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'

8- The Daily sentinel, Middiepo.rt-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 5, 1973

Robert
Staats died . on Sunday
'
NEW HAVEN - Robert L.
Staa ts; 62, New Haven ,
president and manager of the

Pauline 1 Grinstead, Mrs .
Frances Goodnite, both of New
Haven, and Mrs. Geraldine
New Haven Porcelain Co., died Hoffman, Patriot, Ohio, and
Sunday at the Holzer Medical two brothers, James H. Staats,
Center. Mr . Staats was born Point Pleasant, and Ellsworih,
June 16, 1910, at Ripley, the son of New Haven.
of the late James Luther and . Funeral ,services will be at
Margaret Balser Staats . His 1:30 p. m. Wednesday at the
wife, Ruth Goodnite Staats, Fogelsong Funeral Home with
died in 1946.
· the Rev. Clarence McCloud
Surviving' are .a daughter, officiating. Burial will be in
Mrs. Ben (Dorothy) Sayre, Graham . Cemetery . Friends
Hilliard; four grandsons, may call at the funeral home
James, Richard, Chris and from 2to 4p. m. and from 7to 9
Scott; three sisters , Mrs. p. m. Tuesday.

Maggie Lambert died o.n Sunday
RUTLAND .- Mrs. Maggie 1970.
Surviving are two daughters,
· F. Lambert, 78, Rutland Route
I, died Sunday afternoon at the Mrs. Virginia Colitta, Detroit,
Holzer Medical Cerlter . She Mich., and Mrs. Marie Frye,
was born Oct. 19, 1895 in Monaville, W.Va.; three sons,
Kentucky, the daughter of the Drexel, Raymond and Ernest,
late Joseph and Doxie Kitchen. all of Rutland Route 1; two
Her husband, Andrew, died in sisters, Mrs. Ettea Blevins,
Raynette, W. Va., and Mrs.
Myrtle Ramsey, Hunt, W.Va .;
20 grandchildren, and 41 greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the
Switzer Church of God in
Monaville with burial in Stone
19
Branch Cemetery at Big
Creek, W.Va. Friends may call
at the Martin Funeral Home
here any tnne today and any
time · Tuesday at the Marie
Frye residence in Monaville.

Ebner H. Bush
died on Saturday
Elmer H. Bush, 73, of Cave
St., Pomeroy, died Saturday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Surviving are his wife, Ethel; a
stepdaughter, Jeanette
Barrows, Athens; three stepgrandchildren, several nieces
and nephews, and a sister,
Mrs . Millie McGlothlin,
Martins Ferry, Ohio.
Funeral services were to be
held at 3 p. m. today at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Rev. Jacob Lehman officiating, with burial in Meigs
Memory Gardens.

When It comes to satisfying

our customers every need,
you"lt find the "FRIENDLY ONES"' at the
Pomeroy Cement Block
Company put their heart In
their work .
(AFTER
ALL- YOU ARE OUR
REASON FOR BEING IN
BUSINESS)

" Roses are red, violets are
blue. The 'Friendly Ones'
send, this valentine to you.

SORORITY TO MEET
The l\i Gamma Mu Sorority
will meet Thursday at 7:45' p.
m. at the home of Mrs. Pearl
Welker. Co-hostess is Mary C.
Wiley. Mrs. Phil Ohlinger, a
member of the Rio Grande
Commwlity College Board of
Trustees, will he the speaker.

A Sign For OurTimes

®~~

®

~
~

@)

®(j®

We foreMee thH t an}' duy of the year our widea wak e owl ca n be your most favorabl e sign. The
wide-awa ke bank promi ~e s to help you with the
a nticipated and the unanticipated . Becau~e we
rhnke it nil so en~." · many people th nnk their lucky
~t un;,

The wide-awake ba11k
makes itollsoea..IY,,
c:::;::;--.....

.

Dingey's 31 Points
Leads All Scorers

ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY

Market Report

Front Closure
Longline Bra

.MEIGS THEATRE
Ross Hunter's
THOROUGHLY
MODERN MILLIE

POMEROY OHIO
I

.

04 '= ridays Our Drive. In Window is Open 9 a .m. tO 7 p.m .
. (Conlinuouslyl.
'

i

DePositor

I'TechnicotorJ ~
Julie Andrews. Mary Tyler
Moore, Carol Channing , Jas.
Fox , John Gavin. Beatrice
Lit lie.
IGPJ

YoU. R PHA RMAC 1ST
8

We Are The Only Store
Providing Complete and
Accurate Records of ·
Your Expense on
'

Prescription Medicine.

~:;;;J
\
.

ience of a Front
Closure and Firm
Midriff Control that's

SPANETTE " the
BURNED TO DEATH
CLEVELAND (UPI)
Earline Scarver, 36, Cleveland,
was killed Sunday jn a fire
which swept through her twostory frame dwelling.

Colorcartoon

Show Slarls 7 p.m.

:~::;::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::~:::::::;;;i~

Is [IDmiiD~®~I[E[p)

-===.No hold News •.• in /Jriefs

(COntinued from Page I)
Fair ·wednesday and
(Continued from Page 1)
crashed plane In 1966," he said. Thursday with hlghs)n the
BOWUNG GREEN, OHlO .,-NOTED TRIAL lawyer F. Lee
Gauvin emerged from a "More pictures were released upper a&amp; and 40s and lows In
· I Continued from Page 1)
i1e
da night criticized. the training which IIIOI'Jieyl
four-hour meeting of the ICCS over a period of three years lbe 20s. Chance of snow
"But it is oot going to ad- 88 Y SUn Y
tlon Bailey
aklng .
chiefs and said, "We hn.ve been
d
be
u flurries about Friday. Highs vertise what It may use. It's receive and suggested refcrms In, educa •
• ape
at ·
warned about the possibilitY of ~!~: appeare to
we
~-rlday In the 318 and lows In going to be as selective as the =~~~~~~~~~:.:':! ~u:: ~-~~
an exchange of prisoners a,n~ , .. How.:..er In 1971 the N~rth the upper 208 and lower 30s. Presidem has tried to tie in
"Untrained !alent abounds In the legal prcieui(lll," he llald.
to be ready. Weare ready a~ I Vietname,.; said Grubb. died '»-""~ II; I
&amp;MCJ gradually ellpBllding his au- "A lawyer receives Utile training in conducting jury trtala. ·He .
just forewarned the COmmiB· several days after the crash
Vetera1111 Memorial Hospital thority at the expense of the learns by himself . and that Isn't 'lair to a defendant." .He
slon."
from "grievous wounds." ·
SATURDAY DISCHARGES Congress and !be people."
In 1a
"~A the edlcal
Asked when the release of
·
Muskle and Sen. William . suggested the law profeulon Ira
wyers """
m
. · ·
Will Not Accept List
- Gladys Burch, Ethel Moore,
Jl'Ofession trains doctors for different apeclalltles.
!l'isoners woold begin, Gauvin
The consensus of the MIA Minnie Hainer, Roland Morris, Prollllire, D-Wls., were quesBailey said he ha~ faith In the American legal ~tern; but
said, "Within, I presume, a famili'es Sunday' was there ·IS NeII'1e Ha nson an d The1ma tioned about the federal""""d·r~·
llald .•h•Mea must he made. "Yoo can'tso on do'u"' things just
week or so. ! don't know where hope nd the POW list .IS in- G
ing hossle on ABC's Issues and
~ ...
a
rueser.
't 1m
h But 1 '
Answers. .
•
becausethal'sthewaytheyalwayshoveheendone,"hesald.
andIdo
. .n . ow w en...
complete.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES know It 18, Ul the offmg.
"Not under any cir- Harry Roush, Romaine
Ehrliclunan, Interviewed on
COLUMBUS -ROBERT LAZARUS SR., WHO worked hi.B
Gauvin s statement ap- cumstances will 1 accept that . Frederick, Randall Tucker, UPI's Washington Window, way from clerk to chairman emeritus of the board of F &amp; R
peared to back away from his list," said Mrs. Marlon LaBohn Oris Hubbard, Ada Starcher, said Nixon~s power to Impound Lazarus &amp; Co. department store, died Sunday after a brief
comment after a meeting from South Lyon Mich. Her Carl Smith, . David Sigman, funds Is not Impaired If he first lllness. He was 82. Lazarus wss alao active In ~ty affairs,
SUnday that priSOner releases
'
•.
vetoes an apJI'opriatlon on the
might begin by the middle of son, Gary, has been llsteo "1' a Mattie Teaford, Belinda•Shoin
and served on the Ohio Board of Regents. Lazarus began hi.B
.
k
MIA since Nov. 30,1968, but She and Rlchord Blevins.
grounds II Is too costly and career In the family store In 1899 at the age of 9 by working
thIS wee .
Congress later override&amp; the
Saturday's for 25 cents.
The ICCS discussed cease- camol find out where he was
veto by the required two-thirds
,
·
lati
lalnts
d
supposedly
killed.
.
SUPPER
PLANNED
He joined the store fulltime as a clerk after he was graduated
fir e VIO on comp c
an
Mrs. LaBohn said a friend of
Asoup supper will he held at majority in both the Senate and from the Ohio State Unlverslly In 1912 .. He served as general
named Gauvin c()alnlllln for her son was shot down over Eastern High School Tuesday House.
manager of the men's clothing store, sales Jl'OmOtion manager,
the first month of operation. Laos·and she assumes Gary's beginning at 4:30 p. m. spon''The Congress appropriates
Vice president, genera!- merchandise manager. He became
The ICCS chairmanship will aircraft was also downed over sored by the Future but the president is Charged by
rotate on the monthly that country.
Homemakers of America.
law with expending and the Jl'eSI~nt of the store In 1947 and 11'88 elected chairman ci the
board of the Federated Department St&lt;JI"es; Inc., In 1959.
alphobetlcal order of Canada,
"All they will tell us is that he
laws impose on him the duty to
Federated hi!S 14 stores In 115 locations, Including Rlkes of
Hungary, Indonesia and was someplace where he
RO"TE 52 HIT
make savings and !o spend
Dayton and Slillllot's of Cincinnati.
Poland.
wasn't supposed to be, but was
IRONTON, Ohio (UP!) - A only at a rate which is not
On reports of the cease-fire there with authority," she said. rock s1ide ear1y today c1osed wasteful," he said.
.
violations he said, "We have
"Supposedly we weren't part of u.s. 52, east of Ohio 141,
Ehrlichman insisted the
asked them I the reglonai!CCS bombing there, (in Laos) and near here, the State Highway President welcome9 congreateams) to get in touch with the North Vietnamese troops were Patrol reported. There were no sional participation in de~;
.
..
Joint Military Commission not there," McCain said. "It's injuries, the patrol said.
mining domestic policy and
(JMC) teams which should be hurd to pressure·for names of
that Nixon is not attempting to
In place very soon, to Jl'Ovide . personswhowerenotthereand
usurp congreulonalauthority.
the necessary liaison so they captured by no one."
CLUB TO MEET
"We'd like Congress to get
Roger Dingey paced the Wahama White Falcon's to their
candothenecessarylnvestlgaMrs. Charles Busch, of The Pomeroy Garden Club morelnvolvedlnsuchlhlngsas fourth straight victory Saturday night. Dlngey's 31 points led
tion."
Columbus, whose son Jon was willmeetat7:30thiseveningat setting spending limitations, Wahama to a 62-53 victory over the Buffalo Bisons.
listed as MIA June 8, 1967, is the home of Mrs. Irving Karr, Improving budgetary proceduJeff Gilland opened up the scoring early in the game on a
Both metnbers of the ICCS
positive
the
list
is
Inaccurate
Mason,
W.Va.
res,
avoiding
new
taxes,"
he
driving
lay-up as the Falcons were never headed. The first
and the JMC, made up of the
quarter was played on very slow scoring tenus with Wahoma
said.
United States, the Viet Cong and said he ''is definitely still
managing a 12-ll lead. They managed to connect on only 5 of 19
RIBS INJURED
and North and South Vietnam, alive."
DAUGHTER
HOME
field
shots.
Leroy Terrill is a patient at
"We Identified him through a
sent their first permanent
Mary
Brickles,
daughter
of
WAHAMA (62)
BUFFAL0(53)
teams Into a number of 1!169 Christmas film shown on Veterans Memorial Hospital Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Brickles, Dingey
1~ 3-4 31 Burch
3 3-4 9
regional headqu~ters today. television August, 1970," She where he was admitted Darwin, a student at Ohio Mitchell
U
1-4
5
2 1-2 5
WUilams
Their activities were kept said. ''Nootherfamllyhasever Saturday afternoon for rib University, returned home Lambert
1-7
S-8 7 Moore
0 ~ 0
injuries suffered in a fall at the
secret from newsmen who identified Jon otherwise."
from University Hospital Gilland
1-4 6-11 7 ·Sayre
11
4-3 26
home of his brother in
Wants Proof
were barred from observing
Friday after undergoing a · Smith
2-5 !).1 4 Glasco
6 1-2 13
Mr~. Anna Pauley, an elderly Pomeroy. Terrill was taken to
their operations.
0 !).1 0
kidney operation.
wwis
:J.-7 1-3 7 Wandling
There were a number of woman who travelled from the hospital by the Pomeroy
major international develop- Milton, W.Va., for the meeting Emergency squad.
Totals
~ 16-31 62 Totals
22 1!).18 53
SOCIETY TO MEET
wore
a
MIA
braclet
with
her
ments today Involving IndoThe United Methodist
son's name - Marshall
china :
LOCAL TEMPS
Women's Society of the EnPauley, 3-1~.
The temperature in down· terprise Church will meet
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Sunday, who was Ill at hi.B
-In Paris, the VietCong and
"I won 'I accept Marshall as
town
Pomeroy
at
11 a. m. Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
The
Middleport
E·R
squad
home In Hobson. He was taken
the South Vietnamese held an MIA until they· give me
Monday
was
49
degrees
under
home
of
Mrs.
Don
Hunnel,
answered
a
call
for
Luther
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
their first political ·meeting· some kind of proof- not just a
sunny
skies.
Rose
Hill
.
(Cap)
Caldwell
at
11:20
p.m.
where
he was admitted.
today and said they reached letter saying he Is dead."
agreement on several Issues.
Much of ·the identification
They will meet again Wed- problem will he eliminated
nesday. The two sides are when returning POW's are able
planning high -level talks as to filrnlsh names and other indemanded by the peace formation.
.
agreement, to chart the
UniU that time, the families
Shop Weekdays 9:30 to 5 p.m. - Open Fridays and Saturdays 9:30 to 9 p.m.
political future of South Viet· must decide how to approach
nam. They must decide the the Issue.
level, place and frequency at
They expressed confidence
which the talks will be held.
that pressuring Vietnamese of- U.S. Navy Rear Adm. ficials for more Information
Brian McCauley and 14 aides would not jeopardize those in
flew to Hanoi today to confer at captivity, but they were unsure
the Port of Haiphong with whot to do personally.
Commuaisl officials .on remov"I can't decide whether to
ing U.S. mines from North start writing letters and lake
Vietnam's coast, harbors and action now or walt till .the 6().
rivers, ss provided · by the day release period is up," said
Paris peace accords.
Jo Ann Show of Chillicothe.
-Fighting continued in Her brother, James Reed, was
Cambodia, and government listed as a MIA in 1970.
troops reopened lnghway 4, the
"But/' she added, u1 know I
vital link between Phnom Penh simply cannot accept the list,
Feminine sheer
and the nation's only deep and I can 'I let others accept
three piece lace
water port at Kompong Thorn, it.~'
that was severed by the
cups •.. adjustable
Communists three days ago;
tricot non-stretch
Gen . John Vogt, commandant Gallipolis, Ohio, Saturday,
straps for added
of the U.S. 7th Air Force, flew Feb. 3, 1973, Sales Report of
support and comfort ... trimmed
Into Phnom Penh to Investigate Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
i'n beautiful lace.
U.S. aid programs in Cam· . HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 34 lo
32-42B, 32-44C, 32·440', 34-36A, $6.00 .
bodia.
(D' $1.00 _more)
34.35; 220 to 250 lbs. 34.35 to
-Laotian Interior Minister 35.50; Light 28.50 to 30; Fat
Pheng Phongsavan, chief
Sows 24 to 27.50; Stags 21
negotiator with the Communist
Down; ;Boars 21 to 24; Pigs 5 to
Pathet Lao, told UP! today In
18.50; Shoats 15 to 27.50.
Vienttsne he is optimisUc thot
CATrLE- Steers 38 to 44;
a cea!IEHire will be reached in
Heifers 29.50 to 37 .75; Baby
-J.,aos by the deadline set by the
Beef 45 to 58.50; Fat Cows 24.50
Paris agreements -15 days
to 29; Canners 23 to 37.50; Bulls
after theceasEH'II'e in Vietnam.
30 to 34.50; Milk Cows 250 to
Heavy fighting was reported in
500.
The support bras that
many parts of Laos.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
65.50; Seconds 56 to 60;
are comfortable for hours
Medium 49 to 50.50; Com. &amp;
Hvs. 46.50 to 57.50; Culls 45
Now I At last, an
Now- two exciting
Down.
18 Hour Long line
BABY CALVES - 25 to 75.
new bras made with
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
with the conven-

Farmers Bank &amp;

S20,000 Miu.imum Insurance for Each

~

(Continued from Page

February 5·6

Member of Federal Reserve System

'

Bandeau Bra

@

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POWs' q Relatives

· Now You Know

•.

'.

Pleasant VaUey Hospital
Dischorges: Mrs.
William
Wyatt,
Middleport;
Raymond
Ferguson, Gallipolis ; Bias
Moniz, Pliny; Mrs. Mervin
Roush, Point Pleasant; . Mrs.
Dennis Edwards, Mason;
James Marsh, Point Pleasant;
4Da Crookham, Leon; Mrs.
John Jeffers,'Southside; Alice
Holl, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
~obert McDaniel, John Kolle!,
Point Pleasant ; Sharon
Rhodes, . won; William
Saunders, Glenwood; Mrs.
George Dabney, Henderson;
Mrs . Lary Stickler, Point
Pleasant.
•
Births: Feb. 4, a son to Mr.
and Mrs . Michael Bailes,
Ravenswood, and a daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. Gay E. Frashler,
Ripley.

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.... . . . . . . U •• •••

•

•

'

•

enttne

at y

'

.

.,Moslly cloudy through
Wednesday wl.th a chonce of
showers south portion . today.
Highs today in the 411s: Lows
tonight upper 20s to mid 31l'l .
Turning ·cooler Wednesday
high in the 40s and upper 30s.

.

' 'lJuiMei({!·Mmon Area
Devoted To The l"tere.t. Of

VOL. XXIV NO. 206

.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TE~

PHONE 992-2156

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1973

~

WORKERS TOOK ADVANTAGE of the springUke
weather Monday to labor on the exterior of the new Kroger
llore on East Main St., being constructed on Jl'Operty for-

"

I

First readings of -required struct its water system. The
A letter was read by Clerk
legislation to borrow $25,000 for water line will be laid along the Jane Walton from Charles
· the new water well system, and river bank from .Syracuse to Hoffman stating that he will
to vacate Fifth St. to make .Pomeroy . Pomeroy's new not accept a job as janitor of
room for the new fire station system will bypass .its present city hall. Coun.cil voted to hire
were approved Monday night pwnping station located on Ronnie Anderson instead to fill
the job.
by Pomeroy council. The first East Main St.
was a resolution; the second an
The new Pomeroy Fire
In other business, council
ordinance.
:Station is to be built on But- discussed with Calvin Lane,
Pomeroy council last year ternut Ave.;on a lot purchosed
l!rllled test wells in the village from Manning Webster by the
of Syracuse for its new water Fire Dept.
system. Later, Pomeroy and . sealed bids for the conSyracuse
councils worked out struction of the fire station will
inerly owned by Franklin Rizer. The present store ts located
an understanding to determine be received by the village of
on West Second St., and will be moved into·th.e new quarters
the · effect, if any, of the Pomeroy at Mayor William G.
po~bly this spring.
Pomeroy system and on the Baronick's office. until noon,
Syracuse gystem. Following EST., Feb. 19.
tests, it was determined that
Don Collins, president of
HALLOCK APPOINTED
Pomeroy's wells would not coundi, presided in the abCOLUMBUS iUPI) effect Syracuse wells.
sence of Mayor William
Gov. John J. Gilligan today
A federal grant has been Baronick who is in Holzer.
announced the appointment secured by Pomeroy to con- Medical Center.
of Walter E. HaUock Jr.,
Marietta, as judge of the
WASHlNGTON (UP!) -The
Marietta Municipal Courl.
U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Hallock, 42, a practicing
testified today that President
attorney, wfll fill the
Nixon must have standby
vacancy left by lhe
wageprice control powers to
reslgoallon of Judge Robert
scare
tpe
inflationary
mission of Control and C. Rawson. A native of
psychology out of labor and
&amp;lpervision (ICCS).
Cleveland, Hallock has been
business.
Gauvin, a Cansdian wllo is In law practice In Marietta
· "Without these controls and
the acting chairman of the since 1956 and Is currently
DETROIT (UP!) - "Buckle with the new models.
their favorable effect on busiICCS, had earlier said the lhe city solicitor.
up for safety" is going to be
The government standard ness and poblic psychology,
POWs would go free "In a week
more than just a slogan on the requires thot a single com- there is a real danger that
or so." He did not say why It
1974-rnodel cars. The new cars hined la(Hihoulder belt replace inflation will break out again
would take a week for the
won't let you cheat on safety. the present system . The new later this year," Chamber
release, bUt a source said it
The U.S. 6th Circuit Court of lapshoulder belt will have to be economist Carl H. Madden told
may have been due to a
Appeals in Cincinnati, Ohio, buckled by the occupants of the the Senate Banking Comsquabble within the four-party
Monday upheld a government front seat before the car ean he mittee.
Joint Military Commission
Madden said it already
order that an ignition-seat belt started. If anyone unbuckles
(JMC) that is charged with
interlock system be installed once the engine is running, appeared the consumer price
helping set up opera tons for the
on all new cars ·after Aug. ll&gt;- they will he warned by a loud rise would accelerate to from
truce force and prisoner releathe time the 1974 models start buzzer and a flashing warning 3.5 to 4 .per cent this year
se.
rolling off assembly lines.
· light.
compared with last year's 3.4
"I understand there should
The belt system for 1974 Is
Ford Motor Co. hod appealed per cent.
be an exchange of prisoners, or
HOUSTON (UP!) - Now designed to force more people the directive of the Nallonal
Madden empb!lslzed I!Jat the
release of prisoners, shorfly. that Marine Pic. ·Ronald L. to use their lap and s)loulder lnghway Traffic Safety Ad- Chamber wants controls Ufted
after (Saturday) in the'South," Ridgeway, declared ldlled In belts. It's estimated that no minlstratio~ on the grounds as soon as poi!Bible, h\11 "there
he said. "I think it llhould lake Vietnam five years ago, has more thon 40 per cent of car that the safety value of the is ample evidence that the
place after the Americans." He turned up as a living prisoner occupants use the lap belts and Interlock system hod not been economy is moving swiftly
did not clarify whether U.S. of war, the Veterans Ad- less than 5per cent ever untuck demonstra~ thoroughly by toward capacity operations
POWs would be relessed in the ministration says his parents the shoulder belt from above testing. But the government this year, a condition oonSouth at the same time as the may have to pay back $10,000 In their door. Thnt will change order was upheld by a . three- duclve to an Inflationary
Americans to oo freed in government-sponsored life
outbreak."
judge panel.
Hanoi.
insurance.
Whot the government deciGauvin bus been in regular
Ridgeway's parents, who
sion means to the new car
contract with the parallel JMC. were divorced eight years ago,
buyeristhathewon'tbeableto
The JMC's subcommittee on each received $5,000. A V.A.
cheat any longer on wearing
POW release has met every spokesman said Monday a
RUTLAND - Two men were seat belts. The present buzzerday since Saturday to decide on decision on the debt "will be fined in the court of Rutland light system can be foiled
details of prisoner release.
made with the utmost compas- Mayor Eugene Thompson, easily-either by pulling out
A suit for money and lwo for
Shortly before Gauvin made sion for the returning prisoner Monday night. They were tbe seat belt and tying its ends divorce have been filed in
his announcement of a possible and his famlly."
Elmer Whittington, Rutland, or by buckling it behind the Meigs County Common Pleas
Saturday release date, reports
Mildred Ridgeway, who re- $20 and cost,; for leaving the driver aod passenger.
Court. Three actions for
from Quang Tri City said an ceived half of the payment in scene of an accident, and John
divorce
hove been dismissed.
The new interlock systems
artillery duel in the embattled 1968, said she never believed W. Chapman, Cheshire, $10 and will require the driver and
Pomeroy Cement Block Co.,
provincial capital forced a her son was dead and told the costs for speeding.
is
suing Ida M. King and
passenger to follow a set
party of ICCS observers to turn insurance agent that in 1968.
Mayor Thompson reminded procedure. The sequence starts, Myrtle King Robinson, both of
back early today. It was the
"When they gave it to me, I residents today that a new when you sit down, then buckle Pomeroy, Rt. 4, for $1,051.56.
first such lnci~nt since the told them, 'If he shows up, I vascar system is in operation up and then start the car.
Rickey Allen Triplett,
truce force began operations. can't ever pay it back,"' Mrs. in the village . The device, Because the shoulder belt Is Middleport, asks divorce from
'
Ridgeway said.
which records
speed between part of the system, It would Judith Ann Triplett, Pomeroy,
The V.A. spokesma.n said two points, has been in become very uncomfortable to charging gross neglect of duty
that technically an in- operation since Jan. 15.
and extreme cruelty, and Judy
buckle up behind you.
debtedness does exist to the
insurer-or to the government,
which guaranteed the insurance. The decision will be
made soon, the spokesman
said.
The yearly canvass of
"It will be strictly considered
business telephone customers on the basis of the hordshlp It
in the Pomeroy-Middleport "would impose," he said.
'
area is_ under way, General "Whether this will be pursued, . There are 4,755
persons in being named the grantee, with Aging under Eleanor Thomas
Telephone Co. of Ohio an- we can not say now In the_ Meigs County 55 years of age or the college providing 25 pet. of . has secured office quarters
nounced today.
fudgeway case."
older according to Richard the funding, 12'h pet. in money from the Meigs Local School
Kenley Krinn, Athens,
Sayre , assistant project and 12'h pet. in kind.
Boar(! located in the Pomeroy
district commercial manager, Portable radios
director, of the Areawide
A survey of 1,400 senior Junior High School.
said General Telephone
Model Project on Aging. Sayre, citizens 60 years old and older , There is a senior citizen club
Director Co. representatives now to be boug_ht
speaking to the Pomeroy . was made to determine in Harrisonville and one is
will call on businessmen to
Chamber of Com111erce at its prioriti~s. which proved to be proposed in Rutland.
'
review and confinri'lllitings for
Meigs County has been noon luncheon at the Meigs Inn housing, food, and transIn other business, the
the 1973 phone directory being approved for a grant totaling 1\ionday, explained areawide portation.
chamber voted to co-sponsor a
compiled. This canvass lasts $832 in southeastern Ohio lor model project on aging covers
There are 36,464 persons in seminar on lnve.stments and
until February 28. Closing date police radio communibations the five county area of Gallia, the five cow\ties 55 and older. securities to he held at the
is May 3, the deadline, 'for equipment, according to an Jackson, Meigs, Scioto and As Ill income of persons 65 and Holiday !\In in Gallipolis.
residential cuslomers to make announcemeni today by Gov. Vinton . Using charts, · he ex- over, 34 pet. re·ceived old age Bryce Smith, formerly of
changes in the new directory. John J . Gilligan.
plained the purpose of the survivors insurance or social Syracuse, broker 'for inBusinessmen are reminded
The grant was awarded by project on aging and gave a security; 29 pet. live on ear- vestments and securities,
that billing for yellow page Dr. David C. Sweet,.director of brief history since It was nings saved ; 15 pet. on submitted a le.tter asking the
advertising will be Included the Ohio Department of organized in October 1971.
dividends and interest, and chamber to participate In the
with the monthly . telephone Economic and Community
Twenty-six members make four . pet. from public seminar. The seminar will be
statement.
'
Development, under the up a "Task Force," Sayre said. assistance.
for a three week period.
•
" Other
Invoice-type Omnibus Crime Control Act. Four of . the 26 persons are
In Meigs County, 24 pet. of
The Athens Boat and Ski
solicita lions for yeUow page The $832 grant, which will be Meigs Countians.
the population is 65 and over; Club was again Invited . to
advertising should be carefully matched locally by $278, was
Representing Meigs County of its households, 22.1 pet. are participate in this year's Big
Inspected," Krinn said. "Some awarded to Meigs County to are Clarence Struble, Mrs. below pcverty level. The. stale Bend Regatta in June.
businessmen have Inad- purchose two portable police Hugh Custer, Miss L~cille poverty level is seven percent,
Attending were Jack Kerr,
vertently paid for spaee In a radio units.
president,
Carolyn Thomas,
Smith and C. E. Blakeslee. · Sayre said.
national or International
Eleanpr Thomas is project
It is hoped by April! to have secretary, Henry Cleland, Bill
directory thinking it was for
director in Meigs County .
. five acting senior citizen Grueser, Virgil Teaford, Bill
· the local directory."
The program is financed by centers In the five county area. Anderson, Wendell Hoover,
Listed in the book with Veterans Memorial Hospital money from the ACTION There is one active center In Louis OsbOrne, Fred Crow, Ted
Pomeroy and Middleport are
DISCHARGED - Curlls program oufof Washington, D. ·Portsmouth n!lo\1' . The Meigs Reed, c. E. Blakeslee, Rlchord
the communities of !£tart Wolfe, Walter Vaughan, Eulah C., · -. and · from the Ad- County Commission has Chambers, Dennis . Keney,
Falls, Portland, Racine and Fr~ncis, Mabel Pickens, Henry ministration on Aging In . committed Itself to assist Sayre, !3ob Jacobs, Jack
Rutland . The new directory is Klein, Norman Hawley and Columbus. lt was funded In financially Sayre observed.
Carsey, .Earl · lnge_lll, Beulah
scheduled lor delivery In July. Betty Teaford .
June 1972, Rio Grande College
The Meigs County Couilcil on Jones and Katie Crow,

to cool down
new inflation ·

be free Saturday
South Vietnam shortly afterward.
"There are no definite dates
but I understand the American
prisoners will probably hi!
released around the lOth of
February..,some of them, not
all, from Hanoi," Gauvin told
reporters following a meeting
of the International Com-

ew7.7ht'B~

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - A DoNATION international conference
aimed at guaranteeing.the peace In VIetnam will open In Paris
Feb. 26, the White House aMOW\eed todaY •.The ~viet Union and
China will be among participants. The conference was called for
by the VIetnam cea!IEHire agreement negotiated b)' Henry A.
Klaslnger for the United States and Le Due Tho for North VIetnam. The participants:
The United States, South Vietnam, North Vietnam and the
Viet Cong, as the four parties to the cease-fire agreement;
Canada, Poland, Hungary, and Indonesia, as !Jle four members
of the International Commission on Control and &amp;lpervislon, and
Britain, the Soviet Union, France and China. The secretary
~neral of the United Nations, Kurt Waldoolm, also will sit in.

PARIS-THE ATMOSPHERE,ONE DELEGATE said, was
"almost cordial" as Viet Cong and South Vietnamese diplomats
met for the first time without the presence of their allies from
Hanoi and Washington.
The longtime enemies sat down together Monday after four
years of accusations aod insults. After the meeting, they said
they would meet again Wednesday. The two aides are meeting in
an attempt to reach a political settlement that includes free
elections and the establishment of a National CouncU of Concord
· and Reconclllation. The Paris agreement requires such a settlement within 90 days.
BOULDER, COLO.- THE NATIONAL Earthquake Center
reported today It has monitored an earthquake messurlng 8.0 on
the open-end Richter Scale in a mountainous region of China.
A center spokesman said the quake was in the "great"
category, but was not expected to cause too much damage
because the area is sparsely populated. The eartbjuake,
recorded at5 :37 a .m., EST, occurred in the Szechwan Province
of China,about400mllesnortho1Chungklng and l,OOOmlles from
Peking.
FAIRF1ELD, C,'-LIF. -JUAN V. CORONA sat rigidly In his
chair Monday and Ustened to a judge sentence him to 25 consecutive life tenns for the biggest mass murder spree in U. S.
history. The Blbl~arrylng Mexican farm labor contractor
appeared stunned as Superior Court Judge Richard E. Patton
rejected his motion for a new trial and ordered him to serve his
tenus "consecutively and not concurr.ently."
The judge ruled at the end of a day long hearing at which a
sheriff's matron admitted she discussed the case with a juror
during deliberations. But Latton said the defense faUed to prove
jury tampering.
WASHINGTON - SEN._JOHN C. STENNIS, D-Miss.; who
..was shot and robbed · on the· street a week ago, underwent
emergency surgery early today and his condition was said to
hove worsened .
Maj. Frank Garland, an Information officer at Walter Reed
, ArmY r.fedicBI Center, said the 45-rninute operation was begun at
2:15a.m. EST after stennls's doctors became concerned about a
possible blockage of veins In the small Intestine. "This additional
surgery has resulted in a worsening of his condition," Garland
said. "He remains' very seriously ,lll and the prognosis is considered grave."

street superintendent, repair of
the present street sweeper or
purchase of a new one. A
decision will be made later.
Also discussed was the
purchase of additional street signs. A survey wiU be made to
determine what si~ns are
(Continued on Page 10)

Threat needed

First POWs may
SAIGON (UP!) - Michel
Gauvin, the chief truce
supervisor of the four-nation
peac!'e force in South Vietnam,
said today the first U.S.
prisoners of war may be
released on or about Saturday.
He said too first North and
South Vietnamese prisoners
Jl'Obably would be releasM In

'

Safety belt in
'74s foolproof

VA may
get back

$10,000

Two fined in

Rutland court

'73 Canvass
•
m
progress

Businesemen hear account

of Model Project on Aging

.

He added, "To the extent
that standby controls wlll
dissuade workers from
demanding
above
productivity wage increases,
leading to 1\ wage-price spiral,
such controls can be a useful
adjunct to a more moderate
monetary and fiscal policy."
The commlllee is considering an administration
request for a one-year extension-to AprU 30, 1974--&lt;ll
the Economic Stabilization
Act, although Nixon .has
already telaxed controls on
most of the economy except the
food, health and construction
Industries.
Ainajor food industry unlon,
the Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen,
AFLCIO, condemned the
President's Pllue Ill contrOli
-as ··. "Inequitable" . and
"Iniquitous" becaiiSe If continued strict wage cootrol of
food induatry unions while ,
continuing food price control
"In name only and for public
rela.tions purposes only."

Court suits filed

'

•
I

CENTS

$25,000 Loan for wate:.;
well project considered

WASHINGTON - CONGRESSIONAL investigators have
been told growing government and courf use of the news media
as an lnvestlsative tool amounts to an open,season on the press.
Spokesmen for a committee of journali!Jts told a House judiciary
subcommittee Monday that Congress should ena~t legislation
that would block subpoena of reporters or Unpubllshed materlala
In slate and federal pt'Ol'eedlngs.
They said a Supreme Court decision ordering newsinen to
disclose confidential facta and sources to juries has gravely
damaged constitutional guarantees of a free Jl'eSS. Jack. C.
Landau of the Ne'ivhoiiSe Newspapers warned that the court's
decision wal being used to authorize disclosure In criminal trialS,
clvlllltigatlon aild contempt cases "in_wharamounts to a kind of
!Continued on Page -10)

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
I

I

A. Custer, Middleport, filed
against Philip J. Custer, same
address, on grounds of gross
neglect of duty .
Divorces dismissed were
Anna Jean Shields vs Russell
Shields, Carolyn Shrimplln vs
Gale F. Shrlmplln, Jr., and
Gathel wwis vs William E.
wwis .

Rural market

at Five Points
struck again
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. is investigating a ll"cond breaking
and entering ol the Five Points
Market, this one 11 days after
the first. The department said
the incident occurred Tuesday
night before 8 a.m. today.
Entry was gained by
breaking glass in a front door.
Tape taken from the store in
the first robbery was used to
break the glass In such a way
as to keep it from shattering.
Between $140 and $21)0 was
taken from a pool table, two
pinball machines and a juke
box. Twenty cartons. of
cigarettes and other merchandise also I~ missing.
HOUSING TALK SET
Mobile homes and mobile
home parks as a partial
solution to the Meigs County
housing problem will be
discussed at an open meeting
frd!n 10 a.m. lo noon Thursday ·
in the social room of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, Orion ·Roush, choirman of the Meigs Qpunty Study
Commlltee, announced)od&amp;Y.
Gerrlt VanStraten, engmeer of
the Van Straten and Edwards
Engineering .Firm, Columbus,
developer of ' the Canaan
community In Columbus, will
bt the ipeaker·.

�Roosevelt, had foundd the Amertcan welfare soctety although, hke Jobnson, Roosevelt became so
preoccuptfll Wtth war that he had httle ttme for
anyone's welfare
In any case, under the expert mampulanon of
the former Senate mmonty and maJonty leader,
the 88th Congress responded to the Prestdent's
appeal by wmmg mto the books of law a spate
of ctvtl nghts measures remtmscent, m number, to
Franklm Roosevelt's Ftrst Hundred Days thtrty
years before
Ftrst, there was an $11 5-btllton oncome-tax
reducnon btll that would shortly send the national
economy soarmg to new records Then, m raptd-fire
order, came the Ctvtl Rrghts Act, the Economtc
Opportumty Act, the Mass Transit Act, the Water
Research Act and the W1lderness Act
PrestdcntJohnson had told Congress on that fifth
dark day that "No memonal oratton or eulogy could
more eloquently honor Prestdent Kennedy's memory than the earhest poss1ble passage of the ctvtl
nghts btll for whtch he fought " 1\nd the record
shows clearly that Lyndon Johnson fought, and
fought ~ell, to carry out the deadlocked pohctes
of hts unfortunate predecessor
But Johnson was no exception to the Btbhcal
adage that' allts vamty and vexation of spmt,'' and
so tt came to pass that, under prestdenrtal proddmg,
a gtfted speechwrtter named Rtchard Good"'m
rechnstened the New Frontier the Great Soc1ety
Thus dtd Lyndon Johnson s Great Soctety wnte
mto the books of law the sometimes nebulous, often
thwarted asptrattons of Frankl111 Roosevelt's New
Deal, Harry fruman's Fatr Deal and John Kennedy's New Frontier Conceptually, there ts even
a tlc-m wtth the first Roosevelt's Square Deal,
although an a!tempt to make a practtcal connection
qmckly dwmdles to the \ amsh111g pmnt
But wntmg an mscnptlon m the books of law
ts not the same as msulhng tt m the mmds of men,
a paradox that has baffled lawgtvers from Solon to
Sen J W Fulbnght In Prestdent Johnson's case,
the absurd tty mamfested as an outbreak of nots by
black mthtants that set off a cham reaction of mass
destructton-lootmg, burmng, bloodshed-from
the Deep Soutft to the Far West, from '\labama
to Cahforma, by way of Montgomery, Harlem,
Chtcago, Phtladclphta, San Franctsco and Los
Angeles
The agttatlon for Negro equahty had begun durong the Kennedy Admmtstranon, whtch had done
httle more than make promtses, and tt ts tromcal
that the movement gathered headway durmg the
Johnson Admmtstratwn, whtch had enacted the

Thirty 11xth Pres1dent Lyndon B Johnson

(First Adm1"1Sirot1on November 22 1963.Jonuory 20 1964)

Great Somty Wms Lm1dsltde Vote
'All I ha•e I would have g11 en gl.~&lt;lly not to
be standmg here today,' Prestdent Lyndon Johnson
told a JOint sesston of Congress fi•e days after the
assass111at1on of Prcmlent John F Kennedy
These melodramatic and unbchcvablc ••ords set
the mood for a Prestdcncy so 111crcasmgly 111credtble
that PrestdentJohnson would be compelled to fm ego
a second term 111 hts own nght- aftcr w111n111g hts
first one b} the largest plurality m prcstdennal annals-because' There ts dtvlston 111 the 1\rncncan house
now," a dtvtston he htmself had wrought but could
not reconcile
But first there was umty 'We have talked long
enough tn thts country about equal nghts," the tall,
Texas-bred Prestdent satd "We have talked for 100
years or more It ts ttme now to wnte the next
chapter-and wrtte tt m the books of law"
Here Johnson was on more crcdtblc ground, for
hts first pohttcal mentor and long tunc tdol, Frankhn

~·

WIN AT BRIDGE

Omits Safety Play,DownOne I
NORm

6

doubleton or tnpleton ]ack
but would insure hts contract
once East followed to the
ftrst dtamond
Thts sort of msuranc• ts
mtghty cheap Game and
rubber as agamst a posstble
20 pomts Posstble because tf
East started wtth the ]ack
and JU1t 1 ~J\e ,or, two extra
dtamond"' , the pray ,would
make no dtfference at all
The contract would make on
any line of play

,:

mm~::c:..,.::::::::::::::::».:.-w..::t8l·:8l??8l:83:llm1111811m~~~~~'B

Generation Rap

~

By Helen and Sue Hottel

Another Modern Switch
Dear Helen and Sue
When I ftrst met Dave I really went bananas over him That
was when I was 18 and he 20 We've been together three years,
and constder ourselves mamed
All the times haven't been perfect, but we were m our own
world and understood each other
Now Dave has changed He won't get stoned anymore and
doesn't brmg his friends around to rap In fact, ou' old frtends
aren't welcome now
You see,! got pregnant last year, and Dave satd 'no abortion "It was my fault -1 was strung out After the boy was born,
Dave JUSt took to hun, and now all he can think of is us really
married, buying a house, him working steady and bemg a family

first maJor btll from the White House suggested
htstonc changes m that troubled and mudd ted area
The mato fefltures of the ommbus btll were a
guaranteed mcome (Famtly Assrstance Plan),
revenue-sharmg wtth the states and health 111surance
fnr the poor Go111g 111to the summer of 1972, after
three years of wranghng by the 91st and 92nd Congresses, no final actton had been taken on the proposals
It was apparently dtfficult for the htghest patd
Chtef Executive m the natwn's btstory ($200,000
per year) to become senously dtsturbed by an unem
ployment rate that hovered perststendy around 6
%when both the GNP--now edgmg past $100 btllton yearly-and the number of employed persons
are nsmg In any case, the Ntxon Admtmstratlon
dtd ltttle about unemployment and that httle dtd
ltttle good
In support of the' New Ntxonomtcs," the Prestdem reversed hts long-held convtcttons by ordermg
wage and pncc controls 111 August, 1971 A year
later the annua l rate of mtlatlon had dropped from
4% to 3%, but 11 ts a moot pomt among fiscal expertS
whether thts change was brought about by Admtmstratton pohctes or was snnply the result of normal
economtc tluctuattons
When tt appeared that tmports would exceed
exports 111 1971 for the first ttme smce 1893, Ntxon
took sttll another dar111g gamble by devalu111g the
dollar on the mternattonal exchange by an aggregate
of about II %, b} severmg the dollar from tts foretgn
moor111g to gold and by suspendmg the U S govern
ment s promtse to redeem 111 gold at $35 and ounce
some $50 btllton m foretgn hands
In effect he declared that gold had no monetary
value "hatevcr as mternatmnal currency so far .ts
the U S rreasury was concerned
By concedmg that the Umted States could not
meet tts fiscal obhgattons-111 effect, was bankrupt-:--ltxon s mam obJeCttves m floatmg and
dcvalumg the dollar \\ere to achteve rough eqmhb
r1um m the balance of payments between the Umted
States and tts maJor trachng partners and to restore
worldwtde confidence m the dollar as a stable fiscal
un11 by agreed upon revaluatwns of other maJor
currenctes These, m turn, were expected to stem
the outllo" of speculative Amencan dollars, to
mcrease foretgn mvestments m Amencan stocks and

