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Devoted To The Interest. Of Tlw Meiga·Mason Area

ALAMEDA, Calif. (UPI) - A Oamlng Navy attack jet
cUpped a rooftop and plowed Into a big aparbnent complex
Wednesday night, collapsing lxllldlngs In fiery destruction. The
blazing rubble was so hot rescuers were prevented from entering
the disaster area for·hours.
Some 200 persons, including many children, were believed to
have lived in the three apartment buildings and one home which
were destroyed when the plane bit with a terrifying whine.
The apartment rammed by the twin-engine A7 Corsair n out
of Lemoore Naval Air Station near Fresno collapsed in flames.
Fire quickly spread to another apartment building, and It
crwnbled too. The third apartrilent was burned out and a neighboring house destroyed.
Only One In Plane
WASHINGTON (UPI) Officials at the Alarileda hit the City of Alameda."
"There were many people.ln
President Nixon has vowed to Nava! Air Station, across the
thai
building that never got
break out the ''very big stick" bay from San Francisco, said
out," he said.
of government intervention the plane carried only the pilot, M
Brad Smith, 19, who was on a
In the administration to get Lt. Robert L. Ward, when It
porch
across the street from
full cooperation during the crashed while trying to make
Phase m wage and price an emergency landing with one the half-block disaster area,
said the buildlng hit by the jet
,controls program.
wing ablaze.
Nixon made his personal
"! heard screaming from "collapsed like a house made
commitment Wednesday after inside the building," said of sticks."
Thousands of area residents
Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., a Wayne Jones, 29, a student. "It
drove
to the scene, creating a
leading congressional got worse and worse and worse
traffic jam that delayed ameconomic expert, sketched a ~ and then stopped."
lxllances,
fire trucks and pollee
gloomy outline of the nation's
Ted Guinn, an operating
economic picture during a engineer, said, "I could smell cruisers.
The water pressure in the
House speech.
bodies burning."
The President selected a
Residents of the devastated fire hydrants dropped to a low
White House swearing-in buildings leaped out of win· level because so many were in
ceremony for John T. Dunlop dows, shinnied down sheets use by the scores of lr!lcks
to serve as the new Cost of from windows and ran from the which came from surrounding
Living Council director as the exits. One woman made her communities, but firemen kept
time to warn "people who get way to safety down a drain the Dames from spreading.
The Red Cross set up a relief
out of line" during the largely . pipe.
station
at Lafayette High
voluntary Phase UI controls
Don Shand, 23, said of the
that the government will not plane: "It sounded like it broke School where the homele&amp;!l
hesitate to Intervene if the sound barrier. It whined. It were given food , shelter and
about the size of a flngemall at birth. There are now it mice Including the
SEE HOW THEY RUN - The rourth grade studentl of SyraCU8e
necessary to avert Inflation just went directly over the first ald.
mother and father. The children take their turn in taking the pets home on
Elementary chose to have a pet for their home room. What did they choose?
Pollee set up a command
and higher taxes.
hduse, then cut the afterburner
the weekend. The mice, three of them brown like t~ mother and six white
Two mice. Their teacher, Miss Honkala, purchased two white mice, one of
post
at St. Joseph's Roman
Pointing to a door in his Oval In, then It nosed into the
like the father, are now three weeks old and just this week their eyes opened.
which died, so she purchased a brown one. To the amazement of the teacher
Catholic lligh School.
office, Nixon said:
apartment building."
Some of the students witnessed the birth of the mice.
and student body the brown mouse gave birth to 16 tittle mice which were
Alameda ls ·an Island com''There's a stick in that closet
The flames shot hundreds of
-a very big stick-which I will feet into the air and were munity of 71,000 persona on San
~(:;:::::;;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;;;:~::::::::;:;:;:::l::::::::::::::::::::;:;:
. .
.
not hesitate to uae In our fight visible to motonats Cl'&lt;lliSing Frani;lldi llaY. Many rtllldenta
against higher prices and the San FrancisCo Bay Bridge. are servicemen assigned 10 the
air base or a nearby iBland
higher taxes."
The Worst Tragedy
Mills overall pessimistic
Alameda Mayor Terry La· which houses a Co!lst Guard
evaluation of the economic Croix, visibly shaken, said It station. Many are civilian
M
situation contrasted sharply was ''the worst tragedy ever to employes of the government.
treasurer
in
Pomeroy,
was
the
~~;
~
Due to a lack of candidates, Marvin Kelly, a Republican. for nomination were Ralph H.
with the expressed views of
•
only
one
to
file
a
petition
for
Sheriff
Robert
C.
Har·
Werry,
incwnbent,
and
Harry
there will be no local primary None of the incumbent council
administration economic of.
tenbach's Dept. was called to ficlals, who have predicted a
contests in the Primary members whose terms expire A. Davis, both Democrats, and that post.
While
local
races
will
not
the
Dorsel Biggs residence slowdown in the Inflation rate,
elections on May 6 in Pomeroy this year, Jean Morgan, David Philip Globokar and Mrs .
or Middleport.
Ohlinger, Lawrence Stewart or Elma S. Russell, the latter an bring about primary elections Wednesday at 10 p. m.
further reductions in unern·
in
May,
primaries
will
be
held
Biggs
who
had
52
chickens,
incumbent,
both
Republicans
.
The Meigs County Board of Richard Vaughan filed . There
ployment and growing
Elections Wednesday reported is one term on the board of Republlcan Incumbents Don because of state issues found 40 ofthem dead and lying productivity during the
one candidate filing for one public affairs which becomes Collins, president of Council, scheduled to appear before around his yard. Wire on the remainder of this year.
voters.
chicken house has been cut. It
post in Middleport and in vacant this year. No one filed and Lou Poulin, did not file .
Mills, chairman of the House
The
political
picture
in
both
is
believed
that
an
animal
On
Pomeroy
's
Board·
of
Pomerpy only enough to fill for that post either . James
Ways and Means Committee,
vacancies. The filing deadline Brewington is the incumbent. Public Affairs, with two seats Pomeroy and Middleport killed the chickens.
said the "domestic and inThe sheriff's department ternational problems con·
By United Press Intematloul
was 4 p.m. Wednesday.
In Pomeroy Village, four to open at the end of 1973, the villages could also change in
the
fall
before
the
Noyember
also
reported
the
home
of
Mrs.
A strike against the Pem Central Ra!!road by the United
FlUng for a nomination to seats on colincil also become Incumbents, Robert Hysell and
fronting us" are so severe they
election
because
write-in
Forest
Rood
of
Reedsville,
Transportation
Union todsy will have a "major effect" on Ohio's
both
"raise considerable doubt
council In Middleport was open at the end of 1973. Filing Clfarles · Legar ,
candidates
could
declare
their
·
burned
to
the
ground
Saturday
Republlcans, were the only
about the vitality of our auto industry by tonighi and will a1ao severely affect the state's
. . . . . . . ~$(.):~::~-'i:?-::::w.~ .. ,....,,, ......... ~~·:::~ ones to file and Phyllis Hen· candidacy for the posts up for night between 10 and II p. m. seemingly Vilrant economy." steel and rubber industry within a week.
The Reedsville Fire Dept. was
''The Vega assembly plant or I..Drdstown which 18 serviced
nessy, Dem., incumbent election in the fall.
In his prepared speech, Mills
at the scene. It has not been foresaw Increased Inflation, solely by Peim Central will be shut down by the second shift
determined how the fire Intensified labor demands, an tonight," said Andy · O'Keefe, of the General Motors public
started. Amount of the loss is Inadequate slowdown In deficit relations department In Detroit.
not known.
"During the next 48 hours the strike will have a maj!lr ·effect
spending, higher Interest rates
By Uolted Preu Intematlonal
on
every
plant we have.," he said. General Motors has 11 plants
and difficulty coping with the
. GRANVILLE, OWO - FORMER HUD Secretary George
By United Press International dollar weakened. It jumped 14
with il5,000 workers in the Buckeye State.
nation's trade imbalance.
Romney said Wednesday night his new "grassroots citizens
Germany and Japan today cents an ounce in Germany to
. ~·~;;~".III'!PIII
"llil
"I'!PiOI'!Pi'.,'!PIISIIi··s::;:;~
···· ·
Mills proposed an InJerry Dent, superVIsor of llllli8!0llli!llif!lj
group" will not be like Common Cause, the so~lled people's bought close to a billion dollars $67.56 per ounce. The rise in
CJ.EVELAND
(UPI)
.Jobb); run by John Gardner. "Common Cause has not dealt with between them in their London was 10 cents and other Cold wave warning for ternational conferense to salaried personnel at the
Officers of the United Tra!l8life and death Issues but Instead has run off in the direction of seemingly endless battle increases were reported in tonight. Snow accumulations of tackle the problems.
Mansfield GM Fisher Body
"These matters must be plant, said although the plant is portatlon Unfon, wbicb
Gardner," Romney said at Denison University.
against U. S. dollar-irading Paris, Zurich and Amsterdam. I to 3 inches. Partial clearing
struck the Penn Central
Without dlwlglng what form his group would tske euctly, speculators. In reaction, the
The assault on U. S. currency south. Much colder tonight considered soon, in a confer- serviced by the Erie Railroad tod3y, annouced
Romney said he was recruiting national leaders to help launch it price or'· gold rose steadily came late last week when with lows 5 to.)5. Friday mostly ence-llot later in separate Lackawanna it v.1ll still be
that they have been ordered
and said the organization would hopefully solve many of the higher.
speculators began gambling on sunny and cold with highs in conferences," he said. ''These affected.
problems are growing; their
problems resulting from the magnitude ofthis country's success.
"Any assembly plants that to Washington for con·
Germany 's dollar rescue their belief the West German upper teens and lower 20s.
wltb
Labor
solutions are becoming more receive parts from Mansfield ference
I'm concerned we cannot achieve basic reform in this country operation was by far . the mark and the Japanese yen are
evasive."
will be affected if they are Department officials and
without a crisis."
biggest. Financial sources on so strong the y must be
Earlier Wednesday, Federal serviced by Penn Central IJe. Penn Central manageJDent.
LOCAL TEMPS
the Frankfurt exchange said revalued upward - moves that
"UTU officers ,and the
SAIGON - THERE WAS STILL NO official word today on the Central Bank bought up would net them millions of The temperature in down- Reserve Chairmanq Arthur F. cause they won't be able to use
gioaeral
chairman In ~barge
the release date or site for American POWs but military sources about $800 million to fulfill its dollars in profits. So far, both town Pomeroy at II a.m. Burns told the Senate Banking them," he said. "So we will be
llald the first exchange of North and South Vietnamese prisoners commitment that the dollar the Germans and the Japanese Thursday was 36 degrees with Committee that the ad· affected in a secondary way of the dispute with the Penn
(Continued on page 6)
will take place this weekend.
because we won't have any Central Railroad are on the
snow falling.
must not fall below a price of have resisted the moves.
way to Wasblllgtoo· for a %
Michel Gauvin, the Canadian chief of the four-power In- 3.15 marks, the artificial price
place to ship them."
ternational Commission of Control and Supervision (ICCS), said set by an international
Don ~erly, a spokesman p.m. EST meetlilg with the
a decialon on American POW releases has not been reached yet financial
for Annco Steel at Middletown, Labor Department and Penn
m~ eting
In
by the Joint Military Cor.•:•tssion (JMC), the organization Washington in 1971.
said if the Strike "stretches Central management," a
charged with making POW arrangements . .
over fo!U' or five dsys" Annco UTU s\lokesJDan said. "The
In Tokyo, money traders said
JDeetlog was called by the
will be in trouble.
Japan's Central Bank had
goverrunent.
SAIGON - THE GOVERNMENT DETAINED 24 newsmen bought about $110 mlllion .
"Pem Central handles about
lriefiy today and seized their pres.!! cards when they tried to talk dollars to hold the dollar at IIi
half the products we ship by ~'S:-:!8!*?~:!:!8!:•;8W.8111ffif«i.- - to North Vietnamese and Viet Cong members of the four1&gt;ar!Y fixed bottom price of 301.10
rail," said Easterly. "Up to
Joint Military Comml~on. The Incident occurred one day after yen.
four or five days it will be no
Information Director · Pham Duong Hien said reporters congreat problt;m but after that we
Gold strengthened as the
Four schools were closed
lidered by the gov~rnment to be acting In an "Un.vlelnamese" ·
are going to have to look at it
Thursday due to a power
way face deportation or loss of their visas.
pretty hard."
THREE FINED
Republic Steel, although outage which left them without
Three defendants were fined
.
NEW ORLEANS- FOR THE FIRST TIME In I&amp; years, the and two others forfeited bonds
Pem Central Is not Its prime electricity .
Closed
were
Meigs
High
United Auto Workers Is making a serious push for a share In the in Pomeroy Mayor's Court
carrier, also said It coi!ld be
School, Satiabury Elementary,
prot1t1 of the big three car manufacturers. The demand was conducted
1111"1 by the strike:
by
Council
'll'liiOUIICed by UAW PresideD! Leonard Woodcock Wednesday In
"If the Pem Central strike Harrisonville Elementary and
President Don Collins Wed· ·
a..,.eh to the bternatlonal Skilled Trades Conference (ISTC). nesday night . Fined were
lasts ~ry lorig It could cripple Chester Elementary. A main
The c:anference Is holding the first of a series or UAW Ollver Bailey, Reedsville, .$10
111 severely," said AI Connors, Une at the rear of the Salisbury
m=''DIII aimed 11 loimulattng bargalnlnt strategy lor contract ~nd costs, speeding; Winford
a spokesman for Republic at Ill School was down and caused
the outage. Columbus ·and
neptiationa that begin In mid.July with Ford, Chryaler and Wendling, Athens, $100 and
aeveland headquarters.
Southern
Ohio Electric Co.
a.neral Motors. "Either they reduce their monstrously high costs and three days In jail,
Ohio has about 50,000 steel
JACQUE GABRITSCII
LIZ BLAE'ITNAR
CA.THY RAYBURN
workers were eapected.to have
profit larlet 111d reduce their·cOlt,. to the consumer," Woodcock DWI, and Frederick J. Smith,
workers.
laid, ''or '!I'• lhould demand they share those profits on an Middleport, $5 and costil,- un. Bill DeMaza, pub)lc relaliona ll)e line ilacll In place ilo latet
NEW SWEETHEART - The Meigs Chapter, Order of DeMolay will select a new
·.
equitable basis." ·
director for Goodyear Tire &amp; than nilon today. ·
S'ifeetheart for 1973at 7:30p.m. Saturday at the r.flddleport Masonic Temple. contestants for
safe vehicle . Forfeiting bonds
The
Laurel
Cliff,
Rock
American Motors has had a profit sharing plan since 1961, were Kenneth Hoffman,
Rubber Co. In Akron, IIIYI'
this year's events are Uz Blaettnar, dsugbter of'Mr. and.Mrs. John W, Blaettnar, Pomeroy ;
but 1t has never paid off to workers·because the company was not Lancaster, $16, running a red
after a week the rubber in- Springs and HarrisonvlUe
Cathy Rayburn, daughter of Mrs. Joan Rayburn, Pomeroy, and Jacque Gabritsch, daughter of
t:esident!al areu were
, 1118klng lllfllclent earnings.
· ligh~ and Oren Ellis, Rutland,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gabritsch, Point Pleluumt. All persons Interested In DeMolay are Invited
. ·reason.
. without '
(Continued on page 12)
power
for
the.
9lin\.e
to attend. Refreshments will be served.
(Continu.ed on page 12)
$13.70, speeding.

VOL XXV NO. 208

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

!THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1973

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

Controls

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Car ·makers
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Dollars rescued

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2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 8, i973

Television ·Log
Thursday, Feb. 8, 1973
4:00 - Mr. Cartoon 3, Love American Style 13: Flmtstones 6,
15: Gilligan's Isle B: Sesame St. 20, 33, Movie "The Juggler"
10.
4:30- I Love Lucy 6: Dante! Boone 13, Andy Grift1fh 15, Pel·
ticoa t Junction 3: Glll1gan's Island 8.
5:00 - Dante! Boone6 ; Mister Rogers 20, 33: Dick Van Dyke IS :
Bonanza 3, 4; Hazel 8.

5:30 - Marshall Ditton IS ; Etec. Co 33; Gomer Pyle 13;
Hodgepodge Lodoe 20: Beverly Hillbillies a.
6:00- News 3. 4, 8. 10, IS; Truth or Conseq. 13. Around The
Bend 33: Sesame St. 20.
6:30 - NBCNews4, 1S; ABCNews8, 10: I DreamofJeannle13;
Designing Women 33.
,
7:00 - Truth or Conseq. 3: Beat the Clock 4; Course of Our
Times 33: Dick Van Dyke 4; What's My Line 8; Big Red
Jubilee IS ;-News6: Elec. Co. 20; Let's Make ADeal13.
7:30 - Hollywood Squares3 ; To Tell the Truth 6; Wild Kingdom
10; I'll See You in Court~; Lassie 8; Zoom 20; Newsmaker '7¥
13; Western Civilization: Majesty - Madness 33.
'
8:00 - Advocates 20, JJ; Flip Wilson 3, 4, IS: Mod Squad 6, 13;
Wallons 8, 10.
9:00 - Bob Hope 3, 4, IS; King FW 6, 13: An American Family
20, 33; Movies "The Professionals" 10: "The Man with the
Golden Arm" 8.
.
10:00- News 20; World Press 33 ; Streets of San Francisco 6, 13;
NBC Follies 3, 4, 15.
11:00-News3,4,6,8.13, 15.
11:30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Jack Paar Tonlle6, 13.
11:50- Movies "The Devil Lives In Something Evil" 8; " Parts
When it Sizzles" 10.
1:00 - News 4, 13.
FRIDAY, FEB. 9,1973
6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6: 15- FarmllmeiO; Farm Report 13; English 3.
6:25 - Paul Harvey 13.
6:30 - Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Human Dimension
10: Blue Ridge Quartet 13.
7:00- Today 3, 4, 15; News 6, 8, 10; Fllntslones 13.
7:30- Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13; Popeye 10.
8:00 - Capt. Kangaroo 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33 ;
Romper Room 8; Lassie 6 .
S:30- Jack LaLanne 13; New Zoo Revue 6; Romper Room B.
9:00- Paul Dl&lt;on 4; Phil Donahue 15; A. M. 3; Concentration 6;
Capt. KangarooS; Ben Casey 13; Mr. Rogers 33.
9:30- HazelS; To Tell The Truth J .
10:00- Dinah Shore 3, IS; Dick Van Dyke 13; Columbus Six
Calling 6; Joker's Wild 8, 10.
10:30 - Concentration 3, 15: Phil Donahue 4; Split Second 13:
Price Is Right B. 10.
11:00- Love American Style6; Sale ofthe Century 3, IS.
12:00- Jeopardy 3, 15; Boil Braun's S0-50 Club 4; Password 6 ;
Local News 10; News 13; Contact 8.
12 :30 - 3 W's Game 3, 15 ; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10i Split

Second 6.
1:00- News3; All My Children 6, 13; Green Acres 10; It's Your
Bet 8; Walch Your Child 15.
1:30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; Let's Make a Deal 6, 13; As The
World Turns 8, 10.
2:00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13: Mike
Douglass 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
2:30 - Doctors3, 4, 15; DallngGamel3 ; Edge of NightS, 10.
3:00- Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hosollal6, 13; Love Is A
Many Sptendored Thing 8, 10: Bill Moyers' Journal20.
3:30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13:
Merv Griffin B; Secret Storm 10; Book Beat 20.
4:00- Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset IS; Sesame St. 33; Fllntstones
6; Love American Style 13; Merv Griffin 4; Gilligan's Island
8; Movie "The Spoilers" 10.
4:30- I Love Lucy 6; Andy Griffith 15; Daniel Boone 13; Pet·
tlcoat Junction 3; Gilligan's Island S.
5:00- Mister Rogers 20, 33; Dick Van Dyke 15: Bonanza 3, 4 ;
Daniel Boone 6; Hazel 8.
5:30 • Marshall Dillon 15: Elec. Co. 33: Gomer Pyle 13:
Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Beverly Hillbillies 8.
6:00- News 3, 4, S, 10, 15: NBC News 13; Truth or Conseq . 6;
Sesame St. 20; Around the Bend 33.
6:30- NBC News l, 4, IS ; ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10; I
Dream of Jeannie 13; Let's Travel 33.
7:00- What's My LineS; Truth or Conseq. 3, Beat the Clock 4;
·News 6, 10; Saint 15; Elec. Co. 20; Folk Guitar 33; Wild
Kingdom 13.
7:30- To Tell the Truth 6; Parent Game 10; Beat the Clock 13;
Porter Waggoner 3; Young Dr. Kildare 4; It's Your Bet 8:
Hodgepodge Lodge 20: Wall Street This Week 33.
8:00 - Santord &amp; SOn 3. 4.15; Brady Bunch 6, 13; Mission. lm·
possibleS, 10; Washington Week ln·Revtew 20, 33.
8:30 - Masterpiece Theatre 33: Room 222 6 13: Movie " The
Undefeated" S; Movie "TM Bridges atToko Rl" 10.
9:30 - Odd Couple 6, 13.
10:00- News 20; Bobby Darin 3, 4, IS; Love Amer ica n Style 6,
13; Wake Up John Doe 33.
11 :00-News3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15.
11 :30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Jack Paar Tonlte 6; Movies
"Journey to the Center of Time" 10; "War·Gods otthe Deep"
13.
11:50 - Movie "Frankenstein Created Woman" B.
1:00 - Midnight Music Festival 3, 4, 15; Movle " Souls for Sale"
10: News 13.
2: 30 - News 4.

&amp; THINBS·
BY PAUL CRABTREE

Miller gets seat

W -IN AT BRIDCE

'Hard Luck Joe' Errs Again

I Voice. along Br'Way
.

~~Nicklaus almost perfect

)
.

WASHINGTON , D. C. Tenth District Representative
Clarence E. Miller has been
I·' The btcldm~ has bcc.·n·
selected to serve on the House
Wcsl
Nurth
Republican Research Com.
m1ltee'. The role of the
Pa~s
1 N.T.
Pas.o.;
Pass
2 N.T .
Pass
., Research Committee is to
Pas:s
3•
P&lt;!SS
serve GOP House Members as
You, South, hold:
a source of ne1" Ideas and
4AK54 ¥AQ63 t 2 .KQI07 approaches to emerging
What do you do now?
issues.

promoter - or go to jail.
.
BY JACK O'BRIAN
The
huge
''Two
for
the
Seesaw"
musical's
CLAUDETI'E'SA PEACH TO KLING
• 1094
off balance ... Jane Fonda's writing her
NEW
YORK (UP!)- Dr. Henry Klipg has
¥ 7 SJ
autobiog.
II should sell hundreds of eopies !..
t AKJ
been making house calls - on Claudette Colbert
David Cassidy's nom-d~otel at the Plaza Is
... Showbiz insiders simply can't dig the Lucie
WEST
EAS1'
James
Ross, gals ... Another unusually-named
Arnaz.Jim Bailey togetherness. He's the sen.
48~
.J7 632
restaurant: The Last National Bank of Hartsationally campy female Impressionist (Judy
¥1098 62
.... 4
ford,
Conn ., .. Need a lift? The Dutch Phone Co.
t 9764 3
t S2
Garland, Streisand etc.) ... Bdwy. is amazed at
J964
in Amsterdam has a Dial.a.Joke service. (You
producer Cyma Rubin shuttering "No, No,
SOU~H (D)
go
Dutch, rcawss).
·
Nanette" while it's still making ·money; but
4AKQ
Hal Prince's philanthropy thJ year is a
A-Bid four spades. Your
Cyrna just gave her rich·f'ich husband notice,
• KQJ
partner un't be iood enough in
preview
performance of hill "A Uttle Night
tOo ... Alan Ladd Jr. inherited his dad's looks t Q lOB
diamonds to warrant a thrt..-e
Music" musical Feb. 18 -tohelpJawn Lindsay
.KQ83
and his mom's showbiz acumen: he's just been
no- trump call, hut you have a
pay
off hts planned hopelessness last year- his
North -South vulnerable
very gofKfhand and should try
named veep for creative affairs at 20th-Fox.
Llndsay.for-Presldent !Iasco ... With all the
w..t North East South .:-ame with the 4-3 spade fit.
Author Michael Blankfort couldn't wheedle
2N.1'.
TODAY'S QUESTION
hired
cops in Las Vegas watching cash,
a ticket to the opera even with conductor Zubiil
Pass
6 N.T. Pass Pass
Instead of bidding two nosomeone walked off with a big sofa from the E1
Mehta's influence, so he went to the boxofflce
Pass
trump your partner .. has bid
Cortez Hotel lobby ... Gifted tittle rock star
hoping for a last-minute cancellation. As he
three clubs over your two
Openmg lead - · 10
halfpint Paul Wl111ams bought the late Peter
spades. What do you do now?
walked away from that defeat, a 12-year~ld
Lorre's
Bevhllls manse.
Answer
tomorrow
ticket-bustling kid pulled at his sleeve and
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Casino Russe maestro Sasha Potinoff rec'd
whispered, "I got 20 tickets. Wanna buy two?"
'. East won the first trick
his
biggest
tip - two crisp $100 bllls from ~
'th th
f
h
t
d
5tnd
$1
for
JACOBY
MODERN
book
B.
F.
Board
Flora
C.
Board
Done and done; and Mike wantS to know the
, WI
e ace 0 ears an to: "Win ot Bridgt," (c/o tiN~ ne~s- to Ruben A. 'collins, Thelma
Boston Diamond Jtm who sal&lt;l hts name's
kid's contact.
returned the su1t.
paper),
P.O.
Box 48!1, Rodro City C ll'
L
I
M'ddl
I
Martin
Simmons. Came back this .week and
The lad probably will grow up to be another
"Hard Luck Joe" was on Stotion, New York; N.Y. 10019.
0 ms, 0
l
epor .
gifted
Sasha
with a gold watch.
lead. He thought, or maybe
Robert N. Clark, Lola E. Mike Jacobs, who would up running Madison
just paused for a second,
Family that plays together, etc. - TV's
Clark to Larry W. WiU, Shirley Square Garden when he came up with champ
before laying down the king
Gene
Barry will tour in "Fiddler." His real
Joe Louis. Uncle Mike had been a ticket hustler
-"!:B~A~R=-=a~s:::--- L. wm, lot, Scipio.
and queen of clubs.
wife, Betty, will play his stage wife, Golda ...
Argyle L. Deeter, Florence all his life -still scalping as a multl.lflUllonalre
West showed out and there
Anne Baxter's getting the Big Rush from rich
Deeter to John T. Craven, to his last fight promotion .. 1 Mike told us the
By PHIL PASTORET
was no way left for Joe to
Robert E. Thieman, 6.8 acres, afternoon of the second Louls.Conn fight, "Jack, Roger Vall ... Phil Silvers feels well enough
make 12 tricks.
Yes,
G
w
e
n
d
o
I
y
n
,
you
"My typical hard luck" he might say that saurian Olive.
l won't but you will see a heavyweight cham- after his stroke and hospital siege to start
groaned . "We each had to sweethearts are a IIi g a tor John M. Welsh, Anna M. pionship draw a $10 mUllon gate ." Mike said preparing a cafe act. Careful, Farve! ... Diana
hold four cards in the same
Welsh to Jack W. Carsey, pay-TV would do it and was right. Here's an Ross' future includes an almost certain Oscar
suit and while I played prop· pairs.
Neacil E. Carsey, lot, Mid- insight into the late Mike's scalping days: AI nomination, a three-week bonanza at Caesars
erly and guarded against the
Bumper slicker we're
Jolson walked into the ~ailed press seats at Palace - and a definite mayhe : co-6tarrlng
only 4-1 break I could han- not apt to lake lightly: ·dleport.
dle, the other player had the " Mafia Staff Car- Keep'a
Carla J. Salser to Larry the same Louis.COnn fight, discovered he was in with Liz Taylor in a film, "Black and White."
four cards."
"Deliverance" Is headed for the $25 mUllon
the 12th row and to all around bleated, "And I
Salser, lot, Olive.
It was typical of the sort you hands off!"
Harold 0 . Long, dec., to paid $1ro each for seats back here!" ... Mike mark. The Burt Reynolds Cosmoofludlty is
of hard l u c k that results
Mildred P. Long, Mary A. used about two or three legitimate rows for the credited with most of its wallop ... Cafe clown
from poor play. Joe had
The
Dai~ Sentinel
nothing to lose by cashing
Long, Roy Long, Richard press, peddled off the rest for whatever he could Bette Midler entertains here in N. Y. at the
DEVOTEO TO THE
the three top diamonds and
INTEREST OF
Long, Roger Long, cert. for get, usually $100 to $200 apiece ... It ran openly publicized and admitted homo-llangout
MEIG5·MA50N
AREA
the last heart before playing
turkish bath joint on the West Side, but she goes
sometimes into six figures.
trans., Middleport.
L. TANNEHILL,
further. East would have CHESTEREKtC.
home
nights with a straight lad, actor Art
Ed .
Mike told us he made about $250,000 in his
1
Mary A. Long, Roy Long,
shown out and West would
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
Maida N. Long, Richard Long, first light-production, and, ''The next night I Killiam ... It's never too late for film nudity, it
City Editor
be marked with 10 cards in
Published
daily
except
those suits. Then, Joe should Seturdav by The Ohio Valley Beverly Long, Roger Long, was in my usual doorway at the Metropolitan seems: middle-aged Monlque VanVooren said
cash the king and queen of r:»ubHsl'llng Company , 111 Delores Long to Mildred P. Opera hustling tickets - and it was pouring at Paparazzi she'll go starkers in Andy Warhol's
spades . West would follow Court St ., Pomeroy, Ohio.
rain!" ... That's why we expect the hustling "Flesh from Frankenstein." No comment.
and two more of his cards o4S769. Business Ofl rce Phone Long, lots, Middleport.
Editorial Phone 992·
Marjorie June Roush, dec., youngster to either make a large dent as a
would be known so that he 992-21S6,
2157
to Walter D. Roush , cert. for
could only hold one club.
Second clns postage paid at
I
Pomeroy
,
Ohio
.
trans.,
Middleport.
The ace of clubs play from
The
Almanac
Feb.
6,
1820.
In
1!164,
Princess
Irene of The
National advertis i ng
dummy would mark East represtntat
Albert Zahl to Albert Zahl, By United Press lntematiooal
ive Bottinelll
On this day in history:
Netherlands renounced her
with the last three clubs. At Gallagher, Inc ., 12 East o42nd Ruth Lutheran, parcels,
Today
is
Thursday,
Feb.
8,
In
1587,
Mary,
queen
of
Scots
right
to the throne and was
St
,
New
York
City,
New
York
this point even Joe could
Subscription
rates
:
De
·
Letart.
the
39th
day
of
1973
with
326
to
was beheaded after being married to Spanish Prince Juan
work out a way to lead twice livered by carrier where
Anna M. Ryther, Com., follow. ·
through East's jack-nine·six availeble SO cents per week.
charged with conspiring to Carlos, slated to become king
By Motor Route where carrier Elmer H. Bush, dec., to Ethel
and make the slam.
The moon is approaching its murder Britain's Queen Eli· of Spain after the death of
service not available: One.
(NEWSPAPER ENT£RPRISE ASSN .)
May
Bush,
lot,
Pomeroy
.
month Sl 7S By ma ll In Oflio
first quarter.
zahethl.
Generalissimo Francisco Franand W Va , One vear SU 00 .
The
morning
stars
are
Venus,
In 1940, every tenth person in co.
SiK months S7.2S . Three
months s• SO . Subscr ip ti on
Mars and .Jupiter.
two
villages near Warsaw,
Our lazy neighbor antici- price
includes Sunday T tmes
pated the energy crisis by Sentinel
The evening stars are Mer- Poland was shot in rep~isal for
about 20 years.
.
cury and Saturn.
the deaths of two German
A thought for the day:
Those born on this date are soldiers.
American statesman Benjamin
under the sign of Aquarius.
In 1963, Iraq Premier Karim Franklin said, "There never
h
Secretary we know spe nds
1
more time manicuring her
Union Gen. WiliamS
erman, Kassim was overthrown by a was a good war or a bad
hands tpan doing anything who put the torch .to.. Atlanta military coup. He was executed
· else ~ we call her our file ' during·the Civil War, was born the next day.
By Helen and Sue Hottel
clerk.
NUK1'11

K

"'"10"2

.7

..

lZa M;J :J •A@!fiiiJ

I

'

Coll

Eternal Triangle -Teen Style

id

Worrier :
Best girl friends are for sharing confidences; tell her the
truth - that you're stlU hoping. Friendships last longer when
they're held together with honesty. - SUE

+++

ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE
--MUST GOJ-WE NEED THE SPACE FOR NEW SPRING AND
SUMMER MERCHANDISE ARRIVING DAILY. DON'T
MISS OUT ON THIS ONCE A YEAR SALEI
"

J

,,
1••

'•

,

+++

. Cl'( THE TV DIAL: A JII8Cial that may make it as a fall ·
-.:* piileWI at 10 OD WSAZ-TV: "NBC's Foilles," itrilh
"'"01 Davia Jr. 11 lint week'l bolt ... 'Bob Hope, who might
.J111b Jthln rlf,lutar olhll owupeclal, ume eblllnelat 8.

·,

a

STORE HOURS:
I

FABULOUS DISCOUNTERS!

,.'." '

"

~

J

9 AM • 9 PM Daily

KNOWS

Note ~'rom Rap: We're glad we never had YOU for
teacher!
''

.·,

700 WEST MAIN STREET

the

12 PM •.8 PM Sunday

res

Irvin named to Hall of Fame

HURRY ON OVERAND 5-A-V-E I I

POMEROY, OHIO

ege

Sco

'

'

SHOP THE JONES BOYS .FOR SUPER SAVINGS!

the second round. Barbarossa
and JohllBOn move over to I.a.
Quinta and then play Bermuda
Dunes !Jelore hitting Indian
Wells.
·
· In the ~ole format of this
tourney, a round is played on
each of the four courses before
the cut is made to the low 70
and ties for the final round at
Bermuda Dunes. This year's
•
•

·

field goal attempts for 49 pet.
Rio led 12-7 early in the
game, and with 9:47 left in the
first half, was on top 32-15. Rio
led 43-39 at halftime.
Bob Hornsburger hit two
quick buckets at the start of the
second half to knot the count at
4:Hlll.
The Panthers took the lead
for good when Ken Mizell, 5-9
junior guard, tallied five points
w1thin a' span of 45 seconds,
snapping a 65.j)S tie. OD in·
creased its lead to 10 points at
the three-minute mark.
In the preliminary game,
Rio's JVs won, 82-72.

IN GOOD CONDITION

CHICAGO (UP[) - George
Halas, owner of the Chicago
Bears, underwent abdominal
surgery Wednesday at Passavant Hospital to remove stones
from the common duct leading
to the liver.
Doctors said Halas was In
good condition followiog the
operation.

Box score:
RIO GRANDE (77) - Bar.
tram 6-2-14; Hart, 1-0·2:
Thompson, 6·4-16; Rouse, 1-1·3:
Lambert, 9·8-26 ; Bollinger, 6-012; Rose, 1-2-4. TOTALS 30· 11·

17.

OHIO DOMINICAN {92) Richardson, 14·4·32; Stoner, 3·39: Maurer, 5·1·11: Yuskewlch, 6·
1·13: Dledalls, 2-0·14: Mizelle 3·

1-7; Brewer, 1-0-2; Horns ..

burger, 7·0·14. TOTALS 41·10..
92.
Score at half: Rio 43 OD 39

WORLD ALMANAC

1
•

FACTS

·

A patent for an invention
1s granted by the U.S. Patent Office to the inventor
of any new and useful proc·
ess, machine, manufac·
ture, or composition of matter, or any new and use·
lui improvements in these
categories. The grant to the
patentee is of " the right to
exclude others from making, usmg or selling the in·
v en t i on throughout the
U.S." for the term of 17
years, The World Almanac
says.
C!}\J YI'igh t © 1973
St 1\ ~ Pftl't ' l'

Jo;n t••! !H i lle

;\t~ t:i n.

Pro Smndings
:IBA Standings

By United Press International
Eastern Conference

AHL Standings
By United Press

lnt~rnalional

East

Atlantic Division
w. I. I. pis gf ga
w. I. pet. g.b. N.S
29
12 12 70 212 13.4
Boston
44 11 .BOO
Boston 27 20 7 61 181 1781
New York
45 15 .750 1'12 Rchstr
host course. .
23 19 9 55 168 182
Bulfalo
17 39 .304 27'12 Prov
Ben Kern, another youngster Philadelphia
19 23 9 47 165 175
4 55 .068 42
26 13 41 199 23.4
among~ many playing in this
~~tid ,.
Central Division
12
30
11 35 179 244
w. I. pet. g.b.
tournament, shot a ~
West
Baltimore
35
20
.636
for the best first.round score at Atlanta
w. I. I. pts gf ga
32 27 .542 S Cinco
41 14 4 86 259 165
Bermuda Dunes and was three Houston
23 34 .404 13 Hrshy 29
14 II 69 229 157
20 35 .364 15 Va
shots behind Nicklaus along Cleveland
25
IS 12 62 188 168
Western Conference
Rchmnd
20
26
B 48 188 199
with Charles Coody and Dwight
Midwest Division
Jcksnvl
18
30
7
43 183 217
' Nevil. ·
w. I. pet. g.b. Batt
a
36
9
25 JA7 245
39 17 .696 1
Another shot back at 68 were Milwaukee
Wednesday
$ Results
Chicago
33 21 .611 s
Rochester SJacksonvtlte 2
Tom Jenkins and John Mahaf- KC·Omaha
29 32..475 12'1'
(Only
game scheduled)
25 31 · .446 14
fey, who, like Barbarossa, are Detroit
Thursday's Games
Pacific
Division
recent graduates from the
Nova Scotia at Richmond
w. I. pet. q.b.
(Only game scheduled)
University of Houston, Billy Los Angeles 44 12 .786
34 21 618 9'12
Casper, Kermit Zarley and Bob Golden St.
NHL Staridings
Phoeni&lt;
26 30 .464 18
International
Payne.
Seattle
19 40 .322 26'12 By United Press
East
Defending champ Bob Ros- Portland
13 42 .236 31'12
w. I. t. pis gf ga
Wednesday's Results
burg was at 69 while John
Montrel
35
7 12 82 226 120
Boston 113 Los Ang 112, ot
NY Rgrs 37 13 4 78 218 130
Schlee, who snapped an eightBaltimore 137 Atlanta 108
Boston 32 16 S 69 223 165
year slump by winning last
KC.Omaha 105 Milwaukee 98 Detroit
2Q 19 7 63 IS2 167
Detroit 113 Phoenix 107
Sunday's Hawaiian Open, was
Buffalo
2j 18 8 62 189 ISO
(Only games scheduled)
Toronto
18
29 7 43 167 IS3
in a big group at 70. Arnold
Thursday's Games
Vncuvr
IS
33
7 37 154 232
Portland
at
Golden
State
Palmer, Orville Moody, Miller
NY
lsldrs
7
44
s 19 113 256
Cleveland at Atlanta
Barber and Bobby Lunn were
West
Seattle at Phoeni&lt;
w. t• . I. pts gf ga
in an even bigger group tied at
!Only games scheduled)
Chicago 31 17 6 68 204 156
71.
Phlla
24 22 9 57 189 1S9
Minn
23 22 8 54 164 157
A tQtal of 52 players from the
Atlanta
,
22 25 9 53 146 159
starting field of 144 broke par
St.Louis 21 22 10 52 157 166
over the lour flat desert layouts
Los Ang 22 26 1 51 165 183
Pittsbgh 22 27 6 50 183 185
on a near perfect day for golf. Va. Un1on S1 St. Paul's 77
Calif
9 33 12 30 149 231
Fta
Sou
.
90
Fla.
Tech
54
A strong wind came up late in
Wednesday's Results
Biscayne 88 Ft. Lauderdle 7S
the day but it didn't have much Elon 65 Pfeiffer sa
Montreal 5 Pittsburgh 2
Toronto 5 California 3
High
Pt.
67
All
.
Chrslian
65
effect. Most of the field made it
NY Rngrs 6 NY lslnd rs 0
Guilford
96
Catawba
84
home before the sand started to N.C Wslyn 85 St. Andrws 79
Boston 3 Minnesota 2
Detroit 5 Atlanta 3
fly.
East Car. 69 RichmonQ 64
Chicago 2 Buffalo I
Lee Trevino played Indian in Wstrn Md. 74 MI. St. Mry's 72
Los Ang 2 Philadelphia 1
Hopkins 73 Ursin us 64
the first round and shot a tw(). Johns
(Only games scheduled)
Murray St. 89 Parsons 80
Thursday's Games
over 74. He was so upset at Union. Ky. 94 No . Ky . 92
California
at Buffalo
Midwest
himself that he stormed off in a
Minnesota at St. Louts
Yngstwn St BS Bldwn· Wll ce 50
huff.
(Only games scheduled)
Malone S9 Tiffin 85
Worse off than Trevino, Wright St. 91 Marian-Ind. 68
,.-.. WHA Standings
Urbana 71 Walsh 56
though, was Lu Uang-Huan of Wooster
71 Marietta 53
By United Press International
Taiwan. He played lost ball Kent St.74 Pitt 68
East
w. 1. t. pts gf ga
as an unplayabletie on the fifth Mrshll68 Miami 0. 59
98 Gannon -Pa . 66
Cleve
33 19 2 6S 19S 150
hole at Indian and was Akron
Ky . Wslyn 96 S.W. Mo. 71
New Eng 32 22 1 , 65 227 182
disqualified. Lu said he Musklngum 73 Dayton 57
N.Y.
25 30 1 51 226 230
Quebec 24 2S 3 51 188 205
became confused but finally Butler 76 Evansvl 74
Ind . Cent. 78 Vatpraiso 66
Phil a
22 31 0 44 188 228
understood.his mistake. He had Shaw
102 Central St. 73
Ottawa 20 31 4 44 195 239
a 76 anyway, which was a UW.Grn Bay 30 St. Nrbrt s
West
DePaul 89 Xavler-0. 67
w. I. t. pis gf ga
distant 12 shots off the lead.
E. Ill . 96 Nrlhrn Iowa 66
Wlnlpg 30 23 3 63 203 177
W. Ill. 95 Cent. Mo. St.BS
Ho\Jslon 2S 21 4 60 209 182
Augstna·lll. 66 Elmhrst SO
Minn
27 25 3 57 181 189
Itt. Wslyn 80 Millikin 7S
Los Ang 25 24 4 54 186 181
Defiance BS Bluffton 86
Alberta 25 26 2 52 180 181
Cleve St. 65 Wayne St. 64
Chicago 19 33 I 39 169 203
TrJ.St . 106 Sprng Arbr 75
Wednesday's Results
Notre
Dame
85
Mich
.
Sl.72
Houston
5 Winnipeg 2
Ironton's fourth of its last 16
Soulhwest
Quebec 3 Philadelphia 0
starls, and their third in the Sam Hous. St. 81 S. F. Austn 67
Alberta 3 New England 1
Te&lt; Sou . 86 Austin Colt. 79
(Only games scheduled)
SEOAL.
W
iley
94
Ark.
Baptist
77
Thursday's Games
However, things have been
Winnipeg at Houston
West
going great for the Marauders. Adams St. 76 No. Colo. 72
New York at Ottawa
Pacific
55
San
Jose
St
.
53
Quebec
at Chicago
Meigs has won 7 out of their
San Fran 7S Santa Clara 69
Minnesota at Los Angeles
last 9 starts . But the two games Lng Bch St. 97 UC-S.D. 76
(Only games scheduled)
th ey yielded were to the
number one and number 'eigh(
·Enjoy Th'e'·fxciting Sound
ranked teams in Ohio Class
AA, Waverly and Gallipolis.
The Marauders are strong on
the backboards, courtesy of
On The Great Hammond Organ
Bill Chaney, the rugged 6-1
senior pivot man for Meigs.
At
Chaney, combined with the
improved play of Bill Vaughan
at guard and Mike Sayre at
forward promises a strong
3 mi . South of Middleport on St. Rl. 7
offense.
Meigs is hungry for a victory
after the temporary setback by
Perfonnances nightly except
Gallipolis. And Ironton should
Sunday and Monday
just be the team to let Meigs
get that win.

Scores

a

Marauders want victory at Ironton

Generation Rap

Dear W.:
Friendships also last longer when no one plays the martyr
(making the other feel guilty).
Go ahead and compete - and let the boy choose. Could he
you'll BOTH outgrow him in another month or two. - HELEN

gu~

"I
I didn'l'ruiss many
putts," Nicklaus smiled. "It
was one of those rounds where
l couldn't do anything wrong.
All the 'shots went into the
hole."
Brewer shot his ~ at
the same- COW"Se while Barbarossa and Johnson got their
66s at tougher Tamarisk, the
course Nicklaus plays today in

Red men I0 se 92 77

Transfers

tar.

