville 64
Dayton Meadowdale 63
Sidney 49 Wayne 46 loll
Trotwood Madison 71
Tecumseh 62
Sprlnglleld North 69
Springfield South 53
Oak Hills 69 Indian Hill 53
Cin. St. Xavier 68
Cincinnati Hughes 48
Toledo Liberty 80 Oregon Clay
62
Sylvania 75 Maumee 58
Euclid 68 Brush 56
Mansfield Malabar 70 Gallon 46

Rossford 74 Springfield 60
West Holmes 52 Coshocton 49
Cloverleaf 74 Brookside 68
Morgan 84 Fort Frye 67
Wellsville 98 Carrollton 62
Steubenville Caihollc 88
St. Clairsville 62
Can . Lehman 65 Doylestown 46
Woodridge 74 Orrville 70
Youngstown Llberly 58
Minerva 41
Poland 82 Girard 42
Kens ton 63 Cardinal 43
Archbold 68 Polding 61
New Lex. 60 Sheridan 56
Ironton 57 Gallipolis 52
Waverly 66 Hillsboro 53
Geneva 59 Ashtabula 57 (ot)
Independence 71
Buckeye 51
CLASS A
Ridgedale
Licking Heights 66
Plain City 59 Westfall 49
Lancasler Fisher 68
Mlllersporl66
Northridge 56 Johnstown 51
Wapakoneta St. Joseph 90
New Knoxville 75
Spencerville 63 Morlan Lo. 59
Leipsic 61 Kalida 57
Elmwood 64 Bettsville 62

Pr inceton 77 Green Hill s 5.4

St. Bernard 65

Lemon -Monroe 86

Macon Eastern 45

Mount Hea lthy 59 , Hardin Northern 73
Portsmouth 63
Arlington 52
Lancaster 62 12 of) Ottoville 96 Ohio City 52
Findlay 31 Mar. Harding 27
Nnrlh Contr•l 66
.
CLASS AA
Montpelier 62
London 63 Grandview 52
Mansfield St. Peter's 55
Lakewood 74 Fredericktown 60
Buckeye Local46
Cots. Mifflin 60 Circleville 49 Seneca East 66
Buckeye Valley 59 MI. Gilead
Norwalk St. Paul63
52
West Liberty Salem 64

Harrison 81 Western (Brown)

55

No. College Hill 67 N, Richmond 57
Amelia 65 Forest Park 52
East Clinton 57 Blanchester 47
Dayton Northridge 75
Springfield Shawnee62
W. Mil ton 73 Urbana 50
Norwalk 76 Sandusky Perkins
70
Delta 75 Eastwood 70
Col. Crawford 68 Clearfork 59
Gibsonburg
71 Oak 34
Harbor 60
Fostoria 62 Lakota

Houston 4.4

Eoslern IMeigs County) 70
Norlh Gall to 55'
Alexander 98 Crooksville 73
Ross Southeaslern /5
Peebles 69
Zane Trace 53
·
Leesburg Fairfield 52
Portsmouth East 55
.
Portsmouth Clay 52
Clearview 91 So. Amherst 56
Otiawa Hills 73 Liberty Cenler
69

employment costa be 'relsted tD
the ability to meet them
through lncreued output per
manhour, the magazine said.
Improved tools, hls!Drlcally,
have been able to Increase pro.
ductlvlty by creating a l'e&lt;tlcllon in cost at a rate of about 3
per cent per year. In 1969, wage
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL RECORDS
United Press lnftrnatlonol
Mid-Americon Conference
F;inol·
Logue OYer~ll

i

m'

SALE .CANCElLED
A rwnmage sale scheduled
In the Fry building In Mid·
dlepart, March 7-11, by the
Bradbury PTA has been.
cancelled due to
rental of
the building,
'

16-5 mark.
Waverly won the Lucasville
Valley Sectional following a 6053 win over Hillsboro.. The
Tigers, 19-2 · overall, are
favored to repeat as Class AA
District champions this
weekend . at Rio . Hillsboro
finished with a 9-12 seasOn
mark.
,
In Class A action Saturday,
Eas&lt;ern down North Gallia to
win the Rock Springs tiUe.

'
Alexander dwnped CrooksvUie Chillicothe,
9&amp;-13 to win the Buchtel crown. and 9.
Ross-Southeastern won the
Minford title by ousting
Peebles, 7:1-Q9. Zane Trace
nipped Leesburg-Fairfield 5352 for the Chillicothe title, and
Portsmo11th East nudg~ Clay
55-52 for the . Portsmouth
sectional crown.
The five S!!Ctlonal ~nners
will advance to the Class A
District tournament at

slaled March

23

1

x-Akron
tlrbana
x-Youngslown
Ashland
Cincinnati
Case Western
x-Findlay

22 4
23 6
20 6
19 7
17 9
13 7
16 10

Hiram

14

x-Rio Grande

14
11
14
13
14
12
11

x - Wllmln~ton

Steubenvoile
Daylon
Malone
Bluflton
Ohio Northern
x.Xavier

11

John Carroll
Ohio Dominican
Cleveland Slate
Central State
Cedarville
Walsh

6
8
8
6

·

'.
(

..

..
"

College Scores
By United Press lnter.naflonal
Ea!l
Pa . St. 77 Ruig'ers 66
R.I. S9 Maine 68
Fordham 77 Mass. 76
Dartmouth 107 Columbia 73
W. Virginia 104 Pi tis. 90
Manhlln 83 Conn . 71
Penn . 37 Brown 33
Prvdnce 78 Setoo Hall68
Syracuse 90'Colgate 76
Princeton 76 Yale 62
Boston-Coll78 Geor~etwn 69 "
Fairfield 86 Holy ross 82
Canis! us 87 Niagara n
Harvard 95 Cornell 9~
South