H But D
How about honesty' Tell 'em you're "dymg to try tt but
trymg to diet" - and most parents will understand - HELEN

3.

s•

By Gary Kale
UPtSpot18 Writer
Ohio Slate Coach Fred
Taylor,hospttallzedinJanuary
for fbest pains, made hiS first
bench appearance smce the
InCident and dtrecled the
Budts to a 7().69 victory over
Indiana Monday night
'lhe outcome wasn't setUed
unlil the filtal five seconds
when Allan Hornyak hit on the
second ol' two foul shots. When
Hornyak mtssed the hrst
throw, with the score tied 68all,tt \OOk tl!e strong-hearted to
continue focusing on the basket
and watt the developments of
.the second toss
Hornyak, the Big Ten's
leadmg scorer, cool desptte the
errant first throw, netted the
nelt charity foul that pinned
lndtana with 1111 first conference loss in seven games It
also gave Hornyak 19 pomts for
the contest, tytng him for team
honors wtth Wardell Jackson

Sport Parade

ij

NEW YORK (UP!) - Armand "Bep" Gutdolin IS a man
completely without pretense
All his life, he has busted his back working and It shows
Not m his back, but In his face and m his outlook, which is far
more realistic than you'll find In most other people
Bep Gwdolin-nobody ever calls him Armand-lives pretty
much for hlJI work, which happens to be lee hockey He has been
In It practically all his life, and altllough he Is 47 now he was only
16 when he jomed the Boston Bruins In 1942 and became the
youngest player ever to perform In the NHL
Guldolln was pretty much of a naturat choice as coach when
the Boston Braves were formed last year as a farm club of the
Bruins In the AHL
Why not'
He had served as a scout and coach for a nwnber of years m the
Brums' orgamzatlon He was a good man, hard-workmg, con·
scientious Sure, why not'
So they made Guidolln the Braves' coach and In his first year
he steered them to the league's Eastern Division title
There Was a Pb111e Call
He was leading the Braves through a workout Monday, skating
on the ice with them, as usual, at Boston Gardens, when there
was a phone caD from Harry Slnden, the Bruins' managing
director, who has his office in the same building
"Come on up, I wama talk with you," said Slnden
"I'm In my sweat clothes," said Guldolin.
"That's all right," replied Slnden "Just pul on a pair of shoes
and come on over "
Gwdolin took off his skates and put on a pair of sneakers, then
walked the 100 yards or so to Sinden's office
"We just made a change," Sinden greeted him
Gwdolin didn't comprehend immediately
"What's happenmg'" he asked
"You're lbe new coach of the Bruins," said Sinden
Gwdolil)'s eyes narrowed In disbelief
"You're ldddmg," he satd

'Divorce his Divorce hers 3 4 15

"No, l'm not n
"Whadda I do now?"
"Whadda you mean whadda you do now' You go out and rurl
the practice It's your team "
"It's our team," Guldolin corrected Slnden.
"Yes, you're rlght,lt'sourteam,"said the Brums'boss
Thai's the Way ll Hlppeued
And thai was the way It happened That was the way Bep
Guldolin got to know be was going to coach an NHL team for the
ftrst time, and that was the way the Bruins told Tom Johnson, the
man who led them to the stanley Cup championship, he wasn't
their coach anymore
The Bruins are in third place now, and Guldolln Is aware lf he
doesn 'I gel them moving, the same thing that happened to Tom
Johnson will happen to him
"You're hired to be flfed," says Guidolin "I accept this life,
and I like it "
Aware of how Tom Johnson must have felt at having a team
laken away from him less than 12 months after having guided tt
to a title, Guitlolin made it his business to see him before he
acjually took over the Brums In practice
"It's notthe em of the world," he Satd to Jolmson "The same
thing could haPP,en to me "
What Bep Guithlin has to do now with the Bruins is wake them
up, shake them and motivate them The Boston players aren't
exacUy strang to him He had fellows like Bobby Orr, Wayne
Caslunan and ck Beverly when he was coaching the Oehawa,
Ont , "Genera "
"We have
talent," he says "We've got young kids and
we've gotta plajo 'em more Too many players are depending on
Bobby Orr aitdfPhll Esposito They have to learn how to depend
em one anolthtt."
"!liked th~= (VInce) Lombardi coached his teams," says
Guidolln "I
It's because I'm ltaHan I'd always cheer for
and Yogi Berra, too But I really admired Lornbig guys, B.foot-7, two-three hundred pounders,
guys had his respect and he loved 'em They
too That's what! want my players to do "

&amp; THINGS
.

i

~

rejects the Idea the Bruins are a "dirty" hockey
choir boys," he says with a straight face. "We
anybody I can't understand tt They call us a dirty
but after the game Is over everybody walks out of
the 'buil~g okay They go have a beer and a helluva time "
Gul1~0~ admits he's a bad loser
be sarcastic after a game, but give me a little time
"I
over," be told the Boston media Monday "Just bear
after
and don't catch me too quick I may say something
with
rough/but! dc•n't 1me1m what! say Later,l'll go have a beer with
you

In a lot of time on the Ice Monday He skated an
bintr/ltnd-11-hlltlf with the Boston Braves and theQ another hourand·~llll with the Boetoo Bruins,
of the hockey clubl he coached previOUily fired him, not
heq!UI8 be wu a bad coacb, but becaUI8 be wu a hungry one
waa always over money," he says
tunny thing happened to Bep Guldolln when he got the
·Bljalt•' job Monday.
never ewn ulled bow IIIIlCh.
',._ tlllD 1iloeln 't tnoir, bllt be certainly wlll10011 eno118b

I

Tournament drawmgs for 71
southeastern Ohto area h1gq
school basketball teams wtll be
held at mne dtfferent sties thts
Sunday
There will be 41 Class A
teams seekmg sectwnal
dtstrtct regional or state tttles
from southeastern Ohto The
area has 21 Class AA squads,
and mne Class AAA qwntets
Sectionals will be played at
Nelsonvtlle-York, Metgs,
Chtllicothe, Portsmouth, Hills·
boro for Class A participants
Class AA sectwnals wtll be
held at Valley, Federal·
Hocktng, Coal Grove and
Waverly
Rto Grande College wtll host
the Trtple A sectional
Drawmgs for the AAA event
at Rto wtll be held m Lyne
Center Room 204, begmmng at
2 p m on Sunday Tournament
manager IS Art Lanham
The drawmgs for the ftve

I

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporta Editor

TUESDAY FEB &amp; 1973
00 - News 3 4 8,10 13 IS I Dream Of Jeannie 13 Growing
H1m Up 33
7 00 - Whal s My L1ne 8 I ve Got A Secrel 15 TV Honor
SoCiely 15 Electric Co 20 Beat The Clock 4
7 30 - Th1s Is Your L1fe 3 Doctors on Call 4 To Tell The Truth
6 Price Is Righi 8 10, Beat The Clock tJ RFD 20 Great
Dec Is Ions 73 33
8 00- Maude 8 10 Ohio This Week 20 Movie Flrecreek 3 4
15 Temperatures RISing 6 13
8 30 - Hawaii Five 0 8 10 B1ll Moyers Journal 20 Movie

Flftieii

i

1r&lt;Klay's

6

to hit a field goal for Alabama
It was a tale of too much
Lamar at Beaumont, Tex The
player, Dwtght Lamar, beat
the school, Lamar Uruverstly,
wtth a 24-pomt second half that
boosted SW l.ows18na to a 17-1
season record and an 8-0 mark
m South!!'"d Conferen~ play
Lamar,now7-ll, recetveda 22point high from Danny Bromley
In other actton, Gary Novak
scored 23 points m leadt,ng
Notre Dame to an ~2 vtctory
over Butler, Nick Weatherspoon talhed 32 points m
Dlinois' 84-7'7 Big 10 wtn over
Northwestern, seven.foot Len

High school tourney
drawings set Sunday

... i!..,. , ....•-.•:;:::::;::-.?.._ )~~.§:~VoY.:O_W,~~::m"'.W~

I.2.

I Voice along Br'Way

Steve Downmg led the losmg half, was tied at 87-all on a
Hoosiers with 22 points
Moeller jwnper with 4 30 len,
The torrid riValry m North but managed to regain a brief
Carollila came to a head as advantage until Moeller's wtnsecond-ranked North Carolina liiDg basket Tommy Burleson,
State rupped No 6 North the Wolfpacks • 7-4 center,
Carolina, Jll-73, and a ragmg scored 22 points George Karl
battle In Mlsstssipt found Ole led the Tar Heels w1th 22
Mlas upending seventh-ranked
Coohdge Ball scored 26
Alabama, 6U2 Southwestern pomts and collected 14
Louisiana got by Lamar, 101- rebrounds In MississiPPI'S upset
94
of Alabama The Ttde outshot
Mark Moeller's 2t)..foot jump- Ole Miss, 62 per cent to 43 per
er put N C State In front, 74-73, cent from the field, but made
and Dave Thompson gave ttte fewer Ooor attempts Wendell
Wolfpack a cushion wtth a pair Hudson led Alabama with 24
ol' foul shots
points Charles Cleveland, who
North Carolina held the lead scored 24 against Mlsstssippt
for 13 minutes In the second State last weekend, was unable

a

Kosmalsld netted 20 points as
Tennessee beat VanderbUt, n.
62; Uoyd Batts' 25-loot basket
atthebuzzerpushedClnclnnali

team Class AA Coal Grove
Sectional wtll be held at I p m
Sunday at Coal Grove under
the dtrection of Paul Kegley,
tournament manager
Charles Chancey wtll serve
as manager of the etght team
Class A sectional at Metgs
Drawmgs for that sessiOn wtll
be held at the new Meigs school
at 2 pm on Sunday
Some changes are noted thiS
year Alexander has changed
from Class A to Class AA,
Federal-Hockmg, Chesapeake,
and Coal Grove dropped from
AA to A, and Metgs moved
from AA to AAA
Sectional lournaments wtll
be held between Feb Z4 and
March 3 Dislrtct play will be
held the followmg week wtth
Regtonal tournaments set for
March 1&amp;-17 The state tour- By United Press IDiernatlonal
Jun Wiste and Gary Jarrett
naments wtll be held at St
each
scored a patr of goals
John Arena m Columbus on
Monday night to spark the
March 22, 23 and 24
Cleveland Crusaders to a 7-li
World Hockey Assoctation vtctory over the Chtcago Cougars
It was the third straight
vtctory for the Eastern
DIVISIOn -leading Crusaders,
who now lead second-place
New England by five potnts.
The Qousadera, who spotted
the Cougars a 1.0 lead only 40
Point
seconds
after the opentng
Waverly Htgh School (5
loamsl - Clak Hill Wellslon faceoff, took a 3-1lead after the
Hillsboro Greenf•eld McClain ftrst 20 nunutes WtSte made tl
and Alexander
Four sectronal wrnners will 4-1 at 5 II of the second pertod
advance to Class AA dlstncl but the Cougars came back
tournament at Rio Grande With two QUICk goals Within
College
CLASS AAA SECTIONAL
Rto Grande College (9
r .4
teamsl - Alhens Chillicothe.

school cage tournaments

CLASS A SECTIONALS
Nelsonvtlle York Htgh
School (6 teams) - M1iler
Glousler. Starr Washington
Crooksville Eastern !Meigs)
and Federal Hocking
Mergs High Schoof (8 teams)
- Southern. North Gallla.
5&gt;lllhwestern, Kyger Creek.
Ironton 51 Joseph Symmes
Valley Hannan Trace and
Chesapeake
Chillicothe Htgh School (8
learns) - Bishop Flaget
Adena, Unloto. Paint Valley,
Zane

Trace,

Huntmgton

IRossl Ross Southeastern and
P1keton
Portsmouth Htgh School (9
teams) - South Webster
Bloom Portsmouth Clay
Portsmouth Notre Dame,
Portsmouth East, New Bosloo
Lucasville Valley Franklin
Furnace

Green

Eastern

(Pike) and Coal Grove
Hillsboro IB leamsl Lynchburg Clay, Fairfield
Leesburg, Whitely Whlfeoak,
Peebles North Adams Wesl
Union , Manchester and
Western (Pike)
Five secllonal winners w11i
advance to Class A Dlstrlcl
tournament at Chillicothe High
School
CLASS AA SECTIONALS
Valley Local High School (5
teams) - Waverly Northwest,
Portsmouth West, Minford and
Wheelersburg
Federal Hocking Htgh
School (&amp; learns) - Belpre
Warren Local, New Lex1ngton
Nelsonville York, VInton
County and Sheridan
Coal Grove Htgh School IS
teams) - Gallipolis, Ironton,
Rock Hill Fairland and Solllh

had a IJIUCh better mstde game
and we had fme balance "
Allan Hornyak scored the
last pomt of the game, a free
throw wtth five second~! to play
He truSSed the ftrsl of two
chartty shots but htt the second
and after a flurry of Indiana
ttmeouts teammate Dave
Merchant mtercepted a
Hoosier pass to end the
struggle
Hornyak collected 19 potnts,
along wtth Wardell Jackson
Witte fouled out wtth 3 37 left
Center Steve Downing finished wtth 22 pomts for Indiana,
now 14-3 for the season OSU IS
3-3 In the Btg Teri and 9-7
overaU
lndtana Coach Bobby
Knight, who once played under
Taylor at Ohio State, satd he
thought h1s Roosters were
"real sloppy tn the first
half But we had some opportunittes Bad passes cost us
"They played like I ftgured
they would," he added, "real

well"

Crusaders trip Cougars

Here's list of
toUJ;1ley squads
Here's how they stack up In
southern Oh lo this winter as
area teams prepare for lhe 1973
Class A. AA and AAA high

•

past Louisville, 81-79, Kenlucky downed Auburn, ~7.
behind Jlnuny Dan Conner's Tl
points, and Jacksonville
clilshed Creighton, 7~

Witte in
comeback
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Big
Luke Witte, Ohio State's sleepIng giant, woke up Monday
rught
The 7.foot semor center, wbo
had not started since Dec 29,
scored 18 points and pulled
down 16 rebounds as Ohto State
upset fourtiH'anked Indiana 7().
69 It was the Hoosiers' ftrst
loss In seven Big Ten games
"It's been a long time too
long," Witte sm1led afterwards
The win came on Coach Fred
Taylor's lirst coaching mght
back smce becoming ill several
weeks ago Assistant coach
Bob Burkholder had taken
Taylor's place m the three
prevtous games
Taylor satd he dectded to
start Wttte after watchmg him
prachce Sunday, when he "just
played up a storm "
"Because Luke became a
threat tonigllt, a lot of other
things happened," Taylor satd
"We had a lot more movement
out of our corner people, we

-

Jackson,

Lancaster

Logan,

Marietta, Meigs, Portsmoulh
and Miami 1race
Two co winners of sectional

will advance to Class AAA
district tournament at Ohio
University Convocal1on
Center

Nolan first Red
to sign contract
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Rtghthander Gary Nolan,
whose 750 won-lost percentage
was best m the National
League last season, Monday
he came the ftrst member of the
Clnctnnati Reds to stgn a 1973
contract
Nolan, 24, was liKi isst year
ThiS will be his sixth season
with CIIICinnati
Nolan was 13-2 at the all-atar
break wtth a 1 81 earned run
average, but a shoulder irritation blamed on an abscessed
tooth forced him to bow oul of
the All-Star game and be appeared In only SIX games the
rest of the regular season
Nolan finished the season
with a 1 99 ERA, second only to
the PhHadelphla Phillles' Steve
Carlton's 1 98

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P DP
Hannan Trace 1~ 2 111611 767
Symmes Valley 9 5 1056 942
Eastern
B 6 805 757
Southern
6 8 740 780
Kyger Creek
4 12 914 1162 ''SUPER SCOUT"
Southwestern 3 12 776 1018
PHILADELPWA (UP!)
North Gallla
3 13 855 100~ Jack McMahon, former coach
SVAC ONLY
Symmes Valley 9 1 803 60~ In both major pro basketball
Hannan Trace 9 2 720 541 leagues, was hired Monday as
Eastern
7 2 541 454
Southern
5 ,,.1 453 545 a "super scout" by the PhilNorlh Galli a
3 'U 625 705 delphia 78ers
Kyger Creek
J 8 617 810
McMahon will go talent
Scuthwostern 0 10 503 703
hunting to prepare the 76ers for
SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP the college draft The club has
Norfh Gallla
9 2 446 348
Symmes Valley 7 3 432 375 the worst record In the NBA
Southern
7 J 415 JIB and probably will have two of
Hannan Trace 5 6 401 421 the first three picks In the
Eastern
~ 5 393 327
Kyger Crook
4 7 443 504 draft
Southwestern 0 10 242 .S9
This week's schedule.
Tuos«Yy- Fairland at North
Gallla, Southwestern at
Hannan Trace, Southern at H Payne 92 McMurry 84
Eastern and Rock Hill aJ S F Aust1n 117 Trltn 51 79
Symmes Valley
La Tech 88 Ark St 78
Friday - North Gall Ia at • Ne La 95 Houston Bap 86
Kyger Creek, Hannan Trace at Cntnary 86 Tex Arl 67
Hannan. W Va ,1 Eastern at ~E La 89 Flornce St 75
Southwestern
1ulane 75 Samford 70
Saturday - Southern at LSU N 0 92 Ga St 8
Symmes Valley, Kyger Creek NW La 79 La Coli 60
at Union Furnace
Texas A&amp; I 86 Sui Ross 78

C
sv..ti. teams
resume play
Four Southern Valley
Athletic Conference teams are
m action th1s evenmg
In league games, Eastern
wtll host Metgs County rtVal
Southern whtle Southwestern
travels to Hannan Trace
Fairland ts at North Gallla and
Rock Htll moves mto Symmes
Valley m non-league affatrs
Both Hannan Trace and
Eastern wtU attempt to stay m
the Southern Valley Athletic
Conference race behmd
Symmes Valley
The Vtkings are 9-1, Hannan
Trace IS !1-Z and Eastern 1~ 1·2

College Basketball Resuln
By Untied Press tnlerna11onal
Easl
Temple 97 Drexel 63
WHA Sland1ngs
By Untted Press International Sthampln 78 NY Tech &amp;9
Morrsvl 57 Coblskll 56
East
w I .I pis gf ga Holstra 67 LIU 65
Cleve
33 19 2 68 195 ISO Newrk St 71 Monmth 64
New Eng 31 21 1 63 222 177 St Lwrnce 81 M1ddlbry 70
NY
2~291 51 222 225 Pttt 77 West Vtrg 101a 64
Quebec 23 2S 3 49 185 205 Wesl L1b 94 WVa Wslyn 76
Ph1la
22 29 0 44 185 220 W Va Sl 83 Davs&amp;Eikns 62
Ottawa 19 31 4 42 190 236 Bluelld 51 81 Concord 72
Fa1rmont 83 Wheeltng 65
West
wttptsgfga Gllysbg 85 Frnkln&amp;Mrshll 67
W1nlpg 30 22 3 63 201 172 Temple 97 Drexel63
Houston 27 21 4 58 204 180 Rutgers 80 Bucknell 69
Mm"
26 25 3 55 176 IBS Ednboro 78 Lck Hven 68
LosAng 25 24 4 54 186 181 Kutzlwn 93 Elzblhlwn 87
Alberta 24 25 2 50 175 176
S""lh
Ch1cago 19 33 1 39 169 203 Fia Tech 81 Augusta 77
B1scyne 85 Vldasta 51 73
Mond1y's Results
Kentucky 88 A-uburn 57
Cleveland 7 Ch1cago 5
Jcksnvl 78 Cre1ghtn 62
Mmnesota 6 Houston 3
Tenn 72 Vanderbilt 62
(Only games scheduled)
Va St 91 J C Sm1lh 88
Tuesday's Games
Soulh Fla 85 South Ala 64
Ph1iadelph•a at Ottawa
Gullfrd 82 Llvngstn 7~
New England al Alberta
E Car 82 St " Peler s 77
New York at M1nnesota
MISs 66 Alabama 62
I Only games scheduled I
Crsn Newmn 83 W Car 75
E Tenn Sl 105 ApplchnSt 87
Norflk St 94 Hmpln fnst 67
N C 51 76 No Car 73
,\GREE TO SELL
Modwesl
WORTHINGTON, Ohto Cho Corcle 82 Bndctne 62
(UP!) - Worthmgton ln- Oh1o St 70 Indiana 69
duslrtes, Inc , announced Notre Dame 89 Buller 62
lnd St 81 Wis Mil 63
Monday tt has reached Stubnvl75 Alliance 43
agreement to sell the East So Car 77 Toledo 74
81 Lou1svl 79
Chtcago, Ind , metal pro- Ctnc•
P•kevl77 Berea 61
cessmg facilities of tts wholly- Thos More 89 Centre 83
owned substdtary, Umted F1at Geotwn 78 Union Ky. 72
J Carr II 80 Crng1e Mlln 69
Rolled Products
Colo 67 Nebraska 59
Mtd.State Metals, Inc , of Ill 84 Northwestern 77
Oak Brook, Ill , will operate the Eau Claire 78 Stevens PI 7/r
Southwest
facthty through a wholly- North Tex 55 Wesl Tex 53
owned substdiary named Mid- Oklahoma 90 MISSOUri 77
Houston 79 E Tex 53
State Metal Processmg, Inc Sam
SW La 101 Lamar 94
John
H
McConnell, Praor1e Vw 93 Grmblng 78
preSident of Worthmgton In- Sthwstrn 89 E Tex Bap 74
dustnes, would not disclose
details of the sale, but added
ThiS Week's Spec1al
the transaction IS part of a plan
to phase Untted out of
processmg customer-owned
materials
Worthmgton's Frankhn
Park, Ill , plant will be expanded to accommodate
United's operatiOns