I

PALJI'I SPRINGS , Calif.
,. (UPI) - Wednesday, in the
By MILTON RICHMAN
.~ ojlening round of the $160,000
:·,~
UPI Sports Editor
~ Bob Hope Desert Classic, Jack
•' NEW YORK (UP!) _No man can ever fool his wife. Not for Nicklaus was ahnost perfect as
• 1Jong anyway.
he shot an eight-under-par 64
( Monte Irvin can't. What's more, he knows it.
for a two-shot lead over
·•· But he thought he'd give ita try this one time.
veteran Gay Brewer. and
He came home from work the other night and tried to pretend youngilers Bob Barbarossa
"nothing !Jad-1lappened, but if you ever saw the cat who had just and. George Johnson, over the
"swilllowed the canary, that was Monte Irvin.
lnd1an Wells course.
., He tried not to give the whole thing away, but youthful,
: vivaciousDeelrvin,whohasbeenmarriedtohlm32yearsnow,
·sensed inunediately something was up.
;' "I could tell he was acting," she says. "He had something to
·
· teU me ... I knew that by the way he was behaving ... but he
'
·wanted to surprise me."
· Monte Irvin couldn't keep it inside anymore.
OhiO Dominican"'overcame a
"Dee ... " he said, in that soft tittle voice he uses whenever he's
'happy, which is 90per cent.of the tiple. "l have some good news 17-point first half deficit to
inflict the first Mid·Ohio
:for you. I've been elected to the Hall of Fame. "
Conference loss of the year on
His wife looked at him a moment.
visiting
Rio Grande College in
' "Irvin," she said, employing the name she uses when~ver
she's especially delighted or upset with him, "I knew it was the Panthers' Columbus gym
Wednesday night.
· 8omethin~ . You didn't fool me for a minute."
1 ,
Final score was 92-77. The
She Hugs the Man
loss
not only kept Rio from
With that, she grabbed and hugged the man, who put in 10
years in the Negro Leagues, came up to the New York Giants in gaining at least a share of the
'1949 at the age of 31, developed into one of their hardest-bitting MOC title, it also may have
stars, and was elected to Baseball's Hall of Fame Wednesday by cost them a trip to the, District
22 NA!A playoffs next month.
the special Negro selection committee.
The Redmen are 10-10
Monte Irvin was, well, Monte Irvin at the official announcement in one of the huge ballrooms of the Americana Hotel here overall, and 5-l in league play.
The Panthers are 6-14 overall
Wednesday .
That is to say he was simply himself - obliging, extraor- and 4-3 in league action.
Rio will face Cedarville at
dinarily considerate of others even though this was "his" day,
Lyne Center in its next MOC
and sofl-!lpoken.
outing
Saturday night.
"I used to call him 'Willsperin' Smith,' laughed Larry Doby,
Ken Richardson's 32 points
who used to be Irvin's teammate with the old Newark Eagles of
led
the Panthers' attack. Capt.
the Negro National League and now is a scout and batting inRon Lambert popped in 26 for
structor with the Montreal Expos.
"He probably won't like me saying this, because of the age and the Redmen.
Rio was 17 of 21 from the foul
everything, but he was my idol," said Doby, still smiting. "With
circles
(80 pet. ) and 30 of 65
the Eagles, he played shortstop, and I played second base.
"Monte is the most cool guy I ever met in my life. Look at him from the field for 35 pet. In the
over there now. Still cool. Back in the days we played for second half, Rio managed only
Newark, we'd get a dollar.and.a.IJalf a day to eat. l remember 12 of 46 shots from the field for
how 'we'd go' to the A&amp;P stores and get a bunch of cold cuts. a cold 26 pet.
Dominican hit 10 of 18 foul
Baloney, ham, cheese. We'd spend two dollars, then go back to
shots
for 55 pet. and 40 of 65
the room and eat. We'd always keep a dollar between us. For
emergency."
Irvin was pretty hot stuff with the Eagles.
HeWasMVP
. He hit .422 for them to win the batting title in 1940, and his .388
won him another batting championship in 1941. when he also
By CONNIE SMITH
clubbed 41 homers and was voted the league's MVP.
Fresh from a walloping
A salary disagreement prompted him to go to Mexico in 1942,
suffe
red las t Friday in
and that year he led the Mexican League with .397. Despite three
years with the Army Engineers in Europe, Irvin still wes good Gallipolis, the Meigs basketenough to make the AII.Star team in 1946, 1947 and 1948 after ball team travels to Ironton to
try to get back in the wm
returning to the Eagles.
colwnn
this Friday. The Tigers
There was only one trouble.
were VIctorious last week
Monte Irvin wasn't getting any younger.
Wellston as:the wimess
against
The Giants brought him up in 1949, sent him back down, then
trough! him back up to stay again in 1950.
.; Irvin is now a congenial, respected member of Baseball
!commissioner Bowie Kuhn's staff but in 1951 he was pure
By United Press International
East
:murder at the plate for the Giants, dr(vlng in 151 runs and leading
LaSalle
96
Canislus
85
!them to the National League pennant.
Bktyn Colt 84 Bklyn Poly 72
t; A broken ankle in a Denver exhibition game in April, 1952 Phtla Te&lt;. 56 Albr ight 46
Brockport 7S Oswego 65
)lastened the end of his career, which came five years later.
Thiel
67
:; Irvin talked about how it was for the others in the Negro LIU 7468St.Hiram
Fran·Pa
. 64
'
~gues after Jackie Robinson became the first black to play in
Rochstr 73 Colgate 63
C.W. Post 58 Hofstra 57
~e majors in 1947.
Delaware 77 Rider 66
:; "Jackie going up gave everyone hope that he might be next,'' WVa 71 Rutgers 68
dald Irvin. "AU of us used to talk about it, on the bus and on the Scranton S9 Del. Val. 64
York 42 Cathedral 41
~nches. I'm sorry l didn't get a chance to make the majors when Frnkln&amp;Mrshll
67 Havrfrd 62
~was 16or 19. l thoughll was ready. When !finally did come up, I Stony Brook 80 Kings Pt. 64
~as way over my peak. I wasted 10 years in the Ne~o Leagues." Bflo 76 Albny St..N. Y. 62
59 Susquehanna 58
~
Some Purists Can Quarrel
. Wilkes
Kutztwn 60 Shlppensbg 59
:: Some purists can quarrel with Irvin's credentials for the Hall MnlclalrSI . 71 Trntn St. 62
q!Fame. They can point out he wasn't even in the majors seven Glssbro St. 59 Newrk St. 54
Merrimack 100 Suffolk 73
~II seasons and his lifetime average there was only .293.
Williams 90 Middtebry 56
,; But nobody can quarrel with the fact he was one of the greatest Prvidnce 81 St. Jos.. Pa. 75
~.around performers ever produced by the Negro Leagues or Mass. 76 Boston Colt . 52
Amherst 97 MIT 48
O.at he was one of the most dangerous bitters in the National Colby 83 Bowdoin 73
League during the brief time he was there. Since the special Seton Hall 72 Villnova 70
~mmittee on Negro Leagues is supposed to recognize those who Queens SS Pratt 53
Falrfld 72 St. Bonvntre 60
ierformed outstandingly in those leagues when they otherwise Pace 69 F. Dcknsn -Mad. 68
Widener 78 Swarthmore 48
(ili~t have been in the majors, Monte Irvin fully qualifies.
Penn St . 64 Temple 49
~ The 55-year~ld former Giants first baseman~utfielder has
So.Conn.St. 76 Adelphi 70
p!me other qualifications also,
Dowl ing 56 W. Conn . 25
: '"He was a second father to me," said WUlle Mays, who came Boston U. 107 Cqpn. 99
Hartford 91 Am . Inti 80
lip to the Giants two years after him and is 12 years younger .
Sacred Hrt 74 Stonhll 72
Assumption 67 Cent .Conn . 53
i "We roomed together, and he'd tell me the places to go and W
. Va . Tech 88 Concord 81
where not to go. He'd put me to bed at night . That's right. He'd
Cntenry 91 Lamar U. 73
'ctually see that I was in bed by 10 o'clock every night we
South
Duke S4 Wake Forest 71
i;eren't playing.
•&lt;
Dom . 97 Norflk St. 96
•, "!remember when he broke his leg' in Denver. I cried, because Old
Towson St. 80 Baltimore 74
•t felt l lost a great friend."
Roanoke 73 Geotwn ·D.C. 57

Property

Rap:
It's nothing new, but when it happens to YOU, all those answers you gave other people just don 'I go down any more.
My best.friend and l went loopy over the same guy. He can't
decide which of us he likes better.
To avoid a feud, and losing my best friend,! told her I'd stop
trying for him. But how can I reaDy stop when all I do Is think of
htm? And how can l convince her, when in truth,l'm still hoping?
He doesn't make it any easier, liking us both.- WORRIER

~port Parade

'•.

Meigs

Arise, my feUow environmentalists, and let us join to fight to
protect and preserve a seriously endangered species, the
vanlshlng American Semicolon.
The American Semicolon used to flourish in many parts of
+++
the land. It was in every learned paper. You could find it in most
Dear
Helen
and
Sue
:
bOoks written by authors who could read without moving their
You more or less agreed with ''Outside the Door a Lot," the
lips. It even showed up in some newspapers and magazines.
hoy
who thinks students should "grade" teachers.
Prolific, and given revered status by early English and
"SCIENCE,'' a prestigious weekly, recently reported on
American grammarians, it found fertile nesting grounds on the
student
evaluations of teachers. Researchers found that students
CBIJlpuses of almost every college in North America .
The American Semicolon perhaps reached its greatest pre- studied were "less than perfect judges of teaching effectiveness"
eminence when the designers of typewriter keyboards made it ... in fact, "students rate most highly instructors from whom
they learn least." (This is coUege level - would high schoolers
easier to make a semicolon than a colon.
.
be
any more astute?)
Alas, its moment' of glory was transient; a new generation,
I ·would not discourage students from opposing, by
and a.new medium appeared on the scene.
reasonable
and effective means, incompetence or abuse of
BY spending more time watching television than reading
books, the Now Generation forgot the revered sanctity of the authority, but why should they be considered competent judges
of the qusllty of their instruction? Not haveing been over the
American Semicolon, and Its numbers rapidly depleted.
Cleverly schooled as they were in such arts as campus- path, how can they be expert at knowing where they need to go?
- SYMPATHETIC BUT NOT BLIND
burning, draft~vading and dally violence, the New People forgot
just how serviceable and sturdy a Semicolon could be. The lossIs
Dear Rap:
theirs, not ours. (Some place all the blame on TV; some do not.)
lfeela better appraoch (than student grading of teachers) is
Most learned punctuators protested that the young were
to
grade
the students at the end of each school year against a
destroying the American,Semicolon at the very ttme they were
trying to. protect the whooping crane, bald eagle, woods and statewide or national standard for that grade level. Where class
achievement is low, the teaching quality is poor, and vice versa
waters.
These voices crying in the wilderness got little help from the • - regardless of how unpopular or popular a teacher is with the·
orthographers and lexlcologtsts; after all, their field was words, students. My child has learned more from a tough teacher she
"endures" than from the "great guy" who lets the kids loaf or get
not the little squiggly things put between them.
off
the subject. - JAMES c.
One sage suggests that the very schizophrenic nature of the
~erican Semicolon led to its own demise. After aU, it looks, and
usuaUy behaves, a little like a period, colon, or comma, and yet is Helen and Sue:
What a bum answer you gave to the filp who was "Outside
none of
The !otiS ts one to be regretted, because abnost every the Door a Lot." Why didn't you tell him if only one out ot six
reaeonably quick-witted schoolboy of a generation ago (and teachers was "great" by his inadequate .Judgment, he was
batting only 16 pet. himself?
every headline writer who ever lived) learned a most valuable
For his information: teachers DO get called to the office.
lesson which has been lost in antiquity:
You can use a semicolon in almost ~very situation, when They are "graded" by their supervisors, parents, students,
taJ1118yen - they are constantly being tested.
,
you're not sure whether a period, colon or comma is really
I have known many teachers. Moot are good, they are
correct.
dedicated;
they enjoy working with youth. l have never known
what a find thts would be for today's young! To have a ready
any
child
who
was unjustly or cruelly punished by a teacher. If
IIJPPIY of all.purpose punctuation to scatter through essays, term
pspen and even love letters. Here, let me give a few, but the slob who wrote this letter is outside the door a lot (banished)
it is be&amp; use he Is too obnoxious to remain in the classroom. H~
remember, they're getting scarce:
has been rude and impudent to the teacher, and no doubt lives in
CUpanduve lhele, f~r -unleu the C8IIIPUIOI ~in anew to a district which has the stupid regulation that a child cannot be
Intel vut quantllle• ol the American SemlcGlon, we may see the disciplined within the classroom.
dl7 when G1117 a few will be dllplayed In the l'lre boob section of
If students do not learn, It Is nearly always the fault ot the
llllj~r public ltbrarill, lllte the now.aUnct pauenger pigeon
student or the home. Such an arrogant, re8enlful, obstinate
lllowed up In the 100. Heed my warnln8;.It may not be too late.
character wouldn't learn if he had Socrates for a· teacher. -

these.

'fith study group

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-t'omeroy, 0., Feb. 8, 1973

&gt;).w;'7)S.;::®:::~~:;-;-;::::::::x:::~:::::~::-»x:::m:::i*:s.::stS:WJ«.:~~=:::'4~:::~.w.~ · ·"=~.~&gt;=-~1

•
l·A

,.

11
~

• ••
'•'

,,I

,NEW YORK (UPI) - Monte
llvin,
whose brief career as a
&gt;
major league star was a sad
reminder that his 10 peak years
were spent in the shadowland
of 1M old Negro Leagues, is the
newest member of baseball's
.Hall of Fame.
Irvin, who played for the
New York Giants and Chicago
Cubs from 1949 through 1956,
was elected to the Hall Wedn8aday by the special eight·
man committee on the Negro
Litagues. He is the !39th
member of the HaD and the
fourth selected by the special
cOOunlttee .
Irvin will be inducted into the
Hall of Fame in Cooperstown,
N;y ., Aug. 8, . along with
warren Spahn, Mickey Welch,
Gtorge "Highpockets" Kelly
and B!Uy Evans. Spahn was
e~ to the Hall in voting by
389 members of the Baseball
Wttters Association of
America while Welch, Kelly
and Evans were selec!ed by a
s~clal committee on old'

tiriiii'S.

.. ~·a major league creden-

•I:

Df are modest by Hall

rJ.

Fame standards-a .293 batting average for seven seasons
and 99 homers-but his career
must be viewed within the
coqtext of his time.
Monte was a deadly clutchhitter for the Giants in 1951
when he had a .312-24-121 offensive perfol'lljance and also
starred will' .329-21-97 and .26219-64 performances in 1953 and
1954, respectively. He was an
excellent defensive outfielder
with a strong throwing arm
and he ran the bases
aggressively and alertly if
without great speed.
But the Irvin of those years
in "the bigs" was only a
shadow of the Irvin who played
the previous 10 seasons in the
Negro Leagues.,.travelling the
hamburger circuit in rickety
buses ... being turned away by
Jim ,Crow laws... playing three
games in a day and moving
along 100 roUes for a doubleheader the n.exl day ...earning
$150 a month when white
players of lesser skills were
~rning three and four times as
much ... agreeing to split
doubleheaders in order to get a

hooking ...always second class
and walling for the hour of
deliverance .
It came in 1947 when Jackie
Robinson broke basebaU'~ unwritten color line with the
Dodgers.
Others who received votes
from the co111111ittee were Judy
Johnson and Jim "Cool Papa"
Bell, three each, and Martin
DiHigo, two, and Ray Dandridge and Willie Foster, one
each.
The oth~r Negr!l stars selected by the special committee for
enshrinement have been
Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson and
Buck Leonard while Robinson
and Roy Campanella have
been elected )II voting by the
main body of the BBWAA.
SIX SIGNED
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - The
Pittsburgh Pirates Wednesday
announced the signing of six
veteran players - outfielders
Willie Stargell and Gene
Clines, shOrtstop Gene Alley
ana pitchers Nelson Briles,
Dock Ellis and Ramon Hernandez- to 1973 ~ontracts.

Rockets succumbed to a 97,77
beatmg.
Several of the Ironton
players had a good evening of
play there. Five of their men

scored w double figures.
Among these were Vince
McCreary with 21 points, Dave
Rann was next with 19 and Bill
Green had 17. This victory was

SVAC quints head .
down 'home stretch
Three league games and two
non-league tills are slated this
weekend in the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference.
Action starts Friday night
with North Gallia traveling to
Kyger Creek and Eastern
playing at Southwestern in
league games . Hannan Trace
IS at Hannan , W. Va., in a nonleague battle. Saturday night,
Southern plays at Symmes
Valley iri league play while
Kyger Creek visits Union
Furnace in non-conference
action .
Both North Gallia and Kyger
Creek have had their troubles
this season. The Pirates are J.14 overall and 3-11 in the league.
Kyger Creek holds a 4-12
overall record and 3-8 mark in
the SV AC. The Bobcats own
league victories over North
Gallia and two over Southwestern. The other was a
tournament win over the
Pirates.
Coach Jim Foster's Pirates
have beaten Southern and
Southwestern in league play.
Eastern, 9-6 overall and 6-2
against league opponents will
play
the Southwestern
Highlanders. SW is J.-14 overall

and ().IJ in the SVAC. Symmes
Valley continues to lead the
league with a 9·1 slate ,
however , the Vikings. have
taken their lumps against
stronger competition. Southern
holds down fourth place in the
loop with a S.O mark.
Hannan Trace, predicted to
win the SVAC, has an outs tandmg 15-2 record. The
Wildcats are 10-2 in loop
games.
SVAC STANDINGS
All GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Hannan Trace 15 2 1153 ·alO
Sy mmes Valley 9 6 1125 1059
Eastern
9 6 870 808
Southern
6 9 791 845
Kyger Creek
4 12 91 4 1162
Southwestern 3 lJ 819 1103
North Gatlia
3 14 918 1094
SVACONLY

TEAM
W L P
Symmes Valley 9 1 S03
Hannan Trace 10 2 80S
Eastern
8 2 606
Southern
5 6 504
North Gallia
3 8 625
KygerCreek
3 8 617
Southwestern 0 11 546
SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W L P
-ttorlh Gall Ia
9 2 446
&gt;outhern
S 3 4SI
Symmes Valley 7 3 432
Hannan Trace

Eastern
Kyger Creek
Southwestern

6 6 444
4 6 428
4 7 443
0 II 268

,df .'...·-- ,·

. .. GEORGE HALL

KINGS ARMS NIGHT CLUB

•

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~ ·'

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SEE YOUR NEAREST FORD DWR TODAY

•

�•

'

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 8, i973

Television ·Log
Thursday, Feb. 8, 1973
4:00 - Mr. Cartoon 3, Love American Style 13: Flmtstones 6,
15: Gilligan's Isle B: Sesame St. 20, 33, Movie "The Juggler"
10.
4:30- I Love Lucy 6: Dante! Boone 13, Andy Grift1fh 15, Pel·
ticoa t Junction 3: Glll1gan's Island 8.
5:00 - Dante! Boone6 ; Mister Rogers 20, 33: Dick Van Dyke IS :
Bonanza 3, 4; Hazel 8.

5:30 - Marshall Ditton IS ; Etec. Co 33; Gomer Pyle 13;
Hodgepodge Lodoe 20: Beverly Hillbillies a.
6:00- News 3. 4, 8. 10, IS; Truth or Conseq. 13. Around The
Bend 33: Sesame St. 20.
6:30 - NBCNews4, 1S; ABCNews8, 10: I DreamofJeannle13;
Designing Women 33.
,
7:00 - Truth or Conseq. 3: Beat the Clock 4; Course of Our
Times 33: Dick Van Dyke 4; What's My Line 8; Big Red
Jubilee IS ;-News6: Elec. Co. 20; Let's Make ADeal13.
7:30 - Hollywood Squares3 ; To Tell the Truth 6; Wild Kingdom
10; I'll See You in Court~; Lassie 8; Zoom 20; Newsmaker '7¥
13; Western Civilization: Majesty - Madness 33.
'
8:00 - Advocates 20, JJ; Flip Wilson 3, 4, IS: Mod Squad 6, 13;
Wallons 8, 10.
9:00 - Bob Hope 3, 4, IS; King FW 6, 13: An American Family
20, 33; Movies "The Professionals" 10: "The Man with the
Golden Arm" 8.
.
10:00- News 20; World Press 33 ; Streets of San Francisco 6, 13;
NBC Follies 3, 4, 15.
11:00-News3,4,6,8.13, 15.
11:30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Jack Paar Tonlle6, 13.
11:50- Movies "The Devil Lives In Something Evil" 8; " Parts
When it Sizzles" 10.
1:00 - News 4, 13.
FRIDAY, FEB. 9,1973
6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6: 15- FarmllmeiO; Farm Report 13; English 3.
6:25 - Paul Harvey 13.
6:30 - Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Human Dimension
10: Blue Ridge Quartet 13.
7:00- Today 3, 4, 15; News 6, 8, 10; Fllntslones 13.
7:30- Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13; Popeye 10.
8:00 - Capt. Kangaroo 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33 ;
Romper Room 8; Lassie 6 .
S:30- Jack LaLanne 13; New Zoo Revue 6; Romper Room B.
9:00- Paul Dl&lt;on 4; Phil Donahue 15; A. M. 3; Concentration 6;
Capt. KangarooS; Ben Casey 13; Mr. Rogers 33.
9:30- HazelS; To Tell The Truth J .
10:00- Dinah Shore 3, IS; Dick Van Dyke 13; Columbus Six
Calling 6; Joker's Wild 8, 10.
10:30 - Concentration 3, 15: Phil Donahue 4; Split Second 13:
Price Is Right B. 10.
11:00- Love American Style6; Sale ofthe Century 3, IS.
12:00- Jeopardy 3, 15; Boil Braun's S0-50 Club 4; Password 6 ;
Local News 10; News 13; Contact 8.
12 :30 - 3 W's Game 3, 15 ; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10i Split

Second 6.
1:00- News3; All My Children 6, 13; Green Acres 10; It's Your
Bet 8; Walch Your Child 15.
1:30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; Let's Make a Deal 6, 13; As The
World Turns 8, 10.
2:00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13: Mike
Douglass 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
2:30 - Doctors3, 4, 15; DallngGamel3 ; Edge of NightS, 10.
3:00- Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hosollal6, 13; Love Is A
Many Sptendored Thing 8, 10: Bill Moyers' Journal20.
3:30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13:
Merv Griffin B; Secret Storm 10; Book Beat 20.
4:00- Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset IS; Sesame St. 33; Fllntstones
6; Love American Style 13; Merv Griffin 4; Gilligan's Island
8; Movie "The Spoilers" 10.
4:30- I Love Lucy 6; Andy Griffith 15; Daniel Boone 13; Pet·
tlcoat Junction 3; Gilligan's Island S.
5:00- Mister Rogers 20, 33; Dick Van Dyke 15: Bonanza 3, 4 ;
Daniel Boone 6; Hazel 8.
5:30 • Marshall Dillon 15: Elec. Co. 33: Gomer Pyle 13:
Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Beverly Hillbillies 8.
6:00- News 3, 4, S, 10, 15: NBC News 13; Truth or Conseq . 6;
Sesame St. 20; Around the Bend 33.
6:30- NBC News l, 4, IS ; ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10; I
Dream of Jeannie 13; Let's Travel 33.
7:00- What's My LineS; Truth or Conseq. 3, Beat the Clock 4;
·News 6, 10; Saint 15; Elec. Co. 20; Folk Guitar 33; Wild
Kingdom 13.
7:30- To Tell the Truth 6; Parent Game 10; Beat the Clock 13;
Porter Waggoner 3; Young Dr. Kildare 4; It's Your Bet 8:
Hodgepodge Lodge 20: Wall Street This Week 33.
8:00 - Santord &amp; SOn 3. 4.15; Brady Bunch 6, 13; Mission. lm·
possibleS, 10; Washington Week ln·Revtew 20, 33.
8:30 - Masterpiece Theatre 33: Room 222 6 13: Movie " The
Undefeated" S; Movie "TM Bridges atToko Rl" 10.
9:30 - Odd Couple 6, 13.
10:00- News 20; Bobby Darin 3, 4, IS; Love Amer ica n Style 6,
13; Wake Up John Doe 33.
11 :00-News3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15.
11 :30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Jack Paar Tonlte 6; Movies
"Journey to the Center of Time" 10; "War·Gods otthe Deep"
13.
11:50 - Movie "Frankenstein Created Woman" B.
1:00 - Midnight Music Festival 3, 4, 15; Movle " Souls for Sale"
10: News 13.
2: 30 - News 4.

&amp; THINBS·
BY PAUL CRABTREE

Miller gets seat

W -IN AT BRIDCE

'Hard Luck Joe' Errs Again

I Voice. along Br'Way
.

~~Nicklaus almost perfect

)
.

WASHINGTON , D. C. Tenth District Representative
Clarence E. Miller has been
I·' The btcldm~ has bcc.·n·
selected to serve on the House
Wcsl
Nurth
Republican Research Com.
m1ltee'. The role of the
Pa~s
1 N.T.
Pas.o.;
Pass
2 N.T .
Pass
., Research Committee is to
Pas:s
3•
P&lt;!SS
serve GOP House Members as
You, South, hold:
a source of ne1" Ideas and
4AK54 ¥AQ63 t 2 .KQI07 approaches to emerging
What do you do now?
issues.

promoter - or go to jail.
.
BY JACK O'BRIAN
The
huge
''Two
for
the
Seesaw"
musical's
CLAUDETI'E'SA PEACH TO KLING
• 1094
off balance ... Jane Fonda's writing her
NEW
YORK (UP!)- Dr. Henry Klipg has
¥ 7 SJ
autobiog.
II should sell hundreds of eopies !..
t AKJ
been making house calls - on Claudette Colbert
David Cassidy's nom-d~otel at the Plaza Is
... Showbiz insiders simply can't dig the Lucie
WEST
EAS1'
James
Ross, gals ... Another unusually-named
Arnaz.Jim Bailey togetherness. He's the sen.
48~
.J7 632
restaurant: The Last National Bank of Hartsationally campy female Impressionist (Judy
¥1098 62
.... 4
ford,
Conn ., .. Need a lift? The Dutch Phone Co.
t 9764 3
t S2
Garland, Streisand etc.) ... Bdwy. is amazed at
J964
in Amsterdam has a Dial.a.Joke service. (You
producer Cyma Rubin shuttering "No, No,
SOU~H (D)
go
Dutch, rcawss).
·
Nanette" while it's still making ·money; but
4AKQ
Hal Prince's philanthropy thJ year is a
A-Bid four spades. Your
Cyrna just gave her rich·f'ich husband notice,
• KQJ
partner un't be iood enough in
preview
performance of hill "A Uttle Night
tOo ... Alan Ladd Jr. inherited his dad's looks t Q lOB
diamonds to warrant a thrt..-e
Music" musical Feb. 18 -tohelpJawn Lindsay
.KQ83
and his mom's showbiz acumen: he's just been
no- trump call, hut you have a
pay
off hts planned hopelessness last year- his
North -South vulnerable
very gofKfhand and should try
named veep for creative affairs at 20th-Fox.
Llndsay.for-Presldent !Iasco ... With all the
w..t North East South .:-ame with the 4-3 spade fit.
Author Michael Blankfort couldn't wheedle
2N.1'.
TODAY'S QUESTION
hired
cops in Las Vegas watching cash,
a ticket to the opera even with conductor Zubiil
Pass
6 N.T. Pass Pass
Instead of bidding two nosomeone walked off with a big sofa from the E1
Mehta's influence, so he went to the boxofflce
Pass
trump your partner .. has bid
Cortez Hotel lobby ... Gifted tittle rock star
hoping for a last-minute cancellation. As he
three clubs over your two
Openmg lead - · 10
halfpint Paul Wl111ams bought the late Peter
spades. What do you do now?
walked away from that defeat, a 12-year~ld
Lorre's
Bevhllls manse.
Answer
tomorrow
ticket-bustling kid pulled at his sleeve and
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Casino Russe maestro Sasha Potinoff rec'd
whispered, "I got 20 tickets. Wanna buy two?"
'. East won the first trick
his
biggest
tip - two crisp $100 bllls from ~
'th th
f
h
t
d
5tnd
$1
for
JACOBY
MODERN
book
B.
F.
Board
Flora
C.
Board
Done and done; and Mike wantS to know the
, WI
e ace 0 ears an to: "Win ot Bridgt," (c/o tiN~ ne~s- to Ruben A. 'collins, Thelma
Boston Diamond Jtm who sal&lt;l hts name's
kid's contact.
returned the su1t.
paper),
P.O.
Box 48!1, Rodro City C ll'
L
I
M'ddl
I
Martin
Simmons. Came back this .week and
The lad probably will grow up to be another
"Hard Luck Joe" was on Stotion, New York; N.Y. 10019.
0 ms, 0
l
epor .
gifted
Sasha
with a gold watch.
lead. He thought, or maybe
Robert N. Clark, Lola E. Mike Jacobs, who would up running Madison
just paused for a second,
Family that plays together, etc. - TV's
Clark to Larry W. WiU, Shirley Square Garden when he came up with champ
before laying down the king
Gene
Barry will tour in "Fiddler." His real
Joe Louis. Uncle Mike had been a ticket hustler
-"!:B~A~R=-=a~s:::--- L. wm, lot, Scipio.
and queen of clubs.
wife, Betty, will play his stage wife, Golda ...
Argyle L. Deeter, Florence all his life -still scalping as a multl.lflUllonalre
West showed out and there
Anne Baxter's getting the Big Rush from rich
Deeter to John T. Craven, to his last fight promotion .. 1 Mike told us the
By PHIL PASTORET
was no way left for Joe to
Robert E. Thieman, 6.8 acres, afternoon of the second Louls.Conn fight, "Jack, Roger Vall ... Phil Silvers feels well enough
make 12 tricks.
Yes,
G
w
e
n
d
o
I
y
n
,
you
"My typical hard luck" he might say that saurian Olive.
l won't but you will see a heavyweight cham- after his stroke and hospital siege to start
groaned . "We each had to sweethearts are a IIi g a tor John M. Welsh, Anna M. pionship draw a $10 mUllon gate ." Mike said preparing a cafe act. Careful, Farve! ... Diana
hold four cards in the same
Welsh to Jack W. Carsey, pay-TV would do it and was right. Here's an Ross' future includes an almost certain Oscar
suit and while I played prop· pairs.
Neacil E. Carsey, lot, Mid- insight into the late Mike's scalping days: AI nomination, a three-week bonanza at Caesars
erly and guarded against the
Bumper slicker we're
Jolson walked into the ~ailed press seats at Palace - and a definite mayhe : co-6tarrlng
only 4-1 break I could han- not apt to lake lightly: ·dleport.
dle, the other player had the " Mafia Staff Car- Keep'a
Carla J. Salser to Larry the same Louis.COnn fight, discovered he was in with Liz Taylor in a film, "Black and White."
four cards."
"Deliverance" Is headed for the $25 mUllon
the 12th row and to all around bleated, "And I
Salser, lot, Olive.
It was typical of the sort you hands off!"
Harold 0 . Long, dec., to paid $1ro each for seats back here!" ... Mike mark. The Burt Reynolds Cosmoofludlty is
of hard l u c k that results
Mildred P. Long, Mary A. used about two or three legitimate rows for the credited with most of its wallop ... Cafe clown
from poor play. Joe had
The
Dai~ Sentinel
nothing to lose by cashing
Long, Roy Long, Richard press, peddled off the rest for whatever he could Bette Midler entertains here in N. Y. at the
DEVOTEO TO THE
the three top diamonds and
INTEREST OF
Long, Roger Long, cert. for get, usually $100 to $200 apiece ... It ran openly publicized and admitted homo-llangout
MEIG5·MA50N
AREA
the last heart before playing
turkish bath joint on the West Side, but she goes
sometimes into six figures.
trans., Middleport.
L. TANNEHILL,
further. East would have CHESTEREKtC.
home
nights with a straight lad, actor Art
Ed .
Mike told us he made about $250,000 in his
1
Mary A. Long, Roy Long,
shown out and West would
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
Maida N. Long, Richard Long, first light-production, and, ''The next night I Killiam ... It's never too late for film nudity, it
City Editor
be marked with 10 cards in
Published
daily
except
those suits. Then, Joe should Seturdav by The Ohio Valley Beverly Long, Roger Long, was in my usual doorway at the Metropolitan seems: middle-aged Monlque VanVooren said
cash the king and queen of r:»ubHsl'llng Company , 111 Delores Long to Mildred P. Opera hustling tickets - and it was pouring at Paparazzi she'll go starkers in Andy Warhol's
spades . West would follow Court St ., Pomeroy, Ohio.
rain!" ... That's why we expect the hustling "Flesh from Frankenstein." No comment.
and two more of his cards o4S769. Business Ofl rce Phone Long, lots, Middleport.
Editorial Phone 992·
Marjorie June Roush, dec., youngster to either make a large dent as a
would be known so that he 992-21S6,
2157
to Walter D. Roush , cert. for
could only hold one club.
Second clns postage paid at
I
Pomeroy
,
Ohio
.
trans.,
Middleport.
The ace of clubs play from
The
Almanac
Feb.
6,
1820.
In
1!164,
Princess
Irene of The
National advertis i ng
dummy would mark East represtntat
Albert Zahl to Albert Zahl, By United Press lntematiooal
ive Bottinelll
On this day in history:
Netherlands renounced her
with the last three clubs. At Gallagher, Inc ., 12 East o42nd Ruth Lutheran, parcels,
Today
is
Thursday,
Feb.
8,
In
1587,
Mary,
queen
of
Scots
right
to the throne and was
St
,
New
York
City,
New
York
this point even Joe could
Subscription
rates
:
De
·
Letart.
the
39th
day
of
1973
with
326
to
was beheaded after being married to Spanish Prince Juan
work out a way to lead twice livered by carrier where
Anna M. Ryther, Com., follow. ·
through East's jack-nine·six availeble SO cents per week.
charged with conspiring to Carlos, slated to become king
By Motor Route where carrier Elmer H. Bush, dec., to Ethel
and make the slam.
The moon is approaching its murder Britain's Queen Eli· of Spain after the death of
service not available: One.
(NEWSPAPER ENT£RPRISE ASSN .)
May
Bush,
lot,
Pomeroy
.
month Sl 7S By ma ll In Oflio
first quarter.
zahethl.
Generalissimo Francisco Franand W Va , One vear SU 00 .
The
morning
stars
are
Venus,
In 1940, every tenth person in co.
SiK months S7.2S . Three
months s• SO . Subscr ip ti on
Mars and .Jupiter.
two
villages near Warsaw,
Our lazy neighbor antici- price
includes Sunday T tmes
pated the energy crisis by Sentinel
The evening stars are Mer- Poland was shot in rep~isal for
about 20 years.
.
cury and Saturn.
the deaths of two German
A thought for the day:
Those born on this date are soldiers.
American statesman Benjamin
under the sign of Aquarius.
In 1963, Iraq Premier Karim Franklin said, "There never
h
Secretary we know spe nds
1
more time manicuring her
Union Gen. WiliamS
erman, Kassim was overthrown by a was a good war or a bad
hands tpan doing anything who put the torch .to.. Atlanta military coup. He was executed
· else ~ we call her our file ' during·the Civil War, was born the next day.
By Helen and Sue Hottel
clerk.
NUK1'11

K

"'"10"2

.7

..

lZa M;J :J •A@!fiiiJ

I

'

Coll

Eternal Triangle -Teen Style

id

Worrier :
Best girl friends are for sharing confidences; tell her the
truth - that you're stlU hoping. Friendships last longer when
they're held together with honesty. - SUE

+++

ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE
--MUST GOJ-WE NEED THE SPACE FOR NEW SPRING AND
SUMMER MERCHANDISE ARRIVING DAILY. DON'T
MISS OUT ON THIS ONCE A YEAR SALEI
"

J

,,
1••

'•

,

+++

. Cl'( THE TV DIAL: A JII8Cial that may make it as a fall ·
-.:* piileWI at 10 OD WSAZ-TV: "NBC's Foilles," itrilh
"'"01 Davia Jr. 11 lint week'l bolt ... 'Bob Hope, who might
.J111b Jthln rlf,lutar olhll owupeclal, ume eblllnelat 8.

·,

a

STORE HOURS:
I

FABULOUS DISCOUNTERS!

,.'." '

"

~

J

9 AM • 9 PM Daily

KNOWS

Note ~'rom Rap: We're glad we never had YOU for
teacher!
''

.·,

700 WEST MAIN STREET

the

12 PM •.8 PM Sunday

res

Irvin named to Hall of Fame

HURRY ON OVERAND 5-A-V-E I I

POMEROY, OHIO

ege

Sco

'

'

SHOP THE JONES BOYS .FOR SUPER SAVINGS!

the second round. Barbarossa
and JohllBOn move over to I.a.
Quinta and then play Bermuda
Dunes !Jelore hitting Indian
Wells.
·
· In the ~ole format of this
tourney, a round is played on
each of the four courses before
the cut is made to the low 70
and ties for the final round at
Bermuda Dunes. This year's
•
•

·

field goal attempts for 49 pet.
Rio led 12-7 early in the
game, and with 9:47 left in the
first half, was on top 32-15. Rio
led 43-39 at halftime.
Bob Hornsburger hit two
quick buckets at the start of the
second half to knot the count at
4:Hlll.
The Panthers took the lead
for good when Ken Mizell, 5-9
junior guard, tallied five points
w1thin a' span of 45 seconds,
snapping a 65.j)S tie. OD in·
creased its lead to 10 points at
the three-minute mark.
In the preliminary game,
Rio's JVs won, 82-72.

IN GOOD CONDITION

CHICAGO (UP[) - George
Halas, owner of the Chicago
Bears, underwent abdominal
surgery Wednesday at Passavant Hospital to remove stones
from the common duct leading
to the liver.
Doctors said Halas was In
good condition followiog the
operation.

Box score:
RIO GRANDE (77) - Bar.
tram 6-2-14; Hart, 1-0·2:
Thompson, 6·4-16; Rouse, 1-1·3:
Lambert, 9·8-26 ; Bollinger, 6-012; Rose, 1-2-4. TOTALS 30· 11·

17.

OHIO DOMINICAN {92) Richardson, 14·4·32; Stoner, 3·39: Maurer, 5·1·11: Yuskewlch, 6·
1·13: Dledalls, 2-0·14: Mizelle 3·

1-7; Brewer, 1-0-2; Horns ..

burger, 7·0·14. TOTALS 41·10..
92.
Score at half: Rio 43 OD 39

WORLD ALMANAC

1
•

FACTS

·

A patent for an invention
1s granted by the U.S. Patent Office to the inventor
of any new and useful proc·
ess, machine, manufac·
ture, or composition of matter, or any new and use·
lui improvements in these
categories. The grant to the
patentee is of " the right to
exclude others from making, usmg or selling the in·
v en t i on throughout the
U.S." for the term of 17
years, The World Almanac
says.
C!}\J YI'igh t © 1973
St 1\ ~ Pftl't ' l'

Jo;n t••! !H i lle

;\t~ t:i n.

Pro Smndings
:IBA Standings

By United Press International
Eastern Conference

AHL Standings
By United Press

lnt~rnalional

East

Atlantic Division
w. I. I. pis gf ga
w. I. pet. g.b. N.S
29
12 12 70 212 13.4
Boston
44 11 .BOO
Boston 27 20 7 61 181 1781
New York
45 15 .750 1'12 Rchstr
host course. .
23 19 9 55 168 182
Bulfalo
17 39 .304 27'12 Prov
Ben Kern, another youngster Philadelphia
19 23 9 47 165 175
4 55 .068 42
26 13 41 199 23.4
among~ many playing in this
~~tid ,.
Central Division
12
30
11 35 179 244
w. I. pet. g.b.
tournament, shot a ~
West
Baltimore
35
20
.636
for the best first.round score at Atlanta
w. I. I. pts gf ga
32 27 .542 S Cinco
41 14 4 86 259 165
Bermuda Dunes and was three Houston
23 34 .404 13 Hrshy 29
14 II 69 229 157
20 35 .364 15 Va
shots behind Nicklaus along Cleveland
25
IS 12 62 188 168
Western Conference
Rchmnd
20
26
B 48 188 199
with Charles Coody and Dwight
Midwest Division
Jcksnvl
18
30
7
43 183 217
' Nevil. ·
w. I. pet. g.b. Batt
a
36
9
25 JA7 245
39 17 .696 1
Another shot back at 68 were Milwaukee
Wednesday
$ Results
Chicago
33 21 .611 s
Rochester SJacksonvtlte 2
Tom Jenkins and John Mahaf- KC·Omaha
29 32..475 12'1'
(Only
game scheduled)
25 31 · .446 14
fey, who, like Barbarossa, are Detroit
Thursday's Games
Pacific
Division
recent graduates from the
Nova Scotia at Richmond
w. I. pet. q.b.
(Only game scheduled)
University of Houston, Billy Los Angeles 44 12 .786
34 21 618 9'12
Casper, Kermit Zarley and Bob Golden St.
NHL Staridings
Phoeni&lt;
26 30 .464 18
International
Payne.
Seattle
19 40 .322 26'12 By United Press
East
Defending champ Bob Ros- Portland
13 42 .236 31'12
w. I. t. pis gf ga
Wednesday's Results
burg was at 69 while John
Montrel
35
7 12 82 226 120
Boston 113 Los Ang 112, ot
NY Rgrs 37 13 4 78 218 130
Schlee, who snapped an eightBaltimore 137 Atlanta 108
Boston 32 16 S 69 223 165
year slump by winning last
KC.Omaha 105 Milwaukee 98 Detroit
2Q 19 7 63 IS2 167
Detroit 113 Phoenix 107
Sunday's Hawaiian Open, was
Buffalo
2j 18 8 62 189 ISO
(Only games scheduled)
Toronto
18
29 7 43 167 IS3
in a big group at 70. Arnold
Thursday's Games
Vncuvr
IS
33
7 37 154 232
Portland
at
Golden
State
Palmer, Orville Moody, Miller
NY
lsldrs
7
44
s 19 113 256
Cleveland at Atlanta
Barber and Bobby Lunn were
West
Seattle at Phoeni&lt;
w. t• . I. pts gf ga
in an even bigger group tied at
!Only games scheduled)
Chicago 31 17 6 68 204 156
71.
Phlla
24 22 9 57 189 1S9
Minn
23 22 8 54 164 157
A tQtal of 52 players from the
Atlanta
,
22 25 9 53 146 159
starting field of 144 broke par
St.Louis 21 22 10 52 157 166
over the lour flat desert layouts
Los Ang 22 26 1 51 165 183
Pittsbgh 22 27 6 50 183 185
on a near perfect day for golf. Va. Un1on S1 St. Paul's 77
Calif
9 33 12 30 149 231
Fta
Sou
.
90
Fla.
Tech
54
A strong wind came up late in
Wednesday's Results
Biscayne 88 Ft. Lauderdle 7S
the day but it didn't have much Elon 65 Pfeiffer sa
Montreal 5 Pittsburgh 2
Toronto 5 California 3
High
Pt.
67
All
.
Chrslian
65
effect. Most of the field made it
NY Rngrs 6 NY lslnd rs 0
Guilford
96
Catawba
84
home before the sand started to N.C Wslyn 85 St. Andrws 79
Boston 3 Minnesota 2
Detroit 5 Atlanta 3
fly.
East Car. 69 RichmonQ 64
Chicago 2 Buffalo I
Lee Trevino played Indian in Wstrn Md. 74 MI. St. Mry's 72
Los Ang 2 Philadelphia 1
Hopkins 73 Ursin us 64
the first round and shot a tw(). Johns
(Only games scheduled)
Murray St. 89 Parsons 80
Thursday's Games
over 74. He was so upset at Union. Ky. 94 No . Ky . 92
California
at Buffalo
Midwest
himself that he stormed off in a
Minnesota at St. Louts
Yngstwn St BS Bldwn· Wll ce 50
huff.
(Only games scheduled)
Malone S9 Tiffin 85
Worse off than Trevino, Wright St. 91 Marian-Ind. 68
,.-.. WHA Standings
Urbana 71 Walsh 56
though, was Lu Uang-Huan of Wooster
71 Marietta 53
By United Press International
Taiwan. He played lost ball Kent St.74 Pitt 68
East
w. 1. t. pts gf ga
as an unplayabletie on the fifth Mrshll68 Miami 0. 59
98 Gannon -Pa . 66
Cleve
33 19 2 6S 19S 150
hole at Indian and was Akron
Ky . Wslyn 96 S.W. Mo. 71
New Eng 32 22 1 , 65 227 182
disqualified. Lu said he Musklngum 73 Dayton 57
N.Y.
25 30 1 51 226 230
Quebec 24 2S 3 51 188 205
became confused but finally Butler 76 Evansvl 74
Ind . Cent. 78 Vatpraiso 66
Phil a
22 31 0 44 188 228
understood.his mistake. He had Shaw
102 Central St. 73
Ottawa 20 31 4 44 195 239
a 76 anyway, which was a UW.Grn Bay 30 St. Nrbrt s
West
DePaul 89 Xavler-0. 67
w. I. t. pis gf ga
distant 12 shots off the lead.
E. Ill . 96 Nrlhrn Iowa 66
Wlnlpg 30 23 3 63 203 177
W. Ill. 95 Cent. Mo. St.BS
Ho\Jslon 2S 21 4 60 209 182
Augstna·lll. 66 Elmhrst SO
Minn
27 25 3 57 181 189
Itt. Wslyn 80 Millikin 7S
Los Ang 25 24 4 54 186 181
Defiance BS Bluffton 86
Alberta 25 26 2 52 180 181
Cleve St. 65 Wayne St. 64
Chicago 19 33 I 39 169 203
TrJ.St . 106 Sprng Arbr 75
Wednesday's Results
Notre
Dame
85
Mich
.
Sl.72
Houston
5 Winnipeg 2
Ironton's fourth of its last 16
Soulhwest
Quebec 3 Philadelphia 0
starls, and their third in the Sam Hous. St. 81 S. F. Austn 67
Alberta 3 New England 1
Te&lt; Sou . 86 Austin Colt. 79
(Only games scheduled)
SEOAL.
W
iley
94
Ark.
Baptist
77
Thursday's Games
However, things have been
Winnipeg at Houston
West
going great for the Marauders. Adams St. 76 No. Colo. 72
New York at Ottawa
Pacific
55
San
Jose
St
.
53
Quebec
at Chicago
Meigs has won 7 out of their
San Fran 7S Santa Clara 69
Minnesota at Los Angeles
last 9 starts . But the two games Lng Bch St. 97 UC-S.D. 76
(Only games scheduled)
th ey yielded were to the
number one and number 'eigh(
·Enjoy Th'e'·fxciting Sound
ranked teams in Ohio Class
AA, Waverly and Gallipolis.
The Marauders are strong on
the backboards, courtesy of
On The Great Hammond Organ
Bill Chaney, the rugged 6-1
senior pivot man for Meigs.
At
Chaney, combined with the
improved play of Bill Vaughan
at guard and Mike Sayre at
forward promises a strong
3 mi . South of Middleport on St. Rl. 7
offense.
Meigs is hungry for a victory
after the temporary setback by
Perfonnances nightly except
Gallipolis. And Ironton should
Sunday and Monday
just be the team to let Meigs
get that win.