Bradl~y, 86 St. Louis 73

Toledo 59 Kent St. 57
Ohio U. lOS Bwlng Grn 84
N.Western 90 Wiscoosin 82
Indiana 65 Ohio St. 57
Kansas St. 73 Colorado 55
Xavier (0) 78 Miami (0) 74, at
Missouri 61 Nebraska 54
Purdue 87 low•. 85
W.Mich: 98 .Detroit .85
Dayton 86 Notre Dame 74
Wchta 51. 103 W. Texas 'st. 73
Southwest.
Tex. as 72 TCU
65
~~~~~~i~ ~~ ~~~,:.'a,.:~h 61
SMU 96 Baylor 87
~en&lt;;!,';~~~~;i~u~~ ~~
Brghm Young 61 New Mex 60
G
Okla . St. 76 Kansas 72
eorgla 75 Florida 72
Tulsa 89 N. Texas 51. 86
Maryland 45 ·VIrginla 42
N M S
.
S. Carolina 77 Clemson 64
ew
ex
.
I 73 Marquette 69
Arkansas 113 Rice 103
N. Carolina Si. 86 Wake Frst 78
Tex.-EI
Paso80 Utah 60
Mississippi 101 LSU 78
Air Force6JTulane56
Tournoments
W
.
Ky
85 Middle Tenn. 71
M'd
All • Conf ·
1 •
E. KD. 121 Morehead Si. 91
Otd omm
. Ion 1O~ LS U 78
Univ.
DIY.'
Flnols
E. Tenn . St. 83 Tenn. Tech . 75 Tmpl 65 St. Joseph, Pa 57
Austin
Murray St. 68
(Ch amf. 1ons hi P)
MemphisPeay
suo70 Drake
69
Miss. St. 97 Alabama 91. ot
Sout=f~~~:on ·
E. Carolina 77 .Furman 75 ot
MIDWEST
Mid. All,' Cont.
Cincinnatl88 Fla. Sl. 64
Coli Div
Mich. St. 96 Michigan 92
Finols ·
Minnesota 91 Ill . 62
Phila. Textlle85 Albrlghl62

"
"

fi!1 An Advon!urt .lor
l.!!l tile WhOII Fllllilyl

(Upon

•

.,
I

.•

MEIGS
~

'

Dr. Selm Blazewicz, Commissioner

The Commissioner's Message

65% of Rural Water Supplies
Tested to ·This Point Show

•
YOONG KEN McCULLOUGH OF POMEROY Is receiving speech training at a hearing
and speech clinic held each Saturday at the Pomeroy Elementary School. Seated with Ken are
John Robertson, Ohio University, faculty supervisor; Elaine Bovenizer, therapist, Looking on, ·
standing, from the left, are Mrs. Virgil Atkins, clinic coordinator, and· Nancy Jo Mayer,
Pomeroy, clinic secretary.

11

9

12
13
14
13
12
14

.

R_~uest)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy

There is

a

I
'
Charles Crow, Jr. Born today. At
2:28am. Mother and baby doing just fine.
Only one thing's missing . Father.
Corporal Charles Crow. Senior. He's in
the Army. Half a world away.
Yet before he had breakfast, he'd
already gotten the word. A son.
7 pounds. And 14 beautiful ounces.
All thanks to Harriet Rex. And
The American Red Cross.
Harriet's a Red Cross Volunteer.
The reason her hair's in curlers
is, she runs the night shift twice
a week at the local Red Cross
office. At 2:37am, she got the
happy news about little Charles.
At 2:40am, she sent the message
off to The American Red Cross Headquaners in Wasl{ington, D.C. And

JANE BROWN

GENE I:YONS

TERRY SHAIN

in this

JANE BROWN, R.N. : Mrs.
Brown's office Is in the Health
Department, although she Is
paid from the Tuberculosis
IA!vy Fund. She does all the
skin testing in the County;
provides therapy and guidance
to an 'tuberculosis patients,
CUJtacts and suspects; she
visits the homes, nursing
homes, jail, infirmary,
children's home and hospital
when nacessary; works with
Roy Donnerberg, M. D., Chest
Clinician from Coiwnbus, on
the .cheat Clinics held in the
·health department; works with
the Ohio Departmimt of Healtb
during the yearly skin testing
Program: maintains the
county wide Tuberculosis
Regl$te• lllld is the iaison
between the doctors and the
Pllbllc.

before4:00 am, the news was sent by teletype to Corporal Charlie's base in Korea .
Love may be what makes the world
go round. But the Red Cross is what
gets the messages around. To service·
men, everywhere.
And what makes it all happen
are the Harriet Rexes of the world .
The hundreds of thousands of
Red Cross Volunteers all across
America.
Maybe you don't have the
timetoworkononeofour night
shifts.
But think about the Red
Cross a minute. .
Where do you.fit inl
The American Red Cross.

. .CATHERINE E. WWERY,
R.N.: Mrs. Lowery Is the
PubUc Health Nurse. She visits
the homea of the people who
have healtli prQbiems; she
Worb IInder the aupervislon of
the health co"'mlssiotwr;
carrtea out lhe regulations set
forth by the board ·or health;
carries out the recommendation of the family
· Phyaiclan; .demonstrates to
Blld IUida the .family on the
care of U, patient; advises
Prl~~ate physicians of her
ltndiniJ In the home: conducts
the imnnullzatlOil program in
the schools; counsels ~lth

People helping people help themselves

Aclwtrtlll"'l ttn,lt i htt~ for tht puDIIc 10011 In cOGpmt lolt wit?!
Tilt Afwtrllalnt Co~tllttl tnd tilt ,JnttlniUOntl NIWIPIPII Advtrt111n1 btcutl¥11

HILTON WOLFE

County Health Staff

country.
A new movement among people who
want to do something-personallyabout the problems that face us.
lt's called ACTION.
ACTION is Peace Corps. ACTION is
VISTA ACTION is Foster Grandparents.
ACTION is the Service Corps of Retired
Executives. All of these and morecommitted to wprking together, face to
face, where it really makes a difference.
ACTION is over 25,000 Americans:
college students and retired people, men
and wcimen, black and white, of all incomes, ages and from all walks of life.
Find out how you can be part of
ACTION. Write ACTION, Washington,
D.C. 20525.

TONY CHAPELL, a third grader at the Middleport Elementary School, undergoes an eye
check. With him are Mrs. Beverlyn Dowell, Racine, left, technician, and Mrs. Doris Sayre,
Portland, health department employe.

THEATRE

x - season not completed

'

'

'·

12
16
18
18
6 18
4 19

'·

.

"
•-

9

2-HOUR
.
-.CLEANING

'·

ater

7, I

W L

x-Defiance

Contributors
CQ_ntributors of materials
and m6ney for the therapy
program with the Meigs
Community Class of Retarded
Children have been listed by
Mrs. Marion Francis who will
direct the work, and Mrs.
Jeanette Thomas and Mrs.
Carol Wolfe, the teachers.
The craft program is
scheduled to begin on March
15.
Businesses contributing
were Royal Crown Bottling
Co. , Elberfelds, Shoppers
Bonanza, Mark V, M and R
Foodliner, Middleport Book
Store, Middleport Sewing
Center, King Construction,
Middleport Department Store,
Ebersbach Hardware, Ben
Franklin or Pomeroy, The
Kiddie . Shoppe, Werner's
Radio, Davis-Warner In·
surance , Wehrung Bakery,
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co., the Pomeroy National
Bank , and the .Citizens
National Bank.
Individuals contributing
materials for the work were
Mrs . Harold Teaford, Sue
Grueser, Mary Clark, Mrs.
Helen Bodimer, Mrs. Norma
Wilcox, Mrs. Mary Pickens,
Miss Mabel Hysell, Howard
Frank, Miss Mildred Hawley,
Mrs. Edna Maxine Gaskill,
Mrs. Wes Powell, Mrs. Ruth
Gosney, Mts. Ethel KOI'nig,
Mrs . Charles Sauer, Mrs .
Perry Mitch, Mrs. Nelle "'Iahr,
James Roach, Mrs. "' UIJian
,Smith.

.

Sectional Winners Move To District

Southern Ohio iligh School
basketball teams in three
' . divisions advan~ to district
Increases reached·&amp;rate of' 7_5 action following Saturday
per cent, more than twice the night's finals in sectional play.
histroic productivity im.- The Portsmouti1 Trojans
provement and nearly five captured the Rio Grande Class
times the actual 1. 7 per cent AAA Sectional by eliminating
increue in output per manhour Lancaster 6U2 in a double
achieve~!.
overtime. The Trojans, now 13Prospect of BaWag
8, play in the Steubenville
District March II.
U hourly employment costs
In Class AA play, New
cannot be lrought within the
cost-savings ran~e that tools Lexing!Dn upset Sheridan 66-56
can provide in increase output to capiure the Albany Sectional
•
Tournament. New Lex drew a
per manhour, the nation faces first round bye in the Rio
the prospect of balling a torpe·
d ·u 1
doed economy with a tin cup, Grande District, an wt Pay
Industry Week said.
the winner of Thursday's
Waverly-Ironton
game for the
But even if the line Can be . tr' t tiU
d 1 · · t0 th
d
held on hourly employment IS IC
e an a ' rtp
,e
costs, the line also must be held Oxford, Ohio Regionals March
17 and 18. Sheridan bowed out
on government, the magazine with a 18-3 mark. New Lex is
declsred, ad~ that it must
be clearly understood that 17-4 on the year.
At Willow Wood ' Ironton
go vernment does not create
ousted Gallipolis 57-52.
The
wealth- government feeds on
wealth and redirects it.
Tigers drew arch-rival and
"We are uaing in other ways SEOAL champion Waverly in
the wealth that could be goiing the district tournament. They
will meet Thursday, March 9,
into more toOls,". the magazine
.
S8l·d. "Yet the' longe·r we delay at 7:30 p.m., In Lyne Cen&lt;er at
the necessary vestment ••
'" Rio Grande. Ironton is 14-7
new tools, the less wealth we overall, GAHS finish ed with a
shallhavetodothejobandthe
greater our sacrifice of, con,
sumpIIon mus t be come.,
.est level in 11 months - $35.67
Meanwhile, rising domestic per gross ton - after being at
demand and some renewed ex- $35.50 for two weeks.
port activity are sending the The latest figure \vas based
price of steel scrap higher. In- on the following gross ton
dustry Week's price composite .prices : Pittsburgh, $37.50;
lting t 1 ••·
on No. 1 heavy me
see · PfiJ!adelphia, $35 .50, and
making scrap rose tD the high- Chicago, $34.

.

•

1\ RAINBOW ADVENTURE FILM
W L W L
Ptodvc:td by CHUCK ICEEN
x-Toledo
7 3 18 6
C
187\
AMIEIIIICAN NATIOf.w.
x-Ohiq University 7 3 14 10
Kent Stole
6 5 7 17
West. Michigan 5 5 10 14
Miami
4 6 12 12
Bowling Green · 1 9 4 20
x- meet Tuesday for NCAA
berth
Ohio Conference
Final
Le~guo OYeroll
W L W
x-Wittenberg 10 2 l6
Capital
9 2 20 4
Wooster
9 3 18 8
Utferbeln
9 3 16 8
Ohio Wesleyan
6 5 11 12
6 6 11 12
Musklngum
Mount Union
5 7 12 11
STARTS WED.
Baldwin-Wallace 5 7 1115
S 7 13 14
ONE DAY ONLY
x. Kenyon
Oberlin
4
7
9 12
Denison
4 8 8 12
Marietta
2 9
6 17
H01'd• lbe rg
2 10 2 19
. ,.
Toxurneymt'rn~ Tuesday for oc
Big Ten
Leogue Overall
WL W L
Minnesota
10 3 16 6
Ohio State
9 4 17 6
Michigan
87 54 15
13 97 , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - Indiana
Purdue
6 6 12 10
Michigan 51.
5 7 12 10
Wlscoosln
5 7 12 10
Iowa
4 8 10 12
Illinois
4 8 12 9
Northwestern
3 9 6 18
Others
Final

..Ma=p=l~ew~ood=~8~0~B=ad=g=e~r=52:_-~~~~Phon~~i!m~-~5~42~8~~~
.-

Are Listed

'

,.,,,..

CA111ERINE LOWERY

ContamiTUJtion of Some Kind
Meigs County's rural Water
Supply Improvement Project
is progressing rapidly and has
been received favorable by
area residents. 'lbe purpose of
the program, which began in
October 1970, is to determine
the quality of private drinking ·
water and to offer suggestions
as to how some water supplies
may be improved.
·
The program is funded
through the Ohio Department
of Health and is offered as a
free lervice to Meigs County
residents. nie County Water
Improvement Inspector,
Charles Bartels, will ·call on
rural homes and will gladly
assist anyone who wishes to
know more about the water
they drink. With the consent of
the homeowner, Mr. Bartels
wUI take a sample of the
drinking water to be analysed
by the State Health Department Laboratory in Nelsonville
and will examine the water
sUpply and sewage disposal
systems so that · proper
. suggestions for improvement
may be made where
necessary.
To date, the program has
oovered the following townships: Columbia, Salem,
Rutland, Scipio, Bedford and
Salisbury. Mr . Bartels is

presently at work in Letart
!Dwnship and plans tD complete
Orange, Olive, Chester,
Lebanon and Sutton by September of this year.
At this time 666 water supplies have been checked and
laboratory analysis has shown
3S pet of them tD be safe and 65
pet of them to be unsafe, or in
some way contaminated.
cOntamination usually enters a
water supply in the fonn of
surface water which Is
premitted to drain in!D the
supply. A shallow well, or
improperly cased well or any
other type development which
has an opening which allows
surface water to drain Into the
water supply inay show oontaminallon. Frequently, it ill
found that a few simple repain
to a water well, clstern or other
type development can greatly
improve the safety of the
water. Mr. Bartels offers
assistance in detennining the
source of contamination and In
oorrectlng an unsafe water
supply. Area residents wilhlnll
to develope· a new water
supply, or improve a system
now In use or simply to havt
their water sampled and tested
should oontact Mr. Bartels, af
the Meigs County Health
Department, phon~ 992-3723'.

BEULAH STRAUSS: Mrs.
Strauss is the Administrative
Assistant, Secretary to the
Board of Health and County
Registrar of Vital Statistics.
She works directly under the
board of health and the health
commissioner; acts as fiscal
officer of all funds (county,
state and federal); she is the
laison between the state
departments and the public for
the commissioner and the
board; prepares and maintains
the budget; does the
secretarial. work for . the
commissioner and the board;
attends state, county and group
meetings at the recommendation of the board and
commissioner; acts as
receptionist in the health
department; issues licenses;
issues birth and death certificates requested ; confers
with county officials ~, P,Je
need .arises and ..as,.registrar
maintains the vital statistics.
· Beulah Strauss, Adm. Asst.

Board of Health Has Five Members

DORIS SAYRE

Vision-Hearing Report

Robert Beegle

During the school year vision and hearing tests were done in
the
schools.
If serious problems were found the children were
school authorities; carries out
offered the services of either the Pedjatric.O!Diogicai-Diagnostic
the directives of the Ohio
or Diagnostic-Ocular-Pediall1c Clinic.
Department of Health;
Children with an abnormal vision screening were referred to
maintains the Rheumatic
Doris
Sayre, L.P.N. Comprehensive Hearing and VisiQD Nurse.
Fever register; and offers
Parents were advised of the problema and It was recommended
services to nilrsing and rest
that the child be seen by an eye specialist.
homes.
Aspeech and hearing clinic was held on Saturday mornings.
It was staffed by the School af Hearing and Speed! Science from
HILTON WOLFE: Meigs
County Sanitarian, He collects
Ohio University. The County Coordinator was Pauline Atkins and
private and municipal water
·Nancy Jo Mayer was secr.etary.
samples; advises people ·on
Speech dlsgnostlc and therapy services was available to any
proper construction of water
child or adult with a speech problem.
REV. LUND
~upplies;
septic tanks,
Denver Developmental Screening tests were done on
leaching fields; provides
children between theagesof18to 3611)0nths of age. This is not an
guidance to persons needing
I.Q. test but one to evaluate how well a child Is using the large .
assistance on sanitary with licensing; does routine and small muscles and speech, This screenmg alerts the parents
problems; Inspects food ser· correspondence; has contact to the possibility of delays in some areas so the child can be
vice operations; Inspects with public; assists other staff helped.
school buildings; investigates members when necessary; and
animal bi&lt;es; investigates and as deputy registrar assists the
seeks to rectify nuisance registrar.
complaints; works with state
personnel on landfill; lays out
TERR~ SHAIN: Mrs. Shain
and inspects ·septic tanks and is employed as the Secretary of t~· c Alcoholic and Dn!g Abuse· Section 202 of the Appalachian
leaching fields; malres in- the Tubercalosis Division. She PrograminMeigsCounty. This Development Act of 1965
spections requested by the works for the Tuberculosis program Is sponsored by the through the Ohio Valley Health
·State Uquor Control Board: Nurse; maintains files, assists local health department but Services. She sets up PediatricChecks fair booths; takes in notifying people of Chest fun~ed through the Ohio Otological-Diagnostic and
CHARLES BARTELS : Mr .
periodic samples of water at
Clinics: assists during the Department of Health. Rev. Diagnostic - Ocular-Pediatric Bartels is the water supply
Middleport
Municipal clinics; her duties are many . Lund works with. a chosen Clinics; contacts parents by
Swimming Pool; inspects and varied during the year; conumttee tD assiSt persons home visits; follows up with improvement in~pector . He
has his headquarters in the
privately owned parks · and
she trimscribes the clinician's and famiUes of these people doctors, opto metrists, and Meigs County Health Departcamp sites: inspects trailer impressions of patients after having an alcoholic or drug state personnel ; Issues
ment but the program is
parks; and does periodic ina•Jthorizations for assistance to
each clinic; when the· skin problem.
funded by the Ohio Department
specllons with personnel from
families requiring financial of · Health, His· job is to take
testing units are in the county,
Ohio DepartmeM of Health.
help ; forwards necessary · water samples of·private water'
she handles all records; her
DORIS
SAYRE.
L.P.N.
:
documents
to Bureau of supplies l.o determine whether
office is in the health departGENE LYONS: Mrs. Lyons ment and is paid from the Mrs . Sayre is the Com- Crippled Children; works with ur not the water is safe for
prehensive Hearing and 'Vision the &lt;e~hnician who is doing drinking ; guides and counsels
is (leputy Clerk .- Deputy . Tuberculosis Levy Fund,
Nurse. She wor';s oui o! the · hearing and vision checks in · ;&gt;ersuns with water problems;
Registrar. She is one of the
local health dep.:rtmeni but the the schools; and does Denver he checks sewage f!isposal
clerlcal.staff and her duties are '
varied and numerous; she
REV. ARTHUR LUND, Rev, pt·ogram is fun~ed by the Ohio Development Tests as time systems and provides guidance
·~~Mists with reports ; as:;ists r,uod is dircC!UI'-&lt;:ounselor of Deportment uf Health under P.,nltits.
where necessary. This is a

Dale Dutton

Kermit Walton

John Ridgway ,

Virgil Atkins

ijEALTH DEPARTMENT F1NANCIAL STATEMENT
Budget - s.Iaries: $17,072.29; travel, $1,347.71; other ex·
penses, $5,000.32.
.
Source of funds - State Subsidy, $1,454.00; license fee from
food service, $948.00; Trailer Parks, $fi0.00; Solid Waste, $UO.
Expenditures -Salaries, $17,007.34; Travel; $1,28Ul; olh•r
$4,588.49.
VITALSTATISTICS
Deaths - 183: 71 Female; 112 Male.
CAUSES OF DEATII
Cardiac Complex, 74; SIJock, 35; Cerebral Vascular Accident, 34; Other, 4; Cancer, 14; Uremia, 3; Accidents, 8;
Pneumonia, II; No maternity ward in county.
'lbe Tuberculosis Nurse and Secretary are paid from
the Tuberculosis Levy Fund. The comprehelislve hearing, vision
and speech programs; 'the water supply tmpruvement and lbe
alcoholism programs are flnaneed completely from other tllan
county funds.
Q- What is .the '" 11 ·~ 1 "!";'[
gratis-service offered to Meigs
Coun1ians who do not have weight for u welterwcl!l'
1 t 47.
access t9 a municipal water boxer?
A- The maximum is
supply;
'
1&gt;ounds.

I I

I'

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�.. .

Industry's Retooling Lagging
CLEVELAND (UP!) Industry in the United States
must Increase its investment in
new tools if the nation Is to
regain its lost competitiveness,
Industry Week Magazine
reported todsy.
But before the country ('lin
step up its Investment, industry must ha~ an improvement in profits, the
ma~azine pointed out.
Between 1965 and 1970, corporate after-tax profits went
down 11.4percent,a big reason
for the drop being increased
taxes to support government
spending which ballooned from
about $100 billion in 1955 to
$341.1 billion in 1970.
Despite reduced profits, industry sustained Its capital expenditures sufficiently during
tlie 1965-70 period so that they
were some 20 per cent higher in
relation to the volume of
business done by the corporate
system than during 1947.:Q4 period.. But this has not been
enough, Industry Week said.
The nation's investment in
better toots is among the lowest
in the world. Nearly 70 per cent

of Ja(ian 's machine tools, for
example, are less than 10 years
old. In contrast, the magazine
said, only 3S per cent of U.S.
jndustry's machine tools are
less than that of age. and Japan
continued to add output per
man hour with a rate of investment in better toots double
that of the U.S. in 1968-70, the
magazine said.
First to Dead Last
Historically, output per manhour in the U.S. rose 3 per cent
annually. During the last four
years, it has slumped to an
average rate of 1.1 per cent, the
lowest four-:.rear average
growth in oulput per. manbour
since the end of World War II.
In a single generation, the
U.S. has plummeted from first
tD dead last among industrial
nations in output per manhour
growth, Industry Week said.
The U.S. with tools twice as
old as tho6e of its major com- ·
peti!Drs, Is attempting tD sustain hourly employment costs
two to four times those of its
competi!Drs.
The survival of U.S. industrial jobs demands that hourly

Tournament Results
Ohio Hi11h School
Tournament Scores
By United Press lnlernofionol
CLASS AAA
Cleveland John F. Kennedy 78
Maple Helghls67
Brecksville 57 Normandy 38
Lorain 90 Br.unswlck 52
Alliance 57 Glenwood -18
Chardon 49
Painesville Harvey 43
Cleveland Lincoln West 73
Cleveland St.lgnallus63
Up. Arlington 61 Cois. Linden
55
Cols. Central 76 MI. Vernon 65
Revere 68 Cuyahoga Faits 38
Greenville 64
Dayton Meadowdale 63
Sidney 49 Wayne 46 loll
Trotwood Madison 71
Tecumseh 62
Sprlnglleld North 69
Springfield South 53
Oak Hills 69 Indian Hill 53
Cin. St. Xavier 68
Cincinnati Hughes 48
Toledo Liberty 80 Oregon Clay
62
Sylvania 75 Maumee 58
Euclid 68 Brush 56
Mansfield Malabar 70 Gallon 46

Rossford 74 Springfield 60
West Holmes 52 Coshocton 49
Cloverleaf 74 Brookside 68
Morgan 84 Fort Frye 67
Wellsville 98 Carrollton 62
Steubenville Caihollc 88
St. Clairsville 62
Can . Lehman 65 Doylestown 46
Woodridge 74 Orrville 70
Youngstown Llberly 58
Minerva 41
Poland 82 Girard 42
Kens ton 63 Cardinal 43
Archbold 68 Polding 61
New Lex. 60 Sheridan 56
Ironton 57 Gallipolis 52
Waverly 66 Hillsboro 53
Geneva 59 Ashtabula 57 (ot)
Independence 71
Buckeye 51
CLASS A
Ridgedale
Licking Heights 66
Plain City 59 Westfall 49
Lancasler Fisher 68
Mlllersporl66
Northridge 56 Johnstown 51
Wapakoneta St. Joseph 90
New Knoxville 75
Spencerville 63 Morlan Lo. 59
Leipsic 61 Kalida 57
Elmwood 64 Bettsville 62

Pr inceton 77 Green Hill s 5.4

St. Bernard 65

Lemon -Monroe 86

Macon Eastern 45

Mount Hea lthy 59 , Hardin Northern 73
Portsmouth 63
Arlington 52
Lancaster 62 12 of) Ottoville 96 Ohio City 52
Findlay 31 Mar. Harding 27
Nnrlh Contr•l 66
.
CLASS AA
Montpelier 62
London 63 Grandview 52
Mansfield St. Peter's 55
Lakewood 74 Fredericktown 60
Buckeye Local46
Cots. Mifflin 60 Circleville 49 Seneca East 66
Buckeye Valley 59 MI. Gilead
Norwalk St. Paul63
52
West Liberty Salem 64

Harrison 81 Western (Brown)

55

No. College Hill 67 N, Richmond 57
Amelia 65 Forest Park 52
East Clinton 57 Blanchester 47
Dayton Northridge 75
Springfield Shawnee62
W. Mil ton 73 Urbana 50
Norwalk 76 Sandusky Perkins
70
Delta 75 Eastwood 70
Col. Crawford 68 Clearfork 59
Gibsonburg
71 Oak 34
Harbor 60
Fostoria 62 Lakota

Houston 4.4

Eoslern IMeigs County) 70
Norlh Gall to 55'
Alexander 98 Crooksville 73
Ross Southeaslern /5
Peebles 69
Zane Trace 53
·
Leesburg Fairfield 52
Portsmouth East 55
.
Portsmouth Clay 52
Clearview 91 So. Amherst 56
Otiawa Hills 73 Liberty Cenler
69

employment costa be 'relsted tD
the ability to meet them
through lncreued output per
manhour, the magazine said.
Improved tools, hls!Drlcally,
have been able to Increase pro.
ductlvlty by creating a l'e&lt;tlcllon in cost at a rate of about 3
per cent per year. In 1969, wage
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL RECORDS
United Press lnftrnatlonol
Mid-Americon Conference
F;inol·
Logue OYer~ll

i

m'

SALE .CANCElLED
A rwnmage sale scheduled
In the Fry building In Mid·
dlepart, March 7-11, by the
Bradbury PTA has been.
cancelled due to
rental of
the building,
'

16-5 mark.
Waverly won the Lucasville
Valley Sectional following a 6053 win over Hillsboro.. The
Tigers, 19-2 · overall, are
favored to repeat as Class AA
District champions this
weekend . at Rio . Hillsboro
finished with a 9-12 seasOn
mark.
,
In Class A action Saturday,
Eas&lt;ern down North Gallia to
win the Rock Springs tiUe.

'
Alexander dwnped CrooksvUie Chillicothe,
9&amp;-13 to win the Buchtel crown. and 9.
Ross-Southeastern won the
Minford title by ousting
Peebles, 7:1-Q9. Zane Trace
nipped Leesburg-Fairfield 5352 for the Chillicothe title, and
Portsmo11th East nudg~ Clay
55-52 for the . Portsmouth
sectional crown.
The five S!!Ctlonal ~nners
will advance to the Class A
District tournament at

slaled March

23

1

x-Akron
tlrbana
x-Youngslown
Ashland
Cincinnati
Case Western
x-Findlay

22 4
23 6
20 6
19 7
17 9
13 7
16 10

Hiram

14

x-Rio Grande

14
11
14
13
14
12
11

x - Wllmln~ton

Steubenvoile
Daylon
Malone
Bluflton
Ohio Northern
x.Xavier

11

John Carroll
Ohio Dominican
Cleveland Slate
Central State
Cedarville
Walsh

6
8
8
6

·

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(

..

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College Scores
By United Press lnter.naflonal
Ea!l
Pa . St. 77 Ruig'ers 66
R.I. S9 Maine 68
Fordham 77 Mass. 76
Dartmouth 107 Columbia 73
W. Virginia 104 Pi tis. 90
Manhlln 83 Conn . 71
Penn . 37 Brown 33
Prvdnce 78 Setoo Hall68
Syracuse 90'Colgate 76
Princeton 76 Yale 62
Boston-Coll78 Geor~etwn 69 "
Fairfield 86 Holy ross 82
Canis! us 87 Niagara n
Harvard 95 Cornell 9~
South

Bradl~y, 86 St. Louis 73

Toledo 59 Kent St. 57
Ohio U. lOS Bwlng Grn 84
N.Western 90 Wiscoosin 82
Indiana 65 Ohio St. 57
Kansas St. 73 Colorado 55
Xavier (0) 78 Miami (0) 74, at
Missouri 61 Nebraska 54
Purdue 87 low•. 85
W.Mich: 98 .Detroit .85
Dayton 86 Notre Dame 74
Wchta 51. 103 W. Texas 'st. 73
Southwest.
Tex. as 72 TCU
65
~~~~~~i~ ~~ ~~~,:.'a,.:~h 61
SMU 96 Baylor 87
~en&lt;;!,';~~~~;i~u~~ ~~
Brghm Young 61 New Mex 60
G
Okla . St. 76 Kansas 72
eorgla 75 Florida 72
Tulsa 89 N. Texas 51. 86
Maryland 45 ·VIrginla 42
N M S
.
S. Carolina 77 Clemson 64
ew
ex
.
I 73 Marquette 69
Arkansas 113 Rice 103
N. Carolina Si. 86 Wake Frst 78
Tex.-EI
Paso80 Utah 60
Mississippi 101 LSU 78
Air Force6JTulane56
Tournoments
W
.
Ky
85 Middle Tenn. 71
M'd
All • Conf ·
1 •
E. KD. 121 Morehead Si. 91
Otd omm
. Ion 1O~ LS U 78
Univ.
DIY.'
Flnols
E. Tenn . St. 83 Tenn. Tech . 75 Tmpl 65 St. Joseph, Pa 57
Austin
Murray St. 68
(Ch amf. 1ons hi P)
MemphisPeay
suo70 Drake
69
Miss. St. 97 Alabama 91. ot
Sout=f~~~:on ·
E. Carolina 77 .Furman 75 ot
MIDWEST
Mid. All,' Cont.
Cincinnatl88 Fla. Sl. 64
Coli Div
Mich. St. 96 Michigan 92
Finols ·
Minnesota 91 Ill . 62
Phila. Textlle85 Albrlghl62

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fi!1 An Advon!urt .lor
l.!!l tile WhOII Fllllilyl

(Upon

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MEIGS
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Dr. Selm Blazewicz, Commissioner

The Commissioner's Message

65% of Rural Water Supplies
Tested to ·This Point Show

•
YOONG KEN McCULLOUGH OF POMEROY Is receiving speech training at a hearing
and speech clinic held each Saturday at the Pomeroy Elementary School. Seated with Ken are
John Robertson, Ohio University, faculty supervisor; Elaine Bovenizer, therapist, Looking on, ·
standing, from the left, are Mrs. Virgil Atkins, clinic coordinator, and· Nancy Jo Mayer,
Pomeroy, clinic secretary.

11

9

12
13
14
13
12
14

.

R_~uest)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy

There is

a

I
'
Charles Crow, Jr. Born today. At
2:28am. Mother and baby doing just fine.
Only one thing's missing . Father.
Corporal Charles Crow. Senior. He's in
the Army. Half a world away.
Yet before he had breakfast, he'd
already gotten the word. A son.
7 pounds. And 14 beautiful ounces.
All thanks to Harriet Rex. And
The American Red Cross.
Harriet's a Red Cross Volunteer.
The reason her hair's in curlers
is, she runs the night shift twice
a week at the local Red Cross
office. At 2:37am, she got the
happy news about little Charles.
At 2:40am, she sent the message
off to The American Red Cross Headquaners in Wasl{ington, D.C. And

JANE BROWN

GENE I:YONS

TERRY SHAIN

in this

JANE BROWN, R.N. : Mrs.
Brown's office Is in the Health
Department, although she Is
paid from the Tuberculosis
IA!vy Fund. She does all the
skin testing in the County;
provides therapy and guidance
to an 'tuberculosis patients,
CUJtacts and suspects; she
visits the homes, nursing
homes, jail, infirmary,
children's home and hospital
when nacessary; works with
Roy Donnerberg, M. D., Chest
Clinician from Coiwnbus, on
the .cheat Clinics held in the
·health department; works with
the Ohio Departmimt of Healtb
during the yearly skin testing
Program: maintains the
county wide Tuberculosis
Regl$te• lllld is the iaison
between the doctors and the
Pllbllc.

before4:00 am, the news was sent by teletype to Corporal Charlie's base in Korea .
Love may be what makes the world
go round. But the Red Cross is what
gets the messages around. To service·
men, everywhere.
And what makes it all happen
are the Harriet Rexes of the world .
The hundreds of thousands of
Red Cross Volunteers all across
America.
Maybe you don't have the
timetoworkononeofour night
shifts.
But think about the Red
Cross a minute. .
Where do you.fit inl
The American Red Cross.

. .CATHERINE E. WWERY,
R.N.: Mrs. Lowery Is the
PubUc Health Nurse. She visits
the homea of the people who
have healtli prQbiems; she
Worb IInder the aupervislon of
the health co"'mlssiotwr;
carrtea out lhe regulations set
forth by the board ·or health;
carries out the recommendation of the family
· Phyaiclan; .demonstrates to
Blld IUida the .family on the
care of U, patient; advises
Prl~~ate physicians of her
ltndiniJ In the home: conducts
the imnnullzatlOil program in
the schools; counsels ~lth

People helping people help themselves

Aclwtrtlll"'l ttn,lt i htt~ for tht puDIIc 10011 In cOGpmt lolt wit?!
Tilt Afwtrllalnt Co~tllttl tnd tilt ,JnttlniUOntl NIWIPIPII Advtrt111n1 btcutl¥11

HILTON WOLFE

County Health Staff

country.
A new movement among people who
want to do something-personallyabout the problems that face us.
lt's called ACTION.
ACTION is Peace Corps. ACTION is
VISTA ACTION is Foster Grandparents.
ACTION is the Service Corps of Retired
Executives. All of these and morecommitted to wprking together, face to
face, where it really makes a difference.
ACTION is over 25,000 Americans:
college students and retired people, men
and wcimen, black and white, of all incomes, ages and from all walks of life.
Find out how you can be part of
ACTION. Write ACTION, Washington,
D.C. 20525.

TONY CHAPELL, a third grader at the Middleport Elementary School, undergoes an eye
check. With him are Mrs. Beverlyn Dowell, Racine, left, technician, and Mrs. Doris Sayre,
Portland, health department employe.

THEATRE

x - season not completed

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16
18
18
6 18
4 19

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2-HOUR
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-.CLEANING

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x-Defiance

Contributors
CQ_ntributors of materials
and m6ney for the therapy
program with the Meigs
Community Class of Retarded
Children have been listed by
Mrs. Marion Francis who will
direct the work, and Mrs.
Jeanette Thomas and Mrs.
Carol Wolfe, the teachers.
The craft program is
scheduled to begin on March
15.
Businesses contributing
were Royal Crown Bottling
Co. , Elberfelds, Shoppers
Bonanza, Mark V, M and R
Foodliner, Middleport Book
Store, Middleport Sewing
Center, King Construction,
Middleport Department Store,
Ebersbach Hardware, Ben
Franklin or Pomeroy, The
Kiddie . Shoppe, Werner's
Radio, Davis-Warner In·
surance , Wehrung Bakery,
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co., the Pomeroy National
Bank , and the .Citizens
National Bank.
Individuals contributing
materials for the work were
Mrs . Harold Teaford, Sue
Grueser, Mary Clark, Mrs.
Helen Bodimer, Mrs. Norma
Wilcox, Mrs. Mary Pickens,
Miss Mabel Hysell, Howard
Frank, Miss Mildred Hawley,
Mrs. Edna Maxine Gaskill,
Mrs. Wes Powell, Mrs. Ruth
Gosney, Mts. Ethel KOI'nig,
Mrs . Charles Sauer, Mrs .
Perry Mitch, Mrs. Nelle "'Iahr,
James Roach, Mrs. "' UIJian
,Smith.

