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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.

�-·
2·-The Dailv Sentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,'Jan. 17, 1913

. •,fi 'I'(I

w::.:::::,.,&gt;.:;;:;:;:;:;;::::::~;::w;:::e::::::~~;;,:,:.;,:,:,:,:,:,:;:&gt;x-;;-.:::::;;-;:;~;::::t:e:-z.o~:%'1

"(~ciul ·''ote.~

~.·

Sunday School attendance on
Jan. l4 was · 38, the offering
i iB.05, lyorship services were

Helen Help

,

.

·

at ll1e Tuppers Plains

IJ..,!,'

w l' h

Thursday evening,

(JO

.... . lll, at 6 o'clock. This
·!p,•hng 1s open· to anyone.

' '''"!

Mrs. Charles D.
ul' \'l!-;itc-d Sarah Woode in
c
\ · tera ns
Me mor ial
.. 1.•.t.:n 1 .meroy, last Thurs-

I

llerll l&amp; Wright ·or
.1 • ..;,
U. , visite d her

,,.
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,

•'.11''1" :1• l;m and si!:iter, Mr.
d :\!1 ~. { •. truu t Henderson
t'-

th·· '1·\·, krnd i\Jld a tlcndetl

I:IJ t·J~

.11"'

lil.:'Je
j

:-iUHWI) fiJU I !li n g.

··t~• inw Her1rlt:• ·~o n

ha s

t·n 1J1 V&lt; il h the flu.
! 1 •('• t• ' ' !\I Jot·:~ in t!w Vt&gt;rc
: .. &gt;~1'.1.

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'&gt;.t'l't.

Mi.lr·ti lcl

1[ ·11 il-•lk1rt Sw ar lL, M1 . &lt;111d

•. rl ,., S..v:1rt;., Mllldrd
:- .1r: .n(\ K:1te

!
~

~

~

Dangerous Combination

Dear Helen :
!love this woman. U !lose her, I'D probably go back to the
botUe, But'she likes ber booze and she'd rather go to bars than be
with me since I went on the wagon.
My doctor said if I dian•t give up'Uquor, I wouldn't be around
very long, and I quit cold. But now I'm In a bind : Ill stay with ·my
lady friend, I don't think I can resist drinking with her and,
without her, 1may be driven to drink. I don't take loneliness very
well. - NO WAY OUT
Dea~ No:
I'd guess the gal is more drlnklng-buddy than "lady friend"
and, once you're thoroughly dried our, you may realize this too.
Somehow bar belles don't have the same appeal when you're cold
sober. (No pun intended.)
How to fight your lonelinesS? Get the word around the office
that you're on the wagon. You'D be surprised how many people
1especially women) want to help you. - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
My 16-year-{)ld son tells me that the hair on his legs is falling
out. 1~ this a stage he is going through or a real problem' - R.S.
..
Dear R.:
First, check out your son's pants. Are they tight fitting aD the
way up ' Is the material somewhat abrasive? Girls use a type of
fine sandpaper for hair removal on legs and laces. Perhaps his
pants ha ve the same effect.
If not, then consult a doctor. - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
On behaU of th e Girl Guards and Sunbeams of Secaucus, N.
111 \'viP! ans \1cmorial
J ., 1 want to thank your readers from all over the country for
.. &lt;: I• · Slid l on Swartz
their help in making it possible for us to complete our project.
·.v:T!,. Jt..;v, L· ·h~
' '
The flood of Betty Crocker coupons they sent have helped us get a
. ' · ' ' '·'-Hi Mrs Warren ve~y expensive part for the heart machine at Christ Hospital in
. u •:Ji i .\l !. r11tfl Mrs . Jersey City. Without them, we would never have· secured the
'''·. · . .1: rz.
hundreds of thousands of coupons necessary.
I.H. 'II&lt;: Mrs. Otto SwartZ of
We sent thank-you notes to all who sent addresses, but many
u
wl! rc S uri d ~lY didn't, so would you please add our thank-you to your widely read
•1 'l1r'J F'ollroU and
column ? God bless them all! - GIRL GUARDS AND SUNI 1.1 J ,•II,Jd iS Un. '
BEAMS (Sponsored by the Salvat.iC1 Army)
~ r.
.-uU Mrs. Ar thur
Dear Helen :
.
~ ht:"rl 1111 have been at the
This Christmas, as usu21, Mrs. Ardelle T: Dow sent oot
1 .iii• . his sister, Ruth in St.
around 5,oopcards to "her boys overseas." "Mom" as the fellows
r !· T' .n:ta l, nnd at home
call her, works in her executiv£ wheelchair at the Fairview
Ill.• ._, f, . ·s ,'ieriously ill .
,.,.._
'\ Manor Convalescent Home, and supplies her program,
;
"Operation ·Mail Call," from the $13 check she receives once a
C1,,. Interest Is
month . She sends friendly cards and notes to the many men who
Grt:&gt; 'l f er For You
might otherwise receive no mail at all, and she is much-loved by
thousands of lonely G.Ls.
I'm writing to ask a favor of your readers : Will anyone who
has leftover (untised) Christmas cards - and olller greeting
cards too - please send those they don't want to keep to:
OPERATION MAIL CALL,
On 90·Day
Care of MOM,
502 Hill Street,
'.:~&gt;rtlfkc• tes
Coventry, Rhode Island, 02816.
· i Oeposit
Another way people .can really help is by sending along a
1
! •. rr'l 1 f pe r year
rouple of eighl-&lt;:ent stamps too, for postage mounts up when you
'" 90 d ay Cer· have so many long distance friends. Thank you. - MOM'S
.
,tip·; o l De po s it.
P n ·, 1. \1•1J. ,1.,•·. ,,, ··• ~- .. 1 1 , •··
1 · I ,'·.)\' oo Mi~ im u m ·. !'\~HI~NP
"·
Dear ne en:
~ ,l lt:t·l '•1
. Pay 'ilb l e
YoU tell the woman to '"forgive and forget" her husband's
' H.ii
,1
affair,'Ml if SHE had an affair, would HE do likewise. Would you
be as lenient with her' - DOUBTFUL
Dear Doubtful :
r
Be they female or male, they get the same advice from me:
Bury past affairs deep and don't build monwnents on the graves.
Here's a man who agrees with me - too late:
Dear Helen:
I • Arh•!ll 5 County
1 had the perfect marriage and my wife hoid an affair on the
, :1• ' ntl&lt;; &amp; Loan Co.
side (perhaps because it wasn't as perfect as I thought ). My male
t~o S!!'c ond St .
·' l'n:&gt;- roy, Ohio
ego was crushed when I found out, and l wouldn't listen or
. • Jt•ll l'&gt; In s ured To
forgive.
i I IC
It's been seven years. Believe me, if l could only go back
things would be different today, She told me it was otA!r and I
wouldn't believe her. I drove her away, and in doing so !lost the
best things in !lie. - CAN'T FIND HER TO BEG
FORGIVENESS
•

,1

ul

•:-.: [.,, .-.;

Sarah

J ,,],.

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

1

1

lr'·!; Co. Branch

~~.@

..

ll'l'l'rill"'~ll!---------------·
'Ne Have The

BEST GAS IN TOWN
And We Sell II

Second class postage peid at

SAVE

CERTIFIEDGAS STATION

________
(182)

HOMF MADE
CHEESE SPREAD
AND

Pomeroy, o.

992-9981

(183)

HAM SAlAD

lb.
4 lb.
3 lb.
3 lb.
2 lb.
4

Published daily e~t c ept
Saturday bY Tne Ohio vatlev
Publi s hing Company , 111
Court 51. , Pomeroy , OhiO,
45769 . Business Off i ce Phone
992 -2156, Editorial Phone 992 -

Pomeroy , Ohio .
Nalionat advertising

.So You

tl 538 W. Ma in

Sentinel

2157.

FOR LESS

"'

Dai~

The

DEVOTED TO THE
1NTERE5TOF
• MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL ,
Exec. Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor

representati\'e
8ott lnelli .
Gallagher. tn c .. 12 East 42nd
St. , New 'Vork City , New York .
Sub~cr i ption rates : De livered by carrier where
ava ilable so cents per week;
By Motor Route where carrier
ser ¥ice not available : One
mon t h 11.15 . B v m a il in Oh io
and W. Va ., One yea r Sl 4.0D.
Six mon !hs S1.25 . Thr&amp;e
month s S.t .SD . Subsc ript ion
pr ice in cludes Sunday Timu ~~entinel.

too.)

But this eight-track thing has me captivated, no doubt about
It - and&gt;in spite of the fact that I am a cheapskate.,
Since I've got about seven cable TV and FM drops at various
points around the house, including one for a rather expensive
stereo FM-record player, I didn't want to get too deep into money
with this new stereophonic toy.
So my total investment is only about a hWJdred dollars, to
this point. The player and headphones retail for about $80, and I
have about fifteen tapes, ranging In price from $2.50 to under $6.
lt's already been worth the hundred and more.
I'm rapidly teaming what I Uke for this specific medium:
- Instrumental stuff Is better than vocalists, if you're
looking lor pure effect of.stereo separation. I have some really
fine works by Henry Mancini, Peter Nero, Floyd Cramer, Chet
Atkins, and-my personal favorite-Danny Davis and the
Nashville ,Brass, which made such a hit at the 1972 Gallia Junior
Fair.
- Vocal groups sound better than singles. I have some very
good Simon &amp; Garfunkel, Cher Bono, and the Four Tops, plus
some badly-recorded early Sinatra. Tbe groups have It all over
the soloists in eight-track. ·
Hanging it up, it seems sort of siUy for me to be-plugging
stereo players, when I make my living from selling sounds and
pictures transmitted by a wire.
But tape players produce some greatsowuls, and some great
entertainment for music~overs. It'• no wonder they're such an
attractive target for car-strippers looking for a big~emand
item to peddle in the Midnight Auto Market.

4 lb. GROUND BHF
3 lb. 51 RLOIN STEAK
3 lb. PORK CHOPS
4 ib. CHUCK ROAST
4 lb. SLICED BACON
3 1~. LARGE FRANKS

8 To 1

Saturdays

(185)

Phone Us
Your Orderl

S lb.

4 lb.
4 lb.
4 lb.
. 3 lb.
3 lb.
3 lb.

CltUCK ROAST
ROUND STEAK
SLICED PORK SHOULDER
GROUND BEEF
BULK SAUSAGE
.
PORK CHOPS
SLICED BACON

Lassie 6.

8: 30 - Jack Lalanne 13 ; New Zoo Revue 6; Romper Room 8.

9• 00 - Ben Casey 13; Concentration 6; What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3; Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Capt.

Kangaroo 8; Friendly Junction 10; Green Acres 3.
9:30 - Jeopardy 6 ; To Tell The Truth 3; HazelS; Elec. Co. 33.
10;00 - Dick Van Dyke 13; Dinah Shore 3, 15; Columbus Six

6•30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABC News 6; CBS New• 8. 10; I
Dream of Jeannie 13; Designing Women 33.
7:00 - What's My Line 8; Big R~d Jubl!e•IS; News 6, 10; Beat
the Clock 4; Amazing World of Kreskfn 13; Elec. Co. 20;
Course of Our Times 33; Truth or Conseq. 3.
7:30 - I'll See You In Court 4; Hollywood Squares 3; To Tell fhe
Truth 6; Wild Kingdom 10; Lassie 8; Beat the Clock 13; Zoom
20; Western Civlflzatlon: Majesty &amp; Mocttass 33.
·
8:00 '- Flip Wilson 3, 4, iS; Mod Squad 6, 13; Advocates 20, 33:
Tho Waltoos 8, 10; VD Blues 20.
9•00 - Jack Benny's Farewell Show 3, 4, IS ; King Fu 6, 13;
Movie "Vertigo' 8,.10; All American Family 33; Bill Moyer

$
'

20.

'

992-3502

WE ACCEPT FEDE AL FOOD STAMP..S

•102
tQJIO
t9762
.KI062
.Q954
SOUTH (0} ·
.JI016
.K8

.AJ94

t

AK43

.AJ~

r West
Pass
Pass

None vulnerable

North

East South
IN.T.

2•
Pass

Pass
Pass

2.

Opening lead-+ Q

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
II ~ou haven't got around
to usmg the Stayman convention as yet, we don't recommend. th11t you try the
Jacoby transfer. They fit together like bread and butter
provided you use what we
call a very nonforcing Stayman.
In this variation the no 3t
'3 ¥ ·
trump bidder must allow for Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
the possibility that re- Pble Pass
Pass
sponder's two clubs has been
You, South, hold:
made with a very bad hand •2 ¥AQ9875 tA32 o!oKQ7
and must not go past two
What do you do now?
A-Pass. West surety wants
spades on his own hook.
Now take a look at the you to go back to hearts. Don't
North hand. Your partner oblige him.
-·
opens one no-trump. You
TODAY'S QUESTION
don't want him to play there
Instead of passing afte~· West
and you are right. He won't

make one no-trump.
Playing ordinary bridge
you can respond two hearts

P--------..
sH··1RT
SH NG'

11

SAME DAY
SERVICE

..

Use Our Free Par~ing lot

doubles three no ~tru mp, Ea~n
goes to !our diamonds. What. do

you do now?

..

.

In AI 9-0ut At 5

.•''
••

___....

Robinson's Cleaners

'

.._

, 116 E. 2nd ,

Pom~roy

:

'J

JANUARY
NITURE

News Notes

,j

,,,
.•;I
,Hjt

1 ,, 1

.r

'''·"
'

oJ

I ~d li.J

. 'J....
1

~.

~

BAKER
, ,~ .,

,~ll)

.JJo!
u~

lllJIJ

EFFECTIVE THRU JAN. 20

.

~

CARROTS
. .
Polish

2 Bunches29~

SAUSAGE

CABBAGE

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

SLICED

2

Golden Isle
'

Admiral King ·18.
Others with ten or more

points: Springfield North.
Columbus East. Cin cinnati
LaSalle. Findlay and Akron
Buchtel.
CLASSAA
Team
Points
I. Cots. Ready (49·2)
220
2. Rossford (912-01
202
3. Waverly 159-0)
194
4, Steubenville Cath. (48.1)
193
5. Willard (1 11 -01
114
6. AibanyAiexander(J9.1) 78
7. River (.t 8-1)
57
B. Huron ll0-0)
56
9. Wellsville (9-2)
52
iO. Middletown Madison (9-0)
.
49
Second ten: 1·1. Poland 48; 12.
Claymont 47- 13. Tipp City
Tippecooaoe Ill 35; 14 . (tiel
Upper Sandusky and Etnia
Catholic (2) 29 each ; 16.
Manchester I I) 28; 17. Genoa
24; 18. Fostoria 22 ; 19. West
Muskingum 21 ; 20. Gallipolis ·
19,

Others with ten or more
points: Loveland, River VIew ,

Bexley, Wyoming Ill. Buckeye
Valley, lorain Catholic ,
Orrville, Fairfield Union ,
Lexington, Tuslaw, Olmsted
Falls. Ashtabula Harbor ,
Warren Kennedy Ill and
leavittsburg Labrae.
CLASS A
Team
Points
I. Indian Val. So. I12 9-0) 281
2.

2. Marion Pleasant (711 -0) 236
3. Fort Recovery (412-0) 215
4. Wapakoneta St . Joseph (3
12-0)
165
5. Strasburg (8-2)
96
6. Sebring (8-1)
74
7. McDonald (28·1)
63
8. Lorain Ctearview (29·1) 59
9. Columbia Station 18-2) $1
10. 5oth Central 119-0)
50
Second Ten: Zanesville
Rosecrans 35; i2. Franklin
Monroe 33; 13. Fostoria St .
Endelln 29; 14. (tiel Ridgedale
and Lowellville 28 each: 16.
Continental 27; 17. lie)
Cedarville (1) and Mansfield
St. Peter's 26 each; 19. lucas
24: 20. Atwater Waterloo 23

"I'd rather not say," said Gabriel, the m.ly time he sidestepped.
"We're simply not the same team we were when George Allen
left. I'm speaking from the mental aspect. As far as talent goes,
we probably have more of it than when he left."
COLUMBUS IUPI) - This
Gabriel, who watched the Super Bowl game on TV, also
week's United Press In followed what tbe players of both teams had to say before Sunternational Ohio High School
By United Presa International Musklngum defeated Kenyon Board of Coaches' basketball
day.'s game, He read the ne'otspapers every dsy.
· Ohio U. ·outdueled Eastern 6l.S2, Marietta bested Salem ratings with first place votes
lnlereoled ill Interviews
and won -lost records in
"I was lnrerested In the Interviews the players on both teiiiiiB Michigan In a blistering shoot- (W.Va.) 88-75, Ohio Northern parentheses:
CLASSAAA
gave out," he says. "I noticed they didn't care who got the credit, 'em-out Tuesday night to high- topped Heidelberg 5649 and
Team
· Points
and I'm talking about both the Maiffii and Washington players. light Ohio college basketball Ohio ·Dominican outscored I. Mansi. Sr . (20 11 -0)
287
Youdidn'tbearthemsaylngl ... I ... 1 ... all the time. It was 'we,' action.
2. Springfield So. (4 9-0) 252
Cedarville li0-66.
minute wash cyc le!
Cleve. East Tech 1410-2) 209 each.
The teams totaled 178 field
not 'I,' and that'sthe way it has to he if you're gonna win.
A heavy schedule tonight In- 3.
Others
with
ten
or
more
4. Hamilton Taft 1310-i l 191
Sa/6 Days Prfc~
goal attempts and luckily lor cludes Louisville at Dayton, 5.
"Certain remarks were made all year long about our team,"
Middletown 128-2)
180 points : Cleveland Heights
165 Lutheran East, Riverdale ,
says Gabriel. "They said we were not an emotional team. People the Ohio U. Fieldhouse nets, Cincinnati at Toledo, Miami at 6. Newark i 111 -ll
7.
Cots.
South
(110-2)
126 Newton , Lancaster Fisher ,
not many shots went through, Marshall, Kent State at Central
took the attitude, 'Well, you guys are being paid to play. You're
· 8. Barberton (12:0 )
113 Hanoverton United, Garaway ,
Ohio U. coMecled on 40 of 104 Michigan, St. Joseph (Pa.) at 9. Cleve.J . F. Kennedy (19-1) Bettsville, Ottoville, St. Berprofessionals. You don't need anybody to get up. You oughtta be
field goals and emerged with Bowling Green and Akron at
99 nard, Cuyahoga Heights, Fort
able to get yourselves up.' WeU, it doesn't always work the way
10. Canton Lehman (11 ,0)
85 Loramie, Ottawa Hills Ill
people think.
·
an 89-73 verdict over the Buffalo.
Second Ten : 11. Akron Portsmouth Notre Dame,
Hurons, who hit 28 of 74,
Pike, Windham ,
"You take Ken !man on our club. He's as good a center as
Eastern Miichigan's Gary Centra i·Hower (2) 76 ; 12. Western
Eas1ern
(Meigs)
t, and
Princeton
48;
13.
Toledo
St.
In other games, Hiram lost Tyson had the hottest hand In
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
anyone In the league In my opinion. He doesn't play for money.
Buckeye
West
(I).
Francis 41; 14. Kettering Aller
its
first
game
of
the
season
No way he could..He's not making much money, and he doesn't
the sbootout with Ohio U. and 31; 15. Cleveland St. Joseph (I)
6~ to Mount Union, Otterbein scored 35 points. But the Bob- 30 ; 16. Boardman 28; 17.
get any publicity, but lie's out there banging his head week after
week becaus&amp;he enjoys the game. So many people figure a guy is · edged Denison 77-74, Wright cats sparkled with a balanced Cincinnati Purcell 26; 18. (tiel
· Ursuline and
State nipped Rio Grande ~. scoring attack, pulling live Youngstown
out there simply for the money, but there 's a lot more to the
Elyria 20 each ; 20. lorain
Reserve District No.4
gal.fle than that, I assure you ."
players in double figures.
State No. 223X
Gabriel says his ann, which bothered him periodically last
CONSOLIDATED
REPORT
OF
CONDITION
OF
IeaSOn, .Is coming along fine now. Two doctors, including Dr.
Robert Kerland, have recominended.he rest It completely for two
months, and both feel it will come hack.
No Belter Coacb
of Pomeroy, Oblo and Foreign aad Domestic Subsictillrles, at the close of
Gabriel, who played Wider George Atien with the Rams and
business December 31,1972, a stale banking Institution orgaulzed and operating
doesn't think there is any better coach in football, watched the
under the banking laws of this State and a member of the Federal Reaerve
&amp;IJMIIi Bowl game with 10 other people.
,
'
•
1&lt;
•
l
•I ' '
System. Pabllsbed in acoordance with a eall made by the State Banking
Wilen the Redsll!ns kicked off alter Mike sass scored their only
' The Southern Valley Athletic posted an easy 71-38 victory points per game while perAutboritle5 and by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
tou&lt;¥own with two minutes left, some of those watching with
Conference
race
is
expected
to
over
Kyger
Creek
but
were
milling
659,
an
average
of
69
.
ASSETS
Gabriel wanted to know-how be felt about Allen's not Instructing
continue
this
weekend
with
hard-pressed
in
·
beating
per
game
.
the Redsklns to try an onside kick.
Cash and due from banks - • • • - • - • • - - - - - - - - - - $ 1,369,326.84
three clubs still in contention Southern, 30-46. Hannan Trace
Coach Bob Ord's Southern
"ltoldthemlagreedwithAilen," saysGabriel. "You got three
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - •• - - - • - - - - - - 2,293,104.43
for
the
1972-73
crown.
boasts
a
potent
offense
and
a
Tornadoes
own
a
3-7
overall
timeouta. Whatyoudoishold 'em, and get the ball back."
Obligations of other U.S. Goverrunent
Eastern travels to Symmes rangy, stingy defense.
record and 2-3 mark in the
Washington did get the ball back with a minute and seven
agencies and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 297,991.16
Valley
Saturday
night
in
the
NorthGallia,
missing
outside
league.
Southern
has
scored
Obligations of States and political subdivisions - - - - tleCOnds left but couldn't score. Later Billy Kilmer blamed
1,106,128.28
. top league engagement.
shooters, has had problems in 493 points while allowing 574
himulf, but Gabriel doesn't see it as being all his fault.
- . - 21,000.00
Other securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Coach Bill Phillips' Eagles recent weeks, hitting over the points.
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
"The pass patt.erna Kilmer tried to throw ar~ the things he does
own a 6-lleague mark behind zone. Coach Jim Foster's
North Gallia continues to
well, but at the same time those slants are the things Miami
under agreements to resell - - - - - - - - - 800,000.00
C~ach
Paul
Dillon's
Hannan
Pirates
have
lost
their
last
·
have
the
league's
top
reserve
lr!kesaway best,'' he says. "That's what it all boiled down to. A
Otherloans - - - - -- - - - - - - - • - - - 7,126,473.39 '
Trace Wildcats who are 7-1.
eight games in a row.
squad. The Little Pirates own a
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
Iotta people said It was a dull game . I didn't think so. 1 thought
Symmes
Valley,
coached
by
Eastern
and
Symmes
Valley
6-1
league
mark.
Southern
is
other assets representing bank premises - •
both clubs ptayed very well, and to some people, that seems
• • 434,587.85
Wayne White, has a 5-1 league are rather evenly matched,
second best at 5-2.
&amp;Ill."
Otherassets--------- - -- • - 7,372.49
mark. Saturday's game should
The Vikings have scored an
Jamie Lafon's Symmes
TOTAL ASSETS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · - $13,455,984.66
detennine the main contender average of 77 points in six Valley's 5-10 senior sharpLIABU.ITIES
to
fight
it
out
"With
Hannan
league
games
while
permitting
shooter
from
the
outside,
Demand deposits of indivld118ls, partnerships,
DINOVATOR DIES
of the five-voice Clara Ward Trace.
64.
Eastern
is
averaging
60
continues
to
be
the
league's
and corporations - - - - - - - - - · - - - - - • - - $3,141,302.18
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Singers, one of the best known
In the other league games, points in seven conference leading point maker with 106
Time and savings deposits of Individuals,
Clara Wood, who brought gospel groups. She began
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - 8,647,614.19
gospel music out of black singing at the age of 5, when Hannan Trace is at North games while permitting its points, an average of 17.7.
Other top scorers and their
Deposits of United States Government - - - - - - - - - - . 48,581.06
churches and Into white night she and her sister joined a Gallia and Kyger Creek travels opposition 31 points per game .
At Southwestern, Kyger averages are : Phil Robinson,
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - : 332,&amp;12,94
clubs, died Tuesday of a stroke. chorus begun by theii mother. to Southwestern Friday night,
Southern
plays
the
HighlanCreek
and Coach Richard Symmes Valley, 97 points,.
Deposits of commercial bwtk~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3,877.35
Miss Ward, 48, was the leader
ders in a league engagement Hamilton's Highlanders wiD average, 16.2; Randy Boring,
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - • • - - - - - - - 65,439.45
Saturday night.
battle for the "rubber" game Eastern, 113 points, average,
TOTAL DEPOSITS . - - - - - - - - - $12,239,837.37
16.1; Dave Robinette, North
Non-league · battles lind of the series.
(a) Total demand deposits - - - - - - •
$ 3,592,023.18
Southern and Wahama locking . The Bobcats own an 11 point Gatlla, 94, average, 15.7; Mike
(b) Total time and savings deposits - - - $ 8,647,814.19
horns Friday night as will VIctory over Southwestern in Caldwell, Hannan Trace, 118
Other liabilities - - - - - - - - - - - - • • • • 3861376.99
Eastern
and Glouster . the league but lost by nine points, average, 14.8: Clay_
TOTAL UABIUTIES - - - - - - - - - - - : - • - fl2,626 1214.36
Saturday night, North- Gallia points in the Gallia County Hudson, Kyger Creek, 99
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
plays at Fairland and Coal Holiday Tournament
point.;, average, 14.1; John
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
Grove invades the Wildcat den
Coach Jim Arledge's Bob- Lusher, Hannan Trace, 107
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - - - - - . - - . - - - - - - $41,204.28
at MercerviUe.
cats have averaged 61.3 points points, average, 13.4; Dave
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES - - - - - $41,204.28
Hannan Trace, picked by the J!Cr game while permitting 72 Dunfee, Symmes Valley, 76
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
coaches to win the SVAC, point.; per game in their 11 poinll;,average, 12.7 and Terry
Equity. capital, total - - - - • - '- $788,566.02
posted two more league vic- outings this winrer.
Bush, Southwestern, 75,
Conunon stock-total par value - - - • - - 300,000.00
tories last week. The Wildcats . Southwesrern bas scored 379 average, 12.5.
~
No. shares authorized 12,000
points, an average of 37.9
No. shares outstanding 12,000
Plus $2.52-$2.69 Fed. Exci Tax.
Surplus - - - - - - - - - - - - 400,000.00
Undivided profits - - • - - - - • 88,566.02
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
1788,566,02
Plus $2.93 Fed. Exc. Tax.
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
.CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - - - $13,435',984.66
FREE MOUNTING
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar ·
days ending with call dsre - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •12 196 642 60
' ' '
l'fiERCERVILLE
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
.
Southern's reserves Saturday
days ending with call dsre - - - - - - - - • - - $ 8,445,766.32
defeated Hannan Trace In an
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
upaet victory, 33 to 32.
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value) :
Hannan Trace earlier had
U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
defeated the Southern squad . .
pledged to secure deposits and other liabilities - - - - - ~.000.00
Southern was also handicapped
TOTAL - - - - - - • - - • • - - - • - - - - - $835,000.00
Saturday ·without the services
of Mitch Nease.
Southern is now 7..:1 overall
and 5-2 in league play with
I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the aboveofi8Jlled hank do hereby declare
Saturday's game giving them
that this report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
second place In league action.
· Roger W. HyseU ·
For Souihein, Greg Dunning
was the blg gun with 14, Daii
We, the Wldorsigned directors, attest the correctness of this report of
700 E. Main St. r
Brown had 9, Tim HiU 6, and
condition and declare that it has been examined by u8 and to the best of our
POMEROY, OH.JO
Terry Sayre 4, for Hann.an
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
992·2101
. Trace, HeSBon had 9, Hall 7,
Theron .JohnHOn
Wllliama and Halley 6 each,
Fred W. Crow, Jr.- Dlrecton
Theodore!. Reed, ,Jr.
M~uire and Cremeans 2 each.
Southern shot 38, pet.. from
State of Ohio, County of Meigs ss :
the lleld and 35 pet. from the
I:IFI AS liEU AS OURS
Sjvorn to and subscrihed before me this 12th day of January, 1973.
line. Duane Wolfe is Southern's
,· Juhn t·. t'uha
C08C.h.,
· .
Mary,P: Y01111g, Notary PubUc
' \!khat~ ••. 7.1rl!My
Commission
expires
July
I,
1974.
Southern
7 15 .2'1 33
·Jrd Ave.
Middleport
5 11 17 32

OU outguns foe

'269

89

~

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NESCAFE INSTANT ·
"OFFEE 1o oz. . .
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Rutland Dept. store
DFFE

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USED CARS

LEMON
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~aod At:

Reserves take
·33-32 victory
at Merceroille

ON

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•

Fruit CocktaiL ....... ~ ns 99~

Three SVAC teams still in
running; 'Cats have edge

SUBURBANITE

7 Oz.

Beft

Willard was a distant fifth irt
town took the fourth and fifth the list with 114, followed by
spots, e:rchanging places from. Albany Alexander, River, Hur.
a week ago, with Newark, Co- on, Wellsville and Miqdletown
lumbus South, Barberton, Madison.
Cleveland John F. Kennedy · Huron, lith last week, was
and Canton Lehman rounding making its first top ten apout the top ten.
pearance, while Wellsville reLehman, (10-0) was the only lurns after a week's absence.
newcomer to the top ten, re- Claymont and Manchester
placing Akron Central-Hower dropped out:
which dropped to l1th. Barber- The Class A race remained
ton (12-0) was up two notches, Pl"etty much a two-team affail",
Columbus.South (10-2) up one, altnough Filrt Recovery moved
, lmd Kennedy (9-1) down one. up a notch to third and could
Ready Holds On
become a factor.
Ready continued to lead the
IVS, which is 9-0 this season
way among the AA schools, a!- . and has now won 35 games In a
though the Silver l{nights, 9-2, row, piled up 281 points and 12
had a big bite taken in their first place votes. Pleasant,
lead of a week ago.
which has been second all three
Rossf~rd, 12-0, actoally more weeks of the ratings, got seven
than doubled the first place firsts and 236 points. Fort
vote total on the leaders, nine Recovery's total was 215 with
to four, but Ready's second and four first place votes.
third place support gave it a Wapakoneta St. Joseph, third
2211-202 point spread.
"
last week, dropped ·a notch,
Waverly and Steubenville with Strasburg, Sebring, -McCatholic In third and fourth Donald, Lorain Clean1ew, Coplace had an even closer race ·lumbia Station and South Cengoing with the Tigers (9-0) tral rounding out the top ten.
holding a slim 194-193lead over
South Central (9-0) was the
the once-beaten Crusaders.
only newcomer, replacing
Mansfield St. Peter's, but several of the bottom teams ex·
changed places.

~::J~--------·~~

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TUNA

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NEW YORK (UP!) -Roman Gabriel has sat down thoug!)t
out the whole thing and come to the debatable conclusio~ that the
.Los Angeles Rams can win the world championship nexi season.
He makes only one provision.
They have to get over being a selfish football learn. That's
right, H-l.f-1~.
Uke the rest of the RarM' players, Gabriel, In town for a
couple of.TV appearances, is waiting to see what the front office
Is going to ~o about a new coach. Not that he blames Tommy
Prothro enhrely for the Rams' bac~sllde this past season.
Gabriel puts the bulk of the blame exacUy where it belongs. On
the Rams' players themselves.
·
"I feel we've got the talent to beat Miami," he says: "Wbat we
are laCking is that one important characteristic Miami and
Washington both have- \Dgetherness."
Word Becomes CUche
The word has been used so much, it was suggested, that it has
become a cliche, particularly In football. The late Vince Lombardi popularized it and tben so many other coaches followed.
Now you'd think every team in football is bound together by
togetherness.
·
"Not oilrs," offers the Rams' candid quarterback.
"There's no reason In the world we shouldn't have done better
!hill past year," he says. "We have the personnel to do it, but for
some reason we've become a very selfish ball club."

COLUMBUS (UP!). - Mans. field. Senior, rolling along With
an ll-0 record, has taken over
·as the NO. 1 team In the United
Press International Ohi&lt;i High
School Board of Coaches' Class
AAA basketball rating:~. ·
The Tygers, along with 11111-'
nerup Springfield South;
moved past Cleveland East
Teeh, the leader the first two
weeks. The Scarabs dropped til
third.
But, whUe the Class . AAA
leader was changing, the leaders in the other two divisions,
Columb.us Bishop Ready In AA
and indian VaUey South In A,
remained on top.
Mansfield, which has not
been among the state's top
teams in recent years,
received half of the first place
votes cast by the 40 Class AAA
coaches balloting and 287
points, based on 10 for a first
place vote, nine for ·second,
eight for third, etc,
Springfieid South, 9-0 on the
year, got four first place nods
and 252 points, whUe East
Tech, 10-2, aJso.got lour firsts
and 209 points.

GOODYEAR POLYGlAS

$J29

STAR·KIST

Del Monte

By MILTON-RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

,

College BKB Results'
J.C.Smith 87 ·N.C. A&amp; T 80
By United Press International Fyttevl St. 92 Ellz. Cty St. 82
·
East
Midwest
..
ca'l. -Pa. 79 St.Vine. 63
111 .-ChiCrct 66 N.E.III. 64
Duquesne 'T'I Wheelng 62
Ohio U. 89 Eastern Mich . ·73
Mnlclr St. 61 Glssbro 46
Mr itta 88 Satm-W.Va. 75
Adei phi 82 lehman 80
Eau Claire 65 No.Dak . 59
Brrngln 67 E. Nzrene"61
, Ind. Tech 86 St ..Fran .- lnd . 74
Mass . 77 Vermont 55
. Bethel 105 Marion 74
Siena 78 Hartwick 76
Grace 109 Concordia «
Tufts 92 MIT 71
Nrthwstrn 83 St. Jos.- lnd. 77
Sprngfld 87 Wit lams 82
Minnesota 64 Marquette 53
W.Va. 75 Lehigh 63
· Agstna-111. 88 Millikn 66 ·
Stppry Rck 102 Gneva 85
Frnkln 102 Bellrmne 69
Shphrd 72 West Lib. 67
Geotwn-Ky . 89 Norlhwd 82
Princeton 43 Temple 37
Ia. Wslyn 86 Clvr-Stcktn 75
Clarion 60 Mansfld 52
loras 56 Lewis 55
King's 91 Corllnd 65
Parsons 87 Wm . Penn 74
Wilkes 72 Eckerd 59
Southwest
5oulll
D. Roberts 92 So. Oak . 79
G. Mason 79 Madison 78
Houston ~6 Rice 77
Mi.ss. Coli. 82 Ark.·L,R. 80
Houston Bap. 94 TCU 93
S.C. St. 71 Benedict 61
Okla . Bap. 80 Oils Bap. 79
Blst'ayne 92 Wm. Patrsn 68
West
Rollins 67 Baotist62
Mont. St. 7Q Montana 65

H&amp;R FIRESTONE

2 lb.
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_1. _I_

Laurel Cliff

THURSDAY, JAN. 18, 1973
6•00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6•1 5 - Farmllme 10.
6:20 -, Paul Harvey 13.
6•30 - Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8: America's
Problems 10.
6•45 - Corncob Report 3.
7:00 - Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10: News 6; Flintstones i3:
Popeye iO.
7• 30 - Romper Room 6 ; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13'.
8• 00 - Capt . Kangaroo 10; Sesame St. 33; New Zoo Revue 13;

6:00 - News J, 4, 8, 15 ; News 6, 10; I Dream o Jeannie 13;
Designing Women 33.
.

lb. CHUCK ROAST
3 lb. ROUND STEAK
4 lb. SIRLOIN STEAK
S lb. ·GROUND BEEF
3 lb. STEW MEAT
4

EAST
• A95

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Bonanza J, 4.

OP EN

.,3
WEST

remains. 3rd ·in· Poll
;

!t

Television Log

5: 30 - Marshall Dillon 15; Elec. Co. 33; Gomer P{le USMC 13. ·

7 A.M. to S P.M.
Weekdays

Toda;,~~~.m:w.W-.:~.·::0~ waverly

.l

and, hope for the, best.
·year old wife of f\'lel Las)man, J
wont happen. You JUSt can I the multimillionaire mayor of ·i
. make two hearts,
N th ·y k o t
kid .;
Playing the tra11sfer you or
or • n ·• :was · ' ·,
can bid two diamonds and naped from her home Monday, •
let your partner struggle held for several hours, then ·
with the two hearts . He won't releasedimhanned, police said
make It any more than you today ·
would but better action is
·
.
,
possible. You respond two No ransom was pa1d for her
clubs·! .
release, they said . . Marilyn ·
You plan lo bid two hearts Lastman, a major shareholder
if your partner rebids two in her husband's nationwide ''
diamonds but something nice • chain of Bad Boy Appliance
happens. Your partner has
di ·
.)
spades and bids two of that Store out1ets, sappea.red ..
suit.
· ·
about 1:30 p.m. (EST) Mon· . i
You pass and lethim play day, and returned home In a
there. West opens the queen taxicab about 11:15·p.m,
of diamonds and your partJ
ne• has no trouble making.
. the two-spade contract.
LAMPMAN RECAII,ED
.c
A king of spades opening ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Mike ,i
would probably have beaten
him but somehow or other Lampman, a left winger, was
people don't find such bril- recalled Monday by. .._the St.
liant and unusual leads.
I.Duis Blues of the National 1
(NEWSPAP£R ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Hacke;- League from their ~
Denver farm club. Lampman .,
has played with the Blues twice ·.:
this season with two goills In 11 ' •
Th~ bidding has bOtn:
· West North
East South games.

17

NORTH ,
.Q842
.Q7653
• 85

By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
Jan. 14 at the l'ree Methodist
Church was 124, offering for all
services was $186.13. Twenty
members of the choir w~re
present Sunday morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stahl,
+++
Stockdale, recently visited
ON THE TV DIAL : One of TV's better nights, reatiy: A with Mr , and Mrs. Norman
National Geographic special on WCHS-TV at 8 ... Marshall U- Schaeffer,
/
Miami basketbaU, same hour on WMUL-TV ... A satire on "How
Mrs. Georgia Diehl visited
to Win the Nobel Prize" at 8 on WOUB-TV ... Bob Hope's last Sunday with Mrs. Nellie Tracy,
Christmas special, 8:30 on WSAZ-TV ... and Perry Cdmo In a Cole Ball Rnn.
Porter special, 10, same sl&lt;!tion.
Mrs. Dora Halley remains ill
at her home although she is
improving.
Mr. Wyatt Schaefer, MI.
Vernon, spent the weekend
. ,.IV.ith ~P,Ii'ren~.. Mr ..aP~ . Mr$ . ,
Norman Schaefer. Due to the ,
illness of his wife's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Robinson,
she was unable to come with
her husband.
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 17, 1973
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 JeannieiJ ; 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 Your Schools 33;
Outlook '73 15.
7:30 - To Tell The T•uth 6 ; The Judge 10; Police Surgeon 3, 4;
Protectors 8; Beat The Clock 13; Andy Griffith 15;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Marco Sportlite 33.
7:45 - Marshall Basketball .
8:00- Adom-12 3, 15, 4; Paul Lynde 6, iJ; National Geographic
8. 10; College Baskelball 33; How To Win The Nobel Prize 20.
8:30 - Playhouse New York 20; Bob Hope 3, 4, 15; Movie
PRICES
"Female Artillery" 6, i3.
9:00-Medlcal CenterS, 10; Eye to Eye20.
9: 30 - Flne Art of Goofing Off 20.
10:00 - Soul33; News 20 ; Cannon 8, 10; Cole Porter In Paris.
11 •00- News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15.
1UO- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15. Movie "Frankenstein" 6, 13;
Virginian 8; Mov ie " Hell Below Zero" 10.
LOO - News 4. 13.
·

Calling 6: Joker's Wild 8, 10.
•
10• 30 - Concentration 3, 15; Price Is RightS, 10; Phil Donahue 4;
Split Second 13; Sounds of Joy 33.
11 :00 - Sale of the Century 3, 15; GambitS, 10; Love American
Style 6; Password 13; Elec . Co. 20.
·
11 : 30 - Bewitched 13; Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Love of Lite 8.
10.
12:00 - Password6 ; News 10; Jeopardy 3, 15; Jackie Obllnger8.
1:00 - All My Children 6, 13; News 3: It's Your Bet8; Green
Acres 10; Watch Your Child iS.
1:30- Three on AMalch 3, 4, 15; ABC's Playbreok 6, 13; As the
World Turns 8, 10.
2: 00 - Days ot Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Guiding light 8, iO.
2: 30 - Poctors 3. 4, 15; Edge of NightS, ,10.
3: 00 - Another World 3, 4, 15; Generol Hospital 6, 13; love
Splendored Thing 8, 10; Behind the lines 20.
3:30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
Secret Storm 8, I 0.
·
.
4:00 - Mister Cartoon, Banana Splits 3; Merv Griffin 4; Flintstones 6; love, American Style i31 Somerset 15; Gilligan's
Island 8; Sesame St. 20, 33; Movie "The looters" 10. '
4• 30 - Petticoat Jun'ctloo 3; Andy Griffith 15; I love Lucy 6:
Merv Griffith 8; Daniel Boone 13.
5•110 - Dick Van Dyke 15; Merv Griffith 4; Mr. Roberts 20, 33;

SLICED PORK SHOULDER
GROUND BEEF
SIRLOIN STEAK
BULK SAUSAGE
ALL MEAT WIENERS

Mayor's wife is
retumed safeiy

The

BY PAUL CRABTREE
I'm just discovering something that most teenagers have
known for several years now:
A stereo eight-track tape player produces some fantastic
sounds. I bought one this faU, and wow!
YGU loll back In bed with the speakers paired up just right,
and there's a roaring brass section cutting loose at some spot
appro~imately six Inches up and off to the right of the ocelpital
bone .
Over on your left, a guitar and heavy bass is performing
counter-poi!lt, while on the extreme right, a very soft chorus of
voices blend In. Groovesville, man.
Or, if you don't want to wake the baby (I don't have.a baby,
hut I do have a wife who is extremely {IOise&lt;onscious, and most
of the music I play she would categorize as noise), you can get a
pair of headphones very cheaply, and get totaUy absorbed In
your own iitUe bi;~udible world. And no one knows just what has
you sitting there so enraptured.
I don't Pl"etend to be a real hi-fi buff, or to know much about
audio engirieerlng. I leave that to the dedicated stereo fans like
Homer Lowe at the Lowe Motor Inn in Pt. Pleasant, who owns
equipment that wiU separate Swahili into English and.Russian
simultaneously. (My big, big co-worker, Dick Newell, is good,

.&gt;

·~
·
S
k
d
Transfer Lin e to tayman .TORONTO (UP!)_ 37)

~

B~ Helen Hottel

:i-n " Ways to keep the
of God." Attendance
1 thb service was 28.
, lie Alfred WSCS group will
·11csts of the Tuppers Plains.
'', :• WSCS for a program,
, 1· t1 Payer and Self

.

uSe •

~

',':\~n~!~~;~~::g~;~m~::.e~ ~
• &lt;'lll'e

.