Scores

a

Marauders want victory at Ironton

Generation Rap

Dear W.:
Friendships also last longer when no one plays the martyr
(making the other feel guilty).
Go ahead and compete - and let the boy choose. Could he
you'll BOTH outgrow him in another month or two. - HELEN

gu~

"I
I didn'l'ruiss many
putts," Nicklaus smiled. "It
was one of those rounds where
l couldn't do anything wrong.
All the 'shots went into the
hole."
Brewer shot his ~ at
the same- COW"Se while Barbarossa and Johnson got their
66s at tougher Tamarisk, the
course Nicklaus plays today in

Red men I0 se 92 77

Transfers

tar.

I

PALJI'I SPRINGS , Calif.
,. (UPI) - Wednesday, in the
By MILTON RICHMAN
.~ ojlening round of the $160,000
:·,~
UPI Sports Editor
~ Bob Hope Desert Classic, Jack
•' NEW YORK (UP!) _No man can ever fool his wife. Not for Nicklaus was ahnost perfect as
• 1Jong anyway.
he shot an eight-under-par 64
( Monte Irvin can't. What's more, he knows it.
for a two-shot lead over
·•· But he thought he'd give ita try this one time.
veteran Gay Brewer. and
He came home from work the other night and tried to pretend youngilers Bob Barbarossa
"nothing !Jad-1lappened, but if you ever saw the cat who had just and. George Johnson, over the
"swilllowed the canary, that was Monte Irvin.
lnd1an Wells course.
., He tried not to give the whole thing away, but youthful,
: vivaciousDeelrvin,whohasbeenmarriedtohlm32yearsnow,
·sensed inunediately something was up.
;' "I could tell he was acting," she says. "He had something to
·
· teU me ... I knew that by the way he was behaving ... but he
'
·wanted to surprise me."
· Monte Irvin couldn't keep it inside anymore.
OhiO Dominican"'overcame a
"Dee ... " he said, in that soft tittle voice he uses whenever he's
'happy, which is 90per cent.of the tiple. "l have some good news 17-point first half deficit to
inflict the first Mid·Ohio
:for you. I've been elected to the Hall of Fame. "
Conference loss of the year on
His wife looked at him a moment.
visiting
Rio Grande College in
' "Irvin," she said, employing the name she uses when~ver
she's especially delighted or upset with him, "I knew it was the Panthers' Columbus gym
Wednesday night.
· 8omethin~ . You didn't fool me for a minute."
1 ,
Final score was 92-77. The
She Hugs the Man
loss
not only kept Rio from
With that, she grabbed and hugged the man, who put in 10
years in the Negro Leagues, came up to the New York Giants in gaining at least a share of the
'1949 at the age of 31, developed into one of their hardest-bitting MOC title, it also may have
stars, and was elected to Baseball's Hall of Fame Wednesday by cost them a trip to the, District
22 NA!A playoffs next month.
the special Negro selection committee.
The Redmen are 10-10
Monte Irvin was, well, Monte Irvin at the official announcement in one of the huge ballrooms of the Americana Hotel here overall, and 5-l in league play.
The Panthers are 6-14 overall
Wednesday .
That is to say he was simply himself - obliging, extraor- and 4-3 in league action.
Rio will face Cedarville at
dinarily considerate of others even though this was "his" day,
Lyne Center in its next MOC
and sofl-!lpoken.
outing
Saturday night.
"I used to call him 'Willsperin' Smith,' laughed Larry Doby,
Ken Richardson's 32 points
who used to be Irvin's teammate with the old Newark Eagles of
led
the Panthers' attack. Capt.
the Negro National League and now is a scout and batting inRon Lambert popped in 26 for
structor with the Montreal Expos.
"He probably won't like me saying this, because of the age and the Redmen.
Rio was 17 of 21 from the foul
everything, but he was my idol," said Doby, still smiting. "With
circles
(80 pet. ) and 30 of 65
the Eagles, he played shortstop, and I played second base.
"Monte is the most cool guy I ever met in my life. Look at him from the field for 35 pet. In the
over there now. Still cool. Back in the days we played for second half, Rio managed only
Newark, we'd get a dollar.and.a.IJalf a day to eat. l remember 12 of 46 shots from the field for
how 'we'd go' to the A&amp;P stores and get a bunch of cold cuts. a cold 26 pet.
Dominican hit 10 of 18 foul
Baloney, ham, cheese. We'd spend two dollars, then go back to
shots
for 55 pet. and 40 of 65
the room and eat. We'd always keep a dollar between us. For
emergency."
Irvin was pretty hot stuff with the Eagles.
HeWasMVP
. He hit .422 for them to win the batting title in 1940, and his .388
won him another batting championship in 1941. when he also
By CONNIE SMITH
clubbed 41 homers and was voted the league's MVP.
Fresh from a walloping
A salary disagreement prompted him to go to Mexico in 1942,
suffe
red las t Friday in
and that year he led the Mexican League with .397. Despite three
years with the Army Engineers in Europe, Irvin still wes good Gallipolis, the Meigs basketenough to make the AII.Star team in 1946, 1947 and 1948 after ball team travels to Ironton to
try to get back in the wm
returning to the Eagles.
colwnn
this Friday. The Tigers
There was only one trouble.
were VIctorious last week
Monte Irvin wasn't getting any younger.
Wellston as:the wimess
against
The Giants brought him up in 1949, sent him back down, then
trough! him back up to stay again in 1950.
.; Irvin is now a congenial, respected member of Baseball
!commissioner Bowie Kuhn's staff but in 1951 he was pure
By United Press International
East
:murder at the plate for the Giants, dr(vlng in 151 runs and leading
LaSalle
96
Canislus
85
!them to the National League pennant.
Bktyn Colt 84 Bklyn Poly 72
t; A broken ankle in a Denver exhibition game in April, 1952 Phtla Te&lt;. 56 Albr ight 46
Brockport 7S Oswego 65
)lastened the end of his career, which came five years later.
Thiel
67
:; Irvin talked about how it was for the others in the Negro LIU 7468St.Hiram
Fran·Pa
. 64
'
~gues after Jackie Robinson became the first black to play in
Rochstr 73 Colgate 63
C.W. Post 58 Hofstra 57
~e majors in 1947.
Delaware 77 Rider 66
:; "Jackie going up gave everyone hope that he might be next,'' WVa 71 Rutgers 68
dald Irvin. "AU of us used to talk about it, on the bus and on the Scranton S9 Del. Val. 64
York 42 Cathedral 41
~nches. I'm sorry l didn't get a chance to make the majors when Frnkln&amp;Mrshll
67 Havrfrd 62
~was 16or 19. l thoughll was ready. When !finally did come up, I Stony Brook 80 Kings Pt. 64
~as way over my peak. I wasted 10 years in the Ne~o Leagues." Bflo 76 Albny St..N. Y. 62
59 Susquehanna 58
~
Some Purists Can Quarrel
. Wilkes
Kutztwn 60 Shlppensbg 59
:: Some purists can quarrel with Irvin's credentials for the Hall MnlclalrSI . 71 Trntn St. 62
q!Fame. They can point out he wasn't even in the majors seven Glssbro St. 59 Newrk St. 54
Merrimack 100 Suffolk 73
~II seasons and his lifetime average there was only .293.
Williams 90 Middtebry 56
,; But nobody can quarrel with the fact he was one of the greatest Prvidnce 81 St. Jos.. Pa. 75
~.around performers ever produced by the Negro Leagues or Mass. 76 Boston Colt . 52
Amherst 97 MIT 48
O.at he was one of the most dangerous bitters in the National Colby 83 Bowdoin 73
League during the brief time he was there. Since the special Seton Hall 72 Villnova 70
~mmittee on Negro Leagues is supposed to recognize those who Queens SS Pratt 53
Falrfld 72 St. Bonvntre 60
ierformed outstandingly in those leagues when they otherwise Pace 69 F. Dcknsn -Mad. 68
Widener 78 Swarthmore 48
(ili~t have been in the majors, Monte Irvin fully qualifies.
Penn St . 64 Temple 49
~ The 55-year~ld former Giants first baseman~utfielder has
So.Conn.St. 76 Adelphi 70
p!me other qualifications also,
Dowl ing 56 W. Conn . 25
: '"He was a second father to me," said WUlle Mays, who came Boston U. 107 Cqpn. 99
Hartford 91 Am . Inti 80
lip to the Giants two years after him and is 12 years younger .
Sacred Hrt 74 Stonhll 72
Assumption 67 Cent .Conn . 53
i "We roomed together, and he'd tell me the places to go and W
. Va . Tech 88 Concord 81
where not to go. He'd put me to bed at night . That's right. He'd
Cntenry 91 Lamar U. 73
'ctually see that I was in bed by 10 o'clock every night we
South
Duke S4 Wake Forest 71
i;eren't playing.
•&lt;
Dom . 97 Norflk St. 96
•, "!remember when he broke his leg' in Denver. I cried, because Old
Towson St. 80 Baltimore 74
•t felt l lost a great friend."
Roanoke 73 Geotwn ·D.C. 57

Property

Rap:
It's nothing new, but when it happens to YOU, all those answers you gave other people just don 'I go down any more.
My best.friend and l went loopy over the same guy. He can't
decide which of us he likes better.
To avoid a feud, and losing my best friend,! told her I'd stop
trying for him. But how can I reaDy stop when all I do Is think of
htm? And how can l convince her, when in truth,l'm still hoping?
He doesn't make it any easier, liking us both.- WORRIER

~port Parade

'•.

Meigs

Arise, my feUow environmentalists, and let us join to fight to
protect and preserve a seriously endangered species, the
vanlshlng American Semicolon.
The American Semicolon used to flourish in many parts of
+++
the land. It was in every learned paper. You could find it in most
Dear
Helen
and
Sue
:
bOoks written by authors who could read without moving their
You more or less agreed with ''Outside the Door a Lot," the
lips. It even showed up in some newspapers and magazines.
hoy
who thinks students should "grade" teachers.
Prolific, and given revered status by early English and
"SCIENCE,'' a prestigious weekly, recently reported on
American grammarians, it found fertile nesting grounds on the
student
evaluations of teachers. Researchers found that students
CBIJlpuses of almost every college in North America .
The American Semicolon perhaps reached its greatest pre- studied were "less than perfect judges of teaching effectiveness"
eminence when the designers of typewriter keyboards made it ... in fact, "students rate most highly instructors from whom
they learn least." (This is coUege level - would high schoolers
easier to make a semicolon than a colon.
.
be
any more astute?)
Alas, its moment' of glory was transient; a new generation,
I ·would not discourage students from opposing, by
and a.new medium appeared on the scene.
reasonable
and effective means, incompetence or abuse of
BY spending more time watching television than reading
books, the Now Generation forgot the revered sanctity of the authority, but why should they be considered competent judges
of the qusllty of their instruction? Not haveing been over the
American Semicolon, and Its numbers rapidly depleted.
Cleverly schooled as they were in such arts as campus- path, how can they be expert at knowing where they need to go?
- SYMPATHETIC BUT NOT BLIND
burning, draft~vading and dally violence, the New People forgot
just how serviceable and sturdy a Semicolon could be. The lossIs
Dear Rap:
theirs, not ours. (Some place all the blame on TV; some do not.)
lfeela better appraoch (than student grading of teachers) is
Most learned punctuators protested that the young were
to
grade
the students at the end of each school year against a
destroying the American,Semicolon at the very ttme they were
trying to. protect the whooping crane, bald eagle, woods and statewide or national standard for that grade level. Where class
achievement is low, the teaching quality is poor, and vice versa
waters.
These voices crying in the wilderness got little help from the • - regardless of how unpopular or popular a teacher is with the·
orthographers and lexlcologtsts; after all, their field was words, students. My child has learned more from a tough teacher she
"endures" than from the "great guy" who lets the kids loaf or get
not the little squiggly things put between them.
off
the subject. - JAMES c.
One sage suggests that the very schizophrenic nature of the
~erican Semicolon led to its own demise. After aU, it looks, and
usuaUy behaves, a little like a period, colon, or comma, and yet is Helen and Sue:
What a bum answer you gave to the filp who was "Outside
none of
The !otiS ts one to be regretted, because abnost every the Door a Lot." Why didn't you tell him if only one out ot six
reaeonably quick-witted schoolboy of a generation ago (and teachers was "great" by his inadequate .Judgment, he was
batting only 16 pet. himself?
every headline writer who ever lived) learned a most valuable
For his information: teachers DO get called to the office.
lesson which has been lost in antiquity:
You can use a semicolon in almost ~very situation, when They are "graded" by their supervisors, parents, students,
taJ1118yen - they are constantly being tested.
,
you're not sure whether a period, colon or comma is really
I have known many teachers. Moot are good, they are
correct.
dedicated;
they enjoy working with youth. l have never known
what a find thts would be for today's young! To have a ready
any
child
who
was unjustly or cruelly punished by a teacher. If
IIJPPIY of all.purpose punctuation to scatter through essays, term
pspen and even love letters. Here, let me give a few, but the slob who wrote this letter is outside the door a lot (banished)
it is be&amp; use he Is too obnoxious to remain in the classroom. H~
remember, they're getting scarce:
has been rude and impudent to the teacher, and no doubt lives in
CUpanduve lhele, f~r -unleu the C8IIIPUIOI ~in anew to a district which has the stupid regulation that a child cannot be
Intel vut quantllle• ol the American SemlcGlon, we may see the disciplined within the classroom.
dl7 when G1117 a few will be dllplayed In the l'lre boob section of
If students do not learn, It Is nearly always the fault ot the
llllj~r public ltbrarill, lllte the now.aUnct pauenger pigeon
student or the home. Such an arrogant, re8enlful, obstinate
lllowed up In the 100. Heed my warnln8;.It may not be too late.
character wouldn't learn if he had Socrates for a· teacher. -

these.

'fith study group

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-t'omeroy, 0., Feb. 8, 1973

&gt;).w;'7)S.;::®:::~~:;-;-;::::::::x:::~:::::~::-»x:::m:::i*:s.::stS:WJ«.:~~=:::'4~:::~.w.~ · ·"=~.~&gt;=-~1

•
l·A

,.

11
~

• ••
'•'

,,I

,NEW YORK (UPI) - Monte
llvin,
whose brief career as a
&gt;
major league star was a sad
reminder that his 10 peak years
were spent in the shadowland
of 1M old Negro Leagues, is the
newest member of baseball's
.Hall of Fame.
Irvin, who played for the
New York Giants and Chicago
Cubs from 1949 through 1956,
was elected to the Hall Wedn8aday by the special eight·
man committee on the Negro
Litagues. He is the !39th
member of the HaD and the
fourth selected by the special
cOOunlttee .
Irvin will be inducted into the
Hall of Fame in Cooperstown,
N;y ., Aug. 8, . along with
warren Spahn, Mickey Welch,
Gtorge "Highpockets" Kelly
and B!Uy Evans. Spahn was
e~ to the Hall in voting by
389 members of the Baseball
Wttters Association of
America while Welch, Kelly
and Evans were selec!ed by a
s~clal committee on old'

tiriiii'S.

.. ~·a major league creden-

•I:

Df are modest by Hall

rJ.

Fame standards-a .293 batting average for seven seasons
and 99 homers-but his career
must be viewed within the
coqtext of his time.
Monte was a deadly clutchhitter for the Giants in 1951
when he had a .312-24-121 offensive perfol'lljance and also
starred will' .329-21-97 and .26219-64 performances in 1953 and
1954, respectively. He was an
excellent defensive outfielder
with a strong throwing arm
and he ran the bases
aggressively and alertly if
without great speed.
But the Irvin of those years
in "the bigs" was only a
shadow of the Irvin who played
the previous 10 seasons in the
Negro Leagues.,.travelling the
hamburger circuit in rickety
buses ... being turned away by
Jim ,Crow laws... playing three
games in a day and moving
along 100 roUes for a doubleheader the n.exl day ...earning
$150 a month when white
players of lesser skills were
~rning three and four times as
much ... agreeing to split
doubleheaders in order to get a

hooking ...always second class
and walling for the hour of
deliverance .
It came in 1947 when Jackie
Robinson broke basebaU'~ unwritten color line with the
Dodgers.
Others who received votes
from the co111111ittee were Judy
Johnson and Jim "Cool Papa"
Bell, three each, and Martin
DiHigo, two, and Ray Dandridge and Willie Foster, one
each.
The oth~r Negr!l stars selected by the special committee for
enshrinement have been
Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson and
Buck Leonard while Robinson
and Roy Campanella have
been elected )II voting by the
main body of the BBWAA.
SIX SIGNED
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - The
Pittsburgh Pirates Wednesday
announced the signing of six
veteran players - outfielders
Willie Stargell and Gene
Clines, shOrtstop Gene Alley
ana pitchers Nelson Briles,
Dock Ellis and Ramon Hernandez- to 1973 ~ontracts.

Rockets succumbed to a 97,77
beatmg.
Several of the Ironton
players had a good evening of
play there. Five of their men

scored w double figures.
Among these were Vince
McCreary with 21 points, Dave
Rann was next with 19 and Bill
Green had 17. This victory was

SVAC quints head .
down 'home stretch
Three league games and two
non-league tills are slated this
weekend in the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference.
Action starts Friday night
with North Gallia traveling to
Kyger Creek and Eastern
playing at Southwestern in
league games . Hannan Trace
IS at Hannan , W. Va., in a nonleague battle. Saturday night,
Southern plays at Symmes
Valley iri league play while
Kyger Creek visits Union
Furnace in non-conference
action .
Both North Gallia and Kyger
Creek have had their troubles
this season. The Pirates are J.14 overall and 3-11 in the league.
Kyger Creek holds a 4-12
overall record and 3-8 mark in
the SV AC. The Bobcats own
league victories over North
Gallia and two over Southwestern. The other was a
tournament win over the
Pirates.
Coach Jim Foster's Pirates
have beaten Southern and
Southwestern in league play.
Eastern, 9-6 overall and 6-2
against league opponents will
play
the Southwestern
Highlanders. SW is J.-14 overall

and ().IJ in the SVAC. Symmes
Valley continues to lead the
league with a 9·1 slate ,
however , the Vikings. have
taken their lumps against
stronger competition. Southern
holds down fourth place in the
loop with a S.O mark.
Hannan Trace, predicted to
win the SVAC, has an outs tandmg 15-2 record. The
Wildcats are 10-2 in loop
games.
SVAC STANDINGS
All GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Hannan Trace 15 2 1153 ·alO
Sy mmes Valley 9 6 1125 1059
Eastern
9 6 870 808
Southern
6 9 791 845
Kyger Creek
4 12 91 4 1162
Southwestern 3 lJ 819 1103
North Gatlia
3 14 918 1094
SVACONLY

TEAM
W L P
Symmes Valley 9 1 S03
Hannan Trace 10 2 80S
Eastern
8 2 606
Southern
5 6 504
North Gallia
3 8 625
KygerCreek
3 8 617
Southwestern 0 11 546
SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W L P
-ttorlh Gall Ia
9 2 446
&gt;outhern
S 3 4SI
Symmes Valley 7 3 432
Hannan Trace

Eastern
Kyger Creek
Southwestern

6 6 444
4 6 428
4 7 443
0 II 268

,df .'...·-- ,·

. .. GEORGE HALL

KINGS ARMS NIGHT CLUB

•

•

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OP
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r~a

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604
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~ ·'

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EARTHBIRD TILLERS

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W. VA.

SEE YOUR NEAREST FORD DWR TODAY

•

�SVAC SCORING
Name

Jamie Lafon, S. Valley
Phil Robinson , Symmes Valley

Mike Caldwell , Hannan -Trace
Norm c;urfman. Southern

Dave Robinette. North Gall Ia
Randy Boring, Eastern
Te.rry Bush, Southwestern
John Lusher. Hannan -Trace

Ron Hill, Southern
Rick Corn, Symmes Valley

FG FT Pis G Avg.
171 I 0
170 10
172 I I
66 17 149 10
54 36 144 10
52 29 133 9
62 24 148 11
61 23 145 11
39 35 113 9
52 17 121 10
72
74
70

27
22
32

17.1
17.1
15.6 .
14.9
14.8
14.8
13.5
IH
12.6
12. 1

OVERALL STANDINGS
TEAM STATISTICS
{As of Feb. Jl
IAs ot Feb. 2)
TEAM
W L Pis. OP
Field Goal Percentage
Waverly
14 0 1050 740 TEAM
FG·A Pet.
Alexander
14 1 1343 730 Gall ipolis
306·602 .508
Gallipolis
13 1 952 670 Waverly
342·708 .483
Han-Trace
14 2 1068 767 Athens
257 ·569 .452
Fed.·Hocking 10 4 782 803 Logan
303·689 .440
Symmes Valley 9 5 1056 942 Meigs
252·631 .399
Belpre
9 5 891 837 Wellston
227 ·599 .379
Meigs
9 6 920 923 Jackson
200·530 .377
Athens
9 6 835 759 Ironton
266 -711 .374
Miller
9 6 836 826
Free Throw Percentage
Nels .. York
8 6 911 885 TEAM
FT-A Pet.
Eastern
8 6 806 757 Gallipolis
150·218 .688
Wahama
8 7 975 923 Waverly
148·220 .673
Logan
8 7 1005 950 Logan
114· 172 .663
VInton County 8 7 914 903 Athens
101· 169 .598
Starr·Wash.
6 6 809 825 Ironton
97· 163 .595
Southern
6 8 740 780 Meigs
138·238 .580
Ironton
4 10 833 847 Jackson
125·225 .556
Kyger Creek
4 12 914 1162 Wellston
134-248 .540
Point Pleasant 3 9 737 866
REBOUNDS
Glouster
3 11 741 896 TEAM
No. G Avg.
Southwestern 3 12 776 1008 Waverly
464 14 42 .2
North Gall ia
3 1 855 1004 Gallipolis
448 11 40.7
Warren Local 2 11 716 877 Ironton
442 11 40.2
Jack son
2 13 716 981 Logan
407 11 37 .0
Wellston
0 14 750 1217 Meigs
400 11 36.4
Athens
347 11 31.5
SEOAL VARSITY
Jackson
252 11 22 .9
TEAM
W L Pis OP Wellston
251 11 22.8
Waverly
11 0 832 543
PERSONAL FOULS
Gallipolis
10 1 752 528 TEAM
No. G Avg.
Athens
7 4 615 543 Jackson
158 11 14.4
Logan
6 5 720 685 Athens
161 11 14.6
Meigs
6 5 643 696 Waverly
180 11 16.4
Ironton
3 8 629 643 Meigs
191 11 17.4
Jackson
I 10 525 733 Gallipolis
205 11 18.6
Wellston
0 11 588 933 Ironton
207 11 18.8
Logan
210 11 19.1
SEOAL RESERVES
Wellston
228 11 20.7
TEAM
W L Pts. OP
Field Goal Percentage
Logan
10 1 512 379 NAME
FG-A Pel.
Waverly
9 2 466 358 Price. Gallipolis
98-158 .620
Athens
8 3 487 382
Noe, Gallipolis
76·124 .613
Gallipolis
7 4 403 370 Chonko, Athens
36 · 60 .600
Meig s
5 6 462 439 Oyer. Waverly
68 ·128 .531
Ironton
3 8 414 457
Norris, Logan
55· 106 .519
Jackson
I 10 426 519
Wellston
1 10 324 590
Free Throw Percentage
~~ Teams Ranked Offensively
NAME
• · FT•A Pet.
TEAM
Pts. G Avg, Sh"'\l)l~k", Wa v. 35-~t .lis
Alexander
1343 15 89.5
Noe, Gallipolis
37-56 .661
Symmes Valley 1056 14 75.4 Oyer,
Waverly
33·50 .660
Waverly
1050 14 75.0 Share, Wellston
43-66 .652
Gallipolis
952 14 68.0
Bailey,
Meigs
33.53 .623
Starr·Wash .
809 12 67 .4
REBOUNDS
Logan
1005 IS 67 .0
NAME
No. G Avg.
Hannan.Trace 1068 16 66.8
Price,
Gallipolis
146 11 13.3
Meigs
920 14 65.7
Nels .. York
911 14 65.1 Markin, Ironton 108 9 12.0
125 11 11 .4
Wahama
975 15 65 .0 Chaney, Meigs
112 11 10.2
Belpre
891 14 63 .6 Noe, Gallipolis
Norris.
Logan
101 11
9.2
Pt. Pleasant
737 12 61.4
FRIDAY
VInton County
914 15 60 .9
SEOAL
Ironton
833 14 59 .5
Eastern
806 14 57.6 Athens at Waverly
Kyger Creek
914 16 57 .1 Gallipolis at Logan
North Gall Ia
855 15 57 .0 Meigs at Ironton
Fed .. Hocklng
782 14 55.8 Wellston at Jackson
TRI-VALLEY
Miller
836 15 55.7
Athens
835 15 55.7 Warren Local at Fed .· Hocklng
SVAC
Warren Local
·716 13 55.1
Southern
740 14 52.9 E~stern at Southwestern
Wellston
750 14 53.6 North Gallla at Kyger Creek
Glouster
741 14 52 .9
OTHERS
Southwestern
776 15 51.7 Belpre at Parkersburg Cath.
Jackson
716 15 47 .7 Miller at Nels· York
Teams Ranked Defensively
TEAM
Pis . G Avg.
Hannon.'frace
767 16 47.4
Gallipolis
670 14 47.9
Ale xander
730 15 48.7
Athens
759 15 50.6
Waverly
740 14 52.9
Eastern
757 14 54.1
Miller
826 15 55. I
Fed.· Hocking
803 14 57 .3
Southern
780 14 55.7
Belpre
837 14 59.8
VInton Co.
903 ·15 60.2
Ironton
847 14 6o.5
Meigs
923 15 61.5
Wahama
923 15 61.5
Nels.· York
885 14 63.2
Logan
950 15 63 .3
Glouster
896 14 64.0
Jackson
981 15 65.4
North Gallia
1004 15 66.9
Southwestern
1008 15 67.2
Symmes Valley 942 14 67.2
Warren Local
877 13 67.4
Starr.Wash.
825 12 68.8
Point Pleasant
866 12 12.1
Kyger Creek
1162 16 72.6
Wellston
1217 14 86.9

holm Olympics. The Boston
Globe spon,sored a Sports·
men's Show. Thorpe came,
sihce he was a great flycaster Someone got ihe idea
to bring him up to the office
to meet my father. They had
never been face -to-face be·
fore.
·
" My father said, 'Jim, I'm
proud to shake your hand . I
always thought you were the
greatest athlete that ever
lived.' Thorpe bore no rancor to my father. 'You were
only .doing your job,' said
Thorpe ."
Thorpe rlied one year later.
In Washington, Gr a.c e
Thorpe, a daughter of Jim's,
said recently, "No, J don''!
think the loss of the medals
or the fact that his name
was taken off the record
books made much difference
to Dad. He felt that his
achievements were ptoof
enough of his abilities." "But I would like to get
the medals bac'k to put in the
Indian Hall of Fame in ·Kansas . And I'd like Dad's nanie
restored in 'the official books.
It would be for Indian kids,
something for them to. try to

Hannan-Trace at Hannan

Alf xander at Cols. Ready
Glouster at St. Jos. Prep

Point Plea sant at Wahama

SATURDAY
TRt.VALLEY

Vinton Co. at Warren Local

SVAC
Southern at Symmes Valley
OTHERS
Portsmouth at Gallipolis
W.averly at Springfteld South
Miller at Fed .. Hocking
Kyger Creek at Starr.wash.
Waterford at Glouster.
TUESDAY {Feb. Ill
SEOAL
Logan at Athens
Jackson at Gallipolis
Ironton at Waverly
Wellston at Meigs
OTHERS
Symmes Valley at Chesapeake
Barboursville at Pt. Pleasant ·
Wahama at Ripley
Glouster at Southern
tMakeupl
Reemelln at Starr-Washington
(Added to Schedule I

Danny Brown's goal at
end won reserve game

emulate.''

JIM THORPE an Olympic standout and an Ali-Amerl·
can football pla~· er with Carlisle College In 1912, left.
Then a reporter. the late Roy Ruggles Johnson, re·
vealed that Thorpe had played pro baseball, which
led the Amateur Athletic Union to strip Thorpe of his
Olvmpic medals and records. But by the time of their
first face-to-face meeting in 1952. Thorpe, at left above,
could smile at Johnson.

Gophers and Bucks sellout
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) Coach Bill Musselman and his
fifth-ranked Minnesota basketball team travel to Ohio State
Saturday for "just another
game"-a nationally televised
rematch between the teams
which engaged in a bloody
brawl in Minneapolis a year
ago.
"I'm just treating it like any
other game," Musselman said.
"What can I say to my · ball
club? 'Listen boys, stick together'? , All I'm worried about is
our kids being ready to play a
good basketball game . .
"It's not my job to worry
about trouble. Ohio State has
all the responsibility."
Musselman and the Gophers,
4-2 and in fourth place in the
league standings, are in
desperate need of a victory if

SULLIVAN TO RAIDERS
BALTIMORE (UP!)
Veteran offensive tackle Dan
Sullivan was sent to the
Oakland Raiders by the
Baltimore Colts Wednesday for
an undisclosed draft choice.
SUllivan was the seventh Colt
veteran dealt away since
general manager Joe Thomas
began his winter housecleaning
three weeks ·ago.
McNAI::LY PROMOTED
NEW YORK (UPI) - Art
M~Nally , head of the National
Football Conference officiating
program since 1970 when he
retired as a National Football
League referee, Wednesday
was promoted to supervisor of.
officials of the entire NFL, it
was announced by commissioner Pete Rozelle. Me·
Nally succeeds Mark Duncan
who resigned to join the Los
Angeles Rams organization.

they hope to win a second
straight Big Ten title . They
undoubtedly . will
face
emotional strain at Ohio State.
· On Jan. 20, 1972, Ohio State
was leading 5~4 with 36
seconds remaining when Minnesota 's Corky Taylor kneed
Buckeye Luke Witte in the
groin, both benches cleared
and more than 100 Minnesota
fans swarmed onto the
Williams Arena court.
As a restilt of the free-lor-all,
three Ohio State players, in·
cl uding Witte , were hospitalized, and Gophers Ron
Behagen and Taylor, both
seniors this year, were
suspended for the season after
a long series of hearings and
appeals.
Mil)nesota, using . &amp;~ "iro.n
five" lineup that played almost
the entire 40 minutes the rest of
the season, rallied against
public criticism to win the Big
Ten with an ll.J record. The
Gophers are 14-2 this year.
Ohio State, longtime Big Ten
power, faltered last year and
has had its troubles this season
with Coach Fred Taylor sidelined much of the time with an
undetermined illness.
Witte, a rugged 7-footer who
was invited to the U.S. Olympic
tryout camp, was not suspended in spite of Gopher protests
that his conduct was unsportsmanlike, but he had
showed no semblance of his
1g72 fonn until Monday night.
He did the Gophers a favor
by scoring -19 points and
grabbing 18 rebounds in
leading the Buckeyes to a 7~9
upset of first place Indiana (61) in Taylor's first night back
on the .bench ,
"The win over Indiana will
really fire up Ohio State (3-3),
which can now get back into
the thick · of things,"
Musselman said. "They had
some lean days, but now seem
to have it all together."
Behagen, a 6-foot-10 forward,
also has lacked sharpness in
recent weeks after winning

AWARD FOR STRACEY
LONDON
(UPI)- London
welterweight John H. Stracey,
who fights Danny McAloon of
the Bronx, N.Y. , on the
Muhanunad Ali.Joe Bugner most valuable player honors at.
bill at Las Vegas, Feb. 14,
Wednesday was presented with
his award as Britain's "Young
Boxer of 1972."
from the field and made 8 out of
19 foul shots. Eastern made 5
out of IS free throws.
Southern is now 1~ overall ·
and 11-3 in league play. They
will play their last league game
Saturday at Symmes Valley.
Duane Wolfe is Southern's
coach.

South e rn ' s reserve and Tim Hill 1.
basketba)l team, trailing by
For· Eastern, G.obel had ll
two points at the end of the and Orr 10.
third quarter Tuesday night,
Southern shot 29 percent
rallied in lhe fourth quarter to
defeat the Eastern squad 36 to
35.
Southern took a five point
lead in the first quarter only to
go behind at the end of the half
by three points.
With four seconds remaining
Southern's Mitch Nease shot
and missed. Southern's Danny
Now you can buy that
comlortable
La·Z·Boy
Brown got the ball and scored
chair
you
'
ve
always
and a foul was called ·against
dreamed of at our . low
Eastern. · Brown shot but
prices.
missed, making the final score
36-35.
Authorized Dealer
For Southern Mitch Nease
and Brown led in double
figures with 14 and 13
respectively. Brown also led
with 12 rebounds. Other
Herman Grote
scorers for Southern were Greg
777·5592
Mnon, W. V• . .
J?unning with 6, Terry .Sayre 2,

LA-Z·BOV

CHAIRS

· MASON

FURNITURE

thf Far West Classic over the
Cliristmas holidays,
"It's just another game," he
said. "I'm not going to worry
about it. If something weird is
going to happen, it's going to
happen anyway."
Privately, Minnesota
Athletic Department officials
have expressed little concern
about the game itself, but seem
worried about possible fan
reaction before or after the
game. Muss.elman and the
Gophers have made reservations at a hotel several miles
from Columbus.
"I just hope nothing crazy
happens," said Gopher captain
Jim Brewer, who played on
friendly terms with Witte at the
.Olympic camp. "I don't have
any reason to dread playing at
Ohio State.
·
"You can make a big thing
aboot the game being more
important and about last year.
But in the end, it's a competitive game. You have to
compete and your team has to
compete."
The game at 13,400-seat St.
John's arena has been sold out
since last spring.

His medals wet·e never re·
turned and his name has not
been restored in the Olympic
record book despite various
effort s through the years.
Today , a group headed by
former Yankee pitcher Allie
Reynolds, also an Oklahoma
Indian. plans to petition
President Nixon to plead the
case to the International
Olympic Committee.
Don Johnson. son of Roy
Ruggles Johnson, said in a
phone interview that his
rather supported the idea
thai Thorpe's name and
medals be •·estored.
"My father felt that the
AAU was too strict." said
Don Johnson , now an executive with the Worceste•· Tele·

Get A Philco FM·AM

PORTABLE RADIO
Model Rl31

' 5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 8, 1973

~ Barons
I'

edge·. foe, 19-17

By United Press lnlernali0!181

with 21 points.
· It wa~ a long night at s~•.
Kent state made up an eightbenville Wednesday night.
point second half deficit to
Both the Barons and the down .Pittsburgh. Dwight ~en­
visiting California (Pa.) team ner led a balanced attaCk with
· kept the acUotl slow and when 17 pointa as the Flas~es betterthe game was over only a total ed their record to 8-11.
of 36 pointa had been scored.
Akron gained Its 13th win in
Steubenville won the game 17 outings. Len Paul and Larry
19-17 after leading 1Q.9 at the Jenkins scored 21 points apiece
half.
for the Zips, who ran away with
Will Adams led the BaroiL'l tilt! game from the begimlng.
with six points and Cleve Stew. Clifford Pratt scored 31
ard was high for CaUfornla and points for Shaw in Its win over
the game with seven points. Central State. Mike Williams,
Steubenville Is now 16-1.
In other ganies that were
· more the usual fare, Youngstown State demolished Bald'!linWallace 88-60; Thiel (Pa.)
edged Hiram 68-67; Wright
state Whipped Marian (Ind.)
&amp;1~; and Urbana downed
Walsh 71~.
Oakland (Mich.) downed By United Press International
Long Beach State rolled to Its
Ashland 114-97 at Rochester,
Mich., as Calvin MelBon logged 18th victory of the season
3S points and Walt Johnson against just one lOllS and Its
. added 28. It was Ashland's 8lst consecutive home
; sixth loss in a row, dropping triumph, 97-76, over UC San
·Diego Wednesday night, to
: the Eagles to 7-9.
: Also Wooster beat Marietta justify Its 3rd-place natiooal
' 71-43; Kent State squeezed past ranking.
Pittsburgh 74-68; Marshall
'Despite shooting 50 per cent
: downed Miami 68-59; Akron from the floor, the Aztecs
, ' Ramped Gannon (Pa .) 98-U; trailed by two at the half, but
Ohio Dominican beat Rio San Diego could not sustain
Grande 92-77; Cleveland State their efforts in the second half
ed8ed Wayrie State 65-64; Shaw and Lpng Beach drew away.
(Mich.) whipped Central State
In the only other games
102-73; Defiance beat Bluffton involving top-rated teams,
88-88 In a double overtime and Providence held on against St.
DePaul downed Xavier B!J.i7. Joseph's (Pa.) for an 81-75
Marshall defeated Miami for decision and San Francisco
the second time this season and topped Santa Clara, 78-69.
Randy Noll led the way with 20
In other contests, Notre
points and 14 reboumb. Miami Dame UPIU!t Michigan State,
Is now lZ-7.
85-72, and West Virginia topped
Wooster boosted Its Ohio Rutgers, 81·78. In an important
Conference record to 6-3 with small college game, No. 1Sam
the win over Marietta, now 4-5 Houston State defeated No. 2
In the league. Chuck Roblnoon Stephen F. Austin for the
' of Ma~ietta was high scorer. second time this season, this

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Defiance and Bluffton were
tied 7B-70 at the end of regulation time and tied at 81-81 at the
end of the first overtlffie. Bll1
Kramer Jlil a field goal to give
Defiance an 8'1-86\ead and Max
Trowbridge lidded a free throw
for insuranoo In the second
overtime.

l

l.

time by an 81-67 score.
The Friars led at one point 59
-42 against St. Joseph's, and

io'

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special prices. Shop early
while anortment is
complete.

' By United Press International

John Havlicek, whose knee
alhnent ha s been dla gnose d. as
arthritis, said that his right
knee "was sore, but It's a dull
ache-and r can play with
that."
And play he did, notching 30
points for Boston-four in the
overtime period-and sinking a
25-foot bomb with two seconds
to play in overtime, to give the
Celtics a 113-112 extra..,...;od
~-·victory over the Los Angeles

CENTER
*

•··

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200-202 East Main St.
POMEROY, OHIO
992 ..3498
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992-5321

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FERRIS APPOINTED
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Boyd ·
B. Ferris, a fonner staff counsel, has been appointed assistant to the state Pablic Utilities
Commission. '
The attorney succeeds Mrs.
Sally W. Bloomfield, who was
appointed by Gov. John J. Gilligan as a commissioner last
week.