.

Sectional Winners Move To District

Southern Ohio iligh School
basketball teams in three
' . divisions advan~ to district
Increases reached·&amp;rate of' 7_5 action following Saturday
per cent, more than twice the night's finals in sectional play.
histroic productivity im.- The Portsmouti1 Trojans
provement and nearly five captured the Rio Grande Class
times the actual 1. 7 per cent AAA Sectional by eliminating
increue in output per manhour Lancaster 6U2 in a double
achieve~!.
overtime. The Trojans, now 13Prospect of BaWag
8, play in the Steubenville
District March II.
U hourly employment costs
In Class AA play, New
cannot be lrought within the
cost-savings ran~e that tools Lexing!Dn upset Sheridan 66-56
can provide in increase output to capiure the Albany Sectional
•
Tournament. New Lex drew a
per manhour, the nation faces first round bye in the Rio
the prospect of balling a torpe·
d ·u 1
doed economy with a tin cup, Grande District, an wt Pay
Industry Week said.
the winner of Thursday's
Waverly-Ironton
game for the
But even if the line Can be . tr' t tiU
d 1 · · t0 th
d
held on hourly employment IS IC
e an a ' rtp
,e
costs, the line also must be held Oxford, Ohio Regionals March
17 and 18. Sheridan bowed out
on government, the magazine with a 18-3 mark. New Lex is
declsred, ad~ that it must
be clearly understood that 17-4 on the year.
At Willow Wood ' Ironton
go vernment does not create
ousted Gallipolis 57-52.
The
wealth- government feeds on
wealth and redirects it.
Tigers drew arch-rival and
"We are uaing in other ways SEOAL champion Waverly in
the wealth that could be goiing the district tournament. They
will meet Thursday, March 9,
into more toOls,". the magazine
.
S8l·d. "Yet the' longe·r we delay at 7:30 p.m., In Lyne Cen&lt;er at
the necessary vestment ••
'" Rio Grande. Ironton is 14-7
new tools, the less wealth we overall, GAHS finish ed with a
shallhavetodothejobandthe
greater our sacrifice of, con,
sumpIIon mus t be come.,
.est level in 11 months - $35.67
Meanwhile, rising domestic per gross ton - after being at
demand and some renewed ex- $35.50 for two weeks.
port activity are sending the The latest figure \vas based
price of steel scrap higher. In- on the following gross ton
dustry Week's price composite .prices : Pittsburgh, $37.50;
lting t 1 ••·
on No. 1 heavy me
see · PfiJ!adelphia, $35 .50, and
making scrap rose tD the high- Chicago, $34.

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1\ RAINBOW ADVENTURE FILM
W L W L
Ptodvc:td by CHUCK ICEEN
x-Toledo
7 3 18 6
C
187\
AMIEIIIICAN NATIOf.w.
x-Ohiq University 7 3 14 10
Kent Stole
6 5 7 17
West. Michigan 5 5 10 14
Miami
4 6 12 12
Bowling Green · 1 9 4 20
x- meet Tuesday for NCAA
berth
Ohio Conference
Final
Le~guo OYeroll
W L W
x-Wittenberg 10 2 l6
Capital
9 2 20 4
Wooster
9 3 18 8
Utferbeln
9 3 16 8
Ohio Wesleyan
6 5 11 12
6 6 11 12
Musklngum
Mount Union
5 7 12 11
STARTS WED.
Baldwin-Wallace 5 7 1115
S 7 13 14
ONE DAY ONLY
x. Kenyon
Oberlin
4
7
9 12
Denison
4 8 8 12
Marietta
2 9
6 17
H01'd• lbe rg
2 10 2 19
. ,.
Toxurneymt'rn~ Tuesday for oc
Big Ten
Leogue Overall
WL W L
Minnesota
10 3 16 6
Ohio State
9 4 17 6
Michigan
87 54 15
13 97 , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - Indiana
Purdue
6 6 12 10
Michigan 51.
5 7 12 10
Wlscoosln
5 7 12 10
Iowa
4 8 10 12
Illinois
4 8 12 9
Northwestern
3 9 6 18
Others
Final

..Ma=p=l~ew~ood=~8~0~B=ad=g=e~r=52:_-~~~~Phon~~i!m~-~5~42~8~~~
.-

Are Listed

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CA111ERINE LOWERY

ContamiTUJtion of Some Kind
Meigs County's rural Water
Supply Improvement Project
is progressing rapidly and has
been received favorable by
area residents. 'lbe purpose of
the program, which began in
October 1970, is to determine
the quality of private drinking ·
water and to offer suggestions
as to how some water supplies
may be improved.
·
The program is funded
through the Ohio Department
of Health and is offered as a
free lervice to Meigs County
residents. nie County Water
Improvement Inspector,
Charles Bartels, will ·call on
rural homes and will gladly
assist anyone who wishes to
know more about the water
they drink. With the consent of
the homeowner, Mr. Bartels
wUI take a sample of the
drinking water to be analysed
by the State Health Department Laboratory in Nelsonville
and will examine the water
sUpply and sewage disposal
systems so that · proper
. suggestions for improvement
may be made where
necessary.
To date, the program has
oovered the following townships: Columbia, Salem,
Rutland, Scipio, Bedford and
Salisbury. Mr . Bartels is

presently at work in Letart
!Dwnship and plans tD complete
Orange, Olive, Chester,
Lebanon and Sutton by September of this year.
At this time 666 water supplies have been checked and
laboratory analysis has shown
3S pet of them tD be safe and 65
pet of them to be unsafe, or in
some way contaminated.
cOntamination usually enters a
water supply in the fonn of
surface water which Is
premitted to drain in!D the
supply. A shallow well, or
improperly cased well or any
other type development which
has an opening which allows
surface water to drain Into the
water supply inay show oontaminallon. Frequently, it ill
found that a few simple repain
to a water well, clstern or other
type development can greatly
improve the safety of the
water. Mr. Bartels offers
assistance in detennining the
source of contamination and In
oorrectlng an unsafe water
supply. Area residents wilhlnll
to develope· a new water
supply, or improve a system
now In use or simply to havt
their water sampled and tested
should oontact Mr. Bartels, af
the Meigs County Health
Department, phon~ 992-3723'.

BEULAH STRAUSS: Mrs.
Strauss is the Administrative
Assistant, Secretary to the
Board of Health and County
Registrar of Vital Statistics.
She works directly under the
board of health and the health
commissioner; acts as fiscal
officer of all funds (county,
state and federal); she is the
laison between the state
departments and the public for
the commissioner and the
board; prepares and maintains
the budget; does the
secretarial. work for . the
commissioner and the board;
attends state, county and group
meetings at the recommendation of the board and
commissioner; acts as
receptionist in the health
department; issues licenses;
issues birth and death certificates requested ; confers
with county officials ~, P,Je
need .arises and ..as,.registrar
maintains the vital statistics.
· Beulah Strauss, Adm. Asst.

Board of Health Has Five Members

DORIS SAYRE

Vision-Hearing Report

Robert Beegle

During the school year vision and hearing tests were done in
the
schools.
If serious problems were found the children were
school authorities; carries out
offered the services of either the Pedjatric.O!Diogicai-Diagnostic
the directives of the Ohio
or Diagnostic-Ocular-Pediall1c Clinic.
Department of Health;
Children with an abnormal vision screening were referred to
maintains the Rheumatic
Doris
Sayre, L.P.N. Comprehensive Hearing and VisiQD Nurse.
Fever register; and offers
Parents were advised of the problema and It was recommended
services to nilrsing and rest
that the child be seen by an eye specialist.
homes.
Aspeech and hearing clinic was held on Saturday mornings.
It was staffed by the School af Hearing and Speed! Science from
HILTON WOLFE: Meigs
County Sanitarian, He collects
Ohio University. The County Coordinator was Pauline Atkins and
private and municipal water
·Nancy Jo Mayer was secr.etary.
samples; advises people ·on
Speech dlsgnostlc and therapy services was available to any
proper construction of water
child or adult with a speech problem.
REV. LUND
~upplies;
septic tanks,
Denver Developmental Screening tests were done on
leaching fields; provides
children between theagesof18to 3611)0nths of age. This is not an
guidance to persons needing
I.Q. test but one to evaluate how well a child Is using the large .
assistance on sanitary with licensing; does routine and small muscles and speech, This screenmg alerts the parents
problems; Inspects food ser· correspondence; has contact to the possibility of delays in some areas so the child can be
vice operations; Inspects with public; assists other staff helped.
school buildings; investigates members when necessary; and
animal bi&lt;es; investigates and as deputy registrar assists the
seeks to rectify nuisance registrar.
complaints; works with state
personnel on landfill; lays out
TERR~ SHAIN: Mrs. Shain
and inspects ·septic tanks and is employed as the Secretary of t~· c Alcoholic and Dn!g Abuse· Section 202 of the Appalachian
leaching fields; malres in- the Tubercalosis Division. She PrograminMeigsCounty. This Development Act of 1965
spections requested by the works for the Tuberculosis program Is sponsored by the through the Ohio Valley Health
·State Uquor Control Board: Nurse; maintains files, assists local health department but Services. She sets up PediatricChecks fair booths; takes in notifying people of Chest fun~ed through the Ohio Otological-Diagnostic and
CHARLES BARTELS : Mr .
periodic samples of water at
Clinics: assists during the Department of Health. Rev. Diagnostic - Ocular-Pediatric Bartels is the water supply
Middleport
Municipal clinics; her duties are many . Lund works with. a chosen Clinics; contacts parents by
Swimming Pool; inspects and varied during the year; conumttee tD assiSt persons home visits; follows up with improvement in~pector . He
has his headquarters in the
privately owned parks · and
she trimscribes the clinician's and famiUes of these people doctors, opto metrists, and Meigs County Health Departcamp sites: inspects trailer impressions of patients after having an alcoholic or drug state personnel ; Issues
ment but the program is
parks; and does periodic ina•Jthorizations for assistance to
each clinic; when the· skin problem.
funded by the Ohio Department
specllons with personnel from
families requiring financial of · Health, His· job is to take
testing units are in the county,
Ohio DepartmeM of Health.
help ; forwards necessary · water samples of·private water'
she handles all records; her
DORIS
SAYRE.
L.P.N.
:
documents
to Bureau of supplies l.o determine whether
office is in the health departGENE LYONS: Mrs. Lyons ment and is paid from the Mrs . Sayre is the Com- Crippled Children; works with ur not the water is safe for
prehensive Hearing and 'Vision the &lt;e~hnician who is doing drinking ; guides and counsels
is (leputy Clerk .- Deputy . Tuberculosis Levy Fund,
Nurse. She wor';s oui o! the · hearing and vision checks in · ;&gt;ersuns with water problems;
Registrar. She is one of the
local health dep.:rtmeni but the the schools; and does Denver he checks sewage f!isposal
clerlcal.staff and her duties are '
varied and numerous; she
REV. ARTHUR LUND, Rev, pt·ogram is fun~ed by the Ohio Development Tests as time systems and provides guidance
·~~Mists with reports ; as:;ists r,uod is dircC!UI'-&lt;:ounselor of Deportment uf Health under P.,nltits.
where necessary. This is a

Dale Dutton

Kermit Walton

John Ridgway ,

Virgil Atkins

ijEALTH DEPARTMENT F1NANCIAL STATEMENT
Budget - s.Iaries: $17,072.29; travel, $1,347.71; other ex·
penses, $5,000.32.
.
Source of funds - State Subsidy, $1,454.00; license fee from
food service, $948.00; Trailer Parks, $fi0.00; Solid Waste, $UO.
Expenditures -Salaries, $17,007.34; Travel; $1,28Ul; olh•r
$4,588.49.
VITALSTATISTICS
Deaths - 183: 71 Female; 112 Male.
CAUSES OF DEATII
Cardiac Complex, 74; SIJock, 35; Cerebral Vascular Accident, 34; Other, 4; Cancer, 14; Uremia, 3; Accidents, 8;
Pneumonia, II; No maternity ward in county.
'lbe Tuberculosis Nurse and Secretary are paid from
the Tuberculosis Levy Fund. The comprehelislve hearing, vision
and speech programs; 'the water supply tmpruvement and lbe
alcoholism programs are flnaneed completely from other tllan
county funds.
Q- What is .the '" 11 ·~ 1 "!";'[
gratis-service offered to Meigs
Coun1ians who do not have weight for u welterwcl!l'
1 t 47.
access t9 a municipal water boxer?
A- The maximum is
supply;
'
1&gt;ounds.

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a- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pon!eroy, 0., March 6. 1•~

Por Sale

To . Buy

~

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs . Virgil Roush
entertained Sunday at their
home in honor of their son,
Marshall, who was celebrating
a birthday. Guests attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Marshall
Roush and son, Joey, Fred
Shain, W. B. Cross, Mr. and
Mrs . Virgil Walker of Racine
and John Joe Shain_
Mr. and Mrs.•Lowell Burton
of Columbus spent the weekend
with Mr . and Mrs. Vernon
Donohue.
Mr . and Mrs. Ted Hayman
and children of Columbus spent
the weekend with Mr . and Mrs.
Gerald Hayman and Keith .
Wednesday afternoon guests
of Mrs. Virgil Roush·were Mrs.
Hattie Powell and daughter
Addie, Mrs. Marv.!'ne Beegle,
Mrs. Mary Circle, all of Portland Route.
Mr . and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman spent Thursday afternoon with Mr . and Mrs.
Lewis Ours at Tanners Run.
Airman First Class Jeff
Donohew and fri end, AFC.
John Powers of Fort Meade,
Md., sperit a weekend with the
former's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Don~hew and Greg.
Mr : and Mrs. Larry Badgely
and children of Fairfax, Va.
br ought Mrs. Margaret
Gloeckner home Wednesday
and visited Mr . Badgely's
brother, Darrell Badgely who
is a medical patient at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith
and Joe Derouin were dinner
guests Saturday of Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Johnson and family
at Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ours of
New Brighll&gt;n, Pa., spent a
weekend with Miss Loretta
Ours at Middleport, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Donohew, Mr. and
Mrs. Wiley Ours and Mr . and
Mrs. Lewis Ours, local.
Rodney Neigler and Joe
Derouin were visitors in
Parkerfburg Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Pearson
and Mrs. Sally Savage and

QUALITY

"-

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·-~-····

Tu'ppers Plains
Society News

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trans., luggage rack, radio, chrome wheel covers, bfuf

color. blk. vinyl Interior.
tt70 CHEVELLE SSlt6 CPE.
$2295
Green finish, blk . vinyl roof, green vinyl Interior, new
wide oval tires. 4 speed trans., power steering, radio. A
sweetheart ol a buy.
·
1970 DODGE POLARA

$2:195

Factory air conditioning, v.a engine, auto. trans., P.S.,
P. B., good w -s-w tires, many more extras . A low price ·
now !

Pomeroy Motor Co.

OLD FURNITURE, Round Ollk
tables, ·,Brass l&gt;tds. dishes,
clocks , and-or complete
households . Write M. D.
Miller, Rl. A, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Call 992-6271.
.
- ~- t7-tf~.

OHIO

w.

36" ~ 23" l( .oo9

The

Aluminum

Orthkl Room.

sheets

Make reservattor&gt;s lor your :
private parties, banquets. '
special occasions.
· kt"l for m~lng place - ·
with or without kitchen
privileges.
Individual catering
.Will seal up to 150 people.

USED OFFSET PLATES

Wanted To Do

MA:¢vJsEs

BABYSITTING In my home,
Mrs . Glenn Smith, Rock
Springs Rd., phone 992-6187.
3· t-6tc

Employment Wanted

Help Wanted

F'rom the llo~sl
Bulldozer Rodlator to the
Smallest Heater Cor.e.
-NIIftanlltls
-llllr s,.NHst

SMITH NFI SON
MOlbRS.INC.
Pomoroy

Phone

· a for $1.00
DRY WALL Finisher contractor. R.I . Dubbeld, Phone
742-5825.
3-6-5tc

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
1'~EROY,

WHEEL drive Jeep. Phone
aller 5 p.m. 992-:1062.
2-27-12tc

,992-3975

The

992-5786

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GlORY BE!!

_LOOK WHO'S
· COM IN' -- LONZO
AN' CALEB

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DADBORN
WMCHERS!!

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ALL WEAliiEI IOOFIH
&amp;OOISTIUCTIOfl
l'PWIIIIICi CO.

·· - · .... ·.

241 Lin~ illlll.
MNII..... OIIIe
11M Antilla! , . . . .
We 1110!1 • ce"""tw Htmt
Mlll•teliance Sonlco !til

#10~.4/.S

Of: TIUi
SIXTIES, CLASS SOUNDS
PROMISING. THEY'RE
THIS

USING TEAM T&amp;AC&gt;tJNG

W~AT'S
~OMIStNG

A8()uT

1n

_ _... ltliUtllrwlllt,

_

MA'I'SE IT'S JUST A

.-·..

... 808 &amp; ('AROL &amp; TED &amp; ALICE

'C01NC1DENC!i, 9UT THE
INSTRUCTORS' FIRST
NAMSS ARE" ...

..... Ce ........ rwftr
lnllrter or

'""'""
.. c.llltlt
•••
.., ...,.lr
...,,..,try.
"'a... $1411ng.I

lilt ...........

Free Estimate

TERMITES. •TERMITES.

Dai~ Sentin~l

Gel Rid ofThem
Wo .will prohct lftY single
dwelllna resklenco for

m Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohi~

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

(o!ftpllll

-ling.

