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•
16 - 1 ne Dailv Sentinel. Middl•nort-Pomeroy ,0., Jan. 10, 1973

________________
_ __
.
.

•

.

Dems live it up
.

JOHN LOHSE, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Lohse,
Pomeroy,

was

re cently

initiated Into PI Mu Epsilon,
mathematics honorary at
Ohio State University.
Ccrmonles were held In
Cockins Hall mathematics
lounge with Dr. Richard M.
Wilson of the mathematics
department as speaker. A
junior at Ohio State, Lohse Is
en roiled In the coilege of arts
and sciences majoring in
Mathematics. He was on the
dean 's list for the fail
quarter with a four polo!
average.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio House and Senate Tuesday completed their orga'ruzalion for the IIOth session, and
Democrats in the lower chamber began enjoying their newfound majority.
.The Democrats, controlling
the House by 511-41, drafted and
passed new rules and beat back
a number of Republican attempts to liberalize them and
tack on minority benefits.
Committee assignments
were completed· in both the
House and Senab!, and state
Rep. Richard G. Reichel, RMassillon, was sworn in as a
state senator, succeeding
Ralph S. Regula, R-Navarre,
who resigned to go to Congress.
Among the bills introduced
were a Republican proposal to
lower the age of. adulthood,
and Gov. John J. Giiligun's proposal to appropriate
$92.3 million worth of federal
revenue-sharing funds for Ohio
through next June 30.
House rules, drafb!d by the
Democrats in control for the
first time in a dozen years,
were virtually the same as •

Point loses thriller
When it comes to hooking up in barn burners, Point Pleasant
and Hurrica ne take-a back seat to none.
1.1si night, down in Redskins territory, they staged another
one. with Hurricane pulling it out, 75-72.
In their last three meetings, a total of seven points has
decided ali the games, with the Redskins grabbing them ail.
It cam e down to the last six~en seconds last night,
Hurricane leading by one, 72-73, and the Big Blacks called time.
They had three cracks at that ail important final bucket, missed
all three, and Kinsman Donahoe was fouled.
The little Redskin, a 5-9 junior, stepped to the line with one
second left and dropped in two tries to seal Hurricane's second
win of the season. They have lost four.
Donahoe, an excellent playmaker, shared scoring honors
with Point's Dave Stricklen, each lad pumping horne 23.
Fact 1s, each team placed four boys in dou ~ie figures.
Behind Stricklen, Ma l ~ Waldie and Charlie Chambers wham•ned In 16 apiece, and Marvin Moore arched in 12. Steve Kayser
mopped it up with five.

Falcons losers to Spencer 63-55
Five Spencer Wildcat cagers
hit in double figures Tuesday
night while handing the visiting
Wahama White Falcons a 63-55
defeat.
Though Wahama 's 6-5 Roger

Dingey led ali scorers with 30
poinl,&lt;;, the Falcons trailed
their hosts at the end of each
period .
Wahama
8201512-55
Spencer
1422817-63

MEIGS· THEATRE

WAHAMA (55) .

Tonighl &amp; Thursday
January 10-11

Dingery 14 ( 2-4) 30, Lambert
6 (IJ.&lt;J) 12, GiUand 2 ( 3--5) 7,
Lewis 1 (0.1) 2, Mitchell! (IJ.&lt;J)
2, Buzzard I (IJ.&lt;J) 2. Totals 25-5-

NOT OPEN

Friday &amp; Saturday
January 1~- ll

55.
SPENCER (63) .

THE HARD RIDE
(Techni color)

Robert Fulle r
Sher ry Bain

. (G P )

STAR SPANGLED
. GIRL

CTechnicolor )

· Woods7(t-2) 15, Titus3 (4-5)
10, Camp 7 (0.0 ) 14, Garrett 2
(8-15) 12, Lemon I (IJ.&lt;J ) 2,
Flesher 4 (2-3) 10. Totals 24-1563.

Sanely Dun can
Ton)" Robert s

iGPl
S~ow

Starts 7 p.m.

U/tde1.teiver
'l' hel'l''s no nt)ed to pla y

c u tc h~u p

in the money ·game.

Not wlwn the Wi dc·Awakc Bank an d the United
~ hlll.':;

'

1-'o!ilnl ~c l' v i cc will ' work to put yo u ahead for

kc l' p ~.

.J ust make it u regu lar practirc to hit u ma il box
wi th a bank-by- ma il deposit for t he widc-uwuk e hank .
There's no need to play ca tc h-up in the money game. Not
when the Wi de-Awake Bank and the United Stales Poslal
Se r vice wil l wor k fo put you ahead for keeps.
Just make ita regular pract ice to hit a mail box; with a
bank-by-mai l deposit for the wide-awa ke bank . ·
_ To~o any of your ba nk ing nee ds at any hour , just stop
m and p1ck up a Bank -by-Mail envelope . And loo k for your
favo r ite wi de-receiver .

"!Pide-awake btmkitlg-by-~ail
makes 1t c:::;;-..._3'
all so easv.

Farmers Bank &amp;
POMEROY, OHIO

those which governed the last
session.
"The Republicans had lots of
experience in writing i"ules to
the advantage of the
majority, " R~p. Arthur R.
Wilkowski, D-Toledo said,
we didn't see any reason to
change them much."
Amendments Tabled
The- GOP offered several
amendments, but each was
tabled by the Democrats, who
seemed to enjoy using the
tactic Republicans employed
on thei114Jroposals for a nwnber
of years.
One Republican amendment
would have required each bill
to be accompanied by a statementof financial impact on the
state treasury. Another would
have required that actions of
the Rules Committee be published, and a third would have
eliminated the provision that
committee meetings may be
closed by a tw&lt;&gt;-thirds vote of
the committee.
Sen. Stanlye J. Aronoff, RCincinnati, introduced a bill
lowering the age of adulthood
ffom 21 to lB years.
GENEROUS CHILDREN
ST. ALBANS, England
(UP!) - Mrs. Doris Coulson
'was so annoyed at the fact her
two sons, aged eight and five,
wanted to watch television ali
the time that she threatened to
send it back to the store. So
when two men came to the
Coulson home Tuesday and
sa1d they wanted the set, the
boys told them to take it.
11
•
1 was stuhned/ ' said Mrs.
-Coulson when she reported the
theft to police .

Holzer Medical ·Center
(Discharges 1
(Jan. 5, 6, 7)
Dorothy Mitchell, Cleo
Caudill, Bonnie GermaQ,
Claudette Pinkerman, Virgil
Roush, Mrs. John Pappas and
son, Ruth Shook, Stella
Manring, Sandra Napper,
Jessie Herbert, Aaron Boothe,
Malcom Conley, Oral Barnette,
Clifford
Grady ,
Kevin
Higgenbotham, Nellie Watson,
Steve W~ll, Marjorie Price,
Wyoma MCGhee, Louise
Morrison, Jeffery Mills,
Delbert Lawson ; Lily Kerr,
Marybelie Evans, Lonnie
Hodge, Patrick Fragale ,
Ral)dolph Fraley, Christopher
Kimmel, Naida Carter, Squire
Young, Geraldine Cochran,
Clyde Riegel, Mildred Collins,
Mrs. Roger Smith and son,
Michael Drummond, Judith
Brown, Kent Shawver, Nellie
Eblin, Mrs. Russell Olexa and
daughb!r, Lola Filson, Mrs.
Harry Roush and daughter,
Mrs. · Michael Gardner and
daughter, Charlottie Long,
Lorenzo · Woyan, Marjorie
Davis, Mrs. Dewe.)'. Burton and
son , Ammazi Cheatwood,
Louise Burton, Mrs. Ronnie
Boggs and son, Lillian Rotzenberg , Danny Wilburn,
David Castor, Mary Pullins,
Judith Tomacelli, Charles
Withee, Russell Slayton,
Dorothy ·Sheets, Mrs. Darrell
Sayre and son, Marjorie
Rutherford, Randall Roush,
Greta Riffle , Jeffrey Ray,
Cecil Queen, Jr., Kimberly
Polcyn, Bruce Masters, Pearl
Little, Dencil Hoffman, Tina
Garber, Lillie Fulks, Phillip
Fisher, Richard Carter, Dennis
Adams.
Birth
Mrs. Earl Rowe, daughter,
Jackson, Jan. 5.

Co.

SYMPATHY

1\ f lJLL
1\fRVICE

!lANK

Membe r of Federal Rese r ve System
On Fr idays Our Driv e-In Window is Open' a .m . to 7 p.m-.
( Con ti nuou sl y).
s2 o,ooo MaX imum Insurance for Each Depositor

FlOWERS
• BASKETS
VASES
'SPRAYS
t

Dudley's Florist
59 N. Second St.

Middleport. 0.

.

.

Paris talk
\

The package, which cleared
the Senate last year but was
buried in a Hoilse conunittee,
would allow 18-lo-20 year olds
to sign contracts, go into debt,
marry without parental coJ&gt;o
sent, sue and be sued.
But it woui)l not permit them
to drink alcoholic beverages, a
fea lure which was included in
the Senate-passed bill last
year.
A variety of bills were intr&lt;&gt;duced seeking to give working
couples a break on the state
income tax by allowing husbands aild wives to file joint returns whether or not they do so
with their federal return.
Rep. John D. Thompson, DCleveland, _submitted the pr&lt;&gt;posal which seemed to have the
best chance of clearing the
House, while Republican Sens.
Paul R. Matis of Westlake and
Robert J. Carts of Elyria pr&lt;&gt;posed the same thing in the
Senate.
Revenue Losses
Gov. John J. Gilligan has
pointed out it would cost the
state $90 million in revenue
losses to give tax breaks to
working couples, and earlier in
the day he seemed to discourage such a proposal.
"There are arguments tO be
made on both sides," the governor said. "This .is a tax break
given by the federal gQvernment, but that doesn't mean it
has to be done at the state level. If the General Assembly
wants to give the same breaks,
they will have to come up with
the $90 million to replace the
lost revenues."
Gilligan's revenue-sharing
plans were offered in the House
by Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker, DBourneville.

Amberger named
• • .. h d
COIDIDlSSlOD ea
Wallace W. Amberger of
near Chester, was named
president of the Meigs County
Soldiers and Sailors Relief
Commission at the group's
annual organizational session
Monday. Oris F. Knopp ,
Racine, was named vice
president ~nd J. E. Denlson,.
Rutland, secrel&lt;!ry. Members
are Frank Clark, Hemlock
Grove, . and Paul Casci, Middleport. Glen A. Johnson is the
service officer.
TWO GIVEN AID
The Pomeroy E-R squad
answered a call to the county
children's home in Pomeroy at
3:41 p.m. Tuesday for Rose
Roseberry, a resident, who fell
down steps there. She was
taken to Vererans Memorial
Hospilal where she was admilled. At 9:iill a.m. Wednesday, the squad was called to
the Raymond Macomber
residence, Pomeroy Route 4
for Nellie Boring, ivho was ill.
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital
for
examination.

(Continued fl'C)lll Page 1)
contrary, ·on the American
side, there are emerging again
indications auguring badly for
the future."
The paper said that as late as
Jan. 5 Pl'esident Nixon repealed his determination to continue mining North Vietnamese
porta and bombing the coUntry.
The paper promised that North
-;,~.~·~" Vietnam was "full of detennl~
nation and .energy so that if
AMN RK;HARD L. DEAN Nixon continues the war, we
has compieteii" six weeks shall.continue the struggle... "
basic tralnlng at Lackland ' In Stockholm, the Swedish
Air Force Base, Texas. Broadcasting Corp. (SR) said
Following basic training he today there were indications
was transferred to the that Hanoi expects the Parill
Sheppard Air Base at peace talks to bceak down and
Wichita Falls, Tex., where U.S. bombings to resume
he completed a course in before the end of this week.
SR said Hanoi had requested ·
medical fundamentals. He Is
now stationed at the Brooks the Stockholm Coliference on
Air Force Base In Silo An- Vietnam, an organization of
tonio where be is tratnlog as writers, politicians and scienan aeromedical speciaUst. tists from various countries
He will then be sent to the K. critical of American policies in
I. Sawyer Air Base In , Vietnam, to send an internaMarquette, Mich. A 19'11 tional delegation of observers
A HUGE PILE OF well owr 100 discarded Chltstmu
graduate of Meigs High to the North Vietnamese
trees was recycled to this mulch In Pomeroy Tuesday by the
School, Airman Dean at- . capital in case the bombings
Bartlett
Tree Expert Co. at the viliage parking lot between
tended Asbury College in were resumed.
Mechanic St. and-&lt;Butiernut Ave. Receiving the first bag of
Hanoi underlined that the
Wilmore, Ky., before
mulch Tuesday were Mrs. John Terrell, left, and Mrs. Robert
delegation must arrive in
enlisting In the air force.
Lewis, right, members of the Winding Trail Garden Club
Hanoi by next Saturday at the
which
sponsored the recycling project with the cooperation of
latest, the radio said.
village officials. Looking on is Desmond Jeffers of the Bart.
"This may be interpre.ted as
lett
Co. Pomeroy residents can take containers and pick up
an indication that the North
some of the mulch free at the lot.
Vietnamese expect the talks to
break down and the bombings
to resume before the end of this
WEST COLUMBIA - Mrs. week," an SR commentator
Elsie M. Stewart, 64, died said.
(Continued from Page I)
Tuesday afternoon at her
The French Communist were repOrted in Germany near the end of World War II.
newspaper Humanite quoted
residence here.
M;rs. Stewart was born Nov. radio Hanoi as announcing the
NEW YORK- A24-CENT STAMP SOLD at auction Tuesday
30, 1908 in West Columbia, the establishment of new antiair- for $37,000. The siamp, one of the nation's first airmail stamp
daughter of the late John Mac craft units around Hanoi and issues, contained a printer's error. On it, .the airplane was
Stewart and Mrs. Lizzie Van Haiphong. If so, this would depicted upside down. The printing error occurred on one block
Maire Stewart of West correspond with a similar of 100 slamps.
buildup of antiaircraft
Colwnbia.
The stamp went to dealer Irwin Weinberg of Wilkes-Barre,
facilities
during
a
halt
in
U.S.
Surviving besides her
Pa. The se11er was the Robert A. Siegel auction galleries, which
mother are her husband, J. bombing above the 20th paid the world record auction price for a stamp in 1970 wheh it
Lawrence Stewart, a daughter, parallel between Oct. 23 and bought the one-cent 1856 Bitish Guiana stamp for $280,000.
Mrs. Barbara Thacker, Dec. 18.
The issue of whether South
Waynesboro, Va .; two sons,
WASHINGTON -THE SUPREME COURT threw out today
Lawrence M., Middleport, and Vietnam and North Vietnam a multimillion dollar judgment in favor of Trans World Air Unes
Kenneth J., of Pomeroy; a are two separate entities or (TWA) against industrialist Howard Hughes. and the Hughes
brother, Paul, of West parts of a single country is Tool Co. An award of $138million to TWA was originally ordered
Colun\bia; a sister, Mrs. Mary believed to be the major in 1963 by U.S. District Judge Charles M. Metzner of New York.
which Interest has been increasing the amount by abuut $900,000 a
Blessing, Point Pleasant, and stumbling block
prevented a cease-fire month.
five grandchildren.
Mrs. Stewart was a member agreement from being signed
Metzner entered the judgment when Hughes, who has not
of the West Columbia United before Chrislmas. The North appeared In public for many years, failed to show up-for the
Methodist Church many years. Vietnamese insist Vietnam is a proceedings. The a~unt w~ said \0 be..,\1! Jar~es_t .si!lllp, ..
Funeral services will be held . single country and have judgment ever awarded in a private case. TWA sued for treble
all :30 p.m. Friday at the West refused to relent to an damages under the Clayton Anti-Monopoly law on grou~ that
demand
for Hughes Tool Co. (TOOLCO) illegally used-its business with TWA
Columbia United Methodist American
Church with the Rev. James C. language in a peace agreement to establish itself as a supplier to other airlines.
Dempsey officiating. Burial stating that South Vietnam is a
SAIGON - U. S. MILITARY authorities said today warwill be in the Kirkland sovereign state.
An1ldditional touch of uncer- planes armed with guided "smart bombs" and conventional
Memorial Gardens, Point
Pleasant. Friends may call at tainty over the future status of explosives hit the North Vietnamese panhandle Tuesday night
the Foglesong Funeral Home the Paris negotiation came and early today in the heaviest raids in nearly seven weeks.
from 2to 4and from 7to 9p.m. when William J. Porter, head Authorities.also announced the loss of two aircraft and said eight
.
Thursday. The casket will be of the permanent ~egotiating Americans aboard them are missing.
mission,
·
left
for
Washington
North Vietnamese gunners firing from "one of the hot ·spots"
closed at the church.
to assume a high State of Communist antiaircraft concentrations shot down aU. s. Navy
Department post without any A6 Intruder fighrer-bomber today during a mission. Its two
announcement of his im- · crewmen were reported missing: In South Vietnam, six
LOCAL TEMPS
mediate replacement.
Americans were reported missing in the losa of a helicopter just
Temperature in downtown • Heyward Isham, Porter's south of the Demilitarized Zone separating the two Vietnams.
Pomeroy Wednesday at II a.m. deputy, is expected to head the The 'copter went down in bad weather Monday night and a twowas 23 degrees under sunny U.S. delegation at Thursday's day search was unscu~ul. U. S. sources said c...nmunist
skies.
.weekly meeting.
rockets may have shot ,it down.
.

'

. .

'

Died Tuesday

.

992-2635

TERMS

Middleport

'

All Models of ·Hoover
Sweepers Included
In This Sale . • •

grandmothers are Mrs. Cora
Christy, Pomeroy Route 3, and
Mrs. Elizabeth Young,
Rochester, Pa.
Mr. and Mrs. Smith have
anot11er son, James Carl, 9. Mr.
Smith is employed at Ohio
University, Athens. As winner
of the annual derby, the Smith
family will receive the
following prizes:
Heritage House, $9 gift
certificate; · Racine HomeNational Bank, $10 savings
account; Pomeroy Flower
Shop, baby theme planter;
Craw 's Steak House, meal for
the mother; Citizens National
(Continued on page 12)

er
WASHINGTON (UP!) Former White House consultant E. Howard Hunt Jr.
pleaded guilty today to all
charges against him in the
Watergate bugging trial. The
judge accepted the plea after
rejecting Hunt's effort to plead

guilty to only three counts.
plead guilty to conspiracy to
After accepting the second break into Democratic national
plea, U. S. District Judge John headquarters , actually
J. Sirica ordered Hunt held breaking into the Watergate
under $100,000 bond until a pre- · building office, and to listening
sentencing investigation is via bugging devices to
completed.
telephone conversations of
Hunt had initially· tried to some Democratic officials.

Afll!r Sirica refused to accept
that plea -omitting reference
to three other charges relating
to actually placing bugging
devices in the offices - Hunt
pleaded guilty to all six counts
of the indiclment against him.
Hunt's attorney, WU!iam 0.
Billman, pleaded with Sirico to
lower the $100,000 bond, saying
"!don't believe he will be able
to meet" the amount. He •sked
that it be lowered to " $25,~00 or,
at most, $50,000.
Sirica said, "! deny your
request and you can take it to
the court of appeals if you
want."
The possibility the case
would be expanded beyond the
THis AMERICAN BUfFAi.b IS getting a lot of attention
simple Cl'lmlnai counts inat the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Jones, Pine Grove: This
By United Press lnterualfonal
volved in a break-in last "June
and another buffalo, both females, were purchased in the
NEW YORK -THE NEW YORK CHAPTER of Sigma Delta
17 apparently vanished when
West by Edward Frecker, Columbus businessman, who sent
Chi, the national journalism society, 'llsked President Nixon .
Hunt's
attorney,
with
them this week by truck to the Joneses. Frecker owns this
Wednesday to stop interfering with the press. George Bookman,
agreement of the prosecutor,
160-acre farm, the former home of Mr. and Mrs. Norman G.
pres}dent of the New York chapter, charged in a telegram to the
successfully argued against
Rose. The buffalo are quartered in a building but wili be
President that the administration "has done nothing to protect
Slrica's suggestion that for
turned
out to pasture in the spring. One of the two animals is
the rights of professional journalism. Indeed, if anything, it has
Hunt to bave his guilty pleas
about half grown. This one is full grown, and expecting.
encourage~ inrerference with professional· journalism," Bookaccepted, he explain "how you
man said.
got into this cobspiracy."
SDX members at a meeting at the Overseas Press Club
Hunt did admit under
unanimoUsly passed a resolution saying: "We respectfully
Sirica's questioning that ·he
request that the administration and others in govenunenl defend
ELECI'ED TO FIF'l'H TERM -Bill Hill, seated, was elected to his fifth term as president
was guilty of each count and
the rights of working journalists as they are embodied in the lsi
of the Southern Athletic Boosters Association Tuesday night. Other officers elected were, back
committed the violations
Amendment to the Constitution and which you are duty bound to
row, 1-r, Beverly Codner, secretary, Herb White, vice-president, Martha Dudding, treasurer,
"knowingly and intentionally
enforce."
and Dortha Salser, reporter.
·
and unlawfully."
Bittman argued against Hunt
PARIS-VIETNAM NEGOTlATORS held the biggest secret
The question whether or not water line before council.
answering the question of how
meeting of their current peace talks today while simultaneously,
he became involved in ihe to Install a bigger warer line on ' However, bids must be sought
at the regular weekly session, the Viet Cong accused South
conspiracy on grounds the Vine St. was ·at least partially if such· a project would cost
Vietnam of preparing a major new offensive.
government plans to reopen a clarified Wednesday night by over $1,500, as it is indicated
Dinh Ba Thi, chief of the VietCong delegation at the weekly
grand jury investigation of the the Middleport Board of Public the Vine St. project would.
talks, also denounced any attempt to partition Vietnam. PreAffairs.
II is expected now that
political espionage.
conference statements by other delegation leaders, however,
Mr. and Mrs. James Brewer, Richard Gress of the Board of
Bittman said Hunt's answers
•
were markedly more moderate than In past weeks.
might prejudice his position in who have appeared before Public Affairs will lake up the
that investigation and tbat his Middiepartcouncilanumberof matter of a bigger water line
CINCINNATI - ABOUT 40 ELDERLY PERSONS met
answers might prejudice the times complaining about water on the street with the council
Wednesday ot organize a lobbying group to force politicians to
judge's own view regarding the pressure at their Vine St. home fire commltb!e.
listen to them. "Everybody else is organized - your younger
Projects totaling $504,000 will service applications will be single pairs of wires.
At rending were Mr. and Mrs.
other six defendants sliU ~!tended the meeting of the
people, your labor .unions - and they go to city council and be constructed in 1973 by limited to two-party in urban
Voice impulses are elec- standing trial.
board.
Brewer, Mayor Zerkle, board
wherever and get what they want," Charles Gibbs told the other General Telephone Co. of Ohio localities and no more than tronically converted to ~adlo
One bone of contention was a members Gress , James
39.
in its Meigs County exchange, five-party in rural areas. frequencies for transmission.
report that a review of minutes Brewington and Jack Hawley,
Louis Young, 77, named president of the new organization, the company announced today. "Gen~ral will limit their rural At the receiving end the
of the board indicated that in maintenance super·visor
noted that 74 per cent of Ohioans over the age of 65 voted in the
frequencies
are
changed
back.
lines
to
four
parties,"
Krinn
Pomeroy, Letart Falls,
July, 1969, the Board of Public ._Harold Chase, and board clerk
last general election, while less than.haif the newly enfranchised Portland, Racine and Rutland added.
Affairs had agreed to Helen Shuler.
"The
use
of
'carrier'
systems
18-t&lt;&gt;-20 year olds did. ''That gives us senior power," he said.
.
Business
service
will
be
recommend to village council
· ceQtral offices serve 6, 708
tbat a bigger water line he
telephones in a 95.2-square- limited to one-party in towns reduces the need for installing
CHRISTMAS, FLA . - THEY RIDE IN BOATS and they look mile area of the county.
and tw&lt;&gt;-parly in rural areas. great quantities of expensive
Installed there.
cable
facilities,"
Krinn
said.
like fishermen, but the game they are af(er walks on l!"d a~d
lq
the
spring
technicians
will
"This is part of $1.7 million
However, Mayor John Zerkle
makes jUicy sirloin steaks . Cattle rustling, Florida style, has budgeted for the next three begin isntailing more call- "In the long run, this helps
said last night that village
taken.li new twist. · ·
records, before he became
years in this area," said switching equipment in the keep down the cost of providing
WASHINGTON (UP!) - mayor, do not show such a
In the swanips of the St. Johns River, hidtlen by cabbage Kenley Krinn, commercial Pomeroy central office. telephone service." Additional
palms, scrub pine and palmetto, rustlers riding airboats and manager at Athens. Six major Te_rminals for 200 phone carrier equipment, lines and President Nixon today asked . recommendation was made.
packing high-powered rifles are slaughtering beef cattle like projects costing $317,000 will numbers and 400 more trunks wlll be put in all area Congress to extend beyond
Eric Chambers spoke on
Mayor Zerkle also obserVed
April30his authority to control that the board does not need to "Project Hope" in which he is
poachers once went after alligators. "There are more cattle provide additional cable and customer lines will be ready central, offices.
These exchanges are a part wages and prices although he · take the installation of a new associated, to the Pomeroybeing stolen today tban ever In the history of the world," said Jay associated equipment in all for service by mid-summer.
Hebert executive secretary of the Orange County Cattlemen's exchange areas.
Interexchange trunks (calling of General's Athens district plans to ease the restraints
Middleport Lions
Club
·'
somewhat
in
the
next
phase
of
which
serl'es
52,401
relephones
Association.
paths)
to
area
exchanges
also
following
its
noon
luncheon
at
"Emphasis is on upgrading
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
his
anti-inflation
program.
in
portions
of
Athens,
Fairfield,
will
be
added
to
keep
pace
with
the Meigs Inn Wednesday.
party-line service," Krlnn
Highs in the 30&amp; and low 40s
The President, who once
. WASHINGTON - IT'S SAFER TO WORK in one of .noted. "Ali U!iephone com- increasing communications Hocking, Jackson, Meigs,
Chambers said Project Hope
America's coal mines than tO drive a car on the highway, ac- .panies ha.ve until the end of needs .
Morgan and Vinton counties. ruled out controls but later and lows in the teens .trains physically handicapped
Saturday; In the 20s Sunday
cording to the U.S. Bureau of Mines. Statistics for 1972 show that
Many calling paths are Capital additions for the entire accepted them as a temporary ·
people to become taxpayers
1~76 to comply with new
and 'Monday. A chance of
the fatality rate for accidents by coal miners was.0.56 per-million minimum service . slandrards established by using "carrier'.' district will total $3.5 mlliion 'measure, has decided they
through a p~ogram designed to
rain or snow Sunday or
manhours almost half the rare It was two years-ago before the set by the ' Publ_ic Utilities systems. Such systems enable this year. The company is must be retained if the nation
leach
them skills iil several
'
Monday.
'
hopes
to
avoid
another
round
of
federal coal mine health and safety law went mto effect.
spending
a
record
$47.3
million
many conversations to be
fields of endeavor. Funded by
Commission of, Ohio."
increasing prices.
And the 0.56 rate compares favorably to an 9.8 rate for highstatewide.
carried
simultaneously
over
the Bureau of Vocational
At that time new residential
.
Oflicials said Phase Ill of the
'i\lay deaths. "It is incredible to think that in just two years of
Rehabilitation, participantS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
economic control program to
:tomplete enforcement of the law ... the tide is completely turned
are
referred from .a welfare
ADMITTED
Nellie
be unveiled today would relax Boring, Pomeroy;' Gladys operations, by other agencies
and more people Ill"" kiUed per manhour along the highway than
the restraints on profit Goulding, New Haven; James or by personal references.
"hlle mining coal," siad Donald P. Schlick, deputy director of
margtns which businessmen Edwards, Middleport; Eva
the Bureau of Mines for health aiKI safety.
·
Not only are these people
complained are unfair and Shaffet, Racine; Eulonda contacted and provided
SAIGON-u.s. WARPLANES STEPPED up their attacks
As a convenience to can- filed by 4 p.m. on Feb. 7.
will be made. The two whose unworkable. Rent controls also Haley, Gypsy, W. Va.; Evelyn training but the final step is to
On North Vietnam's panhandle for the eighth consecutive daY. dldales for public office m Terms of four council terms expire are Charles. are expected to be phased out. Montgomery, Langsville; help them secure employment.
Under the Phase II system ~uby Erb, Pomeroy; Marlena He urged club members to try
'today while Communist· attacks· in the South fell to one of the
Pomeroy and Middleport members in each town wlli ,Legar and Bob · Hysell. In
lowest points in nine months, military spokesmen said.
Villages, the Meigs · County expire this year in Pomeroy, Middleport\ the term of one which ·has been in effect since Rockhold, Reedsville; Clayton some of the trainees in their
1n the ,Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh, rockets si1muned ' Board , of Elections is: main- Mrs : Elma Russell, Don member of the board of puqllc the 9&lt;klay wage-price freeze Tippie, Syracuse; · Rosa businssses . Both men ar d
Into the National Assembly grounds today and sent leg~lators · tainlng offi~e hours ffom 1 to 4 Collins, Ralph Werry and Lou affairs expires, that of James ended Nov. 19, 1971, busine'!S- Greene, Hartford; Gale Wolfe, women are accepted in t.,c
men have been permitted to Pomeroy, and Carl Stili; Jr. , program.
streaming in panic from the building. Two persons were
p.m., Monday through Friday. Poulin, and in !&gt;liddleport, Brewington.
PI!SS
cost increase&amp; along to Middleport.
seriously wounded in the attack Hanoi's official People's Army . . Those interested.in filing for ,those of Dave Ohlinger, Dick
In Pomeroy, the term of Mrs.
•
During the meeting presided
daly newspaper cbarged today that llresldent Nixon W!IS . the May primaries may visit ~aughan ,- Jeane Morgan and Phyllis Hennessy, treasurer, their customers in the form of
DISCHA.RGED ...:. Doyle over by Don Pearch, president,
)ll'eparing to renew U.S. air ralds in the Hanoi-Haiphong area. . the office located in the Lawrence Stewart.
also expires, for w_hich ·higher prices provid~ they did _ Smales, Elmer Napper·, Jim Danner of The Daily ·
But there were np reports of strikes above the 1lllh Parallel up to Masonic Temple, Pomeroy.
In Pomeroy, nominations for 'nominations will be made at not increase their profit mar- Susanne Sprouse, Myrtle · Senllnel, presented the Uons
(Continued on page 12)
today.
Petitions of candidacy must'be the board of public affairs also the primary elections.
Robinson and Dixie Baldwin. information paper.

~~

Water line issue
partly clarified

Meigs phone exchange
•

gettmg Improvements

.

• Handi-Vac
• Swingette ..

.

Elections board hours set

• Portable

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
..

y_v_oL_.x_xv_·_N_O._I8_8_ _P_OM_E_RO_Y-_MI_DD_LE'-PO_RT_,_OH_IO_ _ _TH_U_RS_DA_;Y,_JA_N_UA_RY_I_I._I9_73_ _ _ _ _P_H_ON_E_99_2-_21_56_ _ _ _T_EN_C_EN_TS

.has a winner .
Roger C. Smith, Jr., seven
pound, one ounce son of Mr.
and Mrs. Roger C. Smith, Sr.,
Pomeroy Route 3, is the winner
of the annual ba6y derby held
by the Daily Sentinel with the
cooperation of merchants.
As the winner, the infant will
receive along with his parents
a number of prizes. The child
was born at 7:20 p. m. on
January 2 at the Holzer
Medical Center and is apparenUy the first child of 1973
born to Meigs County parents.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. James Calvin Smith and
Mr. and Mrs. Carl V. Pullins,
all of Pomeroy Route 3. Great-

The Interests Of The Meig5·~ruon Area

Project Hope
story told ro

Pomeroy Lions"

• Convertible

INGELS FURNITURE

y

en tine

Phase III
controls
wanted

•

.,

New bah derh

•

• Dia~A-Matic

FURNITURE ANDAPPLIANCE
DISCOUNTS ALL OVER THE STORE

Devoted To

•

.

-

,;'

, ·Mea)1While, Gilligan has a prediction of his own: "AI the end of
another two years, we're going to be in a leading position in many
areas of ~ervice."
·
·
AI the end of another two years, the governor will probably
already have run for reelection, and he has long-range plans for
what he would like to accomplish in a second term.
No Tax Hike Hinted
They would cost more money, and just as Gilligan is unwilling
to tamper with the mecha~isins of the income tax for the taxpayers' .benefit this year, he is reluctant to talk about a rat.! increase in future years.
-"In large measure," the governor said, "using the resources
we have now, we. can do the job the General Assembly has
assigned us to do. If you get into whole new ranges of things like
overhauling our systems of higher education and health care,
and if people say 'we want a whole new system' it may, just may,
require substantial new expenditures.
"If people say 'we are content with the way things are' we
would go on indefmirely wlth.the present level of spending. "
While waiting for things to shake down, Gilligan is thinking
(Continued on p~ge 12)

•

a1 y

ROGER SMITH JR. and MOM .

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Save Now On
Hoover Floor. Cleaners

January Clearance
In Full Swing!

.-. I

News . • • in Briefs

'

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharged
Denver
Brown, .Gallipolis ; Eunice
Rollins, Leon; Mrs. Charles
Pearson, Point Pleasant;
Lloyd Hili, Athens: Terry
Nance, Glenwood; Barbara
Lamm, Gallipolis; Richard
Patterson, -· Henderson;
Elizabeth Dunkel, Columbus;
Vickie Ann Cooper, Point
· Pleasant.

•

Elsie Stewart

Shop Thursday 9:30 to 5 pm
Open Both Friday and Saturday 9:30,to 9 pm

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED- Roy Johnson,
Long Bottom; Betty Hawley,
Middleport; Rose Roseberry,
Pomeroy; Jeffrey Musser,
Pomeroy; Bernice Hook ,
Shade, and Susanna Sprouse,
Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Ada ·Clark,
Richard Tatrerson, Georgia
Ervin, Charles Tennant and
Ruth Duerr.

'

EDITOR'S NOTE: Gov. John J, Gilligan today passed the time ~ince World War IT," the governor said. "The changes
halfway poinllu his four-year tenn as Ohio's chief executive. we've been able to bring about in the areas of mental health and ·
This analysis of where the. governor hl!ll been, where he Is now r.etardation are just .revolutionary. And we've done more in penal
and where he Is going was prepared by UP! Stilte-h~use Reporter . reforni than was done in the previous 25 to 30 years - lasting
reforms, not just cosmetic touches."
Lee Leonard following an exclusfve Inter-view 'with GUIIgan.
But many of the stale programs made possible by the income
tax
have not yet geared up to full throttle. And all returns are not
By LEE LEONARD
yet in on the tax itself, despite a 2-1 ratification by the.vote;s last
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Gov. John J. Gilligap, having reached November.
Good Ship Adrift
.
the halfway mark of his four-year term, finds himself in the
So.
the
Good
Ship
Gilligan
is
adrift on a placid sea, trying to
position of a man who Is all dressedup with no place to go.
And Gilligan, inaugurated two years ago today, is in no hurry keep busy ''bringing to bear modern business techniques to a $4
billion industry . with 50,000 emp,loyes," aud pressing for
to get there.
The governor's paramount achievement during his first two legisl~tive action on ethics, governmental reorganization and
'
·years, by his own evaluation, was the enactment of Ohio's flfst election reform.
It will be April before the administration really knows how
graduated personal income tax in December, 1971. '
much
the income tax is producing and whether programs should
"For the first time, it places the burden of taxation.on those
best able to pay, it puts Ohio on a sound financial footing and it be continued, cut or expanded.
The governor disagrees with forecasts of a massive surplus,
gives us tools for the future," Gilligan told United Press In"but if there is, the General Assembly will have the happy choice
ternational.
of
voting a CUtiiackin taxes or spending tl.!e money." ,
''Our public education is on a sound financial basis for the first

..

'

'

.--

�3- The Dally Sentmel Mtddleport Porn
eroy, OJ
U" ,, an. 11973
,I

-

'

•

~f

Patterson and Patrick

ttll ,lfll goHtnot ol Oluo .tnt! US scn.nor, W.mcn
llu·dmg "·"pushed mto l1.ttcr heyoml hts depth
by ll.my Dlllgh&lt;rty .11 the l.unous mcelfng 111 "th&lt;
smoke-hllcd llHJlll " .11 th e Bl.tkestone llotd (,ol
· ( 1h Ill Lox1l1dge ot M.t».tdll!sctts 1\.IS the 1 tee prt·stdmtt.ll nommee
I he lkmon.llll t1cke1 11 ,IS j.tmes M Cox, .tlso
.tq ( lh1o nc\1 sp.tpel puhhsher, .tnt~ I• r.tnkltn I)
Roosc1 dr , .1 person,thlc young 111.111 111th .1 fuwre
I he Democrats r.m .IS pro Wtlsonmen, !he Repuhhc.tns lo.tlctl .IS rerurn-to-norm.tlcy men, .md the
l{epubltc.tns 11 on hy .1 landslide
Prestdent ll .trdmg\ Cahtnet wntamed such dtsttngutshcd men .ts Ciurlcs I llugh~s, Ilcrbcrt
II&lt;Hll er, \ndt'C \1 Mellon .md Wtll ll.tys, bm t\\o
ol them , Secrcttry ot lntenor \lherr B 1-.tll .md
\ttorncy Cener.tl Daugherty, 11ould later blacken
the I I.mlmg \dnumstranon 11 tth thetr unconstitutional .md tllcgal dc.tlmgs 11 tth oil tyc&lt;Mms m cr the
lc.lSlng of teder.tl otl res en es
\It hough l'restdenr II.mhng had hts 1erstsm ot
\ndn\\ j.u.: kson's k1tdu:n t::.Ihmrt," WhiCh ITICt at
the " I lttk Crcen I louse" at 11125 K Street, .tnd
•tit hough gm ernmcnt t&lt;l10rs 11 ere bought and sold
there, there IS no n ulcnce that llardu1g 11 .ts pcrsoll.tlly 1m oh ed
In tact, Hardmg's XXI days m the Premlency
11 ere latrly producti1 e ones He fought tu shortm
the I 2-hour 1\orkd.ty m the steclmdustry, favortxl
and stgned tnto la11 mcre.tsed prutecttve t.mffs,
est.tbiJShed the Budget llure.tu .md called the
Waslungton ( onfcrence tor the Lumt.num ot
\ rm.unent m IIJ2 I
1\'e.tk m logiC, almost enttrcly 11 1thout upl ;fnng
1dc.tls, Warren Hardmg 11 as .1 people-centered PresIdent lie 11 ts fully .111.1re that he 11 as not .1 great
Prcstdent, .tnd he desper.ttcly \l.tntcd w he the best
lm ed one I o ach1e1 c these ego prups, llardmg
became the most tn\Ctcrate ye.ISaycr e1cr w occupy
the \Vh1te I louse
\ddrcssmg a press club dmner, PresHicnt Hardmg s;Jtd hts father once sa1d ,"V..trrcn, It's a good
thmg you 11asn't horn .1 gal '
11

'/ pi/Jhed h1111

IIIlO

the U 0/&lt;1

'

' llnllth ,, 1~1111 11 ho goes 111 on .1 p.m ol e1ghts
.md comes ou~111th .tees lull ,' Sen ll .utcn H.trdmg told .1 L1tet.uy Dtgcsr llpomr upon k .trnmg
he lud jUst 11011 the Rcpuhltcan nomm.ttlon tor
l'remlcnt 111 June, tno, at the Clucago Coltseum
Prestdcnt H.trd111g tdr anythtng hut lucky,
ho11e1e1 , a• he kft Washmgron thrce Junes l.net
on' a 1 oyagc ot understand111g '-hJS fin.1l one-th.n
11 ottld take htm across the wntlntnt, lor serullls
corruptton 1n the Veter.tn's Buteau had !teen dtsLOI ered, 111 o ol the Prest dent\ erontes had recently
(OITIITIJtted

swudc, .md th..:re

\\err onlt:n'i ot \\orsc

tO UHlll'

1\.trmt ll.mlmg had not 11anted to he President, thought he co uld he, or felt that he should
he Bur Ohm pohtlc,tl hoss Henry \1 Daugherty
sa11 111 the lug h.uubome, gen1al .111d malleabk
newspaper ed1tur and publtsher the qu&lt;ll1t1es ot .1
natural 1ote-gcttcr " I found h1m sunn111g hnnsclt,
ltkc a frog on a log, " Daugherty sa1d , ' .tnd I pushed
) um uno the 11 ater "
I hus 1 ~ \\as that, .titer parttsan hut other\\ tse
undtsttngutshcd ser\lces as state sen.ttor and ltcu-

"\Vhy'"

•

'Because you'd I&gt;&lt;: m the tamtly 11ay all the
lime You can't say no '
Hardmg's mtstrcss, :\ian Bntton, 11 rute that
shortly hdore hts de&lt;lth the Prestdent begged her
to keep thctr secret "Why, I \\ ould rather the, '
ll.mltng satd, 'than dtsappmnt my party "
\nxtety 01 cr hts and hts party's reputa(llm
undoubtnlly contrthmed to Warren Hardmg's
de.nh-as sudden .ts It 11as mystcnous-m a San
r r.tnctsco hotel room on \ug 1' 192 3' as hts \1 lfe,
the ta1thful but ott-betrayed "Duchess," sat by hts
bed rcadmg to h1m

&amp; THINGS

Generation Rap

Timely Quotes

Use Stayman to Find a Fit
.

,

NORTH
'411 J 109 7
.QJ2
• 105
"'AK104

11

East- West vulnerable
North

Pass
Pass

4.2"'

Pass

East South
INT.
Pass
Pass

- George F Kugler, attor
ney general of New Jersey, explamtng why the
Send $1 for JACOBY MODERN book
state would not mcrease
to "Wm at Brtdgt1" (c/o thrs newr
commuter substdtes to the
paper), PO Box 419, Rad1o C•tr
Central Rat/road of New
Stollen, N&lt;W York, N Y 10019
Jersey
Answer tomorrow

WEST
EAST
411K4
411863
.953
¥A1084r
.KQJ97
• 864
411862
.753
SOUTH (D)
411AQ52
.K76
• A32
.QJ9
West

m resp onse to your double
double What do you do now'

2.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

What Causes Bags
Under the Eyes?

Pass

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Openm~ lead- t K
Dear Dr. Lamb-Th1s may
not seem tmportant to you,
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby but 11 ts to me How can you
How do you fmd a 4 4 get rtd of bags under your
maJOr sutt ht after a no eyes' I've trted many
trump opemng '
thmgs What causes these'
You use the Stayman con- Dear Readcr- Dtrectly unventiOn There are almost as derneath the eyelid ts a
many form s of Stayman as small bag of fat As people
there are expert bridge play get Q)der, unless they have
ers, but they have thts m remamed very thm , thts bag
common The two club re- of fat mcreases m stze lead·
sponse to an opemng no mg to the typtcal baggy aptrump 1s ar!tf1ctal and fore peara nce that dtsturbs some
mg In tts most common people Of course, wtth the
form the no-trumper rebtds enlargement nf the bag of
two spades w1th four ot fat, the skm of the lower
more spades, two hearts eyelid ts stretched The only
wtth four or more hearts and saltsfactory way of correctfewer than four spades, and mg tlus pt oblem 1s by costwo dtamonds wtthout as mettc surgery
many as four cards 1n etther
An IOCISIOn IS made along
maJor sutt
the
rtm of the lower eyelid
Today's hand shows the
JUSt
at th~ base of the eyeStay man conventiOn at work
lashes
a little pressure
North wants to be 111 game beneathWtth
the eyeball, the bag
and wtth out a club conve n· of fat ts ltterally popped out
!ton would stmply JUmp tu and exc1sed The excess skm
three no-tt ump
ts then 1emoved and the mWest would open the km g CtSIOll sui ured It usually reof dtamonds and aflet losmg quu es sevetal months to rea spade fmcsse South would gam full not mal movement
wmd up down two t11cks and of the lower eyehd, smce the
com platmng about bad luck muscles normally assoctated
The Stayman convention wtth the eyeltd closure are
gtves North a chance to look attached to the skm m thts
for a spade f1t He btds two regiOn and are cut m the
clubs South goes to two course of the operahon
spades m response and
Tr~nsttory
accumulatiOn
North takes h1m to the spade
of
small
amounts
of flutd
game
wtll also ca use bags tempoSouth I o s e s the spade ranly 'flus ts mote promfmesse, but thts docs not men! 111 the mornmg and
stop htm from collec hng the usually dtsappeat s by noon
spade game
unless thet e ts an assoctated
(NEWSI'API:R ENTERPRISf ASSN I
medtcal problem
Dear Dr Lamb-My hus
band ts a fatthful reader ol
your column and would ltke
The baddmg has been
to
know thts H~ takes Vlt·
w.. t North East South amm
capsules and chews
3•
Dble
have told htm they
them
I
Pass
Pass
'
wtll
dtssolve
If he swallows
You, South, hold
them whole, and he wtll gel
¥AQ9875 .A32 "'KQ7 the same beneftt He can
What do yo u do now?
not accept that answer He
A- B1d s•~ clubs No guaran- chews any p11J or capsule
tee (MS With lhlS, bul ll fook:t and does not believe they
like a mlJhty good gamble
can dtssolve theqtselves, but
that they go undtgested
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of b1ddu1g ftve clubs, through your system Please
your partner has btd four spades explatn the truth

•z

5•

~

It would be cheaper to buy
each pass~nger a Volkswagen and send htm off to
work

Y P!ll'

By Helen and Sue Hottel
A Lift for 'Dad's Morale
o

Dear Rap:
Wbile my Dad IS still recovenng from the Christmas biDs, I
Utinktt'sa good tiDletotelleveryone howl feel about him
WHAT IS A FATHER?
AIaUter IS someone who tells you when he brags ab9ut you to
others, but cuts It In half so you don't get coocelted.
He teases you when he's Jzylng genUy to tell you something
unportant that means a lot tobolh of you.
He heSitates a little when lending you money even thoUj!h you
know he will
,
Though he doesn't need It, he remtnds you of the loan so you
won't think he forgot -and you 'II learn about paying debts
He asks about those of your fnends whom he Ukes, but never
puts down the ones he doesn't
He loves you to stay ]lome sometunes and watch TV wtth
bim.

He ruba your back when you ask, and teases you about
getting old.
·
He wears those freaky Utings you buy him even though
they're not his type.
He grows a mustache for you while on vacation, but shaves it
off later because Ute men at work are "stratght."
He sends you flowers on your birthday when he knows no one
else will - and leaves Ute card blank
He's the greatest guy m the whole world, and you know you
don't show your affection enough, so maybe Utls will tell him.CHEL

'

Dear Chel
It wiU, tt wiU 1 -RAP

+++

Rap:
I'm gomg around wtth this 19-year-old chick !love a lot, but
Ute problem IS she's a Jesus freak and I'm just the opposite
My frtends get stoned and they say some off-the-wall junk
about and to her Then HER friends preach to me because I do
grass and things.
My people are getting rougher and rougher on us and her
people are geUmg pusluer and pushier. Which way do I go'MIXEDUP
MU
That depends on whether you want to keep on domg gi'I!JIS
and things or (as your girl ought put tt) flnd some purpose In life
If she means more to you than your spaced-out friends, then
maybe you'll see that her way tsn't any more "freaky" than
Utetrs
Thts IS for sure. you can't I11IX two opposites, so someone's got
tn gtve Choose for yourself what you truly want, and don't let
anyone make the deciSion for you -Including me 1-SUE

+++
Mixed Up
Perhapa you could both gtve a liiUe If YOU quit drugs and
cool your present crowd, then your girl shoufd quiet down her
~'preachers.''

I gather she herself Isn't pushy about her religion, nor are
you mStstent that she choose your way of life So 11 appears your
fr1ends are the problem Let both sets know you'd apsrectate
their butting out. - HELEN

+++
WIN AT BRIDGE

.....• •..••.•,•••.., ...
»' .........,.,.,.,_.,.,......,.,., .-.;.-,......-..-..:.....:-.:.-,-:..-......................,..,
••••••,•••.,•••......
,.,.,.,,. ·:· •'.-.:".t.:o:o.®.

:.

PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY
•

(Adm1nostratoon March 4 1921-August 2, 1923)

.

·~·

2- !'he Datly Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0, Jan 11,1973

Twenty-n1nth Pres1dent Warren G Hardmg

.

BY PAUL CRABTREE '
I say Ibis not as a conlesston or an admlsston of lnunatur1ty,
but really, as a rather sroud statement
I read Mad Magazine Almost every Issue.
Desptte the pseu'do-6110bs who think that the publication wi'th
Ute mmdless, grinning face of Allred E Newnann on the cover Is
for kids, tt ISll't.
•
Mad cOIISlSienUy publlsbes some of the best sattre on sale
anywhere, In any mediwn, today. And It's been doing It, I suddenly realize, for 18 years and more
Television tsn't really very good at satire. "Laugh-In" was
the best srosram at heaping It out, before the wells of creativity
ran tJrit. "Sonny &amp; Cher" still have a btt now and then lha,t isn't
bad. "All m the Family" relies more on characterization than on
satke, per se.
Some of the specialized magazmes (and what kltid are there, .
any more?)do a clever bit now and then But Mad Is devoted to:l
debunking, ego-deflatmg, and some qutte creative bits of humor, •' l
month after month.
'
Sure, some of Ute stuff Is aimed squarely at the eleventb- •'
graders who srobably constitute 1ts largest single buymg bloc. ·
(College freshmen donnitortes rank second, I'd bet.) And even
that materialun't bad, usually .
But Mad Magazine also delivers some highly-reftned stuff,
which passes about etght miles over the heads of most of the kids.
Or, I should say, It would have passed over my head when I was
an eleventh-grader or college freshman.
·
rn tis early era, a lot of Ute articles were direct take-offs on
comic strips, early TV shows, and cherished American Institutions. Things haven't changed too much.
It still delivers shattering portrayals of the moVIes, TV and
newspaper features. But it's added a certain sophiStication
through Ute years
One of the most poignant and devastating arguments for the
envlrorunentalists popped up about three or four years ago. It
was a photo-essay, using the words of "Amertca the Beautiful"
as captions for ptctures that showed haw man has despoiled,
cluttered, polluted, and defaced this loveliest of all possible
countries
Such superb matertal isn't rare In Mad In fact, almost every
Issue has at least one article that soars above the study-ball level,
and bears a message as well as a chuckle (Mad, for example, Is
pointedly sreaching agalnatdrugs, but In a way Uta! doesn't turn
Ute kids off.)
Mad started out as a comic hook, published by a two-lime
loser The IaUter of present publisher William M. Games came
along too late to get In on lhe Superman-Captain Marvel golden
age of the comtc book, but had modest success wtth hiS early
lineup of publications In the Forbes
Then he tried tn educate the kids through comtcs, producing
a ltne of lnatructlonal and Biblical stories m com1c form. It
bombed. The elder Gaines died, and hu son -probably In
desperation -looked for somelhmg else He trted Mad -and Ute
rest Is history.
The beanung, moronic face of Allred E NewnaM wasn't In
the !at Issue of Mad, but he came along early on m tis history.
Today, he's better recognized by most people between !5 and 45
than Utelr own U S Senators -which IS probably just as well

+++

Television·Log ··"··

9

WORLD ALMANAC

L

I

Dear Reader-Ptlls are de
s)gned to be dtssolved tn the
dtgesttve tract The coatmg
on them, mcludmg vttamin
ptlls and capsules, IS usually
there to save you from hav
mg to expertence thetr ter
rtble taste Whtle It Isn't true
that medtcmes have to taste
awful to be effective, tt does
seem to be true that a lot of
good medtcmes taste pretty
bad, mcludmg some vltamm
preparatiOns Some ptlls are
coated wtth a matertal to
keep them from betng dts·
solved tn the stomach This
ts because the types of
chemicals m the pills mtght
be destroyed by the acid dt
gesttve JUices In the stom
ach, and 11 ts desired that
they be protected from thts
12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4 Password 6
unt1l they reach the Intestine
Local News to, News 13, Contact 8
'
whtch ts more alkaline
BY JACK O'IIRIAN
solely lo man and to his travels.
12 30 - 3 W's Game 3, 15, Search For Tomorrow a tO Split
These are called entertc
SPOKESMAN FOR A
"Thecoconutpabnlaofgreatlmportanceto
Second 6
•
coated ptlls or capsules
LOVELY BUNCH
man 1n the tropical areas where It grows. It 1 00- News3. All My Children 6, 13, Green Acres 10 ll's Your
Bet 8, Walch Your Child IS
'
There are some p1lls that
NE
•
vid food
don't dtssolve well 10 the dl·
W YORK (KFS) - If there s one man sro es
and drink, materials for clothing 1·30 - J Q1 A Mate~ 3, 4,15. Lei's Make A Deal6 13· As The
World Turns 8, 10
'
geshve tract and mtght pa~s 's done more for coconuts than Ute Marx and shelter, and has Uterally lluldreds of other
00
Days
of
Our
Lives
3,
4,
15,
Newl~ed Game 13 Mike
2
through wtthout adequate
others, It's Andrew Mackenzie Hay
uses. But aside from lhellll, the coconut Is of
Doug tass 6. Guiding Llghl 8, tO
'
'
absorphon Thts ts a resu Married tn Ute former Sharman Douglas
tremendous economic Importance. For In- 2 30-1Jac1ors3, 4, 15, Doling Game 13. Edge of Nigh18, tO
of faulty preparatto~, tf 11 Prmcess Margaret's great pal, Hay u one oft~ stance, tt Is estimated that about one-third of the 3 00 - Anol~er World 3, 4, 15, General Hospllal 6 13 Love
Spiendored Thing 8, 10 Dateline America 20 - ' '
should occur, and to my worlil'se..,..rtson coconuts London-born b 1 po~·'·tlon of Ute Phlllpplnes1either ,.._.,.,y or 3 30
- Relurn 1o Peylon Place 3, 4, 15, Secrel Storm a 10 Qle
knowledge no pharmlfceu..,..
··
u
.....,.
"""""
Life lo Live 6, 13, Book Beat
' '
t 1cal houses are mtenttonally now an American citizen, Hay Is definitely an indlrectiy, depends on the cocmut for 11a1
00Mr
Carloon
3.
Somerset
15,
Sesame
Sl
33,
Fllnlslones
4
makmg ptlls of thts type
Anthony Eden type ... but does he mingle with livelihood.
6, Love, American Slyle 13, Merv Griffin 4, Gilligan's Isle 8
Some p11Js should be New York's British colony'
"ln proper conditions, the tree wtllsrow to
Movie "The Prelty Girl" 10
'
chewed, but usually the d~"Why associate with Ute British here when a hei8/'t of 100feet and will produce 50 coconula 4 30 - I Love Lucy 6, Password 13, Merv Griffin 8 Andy
Grllfll~ 15, Daniel Boone i3, Peltlcoal Juncllon 3
tor will gtve you this lnstruc- there Is afar better selection In Great Britain'" or more a year for over 60 ~ars The principal
5 OOD-Misler Rogers 33, 20, Dick Van Dyke 15 Ponderosa 3 •
tton or they wtll be on the he says answering the question with a question products In International trade are copra,
anlei Boone 6
'
· ''
prescnptton, or It wtll be
:
5
30
Marshall
Dillon
15,
Elec
Co
33
,
Gomer
Pyle
13
on the bottle 'tf tt happens to .. Hays brother David was pediatrician for coconut oil, desiccated coconut, poonac, coir,
Dragnet 8, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
'
be sometl\mg you can buy Princess Margaret's children at ,the time he shell charcoal alld shell flour .
6.00S- News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15; NBC News 8, 13, Truf~ or Conseq 6
yourself •As an 1llustratton, marrted Sharman, whose father Is the former
"Copra Is simply the dried meat Of the
esame St. 20. Around Ihe Bend 33
·
many of the antacid tablets Ambassador to Ute Court of St. James's ... Hay coconut which Is broken up In chunkl, bagged, 6 30- NBC News 3, 4, 15, ABC News 6, CBS News 8 10 1
Dream of Jeannie 13; Lei's Travel 33
' '
are chewed so that they wtll prefers being the coconut ambassador
and shipped to lndustrilll areas arotmd the 1 00
~atc'sMyLine8,
Wild
Kingdom
13,
Trulhor
Conseq
3
provtde the most tmmedtate
.,
_....8ea 1 one lock 4, News 6, 10 , Saint 15. Elec Co 20, Folk
and effechve neutrahzmg
Coconut has been a most undiscovered world for the production of coconut oil, always
- .. ultar 33.
.
1
actton of the actd m • the natural health food," he says. "ln fact, during Iii demand because of Ita loog staHillty. The 7· 30- To Tell The Truth
6. Parent Game 10, BealT~e Clock 13
stomach I thmk tt's safe to World War If, Amencan boys taken prisoner by, residue that remalna after the oU 18 emacted Ia
Poodrter
Wagoner
3.
Young
Kildare 4; ll's Your Bel a'
H gepodge Lodge 10, WallDr.
Slreet This Week 33
'
say that your husband can the Japanese In the Philippines were able to calledpoonac,'whlchfintiJreatl,yuaeasfoodfor
8 00- Sanford &amp; SOil 3, 4, 15: Brady Bunch 6 13 · Mission
swallow hts vtlamm ptlls and survive on coconula. The nut has natural un- , dairy cattle and In feeds of other farm animals
Impossible&amp;, 10, Washington Week tn Review 20 3:i
other ptlls and feel assured
d1
1
..,
' · ""-"'
1a shredded Into ll)leCiflc' B 30Partridge Famlly6, 13, Wall Sf Week 20, u'111e People3
be will receive the full bene- saturate ats, natura sugar, sroteln, mlnenils u=ecaled cocomt
'15
1 '
ftt from them
and carbohydrates
cull and moled for candy, cake, and other
9 00 - Maslerplece T~ealre33. World Press 20, Circle 1 Fear
!HEWSPAm EHTIRPIIISI •SSH I
"The geographiC origins of the coconut ha\'1! SWeets. Coif ~ of hulk ftbers ~ Jn
3, 4, 15, ~oom 222 6, 13, Movies "Captain Eddle1· eq "T"
Court Jester" 10
'
ne
puzzled several generatiOIIB of botanists. It Is mall, rug£, yll'lt and twine."
~ntl your quetf•onr to Dr hmb
9
30-,30Minuleswlth20,
OddCouple6.13
now collSidered ahnost certain that the pabn
Hay's compariy, Calvert, Vavuseur II Co. 10 00- Ne'ws 20; Love, American Style 6, 13, Bany 1 3 15
m core ol tlus ntwspoper, P0 loA"
011 ' 4' '
Wake Up John ~
1551 Rod•o C•tr Stat1on, Hew YorA:, originated somewhere west and north of New Inc., IS a coDIJllOIIIty hnporlillg concern. Aa
N Y 10019 Foro copr ol Or L&lt;lmb't Guinea, perhaps In Malaya or In lndlll!eaia. coconut keynOte speaker at a recent conference t1 00- News3. 4. 6, 8,10, t3, 15
Jo~nny Carson 3, 4, 15, Jack Paar 6, Movies "Youn
boolfltt on balqnced d~tt1 Jtnd SO Although single coconula can be carrted (ong
1ti New York,' he .Oyildect' his rallying c:ry: 11 30Guns ot Texas" 8, "T~e Creature Walks Among Us" lOg
cents to the same Gddrerr attd at.l distances by the sea, 1t Is widely held that tlte
"Mara of lh'e Wilderness" 13
•
"From now 1111, I command you w lltlnk
lor "Bofonced 01et' brHJAiet
1
00Roller
Derby
4,
Movle"Portrallln
Terror"
10
dlssem1118tlon If the pahn can be attributed cocoout "
1 30- News 13,' 4

~

I Voi;;e-~l~ng Br'W~Y""l

1

I

-

.