Pro Standings

OSU"_ tops Hoosier$10. to 69

Television Log

+++

9 00 - Behind the L1nes 20 33
9 30- Movies VISions ol Death 8 Bad Day at Black Rock
10 Black Journal 20, 33
10
OC - News 20 Biography 33 Forst Tuesday 3 4 15 Marcus
.QI098
Welby MD 6 13
WEST
EAST
11
00
- News3,4 8,10 13,15
Note From Sue
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 15 Jack Paar Tonlte 6 13 Movies
• 4
• K10985
Except "Super-mother" (do you know one') who figures
Jack of Diamonds' 8 Conspiracy of Hearts 10
¥AK8754
¥10632
tJ932
tB
you're conung down.wtth so!'lt~ll! fata!'~u don't&gt;~~~~~~~., - 1 00 - Your Heallh 4 f'lews 13
130 - News4
.62
.753
helpmgs of everything It's belt to avoid~ kitchen until you've
WEDNESDAY, FEB 7, 1973
SOUTH {0)
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
lost your quota, or she'D ''worry" you mto the next dress stze .73
6 IS - Farmtlme 10 English 3
SUE
¥9
6 20 - Farm Report 13
+++
tAKQIOH
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
.AKJ4
Dear
Rap
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8 Urban League
(NlWSPAPU ENTERPR IS E ASSN)
Presents 10 The Story 13
Both vulnerable
I believe tt was Sue who wrote, "the Germans belch to show
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
West North Eost South
apprectation of good," to the gtrl whose boyfrtend was a burper
man
6 55- Take Five for Llle 15
lt
7 00 - Today3 4 IS News6 8 10 Fllnlstones 13
I
nuss
the
old
times,
but
tt
would
tear
Dave
up
if
I
told
him
so
Wrong'
My
wife
and
I
are
German
IWe
are
brought
up
to
be
,.
,.
2¥
7 30- Romper Room 6 Sleepy Jelfers 8 Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
The h1ddmg has been
I can't cut thiS Establiahment stuff much longer, but I don't want poltte and do not belch m public You have the Germans and
13 Popeye 10
l'llss
4•
Pass 4¥
West
North
East
South to hurt him Do you have the answer' - PERPLEXED
Chmese nuxed up Even drinking beer, we do not perrrut our8 00- Capt Kangaroo 8 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Pass 4 •
Pass
Lassie 6
Pass Pass
Pass
selves thts lapse of manners Please wrtte a correction - H T
Pass
I NT
Pass
8
30
- Jack La La nne 13 Romper Room 8 New Zoo Revue 6
Openmg lead- ¥ K
Pass
2NT
Pass
Dear Perplexed
8
55
- Local News 13
'
You South hold
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Ph1l Donahue 15 AM 3 Concentration 6
OnlyYOUhave the answer Wtlltt be Dave and your baby m DearH
Capt Kangaroo 8 Friendly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13
By Oswald &amp; James Jacob) .AK54 ¥AQ63 t2 .KQI07 a life you could learn to like - if you loved them enough' Or will
(And all our German readers )
9 30 - ToTelltheTruth3 Jeopardy6 HazelS
Rubber b r 1d g e players What do you do now'
tt be driftmg along m your no-tomorrow kmd of spaced-out
Excuse please' I goofed
9 55 - Chuck While Reports 10
don't waste much hme on
A-Bid three h~arts You want world'
Germans do NOT belch to show apprecration, but they surely 10 00 - Dinah Shore3, 15 Phil Donahue 4 Columbus Six Calling
6 Jokers Wild 8 10 Dick Van Dykel3
analysts They are too anxt to complete the picture of your
Once you've made your dectSton(I'm guessmg Dave wtll do WRITE to say a gtrlts wrong. Am I forgiven'- SUE
10 JO - Concenlrallon 3 15 Phil Donahue 4, Price Is Right 8 10
ous to get to the next hand
hand
wm I) the Drug Abuse Center m your town wtll help you see tt's
Split Second 13
South ruffed the second
TODAY S QUESTION
11 00 - Saleofthe Ce"lury 3 15 Love American Style 6 Gambit
the
rtght
one
HELEN
Your partner contmues to
heart played three rounds of
B 10 Password 13 Etec Co 20
+++
trumps and hts top dta three no-trump What do you
11
JO
- HoltywoodSquares3 4 15, Bewllched6 13 Love of Life
•
do now?
monds
B, 10 Sesame St 20
Dear Perplexed
12 DO - Jeopardy 3,15 l!ob Braun s.SO.lO Club 4 Local News 10
Smce East had shown out
You're not 18 any longer, and tt 's time you learned about
13 Contact 8 Password 6
Send
$1
lor
JACOBY
MOOERN
book
on the second lead South was
direction,
comrrutment,
responstbthty
growmg
up'
Also,
about
12
J0
- 3 W's Gamel, 15 Spill Second6, Search for Tomorrow 8
able to dtscard JU St one of to Wm at Bndge (c/o t~u ntWJ· Dave's kind of love If you can't- if the slratght life turns you off
10
dummy's spades Then he at paper), P0 Box 489, Rad10 C1fy
BY PAUL CRABTREE
12 55 - NBC News 3 15
completely- get the hurt over fast and let hun and the baby go
tacked that swt and th e bad Srol(on, Now York NY 10019
1 00 - News Weather Sports 3 All My Children 6 13 Green
(and If THAT advtce makes you mad, you're ready to chauge
It was reaDy a very modest little house, but even so ,II was as
Acres 10 Fre"ch Chef 33, Secret Storm 8 Not For Women
break m spades left htm
Only 15
down one
much as we could afford Rookte newspapermen just don •t make
1 20 - Fashions In Sewing 3
~~~ v .:-.-. .. ;..o.,:., .,.. x « ~ . . . -.:«if!.';~ -.vw.x~ w_....::::::::,-.
.:-:- :x
.--:;. .. ~"ii"»X'. ;:-,. .,V.;o'{(o .;.....
very much money
'Too bad I dtdn't !)lay dta
1 JO- 3 On A Match 3 4 15 As the World Turns B 10 Let's
monds, ' said Sou~h
ru
Make a Deal 6 13
It stood nght on lop of a hiD tn Charleston, and had been built
have scored my hundred
2
00
- Days of Our Lives 3, 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 Mike
about 1938, as nearly as we could determine It had two
Douglass 6 Guiding Light 8, 10
honors
moderately-6lllall bedrooms, a bath (that kept actmg up ), a
2 30 - DatlngGale13, EdgeofNightB 10, Doctors3 4 IS
It was too bad that South
3
00- Another World 3 4, 15 General Hospital tr, 13 Love
livmg
room,
kitchen,
and
a
dinmg
room
whtch
I
enlarged
Into
the
dtdn t take advantage of a
BY JACK O'BRIAN
Splendored Thing B 10 RFD 20
hvmg
area
There
was
a
little
utlllty
room
out
behind
the
kitchen
headlined
Ma
manners
recently
IS
hiS
ftrsl
bad
simple safety play m dta
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4 15 One Life to Live 6, 13
FARCE IS ENGUSH
publicity msome tune, usually IS followed by an wtth a hot-water heater (that kept acting up), and water ptpes
monds He should wm the
Ohio ThlsWeek20 MervGrlfflnB Secret Storm 10
AND ON mE BAlL
4 00 - Mister Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Fllntstones 6 Love
thtrd trump m dummy lead
announcement that he's getting Involved 'in that seemed to freeze at 31 degrees or below
NEW YORK (KFS) -lt'sa pleasure to note some marvelous humamtartan project
American Style 13 Merv Griffin 4 Sesame St 33 Movie
a dtamond and sttck m ius
Many faults, mcluding a long, treacherous climb up the hill
Charley's Aunt 0 10
,
10 spot Thts play would cost 'The Jockey Club stakes," which opened last
from
the
bus
stop
(rookie
newsmen
didn't
own
cars
m
those
days
Lyricist
Sanuny
Cahn's
party-parodies
4
30Andy
Griffith
15,
Petticoat
Junction
3
ABC
Aflerschool
htm a trtck tf West had week on Bdwy , IS a fine fat hit
The
Theatre 6, 13 Gilligan's Island 8
'
started wtth the smgleton management was afratd to br~ this delightful unpudently hononng everyone from Sptro either), and few vtStble virtues.
5 00 - Mister Rogers 20, 33 Bonanza 3 4 Hazel 8 Dick Van
I satd "vtstble" virtues for a reason, because rt had one mAgnew to anybody m showbiz should be
Dyke IS
drollery mto town, feelmg It was "too Engliah," published, recorded and kept, they're always tanglble that made It highly destrable back In those dimly5 30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Marshall Oilton 15
and 11 ts marvelously exaggerated Brttlsh farce
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 I Love Lucy 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8
cheerfully unpertlnent, never msolent
We remembered Flfdes
The Almanac
6 00-News Weather Sports3 4,8 10 15 TrulhorConseq 6
mdeed The more we encounter Peter Fonda
That little house was m one of the best televtston reception
Sesame St 20 Around the Bend 33
By United Press International m performance and news headlines, the more often couldn 'I ftgUre which of two marvelous old
areas
tn
the
Ctty
of
Charleston
6 30 - NBC News 3, 4 News 8 10 Sesame St 20, Around the
stage-film
actresses
was
whtch
Ca.thleen
Today Is Tuesday, Feb 6 the he strikes us as adolescently posey, pretentious
Bend 33 I Dream of Jeannie 13
We moved there In the fall of 1952, and after taking one look
Nesbttt and the late Gladys Cooper, probably
37th day of 1973 wtth 328 to and shallQw
7
00Truth or Conseq 3, Beat the Clock 4 News6, 10 Whars
Elhott Gould seems terrtbly
at
the
ptctures
my
netghbors
were
getting
on
'IV,
my
wife
and
because
both
were
beautiful,
talented,
charMy
LineS
Anything You Can Do 13, Elec Co 201 Know Your
follow
proud of some permanent histrionic peak we've mmg and enchantingly well spoken , And they decided we had to have one of those marvelous magic boxes
Schools 33 Saint 15
The moon Is between tts new never noticed Vanessa Redgrave remams
7 30- Episode Actio" 33 To Tell The Truth 6 the Judge 10
couldn't be descrtbed as "once very beautlful", Since we had decrded (at least, I think we decided) that we
Lassie 15 Beat the Clock 13 Pollee Surgeon 3, Hodgepodge
phase and first quarter
durably a pam in the public eye but she's a they retamed thetr beauty mto thetr 70s
needed
a
baby
daughter
several
months
previously,
we
had
to
Lodge 20 Half the George Kirby Comedy Hour B
The morning stars are marvelous actress
B 00 - Paul Lynde 6, 13 Adam 12 3 4 15 Paul Lynde 6 13
Mtckey
Rooney's
career
seems
unable
to
wait
until
she
was
safely
arrived
in
the
world
before
we
got
that
Venus, Mars and Juptter
Sonny&amp; Cher8 10, America 7320,33
Sen llairy Goldwater and hiS host, Dtck
8 JD-Banacek3,4.15 Movle"Divorcehls Divorce hers"
The evening stars are Mer- Cavett, should •ve had some rejomder to another regam its old potency, but he continues to box - a brg, ugly Emerson with a 17" screen and a masonite
Y 00 - Medical Center 8 10
surface occasionally wtth flashes of brilliance cabinet WISely designed not to show the scratches, rucks, and
cury and Saturn
performing misfit's disgraceful statement 9
30 - A Look At Lincoln 20 33
Those born on this date are Germaine Greer, who said lf she'd been In the The new Michael Caine ftim, "Pulp," is a peanut butter the children would so generously bestow on tt
10 00- Search 3, 4, 15, Cannon 8, 10, Soul33, Owen Ma,.hall6
There was absolutely no worry about choice ol' channels dreadful cellulotd, but spins a pmwheel of nifty
13, News 20
under the sign of Aquartus
Vtetnam war, she'd've been ruling around on a
you
watched Channel3 from Huntington, because It W&amp;$ the only 11 00 - News 3 4. 6 8, 10, 13, IS
lunacy
up
to
the
moment
the
ex-gangster
The
Britl.sh actor Str Henry Ir- motorcycle shooting Amertcan soldiers In the
11 3~- Johnny Cars~" 3, 4, 15 Jack Paar Tonlte 6, 13 Movl..
M1ck plays gets killed Glorta Swanson is a station on the atr m those years.
The Desperados 8 'Requiem for a Secret Agent"IO
ving was born Feb 6, 1638
back Too often Cavett takes aggreSSive ex(One nerghbor, toting borne a new 'IV to surprise his family
I 00 - News 4 13
food.fanatic and tt's fanatics who get things
On thiS day in history
ceptions to conservattve or mlddleroaders but
done we congratulated Cong Delaney (Queens for Christmas, solved the antenna problem by jamnung the leadIn 1778, Massachusetts rail- lets such militant bubbleheads say anything
Dem ) on getting his artlficull-!iweetener btll In wires out the window, and shoving the antenna base Into the
fled the U S ConstitutiOn
outrageous carbonating m their little pink
passed and he told us, "Don't than~ me, thank mud outstde It stayed there for months, bringing tn WSAz-'IV as and laleofllght fare that wasn't old movies (although they were
In 1943, Gen Dwtght minds
Gloria Swanson" Saw "How Green Was My clear as a beD )
plentiful, even then), and Sunday afternoons devoted to what•was
D Eisenhower was namLaurence Olivier's Cavettcast solo was a
But soon, I watched the historic moment when Channel 8 called the "cultural ghetto" (Pete Rozelle hadn't been Invented
Valley" on 'IV for the umpteenth time and was
ed commander of Alhed grand vistt with the finest actor m the world,
then).
~
,.
struck agam by the attractive warmth and signed on the atr, and soon tt was followed by Chamell3
Expeditionary Forces m.North gentlemanly all the way, literate, mtellectual,
Like everyone else at the time, we '\fOre absolutely fanatic
depth of Walter Pidgeon And the beauty of
I never spent a happier two latndred dollars In my life and
Africa He subsequently articulate, artistic and withal, sl)y, hiS Mtlton
about 'IV at ftrst, watching shipped-in shows about Christmas the old set lasted for about six years -not bad, for the
Maureen O'Hara
'
became supreme Alhed quotation moved his audience - and plainly,
well up mto March, and even putting up wtth game shows, thenNo one can begrudge NeU Simon the forlune
Last weekend, the little house burned down, according to a
commander in Europe
himself In this era of anti-heroes, a good
as now- a bane of the viewer ,In my opinion
he makes from his endless Bdwy comedy hits
brief report tn the Charleston press. I hope IICRJlt!one rebuilds on
In 1867, Muhammad All young actor, Rtchard Benjamm, seems to be thE
But there was some great stuff In thelltUe old Emerson back the nice little sloping lot U they do, they'll get great TV there _
be backs them now entirely wtth his own money ,
defeated Ernie Terrell to keep screen's Ultunate Creep
After all her
then "The U S steel Hour," "Robert Montgomery Presenlll," bUt somehow, !don't thinklt'llmatchthestuffillaw
.. His "Sunshine Boys" pays him $8,000 a week
,
the heavyweighl boxing crown H'woad.Bdwy years as a true theatrical
"Kraft 'IV Theatre," Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca, Your Hit
In royalties alone, when tis cost is paid ••ff In the
+++
'
In 1m, Apollo 14 began its mavertck, Katharine Hepburn's new • m1
Parade, and -not long afterwards -NBC's lmovation ol' a
near future, his payoff wtll be just about a
ON
THE
'IV
DIAL
"A
Look
at
Uncoln"
ila
BpeClal
worth
a
trip home after a moon dependent" act IS postponed eihlbltionlsm she
mornmg news-talk show, with Steve Allen
mlWon a year to the lad who once was Sid
look, maybe,;at 9 on WOUB-'IV . ''Peanuta" melllr Cilarlee
eschewed m her Tracy days , Sinatra's
mllllun
This, friends, was pioneering sluff live dramas, early-day Schilz meets Johnny Canon at 11:3JJ, WSAZ-'IV
Ceasar's sense of 'IV hwnor
•
r
.AQJ62
¥QJ
• 76

3-TbentUySentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O ,Feb 1,19'/i

mdustry and to act as a general spur to Amencan
busmess actlvtty
Results of the New Ntxonomtcs have been
mtxcd fhe consensus of fiscal and polmcal expertS
seems to be that long-range results wtll prove benefiCial to the Umted States True, the admtsston of
msolvency was damagmg to the Amencan tmage
of superabundance and ommpotence at home and
abroad Granted, too, that ther~ was tmmedtate copsternatton m many of the world's financtal centers
and that the 111ternattonal monetary system, desptte
revrsed exchange rates, remams senously shaken a
year and a half later
Granted all thts and more, Rtchard N1xon\
reahstlc acceptance of the nation's actual fiscal condttton-begmmng wtth a $450 btlhon natiOnal debt •
that makes the U S gmernment a national as well ~
as an mternattonal bankrupt-and hts drasttc acttons 1
to correct tt may succeed ·m forc111g luxury-sated '
Amcncans and the rectptents of Amencan largesse '
to revtse their "easy-nder" concept of the U S
Treasury as the ever-flower111g money tree for all
humankmd
Whtle there ts constderable and JUStifiable doubt
regard111g the final outcome of t hese Ntxoman fiscal '
maneuvers, there can be httle reasonable doubt that
Rtchard N txon has metamorphosed 111to one of the
most dar111g and mnovattve Chtcf Executt\ es m the ,
htstory of the Premlency
Extend111g hts newly revealed 1mag111atl\ eness
and boldness to dtplomattc affatrs durmg the last
year of hts '\dmmtstratton, Prestdent N txon made
unprecedented VIStts to Russta and Red Chma,
negot1at111g a nuclear arms hmttauon pact~ tth Russta and gett111g tmportant trade and dtplomauc agreements wtth both of the Astattc gtants
It rs generally agreed, though offietally softpedaled for dtplomattc reasons, that a maJOr atm
of the Prcstdent's vtstts to the Commum't capttals
\\as to brmg the Vtctnamese war to a satiSfactory
end The practtce of thts penlous summttry,
together wtth hts steady Withdrawal of Amertcan
combat troops from \ tetnam, suggests that Rtchard
Mtlhous Ntxon, Quaker-born and Quaker-bred,
fancted htmself 111 the role of The Peacemaker,"
a role that m1ght help to restore the \mencan
spmt"-thefroblem he had called "the most omportant th111g o all '

Good luck')- SUE

Rap
Bemg on a diet ts bad enough, but when the parents of your
fnends get shook if you don't eat anything they ,erve, what do
you do' If I say 'your food's too fattenmg," they're all hurt
hecausetheythink ldon'tlike thetr cookmg, or I'm too ftntcky or
something
How could I make tl easter for myself, and also for them' HUNGRY BUT DETERMINED

I

•

•

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb 6, 19'13

1 45 Roste Patement got his
second goal at 6 30 and Dan
Lodboa beat goalie Bob Wludden at 8 15
Jarrett's 28th goal of the
season at 10 43 of the final
pertod put Cleveland ahead, 1).
4, and his 29th goal h1t the open
net wtth 13 seconds showmg on
the clock
In the only other WHA game
Monday night, Frank Sanders,
George Morrtson and Len
Ulyholm scored three goals to
lead the Minnesota Fighting
Samts to a lh'l wm over the
Houston Aeros
Mmnesota's vtctory moved 11
mto thtrd place ahead of Los
Angeles m the World Hockey
League Assoctation West Dtviston Houston remamed m
second place behind Wmmpeg
Sanders opened the scoring
at 0 24 wtth Morrison followmg
on a power play at 3 27
Lilyhoim closed the pertod wtth
a pomt at 17 21

STUDENTS ROBBED
KENT, Ohto (UP!) - Two
Kent State Umvers1ty students
were robbed Monday tn a 1101verslty dormitory room by a
patr of armed bandits
Jolm Ramsey, Canton, satd
the gunmen bound and gagged
him and Kenneth Cooper, also
of Canton Cooper lives In the
room next to Ramsey and saw
the men enter Ramsey's room
and went to mvesttgate
Both victims' wallets and
valuables were taken

I·

'69 MERCURY
MONTEGO
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You'll Like Our QualitY.
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992 5342
Pome~oy
Open Evenings 'TtiB 00
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PHONE 992 2342

MIDDLEPORT,O

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

BELTED
tires at Mryday low•••

DR. J IS TOPS
NEW YORK (UP!) .- Julius
Ervmg of the Virginia Squtres
continueS to dommate Amencan Basketball Associatton
scormg With a 30 72 average
Dr. J has netted 1,859 points m
54 games played through last
Sunday
Artis !iilmore of t~ Kentucky Colonels IS the ABA's top
rebounder with 1,093 caroms In
58 games for an 18 84 average

fir II

lawn

The Daly Sentinel
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I

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\

�Roosevelt, had foundd the Amertcan welfare soctety although, hke Jobnson, Roosevelt became so
preoccuptfll Wtth war that he had httle ttme for
anyone's welfare
In any case, under the expert mampulanon of
the former Senate mmonty and maJonty leader,
the 88th Congress responded to the Prestdent's
appeal by wmmg mto the books of law a spate
of ctvtl nghts measures remtmscent, m number, to
Franklm Roosevelt's Ftrst Hundred Days thtrty
years before
Ftrst, there was an $11 5-btllton oncome-tax
reducnon btll that would shortly send the national
economy soarmg to new records Then, m raptd-fire
order, came the Ctvtl Rrghts Act, the Economtc
Opportumty Act, the Mass Transit Act, the Water
Research Act and the W1lderness Act
PrestdcntJohnson had told Congress on that fifth
dark day that "No memonal oratton or eulogy could
more eloquently honor Prestdent Kennedy's memory than the earhest poss1ble passage of the ctvtl
nghts btll for whtch he fought " 1\nd the record
shows clearly that Lyndon Johnson fought, and
fought ~ell, to carry out the deadlocked pohctes
of hts unfortunate predecessor
But Johnson was no exception to the Btbhcal
adage that' allts vamty and vexation of spmt,'' and
so tt came to pass that, under prestdenrtal proddmg,
a gtfted speechwrtter named Rtchard Good"'m
rechnstened the New Frontier the Great Soc1ety
Thus dtd Lyndon Johnson s Great Soctety wnte
mto the books of law the sometimes nebulous, often
thwarted asptrattons of Frankl111 Roosevelt's New
Deal, Harry fruman's Fatr Deal and John Kennedy's New Frontier Conceptually, there ts even
a tlc-m wtth the first Roosevelt's Square Deal,
although an a!tempt to make a practtcal connection
qmckly dwmdles to the \ amsh111g pmnt
But wntmg an mscnptlon m the books of law
ts not the same as msulhng tt m the mmds of men,
a paradox that has baffled lawgtvers from Solon to
Sen J W Fulbnght In Prestdent Johnson's case,
the absurd tty mamfested as an outbreak of nots by
black mthtants that set off a cham reaction of mass
destructton-lootmg, burmng, bloodshed-from
the Deep Soutft to the Far West, from '\labama
to Cahforma, by way of Montgomery, Harlem,
Chtcago, Phtladclphta, San Franctsco and Los
Angeles
The agttatlon for Negro equahty had begun durong the Kennedy Admmtstranon, whtch had done
httle more than make promtses, and tt ts tromcal
that the movement gathered headway durmg the
Johnson Admmtstratwn, whtch had enacted the

Thirty 11xth Pres1dent Lyndon B Johnson

(First Adm1"1Sirot1on November 22 1963.Jonuory 20 1964)

Great Somty Wms Lm1dsltde Vote
'All I ha•e I would have g11 en gl.~&lt;lly not to
be standmg here today,' Prestdent Lyndon Johnson
told a JOint sesston of Congress fi•e days after the
assass111at1on of Prcmlent John F Kennedy
These melodramatic and unbchcvablc ••ords set
the mood for a Prestdcncy so 111crcasmgly 111credtble
that PrestdentJohnson would be compelled to fm ego
a second term 111 hts own nght- aftcr w111n111g hts
first one b} the largest plurality m prcstdennal annals-because' There ts dtvlston 111 the 1\rncncan house
now," a dtvtston he htmself had wrought but could
not reconcile
But first there was umty 'We have talked long
enough tn thts country about equal nghts," the tall,
Texas-bred Prestdent satd "We have talked for 100
years or more It ts ttme now to wnte the next
chapter-and wrtte tt m the books of law"
Here Johnson was on more crcdtblc ground, for
hts first pohttcal mentor and long tunc tdol, Frankhn

~·

WIN AT BRIDGE

Omits Safety Play,DownOne I
NORm

6

doubleton or tnpleton ]ack
but would insure hts contract
once East followed to the
ftrst dtamond
Thts sort of msuranc• ts
mtghty cheap Game and
rubber as agamst a posstble
20 pomts Posstble because tf
East started wtth the ]ack
and JU1t 1 ~J\e ,or, two extra
dtamond"' , the pray ,would
make no dtfference at all
The contract would make on
any line of play

,:

mm~::c:..,.::::::::::::::::».:.-w..::t8l·:8l??8l:83:llm1111811m~~~~~'B

Generation Rap

~

By Helen and Sue Hottel

Another Modern Switch
Dear Helen and Sue
When I ftrst met Dave I really went bananas over him That
was when I was 18 and he 20 We've been together three years,
and constder ourselves mamed
All the times haven't been perfect, but we were m our own
world and understood each other
Now Dave has changed He won't get stoned anymore and
doesn't brmg his friends around to rap In fact, ou' old frtends
aren't welcome now
You see,! got pregnant last year, and Dave satd 'no abortion "It was my fault -1 was strung out After the boy was born,
Dave JUSt took to hun, and now all he can think of is us really
married, buying a house, him working steady and bemg a family

first maJor btll from the White House suggested
htstonc changes m that troubled and mudd ted area
The mato fefltures of the ommbus btll were a
guaranteed mcome (Famtly Assrstance Plan),
revenue-sharmg wtth the states and health 111surance
fnr the poor Go111g 111to the summer of 1972, after
three years of wranghng by the 91st and 92nd Congresses, no final actton had been taken on the proposals
It was apparently dtfficult for the htghest patd
Chtef Executive m the natwn's btstory ($200,000
per year) to become senously dtsturbed by an unem
ployment rate that hovered perststendy around 6
%when both the GNP--now edgmg past $100 btllton yearly-and the number of employed persons
are nsmg In any case, the Ntxon Admtmstratlon
dtd ltttle about unemployment and that httle dtd
ltttle good
In support of the' New Ntxonomtcs," the Prestdem reversed hts long-held convtcttons by ordermg
wage and pncc controls 111 August, 1971 A year
later the annua l rate of mtlatlon had dropped from
4% to 3%, but 11 ts a moot pomt among fiscal expertS
whether thts change was brought about by Admtmstratton pohctes or was snnply the result of normal
economtc tluctuattons
When tt appeared that tmports would exceed
exports 111 1971 for the first ttme smce 1893, Ntxon
took sttll another dar111g gamble by devalu111g the
dollar on the mternattonal exchange by an aggregate
of about II %, b} severmg the dollar from tts foretgn
moor111g to gold and by suspendmg the U S govern
ment s promtse to redeem 111 gold at $35 and ounce
some $50 btllton m foretgn hands
In effect he declared that gold had no monetary
value "hatevcr as mternatmnal currency so far .ts
the U S rreasury was concerned
By concedmg that the Umted States could not
meet tts fiscal obhgattons-111 effect, was bankrupt-:--ltxon s mam obJeCttves m floatmg and
dcvalumg the dollar \\ere to achteve rough eqmhb
r1um m the balance of payments between the Umted
States and tts maJor trachng partners and to restore
worldwtde confidence m the dollar as a stable fiscal
un11 by agreed upon revaluatwns of other maJor
currenctes These, m turn, were expected to stem
the outllo" of speculative Amencan dollars, to
mcrease foretgn mvestments m Amencan stocks and

H But D
How about honesty' Tell 'em you're "dymg to try tt but
trymg to diet" - and most parents will understand - HELEN

3.

s•

By Gary Kale
UPtSpot18 Writer
Ohio Slate Coach Fred
Taylor,hospttallzedinJanuary
for fbest pains, made hiS first
bench appearance smce the
InCident and dtrecled the
Budts to a 7().69 victory over
Indiana Monday night
'lhe outcome wasn't setUed
unlil the filtal five seconds
when Allan Hornyak hit on the
second ol' two foul shots. When
Hornyak mtssed the hrst
throw, with the score tied 68all,tt \OOk tl!e strong-hearted to
continue focusing on the basket
and watt the developments of
.the second toss
Hornyak, the Big Ten's
leadmg scorer, cool desptte the
errant first throw, netted the
nelt charity foul that pinned
lndtana with 1111 first conference loss in seven games It
also gave Hornyak 19 pomts for
the contest, tytng him for team
honors wtth Wardell Jackson

Sport Parade

ij

NEW YORK (UP!) - Armand "Bep" Gutdolin IS a man
completely without pretense
All his life, he has busted his back working and It shows
Not m his back, but In his face and m his outlook, which is far
more realistic than you'll find In most other people
Bep Gwdolin-nobody ever calls him Armand-lives pretty
much for hlJI work, which happens to be lee hockey He has been
In It practically all his life, and altllough he Is 47 now he was only
16 when he jomed the Boston Bruins In 1942 and became the
youngest player ever to perform In the NHL
Guldolln was pretty much of a naturat choice as coach when
the Boston Braves were formed last year as a farm club of the
Bruins In the AHL
Why not'
He had served as a scout and coach for a nwnber of years m the
Brums' orgamzatlon He was a good man, hard-workmg, con·
scientious Sure, why not'
So they made Guidolln the Braves' coach and In his first year
he steered them to the league's Eastern Division title
There Was a Pb111e Call
He was leading the Braves through a workout Monday, skating
on the ice with them, as usual, at Boston Gardens, when there
was a phone caD from Harry Slnden, the Bruins' managing
director, who has his office in the same building
"Come on up, I wama talk with you," said Slnden
"I'm In my sweat clothes," said Guldolin.
"That's all right," replied Slnden "Just pul on a pair of shoes
and come on over "
Gwdolin took off his skates and put on a pair of sneakers, then
walked the 100 yards or so to Sinden's office
"We just made a change," Sinden greeted him
Gwdolin didn't comprehend immediately
"What's happenmg'" he asked
"You're lbe new coach of the Bruins," said Sinden
Gwdolil)'s eyes narrowed In disbelief
"You're ldddmg," he satd

'Divorce his Divorce hers 3 4 15

"No, l'm not n
"Whadda I do now?"
"Whadda you mean whadda you do now' You go out and rurl
the practice It's your team "
"It's our team," Guldolin corrected Slnden.
"Yes, you're rlght,lt'sourteam,"said the Brums'boss
Thai's the Way ll Hlppeued
And thai was the way It happened That was the way Bep
Guldolin got to know be was going to coach an NHL team for the
ftrst time, and that was the way the Bruins told Tom Johnson, the
man who led them to the stanley Cup championship, he wasn't
their coach anymore
The Bruins are in third place now, and Guldolln Is aware lf he
doesn 'I gel them moving, the same thing that happened to Tom
Johnson will happen to him
"You're hired to be flfed," says Guidolin "I accept this life,
and I like it "
Aware of how Tom Johnson must have felt at having a team
laken away from him less than 12 months after having guided tt
to a title, Guitlolin made it his business to see him before he
acjually took over the Brums In practice
"It's notthe em of the world," he Satd to Jolmson "The same
thing could haPP,en to me "
What Bep Guithlin has to do now with the Bruins is wake them
up, shake them and motivate them The Boston players aren't
exacUy strang to him He had fellows like Bobby Orr, Wayne
Caslunan and ck Beverly when he was coaching the Oehawa,
Ont , "Genera "
"We have
talent," he says "We've got young kids and
we've gotta plajo 'em more Too many players are depending on
Bobby Orr aitdfPhll Esposito They have to learn how to depend
em one anolthtt."
"!liked th~= (VInce) Lombardi coached his teams," says
Guidolln "I
It's because I'm ltaHan I'd always cheer for
and Yogi Berra, too But I really admired Lornbig guys, B.foot-7, two-three hundred pounders,
guys had his respect and he loved 'em They
too That's what! want my players to do "

&amp; THINGS
.

i

~

rejects the Idea the Bruins are a "dirty" hockey
choir boys," he says with a straight face. "We
anybody I can't understand tt They call us a dirty
but after the game Is over everybody walks out of
the 'buil~g okay They go have a beer and a helluva time "
Gul1~0~ admits he's a bad loser
be sarcastic after a game, but give me a little time
"I
over," be told the Boston media Monday "Just bear
after
and don't catch me too quick I may say something
with
rough/but! dc•n't 1me1m what! say Later,l'll go have a beer with
you

In a lot of time on the Ice Monday He skated an
bintr/ltnd-11-hlltlf with the Boston Braves and theQ another hourand·~llll with the Boetoo Bruins,
of the hockey clubl he coached previOUily fired him, not
heq!UI8 be wu a bad coacb, but becaUI8 be wu a hungry one
waa always over money," he says
tunny thing happened to Bep Guldolln when he got the
·Bljalt•' job Monday.
never ewn ulled bow IIIIlCh.
',._ tlllD 1iloeln 't tnoir, bllt be certainly wlll10011 eno118b

I

Tournament drawmgs for 71
southeastern Ohto area h1gq
school basketball teams wtll be
held at mne dtfferent sties thts
Sunday
There will be 41 Class A
teams seekmg sectwnal
dtstrtct regional or state tttles
from southeastern Ohto The
area has 21 Class AA squads,
and mne Class AAA qwntets
Sectionals will be played at
Nelsonvtlle-York, Metgs,
Chtllicothe, Portsmouth, Hills·
boro for Class A participants
Class AA sectwnals wtll be
held at Valley, Federal·
Hocktng, Coal Grove and
Waverly
Rto Grande College wtll host
the Trtple A sectional
Drawmgs for the AAA event
at Rto wtll be held m Lyne
Center Room 204, begmmng at
2 p m on Sunday Tournament
manager IS Art Lanham
The drawmgs for the ftve

I

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporta Editor

TUESDAY FEB &amp; 1973
00 - News 3 4 8,10 13 IS I Dream Of Jeannie 13 Growing
H1m Up 33
7 00 - Whal s My L1ne 8 I ve Got A Secrel 15 TV Honor
SoCiely 15 Electric Co 20 Beat The Clock 4
7 30 - Th1s Is Your L1fe 3 Doctors on Call 4 To Tell The Truth
6 Price Is Righi 8 10, Beat The Clock tJ RFD 20 Great
Dec Is Ions 73 33
8 00- Maude 8 10 Ohio This Week 20 Movie Flrecreek 3 4
15 Temperatures RISing 6 13
8 30 - Hawaii Five 0 8 10 B1ll Moyers Journal 20 Movie

Flftieii

i

1r&lt;Klay's

6

to hit a field goal for Alabama
It was a tale of too much
Lamar at Beaumont, Tex The
player, Dwtght Lamar, beat
the school, Lamar Uruverstly,
wtth a 24-pomt second half that
boosted SW l.ows18na to a 17-1
season record and an 8-0 mark
m South!!'"d Conferen~ play
Lamar,now7-ll, recetveda 22point high from Danny Bromley
In other actton, Gary Novak
scored 23 points m leadt,ng
Notre Dame to an ~2 vtctory
over Butler, Nick Weatherspoon talhed 32 points m
Dlinois' 84-7'7 Big 10 wtn over
Northwestern, seven.foot Len

High school tourney
drawings set Sunday

... i!..,. , ....•-.•:;:::::;::-.?.._ )~~.§:~VoY.:O_W,~~::m"'.W~

I.2.

I Voice along Br'Way

Steve Downmg led the losmg half, was tied at 87-all on a
Hoosiers with 22 points
Moeller jwnper with 4 30 len,
The torrid riValry m North but managed to regain a brief
Carollila came to a head as advantage until Moeller's wtnsecond-ranked North Carolina liiDg basket Tommy Burleson,
State rupped No 6 North the Wolfpacks • 7-4 center,
Carolina, Jll-73, and a ragmg scored 22 points George Karl
battle In Mlsstssipt found Ole led the Tar Heels w1th 22
Mlas upending seventh-ranked
Coohdge Ball scored 26
Alabama, 6U2 Southwestern pomts and collected 14
Louisiana got by Lamar, 101- rebrounds In MississiPPI'S upset
94
of Alabama The Ttde outshot
Mark Moeller's 2t)..foot jump- Ole Miss, 62 per cent to 43 per
er put N C State In front, 74-73, cent from the field, but made
and Dave Thompson gave ttte fewer Ooor attempts Wendell
Wolfpack a cushion wtth a pair Hudson led Alabama with 24
ol' foul shots
points Charles Cleveland, who
North Carolina held the lead scored 24 against Mlsstssippt
for 13 minutes In the second State last weekend, was unable

a

Kosmalsld netted 20 points as
Tennessee beat VanderbUt, n.
62; Uoyd Batts' 25-loot basket
atthebuzzerpushedClnclnnali

team Class AA Coal Grove
Sectional wtll be held at I p m
Sunday at Coal Grove under
the dtrection of Paul Kegley,
tournament manager
Charles Chancey wtll serve
as manager of the etght team
Class A sectional at Metgs
Drawmgs for that sessiOn wtll
be held at the new Meigs school
at 2 pm on Sunday
Some changes are noted thiS
year Alexander has changed
from Class A to Class AA,
Federal-Hockmg, Chesapeake,
and Coal Grove dropped from
AA to A, and Metgs moved
from AA to AAA
Sectional lournaments wtll
be held between Feb Z4 and
March 3 Dislrtct play will be
held the followmg week wtth
Regtonal tournaments set for
March 1&amp;-17 The state tour- By United Press IDiernatlonal
Jun Wiste and Gary Jarrett
naments wtll be held at St
each
scored a patr of goals
John Arena m Columbus on
Monday night to spark the
March 22, 23 and 24
Cleveland Crusaders to a 7-li
World Hockey Assoctation vtctory over the Chtcago Cougars
It was the third straight
vtctory for the Eastern
DIVISIOn -leading Crusaders,
who now lead second-place
New England by five potnts.
The Qousadera, who spotted
the Cougars a 1.0 lead only 40
Point
seconds
after the opentng
Waverly Htgh School (5
loamsl - Clak Hill Wellslon faceoff, took a 3-1lead after the
Hillsboro Greenf•eld McClain ftrst 20 nunutes WtSte made tl
and Alexander
Four sectronal wrnners will 4-1 at 5 II of the second pertod
advance to Class AA dlstncl but the Cougars came back
tournament at Rio Grande With two QUICk goals Within
College
CLASS AAA SECTIONAL
Rto Grande College (9
r .4
teamsl - Alhens Chillicothe.

school cage tournaments

CLASS A SECTIONALS
Nelsonvtlle York Htgh
School (6 teams) - M1iler
Glousler. Starr Washington
Crooksville Eastern !Meigs)
and Federal Hocking
Mergs High Schoof (8 teams)
- Southern. North Gallla.
5&gt;lllhwestern, Kyger Creek.
Ironton 51 Joseph Symmes
Valley Hannan Trace and
Chesapeake
Chillicothe Htgh School (8
learns) - Bishop Flaget
Adena, Unloto. Paint Valley,
Zane

Trace,

Huntmgton

IRossl Ross Southeastern and
P1keton
Portsmouth Htgh School (9
teams) - South Webster
Bloom Portsmouth Clay
Portsmouth Notre Dame,
Portsmouth East, New Bosloo
Lucasville Valley Franklin
Furnace

Green

Eastern

(Pike) and Coal Grove
Hillsboro IB leamsl Lynchburg Clay, Fairfield
Leesburg, Whitely Whlfeoak,
Peebles North Adams Wesl
Union , Manchester and
Western (Pike)
Five secllonal winners w11i
advance to Class A Dlstrlcl
tournament at Chillicothe High
School
CLASS AA SECTIONALS
Valley Local High School (5
teams) - Waverly Northwest,
Portsmouth West, Minford and
Wheelersburg
Federal Hocking Htgh
School (&amp; learns) - Belpre
Warren Local, New Lex1ngton
Nelsonville York, VInton
County and Sheridan
Coal Grove Htgh School IS
teams) - Gallipolis, Ironton,
Rock Hill Fairland and Solllh

had a IJIUCh better mstde game
and we had fme balance "
Allan Hornyak scored the
last pomt of the game, a free
throw wtth five second~! to play
He truSSed the ftrsl of two
chartty shots but htt the second
and after a flurry of Indiana
ttmeouts teammate Dave
Merchant mtercepted a
Hoosier pass to end the
struggle
Hornyak collected 19 potnts,
along wtth Wardell Jackson
Witte fouled out wtth 3 37 left
Center Steve Downing finished wtth 22 pomts for Indiana,
now 14-3 for the season OSU IS
3-3 In the Btg Teri and 9-7
overaU
lndtana Coach Bobby
Knight, who once played under
Taylor at Ohio State, satd he
thought h1s Roosters were
"real sloppy tn the first
half But we had some opportunittes Bad passes cost us
"They played like I ftgured
they would," he added, "real

well"

Crusaders trip Cougars

Here's list of
toUJ;1ley squads
Here's how they stack up In
southern Oh lo this winter as
area teams prepare for lhe 1973
Class A. AA and AAA high

•

past Louisville, 81-79, Kenlucky downed Auburn, ~7.
behind Jlnuny Dan Conner's Tl
points, and Jacksonville
clilshed Creighton, 7~

Witte in
comeback
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Big
Luke Witte, Ohio State's sleepIng giant, woke up Monday
rught
The 7.foot semor center, wbo
had not started since Dec 29,
scored 18 points and pulled
down 16 rebounds as Ohto State
upset fourtiH'anked Indiana 7().
69 It was the Hoosiers' ftrst
loss In seven Big Ten games
"It's been a long time too
long," Witte sm1led afterwards
The win came on Coach Fred
Taylor's lirst coaching mght
back smce becoming ill several
weeks ago Assistant coach
Bob Burkholder had taken
Taylor's place m the three
prevtous games
Taylor satd he dectded to
start Wttte after watchmg him
prachce Sunday, when he "just
played up a storm "
"Because Luke became a
threat tonigllt, a lot of other
things happened," Taylor satd
"We had a lot more movement
out of our corner people, we

-

Jackson,

Lancaster

Logan,

Marietta, Meigs, Portsmoulh
and Miami 1race
Two co winners of sectional

will advance to Class AAA
district tournament at Ohio
University Convocal1on
Center

Nolan first Red
to sign contract
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Rtghthander Gary Nolan,
whose 750 won-lost percentage
was best m the National
League last season, Monday
he came the ftrst member of the
Clnctnnati Reds to stgn a 1973
contract
Nolan, 24, was liKi isst year
ThiS will be his sixth season
with CIIICinnati
Nolan was 13-2 at the all-atar
break wtth a 1 81 earned run
average, but a shoulder irritation blamed on an abscessed
tooth forced him to bow oul of
the All-Star game and be appeared In only SIX games the
rest of the regular season
Nolan finished the season
with a 1 99 ERA, second only to
the PhHadelphla Phillles' Steve
Carlton's 1 98

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P DP
Hannan Trace 1~ 2 111611 767
Symmes Valley 9 5 1056 942
Eastern
B 6 805 757
Southern
6 8 740 780
Kyger Creek
4 12 914 1162 ''SUPER SCOUT"
Southwestern 3 12 776 1018
PHILADELPWA (UP!)
North Gallla
3 13 855 100~ Jack McMahon, former coach
SVAC ONLY
Symmes Valley 9 1 803 60~ In both major pro basketball
Hannan Trace 9 2 720 541 leagues, was hired Monday as
Eastern
7 2 541 454
Southern
5 ,,.1 453 545 a "super scout" by the PhilNorlh Galli a
3 'U 625 705 delphia 78ers
Kyger Creek
J 8 617 810
McMahon will go talent
Scuthwostern 0 10 503 703
hunting to prepare the 76ers for
SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP the college draft The club has
Norfh Gallla
9 2 446 348
Symmes Valley 7 3 432 375 the worst record In the NBA
Southern
7 J 415 JIB and probably will have two of
Hannan Trace 5 6 401 421 the first three picks In the
Eastern
~ 5 393 327
Kyger Crook
4 7 443 504 draft
Southwestern 0 10 242 .S9
This week's schedule.
Tuos«Yy- Fairland at North
Gallla, Southwestern at
Hannan Trace, Southern at H Payne 92 McMurry 84
Eastern and Rock Hill aJ S F Aust1n 117 Trltn 51 79
Symmes Valley
La Tech 88 Ark St 78
Friday - North Gall Ia at • Ne La 95 Houston Bap 86
Kyger Creek, Hannan Trace at Cntnary 86 Tex Arl 67
Hannan. W Va ,1 Eastern at ~E La 89 Flornce St 75
Southwestern
1ulane 75 Samford 70
Saturday - Southern at LSU N 0 92 Ga St 8
Symmes Valley, Kyger Creek NW La 79 La Coli 60
at Union Furnace
Texas A&amp; I 86 Sui Ross 78

C
sv..ti. teams
resume play
Four Southern Valley
Athletic Conference teams are
m action th1s evenmg
In league games, Eastern
wtll host Metgs County rtVal
Southern whtle Southwestern
travels to Hannan Trace
Fairland ts at North Gallla and
Rock Htll moves mto Symmes
Valley m non-league affatrs
Both Hannan Trace and
Eastern wtU attempt to stay m
the Southern Valley Athletic
Conference race behmd
Symmes Valley
The Vtkings are 9-1, Hannan
Trace IS !1-Z and Eastern 1~ 1·2

College Basketball Resuln
By Untied Press tnlerna11onal
Easl
Temple 97 Drexel 63
WHA Sland1ngs
By Untted Press International Sthampln 78 NY Tech &amp;9
Morrsvl 57 Coblskll 56
East
w I .I pis gf ga Holstra 67 LIU 65
Cleve
33 19 2 68 195 ISO Newrk St 71 Monmth 64
New Eng 31 21 1 63 222 177 St Lwrnce 81 M1ddlbry 70
NY
2~291 51 222 225 Pttt 77 West Vtrg 101a 64
Quebec 23 2S 3 49 185 205 Wesl L1b 94 WVa Wslyn 76
Ph1la
22 29 0 44 185 220 W Va Sl 83 Davs&amp;Eikns 62
Ottawa 19 31 4 42 190 236 Bluelld 51 81 Concord 72
Fa1rmont 83 Wheeltng 65
West
wttptsgfga Gllysbg 85 Frnkln&amp;Mrshll 67
W1nlpg 30 22 3 63 201 172 Temple 97 Drexel63
Houston 27 21 4 58 204 180 Rutgers 80 Bucknell 69
Mm"
26 25 3 55 176 IBS Ednboro 78 Lck Hven 68
LosAng 25 24 4 54 186 181 Kutzlwn 93 Elzblhlwn 87
Alberta 24 25 2 50 175 176
S""lh
Ch1cago 19 33 1 39 169 203 Fia Tech 81 Augusta 77
B1scyne 85 Vldasta 51 73
Mond1y's Results
Kentucky 88 A-uburn 57
Cleveland 7 Ch1cago 5
Jcksnvl 78 Cre1ghtn 62
Mmnesota 6 Houston 3
Tenn 72 Vanderbilt 62
(Only games scheduled)
Va St 91 J C Sm1lh 88
Tuesday's Games
Soulh Fla 85 South Ala 64
Ph1iadelph•a at Ottawa
Gullfrd 82 Llvngstn 7~
New England al Alberta
E Car 82 St " Peler s 77
New York at M1nnesota
MISs 66 Alabama 62
I Only games scheduled I
Crsn Newmn 83 W Car 75
E Tenn Sl 105 ApplchnSt 87
Norflk St 94 Hmpln fnst 67
N C 51 76 No Car 73
,\GREE TO SELL
Modwesl
WORTHINGTON, Ohto Cho Corcle 82 Bndctne 62
(UP!) - Worthmgton ln- Oh1o St 70 Indiana 69
duslrtes, Inc , announced Notre Dame 89 Buller 62
lnd St 81 Wis Mil 63
Monday tt has reached Stubnvl75 Alliance 43
agreement to sell the East So Car 77 Toledo 74
81 Lou1svl 79
Chtcago, Ind , metal pro- Ctnc•
P•kevl77 Berea 61
cessmg facilities of tts wholly- Thos More 89 Centre 83
owned substdtary, Umted F1at Geotwn 78 Union Ky. 72
J Carr II 80 Crng1e Mlln 69
Rolled Products
Colo 67 Nebraska 59
Mtd.State Metals, Inc , of Ill 84 Northwestern 77
Oak Brook, Ill , will operate the Eau Claire 78 Stevens PI 7/r
Southwest
facthty through a wholly- North Tex 55 Wesl Tex 53
owned substdiary named Mid- Oklahoma 90 MISSOUri 77
Houston 79 E Tex 53
State Metal Processmg, Inc Sam
SW La 101 Lamar 94
John
H
McConnell, Praor1e Vw 93 Grmblng 78
preSident of Worthmgton In- Sthwstrn 89 E Tex Bap 74
dustnes, would not disclose
details of the sale, but added
ThiS Week's Spec1al
the transaction IS part of a plan
to phase Untted out of
processmg customer-owned
materials
Worthmgton's Frankhn
Park, Ill , plant will be expanded to accommodate
United's operatiOns

Pro Standings

OSU"_ tops Hoosier$10. to 69

Television Log

+++

9 00 - Behind the L1nes 20 33
9 30- Movies VISions ol Death 8 Bad Day at Black Rock
10 Black Journal 20, 33
10
OC - News 20 Biography 33 Forst Tuesday 3 4 15 Marcus
.QI098
Welby MD 6 13
WEST
EAST
11
00
- News3,4 8,10 13,15
Note From Sue
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 15 Jack Paar Tonlte 6 13 Movies
• 4
• K10985
Except "Super-mother" (do you know one') who figures
Jack of Diamonds' 8 Conspiracy of Hearts 10
¥AK8754
¥10632
tJ932
tB
you're conung down.wtth so!'lt~ll! fata!'~u don't&gt;~~~~~~~., - 1 00 - Your Heallh 4 f'lews 13
130 - News4
.62
.753
helpmgs of everything It's belt to avoid~ kitchen until you've
WEDNESDAY, FEB 7, 1973
SOUTH {0)
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
lost your quota, or she'D ''worry" you mto the next dress stze .73
6 IS - Farmtlme 10 English 3
SUE
¥9
6 20 - Farm Report 13
+++
tAKQIOH
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
.AKJ4
Dear
Rap
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8 Urban League
(NlWSPAPU ENTERPR IS E ASSN)
Presents 10 The Story 13
Both vulnerable
I believe tt was Sue who wrote, "the Germans belch to show
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
West North Eost South
apprectation of good," to the gtrl whose boyfrtend was a burper
man
6 55- Take Five for Llle 15
lt
7 00 - Today3 4 IS News6 8 10 Fllnlstones 13
I
nuss
the
old
times,
but
tt
would
tear
Dave
up
if
I
told
him
so
Wrong'
My
wife
and
I
are
German
IWe
are
brought
up
to
be
,.
,.
2¥
7 30- Romper Room 6 Sleepy Jelfers 8 Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
The h1ddmg has been
I can't cut thiS Establiahment stuff much longer, but I don't want poltte and do not belch m public You have the Germans and
13 Popeye 10
l'llss
4•
Pass 4¥
West
North
East
South to hurt him Do you have the answer' - PERPLEXED
Chmese nuxed up Even drinking beer, we do not perrrut our8 00- Capt Kangaroo 8 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Pass 4 •
Pass
Lassie 6
Pass Pass
Pass
selves thts lapse of manners Please wrtte a correction - H T
Pass
I NT
Pass
8
30
- Jack La La nne 13 Romper Room 8 New Zoo Revue 6
Openmg lead- ¥ K
Pass
2NT
Pass
Dear Perplexed
8
55
- Local News 13
'
You South hold
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Ph1l Donahue 15 AM 3 Concentration 6
OnlyYOUhave the answer Wtlltt be Dave and your baby m DearH
Capt Kangaroo 8 Friendly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13
By Oswald &amp; James Jacob) .AK54 ¥AQ63 t2 .KQI07 a life you could learn to like - if you loved them enough' Or will
(And all our German readers )
9 30 - ToTelltheTruth3 Jeopardy6 HazelS
Rubber b r 1d g e players What do you do now'
tt be driftmg along m your no-tomorrow kmd of spaced-out
Excuse please' I goofed
9 55 - Chuck While Reports 10
don't waste much hme on
A-Bid three h~arts You want world'
Germans do NOT belch to show apprecration, but they surely 10 00 - Dinah Shore3, 15 Phil Donahue 4 Columbus Six Calling
6 Jokers Wild 8 10 Dick Van Dykel3
analysts They are too anxt to complete the picture of your
Once you've made your dectSton(I'm guessmg Dave wtll do WRITE to say a gtrlts wrong. Am I forgiven'- SUE
10 JO - Concenlrallon 3 15 Phil Donahue 4, Price Is Right 8 10
ous to get to the next hand
hand
wm I) the Drug Abuse Center m your town wtll help you see tt's
Split Second 13
South ruffed the second
TODAY S QUESTION
11 00 - Saleofthe Ce"lury 3 15 Love American Style 6 Gambit
the
rtght
one
HELEN
Your partner contmues to
heart played three rounds of
B 10 Password 13 Etec Co 20
+++
trumps and hts top dta three no-trump What do you
11
JO
- HoltywoodSquares3 4 15, Bewllched6 13 Love of Life
•
do now?
monds
B, 10 Sesame St 20
Dear Perplexed
12 DO - Jeopardy 3,15 l!ob Braun s.SO.lO Club 4 Local News 10
Smce East had shown out
You're not 18 any longer, and tt 's time you learned about
13 Contact 8 Password 6
Send
$1
lor
JACOBY
MOOERN
book
on the second lead South was
direction,
comrrutment,
responstbthty
growmg
up'
Also,
about
12
J0
- 3 W's Gamel, 15 Spill Second6, Search for Tomorrow 8
able to dtscard JU St one of to Wm at Bndge (c/o t~u ntWJ· Dave's kind of love If you can't- if the slratght life turns you off
10
dummy's spades Then he at paper), P0 Box 489, Rad10 C1fy
BY PAUL CRABTREE
12 55 - NBC News 3 15
completely- get the hurt over fast and let hun and the baby go
tacked that swt and th e bad Srol(on, Now York NY 10019
1 00 - News Weather Sports 3 All My Children 6 13 Green
(and If THAT advtce makes you mad, you're ready to chauge
It was reaDy a very modest little house, but even so ,II was as
Acres 10 Fre"ch Chef 33, Secret Storm 8 Not For Women
break m spades left htm
Only 15
down one
much as we could afford Rookte newspapermen just don •t make
1 20 - Fashions In Sewing 3
~~~ v .:-.-. .. ;..o.,:., .,.. x « ~ . . . -.:«if!.';~ -.vw.x~ w_....::::::::,-.
.:-:- :x
.--:;. .. ~"ii"»X'. ;:-,. .,V.;o'{(o .;.....
very much money
'Too bad I dtdn't !)lay dta
1 JO- 3 On A Match 3 4 15 As the World Turns B 10 Let's
monds, ' said Sou~h
ru
Make a Deal 6 13
It stood nght on lop of a hiD tn Charleston, and had been built
have scored my hundred
2
00
- Days of Our Lives 3, 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 Mike
about 1938, as nearly as we could determine It had two
Douglass 6 Guiding Light 8, 10
honors
moderately-6lllall bedrooms, a bath (that kept actmg up ), a
2 30 - DatlngGale13, EdgeofNightB 10, Doctors3 4 IS
It was too bad that South
3
00- Another World 3 4, 15 General Hospital tr, 13 Love
livmg
room,
kitchen,
and
a
dinmg
room
whtch
I
enlarged
Into
the
dtdn t take advantage of a
BY JACK O'BRIAN
Splendored Thing B 10 RFD 20
hvmg
area
There
was
a
little
utlllty
room
out
behind
the
kitchen
headlined
Ma
manners
recently
IS
hiS
ftrsl
bad
simple safety play m dta
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4 15 One Life to Live 6, 13
FARCE IS ENGUSH
publicity msome tune, usually IS followed by an wtth a hot-water heater (that kept acting up), and water ptpes
monds He should wm the
Ohio ThlsWeek20 MervGrlfflnB Secret Storm 10
AND ON mE BAlL
4 00 - Mister Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Fllntstones 6 Love
thtrd trump m dummy lead
announcement that he's getting Involved 'in that seemed to freeze at 31 degrees or below
NEW YORK (KFS) -lt'sa pleasure to note some marvelous humamtartan project
American Style 13 Merv Griffin 4 Sesame St 33 Movie
a dtamond and sttck m ius
Many faults, mcluding a long, treacherous climb up the hill
Charley's Aunt 0 10
,
10 spot Thts play would cost 'The Jockey Club stakes," which opened last
from
the
bus
stop
(rookie
newsmen
didn't
own
cars
m
those
days
Lyricist
Sanuny
Cahn's
party-parodies
4
30Andy
Griffith
15,
Petticoat
Junction
3
ABC
Aflerschool
htm a trtck tf West had week on Bdwy , IS a fine fat hit
The
Theatre 6, 13 Gilligan's Island 8
'
started wtth the smgleton management was afratd to br~ this delightful unpudently hononng everyone from Sptro either), and few vtStble virtues.
5 00 - Mister Rogers 20, 33 Bonanza 3 4 Hazel 8 Dick Van
I satd "vtstble" virtues for a reason, because rt had one mAgnew to anybody m showbiz should be
Dyke IS
drollery mto town, feelmg It was "too Engliah," published, recorded and kept, they're always tanglble that made It highly destrable back In those dimly5 30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Marshall Oilton 15
and 11 ts marvelously exaggerated Brttlsh farce
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 I Love Lucy 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8
cheerfully unpertlnent, never msolent
We remembered Flfdes
The Almanac
6 00-News Weather Sports3 4,8 10 15 TrulhorConseq 6
mdeed The more we encounter Peter Fonda
That little house was m one of the best televtston reception
Sesame St 20 Around the Bend 33
By United Press International m performance and news headlines, the more often couldn 'I ftgUre which of two marvelous old
areas
tn
the
Ctty
of
Charleston
6 30 - NBC News 3, 4 News 8 10 Sesame St 20, Around the
stage-film
actresses
was
whtch
Ca.thleen
Today Is Tuesday, Feb 6 the he strikes us as adolescently posey, pretentious
Bend 33 I Dream of Jeannie 13
We moved there In the fall of 1952, and after taking one look
Nesbttt and the late Gladys Cooper, probably
37th day of 1973 wtth 328 to and shallQw
7
00Truth or Conseq 3, Beat the Clock 4 News6, 10 Whars
Elhott Gould seems terrtbly
at
the
ptctures
my
netghbors
were
getting
on
'IV,
my
wife
and
because
both
were
beautiful,
talented,
charMy
LineS
Anything You Can Do 13, Elec Co 201 Know Your
follow
proud of some permanent histrionic peak we've mmg and enchantingly well spoken , And they decided we had to have one of those marvelous magic boxes
Schools 33 Saint 15
The moon Is between tts new never noticed Vanessa Redgrave remams
7 30- Episode Actio" 33 To Tell The Truth 6 the Judge 10
couldn't be descrtbed as "once very beautlful", Since we had decrded (at least, I think we decided) that we
Lassie 15 Beat the Clock 13 Pollee Surgeon 3, Hodgepodge
phase and first quarter
durably a pam in the public eye but she's a they retamed thetr beauty mto thetr 70s
needed
a
baby
daughter
several
months
previously,
we
had
to
Lodge 20 Half the George Kirby Comedy Hour B
The morning stars are marvelous actress
B 00 - Paul Lynde 6, 13 Adam 12 3 4 15 Paul Lynde 6 13
Mtckey
Rooney's
career
seems
unable
to
wait
until
she
was
safely
arrived
in
the
world
before
we
got
that
Venus, Mars and Juptter
Sonny&amp; Cher8 10, America 7320,33
Sen llairy Goldwater and hiS host, Dtck
8 JD-Banacek3,4.15 Movle"Divorcehls Divorce hers"
The evening stars are Mer- Cavett, should •ve had some rejomder to another regam its old potency, but he continues to box - a brg, ugly Emerson with a 17" screen and a masonite
Y 00 - Medical Center 8 10
surface occasionally wtth flashes of brilliance cabinet WISely designed not to show the scratches, rucks, and
cury and Saturn
performing misfit's disgraceful statement 9
30 - A Look At Lincoln 20 33
Those born on this date are Germaine Greer, who said lf she'd been In the The new Michael Caine ftim, "Pulp," is a peanut butter the children would so generously bestow on tt
10 00- Search 3, 4, 15, Cannon 8, 10, Soul33, Owen Ma,.hall6
There was absolutely no worry about choice ol' channels dreadful cellulotd, but spins a pmwheel of nifty
13, News 20
under the sign of Aquartus
Vtetnam war, she'd've been ruling around on a
you
watched Channel3 from Huntington, because It W&amp;$ the only 11 00 - News 3 4. 6 8, 10, 13, IS
lunacy
up
to
the
moment
the
ex-gangster
The
Britl.sh actor Str Henry Ir- motorcycle shooting Amertcan soldiers In the
11 3~- Johnny Cars~" 3, 4, 15 Jack Paar Tonlte 6, 13 Movl..
M1ck plays gets killed Glorta Swanson is a station on the atr m those years.
The Desperados 8 'Requiem for a Secret Agent"IO
ving was born Feb 6, 1638
back Too often Cavett takes aggreSSive ex(One nerghbor, toting borne a new 'IV to surprise his family
I 00 - News 4 13
food.fanatic and tt's fanatics who get things
On thiS day in history
ceptions to conservattve or mlddleroaders but
done we congratulated Cong Delaney (Queens for Christmas, solved the antenna problem by jamnung the leadIn 1778, Massachusetts rail- lets such militant bubbleheads say anything
Dem ) on getting his artlficull-!iweetener btll In wires out the window, and shoving the antenna base Into the
fled the U S ConstitutiOn
outrageous carbonating m their little pink
passed and he told us, "Don't than~ me, thank mud outstde It stayed there for months, bringing tn WSAz-'IV as and laleofllght fare that wasn't old movies (although they were
In 1943, Gen Dwtght minds
Gloria Swanson" Saw "How Green Was My clear as a beD )
plentiful, even then), and Sunday afternoons devoted to what•was
D Eisenhower was namLaurence Olivier's Cavettcast solo was a
But soon, I watched the historic moment when Channel 8 called the "cultural ghetto" (Pete Rozelle hadn't been Invented
Valley" on 'IV for the umpteenth time and was
ed commander of Alhed grand vistt with the finest actor m the world,
then).
~
,.
struck agam by the attractive warmth and signed on the atr, and soon tt was followed by Chamell3
Expeditionary Forces m.North gentlemanly all the way, literate, mtellectual,
Like everyone else at the time, we '\fOre absolutely fanatic
depth of Walter Pidgeon And the beauty of
I never spent a happier two latndred dollars In my life and
Africa He subsequently articulate, artistic and withal, sl)y, hiS Mtlton
about 'IV at ftrst, watching shipped-in shows about Christmas the old set lasted for about six years -not bad, for the
Maureen O'Hara
'
became supreme Alhed quotation moved his audience - and plainly,
well up mto March, and even putting up wtth game shows, thenNo one can begrudge NeU Simon the forlune
Last weekend, the little house burned down, according to a
commander in Europe
himself In this era of anti-heroes, a good
as now- a bane of the viewer ,In my opinion
he makes from his endless Bdwy comedy hits
brief report tn the Charleston press. I hope IICRJlt!one rebuilds on
In 1867, Muhammad All young actor, Rtchard Benjamm, seems to be thE
But there was some great stuff In thelltUe old Emerson back the nice little sloping lot U they do, they'll get great TV there _
be backs them now entirely wtth his own money ,
defeated Ernie Terrell to keep screen's Ultunate Creep
After all her
then "The U S steel Hour," "Robert Montgomery Presenlll," bUt somehow, !don't thinklt'llmatchthestuffillaw
.. His "Sunshine Boys" pays him $8,000 a week
,
the heavyweighl boxing crown H'woad.Bdwy years as a true theatrical
"Kraft 'IV Theatre," Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca, Your Hit
In royalties alone, when tis cost is paid ••ff In the
+++
'
In 1m, Apollo 14 began its mavertck, Katharine Hepburn's new • m1
Parade, and -not long afterwards -NBC's lmovation ol' a
near future, his payoff wtll be just about a
ON
THE
'IV
DIAL
"A
Look
at
Uncoln"
ila
BpeClal
worth
a
trip home after a moon dependent" act IS postponed eihlbltionlsm she
mornmg news-talk show, with Steve Allen
mlWon a year to the lad who once was Sid
look, maybe,;at 9 on WOUB-'IV . ''Peanuta" melllr Cilarlee
eschewed m her Tracy days , Sinatra's
mllllun
This, friends, was pioneering sluff live dramas, early-day Schilz meets Johnny Canon at 11:3JJ, WSAZ-'IV
Ceasar's sense of 'IV hwnor
•
r
.AQJ62
¥QJ
• 76

3-TbentUySentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O ,Feb 1,19'/i

mdustry and to act as a general spur to Amencan
busmess actlvtty
Results of the New Ntxonomtcs have been
mtxcd fhe consensus of fiscal and polmcal expertS
seems to be that long-range results wtll prove benefiCial to the Umted States True, the admtsston of
msolvency was damagmg to the Amencan tmage
of superabundance and ommpotence at home and
abroad Granted, too, that ther~ was tmmedtate copsternatton m many of the world's financtal centers
and that the 111ternattonal monetary system, desptte
revrsed exchange rates, remams senously shaken a
year and a half later
Granted all thts and more, Rtchard N1xon\
reahstlc acceptance of the nation's actual fiscal condttton-begmmng wtth a $450 btlhon natiOnal debt •
that makes the U S gmernment a national as well ~
as an mternattonal bankrupt-and hts drasttc acttons 1
to correct tt may succeed ·m forc111g luxury-sated '
Amcncans and the rectptents of Amencan largesse '
to revtse their "easy-nder" concept of the U S
Treasury as the ever-flower111g money tree for all
humankmd
Whtle there ts constderable and JUStifiable doubt
regard111g the final outcome of t hese Ntxoman fiscal '
maneuvers, there can be httle reasonable doubt that
Rtchard N txon has metamorphosed 111to one of the
most dar111g and mnovattve Chtcf Executt\ es m the ,
htstory of the Premlency
Extend111g hts newly revealed 1mag111atl\ eness
and boldness to dtplomattc affatrs durmg the last
year of hts '\dmmtstratton, Prestdent N txon made
unprecedented VIStts to Russta and Red Chma,
negot1at111g a nuclear arms hmttauon pact~ tth Russta and gett111g tmportant trade and dtplomauc agreements wtth both of the Astattc gtants
It rs generally agreed, though offietally softpedaled for dtplomattc reasons, that a maJOr atm
of the Prcstdent's vtstts to the Commum't capttals
\\as to brmg the Vtctnamese war to a satiSfactory
end The practtce of thts penlous summttry,
together wtth hts steady Withdrawal of Amertcan
combat troops from \ tetnam, suggests that Rtchard
Mtlhous Ntxon, Quaker-born and Quaker-bred,
fancted htmself 111 the role of The Peacemaker,"
a role that m1ght help to restore the \mencan
spmt"-thefroblem he had called "the most omportant th111g o all '

Good luck')- SUE

Rap
Bemg on a diet ts bad enough, but when the parents of your
fnends get shook if you don't eat anything they ,erve, what do
you do' If I say 'your food's too fattenmg," they're all hurt
hecausetheythink ldon'tlike thetr cookmg, or I'm too ftntcky or
something
How could I make tl easter for myself, and also for them' HUNGRY BUT DETERMINED

I

•

•

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb 6, 19'13

1 45 Roste Patement got his
second goal at 6 30 and Dan
Lodboa beat goalie Bob Wludden at 8 15
Jarrett's 28th goal of the
season at 10 43 of the final
pertod put Cleveland ahead, 1).
4, and his 29th goal h1t the open
net wtth 13 seconds showmg on
the clock
In the only other WHA game
Monday night, Frank Sanders,
George Morrtson and Len
Ulyholm scored three goals to
lead the Minnesota Fighting
Samts to a lh'l wm over the
Houston Aeros
Mmnesota's vtctory moved 11
mto thtrd place ahead of Los
Angeles m the World Hockey
League Assoctation West Dtviston Houston remamed m
second place behind Wmmpeg
Sanders opened the scoring
at 0 24 wtth Morrison followmg
on a power play at 3 27
Lilyhoim closed the pertod wtth
a pomt at 17 21

STUDENTS ROBBED
KENT, Ohto (UP!) - Two
Kent State Umvers1ty students
were robbed Monday tn a 1101verslty dormitory room by a
patr of armed bandits
Jolm Ramsey, Canton, satd
the gunmen bound and gagged
him and Kenneth Cooper, also
of Canton Cooper lives In the
room next to Ramsey and saw
the men enter Ramsey's room
and went to mvesttgate
Both victims' wallets and
valuables were taken

I·

'69 MERCURY
MONTEGO
V 8 motor au to trans
P S w s w f1res rad10 one

owner

•1395

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You'll Like Our QualitY.
Way of Doong Business
GMAC FINANCING
992 5342
Pome~oy
Open Evenings 'TtiB 00
TIIS PM Sal

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHONE 992 2342

MIDDLEPORT,O

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

BELTED
tires at Mryday low•••

DR. J IS TOPS
NEW YORK (UP!) .- Julius
Ervmg of the Virginia Squtres
continueS to dommate Amencan Basketball Associatton
scormg With a 30 72 average
Dr. J has netted 1,859 points m
54 games played through last
Sunday
Artis !iilmore of t~ Kentucky Colonels IS the ABA's top
rebounder with 1,093 caroms In
58 games for an 18 84 average

fir II

lawn

The Daly Sentinel
DIVOTID TO THI
INTIRISTO'
MIIOS·MASON ARU
CHI STIR L TANNIHILL,
•••• ld
ROIIRT HOEFLICH
City ldllor
Published dlll'f except

Saturday by Tht Ohio Vallty
Publish ing Company 111
Court St. Pomeroy Ohio
•n" Buslnels Office Phone
992 2156 Editorial Phont 992

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Stcond cl111 po&amp;tage paid at
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.:..