Ptum~lnl

lily """'...,. m-255t
We haw 24 hr. oonooooocy
StrV~.

m.SIQ

742-3947

'149;50
WANT ADS
m-- 742-4761 ~-daughter,
Robin
were I'
INFORMATION
WRinEN
WARRANTY
we ITI fully lnsorld
Columbus visitors Sunday.
DEADLINES
C1tl Coiled 614-452-3151
Sunday guests of Mr. and
5
P.M.
Day
Before
1970 KAwAsAt&lt;t. -mociet . G-31,
Publication
Mrs . Pete Shields were Mr. and
Centurion, new condition.
Monday Deadllnt 9 a.m.
Mrs . Philip Radford and
raced. Phone after 6 p.
never
Cancellation &amp; Corredtons
m.
992-3401.
Stephanie of Pomeroy Route, Will be accepted unlil9 a.m. lor,
3-2-6tc
For Appointment
Day of Publlcatton1
633 Mal~ 51.
Mrs. Clara Mae Sargent, Mrs. '
REGULATIONS
Zanesville,
Ohio
Phone 949-2803
Marlene Fisher and children,
MALE Norwegian Elkhound
The Publisher r..erves the
Molly , Larry and Amy, Dave
pups, 10 weeks old - $25 ;
right to edit or reject any ads
· phone 992-2362.
On ~I .A~.n
deem~d oble~ t!onal. The
and Pete Robinson of Racine.
SEPTIC tanks cl.. ned. Miller O' DELL WHEEL allil!lme'ni
·publisher
wilt
not
be
-GUARANTE&amp;o---; ·
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Roush,
----------------3-5~p
located at Crossroads, Rl. 12A.
r..ponstbte lor more than one
662-3035.
Plloil,t 992-2094
Complete front end service,
Roger Roush and Jeff Miller
k'lcorrect Insertion.
'••• ••• •'''' · ·'' •• •••• ''' •' '!
2·12-tfc
Dai~
tune
up
and
brake
service.
RATES
spent Saturday evening with
=~ _H_O_U-SE_B_U_I~.l-D_E_R-S,...::....
CALL' . Wheels balanced eltC· POIRIIOJ .1..-&amp; Alta
For Want Ad ServiCe
1
SAVE -50.00
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell at
Ph. 614-992·2156
All
work
lroalcal ly.
5 cents per Word one Insertion
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
Clpltll Till '
Middleport.
Reasonable.
guaranteed.
Minimum Charge75c
,
FLOOR
SAMPLE
OHIO.
MMeoioltdidilllllnl
Sltllrtlly
Phone
992-3213.
rates.
Mr . and Mrs. -Freeland
12 cents per word three' DELIVERY DRIVER SALES.
3-5-30tc
7-27-tfc
606
E.
Mlln
........
.-.y.O,: :
Young men lor Immediate
Norris, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry consec utive Insertions.
CLEARANCE
.. 18 cents per word six cOn- work, . no
experience
Powell, Mr. and Mrs. Earl ~ecutlve Insertions .
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
INTERIOR and exterior
Elec. &amp; Gas Ranges
necessary. $3.57 an hour. Not
HARRISON'S tv lind Ant.Nia'
palnllng
.
R.
I.
Dubbeld,
phone
Complete Service
Shuler, Mr-. and Mrs. Rod
25 Per Cent Discount on paid . too much lor delivery and
•• 742-5825 .
2
White
Electric
Service. Phont 992•252'1. · I
·
Phone
9-1'
1
,3821
ads and ads paid within 10
sales ol small appliance. Full
•
Grimm, all of · Racine, spent
6-lO.IIc ,
·
•
1 Coppertone Elec.
Racine, Ohio
3-6-51c
days:
•
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or
part
time;
Mr.
Row,
4-46·
Friday evening with Mr. and
Crill Br4dlord
1
CARD OF THANKS
0677, Monday and Tuesday
1 White Gas
ALLSIDE Builders &amp; Con:
•
Mrs. Marshall Adams.
&amp; OBITUARY
only, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
READY-MIX CONCRETE de-·
5-1-11&lt;
Co. wo -~peelellzt Jn
• livered right to your proJect. ·s eE us FOR:' Awnings, storm structlon
Sl.SO lor 50 word minimum.·
3-5·21c
NOW
150
OFF
Mrs . Early Roush still
aluminum,
vinyl end &amp;tell
•
Each additional word 2c.
siding:
llberglu,
brick lind·
..
'
:
Fast and easy . ~ree . doors and windows, carports,
remains a medical patient at
LADY TO live In with elderly
IILIND ADS
stone;
complete
line of
estimates
.
Phone
992-3284.
marquees,
aluminum
siding
lady, light housekeeping,
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Additional 25c Charge per
residential
and
commercial
,
Goegleln
Rea•y.Mix
Co..
and·
railing.
A.
Jacob,
sales
I
t
t
.
•
I
t
'
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
t
t
t
t
t
•
t
I
.
I
I
I
I
I
phone 949-4904 or 667-J3t9.
Advertisement.
Mr . and Mrs. Gary Spires,
roofing:
romodellng,
Middleport, Ohto.
representative . For free
3·5-31c
OFFICE HOURS
building, suspended celll~~ts.
Mr. and Mrs. Hank Baker,
· -:-~~.....:::..:..._ __::6-_:JO..:....tf.:c." estimates, phone Charles
4 GRAVE tot at Meigs :..
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dolly,
Interior 1nd oxterlor peln·
Memorial
Gardens
,
lisle,
Syracuse,
v.
V.
Miss Marabelle Sharpnack of
8:30 a. m. to 12: 00 Noon
ling
; complete line of
reasonable. Phone 9-49-4962. INTERIOR &amp; exterior palntlnq.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
Wanted To Rent
Saturday.
Columbus visited their mother,
Masonry
work . All work'
3-1 -6tc
R. t. Dubbeld, phone 7-42-5825. 3-2-tfc:-- - - - - guaranteed
to customer
TWO Bedroom home tn Albany- - - - - - - - Mrs. Elizabeth Sharpnack at
2-28-5tc
Middleport
.
We
are tully
sattsfadlon.
Langsvltte
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pet Shop, - - - - - - - Veterans Memorial Hospital Found
Insured
lor
your
protection.
32
Pomeroy area . A. W. Watson,
Chester, Ohio, Phone 985-3356. GET your boat ready for Real Estate For Sale
and J~ck Sharpnack at Racine. RING found In Pomeroy. Owner
N.
Second,
ph.
992·3911.
P. 0 . Box 35, Langsville, Ohio.
Tropical fish and supplies.
summer! Call D. Karr, 992·
may hove by Identifying .
2·15-JOtc
Mrs. Erma Wilson, Mrs.
3·1-6tp
_5367 _
Stop In and compare.
Phone 992-71-75.
--__,....-1
3
2
Herbert Roush visited Mrs.
.J. 7 P
2-27-6tc
DOZER WORK . Reason1ble
3•5·3'P MODERN3or4bedroomhome. ----------~~~~--~
Early Roush, Mrs. Elizabeth - - - - - - - - rates. ACHD 11, Phone D.
Phone 992-3062.
1971 ZIG-ZAG Sewing Machine AUTOMOBILE 1
Sharpnack and Mrs . Eula Notice
left
in
loyawar.
Beautiful
nsurance
been
Karr. 992-~7 .
3·2-lfc
pastel
color'
lui
size
model.
cancelled?
Lost
your
Bracken
at
Veterans
------------~2~·27~~
Office m-225f
All built-In to buttonhole, do
•~rotor's license? Call ·992·
WILL DO bookkeeping, tax
Memorial Hospital Friday.
2 66·
Rosldence m-2568
services In the privacy of my For Rent
slretch sewing and fancy
SEWING MACHINES. Ropalr .
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas Nice of
Pomoroy, Olllo
home. Evelyn C. Young , A ROOMS &amp; bath, unfurn ished
stitching. Pay Just SA8.15 cash ---.,-:-:-c-:::':::::==..:6-.....:15-tfc
service, all maku. 992-m..
BUSINESS
·INVESTMENT
phone 949-3741 , Racine.
Chesler visited Mr. and Mrs.
h&lt;XJse, 1650 Lincoln Heights. or terms available. Trade-Ins BACKHOE AND -DOZER wc);k.
The Febrlc Shop, Pomeroy.
Large
tile
and
brick
2-21 -12tc
Uoyd Nice recently.
Phone 992-3874.
Authorized Singer Saln lind '
accepted. Phone 992 '5641 ·
Septic tanks Installed. George
building, 2 story, 4 apart3-5-lfc _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _3_-t-6tc
Service. Wo Sharpen Sclsoon. .
( BHI) Pullins. Phone 992-2A78. • ments, (3 furnished) 2
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold An· KOSCOT KOSMETICS, Flame
3-29-tlc .
business rooms, storage
derson and Brenda and Lori
4.25-tfi::
of Hope Perfumes, Human TWO BEDROOM mobile home, VACUUM Cleaner, new 1971
---:
.
-~
---,.,.---,• • J
room, present business goes
and Synthetic wigs. We're
model . Complete with all .,
•· · -. • ~- -··- . With
Ann, Mr, and Mrs. Ted Wll!ord
'
.
Call
992-5623.
fhe
building,
$29,500.
~NED
cleaning tools. Small 'Paint SEPTIC TANKS.
1
here for rour convenience.
LIGAL NOTICI
and children, Bart and Joe
3-5-31c
FAMILY HOME
damage in shipping. Will take REASONABLE r
! Ph. -4-46;,
Please col 992-5113.
DANNY
l!LWOOD
BOWERS,
.
4 bedrooms, bath, porches,
Rhodes were dinner guests on
$27 . cash or budget plan
4782, Gallipolis. Jphn Russell,
2-25-lfc
whoso
last
known
pll&lt;t
of
forced olr heat, large bam -residence Is 352' Elll Moln
avattable. Phone 99~·56A1 .
Owner &amp; Operator. .
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Owen
NEW, 12x60, two bedroom
and storage building. ·$8,900. Street , Pomeroy, Ohio, II
3-Htc
·
5-t2-tfc
ANYONE interested In learning
Anderson .
mobile home across from
IOACRES
hereby nottrled lhtl on lilt 2Aih·
crafts and making flowers
Bradbury School . Call 992RUTLAND
TOWNSHIP clay of Jonuory, 1972 RO'I' A.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Brutzman
SIGNS,
posters,
moll
boxes
anu
contact Eutah Francis at 9925308 or see Charles Lewis, 2nd POODLE puppies, Stiver Toy,
1'1:1 story frame home, 7 -ROUSH filed htlpotttttn In t.ho
favorite saying; hand letand children of Cincinnati, Mr.
5884.
h&lt;XJse south from Bradbury
rooms,
bath, cellar, large Probate Court of Mtlllll County,
Park view Kennels; Phone 992·
tered; In your favorite style.
3·2·61p
and Mrs. Archie Tarr and
School . Pets welcome.
barn,
crib,
Implement bldg .• Ohio to ldopt ROBERT
5443.
David Hooker, Rt. 2, 'Albany,
EUGENE BOWERS end lor
2-21-tlc
chicken
house,
milk h&lt;XJse.
children of CUyahoga Falls,·
8-15-tfc
Ohio A5710 ( Pagetown).
change
of nemt or tlld chlltl to
-----Close to the new mines.
Mrs. Edith Grimm of Kent
2-6-JOtc
Robert Eugene Aouah ; llld
$17,600.
2 BEDROOM mobile home In Auto Sales
CIUit II Ht tor htlrlng 11 10:00
----':;-~
spent the weekend with Mr.
CHEAP HOME
a·.m. on tho 11th llay of Mlrch,
Racine area. Phone 992·6329.
Why buy new furniture-? H-ave
and Mrs. Ernest Grimm and
t1,; story frlim.e. 6 rooms, 3 1972.
2-16-ttc 1960 THUNDERBIRD Conthat old made new by Sylvia's
Roy A. Roush, PotiiiOntr
bedrooms,
bath, utility
attended funeral services for ·
Uphotslerlng Shop , Mrs.
vertible, new top, 36,000 acJ . B. O'lri*R, Attorney
room, some hardwood floOrs,
Woodrow T. Zwilling, Prop.,
Mr.· Harry Wolfe at Rawlings
SPAC IOU S unfurnished tual mtles,JI·'&lt;lne 742-3386. ·
for Petitioner.
gas
forced
air
heal,
porch,
Syracuse, Ohio.
!
'
J
&gt;!
,
({
)
7,
1A,21,28
(3)661
apartment
in
Mason,
-4
rooms
2-27-61c
Coates Funeral Home. Mrs .
$3,500.
lmmed.late
2-10-JOtp
&amp; bath, electric heat ; phone
Edith Grimm also visited Mr. SAVE up to one half. Bring your
possession.
773-5975.
'66 THUNDERBIRD,
V-8,
NOTICI 0'
1 story frame. 2 bedrooms,
and Mrs. Otis Knopp, Racine.
2-27-6tc
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
A,OlNTM.NT
automatic, power steering, Real Estate For Sale
cobln1ts
In
kitchen,
CliO NO. 21611
Mr . and Mrs. Benny · 15t Butternut Ave., Pome.rov ..
power brakes, power winbasement, large lot. All In Estoto of Chorlto W. Whit ·
11:1 d&lt;XJbte, fur- dows,
2
BEDROOM,
phone
992-5637.
'
Boggess, Wayne Roseberry,
excellent condition . Just tlngton DtcOINd.
nished on Ath &amp; College In _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _3_·5-6tp
11-21-lfc
•,
'
$1,900:
Notice Is horlby tlven thll
Don Johnson, Susie Norma and
Syracuse . Phone 992-27A9.
:r:
WE H~VE 35 PROPER- Jonnlo M. Whittington of
•
2-29-6tc 1963 FORD with 12 ft . dump,
Kim Jarrell, Roy Pierce
Pomeroy, OhiO, hit bHn dYIY
:-:
TIES, ONE OF WHICH MAY
LEGAL
NOTICE
-new palnl, priced to sell,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Jess IN THE MATTER OF SET '
SUIT YOU. COME TO THE IPt&gt;Ointed Aamlnlstrotrtx of tho
phone
992-3165.
Estill of Charles ·.W. Whit·
TLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS
,
FURNISHED
and
unfurnished
Anderson Sunday.
OFFieE OR CALL, WE .tlngton
fill Of Mtlts
3-5-3tc
PROBATE COURT. MEIG S apartments. Close to school.
'
WILL liE GLAD TO SHOW county,&lt;aecoeHd.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jewell COUNTY , OHIO
Dhto.
Phone 992-5A34.
------Brokor
THEM TO YOU.
Creditors oro roqutrtd 10 file
and children of Letart, Route, · Ac counts and vou chers of the ---:,.----~---':.
110 Mlchantc St.
0 ·-18-tfc 1970 . FORD Camper s,eclal,
their
clllms wtth sald fiduc iary
Henry
CleU.nd.
Rtlllor
fo llowing namtd flducl~rlts
automatic,
power
steering,
Pomeroy,
0
.,
45769
W. Va., spent Sunday with Mr. hav e betn filed In the Probate
within four months.
•
power brakes, phone 992-3954.
Dated thiS 16th diY Of
and Mrs. Gerald Hayman and Court, Meigs County , Oh io,· for TRAt LE R, Brown's Trailer
3
BEDROOM
rench
type
home
~
3-5-3tc
Fobruory
1f72.
approval and settlement :
Court, Minersville, Ohio,
NEW LISTING
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
Keith.
JOhn C.IICOn
CAS E NO . 13,497-A Ninth
phone
992-3324.
175
ACRE
STOCK FARM-2
1
Acting Probate Judge
Plains. All new with total
.
/ 2 ton pickup.
Account of the Huntington
1962
DODGE
.tfc
33
barns, 2 ponds, 2 springs, 3
of satd County
electric and central air ·
National Bank of Columbus, - - - - - - - Phone 949-2977.
(31
21,
21
(31
6,
3tc
dug
wells,
and
water
tap,
Trustee under the Lut Wi ll and
conditioning, bath and &gt;.o fully
3·5-2tc
Testament ol Albert 0 . Ebers paid. 9 room renovated older
carpeted,
full beaement/1 - - - - - - - - - - bach , Deceased .
For
Sale
garage In basement. See by ,
home.
Plenty
of
good
1969
DODGE
Super
Bee,
383
cu.
NOTICI OP
CASE NO . 19,105 Fourth and
appointment, phpne 992-2196 ·
ln.. A speed transmission, pasture. Free gas with own
APPOINTMINT
Flnal Account of Richard c . TROPICAL
FISH, fancy
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson •.
posltractlon, good condition, gas well . Would you believe
CIIINt.l..,l
Martin, Guardian of the Estate
guppies, angels and breeders,
Financing evallable.
· Ellett Of Coctt Bottn DtctOitd.
Sl.600 or take over payments, only $42,500.00.
at William F . Reeves, an ln .
Bellas and supplies. Phone
12-JO.tfc' Notice ts hereby given thll
competent Person.
phone 992-2511 or 992-3205.
4IIEDROOMS
992·.54&lt;13.
Jot M. IOIIn Of LlniSVtltt,
CASE NO. 19,209 Seventh
12·30-tfc
·
3-5-2tc
COUNTRY HOME - Hot r-----~----... Ohio,
hll bton duly ll'fiOintM
Current Account of Dan Shane,
--------'
water heal, 1'12 baths.
Admlntstrotor 01 tho Etlltt of
...
John Sisson injured his foot Guardian of the Estates of
1964 CHEVELLE, 2 door hardCtctt · llolln, dtctoHd, lilt ot
Modern kitchen. Recreation
Daniel Franklin Shone and SKY LINE Mobl!• home, 10 x 50
top, call 992-7329 alter A p.m . room. 2 drilled wells.
recenlly
while
playing Herman
Meigs County, Ohio. .
lee Shane, minors.
_ 52 ,000 ,. If Interested "hone
Creditors lrt roqulrlel to lilt ·
3-5-3tc
CASE
NO
.
20,
115
First
and
to'
Foundation for 2nd house. 10
basketball for Mason's In- Final Account of Adrian A. 992·5433.
lhtlr
ctolma with ••td ltauclarr
acres. NOW only $20,000.00.
dependent League. He has Ca rson , Exec utor of the Estate
within four monthl .
3-3-3tc
NEW LISTING
Dalla thIs 17th doy of
been unable to work (Kro~er 's) o f Gtorge E . Carson, Deceased. ~-------Februory 1f72.
7
ACRES
On
Route
7
near
CASE NO . 20,476 First and JOHN Deere bater and hay Mobile Homes
Sale
for several days.
John C. IIcon
Final Account of Clair 0 . conditioner. Phone 949-3193.
Eastern School. Ideal lor
Judtt
Nelson,
Executor
of
the
Estate
The Rev. Richard Wright
housing
proJect
or
small
3-3-Jic
FOR
THE
BEST
d
..
lin
a
new
(2) 21, 21 131 6, 31
of Mittie M . Nelson , Deceased .
or used mobile home. try
farm . A bargain at
wit! be the guest speaker at
CASE NO . 20,5AO First and
~- •'ntilte
Kanauga
Mobile
Home
Sales,
$10,000.00.
GREEN
MAYTAG
dishwasher,
Mason United Methodist Fi nal Account of Anna M.
Kanauga,
Ohio.
MODERN
Ryther , Adm inis tratrix at the
1 year old, phone 247-2664.
VERA EBLEN
LIG'AL NOTICI
Church durtng the Sunday Esta te of Ed S. Grant ,
t2-17-90fc
Tho
undorstgned ls ottertng
RUTLAND - 3 bedrooms,
3-S-6tc
992-3020
for
sole
tho houN ond lot ownu
Morning service, March 5. The Deceased .
hot water healing. Nice
=
---192 N, 2nd
CASE NO . 20,5A9 First and Middleport by tho loto Cion Gort1nf In
NEW
PONTOON
boats,
3
good
60X12,
2-bedroom,
atl-etectdc,
kitchen
wtth
dishwasher,;·
Rev . Parker Hinzman, pastor, Fina l Account o~ .Iilah A . Jones.,
wetchlown, Mtnorsvltto, OhiO.
used boats, runabout and
air conditioned. h20 ft. Porch cook and bake units. Fully
LOOKING for lnvestmen~ Property oppntsM 11 10,500.110 ·
has invited members and Admi nistra trix ol the Estate of
cabin
cruiser.
Boat
Repairs,
and
ah.tmlnum
awning,
Char les H. Jones, Oeceued .
· carpeted . Carport and
property? Fantastic ts th01 ond c1nnot-bt sold for Ins thin
friends II&gt; .attend the morning
Middleport Boat Shop, Pearl
aluminum skirting, com. fenced yard. $20,000.00 ..
Unless exceptions are filed
word
lor this spacious 12.. "'' opprotsed vetut. Att tn.
Street, Dick Karr 992·5367.
ptetely setup. Beautiful.
ptrlont contect Miry
service and potluck dinner thereto , said accounts. will be
MIDDLEPORT
room,
2-bath all brick home, ttrtttild
for hearing before sa id Court on
location.
Owner
leaving
state.
3-5-31c
Herrlst
Exteutrlx,
Mlntrtvlllt,
BEDROOMS - Bath, cute
which will be held at 12:30.
setup as duplex, or can be Ohio. ettphono "2·3317.
the 4th day of April , 19'2, at
sate
Phone 9A9·A892 or 992-5272. • 3kitchen,
large living and
used a• offices. l\)Cated !n lllb)tct to tilt 1pprovo1 tf "''
Mr . and Mrs . Richard which time said accounts will be EARLY AMERICAN Stereo,
1-10-llc
considered and continued from
dining. Garage. All on·corner
Middleport's business district Prob1tt Court, Mtlll Cownty,
Spurlock, Mr. Leroy Durst of day to day until finally disposed
AM -FM radio, A speed ...--------~-.., lot lor only $10,000.00.
overlooking
the Ohio River. OhiO.
changer, 4 speaker sound
Pt. Pleasant, Mrs. R. C. King Of . '
system , Balance $79.32. Use
6 Room -2 bath home.
Any person interuted ma y
Mary Hlrrlt, ExtcutriK
WANT A GOQD ,PRICE FOR
of Henderson, Mrs . Alva f ile written eKceptlons to Slid
our budget lerms . Call 992(shingle) , cellar ··house,
of lhllstotoof
YOUR PROPERTY, LIST
garage, plus extra lots. One lot
Luckeydoo of Letart were accounts or to mattets per 7085.
Clara E. Glrtand ;
taining. to the execution of the
WITH US, AND START
3-1-6tc
DICIIMd
hu watkw~rys, set up for
dinner guests recently of Mr. trus t, not less than five days
Crow, trow &amp; Porter,
LOOKING.
troller.
Located
In
buslnen
prior to the date set for hearing . STEREO-Radio Combination,
and Mrs. Landon Smith.
dlslrlct, acr0ss from the A&amp;P Attorneys
Mr . and Mrs . Stanley
HELEN
L
TEAFORD,
Store ·· 1n Middleport. Floor (31 5. 6. 7, 31
lovely
WALNUT
finish,
lour
John C. Bacon
speed
Intermixed
changer,
4
Probate
Judge
12' • 14' • 24t ~
ASSOCIATE
!urn. Asking ... $20,1100 for all .
Saunders and three children of
Meigs County , Oh io
sptdker
sound
system,
9f'l-3325
m-2371
Lot with rarllot garage,
Columbus, visited over the t 3) 6. 11
Balance $63 .99. Use our
,
NOTICI
lneeds
roof 90 ft . frontage,
weekend wlth her parents, Mr.
budget terms. Cat! 992-7085.
The undoroltned witt ofl4f for
. __ _
NlCE 2-story home with lull' sullable tor large trailer or
3-Htc
and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel.
basement. 2 lots. new forced small business In business lilt, by IVCtlon, It tt" ~trtmJ&amp;ts
1111 Untied MothOdlsl Church
I1UIII
air furnace. NNr Pomeroy.' dl•trtct, across from the A&amp;P of
Mrs . Marilyn Hetzer and son ,
Par-lge If llltftvttlt, Ohio,
12
FT.
WIDE
frailer
with
air
Elementary
School.
Phone
•
Slore,
Middleport,
Ohio.
Tod , of Parkersburg visited
1M per-•11 rMt •uteto, on
COfldilionl ng, washer &amp; dryer
1220Washlngton lllvd.
992-7314 to-·
ff
Asklfll1 ••. $A,OOO.
·
March '· 1972, It 1:10 O'Clock
over the weekend wlth her
llelpn,Ohlo .
1J.7- c.
- $3,700: see Harold Johnson,
.!' .M . no pr-tv wllf 110 1011
Chesler, Ohio. ·
1-------;_--..J c:-----.,.---.,.-::=,.- · Letart Falls- 10 rooni houM to"'" htOhtot 'lchler ; r_.,tno
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
SIX ROOM ,ou~e. 133 Butt;,:;;;;i'l wllh bath, basement, fenced- to tilt Trua- 1111 rtthl to
3-5-61p
Schwarz.
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137 1 In lawn, lwo bull~lngs, fuel olt
oct tho htghut "" Jn lflt ,
---~--Wadsworth Drive Columbus ' heal, 5 lots, thrH of .thorn ovont It to d~ed tnsutfk:l.,.t.
:;ooD mi xed hoy . Phone Real Estate For Sale
lfwarf ltlko
"'-I ho
.;. · .
' tocaled on the river front,
HOUSE, 16Al lincoln Hel.ghts .. ""'o.
Wltkesvltte 669-ml.
P
ne
23.
7
-.
...
4.
selling
due
to
Ill
health,
$251100
Dane
Holtnltn, Sr.
Q- Why are Sou.tl• Ameri·
3-Htc Call Dann)' Thompson, 99221_-fl.. . :.c for alf. Home has two porches,
ltnhckler
---.,..-.,..---· _1_1._
can eagles called harpies?
2196.
.
Chlrlft Htnlloy
one
enclosed,
within
walking
A~The great harpy eagle
HITIII lrtnnon
:~ BEDROOM \l .ndele rr.oblte --,.,.,-----~_:7...:.:
· 18-llc BU ILDINC lots In Branchwood distance of school.
Tr01tta,
was named for the harpies
home, 11,., ba:hs en choke
Subdlvlston
at
Rock
Springs;
R
otdtvltlo
Circuit
ot
HOUSE
In
Long
Bottom
,
ph.;ne
or Greek m y tholo ·gy. be·
I Nttd Llillngs for Farms 1nd
ren ial lot . Herman Bullnger ,
U~tled M~thOdlst Church'
T.
P.
water.
9Bl-3529.
.
phone
992-2789.
lieved to be half-wuman .
992,5570.
.
3-t-121c Homos. Also Handle Ront1ls. (3) 3, 5. 6, 7, •• 5t
__:_:
1-28-tlc
3-5-61p
half-bird.