&amp;.THINGS

WIN AT BRIDGE

3-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 17, 1m

WEATHER
COLDER••.
.VALI$S

99t :

HO'ITER!

-

10:00 - Owen Marshall6, '13; Dean Marlin 3, 4, 15; Capitol City
• Jamboree 33; News 20.
·
11 :30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, IS; Movie "Lady Killer" 6, 13.
12:00- Movles"CryoflheCity"8; "TightSpol''lO. , .
i:OO - News4, 13.

.

''

KEITH GOBLE FORD
· · USED CAR LOT

::r~ace

'

'"

(
'

�-·
2·-The Dailv Sentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,'Jan. 17, 1913

. •,fi 'I'(I

w::.:::::,.,&gt;.:;;:;:;:;:;;::::::~;::w;:::e::::::~~;;,:,:.;,:,:,:,:,:,:;:&gt;x-;;-.:::::;;-;:;~;::::t:e:-z.o~:%'1

"(~ciul ·''ote.~

~.·

Sunday School attendance on
Jan. l4 was · 38, the offering
i iB.05, lyorship services were

Helen Help

,

.

·

at ll1e Tuppers Plains

IJ..,!,'

w l' h

Thursday evening,

(JO

.... . lll, at 6 o'clock. This
·!p,•hng 1s open· to anyone.

' '''"!

Mrs. Charles D.
ul' \'l!-;itc-d Sarah Woode in
c
\ · tera ns
Me mor ial
.. 1.•.t.:n 1 .meroy, last Thurs-

I

llerll l&amp; Wright ·or
.1 • ..;,
U. , visite d her

,,.
~.'

,

•'.11''1" :1• l;m and si!:iter, Mr.
d :\!1 ~. { •. truu t Henderson
t'-

th·· '1·\·, krnd i\Jld a tlcndetl

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lil.:'Je
j

:-iUHWI) fiJU I !li n g.

··t~• inw Her1rlt:• ·~o n

ha s

t·n 1J1 V&lt; il h the flu.
! 1 •('• t• ' ' !\I Jot·:~ in t!w Vt&gt;rc
: .. &gt;~1'.1.

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'&gt;.t'l't.

Mi.lr·ti lcl

1[ ·11 il-•lk1rt Sw ar lL, M1 . &lt;111d

•. rl ,., S..v:1rt;., Mllldrd
:- .1r: .n(\ K:1te

!
~

~

~

Dangerous Combination

Dear Helen :
!love this woman. U !lose her, I'D probably go back to the
botUe, But'she likes ber booze and she'd rather go to bars than be
with me since I went on the wagon.
My doctor said if I dian•t give up'Uquor, I wouldn't be around
very long, and I quit cold. But now I'm In a bind : Ill stay with ·my
lady friend, I don't think I can resist drinking with her and,
without her, 1may be driven to drink. I don't take loneliness very
well. - NO WAY OUT
Dea~ No:
I'd guess the gal is more drlnklng-buddy than "lady friend"
and, once you're thoroughly dried our, you may realize this too.
Somehow bar belles don't have the same appeal when you're cold
sober. (No pun intended.)
How to fight your lonelinesS? Get the word around the office
that you're on the wagon. You'D be surprised how many people
1especially women) want to help you. - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
My 16-year-{)ld son tells me that the hair on his legs is falling
out. 1~ this a stage he is going through or a real problem' - R.S.
..
Dear R.:
First, check out your son's pants. Are they tight fitting aD the
way up ' Is the material somewhat abrasive? Girls use a type of
fine sandpaper for hair removal on legs and laces. Perhaps his
pants ha ve the same effect.
If not, then consult a doctor. - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
On behaU of th e Girl Guards and Sunbeams of Secaucus, N.
111 \'viP! ans \1cmorial
J ., 1 want to thank your readers from all over the country for
.. &lt;: I• · Slid l on Swartz
their help in making it possible for us to complete our project.
·.v:T!,. Jt..;v, L· ·h~
' '
The flood of Betty Crocker coupons they sent have helped us get a
. ' · ' ' '·'-Hi Mrs Warren ve~y expensive part for the heart machine at Christ Hospital in
. u •:Ji i .\l !. r11tfl Mrs . Jersey City. Without them, we would never have· secured the
'''·. · . .1: rz.
hundreds of thousands of coupons necessary.
I.H. 'II&lt;: Mrs. Otto SwartZ of
We sent thank-you notes to all who sent addresses, but many
u
wl! rc S uri d ~lY didn't, so would you please add our thank-you to your widely read
•1 'l1r'J F'ollroU and
column ? God bless them all! - GIRL GUARDS AND SUNI 1.1 J ,•II,Jd iS Un. '
BEAMS (Sponsored by the Salvat.iC1 Army)
~ r.
.-uU Mrs. Ar thur
Dear Helen :
.
~ ht:"rl 1111 have been at the
This Christmas, as usu21, Mrs. Ardelle T: Dow sent oot
1 .iii• . his sister, Ruth in St.
around 5,oopcards to "her boys overseas." "Mom" as the fellows
r !· T' .n:ta l, nnd at home
call her, works in her executiv£ wheelchair at the Fairview
Ill.• ._, f, . ·s ,'ieriously ill .
,.,.._
'\ Manor Convalescent Home, and supplies her program,
;
"Operation ·Mail Call," from the $13 check she receives once a
C1,,. Interest Is
month . She sends friendly cards and notes to the many men who
Grt:&gt; 'l f er For You
might otherwise receive no mail at all, and she is much-loved by
thousands of lonely G.Ls.
I'm writing to ask a favor of your readers : Will anyone who
has leftover (untised) Christmas cards - and olller greeting
cards too - please send those they don't want to keep to:
OPERATION MAIL CALL,
On 90·Day
Care of MOM,
502 Hill Street,
'.:~&gt;rtlfkc• tes
Coventry, Rhode Island, 02816.
· i Oeposit
Another way people .can really help is by sending along a
1
! •. rr'l 1 f pe r year
rouple of eighl-&lt;:ent stamps too, for postage mounts up when you
'" 90 d ay Cer· have so many long distance friends. Thank you. - MOM'S
.
,tip·; o l De po s it.
P n ·, 1. \1•1J. ,1.,•·. ,,, ··• ~- .. 1 1 , •··
1 · I ,'·.)\' oo Mi~ im u m ·. !'\~HI~NP
"·
Dear ne en:
~ ,l lt:t·l '•1
. Pay 'ilb l e
YoU tell the woman to '"forgive and forget" her husband's
' H.ii
,1
affair,'Ml if SHE had an affair, would HE do likewise. Would you
be as lenient with her' - DOUBTFUL
Dear Doubtful :
r
Be they female or male, they get the same advice from me:
Bury past affairs deep and don't build monwnents on the graves.
Here's a man who agrees with me - too late:
Dear Helen:
I • Arh•!ll 5 County
1 had the perfect marriage and my wife hoid an affair on the
, :1• ' ntl&lt;; &amp; Loan Co.
side (perhaps because it wasn't as perfect as I thought ). My male
t~o S!!'c ond St .
·' l'n:&gt;- roy, Ohio
ego was crushed when I found out, and l wouldn't listen or
. • Jt•ll l'&gt; In s ured To
forgive.
i I IC
It's been seven years. Believe me, if l could only go back
things would be different today, She told me it was otA!r and I
wouldn't believe her. I drove her away, and in doing so !lost the
best things in !lie. - CAN'T FIND HER TO BEG
FORGIVENESS
•

,1

ul

•:-.: [.,, .-.;

Sarah

J ,,],.

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

1

1

lr'·!; Co. Branch

~~.@

..

ll'l'l'rill"'~ll!---------------·
'Ne Have The

BEST GAS IN TOWN
And We Sell II

Second class postage peid at

SAVE

CERTIFIEDGAS STATION

________
(182)

HOMF MADE
CHEESE SPREAD
AND

Pomeroy, o.

992-9981

(183)

HAM SAlAD

lb.
4 lb.
3 lb.
3 lb.
2 lb.
4

Published daily e~t c ept
Saturday bY Tne Ohio vatlev
Publi s hing Company , 111
Court 51. , Pomeroy , OhiO,
45769 . Business Off i ce Phone
992 -2156, Editorial Phone 992 -

Pomeroy , Ohio .
Nalionat advertising

.So You

tl 538 W. Ma in

Sentinel

2157.

FOR LESS

"'

Dai~

The

DEVOTED TO THE
1NTERE5TOF
• MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL ,
Exec. Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor

representati\'e
8ott lnelli .
Gallagher. tn c .. 12 East 42nd
St. , New 'Vork City , New York .
Sub~cr i ption rates : De livered by carrier where
ava ilable so cents per week;
By Motor Route where carrier
ser ¥ice not available : One
mon t h 11.15 . B v m a il in Oh io
and W. Va ., One yea r Sl 4.0D.
Six mon !hs S1.25 . Thr&amp;e
month s S.t .SD . Subsc ript ion
pr ice in cludes Sunday Timu ~~entinel.

too.)

But this eight-track thing has me captivated, no doubt about
It - and&gt;in spite of the fact that I am a cheapskate.,
Since I've got about seven cable TV and FM drops at various
points around the house, including one for a rather expensive
stereo FM-record player, I didn't want to get too deep into money
with this new stereophonic toy.
So my total investment is only about a hWJdred dollars, to
this point. The player and headphones retail for about $80, and I
have about fifteen tapes, ranging In price from $2.50 to under $6.
lt's already been worth the hundred and more.
I'm rapidly teaming what I Uke for this specific medium:
- Instrumental stuff Is better than vocalists, if you're
looking lor pure effect of.stereo separation. I have some really
fine works by Henry Mancini, Peter Nero, Floyd Cramer, Chet
Atkins, and-my personal favorite-Danny Davis and the
Nashville ,Brass, which made such a hit at the 1972 Gallia Junior
Fair.
- Vocal groups sound better than singles. I have some very
good Simon &amp; Garfunkel, Cher Bono, and the Four Tops, plus
some badly-recorded early Sinatra. Tbe groups have It all over
the soloists in eight-track. ·
Hanging it up, it seems sort of siUy for me to be-plugging
stereo players, when I make my living from selling sounds and
pictures transmitted by a wire.
But tape players produce some greatsowuls, and some great
entertainment for music~overs. It'• no wonder they're such an
attractive target for car-strippers looking for a big~emand
item to peddle in the Midnight Auto Market.

4 lb. GROUND BHF
3 lb. 51 RLOIN STEAK
3 lb. PORK CHOPS
4 ib. CHUCK ROAST
4 lb. SLICED BACON
3 1~. LARGE FRANKS

8 To 1

Saturdays

(185)

Phone Us
Your Orderl

S lb.

4 lb.
4 lb.
4 lb.
. 3 lb.
3 lb.
3 lb.

CltUCK ROAST
ROUND STEAK
SLICED PORK SHOULDER
GROUND BEEF
BULK SAUSAGE
.
PORK CHOPS
SLICED BACON

Lassie 6.

8: 30 - Jack Lalanne 13 ; New Zoo Revue 6; Romper Room 8.

9• 00 - Ben Casey 13; Concentration 6; What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3; Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Capt.

Kangaroo 8; Friendly Junction 10; Green Acres 3.
9:30 - Jeopardy 6 ; To Tell The Truth 3; HazelS; Elec. Co. 33.
10;00 - Dick Van Dyke 13; Dinah Shore 3, 15; Columbus Six

6•30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABC News 6; CBS New• 8. 10; I
Dream of Jeannie 13; Designing Women 33.
7:00 - What's My Line 8; Big R~d Jubl!e•IS; News 6, 10; Beat
the Clock 4; Amazing World of Kreskfn 13; Elec. Co. 20;
Course of Our Times 33; Truth or Conseq. 3.
7:30 - I'll See You In Court 4; Hollywood Squares 3; To Tell fhe
Truth 6; Wild Kingdom 10; Lassie 8; Beat the Clock 13; Zoom
20; Western Civlflzatlon: Majesty &amp; Mocttass 33.
·
8:00 '- Flip Wilson 3, 4, iS; Mod Squad 6, 13; Advocates 20, 33:
Tho Waltoos 8, 10; VD Blues 20.
9•00 - Jack Benny's Farewell Show 3, 4, IS ; King Fu 6, 13;
Movie "Vertigo' 8,.10; All American Family 33; Bill Moyer

$
'

20.

'

992-3502

WE ACCEPT FEDE AL FOOD STAMP..S

•102
tQJIO
t9762
.KI062
.Q954
SOUTH (0} ·
.JI016
.K8

.AJ94

t

AK43

.AJ~

r West
Pass
Pass

None vulnerable

North

East South
IN.T.

2•
Pass

Pass
Pass

2.

Opening lead-+ Q

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
II ~ou haven't got around
to usmg the Stayman convention as yet, we don't recommend. th11t you try the
Jacoby transfer. They fit together like bread and butter
provided you use what we
call a very nonforcing Stayman.
In this variation the no 3t
'3 ¥ ·
trump bidder must allow for Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
the possibility that re- Pble Pass
Pass
sponder's two clubs has been
You, South, hold:
made with a very bad hand •2 ¥AQ9875 tA32 o!oKQ7
and must not go past two
What do you do now?
A-Pass. West surety wants
spades on his own hook.
Now take a look at the you to go back to hearts. Don't
North hand. Your partner oblige him.
-·
opens one no-trump. You
TODAY'S QUESTION
don't want him to play there
Instead of passing afte~· West
and you are right. He won't

make one no-trump.
Playing ordinary bridge
you can respond two hearts

P--------..
sH··1RT
SH NG'

11

SAME DAY
SERVICE

..

Use Our Free Par~ing lot

doubles three no ~tru mp, Ea~n
goes to !our diamonds. What. do

you do now?

..

.

In AI 9-0ut At 5

.•''
••

___....

Robinson's Cleaners

'

.._

, 116 E. 2nd ,

Pom~roy

:

'J

JANUARY
NITURE

News Notes

,j

,,,
.•;I
,Hjt

1 ,, 1

.r

'''·"
'

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I ~d li.J

. 'J....
1

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~

BAKER
, ,~ .,

,~ll)

.JJo!
u~

lllJIJ

EFFECTIVE THRU JAN. 20

.

~

CARROTS
. .
Polish

2 Bunches29~

SAUSAGE

CABBAGE

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

SLICED

2

Golden Isle
'

Admiral King ·18.
Others with ten or more

points: Springfield North.
Columbus East. Cin cinnati
LaSalle. Findlay and Akron
Buchtel.
CLASSAA
Team
Points
I. Cots. Ready (49·2)
220
2. Rossford (912-01
202
3. Waverly 159-0)
194
4, Steubenville Cath. (48.1)
193
5. Willard (1 11 -01
114
6. AibanyAiexander(J9.1) 78
7. River (.t 8-1)
57
B. Huron ll0-0)
56
9. Wellsville (9-2)
52
iO. Middletown Madison (9-0)
.
49
Second ten: 1·1. Poland 48; 12.
Claymont 47- 13. Tipp City
Tippecooaoe Ill 35; 14 . (tiel
Upper Sandusky and Etnia
Catholic (2) 29 each ; 16.
Manchester I I) 28; 17. Genoa
24; 18. Fostoria 22 ; 19. West
Muskingum 21 ; 20. Gallipolis ·
19,

Others with ten or more
points: Loveland, River VIew ,

Bexley, Wyoming Ill. Buckeye
Valley, lorain Catholic ,
Orrville, Fairfield Union ,
Lexington, Tuslaw, Olmsted
Falls. Ashtabula Harbor ,
Warren Kennedy Ill and
leavittsburg Labrae.
CLASS A
Team
Points
I. Indian Val. So. I12 9-0) 281
2.

2. Marion Pleasant (711 -0) 236
3. Fort Recovery (412-0) 215
4. Wapakoneta St . Joseph (3
12-0)
165
5. Strasburg (8-2)
96
6. Sebring (8-1)
74
7. McDonald (28·1)
63
8. Lorain Ctearview (29·1) 59
9. Columbia Station 18-2) $1
10. 5oth Central 119-0)
50
Second Ten: Zanesville
Rosecrans 35; i2. Franklin
Monroe 33; 13. Fostoria St .
Endelln 29; 14. (tiel Ridgedale
and Lowellville 28 each: 16.
Continental 27; 17. lie)
Cedarville (1) and Mansfield
St. Peter's 26 each; 19. lucas
24: 20. Atwater Waterloo 23

"I'd rather not say," said Gabriel, the m.ly time he sidestepped.
"We're simply not the same team we were when George Allen
left. I'm speaking from the mental aspect. As far as talent goes,
we probably have more of it than when he left."
COLUMBUS IUPI) - This
Gabriel, who watched the Super Bowl game on TV, also
week's United Press In followed what tbe players of both teams had to say before Sunternational Ohio High School
By United Presa International Musklngum defeated Kenyon Board of Coaches' basketball
day.'s game, He read the ne'otspapers every dsy.
· Ohio U. ·outdueled Eastern 6l.S2, Marietta bested Salem ratings with first place votes
lnlereoled ill Interviews
and won -lost records in
"I was lnrerested In the Interviews the players on both teiiiiiB Michigan In a blistering shoot- (W.Va.) 88-75, Ohio Northern parentheses:
CLASSAAA
gave out," he says. "I noticed they didn't care who got the credit, 'em-out Tuesday night to high- topped Heidelberg 5649 and
Team
· Points
and I'm talking about both the Maiffii and Washington players. light Ohio college basketball Ohio ·Dominican outscored I. Mansi. Sr . (20 11 -0)
287
Youdidn'tbearthemsaylngl ... I ... 1 ... all the time. It was 'we,' action.
2. Springfield So. (4 9-0) 252
Cedarville li0-66.
minute wash cyc le!
Cleve. East Tech 1410-2) 209 each.
The teams totaled 178 field
not 'I,' and that'sthe way it has to he if you're gonna win.
A heavy schedule tonight In- 3.
Others
with
ten
or
more
4. Hamilton Taft 1310-i l 191
Sa/6 Days Prfc~
goal attempts and luckily lor cludes Louisville at Dayton, 5.
"Certain remarks were made all year long about our team,"
Middletown 128-2)
180 points : Cleveland Heights
165 Lutheran East, Riverdale ,
says Gabriel. "They said we were not an emotional team. People the Ohio U. Fieldhouse nets, Cincinnati at Toledo, Miami at 6. Newark i 111 -ll
7.
Cots.
South
(110-2)
126 Newton , Lancaster Fisher ,
not many shots went through, Marshall, Kent State at Central
took the attitude, 'Well, you guys are being paid to play. You're
· 8. Barberton (12:0 )
113 Hanoverton United, Garaway ,
Ohio U. coMecled on 40 of 104 Michigan, St. Joseph (Pa.) at 9. Cleve.J . F. Kennedy (19-1) Bettsville, Ottoville, St. Berprofessionals. You don't need anybody to get up. You oughtta be
field goals and emerged with Bowling Green and Akron at
99 nard, Cuyahoga Heights, Fort
able to get yourselves up.' WeU, it doesn't always work the way
10. Canton Lehman (11 ,0)
85 Loramie, Ottawa Hills Ill
people think.
·
an 89-73 verdict over the Buffalo.
Second Ten : 11. Akron Portsmouth Notre Dame,
Hurons, who hit 28 of 74,
Pike, Windham ,
"You take Ken !man on our club. He's as good a center as
Eastern Miichigan's Gary Centra i·Hower (2) 76 ; 12. Western
Eas1ern
(Meigs)
t, and
Princeton
48;
13.
Toledo
St.
In other games, Hiram lost Tyson had the hottest hand In
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
anyone In the league In my opinion. He doesn't play for money.
Buckeye
West
(I).
Francis 41; 14. Kettering Aller
its
first
game
of
the
season
No way he could..He's not making much money, and he doesn't
the sbootout with Ohio U. and 31; 15. Cleveland St. Joseph (I)
6~ to Mount Union, Otterbein scored 35 points. But the Bob- 30 ; 16. Boardman 28; 17.
get any publicity, but lie's out there banging his head week after
week becaus&amp;he enjoys the game. So many people figure a guy is · edged Denison 77-74, Wright cats sparkled with a balanced Cincinnati Purcell 26; 18. (tiel
· Ursuline and
State nipped Rio Grande ~. scoring attack, pulling live Youngstown
out there simply for the money, but there 's a lot more to the
Elyria 20 each ; 20. lorain
Reserve District No.4
gal.fle than that, I assure you ."
players in double figures.
State No. 223X
Gabriel says his ann, which bothered him periodically last
CONSOLIDATED
REPORT
OF
CONDITION
OF
IeaSOn, .Is coming along fine now. Two doctors, including Dr.
Robert Kerland, have recominended.he rest It completely for two
months, and both feel it will come hack.
No Belter Coacb
of Pomeroy, Oblo and Foreign aad Domestic Subsictillrles, at the close of
Gabriel, who played Wider George Atien with the Rams and
business December 31,1972, a stale banking Institution orgaulzed and operating
doesn't think there is any better coach in football, watched the
under the banking laws of this State and a member of the Federal Reaerve
&amp;IJMIIi Bowl game with 10 other people.
,
'
•
1&lt;
•
l
•I ' '
System. Pabllsbed in acoordance with a eall made by the State Banking
Wilen the Redsll!ns kicked off alter Mike sass scored their only
' The Southern Valley Athletic posted an easy 71-38 victory points per game while perAutboritle5 and by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
tou&lt;¥own with two minutes left, some of those watching with
Conference
race
is
expected
to
over
Kyger
Creek
but
were
milling
659,
an
average
of
69
.
ASSETS
Gabriel wanted to know-how be felt about Allen's not Instructing
continue
this
weekend
with
hard-pressed
in
·
beating
per
game
.
the Redsklns to try an onside kick.
Cash and due from banks - • • • - • - • • - - - - - - - - - - $ 1,369,326.84
three clubs still in contention Southern, 30-46. Hannan Trace
Coach Bob Ord's Southern
"ltoldthemlagreedwithAilen," saysGabriel. "You got three
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - •• - - - • - - - - - - 2,293,104.43
for
the
1972-73
crown.
boasts
a
potent
offense
and
a
Tornadoes
own
a
3-7
overall
timeouta. Whatyoudoishold 'em, and get the ball back."
Obligations of other U.S. Goverrunent
Eastern travels to Symmes rangy, stingy defense.
record and 2-3 mark in the
Washington did get the ball back with a minute and seven
agencies and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 297,991.16
Valley
Saturday
night
in
the
NorthGallia,
missing
outside
league.
Southern
has
scored
Obligations of States and political subdivisions - - - - tleCOnds left but couldn't score. Later Billy Kilmer blamed
1,106,128.28
. top league engagement.
shooters, has had problems in 493 points while allowing 574
himulf, but Gabriel doesn't see it as being all his fault.
- . - 21,000.00
Other securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Coach Bill Phillips' Eagles recent weeks, hitting over the points.
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
"The pass patt.erna Kilmer tried to throw ar~ the things he does
own a 6-lleague mark behind zone. Coach Jim Foster's
North Gallia continues to
well, but at the same time those slants are the things Miami
under agreements to resell - - - - - - - - - 800,000.00
C~ach
Paul
Dillon's
Hannan
Pirates
have
lost
their
last
·
have
the
league's
top
reserve
lr!kesaway best,'' he says. "That's what it all boiled down to. A
Otherloans - - - - -- - - - - - - - • - - - 7,126,473.39 '
Trace Wildcats who are 7-1.
eight games in a row.
squad. The Little Pirates own a
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
Iotta people said It was a dull game . I didn't think so. 1 thought
Symmes
Valley,
coached
by
Eastern
and
Symmes
Valley
6-1
league
mark.
Southern
is
other assets representing bank premises - •
both clubs ptayed very well, and to some people, that seems
• • 434,587.85
Wayne White, has a 5-1 league are rather evenly matched,
second best at 5-2.
&amp;Ill."
Otherassets--------- - -- • - 7,372.49
mark. Saturday's game should
The Vikings have scored an
Jamie Lafon's Symmes
TOTAL ASSETS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · - $13,455,984.66
detennine the main contender average of 77 points in six Valley's 5-10 senior sharpLIABU.ITIES
to
fight
it
out
"With
Hannan
league
games
while
permitting
shooter
from
the
outside,
Demand deposits of indivld118ls, partnerships,
DINOVATOR DIES
of the five-voice Clara Ward Trace.
64.
Eastern
is
averaging
60
continues
to
be
the
league's
and corporations - - - - - - - - - · - - - - - • - - $3,141,302.18
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Singers, one of the best known
In the other league games, points in seven conference leading point maker with 106
Time and savings deposits of Individuals,
Clara Wood, who brought gospel groups. She began
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - 8,647,614.19
gospel music out of black singing at the age of 5, when Hannan Trace is at North games while permitting its points, an average of 17.7.
Other top scorers and their
Deposits of United States Government - - - - - - - - - - . 48,581.06
churches and Into white night she and her sister joined a Gallia and Kyger Creek travels opposition 31 points per game .
At Southwestern, Kyger averages are : Phil Robinson,
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - : 332,&amp;12,94
clubs, died Tuesday of a stroke. chorus begun by theii mother. to Southwestern Friday night,
Southern
plays
the
HighlanCreek
and Coach Richard Symmes Valley, 97 points,.
Deposits of commercial bwtk~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3,877.35
Miss Ward, 48, was the leader
ders in a league engagement Hamilton's Highlanders wiD average, 16.2; Randy Boring,
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - • • - - - - - - - 65,439.45
Saturday night.
battle for the "rubber" game Eastern, 113 points, average,
TOTAL DEPOSITS . - - - - - - - - - $12,239,837.37
16.1; Dave Robinette, North
Non-league · battles lind of the series.
(a) Total demand deposits - - - - - - •
$ 3,592,023.18
Southern and Wahama locking . The Bobcats own an 11 point Gatlla, 94, average, 15.7; Mike
(b) Total time and savings deposits - - - $ 8,647,814.19
horns Friday night as will VIctory over Southwestern in Caldwell, Hannan Trace, 118
Other liabilities - - - - - - - - - - - - • • • • 3861376.99
Eastern
and Glouster . the league but lost by nine points, average, 14.8: Clay_
TOTAL UABIUTIES - - - - - - - - - - - : - • - fl2,626 1214.36
Saturday night, North- Gallia points in the Gallia County Hudson, Kyger Creek, 99
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
plays at Fairland and Coal Holiday Tournament
point.;, average, 14.1; John
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
Grove invades the Wildcat den
Coach Jim Arledge's Bob- Lusher, Hannan Trace, 107
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - - - - - . - - . - - - - - - $41,204.28
at MercerviUe.
cats have averaged 61.3 points points, average, 13.4; Dave
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES - - - - - $41,204.28
Hannan Trace, picked by the J!Cr game while permitting 72 Dunfee, Symmes Valley, 76
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
coaches to win the SVAC, point.; per game in their 11 poinll;,average, 12.7 and Terry
Equity. capital, total - - - - • - '- $788,566.02
posted two more league vic- outings this winrer.
Bush, Southwestern, 75,
Conunon stock-total par value - - - • - - 300,000.00
tories last week. The Wildcats . Southwesrern bas scored 379 average, 12.5.
~
No. shares authorized 12,000
points, an average of 37.9
No. shares outstanding 12,000
Plus $2.52-$2.69 Fed. Exci Tax.
Surplus - - - - - - - - - - - - 400,000.00
Undivided profits - - • - - - - • 88,566.02
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
1788,566,02
Plus $2.93 Fed. Exc. Tax.
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
.CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - - - $13,435',984.66
FREE MOUNTING
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar ·
days ending with call dsre - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •12 196 642 60
' ' '
l'fiERCERVILLE
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
.
Southern's reserves Saturday
days ending with call dsre - - - - - - - - • - - $ 8,445,766.32
defeated Hannan Trace In an
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
upaet victory, 33 to 32.
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value) :
Hannan Trace earlier had
U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
defeated the Southern squad . .
pledged to secure deposits and other liabilities - - - - - ~.000.00
Southern was also handicapped
TOTAL - - - - - - • - - • • - - - • - - - - - $835,000.00
Saturday ·without the services
of Mitch Nease.
Southern is now 7..:1 overall
and 5-2 in league play with
I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the aboveofi8Jlled hank do hereby declare
Saturday's game giving them
that this report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
second place In league action.
· Roger W. HyseU ·
For Souihein, Greg Dunning
was the blg gun with 14, Daii
We, the Wldorsigned directors, attest the correctness of this report of
700 E. Main St. r
Brown had 9, Tim HiU 6, and
condition and declare that it has been examined by u8 and to the best of our
POMEROY, OH.JO
Terry Sayre 4, for Hann.an
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
992·2101
. Trace, HeSBon had 9, Hall 7,
Theron .JohnHOn
Wllliama and Halley 6 each,
Fred W. Crow, Jr.- Dlrecton
Theodore!. Reed, ,Jr.
M~uire and Cremeans 2 each.
Southern shot 38, pet.. from
State of Ohio, County of Meigs ss :
the lleld and 35 pet. from the
I:IFI AS liEU AS OURS
Sjvorn to and subscrihed before me this 12th day of January, 1973.
line. Duane Wolfe is Southern's
,· Juhn t·. t'uha
C08C.h.,
· .
Mary,P: Y01111g, Notary PubUc
' \!khat~ ••. 7.1rl!My
Commission
expires
July
I,
1974.
Southern
7 15 .2'1 33
·Jrd Ave.
Middleport
5 11 17 32

OU outguns foe

'269

89

~

H78x14 ·---------•2700

OCE.AN

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Ship Ahoy

CRACKERS

lb.$J39

10

Assort. &amp; White

,·

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PUFFS............. 2200
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' 69~
2~-n°s
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The Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Company

NESCAFE INSTANT ·
"OFFEE 1o oz. . .
· · Jar
Rutland Dept. store
DFFE

.

USED CARS

LEMON
·PLEDGE

~aod At:

Reserves take
·33-32 victory
at Merceroille

ON

4~~

•

Fruit CocktaiL ....... ~ ns 99~

Three SVAC teams still in
running; 'Cats have edge

SUBURBANITE

7 Oz.

Beft

Willard was a distant fifth irt
town took the fourth and fifth the list with 114, followed by
spots, e:rchanging places from. Albany Alexander, River, Hur.
a week ago, with Newark, Co- on, Wellsville and Miqdletown
lumbus South, Barberton, Madison.
Cleveland John F. Kennedy · Huron, lith last week, was
and Canton Lehman rounding making its first top ten apout the top ten.
pearance, while Wellsville reLehman, (10-0) was the only lurns after a week's absence.
newcomer to the top ten, re- Claymont and Manchester
placing Akron Central-Hower dropped out:
which dropped to l1th. Barber- The Class A race remained
ton (12-0) was up two notches, Pl"etty much a two-team affail",
Columbus.South (10-2) up one, altnough Filrt Recovery moved
, lmd Kennedy (9-1) down one. up a notch to third and could
Ready Holds On
become a factor.
Ready continued to lead the
IVS, which is 9-0 this season
way among the AA schools, a!- . and has now won 35 games In a
though the Silver l{nights, 9-2, row, piled up 281 points and 12
had a big bite taken in their first place votes. Pleasant,
lead of a week ago.
which has been second all three
Rossf~rd, 12-0, actoally more weeks of the ratings, got seven
than doubled the first place firsts and 236 points. Fort
vote total on the leaders, nine Recovery's total was 215 with
to four, but Ready's second and four first place votes.
third place support gave it a Wapakoneta St. Joseph, third
2211-202 point spread.
"
last week, dropped ·a notch,
Waverly and Steubenville with Strasburg, Sebring, -McCatholic In third and fourth Donald, Lorain Clean1ew, Coplace had an even closer race ·lumbia Station and South Cengoing with the Tigers (9-0) tral rounding out the top ten.
holding a slim 194-193lead over
South Central (9-0) was the
the once-beaten Crusaders.
only newcomer, replacing
Mansfield St. Peter's, but several of the bottom teams ex·
changed places.

~::J~--------·~~

SUGAR...................~~~..

Kidney

Hamilton Tan and Middle-

Special Price On Blems.

69e

6112 oz.
Cans

TUNA

.Pork &amp; Beans

NEW YORK (UP!) -Roman Gabriel has sat down thoug!)t
out the whole thing and come to the debatable conclusio~ that the
.Los Angeles Rams can win the world championship nexi season.
He makes only one provision.
They have to get over being a selfish football learn. That's
right, H-l.f-1~.
Uke the rest of the RarM' players, Gabriel, In town for a
couple of.TV appearances, is waiting to see what the front office
Is going to ~o about a new coach. Not that he blames Tommy
Prothro enhrely for the Rams' bac~sllde this past season.
Gabriel puts the bulk of the blame exacUy where it belongs. On
the Rams' players themselves.
·
"I feel we've got the talent to beat Miami," he says: "Wbat we
are laCking is that one important characteristic Miami and
Washington both have- \Dgetherness."
Word Becomes CUche
The word has been used so much, it was suggested, that it has
become a cliche, particularly In football. The late Vince Lombardi popularized it and tben so many other coaches followed.
Now you'd think every team in football is bound together by
togetherness.
·
"Not oilrs," offers the Rams' candid quarterback.
"There's no reason In the world we shouldn't have done better
!hill past year," he says. "We have the personnel to do it, but for
some reason we've become a very selfish ball club."

COLUMBUS (UP!). - Mans. field. Senior, rolling along With
an ll-0 record, has taken over
·as the NO. 1 team In the United
Press International Ohi&lt;i High
School Board of Coaches' Class
AAA basketball rating:~. ·
The Tygers, along with 11111-'
nerup Springfield South;
moved past Cleveland East
Teeh, the leader the first two
weeks. The Scarabs dropped til
third.
But, whUe the Class . AAA
leader was changing, the leaders in the other two divisions,
Columb.us Bishop Ready In AA
and indian VaUey South In A,
remained on top.
Mansfield, which has not
been among the state's top
teams in recent years,
received half of the first place
votes cast by the 40 Class AAA
coaches balloting and 287
points, based on 10 for a first
place vote, nine for ·second,
eight for third, etc,
Springfieid South, 9-0 on the
year, got four first place nods
and 252 points, whUe East
Tech, 10-2, aJso.got lour firsts
and 209 points.

GOODYEAR POLYGlAS

$J29

STAR·KIST

Del Monte

By MILTON-RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

,

College BKB Results'
J.C.Smith 87 ·N.C. A&amp; T 80
By United Press International Fyttevl St. 92 Ellz. Cty St. 82
·
East
Midwest
..
ca'l. -Pa. 79 St.Vine. 63
111 .-ChiCrct 66 N.E.III. 64
Duquesne 'T'I Wheelng 62
Ohio U. 89 Eastern Mich . ·73
Mnlclr St. 61 Glssbro 46
Mr itta 88 Satm-W.Va. 75
Adei phi 82 lehman 80
Eau Claire 65 No.Dak . 59
Brrngln 67 E. Nzrene"61
, Ind. Tech 86 St ..Fran .- lnd . 74
Mass . 77 Vermont 55
. Bethel 105 Marion 74
Siena 78 Hartwick 76
Grace 109 Concordia «
Tufts 92 MIT 71
Nrthwstrn 83 St. Jos.- lnd. 77
Sprngfld 87 Wit lams 82
Minnesota 64 Marquette 53
W.Va. 75 Lehigh 63
· Agstna-111. 88 Millikn 66 ·
Stppry Rck 102 Gneva 85
Frnkln 102 Bellrmne 69
Shphrd 72 West Lib. 67
Geotwn-Ky . 89 Norlhwd 82
Princeton 43 Temple 37
Ia. Wslyn 86 Clvr-Stcktn 75
Clarion 60 Mansfld 52
loras 56 Lewis 55
King's 91 Corllnd 65
Parsons 87 Wm . Penn 74
Wilkes 72 Eckerd 59
Southwest
5oulll
D. Roberts 92 So. Oak . 79
G. Mason 79 Madison 78
Houston ~6 Rice 77
Mi.ss. Coli. 82 Ark.·L,R. 80
Houston Bap. 94 TCU 93
S.C. St. 71 Benedict 61
Okla . Bap. 80 Oils Bap. 79
Blst'ayne 92 Wm. Patrsn 68
West
Rollins 67 Baotist62
Mont. St. 7Q Montana 65

H&amp;R FIRESTONE

2 lb.
\_YINDSOR

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Why?

fi_N
_1. _I_

Laurel Cliff

THURSDAY, JAN. 18, 1973
6•00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6•1 5 - Farmllme 10.
6:20 -, Paul Harvey 13.
6•30 - Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8: America's
Problems 10.
6•45 - Corncob Report 3.
7:00 - Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10: News 6; Flintstones i3:
Popeye iO.
7• 30 - Romper Room 6 ; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13'.
8• 00 - Capt . Kangaroo 10; Sesame St. 33; New Zoo Revue 13;

6:00 - News J, 4, 8, 15 ; News 6, 10; I Dream o Jeannie 13;
Designing Women 33.
.

lb. CHUCK ROAST
3 lb. ROUND STEAK
4 lb. SIRLOIN STEAK
S lb. ·GROUND BEEF
3 lb. STEW MEAT
4

EAST
• A95

.K3

QUALITY MEAT

Bonanza J, 4.

OP EN

.,3
WEST

remains. 3rd ·in· Poll
;

!t

Television Log

5: 30 - Marshall Dillon 15; Elec. Co. 33; Gomer P{le USMC 13. ·

7 A.M. to S P.M.
Weekdays

Toda;,~~~.m:w.W-.:~.·::0~ waverly

.l

and, hope for the, best.
·year old wife of f\'lel Las)man, J
wont happen. You JUSt can I the multimillionaire mayor of ·i
. make two hearts,
N th ·y k o t
kid .;
Playing the tra11sfer you or
or • n ·• :was · ' ·,
can bid two diamonds and naped from her home Monday, •
let your partner struggle held for several hours, then ·
with the two hearts . He won't releasedimhanned, police said
make It any more than you today ·
would but better action is
·
.
,
possible. You respond two No ransom was pa1d for her
clubs·! .
release, they said . . Marilyn ·
You plan lo bid two hearts Lastman, a major shareholder
if your partner rebids two in her husband's nationwide ''
diamonds but something nice • chain of Bad Boy Appliance
happens. Your partner has
di ·
.)
spades and bids two of that Store out1ets, sappea.red ..
suit.
· ·
about 1:30 p.m. (EST) Mon· . i
You pass and lethim play day, and returned home In a
there. West opens the queen taxicab about 11:15·p.m,
of diamonds and your partJ
ne• has no trouble making.
. the two-spade contract.
LAMPMAN RECAII,ED
.c
A king of spades opening ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Mike ,i
would probably have beaten
him but somehow or other Lampman, a left winger, was
people don't find such bril- recalled Monday by. .._the St.
liant and unusual leads.
I.Duis Blues of the National 1
(NEWSPAP£R ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Hacke;- League from their ~
Denver farm club. Lampman .,
has played with the Blues twice ·.:
this season with two goills In 11 ' •
Th~ bidding has bOtn:
· West North
East South games.

