<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16995" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16995?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T10:34:20+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="50145">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/aa6b4ed24646c9fc9d52a93f29b1f278.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0ffc231556fcc7013d45bffc103adcdb</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="54233">
                  <text>•

.,

8- The Daily Se~tinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. l5, 1973

.-

----War theme veto.ed
NEW YORK (UP!) - A
composer commissioned to
write an orchestral piece for
Presidenl.. Nixon ' s
inauguration said today his
work hBs been cut from the
program, apparently because
its text deals with war.
"It was their
(the
inaguration organizers) idea in
the first ploce,"· said Vincent
Persichetti, 57, chairman of the
department of composition at
the Julllard School of Music in
New York.
He said in a telephone interview from his home in
Philadelphia that the inaugural
committee suggested
Abraham Lincoln's second
inaugural address as the, text
for a composition for orchestra
and narrator. The narrator
was to have been actor

By Uolted Pre111 llllernatloDal
Charlton Heston.
Lord are true and righteous
WASHINGTON - SENATE DEMOC!l,\TIC leader Mike
"Apparently after the bomb- altogether."'
.
Mansfield,
an ·opponent of U. S. involvement in Vietnam, and
ing of North Vietnam started'
Aspokesman for the inBugil·
again they decided it was too . ral oonunitlee in Washington Sen. Hugh Scott, the Republican leader, agree that' Congress
much for the' President, em- said that the 11-minute tone cannot stop the war. "We shouldn't fool ourselves," Mansfield
barrasing, in poor taste," he poem was deleted for reasons silid Sunday. He said Congress can pass resolutions "but we can 'I
said.
that have "absolutely nothing end the war," Scott agreed.
"It's an e~ercise in SA!mantics to talk about Congress'
Uncoln's address, delivered to do with the reaS&lt;ms he
stopping
the war," the Pennsylvania senator said. Even if
at the beginning of his second (Persichetti) suggested."
'tA!rm in 1865, says in part:
"We just changed our ·Congress cut off funds for the conflict, Scott said; President
"llondly do we hope, fervently plans," the spokesman said. Nixon has the option of using a veto or going to the courts.
"!think the courts would sustain him," Scott said . Mansfield
do we pray, that this mighty "We were pulling our plans
scourge of war may speedily together rather early when we said the only weapon that Congress has is its conQ-ol of the purse.
pass away.
talked with Mr . Persichetti." But he said he did not believe Congress would act to cut off funds
"Yet, if God wills that it ' As an opponent of the . and that if it did, it could not muster enough votes to override
.
·
continue until all the wealth __Vietnam war, Persichetti said, Nixon's veto.
PRINcETON, N. J .41NE of ttiree Americans living in inner
piled by the bondsman's 250 he originally shied away from
city
areas has been mugged, robbed o~ vandalized in the past
years ohmrequlted loU shall he the suggestion. He said he ,
sunk, and until every drop of changed his mind after study- year, but half of them failed to report the crimes to the pollee,
according to a Gallup Poll released Sunday. In addition, city
blood drawn with the lash shall ing the Uncoln text.
be paid by another drawn with
"I just feel sorry for my dwellers list crime as the .No. I urban problem, but .rate transthe sword, as was said 3,000 fellow human beings that they portation second over drugs--a crime-related problel!l- which
years ago, so still it must he can't take Mr. Lincoln's they place third, the poll said.
The poll results were based on interviews with 1,504 persons
said, 'The judgments of the words."
18 years or older conducted Dec. 8-11 in 300 localities. It said 21
pet. of those polled reported having heen the victim of one or
more of five types of crime: break-ins, muggings, money or
property theft, proper!}' vandalism and auto theft. Seven per
cent said they or members of their family had heen the victim of
two or more types in the past 12 months.
·

Blood ruits ·high
WASHINGTON (UP!) There are an estimated 23
million sufferers from high
blood pr_\!5Sure in the United
States and hall of them are
unaware they have the disorder .
Secretary Elliot L. Richardson of the Health, Education
and Welfare Department said

"Everything depends on

today an effort will he made to
increase awareness of the
problem of high blood pressure
and reduc.e the annual toll of
50,000 deaths.
"The screening and detection activities we envision, and
the necessary followup
treatment, will involve whole
communities,'' Richardson
said.
Qpening a two&lt;day National
Conference on High Blood
Pressure Education here,
Richardson announced the
establishment Of a private
Citizens for the Treatment of
High Blood Pressure to he
headed by a present member of
his HEW staff who is leaving
government.
"As we see it, the government can contribute most
toward a nationwide decline in
hypertension (high blood
pressure) by serving as the
locus, the catalyst or perhaps
... as the home office," he said
in a prepared keynote address.
"But we believe the moving
force behind this effort will be

Five accidents

yoUr point oi view . To a

worm. for eXample, our·
beautiful winter 'birds ar:e
holy te rrors" .. .

Ne •t t ime you drop In at
the Pomer oy Cement Block
Company. ask abOut our
birdteeders and
blr ·
dhou ses. (You' ll be surpr ised how they perk up

your lawn or patio.)

blamed on rain
The Gallla-Melgs Post State
Highway Patrol was investigating five minor traffic
accidents this morning, · ali
blamed on wet road conditions
in Gallla and Meigs Counties.
One minor accident was
investigated Sunday in Meigs
County on township road 88.
Officers said cars driven by
Betty L. McKinley, 44, Middleport, and Crystal D. Richmond, 18, Pomeroy, collided in
a curve . There was heavy
damage to both cars. No
charges were filed.

(9ur

Wide~Jlwake

Wide-r9pe,t 'Door
Policy
•

1\tor£! than a word . More thn'n our smiles. Our time.
The wide.awake bank has time f or you nnd tll e eagerness
to serve you best.

All banks are big on money- so are we. But we're just
as big on se rvice . If our tellers can 't an swer a question,
feel free to e'bns ul t any of our officers. Our cusy-going
officers are ready wi t h financ ia l co·unsel, to help you make
big decisions or plan fo r your future. We have t lle time to
let you take your time. We know how mu c~ it matters.
So whether you bank with us or not, we welcome your
questions. Our doors are alw ays open. The wide-open,
wide-awake bank always makes you feel you've come to
tlle ri ght place: And you have!

The wide-rtwrtke bonk
, . makes itf!!J.Iio ea.IJ;.,.

Farmers Bank &amp; Savi

Co.

POMEROY, OHiO
Member ot Federal Reserve System

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window Is Open 9 a .m. to i p .m.
!Continuously) . ·
~

S~O,OOO

....._____
·

Maximum Insurance for Each Depositor

IM-a1t11'LIIIIIflllw.,_Mr, l~r .

LAKEWOOD, OHIO - NON-TEACHING employes of the
Lakewood School system rejected a con b-act offer Sunday night
and called a strike today at ·the 14 schools in this Cle~eland
suburb ..
Schools Superintendent Robert Cawrse said he was ''confident" employes would ignore the picket lines and report to
work as usual. He said classes would be held for the 10,700
students. The 103 non-teaching employes belong to Local 52 of the
International Firemen and Oilers Union. They include
custodians, maintenance workers and cleaners. The system has
no bus drivers.

generated
by
health
professionals and publicspirited, nonprofessional activists all over the country."
The 75-organlzatlon conference Is being held to initiate a
national program of public
education.
Although scientists know
little about the causes of high
blood pressure and it cannot he
prevented or cured, It can he
d elected and nearly always
controlled by treatment.
Hypertension. affects 15 per
cent of the adult population but
about half of them aren't even
aware they have it.
Only about 4.6 million of the
estimated 23 million sufferers
receive what doctors consider
to be adequate treatment. The
disease also contributes
significantly to heart attacks,
strokes .and kidney failure.

ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. -STATE SEN. Alfonso T. Montoya, brother of U. S. Sen:·JoSA!ph M. Montoya, D-N.M., and a
member of the New Mexico Legislature, was killed Sunday night
in a one-car accident on Interstate 25 north of Albuquerque.
Montoya, 4S,and a woman in the car with him were thrown from
the southbound vehicle as it went out of control near AlgOdones,
about 19 miles north of Albuquerque.
The woman, Leonella Trujillo, 42, of Albuquerque, was not
seriously hurl. New Mexico police officer Randall Miller said
another southbound motorist reported that the car, believed
driven by Montoya, had passed him at a high rate of speed
shortly before the accident occurred.
·

Oren R. Jones ·
died Saturday

TAXES
_.., BITE DEEP
COLUMBUS (UPI) State Auditor JQJepb
Ferg~son said today the
sales In was tire biggest
revenue prOducer for Ohio
fOr the last six· months of
197Z. The sales tax prodnced
$395 mUlloo, up $34 riillllon
from the same period of 1171.
The stale lncoloe In
produced $133 mi!Uon and
lhe natural resources
severance tax brought In $%.1
million.' Those two lases
went Into efl~cl Jan. 1, In%.
The five-cent Increase In lbe
cigarette taxes brought In
$86.3 mDIIon, ,or $23.5 mllllon
more lban the·. previous
period. ·
·::::::x~w...::::::~«=::s.x:~:;::::~~m:~

Wonderful time
reported by 3

Nannie Russell
died Saturday

Junior Misses
pr. PLEASANT - Three
Mason County girls who
returned home Sunday evening
declared, " It was wonderful,"
alter participating in the 1973
West Virgiitia Junior Miss
Pageant Saturday and Sunday
at Concord College in Athens.
They were Peggy Holliday,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. M.
Holliday of 2015 North Main
Street;
Pam Sommer,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. C.
Sommer of Southside and
Dianna Harris, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs . C. Harris of New
Ha~en.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
8(\TURDAY ADMISSIONS
--' Jerry Stobart, Middleport;
Julia Hutchison, RuUand;
Harold Sauer, Mladleport, and
· Oren Ross Jones, 77, of 289
. Harold Dewhurst, Rull.ond.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, died
- Jlimes. Edwards, Harriet Saturday at the Gaihart
Thompson, A. J. · WUb8J:1!er, . Nursing Home In Piketon. Mr.
David Darst, Gale' Wolfe, Jones was the lost charter
Cllarles Klein, Richard Burke, member of Aerie 2171,
Eula Welker, and Rose Fraternal Order ol Eagles in
Pomeroy.
Roseberry.
He was preceded in death by
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS his
parents, Oren and Mary
Jane Geary, Middlepof t;
Sylvia Zwilling, Syracuse; Tracy Jones; his wife, Jessie
Clearsie Gibson, Portland; Quivey Jones; two brothers,
Gary Haning, Albany; Jimmy Harry and Clyde Jones, and
Bailey, .Tuppers Plains; SA!veral nieces and nephews.
Ric.hard Vance, Mldd!A!port; Mr. Jones was a retired
Pamela Smith, Middleport; blacksmith.
Funeral Services will be held
Jack Frederick, Cheshire;
at
I p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
Dwight Sayre, New Haven;
Gene Thompson, Racine; ·Funeral Home with the Rev:
Eugene Reeves, Pomeroy, and Robert Kuhn officiating. Burial
Randall Tucker, Racine.
· will be In the Burlinghll!ll
SUNDAy DISCHARGES - Cemetery. Friends may call at
Julia Hutchison, Tyronne the funeral home anytime.
Patterson, Debora Phillips,
Johnny McDermott, Adra
Swick, Jane Geary and Ronald
Bostic.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharges: Mrs. Gretchen
Wilson, Leon; Mrs. Vernon
Evans, Pomeroy; Patricia
Newsome, Susan Murphy,
Point Pleasant; Chester Jeffers, Southside; Riley Swartz,
Gallipolis Ferry; Herbert
Tucker, Grimms Landing;
· Lena Minturn, Leon; Mrs.
James Ramey, daughter,
Galllpolis; Mrs. James Bump,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Cecil Queen,
Gallipolis; Russell Moore,
Point Pleasant; Angela·Oliver,
West Columbia; Diane McCauley, Mason; Mrs. Ralph
Fruth, Mason; Mrs. Roy
Johnson, son, Point Pleasant;
Donnie Patterson, Henderson·;
Daniel Hlll, Covington, . Ky.,
and Samuel Holiday, Point
Pleasant.

Mrs. ·Nannie 0. RI!BIIfll, 95,
former Meigs Resident, died
Saturday at home, 470 Hllock
Ave., Columbus.
Preceded in death by her
husband, Clarence, in 1966,
Mrs. Russell is survived by a
son, Floyd, and · a daughter, .
Mrs. Neta White, both of
Columbus; four grandchildren,
II great-grandchildren, four
great - great - grandchildren,
and several nieces and ·
nephews. She was a member of
the Hysell Run Free Method!Bt ·
Church.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a. m. Tuesday at the
Hysell Run Free Method!B~
Church with the Rev. Cecil
WiSA! officiating. Burial will be
in the Bradford Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Ewing
FUneral Home anyllme.

Nancy Kay McCormick of
Logan was chosen West
Virginia Junior Miss Sunday
night. Four runnersup were
Sheri &amp;:ott of Greenbrier East
High School, Mary Carol Jones
CLUB TO MEET
of Hinton, Melea Haines of The Middleport Literary
Charleston and Vicki Lynn Club wiD meet at 2 p.m.
LODGE TO MEET
Salentro of Shinnston.
Wednesday at the borne of Mrs.
A special meeting of
Charles Gaskill. Mrs. Richard Pomeroy Lodge 184, F&amp;AM,
Owen will present the program will he held at 7 p.m. Thursday
'mE STRIKE BY 13,000 PUBUC SCHOOL teachers in
PhiladeiJlhia entered ils second week today with teachers vowirig
reviewing , "Marie, My Own at the Masonic Temple to
DIVORCES GRANTED
to slay out until "we negotiate." In Chicago, another meeling
Story," by Maria Von Trapp. confer the master mason
Two divqrces granted in
was scheduled todl!y between representatives of 25,970 striking Meigs County Common Pleas ResponSA! to the book will ' he · degree. AU master masons are
teachers and the school board. Chicago teachers walked off the Court were to Mary M. Amos the answer to roll call.
invited.
job last Wednesday.
. ~~~~1111181,
from Leonard E. Amos :s:S¥-:&amp;:::::~m:-:::~::::8!:!8!:!8:::::::8!:~:!::&amp;::::-.:::::w..::..~::::::
. r
"The school board will have to negotiate," said Phllad~lphia char_ging gross neglect of duty,
Federation of Teachers (PF'I') president Frank Sullivan.
"Nothing wUI be resolved until we negotiate. The hoard's out to and Thomas Lee King from
Bessie Mae King charging
break us. That's the Issue now and we'll fight them 'to the very
·:·~
·gross
neglect of duty and ex- ·.o"J
::~
end." About 80 pet. of Philadelphia teachers stayed away from
;::.:
school Fr\day, halting education for about 280,000 pupils for the treme cruelty.
fifth straight day.
.«

Lucinda Wolfe

r Save All Your

died on Sunday
Mrs . Lucinda Wolle, 86,
Pomeroy Route 3, died Sunday
evening at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Mrs. Wolfe was
preceded In death by her
parents, the late Henry and
Julia Ridenour Pooler, and a
Nina
Wolfe
daughter,
Robinson.
.Surviving are her husband,
William Wolfe, Pomeroy Route
3; two daughters, Mrs. Dwight
(Ella) Spenc~r , Pomeroy
Route 3, and Mrs . Edna
Bearhs, Pomeroy, Route 3;
three sons, Wayne, Pomeroy
Route 3; Glenroy, Olmsted
Falls, Ohio, and Alfred,
Pomeroy Route 3; 24 grandchildren,
38
greatgrandchildren, and one great great - grandchild.
Mrs. Wolfe was a member of
the United Brethren in Christ
Church at Mt. Hermon.
Funeral SA!rvices will be held
at 3 p.m. Wednesday at the MI.
Hermon Church in the Texas
Community with the Rev .
Robert Shook officiating .
Burial will he in the MI. Hermon Cemetery. Friends may,
call at the Ewing Funeral
· Home any time.

Saleslips From

l

·:·:·
;.;.:

;::::
FOUR OF 4 HOURS
HELSINKI - THE WESTERN ALLIES formally asked the
•'•'
The
Meigs
County
Chapter
of
Soviet Union today to relax its rules on travel and censorship and
build a new Europe based on "human contacts, cultural ex- the American Red Cross will
changes and a wider flow of information ." The detailed, seven- conduct a multi-media in- •:0!
page Western program ealled for better ueatment of Western structors first aid class in four ::::
businessmen and journalists in Communist countries, more four-hour sessions instead of
~
exchanges of newspapers, books, movies and television four one hour sessions, as was ·:-:·
;:_;
announced
.
programs, freer travel, the reunion ·of families divided by the
·.·:·:·:·:· ·. :·::..·.·. ·:·:· ··.;: ···:·:··-·...·.·.·.
cold war, better business contacts - even the right of young
lovers from East and West to marry without hiridrance.
The Western proposals were presented by the ambassadors
irom Belgium, Derunark and Italy when the 34-nation
preparatory talks for a European Security Conference resumed
after a one-month recess. If a security conference is held, the
ambassadors said, theSA! principles must guide its work.
1

L

~

Elberfelds
In Porp.eroy

:*

INDIANAPOLIS-{)HIO SUPERINTENDENT of Public
Instruction Martin W. Essex said states must band together to
produce television courses for elementary and secondary
schools. Essex, president-elect of the Council of Chief State
School Officers, told the group today that the abSA!nce of high
q'Jality lessons has curtailed television's potential for education . .
"The various states must band together to produce vitaily
needed telecourses which no one state or television station has
heen abie to afford," Essex said. He suggested a cooperative
organization among the 50 states, Canadian provinces and U. S.
territories.
·

-MEDI·REST
Suprema·
Mattress Sat

20,000 Protest
busing
.

OXON HILL, Md. (UP!) White .parents and studenls20,000 strong--turned out in
freezing temperatures Sunday
at a rally protesting racial
school busing in their prosperous Washington suburb.
After the rally, some of the
participants formed a motor-

cade and drove into the District movement.
of Columbia, the lights of their Smothers noted he has often
cars on and horns blowing. been called 1an "Uncle Tom."
District police said they count.. "I have no apology to make
ed 1,117 cars.
to anyone, black' or while,"
The demonstrators protested Smothers said.
an order by U.S. District Judge
Frank A. Kaufman requiring the uansfer of 32,000 of the E·R unit called
Prince Georges County, Md.,
sc~ool disb'ict's 162,000 pupils out three times
to achieve racial balance
starting Jan. 29. About one- The Middleport E-R sqll8d
fourth of the students are was called to the home of Mrs.
black.
Donald Geary, Page St., at 5:39
The rally at the Rosecroft a. m. Sunday for Mrs. Geary
R&amp;cetrack lasted more than who suffered a head Injury in a
two hours. Speaker alter fall . She was taken to Veterans
speaker drew cheera but the Memorial Hospital where she
loudest applause was for a was admitted. ' She was
black , Clay Smolbera, a Texas· discharged Sunday evening.
newspaper columnist who has
At 11:39 a. m. Sunday, the
joiried a nationwide antibusing squad . was calied for Mrs.
. .- - - - - - -.. Edith Spencer, Main St., who
JanUIJry Sale!
had fainted. Dr. R. R. Pickens
was called. At 6:49 p. m:
Sunday, the ftre dept. was
ADVENTURE
called to a car on fire on SOulh
" ...THIS IS THE BEST."
Deseret -News. SatiTak e CliY Ht---c" ·tLar·aegroup of
Third Ave. However, the'.fiie COMING
Misses' Sizes.
was extinguished before
· firemen left the station ''and the
SOON
·~
.call was cancelled.
2 D~YS. ONI;Y'

.,...,,·--"!'"'--1111.

s

NOW ONLY

Nationally Advertised at $79.95
Save $20 on a matlress and another S20 on a

bo~

famous unifused Construct1on• to give you a really com-

spring during Bemco 's · fabulous Roaring Twenties fortable night's sleep. And Bemeo's COII·Guard' support

Sale.
.
gives extra.firmness to keep your back in shape for years
The Med i-Aest Supreme is designed with Bemeo's to come.

IEMCO HIVES
TWENTIES
SA¥11188 ON THE
MEDI·REST CLASSJc,' TOO.·

THEIEMCO
QUILTOHAMA PREITliiE"

R~ARINI

with tuxuriGUS dOUble dtep
qulltlr~g .

The World'•

a,. ...., StMPino Pill•.

DRESSES
price

l~'s

. WED•• THURS.

MEIGS
THEATRE

Dress Shop

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

t•

'

LOCAl. TEMPS
Temperature In downtown
Pomeroy Munday . at ti a.m.
was 38 degrees;"with rain.

Ingels ~Furniture·· ~
.

'

.

, ~PEN •11. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS .
•
PHONE 992·2635 MIDDLEPORT

. IJ

.

•·

·

·'

.,

·

' .

.'

·

Bolnb Une now at.DMZ ,

i Baritone star
••••

. ~ , Communist lor~es below the Demilitarized ~
i Zone (DMZ&gt; today but U. S. warplanes were :~;

·.

•

ordered
to continue
escort
flights
for:Vietnam.
manrled ;;:; . Frank Guarrera, versatile
reconnaissance
planes
over
N~rth
Ame~ican military spokesmen said the · ~~: . young American baritone of
escortfighters.were ordered to bomb or attack .~l the Metropolitan Opera will
~ any Communist planes or antiaircrart gun .::l appear on the stage of the
~~-· firing on the reconnaissance planes.
~l Gallia Academy High &amp;:hoot
,
About 1,000 u. s. 852 b9mbers . and jet i.l.: audltoriumat8p.m. Thursdsy.
His concert is the second in the
• lighter-bombers b~sed in Southeast Asia and ~~~: current SA!ries of the TriGuam obeyed President Nixon's orders to end ~: County Cominunity Concert
~ r~ids on Nort~. Vietnam. But they _continued to ~~! Association.
~ htt .t argeb m Laos, South VIetnam and
Since his meteoric riSA! ' to
·w
~ .Cambodia.
· .
.~t faille following his win:::::::-;.-:-;:::::::::::::::=-~::::::.-=:::~:::::::-».".::::::::~w:::~:~:~:?.:~®:?.~:::!».::::::::::::::::~..: nin g
the
Me tropo Ii tan
'
Auditions of the Air
at 21, Guarrera has become
one of America's most sought
North Vietnamese apparently war exchange in Vietnam as after performers. In recent
have ag.·eed to releaSA! all u.s. soon as it receives an official BA!asons he not only has apprisoners of war in both North request from all parties In- peared more frequenUy at the
and South VIetnam In ex- volved In the war to do so. A Meuopolitan than any other
change for captured Com- Red Cross spokesman . said baritone, but is also a regular
munist uoops. The paper said there had been no such request guest star with the opera
the prisoner el&lt;change would as of Monday night, but Jdded: compapies of San Francisco,
occur within 60 days of the "We remain hopeful, however, Cincinnati, New Orleans and in
signing of a ceaseflre.
that we will be asked to go · Phlladelph[a
with
the
ahead with arrangements Phlladelp~ia Grand Opera
Also in Geneva, the International Red Cross said today It is shorUy and it is possible that Company.
Mr. Guarrera 's nearly 30
ready to organize a prisoner of there could he statements from
all sides later todsy."
operatic roles include the tiUe
::;
~

I

By UDIIed Pre11lalemallopa]
White HOUBe emissary Gen.
Alei'Bilder M. Haig conferred
for more than !Wo"bolll's todsy
with President Nguyen .Van
Thleu .in Saigon •mid gtOwing
speculation that a VIetnam
cease:flte is near: But Hanoi '
envoys said more high~evel
private talks are crucial
despite progreSs made so far in
Parill.
In Paris, tecbnlc~ll experts
agreed to meet again today In
their elforts to negotiate the
fine points of a cease-fire
agreement, conferring this
time in a suburban villa owned
by a wealthy Allierican industrialist. The technical
experts have heen meellng
dally since Jan. 8 to work out
cease-fire details in the event
of a ~ce accord.

Halg's mission .In . Saigon,
government sources aald, was
.to seek ·Thien's approval of. a
revised cease-fire formul.o. He
and and U.S. Ambassador
Ellsworth Bunker met for two
hours and 35 minutes with
Thieu.
Kissinger returned to Washington over the weekend
following a week of private
talks with chief Hanoi envoy Le
Due Tho In Paris. President
Nixon suspended bombing and
all other offensive milltary
actions Mondsy against North
Vietnam as a result of progress
made in the talks.
. Hanoi Radio in a broadcast.
monitored today ·in Saigon
reported the bombing halt of
the North but warned it has
been stopped and then resume~
before. "The American im-

periallsta have many times
stopped partially and entirely
the bombing of North Vietnam,
then resumed the bombing
a_g.ain more fi~rcely," tlie raqio
said.
.
Coinmunlst Viet~ese officials In Paris would not go
beyond their statements that
''progress baa been achieved"
in lost ·week's 23rd round of
Kissinger-Tho sessions. While
House Preas Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler said Kissinger would
return' "in the near future" for
more talks In Paris with Tho,
who stayed behind in the
French capital. Communist
diplomats in Paris said Kissinger's return was crucial to a
peace accord.
The newspaper The Guardian said in London today in a
dispatch lrom Geneva that ihe

•

*'··

•·

at y
•

en tine

Devoled To The lnlerests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL XXV NO. 191

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1973

Job easy on
•
mountam

PHONE 992·2156

'l

•

'

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The snowy bleakness of the Catoctin
Mountains holds a special fascination for Rlcbard Nixon. Aside
from providing him the privacy he so cherishes, the austerity of
lite· winter woods seems to fit his mood.
"I find that up here on top of a mountain It is easier lor me to
get on top of the job, to think ... objectively with perception about
the problems I must make decisions on," he told reporters at
camp David in Nowmber in his only session with them since the
election. '·
· · · '
"I developed that pattern early in the adminlsuation and am
go~ to follow it even more during the next four years ... "
The jubilation that marked his Inauguration four years.ago is
absent now. Nil on is approaching his second four years as the
moet powerful man on the world scene somewhat like a corporation executive dlssatisfied with his company's past performance and determined to do better in the future .
• "There was ihe glamor and strangeness of the place then and
the prerequlaitea tended to give it a euphoria we don't have this
year," said John D. Ehrllchman, a charter member of the first
Nlmn Whlll! HOUBe and one of the President's closest advisors.
''Now there is very much of a business-like mood."
According to his aides, Nixon has been confident he would be
're-elected since the Democrats nominated Sen. George McGov,
ern In July, and be has been pl.onning his second term since then.
During lbe first term it was a matter of translating promises
Into programs, asserting the Nixon style and becoming accustomed to the demands of. the office .
But this time, Nixon made very few specific promises in
wimlng the greatest political victory of his career. The size of his
vlctory-al.7 per cent of the vote and.majorities in 49 of the 50
states--and his belief that he won it on the basis of his stewardship during his first term has sb'engthened his confidence that
his approach to the probl!llllS confronting the nation are ·correct.
During the transition period before his first Inauguration,
Nixon worked on the 39th floor of the Hotel Pierre overlooking
New York City's Central Park. He organized a total of 22 task
forces to study a broad range of domestic and foreign policies
and made 113 appointment.!! to key positions In the executive
branch.
But this time he has spent most of the time since his reeJ.ection
· In quiet contemplotion with the aides closest to him- Ehrlichman, H.R. Haldeman and Henry A. Kissinger.
"He is a better manager now than he was then," Eilrllchman
IBid recently of his boss. "He delegates better and husbands his
lime better.
.
·
"He alao Is better on the issues because he has had four years
experience with them. It used to he that when some subjects
came up in meetings he would have to hedge it because he was
not always familiar with them.
"But he is very retentive. His da\11 bank is full at this point."
It may be that Nixon is ~ettlng a ~etter grasp on the federal
IKJreaucracy that he has spent so long trying to master. He
conatantiy has fiddled with the White House aPPjlratu.s during the
...t (our years and just completed a major overhaul of the top
cabinet and subcabinet posts ~d the toplevel White House
organizational chart.
.
.
There are only a few new faces.L..four at the cabinet level--fut
lhe structure has been changed so ·that Nixon now has to deal
only with four 'or five While .House aides instead of each IndlvidiUII cabinet member.
For a man who enjoys vlsillng dressing rooms after football
games to congratulate Uie winr1ers, Nixon's acilona after his own
team delivered hhn a massive re-election victory were
eomewhat guzzling. He asked for the resignations of about 2,000
toplevel membenofhis administration holdin~ political appoint..
ments--and accepted many of thein.
·
"The tendency is for an adminisb'ation to run out of steam
after tlla first four Y\lllr9 and Uien, to coast and usually coast
downhill," Nixon 8lid in explaining his actions. '·
"The only way that historical pattern can be changed 1s to
change not only some of lbe playeraiKJtal8o I!Oille of the plays."
., Hlil!I'IIICJ Claim that the mssslve bombing o1 North Vletnll!! over the' CI1'IBtJllas holldays which sparked . bitter and
'l!'ldespread protetr1a both at home and abroad already have
·eraded Nixon's new mandale conalderably.
But his supporters take a diff!!l"ent view. "He has just 6ad a
massive vote of confidence from the American people," Ehrllchman said. ·
"lthlr*tllePresldenlhaslherighttofeelwhatheisdoingnow
'
Continued p
.
(
on age 10)

III

I
; 1

I

TEN CENTS

I:._:~

i I :I II
'

1
i

Br. ~UGENE V. RISHER

,\I

I

~

·

:

I'

I

1
.

I

!

roles In "Rigoletto" and "The
Barber of Seville," Count ell
Uuna in 11 11 Trcivatore,"
Mircello in "La Bohime/'
"Count ·Alma viva in "The
Marriage of Figaro," and
&amp;:arpia in "Tosca."
Possessed of a natural acting
ability and an easy, masculine
grace on stage, Mr. Guarrera's
great success in these roles
may also be attributed 19 the
fact that, as part of his
preparation, he does a
thorough motivational study of
each character he portrays.
For the role of Escamillo in
"Carmen," he studied bullfighting, and even took lessons
in the art from experts Barnaby Conrad and Sidney .
Franklin - minus the bulls, of
course. The result has been an
overwhelming success. In a
recent review the Cincinnati
Enquirer declared:
"He is Escamillo, proud,
MR. GUARRERA
handsome, a veritable volcano
of virility which explodes ijlthe
midst of ecstatic female ·ad- stopped breathing for what
mirers. When Mr . Guarrera seemed like minutes; when the
began · his famed Toreador aria wa~ over they burst into
Song, the audience literally wild· applause."

Guard ·shift
cut by half
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (UP!) - Sixty-two of the 117 guards on
the ftrst shift of the Southern Ohio Correctional facility failed to
report for work today in a dispute over seniority rights and
·"unsafe working conditions," said Superintendent W. J .
Whealon.
Whealon said the work stoppage was no problem "at this
polntln time" but could get bad if more guards join in the strike.
He said there are only 627
prisoners at the new facility up for the overnight shift .
and we are "getting roughly 70
The superintendent said the
a week," as the Ohio Peniten- striking guards were citing
tiary In Columbus is being ''personal business reaons and
pllased out. ·
various aliments" as their rea''They (the striking guards) sons for not working today.
are citing seniority rights," he
Sli!d. "And they consider beca111e we are understaffed we
have· unsafe working conditions."
Whealon aald the problem
apparently involves how many
guards will be transferred
The State Environmental
lrom the Ohio pen.
Protection
.Agency (EPA) has
"!'have been given instrucilons not' to hire anyone until given the Meigs County
they know what they are going Commissioners tentative
to do at the Ohio Penitentiary," approval of a sanitary landfill
said Whealon. ,"1 have roughly site locatl!d off of SR 143 on the
130 vacancies for correctional Norman . and Mildren Humphrey property.
officers ....
The commission, meeting in
Whealon said the normal
complement of gusrds showed regular session, disclosed the
county now must supply the
site with elecb'icity, provide a
well, erect a storage building
and toilet facilities. .
In other business , the
commission opened bids on a
dozer for the county highway
sites within the villoge limits, department. Bids were subthe survey says.
mitted by Rish Equipment,
The survey further · shows Parkersburg, in the amount of
that commercial land use $43,000 ; Walker Machine,
occupies 18 acres of lond, 24 Parkersburg and Charleston,
pet., with increased growth of $38,587, and Marks Tractor,
dle village and of the·county to .Columbus, $41,024, with an
ploce additional demand of alternate. bid of $45,084. Bids'
these1 commercial facilities. will he studied and awarded
Some expansion may he an- later .
ticipated and should be
James Roush, compliance
grouped . into concentrations and sanitation officer and
where .existing at the preSA!nl building inspector, was
time. Sufficient demand to authorized to attend a health
·support a new regional center clinic in Columbus Jan. 29 - 31.
is not anticipated, SurVeys Attending were Robert Clark,
Unlimited reports.
Charles R. Karr, and Warden
Twenty acres of M)dd~port's Ours, commissioners, and
land are used for industrial Martha Chambers, clerk.
purposes and Increased ac' (Continued on page 10)

Landfill
site OK

SURVEYS UNLIMITED, Cable, Ohio, the planning firm
for Meigs County, In its report has recommended
replacement of the Middleport fire station. This project is
now underway. Fire department members are working on a
voluntary basis to complete the interior of the structure built
by the X-L Corp., Columbus. Here Kevin Dailey and Jim

Daniels, right, !lfe with Pete Kloes. who is working on a
doorway in the meeling room of the new structure. The
meeting room is done in birch paneling with the floor in a red
stone designed vinyl. AU of the work is not expected to be
done until spring and at that time an open house will be held
to show the new .fire station to the public.
.

One fourth of homes run down
Of 932 housing units in
Middleport, 25 pet. of 11\em
have been listed in poor condition, according to the survey
compiled on behalf of the
Meigs County Planning
Commission by Surveys
Unlimited of Cable, Ohio.
According to the survey,

repair and routine maintenance will eliminate most of
the 237 houSA!s found to be in
poor condition. The survey
recommends that an aid would
be releasing the larger and
older homes to young people
who. can and will maintain
them; smaller apartment type '

Citizenship tests won by
Edith Mees of Meigs
Edith Ann Mees, daughter of
Mr · .and Mrs, Malcolm Mees,
Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, took
first ploce In the county In the
annual Good Citizenship Tests
sponsored by Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter of the
Daughterli of the ·American
Revolution. Miss Mees is a
SA!nior at Meigs High School.
First place winner at
Southern High School was
Debra Lyhn Nelson, and at
Eastern High &amp;:hoot -the lOp
scorer w,as · Karle Robin
Humphrey·
Two girls from each schoOl
participated in the contest.
Others taking the lest on
Unlteil Slates and Ohio history
and government were Patti
Ann Well ol Meigs, Lucy Jean
Holler qf Eastern, and Judith
Ann Robert.!! of ,Southern. The
tests were given in the locaL
schools - the latter part of
Novemb~r.
They
were
prepared ~nd scored by the
Ohio · DAR Citizenship committee . .Winners were·· an nouilced Monday by Mrs.
Har_old ,Sargent, local c on~~~
chanfnan.
The Good Citizen of each
sch!l'Jl will receive a certificate

•

~

·w:~:m::.o:::1::::.::::-.:m:::::::::;:;:=:=~-:=:::;:::::=::::::::::::::::;::::::::::=:::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::t=:=::::::::::::::i::~

•

.naRO l CO(! l ng I turn:·~~~~u~~(~:!~ ;it~~~~!::~:~~~~ I •
gtvmg concert
·
·
a
.
o
·
'
'
·
_
p·
,
.
ea
.
·
.
c.
e.
.
.
~
~
lk
t

' '

...·\

J

'I

homes at lower rental
payments should be made
available for ·the elderly.
(According to recent reports a
new housing development,
apartment type, will take place
in the near future on'Front St.)
The survey also states that
the Middleport fire station is
due for replacement. (This is
being taken care of through a
new fire station which is expeeled to be completed in the
spring. Voters of the town
approved a bond issue to pay
for the new station and these
funds have been teamed with
volunteer labor and conuibutions for the new
headquarters.)
About Middleport, the survey

also states that there has been
a negative growth of the
village, the population
decreasing by 589 people, 17
pet. , from 1960 to 1970.
However, due to the mine
development, it is anticipated
in the survey that the
population ' will increase
through the 1980s.
Residential land uses in
Middleport occupy 422 acres of
land or 58 pet. of the village's
land area. An increase in
population will create a need
for additional residential land.
The more level areas on the
hill tops hehihd the vlllage will
he used for residential purposes, but firat priority should
he to fill in the undeveloped
'

'

'

Police, fire reports made
Charles Hoffman was hired
as janiror of Pomeroy city hall
replacing Dwight Parker, who
Is retiring, by Pomeroy council
in re~ular session Monday
night.
Hoffman will continue
employment as a dispatcher
for Pomeroy police.
Don
Collins, counsel
president, presided in the
absence 1?£ Mayor William
EDITH MEES
Baronick"who is a patient at
Holzer Medical Center.
,
In other business, the fire
of award and a good citizenship · report lor 1972 submitted by
pin. Certificates will he sent to Jlenry Werry showed the
the schools for presentation, !lepartment answered the
while the pins will he awarded iollowing kinds ol In-town
by Ret.urm Jonathan ·Meigs calls: five cars, six houses, six
Chapter at its annual Charter brush; total estimated losses of
Day llincheon io be held in · $8,698.64; took three lire drills,
March at the Meigs Inn.
using a"total of 253 nian hours ;
As the county winner, Miss washed the parking lot at The
Mees will now c'omp;,te for Jones Boys; out Or town calls:
state recognition.
live cars, six houses and five

brush, estimated total losses of
$8,650; using 372 man hours;
called to standby at a train
wreck, answered three calls to
Middleport, and one to Pt.
Pleasant.
Chief of Police Jed Webster
submitted his' report for 1972:
made 475 arrest.!!, Investigated
19J accidents, and parking lot
meter receipts were $15,432.50,
sueet meters, $19,764.50, and
fines and costs, $17,218.95.
Council voted to spend
money r~celved from revenue
sharing as follbws : $3,500 for a
police .cruiser, $3,000 for
recreation facilities on
Mechanic Sb'eet; pay $7,000
due Shelly Company for
balance due on old street
repair ; $12,000 on street repair
this year and $2,000 to repair
the parking lot wall.
The,third required reading of
an ordinance requiring a 125

Rural store
is entered

deposit by persons who erect
signs or posters in town was
The Meigs County Sheriff's
approved. The deposit will he Dept. investigated three acreturned if the posters or signs cidents Monday and one
are removed within 10 days breaking and entering. The
after the event being ad- B&amp;E occurred sometime
vertised.
Monday morning at the Mont
Councilman Jim Mees ob- Vance Grocery Store in
jected to the citizens' surv~y of Snowville where entry was
Pomeroy that appeared in gained by breaking out a glass
Monday night's edition of The in a back door. What was taken
Daily Sentinel. Council in its - if anything - is unlast meeting agreed to hire Pat determined.
Meeker of Surveys Unllmiled
At 7:35a.m. Monday on Twp.
Inc., to make a survey of the road 21, in Salem Twp .,
town and from It make a Wllllalfl E. Morton, Shelton,
master plan which could be a Conn.', driving west, went Off
guide to future development the road on the right jumped a
and growth. Cost of the survey .ditch, and hit a tree. Morton
is $5,800, the town's share was not Injured and no citation
being $2,317.
was Issued. There was heavy
Council ~greed that since the · damage to his truck.
form appearing in the paper
At 12:45 p.m. Monday on
did not require a signature, a Twp. Road 14 in Columbia
more detailed form should Twp., Wanda A. Swearinger,
(Continued on page 10)
(~tinued on page 10)

�'i

'
.

&amp; THINGS.

