<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="17096" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/17096?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-10T15:50:38+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="50246">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/75bc90494e0aa2d541181954773b24d6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b51af883d571f40bfdd1f8316872dd4c</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="54536">
                  <text>Now You Know ·

'

.

' .

•

at y

. The scarlet giant Japa.nese
spider- ~rab, with a body one
. foot aerO&amp;!, has legs capable of
. spanning 12 feet, claw-tip to
claw-tip.

bsr Co"rse &amp; MillJe
·
.

AMANDA PANDA
'
AMANl7A, WHICH S6A50N

Weather

c-:-:- · .

VOL. XXIV NO~ 210

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, PHIO

en tine

Devoted To 1'he lntere316 OfTIWMeig.~-Mason Area
..
MDNDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1973

t(J,'(OU UKE
~e.Gr:

gtven

,.

. . '.

· !UK~ .'

. ·lH£M ..

:. ALL!
/

1966.

· At Apple Valley, Mra. Lurie
said, "I don't know what kind
of celebration we're going to
have when he gets here, but It
will be a good one."
Worried About Health
"His health ... that's the only
thing that worries me," said
Mary Lurie.' "They said some
of them In the first group were
sick and injured. He's always
said his health was good in his
letters and cards though."
The father of Maj . Hoyden J.
Lockhart of Springfield, Ohio,
said he felt "great" about his

Miss Blaettnar

You Can't Trust
An?fone Under.
·3 inches fa)/.;_

'73 ·Sweetheart

OL.E
WRNT DOWN, &amp;If IT ALLUS
WAS A IYESOIU-50 IT'S
A SMAL.L.l.DSS-

son's release . Lockhart a
graduate of the Air Force
Academy, was shot down over
North Vietnam March 2, 1965.
Paul Smith of Lake Milton,
father of Navy Lt. Cmdr. Bradley Smith, a POW since 11166,
said "quite frankly and honestly lam literally overjoyed. My
pr_ayers have been answered."
Smith was shot down while
ftY.ing over Quang Binh Prov·
lnce and the elder Smith said
he did not receive a letter fr&lt;lm ·
him unW four years later.
Smith is now 33. He grew up in
Lake Milton.
Other Ohioans released Included Lt. Col. Harisn P. Chapman, 38, whose parents stlll
live in Elyria, but whose wife
resides at Fremont, Calif. He
was captured Nov. 5, 1965.
Cmdr. Theodore F. Kopf·
man's wife and three children
live at LeMoore, Calif. Kopfman was born in 1931 at Toledo,
Ohio, and graduated from Kent
State University in 1955. He
was shot down over North
VIetnam June 16, 1965.
NoUve Of Dayton
Lt. Cmdr. Frederick C. BaJ.
dnck Jr. was born in 1939 in
Dayton, Ohio. His parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Frederick C. Baldock
Sr., reside now in San Marcos,
Calif. He was shot down over
North Vietnam March 17, 1966.
Burton Campbell, 33,
was born at Amherst, Ohio,
and his wife, Bonnie, lives in
· 'Avon·ta~te. He ai!ended ohio
University, graduating there In
1961. He was shot down July I,

Uz Blaettnar, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Blaettnar, Pomeroy, was'selected the
1973 Sweetheart of the Meigs
Chapter, Order of DeMolay In
annual competition Saturday
_ night at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
In the talent portion of the
1966.
program, Miss Blaettnar·, a
Maj . Paul A. Karl, 37, was
senior at Meigs High School
born at Akron. He graduated
.1nd a cheerleader, presented a
from Ohio University in 1958
song and dance, "One of Those
and entered the Air Force later
Songs " , accompanied by
that year. He was captured
Kathy Kin~. First runnerup
June 20, 1965. His wife and two
was Jacque Gabritsch,
children now live at St. Petersdaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
burg, Fla.
Donald Gabritsch, Point
Capt. Mark A. Smith, 26, was
Pleasant, who sang and did a
. born in Umo, Ohio . His parents
lap routine. Second runnerup
now live In Hawthorne, Calif.,
was Cathy -Rayburn, daughter
where Mrs. Wllllam Smith said
. LIZBLAE'ITNAR
of Mrs. Joan Rayburn,
"it's really terrific being one of
-- Pomeroy, who sang "Blowin' Gallipolis, of the Slate High- the flrst."
in the Wind" with guitar ·ac- way Patrol; Mrs . James Curl,
Another Ohioan was involved
companiment provided by Gallipolis, a past grand officer in the effort to bring the POWs
Philip Moon and Tom Reed.
of the Order of Eastern Star. a step nearer the United States.
Miss
Blae ltnar
was and Mrs. Sarah Secoy, Bart- Maj. Donald G. Roszman of
presented a $50 savings bond lett, deputy grand matron of Columbus, Ohio, was comand $25 savings bonds were District 25, OES. Escorts were mander of the second C-141
awarded to Miss Gabritsch and Tim King for Miss Blaettnar, making the ntght from Hanoi
Miss Rayburn. The bonds were John Sebo, Pomeroy, for Miss to Clark AFB.
provided by The Farmers Gabrit..ch, and John David
Bonk and Savings Co., The Edwards, Pomeroy, for Miss
Citizens National Bonk, The Rayburn.
Pomeroy National Bank and
Areception honoring the new
The Racine Home-National DeMolay Sweetheart was held
Bank. The girls also received to conclude the evening with
bouquets of long stemmed red Mrs. Hilda Quickie, Mrs.
Robert King and Mrs. Donald·
roses.
William Quickie. of Cheshire Gabritsch the hostesses .
was master of ceremonies; Organist for the evening was
judges were Frank Casto, Mrs. Raymond Wilcox.

ear.

•&gt;'

•

... ,.,.

'

.

'

CONFIPfiVTIAJ.L'/, IT'~ A CUNNIN6 MOl'E:
TO L.I)J.L. OU~t r\"KJ :$1JSPECTG .OFF-GUARD...

blamed in

6"1 CRfATifoJcS A

WARM, HOMeY..; ·
ATMO~PHfR~l

auto wreck

1P~--~~~;w;.~:&gt;;"$:W/.~::::::~W:&gt;:::::¥.~~~:XX::!:~:~:-;:::::&gt;.

ews .. in Briefsl·
By United ~u IJiteruatinoal

CLARK AFB, PIIILIPPINES- U.S. officials changed their
figures three times today before finally coming up with a final
total of 116 American prisoners ~ war repatriated on the first
three freedom ftights from North Vietnam. The total originally
stood at 115 but was increased to 116 to Include Cmdr. Brian D.
woods, of San Diego, Calif., who was added to the list of the first
group of prisoners to be released by North Vietnam because his
mother was reported to be critically 111.
.
,
After the group landed at Clark Air Force Base ln. the
Pblllppines, the Alr Force said recount showed there were only
!15 POWs Initially released from Hanoi. It said Woolls was included bul another man, Lt. Col. Robert B. Purcell of Louisville;
Ky. a father of five, was left behind.
'Later an Alr Force spokesman issued a final official
correction saying thai Purcell, who was shot down over North
VIetnam July 'II, 1965, was not bumped off todDy's freedom
ntghts to Clark, malting the total 116 released POWs at this
American air base.

a

'

.

WASHINGTON- mE ADMINISTRATION has not placed·
' tar reform on the boc!t burner but is hard at work on a blll that
'lrOIJ)d overhaul the federal tax code, Preiident Nixon's top
ecoDOmic adviser hll reported. Herbert Stein, the chairinan of
lhe COUncil ol Economic Advisenl, said &amp;lnday the shape of the
111181 produet ill atUliiiiCel'laln.
..,. .. -'IDe under an lnatruction to proceed as rapidly
• p uli'rk Ill dlftlap 1 package of tax reform," Stein said, "I
. ., ~ whlllhe llllftr will be when we're through." But
.... 1111111111 ''Ill l'lfarm ill not on the back burner."
llldlla, UPI W~n Window interview thai the
1Qmtlnu~ on J;&gt;age 8)

'the red carpet'
By Uolted Press IDieruatiooal

JAN HOLTER

Jan Holter is

Accelerator

Mechanical failure was
blamed for two of three traffic
accidents investigated over the
weekend by the Gallia-Meigs
Post State Highway Patrol.
The first accident occurred
at 4:50 p.m. Saturday on
Jackson Rd., one and . three
tenths miles west of Rt. 160
'
where
the accelerator pedon a car
al stuck
driven by Charles S. Kea·
ton , 25, Rt. 2, Vinton.
Keaton lost control of his car
which left the highway ,
striking a fence. No citation
was issued.
Sharon L. Grueser, 20, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, was cited to Meigs
County Court lor defective
brakes following an accident at
3:30p.m. Sunday on Rt. 124 in
Rutland. The patrol said the
Grueser car struck the rear
end of an auto operated by
Dennis McKinney, 25, Rutland.
There 'was moderate damageto bolh cars.
Another Sunday acCident
occurred on Coal Valley Rd.,
two miles ·west of Rt. 160.where
cars driven ))y James 0. New,.
'!_5, Taylor, Mich., and Vernon
Isaac,. 26, Rt. 2, Vinton;
sideswiped on a curve. No
charges were filed.
•.,

s

Some wept, some
laughed walking

Prayers answered
said the family In Cleveland
was "stlll on cloud nine."
Lurie's wife moved to Apple
Volley, Collf. shortly after he
became a POW. Lurie, who will
be 40 on March 24, graduated
from Ohio State University In
1955. He was captured June 12,

TEN CENTS

•

eroes'
By United Presslnteruatiooal
''We have prayed and prayed
and God 811lWered our prayers," said Paul Keirn of Akron,
Ohio, whose son has been in a
prisoner ol war camp for 712
years and now is cOilllni home.
Lt. Col. Richard Keirn, taken
lrl!oner July 24, 1965 in Vietnam, was among tbe first
POWs released by Hanoi and
ftown to Clark Alr Force Bose
In the Philippines Sunday
night.
"It's through our faith, I
gueoo, that he has been able to
endure all this time," Keirn
said.
Keirn, 47, has two children.
His wife, Hazel, and the chll·
dren now live In Tampa, Fla.
At least 10 Ohioans or former
Ohioans were released.
lAluill Lurie, father of Lt. Col.
Alan Lurie who was freed after
being captive for six years,

PHONE 992-2156

Increasing cloudiness and
warmer tonight, lows 23 to 3Q.
Cloudy. and warmer Tuesday,
chance of light snow in the
northwest. Higha Tuesday in
the 40s south .

..

-

dairy princess
Miss Jan Holter, daughter or
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Holter,
Pomeroy, Route 3, was
crowned the Ohio State Fair
Holstein Queen by the Ohio
Holstein Friesian Association
at a banquet Saturday night at
the Nell House in Columbus.
A junior at Meigs High
School, Jan was one of 17
contestants in the competition
for the state title. Selection was
made by four judges on the
basis of appearance, interviews, activities and an

essay on the topic "Country
Living and Holsteins. "
As the Ohio State Fair
Holstein Queen, Miss Holter
will reign at the Slate Fair as
well as all the Holstein shows
over the state this year.
Her invitation to enter the
competition was from Mrs.
Richard lndoe, state chair·

man. Contestants must be 16 to
compete, and Miss Holter
observed her 16th birthday in
August and was one of the
youngest in the contest.
She was crowned by -Miss
Kathy Morgan , Fulton County,
the 1972 queen. First runnerup
in the contest was Joyce Watts,
a junior at Ohio State
University.
A queen charm , a cor
sage, and $25 in cash were
presented to Miss Holter, who
was accompanied to Columbus
by her mother and an aunt,
Mrs. Hubert Fulton of
Cheshire.
Miss Holter is the second
Meigs County girl to be
selected as the Ohio Slate Fair
Holstein Queen. A number of
years ago, Anna Jean Rose,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Rose, held the title.