\

1

1

1
1

&gt;

'

•
'
'
'

p

63-64
5
64-65
t
65-66
7
66-67
12
Totals 25

13
17
11
6
47

6~-68

17
16
9
8

6 -69
69-70
70·71
71-72
72'-73
Totals

2

4

10

~1

8
6

11

~1

4

65
1 ota1 l

(At M1dd1e·lort)

OPP

\-[

Sport Parade
.

.

8

2-T

~1~-T

disaster Nor ts tl a trtwnph At Mtddleport, wtth the smallest
enrollment of boys m the league to draw from, be was stxth
lwtce, etghlh once, and thtrd once, the lhtrd place fllllsb clearly
an achtevement beyond the norm m relation to scbool~ze
At Metgs l.ocal where boy enrollment falls roughly at Ute
average among the etght-member schools (some of them by now
larger by sddttional consolidations than before Metgs l.ocal's
consolidation for the 67-08 season) Marautler basketball success
after two seasons of tragedy also bas been average Wolfe teams
have had league f1mshes of ttemg for second, a fourth, a fifth and
ttemg for fourth In that order.
Many may conclude that is good enough
But that t:; contrary to the nature of basketball fans The
SEOAL basketball fan potnts to Waverly where a guy named
Hawhee has put his school's team on Ute Ohio athletic map year
after year And lhey pomt to Gallipolis where a young man
named Osborne has turned around basketball m JUSt three years
Both are AA schools And nobody m Metgs County ever wtll
forget a dapper fellow named Dtck Rettnn who came 1o Pomeroy
m 1956 wtlh the Panthers havtng set all kinds of records for most
stratght defeats over a ftve-year span The next year Rettnn had
hltle Pomeroy Htgh back up m tis glortous basketball tradition of
a Wlllller Furthermore, what Retton bwlt so qmckly contnbuted
to two more champ1onshtps followmg h1s departure (to Mansfteld
Madison)
...,
Meanwhtle, smce Mr. Wolfe has chosen to IDlprove his
sttuatton by restgnmg at Metgs after Ute basketball season, Ute
fans and student body can do nothmg better Ulan gtve the 72-73
Marauder varSity all posstble support. These boys are at 6-4 all
games and 3-3m the league, on the way to a WtMmg season They
are fun to watch m actwn Not btgas players of this sport go, !hey
have tndiVldual talent for the game We hope for them - and
Utetr coach -the best offortunes from here on out

whtch can get hot and score a
bundle On a couple of occaswns, Logan , bke Metgs, has
had ftve or more people m
double figures
Coach Scott Fttzgerald's
. ~1~~ Pl.:ea ~~ filsemor
center l!andy.ltierrts., the
second best held goal percentage shooter and fourth
leadtng rebounder m the
league Noms ts a returnmg
starter from last year's Logan

Pterce and 6-2 sophomore Jun
Kemper Jtm Whitcraft and
Ken Culbertson are the top
reserves
Coach
Carl
Wolfe's
Marauders on Ute other hand
Will start 5-9 semor caplstn Jtm
Boggs and 5-10 semor B1ll
Vaughan at guards ; 6-0 semor
Mtke Sayre and 5-10 semor
Andy Vaughan at forwards,
and 6-1 semor Btll Chaney at
center Rich Batley, 5-9 semor
ftve
guard, ts Ute stxth man
The other Logan starters are
Logan IS the lhtrd best fteld
Mttch Wrtghl and Jeff Camp- goal percentage shooter m the
bell at forwards and a couple of !•ague, hitting 453 Metgs,
hot-shot guards, 5-10 JUDtor Jtm

Phillies get first choice
NEW YORK (UPI) - Phila- player - second baseman
delphia, who gamed the nght to Bradley Stuart of Hagerstnwn,
make Ute first selection In Ute Md -San Diego selected Ute
draft for lhe dubtous dtstmc- ftrst of many pttchers--9-foot 4
Uon of having lhe worst record rtghthander Dave Yt;ehrm the majors last year, ptcked metster of La Grande, IU
Other pitchers selected by
Alan Bannister as Utetr No I
selection In the free agent Ute major league clubs for
thetr own constderatton
winter draft Wednesday
Banmster, a 21-year-old (subsequenl rounds In the
shortstop, was stgned Im- regular draft were for lhetr
mediately m Veterans Stadtum farm clubs) were James
m Philadelphia, and reJ101'tedly McCutchm of Levelland,
received a "subslanttafbonus" Texas, ptcked as a No 6 chotce
rumored mUte netghborhood of by Cleveland, Thomas Ford of
Ypsilanti, Mtchtgan, No 7 by
$100,000
Most teams placed a prerru- Montreal, Randy Srrulh of
wn on pttchers at the draft and Abyrd, Mo , Califorma 's choice
as a resull 13 hurlers were as No 8; Mtchael Kirkpatrick
selected m Ute opening round of Fatrless Hills, Pa , Ute nmth
After Texas chose Ute secopd pick, by Atlanta .. and No 10
Marttn Walker of Lamesa,
by Kansas Ctty
Tilt
Sallliltl Calif,
Also,
James Johnson off
DEVOTED TO THE
tNTERESTDP
Lonoke, Ark , No 13, by the
MIIIJ$-MASDN AREA
New
York Mets, Samuel
CHISTIR L TANNEHILL,
E ..c ld.
Moore of Jackaon, MISS , No.
IIO.UT HOEFLICH,
17,
by !As Angeles; Stephen
City Editor
PubllJhed dally excopl Trella of Anaheim, Calif , was
Saturdly bY The Ohio Vaitay
PuDltJhlng Company , 111 picked 20th, by Detroit,
Court St
Pomeroy , OhiO,
45769 auolneu Of!Jce Phone followed by Gary Lucas of
992 2156. Edllorlol Phone 992 Rtverslde, Calif., by Cln2157
Second clUJ postage paid at cmnati, Elmer Yelverton of
Pomaroy, Ohio
Wllmmgton, N C , by the
NIIIOnll advertlslnt
Chtcago
White Sox; Paul
nprtaentatlvt Bottlntlll·
Gallagher, Inc , 12 EU1 •2nd Nelson of Sacramento, Qilif ,
St, Ntw York Clly, Now York
Subtcripllon rates Dt · by Ptttsburgh, and Michael
livered by ctrrler whtrt Noms of San Franctsco, by the
lvtlltble 50 unts per wttk;

D11J

monlh It 7S By malt In OhiO
and w vo . One veer su 00.
Six months S7 25 Thrll
monthS u so Subacrlplloft
rict Includes SundtY TlmnIfNI.

Alan Bannister, the lop draft
choice In the winter baseball
draft, signed Wednesday with
the Philadelphia Fhlllles
shortly after bemg selected
Bannister, 21, a shortstop at
Arizona Slate last season, was
In PlllladelPIIa to si(!Jl his
contract, a Phillles spokesman
llld.

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

• 8

Fourth place at stake here Friday

PHILADELPHIA (UPI)

,.
1.
,..
,

6-T
3

boys
Mr Wolfe's 9-\-2-year record, as the table shows, ts not a

Thesday Headline Coach Carl Wolfe of the Marauders
restgns effective Ute end of the 1972-73 season
The accompanying chart tells the story of Carl Wolfe as
basketball coach at Mtddleport Htgh Schooll963 through the 6667 season, and at Me1gs Htgh School for Ute 67-68 season tn Ute
present Frldsy rught's game agalllSt Logan here completes the
ftrst half of Ute Southeastern Ohto League season Metgs at 3-3
wtll be a sltghtfavorlte to be 4-3 when that match~ past '
'
The cold, lifeless numbers that tell of wtns and losses, pomts
scorlld for and pomts scored agamst, and Ute annual standmgs
caMot even suggest the work, the effort, the dreams and hopes
- and the dtStllustonments - Utat retgned tn Middleport and
Meigs High dressmg rooms at Ute halftime and post game
ertltques of these 91&gt; basketball seasons
These 178 basketball games m playmg time only spanned
approxunately 266 hours m 91&gt; years a coach and his players of
necesstty put thetr fulures m alhleltcs on a short-tiDle fuse It
wouldn't be fatr except for Ute fact that Ute same condtltons, on
Ute averap: govern competing schX&gt;Is and teams.
ThiS I and everyone who has known Coach Wolfe knows he
works as hard at hts job as anyone could want He never took his
role as coach hghUy I lhmk he _was surprtsed year after year
when boys who were shooters and eager to play basketball m
grade school, as freshmen, and even as varsity reserves 1oo often
sroved average shots and tense and error.prone as JUntors and
semors m varsity action Or they chose tn gtve up basketball
altogether by tl)eir last year m school
This had to be a bttter pill, for Coach Wolfe was a bona ftde

tiANNW~~~-~~~~~~GNS~~--~

'·

8

.

Chet Tannehill

t

\1

OPP
946
779
958
742
874
935
821J;
840
3219 3679

~ij

Today's

Pos.
6

p

"star" atold Racme High School where he owns to lh1s day many
of the all-tune scormg records And he was a top scorer for the
Martella College Pioneers tn Ute 61~2 and 62 and 63 seasons
before coming to Mtddleport. Basketball was good tn hun He
surely believes 11 should be as good to ~u athletically-mmded

the Sports
By
Desk

urvlce
By Motornot
Route
avallablt
where carrier
Onl

o' ........o"o o o".Vo'o"o' o0 o 0 ~0 o"F1'~.., ......

*
**t-,.
i:l

,. i:j
W• "

I

I

,

L

o".l'o

~

SI:OAI,

I~ 10
12h9
1 13
1189
113/jl
3 11
6
8
10?3
16 40
~264 4595
(At Ml!lit;R High)
1 13 671 107J
953 JJ.~5Z
1 13 6fio 930
1026 1301
762
9 5 797
1077 1073
923
7 ~ 867
1221 1221 ( 1)
f\23
857
1119 1177
-6
394
6)8 621 (to date)
3 3' 161
459
(,034 601.~5
27 49 438
ncludes last ni t-;ht !;t:&gt;me· at \le llston)

1072
936
1146
1110

'

.

BY KEITH WISECUP
Sole possesston of fourth
place m Ute Southeastern Ohio
League Is Ute stakes when the
Logan Chieftatns pay the redhot Metgs Marauders a vlstt at
Rock Spri!)$S ~ Fi'!&amp;y.
Both Ute Chtefs and the
Marauders lulve 3-3 league
slates but Logan has lost three
in a row while Me1gs has won
thetr last two in loop aclton In
all games, Logan ts 4-5 whtle
Meigs Is riding a four game
winning streak at 6-4
Both Ute Chtefs and Ute
Marauders have nearly Ute
same type starting ftve , any of

ON THE TV DIAL Two goodies "China," a spectal on Ute
history and customs ofthis stlll-mystertous land, 9 on WHTN-TV,
and a real-life documenlary, "An American Family," same
,
time, darn 11, on WDUB-TV

Dear Rap
I have a frtend who IS always telling me what other people
The Almanac
say about me And they're really such terrible things thai I feel
By United Press International like runnmg away. I guess I make an awful unpresslon How can
Today ts Thursday, Jan. 11, I change' _ 1:.. D.
Ute lith day of 1973 wtlh 354 to
follow
L
The moon ts approaching tis
THURSDAY. JAN. 11, fm
Change frtends 1 - SUE
6
00News
3,
4,
8, 10, 13 t5 Trul~ or Con seq 6, Around the
f1rst quarter
+++
Bend 33, Sesame Sf 20
•
The mormng stars are Dear L D. ·
6 30- NBC Naws4, 15, ABC News 8, tO I Dream of Jeannle1 3
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Designing Women 33
And know your enemies - of whom this friend Is one 1 7
00Trulh or Conseq. 3, Seal T~e Clock 4, Course of Our
Jup1ter
HELEN
Times 33, Dick Van Dyke 4. W~at•s My Line&gt; 8 Big Red
The evenmg star is Saturn
Jubilee 15, News 6 Amazing World of Kreskln 13. Ele&lt;:lrlc
Company 20
Those born on this date are
7 30- Holl~ood Squares 3, To Tell The Truth 6, Wold King
under the stgn of Caprtcorn
-------....,-FACTS
dom 10, Ill See You In Court 4 Lassie 8 Wesfern
AmerlcanstatesmanAlexand- -~B=..::A::..:R~.:B=-:::S:.._
Civilization MaJesty &amp; Madness 20, Newsmaker 13
8 00 - Advocates 33, 20, Flip Wilson 3, 4, 15. Jacques Cousleau
er Hamilton, ftrst secretary of
By PHIL PASTORET
6. 13 Wallons 8, 10
the Treasury, was born Jan. II,
9
00
- Ironside 3, 4, IS , C~ina 6, 13. An Amer ica n Family 20
1757
The turkey's revenge hash
33
, Movie "The Gypsy Moths," 8.,10 , An American Family
left over from the festive
20, 33
0 n lh ts da y m hIS tory
btrd
10 00 - Owen Marshall 6, 13 , News 20 Dean Martin 3 4 15
In 1861, Alabama - seceded
• • •
World Press 33
'
11 OO-News3,4,6,8,13.15
from the Umon
Husbands who mu.!t
11 30-Jo~nnyCarson3.4 15, Jack Paar6, 13, Movies Slage to
In 1935, American avtatrtx take the check home to
Tucson" a. "Party Girl 10
Amelia Earhart Putnam the frau are merely reve
11
45
- Jo~nny Carson 4
nue agents
100-News4
II
became lhe ftrst woman to fly
• • •
•
FRIDAY. JAN. 12, 1973
across the Paciftc from Hawau
6 00- Sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10
to Calilorma
6 15 - Formllme 10. Farm Reporl 13
The
Council of
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
In 1964, Surgeon General
Churches ts a fellowship of
6 30- Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8. Human Dimension
Luther Terry reletsed"'o..report
tO. Blue Ridge Quartet 3
252 Protestant, Anglican,
saymg that smokmg ctga~ltes
1 00 - Today3,4, 15 News6 News8,10, Ftlntstones 13
Orthodox and Old Catholic
7 30 - Romper Room 6. Sleepy Jeffers 8, Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
churches from 90 countries
was a deftmte "health hazard "
13, Popeye 10
,
Seem~ the Old Year out ts
and territories throughout
8
00
../Capt.
Kangaroo
10,
New
Zoo
Revue 13 Sesame Sf 33,
a condttton m wh1ch qutte a the world. It was 1founded
Rom
per
Room
B. Lassie 6
A thought for the day few do
' In 1948 to promote Christian
8 30- Jack LaLanne 13. New Zoo Revue 6. Rompe( Room 8
Alexander Hamilton satd m
• • •
unity and to facilitate co9 00 - Paul Dixon 4, P~ll Done~ue 15 AM 3, Concentration 6.
Fellows who have
1781, "A naltonal debt, If 1t 1s
operation In mission work,
C.pl Kangaroo 8, Ben Casey t3 Mr Rogers 33 Friendly
dream
g1rls shouldn't, If
Junction 10
'
doctrinal study and service
not e"cess1ve, wtll be tn us a
marned, talk m thetr
9 30-Jeopordy3, HazelS. ToTeltTheTrulh3
projects
such
as
aid
to
refnattonal blessmg "
- Dina~ Shore 3, 15, Die~ Van Dyke 13. Columbus Sl•
sleep.
ugees, The World Almanac 10 00
Calling 6, Joker's Wild 8, 10
says
10 30- Concenlrallon 3, 15. Phil Dona~ue ~ . Split Second t5
~m.....:-..... ·~··~":.-WW~&lt;-»&gt;'A · ······
·
PJice Is Right a. 10.
•
'
11 00 - Love American Style 6, Sale of lhe Cenlury 3 15
Panword 13. Gambit 8, iO
'
t1 ~-Love of Life 8, Bewitched 6, 13 Hollywood Squares 3, 4,

ALL ttAHES.
w L

"T.I'o"o

world champton Oakland Athletics who p1cked last
Mtlwaukee p1cked fourth and
went for oulflelder Michael
Robtnson of Kirkland, Wash ,
wtlh San Franctsco then ptckmg shortstnp John Andrews of
Uncoln, Til St Louts selected
second baseman Larry Stortt
of Lakewood, Calif., as the No
II ptck and Mmnesota unmedtately came on wtth outftelder Joseph Honce Jr of
Brtdgeport, WVa
The New York Yankees,
selectmg 14th, chose catcher
Greg Kane of Arcata, Calif,
mftelder Wayne Benson of Del
Rio, Texas, was ptcked 15th by
lhe Chicago l.'ubs, followed by
Cleveland's chotce of outftelper
Cleve Reed of Lancaster,
Cahf , Boston takmg th1rd
baseman Uoyd Thompson of
Albuquerque, N .M ., and
Houston grabbmg shortstop
Robert Ntckeson of San Jose,
Calif
The major league clubs
picked for thetr Triple-A affthates m the second round,
wtth every learn makmg a
selectton with Ute exception of
Houston, which passed
To be subject lo selection, a
player must he eligible tn s1gn
a professiOnal contract on or
before Feb 24, 1973

however, IS last tn that
category wtth a chtlltsh 362
average The Chtefs are Ute tnp
free throw sho~ at 704 per
cent
Logan opened tis league
season as Ute stirphse team'lly
wmmng the ftrst three games
and lostng the fourth to
powerful Waverly only by 6561, the closest test the Ttgers
have had tilts year Stnce then,
however, tt has been downhtll
Undefeated Galhpohs
shocked the Chiefs 71-'16 at the
French Ctty anq last Tuesday
mght Athens turned the trtck
56-51 The key In Frtday here
wtll be whether the Chtefs can
.bounce back to thetr earher
form.
Back at Marauderland
thmgs have gone enltrely
different Metgs started out on
a sour note, droppmg four of
thetr first stx Things are
different now for Coach Wolfe's
lads have not lost smce
December Ia• when Galbpolts
dtd the Marauders m
A good reserve game should
be on tap also as Ute Logan
Papooses are the league
leaders at 6-0 Coach Roger
Btrch's Metgs reserves are 3-3
but are a better team Ulan th1s
mdteates

ELVERA&lt; NEUMAN OF THE LASSIES
RACINE - The coaches of Southern H1gh School are
preparmg for a btg sports attraclton w~en Ute naltonally known
all-gtrls basketball team - the "Arkansas Lasstes" - come tn
tnwn
The "Lasstes", featurmg some of the fmest female talent of
America, will make the local boys earn every basket, when they
meet at Racme's Southern Htgh gym on Monday, Jan 15 at 8
pm
The "Lasstes" ask for no set-ups and will furmsh the local
men's faculty all the oppos1t10n they wtll need 149 wtns tn 151
games 1s great m any league That's the record Ute "Lass1es"
brmg to Racme
Playmg good, sohd basketball IS a trademark w1th the
"Lasstes" Outstandmg passmg and ball handlmg add a great
· deal to the color of this group of female' court wtzards However,
there wtll he plenty of laughs when Ute gtrls ptck on everyone In
stght
Fans are sure to be amazed at the remarkable shootmg
percentage of this great gtrls' learn Few area htgh school teams
could match 'them m percentage of shots made
So, fans are m for an enJoyable and exctltng evemng of
basketball, when the local men's faculty 1)100t the gtrls head-Qn
at Ute Southern Htgh Gym, sponsored by The SOuthern Athletic
Boosters
Acapacity crowd ts expected, so get your tickets early from
etther Ute Southern High School basketball and football teams
and cheerleaders or Ute Jr Htgh football and basketball teams
and cheerleaders Advance ltcket pnces are $1 student, $1 25
adults, and at the doors, $1 25 student and $1 50 adults

Falcons edge
Marshall 92-87
By United Press International
Cornelius Cash, one of Ute
best rebounders m the natwn,
proved hts worth to Bowlmg
Green Wednesdav mght as his
t ~lm!'tili!lJ''i~' !ll#,tes tel)" u\e
Fal~ns to an upset of Marshall
Bowlmg Green Jed all the
way tn wm 92-ll7 as Marshall
was hampered by poor
shootmg and the Falcons'
strong defense
Randy Noll scored 31 pomts,
20 m Ute second half as the
Tbundenng Herd tned to make
up the def1c1t Cash had 25
pomts BG ts now 4-5 and Marshall 8-4
Other college scores of the
rught showed Otterbetn over
Wtttenberg6~1, Wooster over
Mt Uruon 7~3 , Deftance over
Fmdlay 91-ll2, Case over John
Carroll 63-54 , Ohto Dommtcan
over Urbana 94-lll; Eastern
Mtchtgan over Cleveland State
62-54, and GaMon (Pa ) over
Youngstown State 63-54
Gannon tnok an 6-0 lead and
held on to tts advantage
throughout the game to gettts
stxth wm of the season
Youngstown, now U , drew to
w1Utm four pomts, 53-49, wtth
seven mmutes left but got no

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come tQ us
for income tax help.

The tax books are now open for the
December or first half collection of the
1972 Real Estate taxes. Also for
delinqueJtt tax. Closing date will be
January 20, 1973.
•.

Howard E. Frank
Meigs COunty Treasurer
•

r.

NEWGM
SAN DIEGO, Calif (UP!) Peter Bavast, 30, was named
Wednesday all the new general
manager of the San Otego
Padres
He
succeeds,
Eddte
\ l
I
t, ~
'1. P tt 'I '!l w
\.
• ----------

and ~I m the p AC
Bruce Baer paced Deftance
wtth T/ pomts to give the Yellow Jackets thetr lOth wm m 11
starts Findlay ts !Hi
Cleveland State, playing at
Ypstlanti, Mtch , attempted to
rally m the second half but fell
short to lose tts seventh game
out of II starts Gale Drununer
was high for Ute V1kmgs wtth 22
pomts

WITH THESE

SPRIJiS
WEATHER STRIPPING
CAULKING COMPOUND
PLASTIC STORM WINDOWS
HEAT TAPES- DOOR STRIPS
WARM MORNING HEATERS
PERFECTION OIL HEATERS
ELECTRIC HEATERS
WINDOW GLAS$-THERMOMETERS
PIPE INSULATION
STOVE PIPE, COLLARS, SHOULDERS,
COAL BUCKETS, ETC.

'

[}[IIOO.BLOCM
THE IHCOME TAX PEOPLE

Ebersbach Hardware
Main Street
Ph. 992·2811
Pom~,

0.

304 E. Main 992-3795 Pomenrj, 0.
Open 9 Til 5 Mon. thru Sat.
No Appointment Necessary

Letshman who dted last month
Bavast, who ts the son of
Padres' Prestdent E J 'Buz
z1e" Bavast, has served as
dtrector of mmor league
operattons smce the Padres
were formed m 1968
'Dhe Padres also anno(mced
Utat Bob Jl'ontame wtJI be Ute
new dtrector of player personnel Fontame was formerly
director of scoutmg
In another move, Mtke Port
was named mmor Je~ g ue
adrmntstratnr for the Padres
Port had prevwusly served as
director of promotwns and
general mana ger of Ute Lodi
and Key West farm teams m
the Padres' mmor lea gue
system

( Ga·s &amp; Coa ll

Reason 3. We are a year-round
service. We do not disappear or
I!P back to some other business
after 'April IS.

~~----------------"'"'-. .

closer
Walter Hill scored 23 pomts
as Wooster downed Mount Unton m OhiO Conference action
WQ!lsler ••
ou ouerall Iand 1.,I tn
'f'ti "!T' "V
Ute league Mount Umon, !Hi
and l-2, was led· by Ed Lawrenee's 26 pomts
Otterbem ran tis record to 9-3
wtth the Ohio Conference wm
overWittenberg,now7-2 Steve
Traylor led Otterbem wtlh 15
pomts
Jumor guard Russ Drake h1t
for 28 pomts to lead Case td tts
vtctory m Presidents Athletic
Conference actton Both Case
and John Carroll are 5-3 overall

LONG BEACH, Calif (UPI) - Somehow, some way, make tt
your busmess to meet Tim Foley, somettme
You're m for a warm experience
He played cornerback mall 16 of Ute Mlamt Dolphtns v1ctones
tilts year, and naturally-, was lookmg forward tn the next one No
' lookmg forward to catching 'your
17, about the same way you're
next breath
Tim Foley won 't be swtmg up for No 17, though
He can't
"The doctnrs say tt was a one hundred per cent shoulder
separation ," says the goodlookmg, 24'year-Qld Foley, who 1s
carrymg h1s left arm m a shng and walkmg w1th such small, sttff
legged steps that he looks hke a man of 84
He's Not Complaining
"They took some muscle out of my left Uttgh and put tt m my
left shoulder, so tt 's a bttle tnugh gettmg around ," he says explatmng, not complammg "Naturally, tt's a btg dtsappomtment
not to be able to play m Ute Super Bowl Sunday But 1 bebeve
hke all those people who heheve m God, that all things work for
Ute good Somehow m some strange way, some good wtll come
out of thts "here Foley paused a moment before contmumg
"and thts IS the beshlung that could've happened "
That's qwte a statement for a young man of 24
It takes on even more mearung when you hear stdebned T1m
Foley say tl, because when you do, you know he means tl
Ttm Foley, you mtght say, 1s In Utts Super Bowl game what
Reggte Jackson was In the last World Senes
"I saw those ptctures of him on crutches," says the Dolphms
slender third year man "I don't know Reggte Jackson, but I felt
sorry for hiDllhe same way you'd feel sorry for anybody who was
part of an effort and dtdn't at least get Ute satisfactiOn of atlemptmg to achteve hJS goal Never havmg been m that sttuation
before, I didn't reahze what he was gomg through Now I have a
better tdea "
Nothing Dramatic
There was nothing dramattc about the way Foley mgJrred his
separated shoulder two weeks ago agamst Ute Ptttsburgh
Steelers It happened the second ttme the Steelers had the ball
The Steelers punted and the 6 -foot, 190-pound Foley threw a
beauttful block at Jun Clack, Pttlsburgh's 6-foot-3, 250-pound
center Only one thmg went wrong Foley landed on hts left
shoulder as he fell, Clack fell on top of htm, and Fole) 's shoulder
hit the hard tartan turf mThree Rtvers Stadiwn
"It was just like thts," satd Foley, lappmg his left foot on Ute
concrete floor of the dugout tn whtch he was sttlmg and talkmg
Come Utts Sunday , Foley, wtlh his arm tn the sling, will be on
the stdelines at !As Angeles Coliseum trymg lo do the little he can
In help his Dolphin teammates He'll be watching the Washmglon
Redskins Iosee if they unwtttlngly ltp off any of Utetr plays
"Hopefully, I've got a few years left, " says Ttm Foley, "and a
chance to get back here agam You can't let somethmg hke this
ea t away at you "
..

"Everythrng In Hardware"

�3- The Dally Sentmel Mtddleport Porn
eroy, OJ
U" ,, an. 11973
,I

-

'

•

~f

Patterson and Patrick

ttll ,lfll goHtnot ol Oluo .tnt! US scn.nor, W.mcn
llu·dmg "·"pushed mto l1.ttcr heyoml hts depth
by ll.my Dlllgh&lt;rty .11 the l.unous mcelfng 111 "th&lt;
smoke-hllcd llHJlll " .11 th e Bl.tkestone llotd (,ol
· ( 1h Ill Lox1l1dge ot M.t».tdll!sctts 1\.IS the 1 tee prt·stdmtt.ll nommee
I he lkmon.llll t1cke1 11 ,IS j.tmes M Cox, .tlso
.tq ( lh1o nc\1 sp.tpel puhhsher, .tnt~ I• r.tnkltn I)
Roosc1 dr , .1 person,thlc young 111.111 111th .1 fuwre
I he Democrats r.m .IS pro Wtlsonmen, !he Repuhhc.tns lo.tlctl .IS rerurn-to-norm.tlcy men, .md the
l{epubltc.tns 11 on hy .1 landslide
Prestdent ll .trdmg\ Cahtnet wntamed such dtsttngutshcd men .ts Ciurlcs I llugh~s, Ilcrbcrt
II&lt;Hll er, \ndt'C \1 Mellon .md Wtll ll.tys, bm t\\o
ol them , Secrcttry ot lntenor \lherr B 1-.tll .md
\ttorncy Cener.tl Daugherty, 11ould later blacken
the I I.mlmg \dnumstranon 11 tth thetr unconstitutional .md tllcgal dc.tlmgs 11 tth oil tyc&lt;Mms m cr the
lc.lSlng of teder.tl otl res en es
\It hough l'restdenr II.mhng had hts 1erstsm ot
\ndn\\ j.u.: kson's k1tdu:n t::.Ihmrt," WhiCh ITICt at
the " I lttk Crcen I louse" at 11125 K Street, .tnd
•tit hough gm ernmcnt t&lt;l10rs 11 ere bought and sold
there, there IS no n ulcnce that llardu1g 11 .ts pcrsoll.tlly 1m oh ed
In tact, Hardmg's XXI days m the Premlency
11 ere latrly producti1 e ones He fought tu shortm
the I 2-hour 1\orkd.ty m the steclmdustry, favortxl
and stgned tnto la11 mcre.tsed prutecttve t.mffs,
est.tbiJShed the Budget llure.tu .md called the
Waslungton ( onfcrence tor the Lumt.num ot
\ rm.unent m IIJ2 I
1\'e.tk m logiC, almost enttrcly 11 1thout upl ;fnng
1dc.tls, Warren Hardmg 11 as .1 people-centered PresIdent lie 11 ts fully .111.1re that he 11 as not .1 great
Prcstdent, .tnd he desper.ttcly \l.tntcd w he the best
lm ed one I o ach1e1 c these ego prups, llardmg
became the most tn\Ctcrate ye.ISaycr e1cr w occupy
the \Vh1te I louse
\ddrcssmg a press club dmner, PresHicnt Hardmg s;Jtd hts father once sa1d ,"V..trrcn, It's a good
thmg you 11asn't horn .1 gal '
11

'/ pi/Jhed h1111

IIIlO

the U 0/&lt;1

'

' llnllth ,, 1~1111 11 ho goes 111 on .1 p.m ol e1ghts
.md comes ou~111th .tees lull ,' Sen ll .utcn H.trdmg told .1 L1tet.uy Dtgcsr llpomr upon k .trnmg
he lud jUst 11011 the Rcpuhltcan nomm.ttlon tor
l'remlcnt 111 June, tno, at the Clucago Coltseum
Prestdcnt H.trd111g tdr anythtng hut lucky,
ho11e1e1 , a• he kft Washmgron thrce Junes l.net
on' a 1 oyagc ot understand111g '-hJS fin.1l one-th.n
11 ottld take htm across the wntlntnt, lor serullls
corruptton 1n the Veter.tn's Buteau had !teen dtsLOI ered, 111 o ol the Prest dent\ erontes had recently
(OITIITIJtted

swudc, .md th..:re

\\err onlt:n'i ot \\orsc

tO UHlll'

1\.trmt ll.mlmg had not 11anted to he President, thought he co uld he, or felt that he should
he Bur Ohm pohtlc,tl hoss Henry \1 Daugherty
sa11 111 the lug h.uubome, gen1al .111d malleabk
newspaper ed1tur and publtsher the qu&lt;ll1t1es ot .1
natural 1ote-gcttcr " I found h1m sunn111g hnnsclt,
ltkc a frog on a log, " Daugherty sa1d , ' .tnd I pushed
) um uno the 11 ater "
I hus 1 ~ \\as that, .titer parttsan hut other\\ tse
undtsttngutshcd ser\lces as state sen.ttor and ltcu-

"\Vhy'"

•

'Because you'd I&gt;&lt;: m the tamtly 11ay all the
lime You can't say no '
Hardmg's mtstrcss, :\ian Bntton, 11 rute that
shortly hdore hts de&lt;lth the Prestdent begged her
to keep thctr secret "Why, I \\ ould rather the, '
ll.mltng satd, 'than dtsappmnt my party "
\nxtety 01 cr hts and hts party's reputa(llm
undoubtnlly contrthmed to Warren Hardmg's
de.nh-as sudden .ts It 11as mystcnous-m a San
r r.tnctsco hotel room on \ug 1' 192 3' as hts \1 lfe,
the ta1thful but ott-betrayed "Duchess," sat by hts
bed rcadmg to h1m

&amp; THINGS

Generation Rap

Timely Quotes

Use Stayman to Find a Fit
.

,

NORTH
'411 J 109 7
.QJ2
• 105
"'AK104

11

East- West vulnerable
North

Pass
Pass

4.2"'

Pass

East South
INT.
Pass
Pass

- George F Kugler, attor
ney general of New Jersey, explamtng why the
Send $1 for JACOBY MODERN book
state would not mcrease
to "Wm at Brtdgt1" (c/o thrs newr
commuter substdtes to the
paper), PO Box 419, Rad1o C•tr
Central Rat/road of New
Stollen, N&lt;W York, N Y 10019
Jersey
Answer tomorrow

WEST
EAST
411K4
411863
.953
¥A1084r
.KQJ97
• 864
411862
.753
SOUTH (D)
411AQ52
.K76
• A32
.QJ9
West

m resp onse to your double
double What do you do now'

2.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

What Causes Bags
Under the Eyes?

Pass

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Openm~ lead- t K
Dear Dr. Lamb-Th1s may
not seem tmportant to you,
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby but 11 ts to me How can you
How do you fmd a 4 4 get rtd of bags under your
maJOr sutt ht after a no eyes' I've trted many
trump opemng '
thmgs What causes these'
You use the Stayman con- Dear Readcr- Dtrectly unventiOn There are almost as derneath the eyelid ts a
many form s of Stayman as small bag of fat As people
there are expert bridge play get Q)der, unless they have
ers, but they have thts m remamed very thm , thts bag
common The two club re- of fat mcreases m stze lead·
sponse to an opemng no mg to the typtcal baggy aptrump 1s ar!tf1ctal and fore peara nce that dtsturbs some
mg In tts most common people Of course, wtth the
form the no-trumper rebtds enlargement nf the bag of
two spades w1th four ot fat, the skm of the lower
more spades, two hearts eyelid ts stretched The only
wtth four or more hearts and saltsfactory way of correctfewer than four spades, and mg tlus pt oblem 1s by costwo dtamonds wtthout as mettc surgery
many as four cards 1n etther
An IOCISIOn IS made along
maJor sutt
the
rtm of the lower eyelid
Today's hand shows the
JUSt
at th~ base of the eyeStay man conventiOn at work
lashes
a little pressure
North wants to be 111 game beneathWtth
the eyeball, the bag
and wtth out a club conve n· of fat ts ltterally popped out
!ton would stmply JUmp tu and exc1sed The excess skm
three no-tt ump
ts then 1emoved and the mWest would open the km g CtSIOll sui ured It usually reof dtamonds and aflet losmg quu es sevetal months to rea spade fmcsse South would gam full not mal movement
wmd up down two t11cks and of the lower eyehd, smce the
com platmng about bad luck muscles normally assoctated
The Stayman convention wtth the eyeltd closure are
gtves North a chance to look attached to the skm m thts
for a spade f1t He btds two regiOn and are cut m the
clubs South goes to two course of the operahon
spades m response and
Tr~nsttory
accumulatiOn
North takes h1m to the spade
of
small
amounts
of flutd
game
wtll also ca use bags tempoSouth I o s e s the spade ranly 'flus ts mote promfmesse, but thts docs not men! 111 the mornmg and
stop htm from collec hng the usually dtsappeat s by noon
spade game
unless thet e ts an assoctated
(NEWSI'API:R ENTERPRISf ASSN I
medtcal problem
Dear Dr Lamb-My hus
band ts a fatthful reader ol
your column and would ltke
The baddmg has been
to
know thts H~ takes Vlt·
w.. t North East South amm
capsules and chews
3•
Dble
have told htm they
them
I
Pass
Pass
'
wtll
dtssolve
If he swallows
You, South, hold
them whole, and he wtll gel
¥AQ9875 .A32 "'KQ7 the same beneftt He can
What do yo u do now?
not accept that answer He
A- B1d s•~ clubs No guaran- chews any p11J or capsule
tee (MS With lhlS, bul ll fook:t and does not believe they
like a mlJhty good gamble
can dtssolve theqtselves, but
that they go undtgested
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of b1ddu1g ftve clubs, through your system Please
your partner has btd four spades explatn the truth

•z

5•

~

It would be cheaper to buy
each pass~nger a Volkswagen and send htm off to
work

Y P!ll'

By Helen and Sue Hottel
A Lift for 'Dad's Morale
o

Dear Rap:
Wbile my Dad IS still recovenng from the Christmas biDs, I
Utinktt'sa good tiDletotelleveryone howl feel about him
WHAT IS A FATHER?
AIaUter IS someone who tells you when he brags ab9ut you to
others, but cuts It In half so you don't get coocelted.
He teases you when he's Jzylng genUy to tell you something
unportant that means a lot tobolh of you.
He heSitates a little when lending you money even thoUj!h you
know he will
,
Though he doesn't need It, he remtnds you of the loan so you
won't think he forgot -and you 'II learn about paying debts
He asks about those of your fnends whom he Ukes, but never
puts down the ones he doesn't
He loves you to stay ]lome sometunes and watch TV wtth
bim.

He ruba your back when you ask, and teases you about
getting old.
·
He wears those freaky Utings you buy him even though
they're not his type.
He grows a mustache for you while on vacation, but shaves it
off later because Ute men at work are "stratght."
He sends you flowers on your birthday when he knows no one
else will - and leaves Ute card blank
He's the greatest guy m the whole world, and you know you
don't show your affection enough, so maybe Utls will tell him.CHEL

'

Dear Chel
It wiU, tt wiU 1 -RAP

+++

Rap:
I'm gomg around wtth this 19-year-old chick !love a lot, but
Ute problem IS she's a Jesus freak and I'm just the opposite
My frtends get stoned and they say some off-the-wall junk
about and to her Then HER friends preach to me because I do
grass and things.
My people are getting rougher and rougher on us and her
people are geUmg pusluer and pushier. Which way do I go'MIXEDUP
MU
That depends on whether you want to keep on domg gi'I!JIS
and things or (as your girl ought put tt) flnd some purpose In life
If she means more to you than your spaced-out friends, then
maybe you'll see that her way tsn't any more "freaky" than
Utetrs
Thts IS for sure. you can't I11IX two opposites, so someone's got
tn gtve Choose for yourself what you truly want, and don't let
anyone make the deciSion for you -Including me 1-SUE

+++
Mixed Up
Perhapa you could both gtve a liiUe If YOU quit drugs and
cool your present crowd, then your girl shoufd quiet down her
~'preachers.''

I gather she herself Isn't pushy about her religion, nor are
you mStstent that she choose your way of life So 11 appears your
fr1ends are the problem Let both sets know you'd apsrectate
their butting out. - HELEN

+++
WIN AT BRIDGE

.....• •..••.•,•••.., ...
»' .........,.,.,.,_.,.,......,.,., .-.;.-,......-..-..:.....:-.:.-,-:..-......................,..,
••••••,•••.,•••......
,.,.,.,,. ·:· •'.-.:".t.:o:o.®.

:.

PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY
•

(Adm1nostratoon March 4 1921-August 2, 1923)

.

·~·

2- !'he Datly Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0, Jan 11,1973

Twenty-n1nth Pres1dent Warren G Hardmg

.

BY PAUL CRABTREE '
I say Ibis not as a conlesston or an admlsston of lnunatur1ty,
but really, as a rather sroud statement
I read Mad Magazine Almost every Issue.
Desptte the pseu'do-6110bs who think that the publication wi'th
Ute mmdless, grinning face of Allred E Newnann on the cover Is
for kids, tt ISll't.
•
Mad cOIISlSienUy publlsbes some of the best sattre on sale
anywhere, In any mediwn, today. And It's been doing It, I suddenly realize, for 18 years and more
Television tsn't really very good at satire. "Laugh-In" was
the best srosram at heaping It out, before the wells of creativity
ran tJrit. "Sonny &amp; Cher" still have a btt now and then lha,t isn't
bad. "All m the Family" relies more on characterization than on
satke, per se.
Some of the specialized magazmes (and what kltid are there, .
any more?)do a clever bit now and then But Mad Is devoted to:l
debunking, ego-deflatmg, and some qutte creative bits of humor, •' l
month after month.
'
Sure, some of Ute stuff Is aimed squarely at the eleventb- •'
graders who srobably constitute 1ts largest single buymg bloc. ·
(College freshmen donnitortes rank second, I'd bet.) And even
that materialun't bad, usually .
But Mad Magazine also delivers some highly-reftned stuff,
which passes about etght miles over the heads of most of the kids.
Or, I should say, It would have passed over my head when I was
an eleventh-grader or college freshman.
·
rn tis early era, a lot of Ute articles were direct take-offs on
comic strips, early TV shows, and cherished American Institutions. Things haven't changed too much.
It still delivers shattering portrayals of the moVIes, TV and
newspaper features. But it's added a certain sophiStication
through Ute years
One of the most poignant and devastating arguments for the
envlrorunentalists popped up about three or four years ago. It
was a photo-essay, using the words of "Amertca the Beautiful"
as captions for ptctures that showed haw man has despoiled,
cluttered, polluted, and defaced this loveliest of all possible
countries
Such superb matertal isn't rare In Mad In fact, almost every
Issue has at least one article that soars above the study-ball level,
and bears a message as well as a chuckle (Mad, for example, Is
pointedly sreaching agalnatdrugs, but In a way Uta! doesn't turn
Ute kids off.)
Mad started out as a comic hook, published by a two-lime
loser The IaUter of present publisher William M. Games came
along too late to get In on lhe Superman-Captain Marvel golden
age of the comtc book, but had modest success wtth hiS early
lineup of publications In the Forbes
Then he tried tn educate the kids through comtcs, producing
a ltne of lnatructlonal and Biblical stories m com1c form. It
bombed. The elder Gaines died, and hu son -probably In
desperation -looked for somelhmg else He trted Mad -and Ute
rest Is history.
The beanung, moronic face of Allred E NewnaM wasn't In
the !at Issue of Mad, but he came along early on m tis history.
Today, he's better recognized by most people between !5 and 45
than Utelr own U S Senators -which IS probably just as well

+++

Television·Log ··"··

9

WORLD ALMANAC

L

I

Dear Reader-Ptlls are de
s)gned to be dtssolved tn the
dtgesttve tract The coatmg
on them, mcludmg vttamin
ptlls and capsules, IS usually
there to save you from hav
mg to expertence thetr ter
rtble taste Whtle It Isn't true
that medtcmes have to taste
awful to be effective, tt does
seem to be true that a lot of
good medtcmes taste pretty
bad, mcludmg some vltamm
preparatiOns Some ptlls are
coated wtth a matertal to
keep them from betng dts·
solved tn the stomach This
ts because the types of
chemicals m the pills mtght
be destroyed by the acid dt
gesttve JUices In the stom
ach, and 11 ts desired that
they be protected from thts
12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4 Password 6
unt1l they reach the Intestine
Local News to, News 13, Contact 8
'
whtch ts more alkaline
BY JACK O'IIRIAN
solely lo man and to his travels.
12 30 - 3 W's Game 3, 15, Search For Tomorrow a tO Split
These are called entertc
SPOKESMAN FOR A
"Thecoconutpabnlaofgreatlmportanceto
Second 6
•
coated ptlls or capsules
LOVELY BUNCH
man 1n the tropical areas where It grows. It 1 00- News3. All My Children 6, 13, Green Acres 10 ll's Your
Bet 8, Walch Your Child IS
'
There are some p1lls that
NE
•
vid food
don't dtssolve well 10 the dl·
W YORK (KFS) - If there s one man sro es
and drink, materials for clothing 1·30 - J Q1 A Mate~ 3, 4,15. Lei's Make A Deal6 13· As The
World Turns 8, 10
'
geshve tract and mtght pa~s 's done more for coconuts than Ute Marx and shelter, and has Uterally lluldreds of other
00
Days
of
Our
Lives
3,
4,
15,
Newl~ed Game 13 Mike
2
through wtthout adequate
others, It's Andrew Mackenzie Hay
uses. But aside from lhellll, the coconut Is of
Doug tass 6. Guiding Llghl 8, tO
'
'
absorphon Thts ts a resu Married tn Ute former Sharman Douglas
tremendous economic Importance. For In- 2 30-1Jac1ors3, 4, 15, Doling Game 13. Edge of Nigh18, tO
of faulty preparatto~, tf 11 Prmcess Margaret's great pal, Hay u one oft~ stance, tt Is estimated that about one-third of the 3 00 - Anol~er World 3, 4, 15, General Hospllal 6 13 Love
Spiendored Thing 8, 10 Dateline America 20 - ' '
should occur, and to my worlil'se..,..rtson coconuts London-born b 1 po~·'·tlon of Ute Phlllpplnes1either ,.._.,.,y or 3 30
- Relurn 1o Peylon Place 3, 4, 15, Secrel Storm a 10 Qle
knowledge no pharmlfceu..,..
··
u
.....,.
"""""
Life lo Live 6, 13, Book Beat
' '
t 1cal houses are mtenttonally now an American citizen, Hay Is definitely an indlrectiy, depends on the cocmut for 11a1
00Mr
Carloon
3.
Somerset
15,
Sesame
Sl
33,
Fllnlslones
4
makmg ptlls of thts type
Anthony Eden type ... but does he mingle with livelihood.
6, Love, American Slyle 13, Merv Griffin 4, Gilligan's Isle 8
Some p11Js should be New York's British colony'
"ln proper conditions, the tree wtllsrow to
Movie "The Prelty Girl" 10
'
chewed, but usually the d~"Why associate with Ute British here when a hei8/'t of 100feet and will produce 50 coconula 4 30 - I Love Lucy 6, Password 13, Merv Griffin 8 Andy
Grllfll~ 15, Daniel Boone i3, Peltlcoal Juncllon 3
tor will gtve you this lnstruc- there Is afar better selection In Great Britain'" or more a year for over 60 ~ars The principal
5 OOD-Misler Rogers 33, 20, Dick Van Dyke 15 Ponderosa 3 •
tton or they wtll be on the he says answering the question with a question products In International trade are copra,
anlei Boone 6
'
· ''
prescnptton, or It wtll be
:
5
30
Marshall
Dillon
15,
Elec
Co
33
,
Gomer
Pyle
13
on the bottle 'tf tt happens to .. Hays brother David was pediatrician for coconut oil, desiccated coconut, poonac, coir,
Dragnet 8, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
'
be sometl\mg you can buy Princess Margaret's children at ,the time he shell charcoal alld shell flour .
6.00S- News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15; NBC News 8, 13, Truf~ or Conseq 6
yourself •As an 1llustratton, marrted Sharman, whose father Is the former
"Copra Is simply the dried meat Of the
esame St. 20. Around Ihe Bend 33
·
many of the antacid tablets Ambassador to Ute Court of St. James's ... Hay coconut which Is broken up In chunkl, bagged, 6 30- NBC News 3, 4, 15, ABC News 6, CBS News 8 10 1
Dream of Jeannie 13; Lei's Travel 33
' '
are chewed so that they wtll prefers being the coconut ambassador
and shipped to lndustrilll areas arotmd the 1 00
~atc'sMyLine8,
Wild
Kingdom
13,
Trulhor
Conseq
3
provtde the most tmmedtate
.,
_....8ea 1 one lock 4, News 6, 10 , Saint 15. Elec Co 20, Folk
and effechve neutrahzmg
Coconut has been a most undiscovered world for the production of coconut oil, always
- .. ultar 33.
.
1
actton of the actd m • the natural health food," he says. "ln fact, during Iii demand because of Ita loog staHillty. The 7· 30- To Tell The Truth
6. Parent Game 10, BealT~e Clock 13
stomach I thmk tt's safe to World War If, Amencan boys taken prisoner by, residue that remalna after the oU 18 emacted Ia
Poodrter
Wagoner
3.
Young
Kildare 4; ll's Your Bel a'
H gepodge Lodge 10, WallDr.
Slreet This Week 33
'
say that your husband can the Japanese In the Philippines were able to calledpoonac,'whlchfintiJreatl,yuaeasfoodfor
8 00- Sanford &amp; SOil 3, 4, 15: Brady Bunch 6 13 · Mission
swallow hts vtlamm ptlls and survive on coconula. The nut has natural un- , dairy cattle and In feeds of other farm animals
Impossible&amp;, 10, Washington Week tn Review 20 3:i
other ptlls and feel assured
d1
1
..,
' · ""-"'
1a shredded Into ll)leCiflc' B 30Partridge Famlly6, 13, Wall Sf Week 20, u'111e People3
be will receive the full bene- saturate ats, natura sugar, sroteln, mlnenils u=ecaled cocomt
'15
1 '
ftt from them
and carbohydrates
cull and moled for candy, cake, and other
9 00 - Maslerplece T~ealre33. World Press 20, Circle 1 Fear
!HEWSPAm EHTIRPIIISI •SSH I
"The geographiC origins of the coconut ha\'1! SWeets. Coif ~ of hulk ftbers ~ Jn
3, 4, 15, ~oom 222 6, 13, Movies "Captain Eddle1· eq "T"
Court Jester" 10
'
ne
puzzled several generatiOIIB of botanists. It Is mall, rug£, yll'lt and twine."
~ntl your quetf•onr to Dr hmb
9
30-,30Minuleswlth20,
OddCouple6.13
now collSidered ahnost certain that the pabn
Hay's compariy, Calvert, Vavuseur II Co. 10 00- Ne'ws 20; Love, American Style 6, 13, Bany 1 3 15
m core ol tlus ntwspoper, P0 loA"
011 ' 4' '
Wake Up John ~
1551 Rod•o C•tr Stat1on, Hew YorA:, originated somewhere west and north of New Inc., IS a coDIJllOIIIty hnporlillg concern. Aa
N Y 10019 Foro copr ol Or L&lt;lmb't Guinea, perhaps In Malaya or In lndlll!eaia. coconut keynOte speaker at a recent conference t1 00- News3. 4. 6, 8,10, t3, 15
Jo~nny Carson 3, 4, 15, Jack Paar 6, Movies "Youn
boolfltt on balqnced d~tt1 Jtnd SO Although single coconula can be carrted (ong
1ti New York,' he .Oyildect' his rallying c:ry: 11 30Guns ot Texas" 8, "T~e Creature Walks Among Us" lOg
cents to the same Gddrerr attd at.l distances by the sea, 1t Is widely held that tlte
"Mara of lh'e Wilderness" 13
•
"From now 1111, I command you w lltlnk
lor "Bofonced 01et' brHJAiet
1
00Roller
Derby
4,
Movle"Portrallln
Terror"
10
dlssem1118tlon If the pahn can be attributed cocoout "
1 30- News 13,' 4

~

I Voi;;e-~l~ng Br'W~Y""l

1

I

-

.

\

1

1

1
1

&gt;

'

•
'
'
'

p

63-64
5
64-65
t
65-66
7
66-67
12
Totals 25

13
17
11
6
47

6~-68

17
16
9
8

6 -69
69-70
70·71
71-72
72'-73
Totals

2

4

10

~1

8
6

11

~1

4

65
1 ota1 l

(At M1dd1e·lort)

OPP

\-[

Sport Parade
.

.