17

NORTH ,
.Q842
.Q7653
• 85

By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
Jan. 14 at the l'ree Methodist
Church was 124, offering for all
services was $186.13. Twenty
members of the choir w~re
present Sunday morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stahl,
+++
Stockdale, recently visited
ON THE TV DIAL : One of TV's better nights, reatiy: A with Mr , and Mrs. Norman
National Geographic special on WCHS-TV at 8 ... Marshall U- Schaeffer,
/
Miami basketbaU, same hour on WMUL-TV ... A satire on "How
Mrs. Georgia Diehl visited
to Win the Nobel Prize" at 8 on WOUB-TV ... Bob Hope's last Sunday with Mrs. Nellie Tracy,
Christmas special, 8:30 on WSAZ-TV ... and Perry Cdmo In a Cole Ball Rnn.
Porter special, 10, same sl&lt;!tion.
Mrs. Dora Halley remains ill
at her home although she is
improving.
Mr. Wyatt Schaefer, MI.
Vernon, spent the weekend
. ,.IV.ith ~P,Ii'ren~.. Mr ..aP~ . Mr$ . ,
Norman Schaefer. Due to the ,
illness of his wife's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Robinson,
she was unable to come with
her husband.
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 17, 1973
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 JeannieiJ ; 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 Your Schools 33;
Outlook '73 15.
7:30 - To Tell The T•uth 6 ; The Judge 10; Police Surgeon 3, 4;
Protectors 8; Beat The Clock 13; Andy Griffith 15;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Marco Sportlite 33.
7:45 - Marshall Basketball .
8:00- Adom-12 3, 15, 4; Paul Lynde 6, iJ; National Geographic
8. 10; College Baskelball 33; How To Win The Nobel Prize 20.
8:30 - Playhouse New York 20; Bob Hope 3, 4, 15; Movie
PRICES
"Female Artillery" 6, i3.
9:00-Medlcal CenterS, 10; Eye to Eye20.
9: 30 - Flne Art of Goofing Off 20.
10:00 - Soul33; News 20 ; Cannon 8, 10; Cole Porter In Paris.
11 •00- News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15.
1UO- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15. Movie "Frankenstein" 6, 13;
Virginian 8; Mov ie " Hell Below Zero" 10.
LOO - News 4. 13.
·

Calling 6: Joker's Wild 8, 10.
•
10• 30 - Concentration 3, 15; Price Is RightS, 10; Phil Donahue 4;
Split Second 13; Sounds of Joy 33.
11 :00 - Sale of the Century 3, 15; GambitS, 10; Love American
Style 6; Password 13; Elec . Co. 20.
·
11 : 30 - Bewitched 13; Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Love of Lite 8.
10.
12:00 - Password6 ; News 10; Jeopardy 3, 15; Jackie Obllnger8.
1:00 - All My Children 6, 13; News 3: It's Your Bet8; Green
Acres 10; Watch Your Child iS.
1:30- Three on AMalch 3, 4, 15; ABC's Playbreok 6, 13; As the
World Turns 8, 10.
2: 00 - Days ot Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Guiding light 8, iO.
2: 30 - Poctors 3. 4, 15; Edge of NightS, ,10.
3: 00 - Another World 3, 4, 15; Generol Hospital 6, 13; love
Splendored Thing 8, 10; Behind the lines 20.
3:30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
Secret Storm 8, I 0.
·
.
4:00 - Mister Cartoon, Banana Splits 3; Merv Griffin 4; Flintstones 6; love, American Style i31 Somerset 15; Gilligan's
Island 8; Sesame St. 20, 33; Movie "The looters" 10. '
4• 30 - Petticoat Jun'ctloo 3; Andy Griffith 15; I love Lucy 6:
Merv Griffith 8; Daniel Boone 13.
5•110 - Dick Van Dyke 15; Merv Griffith 4; Mr. Roberts 20, 33;

SLICED PORK SHOULDER
GROUND BEEF
SIRLOIN STEAK
BULK SAUSAGE
ALL MEAT WIENERS

Mayor's wife is
retumed safeiy

The

BY PAUL CRABTREE
I'm just discovering something that most teenagers have
known for several years now:
A stereo eight-track tape player produces some fantastic
sounds. I bought one this faU, and wow!
YGU loll back In bed with the speakers paired up just right,
and there's a roaring brass section cutting loose at some spot
appro~imately six Inches up and off to the right of the ocelpital
bone .
Over on your left, a guitar and heavy bass is performing
counter-poi!lt, while on the extreme right, a very soft chorus of
voices blend In. Groovesville, man.
Or, if you don't want to wake the baby (I don't have.a baby,
hut I do have a wife who is extremely {IOise&lt;onscious, and most
of the music I play she would categorize as noise), you can get a
pair of headphones very cheaply, and get totaUy absorbed In
your own iitUe bi;~udible world. And no one knows just what has
you sitting there so enraptured.
I don't Pl"etend to be a real hi-fi buff, or to know much about
audio engirieerlng. I leave that to the dedicated stereo fans like
Homer Lowe at the Lowe Motor Inn in Pt. Pleasant, who owns
equipment that wiU separate Swahili into English and.Russian
simultaneously. (My big, big co-worker, Dick Newell, is good,

.&gt;

·~
·
S
k
d
Transfer Lin e to tayman .TORONTO (UP!)_ 37)

~

B~ Helen Hottel

:i-n " Ways to keep the
of God." Attendance
1 thb service was 28.
, lie Alfred WSCS group will
·11csts of the Tuppers Plains.
'', :• WSCS for a program,
, 1· t1 Payer and Self

.

uSe •

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',':\~n~!~~;~~::g~;~m~::.e~ ~
• &lt;'lll'e

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&amp;.THINGS

WIN AT BRIDGE

3-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 17, 1m

WEATHER
COLDER••.
.VALI$S

99t :

HO'ITER!

-

10:00 - Owen Marshall6, '13; Dean Marlin 3, 4, 15; Capitol City
• Jamboree 33; News 20.
·
11 :30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, IS; Movie "Lady Killer" 6, 13.
12:00- Movles"CryoflheCity"8; "TightSpol''lO. , .
i:OO - News4, 13.

.

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KEITH GOBLE FORD
· · USED CAR LOT

::r~ace

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' 4- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 17,1973

Pro Standings
Standings
By United _Press International
Eastern Conference

Atlantic Division
· w. I, pet. g.b.
Boston .
36 7 .837
New York
39 10 .796
Buffalo
13 31 .295 ,23112
Philadelphia 4 44 .083 34'12
Central Division

w. I. pel . g.b.

Midwest Division
w. I. pet. g.b.

Milwaukee
Chicago
KC-Omaha

34 13 .723
29 17 .630 4112
24 28 .462 121(,

Detroit

19 '17 .413 141!2

Pacific Division

.w. I. pel. g,b,
LosAngeles 33 11 .717
Golden Stale 29 15 .659 4
Phoenix
23 24 .489 11'12
Seattle
15 34 .292 2011,
Portland
11 36 .234 23'1'
Tuesday•s··Resulls
Boston 106 Buffalo 102 .
Seattle 125 KC-Omaha 122
Chicago 100 Portland 89
Atlanta 130 Detroit 129
Milw 108 Philadelphia 92
New York 102 Phoenix 101
Baltimore 112 Los Ang 104
Cleveland 100 Golden St. 98
Wednesday's Games

Portland at Boston
Atlanta at Philadelphia
Seattle at Detroit

Golden State vs. Houston
At San Antonio

IQnly games scheduled I •
ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
w. I. pel. g.b.
Carolina
34 16 .680 Kentucky
29 16 .644 21h
Virg inia
26 23 .5 31 71h
New Yor k
16 30 .348 16
M emphis
15 31 .326 . 17
West
w. I. pel. g.b.
Utah
31 16 .660 -

Coach Jim Osborne's
Gallipolis Blue Devils chalked
up their ninth hardwood
lriwnph in 10 outings Tuesday
night by defeating Coach Lewis
D'Anloni's visiting Chesapeake
Panthers, 65-46.
The defeat snapped the
Panthers' three-game winning
streak and left the Lawrence
Counlians with a 6-4 season
mark.
Gallipolis was never headed
Tuesday. The Gallians jwnped
off to a 17-7 first period lead. It
was 3(;.17 during 'the halftime
intermission.
Biggest GAHS lead - 24
points - came with 5:56left in
the third period - 41-17.
Taking advantage of sloppy
ball handling by the Gallians,
CHS then rallied for eight
straight points within a minute
and 11 seconds to reduce
Gallia 's lead to 16 points, 41-25.
The Blue Devils led 51-33 after
three periods of play.
Osborne inserted Jim Niday
and Mike Berridge into the
GAHS lineup to open the final
period of play. With GAHS on
top 58-37 at the 5:34 mark, both
coaches flooded the floor with

De nver
I ndiana

25 21 .543
25 21 .543

Dallas
San Diego

17 27 .386 12'12 · Gil Price led the GAHS at18 35 .340 16

51!?
51/:t

Carlton Signs {or

Devils post
•
ninth wm

~BA

Baltimore
27 17 .614
Atlanta
25 · 23 .521 4
Houston
17 27 .386 10
Cleveland
16 30 .348 12
Western Conference

' . I

tack with 18 points. Jimmy Noe
added 16 and Mark (\iesling .14.
Topper Orr finished with eight.
Kev Sheets was the only
regular who failed to score.
Gary Sheets led the Panthers' attack with 12 points.
Randy Hall added 1L
Gallipolis shot 51.2 pet. from
the field, sinking 25 of 49 field
goal· attempts . The Gflllians
were 15 of 23 at the foul circles
for 65.2 pet. GAHS had 13
personals, 41 rebounds and 27
turnovers.
Noe hauled in 19 rebounds for
GAHS, including eight in the
third canto. Price picked off
nine snags for lhe winners.
Chesapeake hit 19 of ii5 from
the field for 34.5 pet. and eight
of 14 from the charity line for
57 .I pet. The Panthers, who
pressed for two and one-half
quarters, committed 18 personals. CHS had 17 rebounds
and 18 turnovers.
Paul Wilcox and Steve
Holbrook each had four
reboWJds for the losers.
Gallipolis will host Athens
Friday in a Southeastern Ohio
League contest. Chesapeake
will play at Oak Hill in an Ohio
Valley Conference game.

.substitutes.

Tuesday's Results
Indiana 130 Denver 113

Pprvsly ppd gm

Virgini a 127 Mem phis 122

IOnly games scheduled I

GAllS-Chesapeake .box

•

Wedn esday's Games
Denver at New York

CHESAPEAKE PANTHERS l%1
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT-A PF RB
Only gam es schedul ed )
Randy Hall. f
4- 9 3- 4 4 2
Dale Pemberton, g
1- 6 0- 1 0 I
NHL Standings
Paul Wilcox, 1
1- 7 2- 4 4 4
By United Press- International Randy Wocd. g
0- 3 0- 0 0 I
East
Ron Roesch. c
3-10 0- 0 4 2
0- 0 0- 0 0 0
w. I. t. pis gf ga Steve Smith. c
Montrel 26 6 11 63 173 95 Monte Edwards. g
3- 3 0- 0 1 I
Boston 28 10 4 60 186 121 Dave Sheets, g
0- 2 0- 0 2 0
NY Rgrs 28 13 3 59 167 112 Gary Sheets, g
5-13 2- 3 2 I
Buffalo 23 14 7 53 157 124 Steve 1-lolbrook, f
2- 2 0- 0 0 4
Detroit 21 16 6 48 136 131 MarkMcKinney,g
0- 0 0- 0 0 0
Toronto 15 23 6 36 137 147 Denny Burke. g
0- 0 1- 2 1 I
Vncuv r 13 27 6 32 133 198 TOTALS
19-SS
B-14 lB 17
NY lsldrs 4 37 4 12 81 208
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS 165)
West
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT-A PF RB
5-15 6- 8 2 9
w. I. t. pis gl ga Gil Price, c
Chi cago 24 16 3 51 159 127 Jimmy Noe, f
6-16
4- 7 3 19
Minn 21 16 6 48 139 118 Mark Kiesling. g
5- 7 4- 4 3 I
Atlanla 20 19 7 47 121 125 Topper Orr. f
4- 5 0- 0 0 3
Los Ang 20 20 4 44 131 135 Kev Sheets. g
0- I 0- 0 2 0
Phila
18 20 6 42 145 154 Jim Niday, g
1- I
0- I 0 I
Piltsbgh 18 20 6 42 149 142 Skipper, Johnson, c
0- 0 0- 0 I
2
St.Louis 15 21 7 37 120 144 Jim Singer, g
0- 0 0- 0 0 1
Calif
8 2410 26• 123 176 ' MikB18err.illlge,-,t.•··
.,... ·-1·' 2 ' •0- 0 "•' 0 • 2
Tuesday's Results
Roger Dai ley, I
0- 0 1- 2 0 0
Minn . I NY Islanders 0
Bill Lemley, I
1- I
0- 0 0 0
Kentucky at Utah

Vancouver 6 Toronto 4

!Only games scheduled I
Wednesday's Games
Pittsburgh at Montreal
Toronto at California
NY Rangers at Los Ang
Chicago al Detroit
Atlanta at St. Louis
(Only gamesscheduled)

David B'rown, c

0· 0

0- 0

0

~

TO TP
2 II
0

2

0
7

0

6
0
I

0
0
0

18

2

4
0.
6
0
6
0
12
4
0
I

46

TO TP
8 ~:
5
3 14
3 8
2 0
2 2
~

g

· ~ ··· ;

0

0

0

0
Ken Will, g
0- 0
.
1 2 2
Steve Lee. g
1- I
TOTALS
25-49
41 27 65
Score By Quarters :
7 10 16 13-46
Chesapeake Panthers
17 18 16 loi--J&gt;5
GAHS Blue Devils
Ollicials - Lowell Shupe and Dick Hyland, Portsmouth
chapler .

0- 1 0
0- 0 2
15-23 13

1

2

$165,00~0_....__~Yil~o~wsp'r~ingsl_,.,n,Gre..,_
.. ~~ew

PHILADELPHIA (U~I) - $165,000 one-year contract with would win :iO games this
Steve Carlton, in a light mood the Philadelphia Phillies coJDing sea&amp;an.
.
after signing a reported Tuesday, casually predicted he
The left-handed 1972 Cy
Young Award-Winner seemed
· certain of the nwnber of starts
he would need to attain his
goal. At a news conference, he
told reporters he believed 30
wins was within reason
because he would · have three
- full days of rest before each
By United Press International flawless as he hit all four field slart.
AI McGuire lost the battle of - goal attempts and both · foul
The -owner of a 27-10 record
the psyche Tuesday night and shots~ blocked five shots and last season, Carlton provided
his Marquelte Warriors went took down 10 rebounds. Turner nearly half the wins of the l;lst
tumbling lo their second was the Gophers' leading place Phillies in the National
straight defeat.
scorer with 20 points while League's Eastern Division. But
McGuire,
the
fi~ry Marcus Lucas had 16 and -Phils' General Manager Paul
Marquette . coach,
had Larry McNeill 14 for Owens said it was Carlton's
predicted that the Warriors' Marquelte.
attitude which made him "the
·game against Minnesota at
McGuire and his son Allie, a h!ghest paid pitcher in baseMinneapolis would be, "a starting guard for the hall."
battle of the psyche," referring Warriors, both were assessed
Neither Owens nor 1Carlton
to tactics used by both teams to tectmical fouls with 16:02 left would verify the reported
dislurb opponents.
when a 1\lerquette basket was salary of tbe contract. Owens
Clyde Turner provided the disallowed because of offensive said the Phillies did not have
outside shooting and Jim goaltending.
access to the account books of
Brewer the rebounding as
In other action Houston, with other teams "so only in our
Minnesota, ranked fifth, ·Louis Dunbar hitting 14-&lt;&gt;f-15 minds Is he the highest paid
clipped
seventh-ranked field goal atltempts, crushed pitcher in baseball."
Marquette, 64-.13. Minnesota's Rice, 96-77. Dwight Jones
Owens cited as an example of
victory was its lith in 12 games ' scored 29 points and Dunbar Carlton's sentiments his
while Marquette, which won its finished with 28 to lead the parting statement al season's
first 11 games, now is 11-2.
Houston attack and give the end last year.
·
·
A deafening crowd of 17,987 Cougars their 12th victory in 14
"As Sieve was leaving town,
watched Minnesota build a 13- games.
be said 'Please don 'I trade me.
point lead in the second half
Elsewhere, Mark Sibley We've got a great nucleus and
before Marque Ill; rallied to cut scored 20 points to lead Nor- we're not that far away."'
it to three with 11 minutes left. thwestern to an 83-77 victory
But Brewer, a member of the over St. Joseph's of Indiana
U.S. Olympic team, hit two and reserve forward John
quick baskets for a seven-point Vavricka scored 15 points as
bulge and Minnesota went into Princeton upset Temple, 43-37.
a stall with six minutes left, Henry Seawright's 19 points
beating Marquette at its own carried Manhattan to a ~9
ball-control game.
victory over DePaul.
Brewer was virtuallv

Henry Block has
17 reasons why You
should come to usfor income tax h~lp.
,.

Warriors suffer
2nd loss in row

)

Reason 10. H &amp; R Block tax preparers,
have all n:ceived special training on the
use of the new tax forms fpr this year.
We will use the f1.mn that best fits your
own personal situation so that you pay the
least possible 1.a11:. ·.

· CINCINNATI (UP! ) Cincinnati Reds catcher
Johnny Bench, the National
League's most valuable player
last year, has been nani.ed the
1972 winner of the Cincinr.ati
Reds most valuable player
award.
The Cincinnati chapter of the
Baseball Writers Association
of America voted for the

award.
Bench, 25, hit 40 home rWJs
and drove in 125 runs to lead
the rna jor leagues in bOth
categories last season. He also
won his fifth consecutive Gold
Glove in 1972, the only catcher
in baseball history to do so.
Bench
is
currently
recuperating from surgery to
remove a benign lesion from a
lung in December. He is expected to be ready for the 1973
season.

.''

..

OOilMBLOCM .
THE lNCOME TAX PEOPLE

304 E. Main 992-3795 Pom~
Open 9 Til 5 Mon. Thru Sat
No Appointment Necessary

-

:: .
'

:.:

.. •

1"

&amp;ETALitT

.. ·::

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Right reserved to limit quantities

We Gladly Aecept Fed. Food Stamps

Prices Effective· Jan. 17-24
Monday Thru Friday

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

Peaches. ~.~~~:~~..~~~~~.~.~.~~~~.:~......... 3 N~·a;~ •1
JUMBO ROLLS 3 jumbo $
KIeenex T
. owe Is................. rolls 1
Margarine. ~.~~.~..~~.~.~.~~~~~.~~.~~......... 3 :~~~ '1
FACIAL
KIeenex· y•tssues................
:.ZOQR~K.ct.29e
Instant Cocoa .....~~.~~~~~~~....... 2 tfn 69e
6 _oz. 10 e
IT'S THE BEST
Kra f t Mustard...........................]~!...
WYLER'S
3oz. 10
.
e
Lemona d e. M.tx ......................
.P.~: ..
•
J
•
SEALDSWEET .. 46 oz.
.
e
Grape f ru •-t u ace.(~~~~~.~?.~~.~1:.~~~,39

I

Valentine favors and
arrangmhents will be lj!ade by
· the Star Garden Club for the
Meigs County Children's Home
and,_ the Meigs County jnfirmary, according to plans
made during a meeting Thursday at the home of 1\lrs. James
~ Nicholson.
Mrs. Sharon jewell, Mrs.
~: Pauline Atkins and Mrs.
Allegra Will will make the
2 arrangements. Mrs. Gladys
~ Nicholson will prepare the
Green Thumb Notes for The
" Dally Sentinel.
During the meeting wh!ch
~· opened with the creed and
t, collect, a certificate of award
· 0, was displayed from the OHio
t Association of Garden Clubs
: for garden therapy work with
! the Good Luck Garden Club at
;: the Southeastern Ohio Mental
:' Health Center.
:
Appreciation was extended
: to those who assisted with the
; Rutland Garden Club flower
, show. !twas reported thai Mrs.
~ Atkins, Miss Ruby Diehl, and
• Mrs. Will had provided
arrangements for their
churches; Mrs. Virginia
;. Nelson had taken a Ch~lstmas
: arrangement to the post office,
• and Mrs. Grace Turner had
provided a potted plant for her
church, all a pari of the
: conununily service program of
the club·.
"How Plants Live and
Grow" was the topic of the
. program presenied by Mrs.
• Orion Nelson. Mrs. Nelson
: explained that plant life was
~ lhe first life on earth having
. appeared about 400 billion
·. years ago. She described a
plant as a green living thing

f,

•

l n ~H a
.. , 1'1 •

,.

USDA
CHOICl
We Feature USDA
Beef - U.S. Govt.

Racine

Social Events

By Mrs. Francia Morris
Mrs. Robert Warden is a
""alieni at Holzer Medical
r·eenter.
: Mrs. Ella Jean Badgley is a
: flu patient at Holzer Medical
! Center.
The Rev. Edward Fischer is
~ the interim pastor of the First
~ Baptist ClnJrch. Mrs. Fisher
was here for Sunday services
and they were guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Johnson
of Pennsylvania were recent
overnight guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Powell.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve BacDey
and KeW of Cl&gt;lumbus spent
the weekend with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
Mr. and Mn. Ralph Diddle of
Winfield, W. Va., were recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Powell.

1·

Inspected

Meat lo.af

with roots in the soil and with
leaves, stem and flowers above
the. ground.
She spoke of seeds, how they
differ in size, shape, texture
and color, yet maintain the
same basic struclure within a
proteclive.coat. Seeds contain
little moisture, she said, and
most can be stored dry for long
periods. A seed needs air,
moisture and warmth to
germinate, Mrs. Nelson explained, and the first growth to
emerge is the young root or
radicle which grows rapidly.
The root system anchOrs the
plant in lhe soil and provides
nutrients needed for growth. In
some plants; she explained, the
root system is also a storage
organ which enables the plant
to survive in winter and grow
again the next year.
Further explaining growth,
Mrs. Nel&lt;on said that the
downward growth of the plant
is swiftly followed by the upward growth of its primary
shoot. The embryo stem grows
to the light and the light
energizes the ·stem tissues for
lhe production of leaves where
the food is produced and then
circulated throughout the
plant.
.Mrs. Nelson explained the
pollination process and the
process
of
reseeding .
Following the meeting the
hostess served a dessert course
to those named and Mrs.
Pearley Nelson, Mrs. Miles
Nelson, Mrs. Kearney Ogdm,
Mrs. Lawrence Chapman, Mrs.·
Bert Hoosier, Mrs. Henry
Turner, and Mrs . George A.
Radekin.

•·

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&gt;l.

I

MASON, W.VA.

/THAT SPELL

~

•l:

MATERIALS' CO.

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1rtany favors

'·

cp,E A,Nq.,J~''' ~!, .
HOGG AND ZUSPAN

-

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Special Prices Now!

PH. 773-5554

.~

I

. 15" and 23" Widths

Tuesday Ohio College
Basketball Scores
By United Press International
Ohio U. 89 East. Michigan 73
Marietta 88 Salem IW. Va.l 75
Muskingum 61 Kenyon 52
Otterbein
77 Denison 74
Massi l lon 59 Can. Cent . Catholic Wright State 65 Rio Grande 64
52
Ohio Northern ~6 Heidelberg 49
University School 72
Mounl Union 82 Hiram 68
Cleveland Cathedral Latin 65 Ohio Dominican 80 Cedarville 66

S-The Dally "'- ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 17, 1973

1

INSULATION

High School Basketball Scores
By United Press International
Westerville 69 Up. Ar lington 57
Cleve. St. Joseph 81 Parma
Padua 55
Gall ipolis 65 Chesapeake 46
Pymatuning Valley 69 •
Ashtabula Edgewood 57

cl/tr 'lb.to make·reFesoCTaT:::::
:,,,iProject is accepted
~:

0

i
i

Bench ·RedS' MVP

·~:

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart,
You 1NE LIKE"

.

Cambridge 62 New Philadelphia

TWO RECORDS SET
RACINE - Two registered
Guernsey cows in the herd of
Edson Roush, Locust Grove
Farms, near here have
recently completed top official
DHIR actual production
records , accordin g to The
American Guernse y Cattle
Club. The cows were milked
two times a day, the testing
supervised by Ohio State
University. They were Locust
Grove Elsie, a four-year-old
14,830 pounds of milk and 699
pounds of fal, and Locust
Grove Fay, a three-year-old,
12,540 pounds of milk and 733
pounds of fat, both in 305 days.
IN COLUMBUS
Mrs . Richard Vaughan ,
direction of Region 16, Ohio
Congress of Parents · and
Teachers, will be in Columbus
Thursd~y and Friday for an
executive board meeting.

Family Size

A thoughl for the day:
Benjamin Franklin said: "Doth
thou love llfe? Then do not
squander time, for that is the
stuff life is made of."

2

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¢

WEDNESDAY
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
Stated meeting 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday· at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
PAST PRESIDENTS,
American ;Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Welisler Post 39, 7:30 p.
m. Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. George Hackett, St.
THURSDAY
WIWNG WORKERS Class,
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, 7:30!&gt;. m. Thursdav at
the home of Mrs. Stanten
Smith.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, 1:15 p. m.
Thursday at the horne of Mrs.
Fred Goeglein. Mrs. William
Folmer to have the program,
Mrs. Scott Folmer to have the
contest.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Women, 12:30 p. m. luncheon,
Grace Episcopal Church. Mrs.
Patrick Lochary, Mrs. Virginia
Watson, Mrs. James O'Brien,
Mrs. James·Titus, Mrs. 0. B.
Stout, hoslesses.
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League, 7:30
p.m., Thursday, Columbus Gas
of Ohio. Demonstration by the
home economist.
SPECIAL meeting, Pomeroy
Lodge 164 F .&amp;AM, 7 p.m.
Thursday at Masonic Temple
to confer the Master Mason
degree. Ali Master Masons
invited.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
home of Mrs. Charles Hayes.
FRIDAY

SPECIAL -sALE
·-----------------Special Shoe
Clearance

Over 100 Pairs
Women's &amp; Children's
Regular

to 15.00
Values

Talk given at club meeting
" Containers that Aren 't' ' included readings on garwas the theme of an illustrated dening myths. Members
talk by Mrs. Ried Young at a discussed new varielies of
.recent meeting of the Chesler plants, some of which they had'
Ga~den Club held at the home tried last year, and displayed
of Mrs. Dale Kautz.
catalogues.
In conjunction with her talk,
Mrs. Homer Holter was
Mrs. Young showed a variety awarded a blue ribbon for her
of household items which are arrangement. A quiz consuitable for use as containers. dueled by Mrs. Donald Mora,
Mrs. Buel Ridenour and Mrs. Mrs. Pearl Mora, and Mrs.
Jean Summerfield did a Earl Ingels was won by Mrs.
dialogue entitled "Paul Paul Baer, Mrs. Howard
Tucker's Pipe Dreams" which · Knight, Mrs. Robert l~'oods
and Mrs. Earl Dean.
A. rummage sale was
planned for February. Mrs.
Kautz and Mrs. Rose Ginther
PARTY GIVEN
· The birthday anniversaries served refreshments to the 23
of Mrs. Robert Hawk and son, members attending.
Robert Eugene, of 205 Pleasant
Ridge, Pomeroy, were observed with a party recently.
Ice cream and a decorated
MEET TONIGHT
cake were served lo Robert
A
mee
ting .of the past
Eugene's grandmother, Mrs.
presidents of the American
Ora Sinclair, Mrs. Mildred
Legion
Auxiliary of Drew
Roberts and daughter,
Meloday, Eloise Hoffman, Mr. Webster Post 39 scheduled for
tonight at the home of Mrs.
and Mrs. Robert 0. Bowles and
George Hackett, Sr. has been
Michael,' Fay Reibel, Mrs.
Beity Stivers and Janet, cancelled due to the illness of
Mr,. Hackett.
He wasr admitted
,
, ,
,,
Pomeroy.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
Monday night.

RACINE LODGE 461,
F&amp;AM, special meeting, at
7:30 p. m. Friday for work in
the E.A. de gree . Refreshments. Ali Master Masons
invited.
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citize11s Club January meeting
cancelled. Next meeting, Feb.
15 at 7:30 p. m. at Harrisonville
School.
REV. RICHARD W. Jaymes,
evangelist of Bellefontaine
speaking each evening through
Jan. 28 at Syracuse Church of
Nazarene. Special music,
public invited.
Covered dish dinner, take own
table service.
SATURDAY
POINT PLEASANT Bible
MEIGS COUNTY Retired' Choir, program of Christian
Teachers Assn ., 12:30 p.m. music at Pomeroy Church of
Saturday
at
Pomeroy the Nazarene, 7:30 p. m.
Elementary School. Talk by Saturday. Program will inAttorney Fred Crow on probate clude choir, solo, duet and trio
law and Homestead Act. numbers. Public invited.

congregation voted approval to
become an active member of
this organization with Moore
and Franklin Ryther to be the
1973 representatives from the
congregation.
· Jones gave the financial
report for 1972 which showed
all funds in good standing and
presented the 1973 proposed
budget which was approved by
the congregation.
·
The Rev. Arthur C. Lund,
pastor, called attending to the
entire annual report and made
comments on the accomplishments of 1972 and the
challenges of !973.
Ryther, congregational
chairman, opened the meeting
with prayer asking ei!peclally
for guidance and wisdom for
the congregation and Its
leaders in the New Year.

VISIT MADE
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Grueser,
Middleport, spent the weekend
in Wheeling, W. Va., visiting
her son and daughter-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Johnson,
Jr . Other guests at the Johnson
home were Mr. and Mrs.
Howard I. Snyder, Cleveland .

Ca11No. 484
PTA RESCHEDULED
A meeting of the Middleport
PTA has been rescheduled for
Monday night. It was cancelled
this past Monday night due to
the death of Larry Morrison,
assistant superintendent of the
Meigs Local School District.

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of the St. Paul Council, Ryther
e1 ted chairman and
was
ec
B
·
d 1
raun was name
v ce
chalnnan for 1973.

CHAPMAN'S

Ro.cmnq Sr=tv1ngs on King nnd Queen Size Comfort. too

FRENCH CITY WIENERS

.J

,,.

Chapter \of Beta s;•m_a Phi
Sorority Thursday "'mght to
again this year sponsor a girl
at Buckeye Girls' Stale to be
held in June al Capital
University.
Mrs. Pearl Welker reported
that lhe fee is $70. She also
reported on progress being
made with I he children 's
reading trail _pain~ngs and
commented on work of the
ClttzeilS' Committee . at the
Meigs County Children's
Home.
Mrs. Mildred Karr, social
chairman, reported on plans
for a St. Patrick's Day party
where the husbands will be
guests. Also discussed were,
plans for the annual Founders'
Day banquet, a combined
event of the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter and Xi Ganuna Mu
Chapter.
A rnmmage sale was announced for Feb. 2 with the

Pomeroy, Ohio

2 lb. $1 59

12 pall

•

~ price
lola's Dress Shop

SAUSAGE

ICE MILK BARS

:_;_··1,.

DRESSES

PORK

BOILING
BEEF.

CABBAGE
lb.l e

Election of new officers for Minutes of the semi-annual
the Church Council for 1913 meetin_g· were read by
announced plans fo_r an auction highlighted the annual meeting ~boenleb.
of the congregation of St. Paul
At the Monday night meeting
of homemade arttcles at lhe Lutheran Church, Pomeroy,
next regular meeting of the Sunday morning following the
Chapter. Each member was
requested to provide an article w~-~:~~iected officers
for the auction.
Meeting at the home of Mrs. are Richard Jones, treasurer;
Rose
Sisson, members William Baer, secretary;
welcomed -Peggy Gurtls, a . Franklin Ryther, elder; Don
former member of the chapter. Diener, Fennan Moore, and E.
R. Yost, deacons; James Fry
Mrs .. Karr and Mrs . Velma Rue and William Anderson,
were in charge of the cultural trustees. These .new officers
program using the topic "Easy
join Miss Erna Jesse, financial
and Informal Living." They secretary, Trell Schoenleb,
conducted a group par.- eld~tr' Kenneth Braun and
ticipation program on the
Raymond Adams, deacons,
effects of reading, television, and Charles Evans and Mickey
radio and movies on everyday Williams, trustees to make up
life. Mrs. Margaret Follrod the Cl&gt;uncil for 1973 _
presided at the meeting. Mrs .
Moore , "congregational
Ann Rupe was a contributing member and chairman of an
hostess.
Mrs. · Eleanor Thomas and ecumenical housing committee
representing various churches
Mrs. Reva Vaughan will he in the county, reported to the
hostesses for the Jan . 25 congregation on efforts to
meeting.
obtain new housing for senior
citizens in the county. The

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. It was . vote_d during a location to be reported later,
"·::1 meeting oi the Xj Ganuna Mu and Mrs. 'Lois Rosenbaum also

.

Misses' Sizes.

(Beef &amp; Pork)

TIDE

~-

·

I Lutherans elect new Cou_n_cil officers .~·

Large group of

MIX

CLOSED SUNDAYS

~~

i

;:;8::::::::::~:::: ::::::m::~::::~:::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::&lt;:: :::::::::: ::::::::: :::~::: : ::::::::::::~:::&lt;&gt;.&gt;.::: - .:::::~~~::~$~$:':':~:::$;:;:~wH'..:&gt;.:&gt;~~#..,

of Middleport, Ohio In the Slate of Ohio, at the close of business oo December 30,
1972 publlshed In response to call made by Comptroller of the currency, uoder
Tille 12, Uulted States Code, Section 181.
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - - - - - $ 1,029,523.26
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2,746,000.00·
Obligations of Slates and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - 1,398,442.00
Other securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 15,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
Wlder agreements to resell - - - • - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 900,000.00
Loans - - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4,665,675.83
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
100,871.94
other assets representing hank premises - - - Real estate owned other than bank premises - - - - 21,648.58
- - 4,032.94
Otherassets - - - - - - - -- - - • - $10,881,194.5li
TOTAL ASSETS - - - - - - - - • • • •
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations • - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - $2,285,443.27
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6,779,227.72
Deposits of United States Government . - - - - - - - - - - - 243,087.49
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - - 418,723.78
Deposits of commercial banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5,000.00
Certlfied and officers' checks, elc. - - - - - - - - - - - - - 56,360.09
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - • - • • • $9.787,842.35
(a) Total'demand deposits - - - - • - - • $2.847,092.00
(b) Total time and savings deposits - • - - - $6,940,750.35
- 193,879.80
Other liabilities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $9,981,722.15
TOTAL UABIUTIES • - - • - - - - - - • - - RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans'
(set up.pursuantto IRS rulings) - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - $71,786.65
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
• $71,786.65
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total - - - - - .. -- - - - - - $827,685.75
Comrnori Stock-total par value - - - . - - 100,000.00
No. shares authorized 2,000
No. shares outstanding 2,000
400,000.00
Surplus - - - - - -=-- - - Undivided profits - - - - ·- - · 327,685.75
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
827,685.75
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - - - - .
$10,S81,194.5li
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar
$9,6j12,420.11
days ending with_call date • - • - - - - ' Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
$4,680,053.68
days ending with call da'" - - - - - - - I, Manning Kloes, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that
this report of condition ls true and correct to the best of my knowledge and
beUef.
Malllling Kloos, Cubler

.•

Ingels .Furniture.
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
PH,ONE 992-2635

· MIDDLEPORT

We, tl)e undersigned directors attest the correctneslo! this report of condition wid declare that it has been elUIIllined .by l!ll and to the best of our
kno)VIedge and belief is true 'and correct.
·

Paul s. Smart

Harold E. Hubbud
Dale M. Dutton

-

Dtrecton

�'
' 4- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 17,1973

Pro Standings
Standings
By United _Press International
Eastern Conference

Atlantic Division
· w. I, pet. g.b.
Boston .
36 7 .837
New York
39 10 .796
Buffalo
13 31 .295 ,23112
Philadelphia 4 44 .083 34'12
Central Division

w. I. pel . g.b.

Midwest Division
w. I. pet. g.b.

Milwaukee
Chicago
KC-Omaha

34 13 .723
29 17 .630 4112
24 28 .462 121(,

Detroit

19 '17 .413 141!2

Pacific Division

.w. I. pel. g,b,
LosAngeles 33 11 .717
Golden Stale 29 15 .659 4
Phoenix
23 24 .489 11'12
Seattle
15 34 .292 2011,
Portland
11 36 .234 23'1'
Tuesday•s··Resulls
Boston 106 Buffalo 102 .
Seattle 125 KC-Omaha 122
Chicago 100 Portland 89
Atlanta 130 Detroit 129
Milw 108 Philadelphia 92
New York 102 Phoenix 101
Baltimore 112 Los Ang 104
Cleveland 100 Golden St. 98
Wednesday's Games

Portland at Boston
Atlanta at Philadelphia
Seattle at Detroit

Golden State vs. Houston
At San Antonio

IQnly games scheduled I •
ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
w. I. pel. g.b.
Carolina
34 16 .680 Kentucky
29 16 .644 21h
Virg inia
26 23 .5 31 71h
New Yor k
16 30 .348 16
M emphis
15 31 .326 . 17
West
w. I. pel. g.b.
Utah
31 16 .660 -

Coach Jim Osborne's
Gallipolis Blue Devils chalked
up their ninth hardwood
lriwnph in 10 outings Tuesday
night by defeating Coach Lewis
D'Anloni's visiting Chesapeake
Panthers, 65-46.
The defeat snapped the
Panthers' three-game winning
streak and left the Lawrence
Counlians with a 6-4 season
mark.
Gallipolis was never headed
Tuesday. The Gallians jwnped
off to a 17-7 first period lead. It
was 3(;.17 during 'the halftime
intermission.
Biggest GAHS lead - 24
points - came with 5:56left in
the third period - 41-17.
Taking advantage of sloppy
ball handling by the Gallians,
CHS then rallied for eight
straight points within a minute
and 11 seconds to reduce
Gallia 's lead to 16 points, 41-25.
The Blue Devils led 51-33 after
three periods of play.
Osborne inserted Jim Niday
and Mike Berridge into the
GAHS lineup to open the final
period of play. With GAHS on
top 58-37 at the 5:34 mark, both
coaches flooded the floor with

De nver
I ndiana

25 21 .543
25 21 .543

Dallas
San Diego

17 27 .386 12'12 · Gil Price led the GAHS at18 35 .340 16

51!?
51/:t

Carlton Signs {or

Devils post
•
ninth wm

~BA

Baltimore
27 17 .614
Atlanta
25 · 23 .521 4
Houston
17 27 .386 10
Cleveland
16 30 .348 12
Western Conference

' . I

tack with 18 points. Jimmy Noe
added 16 and Mark (\iesling .14.
Topper Orr finished with eight.
Kev Sheets was the only
regular who failed to score.
Gary Sheets led the Panthers' attack with 12 points.
Randy Hall added 1L
Gallipolis shot 51.2 pet. from
the field, sinking 25 of 49 field
goal· attempts . The Gflllians
were 15 of 23 at the foul circles
for 65.2 pet. GAHS had 13
personals, 41 rebounds and 27
turnovers.
Noe hauled in 19 rebounds for
GAHS, including eight in the
third canto. Price picked off
nine snags for lhe winners.
Chesapeake hit 19 of ii5 from
the field for 34.5 pet. and eight
of 14 from the charity line for
57 .I pet. The Panthers, who
pressed for two and one-half
quarters, committed 18 personals. CHS had 17 rebounds
and 18 turnovers.
Paul Wilcox and Steve
Holbrook each had four
reboWJds for the losers.
Gallipolis will host Athens
Friday in a Southeastern Ohio
League contest. Chesapeake
will play at Oak Hill in an Ohio
Valley Conference game.

.substitutes.