WANT£0!

Y-tiTY

Carrlen For
MASON
ancl
HARTFORD
The
Sentinel

B&amp;W HEATING en

EXTERMINATION

EXPERT·

-~pent

'5.55 c.,_
.

- - - --

..

..

......,.,.....
.., :
: ..
•. :a:-r·

tFOI-lL'I •E!IGau.L"
axJLD HAVE SUPNIVED
'iO.JR APPLE PIE
LJ:lt..iG ENoi.JGH 10
HAVE MARRIED
'r'OU--

-AA'-SIGI-t!-AH
WOUI.DOF HAD A

Pito.IP. 0' 1¥11-lTS.~

.

"THESE VtTAMINi ~ TH'
jjfl:irATiST, FUPPSY! GtVi" Y"
NEW P•p, NI!W STRiiNIO'TH!

--.-----

IIMV GUeS'I',,UIICI
X C:.O.N'T G&amp;T 'TH' CAP
0"~

FIRST A ~LEN11NE5
0\RD.... ANO NOW
Fl.O'M:Rel! WHO CAN
MY llt)I51"ERI0tJ&amp;

-----

ADMIRER 6Ei'

•

CLELAND
REALTY

------

------

By Mrs. Evelyu Brlcklea
Sunday School attendance at
the United Methodist Olurch
waa 53 and offering $17.83.
Worship attendance waa 34 and
the offering was $56.15.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Darst of
Long Bottom and Mr. and Mrs .
Norman McCain, Eastern,
were . Sunday guesta of Mrs.
Ethel Stout.
Those callong on Gerald
Violet were Mr. and Mrs.
Dorsel Miller, Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Brlckles, John Arbaugh, Russell Mollohan,
Martin Mollahan, all of Tuppers Plains, and Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Perry of Shade. Mr. VIolet
is recovering from a badly
sprained ankle.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Justis,
and the two young chUdren,
Mary Louise and Olrislina
Ri~s of Mr . and Mrs. David
Riggs of Vienna were Sunday
visitors of Mrs. Leota Massar
of Eastern.
Mrs. Marvin Walker ·and
daughter Ruthie spent the
weekend at Columbus.
Mrs. Ronald Golden and
daughter of Athens spent the
weekend here with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Way Clark.
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence
Nichols spent Sunday with
their daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Hendershot and son of
Lancaster and they also called
on their son, Rev . and Mrs.
Earl Nichols and son of Athens.Mr. and Mrs. Starllng
Massar and two children ,
Diana and Chuckle of Eastern
were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Marion Riggs oE Logan,
0.
.
Mrs. Myrtle
Boggess
celebrated her birthday Feb. 24
by going to her niece's, Mias
Emmaneal
Boggess
at
Parkersburg for dinner. Then
on Saturday her daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Garland Brannon of
Bridgeport, W. Va., came with
a lovely cake and gifts and also
her aon, Wllltam Boggess of
Huntington came with gil"'.
They had a nice dinner for her
at her home.
Juanita Spencer of Chester
callect on Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Brlckles Saturday afternoon.
) Mr. and Mrs. Richard Carns
family of Sandyvllle,
Va ..
· Mr. and Mrs . Fritz Goebel
and family returned home
• • from a vacaUon in Florida.

and

197t VOLKSWAGEN SQ. IIACK SEDAN
$249$
Local 1 owner. new car trade In, 13.000 miles, automatic
\

•

• ·

Sentinel Classifieds Get Actif)n! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results/
Wanted
...
.,.,
2
Apple Grove
Business
Services,
Of
For Sale.
Motor Co.
News, Events

-.

·•

Do tjOU
have brake!&gt;
on this :

cart, Joel?

.

..

-------

lJTl'LE ORPfiAN ANNIE

- -- - - -

...

Virgil B.

.·::
....
..·.

Teaford, Sr.

ILCraQY
hiU

5. Convex
molding
St."Don't- 1. Unsocla·
me"(well·
ble person
JmOWD
1. Cover
motto)
lt. Charily
D. Milcalcucue
late
11. Mils May.
U. Litvian
12. Banged In
U.-of
lt. "Kubla
hope
Khan"
DOWN
river
1. Come true U.Mortgage
2. Friend In :13. Freneh
Tampico
novellst
I. In contenU.
Expulsion
tion
Z5. Noptune's
t. Without
word a
·emblem

-------

Mason Area

- - - - --

News, Notes

_WMP0/1390.

_____

ON YOUR DIAL

."

...... -

...

·-

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

,•

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H."The
Bambino"
1'1. Claretcolofed
II. Russian
city
zt. Byproduct
U.Colorldo
Indian
at. Blrd'a
neat ,.
U.Mexlcan

...
~IV!P

/tiT il-l! ~UA MAKER&amp;'
ANNUAl. &amp;HIN1716.
'

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proap

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AlliNG PlACID VIOI.IN

u111n in •.......U.. Mf1 - AIIIIIIION

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tree

H. Subservient

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

WiDE ·

·- - - - - -

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source

- - -- - - -

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ITHEN~]

H1vin1

-------

We talk to JOU
like a. persOri.

I K j II

"- .J1

Opium

- - - -- -

MOBILE unuES

Ing
30. Beat the
helm
31. Fauna's
partner
32. Harbor
craft
n . Maleor
female ·
nickname

·
+-~-r~~
1rD_l~PA_UN~~~~--~
I" 11 ·1 V'
ilr

-

MIWR

zt. Insinuat-

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

-----Far

RUIFT

NORTH!Ft&gt;l CA&gt;JADA., E~Y t.JINO,S AI
I:JEAR&amp;~T !1!.1!~011·~

A X Y D.L BAA X R
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
Uled for the three L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. Single letters.
I)IOIIropbea, the lencth and fonnatlon of the words &amp;t"f all
hlnll. Each day the code !etten are different.

WOOL15TOCK JU5T RlTIJ«N£1)

FROM TKE OTHER EKP OF

"THE 006HOIJSE

CRYPTOQUOTJIS
BVF QVSACYFKQ SZ L "'SKKSIFK LKF
LCILRQ L CJ.BBCF QBKLJUVBFK BVLP
BVSQF
l'KPQB

SZ

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NFUULK .- WSKK.IQ

C.

Sllarda)"l Crnlooiuole: A FRIENDSHIP FOUNDED ON
BUSINESS IS BETTER THAN· A BUSINESS FOUNDED ON
FRIENDSHIP.-JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER
((} 11172 Kin., Fr ~'1tur~~ ~yndi("a lt•, lnc·.·,

'

\.

'"
&lt;

I

•

.

1

�•

--

a- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pon!eroy, 0., March 6. 1•~

Por Sale

To . Buy

~

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs . Virgil Roush
entertained Sunday at their
home in honor of their son,
Marshall, who was celebrating
a birthday. Guests attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Marshall
Roush and son, Joey, Fred
Shain, W. B. Cross, Mr. and
Mrs . Virgil Walker of Racine
and John Joe Shain_
Mr. and Mrs.•Lowell Burton
of Columbus spent the weekend
with Mr . and Mrs. Vernon
Donohue.
Mr . and Mrs. Ted Hayman
and children of Columbus spent
the weekend with Mr . and Mrs.
Gerald Hayman and Keith .
Wednesday afternoon guests
of Mrs. Virgil Roush·were Mrs.
Hattie Powell and daughter
Addie, Mrs. Marv.!'ne Beegle,
Mrs. Mary Circle, all of Portland Route.
Mr . and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman spent Thursday afternoon with Mr . and Mrs.
Lewis Ours at Tanners Run.
Airman First Class Jeff
Donohew and fri end, AFC.
John Powers of Fort Meade,
Md., sperit a weekend with the
former's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Don~hew and Greg.
Mr : and Mrs. Larry Badgely
and children of Fairfax, Va.
br ought Mrs. Margaret
Gloeckner home Wednesday
and visited Mr . Badgely's
brother, Darrell Badgely who
is a medical patient at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith
and Joe Derouin were dinner
guests Saturday of Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Johnson and family
at Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ours of
New Brighll&gt;n, Pa., spent a
weekend with Miss Loretta
Ours at Middleport, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Donohew, Mr. and
Mrs. Wiley Ours and Mr . and
Mrs. Lewis Ours, local.
Rodney Neigler and Joe
Derouin were visitors in
Parkerfburg Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Pearson
and Mrs. Sally Savage and

QUALITY

"-

---

·-~-····

Tu'ppers Plains
Society News

I

•

trans., luggage rack, radio, chrome wheel covers, bfuf

color. blk. vinyl Interior.
tt70 CHEVELLE SSlt6 CPE.
$2295
Green finish, blk . vinyl roof, green vinyl Interior, new
wide oval tires. 4 speed trans., power steering, radio. A
sweetheart ol a buy.
·
1970 DODGE POLARA

$2:195

Factory air conditioning, v.a engine, auto. trans., P.S.,
P. B., good w -s-w tires, many more extras . A low price ·
now !

Pomeroy Motor Co.

OLD FURNITURE, Round Ollk
tables, ·,Brass l&gt;tds. dishes,
clocks , and-or complete
households . Write M. D.
Miller, Rl. A, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Call 992-6271.
.
- ~- t7-tf~.

OHIO

w.

36" ~ 23" l( .oo9

The

Aluminum

Orthkl Room.

sheets

Make reservattor&gt;s lor your :
private parties, banquets. '
special occasions.
· kt"l for m~lng place - ·
with or without kitchen
privileges.
Individual catering
.Will seal up to 150 people.

USED OFFSET PLATES

Wanted To Do

MA:¢vJsEs

BABYSITTING In my home,
Mrs . Glenn Smith, Rock
Springs Rd., phone 992-6187.
3· t-6tc

Employment Wanted

Help Wanted

F'rom the llo~sl
Bulldozer Rodlator to the
Smallest Heater Cor.e.
-NIIftanlltls
-llllr s,.NHst

SMITH NFI SON
MOlbRS.INC.
Pomoroy

Phone

· a for $1.00
DRY WALL Finisher contractor. R.I . Dubbeld, Phone
742-5825.
3-6-5tc

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
1'~EROY,

WHEEL drive Jeep. Phone
aller 5 p.m. 992-:1062.
2-27-12tc

,992-3975

The

992-5786

•

i' .

GlORY BE!!

_LOOK WHO'S
· COM IN' -- LONZO
AN' CALEB

•

,.'
I

I

DADBORN
WMCHERS!!

'

ALL WEAliiEI IOOFIH
&amp;OOISTIUCTIOfl
l'PWIIIIICi CO.

·· - · .... ·.

241 Lin~ illlll.
MNII..... OIIIe
11M Antilla! , . . . .
We 1110!1 • ce"""tw Htmt
Mlll•teliance Sonlco !til

#10~.4/.S

Of: TIUi
SIXTIES, CLASS SOUNDS
PROMISING. THEY'RE
THIS

USING TEAM T&amp;AC&gt;tJNG

W~AT'S
~OMIStNG

A8()uT

1n

_ _... ltliUtllrwlllt,

_

MA'I'SE IT'S JUST A

.-·..

... 808 &amp; ('AROL &amp; TED &amp; ALICE

'C01NC1DENC!i, 9UT THE
INSTRUCTORS' FIRST
NAMSS ARE" ...

..... Ce ........ rwftr
lnllrter or

'""'""
.. c.llltlt
•••
.., ...,.lr
...,,..,try.
"'a... $1411ng.I

lilt ...........

Free Estimate

TERMITES. •TERMITES.

Dai~ Sentin~l

Gel Rid ofThem
Wo .will prohct lftY single
dwelllna resklenco for

m Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohi~

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

(o!ftpllll

-ling.

Ptum~lnl

lily """'...,. m-255t
We haw 24 hr. oonooooocy
StrV~.