8

2-T

~1~-T

disaster Nor ts tl a trtwnph At Mtddleport, wtth the smallest
enrollment of boys m the league to draw from, be was stxth
lwtce, etghlh once, and thtrd once, the lhtrd place fllllsb clearly
an achtevement beyond the norm m relation to scbool~ze
At Metgs l.ocal where boy enrollment falls roughly at Ute
average among the etght-member schools (some of them by now
larger by sddttional consolidations than before Metgs l.ocal's
consolidation for the 67-08 season) Marautler basketball success
after two seasons of tragedy also bas been average Wolfe teams
have had league f1mshes of ttemg for second, a fourth, a fifth and
ttemg for fourth In that order.
Many may conclude that is good enough
But that t:; contrary to the nature of basketball fans The
SEOAL basketball fan potnts to Waverly where a guy named
Hawhee has put his school's team on Ute Ohio athletic map year
after year And lhey pomt to Gallipolis where a young man
named Osborne has turned around basketball m JUSt three years
Both are AA schools And nobody m Metgs County ever wtll
forget a dapper fellow named Dtck Rettnn who came 1o Pomeroy
m 1956 wtlh the Panthers havtng set all kinds of records for most
stratght defeats over a ftve-year span The next year Rettnn had
hltle Pomeroy Htgh back up m tis glortous basketball tradition of
a Wlllller Furthermore, what Retton bwlt so qmckly contnbuted
to two more champ1onshtps followmg h1s departure (to Mansfteld
Madison)
...,
Meanwhtle, smce Mr. Wolfe has chosen to IDlprove his
sttuatton by restgnmg at Metgs after Ute basketball season, Ute
fans and student body can do nothmg better Ulan gtve the 72-73
Marauder varSity all posstble support. These boys are at 6-4 all
games and 3-3m the league, on the way to a WtMmg season They
are fun to watch m actwn Not btgas players of this sport go, !hey
have tndiVldual talent for the game We hope for them - and
Utetr coach -the best offortunes from here on out

whtch can get hot and score a
bundle On a couple of occaswns, Logan , bke Metgs, has
had ftve or more people m
double figures
Coach Scott Fttzgerald's
. ~1~~ Pl.:ea ~~ filsemor
center l!andy.ltierrts., the
second best held goal percentage shooter and fourth
leadtng rebounder m the
league Noms ts a returnmg
starter from last year's Logan

Pterce and 6-2 sophomore Jun
Kemper Jtm Whitcraft and
Ken Culbertson are the top
reserves
Coach
Carl
Wolfe's
Marauders on Ute other hand
Will start 5-9 semor caplstn Jtm
Boggs and 5-10 semor B1ll
Vaughan at guards ; 6-0 semor
Mtke Sayre and 5-10 semor
Andy Vaughan at forwards,
and 6-1 semor Btll Chaney at
center Rich Batley, 5-9 semor
ftve
guard, ts Ute stxth man
The other Logan starters are
Logan IS the lhtrd best fteld
Mttch Wrtghl and Jeff Camp- goal percentage shooter m the
bell at forwards and a couple of !•ague, hitting 453 Metgs,
hot-shot guards, 5-10 JUDtor Jtm

Phillies get first choice
NEW YORK (UPI) - Phila- player - second baseman
delphia, who gamed the nght to Bradley Stuart of Hagerstnwn,
make Ute first selection In Ute Md -San Diego selected Ute
draft for lhe dubtous dtstmc- ftrst of many pttchers--9-foot 4
Uon of having lhe worst record rtghthander Dave Yt;ehrm the majors last year, ptcked metster of La Grande, IU
Other pitchers selected by
Alan Bannister as Utetr No I
selection In the free agent Ute major league clubs for
thetr own constderatton
winter draft Wednesday
Banmster, a 21-year-old (subsequenl rounds In the
shortstop, was stgned Im- regular draft were for lhetr
mediately m Veterans Stadtum farm clubs) were James
m Philadelphia, and reJ101'tedly McCutchm of Levelland,
received a "subslanttafbonus" Texas, ptcked as a No 6 chotce
rumored mUte netghborhood of by Cleveland, Thomas Ford of
Ypsilanti, Mtchtgan, No 7 by
$100,000
Most teams placed a prerru- Montreal, Randy Srrulh of
wn on pttchers at the draft and Abyrd, Mo , Califorma 's choice
as a resull 13 hurlers were as No 8; Mtchael Kirkpatrick
selected m Ute opening round of Fatrless Hills, Pa , Ute nmth
After Texas chose Ute secopd pick, by Atlanta .. and No 10
Marttn Walker of Lamesa,
by Kansas Ctty
Tilt
Sallliltl Calif,
Also,
James Johnson off
DEVOTED TO THE
tNTERESTDP
Lonoke, Ark , No 13, by the
MIIIJ$-MASDN AREA
New
York Mets, Samuel
CHISTIR L TANNEHILL,
E ..c ld.
Moore of Jackaon, MISS , No.
IIO.UT HOEFLICH,
17,
by !As Angeles; Stephen
City Editor
PubllJhed dally excopl Trella of Anaheim, Calif , was
Saturdly bY The Ohio Vaitay
PuDltJhlng Company , 111 picked 20th, by Detroit,
Court St
Pomeroy , OhiO,
45769 auolneu Of!Jce Phone followed by Gary Lucas of
992 2156. Edllorlol Phone 992 Rtverslde, Calif., by Cln2157
Second clUJ postage paid at cmnati, Elmer Yelverton of
Pomaroy, Ohio
Wllmmgton, N C , by the
NIIIOnll advertlslnt
Chtcago
White Sox; Paul
nprtaentatlvt Bottlntlll·
Gallagher, Inc , 12 EU1 •2nd Nelson of Sacramento, Qilif ,
St, Ntw York Clly, Now York
Subtcripllon rates Dt · by Ptttsburgh, and Michael
livered by ctrrler whtrt Noms of San Franctsco, by the
lvtlltble 50 unts per wttk;

D11J

monlh It 7S By malt In OhiO
and w vo . One veer su 00.
Six months S7 25 Thrll
monthS u so Subacrlplloft
rict Includes SundtY TlmnIfNI.

Alan Bannister, the lop draft
choice In the winter baseball
draft, signed Wednesday with
the Philadelphia Fhlllles
shortly after bemg selected
Bannister, 21, a shortstop at
Arizona Slate last season, was
In PlllladelPIIa to si(!Jl his
contract, a Phillles spokesman
llld.

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

• 8

Fourth place at stake here Friday

PHILADELPHIA (UPI)

,.
1.
,..
,

6-T
3

boys
Mr Wolfe's 9-\-2-year record, as the table shows, ts not a

Thesday Headline Coach Carl Wolfe of the Marauders
restgns effective Ute end of the 1972-73 season
The accompanying chart tells the story of Carl Wolfe as
basketball coach at Mtddleport Htgh Schooll963 through the 6667 season, and at Me1gs Htgh School for Ute 67-68 season tn Ute
present Frldsy rught's game agalllSt Logan here completes the
ftrst half of Ute Southeastern Ohto League season Metgs at 3-3
wtll be a sltghtfavorlte to be 4-3 when that match~ past '
'
The cold, lifeless numbers that tell of wtns and losses, pomts
scorlld for and pomts scored agamst, and Ute annual standmgs
caMot even suggest the work, the effort, the dreams and hopes
- and the dtStllustonments - Utat retgned tn Middleport and
Meigs High dressmg rooms at Ute halftime and post game
ertltques of these 91&gt; basketball seasons
These 178 basketball games m playmg time only spanned
approxunately 266 hours m 91&gt; years a coach and his players of
necesstty put thetr fulures m alhleltcs on a short-tiDle fuse It
wouldn't be fatr except for Ute fact that Ute same condtltons, on
Ute averap: govern competing schX&gt;Is and teams.
ThiS I and everyone who has known Coach Wolfe knows he
works as hard at hts job as anyone could want He never took his
role as coach hghUy I lhmk he _was surprtsed year after year
when boys who were shooters and eager to play basketball m
grade school, as freshmen, and even as varsity reserves 1oo often
sroved average shots and tense and error.prone as JUntors and
semors m varsity action Or they chose tn gtve up basketball
altogether by tl)eir last year m school
This had to be a bttter pill, for Coach Wolfe was a bona ftde

tiANNW~~~-~~~~~~GNS~~--~

'·

8

.

Chet Tannehill

t

\1

OPP
946
779
958
742
874
935
821J;
840
3219 3679

~ij

Today's

Pos.
6

p

"star" atold Racme High School where he owns to lh1s day many
of the all-tune scormg records And he was a top scorer for the
Martella College Pioneers tn Ute 61~2 and 62 and 63 seasons
before coming to Mtddleport. Basketball was good tn hun He
surely believes 11 should be as good to ~u athletically-mmded

the Sports
By
Desk

urvlce
By Motornot
Route
avallablt
where carrier
Onl

o' ........o"o o o".Vo'o"o' o0 o 0 ~0 o"F1'~.., ......

*
**t-,.
i:l

,. i:j
W• "

I

I

,

L

o".l'o

~

SI:OAI,

I~ 10
12h9
1 13
1189
113/jl
3 11
6
8
10?3
16 40
~264 4595
(At Ml!lit;R High)
1 13 671 107J
953 JJ.~5Z
1 13 6fio 930
1026 1301
762
9 5 797
1077 1073
923
7 ~ 867
1221 1221 ( 1)
f\23
857
1119 1177
-6
394
6)8 621 (to date)
3 3' 161
459
(,034 601.~5
27 49 438
ncludes last ni t-;ht !;t:&gt;me· at \le llston)

1072
936
1146
1110

'

.

BY KEITH WISECUP
Sole possesston of fourth
place m Ute Southeastern Ohio
League Is Ute stakes when the
Logan Chieftatns pay the redhot Metgs Marauders a vlstt at
Rock Spri!)$S ~ Fi'!&amp;y.
Both Ute Chtefs and the
Marauders lulve 3-3 league
slates but Logan has lost three
in a row while Me1gs has won
thetr last two in loop aclton In
all games, Logan ts 4-5 whtle
Meigs Is riding a four game
winning streak at 6-4
Both Ute Chtefs and Ute
Marauders have nearly Ute
same type starting ftve , any of

ON THE TV DIAL Two goodies "China," a spectal on Ute
history and customs ofthis stlll-mystertous land, 9 on WHTN-TV,
and a real-life documenlary, "An American Family," same
,
time, darn 11, on WDUB-TV

Dear Rap
I have a frtend who IS always telling me what other people
The Almanac
say about me And they're really such terrible things thai I feel
By United Press International like runnmg away. I guess I make an awful unpresslon How can
Today ts Thursday, Jan. 11, I change' _ 1:.. D.
Ute lith day of 1973 wtlh 354 to
follow
L
The moon ts approaching tis
THURSDAY. JAN. 11, fm
Change frtends 1 - SUE
6
00News
3,
4,
8, 10, 13 t5 Trul~ or Con seq 6, Around the
f1rst quarter
+++
Bend 33, Sesame Sf 20
•
The mormng stars are Dear L D. ·
6 30- NBC Naws4, 15, ABC News 8, tO I Dream of Jeannle1 3
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Designing Women 33
And know your enemies - of whom this friend Is one 1 7
00Trulh or Conseq. 3, Seal T~e Clock 4, Course of Our
Jup1ter
HELEN
Times 33, Dick Van Dyke 4. W~at•s My Line&gt; 8 Big Red
The evenmg star is Saturn
Jubilee 15, News 6 Amazing World of Kreskln 13. Ele&lt;:lrlc
Company 20
Those born on this date are
7 30- Holl~ood Squares 3, To Tell The Truth 6, Wold King
under the stgn of Caprtcorn
-------....,-FACTS
dom 10, Ill See You In Court 4 Lassie 8 Wesfern
AmerlcanstatesmanAlexand- -~B=..::A::..:R~.:B=-:::S:.._
Civilization MaJesty &amp; Madness 20, Newsmaker 13
8 00 - Advocates 33, 20, Flip Wilson 3, 4, 15. Jacques Cousleau
er Hamilton, ftrst secretary of
By PHIL PASTORET
6. 13 Wallons 8, 10
the Treasury, was born Jan. II,
9
00
- Ironside 3, 4, IS , C~ina 6, 13. An Amer ica n Family 20
1757
The turkey's revenge hash
33
, Movie "The Gypsy Moths," 8.,10 , An American Family
left over from the festive
20, 33
0 n lh ts da y m hIS tory
btrd
10 00 - Owen Marshall 6, 13 , News 20 Dean Martin 3 4 15
In 1861, Alabama - seceded
• • •
World Press 33
'
11 OO-News3,4,6,8,13.15
from the Umon
Husbands who mu.!t
11 30-Jo~nnyCarson3.4 15, Jack Paar6, 13, Movies Slage to
In 1935, American avtatrtx take the check home to
Tucson" a. "Party Girl 10
Amelia Earhart Putnam the frau are merely reve
11
45
- Jo~nny Carson 4
nue agents
100-News4
II
became lhe ftrst woman to fly
• • •
•
FRIDAY. JAN. 12, 1973
across the Paciftc from Hawau
6 00- Sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10
to Calilorma
6 15 - Formllme 10. Farm Reporl 13
The
Council of
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
In 1964, Surgeon General
Churches ts a fellowship of
6 30- Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8. Human Dimension
Luther Terry reletsed"'o..report
tO. Blue Ridge Quartet 3
252 Protestant, Anglican,
saymg that smokmg ctga~ltes
1 00 - Today3,4, 15 News6 News8,10, Ftlntstones 13
Orthodox and Old Catholic
7 30 - Romper Room 6. Sleepy Jeffers 8, Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
churches from 90 countries
was a deftmte "health hazard "
13, Popeye 10
,
Seem~ the Old Year out ts
and territories throughout
8
00
../Capt.
Kangaroo
10,
New
Zoo
Revue 13 Sesame Sf 33,
a condttton m wh1ch qutte a the world. It was 1founded
Rom
per
Room
B. Lassie 6
A thought for the day few do
' In 1948 to promote Christian
8 30- Jack LaLanne 13. New Zoo Revue 6. Rompe( Room 8
Alexander Hamilton satd m
• • •
unity and to facilitate co9 00 - Paul Dixon 4, P~ll Done~ue 15 AM 3, Concentration 6.
Fellows who have
1781, "A naltonal debt, If 1t 1s
operation In mission work,
C.pl Kangaroo 8, Ben Casey t3 Mr Rogers 33 Friendly
dream
g1rls shouldn't, If
Junction 10
'
doctrinal study and service
not e"cess1ve, wtll be tn us a
marned, talk m thetr
9 30-Jeopordy3, HazelS. ToTeltTheTrulh3
projects
such
as
aid
to
refnattonal blessmg "
- Dina~ Shore 3, 15, Die~ Van Dyke 13. Columbus Sl•
sleep.
ugees, The World Almanac 10 00
Calling 6, Joker's Wild 8, 10
says
10 30- Concenlrallon 3, 15. Phil Dona~ue ~ . Split Second t5
~m.....:-..... ·~··~":.-WW~&lt;-»&gt;'A · ······
·
PJice Is Right a. 10.
•
'
11 00 - Love American Style 6, Sale of lhe Cenlury 3 15
Panword 13. Gambit 8, iO
'
t1 ~-Love of Life 8, Bewitched 6, 13 Hollywood Squares 3, 4,

ALL ttAHES.
w L

"T.I'o"o

world champton Oakland Athletics who p1cked last
Mtlwaukee p1cked fourth and
went for oulflelder Michael
Robtnson of Kirkland, Wash ,
wtlh San Franctsco then ptckmg shortstnp John Andrews of
Uncoln, Til St Louts selected
second baseman Larry Stortt
of Lakewood, Calif., as the No
II ptck and Mmnesota unmedtately came on wtth outftelder Joseph Honce Jr of
Brtdgeport, WVa
The New York Yankees,
selectmg 14th, chose catcher
Greg Kane of Arcata, Calif,
mftelder Wayne Benson of Del
Rio, Texas, was ptcked 15th by
lhe Chicago l.'ubs, followed by
Cleveland's chotce of outftelper
Cleve Reed of Lancaster,
Cahf , Boston takmg th1rd
baseman Uoyd Thompson of
Albuquerque, N .M ., and
Houston grabbmg shortstop
Robert Ntckeson of San Jose,
Calif
The major league clubs
picked for thetr Triple-A affthates m the second round,
wtth every learn makmg a
selectton with Ute exception of
Houston, which passed
To be subject lo selection, a
player must he eligible tn s1gn
a professiOnal contract on or
before Feb 24, 1973

however, IS last tn that
category wtth a chtlltsh 362
average The Chtefs are Ute tnp
free throw sho~ at 704 per
cent
Logan opened tis league
season as Ute stirphse team'lly
wmmng the ftrst three games
and lostng the fourth to
powerful Waverly only by 6561, the closest test the Ttgers
have had tilts year Stnce then,
however, tt has been downhtll
Undefeated Galhpohs
shocked the Chiefs 71-'16 at the
French Ctty anq last Tuesday
mght Athens turned the trtck
56-51 The key In Frtday here
wtll be whether the Chtefs can
.bounce back to thetr earher
form.
Back at Marauderland
thmgs have gone enltrely
different Metgs started out on
a sour note, droppmg four of
thetr first stx Things are
different now for Coach Wolfe's
lads have not lost smce
December Ia• when Galbpolts
dtd the Marauders m
A good reserve game should
be on tap also as Ute Logan
Papooses are the league
leaders at 6-0 Coach Roger
Btrch's Metgs reserves are 3-3
but are a better team Ulan th1s
mdteates

ELVERA&lt; NEUMAN OF THE LASSIES
RACINE - The coaches of Southern H1gh School are
preparmg for a btg sports attraclton w~en Ute naltonally known
all-gtrls basketball team - the "Arkansas Lasstes" - come tn
tnwn
The "Lasstes", featurmg some of the fmest female talent of
America, will make the local boys earn every basket, when they
meet at Racme's Southern Htgh gym on Monday, Jan 15 at 8
pm
The "Lasstes" ask for no set-ups and will furmsh the local
men's faculty all the oppos1t10n they wtll need 149 wtns tn 151
games 1s great m any league That's the record Ute "Lass1es"
brmg to Racme
Playmg good, sohd basketball IS a trademark w1th the
"Lasstes" Outstandmg passmg and ball handlmg add a great
· deal to the color of this group of female' court wtzards However,
there wtll he plenty of laughs when Ute gtrls ptck on everyone In
stght
Fans are sure to be amazed at the remarkable shootmg
percentage of this great gtrls' learn Few area htgh school teams
could match 'them m percentage of shots made
So, fans are m for an enJoyable and exctltng evemng of
basketball, when the local men's faculty 1)100t the gtrls head-Qn
at Ute Southern Htgh Gym, sponsored by The SOuthern Athletic
Boosters
Acapacity crowd ts expected, so get your tickets early from
etther Ute Southern High School basketball and football teams
and cheerleaders or Ute Jr Htgh football and basketball teams
and cheerleaders Advance ltcket pnces are $1 student, $1 25
adults, and at the doors, $1 25 student and $1 50 adults

Falcons edge
Marshall 92-87
By United Press International
Cornelius Cash, one of Ute
best rebounders m the natwn,
proved hts worth to Bowlmg
Green Wednesdav mght as his
t ~lm!'tili!lJ''i~' !ll#,tes tel)" u\e
Fal~ns to an upset of Marshall
Bowlmg Green Jed all the
way tn wm 92-ll7 as Marshall
was hampered by poor
shootmg and the Falcons'
strong defense
Randy Noll scored 31 pomts,
20 m Ute second half as the
Tbundenng Herd tned to make
up the def1c1t Cash had 25
pomts BG ts now 4-5 and Marshall 8-4
Other college scores of the
rught showed Otterbetn over
Wtttenberg6~1, Wooster over
Mt Uruon 7~3 , Deftance over
Fmdlay 91-ll2, Case over John
Carroll 63-54 , Ohto Dommtcan
over Urbana 94-lll; Eastern
Mtchtgan over Cleveland State
62-54, and GaMon (Pa ) over
Youngstown State 63-54
Gannon tnok an 6-0 lead and
held on to tts advantage
throughout the game to gettts
stxth wm of the season
Youngstown, now U , drew to
w1Utm four pomts, 53-49, wtth
seven mmutes left but got no

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come tQ us
for income tax help.

The tax books are now open for the
December or first half collection of the
1972 Real Estate taxes. Also for
delinqueJtt tax. Closing date will be
January 20, 1973.
•.

Howard E. Frank
Meigs COunty Treasurer
•

r.

NEWGM
SAN DIEGO, Calif (UP!) Peter Bavast, 30, was named
Wednesday all the new general
manager of the San Otego
Padres
He
succeeds,
Eddte
\ l
I
t, ~
'1. P tt 'I '!l w
\.
• ----------

and ~I m the p AC
Bruce Baer paced Deftance
wtth T/ pomts to give the Yellow Jackets thetr lOth wm m 11
starts Findlay ts !Hi
Cleveland State, playing at
Ypstlanti, Mtch , attempted to
rally m the second half but fell
short to lose tts seventh game
out of II starts Gale Drununer
was high for Ute V1kmgs wtth 22
pomts

WITH THESE

SPRIJiS
WEATHER STRIPPING
CAULKING COMPOUND
PLASTIC STORM WINDOWS
HEAT TAPES- DOOR STRIPS
WARM MORNING HEATERS
PERFECTION OIL HEATERS
ELECTRIC HEATERS
WINDOW GLAS$-THERMOMETERS
PIPE INSULATION
STOVE PIPE, COLLARS, SHOULDERS,
COAL BUCKETS, ETC.

'

[}[IIOO.BLOCM
THE IHCOME TAX PEOPLE

Ebersbach Hardware
Main Street
Ph. 992·2811
Pom~,

0.

304 E. Main 992-3795 Pomenrj, 0.
Open 9 Til 5 Mon. thru Sat.
No Appointment Necessary

Letshman who dted last month
Bavast, who ts the son of
Padres' Prestdent E J 'Buz
z1e" Bavast, has served as
dtrector of mmor league
operattons smce the Padres
were formed m 1968
'Dhe Padres also anno(mced
Utat Bob Jl'ontame wtJI be Ute
new dtrector of player personnel Fontame was formerly
director of scoutmg
In another move, Mtke Port
was named mmor Je~ g ue
adrmntstratnr for the Padres
Port had prevwusly served as
director of promotwns and
general mana ger of Ute Lodi
and Key West farm teams m
the Padres' mmor lea gue
system

( Ga·s &amp; Coa ll

Reason 3. We are a year-round
service. We do not disappear or
I!P back to some other business
after 'April IS.

~~----------------"'"'-. .

closer
Walter Hill scored 23 pomts
as Wooster downed Mount Unton m OhiO Conference action
WQ!lsler ••
ou ouerall Iand 1.,I tn
'f'ti "!T' "V
Ute league Mount Umon, !Hi
and l-2, was led· by Ed Lawrenee's 26 pomts
Otterbem ran tis record to 9-3
wtth the Ohio Conference wm
overWittenberg,now7-2 Steve
Traylor led Otterbem wtlh 15
pomts
Jumor guard Russ Drake h1t
for 28 pomts to lead Case td tts
vtctory m Presidents Athletic
Conference actton Both Case
and John Carroll are 5-3 overall

LONG BEACH, Calif (UPI) - Somehow, some way, make tt
your busmess to meet Tim Foley, somettme
You're m for a warm experience
He played cornerback mall 16 of Ute Mlamt Dolphtns v1ctones
tilts year, and naturally-, was lookmg forward tn the next one No
' lookmg forward to catching 'your
17, about the same way you're
next breath
Tim Foley won 't be swtmg up for No 17, though
He can't
"The doctnrs say tt was a one hundred per cent shoulder
separation ," says the goodlookmg, 24'year-Qld Foley, who 1s
carrymg h1s left arm m a shng and walkmg w1th such small, sttff
legged steps that he looks hke a man of 84
He's Not Complaining
"They took some muscle out of my left Uttgh and put tt m my
left shoulder, so tt 's a bttle tnugh gettmg around ," he says explatmng, not complammg "Naturally, tt's a btg dtsappomtment
not to be able to play m Ute Super Bowl Sunday But 1 bebeve
hke all those people who heheve m God, that all things work for
Ute good Somehow m some strange way, some good wtll come
out of thts "here Foley paused a moment before contmumg
"and thts IS the beshlung that could've happened "
That's qwte a statement for a young man of 24
It takes on even more mearung when you hear stdebned T1m
Foley say tl, because when you do, you know he means tl
Ttm Foley, you mtght say, 1s In Utts Super Bowl game what
Reggte Jackson was In the last World Senes
"I saw those ptctures of him on crutches," says the Dolphms
slender third year man "I don't know Reggte Jackson, but I felt
sorry for hiDllhe same way you'd feel sorry for anybody who was
part of an effort and dtdn't at least get Ute satisfactiOn of atlemptmg to achteve hJS goal Never havmg been m that sttuation
before, I didn't reahze what he was gomg through Now I have a
better tdea "
Nothing Dramatic
There was nothing dramattc about the way Foley mgJrred his
separated shoulder two weeks ago agamst Ute Ptttsburgh
Steelers It happened the second ttme the Steelers had the ball
The Steelers punted and the 6 -foot, 190-pound Foley threw a
beauttful block at Jun Clack, Pttlsburgh's 6-foot-3, 250-pound
center Only one thmg went wrong Foley landed on hts left
shoulder as he fell, Clack fell on top of htm, and Fole) 's shoulder
hit the hard tartan turf mThree Rtvers Stadiwn
"It was just like thts," satd Foley, lappmg his left foot on Ute
concrete floor of the dugout tn whtch he was sttlmg and talkmg
Come Utts Sunday , Foley, wtlh his arm tn the sling, will be on
the stdelines at !As Angeles Coliseum trymg lo do the little he can
In help his Dolphin teammates He'll be watching the Washmglon
Redskins Iosee if they unwtttlngly ltp off any of Utetr plays
"Hopefully, I've got a few years left, " says Ttm Foley, "and a
chance to get back here agam You can't let somethmg hke this
ea t away at you "
..

"Everythrng In Hardware"

�'
· 4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o:,Jan. 11, 197~

Warfield agrees·with

SEO Statistics
1972-73 HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
IIncludes games through Jan. 6)
OVERALL SCORING
Name, Team
FG FT Pis
Rich Wh ite. Ale xander
95 21 211
·oave Souders, Wellston
70 19 159
Mark Mace, Athens
72 34 178
Roger Dingey , Wahama
73 10 156
Char lie Chamber, Pt Pl easant
52 31
135
Danny Hall , Federal -Hocking
33 11
77
58 25 151
G re~ McDaniel. Starr·Wash ,
Gil 'rice. Gallipolis
19 131
56
Jim Noe, Gallipolis
49 25 123
Mark Hu mphrey, Belpre
51 19 121
SEOAL SCORING
Name , Team
FG FT Pis
Dave Souder s. Wel lston
48 12 108
Mark Mace , Athens
39 17 95
Bill Maloy. Waverly
' 41 11 93
Mi ke Oyer, Waverly
38 17 93
Jeff Hannon , Ironton
44 3 91
Gil Pnce, Gallrpolis
38 11 87
Jim Noe, Gallipolis
34 17 85
36 8 76
Jim Bo~gs , Me i ~s
Paul W ite, Jac son
31 12 74
Mark Ki esling, Gallipolis
29 18 74
SVAC SCORING
Name, Team
FG FT Pis
Jam ie Lafon , Sym mes Valley
34 19 87
Ph il Robinson. Symmes Valley
37 11 '85
Dave Robinette. Norlh Gallia
33 16 82
Randy Boring, Easter'n
39 18 96
Clay Hudson, Ky~er Creek
37 17 91
Norm Curfman, outhern
37 12 86
John Lusher, Hannan Trace
34 15 83
Mi ke Caldwell. Hannan TraCe
32 12 76
Rick Corn, Symmes Valley
27
7 61
Jene Myers, Symmes Valley
14 5 35

..

TEAM STATISTICS
Field Goal Percentage
Team
FGM-A Pet.
Waverly
164-331 .495
Gallipolis
134-281 .477
. Logan
131 -289 .453
Athens
114-254 .449
lronlon
128-305 .420
Ja ckson
108-269 .401
Wellston
99-258 .384
Meigs
11 3-312 . .362
Free Throw PercentaQe

Team
Logan
Athens
Waverly
Gallipolis
Ja ckson
-Meigs
Ironton
Wellston
Team
Waverly
Ga llipolis
Logan
Meigs
Ironton

Alhens
Jackson
Wellslon

FTM-A
57 - 81
52· 77
67-102
67-106
66-lll
58-102
37· 68
53-108
Rebounds ·

No.
233
210
178
174

Pet.
.704
.675

.657
.632

.595
.569

.544
.491

G Avg ,
5 46.6
5 42.0
5 35,6
5 34.8

173 5 34 .6

155 5 31.0
127 5 25.4
103 s 20.6

Personal Fouls

Team
'No. G Avg.
Jackson
70 5 14.0
Athens
76 5 15.2
Waverly
88 5 17.6
Well ston
89 5 17.8
Ironton
92 5 18.4
Meigs
93 5 18.6
Logan
97 5 19.4
Gallipolis
101 5 20.2
INQIVIDUAL LEADERS
Field Goal Percenlage
Name, T.
FGM·A Pet.
Oyer, Wav.
38-59 .644
Norris, L.
30-48 .625
Chonko, Ath.
15-24 .625
Pr ice, Gal l.
38-65 .585
Noe, Gall .
34-60 .567

N. Galli a
Jackson
Wellston
S'western
Southern

I G) Avg.

19)
(7)
(9)
18)
(7)
(4)
(81
(7}

(7)
(7)

23.4
22.7
19.8
19.5

19.3
19.3
18.9
18.7
17.6
17.3

IG1 Avg.
(51 21.6
(51 19.0
15) 18.6
15) 18.6
(5) 18.2
m 17.4
151 17.0
(5) 15.2
(5)· 14.8
(5) 14.8
IGl Avg.
15) 17.4
15) 17.0
(5 ) 16.4
(6 ) 16.0
16) 15.1
16) 14.3
16) 13.8
16) 12.7
(5) 12.3
(3) 11.7

425
421
355
453
396

181 x5J.1
(8) 52.6
(7)

50.7

(9) 50.3
18) 49.5

Teams Ranked Defensively

Team
Han-Trace
Gallipolis
Eastern
Athens
Alexander
Miller
Waverly
N. Gallia
Southern
Fed-Hock ing
Ironton
Meigs
Logan
Vinton Co.
S'weslern
Nels-York
Belpre
GIOusler
Wahama
W. Local
PI . Pleasant
Jackson
K Creek
Starr-Wash .
S. Valley
Wellslon

x-shortened

Pis
470
342
370
477
480
395
397
463
476
541
492
556

495
500
563
570

447

515
515

· 469
476
555

.'

IG) Avg.
110) 47.0
17) 48.9
17) 52 .9
191 53 .0
19 ) 53 .3
17) 56 .4
17) 56 .7
(8) x59.5
181 59.5
19) 60.1
(8) 61.5
(9) 61.8
(8) 61.9
181 62.5
(9) 62.6
(9) 63.3
(7) 63.9
IS) 64.3
(8) 64.4
17) 67.0
(7) 68.0
(8) 69.3
110) 72.5
(8) 75.1

725
601
528 171 75.4
578 (7) 82.8
game not

cluded.

in-

FRIDAY
SEOAL
Wellston at Athens
Waverly at Gallipolis

Jackson at Ironton

Logan at Meigs
TRI-VALLEY
VInton Co. at Nels-'U&gt;rk
SVAC
North Gallia at Eastern

DOn Shula on decision
LONG BEACH, Calif. (UPI)
- As the leading receiver of
the Miami Dolphins, Paul
Warfield is particularly quali-lied to bilk about Don Shula's
decision to go with Bob Griese
at quarterback over Earl
Morrall.
-· Morrall, Ute old veteran,
replaced Griese, Ute young
veteran, after Griese broke a
bone in his ankle in lhe
Dolphins' fi!Ut game. AIUtough
Morrall came on and got
Miami to Super Bowl VII,
Shula has announced he is
going back to Griese, who is
healthy again.
"It's a matter of communication," said Warfield,
Ute nine-year pro grom Ohio
State. "Bob Griese and I have
been together three years
while Earl Morrall has been
with this club one year.
" Naturally, the lines of
communication between
myself and Bob Griese are a

S~~:per

little closer than the onb
between Earl Morrall and
myself, it's Utat simple."
Obviously, Warfield agrees
wiUt Shula 's decision.
At 30, he is completing his
Utird season as a Dolphin after
the controversial January,
1970, trade between Miami and
Cleveland, a deal which gave
Ute Browns the Dolphins' No. I
draft selection. That selection
turned out to he Mike Phipps,
now Ute starting quarterback
at Cleveland.
Warfield missed three games
Utis season wiUt a painful
sprained arch but still was able
to account for 606 yards ·and
Utree touchdowns on 29 receptions for a team with two 1,000yard rushers (Larry Csonka
and Mercury Morris.
"It's a type of injury that
lakes a long time to heal,"
Warfield explained. "It still
gets very sore. It really won't
be okay until after the season.
But I'll he able to play up to 100

Bowl nptes • • •

ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP!) - ·
What Utey're saying during
Super Bowl week:
Sam Wyche, sub quarterback for Washington :
"We're not coming out here
lhis year to prepare for next
year's Super Bowl. We're out
here to win it this year."
When someone asked Wyche
if George Allen told him that,
he replied, "Naw, I Utought it
up all by myself."
Don Shula, the Dqlphin
Coach opening his daily press
conference: " I have noUting
further to add."

own. I just try to get by and
sometimes I don't even dQ
that."
Larry Brown, Redskin running hack, on wheUter he
thinks while he runs : "If you
Utink too much, you'll go
nowhere. I just try to decrease
the situations that are
detrimental to my health."

per cent of my capacity Sunday·."
Commenting on Warfield's
perfonnance this year, Shula
said the element of luck was
involved Utis season. Warfield
had an NFL-leading 11 touchdown catches in 1971, eight
more Ulan Utis season.
"I thought Utere were six to
eight passes Utat he could have
caught for touchdowns this
season Utat dido 't happen,"
Shula said. "They were passes
that were that close but
weren't meant to be."
The gifted pass catcher
agreed wiUt his coach's assessment.
"I felt I had a good year
considering Ute injury and
everyUting," he offered, "but it
could have been better. There
were a munber of occasions
where I didn't score by inches.

"It's just the breaks,! guess.
I had a couple of passes go off
my fingertips, I dropped a
couple of oUters and Utere were
a couple of instances where Ute
defensive man· just simply
made fantastic plays."
What does he expect on
Super Sunday from the
Washington Red.skins by way
of pass coverage?
"I Utink they'll concentrate
on me," said the fleet receiver.
"But Utey can't do it exclusively because we have so many
olher ways of scoring.
"If I get double coverage, we
have a very capable quarterhack who will lake ·advantage

Sonics lose
again, 98-86

Shula on Allen's rah-rah __
Olhers
tactics: "I can't visualize
Following the theory it's
William stown at Belpre
Parkersburg Calholic al myself leading Larry Csonka easier to fire the coach ralher
Free Throw Percentage
Warren Local
in 'Hail to the Dolphins.'"
than the players, the Seattle
Name , T.
FTM-A Pel. Hannan at Southern
Conroy, Jack.
18-20 .900 Alexa nder at Hunginton I Ross)
SuperSonics find themselves
Mace, Ath.
17-20 .850 Miller at Glouster
John Wilbur, Ute Redskin with a new coach today and
Bailey, M.
21 -28 . .750 Starr-Washington at Ohio Deal
guard, on the differences another loss on their record.
Oyer. Wav.
17-24 .708 Rav enswood at Wahama
Noe. Gall .
17-25 .680
, between ., the two .,. similar • The'' Sonlcs, who bounced
' SA'I'I:JRDAY
Rebounds
TRI-VALLEY
···teams:
"WeH;1hey have a field Tom Nissalke and replaced
Name , T.
No. G Avg. Belpre at Warren Local
goal kit ker whO''dyes tles in the him with assistant Bucky
Malkin, I.
78 5 .15.6
SVAC
Pri ce, Gall
71 5 14.2 Southern at Hannan Trace
off-season."
Buckwalter Wednesday,
Noe, Gall
49 5 9.8
Others
showed no noticeable imNorri s, L.
47 5 9.-4 Vinton Co. at Miller
Manny Fernandez, Dolphin provement in Uteir play a few
Thompson, Wav . 47 5 9 4 Hannan at Southwestern
Teams Ranked Ollensively
Chesapeake at Symmes Valley defensive lineman, on his bours later when they dropped
Team
Pis IG) Avg. St. Joseph Prep at Glouster
style : "I have a style all my
Alexander
830 (9) 92 2
a 911-86 decision to Baltimore.
TUESDAY 1Jan.16)
Waverly
546 (7) 78.0 Chesapeake at Gallipolis
Seattle, after being held to 30
S. Valley
534 (7) 76.3 Point Pleasant at Barbourspoints
in the first half, did
575 18 ) 71.9 ville
Starr-Wash.
Belpre
490 (7) 70.0 Wahama at Winf ield
manage to overcome a 23-point
NBA Slandings
Gallipolis
470 17) 67.1
By
United
Press
International
deficit
and tie the game with
Han -Trace
661 (10) 66.1
SEOAL
Standings
Eastern
Conference
5%
minutes
left to play.
Wahama
527 181 65.9
Pt . Pleasant
458 (7) 65.4
Atlantic Division
However, Baltimore regained
· w. I. pet. g.b.
Logan
518 (8 ) 64.8 Team ALL GAMES
W
l
P
OP
Boston
33 7 .625
its composure and o.utscored
Vinton Co.
506 IS) 63.3
8 0 614 449 New York
35 10 .778
v, UteSonics, 14-'1, in the\exl fowK. Creek
629 110) 62 .9 Waverly
'8 0 536 ·374 Buffalo
12 30 .286 22
Meigs
561 (91 62 .3 Gallipolis
Portsmouth
7 3 707 670 Philadelphia
4 40 .091 30
minutes to hand Seattle its 33rd
Ironton
·497 (8 ) 62.1 South Point
7 4 794 650
Central
Division
loss
in 46 games.
Nels-York
550 (9) 61 .1 Athzns
6 4 556 528
Eastern
412 17) 58.9 Meigs
w.
I.
pel.
g.b.
Elsewhere
in the National
6 4 638 621 Baltimore
25 17 .595
Miller
396 (7) 56.6 Fed-Hocking
5 4 491 541 Atlanta
24 20 .545 2 Basketball Association,
Athens
500 (9) 55.6 ' Chesapeake
4
3
420
403
Houston
17 25 .405 8 Kansas City-Omaha edged
Fed-Hocking
491 19) 54.6 Logan
4 5 569 551
W. Local
381 17) 54.4 Ironton
Cleveland
13 JO .302 12'17 Chicago, 102-100, Phoenix
2 7 549 560
Western Conference
Glou ster
431 (8 ) 53.9 Jackson
2 7 453 621
Midwest Division
nipped Detroit, 123 -121 ,
Wellston
0 8 420 655
w. 1. pet. g.b. Boston ripped Houston, 128 Milwaukee
31 13 .705
SEOAL VARSITY
Chicago
28 15 .651 2'12 107, and Los Angeles routed
T01m
W L P OP KC-Omaha
College BKB Results
22 26 .458 , 11
Philadelphia, 120-96.
6 0 463 315
By United Pres. International Waverly
25 .419 12'12 Mike Riordan scored 20
Gallipolis
6 0 401 278 · Detroil Pacific IS
.
East
Division
Alhens
4
2
336
312
Bowdoin 73 Bates 71
w••I pct. g.b• points and Phil Chenier and
Logan
3 3 370 368 Los Angeles 31 10 .756
Wagner 88 Elizlolvn 74
Wes Unseld tallied 18 each for
Meigs
J J 361 394
F. Dcknsn '6J Ga . Soulhern 53
17
Ironton
1 5 345 356 ~~~~7;tate ~~ ~~ :~~ 1 ~' Baltimore which increased its
Delaware 49 Glassboro 36
Jackson
1 5 314 428
LeMoyne 75 Hartwick 71
13 33 .283 , 20•12 Central Division lead to two
Wellslon
·o 6 316 455 Seattle
Allred 75 Houghton 71
Portland
11 33 .250 21'17 games over Atlanta. Spencer
Tolal•
24 24 2906 2906
Dowling 65 Nyack 61
Wednesday's
Results
d'
·
ed n.. ;
SEOAL RESERVES
Boston 128 Houston 107
Haywoo s 17 pomts pac w•e
Scrd Heart 62 Adlphi 61
Team
W
L
P
OP
Edinboro 70 All lance 64'
Los Angeles 1.20 Phlla 96
Logan
6 0 279 ~3
Davidson 76 Pitt 73
KC-Omaha 102 Chicago 200
Waverly
5 1 240 200
Navy 80 Rndlph-Macn 61
Phoenix
123 Detroll121
Gallipolis
4 2 224 177
Mass . 62 Penn 58
Baltimore
98 ~altle 66
Athens
3 3 230 211
Wstminstr 80 Crngie-MIIn 43
(Only
games
scheduled)
Meigs
J 3 256 226
Thursday's
Games
Prov 118 Western Kr. 88
Ironton
2 4 216 242
Cai.-Pa. 71 KeeneS . 58
New
York
al
Atlanta
Jackson ..
I 5 223 266
Sippry Rck 85 St. Vine . 75
Golden St. vs. KC-Omaha
Wellston
0
6 156 299
Albrght 76 Squehnna 74
At Kansas City
Tolals
24 24 1824 '1824
W.Va. 102 Cornell69
!Only
games
scheduled)
' SEOAL FROSH
Ph ila . Tex. 75 St. Fran . 63
Team
W L P OP
•
South
ABA Standings
Ja ckson
6 1 367 260
Tenn . St·. 94 Tenn .-Chat 81
By
United
Press lnternalional
Gallipolis
5
2
302
232
Roanoke 56 VMI 55
East
Logan
3 2 184 160
No. Car. 92 Clemson 58
w. I. pet. g.b.
Meigs
3
3
206
203
No. Car. St. 94 Duke 87
32 IS .681
Ironton
3 3 194 225 Carol ina
Col mbs Coll : 62 OQithrpe 60
27 15 .643 2'12
Athens
2 3 174 168 Kentucky
LaGrange 71 Ga. S.W. 411
24 23 .511 8
Virgin ia
Waverl
y
2
4
255
209
West Ga. 88 Augsta Coll .78
16 29 .356 15
New
York
W
ellston
0
6
133
358
Wake Forest 85 Niagara 79
Memphis
15 28 .349 15
Totals
24
24
1815
1815
Towson St. 74 Wash&amp;Lee 64
West
Villanova 79 Richmond 74
w. I. pel. g.b.
S.E. La . 67 N.E. La. 55
Ulah
29 16 .644
Memphs Sl. 124 Fi ll~ Tech 75
Denver
23 20 .535 5
S.W. La. 129 Lamar Ill
Indiana
22 20 . 52~ 5112
SVAC
standings
·
Jacksonvl 73 Furman 71 ,
Dallas
17 25 .405 10112 ·
Midwest
Team
W L P Qp , San Diego
18 32 .360 lJIJ2 '
Wabash 105 DePauw 94
Hannan Trace 9 1 661 470
Wednesda v's Resu Its
Bwlng Grn 92 Marshall 87
Easterr
5 2 412 370
Dallas 124 San Diego 111
Millon 82 Rockford 62 .
Symmes Valley 4 3 534 528
Denver 106 Indiana 105
Mich .Tech 68 Northlnd 63
Kyger Creek
3 7 629 725
'New
York 105 Carolina 93
River Fails 77 Oshkosh 75
Soulhern
2 6 396 476
(Only
games scheduled)
Ind. Cenl . 79 Nrthrn Ky. 73
Soulhwestern 2 6 453 563
Thursday's
Games
St. Jos. 71 Butter 66
North Gallia •. 2 7 425 463
San Diego vs . Denver
Hastings 109 Krney St. 99
SVAC ONLY
At Dallas .
Case Wstrn 63 J. Carroll 54
Team
W L . P ~P
Indiana
at
Dallas
Ohio Dom. 94 Urliana 81
Hannan Trace 5 1 360 290
(Only games scheduled)
Gannon 63 Yngstwn St. 54
Eastern
5 1 348 296
Wayne St. 68 Mercy 59
Symmes Valley 4 1 391 333
E. Mich. 62 Cleve St. 54
Kyger Creek
2 4 390 451
Del . 77 St.Petrs-N.J. 64
North Gallia
2 4 317 339
Kalmazoo 85 Sprg Arbor 79 Southern
2 4 313 356
Oakland 90 Olivet 88
Soulhwestern 0 5 251 306
OHIO COLLEGI'l
Norlhwd 103 Del. Tech 91
Totals
20 20 2371 2371
BASKETBALLr
SCORES
AI ma 82 Adrian 66
SVAC RESERVES'
By
United
Press
International
Evansvi 71 Vlpraiso 62
Team
W L P OP
Southwest
North Gall ia
5 1 251 l-92 Otterbein 69 Wlltenberg 61
Wooster 70 Mt. Union 63
S.F.Austn 115 Sui Rss 76
Hannan Trace 4 2 225 212 Bowling
92 Marshall 87
Houston 66 ·Baylor 82
Southern
' 4 2 259 200 Defiance Green
91
Findlay
Kansas St. 57 SMU 55 ·
Eastern
4 2 253 . 186 Case Western 63 John 82
Carroll 54
Arlz.SI. 71 St.Louis 67
Symmes Valley 2 J 181 191
Dominican 94 Urbana 81
West
Kyger Creek
1 5 259 315 Ohio
Mi chigan 62 Cleveland
Santa Fe 76 S.W. Okla . 67
Soulhwestern 0 5 127 247 Eastern
State 54
·
Sou. Colo'. 72 Montana 70
Tolol~
20 20· 1555 1555
Hannan Trace at Kyger Creek

Pro Standings

College Scores·

feeble Sonic offense.
Nate Archibald, who scored
52 points Tuesday night in a
losing effort against New York,
rnnnected for 37 to lead Kansas
City-Omaha past Chicago.
Four of Archibald's points
came on a pair of twisting
layups In Ute final two minutes
as the Kings won for only Ute
sernnd time in the last H
games. Bob Love's 36 points
topped Chicago.
Charlie Scott poured in 37
points, including a club record
20 in the first quarter, to help
Phoenix beat Detroit. Neal
Walk had 25 points and Connie
Hawkins added 20 for Phnenix
hil D
.
w e ave Bmg topped Detroit
with 29.
hn
1· k'
· "
Jo HaVIce s 22pomts and
2() by Dave Cowens powered
Boston past Houston and
enabled the Celtics to move
into first p)ace in Ute Atlantic·
Division by a half game over
New York. Clavin Murphy led
the Rockets with 20 points.
L
1
d
os Ange es snappe its
three game losing streak at Ute
expense of Philadelphia which
suffered its 40th loss in 44
gsmes. Gail Goodrich scored
26 points and Jim McMillian
added 22 for the Lakers while
John Block's 20 was high for
th 76er
e
s.

of the situation. If Utat means
Utrowing to Marv Fleming (the
Dolphiqs' starting tight end) 10
times, then he'll do it."

.Reds pick
·up eight
pitchers
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Cincitmati Reds, always
looking for some new pitching
blood to go with their powerful
hats, picked up eight promising
young hurlers Wednesday In
Ute major leagues' winter free
agent draft.
Five selections were in Ute
regular phase of Ute draft ~~d
Utree more in the secondary
phase.
Two Ohioans were chosen by
major league teams .
Dennis Perry, a righthanded
· pitcher from West Unity, was
chosen by Ute Philadelph41
Phillies for Uteir Spartanburg
farm club. Dennis SmiUt, a
first baseman from Weston,
was picked by the San Francisco Giants for their Fresno
club.
Cincinnati's top pick was
Gary Lucas, a lefty from
Riverside, Calif., while Cleveland, picking sixth, went' with
James
McCutchin,
a
righthanded pitcher from
Level Lan , Tex.
The rest of Cincinnati's regular phase picks were :
Jonathon Ellefson, rhp, Williston, N.D.; John Higgins, ofrhp, Council Bluffs , Iowa;
Steven Hargest, rhp, Huntington, N. Y.; and Terry
Willis, rhp, Palmetto, Fla.
The rest of Cleveland's regular phase-picks were:
Jerry Devine, of~f. Walnut
Creek, Calif.; Donald Sasser,
if-c, Albany, Ga .; Wllllam Tiedemann, if, Wacaville, Calif. ;
Paul Faulk, of, East Laurinburg, N.C.; Dalll1y Howell, c,
Brunswick, Ga., and James
Postel, rhp, Costa Mesa, Calif.
Cincinnati went wiUt Jeff
Chandler, lhp, Davis, Calif.;
Paul Parker, p, WatchWlg, N.
Y. and William Guy, rhp, Hattiesburg, Miss., in Ute secondary phase.
Cleveland got Donald Saulnier Jr., lhp, Waltham, Mass.;
Gene Stohs, lhp, Grand Island,
Neb.; Manuel Alfonsin, if-of,
Hialeah,
Fla.;
Clyde
Lineberry, of, Lexington, Va.,
and Dennis Whitehead, c,
Birmingham, Ala. in the
secondary phase.
Except for the first rouna
picks, all Ute players were assigned to farm clubs.
Cleveland distributed its
players to affiliates in Reno,
Oklahoma City and San Antonio. Cincinnati's went to
Indianapolis, Three Rivers and
Tampa.
To be subject to selection, a
player must he eligible to sign
a professional contract on or
before Feb. 24, 1973'. The draft
was conducted over a
lelephone conference hookup.

Paul joins
NY Yankees ··
NEW YORK (UPI) .:.. 'Gqbe
Paul the man who traded
Graig Nettles to New York last
month, resigned from his
general manager's post with ·
Ute Cleveland Indians Wednes·
day and dealt himself over to
Ute Yankees to become one of
Ute learn's new owners.
Paul, one of baseball's top
executives r'Or ihe past i.5 years
-the last 12 with Ute Indianswill now step into the Yankee
picture in some high executive
position.
"Gabe Paul will join Ute
Yankee organization in a
major post," said Mike Burke,
who along with George
Steinbrenner, is one of Ute two
principal owners of the team,
purchased from CBS last week
for $10 miJUon.
Paul, who had four years left
on his contract wiUt the Indians, became a free agent
early Wednesday morning
when he signed papers in
Cleveland"'long wiUt team
owner and pr-esident Nick
Mileti.
"This morning I signed some
papers Utat. released me from
my contract," said Ute 63-year
old Paul. It was just an hour or
so ago that I became an official
owner of Ute Yankees. When
Ute opportunity was presented
Utere wasn't anyway I could
turn it down. Well,l should say
Utough, Utat if it wasn't for Ute
graciousness of Mr. Mileti, it
couldn't have happened. I am
very grateful to him."
Paul's sudden presence on
the Yankees is an interesiing
move in that he sent Nettles,
one of the bright young power
hltting infielders in Ute American League, to Ute Yankees for
a handful of second stringers.
Many Utought the deal was a
steal lor lhe Yankees.
P111l emphatically ~enied
any wrongdoing on his part, ,
joining Ute same team Utat he
had traded Nettles to only a
monUt ago.
"The first I heard of me
coming to Ute Yankees was Ute
day before yesterday," explained Paul. "Mr. Steinbrenner called Mr, Mil~ti·~l)d a~~ed
pennisslon to talk to me,"
·Paul's ea~a'l!lty with Ute
Yankees has not yet been
decided but he's likely to be one
of the brains In the
organization Utat can find Ute
young'lalent to put Ute Yankees
back on top.
He was only one of 13 new
owners who were unveiled
Wednesday. The others were :
Jess A. Bell, president, Bonne
Bell, Inc ., Lakewood, Ohio;

Lester Crown, president,
Henry CroWII &amp; Co., Chleaco;
John oeLorean, vice-president
Car and Truck Group, General
Motors Corp., Detroit; Tbolllllll
W. Evans, managing partner
in the law finn of Mudge,llol!e,
Guthrie and Aleunder, New
York; Edward Ginsberg and
Sheldon B. Guren, joint sharebolders from Cleveland; Ed·
ward M. Greenwald and Daniel
R. McCarthy, joint sllareholders from Cleveland; Nelson
Bunker Hunt, managing dlrector, Hunt International Petroleum Corp., and brother of
football's Lamar Hunt, Dallaa;
James M. Nedwlander,. prtisi.
dent Nederlander Theatre
Corp., New York; Marvin L.
Warner, chainnan of M4r\oin
Warner Co., Cincinnati; and
Francis J. O'NeiU, retired
chairman, Leaseway Transportation Co. and only
recently part owner ,of
Cleveland Indians, Cleveland.
WHA Standings
By United Pross lnterNOHonol
East
w. I. I. pis gf p
New Eng 24 16 1 49 179 1.0
Cleve
23 14 I ~7 1-40 102
N.Y.
23 21 0 A6 188 161
Quebec 20 19 I 41 1~7 152
Ottawa 17 19 3 37 1-45 )73
Phil a
15 25 0 30 138 182
Wesl
w. I. I. pis gf p
Wnlpeg
24 16 2 so 162 134
Mlnn
20 16 3 -43 133 136
LosAng 19 19 4 42 1-46 1~7
Houston 17 17 4 38 135 136
Alberta
16 21 2 34 120 139
Chicago 13 24 I 27 114 1 ·~2

Sale!
All Records· ·

and
Sheet M_
usic
Marked Down·
r •

For

~

c , usuoll; mto,~~,~fferent
s es - II&gt; to. 2"1~11~s for the
ide layer, 2~ for Ute second
layer, an_&lt;! 3 to 3 ~ inches for
Ute outside round of petals. The
petals ,are cut in heart shape
and are fas!ened at the point.
'l'o form ,Ute cenler, Mrs.

Bill &amp; Lee'$
I

MUSIC
CENTER

Bolin demonstrated how to loop
strips of the cornhusks, about
one-half inch wide, in ribbon
fashion Wllil Utere is a sizeable
bunch of the loops. These are
then wired with some fine wire.
Once the center is completed, the next step Is to begin
placing the petals, smaller
ones first and Uten on to the
medium sized ones and finally
the largest ones. These are
then wired in place.
For Ute stem a heavier wire
is added and Utis is wrapped
wit'I a nora! tape, preferably
brown since it blends better
with Ute cornhusks. As the
stem is taped, a piece of husk
can be added to create a leaf.
The final step is to spread the
petals and Uten curl Ute ends
over a large nail or small round .
pencil. Since the cornhusks are
damp, once they are rolled
over the nail or pencil they slay
CORNHUSK ROSES - Alittle lime and patience, but not
in that position.
too
much
talent, is what it lakes to create beautiful cornhusk
In making arrangements,
roses, according to Mrs. Janel Bolin who demonstrate d the
Mrs. Bolin suggested the lise of
technique
at a meeting Wednesday night of the Middleport
buckeye clusters to comAmateur Gardeners at Ute home of Mrs. Selwyn Smith .
pliment the cornhusk roses.
They are made from buckeyes
"'ired togeUter to resemble
ga•e the collect to open the
gffillll 61111'1!lf~: . Mrs. Bolin , all '!!~J1~Jro'?. ~ornh~)ls . , ,
~ exp!~l~w);ilJp~,\1\.¥ ~91~.~r~Ji~ , . Oil!iing ,lhe quslness .•sessioRc' m~etlng. Til ~ · ddof prize w!M'
the buckeyes !orr ~ v;ir.e-..ij; conducted by Mrs. Smilh, •vice to Mrs: Erroll Conroy. There ·
made wiUt the smallest bit on president, a report wa ~· g1ven will be no meeting in February.
an electric drill.
Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Arthur
by Mrs. Charlotte Taunton on
Mrs. Selwyn Smith, hostess arrangements taken to AUtens Strauss served refreshments.
for lhe meeting, featured on Mental Health Center at Mrs. Russell Mills was a
her mantel a family of dolls Christmas time . Members contributing hostess.

··LETART, W. Va . - The
r..iJtart Homemakers Club held
tlieir regular monthly meeting
on January 3 at the home of
Opal Friend with Lois Hoffman
and 9Pal Friend as hostesses.
The 'meeting was called to
order by the president, Mildred
Morgan, .•
~hlr!h 'VanFossen led
devotio ns with a scripture
reading from Galatians 2:14·21
Slid Martha Friend led the
group in singing " Praise

PH. 992-7590

Open Monday thru Saturday ·9 to 5
Friday Night Till 8:00
Budget Terms or BankAmericard

ii{m."
The secretary, Maxine
Mhrrhmri·, read the reports of
the November and December
meeting. B~r bar a Winter gave
Ute treasurer's report followed
by other committee reports
and the business meeting. The
lesson was given by Lois
Hoffinan entitled "A Look at
Communication Barriers."
The recreation leader, Judy
HW1t, led games. Prizes were
won by Dorothy Click and Pat
Friend. Refreshments were
served ·by the hostesses. Olher
priz.S were won by Judy Hunt
and ~xine Morrison .
Members present were
Elaine Ball, Dorthy Click, Lois
Durst, Martha Friend, Opal
Frlerid, Pat Friend, Judy HWlt,

fark's recrcatlon.buildlng Is
exteqded to area couples.
, The lessons will be held
each Th~rsday night at the
park from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Interested couples have until
Jan. 18 to enter the class.
Questions regarding the
classes may be answered by
telephonlog 985-3308 or 8822283. The classes are being
taught by Cecil Sayre of
Letart, W. Va., the club
caller.
The dress Is casual and
children are welcoine to
altend with their parents.