Tuesday's Results
Indiana 130 Denver 113

Pprvsly ppd gm

Virgini a 127 Mem phis 122

IOnly games scheduled I

GAllS-Chesapeake .box

•

Wedn esday's Games
Denver at New York

CHESAPEAKE PANTHERS l%1
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT-A PF RB
Only gam es schedul ed )
Randy Hall. f
4- 9 3- 4 4 2
Dale Pemberton, g
1- 6 0- 1 0 I
NHL Standings
Paul Wilcox, 1
1- 7 2- 4 4 4
By United Press- International Randy Wocd. g
0- 3 0- 0 0 I
East
Ron Roesch. c
3-10 0- 0 4 2
0- 0 0- 0 0 0
w. I. t. pis gf ga Steve Smith. c
Montrel 26 6 11 63 173 95 Monte Edwards. g
3- 3 0- 0 1 I
Boston 28 10 4 60 186 121 Dave Sheets, g
0- 2 0- 0 2 0
NY Rgrs 28 13 3 59 167 112 Gary Sheets, g
5-13 2- 3 2 I
Buffalo 23 14 7 53 157 124 Steve 1-lolbrook, f
2- 2 0- 0 0 4
Detroit 21 16 6 48 136 131 MarkMcKinney,g
0- 0 0- 0 0 0
Toronto 15 23 6 36 137 147 Denny Burke. g
0- 0 1- 2 1 I
Vncuv r 13 27 6 32 133 198 TOTALS
19-SS
B-14 lB 17
NY lsldrs 4 37 4 12 81 208
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS 165)
West
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT-A PF RB
5-15 6- 8 2 9
w. I. t. pis gl ga Gil Price, c
Chi cago 24 16 3 51 159 127 Jimmy Noe, f
6-16
4- 7 3 19
Minn 21 16 6 48 139 118 Mark Kiesling. g
5- 7 4- 4 3 I
Atlanla 20 19 7 47 121 125 Topper Orr. f
4- 5 0- 0 0 3
Los Ang 20 20 4 44 131 135 Kev Sheets. g
0- I 0- 0 2 0
Phila
18 20 6 42 145 154 Jim Niday, g
1- I
0- I 0 I
Piltsbgh 18 20 6 42 149 142 Skipper, Johnson, c
0- 0 0- 0 I
2
St.Louis 15 21 7 37 120 144 Jim Singer, g
0- 0 0- 0 0 1
Calif
8 2410 26• 123 176 ' MikB18err.illlge,-,t.•··
.,... ·-1·' 2 ' •0- 0 "•' 0 • 2
Tuesday's Results
Roger Dai ley, I
0- 0 1- 2 0 0
Minn . I NY Islanders 0
Bill Lemley, I
1- I
0- 0 0 0
Kentucky at Utah

Vancouver 6 Toronto 4

!Only games scheduled I
Wednesday's Games
Pittsburgh at Montreal
Toronto at California
NY Rangers at Los Ang
Chicago al Detroit
Atlanta at St. Louis
(Only gamesscheduled)

David B'rown, c

0· 0

0- 0

0

~

TO TP
2 II
0

2

0
7

0

6
0
I

0
0
0

18

2

4
0.
6
0
6
0
12
4
0
I

46

TO TP
8 ~:
5
3 14
3 8
2 0
2 2
~

g

· ~ ··· ;

0

0

0

0
Ken Will, g
0- 0
.
1 2 2
Steve Lee. g
1- I
TOTALS
25-49
41 27 65
Score By Quarters :
7 10 16 13-46
Chesapeake Panthers
17 18 16 loi--J&gt;5
GAHS Blue Devils
Ollicials - Lowell Shupe and Dick Hyland, Portsmouth
chapler .

0- 1 0
0- 0 2
15-23 13

1

2

$165,00~0_....__~Yil~o~wsp'r~ingsl_,.,n,Gre..,_
.. ~~ew

PHILADELPHIA (U~I) - $165,000 one-year contract with would win :iO games this
Steve Carlton, in a light mood the Philadelphia Phillies coJDing sea&amp;an.
.
after signing a reported Tuesday, casually predicted he
The left-handed 1972 Cy
Young Award-Winner seemed
· certain of the nwnber of starts
he would need to attain his
goal. At a news conference, he
told reporters he believed 30
wins was within reason
because he would · have three
- full days of rest before each
By United Press International flawless as he hit all four field slart.
AI McGuire lost the battle of - goal attempts and both · foul
The -owner of a 27-10 record
the psyche Tuesday night and shots~ blocked five shots and last season, Carlton provided
his Marquelte Warriors went took down 10 rebounds. Turner nearly half the wins of the l;lst
tumbling lo their second was the Gophers' leading place Phillies in the National
straight defeat.
scorer with 20 points while League's Eastern Division. But
McGuire,
the
fi~ry Marcus Lucas had 16 and -Phils' General Manager Paul
Marquette . coach,
had Larry McNeill 14 for Owens said it was Carlton's
predicted that the Warriors' Marquelte.
attitude which made him "the
·game against Minnesota at
McGuire and his son Allie, a h!ghest paid pitcher in baseMinneapolis would be, "a starting guard for the hall."
battle of the psyche," referring Warriors, both were assessed
Neither Owens nor 1Carlton
to tactics used by both teams to tectmical fouls with 16:02 left would verify the reported
dislurb opponents.
when a 1\lerquette basket was salary of tbe contract. Owens
Clyde Turner provided the disallowed because of offensive said the Phillies did not have
outside shooting and Jim goaltending.
access to the account books of
Brewer the rebounding as
In other action Houston, with other teams "so only in our
Minnesota, ranked fifth, ·Louis Dunbar hitting 14-&lt;&gt;f-15 minds Is he the highest paid
clipped
seventh-ranked field goal atltempts, crushed pitcher in baseball."
Marquette, 64-.13. Minnesota's Rice, 96-77. Dwight Jones
Owens cited as an example of
victory was its lith in 12 games ' scored 29 points and Dunbar Carlton's sentiments his
while Marquette, which won its finished with 28 to lead the parting statement al season's
first 11 games, now is 11-2.
Houston attack and give the end last year.
·
·
A deafening crowd of 17,987 Cougars their 12th victory in 14
"As Sieve was leaving town,
watched Minnesota build a 13- games.
be said 'Please don 'I trade me.
point lead in the second half
Elsewhere, Mark Sibley We've got a great nucleus and
before Marque Ill; rallied to cut scored 20 points to lead Nor- we're not that far away."'
it to three with 11 minutes left. thwestern to an 83-77 victory
But Brewer, a member of the over St. Joseph's of Indiana
U.S. Olympic team, hit two and reserve forward John
quick baskets for a seven-point Vavricka scored 15 points as
bulge and Minnesota went into Princeton upset Temple, 43-37.
a stall with six minutes left, Henry Seawright's 19 points
beating Marquette at its own carried Manhattan to a ~9
ball-control game.
victory over DePaul.
Brewer was virtuallv

Henry Block has
17 reasons why You
should come to usfor income tax h~lp.
,.

Warriors suffer
2nd loss in row

)

Reason 10. H &amp; R Block tax preparers,
have all n:ceived special training on the
use of the new tax forms fpr this year.
We will use the f1.mn that best fits your
own personal situation so that you pay the
least possible 1.a11:. ·.

· CINCINNATI (UP! ) Cincinnati Reds catcher
Johnny Bench, the National
League's most valuable player
last year, has been nani.ed the
1972 winner of the Cincinr.ati
Reds most valuable player
award.
The Cincinnati chapter of the
Baseball Writers Association
of America voted for the

award.
Bench, 25, hit 40 home rWJs
and drove in 125 runs to lead
the rna jor leagues in bOth
categories last season. He also
won his fifth consecutive Gold
Glove in 1972, the only catcher
in baseball history to do so.
Bench
is
currently
recuperating from surgery to
remove a benign lesion from a
lung in December. He is expected to be ready for the 1973
season.

.''

..

OOilMBLOCM .
THE lNCOME TAX PEOPLE

304 E. Main 992-3795 Pom~
Open 9 Til 5 Mon. Thru Sat
No Appointment Necessary

-

:: .
'

:.:

.. •

1"

&amp;ETALitT

.. ·::

:'

Right reserved to limit quantities

We Gladly Aecept Fed. Food Stamps

Prices Effective· Jan. 17-24
Monday Thru Friday

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

Peaches. ~.~~~:~~..~~~~~.~.~.~~~~.:~......... 3 N~·a;~ •1
JUMBO ROLLS 3 jumbo $
KIeenex T
. owe Is................. rolls 1
Margarine. ~.~~.~..~~.~.~.~~~~~.~~.~~......... 3 :~~~ '1
FACIAL
KIeenex· y•tssues................
:.ZOQR~K.ct.29e
Instant Cocoa .....~~.~~~~~~~....... 2 tfn 69e
6 _oz. 10 e
IT'S THE BEST
Kra f t Mustard...........................]~!...
WYLER'S
3oz. 10
.
e
Lemona d e. M.tx ......................
.P.~: ..
•
J
•
SEALDSWEET .. 46 oz.
.
e
Grape f ru •-t u ace.(~~~~~.~?.~~.~1:.~~~,39

I

Valentine favors and
arrangmhents will be lj!ade by
· the Star Garden Club for the
Meigs County Children's Home
and,_ the Meigs County jnfirmary, according to plans
made during a meeting Thursday at the home of 1\lrs. James
~ Nicholson.
Mrs. Sharon jewell, Mrs.
~: Pauline Atkins and Mrs.
Allegra Will will make the
2 arrangements. Mrs. Gladys
~ Nicholson will prepare the
Green Thumb Notes for The
" Dally Sentinel.
During the meeting wh!ch
~· opened with the creed and
t, collect, a certificate of award
· 0, was displayed from the OHio
t Association of Garden Clubs
: for garden therapy work with
! the Good Luck Garden Club at
;: the Southeastern Ohio Mental
:' Health Center.
:
Appreciation was extended
: to those who assisted with the
; Rutland Garden Club flower
, show. !twas reported thai Mrs.
~ Atkins, Miss Ruby Diehl, and
• Mrs. Will had provided
arrangements for their
churches; Mrs. Virginia
;. Nelson had taken a Ch~lstmas
: arrangement to the post office,
• and Mrs. Grace Turner had
provided a potted plant for her
church, all a pari of the
: conununily service program of
the club·.
"How Plants Live and
Grow" was the topic of the
. program presenied by Mrs.
• Orion Nelson. Mrs. Nelson
: explained that plant life was
~ lhe first life on earth having
. appeared about 400 billion
·. years ago. She described a
plant as a green living thing

f,

•

l n ~H a
.. , 1'1 •

,.

USDA
CHOICl
We Feature USDA
Beef - U.S. Govt.

Racine

Social Events

By Mrs. Francia Morris
Mrs. Robert Warden is a
""alieni at Holzer Medical
r·eenter.
: Mrs. Ella Jean Badgley is a
: flu patient at Holzer Medical
! Center.
The Rev. Edward Fischer is
~ the interim pastor of the First
~ Baptist ClnJrch. Mrs. Fisher
was here for Sunday services
and they were guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Johnson
of Pennsylvania were recent
overnight guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Powell.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve BacDey
and KeW of Cl&gt;lumbus spent
the weekend with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
Mr. and Mn. Ralph Diddle of
Winfield, W. Va., were recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Powell.

1·

Inspected

Meat lo.af

with roots in the soil and with
leaves, stem and flowers above
the. ground.
She spoke of seeds, how they
differ in size, shape, texture
and color, yet maintain the
same basic struclure within a
proteclive.coat. Seeds contain
little moisture, she said, and
most can be stored dry for long
periods. A seed needs air,
moisture and warmth to
germinate, Mrs. Nelson explained, and the first growth to
emerge is the young root or
radicle which grows rapidly.
The root system anchOrs the
plant in lhe soil and provides
nutrients needed for growth. In
some plants; she explained, the
root system is also a storage
organ which enables the plant
to survive in winter and grow
again the next year.
Further explaining growth,
Mrs. Nel&lt;on said that the
downward growth of the plant
is swiftly followed by the upward growth of its primary
shoot. The embryo stem grows
to the light and the light
energizes the ·stem tissues for
lhe production of leaves where
the food is produced and then
circulated throughout the
plant.
.Mrs. Nelson explained the
pollination process and the
process
of
reseeding .
Following the meeting the
hostess served a dessert course
to those named and Mrs.
Pearley Nelson, Mrs. Miles
Nelson, Mrs. Kearney Ogdm,
Mrs. Lawrence Chapman, Mrs.·
Bert Hoosier, Mrs. Henry
Turner, and Mrs . George A.
Radekin.

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MASON, W.VA.

/THAT SPELL

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MATERIALS' CO.

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1/1

1rtany favors

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cp,E A,Nq.,J~''' ~!, .
HOGG AND ZUSPAN

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Special Prices Now!

PH. 773-5554

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. 15" and 23" Widths

Tuesday Ohio College
Basketball Scores
By United Press International
Ohio U. 89 East. Michigan 73
Marietta 88 Salem IW. Va.l 75
Muskingum 61 Kenyon 52
Otterbein
77 Denison 74
Massi l lon 59 Can. Cent . Catholic Wright State 65 Rio Grande 64
52
Ohio Northern ~6 Heidelberg 49
University School 72
Mounl Union 82 Hiram 68
Cleveland Cathedral Latin 65 Ohio Dominican 80 Cedarville 66

S-The Dally "'- ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 17, 1973

1

INSULATION

High School Basketball Scores
By United Press International
Westerville 69 Up. Ar lington 57
Cleve. St. Joseph 81 Parma
Padua 55
Gall ipolis 65 Chesapeake 46
Pymatuning Valley 69 •
Ashtabula Edgewood 57

cl/tr 'lb.to make·reFesoCTaT:::::
:,,,iProject is accepted
~:

0

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i

Bench ·RedS' MVP

·~:

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart,
You 1NE LIKE"

.

Cambridge 62 New Philadelphia

TWO RECORDS SET
RACINE - Two registered
Guernsey cows in the herd of
Edson Roush, Locust Grove
Farms, near here have
recently completed top official
DHIR actual production
records , accordin g to The
American Guernse y Cattle
Club. The cows were milked
two times a day, the testing
supervised by Ohio State
University. They were Locust
Grove Elsie, a four-year-old
14,830 pounds of milk and 699
pounds of fal, and Locust
Grove Fay, a three-year-old,
12,540 pounds of milk and 733
pounds of fat, both in 305 days.
IN COLUMBUS
Mrs . Richard Vaughan ,
direction of Region 16, Ohio
Congress of Parents · and
Teachers, will be in Columbus
Thursd~y and Friday for an
executive board meeting.

Family Size

A thoughl for the day:
Benjamin Franklin said: "Doth
thou love llfe? Then do not
squander time, for that is the
stuff life is made of."

2

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¢

WEDNESDAY
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
Stated meeting 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday· at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
PAST PRESIDENTS,
American ;Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Welisler Post 39, 7:30 p.
m. Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. George Hackett, St.
THURSDAY
WIWNG WORKERS Class,
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, 7:30!&gt;. m. Thursdav at
the home of Mrs. Stanten
Smith.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, 1:15 p. m.
Thursday at the horne of Mrs.
Fred Goeglein. Mrs. William
Folmer to have the program,
Mrs. Scott Folmer to have the
contest.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Women, 12:30 p. m. luncheon,
Grace Episcopal Church. Mrs.
Patrick Lochary, Mrs. Virginia
Watson, Mrs. James O'Brien,
Mrs. James·Titus, Mrs. 0. B.
Stout, hoslesses.
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League, 7:30
p.m., Thursday, Columbus Gas
of Ohio. Demonstration by the
home economist.
SPECIAL meeting, Pomeroy
Lodge 164 F .&amp;AM, 7 p.m.
Thursday at Masonic Temple
to confer the Master Mason
degree. Ali Master Masons
invited.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
home of Mrs. Charles Hayes.
FRIDAY

SPECIAL -sALE
·-----------------Special Shoe
Clearance

Over 100 Pairs
Women's &amp; Children's
Regular

to 15.00
Values

Talk given at club meeting
" Containers that Aren 't' ' included readings on garwas the theme of an illustrated dening myths. Members
talk by Mrs. Ried Young at a discussed new varielies of
.recent meeting of the Chesler plants, some of which they had'
Ga~den Club held at the home tried last year, and displayed
of Mrs. Dale Kautz.
catalogues.
In conjunction with her talk,
Mrs. Homer Holter was
Mrs. Young showed a variety awarded a blue ribbon for her
of household items which are arrangement. A quiz consuitable for use as containers. dueled by Mrs. Donald Mora,
Mrs. Buel Ridenour and Mrs. Mrs. Pearl Mora, and Mrs.
Jean Summerfield did a Earl Ingels was won by Mrs.
dialogue entitled "Paul Paul Baer, Mrs. Howard
Tucker's Pipe Dreams" which · Knight, Mrs. Robert l~'oods
and Mrs. Earl Dean.
A. rummage sale was
planned for February. Mrs.
Kautz and Mrs. Rose Ginther
PARTY GIVEN
· The birthday anniversaries served refreshments to the 23
of Mrs. Robert Hawk and son, members attending.
Robert Eugene, of 205 Pleasant
Ridge, Pomeroy, were observed with a party recently.
Ice cream and a decorated
MEET TONIGHT
cake were served lo Robert
A
mee
ting .of the past
Eugene's grandmother, Mrs.
presidents of the American
Ora Sinclair, Mrs. Mildred
Legion
Auxiliary of Drew
Roberts and daughter,
Meloday, Eloise Hoffman, Mr. Webster Post 39 scheduled for
tonight at the home of Mrs.
and Mrs. Robert 0. Bowles and
George Hackett, Sr. has been
Michael,' Fay Reibel, Mrs.
Beity Stivers and Janet, cancelled due to the illness of
Mr,. Hackett.
He wasr admitted
,
, ,
,,
Pomeroy.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
Monday night.

RACINE LODGE 461,
F&amp;AM, special meeting, at
7:30 p. m. Friday for work in
the E.A. de gree . Refreshments. Ali Master Masons
invited.
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citize11s Club January meeting
cancelled. Next meeting, Feb.
15 at 7:30 p. m. at Harrisonville
School.
REV. RICHARD W. Jaymes,
evangelist of Bellefontaine
speaking each evening through
Jan. 28 at Syracuse Church of
Nazarene. Special music,
public invited.
Covered dish dinner, take own
table service.
SATURDAY
POINT PLEASANT Bible
MEIGS COUNTY Retired' Choir, program of Christian
Teachers Assn ., 12:30 p.m. music at Pomeroy Church of
Saturday
at
Pomeroy the Nazarene, 7:30 p. m.
Elementary School. Talk by Saturday. Program will inAttorney Fred Crow on probate clude choir, solo, duet and trio
law and Homestead Act. numbers. Public invited.

congregation voted approval to
become an active member of
this organization with Moore
and Franklin Ryther to be the
1973 representatives from the
congregation.
· Jones gave the financial
report for 1972 which showed
all funds in good standing and
presented the 1973 proposed
budget which was approved by
the congregation.
·
The Rev. Arthur C. Lund,
pastor, called attending to the
entire annual report and made
comments on the accomplishments of 1972 and the
challenges of !973.
Ryther, congregational
chairman, opened the meeting
with prayer asking ei!peclally
for guidance and wisdom for
the congregation and Its
leaders in the New Year.

VISIT MADE
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Grueser,
Middleport, spent the weekend
in Wheeling, W. Va., visiting
her son and daughter-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Johnson,
Jr . Other guests at the Johnson
home were Mr. and Mrs.
Howard I. Snyder, Cleveland .

Ca11No. 484
PTA RESCHEDULED
A meeting of the Middleport
PTA has been rescheduled for
Monday night. It was cancelled
this past Monday night due to
the death of Larry Morrison,
assistant superintendent of the
Meigs Local School District.

Nationally Advar11sad at $79.95

Save $20 on a rnanress and another $20 on a bOle
spring during Bemco's fabulous Roaring Twenties
Sale.
.
·.
,
The Medi·Rest Supreme 1s des1 gned with Bemco s

I

lb.

SOLlLOQUV

lb. 7.5 .

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69~ 30oi'?69~

ramous UmhJsed Construction• to gi'le you a really com·
rortable nighl's sleep. And Bemco's Coil-Guard• support
gi'oles extra lirmness to keep your back in shape ror years
to come.

· Diamond value is determined
by cut, co_lor, and clarity as
·well as size . So a big diamond
is not aiWavs the best buy!
.Let us show you why a
Keepsake Diamond Ring is
your best buy . Everv Keepsake engagement diamond is
perfect. We guarantee it (or

WED . R ING

JUOD
W!D . lUNG

IEMCO GIVES
ROARINB TiVENTlES
SAVIIGS ON THE
MEDl-REST CLASSIC~ TOO.

·•:t•ts
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Now only

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. at $8!!.95 each pie ce

replacement assured.)

Fairmont Features

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THEBEM~O

'QUILTORAMA PRESTIGE'
With li.IXUIIOUI dOUble deep
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lATEST FASHIONS IN
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SOME HOUSE
SLIPPERS
Ladies &amp; Children's

MEN'S DRESS

I SHOES
I IN SPECIAL

~ PRICE__ J.C~!N.:~!~
Special Markdowns Now On
Men's &amp; Children's Shoes
and Ladies' Fashion Boots

--------------~---·
Matching Handbags On Sale

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Chapman's
SHOES

POMEROY

Charter No. 8441
NaUonalllaDk Region No. t
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF mE

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

NOW ONLY

IP-!1-~!)S

·-----------------MISS AMERICA &amp; NATlJRALIZERS

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of the St. Paul Council, Ryther
e1 ted chairman and
was
ec
B
·
d 1
raun was name
v ce
chalnnan for 1973.

CHAPMAN'S

Ro.cmnq Sr=tv1ngs on King nnd Queen Size Comfort. too

FRENCH CITY WIENERS

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Chapter \of Beta s;•m_a Phi
Sorority Thursday "'mght to
again this year sponsor a girl
at Buckeye Girls' Stale to be
held in June al Capital
University.
Mrs. Pearl Welker reported
that lhe fee is $70. She also
reported on progress being
made with I he children 's
reading trail _pain~ngs and
commented on work of the
ClttzeilS' Committee . at the
Meigs County Children's
Home.
Mrs. Mildred Karr, social
chairman, reported on plans
for a St. Patrick's Day party
where the husbands will be
guests. Also discussed were,
plans for the annual Founders'
Day banquet, a combined
event of the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter and Xi Ganuna Mu
Chapter.
A rnmmage sale was announced for Feb. 2 with the

Pomeroy, Ohio

2 lb. $1 59

12 pall

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~ price
lola's Dress Shop

SAUSAGE

ICE MILK BARS

:_;_··1,.

DRESSES

PORK

BOILING
BEEF.

CABBAGE
lb.l e

Election of new officers for Minutes of the semi-annual
the Church Council for 1913 meetin_g· were read by
announced plans fo_r an auction highlighted the annual meeting ~boenleb.
of the congregation of St. Paul
At the Monday night meeting
of homemade arttcles at lhe Lutheran Church, Pomeroy,
next regular meeting of the Sunday morning following the
Chapter. Each member was
requested to provide an article w~-~:~~iected officers
for the auction.
Meeting at the home of Mrs. are Richard Jones, treasurer;
Rose
Sisson, members William Baer, secretary;
welcomed -Peggy Gurtls, a . Franklin Ryther, elder; Don
former member of the chapter. Diener, Fennan Moore, and E.
R. Yost, deacons; James Fry
Mrs .. Karr and Mrs . Velma Rue and William Anderson,
were in charge of the cultural trustees. These .new officers
program using the topic "Easy
join Miss Erna Jesse, financial
and Informal Living." They secretary, Trell Schoenleb,
conducted a group par.- eld~tr' Kenneth Braun and
ticipation program on the
Raymond Adams, deacons,
effects of reading, television, and Charles Evans and Mickey
radio and movies on everyday Williams, trustees to make up
life. Mrs. Margaret Follrod the Cl&gt;uncil for 1973 _
presided at the meeting. Mrs .
Moore , "congregational
Ann Rupe was a contributing member and chairman of an
hostess.
Mrs. · Eleanor Thomas and ecumenical housing committee
representing various churches
Mrs. Reva Vaughan will he in the county, reported to the
hostesses for the Jan . 25 congregation on efforts to
meeting.
obtain new housing for senior
citizens in the county. The

.r

What You Should Know
About Diamonds.

Ohio Valley

lb.

.
Fresh, Solid ·Heads

,:0:

January Sale!

FOR STEW ••• FOR SOUP

10 lb.
lloz.

!$

c.aIen·da·r

·

. It was . vote_d during a location to be reported later,
"·::1 meeting oi the Xj Ganuna Mu and Mrs. 'Lois Rosenbaum also

.

Misses' Sizes.

(Beef &amp; Pork)

TIDE

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I Lutherans elect new Cou_n_cil officers .~·

Large group of

MIX

CLOSED SUNDAYS

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;:;8::::::::::~:::: ::::::m::~::::~:::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::&lt;:: :::::::::: ::::::::: :::~::: : ::::::::::::~:::&lt;&gt;.&gt;.::: - .:::::~~~::~$~$:':':~:::$;:;:~wH'..:&gt;.:&gt;~~#..,

of Middleport, Ohio In the Slate of Ohio, at the close of business oo December 30,
1972 publlshed In response to call made by Comptroller of the currency, uoder
Tille 12, Uulted States Code, Section 181.
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - - - - - $ 1,029,523.26
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2,746,000.00·
Obligations of Slates and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - 1,398,442.00
Other securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 15,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
Wlder agreements to resell - - - • - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 900,000.00
Loans - - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4,665,675.83
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
100,871.94
other assets representing hank premises - - - Real estate owned other than bank premises - - - - 21,648.58
- - 4,032.94
Otherassets - - - - - - - -- - - • - $10,881,194.5li
TOTAL ASSETS - - - - - - - - • • • •
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations • - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - $2,285,443.27
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6,779,227.72
Deposits of United States Government . - - - - - - - - - - - 243,087.49
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - - 418,723.78
Deposits of commercial banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5,000.00
Certlfied and officers' checks, elc. - - - - - - - - - - - - - 56,360.09
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - • - • • • $9.787,842.35
(a) Total'demand deposits - - - - • - - • $2.847,092.00
(b) Total time and savings deposits - • - - - $6,940,750.35
- 193,879.80
Other liabilities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $9,981,722.15
TOTAL UABIUTIES • - - • - - - - - - • - - RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans'
(set up.pursuantto IRS rulings) - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - $71,786.65
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
• $71,786.65
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total - - - - - .. -- - - - - - $827,685.75
Comrnori Stock-total par value - - - . - - 100,000.00
No. shares authorized 2,000
No. shares outstanding 2,000
400,000.00
Surplus - - - - - -=-- - - Undivided profits - - - - ·- - · 327,685.75
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
827,685.75
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - - - - .
$10,S81,194.5li
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar
$9,6j12,420.11
days ending with_call date • - • - - - - ' Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
$4,680,053.68
days ending with call da'" - - - - - - - I, Manning Kloes, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that
this report of condition ls true and correct to the best of my knowledge and
beUef.
Malllling Kloos, Cubler

.•

Ingels .Furniture.
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
PH,ONE 992-2635

· MIDDLEPORT

We, tl)e undersigned directors attest the correctneslo! this report of condition wid declare that it has been elUIIllined .by l!ll and to the best of our
kno)VIedge and belief is true 'and correct.
·

Paul s. Smart

Harold E. Hubbud
Dale M. Dutton

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Dtrecton

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6- The Daily Sentinel,Middleport-J:'omergy,O.,Jan. 17, 1973

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Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel .Classifieds .Get ·R esults!·
WANT

A~

Notice

0A'b'ttmN
"liE
,·5 P .M. Day Btfore Publl cailo n
MQnda-y Deadline 9 a.m .

Cancellation - Corrections

MEIGS Coun ty Fish and Game
Association, Thursday, Jan .
18, 7: JCJ p,m. at th e Syracuse

'

Will be accepted until9a .m . for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publ i sher reserves the

Club Room; members are

right to edit or r elect any ads
deemed
obH!ttlonal .
Ttle o
p ublisher w i ll not be r esponsible.
for more than on• incorrect
inse rt i on .
·
RATES
" For Waftt Ad Service
5 cen ts per Word one inser t ion
Minimum Cllarge 75c
12 cents' per word three
con5ecullve Insertions .
:
18 cen ts per word six con ~

sec utlve insertions .

25 Per Cerit Oisc·ount on pa id
ads and ad s pa id wi th in 10 dl!IY'
CARD OF THANKS . '
·
&amp;

OBITUARY

$1. 50 for 50 word rh inim'-'m

Each additional word 2c .
BL IND ADS
Add !'tiona I 25c Char'ge · per

Advertise111ent .
.

. QFFICE HOURS

8:30a .m . tO 5:00p.m . Dal ly,
8:30 , a.m. to 12:0 0 Noon
Sat urday .

Card c' Thanks
WE, MRS. Flrn Gaul and
childr en, wish to express our
since re thanks and apprec iation to the staff of

Veterans Memorial Hospital

for care given to our dear
husband and father duri ng his
many
ti mes
of
hos pital izatlon . We wi-sh es-

pecially

to

!hank

asked lo attend; election will
be held.
1·16·3tc

v, DUPLEX wall·to·wall carpeti ng, small yard ; available

now ; phone 9'12·2780 or 992·
3432 .
1-16.tfc

"HElL"
HEATING &amp;
OOOLING
Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Healers
Plumbing·
Electr'ical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448

. Pomeroy,

o.

Dr . HOOD 'S AQUARIUMS ; fish

Boonsue and Sally Sauvage of

the office stall. the Racine
Emergency Squad lor their
quick response at the lime ol
his death, the Rev. Freeland
Norris,_Ewing Funeral HonJ_e.

Gerald Powell for the music
and all the neighbors. friend s

"

...

and supplies i new location,

Ash Street, Middleport near
park ; phone 9'1 2·5443.
1·7·1fc

THERE will be a special
meeting of the Racine Gun
Club on Salurday, January zo,
7:30 p.m.; relreshmenls will
be served.
1-17-3tc

Q\

For Rent

$3995

2·

.

EXPERi

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

·~eei · IUiglfment .

992· 2094

THE .SHOP

.606 E. Main

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

1

nished ; phone 9'12-274?.
1·1,..tfc

'

- - -- 2 BEDROOM mobile home on

and

FURNITURE

old Rt. 33, adults only: phone
9'12-6294 or 992-6385 after 8
p.m.
1-17-10tc

'5.55 .

on Most American
C.rs. ··
. ..
,.

·•

Stop In and See Our
.Floor Display.

'

'

'

- GUARANTEED-- .
Phone 992-2094 , !

PoineroyJiOOii.&amp; Auto
Open 8TII5 , .:. - ·
Monday thru Sajurdl!y ,
E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
. .606
-··--.
----- .. •-- ..

MOBILE 'home, 12 x 65, 13 ft.
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
e•pando; partially furnish~;
cancelled?- Lost
your
air-conditioned; nice For Sale
operator's license? Call 992·
location ; $140 a month ;
2966.
deposit required ; need '1971 CAMARO 4 speed VB
6-15-lfc
references; phone 9'12·6615.
Bucket Seats. Reasonable. =-o---,--==~
1-17-5tc
Call after 5, ??2-7201.
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
the larjjest
1-15-61c SEWAGE
SYSHMSMILLER
CLEAN- From
Bulldozer Radiator
UNFURNISHED 3-room
ED, REPAIRED.
apartment, adults only. No
SANITATION, STEWART, I:Sm1all~ist Heater dore ..
Nathan Blgts
. ~~~~ro~08 Spring Ave .. ·coAL&gt; Limestone, E•celsiol OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
Radiator
Spoeilillit
10·4-tfc
1-7-tfc Salt Works, E. Main St.,'
::-::::~==-:--::-,..-:--:'Pomeroy . Phone 992·38'11. I
•
' 3 AND • ROOM furnished and .
4-12-lfc SEWING MACHINES . Repair

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
1'PMEROY, OHIO

------

BEDROOM furnished
apartment, 114 Mulberry, no

1-10-tfc
1&gt; DOUBLE, 2 bedroom, fur·

,!._,

Mrs. Steven !Wanda ) Eblin,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy (La urel Cliff
Rd. off Rt. 7 By -Pass); phone
992·2272.
1-3-30·tc

If, I HAVE
To Go
Take Me To

dogs or cats; adults;
references ; phone 992-6698.

locks. Dark green vinyl tool with medium green In color.
Radio &amp; rear speaker. S-H-A-R-P.

TAX Service, Federal and State
Income Taxes ; dally except
Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m ..
evenings by appointment ;

'

reference.: preferably Meigs
County: phone 992·3062.
1-1•·1Bic U-~----~---------------------------------=~--~--~~

new car . Comfortron air, 400 V-8 engine, with power diSC
front brakes, !}teering &amp; automatic, power windows &amp; door

KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS.
SPECIALS MONTHLY .
PHONE HELEN JANE
BROWN , MIDDLEPORT.
OHIO 9'12-5113. ·
12-3-lfc

, ... .

'

Business Services::

bedroom modern home; have

1971 CHEVROLET
$3500
Caprice Sport Sedan. Less than 15,000 miles &amp; spotless
inside &amp; out. 5 new white.wall tires transferred from '73

Notice

. ,

'

WOULD LIKE to rent a 3 o'r &lt;

Capr ice 4-door. new car title &amp; balance of warranty,
covert with brown vinyl roof, tinted glass, factory air,
front &amp; rear guards, radio &amp; rear speaker, white-wa ll
tires. Nice and clean . Retail $4860. Priced to move.

·Pomeroy Motor Co.

'

Wanted To Rent

Z SIGNS .

1972 CHEVROLET

"

.

Pomeroy·
~ · IU:.TJ Motor Co..

,

1•

Wanted To Buy

.---------. ======--:'cWANTED
CHIPWOOD
·

unfurnished

Poles

Phone 9'12-5434.

Maximum
Diameter
10" on
Largest End

llelp Wanted

apartments

·

·
4-12-ffc SINGER automal lt sewing
machine; like new in walnut
cabinet. Makes design sill·

RN part time for Family
Planning Clinic In Meigs
County. Please call 9'12-5912.
1-14-12tc

service, all makes. 992-2284.

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Sing~r Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3·29-lfc

ches, zig-zags_, buttonholes, ---::- : - : : - - -- , - - blind hems, overcasts, etc .. DO.ZER.. and back hoe work,

$85. Call · Ravenswood, 273·
952i or 273-9893.
1·11 -lfc

ponds and septic tanks, ditching service ; top soli, fill
dirt, limes tone; B&amp;K Excavating. Phone 9?2-5367,
Dick Karr, Jr.
?·l-Ife

S_MllH NELSON
MOTORS. Toiil'e..Oy'
INC.
99t.m4

SEE US FoR·: Awnings, storm
doors and windows/ carports,

marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. A. Jacob, aales
representative . . For free
estimates, phone Charles
lisle, Syracuse• V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
·
, 3-2-lfc