The first 115 American POWs released by Hanoi, some of
them weeping, some of them laughing, received heroes'
welcomes today as they walked across a red carpet to freedom in
an emotional greeting at Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines.
Another 2'i U. S. POWs being held by the VietCong began their
trip back to Saigon and freedom.
The 'II POWs in South Vietnam, whose release was held up
more than 12 hours by a procedural wrangle among the members
of the Joint Military Commission (JMC) which is responsible f~r
the details of the release, left Loc Nlnh in South Vietnam at 6:30
a.m. EST, according to a military spokesman. They were expected at Clark in the Philippines about 10 a.m. EST after a stop
in Saigon.
"God bless America," salda tearful Navy Capt. Jeremiah A.
Denton of Virginia Beach, Va,, the first man to step from the
special C141 Starlifter evacuation planes which new the men
from Hanoi to Clark, a distance of 900 miles.
"We are honored to have the acknowledge the cheers.
He appeared In good condi·
opportunity to serve our country under difficult circwnstan- tion-as did most of the men.
ces,,. said Denton, 40, who was
At first, officials said Hanoi
shot down while on a combat added a 116th man to the list to
mission over North Vietnam on go _free, but later they said the
July 18, 1965. "We are correct figure was 115 because
profoundly grateful to our one man took the place of Lt.
commander-in~hief and to our Col. Robert B. Purcell of
Louisvllie, Ky., who wai shot
nation for this day.
"God bless America," he down over North Vietnam in
July, 1965.
'
said, his voice breaking.
In Virginia Beach, his family
The first of the three C1411l
said it "screamed a lot" in joy arrived at 3:11 a.m. EST and
as it watched a special the last at 4:47 om. EST after
television broadcast from what authorities said was a
Clark and spotted Denton leave smooth operation at Hanoi's
the plane• "My mother sal(! he Gla Lam airport.
really looked good," .salt! his
After they left Hanoi, Presi·
16 -year-old daughter dent Nixon issued a statement
Madeleine, who was eight at the Western White House at
when her father was ·captured. San Clemente, Calif., praising
Denton and the 114 fellow them as men ''who mode peace
POWs were the first of 592 with honor possible." He called
prisoners scheduled to go free on fellow Americans to greet
· by March 29 under the Paris them "not with fanfare, but
agreement ending America's with quiet respect."
longest and most divisive
The men were rushed by bus
foreign war.
to the bose hospital for three or
Some of the men hobbled as four days medical treatment,
they left the planes. Some the first step in a carefully
limped. Three were carried iri planned Operation
stretchers . But most managed Homecoming exercise in·
a smile and a wave to hundreds tended to reintroduce tbem to a
of fellow Americans.
world many may have
"Welcome Home, Beautiful forgotten in the five, six or
Men," read a sign painted on a seven years they spent in
sheet and waved by a group of captivity.
women waiting at the base 50
None spoke to newsmen, but
miles north of Manila.
Lt. CoL Richard Abel of
Among· the men was Navy Cleveland, Ohio, who rode back
Lt. Cmdr. Everett Alvarez of to Clark aboard the first pisne,
Santa cliu-a, Calif., who was said the men reacted with deep
shot down Aug. 5, 1964, and emotion.
thus became the longest-held of
all POWs. He moved quickly
down the airplane ramp,
saluted a reception committee
smartly and smiled to

Safety Programs here

toiL"

Now in its 18th year, the
program has been presented to
over 14 million teenagers
throughout the USA in over
7,000 high schools. It has

"After they got on the pisne
and we closed the doors," Abel
said, "they hugged each other.
A tremendous elation on their
faces. Tears in some eyes, yes,
but they were certainly tears of
happiness.
"After we took off," he said,
"they shook hands, patted each
other on the back. They were
happy to get an American
cigarette."
Then, Abel said, the men
walked to the back of the plane
to greet· the three men who
could not walk.
"Thete was just a tremendous happiness," he said.
11
They were alive."
Abel said the men appeared
in "great" physical condition.
Roger E. Shields, a Department of Defense aide who
specialized in POW matters,
said he did not notice any
psychological problems among
the men. "These are very
happy men," he said . 11 Proud

and dignified .."
A!J the men left the planes;
they glanced at an honor
guard, saluted and shook hands
with Adm. Noel Gaylor,
commander of U.S. forces in
the Pacific, and other highranking military men, tjlen
stepped into buses taking them
to the Clar.k Air Force Base
hospital. Some acknowledged
the cheers and shouts of
(Continued on Page 8)

Prisoners given
credit for peace

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. without having anybody trying
(UP!) - President Nixon to exploit them or interfere. "
today praised the former
"Let's let them see their
prisoners of war as men who families again, and if they
''made peace with honor want to see anybody (in the
possible" and appealed to administration), the President
newsmen and the' nation to let or the secretary of defense, we
them come home to their will be available," Nixon said.
families In privacy and quiet.
Nixon appeared to be
'lbe na)lon should welcome buoyant over developments
them home "not with fanfare, following the Vietnam ceasebut with quiet respect," Nixon fire. He also ·told reporters
said in a statement after the Henry A. Kissinger's meetings
release of the POWs had with the top North Vietnamese
begun.
leadership In Hanoi, in their
He had seen to it, therefore, third day today, are "serious ...
the President said, that on and we hope and expect that
arrival In the Philippines and they will be constnictive."
in the United States, the exHe disclosed that consultaPOWs would not be met by him tlons between the presidential
or any other high-ranking envoy and Prime Minister
official.
Pbam Van Dong "ore going
When a man comes home forward on schedule, and they
from a war, Nixon said, are serious talks ."
recalling his own return from
Nixon said he could not ·
the Navy in World War II, ' discuss the subetance' of the
"You don't want a !lit of diplomatic exchanges because
cameras, you don't want a VIP of an agreement with North
there, you just want to see your Vietnam. But they apparently
wife." ·
cover the full range o~ pr\!Ssing
The formal statement echoed topics from · extension of · the
the President's remarks cease-fire to Laos and Cam&amp;mday on the sidewalk ouQ!ide bodia' to postwar reconthe Palisades United Methodist ·struction aid for Hahoi .
Olurch in Capistrano Beach,
The Piesident said he has
.when he urged reporters to been receiving dally cables
JOHNNY BOYD
"Let's let them get hack home. from Kissinger relayed from
He told-reporters the former communications facilities
brought numerous awards to these are three National Safety
its national sponsor, Champion Council Public ~rvice awards priso~rs.ahould be allowed "to aboard the White HoWle air·
see and talk to their families craft in Hanoi.
Spark Plug Campa"{ Among. · (Continued on page 8)

feature famous driver
Johnny Boyd, 12 time
competitor in the famed Indianapolis 500,miie race, will
be presented at three high
schools of Meigs County this
week by the Champion Highway Safety Program.
Boyd will be at Southern
High School~ Racine, on Thurs·
day, and at 1 p.m. at Eastern
High School, Thursday, and on
Friday at 10 a.m. he will appear at the Meigs High School.
His appearance here is cosponsoredby the G. and J . Auto
Parts Co.
In commenting on toe
program, Boyd said, "On the
race track or the highway,
attitude is the biggest'factor in
safe driving. By keeping a car
.in good ·operating condition,
being mentally alert and
practicing common courtesy,
all of which reflect the proper
attitude, we could substantially
reduce the annual traffic death

MAJ. LOCKHART
Air Force Maj. Hayden
Lockhart ll, a graduate of
Pl; Pleasant High School,
later a resident of
Springfield, Ohio, was
reported the
second
American prisoner of war to
walk the red carpet of
welcome at Clark Air Base in ·
the Philippine Islands.

�3- The D&amp;Uy Sent !he!, Middleport-Pomeroy' 0 ., Feb 12, 1973

..

2- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Feb 12, 1973

Bobcats lose
For the second stra•ght
Darst, Hudson and Orland
rught, Kyger Creek hit over 45 Cremeans paced the Gallial19.
pet of Its held goal attempts m Darst had mne pomts, Hudson
a losmg effort
SlX and Creme8119 ftve
Saturday mght, StarrIn the second per1od, the
Washmgton managed to sink 52 Bobcats outscored Starrpet of tis floor attempts m Washmgton, 24-20 Stidham
turrung back the Bobcats, !H}.85 was the leadmg KC scorer wtth
m a fast-movmg thriller played 12 pomts KC collected 19
m the ''httle gym" at Umon pomts m the third pertod wtth
Furnace
Hudson leadmg the way wtth
Frtday mglit, KC btl 49 pet dlght points Greg McCarty,
and lost 81~ to North Gallia senior guard, and Darst
Tratllng 63-60 gomg into the provtded the other pomts
Ellmger and McDamel were
fmal stanza, the Warr1ors used
clutch foul shootmg by Greg the Warriors' leading polntMcDaruel and Doug Ellinger to makf rs wtth 25 and 24
respdcttvely
turn the game around
Starr-Washmgton won the
Coach Jim Arledge's Bobcats led by seven pomts at one reserve game, 58-23 Btll See!
stage m the final stanza before had 19 pomts for the wmners,
fouls begm to lake therr toll Tom Kern and Davtd Clay
KC lost the servtces of two of scored seven each m a losmg
1ts top rebounders, Ii-I Joe cause
Kyger Creek takes tis overall
Stidham, a sophomore, and
Mark Darst, ~ semor Both 4-14 record mto the SectiOnal
ex1ted m the fur~ous fourth Tournament at Metgs agamst
pertod Stidham left wtth 14 North Galha Frtday, Feb 23
points and 14 rebounds whtle
Box Seore
Darst departed after scormg 18
Kyger Creek (85) -McCarty
points and collectmg 10 244, Hudson 11-4-26; Rumley·
().12 , Stidham 6-2-14, WISe ().2rebounds
Ellinger had 16 pomts m the 2, Tabor 244, Cremeal19 2-1-5;
fourth quarter, slX at the Darst 6-6-18, Totals 35-15-85.
charity !me McDaniel added
Starr-Washington (90) ftve pomts, three on foul shots McClam 3-3·9, Ellinger 9-7·25,
and Gerald Robmette had two McDaruel 7·1().24, Robmette 5free throws
3-13, and VermJihon 9·1·19
The Bobcats had JUmped u.to Totals 33-24-90.
the lead on hot-shootmg by Kyger Creek 20 24 19 ~
John Rumley, ~ juruor for- Starr-Wash
28 20 12 30-90
ward, and Clay Hudson, 5-10
juruor
Southwest
Rumley had 10 points m the Housto n 82 S W La 80
Amona 81 UTEP 78
quarter while Hudson added Tex
A&amp;M 108 Ark 82
eight
Texas 77 Baylor 64
Hudson was the leadmg N Tex St 64 N Mex St 63
SW Texas 90 H Payne 73
Bobcat pomt-maker wtth 26 Drake 84 W Tex St 71
points on II baskets and four Hrd lnSmm ns 75 E NewMex 54
Texas Ar l 98 Lamar 90
free throws
Sam Hous St 96 Sui Ross 75
Starr-Washmgton JUmped Texas Tech 64 SMU 59
mto a ~20 lead at the end of McNeese St 81 Ark St 80
Mry s 81 Lelurneau 73
the first per1od Ellmger, St
Corpus Chrl sl1 81 Pan Am 72
McDaruel arld Gary VermJI!ion Ark A&amp;M 95 Gramblmg 91
were the big guns m the TCU 72 R1ce 71
St Ed 84 Southwestern 81
Warrwr arsenal
S F Austin 96 Anoelo St 91
~-·::-:

,,,

·~·

;, ,.;.:,

~

:

.,.,

'

1 Helen Help

I

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

Deception
Is Fine, If--NORrH
• Q62

•

Redskins cop 7th wzn
I

lace 70-65, Otterbein beat
Wooster ~7 and Wittenberg
whipped Deruson 95-46
Dayton beat Long Island U.
84-76,
whtle
Ashland
humthated Wtlberforce 130·
78, Mount Umon beat Kenyon
91-74, Rto Gran ~e edged
Cedarville 7~, Bluffton beat
Wtlmmgton 87-78; Walsh
downed Tiffm 60-00, and Ohio
Ohoo College
BaskeflballScores
Northern rolled over Manetta
By Unlled Press International
75-53
Saturday
Minnesota 80 Ohio State 78
Also, Berea (Ky ) beat
C1nctnnatt 89 Flonda State 62 Wr1glit State 8().74; HU"am
Dayton 84 Long Island U 76
downed Oberlin 113-72; Malooe
M1am1 69 Oh10 U 65
Bowling Green 73 Western defeated Ohto DommJcan 106M1ch 69
95, Defiance beat Findlay 87·
Toledo 72 Kent Stale 69
80,
xavier lost to Detr01t s:h'II;
Delro1t 83 Xav1er 81 ot
Ashland 130 Wilberforce 78
St FranclS (Pa ) stopped Steu·
Capital 70 Baldwin Wallace 65
benvtlle 44-38, Kentucky State
W11tenber~ 95 Den1son 46
Mount Un1on 91 Kenyon 74
crushed Central State 82-53,
Ohio Northern 75 Manella 53 and Akron got by Brockport
Musktngum 76 Ohto Wesleyan
(NY.) State 71-67
54
may be lost for the rest of the
season
In the Ohio Conference, Musklngum mamtalhed tts slim
lead over Capttal, Otterbem
and Wittenberg wtth a 76-54 wm
over Ohio Wesleyan.
Capttal edged Baldwin-Wal·

12

¥ Q7

+ Q1043J
"'J74
WEsT

EAST

.A

.KJ4

· ~5 3

¥1086 2

+J 765

+98

"-Q109 3

"-AK 865

SOUTII

( D)

. 1098753
¥A KJ4
+ AK

"' 2

I.4.