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11111 Rrollooo C.C - chocllolnt~onllotloalordoto~nd tlmt "

BUY TODAYI Chargeltl

St Now York City New York

Subscription ratn
Dt
livered by carrltr whtrt
available 50 cents Ptr wtek
By Motor Routt whtrt carrltr
Strvlce not •~llllblt One

monlh Sl 75 By moll In Ohio
ond W Vo Ont v11r S14 00
She months S7 25
Thr11
months S• 50 Subierlptlon
pr•ct in&lt;::ludd Sunday Times
Stnt1ntl

\

•

I

I

\

�'

'\

'' .
f- The OaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 6, 1973

..

.Layette shower given
for Mrs. Herb Moore

J

'

'

'

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Effie Pyle, Fern Swank,
Vassell Diller, Waller Diller,
Vera Rush to Wanda Lewis,
Milton Miller, Naomi Miller,
Ease., Orange.
Philip D. Ohlinger, Carol A.
Ohlinger to Henry Doerfer, Jr.,
Patty Doerfer, Parcel,
Salisbury.
Harold Carnahan, Isabel
Carnahan to Marvin Hill, Jan
Hill, .65 Acre, Sutton.
Roy V. Howell, Jr., lola
Howell to Leading Creek
Conservancy Dist., Salisbury.
Leonard L. Lentz, Alice
Lentz to John C. Scragg and
Esther M. Scragg, 5 Acres,
Rutland.
Alhert Hill, Jr., Ora E. Hill to
Sam Lewis, Pt. Lot 37, Wolf's
Add., Racine.
Edison Hobstetter, Exec.,
Fred A. Shiflet, dec. to Jayman
Coal Co., 3 Acres, 3 Acres,
Olive.Qrange-Chester, Pomeroy.
Harry Osborn Sr., aka Wilma
Osborn aka Harry Osborne, .
Sr., Wilma Osborne to Harry
Osborn, Sr., Wilma Osborn,
Lot, Pomeroy.
Goldie Wyant to Dallas G.
DeBord, Janice M. DeBord,
Scipio .
18 Ease. Leading Creek
Conservancy, Pomeroy.
Fern Swank, Effie Pyle,
Vassel Diller, Walter Diller,
Vera Roush to Lewis F. White,
Josephine 0. White, 97 Acres,
Orange.

Lanier and the other by the
hooored guest, Jean Moore.
Mrs . Moore' then opened and
acknowtedg!!d the gifts. The
gift table was decorated with
an umbrJ!Ila and colored
sireamers and a floral
arrangement or a baby in a
cradle made by Eleanor White.
Class members attending ,
other than those mentioned
were Elsie McCoy, Sue Ragan, .
Doris Harder, Virginia Harder,
Kathryn Evans, Ernestine
Polsley, Phyllis Keys, Yvonne
Walters, Mary Lanier, Uncia
Warner, Laura Brown, Phyllll
Mulholand, Linda Harrington,
June Argabright, Mary Ann
Fitch and Deloris Coffee.
Guests were Hazel Isaacs,
Lena Lambert, Donnie Fitch,
Cindy and Vickie Coffee,
Krlstee Keys and Joyce
Saunders' .

By Ahna Marshall

'

BAND IN WAsHINGTON - Thla Is how th8 Wahama
While Falcon band looked to the official photographer .of the

Inaugural Parade in Washington, D. C. as It passed the
President's reviewing stand.
'

Unbeatable UCLA still tops

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges Feb. 2, 3, 4)
Donovan Thornton, Mrs .
Joseph Elias and ~on, Howard
Roush, Alva Speakman, Mary
Courter, Marie Osborne, Mrs.
Arthur Bell and son, Archei
Vincell, Tony Blanton, Marsha
Carter, Charles Dickens,
Shawn Lowry, Ermel Ward,
Monna Jean Taylor, Frances
Still, Nancy Lemley, Cecil
Lambert, Fred Kingery, Anna
Sue Grueser, Katherine Frost,
Marie Edwards, Karen Cox,
Marsha · Cox, Keith Carroll,
Mrs: Donald . Braithwaite and
son, William Baronick, James
Allbright, Emil J. Romans,
Francis Sommerv'ille , Paul
Montgomery, James Chandler,
Maddie ·Campbell, Larry
Gilland, Uris Hall, Wendy
Laudermilk,
Clarence
McKinnis, Mark Coy, William
Davis, Rossiter Williams,
Janet Johnson, Sandra Dove,
Virgil Good, Elizabeth Hill,
Mrs. William Youn~ and son,
Billy Lester, Frank Cyrus,
Forrest McNeal, Bessie Boyer,
Mary Withee, Jason Whobray,
Nellie .Watson, Dennie Tolley,
More than four-fifths of Jr., Sandra Slone, Dorothy'
the world's animals live in Sheets, Jeffrey 'Randolph,
the sea.

Southern Cal try a stall
Saturday night, and for a while
it worked. All-America center
Bill Walton did not score until
10:58 had elapsed in the first
half,.and the Trojans led, llh'l,
after 7:29. But Walton's first
points put UCLA out front, 1412, the Bruins pulled away to a
40-20 halftime lead, and were
never threatened again, winning, 79-56.
For their efforts UCLA, as
usual, picked up all 35 firstplace ballots and a perfect 350
points in the tenth week of
voting by the United Press
International Board of
Coaches.
North Carolina State, the
11
other" unbeaten major
college team at 1~, scored an
impressive 89-78 victory over
Maryland, but had a great deal
.
Lucille Rsmsay, Jesse Proffitt,
William Perry, Lemma Niday,
Anna Fast, Ruda Durst, Gay
Circle, Bertha Blankenship,
Mrs. Larry Barrick and son,
Joseph Adams, ·Brent Sheets,
Lewis Taylor, ·James Ball,
Diane Orender, Halene Oiler,
Laura Karasek , Evelyn
Dearing, Cathy Barnes, James
Gallagher, Cla ~ence Aldridge,
Mrs. Evan Clark and daughter,
Lawrence Camp, Gary Cox,
Leonard Myers, Herbert
Swain, Doris Reinhart, Charles
Litchfield, John Leadman,
Martin Flanders, Mrs. James
Elliott and daughter, Mrs.
Charles Colburn and daughter,
Cuba Carter, Mrs. Francis
Baker and daughter and Marie
•

The Rockets, led by Mike
There Were some hot times in Parker's 18 points, are now 11Toledo, Cincinnati and eo. 9.
Cincinnati guard Lloyd Batts
lumbus Monday night.
hit
a ·2$-lool jump shot at the
South Carolina Inched its
way lD a 77-74 wln over Toledo; buzzer to give the Bearcats
Cincinnati won an 81-79 cliff- their 12th win In 20 outings.
hanger over Louisville, and jesse Jemison led Cincinnati
Ohio State S\D'Prlsed Incllana Sl!oring with 19 points. Louisville Is 1~ .
~.
Kevin Joyce scored 22 points Ohio State captain Allan
for South Carolina as the Hornyak made a free. throw
Gamecocks picked up their with five second3 remaining lD
14th wln against five )osses. give the Buckeyes their upset
South Carolina reeled off six wln over the fourth=ranjted ·
straight pointa to take the lead Hoosiers. Indiana had gone
into the game unbeaten in the
for good at .66-62.

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

20 major college basketball
teams Wi th first place voles

and won-lost records as of

Saturday in pare n t he s e s:

ITenth Week)

Team

Points

1. UCLA 1351 111·01
350
2. N.C. St. 116·01
, 314
3. Long Beach St. 117·11
242
4. Ind iana (14·21
222
5. Minnesota (14·2)
127
6. North Carol ina 116·31
86
7. Alabama 114·21
·
79
8. Maryland (14·3) .
73
9. Missouri 115·21
72
10. Marquette 116·2)
64
11. Houston 115·21
52
12. Kansas St. 114-JI
48
13. St. John's·N.Y. 115·21 · 40
14. SW Louisiana 116·11
36
15. Providence (14-2)
23
16. Memphis St. 116·31
20
17. San Francisco 116·21
18
18. (tiel Ore. St . 112.5)
12
18. (fie) New Mex . (16·31
12
20. Brigham Young 115·41
10
Alexander.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - House
Democrats' needing 60 voles to
pass a Vietnam war bonus bill,
have postponed the vote unW
Wednesday
when
the
measure's chief sponsor, Rep.
Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New
BostOn, may be back in the
state capital to help whip up
support.
TAFT OFFERS BilL
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R-Ohio,
offered a bill in . the Senate
Monday which would allow
rallroaas to abandon unproductive lines after 90 days
ootice, unless the Depal'tlnent
of Transportation ruled the line
was necessary for defense of
the region or nation.

LA·Z-BOV

CHAI,Rs ·
Your

Headqua,rters
For

the
record,
decisioned
Pioneers
82-73.
Ohio
Dominican (3-3) and Cedarville (2-3), with no league tilts
last week, remained In third
and fourth , respectively .
Malone is 11-5.

50.0
50.0

market lind it most 1disconcerting. They see it as public
fear that Phase Ill will not
eliminate or slow down, and

SCORING LEADERS
Nome
FG FT TP . Avg.
Richardson IDOl •
107 71 285 23.7
Lambert IRGI
IU 69 417 21.9
Young IC) 136 68 340 18.9
Eck ICJ
121 71 327 18.2
Klein
104 22 230 17.7
Goines lUI t45 72 342 17.2
Jordan IMJ 148 33 329 16.5
Hodge IMJ 152 24 328 16.4
Aikman IUI 145 54 J.U 16.4
FIELD GOAL LEADERS
Name
FG-A Pet.
Vance IU)
4-4-73 .10.3
Aikman lUI
145·263 5.5.1
Rlch 'n 1001
107·196 54.6
Young IC J
Culp lUI
Watson (C)
Lambert IRGI
Kle in IMJ
Dledatls (ODI
Eck (C)

PHILADELPIDA (UP!) An attorney for two college
basketball players banned for
allegedly takfug excessive financialaidsayshe will seek to .
have tbe National €ollegiate
Athletic Association (NCAA)
held in contempt today.
The two New Mexico State
University (NMSU) players)
John Williamson, 20, New
Haven, Conn., and Roland
"Tree"
Grant
20
'
Philadelphia, were suspended'
in January for the alleged
infractions which occurred two

years ago.
Richard G. Phillips, the
Philadelphia lawyer who
represents several pro
athletes,. obtained an in'junctlon from Coiruilon Pleas
Court last Friday which ordered the NCAA to reinstate
the two.
But they have yet to suit up.
NMSU said it had suspended
the two and that Phillips' suit
was aimed at the NCAA.
Phillips said Monday the
NCAA originally ruled the two
ineligible and that now the

sixth annual ABi

r..4l

SALT LAKE CITY (UP!) American Basketball Association officials, who say their
elder National Basketball Association counterparts are
meeting merger plans with a
''resounding silence,'' have
announced a new proposal lD ·
be placed before Congress
Saturday.
ABA Commissioner Robei't
Carlson, here for the two-4ay
league meetinl!!l being held in
conjunction with !Dnight's ABA
All..Star game, said Sen. Birch
Bayh, D-Ind., will introduce
the measure before the Senate
later this week.
Carlson said the document,
drawn up by league officials
and approved by both leagues'
players associations, met with

cna~r

you've

always

Deale~

'MASON
FURNITURE

liermo n Grote
7)7.5592 . Mlson, W.Va.

NCAA .. is binding on all
members," Phillips said. "My
position Is and will be that New
Mexico State is and will be
bound by the injunction."
Phillips said Wlllismson and
Grant originally were suspended for the rest of their lives
from intercollegiate athletics.
He said an appeal reduced the
sentence to one semester.

"resounding silence from the
NBA owners.
"If all Interested groups
supported the bill," Carlson
said, ''we'd have the merger
overnight." He was speaking of
the ABA and NBA owners as
well as the two players groups.
Carlson opened a meeting of
the league's trustees Monday
afternoon during which he said
the latest merger bill was
discussed, as well as merchandising and the senior college
draft date set for April 10.
II was widely thought that
league expansion would be
discussed, but the commlasioner said the subject was not
Included on the two-day agenda.
He did say, however, an
•

o

announcement may come
today concerning the fulul'e of
the sagging Dallas franchise.
He said a group of New Jersey
buyers are looking at the club.
The sixth annual ABA AllStar game, scheduled for 10
p.m. (EST) will culmlnate the
two days of meellnga by the
trustees, team public relations
directors, the players association . and the ABA writers
group.
Carolina's Larry Brown will
be coaching the East All.stars
while Utah Stars Coach t.adeU
Andersen leada the West for hla
second stratebt year.

104·208

54·108
128·258

52.9
52.4
51.6
49.6

· REBOUNDINCnEADERS · ·' ,;,
Name
., G RB Avg.
Richardson IDOl 12 IPS 16.2
Hodge IM)
20 258 12.9
Young ICI
18 180 tO.O
Lambert IRGJ 19 176 9.3
Bollinger I RG I 19 159 8.4
Aikman IUI
21 168 8.0
Jordan IM)
20 155 7.8
Yuskewlch IDD) 20 151 7.6
Rou,.IRGI
19 139 7.3
FREE THROW LEADERS
Name
fT-A Pet.
Young IC)
68·76 89.5
. Watson ICI
22·26 84.6
Stoner 1001
21·25 84.0
Lambert ( RG)
61·91 75.8
Goines lUI
72-95 75.8
Barlram IRG I
44-58 75.8
Eck ICJ
71 ·95 74.7
Crawford lUI
31 ·42 73.8
Poling IRG)
11·24 70.8
Maurer IODJ
35·50 70.0
LAST WEEK'S RESULTS:
Urbana 82 Malone 73 ,
Cedarville 92 Wilberforce 84
Rio Grande 74 Berea (Ky.) 71
Rio Grande 97 Malone 12
Urbana 93 Wilberforce 79
Ohio Dominican over Walsh
lfortelt due to Ineligible
player)
Cedarville 92 Marion (ljld.) 65
Youngs . St. 61 Ohio Dominican
51
Georgetown (Ky .) 95 Rio
Grande 70
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE:
Walsh at Cedarville (Tul
Rio Grande at Ohio Dom. (WI
Urbana at Cedarville (W)
Malone at Tlflln (WI
Cedarville at Rio Grande lSI
Ohio Dom . at Maione IS)

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'

J
I
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(FEB~ 141

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v-...·i:andy,

!

ncNelties, cutout books of
Valentiles, paper napkins,

PLANTS

••

·.

David Packard said the Pentagon could save a billion dollars
by closing ,llnnecessary bases. ·
Last Novemher, the Pentagon
said it was preparing for a
round of base closings but none
was ever announced.
ftichardson said he understood the reason ·Laird did not
include any base closings in the
new budget was that no final
decision ·had been made on
which installations should go.

if he intended to close any
bases.
" I do, yes," Richardson
replied.
He said it was too early to
determine whether the closing
he endorses will be on the same
scale as the billion dollar
cutback mapped under Laird's
administration and then drop.
pe'ct'.
When he departed as deputy
secratary of defense last year,

Closings Under Review ·
"We will be reviewing this,"
he saitl ·:It has been understood that any decisions !hat
are to he m~de will be our
decisions."
The matter ·of military
retirement pay- is close to the
hearts of the nation's large
co mmunity of retired servicemen.

those retiring at comparable
rank now.
A $360 million recomputation
boost was included by Laird in
the 1974 budget.
Richardson said he intended
to took for items in that budget
"on which we could, In th.e give
--and-take of the budget
process on the Hill, give some
ground in order lD maintain ...
combat capability."
Askei:l if retired pay
recomputation , which
Congress has not supported
strongly, was one item he
might be willing to give up,
Richardson replied: "That's a
good eumple, yes."

·

They have fought hard for a
recomputation lD offset the
.effects of inflation and of
recent pay raises for those on
active duly, which have
created a gap between what
retirees of the past received
compared to larger checks of

A HUG.E ASSORTMENT
HAS ARRIVED!

progress and to come involves
4.7 million wor~ers covered by
major contracts, two million
more than last year, which \vas
a relatively peaceful year in
terms of strikes because of the
smoothing effect of wage and
price controls. There are indications this year won't be so
peaceful.
Labor Unrest Ahead?
Most contracts being hammered out involve tough,
militant unions In construction,
electrical manufacturing,
autos and farm equipment,
rubber, food and apparel.
Union officials also will be
under pressure to get bigger
settlements now that wage and
price controls have been eased.
Administration spokesmen
might point out that labor and
man9flement are expected
under Phase Ill to adhere to
the 5.5 per cent guideline laid
down In Phase II. They would
remind you that the administration has threatened to
take the "big slick out·of the
closet" if guidelines are
·violated.
But many are skeptical.

SMOCK
TOPS

~dley's Florist

l' .

---til

$ 94

·ORLON
SOCKS

PLASTIC
HANGERS

Solids, prints, checks, etc.
Choose from aver 200 in each
store.

Long
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or
Short
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BOYS

VINYL COATED

TEENS and WOMEN'S
FASHION FAVORITES

9 7~

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OF

12

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BOY CUT"
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Grade School

11

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Navy blue with contrasting red
cut now desired.

:IZES
TO

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Children

JUMBO PACKAGE
.OF40

stitching. Women's sites in the boy

Complete

Wit~

Envelopes!

Enough for their

$ 94

class. Valentine's
Day is February

14th. Get theirs at
Mart.

ONE FOR
TEACHER

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BIG SIZE 21x3~

77¢

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Guarantees to keep them

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Dark Walnut Finish Early American Style -

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APPLIANCE
DOLLY
Fits Under

$J47 :
·SET ·

2'1&gt; Ouar!- WHISTLI~G

2 sizes . .. One fils
petite-medium,
the ·other • medium-tall
gals.
Cinnamon,
Beige, Taupe.

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Real Feather 's

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TANGERINE
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BAKELITE
HANDLE

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A DISCOUNT.
Df.PART ME NT ·STOlt(

SHOP OUR.BUSY LITILE STORES
PT. PLEASANT - ASON • SILVER BR!DGE PlAZA

'

• :

~prices!

bargain away to relain .funds
for active forces.
Both positions are bound to
encounter stiff opposition from
different quarters.
Touchy CongreSimen
Closing military ·bases is one
way of reducing defense spending, but it is politically sensitive because no congressman
likes to see a base In bis' own
district shut down, putting
ronstituen\S out of .,..ork.
Richardson's position is
sharply different from one
described only a couple of days
previously by Laird's contrOIler,.Robert Moot. M,oot said he
expected base reductions but
oo closings in fiscal1974.
Reporters asked Richardson

ANOTHER DOG OBEDIENCE School will be held thla year
at Mason County Fairgrounds on Sunday, March 11, at 3:30p.m.
'lbeflrstseiiBion will be for the owner of the dog. At thla meeting,
the owner Is not to bring hla or her dog. The 12 week achooll,ng on
doll obediem:e
. and wllleoat·ttlland for Yf·lilenllier!l alid!eldera ·' currmayenet;infenlatal·oncc.elerate, the . They point to tlslng ·prices in
th ha w111 bess
sst
k ill 1a
ho
- 'food; fuel oil, plipei'; and some
e c rge
· Each se .on once a wee w st 110 ur ·
Inflation Stoppers
metals, lD mention a few areas
If lntereated, call 6'15-3710, Mason County Extension Office
Dr. Herbert Stein, chairman as evidence that inflation still
for an application. ,.
of the President's Council of is a threat.
Economic Advisers, stressed
The Big Four rubber compain New York on Jan. 29 that nles and the United Rubber
inflation must be contrOlled or Workers hammer out contracts
the counlry's strength will be in April. What's decided will
sapped. Stein told businessmen affect more than 70,0011 rubher
control of Inflation is necessary · workers and set wage patterns
this year to prevent an for another 30,0011 workers.
"t!Conomlc blowoff.!' In other "We'll all know more about
words, to keep It healthy.
where we're going after that
This year is an unusual one is settled," said one big
ecooomic year, in some re- Industrialist at a recent meespects unique. It's a year of ling.
danger, a year when delicately
tuned mechanisms could come
unglued because of the many
union contracts in negotla lion
now and in the months immediately ahead.
For the first lime ever, all
major trucking and railroad
contracts wJU expire at the
Mrs. Ora Higgins of Pt.
Slime time, June 30 and July 1,
respectively. U negotiations Pleasant was a Thutsday
develop into an adamant dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs.
strike, the counlry cOuld be Lloyd Wllliams."
paralyzed. You don't function
Mrs. Leota Dudding of Nitro
unless people and their goods is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Bill
and products can get to Williams .
market.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fry have
The bargaining both in returned from Naples, Florida
where they have been residing
and are now residing in Clifton.
He was recenUy discharged
from the Navy.
Mrs. Joo Posey of Clifton Is a
patient at Jackson General
Hospital. She reportedly was
hospitalized because of a
stroke.
HIS SECOND
looks happy wllh John Wayne
and wife Pilar at their Newport Beach, Calif., home . .
Byron VanMeter has been
Their children are Ethan, 10; Aissa, 16; Marissa, 6.
hospitalized at Charleston
Wayne'• got krandchlldren ·from his first family older
with
General
Hospital
than these . .
'
pneumonl~ .
He is now
recuperating at the home of his
daughter, Mrs. Adrian Mullins
TO DEPOSIT CHECK .
DOAK LOST 1
at Cabin Creek, W. Va.
DENVER (UP!) 1-Blll
DETI:tOIT (UP!) - DefenseMr. Curtis McDaniel, Jr. of
man Gary Doak will be lost to Daniels said he wlll deposit a
Jenkinstown, Pa. and Field
the qetroit Red Wings for two $5,0011checkwith theiNe\vYork
Advisor for Alco, visited his
to three weeks with a sprained Stale Athletic Comlnlsslon
parepts, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
Wednesday to open the official
left knee.
McDaniel, Sr., while on a
Thla will be Doak's second ·challenge for his fighter, Ron
business irip In the area.
ta:Jp to the sidelines. He mlased Lyle, agajnst heavyweight
Enroute from Mason he went to
13 games early In the season champion George Foreman.
Columbus where he visited his
with a fractured right leg.
two sisters, Mrs. James Loyd
· and Mrs . Stanley Saunders and
their families.
. Debra Irene Stewart of Rl. 3,
Pom~roy, ~nd Debbie Werry,
Mason, both received their
'
caps ai special ceremony held
Tulips
from 53.50
·on Sunday, January· 28, at
Hyacinths from 52.49
Washington County Vocational
from 57.50
Azaleas
Schoo) of Practical Nursing.
L IV ULLMANN , escares
lhe sun under a paraso In . Debra is the daughter of Mr.
Hollywood during filming
and Mrs. Kenneth Stewart, Rt.
of the musir'll version of · 3, Pomeroy, and Debbie is the
"Lost Horizon." With her
f . ~9 N. Second St,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Is daughter Linn. 6.
-~
Walter Werry, Mason.
~~:~~:$:~*::'.-;.~~~~.:o;,;;:'1818!111888~

BLOOMING

crepe paper,
See the smaller sizls of
Brach's BOxed Q1oc:oJates
and Olliir Candies at
r

.

News, Notes

-

.

Mason Area

CONTINUES· ALL THIS
-,. -

·dreamed of at our low
prices.
'

· Authorized

"An injunction against the

tt"lt S Ia ted , tonzg.ht

winter. been hard on your. outo?

Now you can buy that
comfortable
La·Z·Boy

school was "lrying to pass the
buck."

136·255
72·136
43· 80
174·337

f:~

.

new inflation

MtD.OHIO CONFERENCE
BASKETBALL STATISTiCS
Moe Overall
Team
WL WL
Rio Grande
0
10 9
Urbana
3 2 12 9
Ohio Dom.
3 3
6 14
Cedarville
2 3
9 9
0 5
8 12
Malone

Uni ted Press International top

BONUS VOTE SET BAct

Big Ten.
Hornyak and Wardell
Jackson each scored 19 points
as the Bucks evened their
conference record at 3-3. Indiana Is 6-1.
1
In other college basketball
games, Steubenville crushed
Alliance (Pa.) 7~3; John Carroll downed Carnegie-Mellon
(Pa.) 80-69, and Northern Dlinols beat Bowling Green 82-77.
Steubenville won its eighth In
a row in an easily fought contest. The Barons substituted
freely in the second half when
they led by more than 30 points
with 10 minutes left.
Larry Jackson scored 'll
points and Billy ·Harris added
38 for Northern llllnols, now 124. Bowling Green fell to 6-10.

Wedues~ay's Rio Grande
game with Ohio Dominican
will be played at the St.
Charles High Srhool gym on
East Broad and Nelson Rd.
in Columbus. Tbe JV tilt
starts at 5:45 and varsity
game at 8 p.m.

.

.

Investors fear

faces Malone in other Important MOC contests. In nonleague encounters this week,
Cedarville entertains Walsh
and Malone travels lD Tifitn.