0

+++

Thirty-flr~t

Presidenl Herbert Hoover
(Admlhislraticn : March 4, 1929-March 3, 1933)

"Prosperity is just around the corner"
i'Jo President began his administration under
more deservedly auspicious circumstances than
Herbert Hoover, and no President left the White
House so thoroughly and undeservedly discredited .
:\It hough wooed by both major parties,' Hoover
easily donned the cast-off mantle of President
Coolidge and received the Republican nomination
unanimously on the first ballot. His Democratic
opponent was the popular Gov . .'\ lfrcd E. Smith
of New York.
"
Smith's Roman Catholicism and "wet" stand on
prohibition cost him millions of votes. Hoover
denounced the introduction of religious bigotry into
the campaign, but' he stood firmly in favor of prohibition.
Hoover represented rugged individuali sm , personal respectability, political conservatism and
fiscal responsibility, and he won with 58.2 % of the
votes. The national mandate was clear: keep the
boom booming.
The boom had been slowly collapsing in the
farm segment of the economy for ten yea rs, a fact
recognized by President Hoover's promise in his

· ·

9:00 - Medical Centers, 10; Eye to Eye20.
9:30- Fine Art of Goofing orr 20.
10:00 - Soui3J; News 20; Cannon 8, 10; Cole f!orter In Paris.
11: 00 - News 3, 4. 6, B, \0, 13, 15~
]1 : 30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15. Movie "Frankenstein" 6, 13;
VIrginian 8; Movie "H.ell Below Zero" 10.
1:00 - News 4, 13.
;

Finally forced to act by the rising tide of misery
and despair, Hoover was ambivalent. He asked
Congress to es tablish a Reconstruction Finance
Corp. to aid businesses and home owners with
loans, then angrily vetoed the bill as a "gigantic
banking and pawnbroking business." He . later
approved the meas ure, however, although Congress
had doubled the appropriation to $3.3 billion.
The last two years of Hoover's Administration
were troubled ones for the President and the nation .
As former President Taft said of Hoover, "He;did
not speak the language of the politicians." He did
not speak the language of the people, either, and
his tumbling popularity hit rock bottom .in the election of 1932 when Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt
crushed Hoover's 'bid for a second term with a
greater plurality than he had earned against Alfred .
E. Smith four years earlier.
Despite his humiliating rejection by the majority of the politicians and the people, President
Hoover kept his dignity and never-failing sense of
civic duty to the end.
On Jan . 13, 1958, Gen. Mark Clark, president
of the Citadel, South Carolina State Military College, bestowed the hoporary degree of doctor of
Ia ws on Herben Clark Hoover, now the world's
most honored elder statesman. It was the eightythird degree the former President had received, one
for each year of his life.

·
'
"
,
.
,
"
·
,. .Voi:ce along ·Br''Way· I The Tra.nsler
Jacoby-Style
,

: .~ ~~~.l:ee.::

.

Stumpf sets Cap mark

By Helen and'Sue Bottel
· TV CommerclaltJ Prudllb?
Rap:
.
Can anyone tell' me why TV conimercials are so prudish
about some things and so sexy about others?,
· ~
Like what's wrong with openly sjraymg .an underarm with
deo¢brant, yet even that· octopus gal with all the
just
sprays in the general dlrecti&lt;J!l. Are underarms obscene yet, and
if so why?
.
. ,
Also, they never show even the "rim" in bathrooms. What's
so awful about a toilet?
·.
On the other hand, soap, perfume, ' men's cologne, etc.
depend on se• to sell.
Maybe you could "throw this queation down the well and see
if it bubbles"- imean, gell! an answer from ad men or peOple in
charge of commercials. - OKAY?

arms•

"

' '"' ''" ,.,

being greeted by gently sketched animals in the
BY JACK O'BRIAN
St. Francis of Assisi tradition, with the caption :
POSTSCRIPTS ON THE HOLIDAY
NORTH .
18
NEW YORK (KFS) - Christmas _cards "Softly, softly seek the Child, all creatures
¥KJ6543
come but once a year and then are, usually, great arid small. Be you gentle, be you wild, His
• Q64
blessing
sings
to
you
all,"
signed
alsp
by
Merv's
glanced at and tossed out; we've been off on a
.985
Yule holiday and hadn't seen most of our cards; Julann and Tony.
WEST
EAST
The incomparable Hildegarde's card flew a
ergo, we perused them at leisure instead of
.Q863
.KJ975
during the pre-Christmas-New Year hysteria, three-dimensional angei•s "BleSs You!•'Hiidy's ¥Al0
• 97
•
J
1083
• 72
personal
message
wished
"Joy
and
peace
and
and were impressed generally with the ahnost
.Q102
.KJ76
single-minded hope and optimism of their especially - love."
SOUTH (D)
Portland Hoffa Allen Rines, widow of Fred
messages:
.Al04
Bob Hope, erstwhile hawk, wished us a Allen and now wed happily to ex-handleader and
¥Q82
Merry C!rlstmas and Happy New Year .with advertising executive Jo~ Rines, sent their old·
+AK95
.A43
"Peace at Otrlslmas is the sublhne moment for friend wishes with their photos looking ecBoth vulnerabJe
all of us ll)ls year"; Bob's Vietnam appearances statically happy indeed : we seem to meet Porty
West
N.orth East South
annually to perk up our troops naturally· drew and Joe more often in Hong Kong or other
lN.T.
the ire of bubbleheads who actually resent foreign lands than in New York these last few Pass 2+
Pass 2¥
anything done for American boys; we know of years, but Chrislmas does bring us closer. And Pass 3¥
Pass 4¥
one nouveau riche ass who in his liberal ' our Hong Kong friend, Ascot Otang, rushes his ·Pass Pass Pass
Operilng lead- + J
ignorance even castigated the noblest civilian holy Yule greetings by air mail on a ca.rd driven
arti.stically
with
rickshaws
in
a
painting
of
free
wartime project, the USO, as if it, and not
'Eisenhower-Kennedy-Johnson had declared Chinese women and children. Not political; just ·By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
escalatea war in VIetnam and Nixon had not de- the freedom of Hong Kong.
The four level transfer re·
Dina Merrill and CllH Robertson opted for a sponse to · an opening no.
escalated it. Oh, well - we wish even them a
Peter Max-decorated mod.Card without holy trump bid was invented
happy peaceful New Year.
· nil'
1 d
around 1951 by David Carter
Dorothy Lamour's Christmas· greeting nor ho!idaY slg
lcance except to P ea • "Let of St. Louis and independentprayed for "Peace and Happiness" now and the Beauty of the world be preserved," which ly by Olle Willner of Stockthroughout the New Year, in patriotic colors. sort of says it. Jack E. Leonard appears on our holm. Willner also extended
Old friend Joan Crawford's earllesl-()f-611 doorstep in a characteristically noisy but not it to the three level and
Otristmas greeting was a seasonally-colored sacreligious greeting posing Fat Jack, bride Richard Troxel of Minne·
, adopted Gladya'-kids apoli$ extended it down to
note to "My dear Jack and Mrs. O'Brian" Gladys and Jack's
.
the two leveL
l'ishing us "affectionately" to be "blessed with Brenda, Unda and Wanda waving banners
In 1955 Oswald Jacobytook
God's gentle.touch tbroughou~ the New Year"; proclaiming Faith, Peace, Joy, Hope and Love, Troxel's idea, amplified it
and the Slime always ~ . this great star.
cheering off '72 and foreseeing all the best In and developed the Jacoby
transfer bids· that are now
The Most
Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen '73; 'nJI!Ir banners to God's ears.
Pete and Edie (Adama) CandOli tnnnpeted in general expert use in
also pe!lned his holy greetings personally in
peaceful
wishes with photo of their off&amp;pring every par~ of the world.
theatrical metaphor, citing Cbrist's Drama of
Tara
Josh
Mia and Carrie. Edle looked happy . The bas1c prmc1ple of the
Redemption and our roles as He has assigned
'
'
l.iacoby transfer IS that a
them: "During the New Year it will be our joy to at last. The Bruce (and Marcia) &amp;lyders of tbe lwo-diamond response to a
induce the ·other actors before the Curtain of "21" hierarchy were proud enough of their no-trump opening says noth·
Ufe 'rings down, to shout: 'Author! Author!" young family (Michael and Jenny Lynn) that ing about diamonds, but
ending with a cheery "Merry Christ-Mass." they posed at Santa's arrival apot, their
Great man, the Archbishop.
fireplace in their new Long Island man.ie, with
The Almanac
Famous old atsr of vaudeville, musical ~ace. Gene Krupa and his Mary Grace and ByUDltedPresslnlernatlooal
comedy, movies, radio and TV, Jack Haley, Bee-Gee posted a card bearlrig a Yule candle · Today Is Tuesday, Jan. 16,
whose cheerful 70s seem happier than even his lighting the way to peace and every New Year the 16th day of 1973 with 349 to
early and middle years, sent greetings and the Happiness.
.follow.
news our family will be remembered In his
Jerry Sllvennan of dress manufacturing
The moon Is approaching Its
prayers and those of the Marlanist fathers fame sent not only hopeS and prayers for peaa; fuJi phase.
through the Jfoly Season arid throughout the but a contribution in'OIIl' name to the U. S.
The morning stars are
New Year. Lovely old friends, Jack and Flo.
Committee for UNICEF, line of the ·finest Mercury, · Venus, Mars and
We hear dependably at Cbristmas from greetings anyone might wish. ·Japanese Jupiter.
a gal we've admired and corresponded with restaurant tycoon •Rocky Aoki, in a typical
TheeveningstarisSaturn.
for years, Gertrude Ederle; Trudy's the pioneer executive take.over, usurped Santa's sleigh
Those born on this date are
liberated lass who was first to swim the Engilah carrying a quintet of his chefs delivering Peace under the sign of Capricorn.
Channel and we're always delighted to find her by reindeer-power; with Donner and Blltzen
Famed American designer
in fine health; her card bear~~ an enchantinR and their elk. A great lady we've known longer and woodcarver Samuel MclnOliTI!!f - lves Yule vista ''with wann re- as a fan than she's known us these last :10 years, tire was born Jan. 16, 1757.
. gards"; reciprocated always.
Odette Myrtil, atsr of vaudeville, stage and
Onthlsdayinhistory:
·
~ of the great old fllm ,and stage · screenandnowaNew.Hope,BuckaCounty,Pa.,
In 1833, the Pendleton .Act
oomedlennl!ll, Ruth Donilelly's card shouts restaurateuse, Insists .it's "The same oid face went into' effect, providing f91'
Ruth's own consistent '')OY" in Ouiatmas.reda . with the same old wishes ,..;. ooly more so" for a tbe U.S. Civil Service Commisand greena sent between performances In "No, paacefullli73, wearing a somehow FrenciH:hlc, slon.
No, Nanette." Alexis Smith and Craig Sievens even as Odette always has been, Cllrlstmas tree
In 1920 the 18th Amendment
sent "The Mer'rleat and the Happiest" on a for a frock. Florence and ~ (Pres. of "21") · 1o the
Constitution became
beautifully priltine white card decorated with
Ktiendler pleaded for peace d!Bgulsed as Mr. effective,prohlbiUngthemanusingle tiny Cbrlstmss tree . .
and·Mrs. Snowman.
facture, sale or trlllllpC!rtation .
Merv Griffin's family card shows The Babe
of intoxicating liquors.

.2

Okay:
Another question, while we're at It : How come television is
still pretty well censored, but on radio (especially call~n abows),
almost anything goes ... and young people listen to radio more
than they do to TV? Not that I'm for strict censorship - just
equality. - SUE

+++

Dear ijap :
I was interested In your column on the European hitchhiker
and his suggestion that America develop "safe" hitching via
registration and identity cards.
ll'sa shamethatthis kind of travel is downgraded In the U.S.
for it's a great way to go.
Up until a few years ago (I'm now 56) I did a great deal of
hitchhiking. I've been all over the 11.S., Mexico and Canada, had
a wonderful time, met a lot of fine people and a few odd ones. I
could never have travelled had I not used my thumb.
I've never been hurt or forced to do anything against my will.
I've never beeo in jail. My reCipe is: gull!, plenty of Identification, a few dollars of your own, and the spirit of adventure.
And I wouldn't trade my memories for anything. - VERY
YOUNG 56

.

Rev.

guarantees that responder
holds at least five hearts. In
similar manner the twoheart response guarantees at
least five spades.
Today's hand shows the
Jacoby transfer at work.
North's two-diamond bid
tells South to bid hearts.
North's rebid to three hearts
invites a game contract and
South Is delighted to accept
the Invitation.
Four hearts makes easily
and would also make if
North were declarer, but the
transfer bid gave North a
chance to invite game. With·
out the transfer bid North
would probably have con.
tented himself with a two
heart response and game
might not have been
reached. ·

TODAY'S QUMTION
You do pass. West doubles and
East pass. What do
you do now7

North and

SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
STEERS-Choice, 39-40;
good, 36·.35-37 .50; standard,
29.75-32.
HEIFERS - .Choice 35.1&lt;136.75; good, :if!i().34.1il.
COWS-Commercial, 27.5029.10; utility, 24-26:50; canners
and cutters, .18-21.25.
BULLS ..-. . Commercial,
31.60-35.25:
stockers and
{Ht:WSPAPU ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
feeders steer calves, 42.50. 50.10; heifer calves, 35.40-44;
yearling, 35-40:50.
The bidding has been:
West North East South SHEEP - Choice, 32.25;
3+
3¥ good, 29.
Pass , 3 N.T. Pass
HotS - 200-230, 38; No. I,
You, South, hotd:
;13.25; 23&lt;1-240, 32.75 sows, 25.7~
~ Z ¥ AQ9875 + A3Z • KQ7 26- boars, 24.

CARNIVAL

by Dick Turner ·

T3t&gt;O IV

••

~OTOM

4

•

••

!'I'll

,,
,.

j

'

•
'•
"•
•

Redmen

to

'

play tonight

•
M:z·ss· ourz· lS
upset 81-79
By United Press lnternatfonal
Missouri suddenly has taken
a complete turnabout.
The Tigers, unbeaten in their
first 12 games, had their streak
ended last Saturday with a 71).
55 loss to Kansas state. The
after effect seems to be
lingering, however, as
Colorado made it two losses in
a row Monday night with an 8179 overtime victory over the
eighth:ranked Tigers.
Pat Kelly hit a 10-fool jump
shot with 48 seconds left and
then added a free throw ~th

SHIRT
FINISHING
.

Robinson's Cleaners

Henry ·Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us

for income tax help.

r

720LDSCUTlASS
SUPREME
H.T. SEDAN

'3795
·. ~au &amp;.Yan Zandt

TOPFLITE
BARERIES

AU
SIZES

24 Mo. · 36 Mo. • 48 Mo. llld
Life T1111e GU.niaes .

Downing-Childs Agency .Inc. .
PHON El92-2342 · ·

~~·

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

INSURANCE • BONUS .·
MUTUAL FUNDS
.
Meigs County's Oldest and largest

. Insurance Agency

with only two doctol'll"

r

304 E. Main 992-3795 Pomeroy
Open 9 Til 5 Mon. Thru Sat

$17 95

See Us At···

"You mean to eay you ordered 15 tuper deluxe '

OOIOC1BLOC.-

Tune Into A TUNE-UP Here, Soon

In Stock
'19

,,

~·

ba::!or~~:~tw:":

share dulles with Klhner next
Sunday :· "Miami won the
battle of the turnovers and that
was that.''

points, 17.of them in the ~~econd
half, and John Brown also had
28 for Mlssourt, which turned
the ball over 31 tllnes.
In another Big Eight Conference game, Lee Harris scored
22 points to pace Nebraska to a
74-67 upset of Oklihoma and
Mike Robins on scored 38
points, including an 1~
jump shot with two seconds left
just 10 seconds remaining to
to carry Michigan State to a 7f&gt;.
11ft Colorado to .the victory, its
74.Big Ten ,victOry over Iowa.
fifth against eight losses.
Allen Hornyak's 24 points
Missouri led, 43-35, at the
carried Ohio State to an IJ$.79
half, but Scott Wedman and
victory over Goergia Tech and
Lee Haven combined to rally
Ken Wolfe's 18 points
Colorado to a 72-70 lead. highlighted Harvard's 105-Q
Mlsourl's Steve Blind sent the
rout of Northeastern in the
game into overtime with a 30Beanpot Tournament in
foot jumper with 90 seconds left
Boston.
in regulation time and the
In Southeastern Conference
Tigers led by as many as three
action, .John Snow's 20 points
points in the overtime before
lifted Tennessee to a 75-li6
Kelly emerged as the hero.
romp over F1orlda and f&gt;.foot-11
Haven led Colorado with 28
Jim Andr!lWs hit 17 of his 27
points In the second half as
Kentucky
cruised past

Sentilll

•

1

•

UCLA remains
first in poll

that is quite an accomplishment because any
team in this league can beat
any other team.

111GB POINT CARD TROPHY WINNER- Winners of high point card at the Side Hill GWl
Club recently were, left, Charles· Gilmore, Rutland, and Kent Smith, right, of Jackson .
Presenting the winners with trophies was June Yost of Rutland. Not pictured Is lied Eblin of
!\Ulland who also won a trophy.

·Davis 'soph of year'·

u.s:

,.

stadium.
play eo well aU year.''
Other capsule comments on
-Atlanta linebacker:Tommy
the Super Bowl:
Nobis: "I ' was pulling for
- C\Juck Noll, Pi~burgh Washington because they were
coach who will dlreci the AFC the NFC club and I think there
In the Pro Bowl: "I'm just Is stm some rivalry between
disilppointed it was not us out the conferences. But you have
there. But I thought Miami to hand it to Miami. They won
played wen. They didn't play 17 in a row. I don't care what
better than usual, since they ldnd of schedule they played

*

~

II' town

Leonard RDbinson scored 33 ·
points · in• TeMeasee State't
eighth win of the season
against five lo~$. Central
State, 'led by Lanrils Timmons•
19 points, is IIOW 3-10.
.

The Rio Grande Redmen
NEW YORK (UP!) - The toward the top of the rating~~.
meet
Wright State UniversitY
UCLA Bruins picked up their The 49ers got by Pacific, 91-115,.
56th and 57th consecutive at Pacific last Sunday, then tonight at the Xenia high school
victories last week .to once easily defeated Fresno State, gym in a non-conference game.
The game Is being played at
again top this week's 92 -72, Thursday night.
"
Marquette took a twnble Xenia because the new sports
. basketball ratings of the
By MILTON RICHMAN
· United Press International from third to seventh. The facility at Wright State is not
UPI Sports Editor
·
Board of Coaches, In a week Warriors defeated Loyola (lli.) yet compl~ted.
Rio Grande, fresh from a 96GLENDALE, Calif. (UP!)- "Of course, I'm for it. I've been that saw a complete reshuf- on Tuesday by ao 82-77 score, 84 win over Malone, will take a
fling of the top 10 teams.
but their flirtation wiih
dOin' It all my life, ain't I?"
·
UCLAamasaedtheirusual35 defeat- the Warriors had 4o8 record into the game while
casey Stengel, the world's leading authority on designated
Wright State is 1&lt;1-1. Wright
pinch-llitters-he has designated more of them in his lime, first"Place votes and 350-point triumphed in most of their
State's :lone defeat came
perhaps, than any other man alive-paused a moment from total in the seventh week of this games this season by only a
few points-caught ·up with against Mid-American power
Georgia,~P!llt!!l'ing around ill the garden of hls neat but unpretentious, season's poll.
Miami of Ohio. ·
After
topping
Stanford,
BU7,
them
Saturday
afternoon
as
In a key smaU college game,
white stucco Spanish-type home here to talk about the American
The Redmen, after tonight's
on
Friday
the
Bruins
received
Notre
Dame
handed
Marquette
League'•s newly adopted rule for the upcoming season.
COLUMBUS (tlPI) - An·
Davis was injured in,an auto No . 2-ranked Sam Houston
game, returns home Thursday
a
mild
scare
from
the
its
first
foss
of
the
season,
71-69,
"It's gotta help," said the 82-year-old former manager of the
thony Davis, tailback on the accident last weekend in which State, with James Lister
evening
to
play
Central
State.
scoring 30 points and grabbing
Dodgers, Bravea, Mets and Yankees, referring to the use of University of Califorma,losing giving the Warriors their first
Saturday, Rio will · play at Southern California football he suffered a partially severed 25 rebounds, ripped McMurry,
by
35-33
at
the
half,
before
home-court
loss
in
82
games
at
specified pinclH!Itters in place of the pitchers without the pitCedarville in a Mid-Ohio team lllat beat Ohio State ln the · Achilles tendon. TDC officials 72-58, to remain unbeaten.
going on to a 69 -50 decision. Milwaukee Arena.
chers having to leave the game.
Rose Bowl, _has been named said the Injury probably would
Behind the 12-0 Bruins the . Missouri, Providence and Conference game.
"Some pitchers are never gonna get to hlt this way," a
"sophomore player of the preventhimfromattending the
reshuffiing produced three AI· Kansas State closed out the top
newsman said to ol' Case.
year" by the Touchdown Club 18th annual awards dinner here
iantlc Coast Conference teams 10. The Tigers became the
"Which ones?" came right back.
· of Columbus.
· Jan. 26.
"The ones who can't hit anyway," he said, answering his own in the Nos. 2-4 spots. North third team in last week's top Little Tornados
Davis scored six touchdowns
question . "They're never gonna take the good ones out, like Carolina State took over five to lose its first game of the
against
Notre Dame after
second 'place behin&lt;! UCLA, season, suffering a 7~ loss at win at Hannan
(Bob) Gibson, are they?
becoming a Trojan regular late
••
The Dajly
garnering 25 of the 35 second- · the hands of Kansas state. The
s'A ME DAY
Got Hell For It
in the season. He piled up 158
DEYOTID 't'O THE ..
HANNAN,
W.
Va
.
.
.;.:_
The
place
votes
arid
300
points.
The
.
surging
Wildcats
also
defeated
...
SERVICE
"Sure, I used to believe in lakin' pitchers out," Stengel said. "I
INTEREST OF
yards and scored once against
little
Tornadoes
set
the
Wolfpack
knocked
off
Duke,
94SMU
by
.
t
wo.
·
MEIGS-MASON
ARIA
In At 9-0ut At 5
believed in .lakin' other guys out too no matter what inning it was.
Ohio State.
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
example - which wasn't
Use
OUr Free Parking Lot
I took (Ciete) Boyer out once in the second inning of a World 87, Wednesday and Lehigh, 11~
Exec. Ed.
The TDC also announced
'
followed
for
their
reserves
ROIERT
HOEFLICH,
53,
Friday,
and
edged
Series in Pittsburgh, before he ever came up to bat, and got hell
City Editor
Monday
that
Michigan
tackle
College
BK
B
Results
Maryland, the No. 3 team this By United Press International by destroying the Hannan
for It, remember?
Published daily u :cept
reserves 64-27 here Friday Saturday by The Ohio Volley Paul Seymour, a 6-5, 255-pound
week,
87-85, on Sunday at
Bunpot Classic
"I did It because they had scored three-lour runs in the first
Publishing Company , 111
Ali-American, would be given
Round!
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
night.
Court St., Pomeroy. Ohio.
inning. So I put in apinchhltter. Why in hell not? I'm behind, ain't College Park, Md., to remain Harvard(Final
105 Nrlheaslrn 63
an
"award
of
distinction.''
Southern poured in 40 points 45769. Buslntsa Oltice Phon•
I? How in hell am I gonna catch 'em in nine inning~~ if 1 don't try unbeaten at 11.0 as of games
(Consolation!
"2·2156, Edilorlol Phone "2·
in the middle quarters. The 2157.
to? It's too late to catch 'I'll tomorrow. The guy I put in to hit for played tbrough Saturday. The Boston U. 82 Boo Coli. 72
Second c11n postege Plid at
East
hapless Wildcats never had a Pomeroy,
Boyer was outfielder-first baseman Dale Long who used to play only other unbeaten major F.Dcknsn.Rthfrd
Ohio.
73 Brldgpt 58
chance as their opponents shot
National advertising
for Pittsburgh. The fe!Ja hit a line drive that was caught. We team in the COWltry Is UCLA. Cleve St. 90 St. Fron.Pa. 85
repr·uentatlve Bottintlll ·
a dazzling 51 pet. from the Gallagher,
The Terps, who disposed of Fla. Sou : 93 Wm. Ptrsn 67
scored some runs anyway, but we lost. Remembe~ the big smell
Inc ., 12 East •2nd
Fairmont 105.W.Va. Tech 75
51
.,
Now
York
Clly, Now York .
floor.
All
of
the
Southern
Virginia,
93-74,
Tuesday
before
they made about It? They said It was Boyer's first World Series,
Del. St. 78 Lncln u.. Pa. 54
Subscrlpllen rifts: Dt ·
Sunday's loss, dropped to third, Fairfield 71 Colgate 53
reserves saw action. Nease llvtred by curler where
and how could I be so mean and take him out?"
South
·
collected
16 points and Dunning •vallable 50 cents per wuk;
plcldng
up
237
points.
North
Qtsey stengel feels the AL's new dealgnated pinch-llltter rule
By Matar Route whert carrier
Jacksonvl
94
Pan
Am. 64
foll~wed with 14 points for strvlu not avalltble : One
can't help but prolong the playing careers of certain older Carolina, sixth in last week's Tenn. 75 Florida 56
month S1.75. By mail In Ohio
poll, moved up to fourth, just Ky. 89 Georgia 68
Southern.J!rown pulled down 9 and
players.
w . va .• One vear S14.00.
St. 85 Ga. Tech 79
rebounds for the winners. Six months S1 .25 . . Thru
"How can anybody say this is a bad thing?" he asked. "I used edging out Minnesol11 by one Ollie
Ala . 104 Trlnlly-Tex. 63
monthS 14 .50. Subscrir,tlon
point, by virtue of a 92-58 Auburn 82 Miss. St. n
Richards was Hannan's high price
it with the Yankees and we won ten peMants."
Includes Sunday T mu.
Sentinel.
scorer with 12 points.
drubbing of Clemson Wednes- Florence St. 76 SE La. 53
Mlze Most Suceesslal
Reason 10. -H &amp; R Block lax preparers
Stetsn 76 St. Mry's.Tex. 62
Of all the men Stengel employed as ptnCIHlltters, Johnny Mlze day . The Gophers also moved Belmnt Abby 103 Pfelffr 81
Coach Dune Wolfe's reserves . ':;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;.
have all rnceived .special training on the
now possess a 6-3 record. They
was by far the p10st successful after coming over to the Yankees up two- notches from last Grdnr-Webb 103 Allen 80
use of the. new tax fotms for this year.
will be at Wahama next
. This W~k'S Spe~lai
week's seventh ranking, Erskine 75 F. Marloo 54
from the Giants.
·
UNC
Ashevl
95
W.
Car.
82
We will use the fonn that best fits your
Friday.
"The older he got, the betier he got," said Casey, with one of polishing off Wisconsin, 711-54, A. Peay 88 E. Ky. 87, ot
own personal situation so that you pay the
Score by quarters:
Morehed 82 Murray 75
those familiar winks of his. "Know why? I'll tell ya. He knew he Saturday.
Corps
Chrstl
74
Ga.
St.
67
least
possible tax.
Long Beach State was anothHannan
8 12 23 27
could hit distance. sOmetimes It's better not to. So he put that in
LaGrnge
73
Colmbs
Coli.
59
Southern
12 32 52 64
his mind and went on the size of the park he was in. He'd come . er team moving up the ladder Tougaloo88Ark.·P.B. 84
up, pinch-lilt and there'd be three men on base. They'd pitch the
PLANS ANNOUNCED
USED CARS
ball in on him, and he'd go the other way. Not too hard, not too
v~ry good hitter and so was (Bob) lemon. I had some pretty good
HANOVER,
N.H.
(UP!)
easy. He'd go 'butcher boy.' Just chop at the ball. The same way
ones, too, like (Ed) Lopat, (Whitey) Ford and (Tommy) Byrne. Dartmouth College, long a
a butcher chops a piece of meat.''
All of 'em could hit.''
hockey power In the Ivy
~engel PU\ in more than 50 years In baSeball before retiring at
Sends In Pinch-Hitters
League, Monday announced
the end of 1965. He saw many fine hitting pitchers in his thne but,
Yet Stengel sent in pinchhitters for Lopat, Ford and Byrne plans for a new $3.75 mllllon
this is ·a trait of his, he shies away from saying which one he
when he felt he had to.
multi-purpose ice hockey
thinks was best because he doesn't wish to hurt the feelings of
casey says he can't begin to calculate how many plnchhliters arena with construction due to
Blue with .black vinyl top,
some other pitcher who might feel he's the one Casey should have
blue
Int., full power equip,,
he used during the 25 years he managed in the majors.
begin in April.
singled out.
.
la_ctory
~lr, 7,000 mlies.
.
. "I'll tell yOU one thing, ihoUgh," he sSya. "!believed in it.''
1
Sharp! Like newl '
"1 won't say '(Otarlie) RUffing was the greaiest hitter I. ever
Nobody was sacred as far as he was concerned either. .
IN SECOND PLACE
seen for a pitcher, but he was one of 'em. (0on) Drysdale was a
Once, after one of his better kno'wn infielders was removed for
NEW YORK (UP!) .- Bruce
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
apinch-llitter, and the infielder who had already begun walking Crampton, winner of the
up to the plate becanie so angry over being pulled that he fiung Phoenix Open golf championhis bat toward the rack.
•
ship this past weekend, has
"You'll Like Our Quality
It boWlCed into the dugout and landed only Inches from moved into second place in the
Way of Doing Business.'~ .
GMAC FINANCING i
Stengel's feet.
PGA tournament division
.992 -534~ .
J'omero~
The Infielder grwnbled something about being tsken out and . money winners list. Cratilpton
. Open Evenings·''fiiB:OO :
headed straight down the dugout steps toward the Yailkees ,1 picked up $30,000 In the
Til S P.M, Sat: ,
clubhouse.
Phoenix nn....
stengel was after him like a shot.
- !!!!!
. ·!· !·!·!-·!!=!!
-!!
"~.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
"Ussen here, you," snapped Casey; his face less than six in!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ches from the Infielder's. "When you manage this club, you do it
your way I'm managln' now, so you're gonria do It my way.
Understand?" .
.
The Infielder nodded ·sllenUy.
1'ROFESSIONAL TUNE4JP ·
He understood, ali right. He still remembers·the episode to this
day •
8 CYLINDER
Includes Parts
95 UP
1
and Labor

y

.aport cars •• ·, In

fell to '"'· :

Sport farade

I

What do you do now?
A-Pass. II the h oa r t suit
doesn't work, you ~on't make
foUr hearts, but yo·1r partner
ml~ht still be oblo to mike nine
tricks at no-trump.

Transylvllllia jumped to a 4124 lead over Urbana at half.
time and eltended It to ·liB
points in the. second half ' enroute to the KentuCky learn 't
ninth win ofthe season. Urbana

because four Carnegie atsrters
were mwith influenza.
Allan Hornyak scored 24
points for Ohio State, which
went through a see-!IIIW secood
half with Georgia Tech. The
win made the Buckeyea 6-6.
Rick Mlchaelaon scored 23
points and Joel Copeland 22 to
lead Old Dominion to 1111 uneasy win over Xl!vler. Conny
Warren was high fw Xavier,
now 2-10, with 20 points.

foday's

. •. . ,
.. ,
·My brother-in-law says we'•e •elatives now and it's okay If he ,.
kisses me in front of my sister- just when we're aloe. What do·
you do about nol-60-brotherly kisses? - DEFINITELY NOT'

+++

faJIII that·made them that way .
or If they were just that way for
us. BQt they weren't the Same
against Miami."
Miami's 14-7 Super Bowl
victory over Washington was
the chief topic for discussion
Monday during workout sessions for tbe third Pro Bowl to
iring together stars of both the
NFC and AFC. The first two
gamea, both played In Los
Angeles, were split.
Kickoff Is set for 3 p.m. CST
at the DallJis Cowboys' Texas

"it.::!mt.;;::~m:;::-n::::::::::m:!:!~~::~®~~~:::::::::;;;;

Dear Helen and Sue:
Maybe hitchhiker emblems and i.d. cards in cars would
make it safe, but I learned my lesson recently -no more pickups for me!
My sister, a girlfriend and I saw a man hitching. He looked
safe and it was raining, so we gave him a ride. He told us he was
an alcoholic on the way to an A.A. meeting and to turn down a
dark side street to let'him off. Then I saw be had a gun at my
head! He motioned me to make them stop the car, so without
letting them know, I told them there was II friend on the sidewalk,
and we ought to pick her up. Thank goodneSs they caught on fast
and stopped.! jumped out with the man behind me, and my aiater
gunned tbe car just as I jumped In it again. It was split second,
but we got 'rid of him. We notified the pollee but he had disappeared.
I went to Europe last summer and it's true - hitching isn't
considered dangerous over there - but over here, well NEVER AGAIN!

Dear D.:
Or an innocent, "I'll ask my sister what she thinks about
brotherly ldsses, okay?" - HELEN

l!le

DALLAS (UP!) - The
' Washington club that Tom
Landry saw on his television
Silt .last Sunday did not remind
him In any way of the team he
waa forced to ·'look at New
Year's Eve.
"Washington just didn ~have
the edge against Miami that
they did against us," said
Landry, preparing the
National Conference squad for
next SWlday's Pro Bowl. "They
weren 'I fired up.
"I don't know if It was their

+++

TEMPTED
D.N.T.:
How about a sisterly slap across the face? -SUE

.

By Ualted l'rel8 lutmudiaaal
Wllh Stumpf ~d Scott Weak- ing stresk by downing aeorgu.
Mike Stumpf, Capital's ley, who had 22 more points, · Tech 85-79 at ~jtlanta ; Temessenlor center, scored 34 points providing the firepower, Cap . see State trounced Central
Monday night to set hlmaelfup ·got its 13th win . of the year State 83-ill; Transylvania
as the school's all-time ll!lainst a s!ngle defeat. The ; (Ky.) whipped Urbana 110-60;
bask~tball scoring leader.
Crusadat, ranked ninth in the Old Dominion (Va.) edged
sttmipf, who led
Cru- UPI small college ratings, are ·-Xavier .79-76; Bowling Green
sadera to a 94-68 rout of Ober- . ~In the Ohio Conference.
slipped by Ball state (Ind.) 7f&gt;. '
lin, now has 1,4110 careec points,
Oberlin, now 3-8. ov~au and ' 74, and Cleveland State beat St. '
15more than.the previous scor- 6-41n the conference, was led Francis (Pa.) 90-85. ·
'
lng leader, Bob Bernl&lt;ihr. by Robbie Baird with ]&amp;points.
Carnegie-Mellon (Pa.) was
Bernlobr set his mark 1951· · In other Ohio games, Ohio · scheduled to play John Carroll,
1955.
State ended a three-game los- but the game was postponed

' Skins were not fired up'-~Landry

Okay:
Okay!
We can 'I figure out TV taboos, but they surely must make
sense to someone in charge. Let's hope he or she elucidates. HELEN

· WIN',AT ·SRIDO.E Helen and Sue :

'

a

Generation Rap

'

1• 0

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 17, 1973
6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10,
6: 15 - Farmtlme 10; Farm Report 13.
.
6:25 - Paul Harvey 13.
6:30- Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Urban League 10;
The Story 13.
7:00 - Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10; News 6; Fllntstones 13.
7:30 - Sleepy Jeffers 8; Romper Room 6; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13; Popeye 10.
8:00 - Capt . Kang'aroo 10;. New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
Tim my &amp; Lassie 6.
8:30- Ja ck La La nne 13; New Zoo Revue 6; Romper Room a.
8:55 - Local News 13.
. ..
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Pllll Donahue 15; What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3; Concentration 6; Capt. Kangaroo a;
Friendly Junction 10; Ben Casey 13 ,
9:30 - Elec. Co. 33 ; To Tell The Truth 3; Jeopardy 6; Hazel 8.
10:00 - Dinah Shore 3, 15; Columbus Six Calling 6; Joker's Wild
a. 10; Dick Van Dyke 13:
10:30 - Concentration 3, 15; Ph li Donahue4; Price Is Righi a. 10;
Split Second 13.
11 :00.- Sale of the Century 3, 15; Love American Style6; Gambit
8. 10; Password 1~ .
11 : 30- Hollywood.Squares 4, 13; Love Of Life a, 10; Bewitched 6,
13; Sesame Street 20.
,
12:00 - Jeopardy 3, 15; Password 6; Bob Braun's so.so Club 4;
News 13; Contact 8; News 10.
·
I 2: 30- Split Second 6; Search For Tomorrow a, 10; Who, What,
Where 3, 15.
··
I :00 - News. Weather, Sporfs3 ; All My Children 6, 13; It's Your
Bet 8; Green Acres tO; Watch Your Child 15.
1:20 - Lucille Rivers 3.
1:311'- 3 On A·Match 3, 4, 15; Let's Make A Deal6, 13; As The
World Turns a, 10.
' '
2:00- Days of Our Lives 3. 4. 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Douglas 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
2:30 - DatlngGame13; Ooctors3. 4, 15; EdgeofNight8, 10.
3: 00 - Another World 3, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; Love,
· Splendored Thing 8. 10; RFD 20.
3:30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
Secret Storm 8, 10; Ofllo: This Week· 20.
4:00 - Mr. Cartoon 3) Somerset 15'; Sesame St. 33; Love
American ·Style 13; ,.,.,rv Griffin 4; Fllntstones 6; Gilligan's
Island 8; Movie "A Private Affair" 10.
·
· 4:30- Andy Griffith 15 ; Pettlcoal Juncllon 3; Merv Griffin 8;
ABC Aller School 6, 13.
·
.
5:00 - Mr. Rogers 33; Dick Van Dyke 15; Ponderosa 3, 4; Daniel
.Boone 6.
·
5:30- Marshall Dillon 15; Elec. Co, 33; Dragnet a; Gomer Pyle
USMC 13; Hodgepodge Lodge20: I Love Lucy6.
6:00 - ·Truth or Conseq. 6; News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15; Sesame St. 20;
Around The Bend 33.
6:30 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15; I Dream of Jeannie 13; HathayOga
33.
7: 00 - News 6, 10; What's My Line 8; Truth or Conseq. 3; Beat
The Clock 4; Anything You Can Do 13; Know v·our Schools33 ·
Outlook '73 1s.
'
7:30- To Tell '(he Truth 6; The Judge 10; Pollee Surgeon 3, 4;
Proteclors 8; ' Beat The Clock 13; f.ndy Griffith 15;
Hodgepodge. Lodge 20; Marco Sportllte 33.
7:45 - Marshall Basketball.
8:!!0 - Adam·12 3,15, ~~Paul Lynde-6, 13; Nallonai .Geographlc
8, 10; College Basketball 33; How Td Win The Nobel Prtu 20.
8:30 - Playhouse New York 20; Bob Hope 3, 4, 15; Movie
·

ment.