Eas t- Wes t vulneJ able
Norlh
East South
West

Palmer feels just super

Television Log
MONDAY, FEB f2, 1973
7 30- To Te ll !he Truth 6. Young Dr Kildare 8, HollyWood
Squares 4 TraffiCCourt 10 HodgepoJge Lo~e 20, ~~plsode
Action 33 Bobby Goldsboro 3 Movie Tarzan s Peril 13
7 45- EpiSode Achon 33
8 oo - Rowan &amp; Marlin's Laugh In 3, 4, 15, Rookies 6, Gunsmoke 8 10 Escape from Heroin 4, Cambridge Debafe on
Women s L1b 20, 33
1
8 30- College Basketball 4
..
9 oo - Heres Lucy 8, 10, World Premiere 3, 15, Movie The
Longest Day 6, 13 NET Opera Theatre 20, 33
9 30 - Dom Day 8, 10
10 00 - News 20 B1ll Cosby 8 10 An American Family 33.
Laugh In 4
11 00 - News3 4. 6 8, 10, 13 15
'
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 Movies "Someone~; the Top of
!he Stairs" 6 13 Movie The Corrupt Ones 81 Movie
'Strangers at Sunrise" 1D
1 00 - Focus On Columbus 4, News 13

Dear Helen
Somethmg for a "different" column
In the expectant fathers ' room at Holy Name Hospttal,
Teaneck, N J are several notebooks filled wtth the thoughts and
emollons of those not-so-stoical men who mu$t only stt and watt.
They are fast becommg the best-read books in the hospttal, and
each day they grow a httle more, for "writing It down" ts a great
way to make trrne move alone
Heartwarming, anXIous, awed, often humorous, occasiOnally
sad, these hasttly penned notes offer male reactions to females'
labor-of-love Could I share a few wtth your readers ' Here they
are·
To all readers! I wrtte to relieve my tens10ns smce I am
nervous and like the tune to pass qwckly My wife has seven
other children so I hope thlS 1S another healthy, beautiful one
The doctor 1S gomg to notify me as soon as I can see my beautiful
wife (Later ) IT'S AGIRL ..• AND ABOY! Congratulations to
my wife and me'
This Is our ftrst child and I must use the word "Our " It has
been a joint effort all the way and if someone ever says that a
husband doesn't go through much durtng the bU"th of a chtld then
he has never been a husband
l don 't think I could have found a better wife If I had watted
till l was 99 to marry l thank God for gtvmg her and my children
to me and I ask that this child be healthy and whole and to
PLEASE HURRY THIS THING ALONG!
Sorry, men, but •t looks like this will have to be short and
sweet My wile would be terrific on a track team. We amved at
the hospttal at 9 25 p.m It's now 10·10and just &amp;bout that time . .
reading through this month's btrths, It seems boys are m the
majortty Smce f have one of each I'll setUe lor either But to help
keep score, I'll let you know whtch 11 Is
IT'S A GIRL! 8 pounds 9 ounces
My wife and I arrived here at 5 00 a m Dtd I tell you she Is a
reglste~ed nurse' Believe me, It makes no difference, she's only
a woman now I've been wtth her since 5 30 am and I've seen
her re-live the natural, pamful process of creation Soon I will see
the mJracle God wdling, all wtll go well
Am I nervous' Wtthouta doubt' Whoever satd that the lather
gets off easy was never a father'
12 15 p m Our son has arrived lncredtble' He's beautiful
and so 1S my wile I love them both
I'm exhausted'
I'm ecstatic'
I'm a father 1 - A MATERNITY WARD NURSE
Dear Helen
f want to rap with the heterosexual people of our society You
see, I'm not trymg to convert you Into homosexuals (though most
of you try to convert us 1) I ask only that you no longer look on us
as "Sick people " We are beautiful people who have a large
capacrty to love - just as you do The way the world lS, I don't
thtnk anyone has a right to say what IS normal and abnormal nor
should anyone be judged on set standards WE are able ~ understand and accept heterosexuals, so why can't you do the same
for us ' I am s1ck only m the sense of being oppressed and
ostractzed
Please don't chng to tbe stereotyped view of hombsexuals
Not all of us go around dressed in strange clothes or talkmg like
fags. We aren 't crttelnals We are mainly gentle people who don't
force our way or life on others
Your next-door-ne~ghbor, whom you think Is so superpflrfect, may be gay Some of our most creative artists, writers,
muslct8119, both men and women, are what the world calls
"twisted." But are we any more twisted than husbands and
wives who-live together wtthout love'
I turned gay because of rejection When I'm wtth my people
I'm never put down Everyone 1S friendly and kind
Please understand, I am not knocking stratghts. I am only
asking that our minonty group be treated as human bemgs,
becauae that's what we are. - PEALE
I

.

'

130- News 4

TUESDAY, FEB 13,1973
6 00 - Sunnse Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15- farm Report 13, Fa rmt1me 10
6 25 - Paul Harvev 13
6 3D-Columbus Today 4 B1ble Answers 8,