Three Urbana players are
among the top five field goal
percentage leaders. The Blue
Knights' trio of Tony Vance,
Bill Aikman, and Ron Gulp are
first, second and fifth in that
department. Vance is hitting
on 60.3 per cent of his shols,
while teammate Aikman is
at 55.1 percent.
Steve Young and Rick
Watson, teammates at
Cedarville, ar011one-two in free
throw accuracy. Young's 89.5
percent 168 for 76) is lops,
while Watson is at 84.6 percent
(22 for 26) from the line.
In this week's Mid-Ohio
action, Rio has two crucial
conference games, one at Ohio
Dominican Wednesday and
Cedarville, at home Saturday.
Cedarville also meets Urbana and Ohio Dominican

~~~~K~~~~~he Contempt sought by lawyer

Birtbs
(Feb2-3-4)
Mrs. Donald Slone, son,
Crqwn City ; Mrs. Roger Fink,
son, New Haven ; Mrs . Larry
Kandel, daughter, Beaver ;
Mrs. Timothy Michael, son,
Pomeroy ; Mrs. Everette Coy,
daughter, Wellston and Mrs .
Floyd Peyton, · daughter,
Dexter.

Toledo beaten;
·UC trips Cards
By United Press Intemattooat

of trouble with Virginia before
squeaking out a ~9 decision.
The Wolfpack garnered all but
one of the second-place
oomlnations - Southwestern
Louisiana spoiled their bid on
one ballot- and 314 points.
Long Beach Staie, Indiana
and Minnesota each moved up
one spot, to the third through
fifth positions, respectively,
thanks to Maryland's two
losses. The Terps lost to Duke,
85-81, in addition to their defeat
by N.C. State, and dropped
from third to eighth.
North Carolina jumped two
places to sixth, Alabama
remained seventh despite a
two ...point loss to Kentucky,
and Missouri and Marquette,
switching places from last
week, closed out the top 10.

Overall, Urbana is 12-9, Rio
Grande Is at 10-9. Cedarville
shows an even 9-9 mark, while
Malone is 8-12 and Ohio
Dominican has a record of 6-14.
Ohio Dominican's Ken
Richardson holds big edges in
scoring and rebounding. The 66center has a 23.7 point scoring
average, and a 16-2 rebounding
mark. Rio's Ron Lambert is
the only other MOC scorer
averaging over 20 points. The
Rio Grande ace is averaging
21.9 points per game.
Malone's Phil Hodge and
Cedarville's Steve Young,
along with Richardson, are the
only rebounders with at least a
10-per-game average. Hodge is
at 12.9, while Young's average
is an even 10.0. Young is also
third in scoring, connecting for
18.9 points per game.

~

53.3

"

Rio has two-game lead in MOC;
three loop tilts left oq, card
CANTON- Rio Grande's 5.o
·record has given the Redmen a
commanding tw&lt;&gt;-game lead in
the Mid-Ohio Conference
basketball race.
Last week, Rio lopped
Malone 97-92 . Second-place
Urbana, with a 3-2 MOC

,·

By EDWARD K.' DeWNG
WASIDNGTON (UP!) ~ The
MASON - The Mason County Extension Service sends out new defensJ! secretary, Elliot
each month a calend8r of events which includes the who, what, L. Richardson, arrived at the
when and where pertaining to· 4-H leaders meetings, 4-H news, Pentagon wi!h a reputation as
Homemaker news and workshops, educational tours and a tough adm.lnistralor. No
. agriculture news. This calendar and new$letter in my opinion Is sooner had he taken over
one of the finest means of letting olir people know of fourth, Melvin ~ird' s office than he
coming events.
.
. exhibited a willingness to
Included In this month's newsletter, ''Turni!Jg the Pages" , tangle with unpopular - and
are ~veral .recipes aiul a tip on making pelject hamburgers. politically touchy -matters. ··
Use t~ plastic lids fr.om coffee cans, 1-2 or 3pound an&lt;! lliold the
In )lis first Pentagon news
hamburg to fit the lid and stack and freeze in a plastic bag. Then conference, Richardson said he
whim you are In a hurry, get out the lids, bend the plastic and out expected to order the closilig of
pops the nicely molded hamburg.
·
military bases after conA former home economics teacher cif mine, Margaret dueling a review of the defense
Keehne Davis, submitted a recipe for Springfield Spinach which budget. And he pinpointed ~
is very good. I never cared for spinach until I tasted tilil- and $360 million .pay boost for
beli~We me it is really good.
·
retired military personnel 811
2 pkga. leaf or chopped spinach
an item he might be willing lD
I 8 oz. pkg. of Philadelphia cream cheese
I. slick butter or margarine
10 pkg. pepperidge farm stuffing
salt to taste
· '
Cjlok the spinach and drain. Add cheese and butter while
spinach is hot. Let melt. Add Pepperidge farm stuffing lD mixture. Put In lightly greased casserole and hake at 350 degrees
until heated through. Additional stul!lng can be used to cover the
top of the mixture.
Sewing Seminar:
· Mrs. Bonnie Lacey of Charleston will conduct a one-day
cour~ on sewing with knits on Wednesday, March 28, starting at
By DEAN C. MILLER
9a.m. at Mason County Courthouse Annex, Pt. Pleasant. The fee
, NEW YORK (UP!) -Wall
is '1 per person for five hours of instructions, and wlll include
Street
apparently is uncertain,
measuring.and alterations, tips on making slacks, rib neck bands
if not wary, of the Nixon Adand making lingerie.
ministration's
Phase ID pr&lt;&gt;Register for the seminar by sending $1 with your name and
telephone ntimher to the Extensiqn Office In Pt. Pleasant by gram. The Street obviotisly is
afraid it won 'I he able lD
March 21.
control inflation.
,
From Jan. 11, when
ALSO, ACCORDJNG to Vicki Keefer, hom~makers agent, a
yeast bread workshop will he held on Thursday, February 8 at I President Nixon unveiled
p.m. at Appalachian Power Company auditorium In Point Phase UI, until the close of the
Pleasant. Virginia Black, Appalachian Power Home Economist, market on Jan. 30, the Dow
will conduct a workshop on basic bread making tips and will Jones Industrial average fell
include how lD make fancy breads. Call the extension office to 58.77 points. On Black Monday
o( Jan. 29, the DJIA dropped
reg'\ster.
'
I
back through the 1,0011 plateau
MRS. MAXINE ARNOLD, Mason, received a letter !ram an
old and dear friend, Mrs. Edna Gladys Crumbley of Wellsville, 0 . Business today
Edna has been a frl,end of mine too, for many years.
for the first time since Nov. 15,
· We received word that she has lost both her husband, Ray 19'/2, the day after itfirst broke
and her daughter, Mrs. Mary Ruth Smith Rutledge last year.
that euphoric level. II closed
Mary Ruth died on Palm Sunday and six months later, her
Jan. 30 at 992.93.
husband died of a heart attack.
Mayhe that doesn't blow the
She is very lonely and I expect would appreciate hearing mind of the average Investor.
from her Bend Area frienda on both sides of the river.
But analysts who deal dally
Her granddaughter, Cindy, and her two sons, Ray, Jr. and and significantly with the
Father WWlam (Bill) Crumbley, visit often and thla helps to ease problem of how numbers and.
the loollnesa that one experiences after losing their love:! ones. human emotions sway the

'

NEW YORK (UP!) - You
can run on them or you can
stall theni, but you can'l •beal
UCLA .
The No. I Bruins, at 17.0
possessors of a 62-game consecutive winning streak, had

. . . ,

MaS()n eoun.ty,

'

VINTON.- The B.T.I. ClaM
of the VInton Baptist Oulrch
met recently for its regular
meeting.
The president Eleanor White
called the meeting lD order and
a short devotional program
was held with ihe memhers
and guests singing, "Just Uke
His Great UJve," ~~one ti&amp;y,"
and "Ivory Palaces," ac..
companied by Lucy Hartsook
at the plano. Prayer was led by
Olristtne Hawks and a short
business session was held
followed by a social hour.
Jean Moore was j!iven a
layette shower by the B.T.I.
Class and the Loyal Workers
Class.
After a delicious potluck
supper, games were played.
One game was won by Mary

.

l WASHINGTON WJNI)()W

,.

I

.
. sacred ·cows .
News ._ NotesiRzcha.rdson attackz~g

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 6, 19'/3
:
·~;::so~:: .. :~u;;; ~
WI .. W"w;:::' ' %W*'' , c

OPEN
EVERY
NIGHT
TILL
9 PM!

Sho The Store Nearest va·ut
•

.

�'

'\

'' .
f- The OaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 6, 1973

..

.Layette shower given
for Mrs. Herb Moore

J

'

'

'

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Effie Pyle, Fern Swank,
Vassell Diller, Waller Diller,
Vera Rush to Wanda Lewis,
Milton Miller, Naomi Miller,
Ease., Orange.
Philip D. Ohlinger, Carol A.
Ohlinger to Henry Doerfer, Jr.,
Patty Doerfer, Parcel,
Salisbury.
Harold Carnahan, Isabel
Carnahan to Marvin Hill, Jan
Hill, .65 Acre, Sutton.
Roy V. Howell, Jr., lola
Howell to Leading Creek
Conservancy Dist., Salisbury.
Leonard L. Lentz, Alice
Lentz to John C. Scragg and
Esther M. Scragg, 5 Acres,
Rutland.
Alhert Hill, Jr., Ora E. Hill to
Sam Lewis, Pt. Lot 37, Wolf's
Add., Racine.
Edison Hobstetter, Exec.,
Fred A. Shiflet, dec. to Jayman
Coal Co., 3 Acres, 3 Acres,
Olive.Qrange-Chester, Pomeroy.
Harry Osborn Sr., aka Wilma
Osborn aka Harry Osborne, .
Sr., Wilma Osborne to Harry
Osborn, Sr., Wilma Osborn,
Lot, Pomeroy.
Goldie Wyant to Dallas G.
DeBord, Janice M. DeBord,
Scipio .
18 Ease. Leading Creek
Conservancy, Pomeroy.
Fern Swank, Effie Pyle,
Vassel Diller, Walter Diller,
Vera Roush to Lewis F. White,
Josephine 0. White, 97 Acres,
Orange.

Lanier and the other by the
hooored guest, Jean Moore.
Mrs . Moore' then opened and
acknowtedg!!d the gifts. The
gift table was decorated with
an umbrJ!Ila and colored
sireamers and a floral
arrangement or a baby in a
cradle made by Eleanor White.
Class members attending ,
other than those mentioned
were Elsie McCoy, Sue Ragan, .
Doris Harder, Virginia Harder,
Kathryn Evans, Ernestine
Polsley, Phyllis Keys, Yvonne
Walters, Mary Lanier, Uncia
Warner, Laura Brown, Phyllll
Mulholand, Linda Harrington,
June Argabright, Mary Ann
Fitch and Deloris Coffee.
Guests were Hazel Isaacs,
Lena Lambert, Donnie Fitch,
Cindy and Vickie Coffee,
Krlstee Keys and Joyce
Saunders' .

By Ahna Marshall

'

BAND IN WAsHINGTON - Thla Is how th8 Wahama
While Falcon band looked to the official photographer .of the

Inaugural Parade in Washington, D. C. as It passed the
President's reviewing stand.
'

Unbeatable UCLA still tops

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges Feb. 2, 3, 4)
Donovan Thornton, Mrs .
Joseph Elias and ~on, Howard
Roush, Alva Speakman, Mary
Courter, Marie Osborne, Mrs.
Arthur Bell and son, Archei
Vincell, Tony Blanton, Marsha
Carter, Charles Dickens,
Shawn Lowry, Ermel Ward,
Monna Jean Taylor, Frances
Still, Nancy Lemley, Cecil
Lambert, Fred Kingery, Anna
Sue Grueser, Katherine Frost,
Marie Edwards, Karen Cox,
Marsha · Cox, Keith Carroll,
Mrs: Donald . Braithwaite and
son, William Baronick, James
Allbright, Emil J. Romans,
Francis Sommerv'ille , Paul
Montgomery, James Chandler,
Maddie ·Campbell, Larry
Gilland, Uris Hall, Wendy
Laudermilk,
Clarence
McKinnis, Mark Coy, William
Davis, Rossiter Williams,
Janet Johnson, Sandra Dove,
Virgil Good, Elizabeth Hill,
Mrs. William Youn~ and son,
Billy Lester, Frank Cyrus,
Forrest McNeal, Bessie Boyer,
Mary Withee, Jason Whobray,
Nellie .Watson, Dennie Tolley,
More than four-fifths of Jr., Sandra Slone, Dorothy'
the world's animals live in Sheets, Jeffrey 'Randolph,
the sea.

Southern Cal try a stall
Saturday night, and for a while
it worked. All-America center
Bill Walton did not score until
10:58 had elapsed in the first
half,.and the Trojans led, llh'l,
after 7:29. But Walton's first
points put UCLA out front, 1412, the Bruins pulled away to a
40-20 halftime lead, and were
never threatened again, winning, 79-56.
For their efforts UCLA, as
usual, picked up all 35 firstplace ballots and a perfect 350
points in the tenth week of
voting by the United Press
International Board of
Coaches.
North Carolina State, the
11
other" unbeaten major
college team at 1~, scored an
impressive 89-78 victory over
Maryland, but had a great deal
.
Lucille Rsmsay, Jesse Proffitt,
William Perry, Lemma Niday,
Anna Fast, Ruda Durst, Gay
Circle, Bertha Blankenship,
Mrs. Larry Barrick and son,
Joseph Adams, ·Brent Sheets,
Lewis Taylor, ·James Ball,
Diane Orender, Halene Oiler,
Laura Karasek , Evelyn
Dearing, Cathy Barnes, James
Gallagher, Cla ~ence Aldridge,
Mrs. Evan Clark and daughter,
Lawrence Camp, Gary Cox,
Leonard Myers, Herbert
Swain, Doris Reinhart, Charles
Litchfield, John Leadman,
Martin Flanders, Mrs. James
Elliott and daughter, Mrs.
Charles Colburn and daughter,
Cuba Carter, Mrs. Francis
Baker and daughter and Marie
•

The Rockets, led by Mike
There Were some hot times in Parker's 18 points, are now 11Toledo, Cincinnati and eo. 9.
Cincinnati guard Lloyd Batts
lumbus Monday night.
hit
a ·2$-lool jump shot at the
South Carolina Inched its
way lD a 77-74 wln over Toledo; buzzer to give the Bearcats
Cincinnati won an 81-79 cliff- their 12th win In 20 outings.
hanger over Louisville, and jesse Jemison led Cincinnati
Ohio State S\D'Prlsed Incllana Sl!oring with 19 points. Louisville Is 1~ .
~.
Kevin Joyce scored 22 points Ohio State captain Allan
for South Carolina as the Hornyak made a free. throw
Gamecocks picked up their with five second3 remaining lD
14th wln against five )osses. give the Buckeyes their upset
South Carolina reeled off six wln over the fourth=ranjted ·
straight pointa to take the lead Hoosiers. Indiana had gone
into the game unbeaten in the
for good at .66-62.

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

20 major college basketball
teams Wi th first place voles

and won-lost records as of

Saturday in pare n t he s e s:

ITenth Week)

Team

Points

1. UCLA 1351 111·01
350
2. N.C. St. 116·01
, 314
3. Long Beach St. 117·11
242
4. Ind iana (14·21
222
5. Minnesota (14·2)
127
6. North Carol ina 116·31
86
7. Alabama 114·21
·
79
8. Maryland (14·3) .
73
9. Missouri 115·21
72
10. Marquette 116·2)
64
11. Houston 115·21
52
12. Kansas St. 114-JI
48
13. St. John's·N.Y. 115·21 · 40
14. SW Louisiana 116·11
36
15. Providence (14-2)
23
16. Memphis St. 116·31
20
17. San Francisco 116·21
18
18. (tiel Ore. St . 112.5)
12
18. (fie) New Mex . (16·31
12
20. Brigham Young 115·41
10
Alexander.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - House
Democrats' needing 60 voles to
pass a Vietnam war bonus bill,
have postponed the vote unW
Wednesday
when
the
measure's chief sponsor, Rep.
Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New
BostOn, may be back in the
state capital to help whip up
support.
TAFT OFFERS BilL
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R-Ohio,
offered a bill in . the Senate
Monday which would allow
rallroaas to abandon unproductive lines after 90 days
ootice, unless the Depal'tlnent
of Transportation ruled the line
was necessary for defense of
the region or nation.

LA·Z-BOV

CHAI,Rs ·
Your

Headqua,rters
For

the
record,
decisioned
Pioneers
82-73.
Ohio
Dominican (3-3) and Cedarville (2-3), with no league tilts
last week, remained In third
and fourth , respectively .
Malone is 11-5.

50.0
50.0

market lind it most 1disconcerting. They see it as public
fear that Phase Ill will not
eliminate or slow down, and

SCORING LEADERS
Nome
FG FT TP . Avg.
Richardson IDOl •
107 71 285 23.7
Lambert IRGI
IU 69 417 21.9
Young IC) 136 68 340 18.9
Eck ICJ
121 71 327 18.2
Klein
104 22 230 17.7
Goines lUI t45 72 342 17.2
Jordan IMJ 148 33 329 16.5
Hodge IMJ 152 24 328 16.4
Aikman IUI 145 54 J.U 16.4
FIELD GOAL LEADERS
Name
FG-A Pet.
Vance IU)
4-4-73 .10.3
Aikman lUI
145·263 5.5.1
Rlch 'n 1001
107·196 54.6
Young IC J
Culp lUI
Watson (C)
Lambert IRGI
Kle in IMJ
Dledatls (ODI
Eck (C)

PHILADELPIDA (UP!) An attorney for two college
basketball players banned for
allegedly takfug excessive financialaidsayshe will seek to .
have tbe National €ollegiate
Athletic Association (NCAA)
held in contempt today.
The two New Mexico State
University (NMSU) players)
John Williamson, 20, New
Haven, Conn., and Roland
"Tree"
Grant
20
'
Philadelphia, were suspended'
in January for the alleged
infractions which occurred two

years ago.
Richard G. Phillips, the
Philadelphia lawyer who
represents several pro
athletes,. obtained an in'junctlon from Coiruilon Pleas
Court last Friday which ordered the NCAA to reinstate
the two.
But they have yet to suit up.
NMSU said it had suspended
the two and that Phillips' suit
was aimed at the NCAA.
Phillips said Monday the
NCAA originally ruled the two
ineligible and that now the

sixth annual ABi

r..4l

SALT LAKE CITY (UP!) American Basketball Association officials, who say their
elder National Basketball Association counterparts are
meeting merger plans with a
''resounding silence,'' have
announced a new proposal lD ·
be placed before Congress
Saturday.
ABA Commissioner Robei't
Carlson, here for the two-4ay
league meetinl!!l being held in
conjunction with !Dnight's ABA
All..Star game, said Sen. Birch
Bayh, D-Ind., will introduce
the measure before the Senate
later this week.
Carlson said the document,
drawn up by league officials
and approved by both leagues'
players associations, met with

cna~r

you've

always

Deale~

'MASON
FURNITURE

liermo n Grote
7)7.5592 . Mlson, W.Va.

NCAA .. is binding on all
members," Phillips said. "My
position Is and will be that New
Mexico State is and will be
bound by the injunction."
Phillips said Wlllismson and
Grant originally were suspended for the rest of their lives
from intercollegiate athletics.
He said an appeal reduced the
sentence to one semester.

"resounding silence from the
NBA owners.
"If all Interested groups
supported the bill," Carlson
said, ''we'd have the merger
overnight." He was speaking of
the ABA and NBA owners as
well as the two players groups.
Carlson opened a meeting of
the league's trustees Monday
afternoon during which he said
the latest merger bill was
discussed, as well as merchandising and the senior college
draft date set for April 10.
II was widely thought that
league expansion would be
discussed, but the commlasioner said the subject was not
Included on the two-day agenda.
He did say, however, an
•

o

announcement may come
today concerning the fulul'e of
the sagging Dallas franchise.
He said a group of New Jersey
buyers are looking at the club.
The sixth annual ABA AllStar game, scheduled for 10
p.m. (EST) will culmlnate the
two days of meellnga by the
trustees, team public relations
directors, the players association . and the ABA writers
group.
Carolina's Larry Brown will
be coaching the East All.stars
while Utah Stars Coach t.adeU
Andersen leada the West for hla
second stratebt year.

104·208

54·108
128·258

52.9
52.4
51.6
49.6

· REBOUNDINCnEADERS · ·' ,;,
Name
., G RB Avg.
Richardson IDOl 12 IPS 16.2
Hodge IM)
20 258 12.9
Young ICI
18 180 tO.O
Lambert IRGJ 19 176 9.3
Bollinger I RG I 19 159 8.4
Aikman IUI
21 168 8.0
Jordan IM)
20 155 7.8
Yuskewlch IDD) 20 151 7.6
Rou,.IRGI
19 139 7.3
FREE THROW LEADERS
Name
fT-A Pet.
Young IC)
68·76 89.5
. Watson ICI
22·26 84.6
Stoner 1001
21·25 84.0
Lambert ( RG)
61·91 75.8
Goines lUI
72-95 75.8
Barlram IRG I
44-58 75.8
Eck ICJ
71 ·95 74.7
Crawford lUI
31 ·42 73.8
Poling IRG)
11·24 70.8
Maurer IODJ
35·50 70.0
LAST WEEK'S RESULTS:
Urbana 82 Malone 73 ,
Cedarville 92 Wilberforce 84
Rio Grande 74 Berea (Ky.) 71
Rio Grande 97 Malone 12
Urbana 93 Wilberforce 79
Ohio Dominican over Walsh
lfortelt due to Ineligible
player)
Cedarville 92 Marion (ljld.) 65
Youngs . St. 61 Ohio Dominican
51
Georgetown (Ky .) 95 Rio
Grande 70
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE:
Walsh at Cedarville (Tul
Rio Grande at Ohio Dom. (WI
Urbana at Cedarville (W)
Malone at Tlflln (WI
Cedarville at Rio Grande lSI
Ohio Dom . at Maione IS)

- BIG 9
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--

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l

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8

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Pomeroy
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'

J
I
.[

(FEB~ 141

Shop here for

v-...·i:andy,

!

ncNelties, cutout books of
Valentiles, paper napkins,

PLANTS

••

·.

David Packard said the Pentagon could save a billion dollars
by closing ,llnnecessary bases. ·
Last Novemher, the Pentagon
said it was preparing for a
round of base closings but none
was ever announced.
ftichardson said he understood the reason ·Laird did not
include any base closings in the
new budget was that no final
decision ·had been made on
which installations should go.

if he intended to close any
bases.
" I do, yes," Richardson
replied.
He said it was too early to
determine whether the closing
he endorses will be on the same
scale as the billion dollar
cutback mapped under Laird's
administration and then drop.
pe'ct'.
When he departed as deputy
secratary of defense last year,

Closings Under Review ·
"We will be reviewing this,"
he saitl ·:It has been understood that any decisions !hat
are to he m~de will be our
decisions."
The matter ·of military
retirement pay- is close to the
hearts of the nation's large
co mmunity of retired servicemen.

those retiring at comparable
rank now.
A $360 million recomputation
boost was included by Laird in
the 1974 budget.
Richardson said he intended
to took for items in that budget
"on which we could, In th.e give
--and-take of the budget
process on the Hill, give some
ground in order lD maintain ...
combat capability."
Askei:l if retired pay
recomputation , which
Congress has not supported
strongly, was one item he
might be willing to give up,
Richardson replied: "That's a
good eumple, yes."

·

They have fought hard for a
recomputation lD offset the
.effects of inflation and of
recent pay raises for those on
active duly, which have
created a gap between what
retirees of the past received
compared to larger checks of

A HUG.E ASSORTMENT
HAS ARRIVED!

progress and to come involves
4.7 million wor~ers covered by
major contracts, two million
more than last year, which \vas
a relatively peaceful year in
terms of strikes because of the
smoothing effect of wage and
price controls. There are indications this year won't be so
peaceful.
Labor Unrest Ahead?
Most contracts being hammered out involve tough,
militant unions In construction,
electrical manufacturing,
autos and farm equipment,
rubber, food and apparel.
Union officials also will be
under pressure to get bigger
settlements now that wage and
price controls have been eased.
Administration spokesmen
might point out that labor and
man9flement are expected
under Phase Ill to adhere to
the 5.5 per cent guideline laid
down In Phase II. They would
remind you that the administration has threatened to
take the "big slick out·of the
closet" if guidelines are
·violated.
But many are skeptical.

SMOCK
TOPS

~dley's Florist

l' .

---til

$ 94

·ORLON
SOCKS

PLASTIC
HANGERS

Solids, prints, checks, etc.
Choose from aver 200 in each
store.

Long
Sleeve ·
or
Short
Sleeve!

BOYS

VINYL COATED

TEENS and WOMEN'S
FASHION FAVORITES

9 7~

SET
OF

12

~€~39¢PR.
u

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Your Gals Will Love Them!

BOY CUT"
BLUE DENIM

Grade School

11

JEANS
Navy blue with contrasting red
cut now desired.

:IZES
TO

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J

Children

JUMBO PACKAGE
.OF40

stitching. Women's sites in the boy

Complete

Wit~

Envelopes!

Enough for their

$ 94

class. Valentine's
Day is February

14th. Get theirs at
Mart.

ONE FOR
TEACHER

.

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BRAIDED RUG
BIG SIZE 21x3~

77¢

RAINBOW STRIPE!

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NUT AND CANDY DISPENSER
Guarantees to keep them

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LEVER!
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WOODEN UTILITY STOOL
Dark Walnut Finish Early American Style -

$177

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BAG- .

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Parking.

APPLIANCE
DOLLY
Fits Under

$J47 :
·SET ·

2'1&gt; Ouar!- WHISTLI~G

2 sizes . .. One fils
petite-medium,
the ·other • medium-tall
gals.
Cinnamon,
Beige, Taupe.

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SHOP OUR.BUSY LITILE STORES
PT. PLEASANT - ASON • SILVER BR!DGE PlAZA

'

• :

~prices!

bargain away to relain .funds
for active forces.
Both positions are bound to
encounter stiff opposition from
different quarters.
Touchy CongreSimen
Closing military ·bases is one
way of reducing defense spending, but it is politically sensitive because no congressman
likes to see a base In bis' own
district shut down, putting
ronstituen\S out of .,..ork.
Richardson's position is
sharply different from one
described only a couple of days
previously by Laird's contrOIler,.Robert Moot. M,oot said he
expected base reductions but
oo closings in fiscal1974.
Reporters asked Richardson

ANOTHER DOG OBEDIENCE School will be held thla year
at Mason County Fairgrounds on Sunday, March 11, at 3:30p.m.
'lbeflrstseiiBion will be for the owner of the dog. At thla meeting,
the owner Is not to bring hla or her dog. The 12 week achooll,ng on
doll obediem:e
. and wllleoat·ttlland for Yf·lilenllier!l alid!eldera ·' currmayenet;infenlatal·oncc.elerate, the . They point to tlslng ·prices in
th ha w111 bess
sst
k ill 1a
ho
- 'food; fuel oil, plipei'; and some
e c rge
· Each se .on once a wee w st 110 ur ·
Inflation Stoppers
metals, lD mention a few areas
If lntereated, call 6'15-3710, Mason County Extension Office
Dr. Herbert Stein, chairman as evidence that inflation still
for an application. ,.
of the President's Council of is a threat.
Economic Advisers, stressed
The Big Four rubber compain New York on Jan. 29 that nles and the United Rubber
inflation must be contrOlled or Workers hammer out contracts
the counlry's strength will be in April. What's decided will
sapped. Stein told businessmen affect more than 70,0011 rubher
control of Inflation is necessary · workers and set wage patterns
this year to prevent an for another 30,0011 workers.
"t!Conomlc blowoff.!' In other "We'll all know more about
words, to keep It healthy.
where we're going after that
This year is an unusual one is settled," said one big
ecooomic year, in some re- Industrialist at a recent meespects unique. It's a year of ling.
danger, a year when delicately
tuned mechanisms could come
unglued because of the many
union contracts in negotla lion
now and in the months immediately ahead.
For the first lime ever, all
major trucking and railroad
contracts wJU expire at the
Mrs. Ora Higgins of Pt.
Slime time, June 30 and July 1,
respectively. U negotiations Pleasant was a Thutsday
develop into an adamant dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs.
strike, the counlry cOuld be Lloyd Wllliams."
paralyzed. You don't function
Mrs. Leota Dudding of Nitro
unless people and their goods is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Bill
and products can get to Williams .
market.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fry have
The bargaining both in returned from Naples, Florida
where they have been residing
and are now residing in Clifton.
He was recenUy discharged
from the Navy.
Mrs. Joo Posey of Clifton Is a
patient at Jackson General
Hospital. She reportedly was
hospitalized because of a
stroke.
HIS SECOND
looks happy wllh John Wayne
and wife Pilar at their Newport Beach, Calif., home . .
Byron VanMeter has been
Their children are Ethan, 10; Aissa, 16; Marissa, 6.
hospitalized at Charleston
Wayne'• got krandchlldren ·from his first family older
with
General
Hospital
than these . .
'
pneumonl~ .
He is now
recuperating at the home of his
daughter, Mrs. Adrian Mullins
TO DEPOSIT CHECK .
DOAK LOST 1
at Cabin Creek, W. Va.
DENVER (UP!) 1-Blll
DETI:tOIT (UP!) - DefenseMr. Curtis McDaniel, Jr. of
man Gary Doak will be lost to Daniels said he wlll deposit a
Jenkinstown, Pa. and Field
the qetroit Red Wings for two $5,0011checkwith theiNe\vYork
Advisor for Alco, visited his
to three weeks with a sprained Stale Athletic Comlnlsslon
parepts, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
Wednesday to open the official
left knee.
McDaniel, Sr., while on a
Thla will be Doak's second ·challenge for his fighter, Ron
business irip In the area.
ta:Jp to the sidelines. He mlased Lyle, agajnst heavyweight
Enroute from Mason he went to
13 games early In the season champion George Foreman.
Columbus where he visited his
with a fractured right leg.
two sisters, Mrs. James Loyd
· and Mrs . Stanley Saunders and
their families.
. Debra Irene Stewart of Rl. 3,
Pom~roy, ~nd Debbie Werry,
Mason, both received their
'
caps ai special ceremony held
Tulips
from 53.50
·on Sunday, January· 28, at
Hyacinths from 52.49
Washington County Vocational
from 57.50
Azaleas
Schoo) of Practical Nursing.
L IV ULLMANN , escares
lhe sun under a paraso In . Debra is the daughter of Mr.
Hollywood during filming
and Mrs. Kenneth Stewart, Rt.
of the musir'll version of · 3, Pomeroy, and Debbie is the
"Lost Horizon." With her
f . ~9 N. Second St,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Is daughter Linn. 6.
-~
Walter Werry, Mason.
~~:~~:$:~*::'.-;.~~~~.:o;,;;:'1818!111888~

BLOOMING

crepe paper,
See the smaller sizls of
Brach's BOxed Q1oc:oJates
and Olliir Candies at
r

.

News, Notes

-

.

Mason Area

CONTINUES· ALL THIS
-,. -

·dreamed of at our low
prices.
'

· Authorized

"An injunction against the

tt"lt S Ia ted , tonzg.ht

winter. been hard on your. outo?

Now you can buy that
comfortable
La·Z·Boy

school was "lrying to pass the
buck."

136·255
72·136
43· 80
174·337

f:~

.

new inflation

MtD.OHIO CONFERENCE
BASKETBALL STATISTiCS
Moe Overall
Team
WL WL
Rio Grande
0
10 9
Urbana
3 2 12 9
Ohio Dom.
3 3
6 14
Cedarville
2 3
9 9
0 5
8 12
Malone

Uni ted Press International top

BONUS VOTE SET BAct

Big Ten.
Hornyak and Wardell
Jackson each scored 19 points
as the Bucks evened their
conference record at 3-3. Indiana Is 6-1.
1
In other college basketball
games, Steubenville crushed
Alliance (Pa.) 7~3; John Carroll downed Carnegie-Mellon
(Pa.) 80-69, and Northern Dlinols beat Bowling Green 82-77.
Steubenville won its eighth In
a row in an easily fought contest. The Barons substituted
freely in the second half when
they led by more than 30 points
with 10 minutes left.
Larry Jackson scored 'll
points and Billy ·Harris added
38 for Northern llllnols, now 124. Bowling Green fell to 6-10.

Wedues~ay's Rio Grande
game with Ohio Dominican
will be played at the St.
Charles High Srhool gym on
East Broad and Nelson Rd.
in Columbus. Tbe JV tilt
starts at 5:45 and varsity
game at 8 p.m.

.

.

Investors fear

faces Malone in other Important MOC contests. In nonleague encounters this week,
Cedarville entertains Walsh
and Malone travels lD Tifitn.

Three Urbana players are
among the top five field goal
percentage leaders. The Blue
Knights' trio of Tony Vance,
Bill Aikman, and Ron Gulp are
first, second and fifth in that
department. Vance is hitting
on 60.3 per cent of his shols,
while teammate Aikman is
at 55.1 percent.
Steve Young and Rick
Watson, teammates at
Cedarville, ar011one-two in free
throw accuracy. Young's 89.5
percent 168 for 76) is lops,
while Watson is at 84.6 percent
(22 for 26) from the line.
In this week's Mid-Ohio
action, Rio has two crucial
conference games, one at Ohio
Dominican Wednesday and
Cedarville, at home Saturday.
Cedarville also meets Urbana and Ohio Dominican

~~~~K~~~~~he Contempt sought by lawyer

Birtbs
(Feb2-3-4)
Mrs. Donald Slone, son,
Crqwn City ; Mrs. Roger Fink,
son, New Haven ; Mrs . Larry
Kandel, daughter, Beaver ;
Mrs. Timothy Michael, son,
Pomeroy ; Mrs. Everette Coy,
daughter, Wellston and Mrs .
Floyd Peyton, · daughter,
Dexter.

Toledo beaten;
·UC trips Cards
By United Press Intemattooat

of trouble with Virginia before
squeaking out a ~9 decision.
The Wolfpack garnered all but
one of the second-place
oomlnations - Southwestern
Louisiana spoiled their bid on
one ballot- and 314 points.
Long Beach Staie, Indiana
and Minnesota each moved up
one spot, to the third through
fifth positions, respectively,
thanks to Maryland's two
losses. The Terps lost to Duke,
85-81, in addition to their defeat
by N.C. State, and dropped
from third to eighth.
North Carolina jumped two
places to sixth, Alabama
remained seventh despite a
two ...point loss to Kentucky,
and Missouri and Marquette,
switching places from last
week, closed out the top 10.

Overall, Urbana is 12-9, Rio
Grande Is at 10-9. Cedarville
shows an even 9-9 mark, while
Malone is 8-12 and Ohio
Dominican has a record of 6-14.
Ohio Dominican's Ken
Richardson holds big edges in
scoring and rebounding. The 66center has a 23.7 point scoring
average, and a 16-2 rebounding
mark. Rio's Ron Lambert is
the only other MOC scorer
averaging over 20 points. The
Rio Grande ace is averaging
21.9 points per game.
Malone's Phil Hodge and
Cedarville's Steve Young,
along with Richardson, are the
only rebounders with at least a
10-per-game average. Hodge is
at 12.9, while Young's average
is an even 10.0. Young is also
third in scoring, connecting for
18.9 points per game.

~

53.3

"

Rio has two-game lead in MOC;
three loop tilts left oq, card
CANTON- Rio Grande's 5.o
·record has given the Redmen a
commanding tw&lt;&gt;-game lead in
the Mid-Ohio Conference
basketball race.
Last week, Rio lopped
Malone 97-92 . Second-place
Urbana, with a 3-2 MOC

,·

By EDWARD K.' DeWNG
WASIDNGTON (UP!) ~ The
MASON - The Mason County Extension Service sends out new defensJ! secretary, Elliot
each month a calend8r of events which includes the who, what, L. Richardson, arrived at the
when and where pertaining to· 4-H leaders meetings, 4-H news, Pentagon wi!h a reputation as
Homemaker news and workshops, educational tours and a tough adm.lnistralor. No
. agriculture news. This calendar and new$letter in my opinion Is sooner had he taken over
one of the finest means of letting olir people know of fourth, Melvin ~ird' s office than he
coming events.
.
. exhibited a willingness to
Included In this month's newsletter, ''Turni!Jg the Pages" , tangle with unpopular - and
are ~veral .recipes aiul a tip on making pelject hamburgers. politically touchy -matters. ··
Use t~ plastic lids fr.om coffee cans, 1-2 or 3pound an&lt;! lliold the
In )lis first Pentagon news
hamburg to fit the lid and stack and freeze in a plastic bag. Then conference, Richardson said he
whim you are In a hurry, get out the lids, bend the plastic and out expected to order the closilig of
pops the nicely molded hamburg.
·
military bases after conA former home economics teacher cif mine, Margaret dueling a review of the defense
Keehne Davis, submitted a recipe for Springfield Spinach which budget. And he pinpointed ~
is very good. I never cared for spinach until I tasted tilil- and $360 million .pay boost for
beli~We me it is really good.
·
retired military personnel 811
2 pkga. leaf or chopped spinach
an item he might be willing lD
I 8 oz. pkg. of Philadelphia cream cheese
I. slick butter or margarine
10 pkg. pepperidge farm stuffing
salt to taste
· '
Cjlok the spinach and drain. Add cheese and butter while
spinach is hot. Let melt. Add Pepperidge farm stuffing lD mixture. Put In lightly greased casserole and hake at 350 degrees
until heated through. Additional stul!lng can be used to cover the
top of the mixture.
Sewing Seminar:
· Mrs. Bonnie Lacey of Charleston will conduct a one-day
cour~ on sewing with knits on Wednesday, March 28, starting at
By DEAN C. MILLER
9a.m. at Mason County Courthouse Annex, Pt. Pleasant. The fee
, NEW YORK (UP!) -Wall
is '1 per person for five hours of instructions, and wlll include
Street
apparently is uncertain,
measuring.and alterations, tips on making slacks, rib neck bands
if not wary, of the Nixon Adand making lingerie.
ministration's
Phase ID pr&lt;&gt;Register for the seminar by sending $1 with your name and
telephone ntimher to the Extensiqn Office In Pt. Pleasant by gram. The Street obviotisly is
afraid it won 'I he able lD
March 21.
control inflation.
,
From Jan. 11, when
ALSO, ACCORDJNG to Vicki Keefer, hom~makers agent, a
yeast bread workshop will he held on Thursday, February 8 at I President Nixon unveiled
p.m. at Appalachian Power Company auditorium In Point Phase UI, until the close of the
Pleasant. Virginia Black, Appalachian Power Home Economist, market on Jan. 30, the Dow
will conduct a workshop on basic bread making tips and will Jones Industrial average fell
include how lD make fancy breads. Call the extension office to 58.77 points. On Black Monday
o( Jan. 29, the DJIA dropped
reg'\ster.
'
I
back through the 1,0011 plateau
MRS. MAXINE ARNOLD, Mason, received a letter !ram an
old and dear friend, Mrs. Edna Gladys Crumbley of Wellsville, 0 . Business today
Edna has been a frl,end of mine too, for many years.
for the first time since Nov. 15,
· We received word that she has lost both her husband, Ray 19'/2, the day after itfirst broke
and her daughter, Mrs. Mary Ruth Smith Rutledge last year.
that euphoric level. II closed
Mary Ruth died on Palm Sunday and six months later, her
Jan. 30 at 992.93.
husband died of a heart attack.
Mayhe that doesn't blow the
She is very lonely and I expect would appreciate hearing mind of the average Investor.
from her Bend Area frienda on both sides of the river.
But analysts who deal dally
Her granddaughter, Cindy, and her two sons, Ray, Jr. and and significantly with the
Father WWlam (Bill) Crumbley, visit often and thla helps to ease problem of how numbers and.
the loollnesa that one experiences after losing their love:! ones. human emotions sway the

'

NEW YORK (UP!) - You
can run on them or you can
stall theni, but you can'l •beal
UCLA .
The No. I Bruins, at 17.0
possessors of a 62-game consecutive winning streak, had

. . . ,

MaS()n eoun.ty,

'

VINTON.- The B.T.I. ClaM
of the VInton Baptist Oulrch
met recently for its regular
meeting.
The president Eleanor White
called the meeting lD order and
a short devotional program
was held with ihe memhers
and guests singing, "Just Uke
His Great UJve," ~~one ti&amp;y,"
and "Ivory Palaces," ac..
companied by Lucy Hartsook
at the plano. Prayer was led by
Olristtne Hawks and a short
business session was held
followed by a social hour.
Jean Moore was j!iven a
layette shower by the B.T.I.
Class and the Loyal Workers
Class.
After a delicious potluck
supper, games were played.
One game was won by Mary

.

l WASHINGTON WJNI)()W

,.

I

.
. sacred ·cows .
News ._ NotesiRzcha.rdson attackz~g

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 6, 19'/3
:
·~;::so~:: .. :~u;;; ~
WI .. W"w;:::' ' %W*'' , c

OPEN
EVERY
NIGHT
TILL
9 PM!

Sho The Store Nearest va·ut
•

.

�'

..(

'

6-TheDallySenllnel,Middleport-Pbmeroy, O.,·Feb. 6,1973 .

·

1111 •

, ;;; .., ...w

JOE .SMHH,

•

MEAT MANAGER

~Area churchwomen joinedf Social J
Corner s, clllvlene Hoetlrnl for annual Fellowship Tea ICa~dlirl ~

• v
.,...
.

..

~(*

•'

..,." .

'·'. ..

'"'
'.
'

In 192'1 high ~hool. graduations were something special not
only for the graduates and their families and friends, but for the
whole col11lllllllity.
Cle~ming oot the fonner Leo M. Hysell property in Middleport,
Harry and Jean Moore came acro8s the May 12, 1927 issue of The
Democrat, a special weekly edition dedicated to the Pomeroy
High School graduating class of 58 members, an all-time high.
The front page pictured all of the gra&lt;llates, detslled the
commencement program where the Hon. Sllneon D. Fess, U.S.
Senator, was the speaker, and described tbe event as "closing in
a blaze of glory."
Inside the paper were listed all of the graduates of PHS from
the first year in 1876 when only six received diplomas. lncldentslly, there were no graduates in 1877 and only two in 1878.
Mrs. Moore has turned the old newspaper over to the Meigs
County Histor!cal Society for posaible use in the museum.
DAVID KUHN, STATION at the Langley Air Force Base,
was involved in an automobile accident over the weekend, but
apparently was not injured seriously. The Rev. and Mrs. Kuhn
have been advised that he Is suffering a concussion of the cornea
of one eye. The car in which David was a passenger hit another
vehicle broadside at an intersection and David's eye struck the
comer of tbe sunvlsor.
JENNIFER SHEETS, MEIGS Extension Agent, home

· economics, advises that two classes have been set up for chair
caning to be taught by Clara Lochary. A daytime session will be

..

held on March 7, and an evening session on March 14, both at the
Meigs Pioneer House, Butternut Ave.
Also to be offered at the Pioneer House beginning In March
will be a course in crocheting. Mr~. Louise Hines will be the instructor for the eight week program which will be offered for $10.
Interested in either of these programs? Let Mrs. Sheebi know if
you are.

'
Women from fiv
e ar.ea
churches joined members of
the B.H. Sanborn Missionary
Society ol the Middleport First
Baptist Church Monday night
for the arnual fellowship te~ .
Approximately 45 were in
attendance.
The program featured a
'presentation by Mrs . George
Hackett, Jr. of slides which she
took on an European tour last

swnmer.

Tell to the Nations". The
valentine theme was used by
Mrs . Tony Fowler for
devotions.
Mrs. Werner anQounced the
World Day of Prayer observance and the world
fellowship offering to be taken
on March 4. The love gift
dedication by Mrs. Charles
Simons used the theme "Alert
in Our Times" . She was

assisted by Mrs. Pearl Hoff.
man, Mrs. Manning Kloes, and
Mrs. Arland King.
' Mrs . Kloes, Miss Rhoda Hall,
and Mrs . Fred Lewis, circle

Mrs. Gerald Anthony opened
the meeting with an organ
prelude, and Mrs. John Werner, presiden~. had prayer. The
group sang "We've a Story to chairmen. were

hn.c:t~ses

for

Mrs. Fay Sauer was elected
president of the Middleport Pomeroy Area Branch of the
American Association of
University Women at a second
organizational
meeting
Saturday at the Meigs Inn.
Other officers elected were
Mrs. Jeanne Bowen, first vice
president; Mrs. Bernice

Carpenter , second vice
president; Miss Carolyn Smith,
recording secretary; Mrs. Rita
Lewis , corresponding
secretary; and Mrs. Kathryn
Knight, treasurer.
Mrs. Nancy B. Reed and
Mrs. 0 . B. Stout served on the
nominating
committee.
Presented and adopted at the

Phone firms recognized
for employment policies

·-

on tube tonight

!;
...

.

New Haven
Social Events

..

SHIRT
FINISHING
SERVICE

Ill At 9-0ut At 5,
Use Our Free Parking Lot

Robinscin's Qea~ers
l16 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

'

Four Meigs men
in Point jail

ATTEND FUNERAL
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bland and
Mrs. Nina Bland, Akron, were
Tuesday ~uests of Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds.
They
came
especially for the funeral
services for James Souders.
'

Henry BlOck has
17 reasons why VOU:
should come to.us
for incollle tax help.
U...Oa 9. H &amp; R Blocl: can omw you bot. ~
new p-ernmon~ Short Form )W've beard about
could 001t you money. For eum~, if you have
inlenlot oo your ~. medical expense or child
cam doductiorw, which are up to forty-eiaht ltunclml
diJIIIn •hit year, you cannot itemize them on the

SlmFonn.

According to the 1970
Census, population density
in the United States was
57.5 persons per square
mile. New Jersey was the
n\ost densely populated
state with 953.1 persons
!Mlr _square mile while
Rhode Tsland, previously
the most populous state,
had 905.5 persons per
square mile, The World AI·
manac notes. The least
densely populated states
were Alaska with 0.5 persons per sq. mi. and Wyoming with 3.4.
('+IP YI'I (Il'hl

By POLLY CRAMER

.

No Appcinbnent Necessary

. 57 Court St: .

592-2851

Athens, O.

'

For Price and Quality!

'

'

$ ... -

...

ELM HILL

•m-' -·

.

'

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
A
PHONE: 992·3,480
~~:_~ill~a~li'dd~i:~~;·..w:e~R~es:e~rv~e~Th=e~ru~·gh:t~T~oLimi~·:·~t~Qua:n:ti:tie~s·~·-~:M~ID~D;;LEPORT, 0.

Potato ·Chip Sale!
POTATO CHIPS
Regular 39' pg .

•

pk~ for

'1.00
59~

POLISH
SAUSAGE
lb~

Boneless·Ham

FAIRMONT

TIDE

-..-,,,COTTAGE CHEESE

2 ~r.t~~- 69¢

®

l 9'iK

l•: nlt•ril rlse

}\ l'l.~ ll .

Move than a watch ... each
' expressive gilt
umepiece is an
of love. The brace let, an
integral part of the elegant
case, adorns the wrist with
u;.t~ing beauty. The precision
It Je.wel movement, under that
· glamorotls 'exterior, reports
time with uncanny accuracy.

10% DISCOUNT

Fairmont Thriftie Gallon

-2·% ·MILK·.;
gallon 89e

ICE CREAM
5 :~ts '1.00

4

8 oz.

•1.00

Crls.

Strawberry, Peach, Lime. Plain,

· Blackberry

&amp;

BEEF
LIVER
CHICKEN

Red Raspberry.

FAIRMONT

ICE CREAM
112

gal. crt

16 oz.
bois.

DOG FOOD

'79¢

6

15'12 oz.
Cans

The

Uncola.
16 oz. bots.

FRISKIES
CAT FOOD
FiSH
LIVER
CHICKEN

6 $1.00
PAK
16 oz.
bots.

GRAHAM CRACKERS
3 ~-~~: $1.00

•,

Diet Rite .Cola

lllttemto In

1trlp11. $71.

.THE SINGER, STORE
\
115 W. Second 992-2284 Pomeroy

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE
Court St.

DIAMOND

LARGE
SIZE

Pomerov

We have a credit plan designed Ia fil your budget
. We also have a Uberlilrade-rn oollcy.
·

PPROVEO IIHGI" DEALER

.

'

1-lb.
bag

9~

16 oz.

ENGLISH WALNUTS

gallon

7-UP

.69e

15 oz.
Cans

59¢

bots.
'

GERBER'S

.Only

BABY JUICE

10

Cans

16 oz.

$} .

bottles

DR. PEPPER

POTATO SALE! .

The Fabric Shop\·

8 pak

SUNSHINE

Unclassified

n••••••"·

'1.29

FRISKIES

.GAYMONT YOGURT

SEALTEST

1h Price ·Fabrics
Slender
• illluttl1,

NO WASTE lb.

RC COLA

·sox

See Our Group Of

IUIDHuOr

HAM SLICES

THURSDAY ONLY

GIANT
SIZE

lOLA'S

·Singer M.odel 177
Zig Zag .For Only

$1.19

69e

lb.

8.95

The
beautiful
.Goddess
of Time
bracelet
watches
by Bulova

lb.

69¢

Budget Une
of Dresses

Misses &amp; Half Sizes.
PT. PLEASANT - 'Nin~
IN
ONTARIO
For lovebirds, tlte billing
persons, four of them from
comes
very shortly after the Mrs. Selwyn Smith, MidMeigs County, Ohio were
cooing leads to marriage.
dleport, spent the weekend in
booked into Mason County jail
•
•
•
Main &amp; Sycamore, Pomeroy
Sarnia,
Ont. visiting her
during the weekend' on arrests
If your cup runneth husband.
by the 'Sheriff's department
over, your hand is prob·
ably
shaking too much.
and state police,
They were Daniel Spurlock,
27, Syracuse, DWI and b r a n - , . - = - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
I '
dishing a concealed .weapon,
and David M. Bissell, 23,
Pomeroy, Ronald WilliamsQn
Harrison, 19, Middleport, and
Randy L. Williams, 19, Langs- ·
ville, each charged with in·
toxication.
Earlis M. Craddock, 18, West
Columbia, was arrested on a
(CARRYING CASE EXTRAI
petit larceny charge. These
arrests were all made by the
Sheriff's Department.
State police arrested Don J.
Mays of Glenwood, Clarence R.
Smith of Leon, David
To Adult Education Classes and Home
Melvin
Rose,
23,
of
Economics Students on All Fabric
Pinch and William AI Stover,
Purchases for School Projects.
27, of Gallipolis Ferry, each for
intoxication.

KAHN'S

'

BARBS

PROGRAM TAPED
A- program from the
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church to be aired over WFOB
Radio at Fostoria, was taped
on Jan. 29 at the borne of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Jeffers,
Syracuse.

SUPERIORS

10' OFF LABEL

••

lb. 59~

SUPERIORS

BREASTS · lb.67¢
Baby Beef liver .

PRINGLE$
POTATO
CHIPS 2. pak

I

BRAUNSCHWEIGER

lb.

POTATO CHIPS
Hb. bag

"

l-Ib~ . pkg.

Buckeye Humpty Dumpty

Several visit over weekend

Firstborn a son

LEGS &amp; THIGHS

BUCKEYE

4

SUPERIORS

l-Ib.
..
pkg.

LUNCH MEATS OR BOLOGNA·

FRESH FRYER PARTS

.

WIENERS

.

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10

~:;;!~E:1:~:~:::w:::av:*'

'

. .

·Joe Says: (]heck Each Item

Find Coal That Fits

the social hour and tea . The . SOUP SupP.,r at Eastern ,. DEAR POLLY-My elderly mother-is only five lee~ tall
table was covered with a gold High School beginning at 4:30 and weighs less than 100 pounds and recently my ·Stsler
and 1 literallY combed a city of 115,000 people trying to .
cloth and centered with red and p.m., sponsored by FHA.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic find a suitable winter coat lor her. One saleslady! told
white flowers flanked by red
us she had the same problem. They. do not· get c,otb~s
tapers in white holders . Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, regular appropriate for senior citizens. I realize half our na!ion s
Napkins carried out the session at 7:30 tonight at the population is under 25 but our semor cltl~ens de~erve .
valentine theme. Mrs. Werner temple , All Master Masons some services they are not gettmg.-MRS. W. A. R., ·
and Mrs. Simons presided at welcome.
_ ...... '(=,\;~~~'""""j'~'~¥
"l{m:tAt#itw.tmrrt*- PoII y' s Pro blem ili.,,,;;f.~"
.EASTERN
ATHLETIC
the coffee and tea service.
! DEAR POLLY - An elderly neighbor of mipe ~
Churches represented at the Boosiers, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at • · spilled ink on her pastel-pink figured rug a~d does . [j
fellowship tea were the Mount the high ·school special
. not want to expertment with the spot (_V. ·!ncb by II!
Moriah Baptist Church, the meeting.
eight inches) that was made by a fountam !!en sev· :~
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Cheshire Baptist Church, the
Pomeroy First Baptist, the Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15
Middleport Church of Christ, p.m. Tuesday, Columbus and
DEAR POLLY and Mrs. K L. H.-We have had elec·
and the Middleport Heath : Southern Ohio Electric Co.
tric
baseboard heating units for 13 years and I have ex·
Cultural program on art by
Methodist Church ..
perimented
with different window · curtain lengths. For
Miss Kathy King, Mrs. Becky
. an informal treatment she could have her curtams stop
Anderspn and Unda Sauvage. at the ,bottom of the window trim and for a more formal
Hostesses, Mrs . . Anderson, one they could come down _to the top of the baseboard
Mrs. Lynn Kitchen, and Mrs. heater being sure to clear them by about :Y• of an mch.
No matter what. any salesman tells her .she should not
Vikki Gloeckner.
place
dr':feries over the heaters. The man who Installed
WEDNESDAY
ours sai it was perfectly safe to put floor length
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's ; draperies in front of the heating units as they would not
meeting
were
by-laws Auxiliary, 8p.m. Wednesday at get hot enough to be dangerous. This is in Itself true
BUT someone pushed a chair against our wall pushing
prepared by Mrs. Daisy the new firehouse.
the drapery tight against the heater. The corner of the
Blakeslee and Mrs . Betsy
ALL SOUTHERN Local curtain became wed~ed in an opening in the heater and
Horky.
District high school students it caught fire. Lucktly I was at• home and smelled it.
The charter membership invited to youth prayer break- Even now I shudder to think of what could have baJ;&gt;·
meeting was set for Feb. 27 at fast, 7:30 a.m. Wednesday, at pened. If Mrs. K. L. H.'s beaters have openings (atr
the Meigs Inn beginning with a Wesleyan United Methodist vents) she will need to caution her children about stick'
ing pencils, fingers and so on in the vents. A crayon can
6:30 smorgasbord . The Chulch.
make a mess as it melts and does not smell nice when
meeting will be held at 8 p.m.
burning.
Also watch out for your animals-our cat laid
THURSDAY
Applica lions for prospective
against the warm heater
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
an(l her tail became stuck
members are available from
•· . in the vent.-GEORGIA
Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Sauer ·or 7:30p.m. Thursday at the hall.
MEIGS County Humane
Mrs. Philson and must be
DEAR READERS - The
Society,
7:30Thursday night at
Electric Comfort Heating
returned to Mrs. Carpenter by
Equipment Seetlon of the
Feb. 15. Prospective members Middleport Village HaU. '!be
National
Electrical Manupublic
is
invited
to
attend.
are urged to get their apfacturer&amp;
Assn., make• tbe
CATHOLIC Women's Club,
plications in and to plan to
foUowlng
recommendations
attend the charter membership Sacred Heart Parish, Thursconcernlna drapery hangday, 8 p.m., preceded by Mass
Ing: "Draperlea should
meeting.
bang at lea1t one-Inch in
Reservations for
the and Rosary at 7:15p.m.
REGULAR
meeting,
Shade
front
of
the
heater
and
one-half
lnl!b above the carpet
smorgasbord are to be made
and below the ceDing. Material, to be suitable for dra·
River
Lodge
453,
F&amp;AM,
7:30
with Mrs. Carpenter by
p.m. Thursday, at hall in perles, should not discolor, ahrluk or stretch even after
Saturday, Feb. 24.
1,000 hours exposure to a temperature of ZOO degrees F.
A meeting of the executive Chester. Refreshments. All For the best heat Row and even distribution, fu;-nlture
should be at least six Inches from baseboard beaten, witb
committee will be held Master Masons invited.
at least three lnl!hea minimum clearance from the floor.
XI
GAMMA
Mu
Thursday,
Saturday at 10 a.m. at which
Furniture should be placed away from forced air or
time the board of directors wilj 7:45p.m. home of Mrs. Pearl radiant heaters, too.''-POLLY
be appointed and a policy Welker with Mrs. Mary C.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
statement as required by the Wiley serving as co-hostess.
organization will be for- Mrs. Phil Ohlinger, a member
You wm receive a dollar II Polly uses your favorite
of the Rio Grande Community
mulated.
bomemaldng
Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or 10lutloo
College Board of Trustees, will
to
a problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.
be guest speaker.
UNITED
Methodist
Women's Society of Enterprise
Church Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
RACINE - Mr. and. Mrs . Fred Timmons of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Allen home of Mrs. Don Hunnel,
Robert
E. Waldnlg of Rjlcll)e, ··' Other guests who '&lt;!dropped
Rose
Hill.
Peyton of Pomeroy Route 2,
FRIDAY
RD 1, Ohio, had as their house in" Saturday evening were Mr.
are announcing the birth of
MARY SHRINE 37, White guests(or the weekend Mr. and and Mrs . Dick Rowe of
their first child, a five pound,
12 ounce son, Richard Allen Shrine of Jerusalem, 8 p.m.· Mrs. Julius Waldnig of Columbus, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jr.,.born Jan. 11 at the Holzer Friday at the IOOF Hall, Springfield, Ohio; Mr . and Robert Miller and daughter
Pomeroy, with potluck Mrs. William J. Waldnig and Brenda, and son Jeff of Mid·
Medical Center.
son Tinuny of Mechanicburg, dleport.
Paternal grandparenbi are refreshments.
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. James A.
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Peyton of
Moore and son Joseph of Grove
Dexter and maternal grandCity, Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs.
·parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Jeffers, Third St.,
INSPECTION SET
Syracuse. Great-grandparents
The annual inspection of
are Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM,
By PHIL PASTORET
SESSION SET
Icenhower, Portland, and
will be held at 7:30 p.m.
A
training
session for aides Friday. Inspection·' will be in
Mrs. Ethel ·Jeffers, Pomeroy.
Looking a gift horse in the
mouth is a dandy way to be of Meigs and Gallia Counties in the Master Mason degree. All
billed for its dental work. the Expanded Nutrition
Master Masons are invited.
• • •
Program has been set lor Feb.
Anyone who has to
she!! out for oil, tires, 23 at the Columbus and
IN SOUm POINT
insurance and gas can Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Mrs. Donald Kouns and Mrs.
wonder with cause wh~ . Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, Meigs
SEE OUR
Adelbert Lee spent Monday at
they call 'em "freeways.r. Extension Agent, and the agent
• • •
South t;&gt;oint visiting the Rev.
from the Gallia County Ex·
and Mr~ Charles Norris,
tension Service, will be informerly &amp;(.Racine.
structors for the training
session.