!..akers Wednesday night in a ·
battle of the NBA's top percentage teams.
The victory gave the Celtics
a l&gt;t..game lead over the idle
New York Knicks, while the
Lakers' impressive lead over
Golden State dropped to 9'f.!
games.
In other NBA action Wednesday night, Kansas City.Qmaha
surprise&lt;J Milwaukee, 101J.98,
Detroit defeated Phoenix, 113107, and Baltimore crushed

w••h

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oil
tully because. the new
vanvl -ltt nes unsurpessed

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"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"
110 W. MAIN

POMEROY

iffs

rorf/ter

Atlanta 137-108.
Boston's victory snapped a
Lakers' 11-game winning
streak, and marked the third

~~~~~

threeeight
quarters,
but came
back
on
of Gail
Goodrich's
game-bigh 35 points to lead 103101 with 1:30 to go. CowelL'!
scored on a tip-in of his own
shot with I :09 left to send the
game into overtime.
Kansas City-Omaha had lost
12 straight, dating backto Dec.
19, 1970, against the Bucks
going into their game but a
sellout 10,472 watched the
·Kings come back from a 3~16
first quarter deficit.
Nate Archibald had a l~J.
footer in the final minute to
complete a 39.point performance.
Oetrolt outscored Phoenix,
17-3, in the fourth quarter of a
game tied 17 times, to give the
Pistons their fifth straight
victory·. Bob Lanier led all
scorers with 26 points.
Six players scored In double
figures as t~te Bullets stretched
their Central Division lead to
five games over the Hawks and
rolled up their highest point
total of the Season.
DRIVER CITED
Doyle T. Shuler, 59,
Cheshire, was charged with
falling to stop within the
assured clear distance
following a traffic accident at 4
p.m. Wednesday on Rt. 7 at the
James M. Gavin Plant. · · · ·
According to' the Ohio Stale
Highway Pablo!, Shuler's ·car
struck the rear end of an auto
operated by Mary J. Mora, 44,
Rt. 3, Pomer.oy. There was
miniH' dan1aRe to both cars.
'

bus would be advised to wait
along the highway at the Intersection of Route 279 and
Route 35 (the 4 lane). This
intersection is the one closest
to Gallipolis. A. .W. Sue, of
Greyhound Lines, has indicated that a 30-day survey
will be run on the bus schedule
to determine the extent
Thurman area residents use
the bus. If little use is made of
·the service, he will apply to the
Public Utilities Commission to
change the schedule. To help
keep the service available to
senior citizens the public is
urged to use the bus If one
needs a way to town.
The Thurman Senior Citizens
plan a potluCk lunch on Feb. 6,
a visit to a glass factory in
Huntington, and to a former
member of the group in Lancaster.
The next meeting will be held
March 6 at noon with a potluck
lunch. All senior citizens are
welcome.

aunts, and a number of
cousins .
Funeral services will be helii
at 10 a.'m. Saturday at the
Rijtherfor,d -Corbin Funeral
Home, 515 High St., Worthington and burial will be In
Union Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.
Friends are asked to giv·e ·
donations to the Columbus
Cancer Clinic in lieu of flowers.

ro:~;o;-~

I in Sportswear I
I Wi II take yo.u any
I place, any lime. · I
I COME IN AND t
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lOLA'S
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f Main &amp; Sycamore, Pomeroy f
"-'---~~....._ .•

NEW RECORDS
New Top 25, 45 Records
Now In Stock.
New list each Monday.

NEW LP's
ARRIVING
WEEKLY
Some Records
MARKED DOWN
NOW!

Bill &amp; lee's Music Center
Former BRW Hdwe. Room
Ill Second St.
992-3680
POMEROY, OHIO

2 Days Only Friday and Saturday
hI "•

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·Final Rounaup:·.. ··
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K.erm Has To Make Room For Spring Merchandise
Men's Long Sleeve

Men's Sweaters $5

Dress Shirts, %price

VALUES TO 14.98

Sizes 1~ to 16112. Regular 5.98 to
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2.99 to 4.49

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A beautiful selection of colors.
Sizes S-M- L &amp; XL Regular 7.98 to
10.98.
For 2 Days Only
3.99 to 5.49

consecutive
the !..akers
had fallen totime
the Celtics
.. l.os

'

i

Gerald ·,. Stanley, 67, former
Tuppers Plains resident and a
prominent retired Columbus
attorney died Wednesday at his
home at 5767 Olentangy Blvd.
Mr. Stanley was formerly
associated with the legal finn
of Schorr, Chastang, Edwards
and Stanley. He was a member
and elder of the Worthington
United Presbyterian Church, a
' pUgrim of the Worthington
Moose, a former assistant
Unlt..d States District AI·
tomer, and formerly secretary
and legal counselor for
Steward and Silver. He was a
member of the Columbus Bar
Association and of the Board or
Governors of the National
Counter Intelligence Assn . He
was a veteran of-World War IT.
Surviving are his widow,
Clara Hardway Stanley, also
formerly of Tuppers Plains;
his step-mother, Mrs. Bridie
M. Stanley, of Columbus, two

OF 1\IIEN'S WEAR

Jeans,

Yz price

'

Suits and ·Sport Coats

%price

Men's Short Sleeve
· Dress Shirts, lh price

Sizes are broken.
Men's Long Sleeve

Regular 4.98 to6.98, now
2.49 to 3.49

Kn~

3A9 to 5.99

A nice selection of styles and
colors. Regular 3.98 to 8.98.

Sale 1.99 to 4.49
10/2UM -10/213L

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Friday

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GOESSLER'S
Jewelry Store

Court St., Pomeroy

l

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Regular 6.98 to 11 .98. These are
real bargains at

Men's Long Sleeve
Kn~ Shirts, lh price

hand carved . In tradllional-and cont,mporary

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Odd Lot of Men's

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Now Only 2.49 to 3.99

Men's Casual Flare Leg

10/187L

SVPERtOR

WASt-lABiliTY- dirt and

Stl!p in and visit our new

village 1F someone wants off in
Thurman. Otherwise the bus
will stay on Route 35, arriving
in Jackson approximately 5 p.
m.
Schedule 5405: Leaves
Jackson 6:25 p. m. and will
deliver a passenger into the
village of Thurman IF
someone wants off there;
otherwise, the bus will stay on
Rt. 35, arriving in Gallipolis
approximately 7:15 p. m.
In other words, the morning
schedtiles listed above will
pass through the village of
Thunnan approximately 10:30
a. m. The late afternoon
schedules will stay on Route 35
unless there is someone who
wants off of the bus in the
village. It will then go through
the village,
Anyone desiring to catch a
morning bus can go to the
Thurman Post Office and wait,
being sure to step out and flag
the bus when it comes. Anyone
desiring the catch an evening

ment In werm , SOIP'I water

-

attorney dies

Bus
. schedul.e to Thurman exnanded
'I:'

appeared to have their game
sewed up, But a 25-8 spurt by
St. Joseph's tied the game at 67
THURMAN
Senior
--67. Friars backco!U'I star
citizens of this Gallia County
Ernie DiGregorio then dropped
in a jump shot to make the community, concerned with
problems related to transscore 73-71 Friars, and St. Joe's
portation broug_ht about
never caught up again.
DIGregorio and St. Joseph's discussions on Jan. 2J with
Mike Bantom each tallied 26 representatives of Greyhound
points, while the Friars' Lines-East and the Ohio Public
Marvin Barnes contributed 18 Utilities Commission. The
points and 19 rebounds for result already has been imProvidence, to up the Friars' proved bus services to Thur·
record to l~J-2.
man· .
San Francisco used a baThe . 1ssue centered on
lanced scoring attack, placing r prov1dmg· the v1llage . of
all five starters in double Thurman. and the surroundmg
fg es and outshot Santa area w1th adequate and
~ura 45 6 per cent to 40 6 to dependable bus service. After
r~ their overall record 17_ long discussion, the following
2. Guards Mike ~ck and Phil schedule was agreed upon by
Smith camed 19 points apiece all those present.
.
to lead the DolL'!, while center
Schedule 5401 : Leaves
Mike Smith paced the Broncos Jackson 10: to a. m., goes
who are normally 52 per ceni through the village of Thurman
shooters, with 22 points.
app~ox1m~tely 10 :30 a.m. and
Sam Houston State remained arn~es '" Galhpohs apunbeaten at 1~ to viriually proximately 10:55 a. m.
clinch the first Lone Star
Sc.hedule 5402: Leaves
conference championship for Galltpohs 10:10 a. m., goes
the Bearkats in 40 years. The through the village of Thurman
victory, made Jl(isslble by the approx~ately 10:35 a. m.
rebounding of the Bearkats- and .arrives m Jackson ap·
63-32 over Stephen F. Austin- proxtmately 10:55 a. m.
.
gave the Bearkkals their 25th
Schedule 5464 : leaves
consecutive victory and ]eftS. Galltpolts 4:15 p. m. and will
F, Austin 11-3. "
deliver · a passenger. Into the

STASH BAG
FOR MEN
Color TV, Rollabout Stand.
FM-AM Portable RadioAll three for only

DISCUSSIONS INITIATED-Thlr!een senior citlzeiL'l of the 'lburman area took the lead in
discussions recently that produced improved Greyhound.bus service to the village of Thunnan
in Gallia County. Seated, I tor, are Zelma Walker, Sarah Callihan and Hattie Saxton; standing,
row one I Sophia Nichols t Mary Boster ' HeJen .Conner, Susie Cherrington, Erruna, Gatewood,
and Beulah Mae Boster; and row two, standing, Eber Shealdon, Carrie Conley and Ann
Daniels, and A. W. Due, Greyhound Lines East, and Frank Dittos, of the Ohio Public Uti~tles
Commission.

Havlicek returns
with 30 markers

1.~.~
!~ ~-·'·
, ,~~~ERIJ'f!tl~~!,~f~.
-·-~· ··= ·"" •

'
!

0

VALENTINES

'

STRETCH BOOTS

who had scored 20 points for
Central in the freshman game
earlier In the evening, led the
Marauders in the varsity game
with another 20 points.

Long Beach St~te
scores 18th win

FREE

LOSE UGLY FAT

Ret~ed

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%price
Odd Lot Men's Winter
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Sizes are broken .

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A very good name in luggage.

KERM'S KORNER

NEW YORK
'CLOTHING HOUSE
POMEROY, OHIO

�SVAC SCORING
Name

Jamie Lafon, S. Valley
Phil Robinson , Symmes Valley

Mike Caldwell , Hannan -Trace
Norm c;urfman. Southern

Dave Robinette. North Gall Ia
Randy Boring, Eastern
Te.rry Bush, Southwestern
John Lusher. Hannan -Trace

Ron Hill, Southern
Rick Corn, Symmes Valley

FG FT Pis G Avg.
171 I 0
170 10
172 I I
66 17 149 10
54 36 144 10
52 29 133 9
62 24 148 11
61 23 145 11
39 35 113 9
52 17 121 10
72
74
70

27
22
32

17.1
17.1
15.6 .
14.9
14.8
14.8
13.5
IH
12.6
12. 1

OVERALL STANDINGS
TEAM STATISTICS
{As of Feb. Jl
IAs ot Feb. 2)
TEAM
W L Pis. OP
Field Goal Percentage
Waverly
14 0 1050 740 TEAM
FG·A Pet.
Alexander
14 1 1343 730 Gall ipolis
306·602 .508
Gallipolis
13 1 952 670 Waverly
342·708 .483
Han-Trace
14 2 1068 767 Athens
257 ·569 .452
Fed.·Hocking 10 4 782 803 Logan
303·689 .440
Symmes Valley 9 5 1056 942 Meigs
252·631 .399
Belpre
9 5 891 837 Wellston
227 ·599 .379
Meigs
9 6 920 923 Jackson
200·530 .377
Athens
9 6 835 759 Ironton
266 -711 .374
Miller
9 6 836 826
Free Throw Percentage
Nels .. York
8 6 911 885 TEAM
FT-A Pet.
Eastern
8 6 806 757 Gallipolis
150·218 .688
Wahama
8 7 975 923 Waverly
148·220 .673
Logan
8 7 1005 950 Logan
114· 172 .663
VInton County 8 7 914 903 Athens
101· 169 .598
Starr·Wash.
6 6 809 825 Ironton
97· 163 .595
Southern
6 8 740 780 Meigs
138·238 .580
Ironton
4 10 833 847 Jackson
125·225 .556
Kyger Creek
4 12 914 1162 Wellston
134-248 .540
Point Pleasant 3 9 737 866
REBOUNDS
Glouster
3 11 741 896 TEAM
No. G Avg.
Southwestern 3 12 776 1008 Waverly
464 14 42 .2
North Gall ia
3 1 855 1004 Gallipolis
448 11 40.7
Warren Local 2 11 716 877 Ironton
442 11 40.2
Jack son
2 13 716 981 Logan
407 11 37 .0
Wellston
0 14 750 1217 Meigs
400 11 36.4
Athens
347 11 31.5
SEOAL VARSITY
Jackson
252 11 22 .9
TEAM
W L Pis OP Wellston
251 11 22.8
Waverly
11 0 832 543
PERSONAL FOULS
Gallipolis
10 1 752 528 TEAM
No. G Avg.
Athens
7 4 615 543 Jackson
158 11 14.4
Logan
6 5 720 685 Athens
161 11 14.6
Meigs
6 5 643 696 Waverly
180 11 16.4
Ironton
3 8 629 643 Meigs
191 11 17.4
Jackson
I 10 525 733 Gallipolis
205 11 18.6
Wellston
0 11 588 933 Ironton
207 11 18.8
Logan
210 11 19.1
SEOAL RESERVES
Wellston
228 11 20.7
TEAM
W L Pts. OP
Field Goal Percentage
Logan
10 1 512 379 NAME
FG-A Pel.
Waverly
9 2 466 358 Price. Gallipolis
98-158 .620
Athens
8 3 487 382
Noe, Gallipolis
76·124 .613
Gallipolis
7 4 403 370 Chonko, Athens
36 · 60 .600
Meig s
5 6 462 439 Oyer. Waverly
68 ·128 .531
Ironton
3 8 414 457
Norris, Logan
55· 106 .519
Jackson
I 10 426 519
Wellston
1 10 324 590
Free Throw Percentage
~~ Teams Ranked Offensively
NAME
• · FT•A Pet.
TEAM
Pts. G Avg, Sh"'\l)l~k", Wa v. 35-~t .lis
Alexander
1343 15 89.5
Noe, Gallipolis
37-56 .661
Symmes Valley 1056 14 75.4 Oyer,
Waverly
33·50 .660
Waverly
1050 14 75.0 Share, Wellston
43-66 .652
Gallipolis
952 14 68.0
Bailey,
Meigs
33.53 .623
Starr·Wash .
809 12 67 .4
REBOUNDS
Logan
1005 IS 67 .0
NAME
No. G Avg.
Hannan.Trace 1068 16 66.8
Price,
Gallipolis
146 11 13.3
Meigs
920 14 65.7
Nels .. York
911 14 65.1 Markin, Ironton 108 9 12.0
125 11 11 .4
Wahama
975 15 65 .0 Chaney, Meigs
112 11 10.2
Belpre
891 14 63 .6 Noe, Gallipolis
Norris.
Logan
101 11
9.2
Pt. Pleasant
737 12 61.4
FRIDAY
VInton County
914 15 60 .9
SEOAL
Ironton
833 14 59 .5
Eastern
806 14 57.6 Athens at Waverly
Kyger Creek
914 16 57 .1 Gallipolis at Logan
North Gall Ia
855 15 57 .0 Meigs at Ironton
Fed .. Hocklng
782 14 55.8 Wellston at Jackson
TRI-VALLEY
Miller
836 15 55.7
Athens
835 15 55.7 Warren Local at Fed .· Hocklng
SVAC
Warren Local
·716 13 55.1
Southern
740 14 52.9 E~stern at Southwestern
Wellston
750 14 53.6 North Gallla at Kyger Creek
Glouster
741 14 52 .9
OTHERS
Southwestern
776 15 51.7 Belpre at Parkersburg Cath.
Jackson
716 15 47 .7 Miller at Nels· York
Teams Ranked Defensively
TEAM
Pis . G Avg.
Hannon.'frace
767 16 47.4
Gallipolis
670 14 47.9
Ale xander
730 15 48.7
Athens
759 15 50.6
Waverly
740 14 52.9
Eastern
757 14 54.1
Miller
826 15 55. I
Fed.· Hocking
803 14 57 .3
Southern
780 14 55.7
Belpre
837 14 59.8
VInton Co.
903 ·15 60.2
Ironton
847 14 6o.5
Meigs
923 15 61.5
Wahama
923 15 61.5
Nels.· York
885 14 63.2
Logan
950 15 63 .3
Glouster
896 14 64.0
Jackson
981 15 65.4
North Gallia
1004 15 66.9
Southwestern
1008 15 67.2
Symmes Valley 942 14 67.2
Warren Local
877 13 67.4
Starr.Wash.
825 12 68.8
Point Pleasant
866 12 12.1
Kyger Creek
1162 16 72.6
Wellston
1217 14 86.9

holm Olympics. The Boston
Globe spon,sored a Sports·
men's Show. Thorpe came,
sihce he was a great flycaster Someone got ihe idea
to bring him up to the office
to meet my father. They had
never been face -to-face be·
fore.
·
" My father said, 'Jim, I'm
proud to shake your hand . I
always thought you were the
greatest athlete that ever
lived.' Thorpe bore no rancor to my father. 'You were
only .doing your job,' said
Thorpe ."
Thorpe rlied one year later.
In Washington, Gr a.c e
Thorpe, a daughter of Jim's,
said recently, "No, J don''!
think the loss of the medals
or the fact that his name
was taken off the record
books made much difference
to Dad. He felt that his
achievements were ptoof
enough of his abilities." "But I would like to get
the medals bac'k to put in the
Indian Hall of Fame in ·Kansas . And I'd like Dad's nanie
restored in 'the official books.
It would be for Indian kids,
something for them to. try to

Hannan-Trace at Hannan

Alf xander at Cols. Ready
Glouster at St. Jos. Prep

Point Plea sant at Wahama

SATURDAY
TRt.VALLEY

Vinton Co. at Warren Local

SVAC
Southern at Symmes Valley
OTHERS
Portsmouth at Gallipolis
W.averly at Springfteld South
Miller at Fed .. Hocking
Kyger Creek at Starr.wash.
Waterford at Glouster.
TUESDAY {Feb. Ill
SEOAL
Logan at Athens
Jackson at Gallipolis
Ironton at Waverly
Wellston at Meigs
OTHERS
Symmes Valley at Chesapeake
Barboursville at Pt. Pleasant ·
Wahama at Ripley
Glouster at Southern
tMakeupl
Reemelln at Starr-Washington
(Added to Schedule I

Danny Brown's goal at
end won reserve game

emulate.''

JIM THORPE an Olympic standout and an Ali-Amerl·
can football pla~· er with Carlisle College In 1912, left.
Then a reporter. the late Roy Ruggles Johnson, re·
vealed that Thorpe had played pro baseball, which
led the Amateur Athletic Union to strip Thorpe of his
Olvmpic medals and records. But by the time of their
first face-to-face meeting in 1952. Thorpe, at left above,
could smile at Johnson.

Gophers and Bucks sellout
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) Coach Bill Musselman and his
fifth-ranked Minnesota basketball team travel to Ohio State
Saturday for "just another
game"-a nationally televised
rematch between the teams
which engaged in a bloody
brawl in Minneapolis a year
ago.
"I'm just treating it like any
other game," Musselman said.
"What can I say to my · ball
club? 'Listen boys, stick together'? , All I'm worried about is
our kids being ready to play a
good basketball game . .
"It's not my job to worry
about trouble. Ohio State has
all the responsibility."
Musselman and the Gophers,
4-2 and in fourth place in the
league standings, are in
desperate need of a victory if

SULLIVAN TO RAIDERS
BALTIMORE (UP!)
Veteran offensive tackle Dan
Sullivan was sent to the
Oakland Raiders by the
Baltimore Colts Wednesday for
an undisclosed draft choice.
SUllivan was the seventh Colt
veteran dealt away since
general manager Joe Thomas
began his winter housecleaning
three weeks ·ago.
McNAI::LY PROMOTED
NEW YORK (UPI) - Art
M~Nally , head of the National
Football Conference officiating
program since 1970 when he
retired as a National Football
League referee, Wednesday
was promoted to supervisor of.
officials of the entire NFL, it
was announced by commissioner Pete Rozelle. Me·
Nally succeeds Mark Duncan
who resigned to join the Los
Angeles Rams organization.

they hope to win a second
straight Big Ten title . They
undoubtedly . will
face
emotional strain at Ohio State.
· On Jan. 20, 1972, Ohio State
was leading 5~4 with 36
seconds remaining when Minnesota 's Corky Taylor kneed
Buckeye Luke Witte in the
groin, both benches cleared
and more than 100 Minnesota
fans swarmed onto the
Williams Arena court.
As a restilt of the free-lor-all,
three Ohio State players, in·
cl uding Witte , were hospitalized, and Gophers Ron
Behagen and Taylor, both
seniors this year, were
suspended for the season after
a long series of hearings and
appeals.
Mil)nesota, using . &amp;~ "iro.n
five" lineup that played almost
the entire 40 minutes the rest of
the season, rallied against
public criticism to win the Big
Ten with an ll.J record. The
Gophers are 14-2 this year.
Ohio State, longtime Big Ten
power, faltered last year and
has had its troubles this season
with Coach Fred Taylor sidelined much of the time with an
undetermined illness.
Witte, a rugged 7-footer who
was invited to the U.S. Olympic
tryout camp, was not suspended in spite of Gopher protests
that his conduct was unsportsmanlike, but he had
showed no semblance of his
1g72 fonn until Monday night.
He did the Gophers a favor
by scoring -19 points and
grabbing 18 rebounds in
leading the Buckeyes to a 7~9
upset of first place Indiana (61) in Taylor's first night back
on the .bench ,
"The win over Indiana will
really fire up Ohio State (3-3),
which can now get back into
the thick · of things,"
Musselman said. "They had
some lean days, but now seem
to have it all together."
Behagen, a 6-foot-10 forward,
also has lacked sharpness in
recent weeks after winning

AWARD FOR STRACEY
LONDON
(UPI)- London
welterweight John H. Stracey,
who fights Danny McAloon of
the Bronx, N.Y. , on the
Muhanunad Ali.Joe Bugner most valuable player honors at.
bill at Las Vegas, Feb. 14,
Wednesday was presented with
his award as Britain's "Young
Boxer of 1972."
from the field and made 8 out of
19 foul shots. Eastern made 5
out of IS free throws.
Southern is now 1~ overall ·
and 11-3 in league play. They
will play their last league game
Saturday at Symmes Valley.
Duane Wolfe is Southern's
coach.

South e rn ' s reserve and Tim Hill 1.
basketba)l team, trailing by
For· Eastern, G.obel had ll
two points at the end of the and Orr 10.
third quarter Tuesday night,
Southern shot 29 percent
rallied in lhe fourth quarter to
defeat the Eastern squad 36 to
35.
Southern took a five point
lead in the first quarter only to
go behind at the end of the half
by three points.
With four seconds remaining
Southern's Mitch Nease shot
and missed. Southern's Danny
Now you can buy that
comlortable
La·Z·Boy
Brown got the ball and scored
chair
you
'
ve
always
and a foul was called ·against
dreamed of at our . low
Eastern. · Brown shot but
prices.
missed, making the final score
36-35.
Authorized Dealer
For Southern Mitch Nease
and Brown led in double
figures with 14 and 13
respectively. Brown also led
with 12 rebounds. Other
Herman Grote
scorers for Southern were Greg
777·5592
Mnon, W. V• . .
J?unning with 6, Terry .Sayre 2,

LA-Z·BOV

CHAIRS

· MASON

FURNITURE

thf Far West Classic over the
Cliristmas holidays,
"It's just another game," he
said. "I'm not going to worry
about it. If something weird is
going to happen, it's going to
happen anyway."
Privately, Minnesota
Athletic Department officials
have expressed little concern
about the game itself, but seem
worried about possible fan
reaction before or after the
game. Muss.elman and the
Gophers have made reservations at a hotel several miles
from Columbus.
"I just hope nothing crazy
happens," said Gopher captain
Jim Brewer, who played on
friendly terms with Witte at the
.Olympic camp. "I don't have
any reason to dread playing at
Ohio State.
·
"You can make a big thing
aboot the game being more
important and about last year.
But in the end, it's a competitive game. You have to
compete and your team has to
compete."
The game at 13,400-seat St.
John's arena has been sold out
since last spring.

His medals wet·e never re·
turned and his name has not
been restored in the Olympic
record book despite various
effort s through the years.
Today , a group headed by
former Yankee pitcher Allie
Reynolds, also an Oklahoma
Indian. plans to petition
President Nixon to plead the
case to the International
Olympic Committee.
Don Johnson. son of Roy
Ruggles Johnson, said in a
phone interview that his
rather supported the idea
thai Thorpe's name and
medals be •·estored.
"My father felt that the
AAU was too strict." said
Don Johnson , now an executive with the Worceste•· Tele·

Get A Philco FM·AM

PORTABLE RADIO
Model Rl31

' 5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 8, 1973

~ Barons
I'

edge·. foe, 19-17

By United Press lnlernali0!181

with 21 points.
· It wa~ a long night at s~•.
Kent state made up an eightbenville Wednesday night.
point second half deficit to
Both the Barons and the down .Pittsburgh. Dwight ~en­
visiting California (Pa.) team ner led a balanced attaCk with
· kept the acUotl slow and when 17 pointa as the Flas~es betterthe game was over only a total ed their record to 8-11.
of 36 pointa had been scored.
Akron gained Its 13th win in
Steubenville won the game 17 outings. Len Paul and Larry
19-17 after leading 1Q.9 at the Jenkins scored 21 points apiece
half.
for the Zips, who ran away with
Will Adams led the BaroiL'l tilt! game from the begimlng.
with six points and Cleve Stew. Clifford Pratt scored 31
ard was high for CaUfornla and points for Shaw in Its win over
the game with seven points. Central State. Mike Williams,
Steubenville Is now 16-1.
In other ganies that were
· more the usual fare, Youngstown State demolished Bald'!linWallace 88-60; Thiel (Pa.)
edged Hiram 68-67; Wright
state Whipped Marian (Ind.)
&amp;1~; and Urbana downed
Walsh 71~.
Oakland (Mich.) downed By United Press International
Long Beach State rolled to Its
Ashland 114-97 at Rochester,
Mich., as Calvin MelBon logged 18th victory of the season
3S points and Walt Johnson against just one lOllS and Its
. added 28. It was Ashland's 8lst consecutive home
; sixth loss in a row, dropping triumph, 97-76, over UC San
·Diego Wednesday night, to
: the Eagles to 7-9.
: Also Wooster beat Marietta justify Its 3rd-place natiooal
' 71-43; Kent State squeezed past ranking.
Pittsburgh 74-68; Marshall
'Despite shooting 50 per cent
: downed Miami 68-59; Akron from the floor, the Aztecs
, ' Ramped Gannon (Pa .) 98-U; trailed by two at the half, but
Ohio Dominican beat Rio San Diego could not sustain
Grande 92-77; Cleveland State their efforts in the second half
ed8ed Wayrie State 65-64; Shaw and Lpng Beach drew away.
(Mich.) whipped Central State
In the only other games
102-73; Defiance beat Bluffton involving top-rated teams,
88-88 In a double overtime and Providence held on against St.
DePaul downed Xavier B!J.i7. Joseph's (Pa.) for an 81-75
Marshall defeated Miami for decision and San Francisco
the second time this season and topped Santa Clara, 78-69.
Randy Noll led the way with 20
In other contests, Notre
points and 14 reboumb. Miami Dame UPIU!t Michigan State,
Is now lZ-7.
85-72, and West Virginia topped
Wooster boosted Its Ohio Rutgers, 81·78. In an important
Conference record to 6-3 with small college game, No. 1Sam
the win over Marietta, now 4-5 Houston State defeated No. 2
In the league. Chuck Roblnoon Stephen F. Austin for the
' of Ma~ietta was high scorer. second time this season, this

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Defiance and Bluffton were
tied 7B-70 at the end of regulation time and tied at 81-81 at the
end of the first overtlffie. Bll1
Kramer Jlil a field goal to give
Defiance an 8'1-86\ead and Max
Trowbridge lidded a free throw
for insuranoo In the second
overtime.

l

l.

time by an 81-67 score.
The Friars led at one point 59
-42 against St. Joseph's, and

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' By United Press International

John Havlicek, whose knee
alhnent ha s been dla gnose d. as
arthritis, said that his right
knee "was sore, but It's a dull
ache-and r can play with
that."
And play he did, notching 30
points for Boston-four in the
overtime period-and sinking a
25-foot bomb with two seconds
to play in overtime, to give the
Celtics a 113-112 extra..,...;od
~-·victory over the Los Angeles

CENTER
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FERRIS APPOINTED
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Boyd ·
B. Ferris, a fonner staff counsel, has been appointed assistant to the state Pablic Utilities
Commission. '
The attorney succeeds Mrs.
Sally W. Bloomfield, who was
appointed by Gov. John J. Gilligan as a commissioner last
week.

!..akers Wednesday night in a ·
battle of the NBA's top percentage teams.
The victory gave the Celtics
a l&gt;t..game lead over the idle
New York Knicks, while the
Lakers' impressive lead over
Golden State dropped to 9'f.!
games.
In other NBA action Wednesday night, Kansas City.Qmaha
surprise&lt;J Milwaukee, 101J.98,
Detroit defeated Phoenix, 113107, and Baltimore crushed

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Atlanta 137-108.
Boston's victory snapped a
Lakers' 11-game winning
streak, and marked the third

~~~~~

threeeight
quarters,
but came
back
on
of Gail
Goodrich's
game-bigh 35 points to lead 103101 with 1:30 to go. CowelL'!
scored on a tip-in of his own
shot with I :09 left to send the
game into overtime.
Kansas City-Omaha had lost
12 straight, dating backto Dec.
19, 1970, against the Bucks
going into their game but a
sellout 10,472 watched the
·Kings come back from a 3~16
first quarter deficit.
Nate Archibald had a l~J.
footer in the final minute to
complete a 39.point performance.
Oetrolt outscored Phoenix,
17-3, in the fourth quarter of a
game tied 17 times, to give the
Pistons their fifth straight
victory·. Bob Lanier led all
scorers with 26 points.
Six players scored In double
figures as t~te Bullets stretched
their Central Division lead to
five games over the Hawks and
rolled up their highest point
total of the Season.
DRIVER CITED
Doyle T. Shuler, 59,
Cheshire, was charged with
falling to stop within the
assured clear distance
following a traffic accident at 4
p.m. Wednesday on Rt. 7 at the
James M. Gavin Plant. · · · ·
According to' the Ohio Stale
Highway Pablo!, Shuler's ·car
struck the rear end of an auto
operated by Mary J. Mora, 44,
Rt. 3, Pomer.oy. There was
miniH' dan1aRe to both cars.
'

bus would be advised to wait
along the highway at the Intersection of Route 279 and
Route 35 (the 4 lane). This
intersection is the one closest
to Gallipolis. A. .W. Sue, of
Greyhound Lines, has indicated that a 30-day survey
will be run on the bus schedule
to determine the extent
Thurman area residents use
the bus. If little use is made of
·the service, he will apply to the
Public Utilities Commission to
change the schedule. To help
keep the service available to
senior citizens the public is
urged to use the bus If one
needs a way to town.
The Thurman Senior Citizens
plan a potluCk lunch on Feb. 6,
a visit to a glass factory in
Huntington, and to a former
member of the group in Lancaster.
The next meeting will be held
March 6 at noon with a potluck
lunch. All senior citizens are
welcome.

aunts, and a number of
cousins .
Funeral services will be helii
at 10 a.'m. Saturday at the
Rijtherfor,d -Corbin Funeral
Home, 515 High St., Worthington and burial will be In
Union Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.
Friends are asked to giv·e ·
donations to the Columbus
Cancer Clinic in lieu of flowers.

ro:~;o;-~

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992-3680
POMEROY, OHIO

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Men's Long Sleeve

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consecutive
the !..akers
had fallen totime
the Celtics
.. l.os

'

i

Gerald ·,. Stanley, 67, former
Tuppers Plains resident and a
prominent retired Columbus
attorney died Wednesday at his
home at 5767 Olentangy Blvd.
Mr. Stanley was formerly
associated with the legal finn
of Schorr, Chastang, Edwards
and Stanley. He was a member
and elder of the Worthington
United Presbyterian Church, a
' pUgrim of the Worthington
Moose, a former assistant
Unlt..d States District AI·
tomer, and formerly secretary
and legal counselor for
Steward and Silver. He was a
member of the Columbus Bar
Association and of the Board or
Governors of the National
Counter Intelligence Assn . He
was a veteran of-World War IT.
Surviving are his widow,
Clara Hardway Stanley, also
formerly of Tuppers Plains;
his step-mother, Mrs. Bridie
M. Stanley, of Columbus, two

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9 a.m.

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Regular 6.98 to 11 .98. These are
real bargains at

Men's Long Sleeve
Kn~ Shirts, lh price

hand carved . In tradllional-and cont,mporary

Sport Shirts, lh price
Odd Lot of Men's

Regular 6.98 to 11.98, now
3.49 to 5.99

14K Gold antiqued Weddina Rlnao artlotloally

Men's Long Sleeve

S-M·L. Regular(98to7.98
Now Only 2.49 to 3.99

Men's Casual Flare Leg

10/187L

SVPERtOR

WASt-lABiliTY- dirt and

Stl!p in and visit our new

village 1F someone wants off in
Thurman. Otherwise the bus
will stay on Route 35, arriving
in Jackson approximately 5 p.
m.
Schedule 5405: Leaves
Jackson 6:25 p. m. and will
deliver a passenger into the
village of Thurman IF
someone wants off there;
otherwise, the bus will stay on
Rt. 35, arriving in Gallipolis
approximately 7:15 p. m.
In other words, the morning
schedtiles listed above will
pass through the village of
Thunnan approximately 10:30
a. m. The late afternoon
schedules will stay on Route 35
unless there is someone who
wants off of the bus in the
village. It will then go through
the village,
Anyone desiring to catch a
morning bus can go to the
Thurman Post Office and wait,
being sure to step out and flag
the bus when it comes. Anyone
desiring the catch an evening

ment In werm , SOIP'I water

-

attorney dies

Bus
. schedul.e to Thurman exnanded
'I:'

appeared to have their game
sewed up, But a 25-8 spurt by
St. Joseph's tied the game at 67
THURMAN
Senior
--67. Friars backco!U'I star
citizens of this Gallia County
Ernie DiGregorio then dropped
in a jump shot to make the community, concerned with
problems related to transscore 73-71 Friars, and St. Joe's
portation broug_ht about
never caught up again.
DIGregorio and St. Joseph's discussions on Jan. 2J with
Mike Bantom each tallied 26 representatives of Greyhound
points, while the Friars' Lines-East and the Ohio Public
Marvin Barnes contributed 18 Utilities Commission. The
points and 19 rebounds for result already has been imProvidence, to up the Friars' proved bus services to Thur·
record to l~J-2.
man· .
San Francisco used a baThe . 1ssue centered on
lanced scoring attack, placing r prov1dmg· the v1llage . of
all five starters in double Thurman. and the surroundmg
fg es and outshot Santa area w1th adequate and
~ura 45 6 per cent to 40 6 to dependable bus service. After
r~ their overall record 17_ long discussion, the following
2. Guards Mike ~ck and Phil schedule was agreed upon by
Smith camed 19 points apiece all those present.
.
to lead the DolL'!, while center
Schedule 5401 : Leaves
Mike Smith paced the Broncos Jackson 10: to a. m., goes
who are normally 52 per ceni through the village of Thurman
shooters, with 22 points.
app~ox1m~tely 10 :30 a.m. and
Sam Houston State remained arn~es '" Galhpohs apunbeaten at 1~ to viriually proximately 10:55 a. m.
clinch the first Lone Star
Sc.hedule 5402: Leaves
conference championship for Galltpohs 10:10 a. m., goes
the Bearkats in 40 years. The through the village of Thurman
victory, made Jl(isslble by the approx~ately 10:35 a. m.
rebounding of the Bearkats- and .arrives m Jackson ap·
63-32 over Stephen F. Austin- proxtmately 10:55 a. m.
.
gave the Bearkkals their 25th
Schedule 5464 : leaves
consecutive victory and ]eftS. Galltpolts 4:15 p. m. and will
F, Austin 11-3. "
deliver · a passenger. Into the

STASH BAG
FOR MEN
Color TV, Rollabout Stand.
FM-AM Portable RadioAll three for only

DISCUSSIONS INITIATED-Thlr!een senior citlzeiL'l of the 'lburman area took the lead in
discussions recently that produced improved Greyhound.bus service to the village of Thunnan
in Gallia County. Seated, I tor, are Zelma Walker, Sarah Callihan and Hattie Saxton; standing,
row one I Sophia Nichols t Mary Boster ' HeJen .Conner, Susie Cherrington, Erruna, Gatewood,
and Beulah Mae Boster; and row two, standing, Eber Shealdon, Carrie Conley and Ann
Daniels, and A. W. Due, Greyhound Lines East, and Frank Dittos, of the Ohio Public Uti~tles
Commission.

Havlicek returns
with 30 markers

1.~.~
!~ ~-·'·
, ,~~~ERIJ'f!tl~~!,~f~.
-·-~· ··= ·"" •

'
!

0

VALENTINES

'

STRETCH BOOTS

who had scored 20 points for
Central in the freshman game
earlier In the evening, led the
Marauders in the varsity game
with another 20 points.

Long Beach St~te
scores 18th win

FREE

LOSE UGLY FAT

Ret~ed

Boys' Suits &amp;.Sport Coats
%price
Odd Lot Men's Winter
Jackets,. ¥2 price
Sizes are broken .

Odd Lot Luggage
%oH
A very good name in luggage.

KERM'S KORNER

NEW YORK
'CLOTHING HOUSE
POMEROY, OHIO

�..
survey.
This is a statewide su•vey. What :
does it mean lor those of us living in
Gallia and Meigs counties? lt means :
that we have the opportunity to ex- ·
press some of our opinions about what
should be done in the schools in a
place w.here we will be heard.
The future direction of education
in Ohio is being considered now. ll we
do not respond, then this future
direction will be determined by those
throughout the state who do respond.
To participate in the completion
of the Citizen Opinionnaire Survey,
citizens of Meigs and Gallia counties ·
must make. a sacrifice of time and
energy. This sacrifice is in the form of
attending a regional meeting of the
"Search for Consensus" program
conducted-by the State Department of

e can shape our
schools' future,
or others will
By Prof. Ed (Doc) Wallen
RIO GRANDE - Below are four
statements about schools. Do you
agree or disagree?
I. In Mathematics courses,
practical application (Making
change, balancing a checkbook, etc.)
should be stressed as much as prin·
ciples and theories.
AGREE·
DISAGREE
2. A student should be able to
compare American and foreign
economic and political systems.
AGREE· DISAGREE
3. Each student, whether he iii·
tends to continue his education beyond
high school or not, should have a
vocational skill before he g~aduates.
AGREE · DISAGREE
4. Parents should have access to
information, records and professional
interpretation about their children's
progress.
AGREE· DISAGREE
WELL, NOW THAT you have
recorded· ·your response to each
statement, what neKt? I have no
"key" listing the correct answers,

because at this moment no such an·
swers e~ist.
The above statements were taken
from a, list of nearly 100 crucial items
which make up a Citizen Opiniorinaire
Survey regarding the Goals of
Education for Ohio Schools. The
survey is being conducted by the Ohio
State Department of Education as
part of their "Search for Consensus"
program.
The basic purpose of the "Search
lor Consensus" program is to provide
citizens with the opportunity to express their opinions and aspirations
lor the direction of their schools. Once
the direction is established, citizens
should be able to hold schools accountable for progress in the
established direction .
The citizen.s survey deals not only
with the goals for academic
achievement of our youngsters, but
also with school finances and
facilities. In fact, most ol the topics
one hears citizens discussing
regarding the schools are part of the

Meigs High honor
roll announced
Principal James Diehl Is Davis, Barbara Demoskey,
Andy English, Dinah Erlewlne.
announcing the third six weeks Theodore Fis her . Sa11dra
grading period honor roll lor . Floccarl, Grace Fr~kes. Gre9
France, Brian Friend, Connie
the Meigs High School. Making Garnes,
Venlda Gibbs, David
a grade of "B" or above to be Grant, Cathy Harrison, Denise
Hawley, Ingrid Hawley. James
listed on the roll were:
Hill. Jacqueline Hutton, Anna
SENIORS - Edgar Abbott, Jacks. Mary Janey , Susie
Diana Aleshire, Shirley Alkire. Jeffers, Dana Johnson , Ezra
Barbara
Archer ,
Linda Kiser, Mary Krawsczyn, John
Atkinson·, Lynne Baker, Janet Lehew, Michael May, Diana
Biggs. Elizabeth Blaettnar, McAngus, Alan Mills, Stan
Jim Boggs, Sarah Boyles, Jon Moon, Janel Morris, ·Mark
Bunce, Janice Burns, Terry Morris, Susan Morrison , Tina
Cadle, Wanda Cardillo Gard· Nler l. Sonya Ohlinger, Diana
ner , Judy Carsey, Debbie Pa inter, Roxie Patterson ,
Carson. Rita Cascl, Michael Debra Pierce, Debra .Powell.
Carder. Steve Cotteril l, Paul Donna Powell, Cherie Reuter,
Cunningham , Jeff Darst, Mike
Richards,
Diane
Brenda Donahue, Robin Duck· Ridgway . Joe Rosenbaum,
worth, Merri Ebersbach, Sandra
Rusche!, Jean ie
Donna Francis, Keith French. Schneider, Patty Searles,
Beth Fultz, Debbie Gilliam. Wayne Searls, Gall Sizemore,
Kaaron Gilmore, Karen Hale, Albert Smith, Jill Smith, Tina
David Hanson, Sheila Hawk, Spires, Rick Stobart. Brenda
John Hayes, Randy Haynes, Van Meter, Paul Voss, Karen
Connie Herdman, Marlene Wheeler, Sherman While ,
Hutton, Debbie Jewett, Steve David Wolfe .
Jewell. William Kennedy,
Barbara Klein, Sherry Lam .
bert. Tony Manley, Kr lsty
Matson, Eugene

Ed~cation.

On Tuesday, February 20, at 7:30
p.m., the progr8lil's Region VII
meeting will be held at The Plains
High School in Athens county. Both
Galli~ and Meigs co~nties are
assigned to this region, The survey
will be completed at that meeting.
Responding to the statements at
the beginning or this column was jus!
an academic eKercise. H you want to
respond to such statements in a
situation which counts, then you
should attend the Region VII meeting.
The choice, as always, is yours and
mine.
Inevitably, if we don't help shape
the future or education ourselves, It
will be shaped for us.

3 Entries
registered
•
m
contest
Three entries have been
registered to date in the Meigs
County Princess of Hearts
contest for seventh and eighth
graders of Meigs County. They
are Teresa Carr of Eastern
Local School District, and
Trudy Roach and Becky King
of the Meigs Local District.
Prospective contestants mfy
contact Mrs. James Snulsby at
992-2377 for details. The
deadline for entry is Feb. 9.
Latest entries In the Queen of
Hearts contest are Cindy
Schneider, Dreama Ward,
Loretta Tackett and Debbie
Lawrence of Meigs High
School, and Debbie Milliron
and Karen Neigler of Southern ,
This event is for girls from
freshmen through the senior
year of high school.
New entries in the Junior
Princess contest for filth, sixth
and seventh graders are
Elizabeth BlevinS, Salisbury;
Ruth Ann ·Blake and Angela
Baker of Middleport, and· Lori
Rupe, Brenda Richards, Cindy
. Richards and Julie Richards or
,the Pomeroy Elementary
School.
All interested girls are as~ed
to call Mrs. Soulsby for com-.
plete details of. the different
contests.

Grace ·Brawley of Coolville died Wedne8day

· f.llll!ddl · rt'

. COOLVILLE -

epo, .
died Wednesday

0

if.U

,

·

·
Mrs. Geneva Yates, 76, Page
: St., Middleport, died Wed: nesday evening at the Holzer
· Medical Center.
Mrs. Yates was a member of
: He.ath United Methodist
Church in Middleport and was
: .active in the county's Senior
: Citizens Program.
She was preceded in death by
: her father, Charles Lisle; her
stepfather, Clark Swan; her
: mother, . Anna Wagner Lisle
· Swan; her husband, David S.
Yates; a son, Jack, in infancy,
and a daughier, Jean Ann.
Surviving are two sons,
David R. Yates, Cambridge,
and Morgan A..Yates, Mentor;
two half-brothers, Charles
Lisle, Jr., Syracuse, and
Robert Lisle of Point Pleasant;
three grandchildren and six
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p. m. Saturday at the

Nancy

t '•'

~

.

Br~dy. Pli.; 31 -~randchlldren . 1\ev. Roy Deeter. officiating;
arid 53 grea~-grandchildren. Burial wilt' be in the Coolville
Funeral servic~ .will be held Cemetery. Friends may call at
. at 1p.m. Saturday at th~ White the funeral home after 7 UU.
Funeral Home here w1th the evening ,
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •...• •

An Easter party to be held
for the Meigs Community Class
was planned during a meeting
"of the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
Tuesday night at the Columbus
' andSnutbernOhio Electric Co.
Mrs. Linda Riffle presided at .
,the ineeti~g )l'ith f$'s: Carol
Jean Adams reporting on
improvements still being made
at the Chlldre~·s Home. Mrs.
Adams heads the Children's
Home Cit&amp;ens Committee
which periodically tours the
home and makes recommendations for repairs and

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you.
·'should come to us
¥-.income tax help.
R-n I. We specialize in income tax
!ftparalion. We know the ~es. We dig
out ever)' honest deduction. There is very
little chance we will let you overpay your
taxes.

•

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

SAME DAY

304 E. Main 992·3795 · Pcxneroj, 0.

SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5
Use Our Free Parking Lot

Open 9 Til 5 Mon. thru ·Sat.

No Appointment NecessaJy

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd,

57 Court St.

Pomeroy

592-2851

Athens,

o.
•

Lawrence,

VIrginia McCune. Debbie
McLaughlin, Michael Alan
Nessselroad, Phil Ohlinger, Jo
Anna Peyton, Rose Ramsburg,
Bryan Shank, Karen Tillis,
Sleven Walburn. Joy Whlfe,
Brenda Will.
· FRESHMEN Garry
Boggs. Sandra Carleton, David

A
home
·furnishings
workshop, another in a series
ol educational pr,ograms and
activities ~onducted by the
Ohio Cooperative 'Extension
Service, and arranged by Mrs . .
Jennifer Sheets, Meigs extension agent, will be held on
Feb. 20 from 1 to 3 p.m. at St.
Paul's
Lutheran · Church,
MRS. awu.ES R. BRU811
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Judith Ma'tthews,
MISS DIANA MARIE EBUN and Mr. Charles Robert
assistant professor at Ohio.
Brush ~changed nuptial vows on·Jan. 'l1 at 2p.m. at the Mt.
University and home furVernon Bible COllege. The Rev. Thomas Bryant officiated:
nishings teacher In the School
tl)e bride is the daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. Ira Eblin of
of
Home Economics, will
COlumbus, former' Meigs County residents, and the
conduct the workshop.
bridegroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. James Brush of
Sunbury.
·
Her 1p.m. topic will be "Do's
and Don'ts of Decorating and
Miss Linda K. Thibant was the maid of honor and
·her
2 p.m. topic will be "Let
bridesmaids were Margaret Lynch and BoMle Sawyer.
Color Work lor You". At ber
Thomas McComb was best man. Ushers were Donald Lapfirst session, 'Mrs. Matthews
pert and William Kimmel. The bride Is employed by the
will be using slides to Illustrate
Grange Mutual Casualty CO., and Mr. Brush Is selfthe principles of harmony,
employed.
balance, scale, and emphasis
in room decorating. The second
portion will ljle devoted to
showing how color can make
New Plants lor 1973 was the
The weekly prayer breakfast earthly things. The lack of rooms look young or old,
for Southern High School dedication and the faith needed feminine or masculine, cool or topic of Mrs. Roy Betzing who
presented the program at a
students was held Wednesday for divine leadership were warm.
Tbere will be a 50-eent meeting of the Pomeroy
'morning at the Racine discussed by the speaker.
Garden Club held Monday
Wesleyan United Methodist Prayer was by the Rev. Ed- registration charge.
night at the home of Mrs. lr·
Church. Thirteen youths at- ward Fischer of the Racine
vlng Karr, Jr.,Mason,.. W. Va .
tended.
, • Bapllsl Church. ·
Mrs. Betzing . riarhed
The 1\ev. Howard Shlvi!iey ,•' '.l.tiri'dmg the breakfast were
flowers which are being'· inin prayer folloWed by group Janie Rees, Vicki Wolfe,
troduced this year noting their
singing directed by Duane Rhonda West, Judi Roberts,
characteristics and growth
Wolfe. Special music was Jay Hill, Tim Hill, Jeff Hill,
requirements.
In response to
presented by Florence Adams, Ethan Stearn, Bill Shiveley,
roll call members named a new
Mar llyn Powell, Marjorie Beverly Hart, Mary Walker,
.
.
plant they hope to have in their
. Grimm, Dennis Manuel, and Rodney Neigler, Valerie
The
Rev.
Conrad
Diehm,
gardens
this summer. Mrs .
the Rev. Freeland Norris.
Johnson, and the Rev. Frank
pastor of th~ Emmanuel Betzing also read a letter on
Dr.
Russell
Jones, Cheesebrew.
.
United
Methodtst Church In gardening from Victor Rees.
evangelist, had a short
Preparing the breakfast
Logan, will be the evangelist
·meditation. He spoke of how were Mrs. Robert Hill, Mrs.
for a revival to be held at the
men are trying to conquer Billy Hill and Mrs. Howard
WSCSTOMEET
Enterprise United Methodist
outer space while overlooking Shiveley. Another breakfast
The
Women's Society o£
Church beginning on Feb. 25.
the most Important thing in life will be held next Wednesday
Christian
Service will meet at
Services will be conducted
- Inner space or the soul of morning at 7:30 a.m. and all thfough March 3 each evening 7:30 p. m. Tuesday at the
men. He said that many times Southern High School students
at 7:30p.m. and will be con- Pomeroy United Methodist
the spiritual things of life are are invited to attend.
tinued a second wee,k if the Church with "Living and
overlooked while men seek the
response is good. Special music Acting in Love ... ·as the
will be presented by the En- program topic.
terprise choir and also by
members of the Logan church.
IN HOSPITAL
The Rev. Mr. Diehm was
Mrs.
Oris Hubbard is a
Mrs. Joyce Grover and Mrs. · Haggy, Mrs. Bea O'Dell, Mrs. recently presented a citation
Gerri Mowery entertained Eleanor Hoover, Mrs. Diana for special work In evangelism. medical patient at St. Mary's
tecenUy with a bridal shower Bachtel, Mrs. ·Judith Starcher, The public is Invited to attend Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
Friends are asked to offer
honoring Mrs. Tina Mayle Miss Robin Venoy, and Miss the revival services.
prayers and sent cards. Her
Collins at the Mowery home, Crystal Richmond.
room
number is 538.
Route 2, Pomeroy.
Also presenting gifts to the
A yellow and green color bride · were Mrs. Jean
TURNERS VISITED
scheme was carried out In the Cremellns, Debbie and Agnes
FACTS
Mr. and Mrs. William Turner
decorations. The cake featured Mowery, Mrs. Myrtle Grover,
Domesticated
Brahman
of
Dayton were recent visitors
white wedijing bells Inscribed Cindy Jordan , Mrs. Dorothy bulls, weighing almost a
"Tina and Bob". Games were Collins, Daisy and Bill Conkle, ton; are thought of as ex- of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Turner,
played with prizes going to Mel Faulkner, Mrs. Connie tremely wild because of Middleport.
Mrs. Beverly Chapman, Mrs. Chapman, Annette Phatln, Kay their use in rodeos. The
Lorraine Venoy, Mrs. Mary Shuler, Mrs. May Mayle, Mrs. World Almanac notes, however, that in India millions
SALE PLANNED
Starcher, and Mrs. Janice VIrginia Haley', Mrs. Roberta of Brahman cattle roam
The Chtister Garden Club
Capehart, and Miss Kathy Dillon, Mrs. Robert Collins, docilely without fear of
will
hold a rummage sale
Durst won the door prize.
Mrs . Edith Leach, Mrs. Art harm because the passive
·The decorated cake was Price, Mrs . Sharon Durst, animals are held sacred by Friday, 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. at
Trinity Church basement.
served with Ice cream, candy Betty Sayre, Allie Halley, the Hindu population.
hearts, potato chips, Kool-Ald Nancy Beaver, C. H.
and coffee. Laura Hoover McKenzie, Carrie Meinhart,
Short Sleeve
&amp;Misted with the serving.
Terri and Todd Grover, and
Nylon StretCh
Others attending the shower Colena Mowery.
were Mrs. Brenda Haggy, Mrs.
Emma Chapman, Mrs. LeUa

Cullums, Peggy Cunningham.
Cindy Eads, Elaine Fish.
Cherie Fry, Crystal Glaze,
Cindy Gloze. William Gloyd,

Julie Hamm, Oar/a Harper,

•

Tam I Hollman, James Hutton,
Debbie Janey, Nancy Jeffers.
Bonita Johnson, Debbie Kauff,
Glenn Kennedy, Mona King,
Michae l Magnotta, VIcki
Manley, · Charles Marshall,
Judy Radford, Bruce Reed,
Rebecca Roush, Kathy Rupe,
Mary Ruschel, Angela Sisson.
Tamara Stanley, George
Stewart, Mike Swick, Melissa
Thomas, Donna Thornton,
Greg Van Meter.