m.SIQ

742-3947

'149;50
WANT ADS
m-- 742-4761 ~-daughter,
Robin
were I'
INFORMATION
WRinEN
WARRANTY
we ITI fully lnsorld
Columbus visitors Sunday.
DEADLINES
C1tl Coiled 614-452-3151
Sunday guests of Mr. and
5
P.M.
Day
Before
1970 KAwAsAt&lt;t. -mociet . G-31,
Publication
Mrs . Pete Shields were Mr. and
Centurion, new condition.
Monday Deadllnt 9 a.m.
Mrs . Philip Radford and
raced. Phone after 6 p.
never
Cancellation &amp; Corredtons
m.
992-3401.
Stephanie of Pomeroy Route, Will be accepted unlil9 a.m. lor,
3-2-6tc
For Appointment
Day of Publlcatton1
633 Mal~ 51.
Mrs. Clara Mae Sargent, Mrs. '
REGULATIONS
Zanesville,
Ohio
Phone 949-2803
Marlene Fisher and children,
MALE Norwegian Elkhound
The Publisher r..erves the
Molly , Larry and Amy, Dave
pups, 10 weeks old - $25 ;
right to edit or reject any ads
· phone 992-2362.
On ~I .A~.n
deem~d oble~ t!onal. The
and Pete Robinson of Racine.
SEPTIC tanks cl.. ned. Miller O' DELL WHEEL allil!lme'ni
·publisher
wilt
not
be
-GUARANTE&amp;o---; ·
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Roush,
----------------3-5~p
located at Crossroads, Rl. 12A.
r..ponstbte lor more than one
662-3035.
Plloil,t 992-2094
Complete front end service,
Roger Roush and Jeff Miller
k'lcorrect Insertion.
'••• ••• •'''' · ·'' •• •••• ''' •' '!
2·12-tfc
Dai~
tune
up
and
brake
service.
RATES
spent Saturday evening with
=~ _H_O_U-SE_B_U_I~.l-D_E_R-S,...::....
CALL' . Wheels balanced eltC· POIRIIOJ .1..-&amp; Alta
For Want Ad ServiCe
1
SAVE -50.00
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell at
Ph. 614-992·2156
All
work
lroalcal ly.
5 cents per Word one Insertion
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
Clpltll Till '
Middleport.
Reasonable.
guaranteed.
Minimum Charge75c
,
FLOOR
SAMPLE
OHIO.
MMeoioltdidilllllnl
Sltllrtlly
Phone
992-3213.
rates.
Mr . and Mrs. -Freeland
12 cents per word three' DELIVERY DRIVER SALES.
3-5-30tc
7-27-tfc
606
E.
Mlln
........
.-.y.O,: :
Young men lor Immediate
Norris, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry consec utive Insertions.
CLEARANCE
.. 18 cents per word six cOn- work, . no
experience
Powell, Mr. and Mrs. Earl ~ecutlve Insertions .
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
INTERIOR and exterior
Elec. &amp; Gas Ranges
necessary. $3.57 an hour. Not
HARRISON'S tv lind Ant.Nia'
palnllng
.
R.
I.
Dubbeld,
phone
Complete Service
Shuler, Mr-. and Mrs. Rod
25 Per Cent Discount on paid . too much lor delivery and
•• 742-5825 .
2
White
Electric
Service. Phont 992•252'1. · I
·
Phone
9-1'
1
,3821
ads and ads paid within 10
sales ol small appliance. Full
•
Grimm, all of · Racine, spent
6-lO.IIc ,
·
•
1 Coppertone Elec.
Racine, Ohio
3-6-51c
days:
•
·
or
part
time;
Mr.
Row,
4-46·
Friday evening with Mr. and
Crill Br4dlord
1
CARD OF THANKS
0677, Monday and Tuesday
1 White Gas
ALLSIDE Builders &amp; Con:
•
Mrs. Marshall Adams.
&amp; OBITUARY
only, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
READY-MIX CONCRETE de-·
5-1-11&lt;
Co. wo -~peelellzt Jn
• livered right to your proJect. ·s eE us FOR:' Awnings, storm structlon
Sl.SO lor 50 word minimum.·
3-5·21c
NOW
150
OFF
Mrs . Early Roush still
aluminum,
vinyl end &amp;tell
•
Each additional word 2c.
siding:
llberglu,
brick lind·
..
'
:
Fast and easy . ~ree . doors and windows, carports,
remains a medical patient at
LADY TO live In with elderly
IILIND ADS
stone;
complete
line of
estimates
.
Phone
992-3284.
marquees,
aluminum
siding
lady, light housekeeping,
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Additional 25c Charge per
residential
and
commercial
,
Goegleln
Rea•y.Mix
Co..
and·
railing.
A.
Jacob,
sales
I
t
t
.
•
I
t
'
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
t
t
t
t
t
•
t
I
.
I
I
I
I
I
phone 949-4904 or 667-J3t9.
Advertisement.
Mr . and Mrs. Gary Spires,
roofing:
romodellng,
Middleport, Ohto.
representative . For free
3·5-31c
OFFICE HOURS
building, suspended celll~~ts.
Mr. and Mrs. Hank Baker,
· -:-~~.....:::..:..._ __::6-_:JO..:....tf.:c." estimates, phone Charles
4 GRAVE tot at Meigs :..
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dolly,
Interior 1nd oxterlor peln·
Memorial
Gardens
,
lisle,
Syracuse,
v.
V.
Miss Marabelle Sharpnack of
8:30 a. m. to 12: 00 Noon
ling
; complete line of
reasonable. Phone 9-49-4962. INTERIOR &amp; exterior palntlnq.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
Wanted To Rent
Saturday.
Columbus visited their mother,
Masonry
work . All work'
3-1 -6tc
R. t. Dubbeld, phone 7-42-5825. 3-2-tfc:-- - - - - guaranteed
to customer
TWO Bedroom home tn Albany- - - - - - - - Mrs. Elizabeth Sharpnack at
2-28-5tc
Middleport
.
We
are tully
sattsfadlon.
Langsvltte
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pet Shop, - - - - - - - Veterans Memorial Hospital Found
Insured
lor
your
protection.
32
Pomeroy area . A. W. Watson,
Chester, Ohio, Phone 985-3356. GET your boat ready for Real Estate For Sale
and J~ck Sharpnack at Racine. RING found In Pomeroy. Owner
N.
Second,
ph.
992·3911.
P. 0 . Box 35, Langsville, Ohio.
Tropical fish and supplies.
summer! Call D. Karr, 992·
may hove by Identifying .
2·15-JOtc
Mrs. Erma Wilson, Mrs.
3·1-6tp
_5367 _
Stop In and compare.
Phone 992-71-75.
--__,....-1
3
2
Herbert Roush visited Mrs.
.J. 7 P
2-27-6tc
DOZER WORK . Reason1ble
3•5·3'P MODERN3or4bedroomhome. ----------~~~~--~
Early Roush, Mrs. Elizabeth - - - - - - - - rates. ACHD 11, Phone D.
Phone 992-3062.
1971 ZIG-ZAG Sewing Machine AUTOMOBILE 1
Sharpnack and Mrs . Eula Notice
left
in
loyawar.
Beautiful
nsurance
been
Karr. 992-~7 .
3·2-lfc
pastel
color'
lui
size
model.
cancelled?
Lost
your
Bracken
at
Veterans
------------~2~·27~~
Office m-225f
All built-In to buttonhole, do
•~rotor's license? Call ·992·
WILL DO bookkeeping, tax
Memorial Hospital Friday.
2 66·
Rosldence m-2568
services In the privacy of my For Rent
slretch sewing and fancy
SEWING MACHINES. Ropalr .
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas Nice of
Pomoroy, Olllo
home. Evelyn C. Young , A ROOMS &amp; bath, unfurn ished
stitching. Pay Just SA8.15 cash ---.,-:-:-c-:::':::::==..:6-.....:15-tfc
service, all maku. 992-m..
BUSINESS
·INVESTMENT
phone 949-3741 , Racine.
Chesler visited Mr. and Mrs.
h&lt;XJse, 1650 Lincoln Heights. or terms available. Trade-Ins BACKHOE AND -DOZER wc);k.
The Febrlc Shop, Pomeroy.
Large
tile
and
brick
2-21 -12tc
Uoyd Nice recently.
Phone 992-3874.
Authorized Singer Saln lind '
accepted. Phone 992 '5641 ·
Septic tanks Installed. George
building, 2 story, 4 apart3-5-lfc _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _3_-t-6tc
Service. Wo Sharpen Sclsoon. .
( BHI) Pullins. Phone 992-2A78. • ments, (3 furnished) 2
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold An· KOSCOT KOSMETICS, Flame
3-29-tlc .
business rooms, storage
derson and Brenda and Lori
4.25-tfi::
of Hope Perfumes, Human TWO BEDROOM mobile home, VACUUM Cleaner, new 1971
---:
.
-~
---,.,.---,• • J
room, present business goes
and Synthetic wigs. We're
model . Complete with all .,
•· · -. • ~- -··- . With
Ann, Mr, and Mrs. Ted Wll!ord
'
.
Call
992-5623.
fhe
building,
$29,500.
~NED
cleaning tools. Small 'Paint SEPTIC TANKS.
1
here for rour convenience.
LIGAL NOTICI
and children, Bart and Joe
3-5-31c
FAMILY HOME
damage in shipping. Will take REASONABLE r
! Ph. -4-46;,
Please col 992-5113.
DANNY
l!LWOOD
BOWERS,
.
4 bedrooms, bath, porches,
Rhodes were dinner guests on
$27 . cash or budget plan
4782, Gallipolis. Jphn Russell,
2-25-lfc
whoso
last
known
pll&lt;t
of
forced olr heat, large bam -residence Is 352' Elll Moln
avattable. Phone 99~·56A1 .
Owner &amp; Operator. .
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Owen
NEW, 12x60, two bedroom
and storage building. ·$8,900. Street , Pomeroy, Ohio, II
3-Htc
·
5-t2-tfc
ANYONE interested In learning
Anderson .
mobile home across from
IOACRES
hereby nottrled lhtl on lilt 2Aih·
crafts and making flowers
Bradbury School . Call 992RUTLAND
TOWNSHIP clay of Jonuory, 1972 RO'I' A.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Brutzman
SIGNS,
posters,
moll
boxes
anu
contact Eutah Francis at 9925308 or see Charles Lewis, 2nd POODLE puppies, Stiver Toy,
1'1:1 story frame home, 7 -ROUSH filed htlpotttttn In t.ho
favorite saying; hand letand children of Cincinnati, Mr.
5884.
h&lt;XJse south from Bradbury
rooms,
bath, cellar, large Probate Court of Mtlllll County,
Park view Kennels; Phone 992·
tered; In your favorite style.
3·2·61p
and Mrs. Archie Tarr and
School . Pets welcome.
barn,
crib,
Implement bldg .• Ohio to ldopt ROBERT
5443.
David Hooker, Rt. 2, 'Albany,
EUGENE BOWERS end lor
2-21-tlc
chicken
house,
milk h&lt;XJse.
children of CUyahoga Falls,·
8-15-tfc
Ohio A5710 ( Pagetown).
change
of nemt or tlld chlltl to
-----Close to the new mines.
Mrs. Edith Grimm of Kent
2-6-JOtc
Robert Eugene Aouah ; llld
$17,600.
2 BEDROOM mobile home In Auto Sales
CIUit II Ht tor htlrlng 11 10:00
----':;-~
spent the weekend with Mr.
CHEAP HOME
a·.m. on tho 11th llay of Mlrch,
Racine area. Phone 992·6329.
Why buy new furniture-? H-ave
and Mrs. Ernest Grimm and
t1,; story frlim.e. 6 rooms, 3 1972.
2-16-ttc 1960 THUNDERBIRD Conthat old made new by Sylvia's
Roy A. Roush, PotiiiOntr
bedrooms,
bath, utility
attended funeral services for ·
Uphotslerlng Shop , Mrs.
vertible, new top, 36,000 acJ . B. O'lri*R, Attorney
room, some hardwood floOrs,
Woodrow T. Zwilling, Prop.,
Mr.· Harry Wolfe at Rawlings
SPAC IOU S unfurnished tual mtles,JI·'&lt;lne 742-3386. ·
for Petitioner.
gas
forced
air
heal,
porch,
Syracuse, Ohio.
!
'
J
&gt;!
,
({
)
7,
1A,21,28
(3)661
apartment
in
Mason,
-4
rooms
2-27-61c
Coates Funeral Home. Mrs .
$3,500.
lmmed.late
2-10-JOtp
&amp; bath, electric heat ; phone
Edith Grimm also visited Mr. SAVE up to one half. Bring your
possession.
773-5975.
'66 THUNDERBIRD,
V-8,
NOTICI 0'
1 story frame. 2 bedrooms,
and Mrs. Otis Knopp, Racine.
2-27-6tc
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
A,OlNTM.NT
automatic, power steering, Real Estate For Sale
cobln1ts
In
kitchen,
CliO NO. 21611
Mr . and Mrs. Benny · 15t Butternut Ave., Pome.rov ..
power brakes, power winbasement, large lot. All In Estoto of Chorlto W. Whit ·
11:1 d&lt;XJbte, fur- dows,
2
BEDROOM,
phone
992-5637.
'
Boggess, Wayne Roseberry,
excellent condition . Just tlngton DtcOINd.
nished on Ath &amp; College In _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _3_·5-6tp
11-21-lfc
•,
'
$1,900:
Notice Is horlby tlven thll
Don Johnson, Susie Norma and
Syracuse . Phone 992-27A9.
:r:
WE H~VE 35 PROPER- Jonnlo M. Whittington of
•
2-29-6tc 1963 FORD with 12 ft . dump,
Kim Jarrell, Roy Pierce
Pomeroy, OhiO, hit bHn dYIY
:-:
TIES, ONE OF WHICH MAY
LEGAL
NOTICE
-new palnl, priced to sell,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Jess IN THE MATTER OF SET '
SUIT YOU. COME TO THE IPt&gt;Ointed Aamlnlstrotrtx of tho
phone
992-3165.
Estill of Charles ·.W. Whit·
TLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS
,
FURNISHED
and
unfurnished
Anderson Sunday.
OFFieE OR CALL, WE .tlngton
fill Of Mtlts
3-5-3tc
PROBATE COURT. MEIG S apartments. Close to school.
'
WILL liE GLAD TO SHOW county,&lt;aecoeHd.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jewell COUNTY , OHIO
Dhto.
Phone 992-5A34.
------Brokor
THEM TO YOU.
Creditors oro roqutrtd 10 file
and children of Letart, Route, · Ac counts and vou chers of the ---:,.----~---':.
110 Mlchantc St.
0 ·-18-tfc 1970 . FORD Camper s,eclal,
their
clllms wtth sald fiduc iary
Henry
CleU.nd.
Rtlllor
fo llowing namtd flducl~rlts
automatic,
power
steering,
Pomeroy,
0
.,
45769
W. Va., spent Sunday with Mr. hav e betn filed In the Probate
within four months.
•
power brakes, phone 992-3954.
Dated thiS 16th diY Of
and Mrs. Gerald Hayman and Court, Meigs County , Oh io,· for TRAt LE R, Brown's Trailer
3
BEDROOM
rench
type
home
~
3-5-3tc
Fobruory
1f72.
approval and settlement :
Court, Minersville, Ohio,
NEW LISTING
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
Keith.
JOhn C.IICOn
CAS E NO . 13,497-A Ninth
phone
992-3324.
175
ACRE
STOCK FARM-2
1
Acting Probate Judge
Plains. All new with total
.
/ 2 ton pickup.
Account of the Huntington
1962
DODGE
.tfc
33
barns, 2 ponds, 2 springs, 3
of satd County
electric and central air ·
National Bank of Columbus, - - - - - - - Phone 949-2977.
(31
21,
21
(31
6,
3tc
dug
wells,
and
water
tap,
Trustee under the Lut Wi ll and
conditioning, bath and &gt;.o fully
3·5-2tc
Testament ol Albert 0 . Ebers paid. 9 room renovated older
carpeted,
full beaement/1 - - - - - - - - - - bach , Deceased .
For
Sale
garage In basement. See by ,
home.
Plenty
of
good
1969
DODGE
Super
Bee,
383
cu.
NOTICI OP
CASE NO . 19,105 Fourth and
appointment, phpne 992-2196 ·
ln.. A speed transmission, pasture. Free gas with own
APPOINTMINT
Flnal Account of Richard c . TROPICAL
FISH, fancy
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson •.
posltractlon, good condition, gas well . Would you believe
CIIINt.l..,l
Martin, Guardian of the Estate
guppies, angels and breeders,
Financing evallable.
· Ellett Of Coctt Bottn DtctOitd.
Sl.600 or take over payments, only $42,500.00.
at William F . Reeves, an ln .
Bellas and supplies. Phone
12-JO.tfc' Notice ts hereby given thll
competent Person.
phone 992-2511 or 992-3205.
4IIEDROOMS
992·.54&lt;13.
Jot M. IOIIn Of LlniSVtltt,
CASE NO. 19,209 Seventh
12·30-tfc
·
3-5-2tc
COUNTRY HOME - Hot r-----~----... Ohio,
hll bton duly ll'fiOintM
Current Account of Dan Shane,
--------'
water heal, 1'12 baths.
Admlntstrotor 01 tho Etlltt of
...
John Sisson injured his foot Guardian of the Estates of
1964 CHEVELLE, 2 door hardCtctt · llolln, dtctoHd, lilt ot
Modern kitchen. Recreation
Daniel Franklin Shone and SKY LINE Mobl!• home, 10 x 50
top, call 992-7329 alter A p.m . room. 2 drilled wells.
recenlly
while
playing Herman
Meigs County, Ohio. .
lee Shane, minors.
_ 52 ,000 ,. If Interested "hone
Creditors lrt roqulrlel to lilt ·
3-5-3tc
CASE
NO
.
20,
115
First
and
to'
Foundation for 2nd house. 10
basketball for Mason's In- Final Account of Adrian A. 992·5433.
lhtlr
ctolma with ••td ltauclarr
acres. NOW only $20,000.00.
dependent League. He has Ca rson , Exec utor of the Estate
within four monthl .
3-3-3tc
NEW LISTING
Dalla thIs 17th doy of
been unable to work (Kro~er 's) o f Gtorge E . Carson, Deceased. ~-------Februory 1f72.
7
ACRES
On
Route
7
near
CASE NO . 20,476 First and JOHN Deere bater and hay Mobile Homes
Sale
for several days.
John C. IIcon
Final Account of Clair 0 . conditioner. Phone 949-3193.
Eastern School. Ideal lor
Judtt
Nelson,
Executor
of
the
Estate
The Rev. Richard Wright
housing
proJect
or
small
3-3-Jic
FOR
THE
BEST
d
..
lin
a
new
(2) 21, 21 131 6, 31
of Mittie M . Nelson , Deceased .
or used mobile home. try
farm . A bargain at
wit! be the guest speaker at
CASE NO . 20,5AO First and
~- •'ntilte
Kanauga
Mobile
Home
Sales,
$10,000.00.
GREEN
MAYTAG
dishwasher,
Mason United Methodist Fi nal Account of Anna M.
Kanauga,
Ohio.
MODERN
Ryther , Adm inis tratrix at the
1 year old, phone 247-2664.
VERA EBLEN
LIG'AL NOTICI
Church durtng the Sunday Esta te of Ed S. Grant ,
t2-17-90fc
Tho
undorstgned ls ottertng
RUTLAND - 3 bedrooms,
3-S-6tc
992-3020
for
sole
tho houN ond lot ownu
Morning service, March 5. The Deceased .
hot water healing. Nice
=
---192 N, 2nd
CASE NO . 20,5A9 First and Middleport by tho loto Cion Gort1nf In
NEW
PONTOON
boats,
3
good
60X12,
2-bedroom,
atl-etectdc,
kitchen
wtth
dishwasher,;·
Rev . Parker Hinzman, pastor, Fina l Account o~ .Iilah A . Jones.,
wetchlown, Mtnorsvltto, OhiO.
used boats, runabout and
air conditioned. h20 ft. Porch cook and bake units. Fully
LOOKING for lnvestmen~ Property oppntsM 11 10,500.110 ·
has invited members and Admi nistra trix ol the Estate of
cabin
cruiser.
Boat
Repairs,
and
ah.tmlnum
awning,
Char les H. Jones, Oeceued .
· carpeted . Carport and
property? Fantastic ts th01 ond c1nnot-bt sold for Ins thin
friends II&gt; .attend the morning
Middleport Boat Shop, Pearl
aluminum skirting, com. fenced yard. $20,000.00 ..
Unless exceptions are filed
word
lor this spacious 12.. "'' opprotsed vetut. Att tn.
Street, Dick Karr 992·5367.
ptetely setup. Beautiful.
ptrlont contect Miry
service and potluck dinner thereto , said accounts. will be
MIDDLEPORT
room,
2-bath all brick home, ttrtttild
for hearing before sa id Court on
location.
Owner
leaving
state.
3-5-31c
Herrlst
Exteutrlx,
Mlntrtvlllt,
BEDROOMS - Bath, cute
which will be held at 12:30.
setup as duplex, or can be Ohio. ettphono "2·3317.
the 4th day of April , 19'2, at
sate
Phone 9A9·A892 or 992-5272. • 3kitchen,
large living and
used a• offices. l\)Cated !n lllb)tct to tilt 1pprovo1 tf "''
Mr . and Mrs . Richard which time said accounts will be EARLY AMERICAN Stereo,
1-10-llc
considered and continued from
dining. Garage. All on·corner
Middleport's business district Prob1tt Court, Mtlll Cownty,
Spurlock, Mr. Leroy Durst of day to day until finally disposed
AM -FM radio, A speed ...--------~-.., lot lor only $10,000.00.
overlooking
the Ohio River. OhiO.
changer, 4 speaker sound
Pt. Pleasant, Mrs. R. C. King Of . '
system , Balance $79.32. Use
6 Room -2 bath home.
Any person interuted ma y
Mary Hlrrlt, ExtcutriK
WANT A GOQD ,PRICE FOR
of Henderson, Mrs . Alva f ile written eKceptlons to Slid
our budget lerms . Call 992(shingle) , cellar ··house,
of lhllstotoof
YOUR PROPERTY, LIST
garage, plus extra lots. One lot
Luckeydoo of Letart were accounts or to mattets per 7085.
Clara E. Glrtand ;
taining. to the execution of the
WITH US, AND START
3-1-6tc
DICIIMd
hu watkw~rys, set up for
dinner guests recently of Mr. trus t, not less than five days
Crow, trow &amp; Porter,
LOOKING.
troller.
Located
In
buslnen
prior to the date set for hearing . STEREO-Radio Combination,
and Mrs. Landon Smith.
dlslrlct, acr0ss from the A&amp;P Attorneys
Mr . and Mrs . Stanley
HELEN
L
TEAFORD,
Store ·· 1n Middleport. Floor (31 5. 6. 7, 31
lovely
WALNUT
finish,
lour
John C. Bacon
speed
Intermixed
changer,
4
Probate
Judge
12' • 14' • 24t ~
ASSOCIATE
!urn. Asking ... $20,1100 for all .
Saunders and three children of
Meigs County , Oh io
sptdker
sound
system,
9f'l-3325
m-2371
Lot with rarllot garage,
Columbus, visited over the t 3) 6. 11
Balance $63 .99. Use our
,
NOTICI
lneeds
roof 90 ft . frontage,
weekend wlth her parents, Mr.
budget terms. Cat! 992-7085.
The undoroltned witt ofl4f for
. __ _
NlCE 2-story home with lull' sullable tor large trailer or
3-Htc
and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel.
basement. 2 lots. new forced small business In business lilt, by IVCtlon, It tt" ~trtmJ&amp;ts
1111 Untied MothOdlsl Church
I1UIII
air furnace. NNr Pomeroy.' dl•trtct, across from the A&amp;P of
Mrs . Marilyn Hetzer and son ,
Par-lge If llltftvttlt, Ohio,
12
FT.
WIDE
frailer
with
air
Elementary
School.
Phone
•
Slore,
Middleport,
Ohio.
Tod , of Parkersburg visited
1M per-•11 rMt •uteto, on
COfldilionl ng, washer &amp; dryer
1220Washlngton lllvd.
992-7314 to-·
ff
Asklfll1 ••. $A,OOO.
·
March '· 1972, It 1:10 O'Clock
over the weekend wlth her
llelpn,Ohlo .
1J.7- c.
- $3,700: see Harold Johnson,
.!' .M . no pr-tv wllf 110 1011
Chesler, Ohio. ·
1-------;_--..J c:-----.,.---.,.-::=,.- · Letart Falls- 10 rooni houM to"'" htOhtot 'lchler ; r_.,tno
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
SIX ROOM ,ou~e. 133 Butt;,:;;;;i'l wllh bath, basement, fenced- to tilt Trua- 1111 rtthl to
3-5-61p
Schwarz.
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137 1 In lawn, lwo bull~lngs, fuel olt
oct tho htghut "" Jn lflt ,
---~--Wadsworth Drive Columbus ' heal, 5 lots, thrH of .thorn ovont It to d~ed tnsutfk:l.,.t.
:;ooD mi xed hoy . Phone Real Estate For Sale
lfwarf ltlko
"'-I ho
.;. · .
' tocaled on the river front,
HOUSE, 16Al lincoln Hel.ghts .. ""'o.
Wltkesvltte 669-ml.
P
ne
23.
7
-.
...
4.
selling
due
to
Ill
health,
$251100
Dane
Holtnltn, Sr.
Q- Why are Sou.tl• Ameri·
3-Htc Call Dann)' Thompson, 99221_-fl.. . :.c for alf. Home has two porches,
ltnhckler
---.,..-.,..---· _1_1._
can eagles called harpies?
2196.
.
Chlrlft Htnlloy
one
enclosed,
within
walking
A~The great harpy eagle
HITIII lrtnnon
:~ BEDROOM \l .ndele rr.oblte --,.,.,-----~_:7...:.:
· 18-llc BU ILDINC lots In Branchwood distance of school.
Tr01tta,
was named for the harpies
home, 11,., ba:hs en choke
Subdlvlston
at
Rock
Springs;
R
otdtvltlo
Circuit
ot
HOUSE
In
Long
Bottom
,
ph.;ne
or Greek m y tholo ·gy. be·
I Nttd Llillngs for Farms 1nd
ren ial lot . Herman Bullnger ,
U~tled M~thOdlst Church'
T.
P.
water.
9Bl-3529.
.
phone
992-2789.
lieved to be half-wuman .
992,5570.
.
3-t-121c Homos. Also Handle Ront1ls. (3) 3, 5. 6, 7, •• 5t
__:_:
1-28-tlc
3-5-61p
half-bird.