'$:¥::m.&lt;:
••
~~~

. TUESDAY, JAN. 16, 1973
6:00 - News 3, 4: a, 10: 13. 15; Truth or Conseq. 6; Sesame St. 20;
Around The Bend 33.
6:30- News 3, 4. 6, a, 10, 15; I Dream of Jeannie 13; Growing
..J:Um Up 33.
7~ - What's My Line 8; I've Got A Secret 13; Saint 15;
Electric Co. 20; Bea t The Clock 4.
7:30- This Is Your Life 3; Doclors on Call4 ; To Tell The Truth
6; Price Is Right 8, 10; Beal The Clock 13 ; RFD 20 ; Zoom 33.
8:00 - Temperalures Ri sing 6, 13; Bonanza 3, 4, 15; Maude 8,
10; VD Blues 20 ;' Book Beat 33.
8:30 - Hawaii Flve·O 8,10; Bill Moyer's Journal20, 33; Movie
"The Nlaht Stranaler" 6, 13.
9:00 - Behind the Lines 20; Hernandez: Houston P.O. 3, 4, 15.
9:30 - Black Jourrial20, 33; Movie "All In the Family" 8, 10.
10:00 - Marcus Welby M.D. 6. 13; News 20; NBC Reports 3, 4; 15.
11 :00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 13, 15.
11 :30 - Movie "Frankenstein" 6. 13; Virginian 8; Movie "Sword
In the Desert" 10.
'
I : 00 - Your Health 4; News 13.
1:30 - News 4.

" Female Artillery" 6, 13.

by Patterson .and Patrick

inaugural address to call Congress ioto special session tn deal with farm problems as well as tariff
changes to help increase farm prices .
Wrangling between the White House and Congress was s&lt;i prolonged and bitter that the resulting
measures of the session-the Hawlcy,Smoot Tariff
Act and the Marketing Act of 1929-helped no one
much, and farmers least of all. 011 Oct. 29, 1929,
the roof fell in when more than sixteen million
shares :~f stock were sold on the New York Stock
Exchange at an average loss of $40 a share . •
In the first nine months of the Hoover Administration, the wonh of listed securities alone had
decreased by more than $30 billion: In rapid succession banks closed, businesses failed, factories shut
down . or drastical_ly cunailcd production and the
number of unemployed persons soared from three
million in 1930 to over ten million in 1932.
The first reaction of Administration officials was
to discount the seriousness of the depression . .
Hoover himself kept insisting that "prosperity is
just around the corner," as though it were an incantation to ward off e"il. Hoover's philosophy of
individualism kept him from trying to mobilize the
resources of the federal government in the fight
against the depression. He thought the basic cause
of the trouble was psychological rather than political or economic, and he thought relief should be
handled at the local level, not by the federal govern-

~llmllml!::::::~'~·~
···~·········
...... ·~·····~··
. ....::r.:;:•..............
·.&lt;&lt;·.·:-:·
• o;.·....·:·:·

Television.. Log

3- The Daily sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy; 0 .., Jan. 16, 1973 "

PRESIDENTS ~F MANIF'EST DESTINY

11

ON THE TV DIAL: Not much ... An NBC special noses into
Peking, China, at 10, WSAZ-TV ... Pilot of a ''maybe" series,
"Hernandez," a cop story, at 9, same station.

i'''•· , ..

.

, BY PAUL ,CRABTREE
I've got a problem. There's this kid who lives at our house
who likes to read stories from her first-grader primer to her
friends.
On the telephone.
S!e sits for hours, talking with two ·friends named Deanna
and Angela, and reading long paaaages from a textbook calied
"Up.the Street imd Down."
'
•
(Yeah, I know itsowt~like "Up the Down Staircase,"-which
exposed the perils of modern school-teaching, and maybe that's
why the teachers subconsciously chose it.)
Anyhow, this ldd - with the wtlikely name of Shinybrite reads stories like ''Old Mrs. Duck," "A New Boy," "Freddie
Helps/' andl currenUy, 0ne PeMy."
The chief protagonists of "Up the Street and Down" are
Jimmy and Sue, but there are animal stories and oth!!l' atuff in
there, too. (Whatever happened to Dick and Jane?
Herewith is a sample of ''One Penny":
One day Sue went for a walk in the park.
Soon she saw· something.
"A penny!" said Sue.
"I see a permy."
Then she saw Polly and Freddie ...
After this excerpt, the plot really thickens, and I'll n~ver tell
how It really came out.
You can imagine how this sounds, being read in an almostseven-yell!'-&lt;&gt;ld voice as S!inybrite drones on and on, page after
page, the most lurid stuff to be found in "Up the Street and
Down." Angela and Deanna must have ears made of pre-6tressed
concrete. Four out of five calls at my house are for Shinybrite
now.
Anyhow, I have a problem.
I've been in the daughtering game for more than 20 years,
and I know that girls love telephones. But the romance usually
begins about 12 or 13, and most early conversations are with
otber pubescent girls.
After about 14, the telephone really becomes important,
because It may honest-to-gosh be from A Boy! !!
With my 20-year-old away at college the past tbree years, ·
and middle daughter Vyvyanne still 11, it's been fairly quiet at
our house for some time. I even got a call myself from time to
time.
. But now Shinybrite, at 7, has established her own reading
circle via closed circuit telephone.
, U I stop her and obey my nonnal paternal impulse to scream
"Stop reading that nutty book!" who knows? Maybe I'll turn her
off fr.om reading forever, and stunt her mentsllty or something.
On the other hand, if I don 't stop her, my sanity is in mortal
peril. Shinybrite's larynx easily oulmatches my eardrums.
With a problem like this, l can hardly wait until she's 14.
Then she won 'I call, for fear the phone might be tied up when A
Boy Is really trying to reach her. But holy Moses! that's more
than seven years away.
"Meanwhile, Jimmy and Sue took the penny, etc., etc.... "

t • •

DRIVING•••
Moore's Semce Ceitter

ExpertlY Install:
SHOCKS
BRAKES'
MUFFLERS
TAiL PIPES

..

•

Is your .car acting up? Has the
winter been hard on your auto?
Now's lhollmelo have 1 tune-up. We ·
can hove Your car running smoothly
in no 1ime. Save money 1t Moore's. ,
,,

•

·. MOORE'S •._,
. Service Center
124 W. Main
Pomeroy
'
PH. 992-2848

�'i

'
.

&amp; THINGS.

0

+++

Thirty-flr~t

Presidenl Herbert Hoover
(Admlhislraticn : March 4, 1929-March 3, 1933)

"Prosperity is just around the corner"
i'Jo President began his administration under
more deservedly auspicious circumstances than
Herbert Hoover, and no President left the White
House so thoroughly and undeservedly discredited .
:\It hough wooed by both major parties,' Hoover
easily donned the cast-off mantle of President
Coolidge and received the Republican nomination
unanimously on the first ballot. His Democratic
opponent was the popular Gov . .'\ lfrcd E. Smith
of New York.
"
Smith's Roman Catholicism and "wet" stand on
prohibition cost him millions of votes. Hoover
denounced the introduction of religious bigotry into
the campaign, but' he stood firmly in favor of prohibition.
Hoover represented rugged individuali sm , personal respectability, political conservatism and
fiscal responsibility, and he won with 58.2 % of the
votes. The national mandate was clear: keep the
boom booming.
The boom had been slowly collapsing in the
farm segment of the economy for ten yea rs, a fact
recognized by President Hoover's promise in his

· ·

9:00 - Medical Centers, 10; Eye to Eye20.
9:30- Fine Art of Goofing orr 20.
10:00 - Soui3J; News 20; Cannon 8, 10; Cole f!orter In Paris.
11: 00 - News 3, 4. 6, B, \0, 13, 15~
]1 : 30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15. Movie "Frankenstein" 6, 13;
VIrginian 8; Movie "H.ell Below Zero" 10.
1:00 - News 4, 13.
;

Finally forced to act by the rising tide of misery
and despair, Hoover was ambivalent. He asked
Congress to es tablish a Reconstruction Finance
Corp. to aid businesses and home owners with
loans, then angrily vetoed the bill as a "gigantic
banking and pawnbroking business." He . later
approved the meas ure, however, although Congress
had doubled the appropriation to $3.3 billion.
The last two years of Hoover's Administration
were troubled ones for the President and the nation .
As former President Taft said of Hoover, "He;did
not speak the language of the politicians." He did
not speak the language of the people, either, and
his tumbling popularity hit rock bottom .in the election of 1932 when Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt
crushed Hoover's 'bid for a second term with a
greater plurality than he had earned against Alfred .
E. Smith four years earlier.
Despite his humiliating rejection by the majority of the politicians and the people, President
Hoover kept his dignity and never-failing sense of
civic duty to the end.
On Jan . 13, 1958, Gen. Mark Clark, president
of the Citadel, South Carolina State Military College, bestowed the hoporary degree of doctor of
Ia ws on Herben Clark Hoover, now the world's
most honored elder statesman. It was the eightythird degree the former President had received, one
for each year of his life.

·
'
"
,
.
,
"
·
,. .Voi:ce along ·Br''Way· I The Tra.nsler
Jacoby-Style
,

: .~ ~~~.l:ee.::

.

Stumpf sets Cap mark

By Helen and'Sue Bottel
· TV CommerclaltJ Prudllb?
Rap:
.
Can anyone tell' me why TV conimercials are so prudish
about some things and so sexy about others?,
· ~
Like what's wrong with openly sjraymg .an underarm with
deo¢brant, yet even that· octopus gal with all the
just
sprays in the general dlrecti&lt;J!l. Are underarms obscene yet, and
if so why?
.
. ,
Also, they never show even the "rim" in bathrooms. What's
so awful about a toilet?
·.
On the other hand, soap, perfume, ' men's cologne, etc.
depend on se• to sell.
Maybe you could "throw this queation down the well and see
if it bubbles"- imean, gell! an answer from ad men or peOple in
charge of commercials. - OKAY?

arms•

"

' '"' ''" ,.,

being greeted by gently sketched animals in the
BY JACK O'BRIAN
St. Francis of Assisi tradition, with the caption :
POSTSCRIPTS ON THE HOLIDAY
NORTH .
18
NEW YORK (KFS) - Christmas _cards "Softly, softly seek the Child, all creatures
¥KJ6543
come but once a year and then are, usually, great arid small. Be you gentle, be you wild, His
• Q64
blessing
sings
to
you
all,"
signed
alsp
by
Merv's
glanced at and tossed out; we've been off on a
.985
Yule holiday and hadn't seen most of our cards; Julann and Tony.
WEST
EAST
The incomparable Hildegarde's card flew a
ergo, we perused them at leisure instead of
.Q863
.KJ975
during the pre-Christmas-New Year hysteria, three-dimensional angei•s "BleSs You!•'Hiidy's ¥Al0
• 97
•
J
1083
• 72
personal
message
wished
"Joy
and
peace
and
and were impressed generally with the ahnost
.Q102
.KJ76
single-minded hope and optimism of their especially - love."
SOUTH (D)
Portland Hoffa Allen Rines, widow of Fred
messages:
.Al04
Bob Hope, erstwhile hawk, wished us a Allen and now wed happily to ex-handleader and
¥Q82
Merry C!rlstmas and Happy New Year .with advertising executive Jo~ Rines, sent their old·
+AK95
.A43
"Peace at Otrlslmas is the sublhne moment for friend wishes with their photos looking ecBoth vulnerabJe
all of us ll)ls year"; Bob's Vietnam appearances statically happy indeed : we seem to meet Porty
West
N.orth East South
annually to perk up our troops naturally· drew and Joe more often in Hong Kong or other
lN.T.
the ire of bubbleheads who actually resent foreign lands than in New York these last few Pass 2+
Pass 2¥
anything done for American boys; we know of years, but Chrislmas does bring us closer. And Pass 3¥
Pass 4¥
one nouveau riche ass who in his liberal ' our Hong Kong friend, Ascot Otang, rushes his ·Pass Pass Pass
Operilng lead- + J
ignorance even castigated the noblest civilian holy Yule greetings by air mail on a ca.rd driven
arti.stically
with
rickshaws
in
a
painting
of
free
wartime project, the USO, as if it, and not
'Eisenhower-Kennedy-Johnson had declared Chinese women and children. Not political; just ·By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
escalatea war in VIetnam and Nixon had not de- the freedom of Hong Kong.
The four level transfer re·
Dina Merrill and CllH Robertson opted for a sponse to · an opening no.
escalated it. Oh, well - we wish even them a
Peter Max-decorated mod.Card without holy trump bid was invented
happy peaceful New Year.
· nil'
1 d
around 1951 by David Carter
Dorothy Lamour's Christmas· greeting nor ho!idaY slg
lcance except to P ea • "Let of St. Louis and independentprayed for "Peace and Happiness" now and the Beauty of the world be preserved," which ly by Olle Willner of Stockthroughout the New Year, in patriotic colors. sort of says it. Jack E. Leonard appears on our holm. Willner also extended
Old friend Joan Crawford's earllesl-()f-611 doorstep in a characteristically noisy but not it to the three level and
Otristmas greeting was a seasonally-colored sacreligious greeting posing Fat Jack, bride Richard Troxel of Minne·
, adopted Gladya'-kids apoli$ extended it down to
note to "My dear Jack and Mrs. O'Brian" Gladys and Jack's
.
the two leveL
l'ishing us "affectionately" to be "blessed with Brenda, Unda and Wanda waving banners
In 1955 Oswald Jacobytook
God's gentle.touch tbroughou~ the New Year"; proclaiming Faith, Peace, Joy, Hope and Love, Troxel's idea, amplified it
and the Slime always ~ . this great star.
cheering off '72 and foreseeing all the best In and developed the Jacoby
transfer bids· that are now
The Most
Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen '73; 'nJI!Ir banners to God's ears.
Pete and Edie (Adama) CandOli tnnnpeted in general expert use in
also pe!lned his holy greetings personally in
peaceful
wishes with photo of their off&amp;pring every par~ of the world.
theatrical metaphor, citing Cbrist's Drama of
Tara
Josh
Mia and Carrie. Edle looked happy . The bas1c prmc1ple of the
Redemption and our roles as He has assigned
'
'
l.iacoby transfer IS that a
them: "During the New Year it will be our joy to at last. The Bruce (and Marcia) &amp;lyders of tbe lwo-diamond response to a
induce the ·other actors before the Curtain of "21" hierarchy were proud enough of their no-trump opening says noth·
Ufe 'rings down, to shout: 'Author! Author!" young family (Michael and Jenny Lynn) that ing about diamonds, but
ending with a cheery "Merry Christ-Mass." they posed at Santa's arrival apot, their
Great man, the Archbishop.
fireplace in their new Long Island man.ie, with
The Almanac
Famous old atsr of vaudeville, musical ~ace. Gene Krupa and his Mary Grace and ByUDltedPresslnlernatlooal
comedy, movies, radio and TV, Jack Haley, Bee-Gee posted a card bearlrig a Yule candle · Today Is Tuesday, Jan. 16,
whose cheerful 70s seem happier than even his lighting the way to peace and every New Year the 16th day of 1973 with 349 to
early and middle years, sent greetings and the Happiness.
.follow.
news our family will be remembered In his
Jerry Sllvennan of dress manufacturing
The moon Is approaching Its
prayers and those of the Marlanist fathers fame sent not only hopeS and prayers for peaa; fuJi phase.
through the Jfoly Season arid throughout the but a contribution in'OIIl' name to the U. S.
The morning stars are
New Year. Lovely old friends, Jack and Flo.
Committee for UNICEF, line of the ·finest Mercury, · Venus, Mars and
We hear dependably at Cbristmas from greetings anyone might wish. ·Japanese Jupiter.
a gal we've admired and corresponded with restaurant tycoon •Rocky Aoki, in a typical
TheeveningstarisSaturn.
for years, Gertrude Ederle; Trudy's the pioneer executive take.over, usurped Santa's sleigh
Those born on this date are
liberated lass who was first to swim the Engilah carrying a quintet of his chefs delivering Peace under the sign of Capricorn.
Channel and we're always delighted to find her by reindeer-power; with Donner and Blltzen
Famed American designer
in fine health; her card bear~~ an enchantinR and their elk. A great lady we've known longer and woodcarver Samuel MclnOliTI!!f - lves Yule vista ''with wann re- as a fan than she's known us these last :10 years, tire was born Jan. 16, 1757.
. gards"; reciprocated always.
Odette Myrtil, atsr of vaudeville, stage and
Onthlsdayinhistory:
·
~ of the great old fllm ,and stage · screenandnowaNew.Hope,BuckaCounty,Pa.,
In 1833, the Pendleton .Act
oomedlennl!ll, Ruth Donilelly's card shouts restaurateuse, Insists .it's "The same oid face went into' effect, providing f91'
Ruth's own consistent '')OY" in Ouiatmas.reda . with the same old wishes ,..;. ooly more so" for a tbe U.S. Civil Service Commisand greena sent between performances In "No, paacefullli73, wearing a somehow FrenciH:hlc, slon.
No, Nanette." Alexis Smith and Craig Sievens even as Odette always has been, Cllrlstmas tree
In 1920 the 18th Amendment
sent "The Mer'rleat and the Happiest" on a for a frock. Florence and ~ (Pres. of "21") · 1o the
Constitution became
beautifully priltine white card decorated with
Ktiendler pleaded for peace d!Bgulsed as Mr. effective,prohlbiUngthemanusingle tiny Cbrlstmss tree . .
and·Mrs. Snowman.
facture, sale or trlllllpC!rtation .
Merv Griffin's family card shows The Babe
of intoxicating liquors.

.2

Okay:
Another question, while we're at It : How come television is
still pretty well censored, but on radio (especially call~n abows),
almost anything goes ... and young people listen to radio more
than they do to TV? Not that I'm for strict censorship - just
equality. - SUE

+++

Dear ijap :
I was interested In your column on the European hitchhiker
and his suggestion that America develop "safe" hitching via
registration and identity cards.
ll'sa shamethatthis kind of travel is downgraded In the U.S.
for it's a great way to go.
Up until a few years ago (I'm now 56) I did a great deal of
hitchhiking. I've been all over the 11.S., Mexico and Canada, had
a wonderful time, met a lot of fine people and a few odd ones. I
could never have travelled had I not used my thumb.
I've never been hurt or forced to do anything against my will.
I've never beeo in jail. My reCipe is: gull!, plenty of Identification, a few dollars of your own, and the spirit of adventure.
And I wouldn't trade my memories for anything. - VERY
YOUNG 56

.

Rev.

guarantees that responder
holds at least five hearts. In
similar manner the twoheart response guarantees at
least five spades.
Today's hand shows the
Jacoby transfer at work.
North's two-diamond bid
tells South to bid hearts.
North's rebid to three hearts
invites a game contract and
South Is delighted to accept
the Invitation.
Four hearts makes easily
and would also make if
North were declarer, but the
transfer bid gave North a
chance to invite game. With·
out the transfer bid North
would probably have con.
tented himself with a two
heart response and game
might not have been
reached. ·

TODAY'S QUMTION
You do pass. West doubles and
East pass. What do
you do now7

North and

SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
STEERS-Choice, 39-40;
good, 36·.35-37 .50; standard,
29.75-32.
HEIFERS - .Choice 35.1&lt;136.75; good, :if!i().34.1il.
COWS-Commercial, 27.5029.10; utility, 24-26:50; canners
and cutters, .18-21.25.
BULLS ..-. . Commercial,
31.60-35.25:
stockers and
{Ht:WSPAPU ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
feeders steer calves, 42.50. 50.10; heifer calves, 35.40-44;
yearling, 35-40:50.
The bidding has been:
West North East South SHEEP - Choice, 32.25;
3+
3¥ good, 29.
Pass , 3 N.T. Pass
HotS - 200-230, 38; No. I,
You, South, hotd:
;13.25; 23&lt;1-240, 32.75 sows, 25.7~
~ Z ¥ AQ9875 + A3Z • KQ7 26- boars, 24.

CARNIVAL

by Dick Turner ·

T3t&gt;O IV

••

~OTOM

4

•

••

!'I'll

,,
,.

j

'

•
'•
"•
•

Redmen

to

'

play tonight

•
M:z·ss· ourz· lS
upset 81-79
By United Press lnternatfonal
Missouri suddenly has taken
a complete turnabout.
The Tigers, unbeaten in their
first 12 games, had their streak
ended last Saturday with a 71).
55 loss to Kansas state. The
after effect seems to be
lingering, however, as
Colorado made it two losses in
a row Monday night with an 8179 overtime victory over the
eighth:ranked Tigers.
Pat Kelly hit a 10-fool jump
shot with 48 seconds left and
then added a free throw ~th

SHIRT
FINISHING
.

Robinson's Cleaners

Henry ·Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us

for income tax help.

r

720LDSCUTlASS
SUPREME
H.T. SEDAN

'3795
·. ~au &amp;.Yan Zandt

TOPFLITE
BARERIES

AU
SIZES

24 Mo. · 36 Mo. • 48 Mo. llld
Life T1111e GU.niaes .

Downing-Childs Agency .Inc. .
PHON El92-2342 · ·

~~·

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

INSURANCE • BONUS .·
MUTUAL FUNDS
.
Meigs County's Oldest and largest

. Insurance Agency

with only two doctol'll"

r

304 E. Main 992-3795 Pomeroy
Open 9 Til 5 Mon. Thru Sat

$17 95

See Us At···

"You mean to eay you ordered 15 tuper deluxe '

OOIOC1BLOC.-

Tune Into A TUNE-UP Here, Soon

In Stock
'19

,,

~·

ba::!or~~:~tw:":

share dulles with Klhner next
Sunday :· "Miami won the
battle of the turnovers and that
was that.''

points, 17.of them in the ~~econd
half, and John Brown also had
28 for Mlssourt, which turned
the ball over 31 tllnes.
In another Big Eight Conference game, Lee Harris scored
22 points to pace Nebraska to a
74-67 upset of Oklihoma and
Mike Robins on scored 38
points, including an 1~
jump shot with two seconds left
just 10 seconds remaining to
to carry Michigan State to a 7f&gt;.
11ft Colorado to .the victory, its
74.Big Ten ,victOry over Iowa.
fifth against eight losses.
Allen Hornyak's 24 points
Missouri led, 43-35, at the
carried Ohio State to an IJ$.79
half, but Scott Wedman and
victory over Goergia Tech and
Lee Haven combined to rally
Ken Wolfe's 18 points
Colorado to a 72-70 lead. highlighted Harvard's 105-Q
Mlsourl's Steve Blind sent the
rout of Northeastern in the
game into overtime with a 30Beanpot Tournament in
foot jumper with 90 seconds left
Boston.
in regulation time and the
In Southeastern Conference
Tigers led by as many as three
action, .John Snow's 20 points
points in the overtime before
lifted Tennessee to a 75-li6
Kelly emerged as the hero.
romp over F1orlda and f&gt;.foot-11
Haven led Colorado with 28
Jim Andr!lWs hit 17 of his 27
points In the second half as
Kentucky
cruised past

Sentilll

•

1

•

UCLA remains
first in poll

that is quite an accomplishment because any
team in this league can beat
any other team.

111GB POINT CARD TROPHY WINNER- Winners of high point card at the Side Hill GWl
Club recently were, left, Charles· Gilmore, Rutland, and Kent Smith, right, of Jackson .
Presenting the winners with trophies was June Yost of Rutland. Not pictured Is lied Eblin of
!\Ulland who also won a trophy.

·Davis 'soph of year'·

u.s:

,.

stadium.
play eo well aU year.''
Other capsule comments on
-Atlanta linebacker:Tommy
the Super Bowl:
Nobis: "I ' was pulling for
- C\Juck Noll, Pi~burgh Washington because they were
coach who will dlreci the AFC the NFC club and I think there
In the Pro Bowl: "I'm just Is stm some rivalry between
disilppointed it was not us out the conferences. But you have
there. But I thought Miami to hand it to Miami. They won
played wen. They didn't play 17 in a row. I don't care what
better than usual, since they ldnd of schedule they played

*

~

II' town

Leonard RDbinson scored 33 ·
points · in• TeMeasee State't
eighth win of the season
against five lo~$. Central
State, 'led by Lanrils Timmons•
19 points, is IIOW 3-10.
.

The Rio Grande Redmen
NEW YORK (UP!) - The toward the top of the rating~~.
meet
Wright State UniversitY
UCLA Bruins picked up their The 49ers got by Pacific, 91-115,.
56th and 57th consecutive at Pacific last Sunday, then tonight at the Xenia high school
victories last week .to once easily defeated Fresno State, gym in a non-conference game.
The game Is being played at
again top this week's 92 -72, Thursday night.
"
Marquette took a twnble Xenia because the new sports
. basketball ratings of the
By MILTON RICHMAN
· United Press International from third to seventh. The facility at Wright State is not
UPI Sports Editor
·
Board of Coaches, In a week Warriors defeated Loyola (lli.) yet compl~ted.
Rio Grande, fresh from a 96GLENDALE, Calif. (UP!)- "Of course, I'm for it. I've been that saw a complete reshuf- on Tuesday by ao 82-77 score, 84 win over Malone, will take a
fling of the top 10 teams.
but their flirtation wiih
dOin' It all my life, ain't I?"
·
UCLAamasaedtheirusual35 defeat- the Warriors had 4o8 record into the game while
casey Stengel, the world's leading authority on designated
Wright State is 1&lt;1-1. Wright
pinch-llitters-he has designated more of them in his lime, first"Place votes and 350-point triumphed in most of their
State's :lone defeat came
perhaps, than any other man alive-paused a moment from total in the seventh week of this games this season by only a
few points-caught ·up with against Mid-American power
Georgia,~P!llt!!l'ing around ill the garden of hls neat but unpretentious, season's poll.
Miami of Ohio. ·
After
topping
Stanford,
BU7,
them
Saturday
afternoon
as
In a key smaU college game,
white stucco Spanish-type home here to talk about the American
The Redmen, after tonight's
on
Friday
the
Bruins
received
Notre
Dame
handed
Marquette
League'•s newly adopted rule for the upcoming season.
COLUMBUS (tlPI) - An·
Davis was injured in,an auto No . 2-ranked Sam Houston
game, returns home Thursday
a
mild
scare
from
the
its
first
foss
of
the
season,
71-69,
"It's gotta help," said the 82-year-old former manager of the
thony Davis, tailback on the accident last weekend in which State, with James Lister
evening
to
play
Central
State.
scoring 30 points and grabbing
Dodgers, Bravea, Mets and Yankees, referring to the use of University of Califorma,losing giving the Warriors their first
Saturday, Rio will · play at Southern California football he suffered a partially severed 25 rebounds, ripped McMurry,
by
35-33
at
the
half,
before
home-court
loss
in
82
games
at
specified pinclH!Itters in place of the pitchers without the pitCedarville in a Mid-Ohio team lllat beat Ohio State ln the · Achilles tendon. TDC officials 72-58, to remain unbeaten.
going on to a 69 -50 decision. Milwaukee Arena.
chers having to leave the game.
Rose Bowl, _has been named said the Injury probably would
Behind the 12-0 Bruins the . Missouri, Providence and Conference game.
"Some pitchers are never gonna get to hlt this way," a
"sophomore player of the preventhimfromattending the
reshuffiing produced three AI· Kansas State closed out the top
newsman said to ol' Case.
year" by the Touchdown Club 18th annual awards dinner here
iantlc Coast Conference teams 10. The Tigers became the
"Which ones?" came right back.
· of Columbus.
· Jan. 26.
"The ones who can't hit anyway," he said, answering his own in the Nos. 2-4 spots. North third team in last week's top Little Tornados
Davis scored six touchdowns
question . "They're never gonna take the good ones out, like Carolina State took over five to lose its first game of the
against
Notre Dame after
second 'place behin&lt;! UCLA, season, suffering a 7~ loss at win at Hannan
(Bob) Gibson, are they?
becoming a Trojan regular late
••
The Dajly
garnering 25 of the 35 second- · the hands of Kansas state. The
s'A ME DAY
Got Hell For It
in the season. He piled up 158
DEYOTID 't'O THE ..
HANNAN,
W.
Va
.
.
.;.:_
The
place
votes
arid
300
points.
The
.
surging
Wildcats
also
defeated
...
SERVICE
"Sure, I used to believe in lakin' pitchers out," Stengel said. "I
INTEREST OF
yards and scored once against
little
Tornadoes
set
the
Wolfpack
knocked
off
Duke,
94SMU
by
.
t
wo.
·
MEIGS-MASON
ARIA
In At 9-0ut At 5
believed in .lakin' other guys out too no matter what inning it was.
Ohio State.
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
example - which wasn't
Use
OUr Free Parking Lot
I took (Ciete) Boyer out once in the second inning of a World 87, Wednesday and Lehigh, 11~
Exec. Ed.
The TDC also announced
'
followed
for
their
reserves
ROIERT
HOEFLICH,
53,
Friday,
and
edged
Series in Pittsburgh, before he ever came up to bat, and got hell
City Editor
Monday
that
Michigan
tackle
College
BK
B
Results
Maryland, the No. 3 team this By United Press International by destroying the Hannan
for It, remember?
Published daily u :cept
reserves 64-27 here Friday Saturday by The Ohio Volley Paul Seymour, a 6-5, 255-pound
week,
87-85, on Sunday at
Bunpot Classic
"I did It because they had scored three-lour runs in the first
Publishing Company , 111
Ali-American, would be given
Round!
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
night.
Court St., Pomeroy. Ohio.
inning. So I put in apinchhltter. Why in hell not? I'm behind, ain't College Park, Md., to remain Harvard(Final
105 Nrlheaslrn 63
an
"award
of
distinction.''
Southern poured in 40 points 45769. Buslntsa Oltice Phon•
I? How in hell am I gonna catch 'em in nine inning~~ if 1 don't try unbeaten at 11.0 as of games
(Consolation!
"2·2156, Edilorlol Phone "2·
in the middle quarters. The 2157.
to? It's too late to catch 'I'll tomorrow. The guy I put in to hit for played tbrough Saturday. The Boston U. 82 Boo Coli. 72
Second c11n postege Plid at
East
hapless Wildcats never had a Pomeroy,
Boyer was outfielder-first baseman Dale Long who used to play only other unbeaten major F.Dcknsn.Rthfrd
Ohio.
73 Brldgpt 58
chance as their opponents shot
National advertising
for Pittsburgh. The fe!Ja hit a line drive that was caught. We team in the COWltry Is UCLA. Cleve St. 90 St. Fron.Pa. 85
repr·uentatlve Bottintlll ·
a dazzling 51 pet. from the Gallagher,
The Terps, who disposed of Fla. Sou : 93 Wm. Ptrsn 67
scored some runs anyway, but we lost. Remembe~ the big smell
Inc ., 12 East •2nd
Fairmont 105.W.Va. Tech 75
51
.,
Now
York
Clly, Now York .
floor.
All
of
the
Southern
Virginia,
93-74,
Tuesday
before
they made about It? They said It was Boyer's first World Series,
Del. St. 78 Lncln u.. Pa. 54
Subscrlpllen rifts: Dt ·
Sunday's loss, dropped to third, Fairfield 71 Colgate 53
reserves saw action. Nease llvtred by curler where
and how could I be so mean and take him out?"
South
·
collected
16 points and Dunning •vallable 50 cents per wuk;
plcldng
up
237
points.
North
Qtsey stengel feels the AL's new dealgnated pinch-llltter rule
By Matar Route whert carrier
Jacksonvl
94
Pan
Am. 64
foll~wed with 14 points for strvlu not avalltble : One
can't help but prolong the playing careers of certain older Carolina, sixth in last week's Tenn. 75 Florida 56
month S1.75. By mail In Ohio
poll, moved up to fourth, just Ky. 89 Georgia 68
Southern.J!rown pulled down 9 and
players.
w . va .• One vear S14.00.
St. 85 Ga. Tech 79
rebounds for the winners. Six months S1 .25 . . Thru
"How can anybody say this is a bad thing?" he asked. "I used edging out Minnesol11 by one Ollie
Ala . 104 Trlnlly-Tex. 63
monthS 14 .50. Subscrir,tlon
point, by virtue of a 92-58 Auburn 82 Miss. St. n
Richards was Hannan's high price
it with the Yankees and we won ten peMants."
Includes Sunday T mu.
Sentinel.
scorer with 12 points.
drubbing of Clemson Wednes- Florence St. 76 SE La. 53
Mlze Most Suceesslal
Reason 10. -H &amp; R Block lax preparers
Stetsn 76 St. Mry's.Tex. 62
Of all the men Stengel employed as ptnCIHlltters, Johnny Mlze day . The Gophers also moved Belmnt Abby 103 Pfelffr 81
Coach Dune Wolfe's reserves . ':;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;.
have all rnceived .special training on the
now possess a 6-3 record. They
was by far the p10st successful after coming over to the Yankees up two- notches from last Grdnr-Webb 103 Allen 80
use of the. new tax fotms for this year.
will be at Wahama next
. This W~k'S Spe~lai
week's seventh ranking, Erskine 75 F. Marloo 54
from the Giants.
·
UNC
Ashevl
95
W.
Car.
82
We will use the fonn that best fits your
Friday.
"The older he got, the betier he got," said Casey, with one of polishing off Wisconsin, 711-54, A. Peay 88 E. Ky. 87, ot
own personal situation so that you pay the
Score by quarters:
Morehed 82 Murray 75
those familiar winks of his. "Know why? I'll tell ya. He knew he Saturday.
Corps
Chrstl
74
Ga.
St.
67
least
possible tax.
Long Beach State was anothHannan
8 12 23 27
could hit distance. sOmetimes It's better not to. So he put that in
LaGrnge
73
Colmbs
Coli.
59
Southern
12 32 52 64
his mind and went on the size of the park he was in. He'd come . er team moving up the ladder Tougaloo88Ark.·P.B. 84
up, pinch-lilt and there'd be three men on base. They'd pitch the
PLANS ANNOUNCED
USED CARS
ball in on him, and he'd go the other way. Not too hard, not too
v~ry good hitter and so was (Bob) lemon. I had some pretty good
HANOVER,
N.H.
(UP!)
easy. He'd go 'butcher boy.' Just chop at the ball. The same way
ones, too, like (Ed) Lopat, (Whitey) Ford and (Tommy) Byrne. Dartmouth College, long a
a butcher chops a piece of meat.''
All of 'em could hit.''
hockey power In the Ivy
~engel PU\ in more than 50 years In baSeball before retiring at
Sends In Pinch-Hitters
League, Monday announced
the end of 1965. He saw many fine hitting pitchers in his thne but,
Yet Stengel sent in pinchhitters for Lopat, Ford and Byrne plans for a new $3.75 mllllon
this is ·a trait of his, he shies away from saying which one he
when he felt he had to.
multi-purpose ice hockey
thinks was best because he doesn't wish to hurt the feelings of
casey says he can't begin to calculate how many plnchhliters arena with construction due to
Blue with .black vinyl top,
some other pitcher who might feel he's the one Casey should have
blue
Int., full power equip,,
he used during the 25 years he managed in the majors.
begin in April.
singled out.
.
la_ctory
~lr, 7,000 mlies.
.
. "I'll tell yOU one thing, ihoUgh," he sSya. "!believed in it.''
1
Sharp! Like newl '
"1 won't say '(Otarlie) RUffing was the greaiest hitter I. ever
Nobody was sacred as far as he was concerned either. .
IN SECOND PLACE
seen for a pitcher, but he was one of 'em. (0on) Drysdale was a
Once, after one of his better kno'wn infielders was removed for
NEW YORK (UP!) .- Bruce
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
apinch-llitter, and the infielder who had already begun walking Crampton, winner of the
up to the plate becanie so angry over being pulled that he fiung Phoenix Open golf championhis bat toward the rack.
•
ship this past weekend, has
"You'll Like Our Quality
It boWlCed into the dugout and landed only Inches from moved into second place in the
Way of Doing Business.'~ .
GMAC FINANCING i
Stengel's feet.
PGA tournament division
.992 -534~ .
J'omero~
The Infielder grwnbled something about being tsken out and . money winners list. Cratilpton
. Open Evenings·''fiiB:OO :
headed straight down the dugout steps toward the Yailkees ,1 picked up $30,000 In the
Til S P.M, Sat: ,
clubhouse.
Phoenix nn....
stengel was after him like a shot.
- !!!!!
. ·!· !·!·!-·!!=!!
-!!
"~.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
"Ussen here, you," snapped Casey; his face less than six in!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ches from the Infielder's. "When you manage this club, you do it
your way I'm managln' now, so you're gonria do It my way.
Understand?" .
.
The Infielder nodded ·sllenUy.
1'ROFESSIONAL TUNE4JP ·
He understood, ali right. He still remembers·the episode to this
day •
8 CYLINDER
Includes Parts
95 UP
1
and Labor

y

.aport cars •• ·, In

fell to '"'· :

Sport farade

I

What do you do now?
A-Pass. II the h oa r t suit
doesn't work, you ~on't make
foUr hearts, but yo·1r partner
ml~ht still be oblo to mike nine
tricks at no-trump.

Transylvllllia jumped to a 4124 lead over Urbana at half.
time and eltended It to ·liB
points in the. second half ' enroute to the KentuCky learn 't
ninth win ofthe season. Urbana

because four Carnegie atsrters
were mwith influenza.
Allan Hornyak scored 24
points for Ohio State, which
went through a see-!IIIW secood
half with Georgia Tech. The
win made the Buckeyea 6-6.
Rick Mlchaelaon scored 23
points and Joel Copeland 22 to
lead Old Dominion to 1111 uneasy win over Xl!vler. Conny
Warren was high fw Xavier,
now 2-10, with 20 points.

foday's

. •. . ,
.. ,
·My brother-in-law says we'•e •elatives now and it's okay If he ,.
kisses me in front of my sister- just when we're aloe. What do·
you do about nol-60-brotherly kisses? - DEFINITELY NOT'

+++

faJIII that·made them that way .
or If they were just that way for
us. BQt they weren't the Same
against Miami."
Miami's 14-7 Super Bowl
victory over Washington was
the chief topic for discussion
Monday during workout sessions for tbe third Pro Bowl to
iring together stars of both the
NFC and AFC. The first two
gamea, both played In Los
Angeles, were split.
Kickoff Is set for 3 p.m. CST
at the DallJis Cowboys' Texas

"it.::!mt.;;::~m:;::-n::::::::::m:!:!~~::~®~~~:::::::::;;;;

Dear Helen and Sue:
Maybe hitchhiker emblems and i.d. cards in cars would
make it safe, but I learned my lesson recently -no more pickups for me!
My sister, a girlfriend and I saw a man hitching. He looked
safe and it was raining, so we gave him a ride. He told us he was
an alcoholic on the way to an A.A. meeting and to turn down a
dark side street to let'him off. Then I saw be had a gun at my
head! He motioned me to make them stop the car, so without
letting them know, I told them there was II friend on the sidewalk,
and we ought to pick her up. Thank goodneSs they caught on fast
and stopped.! jumped out with the man behind me, and my aiater
gunned tbe car just as I jumped In it again. It was split second,
but we got 'rid of him. We notified the pollee but he had disappeared.
I went to Europe last summer and it's true - hitching isn't
considered dangerous over there - but over here, well NEVER AGAIN!

Dear D.:
Or an innocent, "I'll ask my sister what she thinks about
brotherly ldsses, okay?" - HELEN

l!le

DALLAS (UP!) - The
' Washington club that Tom
Landry saw on his television
Silt .last Sunday did not remind
him In any way of the team he
waa forced to ·'look at New
Year's Eve.
"Washington just didn ~have
the edge against Miami that
they did against us," said
Landry, preparing the
National Conference squad for
next SWlday's Pro Bowl. "They
weren 'I fired up.
"I don't know if It was their

+++

TEMPTED
D.N.T.:
How about a sisterly slap across the face? -SUE

.

By Ualted l'rel8 lutmudiaaal
Wllh Stumpf ~d Scott Weak- ing stresk by downing aeorgu.
Mike Stumpf, Capital's ley, who had 22 more points, · Tech 85-79 at ~jtlanta ; Temessenlor center, scored 34 points providing the firepower, Cap . see State trounced Central
Monday night to set hlmaelfup ·got its 13th win . of the year State 83-ill; Transylvania
as the school's all-time ll!lainst a s!ngle defeat. The ; (Ky.) whipped Urbana 110-60;
bask~tball scoring leader.
Crusadat, ranked ninth in the Old Dominion (Va.) edged
sttmipf, who led
Cru- UPI small college ratings, are ·-Xavier .79-76; Bowling Green
sadera to a 94-68 rout of Ober- . ~In the Ohio Conference.
slipped by Ball state (Ind.) 7f&gt;. '
lin, now has 1,4110 careec points,
Oberlin, now 3-8. ov~au and ' 74, and Cleveland State beat St. '
15more than.the previous scor- 6-41n the conference, was led Francis (Pa.) 90-85. ·
'
lng leader, Bob Bernl&lt;ihr. by Robbie Baird with ]&amp;points.
Carnegie-Mellon (Pa.) was
Bernlobr set his mark 1951· · In other Ohio games, Ohio · scheduled to play John Carroll,
1955.
State ended a three-game los- but the game was postponed

' Skins were not fired up'-~Landry

Okay:
Okay!
We can 'I figure out TV taboos, but they surely must make
sense to someone in charge. Let's hope he or she elucidates. HELEN

· WIN',AT ·SRIDO.E Helen and Sue :

'

a

Generation Rap

'

1• 0

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 17, 1973
6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10,
6: 15 - Farmtlme 10; Farm Report 13.
.
6:25 - Paul Harvey 13.
6:30- Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Urban League 10;
The Story 13.
7:00 - Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10; News 6; Fllntstones 13.
7:30 - Sleepy Jeffers 8; Romper Room 6; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13; Popeye 10.
8:00 - Capt . Kang'aroo 10;. New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
Tim my &amp; Lassie 6.
8:30- Ja ck La La nne 13; New Zoo Revue 6; Romper Room a.
8:55 - Local News 13.
. ..
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Pllll Donahue 15; What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3; Concentration 6; Capt. Kangaroo a;
Friendly Junction 10; Ben Casey 13 ,
9:30 - Elec. Co. 33 ; To Tell The Truth 3; Jeopardy 6; Hazel 8.
10:00 - Dinah Shore 3, 15; Columbus Six Calling 6; Joker's Wild
a. 10; Dick Van Dyke 13:
10:30 - Concentration 3, 15; Ph li Donahue4; Price Is Righi a. 10;
Split Second 13.
11 :00.- Sale of the Century 3, 15; Love American Style6; Gambit
8. 10; Password 1~ .
11 : 30- Hollywood.Squares 4, 13; Love Of Life a, 10; Bewitched 6,
13; Sesame Street 20.
,
12:00 - Jeopardy 3, 15; Password 6; Bob Braun's so.so Club 4;
News 13; Contact 8; News 10.
·
I 2: 30- Split Second 6; Search For Tomorrow a, 10; Who, What,
Where 3, 15.
··
I :00 - News. Weather, Sporfs3 ; All My Children 6, 13; It's Your
Bet 8; Green Acres tO; Watch Your Child 15.
1:20 - Lucille Rivers 3.
1:311'- 3 On A·Match 3, 4, 15; Let's Make A Deal6, 13; As The
World Turns a, 10.
' '
2:00- Days of Our Lives 3. 4. 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Douglas 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
2:30 - DatlngGame13; Ooctors3. 4, 15; EdgeofNight8, 10.
3: 00 - Another World 3, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; Love,
· Splendored Thing 8. 10; RFD 20.
3:30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
Secret Storm 8, 10; Ofllo: This Week· 20.
4:00 - Mr. Cartoon 3) Somerset 15'; Sesame St. 33; Love
American ·Style 13; ,.,.,rv Griffin 4; Fllntstones 6; Gilligan's
Island 8; Movie "A Private Affair" 10.
·
· 4:30- Andy Griffith 15 ; Pettlcoal Juncllon 3; Merv Griffin 8;
ABC Aller School 6, 13.
·
.
5:00 - Mr. Rogers 33; Dick Van Dyke 15; Ponderosa 3, 4; Daniel
.Boone 6.
·
5:30- Marshall Dillon 15; Elec. Co, 33; Dragnet a; Gomer Pyle
USMC 13; Hodgepodge Lodge20: I Love Lucy6.
6:00 - ·Truth or Conseq. 6; News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15; Sesame St. 20;
Around The Bend 33.
6:30 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15; I Dream of Jeannie 13; HathayOga
33.
7: 00 - News 6, 10; What's My Line 8; Truth or Conseq. 3; Beat
The Clock 4; Anything You Can Do 13; Know v·our Schools33 ·
Outlook '73 1s.
'
7:30- To Tell '(he Truth 6; The Judge 10; Pollee Surgeon 3, 4;
Proteclors 8; ' Beat The Clock 13; f.ndy Griffith 15;
Hodgepodge. Lodge 20; Marco Sportllte 33.
7:45 - Marshall Basketball.
8:!!0 - Adam·12 3,15, ~~Paul Lynde-6, 13; Nallonai .Geographlc
8, 10; College Basketball 33; How Td Win The Nobel Prtu 20.
8:30 - Playhouse New York 20; Bob Hope 3, 4, 15; Movie
·

ment.

'$:¥::m.&lt;:
••
~~~

. TUESDAY, JAN. 16, 1973
6:00 - News 3, 4: a, 10: 13. 15; Truth or Conseq. 6; Sesame St. 20;
Around The Bend 33.
6:30- News 3, 4. 6, a, 10, 15; I Dream of Jeannie 13; Growing
..J:Um Up 33.
7~ - What's My Line 8; I've Got A Secret 13; Saint 15;
Electric Co. 20; Bea t The Clock 4.
7:30- This Is Your Life 3; Doclors on Call4 ; To Tell The Truth
6; Price Is Right 8, 10; Beal The Clock 13 ; RFD 20 ; Zoom 33.
8:00 - Temperalures Ri sing 6, 13; Bonanza 3, 4, 15; Maude 8,
10; VD Blues 20 ;' Book Beat 33.
8:30 - Hawaii Flve·O 8,10; Bill Moyer's Journal20, 33; Movie
"The Nlaht Stranaler" 6, 13.
9:00 - Behind the Lines 20; Hernandez: Houston P.O. 3, 4, 15.
9:30 - Black Jourrial20, 33; Movie "All In the Family" 8, 10.
10:00 - Marcus Welby M.D. 6. 13; News 20; NBC Reports 3, 4; 15.
11 :00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 13, 15.
11 :30 - Movie "Frankenstein" 6. 13; Virginian 8; Movie "Sword
In the Desert" 10.
'
I : 00 - Your Health 4; News 13.
1:30 - News 4.