. IS. · ·
,

.,

J •

Logatf'f!}tor ,
is evangelist
·
·
/
h
fior revtva ere

us,
re
ene

CARPET LAND, INC.
Pomeroy

REMNANTS (ODDS &amp; ENDS)
GALORE
On Sale Now At
Carpet-Land of Pomeroy

Shower given bride

•

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WISe

Beautiful Indoor-Outdoor Odds &amp;
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Numerous
Colors. Remnants large enough for
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We Offer Expert Installation

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· FROM CARPET-LAND INC.
Because natural gas has always been so inexpensive,
there has never been a great urge to conserve it.
Until now.
Right now, there's just not enough natural gas
to supply all the new demands for t~is cleanest-burning fuel.
' Of course. as a gas customer, you don't have to worry about getting
the gas you need for the appliances now in your home ... or their replacements.
But the shortage of natural gas, indeed, the shortage of all clean-burning fuels, is becoming
a grave threat to our community's economic growth. More clean-burning gas is desperately needed.
Not only to stimulate economic growth and provide more jobs, but simply to maintain current requirements.
A healthy economy needs natural gas, And a healthy environment needs natural gas.
Use gas wisely in your home and business. It's too valuable to waste.
And the gas you save, together with the new gas Columbia is
· working hard to develop, can help ease the gas shortage.
Write to Columbia Gas for the free booklet:
"30 Ways to Save." ·

"IF YOU DON'T KNOW CARPET
'

KNOW YOUR CARPET DEALER"
Store Located AI:
161 lrd Ave.-Gallipolis. Ohio-614-444-1641
116 W. Main- Pomeroy, Ohio-614-992-7590
2626 5th Ave •. Huntington, W. Va.-304-523-9402
Pomeroy Store Hours:
Monday· Thursday-9-5
Friday9-8
Saturdav 9-5

EXQIANGE SnJDENTS
&lt;Xll:.UMBUS (UPI) '- Three
&lt;lllo State University students
bave been:thosen for the Inter·
'nallonar Farm
Youth Ex·
.
'

change. .

&amp;!Ban Bowen of Wooster wl11
vlalt Turkey; Unda Pursley ol
·. Lebanon wlllgo to Greece and
Edon Bilhop of Findlay goes to
Kenya and Zambia.
Mila Bowen and M!Ja PunleY are aenlors 11111 jorlng in
home econorillcs education and
Bi1bop 1111 julllor 11111jorinll in

ioclai ltudlel educallop.
'l11e IFYE pro11f8111 Ia apon·
IOI'ed by the Nallonal t-Il
FOundation · . and Ia lid·
mlniltered by the Cooperative

· Gas is precious, pure energy . .. u~e it wisely.

Ca II today for a fre-e estimate in your home.

Carpet Is Our Only Busineu
•

~WMBIAGAS
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FINAL ·CLEARANCE
GROUP'-50% OFF

new

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The atudenll wl11 Uve with
firm fmnDiio IIIII wark with
youlll arvup1 ID tile countrlla
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"

SUSPECI' &lt;XlNVICTED
AKRON (UPI)-Charles
HIUlt, 19, Akron, was convicted
Wednesday of first · degree
murder In the killing of a
policeman last October and of
shooting to kill In the wounding ·
of another officer.
Patrolmen stephen Ondas
and Pb11llp Brady had stopped
a car on a routine traffic violation arid attempted to arrest
Hunt on a warrant Issued fOr
another violation.
Hunt, a pauenger, allegedly
wretlllad a revolver away fr&lt;im
Ondas, fatally shooting him
and wounding Brady.

GROUP-30% OFF

THOM MeAN
MENS SHOES

CONNIE

organizational

Mrs. Harold Brown presided
at the meeting which opened
with devotions by Mrs. Karr
and the Lord's Prayer in
unison. Officers reports were
presented and thank-you notes
. from Mrs. Karr lor a
.'remembrance during her
hospitalization ; from Lillie
Coates and Lydia Ebersbach
,for Christmas flowers, and
from Mrs. Sarah Gibbs were
read.
Mrs. Fred Blaettnar was
named to have charge of the
radio program In April. During
a concluding social hour, a
dessert course was served by
the hostess.

Village Pharmacy continues to provide
complete and accurate records of your ex·
pense on prescription medicine as we have the
past five years.

EXECUTIVE committee
meeting Middleport . Pomeroy
Area Branch of the AAUW, 10
a.m. Saturday, Meigs Inn .

SHOES
14.99 to 116.99 Value

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GROUP-VALUES TO '6.50

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Your Thorn MeAn Shoe Store
MIDDLEPORT

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service

lor Your Drug Nutl1

VALENTINE DANCE,
Saturday, following Southern •
Waterford game at Southern
High School · until midnight.
King and queen of hearts to be
crowned at 10:30. Mustic by
Stagecoach.'

New plants are discussed

Youths at breakfast

Cole, Karen Coleman, Ginger

116 W. Main ·

•

Workshop set
for Feb. 20th

SHIRT
FINISHING

THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30p.m. Thursday at the hall.
MEIGS County Humane
improvements.
Society, 7:30 Thursday night at
A report was given on the Middleport Village Hall. The
March ·of Dimes Mothers· public is invited to attend.
March and it was noted that the
CATHOLIC Women's Club,
chapter will send thank you Sacred Heart Parish, Thursnotes to Mrs. Eln)a Russell and day, 8 p.m., preceded by Mass
Mrs. Effie Allriend lor their and Rosary at 7:15p.m.
aSsistance.
REGULAR meeting, Shade
Mrs. Riffle noted that the River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, 7:30
couples party .will be held on p.m. Thlirsday, at hall in
March 9 at the Orchid Room. A Chester. Refreshments. All
bake sale and rummage sale Master Masons invited.
will also be held later this
XI GAMMA Mu .. Thursday,
spring.
7:45 p.m. home of Mrs. Pearl
The chapter voted tosend . Welker with Mrs. Mary C.
International $10 each for the ' Wiley serving ·as co,ljpstess.
endowment, the loan, and the Mrs. Phil Ohlinger, a member
exemplar funds. Jo Smith was of the Rio Grande Community.
a guest at the meeting. Mrs. COllege Board of Trustees, will
Becky . Anderson, Linda be guest speaker.
Sauvage and Kathy King
UNITED
Methodist
presented the cultural report Women's Society of Enterprise
on art. Refreshments were Church· Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
served by Mrs. Vikki home of Mrs. Don Hunnel,
Gloeckner, Mrs. Anderson and Rose HiU.
Mrs. Lynn Kitchen.
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612,
Letart Falls, 7:30p.m. Thursday at hall; refreshments of
::~-x·-·a~···
.:. ?.SS!CS:_._._u;;;, .sandwiches, pie.
RESERVATIONS NOTE
MOBILE HOME and mobile
Kathryn Olx Snwle, wife of home parkS as a ~art of
Dr. Claude ' R. Sowle, relieving the Meigs County
president of Ohio University, housing situation to be
will speak at a meeting to be discussed at public meeting,
held Feb. 15, Thursday, at 10 a.m. to 12 noon Thursday at
the Grace Episcopal Church social room of Pomeroy United
parrish bouse. She will Methodist Church. Gerrit Van
discuss "Oblo University - Straten, engineer with Van
Its Present and Its Future," Straten
and
Edwards,
following a 12:30 luncheon to developers of Canaan Com·
be served by the Grace munity, Columbus, will be
Episcopal Church Women. speaker.
Reservations lor the
PAST tOU NCILORS ,
luncheon are to be Theodotus Council, Daughters
telephoned to either Mrs. of American Revolution, 7:30
Fred Crow at 992·2562 or p.m. Thursday at home of Mrs.
Mrs. Ted Reed, Jr., at 992· COra Beegle, Racine.
· 2370 by Saturday.
EMERGENCY MEDICAL

will have party

Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Robert
Baumgarner officiating :
Burial will be in Sand Hill .
Cemetery at Long Bottom.
Friends may call at the funeral
home alter 3 p. m. Friday.

SOPHOMORES - VIcki
Abbott, Teresa Burchett, Julia
Capehart, Mandy Carder, Jo
Chafin. Jennifer Chapman,
Charles Cogar, Richard Couch,
Carla Crisp, Lenora Davis,
Bonnie Dillon , April Fraser, •
Barbara Fultz, Cynthia
Garnes, Joy Hiiyes, Maureen
Hennessy. Kathy Hysell, Sonia
Justice, Anita King, Scherry
Lane,

'.

Mrs: Grace
Irene Brawley, 85, a reside,nt
here the past 52 years, died
Wednesday at the residence of
a daughter in Johnstown, Ohio,
following a long illness.
Mrs. Brawley was born at
Elizabeth, Pa., the daughter of
the late Arch and · Nancy
Johnson Rue. She was also
preceded in death by her
husband, Edwal'd, in 1962; a
son, Harold ; a brother, . two
sisters, and three grandchildren.
Surviving are a son, Ira, of
Cool¥ille; foU. daughters, Mrs.
Dorothy Bowman, Coolville;
Mrs. Ida Nestor, Columbus;
Mrs . Margaret Westfall,
Reedsville, and Mrs. Betty
Cupp, Johnstown; a sister,
Mrs. William Stoops. East

Wednesday to pay the county
$173,000whlch examiners from
the state auditor's office said
was missing when an audit was
conducted of his books 1966
through 1970.
R.obert Cook, visiting from
neighboring Portage County
Common Pleas COurt, Issued
ORDERED TO PAY
the order, saying the defense,
AKRON (UPI)-Former in a hearing last fall, failed to
&amp;unmlt County Clerk of COurts troduce sufficient evidence to
Frank Yacobucci was ordered . show an audit was in error.

McKinney,

Sheila McKnight, Edith Mees,
Terry Metheny.
Also, Sherry Michael. Debbie
Mil ler. Kim Mowery, John
Nelson. Desiree Pike, Sharon
Reeves, Christine Robinson,
Mike Sayre, James Schmoll,
Everett Schuler, Kenneth See,
Becky Seelig, Dorothy Seth,
Connie Smith. Rebecca Smith,
Charlotte Snyder, Christine
· Stonley, Delores Stanley, Greg
Stewart, Jane Thoma..
Richard . William Vaughan ,
Stephen Warner, Dallas
Weber. Patti Weber, Patti
Well. Sharon Wilson, Mindy
Young .
JUNIORS Christine
Bailey, David Barnhart.
Brenda Barton, Regina Bing,
Donna Blevins. Donna Boyd,
Shelly Clark, Tom Cleland,
VIctoria Clelland, Joyce Davis,
Linda Cunningham, Rita

Geneva Yales

MONDAY
INJIJRED IN FALL
Mrs . Carrie Meinhart is .,.
AMERICANISM Program
recuperating
from injuries
by Le ..:is Manley Alilerican
j,egion Auxiliary 363, 7:30 suffered in a fall at the home of
Monday night at the Naomi her grandson, Jimmy J.
meeting, Thursday, 7:30p.m. Baptist Church, Pomeroy . Guinther, Syracuse. She was
at the Rutland Funeral Home, Rev. Samuel Jackson, guest confined to the Holzer Medical
Rutland .
Center lor treatment following
speaker. Public invited.
J
her fall.
FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, White
Shrine of Jerusalem, 8 p.m.
Friday at the IOOF Hall,
Pomeroy, with potluck
refreshments.
RETURN
JONATHAN
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
the American _Revolution, 2 '
p.m. Friday at the Meigs Inn.
FREE CLOTHING day
Friday at Long Bottom United
Methodist Church basement
from 12 noon to 4 p.m.
ANNUAL INSPECTION ,
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM,
7:30 p.m. Friday with inspection in Master Mason
d~gree. All Master Masons
welcome.
'1111! CI!IATOII Of
DANCE FRIDAY following
ltiSONAile '*'0 PMCIS"
basketball game at Wahama
High SChool, 9:30 p.m. to
PHONI! 992~759
midnight. School sponsored,
271 N. Smnd ,....,
I
music l)y the Jays.
Mld:hplrt
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MIDDLEPORT

.

�..
survey.
This is a statewide su•vey. What :
does it mean lor those of us living in
Gallia and Meigs counties? lt means :
that we have the opportunity to ex- ·
press some of our opinions about what
should be done in the schools in a
place w.here we will be heard.
The future direction of education
in Ohio is being considered now. ll we
do not respond, then this future
direction will be determined by those
throughout the state who do respond.
To participate in the completion
of the Citizen Opinionnaire Survey,
citizens of Meigs and Gallia counties ·
must make. a sacrifice of time and
energy. This sacrifice is in the form of
attending a regional meeting of the
"Search for Consensus" program
conducted-by the State Department of

e can shape our
schools' future,
or others will
By Prof. Ed (Doc) Wallen
RIO GRANDE - Below are four
statements about schools. Do you
agree or disagree?
I. In Mathematics courses,
practical application (Making
change, balancing a checkbook, etc.)
should be stressed as much as prin·
ciples and theories.
AGREE·
DISAGREE
2. A student should be able to
compare American and foreign
economic and political systems.
AGREE· DISAGREE
3. Each student, whether he iii·
tends to continue his education beyond
high school or not, should have a
vocational skill before he g~aduates.
AGREE · DISAGREE
4. Parents should have access to
information, records and professional
interpretation about their children's
progress.
AGREE· DISAGREE
WELL, NOW THAT you have
recorded· ·your response to each
statement, what neKt? I have no
"key" listing the correct answers,

because at this moment no such an·
swers e~ist.
The above statements were taken
from a, list of nearly 100 crucial items
which make up a Citizen Opiniorinaire
Survey regarding the Goals of
Education for Ohio Schools. The
survey is being conducted by the Ohio
State Department of Education as
part of their "Search for Consensus"
program.
The basic purpose of the "Search
lor Consensus" program is to provide
citizens with the opportunity to express their opinions and aspirations
lor the direction of their schools. Once
the direction is established, citizens
should be able to hold schools accountable for progress in the
established direction .
The citizen.s survey deals not only
with the goals for academic
achievement of our youngsters, but
also with school finances and
facilities. In fact, most ol the topics
one hears citizens discussing
regarding the schools are part of the

Meigs High honor
roll announced
Principal James Diehl Is Davis, Barbara Demoskey,
Andy English, Dinah Erlewlne.
announcing the third six weeks Theodore Fis her . Sa11dra
grading period honor roll lor . Floccarl, Grace Fr~kes. Gre9
France, Brian Friend, Connie
the Meigs High School. Making Garnes,
Venlda Gibbs, David
a grade of "B" or above to be Grant, Cathy Harrison, Denise
Hawley, Ingrid Hawley. James
listed on the roll were:
Hill. Jacqueline Hutton, Anna
SENIORS - Edgar Abbott, Jacks. Mary Janey , Susie
Diana Aleshire, Shirley Alkire. Jeffers, Dana Johnson , Ezra
Barbara
Archer ,
Linda Kiser, Mary Krawsczyn, John
Atkinson·, Lynne Baker, Janet Lehew, Michael May, Diana
Biggs. Elizabeth Blaettnar, McAngus, Alan Mills, Stan
Jim Boggs, Sarah Boyles, Jon Moon, Janel Morris, ·Mark
Bunce, Janice Burns, Terry Morris, Susan Morrison , Tina
Cadle, Wanda Cardillo Gard· Nler l. Sonya Ohlinger, Diana
ner , Judy Carsey, Debbie Pa inter, Roxie Patterson ,
Carson. Rita Cascl, Michael Debra Pierce, Debra .Powell.
Carder. Steve Cotteril l, Paul Donna Powell, Cherie Reuter,
Cunningham , Jeff Darst, Mike
Richards,
Diane
Brenda Donahue, Robin Duck· Ridgway . Joe Rosenbaum,
worth, Merri Ebersbach, Sandra
Rusche!, Jean ie
Donna Francis, Keith French. Schneider, Patty Searles,
Beth Fultz, Debbie Gilliam. Wayne Searls, Gall Sizemore,
Kaaron Gilmore, Karen Hale, Albert Smith, Jill Smith, Tina
David Hanson, Sheila Hawk, Spires, Rick Stobart. Brenda
John Hayes, Randy Haynes, Van Meter, Paul Voss, Karen
Connie Herdman, Marlene Wheeler, Sherman While ,
Hutton, Debbie Jewett, Steve David Wolfe .
Jewell. William Kennedy,
Barbara Klein, Sherry Lam .
bert. Tony Manley, Kr lsty
Matson, Eugene

Ed~cation.

On Tuesday, February 20, at 7:30
p.m., the progr8lil's Region VII
meeting will be held at The Plains
High School in Athens county. Both
Galli~ and Meigs co~nties are
assigned to this region, The survey
will be completed at that meeting.
Responding to the statements at
the beginning or this column was jus!
an academic eKercise. H you want to
respond to such statements in a
situation which counts, then you
should attend the Region VII meeting.
The choice, as always, is yours and
mine.
Inevitably, if we don't help shape
the future or education ourselves, It
will be shaped for us.

3 Entries
registered
•
m
contest
Three entries have been
registered to date in the Meigs
County Princess of Hearts
contest for seventh and eighth
graders of Meigs County. They
are Teresa Carr of Eastern
Local School District, and
Trudy Roach and Becky King
of the Meigs Local District.
Prospective contestants mfy
contact Mrs. James Snulsby at
992-2377 for details. The
deadline for entry is Feb. 9.
Latest entries In the Queen of
Hearts contest are Cindy
Schneider, Dreama Ward,
Loretta Tackett and Debbie
Lawrence of Meigs High
School, and Debbie Milliron
and Karen Neigler of Southern ,
This event is for girls from
freshmen through the senior
year of high school.
New entries in the Junior
Princess contest for filth, sixth
and seventh graders are
Elizabeth BlevinS, Salisbury;
Ruth Ann ·Blake and Angela
Baker of Middleport, and· Lori
Rupe, Brenda Richards, Cindy
. Richards and Julie Richards or
,the Pomeroy Elementary
School.
All interested girls are as~ed
to call Mrs. Soulsby for com-.
plete details of. the different
contests.

Grace ·Brawley of Coolville died Wedne8day

· f.llll!ddl · rt'

. COOLVILLE -

epo, .
died Wednesday

0

if.U

,

·

·
Mrs. Geneva Yates, 76, Page
: St., Middleport, died Wed: nesday evening at the Holzer
· Medical Center.
Mrs. Yates was a member of
: He.ath United Methodist
Church in Middleport and was
: .active in the county's Senior
: Citizens Program.
She was preceded in death by
: her father, Charles Lisle; her
stepfather, Clark Swan; her
: mother, . Anna Wagner Lisle
· Swan; her husband, David S.
Yates; a son, Jack, in infancy,
and a daughier, Jean Ann.
Surviving are two sons,
David R. Yates, Cambridge,
and Morgan A..Yates, Mentor;
two half-brothers, Charles
Lisle, Jr., Syracuse, and
Robert Lisle of Point Pleasant;
three grandchildren and six
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p. m. Saturday at the

Nancy

t '•'

~

.

Br~dy. Pli.; 31 -~randchlldren . 1\ev. Roy Deeter. officiating;
arid 53 grea~-grandchildren. Burial wilt' be in the Coolville
Funeral servic~ .will be held Cemetery. Friends may call at
. at 1p.m. Saturday at th~ White the funeral home after 7 UU.
Funeral Home here w1th the evening ,
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •...• •

An Easter party to be held
for the Meigs Community Class
was planned during a meeting
"of the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
Tuesday night at the Columbus
' andSnutbernOhio Electric Co.
Mrs. Linda Riffle presided at .
,the ineeti~g )l'ith f$'s: Carol
Jean Adams reporting on
improvements still being made
at the Chlldre~·s Home. Mrs.
Adams heads the Children's
Home Cit&amp;ens Committee
which periodically tours the
home and makes recommendations for repairs and

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you.
·'should come to us
¥-.income tax help.
R-n I. We specialize in income tax
!ftparalion. We know the ~es. We dig
out ever)' honest deduction. There is very
little chance we will let you overpay your
taxes.

•

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

SAME DAY

304 E. Main 992·3795 · Pcxneroj, 0.

SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5
Use Our Free Parking Lot

Open 9 Til 5 Mon. thru ·Sat.

No Appointment NecessaJy

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd,

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Pomeroy

592-2851

Athens,

o.
•

Lawrence,

VIrginia McCune. Debbie
McLaughlin, Michael Alan
Nessselroad, Phil Ohlinger, Jo
Anna Peyton, Rose Ramsburg,
Bryan Shank, Karen Tillis,
Sleven Walburn. Joy Whlfe,
Brenda Will.
· FRESHMEN Garry
Boggs. Sandra Carleton, David

A
home
·furnishings
workshop, another in a series
ol educational pr,ograms and
activities ~onducted by the
Ohio Cooperative 'Extension
Service, and arranged by Mrs . .
Jennifer Sheets, Meigs extension agent, will be held on
Feb. 20 from 1 to 3 p.m. at St.
Paul's
Lutheran · Church,
MRS. awu.ES R. BRU811
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Judith Ma'tthews,
MISS DIANA MARIE EBUN and Mr. Charles Robert
assistant professor at Ohio.
Brush ~changed nuptial vows on·Jan. 'l1 at 2p.m. at the Mt.
University and home furVernon Bible COllege. The Rev. Thomas Bryant officiated:
nishings teacher In the School
tl)e bride is the daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. Ira Eblin of
of
Home Economics, will
COlumbus, former' Meigs County residents, and the
conduct the workshop.
bridegroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. James Brush of
Sunbury.
·
Her 1p.m. topic will be "Do's
and Don'ts of Decorating and
Miss Linda K. Thibant was the maid of honor and
·her
2 p.m. topic will be "Let
bridesmaids were Margaret Lynch and BoMle Sawyer.
Color Work lor You". At ber
Thomas McComb was best man. Ushers were Donald Lapfirst session, 'Mrs. Matthews
pert and William Kimmel. The bride Is employed by the
will be using slides to Illustrate
Grange Mutual Casualty CO., and Mr. Brush Is selfthe principles of harmony,
employed.
balance, scale, and emphasis
in room decorating. The second
portion will ljle devoted to
showing how color can make
New Plants lor 1973 was the
The weekly prayer breakfast earthly things. The lack of rooms look young or old,
for Southern High School dedication and the faith needed feminine or masculine, cool or topic of Mrs. Roy Betzing who
presented the program at a
students was held Wednesday for divine leadership were warm.
Tbere will be a 50-eent meeting of the Pomeroy
'morning at the Racine discussed by the speaker.
Garden Club held Monday
Wesleyan United Methodist Prayer was by the Rev. Ed- registration charge.
night at the home of Mrs. lr·
Church. Thirteen youths at- ward Fischer of the Racine
vlng Karr, Jr.,Mason,.. W. Va .
tended.
, • Bapllsl Church. ·
Mrs. Betzing . riarhed
The 1\ev. Howard Shlvi!iey ,•' '.l.tiri'dmg the breakfast were
flowers which are being'· inin prayer folloWed by group Janie Rees, Vicki Wolfe,
troduced this year noting their
singing directed by Duane Rhonda West, Judi Roberts,
characteristics and growth
Wolfe. Special music was Jay Hill, Tim Hill, Jeff Hill,
requirements.
In response to
presented by Florence Adams, Ethan Stearn, Bill Shiveley,
roll call members named a new
Mar llyn Powell, Marjorie Beverly Hart, Mary Walker,
.
.
plant they hope to have in their
. Grimm, Dennis Manuel, and Rodney Neigler, Valerie
The
Rev.
Conrad
Diehm,
gardens
this summer. Mrs .
the Rev. Freeland Norris.
Johnson, and the Rev. Frank
pastor of th~ Emmanuel Betzing also read a letter on
Dr.
Russell
Jones, Cheesebrew.
.
United
Methodtst Church In gardening from Victor Rees.
evangelist, had a short
Preparing the breakfast
Logan, will be the evangelist
·meditation. He spoke of how were Mrs. Robert Hill, Mrs.
for a revival to be held at the
men are trying to conquer Billy Hill and Mrs. Howard
WSCSTOMEET
Enterprise United Methodist
outer space while overlooking Shiveley. Another breakfast
The
Women's Society o£
Church beginning on Feb. 25.
the most Important thing in life will be held next Wednesday
Christian
Service will meet at
Services will be conducted
- Inner space or the soul of morning at 7:30 a.m. and all thfough March 3 each evening 7:30 p. m. Tuesday at the
men. He said that many times Southern High School students
at 7:30p.m. and will be con- Pomeroy United Methodist
the spiritual things of life are are invited to attend.
tinued a second wee,k if the Church with "Living and
overlooked while men seek the
response is good. Special music Acting in Love ... ·as the
will be presented by the En- program topic.
terprise choir and also by
members of the Logan church.
IN HOSPITAL
The Rev. Mr. Diehm was
Mrs.
Oris Hubbard is a
Mrs. Joyce Grover and Mrs. · Haggy, Mrs. Bea O'Dell, Mrs. recently presented a citation
Gerri Mowery entertained Eleanor Hoover, Mrs. Diana for special work In evangelism. medical patient at St. Mary's
tecenUy with a bridal shower Bachtel, Mrs. ·Judith Starcher, The public is Invited to attend Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
Friends are asked to offer
honoring Mrs. Tina Mayle Miss Robin Venoy, and Miss the revival services.
prayers and sent cards. Her
Collins at the Mowery home, Crystal Richmond.
room
number is 538.
Route 2, Pomeroy.
Also presenting gifts to the
A yellow and green color bride · were Mrs. Jean
TURNERS VISITED
scheme was carried out In the Cremellns, Debbie and Agnes
FACTS
Mr. and Mrs. William Turner
decorations. The cake featured Mowery, Mrs. Myrtle Grover,
Domesticated
Brahman
of
Dayton were recent visitors
white wedijing bells Inscribed Cindy Jordan , Mrs. Dorothy bulls, weighing almost a
"Tina and Bob". Games were Collins, Daisy and Bill Conkle, ton; are thought of as ex- of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Turner,
played with prizes going to Mel Faulkner, Mrs. Connie tremely wild because of Middleport.
Mrs. Beverly Chapman, Mrs. Chapman, Annette Phatln, Kay their use in rodeos. The
Lorraine Venoy, Mrs. Mary Shuler, Mrs. May Mayle, Mrs. World Almanac notes, however, that in India millions
SALE PLANNED
Starcher, and Mrs. Janice VIrginia Haley', Mrs. Roberta of Brahman cattle roam
The Chtister Garden Club
Capehart, and Miss Kathy Dillon, Mrs. Robert Collins, docilely without fear of
will
hold a rummage sale
Durst won the door prize.
Mrs . Edith Leach, Mrs. Art harm because the passive
·The decorated cake was Price, Mrs . Sharon Durst, animals are held sacred by Friday, 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. at
Trinity Church basement.
served with Ice cream, candy Betty Sayre, Allie Halley, the Hindu population.
hearts, potato chips, Kool-Ald Nancy Beaver, C. H.
and coffee. Laura Hoover McKenzie, Carrie Meinhart,
Short Sleeve
&amp;Misted with the serving.
Terri and Todd Grover, and
Nylon StretCh
Others attending the shower Colena Mowery.
were Mrs. Brenda Haggy, Mrs.
Emma Chapman, Mrs. LeUa

Cullums, Peggy Cunningham.
Cindy Eads, Elaine Fish.
Cherie Fry, Crystal Glaze,
Cindy Gloze. William Gloyd,

Julie Hamm, Oar/a Harper,

•

Tam I Hollman, James Hutton,
Debbie Janey, Nancy Jeffers.
Bonita Johnson, Debbie Kauff,
Glenn Kennedy, Mona King,
Michae l Magnotta, VIcki
Manley, · Charles Marshall,
Judy Radford, Bruce Reed,
Rebecca Roush, Kathy Rupe,
Mary Ruschel, Angela Sisson.
Tamara Stanley, George
Stewart, Mike Swick, Melissa
Thomas, Donna Thornton,
Greg Van Meter.

. IS. · ·
,

.,

J •

Logatf'f!}tor ,
is evangelist
·
·
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fior revtva ere

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' Of course. as a gas customer, you don't have to worry about getting
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But the shortage of natural gas, indeed, the shortage of all clean-burning fuels, is becoming
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Not only to stimulate economic growth and provide more jobs, but simply to maintain current requirements.
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Store Located AI:
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116 W. Main- Pomeroy, Ohio-614-992-7590
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Pomeroy Store Hours:
Monday· Thursday-9-5
Friday9-8
Saturdav 9-5

EXQIANGE SnJDENTS
&lt;Xll:.UMBUS (UPI) '- Three
&lt;lllo State University students
bave been:thosen for the Inter·
'nallonar Farm
Youth Ex·
.
'

change. .

&amp;!Ban Bowen of Wooster wl11
vlalt Turkey; Unda Pursley ol
·. Lebanon wlllgo to Greece and
Edon Bilhop of Findlay goes to
Kenya and Zambia.
Mila Bowen and M!Ja PunleY are aenlors 11111 jorlng in
home econorillcs education and
Bi1bop 1111 julllor 11111jorinll in

ioclai ltudlel educallop.
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SUSPECI' &lt;XlNVICTED
AKRON (UPI)-Charles
HIUlt, 19, Akron, was convicted
Wednesday of first · degree
murder In the killing of a
policeman last October and of
shooting to kill In the wounding ·
of another officer.
Patrolmen stephen Ondas
and Pb11llp Brady had stopped
a car on a routine traffic violation arid attempted to arrest
Hunt on a warrant Issued fOr
another violation.
Hunt, a pauenger, allegedly
wretlllad a revolver away fr&lt;im
Ondas, fatally shooting him
and wounding Brady.

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THOM MeAN
MENS SHOES

CONNIE

organizational

Mrs. Harold Brown presided
at the meeting which opened
with devotions by Mrs. Karr
and the Lord's Prayer in
unison. Officers reports were
presented and thank-you notes
. from Mrs. Karr lor a
.'remembrance during her
hospitalization ; from Lillie
Coates and Lydia Ebersbach
,for Christmas flowers, and
from Mrs. Sarah Gibbs were
read.
Mrs. Fred Blaettnar was
named to have charge of the
radio program In April. During
a concluding social hour, a
dessert course was served by
the hostess.

Village Pharmacy continues to provide
complete and accurate records of your ex·
pense on prescription medicine as we have the
past five years.

EXECUTIVE committee
meeting Middleport . Pomeroy
Area Branch of the AAUW, 10
a.m. Saturday, Meigs Inn .

SHOES
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VALENTINE DANCE,
Saturday, following Southern •
Waterford game at Southern
High School · until midnight.
King and queen of hearts to be
crowned at 10:30. Mustic by
Stagecoach.'

New plants are discussed

Youths at breakfast

Cole, Karen Coleman, Ginger

116 W. Main ·

•

Workshop set
for Feb. 20th

SHIRT
FINISHING

THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30p.m. Thursday at the hall.
MEIGS County Humane
improvements.
Society, 7:30 Thursday night at
A report was given on the Middleport Village Hall. The
March ·of Dimes Mothers· public is invited to attend.
March and it was noted that the
CATHOLIC Women's Club,
chapter will send thank you Sacred Heart Parish, Thursnotes to Mrs. Eln)a Russell and day, 8 p.m., preceded by Mass
Mrs. Effie Allriend lor their and Rosary at 7:15p.m.
aSsistance.
REGULAR meeting, Shade
Mrs. Riffle noted that the River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, 7:30
couples party .will be held on p.m. Thlirsday, at hall in
March 9 at the Orchid Room. A Chester. Refreshments. All
bake sale and rummage sale Master Masons invited.
will also be held later this
XI GAMMA Mu .. Thursday,
spring.
7:45 p.m. home of Mrs. Pearl
The chapter voted tosend . Welker with Mrs. Mary C.
International $10 each for the ' Wiley serving ·as co,ljpstess.
endowment, the loan, and the Mrs. Phil Ohlinger, a member
exemplar funds. Jo Smith was of the Rio Grande Community.
a guest at the meeting. Mrs. COllege Board of Trustees, will
Becky . Anderson, Linda be guest speaker.
Sauvage and Kathy King
UNITED
Methodist
presented the cultural report Women's Society of Enterprise
on art. Refreshments were Church· Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
served by Mrs. Vikki home of Mrs. Don Hunnel,
Gloeckner, Mrs. Anderson and Rose HiU.
Mrs. Lynn Kitchen.
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612,
Letart Falls, 7:30p.m. Thursday at hall; refreshments of
::~-x·-·a~···
.:. ?.SS!CS:_._._u;;;, .sandwiches, pie.
RESERVATIONS NOTE
MOBILE HOME and mobile
Kathryn Olx Snwle, wife of home parkS as a ~art of
Dr. Claude ' R. Sowle, relieving the Meigs County
president of Ohio University, housing situation to be
will speak at a meeting to be discussed at public meeting,
held Feb. 15, Thursday, at 10 a.m. to 12 noon Thursday at
the Grace Episcopal Church social room of Pomeroy United
parrish bouse. She will Methodist Church. Gerrit Van
discuss "Oblo University - Straten, engineer with Van
Its Present and Its Future," Straten
and
Edwards,
following a 12:30 luncheon to developers of Canaan Com·
be served by the Grace munity, Columbus, will be
Episcopal Church Women. speaker.
Reservations lor the
PAST tOU NCILORS ,
luncheon are to be Theodotus Council, Daughters
telephoned to either Mrs. of American Revolution, 7:30
Fred Crow at 992·2562 or p.m. Thursday at home of Mrs.
Mrs. Ted Reed, Jr., at 992· COra Beegle, Racine.
· 2370 by Saturday.
EMERGENCY MEDICAL

will have party

Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Robert
Baumgarner officiating :
Burial will be in Sand Hill .
Cemetery at Long Bottom.
Friends may call at the funeral
home alter 3 p. m. Friday.

SOPHOMORES - VIcki
Abbott, Teresa Burchett, Julia
Capehart, Mandy Carder, Jo
Chafin. Jennifer Chapman,
Charles Cogar, Richard Couch,
Carla Crisp, Lenora Davis,
Bonnie Dillon , April Fraser, •
Barbara Fultz, Cynthia
Garnes, Joy Hiiyes, Maureen
Hennessy. Kathy Hysell, Sonia
Justice, Anita King, Scherry
Lane,

'.

Mrs: Grace
Irene Brawley, 85, a reside,nt
here the past 52 years, died
Wednesday at the residence of
a daughter in Johnstown, Ohio,
following a long illness.
Mrs. Brawley was born at
Elizabeth, Pa., the daughter of
the late Arch and · Nancy
Johnson Rue. She was also
preceded in death by her
husband, Edwal'd, in 1962; a
son, Harold ; a brother, . two
sisters, and three grandchildren.
Surviving are a son, Ira, of
Cool¥ille; foU. daughters, Mrs.
Dorothy Bowman, Coolville;
Mrs. Ida Nestor, Columbus;
Mrs . Margaret Westfall,
Reedsville, and Mrs. Betty
Cupp, Johnstown; a sister,
Mrs. William Stoops. East

Wednesday to pay the county
$173,000whlch examiners from
the state auditor's office said
was missing when an audit was
conducted of his books 1966
through 1970.
R.obert Cook, visiting from
neighboring Portage County
Common Pleas COurt, Issued
ORDERED TO PAY
the order, saying the defense,
AKRON (UPI)-Former in a hearing last fall, failed to
&amp;unmlt County Clerk of COurts troduce sufficient evidence to
Frank Yacobucci was ordered . show an audit was in error.

McKinney,

Sheila McKnight, Edith Mees,
Terry Metheny.
Also, Sherry Michael. Debbie
Mil ler. Kim Mowery, John
Nelson. Desiree Pike, Sharon
Reeves, Christine Robinson,
Mike Sayre, James Schmoll,
Everett Schuler, Kenneth See,
Becky Seelig, Dorothy Seth,
Connie Smith. Rebecca Smith,
Charlotte Snyder, Christine
· Stonley, Delores Stanley, Greg
Stewart, Jane Thoma..
Richard . William Vaughan ,
Stephen Warner, Dallas
Weber. Patti Weber, Patti
Well. Sharon Wilson, Mindy
Young .
JUNIORS Christine
Bailey, David Barnhart.
Brenda Barton, Regina Bing,
Donna Blevins. Donna Boyd,
Shelly Clark, Tom Cleland,
VIctoria Clelland, Joyce Davis,
Linda Cunningham, Rita

Geneva Yales

MONDAY
INJIJRED IN FALL
Mrs . Carrie Meinhart is .,.
AMERICANISM Program
recuperating
from injuries
by Le ..:is Manley Alilerican
j,egion Auxiliary 363, 7:30 suffered in a fall at the home of
Monday night at the Naomi her grandson, Jimmy J.
meeting, Thursday, 7:30p.m. Baptist Church, Pomeroy . Guinther, Syracuse. She was
at the Rutland Funeral Home, Rev. Samuel Jackson, guest confined to the Holzer Medical
Rutland .
Center lor treatment following
speaker. Public invited.
J
her fall.
FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, White
Shrine of Jerusalem, 8 p.m.
Friday at the IOOF Hall,
Pomeroy, with potluck
refreshments.
RETURN
JONATHAN
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
the American _Revolution, 2 '
p.m. Friday at the Meigs Inn.
FREE CLOTHING day
Friday at Long Bottom United
Methodist Church basement
from 12 noon to 4 p.m.
ANNUAL INSPECTION ,
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM,
7:30 p.m. Friday with inspection in Master Mason
d~gree. All Master Masons
welcome.
'1111! CI!IATOII Of
DANCE FRIDAY following
ltiSONAile '*'0 PMCIS"
basketball game at Wahama
High SChool, 9:30 p.m. to
PHONI! 992~759
midnight. School sponsored,
271 N. Smnd ,....,
I
music l)y the Jays.
Mld:hplrt
Ohio
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•
9 - The Dally SentlneJ,MiddleP.,rt-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 8, !973
8- The Daily Sentine•, Middleport-Pomecoy, 0 ., Feb. 8, 1973

Controls
1Con linued from Page Ii

· d 0 f. oppo,rt.un,1•ty
• still 'I. an
Oh10

ministration would be "very
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Bruce
tough" on Phase lll. He dld, Schnable turned his Columbus
however, . suggest
that apartment into a one-man
Congress grant permanent mortgage banking office in
standby authority for direct 197land didn't have a client for
wage and price restraints.
six months.
Jack Sparagowski formed
"The performance of the
American economy in recent bis 'own' private insurance
years, as well.as th'at of other investigating company 2'h
industrialized nations, has per- years ago and managed along
suaded me that there is a -· on only $25 a week salary.
need" for such ' legislation,
· Nick Buschur quit a foundry
Burns told the committee job five years ago and started
which concluded hearings on working for a Dayton bottled
the extension of wage-price
control authority past its
scheduled expiration date of
April 30.

Sparagowski, 25, now provides tractors are smart people. If
businesses with security you ·make a bad deal, word gets
personnel - trained at his own around."
Schnable said he doesn't like
accredited academy :.. and
to
do things "big and splashy."
draws about $2.1,900 a year in
"When I started, I didn't ·
salary. Buschur, 24, now owns
want
to take out a full-page ad
Don McMahan's Bottle 'Gas,
in
the
paper saying 'Schnable
the company he got a job with
five years ago, and another starts own business.' That's noi .
bosiness which sells exterior my style," he said. "I just went
accessories for mobile homes. around to various contractors
Schnable, a West Virginian' in Columbus and told them I
who played basketball at Ohio could get them a better d~l)l
Slate, was employed by (lal- through lenders in New York.
breath Mortgage Co. in Colum- , "After I closed my first conbus two years before going into tract - worth $3.9 million things just happened. Other
business for himself.
contractors
started calling
"I just decided to do it," he
said. "I figured if for some me,." he said. "In the rirst'
year, I completed more than •
Columbus Apartment Associa- reason I couldn 'I make it, I $20million in financing,"
•
tion the state must take a could fall back on my degree in
If
Schnable
has
any
Stumbl·
strong leadership role in the finance and work the rest of my ing blocks along his path, it's •
housing field to "effectively life for someone to pay off the his age.
•
guarantee a decent home for $10,000 loan.
"l'moneoftheyoungestmen . •
Word Gets Around
every Ohioan in this decade."
in
the field," he said. "And •
"Mortgage companies are a
He said the Nixon admini·
when I go to New York, some of ,.
stration moratorium on subsi- dime a dozen - here today, the men I have to deal with are
dies for low and moderate in- gone tomorrow/' he said. To really old-timers. And here I •
come housing could cost the make it, you have to know come - this young whipper- •
state $300 million in housing ' where the money is and bow to snapper trying to bargain with •
projects that would have been arrange the best financing for them."
started during the Ill-month your client's needs. ConWhy do contractors pay for a •
freeze .
middle man to secure finan- •
"We can no longer rely on the
o cing?
.
•
effectiveness ~ or, it seems
"They pay for my exeven the existence - of federal
pertise "he explained. "I know •
housing programs," Sweet
a. 11 th~ important lenders •
said . ,''Wh~te;er the Nixon
00
around the country, where the •
admmtstralion s next move in
best rates are and who's in- •
the housing field, Ohio must reAn outstanding professional terested in investing in what
spond effectively now at the show has been booked for the and when.
·
•
state Ievelto what are uniquely Metgs County Fatr, Wallace
Nothing Is Sure
•
Ohio needs."
Bradford, fatr board president,
It costs Schnable several •
SWeet also urged legislative reported today.
thousand dollars to present a •
The Del Reeves show has "package" to a would-be lendapproval of three recommendations of the Housing and been. booked for the Thursday er, and there is no guarantee •
Commumly Development evemng grandstand . show at his client will accept the offer. •
Advisory Commission, formed the annual fatr staged in
"I take aerial photographs of •
by Gov. John J . Gilligan in August. .
the property, draw up plans, •
1971.
Tentative plan~. also call co.~ make phone contac"' with the
The recommendations:
the bookmg of a walktng act lenders to find out where the •
- A landlord-tenant bill that for Wednesday night when the money is and fly to New York • '
SWeet said would "bind both youth even!.'l are held. This for several days to bicker for •
landlord and tenant to main- would be m the form of a clown the best offer," Schnable said. •
taining property in accordance who would meet visitors to the "And someone else can come
with housing, health and safety fair at various locations on the along and offer my client an •
codes."
grounds and then would agreement he likes better."
•
-Expansion of the power of present an approximate 15
Sparagowski was working •
the Ohio Housing Development minute program.
'with the Toledo police force •
Board so it can issue long term
According to plans made by when he decided to drum up
tax-exempt bonds and use the the board, this year's pony business providing private in- •
proceeds to finance construe- .pulling contest will be changed vestigation into personal injury •
lion of low and moderate in· so that teams will be classified cases.
come housing.
according to their weight
Several attorneys agreed
- Expand existing Ohio law rather than on the basis of that preliminary police reports ·
to strengthen the ability of the height as in past years . were not enough and a Toledo
Civil Rights Commission to end Weighing will take part on the lawyer gave him his first case.
housing discrimination .
grounds.
"He
wanted
some
gas company.
What ali three have in com;
mon is their success. stories.
They were among 25 recently
named by the Jim Walters
Corporation as the nation's top
young busineSs people. The
award cqrried a $1,000 prize.
Schnable, 24, now arranges
$36 million in financing for
building contractors in five
stales through his American
Mortgage Investors, Inc.