Concern &amp; Com·
ment 10 Fal!h For Today 13
6 45 - Corncob Reoort J
6 55- Take F1ve for Life 15
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15 CBS News 8, 10 News 6, Flln!s!onos 13
7 30- Sleepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13 Popeye 1D
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 13. Sesame St 33.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald There " nothm g
Htram 83 Oberltn 72
wrong WJth decephve play
Lass1e 6
O!terbeln 69 Wooster 67
8 30- Ja ck LaLanne 13 Romper Room 8 New Zoo Revue 6
pro v 1d e d the decepuon
Bluffton 87 W1lm1ngton 78
9 30 - Paul D1xon 4 Phil Donahue 15, Concentration 6.
RECORD IIANDI.E
works '
R1o Grande 70 Cedarville 66
Friendly Junct1on 10 Ben Casey 13 Capt Kangaroo 8, AM
Kentucky 82 Central Slate 53
NEW YORK (UP!) - A
J1m
'In other wo1ds,
3
Defiance 87 F1ndlay 80
nothmg succeeds as well as
30- ToTeii The Truth3 Jeopardy6
Malone
106 Oh1o Domm1can 95 record one-day handle for 109 oo
- D1nah Shore 3 15 Columbus S1x Calling 6, Joker's Wild
success '
Saturday,
Feb
10,
totaling
St Frane~s (Pal 44
8
D1ck Van Dyke 13
Steubenville
38
$1,499,672 from the combined 10 30-10Concentration
Oswald "Here ts a ~ood
3.15 Ph1l Donahue 4 Price Is Righi 8, 10,
Walsh 65 Tiffm 60
exa mple of a httle m1ld de
recetpts of Bowte race track
Spill Second 13
Berea
(
Ky
l
80
Wnghl
State
74
ceptJOn whtch wound up as
Ak ron 71 Brockport (N Y 1 St and Yonkers Raceway, was 11 oo - Sa le ofthe Centur.l' 3 15 Love American Style 6 Gambit
8 10, Password 13 f lee Co 20
hi ghway rob bet y '
67
announced Sunday by the Off- 11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 15. Love of Life 8, 10, Bewitched
John Carroll 96 Alleghany
Jun I assume that West
6 13 , Sesame Sl 20
Track Betting Corp
(Pal 93
started by playmg the kmg
12 00 - Jack1e Oblmger 8 Jeopardy 3 15 Bob Braun's 50 50
Club 4 Password 6 News 10 13
and ace of clubs wh ereupon
• •••,.,:-; :'•!"• ·::: =~.'"!X:!$•!•..:::-;.')M,.:'U.:! ~-=- ::: ....~·=-:=:::::.. '"! :::-:: ·':;:;:; ..-;:~~
12 25 - CBS News 8
declarer ruff e d entered ;:.g;g-§8~·-.-:-:- ···:··
12 30 - 3 W's 3 15 Spl1l Second 6, Search For Tomorrow 8 10
dummy w1th the queen of
12 55 - NBC News 3 15
hearts and led the queen of
1 oo - News 3 All My Children 6 13 Green Acres 10 Not For
humps'
Women Only 15 Secret Storm 8
1 20 - Fash1ons 1n Sewmg 3
Oswald
As usual you
1 30 - 3 On AMatch 3 4 15 Let's Make A Deal 6, 13 As The
ha ve fl gu1 ed out e~actly
World Turns 8, 10
what decla1 er d1d Further
2 00 - Da ys ot Our L1ves 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 13, Mike
restaurants used to be Atheman scenes, now
BY
JACK
O'BRIAN
mm e Ihe play wm ked East
Douglass 6 Gu1dlng 1.1ght 8, 10
they hang ptctures of S(lll"o, Ar1 and Jackte
ENGAGEMENT HAD A
covered th e qu een wJih the
2 30 - Doctors3 4,1 5 ~tmgGame13 EdgeofNightB, 10
ChrlS Borgen, fmest TV pollee reporter, was
3 00 - Another World 3, 4, 15, General Hospllal 6, 13 , World
F A.'diLIAR RING
kmg and wh en West had to
Press 20 Love 6plendored Thing 8, 10
offered
a
role
m
"Badge
373,"
but
CBS
won't
let
play h1s ace South had no
NEW YORK (KFS)- Paula Laurence gets
3
30
- Return to Peylon Place 3, 4, 15 One Lite to Live 6, 13,
t1 ouble b11ngmg hts 1mpos many glowing mentions m John Housman's him
Danny Thomas' coffee commewal
Secret
Storm 10 Magg1e &amp;The Beaut 1ful Machine 20, Merv
s1 ble con tt act home
Gnff1n 8
uRun·Through" memotrs "Why not' I was featured the comtc mdark coffee-tmted tresses,
4 00 - MISter Cartoon 3 Love Ameman Style 13, Flintstone 6
now he's letting the natural gray back m
llm It wasn I too good engaged to h
th
Merv Gnffm 4 Somerset 15 Sesame Street 20 33 , Movie
a play It would hav e cost
un ree tunes'"
Mtckey
Mayor Lmdsay's wtll-run-agam anTarzan s Three Challenges" 10
tum a lt 1ck tf West held ace Rooney's despatr loves his low- chtldren by hts
nouncement
1S
due
any
day
Is
that
a
threat
or
a
4
30Pett icoa t Junct 1on 3 I Love Lucy 6 Dick Van Dyke 15
5
kmg )ack ace )ack four or th mamage, but the cow-ts won't let him have
Dan1el Boone 13 , Gilligan s Island 8
promtse'
Latin
mustc
maestrL
Sergw
kmg Jack fo ur and co uld them . Dav1d Casstdy will be JUSt another
5 oo - Damel Boone 6 Mr Rogers 20 33 Andy Griffith t5,
only ga m for h1m tf East 'typtcal U S ktd m next season's "Partrtdge Mendes IS spending hts bossa nova.gams on a
Bonanza 3 4
•
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Marshall Dillon 13,
held the app1 op11ate tht ee Famtly" rupups Ins show has had co tru ted cham or Latin·Amencan theaters The new
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Beverly Hillbillies 8
11 umps and made lhe mts 1 h
br
ns c
lake of covenng
or rrna and new 1926model-Troadsterwtth status symbol among showbtz nouveaus wtll be
5 55 - Earl Nightingale lS
6 00- News3.4 8 10 13 IS Truth or Conseq 6 Sesame St 20
everythmg hand-tatlored - 100 coats of hand- yachts this year every Tom, Dtck and SamJny
0 swa ld Sout h agreed to rubbed pam!
Around The Bend 33
had
ed
owns a RollS-Royce
21
all tha t He explamed tha i
•m
s es spray over an
6 30- News 3 4, 6, 8 10, 15 I Dream of Jeannie 13 , Growing
The Golddiggers group IS getting restless
West was the sort of pia)er underbase of crushes pearls, onenlal ftsh
H1m Up 33
The
sometimes smger wtth Woody Herman's
7 00 - What s My L1ne 8, l"ve Got A Secret 13 , Elec Co 20,
who would have doubled fo Ul scales, and dtamond dust
The 20-year-old
Beat The Clock 4, News 6 10, Untamed World 13 TV Honor
spades Wllh th e ace kmg of beauty who poses front-nude m the "Les Males" band ts Tommy Uttlelteld Tommy 1S Woody's
Soc1ely
15 Truto or Consequences 3
cl ubs and two probabl e fhck ts the daughter ol Canadtan cabmet 12-year-old grandson .. Team owners say that
7 30- ThiSis Your Llfe3 To Tell The Trulh 6. Price Is Right 8,
t1 ump lucks and anyway h1s mtruster Gerard Pelleller
the new commandment for athletes 1S Honor
10 BeatThe Clock 13 RFD 20 C1rcus 4 Great Decisions '73
play wm ked whtle the not m
33
thy father and mother but not thy contract
8 QO - Tempera lures RISing 6 q Maude 8, 10 Book Beai 33,
,_ at play would have been a
Air Force Sgt Peter Wrtght of Arlington, Rocky Aoki, who owns the prosperous (and
Ohio ThiS Week 20 Movie The Great Man s Whls•ers • 3
...... toseP •
..
4 15
"
Va , wasn't a forlorn lad while stationed here deservedly) Benlhana of Toliyo restaurant
' (NEW SPAPER ENTERPRIS[ ASSN ) the past 19 months he saw 33 stage shows which cham, like all new-rtch lads last year bought two 8 3~ - Ha wa11 Five 0 8 10, Bill Moyer s Journal20, 33, Movie
The Greal Amencan Beau ty Contest, 6, 13
would've cost hun more than $750 if he hadn't Rolls-Royces. Not enough he's added a $14,000
9 00 - Behind the Lines 20 33
got them free at the 1540 Bdwy USO freebee Jensen speedster Asked a watter If there are
9 30- Black Journal 20, 33 Nwv1e The Horror at 37 000 Feet"
center Howard Bruno IS a former btg-band any more "btg spenders" around "At these
8 10
The b1ddmg has been
drummer for Guy Lombardo, Ozz1e Nelson, Nat prtces," he shrugged' "everyone has to be a btg 10 00 - Marcus WelbyM 0 6 13, News20 . NBC Reports3 4 15
Wesl
North
Ea~t
South Brandywynne etc and Sits m three hours at
11 00 - News3 4 8 10 13 lS
''
spender ''
11
30
Johnny
Carson
3
4
15
Suicide
Club
6,
13
Movie
'Wild
Roseland each St w1th Johnny Mulay's ork
No Bdwy show can match the basketball
Pass
lnTheStreets 8. Mov 1e 'TheThreeFacesofEve 10
Poss
Rest of the week he's the ticket taker Soon- games at The Garden for scalper's prices the 1 00 - Your Hea lth 4 News 13
Pass
Pass
3¥
130 - News4
Pn s~
Pass
due
about Sptros Skouras' 20th-Fox years Jan 27 Knlcks.Celtlcs game had the tllegal
' won'tbook
be flattermg
You South hold
Sidewalk tycoons demandmg - and gettmg Saddest
true tale Florence A Dwley, a up to $100 a patr Now there's a "Godfather"
jfii\K54 ¥AQt. 3 +2 ,j,KQ107
Rochester spmster, was secretary to the boss of bout1que m Greenwhtch Village Bra-burrung
Whul do you do now?
an
upstate bank, who advtsed her to "Put your women's libbers please note the Amer Med
A- H•rl hvt• club" 01 pass de
pcndmg 011 what sm t or bidder money m Kodak " Mtss Oatley retired to an old· Assn warns off1c1ally gotng wtthout bras 1S
\UUr p11rtnc1 I S
ladtes' hotel where she hved poorly, dressed dangerous to mammary ligaments The meds
shabbily, was found unconscwus m the ftlth of call tt Cooper's Droop, after the doctor who
TODAY S QUESTION
BY PAUL CRABTREE
her
uncared.for
room
and
was
taken
to
St
Ann's
Ins tcud of respond1ng one no
analyzed the hgamentary results of pseudoHere's another qwz - one about hiStory and some radical
tJ ump North has 1 ~used your Home, where she was constdered so tembly
Independence "Out of Thts World" was a SO· acts and statements Even If you're not a history bull, stick with
one clu b btd to two Wh a t do poor, the doctor who VlBtled her dtdn't even send
so
mustcal wtth good Cole Porter songs whtch 11, for the al19wers wtll surpriSe you
you do now I
a btll M1ss Da1ley died m the late 00s at 87 and made no Bdwy dent at all Drama crttic George
1- Who sa1d, "Labor 1S pnorto, and Independent of, capital
Answc 1 tomurru"'
would have been complelely Ignored - except Oppenheuner has redone the book, and Equtty CapttaltS only the frUit of labor, and could never have existed
her portfoho of Eastman Kodak stock made her Library Theater wtll test tt this month
On thts day m history
had labor not fU"st exlSted Labor 1S the superior of capital "
estate
worth $19,000,000'
ln 1912, Chma became a
Vtctor Borge was asked if he 'll continue hiS
A - Karl Marx, B - Ntkolall..enln ; C. - Niktta Khrush·
New tssue of Nicaraguan stamps honors marvelous one-man show "I don't see how we chev , D - None of the above
1epubhc when the Manchu
dynasty was overthrown by the Interpol, tbe mt'l pollee orgamzatton, wtth could do tt wtth less," was hts courtly zmger
2 - Whose election, m a manner we would consider nwst
pictures offamous detectives and lawyers such Davtd Batley, the ex-truckdrtver who poses as undemocrattc, touched off a wave of rebellion In the southern
Nat10nahsts
' In 1942, the German battle· as Sherlock Holmes, Sam Spade and Perry the bare-chested lad peddhng a deodorant on portion of his country, and caused him to send troo(16 Into the
sh1ps Dcharnhorst and GnetSe· Mason
TV, was scouted on that one topless pttch and revoltmg areas'
It's
catchmg
recent
Dean
Martin
Show
nau escaped from the French
will be starred already m the "Wicked, Wtcked"
A - Ho ChtMmh, B - Le Due Tho, C - Ngo Dinh Diem,
port of Brest mto the North tapmg saw a stzable slice of the audience fltck playmg a detective Nothing to sniff at
D - None of the above
woofled Standard wall decoratiOn for Greek Joan Blondell's tram of thought won't let her fly
Sea
3- Who forecast bloody revolution wtthin hts country when
he said two months before the war began "This coun'try
belongs to the people who mhabtt 11 Whenev;r they grow weacy
of the eJUSttng government, they can exercise their constitutional
nght of amending tt, or thetr revolutionary right of dlsmem·
bermg or overthrowing tt "
A - Czar Nicholas ll, B _ Leon Trotsky, C _ Fidel
Castro, D - None of the above
4 - Who threatened Ill leave his native land because of
"rac~t" Issues, saymg tbat'I!~clst elements seized power "I
shall prefer emJgrating to some other country "
'
By Lawrence Lamb, M D should be cons tderably pro· Its JUSt as good or a better A- That's what 1 went to
A - Stokely CarmJchael, B _ Rap Br~;· C _ Martin
Dear Dr Lamb - Would longed c ompar~d to the nor- sedattve than a lot of sleep· medtcal school for
Luther
King, D - Non~ of the above
you please explam the read mal blood The obJect IS to mg p1 lls which ate used It" (NEWSPA. PER EHTERPRISE ASSH J
5 - Whtch national leader boldly cut in half one of the
mgs m a prothrombm blood prevent your blood from hav doe.n t happen to be the
mg
a
tendency
to
clot,
hop
that
I
usually
pre
medtcme
governments
makmg war agamst his armies, and placed the
lest of 25/ 13 I am lakmg
mg
to
prevent
a
new
heart
scrtbe
for
thts
purpose,
bul
Send vour 4uestron.s to Dr Lomb, disputed territory on a co-equal footing with other territories
ft ve Coumadm t ab 1e t s a
week I had a heart allack attack Too much medtctne on the other hand I seo no m core of t,1.s ne wspaper P 0 Bo11 under his rule?
may cause bleedmg whtle harm m 1! m reasonable
last year
1551 Rod1o C1ty Stot1on New York ,
A - Adolf Hitler ; B - Beruto Mussollnl; c _ Fulgenclo
too hltle ISn't effecttve m amounts m spec1f1c cases
Dear Reader- Many peo preventmg blood clottmg
Batista,
D - None of the above.
NY
J00/9
For
o
copy
of
Dr
Q- You tell your readers
pie are lakmg Coumadm
Dear Dr. Lamb - I read not to smoke tobacco and lambs boofc/er on blood sugar , send
8 - Who justified the raiSing of an army of conquest b
afte1 heart attacks so I am
dally
column
and
al
your
not
to
drmk
coffee
w
h
y
saying
the question ts "whether any government not too st Y
SO cents to the some address and
sure your questiOn wtll be of
ways
fmd
11
mtereslmg
I
don
't
you
tell
them
'not
to
general mtet est To hnd out
Olk lor HB/ood Sugar' boofllef
for the llberttes of tis people, can be strong enough' to malnta~~:
how effechve the medtcme woWd apprectate some an· drmk alcohol'
exiStence m great emergencies "
,
1S m preventmg yo ur blood !wers to these quesllons
A- If you've read my
A - Josef Stalin, B. - Emperor Halle Selaasie· C
Q- How ca n 10 glasses of columns regularly as you
from clollmg, a sample of
Chtang
Kalo~~hek, D - None of the above
'
normal blood Is tested at the alcoholic beverage b e polson mentioned you'd know that
7- What natlonalleader was slain as he attempted to chart
same tune yo ur b I o o d IS tf one ts not '
I rlo
tested The number 13 re
A- That s stmple E v e n
The Almanac
a path of peaceful Cll-&lt;!XIStence with his country's former
fers lo 13 seconds reqmred our best medtcmes tf taken
By United Press International enenlles?
for the no r m a I control m excesstve amounts can be
Today ts Monday, Feb 12, y A - JohnF Kennecty, B.-MohandasK. Gandhi; C.-Sun
blood s clottmg mechamsm pmsonous Digttahs for ex~ Q- Should anyone beSides
ato~~en , D - None of the above ,
and the 25 refers to the 25 ample, one Of our most COm· husband and Wife Or those the 43rd day of 1973 with 322 to
seconds tt requtres fo r your mon heart medtcmes when engaged to become husband folio" Thts ts Lmcoln's btrlh· '
, +++
blood to react Bastcally thts given m lhe nghl amount and wtfe ktss on the hps'
day
As you've probably guessed, "D" Ia tbe anawer to all seven
means that the c I o t t 1n g can prevent heart failure
A- That's a moral ques
The moon ts approaching Its queAtions. All the actions and quotationsarefroma man who W1IS
mechamsm of your blood ts When g1ven m too large an han not JUSt a medtcal one
full
phase
the greatest of all American Prealdenta Abraham Uncoln
prolonged to about twtce that amount tl can be tox1c and and up to the mdlvtduals
The mornmg stars are Venus,
The founder of today's C0118ervaUv~ Republican Party. !ot a normal md1vidual
even cause death Even small concerned Between healthy
tered each statement noted above, preeipltated the 111
uln
These labot atory les ts are amounts of alcohol howeve 1 people 11 1s unbkely to cause Mars and Juptter
reasonably complex and tend are harmful tO SOme people any problems It IS ' hOW·
The evenmg stars are Mer· the Civil War by his very aliCI!IIJion to power
lo vat y dependmg on the re
Q- lf your pah~nt need&amp; a ever, a means of transmtt· cury and Saturn
Western Virginia to the Unloo, freed the ala;ea and ~~
agents used a nd thts ts why sedatiVe do you pl escrlbe hng colds, resptratory mfec·
Those
born
on
thts
date
are
'
tended the hand of brotherhood to the defeated' South
•
ttons and somehmes other
a controlled blood sample alcohol"'
achieved greatness
- and
Illnesses wh e th er one 15 under the s1gn of Aquartus
h om a normal pet son ts used
A ~ If th e mdtvldual tolet
marned to a ktssmg parlne1
Bnhsh
btolog1st
Charles
Dar.
Happy
birthday,
Abe
to check agamsl your blood ates alcohol well and 1t 1s 01 not
each tune the test •s done
wm was born Feb 12, ~
+++
not upsettmg lor h1m to use
Q- Do you believe m pre
ON THE TV DIAL: A look, at the hoiTCI'tl II heroin ·in 1
JJ vo ur medl&lt;:lllc rs effpc 1t I ~&gt;ouldn t hes1t ale to pt c· venting pam and spread of Abraham Lincoln was born on
t1vr your pr oth1 nmh111 flmt St t dw tt to un m(!n tdual (h.sease 1
Ihe same day
WLWC·TV documentary, at 8 ... Ohio State-Ion ~lball
foUows, same apot, 8::10.