" Female Artillery" 6, 13.

by Patterson .and Patrick

inaugural address to call Congress ioto special session tn deal with farm problems as well as tariff
changes to help increase farm prices .
Wrangling between the White House and Congress was s&lt;i prolonged and bitter that the resulting
measures of the session-the Hawlcy,Smoot Tariff
Act and the Marketing Act of 1929-helped no one
much, and farmers least of all. 011 Oct. 29, 1929,
the roof fell in when more than sixteen million
shares :~f stock were sold on the New York Stock
Exchange at an average loss of $40 a share . •
In the first nine months of the Hoover Administration, the wonh of listed securities alone had
decreased by more than $30 billion: In rapid succession banks closed, businesses failed, factories shut
down . or drastical_ly cunailcd production and the
number of unemployed persons soared from three
million in 1930 to over ten million in 1932.
The first reaction of Administration officials was
to discount the seriousness of the depression . .
Hoover himself kept insisting that "prosperity is
just around the corner," as though it were an incantation to ward off e"il. Hoover's philosophy of
individualism kept him from trying to mobilize the
resources of the federal government in the fight
against the depression. He thought the basic cause
of the trouble was psychological rather than political or economic, and he thought relief should be
handled at the local level, not by the federal govern-

~llmllml!::::::~'~·~
···~·········
...... ·~·····~··
. ....::r.:;:•..............
·.&lt;&lt;·.·:-:·
• o;.·....·:·:·

Television.. Log

3- The Daily sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy; 0 .., Jan. 16, 1973 "

PRESIDENTS ~F MANIF'EST DESTINY

11

ON THE TV DIAL: Not much ... An NBC special noses into
Peking, China, at 10, WSAZ-TV ... Pilot of a ''maybe" series,
"Hernandez," a cop story, at 9, same station.

i'''•· , ..

.

, BY PAUL ,CRABTREE
I've got a problem. There's this kid who lives at our house
who likes to read stories from her first-grader primer to her
friends.
On the telephone.
S!e sits for hours, talking with two ·friends named Deanna
and Angela, and reading long paaaages from a textbook calied
"Up.the Street imd Down."
'
•
(Yeah, I know itsowt~like "Up the Down Staircase,"-which
exposed the perils of modern school-teaching, and maybe that's
why the teachers subconsciously chose it.)
Anyhow, this ldd - with the wtlikely name of Shinybrite reads stories like ''Old Mrs. Duck," "A New Boy," "Freddie
Helps/' andl currenUy, 0ne PeMy."
The chief protagonists of "Up the Street and Down" are
Jimmy and Sue, but there are animal stories and oth!!l' atuff in
there, too. (Whatever happened to Dick and Jane?
Herewith is a sample of ''One Penny":
One day Sue went for a walk in the park.
Soon she saw· something.
"A penny!" said Sue.
"I see a permy."
Then she saw Polly and Freddie ...
After this excerpt, the plot really thickens, and I'll n~ver tell
how It really came out.
You can imagine how this sounds, being read in an almostseven-yell!'-&lt;&gt;ld voice as S!inybrite drones on and on, page after
page, the most lurid stuff to be found in "Up the Street and
Down." Angela and Deanna must have ears made of pre-6tressed
concrete. Four out of five calls at my house are for Shinybrite
now.
Anyhow, I have a problem.
I've been in the daughtering game for more than 20 years,
and I know that girls love telephones. But the romance usually
begins about 12 or 13, and most early conversations are with
otber pubescent girls.
After about 14, the telephone really becomes important,
because It may honest-to-gosh be from A Boy! !!
With my 20-year-old away at college the past tbree years, ·
and middle daughter Vyvyanne still 11, it's been fairly quiet at
our house for some time. I even got a call myself from time to
time.
. But now Shinybrite, at 7, has established her own reading
circle via closed circuit telephone.
, U I stop her and obey my nonnal paternal impulse to scream
"Stop reading that nutty book!" who knows? Maybe I'll turn her
off fr.om reading forever, and stunt her mentsllty or something.
On the other hand, if I don 't stop her, my sanity is in mortal
peril. Shinybrite's larynx easily oulmatches my eardrums.
With a problem like this, l can hardly wait until she's 14.
Then she won 'I call, for fear the phone might be tied up when A
Boy Is really trying to reach her. But holy Moses! that's more
than seven years away.
"Meanwhile, Jimmy and Sue took the penny, etc., etc.... "

t • •

DRIVING•••
Moore's Semce Ceitter

ExpertlY Install:
SHOCKS
BRAKES'
MUFFLERS
TAiL PIPES

..

•

Is your .car acting up? Has the
winter been hard on your auto?
Now's lhollmelo have 1 tune-up. We ·
can hove Your car running smoothly
in no 1ime. Save money 1t Moore's. ,
,,

•

·. MOORE'S •._,
. Service Center
124 W. Main
Pomeroy
'
PH. 992-2848

�•

•
4-The DaUySentinel,Middlepori·Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 16, 1973

.

.

85
·
'19
.
t
·
'
·
_
·
.
.
cops
·
..
·
.
-'
..
VlC
'orr·
·
. U
OS
-

·

·

·

, ATLANTA (UPI)-Ohio
State ended lbe non~rence
portloo of Ita seaaon Monday
night' with a going-away win
over Georgia Tech, ~711.
Allan
Hornyak,
the
Buckeyes' perennial hlg)).wint
man, was master ol the nets
again, bitting 24 point, in·
cludlilg seven in a spurt near
·the end o1 the
that
decided tbe Winner. '
OSU bad jumped to a lkl
lead, but thougb Georgia Tech
failed to produce a point in the
first five minutes, the Yellow
Jackets had narrowed the gap
to 35-31 by halftime.
With 10:29 remaining in the .
game, Georgia Tech took a 5655 lead and the Buckeyes were

game

In for some roller~oaster
times for the next six minutes.
. Hornyak started the Buckeye
rallybyhittingashotfromthe
field and following it uP with
two foul shots. That put t!lem
ahea d 7~74 and the Georgia
Tech machine· started falling
apart,
Luke Witte came off the·
bench to score 10 points while
Wardell Jackson acored l8and
Steve Wemer 13. Jackson picked off 13 rebounds.
Andy McCain scored a

~:e~~~h~~U:e~~~~:.~

.

·

·

. .

·

.

·

:·

·

,

.

·.

Sfar.•Qt7 tumb.le

.•

·~

~·

'

'

'

,'
'

''.

.-:'
'•

3.. Maryland
(10-0)
4 North Carolina 03_11
5. Minnesota (10-1)

6.LongBeach~t. {13-1)

7· Marquette &lt;11 · 11
B. Missouri (12-1)
9. Providence (10-11
10· Kansas St. (11- 2)
ll . lndlana (10-2)
12. Houston {11 -2)
13. San Francisco (12-1)
Utah bad the Eastern Divi- ~~: ~\yJ~:.n(~oNi( (9.21
sian leader on the ropes 16. Alabama (8-1)
Monday night and kept It there. 17 · Michigan 110·31
18. Fla. St. 110-3)
While the Colonels kept pace 19.1Tie) Vnderbll {10-3)
. nearly basket.for.IJasketin the 19.1Tie) Loulsvt (11 -2)
second half, Urah's h~e first~

!~r~c~:~:/::!~u~ ~~!t~:d r:~e :!~sst~:

::
19.
game.
final two quarters.
Ohio Slate, now~. resumes
Last Saturday, the Stars bad
One of Utah's more notable
its Big Ten schedule SaturdaY. an Ill-point first half lead on f~ats in the contest, In addition
archrival Kentucky. Utah bhiw to shooting 'better than 60 per
it in the third quarter and let · cent from the field for the
the Colonels pull within two night, was its passing. '!be
points before the Western stars amassed 30 assists and
Division leader was able to only 13 errors to dominate the
,regain its footing and go on to Carolina team.
beat the visitors, 1~96.
To top it off, eight Stars each
"We just decided as a learn" shot better than 50 per cent
before the Carolina game ''that from the two-point range.
we've got to keep our offense
The win ·gave Utah a solid
wori!l to Philadelphia, was led moving," said assistant Stars' five-game lead over the
by Sidney Wicks' 29 points.
Coach Larry Creger following Denver Rockets In the West,
·the win over the CougarS. "So, and dropped Carolina's lead
we just kept our running game 2'h games in the East over
going."
Kentucky.
•
Delta St. 97 Troy St. 84
Alcorn A&amp;M 106 Sou. U. 97
the Wh1te paper
.
South Ato. 83 Samfrd 63
Jacksnvl St. 73 Livngstn 63
Tenn. Tech 96 Western Ky. 90
Berea 78 Centre 73
Ky. St.eo Geotwn-Ky. 73
Ky. Weslyn 119 Shaw 95
not foreign but rather domestic
By WIUI•m S. While
Cmpbllsvl68 No. Ky. 66
WASHINGTONSeemingly
policy.
Granting
this
SW La . 96 Ab. Chris. 70
Tulane 58 UNC-Chrltte 55
premature though it may be, a likelihood, there will be a
Cntnary 91 LSU-N.O. 74
subtle
and tentative form of certain historical aptness in
Midwest
precampaigning for the 1976 the identities
Michigan St. 76 Iowa 74
of tbe
Trnsylvnla-Ky. 80 Urbana 60
Republican presidential challengers, coming, as they
Old Dom . 79 Xavler-0. 76
nQmination
is already Upon US. will, from the statehou~es
Capital 94 Oberlin 68
Tenn. St. 83 Cent. St. 68
. By every present sign Vice- rather 1/lan, as has been the
Vincennes 76 R. Morris 61
President
Spiro Agnew will be case for a dozen years, from
Oaklnd Cty 92 Ind . S.E. 73
contested for the honor by at the United Slates Senate. ·
Nebraska 74 Oklahoma 67
Bowing Grn 76 Ball St. 74
least two powerful rivals in
Governors, of course, have
Colo. 81 Mo. 79, ot
Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of little or nothing to do with
Southwest
.
New York and Gov. Ronald foreign affairs, though a great
S. Hous. St. 72 McMrray 58
Ark . Tech 71 Camern Sl.64
Reagan of California. It is deal to do with homely matters
Tex . Sou. 105 Austn Coll.78
entirely
possible, too, that a like taxation and welfare. But
Lamar 87 Texas-Arl 81
S.F.Auslln 78 H. Payne 70
fourth big-state aspirant, by 1976 the Vietnam War will
Tex. Luth . 72 SI.Edward's 58
former
Gov. John ConnaUy of long since have been over, one
S.W.·Tex. 74 E. Tex. Sap. 67
Texas,
will
enter 'the lists.
· way or another. And Its trawna
Bishop 102 LeTourneau 70
S.W. Tex. 91 Tex . A&amp; I 70
Moreover, the probability is will have bitten so deeply that
Waylnd 88 Lbbck Chris. 69
high
that for the first time no political leader will dare
Wiley 90 Langston 87
since before World War II the even to think of any foreign
Anglo St. 74 E. Tex. St. 67
Mo. Sou . 55 Mldwstrn 53 ·
tlecisl\i6 issues in 1976 wm be commitment of American

76ers, 135-108.
The Kansas Clty-Qmaha
Kings got their chance to toy
with ·the Pbiladelpbia . 76ers
Monday night and like the :est
of the National Basketball
Association, they had a ball .
The
Kings
exploited
Philadelphia's defense for 43
pointsinthethirdquarter,!Oof
them coming on layups, and
went on to rout the 78ers, 135108. The loss was the 43rd in 47
gamea lor the 78ers · this
season, the worst record by far
in the league .
Nate Archibald, the league's
leading scorer, hit for 30 points
and contributed 14 assists
before leaving the game with
nearly seven minutes left .
Freddie Boyd led the 78ers with
24 points.
In the only other game, Dave
Bing scored 31 points and Bob
Lanier Jidded 24 to lead the
Detroit Pistons to a 112-101
victory over the Portland Trail
mazers. The victory snapped a
three-game losing streak for
the Pistons. Portland, which
has won only 11 games, second

in parentheses: (Seventh Week)

Co~·ors
a

Kings roll over
By United Prest lntematlooal

won•IO$f records 'as of Saturday

128.• 110 ..zn AB:A ti•tt
SALT LAKE CITY (UP!)The Utah ' Stars learned a
valuable lesson last week and
they taught it to Carolina's
Cougars, pulling off a 128-110
American Basketball Assocla-

College Scores

21Dodgers

NEW YORK (UPI)- The
\Jnited_Press
International
top
20 ma1or . college
basketball
.teams wlth.first-p,lace votes and

Team
against Iowa. The Buckeyes conferen~win. They lost their 1. UCLA (351 112·01
2: N.C. St. 111-01
111\e still looking for their first ·first two starts.

p

Poinls

350
300
237
166
165
155
147
73
62
43

39

38
31

~~

17

11
10

s

Not ~ty . says , ' report /Qr
Woody's attorney first drills
'

'

t

.

PASADENA, Calif. (UP!) An a 1torney representing Ohio
State football co;~ch Woody
Hayes entered a plea of innocenl for 'him
. Monday to a
misdenjeanor battery charge
filed by a Los Angeles Times
photographer.
Hayes was not required to
appear for the arraignment.
·Municipal Judge Samuel L. ·
Laidig set Feb. 22 for a pretrial
f
con erence,-.
.

.

·
·
Aft Rogers, who was at tbe
Rose Bow1game between Oh'10
State and Southern California
New Year's Day, claimed
Hayes pushed his camera back
into his face. The incident
occurred shortly before the
opening kickoff.
Rogers claimed his ·eye was
injured. Hayes contends he did
not strike the photographer
with the camera, but pushed it
.
t th 'd
away 0 e 81 e.

· 11 b
d
er10rlnattce '· wJ.U e tape
8

.
PomTV1ew Cable TV and the
Tri.COun!y's three da~y newspapers Will have thetr own
"man in Washington"wben the
Wahama High School Band
appears in President Nixon's
Inaugural Parade next
Saturday. .
Paul Gerard, who originates
many of PoinTView:~ local
programs and is host of the
weekly "Take : Five" program
on Ch. 5, will record the entire
trip for both the newspapers
and cable TV subscribers.
Newspaper photos will be
sent back on a rush basis for
use by the Pt. Pleasant
Register, Gallipolis Tribune
and Pomeroy Sentinel, whic,h.

_.:.,!

cooperate with PoinTView in
daily news digest programming.
A Videotape of the White
Falcons' trip, from their
departure Friday morning,
their arrival in Washington,
the parade itself, sightseeing,
and the trip home will be made.
It is expected to be at least 90
minutes long. ·
The televised show will be
rerun at least three times on
PoinTView Cable Ch. · 5,
sponsored jointly by Mason
County's three banks : Mason
County Bank, Citizens National
Bank and Peoples Bank of Pt.
Pleasant.
Exact time for the re-

.plays will be announced
later in the_iewspapers and on
Cable Cbs. 5 and 15.
"The newspapers, cable
company, and banks are
uniting in this unique en·
deavor, because · we consider
the selection of the Wahama
band to appear In the .Nixon
Inauguration-an event in which
the whole area can take pride,"
said PoinTView operator Paul
Crabtree and Daily Sentinel
Editor Chesler L. Tannehill in
a joint statement, adding,
"We'll provide complete photo
coverage and interviews with
the bandsmen and many of the
dignitaries they'll be seeing for
the many Falcon fans."

LOS ANGELES (UP!) ·.Twenty-one Los Angeles Do&lt;ls·
ers trotted onto the grass :at
Dodger stadium Monday for
the first workout of the season:
·veteran outfielder Willie
DaviS· was th'e first in the
Dodger batting cage, b~t .the
big ·· show came from third
baseman
and · former
California Angel, . Ken Me·
Mullen, who corulected for a
home run during the batting
drill. Farmhand lee RDblnson
also lmocked a ball into the .

I

Prices valid th!u Janu-v 24

.·11'·11Z.,COL&amp;:ATE
'-

troops, to any cause. Publlc
interest and the national
dialogue will perforce turn to
domestic problems.
The year 1976 in short,
almost certainly will go down
as the year of the governors in
national politics, and the more
so because gubernatorial
power in general will in any
event rise as federal revenue
sharing with the states
proceeds.
That Gov. Rockefeller sees
this prospect and ·is actively
interested in having another go
at the presidential nomination
is plain both in what he says
and what he does. (To say that
Agnew is interested is to · say
the screamingly 9bvious.)
Rockefeller's preparations

for . the- big try are built
primarily upon the harshest of
ail current social issues;· tbe
drug traffic. His proposal for
mandatory life sentences
beyond possibility of parole,
for hard drug pushers, is not
only the toughest ever
responsibly put forward in this
country. It is also strongly
appealing to the " silent
majority" nationally, not· withstanding all tbe objections
raised by some liberals and
nearly ail advanced liberals,
such as Mayor John 1.indsay of
New York City.
Indeed, the very antagonism
of Lindsay, an erstwhile
unrepublican Republican now
turned-far leftist Democrat,
will beyond doubt be a bonus

for Nelson Rockefeller among
the regular Republicans who
will control the party convention four years hence. In
fa ct, one can even now see a
gathering of circumstances
which could well end with
Nelson Rockefeller holding the
Iitle
of
Mr.
. Antipermissiveness.
Regan , for his part, is
making his preconvention
record primarily upon the
issues of fiscal prudence and
inflation
control.
Like
Rockefeller, he will be well into
his sixties in 1976 _ but like
Rockefeller again, he does not
look his age.
Agnew's strength will of
course lie in the fact that he
will for · eight years have been

st~~~ullen was joined in the

DUTTON'S ONLY

...
;'

.."

.200, 2-PLY
ACIIL T!SSUES

5 GILLETTE
TRAC~II
BLADES
.
G.OOD AT
DUTTON'S ONLY ·
Pri~s

Joe·

15°

GOOD AT

...

Limit 2

DUTTON'S ONLY

Limit2boxes

Prices valid thru January 24

valid thru. January 24

LUSTRE CRE
. HAIR SPRAY
18-0Z·. REG. OR HTH

close to the levers of national '
power as part of the Nixon
"team. " It will be said in his
behalf that he is entitled to
promotion.
As to Connally, he is
presently the darkest of dark
horses. He remains a
Democrat, though as head of
Democrats for Nixon he
contributed mightily to the
President's landslide victory of
1972. A reconversion of John
Connally into a Republican is,
however, far from impossible.
This columnist's impression is
thst such a reconversion will
occur if, say by late 1974,
Connally is convinced that the
Democratic
party
is
irreversibly bent upon what he
would ' •dolloe •as ultraliberalism.

~1Mt~

28-QT.
BASKET

Rectangular shape. Sturdy.

COOD AT
DUTTON'S ONLY

GOOD AT
DUTTON'S ONLY

Limit2

Limit 2
Prices valid thru January 24

4-0Z. DIAL
ANTI-PERSPIRANT
DEODORAIT
...............

IIIIWSaul

GOOD AT
DUTTON'S ONLy·

MAGI CUBES

a&amp;c

GOOD AT
DUTTON'S ONLY

Limit 2

7-0Z. COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE
· PLUS BRUSH

3-SYLY411A

GOOD At .
DUTTON'S ONLY
Limit 2 packs

.CLAIROL HERBAL
ESSENCE SHAMPOO
For bril#lt and shiny hlir. 11-oz. sizo.

55°

GOOD AT
DUTTON'S ONLY

.Limit 2

Prices valid thru Jonuary 24

Prices valid thru January 24

Prlc01 volid thru Janu-v 24

25°

. GOOU AT
l'lUTTON'S ONLY

'•

· A consistent, well co-ordinated advertising campaign placed

..

GOOD AT
DUTTON'S ONLY

Limit 2 packs

GOODAT
DUTTON'S ONLY ·

Limit 2 boxes

J I J·
BABY POWDER
I

EVEREADY
·aanERIES

than your salesmen. Newspaper advertising motivates people ...
when people are motivated ... they buy! S~, Mr.

86C

Prices valid thru January 24

Prictl vlllid thru Jonuory 24

in your hometown paper can reach more people, quicker

KODAK FILl
01128-12

40 REG. OR SUPER
~-;r
KOTEI IAPKIIS
t;~
....... -·.

100 WESTAB
EIIVELOPES

.

..,

·Prices valid thru Janu-v 24

.

PUT Y UR SALESMAN
AT EVERY DOORSTEP. ••

..

(GOOD AT
,
DUTTON'S
ONLY
- ·· ··
-

Limit 2'

Prices valid thru January 24

--

..,'

25c.

.· dd~~~~IIIU£-~

GOOD AT

drill by another fonner Angel
acquired by the Dodgers In the
big. offseason trade, pitcher
Andy Messersmith.
Veteran Dodger pitchers on
hand included Don Sutton, AI
Dowing and Claude Osteen.
The Monday, Wednesday and
Friday workouts, scheduled
primarily for players who live
in the West, will continue untO
late next month when spring
training begins in Vero Beach,
F1a.
Sunday , Feb. 18, a practice
and a five-inning game with the
University of Southern Callfornia will be open to the
· public .

Prices vlllid thru Jonuory 24

.:

LITY BUCKET
.11-QUART

'

'

Repl• or lime,

';·
'•

'

·SHAVE-CRlAI

Republican precampaigning for '76 underway

..

•

'

,

College Ratings

.

.

s...:.Tbe DIUySenlinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Jan. I&amp;, In!

Soothing on baby's skin.

"C" or uo" blttlrits.

GOOD AT

Merchant, when you want to reach the most people, the

DUTTON'S
y

fastest way possible ... thillk newspaper. We
Prices valid thru Jonu.-y 24

cover more of the people you want to reach, everyday.

.•
·'

'

·~·

The
~

..
:~

•'
·'
- ~.'
'

..

..

.

UOOD AT · :
·GooDAT
DUTTON'S
ONLY

Dail
. y
'•

•

..
'

••

Is Delivered Tlf More (3 Tinies .A s Ma!ly)

·~

·'

46

PIITI •sE
81111 or Clnn-.

••
ttat,IIC. •

.

.

U\JQO AT .

'

Homes in Meigs County Th11n· Any Other Newspaper

'

DUTTON'S
ONLY •

C

.

DUTTON'S
ONLY
.,·

40·
0

·14..oz.

&amp;oc·

'tooD
AT . .

6&amp; ·

24

Limit2

2

for
Prices volid thru Jonu-v :i4

Prices volld thru Janu-v 24

TOILET
·TISSUE ·

spray.

Twin-pack of ,.2-ply
'

GOOD AT

DUTTON'S
ONLY

80, 75, and 100 WIU.

C

DUTTON'S
ON!,.Y
·

a·uaRD
DEODORAIT
~!:oz .

. SYLVAIIA
LI&amp;HT BULBS

CEPACOL

Prices valid thru '

··s entinel

· .('
~.

·PACK OF 110
Q-TIPS

JOIISOII
'JOIISOI
·aaiD·IIDS

'•

l.lmit 2

GoooA.r ·
•DUTTON'S
ONLY'
.

.BIC ·PEIIS
Moka writing 1 piiiiUII .

tiUuet.

1-&amp;c

Limit 2 packs

GooD AT

DUTTON'S
ONLY

�•

•
4-The DaUySentinel,Middlepori·Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 16, 1973

.

.

85
·
'19
.
t
·
'
·
_
·
.
.
cops
·
..
·
.
-'
..
VlC
'orr·
·
. U
OS
-

·

·

·

, ATLANTA (UPI)-Ohio
State ended lbe non~rence
portloo of Ita seaaon Monday
night' with a going-away win
over Georgia Tech, ~711.
Allan
Hornyak,
the
Buckeyes' perennial hlg)).wint
man, was master ol the nets
again, bitting 24 point, in·
cludlilg seven in a spurt near
·the end o1 the
that
decided tbe Winner. '
OSU bad jumped to a lkl
lead, but thougb Georgia Tech
failed to produce a point in the
first five minutes, the Yellow
Jackets had narrowed the gap
to 35-31 by halftime.
With 10:29 remaining in the .
game, Georgia Tech took a 5655 lead and the Buckeyes were

game

In for some roller~oaster
times for the next six minutes.
. Hornyak started the Buckeye
rallybyhittingashotfromthe
field and following it uP with
two foul shots. That put t!lem
ahea d 7~74 and the Georgia
Tech machine· started falling
apart,
Luke Witte came off the·
bench to score 10 points while
Wardell Jackson acored l8and
Steve Wemer 13. Jackson picked off 13 rebounds.
Andy McCain scored a

~:e~~~h~~U:e~~~~:.~

.

·

·

. .

·

.

·

:·

·

,

.

·.

Sfar.•Qt7 tumb.le

.•

·~

~·

'

'

'

,'
'

''.

.-:'
'•

3.. Maryland
(10-0)
4 North Carolina 03_11
5. Minnesota (10-1)

6.LongBeach~t. {13-1)

7· Marquette &lt;11 · 11
B. Missouri (12-1)
9. Providence (10-11
10· Kansas St. (11- 2)
ll . lndlana (10-2)
12. Houston {11 -2)
13. San Francisco (12-1)
Utah bad the Eastern Divi- ~~: ~\yJ~:.n(~oNi( (9.21
sian leader on the ropes 16. Alabama (8-1)
Monday night and kept It there. 17 · Michigan 110·31
18. Fla. St. 110-3)
While the Colonels kept pace 19.1Tie) Vnderbll {10-3)
. nearly basket.for.IJasketin the 19.1Tie) Loulsvt (11 -2)
second half, Urah's h~e first~

!~r~c~:~:/::!~u~ ~~!t~:d r:~e :!~sst~:

::
19.
game.
final two quarters.
Ohio Slate, now~. resumes
Last Saturday, the Stars bad
One of Utah's more notable
its Big Ten schedule SaturdaY. an Ill-point first half lead on f~ats in the contest, In addition
archrival Kentucky. Utah bhiw to shooting 'better than 60 per
it in the third quarter and let · cent from the field for the
the Colonels pull within two night, was its passing. '!be
points before the Western stars amassed 30 assists and
Division leader was able to only 13 errors to dominate the
,regain its footing and go on to Carolina team.
beat the visitors, 1~96.
To top it off, eight Stars each
"We just decided as a learn" shot better than 50 per cent
before the Carolina game ''that from the two-point range.
we've got to keep our offense
The win ·gave Utah a solid
wori!l to Philadelphia, was led moving," said assistant Stars' five-game lead over the
by Sidney Wicks' 29 points.
Coach Larry Creger following Denver Rockets In the West,
·the win over the CougarS. "So, and dropped Carolina's lead
we just kept our running game 2'h games in the East over
going."
Kentucky.
•
Delta St. 97 Troy St. 84
Alcorn A&amp;M 106 Sou. U. 97
the Wh1te paper
.
South Ato. 83 Samfrd 63
Jacksnvl St. 73 Livngstn 63
Tenn. Tech 96 Western Ky. 90
Berea 78 Centre 73
Ky. St.eo Geotwn-Ky. 73
Ky. Weslyn 119 Shaw 95
not foreign but rather domestic
By WIUI•m S. While
Cmpbllsvl68 No. Ky. 66
WASHINGTONSeemingly
policy.
Granting
this
SW La . 96 Ab. Chris. 70
Tulane 58 UNC-Chrltte 55
premature though it may be, a likelihood, there will be a
Cntnary 91 LSU-N.O. 74
subtle
and tentative form of certain historical aptness in
Midwest
precampaigning for the 1976 the identities
Michigan St. 76 Iowa 74
of tbe
Trnsylvnla-Ky. 80 Urbana 60
Republican presidential challengers, coming, as they
Old Dom . 79 Xavler-0. 76
nQmination
is already Upon US. will, from the statehou~es
Capital 94 Oberlin 68
Tenn. St. 83 Cent. St. 68
. By every present sign Vice- rather 1/lan, as has been the
Vincennes 76 R. Morris 61
President
Spiro Agnew will be case for a dozen years, from
Oaklnd Cty 92 Ind . S.E. 73
contested for the honor by at the United Slates Senate. ·
Nebraska 74 Oklahoma 67
Bowing Grn 76 Ball St. 74
least two powerful rivals in
Governors, of course, have
Colo. 81 Mo. 79, ot
Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of little or nothing to do with
Southwest
.
New York and Gov. Ronald foreign affairs, though a great
S. Hous. St. 72 McMrray 58
Ark . Tech 71 Camern Sl.64
Reagan of California. It is deal to do with homely matters
Tex . Sou. 105 Austn Coll.78
entirely
possible, too, that a like taxation and welfare. But
Lamar 87 Texas-Arl 81
S.F.Auslln 78 H. Payne 70
fourth big-state aspirant, by 1976 the Vietnam War will
Tex. Luth . 72 SI.Edward's 58
former
Gov. John ConnaUy of long since have been over, one
S.W.·Tex. 74 E. Tex. Sap. 67
Texas,
will
enter 'the lists.
· way or another. And Its trawna
Bishop 102 LeTourneau 70
S.W. Tex. 91 Tex . A&amp; I 70
Moreover, the probability is will have bitten so deeply that
Waylnd 88 Lbbck Chris. 69
high
that for the first time no political leader will dare
Wiley 90 Langston 87
since before World War II the even to think of any foreign
Anglo St. 74 E. Tex. St. 67
Mo. Sou . 55 Mldwstrn 53 ·
tlecisl\i6 issues in 1976 wm be commitment of American

76ers, 135-108.
The Kansas Clty-Qmaha
Kings got their chance to toy
with ·the Pbiladelpbia . 76ers
Monday night and like the :est
of the National Basketball
Association, they had a ball .
The
Kings
exploited
Philadelphia's defense for 43
pointsinthethirdquarter,!Oof
them coming on layups, and
went on to rout the 78ers, 135108. The loss was the 43rd in 47
gamea lor the 78ers · this
season, the worst record by far
in the league .
Nate Archibald, the league's
leading scorer, hit for 30 points
and contributed 14 assists
before leaving the game with
nearly seven minutes left .
Freddie Boyd led the 78ers with
24 points.
In the only other game, Dave
Bing scored 31 points and Bob
Lanier Jidded 24 to lead the
Detroit Pistons to a 112-101
victory over the Portland Trail
mazers. The victory snapped a
three-game losing streak for
the Pistons. Portland, which
has won only 11 games, second

in parentheses: (Seventh Week)

Co~·ors
a

Kings roll over
By United Prest lntematlooal

won•IO$f records 'as of Saturday

128.• 110 ..zn AB:A ti•tt
SALT LAKE CITY (UP!)The Utah ' Stars learned a
valuable lesson last week and
they taught it to Carolina's
Cougars, pulling off a 128-110
American Basketball Assocla-

College Scores

21Dodgers

NEW YORK (UPI)- The
\Jnited_Press
International
top
20 ma1or . college
basketball
.teams wlth.first-p,lace votes and

Team
against Iowa. The Buckeyes conferen~win. They lost their 1. UCLA (351 112·01
2: N.C. St. 111-01
111\e still looking for their first ·first two starts.

p

Poinls

350
300
237
166
165
155
147
73
62
43

39

38
31

~~

17

11
10

s

Not ~ty . says , ' report /Qr
Woody's attorney first drills
'

'

t

.

PASADENA, Calif. (UP!) An a 1torney representing Ohio
State football co;~ch Woody
Hayes entered a plea of innocenl for 'him
. Monday to a
misdenjeanor battery charge
filed by a Los Angeles Times
photographer.
Hayes was not required to
appear for the arraignment.
·Municipal Judge Samuel L. ·
Laidig set Feb. 22 for a pretrial
f
con erence,-.
.

.

·
·
Aft Rogers, who was at tbe
Rose Bow1game between Oh'10
State and Southern California
New Year's Day, claimed
Hayes pushed his camera back
into his face. The incident
occurred shortly before the
opening kickoff.
Rogers claimed his ·eye was
injured. Hayes contends he did
not strike the photographer
with the camera, but pushed it
.
t th 'd
away 0 e 81 e.

· 11 b
d
er10rlnattce '· wJ.U e tape
8

.
PomTV1ew Cable TV and the
Tri.COun!y's three da~y newspapers Will have thetr own
"man in Washington"wben the
Wahama High School Band
appears in President Nixon's
Inaugural Parade next
Saturday. .
Paul Gerard, who originates
many of PoinTView:~ local
programs and is host of the
weekly "Take : Five" program
on Ch. 5, will record the entire
trip for both the newspapers
and cable TV subscribers.
Newspaper photos will be
sent back on a rush basis for
use by the Pt. Pleasant
Register, Gallipolis Tribune
and Pomeroy Sentinel, whic,h.

_.:.,!

cooperate with PoinTView in
daily news digest programming.
A Videotape of the White
Falcons' trip, from their
departure Friday morning,
their arrival in Washington,
the parade itself, sightseeing,
and the trip home will be made.
It is expected to be at least 90
minutes long. ·
The televised show will be
rerun at least three times on
PoinTView Cable Ch. · 5,
sponsored jointly by Mason
County's three banks : Mason
County Bank, Citizens National
Bank and Peoples Bank of Pt.
Pleasant.
Exact time for the re-

.plays will be announced
later in the_iewspapers and on
Cable Cbs. 5 and 15.
"The newspapers, cable
company, and banks are
uniting in this unique en·
deavor, because · we consider
the selection of the Wahama
band to appear In the .Nixon
Inauguration-an event in which
the whole area can take pride,"
said PoinTView operator Paul
Crabtree and Daily Sentinel
Editor Chesler L. Tannehill in
a joint statement, adding,
"We'll provide complete photo
coverage and interviews with
the bandsmen and many of the
dignitaries they'll be seeing for
the many Falcon fans."

LOS ANGELES (UP!) ·.Twenty-one Los Angeles Do&lt;ls·
ers trotted onto the grass :at
Dodger stadium Monday for
the first workout of the season:
·veteran outfielder Willie
DaviS· was th'e first in the
Dodger batting cage, b~t .the
big ·· show came from third
baseman
and · former
California Angel, . Ken Me·
Mullen, who corulected for a
home run during the batting
drill. Farmhand lee RDblnson
also lmocked a ball into the .