Leader skills

will be honed
in workshop

RULING FROM BROWN
COLUMBUS (U+I) - A
disbarred attorney cannot
serve aa attorney examiner for
the state Board of Tax Appeals,
Ohio Attorney General Willaim
J. Brown said Wednesday.
Brown made the ruling in response to a question from Napoleon A. Bell, vice chairman
of the tax appeals board.
Brown explained a disbarred
attorney cannot hold any
I:Pqsitlon with the board in
·which he would perform duties
similar to an attorney
examiner.

FEBRUARY'S summertlme In Rio De Janeiro
finds this beguiling scene
at Ipanema Beach .

.

'

·~·····················~ ~

Housing need high

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Maintaining that "one of every six
housing units in the state is unsound," Ohio Department of
Economic and Community De·
veiopment Director David
SWeet said Wednesday night
that "We need a hall-million ·
units of decent houSing for low
A leadership workshop will and moderate income families
be conducted on Feb . 21 and now."
Feb. 28 from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m.
SWeet told a meeting of the
in the meeting room at the
Meigs Inn, Pomeroy, sponsored by the Meigs Coun ty
Extension Service.
Dr. Albert f . Gehres, Extension Specialist, Community
Resource Development, OSU,
and William Shaw, Area Extension Agent Resource
Development, will conduct the
workshop. Registration is
requested by Feb. 12 at the
Extension office, 992-3895. The
workshop is open to everyone
interested in improving their
leadership skills. The fee is $1 . .
A dutch treat lunch will be
available both days.

business he knew nothing aboUt
statements on an automobile · nesses.
when
he joined McMJban's
ac~ident that showed Break Til!! Image
.
negligence on the part of the
"We're fighting hard to Bottle Gas.
"Bu!I
wQI'ked
for
hiJ!i
for
siJ:
defendant," Sparagowski said. bfeak .the stereotyped bnage of
"I recall it because I charged security officers. Vou know, months, lftCtically managing
him $40 and did about 60 hours the incompetent man over 65 it, and then I leased it from
worth of work, drawing making $1.60an hour," he said. him."
I
BUBChur
said
the
propane
·
diagrams and taking photos."
"The oldest employe I have
Other assignments quickly is 28 years old. Ninety-five per business gets ''pretty lean" lri
·followed, and within four cent of these fellows are col- the· summer, 8o be tried to
months he quit the police force. lege trained, recruited from eveno()Ut his income.
"One day, I brought a couple
Later, with the threat of no- law enforcement programs at
fault insurance, Sparagowski local universities," Sparagow- of traUor awnlrigs Into the !I.diversified into the security ski said. "The rest come from · flee and set them around for
sale," he said; "Now I have a
field. His company, American the military.''
Serurity Consultlllits, now has
Buschur got his propane bus- warehOUse showroom for awn65 persons employed')n 20 bus!- iness going when he was 19, a Ings, steps and sheds.'~ ·

1)~

~CANDIES

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b ked h ere

Assorted Chocolates
1 lb. $2.00

GREAT VALENTINE GIFTS
WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 14

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from $1.00

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You can tell it's something special just by
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will J:,,• p,1id toe plu s 3¢ h.ln ·
dling fnr ej1(h co u~·mn pro\'idt•d \;nu ·
and the ClJ~ tomer h,w c n1r:nplit•d
wit:. tilt• IL·nm tlfthisuffl"r; clnV(ltlll'r
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·Vietnam b.o nus bill m~y never reach Oh.io voters
By LEE LEoNARD .
UPI Slatebotiae Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
. ()hlp H0111e has passed and
sent \0 the Senate a proposed
Vietnam War era· veterans'
bonus plan, but its pro11pects
for reaching the May 8 ballot
for a vote of the people seem, at
belll, uncertain.
House clearance came Wed'~~~!adaY ori a n-2Q vote following
one hQ~ and 15 minutes o! !le·
bate during which · minorlty
Republlcans attempted In vain
to remove a statewide property
tax as the method of financing
tile bonua.
Both the House and Senate
the adjourned for the weekend.
This gives the Senate, starting"
,..f!l!xt Monday, 10 daya to meet
Ute Feb. 22 deadline for getting
Ute bonus proposal to
Secretary of State Ted W,
BrOWI1 for proper priltting and ·
adverUslng for the May ballot. ·
Sen. Michael J. Maloney, RClncinnaU, chairman of the
Senate Ways and Means
Committee Sen. Michael J.
, Maloney,
R·· Cincinnatl 1
chalnnan of the Senate Waya
and Means Committee,
repeated · Wednesday he is
''very pesalmistlc" his committee wW have adequate time
to study the taxation features
of the bonus before the
deadline.
If the bonus plan faUa to
make the May ballot, It could
be placed on the November
ballot as a constitutional
amendment.
Under the bonus resolution,
Oblo servicemen! on active
duty during the VIetnam War
era would receive a bonus of
$10 to ~ for each month of
service, depending on where
they were stationed, up tD a
IIUil&lt;imum of ~ .
fZO ·Per Montb
Those serving in the Asian
Theater between Dec. 1, 1961,
and July 1, 1973, would receive
$20 a month.
Those In foreign posts outside the Asian Theater after
Aug. 5, 1984, would receive $15
a month, and those on active
duty In the United States after .
the aame date would receive

$10 for e~ch ~nth they served.
The propossl would require a
maximum bond issue of $300
mUJion with bonds paid off by
an 0.6 mill statewide property
tax.
House Speaker Pro Teinpore
Vernal G. Riffe Jr., 0-New
llostori, chief. sponsor of the
bonua propossl, said 1/ietnam
veterans can never be fully·
repaid for their service '.' but

f"•

H

. ,,

1\1 • ,\,;

'I

this would !Je a 'gesture of . of a b"'/US. But they offered
gratit·ude, a. tiny fraction of vigorous opposition to the
compensation for these men. jlroposed property tax and
"They fought, sometimes tried, without success a
with no clarity of purpose, and · strategy developed during a
withnopalriotic.sendoffby this . tw&lt;Htour caucus to get the
country," Riffe said. "And bonus funded through eeneral
· when \hey returned, they did state tax collections.
not always r.eceive a welclime
House Mindrity Leader
befittillg heroes."
Charles F. Kurfess, R-Bowting
Republicans generally , · Green, argued there would be
· agreed with Riffe on the merits excess revenues at the end of

the current fiscal year to wiih a property tax. Can't we
finance the bonus payments. treat the Vietnam veterans as
"Most lnequltsble"
well as we treat ourselves?"
''And even if there weren't"
Kuriess described the Demosaid Kurtess, "I~ worst, m~t crats' argument that the voters
inequitable tax we could go to wW decide in May on whether
would be the property tax. To to accept the new tax as "a
offer a Vietnam bonus coupled chicken way out."
with a property tax is almost
His' amendment to finance
an act of bad faith. When we the bonu.s through existirig
gave ourselves a pay raise we revenue collections was
didn't ask that it be flrlanced defeated along p~~rty lines on a

on May 8th
JB.li5 vote. •
Rep .. Joseph P. TUlley, RMentor, recommended that the
voters be allowed to choose on
the May ballot between a property tax and general revenue
funds, but his amendment was
tabled on a 55-39 vote.
Riffe said the bonds could be
paid off in 15 years with the
property tax, which he said
would cost the owner of a

$20,000 home only $4.211 a year.
The fall ~ bonus would
automatically be&lt;pald to disabled and medically reUred
Vietnam veterans. Survivors of
servicemen killed in action
would receive $1,000. ·
Both the House and Senate
scheduled housekeeping
sessions for later this week.
They will return tO lull session
next Tuesday.

GIFTS FROM THE HEART FOR ·YOUR VALENTINE

RIGHT
GUARD

Family
$1.13 Value .

~WO!!!·

DeOdorant
11 Value

.,

1J,II.,l1't

(:O.Il
""".......
........
l';'!ot

•

, • 19 Ul\11)
~

a

0 '·.

.. ~

Q

..

SINUTAB

1% oz.

LIQUID

30's

14 oz.

4oz.

$1.09 Value

$2.50

$1.29 Value '

$1.09 Value

COTY ENSEMBlfS
BAlM
POWDER

1

.

""'· "

....

r

CEPACOL

... :&gt;: -'\

~ ~0~""',. '

....

BEN GAY

.......~c.ot~

~::::...-

.-.)~~~~

Service set for
Mr. Denny .

REVLON
z INTIMATE
~ · COLOGNE
1'1 [II
...... MIST

HEAVEN
SENT
SPRAY
MIST

of Rutland

'

RUTLAND Funeral
services for Honel Leroy
Denny, 38, who died Wednesday morning at his Salem
St. residence here, will be held
at 2 p. m. Saturday at the
Rutland Church of the
Nazarene.
The son of the late Honel and
Pearl Denny·; he was hom Sept.
12, 19:W, in Gallla County. He
was also preceded in death by a
brother.
Mr. Denny was employed
with the Power Construction
Co. on the coat belt line being
constructed in Meigs and
Gallla Counties. He was a
member of Local 83 of Portsmouth and Local 505, In·
ternational Brotherhood of
Teamsters, Chauffeurs,
Warehousemen, and Helpers of
America. He had served with
the United States Army.
Surviving are his wife, Judy;
a daughter, Deanna; a son,
Bryan; three sisters, Mrs.
Beulah Grate, Mrs. Vivian Coy
and Mrs. Beatrice Smith, all of
Rutland, and a brother, .
Marvin, of Vinton.
Officiating at Saturday's
service will be the Rev. Uoyd
Grimm. Burial will be in Miles
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the Martin Funeral Home
anytime on Friday and until
noon on Saturday.

VALENTINE
CANDY ~
HEARTS
· .

4 ~UP

Valentine's
Day

COLUMBUS OFFICE
WASIUNGTON (UP!)- TheDefense Department an·
, nounced Wednesday that one of
three regional offices of the
new
Defense
Property
Disposal Service will be
located In Colurnbua, Oblo.
Offlclala said the service was
being established to approve
the effectiveness and ef.
flciency · of programs of
dilposal and reutillzatlon of
American military supplies
and equlpn:~ent. It replaces the
preaent · Defense Supply
Center:
The Colurnbua. regional II.·
flee, to be activated Apil 9,
wlll be responalble for
l'1lllldencl ofJIIlll1 iD Newpcwt,
RJ.; NrhlpiU, Pa., llld
Narltta, V'a.

.

(",
'.· .,,.
"

E,A
DE

I~O"f'

OLD SPICE
AFTER
SHAVE

Free

~n1
I-- ... .

L

---'

EAUDE
LOVE
SPRAY

MIST

2.45 Ol. '4.00
4 Ol. s5.25

With $}19
-

LOVE
DOLL
CLOJHES
a woman never forgets .. .
the man who rem embe rs

89~
HAl KARATE

1

I
I
I

.

AFTER SHAVE
WITH
FREE
·DEODORANT
$3.00 Value

TRAVEL
KIT
$5.50 Value

Skinny Dip
BEAUTY G=;::~

TOTE
$6.50 Value

$2 .50 VALUE

2/98~
NOXZEMA

COVER GIRL

'

4oz.

CASHMERE
BOUQUET

10 oz.
c l e~ n .

natura l looking

$1.19 Value

�.
•
9 - The Dally SentlneJ,MiddleP.,rt-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 8, !973
8- The Daily Sentine•, Middleport-Pomecoy, 0 ., Feb. 8, 1973

Controls
1Con linued from Page Ii

· d 0 f. oppo,rt.un,1•ty
• still 'I. an
Oh10

ministration would be "very
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Bruce
tough" on Phase lll. He dld, Schnable turned his Columbus
however, . suggest
that apartment into a one-man
Congress grant permanent mortgage banking office in
standby authority for direct 197land didn't have a client for
wage and price restraints.
six months.
Jack Sparagowski formed
"The performance of the
American economy in recent bis 'own' private insurance
years, as well.as th'at of other investigating company 2'h
industrialized nations, has per- years ago and managed along
suaded me that there is a -· on only $25 a week salary.
need" for such ' legislation,
· Nick Buschur quit a foundry
Burns told the committee job five years ago and started
which concluded hearings on working for a Dayton bottled
the extension of wage-price
control authority past its
scheduled expiration date of
April 30.

Sparagowski, 25, now provides tractors are smart people. If
businesses with security you ·make a bad deal, word gets
personnel - trained at his own around."
Schnable said he doesn't like
accredited academy :.. and
to
do things "big and splashy."
draws about $2.1,900 a year in
"When I started, I didn't ·
salary. Buschur, 24, now owns
want
to take out a full-page ad
Don McMahan's Bottle 'Gas,
in
the
paper saying 'Schnable
the company he got a job with
five years ago, and another starts own business.' That's noi .
bosiness which sells exterior my style," he said. "I just went
accessories for mobile homes. around to various contractors
Schnable, a West Virginian' in Columbus and told them I
who played basketball at Ohio could get them a better d~l)l
Slate, was employed by (lal- through lenders in New York.
breath Mortgage Co. in Colum- , "After I closed my first conbus two years before going into tract - worth $3.9 million things just happened. Other
business for himself.
contractors
started calling
"I just decided to do it," he
said. "I figured if for some me,." he said. "In the rirst'
year, I completed more than •
Columbus Apartment Associa- reason I couldn 'I make it, I $20million in financing,"
•
tion the state must take a could fall back on my degree in
If
Schnable
has
any
Stumbl·
strong leadership role in the finance and work the rest of my ing blocks along his path, it's •
housing field to "effectively life for someone to pay off the his age.
•
guarantee a decent home for $10,000 loan.
"l'moneoftheyoungestmen . •
Word Gets Around
every Ohioan in this decade."
in
the field," he said. "And •
"Mortgage companies are a
He said the Nixon admini·
when I go to New York, some of ,.
stration moratorium on subsi- dime a dozen - here today, the men I have to deal with are
dies for low and moderate in- gone tomorrow/' he said. To really old-timers. And here I •
come housing could cost the make it, you have to know come - this young whipper- •
state $300 million in housing ' where the money is and bow to snapper trying to bargain with •
projects that would have been arrange the best financing for them."
started during the Ill-month your client's needs. ConWhy do contractors pay for a •
freeze .
middle man to secure finan- •
"We can no longer rely on the
o cing?
.
•
effectiveness ~ or, it seems
"They pay for my exeven the existence - of federal
pertise "he explained. "I know •
housing programs," Sweet
a. 11 th~ important lenders •
said . ,''Wh~te;er the Nixon
00
around the country, where the •
admmtstralion s next move in
best rates are and who's in- •
the housing field, Ohio must reAn outstanding professional terested in investing in what
spond effectively now at the show has been booked for the and when.
·
•
state Ievelto what are uniquely Metgs County Fatr, Wallace
Nothing Is Sure
•
Ohio needs."
Bradford, fatr board president,
It costs Schnable several •
SWeet also urged legislative reported today.
thousand dollars to present a •
The Del Reeves show has "package" to a would-be lendapproval of three recommendations of the Housing and been. booked for the Thursday er, and there is no guarantee •
Commumly Development evemng grandstand . show at his client will accept the offer. •
Advisory Commission, formed the annual fatr staged in
"I take aerial photographs of •
by Gov. John J . Gilligan in August. .
the property, draw up plans, •
1971.
Tentative plan~. also call co.~ make phone contac"' with the
The recommendations:
the bookmg of a walktng act lenders to find out where the •
- A landlord-tenant bill that for Wednesday night when the money is and fly to New York • '
SWeet said would "bind both youth even!.'l are held. This for several days to bicker for •
landlord and tenant to main- would be m the form of a clown the best offer," Schnable said. •
taining property in accordance who would meet visitors to the "And someone else can come
with housing, health and safety fair at various locations on the along and offer my client an •
codes."
grounds and then would agreement he likes better."
•
-Expansion of the power of present an approximate 15
Sparagowski was working •
the Ohio Housing Development minute program.
'with the Toledo police force •
Board so it can issue long term
According to plans made by when he decided to drum up
tax-exempt bonds and use the the board, this year's pony business providing private in- •
proceeds to finance construe- .pulling contest will be changed vestigation into personal injury •
lion of low and moderate in· so that teams will be classified cases.
come housing.
according to their weight
Several attorneys agreed
- Expand existing Ohio law rather than on the basis of that preliminary police reports ·
to strengthen the ability of the height as in past years . were not enough and a Toledo
Civil Rights Commission to end Weighing will take part on the lawyer gave him his first case.
housing discrimination .
grounds.
"He
wanted
some
gas company.
What ali three have in com;
mon is their success. stories.
They were among 25 recently
named by the Jim Walters
Corporation as the nation's top
young busineSs people. The
award cqrried a $1,000 prize.
Schnable, 24, now arranges
$36 million in financing for
building contractors in five
stales through his American
Mortgage Investors, Inc.

Leader skills

will be honed
in workshop

RULING FROM BROWN
COLUMBUS (U+I) - A
disbarred attorney cannot
serve aa attorney examiner for
the state Board of Tax Appeals,
Ohio Attorney General Willaim
J. Brown said Wednesday.
Brown made the ruling in response to a question from Napoleon A. Bell, vice chairman
of the tax appeals board.
Brown explained a disbarred
attorney cannot hold any
I:Pqsitlon with the board in
·which he would perform duties
similar to an attorney
examiner.

FEBRUARY'S summertlme In Rio De Janeiro
finds this beguiling scene
at Ipanema Beach .

.

'

·~·····················~ ~

Housing need high

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Maintaining that "one of every six
housing units in the state is unsound," Ohio Department of
Economic and Community De·
veiopment Director David
SWeet said Wednesday night
that "We need a hall-million ·
units of decent houSing for low
A leadership workshop will and moderate income families
be conducted on Feb . 21 and now."
Feb. 28 from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m.
SWeet told a meeting of the
in the meeting room at the
Meigs Inn, Pomeroy, sponsored by the Meigs Coun ty
Extension Service.
Dr. Albert f . Gehres, Extension Specialist, Community
Resource Development, OSU,
and William Shaw, Area Extension Agent Resource
Development, will conduct the
workshop. Registration is
requested by Feb. 12 at the
Extension office, 992-3895. The
workshop is open to everyone
interested in improving their
leadership skills. The fee is $1 . .
A dutch treat lunch will be
available both days.

business he knew nothing aboUt
statements on an automobile · nesses.
when
he joined McMJban's
ac~ident that showed Break Til!! Image
.
negligence on the part of the
"We're fighting hard to Bottle Gas.
"Bu!I
wQI'ked
for
hiJ!i
for
siJ:
defendant," Sparagowski said. bfeak .the stereotyped bnage of
"I recall it because I charged security officers. Vou know, months, lftCtically managing
him $40 and did about 60 hours the incompetent man over 65 it, and then I leased it from
worth of work, drawing making $1.60an hour," he said. him."
I
BUBChur
said
the
propane
·
diagrams and taking photos."
"The oldest employe I have
Other assignments quickly is 28 years old. Ninety-five per business gets ''pretty lean" lri
·followed, and within four cent of these fellows are col- the· summer, 8o be tried to
months he quit the police force. lege trained, recruited from eveno()Ut his income.
"One day, I brought a couple
Later, with the threat of no- law enforcement programs at
fault insurance, Sparagowski local universities," Sparagow- of traUor awnlrigs Into the !I.diversified into the security ski said. "The rest come from · flee and set them around for
sale," he said; "Now I have a
field. His company, American the military.''
Serurity Consultlllits, now has
Buschur got his propane bus- warehOUse showroom for awn65 persons employed')n 20 bus!- iness going when he was 19, a Ings, steps and sheds.'~ ·

1)~

~CANDIES

11

T op show IS
b ked h ere

Assorted Chocolates
1 lb. $2.00

GREAT VALENTINE GIFTS
WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 14

Fancy Hearts
from $1.00

SWISHER'
" 'LDHSE
;',;_c..;.'

O ~ U ( 1 c;.
:;,,,&lt;t/y.&gt;nnn I&lt; . : : Jill~!al
;;.,
c ;:..f
f

U lHHUITJJI
II :?

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MA

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ST.

•

POMf ltOY O t liO

Prescription Servic~ Regis1ertd Pharmacis1s 1a S1rv1
You! Open Dolly a:ooo :m. to 19 p. m.~ Sull'llly 10:30 o.m. to
_ 12:30 p.m. &amp; 5 to 9 p.m.

.;

....

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

d ... Jbb db ct.

Country Str.le, ~u~ter--Top Table Bread.
The way you remember 1t 1S the way we brought it back.
We've taken a taste from days gone by and baked
it into every slice of new Betsy Ross Country Style
Table Bread.
You can tell it's something special just by
looking at it. The old-fashioned buttered top, the
hearty thicker slices tell you this bread is baked
the right way. So you can be proud to serve it with
any meal, from breakfasts to family banquets.
Betsy Ross Country Style Table Bread. It has
the taste you remember when you think back to
those good, hot, home-baked breads that marked
those special meals.
.
Andtheway
rememberitistheway
we've l,Jrought it bac:k., ............ . ....... . . .. " ,............ .

~ ·,J£1j"
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\10~
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I

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10 Cents Off

ononellhlb.loafof~lloss

Country Style Table Bread

,

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To th~ c;mcL•r:
Yl; ~. J!"L' oluthorill'd to act m; 0\lf
JJ;Cnt in rcdccmln~ thi!-&lt; CO\lptm .
will J:,,• p,1id toe plu s 3¢ h.ln ·
dling fnr ej1(h co u~·mn pro\'idt•d \;nu ·
and the ClJ~ tomer h,w c n1r:nplit•d
wit:. tilt• IL·nm tlfthisuffl"r; clnV(ltlll'r
,, pplic,Hi hn umstitutcs irJu~{ flnlu f
of pnn:hnsc uf 1-iUHicicn t stocks uf
Hct!iv. Ros!O ( ,luntry Style. Butt~r-Top
.:J",•hf(• Hn.• c1d io cnv~ r coupons pre·
:~cntt~d mu!'&gt; t bL' i ll rnisht•d on n'l:)u~~t.
Cn~t(mlL'I' nlu~l P•'Ys,1lcs l&lt;tx. i any .
RL•t1L't'm th rmzHh m1r route salesm~1t\ .

'tHJ

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Olft•r t•x pircs M,ud\ 3. 197.3.
~~

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----------------'

·Vietnam b.o nus bill m~y never reach Oh.io voters
By LEE LEoNARD .
UPI Slatebotiae Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
. ()hlp H0111e has passed and
sent \0 the Senate a proposed
Vietnam War era· veterans'
bonus plan, but its pro11pects
for reaching the May 8 ballot
for a vote of the people seem, at
belll, uncertain.
House clearance came Wed'~~~!adaY ori a n-2Q vote following
one hQ~ and 15 minutes o! !le·
bate during which · minorlty
Republlcans attempted In vain
to remove a statewide property
tax as the method of financing
tile bonua.
Both the House and Senate
the adjourned for the weekend.
This gives the Senate, starting"
,..f!l!xt Monday, 10 daya to meet
Ute Feb. 22 deadline for getting
Ute bonus proposal to
Secretary of State Ted W,
BrOWI1 for proper priltting and ·
adverUslng for the May ballot. ·
Sen. Michael J. Maloney, RClncinnaU, chairman of the
Senate Ways and Means
Committee Sen. Michael J.
, Maloney,
R·· Cincinnatl 1
chalnnan of the Senate Waya
and Means Committee,
repeated · Wednesday he is
''very pesalmistlc" his committee wW have adequate time
to study the taxation features
of the bonus before the
deadline.
If the bonus plan faUa to
make the May ballot, It could
be placed on the November
ballot as a constitutional
amendment.
Under the bonus resolution,
Oblo servicemen! on active
duty during the VIetnam War
era would receive a bonus of
$10 to ~ for each month of
service, depending on where
they were stationed, up tD a
IIUil&lt;imum of ~ .
fZO ·Per Montb
Those serving in the Asian
Theater between Dec. 1, 1961,
and July 1, 1973, would receive
$20 a month.
Those In foreign posts outside the Asian Theater after
Aug. 5, 1984, would receive $15
a month, and those on active
duty In the United States after .
the aame date would receive

$10 for e~ch ~nth they served.
The propossl would require a
maximum bond issue of $300
mUJion with bonds paid off by
an 0.6 mill statewide property
tax.
House Speaker Pro Teinpore
Vernal G. Riffe Jr., 0-New
llostori, chief. sponsor of the
bonua propossl, said 1/ietnam
veterans can never be fully·
repaid for their service '.' but

f"•

H

. ,,

1\1 • ,\,;

'I

this would !Je a 'gesture of . of a b"'/US. But they offered
gratit·ude, a. tiny fraction of vigorous opposition to the
compensation for these men. jlroposed property tax and
"They fought, sometimes tried, without success a
with no clarity of purpose, and · strategy developed during a
withnopalriotic.sendoffby this . tw&lt;Htour caucus to get the
country," Riffe said. "And bonus funded through eeneral
· when \hey returned, they did state tax collections.
not always r.eceive a welclime
House Mindrity Leader
befittillg heroes."
Charles F. Kurfess, R-Bowting
Republicans generally , · Green, argued there would be
· agreed with Riffe on the merits excess revenues at the end of

the current fiscal year to wiih a property tax. Can't we
finance the bonus payments. treat the Vietnam veterans as
"Most lnequltsble"
well as we treat ourselves?"
''And even if there weren't"
Kuriess described the Demosaid Kurtess, "I~ worst, m~t crats' argument that the voters
inequitable tax we could go to wW decide in May on whether
would be the property tax. To to accept the new tax as "a
offer a Vietnam bonus coupled chicken way out."
with a property tax is almost
His' amendment to finance
an act of bad faith. When we the bonu.s through existirig
gave ourselves a pay raise we revenue collections was
didn't ask that it be flrlanced defeated along p~~rty lines on a

on May 8th
JB.li5 vote. •
Rep .. Joseph P. TUlley, RMentor, recommended that the
voters be allowed to choose on
the May ballot between a property tax and general revenue
funds, but his amendment was
tabled on a 55-39 vote.
Riffe said the bonds could be
paid off in 15 years with the
property tax, which he said
would cost the owner of a

$20,000 home only $4.211 a year.
The fall ~ bonus would
automatically be&lt;pald to disabled and medically reUred
Vietnam veterans. Survivors of
servicemen killed in action
would receive $1,000. ·
Both the House and Senate
scheduled housekeeping
sessions for later this week.
They will return tO lull session
next Tuesday.

GIFTS FROM THE HEART FOR ·YOUR VALENTINE

RIGHT
GUARD

Family
$1.13 Value .

~WO!!!·

DeOdorant
11 Value

.,

1J,II.,l1't

(:O.Il
""".......
........
l';'!ot

•

, • 19 Ul\11)
~

a

0 '·.

.. ~

Q

..

SINUTAB

1% oz.

LIQUID

30's

14 oz.

4oz.

$1.09 Value

$2.50

$1.29 Value '

$1.09 Value

COTY ENSEMBlfS
BAlM
POWDER

1

.

""'· "

....

r

CEPACOL

... :&gt;: -'\

~ ~0~""',. '

....

BEN GAY

.......~c.ot~

~::::...-

.-.)~~~~

Service set for
Mr. Denny .

REVLON
z INTIMATE
~ · COLOGNE
1'1 [II
...... MIST

HEAVEN
SENT
SPRAY
MIST

of Rutland

'

RUTLAND Funeral
services for Honel Leroy
Denny, 38, who died Wednesday morning at his Salem
St. residence here, will be held
at 2 p. m. Saturday at the
Rutland Church of the
Nazarene.
The son of the late Honel and
Pearl Denny·; he was hom Sept.
12, 19:W, in Gallla County. He
was also preceded in death by a
brother.
Mr. Denny was employed
with the Power Construction
Co. on the coat belt line being
constructed in Meigs and
Gallla Counties. He was a
member of Local 83 of Portsmouth and Local 505, In·
ternational Brotherhood of
Teamsters, Chauffeurs,
Warehousemen, and Helpers of
America. He had served with
the United States Army.
Surviving are his wife, Judy;
a daughter, Deanna; a son,
Bryan; three sisters, Mrs.
Beulah Grate, Mrs. Vivian Coy
and Mrs. Beatrice Smith, all of
Rutland, and a brother, .
Marvin, of Vinton.
Officiating at Saturday's
service will be the Rev. Uoyd
Grimm. Burial will be in Miles
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the Martin Funeral Home
anytime on Friday and until
noon on Saturday.

VALENTINE
CANDY ~
HEARTS
· .

4 ~UP

Valentine's
Day

COLUMBUS OFFICE
WASIUNGTON (UP!)- TheDefense Department an·
, nounced Wednesday that one of
three regional offices of the
new
Defense
Property
Disposal Service will be
located In Colurnbua, Oblo.
Offlclala said the service was
being established to approve
the effectiveness and ef.
flciency · of programs of
dilposal and reutillzatlon of
American military supplies
and equlpn:~ent. It replaces the
preaent · Defense Supply
Center:
The Colurnbua. regional II.·
flee, to be activated Apil 9,
wlll be responalble for
l'1lllldencl ofJIIlll1 iD Newpcwt,
RJ.; NrhlpiU, Pa., llld
Narltta, V'a.

.

(",
'.· .,,.
"

E,A
DE

I~O"f'

OLD SPICE
AFTER
SHAVE

Free

~n1
I-- ... .

L

---'

EAUDE
LOVE
SPRAY

MIST

2.45 Ol. '4.00
4 Ol. s5.25

With $}19
-

LOVE
DOLL
CLOJHES
a woman never forgets .. .
the man who rem embe rs

89~
HAl KARATE

1

I
I
I

.

AFTER SHAVE
WITH
FREE
·DEODORANT
$3.00 Value

TRAVEL
KIT
$5.50 Value

Skinny Dip
BEAUTY G=;::~

TOTE
$6.50 Value

$2 .50 VALUE

2/98~
NOXZEMA

COVER GIRL

'

4oz.

CASHMERE
BOUQUET

10 oz.
c l e~ n .

natura l looking

$1.19 Value

�. 10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 8, l!Y73

:·.selltinel Classifieds ·G et Action! Sentinel Cla.s sifieds Get Results!
.

.

WANT -Ail.S .
lri~ORMATION

pEADLINES ,

5 P .M . Dav Before Publ icat ion .
Monday Deadllne ·9 a .m .
Cancel lat ion '- Correct ions •
Will be acc'epted until9 a .m . for
Olly of.Publlcaflon
·

REGULATIONS

Th'e Publisher reserves the
right to edit or -reject any ads
d eemed
ob l ettlonal .
The
,, publisher will not be responsible '

"fer more than one incorrect

For WaM Ad Service
, 5 cents per Word one insertion
,.
Minimum Charge 7Sc
,
-: 12 cents" per word thr,e
• ·, con5ecutlve Insertions.
:
~ 18 -cents per word six con ,
...

1968CHEVROLETBELAIR
S109S
Station wagon, V-8 engine, standard transmission, radio,

• 25 Per cent Discount on paid
: ads and ads paid within 10 days .

011 goOd. Plenty of space for the family.

$1.50 fat 50 wor,d min l mpm .
Ea ch additional word 2c .

·

,

BLIND ADS

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Charge ·per

OFFICE HOURS

·; THANKS to all my friends for
their cards, letters,· gifts and
prayers during my illness.
Mrs. Ben Turner .

2·8-ltc

' IN LOVING memory of my
dear wife and mother who
passed away two years ago

today , Feb. 8th . Eldon
Kraeuter and family.
2-8-ltp

Gas firms
• • •
JOmmg
national
program
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.,
cooperating with the
American Gas Assn., the Gas
Appliance Manufacturers '
Assn. and 50 other natural gas
companies in a nationwide
program designed to benefit
consumers by improving the
performance of gas-fueled
appliances and equipment.
C. T. Cassell and John
Koebel ,
managers
for
Columbia Gas of Ohio in the
Middleport-Pomeroy and
Gallipolis areas respectively,
said the program - known as
GAIN (Gas Appliance Im·
provement Network) - is an
effort on the part of the gas
industry to demonstrate its
desire to provide the ultimate
i~

in consumer

service

and

protection.
The new program will utilize
gas company service call
reports from throughout Ohio
and the nation to pinpoint
problems or delicienceis in
construction, design or per'
formance of natural gas
ranges, dryers, water heaters,
incinerators, various types of
heating and air conditioning
equipment, etc, and alert
manufacturers so corrective
measures can be taken.
"The chief advantage of the
GAIN program is the speed
with which it will function,"
they said . "Often problems can
be spotted and manufacturers
notified of deficiencies while
the appliance model is still on
assembly lines; and, with the
coopera lion of the manufac·
turer, repairs and adjustments
can be made to models already
installed in customer homes."
They said the GAIN network
Is not intended ' to replace or
interfere with the excellent
consumer
service ' and
guarantee programs main·
tained by gas appliance
manufacturers.
It is intended, rather, to
effectiveiy and rapidly pinpoint gas . appliance problem
areas that are of a concern to
both the gas industry and the
manulacturers and solve these
problems to the benefit of the
consumer. As in the past the
industry_intends to cooperate
:fully
with
appropriate
.governmental agencies.
Mrs. Virginia H. Knauer,
,Special Assistant to President
,Nixon for Consumer Affairs ,
~ haracterized
the
new
program as one which "will
provide immediate and longterm advantages to the con·
sumer" as well as to the industry.

,-------------1 Classified Ads I
I

.

.

/

bring you

1

extra cash

1·

for
.
shopp Ina sp.reas

I

i'PMEROY, OHIO

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

I

machine; like new in walnut

ca binet. Makes design sl it-.

ON YOUR DIAL

ches, zig-zags, buttonholes,
blind hems, overcasts. etc .,

Call Ravenswood. 273·
9.i21 or 273-9893.
1-11 -tfc

CAB DRIVER for Twin City REGISTERED Quarter Hor se;
Reserve Grand Champion 4Cabs to take local and Penn
H; gelding ; show horse; very
Central runs . Call 992-3280.
2-4-6tc well trained ; phone 992-5090.
2-8-3tp
------

992-5090.

organs. dishes, clocks, brass

beds or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,

2-8-31p

WHEAT STRAW, W. S.
Michael, Phone 985-3956.
1-7-tfc
2·8-3tp

6271.
Notice
GUN
SHOOT,
Saturday,
FINANCIAL REPORT
February 10, 7&lt;30 p. m., Mile
OF TOWNSHIPS
COLONIAL, Early American
Hill Road. Factory choked
For Fiscal Year Ending
style, maple, stereo -radio,
Help
Wanted
guns only. Assorted meats;
December llsl, 1911
AM-FM 4 speed, automatic
Sut1on Township
refreshments, sponsored by Tl RE 0 of seeln!l the same laces
changer
, .4 speaker system .
Meigs County
lhe Racine Fire Dept.
and rooms every day? We
Balance
$78.34 . Use our
Racine. Ohio
2-8-21c
need an attractive. Intelligent budget terms. Call 992-7085.
Feb . 2, 1973
I certify the fOllow ing report
young woman fo call on Meigs
2-8-6tc
GUN SHOOT, also rille
William F . Harris
Townsh ip Clerk
SUMMARY OF CASH

BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES

Balance Jan. 1, 1972
General Fund
s 28. 70
Motor Vehicl e License
Tax Fund
1.046.41
Gasoline Tax Fund
1,714 .16
Road and Br idge Fund
42B.S8
Cemetery Fund
1,956.86

matches. open sites only and

special deer slug match,
Forked Run Sportsman Club,
Sunday, Feb. 11, 1973, 12 noon.
. 2-8-3tc

area

businesses

and

No nightwork. Thi s Is a new
fie ld for women and we must

system, 4 speed automati c
changer . Balance $69 .72 . Use

__ ___

- -- - - -

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

------

20~

RECEIPTS AND
. EXPENDITURES
BY FUND

General Fund
Bal.. Jan . 1, 1972
26.70
Receipts
General Flrdperty Tax Real Estate (Gross) 2.040.22
Tangible Personal Property
Ta x (Grossl
·
2.132 .20
Local Governm ent

Distribution

1.848.00
84.00

Sales Taw;
Cigarette L i cense Fees
and Fines {Gross )
7.. . 25
Total Receipts
6,178.67
Total Beg inning Balan ce
6,201 ,37
Plus Receipts
Expendilures
Total Ew;pend llures Administrative
3,427 .39
Fire Protection
550.00
Grand Total Expenditures · General Fund
3,977.39
Permls.sl~e

Ba l., Dec . 31, 1972

2.229.98

Total E»ej)enditures Plus

Bal ., Dec . 31, 1972

6.207.37

Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
Ba l., Jan . 1. 1972
1,0.. 6.41
Receipts
Motor Vehi cle L icense

Tax

5,032.03

Tota l Receipts
5,03 2.03
Total Beginning Balance
6,078 .44
Plus Rece ipts
Expenditures
Total Expenditures MlsceiiMeous
_.,143.79
Maintenance
795.45
Grand Total E»ependltures Motor Veh icle L icense
Tax Fund
41 939.24

Bol. , Dec . 31 , 1972

pets, 408
Pomeroy .

HEATING &amp;
OOOLING
Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

·- ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Plus Receipts

15,3&lt;1.16

E»ependitures
Total E)(pend ilures Miscellaneous
9,708 .13
Ma intenance
-1.20 5. 79
Grand Total expenditures _

Gas "l lne Tax F n• 13 91 3 92
"
u "
1•·427 ··24
Bal., Dec . 31• 1972
Total Exp,end ltures Plus
Bal.Road
, Decan'd
. 31 ,Bridge
1972 Fund
15,3&lt;1 .16
Bal., Jan . 1,1972
428.88

Receipts
General fl'roperty Tax _

Real Estate (Gross i

1,906.14

Tangible Personal Property
58.31
Tax {Gross)
1,96 4. 4s
Total Rectlpts
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
2,393.33
Epxntldutres
Total Ex penditures Miscellaneous
1, .. 50 .98
Grand Total Expenditures Road and Bridge Fund
1.-450. 98
Bal ., Dec . 31. 1972
9A2.35
Total Expenditures · Plus
Bat .• Dec . 31,1972
2,393·.33
Cemetery Fund
Bal., Jan . 1. 1972
1,956 .86

Receipts

Genera l Property Tax Real Estate (Gross) 1.958.27
Tangible Personal Property
Tax (Gross)
72 .83
Sale of Lots
uo 00
Total Re c;elpts
2,891 :10
Total BeQinnlng Balance
Plus Receipts .
4,8_.7 .96
Expenditures
Salaries
1,5 18 .50
Tools - Equipment
315.54
Supplies
91 .19
60 .57
Other EKpenses
Total EKpendlfures
1,985 .80

Bal ., Dec. 31, 1972

2,862.16

Total Expenditures Plus
Bal. , Dec . 31 , 1972
4,847 .96
Revenue Fund 14
Receipts
Federal Go~ernment
Revenue Sharing
3,439.00

Tota l Receipts

3,&lt;39.00

Bel., Dec . 3l , 197~
3,A39.00
Township Debt - Note
Purpost For Which Note
Debt W11 cruttd
Cast
Tractor Ace .
Outstanding Jan . 1; 1912 9.000.00
Redeemed During Year -

I seo
1 1972 .
3 000 oo·
6,000.00
I 31 , 1972
I Dale of Final·Mat. June . 26.197&lt;
Balance Outstanding De~ .

Rate Of Int .

1 !11 5. II

·

6 Pet.

'

Spring

Ave .,

. 1-7-lfc
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurnished

apartments.

Phone 992-5434.

-GUARANTEE~
Phone 992-2094

- -- - - 2 BEDROOM trailer, close to

oPen8TiiS
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main,
0.

KITCHEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

C. L. KITCHEN
992-5653

. mine si te on Rt . 325, by week

or month. Phone 742-5980.
2_4_61 c

&amp;

3 ROOM and bath lurnished
apartment; private entrance ;

1·16·tfc

--~------

utilities paid ; one or two - - -- - - - -children acceptable ; 356 JUST taken in, deluxe zig-zag
North 4th St .. Middleport ; sewing
machine . This
William Smith .

'69

Plymouth
Two

door

hardtop. 383 automatic,
bright orange with black vinyl
top, Sl425. Phone 985·3582 or
667-6317.
2·8·61c
1972 LIBERTY

trailer , 3

bedrooms, 11Jz baths, all new
furniture, just fully carpeted
two weeks ago ; l ived in four

months ; 5500 down and take
over payments ; phone 992·

2715 .

2-7-6tc

------

1950 FORD 'I2 ton pickup truck ;
phone 247-2161.
2·6-3tc
1967 FURY II I, 4 door . 383
engine, good condition. $700 ;

Mason , W. Va. , phone 773·
5651.
2-7-6tc

-----

set sold much higher, must let
~o for $89.60 or S7 .47 a month.
5JJ..it in your home. Call 992-

mach ine

darns,

em -

Buy

cosmetic store or combine

with your

business.

best buy

franchise fee ... ·no house to

12-3-ttc
LEGAL NOTICE
ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS

2 Pairs,

1

PAIR FREE . The

No

in

lhe

area. Have slacks

house selling ... no mid·
dleman. Call us toll free (8001
421-2060, ext. 322. or write
Merle Norman Cosmetics,
LN-33, 9130 Bellanca Avenue,
L. A., Calif. 90056 .
2-8· lie

jeans for lhe
whole family .

&amp;

~

POMEROY
Jack w. car..y, Mgr.
Phone 992-2111

Project Number EDA·06 · 11·
01041

FURNISHED 4 rooms and
bath ; on highway edge of Mobile Homes For Sale
Mason ; phone 773-5147.
1-30-lotp 1967 ELCONA, 10x50. with
Separate sealed bids for The
expansion livil')g room; fully
Construction of a Fire Sta t ion
air -conditioned ;
phone
for The VIllage of Pomeroy ,
Ravenswood 273-9871.
Oh io will be received by, The Pets For Sale
VIllage of Pomeroy, Oh io at the
2·8·3tc
office of The Mavor, Mr . TROPICAL FISH at cut rate
Willi am G. Baron Ic k, unt 1I 12 pnces
· . Ma ny new varieties In ATTENTION ALL MOBILE
~ 'c 1ock noon , Easlern S.T., 2-19.
AI Showalter's Wet
HOME BUYERS! . Berry9 73 , and then at said office stock.
Pet. Chester. Ohio.
Miller Mobile Home Sales
p,u bllcly opened and read aloud .
2 8 Jt
have just received on their lot
' Tht Information for Bidders, -- -- - -- - ·-· P 6 repossessed Mobile Homes
Form of Bid , Form of Contract.
to be sold on a first come, first
Plans. Specifications , 1nd WEIMARANER puppies, AKC
Forms of Bid Bond , Perform registered; phone 742-6834, served basis . 1 ~ 70x14, 1972
ance and Payment Bond, and
Uberty, 3 bedroom Isold new
Rutland, 0 .
other contract documents may
$1&gt;064
- buy now for $7,200); 4
1-28-tfc
be eKan;'llned at the follow ing :
- 60x121ate models - as low
Harder &amp; Reed Architects,
as $4,000 ; 1 - 65x12. 2
673 High Street. Worthington, PARKVIEW Kennels going out
bedroom front den. extra nice
of
business.
Big
price
Ohio.
Mayor Barnoick ' s office.
reduction on all dogs. All AK· un it, save $1800 ; low down
Pomeroy, Ohio City Hall.
C. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash payment, bank rate tlnancing. So for your deal of a
Columbus
Builders
Ex ·
Streets,
Middleport, Ohio.
change , Columbus,. Ohio.
12-13-Hc lifetime, shop Berry-Miller
F . W. Dodge Corporation.
Mobile Home Sales, 705
Columbu~ , Ohio.
Farson Street. Belpre. Ohio,
~oples m~y be obtained at the
phone 423-9531.
olf1ce of Harder &amp; Reed Ar - For Sale
2-8-3tc'
chltects located et 673 High
Street, Worthington, Ohio upon 7 MONTH old trailer 14 x 70,
E LCONA mobile home,
payment of S25.00 for each set.
unfurnished, fully carpeted. 1972
Any unsucctsslu l bidder ,
12x60,
bedrooms, with ' or
Phone 992-7649 after 5 p.m. without 2furn
upon returning such set
iture . Phone , 367·
2·4-12tc 7743.
promptlY and In good condition,
will _be refunded his payment,
2-8-2tc
and any non ·bldder upon so (4) CLOSE OUT on 1972 full size
returning such a set will be
zig-zag sewing machines. For
,
refunded $15 .00, prov ided they
sewing
stretch
fabrics,
CASH
paid
for
all
makes
and
are returned In good condit ion
models of mobile homes.
buttonholes, f&amp;ncy designs,
within ten 00) days of bid date.
etc.
Paint
slightly
blemished.
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
The owner reserves the right·
4-13-tfc ,
lo waive any Informalities or to . Choice of carrying case or
retect onv or all bids.
.
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or,·-;::-:=========~
Each bidder must deposit
ferms available . Electro
with his bid, secur ity In the
Hygiene Co.. phone 992 -7755.
amount. form and subject to the
· .A ir Conditioners
·
2-7-6tc
conditions provided In the In •Awnings
formation for . Bidders .
··· ·Under • ·
Attention of bidders Is par· 121 ELECTROLUX Sweepers
.
. Ptnnt,ng
ticul1arly 1callted 1o .the "' deluxe model. Complete with
all cleaning attachments and : •
requ remen s as o cond 11
tons of
·
• i
uses paper bags. Slightly used ' !Complete ,mQblle hQme, , i
employm ent to be observed •nd
minimum wage rates to bt pafd
but cleans and looks like new. "ervlce ~ plus gigantic
under the contract .
Will ,.II for $37.25 cash or 'display of mobile homes .
No bidder may wlthd r.aw his
terms available . Electro :~lways avall~blo . at ...
bid with in 20 days after the
Hygiene Co., . phone 992-7755.
M
. ILLER
actual date of the opening
2·7-6tc
theroof .
Bv Order .of the Mayor ,
GA_R_A_G_E_SAL_E_a_n_
d -fu-rn-Iture, MOBILE HOMES
. Wd ll•m C. Boron lck, ~
V tllage of F'omeroy, Ohio
4641 S. Second St.. Mlddlef"rt,
1220 Washlng1on Blvd.
M~!Ch B. 1973
Feb. 7th and 8th.
423-7521
BELPRE 0.
IU 18, 25 (2) 1, 81 4tc
·
2·7·2fc . ·
' ·
Vlll1ge of Pomeroy, Ohio
Owner

------

r

FOR 'i\OMEN ...