EXTRAORDINARY OP - WALNUT stereo-radio comPORTUNITY. International bination, 4 speed lnterml•ed
Organization needs . local
help in so many ways at the
changer, 4 speaker sound ----~---­
representative to sell and system, dual volume controls.
death of our husband and
· service established business
GUN SHOOT, also rifle malches
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
f~t her, Jake Gaul.
Balance $69.57 . Use our Real Estate For Sale
Rock Springs Fairground.
accounts. Twenty-one or over,
Septic tanks Installed. George
1-17-llc - open si tes only and special
budget
terms.
Call
9'
1
2-7085.
DELIVERED
10·10-tlc
bondable. Send brief resume
deer slug match ; Forked Run
(B ill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
1-11-61c
7 ROOM house, utility room , 1112
to: Ralph Brown, 455 Jerry
Spor ts man Club. Sunday,
TO
.' &lt;-25-tfc
baths, buill -In ca binets ,
Found
Street, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 . BEAUTIFUL Colonial Maple
Jan. 21. 12 noon .
BIISIN ESS Opportunity for
I
Or, phone (614) ••6·9353 stereo, AM-FM radio, 4 carpet, double garage, city ELNA and White SewlriH
1·ll·3tc
men and women. Inquire by
MAN' S bllllold, may ha ve if
evenings lor an appointment.
speakers, 4 speed automatic water , 1 acre level ground,
Machines '·· service on a
wr iting: R. D. 2, Bo• 73.
identified; call 9'12-2324.
1·1S.Stc changer, separate controls. close to ·School, Route 681 , makes. Reasonable rates .
Racine, Ohio.
1-17-3tc
Balahce $7?.70. Use our Tuppers Plains; phone 378· The Sewing Center, Mid·
1-5-121p
dleporl, Ohio.
budget terms. Call 992-7085. 6374, Robert Barber.
Pets For Sale
1-l7-61p
1-1J.6tc
11-16-tlc
On Old Rt. 33
AKC toy poodle puppies, $75,
LEGAL NOTICE
11
$85;
Siamese
kittens,
$10;
36 X:2J' 'x.009
-READY-MIX
CONC-RETJ:
Phone 992-2689
STARCRAFT. Complete line of
phone 1-256-62&lt;7.
delivered
right
. to your
ADVERTISEMENT
Pomeroy, Ohio
1-7-101c
Starcraft Travel Trailers and
prolect.
Fast
and
easy. Free
FOR BIDS
Fold down campers. Quality
Phone
9?2-3284.
estimates,
Not ice Is hereby given that
Service - Highest
sea l ed bids will be re ce ived by
WANTED - Horse drawn grain JUST ARRIVED, direct from and
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
discount
in
Tri-State.
Camp
the Clerk of the BOARD OF
Florida, tropical fish by the
dri ll, 7·10 single .disk
Middleport, Ohio.
Starcraft Sales, Rt. 62
TR U STE ES OF RUT L AND
hundreds, at Showalter's Wet Conley
preferred. Hugh Leifheit, 9'126·JO·Ifc
N. of Point Pleasant, Behind
TOW N SHIP , MEIG S COUNTY ,
USED OFFSET PLATES
Pet, Che•ter, Ohio.
'
6497.
RUTLAND , OHIO unlit 12
Red
Carpet
Inn,
phone
675·
HAVE
1-15-Jtp
1·10-l?tp 5384.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANEO
O'Ci ocJ&lt;. on th e 31st day of
MANY USES
REASONABLE
rates. Ph .... ·
January , 1973 for furnishing a
1-12-llc
OLD lurniture, oak tables, PARKVIEW Kennels going out
hydrau l ic rotary mower for
4782,
Gallipolis.
John Russell,
of buslne55. Big price
Township use , according to th e
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
Owner
&amp;
Operator.
20~
speci fi cations for such mower
beds or complete households. reduction on all dogs. All AK·
5-12·1fc
on f i le at the offi ce of th e
c. 5?2 Broadwaf. &amp; Ash
11.0 Mechanic Street
8
for
11.00
Wrile M. D. Miller, Rl . 4,
Buy
For
Youl
Town ship Cl er ic
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992- Streets, Middlepor , Ohio.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Pomeroy, Olllo 457"
The contract w i ll be
ON
lOUR
DIAL
12·13-tlc
6271.
Complete Service
I.
awarded to th e lowest and best
1-7-ttc
ONE STORY
Phone 9&lt;9-3821 ·
bidder . The Trustees reser ve
For Sale
Custom
t~ e r ig ht to reie ct any and al l
3 BEDROOMS - New bath ,
Racine, Ohio
b1ds or to se lect in t heir opin ion
Station Wagon
nice kitchen, ul)l lty room,
Crill Bradford
.
For
Trade
t h~ bid for the equipm ent best
Auto. trans., P.S., 351-V·8
dining , and front porch.
5-1) fc
SUited·,fpr their needs. Cop ies ol
H with . Sargent ONE DIESEL fuel furnace, engine, 4 new tkes. (snow
Meigs Care Line, 992- FARMALL
th e spec ifications may be ob phone 94?-4761.
loader will trade for Farlmall
tires on rear). 35,000 actual
Le~eU~C;~n~E~~:~· '" 'l:i~~' Af'PlTAl-ltEH~V~l~:
tained from Edn a M. Swick.
Court
St.
7502
A;
phone
843-2242.
1 - l~·6fc , miles, excellerlt condition.
Cl erJ&lt;,
Rut la nd
Towns hip
LARGE LIVING - Nice
Repair of ·all laundry ,
1-HI·ltp
House, Rutland. Ohio.
dining and kitchen. Large
eq~lpment, refrigeration
By Ord er of the
2 PIECE bedroom suite. booklevel lot on hard road. Want
~ulpment and house wiring ..
TRUSTEE S OF
case
bed,
double
dresser
with
Sl0,500.00.
all 614-992-6050.
RUTLA N D TOWNSHIP
8 drawers, no mirror ; call In
4 BEOROOMS
12-31-JOtp
Edna M . Swic J&lt; ,
ley was born Jan . 17, 1927.
born in the White House. He bought the Virgin Islands !rom evenings 992-3163.
Clerk
SPLIT
LE
VEL
1'
1
2
baths,
Ph. ?92-2176
Pomeroy
( 1) J. 10. 17, J t
1-17-61c
On this day In history :
was the son or Thomas and Denmark for $25 million.
loads of closets, large
Real Estate For Sale
In 1706, American statesman Martha Randolph and the In 1950, nine bandits staged a 600 BALES of Timothy hay ;
modern ki tchen, all electric
home.
Basement
and
7
acres
NOTICE OF
and author Benjamin Franklin grandson ol President Thomas $1 5 million
Mobile Homes For sale
bb
f phone 9'12·6214.
APPOINTMENT
of land. Need $30,000.00.
ro
ery
o
1-17-6tc
·
Jelferson.
·
Case No. 20,834 was born.
Brink's
armored
car
In ---,....,.----~
NEAR POMEROY
a
CASH pa ld tor all makes and
Estate ol Br uno P . · Casc i
In 1806, the first baby was
In 1917, the United Stales Boston.
4 BEDROOMS - Large
1972 APACHE Eagle Fold-up
Deceased .
models
of
mobile
homes
.
,...-CLELAN~
.,
camper ; includes spare tire,
Not ice is her eby given that
Phone area code 614-423-?531 . kitchen with dining . Hardcanopy and plastic storm
Pau l L. Case / of 766 Brownell ~@ ~·:&gt;,::&gt;"i•W·":':'·"·"&lt;·'~·····~····~&lt;·"'-'" W•"•'•"•"•'!$:"•"•'•"W W '"~"~"@."--·~w·······-~
wood
floor
s,
full
basement,
REALTY
"
&lt;·13-ttc
1
Avenu e, M iddleport , Ohio , has
window . Trailer has been
and oil lurnace. Acre lot.
601 E. Ml1n
~
be en duly appointe d Ad wired for electric, 3 outlets. NEED ANOTHER BEDROOM, Ask ing $12,000.00.
' ,. • Pomeroy . . . , ·
m lni strator of th e Es tate of
E•cellent condition, S675, call
NEW
DEN
QR
FAMILY
ROOM
Bruno P . Cascr, deceased. late
992-5815 after 5 p.m .
FOR
YOUR
MOBILE BUSINESS BUILDING of ,Middleport, Meigs County ,
1-17-41c
Oh1 0 .
ECONOMY PRICED
HOME? EASILY DONE Has 2900 sq. ft . of space.
Creditors are r equ ired to t ile
POMEROY - New siding,
WITH
A
VEMCO
ADD-A
"She
traveled
with
trunks
ol
fine
clothes
185,000
BTU
Natural
gas
PAINT Damage. 1972 Zig-Zag
thei r claims with sa id fiduc ia r y
new roof , new carport, •
ROOM. SEE IT AT : furnace , 2 large business
BY JACK O'BRIAN
and a nurse and went round and round the world Sewing Machines. Still In
within four month s.
YOUNG'S
MOBILE
HOME
bedrooms, bath . 2 porche5. •
2
large
storage
offices,
and
Dat ed this 4th day of January
THEY TRIED IT AND LIKED IT
until she was 99 - when she died. Another ole original cartons. No at .
SALES,
ST.
RT.
7 &amp;· 35
Other
features . $5,..00.00.
197 3.
roo
ms.
Excellent
location
for
tachments needed as our
(BELOW
SILVER
FURNISHED
HOME
NEW YORK (KFS ) - We reel a little like lady, a Mrs. Jones, never got off a Cunard ship. controls
the
future.
Appointment
Manning D. Webster ,
are built-in. Sews
MEMORIAL BRDG . ). PLEASE.
Judge Walter Winchell some 15 or 20 years ago when
MIDDLEPORT Lot
She
traveled
world
cruises
and
trips
to
South
wllh
1
or
?
needles.
makes
GALLIPOLI
S.
Court of Comm on Pleas
105•135
level,
2
bedrooms:
Probat e Div ision he's taken his lirst airplane trip in many years,
Africa and back and Mediterranean cruises and buttonholes, sew on buttons,
1·17-llc 4 LARGERUTLAND
bath, F.F. gas heat, storm
BEDROOMS - 8
monograms, and blind hem ·
Meig s County, Ohio
having come up scared ol nothing in particular : when the Caronia had to go Into drydock lor,the ~! i tch . Full cash price $3a.50 .,-: - - - - - - - - : --MI room antique brick home on
doorr&amp; .window•. porches,
( I) HI , 17, 24, Jt
co~ly renovated 3
·
· 1
Route 12• with 2 acres of
the suddenly lrequently airborne Walter started yearly overhaul, she simply had her trunks or budget plan available. •
years
ago. JUST $8,500.00.
prime
land,
for
a
business.
A
.
Phone
9'12-7755.
·•
Air
Conditioner~
raving enthusiastically in his columns and on moved to one of the Queens and crossed and
BEAUTIFUL
BRICK
1' 17-6tc
real
buy
at
$21,500.00.
:·Awnings
his lop-rated radio newscasts, revealing secrets recrossed the Atlantic until she decided she
POMERO~itchen has
RELAX HERE
:··Underpinning
everythlng,31arge B.R. with
about flying known since the Wright Brothers ; needed the change back to the Caronia. Once, a VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
50 ACRES - Of woods,
The Almanac
Model. Complete with all
double closets, 1112 baths, full
briars,
locust,
and
hill
land.
By United Press Internallonal · some folks laughed; not Walter. Walter strange steward was assigned to her suite- not cleaning tools. Small paint : Complete mQbile hQm.e'
•basement with lovely
down. Then $52.77 a
just a cabin, never! - and he took her trunks damage In shipping. Will lake ' '!ierv_rce _. plus gigantic~ 1 1500.00
Today is Wednesday, January discovering anything however belatedly turned
recreation room. 1' acrii
month.
$27
cash
or
budget
plan
that
into
an
absolutely
New
Thing
In
his
wildly
and
bags
oil.
There
was
Holy
Hell
to
pay!
'display
of
mobile
homes
'
ground,
carport. $29,500.00.
NEW
17th, the 17th day ol 1973 with
available. Phone 992-7755.
a
lways
.avallable•al
...
i
LEVEL
lll• ACRES
&lt;
BE'
D
ROOMS
1'
h
baths,
enthusiastic
mind
and
day
in
and
out
WW
ex"And
there's
a
Mrs.
Sharp
who
goes
from
348 to lollow.
1·17·6tc
HARRISONVILLE
'
beautiful
kitchen.
Washer
cruise ship to cruise ship the year 'round. Never
The moon is approaching its citedly flung old knowledge into the air !rom his
MILLER
Corner lot. Grand. older
and dryer hookups. InDC-~i and DC-7 joys or flying; and it was Cilmstops overnight in a hotel!£ she can avoid it. We
home with large building
lull phase.
sulated. Lots of fine closets .
1965 FORD Station Wagon; . • MOBILE HOMES .
40x70,
all In e•cellint conLarge
landscape
lawn.
municalive.
Turned
out
there
were
overall
know
why
these
nice
old
ladies
do
it.
it•s
easy
The morning stars are
stereo tape deck and
dillon.
Home has .(
Asking
only
$21.000.00.
speakers
;
AKC
Collie
pups,
1220
Washington
Blvd.
Mercury, Venus, Mars and whelmingly more millions who never had flown for a man to have a life after his wife dies, and
bedrooms,
· 1'1&gt;
bathtl
NEW
LISTING
$50; phone 773·5758.
:,423-7521
. BELPRE,""''
- 85 pel. or the public hadn't - mostly out ol
he can go out and meet new friends at cluba or
Jupiter.
beautiful
kllchen,
utility
R.,
1
29
ACRES
...:.
On
Route
124
'l-16-5tc
quiet!right, and Waller's message was to them;
pubs, but not a woman, certainly not an old lady
The evening star is Saturn.
• .West, near new coal mine. 20 carJ.l!led. Glassed porches.
THIS YOU MUST 'SEE.,
acres of bottom land suitable
Those born on this date are the airline industry virtually .made Waller its with breeding and the old rules she's lived by." DUE to divorce, 1972 8 track ··Auto Sales
121.500.00.
f9r
housing,
or
mobile
orlicial Pinup Boy.
'
Waiters Gerald and Fltzy over their years stereo console; must sell at
under the sign or Capricorn.
IN PURCHASING A HOME
once; nice walnut finish. This 1963 FORD Falrlane 500, V-8, 4 homes.
We feel the same in a quieter way about our
or experience have analyzed the old gals and setsold much higher, must let . door, automatic, $275. Phone
WE CAN HELP YOU . IFREE GAS ,
Medical missionary Tom Doo9'12-7374.
SPACE FOR LIVING, 24 BEDROOMS - B&gt;ath,
very lirst ocean cruise to the Caribbean aboard
their solution. They can eat th'eir three mepls go for $89.60 or $7.47 a month.
Try
II
In
your
home.
Call
9921-11
-tfc
&amp;
CONECON OM Y
dining
and
front
porch
.
the QE2; although we shan't beat the lively sea
each day in the luxurious dining rooms, such as 5331.
------~-VENIENCE, 3-STYlE &amp;
Large garden, :lO acres In all.
horse in daily revelations of what has been there
the QE2's lavish Queen's Grill. They are greeted
1·16.1fc 'mo 1 TON Ford, dual wheels, Minerals. Asking only
CONSTRUCTION, 4 ~"
LOCATION,
sSlS,OOO.OO.
all along to enjoy. But as we were saying
by headwaiters who become a willing subatitule ~-:-:---'-------=
JUST 1 k 1 d 1
long wh ee l base, power
",e~ ter day, some reverse snobbery had
ror th eir old 1rte
· nd s, now dea d. or gone. The
a
en
n,
e
uxe
zig-zag
TECHNICAL
IN
IF
YOU
CAN'T
DECIDe
ON
brakes,
12'
1
2
fl.
bed,
less
than
sewing machine . This
IFORMATION, 6-PRICE &amp;
23,000 miles, clean as new ; ONE OF THESE , WE HAVE
deflected us ·because our lriends considered it
waiters are solicitous, lriendly servants. They ' machine
darns ,
em - phone · ?85-3554, Harold MANY MORE FOR YOU TO
·FINANCING. CALL OR
square. A day or three at sea and it was our / know the old ladies' gustatory whims and
brolderles, overcasts, butBrewer, Long Bottom.
COME IN TODAY.
SEE
AT
THE
OF.FICE.
tonholes. Pay balance $36.50
1-7-lfc
HENRY E. CLELANO
PICTURES
OF
EACH,
cruise-resistant friends who were indeed
regular prelerences. They are Haltered . to or payments can be arranged.
. BROKER
FREE
BALLOONS
FOR
square. Odd, because some ol our pals had satisfaction by such iamiliar attention. We
Call 992·5331 .
·
3
ASSOCIATES
TO
THE
KIDDlES.
1·16-ffc
taken the same .QE2 to Europe and hadn 't know or one large luxury apartment building on
SERVE YOU.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
992-2259
ASSOCIATE
considered that square; certainly we hadn't
Park Ave. in the 60s wherein the rich live a
"
If
no answer
NO
SUNOAY
SHOWINGS
after a dozen Atlantic crossings by ship, French family to a floor - 18 rooms in each apartment FUEL oil furnace, 120,000 BTU ;
992-2568
or
985-4208
992-3325
has thermostat, registers and
and English; we preferred the latter. - except two; these two exceptions are
some pipe; phone ?85-3979.
Our waiters in ,\he QE2's Queen's Grill told
duplexes of 36 rooms each - and In each 381-16·61c
us of loill or seemingly strange behavior that
room cooperative apartment lives one old lady;
had even their own ,sea-careering sensibilities
who'd probably leap at the chance likewise to
twangl!ng. Such as a Mrs. McBeth, an aging
cruise the world lorever If they'd thought Of it.
..
.
wealthy dowager-type 5th Avenue resident who
. The old Caronia now lives its own llfe or . H~~~~~~~~r .fr~~9!Jcts ;
seldom occupied her cavernous duplex llal but
VIrtually landlocked desperation: the famous
J.S-:iotp
actually traversed the Atlantic for 14 straight
old world-cruising Cunard ship was taken out of . --;:;:;=;;::;::;::;==:::_~
years aboard Cunard's world-cruising ship, the
service more than five years ago and put up for 'r
1 - 16- 121~
Caroma. Never got off except for the annual
sale. AGreek ship operator bought it and made '
Plus Recappable Tire
scraping or the Caronla's bottom plus whatever
ready to put It Into the Caribbean cruise service
scheduled. yearly repairs and Improvements
- except !be yery reasons the Cunard folks
prevented passengers from remain~ aboard ;
pha~ It out ha~ been its lengthily temporary
Mrs . McBeth simply checked Into a undoing: it needs a great deal or repair and
·lliiv'2'
Southampton, Eugland, hOt'elln a direct line of
Improvement to pass the u. S. marine ,
-...;at Pairs
VIsion with the Caronia where she remained
regulatio~s for cruise ships, and so It langulahes ,
FREE
until ready to return lor another year or . at a berth on North River doivnlown, some 50
Tile best .buy In th. , ....·
'
Have slacks &amp; leans for thf
oceangoing luxury.
blocks from the Cunard pie~ at 44th St., awaltirig
whole fomily. · S.ve Ont"She was old and she was very rich and
an infusion of linances which w!U put it back in
Thlrd. . ·
most
or
her
friends
had
either
died
off
or
had
service
for
another
Mrs.
McBeth
or
Mrs.
Jones
'IL
POMEROY
992-7161
moved away from New York," said Fitzy, our
to
cruise to eternity. It actually got a ticket lor
lliil
Jock
W. C.rsey, Mgr.
'
I
Middleport,
741-4211
r Arnold Gr1te
.
Pflone m-mr
waller, who'd.kn.own her from his Caronia days.
parking illegally two years ago!
Rutl1nd · .. .
and relatives for their sincere
ex pression of sy mpathy. and

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

HAYMAN 'S Auction - a good
place to go each . Friday
evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff
on old Rt . 7, 1 mile west of

$7.00 Per Ton

DANTRELL NO IRON MUSLIN

SHEETS

OHIO
PALLET CO.

We Jalk to you
like a person.

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

WMP0/1390

Availabl e in these styles.
Heavenly , Salem Stripes,
Dream Ro se, and Susan 's
Garde .n . Sheets mad e of
Don Pre ss Mu slin which is
easy to core for and NEVER
NEEDS 1Rm41NG.
"MISTY"

- - - -- -

"CORTINA"

,.V~i;~' ;~~~g B~'W;y·

~~~·E:~·.: :::~·
$34.88

d Pl, m u1.,

cold·S d

'

'

1 ~.' 1 "
·. ;1-~ ~"9-;,tliJ.]NINGIII'P/
~
'
(l&lt; h'O, ;rh;J- ·':1

Pomeroy

Meigs
Equipment Co.

~------

.2488

Beautiful Nylo n Pile Room Size Rugl featur ing Ouro9on
'f'ollle lotex Non Skid Backing . A'foi loble in colors of

·-

'

$1588
HECK'S REG.
$22 .88

· · ,.,,., CL'OTHING,.Df,T.I ,•:"'' 11"
!

I'"'~·.·, \J ,,~, ,. "

,),, .... ~, ,

I

~

1

I

CARPET

Indoor -Outdoor Cor pel made of Poly prop lene with Duro ·
gon Wnlf le Backing . Se lect from Tweed ond So lid in
8lue·Gree'1 , Gold, Avoc ado and Red .

TWIN
FITTED

$1099

:·:\;:.~" H~li~mlc~Ji-:~ . ~~

sps

72"t104" OR

u

·

.' .\ '
HECK'SREG .'$~.29
1

•

lo

"

•'

FULL

..

~&lt;"1 1 I

.$258

FTTED
HICK'S REG. $3.99

SIZE
liS" OR

QUEEN
FinED

BATES HOIIEYCOMB

BATES STAR

BED PILLOWS
Stock up now and save on these fine-quality
plump polyester filled pillows with love ly to eking, in delicate shades. Mo chine Washab le

ond Dryable.

BED SPREAD ·
Cho ose from Full or Twin Sizes in a variety of
Wo ~h Fast Decora tor Colors. Made of

18"1124" POlYESTER

100%

Co tton which iw Mach i ne Wa shable and
Dryable and Ne ver Needs Ironing .

99&lt;

BEDSPREAD
Available in Full or Twin Sizes in a variety of
Wo~h Fa st Decorator Colors to Dre ss- Up any
Be droom . Made of 100% Cotton whic h is
Machine Washable and Drya ble and N ever
Need Ironing .
·

..

60".80"
HECK"S REG.

IIIIi SIZE

108'~~1~rOR
FinED

ss99

78"•80"
HECK'S REG. $8.99

21"d7" POLYES·TER

REGULAR
PILLOW CASES

2 FOR 3

5 00

21 "x27" DACRON
$1.99 EACH

1

$168

HECK'S REG. TO $2.99 EACH

HECK'S REG. $7.99

HECK'S REG. $6.99

ti.OTNI/IG DEPT.

Clothing Dept.

CI.OTH/1"
DEPT.
I

HECK'S

IR

.49

MATCHING

KING SIZE
PILLOW CASES

TOSS
PILLOWS
·1

,,

QUILT

, ~rui~· Of-The · Loom Patchwork Quilt available
in assorted prints in sizes 72"x80''. Quilt fit s

11 1

"ful l size bed.

$666

2

•.

'CI,'fJTH/11' DEll.

'
. .,
·'

,.
d/

TWII FlAT

f

f

•• f

•

f

f

I •f

f

Choose from 18"x 18" Square Fur Toss
Pillows in Solid Colors. Foom Filled
and Extra Plump.

f

.FUlLFlAT ........... ..

FUllFinED .......... .
HECK'S R!G· T0.$6.99

CLOTHIIIGDEPT.

GENERAL
TIRE SALES

'

Dryable.

$ . 66

TWIIFITnD ......... ..

HECK'S RlG. $8.99 ,

o.

.

•1

HECK' S REG. $2.99

CI.OTNIIIGD£PT.

DAN RIVER DAN PRESS .
BLEACHED WHITE SHEETS

72" II 04" OR JWIIFITTED .

PolYester Fibe r Filled Mattress Coven which
ore Sonforized and Machine Washable and

PATCHWOR~

$1 99 . PAIR

Da n Press Bleached White Muslin Sheets that ore Easy to Co re
For and Never Never Need Ironing. Pick from assorted styles.

MAtTRESS
COVERS

FRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM

------

I

1

.'! ·.
·~' 1 •! .

••

Elegant Room Size Pol yes ter Shag
Rug s to B rig ht er~ Up ony room in
your home . ChooHt fro m Go ld .
A...ocodo, Orange, Plum and Two
Color Shoge with Latex Boclcing.

'

I

~

8'1z'xl1 1h'IIIDOOR-OUTDOOR

SHAG RUG

NYLON PILE RUG

1970 FORD

The
Daily Sentinel

81/z'xll f/z' PO,lYESTER

81h'xll'h'ROOM SIZE

ss88

$ 88
HECK'S REG.
$3;29

81 "•104" OR FULl FITTED
HECK'S REG. $3.99

$3.99 VALUE
CLOTHIM DEPT.

$tl9

MATCHIIIi CASES

$1.19 PAIR

�•

.,

"I
6- The Daily Sentinel,Middleport-J:'omergy,O.,Jan. 17, 1973

.

.

.

·

.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel .Classifieds .Get ·R esults!·
WANT

A~

Notice

0A'b'ttmN
"liE
,·5 P .M. Day Btfore Publl cailo n
MQnda-y Deadline 9 a.m .

Cancellation - Corrections

MEIGS Coun ty Fish and Game
Association, Thursday, Jan .
18, 7: JCJ p,m. at th e Syracuse

'

Will be accepted until9a .m . for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publ i sher reserves the

Club Room; members are

right to edit or r elect any ads
deemed
obH!ttlonal .
Ttle o
p ublisher w i ll not be r esponsible.
for more than on• incorrect
inse rt i on .
·
RATES
" For Waftt Ad Service
5 cen ts per Word one inser t ion
Minimum Cllarge 75c
12 cents' per word three
con5ecullve Insertions .
:
18 cen ts per word six con ~

sec utlve insertions .

25 Per Cerit Oisc·ount on pa id
ads and ad s pa id wi th in 10 dl!IY'
CARD OF THANKS . '
·
&amp;

OBITUARY

$1. 50 for 50 word rh inim'-'m

Each additional word 2c .
BL IND ADS
Add !'tiona I 25c Char'ge · per

Advertise111ent .
.

. QFFICE HOURS

8:30a .m . tO 5:00p.m . Dal ly,
8:30 , a.m. to 12:0 0 Noon
Sat urday .

Card c' Thanks
WE, MRS. Flrn Gaul and
childr en, wish to express our
since re thanks and apprec iation to the staff of

Veterans Memorial Hospital

for care given to our dear
husband and father duri ng his
many
ti mes
of
hos pital izatlon . We wi-sh es-

pecially

to

!hank

asked lo attend; election will
be held.
1·16·3tc

v, DUPLEX wall·to·wall carpeti ng, small yard ; available

now ; phone 9'12·2780 or 992·
3432 .
1-16.tfc

"HElL"
HEATING &amp;
OOOLING
Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Healers
Plumbing·
Electr'ical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448

. Pomeroy,

o.

Dr . HOOD 'S AQUARIUMS ; fish

Boonsue and Sally Sauvage of

the office stall. the Racine
Emergency Squad lor their
quick response at the lime ol
his death, the Rev. Freeland
Norris,_Ewing Funeral HonJ_e.

Gerald Powell for the music
and all the neighbors. friend s

"

...

and supplies i new location,

Ash Street, Middleport near
park ; phone 9'1 2·5443.
1·7·1fc

THERE will be a special
meeting of the Racine Gun
Club on Salurday, January zo,
7:30 p.m.; relreshmenls will
be served.
1-17-3tc

Q\

For Rent

$3995

2·

.

EXPERi

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

·~eei · IUiglfment .

992· 2094

THE .SHOP

.606 E. Main

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

1

nished ; phone 9'12-274?.
1·1,..tfc

'

- - -- 2 BEDROOM mobile home on

and

FURNITURE

old Rt. 33, adults only: phone
9'12-6294 or 992-6385 after 8
p.m.
1-17-10tc

'5.55 .

on Most American
C.rs. ··
. ..
,.

·•

Stop In and See Our
.Floor Display.

'

'

'

- GUARANTEED-- .
Phone 992-2094 , !

PoineroyJiOOii.&amp; Auto
Open 8TII5 , .:. - ·
Monday thru Sajurdl!y ,
E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
. .606
-··--.
----- .. •-- ..

MOBILE 'home, 12 x 65, 13 ft.
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
e•pando; partially furnish~;
cancelled?- Lost
your
air-conditioned; nice For Sale
operator's license? Call 992·
location ; $140 a month ;
2966.
deposit required ; need '1971 CAMARO 4 speed VB
6-15-lfc
references; phone 9'12·6615.
Bucket Seats. Reasonable. =-o---,--==~
1-17-5tc
Call after 5, ??2-7201.
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
the larjjest
1-15-61c SEWAGE
SYSHMSMILLER
CLEAN- From
Bulldozer Radiator
UNFURNISHED 3-room
ED, REPAIRED.
apartment, adults only. No
SANITATION, STEWART, I:Sm1all~ist Heater dore ..
Nathan Blgts
. ~~~~ro~08 Spring Ave .. ·coAL&gt; Limestone, E•celsiol OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
Radiator
Spoeilillit
10·4-tfc
1-7-tfc Salt Works, E. Main St.,'
::-::::~==-:--::-,..-:--:'Pomeroy . Phone 992·38'11. I
•
' 3 AND • ROOM furnished and .
4-12-lfc SEWING MACHINES . Repair

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
1'PMEROY, OHIO

------

BEDROOM furnished
apartment, 114 Mulberry, no

1-10-tfc
1&gt; DOUBLE, 2 bedroom, fur·

,!._,

Mrs. Steven !Wanda ) Eblin,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy (La urel Cliff
Rd. off Rt. 7 By -Pass); phone
992·2272.
1-3-30·tc

If, I HAVE
To Go
Take Me To

dogs or cats; adults;
references ; phone 992-6698.

locks. Dark green vinyl tool with medium green In color.
Radio &amp; rear speaker. S-H-A-R-P.

TAX Service, Federal and State
Income Taxes ; dally except
Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m ..
evenings by appointment ;

'

reference.: preferably Meigs
County: phone 992·3062.
1-1•·1Bic U-~----~---------------------------------=~--~--~~

new car . Comfortron air, 400 V-8 engine, with power diSC
front brakes, !}teering &amp; automatic, power windows &amp; door

KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS.
SPECIALS MONTHLY .
PHONE HELEN JANE
BROWN , MIDDLEPORT.
OHIO 9'12-5113. ·
12-3-lfc

, ... .

'

Business Services::

bedroom modern home; have

1971 CHEVROLET
$3500
Caprice Sport Sedan. Less than 15,000 miles &amp; spotless
inside &amp; out. 5 new white.wall tires transferred from '73

Notice

. ,

'

WOULD LIKE to rent a 3 o'r &lt;

Capr ice 4-door. new car title &amp; balance of warranty,
covert with brown vinyl roof, tinted glass, factory air,
front &amp; rear guards, radio &amp; rear speaker, white-wa ll
tires. Nice and clean . Retail $4860. Priced to move.

·Pomeroy Motor Co.

'

Wanted To Rent

Z SIGNS .

1972 CHEVROLET

"

.

Pomeroy·
~ · IU:.TJ Motor Co..

,

1•

Wanted To Buy

.---------. ======--:'cWANTED
CHIPWOOD
·

unfurnished

Poles

Phone 9'12-5434.

Maximum
Diameter
10" on
Largest End

llelp Wanted

apartments

·

·
4-12-ffc SINGER automal lt sewing
machine; like new in walnut
cabinet. Makes design sill·

RN part time for Family
Planning Clinic In Meigs
County. Please call 9'12-5912.
1-14-12tc

service, all makes. 992-2284.

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Sing~r Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3·29-lfc

ches, zig-zags_, buttonholes, ---::- : - : : - - -- , - - blind hems, overcasts, etc .. DO.ZER.. and back hoe work,

$85. Call · Ravenswood, 273·
952i or 273-9893.
1·11 -lfc

ponds and septic tanks, ditching service ; top soli, fill
dirt, limes tone; B&amp;K Excavating. Phone 9?2-5367,
Dick Karr, Jr.
?·l-Ife

S_MllH NELSON
MOTORS. Toiil'e..Oy'
INC.
99t.m4

SEE US FoR·: Awnings, storm
doors and windows/ carports,

marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. A. Jacob, aales
representative . . For free
estimates, phone Charles
lisle, Syracuse• V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
·
, 3-2-lfc

EXTRAORDINARY OP - WALNUT stereo-radio comPORTUNITY. International bination, 4 speed lnterml•ed
Organization needs . local
help in so many ways at the
changer, 4 speaker sound ----~---­
representative to sell and system, dual volume controls.
death of our husband and
· service established business
GUN SHOOT, also rifle malches
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
f~t her, Jake Gaul.
Balance $69.57 . Use our Real Estate For Sale
Rock Springs Fairground.
accounts. Twenty-one or over,
Septic tanks Installed. George
1-17-llc - open si tes only and special
budget
terms.
Call
9'
1
2-7085.
DELIVERED
10·10-tlc
bondable. Send brief resume
deer slug match ; Forked Run
(B ill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
1-11-61c
7 ROOM house, utility room , 1112
to: Ralph Brown, 455 Jerry
Spor ts man Club. Sunday,
TO
.' &lt;-25-tfc
baths, buill -In ca binets ,
Found
Street, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 . BEAUTIFUL Colonial Maple
Jan. 21. 12 noon .
BIISIN ESS Opportunity for
I
Or, phone (614) ••6·9353 stereo, AM-FM radio, 4 carpet, double garage, city ELNA and White SewlriH
1·ll·3tc
men and women. Inquire by
MAN' S bllllold, may ha ve if
evenings lor an appointment.
speakers, 4 speed automatic water , 1 acre level ground,
Machines '·· service on a
wr iting: R. D. 2, Bo• 73.
identified; call 9'12-2324.
1·1S.Stc changer, separate controls. close to ·School, Route 681 , makes. Reasonable rates .
Racine, Ohio.
1-17-3tc
Balahce $7?.70. Use our Tuppers Plains; phone 378· The Sewing Center, Mid·
1-5-121p
dleporl, Ohio.
budget terms. Call 992-7085. 6374, Robert Barber.
Pets For Sale
1-l7-61p
1-1J.6tc
11-16-tlc
On Old Rt. 33
AKC toy poodle puppies, $75,
LEGAL NOTICE
11
$85;
Siamese
kittens,
$10;
36 X:2J' 'x.009
-READY-MIX
CONC-RETJ:
Phone 992-2689
STARCRAFT. Complete line of
phone 1-256-62&lt;7.
delivered
right
. to your
ADVERTISEMENT
Pomeroy, Ohio
1-7-101c
Starcraft Travel Trailers and
prolect.
Fast
and
easy. Free
FOR BIDS
Fold down campers. Quality
Phone
9?2-3284.
estimates,
Not ice Is hereby given that
Service - Highest
sea l ed bids will be re ce ived by
WANTED - Horse drawn grain JUST ARRIVED, direct from and
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
discount
in
Tri-State.
Camp
the Clerk of the BOARD OF
Florida, tropical fish by the
dri ll, 7·10 single .disk
Middleport, Ohio.
Starcraft Sales, Rt. 62
TR U STE ES OF RUT L AND
hundreds, at Showalter's Wet Conley
preferred. Hugh Leifheit, 9'126·JO·Ifc
N. of Point Pleasant, Behind
TOW N SHIP , MEIG S COUNTY ,
USED OFFSET PLATES
Pet, Che•ter, Ohio.
'
6497.
RUTLAND , OHIO unlit 12
Red
Carpet
Inn,
phone
675·
HAVE
1-15-Jtp
1·10-l?tp 5384.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANEO
O'Ci ocJ&lt;. on th e 31st day of
MANY USES
REASONABLE
rates. Ph .... ·
January , 1973 for furnishing a
1-12-llc
OLD lurniture, oak tables, PARKVIEW Kennels going out
hydrau l ic rotary mower for
4782,
Gallipolis.
John Russell,
of buslne55. Big price
Township use , according to th e
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
Owner
&amp;
Operator.
20~
speci fi cations for such mower
beds or complete households. reduction on all dogs. All AK·
5-12·1fc
on f i le at the offi ce of th e
c. 5?2 Broadwaf. &amp; Ash
11.0 Mechanic Street
8
for
11.00
Wrile M. D. Miller, Rl . 4,
Buy
For
Youl
Town ship Cl er ic
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992- Streets, Middlepor , Ohio.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Pomeroy, Olllo 457"
The contract w i ll be
ON
lOUR
DIAL
12·13-tlc
6271.
Complete Service
I.
awarded to th e lowest and best
1-7-ttc
ONE STORY
Phone 9&lt;9-3821 ·
bidder . The Trustees reser ve
For Sale
Custom
t~ e r ig ht to reie ct any and al l
3 BEDROOMS - New bath ,
Racine, Ohio
b1ds or to se lect in t heir opin ion
Station Wagon
nice kitchen, ul)l lty room,
Crill Bradford
.
For
Trade
t h~ bid for the equipm ent best
Auto. trans., P.S., 351-V·8
dining , and front porch.
5-1) fc
SUited·,fpr their needs. Cop ies ol
H with . Sargent ONE DIESEL fuel furnace, engine, 4 new tkes. (snow
Meigs Care Line, 992- FARMALL
th e spec ifications may be ob phone 94?-4761.
loader will trade for Farlmall
tires on rear). 35,000 actual
Le~eU~C;~n~E~~:~· '" 'l:i~~' Af'PlTAl-ltEH~V~l~:
tained from Edn a M. Swick.
Court
St.
7502
A;
phone
843-2242.
1 - l~·6fc , miles, excellerlt condition.
Cl erJ&lt;,
Rut la nd
Towns hip
LARGE LIVING - Nice
Repair of ·all laundry ,
1-HI·ltp
House, Rutland. Ohio.
dining and kitchen. Large
eq~lpment, refrigeration
By Ord er of the
2 PIECE bedroom suite. booklevel lot on hard road. Want
~ulpment and house wiring ..
TRUSTEE S OF
case
bed,
double
dresser
with
Sl0,500.00.
all 614-992-6050.
RUTLA N D TOWNSHIP
8 drawers, no mirror ; call In
4 BEOROOMS
12-31-JOtp
Edna M . Swic J&lt; ,
ley was born Jan . 17, 1927.
born in the White House. He bought the Virgin Islands !rom evenings 992-3163.
Clerk
SPLIT
LE
VEL
1'
1
2
baths,
Ph. ?92-2176
Pomeroy
( 1) J. 10. 17, J t
1-17-61c
On this day In history :
was the son or Thomas and Denmark for $25 million.
loads of closets, large
Real Estate For Sale
In 1706, American statesman Martha Randolph and the In 1950, nine bandits staged a 600 BALES of Timothy hay ;
modern ki tchen, all electric
home.
Basement
and
7
acres
NOTICE OF
and author Benjamin Franklin grandson ol President Thomas $1 5 million
Mobile Homes For sale
bb
f phone 9'12·6214.
APPOINTMENT
of land. Need $30,000.00.
ro
ery
o
1-17-6tc
·
Jelferson.
·
Case No. 20,834 was born.
Brink's
armored
car
In ---,....,.----~
NEAR POMEROY
a
CASH pa ld tor all makes and
Estate ol Br uno P . · Casc i
In 1806, the first baby was
In 1917, the United Stales Boston.
4 BEDROOMS - Large
1972 APACHE Eagle Fold-up
Deceased .
models
of
mobile
homes
.
,...-CLELAN~
.,
camper ; includes spare tire,
Not ice is her eby given that
Phone area code 614-423-?531 . kitchen with dining . Hardcanopy and plastic storm
Pau l L. Case / of 766 Brownell ~@ ~·:&gt;,::&gt;"i•W·":':'·"·"&lt;·'~·····~····~&lt;·"'-'" W•"•'•"•"•'!$:"•"•'•"W W '"~"~"@."--·~w·······-~
wood
floor
s,
full
basement,
REALTY
"
&lt;·13-ttc
1
Avenu e, M iddleport , Ohio , has
window . Trailer has been
and oil lurnace. Acre lot.
601 E. Ml1n
~
be en duly appointe d Ad wired for electric, 3 outlets. NEED ANOTHER BEDROOM, Ask ing $12,000.00.
' ,. • Pomeroy . . . , ·
m lni strator of th e Es tate of
E•cellent condition, S675, call
NEW
DEN
QR
FAMILY
ROOM
Bruno P . Cascr, deceased. late
992-5815 after 5 p.m .
FOR
YOUR
MOBILE BUSINESS BUILDING of ,Middleport, Meigs County ,
1-17-41c
Oh1 0 .
ECONOMY PRICED
HOME? EASILY DONE Has 2900 sq. ft . of space.
Creditors are r equ ired to t ile
POMEROY - New siding,
WITH
A
VEMCO
ADD-A
"She
traveled
with
trunks
ol
fine
clothes
185,000
BTU
Natural
gas
PAINT Damage. 1972 Zig-Zag
thei r claims with sa id fiduc ia r y
new roof , new carport, •
ROOM. SEE IT AT : furnace , 2 large business
BY JACK O'BRIAN
and a nurse and went round and round the world Sewing Machines. Still In
within four month s.
YOUNG'S
MOBILE
HOME
bedrooms, bath . 2 porche5. •
2
large
storage
offices,
and
Dat ed this 4th day of January
THEY TRIED IT AND LIKED IT
until she was 99 - when she died. Another ole original cartons. No at .
SALES,
ST.
RT.
7 &amp;· 35
Other
features . $5,..00.00.
197 3.
roo
ms.
Excellent
location
for
tachments needed as our
(BELOW
SILVER
FURNISHED
HOME
NEW YORK (KFS ) - We reel a little like lady, a Mrs. Jones, never got off a Cunard ship. controls
the
future.
Appointment
Manning D. Webster ,
are built-in. Sews
MEMORIAL BRDG . ). PLEASE.
Judge Walter Winchell some 15 or 20 years ago when
MIDDLEPORT Lot
She
traveled
world
cruises
and
trips
to
South
wllh
1
or
?
needles.
makes
GALLIPOLI
S.
Court of Comm on Pleas
105•135
level,
2
bedrooms:
Probat e Div ision he's taken his lirst airplane trip in many years,
Africa and back and Mediterranean cruises and buttonholes, sew on buttons,
1·17-llc 4 LARGERUTLAND
bath, F.F. gas heat, storm
BEDROOMS - 8
monograms, and blind hem ·
Meig s County, Ohio
having come up scared ol nothing in particular : when the Caronia had to go Into drydock lor,the ~! i tch . Full cash price $3a.50 .,-: - - - - - - - - : --MI room antique brick home on
doorr&amp; .window•. porches,
( I) HI , 17, 24, Jt
co~ly renovated 3
·
· 1
Route 12• with 2 acres of
the suddenly lrequently airborne Walter started yearly overhaul, she simply had her trunks or budget plan available. •
years
ago. JUST $8,500.00.
prime
land,
for
a
business.
A
.
Phone
9'12-7755.
·•
Air
Conditioner~
raving enthusiastically in his columns and on moved to one of the Queens and crossed and
BEAUTIFUL
BRICK
1' 17-6tc
real
buy
at
$21,500.00.
:·Awnings
his lop-rated radio newscasts, revealing secrets recrossed the Atlantic until she decided she
POMERO~itchen has
RELAX HERE
:··Underpinning
everythlng,31arge B.R. with
about flying known since the Wright Brothers ; needed the change back to the Caronia. Once, a VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
50 ACRES - Of woods,
The Almanac
Model. Complete with all
double closets, 1112 baths, full
briars,
locust,
and
hill
land.
By United Press Internallonal · some folks laughed; not Walter. Walter strange steward was assigned to her suite- not cleaning tools. Small paint : Complete mQbile hQm.e'
•basement with lovely
down. Then $52.77 a
just a cabin, never! - and he took her trunks damage In shipping. Will lake ' '!ierv_rce _. plus gigantic~ 1 1500.00
Today is Wednesday, January discovering anything however belatedly turned
recreation room. 1' acrii
month.
$27
cash
or
budget
plan
that
into
an
absolutely
New
Thing
In
his
wildly
and
bags
oil.
There
was
Holy
Hell
to
pay!
'display
of
mobile
homes
'
ground,
carport. $29,500.00.
NEW
17th, the 17th day ol 1973 with
available. Phone 992-7755.
a
lways
.avallable•al
...
i
LEVEL
lll• ACRES
&lt;
BE'
D
ROOMS
1'
h
baths,
enthusiastic
mind
and
day
in
and
out
WW
ex"And
there's
a
Mrs.
Sharp
who
goes
from
348 to lollow.
1·17·6tc
HARRISONVILLE
'
beautiful
kitchen.
Washer
cruise ship to cruise ship the year 'round. Never
The moon is approaching its citedly flung old knowledge into the air !rom his
MILLER
Corner lot. Grand. older
and dryer hookups. InDC-~i and DC-7 joys or flying; and it was Cilmstops overnight in a hotel!£ she can avoid it. We
home with large building
lull phase.
sulated. Lots of fine closets .
1965 FORD Station Wagon; . • MOBILE HOMES .
40x70,
all In e•cellint conLarge
landscape
lawn.
municalive.
Turned
out
there
were
overall
know
why
these
nice
old
ladies
do
it.
it•s
easy
The morning stars are
stereo tape deck and
dillon.
Home has .(
Asking
only
$21.000.00.
speakers
;
AKC
Collie
pups,
1220
Washington
Blvd.
Mercury, Venus, Mars and whelmingly more millions who never had flown for a man to have a life after his wife dies, and
bedrooms,
· 1'1&gt;
bathtl
NEW
LISTING
$50; phone 773·5758.
:,423-7521
. BELPRE,""''
- 85 pel. or the public hadn't - mostly out ol
he can go out and meet new friends at cluba or
Jupiter.
beautiful
kllchen,
utility
R.,
1
29
ACRES
...:.
On
Route
124
'l-16-5tc
quiet!right, and Waller's message was to them;
pubs, but not a woman, certainly not an old lady
The evening star is Saturn.
• .West, near new coal mine. 20 carJ.l!led. Glassed porches.
THIS YOU MUST 'SEE.,
acres of bottom land suitable
Those born on this date are the airline industry virtually .made Waller its with breeding and the old rules she's lived by." DUE to divorce, 1972 8 track ··Auto Sales
121.500.00.
f9r
housing,
or
mobile
orlicial Pinup Boy.
'
Waiters Gerald and Fltzy over their years stereo console; must sell at
under the sign or Capricorn.
IN PURCHASING A HOME
once; nice walnut finish. This 1963 FORD Falrlane 500, V-8, 4 homes.
We feel the same in a quieter way about our
or experience have analyzed the old gals and setsold much higher, must let . door, automatic, $275. Phone
WE CAN HELP YOU . IFREE GAS ,
Medical missionary Tom Doo9'12-7374.
SPACE FOR LIVING, 24 BEDROOMS - B&gt;ath,
very lirst ocean cruise to the Caribbean aboard
their solution. They can eat th'eir three mepls go for $89.60 or $7.47 a month.
Try
II
In
your
home.
Call
9921-11
-tfc
&amp;
CONECON OM Y
dining
and
front
porch
.
the QE2; although we shan't beat the lively sea
each day in the luxurious dining rooms, such as 5331.
------~-VENIENCE, 3-STYlE &amp;
Large garden, :lO acres In all.
horse in daily revelations of what has been there
the QE2's lavish Queen's Grill. They are greeted
1·16.1fc 'mo 1 TON Ford, dual wheels, Minerals. Asking only
CONSTRUCTION, 4 ~"
LOCATION,
sSlS,OOO.OO.
all along to enjoy. But as we were saying
by headwaiters who become a willing subatitule ~-:-:---'-------=
JUST 1 k 1 d 1
long wh ee l base, power
",e~ ter day, some reverse snobbery had
ror th eir old 1rte
· nd s, now dea d. or gone. The
a
en
n,
e
uxe
zig-zag
TECHNICAL
IN
IF
YOU
CAN'T
DECIDe
ON
brakes,
12'
1
2
fl.
bed,
less
than
sewing machine . This
IFORMATION, 6-PRICE &amp;
23,000 miles, clean as new ; ONE OF THESE , WE HAVE
deflected us ·because our lriends considered it
waiters are solicitous, lriendly servants. They ' machine
darns ,
em - phone · ?85-3554, Harold MANY MORE FOR YOU TO
·FINANCING. CALL OR
square. A day or three at sea and it was our / know the old ladies' gustatory whims and
brolderles, overcasts, butBrewer, Long Bottom.
COME IN TODAY.
SEE
AT
THE
OF.FICE.
tonholes. Pay balance $36.50
1-7-lfc
HENRY E. CLELANO
PICTURES
OF
EACH,
cruise-resistant friends who were indeed
regular prelerences. They are Haltered . to or payments can be arranged.
. BROKER
FREE
BALLOONS
FOR
square. Odd, because some ol our pals had satisfaction by such iamiliar attention. We
Call 992·5331 .
·
3
ASSOCIATES
TO
THE
KIDDlES.
1·16-ffc
taken the same .QE2 to Europe and hadn 't know or one large luxury apartment building on
SERVE YOU.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
992-2259
ASSOCIATE
considered that square; certainly we hadn't
Park Ave. in the 60s wherein the rich live a
"
If
no answer
NO
SUNOAY
SHOWINGS
after a dozen Atlantic crossings by ship, French family to a floor - 18 rooms in each apartment FUEL oil furnace, 120,000 BTU ;
992-2568
or
985-4208
992-3325
has thermostat, registers and
and English; we preferred the latter. - except two; these two exceptions are
some pipe; phone ?85-3979.
Our waiters in ,\he QE2's Queen's Grill told
duplexes of 36 rooms each - and In each 381-16·61c
us of loill or seemingly strange behavior that
room cooperative apartment lives one old lady;
had even their own ,sea-careering sensibilities
who'd probably leap at the chance likewise to
twangl!ng. Such as a Mrs. McBeth, an aging
cruise the world lorever If they'd thought Of it.
..
.
wealthy dowager-type 5th Avenue resident who
. The old Caronia now lives its own llfe or . H~~~~~~~~r .fr~~9!Jcts ;
seldom occupied her cavernous duplex llal but
VIrtually landlocked desperation: the famous
J.S-:iotp
actually traversed the Atlantic for 14 straight
old world-cruising Cunard ship was taken out of . --;:;:;=;;::;::;::;==:::_~
years aboard Cunard's world-cruising ship, the
service more than five years ago and put up for 'r
1 - 16- 121~
Caroma. Never got off except for the annual
sale. AGreek ship operator bought it and made '
Plus Recappable Tire
scraping or the Caronla's bottom plus whatever
ready to put It Into the Caribbean cruise service
scheduled. yearly repairs and Improvements
- except !be yery reasons the Cunard folks
prevented passengers from remain~ aboard ;
pha~ It out ha~ been its lengthily temporary
Mrs . McBeth simply checked Into a undoing: it needs a great deal or repair and
·lliiv'2'
Southampton, Eugland, hOt'elln a direct line of
Improvement to pass the u. S. marine ,
-...;at Pairs
VIsion with the Caronia where she remained
regulatio~s for cruise ships, and so It langulahes ,
FREE
until ready to return lor another year or . at a berth on North River doivnlown, some 50
Tile best .buy In th. , ....·
'
Have slacks &amp; leans for thf
oceangoing luxury.
blocks from the Cunard pie~ at 44th St., awaltirig
whole fomily. · S.ve Ont"She was old and she was very rich and
an infusion of linances which w!U put it back in
Thlrd. . ·
most
or
her
friends
had
either
died
off
or
had
service
for
another
Mrs.
McBeth
or
Mrs.
Jones
'IL
POMEROY
992-7161
moved away from New York," said Fitzy, our
to
cruise to eternity. It actually got a ticket lor
lliil
Jock
W. C.rsey, Mgr.
'
I
Middleport,
741-4211
r Arnold Gr1te
.
Pflone m-mr
waller, who'd.kn.own her from his Caronia days.
parking illegally two years ago!
Rutl1nd · .. .
and relatives for their sincere
ex pression of sy mpathy. and

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

HAYMAN 'S Auction - a good
place to go each . Friday
evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff
on old Rt . 7, 1 mile west of

$7.00 Per Ton

DANTRELL NO IRON MUSLIN

SHEETS

OHIO
PALLET CO.

We Jalk to you
like a person.

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

WMP0/1390

Availabl e in these styles.
Heavenly , Salem Stripes,
Dream Ro se, and Susan 's
Garde .n . Sheets mad e of
Don Pre ss Mu slin which is
easy to core for and NEVER
NEEDS 1Rm41NG.
"MISTY"

- - - -- -

"CORTINA"

,.V~i;~' ;~~~g B~'W;y·

~~~·E:~·.: :::~·
$34.88

d Pl, m u1.,

cold·S d

'

'

1 ~.' 1 "
·. ;1-~ ~"9-;,tliJ.]NINGIII'P/
~
'
(l&lt; h'O, ;rh;J- ·':1

Pomeroy

Meigs
Equipment Co.