.
'

EARLY LEADER
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - Allie
Clarke of Akron, Ohio, who
launched Ute 1973 Professional
Bowl~rs Association tour. with
a victory in the San Jose Open1
climhed into the early lead ol
money winners Utis week with
his $7,500 lirst-place earnings.

of
securin g basketball
uniforms for the elementary
boys' basketball team and new
folding lunch tables was
discussed at Monday night's
meeting of the Rutland P.T.A.
Mrs. Janel Bolin, treasurer
reported thai the P.T.A. has a
balance of $811 .32 and ways of
putting the money to use were
proposed. Mrs. Shirley Bishop
presided at the meeting with
the Rev. Keith Wise, pastor of
the Rutland Church of Christ,

Phillips

BAYERS
ASPIRIN

MILK

Of
~·

·MAGNESIA

I

·'' 16 ,oz. Bottle

BAYERS CHILDREN
ASPIRIN

Reg.

reported 93 members.
Women interested in playing
basketball for the P.T.A. are
asked to attend a meeting, the
lime and place to be announced
later. P.T.A. memhership is
not required for participation.
Mrs. Sharon Wise's ~econd
grade won the room banner.
The second graders presented
a brief program at the conclusion of the meeting.

power stops
see·tbrough

N-OTEBOOK
PAPER

ALBERTO
BALSAM

500
SHE£JS

NEW HAIR CARE
16 oz.

Superior eoverlng
•

PEPTO-BISMOL
4 oz. .

Lois Hoffman , Audrey Huff.
Sharon McClellan,
Mildred Morgan, Maxine
Morrison; Ruth Pickens, Sue.
Sayre, Shirley VanFossen, and
Barbara Winter.

~man ,

JERGENS
EXTRA DRY

SKIN FORMULA

CHAIRS
Now you can buy that
comlortable
La-Z-Boy

Whatever LUCITE coms wet stays • Goes on fast, dries even faster
cove[td whet1 Hdries.
so.ap and water clean-up.
'

chair

llloohl u fantastic on the wall· • . Never needs stirrln&amp;, doesn't
·as it does In your mind.
like ordinary paints.

you've

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prices.

r

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,,
Alithortted.Dealer .;
. ' .

. MASON ··
FURNITURE

Htrmin Grate
777-5592
Muon, \'l. V•.

·.

45~

Eads, membership chairman,

LA·Z-BOV
'

\

14 oz.

'·

POMEROY

'

MOUTH
WASH

joi~

POMEROY

I

LISTERINE

Homemakers of ,,,,,~,~~::;:-;:;~,~~;$$'' '' ' ' Rutland PTA looking into
An Invitation to
the
'-...._
Letart meet at
~::~: s:~:::D::~!e~lu:~: two improvemen_t projects
western style dance lessons
Friend home
RUTLAND - The possibility givmg devotions. Mrs. Louise
to be glven at Royal Oak

Second
Formerly BRW Hdwe.

Ill

.

•

•

'

Wall To Wall Carpet Specialists

Estimates

Those cornhusk roses, so
pgpul~r
for
winter
arrangements, are easy and
\h,expen'Sive to make and yet so
beautiful in their natural beige
and brown tones.
·, ,Demonstrating just how to
make the cornhusk roses
Wednesday night at a meeting
.of .the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners was Mrs, Janet
~olin, Region 11 director of the
Qhio , Association of Gar'den
Clubs.
0 Wlth·apparent ease and Iilli~
, nor!, ~rs, Bolin created
ieveral rosj!S and showed how
iIttractivelt
, they,can he used in
arrangements.
"Creating
l),lelhing ., fro;n nothing is
ljilt}. like to do;" commented
, ir: liolio, who pointed out
lbat most any farmer is happy
get rid of some corn husks.
Mrs. Ilpliq explained that the
tJrst step is to select clean
h1Jsks from dried field corn,
a)ld suggested Utat the inside
tiosks are preferred since Utey
'*'e usually not as coarse or as
dirty as Ute ones on Ute outside.
~ese' shoUld Uten be dipped
irt warm water, towel dried or
ined. The petals are then

Iii
1

CARPET-LAND, INC.
Free

easy!,
and inexpensive

~

Before You Buy You Should TIJ·

116 W. MAIN

:R~ally

WORKSHOP - FoUowing Mrs. Janet Bolin's demonstration on making the cornhusk roses, everyone got in on the
act. Here Mrs . Bernice May, Mrs. Rose Reynolds and Mrs.
Erroll Conroy ,left to right', join Mrs. Bolin, second from left,
for tips about the fun.

..

1

12% oz.
Ust

'2.00

•

·JERGENS·
LOTION
oz.
Bottle

4314

�'
· 4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o:,Jan. 11, 197~

Warfield agrees·with

SEO Statistics
1972-73 HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
IIncludes games through Jan. 6)
OVERALL SCORING
Name, Team
FG FT Pis
Rich Wh ite. Ale xander
95 21 211
·oave Souders, Wellston
70 19 159
Mark Mace, Athens
72 34 178
Roger Dingey , Wahama
73 10 156
Char lie Chamber, Pt Pl easant
52 31
135
Danny Hall , Federal -Hocking
33 11
77
58 25 151
G re~ McDaniel. Starr·Wash ,
Gil 'rice. Gallipolis
19 131
56
Jim Noe, Gallipolis
49 25 123
Mark Hu mphrey, Belpre
51 19 121
SEOAL SCORING
Name , Team
FG FT Pis
Dave Souder s. Wel lston
48 12 108
Mark Mace , Athens
39 17 95
Bill Maloy. Waverly
' 41 11 93
Mi ke Oyer, Waverly
38 17 93
Jeff Hannon , Ironton
44 3 91
Gil Pnce, Gallrpolis
38 11 87
Jim Noe, Gallipolis
34 17 85
36 8 76
Jim Bo~gs , Me i ~s
Paul W ite, Jac son
31 12 74
Mark Ki esling, Gallipolis
29 18 74
SVAC SCORING
Name, Team
FG FT Pis
Jam ie Lafon , Sym mes Valley
34 19 87
Ph il Robinson. Symmes Valley
37 11 '85
Dave Robinette. Norlh Gallia
33 16 82
Randy Boring, Easter'n
39 18 96
Clay Hudson, Ky~er Creek
37 17 91
Norm Curfman, outhern
37 12 86
John Lusher, Hannan Trace
34 15 83
Mi ke Caldwell. Hannan TraCe
32 12 76
Rick Corn, Symmes Valley
27
7 61
Jene Myers, Symmes Valley
14 5 35

..

TEAM STATISTICS
Field Goal Percentage
Team
FGM-A Pet.
Waverly
164-331 .495
Gallipolis
134-281 .477
. Logan
131 -289 .453
Athens
114-254 .449
lronlon
128-305 .420
Ja ckson
108-269 .401
Wellston
99-258 .384
Meigs
11 3-312 . .362
Free Throw PercentaQe

Team
Logan
Athens
Waverly
Gallipolis
Ja ckson
-Meigs
Ironton
Wellston
Team
Waverly
Ga llipolis
Logan
Meigs
Ironton

Alhens
Jackson
Wellslon

FTM-A
57 - 81
52· 77
67-102
67-106
66-lll
58-102
37· 68
53-108
Rebounds ·

No.
233
210
178
174

Pet.
.704
.675

.657
.632

.595
.569

.544
.491

G Avg ,
5 46.6
5 42.0
5 35,6
5 34.8

173 5 34 .6

155 5 31.0
127 5 25.4
103 s 20.6

Personal Fouls

Team
'No. G Avg.
Jackson
70 5 14.0
Athens
76 5 15.2
Waverly
88 5 17.6
Well ston
89 5 17.8
Ironton
92 5 18.4
Meigs
93 5 18.6
Logan
97 5 19.4
Gallipolis
101 5 20.2
INQIVIDUAL LEADERS
Field Goal Percenlage
Name, T.
FGM·A Pet.
Oyer, Wav.
38-59 .644
Norris, L.
30-48 .625
Chonko, Ath.
15-24 .625
Pr ice, Gal l.
38-65 .585
Noe, Gall .
34-60 .567

N. Galli a
Jackson
Wellston
S'western
Southern

I G) Avg.

19)
(7)
(9)
18)
(7)
(4)
(81
(7}

(7)
(7)

23.4
22.7
19.8
19.5

19.3
19.3
18.9
18.7
17.6
17.3

IG1 Avg.
(51 21.6
(51 19.0
15) 18.6
15) 18.6
(5) 18.2
m 17.4
151 17.0
(5) 15.2
(5)· 14.8
(5) 14.8
IGl Avg.
15) 17.4
15) 17.0
(5 ) 16.4
(6 ) 16.0
16) 15.1
16) 14.3
16) 13.8
16) 12.7
(5) 12.3
(3) 11.7

425
421
355
453
396

181 x5J.1
(8) 52.6
(7)

50.7

(9) 50.3
18) 49.5

Teams Ranked Defensively

Team
Han-Trace
Gallipolis
Eastern
Athens
Alexander
Miller
Waverly
N. Gallia
Southern
Fed-Hock ing
Ironton
Meigs
Logan
Vinton Co.
S'weslern
Nels-York
Belpre
GIOusler
Wahama
W. Local
PI . Pleasant
Jackson
K Creek
Starr-Wash .
S. Valley
Wellslon

x-shortened

Pis
470
342
370
477
480
395
397
463
476
541
492
556

495
500
563
570

447

515
515

· 469
476
555

.'

IG) Avg.
110) 47.0
17) 48.9
17) 52 .9
191 53 .0
19 ) 53 .3
17) 56 .4
17) 56 .7
(8) x59.5
181 59.5
19) 60.1
(8) 61.5
(9) 61.8
(8) 61.9
181 62.5
(9) 62.6
(9) 63.3
(7) 63.9
IS) 64.3
(8) 64.4
17) 67.0
(7) 68.0
(8) 69.3
110) 72.5
(8) 75.1

725
601
528 171 75.4
578 (7) 82.8
game not

cluded.

in-

FRIDAY
SEOAL
Wellston at Athens
Waverly at Gallipolis

Jackson at Ironton

Logan at Meigs
TRI-VALLEY
VInton Co. at Nels-'U&gt;rk
SVAC
North Gallia at Eastern

DOn Shula on decision
LONG BEACH, Calif. (UPI)
- As the leading receiver of
the Miami Dolphins, Paul
Warfield is particularly quali-lied to bilk about Don Shula's
decision to go with Bob Griese
at quarterback over Earl
Morrall.
-· Morrall, Ute old veteran,
replaced Griese, Ute young
veteran, after Griese broke a
bone in his ankle in lhe
Dolphins' fi!Ut game. AIUtough
Morrall came on and got
Miami to Super Bowl VII,
Shula has announced he is
going back to Griese, who is
healthy again.
"It's a matter of communication," said Warfield,
Ute nine-year pro grom Ohio
State. "Bob Griese and I have
been together three years
while Earl Morrall has been
with this club one year.
" Naturally, the lines of
communication between
myself and Bob Griese are a

S~~:per

little closer than the onb
between Earl Morrall and
myself, it's Utat simple."
Obviously, Warfield agrees
wiUt Shula 's decision.
At 30, he is completing his
Utird season as a Dolphin after
the controversial January,
1970, trade between Miami and
Cleveland, a deal which gave
Ute Browns the Dolphins' No. I
draft selection. That selection
turned out to he Mike Phipps,
now Ute starting quarterback
at Cleveland.
Warfield missed three games
Utis season wiUt a painful
sprained arch but still was able
to account for 606 yards ·and
Utree touchdowns on 29 receptions for a team with two 1,000yard rushers (Larry Csonka
and Mercury Morris.
"It's a type of injury that
lakes a long time to heal,"
Warfield explained. "It still
gets very sore. It really won't
be okay until after the season.
But I'll he able to play up to 100

Bowl nptes • • •

ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP!) - ·
What Utey're saying during
Super Bowl week:
Sam Wyche, sub quarterback for Washington :
"We're not coming out here
lhis year to prepare for next
year's Super Bowl. We're out
here to win it this year."
When someone asked Wyche
if George Allen told him that,
he replied, "Naw, I Utought it
up all by myself."
Don Shula, the Dqlphin
Coach opening his daily press
conference: " I have noUting
further to add."

own. I just try to get by and
sometimes I don't even dQ
that."
Larry Brown, Redskin running hack, on wheUter he
thinks while he runs : "If you
Utink too much, you'll go
nowhere. I just try to decrease
the situations that are
detrimental to my health."

per cent of my capacity Sunday·."
Commenting on Warfield's
perfonnance this year, Shula
said the element of luck was
involved Utis season. Warfield
had an NFL-leading 11 touchdown catches in 1971, eight
more Ulan Utis season.
"I thought Utere were six to
eight passes Utat he could have
caught for touchdowns this
season Utat dido 't happen,"
Shula said. "They were passes
that were that close but
weren't meant to be."
The gifted pass catcher
agreed wiUt his coach's assessment.
"I felt I had a good year
considering Ute injury and
everyUting," he offered, "but it
could have been better. There
were a munber of occasions
where I didn't score by inches.

"It's just the breaks,! guess.
I had a couple of passes go off
my fingertips, I dropped a
couple of oUters and Utere were
a couple of instances where Ute
defensive man· just simply
made fantastic plays."
What does he expect on
Super Sunday from the
Washington Red.skins by way
of pass coverage?
"I Utink they'll concentrate
on me," said the fleet receiver.
"But Utey can't do it exclusively because we have so many
olher ways of scoring.
"If I get double coverage, we
have a very capable quarterhack who will lake ·advantage

Sonics lose
again, 98-86

Shula on Allen's rah-rah __
Olhers
tactics: "I can't visualize
Following the theory it's
William stown at Belpre
Parkersburg Calholic al myself leading Larry Csonka easier to fire the coach ralher
Free Throw Percentage
Warren Local
in 'Hail to the Dolphins.'"
than the players, the Seattle
Name , T.
FTM-A Pel. Hannan at Southern
Conroy, Jack.
18-20 .900 Alexa nder at Hunginton I Ross)
SuperSonics find themselves
Mace, Ath.
17-20 .850 Miller at Glouster
John Wilbur, Ute Redskin with a new coach today and
Bailey, M.
21 -28 . .750 Starr-Washington at Ohio Deal
guard, on the differences another loss on their record.
Oyer. Wav.
17-24 .708 Rav enswood at Wahama
Noe. Gall .
17-25 .680
, between ., the two .,. similar • The'' Sonlcs, who bounced
' SA'I'I:JRDAY
Rebounds
TRI-VALLEY
···teams:
"WeH;1hey have a field Tom Nissalke and replaced
Name , T.
No. G Avg. Belpre at Warren Local
goal kit ker whO''dyes tles in the him with assistant Bucky
Malkin, I.
78 5 .15.6
SVAC
Pri ce, Gall
71 5 14.2 Southern at Hannan Trace
off-season."
Buckwalter Wednesday,
Noe, Gall
49 5 9.8
Others
showed no noticeable imNorri s, L.
47 5 9.-4 Vinton Co. at Miller
Manny Fernandez, Dolphin provement in Uteir play a few
Thompson, Wav . 47 5 9 4 Hannan at Southwestern
Teams Ranked Ollensively
Chesapeake at Symmes Valley defensive lineman, on his bours later when they dropped
Team
Pis IG) Avg. St. Joseph Prep at Glouster
style : "I have a style all my
Alexander
830 (9) 92 2
a 911-86 decision to Baltimore.
TUESDAY 1Jan.16)
Waverly
546 (7) 78.0 Chesapeake at Gallipolis
Seattle, after being held to 30
S. Valley
534 (7) 76.3 Point Pleasant at Barbourspoints
in the first half, did
575 18 ) 71.9 ville
Starr-Wash.
Belpre
490 (7) 70.0 Wahama at Winf ield
manage to overcome a 23-point
NBA Slandings
Gallipolis
470 17) 67.1
By
United
Press
International
deficit
and tie the game with
Han -Trace
661 (10) 66.1
SEOAL
Standings
Eastern
Conference
5%
minutes
left to play.
Wahama
527 181 65.9
Pt . Pleasant
458 (7) 65.4
Atlantic Division
However, Baltimore regained
· w. I. pet. g.b.
Logan
518 (8 ) 64.8 Team ALL GAMES
W
l
P
OP
Boston
33 7 .625
its composure and o.utscored
Vinton Co.
506 IS) 63.3
8 0 614 449 New York
35 10 .778
v, UteSonics, 14-'1, in the\exl fowK. Creek
629 110) 62 .9 Waverly
'8 0 536 ·374 Buffalo
12 30 .286 22
Meigs
561 (91 62 .3 Gallipolis
Portsmouth
7 3 707 670 Philadelphia
4 40 .091 30
minutes to hand Seattle its 33rd
Ironton
·497 (8 ) 62.1 South Point
7 4 794 650
Central
Division
loss
in 46 games.
Nels-York
550 (9) 61 .1 Athzns
6 4 556 528
Eastern
412 17) 58.9 Meigs
w.
I.
pel.
g.b.
Elsewhere
in the National
6 4 638 621 Baltimore
25 17 .595
Miller
396 (7) 56.6 Fed-Hocking
5 4 491 541 Atlanta
24 20 .545 2 Basketball Association,
Athens
500 (9) 55.6 ' Chesapeake
4
3
420
403
Houston
17 25 .405 8 Kansas City-Omaha edged
Fed-Hocking
491 19) 54.6 Logan
4 5 569 551
W. Local
381 17) 54.4 Ironton
Cleveland
13 JO .302 12'17 Chicago, 102-100, Phoenix
2 7 549 560
Western Conference
Glou ster
431 (8 ) 53.9 Jackson
2 7 453 621
Midwest Division
nipped Detroit, 123 -121 ,
Wellston
0 8 420 655
w. 1. pet. g.b. Boston ripped Houston, 128 Milwaukee
31 13 .705
SEOAL VARSITY
Chicago
28 15 .651 2'12 107, and Los Angeles routed
T01m
W L P OP KC-Omaha
College BKB Results
22 26 .458 , 11
Philadelphia, 120-96.
6 0 463 315
By United Pres. International Waverly
25 .419 12'12 Mike Riordan scored 20
Gallipolis
6 0 401 278 · Detroil Pacific IS
.
East
Division
Alhens
4
2
336
312
Bowdoin 73 Bates 71
w••I pct. g.b• points and Phil Chenier and
Logan
3 3 370 368 Los Angeles 31 10 .756
Wagner 88 Elizlolvn 74
Wes Unseld tallied 18 each for
Meigs
J J 361 394
F. Dcknsn '6J Ga . Soulhern 53
17
Ironton
1 5 345 356 ~~~~7;tate ~~ ~~ :~~ 1 ~' Baltimore which increased its
Delaware 49 Glassboro 36
Jackson
1 5 314 428
LeMoyne 75 Hartwick 71
13 33 .283 , 20•12 Central Division lead to two
Wellslon
·o 6 316 455 Seattle
Allred 75 Houghton 71
Portland
11 33 .250 21'17 games over Atlanta. Spencer
Tolal•
24 24 2906 2906
Dowling 65 Nyack 61
Wednesday's
Results
d'
·
ed n.. ;
SEOAL RESERVES
Boston 128 Houston 107
Haywoo s 17 pomts pac w•e
Scrd Heart 62 Adlphi 61
Team
W
L
P
OP
Edinboro 70 All lance 64'
Los Angeles 1.20 Phlla 96
Logan
6 0 279 ~3
Davidson 76 Pitt 73
KC-Omaha 102 Chicago 200
Waverly
5 1 240 200
Navy 80 Rndlph-Macn 61
Phoenix
123 Detroll121
Gallipolis
4 2 224 177
Mass . 62 Penn 58
Baltimore
98 ~altle 66
Athens
3 3 230 211
Wstminstr 80 Crngie-MIIn 43
(Only
games
scheduled)
Meigs
J 3 256 226
Thursday's
Games
Prov 118 Western Kr. 88
Ironton
2 4 216 242
Cai.-Pa. 71 KeeneS . 58
New
York
al
Atlanta
Jackson ..
I 5 223 266
Sippry Rck 85 St. Vine . 75
Golden St. vs. KC-Omaha
Wellston
0
6 156 299
Albrght 76 Squehnna 74
At Kansas City
Tolals
24 24 1824 '1824
W.Va. 102 Cornell69
!Only
games
scheduled)
' SEOAL FROSH
Ph ila . Tex. 75 St. Fran . 63
Team
W L P OP
•
South
ABA Standings
Ja ckson
6 1 367 260
Tenn . St·. 94 Tenn .-Chat 81
By
United
Press lnternalional
Gallipolis
5
2
302
232
Roanoke 56 VMI 55
East
Logan
3 2 184 160
No. Car. 92 Clemson 58
w. I. pet. g.b.
Meigs
3
3
206
203
No. Car. St. 94 Duke 87
32 IS .681
Ironton
3 3 194 225 Carol ina
Col mbs Coll : 62 OQithrpe 60
27 15 .643 2'12
Athens
2 3 174 168 Kentucky
LaGrange 71 Ga. S.W. 411
24 23 .511 8
Virgin ia
Waverl
y
2
4
255
209
West Ga. 88 Augsta Coll .78
16 29 .356 15
New
York
W
ellston
0
6
133
358
Wake Forest 85 Niagara 79
Memphis
15 28 .349 15
Totals
24
24
1815
1815
Towson St. 74 Wash&amp;Lee 64
West
Villanova 79 Richmond 74
w. I. pel. g.b.
S.E. La . 67 N.E. La. 55
Ulah
29 16 .644
Memphs Sl. 124 Fi ll~ Tech 75
Denver
23 20 .535 5
S.W. La. 129 Lamar Ill
Indiana
22 20 . 52~ 5112
SVAC
standings
·
Jacksonvl 73 Furman 71 ,
Dallas
17 25 .405 10112 ·
Midwest
Team
W L P Qp , San Diego
18 32 .360 lJIJ2 '
Wabash 105 DePauw 94
Hannan Trace 9 1 661 470
Wednesda v's Resu Its
Bwlng Grn 92 Marshall 87
Easterr
5 2 412 370
Dallas 124 San Diego 111
Millon 82 Rockford 62 .
Symmes Valley 4 3 534 528
Denver 106 Indiana 105
Mich .Tech 68 Northlnd 63
Kyger Creek
3 7 629 725
'New
York 105 Carolina 93
River Fails 77 Oshkosh 75
Soulhern
2 6 396 476
(Only
games scheduled)
Ind. Cenl . 79 Nrthrn Ky. 73
Soulhwestern 2 6 453 563
Thursday's
Games
St. Jos. 71 Butter 66
North Gallia •. 2 7 425 463
San Diego vs . Denver
Hastings 109 Krney St. 99
SVAC ONLY
At Dallas .
Case Wstrn 63 J. Carroll 54
Team
W L . P ~P
Indiana
at
Dallas
Ohio Dom. 94 Urliana 81
Hannan Trace 5 1 360 290
(Only games scheduled)
Gannon 63 Yngstwn St. 54
Eastern
5 1 348 296
Wayne St. 68 Mercy 59
Symmes Valley 4 1 391 333
E. Mich. 62 Cleve St. 54
Kyger Creek
2 4 390 451
Del . 77 St.Petrs-N.J. 64
North Gallia
2 4 317 339
Kalmazoo 85 Sprg Arbor 79 Southern
2 4 313 356
Oakland 90 Olivet 88
Soulhwestern 0 5 251 306
OHIO COLLEGI'l
Norlhwd 103 Del. Tech 91
Totals
20 20 2371 2371
BASKETBALLr
SCORES
AI ma 82 Adrian 66
SVAC RESERVES'
By
United
Press
International
Evansvi 71 Vlpraiso 62
Team
W L P OP
Southwest
North Gall ia
5 1 251 l-92 Otterbein 69 Wlltenberg 61
Wooster 70 Mt. Union 63
S.F.Austn 115 Sui Rss 76
Hannan Trace 4 2 225 212 Bowling
92 Marshall 87
Houston 66 ·Baylor 82
Southern
' 4 2 259 200 Defiance Green
91
Findlay
Kansas St. 57 SMU 55 ·
Eastern
4 2 253 . 186 Case Western 63 John 82
Carroll 54
Arlz.SI. 71 St.Louis 67
Symmes Valley 2 J 181 191
Dominican 94 Urbana 81
West
Kyger Creek
1 5 259 315 Ohio
Mi chigan 62 Cleveland
Santa Fe 76 S.W. Okla . 67
Soulhwestern 0 5 127 247 Eastern
State 54
·
Sou. Colo'. 72 Montana 70
Tolol~
20 20· 1555 1555
Hannan Trace at Kyger Creek

Pro Standings

College Scores·

feeble Sonic offense.
Nate Archibald, who scored
52 points Tuesday night in a
losing effort against New York,
rnnnected for 37 to lead Kansas
City-Omaha past Chicago.
Four of Archibald's points
came on a pair of twisting
layups In Ute final two minutes
as the Kings won for only Ute
sernnd time in the last H
games. Bob Love's 36 points
topped Chicago.
Charlie Scott poured in 37
points, including a club record
20 in the first quarter, to help
Phoenix beat Detroit. Neal
Walk had 25 points and Connie
Hawkins added 20 for Phnenix
hil D
.
w e ave Bmg topped Detroit
with 29.
hn
1· k'
· "
Jo HaVIce s 22pomts and
2() by Dave Cowens powered
Boston past Houston and
enabled the Celtics to move
into first p)ace in Ute Atlantic·
Division by a half game over
New York. Clavin Murphy led
the Rockets with 20 points.
L
1
d
os Ange es snappe its
three game losing streak at Ute
expense of Philadelphia which
suffered its 40th loss in 44
gsmes. Gail Goodrich scored
26 points and Jim McMillian
added 22 for the Lakers while
John Block's 20 was high for
th 76er
e
s.

of the situation. If Utat means
Utrowing to Marv Fleming (the
Dolphiqs' starting tight end) 10
times, then he'll do it."

.Reds pick
·up eight
pitchers
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Cincitmati Reds, always
looking for some new pitching
blood to go with their powerful
hats, picked up eight promising
young hurlers Wednesday In
Ute major leagues' winter free
agent draft.
Five selections were in Ute
regular phase of Ute draft ~~d
Utree more in the secondary
phase.
Two Ohioans were chosen by
major league teams .
Dennis Perry, a righthanded
· pitcher from West Unity, was
chosen by Ute Philadelph41
Phillies for Uteir Spartanburg
farm club. Dennis SmiUt, a
first baseman from Weston,
was picked by the San Francisco Giants for their Fresno
club.
Cincinnati's top pick was
Gary Lucas, a lefty from
Riverside, Calif., while Cleveland, picking sixth, went' with
James
McCutchin,
a
righthanded pitcher from
Level Lan , Tex.
The rest of Cincinnati's regular phase picks were :
Jonathon Ellefson, rhp, Williston, N.D.; John Higgins, ofrhp, Council Bluffs , Iowa;
Steven Hargest, rhp, Huntington, N. Y.; and Terry
Willis, rhp, Palmetto, Fla.
The rest of Cleveland's regular phase-picks were:
Jerry Devine, of~f. Walnut
Creek, Calif.; Donald Sasser,
if-c, Albany, Ga .; Wllllam Tiedemann, if, Wacaville, Calif. ;
Paul Faulk, of, East Laurinburg, N.C.; Dalll1y Howell, c,
Brunswick, Ga., and James
Postel, rhp, Costa Mesa, Calif.
Cincinnati went wiUt Jeff
Chandler, lhp, Davis, Calif.;
Paul Parker, p, WatchWlg, N.
Y. and William Guy, rhp, Hattiesburg, Miss., in Ute secondary phase.
Cleveland got Donald Saulnier Jr., lhp, Waltham, Mass.;
Gene Stohs, lhp, Grand Island,
Neb.; Manuel Alfonsin, if-of,
Hialeah,
Fla.;
Clyde
Lineberry, of, Lexington, Va.,
and Dennis Whitehead, c,
Birmingham, Ala. in the
secondary phase.
Except for the first rouna
picks, all Ute players were assigned to farm clubs.
Cleveland distributed its
players to affiliates in Reno,
Oklahoma City and San Antonio. Cincinnati's went to
Indianapolis, Three Rivers and
Tampa.
To be subject to selection, a
player must he eligible to sign
a professional contract on or
before Feb. 24, 1973'. The draft
was conducted over a
lelephone conference hookup.

Paul joins
NY Yankees ··
NEW YORK (UPI) .:.. 'Gqbe
Paul the man who traded
Graig Nettles to New York last
month, resigned from his
general manager's post with ·
Ute Cleveland Indians Wednes·
day and dealt himself over to
Ute Yankees to become one of
Ute learn's new owners.
Paul, one of baseball's top
executives r'Or ihe past i.5 years
-the last 12 with Ute Indianswill now step into the Yankee
picture in some high executive
position.
"Gabe Paul will join Ute
Yankee organization in a
major post," said Mike Burke,
who along with George
Steinbrenner, is one of Ute two
principal owners of the team,
purchased from CBS last week
for $10 miJUon.
Paul, who had four years left
on his contract wiUt the Indians, became a free agent
early Wednesday morning
when he signed papers in
Cleveland"'long wiUt team
owner and pr-esident Nick
Mileti.
"This morning I signed some
papers Utat. released me from
my contract," said Ute 63-year
old Paul. It was just an hour or
so ago that I became an official
owner of Ute Yankees. When
Ute opportunity was presented
Utere wasn't anyway I could
turn it down. Well,l should say
Utough, Utat if it wasn't for Ute
graciousness of Mr. Mileti, it
couldn't have happened. I am
very grateful to him."
Paul's sudden presence on
the Yankees is an interesiing
move in that he sent Nettles,
one of the bright young power
hltting infielders in Ute American League, to Ute Yankees for
a handful of second stringers.
Many Utought the deal was a
steal lor lhe Yankees.
P111l emphatically ~enied
any wrongdoing on his part, ,
joining Ute same team Utat he
had traded Nettles to only a
monUt ago.
"The first I heard of me
coming to Ute Yankees was Ute
day before yesterday," explained Paul. "Mr. Steinbrenner called Mr, Mil~ti·~l)d a~~ed
pennisslon to talk to me,"
·Paul's ea~a'l!lty with Ute
Yankees has not yet been
decided but he's likely to be one
of the brains In the
organization Utat can find Ute
young'lalent to put Ute Yankees
back on top.
He was only one of 13 new
owners who were unveiled
Wednesday. The others were :
Jess A. Bell, president, Bonne
Bell, Inc ., Lakewood, Ohio;

Lester Crown, president,
Henry CroWII &amp; Co., Chleaco;
John oeLorean, vice-president
Car and Truck Group, General
Motors Corp., Detroit; Tbolllllll
W. Evans, managing partner
in the law finn of Mudge,llol!e,
Guthrie and Aleunder, New
York; Edward Ginsberg and
Sheldon B. Guren, joint sharebolders from Cleveland; Ed·
ward M. Greenwald and Daniel
R. McCarthy, joint sllareholders from Cleveland; Nelson
Bunker Hunt, managing dlrector, Hunt International Petroleum Corp., and brother of
football's Lamar Hunt, Dallaa;
James M. Nedwlander,. prtisi.
dent Nederlander Theatre
Corp., New York; Marvin L.
Warner, chainnan of M4r\oin
Warner Co., Cincinnati; and
Francis J. O'NeiU, retired
chairman, Leaseway Transportation Co. and only
recently part owner ,of
Cleveland Indians, Cleveland.
WHA Standings
By United Pross lnterNOHonol
East
w. I. I. pis gf p
New Eng 24 16 1 49 179 1.0
Cleve
23 14 I ~7 1-40 102
N.Y.
23 21 0 A6 188 161
Quebec 20 19 I 41 1~7 152
Ottawa 17 19 3 37 1-45 )73
Phil a
15 25 0 30 138 182
Wesl
w. I. I. pis gf p
Wnlpeg
24 16 2 so 162 134
Mlnn
20 16 3 -43 133 136
LosAng 19 19 4 42 1-46 1~7
Houston 17 17 4 38 135 136
Alberta
16 21 2 34 120 139
Chicago 13 24 I 27 114 1 ·~2

Sale!
All Records· ·

and
Sheet M_
usic
Marked Down·
r •

For

~

c , usuoll; mto,~~,~fferent
s es - II&gt; to. 2"1~11~s for the
ide layer, 2~ for Ute second
layer, an_&lt;! 3 to 3 ~ inches for
Ute outside round of petals. The
petals ,are cut in heart shape
and are fas!ened at the point.
'l'o form ,Ute cenler, Mrs.

Bill &amp; Lee'$
I

MUSIC
CENTER

Bolin demonstrated how to loop
strips of the cornhusks, about
one-half inch wide, in ribbon
fashion Wllil Utere is a sizeable
bunch of the loops. These are
then wired with some fine wire.
Once the center is completed, the next step Is to begin
placing the petals, smaller
ones first and Uten on to the
medium sized ones and finally
the largest ones. These are
then wired in place.
For Ute stem a heavier wire
is added and Utis is wrapped
wit'I a nora! tape, preferably
brown since it blends better
with Ute cornhusks. As the
stem is taped, a piece of husk
can be added to create a leaf.
The final step is to spread the
petals and Uten curl Ute ends
over a large nail or small round .
pencil. Since the cornhusks are
damp, once they are rolled
over the nail or pencil they slay
CORNHUSK ROSES - Alittle lime and patience, but not
in that position.
too
much
talent, is what it lakes to create beautiful cornhusk
In making arrangements,
roses, according to Mrs. Janel Bolin who demonstrate d the
Mrs. Bolin suggested the lise of
technique
at a meeting Wednesday night of the Middleport
buckeye clusters to comAmateur Gardeners at Ute home of Mrs. Selwyn Smith .
pliment the cornhusk roses.
They are made from buckeyes
"'ired togeUter to resemble
ga•e the collect to open the
gffillll 61111'1!lf~: . Mrs. Bolin , all '!!~J1~Jro'?. ~ornh~)ls . , ,
~ exp!~l~w);ilJp~,\1\.¥ ~91~.~r~Ji~ , . Oil!iing ,lhe quslness .•sessioRc' m~etlng. Til ~ · ddof prize w!M'
the buckeyes !orr ~ v;ir.e-..ij; conducted by Mrs. Smilh, •vice to Mrs: Erroll Conroy. There ·
made wiUt the smallest bit on president, a report wa ~· g1ven will be no meeting in February.
an electric drill.
Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Arthur
by Mrs. Charlotte Taunton on
Mrs. Selwyn Smith, hostess arrangements taken to AUtens Strauss served refreshments.
for lhe meeting, featured on Mental Health Center at Mrs. Russell Mills was a
her mantel a family of dolls Christmas time . Members contributing hostess.

··LETART, W. Va . - The
r..iJtart Homemakers Club held
tlieir regular monthly meeting
on January 3 at the home of
Opal Friend with Lois Hoffman
and 9Pal Friend as hostesses.
The 'meeting was called to
order by the president, Mildred
Morgan, .•
~hlr!h 'VanFossen led
devotio ns with a scripture
reading from Galatians 2:14·21
Slid Martha Friend led the
group in singing " Praise

PH. 992-7590

Open Monday thru Saturday ·9 to 5
Friday Night Till 8:00
Budget Terms or BankAmericard

ii{m."
The secretary, Maxine
Mhrrhmri·, read the reports of
the November and December
meeting. B~r bar a Winter gave
Ute treasurer's report followed
by other committee reports
and the business meeting. The
lesson was given by Lois
Hoffinan entitled "A Look at
Communication Barriers."
The recreation leader, Judy
HW1t, led games. Prizes were
won by Dorothy Click and Pat
Friend. Refreshments were
served ·by the hostesses. Olher
priz.S were won by Judy Hunt
and ~xine Morrison .
Members present were
Elaine Ball, Dorthy Click, Lois
Durst, Martha Friend, Opal
Frlerid, Pat Friend, Judy HWlt,

fark's recrcatlon.buildlng Is
exteqded to area couples.
, The lessons will be held
each Th~rsday night at the
park from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Interested couples have until
Jan. 18 to enter the class.
Questions regarding the
classes may be answered by
telephonlog 985-3308 or 8822283. The classes are being
taught by Cecil Sayre of
Letart, W. Va., the club
caller.
The dress Is casual and
children are welcoine to
altend with their parents.

.
'

EARLY LEADER
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - Allie
Clarke of Akron, Ohio, who
launched Ute 1973 Professional
Bowl~rs Association tour. with
a victory in the San Jose Open1
climhed into the early lead ol
money winners Utis week with
his $7,500 lirst-place earnings.

of
securin g basketball
uniforms for the elementary
boys' basketball team and new
folding lunch tables was
discussed at Monday night's
meeting of the Rutland P.T.A.
Mrs. Janel Bolin, treasurer
reported thai the P.T.A. has a
balance of $811 .32 and ways of
putting the money to use were
proposed. Mrs. Shirley Bishop
presided at the meeting with
the Rev. Keith Wise, pastor of
the Rutland Church of Christ,

Phillips

BAYERS
ASPIRIN

MILK

Of
~·

·MAGNESIA

I

·'' 16 ,oz. Bottle

BAYERS CHILDREN
ASPIRIN

Reg.

reported 93 members.
Women interested in playing
basketball for the P.T.A. are
asked to attend a meeting, the
lime and place to be announced
later. P.T.A. memhership is
not required for participation.
Mrs. Sharon Wise's ~econd
grade won the room banner.
The second graders presented
a brief program at the conclusion of the meeting.

power stops
see·tbrough

N-OTEBOOK
PAPER

ALBERTO
BALSAM

500
SHE£JS

NEW HAIR CARE
16 oz.

Superior eoverlng
•

PEPTO-BISMOL
4 oz. .

Lois Hoffman , Audrey Huff.
Sharon McClellan,
Mildred Morgan, Maxine
Morrison; Ruth Pickens, Sue.
Sayre, Shirley VanFossen, and
Barbara Winter.

~man ,

JERGENS
EXTRA DRY

SKIN FORMULA

CHAIRS
Now you can buy that
comlortable
La-Z-Boy

Whatever LUCITE coms wet stays • Goes on fast, dries even faster
cove[td whet1 Hdries.
so.ap and water clean-up.
'

chair

llloohl u fantastic on the wall· • . Never needs stirrln&amp;, doesn't
·as it does In your mind.
like ordinary paints.

you've

alWays

qreamed. of, at our low
prices.

r

•

,,
Alithortted.Dealer .;
. ' .

. MASON ··
FURNITURE

Htrmin Grate
777-5592
Muon, \'l. V•.

·.

45~

Eads, membership chairman,

LA·Z-BOV
'

\

14 oz.

'·

POMEROY

'

MOUTH
WASH

joi~

POMEROY

I

LISTERINE

Homemakers of ,,,,,~,~~::;:-;:;~,~~;$$'' '' ' ' Rutland PTA looking into
An Invitation to
the
'-...._
Letart meet at
~::~: s:~:::D::~!e~lu:~: two improvemen_t projects
western style dance lessons
Friend home
RUTLAND - The possibility givmg devotions. Mrs. Louise
to be glven at Royal Oak

Second
Formerly BRW Hdwe.

Ill

.

•

•

'

Wall To Wall Carpet Specialists

Estimates

Those cornhusk roses, so
pgpul~r
for
winter
arrangements, are easy and
\h,expen'Sive to make and yet so
beautiful in their natural beige
and brown tones.
·, ,Demonstrating just how to
make the cornhusk roses
Wednesday night at a meeting
.of .the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners was Mrs, Janet
~olin, Region 11 director of the
Qhio , Association of Gar'den
Clubs.
0 Wlth·apparent ease and Iilli~
, nor!, ~rs, Bolin created
ieveral rosj!S and showed how
iIttractivelt
, they,can he used in
arrangements.
"Creating
l),lelhing ., fro;n nothing is
ljilt}. like to do;" commented
, ir: liolio, who pointed out
lbat most any farmer is happy
get rid of some corn husks.
Mrs. Ilpliq explained that the
tJrst step is to select clean
h1Jsks from dried field corn,
a)ld suggested Utat the inside
tiosks are preferred since Utey
'*'e usually not as coarse or as
dirty as Ute ones on Ute outside.
~ese' shoUld Uten be dipped
irt warm water, towel dried or
ined. The petals are then

Iii
1

CARPET-LAND, INC.
Free

easy!,
and inexpensive

~

Before You Buy You Should TIJ·

116 W. MAIN

:R~ally

WORKSHOP - FoUowing Mrs. Janet Bolin's demonstration on making the cornhusk roses, everyone got in on the
act. Here Mrs . Bernice May, Mrs. Rose Reynolds and Mrs.
Erroll Conroy ,left to right', join Mrs. Bolin, second from left,
for tips about the fun.

..

1

12% oz.
Ust

'2.00

•

·JERGENS·
LOTION
oz.
Bottle

4314

�.

.'
'

6·- l'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., van. 11, 1973

· . POLLl"~S POINTERS

-

Black Floor Spot ·

(Third in.. o... •Series.)
.

Canriot
Be Removed
'
'

'

By POLLY CRAMER

;"';"~'.

»"'' ·

,•;.
Polly's Problem "·······ii·'' .
"
DEAR POLLY-I hope someone can leU me how ;•
~' to remove a black slam from my hardwood floor. ·
This mark was made by leaving a damp . trumpet
·case on it and the spot mild~wed . I have tned wood
cleaners but none of them helped.-JOANN.E

'I

Jtg~Jt1l:1't~m:$W~tlit:$'~1't&amp;iidi:'i;f:~~;;l~l,'ff::r-:.:'( A.:;,r:;~ ;~t;;:g,u:zk~.\f~:;._;::.'·::r:~:

DEAR POLLY-Drink dispensers are my Pet Peeve.
On long trips 1 enjoy soda drmks from the automa.llc
. dt'spensers but wonder why they do not: also_ mciud_e mtik,
tea ·and fruit juices. Some people cannot d rm k ~al b on ated
beverages and have to be satisfied with water (If they a~e
lucky enough to find · a fountam) or go .thnsty. Sure Y
these distributors could make a profit by mciudmg these
Other drl'nks in their machines.-ROSEMARY
DEAR POLLY- J. K. can make her plastic laundry
basket sturdier and easier to handle 1! she fits a length
of rubber garden hose under the rim and laces 11 m place
with strong cord. This will hold ~p under a heavy load
of wet wash and prevents the nm from breakmg.-A
READER
DEAR POLLY-When 1 raked leaves it was alwTysti~
problem for me to get the leaves into tb.ose 1arge Pas
bags. 1 finally hit on a great idea. I insert the bag m a
large garbage can and 'turn the top of the bag down over ·
the sides of the can. It is amazin~iy easy to ftll the bag
when it is in llle caq and especially good when I am
working alone or with small children. When the bag IS
·full just remove it from the can, lie, _and msec t another
bag. The can is more secure and wtii not hp over as
~ easily as other things do.-KAREN
DEAR POLLY -If you like lots of butter on your
bread, one pat of butter will see~ like lots more If you
turn the bread upside down while eatmg II. That IS,
with the butter side facing your tongue. Sounds crazy
but it works .-MRS. F . C.
DEAR POLLY-I was down to my la~t sewing O)achine
needle when it started pulling the m~terial. I sharpened
the point with an emery bo_ard. Th1s worked . I could
continue sewing without pullmg the threads m the fab·
ric . Turn the needle as you sharpen the pomt.-MRS. Z.

.,.

lly l!RUCE IIIOSSAT
NEA Washington
Correspondent
WASHINGTON ~ INBAi
- Most working ·Americans

f~-~~-ab~~c~r"s~~u:i~;wt~~=!

are going up in 1973. The
real news is that for a sub·
stantial proportion of these
p~opie th_e new bite won't be
as deep as some accounts
have suggested .

Starting ";Jan. 1, U.S. work·
ers will have Social Security
taxes taken from their paychecks
a new
high ratewill
of
5.85 peratcent.
Employers
contribute a matching per·
d
centage. Seif·employe peo·
pie covered by the law will
also pay a new high rate of
8 per cent.
Furthermore, the tax base
-the maximum amount ol
yearly earnings from which
taxes are deducted for Socia! Security purposes- will
rise in 1973 to a new peak of
$10,800.
·
. The 1972 payroll tax ratei_s
5.2 per cent, and the maxi·
mum taxable base $9,000.
The self-employed this year
are paying at a 7.5 per cent
rate . ,
Somehow the notion has
gotten around that, had there
been no Social Security legis·
Iation
in 1972,
taxes unin
1973 would
be the
virtuaiiy
changed. The fact is that,
under 1967 amendments; a
miw payroll tax rate of 5.65
per cent would have applied
in 1973. That rate obviouslv

· ·
· ·
IS JIISI a shade below the one
that will
beyond . the
$9,000 level.
'
Another misleading impression comes from the em·
phaSis certam accounts have

National security . and the
role of the American Legion
and its Auxiliary was the topic
discussed by Mrs. Ben Neutzllng at .Tuesday night's
meeting of the American
Legion Auxiliary of the Lewis
Manley Post 363 held at the
Naomi Baptist Church in
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Neutzling 1n her talk
stressed the importance of a
Strong army and navy, and
urged assistance of units in the
recruitment of men and women
In the Armed Forces,
especially nurses. She also
commented on law and order,
ihe drug problems, •n.d the
~
ROTC program. Mrs, Neut·
zling, a past Department
American Legion Auxiliary
national security chairman,

was Introduced by Mrs. Arnold
Richards who now holds that
position, Mrs. Neutzling was
escorted to the . rostrum by
Mrs. Sherman Butler.
Mrs.
Lula
Hampton,
president, and Mrs. Nellie
Winston, chaplain, opened the
meeting in ritualistic lorm.
Following roll call reports
were given by the ollicers.
The midwinter conference of
the American Legion Auxiliary
was announced lor Jan. 26 and
Jan. 27 at the Neil House. The
prayer for peace was given by
Mrs. Winston, and the group
cohciuded
by
singing
"Am~rica" ·.with Mrs, ·.1'•.ut.·
·
zling at the plano.

Colkctions of
'J
c/othin6a Wanted

Class observes
43rd anniversary
The 43rd anniversary of" the
Loyal Pals Class of the Mid·
dleport Church of Christ was
observed Tuesday ev~ing
with a dinner at the Meigs Inn
and a party at the home of Mrs.
Edgar Reynolds. Recognized
were three charter members of
the class, Miss Mabel Hysell,
Miss Nina Russell and Miss
Frances Roush. Gifts were
presented to the three by Mrs:.
Reynolds.
A memorial service lor
deceased members was conducted. Readings were given
by Mrs. Edgar Reynolds and
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds. The
hostess served cake, punch!
cdlfee and tea.
Guests were Mrs. Carrie
Kennedy,
Mrs.
Mabel
Walburn, and Mrs. Erroll
Conroy. Members attending
besides those named were Mrs.
!Jice Robeson, Mrs. Mary
Bailey, Miss Mlldred Hawley,
Mrs. Grace Pratt, and Mrs.
Donna Russell.
The observance marked the
last meeting or the class.
Members will now join the
Loyal Women's Class of the
church,

GIRLS INVITED
Applications lor membership
in the Candystripers ol
Veterans Memorial Hospital
are now being acceple\1. Girls,
16 or older and still in high
school, are eligible to join.
Applications· are available
from Barbara Lewis, Meigs
High School; Patsy Proffitt,
Southern; Cathy Coats,
Eastern, and Jane Schwartz,
Wlhama,
'

DONATIONS MADE
'l'l!e Royal Crown Bottling
Company of Middleport and
the West Virginia Royal Crown
Bottlers have each donated
fiOO to the Wahl\llla High
School Band's "Trip to
Walhlngton" Fund bringing
tiJe total to date to f4,423.95, it
·~ repcrted today .