'

304 E. Main · ·992-3795 Pomeroy,
0.
.
Open ·9 Til 5 Mon. thru Sat

I

SINGER BUY!!

:-; o • \\' ~ PU)l +' r

THE INCOME TAX P!OPL!

Senior Citizen Can't .;

Mrs. Sauer heads AA UW

THE CRAFT PROGRAMS being conducted by members of
the RuUand Friendly Gardeners with the retarded children in the
cla11 taught by Mrs. Carol Wolfe are a realhighilgbt each month.
\: 'lbla Ia the first year that the children have been Involved in the
l : garden therapy program. ·
'lbunday Donna Williamson and Marie Birchfield will belp
the children make wall decorations which they can take home
MARION- The General and veteran's o,utlook on life, l!twitb !hem. '!be colorful plaques will be made out of paper doilies,
red velveteen and miniature straw flowers. Mrs. Birchfield will Northern Ohio Telephone titude, loyalty, self-discipline,
Companies have been honored work habits, along with the
serve valentine refreshmenbi following the craft work.
,, by the Ohio Department of the extra bonus in some cases of
American Legion for em- skills acquired in comployment policies affecting munications areas while in the
veterans and disabled persons. service, have contributed
General Telephone President greatly to the success and
PARKERSBURGFour
of
Parkersburg,
Robert M. Wopat received the efficient operation of General
••
i : the best student brains from
The show, taped Monday citation from J. Patrick Hone, Telephone Companies of
: : Meigs High School will pit their night, will be seen between 7 state adjutant of the American Ohio."
: ~ gray cells against those of four and 7:30p.m. as the "TV Honor Legion, during a ceremony
Victor W. Smith, veterans
: : studenbi from Pt. Pleasant Society."
Monday at the Marion employment representative,
t : High School In a show tonight Meigs students are Beth headquarters of the company. told the gathering of company
• • ·on Cable channel 7 originaling Fultz, Bill Vaughan, Edie Mees
Nominations to the Legion officials that plans are helng
in studios of WTAP-TV, and Jim Schmoll. Point High's are made by the Veterans made for returning veterans.
I~
students are Melissa Mowery, Employment Service Division He said those returning to Ohio
I' • - - - - - - - - Phil Howard, Rick Morgan and of the United States Em- were fortunate because of the
'
'
Rick P~ove~~f , .:.,, .•
ployment Service (USES) on efforts of employers and the
DAUGHTER BORN
' '
The spo~Jsors provide $50 to the re~ommendation of the employment service as well as
LETART- Mr. and Mrs.
'
the
sebool of the winning team Ohio .Bureau of Employment those of the American Legion.
James Krebs, Letsrt, W. Va.
which
will return the following Services (OBES) offices
In accepting the award on
are announcing the birth of a
week
against
another
throughout
the
state.
In
Ohio,
behalf
of the companies,
, daughter, Stscie Dawn, on
33 firms were nominated for Wopas said, "Veterans and
\ ; January 22 at Holzer Medical challenger.
the award.
handicapped persons have
: : Center. The mother is the
Hone praised the company been one of the strengths of our
! : former Stells Randolph. The
for
the employment and company. In 1973, we will
• infant weighed' 8 pounds and
training opportunities afforded continue efforts of filling jobs
: • 611. ounces. Grandparents are
returning
servicemen and with qualified veterans. We
· • Mr. and Mrs. Harry Krebs,
older workers. He said, will create no jobs but will give
Point Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs.
The famous Calendar Girls, "General Telephone Company the veteran an opportunity for
Paul Randolph, Letart, W. Va.
Great-grandparents include known throughout the Bend of Ohio considers Itself to be, meaningful employment and
Mrs. Goldie R. Jofmson, New Area will have a return rather than a donor of job advancement."
In winning the state honors,
Haven; Mrs. Lori Parsons, engagement of Showboat at opportunities, a recipient of
highly
qualified,
valuable
the company becomes eligible
Leon; Mr. and Mrs. Charles New Haven some lime in
workers
.
They
believe
a
for
the national award to be
March.
Watch
for
the
date.
Krebs, Point Pleasant.
given at Honolulu in the spring
Also the Ding-a-Dong Girls will
at the National American
be featured. The New Haven
A thought for the day :
Woman's Club will sponsor this American statesman Heru1 Legion convention .
outstanding future event. The Clay said, "If you wish to avoid
date will be announced later. foreign collision, you bad
beller abandon the ocean."
SAME DAY

;~ Brains

,.,

20

POTATOES ·
lb. .bag

$} 00

Everyday Lo_w Price!

'·

Idaho Bakers
lb. bag

. 16 oz. bois.

8

9

'
'AT,..,.._,. 01 THE liNGER Ct•'I&amp;PNN,

'

..

PAK

�'

..(

'

6-TheDallySenllnel,Middleport-Pbmeroy, O.,·Feb. 6,1973 .

·

1111 •

, ;;; .., ...w

JOE .SMHH,

•

MEAT MANAGER

~Area churchwomen joinedf Social J
Corner s, clllvlene Hoetlrnl for annual Fellowship Tea ICa~dlirl ~

• v
.,...
.

..

~(*

•'

..,." .

'·'. ..

'"'
'.
'

In 192'1 high ~hool. graduations were something special not
only for the graduates and their families and friends, but for the
whole col11lllllllity.
Cle~ming oot the fonner Leo M. Hysell property in Middleport,
Harry and Jean Moore came acro8s the May 12, 1927 issue of The
Democrat, a special weekly edition dedicated to the Pomeroy
High School graduating class of 58 members, an all-time high.
The front page pictured all of the gra&lt;llates, detslled the
commencement program where the Hon. Sllneon D. Fess, U.S.
Senator, was the speaker, and described tbe event as "closing in
a blaze of glory."
Inside the paper were listed all of the graduates of PHS from
the first year in 1876 when only six received diplomas. lncldentslly, there were no graduates in 1877 and only two in 1878.
Mrs. Moore has turned the old newspaper over to the Meigs
County Histor!cal Society for posaible use in the museum.
DAVID KUHN, STATION at the Langley Air Force Base,
was involved in an automobile accident over the weekend, but
apparently was not injured seriously. The Rev. and Mrs. Kuhn
have been advised that he Is suffering a concussion of the cornea
of one eye. The car in which David was a passenger hit another
vehicle broadside at an intersection and David's eye struck the
comer of tbe sunvlsor.
JENNIFER SHEETS, MEIGS Extension Agent, home

· economics, advises that two classes have been set up for chair
caning to be taught by Clara Lochary. A daytime session will be

..

held on March 7, and an evening session on March 14, both at the
Meigs Pioneer House, Butternut Ave.
Also to be offered at the Pioneer House beginning In March
will be a course in crocheting. Mr~. Louise Hines will be the instructor for the eight week program which will be offered for $10.
Interested in either of these programs? Let Mrs. Sheebi know if
you are.

'
Women from fiv
e ar.ea
churches joined members of
the B.H. Sanborn Missionary
Society ol the Middleport First
Baptist Church Monday night
for the arnual fellowship te~ .
Approximately 45 were in
attendance.
The program featured a
'presentation by Mrs . George
Hackett, Jr. of slides which she
took on an European tour last

swnmer.

Tell to the Nations". The
valentine theme was used by
Mrs . Tony Fowler for
devotions.
Mrs. Werner anQounced the
World Day of Prayer observance and the world
fellowship offering to be taken
on March 4. The love gift
dedication by Mrs. Charles
Simons used the theme "Alert
in Our Times" . She was

assisted by Mrs. Pearl Hoff.
man, Mrs. Manning Kloes, and
Mrs. Arland King.
' Mrs . Kloes, Miss Rhoda Hall,
and Mrs . Fred Lewis, circle

Mrs. Gerald Anthony opened
the meeting with an organ
prelude, and Mrs. John Werner, presiden~. had prayer. The
group sang "We've a Story to chairmen. were

hn.c:t~ses

for

Mrs. Fay Sauer was elected
president of the Middleport Pomeroy Area Branch of the
American Association of
University Women at a second
organizational
meeting
Saturday at the Meigs Inn.
Other officers elected were
Mrs. Jeanne Bowen, first vice
president; Mrs. Bernice

Carpenter , second vice
president; Miss Carolyn Smith,
recording secretary; Mrs. Rita
Lewis , corresponding
secretary; and Mrs. Kathryn
Knight, treasurer.
Mrs. Nancy B. Reed and
Mrs. 0 . B. Stout served on the
nominating
committee.
Presented and adopted at the

Phone firms recognized
for employment policies

·-

on tube tonight

!;
...

.

New Haven
Social Events

..

SHIRT
FINISHING
SERVICE

Ill At 9-0ut At 5,
Use Our Free Parking Lot

Robinscin's Qea~ers
l16 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

'

Four Meigs men
in Point jail

ATTEND FUNERAL
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bland and
Mrs. Nina Bland, Akron, were
Tuesday ~uests of Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds.
They
came
especially for the funeral
services for James Souders.
'

Henry BlOck has
17 reasons why VOU:
should come to.us
for incollle tax help.
U...Oa 9. H &amp; R Blocl: can omw you bot. ~
new p-ernmon~ Short Form )W've beard about
could 001t you money. For eum~, if you have
inlenlot oo your ~. medical expense or child
cam doductiorw, which are up to forty-eiaht ltunclml
diJIIIn •hit year, you cannot itemize them on the

SlmFonn.

According to the 1970
Census, population density
in the United States was
57.5 persons per square
mile. New Jersey was the
n\ost densely populated
state with 953.1 persons
!Mlr _square mile while
Rhode Tsland, previously
the most populous state,
had 905.5 persons per
square mile, The World AI·
manac notes. The least
densely populated states
were Alaska with 0.5 persons per sq. mi. and Wyoming with 3.4.
('+IP YI'I (Il'hl

By POLLY CRAMER

.

No Appcinbnent Necessary

. 57 Court St: .

592-2851

Athens, O.

'

For Price and Quality!

'

'

$ ... -

...

ELM HILL

•m-' -·

.

'

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
A
PHONE: 992·3,480
~~:_~ill~a~li'dd~i:~~;·..w:e~R~es:e~rv~e~Th=e~ru~·gh:t~T~oLimi~·:·~t~Qua:n:ti:tie~s·~·-~:M~ID~D;;LEPORT, 0.

Potato ·Chip Sale!
POTATO CHIPS
Regular 39' pg .

•

pk~ for

'1.00
59~

POLISH
SAUSAGE
lb~

Boneless·Ham

FAIRMONT

TIDE

-..-,,,COTTAGE CHEESE

2 ~r.t~~- 69¢

®

l 9'iK

l•: nlt•ril rlse

}\ l'l.~ ll .

Move than a watch ... each
' expressive gilt
umepiece is an
of love. The brace let, an
integral part of the elegant
case, adorns the wrist with
u;.t~ing beauty. The precision
It Je.wel movement, under that
· glamorotls 'exterior, reports
time with uncanny accuracy.

10% DISCOUNT

Fairmont Thriftie Gallon

-2·% ·MILK·.;
gallon 89e

ICE CREAM
5 :~ts '1.00

4

8 oz.

•1.00

Crls.

Strawberry, Peach, Lime. Plain,

· Blackberry

&amp;

BEEF
LIVER
CHICKEN

Red Raspberry.

FAIRMONT

ICE CREAM
112

gal. crt

16 oz.
bois.

DOG FOOD

'79¢

6

15'12 oz.
Cans

The

Uncola.
16 oz. bots.

FRISKIES
CAT FOOD
FiSH
LIVER
CHICKEN

6 $1.00
PAK
16 oz.
bots.

GRAHAM CRACKERS
3 ~-~~: $1.00

•,

Diet Rite .Cola

lllttemto In

1trlp11. $71.

.THE SINGER, STORE
\
115 W. Second 992-2284 Pomeroy

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE
Court St.

DIAMOND

LARGE
SIZE

Pomerov

We have a credit plan designed Ia fil your budget
. We also have a Uberlilrade-rn oollcy.
·

PPROVEO IIHGI" DEALER

.

'

1-lb.
bag

9~

16 oz.

ENGLISH WALNUTS

gallon

7-UP

.69e

15 oz.
Cans

59¢

bots.
'

GERBER'S

.Only

BABY JUICE

10

Cans

16 oz.

$} .

bottles

DR. PEPPER

POTATO SALE! .

The Fabric Shop\·

8 pak

SUNSHINE

Unclassified

n••••••"·

'1.29

FRISKIES

.GAYMONT YOGURT

SEALTEST

1h Price ·Fabrics
Slender
• illluttl1,

NO WASTE lb.

RC COLA

·sox

See Our Group Of

IUIDHuOr

HAM SLICES

THURSDAY ONLY

GIANT
SIZE

lOLA'S

·Singer M.odel 177
Zig Zag .For Only

$1.19

69e

lb.

8.95

The
beautiful
.Goddess
of Time
bracelet
watches
by Bulova

lb.

69¢

Budget Une
of Dresses

Misses &amp; Half Sizes.
PT. PLEASANT - 'Nin~
IN
ONTARIO
For lovebirds, tlte billing
persons, four of them from
comes
very shortly after the Mrs. Selwyn Smith, MidMeigs County, Ohio were
cooing leads to marriage.
dleport, spent the weekend in
booked into Mason County jail
•
•
•
Main &amp; Sycamore, Pomeroy
Sarnia,
Ont. visiting her
during the weekend' on arrests
If your cup runneth husband.
by the 'Sheriff's department
over, your hand is prob·
ably
shaking too much.
and state police,
They were Daniel Spurlock,
27, Syracuse, DWI and b r a n - , . - = - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
I '
dishing a concealed .weapon,
and David M. Bissell, 23,
Pomeroy, Ronald WilliamsQn
Harrison, 19, Middleport, and
Randy L. Williams, 19, Langs- ·
ville, each charged with in·
toxication.
Earlis M. Craddock, 18, West
Columbia, was arrested on a
(CARRYING CASE EXTRAI
petit larceny charge. These
arrests were all made by the
Sheriff's Department.
State police arrested Don J.
Mays of Glenwood, Clarence R.
Smith of Leon, David
To Adult Education Classes and Home
Melvin
Rose,
23,
of
Economics Students on All Fabric
Pinch and William AI Stover,
Purchases for School Projects.
27, of Gallipolis Ferry, each for
intoxication.

KAHN'S

'

BARBS

PROGRAM TAPED
A- program from the
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church to be aired over WFOB
Radio at Fostoria, was taped
on Jan. 29 at the borne of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Jeffers,
Syracuse.

SUPERIORS

10' OFF LABEL

••

lb. 59~

SUPERIORS

BREASTS · lb.67¢
Baby Beef liver .

PRINGLE$
POTATO
CHIPS 2. pak

I

BRAUNSCHWEIGER

lb.

POTATO CHIPS
Hb. bag

"

l-Ib~ . pkg.

Buckeye Humpty Dumpty

Several visit over weekend

Firstborn a son

LEGS &amp; THIGHS

BUCKEYE

4

SUPERIORS

l-Ib.
..
pkg.

LUNCH MEATS OR BOLOGNA·

FRESH FRYER PARTS

.

WIENERS

.

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10

~:;;!~E:1:~:~:::w:::av:*'

'

. .

·Joe Says: (]heck Each Item

Find Coal That Fits

the social hour and tea . The . SOUP SupP.,r at Eastern ,. DEAR POLLY-My elderly mother-is only five lee~ tall
table was covered with a gold High School beginning at 4:30 and weighs less than 100 pounds and recently my ·Stsler
and 1 literallY combed a city of 115,000 people trying to .
cloth and centered with red and p.m., sponsored by FHA.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic find a suitable winter coat lor her. One saleslady! told
white flowers flanked by red
us she had the same problem. They. do not· get c,otb~s
tapers in white holders . Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, regular appropriate for senior citizens. I realize half our na!ion s
Napkins carried out the session at 7:30 tonight at the population is under 25 but our semor cltl~ens de~erve .
valentine theme. Mrs. Werner temple , All Master Masons some services they are not gettmg.-MRS. W. A. R., ·
and Mrs. Simons presided at welcome.
_ ...... '(=,\;~~~'""""j'~'~¥
"l{m:tAt#itw.tmrrt*- PoII y' s Pro blem ili.,,,;;f.~"
.EASTERN
ATHLETIC
the coffee and tea service.
! DEAR POLLY - An elderly neighbor of mipe ~
Churches represented at the Boosiers, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at • · spilled ink on her pastel-pink figured rug a~d does . [j
fellowship tea were the Mount the high ·school special
. not want to expertment with the spot (_V. ·!ncb by II!
Moriah Baptist Church, the meeting.
eight inches) that was made by a fountam !!en sev· :~
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Cheshire Baptist Church, the
Pomeroy First Baptist, the Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15
Middleport Church of Christ, p.m. Tuesday, Columbus and
DEAR POLLY and Mrs. K L. H.-We have had elec·
and the Middleport Heath : Southern Ohio Electric Co.
tric
baseboard heating units for 13 years and I have ex·
Cultural program on art by
Methodist Church ..
perimented
with different window · curtain lengths. For
Miss Kathy King, Mrs. Becky
. an informal treatment she could have her curtams stop
Anderspn and Unda Sauvage. at the ,bottom of the window trim and for a more formal
Hostesses, Mrs . . Anderson, one they could come down _to the top of the baseboard
Mrs. Lynn Kitchen, and Mrs. heater being sure to clear them by about :Y• of an mch.
No matter what. any salesman tells her .she should not
Vikki Gloeckner.
place
dr':feries over the heaters. The man who Installed
WEDNESDAY
ours sai it was perfectly safe to put floor length
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's ; draperies in front of the heating units as they would not
meeting
were
by-laws Auxiliary, 8p.m. Wednesday at get hot enough to be dangerous. This is in Itself true
BUT someone pushed a chair against our wall pushing
prepared by Mrs. Daisy the new firehouse.
the drapery tight against the heater. The corner of the
Blakeslee and Mrs . Betsy
ALL SOUTHERN Local curtain became wed~ed in an opening in the heater and
Horky.
District high school students it caught fire. Lucktly I was at• home and smelled it.
The charter membership invited to youth prayer break- Even now I shudder to think of what could have baJ;&gt;·
meeting was set for Feb. 27 at fast, 7:30 a.m. Wednesday, at pened. If Mrs. K. L. H.'s beaters have openings (atr
the Meigs Inn beginning with a Wesleyan United Methodist vents) she will need to caution her children about stick'
ing pencils, fingers and so on in the vents. A crayon can
6:30 smorgasbord . The Chulch.
make a mess as it melts and does not smell nice when
meeting will be held at 8 p.m.
burning.
Also watch out for your animals-our cat laid
THURSDAY
Applica lions for prospective
against the warm heater
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
an(l her tail became stuck
members are available from
•· . in the vent.-GEORGIA
Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Sauer ·or 7:30p.m. Thursday at the hall.
MEIGS County Humane
Mrs. Philson and must be
DEAR READERS - The
Society,
7:30Thursday night at
Electric Comfort Heating
returned to Mrs. Carpenter by
Equipment Seetlon of the
Feb. 15. Prospective members Middleport Village HaU. '!be
National
Electrical Manupublic
is
invited
to
attend.
are urged to get their apfacturer&amp;
Assn., make• tbe
CATHOLIC Women's Club,
plications in and to plan to
foUowlng
recommendations
attend the charter membership Sacred Heart Parish, Thursconcernlna drapery hangday, 8 p.m., preceded by Mass
Ing: "Draperlea should
meeting.
bang at lea1t one-Inch in
Reservations for
the and Rosary at 7:15p.m.
REGULAR
meeting,
Shade
front
of
the
heater
and
one-half
lnl!b above the carpet
smorgasbord are to be made
and below the ceDing. Material, to be suitable for dra·
River
Lodge
453,
F&amp;AM,
7:30
with Mrs. Carpenter by
p.m. Thursday, at hall in perles, should not discolor, ahrluk or stretch even after
Saturday, Feb. 24.
1,000 hours exposure to a temperature of ZOO degrees F.
A meeting of the executive Chester. Refreshments. All For the best heat Row and even distribution, fu;-nlture
should be at least six Inches from baseboard beaten, witb
committee will be held Master Masons invited.
at least three lnl!hea minimum clearance from the floor.
XI
GAMMA
Mu
Thursday,
Saturday at 10 a.m. at which
Furniture should be placed away from forced air or
time the board of directors wilj 7:45p.m. home of Mrs. Pearl radiant heaters, too.''-POLLY
be appointed and a policy Welker with Mrs. Mary C.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
statement as required by the Wiley serving as co-hostess.
organization will be for- Mrs. Phil Ohlinger, a member
You wm receive a dollar II Polly uses your favorite
of the Rio Grande Community
mulated.
bomemaldng
Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or 10lutloo
College Board of Trustees, will
to
a problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.
be guest speaker.
UNITED
Methodist
Women's Society of Enterprise
Church Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
RACINE - Mr. and. Mrs . Fred Timmons of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Allen home of Mrs. Don Hunnel,
Robert
E. Waldnlg of Rjlcll)e, ··' Other guests who '&lt;!dropped
Rose
Hill.
Peyton of Pomeroy Route 2,
FRIDAY
RD 1, Ohio, had as their house in" Saturday evening were Mr.
are announcing the birth of
MARY SHRINE 37, White guests(or the weekend Mr. and and Mrs . Dick Rowe of
their first child, a five pound,
12 ounce son, Richard Allen Shrine of Jerusalem, 8 p.m.· Mrs. Julius Waldnig of Columbus, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jr.,.born Jan. 11 at the Holzer Friday at the IOOF Hall, Springfield, Ohio; Mr . and Robert Miller and daughter
Pomeroy, with potluck Mrs. William J. Waldnig and Brenda, and son Jeff of Mid·
Medical Center.
son Tinuny of Mechanicburg, dleport.
Paternal grandparenbi are refreshments.
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. James A.
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Peyton of
Moore and son Joseph of Grove
Dexter and maternal grandCity, Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs.
·parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Jeffers, Third St.,
INSPECTION SET
Syracuse. Great-grandparents
The annual inspection of
are Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM,
By PHIL PASTORET
SESSION SET
Icenhower, Portland, and
will be held at 7:30 p.m.
A
training
session for aides Friday. Inspection·' will be in
Mrs. Ethel ·Jeffers, Pomeroy.
Looking a gift horse in the
mouth is a dandy way to be of Meigs and Gallia Counties in the Master Mason degree. All
billed for its dental work. the Expanded Nutrition
Master Masons are invited.
• • •
Program has been set lor Feb.
Anyone who has to
she!! out for oil, tires, 23 at the Columbus and
IN SOUm POINT
insurance and gas can Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Mrs. Donald Kouns and Mrs.
wonder with cause wh~ . Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, Meigs
SEE OUR
Adelbert Lee spent Monday at
they call 'em "freeways.r. Extension Agent, and the agent
• • •
South t;&gt;oint visiting the Rev.
from the Gallia County Ex·
and Mr~ Charles Norris,
tension Service, will be informerly &amp;(.Racine.
structors for the training
session.

'

304 E. Main · ·992-3795 Pomeroy,
0.
.
Open ·9 Til 5 Mon. thru Sat

I

SINGER BUY!!

:-; o • \\' ~ PU)l +' r

THE INCOME TAX P!OPL!

Senior Citizen Can't .;

Mrs. Sauer heads AA UW

THE CRAFT PROGRAMS being conducted by members of
the RuUand Friendly Gardeners with the retarded children in the
cla11 taught by Mrs. Carol Wolfe are a realhighilgbt each month.
\: 'lbla Ia the first year that the children have been Involved in the
l : garden therapy program. ·
'lbunday Donna Williamson and Marie Birchfield will belp
the children make wall decorations which they can take home
MARION- The General and veteran's o,utlook on life, l!twitb !hem. '!be colorful plaques will be made out of paper doilies,
red velveteen and miniature straw flowers. Mrs. Birchfield will Northern Ohio Telephone titude, loyalty, self-discipline,
Companies have been honored work habits, along with the
serve valentine refreshmenbi following the craft work.
,, by the Ohio Department of the extra bonus in some cases of
American Legion for em- skills acquired in comployment policies affecting munications areas while in the
veterans and disabled persons. service, have contributed
General Telephone President greatly to the success and
PARKERSBURGFour
of
Parkersburg,
Robert M. Wopat received the efficient operation of General
••
i : the best student brains from
The show, taped Monday citation from J. Patrick Hone, Telephone Companies of
: : Meigs High School will pit their night, will be seen between 7 state adjutant of the American Ohio."
: ~ gray cells against those of four and 7:30p.m. as the "TV Honor Legion, during a ceremony
Victor W. Smith, veterans
: : studenbi from Pt. Pleasant Society."
Monday at the Marion employment representative,
t : High School In a show tonight Meigs students are Beth headquarters of the company. told the gathering of company
• • ·on Cable channel 7 originaling Fultz, Bill Vaughan, Edie Mees
Nominations to the Legion officials that plans are helng
in studios of WTAP-TV, and Jim Schmoll. Point High's are made by the Veterans made for returning veterans.
I~
students are Melissa Mowery, Employment Service Division He said those returning to Ohio
I' • - - - - - - - - Phil Howard, Rick Morgan and of the United States Em- were fortunate because of the
'
'
Rick P~ove~~f , .:.,, .•
ployment Service (USES) on efforts of employers and the
DAUGHTER BORN
' '
The spo~Jsors provide $50 to the re~ommendation of the employment service as well as
LETART- Mr. and Mrs.
'
the
sebool of the winning team Ohio .Bureau of Employment those of the American Legion.
James Krebs, Letsrt, W. Va.
which
will return the following Services (OBES) offices
In accepting the award on
are announcing the birth of a
week
against
another
throughout
the
state.
In
Ohio,
behalf
of the companies,
, daughter, Stscie Dawn, on
33 firms were nominated for Wopas said, "Veterans and
\ ; January 22 at Holzer Medical challenger.
the award.
handicapped persons have
: : Center. The mother is the
Hone praised the company been one of the strengths of our
! : former Stells Randolph. The
for
the employment and company. In 1973, we will
• infant weighed' 8 pounds and
training opportunities afforded continue efforts of filling jobs
: • 611. ounces. Grandparents are
returning
servicemen and with qualified veterans. We
· • Mr. and Mrs. Harry Krebs,
older workers. He said, will create no jobs but will give
Point Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs.
The famous Calendar Girls, "General Telephone Company the veteran an opportunity for
Paul Randolph, Letart, W. Va.
Great-grandparents include known throughout the Bend of Ohio considers Itself to be, meaningful employment and
Mrs. Goldie R. Jofmson, New Area will have a return rather than a donor of job advancement."
In winning the state honors,
Haven; Mrs. Lori Parsons, engagement of Showboat at opportunities, a recipient of
highly
qualified,
valuable
the company becomes eligible
Leon; Mr. and Mrs. Charles New Haven some lime in
workers
.
They
believe
a
for
the national award to be
March.
Watch
for
the
date.
Krebs, Point Pleasant.
given at Honolulu in the spring
Also the Ding-a-Dong Girls will
at the National American
be featured. The New Haven
A thought for the day :
Woman's Club will sponsor this American statesman Heru1 Legion convention .
outstanding future event. The Clay said, "If you wish to avoid
date will be announced later. foreign collision, you bad
beller abandon the ocean."
SAME DAY

;~ Brains

,.,

20

POTATOES ·
lb. .bag

$} 00

Everyday Lo_w Price!

'·

Idaho Bakers
lb. bag

. 16 oz. bois.

8

9

'
'AT,..,.._,. 01 THE liNGER Ct•'I&amp;PNN,

'

..

PAK

�,

s;;tr;;;;Q~;;ifieds Get Action!' Sentinel ClassifiedS Get Results!
WANT AOS. -

INFORMATION

j)EADLINES .

.s P.M . Dav

'

Card of Thanks

·

Before P!,Jbllca1ion . WE WOULD like to expresS' our
Mohday · Deadline 9 a.m .
'
sin ce re thanks and ap -

.

Cancellation - Corrections

Will be acc'epted until9a .m . tor!
Day of.PubllcatiQn
REGULATIONS
Th"e .. Pubt ishe·r reserves the

rig ht to edit or re ject any ads
deemed obiettional. The

'RATES
.. For Wal'lt Ad sendee

5 cen ts per word one insertion

Min imum Charge 7Sc
· 12 cents" per word thr~e
ccmse..:utive insertions .
18 cents per "'ord six con
secutive · Insertions.
25 ~er Ce nt Olscou.nt on pal&lt;i
adsandadspa idwithin 10days.

·

CARD OF . T~ANKS '
&amp; OBITUARY

$1. 50 for SO word m i n lm ~m .
Ea ch additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.

OFFICE HOURS

a. m. 10 5:00p .m. Dally,
· a: JG a. m. to 12 :00 Noon
Saturda v.
B: JO

Veterans Memorial Hospital
and especially· to Or . Boon sue ,

Albany Elementary and Soph .
Cla ss (School),
Rac i ne ,

Southern

Hi~h

Sc hool
rene h Cl ub ;
V.F.W. of Albany ; and all the
neighbo r s,
friends
ant
relatives for their sincere
expression of sym pathy
during the illness and death of
son and father, Eddie Lou
M
Howery . other. Mrs. lara
Tea chers and

c

Howery. children, Holly,

Helena, Clara,
Willadean .

Shir h~.y

:-·

and

News, Event
Mr. and Mrs. Emzie Davis of
Parkersburg spent a day with
her brothers, Paul and W. C.
Peck.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frazier,
Gallipolis, visited her mother,
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly and called
on other relatives in the area.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were in Columbus on Friday
and Saturday on business.
They also vis! ted his sister,
Mrs. Jessie Jewell, before
returning home.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stanley
and Anna, Erie, Penn., spent a
few days with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smilh ,
local , and Mr. and · Mrs .
Eugene Stanley, Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan ,
Gallipolis, were guests of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs . Mendal
Jordan, and other relatives
here and in Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Mattox
are announoing the birth of a
daughter, Tina Louise, o·n
January 27, at O' Bleness
Memorial Hospi tal, Athens .
The grandparents are Mrs.
Emma
Smith,
Orange,
California,and Mr. and Mrs. C.
Tenardi, Western Australia.
The little one has a sister,
Susan Marie.
Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Jordan ,
Danny, Betty and Jerrie Sue,
local, and Mr. and Mrs. David
Llewelyn, New Marshfield,
were guests of Mrs. Jordan's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Reed
Jeffers and her grandmother,
Mr,s. Beulah Cordray on
Sunday.
Overnight visitors at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. William
Thomas were their son-in-law,
. Charles Leist, Clarksburg ,
Maryland, and his nephew,
Charles
Handley,
of
Washington , D. C.
Mr . and Mrs. Glen
Gassaway, Powell, Ohio, spent
a few days here with their sonin-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. William Miller, Connie,
Debbie and Lori.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rice,
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Dwaihe Jordan , Bryan, Keith
and Sarah Faye, were guests of
their parenls, Mr . and Mrs.
William Culwell.
Mr . and Mrs . Arthur
Crabtree and Mrs. Goldie
Gillogly were guests on Sunday
afternoon al the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Frazier in
Gallipolis.

basement, forced air fleat, in

upstairs apartment, 6 rooms
and bath, pOWder room', In
Pomeroy . Phone 992·9915 ·or

1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA

992·~93.

11895

Station wagon, local 1 owner, new car trade-In, vinyl in te'rior , whtfe fini sh,
engine, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, radio &amp; many other extras .

v.s

1968 CHEVY BEL AIR

11095

1969 CHEVROLET2:TON TRUCK

Reedsville
The . Community Builders•
Club met with the Dohrman
Reeds for the January
meeting. During the .business
session dues were paid and the
group voted to pay for shoes for
a - needy child. Committee
reports were given. Refreshments were served to the
following families: Don Myers,
Waller Browns,
Ernest
Whiteheads, Denver Webers,
Warren
Pickens,
Juli
Whitehead, David Brown, Kay
Balderson, Kim and Kirk
Reed. The next meeting will be
at the Weber home.
Mrs. Opal Randolph recently
visited her brother, Warren
Baker in a Columbus hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Rose
and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ruth
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Rome Sandy and Mrs. Alice
Foutty at Parkersburg, w. va .
Mr. Manning Hayman of
Peru, Indiana, spent a few
days with his parents,l\ir. and
Mrs. J. D. Hayman.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Prince
of Long Bottom and Mrs.
Grace Swan of Parkersburg,
visited with Mr. and Mrs. J. D.
Haym~n .
,
Recent visitors of Mrs. Bess
Larkins were Mrs . Jim
Carruthers and Penny of
Louisville, Cheryl Chordas of
canton and Mrs. Carolyn Ruth
and family of Parkersburg, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Rose
were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Dana ,Van Meter and
family of Belpre Sunday.
Ricky Putman, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Putman
celebrated his birthday
January 23. Cake and ice
cream were served to his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Barr of Porterfield and
brothers, Donnie and Keith, his
parents and the honored guest.
- Mrs. L. Balderson

Market Report
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Cattle: Good steers 41.8542.90; standard, 38.50-'10.50.
Heifers : Good heifers, 39.~
40.60; standard heifers, 36-39.
Cows: Commercial, 33.:;().
36.35 ; utility, 27 .50-31.75;
canners and cutters, 21-24.50.
Bulls : Commercial. 32.7:i-3fi. ·
Stock Cattle : Stock calves
steers: 36.35-38; stock calve
heifers, 32.50-'18.50; yearlings,
heifers 31.75-49.50.
Veal Calves: Choice 6().jl1.50;
good, 55.7S-S8.7o.
Lambs : Choice, 35.20; good,
32.10.
Hogs: 200-300, 34; No. 1,
34.2&gt;; 230-240, 33.75; sows ,
27.511-28.60; boars, 25.

KITCHEN]&amp;:SON
OONSTRUCTION

2·1·6tp

FURNISHED and unfurnished
aparlments. Phone 992·3901.
2· J.6tc

Station wagon, v.s e_
ngine, standard transmission, radio,
good tires, vinyl interior, green finish, radio.

HOME BUILDING
&amp;

miles

102" cab to axle, 292 cu. in. engine, 15,000 lbs. 2-speed Jear .

North · of

phone 992·747'/.

· a&gt;le. ·~5&gt;20 JO.ply tires , full depth foam seat, heavy duly
springs. solid cab. Ready to go to work.

Pomeroy ;

BOB SLOAN
&amp;
C. L. KITCHEN
992-5653

2·2·tfC

FURNISHED 4 rooms and
bath ; on highway edge of
Mason ; phone 77J.5147.
1·30-lOtp

Pomeroy Motor Co~
OPEN EVES. 8:00 P.M. .
f'j)MEROY, 'OHIO

HarrisonviUe
Society News

1
1

•

beautiful ... super sheer

GUARANTEED
NoT TO RUN

Pets for Sale

l1

I "c.uh

n1ul U"1 too, •hen
rou phce an aetion Want I
I Ad,
You can ult furnitura 1
Jappl iancet, cl.oth ... , ,d0 ..

l\1l's: Dorothy Sheets is a
patient at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mrs. Hallie Knopp spent a·
week with her sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Bud Morris recently.
Mrs. Joe Carsey was in
Columbus over the weekend to
visit her granddaughter who Is
a patient in Children's
Hospital.
Arthur Goodin is a patient in
O'Bieness Hospital at Athens.
Mrs. Lydia Powell is visiting
her daughter, Mary and family
in West Virginia.
Mrs. Goldie Jones of
Zanesville visited Mrs. Minnie
Foil and friends here recently.
Mr.- and Mrs. Larry Clark
and children of Chester were
supper guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Clark Saturday and
visited Mr · and Mrs. Roy
Wiseman.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Welch of
Commercial Point, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Butler of Marion, .
Everett Welch . of Circleville
and Grey and Cecil Brickles of
Canal Winchester were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs . Dana
Welch.
Mrs. Roger Alkire and son
visited Mr. and Mrs. Felix
Alkire and Mrs. Mary Diehl
recently.

1

1un• of other unuud but I
1uuful I t.•••!
I
'-------------- I

Notice

I WILL do bookkeeping and
clerical work in my home ;

phone 742-6085.

puppies, AKC
registered ; phone 742-6834,
Rutland. 0.
· From the largest
' 1-28-tfc Bulldozer Radiator fo ·the
PARKVIEW Kennel&amp; go.lng out SmalleSt Heater Core.
' Nathan Bigg&amp; •
·of business. Big price
Radia.tor
Specialist__
reduCtion on all dogs. All AKC. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash

Streets, Middleport, Ohio. .
12· 13 ·"c

·
For Sale

carpenters have 2G years
experience · in building
homes in Meigs Caurity.

AFFILIATE QISTRIBUTOR

L-------'-~---:::==::::=::::=:::::::':
· :=-'WEIMARANER

-----------•your phone ;ill . Jinrh

Have your home built by
Cu&amp;tom Builders. Our

ALL WEATHER
ROOFING AND
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE:. 992-2550

REMODELING

SMALL trailer. Ideal for
couples; $75 per . month; 10

12095

'

SMlTH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 991-2174
Pomeroy
For Sale

UP? ,

HOW IN THUNDER
OOES HEGIT
WARMED UP FER

. A GAMEOF

HE .DOES A
FEW ELBOW
BENDS,
LUKEY

PANTY. HOSE
No selling, accts. furnished.
Part-lull
tltne.
EX·

CEPTIONAL

INCOME .

Invest S2,496 or $4,999 tully
secured ltV merchandise .
For full information calf
~~i~eL ~ ~T: £21 3) 938-3823 or

0

BEST BUY HOSIERY, INC.
5225 Wilshire Blvd. No. S20
Los Angeles, Calif. 90036

'Wheel Alignment
'5.55
On MO.&amp;tAmericari Cars

-GUARANT(: E [).,Phone 992-2094 .

PQil1eroy)iome &amp; Auto
Open8nl5
MondaY thru Saturday
606 E...Main,
0.
. - .Pomeroy,
-· .
;.

'

POMEROY
. HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

•

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

------

HEATING &amp;
COOLING .

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

VENUS

OP!iilll UP, FUt:'t'SY!
!!M HERE 'T'
PLASTEii! THAT
HOt..E IN VEl'!

...... ..._,,.
. ...............
..

., , u~

WINNIE WINKLE

CEIUIIIG!

~

------

Mobile Homes

Real Estate For

Sale

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

weal Bowling

Help Wanted

'!OJ

L.li&lt;E 1\11::
CAn\E*!~S WJISE'? - - 1

~·

I AM SHOCI&lt;ED et:YOI'ID WORDS TO

TH INK THAT I HAV•. Gl~ftt T11f BEST
YEAR$ Of M'f LIFE TO THIS SC HOOL

'"WHICH IS NO MORE THAN A
(S~UDDER) TRAINING ~RQUHD

'SCU6E Mf, CHifF ... O'\N I TAKE
f\ LOO~ AT T11AT OUTFIT FOR.
A MINUTE?

FOR. THIEVES!,

~
ACROSS
1. Hit hard
6. Yawp
.10. Regard
highly
IZ. Graven

Wanted

Real Estate For Sale

LEGAL NOTICE

For Sale .
Aluminum
Sheets

an e

Real Estate For Sale

Rent

------

The
Daily Sentinel
Court

VALUABLE
LAND
FOR SALE

------

We talk

to you

like a·person.

WMP0/1390
UN

DIAL

image

13. James
\ Bond

DICK TRACY

•

.,

Easter

"VOICE PRINTS?''

11. Gourmet's

"VES,VOICE PRINTS I

' TloUNJ&lt; IT OVER,

Love/'

Bond

Movie

(2 wds.)
23. Nimbi
2t. - Magnon
26. Pride's
members

27. Snooped
29.-Arbor,
Mich.
30.Domingo
31. James
Bond
. movie
35. Mozam·
bique
native
36. 11Twi&lt;!e/'
Bond

.

loyii i NHOf\I&lt;NIIII&gt;

extension ·.
favorite
reading
14. Hospit&amp;l
workers
(abbr.)
16. FDR's
dog
17. Regret.
ling
18. Univer·
sity of
Maine site
19. "- of La
· Mancha"

20. Matter
(law)

!'I&lt;O ! I i l l

11Menmblelh... bar Jumbln,
letter to eeeh oquero, to
form rour ordinary word1.
DM

(sl.)

15. Opposite
of SSW
16. "-,With

King Features Syndinle, Ine.)

.
c1JWJMJB~® tJ,J ... ll•t&lt;e• .-J ,_. .

6. Scoffs
7. Ohio
college
town
8. Ward
heeler
9. Building

OUMMV."

("!1 1~79

5. Moslem

movie

Yesterday's Answer ~··
21. Cupcake's 38. English
embellish· • river
39. Hunting
ment
22. Mountain
cry
crest
40. Ti "1e deS·
25. Fragrance
ignation
(abbr.)
27. Greek
41. "Let's
letter
28. Stood for
Call Day"
election
32. French
12 wds.)
city
42. Tennes·
33. Actor
seean's
Duryea
nickname
34, Wrapup
43. Suffix for
36. Still
brew or
37. Paddle
· cook

•

"THE:SE PEOPLE OFTE~
CHANe!':

I

COLO~.