~------

.2488

Beautiful Nylo n Pile Room Size Rugl featur ing Ouro9on
'f'ollle lotex Non Skid Backing . A'foi loble in colors of

·-

'

$1588
HECK'S REG.
$22 .88

· · ,.,,., CL'OTHING,.Df,T.I ,•:"'' 11"
!

I'"'~·.·, \J ,,~, ,. "

,),, .... ~, ,

I

~

1

I

CARPET

Indoor -Outdoor Cor pel made of Poly prop lene with Duro ·
gon Wnlf le Backing . Se lect from Tweed ond So lid in
8lue·Gree'1 , Gold, Avoc ado and Red .

TWIN
FITTED

$1099

:·:\;:.~" H~li~mlc~Ji-:~ . ~~

sps

72"t104" OR

u

·

.' .\ '
HECK'SREG .'$~.29
1

•

lo

"

•'

FULL

..

~&lt;"1 1 I

.$258

FTTED
HICK'S REG. $3.99

SIZE
liS" OR

QUEEN
FinED

BATES HOIIEYCOMB

BATES STAR

BED PILLOWS
Stock up now and save on these fine-quality
plump polyester filled pillows with love ly to eking, in delicate shades. Mo chine Washab le

ond Dryable.

BED SPREAD ·
Cho ose from Full or Twin Sizes in a variety of
Wo ~h Fast Decora tor Colors. Made of

18"1124" POlYESTER

100%

Co tton which iw Mach i ne Wa shable and
Dryable and Ne ver Needs Ironing .

99&lt;

BEDSPREAD
Available in Full or Twin Sizes in a variety of
Wo~h Fa st Decorator Colors to Dre ss- Up any
Be droom . Made of 100% Cotton whic h is
Machine Washable and Drya ble and N ever
Need Ironing .
·

..

60".80"
HECK"S REG.

IIIIi SIZE

108'~~1~rOR
FinED

ss99

78"•80"
HECK'S REG. $8.99

21"d7" POLYES·TER

REGULAR
PILLOW CASES

2 FOR 3

5 00

21 "x27" DACRON
$1.99 EACH

1

$168

HECK'S REG. TO $2.99 EACH

HECK'S REG. $7.99

HECK'S REG. $6.99

ti.OTNI/IG DEPT.

Clothing Dept.

CI.OTH/1"
DEPT.
I

HECK'S

IR

.49

MATCHING

KING SIZE
PILLOW CASES

TOSS
PILLOWS
·1

,,

QUILT

, ~rui~· Of-The · Loom Patchwork Quilt available
in assorted prints in sizes 72"x80''. Quilt fit s

11 1

"ful l size bed.

$666

2

•.

'CI,'fJTH/11' DEll.

'
. .,
·'

,.
d/

TWII FlAT

f

f

•• f

•

f

f

I •f

f

Choose from 18"x 18" Square Fur Toss
Pillows in Solid Colors. Foom Filled
and Extra Plump.

f

.FUlLFlAT ........... ..

FUllFinED .......... .
HECK'S R!G· T0.$6.99

CLOTHIIIGDEPT.

GENERAL
TIRE SALES

'

Dryable.

$ . 66

TWIIFITnD ......... ..

HECK'S RlG. $8.99 ,

o.

.

•1

HECK' S REG. $2.99

CI.OTNIIIGD£PT.

DAN RIVER DAN PRESS .
BLEACHED WHITE SHEETS

72" II 04" OR JWIIFITTED .

PolYester Fibe r Filled Mattress Coven which
ore Sonforized and Machine Washable and

PATCHWOR~

$1 99 . PAIR

Da n Press Bleached White Muslin Sheets that ore Easy to Co re
For and Never Never Need Ironing. Pick from assorted styles.

MAtTRESS
COVERS

FRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM

------

I

1

.'! ·.
·~' 1 •! .

••

Elegant Room Size Pol yes ter Shag
Rug s to B rig ht er~ Up ony room in
your home . ChooHt fro m Go ld .
A...ocodo, Orange, Plum and Two
Color Shoge with Latex Boclcing.

'

I

~

8'1z'xl1 1h'IIIDOOR-OUTDOOR

SHAG RUG

NYLON PILE RUG

1970 FORD

The
Daily Sentinel

81/z'xll f/z' PO,lYESTER

81h'xll'h'ROOM SIZE

ss88

$ 88
HECK'S REG.
$3;29

81 "•104" OR FULl FITTED
HECK'S REG. $3.99

$3.99 VALUE
CLOTHIM DEPT.

$tl9

MATCHIIIi CASES

$1.19 PAIR

�-

•
8· ~ The Dally liehthll!l, Mlddleport-1-omeroy, 0., Jan. t7.'t973

.......,

OPEIDAILY
10 TO 9

OPEUAJLY,
10 TO
9
'

SUNSHINE BRIGHT BUYS IN

. OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

. 10 TO 9

RJANUARY

·P-ANASONIC

8 TRACK-TAPE PLAYER

BATH TOWELS

I

wash cloths in stripes and solids.

CLOTHING
DEl'f.

ClOTHIM DEPT.

RECHARGEABLE ·

RAZOR
VIP 50

I

HECK'S
REG. s49.96

HECK'S REG.
$159.96

JEWELRY
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
18.99

JEWEI.RY .
DEPT.

RE 7371

MATCHIN'G WASH
CLOTHS 4 FOR $ ~ .00

HECK'S REG.
$9.99

HECK'S REG.
39'

MAN'S SHAVER

HECK'S

Lorge Size Bath Towels in beautiful Prints,
Solids and Jacqua rds slyles.ll perfect 1.99
and $2.99.

27(

NORELCO

_•3788

BATH TOWELS

.88

$

REMINGTON .

Twq heads with new disposable LEKTRO BLADE cut·
lers .....:.. o dr'a matic step forward in closeness and
coml01t' A new PUSH -UP HEAD CONTROL BUTTON
t hat e lim ir\ote s th e ne ed to rem ove th e head for
clean ing or changi ng cu tter. blades.

RADIO

BETTER QUALITY

..

5'x,6 ' Fully Serged Broadloom
Bathroom Carpet made of Nylon·
Acrylic Shag and available in Sol- .
id Colors.
·

Matching medium weight bath towels and

. HECK'S REG.
99'
MATCHING
WASHCLOTH

.

..

TaBLE

DELUXE

.. SHAG-BATHROOM CARPET

,
1

AM/FM·

"

.
Set comes complete with; Amplifier' Speakers .4·
speed Record Changer' Stereo Headphones ~nd
· Oel u~e Roll Cart.

DUNDEE

.

- '. '.

1.

CI.OTH/HfiDEPT.

20 EXP. PREPAID

MAtiC MAID

·ovNA-COLOR
PROCESSOR

WAFFLE &amp; GRILL
COMBINATION

G. E. ELtCTRIC

..

ALARM CLOCK .

CASSEnE
HEAD CLEANER

No. 7270..K

Heck's
Reg. 51.19

.

·$gas
RUG llUNNERS
Heavyweight· B r~ odloom Nylon -Acrylic Shag C&lt;~rp e t
Runners with DOuble Jute Bodr.ing . Choose from as·sorted colon. Size 36"x 1.4.4".

S9!c!sa o.
1

.

$12.99

DOORMATS

Practical Pile Rug perfect for any room in

19"x24" Track Mat made of High Density.

your home. Available in Gold , Tangerine,
Royal , Avocado and Plum.

Poly Plastic. Perma nenlly Treated - Skid
Proof and Completely Washable:

Availabl e in Indoor-Outdoor or Shag Carpets.

99&lt;

24"x72" IRdADLOOM IUNNII
}.vo lloble in N ~lo~•- A &lt;r~ t i.,- Polyeot. r- Pi u l~ p;r1 S&lt;vlp!UIII-Lcap Pilto in Solid • a nd Tw.. rh .. an
ble.Jul• ko:k,ng

o.....

$2 22

. 24"•60" CANDY STRIPERUNNII

___

A""ilcbl• In AIK&gt;rl nlloop Pi ln and Cut Piltl with Non
~kid LO!fJ lacking.
,

__

.._

HECK'S REG. $1.44

$1 2 2

-

~

...._

AIID

$1 48

No Iron - Machine Woihoble - Mochine DryoblePreshn.mk- Avoiloble in Plush LUJwrious Colors55% Cotto n end 45% Rayo n.

l PC. P1rmon1M Pr111 Klt ch n
S.U In
prinh ond oolid,, J6" Cvrtoin w01 h Mor, hin'
Vola...:• . NEVU Nf fD I~ ONING.

TOWELS
71N PACKAGE
REGULAR
$2 .00VALUE

HECK'S REG. $1 .66
19"x33" SIZE • • • • • • • • • • • 77•

Beacon 100% Polyester Blankets. Choose
from 6 beautifu l co lo rs. Avalon style72" x90".

$297

CI.OTHIN'
DEPT.

CI.OTHIN'
DEPT.

' HECK'S REG. $3.99

CAMERA CASE.
FOR POLAROID SQUARE SHOOTER

$ 00

.

WELTROI

LAMP

RADIO

STEREO SPEAKERS
FOR AUTOMOBILE

•1 ·4

Helps keep your s~in dry a~d
fresh looking .

JEWELRY DEPT.

BAnERIES
ALKALINE
REG. 4 for 12.40

JIWEI.•r DEPT.

CO.STUME JEWELRY
NECKLACES, EARRINGS
AND BRACELETS

REGULAR BATTERY
REG. 4 for '1.00

ONE LOT

CHROME MIXER

2FOR
$100
HECK'S REG. 99' EACH

·ROTARY SLIDE TRA

lADIES NO. 6175

WOODEN
'

'

Fits most rotary

JEWELRY CHEST
Heck's

Reg. s15.88

slide projectors.

$1299

•1 .!'

• Heats baby's meal automatically.
• Has training cup ond feeding
spoons • Immersible for easy
cleaning • In Blue or Pink.

CORDS
Heck's Reg. $3.79 · ·

..

24 HOUR TIMER

Heck's
Reg. $8.49

DIAMOND

· CAMERA CASE
FOR POLAROID FOLDIIIG CAMERA

$499

'6''

HECK'S REG. $7.88
I

.

HWEI.RY IJIIIT,

SUNSET

SU.NSET

PROJECTOR
TABLE

A must for the avid camera "bug" or a
new enthusiastic beg inner. Adjustable,
sturdi ly constructed, and folds for easy
mobility .

CAMERA TRIPOD
.

.$

..,.

_,..· ·:.- ::

Durable, stu rdy, and easy to sto re. Complete with checkerboard top.

"ff'

..·

77

.

-

\

.
HECK'S
·REG.

.; .

HECK'S REG.
14.96

HECK'S REG.
14.88

'2A9

·,

WELTRON
30 FT. TELEPHONE

·EXTENSION

VW-58

HECK'S REG.

BfEliYDEPT.

'

10 Speeds, Icing, beals eggs, desserts , whips, blending,
cake mixes , creams premixes, folds, stirs. Automatic
beater release. FingertiP' control. Twin powerful
chrome beaters.
. ,

BABY -DI·SH ·

'

•

..

VANWYCK

G. E.

88

Heck's Reg. '16.96

HECK'$REG. $11.96

EVEREADY AA SIZE (RADIO)

JEWELRY DEPT.

·TRIUMPH
HEAD PHONE

HECK'S REG. 29' EACH

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

Heck's Reg. $1.19

HECK'SREG. 17.96

. .

i

WITHHOLDER
HECK'S REG. $4.99

9VOLT

8.8¢

99

HECK'S REG. 9.88

JEWELRY DEPT.

CI.OTHIM DEPT.

4FOR

price. Use to send 11Spoken" lette rs to
f riends and sweethearts for away.

1

ClDTHII/C DEPT.

RADIO BAnERIES

High quality tape at a reasonab le

Gently untangles hair in seconds wet or
(l~y. w,ithou.t cre.me rinse,'without breaking
hair, without splitting ends .

'7''

HECK'S REG .
19.96

TAPE

GILLETTE

PURR UNTANGLER

. , .,::N0... 300

ClDTHII/C IIIPT.

HECK'S 9-VOLT

,,,... ,..

AC-1

DRYER

BEACON BLANKET

HERRINGBONE

94(

IRON

Sizes 24x36 TO 27x48. Polyeste1 Sho~ in
loop ond Cut Slyles with Non Skid Bock·
in g. Regular $2.99 ond $3.99 Values .

HECK'S
REG
$3.99

·CASSETTE RECORDING

THERMOWARE
HAIR STYLING

TEFLON STEAM SPRAY

QD1HIIIUIPT.

REGULAR
$1.75 VALUE

WashOble Re\fer sible Rag RuQs featur.ing
Multi Colored Stripes. Rugs ore also Color
Feat. Choose from 2 sizes.

G.E.

EACH

-

HECK'S REG. $2.49

24';x45" Reversible

RAG RUGS

Reg. 12.88
JSVELRY DEPT.

KITCHEN TIER SETS
l it~
$166

21 "x 36"

HECK'S
REG. 59.39

1

.HECK'S REG. 51.19

AREA RUGS

TANK SET

71N PACKAGE

·

ClOTNING DEPT.

CRUSHED VELVET

DISH CLOTH

~'--L

88(

$1.99 VALUE

CLOTHING DEPT.

~--

18"x 27"

99&lt;

WAFFLE WEAVE
-

..

TRACK MAT ,

PILE RUG

Heck'~

,

21 "x34" POLYESTER

,.•
.I

HECK'S REG. $14.96

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

JIWE~•r 11,1.

tj

I~

•.It - ·.

'

.

t
.._,t

'14.aa
:.

! .

�-

•
8· ~ The Dally liehthll!l, Mlddleport-1-omeroy, 0., Jan. t7.'t973

.......,

OPEIDAILY
10 TO 9

OPEUAJLY,
10 TO
9
'

SUNSHINE BRIGHT BUYS IN

. OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

. 10 TO 9

RJANUARY

·P-ANASONIC

8 TRACK-TAPE PLAYER

BATH TOWELS

I

wash cloths in stripes and solids.

CLOTHING
DEl'f.

ClOTHIM DEPT.

RECHARGEABLE ·

RAZOR
VIP 50

I

HECK'S
REG. s49.96

HECK'S REG.
$159.96

JEWELRY
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
18.99

JEWEI.RY .
DEPT.

RE 7371

MATCHIN'G WASH
CLOTHS 4 FOR $ ~ .00

HECK'S REG.
$9.99

HECK'S REG.
39'

MAN'S SHAVER

HECK'S

Lorge Size Bath Towels in beautiful Prints,
Solids and Jacqua rds slyles.ll perfect 1.99
and $2.99.

27(

NORELCO

_•3788

BATH TOWELS

.88

$

REMINGTON .

Twq heads with new disposable LEKTRO BLADE cut·
lers .....:.. o dr'a matic step forward in closeness and
coml01t' A new PUSH -UP HEAD CONTROL BUTTON
t hat e lim ir\ote s th e ne ed to rem ove th e head for
clean ing or changi ng cu tter. blades.

RADIO

BETTER QUALITY

..

5'x,6 ' Fully Serged Broadloom
Bathroom Carpet made of Nylon·
Acrylic Shag and available in Sol- .
id Colors.
·

Matching medium weight bath towels and

. HECK'S REG.
99'
MATCHING
WASHCLOTH

.

..

TaBLE

DELUXE

.. SHAG-BATHROOM CARPET

,
1

AM/FM·

"

.
Set comes complete with; Amplifier' Speakers .4·
speed Record Changer' Stereo Headphones ~nd
· Oel u~e Roll Cart.

DUNDEE

.

- '. '.

1.

CI.OTH/HfiDEPT.

20 EXP. PREPAID

MAtiC MAID

·ovNA-COLOR
PROCESSOR

WAFFLE &amp; GRILL
COMBINATION

G. E. ELtCTRIC

..

ALARM CLOCK .

CASSEnE
HEAD CLEANER

No. 7270..K

Heck's
Reg. 51.19

.

·$gas
RUG llUNNERS
Heavyweight· B r~ odloom Nylon -Acrylic Shag C&lt;~rp e t
Runners with DOuble Jute Bodr.ing . Choose from as·sorted colon. Size 36"x 1.4.4".

S9!c!sa o.
1

.

$12.99

DOORMATS

Practical Pile Rug perfect for any room in

19"x24" Track Mat made of High Density.

your home. Available in Gold , Tangerine,
Royal , Avocado and Plum.

Poly Plastic. Perma nenlly Treated - Skid
Proof and Completely Washable:

Availabl e in Indoor-Outdoor or Shag Carpets.

99&lt;

24"x72" IRdADLOOM IUNNII
}.vo lloble in N ~lo~•- A &lt;r~ t i.,- Polyeot. r- Pi u l~ p;r1 S&lt;vlp!UIII-Lcap Pilto in Solid • a nd Tw.. rh .. an
ble.Jul• ko:k,ng

o.....

$2 22

. 24"•60" CANDY STRIPERUNNII

___

A""ilcbl• In AIK&gt;rl nlloop Pi ln and Cut Piltl with Non
~kid LO!fJ lacking.
,

__

.._

HECK'S REG. $1.44

$1 2 2

-

~

...._

AIID

$1 48

No Iron - Machine Woihoble - Mochine DryoblePreshn.mk- Avoiloble in Plush LUJwrious Colors55% Cotto n end 45% Rayo n.

l PC. P1rmon1M Pr111 Klt ch n
S.U In
prinh ond oolid,, J6" Cvrtoin w01 h Mor, hin'
Vola...:• . NEVU Nf fD I~ ONING.

TOWELS
71N PACKAGE
REGULAR
$2 .00VALUE

HECK'S REG. $1 .66
19"x33" SIZE • • • • • • • • • • • 77•

Beacon 100% Polyester Blankets. Choose
from 6 beautifu l co lo rs. Avalon style72" x90".

$297

CI.OTHIN'
DEPT.

CI.OTHIN'
DEPT.

' HECK'S REG. $3.99

CAMERA CASE.
FOR POLAROID SQUARE SHOOTER

$ 00

.

WELTROI

LAMP

RADIO

STEREO SPEAKERS
FOR AUTOMOBILE

•1 ·4

Helps keep your s~in dry a~d
fresh looking .

JEWELRY DEPT.

BAnERIES
ALKALINE
REG. 4 for 12.40

JIWEI.•r DEPT.

CO.STUME JEWELRY
NECKLACES, EARRINGS
AND BRACELETS

REGULAR BATTERY
REG. 4 for '1.00

ONE LOT

CHROME MIXER

2FOR
$100
HECK'S REG. 99' EACH

·ROTARY SLIDE TRA

lADIES NO. 6175

WOODEN
'

'

Fits most rotary

JEWELRY CHEST
Heck's

Reg. s15.88

slide projectors.

$1299

•1 .!'

• Heats baby's meal automatically.
• Has training cup ond feeding
spoons • Immersible for easy
cleaning • In Blue or Pink.

CORDS
Heck's Reg. $3.79 · ·

..

24 HOUR TIMER

Heck's
Reg. $8.49

DIAMOND

· CAMERA CASE
FOR POLAROID FOLDIIIG CAMERA

$499

'6''

HECK'S REG. $7.88
I

.

HWEI.RY IJIIIT,

SUNSET

SU.NSET

PROJECTOR
TABLE

A must for the avid camera "bug" or a
new enthusiastic beg inner. Adjustable,
sturdi ly constructed, and folds for easy
mobility .

CAMERA TRIPOD
.

.$

..,.

_,..· ·:.- ::

Durable, stu rdy, and easy to sto re. Complete with checkerboard top.

"ff'

..·

77

.

-

\

.
HECK'S
·REG.

.; .

HECK'S REG.
14.96

HECK'S REG.
14.88

'2A9

·,

WELTRON
30 FT. TELEPHONE

·EXTENSION

VW-58

HECK'S REG.

BfEliYDEPT.

'

10 Speeds, Icing, beals eggs, desserts , whips, blending,
cake mixes , creams premixes, folds, stirs. Automatic
beater release. FingertiP' control. Twin powerful
chrome beaters.
. ,

BABY -DI·SH ·

'

•

..

VANWYCK

G. E.

88

Heck's Reg. '16.96

HECK'$REG. $11.96

EVEREADY AA SIZE (RADIO)

JEWELRY DEPT.

·TRIUMPH
HEAD PHONE

HECK'S REG. 29' EACH

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

Heck's Reg. $1.19

HECK'SREG. 17.96

. .

i

WITHHOLDER
HECK'S REG. $4.99

9VOLT

8.8¢

99

HECK'S REG. 9.88

JEWELRY DEPT.

CI.OTHIM DEPT.

4FOR

price. Use to send 11Spoken" lette rs to
f riends and sweethearts for away.

1

ClDTHII/C DEPT.

RADIO BAnERIES

High quality tape at a reasonab le

Gently untangles hair in seconds wet or
(l~y. w,ithou.t cre.me rinse,'without breaking
hair, without splitting ends .

'7''

HECK'S REG .
19.96

TAPE

GILLETTE

PURR UNTANGLER

. , .,::N0... 300

ClDTHII/C IIIPT.

HECK'S 9-VOLT

,,,... ,..

AC-1

DRYER

BEACON BLANKET

HERRINGBONE

94(

IRON

Sizes 24x36 TO 27x48. Polyeste1 Sho~ in
loop ond Cut Slyles with Non Skid Bock·
in g. Regular $2.99 ond $3.99 Values .

HECK'S
REG
$3.99

·CASSETTE RECORDING

THERMOWARE
HAIR STYLING

TEFLON STEAM SPRAY

QD1HIIIUIPT.

REGULAR
$1.75 VALUE

WashOble Re\fer sible Rag RuQs featur.ing
Multi Colored Stripes. Rugs ore also Color
Feat. Choose from 2 sizes.

G.E.

EACH

-

HECK'S REG. $2.49

24';x45" Reversible

RAG RUGS

Reg. 12.88
JSVELRY DEPT.

KITCHEN TIER SETS
l it~
$166

21 "x 36"

HECK'S
REG. 59.39

1

.HECK'S REG. 51.19

AREA RUGS

TANK SET

71N PACKAGE

·

ClOTNING DEPT.

CRUSHED VELVET

DISH CLOTH

~'--L

88(

$1.99 VALUE

CLOTHING DEPT.

~--

18"x 27"

99&lt;

WAFFLE WEAVE
-

..

TRACK MAT ,

PILE RUG

Heck'~

,

21 "x34" POLYESTER

,.•
.I

HECK'S REG. $14.96

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

JIWE~•r 11,1.

tj

I~

•.It - ·.

'

.

t
.._,t

'14.aa
:.

! .

�OPEl DAILY

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

"

10

to 9

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

·

OPEIIAILY

9·

· 10 TO

--

MITCHELL ULTRA
LITE .
'

retrieve . •

'

$1 -sss

HECK'S REG. $22 .99
SPORTS DEPT.

500 ct .

2-BURNER STOVE

22 tal.

12

99

Heck's

(

Reg. $8.80

HECK'S REG. $16.99 •

SPORTS DEPT.

'660

--

'

COLEMAN FUEL

-

-

HECK'S
REG.
$1.38

88&lt;

SPORTS DEPT.

OUTERS

STOCK FINISHING KIT

8-601

GARCIA

SPIN ROD -

99~

Heck's

Reg. $1.99

SIMILAR TO ILLU STRATION

WORLD FAMOUS ALPINE D-RING

light action, fast taper, two
piece rod. Four Elgus hardchromed stainl ess steel
guides and tip-top .

SPORTS
DEPT.

BACK
, ..., . .. , .PACK
~

.•

$3.58

BACK PACK

77

$

Heck's

Heck's
Reg. $2.38 .

$1

SERVING BOWL

.

QUFFLE BAG

ANACIN
100's

RIGHT GUARD
DEODORANT

57•
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

~ASTMJ,)•ELIEF~

.

REG
$1.28

COSMETIC DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

99'

COSMETIC
DEPT.
-

.

2

...., . .. your "'""d

.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $7.99

HDUSEWARE DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
41' EACH

FESCO PLASTIC

.,·:

32 QT. SIT 01 HAMPER

•299

20 GAL. TRASH CAl

SWIIG TOP Ill

$244

$244

HECK'S REG. aa~

HOUHWARE
FESCO PLASTIC
1 lf• BUSHEL

· TABLE

LAMP SHADES

REDMAN

HAMPER

Available in assorted sizes. Assortment consists Of .
Bridge, Deep Drum, Drum and Tal l Deep Drum
Table Style•.

49~

HOUSEWARE DEPT.
· NDUSEWUE DEPT.

44 QT.

FESCO PL4STIC

WASTE BASKET

HECK'S
REG.
$2.77

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HDUSEWARE DEPT.

RENUZIT

640Z.
_ KING SIZE

5 PC. SHOWER

ENSEMBLE·

SOLID

DOWNY

FABRIC SOFTENER

'$ : 29'

.MAGIC COVER
ADHESIVE ·
PAPER

'

991

HECK'S .
REG •
$1.67
HECK'S lEG.
$4.99

tOSMBit

IE,T.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

•oaEWAIIIIPT.

•\

Q

(J

' ; •'

4 YARDS
HOUHWAIIE
DEPT.

SJ 00
HECK'S
REG.
38' YARD

HECK'S REG,
33• EACH

HECK'S REG, $3.88

SJ99

HECK'S REG.

I

LIMIT 4 lOLLS
FOR

KLEENEX

HEC:K'S REG. $3.88

LISTERINE
ANTISEPTIC.

IIPT.

4

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

~

~

tOSMETIC

JUMBO TOWELS

$544 .

HECK'S REG. 66'

FESCO PLASTIC

140Z.

HECK'S REG • .
$1.28 .

FOR

• A real space
mak er e Spring
adjustable

KLEENEX

FACIAL TISSUE
. .;;,

COOKING FUEL

JERGENS
LOTION

BATHROOM
·oRGANIZER
'

SJOO

HECK'S REG.
II • BAR

3-SHELF

l

i

.'

onw,~r

36"x84"

WATER
CHILLER

·,

I

lo,.. &lt;o•t

--

. . ...
HECK'S

FOLDING
DOOR

GOLD

Panel, Tie Back, 6' x6' ShoWer

ANACIN'
- ·COUll·- -·"'-"" •

PLASTIC
DRAPES

SOAP
12 BARS

HECK'S REG. $8.99
HOUSIWA~I DEPT.

Curtain, an~ Fringed Va lan ce.
,,

'

'·. _
- - - - - ,_ _ _
_ '11
,

Set con sists of H·u)k s, Swag

.. ,.

HOUHWARE DEPT.

'

STERNO CANNED

15 oz.

5 PKGS.
(10 ROLLS)

IVORY

$599-

STOVE &amp; FUEL
COMBO PACK

Heck's
Reg. 66'

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

PERSONAL SIZE

\

EASTERN

~""' . I:'.J ""' ~ • ' ""'

STERNO

88

HECK'S REG. $5.99

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

doo&lt; ha1 n&lt;&gt; '"""' to op..., . i,. tull o n " irlu 111 e
f olding Pllo rl ll 9001 up rn '' no IHI'I e " . . . ;,
/ mode to lo\1 lor ~tO 'I lde&lt;J I olsoloo ki t&lt;htn
doo• "~";"11 '- urpuroting rleeping oreo&gt;.
etc

-.3. 66

70Z.

·.
'

HECK'S - $
REG. s4.77
·

SHORTS

.

HECK'S REG.
33• EACH

'

HECK'S REGULAR.
PRICE

\

·...
\."•

HECK'S REG.
. $4.99 .

2 ROLL PKGS.

HECK'S
REG. 49'

V«&gt;RLD FAMOUS REGUlATION

HARVARD GREY
FlANNEL GYM.

S]99

~

29~

99~

HECK'S REG. $3.99

sub ject is framed in fine ly cra fted,
co ntoured mold ing patte rn s.

BATHROOM TISSUE

HECK'S REG.

Reg. $4.77

I

DELSEY

HECK'S REG.
•8.99

POOL SHOOTING ACCESSORIES

.-..

uct ion s of fine o il pa int ing s. Each

ASH TRAYS

RETOO 5x7

ALL

YUCCA

HECK'S
REG.
85'

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

I ~ 'mo ot

HECK'S REG.
$16.99

A complete series of popular re pro d -

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

59$

fro me.

FRAMED PICTURES

CLEAR

COOK SET

$2 99

Heck's. Reg.

~ECK'S . REG.

WORLD FAMOUS
4PARTY

88

$

•

C hoose fro m a large o u ort ment of !izes ,
shapes a nd colo rs.

$ 88

HECK'S
REG. sl.55

DOOR MIRROR

TABLE ClOTHS -

UTILITY T.ARP

GA(LON

PICTURE FRAMES
ASSORTED

MENS

HECK'S
REG. $10.49

HAMILTON

PLASTIC

TENNIS SHOES

The eco nomy and po rtability makes this st&lt;:'ve
po pular for the light -tra ve ling camper. 2 !17
pi nt f\Je l capacity.
"

'

.
..
44

S"x 10"

14 " x5 0". l a rg e d oor mir ror
comp lete with_-na tura l wood

ASSORTED

HECK'S
,
-REG. ss4.95
-

-AMMO

J

.

COFFE~, ~UP'S _

,'

'

22 RIFLE

WINCHESTER
WILDCAT .

COLEMAN

5

•.

-· HI
STANDARD AUTO LOADI.NG
-

Bla ck finis h. Small size·for fre'sohwater use .
Two spools. Thumb handl e knob. Standard

308

CERAMIC.

.

SPINNING REEL

l

AIR
FRESHENER

for$
HECK'S REG. 71'

KOTEX40'S
NEW
HECK'S REG.
$1.55

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

WINDOW SHADES
371/c"x6 Ft.

HECK'S REG.
$1.29

NOUSEWARf
DEPT.

�OPEl DAILY

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

"

10

to 9

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

·

OPEIIAILY

9·

· 10 TO

--

MITCHELL ULTRA
LITE .
'

retrieve . •

'

$1 -sss

HECK'S REG. $22 .99
SPORTS DEPT.

500 ct .

2-BURNER STOVE

22 tal.

12

99

Heck's

(

Reg. $8.80

HECK'S REG. $16.99 •

SPORTS DEPT.

'660

--

'

COLEMAN FUEL

-

-

HECK'S
REG.
$1.38

88&lt;

SPORTS DEPT.

OUTERS

STOCK FINISHING KIT

8-601

GARCIA

SPIN ROD -

99~

Heck's

Reg. $1.99

SIMILAR TO ILLU STRATION

WORLD FAMOUS ALPINE D-RING

light action, fast taper, two
piece rod. Four Elgus hardchromed stainl ess steel
guides and tip-top .

SPORTS
DEPT.

BACK
, ..., . .. , .PACK
~

.•

$3.58

BACK PACK

77

$

Heck's

Heck's
Reg. $2.38 .

$1

SERVING BOWL

.

QUFFLE BAG

ANACIN
100's

RIGHT GUARD
DEODORANT

57•
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

~ASTMJ,)•ELIEF~

.

REG
$1.28

COSMETIC DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

99'

COSMETIC
DEPT.
-

.

2

...., . .. your "'""d

.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $7.99

HDUSEWARE DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
41' EACH

FESCO PLASTIC

.,·:

32 QT. SIT 01 HAMPER

•299

20 GAL. TRASH CAl

SWIIG TOP Ill

$244

$244

HECK'S REG. aa~

HOUHWARE
FESCO PLASTIC
1 lf• BUSHEL

· TABLE

LAMP SHADES

REDMAN

HAMPER

Available in assorted sizes. Assortment consists Of .
Bridge, Deep Drum, Drum and Tal l Deep Drum
Table Style•.

49~

HOUSEWARE DEPT.
· NDUSEWUE DEPT.

44 QT.

FESCO PL4STIC

WASTE BASKET

HECK'S
REG.
$2.77

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HDUSEWARE DEPT.

RENUZIT

640Z.
_ KING SIZE

5 PC. SHOWER

ENSEMBLE·

SOLID

DOWNY

FABRIC SOFTENER

'$ : 29'

.MAGIC COVER
ADHESIVE ·
PAPER

'

991

HECK'S .
REG •
$1.67
HECK'S lEG.
$4.99

tOSMBit

IE,T.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

•oaEWAIIIIPT.

•\

Q

(J

' ; •'

4 YARDS
HOUHWAIIE
DEPT.

SJ 00
HECK'S
REG.
38' YARD

HECK'S REG,
33• EACH

HECK'S REG, $3.88

SJ99

HECK'S REG.

I

LIMIT 4 lOLLS
FOR

KLEENEX

HEC:K'S REG. $3.88

LISTERINE
ANTISEPTIC.

IIPT.

4

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

~

~

tOSMETIC

JUMBO TOWELS

$544 .

HECK'S REG. 66'

FESCO PLASTIC

140Z.

HECK'S REG • .
$1.28 .

FOR

• A real space
mak er e Spring
adjustable

KLEENEX

FACIAL TISSUE
. .;;,

COOKING FUEL

JERGENS
LOTION

BATHROOM
·oRGANIZER
'

SJOO

HECK'S REG.
II • BAR

3-SHELF

l

i

.'

onw,~r

36"x84"

WATER
CHILLER

·,

I

lo,.. &lt;o•t

--

. . ...
HECK'S

FOLDING
DOOR

GOLD

Panel, Tie Back, 6' x6' ShoWer

ANACIN'
- ·COUll·- -·"'-"" •

PLASTIC
DRAPES

SOAP
12 BARS

HECK'S REG. $8.99
HOUSIWA~I DEPT.

Curtain, an~ Fringed Va lan ce.
,,

'

'·. _
- - - - - ,_ _ _
_ '11
,

Set con sists of H·u)k s, Swag

.. ,.

HOUHWARE DEPT.

'

STERNO CANNED

15 oz.

5 PKGS.
(10 ROLLS)

IVORY

$599-

STOVE &amp; FUEL
COMBO PACK

Heck's
Reg. 66'

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

PERSONAL SIZE

\

EASTERN

~""' . I:'.J ""' ~ • ' ""'

STERNO

88

HECK'S REG. $5.99

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

doo&lt; ha1 n&lt;&gt; '"""' to op..., . i,. tull o n " irlu 111 e
f olding Pllo rl ll 9001 up rn '' no IHI'I e " . . . ;,
/ mode to lo\1 lor ~tO 'I lde&lt;J I olsoloo ki t&lt;htn
doo• "~";"11 '- urpuroting rleeping oreo&gt;.
etc

-.3. 66

70Z.

·.
'

HECK'S - $
REG. s4.77
·

SHORTS

.

HECK'S REG.
33• EACH

'

HECK'S REGULAR.
PRICE

\

·...
\."•

HECK'S REG.
. $4.99 .

2 ROLL PKGS.

HECK'S
REG. 49'

V«&gt;RLD FAMOUS REGUlATION

HARVARD GREY
FlANNEL GYM.

S]99

~

29~

99~

HECK'S REG. $3.99

sub ject is framed in fine ly cra fted,
co ntoured mold ing patte rn s.

BATHROOM TISSUE

HECK'S REG.

Reg. $4.77

I

DELSEY

HECK'S REG.
•8.99

POOL SHOOTING ACCESSORIES

.-..

uct ion s of fine o il pa int ing s. Each

ASH TRAYS

RETOO 5x7

ALL

YUCCA

HECK'S
REG.
85'

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

I ~ 'mo ot

HECK'S REG.
$16.99

A complete series of popular re pro d -

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

59$

fro me.

FRAMED PICTURES

CLEAR

COOK SET

$2 99

Heck's. Reg.

~ECK'S . REG.

WORLD FAMOUS
4PARTY

88

$

•

C hoose fro m a large o u ort ment of !izes ,
shapes a nd colo rs.