WANT£0!

Y-tiTY

Carrlen For
MASON
ancl
HARTFORD
The
Sentinel

B&amp;W HEATING en

EXTERMINATION

EXPERT·

-~pent

'5.55 c.,_
.

- - - --

..

..

......,.,.....
.., :
: ..
•. :a:-r·

tFOI-lL'I •E!IGau.L"
axJLD HAVE SUPNIVED
'iO.JR APPLE PIE
LJ:lt..iG ENoi.JGH 10
HAVE MARRIED
'r'OU--

-AA'-SIGI-t!-AH
WOUI.DOF HAD A

Pito.IP. 0' 1¥11-lTS.~

.

"THESE VtTAMINi ~ TH'
jjfl:irATiST, FUPPSY! GtVi" Y"
NEW P•p, NI!W STRiiNIO'TH!

--.-----

IIMV GUeS'I',,UIICI
X C:.O.N'T G&amp;T 'TH' CAP
0"~

FIRST A ~LEN11NE5
0\RD.... ANO NOW
Fl.O'M:Rel! WHO CAN
MY llt)I51"ERI0tJ&amp;

-----

ADMIRER 6Ei'

•

CLELAND
REALTY

------

------

By Mrs. Evelyu Brlcklea
Sunday School attendance at
the United Methodist Olurch
waa 53 and offering $17.83.
Worship attendance waa 34 and
the offering was $56.15.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Darst of
Long Bottom and Mr. and Mrs .
Norman McCain, Eastern,
were . Sunday guesta of Mrs.
Ethel Stout.
Those callong on Gerald
Violet were Mr. and Mrs.
Dorsel Miller, Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Brlckles, John Arbaugh, Russell Mollohan,
Martin Mollahan, all of Tuppers Plains, and Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Perry of Shade. Mr. VIolet
is recovering from a badly
sprained ankle.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Justis,
and the two young chUdren,
Mary Louise and Olrislina
Ri~s of Mr . and Mrs. David
Riggs of Vienna were Sunday
visitors of Mrs. Leota Massar
of Eastern.
Mrs. Marvin Walker ·and
daughter Ruthie spent the
weekend at Columbus.
Mrs. Ronald Golden and
daughter of Athens spent the
weekend here with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Way Clark.
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence
Nichols spent Sunday with
their daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Hendershot and son of
Lancaster and they also called
on their son, Rev . and Mrs.
Earl Nichols and son of Athens.Mr. and Mrs. Starllng
Massar and two children ,
Diana and Chuckle of Eastern
were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Marion Riggs oE Logan,
0.
.
Mrs. Myrtle
Boggess
celebrated her birthday Feb. 24
by going to her niece's, Mias
Emmaneal
Boggess
at
Parkersburg for dinner. Then
on Saturday her daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Garland Brannon of
Bridgeport, W. Va., came with
a lovely cake and gifts and also
her aon, Wllltam Boggess of
Huntington came with gil"'.
They had a nice dinner for her
at her home.
Juanita Spencer of Chester
callect on Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Brlckles Saturday afternoon.
) Mr. and Mrs. Richard Carns
family of Sandyvllle,
Va ..
· Mr. and Mrs . Fritz Goebel
and family returned home
• • from a vacaUon in Florida.

and

197t VOLKSWAGEN SQ. IIACK SEDAN
$249$
Local 1 owner. new car trade In, 13.000 miles, automatic
\

•

• ·

Sentinel Classifieds Get Actif)n! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results/
Wanted
...
.,.,
2
Apple Grove
Business
Services,
Of
For Sale.
Motor Co.
News, Events

-.

·•

Do tjOU
have brake!&gt;
on this :

cart, Joel?

.

..

-------

lJTl'LE ORPfiAN ANNIE

- -- - - -

...

Virgil B.

.·::
....
..·.

Teaford, Sr.

ILCraQY
hiU

5. Convex
molding
St."Don't- 1. Unsocla·
me"(well·
ble person
JmOWD
1. Cover
motto)
lt. Charily
D. Milcalcucue
late
11. Mils May.
U. Litvian
12. Banged In
U.-of
lt. "Kubla
hope
Khan"
DOWN
river
1. Come true U.Mortgage
2. Friend In :13. Freneh
Tampico
novellst
I. In contenU.
Expulsion
tion
Z5. Noptune's
t. Without
word a
·emblem

-------

Mason Area

- - - - --

News, Notes

_WMP0/1390.

_____

ON YOUR DIAL

."

...... -

...

·-

· ·~

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

,•

., .... """-. .. .... ... ..

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.. . . ....

~

..

Kl

K

I

H."The
Bambino"
1'1. Claretcolofed
II. Russian
city
zt. Byproduct
U.Colorldo
Indian
at. Blrd'a
neat ,.
U.Mexlcan

...
~IV!P

/tiT il-l! ~UA MAKER&amp;'
ANNUAl. &amp;HIN1716.
'

NOWII'I'IftPdllclrcWic" I
"ww tor... &amp;hlw,.llllll ww. •
f... _A 1UQulo..1 tllu..n rtm

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proap

J•••te.• DIITT
Aaowe.. Tldo

rx I I I I] rn
CAt

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AlliNG PlACID VIOI.IN

u111n in •.......U.. Mf1 - AIIIIIIION

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~

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tree

H. Subservient

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

WiDE ·

·- - - - - -

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source

- - -- - - -

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.

ITHEN~]

H1vin1

-------

We talk to JOU
like a. persOri.

I K j II

"- .J1

Opium

- - - -- -

MOBILE unuES

Ing
30. Beat the
helm
31. Fauna's
partner
32. Harbor
craft
n . Maleor
female ·
nickname

·
+-~-r~~
1rD_l~PA_UN~~~~--~
I" 11 ·1 V'
ilr

-

MIWR

zt. Insinuat-

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

-----Far

RUIFT

NORTH!Ft&gt;l CA&gt;JADA., E~Y t.JINO,S AI
I:JEAR&amp;~T !1!.1!~011·~

A X Y D.L BAA X R
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
Uled for the three L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. Single letters.
I)IOIIropbea, the lencth and fonnatlon of the words &amp;t"f all
hlnll. Each day the code !etten are different.

WOOL15TOCK JU5T RlTIJ«N£1)

FROM TKE OTHER EKP OF

"THE 006HOIJSE

CRYPTOQUOTJIS
BVF QVSACYFKQ SZ L "'SKKSIFK LKF
LCILRQ L CJ.BBCF QBKLJUVBFK BVLP
BVSQF
l'KPQB

SZ

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NFUULK .- WSKK.IQ

C.

Sllarda)"l Crnlooiuole: A FRIENDSHIP FOUNDED ON
BUSINESS IS BETTER THAN· A BUSINESS FOUNDED ON
FRIENDSHIP.-JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER
((} 11172 Kin., Fr ~'1tur~~ ~yndi("a lt•, lnc·.·,

'

\.

'"
&lt;

I

•

.

1

�•'

10- The DIUy Sentinel, Mlddlepori-Pomenly, 0., b-clll, II'IZ

Spruce Goose Perhaps·
Golden Bird to Hughes
LOS ANGELES ( UPI )- a year regluing (the wooden
Howard Hughes has gone on fuselage ) and changing en-

spending millions of dollars a gines."
year on the "Spruce Goose" The costa of houslng and ·
the stra~ge, giant flying boat · rnalntalnlng the huge plane are
he built of wood and put into deducted fr!lll the Income of a
storage~ quarter century ago Hughes corporation as "or-and deducts the expense dinary and necessary business
from his corporate Income for expenses," Dietrich said.
tax purposes, according to a . "How can these ordinary and
former top_ a1de.
necessary business ezpense8
Hughes may have more than be justified?" he asked.
$SO million invested in the
"It (the plane) l.s plywood, it
"Spruce Goose" by now, said . has straight wings, Internal
Noah Dietrich, who was a key combustion engines, Its eight
figure in the Hughes empire motors can't fly It more than
until he left in 1957.
200 miles per hour, compared
At that time, Dietrich said in with modem jets of cornan interivew Sunday, Hughes parable size with three or.four
"was spend~g $3 to $4 million jet engines flying 600 miles an

Artie Ebersbach Dies Sunday
Arthur (Artie) H. Ebersbach, 79, of 342 South Sixth
Ave., Middleport, died Sunday
morning at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mr . Ebersbach had been
engaged in the sales and
servicing of business machines
many years. He was a member
of Drew Webster Post 39,

Mrs. Smithson
Died SWlday
LETART, W. Va. - Mrs.
Eleanora L. Smithson, 65,
Letart Route 2, died Sunday
evening at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Mrs. Smithson was born July
27, 1906at Mt. Sterling, Ky., the
daughter of the late Marshall
and Jenny Ballard SteWart.
She was a member of the
Asbury United Methodist
Church at Letart and the
American Legion Auxiliary at
Point Pleasant.
Surviving are an aunt,
Amanda Ballard, Winchester,
Ky.; Pat and Kelly Perrine,
who made their home with
Mrs. Smithson-for a number of
years, and several cousins.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p. m. Wednesday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. Achsah Miller officiating. Burial wiJI be in
Forest Hills Cemetery at Flat
Rock, W. Va. Friends may call
at the funeral home from
Tuesday afternoon until time of
services.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight&amp; Tuosd.ly
~rchU7

Walt Disney's
THE LADY AND
THE TRAMP
(Technicolorl
Disney Fea1urette:

Wet Bock Hound
Disney Cartoon :

Tiger Trouble
Donald's V•cation
Swim Dog , Swim
SHOW START$7 P.M.

Dixie's Colmer
Retiring from

Power .Base

First RolUld of

Play Tonight

Lenten Seroice
Wednesday at

8 in Pomeroy

There are places for saving, and places for bor·
rowing, and places lor getting financial advice,
and so on. Bu1 why run all around, when we
have every service you need in one handy
place? Bank here . "Where Everything's At! "

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive-In. Window Is

Open 9 a.m. lo 7 p.m., (Cootlnuously).
$20,100 MaxlmllDllnsuranee
For Ead! Depositor

I

r

ews•• zn
(Continued from Page 1)
.
'·nearly half the blacu saMples were aplnst sueh bu&amp;q, the
magazine reported, altllough it said there were too few blacks
surveyed to provide a reliable statistical sampling.

hour.
· "No elqM!I'Imenta. are ever
condliCted with it. It 1.s never
out of the hangar, I don't
consider tbls an ordinary or
necesaary btlllneu expense.
"Jets came In 12 years ago.
How can )'Oil jtlltlfy spending
money on a wooden airplane
with piston engines? '' he
osked .
Hughes bullt the. plane,
approximately the size of a
modern jumbo jet, aa part ci a
World War U plan to conslnict
enormous flying boata tbat
could transport a batalllon of
troops to a fighting front In a
single trip, avoiding the danger
of enemy submarines.
The plane was not finished
~mtil after the war however,
and at a cost mUU0111 of dollars
more than the government had
budgeted. ·Hughes personally
piloted the plane on Ita one
short flight, after a stormy
congresslooal hearing In which
crltlca said the plane could not
fly. Hughes vowed to leave the
country forever If It wouldn't.
Hughes was at the controlllln
1947 when the plane roared
through the waves ln Los
Angeles habor, lifted about 70
feet In the air for a mile and
settled back ln the water.
Then the plane was tallied
into a 20-etory high hangar, and
has never been out of It slnce.

American Legion, Pomeroy.
Surviving are his wife,
Edith ; a son, Charles Arthur
Ebersbach, Philadelphia; a
stepdaughter, Linda Atkinson,
Middleport; a granddaughter,
Susan Ebersbach,
Philadelphia; a sister, Mrs.
Carrie M. Neutzling, Pomeroy;
and a brother, Elmer, of Polnt
Pleasant.
Besides hi~ parents, Peter
and Emma Bentz Ehersbach,
he was preceded in death by six
brothers, W. H., Adam, Albert
H., Jacob, Joseph, and
Charles, and two sisters, Kate
and Ann Ebersbach. •
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Rev. W. H. Perrin officiating.
Members of Drew Webster
Post have been asked by Edgar
Vanlnwagen to attend se~Wices
and conduct the graveside
rites. Friends may call at the
WASHINGTON ( UPI)
funeral home anytime.
Rep. Wllllam M. Colmer, D·
Miss ., who has used his
chairmanship of the House
Rules Committee as a power
baae for House conservatives,
today
announced · his
retirement.
His decision not to seek reThe first round of play in the
Fifth Annual Meigs Girls' election Ia expected to end an
Invitational
Basketball era during which the powerful
Tourney will get underway this committee often opposed
evening at 5 p. m. with liberal Democratic adSouthern going against ministration policies, and
Wahama. At 7 p.m. Logan wiJI somelinles fo~~&amp;ht the House
leadership Itself.
play Kyger Creek.
"There muat be an end to all
Tuesday at 5, Gallipolis will
things,
Including my service in
play Alexander and BelPre
plays NelsonviUe York at 7 p. the Congress," said Colmer, 32,
who will complete hta 20th
m.
Friday at 6 p. m. Athens will House term next January.
play the winner of the "Moreover, after nearly 40
Gallipolis - Alexander game years I desire to spend some
and at 8 p. m. Meigs wiU play time with my family."
Colmer's probable successor
the winner of the SouthemWahama game. All games are would be Rep. Ray J. Madden,
D-Ind., a liberal who likely
at Meigs High School.
would restore the committee to
its historic role as an arm of
House majority leadership
TO PLAN BANQUET
Plans for the annual policy.
basketball · banquet will be
completed at a meeting of the
Southern . Local Athletic
Boosters at 7:3D tonight at the
high school in Racine.

The Bank that
Puts it All Together

•

Pomeroy's community
Lenten service wiD beat 8p. rn.
Wednesday at the St. Paul
Lutheran Church, 231 East
Second St.
This will be the third Wednesday community service
with two more to follow and a
noon to 3p. m. service on Good
Friday.
This Wednesday the service
will include a Lenten drama,
"From Here to There" by
members and guests of the host
congregation. The cast will
include Mrs. Lydia Groth, Mrs.
Ullian Moore, Mn. Jennifer
Anderson , Donald Diener, Jeff
Ridgway and Robert Elberfeld . The drama will be given
in conjunction with the Lenten
sermonette, "He Pointed the
Way" by the host pastor, the
Rev. Arthur C. Lund.
The Lenten drama was
written by the Rev. W. A.
Poovey who is a professor of
Homolitics at Wartburg
Seminary, ~buque, Ia. The
drama comes from his hook,
"What Did Jesua Do" and is
designed to enUven faith and
increase perSOilallnvolvernent
in Lenten worship. The public
is invited .

TEACHER DIES
GRANVILLE, Ohio (UP! )Funeral services will be held
here Wednesday for Ethel It.
Outland, 84, believed the first
woman college journalism
· teacher in the nation. A native
of Iowa, she taught journalism
at Cr,e College from 1913 to 1949
when sh• retired.

CLEVELAND - NICK J, MJLETI, who already owns two
)ror-ionalsporta teama here, conflnned today he has.reached
agreement with Cleveland lndlana.owner Wrnon S~er to buy
the team. The aa1e price was placed at "around $9 million" by a
spokesman for the club.
'
, ·
Miletl, owner of the National Basketball Association
Cavaliers and the American Hockey League Barons, said he and
stouffer would meet Wednesday In Sarasota, Fla., with
Arnerlean League President Joe Cronin and other club owners to
get flnal approval of the transaction.

'

Death 'Wll Passes 100
~

MAN, W. Va. (UP!) - With
five miles of the devasted
Buffalo Creek Valley still to be
searched, the death toll in West
Virginia's Rood disaster has
passed 100.
,
Ten bodies were found
Sunday, bringing the number
killed to 103.
The National Guard said 79
persons still were missing.

Col. William S. Maroney,
commander of National Guard
search teams, said 7D per cent
of the narrow, 18-rnile long
valley had been searched.
Fourteen small mining
conununlties In the valley were.
devastated Feb. 26 when a coal
waste dam collapsed and
unleashed a 3D-foot wall of
water.

Ann Searles of Dayton is Dead
Mrs. Asel (Ann) Searles, 47,
a resident of Dayton and formerly of Middleport, died
unexpectedly around 8: 3D p.m.,
Saturday while bowling with
friends In Dayton.
She was the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Price, formerly of.
Middleport who now reside in
Florida .
TWO RUNS MADE
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call to the Arthur
Ebersbach residence at 9:47
p.m. Saturday. Mr. Ebersbach,
who was having difficulty
breathing, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he died Sunday morning. At 5:54a.m. Monday, the
squad was called for Mrs. Ben
Merritt on Turkey Run Road,
near Cheshire. Mrs. Merritt,
who was ill, was taken to the
Holzer Medical Center.

She is survived by one son,
Ed, stationed with the armed
forces in Germany, and one
daughter, Becky, at home.
Brothers surviving are
Lewis, Donald, Roxie and
Larry. Two sisters survive,
Juanita Johnson and Wilma
Ward.
Funeral services will be held
1 p.m., Wednesday at the
Morton Funeral Home, 139
South Dixie Drive, Vandalia,
Ohio. Burial will be in the
Dayton area . Friends may can
at the funeral home between 35 and 7-9 p.m., Tuesday.
CIRCLE TO MEET
The Eleanor Circle of the
Heath United Methodist
Church in Middleport will meet
at 7: 3D p. m. Thursday at the
home of Mrs. S. T. Smith with
Mrs . John Krawsczyn as
assisting hostess.