I

Prices valid th!u Janu-v 24

.·11'·11Z.,COL&amp;:ATE
'-

troops, to any cause. Publlc
interest and the national
dialogue will perforce turn to
domestic problems.
The year 1976 in short,
almost certainly will go down
as the year of the governors in
national politics, and the more
so because gubernatorial
power in general will in any
event rise as federal revenue
sharing with the states
proceeds.
That Gov. Rockefeller sees
this prospect and ·is actively
interested in having another go
at the presidential nomination
is plain both in what he says
and what he does. (To say that
Agnew is interested is to · say
the screamingly 9bvious.)
Rockefeller's preparations

for . the- big try are built
primarily upon the harshest of
ail current social issues;· tbe
drug traffic. His proposal for
mandatory life sentences
beyond possibility of parole,
for hard drug pushers, is not
only the toughest ever
responsibly put forward in this
country. It is also strongly
appealing to the " silent
majority" nationally, not· withstanding all tbe objections
raised by some liberals and
nearly ail advanced liberals,
such as Mayor John 1.indsay of
New York City.
Indeed, the very antagonism
of Lindsay, an erstwhile
unrepublican Republican now
turned-far leftist Democrat,
will beyond doubt be a bonus

for Nelson Rockefeller among
the regular Republicans who
will control the party convention four years hence. In
fa ct, one can even now see a
gathering of circumstances
which could well end with
Nelson Rockefeller holding the
Iitle
of
Mr.
. Antipermissiveness.
Regan , for his part, is
making his preconvention
record primarily upon the
issues of fiscal prudence and
inflation
control.
Like
Rockefeller, he will be well into
his sixties in 1976 _ but like
Rockefeller again, he does not
look his age.
Agnew's strength will of
course lie in the fact that he
will for · eight years have been

st~~~ullen was joined in the

DUTTON'S ONLY

...
;'

.."

.200, 2-PLY
ACIIL T!SSUES

5 GILLETTE
TRAC~II
BLADES
.
G.OOD AT
DUTTON'S ONLY ·
Pri~s

Joe·

15°

GOOD AT

...

Limit 2

DUTTON'S ONLY

Limit2boxes

Prices valid thru January 24

valid thru. January 24

LUSTRE CRE
. HAIR SPRAY
18-0Z·. REG. OR HTH

close to the levers of national '
power as part of the Nixon
"team. " It will be said in his
behalf that he is entitled to
promotion.
As to Connally, he is
presently the darkest of dark
horses. He remains a
Democrat, though as head of
Democrats for Nixon he
contributed mightily to the
President's landslide victory of
1972. A reconversion of John
Connally into a Republican is,
however, far from impossible.
This columnist's impression is
thst such a reconversion will
occur if, say by late 1974,
Connally is convinced that the
Democratic
party
is
irreversibly bent upon what he
would ' •dolloe •as ultraliberalism.

~1Mt~

28-QT.
BASKET

Rectangular shape. Sturdy.

COOD AT
DUTTON'S ONLY

GOOD AT
DUTTON'S ONLY

Limit2

Limit 2
Prices valid thru January 24

4-0Z. DIAL
ANTI-PERSPIRANT
DEODORAIT
...............

IIIIWSaul

GOOD AT
DUTTON'S ONLy·

MAGI CUBES

a&amp;c

GOOD AT
DUTTON'S ONLY

Limit 2

7-0Z. COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE
· PLUS BRUSH

3-SYLY411A

GOOD At .
DUTTON'S ONLY
Limit 2 packs

.CLAIROL HERBAL
ESSENCE SHAMPOO
For bril#lt and shiny hlir. 11-oz. sizo.

55°

GOOD AT
DUTTON'S ONLY

.Limit 2

Prices valid thru Jonuary 24

Prices valid thru January 24

Prlc01 volid thru Janu-v 24

25°

. GOOU AT
l'lUTTON'S ONLY

'•

· A consistent, well co-ordinated advertising campaign placed

..

GOOD AT
DUTTON'S ONLY

Limit 2 packs

GOODAT
DUTTON'S ONLY ·

Limit 2 boxes

J I J·
BABY POWDER
I

EVEREADY
·aanERIES

than your salesmen. Newspaper advertising motivates people ...
when people are motivated ... they buy! S~, Mr.

86C

Prices valid thru January 24

Prictl vlllid thru Jonuory 24

in your hometown paper can reach more people, quicker

KODAK FILl
01128-12

40 REG. OR SUPER
~-;r
KOTEI IAPKIIS
t;~
....... -·.

100 WESTAB
EIIVELOPES

.

..,

·Prices valid thru Janu-v 24

.

PUT Y UR SALESMAN
AT EVERY DOORSTEP. ••

..

(GOOD AT
,
DUTTON'S
ONLY
- ·· ··
-

Limit 2'

Prices valid thru January 24

--

..,'

25c.

.· dd~~~~IIIU£-~

GOOD AT

drill by another fonner Angel
acquired by the Dodgers In the
big. offseason trade, pitcher
Andy Messersmith.
Veteran Dodger pitchers on
hand included Don Sutton, AI
Dowing and Claude Osteen.
The Monday, Wednesday and
Friday workouts, scheduled
primarily for players who live
in the West, will continue untO
late next month when spring
training begins in Vero Beach,
F1a.
Sunday , Feb. 18, a practice
and a five-inning game with the
University of Southern Callfornia will be open to the
· public .

Prices vlllid thru Jonuory 24

.:

LITY BUCKET
.11-QUART

'

'

Repl• or lime,

';·
'•

'

·SHAVE-CRlAI

Republican precampaigning for '76 underway

..

•

'

,

College Ratings

.

.

s...:.Tbe DIUySenlinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Jan. I&amp;, In!

Soothing on baby's skin.

"C" or uo" blttlrits.

GOOD AT

Merchant, when you want to reach the most people, the

DUTTON'S
y

fastest way possible ... thillk newspaper. We
Prices valid thru Jonu.-y 24

cover more of the people you want to reach, everyday.

.•
·'

'

·~·

The
~

..
:~

•'
·'
- ~.'
'

..

..

.

UOOD AT · :
·GooDAT
DUTTON'S
ONLY

Dail
. y
'•

•

..
'

••

Is Delivered Tlf More (3 Tinies .A s Ma!ly)

·~

·'

46

PIITI •sE
81111 or Clnn-.

••
ttat,IIC. •

.

.

U\JQO AT .

'

Homes in Meigs County Th11n· Any Other Newspaper

'

DUTTON'S
ONLY •

C

.

DUTTON'S
ONLY
.,·

40·
0

·14..oz.

&amp;oc·

'tooD
AT . .

6&amp; ·

24

Limit2

2

for
Prices volid thru Jonu-v :i4

Prices volld thru Janu-v 24

TOILET
·TISSUE ·

spray.

Twin-pack of ,.2-ply
'

GOOD AT

DUTTON'S
ONLY

80, 75, and 100 WIU.

C

DUTTON'S
ON!,.Y
·

a·uaRD
DEODORAIT
~!:oz .

. SYLVAIIA
LI&amp;HT BULBS

CEPACOL

Prices valid thru '

··s entinel

· .('
~.

·PACK OF 110
Q-TIPS

JOIISOII
'JOIISOI
·aaiD·IIDS

'•

l.lmit 2

GoooA.r ·
•DUTTON'S
ONLY'
.

.BIC ·PEIIS
Moka writing 1 piiiiUII .

tiUuet.

1-&amp;c

Limit 2 packs

GooD AT

DUTTON'S
ONLY

�.'
'
•"

&amp;- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Puneroy, 0 ., Jan.l6,1973

.
.Mrs. o. .rgan
.Commun1ty
·
·. · · .- : ·
· ,
~ has program'
By' Charlene Hoeflich I
·
·
Comer
i§ for Gra~ee

Scouting explained
239.

Mrs. Olive Page, program
chairman, Introduced Roilllrt
Swick, scoutmaster, who spoke
on activities of scouting and
explained the uniform and

''SC'S met at

TJ
VY I

.

Apple Grove
APPLE GROVE, Ohi&lt;r~The
Women's Society of. CllrlStian
Service of the Apple Grove
United Methodist Church met
at the church Tuesday evening.
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe led the
service with singing of the
hymn, "I Love to Tell the
Story." A prayer and SelfDenial service was held. Mrs.
Wolfe used as her topic, "Ufe
together a pilgrimage," with
scripture from the 31st chapter
of Isaiah....Mrs. Roy Buck res,d
"Deborah judge of Israel"
taken from the book of Judges.
The members stood In a
moment of silent prayer before
Mrs. Wolfe prayed and then
gifts were placed on the altar.
Mrs. Dallas Hill was in
charge of the business
meeting. A Stanley party was
planned for Jan. 18 al7:30 p.m.
at the Letart Falls Community
Ce1;!er with Mrs. Irene Rhodes
as demonstrator.
A gift of magazines and
candy were sent to Bill
Shiveley and flowers to Mrs.
Bertha Robinson, patients at
the Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Gel well cards were

badge work with the 88lllslanoe
of Edward Mitchell. Mike
Swick
announced
the
demonstratlona which Included
Buddy Dugan, the way to cook
an egg over an open fire ; Van
Willford, how to prepare a loll
lunch of hamburger, potatoes,
carrots and onions; Craig
Swick, Interlacing short stlcliB
to make a 'frame for cooking
meat; Kenneth Mitchell, the
art of removing an egg from a
shell without breaking tt;
• Raymond WUJ!ord, bow to
bulldacablnclirnpflre; Ronnie

Song service
led by Hill

Duian, b:aktng civer an open
fire on a stick. Other scouts
participating were Jerry
Matson and Tony Hulton.
. Mrs: Sharon Smith, vice
president, had charge of the
llllll!tlng which opened with
devotions by Mrs. Roberta
Wllson.Sbetoldthestoryofthe
palntjng of the Last SuJlP!!r.
Mr. and Mrs; Paul GrllVes,
who have a child In the third
grade and one In the second,
were Introduced. The attendance banner was won by
the sixth grade. Refreshments
wen aerved.

'

M.

'

SCouting and what It offers
waa the theme·of tbe pi-ogram
presented at a rece11t meeting
ol the Salem Center PTA by
members of Boys Scout Troop

SUPERIORS
BRAND
.

. '

'

S. Sgt. Walter

'

.

.;; l

Murray remains hospltalhed at the Noble
Army Hospital, Fort McClelland, Annlslan, .Ala., for trea~t
of Injuries which h' suff~red In an auto accident on New Year s
Day at Bessemer, Alll. ·
Two weeks ago he underWent surgery for multiple Internal.
Injuries but just how long he will remain hospitalized Is quite
uncertain.
Sgt. Harris and his son, Walt, had been In Middleport for'
Cllrlstiilas with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Searles. The
trip south was to return Walt to his mother who resides In
Jackson, Mlsa. Mrs. Searles accompanied her son and grandson
aa far as Bessemer where she remained with her mother and
other relatives, while the two went on to Mississippi.
After the accident, Mr. Searles and Mr. and Mrs. Don Becker
drove to Bessemer and they all returned a week ago. Sgt. Harris
had been scheduled for a tour of duty In Saigon and waa to leave
on Feb. 1 from California.
FOR THE FIRST TIME In 47 years the family of Commissioner and Mrs. Dick Karr didn't get together for Christmaa.
· · Afew days before Christmas, Mr. and Mrs. Kerr W'!l'e called
to Huron due 10 the serious Ubess and hospltallzatlon of their
daughter, Plllly Kerr Mathews. She is home now from the Good
Samaritan Hospital at Sanduaky, and recuperating nicely
although she will be off work for several weeks.

APPLE GROVE, Ohio ~ A
family dinner sponsored by the
Apple Grove Women's Society
·of Christian Service was held
Saturday evening at the Letart
BACK FROM A FUN TWO WEEKS In Phoenix are Juanita
Falls Community Center.
and Carol Bachtel. The two flew out on Dec. 281or a· bel!lted
A six o'clock dinner waa
Olristmas omervance with Butch and Scotty.
served from tables with while
They visited Las Vegas, spent a day at Disneyland, took In
covers.
Rev.
Frank
the sights at Tucson, toured the Frank lloyd Wright Commune,
Cheesebrew gave the prayer
and ate out most every evening In some fancy restaurant. But
before the dinner.
they're back to the old routine now.
.
Aprogram was held after the
Anyway, Monday is Butch's last day aa a member oflhe u. s.
dinner with Dallas Hill leading
Air Force. He receives his discharge that day and will begin
an old-fashioned song service
.
school at Arizona State University. Butch has a degree In speech
Sherrie Lynn(! Blackston to Wed
with Mrs. Darrell Norris at the
REV. BAYMAN
and drama but this time will be majoring In music and plans to
piano.
THE REV. PAUL K.
pick UP his education courses justin case he wants to leach some
Mr. and Mrs. Harold H. Blackston of Route 3, Pomeroy,
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew HAYMAN; Sr., former
tlme.
announce the engagement oJ their daughter, Sherrie Lynne,
gave an inspiring message Meigs County resident, will
Scotty keeps busy at St. Luke's Hospital where' she Is the
to Mr. Jack Kane, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Kane,
using scripture !rpm the 13th be the guest speaker at night supervisor of the intensive care unit. While Carol and
Parma. Miss Blackston, a graduate of Meigs High School,
chapter of I Corinthians, revival services at East
Juanita were there, the 'couple took an ,apartment within walking
attended Ohio University, and is now employed at the Farstressing
starling
the
year
'73
.Letart;
United
Methodist
distance
of the school, are now moved and all settled.
IQers' Bank and Savings Co., Pomeroy.
to
put
Christ
first
In
your
life.
Church
Jan.
21
through
the
Her fiance is a graduate of Padua High School and atMrs. Bertha Robinson gave a 28th, with services to be held
MARY MARTIN has completed a week of training In
tended the University of Detroit. He Is now employed at
recitation
"No
One
Cares
Wliat
·
at7:30
p.m.
nightly.
The
son
Columbus
and is now working 1n Mel.gli and Athens counties aa a
WMPORadlo. The wedding will take place in March .
an
Old
Woman
Wears."
The
of the late William and Lena · ·· field representative auditor for the State of Ohio. Her job ln·• ..
11ervice was dismissed by Hayman, he Is a graduate of volves auditing the deputy registrars, five In Athens and two In
Rae,ne High ·school and
Meigs County, and enforcing court orders against those who fall
r:*$;:,s
:,:..:,:;:o
~::::::c
::&lt;=::::l:~=a
:::::::::,=:&lt;=:=&gt;:-:c
: ::;:::,a
::::::::.=,:=:e
:::::::::n
::::~:=:d
:::::::::a:
:::::&gt;:r
::::::::mm:::::::JI!' ~~:el:;, a~:~ R~~:~n !~~ prayer by Dolly Wolfe.
Attending were Rev. and attended Rio Grande
to comply with state regulations. To say the least, she's delighted
Mrs. Frank Cheesebrew, Mr. College. He taught school In
with the job.
;~:
,:;: Rulb Parsons.
and
Mrs.
Jack
Ables,
Ronnie,
Meigs
County
for
ID yean,
:&lt;=
;:;:
Mrs. Hill announced the
N
;;
·.«... society was to be guests of the Paul and Vicki, Sharon Roush, entering the ministry In 1934
Karen Rhodes, Mrs. Bertha and being ordained In 1938.
TUESDAY
GROUP II, Middleport First Letart Falls society on Jan. 29.
Robinson, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, · He bas been pasjor of
WOMEN ' S Auxili ary , United Presbyterian Church, · Attending were Mrs. Bob
Veterans Memorial Hospital, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the home Rhodes, Mrs. Jack Ables, Mrs. Mrs. Dorsey ·Parsons, Mrs. churches In Ohio Nazarene
District for 31 years. The
1:30 Tuesday nig~t in the of Mrs. Paul Haptonstall.
Robert Smith, Mrs. Dallas Hill, Alice Balser, Mrs. Roy Buck,
SYRACUSE - Plans for Council of Parents and
hospital cafeteria . Business Add Wednesday
Mrs. Dorsey Parsons, Mrs. Early Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Rev. Hayman was District
hosting the Feb . 8 meet- Teachers were made during a
meeting and social hours . All
SYRACUSE THIRD Wed- Herschel Norris, Mrs. Roy Darrell Norris and Tracy, Joey ' Secretary for the Central
Roush, Mrs. Stella Jarrell, Ohio Nazarene Dilltrlct for 13 ing of the Meigs County recent meeting of the Syracuse
members urged to attend.
nesday Homemakers ' Club Buck and Mrs. Dolly Wolfe.
PTA.
~
Darla and Deanna While, Mr. years. Ava Hamer Belles,
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, Wedn esday at 10 a .m. at
Mn.'
~e
Norton',
'Mrs.
and Mrs. Dallas Hill and Dean. retired soq evangelist, wUI
Bets Sigma Phi Sorority,: 7:30 meeting house at, Municipal
Jane
Barnett,
Mrs.
Janice
Rev. and Mrs. Howard be at the East Letart Church
p.m. Tuesday, at the home of Park. Covered dish at noon.
Deem, David Flagg, and
Shiveley and family were Jan. 27 and 'zs and wUI
Mrs. Martha McPhail, Rustic Craft project leaders are Mrs.
William
Baer,
council
unable to attend due to the present Sclence-0-Felts with
MEETING
SET.
Hills, Syracuse. Mrs. McPhail Howard Nolan and Mrs. Janice
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Van- delegates, and Mrs. Louks,
A county-wide class meeting hospitalization of their son, colored lights. Earl Shuler Vranken entertained Saturday Mrs. Daisy Patterson, Mrs.
and Mrs. Carol Jean Adams Lawson . Bring plastic jug with
Bill.
will serve as song lea4er.
will give a cultural program on handle that is centered and will be held at2 p.m. Sunday at
afternoon with a party ~irley Huston and Mrs. Judy
Pastor
of the East Letart
PARENTS VISITED
· travel.
screw top also heavy scissors. the Pomeroy Wesleyan
honoring their son, Matthew, Gibbs, alternates, will be In
United Methodist Church ill
Holiness
Church
with
Okey
Mrs.
Fred
Goegleln
was
in
on his eighth birthday an· charge of refreshments.
SALISBURY PTA, poUuck
MIDDLEPORT Literary
the Rev. Howaid Shiveley.
niversary.
dinner with each family to take Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at Ahart as the leader. Pastor Millersport Wednesday for a
A film, "Who Says You
a covered dish, 6 p.m. Tuesday home of Mrs. Charles Gaskill. O'Dell Manley extends an visit with her parents, Mr. and
Balloons were featured in the Can't," was presented at the
Mrs. Hoyt Haning.
at the school. Entertainment Program by Mrs. Richard invitation to the public.
decorations. Mrs. VanVranken meeting. It explained policies
will be provided and a white Owen reviewing, "Maria, My
assisted by Faith Perrin and of the PTA. Founders Day will
SURGERY TAKEN
elephant sale will be held.
Own Story," with roll call
Anna Wiles served ice cream Ill observed at the Feil'uary
Mrs.
Don
Geary
underwent
being members' response to
and decorated cupcakes. meeting. Mrs.. Martha Mcsurgery Sunday night at the St.
the book.
Games were played and iavors Phail, Miss Beverly Price and
"Mary's Hospital In Huntington,
were given to each of the Mrs. Dorothy Amberger were
...- - - - - - . . MEIGS COUNTY TuberW. Va. She remains in the
culosis and Health Association,
children. Aspecial guest at the named to the refreshment
Intensive care ward and is
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
party was Mark Werry. Others committee . V·alentine parties
reportedly in critical condition .
home of Mrs. Thelma Dill. All
attending were Jeanne Pauley, to be staged by the room
Mrs. Geary suffered a cerebral
board members urged to be
Kim Pauley, Stephanie Van- mothers will be held on Feb. 16.
hemorrhage at her home on
present.
Vranken, Roxanne McDaniel,
It waa noted that parent By BETIY CANARY
Page
St.
in·
Middleport.
She
FRIENDLY CIRCLE, 6 p m.
Barbara . Grueser, Robin teacher conferences were held
was taken to Veterans
Whenever my sons questioned me about leaching them
Mr. Bruce Gars haw
Tuesday potluck supper . Mrs.
Buffington, Peter Van- Monday afternoon. The at.
the
rudiments
of
sanitation,
(Pick
up
your
socks!
No
Memorial
Hospital
by
the
WiiJ Be At
W. H. Perrin, program leade~ . underwear under the kitchen table! ) I have told them
Vranken, John Porter, Terry tendance award went to the
Middleport Emergency Squad
Meigs Inn
Johnson, Chuck Bailey, Mark fifth grade.
the real reason lor my concern. Someday they Would
and was later transferred to
Pomeroy, Ohio
WEDNESDAY
marry. And, I want my daughters-in·law to rise up and
Goeglein, Mike Goegleln, and
the Huntington hospital.
On
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, ~ call me Blessed.
·Kenneth McCullough.
Thursday , Jan . 18
Royal and Select Masters,
Last month my eldest son married . I now have my
From
Stated meeting 7:30 p. m. very own daughter-in-law. .The. only problem . here Is
MEETING CANCELLED
9 A.M. to 12 Noon
Wednesday at the Pomeroy that, the day alter the weddmg m New Hampshire, they
. T
left for Scotland.
The Harrisonville Senior
To repair and service M
1
a~nSI~
e~~~SIDENTS
,
"Don't
worry,"
I
told
her.
"Even
with
the
Atlantic
Citizens
Club meeting for
hearing aig~ .
P
Ocean between us, we'll be close."
January has been cancelled.
"Don't worry," 1 told her. "I am not the Interfering The next meeting will be at
Batteries and supplies Amerit an Legion Auxiliary,
for all makes lor sale. Drew Webster Posl39, 7:30 p. sort. Also, it took 21 years, but I have taught my son to 7:30 p.m., Feb. 15, at the
m. Wednesday at the home of be responsible, gentle, loving and to pick up his own
school.
Mrs . George Hackett, St.
dirty clothing."
.
Mr . Gars haw will be
THURSDAY
"Don't worry," I told her. "And if you need anything,
Now At
glad to g ive you a free
WILLING WORKERS Class, we'll Send it airmail."
~earlng test with the
Enterprise United Methodist
I am secure in the knowledge that here Is the beginning
PTA CANCEI.8
of a golden era. I' am a fortunate woman .. My daughterlat ~s t . Be llon e El ec ·,
A
meeting
of· the Salisbury
. Church, 7:30 D. m. Thursdav·ar in·law is not only a beauty with cameo-like features, she
troni c eq uipment .
the home of Mrs. Stanten also has a sweet nature and is intelligent.
PTA scheduled for tonight has
Pomerov, Ohio
been
cancelled.
Together, the two of us will dispel all the trite mother1- - -- - --:- . Smith.
II hearing is your
RO CK SPRINGS Better in-law myths. Never will our relationship take on a
Health Club, 1:15 p. m. cartoon-caption tinge.'
problem Beltone is
, Thursday at the home of Mrs.
We have rapport! Ours is an ideal sharing of hope and
the answer
Fred Goeglein. Mrs. William love .
Folmer to have the program,
Some day poems
be written about us! Stories will
Mrs. Scott Folmer to have the circulate. Songs will be sung. About bow thoughtful I
have beeil in preparing ·a son ·for marriage. About bow
contest.
gracious she is .in the acceptance of my handiwork.
·Hearing Aid Center
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
1 sent her a 33-page letter advising I would never offer
Sixth
Avenue
Women,
12:30
p.
m.
luncheon,
advice.
601
Grace Episcopal Church: Mrs.
1 received my first letter from her today. It said :
Huntington, W. Va .
PatrickLochary,Mrs. Virginia "Dear Mother. You promised anything I needed. Could
James O'Brien, you please ship five clothes hampers? Our apartment
• -•Ph•o•n•e•:.5.25.-7•2•21_ _ , Watson, Mrs. 'tu
and I think, perhaps if I ~lit one In each
Mrs. James T1 s, Mr s. o· B· has live· rooms
Clearance!
Stout, hostesses.
room, JUSt maybe he mI ght noI throw hi s rty socks ... "
We'll, nobody's perfect.

Sem i~Bon.eles5 Hams
Half or.Whole

A report on the sale of coot:
books was given at the Thursday night me.etlng of Rock
~rings Grange held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Goegleln. ~
eommunlcatlons were read
from the notional master,li}ld a
· th.;.k you note was read froin
Mrs. Amos Leonard for cards
and visits during her re~t
hospitalization. A sympathy
• card was sent to Mrs. Robert
Louks and Mrs. Ruth Duerr
was reported Ill.
The program by Mrs. W. A.
Morgan carried out the theme
"Looking Towards the NI!W
Year!' Readings were "Good
Riddance" by William .
Grueser; "The Fabric · We
Weave" by Mrs. William

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to ·10
,We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480
'We

MEATS
At Lowest Possible

Prices!

MIDDltPQRT 0.

The Right To ·Limit Quantities"

Polish Sausage~s~:~8!0•8~ ••• 1~~ 69e

·a SU~ERIORS . lb. 69e
Chunk
Bologn
,.
············ ~
Chopped Sirloin usDAB~~IcE lb. 99e
USDA CHOICE BEEF lb. $1 09
Ground Rou nd.••••••••••••••
YouNG, rENDER
. lb. ·3 9e
Por k..L•1ver.•.FRESH,
.............••.•.•
.

Grueser; "January," uuttle
Things," and "Snow," by Mrs,
Louks; "The Common Tasks"
by Mrs. Lucille Leifheit; "Post
Holiday Blues," by Mrs.
Goeglein; and "New Year's
Prayer," by Mrs. Morgan.
Refreshments were se~ .

'

'

•

'

•

••

•

Free
On·Street
Parking
After 5 p.m.

oo,; ••~::::~~:::-:::::?.::::::::!:.::::~: ~::::~:!:!:!:;1

~~

'=~I

I'

Third Wednesda11
'J

EASY MONDAY
.DISH DDERGENT

.•

.

lb.

Center Cu.t
HAM SllCES
lb. •1.29

c/ub tO meet

SCOT
TOWELS·
CHEF DELIGHT
CHEESE

SYRACUSE - The Third
Wednesday Home"!akers'
Club will meet Wednesday altO
a.m. at the meeting house at
the Syracuse Municipal Park.
Acovered dish will be served
at noon. Craft project leaders
are Mrs. Howard Nolan •lind
Mrs. Janice Lawson. Members
are to bring plastic jugs with
handles that are centered and
screw tops and heavy scissors.

REESE PEANUT
BUnER CUPS

3 $11
3 $1~

FRYER PARTS
LEGS &amp; THIGHS
¢
lb.

qts
for

.®

juromllsbo

2~b•. box

57

~

89¢

3 $1
10 pak

'

MARS, 3 MUSKETEERS, 10' bars49¢~
M
_I-:LK_Y_WA_Y,_S-.:.
N.I_CK_ER_S__
s p_ak--=---=....·~:!f[

~:L~·:.:::.~

Cinnamon &amp; Caramel

CHICKEN BREASTS

-------...,----=-------==-·~

February meeting planned

SAP'S

12 ~!~ $11

8th Birthday
is celebrated

t

HEFTY tRASH .
CAN LINERS ~~·
IT

I

. ._

,_

_,... ,..,._

79¢
99¢

• ...:.. .......- . . . . _ . - ·

HOUSEHOLD
BROOMS each
-~~

lb.

67¢

~~--·

-U

II

$ 00
for

,-.,.,._,_,.._~

IDAHO BAKING
•

Sunshine Krispy

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

L~~&amp;'~~:s·ll9&amp; ··· . ·
IT

ROLLS

POTATOES .

CRACKERS

---------

. ~tt,ic.:H!~I
SAVE 90' WHDt YOU BUY A
.

INSTANT RllGEII'S
COFFEE CRYSTAlS

BETTY CANARY

Mother-in-Law Can
Dream, Can't She?

BELTONE

HEARING AID

SERVICE CENTER

New Spring
Mix· &amp;Match
Coordinates

, .

BELTONE

Many Fabrics
. On Sale.
Save DollaiS!

·-

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League, 7:30
p:m., Thursday, Columbus Gas
of Ohio. Demonstration by the
home economist.
·
SPECIAL meeting, Pomeroy
Lodge 18f F.&amp;AM, 7 p.m.
· Thursday at 'Masonic Temple
to confer ' the Master Mason
degree, All . Masier Masons
· invited.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
. Club Thursday, 7:30 p.m. 'I'
!111• home of Mrs. Charles Hayes.

..

~·-••••llill••••-.•••

Srplng
I'"'CIUII
"Deli.. vSpecial"

by BULOVA

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE

'"'-Mill ..... J ,,. .. "

.~xpi~.F~~·- ~4., _1~?~

Court St.,

~~---------~---- ·

·

Fuhlon Mate• sewin~
machine. Straighl , ·
zig-zag and reverse
slitches. Model 252.
Base incl uded.

-

Vase
•

m

$49t ..

Dudley's flolist

BAKER

· 59 N. s.c-1 St.

..

FURNITURE

C·

.

Cottage ·Cheese 3
&lt;

J:

Diet Rite Cola

I

...

I

New! New!

16' oz.
bots.

SPRING
..·FAIRicS.i
•'

'·"

AR.RIVING DAILY!

THE SINGER STORE
W. Sec one!
f!2·221M

•

FAIRMONT NICE 'N' LITE

-- -· -

' I

DAD'S ROOT BEER .

'
I

··

We also have a llberallrade-ln """···'
. We have a credll plan designed to fit your buclgel.

0

oee

. BANQUET FROZEN h I .
Bu et Sup.pers . ........~~~...~~!..99
Heath Ba rs ...~~~~.~.~.~~~. . ...~.~~~.~~.~~;.49e
•1k .................
FAIRMONT . ..2
B.u ff erm 1
-

Reg , $109.95
· Carrying case extra .

.

SPRING FUMERS

· -ff ·

only

The Fabric ·Shop '". ·

I

I

Lemonade ..;~~~.-~~--~~~~~-~-.: . ~.~.~.~~ . 1

gallon

--

1

eREAM

. ' ..

' of

Rt;. 17.50 Now

.gge

CARAVELLE'

to s1ng about whatever
your budget!

JANUARY
ITURE

will

5'ICIAl M:l
wmt 1111$ COWII

Savi~s

lOLA'S

II'... I• ..

I
I
I
I

I
I

oz.

tO
Jar

$1 09

with
coupon

Good Only ar Mark v

Limit I Couport
Per Customer

I
L
_____E_!2l!!!_

.

Hb.
bxs.

89¢

Freeze-Drl•d Coffee

4. OL
jar

Limit
I Per
.FllmUy

MARK V STORE
SATURDAY

FRESCA

PAK

'THROW-AWAY BOTTLES

.··.D •

I

Everyday .Low Price!

·- - - - - - - -- -

\

,
COLA

- ·- --

I With 13.00 Purcha•• ·
1 No Limit on Quantity

'. l

. 16 OL bots.

8-

16 oz.

PAK

bots.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
'

~I

I,

)'

'

�.'
'
•"

&amp;- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Puneroy, 0 ., Jan.l6,1973

.
.Mrs. o. .rgan
.Commun1ty
·
·. · · .- : ·
· ,
~ has program'
By' Charlene Hoeflich I
·
·
Comer
i§ for Gra~ee

Scouting explained
239.

Mrs. Olive Page, program
chairman, Introduced Roilllrt
Swick, scoutmaster, who spoke
on activities of scouting and
explained the uniform and

''SC'S met at

TJ
VY I

.

Apple Grove
APPLE GROVE, Ohi&lt;r~The
Women's Society of. CllrlStian
Service of the Apple Grove
United Methodist Church met
at the church Tuesday evening.
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe led the
service with singing of the
hymn, "I Love to Tell the
Story." A prayer and SelfDenial service was held. Mrs.
Wolfe used as her topic, "Ufe
together a pilgrimage," with
scripture from the 31st chapter
of Isaiah....Mrs. Roy Buck res,d
"Deborah judge of Israel"
taken from the book of Judges.
The members stood In a
moment of silent prayer before
Mrs. Wolfe prayed and then
gifts were placed on the altar.
Mrs. Dallas Hill was in
charge of the business
meeting. A Stanley party was
planned for Jan. 18 al7:30 p.m.
at the Letart Falls Community
Ce1;!er with Mrs. Irene Rhodes
as demonstrator.
A gift of magazines and
candy were sent to Bill
Shiveley and flowers to Mrs.
Bertha Robinson, patients at
the Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Gel well cards were

badge work with the 88lllslanoe
of Edward Mitchell. Mike
Swick
announced
the
demonstratlona which Included
Buddy Dugan, the way to cook
an egg over an open fire ; Van
Willford, how to prepare a loll
lunch of hamburger, potatoes,
carrots and onions; Craig
Swick, Interlacing short stlcliB
to make a 'frame for cooking
meat; Kenneth Mitchell, the
art of removing an egg from a
shell without breaking tt;
• Raymond WUJ!ord, bow to
bulldacablnclirnpflre; Ronnie

Song service
led by Hill

Duian, b:aktng civer an open
fire on a stick. Other scouts
participating were Jerry
Matson and Tony Hulton.
. Mrs: Sharon Smith, vice
president, had charge of the
llllll!tlng which opened with
devotions by Mrs. Roberta
Wllson.Sbetoldthestoryofthe
palntjng of the Last SuJlP!!r.
Mr. and Mrs; Paul GrllVes,
who have a child In the third
grade and one In the second,
were Introduced. The attendance banner was won by
the sixth grade. Refreshments
wen aerved.

'

M.

'

SCouting and what It offers
waa the theme·of tbe pi-ogram
presented at a rece11t meeting
ol the Salem Center PTA by
members of Boys Scout Troop

SUPERIORS
BRAND
.

. '

'

S. Sgt. Walter

'

.

.;; l

Murray remains hospltalhed at the Noble
Army Hospital, Fort McClelland, Annlslan, .Ala., for trea~t
of Injuries which h' suff~red In an auto accident on New Year s
Day at Bessemer, Alll. ·
Two weeks ago he underWent surgery for multiple Internal.
Injuries but just how long he will remain hospitalized Is quite
uncertain.
Sgt. Harris and his son, Walt, had been In Middleport for'
Cllrlstiilas with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Searles. The
trip south was to return Walt to his mother who resides In
Jackson, Mlsa. Mrs. Searles accompanied her son and grandson
aa far as Bessemer where she remained with her mother and
other relatives, while the two went on to Mississippi.
After the accident, Mr. Searles and Mr. and Mrs. Don Becker
drove to Bessemer and they all returned a week ago. Sgt. Harris
had been scheduled for a tour of duty In Saigon and waa to leave
on Feb. 1 from California.
FOR THE FIRST TIME In 47 years the family of Commissioner and Mrs. Dick Karr didn't get together for Christmaa.
· · Afew days before Christmas, Mr. and Mrs. Kerr W'!l'e called
to Huron due 10 the serious Ubess and hospltallzatlon of their
daughter, Plllly Kerr Mathews. She is home now from the Good
Samaritan Hospital at Sanduaky, and recuperating nicely
although she will be off work for several weeks.