C~A~GE FO~}

ot1 Ef.Tiv('

write to:

&amp;UR f AU

BEST BUY HOSIERY,
5225 Wilshire Blvd. No. 520
·Los Angeles, Calif. 90036
Giving your phone number.

lJ'L ABNER

.. ' I

AT LAST AH Kl)ol
PUT DOWN Tl-115
(GI?QAN.') ~-IDN

SA."'!!- HOW MANY
0' US STATCHOOS

iS ALIVE."'

BO&lt;..ILDE.R -

ROOANG AND
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE: 992·2550

and exter ior painting , con ·
crete work by hour or con ·

READY -MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to ·your
2·6·12tc. project. Fast and easy. Free
estimates, Phone 992-3284.
------Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC'
Middleport, Ohio.
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN6-30-tfc
ED, REPAIRED . MILLER
SANITATION , STEWART,
SEPTIC TANKS CLiiANED
OH 10. PHONE 662-3035.
REASONABLE
rates . Ph. 44610-4-lfc
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
: - - - : - - -- - Owner &amp; Operator.
WILL trim or cut trees. clean
5-12-tfc
out basements , attics. etc .
Phone 949-3221.
C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
2-4-JO!c
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
BACKHOE Services, llackhoe·
Racine. Ohio
and Dozer work. Septic tanks
Crltt Bradford
Installed. George (Bill) '
5·1-Hc
Pullins, phone 992-2478.
2·2 -tfc
.,--.,.,...,.----~­
SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
OIL AND GAS Service, new and
doors and windows, carports,
used furnaces. new aluminum
marquees. aluminum siding
siding and remodeling. 24
and rail ing . A. Jatob. sales
hour serv ice; phone 843-2833.
representative . For free
1-25-30tp
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle , Syracuse, V. . V.
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
Johnson and Son . Inc .
cancelled?
Lost
your
3-2-tfc
operator's license? Call 992·
...
2966.
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
6-15-lfc
Septic lanks lnslalled. George
I Bill) Pullins . Phone 992-2478.
4-25-tfc
tract ; phone 992-3511 .

Roadrunner.

1968 CHRYSLER Newport , 4
door sedan, power steering
and brakes, air -condit ion ing,
very good condition; good

tires; phone 992-5510.

Real Estate For Sale

2-4'6tc

ELNA and

HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
985-3529.
6- 11 -tt c

Real Estate For Sale

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

5 ROOM HOUS.E, 108 State
Street, Pomeroy, Phone 992·

White

-.

'77CKL.e '

~

BOGSV'-

601{~/

WINNIE WINKLE
WE'vE BEEN
®MY, YOU AND HAL
MARJ1N5 HAVE
CCIU'AINLY BEEN
13U5Y 61NCE' HE
GC1T" '10 iOWN .
WHAT ALL HAVE
'rOU 13EEN

DOING A LOr OF
INTEREfioTING
'TH IN6 5, IWI.

ONE. DAY WE. VISITED MU5EUM~;
DAY WE WENT ICE: SKATING-1 STILL
DAY WE. WENT '10 A
AN~ER

FREE MUN ICIPA l.
CONCERJ: ~

MY, MY. LOOK AT ALL
TH E. TH INo5 ONE
CAN DO WITHOUT
5PENDIN0 HARDLY
ANY MONEY
---~
AT Al.L .

UPlO?

Sewing

an

Machines ... service on
makes. Reasonlltble rates.

The . Sewing Center , Mid dleport, Ohio.
11-16-tfc

HOUSE FOR SALE. 114 Brick
Street. Pomeroy. Ohio; brick ·ooz!:"R 'and back hoe work,
house, 3 bedrooms. excellent
2-8-6tp
ponds and septic tanks, ditlocation. close to school and
ching serv ice ; top soil , fill
city ; contact Lou Osborne or ' dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex·
HOUSE, 5 rooms and bath ,
call 992-5898.
located Jn Rutland; priced for
ca vating . Phone 992 -5367.
11 -26-tfc
quick sale ; phone 742·3334.
Dick Karr, Jr .
2·1-6tc
9-1-Hc

------

rCLELAN~
REALTY
•olE. Moln·

'

acres

12

12 acres

acre

9

rooms .

5

bedrpoms. 1'12 baths. All new
kitchen. Hardwood floors,
basement, garage. Other
buildings.

large

bedrooms, bath, neat kltc:hen

with stove, utility room .
Over an acre of land. Only
$16,000.00.
4 BEDROOMS
POMEROY - 111, baths, .
large'llvlng, modern kitchen,
gas · furnace , and full
basement. Asking $12,500.00.
NAUSHA MOBILE HOME
2 BEDROOMS- B~fh , large
compact living . Dug well on
about an acre. On hard road.
Wanf $3,000.00.
BUILOING LOT
POMEROY - On R011te 33
and 7. All utilities. Just
$1500.00.
BUSINESS LOCATION
4 ROOMS - One with a holst •
for overhavtlng of motors, or

can be used as a paint shop.

,,.I

...11"'

33 ACRES
RUTLAND fenced.

house

COLONIAL
POMEROY - 2 story frame.
Beautiful kitchen. Dining R.. ,
utility R.. 4 bedrooms. 3
baths, basement. CLOSE IN .
$17,500.
RACINE
BEAUTIFUL LOCATION -

basement, back porch and
fenced lot. Now only $7500.00.
NEW HOME
NEAR ROUTE 7 - 3

m-m5

IT!
:_,,....,._,_
.

wir ing ;

welding,

electric and gas. Call 992 -3802
or after 4: 30 p.m. call 992·
6050.
'
2·5-3otp
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service. all makes. 992-228-4.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfc

water. $14,500.

MIDDLEPORT
4 BEDROOMS- Nice bath,

TODAY ANYTHING
WORTH HAltiNG COSTS
MONEY. LAND SHOULD
BE YOUR BEST IN·
VESTMENT. BUY IT
TODAY.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS

1

~

furnace
. paneling,
breezeway,
cellar . enclosed
Lots of

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

~A60UT

G &amp; E Appliance Repair . repair
on all laundry equipment,
refrigeration equipment and

tillable. 3 bedrooms. new
bath, new kitch en, new

.85

home,
large. wood
burning with
fireplace
Only
$25,000.00.
3ACRES
IN THE COUNTRY - Small
barn, 3 Cedrooms with
closets and 2 baths. Cellar
and drilled well. 3 porches.
Only $10,500.00.
8ACRES
ON HARD ROAD- Good for
small farm . housing. or
mobile homes. Asking
$4500.00.

• Pomel'9y ·

NEAR

110 Mechanic Street

Also a . 3 bedroom modern

I:S~'T MAR~~v

:--=~---

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

furnace,

1He ~ c.;Gt:;~ 11-11~ lllE
aD SAT 61J!;R 1Rir::D lD CO
FCJF. WJ;, AIJD ! DIDN'T eleiJ

~U.,/J.NJ.I&gt;.lOW

3834.

stoker

HER ~H FOR
IDENTil'/. -GIVE
HeR 11-IE CHECK.

ABOUT EQt.iALI1Y

COLLECT : (2131 938-3823 or

experience In building
homes in Motgs County.
·

WILL DO remodeling, interior

SHARP

SAY, W~ATS T~ l S
E)(TRA TEN OOLLAR

ALL WEATHER

BOB SLOAN

Auto Sales

Invest S2,4,. or S4,999 fully ,
secur·ed by merchandise.
For full lnformallon !(:Ill

LETS NOr OFfEN!7

U:T M6 1ELL 'lOLl
A 11-11~ ~ 1\1.0

Have your home buill by

and

·

INCOME.

Custom
Builders.
Our
carpenters have 21t years

HOME BUILDING
&amp;
REMODELING

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Court St.

stereo console; must sell at
once; nice walnut finish . This

CEPTIONAL

...

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

-------

DUE to divorce , 1972 8 track

No selling, accts. furnished.
Part-full
tltne .
EX-

SMJnt NELSON
MOTORS, _IPomeroy
NC. _
1'11. 991-2174

Pomeroy.Home &amp; Auto

The
Daily·Sentinel

4-12-tfc . L:,_ _ _ _ _Pomeroy
__..:_~_J

PANTY HOSE

From the , largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core . ..
• Nathan Biggs •
R~i~_~or Speciati~t ...

Virgil B.

6,078.44

Total Beginning Balance

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

-=========:.._.;

I, 139.20

13,627.00

GUARANTEED
NI)T TO RUN

o.

Guoline Tax Fund
Bl!lance , Jan . 1, 1972
1,714.16
Receipts
Gasoline Tax
13,627.00

Total ReceipiS

beautiful ... super sheer

2·7· 31 P broideries, overtasts , but- 4 BEDROM home, 2 balhs, gas
992.2448
furnace, full basement, river
Pomeroy,
_2 _ B_E_D_R_O_O_M_ -mob- ,-,e- h-ome; ton holes . Pay balance $36.50
frontage , Syracuse, Ohio,
L'::-::-::-:-::-:-:-:-:-~-:-':":7-""-=d completely furnished ; call or
Callpayments
992-5331.can be arranged .
Phone 992·2360.
HOOD'S AQUARIUM·S-i fish
9'12-2441 after 5:30p.m.
1-25-tfc
·
1.16.tfc
and supplies; new location,
2-7-lfc - - -- - - -- Ash Street, Middleport near
MASON, West Virginia business
SMALL trail er. Ideal for -COAL. Limestone, Excelsior
park; phone 992-5443.
building or auto repair ,
1·7-tfc . couples; $75 per month; 10 Sail Work.s , E. Main St. ,
garage, Two apartments
-:-:= -:--:--:---c-:---cmiles North of Pomeroy;
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
above 38 x 70 feet; lot 40 x 195
I WILL do bookkeeping and
phone 992-7479.
4-12-tfc
feet. Call 773-5611 day time,
992-6159 evenings
and
clerlc:ol
work In my home ; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2_-2-lfc f=]~~~~~iiiiil
phone 742-6085.
weekends .
·
2·2·6tc DEAL
2-4-6tc
DIRECT
WITH
COSMETIC MANUFAC·
GIVE your feet a treat; try a
r
..
··
TURER.
BE
IN·
pair of Knapp Shoes ; call Bob
DE
PEN
DE
NT!
Merle
Hysell. 992-5324.
AND JEANS
Norman Cosmetics Is offering
1·23-tfc
a rewarding opportunity In
Our Special:
Middleport. Open your own

Total E»ependitures Plus

Bal., Doc . 31 , 1972

EXPERT

professional people to sell the
finest oftlce equipment CONTEMPORARY Modern
plu s Walnut style stereo, radio,
available . Salary
comm ission . Expenses paid .
AM-FM, 4 speaker sound

LOSE wel~ht with "New Shape
have the right person . Send
our budget terms . Call 992·
Tablets. ' 10 day supply only
picture and resume to Mrs .
7085.
Sl.49 at Nelson Drug,
McGee, Box 727, Marietta, 0. 2-8-6tc
Pomeroy, and Dutton Drug.
2·6·61c
..::,_
Middleport .
2-7-3tc BAR Maid, apply In person, HI · TWO and one -half acreage In
Totals
. S.I)S.OI
Flatwoods area. Call 742-3171.
Total Receipts
Ho Bar, Middleport; equal
Sale,
Coats
2·4-6tc
General Fund
6,178 .67 RUMMAGE
opportun lty employer .
Building, Middleport, Feb.
Motor Vehi cle license
2-6-3tc
8th and 9th.
Tax Fund
5,032.03
- - - - - ~------i
Gasoline Tax Fund
13,627 .00
2-7-2tp -WANTED
housewives to test
Road and Bridge Fund 1,964..45 - - - -new products; send reply to
Cemetery Fund
2,891.10 COUNTRY Musi c, Saturday
P. 0. Boli 729-H, C·O The Daily
Totals
28,693 .25
night; Music by Guy Thoma,
Total Receipts- Balances
Sentinel,
Pomeroy. Ohio.
36"x2J"x.009
Dale Snyder and Tobe Young ;
6,207 .37
General Fund
2·6-Jtc
9 till 2; at Jack's Club.
Motor Veh icle Li cense
2·7-3tc
Tax Fund
6,078 .44
GasollneTaK Fund
15,341 .16
GIRL wanted for local office
Road and Bridge Fund 2,393.33 SEARCH for descendants ot
work .
Knowledge
of
Cemetery Fund
4,847 .96
John and Nellie Douglas for
bookkeeping and office
Totals
34,868 .26
geneologlcal purposes; early
machines helpful. Reply to
USED OFFSET PLATES
E xpendltures
settlers
of Me1gs County.
Box 729-N, -c-o· The Daily
HAVE
General Fund
3,977.39
Write: Mrs. 0 . D. Lltsch, 6506 Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Motor Vehicl e License
MANY USES
Auburn Road, Utica, Mich.
4,939 .24
l-26-121p
Tax Fund
Gasoline Tax Fund
13,913.92
48087.
Road and Bridge Fund 1,.450.98
2-7-3tp
Cemetery Fund
1.985.80
For Rent
8 for $1.00
TotalS
26.261.33
UNFURNISHED 3-room
Balance Dec . 31,1972
apartment, adults only. No
General Fund
2,229.98

Motor Vehic le L icense
Tu Fund
1,1 38.20
Gasoline Ta x Fund
1,427 .24
Road and Bridge Fund
9o42.3S
Cemetery Fund
2,862.16
Rev enue Fund 14
3,439.00
'Totals
12,038.93
CASH BALANCE ,

·AFFILIATE DISTRIBUTOR

On Most American Cars

$8~.

Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992-

to be correc t

. I

Slt)IGER automati c sewing

1971 - 2 HORSE Spartan XL
Trailer; walk thru ; fiberglas
OLD turnlture, oak table&gt;. dome, walk-up ramp . Phone

LEGAL NOTICE

;. Card of Thanks

. In Memory

------

l

rt-.,.,_.:·'

Wanted To Buy

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

8: 30a .m. to· 5:00p.m. Daily, .
8: 30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
: Saturday.

:

S450

6 &lt;{IInder, automatic transmission, radio, good tires, runs

CARD OF THANKS '
&amp; OBITUARY ,

· Addltional . 25c
. Advertisemen t.

WMP0/1390

!!

WH OSE HENHOUSE
DID HE . KETCH
'IOU IN 'i'

Business Services·

Starcraft Sales, Rt. 62 N. of
Point Pleasant, W. Va ..
behind Red carpet Inn. Phone
304-675,5384.
2-4-5tc

Wanted

1969 CHEVROLET NOVA WAGON

.

Trailers- and fold down
campers . Camp Conley

good tires. clean vinyl Interior, green finish, 1-owner, new

car trade-ln .

,. secutlve Insertions. ·

.

1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA
$1895
Stat ion wagon, local owned &amp; dean inside &amp; out. V-8

'

WINTER prices on all Startraft

1

brakes, luggage rack , green vinyl Interior with white
linish. Radio and all the extras.

RATES

r

We talk to you
like ·a'person.

engine, automatic transmission, power steering, power

insert ion .

·•

Q\· 2 SIGNS Pomeroy
~ au::n, ii!IIIIIIIM.ot.o.r_co_._

For Sale

.PA

'IE GOT ENN'IBOOY
INTH'JAILHOUSE
I COU~D CHEER UP,
SHE.RIFF?
'

'

MANY OTHER HOMES TO
CHOOSE FROM - CALL
TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
3 ASSOCIATES
TO HELP YOU
992-2259
If no answer
992-2568or 985-4209

Used Bargains
Good Merchandise
USE040" HOT POINT
ELECTRIC RANGE

75.00
USED HOTPOINT
ELECTRIC DRYER

50.00
3- PC. FRUITWOOD
BEDROOM .S UITE

150.00

Ingels FumHure
992-2635

Middleport

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1. Entente
5. Axmin·
ster, for
example
11. Canyon
mouth
12. Threatener's

phrase
(2 wds.)
13. Hima·
layan
broad·
mouth
H . Comfort
15. Not
working
16. That
chap 's
17. Kind of
nap
18. Warehouse
facility
ZO. Nether·
lands
commune

For Sale By Owner
Completely modernized 10-room
house, two full baths, all built-in kitchen_. 1st floor wa 11-to-wa II carpets,
gas central heat. On _two town lots in
goo~ Mi,ddleport neighborhood. Own~r
.leavmg town. See by appointment ~Y
calling 992-3486.

~I ..====================-~VALUABLE FARM LAND
FOR SALE ~
WASHINGTON COUNTY
840 Acres in 17 parcels along State Route 7 and
Ohio River between Marietta and Newport.

MONROE COUNTY
340 Acres In 7 parcels along State Route 7 and
· ' Ohio River north of Sardis, Ohio.
Ca II or Write :
E. H. Doughty
Hanna Coal Company
C.dlz, Ohio 43907
Telephone (614) 942-4641

Yeaterday's CryploQaole; WHO BUILDS NO CASTLES IN ,
THE AIR, BUILDS NO CASTLES ANYWHERE.-ANON.

37. Cruising
38. Simba as
a youth
39. Pursuit
40. American
41. Architectural pier
DOWN
I. Greek
island
2. Direction
on ship
3. era.ethc
impos·
slble
(4wds. )
4. Chinese
pagoda
5. Endorse,
as for a
loan
6. Ascended
7. Electrical
unit

8. One's

rightful
position
(4 wds.)

'(0 lf71 Klnr Ptatum S7ndloato, !no.)

·

c1JtlJMJ])M;""" !::::!!:!.....,c :
Uverambleu-laurJumbl..,
letter lo eoch llqUilft, lo
form four ordinary words.
Yesterday's Answer
9. P.O.W.
on
the loose
10. Wobbling
16. Filament"
19. Constru c1
22. "Sur
Le

d'Avig-

non"

23. The
hackneyed
way

24. Girl's

,.,

name
meaning
golden
25. Repast
27 ..Cross
'out
29. Friction
match
30. Happen·
ing
31. Lariat
36. Sign a
contract
37. Well now !

21. Harness
strap
22. Break·
water
23.. Soviet
republic
25. Kind of
belt
26. German

I (

III

~~ETACE ~
() j
IERTOPY~

I I

)

II
I

Jf~w .,...,..

tp cln:ltd lotion

lo r..... lhellli!lrise .......... u

~:=::~=.:';~::::::=~lllfllllld~~ bJ the aboYe can-.
1~....--...:.;=II::.:B:z:L=·=·=·~-~_.J'

....

river

27. Hollow
28. Anger
29. The white

one means

cowardice
32. Egyptian
solar
deity
33. Aesir
member
34. Night '
before
35. Kay
Thomp-

son's
brainchild

DAILY CRYI'TOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

W~AT

DOES

R,q,V,p,
AXYDLBAAXR
MEAN.
~I R ?
Ia LONGFELLOW
cine leiter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L'l, X for the two O's, etc. Slncle letters.
apostrophes, the lencth and formetlon of the words are all
11inls. Each day the code letters are dlllerenl.
·
CRYP'f()qUOTES

EV VSAXU ' VHN KXG VN KSAX NGX
CONVZXO.-EUOSXJ YSGFHEJJ

[1 I I t]

�. 10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 8, l!Y73

:·.selltinel Classifieds ·G et Action! Sentinel Cla.s sifieds Get Results!
.

.

WANT -Ail.S .
lri~ORMATION

pEADLINES ,

5 P .M . Dav Before Publ icat ion .
Monday Deadllne ·9 a .m .
Cancel lat ion '- Correct ions •
Will be acc'epted until9 a .m . for
Olly of.Publlcaflon
·

REGULATIONS

Th'e Publisher reserves the
right to edit or -reject any ads
d eemed
ob l ettlonal .
The
,, publisher will not be responsible '

"fer more than one incorrect

For WaM Ad Service
, 5 cents per Word one insertion
,.
Minimum Charge 7Sc
,
-: 12 cents" per word thr,e
• ·, con5ecutlve Insertions.
:
~ 18 -cents per word six con ,
...

1968CHEVROLETBELAIR
S109S
Station wagon, V-8 engine, standard transmission, radio,

• 25 Per cent Discount on paid
: ads and ads paid within 10 days .

011 goOd. Plenty of space for the family.

$1.50 fat 50 wor,d min l mpm .
Ea ch additional word 2c .

·

,

BLIND ADS

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Charge ·per

OFFICE HOURS

·; THANKS to all my friends for
their cards, letters,· gifts and
prayers during my illness.
Mrs. Ben Turner .

2·8-ltc

' IN LOVING memory of my
dear wife and mother who
passed away two years ago

today , Feb. 8th . Eldon
Kraeuter and family.
2-8-ltp

Gas firms
• • •
JOmmg
national
program
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.,
cooperating with the
American Gas Assn., the Gas
Appliance Manufacturers '
Assn. and 50 other natural gas
companies in a nationwide
program designed to benefit
consumers by improving the
performance of gas-fueled
appliances and equipment.
C. T. Cassell and John
Koebel ,
managers
for
Columbia Gas of Ohio in the
Middleport-Pomeroy and
Gallipolis areas respectively,
said the program - known as
GAIN (Gas Appliance Im·
provement Network) - is an
effort on the part of the gas
industry to demonstrate its
desire to provide the ultimate
i~

in consumer

service

and

protection.
The new program will utilize
gas company service call
reports from throughout Ohio
and the nation to pinpoint
problems or delicienceis in
construction, design or per'
formance of natural gas
ranges, dryers, water heaters,
incinerators, various types of
heating and air conditioning
equipment, etc, and alert
manufacturers so corrective
measures can be taken.
"The chief advantage of the
GAIN program is the speed
with which it will function,"
they said . "Often problems can
be spotted and manufacturers
notified of deficiencies while
the appliance model is still on
assembly lines; and, with the
coopera lion of the manufac·
turer, repairs and adjustments
can be made to models already
installed in customer homes."
They said the GAIN network
Is not intended ' to replace or
interfere with the excellent
consumer
service ' and
guarantee programs main·
tained by gas appliance
manufacturers.
It is intended, rather, to
effectiveiy and rapidly pinpoint gas . appliance problem
areas that are of a concern to
both the gas industry and the
manulacturers and solve these
problems to the benefit of the
consumer. As in the past the
industry_intends to cooperate
:fully
with
appropriate
.governmental agencies.
Mrs. Virginia H. Knauer,
,Special Assistant to President
,Nixon for Consumer Affairs ,
~ haracterized
the
new
program as one which "will
provide immediate and longterm advantages to the con·
sumer" as well as to the industry.

,-------------1 Classified Ads I
I

.

.

/

bring you

1

extra cash

1·

for
.
shopp Ina sp.reas

I

i'PMEROY, OHIO

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

I

machine; like new in walnut

ca binet. Makes design sl it-.

ON YOUR DIAL

ches, zig-zags, buttonholes,
blind hems, overcasts. etc .,

Call Ravenswood. 273·
9.i21 or 273-9893.
1-11 -tfc

CAB DRIVER for Twin City REGISTERED Quarter Hor se;
Reserve Grand Champion 4Cabs to take local and Penn
H; gelding ; show horse; very
Central runs . Call 992-3280.
2-4-6tc well trained ; phone 992-5090.
2-8-3tp
------

992-5090.

organs. dishes, clocks, brass

beds or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,

2-8-31p

WHEAT STRAW, W. S.
Michael, Phone 985-3956.
1-7-tfc
2·8-3tp

6271.
Notice
GUN
SHOOT,
Saturday,
FINANCIAL REPORT
February 10, 7&lt;30 p. m., Mile
OF TOWNSHIPS
COLONIAL, Early American
Hill Road. Factory choked
For Fiscal Year Ending
style, maple, stereo -radio,
Help
Wanted
guns only. Assorted meats;
December llsl, 1911
AM-FM 4 speed, automatic
Sut1on Township
refreshments, sponsored by Tl RE 0 of seeln!l the same laces
changer
, .4 speaker system .
Meigs County
lhe Racine Fire Dept.
and rooms every day? We
Balance
$78.34 . Use our
Racine. Ohio
2-8-21c
need an attractive. Intelligent budget terms. Call 992-7085.
Feb . 2, 1973
I certify the fOllow ing report
young woman fo call on Meigs
2-8-6tc
GUN SHOOT, also rille
William F . Harris
Townsh ip Clerk
SUMMARY OF CASH

BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES

Balance Jan. 1, 1972
General Fund
s 28. 70
Motor Vehicl e License
Tax Fund
1.046.41
Gasoline Tax Fund
1,714 .16
Road and Br idge Fund
42B.S8
Cemetery Fund
1,956.86

matches. open sites only and

special deer slug match,
Forked Run Sportsman Club,
Sunday, Feb. 11, 1973, 12 noon.
. 2-8-3tc

area

businesses

and

No nightwork. Thi s Is a new
fie ld for women and we must

system, 4 speed automati c
changer . Balance $69 .72 . Use

__ ___

- -- - - -

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

------

20~

RECEIPTS AND
. EXPENDITURES
BY FUND

General Fund
Bal.. Jan . 1, 1972
26.70
Receipts
General Flrdperty Tax Real Estate (Gross) 2.040.22
Tangible Personal Property
Ta x (Grossl
·
2.132 .20
Local Governm ent

Distribution

1.848.00
84.00

Sales Taw;
Cigarette L i cense Fees
and Fines {Gross )
7.. . 25
Total Receipts
6,178.67
Total Beg inning Balan ce
6,201 ,37
Plus Receipts
Expendilures
Total Ew;pend llures Administrative
3,427 .39
Fire Protection
550.00
Grand Total Expenditures · General Fund
3,977.39
Permls.sl~e

Ba l., Dec . 31, 1972

2.229.98

Total E»ej)enditures Plus

Bal ., Dec . 31, 1972

6.207.37

Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
Ba l., Jan . 1. 1972
1,0.. 6.41
Receipts
Motor Vehi cle L icense

Tax

5,032.03

Tota l Receipts
5,03 2.03
Total Beginning Balance
6,078 .44
Plus Rece ipts
Expenditures
Total Expenditures MlsceiiMeous
_.,143.79
Maintenance
795.45
Grand Total E»ependltures Motor Veh icle L icense
Tax Fund
41 939.24

Bol. , Dec . 31 , 1972

pets, 408
Pomeroy .

HEATING &amp;
OOOLING
Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

·- ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Plus Receipts

15,3&lt;1.16

E»ependitures
Total E)(pend ilures Miscellaneous
9,708 .13
Ma intenance
-1.20 5. 79
Grand Total expenditures _

Gas "l lne Tax F n• 13 91 3 92
"
u "
1•·427 ··24
Bal., Dec . 31• 1972
Total Exp,end ltures Plus
Bal.Road
, Decan'd
. 31 ,Bridge
1972 Fund
15,3&lt;1 .16
Bal., Jan . 1,1972
428.88

Receipts
General fl'roperty Tax _

Real Estate (Gross i

1,906.14

Tangible Personal Property
58.31
Tax {Gross)
1,96 4. 4s
Total Rectlpts
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
2,393.33
Epxntldutres
Total Ex penditures Miscellaneous
1, .. 50 .98
Grand Total Expenditures Road and Bridge Fund
1.-450. 98
Bal ., Dec . 31. 1972
9A2.35
Total Expenditures · Plus
Bat .• Dec . 31,1972
2,393·.33
Cemetery Fund
Bal., Jan . 1. 1972
1,956 .86

Receipts

Genera l Property Tax Real Estate (Gross) 1.958.27
Tangible Personal Property
Tax (Gross)
72 .83
Sale of Lots
uo 00
Total Re c;elpts
2,891 :10
Total BeQinnlng Balance
Plus Receipts .
4,8_.7 .96
Expenditures
Salaries
1,5 18 .50
Tools - Equipment
315.54
Supplies
91 .19
60 .57
Other EKpenses
Total EKpendlfures
1,985 .80

Bal ., Dec. 31, 1972

2,862.16

Total Expenditures Plus
Bal. , Dec . 31 , 1972
4,847 .96
Revenue Fund 14
Receipts
Federal Go~ernment
Revenue Sharing
3,439.00

Tota l Receipts

3,&lt;39.00

Bel., Dec . 3l , 197~
3,A39.00
Township Debt - Note
Purpost For Which Note
Debt W11 cruttd
Cast
Tractor Ace .
Outstanding Jan . 1; 1912 9.000.00
Redeemed During Year -

I seo
1 1972 .
3 000 oo·
6,000.00
I 31 , 1972
I Dale of Final·Mat. June . 26.197&lt;
Balance Outstanding De~ .

Rate Of Int .

1 !11 5. II

·

6 Pet.

'

Spring

Ave .,

. 1-7-lfc
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurnished

apartments.

Phone 992-5434.

-GUARANTEE~
Phone 992-2094

- -- - - 2 BEDROOM trailer, close to

oPen8TiiS
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main,
0.

KITCHEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

C. L. KITCHEN
992-5653

. mine si te on Rt . 325, by week

or month. Phone 742-5980.
2_4_61 c

&amp;

3 ROOM and bath lurnished
apartment; private entrance ;

1·16·tfc

--~------

utilities paid ; one or two - - -- - - - -children acceptable ; 356 JUST taken in, deluxe zig-zag
North 4th St .. Middleport ; sewing
machine . This
William Smith .

'69

Plymouth
Two

door

hardtop. 383 automatic,
bright orange with black vinyl
top, Sl425. Phone 985·3582 or
667-6317.
2·8·61c
1972 LIBERTY

trailer , 3

bedrooms, 11Jz baths, all new
furniture, just fully carpeted
two weeks ago ; l ived in four

months ; 5500 down and take
over payments ; phone 992·

2715 .

2-7-6tc

------

1950 FORD 'I2 ton pickup truck ;
phone 247-2161.
2·6-3tc
1967 FURY II I, 4 door . 383
engine, good condition. $700 ;

Mason , W. Va. , phone 773·
5651.
2-7-6tc

-----

set sold much higher, must let
~o for $89.60 or S7 .47 a month.
5JJ..it in your home. Call 992-

mach ine

darns,

em -

Buy

cosmetic store or combine

with your

business.

best buy

franchise fee ... ·no house to

12-3-ttc
LEGAL NOTICE
ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS

2 Pairs,

1

PAIR FREE . The

No

in

lhe

area. Have slacks

house selling ... no mid·
dleman. Call us toll free (8001
421-2060, ext. 322. or write
Merle Norman Cosmetics,
LN-33, 9130 Bellanca Avenue,
L. A., Calif. 90056 .
2-8· lie

jeans for lhe
whole family .

&amp;

~

POMEROY
Jack w. car..y, Mgr.
Phone 992-2111

Project Number EDA·06 · 11·
01041

FURNISHED 4 rooms and
bath ; on highway edge of Mobile Homes For Sale
Mason ; phone 773-5147.
1-30-lotp 1967 ELCONA, 10x50. with
Separate sealed bids for The
expansion livil')g room; fully
Construction of a Fire Sta t ion
air -conditioned ;
phone
for The VIllage of Pomeroy ,
Ravenswood 273-9871.
Oh io will be received by, The Pets For Sale
VIllage of Pomeroy, Oh io at the
2·8·3tc
office of The Mavor, Mr . TROPICAL FISH at cut rate
Willi am G. Baron Ic k, unt 1I 12 pnces
· . Ma ny new varieties In ATTENTION ALL MOBILE
~ 'c 1ock noon , Easlern S.T., 2-19.
AI Showalter's Wet
HOME BUYERS! . Berry9 73 , and then at said office stock.
Pet. Chester. Ohio.
Miller Mobile Home Sales
p,u bllcly opened and read aloud .
2 8 Jt
have just received on their lot
' Tht Information for Bidders, -- -- - -- - ·-· P 6 repossessed Mobile Homes
Form of Bid , Form of Contract.
to be sold on a first come, first
Plans. Specifications , 1nd WEIMARANER puppies, AKC
Forms of Bid Bond , Perform registered; phone 742-6834, served basis . 1 ~ 70x14, 1972
ance and Payment Bond, and
Uberty, 3 bedroom Isold new
Rutland, 0 .
other contract documents may
$1&gt;064
- buy now for $7,200); 4
1-28-tfc
be eKan;'llned at the follow ing :
- 60x121ate models - as low
Harder &amp; Reed Architects,
as $4,000 ; 1 - 65x12. 2
673 High Street. Worthington, PARKVIEW Kennels going out
bedroom front den. extra nice
of
business.
Big
price
Ohio.
Mayor Barnoick ' s office.
reduction on all dogs. All AK· un it, save $1800 ; low down
Pomeroy, Ohio City Hall.
C. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash payment, bank rate tlnancing. So for your deal of a
Columbus
Builders
Ex ·
Streets,
Middleport, Ohio.
change , Columbus,. Ohio.
12-13-Hc lifetime, shop Berry-Miller
F . W. Dodge Corporation.
Mobile Home Sales, 705
Columbu~ , Ohio.
Farson Street. Belpre. Ohio,
~oples m~y be obtained at the
phone 423-9531.
olf1ce of Harder &amp; Reed Ar - For Sale
2-8-3tc'
chltects located et 673 High
Street, Worthington, Ohio upon 7 MONTH old trailer 14 x 70,
E LCONA mobile home,
payment of S25.00 for each set.
unfurnished, fully carpeted. 1972
Any unsucctsslu l bidder ,
12x60,
bedrooms, with ' or
Phone 992-7649 after 5 p.m. without 2furn
upon returning such set
iture . Phone , 367·
2·4-12tc 7743.
promptlY and In good condition,
will _be refunded his payment,
2-8-2tc
and any non ·bldder upon so (4) CLOSE OUT on 1972 full size
returning such a set will be
zig-zag sewing machines. For
,
refunded $15 .00, prov ided they
sewing
stretch
fabrics,
CASH
paid
for
all
makes
and
are returned In good condit ion
models of mobile homes.
buttonholes, f&amp;ncy designs,
within ten 00) days of bid date.
etc.
Paint
slightly
blemished.
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
The owner reserves the right·
4-13-tfc ,
lo waive any Informalities or to . Choice of carrying case or
retect onv or all bids.
.
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or,·-;::-:=========~
Each bidder must deposit
ferms available . Electro
with his bid, secur ity In the
Hygiene Co.. phone 992 -7755.
amount. form and subject to the
· .A ir Conditioners
·
2-7-6tc
conditions provided In the In •Awnings
formation for . Bidders .
··· ·Under • ·
Attention of bidders Is par· 121 ELECTROLUX Sweepers
.
. Ptnnt,ng
ticul1arly 1callted 1o .the "' deluxe model. Complete with
all cleaning attachments and : •
requ remen s as o cond 11
tons of
·
• i
uses paper bags. Slightly used ' !Complete ,mQblle hQme, , i
employm ent to be observed •nd
minimum wage rates to bt pafd
but cleans and looks like new. "ervlce ~ plus gigantic
under the contract .
Will ,.II for $37.25 cash or 'display of mobile homes .
No bidder may wlthd r.aw his
terms available . Electro :~lways avall~blo . at ...
bid with in 20 days after the
Hygiene Co., . phone 992-7755.
M
. ILLER
actual date of the opening
2·7-6tc
theroof .
Bv Order .of the Mayor ,
GA_R_A_G_E_SAL_E_a_n_
d -fu-rn-Iture, MOBILE HOMES
. Wd ll•m C. Boron lck, ~
V tllage of F'omeroy, Ohio
4641 S. Second St.. Mlddlef"rt,
1220 Washlng1on Blvd.
M~!Ch B. 1973
Feb. 7th and 8th.
423-7521
BELPRE 0.
IU 18, 25 (2) 1, 81 4tc
·
2·7·2fc . ·
' ·
Vlll1ge of Pomeroy, Ohio
Owner

------

r

FOR 'i\OMEN ...

C~A~GE FO~}

ot1 Ef.Tiv('

write to:

&amp;UR f AU

BEST BUY HOSIERY,
5225 Wilshire Blvd. No. 520
·Los Angeles, Calif. 90036
Giving your phone number.

lJ'L ABNER

.. ' I

AT LAST AH Kl)ol
PUT DOWN Tl-115
(GI?QAN.') ~-IDN

SA."'!!- HOW MANY
0' US STATCHOOS

iS ALIVE."'

BO&lt;..ILDE.R -

ROOANG AND
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE: 992·2550

and exter ior painting , con ·
crete work by hour or con ·

READY -MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to ·your
2·6·12tc. project. Fast and easy. Free
estimates, Phone 992-3284.
------Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC'
Middleport, Ohio.
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN6-30-tfc
ED, REPAIRED . MILLER
SANITATION , STEWART,
SEPTIC TANKS CLiiANED
OH 10. PHONE 662-3035.
REASONABLE
rates . Ph. 44610-4-lfc
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
: - - - : - - -- - Owner &amp; Operator.
WILL trim or cut trees. clean
5-12-tfc
out basements , attics. etc .
Phone 949-3221.
C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
2-4-JO!c
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
BACKHOE Services, llackhoe·
Racine. Ohio
and Dozer work. Septic tanks
Crltt Bradford
Installed. George (Bill) '
5·1-Hc
Pullins, phone 992-2478.
2·2 -tfc
.,--.,.,...,.----~­
SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
OIL AND GAS Service, new and
doors and windows, carports,
used furnaces. new aluminum
marquees. aluminum siding
siding and remodeling. 24
and rail ing . A. Jatob. sales
hour serv ice; phone 843-2833.
representative . For free
1-25-30tp
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle , Syracuse, V. . V.
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
Johnson and Son . Inc .
cancelled?
Lost
your
3-2-tfc
operator's license? Call 992·
...
2966.
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
6-15-lfc
Septic lanks lnslalled. George
I Bill) Pullins . Phone 992-2478.
4-25-tfc
tract ; phone 992-3511 .

Roadrunner.

1968 CHRYSLER Newport , 4
door sedan, power steering
and brakes, air -condit ion ing,
very good condition; good

tires; phone 992-5510.

Real Estate For Sale

2-4'6tc

ELNA and

HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
985-3529.
6- 11 -tt c

Real Estate For Sale

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

5 ROOM HOUS.E, 108 State
Street, Pomeroy, Phone 992·

White

-.

'77CKL.e '

~

BOGSV'-

601{~/

WINNIE WINKLE
WE'vE BEEN
®MY, YOU AND HAL
MARJ1N5 HAVE
CCIU'AINLY BEEN
13U5Y 61NCE' HE
GC1T" '10 iOWN .
WHAT ALL HAVE
'rOU 13EEN

DOING A LOr OF
INTEREfioTING
'TH IN6 5, IWI.

ONE. DAY WE. VISITED MU5EUM~;
DAY WE WENT ICE: SKATING-1 STILL
DAY WE. WENT '10 A
AN~ER

FREE MUN ICIPA l.
CONCERJ: ~

MY, MY. LOOK AT ALL
TH E. TH INo5 ONE
CAN DO WITHOUT
5PENDIN0 HARDLY
ANY MONEY
---~
AT Al.L .

UPlO?

Sewing

an

Machines ... service on
makes. Reasonlltble rates.

The . Sewing Center , Mid dleport, Ohio.
11-16-tfc

HOUSE FOR SALE. 114 Brick
Street. Pomeroy. Ohio; brick ·ooz!:"R 'and back hoe work,
house, 3 bedrooms. excellent
2-8-6tp
ponds and septic tanks, ditlocation. close to school and
ching serv ice ; top soil , fill
city ; contact Lou Osborne or ' dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex·
HOUSE, 5 rooms and bath ,
call 992-5898.
located Jn Rutland; priced for
ca vating . Phone 992 -5367.
11 -26-tfc
quick sale ; phone 742·3334.
Dick Karr, Jr .
2·1-6tc
9-1-Hc

------

rCLELAN~
REALTY
•olE. Moln·

'

acres

12

12 acres

acre

9

rooms .

5

bedrpoms. 1'12 baths. All new
kitchen. Hardwood floors,
basement, garage. Other
buildings.

large

bedrooms, bath, neat kltc:hen

with stove, utility room .
Over an acre of land. Only
$16,000.00.
4 BEDROOMS
POMEROY - 111, baths, .
large'llvlng, modern kitchen,
gas · furnace , and full
basement. Asking $12,500.00.
NAUSHA MOBILE HOME
2 BEDROOMS- B~fh , large
compact living . Dug well on
about an acre. On hard road.
Wanf $3,000.00.
BUILOING LOT
POMEROY - On R011te 33
and 7. All utilities. Just
$1500.00.
BUSINESS LOCATION
4 ROOMS - One with a holst •
for overhavtlng of motors, or

can be used as a paint shop.

,,.I

...11"'

33 ACRES
RUTLAND fenced.

house

COLONIAL
POMEROY - 2 story frame.
Beautiful kitchen. Dining R.. ,
utility R.. 4 bedrooms. 3
baths, basement. CLOSE IN .
$17,500.
RACINE
BEAUTIFUL LOCATION -

basement, back porch and
fenced lot. Now only $7500.00.
NEW HOME
NEAR ROUTE 7 - 3

m-m5

IT!
:_,,....,._,_
.

wir ing ;

welding,

electric and gas. Call 992 -3802
or after 4: 30 p.m. call 992·
6050.
'
2·5-3otp
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service. all makes. 992-228-4.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfc

water. $14,500.

MIDDLEPORT
4 BEDROOMS- Nice bath,

TODAY ANYTHING
WORTH HAltiNG COSTS
MONEY. LAND SHOULD
BE YOUR BEST IN·
VESTMENT. BUY IT
TODAY.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS

1

~

furnace
. paneling,
breezeway,
cellar . enclosed
Lots of

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

~A60UT

G &amp; E Appliance Repair . repair
on all laundry equipment,
refrigeration equipment and

tillable. 3 bedrooms. new
bath, new kitch en, new

.85

home,
large. wood
burning with
fireplace
Only
$25,000.00.
3ACRES
IN THE COUNTRY - Small
barn, 3 Cedrooms with
closets and 2 baths. Cellar
and drilled well. 3 porches.
Only $10,500.00.
8ACRES
ON HARD ROAD- Good for
small farm . housing. or
mobile homes. Asking
$4500.00.

• Pomel'9y ·

NEAR

110 Mechanic Street

Also a . 3 bedroom modern

I:S~'T MAR~~v

:--=~---

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

furnace,

1He ~ c.;Gt:;~ 11-11~ lllE
aD SAT 61J!;R 1Rir::D lD CO
FCJF. WJ;, AIJD ! DIDN'T eleiJ

~U.,/J.NJ.I&gt;.lOW

3834.

stoker

HER ~H FOR
IDENTil'/. -GIVE
HeR 11-IE CHECK.

ABOUT EQt.iALI1Y

COLLECT : (2131 938-3823 or

experience In building
homes in Motgs County.
·

WILL DO remodeling, interior

SHARP

SAY, W~ATS T~ l S
E)(TRA TEN OOLLAR

ALL WEATHER

BOB SLOAN

Auto Sales

Invest S2,4,. or S4,999 fully ,
secur·ed by merchandise.
For full lnformallon !(:Ill

LETS NOr OFfEN!7

U:T M6 1ELL 'lOLl
A 11-11~ ~ 1\1.0

Have your home buill by

and

·

INCOME.

Custom
Builders.
Our
carpenters have 21t years

HOME BUILDING
&amp;
REMODELING

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Court St.

stereo console; must sell at
once; nice walnut finish . This

CEPTIONAL

...

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

-------

DUE to divorce , 1972 8 track

No selling, accts. furnished.
Part-full
tltne .
EX-

SMJnt NELSON
MOTORS, _IPomeroy
NC. _
1'11. 991-2174

Pomeroy.Home &amp; Auto

The
Daily·Sentinel

4-12-tfc . L:,_ _ _ _ _Pomeroy
__..:_~_J

PANTY HOSE

From the , largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core . ..
• Nathan Biggs •
R~i~_~or Speciati~t ...

Virgil B.

6,078.44

Total Beginning Balance

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

-=========:.._.;

I, 139.20

13,627.00

GUARANTEED
NI)T TO RUN

o.