I Voice along Br'Way

I

1

Expectant Falhers Have A Say

t

WIN AT BRIDG:!

tzaR: I:11 ZM!&amp;IJ

'"'2.

&amp; THINGS

DR. LAWRENCE E.LAMB
Heart Attack Factor

Test Measures Blood Clotting

boldly~

'

I

PALM SPRINGS, Calif.
(UP!) - Patience IS a virtue
ooly the aging can appreciate
and the young ought to practice
but never do.
For 25-year-old Johnny Mfi•
ler •who bad a chance to tie 43year-old Arnold Palmer in the
windup round Sunday of the
Bob Hope Desert Classic, but
finished tleCOnd two strokes
back, It was, hopefully, a
Ieason well learned.
For Jack Nicklaus, who tied
for second with Mlller ,It was a
chance missed but he was
bappy to see hts old friend
Arnie finally win one

It rained for all but four boles
on Palmer, Nicklaus and
Mlller, but once Arnie jumped
into the lead, he admitted he
never gave a tleCOnd thought to
the weather

Miller said the rain bothered
him. "The more I kept thinking
about that the less I started
paying attention to my game
It was a case of lneltperience
and It's something I'll just have
14 learn."
"! feel just super," Palmer
aaid after tapping a short
birdie putt on the 18th green at
Bermuda Dunes In the windup

Sunday to win Itt. fifth Hope
classic and the61st tournament
overall.
"I'm excited about my
putting," he said "It's better
than It has been In a long time
and that's the secret to playing
well. U you can't putt you can't
win I missed a few this week
but I made all the key putts "
Pabner won $32,000 for his
five-day effort and he left the
desert area be loves so much to
go back East and tend to
business Interests He won't
rejoin the IDur now until after
this week's San Diego Open.
Miller and Nicklaus won

SH,800 each while Gary
Brewerand Jim Wlechers, who
finished three strokes back at
~. won S'1,040 each. Schlee,
winner of the HawaUan Open a ·
week ago, was all alooe at 348
and won $5,760 while Lanny
Wadkins won $5,120 for
finishing at 349

Lee Trevino, who still doesn't
have his game under control,
wounl up at 356, 13 shots
behind Palmer, while Bob
Rosburg, the 1972 Hope winner,
packed up after making the
turn in the final rolUld with a
40.

Winles~ Rockets at Meigs Tuesday
BY CONNIE SMITH
1- season the Rockets have fatled
In this Tuesday's contest, the to Ignite any kind of vtctory
struggling Me~gs Marauders flame
will host the wmleM Golden
It Is dtfftcult for any team to
Rockets of Wellston So far this go through an entire season

Ali heavy favorite
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!)Muhammad All has been fn.
tllalled by oddamakers here as
a 7-1 to 8-1 favorite to beat
European heavyweight cham·
pion Joe Bugner of England in
their 12-rolUld fight at the Las
Vegas Convention Center
Wednesday night
Both men are sched111ed to
complete their training today
with light workouts at Caesars
Palace, the fight headquarters
"I'm in my best shape since
1967," the 31-year-old All said

&amp;mday after he completed
etght rolUlda of assorted sparring, beg punching and rope
skipping.
His 22-year-old Hungananborn opponent took the day off
Sunday.
Ali sparred four rounds
Sunday, two each with Billy
Daniels of New York and Tony
Doyle of Salt Lake City.
The 6-foot-4 Bugner is expected to outweigh the 6-3 Ali
by one or two pounds at
Wednesday's 11 a m PST
weigh-in

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sport~ Editor

wtth nothing but losses, but
Wellston seems to be heading
in that direction It ts really too
bad, because one of the best
players in the SEOAL league 1S
on the Golden Rockets' team
He ts a 5-8 semor guard
dnyamo, Dave Souders In hlS
last two outmgs Souders has
scored 65 pomts, Including a
career h1gh 42 pomt performance agat119tlronlon a few
weeks ago.
Souders ts the leadmg pomt
maker in the league, averaging
20.7 pomts a game Charles
Snare, 5-9 senior guard 1S
another standout player for the
Golden Rockets Snare has a
free throw percentage of .652
Other than these two, Wellston
has a pretty much saggmg
offense, averaging 53 pomts a
game They lost to Jackson on
Frtday 91-58
Me1gs also has had Its

Matmen
•
•
mwm

The Meigs grapplers weren't
&gt; satisfied with just breaking one
record so they broke two in one
NEW YORK (UP!) -Peace, It was wonderful
week
Too bad It lasted only a few days.
Last week Coach John
Now both ~es are talking about digging In again, and before
Bentley's
squad delea•ed
you know It they could be fighting the same old war which
Wahama 55-12 This point total
everyon~ Is tired of again
was
the highest Metgs bad ever
Last week everything seemed nne.
The baseball owners had made this ''wonderful" offer to the accumulated in one meet.
Saturday mght the wrestlers
players
met
Wahama agam and this
They called it a "lreakthrough offer" because for the first
time ever the owners agreed to submit to outside arbltrattoo if time beat them 61).8 The 80
the players weren't aatlsfied with terms offered them m thetr pomts broke their one week old
record of 55 and tbe &amp; pomts
contracts
This was such a revolutionary offer that there were those on that Wahama scored was the
both sides who thought 11 would guarantee peace for the next lowest that Meigs has ever beld
an opponent The rampaging
three years.
wrestlers have evened thetr
But wait a minute
season stanllngs at four wins
They Read the Floe Print
The players read some of the !!he print in this wonderful offer and four losses.
Meigs won 12 out of 13,
and now they don't think It's so wooderful any more
allowing
Wahama just one pm.
They've looked lhlS gift horse In the mouth and discovered
The Marauders had six pUIS,
some false teeth
four
decisi0119 and two forfetts.
Accordingly, it's a pretty good bet that when Marvin Miller
Here's the results
geta up at this news conference he has called today he will have
101 lbs. class-Warner, M,
ooe word for the owners, and the word will be "no "
MarvinMlller heads the Players' AlaoclaUon, or if you want to pinned Reed, w
108lbs class - Williamson,
say It another way, you can say he does their thinking for them.
This Is just as well for the ballplayers becauae wben It COIIles to W, pinned D Rosenbaum, M.
115lb class T McClure, M,
pure thinking, m the majority of cases, simply are not In the
declsloned King, W
same league with Marvm Miller. Neither are most of the owners
1221bs class -Rosenbaum,
but that's another story
'
For some time now, Marvin Miller bas been pushing for out- M, plnned.Newell, W
129lbs. claa-J. Musser, M,
side arbitration, and one of the reasons could be he Is something
of an authority in tbe field, having served on national arbitration declsloned Yonker, W.
135 lba. claa - Moore, M,
boards before aSSI111linll his present poeltion
pinned Gibbs, W
Some GI"OWIII Ralel
141 lba. class - Hysell, M,
Wilen the owners agreed to arbitration In theU" latest offer to
the players, they insisted on some ground rules, Including one dectsloned Kobler, W.
148 lbs. class - McLaughlin,
which says no player can deliWld outside arbitration two years
M, pinned Olinger, W
in a row
148lbs. class - Brlcltles, M,
To discourage "fnvolous" offers on either side, the players
dectsloned
Young, W.
made a proposal of their own. They stipulated that any salary
170 lbs class -Lehew, M,
deadlock taken to arbitration be setUed at either the club's figure
pinned
HusseU, W.
or the player's figure, with no compromise. That means if a
178 lbs. claa - Pickens, M,
player Is asking ~,000 and a club Is offermg $40,000, the ardectstoned
Roush, w
bitrator must declae on ooe of those two figures . He can't say
188 lbs. claM - Slack, M,
$80,000.
won
by forfeit
But the owners are seeking to Impose some otber conditions,
Heavyweight - Haley, M,
and these are the ones Marvin Mlller Isn't buying
won
by forfeit.
When a dispute goes to arbitration, the owners say, a player
Meigs has won Its last three
w1ll not be permitted to Introduce such factors as
matches
and has been
1 - The club's attendance total,
wrestling tremendously this
2 - Revenue to the club derived from TV contracts,
3 ~ch Intangibles as the player's personal popularity wtth last part of the season. Meigs
the fans and how many people it may be respo119ible for at the will be hosted by Athel19 this
Saturday, Feb 17 at 7 30.
gate, and
4.-The player'lt press clippings.
The t.ut Collllltlon
The DIU,-:-Stntintl
That last condition Is tbl one that gets me
DEVOTIO TO THE
INTIRIST OF
Naturally, the players don't want any of lhese conditions
MEIGS-MASON UEA
Imposed when they go to arbitration.
CHISTill L TANNEHILL,
"What for?" says ooe "We'll be worse off that way than we
ROIERT HOIFLICH,
are now. The owners caU their offer 'a big breakthrough • 1doo't
City ••ttor
Publ•sntd dally ucept
see where It Is The way things are now they can ooly cut us 20 Solurday
by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Comp1ny, 111
per cent If we go along with this 'wonderful' proposal of theU"s,
Court St , Pomeroy Ohio
they could cut us anything they want and when It came to ar- ~5769
Buslneu Office Phone
bitratloo, we wouldn't be able to offer certain arguments In our 992 2156 Edllorlal Phont 992
2157
own favor"
Second CIISS pOSfiQe Pl'd at
The fact the owners are wllllng lo go to arbitration representa Pomtroy, Ohio
Natlonel adverflslng
definite J11"011resB for the players.
representative aottlntlll
Inc 12 Ent &lt;2nd
I ce_n understand them not wlahlng to be stripped of certain Glllaghor
St Nrw York C!lty, New York
arguments at the arbltratioo table, and X also can see why the
Sub1crlption rates
De
livered by (lrrler wtlert
owners would wish to eUminate these argumenta from con- available
50 ctntt. ptr wttk
By Motor Route wnere carr1er
alderatioo.
not available Ont
To me, it seems ooe Bide is determined 14 defeat the other, I serv.ce
month Sl 75 By moll In Ohio
can't help feeling what a shame that Ia because In the long run and W va, Ont ';'ear su O!l..:
Six months S7 2S
Thne
the ooly ooe who'll suffer Is Joe Fan.
mor'lths '"' 50 Subscr•pt.on
pr.ct IOCIUdtl Sunday Times:
What's hts crime?
Stnllnel .
Only that he shelled'Otlt hilllllllley to 1ee the game

•••••••

\

I

'\

troubles the past few weeks
During this time they have
won just one of four games
The most recent setback of the
Marauders was last Frtday at
Ironton where the Ttgers
downed Metgs 73·49 Rtch
Batl.!!Y was htgh scorer for
Metgs m that game
The Marauders have many
capable scorers m Bailey, Bill
Vaughan, Mtke Sayre and
Junmy Boggs, so they are not
lackmg m pomt makers Senior
Btll Chaney has good control of
the backboards to Insure Meigs
of a strong defense These last
outmgs senior forward Andy
Vaughan has proved htmself to
be another crasher for
rebounds
Agamst Metgs, the Golden
Rockets wtll probably rack up
theU" 13th col19ecuhve loss this
season
Metgs IS now m a tle for 4th
place w1th Logan, both havmg
records of 6-6 m the SEOAL A
wm over Wellston would keep
the Marauders over the 500
mark