Alleged $40.0,000 Deal
Cloud on.Kleindienst
By United Preso illlenultlonal
Mayor Jbhn V. Lindsay of
New York urged the Senate
&amp;lnday to reject the appointment of Richard Klel!ldlenst as .
atlotney general .because the
International Telephone &amp;
Telegraph flap has · cast a
"cloud over .ihe Justice
Department."
Llndaay, stumping in Jacksonville, Fla., in his campaign
for
the
Democratic
Presidentilll nomination, said
the cloud was spawned by a
purported memo by an m
lobbytat ltnking the dropplng of
an antitrust suit against I'lT
with a t4QO,ooo contribution to
the Republlcan National
Convl!!ltion this summer.
Otherwise, the eyes of the
polltlcal world locu.!ed on the
tiny New England state of New
.Hampshire, where frontrunning Democratic ~andldate
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of
Maine squares off against four .
challengers Tuesday in the
first-in-the-nation presidential
trlmary.
Five candidates debated on
television Sunday night in what
turned out to be a low-keyed
effort to pick up lltli hour
suonort.
In other ?Olitical developmenta:
-Rep. Wilbur D. Mills
fmally became a full-fledged
candidate for the Democratic
nomination.
-Florida Gov . Reubtn
Askew said George _C. Wallace
would win the Sunshine State's
Democratic primary, but
would remain a candidate with
limited appeal.
-And Nixon's republican
opponents, Repa. John M. Ashbrook and Paul N. McCloskey,
contended the President has
abandoned his party,
Despite a heavy rain, Sen.
Henry M. Jackson joined 2,000
persons at a Tampa, Fla.
barbeque at which he attacked
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey's

stand on llualng. "In Texas he
sayo !It's against busing imd
then he comes to Florida and
tella you he's for it."
Hwnpbrey )icked up the
endol'lmltlltl ci three major
Florida dally newspapersToday In Coco!!, ihe Daytona
Beach News.Jo!irnal and .the
St. Petersburg Independent.
Mills went to New , Harnpshire, .where he has spent
$84,000 ln radio-TV adverUalng
on a write-In campaign, to
declare for the first time tbat
certab:dv be and I am

••

...'
..
•

'
BY KA11E CROW
During a question and answer period, he pointed
out .that tne
The Meigs M\ne will generate an amual payroll of $21 mining incmtry ~short on talent. Thl.s brolll!ht up the question of
million, will employ 2,600 persons when completed, and be the · tralnlng ofpersonnel.
safest mine in the. coW!ty:
It was noted that George Hargraves, Meigs Local
. G. W. Wallwork, general mine superintendent, Southern SUperintendent of Schools, and Meigs Local School Board
Ohio Coal Company, told ao persons at the appreciation dinner President Frank W. Porter, are wor'king toward instituting a
Monday night at the Meigs Inn the Meigs Mine, which l.s expected JI'Ogramat Meigs High School to train the students and adults in
.to .be ln operation 3o yeara, has coal reserves sufficient to mining and engineering.
troduce 7'hmlllion tons a year (a total of 230 mUUon Ulns).
It was noted that mines need highly skilled persoMel as
Thl!re will be two mines. Number One wiU be located a mile mining today Ia different from in the past.
east·of Salem .Center and Number Two 0ne mOe east of Point
Wallworkspokeofeoal as "black gold." The coal will be sent
Rock. The larger portion of the mine wiD be loeated in Meigs from underground on a conveyor belt to the Gavin Plant,
County, a lesser part in Vtrlton, and a still smaller section In Wallwork explained.
Ga111a County;_Wallwork said.
J. T. Dowd, project manager, Gavin Power Project,
Hiring at the mine will begin this sununer, wUh 50 men American Electric Power Co., reported on .the overaiJ project.
employed each month, building to 500 employees by the summer
In AprU of 1971 earth movement at Gavln was begun. ln July
of 1973. By 1976, the manpower level of 2 600 men will. be reached ' of 1971 foundation work was started. The stack boiler wiD be
Wallwork said.
completed by July with the first unit to be completed by 1m and
Wallwork polnled out that "Perhaps Meigs County was not Unit Two the following year.
aware of the Impact the mine wiD have on ita economy."
Do'Yd pointed out that cooling towers will prevent hot water
He used colored slides to explain the mine operation. The from being ejected in the river. A stack 1,100 feet high, 100 feet
wage acale for a miner ,!ill be SU&amp; per hour. The
shorter than the Empire State building, wiJJ be erected.
salary per year, 22D days, will tqtal $9,040. The figure dill not
Extensive landscaping and trealment of water before it is
Include overtime employment, Wallwork explained.
·
ejected into streams wiJJ be part of the environmental control,
Of the total men employed, ID pet. wiD be above groWld, with Dowd said. It will be a ''most sophisticated system," DQwd ob2,3QD men worklng below. Wallwork gave an in-depth ouUine of served.
the mining operation.
·
Water at the Meigs Mine wiD be supplied by the Leading

now a candldale lor President'
of the United Slltel."
.
Ashbr,ook an~ McCloskeY,
agreed on CBS-TV's ''Face the
NaUon," that Nb;on has "al{
010111 totallr abandoned the,
_principles ct the Republlcan'
'

party!'

.

.

On a statewide · televtaton '

debate, Sen. George McGovern
aci!Qaed Mualtle of being _a
·lsteAcomer In hl.s o~tton to
the VIetnam war. Muakle said
the opportunity to change an
opinion was a stroll&amp; point in
the American ~tical system.

.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

MEN'S DOUBLE KNIT SLACKS
Regular cut slacks and flare leg styles. Solid
colors and smart new patterns. Si~es 29 to 42
waist.
j

-------

••
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•

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~

JACK KERR, PRESIDENT of the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce, gave the welcoming address. The "Information
Dinner" at the Meigs Inn was sponsored by lhe Pomeroy
Chamber.

Now You Know

Weather

. In the early 19th cenfurY,
New York_City's night watch,
the forerunner _of the police
· department, were ordered to
guard the Potter's Field
(municipal cemetery) to
prevent medical students from
steallng corpses.

.. . ..

'

A miner has the same goals In life as anyone else and
Meigs County residents will have 1o share with others whal
has been theirs alone for a good many years, Sleeoland
advised.
"We have one chance to make an Impression. This is a
decisive item in having a family move into Meigs County,"
Steenland said.
(Continued on page ID)

mlnlrnwn

Visit Elberfelds Mens Departl)'lent on the 1st
floor and see our fine selection of

,

Creek Water System. Dowd further 'explained that !he first
treference on hiring personnel is to hire local 'people. However, it
will be necessary to go to other areas to recruit if the quota
cannot be met in Meigs County, Dowd noted , in referring to
personnel at the mine. When the Gavin Plant is comple!ed,
operation pei'SOilllel wiJJ total 225 persons, Dowd noted.
Peter R. Steenland, aSsistant vice president and executive
assistant to tbe president, spoke on community development.
He said' a consulting firm on anticipated housing sites had
been retained by the power company. It is making a study of
bousing currently available and eventually work with potential
developers to bring about required housing.
Steenland pointed out that no one should assume that the
demand for housing will come about automatically. Housing will
materialize in Meigs County when the demand arises.
"The question is, where wiD people want to Jive," Steenland
said. He noted the efforts of the regional planning commission
and that not many counties such as Meigs had the foresight to
agree that a great deal had wbe done.

Turning colder tonight,
rainshowers changing to snow
flurries central and south.
Lows in upper 30s and lower 40s
south. Cloudy, colder, chance
of snow north Wednesday.
Highs in tower 40s southeast.

Devoted To The lnter~u Of The Meigi·Mawn Area

VOL. XXIV NO. 230

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PHONE 992-2156

· TU~SDAY, MARCH 7, 1972

TEN CENTS

Spy Suspect Murdered.
BELFAST (UP!) - LitUe
more·than a month ago Marcus
McCausland quit his captain's
post In Northern Ireland's
parttime defense regiment
because he "dldn 'I like the way
It was being run," frlenda said
today.
The bouild, hooded body of
McCausland, a Roman
Catholic and one of Ulster's
wealthiest landowners, was
found shot to death Saturday on
a snowy COW!try road outside
Londonderry.
He died, said the Irish
Republican Army (IRA) because he was a spy for the
Brittah army~ Catbollc who
had betrayed his own kind in
Northern Ireland's maze of
Intrigue and sectarian
bloodshed.
The politically-oriented
','official" IRA wing said
&amp;mday tbat McCausland, 39,
was kidnaped from his home at
Dreenagh, 15 miles east of
Londonderry,
then
interrogated for four hours
before gunmen pumped two
bullets Into his head.
"It was established through
Interrogation that he was
actually worklng for British
Intelligence,"
an
IRA
statement said.
Victim's Friends Disagree
But friends of McCausland,

descendant of one of Northern
Ireland's oldest plantation
families with an aoce.try ·
dating to the 17th Century, aaid
he . resigned from the
paramilitary Ulster Defense
Regiment (UDR) in J81lllary.
"He said he didn't like the
way it was being run," said one
friend, who decllned to giw his
name. "He said be disagreed
with too many things~
matter of c_onscience-tp
continue."
In_another development, a
statement in Dublin by the
mA's militant "Provisional"
wing blamed Protestant extreml.sta for Saturday 's explosion
in a packed Belfast restaurant
which killed two women and
maimed scores of others.
Doctors called the blast at
Abercorn's restaurant the
"bloodiest, most awful" single
act of violence since strife
between Ulster's Catholic minority and Protestant majority
flared into bloodshed · in
August, 1969.
"Of course this is the work of
the IRA-who else?" a police
spokesman said afterwards.
Police and troops rounded up .

.... A'l'f!!:ND~'i'Dl..J&gt;INNI:R.•AT MEIGS·INN·- IMI to.rtgbt, -- ·••
Jaclt Kerr, Pomeroy Chamber President; John Reece, PUblic Mfalrs Coordinator of the Ohio Power Company; .Peter R. Steentand, assistant vice
tresldent and executive alliltant to the president; Joe P. Guts, ~xecuUve

•

ews •• zn

Men's and Young Men's Sport Belts
Fine group of the popular wide bells In sizes 24 walstto 38
waist . Plus reversible belts In black-tan, black-while,
black -rod.
·
.

BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
NEW YORK - EMBITI'ERED BY Miss Vicky's wl.sh for a
modelmg career and dist11181ing not her but ''the devil in us all,"
singer Tiny Tim says he has asked that the marriage telecast to
35 mUUon people by Johnny Carson be dl.ssolved by a judge.
Nonetheless, the ukelele -strumming, falsetto-voiced slriger said
Monday, ''the wedding ring wiU always stay on my finger. I'll
always love her ... !love her more now than when I met her. She
is still my sweet angel."
Tiny Tim, who married the former Victoria Budinger on the
Johnny Carson show Dec. 17, 1969, before a national television
audience, said in a telephone interview that he has asked for a
legal separation.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

SAIGON - A U. S. NAVY PHANTOM shot down a stowmoving MIG17 jet in a five-minute dogfight over North Vietnam
Monday, but Radio Hanoi said Communist gunners shot down
two U. S. planeS" with antiaircraft fire.
The dogfight, whid! one U. S. source said was the largest in
Indochina since the cutback in the air war In 1968, took place over
~an Lang Airfield midway between Hanoi and the
DemilitariZO!I Zone (DMZ). The U. S. refused to say how many
U.S. planes took part in the fight but a spokesman said F4s, ASs
and A7s participated. Informed SOil1'Cel !laid about eight U. S.
planes were involved -half of them F4fighter-bombers.

'•
It never
•
•
ra1ns ma
Norge dryer•••

AUTOS DAMAGED
Two cars were damaged and
one driver was cited to court as
the result of an accident on
West Main St., at 11:ID a .m.
Saturday. Pomeroy police said
a car driven by Richard Fetty,
17, Cheshire, struck the rear of
a car driven by Richard Smith,
2D, Middleport, which had
stopped to make a left turn .
Damage was heavy to the
Fetty car and medium to
Smith's. Fetty was cited to
juvenUe court on an assured
clear distance charge.
. CARROLL DIES
BACORATON, Fla. (UPI)Gene Carroll, a pioneer in
Cleveland, television and host
of one of the longest continuing
locat television programs In
the United States, died Sunday
at his winter home here of a
heart attack. He was 75.
Carroll had been at WEWSTV in Cleveland since 19-18.

16 IRA suapecta In the Belfast'
area and seized a quantl1y of
arms and ammnniUon.
The IR"A 'dented responsibility for the blast.
Pomeroy Mardi Stopped
In Pomeroy, 50 rnlles west of
Belfast, civil rights marchers
Sunday stoned police and
Brltl.sh troops in a twice-foiled
attempt to defy a government
ban on marches.
Pollee and troops stopped the
estimated 1,000 marchers at a
barricade and forced them
back into Pomeroy. They had ·
intended to walk seven miles to
Carrlckrnore.
·

MAN, ·W. VA. - A NUMBER OF miner's organizations,
dissatisfied with the makeup of Gov. Arch Moore's "ari hoc"
commission to investigate West Virginia's flood disaster, said
Monday they would conduct their own probe lnUI the Feb. 26
.tragedy. Five more bodies were found ln the flood..-avaged
valley Monda1, raising the death toll to 108.
The Natiohal Guard said 57 persons still were unaccoW!ted
for. The ftrst National Guard troops began pulling out of the
valley Monday night, turning over recllvery and ctean-&lt;1p
(Continued on page IDl

E
by FEDDERS

"Succeu hlngu on the ~bllity
to ••• a lab through once lt't
started."

Decorator knobs and hinges
can make old kitchen
cabinets look like new, and
they're easy to change tool
Come in and look at the large
set.octton we have at THE
POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK COMPANY. II we
haven't got just tho slyle you
want, the " FRIENDLY
ONES" will order It for you

Veterans Memorial Rosptlal
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Mildred Bissell, Freda
Turley, Rodney Hill, Ithamer
Neal, Sy!via ZwiiJing, Darlene
Justis, Ruth !lood, Myron
MiiJer, Loshia Mitch~ll .
SUNDAY DJ;JCHARGES - . The Dept. Store of Building
191$,
Richard G:.rfield, Carol Baker. -SiR&lt;t
.

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK 00.
.. ........................

Brief groundbreaking
ceremonies for .the stx'th Ohio
store of The Jones Boys - a
combined discount store and
supermarket using 18,DDD
square feet of building space on Pomeroy's West Main St.
were held this morning.
The store and supermarket
wlll be located In lo1•er
Pomeroy on the site which has
been occupied most recently by
Dannie's Trailer Sales, the
Dayts Ice and Storage
Building, aDd several homes. It
wtU be slrnilar to the Jones
Boys Store In Gallipoll.s at Pine
St. . .
The store, which expects to
employ 40 persons, will have
parking for 100 cars. II Is ex-

.95

air flow, low temperature system help pro-

tong fabric lile. For permanent press you
lust "dry and wear" ... with Norge.
Select a fabric heal . .. set thet.imer lor regular o.r permanent press fabrics . . . and
you're In command of the "sunshine · lor
every load. Model shown- LDE1818A in
electric. Gas models also available.

ING-ELS FURNITURE

992-2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

Success Expected
WASHINGTON (UPI)--Senate Republican leader Hugh
Scott predicted today Richard
G. .Kleindienst would be confirmed as attorney general
despite charges the Justice
Department settled an antitrust suit in exchange for

State Regent to
Be Here Friday
Mrs. Norman H. Dement,
Defiance, state regent of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution, will be guest
speaker at the annual charter
day luncheon of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter
Friday at I p.m. at Grace
Episcopal Parish House.
Special guests for the luncheon
will be the Good Citizens from
the three Meigs County high
schools selected through a
testing program on citizenship,

$400,1100 to help underwrite the
Republican National Convention .
Scott said the Senate
Judiciary Committee In-

Goeglein Hwt
Taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital at 1:58 p.m. Monday ·
was Horner Goeglein, 92,
Pomeroy, Injured when · he
stepped into a moving truck on
West Maln St., Pomeroy.
Police said Mr. Goegletn,
apparently intendlng to cross
the street, stepped Into the
truck's side mirror. He suffered lacerations of the hand
and shoulder and possible
internal injuries. Driver of-the
truck was Eugene Wyatt, 84,
Cheahlre. Goegtein was admitted· to the hospital for
treatment and observation. No
charges will be !Ued ,against
the driver, police ·said.

-

vestigation of the case involving the International
Telephone an_d Telegr_aph
Corp. was "basiCally stalling"
by D¢mocratlc crltlca of the
admintatratlon.
Scott talked with neW811len at
the White House following a
two-hour meeting between
President
Nixon
.and
Republican congressional
leaders.
Scott noted wryly that It was
through queatlons asked by
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, )).
Mass., that the personal
physician of an I'lT lobbyist
trovlded testimony supporting
the admlnlatratlon's position
thet I'lT exercised no Improper
influence.
"I think Mr. Kleindienst will
be conflnned," Scott said.
Then, after a pause, he added,
"Hwe give Sen. KennedY more
time during the hearings to ask
more questl0111."

PETER R. STEENLAND, left, answered the bulk of the questions posed during the
question and answer session of the trogram held at the Meigs IM. F. A. Morrow, right,
presided during the question and answer session.

Junk ers GIVen 72 Hours
e

.

RACINE - Haclne village
residents are being given 72
hours to remove junk and
unlicensed motor vehicles
from village str~ets or see
them hauled away.
Racine council has approved
legl.slation for removal of the
wheels which have no license
plates or motors, or can't be
operated. Such vehicles parked
on town streets for 15 days or
longer will be removed by Ray
Proffitt, who has agreed to
take them for junk. They wiJI
be destroyed, but only if
Proffitt Is given perrnisaion by
the owner in writing.
Those
wishing
such
destruction of vehicles are to
contact Mayor Charles Pyles
or Clerk Mae Cleland,

·· .......,jO!II .. _

Ground Broken

Billowy breezes. moderate temperatures ,
pampering softness and freshness ... it's all
there in your new Norge dryer.
.

Giant I 8 pound capacity drum gives clothes
more room to tumble freely and billow dry.,
-Biggest 1B!I inch fan changes air inside
dryer every 3 seconds white 480 jet ports
gently billow clothes to reduce wrinkles. A
tO minute cool-down period lurther aids In
preventing heat-set wrinkles ... and the high

viceprestdtntef.Ohto,Pwil-; Jehn T.-Dowd~~-managti',Gaviii·Power .
Project, AiilerlcanEiectrlc; J. W; (Bill) iliOn; appointed plant manager of
Gavln Plant, Ohio Power, and Geilly W. Wallwork, general mine superintendent, Southern Ohio Coal.

MIDDL£PORT

I

1
·'•

peeled to be ope'ned this
swnrner. General construction
is by the Carter and Evans
Construction Co., Gallipolis.
The First Jackson Corp. Is
having the building constructed and Ia leasing it to The
Jones Boys. First Jackson
Corp. is owned by a group of
Gallta aild Jackson County
Investors whQ own other retaU
outlets In Ohio and W~st
Virginia.
Jones Boys opened its first
store four years ago In Waverly
Butler Shopping Center using
4,000 square feet of fioor space.
'!'he fllle Jones Boys Stores are
located In Morrow, New
Lexington, Waverly, Galltpolis
llld Jackson.

Fire Chief David Cleland has
met with council recently on
specifications l9r a new !Ire
truck . Council members
concluded that some federal
help may be avallable on such ·

New Bleachers
Are Considered
For Southern
The Southern Athletic
Boosters met Monday evening
at the high school with Billy
Hill, president, In charge. Mr.
Roher, representative from the
Standard Steel Bleacher
Division, Columbus, discussed
the possiblllty of Southern
getting new bleachers for the
football field on the visitors'
side. No decision was made.
It was aLso decided that a
new concession stand will be
built by the boosters this
summer at the football
stadium. •
It was announced that there
will be a basketball game at
the high school March H at 8
p.m. between the coaches of
the SV AC and the SEOAL. The
preliminary game of the
evening wt11 be at 6:30 p.m.
when the sixth grade of Racine
plays the sixth grade of
Syracuse.
·
The annual basketball
banquet will be potluck on
April8 at 6:30p.m. at the high
school.
.·

.·,)(.'.

I"'::. .. '

·Shower at Church
In Middleport

.

TAKING PART IN BRIEF groundbreaklng ceremonies
lor the new Jones Boys Discount Store and &amp;!po1rmarket in
Pomeroy's West Main St. Tuesday mornlng were, from the
left, Pomeroy Mayor William Baronidl; Middleport Mayor
John Zerkle; Robert Wiseman, vice presid,mtof Jones Boys ;
.
'

..

,,

'-

'

•
Jam.,. A. Sttmer, president of Jones Boys; Bernard Fultz,
Meigs Prosecuting Attorney and attorney for Jones Boys,
and Merrill Evans, representing Carter and Evans Construction Co., Gallipolis, general contracting firm on the new
store:

There will be a bouaehold
sbower at the First Baptist
Church In Middleport
Wednesday at 8 p.m. for the
Charles Sheets family whose
home and furnishings were
destroyed by fire this week.
There was no Insurance.

a purchase, and that fire contracts with townships must be
raised. The village currently
.receives $3DD from each
township contract.
The clerk, Mrs. Cleland, has
agreed to take charge of
l.ssulng trash pickup cards at a
fee of $2 each for lour pickups
each month. Anyone wishing to
buy cards for a year's period or
Jess can do so through Mrs.
Cleland. Trash pickup is each
Tuesday In town .
Racine Council members are
Grace Roush, Marie Roush,
Avice Frecker, Glenn Rizer, '
Linley Hart and Larry Wolfe.

31 Projects
unsupported .
The Ohio Department of
Natural Resources is temporarily withholding final
support for federal flood
control projects in Ohio
totaling more than $250 million,
Natural Resources Director
William B. Nye said today.
Nye said the · 31 projects,
proposed by the U. S. Army
Corps of Engineers, but not yet
under construction, could not
receive the final support of his .
department because the local
communities that would be
benefitted do not have
adequate
flood
plan
regulations.
Area protection projects
affected include Cheshire,
Gallia County, along the Ohio
River , $566 ,DOO; . Galli polls,
GaJUa County , along th~ Ohio
River, $3,509,000; . Pomeroy,
Meigs County, along the Ohio
River, $16,800,0DD ; Racine,
Meigll,County, along the river,
$1,11D,DDD'; Syracuse, Meigs
County, along the Ohio Rivet,
$1 ,3?r.,ore.

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