APPLE GROVE, Ohio ~ A
family dinner sponsored by the
Apple Grove Women's Society
·of Christian Service was held
Saturday evening at the Letart
BACK FROM A FUN TWO WEEKS In Phoenix are Juanita
Falls Community Center.
and Carol Bachtel. The two flew out on Dec. 281or a· bel!lted
A six o'clock dinner waa
Olristmas omervance with Butch and Scotty.
served from tables with while
They visited Las Vegas, spent a day at Disneyland, took In
covers.
Rev.
Frank
the sights at Tucson, toured the Frank lloyd Wright Commune,
Cheesebrew gave the prayer
and ate out most every evening In some fancy restaurant. But
before the dinner.
they're back to the old routine now.
.
Aprogram was held after the
Anyway, Monday is Butch's last day aa a member oflhe u. s.
dinner with Dallas Hill leading
Air Force. He receives his discharge that day and will begin
an old-fashioned song service
.
school at Arizona State University. Butch has a degree In speech
Sherrie Lynn(! Blackston to Wed
with Mrs. Darrell Norris at the
REV. BAYMAN
and drama but this time will be majoring In music and plans to
piano.
THE REV. PAUL K.
pick UP his education courses justin case he wants to leach some
Mr. and Mrs. Harold H. Blackston of Route 3, Pomeroy,
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew HAYMAN; Sr., former
tlme.
announce the engagement oJ their daughter, Sherrie Lynne,
gave an inspiring message Meigs County resident, will
Scotty keeps busy at St. Luke's Hospital where' she Is the
to Mr. Jack Kane, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Kane,
using scripture !rpm the 13th be the guest speaker at night supervisor of the intensive care unit. While Carol and
Parma. Miss Blackston, a graduate of Meigs High School,
chapter of I Corinthians, revival services at East
Juanita were there, the 'couple took an ,apartment within walking
attended Ohio University, and is now employed at the Farstressing
starling
the
year
'73
.Letart;
United
Methodist
distance
of the school, are now moved and all settled.
IQers' Bank and Savings Co., Pomeroy.
to
put
Christ
first
In
your
life.
Church
Jan.
21
through
the
Her fiance is a graduate of Padua High School and atMrs. Bertha Robinson gave a 28th, with services to be held
MARY MARTIN has completed a week of training In
tended the University of Detroit. He Is now employed at
recitation
"No
One
Cares
Wliat
·
at7:30
p.m.
nightly.
The
son
Columbus
and is now working 1n Mel.gli and Athens counties aa a
WMPORadlo. The wedding will take place in March .
an
Old
Woman
Wears."
The
of the late William and Lena · ·· field representative auditor for the State of Ohio. Her job ln·• ..
11ervice was dismissed by Hayman, he Is a graduate of volves auditing the deputy registrars, five In Athens and two In
Rae,ne High ·school and
Meigs County, and enforcing court orders against those who fall
r:*$;:,s
:,:..:,:;:o
~::::::c
::&lt;=::::l:~=a
:::::::::,=:&lt;=:=&gt;:-:c
: ::;:::,a
::::::::.=,:=:e
:::::::::n
::::~:=:d
:::::::::a:
:::::&gt;:r
::::::::mm:::::::JI!' ~~:el:;, a~:~ R~~:~n !~~ prayer by Dolly Wolfe.
Attending were Rev. and attended Rio Grande
to comply with state regulations. To say the least, she's delighted
Mrs. Frank Cheesebrew, Mr. College. He taught school In
with the job.
;~:
,:;: Rulb Parsons.
and
Mrs.
Jack
Ables,
Ronnie,
Meigs
County
for
ID yean,
:&lt;=
;:;:
Mrs. Hill announced the
N
;;
·.«... society was to be guests of the Paul and Vicki, Sharon Roush, entering the ministry In 1934
Karen Rhodes, Mrs. Bertha and being ordained In 1938.
TUESDAY
GROUP II, Middleport First Letart Falls society on Jan. 29.
Robinson, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, · He bas been pasjor of
WOMEN ' S Auxili ary , United Presbyterian Church, · Attending were Mrs. Bob
Veterans Memorial Hospital, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the home Rhodes, Mrs. Jack Ables, Mrs. Mrs. Dorsey ·Parsons, Mrs. churches In Ohio Nazarene
District for 31 years. The
1:30 Tuesday nig~t in the of Mrs. Paul Haptonstall.
Robert Smith, Mrs. Dallas Hill, Alice Balser, Mrs. Roy Buck,
SYRACUSE - Plans for Council of Parents and
hospital cafeteria . Business Add Wednesday
Mrs. Dorsey Parsons, Mrs. Early Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Rev. Hayman was District
hosting the Feb . 8 meet- Teachers were made during a
meeting and social hours . All
SYRACUSE THIRD Wed- Herschel Norris, Mrs. Roy Darrell Norris and Tracy, Joey ' Secretary for the Central
Roush, Mrs. Stella Jarrell, Ohio Nazarene Dilltrlct for 13 ing of the Meigs County recent meeting of the Syracuse
members urged to attend.
nesday Homemakers ' Club Buck and Mrs. Dolly Wolfe.
PTA.
~
Darla and Deanna While, Mr. years. Ava Hamer Belles,
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, Wedn esday at 10 a .m. at
Mn.'
~e
Norton',
'Mrs.
and Mrs. Dallas Hill and Dean. retired soq evangelist, wUI
Bets Sigma Phi Sorority,: 7:30 meeting house at, Municipal
Jane
Barnett,
Mrs.
Janice
Rev. and Mrs. Howard be at the East Letart Church
p.m. Tuesday, at the home of Park. Covered dish at noon.
Deem, David Flagg, and
Shiveley and family were Jan. 27 and 'zs and wUI
Mrs. Martha McPhail, Rustic Craft project leaders are Mrs.
William
Baer,
council
unable to attend due to the present Sclence-0-Felts with
MEETING
SET.
Hills, Syracuse. Mrs. McPhail Howard Nolan and Mrs. Janice
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Van- delegates, and Mrs. Louks,
A county-wide class meeting hospitalization of their son, colored lights. Earl Shuler Vranken entertained Saturday Mrs. Daisy Patterson, Mrs.
and Mrs. Carol Jean Adams Lawson . Bring plastic jug with
Bill.
will serve as song lea4er.
will give a cultural program on handle that is centered and will be held at2 p.m. Sunday at
afternoon with a party ~irley Huston and Mrs. Judy
Pastor
of the East Letart
PARENTS VISITED
· travel.
screw top also heavy scissors. the Pomeroy Wesleyan
honoring their son, Matthew, Gibbs, alternates, will be In
United Methodist Church ill
Holiness
Church
with
Okey
Mrs.
Fred
Goegleln
was
in
on his eighth birthday an· charge of refreshments.
SALISBURY PTA, poUuck
MIDDLEPORT Literary
the Rev. Howaid Shiveley.
niversary.
dinner with each family to take Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at Ahart as the leader. Pastor Millersport Wednesday for a
A film, "Who Says You
a covered dish, 6 p.m. Tuesday home of Mrs. Charles Gaskill. O'Dell Manley extends an visit with her parents, Mr. and
Balloons were featured in the Can't," was presented at the
Mrs. Hoyt Haning.
at the school. Entertainment Program by Mrs. Richard invitation to the public.
decorations. Mrs. VanVranken meeting. It explained policies
will be provided and a white Owen reviewing, "Maria, My
assisted by Faith Perrin and of the PTA. Founders Day will
SURGERY TAKEN
elephant sale will be held.
Own Story," with roll call
Anna Wiles served ice cream Ill observed at the Feil'uary
Mrs.
Don
Geary
underwent
being members' response to
and decorated cupcakes. meeting. Mrs.. Martha Mcsurgery Sunday night at the St.
the book.
Games were played and iavors Phail, Miss Beverly Price and
"Mary's Hospital In Huntington,
were given to each of the Mrs. Dorothy Amberger were
...- - - - - - . . MEIGS COUNTY TuberW. Va. She remains in the
culosis and Health Association,
children. Aspecial guest at the named to the refreshment
Intensive care ward and is
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
party was Mark Werry. Others committee . V·alentine parties
reportedly in critical condition .
home of Mrs. Thelma Dill. All
attending were Jeanne Pauley, to be staged by the room
Mrs. Geary suffered a cerebral
board members urged to be
Kim Pauley, Stephanie Van- mothers will be held on Feb. 16.
hemorrhage at her home on
present.
Vranken, Roxanne McDaniel,
It waa noted that parent By BETIY CANARY
Page
St.
in·
Middleport.
She
FRIENDLY CIRCLE, 6 p m.
Barbara . Grueser, Robin teacher conferences were held
was taken to Veterans
Whenever my sons questioned me about leaching them
Mr. Bruce Gars haw
Tuesday potluck supper . Mrs.
Buffington, Peter Van- Monday afternoon. The at.
the
rudiments
of
sanitation,
(Pick
up
your
socks!
No
Memorial
Hospital
by
the
WiiJ Be At
W. H. Perrin, program leade~ . underwear under the kitchen table! ) I have told them
Vranken, John Porter, Terry tendance award went to the
Middleport Emergency Squad
Meigs Inn
Johnson, Chuck Bailey, Mark fifth grade.
the real reason lor my concern. Someday they Would
and was later transferred to
Pomeroy, Ohio
WEDNESDAY
marry. And, I want my daughters-in·law to rise up and
Goeglein, Mike Goegleln, and
the Huntington hospital.
On
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, ~ call me Blessed.
·Kenneth McCullough.
Thursday , Jan . 18
Royal and Select Masters,
Last month my eldest son married . I now have my
From
Stated meeting 7:30 p. m. very own daughter-in-law. .The. only problem . here Is
MEETING CANCELLED
9 A.M. to 12 Noon
Wednesday at the Pomeroy that, the day alter the weddmg m New Hampshire, they
. T
left for Scotland.
The Harrisonville Senior
To repair and service M
1
a~nSI~
e~~~SIDENTS
,
"Don't
worry,"
I
told
her.
"Even
with
the
Atlantic
Citizens
Club meeting for
hearing aig~ .
P
Ocean between us, we'll be close."
January has been cancelled.
"Don't worry," 1 told her. "I am not the Interfering The next meeting will be at
Batteries and supplies Amerit an Legion Auxiliary,
for all makes lor sale. Drew Webster Posl39, 7:30 p. sort. Also, it took 21 years, but I have taught my son to 7:30 p.m., Feb. 15, at the
m. Wednesday at the home of be responsible, gentle, loving and to pick up his own
school.
Mrs . George Hackett, St.
dirty clothing."
.
Mr . Gars haw will be
THURSDAY
"Don't worry," I told her. "And if you need anything,
Now At
glad to g ive you a free
WILLING WORKERS Class, we'll Send it airmail."
~earlng test with the
Enterprise United Methodist
I am secure in the knowledge that here Is the beginning
PTA CANCEI.8
of a golden era. I' am a fortunate woman .. My daughterlat ~s t . Be llon e El ec ·,
A
meeting
of· the Salisbury
. Church, 7:30 D. m. Thursdav·ar in·law is not only a beauty with cameo-like features, she
troni c eq uipment .
the home of Mrs. Stanten also has a sweet nature and is intelligent.
PTA scheduled for tonight has
Pomerov, Ohio
been
cancelled.
Together, the two of us will dispel all the trite mother1- - -- - --:- . Smith.
II hearing is your
RO CK SPRINGS Better in-law myths. Never will our relationship take on a
Health Club, 1:15 p. m. cartoon-caption tinge.'
problem Beltone is
, Thursday at the home of Mrs.
We have rapport! Ours is an ideal sharing of hope and
the answer
Fred Goeglein. Mrs. William love .
Folmer to have the program,
Some day poems
be written about us! Stories will
Mrs. Scott Folmer to have the circulate. Songs will be sung. About bow thoughtful I
have beeil in preparing ·a son ·for marriage. About bow
contest.
gracious she is .in the acceptance of my handiwork.
·Hearing Aid Center
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
1 sent her a 33-page letter advising I would never offer
Sixth
Avenue
Women,
12:30
p.
m.
luncheon,
advice.
601
Grace Episcopal Church: Mrs.
1 received my first letter from her today. It said :
Huntington, W. Va .
PatrickLochary,Mrs. Virginia "Dear Mother. You promised anything I needed. Could
James O'Brien, you please ship five clothes hampers? Our apartment
• -•Ph•o•n•e•:.5.25.-7•2•21_ _ , Watson, Mrs. 'tu
and I think, perhaps if I ~lit one In each
Mrs. James T1 s, Mr s. o· B· has live· rooms
Clearance!
Stout, hostesses.
room, JUSt maybe he mI ght noI throw hi s rty socks ... "
We'll, nobody's perfect.

Sem i~Bon.eles5 Hams
Half or.Whole

A report on the sale of coot:
books was given at the Thursday night me.etlng of Rock
~rings Grange held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Goegleln. ~
eommunlcatlons were read
from the notional master,li}ld a
· th.;.k you note was read froin
Mrs. Amos Leonard for cards
and visits during her re~t
hospitalization. A sympathy
• card was sent to Mrs. Robert
Louks and Mrs. Ruth Duerr
was reported Ill.
The program by Mrs. W. A.
Morgan carried out the theme
"Looking Towards the NI!W
Year!' Readings were "Good
Riddance" by William .
Grueser; "The Fabric · We
Weave" by Mrs. William

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to ·10
,We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480
'We

MEATS
At Lowest Possible

Prices!

MIDDltPQRT 0.

The Right To ·Limit Quantities"

Polish Sausage~s~:~8!0•8~ ••• 1~~ 69e

·a SU~ERIORS . lb. 69e
Chunk
Bologn
,.
············ ~
Chopped Sirloin usDAB~~IcE lb. 99e
USDA CHOICE BEEF lb. $1 09
Ground Rou nd.••••••••••••••
YouNG, rENDER
. lb. ·3 9e
Por k..L•1ver.•.FRESH,
.............••.•.•
.

Grueser; "January," uuttle
Things," and "Snow," by Mrs,
Louks; "The Common Tasks"
by Mrs. Lucille Leifheit; "Post
Holiday Blues," by Mrs.
Goeglein; and "New Year's
Prayer," by Mrs. Morgan.
Refreshments were se~ .

'

'

•

'

•

••

•

Free
On·Street
Parking
After 5 p.m.

oo,; ••~::::~~:::-:::::?.::::::::!:.::::~: ~::::~:!:!:!:;1

~~

'=~I

I'

Third Wednesda11
'J

EASY MONDAY
.DISH DDERGENT

.•

.

lb.

Center Cu.t
HAM SllCES
lb. •1.29

c/ub tO meet

SCOT
TOWELS·
CHEF DELIGHT
CHEESE

SYRACUSE - The Third
Wednesday Home"!akers'
Club will meet Wednesday altO
a.m. at the meeting house at
the Syracuse Municipal Park.
Acovered dish will be served
at noon. Craft project leaders
are Mrs. Howard Nolan •lind
Mrs. Janice Lawson. Members
are to bring plastic jugs with
handles that are centered and
screw tops and heavy scissors.

REESE PEANUT
BUnER CUPS

3 $11
3 $1~

FRYER PARTS
LEGS &amp; THIGHS
¢
lb.

qts
for

.®

juromllsbo

2~b•. box

57

~

89¢

3 $1
10 pak

'

MARS, 3 MUSKETEERS, 10' bars49¢~
M
_I-:LK_Y_WA_Y,_S-.:.
N.I_CK_ER_S__
s p_ak--=---=....·~:!f[

~:L~·:.:::.~

Cinnamon &amp; Caramel

CHICKEN BREASTS

-------...,----=-------==-·~

February meeting planned

SAP'S

12 ~!~ $11

8th Birthday
is celebrated

t

HEFTY tRASH .
CAN LINERS ~~·
IT

I

. ._

,_

_,... ,..,._

79¢
99¢

• ...:.. .......- . . . . _ . - ·

HOUSEHOLD
BROOMS each
-~~

lb.

67¢

~~--·

-U

II

$ 00
for

,-.,.,._,_,.._~

IDAHO BAKING
•

Sunshine Krispy

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

L~~&amp;'~~:s·ll9&amp; ··· . ·
IT

ROLLS

POTATOES .

CRACKERS

---------

. ~tt,ic.:H!~I
SAVE 90' WHDt YOU BUY A
.

INSTANT RllGEII'S
COFFEE CRYSTAlS

BETTY CANARY

Mother-in-Law Can
Dream, Can't She?

BELTONE

HEARING AID

SERVICE CENTER

New Spring
Mix· &amp;Match
Coordinates

, .

BELTONE

Many Fabrics
. On Sale.
Save DollaiS!

·-

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League, 7:30
p:m., Thursday, Columbus Gas
of Ohio. Demonstration by the
home economist.
·
SPECIAL meeting, Pomeroy
Lodge 18f F.&amp;AM, 7 p.m.
· Thursday at 'Masonic Temple
to confer ' the Master Mason
degree, All . Masier Masons
· invited.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
. Club Thursday, 7:30 p.m. 'I'
!111• home of Mrs. Charles Hayes.

..

~·-••••llill••••-.•••

Srplng
I'"'CIUII
"Deli.. vSpecial"

by BULOVA

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE

'"'-Mill ..... J ,,. .. "

.~xpi~.F~~·- ~4., _1~?~

Court St.,

~~---------~---- ·

·

Fuhlon Mate• sewin~
machine. Straighl , ·
zig-zag and reverse
slitches. Model 252.
Base incl uded.

-

Vase
•

m

$49t ..

Dudley's flolist

BAKER

· 59 N. s.c-1 St.

..

FURNITURE

C·

.

Cottage ·Cheese 3
&lt;

J:

Diet Rite Cola

I

...

I

New! New!

16' oz.
bots.

SPRING
..·FAIRicS.i
•'

'·"

AR.RIVING DAILY!

THE SINGER STORE
W. Sec one!
f!2·221M

•

FAIRMONT NICE 'N' LITE

-- -· -

' I

DAD'S ROOT BEER .

'
I

··

We also have a llberallrade-ln """···'
. We have a credll plan designed to fit your buclgel.

0

oee

. BANQUET FROZEN h I .
Bu et Sup.pers . ........~~~...~~!..99
Heath Ba rs ...~~~~.~.~.~~~. . ...~.~~~.~~.~~;.49e
•1k .................
FAIRMONT . ..2
B.u ff erm 1
-

Reg , $109.95
· Carrying case extra .

.

SPRING FUMERS

· -ff ·

only

The Fabric ·Shop '". ·

I

I

Lemonade ..;~~~.-~~--~~~~~-~-.: . ~.~.~.~~ . 1

gallon

--

1

eREAM

. ' ..

' of

Rt;. 17.50 Now

.gge

CARAVELLE'

to s1ng about whatever
your budget!

JANUARY
ITURE

will

5'ICIAl M:l
wmt 1111$ COWII

Savi~s

lOLA'S

II'... I• ..

I
I
I
I

I
I

oz.

tO
Jar

$1 09

with
coupon

Good Only ar Mark v

Limit I Couport
Per Customer

I
L
_____E_!2l!!!_

.

Hb.
bxs.

89¢

Freeze-Drl•d Coffee

4. OL
jar

Limit
I Per
.FllmUy

MARK V STORE
SATURDAY

FRESCA

PAK

'THROW-AWAY BOTTLES

.··.D •

I

Everyday .Low Price!

·- - - - - - - -- -

\

,
COLA

- ·- --

I With 13.00 Purcha•• ·
1 No Limit on Quantity

'. l

. 16 OL bots.

8-

16 oz.

PAK

bots.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
'

~I

I,

)'

'

�..
'.
8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. I&amp;, 1973

Sentinel Classifi.eds Get Action/Sentinel Classifieds Ge~ Results!
WANTA~

Notice

INFORMATION
{)EAOLINES ,

2 SillS.
Of
QUALITY .

MEIGS Counly Fish and Game
·.s P .M. O!ly Be:tof'e Publlca'tlon .
Association, Thursday, Jan .
Monday Deadl ine 9 a .m .
18, 7:30p.m. at the ·Syracuse
Cancellation -Corrections
Club Room ; rhembers are
Will be accepted untll9 e;m . tor
asked to attend; election will
Day of Publication
be held.
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
1·16·31c

3432.

RATES

... For Wal'lt Ad Service
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Ml.nlroum Charge 75c
,
.I~ tentS" per word thret
con5eeutJ~e Insertions . .
. :
18 cents per word she cori t

~ec uttve

Insertions.

25 Per ·cent Discount on paid
ads and ads para within 10 d.n~ .

CARD OF THANKS '
&amp; OBITUARY

$1.50 fM 50 word rtllnimpm
Each additional word 2c.

.

BLIND ADS

Additional 25c
Advertisement.

Chaige ·-- per

OFFIC,I! HOURS

8:3 0a .m . to 5:00 p.m . Dally,
8 : 30 a . m . 10 12 : 00 Noon
·Saturday .

Card c1 Thanks
YOUR expression of sympathy
so generously given by
relatives,

neighbors

and

'
1·16·tfc

"HElL"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING
;

Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbin!J
Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

friends has been a comforllng
light in the darkness Jeff by
992-2448
the sickness and death of our
beloved husband, father and
Pomero.y, 0.
grandfather, Lee S. Johnson.
May we thank Rev. Freeland KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp;WIGS.
Norri s for his consoling
SPECIALS MONTHLY .
words , the singers, the
PHONE HELEN JANE
organist, Ewing Funeral
BROWN , MIDDLEPORT,
Home, Middleporf
OHIO 992·5113.
Emergency Squad, those who
12·3-tfc
senl
beauflful
floral
arrangements, food and cards
and all who helped In any HOOD'S AQUARIUMS; fish
and supplies ; new location.
way. Your kindness will never
Ash Street, Middleport near
be forgotten . The Lee S
Johnson Family.
· park ; phone 992-5443,
f. 16-llc - - - - - - - - ··1·11&lt;
~-----

Pro Standings

Local BOwling
•

Pomeroy Bowling Lones
Saturday Junior League
· Standings
Team
Pis.
Apaches
5
Dreamers

s

Ball Buslers
4
Alley Cats
2
Impacts
2
Rams
0
High Individual Game
Chuck Follrod 192.
Second High Ind. Game Steve Bochner 160.
High Series- Chuck Foil rod
473.
Second High Series - Steve
Bachner 438.
Team High Game - Impacts

885 ,

Team High Series - Impacts
2605.

NBA Standings
By United Press International
· Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
w. I, pet. g.b.
Boston
35 7 .833
New York
38 10 .792
Buffalo
13 30 .302 22'12
Philadelphia 4 43 .085 33'12
Central Division
w. I. pet. g.b,
Baltimore
26 17 .605
Atlanta
24 23 .511 4
· Houston
17 27 .386 9'12
Cleveland
1~ 30 .333 12
Western Conference
Midwest Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
Milwaukee
33 13 .717
Chicago
28 17 .622 4'12
KC.Omaha
24 27 .471 11'12
Defroif
19 26 .422 13'12
Pacific Division

W, I, pet. g,b,
Saturday Senior League
LosAngeles
JJ
10 .767
Jan. 6, 1973
GoldenState
29
14 .674 4
Standings
23 23 .500 11'12
Pis, Phoenix
Team
14 34 .292 21'12
Pin Crushers
5 Seattle
II 35 .239 23'12
Ding-A-Lings
5 Portland
Monday's
Results
Herbie's
3
KC·Omaha 135 Phlla 108
Pin Busters
3
Detrolf 112 Portland 101
Gutter Dus lers
2
(Only
games scheduled)
Born Losers
0
Tuesda.
y's Games
High Individual Game
Boston
at
Buffalo
Rick Stobarf 189.
Seattle vs. KC.Omaha
Second High Ind. Game At Kansas City
Diana Carsey 183.
Portland at Chicago
High Series - Rick Stobart
New York at Phoenl•
528.
Baltimore at Los Ang
Second High Series - Rich
Cleveland at Golden St.
Bailey 526.
Detroit at Atlanta
Team Hi_g!!_Game - Dlng·A·
Philadelphia at Mllw
Lings 820.
Team High Series - Pin
Crushers 2334.
. ABA Standings
By Umted Press International
Wednesday Afternoon
East
League
w, I, pet, g.b.
Jan. 10, 1973
Carolina
34
16 .680
Team
W. L, Kentucky
29
16 .644 2'12
Gaul's Shake Haven
13 3 VIrginia
25 23 .521 8
10 6 New York
R. C. Cola
16 30 .348 16
Lodwick's Mkt.
8 8 Memphis
15 30 .333 16'12
Riggs Used Gars
8 8
West
Goo&lt;l's Pennzoll
6 10
w. I. pet. g,b.
Ridenour 's T.V.
3 13 Utah
31
16 .660
High Ind . game - Patty Denver
25 20 .556 5
Thomas 156; Florine Ginther Indiana
24 21 .533 6
145.
Dallas
17 27 .386 12'12
High series - Patty Thomas San Diego
18 35 .340 16
409 ; Florine Ginther 3'18.
Monday's Results
Team high game
Lod·
Utah 128 Carolina 110
wick's Mkl. 334.
(Only game scheduled)
Team high series - Lod·
Tuesday's Games
wick's Mkl. 908.
Denver at Indiana
VIrginia at MempHis
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday Late Mixed
•
League
End of First Half
Standings
Pts.
Team
94
~ore - f\Aorrow
SV AC Standings
Rosenbaum -Meadows
80
Holter. Rawlings
80
Fultz-Benliey
73
SVAC STANDINGS
Blakesfee.Hoyt
65
TEAM
W L P OP
40
McDonald -Drenner
Hannan Trace
11 1 782 554
High Individual Game
6 2 480 408
Men , Fred Morrow 211 ; Eastern
Symmes Valley 5 4 665 659
Women. Ina Meadows 171.
Southwestern
3 7 579 699
Second High Ind. Game Southern
3 7 493 574
Men, Fred Morrow 211;
3 8 677 796
Women , Lois Rosenbaum 165; Kyger Creek
2 8 473 531
third, men , Gary Drenner 195'; North Galli a
SVAC ONLY
women, Paf Holter 159.
W L P DP
High Series - Fred Morrow TEAM
Hannan Trace 7 1 481 374
575; Pat Holter 431.
6 I 416 334
Second High Series - Men, Eastern
5 1 469 388
Gary Drenner 557; women, Sym. Valley
2 5 428 522
Betty Fultz 409 ; third , men, Kyger Creek
2 5 359 406
Dick Rosenbaum 516 ; women, Southern
North Gall Ia
2 5 355 4()7
Joy Bentley 404,
Southwestern 0 6 306 384
Team
High
Game Totals
24 24 2815 2815
Rosenbaum -Meadows 665.
SVAC
RESERVES
Team High Series - Hotter·
TEAM
W L P OP
RawIIngs 1788 .
North Gailla
6 1 284 218
Southern
5 2 292 232
Hannan Trace 5 3 294 279
Eastern
4 J 279 221
Sym. Valley
3 3 216 216
Kyger Creek
I 6 293 352
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Soufhweslern 0 6 152 292
Saturday, Jan. 13, 1973
Totals
24 24 18t0 1810
·SALES REPORT OF
Friday's Schedule:
Hannan . Trace at North
Ohio Valley Uveslock Co.
Gallia
; Kyger Creek at South·
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 29 to wntern
;
Southern
at
29.75; 220 to 250 lbs. 29,50 to Wahama ; Glouster at Eastern.
S.turdoy's Gam,es 30.25; Light 23.50 to 28.50 ; Fat
North Ga!lla at Fairland;
Sows 24 to 28.50; Stags 19.50 Coal Grove at Hannan Trace;
Down; Boar . 19.50 to 21.60; Southern at Southwestern and
Eastern at Symmes Valley,
Pigs 7 to 18.50,
CATTLE ..:. Steers .34.50 to
40; Heifers 27 to 36.50; Baby
Beef 38 to 51; Fat Cows 22 to 26;
CALL ANSWERED
Canners 17 to 29; Bulls 27.50 to
The Ch~ster Fire Dept.,
34; Milk t':ows 200 to 425.
answered
a call Sunday at the
VEAL CALVES ~ Tops
60.25; Seconds 54 to 58; Earl Showalter residence to
Medium 48 to 54; Com, &amp; Hvs. extinguish a brush fire. The
fire was Wider control upon
42 to 55; Culls 45 Down.
BABYCALVES-17.50 to 65. arrival of the fire department.

Market Report

.I

.

'

2

MallE, B~M:l~ 1

!i
i

BEDROOM

If I HAVE
To Go
Take Me To ·

furnished

Robert Hill. Racine, phone
949·3811'
1·10·6fp

THE SHOP

2

BEDROOM

$1695

'12

'PO~~!~!s.~.~~~ Co. ~
i:IJt

992-2094
.606 E.

Main

Pomeroy

...
i CAN

-GUARANTEED. Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy)icime .,

·srop' In and See Our
.Floor Display.
·, ..

W~'l'

UN~ERsrANP

9UT, PO

YOU'Re PARTIAL

R!;ALL~

THI . THAT
'BLACK IS BSAUTIFUL N
IS Alii APPROPRIATE
SLOGA~ ...

TO IT, !11~. WII!TE

Auto'

Open8Tit5
Monday thru Saturdlly
6~ .E. Ma!n,.~o!f!eroy, 0.