Pro Standirws
NBA Standlllfll
By Unoted Press tntorn~llonol
Eastern Conferanct
Atlantic Division
w. I pet. g.b
Boston
ol5 12 789 New York
&lt;46 15 75-4 1
Bulfalo
18 40 310 27V2
Philadelphia 4 58 065 43V•
Central DiviSion
w I pet. g.b
8altlmore
37 20 649
Atlanta
34 28 548 S'h
Houston
23 36 390 15
Cleveland
21 37 362 16'h
Western Conference
Midwest Division
w I pel g.b.
Milwaukee
41 18 695
Chicago
35 22 614 5
KC Omaha 30 33 476 13
Detrol!
26 32 448 U•h
Paclf1c Division
w I pet. g.b.
LosAngeles 45 13 776
Golden State 36 22 621 9
Phoenix
28 30 &lt;483 18
Seaflle
19 42 311 27'h
Portland
14 ~ 241 31
Sunday's Resull$
Boston 120 Milwaukee 96
Golden St 101 Chicago 96
Buffalo 128 Seal!le 125
Allan Ia 115 Cleveland 107
Los Ang 108 Philadelphia 90
Baltimore 102 Portland 97
(Only games scheduled)
Monday's Games
(No games scheduled)

carolina

Ken!ucky
V1rglma
New York
MemphiS

Redmen top Jackets

by 70-66 count
Rio Grande College rallied from a l~point
halftime deficit to defeat visiting Cedarville 70-66 at
Lyne Center Saturday night
The triumph assured Coach Art Lanham's
Redmen of at least a share of the 1972-73 Mid-Ohio
Conference title. Rio is 6-1 in MOC play, jlnd 11-10 on
the year. The Yellow Jackets dropped to 2-4 in the
conference, and are now 1~10 overall.
Rio has only one conference
game remammg -Feb 21 at Urbana. The Redmen play
at Berea, Ky , on Feb 15, and
at Wilberforce on Feb 24
Cedarville jumped out m
front ~ m the first few
mmutes of play Sabuday The
visitors held 12 pomt leads on
several occastons before Rio
cut it to 10 JUSI before tn·
termlSSton
·
After the Jackets took a 4().28
lea~ to start the second half,
Rio s Dan Bollinger, Capt Ron
Lambert and Steve Bartram
combmed efforts to pull Rio to
coo• ti
th IO
te left
a..,..,. e WI
rrunu S
m the game.
Lambert
ftntShed
the contest
wtth
20 pomts
Bollinger
and
Bartram each had 16. Don
Young had 18 for the Jackets

Pohcy is

tailored to needs.
Whether you want auto, lite
or homeowners Insurance.
we wilt design a policy to Ill
your lndlv1dual require

ments

Discuss your

spec1tlc needs with us

Davis-Warner Ins.
114 eo:~~

9912

'~meroy

lli•~R~Io~2~8--~!!!!!!!!~~=========

SEO Standings

NHL Sloncllngs
By Un1ted Press Internoloonal
East
w I t. pts gl ga
Montrel 36 7 13 85 230 123
NY Rgrs 38 13 S 81 226 132
Boston 34 16 S 73 231 168
Detroit 29 20 7 65 188 171
Bu(lalo 28 20 8 64 196 157
Torbnto 18 30 7 43 169 187
Vncuvr 15 35 7 37 162 248
NY lsldrs 7 ol5 5 19 113 262
West
wltptsgfga
Chicago 33 17 6 72 215 161
M1nn
25 23 8 58 174 164
Ph1la
25 23 9 58 201 201
By United Press lnternallonal StLouis 23 22 10 56 165 170
Atlanta 23 26 9 55 152 164
East
Los Ang 23 27 7 53 169 187
Brooklyn Coli 92 Brandeis 78
P11tsbgh 22 28 6 50 186 191
Manhattan 94 Hofslra 82
Calif
9 36 12 30 152 243
K1ngs PI 67 Trinity 60
Sunday's Resull$
Kutztown 66 W Chester 63
NY Rangers 2 Mil 2, lie
Lafayette 79 Gettysbg 62
Mmnesota 6 Vancouver 3
Bflo 103 Stqny Brook 163
Boston 2 Los Angeles 0
StJohn's NY 78 Fordhm 73
Detroit
5 Buffalo 2
FDU 48 Adelphia 40
Ch1cago 7 Philadelphia 2
Scranton 98 Wagner 69
Atlanta 3 California 1
Princeton 82 Columbia 64
!Qnly games scheduled)
Susquehnna 64 Del Val 57
Monday's Games
Albrght 74 Frkln&amp;Mrohl 58
(No
games
scheduled!
Leh1gh 72 Delaware 70
Lycomong 66 Elmira 57
AHL Standongs
Penn St 73 Navy 63
By Unoted Press lnternollonal
Bethany 69 Thiel 62
So Car 75 Sl Bon 74
East
w. I. I. pis gf ga
MIT 92 Crngle Mlln 65
NS
Dartmouth 83 Yale 69
14 128 64
70 214
141
Boston 29
28 20
192 187
Canlsluo 74 Colgate 54
Rchstr 24 20 9 57 173 t89
Mass 83 UConn 67
Prov
20 23 11 51 181 t86
Fa~rfld 85 Holy Cross 82
Brown 65 Harvard 60
~;r.fld 15 26 14 44 208 240
13 31 11 37 1114 247
Merrimack 80 AIC 76
West
Prov 102 Rhode Is 81
w I. I. pis gf ga
Penn 81 Cornell 52
Clnc1
41 15 4 86 259 t68
Rutgers 97 Wm &amp; Mary 78
Hrshy 29 16 11 69 235 168
Wasll&amp;Lee 82 York 67
Va
27 15 12 66 194 170
Geotwn 66 Dlckmson 65
Rchmnd 21 28 8 so 194 210
Bucknell 57 Rider 49
Jcksnvl 18 30 7 43 183 217
Leb Val 76 Widener 55
Ball
9 36 9 27 153 247
Akron 71 Brckprt St 67
Sunday's Results
Muhlnbrg 91 Urslnus 74
Prov 5 Boston 5, he
W Conn 51 79 Kmgs 78
New Haven ~ Richmond 1
Williams 76 Amherst 53
Rochester 3 Cincinnati o
Assumption 106 Cath U 78
Hershey at N S., ppd snow
Coast Guard 56 QIJeens 55
&lt;Only games scheduled I
Syracuse 82 W Va 62
Monday's Games
Manhattan 94 Hofstra 82
(No
gamesscheduled)
South
Vanderbllt87 Georgia 52
Murray St 83 Morehed St 69
WHA Standings
W Ky 75 Tenn Tech 67
By Unoled Press lnternal•onal
Kentucky 88 Mississippi 70
East
LSU 72 Alabama 70
w I I pis gf gl
No Car 84 Clemson 69
Cleve
34 20 2 70 204 163
G Wash 69 Pittsburgh 66
New Eng 32 23 2 66 233 191
Mid Tenn St 71 E Tenn.St 58 NY
27 31 1 55 236 242
South Ala 66 Slhern Miss 60
Quebec 24 27 4 52 196 217
V~rglnla 104 Wake Forest 73
Phi Ia
24 31 0 &lt;4ft 199 233
N C. St 118 Georgia Tech 9~
O!!awa 21 33 4 46 204 246
Lenoir Rhyne 68 High PI 61
West
Furman 94 VMI 60
wltptsgfgo
WVa 51 81 Wes! Lib 75
Wmlpg 33 23 3 69 215 183
Sewanee 98 Centre 82
Houston 28 23 4 60 210 188
Appalachian St 88 E Car 79
Mlnn
27 28 3 57 187 205
SE La 66 Delta St 63
Los Ang 26 26 4 56 194 191
Samford 73 West Fla 59
Alberta 27 26 2 56 193 186
Flonda 76 Auburn 74
Chicago 21 J3 1 43 177 203
Davidson 86 Citadel 75
Sunday's Results
Midwest
Winnipeg 3 Los Angeles 0
Notre Dame 87 LaSalle 71
Philadelphia 6 Cleveland 1
Purdue 72 Indiana 69
New York 3 O!tawa 2
Miami 0 69 Ohio U 65
Alberta 7 Minnesota s
Clnc1 89 Florida S! 62
Quebec 2 N E 2, lie, ot
Mlnn 80 Ohio St 78
Mt Union 91 Kenron 74
Wisconsin 99 Illinois 88
Franklin 99 Wabash 81
Bwlng Grn 73 West Mlch 69
Marian 99 No Ky 5187
Ashlnd 130 Wllbrfrce 78
M1chlgan 97 M1Ch St 81
SAME DAY
Marquette 88 Tulane 59
Rio Grande 70 Cedrvl 66
SERVICE
Capl!al 70 Bldwn Wllce 65
In At 9-0ut At 5
Buller 62 De Pauw 59
Use
Our Free Porkmg Lol
Wayne 51 55 Hlllsdle 51
Sttsn Fla 81 Ferrs St. 68
Eau Cla1re 79 No Mlch 63
De!rolt83 Xavier 0 81
Wnona St 84 Mlch Tech 77
Green Bay 56 Ill Tech 29
~" E 2nd, Pomeroy
Oklahoma 82 Okla St. 78

College Scores

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Waverly
15 1 1164 856
Gallipolis
14 2 1071 788
Fed Hocking 12 4 923 883
Soulh Point
12 5 11% 9&lt;48
Chesapeake
10 5 942 824
Por!smoulh
10 7 1157 1154
Meigs
9 7 969 996
Athens
9 7 883 816
Logan
8 8 1059 1015
Ironton
S 10 906 896
Jackson
3 13 807 1039
Welloton
0 t6 867 1374
Saturday's Results.
Portsmouth 64 Gallipolis 54
Springfield South 68 Waverly 57
Fed Hocking 63 Miller 41
Tuesday's Games
Jackson at Gallipolis
Wellston at Meigs
Ironton al Waverly
Logan at Athens
WIJCH SIGNS
DETROIT (UP!) ..:. Mickey
Lolich, who bad a 22-14 record
for the Detroit Tigers In 1972
after posting a 24-14 mark in
1971, signed his 1973 contract
Sunday for an eatilruated
$100,000.
The signing of the contract
was B11111lunced by Lollch's
lawyer, Robert Fenton Lollch
has won 163 games for the
Tigers during hls career and
joins 24-game wmner Gaylord
Perry of the Cleveland Indians

Special family meal prices after 4 p.m.

For Adults

For Kids

Btg Shet•
French Fnes
Turnover and
Large Soft Drink
Only

Funburger r•
French Fnes
Small Soft Drink
and Loll1pop
Only

50~

'1

GALLIPOLIS: 1503 EASTERN AVENUE

~in~th~e~$~100~,~000ofialmy~~~cla~ss~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Some people
do fine without
the~ll

Savings Plan.
It depends on your dreams.
If all they need to come true

is a dime here and a
quarter there, you'll do fme
with B sturdy piggy bank.
But if you've got some
bigger plans, like a vacation,
college tuition for the kids,
or a new car, you need
something more.
You need a savings
program that delivers steady
growth and healthy interest.
You need the Payroll
Savings Plan. Just sign up
for It at work. Then an
amount you specify is
automatically set aside from
your paycheck and used to
~uy U.S. Savings Bonds.
You can use your
take-home pay for daily