v~nce

$12 000 B then.
to . ' . . y , gs"

~~~~e s~~edu~ed

$70~ ritvor~·ndae~d 3~f~i ~ecu~?t~ ·

payroll deduction . qf
But, agam. the _meldtaf w~r S.
e~·· more ·Wplc~
h~ve i~:
1
earne~\i~
ea:n~ngs enough
f~ 0;Jd more than about $20
to his tax for 1974.
.
Of course these taxes are
not going to' stop climbing in
1974. The 1972 Social Security
law fixed a rate mcrease
schedule
whch will
roll deiluclions
fromlift5.85pay·
to
6_05 in l978, to 6.15 in 1981,
and to 6.25 in 1986, where 11
will stay until 1998.

Medicare

lSOO~I

SCCUfiiY

fg;

n
·
i'· eport

the door prize.
. ..
Cake, colfee, soft
Jllints·and :ts
those nam , an t . wl ,
Hawley, Mrs. : ~d81J4 ~
Mrs, Margaret ert . n,
.
Debbte Batley! Miss Demaris
Ash, Miss !Jillne McAngus,
Miss Brenda Barton; Miss
·
h Mrs Betty
Carmela Missurp J;~d j~rd&amp;n
Stivers, M ,
Y '; .. •
Miss Christine Bailey,_ Miss .
Lillian Smith, ]\Irs.
Lois
B th ' Miss
Hawley and Mary e ,
Karen Hemsley, Mrs. ·Ellen ,
Couch Mrs. Edith Hood, Mrs.
'
B ll M B '!On
Margaret a ~y, rs, ur .
Smith, Mrs. Shirley ~th and
Jayne, Mrs. April Smi!b alld
Paige, Mrs, Elmse White, Mrs.
Caryl Cook, Mrs. Sandy
Phalln-·
• Lena and .Amy,. Mrs.
, .·

I I

rm~

~er;: ~ria

··-

1

'

1h price

lola's Dress Shop

-~·asg~~n~

lor four Dmg N"tl'

FASH.ION VALUES IN SHOES
FOR ALL THE FAMILY!

Dr. Navin will
speak to PTA

1 LOT OF

LADIES'

Connie

1

SHOES

Dr. Sally Navin, from Ohio
University will be guest
speaker at the Middleport PTA
meeting Monday night at 7:30
p.m. at the school.
Dr , Navin, who supervises
·the junior plloi program in the
local schools, will discuss that
project and child development.
Mrs, Lucy White's fourth grade
will lead in the pledge to the
flag, and devotions will be
given liy Mrs. Wesley \'o"~g.
Greeters·will be Mrs. Barbara
Murray, Mrs. Pat Kitchen,
Mrs. Sibley Slack, Mrs.
Dorothy Boyer, and Mrs. Ruth

Snow &amp; Fashion

$16.99

30% off

$999

SALE

SHOES

BOOTS

Values To

•

LOT OF

1

Miss

30% off
20% oH

GROUP

Boys &amp; Girls

Wonderful
SHOES

Thorn MeAn Men's

SHOES

30% off

REGULAR PRICE
On All Other
Men's Women's
Children's

SALE

,,

'

'

30% off
•

HOUSE
SLIPPERS

$899

SALE (ONTINUES
'

20%

TO

Coats, Jackets, Snow Suits, Hats, Gloves

MIDDLEPORT OHIO

•
II .

,-----.-...
;THE SHOE BOX

SAVINGS

S&amp;L

FOR THURS.,
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY

Girls' dresses.
shirts,
blouses, pullover sweaters,
slacks. shorts, slack sets.
Boys', infants', toddler .
shirts, corduroy slacks and
overalls.

Boys' and girls' crib sets.
Boys' 5 to 12, velour. flannel,
permanent press button
shirts.
Pajamas and gowns
I

THE

PP
.

'

ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

GLEEM II

CEPACOL

~ Mouthwash/Gargle·" ·".

s~n - ~1

'
9¢
On~ 6

88¢

NYQUIL

BAYER

100 Tablets

Nightime.Cold Medicine

"6 9¢

e
89

.

EFFERDENT

-·

VICKS VAPORUB

DENTURE ClfANSER TABLETS

74¢

40 Tablets
Reg.·l29

.,._..;."!'"'______________.,

•

PR.ICE

1/2

Sale •7.99

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

•

'

DRESS· OXFORDS

2 ounce
Reg. 1.00

(Upon Request)

50%0FF

Miss America Shoes
1 Group Men's

2-HOUR
CLEANING

FOR CHILDREN
.
INFANTS THRU SIZE 12

1 Group Ladies'

By_United Press lntel'IUltlonal
Louis Dunbar's 24 points Forest beat Niagara, 115-79, and
North Carolina State looks brought Houston an 86-82 Joe Smith's' 19 points helped
PVT. OLDER
ready for Super Sunday.
victory over Baylor and Mike Detroit beat St. Peter's, 77-64.
. The unbeaten and fourth· Sorrentino's driving layup and
Pvt. Jimmie Older, U. S. ranked Wolfpack boosted their foul shot with less than a
', .
LOSE UGLY FAT
Army, is spending a leave in record to 11).1) Wednesday night minute left gave Davidson a 76- Start losing weight today OR
Meigs County, He will lea,ye with a 94-87 Atlantic Coast 73 verdict over Pittsburg)l, MONEY BACK . MONADEX is
tiny tablet that will help -curb
Columbus on Jan. 12 for Conference victory over Duke Freshman Gary J'ackson ayour
desire for excess food. Eat
Oakland, Calif., and then on as they prepped for their Super scored 18 points as Arizona le ss- weigh less. Contains no
dangerous drugs and will not
The nature of the Vietnam
to Korea for a 13 month tour Sunday showdown against State beat St. Louis, 71-67, and make you , nervou s. No
e.:ercise. Change
War has made the read·
of duty. Pvt-Oider formerly Maryland. The gprile will Tom Inglesby scoced 34 points strenuous
your life ... start today .
v~terans .
justment to civilian tife par·
resided in the Meigs County precede football's Super Bowl to pace Villanova to a 79-74 MONAOEX costs $3.00 for a 20
Of the 341,o00 v1etnam-era ticulariy difficult for thousands
supply and ss.oo for twice
victory over Richmond. Aaron day
Children's Home and Is showcase in LoS Angeles.
the amount. Lose ugly fat or
veterans in Ohio, only one in of Vietnam veterans. They
Seven-foot-4 Tom Burleson Stewart had 39 points for Rich· your monev will be refunded
pres~ntly residing with Mr.
with no questiqps asked by
seven is using the Gl bill. need a strong cOmmitment to
Whoro Shoes Art S.nsibly Prlctll I
and Mrs. Jimmie Evans, and 5-7 Monte Towe hit 20 mood.
Swisher &amp; Lohse Drug, lll E.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Nationally about 20 pet. are help them create their own
..points each as North Carolina
Tony Byers and Eddie Payne Main and Dutton Drug Store,
Minersville.
Middleport:
Mail
orders
filled.
11
taking advantage of the prosperity, independence,
State opened a quick lead and hit :ro points each as Wake
· ~ucatlon ~enellts available to and dignity,"
held it ali the way despite a late
rally by Duke.
Chris Redding led Duke with
Tuppers Plains
31 points and Gary Melchionni
had 21.
NEW YORK (UPI) - Wilt points, now have tied former
North Carolina had little
Chamberlain and Jerry West ol BOston Ceitics star Bob Cousy trouble in its ACG game
FRIDAY~
By Mrs. Evelyn Brickle•
the champion Los Angeles for the most times selected as against Clemson, winning 92Sunday School attendance at Lakers were named Wed· A!l.Stars.
59, but Penn fell to
the United Methodist Church nesday to play in . their 13th
Archibald collected 16.704 Massachusetts, 62-.18 at home,
was 53 and offering $17.77. National Basketball points as a near-unanimous
George Karl's 23 points led
Worship attendance was 30 Association All.Star game at choice. Haywood drew 15.537; North Carolina to its win while
with $65.49 offering,
Chicago, Jan. 23.
Abdui-Jabbar, 15.080, and Massachusetts hit 14 of 19 shots
Mrs. Mildred Headley is a
Utile Nate Archibald, the Barry, 14.294, as starters. in the second half to upend
medical patient at St. Joseph Kansas Citiy.Qmaha Kings Wicks had 10.583 and Scott . Penn. Sophomore John Mur·
Hosj)ltal, Parkersburg.
brilliant backcourt leader, was 5.068.
phy led Massachusetts with 20
Roger Watson of Athens th~ top vote.getter lor the West
The East starters are center points.
visited his grandmother, Mrs. in balloting by writers and Dave Cowens of Boston, forDwight Lamar's 34 points
Effie Watson, Friday . af. broadcasters from the league's ')Vards John Havlicek of Boston lifted Southwestern Louisiana
ternoon.
.
17 cities for the mid-season and Dave DeBusschere of New to a 129-lll triumph over
Severai from here called at NBA classic.
York and guards Wait Frazier Lamar and Bowling Green,
the W!Iite FUneral Horne at
Archibald and West will be of New York and Pete with cornelius Cash getting 25
Coolville on Sunday to pay the starting guards lor !he Maravich of Atlanta . The other poirtts and 18 rebounds, downed
respect to Wateman White and gam? Kareem Abdui.Jabbar three players collecting top Marshall, 92-87. Providence,
several attended the funeral on of Milwaukee was voted the . votes in the balloting are with Ernie DeGregorio tossing
Monday with burial in · the . openingcenterandtheforward forward Lou Hudson ol in 22 points, beat Western
Tuppers Plains Church ol slots will be lllled by Rick Atlanta, center Wes Unseld ol Kentucky, 1111-88.
Christ Cemetery,
Barry of Golden State and Baltimore and guard Lenny
Ernie Kusnyer's two jump
Several from here attended Spencer Haywood ol Seattle. Wilkens of Cleveland.
shots in the final three minutes
the funeral last week of Robert
Chamberlain, Sidney Wicks
· ·
sparked KanSIIS State to a 57-55
Gray at White's Funeral Home or Portland and Charlie Scott of
victory
over
Southern
with burial in Memory Gar· Phoenix were the other mem·
Methodist and Henry Williams'
dens.
bers of the eight-man team In
two ·foul shots with three
Mrs. Neisel Weatherman's the balloting.
seconds
left
boosted
bl:other ~ldred Grl.!llts., lJ!
~ lfll&amp;:Piayers will be
.
,
, 1 Jacksonville to ·a 73-11 triumph '
··~·TOOTHPASTE
:J.;Illl,' i m.!l
•'ie'lec@t by."ih'e Western Con- Gary,
Mr. and Mrs. over Furman. Larry Finch set
•'
morning and took her up to his ference's nine coAches. Each Gary Holter, was a patient at a a team career scoring record
20 ounce
7 ounce
hOOie at Atheps to spend the team in the conference must be Parkersburg hospital from with 34 points and Ronnie
day. T~y attended church represented in the All-Star Thursday unW Saturday.
Robinson se t a oareer
Reg. 1.59 Only
Reg. 1.09
services there and he returned game.
Mrs. Ralph Trussell, Scotty rebounding mark as they led
her to her home here Sundsy
West, who drew 15.271 points and Renee, called on her memphis State to a 124-75 rout
evening.
out of a possible 17, and brother, Mr. and Mrs. Roger ·ol Florida Tec,h.
Mr. and Mrs. Dinsmore Chamberlain, with 11.293 Kirkhart Monday afternoon .
Boyles recently silent a lew
Mr. and Mrs, Harold Trussell
days with her sister. Mrs. .
and sons, Mike and Ricky and
.Aspirin · 5 gr. each
Bernard Hawkey of Mt. Zion,
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
W. Va.
Tdyior of Newport News, Va.,
6 ounce
Mr. and Mrs. David Ross of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ritter • Mr. and Mrs. Donald Trussell
Reg. 1.12 Only
. Reg. 1.59 Only
Athens are announcing the and children of Fayetteville, N. and Dawn of Mt. Vernon, Mr.
AHL Standings
By United Press International
birth of their ltrst child, a c ., and Mr, and M~s. John and Mrs. Robert Trussell and
~~~·-··· -~·~-~-~--·~·~--~~~~
East
daughter, on Jan . 4. She Merrell of Columbus speJll the Mr. and Mrs. John Ridenour of
w. I. t. pts gf ga
weighed 8 lbs., 7 oz. and has weekend with their mother, Chester, Mr. and Mrs. Richard N.S.
22 9 10 54 167 lOS .
Bstn
20 19 5 45 139 154
been named Kimberly Jonan. Mrs. Be"l)ard Ledlie. Other Kerns ol Belpre and Mr. and
Prov
17 14 8 42 135 122
Grandparents are Mr. and dinner guests were Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Trussell and Peggy Rchstr 18 13 6 42 123 127
Mrs. Way Clark of Tuppers Mrs. Albert Woodard and Irene Sue, Stevie, Renee and Scotty, Sprngfld 10 17 10 30 140 154
FOR THE COLD SEASON
10 27 8 28 149 212
Plains and Mr . . and Mrs. and Morton Barnes ol spent Chrislmas with their N.H.
West
Harley Ross ol Athens.
Pomeroy.
parents and grandparents, Mr.
w. I. I. pis gf ga
Cinci
30 12 2 62 191 133
Mrs. Hazel ·Henkie of
Mike Barr, Kathy Abbott and and Mrs. Stanley Trussell.
va.
21 12 1 49 153 130
Amhel'lll is spending several ' Bob Werry, all students at
Mr. and Mrs. Worley Davis Hrshy 20 12 8 48 157 124
On~
days here with Mrs. Effie Glenville State College, were of Dexter, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Rchmnd 15 21 5 JS 14() . 153
12 20 7 31 135 149
Watson.
home for the Christmas break. Holter and children and Mr. Cleve
Ball
625 8 20 115 (1 81
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Morgan They returned to school on and' Mrs. Curtis Rilfie and
Wednesday's Results
Hershey 9 Cincinnati 4
of Granisville, W. Va., were January 8th. ·
daughter spent CJu:istmas with
New
Haven 7 Baltimore 4
Sunday guests of his aunt, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Wright Mr. and Mrs. Arvii Holter and
Thursday's Games
and Mrs. Dinsmore Boyles. and Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Dexter Gocdon:
Nova Scotia at Richmond
(Only game scheduled )
Other recent guests of the of Gallipolis were Christmas
Gretta, young daughter ol
SUPER STAINLESS STEEL BLADES
Boyleses were Mr. and Mrs. J. Day guests of their daughter Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Rillle, is iii
L. Wade of Belpre.
and son-ln·law, Mr. and Mrs. in Hoizer Medical Center, with
Veri Tuttle returned home John Dexter ol Huntington.
strep throat. ·
Saturday alter being a patient
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Barr
Mr. and Mrs. Herman
On~
at Camden Clark Hospital In and son, Shawn, of Oak Hill, Carson of Coolville visited Mr.
Parkersburg. .
were Christmas Day dinner and Mrs. Stanley Trussell on
........
~--------,_.
............ -..-.-·~~-----..-.....
.-..-..
. ,Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence guests of their mother, Mrs. Christmas Day, .
· Balser called on Mr. and Mrs. Elvira Barr and son, Mike.
Mr. and Mrs. Warden Ours
Ira Kyle of Uttle Hocking one
Mike Barr took his mother, spent Christmas with their
day last week.
Mrs. Elvira Barr to Seaman to daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Diana and Charles Massar ol visit his sisier, Mrs. Blair Gaul and boys of Chester.
Eastern spent several days Cadwallader and sons. They
Mrs. Houck of Calilornia
with their aunt, Mrs. Leone .returned home Friday. Brian spent the holldsys with her
2io E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Babcock while their mother. and Chris eadwallader came niece, Mr. and Mrs. John Rose
Phone 992-5428
Mrs. Sandra Massar helped at home with them for a lew days. and daughters.
the Robert Gray home in the On ~turday · their parents
On~
death of Mr. Gray.
came to spent the weekend and
•
,
took the boys horne on Mondar .
NHL Standings
La
F tty
By United Press lnternallan•t
Mr. and Mrs.
rry e
··
East
and son of Bucyrus spent a
'
'
I
w. I. 1. pts gf 11 weekend recently with his
Montreal 25 6 10 6ll 167 92
Lee
Boston 26 to ,3 55 17S 119 parents, Mr. and Mrs.
,.
NY Rgrs 25 13 J 53 153 105 Fetty.
Buffalo 23
15S 114 Mr. and Mrs. Larry Rupe
Detroit
19 17
16 67 53
44 176 128
Hypnotique, Primitif and
Toronto IS 20 6 36 132 136 and famlly of Tampa, Fla. are
Vncuvr 17 25 6 30 126 184 spending several days visiting
4 12 79 197
NY lsi drs 4 ~!st
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
w. I. t. pts gf 11 Lawrence Rupe and family.
Chicago 24 IS 2 SO 151111186 · Mr and Mrs Larry Barr and
19 16 5 43 129
.
.
'
Ml
Atran
ts 19 1 43 116 124 children were Christmas
'Los Ang 19 18 4 47 12S 126 dinner suesta ol her parents,
P.hlla
17718 19 6 64floi01 ~~ 4 J~: Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma
For Inexpensive
Right Is .
ri'/!.~~ 1! 20 i 35 115 138 of Pomeroy. Other visitors at
calli ' B 24 . 8 24 1U 167 theThomahomewereMr.and
Home Furnishing$
R e~terved To
Toc:.~n:~·%~.~~!~~~
Mrs. Harley Johnson and 'Miss
Detroit 2 Pittsburgh 1
Patrlca Thoma of Metri-Data
Umit "'·
•
Atlanta 5 Chicago 21 0
School at Louisville.
16
~t'~1 1 6~\~nL-;~:s
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Eblln
Quantities
(Onlygamesscheduledl
and children spent Christmas
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Thursday's G•rr•
Day with her parents, Mr. and
10
~~~:.~~:':, aJ!~n
Mrs. Eugene Johnston and
OPEN DAILY S:OO A.M. TO 10 P.M. · SUNDAY 10:30 A.M. TO 12:30 P.M. &amp; 5 TO 9 P.M.
Las Ang at Philadelphia
lamfly .ol Salem Center.
(Onlygames scheduled)
·

CREAM DEODORANT

.,

YOUR

'

TUSSY

50% off

l
heritage house .
J&amp;..~CJ\n.. ~TORE.

Values To $15.99

~ncer.

PURSES

'

Langsvi•lle

·~-_!~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!~~~~~~

'

Maryland s_et for
Sund:ay's battle

them. This compares to about
70 pet. who made use of the
benefits after World War. ~. A
major reason lor the low level
of participation is the growing
cost of private as well as public
education, ·The cost-of·
instruction grants oilers an
extra incentive for colleges to
enroll more veterans.
Although the mo~ey has been
appropriated, it is presently
being withheld by the Olfice of
Management and Budget - an
action I opposed in a recent
letter to the President.

!l~lSthlily

'

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Koenig,
Betty Brown, Clyda Bing and
daughter, Joyce, Gladys
Gibson, Myrtle Durst, Mr. and
Mrs. Eslie Mossman, Debbie
Shaffer, Larry Eblin, and
Carol Lunsfor.d.

.....

ByM&lt;;;n~e ~
-

Bashan
News

tikin~.

, SATURDAY
"SUPERJAM Dance" 9 to 12
Saturday at formerly Pomeroy
Junior High School sponsoced
by Coffee House Committee.
~~~~~ by Windmill Grain and

North Carolina,

I
I

Society News

Cla ('s names new mcer.·('

~hairman

I

· ·.

West.stars announced

DRESSES

s_weate~:;
ope~mg

·

The Higher Education Act of
1972contains an bnportant new
cost-of-instruction provision to
intlue~· coli~ges to assist
returning veterans to lurlher
.their education. The p~~~ision
was funded last year at $25
milliim which would provide an
average of $3oo a year to an
Institution for each veteran
attending the college, plus $150
for each veteran enrolled In a
special or remedial program.
To get the payments a college
must increase its enroltmeni of
veterans by 10 pet. over the
previous academic year and
must use half of1he money for
education programs for

M
_ sc.'

l~ So·~ri·~~-,~ - Open house e:njoyed at Cozarts

--

·rw~;;~~~---l

If rou've read somewhere
that m 2011 the rate will rise
placed upon workers .with 'to a firm 7.30 per cent, for maximum. taxable earnmgs. get it. That's not even a
In · 1973 this "maximum parvoejreacgt~~ng, ofbup~oJ'~ct~~~~
earner" ,;ill pay $631.80 with a far-off period.
the new rate and base. But
Most of the scheduled rate mat~ for the tax base is
Eileen Clark and Mtss Dee·Dee
the ·~median worker"-the increases, incidentally, will $14,100. No hard figures go
Sinims.
man who stands right in the come from that part of the beyond that.
.
PARENTS VISITED
Others presenting gilts to the
middle in the U.S. workers'
payroll
deduction
intended
to
iNEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISI
ASSN.J
Mr.
and
Mrs,
Elmer
Stgman.
bride-elect
were Miss Susie
earnings scale-is estimated,
cover
expected
rising
costs
.
and
family--of
Toledo
spent
Andrews,
Miss
connie Lan·
by government authorities Of hosp
ital
insurance
pro.
!NEXT-:
MediCare
Exlendea.)
Chr'1stmas
here
with
their
Miss
as likely to pay $434.83 next
ning,
Mrs.
Judy
Farley,
year in Social Security levies
·
.
· ___ ..;.,_: parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mary Midkilf, and Miss Joyce
-based on earnings figured
1-ii;;;.;-s;;;lse;,;;ity-Book-----:- - ·
Jacks of Langsville and Mr. Arney.
at $7,433, well below the tax·
1
CHAM£
o•
NEWSPAPERJ
:u"~~
·~··
l
al
1
and
Mrs. Flavy Sigman of
able maximum of $10,800.
I ~·f;A:¥Mn· !ADIO CITY STATION
str'u I Middleport, They also visited
Obviously, half of U.S.
NEW YORk,
N.Y. 10019
~·-·.-:1.- It with their. grandmother,
Mrs.
II Seod
ooslpald
book{s).
~
,
workers earn less than the
I
$1.2&gt;~ eac h. Enc 1o1e d 1s
• $
:~''""
-'"''1 Mirl Rath!f, Chesh1re ,
median man, and half earn
.::;.~
..
I MCJie check or money order payable to
I
]an~ry Sale!
more. Those above the maxiI "Biossor look:" .Allow J weels lor delivery.
I
mum earning~. j taxable)
base are relatively modest
II
AT FORT POLK
II Name
in number.
1 Add""
1 HARTFORD, W. Va.- S.P.
In 1974, when the tax rate
Large group of
I 4Randall McMillin left Friday,
I c;~y
will stay at 5.85, the maxiMisses' Sizes.
[Stale
________ _:i!, _____ _! Jan.5forFortPcilk,La.,where
mum taxable base will ad·
----------he will be stationed alter
spending 30 days at his home in
Hartford, W. Va. He returned
from Vietnam on Nov. 29 where·
he spent nine months in
Pomeroy, Ohio
DaNang
and
Saigon.
··
Open house to a family Larry and Georgia Smith, and
Time
Christmas party at the Charles Peggy and Jr .; Laurence
gl s, VISI lD
' twins playmg
Cozart's this year was at thetr Hayman an d Kaye, thetr
Charlesgames.
and sister Kas were
:
.• home on the Bashan-Keno Rd. and triplets and Grandma saddened by the death of Fred
'THURSDAY
which they purchased last !all Goldce, attended.
Hayman, his stepfather and
OHIO VALLEY Commandry from John Wells, now in
The -lamily ge~together ~as her lath~r whom she found
24 Knights Templar, special ·· Fiorids. The house is lurn~sh:d ~e:d on C~at~r ay ';i~~m! dead the week before when she
m~eting to confer the Red only for batching on wee en s e or~
rls mas,
went to take him to the doctor.
Cross and multi-orders ol the until school is out_in Columbus,, beauttfuliy decorated cedar
At 10 ·p.m., way past GranKnight Templar ocganizations, with all the families; n_o car· tree, ~rese;ts exch";;.gedll ~d nie's bed time, Juanita and
7:30 p. m. Thursday. Refresh- · pets, just wall to wall chlldreni ~· tur _ey m~e~l WI ~ a: Kas, Lauri and Avis took her
ments will be served.
The place seemed bursting a
~mg~ , wger ~~c w home to Mockin Bird Hili, the
the seams
spt
WI
gm
·
·
· · Christmas Carols
MEIGS COUNTY Hum.ane
Charles.' Juanita, their Lauri
The young women wore long gtr1s smgmg
Society, _7:30, Th~:Y ~~t and Tami; Hayward and Kas dresses and children slacks ai~~e r::rreturned home in
at the Mlddlepoct
ge 26a12, Bissell, Bruce, Avis and Tod;
time lor church next day and
OHIO VALLEY Grange
,
,
.
p
m
Thursday
at
hall;
Christmas
by
their
own
7 30
. tluck reireshments.
Ql
fireside or Chrisbnas tree . It's
po
.J,
'}jill
.J
a beautiful, warm feehng lor a
XI GAMMA Mu Thursday,
Sr. Citizen to share in the
7:45p.m., home of Mrs. Roste .
New officers were elected at'\ Colmer' treasurer . Com- happenings of two other
~QII; _&lt;P.,Qijjj)'oy, With. An~
'
· d · 1 d generations. And this ·one is
M1ld d a recent .meeting of the Adult mittees appomte mc u_e
Rupe as co-hostess.
re
Class of the Pomeroy Nazarene Hyllia Ebhn, Nancy Whtt· very grateful for the privilege.
"'Hl CIIIATOI 01'
Karr and Velma Rue are co- Church. They were Mrs.
Ruth Koenig, relresh·
And I also wish to thank the
tt1AS0HA111 DIUO l'ltCIS
of the program.
Frieda Mossman, preside!'!; .men!; Barbara Colmer. Reorganized Church of Jesus
PHON! 992-.5759
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
·
u1
I.e h
d Cl d
Christ for the cookie plate and
F&amp;AM Thursdsy, 7:30p.m. at Mrs. Mamie Stephenson, vice Pa ette
ac ' an
Y a box of fruit from the Gospel
- 271 N. Sm Ml ,....,
hall in Chester. Work in Master president ; Robert Eblin, Bing, entertainment,
Mission at Bald Knob. It was
'
Mlddhp art, Ohio
f hm ts secretary; and Barbara
The Rev. Clyde Henderson
Mason Degree. Re res en
gave prayer to open the very kind and thoughtful.
will be served. All ·Master
FRIDAY
meeting. Mrs . Madaiene
Ruth Bradford's name was
Masons illvited to attend.
MARY SHRINE 37, "White McClung read scripture and inadvertently left out of ones
ROCK 'Springs Grange, 7:30 Shrine of Jerusalem, IOOF officers reports were given by attending a Christmas party at
p.m. Thursday at the hail.
p tl k William Stephenson and Jerry Nancy Adams last month. ·
PAST Councilor's Club, hail, Friday, 8 p.m. o uc Colmer.
Sorry about that.
D fA
refreshments
following
Theodorus Council 17, , o ., meeting.
A dinner was served by the
We were happy to have Mrs.
home of Mrs. Eva Robson,
RETURN Jonathan Meigs women of the class. Gilts were Ronnie Beegle, sou . and
Fisher St., Thursday, 7:30p.m. Chapter, Daughters of the exchanged. Attending were daughteratchurchSunday and
MISSIONARY Soctety,
Mr. and Mrs. Glen McClung, Invite them io come again .
1 11
2
C urc ' :
Pomeroy
Baptist
I
.
Thursday night at the
at Revo
the home
• and Mrs . Clyde
h 7 30 Friday
American
u on, o Mrs.
p.m. the Re".
h church.
AMERICAN Cancer Society, James Brewington. Co- Henderson, Mr. and Mrs.
1
c 1St hostesses, Mrs. David Miller Robert
Eblin, Mr. and Mrs.
1
7:30p.m
Thursday at· oa · and Miss Frieda Faehn1e.
Harold Whittikind, Mr. and
office in ..Middleport.
Mrs, Jerry Colmer, Mr. and
FRIDAY
DANCE, 10 to 12 Friday at Mrs. William Stephenson, Sr.,
DANCE AT Wahama High southern High School under Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pullins and
School auditorium 9:30 to 12 sponsorship of senior class; daughter, Sheila, Paulette
Friday lollowing basketball music by "Guthrie" .
Leach and son, Jim Farley,

Collection of good used
clothing and household items
lor distribution in United
·Methodist Churches around the
world was planned during a
meeting Tuesday night ol the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Women.
The members decided to
take items to the church at the
February meeting. Mrs ,
Everett
Thomas,
vice
president, conducted the
meeting with Mrs. Gertrude
Mitchell leading in the service
of prayer and sell-denial. She
read a poem on new things by
Helen Steiner Rice and led in a
responsive reading on "Our
Visions of the Futilre". Mrs. game.
YOUNG Adults Class,
Robert Card showed a fibn B df d Ch h of Chrl'st 7
ra
m ort the Curc
strip entitled, "Seeing the
hurch Frl'day •
·
·
World World, Seeing the World p. · a ND GUN
Club
RUTLA
Whole".
bust'ness•
7 ·
p. m.
Mrs. V. D. Edwards read Friday,
meeting. Ali members asked to
"Creation I" a paraphrase of ~~ .
the creation story in Genesis
and the meeting was closed ·
with all praying the Lord's
Prayer. Mrs. Thomas and Mrs.
W. 0. Barnitz served refresh·
ments.

BROKER INDICTED ,
. NEW YORK (UPI) - Algis
Jergela, ·39, a real estate
broker, was indicted Tuesday
orl charge.s he collected $4,000
rent an apartments he did not
own but rented to welfare
clients.

vided 'under Med1care. In·
,
,
deed that portion of the. tax Mrs Becky Dunfee and Mrs . .
rctireinent, bsur· Linda, .Hawley entertained
11
recently with a bridal shower
;c~ually will drop a fraction honoring Miss Debbie Hawley'
in 1978 and remain stable at bride-elect of Bruce Hawley, at
that lower level through the the Pomeroy First Baptist
year. 2010. . ·
. .
Church.
•
This, ievellng_ of the "V~~t- A y~llow and green color
iy Social Secunty part o e
·
in the
tax is based on the expecta- scheme was carr!~ ou1
lion that the general ea.rn· decorations and the cenings level of u.s. wo~k~rs terpeiece was. a whtte. bell
will rise steadily, permttbng topped with the traditio. nai
legally authorized periodic
bl ,.miniature b.n'de and groom
enlargements of the taxa e1f'g rine
·
1
base-which is presumed to ~
· ere played- with
provide adequate fmancmg . ames_ wt MiSs Jan Smith
for periodic boosts m the pnzes gmng 0
'
basic benelits. This is one of Mrs. Alma . Hysell, Miss ·
the key "automatic" features Rhonda Hawley, Miss Janet
in ti_le n~w Jaw. Bu~. natural· Stivers, and Mrs. Ann Hem·
iy , 1t w111 mean hcgher and sley Mrs Vivian Phillips won
higher yearly payroll deduBc·
.
,
tions
for instance,
many people.
1977 for
the esll·'!

t~~e ~!~cc~~s~o :a~ ~~rk~~m:~~~m~~ve e:r~~~riy cove~ing

~},
:
I d ~&lt;
Uit~.·~· ca.en arm':"'

Se.c'Urt.•try, .J;scussed

.

-

7- The Dally Sentinel; Middleport-Pomergy, q., Jan. 11,1973

s.S.JaxUp-NotasHighasExpected:l~

'

.Visit
Bakers
Budget Shop

.

Only

Reg. 1.19

GILLETTE

Package of 10

.

.......

__

Reg. 1.69

·---

LISTERINE ,

ANTISEPTIC·THROAT LOZENGES
18 Lozenges
Reg. 7'1

MAX FACTOR

WELCOME

3.1 ounce

SPRAY MIST COLOGNE·
. Max Factor Colledor's Aacon
'

Golden Woods

Only
... ·- -----·

AYDS

REDUCING PLAN CANDY
24 ounce size
Reg. 3.50
Only

FAST

250

L;2.~15~0~L--------~0=nl~y-~~--~-------------------

'

�.

.'
'

6·- l'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., van. 11, 1973

· . POLLl"~S POINTERS

-

Black Floor Spot ·

(Third in.. o... •Series.)
.

Canriot
Be Removed
'
'

'

By POLLY CRAMER

;"';"~'.

»"'' ·

,•;.
Polly's Problem "·······ii·'' .
"
DEAR POLLY-I hope someone can leU me how ;•
~' to remove a black slam from my hardwood floor. ·
This mark was made by leaving a damp . trumpet
·case on it and the spot mild~wed . I have tned wood
cleaners but none of them helped.-JOANN.E

'I

Jtg~Jt1l:1't~m:$W~tlit:$'~1't&amp;iidi:'i;f:~~;;l~l,'ff::r-:.:'( A.:;,r:;~ ;~t;;:g,u:zk~.\f~:;._;::.'·::r:~:

DEAR POLLY-Drink dispensers are my Pet Peeve.
On long trips 1 enjoy soda drmks from the automa.llc
. dt'spensers but wonder why they do not: also_ mciud_e mtik,
tea ·and fruit juices. Some people cannot d rm k ~al b on ated
beverages and have to be satisfied with water (If they a~e
lucky enough to find · a fountam) or go .thnsty. Sure Y
these distributors could make a profit by mciudmg these
Other drl'nks in their machines.-ROSEMARY
DEAR POLLY- J. K. can make her plastic laundry
basket sturdier and easier to handle 1! she fits a length
of rubber garden hose under the rim and laces 11 m place
with strong cord. This will hold ~p under a heavy load
of wet wash and prevents the nm from breakmg.-A
READER
DEAR POLLY-When 1 raked leaves it was alwTysti~
problem for me to get the leaves into tb.ose 1arge Pas
bags. 1 finally hit on a great idea. I insert the bag m a
large garbage can and 'turn the top of the bag down over ·
the sides of the can. It is amazin~iy easy to ftll the bag
when it is in llle caq and especially good when I am
working alone or with small children. When the bag IS
·full just remove it from the can, lie, _and msec t another
bag. The can is more secure and wtii not hp over as
~ easily as other things do.-KAREN
DEAR POLLY -If you like lots of butter on your
bread, one pat of butter will see~ like lots more If you
turn the bread upside down while eatmg II. That IS,
with the butter side facing your tongue. Sounds crazy
but it works .-MRS. F . C.
DEAR POLLY-I was down to my la~t sewing O)achine
needle when it started pulling the m~terial. I sharpened
the point with an emery bo_ard. Th1s worked . I could
continue sewing without pullmg the threads m the fab·
ric . Turn the needle as you sharpen the pomt.-MRS. Z.

.,.

lly l!RUCE IIIOSSAT
NEA Washington
Correspondent
WASHINGTON ~ INBAi
- Most working ·Americans

f~-~~-ab~~c~r"s~~u:i~;wt~~=!

are going up in 1973. The
real news is that for a sub·
stantial proportion of these
p~opie th_e new bite won't be
as deep as some accounts
have suggested .

Starting ";Jan. 1, U.S. work·
ers will have Social Security
taxes taken from their paychecks
a new
high ratewill
of
5.85 peratcent.
Employers
contribute a matching per·
d
centage. Seif·employe peo·
pie covered by the law will
also pay a new high rate of
8 per cent.
Furthermore, the tax base
-the maximum amount ol
yearly earnings from which
taxes are deducted for Socia! Security purposes- will
rise in 1973 to a new peak of
$10,800.
·
. The 1972 payroll tax ratei_s
5.2 per cent, and the maxi·
mum taxable base $9,000.
The self-employed this year
are paying at a 7.5 per cent
rate . ,
Somehow the notion has
gotten around that, had there
been no Social Security legis·
Iation
in 1972,
taxes unin
1973 would
be the
virtuaiiy
changed. The fact is that,
under 1967 amendments; a
miw payroll tax rate of 5.65
per cent would have applied
in 1973. That rate obviouslv

· ·
· ·
IS JIISI a shade below the one
that will
beyond . the
$9,000 level.
'
Another misleading impression comes from the em·
phaSis certam accounts have

National security . and the
role of the American Legion
and its Auxiliary was the topic
discussed by Mrs. Ben Neutzllng at .Tuesday night's
meeting of the American
Legion Auxiliary of the Lewis
Manley Post 363 held at the
Naomi Baptist Church in
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Neutzling 1n her talk
stressed the importance of a
Strong army and navy, and
urged assistance of units in the
recruitment of men and women
In the Armed Forces,
especially nurses. She also
commented on law and order,
ihe drug problems, •n.d the
~
ROTC program. Mrs, Neut·
zling, a past Department
American Legion Auxiliary
national security chairman,

was Introduced by Mrs. Arnold
Richards who now holds that
position, Mrs. Neutzling was
escorted to the . rostrum by
Mrs. Sherman Butler.
Mrs.
Lula
Hampton,
president, and Mrs. Nellie
Winston, chaplain, opened the
meeting in ritualistic lorm.
Following roll call reports
were given by the ollicers.
The midwinter conference of
the American Legion Auxiliary
was announced lor Jan. 26 and
Jan. 27 at the Neil House. The
prayer for peace was given by
Mrs. Winston, and the group
cohciuded
by
singing
"Am~rica" ·.with Mrs, ·.1'•.ut.·
·
zling at the plano.

Colkctions of
'J
c/othin6a Wanted

Class observes
43rd anniversary
The 43rd anniversary of" the
Loyal Pals Class of the Mid·
dleport Church of Christ was
observed Tuesday ev~ing
with a dinner at the Meigs Inn
and a party at the home of Mrs.
Edgar Reynolds. Recognized
were three charter members of
the class, Miss Mabel Hysell,
Miss Nina Russell and Miss
Frances Roush. Gifts were
presented to the three by Mrs:.
Reynolds.
A memorial service lor
deceased members was conducted. Readings were given
by Mrs. Edgar Reynolds and
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds. The
hostess served cake, punch!
cdlfee and tea.
Guests were Mrs. Carrie
Kennedy,
Mrs.
Mabel
Walburn, and Mrs. Erroll
Conroy. Members attending
besides those named were Mrs.
!Jice Robeson, Mrs. Mary
Bailey, Miss Mlldred Hawley,
Mrs. Grace Pratt, and Mrs.
Donna Russell.
The observance marked the
last meeting or the class.
Members will now join the
Loyal Women's Class of the
church,

GIRLS INVITED
Applications lor membership
in the Candystripers ol
Veterans Memorial Hospital
are now being acceple\1. Girls,
16 or older and still in high
school, are eligible to join.
Applications· are available
from Barbara Lewis, Meigs
High School; Patsy Proffitt,
Southern; Cathy Coats,
Eastern, and Jane Schwartz,
Wlhama,
'

DONATIONS MADE
'l'l!e Royal Crown Bottling
Company of Middleport and
the West Virginia Royal Crown
Bottlers have each donated
fiOO to the Wahl\llla High
School Band's "Trip to
Walhlngton" Fund bringing
tiJe total to date to f4,423.95, it
·~ repcrted today .

v~nce

$12 000 B then.
to . ' . . y , gs"

~~~~e s~~edu~ed

$70~ ritvor~·ndae~d 3~f~i ~ecu~?t~ ·

payroll deduction . qf
But, agam. the _meldtaf w~r S.
e~·· more ·Wplc~
h~ve i~:
1
earne~\i~
ea:n~ngs enough
f~ 0;Jd more than about $20
to his tax for 1974.
.
Of course these taxes are
not going to' stop climbing in
1974. The 1972 Social Security
law fixed a rate mcrease
schedule
whch will
roll deiluclions
fromlift5.85pay·
to
6_05 in l978, to 6.15 in 1981,
and to 6.25 in 1986, where 11
will stay until 1998.

Medicare

lSOO~I

SCCUfiiY

fg;

n
·
i'· eport

the door prize.
. ..
Cake, colfee, soft
Jllints·and :ts
those nam , an t . wl ,
Hawley, Mrs. : ~d81J4 ~
Mrs, Margaret ert . n,
.
Debbte Batley! Miss Demaris
Ash, Miss !Jillne McAngus,
Miss Brenda Barton; Miss
·
h Mrs Betty
Carmela Missurp J;~d j~rd&amp;n
Stivers, M ,
Y '; .. •
Miss Christine Bailey,_ Miss .
Lillian Smith, ]\Irs.
Lois
B th ' Miss
Hawley and Mary e ,
Karen Hemsley, Mrs. ·Ellen ,
Couch Mrs. Edith Hood, Mrs.
'
B ll M B '!On
Margaret a ~y, rs, ur .
Smith, Mrs. Shirley ~th and
Jayne, Mrs. April Smi!b alld
Paige, Mrs, Elmse White, Mrs.
Caryl Cook, Mrs. Sandy
Phalln-·
• Lena and .Amy,. Mrs.
, .·

I I

rm~

~er;: ~ria

··-

1

'

1h price

lola's Dress Shop

-~·asg~~n~

lor four Dmg N"tl'

FASH.ION VALUES IN SHOES
FOR ALL THE FAMILY!

Dr. Navin will
speak to PTA

1 LOT OF

LADIES'

Connie

1

SHOES

Dr. Sally Navin, from Ohio
University will be guest
speaker at the Middleport PTA
meeting Monday night at 7:30
p.m. at the school.
Dr , Navin, who supervises
·the junior plloi program in the
local schools, will discuss that
project and child development.
Mrs, Lucy White's fourth grade
will lead in the pledge to the
flag, and devotions will be
given liy Mrs. Wesley \'o"~g.
Greeters·will be Mrs. Barbara
Murray, Mrs. Pat Kitchen,
Mrs. Sibley Slack, Mrs.
Dorothy Boyer, and Mrs. Ruth

Snow &amp; Fashion

$16.99

30% off

$999

SALE

SHOES

BOOTS

Values To

•

LOT OF

1

Miss

30% off
20% oH

GROUP

Boys &amp; Girls

Wonderful
SHOES

Thorn MeAn Men's

SHOES

30% off

REGULAR PRICE
On All Other
Men's Women's
Children's

SALE

,,

'

'

30% off
•

HOUSE
SLIPPERS

$899

SALE (ONTINUES
'

20%

TO

Coats, Jackets, Snow Suits, Hats, Gloves

MIDDLEPORT OHIO

•
II .

,-----.-...
;THE SHOE BOX

SAVINGS

S&amp;L

FOR THURS.,
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY

Girls' dresses.
shirts,
blouses, pullover sweaters,
slacks. shorts, slack sets.
Boys', infants', toddler .
shirts, corduroy slacks and
overalls.

Boys' and girls' crib sets.
Boys' 5 to 12, velour. flannel,
permanent press button
shirts.
Pajamas and gowns
I

THE

PP
.

'

ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

GLEEM II

CEPACOL

~ Mouthwash/Gargle·" ·".

s~n - ~1

'
9¢
On~ 6

88¢

NYQUIL

BAYER

100 Tablets

Nightime.Cold Medicine

"6 9¢

e
89

.

EFFERDENT

-·

VICKS VAPORUB

DENTURE ClfANSER TABLETS

74¢

40 Tablets
Reg.·l29

.,._..;."!'"'______________.,

•

PR.ICE

1/2

Sale •7.99

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

•

'

DRESS· OXFORDS

2 ounce
Reg. 1.00

(Upon Request)

50%0FF

Miss America Shoes
1 Group Men's

2-HOUR
CLEANING

FOR CHILDREN
.
INFANTS THRU SIZE 12

1 Group Ladies'

By_United Press lntel'IUltlonal
Louis Dunbar's 24 points Forest beat Niagara, 115-79, and
North Carolina State looks brought Houston an 86-82 Joe Smith's' 19 points helped
PVT. OLDER
ready for Super Sunday.
victory over Baylor and Mike Detroit beat St. Peter's, 77-64.
. The unbeaten and fourth· Sorrentino's driving layup and
Pvt. Jimmie Older, U. S. ranked Wolfpack boosted their foul shot with less than a
', .
LOSE UGLY FAT
Army, is spending a leave in record to 11).1) Wednesday night minute left gave Davidson a 76- Start losing weight today OR
Meigs County, He will lea,ye with a 94-87 Atlantic Coast 73 verdict over Pittsburg)l, MONEY BACK . MONADEX is
tiny tablet that will help -curb
Columbus on Jan. 12 for Conference victory over Duke Freshman Gary J'ackson ayour
desire for excess food. Eat
Oakland, Calif., and then on as they prepped for their Super scored 18 points as Arizona le ss- weigh less. Contains no
dangerous drugs and will not
The nature of the Vietnam
to Korea for a 13 month tour Sunday showdown against State beat St. Louis, 71-67, and make you , nervou s. No
e.:ercise. Change
War has made the read·
of duty. Pvt-Oider formerly Maryland. The gprile will Tom Inglesby scoced 34 points strenuous
your life ... start today .
v~terans .
justment to civilian tife par·
resided in the Meigs County precede football's Super Bowl to pace Villanova to a 79-74 MONAOEX costs $3.00 for a 20
Of the 341,o00 v1etnam-era ticulariy difficult for thousands
supply and ss.oo for twice
victory over Richmond. Aaron day
Children's Home and Is showcase in LoS Angeles.
the amount. Lose ugly fat or
veterans in Ohio, only one in of Vietnam veterans. They
Seven-foot-4 Tom Burleson Stewart had 39 points for Rich· your monev will be refunded
pres~ntly residing with Mr.
with no questiqps asked by
seven is using the Gl bill. need a strong cOmmitment to
Whoro Shoes Art S.nsibly Prlctll I
and Mrs. Jimmie Evans, and 5-7 Monte Towe hit 20 mood.
Swisher &amp; Lohse Drug, lll E.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Nationally about 20 pet. are help them create their own
..points each as North Carolina
Tony Byers and Eddie Payne Main and Dutton Drug Store,
Minersville.
Middleport:
Mail
orders
filled.
11
taking advantage of the prosperity, independence,
State opened a quick lead and hit :ro points each as Wake
· ~ucatlon ~enellts available to and dignity,"
held it ali the way despite a late
rally by Duke.
Chris Redding led Duke with
Tuppers Plains
31 points and Gary Melchionni
had 21.
NEW YORK (UPI) - Wilt points, now have tied former
North Carolina had little
Chamberlain and Jerry West ol BOston Ceitics star Bob Cousy trouble in its ACG game
FRIDAY~
By Mrs. Evelyn Brickle•
the champion Los Angeles for the most times selected as against Clemson, winning 92Sunday School attendance at Lakers were named Wed· A!l.Stars.
59, but Penn fell to
the United Methodist Church nesday to play in . their 13th
Archibald collected 16.704 Massachusetts, 62-.18 at home,
was 53 and offering $17.77. National Basketball points as a near-unanimous
George Karl's 23 points led
Worship attendance was 30 Association All.Star game at choice. Haywood drew 15.537; North Carolina to its win while
with $65.49 offering,
Chicago, Jan. 23.
Abdui-Jabbar, 15.080, and Massachusetts hit 14 of 19 shots
Mrs. Mildred Headley is a
Utile Nate Archibald, the Barry, 14.294, as starters. in the second half to upend
medical patient at St. Joseph Kansas Citiy.Qmaha Kings Wicks had 10.583 and Scott . Penn. Sophomore John Mur·
Hosj)ltal, Parkersburg.
brilliant backcourt leader, was 5.068.
phy led Massachusetts with 20
Roger Watson of Athens th~ top vote.getter lor the West
The East starters are center points.
visited his grandmother, Mrs. in balloting by writers and Dave Cowens of Boston, forDwight Lamar's 34 points
Effie Watson, Friday . af. broadcasters from the league's ')Vards John Havlicek of Boston lifted Southwestern Louisiana
ternoon.
.
17 cities for the mid-season and Dave DeBusschere of New to a 129-lll triumph over
Severai from here called at NBA classic.
York and guards Wait Frazier Lamar and Bowling Green,
the W!Iite FUneral Horne at
Archibald and West will be of New York and Pete with cornelius Cash getting 25
Coolville on Sunday to pay the starting guards lor !he Maravich of Atlanta . The other poirtts and 18 rebounds, downed
respect to Wateman White and gam? Kareem Abdui.Jabbar three players collecting top Marshall, 92-87. Providence,
several attended the funeral on of Milwaukee was voted the . votes in the balloting are with Ernie DeGregorio tossing
Monday with burial in · the . openingcenterandtheforward forward Lou Hudson ol in 22 points, beat Western
Tuppers Plains Church ol slots will be lllled by Rick Atlanta, center Wes Unseld ol Kentucky, 1111-88.
Christ Cemetery,
Barry of Golden State and Baltimore and guard Lenny
Ernie Kusnyer's two jump
Several from here attended Spencer Haywood ol Seattle. Wilkens of Cleveland.
shots in the final three minutes
the funeral last week of Robert
Chamberlain, Sidney Wicks
· ·
sparked KanSIIS State to a 57-55
Gray at White's Funeral Home or Portland and Charlie Scott of
victory
over
Southern
with burial in Memory Gar· Phoenix were the other mem·
Methodist and Henry Williams'
dens.
bers of the eight-man team In
two ·foul shots with three
Mrs. Neisel Weatherman's the balloting.
seconds
left
boosted
bl:other ~ldred Grl.!llts., lJ!
~ lfll&amp;:Piayers will be
.
,
, 1 Jacksonville to ·a 73-11 triumph '
··~·TOOTHPASTE
:J.;Illl,' i m.!l
•'ie'lec@t by."ih'e Western Con- Gary,
Mr. and Mrs. over Furman. Larry Finch set
•'
morning and took her up to his ference's nine coAches. Each Gary Holter, was a patient at a a team career scoring record
20 ounce
7 ounce
hOOie at Atheps to spend the team in the conference must be Parkersburg hospital from with 34 points and Ronnie
day. T~y attended church represented in the All-Star Thursday unW Saturday.
Robinson se t a oareer
Reg. 1.59 Only
Reg. 1.09
services there and he returned game.
Mrs. Ralph Trussell, Scotty rebounding mark as they led
her to her home here Sundsy
West, who drew 15.271 points and Renee, called on her memphis State to a 124-75 rout
evening.
out of a possible 17, and brother, Mr. and Mrs. Roger ·ol Florida Tec,h.
Mr. and Mrs. Dinsmore Chamberlain, with 11.293 Kirkhart Monday afternoon .
Boyles recently silent a lew
Mr. and Mrs, Harold Trussell
days with her sister. Mrs. .
and sons, Mike and Ricky and
.Aspirin · 5 gr. each
Bernard Hawkey of Mt. Zion,
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
W. Va.
Tdyior of Newport News, Va.,
6 ounce
Mr. and Mrs. David Ross of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ritter • Mr. and Mrs. Donald Trussell
Reg. 1.12 Only
. Reg. 1.59 Only
Athens are announcing the and children of Fayetteville, N. and Dawn of Mt. Vernon, Mr.
AHL Standings
By United Press International
birth of their ltrst child, a c ., and Mr, and M~s. John and Mrs. Robert Trussell and
~~~·-··· -~·~-~-~--·~·~--~~~~
East
daughter, on Jan . 4. She Merrell of Columbus speJll the Mr. and Mrs. John Ridenour of
w. I. t. pts gf ga
weighed 8 lbs., 7 oz. and has weekend with their mother, Chester, Mr. and Mrs. Richard N.S.
22 9 10 54 167 lOS .
Bstn
20 19 5 45 139 154
been named Kimberly Jonan. Mrs. Be"l)ard Ledlie. Other Kerns ol Belpre and Mr. and
Prov
17 14 8 42 135 122
Grandparents are Mr. and dinner guests were Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Trussell and Peggy Rchstr 18 13 6 42 123 127
Mrs. Way Clark of Tuppers Mrs. Albert Woodard and Irene Sue, Stevie, Renee and Scotty, Sprngfld 10 17 10 30 140 154
FOR THE COLD SEASON
10 27 8 28 149 212
Plains and Mr . . and Mrs. and Morton Barnes ol spent Chrislmas with their N.H.
West
Harley Ross ol Athens.
Pomeroy.
parents and grandparents, Mr.
w. I. I. pis gf ga
Cinci
30 12 2 62 191 133
Mrs. Hazel ·Henkie of
Mike Barr, Kathy Abbott and and Mrs. Stanley Trussell.
va.
21 12 1 49 153 130
Amhel'lll is spending several ' Bob Werry, all students at
Mr. and Mrs. Worley Davis Hrshy 20 12 8 48 157 124
On~
days here with Mrs. Effie Glenville State College, were of Dexter, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Rchmnd 15 21 5 JS 14() . 153
12 20 7 31 135 149
Watson.
home for the Christmas break. Holter and children and Mr. Cleve
Ball
625 8 20 115 (1 81
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Morgan They returned to school on and' Mrs. Curtis Rilfie and
Wednesday's Results
Hershey 9 Cincinnati 4
of Granisville, W. Va., were January 8th. ·
daughter spent CJu:istmas with
New
Haven 7 Baltimore 4
Sunday guests of his aunt, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Wright Mr. and Mrs. Arvii Holter and
Thursday's Games
and Mrs. Dinsmore Boyles. and Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Dexter Gocdon:
Nova Scotia at Richmond
(Only game scheduled )
Other recent guests of the of Gallipolis were Christmas
Gretta, young daughter ol
SUPER STAINLESS STEEL BLADES
Boyleses were Mr. and Mrs. J. Day guests of their daughter Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Rillle, is iii
L. Wade of Belpre.
and son-ln·law, Mr. and Mrs. in Hoizer Medical Center, with
Veri Tuttle returned home John Dexter ol Huntington.
strep throat. ·
Saturday alter being a patient
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Barr
Mr. and Mrs. Herman
On~
at Camden Clark Hospital In and son, Shawn, of Oak Hill, Carson of Coolville visited Mr.
Parkersburg. .
were Christmas Day dinner and Mrs. Stanley Trussell on
........
~--------,_.
............ -..-.-·~~-----..-.....
.-..-..
. ,Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence guests of their mother, Mrs. Christmas Day, .
· Balser called on Mr. and Mrs. Elvira Barr and son, Mike.
Mr. and Mrs. Warden Ours
Ira Kyle of Uttle Hocking one
Mike Barr took his mother, spent Christmas with their
day last week.
Mrs. Elvira Barr to Seaman to daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Diana and Charles Massar ol visit his sisier, Mrs. Blair Gaul and boys of Chester.
Eastern spent several days Cadwallader and sons. They
Mrs. Houck of Calilornia
with their aunt, Mrs. Leone .returned home Friday. Brian spent the holldsys with her
2io E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Babcock while their mother. and Chris eadwallader came niece, Mr. and Mrs. John Rose
Phone 992-5428
Mrs. Sandra Massar helped at home with them for a lew days. and daughters.
the Robert Gray home in the On ~turday · their parents
On~
death of Mr. Gray.
came to spent the weekend and
•
,
took the boys horne on Mondar .
NHL Standings
La
F tty
By United Press lnternallan•t
Mr. and Mrs.
rry e
··
East
and son of Bucyrus spent a
'
'
I
w. I. 1. pts gf 11 weekend recently with his
Montreal 25 6 10 6ll 167 92
Lee
Boston 26 to ,3 55 17S 119 parents, Mr. and Mrs.
,.
NY Rgrs 25 13 J 53 153 105 Fetty.
Buffalo 23
15S 114 Mr. and Mrs. Larry Rupe
Detroit
19 17
16 67 53
44 176 128
Hypnotique, Primitif and
Toronto IS 20 6 36 132 136 and famlly of Tampa, Fla. are
Vncuvr 17 25 6 30 126 184 spending several days visiting
4 12 79 197
NY lsi drs 4 ~!st
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
w. I. t. pts gf 11 Lawrence Rupe and family.
Chicago 24 IS 2 SO 151111186 · Mr and Mrs Larry Barr and
19 16 5 43 129
.
.
'
Ml
Atran
ts 19 1 43 116 124 children were Christmas
'Los Ang 19 18 4 47 12S 126 dinner suesta ol her parents,
P.hlla
17718 19 6 64floi01 ~~ 4 J~: Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma
For Inexpensive
Right Is .
ri'/!.~~ 1! 20 i 35 115 138 of Pomeroy. Other visitors at
calli ' B 24 . 8 24 1U 167 theThomahomewereMr.and
Home Furnishing$
R e~terved To
Toc:.~n:~·%~.~~!~~~
Mrs. Harley Johnson and 'Miss
Detroit 2 Pittsburgh 1
Patrlca Thoma of Metri-Data
Umit "'·
•
Atlanta 5 Chicago 21 0
School at Louisville.
16
~t'~1 1 6~\~nL-;~:s
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Eblln
Quantities
(Onlygamesscheduledl
and children spent Christmas
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Thursday's G•rr•
Day with her parents, Mr. and
10
~~~:.~~:':, aJ!~n
Mrs. Eugene Johnston and
OPEN DAILY S:OO A.M. TO 10 P.M. · SUNDAY 10:30 A.M. TO 12:30 P.M. &amp; 5 TO 9 P.M.
Las Ang at Philadelphia
lamfly .ol Salem Center.
(Onlygames scheduled)
·

CREAM DEODORANT

.,

YOUR

'

TUSSY

50% off

l
heritage house .
J&amp;..~CJ\n.. ~TORE.

Values To $15.99

~ncer.

PURSES

'

Langsvi•lle

·~-_!~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!~~~~~~

'

Maryland s_et for
Sund:ay's battle

them. This compares to about
70 pet. who made use of the
benefits after World War. ~. A
major reason lor the low level
of participation is the growing
cost of private as well as public
education, ·The cost-of·
instruction grants oilers an
extra incentive for colleges to
enroll more veterans.
Although the mo~ey has been
appropriated, it is presently
being withheld by the Olfice of
Management and Budget - an
action I opposed in a recent
letter to the President.

!l~lSthlily

'

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Koenig,
Betty Brown, Clyda Bing and
daughter, Joyce, Gladys
Gibson, Myrtle Durst, Mr. and
Mrs. Eslie Mossman, Debbie
Shaffer, Larry Eblin, and
Carol Lunsfor.d.

.....

ByM&lt;;;n~e ~
-

Bashan
News

tikin~.

, SATURDAY
"SUPERJAM Dance" 9 to 12
Saturday at formerly Pomeroy
Junior High School sponsoced
by Coffee House Committee.
~~~~~ by Windmill Grain and

North Carolina,

I
I

Society News

Cla ('s names new mcer.·('

~hairman

I

· ·.

West.stars announced

DRESSES

s_weate~:;
ope~mg

·

The Higher Education Act of
1972contains an bnportant new
cost-of-instruction provision to
intlue~· coli~ges to assist
returning veterans to lurlher
.their education. The p~~~ision
was funded last year at $25
milliim which would provide an
average of $3oo a year to an
Institution for each veteran
attending the college, plus $150
for each veteran enrolled In a
special or remedial program.
To get the payments a college
must increase its enroltmeni of
veterans by 10 pet. over the
previous academic year and
must use half of1he money for
education programs for

M
_ sc.'

l~ So·~ri·~~-,~ - Open house e:njoyed at Cozarts

--

·rw~;;~~~---l

If rou've read somewhere
that m 2011 the rate will rise
placed upon workers .with 'to a firm 7.30 per cent, for maximum. taxable earnmgs. get it. That's not even a
In · 1973 this "maximum parvoejreacgt~~ng, ofbup~oJ'~ct~~~~
earner" ,;ill pay $631.80 with a far-off period.
the new rate and base. But
Most of the scheduled rate mat~ for the tax base is
Eileen Clark and Mtss Dee·Dee
the ·~median worker"-the increases, incidentally, will $14,100. No hard figures go
Sinims.
man who stands right in the come from that part of the beyond that.
.
PARENTS VISITED
Others presenting gilts to the
middle in the U.S. workers'
payroll
deduction
intended
to
iNEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISI
ASSN.J
Mr.
and
Mrs,
Elmer
Stgman.
bride-elect
were Miss Susie
earnings scale-is estimated,
cover
expected
rising
costs
.
and
family--of
Toledo
spent
Andrews,
Miss
connie Lan·
by government authorities Of hosp
ital
insurance
pro.
!NEXT-:
MediCare
Exlendea.)
Chr'1stmas
here
with
their
Miss
as likely to pay $434.83 next
ning,
Mrs.
Judy
Farley,
year in Social Security levies
·
.
· ___ ..;.,_: parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mary Midkilf, and Miss Joyce
-based on earnings figured
1-ii;;;.;-s;;;lse;,;;ity-Book-----:- - ·
Jacks of Langsville and Mr. Arney.
at $7,433, well below the tax·
1
CHAM£
o•
NEWSPAPERJ
:u"~~
·~··
l
al
1
and
Mrs. Flavy Sigman of
able maximum of $10,800.
I ~·f;A:¥Mn· !ADIO CITY STATION
str'u I Middleport, They also visited
Obviously, half of U.S.
NEW YORk,
N.Y. 10019
~·-·.-:1.- It with their. grandmother,
Mrs.
II Seod
ooslpald
book{s).
~
,
workers earn less than the
I
$1.2&gt;~ eac h. Enc 1o1e d 1s
• $
:~''""
-'"''1 Mirl Rath!f, Chesh1re ,
median man, and half earn
.::;.~
..
I MCJie check or money order payable to
I
]an~ry Sale!
more. Those above the maxiI "Biossor look:" .Allow J weels lor delivery.
I
mum earning~. j taxable)
base are relatively modest
II
AT FORT POLK
II Name
in number.
1 Add""
1 HARTFORD, W. Va.- S.P.
In 1974, when the tax rate
Large group of
I 4Randall McMillin left Friday,
I c;~y
will stay at 5.85, the maxiMisses' Sizes.
[Stale
________ _:i!, _____ _! Jan.5forFortPcilk,La.,where
mum taxable base will ad·
----------he will be stationed alter
spending 30 days at his home in
Hartford, W. Va. He returned
from Vietnam on Nov. 29 where·
he spent nine months in
Pomeroy, Ohio
DaNang
and
Saigon.
··
Open house to a family Larry and Georgia Smith, and
Time
Christmas party at the Charles Peggy and Jr .; Laurence
gl s, VISI lD
' twins playmg
Cozart's this year was at thetr Hayman an d Kaye, thetr
Charlesgames.
and sister Kas were
:
.• home on the Bashan-Keno Rd. and triplets and Grandma saddened by the death of Fred
'THURSDAY
which they purchased last !all Goldce, attended.
Hayman, his stepfather and
OHIO VALLEY Commandry from John Wells, now in
The -lamily ge~together ~as her lath~r whom she found
24 Knights Templar, special ·· Fiorids. The house is lurn~sh:d ~e:d on C~at~r ay ';i~~m! dead the week before when she
m~eting to confer the Red only for batching on wee en s e or~
rls mas,
went to take him to the doctor.
Cross and multi-orders ol the until school is out_in Columbus,, beauttfuliy decorated cedar
At 10 ·p.m., way past GranKnight Templar ocganizations, with all the families; n_o car· tree, ~rese;ts exch";;.gedll ~d nie's bed time, Juanita and
7:30 p. m. Thursday. Refresh- · pets, just wall to wall chlldreni ~· tur _ey m~e~l WI ~ a: Kas, Lauri and Avis took her
ments will be served.
The place seemed bursting a
~mg~ , wger ~~c w home to Mockin Bird Hili, the
the seams
spt
WI
gm
·
·
· · Christmas Carols
MEIGS COUNTY Hum.ane
Charles.' Juanita, their Lauri
The young women wore long gtr1s smgmg
Society, _7:30, Th~:Y ~~t and Tami; Hayward and Kas dresses and children slacks ai~~e r::rreturned home in
at the Mlddlepoct
ge 26a12, Bissell, Bruce, Avis and Tod;
time lor church next day and
OHIO VALLEY Grange
,
,
.
p
m
Thursday
at
hall;
Christmas
by
their
own
7 30
. tluck reireshments.
Ql
fireside or Chrisbnas tree . It's
po
.J,
'}jill
.J
a beautiful, warm feehng lor a
XI GAMMA Mu Thursday,
Sr. Citizen to share in the
7:45p.m., home of Mrs. Roste .
New officers were elected at'\ Colmer' treasurer . Com- happenings of two other
~QII; _&lt;P.,Qijjj)'oy, With. An~
'
· d · 1 d generations. And this ·one is
M1ld d a recent .meeting of the Adult mittees appomte mc u_e
Rupe as co-hostess.
re
Class of the Pomeroy Nazarene Hyllia Ebhn, Nancy Whtt· very grateful for the privilege.
"'Hl CIIIATOI 01'
Karr and Velma Rue are co- Church. They were Mrs.
Ruth Koenig, relresh·
And I also wish to thank the
tt1AS0HA111 DIUO l'ltCIS
of the program.
Frieda Mossman, preside!'!; .men!; Barbara Colmer. Reorganized Church of Jesus
PHON! 992-.5759
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
·
u1
I.e h
d Cl d
Christ for the cookie plate and
F&amp;AM Thursdsy, 7:30p.m. at Mrs. Mamie Stephenson, vice Pa ette
ac ' an
Y a box of fruit from the Gospel
- 271 N. Sm Ml ,....,
hall in Chester. Work in Master president ; Robert Eblin, Bing, entertainment,
Mission at Bald Knob. It was
'
Mlddhp art, Ohio
f hm ts secretary; and Barbara
The Rev. Clyde Henderson
Mason Degree. Re res en
gave prayer to open the very kind and thoughtful.
will be served. All ·Master
FRIDAY
meeting. Mrs . Madaiene
Ruth Bradford's name was
Masons illvited to attend.
MARY SHRINE 37, "White McClung read scripture and inadvertently left out of ones
ROCK 'Springs Grange, 7:30 Shrine of Jerusalem, IOOF officers reports were given by attending a Christmas party at
p.m. Thursday at the hail.
p tl k William Stephenson and Jerry Nancy Adams last month. ·
PAST Councilor's Club, hail, Friday, 8 p.m. o uc Colmer.
Sorry about that.
D fA
refreshments
following
Theodorus Council 17, , o ., meeting.
A dinner was served by the
We were happy to have Mrs.
home of Mrs. Eva Robson,
RETURN Jonathan Meigs women of the class. Gilts were Ronnie Beegle, sou . and
Fisher St., Thursday, 7:30p.m. Chapter, Daughters of the exchanged. Attending were daughteratchurchSunday and
MISSIONARY Soctety,
Mr. and Mrs. Glen McClung, Invite them io come again .
1 11
2
C urc ' :
Pomeroy
Baptist
I
.
Thursday night at the
at Revo
the home
• and Mrs . Clyde
h 7 30 Friday
American
u on, o Mrs.
p.m. the Re".
h church.
AMERICAN Cancer Society, James Brewington. Co- Henderson, Mr. and Mrs.
1
c 1St hostesses, Mrs. David Miller Robert
Eblin, Mr. and Mrs.
1
7:30p.m
Thursday at· oa · and Miss Frieda Faehn1e.
Harold Whittikind, Mr. and
office in ..Middleport.
Mrs, Jerry Colmer, Mr. and
FRIDAY
DANCE, 10 to 12 Friday at Mrs. William Stephenson, Sr.,
DANCE AT Wahama High southern High School under Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pullins and
School auditorium 9:30 to 12 sponsorship of senior class; daughter, Sheila, Paulette
Friday lollowing basketball music by "Guthrie" .
Leach and son, Jim Farley,

Collection of good used
clothing and household items
lor distribution in United
·Methodist Churches around the
world was planned during a
meeting Tuesday night ol the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Women.
The members decided to
take items to the church at the
February meeting. Mrs ,
Everett
Thomas,
vice
president, conducted the
meeting with Mrs. Gertrude
Mitchell leading in the service
of prayer and sell-denial. She
read a poem on new things by
Helen Steiner Rice and led in a
responsive reading on "Our
Visions of the Futilre". Mrs. game.
YOUNG Adults Class,
Robert Card showed a fibn B df d Ch h of Chrl'st 7
ra
m ort the Curc
strip entitled, "Seeing the
hurch Frl'day •
·
·
World World, Seeing the World p. · a ND GUN
Club
RUTLA
Whole".
bust'ness•
7 ·
p. m.
Mrs. V. D. Edwards read Friday,
meeting. Ali members asked to
"Creation I" a paraphrase of ~~ .
the creation story in Genesis
and the meeting was closed ·
with all praying the Lord's
Prayer. Mrs. Thomas and Mrs.
W. 0. Barnitz served refresh·
ments.