'••J

(AMwen t

Jumlol.,, fEVII MILKY INOUII. IIACON

Yet~~tnlty'•

movie

A.wrra JF1hen.

_

(3 wds.)
44. Merit
45. ~·- Nat''
Bond
movie

4

,
penon 1 IAU, yoa

•

. ..

1110..W... I ...-•

Iii.

to be •veptarian-lllfY

6REAT!HAVE '(OV EVER HEARr
JOE 5HLA60TNIK? HE kiM
LAST-ROUND DRAFTCHOICE IN
'THE GREEN 6RA5G LEA6UE .. ,

46..._
bien"

47. The
"boot"
country
DOWN
I. Coddle
2.Rowan
· tree
3. Man's

nickname

4. Sawbuck

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Ia

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

l-IE 'S GOIN6 TO ~E OUR
GUEST 5PEAK'EI&lt; ·

One letter .simply stands fo~ another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and .formation of the words are all
hmts. Each day the code letters are different.

.

CKYPTOQU'OTES

V1{ VI xcow URIVUF KG su OFVKYORZ L~===~~~=~::l
KWRP KG SU OGFFUOK .- SUPLRXVP .
YViFRUZV

'

Yesterday's C..,.ptoquote: HlJft'ilL!TY IS LIKE UND~R·
WEAR ... ESSENTML, BUT INDECENT IF IT SHOWS.N!ELSEN

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Auto Sales

~ELAN~

LOOKING LIKE THE PROFESSO!i he once was,
Sen . Mike Mansfleld 1 0 -Mont., Is back al his stand as
Sella 1e majotll.v leaaer In the new C6ngtess.

Girrrr.i'

WARMED

CHECKtRS?

· ~'

"I&lt;E"ADY .MIX
CONCRETE
AUCTION
Giving yoUr phone number.
• 2·2·61c SATURDAY,
delivered right to your
Feb. 17 al11 a.m.
projecl. Fast and easy. Free
v, mile North of St. Road 681 BALES hay. Phone Pearl
Phone 992·3284.
estimates.
BACKHOE
AND
DOZER
work.
af Alfred. Oll lo.
Jacobs, 992·3469.
Goeglein
Ready.Mix
Co .•
Septic
tanks
Installed.
George
Complete dispersal of farm
2·5·31p
Middleporl,
Ohio.
(Bill)
Pull
ins
.
Phone
992·
2~78.
macflinery, dairy equipment,
6-JO.tfc
4·2S·IfC
feed and miscellaneous.
"COAL, Limestone, Excelsio'r
See paper of Sunday, Feb. 11.
Salt Works, E. Main St. ,' ELNA 'and White Sewing SEPTIC TANKS CL&amp;ANED
for list.
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891. · Machines ... service on all REASONABLE rates . Ph. 446·
Shirly Russel Findling, Owner
4·12·tfC
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell ,
makes. Reasonabre rates.
I. 0 . "Mac" McCoy. auctioneer.
Owner
&amp; Operator.
The
Sewing
Center,
Mid
·
, · 2-4-3tc
5·12·1fC
dleport, Ohio.
ll·16·tfC
Furnace Cbntrols 7 MONTH old trailer 14 x 70,
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
unfurnished, fully carpeted.
-DozER.Cino U.d(K ;-;;;..: wurK,
Complete Service
Phone 992·7649 after 5 p.m.
HUMIDIFIERS
Phone 949·3821
ponds
and
septic
tanks,
dil
·
2·4·12tc
Racine, Ohio
chlng
service;
top
soli,
fill
AND
JEANS
Hot Water Heaters
-----Crltt Bradford
dirt,
limeslone
;
B&amp;K
Ex·
WINTER prices on all Starcratt
Plumbing
Our Special:
cavating . Phone '992·5367, ,
S.1·tfc
Trailers and lold down
Buy 2 Pairs, 1
Electrical Work
Dick
Karr.
Jr.
~-------Camp Conley
campers.
PAIR FREE. The
9·1·tfC ~E E US FOR : Awning&amp;, storm
Slarcraft Sales. Rt. 62 N. of
best buy in the
doors and windows. carports.
t1rea.
Have
slacks
Point Pleasant. W. Va ..
W
- 1L-L~D-0re_m_o_
d-el""ln-g-."'ln"'t-erlor
marquees, aluminum siding
&amp; leans for the
behind Red Carpel Inn . Phone
and exterior painting, con and ra iling. A. Jacob, sales
whole family .
. 304-675·5384.
crete work by hour or con representative . For free
2·4·51c
tract; phone 992·3511.
estimates. phone Charles
2-6·12tc
Lisle , Syracuse, V. V .
992-2448
POMEROY
1965 GMC tractor with 1966
John&amp;on and Son, Inc.
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Pomeroy, O.
Trail mobile trailer i with or
J.2.tfc
G &amp; E Arpllance Repair, repair
Phone 992.2181
without trailer, with wetllne;
on al laundry equipment,
GIVE your feel a treat ; try a excellent condition. Call after
refrigeration !!qulpment and
Siile
pair of Knapp Shoes ; call Bob 5:30p. m. 992-5914.
house wiring; welding,
For
Hysell, 992·5324.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ _2_·1_
·61c
electric and gas. Call 992·3802 MASON, West VIrg inia buslne&amp;s
1·23·1fc
1968 WINDSOR , 12x60, 2 or after 4:30 p.m . call 992·
building or auto repair ,
MODERN walnut style stereo·
bedroom, with or wfthout
6050 .
garage, Two apartments ·
radio. · AM· FM radio. 4 furniture. Phone 992·3511.
above 38 x 70 feet; lot ..0 x 19.'
2·5-30tp
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp;WIGS. speaker
sound system, 4
2·1·61c
feet . Call 773·5611 day time
SPECIALS MONTHLY. speed automatic
changer .
992 ·6159
evenings an&lt; •
WILL trim or cut trees, clean
PHONE HELEN JANE
Balance
$68
.33.
Use our CASH paid for all makes and ' out basements, attics, etc.
weekends.
BROWN , MIDDLEPORT,
budget terms. Call m·7085.
2--1·61&lt;
model&amp; of mobile .homes .
Phone 949·3221.
OHIO 992·5113. ·
2·1·61c
If
Phone
area
code
614·423·9531.
2-4·30tc
12·3· c - - - - - - - - - 4·13·tfC
---~-SEWING MACHINES. Repair
American stereo-radio,
HOOD 'S AQUARIUMS; fish EARLY
1971 Ll BERTY trailer, . 3 service, all makes. 992-2284.
AM·
FM
radio,
4
speed
and supplies; new location.
bedrooms, w, baths, all new
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
changer, 4 'speaker
Ash Streel, Middleport near automatic
furniture , just fully carpeted
sound
sy&amp;tem.
Balance
$79.56.
Aulhorlzed Singer Sales and
park; phone m ·5443.
two weeks ago; lived in four
Use
our
budget
terms.
Call
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
J.7.tfc 9'12-70115.
•
I
months; ssoo down and take
3·29·tfc
over payments ; phone 992- .- - - - - . ,
2·1·6fc
_
""'
· POMEROY LANES
2715.
Wednesday Early Bird
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
1·31 ·61c
January 24, 1973
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·
16 ) TWIN Needle Sewing
110 Mechanic Street
Won Lo&amp;t TIRED of see in~ the same faces
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
Machines 1972 model in
Evelyn's Grocery
32
8 and rooms every day? We
SANITATION, STEWART,
walnut stand . All features
.Pomeroy, Ohio
King Builders Supply 24 16 need an attractive, Intelligent
OH 10. PHONE 662·3035.
built-in to make fancy designs
-,'Air Conditioners
Dorothy'&amp; Pinnettes
24 16 young woman to call·on Meigs
10·4·tfC.
and do stretch sewing. Al so
MIDDLEPORT
• Awnings
R. H. Rawl ings
18 22 area
bultonholes, bl ind hems, etc.
businesses
and
4
BEDROOMS
- Nice bath,
Bertha's Grocery
16 24 professional
BACKHOE
Services,
oackhoe
$43 .35 cash price or terms
·· Underpinning
people to sell the
and
Royal Crown
6 34 finest off ice
Dozer
work.
Septic
tank&amp;
stoker
furnace
,
large
available
.
Electro
Hygiene
· equipment
I
High Ind. Game - Mary available . Salary
Co. Phone 992·7755.
, 'Complete mqbile hqme,.' Installed . George IBIIIl' basement. back porch llld
plus
Voss 183, Jan Jenkins 170.
Pull ins. phone 992·2478.
J.JJ .6tc •service ....... plus gigantic
fenced lot. Now only $7500.00.
commission. Expenses paid .
High Series - Mary Voss
2·2·tfC
NEW HOME
No nightwork. This is a new
'ell splay . of mobile homes
500, Jean Warner 445.
field for women and we must (5) VACUUM Cleaners. Eleclro 'ijlways avallabiP·at ...
NEAR
ROUTE 7 - 3
._ OIL AND GAS Service. new and
Team High Game and Series
Hygiene New Demonsirators
have the right person. Send
bedroom&amp;,
bath, neat kltcllen
- Dorothy's Plnnettes 801,
used furnaces, new aluminum
has all cleaning attachments
pi_cture and resume to Mrs .
·
MILLER
with
~love,
utility r..,m,
2252.
siding and remodeling, 24
plus the new Electro Sud&amp; for
' . -· .. .
McGee, Ba&gt; 727, Marietta. 0.
Over
an
acre
of land. Only
hour
service
;
phone
843-2833.
shampooing carpet. Only
·
H ·61c
MOBILE HOMES
516.000.00.
1·2S.3Qtp
S27.50 cash pr ice or terms
Wednesday Earl~ Bird
4 BEDROOMS
1220 Wa&amp;hington Blvd.
ava ilable. Electro Hygiene
BAR Maid, apply In person: Hi ·
January ll, 1973
AUTOMOBILE
Insurance
been
423·7521
BELPRE,
0
.
Co.
Phone
992·7755.
POMEROY
- 1'12 baths,
Ho Bar, Middleport; equal
Won Lost
cancelled?
Lost
your
modern
kitchen,
large
living,
opportunity employer .
J.JJ .6fc · L ---------'-!
Evelyn 's Grocery
40
8
operator's llcen&amp;e? Call 9'12·
.
2-6·3tc
gas
furnace,
and
full
Dorothy's Plnnettes
29 19
2966.
'71 HONDA 350 motorcycle, red
basement.
Asking
$12,500.00.
. King Builders' Supply 28 20 WANTED housewiveJ to test
and black with chrome trim ;
6·1S.ttc
NAUSHA MOBILE HOME
Bertha's Grocery
20 28
only
1,000
miles;
like
new,
1967
VOLKSWAGEN.
excellent
--new producls; send reply to
2
BEDROOMS ~ Bath, large
R. H. Rawlings
18 30
$600; phone 742·3334.
condition. 675.1745 after 6
P.O. Box 729·H. C·OThe Daily
Royal Crown
9 39
compact
living. Oug well on
J.JJ
-6tc
p.m.
Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio.
High lno. Game - Wanda
about
an
acre.
On hard rood .
2-6·3tC
2·5·3fc CAB DRIVER for Twin Clly
Gordon 187, Louise Gilmore
Want $3,000.00. ·
SIJJIGER
automatic
sewing
--::--::-:-:::--:----Cabs
to
take
local
and
Penn
185. .
. BUILDING LOT
machine ; like new in walnut 1968 CHRYSLER Newport. 4 Central runs . Call 992·3280.
High Series - Marha Nash. GIRL wanied for local offi ce
door sedan, power steering
2·4·6tc
cablnel
.
Makes
design
slit.
POMEROY
- On Route 33
work.
Knowledge
of
471, Jan Jenkin&amp; 459.
and .brakes, air -conditioning, - - - - - - -- ches, zig-zags, buttonholes,
and
7.
All
utilities. Just
bookkeeping
and
office
Team High Game and Series
very good condillon; good
blind hems, overcasts, etc.,
$1500.00.
machine&amp;
helpful.
Reply
.
to
- Evelyn's Grocery 820,2300.
tires; phone 9'12·5510.
$85. Call Ravenswood, 273·
Box 729· N, ·C·O The Dally
BUSINESS- LOCATION
2·4·61C
9521
or
273-9893.
Sentinel, Pomeroy. Ohio.
4
ROOMS
- One with a hoi&amp;!
1·11 ·tfc
HOUSE in Long Bottom. phone
1·26·12tp
for overhauling of motors, or
985·3529.
'I• TON pickup truck.• ' 57
can be used as a paint s~op.
Chevrolel ; contact Elden
6.fl .tfc
COUPLE. to live In; aparlment
992-2805.
Also a 3 bedroom modern
Walburn,
furnished ; apply .in per&amp;on;
c
4
BEDROM
honie,
2'b
allis,
gaii
1·26-lt
hory~e.
with large wood
Meigs Inn; ask for John
NOTICE ON FILING
-furnace,
full
basement,
river
burning
fireplace . Only
OF INVENTORY
Musser.
36"x23''x.009
1937
GMC
truck.
2,000
actual
fronlage,
Syracuse,
Ohio,
125,000.00.
AND APPRAlSII&lt;MENT
2·1·6fc
miles on engine; needs batPhone 992·2360.
The State of Ohio , Meigs - - - - - -- - - 3 ACRES
Cou'lty. Probate Court
tery and muffler ; asking $65 ; - - - : - . , . - - - - - 1·_l5_1·fc
IN
THE
COUNTRY
-Smell
To lhe Executrix ol the W I d T 8
949 2755
est8IO; to such Of lhe following
0 UJ
phone
.
'
2·4·3tc HOUSE FOR SALE. 114 Brick barn , J bedrooms wltfl
as are residents ol the State of
_ _ _ _.:..______
Street, Pomeroy, Olllo; brick closet&amp; and 2 baths. Cellar
Otllo, viz : - the surviving OLD furnllure , oak lables,
house. 3 bedrooms. excellent and drilled well. 3 POrches.
spouse. the next of kin, the
organs.
dishes,
clocks,
brass
USED
OFFSET
PLATES
close to school and Only $10,500.00.
location.
beneficiaries under ttle will;
beds or complete households.
HAVE
and to the attorney or attorneys
clly;
contact
Lou Osborm! or •
8 ACRES
Wrlle M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
MANY USES
representing any of the
call 992·5898.
ON
HARD
ROAD - Good for
Pomeroy , Ohio. Phone 992aforementioned persons :
11
·26.tfc
·
small
farm
, housing·, or
6271 .
Frederick William Ohlinger ,
20~
mobile homes. Asking
Deceased , M iddleport. Oh io,
1·7·tfC
2 LU 1s In Racine. Phone 949·. $4500.00.
Sa lisbury Township, No. 20828.
REALTY
1
8 for $1.00
2204.
You are hereby notified that
401 E. Moln
-'
tho lnventorv •nd Ap - For
2·1·6fc TODAY ANYTHINll
"'- .Pomeroy ..JIIIII'
pralsement of the estate of the
~.
aforementioned , deceased , late
WORTH HAVING COSTS
TWO LEVEL lots In Mid· MONEY. LAND SHOULD
of said County , was flied In th is UNFURNISHED 3· room
dleport ; phO&lt;le m ·2082. .
apartment. adults only. No
Court. Said Inven to ry and
JJACRES
BE YOUR BEST , IN.
Appra i sement will be for
pets, 408 Spring Ave ..
NEAR RUTLAND - 12 - - - - : - - - ' - ---2-5·31p VESTMENT. BUY IT
hearino betore ttlls Court on the
Pomer~y . ·
acres fenced, 12 acres
8ffielay Of February , 1973, at
TODAY.
1·7·tfc
10:00 o'c lock A.M .
tillable . 3 bedrooms, new · HOUSE a~d lots oo' Wrlghl
HELEN L. TEAFORD.
St
Pomeroy
Street. Pomeroy ; phone 742·
Any person desiring to tile
bath, new kitchen, new
ASSOCIATE
5930.
exceptions thereto must file 3 AND 4 ROOM furnlshedliiid L--------~...J
furnace,
paneling,
enclosed
theni at least five days prior to
NO
SUNDAY
SHOWINGS
unfurnl&amp;hed apartment&amp; . TWO and one.half acreage In
1·24·12tc
the date sth for hearing .
Ph0&lt;1e 992·5434.
Flatwoods area. Call 742·3171. breezeway, cellar. Lob of
992.3325
Given under - my hand and
4·12·1fc
·
.2·Htc water. $14,500.
seal of said Court, this 27th day
COLONIAL
of January 1973.
POMEROY - 2 &amp;tory frame.
_ Manning 0 . Webster SLEEPING room, furnace 1970 TRAVELER 11 ft . truck
heaf.
air
condllloned . camper ; self -contained unit. Beautiful kitchen. Dining R.. ;
Judge and ex -officio Clerk
FA~ ·
of said Court
Available now. Phone 992· Will sell or trade for farm utility R.• 4 bedrooms, 3
5440.
C~OSE
1
N.
baths,
basement.
equipment; Also 3 rail cycle
By Ann B. Watson
. .
2·4·3fc tra iler, S75; for Information $17,500.
Deputy Clerk
{1 ) 30 121 6, 21
call 1·614·992-7261).
RACINE
2 BEDROOM trailer, clo&amp;e to
1·25· 12tp BEAUTIFUL LOCATION mine-slle on Rt. 325, by week
WASHINGTON COUNfY
.as acre . 9 rooms. s
or month. Phone 742·5980.
to divorce, 1972 8 track bedrooms. 1'h baths. All new
840
Acres
In
17 parcels along State Route 7 a~d
2+6tc DUE
stereo console; must sell at kitchen. Hardwood floors ,
-~---Ohio River between Marietta and Newport.
once ; nice walnut finish. This basement, garage. Other
BY WEEK. large · private
set
sold
much
higher,
must
let
sleeping room; connecting
go for $89.61) or $7 .47 a month . bolldlngs.
bath and private entrance In
MONROE COUNTY
.
··
Try It In your ·home. Call 992·
12x61l trailer; use of large
MANY OTHER HOMES TO
.
5331.
340. Acres lri 7 parcels along State Route 7 and
patio and rl ver front .yard; $20
1·16·tic CHO~E FROM - CALL
Oh1o River north of ~rdls, Ohio. .
'
a week; phone 992·7105 be'
TODAY, .
tween 4:30 and 7 p.m. except --~--JUST taken in, deluxe zlg.zag
HENRY E. CLELAND
Wednesday.
sewing
machine.
This
BROKER
Call or Write:
2·4-ltc
machine
darns.
em
·
3
ASSOCIATES
-~---.
E.
H. DoUQhty
brolderle.&amp;. overcasts, bu.t .
'liO HELP YOU
TRAILER. Brown's Trailer
Hanna Coal Company
Park, Mln~rsvllle , Ohio, m . tortholes. Pay balance $36.50
992. 2259
YOUR
or payments can be arranged.
If 110 •ns"·er
l32~ .
.
Cadiz, O~lo 43907
Call 992·5331.
.
• "
2·4·ffc
Tillphont (614) 942·4641
·
1·16·1fc ..,._9..;'·-2·-2s_••_o_r_;,_s...
·•..
209--...J

"HEll"

COME ON IN, LUKEV -PAW'SJEST GITTIN'
WARMED

~~~===;=:=:;-r==.:~=l·
·
EXPERT

Pomeroy ; also unfurnished

2·6-ltc

News, Notes
Carpenter

QUALITY

Pomeror.

The

E!pergency Squad. Rev. Cectl

Business Services

ONE Unfurnished duple&gt;, 6
rooms ·· and bath, foH

Cox, Bigony Funeral Home,

.publisher wi ll not be responsible,
ior more than oM incorrect

insertion .•

preciatlon to the staff .of the

For Rent

Po111eroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF

~

,.

' '

BARNEY

•

�,

s;;tr;;;;Q~;;ifieds Get Action!' Sentinel ClassifiedS Get Results!
WANT AOS. -

INFORMATION

j)EADLINES .

.s P.M . Dav

'

Card of Thanks

·

Before P!,Jbllca1ion . WE WOULD like to expresS' our
Mohday · Deadline 9 a.m .
'
sin ce re thanks and ap -

.

Cancellation - Corrections

Will be acc'epted until9a .m . tor!
Day of.PubllcatiQn
REGULATIONS
Th"e .. Pubt ishe·r reserves the

rig ht to edit or re ject any ads
deemed obiettional. The

'RATES
.. For Wal'lt Ad sendee

5 cen ts per word one insertion

Min imum Charge 7Sc
· 12 cents" per word thr~e
ccmse..:utive insertions .
18 cents per "'ord six con
secutive · Insertions.
25 ~er Ce nt Olscou.nt on pal&lt;i
adsandadspa idwithin 10days.

·

CARD OF . T~ANKS '
&amp; OBITUARY

$1. 50 for SO word m i n lm ~m .
Ea ch additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.

OFFICE HOURS

a. m. 10 5:00p .m. Dally,
· a: JG a. m. to 12 :00 Noon
Saturda v.
B: JO

Veterans Memorial Hospital
and especially· to Or . Boon sue ,

Albany Elementary and Soph .
Cla ss (School),
Rac i ne ,

Southern

Hi~h

Sc hool
rene h Cl ub ;
V.F.W. of Albany ; and all the
neighbo r s,
friends
ant
relatives for their sincere
expression of sym pathy
during the illness and death of
son and father, Eddie Lou
M
Howery . other. Mrs. lara
Tea chers and

c

Howery. children, Holly,

Helena, Clara,
Willadean .

Shir h~.y

:-·

and

News, Event
Mr. and Mrs. Emzie Davis of
Parkersburg spent a day with
her brothers, Paul and W. C.
Peck.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frazier,
Gallipolis, visited her mother,
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly and called
on other relatives in the area.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were in Columbus on Friday
and Saturday on business.
They also vis! ted his sister,
Mrs. Jessie Jewell, before
returning home.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stanley
and Anna, Erie, Penn., spent a
few days with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smilh ,
local , and Mr. and · Mrs .
Eugene Stanley, Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan ,
Gallipolis, were guests of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs . Mendal
Jordan, and other relatives
here and in Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Mattox
are announoing the birth of a
daughter, Tina Louise, o·n
January 27, at O' Bleness
Memorial Hospi tal, Athens .
The grandparents are Mrs.
Emma
Smith,
Orange,
California,and Mr. and Mrs. C.
Tenardi, Western Australia.
The little one has a sister,
Susan Marie.
Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Jordan ,
Danny, Betty and Jerrie Sue,
local, and Mr. and Mrs. David
Llewelyn, New Marshfield,
were guests of Mrs. Jordan's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Reed
Jeffers and her grandmother,
Mr,s. Beulah Cordray on
Sunday.
Overnight visitors at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. William
Thomas were their son-in-law,
. Charles Leist, Clarksburg ,
Maryland, and his nephew,
Charles
Handley,
of
Washington , D. C.
Mr . and Mrs. Glen
Gassaway, Powell, Ohio, spent
a few days here with their sonin-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. William Miller, Connie,
Debbie and Lori.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rice,
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Dwaihe Jordan , Bryan, Keith
and Sarah Faye, were guests of
their parenls, Mr . and Mrs.
William Culwell.
Mr . and Mrs . Arthur
Crabtree and Mrs. Goldie
Gillogly were guests on Sunday
afternoon al the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Frazier in
Gallipolis.

basement, forced air fleat, in

upstairs apartment, 6 rooms
and bath, pOWder room', In
Pomeroy . Phone 992·9915 ·or

1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA

992·~93.

11895

Station wagon, local 1 owner, new car trade-In, vinyl in te'rior , whtfe fini sh,
engine, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, radio &amp; many other extras .

v.s

1968 CHEVY BEL AIR

11095

1969 CHEVROLET2:TON TRUCK

Reedsville
The . Community Builders•
Club met with the Dohrman
Reeds for the January
meeting. During the .business
session dues were paid and the
group voted to pay for shoes for
a - needy child. Committee
reports were given. Refreshments were served to the
following families: Don Myers,
Waller Browns,
Ernest
Whiteheads, Denver Webers,
Warren
Pickens,
Juli
Whitehead, David Brown, Kay
Balderson, Kim and Kirk
Reed. The next meeting will be
at the Weber home.
Mrs. Opal Randolph recently
visited her brother, Warren
Baker in a Columbus hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Rose
and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ruth
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Rome Sandy and Mrs. Alice
Foutty at Parkersburg, w. va .
Mr. Manning Hayman of
Peru, Indiana, spent a few
days with his parents,l\ir. and
Mrs. J. D. Hayman.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Prince
of Long Bottom and Mrs.
Grace Swan of Parkersburg,
visited with Mr. and Mrs. J. D.
Haym~n .
,
Recent visitors of Mrs. Bess
Larkins were Mrs . Jim
Carruthers and Penny of
Louisville, Cheryl Chordas of
canton and Mrs. Carolyn Ruth
and family of Parkersburg, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Rose
were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Dana ,Van Meter and
family of Belpre Sunday.
Ricky Putman, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Putman
celebrated his birthday
January 23. Cake and ice
cream were served to his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Barr of Porterfield and
brothers, Donnie and Keith, his
parents and the honored guest.
- Mrs. L. Balderson

Market Report
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Cattle: Good steers 41.8542.90; standard, 38.50-'10.50.
Heifers : Good heifers, 39.~
40.60; standard heifers, 36-39.
Cows: Commercial, 33.:;().
36.35 ; utility, 27 .50-31.75;
canners and cutters, 21-24.50.
Bulls : Commercial. 32.7:i-3fi. ·
Stock Cattle : Stock calves
steers: 36.35-38; stock calve
heifers, 32.50-'18.50; yearlings,
heifers 31.75-49.50.
Veal Calves: Choice 6().jl1.50;
good, 55.7S-S8.7o.
Lambs : Choice, 35.20; good,
32.10.
Hogs: 200-300, 34; No. 1,
34.2&gt;; 230-240, 33.75; sows ,
27.511-28.60; boars, 25.

KITCHEN]&amp;:SON
OONSTRUCTION

2·1·6tp

FURNISHED and unfurnished
aparlments. Phone 992·3901.
2· J.6tc

Station wagon, v.s e_
ngine, standard transmission, radio,
good tires, vinyl interior, green finish, radio.

HOME BUILDING
&amp;

miles

102" cab to axle, 292 cu. in. engine, 15,000 lbs. 2-speed Jear .

North · of

phone 992·747'/.

· a&gt;le. ·~5&gt;20 JO.ply tires , full depth foam seat, heavy duly
springs. solid cab. Ready to go to work.

Pomeroy ;

BOB SLOAN
&amp;
C. L. KITCHEN
992-5653

2·2·tfC

FURNISHED 4 rooms and
bath ; on highway edge of
Mason ; phone 77J.5147.
1·30-lOtp

Pomeroy Motor Co~
OPEN EVES. 8:00 P.M. .
f'j)MEROY, 'OHIO

HarrisonviUe
Society News

1
1

•

beautiful ... super sheer

GUARANTEED
NoT TO RUN

Pets for Sale

l1

I "c.uh

n1ul U"1 too, •hen
rou phce an aetion Want I
I Ad,
You can ult furnitura 1
Jappl iancet, cl.oth ... , ,d0 ..

l\1l's: Dorothy Sheets is a
patient at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mrs. Hallie Knopp spent a·
week with her sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Bud Morris recently.
Mrs. Joe Carsey was in
Columbus over the weekend to
visit her granddaughter who Is
a patient in Children's
Hospital.
Arthur Goodin is a patient in
O'Bieness Hospital at Athens.
Mrs. Lydia Powell is visiting
her daughter, Mary and family
in West Virginia.
Mrs. Goldie Jones of
Zanesville visited Mrs. Minnie
Foil and friends here recently.
Mr.- and Mrs. Larry Clark
and children of Chester were
supper guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Clark Saturday and
visited Mr · and Mrs. Roy
Wiseman.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Welch of
Commercial Point, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Butler of Marion, .
Everett Welch . of Circleville
and Grey and Cecil Brickles of
Canal Winchester were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs . Dana
Welch.
Mrs. Roger Alkire and son
visited Mr. and Mrs. Felix
Alkire and Mrs. Mary Diehl
recently.

1

1un• of other unuud but I
1uuful I t.•••!
I
'-------------- I

Notice

I WILL do bookkeeping and
clerical work in my home ;

phone 742-6085.

puppies, AKC
registered ; phone 742-6834,
Rutland. 0.
· From the largest
' 1-28-tfc Bulldozer Radiator fo ·the
PARKVIEW Kennel&amp; go.lng out SmalleSt Heater Core.
' Nathan Bigg&amp; •
·of business. Big price
Radia.tor
Specialist__
reduCtion on all dogs. All AKC. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash

Streets, Middleport, Ohio. .
12· 13 ·"c

·
For Sale

carpenters have 2G years
experience · in building
homes in Meigs Caurity.

AFFILIATE QISTRIBUTOR

L-------'-~---:::==::::=::::=:::::::':
· :=-'WEIMARANER

-----------•your phone ;ill . Jinrh

Have your home built by
Cu&amp;tom Builders. Our

ALL WEATHER
ROOFING AND
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE:. 992-2550

REMODELING

SMALL trailer. Ideal for
couples; $75 per . month; 10

12095

'

SMlTH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 991-2174
Pomeroy
For Sale

UP? ,

HOW IN THUNDER
OOES HEGIT
WARMED UP FER

. A GAMEOF

HE .DOES A
FEW ELBOW
BENDS,
LUKEY

PANTY. HOSE
No selling, accts. furnished.
Part-lull
tltne.
EX·

CEPTIONAL

INCOME .

Invest S2,496 or $4,999 tully
secured ltV merchandise .
For full information calf
~~i~eL ~ ~T: £21 3) 938-3823 or

0

BEST BUY HOSIERY, INC.
5225 Wilshire Blvd. No. S20
Los Angeles, Calif. 90036

'Wheel Alignment
'5.55
On MO.&amp;tAmericari Cars

-GUARANT(: E [).,Phone 992-2094 .

PQil1eroy)iome &amp; Auto
Open8nl5
MondaY thru Saturday
606 E...Main,
0.
. - .Pomeroy,
-· .
;.

'

POMEROY
. HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

•

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

------

HEATING &amp;
COOLING .

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

VENUS

OP!iilll UP, FUt:'t'SY!
!!M HERE 'T'
PLASTEii! THAT
HOt..E IN VEl'!

...... ..._,,.
. ...............
..

., , u~

WINNIE WINKLE

CEIUIIIG!

~

------

Mobile Homes

Real Estate For

Sale

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

weal Bowling

Help Wanted

'!OJ

L.li&lt;E 1\11::
CAn\E*!~S WJISE'? - - 1

~·

I AM SHOCI&lt;ED et:YOI'ID WORDS TO

TH INK THAT I HAV•. Gl~ftt T11f BEST
YEAR$ Of M'f LIFE TO THIS SC HOOL

'"WHICH IS NO MORE THAN A
(S~UDDER) TRAINING ~RQUHD

'SCU6E Mf, CHifF ... O'\N I TAKE
f\ LOO~ AT T11AT OUTFIT FOR.
A MINUTE?

FOR. THIEVES!,

~
ACROSS
1. Hit hard
6. Yawp
.10. Regard
highly
IZ. Graven

Wanted

Real Estate For Sale

LEGAL NOTICE

For Sale .
Aluminum
Sheets

an e

Real Estate For Sale

Rent

------

The
Daily Sentinel
Court

VALUABLE
LAND
FOR SALE

------

We talk

to you

like a·person.

WMP0/1390
UN

DIAL

image

13. James
\ Bond

DICK TRACY

•

.,

Easter

"VOICE PRINTS?''

11. Gourmet's

"VES,VOICE PRINTS I

' TloUNJ&lt; IT OVER,

Love/'

Bond

Movie

(2 wds.)
23. Nimbi
2t. - Magnon
26. Pride's
members

27. Snooped
29.-Arbor,
Mich.
30.Domingo
31. James
Bond
. movie
35. Mozam·
bique
native
36. 11Twi&lt;!e/'
Bond

.

loyii i NHOf\I&lt;NIIII&gt;

extension ·.
favorite
reading
14. Hospit&amp;l
workers
(abbr.)
16. FDR's
dog
17. Regret.
ling
18. Univer·
sity of
Maine site
19. "- of La
· Mancha"

20. Matter
(law)

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11Menmblelh... bar Jumbln,
letter to eeeh oquero, to
form rour ordinary word1.
DM

(sl.)

15. Opposite
of SSW
16. "-,With

King Features Syndinle, Ine.)

.
c1JWJMJB~® tJ,J ... ll•t&lt;e• .-J ,_. .

6. Scoffs
7. Ohio
college
town
8. Ward
heeler
9. Building

OUMMV."

("!1 1~79

5. Moslem

movie

Yesterday's Answer ~··
21. Cupcake's 38. English
embellish· • river
39. Hunting
ment
22. Mountain
cry
crest
40. Ti "1e deS·
25. Fragrance
ignation
(abbr.)
27. Greek
41. "Let's
letter
28. Stood for
Call Day"
election
32. French
12 wds.)
city
42. Tennes·
33. Actor
seean's
Duryea
nickname
34, Wrapup
43. Suffix for
36. Still
brew or
37. Paddle
· cook

•

"THE:SE PEOPLE OFTE~
CHANe!':

I

COLO~.

'••J

(AMwen t

Jumlol.,, fEVII MILKY INOUII. IIACON

Yet~~tnlty'•

movie

A.wrra JF1hen.

_

(3 wds.)
44. Merit
45. ~·- Nat''
Bond
movie

4

,
penon 1 IAU, yoa

•

. ..

1110..W... I ...-•

Iii.

to be •veptarian-lllfY

6REAT!HAVE '(OV EVER HEARr
JOE 5HLA60TNIK? HE kiM
LAST-ROUND DRAFTCHOICE IN
'THE GREEN 6RA5G LEA6UE .. ,

46..._
bien"

47. The
"boot"
country
DOWN
I. Coddle
2.Rowan
· tree
3. Man's

nickname

4. Sawbuck

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Ia

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

l-IE 'S GOIN6 TO ~E OUR
GUEST 5PEAK'EI&lt; ·

One letter .simply stands fo~ another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and .formation of the words are all
hmts. Each day the code letters are different.

.

CKYPTOQU'OTES

V1{ VI xcow URIVUF KG su OFVKYORZ L~===~~~=~::l
KWRP KG SU OGFFUOK .- SUPLRXVP .
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'

Yesterday's C..,.ptoquote: HlJft'ilL!TY IS LIKE UND~R·
WEAR ... ESSENTML, BUT INDECENT IF IT SHOWS.N!ELSEN

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Auto Sales

~ELAN~

LOOKING LIKE THE PROFESSO!i he once was,
Sen . Mike Mansfleld 1 0 -Mont., Is back al his stand as
Sella 1e majotll.v leaaer In the new C6ngtess.

Girrrr.i'

WARMED

CHECKtRS?

· ~'

"I&lt;E"ADY .MIX
CONCRETE
AUCTION
Giving yoUr phone number.
• 2·2·61c SATURDAY,
delivered right to your
Feb. 17 al11 a.m.
projecl. Fast and easy. Free
v, mile North of St. Road 681 BALES hay. Phone Pearl
Phone 992·3284.
estimates.
BACKHOE
AND
DOZER
work.
af Alfred. Oll lo.
Jacobs, 992·3469.
Goeglein
Ready.Mix
Co .•
Septic
tanks
Installed.
George
Complete dispersal of farm
2·5·31p
Middleporl,
Ohio.
(Bill)
Pull
ins
.
Phone
992·
2~78.
macflinery, dairy equipment,
6-JO.tfc
4·2S·IfC
feed and miscellaneous.
"COAL, Limestone, Excelsio'r
See paper of Sunday, Feb. 11.
Salt Works, E. Main St. ,' ELNA 'and White Sewing SEPTIC TANKS CL&amp;ANED
for list.
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891. · Machines ... service on all REASONABLE rates . Ph. 446·
Shirly Russel Findling, Owner
4·12·tfC
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell ,
makes. Reasonabre rates.
I. 0 . "Mac" McCoy. auctioneer.
Owner
&amp; Operator.
The
Sewing
Center,
Mid
·
, · 2-4-3tc
5·12·1fC
dleport, Ohio.
ll·16·tfC
Furnace Cbntrols 7 MONTH old trailer 14 x 70,
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
unfurnished, fully carpeted.
-DozER.Cino U.d(K ;-;;;..: wurK,
Complete Service
Phone 992·7649 after 5 p.m.
HUMIDIFIERS
Phone 949·3821
ponds
and
septic
tanks,
dil
·
2·4·12tc
Racine, Ohio
chlng
service;
top
soli,
fill
AND
JEANS
Hot Water Heaters
-----Crltt Bradford
dirt,
limeslone
;
B&amp;K
Ex·
WINTER prices on all Starcratt
Plumbing
Our Special:
cavating . Phone '992·5367, ,
S.1·tfc
Trailers and lold down
Buy 2 Pairs, 1
Electrical Work
Dick
Karr.
Jr.
~-------Camp Conley
campers.
PAIR FREE. The
9·1·tfC ~E E US FOR : Awning&amp;, storm
Slarcraft Sales. Rt. 62 N. of
best buy in the
doors and windows. carports.
t1rea.
Have
slacks
Point Pleasant. W. Va ..
W
- 1L-L~D-0re_m_o_
d-el""ln-g-."'ln"'t-erlor
marquees, aluminum siding
&amp; leans for the
behind Red Carpel Inn . Phone
and exterior painting, con and ra iling. A. Jacob, sales
whole family .
. 304-675·5384.
crete work by hour or con representative . For free
2·4·51c
tract; phone 992·3511.
estimates. phone Charles
2-6·12tc
Lisle , Syracuse, V. V .
992-2448
POMEROY
1965 GMC tractor with 1966
John&amp;on and Son, Inc.
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Pomeroy, O.
Trail mobile trailer i with or
J.2.tfc
G &amp; E Arpllance Repair, repair
Phone 992.2181
without trailer, with wetllne;
on al laundry equipment,
GIVE your feel a treat ; try a excellent condition. Call after
refrigeration !!qulpment and
Siile
pair of Knapp Shoes ; call Bob 5:30p. m. 992-5914.
house wiring; welding,
For
Hysell, 992·5324.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ _2_·1_
·61c
electric and gas. Call 992·3802 MASON, West VIrg inia buslne&amp;s
1·23·1fc
1968 WINDSOR , 12x60, 2 or after 4:30 p.m . call 992·
building or auto repair ,
MODERN walnut style stereo·
bedroom, with or wfthout
6050 .
garage, Two apartments ·
radio. · AM· FM radio. 4 furniture. Phone 992·3511.
above 38 x 70 feet; lot ..0 x 19.'
2·5-30tp
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp;WIGS. speaker
sound system, 4
2·1·61c
feet . Call 773·5611 day time
SPECIALS MONTHLY. speed automatic
changer .
992 ·6159
evenings an&lt; •
WILL trim or cut trees, clean
PHONE HELEN JANE
Balance
$68
.33.
Use our CASH paid for all makes and ' out basements, attics, etc.
weekends.
BROWN , MIDDLEPORT,
budget terms. Call m·7085.
2--1·61&lt;
model&amp; of mobile .homes .
Phone 949·3221.
OHIO 992·5113. ·
2·1·61c
If
Phone
area
code
614·423·9531.
2-4·30tc
12·3· c - - - - - - - - - 4·13·tfC
---~-SEWING MACHINES. Repair
American stereo-radio,
HOOD 'S AQUARIUMS; fish EARLY
1971 Ll BERTY trailer, . 3 service, all makes. 992-2284.
AM·
FM
radio,
4
speed
and supplies; new location.
bedrooms, w, baths, all new
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
changer, 4 'speaker
Ash Streel, Middleport near automatic
furniture , just fully carpeted
sound
sy&amp;tem.
Balance
$79.56.
Aulhorlzed Singer Sales and
park; phone m ·5443.
two weeks ago; lived in four
Use
our
budget
terms.
Call
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
J.7.tfc 9'12-70115.
•
I
months; ssoo down and take
3·29·tfc
over payments ; phone 992- .- - - - - . ,
2·1·6fc
_
""'
· POMEROY LANES
2715.
Wednesday Early Bird
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
1·31 ·61c
January 24, 1973
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·
16 ) TWIN Needle Sewing
110 Mechanic Street
Won Lo&amp;t TIRED of see in~ the same faces
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
Machines 1972 model in
Evelyn's Grocery
32
8 and rooms every day? We
SANITATION, STEWART,
walnut stand . All features
.Pomeroy, Ohio
King Builders Supply 24 16 need an attractive, Intelligent
OH 10. PHONE 662·3035.
built-in to make fancy designs
-,'Air Conditioners
Dorothy'&amp; Pinnettes
24 16 young woman to call·on Meigs
10·4·tfC.
and do stretch sewing. Al so
MIDDLEPORT
• Awnings
R. H. Rawl ings
18 22 area
bultonholes, bl ind hems, etc.
businesses
and
4
BEDROOMS
- Nice bath,
Bertha's Grocery
16 24 professional
BACKHOE
Services,
oackhoe
$43 .35 cash price or terms
·· Underpinning
people to sell the
and
Royal Crown
6 34 finest off ice
Dozer
work.
Septic
tank&amp;
stoker
furnace
,
large
available
.
Electro
Hygiene
· equipment
I
High Ind. Game - Mary available . Salary
Co. Phone 992·7755.
, 'Complete mqbile hqme,.' Installed . George IBIIIl' basement. back porch llld
plus
Voss 183, Jan Jenkins 170.
Pull ins. phone 992·2478.
J.JJ .6tc •service ....... plus gigantic
fenced lot. Now only $7500.00.
commission. Expenses paid .
High Series - Mary Voss
2·2·tfC
NEW HOME
No nightwork. This is a new
'ell splay . of mobile homes
500, Jean Warner 445.
field for women and we must (5) VACUUM Cleaners. Eleclro 'ijlways avallabiP·at ...
NEAR
ROUTE 7 - 3
._ OIL AND GAS Service. new and
Team High Game and Series
Hygiene New Demonsirators
have the right person. Send
bedroom&amp;,
bath, neat kltcllen
- Dorothy's Plnnettes 801,
used furnaces, new aluminum
has all cleaning attachments
pi_cture and resume to Mrs .
·
MILLER
with
~love,
utility r..,m,
2252.
siding and remodeling, 24
plus the new Electro Sud&amp; for
' . -· .. .
McGee, Ba&gt; 727, Marietta. 0.
Over
an
acre
of land. Only
hour
service
;
phone
843-2833.
shampooing carpet. Only
·
H ·61c
MOBILE HOMES
516.000.00.
1·2S.3Qtp
S27.50 cash pr ice or terms
Wednesday Earl~ Bird
4 BEDROOMS
1220 Wa&amp;hington Blvd.
ava ilable. Electro Hygiene
BAR Maid, apply In person: Hi ·
January ll, 1973
AUTOMOBILE
Insurance
been
423·7521
BELPRE,
0
.
Co.
Phone
992·7755.
POMEROY
- 1'12 baths,
Ho Bar, Middleport; equal
Won Lost
cancelled?
Lost
your
modern
kitchen,
large
living,
opportunity employer .
J.JJ .6fc · L ---------'-!
Evelyn 's Grocery
40
8
operator's llcen&amp;e? Call 9'12·
.
2-6·3tc
gas
furnace,
and
full
Dorothy's Plnnettes
29 19
2966.
'71 HONDA 350 motorcycle, red
basement.
Asking
$12,500.00.
. King Builders' Supply 28 20 WANTED housewiveJ to test
and black with chrome trim ;
6·1S.ttc
NAUSHA MOBILE HOME
Bertha's Grocery
20 28
only
1,000
miles;
like
new,
1967
VOLKSWAGEN.
excellent
--new producls; send reply to
2
BEDROOMS ~ Bath, large
R. H. Rawlings
18 30
$600; phone 742·3334.
condition. 675.1745 after 6
P.O. Box 729·H. C·OThe Daily
Royal Crown
9 39
compact
living. Oug well on
J.JJ
-6tc
p.m.
Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio.
High lno. Game - Wanda
about
an
acre.
On hard rood .
2-6·3tC
2·5·3fc CAB DRIVER for Twin Clly
Gordon 187, Louise Gilmore
Want $3,000.00. ·
SIJJIGER
automatic
sewing
--::--::-:-:::--:----Cabs
to
take
local
and
Penn
185. .
. BUILDING LOT
machine ; like new in walnut 1968 CHRYSLER Newport. 4 Central runs . Call 992·3280.
High Series - Marha Nash. GIRL wanied for local offi ce
door sedan, power steering
2·4·6tc
cablnel
.
Makes
design
slit.
POMEROY
- On Route 33
work.
Knowledge
of
471, Jan Jenkin&amp; 459.
and .brakes, air -conditioning, - - - - - - -- ches, zig-zags, buttonholes,
and
7.
All
utilities. Just
bookkeeping
and
office
Team High Game and Series
very good condillon; good
blind hems, overcasts, etc.,
$1500.00.
machine&amp;
helpful.
Reply
.
to
- Evelyn's Grocery 820,2300.
tires; phone 9'12·5510.
$85. Call Ravenswood, 273·
Box 729· N, ·C·O The Dally
BUSINESS- LOCATION
2·4·61C
9521
or
273-9893.
Sentinel, Pomeroy. Ohio.
4
ROOMS
- One with a hoi&amp;!
1·11 ·tfc
HOUSE in Long Bottom. phone
1·26·12tp
for overhauling of motors, or
985·3529.
'I• TON pickup truck.• ' 57
can be used as a paint s~op.
Chevrolel ; contact Elden
6.fl .tfc
COUPLE. to live In; aparlment
992-2805.
Also a 3 bedroom modern
Walburn,
furnished ; apply .in per&amp;on;
c
4
BEDROM
honie,
2'b
allis,
gaii
1·26-lt
hory~e.
with large wood
Meigs Inn; ask for John
NOTICE ON FILING
-furnace,
full
basement,
river
burning
fireplace . Only
OF INVENTORY
Musser.
36"x23''x.009
1937
GMC
truck.
2,000
actual
fronlage,
Syracuse,
Ohio,
125,000.00.
AND APPRAlSII&lt;MENT
2·1·6fc
miles on engine; needs batPhone 992·2360.
The State of Ohio , Meigs - - - - - -- - - 3 ACRES
Cou'lty. Probate Court
tery and muffler ; asking $65 ; - - - : - . , . - - - - - 1·_l5_1·fc
IN
THE
COUNTRY
-Smell
To lhe Executrix ol the W I d T 8
949 2755
est8IO; to such Of lhe following
0 UJ
phone
.
'
2·4·3tc HOUSE FOR SALE. 114 Brick barn , J bedrooms wltfl
as are residents ol the State of
_ _ _ _.:..______
Street, Pomeroy, Olllo; brick closet&amp; and 2 baths. Cellar
Otllo, viz : - the surviving OLD furnllure , oak lables,
house. 3 bedrooms. excellent and drilled well. 3 POrches.
spouse. the next of kin, the
organs.
dishes,
clocks,
brass
USED
OFFSET
PLATES
close to school and Only $10,500.00.
location.
beneficiaries under ttle will;
beds or complete households.
HAVE
and to the attorney or attorneys
clly;
contact
Lou Osborm! or •
8 ACRES
Wrlle M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
MANY USES
representing any of the
call 992·5898.
ON
HARD
ROAD - Good for
Pomeroy , Ohio. Phone 992aforementioned persons :
11
·26.tfc
·
small
farm
, housing·, or
6271 .
Frederick William Ohlinger ,
20~
mobile homes. Asking
Deceased , M iddleport. Oh io,
1·7·tfC
2 LU 1s In Racine. Phone 949·. $4500.00.
Sa lisbury Township, No. 20828.
REALTY
1
8 for $1.00
2204.
You are hereby notified that
401 E. Moln
-'
tho lnventorv •nd Ap - For
2·1·6fc TODAY ANYTHINll
"'- .Pomeroy ..JIIIII'
pralsement of the estate of the
~.
aforementioned , deceased , late
WORTH HAVING COSTS
TWO LEVEL lots In Mid· MONEY. LAND SHOULD
of said County , was flied In th is UNFURNISHED 3· room
dleport ; phO&lt;le m ·2082. .
apartment. adults only. No
Court. Said Inven to ry and
JJACRES
BE YOUR BEST , IN.
Appra i sement will be for
pets, 408 Spring Ave ..
NEAR RUTLAND - 12 - - - - : - - - ' - ---2-5·31p VESTMENT. BUY IT
hearino betore ttlls Court on the
Pomer~y . ·
acres fenced, 12 acres
8ffielay Of February , 1973, at
TODAY.
1·7·tfc
10:00 o'c lock A.M .
tillable . 3 bedrooms, new · HOUSE a~d lots oo' Wrlghl
HELEN L. TEAFORD.
St
Pomeroy
Street. Pomeroy ; phone 742·
Any person desiring to tile
bath, new kitchen, new
ASSOCIATE
5930.
exceptions thereto must file 3 AND 4 ROOM furnlshedliiid L--------~...J
furnace,
paneling,
enclosed
theni at least five days prior to
NO
SUNDAY
SHOWINGS
unfurnl&amp;hed apartment&amp; . TWO and one.half acreage In
1·24·12tc
the date sth for hearing .
Ph0&lt;1e 992·5434.
Flatwoods area. Call 742·3171. breezeway, cellar. Lob of
992.3325
Given under - my hand and
4·12·1fc
·
.2·Htc water. $14,500.
seal of said Court, this 27th day
COLONIAL
of January 1973.
POMEROY - 2 &amp;tory frame.
_ Manning 0 . Webster SLEEPING room, furnace 1970 TRAVELER 11 ft . truck
heaf.
air
condllloned . camper ; self -contained unit. Beautiful kitchen. Dining R.. ;
Judge and ex -officio Clerk
FA~ ·
of said Court
Available now. Phone 992· Will sell or trade for farm utility R.• 4 bedrooms, 3
5440.
C~OSE
1
N.
baths,
basement.
equipment; Also 3 rail cycle
By Ann B. Watson
. .
2·4·3fc tra iler, S75; for Information $17,500.
Deputy Clerk
{1 ) 30 121 6, 21
call 1·614·992-7261).
RACINE
2 BEDROOM trailer, clo&amp;e to
1·25· 12tp BEAUTIFUL LOCATION mine-slle on Rt. 325, by week
WASHINGTON COUNfY
.as acre . 9 rooms. s
or month. Phone 742·5980.
to divorce, 1972 8 track bedrooms. 1'h baths. All new
840
Acres
In
17 parcels along State Route 7 a~d
2+6tc DUE
stereo console; must sell at kitchen. Hardwood floors ,
-~---Ohio River between Marietta and Newport.
once ; nice walnut finish. This basement, garage. Other
BY WEEK. large · private
set
sold
much
higher,
must
let
sleeping room; connecting
go for $89.61) or $7 .47 a month . bolldlngs.
bath and private entrance In
MONROE COUNTY
.
··
Try It In your ·home. Call 992·
12x61l trailer; use of large
MANY OTHER HOMES TO
.
5331.
340. Acres lri 7 parcels along State Route 7 and
patio and rl ver front .yard; $20
1·16·tic CHO~E FROM - CALL
Oh1o River north of ~rdls, Ohio. .
'
a week; phone 992·7105 be'
TODAY, .
tween 4:30 and 7 p.m. except --~--JUST taken in, deluxe zlg.zag
HENRY E. CLELAND
Wednesday.
sewing
machine.
This
BROKER
Call or Write:
2·4-ltc
machine
darns.
em
·
3
ASSOCIATES
-~---.
E.
H. DoUQhty
brolderle.&amp;. overcasts, bu.t .
'liO HELP YOU
TRAILER. Brown's Trailer
Hanna Coal Company
Park, Mln~rsvllle , Ohio, m . tortholes. Pay balance $36.50
992. 2259
YOUR
or payments can be arranged.
If 110 •ns"·er
l32~ .
.
Cadiz, O~lo 43907
Call 992·5331.
.
• "
2·4·ffc
Tillphont (614) 942·4641
·
1·16·1fc ..,._9..;'·-2·-2s_••_o_r_;,_s...
·•..
209--...J

"HEll"

COME ON IN, LUKEV -PAW'SJEST GITTIN'
WARMED