SHIRT
FINISHING

Robinson's Cleaners

~~~~ooooooo

L.ee Eck finlShed with 15 Rio
pulled down 46 rebounds,
Cedarville had 37 The Redmen
had 16 turnovers, Cedarville
had 13 rruscues
The Rto Jayvees edged
Cedarville 73-71 m Saturday's
preliminary contest
Box score of the varstty
game
CEDARVILLE (661- Eck 6
3-15, Brannon 2 7 11, Wa!son 6
2·14, Melford 3 0-6, Young 8-2
18 Potter 1·0 2 TOTALS 26-14·
66RIO GRANDE (701 _
Bartram 6 4 16, Rose 1 o 2,
Thompson J.2 8, Fausnaugh 1
0 2, Rouse 2 0.4, Lambert 8 4
20, Bollinger 8 0.16, Hart 1 0 2
TOTALS 30·111-70
Hollllme score Cedarville

.... ooooo~ooooooooooo&lt;tooooo

Worrisome bills a problem ?

expenses. And at the same
time you'll be bmldmg fiunds
for the future.
U.S. Savings Bonds
through the Payroll Savings
Plan. For people w1th b1g
dr~ams.

Buy U.S. Savings Bonds
Now E flond t pt y S i r'- ln~-trw wh11 held to Mtlllrll)'
111 6 )lttr. tO month• (4 ..~ th~ firM y..ar Hondt .,.,.
rt plutd It la.t t tolen or dl,.troytd Whtn needed they
ct.n be ct. llwd tl yo ur bank l nltrtt l ll not 1ubjo..;\ lu
ltale or loctl Income t i UI aNI ff'd ~rll 111 mty be

del"'rud unt I ~~ nptlan

Conlrlbuled As A PubliC Service by The Dally Sentmel

125 E. Matn

Pomeroy, Ohio

Ph, 992-2171

'"'" •o............. ,.., ...

G~ O..on•o••

" ' ' '' '" " " " " " " "

••c••• ••••• ..••e••••• '' ''''"''''' •••

1101111 t 1

\

tt,JII•-~­
,~.

Cl . . . . . . .~.~ .. ...

.-1- l"n"" .... T.. ,..,. I lo~l ttoll4hl

•

t

�3- The D&amp;Uy Sent !he!, Middleport-Pomeroy' 0 ., Feb 12, 1973

..

2- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Feb 12, 1973

Bobcats lose
For the second stra•ght
Darst, Hudson and Orland
rught, Kyger Creek hit over 45 Cremeans paced the Gallial19.
pet of Its held goal attempts m Darst had mne pomts, Hudson
a losmg effort
SlX and Creme8119 ftve
Saturday mght, StarrIn the second per1od, the
Washmgton managed to sink 52 Bobcats outscored Starrpet of tis floor attempts m Washmgton, 24-20 Stidham
turrung back the Bobcats, !H}.85 was the leadmg KC scorer wtth
m a fast-movmg thriller played 12 pomts KC collected 19
m the ''httle gym" at Umon pomts m the third pertod wtth
Furnace
Hudson leadmg the way wtth
Frtday mglit, KC btl 49 pet dlght points Greg McCarty,
and lost 81~ to North Gallia senior guard, and Darst
Tratllng 63-60 gomg into the provtded the other pomts
Ellmger and McDamel were
fmal stanza, the Warr1ors used
clutch foul shootmg by Greg the Warriors' leading polntMcDaruel and Doug Ellinger to makf rs wtth 25 and 24
respdcttvely
turn the game around
Starr-Washmgton won the
Coach Jim Arledge's Bobcats led by seven pomts at one reserve game, 58-23 Btll See!
stage m the final stanza before had 19 pomts for the wmners,
fouls begm to lake therr toll Tom Kern and Davtd Clay
KC lost the servtces of two of scored seven each m a losmg
1ts top rebounders, Ii-I Joe cause
Kyger Creek takes tis overall
Stidham, a sophomore, and
Mark Darst, ~ semor Both 4-14 record mto the SectiOnal
ex1ted m the fur~ous fourth Tournament at Metgs agamst
pertod Stidham left wtth 14 North Galha Frtday, Feb 23
points and 14 rebounds whtle
Box Seore
Darst departed after scormg 18
Kyger Creek (85) -McCarty
points and collectmg 10 244, Hudson 11-4-26; Rumley·
().12 , Stidham 6-2-14, WISe ().2rebounds
Ellinger had 16 pomts m the 2, Tabor 244, Cremeal19 2-1-5;
fourth quarter, slX at the Darst 6-6-18, Totals 35-15-85.
charity !me McDaniel added
Starr-Washington (90) ftve pomts, three on foul shots McClam 3-3·9, Ellinger 9-7·25,
and Gerald Robmette had two McDaruel 7·1().24, Robmette 5free throws
3-13, and VermJihon 9·1·19
The Bobcats had JUmped u.to Totals 33-24-90.
the lead on hot-shootmg by Kyger Creek 20 24 19 ~
John Rumley, ~ juruor for- Starr-Wash
28 20 12 30-90
ward, and Clay Hudson, 5-10
juruor
Southwest
Rumley had 10 points m the Housto n 82 S W La 80
Amona 81 UTEP 78
quarter while Hudson added Tex
A&amp;M 108 Ark 82
eight
Texas 77 Baylor 64
Hudson was the leadmg N Tex St 64 N Mex St 63
SW Texas 90 H Payne 73
Bobcat pomt-maker wtth 26 Drake 84 W Tex St 71
points on II baskets and four Hrd lnSmm ns 75 E NewMex 54
Texas Ar l 98 Lamar 90
free throws
Sam Hous St 96 Sui Ross 75
Starr-Washmgton JUmped Texas Tech 64 SMU 59
mto a ~20 lead at the end of McNeese St 81 Ark St 80
Mry s 81 Lelurneau 73
the first per1od Ellmger, St
Corpus Chrl sl1 81 Pan Am 72
McDaruel arld Gary VermJI!ion Ark A&amp;M 95 Gramblmg 91
were the big guns m the TCU 72 R1ce 71
St Ed 84 Southwestern 81
Warrwr arsenal
S F Austin 96 Anoelo St 91
~-·::-:

,,,

·~·

;, ,.;.:,

~

:

.,.,

'

1 Helen Help

I

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

Deception
Is Fine, If--NORrH
• Q62

•

Redskins cop 7th wzn
I

lace 70-65, Otterbein beat
Wooster ~7 and Wittenberg
whipped Deruson 95-46
Dayton beat Long Island U.
84-76,
whtle
Ashland
humthated Wtlberforce 130·
78, Mount Umon beat Kenyon
91-74, Rto Gran ~e edged
Cedarville 7~, Bluffton beat
Wtlmmgton 87-78; Walsh
downed Tiffm 60-00, and Ohio
Ohoo College
BaskeflballScores
Northern rolled over Manetta
By Unlled Press International
75-53
Saturday
Minnesota 80 Ohio State 78
Also, Berea (Ky ) beat
C1nctnnatt 89 Flonda State 62 Wr1glit State 8().74; HU"am
Dayton 84 Long Island U 76
downed Oberlin 113-72; Malooe
M1am1 69 Oh10 U 65
Bowling Green 73 Western defeated Ohto DommJcan 106M1ch 69
95, Defiance beat Findlay 87·
Toledo 72 Kent Stale 69
80,
xavier lost to Detr01t s:h'II;
Delro1t 83 Xav1er 81 ot
Ashland 130 Wilberforce 78
St FranclS (Pa ) stopped Steu·
Capital 70 Baldwin Wallace 65
benvtlle 44-38, Kentucky State
W11tenber~ 95 Den1son 46
Mount Un1on 91 Kenyon 74
crushed Central State 82-53,
Ohio Northern 75 Manella 53 and Akron got by Brockport
Musktngum 76 Ohto Wesleyan
(NY.) State 71-67
54
may be lost for the rest of the
season
In the Ohio Conference, Musklngum mamtalhed tts slim
lead over Capttal, Otterbem
and Wittenberg wtth a 76-54 wm
over Ohio Wesleyan.
Capttal edged Baldwin-Wal·

12

¥ Q7

+ Q1043J
"'J74
WEsT

EAST

.A

.KJ4

· ~5 3

¥1086 2

+J 765

+98

"-Q109 3

"-AK 865

SOUTII

( D)

. 1098753
¥A KJ4
+ AK

"' 2

I.4.

Eas t- Wes t vulneJ able
Norlh
East South
West

Palmer feels just super

Television Log
MONDAY, FEB f2, 1973
7 30- To Te ll !he Truth 6. Young Dr Kildare 8, HollyWood
Squares 4 TraffiCCourt 10 HodgepoJge Lo~e 20, ~~plsode
Action 33 Bobby Goldsboro 3 Movie Tarzan s Peril 13
7 45- EpiSode Achon 33
8 oo - Rowan &amp; Marlin's Laugh In 3, 4, 15, Rookies 6, Gunsmoke 8 10 Escape from Heroin 4, Cambridge Debafe on
Women s L1b 20, 33
1
8 30- College Basketball 4
..
9 oo - Heres Lucy 8, 10, World Premiere 3, 15, Movie The
Longest Day 6, 13 NET Opera Theatre 20, 33
9 30 - Dom Day 8, 10
10 00 - News 20 B1ll Cosby 8 10 An American Family 33.
Laugh In 4
11 00 - News3 4. 6 8, 10, 13 15
'
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 Movies "Someone~; the Top of
!he Stairs" 6 13 Movie The Corrupt Ones 81 Movie
'Strangers at Sunrise" 1D
1 00 - Focus On Columbus 4, News 13

Dear Helen
Somethmg for a "different" column
In the expectant fathers ' room at Holy Name Hospttal,
Teaneck, N J are several notebooks filled wtth the thoughts and
emollons of those not-so-stoical men who mu$t only stt and watt.
They are fast becommg the best-read books in the hospttal, and
each day they grow a httle more, for "writing It down" ts a great
way to make trrne move alone
Heartwarming, anXIous, awed, often humorous, occasiOnally
sad, these hasttly penned notes offer male reactions to females'
labor-of-love Could I share a few wtth your readers ' Here they
are·
To all readers! I wrtte to relieve my tens10ns smce I am
nervous and like the tune to pass qwckly My wife has seven
other children so I hope thlS 1S another healthy, beautiful one
The doctor 1S gomg to notify me as soon as I can see my beautiful
wife (Later ) IT'S AGIRL ..• AND ABOY! Congratulations to
my wife and me'
This Is our ftrst child and I must use the word "Our " It has
been a joint effort all the way and if someone ever says that a
husband doesn't go through much durtng the bU"th of a chtld then
he has never been a husband
l don 't think I could have found a better wife If I had watted
till l was 99 to marry l thank God for gtvmg her and my children
to me and I ask that this child be healthy and whole and to
PLEASE HURRY THIS THING ALONG!
Sorry, men, but •t looks like this will have to be short and
sweet My wile would be terrific on a track team. We amved at
the hospttal at 9 25 p.m It's now 10·10and just &amp;bout that time . .
reading through this month's btrths, It seems boys are m the
majortty Smce f have one of each I'll setUe lor either But to help
keep score, I'll let you know whtch 11 Is
IT'S A GIRL! 8 pounds 9 ounces
My wife and I arrived here at 5 00 a m Dtd I tell you she Is a
reglste~ed nurse' Believe me, It makes no difference, she's only
a woman now I've been wtth her since 5 30 am and I've seen
her re-live the natural, pamful process of creation Soon I will see
the mJracle God wdling, all wtll go well
Am I nervous' Wtthouta doubt' Whoever satd that the lather
gets off easy was never a father'
12 15 p m Our son has arrived lncredtble' He's beautiful
and so 1S my wile I love them both
I'm exhausted'
I'm ecstatic'
I'm a father 1 - A MATERNITY WARD NURSE
Dear Helen
f want to rap with the heterosexual people of our society You
see, I'm not trymg to convert you Into homosexuals (though most
of you try to convert us 1) I ask only that you no longer look on us
as "Sick people " We are beautiful people who have a large
capacrty to love - just as you do The way the world lS, I don't
thtnk anyone has a right to say what IS normal and abnormal nor
should anyone be judged on set standards WE are able ~ understand and accept heterosexuals, so why can't you do the same
for us ' I am s1ck only m the sense of being oppressed and
ostractzed
Please don't chng to tbe stereotyped view of hombsexuals
Not all of us go around dressed in strange clothes or talkmg like
fags. We aren 't crttelnals We are mainly gentle people who don't
force our way or life on others
Your next-door-ne~ghbor, whom you think Is so superpflrfect, may be gay Some of our most creative artists, writers,
muslct8119, both men and women, are what the world calls
"twisted." But are we any more twisted than husbands and
wives who-live together wtthout love'
I turned gay because of rejection When I'm wtth my people
I'm never put down Everyone 1S friendly and kind
Please understand, I am not knocking stratghts. I am only
asking that our minonty group be treated as human bemgs,
becauae that's what we are. - PEALE
I

.

'

130- News 4

TUESDAY, FEB 13,1973