DARYL SALISBURY, Com ·
merclai and Residential.
inside
palntln~. block ceilings
&gt; 'PPME•O
_ OH_IC!. _
S65 month. all utilities paid. For Sale
and paneling ; referen&lt;es
~..-_ _ __;__ _:'f:___.:__:__ _ _ __;__ _ __!•J.
C~ll 992·3030.
available; call 992-2559.
•
"
J.J4.3fc SINGER automatic sewing
1·14·3fp
.,----------·
machine; like new In walnut
Notice
Wanted T0 Buy
MODERN 6 room house, fuli
cabinet. Makes design sill· AUTOMOBILE Insurance been ,
the iarqest
basement, garage, outches. zig-zags, buttonholes.
OLAN MILLS Studios is now
cancelled?
Lo.t
your
·I
~~~'!1~~~r
Radiator
building;
references
blind hems, overcasts, etc .,
faking appointments for Jan.
operator's license? Cali 992· I·!
Heater Core,
required;
phone
992-2310
after
S85.
Call
-Ravenswood,
273·
27 in Middleport. 'Phone 992·
2966 ,
Nathan Biggs •
5 p.m. or 992-3425.
9S2i or 27J.9893.
5597 or 992·3572.
Radiator
Spe&lt;folist
6·15·ffc
J.lf.tfc
12·3l·ffC
l-14·3fc
-UNFURNISHED 3-room WAlNUT stereo.radio com· SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
TAX Service, Federal and State
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·
apartment, adults only. No
Income Taxes; dally except
blnaflon, 4 speed intermixed
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
pets,
408
Spring
Ave.,
I
chahger~· 4 speaker sound
Sund~y. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
SANITATION,
STEWART,
Pomeroy.
1 Pomeroy
·
,;r-2174 ·
even1ngs by appointment;
system,
dual
volume
controls.
Poles
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
· 1·7-tfc
Mrs. Sleven !Wanda) Eblin,
Balance 569.57. Use our
10-4-ffc .
Rf. 2. Pomeroy (Laurel Cliff
budget terms. Ca,il 992·7085. ---~-Maximum
:
f.fl .6fc PAPER Hanging and painting; SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
Rd. off Rf. 7 By-Pass) ; phone
doors and windows, carports.
992·2272,
Arthur Musser, phone 742Diameter
marquees, aluminum siding
1.-3-30·tc
BEAUT! FUL Colonial Maple 5223.
and
railing. A. Jacob, sates
4-12.tfc
------stereo. AM·FM radio, 4
12-12·301;.
representative. For free
NE ED a bottom re.woven In
on
speakers. 4 speed aulomatlc
estimates, phone Charles
your chair? Caning and other
changer. separate controls. SEWING MACHINES: Repair
lielp Wante~
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
weaving done. Call 992·6046.
Balance
$79.70.
Use
our
largest End
service,
all
makes.
992-2284,
RN part lime for Family
Johnson
and Son, Inc.
1·14·3fp
budget terms. Call 992-7085. The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy,
Planning Clinic in Meigs
3-2·ffC
--:-..,.---l·lf.6tc Authorized Singer Sales and
County, Please call 992·5912.
:-:-::-:----...,---_..:.::
H~YMAN'S Auction - a good
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. aACKHOE AND DOZER work.
·
1·14·121c
place to go each Friday
.3-29-ffc
2
PIECE
bedroom
suite,
book·
Septic tanks installed. George
evening. 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff
case bed; double dresser with
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·2478.
DELIVERED
on old Rf. 7, 1 mile wesf of
E XTRAORDI NARY OP--:
mirror; call in evenings 992· DOZER anl back hoe work,
·
o4-25.ffc
Rock Springs Fairground.
PORTUNITY. International
TO
3163.
ponds
and
septic
tanks,
dit·
10·10·tfc
Organ lzation needs local
f.J2.61c
chlng service ; fop soli, fill ELNA and White Sewing '
representative to sell and
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex. · Machines .. , service on all
BUSINE SS Opportunity for
service established business
cavating.
Phone 992·5367, . makes . Reasonable rates .
men and women. Inquire by
accounts. Twenty.oneorover, STAR CRAFT. Complete line of
Dick
Karr,
Jr.
·
writing : .R. D. 2. Box 73.
The Sewing Center, Midbondable Send brief resume
Starcraft Travel Tra ilers and
9.f.ffc
Racine, Ohio.
dleport, Ohio.
to: Ralph Brown, 455 Jerry · Fold down campers. Quality
1·5·12tp
11·16-ffc
Street, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
and Service Highest - - - - - - On Old Rt. 33
Or , phone (614) 446·9353
discount in Tri-State. Camp
READY·MIX
CONCRETE
evenings for an appointment.
Conley Starcraff Sales, Rt. 62 Real Estate For Sale
Phone 992-2689
delivered right lo your
l-15-5tc
N. of Po int Pleasant, Behind
Pomeroy, Ohio
pro/ed. Fast and easy. Free
- - - - - - -- Red Carpet Inn, ph 0ne 675est mates, Phone 992·3284.
5384.
Goegleln Ready .MI• Co.,
WANTED- Horse drawn grain Pets For Sale
•·12·7tc
Middleport, Ohio.
·
drill, 7· 10 single disk
6·30-tfc
preferred. Hugh ~lfhelt, 992· AKC loy poodle puppies. $75, ·
6497 ,
S85; Siamese kittens. slO;
Buy For You I
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
phone 1-256·6247,
1·15·3tp
REASONABLE
roles. Ph. 446· ·
1·7·10fc
-----4782, Gallipolis, John Russell. ·
OLD furniture , oak tables,
Owner &amp; Operafor,
organs, dishes, clocks. brass JUST ARRIVED, direct from
Custom
5·t2·tfC
beds or complete households.
Florida, tropical fish by the
Station Wagon
110 Mechanic Street
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
hundreds, at Showalter's Wet
Auto. frans., P.S.. 351 -V-8
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Pomeroy, Ofllo 4576t
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992·
Pet, Chester, Ohio.
engine, 4 new tires, (snow
ON YOUR DIAL ·
Complete Service
6271.
t·t0·19tp tires on rear), 35,000 actual
Phone 949-3821
1-7-ffc
ONE STORY
Racine, Ohio
miles, excellent condition .
3 BEDROOMS - New bath,
PARKVIEW Kennels going ·out
Crill
Bradford
nice kitchen, utility room·,
of business. Big price
5·1·ffC
For Trade
reduction on ail dogs. All AK·
dining , and front porch .
C. 592 Broadway &amp; , Ash
FARMALL
H
with
Sargent
Level
lot.
Only
$15,000.00.
Meigs · Care Line, 992G&amp;E AP~uANCE' ~epalr :
Streets, Middleport, Ohio.
loader will trade lor Farmall
2 LARGE BEDROOMS
Repair of all laundry
7502
12·13·tfc
A; phone 843·2242 ,
LARGE LIVING - Nice
Ph. 992·2176
Pomeroy
equipment, , .refrlg'!f'tllon .'
1-16-Jfp dining arid klfch • .Large
equipment ah"d house wiring ..
level lot on ha•d road . Want
- -- - - For Sale
Call 614·992·6050,
$10,500.00,
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
12·31·30tp
For Sale
1965 FOR 0 . Station Wagon ;
4 BEDROOMS
paid for all makes and
SPLIT LEVEL - l lf2 baths,
ONE DIESEL fuel furnace, stereo tape deck and CASH
models
of
mobile
homes
.
speakers;
AKC
Collie
pups,
toads of closets. large
phone 949·4761.
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
Real Estate For Sale
modern kitchen, all electric
l-16-6fc $50 ; phone 773·5758.
4-13·ffc
1·16·5tc
home. Basement and 7 acres
- -- - - of land. Need 530,000.00.
DUE to divorce, 1972 8 track
NEAR POMEROY
stereo console; must sell at
4 BEDROOMS - Large
·Air
C:onditioners
once; nice walnut finish . This
CLELAND
kitchen with dining . Hard•Awnings
set sold much higher, must let
wood
floors,
lull
basement,
REALTY
go for $89.60 or $7,47 a monlh .
·• Underpinning
and
oil
furnace.
Acre
lot
.
601£. Moln
Try if in your home. Call 992·
Ask ing $12,000.00.
• Pomtroy
5331.
· Complete mQbile hame
NEW
1·16·1fC . 1Serv1ce
'
'
Kyger Creek's Board of
....,. plus gigantic
BUSINESS BUILDING
·
'display
of
mobile homes
Education Monday night in
Has 2900 sq. tt . of spate.
ECONOMY PRICED
JUST taken In, deluxe zig-zag
,
:~I
ways
avallable.at
...
185,000
BTU
Natural
gas
POMEROY
- New siding,
special session approved the
sewing
machine . This
furnace,
2
large
business
new
roof
,
new
carport, A
machine
darns,
em
transfer· of two teachers in
MILLER
offices, and 2 large storage
bedrooms, bath, 2 porches.
bro ideries, overcasts , butorder to alleviate overcrowded
rooms . Excellent location for
other features. $5,000.00. ·
tonhoits. Pay balance $36.50
MOBILE HOME~
the future. Appointment
FURNISHED HOME
Pur ley T, Karr, Altona Karr or payments can be arranged.
conditions at Addaville
PLEASE.
MIDDLEPORT - · ·Lot
1220 Washington Blvd,
Elementary School.
to Steven Frost, Jackalyn Call 992·5331.
RUTLAND
105xl35 level , 2 bedrooms,
1·16·tfC .423·752t
BELPRE, D. ,
Mrs. Cheryl Enyart's Special Frost, 2.147 Acres, Chester.
4 LARGE BEDROOMS - 8
bath, F.F. gas he&lt;~t, · storm
Eber E. Ours, dec, to Gerald PORT-A-C RIB complete with •
Education Class was transroom antique brick home on
idOors &amp; windows, porqhes,
mattress, like new, price SIO; · Auto Sales
Route 124 with 2 acres of
completely renovate~ . ,3·
ferred from the Addaville E. Ours, Garnet E. Johnson
• phone 992-3805.
prime
land,
for
a
business.
A
years ago, JUST $8,500.00.
Elementary Building to Thelma K. Kellenberger, Cert.
I·16-3tp 1968 FALCON Futura 6·CYL
real buy at $21 ,500.00.
BEAUTIFUL BRICK
Cheshlre-Kyger Building for trans., Lebanon.
RELAX HERE
POMEROY - Kitchen has
automatic transriilss l on.
oil furnace, 120,000 BTU;
everylhing,3 large B.R. with
Excellent condition, S/50 . · 50 ACRES - Of woods,
making room for an additional
Ernest F. Powell, Iva P, FUEL
has thermostat, registers and
George'
Hackett,
Jr.
992·2444
briars.
locust.
and
hili
land
.
double closets, 1'12 baths, full
class in the Addaville building. Powell to State of Ohio, some pipe ; phone 985·3979.
after 5:30p.m.
$500.00
down.
Then
$52
.77
a
·basement
with lovely
l·lHtc
Following a brief discussion , Judgment Settlement, 2.56
month .
recreation room, 1 acre
H1·31p
NEW
ground. carport, $29,500.00.
the board voted to combine the Acres, Salisbury,
1971 CAMARO 4 speed V8 1967 CHEVROLET Impala, 283,
4
BEDROOMS
l'h
baths,
LEVEL Ill• ACRES
third grade classes at
Green Hill Homes, Inc. to
Bucket Seats. Reasonable.
UB automatic transmission,
beautiful
kllchen.
Washer
H
A
R
R I S 0 NV I L L E
Call
after
5,
992·7201.
Ch'eshire-Kyger Elementary William.C. Sim, !rna Jean Sim,
P.S., set of Snow fires, black
and dryer hookups . In·
Corner lot. Grand. older
vinyl top , $5.10. Phone 992·
and to transfer teacher Bonnie Lots 11-14, Hartinger Acres, - -- - - - -- ' ·_::lHtc
suiated. Lots of line closets.
home with large building
5530.
Lorge landscape lawn .
40x70, all In excellent con.
·COAL, - Limestone, Excelsior
Campbell to the new class at Chester.
1·14·3fp
Asking only 121 ,000.00.
dillon .
Home has ~
Addav!Ue Elementary.
Ruben A. Collins, Thelma
Sail Works, . E. Main St.,' ,-------_:_:::_
NEW LISTING
bedrooms,
flh
bathol
, Pomeroy , Phone 992·3891.
1963 FORD Falriane 500, V-it, 4 129 ACRES - On Route 124
At Cheshire-Kyger, Mrs . Collins to Ruben· A. Collins
beautiful kitchen, utility R.•
4·12-lfc' 992-7374,
door, automatic, S275. Phone .Wesl. near new coal mine. 20
carpeted. Glassed porches.
Campbell had been teaching 15 Thelm. a Collins, Lot, Mt'd: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:
of
bottom
land
suitable
THIS YOU MUST SEE acres
J.fl
.ffc
students while Mrs. Judy dleport.
600 BALES of Timothy hay ;
for housing , or mobile
121 ,500.00.
Smith had 12 J)upils. The
Milo Hutchison to Robert
phone 992-6214.
1970 1 TON Ford, dual wheels,
homes.
IN PURCHASING A HOME
combined class for Mrs. ~ith Sisson, Iva M. Sisson, Lot 21 - - - - - - - - -'·...:
10-6tc
long wheel base, power
FREE GAS
WE CAN HELP YOU. 1brakes, 12'12 ft . bed, tess than
4 BEDROOMS - Bath,
SPACE FOR LIVING, 2now totals 27 students, still far Hutchison Sub., Rutland.
' FARM fresh eggs; 200 bales
23,000
miles,
clean
as
new;
dining
and
front
porch
.
ECONOMY
&amp;
CON·
below the overcrowded classes
straw; phone 843·2778.
Clarence Imboden, Agnes
phone 985·3554, Harold
Large garden, 30 aores.ln all ,
YEN I ENCE., 3-;:-SJYLE. &amp;
at Addavllle.
Itnboden to James E. Qualls,
I·I0-6tc
Brewer, LongBottom . .
Minerals . Asking only
CONSTRUCTION, 41·7-tfc
$15,000.00.
L0 C AT I 0 N,
5The fourth grade taught by Lots, Nye Add. , Pomeroy,
&lt;(I(C · FEM;.LE while . Toy
-IF
YOU
CAN'T
DECIDE
ON
TE
C
H
N
I
C
A
L
I
N.
Mrs. nochelle Foster has 40
Daisy Schuler to Daisy
Poodle, l'/2 years old, $55 ,
Real.
Estate
For
Sale
ONE
oF
THESE,
wE
HAVE
FORMATION,
6-'PRICE
&amp;
Mason. W. Va .. 773·5233.
students and Joyce Hawks' Schuler, Paul M. Schuler, Lot,
MANY MORE FOR YOU TO
FINANCING , CALL OR
l·l4-3tc NEW6roomhouseandbath,lf2
fifth . grade has over 40 · Pomeroy,
SEE AT THE OFFICE ,
COME IN TODAY.
mile
East
of
Rutland
on
Rt.
PICTURES
OF
EACH,
'
HENRY E. CLELAND
students. Those classes wiU be
Guy A. Spencer, Evelyn NEW 1972 Zig. Zag Sewing
124; Sidney Hayman ,
FREE BALLOONS FOR'
BROKER
divided to give the three Spencer to Larry Guy Spencer,
Machine in original fa cfory
l-10·6fp THE KIDDIES.
3 ASSOCIATES TO'
carton . Zfg. zag to make
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
SERVE YOU.
teachers an equal number of Patricia Ann Spencer, Lot No ,
buffonholes,
sew
on
buttons,
students.
25, Arbaugh Ind., Olive.
monograms, and make fancy · 2 STORY house with 4
ASSOCIATE
992-2259
deSigns with fustthe twist of a , bedrooms, located In New
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
tf noanswor
The board considered hiring
Theophllus L. Smith, Exec .,
single dial . Left In lay.away
Haven; phone 882·2471.
992-3325
992;2568or985·420S
a new teacher but It was felt Elsie D. Smith Blackburn, dec,
and only
never$47
been
used.orWill
sell · -=.,------1·16·2fC 1;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;
that if the classes could be to Thomas C. Clelland, Lois J .
for
'Cash
credit
terms available. Phone 992· ·HotiSE. In L0ng Bottom,1phone
combined this would not be Clelland, Pt. Lots 454, 452,
7755,
985-3529,
'
necessary,
Pomeroy.
6·ll·tfC
1·10·6fc
In other action, tl)e board
----,---Lois .G: Kelly to Phillip W. ~:-;:-::----HOMECLEANING products; 8 ROOM. house and bath, nice
approved payment of $11,386.60 Kelly, Parcels, Scipio,
phone 992-2579 or 247-2193,
large tot, natural -gas, buflf.fn
to Downie-Childs Insurance of
Leonard Hess, Jr., Evelyn
cabinets in kitchen, close lo
1·5·301p
Middleport for insurance on Hess, Beatrice Freda Price,
radio station in Bradbury,
phone 992·2602.
the district's tlu:ee buildings. Arthur Price, Mlna Hess to
1·16·12fp
Clerk Doris Roush was William G. Beal, Lots,
Now . you can buy fl1at
authi&gt;rlzed to borrow money to Pomeroy,
·HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick
~omforfabie · · · La·Z· Boy·
· Streel, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
meet the Janual'y payroll, •
chair you've always
house, 3 beprooms, ~.celient
A lengthy discussion was
dreamed of at our low ·
location, close to school and
prices,
held on maintenance and other
city; contact Lou Osborne or ·
' lluy 21
992·58911.
.
call
problems at the high school
Pairs
·
11·26·ffc
building.
-Authorized Deafer
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
) PAIR FREE\:
2 STORY HO'ME;1uTI basement,
The
best
buy
In
the
area."
RACINE - .The Racine ER
bath and 1/2; extra lot and
Have stacks &amp; jeans for the
attached garage. Available
Squad
transported Clearsie
A thought for the day: Irish
whole family. · s1 ve onenow. May be had with basic
poet Thomas Moore sald1 "My Gibson, 83, Racine, to Veterans
Third,,
,
'furniture. Near Pomeroy
only books were woman's looks, Memorial Hospital where he
POMEROY
.. ... _
,Eiemenfary School. Phone
Hefman Grate '
992-7384 or 992·7133.
and folly 's aU they've taught was admitted as
medical '6ill Jock W. Carsey, Mgr.'
:m-ssn
Ma-.w. VA.
1·1f.61c
Pilant 992-2111 ·,
me.t'
patient Sunday at 12:10 p.m. ·

l l"l b,. Nt .... lot

ADVERTISING
COPYIIfRoT!NG

532 .

- -- - - 4 R00M upstairs apartment.

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

•

1

- ~ - "·-

:FURNITURE

DOUBLE, 2 bedroom, fur·
nished; phone 992·2749.
1-14-tfc

•

EXPERT·
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

On Most Alllertcari
... -· . Cars · ·

and

1-10-ffc

steering. power brakes, red finish wlffl bla~ k vinyl top and
black vinyl Inferior. radio. good whlf.. wall fires.

HOME &amp; AUTO

OFFitE SUPPLIES

iurnlshed

apartment, 114 Mulberry, no
dogs or
cats ;
adults ;
references; phone 992-6698: ._

Malibu sport coupe, air condi.tioned, 307 engine. power

POMEROY

'

----'-----

2-door, local 1 owner. low mileage, good ftres, clean In terlor, green finish, radio, 2000cc engine. 4-speed.

t.JOIIOD'I'"1'ROSTS
A~V MAN' !

"'

apartment; ground floor i

·m99

1968 CHEVELLE

(SI&amp;H )

HOW 1\e.a)T A

MOUTHFUL

,

For Rent

nice and clean.

1971 PINTO FORD

'IOU SAID A

' Wanted To · Rent

·Ponieroy
Motor.Co.

1970 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
$2495
Sport sedan, loi:all owner car, beaufiful turquoise finish
with spotless matching infOFIOf trim, black ·vinyl top,
factory air, v.a engine, turbo hydramatlc, power steering
and brakes, radio, gooQ w-w tires, deluxe bumper guards.

right to edit or reject any ads
:deemed
oblettlonal.
The '12 DUPLEX wall ·to·wail car·
_,ubllsher Will not be respMslble·
pefing, small yard ; available
~or more than -one In correct'
now ; phone 992·2780 or 992Insertion .
·.
.

BARNEY

, I UGED 10
GIVE 111EM
OUT ALL
1HE 1lME; ,
'

·WE,TH'CITIZENS
O'DOGPATCH,
IS PMUP- .

SMIJH N_WON

MOTORS. INC.

WE GOT"
SOMEONE

1-1~

NO DOUeT AT
AU..!! AHGOr
CHAP.ocTE.R!!

HEREWIF

TH'STI'I.ONG
CHARACTER

Yt3GOT-

10"

HE ATE A WHOLE
PEPI":;RONI PIZZA

$7.00 Per Ton

PMms OE'C/SION TO

------

OHIO
PALLET CO.

We talk to you

Virgil B.
;:=::;::====~~
·Teaford, Sr.
1970 FORD
Broker

like a person.

WMP0/1390

Meigs
Equipment Co.

Teachers
moved at
Cheshire

IN THI'I!EOE MINLmO$

.REMAIN IN 71fE

,CO'!~•.,

FLAT IN THE' SCHOOL
CAFETEI'ZIA! TEU.
HIM ABOU'T IT,

ANO PLATT IS NOT
8EIMS/1511tJ!?ED
INHI$NEWLY

"- .R.O-SCOO:!

lrAfJOPTF[)'I

.A IJR'EI/T
PI!.AL OFATll'NllON
IN lliE tiS. .. , ,

COIJN7l?Y,1

£/l!IER,

- - - -- -

-----------

'

...

Meigs
Property

Transfers

w.

LA-Z·-BOV

CHAIRS·

a

MASON
.FURNITURE

~

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: EVERYONE THINKS OF CHANGING THE WORLD, BUT NO ONE THINKS OF CHANGING
HIMSELF.-LEO TOLSTOI
·

by THOMAS JOSEPH

DICK TRACY

ACROSS ,
1. Shade of
green
5. Discard
10.-Rogers
St. John
12. Long for
13. Champion
r""l.-------""t"""t 15. Hitting
(colloq.)
010 VOU I-IEA1'1
the road
A VOICE?
16. Sooner
than
17. - ~~The

Barber''
Maglie,
famed
pitcher

CIBS81fy

Soda pop

Havor

!5. Complete
quickly
and easily
. (2 wda.)
27. Function ·
Zl. Trinidad's
·mone\ary
unit

(C 19?3 Kinr Featurea Syndicate, Inc.)

t.-Cin·
ders. old
comic
strip
5. Unpleas·
ant hap·
penlng
6. Steep cliff
7. "Blow the
whistle"
8. 11Htlil" to
Ca!lgula
9, Apiece
11. To call
attention
U. Times for
.celebration?
17. Psyche
18. Aquatic
plant
19. Bert20. Toward
one side

~(!Uti@~;~
u-ambltthatfuurJumbleo,
.... f.u.t' lo HCh oquare, to
form four ordin1r1 wordo.

21. Loafer,
for
example
22. Riverside
deposit
23. Unclose
(poet.)
U. Pass
between
peaks
26.-derby
30. Character' lstlc mark

31. Succuient
cherry
32. Oklahoma
' city
33. Jewish
month
34. Lavish
reception
35. Droop
S6. Palm leaf
37. Singer Rawls
38. Brutally
frank

IKRVTEY

II

·1 ~ESCVN

~

()

'I I

II

~

Pril*··-·
,.......

t

keeper's

abbrevla·
tlon
31. stew In·
gredlent
(2 wds.)
Hopperson (sl.)
(2 wds.)
39.Forward
Lariat
Estimate
DeHne·

·

.

,..'IJ...W... fiNAL

Now arnnre the clrtled lttltra
to form lhe ourprfH anawer, u

"r I I

rx 1"

(AMwen IHIDrrow)

DlAMA MIDWAY IXODUS
'

.-.en • .,, he lalcen in wah!'r-A SWIM

l SftliLED
WOODSTOCK 'S
PARW! .

fiE HAD INVITED 'f\.115 CUTE
LITTLE BIRD THAT HE'5 IN LOVE
IJJITH BUT HE NEVER 60T TO
TALK WITH HER 6ECAU5E I
TALKED WITH HER T~E
WHOLE EVENIN6! ~........

,_--1

ated
DOWN
1. statute
Z. Ullfl!li
' god
S. P90l

I-

DAILY CRYPTOQUO'i'E - Here's how to work it:
A. ' X Y D L BAA X R
b LONGFELLOW
Oue letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the lhree L's, X for -the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes,, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters ~· different.
' ·..
CRYPTOQUOTES
''
t LGTAC

.
,.....,_

~J·~~·~~~~~~~~='uj""'ted· by lht above carloon.

Book·
r;er;;;;~;;;~~~;;r,--, 21.30. Still

NLKN

..,,_,y IIIMII,_

UC
BC

NEBG
RHED

WGNNGEIGVN
W G c:lJ'L G.E

HS

JBTNBEG
SHE

NLG

50 H.E5ENT ME A BILL FOR
SIX DOLLAR? fO~ A BROKEN
j.IEART ~ OH, WOOMOCK, Ml{

LITTLE fRIEND Of FRIEND5...

RLUJL
CHJUKT

KTT .- LGVEF

RKEM

·'

�..
'.
8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. I&amp;, 1973

Sentinel Classifi.eds Get Action/Sentinel Classifieds Ge~ Results!
WANTA~

Notice

INFORMATION
{)EAOLINES ,

2 SillS.
Of
QUALITY .

MEIGS Counly Fish and Game
·.s P .M. O!ly Be:tof'e Publlca'tlon .
Association, Thursday, Jan .
Monday Deadl ine 9 a .m .
18, 7:30p.m. at the ·Syracuse
Cancellation -Corrections
Club Room ; rhembers are
Will be accepted untll9 e;m . tor
asked to attend; election will
Day of Publication
be held.
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
1·16·31c

3432.

RATES

... For Wal'lt Ad Service
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Ml.nlroum Charge 75c
,
.I~ tentS" per word thret
con5eeutJ~e Insertions . .
. :
18 cents per word she cori t

~ec uttve

Insertions.

25 Per ·cent Discount on paid
ads and ads para within 10 d.n~ .

CARD OF THANKS '
&amp; OBITUARY

$1.50 fM 50 word rtllnimpm
Each additional word 2c.

.

BLIND ADS

Additional 25c
Advertisement.

Chaige ·-- per

OFFIC,I! HOURS

8:3 0a .m . to 5:00 p.m . Dally,
8 : 30 a . m . 10 12 : 00 Noon
·Saturday .

Card c1 Thanks
YOUR expression of sympathy
so generously given by
relatives,

neighbors

and

'
1·16·tfc

"HElL"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING
;

Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbin!J
Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

friends has been a comforllng
light in the darkness Jeff by
992-2448
the sickness and death of our
beloved husband, father and
Pomero.y, 0.
grandfather, Lee S. Johnson.
May we thank Rev. Freeland KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp;WIGS.
Norri s for his consoling
SPECIALS MONTHLY .
words , the singers, the
PHONE HELEN JANE
organist, Ewing Funeral
BROWN , MIDDLEPORT,
Home, Middleporf
OHIO 992·5113.
Emergency Squad, those who
12·3-tfc
senl
beauflful
floral
arrangements, food and cards
and all who helped In any HOOD'S AQUARIUMS; fish
and supplies ; new location.
way. Your kindness will never
Ash Street, Middleport near
be forgotten . The Lee S
Johnson Family.
· park ; phone 992-5443,
f. 16-llc - - - - - - - - ··1·11&lt;
~-----

Pro Standings

Local BOwling
•

Pomeroy Bowling Lones
Saturday Junior League
· Standings
Team
Pis.
Apaches
5
Dreamers

s

Ball Buslers
4
Alley Cats
2
Impacts
2
Rams
0
High Individual Game
Chuck Follrod 192.
Second High Ind. Game Steve Bochner 160.
High Series- Chuck Foil rod
473.
Second High Series - Steve
Bachner 438.
Team High Game - Impacts

885 ,

Team High Series - Impacts
2605.

NBA Standings
By United Press International
· Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
w. I, pet. g.b.
Boston
35 7 .833
New York
38 10 .792
Buffalo
13 30 .302 22'12
Philadelphia 4 43 .085 33'12
Central Division
w. I. pet. g.b,
Baltimore
26 17 .605
Atlanta
24 23 .511 4
· Houston
17 27 .386 9'12
Cleveland
1~ 30 .333 12
Western Conference
Midwest Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
Milwaukee
33 13 .717
Chicago
28 17 .622 4'12
KC.Omaha
24 27 .471 11'12
Defroif
19 26 .422 13'12
Pacific Division

W, I, pet. g,b,
Saturday Senior League
LosAngeles
JJ
10 .767
Jan. 6, 1973
GoldenState
29
14 .674 4
Standings
23 23 .500 11'12
Pis, Phoenix
Team
14 34 .292 21'12
Pin Crushers
5 Seattle
II 35 .239 23'12
Ding-A-Lings
5 Portland
Monday's
Results
Herbie's
3
KC·Omaha 135 Phlla 108
Pin Busters
3
Detrolf 112 Portland 101
Gutter Dus lers
2
(Only
games scheduled)
Born Losers
0
Tuesda.
y's Games
High Individual Game
Boston
at
Buffalo
Rick Stobarf 189.
Seattle vs. KC.Omaha
Second High Ind. Game At Kansas City
Diana Carsey 183.
Portland at Chicago
High Series - Rick Stobart
New York at Phoenl•
528.
Baltimore at Los Ang
Second High Series - Rich
Cleveland at Golden St.
Bailey 526.
Detroit at Atlanta
Team Hi_g!!_Game - Dlng·A·
Philadelphia at Mllw
Lings 820.
Team High Series - Pin
Crushers 2334.
. ABA Standings
By Umted Press International
Wednesday Afternoon
East
League
w, I, pet, g.b.
Jan. 10, 1973
Carolina
34
16 .680
Team
W. L, Kentucky
29
16 .644 2'12
Gaul's Shake Haven
13 3 VIrginia
25 23 .521 8
10 6 New York
R. C. Cola
16 30 .348 16
Lodwick's Mkt.
8 8 Memphis
15 30 .333 16'12
Riggs Used Gars
8 8
West
Goo&lt;l's Pennzoll
6 10
w. I. pet. g,b.
Ridenour 's T.V.
3 13 Utah
31
16 .660
High Ind . game - Patty Denver
25 20 .556 5
Thomas 156; Florine Ginther Indiana
24 21 .533 6
145.
Dallas
17 27 .386 12'12
High series - Patty Thomas San Diego
18 35 .340 16
409 ; Florine Ginther 3'18.
Monday's Results
Team high game
Lod·
Utah 128 Carolina 110
wick's Mkl. 334.
(Only game scheduled)
Team high series - Lod·
Tuesday's Games
wick's Mkl. 908.
Denver at Indiana
VIrginia at MempHis
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday Late Mixed
•
League
End of First Half
Standings
Pts.
Team
94
~ore - f\Aorrow
SV AC Standings
Rosenbaum -Meadows
80
Holter. Rawlings
80
Fultz-Benliey
73
SVAC STANDINGS
Blakesfee.Hoyt
65
TEAM
W L P OP
40
McDonald -Drenner
Hannan Trace
11 1 782 554
High Individual Game
6 2 480 408
Men , Fred Morrow 211 ; Eastern
Symmes Valley 5 4 665 659
Women. Ina Meadows 171.
Southwestern
3 7 579 699
Second High Ind. Game Southern
3 7 493 574
Men, Fred Morrow 211;
3 8 677 796
Women , Lois Rosenbaum 165; Kyger Creek
2 8 473 531
third, men , Gary Drenner 195'; North Galli a
SVAC ONLY
women, Paf Holter 159.
W L P DP
High Series - Fred Morrow TEAM
Hannan Trace 7 1 481 374
575; Pat Holter 431.
6 I 416 334
Second High Series - Men, Eastern
5 1 469 388
Gary Drenner 557; women, Sym. Valley
2 5 428 522
Betty Fultz 409 ; third , men, Kyger Creek
2 5 359 406
Dick Rosenbaum 516 ; women, Southern
North Gall Ia
2 5 355 4()7
Joy Bentley 404,
Southwestern 0 6 306 384
Team
High
Game Totals
24 24 2815 2815
Rosenbaum -Meadows 665.
SVAC
RESERVES
Team High Series - Hotter·
TEAM
W L P OP
RawIIngs 1788 .
North Gailla
6 1 284 218
Southern
5 2 292 232
Hannan Trace 5 3 294 279
Eastern
4 J 279 221
Sym. Valley
3 3 216 216
Kyger Creek
I 6 293 352
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Soufhweslern 0 6 152 292
Saturday, Jan. 13, 1973
Totals
24 24 18t0 1810
·SALES REPORT OF
Friday's Schedule:
Hannan . Trace at North
Ohio Valley Uveslock Co.
Gallia
; Kyger Creek at South·
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 29 to wntern
;
Southern
at
29.75; 220 to 250 lbs. 29,50 to Wahama ; Glouster at Eastern.
S.turdoy's Gam,es 30.25; Light 23.50 to 28.50 ; Fat
North Ga!lla at Fairland;
Sows 24 to 28.50; Stags 19.50 Coal Grove at Hannan Trace;
Down; Boar . 19.50 to 21.60; Southern at Southwestern and
Eastern at Symmes Valley,
Pigs 7 to 18.50,
CATTLE ..:. Steers .34.50 to
40; Heifers 27 to 36.50; Baby
Beef 38 to 51; Fat Cows 22 to 26;
CALL ANSWERED
Canners 17 to 29; Bulls 27.50 to
The Ch~ster Fire Dept.,
34; Milk t':ows 200 to 425.
answered
a call Sunday at the
VEAL CALVES ~ Tops
60.25; Seconds 54 to 58; Earl Showalter residence to
Medium 48 to 54; Com, &amp; Hvs. extinguish a brush fire. The
fire was Wider control upon
42 to 55; Culls 45 Down.
BABYCALVES-17.50 to 65. arrival of the fire department.

Market Report

.I

.

'

2

MallE, B~M:l~ 1

!i
i

BEDROOM

If I HAVE
To Go
Take Me To ·

furnished

Robert Hill. Racine, phone
949·3811'
1·10·6fp

THE SHOP

2

BEDROOM

$1695

'12

'PO~~!~!s.~.~~~ Co. ~
i:IJt

992-2094
.606 E.

Main

Pomeroy

...
i CAN

-GUARANTEED. Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy)icime .,

·srop' In and See Our
.Floor Display.
·, ..

W~'l'

UN~ERsrANP

9UT, PO

YOU'Re PARTIAL

R!;ALL~

THI . THAT
'BLACK IS BSAUTIFUL N
IS Alii APPROPRIATE
SLOGA~ ...

TO IT, !11~. WII!TE

Auto'

Open8Tit5
Monday thru Saturdlly
6~ .E. Ma!n,.~o!f!eroy, 0.

DARYL SALISBURY, Com ·
merclai and Residential.
inside
palntln~. block ceilings
&gt; 'PPME•O
_ OH_IC!. _
S65 month. all utilities paid. For Sale
and paneling ; referen&lt;es
~..-_ _ __;__ _:'f:___.:__:__ _ _ __;__ _ __!•J.
C~ll 992·3030.
available; call 992-2559.
•
"
J.J4.3fc SINGER automatic sewing
1·14·3fp
.,----------·
machine; like new In walnut
Notice
Wanted T0 Buy
MODERN 6 room house, fuli
cabinet. Makes design sill· AUTOMOBILE Insurance been ,
the iarqest
basement, garage, outches. zig-zags, buttonholes.
OLAN MILLS Studios is now
cancelled?
Lo.t
your
·I
~~~'!1~~~r
Radiator
building;
references
blind hems, overcasts, etc .,
faking appointments for Jan.
operator's license? Cali 992· I·!
Heater Core,
required;
phone
992-2310
after
S85.
Call
-Ravenswood,
273·
27 in Middleport. 'Phone 992·
2966 ,
Nathan Biggs •
5 p.m. or 992-3425.
9S2i or 27J.9893.
5597 or 992·3572.
Radiator
Spe&lt;folist
6·15·ffc
J.lf.tfc
12·3l·ffC
l-14·3fc
-UNFURNISHED 3-room WAlNUT stereo.radio com· SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
TAX Service, Federal and State
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·
apartment, adults only. No
Income Taxes; dally except
blnaflon, 4 speed intermixed
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
pets,
408
Spring
Ave.,
I
chahger~· 4 speaker sound
Sund~y. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
SANITATION,
STEWART,
Pomeroy.
1 Pomeroy
·
,;r-2174 ·
even1ngs by appointment;
system,
dual
volume
controls.
Poles
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
· 1·7-tfc
Mrs. Sleven !Wanda) Eblin,
Balance 569.57. Use our
10-4-ffc .
Rf. 2. Pomeroy (Laurel Cliff
budget terms. Ca,il 992·7085. ---~-Maximum
:
f.fl .6fc PAPER Hanging and painting; SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
Rd. off Rf. 7 By-Pass) ; phone
doors and windows, carports.
992·2272,
Arthur Musser, phone 742Diameter
marquees, aluminum siding
1.-3-30·tc
BEAUT! FUL Colonial Maple 5223.
and
railing. A. Jacob, sates
4-12.tfc
------stereo. AM·FM radio, 4
12-12·301;.
representative. For free
NE ED a bottom re.woven In
on
speakers. 4 speed aulomatlc
estimates, phone Charles
your chair? Caning and other
changer. separate controls. SEWING MACHINES: Repair
lielp Wante~
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
weaving done. Call 992·6046.
Balance
$79.70.
Use
our
largest End
service,
all
makes.
992-2284,
RN part lime for Family
Johnson
and Son, Inc.
1·14·3fp
budget terms. Call 992-7085. The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy,
Planning Clinic in Meigs
3-2·ffC
--:-..,.---l·lf.6tc Authorized Singer Sales and
County, Please call 992·5912.
:-:-::-:----...,---_..:.::
H~YMAN'S Auction - a good
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. aACKHOE AND DOZER work.
·
1·14·121c
place to go each Friday
.3-29-ffc
2
PIECE
bedroom
suite,
book·
Septic tanks installed. George
evening. 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff
case bed; double dresser with
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·2478.
DELIVERED
on old Rf. 7, 1 mile wesf of
E XTRAORDI NARY OP--:
mirror; call in evenings 992· DOZER anl back hoe work,
·
o4-25.ffc
Rock Springs Fairground.
PORTUNITY. International
TO
3163.
ponds
and
septic
tanks,
dit·
10·10·tfc
Organ lzation needs local
f.J2.61c
chlng service ; fop soli, fill ELNA and White Sewing '
representative to sell and
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex. · Machines .. , service on all
BUSINE SS Opportunity for
service established business
cavating.
Phone 992·5367, . makes . Reasonable rates .
men and women. Inquire by
accounts. Twenty.oneorover, STAR CRAFT. Complete line of
Dick
Karr,
Jr.
·
writing : .R. D. 2. Box 73.
The Sewing Center, Midbondable Send brief resume
Starcraft Travel Tra ilers and
9.f.ffc
Racine, Ohio.
dleport, Ohio.
to: Ralph Brown, 455 Jerry · Fold down campers. Quality
1·5·12tp
11·16-ffc
Street, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
and Service Highest - - - - - - On Old Rt. 33
Or , phone (614) 446·9353
discount in Tri-State. Camp
READY·MIX
CONCRETE
evenings for an appointment.
Conley Starcraff Sales, Rt. 62 Real Estate For Sale
Phone 992-2689
delivered right lo your
l-15-5tc
N. of Po int Pleasant, Behind
Pomeroy, Ohio
pro/ed. Fast and easy. Free
- - - - - - -- Red Carpet Inn, ph 0ne 675est mates, Phone 992·3284.
5384.
Goegleln Ready .MI• Co.,
WANTED- Horse drawn grain Pets For Sale
•·12·7tc
Middleport, Ohio.
·
drill, 7· 10 single disk
6·30-tfc
preferred. Hugh ~lfhelt, 992· AKC loy poodle puppies. $75, ·
6497 ,
S85; Siamese kittens. slO;
Buy For You I
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
phone 1-256·6247,
1·15·3tp
REASONABLE
roles. Ph. 446· ·
1·7·10fc
-----4782, Gallipolis, John Russell. ·
OLD furniture , oak tables,
Owner &amp; Operafor,
organs, dishes, clocks. brass JUST ARRIVED, direct from
Custom
5·t2·tfC
beds or complete households.
Florida, tropical fish by the
Station Wagon
110 Mechanic Street
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
hundreds, at Showalter's Wet
Auto. frans., P.S.. 351 -V-8
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Pomeroy, Ofllo 4576t
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992·
Pet, Chester, Ohio.
engine, 4 new tires, (snow
ON YOUR DIAL ·
Complete Service
6271.
t·t0·19tp tires on rear), 35,000 actual
Phone 949-3821
1-7-ffc
ONE STORY
Racine, Ohio
miles, excellent condition .
3 BEDROOMS - New bath,
PARKVIEW Kennels going ·out
Crill
Bradford
nice kitchen, utility room·,
of business. Big price
5·1·ffC
For Trade
reduction on ail dogs. All AK·
dining , and front porch .
C. 592 Broadway &amp; , Ash
FARMALL
H
with
Sargent
Level
lot.
Only
$15,000.00.
Meigs · Care Line, 992G&amp;E AP~uANCE' ~epalr :
Streets, Middleport, Ohio.
loader will trade lor Farmall
2 LARGE BEDROOMS
Repair of all laundry
7502
12·13·tfc
A; phone 843·2242 ,
LARGE LIVING - Nice
Ph. 992·2176
Pomeroy
equipment, , .refrlg'!f'tllon .'
1-16-Jfp dining arid klfch • .Large
equipment ah"d house wiring ..
level lot on ha•d road . Want
- -- - - For Sale
Call 614·992·6050,
$10,500.00,
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
12·31·30tp
For Sale
1965 FOR 0 . Station Wagon ;
4 BEDROOMS
paid for all makes and
SPLIT LEVEL - l lf2 baths,
ONE DIESEL fuel furnace, stereo tape deck and CASH
models
of
mobile
homes
.
speakers;
AKC
Collie
pups,
toads of closets. large
phone 949·4761.
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
Real Estate For Sale
modern kitchen, all electric
l-16-6fc $50 ; phone 773·5758.
4-13·ffc
1·16·5tc
home. Basement and 7 acres
- -- - - of land. Need 530,000.00.
DUE to divorce, 1972 8 track
NEAR POMEROY
stereo console; must sell at
4 BEDROOMS - Large
·Air
C:onditioners
once; nice walnut finish . This
CLELAND
kitchen with dining . Hard•Awnings
set sold much higher, must let
wood
floors,
lull
basement,
REALTY
go for $89.60 or $7,47 a monlh .
·• Underpinning
and
oil
furnace.
Acre
lot
.
601£. Moln
Try if in your home. Call 992·
Ask ing $12,000.00.
• Pomtroy
5331.
· Complete mQbile hame
NEW
1·16·1fC . 1Serv1ce
'
'
Kyger Creek's Board of
....,. plus gigantic
BUSINESS BUILDING
·
'display
of
mobile homes
Education Monday night in
Has 2900 sq. tt . of spate.
ECONOMY PRICED
JUST taken In, deluxe zig-zag
,
:~I
ways
avallable.at
...
185,000
BTU
Natural
gas
POMEROY
- New siding,
special session approved the
sewing
machine . This
furnace,
2
large
business
new
roof
,
new
carport, A
machine
darns,
em
transfer· of two teachers in
MILLER
offices, and 2 large storage
bedrooms, bath, 2 porches.
bro ideries, overcasts , butorder to alleviate overcrowded
rooms . Excellent location for
other features. $5,000.00. ·
tonhoits. Pay balance $36.50
MOBILE HOME~
the future. Appointment
FURNISHED HOME
Pur ley T, Karr, Altona Karr or payments can be arranged.
conditions at Addaville
PLEASE.
MIDDLEPORT - · ·Lot
1220 Washington Blvd,
Elementary School.
to Steven Frost, Jackalyn Call 992·5331.
RUTLAND
105xl35 level , 2 bedrooms,
1·16·tfC .423·752t
BELPRE, D. ,
Mrs. Cheryl Enyart's Special Frost, 2.147 Acres, Chester.
4 LARGE BEDROOMS - 8
bath, F.F. gas he&lt;~t, · storm
Eber E. Ours, dec, to Gerald PORT-A-C RIB complete with •
Education Class was transroom antique brick home on
idOors &amp; windows, porqhes,
mattress, like new, price SIO; · Auto Sales
Route 124 with 2 acres of
completely renovate~ . ,3·
ferred from the Addaville E. Ours, Garnet E. Johnson
• phone 992-3805.
prime
land,
for
a
business.
A
years ago, JUST $8,500.00.
Elementary Building to Thelma K. Kellenberger, Cert.
I·16-3tp 1968 FALCON Futura 6·CYL
real buy at $21 ,500.00.
BEAUTIFUL BRICK
Cheshlre-Kyger Building for trans., Lebanon.
RELAX HERE
POMEROY - Kitchen has
automatic transriilss l on.
oil furnace, 120,000 BTU;
everylhing,3 large B.R. with
Excellent condition, S/50 . · 50 ACRES - Of woods,
making room for an additional
Ernest F. Powell, Iva P, FUEL
has thermostat, registers and
George'
Hackett,
Jr.
992·2444
briars.
locust.
and
hili
land
.
double closets, 1'12 baths, full
class in the Addaville building. Powell to State of Ohio, some pipe ; phone 985·3979.
after 5:30p.m.
$500.00
down.
Then
$52
.77
a
·basement
with lovely
l·lHtc
Following a brief discussion , Judgment Settlement, 2.56
month .
recreation room, 1 acre
H1·31p
NEW
ground. carport, $29,500.00.
the board voted to combine the Acres, Salisbury,
1971 CAMARO 4 speed V8 1967 CHEVROLET Impala, 283,
4
BEDROOMS
l'h
baths,
LEVEL Ill• ACRES
third grade classes at
Green Hill Homes, Inc. to
Bucket Seats. Reasonable.
UB automatic transmission,
beautiful
kllchen.
Washer
H
A
R
R I S 0 NV I L L E
Call
after
5,
992·7201.
Ch'eshire-Kyger Elementary William.C. Sim, !rna Jean Sim,
P.S., set of Snow fires, black
and dryer hookups . In·
Corner lot. Grand. older
vinyl top , $5.10. Phone 992·
and to transfer teacher Bonnie Lots 11-14, Hartinger Acres, - -- - - - -- ' ·_::lHtc
suiated. Lots of line closets.
home with large building
5530.
Lorge landscape lawn .
40x70, all In excellent con.
·COAL, - Limestone, Excelsior
Campbell to the new class at Chester.
1·14·3fp
Asking only 121 ,000.00.
dillon .
Home has ~
Addav!Ue Elementary.
Ruben A. Collins, Thelma
Sail Works, . E. Main St.,' ,-------_:_:::_
NEW LISTING
bedrooms,
flh
bathol
, Pomeroy , Phone 992·3891.
1963 FORD Falriane 500, V-it, 4 129 ACRES - On Route 124
At Cheshire-Kyger, Mrs . Collins to Ruben· A. Collins
beautiful kitchen, utility R.•
4·12-lfc' 992-7374,
door, automatic, S275. Phone .Wesl. near new coal mine. 20
carpeted. Glassed porches.
Campbell had been teaching 15 Thelm. a Collins, Lot, Mt'd: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:
of
bottom
land
suitable
THIS YOU MUST SEE acres
J.fl
.ffc
students while Mrs. Judy dleport.
600 BALES of Timothy hay ;
for housing , or mobile
121 ,500.00.
Smith had 12 J)upils. The
Milo Hutchison to Robert
phone 992-6214.
1970 1 TON Ford, dual wheels,
homes.
IN PURCHASING A HOME
combined class for Mrs. ~ith Sisson, Iva M. Sisson, Lot 21 - - - - - - - - -'·...:
10-6tc
long wheel base, power
FREE GAS
WE CAN HELP YOU. 1brakes, 12'12 ft . bed, tess than
4 BEDROOMS - Bath,
SPACE FOR LIVING, 2now totals 27 students, still far Hutchison Sub., Rutland.
' FARM fresh eggs; 200 bales
23,000
miles,
clean
as
new;
dining
and
front
porch
.
ECONOMY
&amp;
CON·
below the overcrowded classes
straw; phone 843·2778.
Clarence Imboden, Agnes
phone 985·3554, Harold
Large garden, 30 aores.ln all ,
YEN I ENCE., 3-;:-SJYLE. &amp;
at Addavllle.
Itnboden to James E. Qualls,
I·I0-6tc
Brewer, LongBottom . .
Minerals . Asking only
CONSTRUCTION, 41·7-tfc
$15,000.00.
L0 C AT I 0 N,
5The fourth grade taught by Lots, Nye Add. , Pomeroy,
&lt;(I(C · FEM;.LE while . Toy
-IF
YOU
CAN'T
DECIDE
ON
TE
C
H
N
I
C
A
L
I
N.
Mrs. nochelle Foster has 40
Daisy Schuler to Daisy
Poodle, l'/2 years old, $55 ,
Real.
Estate
For
Sale
ONE
oF
THESE,
wE
HAVE
FORMATION,
6-'PRICE
&amp;
Mason. W. Va .. 773·5233.
students and Joyce Hawks' Schuler, Paul M. Schuler, Lot,
MANY MORE FOR YOU TO
FINANCING , CALL OR
l·l4-3tc NEW6roomhouseandbath,lf2
fifth . grade has over 40 · Pomeroy,
SEE AT THE OFFICE ,
COME IN TODAY.
mile
East
of
Rutland
on
Rt.
PICTURES
OF
EACH,
'
HENRY E. CLELAND
students. Those classes wiU be
Guy A. Spencer, Evelyn NEW 1972 Zig. Zag Sewing
124; Sidney Hayman ,
FREE BALLOONS FOR'
BROKER
divided to give the three Spencer to Larry Guy Spencer,
Machine in original fa cfory
l-10·6fp THE KIDDIES.
3 ASSOCIATES TO'
carton . Zfg. zag to make
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
SERVE YOU.
teachers an equal number of Patricia Ann Spencer, Lot No ,
buffonholes,
sew
on
buttons,
students.
25, Arbaugh Ind., Olive.
monograms, and make fancy · 2 STORY house with 4
ASSOCIATE
992-2259
deSigns with fustthe twist of a , bedrooms, located In New
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
tf noanswor
The board considered hiring
Theophllus L. Smith, Exec .,
single dial . Left In lay.away
Haven; phone 882·2471.
992-3325
992;2568or985·420S
a new teacher but It was felt Elsie D. Smith Blackburn, dec,
and only
never$47
been
used.orWill
sell · -=.,------1·16·2fC 1;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;
that if the classes could be to Thomas C. Clelland, Lois J .
for
'Cash
credit
terms available. Phone 992· ·HotiSE. In L0ng Bottom,1phone
combined this would not be Clelland, Pt. Lots 454, 452,
7755,
985-3529,
'
necessary,
Pomeroy.
6·ll·tfC
1·10·6fc
In other action, tl)e board
----,---Lois .G: Kelly to Phillip W. ~:-;:-::----HOMECLEANING products; 8 ROOM. house and bath, nice
approved payment of $11,386.60 Kelly, Parcels, Scipio,
phone 992-2579 or 247-2193,
large tot, natural -gas, buflf.fn
to Downie-Childs Insurance of
Leonard Hess, Jr., Evelyn
cabinets in kitchen, close lo
1·5·301p
Middleport for insurance on Hess, Beatrice Freda Price,
radio station in Bradbury,
phone 992·2602.
the district's tlu:ee buildings. Arthur Price, Mlna Hess to
1·16·12fp
Clerk Doris Roush was William G. Beal, Lots,
Now . you can buy fl1at
authi&gt;rlzed to borrow money to Pomeroy,
·HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick
~omforfabie · · · La·Z· Boy·
· Streel, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
meet the Janual'y payroll, •
chair you've always
house, 3 beprooms, ~.celient
A lengthy discussion was
dreamed of at our low ·
location, close to school and
prices,
held on maintenance and other
city; contact Lou Osborne or ·
' lluy 21
992·58911.
.
call
problems at the high school
Pairs
·
11·26·ffc
building.
-Authorized Deafer
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
) PAIR FREE\:
2 STORY HO'ME;1uTI basement,
The
best
buy
In
the
area."
RACINE - .The Racine ER
bath and 1/2; extra lot and
Have stacks &amp; jeans for the
attached garage. Available
Squad
transported Clearsie
A thought for the day: Irish
whole family. · s1 ve onenow. May be had with basic
poet Thomas Moore sald1 "My Gibson, 83, Racine, to Veterans
Third,,
,
'furniture. Near Pomeroy
only books were woman's looks, Memorial Hospital where he
POMEROY
.. ... _
,Eiemenfary School. Phone
Hefman Grate '
992-7384 or 992·7133.
and folly 's aU they've taught was admitted as
medical '6ill Jock W. Carsey, Mgr.'
:m-ssn
Ma-.w. VA.
1·1f.61c
Pilant 992-2111 ·,
me.t'
patient Sunday at 12:10 p.m. ·

l l"l b,. Nt .... lot

ADVERTISING
COPYIIfRoT!NG

532 .

- -- - - 4 R00M upstairs apartment.

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

•

1

- ~ - "·-

:FURNITURE

DOUBLE, 2 bedroom, fur·
nished; phone 992·2749.
1-14-tfc

•

EXPERT·
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

On Most Alllertcari
... -· . Cars · ·

and

1-10-ffc

steering. power brakes, red finish wlffl bla~ k vinyl top and
black vinyl Inferior. radio. good whlf.. wall fires.

HOME &amp; AUTO

OFFitE SUPPLIES

iurnlshed

apartment, 114 Mulberry, no
dogs or
cats ;
adults ;
references; phone 992-6698: ._

Malibu sport coupe, air condi.tioned, 307 engine. power

POMEROY

'

----'-----

2-door, local 1 owner. low mileage, good ftres, clean In terlor, green finish, radio, 2000cc engine. 4-speed.

t.JOIIOD'I'"1'ROSTS
A~V MAN' !

"'

apartment; ground floor i

·m99

1968 CHEVELLE

(SI&amp;H )

HOW 1\e.a)T A

MOUTHFUL

,

For Rent

nice and clean.

1971 PINTO FORD

'IOU SAID A

' Wanted To · Rent

·Ponieroy
Motor.Co.

1970 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
$2495
Sport sedan, loi:all owner car, beaufiful turquoise finish
with spotless matching infOFIOf trim, black ·vinyl top,
factory air, v.a engine, turbo hydramatlc, power steering
and brakes, radio, gooQ w-w tires, deluxe bumper guards.

right to edit or reject any ads
:deemed
oblettlonal.
The '12 DUPLEX wall ·to·wail car·
_,ubllsher Will not be respMslble·
pefing, small yard ; available
~or more than -one In correct'
now ; phone 992·2780 or 992Insertion .
·.
.

BARNEY

, I UGED 10
GIVE 111EM
OUT ALL
1HE 1lME; ,
'

·WE,TH'CITIZENS
O'DOGPATCH,
IS PMUP- .

SMIJH N_WON

MOTORS. INC.

WE GOT"
SOMEONE

1-1~

NO DOUeT AT
AU..!! AHGOr
CHAP.ocTE.R!!

HEREWIF

TH'STI'I.ONG
CHARACTER

Yt3GOT-

10"

HE ATE A WHOLE
PEPI":;RONI PIZZA

$7.00 Per Ton

PMms OE'C/SION TO

------

OHIO
PALLET CO.

We talk to you

Virgil B.
;:=::;::====~~
·Teaford, Sr.
1970 FORD
Broker

like a person.

WMP0/1390

Meigs
Equipment Co.