~~~===;=:=:;-r==.:~=l·
·
EXPERT

Pomeroy ; also unfurnished

2·6-ltc

News, Notes
Carpenter

QUALITY

Pomeror.

The

E!pergency Squad. Rev. Cectl

Business Services

ONE Unfurnished duple&gt;, 6
rooms ·· and bath, foH

Cox, Bigony Funeral Home,

.publisher wi ll not be responsible,
ior more than oM incorrect

insertion .•

preciatlon to the staff .of the

For Rent

Po111eroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF

~

,.

' '

BARNEY

•

�•.

.

10- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Feb. 6,1973

Prominent banker -dies
PT. PLEASANT - Ches~r
A. Roush, 75, . of 2515 Mount
Vernon Avenue, a prominent
banker and highly respec~
citizen of Point. Pleasant, died
at his residence Monday . Mr.
Roush, a lifelong resident of
Mason County, was Chairman
Emeritus of the Board of
Directors at Citizens National

TilE STOCK OF RECORDINGS and tapes has been doubled at the Dutton Drug Store ln
Middleport to provide better service for music fans, Pale Dutton, owner, reports. Dutton says
th~t the additional stocks makes his store one of the be~ sources of supply ln the Bend.

'

Bank at the time of his death.
He was a char~r member of
the Point Pleasant Kiwanis
Club and .Chamber of Commerce, and a 50-year member
of Post 23 of Ule American
· Legion.
Mr. Roush was a lifelong
member of Christ Episcopal
Church and had been active in
community affairs for years.
He was born Sep~mber 26,
1897 at Hallwood in Mason
County a son of the Ia~ Okey A.
and Zurmehley Leitweiler
· Roush.
·
Surviving are his wife,
Goldie Comstock Roush; a
daugh~r, Mrs. Howard R.
(Alice Anne) Andrews Jr., of

KC will buy 60-passenger bus
Kyger Creek's Board of
Education Monday night
authorized its clerk, Mrs. Doris
Roush to advertise for bids on a·
new 60 passenger school bus.
· Bids will be opened on March 5.
Also, Supt. Comer Bradbury
was autllorized to purchase a
dust control unit for the high
school shop. The sta~ has
made it mandatory that all
schools have dust control
devises ln operation.
The board denied a request
by Mr. and Mrs. William
Cremeans to transfer their son
to Bidwell-Porter Elementary
&amp;hool.
In doing so, tlle board enforced a board policy
established ln 1968 whtch states
that no student will be assigned
by the KC Board to another
school district.
Band director Qavie T.
Phillips was granted permission to purchase l~ms for
the Instrumental Music

Department and football coach·
Jim Sprague and his assistant,
Deryl Well, were authorized ·to
at~nd a football clinic this
weekend in Cincinnati.
The
board
discussed
reseeding the football field and

replacing or adding additional
lighting. Board President C.
William Price appointed
members Dale Rothgeb, Jr.,
and James Preston to work
with Coach Sprague on both
projects.

Loans :offered farmers
COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Agriculture Director Gene
Abercrombie said Monday
farmers whose crops were
damaged by Ia~ fail rains will
be eligible lor $50 million in'
loans.

Hysell in race
for hoard seat
Robert Hysell became the
second candidate in either
Pomeroy or l)liddleport fo file
for nomination to a post in the

Abercrombie said the $50
million in loans would be
guaranteed by $1.5 million in
the
old
Ohio
Rural
Rehabilitation Corporation,
which was set up in' he 1930s, to
aid farmers.
Abercrombie and Ohio
farmers have complained
bitterly about the federal
freeze on ~mergency farm
loans through the Farmers
Home Administration .
"I guess you could say we're
going through the back door to
get loans

anyway/~

he said.

In a final action, the board

approved a resolution to
borrow money to pay February
bills and meet tlle month's
payroll. The district will not
receive any tax monies until
after the tax books close. The
books may not open until
March.
Virginia Tate, Sally Icard
and Carol Buck were employed
as substitute cooks.
.
At Mercerville, the Hannan
Trace Board of Education
accepted the resignations of
Melvin Church, a bus driver
and Cathy Small, Title I aide.
Clerk Ann Belville was
authorized to secure bids on
two new buses, a 66 passenger
and 60 passenger. The' board
also discussed transportstion
and maintenance problems.

'Aging Project
jobs open in
Meigs, Gallia

Charleston ; two sons, Ches~r
A. Roush Jr. of Carrollton, &lt;;;a.,
and Okey Comstock Roush of
Westerville; a sister, Mrs.

Elizabeth Roush Dalrymple of
St. Petersburg, Fla., and eight
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at .Christ Episcopal Church
here at 2 p.m. Thursday witll
the Rev . Thomas Kuhn
assis~ by tlle Rev. C. S.
Thqmpson officiating. Buri~l
will follow in Kirkland
Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call at tlle
Crow-Husell Funeral Home
this evening from 7 until9 p,m.
and on Wednesday from 2 until
4 p.m. and then again from 7
until9p.m. Persons so desiring
may make a contribution to the
Ame~ican Cancer Society . in
lieu of flowers .

Reinhart fund
at $1,255.50
A public fund drive for Mrs.
Doris Reinhart, · Pomeroy,
reached $1,255.50 Monday
afternoon.
La~st contributors include
Victor Wippel, Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Nease, Mr. and Mrs.
Aaron Kelton, Mildred Hawley,
Middleport; Mrs. W. A.
Morgan, Mr. and Mrs . Ben
Ewing, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Kloes, Ill~ Laurel Cliff Bet~r
Health Club, Mrs. Lillian
Gress, Mr. and Mrs. Leon
McKnight, Mr. and Mrs. David
Goodwin, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Riffle, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. George
Horak, Mrs. Philip Meier, Mr.
and Mrs. Leo Vaughan, Mr.
and Mrs. Lorenzo Davis, Mr.
and Mrs. David Ohlinger, Mrs.
Louise Harbrecht, Mr. and
Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Mr. and
Mrs. S. G. Pickens, Mrs. Albert
Baer, Mrs. Al!ce Davis, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert ·Beegle,
Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Cohen.

· M;w·m·::c:
:t8· · ·
.8HiNC:
.

Loan

.

(Continued from Page I)
needed.
A corilpiai!lt &lt;&gt;n garbage
pickup was explained by Pollee
Chief Jed Wehs~r who said
tllat tlle pickup truck had been
broken down but tllat service
has been resumed. It is now
one-half day behind.
Webs~r's report for January
was accep~. It showed Ule
. police department investigated
14 accidents, made 25 arrests,
three of them juveniles; drove
4,9:ro miles, issued 812 parking ·
tickets, received $1,300 from
tlle street me~r~ and $1,407
from the parking meters.
Conditions on Osborne St.
were also studied and a survey
ordered.
cou~Elma
Russell,
cilwoman, sugges~d that cross
walks be pain~ on village
streets. No action was taken.
She also asked permission, on
- behalf of the Meigs County
Youth Rally, to sponsor a
choral group from Kentucky·
Christian College on the
parking lot on April 7. Per·mission was gran~d .
Attending were Collins,
Ralph
Werry,
William
Snouffer, Mrs. Russell, and
Jim Mees, councilmen; Jane
Walton, clerk, and Chief
Webster. .

Driver charged
alter accident

SERVICES CANCELLED'
RACINE - The Racine
Nazarene Church will not have
evening services Wednesday
and Sunday tllis week in order
to give fuJi support to tlle Meigs
Area Holiness Association's
indoo~ camp at the Meigs
Junior High &amp;hool in Middleport .

IN HOSPITAL
TUPPERS PLAINS
Thurman Babcock of Tupp_ers
Plains is a patient In St. Joseph
Hospital, Parkersburg. Cards
may be sent in care of room
331, third floor.

·1·
.

Sleepy ·CD units
will be cut off
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
Civil Defense said Tuesday it
would crack down on w~ak
civil defense organizations
through the Buckeye State.
Frank Ruvio, deputy commander of tlle state Civil
Defense said "in a lot of
counties; tllere is only a paper
civil defense organization"
citing as examples Cuyahoga,
Hancock, Hardin, " Huron,
Meigs and Paulding counties.
(Inquiry tOday of respOD'
sible county officials

~

disclosed that Meigs Conly
Is
without
a civil
defense director.)
"There is a lack of response"
he said. "I'll flrid out through
other channels that a rjver Is
flooding In .some county,
"When I attempt to contact
the local CD dtr'"tor, someone
in the county will tell me that
so and so· is only a part-time
director and no one knows
where he is," salct Ruvio.
Ruvio said the county uni\s
have until July I to supply the
state an approved program ·
and approved emergency
operation plans.
He said those counties which
do not measure up will lose the
opportunity to share in federal
programs.
One program he said they
may lose Involves disbursement of federal surplus.
Local civil defense units took
in federal surplus worth an
original cost of $834,268 for a
transfer cbarge of $50,197 in
1971.
"We have limi~ resources
to distribute in the state," said
Ruvio. "So we have decided to
distribute what we have to
those counties which show us a
strong civil defeiJS" program."

Betty Folmer, 42, Rt. I, Long
Bottom, was charged witll
driving left of the center
following a traffic accident at
10:20 a.m. Tuesday on County
Road 403, five tenths of a mile
north of Rt. 124.
According to the GalliaMeigs Post Sta~ Highway
Patrol, the Folmer cor collided
witll an auto driven by Anton
Uter, 67, Rt. I, Long Bottom.
There was moderate damage
to both cars. Mr. Liter and a
passenger were taken to
Ve~rans Memorial Hospital
for treatment of minor injuries.

DAYTON -NATIONAL CASH REGISTER CO. plans to lay
off 1,800 workers this year in management, p-ofesslonal, clerical
and administrative support levels in addition to a 2,000-man
production area layoff.
Robert Oelman, board chairman, said the cutbacks were a
necessary "belt tightening" move. He said the producUon layoff
is about three-quarters complete. About 125 of the 1,800 workers
in the marketing department will be transferred to field
operations, he added.

Dance is planned on February lOth
ments will be served by the
Horsemen. The public Is invited. Further Information
may be obtained·by contacting
Bar-30 members in the
Gallipolis area: Mr. or Mrs.
Billie Joe Evans, Mr. or Mrs.,
Gary Short or Mr. or Mrs. Dick
Roach. The dance will be held
at the Tuppers Plains &amp;hool
Gym.

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~ELBERFELDS

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lion est, rBe elections ,
PARIS ( UPI) ~ South to sjleed their deliberations
Vietnam and the VietCong met aimed at orgapizing free
today with pledges of sincerity elections in tlle South.

Incumbents
have
filed
·
· ,
· With.
. election
at 4 p.
County

the May primary
filing de~dline falling
m. today, tlle Meigs
Board of. Elections
repor~d a slight increase in

activi~y Tuesday.

On Tuesday, three Pomeroy
residents, all incumbents, filed
their petitions of candidacy
with the board. 'l'hey are
.Phyllis Hennessy, a Democrat,
who filed to seek nomination
and · reelection as village
treasurer , Two council
members, . Ralph H. Werry, ·

Democrat, and. Mrs. Elma S.
Russeil, Republican, filed for
nomination and reelection in
the fall.
The only other candidates
who ·have filed · either in

Pomeroy or Middleport are
Robert Hysell, filing for the
board of public affairs on
which he . now serves .in
Pomeroy, and ~arvin Kelly,
who has filed for nomination to
run for Middleport Village
Council. Hysell and Kelly are
both Repilbllcana.

It Was the second Such
meeting this week. Negotiators
for .lhe two sides met ,for the
first time Mo!J(lay to chart the
futu.-~ of South Vietnam
witllout the presence of their
allies irom Washington and
Hai10i. They are mapp,ing
procedures for setting up a
• reconciliation council in Saigon
to bring about elections, as
. stipulated by the Vietnam
·

peace treaty.

Botll Viet Cong delega~
Nguyen Ba Thi and his Saigon
coim~rpart, Nguyen ·Phoun
Thlep, before today's meeting
promised to conclude the .
preliminary Wks as quickly as
possible.
·
'The meeting began at 10:30
a.m. (5:30a.m. EST) at the

.

I·N POMEROY

"N'·--&gt;-=..miJ''~c&lt;-~;w;•;,
.;&lt;•;•;•;•;&lt;•;&lt;•; .£.~·.,.·;;-;m~:m-;.o'!...-.u..oY.«o:o:.Ob ;,.u.o ,o!&gt;,o.o.o.o.o.o.o_oiW,~
...

'090'iJ'...~~-

SAiGON (UPI) - Cease-lire violations .climbed to 1be
blgbest total of the week 'today and there waa still no lndlcalloa when truce pollee woald oogla eaforclng the Solidi
VIetnam al'ltllltlce.
,
Col. WDUam Maei..eod, Caaadlan chief of t!&gt;e foW'-!Uidoa
reglonJI truce
beadquilrterecl at Hue, said be had no
plans to IIIII!! to the field until the parallel military team 'of
tile Joint Military CoDunlsalon (JMC) Is In place aad at wort.
Most JMC units ,ai'OIIIId tile coqntry were still leUfq
. orclllllzed and VIet Coug memberi have yet to al'J'boe at Hue.

team

u· ·· .. ·;. 0... . ··.:::x::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

;.n. ·

International Conference
Cen~r. where tlle Vietnam
peace accord was signed Jan.
27.
After their first session
Mond~y, the two sides said
Uley had found agreement on
several points.

f

·

HUT ONE HUT TWO-Or Is lbl.s a basketbaU game? Vern Ord, Soutllern, "centering" the
ball, seems about to give it to Steve Dill, Eastern, for a run up tl)e middle. Leo Hill caught this
bit of action in the Eastern-Southern game Tuesday night at Eastern, won by Eastern 65-SL See
more pictures and account of game oil page 3today.

at y

en tine

Devored To The Interests Of The Meig.•-Ma.•on Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

t

JUDGE MANNING D. WE.IISI'Eit retired from the
board of dlrectora of the Pomeroy National Bank Tuesday
af~oon but was named director emeritus. He and Mrs. ·
Webster were honored with a · dinner at the M~lgs IM
Tuesday evening by bank directors and their wives.

Judge Web.s ter

General Telephone • Co. of
Ohio today ~nnounced the start
of a major cable construction
project for growtll and improvement in tlle Pomeroy
exchange.
Kenley R. Krinn, Athens
commercial manager, said Ule
$117,600 project Is scheduled
for completion before tlle end
of the year.
· The additional facilities are
designed to provide for future
growth and upgrading of
existing service. A total of
96,800 feet of cable will be in-

stalled. About half of it will be
buried.
"We bury cable where
terrain or right-of-way permits," said Krinn. "This not
only enhances the natural
beauty of tlle landscape, but
reduced service outages
caused by severe weather

Seven directors were reelec~ and one, Judge Manning D, Webster, was elec~
director emeritus at annaul
meeting of the Pomeroy
National Bank Tuesday afternoon in tlle bank's offices.
Re-elec~ as directors were
Dr. R. E. Boice, Alfred M.
Elberfeld, Edison Hobs~tter,
Horace Karr, Roger Morgan,
Warren Pickens and Eldon
Weeks.
The election of Judge
Webster as director emeritus
was taken because tlle judge
had to resign from tlle board
due to his new judicial position.
Hobstetter was re-elected
chairman of the board and
Maxine Griffith was re-eiec~d
secretary.
At the annual meeting of tlle
directors following
the
stockholders meeting, the
following officers and employes were re - elec~ :
Edison Hobstetter, president;
Richard Chambers, vice
president ; George ~ - Hobs~tter, vice president; Dennis
E. Keney, vice president;
Maxine Griffith, cashier; Lera
Jones, Richard Poulin, Joan
Wolfe, and Marilyn Wolfe, all
assistant cashiers, and Don
· Nelson, Millie Midkiff, Donna
Nelson, Bessie Sylvester,

Rebecca Anderson, Linda
Spencer,
and
Marilyn
Robinson, employees.
William J. Hohs~tter was
named vice president and
manager of the Rutland
Branch while Joan May was
promo~ to assistant branch
manager. Karen Grate,
Marcia Elliott and Otto Hartenbach, custodian , were
renamed to their respective
positions .
President Hobstetter announced Ule bank had had Its
grea~st growtll during tlle
year of 1972. The bank passed
the $17 million mark at yearend witli depoSits increasing
$1,750,000 .In 1972. Hobstetter
commented that he was
pleased Wjth the entllusiasm
crea~d during the IOOtll anniversary year In which many
promotional ideas were
carried out. The year 1972 saw
the opening of a new aJ,.
-electric bank at the Rutland
Branch. Approval was also
received from tlle Comptroller
of tlle Currency in Washington,
D. C., for the construction of a
branch at Tuppers Plains.
Tuesday evening directors
and wives held an appreciation
dinner at the Meigs Inn
honoring Judge Webster.

.

Updaling plat books in the
Meigs County Recorder's office was discussed by the
Meigs County Commissioners
Tuesday.
M~eting with the commissioners on the proposal
were representatives of the
Allied Appraisal Co., of Tennessee; Martin Associates,
Worthington; Bernard Fultz,
Meigs County Prosecutor, and
Manning Web~ter, probate
judge.
In other business the commissioners awarded a tractor
mower ·bid to the Meigs
Equipment Company. Cost of
the bid was $9,399.
The commissioners also
agreed earner to contribu~
from the revenue sbaring fund
$4,600 to tlle Meigs ·county
Council on Aging.
Attending were Charles R.
Karr, Robert Clark and
Warden Ours, commissioners,
and Martha Chambers, clerk.

-Sheriff Robert C. HarDept. investiga~
three accidents Tuesd;ly, all of
which are still under investigation,
A12:55 p, m. the sheriff was
called to the intersection of SR
143 and the Rt. 7 bypass where
a two car collision occurred.
· Donald R. Cheadle, 22, Rt. 3,
Albany, was stopped on Rt. 7,
apparenUy at~inpting a left
hand turn onto 143, when his
car was struck in the rear by
one driven by James M. Floyd,
53, Cullman, Ala. The impact
caused the Cheadle car to flip
over on its top.
.
Cheadle was taken to
Ve~rans Memorial Hospital
by the Pomeroy ER squad
where he was treated and
released for abrasions to his
right hand, left elbow and left
knee . There was heavy
damage to both vehicles.
At 10:30p. m. on Union Ave.,
a car owned by Richard
Fraley, Pomeroy, Rt. 4, was
traveling west when it ran over
an embankment. The driver of
the vehicle has not been
identified, as whoever was
driving left tlle scene of tlle

1

::;;

,,~-1

ws.. i"
~riefs~
Pre••

•
segregation
MILA POWELL
IN FINALS - Miss Mila

Honel Denny is found dead
wife, Judy; a daughter, Diane
and one son, Brian, at home;
and three sisters, Vivian Coy,
Beatrice Smith and Beulah
Grate, all of RuUand. .
Funer11l services will be
announced by Martin Funeral
Home.

WASHINGTON (UPI) -As
Sen. Sam Ervin tells it, a
moonshiner was hauled into ~
backwoods court In North
Carolina one day and the judge
demanded the location of his
still.
"!in't gwlne teU ya," the
mari said.
. .·
1
"You mean to say, of course,
· that ·you are invoking your 5th
Amendtpent right against seiilncrlmlnatlon," said the judge.

l

But Teagarden parried by
introducing the transcript of a
briefing by White House Serretacy Ron Ziegler last Thursday
in which be said the President
had made . a "mistake" and
wished to retract what he had
said the day before.
Bodner wanted to know
whether the Air Force-realizing that its version of Fitzgerald's dlsinlssal conllic~d
with the President's-played a
hand in Thursday's retraction.
"Wben did you Jearn tllat the
White House was going to
change its statement?" he
asked Seanians.
"I'm not going to discuss any
aspect of any communication
with the White House," Seamans rei&gt;lied, not taking his
eyes off.his note pad.
Bodner Asked for Answer
Bodner asked the hearing
examiner to request the witness to answer. .
"Would yo~ please Identify
when you first became aware
that the retraction Would be

COLUMBUS (UPI) U. S.
District Court Judge Carl B.
Rubin today . ordered the
Dayton Board of. Education to
prepare and present to. his
coiu-t'within 60 days a plan to
abolish racial seg~egation in
Dayton sc~ools.
Rubin ruled tllat the school
board must abolish all opUonal
attendance zones presently
remaining witll the Dayton
school system and restate tlle
priorities for high school at~ndance in a freedom of
enrollment plan.
This would be done to make
sure no student of a minority
race be denied attendance at
any high school In tlle Dayton
city sys~m.
Rubin said also Ulat transfers for purpose of improving
racial balance take precedence
over curriculum transfers.
Rubin, in a suit filed by the
NAACP, also ordered Dayton
schools to maintain faculty

'

assignment policies \bat will
reflect in each school the approximate ratio of black-towhite faculty throughout Ule
district.
The Board of Education was
also ordered to establish hiring
policies to enable tlle clerical
and maintenance personnel
hired by the school board to
approximate tlle proportion of
black-to-whi~ ratio.
"The evidence presen~ has
established isolated but
repeated instances of failure
by the Dayton School Board to
meet tlle standards of the Ohio
law mandating an in~grated
school sys~m." said Rubin.
"The great majority of all
schools in the Dayton system
today have student populations
which are racially imbalanced
consistent witll the black-white
popula !ion and geographical
distribution Ulereof as shown
by the 1970 census," Rubin said
in his opinion.

You gotta have 'heart'
to win these contests

NOW YOU KNOW
•
Samuel Colt carved a wooden
model of the first revolver
Two "Heart Song Con~sts"
during a voyage to India in 1830 from Feb. 7 to Feb. 14 will
after he ran away from his feature the winners on the all
home in Boston at the age of 16. day radio program on WMPO
Monday, Feb. 19.
Ralph Werry, chairman of

Nobody gwine to tell us

billion beyond expecllltions; a
team ol volun~er lawyers
from the American Civil
Liberties Union I~ by John
· By United
Intematlonll
.
Bodner; Air Force lawyer, Col.
COLUMBUS- THE OHIO SUPREME COURT ruled today
Claude Teagarden; and a
bearing examiner who said he
that mayor's courts do not have tO give part of their receipts to
the county trfallurer for use by the county law associstion.
was born in New York but did
Th' court said Ohio law requiring money collected by a
not wish to be called a New
mimtcipal court from fines and bond fot'feltures to-be paid to the
Yorker, Herman D. Salman.
county law· Ubrary association, refers to statutory municipal
What They're Trying to Prove
courts, and does not include pollee courta ,or mayor's courts.
What Bodner and the ACLU
were trying to prove was tbat
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS WORIQ:D TO !lAY in an effort
Fltqerald's job was not ellmito avert a 12:01 a.m. EST Thursday strike against the Penn
"Thll'l .right," said the raa, Ill an economy move, as
• Central Railroad wblch one official said would have a severe moonshiner. "But I still ain't the Air Force contends, but
effect on . the econemy in 16 E'astern and Midwestern states. gwine tell ya ."
that he wu flt1!d ln reprisitlfor
Darrel M. Trent, acting director of the Office of Emergency . The scene Wednesday at the his Coogressional testimony
Preparedness, said in the event of a strike, the goveriunent bas avu Service Commission was and as a lessqn for other
· an "action plan" that Includes reroutir!g d traffic by the In- not as colorful, but the l'eSUlt bureaucrats to keep pushing
terstate Commerce Commission and 'tl!e Department of Trans- was the same.
their pencils when they spot
portstion'a .(DOT) priority system for moving freight. He also
At a table .in a windowless trouble.
lllid. DOT would use lrucka Instead of trains to haul. goods in room · with fake walnut, •As evidence, · Bodner proIIIIIIY areas.
· .•
,
.
paneling sat the secretary of duced the transcript of Presi~
A fiiiOkesnuin for tile United Transportation Union (UTUI, the Air Force, Robert C. dent Nixon's news conference
which called lor the strike over job cuts, salcf Tuesday tlle union Se91Jl8ns; Ernest Filz&amp;l!l'&amp;ld, last Wednesday in which Nixon
would welcome renewal d talks with the rallroail, which broke the man he rtismtased three personally took cr~dlt f~r
cd llejotlalk\rut lut Friday.
years ago aftet he told Fit!gerald's Ouster, clabt&gt;ing
Congress the cost of the C5A . he approved tile order to lite
(Conttnulid on page 12)
csrgo plane haa &amp;dated $2 111m.
·
-%~~&gt;;:~&gt;;::::;*::::&gt;.:::.&gt;.&gt;.~

to end all

Powell, daughter of. Mr. and
accident before arrival of the
Mrs. Gerald Powell, Lincoln
sheriff's officers.
Hill, Pomeroy, has been
At II p. m. on SR 7 in
named a contestant In the
Salisbury Twp., a second ac- · state finals of the Miss
cident occurred where the
National Teenager Pageant
driver of the car left the scene
to be held July 13 and If at
of the accident.
the Sheraton Dayton Hotel in
A car owned by Linda
Dayton. A student at Meigs
S~wart, Locust St. , Pomeroy,
Hlg~ School, Miss Powell, 16, ·
was found wrecked just south
is active In the Meigs Band,
of the Middleport business loop
nature club, and Is a 4-H
on Rt. 7. The car was aphorse club member. She
parently headed south and
works part-time at Stiffler's
went off tlle highway on the
in Pomeroy. She hopes for a
right side of the road, slid
career In modeling.
sideways and struck a tree.

Cause of the death of a
Rutland man found dead at his
home at approximately 8 a.m.
today had not been determined
at noon.
He is Hone! Leroy Denny, 38,
Salem St., Rutland, found dead
on a couch by his family.
Tom Martin of Martin
Funeral Home said Mr. Denny
died somedme during the
night. Dr. R. R. Pickens, Meigs
County Coronor, was at the
scene.
.Mr. Denny is survived by his

TEN CENTS

Dayton told

conditions and accidents.
Portion• of the new cable will,
replace existing facilities for
maintenance reasons," he
said.
The Pomeroy exchange
serves 4,719 telephones in a 90.4
square mile area of Meigs
County.

Cars abandoned
by two drivers

accorded-. bono~ Up d'a·t•mg. ~nbach's
di.sc'ussed

PHONE 992-2156

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1973

Cable job begun

made," said Staiman.
Seamans again refused on
the grounds tllat it involved a
"privileged communication."
The ritual was repeated at
least 1\. dozen times, with
Bodner asking a question,
Seamans refusing to answer,
Stainman asking again, and
Seamans again refusing.
•
Seamans said he wan~d ·to
make it clear he was not invoking "executive privilege "
-the procedure used to avoid
Congressional testimony that
would disclose confidential
communications by the President and White House aides.
"We're not calling it executive privilege , due to the
legalities which I don't understand," he said.
·Bodner said he didn't understan&lt;l either and was taking the
matter to court for a ruling.
For now, ttbe government
ain't gwtne tell where the still
Is arid the public ain't gwlne
fbld out.

Fees collected
totaled $1,896

the 1973 Meigs County Heart.
Fiind drive, said the first
con~st is to list all songs with
the word "heart" in tlleir titles.
The pe~son sending in the
longest list of songs will
receive a gift.
The second con~st is for
listeners to write in ~lling why
a specific "heart" . song bas
some special meaning for them
and why it is their favorite
song . The winner's letter will
be read on tlle radio program,
on cable TV, and prin~d in the
local press.
Each con~st will bave two
categories, orie for students to
the age of 18 and the second 19
years of age and older. All
entries must be postmarked by
Feb. '14 and received by Feb.
15. The contests are open to
everyone in the surrounding

Larry Spencer, Meigs
County Clerk of Courts, announced today tlle following
report of activities for the
montll ·of January. A total of
$1896 in fees was collec~. The
county's share was $1~3. tlle
State's , $353. There was
$15,661.99 paid In automobile
:sales tax and.$5,464.119 in casual
and use tax.
There were 743 titles issued,
223 notations, 145 memoran- area .
dum · titles, 717 applications,
Entries should be sent to :
affidavits and assignments, six Heart Con~st, P. 0 . Box ~.
salvage titles, 16 duplicates, 54 Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
penalties, , one salvage title
restored, 89 inspections and
four boat titles.
MEETING SET
An emergency medical
service meeting has been set
for 7:30 p. m. Thursday at '.he
Snow likely tonight probably Martin Funeral ·. Home in
beginning as· rain south Rutland. Questions regarding
diminishing to f(urries. the service will be discussed
Thursday and colder. Lows and applications for the course
tonight 18 to 25 north aqd in the will be av~ilable. The Rutland
20s central and south. Highs unit is in the process ol being
Thursday :15 to 35.
organiZed.

Weath. er

·'

'.

,(

The tasks of tlle Viet Cong
a.nd South
Vietnamese
delegations include decisions
on the level of the talks, tlleir
frequency and their si~ .
A 12-nation conference to
deal with guarantees for a
(Continued on page 12)

•

(Continued from Page I)
open hunting season on the press."

ELBERFELDS IN POMTEROY·

died on Sunday

..

News ~ . . in Briefs

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Bar-30 Horsemen of Tuppers
Plains will sponsor another
round and square dance on
Saturday, Feb. 10, from 9 p.m.
until 12 midnight. The Horsemen sponsored a previous
dance in January.
Admission will remain at .
$1.50 per person. Two cake
walks will be held and refresh-

TWO MORE
Two more contestants have
been entered in Ule Meigs
County Heart Assn. Queen of
Hearts contest, bringing the
total to eight. They are Melody
Applications are being ac- Faulkner, Meigs High School,
cepted from persons residing and Rose Roseberry, Eastern
in Gallia and Meigs Counties to High School.
fill recently vacated positions

Limrle Taylor

,,

VOL XXV NO. 207

Abercrombie noted the
guaran~d
loan approach will
May primaries.
' GRANGE TO MEET
Hysell, a member of the not cover all the Ohio farmers
LETART FALLS - Ohio
Pomeroy Board of Public needing emergency aid.
Tonight, Feb. 6
Valley grange 2612, Letart
Affairs, Monday filed for , "We aren't out to help the
Falls, will meet at the hall at
Ross Hunter's
'nomination to a four year term farmers already against the
THOROUGHLY
7:30p.m.
Thursday. Refreshon the board . He is a wall," he said. "These loans
MODERN MILLIE
ments and sandwiches and pie
(Teehnleolorl
Republican. Filing earlier for primarily should go to young
will
be served.
Julie Andrews, Mary Tyler
farmers needing money to buy
nomination
to
run
for
council
MOore, Carol Channing, Jas.
post in Mid~leport was Marvin seed and fertilizer for the 1973
Fox, John Gavin, Beatrice
AreawideAssistant
MO&lt;Jel . • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
growing season and pay loans under
as FieldthePlanning
Lillie.
Kelly.
Project
on
Aging.
(GP)
Filing deadline for the four on equipment."
Colorcartoon
Jerry Ralnsay, Project
council seats in both Pomeroy
Show Starts 7 p.m.
Director, said field planning
and Middleport, plus the board
assistanls should be 45 years of
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
of public affairs posts 11nd the
age and preferably have a high
February 7-8:
village treasurer 's post in
school diploma. They would
NOT OPEN
Pomeroy is 4 p.m. Wednesday.
work in their own county, not at .
Main Store and Warehouse
LONG BOTTOM - Funeral the project office at Rio
services for Mrs. Linnie Mae Grande College.
Open week Days 9:30 to 5 P.M.
Taylor, 61, Long Bottom Route
While working 30 hours
Fridays and Saturdays 9:30 to 9 P.M.
1, who died Sunday evening at weekly the assistants must be
the Holzer Medical Cen~r able·to keep records and fill out
have been set for 2 p.m. reports. The most imporiant
Wednesday at the Bald Knob criteria for employment is that
Church. The daugh~r of tlle the applicant must have a
'
late George and Ellen sincere desire to provide
McKenzie James, Mrs. Taylor assistance to the elderly
was also preceded in death by citizens of the area. Preference
her husband, Isaac, and two will be given to those ap.
infants.
plicants who have had exSurviving are six sons, perience in providing social
' :
Clifford, Lqng Bottom; James services.
The Gallia county poaition
E., Racine Route 2; Virgil H.,
Cincinnati; William A. and had been held by Harry
Joseph C., both of Akron, and Hamilton who has J!SSumed
Deibert, of Minersville; two resll"nsibility in his church.
daughters, Zelma Grady and , Mrs. Leafy Chasteen, the
Evelyn Taylor, both of Miners- Meigs county · representative
ville ; a sister, Reaidy Whi~ of bas transferred to the Meigs
Bucyrus; f6ur half-sisters, county Aging Project under tlle
Uz2ie Archer of Pomeroy, direction of Mrs . Eleanor
Opal Ricketts of Nelsonville, . Thomas.
Shrink knit top, flip skirt of eyecatching
Why noll
Those interested in .the
Rosie Freeze, Newark, and
Jennie Everbash, Hebron; a position of field planning
Our bank officers are
polyester and silk blend in Navy or red.
half-brother, Bob Bonds of assistant for eitller Gallia or
ready to help you acquire
Pomeroy; 14 grandchildren, Meigs county should contact
Juniors 5 to 11.
and several nieces and Ramsay at Rio Grande
your new car today , .. and
College . Appointments can be
nephews.
at the lowest pay-back terms.
made
by calling 245-5303, Ext.
Officiating at the services
will be Ule Rev. Eddie Griffith. 26.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home anytime. Burial
IN HOSPITAL
•
will be in the Bald Knob
The Pomeroy· E·R · squad
Cemerety.
answered a call at 6:49 p.m.
Monday for Mrs. Fred Kinsch,
128 Uncoln Hill Road. Mrs.
·•· Kinsch was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admit~d as a medical
patient.
OPEN FRIDAY EVENING
February 7 has been set for
5:00 TO 7:b0 P.M.
LOCAL TEMPS
the deadline for all 4th, 5th, and
Temperature
in downtown
6th grade girls to en~r the 1973
Meigs County Junior Princess Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Tuesday
WHE~ YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
of Hearts contest, Ralph H. was 47 degrees under rainy
Werry, Heart Fund Chairman skies.
announced \oday.
Contestants who have entered thus ·rar are, Lori county. The winne.r is selected
\
.
Wisecup,
Jan
·
Betzlng,
Sherr!
by
donations
received
~Y
\he
-•~INCINNATI
Ask Abo~;~t Our Convenient Lay-4~Way
Mitch and Bev Faulkner, contestant.
.
. The winner will be
MIDDLEPORT
.Pomeroy elementary; and ·announced during tlle March
OHIO
Vicky King and Kelly Tyree, 4th festival in Pomeroy.
Middleport Elementary.
Girls in~res~ in entering
.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Each conttislant is placing should co.ntact Mrs. James .
conlainers · in
business Soulsby or Miss Susie ·Soulsby,
Member ·Federal Deposit Insursace Corporatloa
~s fnblishments throughout the Cl'ntcst chairmen at 992-2377.

MEIGS THEATRE

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