$ 88

HECK'S
REG. sl.55

DOOR MIRROR

TABLE ClOTHS -

UTILITY T.ARP

GA(LON

PICTURE FRAMES
ASSORTED

MENS

HECK'S
REG. $10.49

HAMILTON

PLASTIC

TENNIS SHOES

The eco nomy and po rtability makes this st&lt;:'ve
po pular for the light -tra ve ling camper. 2 !17
pi nt f\Je l capacity.
"

'

.
..
44

S"x 10"

14 " x5 0". l a rg e d oor mir ror
comp lete with_-na tura l wood

ASSORTED

HECK'S
,
-REG. ss4.95
-

-AMMO

J

.

COFFE~, ~UP'S _

,'

'

22 RIFLE

WINCHESTER
WILDCAT .

COLEMAN

5

•.

-· HI
STANDARD AUTO LOADI.NG
-

Bla ck finis h. Small size·for fre'sohwater use .
Two spools. Thumb handl e knob. Standard

308

CERAMIC.

.

SPINNING REEL

l

AIR
FRESHENER

for$
HECK'S REG. 71'

KOTEX40'S
NEW
HECK'S REG.
$1.55

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

WINDOW SHADES
371/c"x6 Ft.

HECK'S REG.
$1.29

NOUSEWARf
DEPT.

�BARNEY
CO~E

OPEIII D.ILY
10 TO 9

OPEIII DAILY
10 TO 9

TREE HOUSE .

QUICK, OOC.!!

CRLL

LEETLE JUGHI\10 JEST
FELL OUT OF HIS
"TREE HOUSE .

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY Jan. 21 WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.

./ ANTIQUE KIT'

KIT

MEDICINE CABINETe

.
New fortifying latex base lets you

lifetime gua ra ntee . So lid brms burner unit a nd propa ne
cylinder. Pencil flam e burner is l cr ordinar y use . Provid es

• Size 20" x20 , • Light build-top light Sur·
la ce mount with four pla ce tooth brush holder. No -trim .

antique in two easy steps, sa me
d a y . Incl ud e d or e ba se coo t,
g laze, sa nd pa p e r and c heese -

cl o1h .

ARROW

.BERNZ·O~MATIC

liGHTED

RED DEVIL

up to 15 hours burning time . Complete with clogproof fil -

ter which

gua r d ~ a g a i n ~!

imp urities d ogg ing the

o r i f ice ~

THEY WANTED
ME 10 SPEAK
ABOUT LAW
AND ORDER.

I WIN l
t'l.l. TAK= THe
LOWER

STAPLE GUN

Hous e hold sta·ple gun tacker with lustrous
ch rome fini sh. All steel construction.

Ul li ~ t ed .

$ 99

· HOW

CCJNE.,

JUDGE HARDNOGE 1

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG. $12 .88

$3.99

HARDWARE DEPT.

Excellent for all you r nome f iJt;·Up job s.
Avail ab le i n wa ln ut a nd na t ura l

HECK'S REG.

$6 .99

$6.99
U 'LABNER

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT,.

HARDWARE DEPT.

PLASTIC WOOD

HECK'S REG .

BERNZ- 0-MA TIC .

'II IIIICH BY I 00 FT.

MASKING TAPE.

TANK

NOWTHATAH

KNOWS, ITS
QUITE A
REl-IEF!!

LIQUID PLUMBER
QT. SIZE

s ~ ades.

1- 17

(·

IF YOU CI&gt;N SPAIOiEi BUS FA~,
MAK!i IT iO THC:
'WEA~Y T~VELER' MISSION
FO~ l.UNCH! ,---:;;

I ' Ll. J/IST

HECK'S REG.

HECK
REG.

HECK'S REG. 481

HECK'S REG. asc

sac

48'

RI6HT ON WINNie . AT
Le:A5T VV~ WON'T BE
SA17DLED WITl-1 ANY
MORE EXPCN5E5 FROM

WINN1E

1\1E JA::&gt;T OF THE BIG-·
TIME 5PENDER5, REN

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

STORM DOOR

AUTOMOBILE

CLOSER

INNER TUBES

STANLEY

SAW HORSE
BRACKETS
GASOLINE ALLEY

Fits Most Sizes

$299

HECK'S
REG·. s3.49

SK-85

PlATT!

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S

REG. 1150 1·:~~, ·

HECK'S REG. '1.99

I~IWT

GU

VISE GRIP

PLIERS

ROBERK

'

$~~~

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

$1.34

48C

HECK'S REG. TO $2.88 PAIR

HECK'S REG. •3.77
15

oz.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.
12

PRESTONE
START.
. ING FLUID
'

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

oz.

12

PRES
PRIME

SEALER
_STOP LEAK

4FOR

2FOR

s· oo

nc

HECK'S REG.
74 1 EACH

HECK'S REG.
31 c

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

AU'!OMOTIVE DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.
140Z.

PRESTONE
DE-ICER"

WITH SCRAPER TOP

20" 4-WAY

oz.

PRESTONE

CiAS DRYER

HECK'S REG.

sac

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

35(

~:M'&lt;Dtaf
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1. Resource
6. Charlotte

VALVOLINE
MOTOR OIL
10W40

IT WA.S PA.RT OF THE

EXHAUST SVSTEM
TO CAAFI:{ OUT FUMES
OU)

AAS INEA.V80DV

UOHE NUTS

OUT iHI!.RE?

So!

Z1. Take a
puff
U. Bare

REPAIR SHOP.

Tropical
?-~~~~~~ 26.ZS. Shabby
mammal

37.~""

21. Canta-

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

trice's
offering
28.Rim
29. Growl
SO. Painful
31. English
borough
in Bed·
ford Shire
33. Wonderment
36. Become
extremely
angry

,.

13.50Z.

EASY WAY

'

LUG WRENCH

22

TIRE GAU.GE

$1.99

HECK'S REG. 99'

HECK'S REG.

. 991

6. Ride the

7.- Major
8. Bald in·
divldual
(sl.)

(hyph.
wd.)
9. Satanical
joy
10.Famed
Siamese
twin
14. First-rate
' (hyph.
wd.)
11. Dalal or
Panchen

19. Com·
media
dell' -

Unacrambletheoe four Jumbltt.
one letter to each· aquare, to

·21. Inheritor
21. Really!

30. Gem
32. Leave
suddenly
( Z wds.) .
33. At a dis·
lance
3f. Sapient
35. Czech
river
36. Religious
brother .
37. Malay
gibbon
38. Black or
Red

(2 wds.)

22. Tiber

tributary
·23. Scalp con·
figuration
24. "Mondo
Cane"
theme
song
26. Famed
American
actress
28. Merry

ordinary words.

ro~r

rx
t SIVEIJlT

J
~

.J I J

WHY THE ~1 66Eb"T
AN IMAt. LEAVE:$
NO FOOTP'RINT5.

Now arrancethe circled
I
I
I I ".I-=' 1THE rxn xJHAs(l]r n n
.,........,..I

TINNEY±

V

'J
.A

lotion
lo form the 11JJ'PriH amwer, u
auuuted b7 the above earteo11.

,

(Antwe'n IOmorrew)

Jamble" INTIIT QUAKE TURKEY CINSUS
Anlwer1 "lt•lorc- •il down!"-"SQUAT''

(sl.)

~

form

Yesterday'• AniWer

(3wds.)
39. Paid a
quick

SPRAY PAINT

c

Jl&amp;~M;-IkJ 41:-".J-L , _

of word s

wd.)

WHEN THIS WAS A

LIMIT 5 QTS.

m en~

tloned
4. Make a
boo-boo
5. With a
minimum

. Alan
13. Terrifying
(hyph.
15. Terminal&lt;
16. - goose
17. Camera
part
lB. Is that

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THAT IS TRUE CULTURE
WHICH HELPS US WORK FOR THE SOCIAL BE'ITERMENT OF ALL.- HENRY WARD BEECHER
&lt;I? 1978 Xln« Features Syndicate, Inc.)

3. Afore·

11. Bowling
term
12. Actor

HARDWARE DEPT.

HECK'S
REG. ·
HECK'S REG.

VJ61&lt;:£;

19(

WIPER BLAD.E
REFILLS

10-WR

~~~~
mfiJ '{OJ

WORK\

LIQUID
WRENCH

ENGINE DE-GREASER

10 ASi&lt;.II().IJ\

wm

At-lD

~AR5Dl' HAAD

3 oz.

'l!'S, lWf 1 D\Dil'T

&amp;rr~O.J

~~.

'\.

visit

(2wds.)

. ·to. Hire

U.Mountain
crest
f!. Coat of
paint
DOWN
1. C)lurl
star ·
2. Reach
across

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it: j'iilii:~~~r----, r--,-- -- - - - ,

·AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

~ ~; ~ ~::

t::

IT) GUESSING TIME!

1s
.
One letter simply stands for another. In this sainpte A is
uaed for the three L's, X for the two O's,, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes,. the length and formation of the. words are all
biota. Each dfy the code letters are.dlflerent.
.

.

.LUWY

ZQE

CRYPTOQUOTBS
RNW DOO A R S W URFGW

GQ . C QNMDKW
•

ZQE

A'RZ

;I:Q .E N WYWADWF ,

NWPQKW N . -

.

C QN

"-'-'-'.....J.,Il;

'.

RATNQ F W

TDWNPW

i

�BARNEY
CO~E

OPEIII D.ILY
10 TO 9

OPEIII DAILY
10 TO 9

TREE HOUSE .

QUICK, OOC.!!

CRLL

LEETLE JUGHI\10 JEST
FELL OUT OF HIS
"TREE HOUSE .

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY Jan. 21 WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.

./ ANTIQUE KIT'

KIT

MEDICINE CABINETe

.
New fortifying latex base lets you

lifetime gua ra ntee . So lid brms burner unit a nd propa ne
cylinder. Pencil flam e burner is l cr ordinar y use . Provid es

• Size 20" x20 , • Light build-top light Sur·
la ce mount with four pla ce tooth brush holder. No -trim .

antique in two easy steps, sa me
d a y . Incl ud e d or e ba se coo t,
g laze, sa nd pa p e r and c heese -

cl o1h .

ARROW

.BERNZ·O~MATIC

liGHTED

RED DEVIL

up to 15 hours burning time . Complete with clogproof fil -

ter which

gua r d ~ a g a i n ~!

imp urities d ogg ing the

o r i f ice ~

THEY WANTED
ME 10 SPEAK
ABOUT LAW
AND ORDER.

I WIN l
t'l.l. TAK= THe
LOWER

STAPLE GUN

Hous e hold sta·ple gun tacker with lustrous
ch rome fini sh. All steel construction.

Ul li ~ t ed .

$ 99

· HOW

CCJNE.,

JUDGE HARDNOGE 1

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG. $12 .88

$3.99

HARDWARE DEPT.

Excellent for all you r nome f iJt;·Up job s.
Avail ab le i n wa ln ut a nd na t ura l

HECK'S REG.

$6 .99

$6.99
U 'LABNER

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT,.

HARDWARE DEPT.

PLASTIC WOOD

HECK'S REG .

BERNZ- 0-MA TIC .

'II IIIICH BY I 00 FT.

MASKING TAPE.

TANK

NOWTHATAH

KNOWS, ITS
QUITE A
REl-IEF!!

LIQUID PLUMBER
QT. SIZE

s ~ ades.

1- 17

(·

IF YOU CI&gt;N SPAIOiEi BUS FA~,
MAK!i IT iO THC:
'WEA~Y T~VELER' MISSION
FO~ l.UNCH! ,---:;;

I ' Ll. J/IST

HECK'S REG.

HECK
REG.

HECK'S REG. 481

HECK'S REG. asc

sac

48'

RI6HT ON WINNie . AT
Le:A5T VV~ WON'T BE
SA17DLED WITl-1 ANY
MORE EXPCN5E5 FROM

WINN1E

1\1E JA::&gt;T OF THE BIG-·
TIME 5PENDER5, REN

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

STORM DOOR

AUTOMOBILE

CLOSER

INNER TUBES

STANLEY

SAW HORSE
BRACKETS
GASOLINE ALLEY

Fits Most Sizes

$299

HECK'S
REG·. s3.49

SK-85

PlATT!

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S

REG. 1150 1·:~~, ·

HECK'S REG. '1.99

I~IWT

GU

VISE GRIP

PLIERS

ROBERK

'

$~~~

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

$1.34

48C

HECK'S REG. TO $2.88 PAIR

HECK'S REG. •3.77
15

oz.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.
12

PRESTONE
START.
. ING FLUID
'

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

oz.

12

PRES
PRIME

SEALER
_STOP LEAK

4FOR

2FOR

s· oo

nc

HECK'S REG.
74 1 EACH

HECK'S REG.
31 c

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

AU'!OMOTIVE DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.
140Z.

PRESTONE
DE-ICER"

WITH SCRAPER TOP

20" 4-WAY

oz.

PRESTONE

CiAS DRYER

HECK'S REG.

sac

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

35(

~:M'&lt;Dtaf
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1. Resource
6. Charlotte

VALVOLINE
MOTOR OIL
10W40

IT WA.S PA.RT OF THE

EXHAUST SVSTEM
TO CAAFI:{ OUT FUMES
OU)

AAS INEA.V80DV

UOHE NUTS

OUT iHI!.RE?

So!

Z1. Take a
puff
U. Bare

REPAIR SHOP.

Tropical
?-~~~~~~ 26.ZS. Shabby
mammal

37.~""

21. Canta-

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

trice's
offering
28.Rim
29. Growl
SO. Painful
31. English
borough
in Bed·
ford Shire
33. Wonderment
36. Become
extremely
angry

,.

13.50Z.

EASY WAY

'

LUG WRENCH

22

TIRE GAU.GE

$1.99

HECK'S REG. 99'

HECK'S REG.

. 991

6. Ride the

7.- Major
8. Bald in·
divldual
(sl.)

(hyph.
wd.)
9. Satanical
joy
10.Famed
Siamese
twin
14. First-rate
' (hyph.
wd.)
11. Dalal or
Panchen

19. Com·
media
dell' -

Unacrambletheoe four Jumbltt.
one letter to each· aquare, to

·21. Inheritor
21. Really!

30. Gem
32. Leave
suddenly
( Z wds.) .
33. At a dis·
lance
3f. Sapient
35. Czech
river
36. Religious
brother .
37. Malay
gibbon
38. Black or
Red

(2 wds.)

22. Tiber

tributary
·23. Scalp con·
figuration
24. "Mondo
Cane"
theme
song
26. Famed
American
actress
28. Merry

ordinary words.

ro~r

rx
t SIVEIJlT

J
~

.J I J

WHY THE ~1 66Eb"T
AN IMAt. LEAVE:$
NO FOOTP'RINT5.

Now arrancethe circled
I
I
I I ".I-=' 1THE rxn xJHAs(l]r n n
.,........,..I

TINNEY±

V

'J
.A

lotion
lo form the 11JJ'PriH amwer, u
auuuted b7 the above earteo11.

,

(Antwe'n IOmorrew)

Jamble" INTIIT QUAKE TURKEY CINSUS
Anlwer1 "lt•lorc- •il down!"-"SQUAT''

(sl.)

~

form

Yesterday'• AniWer

(3wds.)
39. Paid a
quick

SPRAY PAINT

c

Jl&amp;~M;-IkJ 41:-".J-L , _

of word s

wd.)

WHEN THIS WAS A

LIMIT 5 QTS.

m en~

tloned
4. Make a
boo-boo
5. With a
minimum

. Alan
13. Terrifying
(hyph.
15. Terminal&lt;
16. - goose
17. Camera
part
lB. Is that

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THAT IS TRUE CULTURE
WHICH HELPS US WORK FOR THE SOCIAL BE'ITERMENT OF ALL.- HENRY WARD BEECHER
&lt;I? 1978 Xln« Features Syndicate, Inc.)

3. Afore·

11. Bowling
term
12. Actor

HARDWARE DEPT.

HECK'S
REG. ·
HECK'S REG.

VJ61&lt;:£;

19(

WIPER BLAD.E
REFILLS

10-WR

~~~~
mfiJ '{OJ

WORK\

LIQUID
WRENCH

ENGINE DE-GREASER

10 ASi&lt;.II().IJ\

wm

At-lD

~AR5Dl' HAAD

3 oz.

'l!'S, lWf 1 D\Dil'T

&amp;rr~O.J

~~.

'\.

visit

(2wds.)

. ·to. Hire

U.Mountain
crest
f!. Coat of
paint
DOWN
1. C)lurl
star ·
2. Reach
across

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it: j'iilii:~~~r----, r--,-- -- - - - ,

·AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

~ ~; ~ ~::

t::

IT) GUESSING TIME!

1s
.
One letter simply stands for another. In this sainpte A is
uaed for the three L's, X for the two O's,, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes,. the length and formation of the. words are all
biota. Each dfy the code letters are.dlflerent.
.

.

.LUWY

ZQE

CRYPTOQUOTBS
RNW DOO A R S W URFGW

GQ . C QNMDKW
•

ZQE

A'RZ

;I:Q .E N WYWADWF ,

NWPQKW N . -

.

C QN

"-'-'-'.....J.,Il;

'.

RATNQ F W

TDWNPW

i

�,indu-st~'aw-a rd,·_,
1given .Bob Evans_ Farms
14 _The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan.17, 1973

historic slave cabin and a

variety of farm animal and
.,----,WJ
w;Iallfe exhtlillSr--.
•
,
,
The farm is also the scene of
'
several festivals during the
'•
year including ,the Bob Evans
Farm Festil·al, the Welsh
Eisteddfod, the Bean Dinner
and th~e Trail Ride and Quarter
' GALLIPOLIS - Bob Evans · 1972 Ohio Travel Award 1pent of Economic and Com- Horse Show.
Other travel awards were
Farms, Inc. of Rio Grande was (business category) to Bob munity Development. A
: hooored today by the slate's Evans on behalf of the farm for commitree of state officials presented to Eber L. V.rigt.•,
director of the Ashtabula
: travel
industry
d~ring "its outstanding contribution to and travel executives selected
County Planning Commission
,ceremonies at the Governor's tourism in the stale."
the award recipients.
;Conference On Tourism at Salt
Members of Ohio's travel Sweet said Bob ·Evans Fanns in the individual category and
the Young Women's Christian
:fork Lodge near Cambridge. industry were invited last fall was Selected !or honors for its Assn, of Columbus for Its
: Dr. David C. Sweet, director to submit nominations for the strong contribution as an
lour program in the non-profit
!of the. Ohio Department of award, jointly sponsored by the historic and educational at- group
category.
•Economic
and Community
p_rivate sector Ohio Travel traction i9 the Appalachian
•
&gt;
he
awards presentation
T
:Development, presented the Council and the Ohio Depart- counties of Ohio. The farm
highlighted the second day of
includes a farm museum, a the three-day conference,
deer park, naturt trail, sponsored annually by the
restored log cabin, horse barn, Department of Economic and
Revolutionary War cemerery,
Community Development and
Welsh windmill, sorghum mill, the Ohio Travel Council.
'
'
'
'

:m top pnonty
•

•

~-The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport..Pomeroy, 0., Jan.17, 1973

Local Bowling

N.Y.
169
By United Press International Quebttc
East
Ottawa
'11:".i:t.:-,liplf..-gl ga Ph Ita
NBo:Ss.ton · 23 9 12 58 177 112
West
21 20 5 47 147 )63
w.
pis. gf ga Standings:
Won lost
', Rchstr 19 14 7 45 ·135 t"38 Winipg 27 181. 21. 56
173 139 Team, ·
.
Prov
16 '16 8 44 141 134 Minn
22 20 3 47 143 147 Friendly Tavern , , 8 0
S&gt;prrgfld 11 18 11 33 ISO 169 Houston 20 17 4 44 ·151 141 . Tea"' 5
6 2
N.H.
11 27 8 30 156 218
2
6
LosAng 20 22' 4 44 157 162 Team 2
West
2 6.•
Alber Ia 19 22 2 40 135 150 Team-6
1
1
13 27 1 27 119 158 Modern Supply ·
2 6
Cincl
32w· 13 · ~- &amp;,'s 2&amp;, ~~~ ChicagoTuesday's
0
Results
Tea!" 3
.
• · 8
Va.
22 12 7 51 157 .133
Cleveland 4 Phila 3
H•gh Sar~es - IMenJ B.
Hrshy 21 12 9 51 163 128
Quebec 5 Ollawa 4. ot
Roach 590. B. Willford 552• C.
Rchmnd 16 21 6 38 148 · 158
Winnipeg
3
Minnesota
I
Boyles502; &lt;Women) L. Boyles
Jck'snvl 12 23 7 31 144 164
Alberta
6 Los Angeles 5
462,
B. Whitlatch 42 1, G.
Ball
6 27 8 20 120 186
(Only games scheduled)
Kes~lnger 41 5.
Tuesday's Results
Wednesday's ·Games
R H•ghh 20G5amBaW-IIIfolrMd_en204J ~ Roc hester 5 Boston 3
Cleveland al Houston
oac
• ·
• :.
• Nova Scotia 4 Cincinnati 1
New England at Chicago
Roach 203; (Women) L Boyles
Hershey 5 Providence 3
(Only gamesscheduled)
178: P. Thomas 164, B.
·
Wh1llatch 168.
Richmond4Jacksonvillle 1
Team High Series - Team
I Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
Lakewood 75 Licking Heig hts 4? 5 2115, Friendly Tavern 2093,
- Utica 81 Licking Valley 71
Team 3 2000.
.
Richmond at Baltimore
Watkins Memorial 63 Nor· Team High Game ~ Team 5
Sprlngf,ield at Hershey
Rochester at New Haven
thridge 4? · ·
757, Friendly Tavern 750, Team
Jacksonville at Virg inia
Gahanna 50 Bexl~y .18
5 720.
Cols . Westland 76 Franklin
(On ly games scheduled)
Heights 67
WHA Standings
New Albany 56 Columbus
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
By United Press International
Academy 55
Friendship League
East ·
Fairbanks
67 Marysville 55
Jan. 7, 1973
w. 1, t. pis gf ga Ot1io Deaf 33 Mansfield Fields
Standings:
New Eng 25 16 1 51 183 146
27
Team
Won Lost
Cleve
25 16 I 51 152 .116 Fori Frye 61 Waterford 40
Reds
12
4

__::...._::__~,------..we'.

Ohio taxpayers
I

AH L Standings

10
6•

6

10
4
12
.
.
4
12
Hlgh . lnd. G•m• - IMenJ .
Eddie Van Meter ··203, Bob
Williams 183; (Women) Becky
· Dunfee 186, Betty Whlllach U6.
High Series - (Men) Ken
Little 506, Ed Kitchen .181: ·
(Women! Becky Dunfee. ~73,
Betty Whitlach ~14.
Tum High Game - Super
Stars 625 . .
Team High Serln - Reds
1700.

" DJSABI ,ED?
CHICAGO (UPI) -: James
Baer, 80, charged II) a f250.~
damage suit on flle In Cook
County' Circuli Court be WM
"permanently disabled" wben
he was hllln the·groln by a golf
ball 1n 1970. Baer was In lbe
news earlier th1a 111«1th wben
hill wife pve birth to quiDtuplets.

V/HER£ ECONOMY ORIGINATES

Fully Cooked and Smoked!

Witnesses are

Always do What is honest arl'd lair l or every '"'

C\JStomer .

RAlNCHECK:

attend seminar

II an adVerllsed special is evP.r sold out ask the

M8nager

fOr a Raineheck . 11 e.nlilles you tO lhe

same item at the same special price IM IOI·
lowing week . Or il yo,, wish we' ll give you a
comparable item at the same Sl) eC1al pr1ce

·

the practical
approach
to sewing, using NEW techniques
for the NEW fabrics and fashions ...

A~~~-~ " '' " an unconditional Money-back guar . No mauer what it i s. no maller WhO
,..!35'-"i, it A&amp;P sells it. A&amp; P gua•an l oes

Mldd,lepart, Ohio

e

Dai~

Open

.

9 to 9

the investigation were to take
the stand afrer Baldwin.
At Tuesday's session, policemen said they recovered boxes
full of evidence, from burglary
tools to cameras, at the breakin site.

:;he~~e

·

· 1h

·

ai_!r=les" : : :
refused to turn over to Sirles.
1

ordered the tapes
released to the court. .
• Ba ld..,in
" totd the Times,

for

at the store

1-lb.
Basket

next week
at the store

•

WHITE OR PINK SEEDLESS

G-rapefruit • • •

c

BINDER

Getthis beautiful
to collect and protect your
Sewing Book chapters

.·LAUNDRY DITIRSINT

.

Ferguson catching mistJJkes m

'm?

COLUMBUS (UPlj - State Auditor Joseph T.lffi
::;:;:;: Fergusoo said today his office Is doing taspayers a ser- ~!i;!~
::;:;:;: vice by checking welfare medical bills before they are ~:t:
:;:;:;: paid, eveo lithe process slows up Medicaid payments to ~?:;:;:
druggists and physlclaos. Ferguson's eflorls bU-gely )f:i!
duplicate the work of state Welfare Department com::::::: puten, but the auditor said many mistakes are• being ::::::::
::::&lt;: caught
::::::::
·:·:&lt;-:
•
·:·:·:~
:;[:i:i:
"They sent over biJ!s totaiiDg $t33,7!1.53 the other day [:i:!~
·
that were all Incorrect," Ferguson 1ald. "Key pqncb
:~;:;:: mistakes.
:;:;~:;
i:i:i::; · "But what wOilld have happened If lh•e bllll bad i:i*''
;i:l been paid on the ba1ll 011 the Welfare Department's ;:;:;=[:
:[:[:;:; examl••tton and approval? Tbere I• no way In the world :11:!(
the
coald bave recovered tbat $4GO,IOO."

rJ

i!f\i

W?

&amp;if

:im

sta~

%
'
m:

. .

O.,tce

Pepto Bi!mol
Di·G·I
Tablets
SPRAY

••'
''

4

'
~
.•'

I

I

·••.,''
..•

,
'

'

...·'•
;;
.l
••

.

:1
;,••

:i

~· .~$149

I

I

•

I

Margarine •
CHUNK LIGHT
Star-Kist ·Tuna • •

THE PERFECT GIFT
tor yOur daughter or yourulf

.INIIAL MILLS

1

M

m
...

~-

:.v

m .::~~=~W:==_:x=:.~=~=~~~:*::J:i:i:i:i:t:J;J:J:i:I~:~:~J;I:~:i:!:f:I
:~:I:I:I:~~:~:~:;:;:;:;:I:i:~:§J:::::::::::::::::::::::::t:~~1:~t:1W
. . . . w.-::w................... ,............ ... ......
............·.······················ ......... .

51'

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With
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HUNT'S

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• • At All A&amp;P WEO'o
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Keebler Zesta Saltines • . . ·:. . . . ~: 4:c
Crocker . . . . . . . · • · · · · · · · · 3 c ·

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Hunt's Ketchup •............• l•-·
:; 27c
Hunt's Tomato Paste ....... · . · - · 32c
Hunt's Ma~ich Sandwich . , ..•.•~· 41 c ·

~~

Thio
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• New Fabrics anclthe
Newest Techniques
• Frin1e Benelib
• Sewlor Him!
• Little Clothes at lillie Prices
• llnurie and Swimwur
• Fl~ II,_Chan&amp;e It Cover II!
• The Time, The Place,
. The TOlls

cans

l 00
A&amp;P Pineapple-Grapefruit

NU-MAID SOFT

• Do.Wonders wilh Your
Wardrobe
·
• Blueprint to Fashion
• The Basic Milerlals . ·
• Layout, Cuttlneand Markin&amp;
• The Inside Personality
• Secrets or Shapin&amp;
• Necklines, ·Sleeves, Pockets
• An Open and Shut Slory

16-oz ••

With
26•01.

I

HAIR

Adorn .
Collect All 11S Chaptera •••

Good thru Sat., Jan. 20th. At All A&amp;P WEO'o

Toutllf.o.Ketelu•p

FOR FAST RELIEF

•i

so join the millions, from teens on up
who take'pride in being creative, Beginners will
find this book EASY to understand . .. and the
experenced sewer will find it
refreshingly direct and helpful.
The easy-to-follow, step-by-step instructions
and time-saving techniques make sewing
.more enjoyable. The !illest techniques on
pattern adjustment help you attain the
custom-made look for perfect fit_, So, put
the "NOW" fashions at your fingertips.

I

C.I IIS

•

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

"Sewing your own thing" is fun. _.

tb.
!Jag

Tomatoes

.

.

:t~$140

•';
•'

•
•

i!fii

'

$199

*PLUS, SPECIAL OFFER BELOW!

5 79c

' Thio
Coupon

HUNT'S

CfiA,riRI :t THIIU 11 ••• 0NL

wlth helpful Charlland Guides an the Divider Tabs
and a thorauch, useful Master Index.

CAREER OUTFITS - Employes of the Meigs Branch of
the Athens County Savings and Loan Company are shown
modeling their new career girl mix and match outfits. Shown
wearing the attractive red, white and blue :outfits are, 1-r,
Donna Davidson and Cathy Smith. The oulfitS,were furnished
· by the company. The Athens County Savings· and wan
Company will be celebrating its 50th arutiversary beginning
with an open house at the Pomeroy branch the last of tile
month. Throughout the year gifts will be awarded to adults
and children simply by registering at the Pomeroy_office.

With

15-oz.

CHAPTER TWO "Blueprint to FashionH

=~s~~ a~~~~~t~~~",: t!!!i
later

CHAPTER ONE "Do'WondetSwithYourWanlrobe"

NOW...

2: 1:~: :i:~=~=J~=~=~~J~t~~" ~= =~=~t=m=mt=~=~=~== t= ~=:=~=:=:=~=~=~=~:~ :~ J~=~=~=~:~=~:=~: ~=:=~=: :~:~:~l i~ ili!::~: ::~~

other men.
Five of the seven men indieted in the case have pleaded
guilty to charges of conspiracy,
burglary
and
illegal
wiretapping. Only McCord and
G. Gordon Liddy, former White
House aide remain.
·'
. Baldwin's testimony ~me

--"Newel

HUNT'S

~~r~ =~:E~;~

~~::ts' c;i~: w:~ f~~

CA~IFORNIA JUMBO,SIZE 56's

.,

WAI)IfiN~TON \Yf~tq;;.l'J)~.., ~~,Qcl.-6, --f-,. ·Pollee ooffiteFB involved in
1972, tha~ when McCord hired
him to work for the Committee
to Re-elect the President "he
emphasized that although the
job was temporary, it could be
a stepping stone to a permanent position after President
Nixon's re-election."

Chuck

.

prove 200 eavesdrops
.

From

Shank
Half

l'rlcer '~CHI Thru Sat., Jan. ZO..., I 973 In

. WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

THE COMPLETE FAMILY
Aulllored by an experienced
team of Home Economists,
who have written for most
prominent companies willl
Consumer Education Departments in Home Sewina. ·

$ 08

Cut

Full

GUARANTEE:

NATIONALLY
ADVERTISED IN
AEDIOOK
I McCALL'S

Prosecution expects_ to
'

H,_.,

A&amp;PPOLlCY:

Available NOW
AtA&amp;PWEO!

invited to

campaign organization when

' '

•

COLUMBUS (UP!)- Robert H. Baker, acting stare finance
·director said Tuesday the Gilligan Administration's ·plan for
spending federal revenue sharing funds is designed to eliminate
new bond issues and accompanying future tax increases. Baker
defended the administration's plan to spend $92.3 million in
federal funds in testimony before the House Finance Committee.
Presiding Overseer R. A.
Baker told the committee the administratioo was guided by Hummel and his Middleport
these principles in formulating its recommendations:
· Congregation of Jehovah's
- The revenue sharing funds
Witnesses have been invited to
should be applied toward governor James A. Rhodes had a regional seminar on January
reduction of future lax burdens au thorized the issuance of 20 and 21 in Portsmouth High
on Ohio citizens.
more than $700 million in new School.
~ Programs funded by bonds b e~&gt;feen 1967 and 1971.
revenue shari~g should not be
An estimated 1,000 delegares
"These past bond issues and
allowed to create a patrern of revenue bonds forced the state . from the Tri-state area will
increased cost that would bring to increase its seryice ex- attend the two-day event,
about a lax increase in fiscal penditures from $35.8 miUion in extending the weekly program
1974-75.
liscall970 to an estimated $78.7 of the local congregation of
- The funds should be used million in fiscal 1974," Baker Jehov"ah's Witnesses including
for improvements with a high poinll!d out.
d ministry school designed to
value to the people of Ohio.
"Like taxes, bond issues improve the skills of teaching
- The aid should be focused raise money from the people and preaching both inside and
_on high priority areas such as for government purposes," ou tsid'&gt;
the
family
Ia .'
enforcement,
en- Baker said. "Unlike taxes, arrangement.
v~&lt;·onmental
protection , bond issues seem painless at
The event will end Sunday at
education, mental retardation, the time but result in higher
2
p.m.
when District Director
parks . and recreational ser- taxes in the long run becau~
vices.
the state must pay off both the H. C. Brewer from world
Baker told the committee the bonds and the interest on headquarters will speak on "Is
This Life All There Is•"
administration of former them ."

pr~lml!Fon 1/iilfe;'Watergate
political espionage trial hopes
to prove in court that a former
FBI agent eavesdropped on
some 200 telephone calls of the
Democratic Natiooal Committee last year In an effort to
learn its campaign strategy
against President Nixoo.
The former agent, Allred C.
Baldwin m, has been called for
further testimooy In the trial,
which reswnes in U.S. District
Court today.
Baldwin said esrlier he was
hired by one of the Watergate
defendants, James W. McCord
Jr., to provide "any information on Sen. George McGovern
and the Democrats' party
chairman, Lawrence · F .
O'Brien, and anything having
to do with political strategy."
Baldwin said he worked for
three weeks last May mooltoring the Democrats' tapped
phooes in Washington from a
Howard Johnson motel acrOI'lll
the street.
In another development as
the trial entered its ninth day,
Attorney Gerald Alch said he
would present a memorandwn
to Judge John J . Slrica
defending McCord, by showing
that the break-In at the
Democrats' Watergate headqUarters In Washington last
June 17 was justified because
McCord was convinced
. violence was planned against
Nixon and other top
. Republicans.
"U you have a reasonable
apprehension that harm may
come to others as well as to
yourself, you can break the law
to avoid the greater harm,"
Alch said in outlining the

•

~

&amp;ood 'lin S.t. Joo..ZOII&lt;
At All AlP W!O'o

LIMIT

g

�,indu-st~'aw-a rd,·_,
1given .Bob Evans_ Farms
14 _The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan.17, 1973

historic slave cabin and a

variety of farm animal and
.,----,WJ
w;Iallfe exhtlillSr--.
•
,
,
The farm is also the scene of
'
several festivals during the
'•
year including ,the Bob Evans
Farm Festil·al, the Welsh
Eisteddfod, the Bean Dinner
and th~e Trail Ride and Quarter
' GALLIPOLIS - Bob Evans · 1972 Ohio Travel Award 1pent of Economic and Com- Horse Show.
Other travel awards were
Farms, Inc. of Rio Grande was (business category) to Bob munity Development. A
: hooored today by the slate's Evans on behalf of the farm for commitree of state officials presented to Eber L. V.rigt.•,
director of the Ashtabula
: travel
industry
d~ring "its outstanding contribution to and travel executives selected
County Planning Commission
,ceremonies at the Governor's tourism in the stale."
the award recipients.
;Conference On Tourism at Salt
Members of Ohio's travel Sweet said Bob ·Evans Fanns in the individual category and
the Young Women's Christian
:fork Lodge near Cambridge. industry were invited last fall was Selected !or honors for its Assn, of Columbus for Its
: Dr. David C. Sweet, director to submit nominations for the strong contribution as an
lour program in the non-profit
!of the. Ohio Department of award, jointly sponsored by the historic and educational at- group
category.
•Economic
and Community
p_rivate sector Ohio Travel traction i9 the Appalachian
•
&gt;
he
awards presentation
T
:Development, presented the Council and the Ohio Depart- counties of Ohio. The farm
highlighted the second day of
includes a farm museum, a the three-day conference,
deer park, naturt trail, sponsored annually by the
restored log cabin, horse barn, Department of Economic and
Revolutionary War cemerery,
Community Development and
Welsh windmill, sorghum mill, the Ohio Travel Council.
'
'
'
'

:m top pnonty
•

•

~-The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport..Pomeroy, 0., Jan.17, 1973

Local Bowling

N.Y.
169
By United Press International Quebttc
East
Ottawa
'11:".i:t.:-,liplf..-gl ga Ph Ita
NBo:Ss.ton · 23 9 12 58 177 112
West
21 20 5 47 147 )63
w.
pis. gf ga Standings:
Won lost
', Rchstr 19 14 7 45 ·135 t"38 Winipg 27 181. 21. 56
173 139 Team, ·
.
Prov
16 '16 8 44 141 134 Minn
22 20 3 47 143 147 Friendly Tavern , , 8 0
S&gt;prrgfld 11 18 11 33 ISO 169 Houston 20 17 4 44 ·151 141 . Tea"' 5
6 2
N.H.
11 27 8 30 156 218
2
6
LosAng 20 22' 4 44 157 162 Team 2
West
2 6.•
Alber Ia 19 22 2 40 135 150 Team-6
1
1
13 27 1 27 119 158 Modern Supply ·
2 6
Cincl
32w· 13 · ~- &amp;,'s 2&amp;, ~~~ ChicagoTuesday's
0
Results
Tea!" 3
.
• · 8
Va.
22 12 7 51 157 .133
Cleveland 4 Phila 3
H•gh Sar~es - IMenJ B.
Hrshy 21 12 9 51 163 128
Quebec 5 Ollawa 4. ot
Roach 590. B. Willford 552• C.
Rchmnd 16 21 6 38 148 · 158
Winnipeg
3
Minnesota
I
Boyles502; &lt;Women) L. Boyles
Jck'snvl 12 23 7 31 144 164
Alberta
6 Los Angeles 5
462,
B. Whitlatch 42 1, G.
Ball
6 27 8 20 120 186
(Only games scheduled)
Kes~lnger 41 5.
Tuesday's Results
Wednesday's ·Games
R H•ghh 20G5amBaW-IIIfolrMd_en204J ~ Roc hester 5 Boston 3
Cleveland al Houston
oac
• ·
• :.
• Nova Scotia 4 Cincinnati 1
New England at Chicago
Roach 203; (Women) L Boyles
Hershey 5 Providence 3
(Only gamesscheduled)
178: P. Thomas 164, B.
·
Wh1llatch 168.
Richmond4Jacksonvillle 1
Team High Series - Team
I Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
Lakewood 75 Licking Heig hts 4? 5 2115, Friendly Tavern 2093,
- Utica 81 Licking Valley 71
Team 3 2000.
.
Richmond at Baltimore
Watkins Memorial 63 Nor· Team High Game ~ Team 5
Sprlngf,ield at Hershey
Rochester at New Haven
thridge 4? · ·
757, Friendly Tavern 750, Team
Jacksonville at Virg inia
Gahanna 50 Bexl~y .18
5 720.
Cols . Westland 76 Franklin
(On ly games scheduled)
Heights 67
WHA Standings
New Albany 56 Columbus
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
By United Press International
Academy 55
Friendship League
East ·
Fairbanks
67 Marysville 55
Jan. 7, 1973
w. 1, t. pis gf ga Ot1io Deaf 33 Mansfield Fields
Standings:
New Eng 25 16 1 51 183 146
27
Team
Won Lost
Cleve
25 16 I 51 152 .116 Fori Frye 61 Waterford 40
Reds
12
4

__::...._::__~,------..we'.

Ohio taxpayers
I

AH L Standings

10
6•

6

10
4
12
.
.
4
12
Hlgh . lnd. G•m• - IMenJ .
Eddie Van Meter ··203, Bob
Williams 183; (Women) Becky
· Dunfee 186, Betty Whlllach U6.
High Series - (Men) Ken
Little 506, Ed Kitchen .181: ·
(Women! Becky Dunfee. ~73,
Betty Whitlach ~14.
Tum High Game - Super
Stars 625 . .
Team High Serln - Reds
1700.

" DJSABI ,ED?
CHICAGO (UPI) -: James
Baer, 80, charged II) a f250.~
damage suit on flle In Cook
County' Circuli Court be WM
"permanently disabled" wben
he was hllln the·groln by a golf
ball 1n 1970. Baer was In lbe
news earlier th1a 111«1th wben
hill wife pve birth to quiDtuplets.

V/HER£ ECONOMY ORIGINATES

Fully Cooked and Smoked!

Witnesses are

Always do What is honest arl'd lair l or every '"'

C\JStomer .

RAlNCHECK:

attend seminar

II an adVerllsed special is evP.r sold out ask the

M8nager

fOr a Raineheck . 11 e.nlilles you tO lhe

same item at the same special price IM IOI·
lowing week . Or il yo,, wish we' ll give you a
comparable item at the same Sl) eC1al pr1ce

·

the practical
approach
to sewing, using NEW techniques
for the NEW fabrics and fashions ...

A~~~-~ " '' " an unconditional Money-back guar . No mauer what it i s. no maller WhO
,..!35'-"i, it A&amp;P sells it. A&amp; P gua•an l oes

Mldd,lepart, Ohio

e

Dai~

Open

.

9 to 9

the investigation were to take
the stand afrer Baldwin.
At Tuesday's session, policemen said they recovered boxes
full of evidence, from burglary
tools to cameras, at the breakin site.