Guoline Tax Fund
Bl!lance , Jan . 1, 1972
1,714.16
Receipts
Gasoline Tax
13,627.00

Total ReceipiS

beautiful ... super sheer

2·7· 31 P broideries, overtasts , but- 4 BEDROM home, 2 balhs, gas
992.2448
furnace, full basement, river
Pomeroy,
_2 _ B_E_D_R_O_O_M_ -mob- ,-,e- h-ome; ton holes . Pay balance $36.50
frontage , Syracuse, Ohio,
L'::-::-::-:-::-:-:-:-:-~-:-':":7-""-=d completely furnished ; call or
Callpayments
992-5331.can be arranged .
Phone 992·2360.
HOOD'S AQUARIUM·S-i fish
9'12-2441 after 5:30p.m.
1-25-tfc
·
1.16.tfc
and supplies; new location,
2-7-lfc - - -- - - -- Ash Street, Middleport near
MASON, West Virginia business
SMALL trail er. Ideal for -COAL. Limestone, Excelsior
park; phone 992-5443.
building or auto repair ,
1·7-tfc . couples; $75 per month; 10 Sail Work.s , E. Main St. ,
garage, Two apartments
-:-:= -:--:--:---c-:---cmiles North of Pomeroy;
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
above 38 x 70 feet; lot 40 x 195
I WILL do bookkeeping and
phone 992-7479.
4-12-tfc
feet. Call 773-5611 day time,
992-6159 evenings
and
clerlc:ol
work In my home ; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2_-2-lfc f=]~~~~~iiiiil
phone 742-6085.
weekends .
·
2·2·6tc DEAL
2-4-6tc
DIRECT
WITH
COSMETIC MANUFAC·
GIVE your feet a treat; try a
r
..
··
TURER.
BE
IN·
pair of Knapp Shoes ; call Bob
DE
PEN
DE
NT!
Merle
Hysell. 992-5324.
AND JEANS
Norman Cosmetics Is offering
1·23-tfc
a rewarding opportunity In
Our Special:
Middleport. Open your own

Total E»ependitures Plus

Bal., Doc . 31 , 1972

EXPERT

professional people to sell the
finest oftlce equipment CONTEMPORARY Modern
plu s Walnut style stereo, radio,
available . Salary
comm ission . Expenses paid .
AM-FM, 4 speaker sound

LOSE wel~ht with "New Shape
have the right person . Send
our budget terms . Call 992·
Tablets. ' 10 day supply only
picture and resume to Mrs .
7085.
Sl.49 at Nelson Drug,
McGee, Box 727, Marietta, 0. 2-8-6tc
Pomeroy, and Dutton Drug.
2·6·61c
..::,_
Middleport .
2-7-3tc BAR Maid, apply In person, HI · TWO and one -half acreage In
Totals
. S.I)S.OI
Flatwoods area. Call 742-3171.
Total Receipts
Ho Bar, Middleport; equal
Sale,
Coats
2·4-6tc
General Fund
6,178 .67 RUMMAGE
opportun lty employer .
Building, Middleport, Feb.
Motor Vehi cle license
2-6-3tc
8th and 9th.
Tax Fund
5,032.03
- - - - - ~------i
Gasoline Tax Fund
13,627 .00
2-7-2tp -WANTED
housewives to test
Road and Bridge Fund 1,964..45 - - - -new products; send reply to
Cemetery Fund
2,891.10 COUNTRY Musi c, Saturday
P. 0. Boli 729-H, C·O The Daily
Totals
28,693 .25
night; Music by Guy Thoma,
Total Receipts- Balances
Sentinel,
Pomeroy. Ohio.
36"x2J"x.009
Dale Snyder and Tobe Young ;
6,207 .37
General Fund
2·6-Jtc
9 till 2; at Jack's Club.
Motor Veh icle Li cense
2·7-3tc
Tax Fund
6,078 .44
GasollneTaK Fund
15,341 .16
GIRL wanted for local office
Road and Bridge Fund 2,393.33 SEARCH for descendants ot
work .
Knowledge
of
Cemetery Fund
4,847 .96
John and Nellie Douglas for
bookkeeping and office
Totals
34,868 .26
geneologlcal purposes; early
machines helpful. Reply to
USED OFFSET PLATES
E xpendltures
settlers
of Me1gs County.
Box 729-N, -c-o· The Daily
HAVE
General Fund
3,977.39
Write: Mrs. 0 . D. Lltsch, 6506 Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Motor Vehicl e License
MANY USES
Auburn Road, Utica, Mich.
4,939 .24
l-26-121p
Tax Fund
Gasoline Tax Fund
13,913.92
48087.
Road and Bridge Fund 1,.450.98
2-7-3tp
Cemetery Fund
1.985.80
For Rent
8 for $1.00
TotalS
26.261.33
UNFURNISHED 3-room
Balance Dec . 31,1972
apartment, adults only. No
General Fund
2,229.98

Motor Vehic le L icense
Tu Fund
1,1 38.20
Gasoline Ta x Fund
1,427 .24
Road and Bridge Fund
9o42.3S
Cemetery Fund
2,862.16
Rev enue Fund 14
3,439.00
'Totals
12,038.93
CASH BALANCE ,

·AFFILIATE DISTRIBUTOR

On Most American Cars

$8~.

Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992-

to be correc t

. I

Slt)IGER automati c sewing

1971 - 2 HORSE Spartan XL
Trailer; walk thru ; fiberglas
OLD turnlture, oak table&gt;. dome, walk-up ramp . Phone

LEGAL NOTICE

;. Card of Thanks

. In Memory

------

l

rt-.,.,_.:·'

Wanted To Buy

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

8: 30a .m. to· 5:00p.m. Daily, .
8: 30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
: Saturday.

:

S450

6 &lt;{IInder, automatic transmission, radio, good tires, runs

CARD OF THANKS '
&amp; OBITUARY ,

· Addltional . 25c
. Advertisemen t.

WMP0/1390

!!

WH OSE HENHOUSE
DID HE . KETCH
'IOU IN 'i'

Business Services·

Starcraft Sales, Rt. 62 N. of
Point Pleasant, W. Va ..
behind Red carpet Inn. Phone
304-675,5384.
2-4-5tc

Wanted

1969 CHEVROLET NOVA WAGON

.

Trailers- and fold down
campers . Camp Conley

good tires. clean vinyl Interior, green finish, 1-owner, new

car trade-ln .

,. secutlve Insertions. ·

.

1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA
$1895
Stat ion wagon, local owned &amp; dean inside &amp; out. V-8

'

WINTER prices on all Startraft

1

brakes, luggage rack , green vinyl Interior with white
linish. Radio and all the extras.

RATES

r

We talk to you
like ·a'person.

engine, automatic transmission, power steering, power

insert ion .

·•

Q\· 2 SIGNS Pomeroy
~ au::n, ii!IIIIIIIM.ot.o.r_co_._

For Sale

.PA

'IE GOT ENN'IBOOY
INTH'JAILHOUSE
I COU~D CHEER UP,
SHE.RIFF?
'

'

MANY OTHER HOMES TO
CHOOSE FROM - CALL
TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
3 ASSOCIATES
TO HELP YOU
992-2259
If no answer
992-2568or 985-4209

Used Bargains
Good Merchandise
USE040" HOT POINT
ELECTRIC RANGE

75.00
USED HOTPOINT
ELECTRIC DRYER

50.00
3- PC. FRUITWOOD
BEDROOM .S UITE

150.00

Ingels FumHure
992-2635

Middleport

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1. Entente
5. Axmin·
ster, for
example
11. Canyon
mouth
12. Threatener's

phrase
(2 wds.)
13. Hima·
layan
broad·
mouth
H . Comfort
15. Not
working
16. That
chap 's
17. Kind of
nap
18. Warehouse
facility
ZO. Nether·
lands
commune

For Sale By Owner
Completely modernized 10-room
house, two full baths, all built-in kitchen_. 1st floor wa 11-to-wa II carpets,
gas central heat. On _two town lots in
goo~ Mi,ddleport neighborhood. Own~r
.leavmg town. See by appointment ~Y
calling 992-3486.

~I ..====================-~VALUABLE FARM LAND
FOR SALE ~
WASHINGTON COUNTY
840 Acres in 17 parcels along State Route 7 and
Ohio River between Marietta and Newport.

MONROE COUNTY
340 Acres In 7 parcels along State Route 7 and
· ' Ohio River north of Sardis, Ohio.
Ca II or Write :
E. H. Doughty
Hanna Coal Company
C.dlz, Ohio 43907
Telephone (614) 942-4641

Yeaterday's CryploQaole; WHO BUILDS NO CASTLES IN ,
THE AIR, BUILDS NO CASTLES ANYWHERE.-ANON.

37. Cruising
38. Simba as
a youth
39. Pursuit
40. American
41. Architectural pier
DOWN
I. Greek
island
2. Direction
on ship
3. era.ethc
impos·
slble
(4wds. )
4. Chinese
pagoda
5. Endorse,
as for a
loan
6. Ascended
7. Electrical
unit

8. One's

rightful
position
(4 wds.)

'(0 lf71 Klnr Ptatum S7ndloato, !no.)

·

c1JtlJMJ])M;""" !::::!!:!.....,c :
Uverambleu-laurJumbl..,
letter lo eoch llqUilft, lo
form four ordinary words.
Yesterday's Answer
9. P.O.W.
on
the loose
10. Wobbling
16. Filament"
19. Constru c1
22. "Sur
Le

d'Avig-

non"

23. The
hackneyed
way

24. Girl's

,.,

name
meaning
golden
25. Repast
27 ..Cross
'out
29. Friction
match
30. Happen·
ing
31. Lariat
36. Sign a
contract
37. Well now !

21. Harness
strap
22. Break·
water
23.. Soviet
republic
25. Kind of
belt
26. German

I (

III

~~ETACE ~
() j
IERTOPY~

I I

)

II
I

Jf~w .,...,..

tp cln:ltd lotion

lo r..... lhellli!lrise .......... u

~:=::~=.:';~::::::=~lllfllllld~~ bJ the aboYe can-.
1~....--...:.;=II::.:B:z:L=·=·=·~-~_.J'

....

river

27. Hollow
28. Anger
29. The white

one means

cowardice
32. Egyptian
solar
deity
33. Aesir
member
34. Night '
before
35. Kay
Thomp-

son's
brainchild

DAILY CRYI'TOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

W~AT

DOES

R,q,V,p,
AXYDLBAAXR
MEAN.
~I R ?
Ia LONGFELLOW
cine leiter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L'l, X for the two O's, etc. Slncle letters.
apostrophes, the lencth and formetlon of the words are all
11inls. Each day the code letters are dlllerenl.
·
CRYP'f()qUOTES

EV VSAXU ' VHN KXG VN KSAX NGX
CONVZXO.-EUOSXJ YSGFHEJJ

[1 I I t]

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., F~b. 8, 1973

B.ne
• s

__ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
· 7\
~
l.eiten of !IPlDIOb are welcomed. They aboald be leu
I
1
I
IbiD
3110
wordllOII
(.,be
aubje~tto
reducUoa
by
lbe
1
'
•
I editor)· ad mDII be alped wtlb lbe ojpeo'a ad~•· I
(Continued from Page I)
I Namea may be wllbbeld upc111 publlcallilll. However, 011 . I
WASIUNGTON - THE SENATE HAS voted to spend I reqaeat, names wDJ be dllcloaed.l.eilen llhould be lD iood 1
·. $500,000 on a formal investigation of charges RepubUcan party I . taate, addreu1DIII111ea, aol penODIIllles.

T
•
,ews
• • In

I

functionaries conducted political espionage and sabotage against
the Democrats in last year's presidentlal campaign.
A special conunlttee of four Democrats and .three
RepubliCans to conduct the probe was created in a 7741 Senate
vote late Wednesday. The Republicans lost a battle for equal
membership on the conunlttee, and took an "it r.emains to be
seen" attitude toward whether lbe inquiry would be fair.

I · · Hilda

I

' £)

I J(/.ea.t:Fd//Dt
IJIIL
•
I1 •••''Ill•
,•
1

d
Missing daughter wante

WASHINGTON..,. THE ctrrBACK in federal spendiJJg asked
by President Nixon will reduce the Job Corps from 23,500

enrolees to 16,000, a Labor Department official has told
Congress. Paul Fasser, a Labor Department deputy assistant
secretary for manpower, reported to a congressional hearing
Wednesday that Nixon's197i budget provides f125 million !or the
Jobs Corps, compared to lbe' current f184 million.
. Fasser said several training centers around !be nation would
have to be cl• . He gave no figures, but other sources said
officials were considering closing 36 of the 73 centers. ;rtte Job
Cof'PS is a major antipoverty program that tralna young persons
for work.
.

.

Richard L. Bearhs Sr., dies
Richard L. Bearhs, Sr., 66,
Pomeroy Route 3, died
Thursday
at Veterans
Memorlal Hospital.
A member of the Chester
Cburch of God, Mr. Bearha was
preceded in death by his
parents, Wl111am L. and
Abagall Davis Bearhs, and a
sister, Agnes Bearhs.
Surviving are his wife, Edna
Wolfe Bearhs; a son, Richard
Lowell Bearhs, Jr., Pomeroy
Route!!; three daughters, Mrs.
HOward R. Hartman, Lebanon,
Pa.; Mrs. Nathan E. Arnold,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. George R.
Muth, Myerstown, Pa.; three
staters, Mrs. Dane Highman,

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, February a
NOT OPEN
Friday thru Tuesday
February 9·13
Walt Disney's
SNOWBALL EXPRESS
(Technicolor)
Dean Jones, Nancy Olsen,
HarrY

Wynn,

Morgan, Keenan
Kathtee.n Cody .

!G)
THE MAGIC OF
WALT DISNEY WORLD
!Technlcolor) Steve Forrest Narrates
(G)

Admission:
Adults 51.50
Children 75c
Show Starts 7 p.m.

Valparaiso, Ind.; Mrs. Samuel
Lees, Burbank, lll., and Mrs:
Virgil Britton, Hamilton,
Mich., and eight grand·
children.
Funeral services will be held
at 3 p. m. Saturday at lbe
Cbester (burch of God with
burial io be in the Mount
· Hermon Cemetery. Friends
may can at the Ewing Funeral
Home anytime.

I

'•

Claud W. Roy

Auto

died Thursday

MRS. KOBLENTZ DIES
The Pomeroy emergency
squad was called to the David
Koblent:! home on Route 7 near
Chester at 11:12 p. m. Wed·
nesday for Mrs. Koblenlz who
was dead upon the squad's
arrival. The body was taken to
the Ewing Funeral Home ·
where arrangements are being
made.

BEnER
VALUES

..

·
McGinnis• Mrs. Roger ,Fink
Marie Koblentz,
Koblentz, Pomeroy, Rt · 3· ·
li
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, died at home . Mrs. Koblenlz was a m~ber and son, Stephen · Paug •
late WedneSday night.
o( · the Chester Untied 'Pamela ·Hurlow; Meredith
Mrs. Koblentz Is survived by Methodist Church, Chester Childers, Chester Stewart, Jr.,
her husband, David; a son, Grange,
Daughters of Mattie Sheline, Janet CrabRichard David, Columbus; a America, Fann Bureau and tree, EsUalemi Hughes, Mrs.
I daugbter, Mrs. PatLynn Wolf, the .~ester Fire Departm~t Larry Kendel and daughter.,
1 Pomeroy, Rt. 3; a grand- Auxilllll'y.
Mary Salyers, LOri Skidmore,
1 daugbter, Susan ~nee Wolf; Funeral services will be ~ld Walter Ferrell, Alva Boggs,
1 her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Saturday at 1 p. m. ~~ ~wmg Larry Hardesty, Rena Fife,
4 George Genheimer, Long .Funeral HOme. Burail will be Betsy Weaver, Rita Roush,
Bottom, Rt. 1; a sister, Mrs. in Chester Cemetery. Friends Marilyn Perch, Ralph Miller,
Betty Lou Dean, Pomeroy, Rt. may call at the funeral home Mrs. Tlmolby Michael and 'son,
Feb. 6, 1973 3, and her father-in-law, Pearl anytime.
Margaret Long, Lee L!&gt;ng,

Dear Editor:
I km writing to you in hopes you may prini my letter, which
in tum may just help us concerning our missing daughter.
We don't know who else to turn to. OUr daughter ran away
from home on Sept. 22 and no word at all from her or about her.
We feel she is too scared to call home so we are trying to gel a
plea out to her.
If she's still in or around Meigs County, she may see or hear
about our plea to her and will get the courage to call home.
This is our plea to our daugher, Peggy Aleshire, wherever
you are. We beg you to please call home (collect) and let us hear
from you. We love you and want you back horne with us. If
anyone knows the whereabouts of Peggy, please call this . ~um­
ber, 992-6470. We'd be very grateful to you.
,- ~
Very worried and desperate parents,
i.r. and Mrs. Erne! R. Aleshire, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, Ohto.

RACINE - Claud W.
(Hopper) Roy, 72, Racine, died
at his home Thursday morning.
Mr. Roy was preceded in dealh
W'.YU:TC' ww~~:&amp;&amp;S by his parents, George and
Martha Hall Roy; two sons,
Pete and Jimmy, and a sister,
SMOKING COSTLIER
Cigarette prices are going Katie Adams.
Surviving are his wife, Marie
up, but likely will have lillie .
Myers Roy; two sons, Clarence
ellecl on consumption.
andjlobo(Ral!ine; a.datJ8hter,
Price hikes announced by
Mrs. Robei't (Betty) Pooler,
lour major manufacturers iD
the last four days likely will .Middleport; five grandraise prices to consumers by children; several niecys and
nephews·; four sisters, Mrs.
a penny or more a pack at
Mabel Roush, Racine; Mrs.
ths supermarket and
Berlba Roush, Colunibus; Mrs.
perhaps as much as an extra
Rena Clark, Columbus, and
nickel a pack at vending
Mrs.
Jennie
Shields, .
machlues. Smokers now pay
Cleveland.
from less lban 35 cents per
Mr. Roy was a member of
pack lu Soulbem tobacco
the United Mine Workers of
states to as much as 70 centa
America.
In New York.
Funeral services will be
"I'll just pay more and Sunday at I p. m. at Ewing
keep smoking, probably
Funeral Home with the Rev.
more," said Shena HamHoward Shiveley officiating.
mers, a Sealtle cocktail
Burial will be in Greenwood
wallress.
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime.

"IT'S TRUE"---

d
Holzer Medical Ce!lter
Hilda Koblentz died·Wednes ay . DISCHARGED - Leah

(Continued from Page I)
dustry will be in trouble.
''At the moment we're all
right butit ifisthegoing
striketo iScause
pro·
longed
problems at this location
(Akron)," he said. "There is no
questionaboutit.Ifitgoesona
week or more we are goiJJg to
have •er1·0 us problems.
"'
"We'lltry goiJJg to trucks but
theneverybody else is going to
want trucks too," said
Dema

f~r

As;esman Hanna Coal
Co. said Penn Central serviced
Its Georgetown operation in
eastern Ohio and both Penn
Central and Norfolk &amp;Western
serviced the Piney Creek operation.
"We can work the rest of the
week by stocking coal at
Georgetown," the spokesman
said. "At Piney Creek we can
work lbe rest of the week and
possibly a few days next
week."

_

A strike against the Penn
Central Railroad by the United
Transportation Union today
will have a ''major effect" on
Ohio's auto industry by tonight
and will also severely affect
the state's steel and rubber
industry within a week.

Landlords',
tenants'

Wearing apparel for your family and furnishings for your ho'!'eThis week end Friday and Saturday, Elberfelds are open unttl 9
P.M. Take advantage of the sale prices all over the store- And see
the many new arrivals on all 3 floors and at the warehouse on
Mechanic Street.

DEVON COORDINATES
Sweaters· Blazers - Vests - Print Shirts· Skirts ·
Sweater Sets - Flare or Straight leg Pants.
Choose Sunset Coral or Periwinkle Blue in sizes 8
to 18.

One group of 18 occasional tables, end tables, hex .
tables, cocktail tables. Walnut • oak - maple marble top.

Y2 price
V'ISit Bberfelds
Warehouse
on··-

PANTS

Mechanic Street in Pomeroy

Sale
group
seersucker
Blazers and flare
pants.of polyester.
Selected from our regular stock . Preteen (Young
8·14.
·womens Wi!!ter

SPORTSWEAR
COATS and
DRESSES

Save over ,12 on this
group of womens
winter apparel.

Sale Prices

Girls SJeepwear
Save now on girls 4 to 14
and 2 to 4 Toddler Winter
G
SleepweaRr. be P
owns .

0

s-

ajamas.

¥2 priCe

•See the new Magic Chef Gas Ranges and Electric
Ranges.
IThe Whirlpool Washers and Dryers
d F - the
Whirlpool Refrigerators an
reezers Humidifiers - Dehumidifiers.
•Youngstown Kitchen Sinks · Whirlpool Trash·
mashers • Hoover Washers· Dryers.
•Wall Cabinets. Kitchen Cabinets. Wardrobes.
White and popular finishes.
I The new Carpets iti 12 and 15 ft. widths. Armstrong and Congoleum Floor Coverings in 2
d 'd a· h"
yd. wide, 3 yd. wide or 4 Y • WI e. tg s tpment of Room Size Rugs.
•Visit Elberfelds Warehouse- Plenty of parking
space on Mechanic Street in Pomeroy.

l---~~-·--·--~. . . .-~-·-·---~-~-~"i---~----:--=-::-::~~:::~':"----'1
Famous Maker

CHILDRENS WEAR SALE
Our entire stock of fall and winter styles
of this well-known quality brand of
Childrens Playwear is reduced for this
sale.

LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS-LONG P~NTS
Sizes 2 to 6x

Februa1rv Sale. ..,
Large selection of Knee Hole.
and Roll ,
Top Desks.
Finishes in maple, walnut and pecan. Furniture
- 3rd floor.
Savel During our

Sale of

BABY CRIBS AND MATTRESSES

Womens

All Weather Coat Sale
Our entire stock of womens Spring all -weather
coats is reduced for this sale.
Misses and Half Sizes
Choose 100 percent polyester or blended fabrics.

Mens $29.95 Values

SPORT COATS

Sale •19.90

BAKER

Select Ironing Bqord Covers ~ ~or f.!\11 Pfd $•ts · MiHr.tSs
Covers . Pillow Covers . MaHr.Sf,
A complete iolocllon of lh111 houttholl' nocossltles for
everyday use - plus zippered pillow covers In licking ·
pintle pillow covers.

11•"'·

"Restful"

(Irregular)
An unusually good 65
percent Polyester - 35
percent Collon Sheet
Blanket. Large 80x90 size.
Stitched and Polyester
Binding ends . Beautiful
pastel colors and white,

.

Special!_

SHEET
BLANKETS

BATES
BEDSPREADS
Regular 539 .50 George
Washington Spreads.
!Slight Irregular). Full size
In White and Antique
White.

$2.79

SPORT .BELTS

·=

$18.88

and ''THAT BUNCH"
Of Nashville, Tenn.
Dick Hawkins- " Mr. t'ersonallly"
(Son of Hawkshaw Hawkins)
One of Nashville's Greatest

They Play It AllThe Sweet and

BEDSPREADS

•2.50

FLANNEL
SHIRTS

It's Special
Live Entertainment

THE

MEIGS INN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992·3629

Tube Socks

BED SHEETS

$2.95

:::!!:~rto;;ur:,
and give public employes a
· limited' right to strike, plus
collective bargaining
procedares.
- Increase unettfployment
conipensation benefits and ex-

=~~~~erage to Great Lakes
NOT DISMISSED
A report made recently of a
divorce being dismissed by
Carolyn Shrimplin from Gale
F. Shrimplin 1 Jr., was in error.
It was a dismissal of an action
lo redUce alimony payments
instead.

WRANGLER JEANS
Sizes 29 to 42 waist . Select your correct length .
14oz. plus sanforlzed blue denim . Flare legs· fits
easily over boots.
Stop in now. Select your proper size.
F ina I

Sale

Mens and Boys Sweaters

Stop in the Mens and Boys Department. 1st floor
- Special sale prices Friday and Saturday on
boys sweaters · mens sweaters and sweater

Sale! RCA OJior Television Sets
Rig~t now in the Ml!slc Department on the 2nd
floo~- there are some e).(cellent buys In RCA 25
inch diagonal measure screen size console TV
sets - RCA color Portable TV's • Black and
White Portables and RCA Console Stereos with
bulll· in 8 track tape players. We ·Jn'vlte you to see
these fine values and select the set you think best
.for you. Use our own sensible credit. service to ,
budget your payments. .
·
, ··

BE THRIFTY! SAVE ALL OF YOUR SALULIPS FROM

LIE

Firemen upgrade
skill, technique
.Thirteen Middleport firemen
received certificates lor
completing 36 hours of in·
slruction in fire fighting skills
and techniques Thursday night
at the new Middleport fire
station.
Individual cards were
presented to each man completing the training and a
department certificate was
presented to Middleport Fire
Chief Bob Byer by Pomeroy
Fire Chief Charles Legar, the
instructor.
The Instruction program was
authorized and made available
by the Trade and Industrial
Vocational Education Service
of the State Department of
Education in cooperation with
the Meigs Local School
District.
Chief Legar praised mem.. . __ _

Maple . Walnut . Pine and While Cribs with
Kantwet or Serta Waterproof Mattresses.
'
Furniture Department • 3rd floor.

ON THE lit FLOOR

N

•

FIRI mlrl'ER8 OOIIPLETE COURSI!: ._ ·l'llmtroy
Fir, Odef Charlee !A!gar, left, preaenta Middleport Fire
Ode! Bob E. Byer a certificate for completioo of 36 hours of
lnatructloo In· fire ftghtillg skills by 13 Middleport firemen.
Atten~ the presentation Thursday night were, I to r from
Byer are C. Rober! Fisher, Raymond Kloes, Tom Darst,
Kevin DaUey, David Zirkle and Carol Mowery, some of the
men who COIIlpleted the course.

SALE I TABLES ._. .

,

Just Arrived

Now Going On - 20% Off Sale
Sale •29.oo CUSTOM-MADE DRAPERIES

DICK HAWKINS

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Viet Cong and ·North Vietnam
have agreed to rel~ase an
'I!Siimated 142 prisoners of war
Sunday, ~he Pentagon said
today . .
.
A, Defense Department
w.
spokesman,
Jerry
Friedheim, said the word was
given to U.S. officials tod;ly at
a meeting of the four.party
Joint Military Commission in
Siagon.
Friedheim said some of those
to ·be released in North Viet-

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

rights fixed

SATURDAY NIGHT
10:00 TIL 2

142 POWs freed

r

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E·R squad
transpoded Nancy Dobbins,
Sizes 36 to 46 in shorts, regulars and longs. Select
COLUMBUS (UP!) ~ A
Middleport, to Veterans
corduroy · worsted and dacron blend or 100
Memorial Hospital at 4:30 p. comprehensive bill selling
Drapery Dept.
percent worsted wools.
m.Wednesday for treatment of forth a strict set of rights and
Also Mens 39.95 Double Knit Sport Coats
obligations for landlords and
a lacerated ankle.
tenants was introduced
Sale •19.90
Wednesday by Rep. Leonard
Mens 29.95 All Weather Coats with zip·ouf lining .
Camera, 0-Lorain.
NOW YOU KNOW
Camera said the bill was to
Boys 19.95 Sport Coats - corduroy and double
FURNITURE
The total weight of the first simplify, clarify and moder·
knits.
Sale '14.90 . Bring In your measurements - Oloose from
aircraft flown by the Wright nize the laws governing rental
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
hundreds of samples. We will have your new
brothers at Kitty Hawk was of dwelling units, to encourage
draperies
ready to en joy within two weeks.
Another Shipment
only 750 pounds.
maintenance
and
Improvements in such units, and
Mens and Yo~ng Mens
~~~~~~~~~~~&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ to corumm Ohio wllb other
"Chapel Hil
states
in
landlord-tenant
laws.
Make your reservaiion early
The bill forbids landlords to
fer this repeat performance.
Popular wide width belts in white A heavy weight woven cotton spread .
harass tenants, sets forth rebrown - black - maroon - tan.
quirements for eviction
Knotted Fringe
proceedings, requires land·
Machine Washable
lords to keep up the premises
No Ironing
Mens and young mens l'h inch width reversible
and protects landlords from
Preshrunk
belts.
tenant-caused damages.
White - Gold · Avocado · Antique White.
Rep. James P. Celebrezze,
Sale '1.75
TWIN and FULL • - • · • - • - - • - - 13.95
D-Cleveland introduced bill 1--·--------'"T"-------~....., QUEEN SIZE
· · - • - - - - - - 18.95
to allow tenants to seek
Boys Permanent Press
Young Mens
KING SIZE · · - - : · · · · - - · · - 21.95
You Like It!
recovery throtJ8h the courts of
any.security deposit, plus 6 per
Se!! the Fine New Selection
cent interest, which the landlord refuses to repay.
The sock without • heel Other bills introduced
fits sizes 10·15. While with
CANNON ROYAL FAMILY
Sizes 10 through 18.
color lop ol orange · kelly
Wednesday in the General
green -maroon - Royal blue
Two pockets - colorful
Assembly would;
· red · navy blue .
!plaid patterns.
- Require registration of
auto repair dealers and set up a
Also Boys Tube Socks · fust
All are no·lron sheets. A big selection Including
like the young mens. One
board of inquiry.
twin bed size · fitted or flat sheets · full bed size
size fits all sizes 9 thru 11 .
- Provide for an aMual budfitted or flat plus King and Queen size sheets.
get for the state of Ohio.
1-----~---.«---·--·-·-~~~--'1 Solid colors · white and patterns In an excellent
-Set up an Ohio Labor Re·
Mens and Young Mens
color selection.

*

'

· John Hill, Vernon Grumbling,
Margaret Good, Rowena
Garten and 'l)mothy Drum'
field.
BIRTIIS - Mrs. Oougla~
Pabst; Jackson, a . daughter,
and Mrs. Paul Albright,
Millberry, a daughter.
Veterans.Memortal Hospital
DISCHARGED - Sylvia
Zwilling, Gail Miller, Joe
Lantz, Everett Thomas, Elriler
'Norvell, David KleiJJ, Claude
Roy, A'Pril Naptier, William
Qulvey, Randy Chaffin and Iva
Singer.

.

bers of the class for their
community spirit In Improving
their efficiency in fighting
fires. He commended ·the men
also for their interest in the
training and for the
cooperation he received. He
pointed out that many community fire departments are
requesting training and ·that
interest in fire prevention and
protection is growing in Ohio.
Men ~uccessfully completing
the course were Bob E. Byer,
Terry L. Beechler, Kevin
Dailey, James Daniels, Tom
Darst, "Frank Epple, C. Robert
Fisher, Kenneth Imboden,
Raymond (Pete) Klees,
Russell Mills, Cerol Mowery,
Charles Wayland, and David
Zirkle of Middleport, and
Harold Norton of the Pomeroy
Department.

~:~t/.:::::::::mwu·····_n

···

~~~tx:

ews•• rn Brzefs:
By Ualted PrtaaiDlel'lllllolllll
'
WASHINGTON .- SECRETARY OF STATE William P.
Rogera ~~ uwted Con~aa will have IQ play-a key role II the
United Statea Is to make "an inveatment In peace" by participating In lbe reconstruciloo and rehabllltatlon of Indochina.
"We will conault with Congreu quite cloeely," Rogers aald In an
appearance Thursday before the House Foreign Affairs Committee. "~lie obviously, we can't do thla without congressional
support."
But It was evident at the hearing there is congressional
opposition to the reconstruction program. Rep. Benjamin.
Rol!enlbal, O.N.Y., told Rogers he would find It hard to vote for
aid to either Hanoi or Saigon when the administration had
cancelled 100 significant domestic programs.

ANDREWS, IND. - WHEN 11IE HOME office of the Norfolk
a. Western railroad refused a collect call from town Marshal Ed
Bigelow he said ''to hell wtth you." It might have been cheaper II
lbey hsd accepted the call, because Bigelow was trying to tell
them there IJIIS a broken raU on their tracks in tbe downtown area
of Ibis small commwtity. ;\bout 30 minutes later, 20 cars of a 75car N&amp;W freight derailed a short distance from where Bigelow
said the rail was.
When he was rebuffed in efforts to tell railroad officials of the
damaged track section "I just said 'to hell with you' and hung
up," Bigelow said. "When they won't take advice, I just quit."
Blgelowrelatedhehadtried to warn N&amp;WoHiclals about the bad
section of track by f811lng the home office at Roanoke, Va. He
sal!HheyrefusedtoaccepthlscaU collect. Railroad officlals said
the accident was belleved caused by a faulty wheelliearing, but
Bigelow said he noticed bolts missing from a rail joint.
COLUMBUS - A TEMPORARY 11-MEMIIER candidate
recruiting conunlitee has been established by the Republican
State Committee to seek quallfied and popular candidates for
sta.tewlde office in 1974.
·
The conunlttee, nsmed Thursday, may be expanded when
the slate Republican organization meets In March. Officials left
open the poaslblllty Republicans who are not members of lbe t6member lltate committee may be !lamed next month to the
IICI'eeniJJg conunlttee. The newly formed panel is ~ first of Ita
type to be used by the party, according to Republican State
Cbalrman John S. Andrews.
·
'
·
ALAMEDA, CALIF.- A NAVY JET FIGIITEII experienced
-' Into a threeradio trouble before It swept into Ita deadly 'dive
ttlory apartment house, a Navy investigating officer said today.
. Dlaasler crews Thursday recovered the bodies of eight persons,
IDcludlng those of three children and apparently lbat of the pilot,
Lt. Robert L. Ward, lA!moore Naval Air Station, Calif.
Authorities said thi.t 11 oth·.ll' residents of the apartment were
unaccounted for. The search contlt\ued today.
The Navy investigator said that the last transmlasion from
(Con~nued on page 12)

Vandals blamed
A power outage of 13 hours
duration affecting a part Or
Meigs County east of US Rt. 33
Thursday was blamed on
vandalism. ·
·
John Allen, district manager
of the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Eieclrlc Co., said a m.lin
line near Roclt Springs went
out of commlsslqn. He said
Indications were that someone
Uaed power company Hne In-.
sulator:s for "target practice"
last fall and snow Thursday
morning entered a cracked
Insulator and caused the
outagu.

at y

'.I

. -··

border, to survey the ,South
Vietnam release site.
He said . lbe North Vlet1181hese would allow 8n 1knan
receptloo team to.land in Hanoi
three hours in advance of the
release there to prepare for the
handover of the POWs in North
Vietnam.
The top U.S. representative
on the fourillrly commission,
Maj. Gen. Gilbert H. Woodward, advised washington he
expected to work out precise .
,(Continued on page 12)

•

enttne

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meig!-Mason Area

VOL XXV NO. 209

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1973

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENTS

Half of school
pupils at home
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio
About 50 per cent of
lbe 1,850 students at Middletown High School were
absent today when classes
opened following a disturbance
Thursday in which eight
students were arrested and 38
suspended.
The parents of some of the
suspended students came to
the school today and wanted to
meet as a group with principal
Lewis Hlll, who refused and
told them to return home.
Hill said he might meet with
them Individually later to discuss the suspensions.
Hill said the arrests and suspensions cllmued three
straight days of racial unrest
at Ute school which he said
were caused by plans for
"Black History Week" next
week.
The school's blacks, who
(UP!)-

make up 20 per cent of the en·
rollment, want an outside
speaker during the week but
the school wants one from the
community.
Five policemen patroled the
halls today.
Hill requested police
assistance Thursday after
about 60 students congregated
in a lobby behind the gym.
nasi urn and refused to return to
their home rooms.
"After the police arrived, it
was a mailer of gelling
students out of school who
refused to go," Hill said.
Hill said the situation was
compounded when numerous
parents arrived throughout the
day to take children out of
classes, He said only about
1,000 of the 1,850 students
remained when the school day
ended.
Nine policemen

sta lioned in the school after
making the arrests.
One of the eight arrested was
charged with carrying a
concealed weapon and irespassing and another was
charged with abuse of a police
officer. Three were cited for
being disorderly and the other
three with trespassing.

.

BAD BUSINESS
SABINA, Ohio iUPI) Manufacturers ol political
campaign buttons shouldn't
count heavily on this community for busltiess.
The filing deadline for the
May I primary elecUoa
passed Ibis week, with no
one, not, even incwnbents~
!IIIJJg for lour council seals,
the treasurer's o!lice or a
posillon on the public affairs
board.

"YOU'VE GOTTA HAVE HEART"- Making heartshaped cakea Tbursday were.members of the Future Horneniakers of America class of Melga High School. Each resident of the
Meigs County Infirmary will be gi~~n one of the attractive red and white cakes next Monday
night at a Valentine party at the home. Although there were no school cla8!1e5 Thursday, the
girls went ahead with ~he project scheduled tor Tlmraday's clus. Taking part In the baking .
Thursday were, seated, 1-r, Debbie Lawrence and Diltna Neece, back row, Scherry Lane,
Tammy Michael and Nancy Lawrence. The cakes were baked at the horne'of Mrs. Jim (Mary)

. King.

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ld
w;;• d
w or agog at w zen o,_
• k en bred
S unerc
h
lC
r
.§i,by Jv:o· ung Ca lz~'}'•torn ; n
. IYJ:

0

·~

WEST POINT, Calif. (UP!,) -The

world is coming to 17-yearoOld Grant
Sullen's door because he bred ·a
superchlcken named Weirdo.
The International excitement began
when news stories told of a 22ilound
I'OO!Iter 80 big and rough and tough he
hadkilledtwocalsandcrippledadog.
He also got 80 mad at an 18-potind hall
grown 80n of his he ripped through a
wire fence separating them and kllled
the young rooster.
But It isn't Weirdo's prowess as a
killer that has stimulated the interest
of nations, corporations, chicken
!reeders and businessmen around the
world. lt'shisslze, theslzeofthehens
. in his ~m. and the size of his off:zing. Many are nearly as big as he

1

1-U
·
began accidentally when Grant's
falber, George, won a truckload of
stewingchlckensinadicegameatthe
Timber Wolf Bar he used to own.
They're Stlll Alive
"I thought they were out there all
packed and ready for aale," Sullen
recalls, "But my wile went outside
and came back to tell me, 'George, ·
there's just one thing. Those chickens
are still alive."'
Grant, then just 10 years old,
promised to feed the chickens and sell
the eggs If his father would allow him
to keep them. The deal was made.
"I lost mote than a hundred of them
after the first snow," Grant
remembers.
. "Then somebody told me Rhode

~

I. came with gray ones that laid eggsl

lik~ ~:~:gan.

·•

Nixon in West

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UP!
J - President Nixon
Grant went to work crossing andre· ~
settled Into the Western White
crossing the bigger members of
vari~s chicken breeds s_earchlng for , House today to work on his
a chicken able to Survive the cold . domestic program and to await
nights in the Mother Lode country;
word from Henry Kissinger,
bound for Hanoi and Peking to
one that would gro.:v faster than any of
the known breeds, one that laid plenty
talk peace with former eneof eggs and tasted good.
mies.
Five thousand chickens later he had
Nixon flew to California
Weirdo.
Thursday for a visit of nearly
" I lucked out," Grant said.
two weeks to his oceanside
"Hybrids aren't suppose to be able to ·~~ villa, the first trip here since
reproduce-but Weirdo could.
, , his r~lectlon.
"I named him Weirdo because what ~ The President stayed up late
else could you call something like ::l to sign legislation sending
that?"
strlkiJJg workers of the Penn
The Word Is Out
;:;; Central Railroad back to their
Now the word is out and Grant may :l: jobs, ending a one-&lt;lay walkout.
....
be the most sought after breeder ·in ····
Congress rammed through ·
the world.
legislation Thursday to halt the
''The Republic of Panama wanted :&lt;: strike, and the billlYas rushed
him to come down there and breed
by air courier to the Western
exclusively for them," hislatherssid. ···· White House fqr Nixon's slg·
The government of Zsire, formerly ~ nature.
the Belgian Congo, made a stmilar ~
Nixon timed his California
offer.
~&amp; trip to coincide with the llklay
A Tijuana, Mexico, cockfight $l congressional recess over Lincoln's Birthday.
Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew Is scheduled to arrive

!

By GEORGE HARGRAVES, Supt.
Melg1 Local School DIBtrlcl
This evening there Is a variety of topics to discuss
briefly,; all of them important to understanding your
schools' day-to-day problems. ·
Recent reports of attendance
to indicate
that the worst of the flu may be behind us. We cer·
tainly hope so. We had a few days when we had about
one of every four students out of school.
One area of employee absence in which we are
really hurting is that of bus drivers. We have had
several drivers out for long periods,. This has forced

seem

Pomeroy was· out from 4:40
a.m. Thursday until 5:40 p.m.
Speaking of Schools No. 266
Thursday. Four schools were
closed and ·residents were •the continual use &lt;If oilr few subatltutea in these
without.heat In their homes for vacancies and we tiave been really bani-pressed to
the most part.
flll Vllcancies callled by brief absences. We very
Allen extended apologlea for much need to have additional substitute bus drivers.
the company at the in- How about you 7 If tnterested In learning more about
convenience. The damage driving a bus as a subltltilte, call 1192-2153.
occurred in an inaccessible
'!'HE 84ND BOOSTERS project of bi1ntPJ1g to us
area, and repairs took time, he tile great Stan Kenton and his band Ia a very excelle.nt
said. Repairs were completed thing. Young and old and ID-between should get their
at one time Thursday af- tickets early for thla concert. The daytime 'seminars
ternoon, but when the line was for young musicians should JrOve to be of real value.
energbed It burned out in This year'~ Blind Booster group Is really "on t.he
another place.
move". They need and deserve your sypport. HQW
about getting your tickets Ibis weekend? ..

Saturday to report to Nixoo on
his eight-nation tour to
reassure friendly Asian nations
that the United States wi!J
siand by lis commitments in
Asia following lbe windup of
the war in Vietnam.

Supervisors
to meet at
Meigs Inn

Eighteen counties will be
represented
~t
the
Southeastern Ohio School
Supervisors meeting to be.held
in Meigs County Monday.
The session .will open at 9:30
a.m. with coffee and donuts at
the Bradbury School and the
Meigs High School. From 9:30
to 11 :30 a.m. elementary
supervisors will tour the
Bradbury School with Mrs.
Phyllis Hackett of the Bradbury staff as the hostess. The
supervisors will pa~licularly
observe the individualized
reading program.
Secondary supervisors will
be at the Meigs High School
from
9:30a.m. to 11 :30 a.m. to
· Students, kindergarten to.senlors, are in danger response. Let us know if you have any special in- observe the vocational
terest. If you don't, we will not be concerned. If you
when waitiJJg for a school bus along any road.
department. Principal James
do, we'll try to help.
Motorists should watch for them. Students should
THE ADULT BASIC Education program still Diehl will host the group.
watch for cars and avoid pushing or shoving. Ptirents
The
supervisors, which . in·
operates on Tuesday and Thursday eveniJJg. This
I
should discuss Ibis matter seriously with their
program will help prepare you to lake the GED teat. eludes those not only of local
children in their home. Let's avoid a tragedy.
school districts but of cities and
Another hazardous part oflbe student's day can Success on the test can ea~n you a certificate of high exempted villages, will hold a
be the time sP.nt on the school bus. If ·there is a lack school equivalency from the State. That's not a luncheon at the Meigs Inn after
of good behavior or excessive disturbance, you know diploma but It's the next beat thing; It's worth giving which tll'ne there will be a
Uiat the driVer can 'I give full attention to the dangers some thougbt to, if you don't have a diploma.
We surely owe a deep debt of gratitude to the group discussion on the
of
road.
visitation programs. There will '
. We are detennlned to make traveling on our Rutland Fire Department and to Bruce Davis in be a discussion on the right to
school b_uses as safe as possible. If that requires the particular. The water they have hauled from Rutland read program in each area and
exclusion of studentswhp cannot conduct themselves to Salem Center has kept the school open for weeks. a business session will follow.
· The jlump has been pulled and replaced and we
80 that the bus ride is safe, lben we have to do that .
Mrs. Grella Suttle of the
should be operating our own water system by the
We don't like to, but we have done so in the past and
Meigs County staff Is president
time that you read this (we hope). ·
will not hesitate to do so in the future . The buses must
of
the Southeastern Ohio group.
Neverlbeless, !bose folks In Rutland irurely have
be safe. We will do what we have to .do in order to
our heartfelt thanks. They really came through when
make them safe and keep them safe.
·
SUICIDE RULED
You might want also to discuss this with the we needed their help.
Boys who will be juniors next year should give
students in your family.
'
A ruling of suicide by over
,serious thought to the Mb\e Mechanics program. All medication has been returned
A new crop of student teachers are with us this
indications are lbat there will be good joba in mining by Meigs County Coroner Dr.
quarter. There are some advantages and some
In Meigs County for a long time to come. Of course,
disadvantages to haviJJg them. At this time, it seems this program will be open to juniors In the rest of the R. R. Pickens In the death of
Mrs. Hilda Marie Koblentz
to us, theadvantagesoutnumberthe disadvantages. I county also.
Wednesday night at her
would welcome your opinion on this. Call 992-2153 or
You might want to discuss Ibis at home. Again, as Pomeroy, Route 3 home.
drop me a n~e. I'll appreciate either:
always, we can only offer opportunity. It will be up to Friends said Mrs. Koblentz had
Last week !suggested that .YOU 411111 if you had an you to accept or reject it.
been In failing health
interest in any particular course that ·we might offer ·
The choice is yours.
someilme.
· in an eveniJJg class. SO far there has been very little ·

i

l

"~=:~:=:~~~~~~~·~·==x*t~~:.=:~:,:~:!£::~l~~:J~:~~~:.::.:!~~,:.~r~:J
Flu causing serious school problems

r

~~

nam would be sick or wounded.
The release will include 'D
captives held in South Vietnam, Friedheim said, and onefourlb of those held in North
Vietnam. He said thia would
mean approximately 115
should be released in the
Norlb.
Friedheim said Viet Cong
officials at the four-party
conunlssion had cleared a U.S.
survey team to go to Quan LQI,
a village about 65 miles north
of Saigon near the Cambodian

the

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