BROKER INDICTED ,
. NEW YORK (UPI) - Algis
Jergela, ·39, a real estate
broker, was indicted Tuesday
orl charge.s he collected $4,000
rent an apartments he did not
own but rented to welfare
clients.

vided 'under Med1care. In·
,
,
deed that portion of the. tax Mrs Becky Dunfee and Mrs . .
rctireinent, bsur· Linda, .Hawley entertained
11
recently with a bridal shower
;c~ually will drop a fraction honoring Miss Debbie Hawley'
in 1978 and remain stable at bride-elect of Bruce Hawley, at
that lower level through the the Pomeroy First Baptist
year. 2010. . ·
. .
Church.
•
This, ievellng_ of the "V~~t- A y~llow and green color
iy Social Secunty part o e
·
in the
tax is based on the expecta- scheme was carr!~ ou1
lion that the general ea.rn· decorations and the cenings level of u.s. wo~k~rs terpeiece was. a whtte. bell
will rise steadily, permttbng topped with the traditio. nai
legally authorized periodic
bl ,.miniature b.n'de and groom
enlargements of the taxa e1f'g rine
·
1
base-which is presumed to ~
· ere played- with
provide adequate fmancmg . ames_ wt MiSs Jan Smith
for periodic boosts m the pnzes gmng 0
'
basic benelits. This is one of Mrs. Alma . Hysell, Miss ·
the key "automatic" features Rhonda Hawley, Miss Janet
in ti_le n~w Jaw. Bu~. natural· Stivers, and Mrs. Ann Hem·
iy , 1t w111 mean hcgher and sley Mrs Vivian Phillips won
higher yearly payroll deduBc·
.
,
tions
for instance,
many people.
1977 for
the esll·'!

t~~e ~!~cc~~s~o :a~ ~~rk~~m:~~~m~~ve e:r~~~riy cove~ing

~},
:
I d ~&lt;
Uit~.·~· ca.en arm':"'

Se.c'Urt.•try, .J;scussed

.

-

7- The Dally Sentinel; Middleport-Pomergy, q., Jan. 11,1973

s.S.JaxUp-NotasHighasExpected:l~

'

.Visit
Bakers
Budget Shop

.

Only

Reg. 1.19

GILLETTE

Package of 10

.

.......

__

Reg. 1.69

·---

LISTERINE ,

ANTISEPTIC·THROAT LOZENGES
18 Lozenges
Reg. 7'1

MAX FACTOR

WELCOME

3.1 ounce

SPRAY MIST COLOGNE·
. Max Factor Colledor's Aacon
'

Golden Woods

Only
... ·- -----·

AYDS

REDUCING PLAN CANDY
24 ounce size
Reg. 3.50
Only

FAST

250

L;2.~15~0~L--------~0=nl~y-~~--~-------------------

'

�J

..

1·

' ·'

-- ..

-

... ....... ...

..

.... . . . ..

••. .••. •··•·•···•••·•·••..........·;·.·.·;·,·:·;·:·:·:·~:=:=:wx'$-;x:m;:&gt;.
0.. . . ::::.:-:
groups must assume a . position of ;~~
responsible behavior on their part
~ill
The nature of the job also 1s a ~~
problem source. Teaching is a public :~~
service. As such, teachers have a ~~
responsibility to the. public.
~
. It would seem that teachers have &gt;~~­
an obligation to keep the public in- ·
formed of what they are doing and how •
for collective actio~~ thus, teachers'
they are using the available resources_ ~
-:
groups organized lor collective action . This would reduce sorrie of the tension
are not unique.
which often develops between the ...
The issues which have led to . school and community.
}
teacher strikes have generally centered
At the same time, the public has a ~
around money. But the matter of responsibility to provide adequate ;~
salaries may be of minor concern. For resources lor the teachers to perform ::~
example, the present strike in Chicago
the public service for which they are :;~
has as its focus the si~e of cll)sses. The hired.
'
~;)
teachers of Chicago feel that class sizes
As for southeastern Ohio, I feel :;:;
are too large for effective learning ..The generally that teachers and their ~~jj
board of education there feels that in boards and superintendents are in ~;j;
order to reduce _class sizes, more communication with each other. Also, :;:;
teachers would need to he hired, and
teachers and the conmiunity generally ~~~:
the cost would be too great.
seem to work together. Thfis drfoestinot j~~:
In almost e4'ery instance of strikes, mean that all is in a state o pe ec on. ::::
teachers and board members have Efforts to keep Jines of communicalion ::::
attempted to discuss and resolve the open are a constant need.
'
f;j:
issues. Teachers have struck when they
If the citizens, board members, :;:;
felt, as a group, they were not being administrators and teachers of our j:::
negotiated with "in good faith:"
area work together-lor the benefit of the $
It Is my opinion that the likelihood
youngsters by communicating and ~:;
of strikes is lessened when school board cooperating, there is no need lor
members and school administrators
teacher strikes to happen 'here. .
listen to and work cooperatively with
Mter dll, we are all people Just ~
teachers. Also, teachers and their
trying to get along together.
~
-

.

-.. ...

".....................
·'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•-:···:·:::::·:·:·:..:·:·::;~·!·;~~·:·:·;·;·:·:·:::::·;;;·:;:·:·;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~~;;;,::;:;:jc::;_::;::.;::;:;:;::::::::::=:::::::::-:.;.;-:.:::::::.:.:t!·:·:~:·:·.·············~·-·············· ···"·' !

.

Teacher strikes are
phenomena of the 60s

DIANNA HARRIS

PEGGY HOLLIDAY

Two in Princeton
.for Junior Miss
PT. PLEASANT - Two
more Mason County girls are in
Princeton this week attending
events in West Virginia 's
Junior Miss Pageant to be held
at the Alexander Arts Center,
Concord College, Athens.
They are Miss Dianna Lynn
Harris, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. C. Harris of New Haven
and Miss Peggy Holliday,
daughter of Mr.. and Mrs. E. M.
Holliday of 2015 North Main
Street, Point Pleasant.
Pam Sommer, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Sommer of
Southside, is the other Mason
Countian participating and.the
girls are among 30 contestants
attending from various areas
of the state.

Pr eliminari es beg an
Tuesday with a reception lor
the contes tants and their
parents at the Elks Lodge in
Princeton . Finals will be held
January 13 at 7:30, p.m. and
January 14 at 2:30 p.m. at
Concord College.
Miss Harris is representing
Wahama High School as Junior
Miss. Her talent will consist of
a clarinet solo. She is staying at
the home of Dr . and Mrs . J.P. ·
Champion , 1806 Honaker
Street, Princeton.
Miss Holliday is representing
Point Pleasant as Junior Miss
and her talent is a solo. While
in Princeton, she will be •
guest in the home of Mrs. John
R. Hickman, Park Avenue
Extension.

By Prof. Ed (Doc) Wallen
Rio Grande College
RIO GRANDE - It seems to
happen every September , and then
again in January; incidents of teacher
~ strikes in cities across the country are
reported.
At
present,
tea chers
in
Philadelphia and Chicago are on strike.
Since the first teachers' strike in 1960,
strikes or threats of strikes by teachers
have occured in about all of our major
cities. There were 131 strikes involving
129,000 teachers in 1968-69, and during
'.~.:_:.: the school year 1969-70 there were -171
.... teacher strikes in the United States
:~;j involving 117,000 teachers.
:;~
Certainly this is a large number of
:~: strikes for any occupation, especially
:m teaching. Why has this occurred? What
§1 will the trend be? What does this mean
~~ in southeastern Ohio?
:ffi
Most strikes by teachers take place
;:;: .in large industrial cities. In such
i~i~ locations, most occupations of the
;jr; community are organized into groups

Kenda Dunfee
-honored
Mr. and Mrs . Kendall Dunfee
enltrlained recently with a
party
honoring
their
daughters , Wendi, age 3, on
Dec. 22, and Kenda, 2, on Dec.
31.

Approval of funding by the
State Department of Educ~ tion
to alleviate the critical shortage of school psychologists in
Southeastern Ohio was announced Wednesday.
Robert Weinlurtner, director
of services lor Handicapped ·
Children, said approximately
$22,500
in
Education
Professions Development Act
(EPDA) funds would provide
for the training .of 15 people
who are within 30-36 quarter
hours of their school
psychologist internship period.
The SHC project serves the

Wolfpen News, Notes

Sewerage
lacking.
.-l,...lo
·· rm• e·

Philco-Ford

OMI~A~Tl!R

.fGie

. FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
l

33 school districts in Athens,
GaJiia, Ho'cking , Jackson ,
Meigs , Monroe, Morgan ,
Noble, Perry, Vinton and
Washington Counties in their
efforts to provide appropriate
educational opportunities for
physically , emotionally and
mentally handicapped boys
and girls.
Weinfurtner said that of the
16 school psychologist units
that our 11-county region was

A{fiwl
Social Notes

.

{)

Holzer scores were above.tl]e
national average 'for ' 1all
programs.
. ' ! :~

'· ATHENS
General Portland, Racine, Rutland,
Telephone Co. pf Ohio has Shade,
Wellston
and
budgeted $3.5 mllllon for ex· Wilkesville.
pansloli' of communications
Kenley· R. Krlnn, Athells
facilities this year in the district commercial manager,
Athena district.
said chief' project . at Athens
- Fifty major projects will will be a $422,500 addition of
provide incre·lised cable switching equipment.'
}lstrlbution, call-switching En~lneers are finalizing plans
.equipment and Interchange now for the proj!!(:t to slllrt next
faCilities in the district's 2,8711- swnmer. Included will he 1,200
lquare-mlle area In portions of
Athens, Fairfield, Hocking,
' Jackson, Meigs, Morgan and
Vinton COWities.
General Telephone serves
62,401 - ~lephcines through of.
flee&amp; '· at Athens, Albany,
Amesville, Bremen, Chauncey,
Glade, Guysville, ,Jackson,
Letart Falls, LOgan, McArthur, New Marshfield, Oak
Hill, The Plains, ·Pomeroy,

~:~ '

The temperature 1.of Q\lid
Java may range from .1;600
to 2,000 degrees F·.
'
.· \

~'

Harrisonville
Society News

Dream of diamonds mqnificently
in 14-brat white or rellair aoktDream of 1iorlous rin1 -'olt.-

In comparisons of scores
made by graduates of all accredited programs, the
diploma programs were higher
in mectical nursing, surgical
nursing and nursing of
children. Diploma programs
averaged lour points lower
than accredited degree
pro~rams in obstetric nursing
-and the degree programs
averaged their highest scores
in psychiatric nursing.
Associate Degree . programs

.'

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

week recenUy with her son,
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Atldns at
Chelsea, Michigan.
Sunday dinner guests of
Stella Atkins and Ruby
Diehl were· Mr. and Mrs.
VIrgil Atkins, Mr. alld Mrs.
Felix Alkire, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Jewell, 1Mr. and Mrs.
Da,vid Riggs and six children,
Mary Dlehi and Ruby Halliday.
Mrs: Suale Heitger is caring
for Miss Eunice Bradfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Alkire
at~nded ·the wedding of Jane
Johnson Saturday evening at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Eher
Pickens in Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Whaley
are vacationing In Arizona.
Paul Stelmetz of Colwnbus
has been visiting the Junior
Paynes.
Mt. and Mrs. Robert Alkire
spent a weekend In Colwnbus
and while there visited the
Howard Gilkeys, the F. 0.
Whaleys, the Terry Whaleys
and Bobby Gibsons and · the
Hewitta.
Mr. alld Mrs. Robert Alkire
yjslted Mrs, ~hel , Carnahan
i K6ltef' Jifedlc'lil.. Cimter
Sunday afternoon. Mrs. earnahan Is back in tha h06pital
with sugar following major
lllll"gery.
Charles Barrett suffered a
heart attack Saturday night
and is a patient at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clark
and Tamra and Penny of
Qles~r visited Ava Gilkey, the
Robert Clarks and Roy,
Wiseman.
.._
Mr. and Mrs. Cllnton Gilkey
are vacationing in their
camper in Arizona.
Mrs. Frank Landaker of·
Colorado Is In serious con·
dillon.
Sunday callers of Ava Gilkey
were Karen and Tad Gilkey
and Mrs. Eugene Young.
Mr. and Mrs. HieI . French
and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
YI!Wig spent a recent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Warner of Wellston.
While visiting in Maryland,
Margaret' Douglas had the
opportunity to view the 70 foot
Qrlstmas tree at the White
House. She reports It was a
pretty sight with 60 smaller
tJ'ees lit up each representing a
&amp;tate In tile union.
Mrs. MyrUe Robinson Is in
the boapital with a foot Injury.
:Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dixon of
Athe1111 have purcha!led the late
residence of Weltha Clark and
are modernizing it.
Mrs. Jane Gilkey has moved
from the upstairs apoattment
ot the Charles Byers re~idence
to the-•partment vacated by
Mrs. James Jiylden.

C(~NTOURA"' ' . .
the uilimate In comf«t by • • • '

Priscilla~

GOESSLER
-.
Jewell} Store,
Court St., Pomeroy
tlluslratlon tnllrgtd

Visit our Art Goods Department
tor crochet Hooks, Knitting
Need les. Art Goods , Yarns,
Embroidery Hoops , etc .

By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
Jan. 7 at the Free Methodist
Church was 107, offering
$230.30 lor all services.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise of
McConnelsville attended
morning service at the local ,
church and visited his parents,
Rev. and Mrs. Cecil Wise.
Gerald Pullins Jr., stationed
in Japan, called his pa~ents,
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald PUllins
Sr., Christmas morning and
talked to his parents and three
brotbers.
Steven Craig is the name
given to the new baby born to
Rev~ and Mrs. Lewis Diehl.
Mr. Fritz Stahl of New
Marshfield visited recently
with Mr. and Mrs. Norman

Visit Our Toy Department for After
Inventor Low Prices. Many Pr:iced
FAR BELOW OUR COST.
. ''· ·
To Mention Just A Few At These Low Prices
Mattei Siuter Passenger Train Set Was 511 .88, NOW$4.88
Mattei Siuter Freight Train Set-Was SI6.B8, 'NOWS8.88
Mattei "Splat" Game
Was-S4.77 NOW 96c
Mattei Cop Links
Wn S3.~4, NOW 96c
Mattei Play Fills
·Was $2.69, NOWS.I.92
Mattei Fast Eddie
Was$4.33, NOW96c
Mallet Cat In Hat
ill W '' " Wai'$4At,&gt;HOW.I.&gt;n""'·
'~Mattell!.t~~w .oame
., -Was~.,.,~~-Hl'.1i
Power Blockt
Was $J:"'/ NOn,S1.92.
ZZZoom IIWn 53.49, NOW 96c '
Boundary Gam
Wos $4.41, NOW$1.92
Mallet Gomders
Wn$1.77, NOW96c
Sculpt Sure
Was 53.99, NOW$1.92
Twirt-0-Painl
Was $5 .95, NOWS1 .92
Shop-These-Values Now While They Last
n

n

n

n

.

MAGN"'S .
Chord Organ Ensemble
37 treble keys , 12 chord
buttons . Designer organ
stand plus . matching

hassock bench
foam

cushion .

with deep
Magnu s

Musi c Book . Model 661-P .

... ..,. ...

'

.

· Only
reae ·

39'5 -

~

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

,

" ·'

.. .. ...., -,,m· · ·~-,.,·,···· · ···»o···· · ····ow,-,.,. ,w , ,-,,~, w.w "-"·"-"-"'"' ~ ,
.•"'"
:.:.:·:·:·:=:.:.:-!·!·!-=-~·.-!"f«.t:·! .·!-!·!-!.:-:-:.:.:.:.:.:oxo;•:•:•:•:.-,.,.:.:•:•;.;r.r.•!•;o"".o.v:·:-;~,s~

~~~~F~fo;\~
'
l POMEROY,~!~~'~·
OHIO,,.,
992-3498
OPEN FRID~Y &amp; SATURDAY NIGII'l'S·TIL I

New York Clothing House Special

SAVINGS,::·.
fotthe

GREAT OUTDOORS·.
•'

'

\.

'

Men's and Boys' Winter
"

ackets &amp; Car .COats ·

OFF--.',

·. 1/3

\•

TWO VICl'ORIES
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!) Wiwam Spadafore of San Jose,
calif., took two first-round
victories in the United States
billiards ·: championships
among· 10 competitors from
Oregon an~ 'California Monday.
:I'he victor will advance to
the world championships In
Cilro, Egypt, In February.
Slladafore defeated Frank
Tcrea, San Fernando, Calif.,
In M lnn\ngl and Frank
Talma, San FranciBco, !J0.481n

..

. Boys Sizes 10 to ?P
Reg. 10.98 to 24.5p ',
NOW 7.32 to 16.114 , :

-

....

,.

Mens Si_zes ·36 to 46
Reg. 19.98 to 60.00
NOW ·13.32 to 40.00 '

Men's

J'

SWEATERS
%OFF

eo-a
COMING(
. '·' ..

'es:lnnln8•·
rn ·oUJer first round matches,

.

Reg . .10.98 to 18.98
· NOW 7.32 to 12.~6

6

VAllEY WMBER
&amp; SUPPLY CO.
•

..'

..

..

I

' , The kahnTailoring ..: •. JJ-'.~!1•111.-,;I
~e at, our store Jan.
.i

·.,

..

"I· }

New York Clothing Ho'use
MAIN ST.

.

I

Mrs. Stella Atklns spent · a

JUST ARRIVED
ART GOODS ITEMS
Loose seed, Roc'aal e and Bug le
Bead s, Loose and Strung
Pearls. Sequins , Art Foam .
,Ch ei lle Sti ck, etc.

Sunday School attendance on
Jan . 7 was 48. The offering was
$22.76. Worship service had an
attendance of 21 with Rev. Leh·
man speaking from Luke
16:19-31, "One Brother in Hell,
Five on the Road."
" A!'tll~r Atherton has been
confined to his home with a ·
severe cold.
Clarence Henderson and
..i:fandson, Aaron Williams ,
have been ill with flu and colds.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Parker
enterlained the Parker family
kin at their home here on
Sunday, Dec. 31. That evening,
Mrs. Parker was hostess
to a party for her Latin Club Schaef~r.
Mrs. Irene Gilmore has been
also.
returned
home from ' Veterans
Mrs. Sarah Caldwell , Mrs.
Nellie Parker and Nina Memorial Hospital.
Mrs . Dora Holley remains ill
Robinson met at the Follrod·
Robinson home on Friday at her home.
Mrs. Ted Mathew, daughter
evening Jan . 5 and audited the
of
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Karr
church, Sunday School and
Sr., is improving from her
WSCS treasury books.
Rev. Howard Shiveley of recent illness .
Mrs. Robert Buckley was
Racine called on Mr. and Mrs.
hostess
Thursday evening to 13
Chas. D. Woode in the afmembers of the Laurel Cliff
ternoon of New Year's Day.
Health
Club. Mter the business
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Follrod and
Sue Ann of Athens spent meeting refreshments were
Sunday evening with his served.
mother, Clara Follrod and
aunt, Nina Robinson.
Elmer Bibbee spent Friday ·
with Vere Swartz while Mrs.
Swartz made a trip to
Pomeroy.
.
The Alfred WSCS will hold iIs
regular meeting Tuesday
evening, Jan. 16 at the home of
Merle Griffith at Tuppers
Plains with the meeting to
begin promptly at 7:30. Nina
Robinson is program leader.
Jewell Story, brother of
Genevieve Guthrie, is a patient
in Holze~ Medical Center
hospital suffering from kidney
stones.
Sarah Woode of Coolville is a
medical patient at Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
in
Pomeroy.

992 2709
and data sheets be submitted. - - - - - - - - ·
_,
,. .
'

eligible lor this school year,
seven had to be turned back to
the state due to a lack of
qualified applicants. "We're
simply unable to compete lor
school psychologists with other
regions in the area of salary
and fringe benefits," he said.

• 1

,,

~

KERM'S
..

·

POMEROY

..

.role Hernandez, Los Angelu,

,r·:·

:0:'~'', ··,

room will be' expanded to include new positions for
operator-handled -calls.
Forty per cent ($1.4 million)
.
of this year's budget is ear·
marked lor construction of new
cable lacill ties lor expansion
and growth in all areas.
"General is stepping up its
line reduction program,"
~ Included will he l'service Krinn said, "to meet minimum
center in the lower· level to service standards set by the
combine tile test, repair and Public Utilities Commission of
eustomer account functions. Ohio .~:
The first floor will house an
By Dec. 31, 1976, all
enlarged business office, the telephone companies must be
new ODD switching equip- prepared to limit new
ment, and space for future residential services to twoequipment additions as the party in urban localities and no
community grows.
more than fi,ve-party in rural
On the second floor the loU areas. (General will llrOit its .

colllmunications iri -Athens .District

scored well below thir.national

mean.

.

.~"·· ..

in ·nation's best lQ% ~:J~

Frmds for training granted

Sandwiches, cake, ice
cream, coffee and Kool-Aid
were served to the guests.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Dunfee and Mr. and Mrs.
James E. Hawley, grandMrs. Nora Johnson of Grove and family were Mrs. Fisher parents of the children; Mr.
City and Mr. and Mrs. Ray ·and Mrs. Wanda Fisher of and Mrs . Jerry Hawley,
Johnson and family of Cincinnati and Mr. and Mrs. Tammy Hawley, Mr. and Mrs.
· Colwnbus were pre-Christmas Ivan Shumate and sons of Bill Biggs, Penny and Linda,
weekend .visitors of Mrs. Helen Mansfield, Mr . and Mrs. Paul Mrs. Sandy Phalin, Lena and
Johnson and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Pierce and family of Mason. Amy, Mary Beth Hawley,
Roush and family.
Jimmy Joe Hawley, and
Christmas Day guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey Debbie Hawley.
Mrs. Helen Johnson were Mr. of Albany were New Year's
Others presenting gifts to the
alld Mrs. Everett Ray Johnson, Day visitors of Mr. and Mrs.· children were M~~- , P:~. i,\h _
•. ·
Audra, \leflecy and Eric of· Uncolrl'"·R\issen .•1 '
Hood,. great : g.rea' t- ··' '{:..'"]"1.1 · · ·' Colwnbus, ·Mrs. Nora Johnson
Michael Knapp of Columbus grandmother ; Mr. and Mrs.
of Grove City, Mr. and Mrs. spent a lew days vacati'on with Albert
Smith ,
greatCOLUMBUS - The Ohio
James W. Johnson, Jamie Sue, his un cle, Mr. and Mrs. Doyle grandparents, Bruce Hawley, Environmental Protection
Todd and Teresa of Pomeroy, Knapp , Kail, Charles and Mr. and Mrs. Byron Hysell, Agency has made II recomMr. and Mrs. Larry Johnson, Kevin .
and Mr. and Mrs . Charles mendations to the village of
Gina, Tahnee and Brady, and
New Year's Day guests of Holcomb, Tracy and Sharyl. Rio Grande concerning its
Mr. and Mrs·. Kenneth John- Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell
sewage treatment facility.
son, Annette and Duane; all were Mr. and Mrs. Steve
The recommendations were
Planes landing on Greenlocal.
Haggy, Mr . and Mrs. Donald
occasionally are de- made in a letter from the
New Year's holiday visitors Russell of Akron and Mr. and land
layed while ground crews agency's Southeast District
of Mrs. Geneva Shumate and Mrs . Ronnie Russell and shoo 900-pound musk oxen off Office after a staff inspection
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Johnson Manda, or' Fort Mead.
the airport runway.
of the sewage treatment
facility on Nov . 30 , 1972
revealed several · deficiencies.
State quality standards now
require the use of chlorination.
The plant was constructed
before the standards were
enacted, so the plant was built
without the facility . The addition of chlorination facilities
·had been previously requested
in February, 1971.
The Ohio EPA has suggested
that additional pumps be installed at the plant because
when the river elevation rises,
PHILCOMATIC'" IU COLOR TV
the effluent riom the sewage
100% Solid State Modular Chassis, " Hands-Off'' Tuning
treatment plant backs up,
flooding
both
contact
stabilization tanks. Additional
pumps would allow the treated
effluent to be pumped during
these periods of high water.
Because the building is
subject to flooding, the Ohio
EPA had recommended a
room be constructed on the top
of the existing building to house
the blowers and control panel.
The State Agency said . this
would be less expensive than
MEDITERRANEAN
EARLY AMERICAN
.repairing the control panel
All you do is :
All 5 ma jor controls are locked-in
sl\ould it become water
automatica lly fo r a c leJr,
Se lect th e c hannel
damaged.
bright color picture
See th"e light '
The plant does have a f!QW
COLOR • TINT • BRI GHTNESS
meter but it has been
"Hands-Off"- the picture's
CONTRAST· AUTO MATI C FINE TUN ING
right, automatically
inoperable sinct! F_ebruary,
Wh en you tunc with Advance d
1971. The state has also
· 1r you are a ut of range , tu rn the l ine
Ph llco mai!C, all five vital elements of a
tun ing kn ob un til you see !he light: good color picture are rig ht , aut omati recommended Rio Grande hire
" t1ands- oll"- the pictur e's rigl1t.
a certified sewage treatment
Cil ll y al l are locked in throug h chang Tt'lat's all y ou do lor t1 beautil t.il crrs p
plant operator or send someone
ing sce nes and channels to keep the
lifeli ke color p ictu re. No button 10 push
pic ture r1ght. And you ca n still adjust
to
training school to become
- it's locked-in automatically. W1tl1 th e
t11ese elements tv suit your· personal
certified . The municipality had
Philcomatrc Master Control Sulton in
prelc renco . Tt1e re's no gu ess work ,
" Auto ma tic". you just selec t any one
previously been advised of the
e1ther. When the Ph1tco m atic l ig ht
or 12 VHF or 70 UHF channels. When
requirement in July, 1970.
comes " on" you know you're in auto you see the Phllcomatic Color Control
matic tun1ng ra nge and receiving a
The Ohio EPA has also
Lrg ht come " On ", just take your hand
color telecast. ll you're receiving a B/ W
requested Rio Grande initiate a
all- the pic lure's righ t automatically.
telecasl. the lighl doesn' t glow. Howprogram to reduce the inever. the automatic ci rcuits can be tuned
filtration
Into the sanitary
and loc ked-i n for excell ent reception.
sewers and remove the weeds
·from the sludge drying beds.
FREE _ONE EXTRA YEAR WARRANTY
The city must also submit
copies of ordinances conF.O R A FULL2-YEAR PARTS&amp; LABOR PROTECTION.
cernin-g roof · and , foundation
'
drains, and premium joint
pipes. The state also ~equested
that the three lift stations he
•checked &lt;laily to prevent
problems, the (l!Jmps at the
Bob Evans .lift station he
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
repaired and operating reports

. I

.'

Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing scored
within the upper 10 percent of
schools'in Ohio according to the
recent state Board Test Pool
Examination for Pro(essional
Nurses, Series 671.
Comparisons of scores made
by the 67 schools in Ohio with
other schools in the state and the 52 u. s. jurisdictions where
the test is given were made
public this week.
·
In relation to the nation , Ohio
scores ranked in the upper
quarter in tesls in medical,
surgical , obstetric and
pediatric nursing and in the
upper third in psychiatric
nursing.
There were three schools
which scored ' higher than
Holzer in medical nursing, five
in surgical nursing, three in
obstetric nursing and lour in
nursing of children. There
® were nine schools making
® higher scores in psychiatric
nursing .

.

•
•
.GT to spend $3.5 million rmpro~g
.

Holzer Nursing School. ~·

*~:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:!:::::::!:::::::::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::;:;:;:;::::
.
I
:=:;:::::::::::::::~~=::-;:::~::::::::::::::&amp;8~s:::::::s::~::N::::::::::::~::=:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::;:::::::::.

Wendi and

ol,"
~

.•

.

9- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Jan.J J, una

; '

~

-~

"'

-beat Robert Slatton, Long
ileach, ~. In ~!Innings and
·John Joeephii!JII, PorUand, dJs.
polld of. SlattOn, 56-?.8, in 48

tnP,IiiP-

'

ANACIN
200's
'2.9~ Value

..

'"'

new lines, 300 terminals for ticketers will keep pace with
new phone numbers, mor&amp; the increasing volume of
trunks to area exchanges and calls. "
60 new ticketers. Ticketers
At Jackson, work is
record billing infonnation on progressing on a $1.3 million
direct-dialed calls.
project that wlll establish
" The Athens toU -center · direct distance dialing (DDD)
recorded an 83 per cent in- in 1974. Equipment will he
crease in ·custOmer usage of installed next spring in a new
DDD last quarter," Krinn · addition to the Jackson central
noted . "The additional office.

al
Net
by
Clairol

MYDEC
VITAMINS

~· VICKS
~ _.,

more call-switching equipment
and circuils to area exchanges
will be added. Terminals for
200 phone numbers and 400
more customer Jines will he ·.
ready by mid-summer.
At Wilkesville a newly
de veloped trailer-mounted
telephone system will he ready
lor customers by year-end. The
· trailer will he used until growth
patterns are -established.- At
that time a new permanent
~xchange will he ' constructed.
Athens is one of General
. Telephone's 14 districts serving 450,000 telephones in parts
of 70 Ohio counties. Sta~wide,
the company has budgeted
$47.3 million lor expansion and
modernization of facilities.

SCHICK- --

LYSOL
SPRAY

SJ.!!f·. Sl NEX
_

......::::~:.'t"....

100 with

-··~,..,.

-.

1 Oz.

14 Oz.

30 Free

Reg. $10.38

,,

new rural lines to four parties.)
New urban business se rvice
\viii be limited to one-party and
rural, two-party.
At Bremen, 200 lines and
te_tminals !.or 100 phone
nwnhers will · he added to
handle expected community
growth and customers '
requests fo" lines -with fewer
parties. New equipment in the
Glade ·and Oak Hill centra l
offices soon will he put in
service,
doubling
the
capabilities of both offices.
Logan's equipment recently
was expanded to include 400
more lines and 300 phbne
nwnber terminals. Engineers
will finalize plans for a similar
addition in 1974. At Pomeroy

·.'

fuSs} ·

ll

50's
69c Value

$1.79 Value

•

10's
$1.89 Value

,,

•

$ 25

Wind &amp;
Weather

GIANT 49 oz.

LOTION
8 oz.................. 89~
16 oz............ ~1.69
EXTRA RICH

8 oz~ ................~ 1,.09
16 oz............. ~1.89
HAND CREAM.......$1.00

~~\t '

-Softique
'
Bath Oil Beads

PAMPERS
Daytime

17 oz.

JO,S·

.9r VALUE

56e·/
MASSENGILL
Douche
~~ . Powder

-~

$1.79 Value

,99e

$1.87 ValuE

.

·1 -~5
PLAYTEX
DISPOSABL£
BOTILES
I

0000

o:~v

Nelsons

WITH THII COUPON

I
'

--

(~\(J
r' ..·
'

~

MACLEANS
TOOTHPASTE
Freshmint
Flavor
64c Value

L •

:,-

' ~~~
.

'2/59¢
MICRIN
18 oz.
.
s1.59 Value

.,,, aae

$1.99 Value
'-

J~E69~

l .
- -.

~-

�J

..

1·

' ·'

-- ..

-

... ....... ...

..

.... . . . ..

••. .••. •··•·•···•••·•·••..........·;·.·.·;·,·:·;·:·:·:·~:=:=:wx'$-;x:m;:&gt;.
0.. . . ::::.:-:
groups must assume a . position of ;~~
responsible behavior on their part
~ill
The nature of the job also 1s a ~~
problem source. Teaching is a public :~~
service. As such, teachers have a ~~
responsibility to the. public.
~
. It would seem that teachers have &gt;~~­
an obligation to keep the public in- ·
formed of what they are doing and how •
for collective actio~~ thus, teachers'
they are using the available resources_ ~
-:
groups organized lor collective action . This would reduce sorrie of the tension
are not unique.
which often develops between the ...
The issues which have led to . school and community.
}
teacher strikes have generally centered
At the same time, the public has a ~
around money. But the matter of responsibility to provide adequate ;~
salaries may be of minor concern. For resources lor the teachers to perform ::~
example, the present strike in Chicago
the public service for which they are :;~
has as its focus the si~e of cll)sses. The hired.
'
~;)
teachers of Chicago feel that class sizes
As for southeastern Ohio, I feel :;:;
are too large for effective learning ..The generally that teachers and their ~~jj
board of education there feels that in boards and superintendents are in ~;j;
order to reduce _class sizes, more communication with each other. Also, :;:;
teachers would need to he hired, and
teachers and the conmiunity generally ~~~:
the cost would be too great.
seem to work together. Thfis drfoestinot j~~:
In almost e4'ery instance of strikes, mean that all is in a state o pe ec on. ::::
teachers and board members have Efforts to keep Jines of communicalion ::::
attempted to discuss and resolve the open are a constant need.
'
f;j:
issues. Teachers have struck when they
If the citizens, board members, :;:;
felt, as a group, they were not being administrators and teachers of our j:::
negotiated with "in good faith:"
area work together-lor the benefit of the $
It Is my opinion that the likelihood
youngsters by communicating and ~:;
of strikes is lessened when school board cooperating, there is no need lor
members and school administrators
teacher strikes to happen 'here. .
listen to and work cooperatively with
Mter dll, we are all people Just ~
teachers. Also, teachers and their
trying to get along together.
~
-

.

-.. ...

".....................
·'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•-:···:·:::::·:·:·:..:·:·::;~·!·;~~·:·:·;·;·:·:·:::::·;;;·:;:·:·;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~~;;;,::;:;:jc::;_::;::.;::;:;:;::::::::::=:::::::::-:.;.;-:.:::::::.:.:t!·:·:~:·:·.·············~·-·············· ···"·' !

.

Teacher strikes are
phenomena of the 60s

DIANNA HARRIS

PEGGY HOLLIDAY

Two in Princeton
.for Junior Miss
PT. PLEASANT - Two
more Mason County girls are in
Princeton this week attending
events in West Virginia 's
Junior Miss Pageant to be held
at the Alexander Arts Center,
Concord College, Athens.
They are Miss Dianna Lynn
Harris, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. C. Harris of New Haven
and Miss Peggy Holliday,
daughter of Mr.. and Mrs. E. M.
Holliday of 2015 North Main
Street, Point Pleasant.
Pam Sommer, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Sommer of
Southside, is the other Mason
Countian participating and.the
girls are among 30 contestants
attending from various areas
of the state.

Pr eliminari es beg an
Tuesday with a reception lor
the contes tants and their
parents at the Elks Lodge in
Princeton . Finals will be held
January 13 at 7:30, p.m. and
January 14 at 2:30 p.m. at
Concord College.
Miss Harris is representing
Wahama High School as Junior
Miss. Her talent will consist of
a clarinet solo. She is staying at
the home of Dr . and Mrs . J.P. ·
Champion , 1806 Honaker
Street, Princeton.
Miss Holliday is representing
Point Pleasant as Junior Miss
and her talent is a solo. While
in Princeton, she will be •
guest in the home of Mrs. John
R. Hickman, Park Avenue
Extension.

By Prof. Ed (Doc) Wallen
Rio Grande College
RIO GRANDE - It seems to
happen every September , and then
again in January; incidents of teacher
~ strikes in cities across the country are
reported.
At
present,
tea chers
in
Philadelphia and Chicago are on strike.
Since the first teachers' strike in 1960,
strikes or threats of strikes by teachers
have occured in about all of our major
cities. There were 131 strikes involving
129,000 teachers in 1968-69, and during
'.~.:_:.: the school year 1969-70 there were -171
.... teacher strikes in the United States
:~;j involving 117,000 teachers.
:;~
Certainly this is a large number of
:~: strikes for any occupation, especially
:m teaching. Why has this occurred? What
§1 will the trend be? What does this mean
~~ in southeastern Ohio?
:ffi
Most strikes by teachers take place
;:;: .in large industrial cities. In such
i~i~ locations, most occupations of the
;jr; community are organized into groups

Kenda Dunfee
-honored
Mr. and Mrs . Kendall Dunfee
enltrlained recently with a
party
honoring
their
daughters , Wendi, age 3, on
Dec. 22, and Kenda, 2, on Dec.
31.

Approval of funding by the
State Department of Educ~ tion
to alleviate the critical shortage of school psychologists in
Southeastern Ohio was announced Wednesday.
Robert Weinlurtner, director
of services lor Handicapped ·
Children, said approximately
$22,500
in
Education
Professions Development Act
(EPDA) funds would provide
for the training .of 15 people
who are within 30-36 quarter
hours of their school
psychologist internship period.
The SHC project serves the

Wolfpen News, Notes

Sewerage
lacking.
.-l,...lo
·· rm• e·

Philco-Ford

OMI~A~Tl!R

.fGie

. FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
l

33 school districts in Athens,
GaJiia, Ho'cking , Jackson ,
Meigs , Monroe, Morgan ,
Noble, Perry, Vinton and
Washington Counties in their
efforts to provide appropriate
educational opportunities for
physically , emotionally and
mentally handicapped boys
and girls.
Weinfurtner said that of the
16 school psychologist units
that our 11-county region was

A{fiwl
Social Notes

.

{)

Holzer scores were above.tl]e
national average 'for ' 1all
programs.
. ' ! :~

'· ATHENS
General Portland, Racine, Rutland,
Telephone Co. pf Ohio has Shade,
Wellston
and
budgeted $3.5 mllllon for ex· Wilkesville.
pansloli' of communications
Kenley· R. Krlnn, Athells
facilities this year in the district commercial manager,
Athena district.
said chief' project . at Athens
- Fifty major projects will will be a $422,500 addition of
provide incre·lised cable switching equipment.'
}lstrlbution, call-switching En~lneers are finalizing plans
.equipment and Interchange now for the proj!!(:t to slllrt next
faCilities in the district's 2,8711- swnmer. Included will he 1,200
lquare-mlle area In portions of
Athens, Fairfield, Hocking,
' Jackson, Meigs, Morgan and
Vinton COWities.
General Telephone serves
62,401 - ~lephcines through of.
flee&amp; '· at Athens, Albany,
Amesville, Bremen, Chauncey,
Glade, Guysville, ,Jackson,
Letart Falls, LOgan, McArthur, New Marshfield, Oak
Hill, The Plains, ·Pomeroy,

~:~ '

The temperature 1.of Q\lid
Java may range from .1;600
to 2,000 degrees F·.
'
.· \

~'

Harrisonville
Society News

Dream of diamonds mqnificently
in 14-brat white or rellair aoktDream of 1iorlous rin1 -'olt.-

In comparisons of scores
made by graduates of all accredited programs, the
diploma programs were higher
in mectical nursing, surgical
nursing and nursing of
children. Diploma programs
averaged lour points lower
than accredited degree
pro~rams in obstetric nursing
-and the degree programs
averaged their highest scores
in psychiatric nursing.
Associate Degree . programs

.'

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

week recenUy with her son,
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Atldns at
Chelsea, Michigan.
Sunday dinner guests of
Stella Atkins and Ruby
Diehl were· Mr. and Mrs.
VIrgil Atkins, Mr. alld Mrs.
Felix Alkire, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Jewell, 1Mr. and Mrs.
Da,vid Riggs and six children,
Mary Dlehi and Ruby Halliday.
Mrs: Suale Heitger is caring
for Miss Eunice Bradfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Alkire
at~nded ·the wedding of Jane
Johnson Saturday evening at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Eher
Pickens in Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Whaley
are vacationing In Arizona.
Paul Stelmetz of Colwnbus
has been visiting the Junior
Paynes.
Mt. and Mrs. Robert Alkire
spent a weekend In Colwnbus
and while there visited the
Howard Gilkeys, the F. 0.
Whaleys, the Terry Whaleys
and Bobby Gibsons and · the
Hewitta.
Mr. alld Mrs. Robert Alkire
yjslted Mrs, ~hel , Carnahan
i K6ltef' Jifedlc'lil.. Cimter
Sunday afternoon. Mrs. earnahan Is back in tha h06pital
with sugar following major
lllll"gery.
Charles Barrett suffered a
heart attack Saturday night
and is a patient at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clark
and Tamra and Penny of
Qles~r visited Ava Gilkey, the
Robert Clarks and Roy,
Wiseman.
.._
Mr. and Mrs. Cllnton Gilkey
are vacationing in their
camper in Arizona.
Mrs. Frank Landaker of·
Colorado Is In serious con·
dillon.
Sunday callers of Ava Gilkey
were Karen and Tad Gilkey
and Mrs. Eugene Young.
Mr. and Mrs. HieI . French
and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
YI!Wig spent a recent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Warner of Wellston.
While visiting in Maryland,
Margaret' Douglas had the
opportunity to view the 70 foot
Qrlstmas tree at the White
House. She reports It was a
pretty sight with 60 smaller
tJ'ees lit up each representing a
&amp;tate In tile union.
Mrs. MyrUe Robinson Is in
the boapital with a foot Injury.
:Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dixon of
Athe1111 have purcha!led the late
residence of Weltha Clark and
are modernizing it.
Mrs. Jane Gilkey has moved
from the upstairs apoattment
ot the Charles Byers re~idence
to the-•partment vacated by
Mrs. James Jiylden.

C(~NTOURA"' ' . .
the uilimate In comf«t by • • • '

Priscilla~

GOESSLER
-.
Jewell} Store,
Court St., Pomeroy
tlluslratlon tnllrgtd

Visit our Art Goods Department
tor crochet Hooks, Knitting
Need les. Art Goods , Yarns,
Embroidery Hoops , etc .

By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
Jan. 7 at the Free Methodist
Church was 107, offering
$230.30 lor all services.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise of
McConnelsville attended
morning service at the local ,
church and visited his parents,
Rev. and Mrs. Cecil Wise.
Gerald Pullins Jr., stationed
in Japan, called his pa~ents,
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald PUllins
Sr., Christmas morning and
talked to his parents and three
brotbers.
Steven Craig is the name
given to the new baby born to
Rev~ and Mrs. Lewis Diehl.
Mr. Fritz Stahl of New
Marshfield visited recently
with Mr. and Mrs. Norman

Visit Our Toy Department for After
Inventor Low Prices. Many Pr:iced
FAR BELOW OUR COST.
. ''· ·
To Mention Just A Few At These Low Prices
Mattei Siuter Passenger Train Set Was 511 .88, NOW$4.88
Mattei Siuter Freight Train Set-Was SI6.B8, 'NOWS8.88
Mattei "Splat" Game
Was-S4.77 NOW 96c
Mattei Cop Links
Wn S3.~4, NOW 96c
Mattei Play Fills
·Was $2.69, NOWS.I.92
Mattei Fast Eddie
Was$4.33, NOW96c
Mallet Cat In Hat
ill W '' " Wai'$4At,&gt;HOW.I.&gt;n""'·
'~Mattell!.t~~w .oame
., -Was~.,.,~~-Hl'.1i
Power Blockt
Was $J:"'/ NOn,S1.92.
ZZZoom IIWn 53.49, NOW 96c '
Boundary Gam
Wos $4.41, NOW$1.92
Mallet Gomders
Wn$1.77, NOW96c
Sculpt Sure
Was 53.99, NOW$1.92
Twirt-0-Painl
Was $5 .95, NOWS1 .92
Shop-These-Values Now While They Last
n

n

n

n

.

MAGN"'S .
Chord Organ Ensemble
37 treble keys , 12 chord
buttons . Designer organ
stand plus . matching

hassock bench
foam

cushion .

with deep
Magnu s

Musi c Book . Model 661-P .

... ..,. ...

'

.

· Only
reae ·

39'5 -

~

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

,

" ·'

.. .. ...., -,,m· · ·~-,.,·,···· · ···»o···· · ····ow,-,.,. ,w , ,-,,~, w.w "-"·"-"-"'"' ~ ,
.•"'"
:.:.:·:·:·:=:.:.:-!·!·!-=-~·.-!"f«.t:·! .·!-!·!-!.:-:-:.:.:.:.:.:oxo;•:•:•:•:.-,.,.:.:•:•;.;r.r.•!•;o"".o.v:·:-;~,s~

~~~~F~fo;\~
'
l POMEROY,~!~~'~·
OHIO,,.,
992-3498
OPEN FRID~Y &amp; SATURDAY NIGII'l'S·TIL I

New York Clothing House Special

SAVINGS,::·.
fotthe

GREAT OUTDOORS·.
•'

'

\.

'

Men's and Boys' Winter
"

ackets &amp; Car .COats ·

OFF--.',

·. 1/3

\•

TWO VICl'ORIES
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!) Wiwam Spadafore of San Jose,
calif., took two first-round
victories in the United States
billiards ·: championships
among· 10 competitors from
Oregon an~ 'California Monday.
:I'he victor will advance to
the world championships In
Cilro, Egypt, In February.
Slladafore defeated Frank
Tcrea, San Fernando, Calif.,
In M lnn\ngl and Frank
Talma, San FranciBco, !J0.481n

..

. Boys Sizes 10 to ?P
Reg. 10.98 to 24.5p ',
NOW 7.32 to 16.114 , :

-

....

,.

Mens Si_zes ·36 to 46
Reg. 19.98 to 60.00
NOW ·13.32 to 40.00 '

Men's

J'

SWEATERS
%OFF

eo-a
COMING(
. '·' ..

'es:lnnln8•·
rn ·oUJer first round matches,

.

Reg . .10.98 to 18.98
· NOW 7.32 to 12.~6

6

VAllEY WMBER
&amp; SUPPLY CO.
•

..'

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I

' , The kahnTailoring ..: •. JJ-'.~!1•111.-,;I
~e at, our store Jan.
.i

·.,

..

"I· }

New York Clothing Ho'use
MAIN ST.

.

I

Mrs. Stella Atklns spent · a

JUST ARRIVED
ART GOODS ITEMS
Loose seed, Roc'aal e and Bug le
Bead s, Loose and Strung
Pearls. Sequins , Art Foam .
,Ch ei lle Sti ck, etc.

Sunday School attendance on
Jan . 7 was 48. The offering was
$22.76. Worship service had an
attendance of 21 with Rev. Leh·
man speaking from Luke
16:19-31, "One Brother in Hell,
Five on the Road."
" A!'tll~r Atherton has been
confined to his home with a ·
severe cold.
Clarence Henderson and
..i:fandson, Aaron Williams ,
have been ill with flu and colds.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Parker
enterlained the Parker family
kin at their home here on
Sunday, Dec. 31. That evening,
Mrs. Parker was hostess
to a party for her Latin Club Schaef~r.
Mrs. Irene Gilmore has been
also.
returned
home from ' Veterans
Mrs. Sarah Caldwell , Mrs.
Nellie Parker and Nina Memorial Hospital.
Mrs . Dora Holley remains ill
Robinson met at the Follrod·
Robinson home on Friday at her home.
Mrs. Ted Mathew, daughter
evening Jan . 5 and audited the
of
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Karr
church, Sunday School and
Sr., is improving from her
WSCS treasury books.
Rev. Howard Shiveley of recent illness .
Mrs. Robert Buckley was
Racine called on Mr. and Mrs.
hostess
Thursday evening to 13
Chas. D. Woode in the afmembers of the Laurel Cliff
ternoon of New Year's Day.
Health
Club. Mter the business
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Follrod and
Sue Ann of Athens spent meeting refreshments were
Sunday evening with his served.
mother, Clara Follrod and
aunt, Nina Robinson.
Elmer Bibbee spent Friday ·
with Vere Swartz while Mrs.
Swartz made a trip to
Pomeroy.
.
The Alfred WSCS will hold iIs
regular meeting Tuesday
evening, Jan. 16 at the home of
Merle Griffith at Tuppers
Plains with the meeting to
begin promptly at 7:30. Nina
Robinson is program leader.
Jewell Story, brother of
Genevieve Guthrie, is a patient
in Holze~ Medical Center
hospital suffering from kidney
stones.
Sarah Woode of Coolville is a
medical patient at Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
in
Pomeroy.

992 2709
and data sheets be submitted. - - - - - - - - ·
_,
,. .
'

eligible lor this school year,
seven had to be turned back to
the state due to a lack of
qualified applicants. "We're
simply unable to compete lor
school psychologists with other
regions in the area of salary
and fringe benefits," he said.

• 1

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KERM'S
..

·

POMEROY

..

.role Hernandez, Los Angelu,

,r·:·

:0:'~'', ··,

room will be' expanded to include new positions for
operator-handled -calls.
Forty per cent ($1.4 million)
.
of this year's budget is ear·
marked lor construction of new
cable lacill ties lor expansion
and growth in all areas.
"General is stepping up its
line reduction program,"
~ Included will he l'service Krinn said, "to meet minimum
center in the lower· level to service standards set by the
combine tile test, repair and Public Utilities Commission of
eustomer account functions. Ohio .~:
The first floor will house an
By Dec. 31, 1976, all
enlarged business office, the telephone companies must be
new ODD switching equip- prepared to limit new
ment, and space for future residential services to twoequipment additions as the party in urban localities and no
community grows.
more than fi,ve-party in rural
On the second floor the loU areas. (General will llrOit its .

colllmunications iri -Athens .District

scored well below thir.national

mean.

.

.~"·· ..

in ·nation's best lQ% ~:J~

Frmds for training granted

Sandwiches, cake, ice
cream, coffee and Kool-Aid
were served to the guests.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Dunfee and Mr. and Mrs.
James E. Hawley, grandMrs. Nora Johnson of Grove and family were Mrs. Fisher parents of the children; Mr.
City and Mr. and Mrs. Ray ·and Mrs. Wanda Fisher of and Mrs . Jerry Hawley,
Johnson and family of Cincinnati and Mr. and Mrs. Tammy Hawley, Mr. and Mrs.
· Colwnbus were pre-Christmas Ivan Shumate and sons of Bill Biggs, Penny and Linda,
weekend .visitors of Mrs. Helen Mansfield, Mr . and Mrs. Paul Mrs. Sandy Phalin, Lena and
Johnson and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Pierce and family of Mason. Amy, Mary Beth Hawley,
Roush and family.
Jimmy Joe Hawley, and
Christmas Day guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey Debbie Hawley.
Mrs. Helen Johnson were Mr. of Albany were New Year's
Others presenting gifts to the
alld Mrs. Everett Ray Johnson, Day visitors of Mr. and Mrs.· children were M~~- , P:~. i,\h _
•. ·
Audra, \leflecy and Eric of· Uncolrl'"·R\issen .•1 '
Hood,. great : g.rea' t- ··' '{:..'"]"1.1 · · ·' Colwnbus, ·Mrs. Nora Johnson
Michael Knapp of Columbus grandmother ; Mr. and Mrs.
of Grove City, Mr. and Mrs. spent a lew days vacati'on with Albert
Smith ,
greatCOLUMBUS - The Ohio
James W. Johnson, Jamie Sue, his un cle, Mr. and Mrs. Doyle grandparents, Bruce Hawley, Environmental Protection
Todd and Teresa of Pomeroy, Knapp , Kail, Charles and Mr. and Mrs. Byron Hysell, Agency has made II recomMr. and Mrs. Larry Johnson, Kevin .
and Mr. and Mrs . Charles mendations to the village of
Gina, Tahnee and Brady, and
New Year's Day guests of Holcomb, Tracy and Sharyl. Rio Grande concerning its
Mr. and Mrs·. Kenneth John- Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell
sewage treatment facility.
son, Annette and Duane; all were Mr. and Mrs. Steve
The recommendations were
Planes landing on Greenlocal.
Haggy, Mr . and Mrs. Donald
occasionally are de- made in a letter from the
New Year's holiday visitors Russell of Akron and Mr. and land
layed while ground crews agency's Southeast District
of Mrs. Geneva Shumate and Mrs . Ronnie Russell and shoo 900-pound musk oxen off Office after a staff inspection
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Johnson Manda, or' Fort Mead.
the airport runway.
of the sewage treatment
facility on Nov . 30 , 1972
revealed several · deficiencies.
State quality standards now
require the use of chlorination.
The plant was constructed
before the standards were
enacted, so the plant was built
without the facility . The addition of chlorination facilities
·had been previously requested
in February, 1971.
The Ohio EPA has suggested
that additional pumps be installed at the plant because
when the river elevation rises,
PHILCOMATIC'" IU COLOR TV
the effluent riom the sewage
100% Solid State Modular Chassis, " Hands-Off'' Tuning
treatment plant backs up,
flooding
both
contact
stabilization tanks. Additional
pumps would allow the treated
effluent to be pumped during
these periods of high water.
Because the building is
subject to flooding, the Ohio
EPA had recommended a
room be constructed on the top
of the existing building to house
the blowers and control panel.
The State Agency said . this
would be less expensive than
MEDITERRANEAN
EARLY AMERICAN
.repairing the control panel
All you do is :
All 5 ma jor controls are locked-in
sl\ould it become water
automatica lly fo r a c leJr,
Se lect th e c hannel
damaged.
bright color picture
See th"e light '
The plant does have a f!QW
COLOR • TINT • BRI GHTNESS
meter but it has been
"Hands-Off"- the picture's
CONTRAST· AUTO MATI C FINE TUN ING
right, automatically
inoperable sinct! F_ebruary,
Wh en you tunc with Advance d
1971. The state has also
· 1r you are a ut of range , tu rn the l ine
Ph llco mai!C, all five vital elements of a
tun ing kn ob un til you see !he light: good color picture are rig ht , aut omati recommended Rio Grande hire
" t1ands- oll"- the pictur e's rigl1t.
a certified sewage treatment
Cil ll y al l are locked in throug h chang Tt'lat's all y ou do lor t1 beautil t.il crrs p
plant operator or send someone
ing sce nes and channels to keep the
lifeli ke color p ictu re. No button 10 push
pic ture r1ght. And you ca n still adjust
to
training school to become
- it's locked-in automatically. W1tl1 th e
t11ese elements tv suit your· personal
certified . The municipality had
Philcomatrc Master Control Sulton in
prelc renco . Tt1e re's no gu ess work ,
" Auto ma tic". you just selec t any one
previously been advised of the
e1ther. When the Ph1tco m atic l ig ht
or 12 VHF or 70 UHF channels. When
requirement in July, 1970.
comes " on" you know you're in auto you see the Phllcomatic Color Control
matic tun1ng ra nge and receiving a
The Ohio EPA has also
Lrg ht come " On ", just take your hand
color telecast. ll you're receiving a B/ W
requested Rio Grande initiate a
all- the pic lure's righ t automatically.
telecasl. the lighl doesn' t glow. Howprogram to reduce the inever. the automatic ci rcuits can be tuned
filtration
Into the sanitary
and loc ked-i n for excell ent reception.
sewers and remove the weeds
·from the sludge drying beds.
FREE _ONE EXTRA YEAR WARRANTY
The city must also submit
copies of ordinances conF.O R A FULL2-YEAR PARTS&amp; LABOR PROTECTION.
cernin-g roof · and , foundation
'
drains, and premium joint
pipes. The state also ~equested
that the three lift stations he
•checked &lt;laily to prevent
problems, the (l!Jmps at the
Bob Evans .lift station he
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
repaired and operating reports

. I

.'

Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing scored
within the upper 10 percent of
schools'in Ohio according to the
recent state Board Test Pool
Examination for Pro(essional
Nurses, Series 671.
Comparisons of scores made
by the 67 schools in Ohio with
other schools in the state and the 52 u. s. jurisdictions where
the test is given were made
public this week.
·
In relation to the nation , Ohio
scores ranked in the upper
quarter in tesls in medical,
surgical , obstetric and
pediatric nursing and in the
upper third in psychiatric
nursing.
There were three schools
which scored ' higher than
Holzer in medical nursing, five
in surgical nursing, three in
obstetric nursing and lour in
nursing of children. There
® were nine schools making
® higher scores in psychiatric
nursing .

.

•
•
.GT to spend $3.5 million rmpro~g
.

Holzer Nursing School. ~·

*~:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:!:::::::!:::::::::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::;:;:;:;::::
.
I
:=:;:::::::::::::::~~=::-;:::~::::::::::::::&amp;8~s:::::::s::~::N::::::::::::~::=:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::;:::::::::.

Wendi and

ol,"
~

.•

.

9- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Jan.J J, una

; '

~

-~

"'

-beat Robert Slatton, Long
ileach, ~. In ~!Innings and
·John Joeephii!JII, PorUand, dJs.
polld of. SlattOn, 56-?.8, in 48

tnP,IiiP-

'

ANACIN
200's
'2.9~ Value

..

'"'

new lines, 300 terminals for ticketers will keep pace with
new phone numbers, mor&amp; the increasing volume of
trunks to area exchanges and calls. "
60 new ticketers. Ticketers
At Jackson, work is
record billing infonnation on progressing on a $1.3 million
direct-dialed calls.
project that wlll establish
" The Athens toU -center · direct distance dialing (DDD)
recorded an 83 per cent in- in 1974. Equipment will he
crease in ·custOmer usage of installed next spring in a new
DDD last quarter," Krinn · addition to the Jackson central
noted . "The additional office.

al
Net
by
Clairol

MYDEC
VITAMINS

~· VICKS
~ _.,

more call-switching equipment
and circuils to area exchanges
will be added. Terminals for
200 phone numbers and 400
more customer Jines will he ·.
ready by mid-summer.
At Wilkesville a newly
de veloped trailer-mounted
telephone system will he ready
lor customers by year-end. The
· trailer will he used until growth
patterns are -established.- At
that time a new permanent
~xchange will he ' constructed.
Athens is one of General
. Telephone's 14 districts serving 450,000 telephones in parts
of 70 Ohio counties. Sta~wide,
the company has budgeted
$47.3 million lor expansion and
modernization of facilities.

SCHICK- --

LYSOL
SPRAY

SJ.!!f·. Sl NEX
_

......::::~:.'t"....

100 with

-··~,..,.

-.

1 Oz.

14 Oz.

30 Free

Reg. $10.38

,,

new rural lines to four parties.)
New urban business se rvice
\viii be limited to one-party and
rural, two-party.
At Bremen, 200 lines and
te_tminals !.or 100 phone
nwnhers will · he added to
handle expected community
growth and customers '
requests fo" lines -with fewer
parties. New equipment in the
Glade ·and Oak Hill centra l
offices soon will he put in
service,
doubling
the
capabilities of both offices.
Logan's equipment recently
was expanded to include 400
more lines and 300 phbne
nwnber terminals. Engineers
will finalize plans for a similar
addition in 1974. At Pomeroy

·.'

fuSs} ·

ll

50's
69c Value

$1.79 Value

•

10's
$1.89 Value

,,

•

$ 25

Wind &amp;
Weather

GIANT 49 oz.

LOTION
8 oz.................. 89~
16 oz............ ~1.69
EXTRA RICH

8 oz~ ................~ 1,.09
16 oz............. ~1.89
HAND CREAM.......$1.00

~~\t '

-Softique
'
Bath Oil Beads

PAMPERS
Daytime

17 oz.

JO,S·

.9r VALUE

56e·/
MASSENGILL
Douche
~~ . Powder

-~

$1.79 Value

,99e

$1.87 ValuE

.

·1 -~5
PLAYTEX
DISPOSABL£
BOTILES
I

0000

o:~v

Nelsons

WITH THII COUPON

I
'

--

(~\(J
r' ..·
'

~

MACLEANS
TOOTHPASTE
Freshmint
Flavor
64c Value

L •

:,-

' ~~~
.

'2/59¢
MICRIN
18 oz.
.
s1.59 Value

.,,, aae

$1.99 Value
'-

J~E69~

l .
- -.

~-

�J

s;;;(i;;f(;[;;~ifieds Get Action! sentinel ClaSsifieds Get Results! ·.
.

s
•
·
Business . ervtces

'

WANT AQ.S.
INFO~ MATtON
pEAOLINES

Wanteo To Buy

.s P.M . Day

Before Publlc&amp;1 1on .
Mond ay Deadline 9 a .m .

Can c el lation ,_... Corrections •
W ill be ~cc ep te d until 9 a.m . tor

Day of Publication
REGULATIONS

beds or comp lete households

1-7-tfc

right to ed it or r e ject any ads

obleetiona l.

The . JOINTER Planer and belf

publisher will not be res pon sible:

sander . Phone 992-6675.

1-11 -Jfp

for more than on" incorrect
insert ion .

RATE~

WILL BUY your old buttons and

.· For want .Ad Service
postcard s j Helen Lavely,
5 cents per Word one insertion
Galloway, 0 . 43119 .
M inirnum Charge 75c
12 cent! per Word t hree .
1· Jl .Jtc
con5ecutive irlser ti Jns.
' ---------18 ce nts j)er word siK con
secu ti ve inser tions .
25 Per c·en t Discount on pal o
ads and .ldS paid w i th in 10 d~ys .

LEGAL NOTICE

CARD OF THANKS '

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

&amp; OBITUARY

$1.50 for SO word mlnlmym
tach additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS
Add i t ional 25c Char'ge · per
Adv ert isement ,
OFFICE HOURS

8 :J O a,m . to' 5:00p .m . Daily,
B:J G a .m. to
12 :00 Noon
Saturday
.
.
~

Racine
Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Devotions by Mrs. Frances
Wilcoxen opened the meeting
of the Esther Missionary Circle
of First Baptist Church at the
home of Mrs. Ralph Badgley
Monday evening, Jan. 8. Mter
group singing "Jesus, Savior,
Pilot Me'; Mrs. Wilcoxen gave
a reading entitled "God's Girt"
and read from the lOth chapter
of Acts with a meditation and
prayer. Mrs. Dorothy Badgley,
president, presided at the
business session. A program,
presented by Mrs. Gretta
Simpson, included readings by
members
as
follows:
"Studenls Put Their Faith in
High Ideals of Bacone" by Mrs.
Cora Webb and Mrs. Ura

Case No. 20,817

E~ate

of CHARLE S WAYNE

HOBACK. Deceased .
Notice Is hereby given that
Di x ie Smith of Portland , Ohio.
has been duly appointed
Executrix of the Estate of
Charles
Wayne
Hoback ,
deceased , late of Meigs County,
Ohio .
c red itors are required to file
their claims with said fidu ciary
within tour months.
Dated this 8th day of January

1973 .

m2 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

18 . 25 . Jt

Notice
KOSCOT KOSME TICS &amp;WIGS.
SPECIALS .MONTHLY.
PHONE HELEN JANE
BROWN , MIDDLEPORT.
OHIO 99Bll 3.
12·3·ffC

ches. Trophies for high point
cards.

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

Hearts" by Mrs. Edria Middleport is visiting her
Pickens. "How is Your mother, Mrs. Ben Shafer.
Mr. and Mrs. David Parry
Spiritual House Today," by
Mrs .
Helen
Simpson; and Jeff spent New Years week
"Vicotry" \by Mrs. Mildred end in Hillsboro with their
Hart "Try II, Will You" by parents and families.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Mrs. Isabel Simpson. Program
closed with a New Year's Riffle on Christmas Day were
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McKenzie,
Prayer. The Love Gift
program by Mrs. Marie Roush Philip, Jeff and Josie of"
followed with the topic "Love Gallipolis; Mr. Melvin Riffle,
the World of God". The hymn Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Sam
"Love Li(ted Me" was sung Curtis, Lorain ; Miss Patty
and scripture was Ps. 24:1, I Shain, local.
oMr. and Mrs. James Kiser
John 1:1-1 and John 3:16. The
and
four children and Mrs, Ben
Love Gift. offering was given
and meeting closed with the Shafer visited Mr. and' Mrs.
Lord 's Prayer in unison , Howard Kiser at Mason, W.
During the fellowship hour, Va. New Years.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Walker,
Mrs. Badgley served delicious
Gary and Mary Ann, were
refreshments.
Miss Connie Kiser, daughter Christmas guests of Miss
of Mr. and Mrs. James Kiser Gladys Walker in Pomeroy.
Mr , and Mrs. Albert HiU
returned home from Veterans
were
Christmas guests of Mr,
Memorial Hospital. She fell at
and Mrs. Waid Foster and
school breaking her leg.
family
In Columbus,
Hobart Bryson is a medical
David Crow, Racine, Ste'ie
patient at St Josepn Hospital.
Winebrenner
, Syracuse and
Mrs . L. D. Webb of
Langsville spent Sunday with Lawrence Able, Letart have
her son and daughter-in-law, returned to Lincoln Technical
Institute in Indianapolis, Ind.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb.
after
spending the holidays
Mrs . Charles Taylor of
Beaver , Pa ., Mrs ,· Edwin with their parenls.
Helmick of New Brighton, Pa.,
Mrs. George Van Horn of
Beaver Falls and Mr. Nett
Wolfe of East Liverpool spent
two days last week with Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Rif!le.
Bill Wood, employed in In·
diana , spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood and
By Martha Holsinger
visited his uncle and aunt, Mr.
Christmas Day guests of
and Mrs. Fern Norris.
Martha Holsinger were Mr,
New Year's Eve guests of and Mrs. Clifford Holsinger,
Mr. and Mrs. Fern Norris were Missouri~ Mr, and Mrs. Robert
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Heiney of Webb and Laura Jean and Cora
Fairview. Mter an enjoyable Webb, Guysville, Mr. and Mrs.
evening , Mrs. Norris served Sol Bigley, local, and Mrs.
refreshments.
Emma Van Meter, George ,
Rev. and Mrs. Charles Roberta, David lmd Robert,
. O'Connor of Urbana visited Belpre.
Mrs , Edna Pickens on New
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Year's Day,
Holsinger and Aleshia ~pent
'Mr , and Mrs. Bernard Diddle Christmas with Mr. and Mrs ,
entertained with a turkey Dawain Durst, Reedsville.
dinner, Guests were their sons,
Mr. ani!' Mrs. Mike Kerwin
SP4 Bob Diddle, Ft Eustis, visited recently with Mr. and
Va., George of Colonial Mrs. William Hoselton.
Estates, Lancaster, Mr. and
Fannie Bigley; Eddie Bigley
Mrs. Tqm Diddle and son, and Jackie Blse visited Mr. and
Steve of Syracuse. Also present Mrs. Alva Holsinger Jr. and
were Kermit and Jean Fisher, family of Racine Thursday
Dave and Barbara Woodall and evening.
Mamie Miller of Gallipolis,
Mr. and Mrs . Francis
Wilmer and Cora Byers and Chevalier and family spent a
so n, Eugene, and g'rand· weekend with Mr , and Mrs.
daughter, Lisa of Warren, Ivan Chevalier.
Ohio, Bob and Bette Miller of
Mr. and Mrs . Elza Bartlrnus
'Penn Yen, N, Y., Angus and and family visited Mr. and
Dawn McDonald and son, Mrs. Harvey Rockhold and
Allan, Toronto, Canada, and family on Sunday,
Mrs . Dohs Hensler, locaL
Other guests during the
holidays were Fred Miller,
Irene Hayman, Rutl] Colburn,
Tom and Pam Diddle and son,
Shawn.
Rook Crow, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Crow. has enrolled
in . Georgia Institute of
Tecllpology in Atlanta, Ga. ·
Mr.andMrs. Darcy Potter of
Bryan, Ohio, spent' a couple
days with her mol!ler, Mrs.
ON YOUR DIAL
Lovey Sayre.
Mrs . Nola Braqshaw of

~

.

business .

Big

price

C. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash

Streets, Middleport, Ohio.
12·13·ffc

Auto Sales

Completely modernized 10-room
house, two full baths, all built-in kitchen, 1st floor wall-to-wall carpets,
gas central heat. On two town lots in
good Middleport neighborhpod. Owner
.. leaving town. See by appointment by
calling 992-3486.

-

f\.:~cin e

1·1i·3fc

if interested, come and see,

right in Chesler,
· Clayton Scharliger.

long

Sunday, 9 a.m . to 5 p.m.,

phone 985·3554, · Harold
Brewer, Long Bottom .
1·7·ffc
'68 G.T.O, 400, 4 bbL , 4 speed,
Cragar Chrome Reverses, 4
new tires, G60, tack. air
shocks and 4 other tires and
rims ; good shape; 'ca ll 992-

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

2635.

.1963 FORD Falrlane 500, v.s, 4

Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

tially furnished,

1 1J~

7384.

utilities

now:

miles

1·1l ·lfc

600 BALES of Timothy hay;
phone 992.6214.
1·10·6tc

ON PANTS &amp; JEANS

·, PAiR FREE .
The best buy In the area·.
Have slacks &amp; jeanl for the .
whole family. Save One-

Third,

9

0

~

POMEROY

'Yar.l Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
·

Phone 992·2181

992-

1· 10·3tc

lo attend.

SLEEPING room, 276 Lincoln
1·10·31c
Slreet, Middle pori; phone 992.
7244 ~'
GUN Shoot, also rifle matches
1·10.3tp
- open sites only and specia l

WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB
Friday &amp;
Saturday Nights

10 til2
Music by

Dave Dunn
&amp;

The

Country Cats

HOOD'S AQUARIUMS ; fish
and supplies ; new location,
Ash Street, Middleport near
park ; phone 992.5443.
H ·lfc

- - - - - --

WILL DO bookkeeping and
clerical work In my home ;

phone 74H085.

- - - - - --

1·J.6fc

INTERNATIONAL Songwriters
Club; recording, publishing.
free

membership;

write

LS .C. , Rt. 1, Box 210, Mid·
dleport, Ohio 45760,
P·6fp

------Wanted To Buy
HOU SE or frailer on

land

contract with few acres of

2 BEDROOM furnished mobile 1972 APACHE Eagle Fold·up
home In Syracuse; Call 992· camper ; includes spare tire ,
2441, Mon . thru Sal. after 5:30 canopy and plast ic storm
p.m. and Sunday 1 p, m. to 5 window . Trailer has been
wired ~or, electric, 3 outlets .
p.m.
Excellent condition, S675 ; call
1·1fl.flc
992·5815 after 5 p.m.
1·10·4!c
2
BEDROOM
furn ished -,---::--::---:-apartment ; ground floor ; NEW 1972 Zig· Zag Sewing
Roberf Hill, Racine, phone
Machine in original factory
949·381 L
carton . Zlg .zag to make
1·10·61p
buttonholes, sew on buttons .
------monograms, and make fan cy
FURNISHED apartment ; designs with just the twi st of a
phone 992·2780 or 992·3432.
single dial. Left In lay.away
1·5·11C
and never been used. Will sell
- - - - - - ''' - - for only $47 cash or credit
UNFURNISHED 3. r J om terms available. Phone 992 apartment, adults only. No 7755.
pets, 408 Spring Ave ..
1·10·61c
Pomeroy.
H ·tfc 1970 COPPERTONE Kelvlnator
dishwasher ; phone 247·2082.
TRAILER by week or month ,
1·9·6tc
all utilities paid ; in Danville
close to new mine ; plione 742· ONE complete set Kent-Drums,
5980,
goldk sparkle
bal with
T stool
Zlldjland
1 7 't
_. ·o P , ~oycmba"rs~ 20'j x ~~"; pho~~
MODERN 6 room hou se, full
before 5 p.m. 992.2172 or after
basement, garage, out· 5 p.m. 99n298,
building ;
references
. 1-9-6tc
required ; phone 992·2310 after - - - - - - - , - - 5 p.m. or .992·3425.
STEREO 8 track repossessed,
12·31 .tfc looks like new. 4 speaker,

=------c-:-:==------

3 AND

4

ROOM furnished and

unfurnished

Phone 992-5434.

ground ; phone 949·2782 ans

apartments.

4·12.tfc

ask for Mrs. Walker .

audio

sys tem

in

SUO per week or pay balance

of $98.80 . Call 992·5331.

H ·61c

· I·Hic 6 ROOM furni shed house, 1972 DELUXE zig zag sewing
Ebenezer SL adults only, S65. machine . This machine
darns, embroideries, over a monlh ; phone 992·7784,
1·9·3tc casts, buttonholes all without
altachmenls. Pay balance of
--,-----MODERN furnished ~ pari · $39.20 or pay $5 per monlh .
992.5331.
men! ; phone 992.3686.
1·9·3!c
1·9·61c

WANTED .·
CHIPWOOD
Poles '
Maximum
Diameter
10" on
urgest End

-------------'12 DOUBLE, 2 bedroom, fur .

--------------

COAL, Limestone, Ex celsio·r·
nished ; on Fourth &amp; College
Sail • Works. E. Main St ..
Streets, Syracuse, phone 992· • Pomeroy , Phone 992·3891.
2749.
4·12·1fc
12·29.ffc -...
SINGER aulomali c sewing
'

lielp Wanted
LAO I ES -

Pleasant sa les

work . Hours

$7.00 Per Ton

like a person.

DELIVERED
. TO

OHIO

machine; 11Ke new In walnut
to suit __your

cabinet. Makes design slit.
ches. zlg.zags, buttonholes,
blind hems , overcasts, etc .,

household schedule. Earn $85, Call · Ravenswood, 273·
$2.50 up, based on sales. Write 9521 or 273.9893,
Personal Shopper Depart .
1·11 -tfc
men!, Box 10 , Walkins -~-:-=-----::---- .
Products, Inc .. Winona , WALNUT stereo· rBdlo com ·
Minn esota 55987.
blnatlon, 4 speed Intermixed
changer, 4 speaker sound
f.9.3tc
---------system. dual volume controls.
Balance •$69.57. Use our
DEPENDABLE MAN WHO
CAN WORK WITHOUT
budget term s. Call ?9n085.
SUPERVISION,
Excellent
1·11 !lc
opening in Pome,rby area . No

PALLET CO.
On Old Rt. 33
Phone 992-2689
Pomeroy, Ohio
~

experience necessary. ·{'ge BEAUTIFUL Colonial

not
Important.
.Good
characler a must. We lraln.
Air mall C. C. Dickerson,
Pres .. Southwestern
Petroleum CoFP .• H Worth ,
Tex .
1·10·41C

Maple
stereo , AM. FM radio , 4
speakers, 4 speed automatic
chan~er , separate controls.
Balance $79.70. Use our
budget te·ms . Call 992·7Q8 5.
' ,,
1·11 ·61C

Go

To
Take Me To

H

992 209
• 4
~06 E. Main
Pomeroy

1- ,

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

THE P~OF PAID lr\E A
, ~IG COMPLIMENT IN
S!O~OGI' 70DAV, StMO 1

FURNITURE

'

\

'

f)

FIRST GU'i WHO
COMES ALON&lt;O .

'-o./

foliA'/ NOT OF HAD

DON'T

TH'CHARACT~ 1D

TELL

OF RESISTED -BUT

US'I'OKUMS HAS-

ME."
••

~

- - -- - -

•• Air Conditioners
•Awnings
• Underpinnin!!

marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . A Jacob, sales

5223,

12·12·30tP

representative . For free SEWING MACHINES. Repair
estimates, phone Charles
service, all makes. 992·2184.
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Johnson and Son, Inc,
Aulhorlzed Singer Sllles and
3·2·11 C Service . We Sh~rpen Scissors .
Complete mQbile hQme1· i'
3·29·tfc
O_E_A_N_D_ D
_O
_Z
_E_R
- work .
•service ...... plus glgantlc ' ' _B_A_C_K_H_
'display of mobile homes '
Septic tanks installed . George ,
;always available-at ...
(Bil l) Pullins. Phone 992·2478. ·Real Estate For Sale
4·25-tfc
MILLER
- - - - - - -- THREE bedroom house, full
basement. lot 85 x 125, in New
E LNA and Wh ite Sewing
.MOeiLE HOMES
Haven ; phone 882·2840.
Machines ... service on all
1·9·61p
makes
.
Reasonable
rates
.
1220 Washington Blvd.
--The
Sewing
Center,
Mid
·
.423·7521
BELPRE, 0 .
dleporl, Ohio.
11·16·tfc
8 ROOM house and bath, nice
large lot, natural gas, builf ·in
cabinets in kitchen , close to
radio stat ion in Bradbury,

12·21 -201p

2 BEDROOM home.

lolal

electric, utility room , storm
windows , double garage,
(insulated an paneled), faved
driveway, city water , lo 100 x

416 ; extra lol and building.
Close to school; Don Bid
Headley, Rt. 681 , Tuppers
Plains, Ohio.

·

1·Hip

------

bath and 111, extra lot and

attached garage. Available
now . May b~ had wilh baste
furn iture . Near

Pomeroy

Elementary SchooL Phone
992.7384 or 992-7133 ,
1·11 ·61c
p;, STORY 2 bedroom brick

house In Mlddleporl. Car·
peled. paneled. Kitchen andl
dining room tiled. Complete·
with drapes. $6,500. Call 992·
3465,
'

165 ACRE FARM, 2 houses, 5
oulbuildings, 3 springs,
limber, hay and plenty of
grassland . In Harrisonville
area, Mineral rights. $20,000.
Phone 992·7238.
1·11 ·41c

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, dll·
ch ing service; top soil, fill
di rl, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex·
cavaling . Phone 992·5367 ,
Dick Karr. Jr.
9·1·1fC

Real Estate For Sale ·
NEW6 room house and balh, "'
mile East of Rutland on Rt.
124 ; Sidney Hayman .
1·ffl.6tp
'

~

rtLEIIAN~ .
REALTY
60f E. Main

....

• Pomeroy

.oil
..JI"'

1

bath,

area,

dining

RECENTLY RENOVATED.
Level

lot

about

acre,

112

carport. 2 storage bldgs,
$14,900,00. .
LITTLE UPKEEP
SYRACUSE - BRICK - 4
B. R..' dlnlng R.. NEW bath
and ulll i!y R., NEW plum·
bing &amp; F.A gas furnace. 2
large level lots, EX·
C E L L E N T .N E I G H .
BORHOOD.
RUTLAND
l'iERE IS AN EXCELLENT
BUY - 1 story frame , 3
B. R., large bath. utility.
dining R. paneling and other,
out cellar. THE MEAGE~
SUM OF 59,200.00.
MUCH WORK DONE HERE
Within slghl of the Gavin
sfack. 3 B. R.. NEW balh.
NEW FA furnace, NEW
paneling, uflllty R. large
Red. R, Out cellar and
slorage. large lot. THIS YOU
MUST SEE . $9,800.00,
WE HAVE MANY OTHER
PROPERTIES WHICH WE
CONSIDER GOOD BUYS,
CONTACT US TODAY. IF
WE DON'T HAVE IT, WE
WILL GET IT.
HENRY E. CLELAND
3 ASSOCIATES TO SELL
YOUR PROPERTY,
· 992·2259

HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick
Slreel, Pomeroy, Ohio ; brick
house. 3 bedrooms. excellent
location. close to school and
cIt y; con tac I Lou Osbo rne or
call 992·5898.
11 ·26·tfC
HOUSE in long Bottom phone
'
lfnoanswer
985·3529,
1&gt; 11 .tfc L--9-85-·4_2_0_9 o
_r_9_92_·_2l_68_ _.J

WINNIE WINKLE

,._ _ _ _ _llllf" I

~OuGHTYOU

® IF ')O(J HAD ANY' SE~15E1 WERE A Fmi::E:SS
SERVER fiUT
YOU WOULD HAVE LE:T
COULDN'T YOU
ME TALK TO YOU IN
HAVE SENT ME
PARI5.6UT YOU WERE
AN INI 'fTATION?
1\100 BUSY'OR 'GoNE
R:lR 'THE DAY'f./

6AHI

WE COULDN'T RUN ~E RISK OF

AS I KNEW YOU IN
HOLLYWOOD, IT WAS
!HIS 15 NOT CANNES OR ANY
i}IQUGHT TJ.IAT MY
OF YOUR P05ft FILM
PERSONAL lDUCH
WAS NEEt:'J;D.
FESTIVALS. f7/'72v(Jl /11~~
')OUR REFUSINc:7. AFTER ALL 1

SATURDAY, JAN. 13
STARTING ATll:OOAM
(Sale Held In Heated Bldg.)
Glassware. Pictures, Novelties, AM &amp; FM
Radios. Police Radios. Clock Radios, , Toys,
Ovenware. Lamps. Oil Lamps. Mattress &amp;
Box Springs, Dressers. Mirrors, Furniture ·
and AIH&lt;inds. of Clothing.

NEW LISTING
1 OR 3 ACRES - In the
country . Two good houses or

mobile home sites. On a
corner acre, All for 51200.00.
NEW LISTING

~~!~~f,;· i~~~~~i~

Only S15oo.oo.
NEW LISTING
3 ACRES - Small barn. 6
room house, lwo balhs, 3
bedrooms, all with closets. 3
basement

I I.:OT A. TIGKET FCF.
lVWdH ~ Mil£, FOU&lt;S...
AI/OlD IJ.lAITI~ .If-~
1.-t~~!

and

drilled welL Want 510.500.00.
NEW LISTING
4 BEDROOMS - Ph baths,
wall to wall carpellng :
modern kitchen, gas fur·
nace . Full basement, front
porch and garage. Like to
liave $12,500.
NEW LISTING
RUTLAND - 2 bedroom
i&gt;aneled home. Nic e bath,
utility, and kitchen. Wall to
wall carpeting and nice leV&lt;! I
loL Need 512.000.00
BUILDING LOTS ,
T.P. WATER - 1 acre
rolling land In lhe country
near RL 7 and close to town .
8ACRES
ON HARD ROAD - A lltfle
bit of privacy on new
proposed
$4, 500.00'

water

I AM c:lHOCI&lt;ED TO

lHE CORE-1 ANNIE!

.OliO I WI LL BEND
EVERY EFFORT iO
PUT THAT EVI L WOMAM
WHERE SHE. 6ELOr1GS
•-. 8EH1t'IP BARS

~
ACROSS
1. Pacific
island
group
6. Film
director,
Frank ll.Name
of
two
presi·
dents
12. Corrosive
i3. Nitwit
15. Milkfish
16. Be
poor
17. Spanish

line .

$6500.00
RUTLAND - 3 bedrooms,
modern bath and kitchen .
Fronf porch, nice lot. out of
high water.

ENOUCifl, WI TI-l
TI-lE DOOR S~UT.

LOOK AT · LAST YEAR ,
WOULDN'T YOU LIKE TO
MAKE MORE IN '73, COME
IN AND SEE OUR OF.
FERINGS, THEN INVEST
FOR YOUR FUTURE.

9~2 ·3325

member

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ (~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~------------·--------~-GET TO 111SCUSS THE TE~MS

OF MY EMPLOr'MENT
I

·only

OUTFIT

Hi\\SE~F.

I

THE ~AMROD Of

~lYMID~;Ik.l-='u..J,-

2. Ethiopian
town
3. Birth·
place of
HST 4. Electrica I

un••••mbt•the.. f&lt;Nr Jumbleo,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary wordo.

unit
5. Welsh
river
6. Crete's
capital
1. Yearn
painfully
8. Precede
chrono·
· . logically
· 9. Inlet
(Sp.)
10. Say
further
14. Legal

Yesterday's ADIWer
21. Grassland
22. Goal
24. Brogan,
e.g,
25. Fencing ~
dummy
26. English
river
27. Scorn
28. Obtained
32. Comedian
Myron
33. Ex·
hausted
34. Vestige

document

18. Fashion
19. Miss
MacGraw

'---------...1
!mM5 l iKE I

(0 1973 King Fea tur es Syndicat.e, lnc.)

DOWN
1. Family

ZO. Tapster's
,..______"::1";::!
offering
23. Corrlda
yell
British
carbine
See
13
Across
29. Lake
city
31. Ex-

HEtEN L, TEAFORO,
.,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNOAY SHOWINGS

SNOW
·RETREADS

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: PEOPLE SELDOM ATI'EMPT TO
SIT ON THE MAN WHO STANDS UP FOR HIMSELF.AUTHOR UNKNOWN

by THOMAS JOSEPH

~~r,~~

36. Mr.
Premin·
ger
38. Frank·

fort's

river
39. Chemin
deCO. Guid~&gt;Dian note
U. Gilbert
of.
the
. Rangers
Shade

~~~~~

WAYELE

I.

TREf LfANIN&lt;S
MR OUT OVfl&gt;.

DA!L~·

ARE~ ... LOOK~ A

TH!

At Dell's Dollar" Saver

WATER~

305 N. SECOND MIDDLEPORT

SALES
'

t:,

II
I. I. I.

Now ........,. the circled leltera
to fonn the ollJ'PI'IM answer, u
auputod by the above cll1oon.

:=:::::::Pril:=..~
.. ~SUII==-~IIISWII~:::...
:...:::~

"(

t•JA~l ' IS

l

AMwcn May h

pr~utd

DO l HEAR
THE FLUTTER

RAT~! if5 ONL'f A LEN! I
THOU6HT IT MIGHT. BE WOODSTOCK.

OF WIN65?

f . I{

I 5HOULD WALK OVER 10
&lt;.:RYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: MA~8E
SEE f\IM ... MA~BE WE CAN' HAVE
AXYDLBAAXR
A LITTLE TALK, AND GET II
II L' o N G FELL 0 W
THIN65 5ETTLED ... l'LL DO. IT ..

EJHR

I~

II

·
for rime-A STOPWATCH

i-c----r'"A-"AP-,.-~---1

CRYPTOQUOTBS

·
992-7161
Nol Responsible for accidents.
Middleport, 0.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . . . .------~

I XXJ

}ouable., WHEAT CASTE HOPPER AN'fWAT

Ye.lerd•r'•

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A IS
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, ,etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and lonnatlon of the words are all
htnts. Each day the code letters are different

'

V'

ONE Mi6HT3E
RELIEVED lOSAY IT!

(A.wert toDMorrow)

French
uemecy
article
32. Most
darling
35. Entrance
37. -bono
publico
39.See
13

He:oo:e we

•

t

LEEXAH~

31.

43. Cream
of
the
crop
44. Preven·
lion measure
15. Spouted
off (2
wds.)
.46.I.tihibit

I 01

CIAWR

Across

Sump Pump. Kenmore Wringer Washing
Machine. Dinnerware Sets, Jewelry and
Television Sets.

Auctioneers

~11--..,

110 Mechanic St.

Plus Recappable Tire

'·

UTA ,

Pomeroy, Ohio45749

1-12 Gauge Excel Antique Shotgun. Brooms,
Mops. Walkie Talkies.

ara dford Auc tlon co. '

15 N'OI&lt;!E LIKE
AWALLOP 1

,...IIIIi

heck These Buys

AUCTION SALE!

YOUR

Virgil B. ~
Teaford, 5r.
Broker

por ches ,

HARRISONVILLE
2 Story frame , 4 bedrooms,

I - II

YRJ :

N VZY L K

ASKH

AYN

FKLNJH . -LYEFS

.,
)\

Mi~LION CARS 1HAT
f I'f... T11E .,. D.E$C.RrPfi oN ...

TJ.IERE ML.61' BE A

SOMEONIO R06G A
BANK AND )'()U 1RY
10 PIN IT ON 'THE

He SA.ID I WAS
IN A CLASS
S{M¥S5 LF

Ct.)

U'LABNER

SMJlli NElSON
IJ4C. .

walnut

console, take over .payments

•

If I HAVE

From the largest
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates Ph. 446· Bulldozer Radiator to
I'Jst Heater Core.
Or a e
4782 , Gallipolis. John Russell ,
Nathan Biggs
~ .. ner &amp; Operator.
HOMECLEANING products;
""'
f
Radiato~ Specialist
phone 992·25.79 or 247·2193.
5·1H c
1·5·30tp
C. BRADFORD, Auclioneer
-~---Complete Service
REGISTERED Angus bulls ;
Phone 949·3821
MOTOR~
call after 5 p;m .• Bill Witte,
Racine. Ohio
Ph.
99f-2174
Pomeroy
.
,
1__:_
992 2789
Crill Bradford
' _____
t
5·1·1fc
1·5·6 c
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
--------SEWAGE s·YSTEMS CLEAN·
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
EO, REPAIRED. MILLER
Mobile Homes For Sale
cancelled?
Lost
your
SANITATION, STEWART,
operalor's license? Call 992·
OHIO, PHONE 662·3035.
CASH paid for all makes and
2966.
10·4·Hc
models of mobile homes.
6·15.tfc
Phone area code 61 H23·953l.
./ ·
4-13-tfc SEE US FOR : Awning·s : storm PAPER Hanging and painting ;
Arthur Musser, phone 742·
doors and windows, carports,

deer slug match ; Forked Run -----~
Syracuse; pr ice $3,900 phone
BEDROOM
furnished
Sporlsman Club; Sunday, 2
992.2360,
TWO
single
grave
lots
in
Beech
apar-tment.
114
Mulberry,
no
January 14, 12 noon .
1·5·ffC
Grove Cemetery ; Ca rr ie
dog
s
or
cats
;
adults
;
1·10·31c
-----Moore, Hy se ll Run Road.
references; phone 992·6698 ,
1·1fl·31c ,2 STORY HOME. full basement.
1·10.tfc

DANCE

'IE GOT M E,TRTER

F SI

FRIGIDAIRE refrigerator , 9 8 ROOM house wilh balh and
full basement. Buill·ln kJt.
years old, I ike new ; phone
chen cabinets, double sink , 2
949·3873 or 94n094 after 4
porches; 145 Butternut Ave.,
p.m.
Pomeroy, phone 992-7170,
1·10·31p
f.5.6tc
-----~
fARM fresh eggs; 200 bales ::F~U::R-:-N~I::-5H
-:-E::-0:--3 _r_oo
_
m~house,
straw ; phone 843·2778.
bath , furnace, on corner lot In
4
l· l0·61c

- - - -- - -

OOOH--

.~~;;~;;~§~;::~

Buy 2
I

TATER!! PUT AWAY
T HEM GUNS WHILE
ELVIN E'i'S HERE

Open BTil 5
Stop In and See Our
Monday thru Saturday
Floor Display.
t,=;:60:6:.:£::·.::M:::a:::in:::,~P.:o::m~e~ro;,:y.;.,0.;.;_
, -:--'
G&amp;.E APPLIANCE Repair : READY ·MIX
CONCRETE
Repair of all laundry
deli~ered right to ~our ·
equipment, refrigeration
project Fast and easy. ree
equipmenl and house wiring.
es llmates. Phone 992·3284.
Call 614·992-6050.
Goeglein Ready ·Mix Co .,
]2.31 ·30tp
Middleport,
OhiO .
·
6·30·Ifc

Phon e 992·2602.
Pairs

•

POMEROY
OME &amp; AUTO

Pomeroy_Home &amp; Auto

Real Estate For Sale

' paid ;

phone

p.m .; all members are urged

door, automatic, $275. Phone

99U37 4,

For Sale

north of Rock Springs
Fairground on old Rt. 33.

trailer ;
available

1·9·61p

-------

Mrs. Steven (Wanda) Eblin,
Prefer couple no children .
Rt. 2, Pomeroy I Laurel Cliff
call 992·6615.
Rd. off Rt . 7 By. PasS); phone
1·11 ·21c
9n2 •
I-3·30·1C SMALL double ·wide 2 bedroom
THERE will be a business
meeting of the Rutland Gun
Club on Friday, Jan. 12th, all

power

23,000 miles, clean as new;

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

evenings by appointment ;

wheel ·base,

brakes, 12'/2 ft. bed, less than

HAYMAN'S Auction -a good
place to go each Friday
evening, 7 p.m . al Laurel Cliff
on old Rt. 7, 1 mile west of
Rock Springs Fairground.
1fl. fO.tfc
_.
992·2448
BUSINESS Opportunity for
Pomeroy,
0.
men, and women. Inquire by
wrllmg : R. 0 , 2, Box 73,
Racine. Ohio.
1·5·121p For Rent
LARGE 1970 3 bedroom mobile
TAX Serv ice, Federal and Stale
home. air conditioned, par·
Income Taxes; daily except

Ohio ;

H0·3tp
1970 1 TON Ford, dual wheels,

"HElL"

1·11·21c

Racine Gun Club,

1970 MODEL squareback V.W.;

Notice

Fire Dept.

We talk to you

WMP0/1390

H0·19tp
AKC loy poodle puppies, $75,
$85; Siamese kitlens, $10;
phone 1·256·6247.
H ·101c
---::::::--:::-:---PARK VIEW Kennels gofng out

For Sal~ By Owner

Eden News

Social Notes

Pet, Chester, Ohio.

reduction on all dogs. All AK·

guns only . Second place
shooters get free shot in next
mat ch. Assorted meats .

11

hundreds, at Showalter's Wet

of

GUN SHOOT. Sunday, January
1·11 ·31c
14, 1 p. m. Factory choked

Morris. A poem, Lciye in Our

JUST ARRIVED. direct from ,
Florida. tropical lish by the

·Po111eroy-JAotor Co. ~.

·•wheel A1'1gn·ment
'5.55

·

On Most American Cars
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pets For Sale

steering, power brakes, red finish with black vinyl top al'ld
black vinyl interior, radio, good white-walt tires.

. 'f'PMEIIO\', OHIO

EXPERT

locations in the US. See yoU!' ·

tacts about fhe 180· Day
Delayed Entry Program and
the Army 's new pay raise.
For more information call
collect 55 G. Clark 593·3022.
1·7·6!C

----:'----r='-='- - _.,!

~===::::::::::=:::;:===Jr=~~~~~~~=lr.~i~i~~::~1

local Army representative for

1968 CHEVELLE
51695
Malibu 11&gt;ort coupe, air condltio(led, 307 engine, power

Not responsible for

accidents.

$3995

brown vinyl top. vinyl Interior, factory air, 3.50·engine,
power steering &amp; brakes. Deluxe bumpers, wheel covers,
like new W· W tires, radio &amp; other'fine accessories. A sharp
car &amp; one you would like.

GUN SHOOT, Sunday, January Notice _
14, 1 p, m. Side Hill Gun Club. GUN SHOOT, Saturdar, Jan.
no alcoholic be¥erages
13, 7:30p.m. Mile Hil Road ;
allowed, factory choked guns
Faclory choked guns only! 20.
only, assorted meats, soft
16 and 12 ga.-No, 6, 7'12, 8, 9
drinks will be sold. Free
shot ; assorted meats and
coffee. We will have 1 or 2 refreshments. S~XJ:nsored by
ladies ' and children's mat.

assignments to Europe,
after
graduation.
Guaranteed
Hawaii,
Korea or
selected ·

1971 CHEVROLET BEL AIR
$2895
4-door, toca ll owner, low mileage car, beige finish with

Judge

Ill ll ,

HIE~~st~;~oos~ay~~~!0.fn(;i

4- door , new car title &amp; balance of warranty, covert color
with black vinyl root, tinted glass, factory air , front &amp; rear
guards , radio &amp; rear speaker, white-wall. t ires. Nice and
clean. Retail $4860. Priced to move .

Manning D. Webster
Court ot,Common Pleas,
Probate Divis ion

Help~~

Motor Co.

Write M. 0, Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Phone 992·
6271.

The PlJbtlsher reserVes the

deeme d

Pon~troy

OLD furniture, oak tables
organs, dishes, dock_s, bras~

rn--

Y

DSK

"" ~ - ----

IXEEYRK ._________....,_____,

FE Y- T K- H J D

Y

.

HKAGYH
'

'

'

�J

s;;;(i;;f(;[;;~ifieds Get Action! sentinel ClaSsifieds Get Results! ·.
.

s
•
·
Business . ervtces

'

WANT AQ.S.
INFO~ MATtON
pEAOLINES

Wanteo To Buy

.s P.M . Day

Before Publlc&amp;1 1on .
Mond ay Deadline 9 a .m .

Can c el lation ,_... Corrections •
W ill be ~cc ep te d until 9 a.m . tor

Day of Publication
REGULATIONS

beds or comp lete households

1-7-tfc

right to ed it or r e ject any ads

obleetiona l.

The . JOINTER Planer and belf

publisher will not be res pon sible:

sander . Phone 992-6675.

1-11 -Jfp

for more than on" incorrect
insert ion .

RATE~

WILL BUY your old buttons and

.· For want .Ad Service
postcard s j Helen Lavely,
5 cents per Word one insertion
Galloway, 0 . 43119 .
M inirnum Charge 75c
12 cent! per Word t hree .
1· Jl .Jtc
con5ecutive irlser ti Jns.
' ---------18 ce nts j)er word siK con
secu ti ve inser tions .
25 Per c·en t Discount on pal o
ads and .ldS paid w i th in 10 d~ys .

LEGAL NOTICE

CARD OF THANKS '

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

&amp; OBITUARY

$1.50 for SO word mlnlmym
tach additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS
Add i t ional 25c Char'ge · per
Adv ert isement ,
OFFICE HOURS

8 :J O a,m . to' 5:00p .m . Daily,
B:J G a .m. to
12 :00 Noon
Saturday
.
.
~

Racine
Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Devotions by Mrs. Frances
Wilcoxen opened the meeting
of the Esther Missionary Circle
of First Baptist Church at the
home of Mrs. Ralph Badgley
Monday evening, Jan. 8. Mter
group singing "Jesus, Savior,
Pilot Me'; Mrs. Wilcoxen gave
a reading entitled "God's Girt"
and read from the lOth chapter
of Acts with a meditation and
prayer. Mrs. Dorothy Badgley,
president, presided at the
business session. A program,
presented by Mrs. Gretta
Simpson, included readings by
members
as
follows:
"Studenls Put Their Faith in
High Ideals of Bacone" by Mrs.
Cora Webb and Mrs. Ura

Case No. 20,817

E~ate

of CHARLE S WAYNE

HOBACK. Deceased .
Notice Is hereby given that
Di x ie Smith of Portland , Ohio.
has been duly appointed
Executrix of the Estate of
Charles
Wayne
Hoback ,
deceased , late of Meigs County,
Ohio .
c red itors are required to file
their claims with said fidu ciary
within tour months.
Dated this 8th day of January

1973 .

m2 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

18 . 25 . Jt

Notice
KOSCOT KOSME TICS &amp;WIGS.
SPECIALS .MONTHLY.
PHONE HELEN JANE
BROWN , MIDDLEPORT.
OHIO 99Bll 3.
12·3·ffC

ches. Trophies for high point
cards.

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

Hearts" by Mrs. Edria Middleport is visiting her
Pickens. "How is Your mother, Mrs. Ben Shafer.
Mr. and Mrs. David Parry
Spiritual House Today," by
Mrs .
Helen
Simpson; and Jeff spent New Years week
"Vicotry" \by Mrs. Mildred end in Hillsboro with their
Hart "Try II, Will You" by parents and families.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Mrs. Isabel Simpson. Program
closed with a New Year's Riffle on Christmas Day were
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McKenzie,
Prayer. The Love Gift
program by Mrs. Marie Roush Philip, Jeff and Josie of"
followed with the topic "Love Gallipolis; Mr. Melvin Riffle,
the World of God". The hymn Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Sam
"Love Li(ted Me" was sung Curtis, Lorain ; Miss Patty
and scripture was Ps. 24:1, I Shain, local.
oMr. and Mrs. James Kiser
John 1:1-1 and John 3:16. The
and
four children and Mrs, Ben
Love Gift. offering was given
and meeting closed with the Shafer visited Mr. and' Mrs.
Lord 's Prayer in unison , Howard Kiser at Mason, W.
During the fellowship hour, Va. New Years.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Walker,
Mrs. Badgley served delicious
Gary and Mary Ann, were
refreshments.
Miss Connie Kiser, daughter Christmas guests of Miss
of Mr. and Mrs. James Kiser Gladys Walker in Pomeroy.
Mr , and Mrs. Albert HiU
returned home from Veterans
were
Christmas guests of Mr,
Memorial Hospital. She fell at
and Mrs. Waid Foster and
school breaking her leg.
family
In Columbus,
Hobart Bryson is a medical
David Crow, Racine, Ste'ie
patient at St Josepn Hospital.
Winebrenner
, Syracuse and
Mrs . L. D. Webb of
Langsville spent Sunday with Lawrence Able, Letart have
her son and daughter-in-law, returned to Lincoln Technical
Institute in Indianapolis, Ind.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb.
after
spending the holidays
Mrs . Charles Taylor of
Beaver , Pa ., Mrs ,· Edwin with their parenls.
Helmick of New Brighton, Pa.,
Mrs. George Van Horn of
Beaver Falls and Mr. Nett
Wolfe of East Liverpool spent
two days last week with Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Rif!le.
Bill Wood, employed in In·
diana , spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood and
By Martha Holsinger
visited his uncle and aunt, Mr.
Christmas Day guests of
and Mrs. Fern Norris.
Martha Holsinger were Mr,
New Year's Eve guests of and Mrs. Clifford Holsinger,
Mr. and Mrs. Fern Norris were Missouri~ Mr, and Mrs. Robert
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Heiney of Webb and Laura Jean and Cora
Fairview. Mter an enjoyable Webb, Guysville, Mr. and Mrs.
evening , Mrs. Norris served Sol Bigley, local, and Mrs.
refreshments.
Emma Van Meter, George ,
Rev. and Mrs. Charles Roberta, David lmd Robert,
. O'Connor of Urbana visited Belpre.
Mrs , Edna Pickens on New
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Year's Day,
Holsinger and Aleshia ~pent
'Mr , and Mrs. Bernard Diddle Christmas with Mr. and Mrs ,
entertained with a turkey Dawain Durst, Reedsville.
dinner, Guests were their sons,
Mr. ani!' Mrs. Mike Kerwin
SP4 Bob Diddle, Ft Eustis, visited recently with Mr. and
Va., George of Colonial Mrs. William Hoselton.
Estates, Lancaster, Mr. and
Fannie Bigley; Eddie Bigley
Mrs. Tqm Diddle and son, and Jackie Blse visited Mr. and
Steve of Syracuse. Also present Mrs. Alva Holsinger Jr. and
were Kermit and Jean Fisher, family of Racine Thursday
Dave and Barbara Woodall and evening.
Mamie Miller of Gallipolis,
Mr. and Mrs . Francis
Wilmer and Cora Byers and Chevalier and family spent a
so n, Eugene, and g'rand· weekend with Mr , and Mrs.
daughter, Lisa of Warren, Ivan Chevalier.
Ohio, Bob and Bette Miller of
Mr. and Mrs . Elza Bartlrnus
'Penn Yen, N, Y., Angus and and family visited Mr. and
Dawn McDonald and son, Mrs. Harvey Rockhold and
Allan, Toronto, Canada, and family on Sunday,
Mrs . Dohs Hensler, locaL
Other guests during the
holidays were Fred Miller,
Irene Hayman, Rutl] Colburn,
Tom and Pam Diddle and son,
Shawn.
Rook Crow, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Crow. has enrolled
in . Georgia Institute of
Tecllpology in Atlanta, Ga. ·
Mr.andMrs. Darcy Potter of
Bryan, Ohio, spent' a couple
days with her mol!ler, Mrs.
ON YOUR DIAL
Lovey Sayre.
Mrs . Nola Braqshaw of

~

.

business .

Big

price

C. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash

Streets, Middleport, Ohio.
12·13·ffc

Auto Sales

Completely modernized 10-room
house, two full baths, all built-in kitchen, 1st floor wall-to-wall carpets,
gas central heat. On two town lots in
good Middleport neighborhpod. Owner
.. leaving town. See by appointment by
calling 992-3486.

-

f\.:~cin e

1·1i·3fc

if interested, come and see,

right in Chesler,
· Clayton Scharliger.

long

Sunday, 9 a.m . to 5 p.m.,

phone 985·3554, · Harold
Brewer, Long Bottom .
1·7·ffc
'68 G.T.O, 400, 4 bbL , 4 speed,
Cragar Chrome Reverses, 4
new tires, G60, tack. air
shocks and 4 other tires and
rims ; good shape; 'ca ll 992-

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

2635.

.1963 FORD Falrlane 500, v.s, 4

Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

tially furnished,

1 1J~

7384.

utilities

now:

miles

1·1l ·lfc

600 BALES of Timothy hay;
phone 992.6214.
1·10·6tc

ON PANTS &amp; JEANS

·, PAiR FREE .
The best buy In the area·.
Have slacks &amp; jeanl for the .
whole family. Save One-

Third,

9

0

~

POMEROY

'Yar.l Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
·

Phone 992·2181

992-

1· 10·3tc

lo attend.

SLEEPING room, 276 Lincoln
1·10·31c
Slreet, Middle pori; phone 992.
7244 ~'
GUN Shoot, also rifle matches
1·10.3tp
- open sites only and specia l

WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB
Friday &amp;
Saturday Nights

10 til2
Music by

Dave Dunn
&amp;

The

Country Cats

HOOD'S AQUARIUMS ; fish
and supplies ; new location,
Ash Street, Middleport near
park ; phone 992.5443.
H ·lfc

- - - - - --

WILL DO bookkeeping and
clerical work In my home ;

phone 74H085.

- - - - - --

1·J.6fc

INTERNATIONAL Songwriters
Club; recording, publishing.
free

membership;

write

LS .C. , Rt. 1, Box 210, Mid·
dleport, Ohio 45760,
P·6fp

------Wanted To Buy
HOU SE or frailer on

land

contract with few acres of

2 BEDROOM furnished mobile 1972 APACHE Eagle Fold·up
home In Syracuse; Call 992· camper ; includes spare tire ,
2441, Mon . thru Sal. after 5:30 canopy and plast ic storm
p.m. and Sunday 1 p, m. to 5 window . Trailer has been
wired ~or, electric, 3 outlets .
p.m.
Excellent condition, S675 ; call
1·1fl.flc
992·5815 after 5 p.m.
1·10·4!c
2
BEDROOM
furn ished -,---::--::---:-apartment ; ground floor ; NEW 1972 Zig· Zag Sewing
Roberf Hill, Racine, phone
Machine in original factory
949·381 L
carton . Zlg .zag to make
1·10·61p
buttonholes, sew on buttons .
------monograms, and make fan cy
FURNISHED apartment ; designs with just the twi st of a
phone 992·2780 or 992·3432.
single dial. Left In lay.away
1·5·11C
and never been used. Will sell
- - - - - - ''' - - for only $47 cash or credit
UNFURNISHED 3. r J om terms available. Phone 992 apartment, adults only. No 7755.
pets, 408 Spring Ave ..
1·10·61c
Pomeroy.
H ·tfc 1970 COPPERTONE Kelvlnator
dishwasher ; phone 247·2082.
TRAILER by week or month ,
1·9·6tc
all utilities paid ; in Danville
close to new mine ; plione 742· ONE complete set Kent-Drums,
5980,
goldk sparkle
bal with
T stool
Zlldjland
1 7 't
_. ·o P , ~oycmba"rs~ 20'j x ~~"; pho~~
MODERN 6 room hou se, full
before 5 p.m. 992.2172 or after
basement, garage, out· 5 p.m. 99n298,
building ;
references
. 1-9-6tc
required ; phone 992·2310 after - - - - - - - , - - 5 p.m. or .992·3425.
STEREO 8 track repossessed,
12·31 .tfc looks like new. 4 speaker,

=------c-:-:==------

3 AND

4

ROOM furnished and

unfurnished

Phone 992-5434.

ground ; phone 949·2782 ans

apartments.

4·12.tfc

ask for Mrs. Walker .

audio

sys tem

in

SUO per week or pay balance

of $98.80 . Call 992·5331.

H ·61c

· I·Hic 6 ROOM furni shed house, 1972 DELUXE zig zag sewing
Ebenezer SL adults only, S65. machine . This machine
darns, embroideries, over a monlh ; phone 992·7784,
1·9·3tc casts, buttonholes all without
altachmenls. Pay balance of
--,-----MODERN furnished ~ pari · $39.20 or pay $5 per monlh .
992.5331.
men! ; phone 992.3686.
1·9·3!c
1·9·61c

WANTED .·
CHIPWOOD
Poles '
Maximum
Diameter
10" on
urgest End

-------------'12 DOUBLE, 2 bedroom, fur .

--------------

COAL, Limestone, Ex celsio·r·
nished ; on Fourth &amp; College
Sail • Works. E. Main St ..
Streets, Syracuse, phone 992· • Pomeroy , Phone 992·3891.
2749.
4·12·1fc
12·29.ffc -...
SINGER aulomali c sewing
'

lielp Wanted
LAO I ES -

Pleasant sa les

work . Hours

$7.00 Per Ton

like a person.

DELIVERED
. TO

OHIO

machine; 11Ke new In walnut
to suit __your

cabinet. Makes design slit.
ches. zlg.zags, buttonholes,
blind hems , overcasts, etc .,

household schedule. Earn $85, Call · Ravenswood, 273·
$2.50 up, based on sales. Write 9521 or 273.9893,
Personal Shopper Depart .
1·11 -tfc
men!, Box 10 , Walkins -~-:-=-----::---- .
Products, Inc .. Winona , WALNUT stereo· rBdlo com ·
Minn esota 55987.
blnatlon, 4 speed Intermixed
changer, 4 speaker sound
f.9.3tc
---------system. dual volume controls.
Balance •$69.57. Use our
DEPENDABLE MAN WHO
CAN WORK WITHOUT
budget term s. Call ?9n085.
SUPERVISION,
Excellent
1·11 !lc
opening in Pome,rby area . No

PALLET CO.
On Old Rt. 33
Phone 992-2689
Pomeroy, Ohio
~

experience necessary. ·{'ge BEAUTIFUL Colonial

not
Important.
.Good
characler a must. We lraln.
Air mall C. C. Dickerson,
Pres .. Southwestern
Petroleum CoFP .• H Worth ,
Tex .
1·10·41C

Maple
stereo , AM. FM radio , 4
speakers, 4 speed automatic
chan~er , separate controls.
Balance $79.70. Use our
budget te·ms . Call 992·7Q8 5.
' ,,
1·11 ·61C

Go

To
Take Me To

H

992 209
• 4
~06 E. Main
Pomeroy

1- ,

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

THE P~OF PAID lr\E A
, ~IG COMPLIMENT IN
S!O~OGI' 70DAV, StMO 1

FURNITURE

'

\

'

f)

FIRST GU'i WHO
COMES ALON&lt;O .

'-o./

foliA'/ NOT OF HAD

DON'T

TH'CHARACT~ 1D

TELL

OF RESISTED -BUT

US'I'OKUMS HAS-

ME."
••

~

- - -- - -

•• Air Conditioners
•Awnings
• Underpinnin!!

marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . A Jacob, sales

5223,

12·12·30tP

representative . For free SEWING MACHINES. Repair
estimates, phone Charles
service, all makes. 992·2184.
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Johnson and Son, Inc,
Aulhorlzed Singer Sllles and
3·2·11 C Service . We Sh~rpen Scissors .
Complete mQbile hQme1· i'
3·29·tfc
O_E_A_N_D_ D
_O
_Z
_E_R
- work .
•service ...... plus glgantlc ' ' _B_A_C_K_H_
'display of mobile homes '
Septic tanks installed . George ,
;always available-at ...
(Bil l) Pullins. Phone 992·2478. ·Real Estate For Sale
4·25-tfc
MILLER
- - - - - - -- THREE bedroom house, full
basement. lot 85 x 125, in New
E LNA and Wh ite Sewing
.MOeiLE HOMES
Haven ; phone 882·2840.
Machines ... service on all
1·9·61p
makes
.
Reasonable
rates
.
1220 Washington Blvd.
--The
Sewing
Center,
Mid
·
.423·7521
BELPRE, 0 .
dleporl, Ohio.
11·16·tfc
8 ROOM house and bath, nice
large lot, natural gas, builf ·in
cabinets in kitchen , close to
radio stat ion in Bradbury,

12·21 -201p

2 BEDROOM home.

lolal

electric, utility room , storm
windows , double garage,
(insulated an paneled), faved
driveway, city water , lo 100 x

416 ; extra lol and building.
Close to school; Don Bid
Headley, Rt. 681 , Tuppers
Plains, Ohio.

·

1·Hip

------

bath and 111, extra lot and

attached garage. Available
now . May b~ had wilh baste
furn iture . Near

Pomeroy

Elementary SchooL Phone
992.7384 or 992-7133 ,
1·11 ·61c
p;, STORY 2 bedroom brick

house In Mlddleporl. Car·
peled. paneled. Kitchen andl
dining room tiled. Complete·
with drapes. $6,500. Call 992·
3465,
'

165 ACRE FARM, 2 houses, 5
oulbuildings, 3 springs,
limber, hay and plenty of
grassland . In Harrisonville
area, Mineral rights. $20,000.
Phone 992·7238.
1·11 ·41c

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, dll·
ch ing service; top soil, fill
di rl, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex·
cavaling . Phone 992·5367 ,
Dick Karr. Jr.
9·1·1fC

Real Estate For Sale ·
NEW6 room house and balh, "'
mile East of Rutland on Rt.
124 ; Sidney Hayman .
1·ffl.6tp
'

~

rtLEIIAN~ .
REALTY
60f E. Main

....

• Pomeroy

.oil
..JI"'

1

bath,

area,

dining

RECENTLY RENOVATED.
Level

lot

about

acre,

112

carport. 2 storage bldgs,
$14,900,00. .
LITTLE UPKEEP
SYRACUSE - BRICK - 4
B. R..' dlnlng R.. NEW bath
and ulll i!y R., NEW plum·
bing &amp; F.A gas furnace. 2
large level lots, EX·
C E L L E N T .N E I G H .
BORHOOD.
RUTLAND
l'iERE IS AN EXCELLENT
BUY - 1 story frame , 3
B. R., large bath. utility.
dining R. paneling and other,
out cellar. THE MEAGE~
SUM OF 59,200.00.
MUCH WORK DONE HERE
Within slghl of the Gavin
sfack. 3 B. R.. NEW balh.
NEW FA furnace, NEW
paneling, uflllty R. large
Red. R, Out cellar and
slorage. large lot. THIS YOU
MUST SEE . $9,800.00,
WE HAVE MANY OTHER
PROPERTIES WHICH WE
CONSIDER GOOD BUYS,
CONTACT US TODAY. IF
WE DON'T HAVE IT, WE
WILL GET IT.
HENRY E. CLELAND
3 ASSOCIATES TO SELL
YOUR PROPERTY,
· 992·2259

HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick
Slreel, Pomeroy, Ohio ; brick
house. 3 bedrooms. excellent
location. close to school and
cIt y; con tac I Lou Osbo rne or
call 992·5898.
11 ·26·tfC
HOUSE in long Bottom phone
'
lfnoanswer
985·3529,
1&gt; 11 .tfc L--9-85-·4_2_0_9 o
_r_9_92_·_2l_68_ _.J

WINNIE WINKLE

,._ _ _ _ _llllf" I

~OuGHTYOU

® IF ')O(J HAD ANY' SE~15E1 WERE A Fmi::E:SS
SERVER fiUT
YOU WOULD HAVE LE:T
COULDN'T YOU
ME TALK TO YOU IN
HAVE SENT ME
PARI5.6UT YOU WERE
AN INI 'fTATION?
1\100 BUSY'OR 'GoNE
R:lR 'THE DAY'f./

6AHI

WE COULDN'T RUN ~E RISK OF

AS I KNEW YOU IN
HOLLYWOOD, IT WAS
!HIS 15 NOT CANNES OR ANY
i}IQUGHT TJ.IAT MY
OF YOUR P05ft FILM
PERSONAL lDUCH
WAS NEEt:'J;D.
FESTIVALS. f7/'72v(Jl /11~~
')OUR REFUSINc:7. AFTER ALL 1

SATURDAY, JAN. 13
STARTING ATll:OOAM
(Sale Held In Heated Bldg.)
Glassware. Pictures, Novelties, AM &amp; FM
Radios. Police Radios. Clock Radios, , Toys,
Ovenware. Lamps. Oil Lamps. Mattress &amp;
Box Springs, Dressers. Mirrors, Furniture ·
and AIH&lt;inds. of Clothing.

NEW LISTING
1 OR 3 ACRES - In the
country . Two good houses or

mobile home sites. On a
corner acre, All for 51200.00.
NEW LISTING

~~!~~f,;· i~~~~~i~

Only S15oo.oo.
NEW LISTING
3 ACRES - Small barn. 6
room house, lwo balhs, 3
bedrooms, all with closets. 3
basement

I I.:OT A. TIGKET FCF.
lVWdH ~ Mil£, FOU&lt;S...
AI/OlD IJ.lAITI~ .If-~
1.-t~~!

and

drilled welL Want 510.500.00.
NEW LISTING
4 BEDROOMS - Ph baths,
wall to wall carpellng :
modern kitchen, gas fur·
nace . Full basement, front
porch and garage. Like to
liave $12,500.
NEW LISTING
RUTLAND - 2 bedroom
i&gt;aneled home. Nic e bath,
utility, and kitchen. Wall to
wall carpeting and nice leV&lt;! I
loL Need 512.000.00
BUILDING LOTS ,
T.P. WATER - 1 acre
rolling land In lhe country
near RL 7 and close to town .
8ACRES
ON HARD ROAD - A lltfle
bit of privacy on new
proposed
$4, 500.00'

water

I AM c:lHOCI&lt;ED TO

lHE CORE-1 ANNIE!

.OliO I WI LL BEND
EVERY EFFORT iO
PUT THAT EVI L WOMAM
WHERE SHE. 6ELOr1GS
•-. 8EH1t'IP BARS

~
ACROSS
1. Pacific
island
group
6. Film
director,
Frank ll.Name
of
two
presi·
dents
12. Corrosive
i3. Nitwit
15. Milkfish
16. Be
poor
17. Spanish

line .

$6500.00
RUTLAND - 3 bedrooms,
modern bath and kitchen .
Fronf porch, nice lot. out of
high water.

ENOUCifl, WI TI-l
TI-lE DOOR S~UT.

LOOK AT · LAST YEAR ,
WOULDN'T YOU LIKE TO
MAKE MORE IN '73, COME
IN AND SEE OUR OF.
FERINGS, THEN INVEST
FOR YOUR FUTURE.

9~2 ·3325

member

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ (~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~------------·--------~-GET TO 111SCUSS THE TE~MS

OF MY EMPLOr'MENT
I

·only

OUTFIT

Hi\\SE~F.

I

THE ~AMROD Of

~lYMID~;Ik.l-='u..J,-

2. Ethiopian
town
3. Birth·
place of
HST 4. Electrica I

un••••mbt•the.. f&lt;Nr Jumbleo,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary wordo.

unit
5. Welsh
river
6. Crete's
capital
1. Yearn
painfully
8. Precede
chrono·
· . logically
· 9. Inlet
(Sp.)
10. Say
further
14. Legal

Yesterday's ADIWer
21. Grassland
22. Goal
24. Brogan,
e.g,
25. Fencing ~
dummy
26. English
river
27. Scorn
28. Obtained
32. Comedian
Myron
33. Ex·
hausted
34. Vestige

document

18. Fashion
19. Miss
MacGraw

'---------...1
!mM5 l iKE I

(0 1973 King Fea tur es Syndicat.e, lnc.)

DOWN
1. Family

ZO. Tapster's
,..______"::1";::!
offering
23. Corrlda
yell
British
carbine
See
13
Across
29. Lake
city
31. Ex-

HEtEN L, TEAFORO,
.,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNOAY SHOWINGS

SNOW
·RETREADS

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: PEOPLE SELDOM ATI'EMPT TO
SIT ON THE MAN WHO STANDS UP FOR HIMSELF.AUTHOR UNKNOWN

by THOMAS JOSEPH

~~r,~~

36. Mr.
Premin·
ger
38. Frank·

fort's

river
39. Chemin
deCO. Guid~&gt;Dian note
U. Gilbert
of.
the
. Rangers
Shade