:;he~~e

·

· 1h

·

ai_!r=les" : : :
refused to turn over to Sirles.
1

ordered the tapes
released to the court. .
• Ba ld..,in
" totd the Times,

for

at the store

1-lb.
Basket

next week
at the store

•

WHITE OR PINK SEEDLESS

G-rapefruit • • •

c

BINDER

Getthis beautiful
to collect and protect your
Sewing Book chapters

.·LAUNDRY DITIRSINT

.

Ferguson catching mistJJkes m

'm?

COLUMBUS (UPlj - State Auditor Joseph T.lffi
::;:;:;: Fergusoo said today his office Is doing taspayers a ser- ~!i;!~
::;:;:;: vice by checking welfare medical bills before they are ~:t:
:;:;:;: paid, eveo lithe process slows up Medicaid payments to ~?:;:;:
druggists and physlclaos. Ferguson's eflorls bU-gely )f:i!
duplicate the work of state Welfare Department com::::::: puten, but the auditor said many mistakes are• being ::::::::
::::&lt;: caught
::::::::
·:·:&lt;-:
•
·:·:·:~
:;[:i:i:
"They sent over biJ!s totaiiDg $t33,7!1.53 the other day [:i:!~
·
that were all Incorrect," Ferguson 1ald. "Key pqncb
:~;:;:: mistakes.
:;:;~:;
i:i:i::; · "But what wOilld have happened If lh•e bllll bad i:i*''
;i:l been paid on the ba1ll 011 the Welfare Department's ;:;:;=[:
:[:[:;:; examl••tton and approval? Tbere I• no way In the world :11:!(
the
coald bave recovered tbat $4GO,IOO."

rJ

i!f\i

W?

&amp;if

:im

sta~

%
'
m:

. .

O.,tce

Pepto Bi!mol
Di·G·I
Tablets
SPRAY

••'
''

4

'
~
.•'

I

I

·••.,''
..•

,
'

'

...·'•
;;
.l
••

.

:1
;,••

:i

~· .~$149

I

I

•

I

Margarine •
CHUNK LIGHT
Star-Kist ·Tuna • •

THE PERFECT GIFT
tor yOur daughter or yourulf

.INIIAL MILLS

1

M

m
...

~-

:.v

m .::~~=~W:==_:x=:.~=~=~~~:*::J:i:i:i:i:t:J;J:J:i:I~:~:~J;I:~:i:!:f:I
:~:I:I:I:~~:~:~:;:;:;:;:I:i:~:§J:::::::::::::::::::::::::t:~~1:~t:1W
. . . . w.-::w................... ,............ ... ......
............·.······················ ......... .

51'

l

'

eue, Mi.Ma.
With
This

46•01•

Coupon

can

BIRDS EYE FROZEN

~
9·01.$

16-oz. $

COlli

00

With
This
Coupon

cans

.....

· ·. Cheerlos

Packs

,.,. 0·4·9e ~~~.h

· ·o...~go ~~~
,... .

'

,

.

Save
1Qc c!~~.
oa 4·oz. pk9. of · ·

HUNT'S

C..pon

4

Sot. ~ 20th
At AI AlP WlO'o
·

Coupon

Carson
Dried Beef

.

Th,. Sot. Jon, 20th.
• • At All A&amp;P WEO'o
· .G;ood

'

ONI .

LIMIT

il

•

' ft'

'!

· Save 1oc c••,..

011 l~·ol. can of Cap'1 Jo•11

· e...am Of

Mushroo.m Soup

6aad Tloru Sot., Joo,,201hAI All AaP WEO'o

•"

v

.

~~&lt;.......

!l
i

.Mb
pki.

Crocker Frosting Mixes.~O::.."''':.:41c.
Skillet Dinners
.....
,81
..........
....

-~ - · . . . .11-Q

J

I

.....

W1110n 011 ••.• • . ~ . • • • . ... • . . •· 56c Sunlhlne Hydrox Cookies ..... ;"~t 53c ·
Keebler Zesta Saltines • . . ·:. . . . ~: 4:c
Crocker . . . . . . . · • · · · · · · · · 3 c ·

-~.
l

•

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

BETTY CROCKER LArER

Hunt's Ketchup •............• l•-·
:; 27c
Hunt's Tomato Paste ....... · . · - · 32c
Hunt's Ma~ich Sandwich . , ..•.•~· 41 c ·

~~

Thio
Coupon

btls.

I

I

;

• New Fabrics anclthe
Newest Techniques
• Frin1e Benelib
• Sewlor Him!
• Little Clothes at lillie Prices
• llnurie and Swimwur
• Fl~ II,_Chan&amp;e It Cover II!
• The Time, The Place,
. The TOlls

cans

l 00
A&amp;P Pineapple-Grapefruit

NU-MAID SOFT

• Do.Wonders wilh Your
Wardrobe
·
• Blueprint to Fashion
• The Basic Milerlals . ·
• Layout, Cuttlneand Markin&amp;
• The Inside Personality
• Secrets or Shapin&amp;
• Necklines, ·Sleeves, Pockets
• An Open and Shut Slory

16-oz ••

With
26•01.

I

HAIR

Adorn .
Collect All 11S Chaptera •••

Good thru Sat., Jan. 20th. At All A&amp;P WEO'o

Toutllf.o.Ketelu•p

FOR FAST RELIEF

•i

so join the millions, from teens on up
who take'pride in being creative, Beginners will
find this book EASY to understand . .. and the
experenced sewer will find it
refreshingly direct and helpful.
The easy-to-follow, step-by-step instructions
and time-saving techniques make sewing
.more enjoyable. The !illest techniques on
pattern adjustment help you attain the
custom-made look for perfect fit_, So, put
the "NOW" fashions at your fingertips.

I

C.I IIS

•

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

"Sewing your own thing" is fun. _.

tb.
!Jag

Tomatoes

.

.

:t~$140

•';
•'

•
•

i!fii

'

$199

*PLUS, SPECIAL OFFER BELOW!

5 79c

' Thio
Coupon

HUNT'S

CfiA,riRI :t THIIU 11 ••• 0NL

wlth helpful Charlland Guides an the Divider Tabs
and a thorauch, useful Master Index.

CAREER OUTFITS - Employes of the Meigs Branch of
the Athens County Savings and Loan Company are shown
modeling their new career girl mix and match outfits. Shown
wearing the attractive red, white and blue :outfits are, 1-r,
Donna Davidson and Cathy Smith. The oulfitS,were furnished
· by the company. The Athens County Savings· and wan
Company will be celebrating its 50th arutiversary beginning
with an open house at the Pomeroy branch the last of tile
month. Throughout the year gifts will be awarded to adults
and children simply by registering at the Pomeroy_office.

With

15-oz.

CHAPTER TWO "Blueprint to FashionH

=~s~~ a~~~~~t~~~",: t!!!i
later

CHAPTER ONE "Do'WondetSwithYourWanlrobe"

NOW...

2: 1:~: :i:~=~=J~=~=~~J~t~~" ~= =~=~t=m=mt=~=~=~== t= ~=:=~=:=:=~=~=~=~:~ :~ J~=~=~=~:~=~:=~: ~=:=~=: :~:~:~l i~ ili!::~: ::~~

other men.
Five of the seven men indieted in the case have pleaded
guilty to charges of conspiracy,
burglary
and
illegal
wiretapping. Only McCord and
G. Gordon Liddy, former White
House aide remain.
·'
. Baldwin's testimony ~me

--"Newel

HUNT'S

~~r~ =~:E~;~

~~::ts' c;i~: w:~ f~~

CA~IFORNIA JUMBO,SIZE 56's

.,

WAI)IfiN~TON \Yf~tq;;.l'J)~.., ~~,Qcl.-6, --f-,. ·Pollee ooffiteFB involved in
1972, tha~ when McCord hired
him to work for the Committee
to Re-elect the President "he
emphasized that although the
job was temporary, it could be
a stepping stone to a permanent position after President
Nixon's re-election."

Chuck

.

prove 200 eavesdrops
.

From

Shank
Half

l'rlcer '~CHI Thru Sat., Jan. ZO..., I 973 In

. WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

THE COMPLETE FAMILY
Aulllored by an experienced
team of Home Economists,
who have written for most
prominent companies willl
Consumer Education Departments in Home Sewina. ·

$ 08

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NATIONALLY
ADVERTISED IN
AEDIOOK
I McCALL'S

Prosecution expects_ to
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invited to

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' '

•

COLUMBUS (UP!)- Robert H. Baker, acting stare finance
·director said Tuesday the Gilligan Administration's ·plan for
spending federal revenue sharing funds is designed to eliminate
new bond issues and accompanying future tax increases. Baker
defended the administration's plan to spend $92.3 million in
federal funds in testimony before the House Finance Committee.
Presiding Overseer R. A.
Baker told the committee the administratioo was guided by Hummel and his Middleport
these principles in formulating its recommendations:
· Congregation of Jehovah's
- The revenue sharing funds
Witnesses have been invited to
should be applied toward governor James A. Rhodes had a regional seminar on January
reduction of future lax burdens au thorized the issuance of 20 and 21 in Portsmouth High
on Ohio citizens.
more than $700 million in new School.
~ Programs funded by bonds b e~&gt;feen 1967 and 1971.
revenue shari~g should not be
An estimated 1,000 delegares
"These past bond issues and
allowed to create a patrern of revenue bonds forced the state . from the Tri-state area will
increased cost that would bring to increase its seryice ex- attend the two-day event,
about a lax increase in fiscal penditures from $35.8 miUion in extending the weekly program
1974-75.
liscall970 to an estimated $78.7 of the local congregation of
- The funds should be used million in fiscal 1974," Baker Jehov"ah's Witnesses including
for improvements with a high poinll!d out.
d ministry school designed to
value to the people of Ohio.
"Like taxes, bond issues improve the skills of teaching
- The aid should be focused raise money from the people and preaching both inside and
_on high priority areas such as for government purposes," ou tsid'&gt;
the
family
Ia .'
enforcement,
en- Baker said. "Unlike taxes, arrangement.
v~&lt;·onmental
protection , bond issues seem painless at
The event will end Sunday at
education, mental retardation, the time but result in higher
2
p.m.
when District Director
parks . and recreational ser- taxes in the long run becau~
vices.
the state must pay off both the H. C. Brewer from world
Baker told the committee the bonds and the interest on headquarters will speak on "Is
This Life All There Is•"
administration of former them ."

pr~lml!Fon 1/iilfe;'Watergate
political espionage trial hopes
to prove in court that a former
FBI agent eavesdropped on
some 200 telephone calls of the
Democratic Natiooal Committee last year In an effort to
learn its campaign strategy
against President Nixoo.
The former agent, Allred C.
Baldwin m, has been called for
further testimooy In the trial,
which reswnes in U.S. District
Court today.
Baldwin said esrlier he was
hired by one of the Watergate
defendants, James W. McCord
Jr., to provide "any information on Sen. George McGovern
and the Democrats' party
chairman, Lawrence · F .
O'Brien, and anything having
to do with political strategy."
Baldwin said he worked for
three weeks last May mooltoring the Democrats' tapped
phooes in Washington from a
Howard Johnson motel acrOI'lll
the street.
In another development as
the trial entered its ninth day,
Attorney Gerald Alch said he
would present a memorandwn
to Judge John J . Slrica
defending McCord, by showing
that the break-In at the
Democrats' Watergate headqUarters In Washington last
June 17 was justified because
McCord was convinced
. violence was planned against
Nixon and other top
. Republicans.
"U you have a reasonable
apprehension that harm may
come to others as well as to
yourself, you can break the law
to avoid the greater harm,"
Alch said in outlining the

•

~

&amp;ood 'lin S.t. Joo..ZOII&lt;
At All AlP W!O'o

LIMIT

g

�•

I

I

.......

16...., The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan.l7, 1973

.

Norris heads · · Point scuttled Applications for School boards
Joe waugh fired in~25;s-pp;ointnlts
~.-;.suumn·nmi'Ee~rJolliSooppeein1a;,;;n•;;;nn.din;dtJT.r=.a;.c;:Jk~ey~-1
Racine bank
and Barboursville's defense
rr~
·stopped bigh.,scoring Charlie
WASHINGTON,' D. C. Chambers
as
the
Pirates
again in '73
Congressman Clarence Miller as secretary
~~-'---

COLUMilUS (UPI) - Stale
Rep. George · Ma&amp;tics, R·
Fairview Park, &amp;aid the special
legislative subcommittee of

·'
which he is chairman will
conduct a full-blown investigation of sky-rocketing
medical costs in the state.

"There will be no sacred
cows nor special sanctuaries as
our commission .·conducts its
quest for the truth," Mastics
Said today.
Mastics &amp;aid the committee
would hold a number of public
hearings around the state on
rising hospital and medical
costs. ·
' 'Our commission will in-

tensively cross-examine
witnesses, examine hospital
and medical records, . invesligate costs and incomes,
check on expenses and expense · 'RACINE - Freeland Norris
accounts," he &amp;aid. "We will was re-elected president of the
spare no person from careful Racine Home National Bank at
scrutiny in our search for the its organizational meeting
truth behind these fantastic Tuesday night.
Other officers re-e lected
health costs."
were Charles Hayman ,
chairman . of the board ; Tom
Wolfe, executive vice presiden t
and cashier, and Clarence
Price, vice president.
Directors re-elected were
SYRACUSE - Henry L. at ID a.m. Thursday at the
Harold
Caranhan, Earl Cross,
Johnson , 69, Syracuse, died Ewing Funeral Home with the
Tuesday evening at Veterans Rev . Charles Norris of- J. Dillon Cross, Albert Hill, Jr.,
Memorial Hospital.
ficiating . Following services George Neigler , Carroll
Mr. Johnson is survived by a here the body will be removed Norris, W. A. Orr, J. W.
daughter, Mrs. Ellen Grace to Belleville, Ill., to the Kurrus Weaver, Jr. , and Charles
Morgan, Stamford, Conn.; a Funeral Home . Graveside David Yost. Re-elected
sister, Mrs. Beulah Calkins, services have been set for 11 assistant cashiers were Ruth
Columbus, . and five grand- a.m. Friday at the Valhalla Simpson, Claudia Roush and
Mildred Gillilan . Additional
daughters. Preceding him in Cemetery in Belleville.
employes of the bank are Ben
death were his wife, Margaret ' ·
Petrel, Charlotte Rupe and
Wadsworth Johnson, and a son,
Bonnie Lawrence.
H. L. Johnson, Jr .
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Funeral services will be held
The Pomeroy E-R squad Mr. Wolfe reported that the
answered a call to the Charles bank had an "excellent year"
Faulk residence on old Route in 1972.
33 near Pomeroy at 5:45 a.m.
Marriage Licenses
Wednesday. Edna Faulk, who
Robert Estil Collins, 20, Rt. 2, was iii, was taken to Veterans Veterans Memorial Hospital
Pomeroy, and Tina Marie Memorial Hospital where she
ADMiTTED - Margare t
Mayle, 16, Pomeroy ; James was admitted. At 7, a.m. the Johnson, Racine; David Ross,
59
Snodgrass, 24, . Racine, and fire department was called for Middleport ; Alan Pugh,
Lois A!)n Rupe, 18, Langsville, a fire reportedly in a home M~nersvilie ; Har:y Roush,
and Kenneth Edward Shuler, near the Crossroads. However Middleport ; Juamta Conde,
18, Letart Falls, and Pamela the call was cancelled befor~ Reedsville, and Sheila Conkle,
Virginia Davis, 17, Racine.
firemen left their sbltion.
' Cheshire.
DISCHARGED - Paul Van
Me~r, Judy Elkins, George
Cundiff, Cathy Price, Callie
Metheney , Blythe Theiss,
Eugene Reeves, Steven
(Continued from page 1)
Dunfee, Patricia Mauer, Rosa
corridor, Klatt reported.
Bail and Carl Still, Jr.
Needed collection and sewage treatment facilities in the
Impact area will cost "millions of dyllars," Klatt wariled. He
FILM SCHEDULED
reported that the growth potential of Albany is greal.
A meeting of the Meigs
Topography, geographic location and highway conoections
County
Alcoholism and Drug
dictate cflmmunity expansion. Collection and treatment facilities
Abuse Committee will be held
are needed to service that area also.
at
7:30p.m. Thursday at the St.
The installation of a chlorination system at Middleport would
remove a major barrier to filii state approval in that community, Paul Lutheran Church in
but trunk extensions will be necessary to the sewage system to Pomeroy. A film, "Invisi ble
accommodate future growth. The Jackson sewage treatmeut Child" will be shown. The
plant is unable to treat present and anticipated Impact flows, public is invited.
Klatt pointed out. However, Jackson is expecled to receive a
large share of west growth area population and plant expansion
of sewage facilities is critical.
Klatt analyzed the waU:r systems in the impact area.
Albany's system is inadequate to meet heavy future
demands; the Gallipolis water system is presently operating at
capacity. Plans are, however, underway there to expand it to
accommodate future water demands.
Pomeroy and Middleport have . interconnected water
systems which lack storage capacity. Storage capacity must be
increased, particularly in Pomeroy, if impact demands are to be
met; the survey discloses.
The Athens' distribution system is old, needing constant
attention, but anticipated growth can be accommodated with
improvemenls and replacements.
The Wilkesville-Salem Center area witl be served by the
Leading Creek Water System with treated water expected to be
available before the end of this year.
•
The report said next steps to be taken lmmellialely
include a series of meetings at the highest level with the
Federal Regional Council and the aid of James Peterson,
Economic Development Admlnfstration regional director
and chairman of a task force assigned by the federal
government to Southeastern Ohio,' and with Governor
Gilligan's staff to begin specific negotiations for obtalnfug
supplemental and priority funding for the highway, water
and sewage Improvements recommended.
' Beasley,
Presenting aspects of the future steps, John
executive djrector of the Buckeye Hilla-Hockirig Valley Regional
Development District, &amp;aid It is important that local support for
these improvements be aggressively communicated to approJXiale federal and state agencies. Beasley introduced the two
representatives of the consulting firms at yesterday's meeting.
Once a detailed reading on the level of funding support is
obtained and the projection of the distribution of the new
houseltllds among and outside the growth center is adjusted as
necessary, needs for service facilities such as schools, health
IM!rvlces, manpower training antl housing will be projected and
recommendations made.

Henry Johnson died Tuesday

........

2DAYS

ALASKA
to BAJA!

ONLY

FOR THE ENTIRE
"OFFERS INCREDIBLE BEAUTY, ADVENTURE
AND SUSPENSE."
- Detroit News

NOW SHOWING

MEIGS THEATRE

Ui:'ve got an eye on yourfoture
In this complicated world, it's
tough enough to cope with today,
much less think about tomorrow.
So one wide-awake part of our
business is future-watching for
our customers. And another part
is providing them with new and
improved services to meet the
demands of the time.
Bank wide-awake and we'll look
out for you. The same way we're
looking out for many others.

The wide-nwoke bo11k
makes ito/lsomsv.
~···

POMEROY,'OHIO
Membero1 Federal Res~rve System
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is Open 9 a .m. to 7 p.m
1

{Continuously).

520,000 Maxi,mum Insurance tor Each Depositor

Gavin Complex

The Winfield Generals
1iterally blew the Wahama
White Falcons off the court last
night in a lopsided IOUG win.
- ·.
.
WAHAMA (66)

--

..

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

'lb.

Home Made

~

HAM
SALAD
lb. 79~

89~
IU-Yutd

....

PIZZA
PEPPERONI

. ~ecial
db1Ul¥VP4!

. Fresh~ 90% Leaii

GROUND
CHUCK

12" Reg. $1.19

990
,.,..~

lb.

95~

Tasty Smoked

lb. ' 69~

Imported and

-

Table Wines

Dingey
Lewis
Mitchell
Lambert
Gilland
Buzzard
Ke~rns

Johnson
Totals

BULK
.SAUSAGE
lb. • •~

. I-TRACK
.TAPES
each

2.50

10-23 6-7 26
7-13 1-5 15
2-8 5-7 9
3-ll 0-l). 6
1-5 . 2-4 4

0-7 2-2 2
1-1 0-ll
1-3 0-1

2

2

21Mi9 16-27 66
WINFIELD ( 103)
FG FT-A'IT TP

Home Made Pork

Closeout! 15 Only

POLISH
SAUSAGE

FG A
Fg-A'IT FT-A'IT TP

Pomeroy

Open Mon. - Thurs. 9 a .m: to 7 p.m . - Fridays 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.- Saturdays 9 a.m. to 8:30p.m .

First Cut Fresh
PORK
CHOPS

has been ·advised by the U. S.
COLUMBUS
. Harry
Civil Service Commission that Lackey, · an adminislrative
applications . for summer staff merribel in the student
employment with a number of teaching office in the colle'ge of
federal agencies are now being education, Ohio University,
accepled. Filing deadlines.for has been named the new
the limiled job opportunities southeast regional secretary
vary among the agencies for the Ohio School Boards
participating in the program. Association, succeeding · Dr.
Rep. M1ller urged all those . Gilford Crowell who has
interested in summer em- resigned. The .annountement
pioy~ent to . contact his was made by Thomas West,
Washmgton o.ff~ce for a free Vinton County school poard
booklet: outhmng complete member who is southeast
I.
apphcatwn
procedures . . The regional president.
Barboursville - Waugh 2,
Former principal of OU's
Morgan II, Roberts 9, Smith 9, address: Rep. Claren~ Miller,
128
Cannon
House
Office
Bldg.,
education
college's laborato
Nash 8, Stanley 4, Bumgardner
Washington, D. C. 20515.
school from 1959 to 1977,
2, Poe 2.
Lackey was principal of Athens
By quarters :
Central School from 1954 to
Pt. Pleasant
7 9 18 14-411
1959.
He was a physical
Barboursville 16 19 20 15-70
BONDS FORFEITED
Officials: MarCum and
Two bonds have been for- education teacher and football
Jordan.
feited by one defendant and a and basketball coach at Athens
second defendant !:as been High School !rpm 1938 to 1954;
fined in the court of Middleport basketball and assistant
IN PARADE
Mayor John Zerkle. James D. football coach and teacher of
Sp. 5 Rodney R. Sayre, Walton, 37, Middleport, for- ppysical education, social
stationed with the U. S. Army feited his $200 bond posted for studies and English at Smith- ,
at Forst Eustis, Va., has been driving• while• intoxicated and field High School1934 to 1938,
selection to chauffeur for one of one of $50 for driving without and freshmen basketball coach
the VIP's in the inaugural an operator's license. Fined $10 at Ohio University 1933-34.
parade Saturday. Sp. Sayre left and costs on an assured clear
Lackey, a gll!duate of
for Washington, D. C. on Jan. distance charge was Buddy Youngstown East High School,
10 for briefing. He is the great- McKinney, 55, Middleport.
received his bachelor of
nephew of Mr. and Mrs. Homer
science degree In education'
Forrest of Bradbury, and is the
from Ohio University in 1929,
husband of Kathy Boyd,
his master of arts in English
DEMSTOMEET
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
A regular meeting of the from OU in 193s' and his adBoyd of near Racine, The Meigs County Democrat ministrative certification also
couple reside at Newport Executive Committee will be from OU,
News, Va.
held at 7:30p.m. Thursday at
the Episcopal Paril&gt;h House in
EGYPT ON FILM :
Pomeroy. The public is invited.
Color picture slides of kgypt
will be shown at T:30 p.m.
PLEAsANT VALLEY
LOCAL
TEMPS
Sunday
at the Pomeroy Church
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
The
temperature
in
downof the Nazarene showing
George Schwartz, son, Point
town
Pomeroy
at
II
a.
m.
modem Cairo on the banks of
Pleasant ; Mrs. Larry WhitWednesday
was
46
degrees,
tington, Arbuckle; Mrs. Ricky
the Nile and rural areas where
under
a
sunny
sky.
Smith, son, Point Pleasant;
life is still primitive in contrast
Mrs. Jack Riley, Letart; Mrs.
to the extreme wealth .
R. D. Tillis, Point Pleasant; ·
Narrating the slides will be Dr.
Mrs. Lawrence Stephens, New Crghton 93 Regis 59
Howard Estep. The public is
Haven, and Karen cassell, Seattle 82 Seattle Pac. 75
invited, the Rev. Clyde V.
Gonzaga 61 Wash. St. 52
Southside.
Carroll 76 No. Ariz. 75
Henderson, pastor, said.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Falcons defeated

us W. Main

coasted to a 70-48 · win over
Point Pleasant Tuesday night
at King Gymnasium.
Waugh, who Jed the Pirates
with 13 rebounds, SCQred 12
points in the first half, and
added 13 more in the final
periOd as the Bucs were in
command all the way · while
winning their seventh game
against one loss.
Pt. Pleasant - Moore 20,
Doolittle 15, Stricklen 8,
Chambers 2, Gerlach 2, Waldie

Frazier
Martin
Ru~ell

Mullins
Little John
Jones
Chapman
Banl)isblr
Gobel .
Bailey
Gillian
•

Totals

8 ~ 20
10 0-ll 20
8 3-4 19
4 1-2 9
2 4-1 8
3 0-1 6
3 0-ll 6
30-ll .. 6

I 3-5
I 0-1

5
2

I 0-ll

2

44 lii-23 103

Wahama 121212 30- 66 ·
Winfield 24 32 'll 20 -.too

Sale!
:Bath

•

The language spoken ,by the
most persons is Mandarin,
used by an estimated 475
million Chinese.

.

VOL XXIV

-

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 193

Devoted·To The

lnter~u

Increasing cloudiness and
warm today, highs in the upper
50s and ·low 60s. Showers likely
'tonight and Friday. Lows
tonight In the 40s. Highs Friday
mostly in the· 50s.
·

enttne

at y
•

Weather

•

Of The Meigs- Mason Area

eve

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1973

a use

s
Smiles, handshakes
at parting, hut not a

·,

word about agreements
PARIS (UPI) -For the first
time in four years, Vietnam
peace negotiators ended their
weckly talk~ session today ,
without fixing a new date or
explaining the reason.
The U.S. and North Vietnamese negotiators said
"Farewell" to newsmen and
shook their hands happily.
But none of the delegations
woutd · answer when the
journalists asked if the talks
were over in the . form they

obstacles to peace.
Viet Cong press spokesman
Ly Van Sau said at the end of
the meeting that the North
Vietnamese had proposed, as
usual, another meeting next
Thursday or at a time to be
fixed by liaison officers.
uThe American side gave
their agreement to the second
part of that proposal," Sau
said.
The Saigon spokesman,
Nguyen Trieu Dari, said the
.
f . he. fir · •••..,._ ,.;,..,"""" ' ''{..: ;,.,'-' "'' -~.II.Yi.JIJIW~~~.~!jll. 't(!djlt ,• ~~. (or ele,:ttng,.a, new: .
$IrE OF '~ADQuARTERs . - Til! PomeroY Ftre
· storage area or t
e eq-·~"· ;n!""'WI'~ l'... nned
881on was the !74th. Next dale was .!,ilelU.~ , new ncr,
Department today began seeking blda on the consll:uction of
s.tructure on this lot, purch~~ several mon~ ag,o by the Thursday's would have exceptio'!ill," but it w~ the
a new fire station to be placed on this lot on Pomeroy's
ftre department ~rom Manrung Webster,, w1ll t;»'ovide a marked the precise fourth first time, ~olldays apart, that
Butternut Ave. Surveys Unlimited,lbe county planning firm,
centralized locahon for the department s vehicles and anniversary of the start of the failure to set a new date
, has recommended a new village hall for Pomeroy with
equipment.
talks-Jan., 25, 1969
brought no protests.
N.one of the delegates would U.S. ~pokesman David Lamsay if the move was a positive bertson, asked why the United
sign, indicating a Vietnam States and South Vietnam
cease-fire was at hand; or a declined to meet next Thursnegativesign, indicating it had day, &amp;aid: "We have reasons
been delayed. ·
which obviously we are not
During the meeting, both the going to discuss."
He &amp;aid the Communist side
provided at the school if the United States and Saigon said
In other phases of the survey already constructed.
The Pomeroy Fire Departthere
were
still
difficulties
in
"readily
accepted our point of
Commercial
land
in opportunity arises. Park land
ment is seeking bids on the of Pomeroy, it was reported
construction of its new that 957 housing units .were Pomeroy was found to occupy is Pomeroy is also inadequate. the way of a peace settlement, view" on leaving the date of the
department headquarters on a inspected and 394 of them, 41.2 approximately 25 acr~ •. the The firm does recommend that and the Viet Cong blamed next session to liaison officers.
(Continued on page 12)
Bulternut Ave. site recently per cent, judged in poor con- largest amount of commercial land adjacent to the Ohio River South Vietnam for raising·
purcbased by .the department dition. The report, however, use in the county. The firm remain as open space to
from Manning Webster. It will said maintenance, painting proposes that commercial uses protect the view of the river.
The planning company
be financed primarily by a and minor repair would greatly be condensed into a concon~ed
proposes in its report that the
reduce the nljlllher of dwellings centrated district.
federal grant.
In Pomeroy, industrial land . former Meigs General Hospital
In its report on Pomeroy - a in poor condition.
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Charles A. Perllk Jr., president
Surveys Unlimited reported use occupies 15 acres of land he converted into a long-term
more complete and detailed
of The Newspaper Guild, said here Wedoe~day the jalllng of
study however, remains to be that Pomeroy. bas decreased in surface. To provide for the care facliity including both rest
Los 'Angeles Times Washington Bureau Cblef John
made - Surveys Unlimited of. size 22 per cent, or 984 people, economic expansion of the home and nursing home
Lawrence was "one of tbe reallrimles aDd tragedies of our
between 1960 and 1970 but county and to capitalize on the facilities.
Cable, Ohio, the planning
time."
As to Pomeroy's water
of the Meig~ County Planning points out that a reversal of improved acce•s to markets
PerUk, In an address to tbe Cuyahoga County Bar
which
will
result
from
imsituation,
the company
Commission, has recom- this trend and new growth is
Association, said he feared loss of preu freedom during the
mended a new town hall in expected in the 1980s ·as con- proved roads, expansion of recommended that all lines
neXt four yean of the Nixon administration. "Now tbat Is
Pomeroy which would include ditions improve due to the industrial land use is proposed less than four inches in
one of the real ironies and tragedies of our time," he said of
storage area for the fire implemenbltion of suggestions in several level areas in the diameter be replaced by fourthe jailing of Lawrence.
inch or larger lines. Present
and to the impact o( the Meigs report.
department vehicles.
"In one of the most scandalous, political outrages In the
The firm. states that the sources are adequate to meet
mine~.
nation's history, the lint penon to go to jallls not one of the
The new town hall, however,
Residential land in Pomeroy Pomeroy Elementary School is all anticipated growth but
culprits, not one of the Committee to Re-elect tbe Preol.,nt
when and if constructed, would uses 1,969 acres or 91 per cent adequate but advises that ' hecaus!i of treatment needs of
operatives cauglit red-llanded inside Democratic national
not have to include fire of the land surface within the additional land should be water from the Ohio River,
headquarten, but a nel!sman ·whose paper covered and
Pomeroy may wish .to explore
equipment storage due to the '"village. Further expansion is
wrote about It," said PerUk.
the possibility Of the ' use of
new fire headquarters . . anticipated on the less steep
wells as a replacement for the
Pomeroy Mayor William hilltops behind the village.
source. of its water. (Pomeroy
First priority, the firm
Baroriick is attempting · to
Ia currently doing this throilgh
secure a federal grant for reporls, should be to develop
test wells in Syracuse) .
construction of a new town the vacant land within the
· The planning firm proposed
hall. Surveys Unlimited &amp;aid it developed areas of the village
that all areas of Pomeroy he
should be built between 1975 for increased efficiency from
sewered,
that combined
. and 1978.
the public improvements
.. sanitary and storm sewers ~
eliminated and that' the ptant
be expanded in the future to
fulfill the needs of the expanded community.
By UDIIed Press International
In conclusion the firm
LUCASVILLE, OHIO ;:. ABOUT 1!0 GUARDS at the new
recommended that Route 33
Southern Ohio &lt;lol'l'ecliOI!a! Facility, fearful of losing senioPity·
-lind county roads 24 and 76 and
when the guards at the old Ohio Penitentiary in Columbus transtownship road 77.f!e upgraded
fell here, refused to work for the third straight day today. Ofto higH speed routes in order.to
. flcials at the recently-comjlleled prison &amp;aid there has been no
provide quick, convenient and
problem with Inmate-control dUring the strike. The facility ufe access to the shopping
receiving about 70 prisoners every two weeb from the soon-to- ·
district in Pomeroy.
be-closed Ohio Pen - now has 627lnmates.
HOMER SLAGLE
Pomeroy Village officials
Some guards not on strike have·been working overtime to try
Homer R. Slagle, who recently entered into an
: Ill maintain aecurlty. At one point Wednesday 76 guards were on
joined . the Columbus and agreement with ·Surveys
duty. State Corrections Department officials negotiated briefly
Southera O~io Electric Unllml~d for a more comple~
Wednellday with TeamsterS Union officials representing the
Compaay's Waverly office In study of the community ..
strlklnll JIWirdll. Carrectlons olflcials said twd minor grievances
1954 as a groUDdman, has
A.survey is being conducted
were aet!led, but claimed the Teamsters walked out 'ofl the
retired. He also setved as in Pomeroy through readers of
groUDdman In Middleport, The· Daily Sentinel to secure·
meclinl shortly after the seniority Issue was bro.lght up. · . ·
1
• •
.' ··: co~strucllon
and main- opinions on facilities and ·
WASHINGTON ...,. ADMINISTRATION OFFICIALS, who
tenance, and rettred as a se~ices offered by the town. A
Two representatives of the United States General Acrelaled oil Import qucitaa Wednesdjiy, atao count on milder· Courier Driver at •HIUsboro. similar survey of Middleport
counting ~ional Office ill Detroit, Mich., were in Pomeroy
wet~tlier conditlqns to contribute to the erasing of the American
Mr. aad Mn. Sla1le bave will be conducled through The
Wednesday afternoon to learn details of the operation of "~.
enerl)' crlsla. "The fuel llltuallon has lmpl'O'ied somewhat this
two cblldren pod, Uve In Sentinel in a few weeks.
Eddy", t"e bookmobile headquartered in Pomeroy and
( ConU~uNI on page 12)
Piketon.
,. ,
serving Jackson, Vintoh and Meigs Counties. Hel'!!• Mrs. ·

Bids invited by firemen

Towels

Mark of a

firm

A tremendous selection of towels. Bath size 24 by
inches. Slight irregulars of $2.95 and 53.95 towels.
Famous make. Solid colors - printed and woven
patterns. Fringed and hemmed end towels.
1200 towels in this big sale group.

YOUR CHOICE .

'1.39
"I

·------------------~------- Take advantage now of special sale prices all
over the store. Lingerie Department on the lsi
floor - Mens and Boys wear · Sheets . Pillow ·
Cases · Mattress Pads · . Housewares Department .
.
-'-Shop the 2nd floor for bargains in infants .
childrens and womens ready-to-wear. Special
sale prices on blankets · bedspreads . draperies .
sheer cuFtalns.
·
- Big sale, now, on RCA Color TV Sets and Stereos.
- Stop on the 3rd floor for furniture. Specials on
chairs · dinette sets · bedroom suites . pictures .
lamps.
·
- Visit the Warehouse on Mechanic Street for extra
good buys on Whirlpool Washers and Dryers Magic Chef gas and electric ranges . linoleum wall·to-wall carpeting . room size rugs.
-Eiberfelds St&lt;;~re and Warehouse on Mechanic
. Street .open every day from 9: 30 A.M. to 5 P. M.
and on Fridays and Saturd!JYS until 9 P.M.

ELBERFELD$ I.N POMEROY

~

,,

'

Now You Know

se

......
~

·The tax has furnished an estimated $413 mi)Jion duting II'• biennium. Gilligan. &amp;aid no increase in the r~tes of welfare .
Representatives of the state Finance Department claimed
COLUMBUS (UP!) ;-o Gov. Joho J. Gilligan has presented the
current
.biennium. This will .balloon to ~6 million during the payments wilUid be :requested, but an increase in the welfare
General Assembly 'With a record $9.8 billion budget for fiscal . thoSe excess fumlos have already been conunitted to be pumped
next
fiscal
period, according·to 'the ,Finance Department, which caseload olan average4,l50 cases a month over two years would
back into state programs, and will not cOnstitute a "surplus.'~ ·
1974-75 and challenged the lawmaket:s to' "get it passed by
eat up the extra appropriations.
•
.
State and federal funds to be spent in Ohio during the two years prOjects revenues and which prepared the budget.
Easter."
In an "overview" of the budget, Gilligan said 76.9 per cent of
Most of the increase is projected in the area of aid to families ·
beginnlitg next June '3o were set at $9,792,600,000.
The new budget propo&amp;al, $1:6 billion higher than the spending
with
dependent children. The federal government is to take over
.all
general
spending
would
go
for
primary
and
secondary
The
&amp;arne
expenditures
for
the
current
fiscal
biennium
r.
e
ached
level for the curreni biennium, requires no new or increased
all
payments
to aid the blind, disabled and aged before 1975, the
education, higher education, public welfare, mental health and
$8,147,800,000, according to the budget document.
taxes.
.
The General Assembly had adopted a f/.7 billion two-year retardation and the state's system of correctional institutions. Finance Department said.
II was spelled out in a 312-page document released Wednesday
Primllry and secondary education is awarded an increase of
He also emphasized that property tax relief would total $347
budgetinDecember,1971, but an additional $376 million worth of
and introduced in bill.form in the House Wednesday night after
$258 million under the Gilligan budget, mainly for higher school
.
.
capital improvements, plus ether refunds.for local gov.ernment million·, "and that's a big chunk of money."
the governor delivered his "State of the State" message.
subsidies.
'
Cambined
federal
and
state
funds
totaling·$2,726,400,(M)il
would
"I hope we can get it passed by Ealller,"Gilligan told newsmen and property tax payments raised this figure.
Higher education would get a $119 million increase over the two
go for elementary, secondary and higher education under the
lncrea~ Tu CaUect101111
as he briefed them on the budget. Reaction from Repilblican
years,
but instructional grants would be held to a maximum 3 per
Gillig{ln
proposal,
compared
with
$2,362,000,000
duriug
the
Under Gilligan's budget, the general revenue fund, fed by state
legislative leaders indicated they wou14 seek to cut spending
· cent ·increase per year·.
taxes ahd used for government administration and operation, current biennium - a hike of $364 million.
levels and revamp the tax structure to liniit revenues.
Officials of colleges and universities complained higher ed'
A
total
of
$2,663,000,800
In
state
and
federal
funds
is
allocated
While no new taxes are required, Gilllgan revealed the ·iii- will go from $4.3 billion to $4.8 billion•during the next two years.
for human services including welfare and mental health and ucation was slighted in the budget.
creased spending blueprint will be financed by burgeoning The rest of the budget is federal money.
A 3 per cent annual fee increase is authorized at state inThe general revenue appropriations wirutd be supported retardatioh, an increase of $556 rrliliion.
federal funds and an expanding state tax system which will leave
The Department of PUblic •· Welfare would receive stitutions of higher learning under the budget, which also
chiefly by a sharp increase in coUections of the one-,half to 3'k per
an estimated $188.million surplus in !he state treasury by June
(Continued on page.12)
$1,849,800,000,
compared with $1,429,100,000 during the current
cent graduated personal income tax.
30.

'

Age

FERMA E. MOORE

~

Moore elected
bank ·director
Ferman E. Moore, president
of The Royal Crown Bottling
Company, Middleport, was
elecled a director of The Farmers Bank and Savings
Company of Pomeroy at the
annual meeting of the bank's
shareholders Wednesday afternoon according to Theodore
T. Reed, .Jr., President
Moore, age 44, a native of
Ashland, Ky., is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert F. Moore,
Wright St., Pomeroy. He and
his wife, the former Lillian
Turley of Pinole, Calif., reside
at 271 North 4th Ave., Middleport. They are the parents
of five children.
Moore served in the U. S. Air
Force for 20 years, having
completed 105 air combat
missions during the Korean

Conflict; the holder of four air
medals, he retired as a Master
Sergeant.
After retirement from the
service and tiefore moving to
Middleport, he was a department manager for Sears
Roebuck and Company in
Pinole, Calif. He is a member
of St. Paul's Lutheran Church
·in Pomeroy.
Other directors re-elected in
addition to Reed were Thereon
Johnson, Racine ; E. Robert
Schellhase, Canton; Leslie F.
Fultz, C. Wayne Swisher, and
Richard C. Folirod, all of
Pomeroy; Fred W. Crow, Jr.,
Syracuse·, and Dr. Fred R.
Carsey, Mason, W. Va.
The officers re-elected are
Theodore T. Reed, Jr .,
(Continued on page 12)

~

_,..... .•.

--....:::-:-·

~~~::~_.~~.

VIlma Pikkilja,left, bookmobile supervisor, and Mrs. Louise
Brewer, empl~ye , point out aspects of the Impact of the
operation in the area to the two representatives, ·D. R.
Schmidt, left, and Henry L, Malone, right.

.

-

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