Teachers
moved at
Cheshire

IN THI'I!EOE MINLmO$

.REMAIN IN 71fE

,CO'!~•.,

FLAT IN THE' SCHOOL
CAFETEI'ZIA! TEU.
HIM ABOU'T IT,

ANO PLATT IS NOT
8EIMS/1511tJ!?ED
INHI$NEWLY

"- .R.O-SCOO:!

lrAfJOPTF[)'I

.A IJR'EI/T
PI!.AL OFATll'NllON
IN lliE tiS. .. , ,

COIJN7l?Y,1

£/l!IER,

- - - -- -

-----------

'

...

Meigs
Property

Transfers

w.

LA-Z·-BOV

CHAIRS·

a

MASON
.FURNITURE

~

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: EVERYONE THINKS OF CHANGING THE WORLD, BUT NO ONE THINKS OF CHANGING
HIMSELF.-LEO TOLSTOI
·

by THOMAS JOSEPH

DICK TRACY

ACROSS ,
1. Shade of
green
5. Discard
10.-Rogers
St. John
12. Long for
13. Champion
r""l.-------""t"""t 15. Hitting
(colloq.)
010 VOU I-IEA1'1
the road
A VOICE?
16. Sooner
than
17. - ~~The

Barber''
Maglie,
famed
pitcher

CIBS81fy

Soda pop

Havor

!5. Complete
quickly
and easily
. (2 wda.)
27. Function ·
Zl. Trinidad's
·mone\ary
unit

(C 19?3 Kinr Featurea Syndicate, Inc.)

t.-Cin·
ders. old
comic
strip
5. Unpleas·
ant hap·
penlng
6. Steep cliff
7. "Blow the
whistle"
8. 11Htlil" to
Ca!lgula
9, Apiece
11. To call
attention
U. Times for
.celebration?
17. Psyche
18. Aquatic
plant
19. Bert20. Toward
one side

~(!Uti@~;~
u-ambltthatfuurJumbleo,
.... f.u.t' lo HCh oquare, to
form four ordin1r1 wordo.

21. Loafer,
for
example
22. Riverside
deposit
23. Unclose
(poet.)
U. Pass
between
peaks
26.-derby
30. Character' lstlc mark

31. Succuient
cherry
32. Oklahoma
' city
33. Jewish
month
34. Lavish
reception
35. Droop
S6. Palm leaf
37. Singer Rawls
38. Brutally
frank

IKRVTEY

II

·1 ~ESCVN

~

()

'I I

II

~

Pril*··-·
,.......

t

keeper's

abbrevla·
tlon
31. stew In·
gredlent
(2 wds.)
Hopperson (sl.)
(2 wds.)
39.Forward
Lariat
Estimate
DeHne·

·

.

,..'IJ...W... fiNAL

Now arnnre the clrtled lttltra
to form lhe ourprfH anawer, u

"r I I

rx 1"

(AMwen IHIDrrow)

DlAMA MIDWAY IXODUS
'

.-.en • .,, he lalcen in wah!'r-A SWIM

l SftliLED
WOODSTOCK 'S
PARW! .

fiE HAD INVITED 'f\.115 CUTE
LITTLE BIRD THAT HE'5 IN LOVE
IJJITH BUT HE NEVER 60T TO
TALK WITH HER 6ECAU5E I
TALKED WITH HER T~E
WHOLE EVENIN6! ~........

,_--1

ated
DOWN
1. statute
Z. Ullfl!li
' god
S. P90l

I-

DAILY CRYPTOQUO'i'E - Here's how to work it:
A. ' X Y D L BAA X R
b LONGFELLOW
Oue letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the lhree L's, X for -the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes,, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters ~· different.
' ·..
CRYPTOQUOTES
''
t LGTAC

.
,.....,_

~J·~~·~~~~~~~~='uj""'ted· by lht above carloon.

Book·
r;er;;;;~;;;~~~;;r,--, 21.30. Still

NLKN

..,,_,y IIIMII,_

UC
BC

NEBG
RHED

WGNNGEIGVN
W G c:lJ'L G.E

HS

JBTNBEG
SHE

NLG

50 H.E5ENT ME A BILL FOR
SIX DOLLAR? fO~ A BROKEN
j.IEART ~ OH, WOOMOCK, Ml{

LITTLE fRIEND Of FRIEND5...

RLUJL
CHJUKT

KTT .- LGVEF

RKEM

·'

�•

•
I

10-The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddlepori-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 16, 1973

Job easier
IContinued from page I)
Is consislent with what he said he would do during the campaign
which was ratified by 60 some odd per cent of the American .
people.;'
One who has watched him clQI!ely over the past four years
suspects that this man who so identifies with the aspirations of
Middle :America actUaUy is an elltisl who wishes the press and
the Congress would go away and let him run the country as it
shOuld be run.
II would perhaps be an overstatement to say that he is contemptuous of the Congress. More accurately, he views it as a
rather useless appendage of the government, either to be ignored
or surmowtted. ·
And in an interview with the Washington Star-News published
shortly after his reelection, he talked about his constituents.
'1he average American is just Uke the child in the family," he
said. "You give him some responsibility and he is going to
amount to something. H on the other hand you make him com-·
pletely dependent or pamper him and cater to him too much, you
are going to make hlm soft, spoiled and eventually a very weak
individual."
Having jusi turned 60, Nixon is in trim shape for his second
term. His weight is holding between 173 and 175 pounds- the
same as it was 20 years·ago -&lt;1nd he has not missed a day of
work because of Uiness since taking of! lee.
He takes no medication and the only complaint that his docl&lt;&gt;r
has is that· he duesn't get enough exercise.
"I do not consider the election of Nov. 7, 1972, despite.the rather
maasive majority, to have been simply an approval of things as
they were," Nixon said in his only public remarks about his reelection. "The American people want change. In my view ... they
want change that works-flo! radical change, not destructive
change-but change that builds rather than destroys.
"It is that kind of change that! have tried to stand for and 1will
continue to work for over these nell four years."
the right over an embankment
and into a creek. Miss Crow
was not injured and no citation
was Issued. There was heavy
(Continued from page 1)
damage
to'the car.
47, Rutland, driving east, and
Steven C. Cockerham, MI.
Vernon, driving west, colllded
near a hillcrest . ..Cockerham was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
(Continued from pag~)
by the sheriff's cruiser for
appare.nt Injuries. Elizabeth have been used. It was conAnn Swearinger, passenger, cluded that age, Income, race,
age 28 months, had apparent color, elc., should have been
minor i~jurles but was not noted.
immediately tre~ted. There
Cowtcil did not feel that the
was heavy damage to both form would be very helpful to
vehicles . There were no Pomeroy. The matter will be
arrests.
discussed with Meeker it was
At 4:15 p.ll). Monday, Nancy noted. Attending were Collins,
E. Crow, 16, · Racine, was Mees, Elma Russell, William
traveling east on ~R 124, one Snouffer, and Ralph Werry,
and five tenths of a mile east of council members, Jane
Racine, when she lost control Walton, clerk, and Chief
in a curve, went off the road on Webster.

Rural store

Police

· Road conditions
producing wrecks

· ~"JJri;j~
By United Prell bllen!atl111181

. RELATIVES OF PRISONERS OF WAR WAVERED between hope and skepticism today following President N~n's
suspension of aU offensive action in N. Vietnam. Man~. were
eager to believe that the release of the POWs WOIIld soon occur
but at the .same time they were mindful of previous disap.
pointments such as followed Henry A. Kissinger's ''peace ill at
hand" slatement Oct. 211.
._
Atypical reaction was that of Mn. Richard Stratton of Palo
Alto, CaUl., whOse Navy husband was shot down and captured
Jan. 5, 1967. "It certsinly sounds encouraging. But I'm sure that
like everyone else whO has so recently been 1et down I think I'm
going to wait until it's more definite before I get excited," she
said.
.
'

Arthur J . Euman, 36, cutred at 7:00a.m. on Storys
Wellston, suffere&lt;l only minor Rwt Rd., one and five ~nths
injuries in an accident at 2:30 miles east of Rt. 554 where
a.m. today on Rt. 35, when his . Joseph R. Edwards, 22, Rt. I,
car turned over two and live Middleport, lost control of his
tenths miles east of the car which struck a mailbox.
Jackson County line.
Another single car mlshap
According to the Gallla- occurred on Rt. 124, nine tenths
Melgs Post state Highway of a inile west of Rt. 325 where
Patrol, Essman's car went out Jerry J. Hall, 23, Rt. 1,
of control of! the left side of the Cheshire, lost control of his car
highway, hit a gilardrail, and · in a curve. The auto left the
turned ov,er. There was heavy · highway and turned on an
damage to his car.
embankment. There was . THE WORW REACTED WITH OPrlMISM and relief today
Donald Arthur, 68, Ports- moderate damage to his car. to PreSident Nilloo's order halting acts of war against North
mouth, was cited to.Municipal
ley road conditions were Viefllam and some governments and officials even speculated it
Court for failure to yield right blamed for an accident on Rt. meant a cease-fire was imminent. "Peace Is near," ssid a
of way following an accident at 124, seven tenths of a mile east commentator of the semi-official Japan Broadcasting Corporation i!l Tokyo.
.6:45 a.m. Monday oo Rt. 7 at of Rt: 681 in Meigs County .
"We sincerely welcome the decision to completely halt the
the junction to Rt. 35.
The patrol said Clarence W.
Offi~rs said Arthur pulled Baker, 44, :Rt. 1, Reedsville, bombing of the North," said a spokesman for Premier Kalwei
his car into the path of an auto lost control on the snow ~anaka. The spokesman also said he bt!Heved a peace agreement
driven by Ernest R. Baggy, 22, covered highway. The car went \vas .near. In West Germany, the governing Social Democratic
Middleport. There was off the road and hit a tree. party of Chancellor Willy Brandt caUed the bombing halt "good
moderate damage to both cars. There was moderate damage. news."
"This decision," party spokesman Lothar Schwartz aaid,
A final accident occurred on
A single car accident ocRl. 160, one mile south of the "strengthens our conviction that ~rious efforts to bring peaee to
Vinton County line where an this part of the world I Vietnam) are being made at last and that
Paul Rawson of
auto dri\&gt;en by Deanie K. they will lead soon to the end that mankind has hoped for for
Farley, 54, Rt. 1, Eqington, years."
Canton is dead
skidded off the left side of the
Paul E. Rawson, 37, of 412 highway striking a mailbox
•
'oX"'"W"
"' " " Y '
Marietta Ave., S. E., Canton, and tree.
'•.....:•:•:•!•:0.-.-:0:0:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:v:•::;:;:;:;::=:--::;:;:;:;;::::::::
formerly of Pomeroy, who
~ud~ents asked
moved to Canton 20 years ago,
OW ·
m MeJgS Court
died Monday at the Timken
Mercy Hospital there following
Two judgments for money
a four week illness.
have been filed in Meigs
An employe o! the U. S. Steel
County Common Pleas Court
1Continued from page I)
Corp., Mr. Rawson is survived
against
Diversified Franchise
A real estate appraiser
by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. tivity, plus belief accessibility began work in Letart
Corp., Columbus, and Wells
Harold Rawson of Canton; his to markets· will ·make in· Township today. County
Securities Company, Granwife, Joyce, two sons, Harold dustrial expansion more Auditor Gordon Caldwell
ville.
and Robert, and a daughter, feasible . Two Industrial areas said he is carrying an
Filing against the companieS
Paula, all at home; a half- are proposed near the southern identHication card signed by - are Jay Hall, Jr. and Lillian M.
brother, Dale Whitlock, serv- end of the village.
Hall, Cheshire, Rt. 1, for
the county auditor bearmi
ing with the Air Force in
Public and semi-public land Caldwell's phone number.
purchase of stock in th~
Dayton, and a step-brother, uses occupy 87 acres of Mid- The appraiser's name is
amount of $1,000 which
Harold Long, of Canton.
dleport's land. Parks are the Denver Warner. Residents of
plaintiffs say the defendants
Fwteral services wlll be at 1 major public land user in the the township having any
have failed to deliver and have
p.m. Thursday at the Christian village. The community has doubt as to the claims of a
refused refund of payment, and
and Missionary Alliance adequate school faciliiles to visitor being an appraiser is
Harry N. Lodwick and
Church in Can ton. Burial will meet the anticipated needs, but invited to call Caldwell at
Jwtanita G"Lodwick, Chester,
be in Sunse\ Hills Burial Park, police
facilities
are 992-2898,
for stock in the amowtt of $500
Canton. Friends may call at inadequate. The survey
which the defendants failed to
the Bon Krelghbaum Fwteral recommends present pollee
deliver and refused refwtd of
Home in Canton from 2:':io to office should be expanded or
payment.
3:30 p.m. Wednesday.
new offices provided. The Three earn all A
In other court action Thomas
•
village office and meeting
Lee King was granted a
space is overused or non- marks at OSU
divorce from Bessie Mae King
existent. A new vlllage office Three Meigs countlans have and Phillip W. Kelly from Lois
building is recommended . earned marks of all A for the G. Kelly, each charging gross
(However, the construction of autumn quarter of Ohio State neglect of duty and extreme
the new fire hall is expected to University to be listed on the cruelty.
free some space for other dean's list. They are John
uses.)
Bradford Lohse, Millsa K.
OPEN HOUSE SET
The survey pointed out that Rizer and Richard Paul
An open house will be held
the Middleport park fulfills a Werner, ail of Pomeroy. Others from 7to9:30p.m. Saturday by
need in the village and is named to the list were Douglas the Industrial Arts Club of
widely used. The Middleport William Little, Middleport; Meigs High School. The inwater system is adequate in Harry David Slawter, Mid- dustrial arts shop room will be
capacity to fulfill anticipated dleport Route 1; Sandra Kay open during tl!e desij~pated
demand . Improvements Lewis, Pomeroy Route 3, and hours and work of the students
suggested by the survey are an Jean Denise Whitehead, wlll be shown. There will be a
additional storage tank to Reedsville, all with an average door prize awarded and club
provide for the southern and of at least 3.5.
members will serve refreshwestern parts of the village and
ments.
a smaller tank to provide for
•those homes .either existing or
MUSIC AT CHURCH
anticipated to· locate on the Veterans Memorial Hospital
The Point Pleasant Bible
higher growtds.
ADMITIED - Gail Miller, Choir of Point Pleasant
Sewage collection and New Hnven; Melvin Brown, Mission will present an evening
treatment is near marginal in Ewington; Jack Ginther, of Christian music at 7:30p.m.
the village. Additional lines to . Chester; Jeffrey Mays, Saturday at the Pomeroy
areas not yet served along Chester; Ross Morris, New Church of the Nazarene. The
Powell St. and other areas Haven; Nellle Hanson, Mid· program will include not only
expected to grow, such as the dieport; Mildred Workman, hymns by· the choir but solos,
hilltops and Bone Hollow and to Rutland; Betty Graham, duets and trios. The public is
replace combined sanitary Pomeroy; Alice Russell, invited.
sewer lines are proposed in the Pomeroy; James Bush, · Yinsurvey.
.
I
ton; Claude Roy, Racine, and
LOCAL TEMPS
In its conclusion,'the survey George Hackett, Sr., MidThe temperature in downfinds that the street network is dleport.
town Pomeroy a I 11 a.m.
the most varied in the cOunty.
DISCHARGED - Thomas Tuesday was 45 degrees under
'
It is generally adequate for Cooke, David Jenldns, Curt sunny skies .
internal circulstion, but has Stout, Joseph Moodispaugh,
hazardous and narrow Jason Thomas, Myrtle Click
locations which will need at- and Jerry Stobart.
tention. Most important, the
survey concludes, Is the need
Holzer Medical Center
for fast, safe and convenient
(Discharged)
access from the outlying neighborhoods into the shopping Melba Brown, Mae Messick,
Gail
Trula
.Hackler,
district of Middleport.
Argabright, Roy Bauer, Henry·
~-11'1------.. Camink, 'Eima H•rper, Mrs.
Wilber Reese and son; Ronada
Cook, Katheryn Halley; Carl
Ramey, Effle Meadows,
Millard Brown, Norah Boho,
Vada Thomas, Lottie Smith
Everett Saunders, Mrs. Robert'
Roechiandson; Ethel Morrow, ·
Eva Ives, Catherin Hlll,
Emerson Evans and Ansel
Cross.
(Birthal
Mrs. Martin Wallace,
Jackson, a son; Mrs. Dana
Smith, Wellston, a daughter,
and Mrs. Lew Moore, Oak HIU,
A
a daughter.

Housing

Kn your
•
appratser

Now You Know

&amp;at... .

:;)

Of th~ Bend ·f:~J
.

ftyJl

By Bob Hoeflkl,

M~eountyTreasuM Howard Frank- a big tluuD to
courthouBe

'

Water~ at the curbing after any kind of rain at all before

the repairs were made. Passing cars as a result aplaabed anyone
who hawened to be even near the sl~walk.
"It's reaUy a great improvement", Frank aald,
THERE'S SO MUCH cooking with the Meigs High School
Band of o,.Jght Goins? · .
On March 3, the band will have famed band leader and
composer sian Kenton on hand for .j cUnlc. Then the band allo
plans to go to the Kentucky Derby and to JQng's Island, playing
at both locations.
Incidentally, the Kenton.clinlc is open to area instrumental
students and the Kenton 19iJiece band will present a public
concert In the evening. Yoo can make reservatiiiiB for the C:llnlc
at $1 a person and .for the concert at $3 for adults and $2.50 fll'
students by sending your money to Goins, In care of Meigs High
School, Pomeroy Route 3.
·

A WELL-PRESERVED OOPY of an AprU 5, 1896 edition of
The Dally Telegraph published in Pomeroy was found by Curly
Wiles, Pomeroy, wblle remodeling an old house.
At the time, Pomeroy's Opera HOUle was going strq with
Frank Jones and his excellent company In the new comedy
drama, "Our Country Cousin", the offering. The production
featured a railroad scene with a full train of cara, 100 feet long,
and 12feet high. Admission was 2&amp;, 35 and50centa.
Doctors of the era were openly seeking business! Dr. E. F.
Cerr,locatedover Hwtler'sBook Store In Middleport, advertised
for busi11ess attestlnl! his "specialty" as treatment of dlseases of
women and chUdren and pointing out lhllt he was prepared to
give special treatment to diseales of the throst and lunp; Mae
Blazer annowtced the opening of het m!Wnery shop with the
"latest noveltil!f in pattern hats and bonneta'' and the ~ of
spring and summer millinery at Allard and Armitage's Shop was
reported in the nns columns.
"Lightning Hot Dropa" were adv~d at 25 centa and 50
cents a bottle with the guarantee of "no'telief, no pay". 1be
product was advertised to cure colic, cramps, chlorera, nallle8,
changes of water, etc., and to heal cuts, burns, bruises, 8CI'8t-'
ches, bi
animals and bugs, etc. Quite a [ll'oduct I Anything
that good ough
going Uke hotcakes in 1973.
.
I Wedding ace
were more or leas l:rief but quite complimentary . One
ding report reads:
Married W
y evening by Rev. W. A. Echols, Mr.•
Arthur E. Fox and 1'fl!ss Nell.le. E. Skinner, both of this city. 1be
groom Is aaslstant caahier in the Middleport National Banlt and a
yowtg man of very high social ~. The bride Is the only
daughter of the late 0. P. Skinner and .wife, and Is a highly
respected young lady. 1bey have the beat wlshea of a boat of
frlencls. The announcement concluded with ''Two aouls wltb llut a
single thought; two hearts that beat as one."
FRANKLIN RIZER D, aon of Mr. and ·Mn. Frankllli Rizer, .
Pomeroy, will be man:hlng with the u:s. Air Force Academy in
Saturday's lnaugwoal parade in Washington. Franklin will be
leaving Colorado with his group on Friday Ill' the national event
and will be quartered at Anapolia. He'll be holding down the right
~rd post in tl!epii'adeWhicll1rill jle !tlevlsecl:
'

Marvin Stiles dies of injury
Marvin Franklin (Sparky)
Stiles, Columbus, in his early
20s, son of Rolland and
Josephine Folden SlUes, former Pomeroy area residents,
died Monday eyenlng at Mt.
Carmel Hospital in ·Columbus
as the result of injuries suffer-

Weather
Windy and warmer today.
Increasing. cloudlneas tonight,
lows upper 30s and lower 40e.
Cloudy and warmer Wednesday, highs into low 60s.

a

ed in motorcycle accident.
According to
reports
received here, Mr. Stiles
Friday evening had repaired
the motorcycle of a friend at
his home and decided to road
test it. There was a malfwtction, and Stiles was thrown. He
was taken to Mt. Carmel
Hospital and did not regain
consciousness from · a bead
injury.
Surviving )lesides the
parents, who reside at 2190
White~d Road, Columbus,
are his wife, I.Jnda, and a soo.
Funeral arrangements are
incomplete.

EXTE[\IDED OUTLOOK
A coollDg trend wilb 1
chance of sbowera about
ON. DEAN'S lJ8T
Saturday, bl1hs iD the AI
Patrick 0. Arnold of
Thursday dropping to lbe Ch · Syracuse has been named to
by Saturday. Lows in the 40s
the dean's list of the ParkersThursday to the 30s by
burg Commwtlty College for
Saturday.
the first semester.

Wearing Apparel For Your Faini~ and
.
Furnishings For Your Home

Auto Teller Window!

OPEN FRIDAY EVENING
5:00 TO 7:00 P.M.

' PITTSBURGH ·

2DAYSo ONLY

'

.

'

EXCITING, ADVENTUROUS.
- Portland Oregonian
" ... A GENUINE FAMILY
PICTURE
• • ·• OREGON JOURNAL

MEIGS THEATRE .

··'

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGE's : Mrs. Jack
Landers, daugtiter, Point .
Plea,ant; · Mrs . James
Wheeler, Mni.. Cecil Sines, ·
Reva
Point
Pleasant ;
Meadows, Gallipolis; Mrs. Bill
Croley, Leon; Brenda Crowley,
Leo~; Mn. Ridden Miller,
Lakin; Mrs. Charles Cain,
Leon,
and
George
Wolfingerbarger, Gallipolis.

Visit Elber~elds . Warei\Ouse on Mechanic Street. _
· Carp.ets - Lmoleums ,- ·Whirlpool Washers • Dryers _ .
Refngerators • Freezel's • Trashlnasters -.· 'lfoover '
Washe~ Dryers · Magic Chef Gas Ranges • Mlllt Chef 1
. . ,Electr1c Ranges - Cabinets fl;lr .l(itcheri ·. Metal War~ . 1
drobes. Save at ElberfeJds Warehouse on· Mechanic
Street- Pr~mpt Delivery- C;ontlnuous Service. Sensible
Credit. ·
',
,

.-

Devoted To The Interesu Of The:Meig.•-Mmon Area
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1973

Five ·population centers

Switch
to coal
planned

.w ill experience serious
growing pains at once

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Nixon.. plans to announce shortly a plan for
converting electric power
producing plants from oil-fired
to coal-fired units, according to ·
administration and industry
sources.
Administration sources said
the announcement will be
contained in .the President's
message on energey, expected
within the next two weeks.
Proponents. have · pointed to
the nailon's massive coal
reserves as one way of meeting
the growing energy needs over
the next several years.
Both government and industry sources say Nixon has
agreed that such a move would
• ' ~
lA
reduce financial and security
•I{
risks posed by the increased
use of imported oil.
~
~,
But conservation groups are
.
expected to. oppose the
IT'S FINISHED - The 1,1()3.ft. high stack, 48 ft . in
relaxation of air pollution
controls necessary to permit diameter at its top, is completed at the Gen. James M. Gavin
coal burning on a larger scale, Plant near Cheshire. Alleft is the 492-lt. cooling tower, also is
and the subsequent demand for completed. The first of two 1.3-million kilowatt units is
scheduled for operation in 1974.
more strip mining.

. f;l
;;·

Crops lnd~shows 1972 Ohio crop production down 13 pet. from
1971. Total Jl'oduction of soybeans, wheat, barley· and tobacco
was well above 1971 figures, but com, oats, rye, hay, popcorn,
potatoes, sugar beets, red clover seed and timothy seed were aU
below 1971 staqdards. Despite wet harvesting weather, soybean
production Is estimated at a record high 82 miiUon bushels, up
about 2 pc\. from 1971. But the yield per acre -an average Tl
bushels- was 3.5 busheL• below 1971's high yield. The report said
15 pet. more acreage was used for soybeans in 1972.
Late harvest and field loas cut the corn yield throughout the
state, according to the index. Total corn production fell 44 million
bushels below the 1971 record .of 323 milllon bushels. Yield per
acre dropped to 90 bushels, one fewer than in 1971. Favorable
weather last week allowed Ohio's farmers to harvest soybean
and com crops, but they now face problems of transporting the
grain to elevators and locating enough propane to dry the crops.
CINCINNATI- THREE COMPANIF.'I that control most of
the cigarette vending machines in this area have been indicted
by a federal grand jury for price fixing and other violations of the
Sherman Antitrust Act. The indictment and a civil complaint
were filed Tuesday in U. S. District Court here against M V Co. ·
of Solon, Ohio; ARA Services Inc., of Philadelphia, and the
Western Vending Machine Co. of Cincinnati.
Assistant Attorney General Thomas E. Kauper, head of the
antitrust division, said sales of the .three !inns in 1969-70 accounted for about $4.5 milllon of the $5 milllon tots! sales of
cigarettes from vending machlnl!s In the Cincinnati area. The
companies are charged with conspiring, along with other parties
not named in the Indictment, to fix prices on cigarettes in some
3,000vending machines since some time [ll'lor to 1960.
NEW YORK - BRITJSII OVERSEAS Airways Corp.
(BOAC) Tuesday announced, subject to U. S. government ap.
pro~al, the lowest scheduled airline fares ever offered from
Britain to America, statliiig Api'ill.
·
The new fares, known as APEX (Advance Payment ·Ezcursipn), would cut theround-tripfarefrom London to New York
to $145.80 at its lowest, and the New York-to-United Kingdom
round-trip fare would range from $165 in the winter to $290 in
July.

FAIRFIELD, CALIF. - ONLY ONE holdout remained
today on the elhall5ted )ury tryillg to decide If Juan V· Corona
killed 25 farm hands in the worst mass murder in U. S. history.
The jurors were spHt 11 to 1on a verdict. with no indleation which
•--'•n he the called It qui18
way tbey ware .-.~... w n Y
for the day·
Tuesday·
.
The panel of !Omen and two women 11'11 ordered to reconvene
todaY,for a sixth day of deliberation~.
.
.,
THREE-WEEK TOUR
HEA111 TO VISIT
UNITED NATIONS (UPI)::..
WASHINGTON (UP!) ~
Secretary-G~netal . Kurt S.tate Department officials say
Waldbetm leaves Jan. 31 for a British Prltne Minister Edthree-week tour of Asia ward H.,.th•s · previously anfollowing qilic~ 'stopovers in 'nounced visit to Washington
-. Londoo, Puis and Frllllkfw't. will take place Feb. ~~~.

Deer killed
early today
A deer was killed by a
vehicle at I :55 a . m. today in
Rt. 35, one and six tenths miles
west of Rt. 160.
According to the GalliaMeigs Post State Highway
P•trol, the animal ran into the
path of an auto driven by
Franldin E. Canterbury, 41,
Marmet. There was minor
damage to his car .
Patricia A. Rickman, - 44,
Middleport , sustained
lacerations in an accident at
10:25 a.m. Tuesday on Rt. 554
one and two tenths miles west
of Rt. 7. The patrol said that the
Rickman car colllded with an
auto driven by Vincent A.
Strazzo, 29, Cleveland. There
was moderate damage. No
charges were filed.
William Bunce, 51, Columbus, was cited for driving left
of the center following an
accident on Mill Creek Rd., two
and six tenths miles north of
Rt. 7. Officers said Bunce 's car
colllded on a curve with an auto
driven by Vickie Deem, 22,
Pomeroy . She claimed injury
but was not treated.
No one was injured or cited
in an accident at 4 p.m. on Rt. 7
at the railroad tracks north of
Cheshire. The patrol said Gary
F. Voli\•et, 29, Gteenville, Pa.,
was pulling a house trailer
when the axle of the trailer
broke.
A final accident occurred on
Rt. 325, four tenths of a mile
south of Rio Grande when Roy
D. Troy, 22, Rio Grnnde, lost
. control of his car which struck
a· t~ee and turned over on lis
top.
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (UP!)
- About 60 guards failed to
show up today for .the first .
shift as a work stoppage by
corrections officials went
Into Its second day at the
Southern Ohio ·correctional

BY BOB HOEFUCH
Over 6,000 new jobs will be created and population will increase by some 18,000 by 19110 i!) the impact area of the new deep
coal mines of Southeastern Ohio and the Gavin Power Plant. ·
ThiS was just a part of the information given some 100
business and community leaders of the area attending a meeting
of the Buckeye Hills - Hocking Valley Regional Development
District Council· at the Meigs County Courtroom in Pomeroy
Tuesday afternoon.
The statistics were a part of the economic impact report
which has been completed by Hammer, Greene, Siler Associates
and Stanley Consultants, hired to survey the impact of the Gavin
development and the problems it will generate. Presenting the
· report were George Dengler of Hammer, Greene, Siler, and Bill
Klatt of Stanley Consultants.
Dengler said five growth centers are affected by the
development because existing facilities can be expanded to
accommodate more people ea.sier than new facilities can be
developed. The growth centers, he said, are PomeroyMiddleport, Gallipolis, Athens-Albany, McArthur-HamdenJackson, and Wilkesville-Salem Center. These five centers are
the recommended focus of the impact program.
Projected new households in each of the areas, a total of 3,457
include: Pomeroy-Middleport, 325; Gallipolis, 435; AtbensAlbany, 650; McArthur-Hamden.Jackson, 755; WilkesvilleSalem Center, 537, and remainder of area, 537.
These forecasts .are not meant as a. precise prediction of
what will inevitably occur but rather a projection for improvement programming purposes of the level of population
!iemand that can be anticipated in each growth center If the
recommended growth strategy is implemented, Dengler pointed
out.
Dengler stated that about 2,600 people will be employed by
the new mine operations and there will be 3,485 employed in basic
jobs in relation to the mine and the power plant.
The survey estimates that there will be an additional 2,525
persons employed in non-basic positions wfucli would include
retaUing. WhUe in 1970, 2;420 workers were going out of the area
to their employment, by 1960 th,e number going outside of the
area will be on!~ . Unemployment will alao be reduced
considersbly.
Average household incomes for the three counties, Gallia,
Meigs and Vinton, should approximate $11,210 by 1976 and $14,700
by 1980 compared to $7,450 for 1970, the survey discloses. Shoppers goods sales of $18.1 million for the three cowtties in 1967 will
increase to $46.4 million in 1980.
Klatt, using large maps, pointed out that Routes 124 and
160 hold the .highest priority In the impact area. The high·
ways will connect the mine area with three of the.five growth
centers. A modern artery Is needed to replace the present
grossly Inadequate highway facility. That improvement
would cost an estimated $9 million, Klatt said . .
Route 160, he pointed out, connects the Gallipolis growth
center with the mine area near Wilkesville and the estimated
project cost is $6,000,000. Improvement pf county highway '!/ is
needed to provide access to one of the mines from Route 689 and
the cost of this would amowtt to $400,000.
Klatt emphasized that Routes 124 and 160 are now federal

(
I

l

•

OVER 6,000 NEW JOBS will be created and population of the impact area affected by new
coal mines in Southeastern Ohio and the Gavin Power Plant will increase by about 18,000 by.
1980 according to George Dengler, seated, left, representing Hammer, Greene, Siler,
Washington, D. C., and Bill Klatt, right, of Stanley Consultants, firms which have completed an
economic impact survey.
1
secondary highways. Ohio gets about 4'h ,million .doliars a -y~.
for such highways in tile entire state. Thus', major improv,ements
to the two routes under the present arrangemeht is not likely,
Klatt stated.
However, he suggested the highways could be changed to
'1ederal primary highways" or to "economic growth highways"
so they w~uld be in position for more money for improvement. He
stressed that such changes would have to be approved by the
Ohio Department of Highways and the Governor's office.
&amp;tggested improvements, even If begun at once, would be years
away . By that time, the new mines and power plant will be
operating.
Touching on sewage facilities, Klatt said intense impact is
expected to be felt in the Wilkesville-Salem Center growth
center. The survey advises that a single treatment plant serving
both communities has many advantages. Collection systems are
also required.
Hamden is presently under orders from the state to install a
collection and treatment system. A total system is needed to
accommodate growth. McArthur, Hamden, WeUston and
Jackson constitute a single linear growth center so sanitary
sewer facilities should be carefully integrated within this
(Continued on Page 16 )

Combat advisors ordered back
SAIGON (UP!) - The U.S.
command today ordered
American military advisers
puUed back lrom ground
combat areas to prevent
needless casualties before an
expected cease-fire can go Into
effect, U.S. military sources
reported.
The orders did not apply to
air opera lions and there were
heavy strikes in" South Vietilam, Laos and Cambodia, with
U.S. B5~ flying their heaviest
raids in South Vietnam in more
than three months.
Other U.S. planes supported
South Vietnamese ground for-

ces.

The military sources said the
South Vietnamese army was
placed on maximum alert in
contest areas, including aU five
of the northern provinces, in
expectation of Communist assaults to place as much
territory as possible under
their control before a ceasefire becomes fully effective.
Both sides are expected to
launch all-out attacks once a
cease-fire is announced and
before it takes effect in order to
seize as much ground as
possible.
American troops have ended
their ground combat role in

Vietnam but military advisers
still remain with many South
Vietnamese army 1ARVN)
units. The military sources
said these troops were told to
pull back rather than help the
ARVN fight for small
locations.
The sources said the action
was ordered both for political
and humanitarian reasons.
They said the new orders in no
way prohibited Americans
from shooting back If they
were endangered.
Military sources said the full
American air armada of nearly
1,000 Guam and Thailandbased B5~ and Thailand and

carrierbased jet fighter
bombers would be maintained
at full strength for the
foreseeable f~ture.
The U.S. command said U.S.
jet fighter-bombers flew 311
one --plane strikes in South
Vietnam in the 24-hour period
~nding at 8 a.m. today- the
first full reporting period since
the bomb halt over North
Vietnam wok effe~\.
That was the mo~t tactical
air strikes flown in South
Vietnam since 324 sorties Dec.
15, when the bombing of the
North was still going on but bad
weather held air raids there
down to 50 sorties.

Trailers
checked
'

James Roush, compliance
and sanitation offlcer and
building inspector, has coin·
pleted a systematic check of
Columbia Township for traUer
license stamps.
·
Of 57 trailers there he
reported 43 had vaHd 1972
trailer stamps, 14 did not. Ten
of the fourteen have been
located ih Columbia T~wnship
for some time", while the
other four were moved there
within the last year.
·
Roush said the next township
to be checked will be Salem.
Roush said persons who have
not complied and ; are
delinquent, and those who have
not purchased their 1973 trailer
stamps can do so at the Meigs
County Auditor's Ol!lce .
Failure to do so on or before
Jan. 31 will result In a penalty
of $5 or ten per cent of the taxes
due, whichever Is greater. ·
11

CARS COLLIDE
Two cars had medium
damage in an accident oil
Pomeroy's East Main St. near
the Pomeroy Motor Co. at 8:05
a.m. today. Pomeroy pollee
said a car driven by Thomas
Weaver,.Syracuse, had stopped
in his lane of traffic when it
was struck in the rear by
another westbound vehicle
driven ·by Robert Johnson,
Racine . There · were no injuries. Investigation is con·
tinuing, police said.

More rumors of peace raised
.

Fresh peace nunors swept
the world and nothing said by
Nixon administration officials
discouraged them, but Saigon
and the White House both
denied reports of a weekend
cease-fire
announcement.
Facility here.
In Paris, U.S. and ComJerry Foulk, Ass9clate
Superintendent of Custody, mwtlst technical experts now
said the facUlty Is using in their third week of work
about 76 guards par shift went into another session today
connty officers held · over to work out details of a cease·
from the previous •hilt. The fire 01ice a peace accord is'
chief oi labor relation&amp; in the reabhed. They met fQr 6'h
siate Corrections .Depart- · hours Tuesday and agreed to
ment planned to meet early meet again today privately in
today . with tbe striking suburban Gif&lt;Jur-Yvette.
Most of the attention today
' guards.
· .... ·w· 'POre i?iSiii&gt;~~~:~:,~ was focused on Saigon, where

.

White House emissary Gen. i. P r e s i de n t ~ N i x o n ' s
Alexander M. Haig and Presi- inauguration Saturday. At the
dent Nguyen Van Thieu met same time, administration
separately with top aides. The officials said no hitch had
two men sjlent more than two developed in current peace
hours together Tuesday and negotiations and they did
while spokesmen for both sides nothing to squelch worldwide
refused to discuss the con- speculation that an accord is
ference, Saigon government not far off.
soure.es ~d Haig presumably
One r~pcirt; by Columbia
presented Thieu with a new Broadcasting System (CBS)
V.S.-Hanol draft agreement Saigon correspondents Don
that the United States Intended Webster and Richard Wagner,
to sign with or wJthout Thieu's said Tuesday that South Vletsigllature.
· nam and the United States plan
· The F1orida White House unilaterally to declare a cease·
denied reports Tuesday that a fire - probably FridayVietnam pea~e settlement regardless of whether the
would he announced ln:time for · Washington-Hanoi draft
\

'

TEN CENTS .

PHONE 992·2156

Gavin Complex impact projected into

.'

I

'

en tine

\

KEY BISCA YNE,FLA. -PRESIDENT Nixon may touch on
(ll'Ospects for peace in his forthcoming second Inaugural address,
but he will not discuss the specifics of the Vietnam negotiations.
Press SeCretary Ronald L.. Ziegler said that N!J:on was ''weU
along" in preJIIII'ation of his Bddress, to be delivered on the steps
of the nation's Capitol following his oath:t&amp;king at noon Saturday.
"He may,make a general reference" to the VIetnam War."but he
will, not get Into the specifics of the negotiations," Ziegler said
'l)lesday.

Elberfelds In ·Pomeroy

ADVENTURE

STARTS .
TOM()flROW
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation '

\

JANUARY SALE

Drive in to our

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By United Press IDternational
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO CROP Reporting service's All

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

.

a1 y

Partly cloudy and warmer,
today highs in the upper 50s
and low 60s. Mostly cloudy and
mild tonight · and Thlii'Sday.
Lows tonight in the.40s. Highs
Thursday mid 50s to low 60s.

Pomeroy Mayor Willlam Baronick and tile I'OOieroy Street
Department for their wll'k in ~ tile area in ~t of. the

Save All Over The Store NOW!

BANK THE EASY WAY

•

Cardinal GIUBeppe Caspar
M01:zofanti, a chief keeper of .
the Va\ican Ubrary who died
in 11149, could translate 114
languages and 72 dialects, and
~:ould speak 60 languages
fluently.
.

VOL XXIV , NO. 192

Weather

'

,

agreement is signed.
Webster said the Saigon
.Information Ministry sent him
a letter denying the report and
labeling It "entirely false."
Webster did not comment on
the denial.
White House Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler told
reporters Tuesday in Key
Biscayne that Nixon would not
declare an end to the war in his
inauguration address ..
"He may make a general
reference" to the war, Ziegler
said, "but he will not get into
ihe specifics of the 'negotia·
lions." The press secretary
added that there were no

prospects for a peace agree. ·
ment signing untU at leaat
early in Ni:lon's second ·term.
Earlier, ·Ziegler said that
chief U.S. peace negotiator
Henry A. Kissinger would not
return to Paris this week for
more private talks with his
Hanoi counterpart, Le Due
Tho.
White House . officials said
the next Klsslnger-Tho
meeting was expected early
nel!l week and there were
wtofficial estimate! that li may
take many more daysperhaps a few weeks- for a
final accord to be reached.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="734">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11134">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="54235">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="54234">
              <text>January 16, 1973</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="516">
      <name>rawson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2482">
      <name>stiles</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