~~~~~

WAYELE

I.

TREf LfANIN&lt;S
MR OUT OVfl&gt;.

DA!L~·

ARE~ ... LOOK~ A

TH!

At Dell's Dollar" Saver

WATER~

305 N. SECOND MIDDLEPORT

SALES
'

t:,

II
I. I. I.

Now ........,. the circled leltera
to fonn the ollJ'PI'IM answer, u
auputod by the above cll1oon.

:=:::::::Pril:=..~
.. ~SUII==-~IIISWII~:::...
:...:::~

"(

t•JA~l ' IS

l

AMwcn May h

pr~utd

DO l HEAR
THE FLUTTER

RAT~! if5 ONL'f A LEN! I
THOU6HT IT MIGHT. BE WOODSTOCK.

OF WIN65?

f . I{

I 5HOULD WALK OVER 10
&lt;.:RYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: MA~8E
SEE f\IM ... MA~BE WE CAN' HAVE
AXYDLBAAXR
A LITTLE TALK, AND GET II
II L' o N G FELL 0 W
THIN65 5ETTLED ... l'LL DO. IT ..

EJHR

I~

II

·
for rime-A STOPWATCH

i-c----r'"A-"AP-,.-~---1

CRYPTOQUOTBS

·
992-7161
Nol Responsible for accidents.
Middleport, 0.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . . . .------~

I XXJ

}ouable., WHEAT CASTE HOPPER AN'fWAT

Ye.lerd•r'•

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A IS
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, ,etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and lonnatlon of the words are all
htnts. Each day the code letters are different

'

V'

ONE Mi6HT3E
RELIEVED lOSAY IT!

(A.wert toDMorrow)

French
uemecy
article
32. Most
darling
35. Entrance
37. -bono
publico
39.See
13

He:oo:e we

•

t

LEEXAH~

31.

43. Cream
of
the
crop
44. Preven·
lion measure
15. Spouted
off (2
wds.)
.46.I.tihibit

I 01

CIAWR

Across

Sump Pump. Kenmore Wringer Washing
Machine. Dinnerware Sets, Jewelry and
Television Sets.

Auctioneers

~11--..,

110 Mechanic St.

Plus Recappable Tire

'·

UTA ,

Pomeroy, Ohio45749

1-12 Gauge Excel Antique Shotgun. Brooms,
Mops. Walkie Talkies.

ara dford Auc tlon co. '

15 N'OI&lt;!E LIKE
AWALLOP 1

,...IIIIi

heck These Buys

AUCTION SALE!

YOUR

Virgil B. ~
Teaford, 5r.
Broker

por ches ,

HARRISONVILLE
2 Story frame , 4 bedrooms,

I - II

YRJ :

N VZY L K

ASKH

AYN

FKLNJH . -LYEFS

.,
)\

Mi~LION CARS 1HAT
f I'f... T11E .,. D.E$C.RrPfi oN ...

TJ.IERE ML.61' BE A

SOMEONIO R06G A
BANK AND )'()U 1RY
10 PIN IT ON 'THE

He SA.ID I WAS
IN A CLASS
S{M¥S5 LF

Ct.)

U'LABNER

SMJlli NElSON
IJ4C. .

walnut

console, take over .payments

•

If I HAVE

From the largest
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates Ph. 446· Bulldozer Radiator to
I'Jst Heater Core.
Or a e
4782 , Gallipolis. John Russell ,
Nathan Biggs
~ .. ner &amp; Operator.
HOMECLEANING products;
""'
f
Radiato~ Specialist
phone 992·25.79 or 247·2193.
5·1H c
1·5·30tp
C. BRADFORD, Auclioneer
-~---Complete Service
REGISTERED Angus bulls ;
Phone 949·3821
MOTOR~
call after 5 p;m .• Bill Witte,
Racine. Ohio
Ph.
99f-2174
Pomeroy
.
,
1__:_
992 2789
Crill Bradford
' _____
t
5·1·1fc
1·5·6 c
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
--------SEWAGE s·YSTEMS CLEAN·
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
EO, REPAIRED. MILLER
Mobile Homes For Sale
cancelled?
Lost
your
SANITATION, STEWART,
operalor's license? Call 992·
OHIO, PHONE 662·3035.
CASH paid for all makes and
2966.
10·4·Hc
models of mobile homes.
6·15.tfc
Phone area code 61 H23·953l.
./ ·
4-13-tfc SEE US FOR : Awning·s : storm PAPER Hanging and painting ;
Arthur Musser, phone 742·
doors and windows, carports,

deer slug match ; Forked Run -----~
Syracuse; pr ice $3,900 phone
BEDROOM
furnished
Sporlsman Club; Sunday, 2
992.2360,
TWO
single
grave
lots
in
Beech
apar-tment.
114
Mulberry,
no
January 14, 12 noon .
1·5·ffC
Grove Cemetery ; Ca rr ie
dog
s
or
cats
;
adults
;
1·10·31c
-----Moore, Hy se ll Run Road.
references; phone 992·6698 ,
1·1fl·31c ,2 STORY HOME. full basement.
1·10.tfc

DANCE

'IE GOT M E,TRTER

F SI

FRIGIDAIRE refrigerator , 9 8 ROOM house wilh balh and
full basement. Buill·ln kJt.
years old, I ike new ; phone
chen cabinets, double sink , 2
949·3873 or 94n094 after 4
porches; 145 Butternut Ave.,
p.m.
Pomeroy, phone 992-7170,
1·10·31p
f.5.6tc
-----~
fARM fresh eggs; 200 bales ::F~U::R-:-N~I::-5H
-:-E::-0:--3 _r_oo
_
m~house,
straw ; phone 843·2778.
bath , furnace, on corner lot In
4
l· l0·61c

- - - -- - -

OOOH--

.~~;;~;;~§~;::~

Buy 2
I

TATER!! PUT AWAY
T HEM GUNS WHILE
ELVIN E'i'S HERE

Open BTil 5
Stop In and See Our
Monday thru Saturday
Floor Display.
t,=;:60:6:.:£::·.::M:::a:::in:::,~P.:o::m~e~ro;,:y.;.,0.;.;_
, -:--'
G&amp;.E APPLIANCE Repair : READY ·MIX
CONCRETE
Repair of all laundry
deli~ered right to ~our ·
equipment, refrigeration
project Fast and easy. ree
equipmenl and house wiring.
es llmates. Phone 992·3284.
Call 614·992-6050.
Goeglein Ready ·Mix Co .,
]2.31 ·30tp
Middleport,
OhiO .
·
6·30·Ifc

Phon e 992·2602.
Pairs

•

POMEROY
OME &amp; AUTO

Pomeroy_Home &amp; Auto

Real Estate For Sale

' paid ;

phone

p.m .; all members are urged

door, automatic, $275. Phone

99U37 4,

For Sale

north of Rock Springs
Fairground on old Rt. 33.

trailer ;
available

1·9·61p

-------

Mrs. Steven (Wanda) Eblin,
Prefer couple no children .
Rt. 2, Pomeroy I Laurel Cliff
call 992·6615.
Rd. off Rt . 7 By. PasS); phone
1·11 ·21c
9n2 •
I-3·30·1C SMALL double ·wide 2 bedroom
THERE will be a business
meeting of the Rutland Gun
Club on Friday, Jan. 12th, all

power

23,000 miles, clean as new;

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

evenings by appointment ;

wheel ·base,

brakes, 12'/2 ft. bed, less than

HAYMAN'S Auction -a good
place to go each Friday
evening, 7 p.m . al Laurel Cliff
on old Rt. 7, 1 mile west of
Rock Springs Fairground.
1fl. fO.tfc
_.
992·2448
BUSINESS Opportunity for
Pomeroy,
0.
men, and women. Inquire by
wrllmg : R. 0 , 2, Box 73,
Racine. Ohio.
1·5·121p For Rent
LARGE 1970 3 bedroom mobile
TAX Serv ice, Federal and Stale
home. air conditioned, par·
Income Taxes; daily except

Ohio ;

H0·3tp
1970 1 TON Ford, dual wheels,

"HElL"

1·11·21c

Racine Gun Club,

1970 MODEL squareback V.W.;

Notice

Fire Dept.

We talk to you

WMP0/1390

H0·19tp
AKC loy poodle puppies, $75,
$85; Siamese kitlens, $10;
phone 1·256·6247.
H ·101c
---::::::--:::-:---PARK VIEW Kennels gofng out

For Sal~ By Owner

Eden News

Social Notes

Pet, Chester, Ohio.

reduction on all dogs. All AK·

guns only . Second place
shooters get free shot in next
mat ch. Assorted meats .

11

hundreds, at Showalter's Wet

of

GUN SHOOT. Sunday, January
1·11 ·31c
14, 1 p. m. Factory choked

Morris. A poem, Lciye in Our

JUST ARRIVED. direct from ,
Florida. tropical lish by the

·Po111eroy-JAotor Co. ~.

·•wheel A1'1gn·ment
'5.55

·

On Most American Cars
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pets For Sale

steering, power brakes, red finish with black vinyl top al'ld
black vinyl interior, radio, good white-walt tires.

. 'f'PMEIIO\', OHIO

EXPERT

locations in the US. See yoU!' ·

tacts about fhe 180· Day
Delayed Entry Program and
the Army 's new pay raise.
For more information call
collect 55 G. Clark 593·3022.
1·7·6!C

----:'----r='-='- - _.,!

~===::::::::::=:::;:===Jr=~~~~~~~=lr.~i~i~~::~1

local Army representative for

1968 CHEVELLE
51695
Malibu 11&gt;ort coupe, air condltio(led, 307 engine, power

Not responsible for

accidents.

$3995

brown vinyl top. vinyl Interior, factory air, 3.50·engine,
power steering &amp; brakes. Deluxe bumpers, wheel covers,
like new W· W tires, radio &amp; other'fine accessories. A sharp
car &amp; one you would like.

GUN SHOOT, Sunday, January Notice _
14, 1 p, m. Side Hill Gun Club. GUN SHOOT, Saturdar, Jan.
no alcoholic be¥erages
13, 7:30p.m. Mile Hil Road ;
allowed, factory choked guns
Faclory choked guns only! 20.
only, assorted meats, soft
16 and 12 ga.-No, 6, 7'12, 8, 9
drinks will be sold. Free
shot ; assorted meats and
coffee. We will have 1 or 2 refreshments. S~XJ:nsored by
ladies ' and children's mat.

assignments to Europe,
after
graduation.
Guaranteed
Hawaii,
Korea or
selected ·

1971 CHEVROLET BEL AIR
$2895
4-door, toca ll owner, low mileage car, beige finish with

Judge

Ill ll ,

HIE~~st~;~oos~ay~~~!0.fn(;i

4- door , new car title &amp; balance of warranty, covert color
with black vinyl root, tinted glass, factory air , front &amp; rear
guards , radio &amp; rear speaker, white-wall. t ires. Nice and
clean. Retail $4860. Priced to move .

Manning D. Webster
Court ot,Common Pleas,
Probate Divis ion

Help~~

Motor Co.

Write M. 0, Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Phone 992·
6271.

The PlJbtlsher reserVes the

deeme d

Pon~troy

OLD furniture, oak tables
organs, dishes, dock_s, bras~

rn--

Y

DSK

"" ~ - ----

IXEEYRK ._________....,_____,

FE Y- T K- H J D

Y

.

HKAGYH
'

'

'

�.•

I .

12 _: The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 11,1973

'

Parent-teacher meetings set
'

'

'

., '

The first of a series of parent- Shakespeare late this month' or for Concensus on Education in
teacher conferences to be held in early Februarr. . ·, ~ .. •· Meigs County and outlinw
in the Southern Local School
Mrs. Lee Lee, .vocal music goals for Meigs County as he
District was set for Jan. 29 teacher,_ was authorized to received them from the Ohio
from 1 to 3:15 p. m. by the attend a music education Department of Education. The
district board of education convention in Cleveland Feb.!- superintendent. reviewed the
Wednesday night.
3 a·na a field trip by busi11ess need for Title I funds In tjle
Schools of the district will office education students to the Southern District for the oext
close at noon for the con- · Philip Sporn Plant was ap- year for which he has applied
ferences and parents are in- proved . The board authorized through Carl D. Perkins.
vi ted to visit the schools at- Supt. Ralph Sayre to attend the
Sayre gave the report of Mrs.
tended by their children and eighth annual meeting of the Marilyn L. Powell, clerkdiscuss problems. Other Ohio Association of Local custodian of school funds,
conferences are set for March School Superintendents at stating that all accounts of .the
12 and April 23.
Scotts Inn, Columbus, ~n Jan. schools are in good standing.
The board approved field 30-31.
He . outlined the new Ohio
trips for students and atSayre said several ap- legislation requiring inspection
tendance of staff members to plications for teaching of furnace boilers.
special events . Robert positions have been received.
The board approved two
Spurlock, Vo-Ag teacher, was Bill
Baer,
Syracuse students of Rio Grande College
authorized to take his students Elementary School Principal, for student teacher training in
on a field trip to Columbus on was authorized to attend a the district beginning Jan. 29.
Feb. 3 to visit the Ohio Farm right.-to-read program Feb. 5 at They are Debbie Roush, who
Machinery Show. Going the Coach House in Wellston. will be at the Letart Falls
besides the students will be Syracuse is one of the pilot Schools, and Donna Cross, who
members of the adult and schools involved in the wHI be at the RIIJ:ine
young farmer classes. The program.
Elementary School.
board approved Mrs. Elizabeth
Added to the district's list of
A letter was read from Ohio
Hobbs taking seniors on Feb. 2 substitute teachers were Alice University thanking the board,
and underclassmen on Feb. 7 to Phillips and Eleanor Blaett.- teachers, administrators and
the library at Ohio University nar. Sayre reported on the students for participation in a
for orientation, and to the play, overall view of Meigs County drug survey. Sayre sai~ money
"As You Like It", by gathered through the Search

,1 '

ELBERfELDS .IN POMEROY

~·

has been received for library
books under the Title II
program.
Mrs. Alma Johns'on was
employed as a substitute cook
in the district and a communication was read from J
'
'
H. Stewart in regard to the
mine program being carried
out in western Meigs Col)llty
................... ...:.-..-..._
--..-....-..
. A temporary budget was
approved for 1973 so that bills
You Can Really Save Now
can be paid. The budget will be
finalized at the next lJleeting on '
Feb. 15 at 7:30 p, m. The board
agreed to join the ·ohio School
Boards Association and to take
out liability insurance through
the association for all five
• Special sale of Womens Tops
boad members.
• Sale of Womens Jeans ·
Attending were board
• Worn ens Coordinate Sportswear Sale
members Dennie Hill, Grover
• Sale of Womens Long Dresses
Salser,
Jr.,
Clarence
Lawrence, Charles Pyles and
• Sale Prices Womens Dresses
David Nease; Clerk Nancy
I Womens Coat Sale
. '
Carnahan, Supt. Sayre,
• Sale of Womens Slacks
Principal Jim A-dams, and
• Sale Prices Worn ens Smocks.
these visitors, Ralph Wigal,
• Womens Hats on Sale
David Flagg, Bill Cozart,
~----------·---......----..-..----._._..__,....
Larry Wolfe, Bob Ord, BiD
January Sale Prices
Baer, Billy Hill and Jim
Wickline.

Friday .9:30 to 9

Ohioans -especially people in program of emergency
the Appalachian area - of disaster loans to farmers,
constitutes "one of the biggest
livable homes."
· The loans carried interest blows ever to farmers,n
rates as low as 1 per cent and Abercrombie said.
The U.S. Agriculture Departwere given to poor families to
buy new homes. This federal . ment's Farmers Home Adminaction, coupled with the recent istration had administered the
curtailment of another federal low-cost loans. Nixon administratioo officiaiB disclosed Wednesday, howeve~, no more applications will be accepted until
further notice.
(Continued from page 1)
The loans, Abercrombie
about forming some more citi2ens . task forces to study the entire said, went to people who had no
systems of higher education and health care delivery.
place else to seek money.
"Both of !fese areas have enormous influence on the quality of
"We're talking about people
life," the govem,or said. "They are of long-range importance to
the people Df this state. But we have no pat solutions and we are
not going to propose anything· right now."
As Gilligan enters his second legislative session, he is likely to
da
,
encounter stiff opposition to his proposals to obtain blanket
t~:uues
authority to revamp governmental organi2ation, liberalize
Mrs. j~eph A. (Caroline)
election procedures and enact a strict code of ethics for public Depoy, , Guysville, Route l,
91
officials and employes.
died
Wednesday
afternoon at
Hands Are FuU
t
J
h
H . I .
osp1ta m
But the governor appears unconcerned, perhaps s~ure in the the S . osep
Parkersburg.
knowledge that few believed he would accomplish what he
M Dep
born t N
already has in two years.
... ,
Phi~~elphi~~~ daug~ter•;
He also professes a lack of concern about the identity of his
opponent in 19'14 and whether he will be re-elected.
the late John and Mary Finster
Zumbach. Her death followed
"I've never been particularly worried," Gilligan aaid. "You do
your thing and lay it out before the people and let them stamp the an ex tended I'liness. Besl'des
report card. l guess that's what makes polities exciting. You put her parents, she was preceded
in death by an infant daughter,
your entire career on the line in public service."
Nor Is there any talk about running for national office. three sisters, and two brothers.
Mrs. Depoy was a member of
Suggestions as to this possibility continue to meet with denials.
"I've got my handsfuU right here," the governor said. "I can't
Imagine a job on earth that would permit me to do the good things
I can do here. It's got all the challenges and opportunities, and 1 OES, atGuysville.
wouldn't even trade It for a cabinet post.
Surviving are her husband,
Joseph A.; four daughters,
"A couple of years ago, I thought I would sell my soul to sit in
the U.S. Senate, but I wouldn't trade with either one of our
Mrs . Mary Zickefoose,
senators now."
·
Helvetia, W.Va.; Mrs. Bessie

Gilligan high

.Mrs. Depoy, 91
_.]_
died W
y

·

-·

Saturday 9:30 .to 9·

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

,..

Phase III

New baby

2 pair 1.00
Sale! Mens

Sweaters and Sweater Vests
Cardigan and Slipover Sweaters. Good
selection of vests, too. Solid colors and
fancies.
For This Sale

MASON
Voluntary
obedience to a rule against
burning paper in back yards
was urged by Mason city officials and a Citizens Committee here Wednesday
evemng .
.
.
Counc1irepresentatives were
Mayor Roy Harless, Recorder
Gary Gibbs, Russell Barton
and Joe Jones, councilmen,
dB tlyC dl J
"H ..
aln
lse
J
aye,
ames
nge , oe oung, and ap
Ira
~~~~ongr~pepresented the·
Mayor Harless read a. letter
from Carl G. Beard, D1rector
of Air Pollution Control
Commission, stating that back
yard burning is a violation. He
strongly urged ail residents of

GOWNS · · GOWNS . - GOWNS· -GOWNS.-GOWNS · --

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

.
·
-

--· ··-

(Continued from page 1)
Bank, $10 savings account;
Pomeroy National Bank, $10
savings account; Wald Cross
Sons, two cases of Gerber baby
food; Blue and Grey, meal to
the father; K. &amp;·C. Jewelers,
three piece baby feeder set;
AUTOS COLLIDE
Landmark, baby bunting;
Meigs County Sheriff Robert 'Fabric Shop, $3 gift certificate
C. Hartenbach's
Dept . for material; H. &amp; R.
reported a minor two-car Firestone, baby swing; Racine
accident Wednesday at 6:10 p. Food Market, three boxes of
m. on SR 7 in Orange Township Newborn Pampers ; Village
in front of Lodwick's Grocery. PhaiT(lacy, $5 gift certificate;
Rubal Caldwell, Tuppers We~r 's Ashland Station, 10
Plains, driving a pickup truck gallons of gasoline.
in pulling from the side of the
Goessler's Jewelry, baby
grocery struck a parked car book and sliver; Moore's Store,
belonging to Ray Watson of cuddle, washable bear;
The Plains. There was minor Swisher and Lohse Drugs,
damage to the front of the 'l'ippee Tommee hot plate ;
Watson vehicle.
Dudlef Florist, cut flower
arrangement; Sears, $5 off on
anything ordered from the
Sears Catalog; Stiffler's
HAS SURGERY
Department Store, package of
Alfred Gloeckner of Canton,
diapers : L &amp; Z Dress Shop, a
son of Mrs. Grace Gloeckner ,
lpvely blouse for mother ;
Pomeroy, and brother of Mrs.
Hartley Shoes, a pair of Poll
Ruth Moore, Pomeroy, unParrot baby shoes ; Kroger's,
derwent major sutgery
case of Kroger milk; Dutton
Monday. Those wishing to send
Drug Store, a gift of baby
cards his address is Aultman
clothing; Racine Department
Hospital, . Canton, Room 511 .
Store, sweater set with
leggings ; Mark V. case of
Gerber Baby foods; A&amp;P ,
coupon for $5 ' purchase Of
baby needs ; Royal Crown
Tonight, January 11
Bottling Co., a free case of
NOT OPEN
Royal Crown Cola each month
during 1973; Kiddie Shoppe, $5
Friday &amp; Saturday
· gift certificate; Western Auto,
Jonuar\1 12-13
THE HARD RIDE
musical cradle toy, and
.[Technlcolorl
Rutland
Furniture Store ,
Robert Fuller
playpen pad.
·
Sherry Baln
(Continued from page 1)
gins as a percentage of sales.
That provision has drawn the
most opposition from business
which generally approved the
control system.

MEIGS THEATRE

a

(G P) .

Gilbert Donovan, formerly of
Meigs County, died Wednesday
at WellsviUe.
Surviving are three children,
Margaret Ann, Ralph and
Gilbert, all of Wellsville; his
mother, Mrs. Leora Schar!,
Pomeroy Route 3; two
brothers, Phillip, of Syracuse,
and Clinton, of Northup; five
sisters, Mrs . Alice Beaver,
Letart Falls; Mrs. Amy Eynon,
Syracuse ; Mrs. Mae Smith,
Mrs. Faye Wolfe and Mrs. Nina
Vaughan, all of Pomeroy, and
three grandsons.
The body, at the Mace Leon
Funeral Home in Wellsville,
will be brought to the Ewing
Funeral Home Friday for
services at I p. m. Saturday.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home Friday night
and Saturday until time for
services.

MRS., NOT MR.

IGPI

Show Starts 7p.m . •

.~

p. . •

garbage trucks," be removed

Mens and Young Mens

\

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area
PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

.

KNIT·SHIRTS
Regular prices $4.95 to $12.95 turtle neck
shirts - crew necks - skinny ribs. Many
shirts with collars.

1.89
2.29
2.59 .
3.19
3.89

Mother missing-

Y2 Price

'

LEE BOOT CUT RIDERS

Sale! Womens Flannel imd
Brushed Tricot Pajamas

Sizes 28 to 38. Permanent press. Solid colors and
houndstooth checks. Also denims .

9•29 Boot Cut R'Iders .............. Sale 7•90
8.29 Boot Cut R1'..L.Sale 6.90
1111:1~ • • • .. .... .. .. .
].§1 BOOt CUt Riders ..............sale [4'0

4•98 p a1amas
.
- - - - - - - - - - Sale 3.19
5.98 Pa1'amas-- ·--··-·-Sale 3.89
9.01) Pajamas - - · · -- · • • · Sale

11----·----·
-LINGERIE DEPARTMENT

~.~9

------·----------..J------:=-:--::----,._,._.._.__,,_,~-~--t
•

1st A.OQR

.

S I I W
B d Sh' t
a e · omens 0 Y 1r s
Rogers and Bestf or m ·

• Mens Sport and Dress Shirts
• Boys Sport and Dress Shirts

.

3.99
4.49
4.99
5.99

14.98 Robes
16.00 Robes
17.00 Robes
18.00 Robes
22.00 Robes
2S.DO Robes

I _...... ... , , _ . . 1 - 1

, ... I

Sale! Mens and Young Mens

--

FLARE SLACKS
Sizes 29 to 42 waist. Jean type slacks in solid ·
colors and fancies. Popular styles · well known
makes.
Mens 5.95 Flare Slacks · -- - - - - Sale 3.99
Mens 6.95 Flare Slacks - - - - - - - Sale 4.99
Mens 7.95 Flare Slacks - - - - - - - Sale 5.99
Mens 8.95 Flare Slacks - - • · - - - Sale 6.49
Mens 9.95 Flare Slacks - - • - - - · Sale 6.99

Sale 9.69
Sale 10.39
Sale 10.99
Sale 11.69
Sale 14.29
Sale 16.29

---·--.. . ....-....-.-----------4
Hanlon
Dress Socks

'1

Sale! Mens
Knit Dress Slacks

~le!

Boys Aared Slacks

Sizes 6 to 18. Regulars and Slims: Good selection
•
of styles and coloFs.
BOYS
BOYS
BOYS
BOYS
BOYS
BOYS

8.95
7.95
6.95
5.95
4.95
3.95

SLACKS
SLACKS
SLACKS
SLACKS
SLACKS
SLACKS

-

·
·

•
-

-

·
-

•
-

-

·
.
.

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

6.49
5.99
4.99
3.99
3.49
2.99

-...--· -· --- _ "-- ·----- ·- ·•

......... ,

SALE! YARD GOODS

Drapery Department • 2nd Floor
Selected groups of yard goods at tremendous
savings Fr.iday and Saturday, Sew spring outfits
- pant suits - slacks- jackets. 45 to 60 inches wide.
· Plaids - Stripes - Fancies and solid colors .
~chine washable and no-iron fabrics. An extra .
mce · large selectioJ1. Special January Sale Prices

Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
M ens
MeriS
Mens
Mens

17.95
16.95
14.95
13.95
12 •95
11 .95
10.95
9.95

Knit. Slacks
Knit Slacks
Knit Slacks
Knit ·S·Iacks
K"''t 51 ac ks
Knit Slacks
Knit Slacks
Knit Slacks

- . - ..
- . • - - • '
- . • · ... •

Sale 12.90
I·
Sale .11.90
Sale 1o.90
Another ~lg shipment of these fine Kimball Pianos." Maple ,
Sale 9.90 · P~can · V.:al~ut- Cherry finishes In your favorite furniture
Sal 8 90
styling. You II like the fine tone of these Kimball pianos _
e •
their excellent construction and best of all you'll like the
Sale. 7.90
special s•le prices now In offect.
Sale 6.90 ..' Use oilr own senilbto credit service to buy • Kimball Piino ·
for yaunilf ot for your family.
'
Sale 6.50

__._..____

'

' Mens All Weather Coats
Stop in- Select what you need now during this
sale and save.

Womens Brushed Tricot
and Quilted Robes
Sale 3.89 .
Sale 5.19
Sale 5.89
Sale 6.49
Sale7.19
Sale 7.79
Sale 8.49

JUDGE JOHN C. BACON HONORED - Common Pleas
Judge John C. Bacon holds a certificate from C. William
O'N•W ~CI!W Juatlce..of the Supreme Court .of Ohio, for
oul!ltandlng Judicial Service (or which Judge Bacon ·qualified
by having a current crimirial docket as of Sept. 1972. Judge
Bacon said, "I feel Justice O'Neill should make a similar
prese~tation to Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach · aod
Prosecuting Attorney Bernard Fultz for their accompllshment, as withoot their cooperation a current docket
would be dllllcull."

.

.: ~Le:e;ssNCyC01°o:n::Q:u:,.dldteJd:cJckakecetktssets

Sale! Lingerie Department
On The 1st Floor
5.98 Robes
7.98 Robes
8.98 Robes
9.98 Robes
10.98Robes
11.98 Robes
12.98 Ro~es

SPECIAL SALE PRICES
MENS DEPARTMENT • 1st fLOOR

2 pair for tOO

I

entine

·_VO:...L._X:__XV_N....;,O;_:.1:.:..:89~---....:P..::.O..::.ME::. .:.RO::. .:.YM.:.::.l
. : .· D.:..:DL::.:EP..::.OR:.:.:.T:....::,O:.:.:.HI:..:.G_ ____:F~RIDAY, JANUARY 12, 19 73

LINGERIE DEPARTMENT - 1st FLOOR

Sweater Vests

~~~~.~~~~~g;:i~;~hi:~\~

•

Sale! Mens and Young Mens

Boys Sweaters

Weather

PATRICK G. MEEKER, representing Surveys Unlimited, Cable, the survey firm of the
Meigs County Planning Colilmission, left, presented a program dealing with aspects of the
plans for the future of Meigs County Thursday night when the first annual dinner meeting of the
Meigs County Planning Commission was held at the Meigs Inn. With Meeker is Arnold Clebone
of the Depanment of Economic and Community Development, Colunnbus. The department is
active with the funding of such planning programs.

at y

Sale 1.39

Three are fined
Sale
Mens 79c
Three defendants were fined
and two others forfeited bonds
in Pomeroy Mayor William
and
Baronick's court Wednesday
night . Fined were Glen
Qle size fits size 10 through
Borkowski, no address
14.100 percent nylon. While
recorded; $5, intoxication, and
A fine selection of styles.
. black and a big· selection
Good sizes up to size 20 ..
$10 and costs, indecent exof solid colors .
Solids and fancy patterns.
Friday-Saturday Sale
posure; Edward Martin, 45,
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, assured
~rice
clear distance, and Shelby
Pickens , 36, Syracuse, $5, ·· - - - - - - - - · - - ' - - ·
running a red light, and $20 and · - - - - -· ----....
-..-..... ........ -..--......
costs, speeding,
Forfeiting bonds were
' Dofothy Riley, 51, Pomeroy,
$100, leaving the scene of an
~eclderit, and $200, driving
while intoxicated, and Rullell
c.Sizes 29 to 42 waist. Solid colors- plaids White, Nelsonville, $200, for
stripes. An extra nice selection.
drivicg while intoxicated.
ALARM CANCELLED
An alarm received by
Middleport Fire Dept, at 11 :16
a.m. Wednesday was cancelled
before firemen .left the
building. It was from the
Howard Harrison residence,
East Poplar St., Cheshire.. '

out that the total acreage In developed land use, we were
Meigs County involved in also concermid about the
agriculture, vacant and open relative conditions of the
spaces,
comprises ap- structures. We rated the
proximately 248,000 acres, or structures in good, fair Dl',poor
89.3 pet. of the total county classification .
Of
ap·
area .
proximately 7,300 housing units
~ "When we subtract the· •that were inventoried, we
agricultural land from the land found that the municipal
use totala, we arrive at what housing conditions were in
we call developed land. 'i'he poorer condition than !he rural ,.,
developed land in · Meigs dwelling units. This is
County consists · of ap- somewhat attributed to the
pro~lmately 30,000 acres, blighting influences of over·which represents 10.7 pet. of crowding and mixed'lllnd uses
the total land area.
which were evidenced in the
"Residential is considered a municipalitie•," Meilker said.
developed
land
use
Meeker's slides of local
·classification. The total housing included a new ' subacreage In this classification . division in Tuppers Plains and
amounts to 17,500 acres or ·one on Route 7 to indicate that
approximately 58 pet. of tlie the county is not stagnant in
developed land but only 6.3 pet. new housing construction.
of the total county.
· Meeker said that the county
' 'The pre do m i nan i had 434 mobile homes 'in 1970,
characteristic of the county's an increase of approximately
residential development is that 340 units since 1960, for 300 pet.
of one-family detached homes. increase. He suggested
When we looked at the
(Continued on page 10)

•

Famous well known brand . Jumbo size. SOlid
colors and fancy patterns - Also reversible
towels. Fringed and hemmed ends.
Really an exce!lent selection .

KIMBALL PIANOS

.;,w•.·--·..~----"-.;·J

. bl e cIoud mess
'
...J~"':""--,._-,
.....~~.....~-"':'-.~--·..:..
. ..
The ·_Melgs Local Board of
.Va rta
today r~-:~~~~w~""~~"~--·,--,,--·---··-~--~-~--:--··
1
~
Education
approved · ' a w•th snow flurries lil\ely north
9t3Q ~M
resolution commending Mrs. and a chance of snow flurries
I..OCAL TEMPS
The temperaiure in down- Hiram Slawter on her many
town Pomeroy at 11 a. m. years of service, not Mr. south. Highs around '25. Partly
Thursday was 23 degrees under Hiram Slawter ,. as was announced .
sunny skies.
. ._ _ _.__. _ _ _ _...__.· ,- - - - · .·· .- - - - -·...;.;.'

·-

'

Anderson Street, stating,' "no

ceremonies, as chairman of the
county planning comilliSsion,
Introduced members of the
commission and others active
in planning..
11feekerpresented a program
of .Picture slides taken locally
to · emphasize points brought ..
out by the survey.
·
Surveys Unlimited is the
consultant firm employed by
the commission to work out a
plan for the county to follow in
future improvement and expansion. Pomeroy · also
recently employed' the firm to
prepare a plan specifically for
the village.
Meeker's presentation·
pointed up the influence that
the Gavin Power Plant in
Cheshire will have in the future
of Meigs County as weU as
development of the coal
operations related to the power
plant located in western Meigs
County.
Emphasi2ing land use in
Meigs County, Meeker pointed

BATH TOWELS

FRIDA'J AND SATURDAY OPEN

STAR SP'A NGLED
GIRL
(Technicoior)
Sandy Duncan ·
Tony Roberts

.

Gilbert Donovan .
'
died WednesdJJy

Recorder Gibbs recommended that the present ordinance be amended to allow
burning of paper only.
It was also suggested that the
garbage collections ordinance
be rewritten and that a sign on

good, fair or poor and provides .
space for comment.
The results will be published
in THe Daily Sentinel. As ·a
follow-up, attempts -wm be
made to improve the commercial services of Pomeroy.
Facilities imq services to be
rated are tbe newspaper, fire
protection, police protection,
.school and recreational
facilities, library, shopping
facilities, restaurants, highways, parking, medical
facilities and cultural opportunities.
The survey sheet will also
ask for opinions on the overall
appearance of Pomeroy, what
improvements should be made,
and on related subjects.
Cooperation Asked
Meeker urged thdse attending last night's meeting to
complete the questionnaire
when it appears and also urged
the public to take part in the
survey.
Thereon Johnson, master of

Irregulars of $2.95 and $3.95 ·

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

action would not be necessary
8.00 BODY SHIRT·S - -- - . - - SALE
on the part of his agency.
9.00 BODY SHIRTS - - - - . - - SALE
After the communication 10.00 BODY SHIRTS - -- - . - - SALE
was read and following 12.00 BODY SHIRTS - - . . · - - SALE
d'1scuss1on,
·
Mayor Har1ess
stated that burning of papers ....-··--·-·----------..-..---·-... .... ·-..-....-·
temporarily until a permanent
solution to the problem is
found.

BY BOB HOEFUCH
How do you rate Pomeroy's ·
facilities and services•
Area residents wiD gr~de
these qualities of Pomeroy in a
citizen's survey, Patrick G.
Meeker, · representative .of
Surveys "unlimited, Cable;
Ohio, said Thursday night at
the first annual dinner meeting
of the Meigs County Planning
Commission,
Approximately 100 persons
attended the dinner served at
the Meigs Inn when Meeker .
announced the survey. The
form for the survey will soon be
published in the Monday
· edition of The Daily,.Sentinel.
When, completed, the survey
sheet is to be taken to the office
of ·the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce in the courthouse at
Pomeroy or mailed to that
office.
The form will ask residents
of Meigs County and visitors in
Pomeroy to rate facilities of
the"community on the basis of

Y2 Price

Sale! Womens Flannel- Brushed Rayon
- Cha II is Gowns.
Buy the gowns you need and SjVe.
2.95
3.49
3.98
4.98
5.98

All spun cotton . Ideal for
work . for hunting . far
fishing.

Save Friday
and Saturday

liNGERIE DEPARTMENT • 1st FLOOR

Mason group

Natural color in two .size ,
ranges. Large {Ills size 1213) and medium (fits 10'h ..
11112) .

Qf

colors. Hi Bulk Socks lhat

Girls Dresses -on sale 112 Price
Sale Price on ~iris Sleepwear
Girls Slacks-on Sale 112 Price
All Girls Blouses-Sale 112 Price
Girls Knit Capes-Sale 112 Price
Sale Prices Girls Knit Tops
Sale Now Girls Skirts- 'h Price

reviewed by

WORK SOCKS

are so popular. One size fits
all sizes from 10 lhrough 13.

course now.''

;~~· ~~~~r' :~~~~in~~~:;: :~er~c)on;:: i~ ":e~i~~d
Columbus; two sons, R;ly and
John, Sr., both of Guysville ; a
sister, Mrs. Emma Che~alier,
Guysville; 15 grandchildren;
41 great-grandchildren, and
four great-greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 1p.m. Saturday at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with
the Rev. Roy W. Rose officiating . Burial will be in the
Vanderhoof cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytime after 7 this evening.

-

An excellent 5etection

:n~ ~a~~ne~~i~~~~;rh~~:, ~~:~i:~:~~nE~~~.::E ~:~~ :gg~ ~~::i~ ~ - _
·.-·- . -. ~:~~ ~:!:
Martindill, Guysville; Mrs.

Mens Thermal

Orion Dress Socks

Infants and Gi~s Wear
On The 2nd Roor.

Burning rule

-r. .......

Mens 79c

Ready To Wear _Department
2nd Aoor

whose income was so low they
did not.qualify for bank loans,"_
he said. "This program was
practically their onl~ source of
credit. I can't think of any re-

_....

Pomeroy to look at itself
c

BARGAINS ALL OVER THE STORE AND. AT THE
WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET

Cutoff of housing loans criticized
COLUMBUS (UPI) -State
Agriculture Director Ge~e R.
Abercrombie suggested
Wednesday federal officials in
Washington had "lost their
senses" by cutting off housing
loans for poor rural families.
Abercrombie said the cutoff
would "deprive thousands of

.CITIZENS' SURVEY ·COMING

:

MiLo££ ''"'" ... ....,.._

TO 9 PM .

ELB ERFE LOS IN..PO~-·--M
E
ROY
-; --;,.;,;.;;.;;,.;c..• .:..·.'.;..J '

SEEDLINGS HERE -Various seedlings are again available in Meigs County through the
Meigs County &amp;oil and Water Conservation Office. Lasfspring tho\ districi presented John
Bentley·, left in picture, earth science Instructor at Meigs High School, some of the seedlings
which were planted near the school by Bentley's classes. Here, Bentley, David Parry, district
conservationist, center, and Thereon Johnson, right, diBtrict president, check the progress of
the seedlings.

Meigs Wildlife p-ackets arrive
The Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District fs Of·
ferlng wildlife planting
packets, ctown vetch, song
bird packets and quantity
bundles of seedlings for sale
this year.
Wildlife packets will contain
the following varieties (no
substitutions or changes
permitted): 25 white pine, two
yearseedUngs, 3 to 6 inches; 15
red pine, two years, 3 to 5 in·
cHes ; 15 scotch pine, two years,
3 to 5 inches ; 10 Colorado blue
spruce, four years old, ~ to 12
Inches; 10 Norway spruce,
·three years, seedlings, 12 to 16
Inches:' 10 white spruce;
four years, 12 to 16 irlches; five
white flowering dogwood, B to
12inches; five gray dogwOQd, 6
to 12 Inches ; five Chinese
chestnut, 12 to 18 incHes. •The packet containing 100
seedlings costs $12. A similar

packet of 34 seedlings with
fewer 'of each of the above
varieties Is available for $6.
Crown vetch will be packed
in 50 crown lots only and priced
at, $1.50. Song bird packets will
contain three white flowering
dogwood seedlings, 8 to 12
inches; three gray dogwood, 6
to 12 inches ; two Manchu
cherry, 6 to 12. Inches, and two
mountaip ash, 4 to B inches.
The total is 12 seedlings in the
song bird packets and the cost
Is $4 .
Any of the seed~ngs listed in
either of the packets may be.
ordered in · quantity, but In
multiples of 25. The following
rates will be charged for each
variety: white pine, red pine or
scotch.plne, 25 fDI' $3; Colorado
blue spruce, · Norway spruce ;
white spruce, 25foi- $4'; Chinese
chestnut, Manchu cherry,
white or gray dogwood, 25 for

$6.50, and mountain ash, 25 for
$3.
Quantity orders in multiples
of 25 apply to single varieties.
Those placing orders, for
examples, could not combine
various types of pine for a total
of 25.
· Order blanks for the
seedlinga may be obtained by
calling 992-3828 or writing the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District Office, P.O.
, Box 432, Pomeroy, 45769.
Deadline for accepting these
orders if Feb. 10.

STRIKE CONTINUES .
-WJIEELING, W. Va. (UP!)
- Roving pickets today Idled
2,500 ll!•n and ·seven mines in
·West Virginia's Northern
Panhandi~ and eastern Ohio as
a strike over work as,&lt;~ignments
conUnued.

Last year, the organizational year for the Meigs County
Council on Aging, was one of progress, but 1973 is expected to be
a year of major accomplishments in service and assistance to
senior cltizeM.
This was reflected in a year-end progress report by Mrs.
Eleanor Thomas, project director for the Meigs County Council
on Aging.
Projects of priority for 1973 will be the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program and the establislunent of a Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy with sub-centers throughout the county.
·
Funding for the Retired Senior Volunteer Program through
the Washington office of AC,TION, a branch of the Administration
on Aging, has been virtually assured, Mrs. Thomas reports, and
efforts are underway now to secw:e a dlrector.
The RSVP programs provide opportunities for retired
persons aged 60 and over to serve on a regular basis In a variety
of community sponsored programs. They serve without pay, but
may be reimbursed for out-of-pocket expenses such as transportation or meaiB.
. Locally, Mrs. Thomas said volunteers are needed to help in
the hospital, to work with children in various programs at the
IIChool.s, to aid agencies with clerical work, to do friendly visiting
or telephone reassurance, to read and write for patients in
lllll'Sing homes.
An application has beel) filed with the State Ailrnlnistratlon on
Aging for funds for the operation of a multi-purpose senior
cltizena center. ·
Mn. Thomas reporls that to bti eUglble for otate funding
of a center,~ pel. of tbe amoant needed -approximately
$7,000-haoto be commUted Iocally. ln December the Melgo
Couaty Commllsioaers, at the request of the Meigs COIDIIy
CoaacU on Aging, voted to aet aside $4,100 from the General .
Reveaae Slulriag' Funds for selllor clllzeas programs, aceordiag to the project dlreetor.
The remainder of funds needed to open the senior citizem
center- and the projected date for this is April! -will have to
come froni organlza\(on and indi.vidual donations.
The Meigs Local School Board bas given the Council permission to use faciUties at the former Jlinior High School ·In
Pomeroy for a Center.
Services at the Center would Include not only recreatiOnal
facillties for the over~ age group, but would, when In fuU
operation, handle transportation problems, operate a telephone
reassurance and (riendly visiting program, give health and
(Continued on page 10)

.

-

COLD, BLUSTERY WORK - Emergency-rescue units battled rough, cold water and
freezing temperature to drag the Ohio River Thursday afternoon for the body of Mrs. William
· (Ericka) Thoma, Letart Falls, 36, mother of five children, who is missing . Above are two
members of the Racine unit dragging.
.
ey:===~:;~:;:::::::::;:?.!:;:;:;::::::::;:;:::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::i8~i:::::i:::::::;::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::-.:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:$;:;;;;:;:;:~:~:::~f:~

IPlanners.funded for study I
I

~of Pomeroy's
Meigs County was awarded a
$6,000addition today to a $5,000
federal planning grant approved by the Ohio Depart'

K

development II

men! of Economic and Community Development in July.
Gov. John J . Gilligan made the
an nouncement after th e
develo pment department's
formal approval.
The money will enable Meigs
County's Regional Planning
Commission to devote more
planning time to Pomeroy, the
social and economic seat or
the county.
Underway soon will be:
- A land use and housing
study on which a village
zoning ordinance will be
based;
- The preparation of a
thoroughfare plan based on a
study of the village's street
system;
- A housing program

which will identify problems ·•·
and blighted areas of the
village, a prelude to improving the village housing
situation;
- A plan to upgrade the
ce ntral shopping district.
The level of fundin g was
changed so that Meigs County
planning could be coordinated
with that of Gallia and Vinton
Counties, · accordin g to
Development Director David
C. Sweet.
The entire area is beiog
studied now for the impact of
nearly 3,000new workers at the
$115 million deep-pit coal
mining operation soon to he
built in Meigs ·and Vinton
Counties and the proposed $446
(Continued o~ page 4)

Lohse has a tune going his way

. Jim Lohse of WTVN Radio,
Columbus, has written a song
rating a notice in Sherry
Woods' column (CitizenMR. SCHRECENGOST
AI Scllrecengost, State ~ournai, Jan. 11 ) titled "Danny
Trustee, O~lo State Aerie, . Let's Play. "
Entertainment commentator
F.O.E., )VIII be the guest
.
Sherry
wrote: "Locally on the
speaker for the district No. 4
meeting , Those una~le , to at-- . Eagles Meetlug to be held In music scene WTVN Radio's
tend but interested are asked to
Jim Lohse has been turning out
Pomeroy Sunday, January
telephone either Mrs . Ben
14, at 2 p.m. The Logan ~orne very pretty sounds of his
Philson, 949-3671 or Mrs .
own, a little tune called 'Danny
Degree Team will put on the
Harold Sauer, 742-3654. Fifteen
ritualistic. )Vork at the . Let's Play.'
persons are . requited to
"Everyone who's heard it
meeting. A free chicken
organize a chapter.
has flipped over it and there's
dinner is planned after the
· Mrs. Gene Helen, second
hope · a 'ma jor ·recordin g
meeting followed by a dance
vice president of the Ohio
company
will pic~_it up for
wiih music· by Red Stewart
Division of AAUW in charge of
r~lease.
and the Ambassadors. All
membership, will attend.
"Dave McCoy, who has left
members and g~eslli are
the .50-50 Club to strike out on
welcome to participate.

AAUW Olapter being proposed
Organization of a Meigs
County Chapter of the
American Association of
. University Women will be
discussed at an information
meeting to be held at 10:30 a.in.
Saturday morning at the Meigs
Inn.
All women graduates of an
accredited university or
· college interested in the AAUW
are invited · to attend the

..

'

. .~

'

.

his own, sings the tune. While
you're waiting for it to hit the
airwaves, you can catch the
melody at least by requesting
Joe Dunlap to play it next time
you stop in the Tartan Lounge ·
at Scot's Inn."
Lohse (PHS, l959 ), pianist, is
the so~ of Mr. end Mrs. Harold
Lohse ; Wolfe Dr., Pomeroy. As
a disk jockey, his "Lohse
Lounge" sessions are high·y
popular in central Ohio. He a&lt;:d
his sister, Jennifer Lohse
Sheets, now extension agent,
home economics in Meifig
County, collaborated in 196il'to
write Mei gs High SC'hool's
· Alma Mater song. ·

. ~·

.

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