6 00 - Sunnse Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15- farm Report 13, Fa rmt1me 10
6 25 - Paul Harvev 13
6 3D-Columbus Today 4 B1ble Answers 8,

Concern &amp; Com·
ment 10 Fal!h For Today 13
6 45 - Corncob Reoort J
6 55- Take F1ve for Life 15
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15 CBS News 8, 10 News 6, Flln!s!onos 13
7 30- Sleepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13 Popeye 1D
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 13. Sesame St 33.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald There " nothm g
Htram 83 Oberltn 72
wrong WJth decephve play
Lass1e 6
O!terbeln 69 Wooster 67
8 30- Ja ck LaLanne 13 Romper Room 8 New Zoo Revue 6
pro v 1d e d the decepuon
Bluffton 87 W1lm1ngton 78
9 30 - Paul D1xon 4 Phil Donahue 15, Concentration 6.
RECORD IIANDI.E
works '
R1o Grande 70 Cedarville 66
Friendly Junct1on 10 Ben Casey 13 Capt Kangaroo 8, AM
Kentucky 82 Central Slate 53
NEW YORK (UP!) - A
J1m
'In other wo1ds,
3
Defiance 87 F1ndlay 80
nothmg succeeds as well as
30- ToTeii The Truth3 Jeopardy6
Malone
106 Oh1o Domm1can 95 record one-day handle for 109 oo
- D1nah Shore 3 15 Columbus S1x Calling 6, Joker's Wild
success '
Saturday,
Feb
10,
totaling
St Frane~s (Pal 44
8
D1ck Van Dyke 13
Steubenville
38
$1,499,672 from the combined 10 30-10Concentration
Oswald "Here ts a ~ood
3.15 Ph1l Donahue 4 Price Is Righi 8, 10,
Walsh 65 Tiffm 60
exa mple of a httle m1ld de
recetpts of Bowte race track
Spill Second 13
Berea
(
Ky
l
80
Wnghl
State
74
ceptJOn whtch wound up as
Ak ron 71 Brockport (N Y 1 St and Yonkers Raceway, was 11 oo - Sa le ofthe Centur.l' 3 15 Love American Style 6 Gambit
8 10, Password 13 f lee Co 20
hi ghway rob bet y '
67
announced Sunday by the Off- 11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 15. Love of Life 8, 10, Bewitched
John Carroll 96 Alleghany
Jun I assume that West
6 13 , Sesame Sl 20
Track Betting Corp
(Pal 93
started by playmg the kmg
12 00 - Jack1e Oblmger 8 Jeopardy 3 15 Bob Braun's 50 50
Club 4 Password 6 News 10 13
and ace of clubs wh ereupon
• •••,.,:-; :'•!"• ·::: =~.'"!X:!$•!•..:::-;.')M,.:'U.:! ~-=- ::: ....~·=-:=:::::.. '"! :::-:: ·':;:;:; ..-;:~~
12 25 - CBS News 8
declarer ruff e d entered ;:.g;g-§8~·-.-:-:- ···:··
12 30 - 3 W's 3 15 Spl1l Second 6, Search For Tomorrow 8 10
dummy w1th the queen of
12 55 - NBC News 3 15
hearts and led the queen of
1 oo - News 3 All My Children 6 13 Green Acres 10 Not For
humps'
Women Only 15 Secret Storm 8
1 20 - Fash1ons 1n Sewmg 3
Oswald
As usual you
1 30 - 3 On AMatch 3 4 15 Let's Make A Deal 6, 13 As The
ha ve fl gu1 ed out e~actly
World Turns 8, 10
what decla1 er d1d Further
2 00 - Da ys ot Our L1ves 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 13, Mike
restaurants used to be Atheman scenes, now
BY
JACK
O'BRIAN
mm e Ihe play wm ked East
Douglass 6 Gu1dlng 1.1ght 8, 10
they hang ptctures of S(lll"o, Ar1 and Jackte
ENGAGEMENT HAD A
covered th e qu een wJih the
2 30 - Doctors3 4,1 5 ~tmgGame13 EdgeofNightB, 10
ChrlS Borgen, fmest TV pollee reporter, was
3 00 - Another World 3, 4, 15, General Hospllal 6, 13 , World
F A.'diLIAR RING
kmg and wh en West had to
Press 20 Love 6plendored Thing 8, 10
offered
a
role
m
"Badge
373,"
but
CBS
won't
let
play h1s ace South had no
NEW YORK (KFS)- Paula Laurence gets
3
30
- Return to Peylon Place 3, 4, 15 One Lite to Live 6, 13,
t1 ouble b11ngmg hts 1mpos many glowing mentions m John Housman's him
Danny Thomas' coffee commewal
Secret
Storm 10 Magg1e &amp;The Beaut 1ful Machine 20, Merv
s1 ble con tt act home
Gnff1n 8
uRun·Through" memotrs "Why not' I was featured the comtc mdark coffee-tmted tresses,
4 00 - MISter Cartoon 3 Love Ameman Style 13, Flintstone 6
now he's letting the natural gray back m
llm It wasn I too good engaged to h
th
Merv Gnffm 4 Somerset 15 Sesame Street 20 33 , Movie
a play It would hav e cost
un ree tunes'"
Mtckey
Mayor Lmdsay's wtll-run-agam anTarzan s Three Challenges" 10
tum a lt 1ck tf West held ace Rooney's despatr loves his low- chtldren by hts
nouncement
1S
due
any
day
Is
that
a
threat
or
a
4
30Pett icoa t Junct 1on 3 I Love Lucy 6 Dick Van Dyke 15
5
kmg )ack ace )ack four or th mamage, but the cow-ts won't let him have
Dan1el Boone 13 , Gilligan s Island 8
promtse'
Latin
mustc
maestrL
Sergw
kmg Jack fo ur and co uld them . Dav1d Casstdy will be JUSt another
5 oo - Damel Boone 6 Mr Rogers 20 33 Andy Griffith t5,
only ga m for h1m tf East 'typtcal U S ktd m next season's "Partrtdge Mendes IS spending hts bossa nova.gams on a
Bonanza 3 4
•
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Marshall Dillon 13,
held the app1 op11ate tht ee Famtly" rupups Ins show has had co tru ted cham or Latin·Amencan theaters The new
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Beverly Hillbillies 8
11 umps and made lhe mts 1 h
br
ns c
lake of covenng
or rrna and new 1926model-Troadsterwtth status symbol among showbtz nouveaus wtll be
5 55 - Earl Nightingale lS
6 00- News3.4 8 10 13 IS Truth or Conseq 6 Sesame St 20
everythmg hand-tatlored - 100 coats of hand- yachts this year every Tom, Dtck and SamJny
0 swa ld Sout h agreed to rubbed pam!
Around The Bend 33
had
ed
owns a RollS-Royce
21
all tha t He explamed tha i
•m
s es spray over an
6 30- News 3 4, 6, 8 10, 15 I Dream of Jeannie 13 , Growing
The Golddiggers group IS getting restless
West was the sort of pia)er underbase of crushes pearls, onenlal ftsh
H1m Up 33
The
sometimes smger wtth Woody Herman's
7 00 - What s My L1ne 8, l"ve Got A Secret 13 , Elec Co 20,
who would have doubled fo Ul scales, and dtamond dust
The 20-year-old
Beat The Clock 4, News 6 10, Untamed World 13 TV Honor
spades Wllh th e ace kmg of beauty who poses front-nude m the "Les Males" band ts Tommy Uttlelteld Tommy 1S Woody's
Soc1ely
15 Truto or Consequences 3
cl ubs and two probabl e fhck ts the daughter ol Canadtan cabmet 12-year-old grandson .. Team owners say that
7 30- ThiSis Your Llfe3 To Tell The Trulh 6. Price Is Right 8,
t1 ump lucks and anyway h1s mtruster Gerard Pelleller
the new commandment for athletes 1S Honor
10 BeatThe Clock 13 RFD 20 C1rcus 4 Great Decisions '73
play wm ked whtle the not m
33
thy father and mother but not thy contract
8 QO - Tempera lures RISing 6 q Maude 8, 10 Book Beai 33,
,_ at play would have been a
Air Force Sgt Peter Wrtght of Arlington, Rocky Aoki, who owns the prosperous (and
Ohio ThiS Week 20 Movie The Great Man s Whls•ers • 3
...... toseP •
..
4 15
"
Va , wasn't a forlorn lad while stationed here deservedly) Benlhana of Toliyo restaurant
' (NEW SPAPER ENTERPRIS[ ASSN ) the past 19 months he saw 33 stage shows which cham, like all new-rtch lads last year bought two 8 3~ - Ha wa11 Five 0 8 10, Bill Moyer s Journal20, 33, Movie
The Greal Amencan Beau ty Contest, 6, 13
would've cost hun more than $750 if he hadn't Rolls-Royces. Not enough he's added a $14,000
9 00 - Behind the Lines 20 33
got them free at the 1540 Bdwy USO freebee Jensen speedster Asked a watter If there are
9 30- Black Journal 20, 33 Nwv1e The Horror at 37 000 Feet"
center Howard Bruno IS a former btg-band any more "btg spenders" around "At these
8 10
The b1ddmg has been
drummer for Guy Lombardo, Ozz1e Nelson, Nat prtces," he shrugged' "everyone has to be a btg 10 00 - Marcus WelbyM 0 6 13, News20 . NBC Reports3 4 15
Wesl
North
Ea~t
South Brandywynne etc and Sits m three hours at
11 00 - News3 4 8 10 13 lS
''
spender ''
11
30
Johnny
Carson
3
4
15
Suicide
Club
6,
13
Movie
'Wild
Roseland each St w1th Johnny Mulay's ork
No Bdwy show can match the basketball
Pass
lnTheStreets 8. Mov 1e 'TheThreeFacesofEve 10
Poss
Rest of the week he's the ticket taker Soon- games at The Garden for scalper's prices the 1 00 - Your Hea lth 4 News 13
Pass
Pass
3¥
130 - News4
Pn s~
Pass
due
about Sptros Skouras' 20th-Fox years Jan 27 Knlcks.Celtlcs game had the tllegal
' won'tbook
be flattermg
You South hold
Sidewalk tycoons demandmg - and gettmg Saddest
true tale Florence A Dwley, a up to $100 a patr Now there's a "Godfather"
jfii\K54 ¥AQt. 3 +2 ,j,KQ107
Rochester spmster, was secretary to the boss of bout1que m Greenwhtch Village Bra-burrung
Whul do you do now?
an
upstate bank, who advtsed her to "Put your women's libbers please note the Amer Med
A- H•rl hvt• club" 01 pass de
pcndmg 011 what sm t or bidder money m Kodak " Mtss Oatley retired to an old· Assn warns off1c1ally gotng wtthout bras 1S
\UUr p11rtnc1 I S
ladtes' hotel where she hved poorly, dressed dangerous to mammary ligaments The meds
shabbily, was found unconscwus m the ftlth of call tt Cooper's Droop, after the doctor who
TODAY S QUESTION
BY PAUL CRABTREE
her
uncared.for
room
and
was
taken
to
St
Ann's
Ins tcud of respond1ng one no
analyzed the hgamentary results of pseudoHere's another qwz - one about hiStory and some radical
tJ ump North has 1 ~used your Home, where she was constdered so tembly
Independence "Out of Thts World" was a SO· acts and statements Even If you're not a history bull, stick with
one clu b btd to two Wh a t do poor, the doctor who VlBtled her dtdn't even send
so
mustcal wtth good Cole Porter songs whtch 11, for the al19wers wtll surpriSe you
you do now I
a btll M1ss Da1ley died m the late 00s at 87 and made no Bdwy dent at all Drama crttic George
1- Who sa1d, "Labor 1S pnorto, and Independent of, capital
Answc 1 tomurru"'
would have been complelely Ignored - except Oppenheuner has redone the book, and Equtty CapttaltS only the frUit of labor, and could never have existed
her portfoho of Eastman Kodak stock made her Library Theater wtll test tt this month
On thts day m history
had labor not fU"st exlSted Labor 1S the superior of capital "
estate
worth $19,000,000'
ln 1912, Chma became a
Vtctor Borge was asked if he 'll continue hiS
A - Karl Marx, B - Ntkolall..enln ; C. - Niktta Khrush·
New tssue of Nicaraguan stamps honors marvelous one-man show "I don't see how we chev , D - None of the above
1epubhc when the Manchu
dynasty was overthrown by the Interpol, tbe mt'l pollee orgamzatton, wtth could do tt wtth less," was hts courtly zmger
2 - Whose election, m a manner we would consider nwst
pictures offamous detectives and lawyers such Davtd Batley, the ex-truckdrtver who poses as undemocrattc, touched off a wave of rebellion In the southern
Nat10nahsts
' In 1942, the German battle· as Sherlock Holmes, Sam Spade and Perry the bare-chested lad peddhng a deodorant on portion of his country, and caused him to send troo(16 Into the
sh1ps Dcharnhorst and GnetSe· Mason
TV, was scouted on that one topless pttch and revoltmg areas'
It's
catchmg
recent
Dean
Martin
Show
nau escaped from the French
will be starred already m the "Wicked, Wtcked"
A - Ho ChtMmh, B - Le Due Tho, C - Ngo Dinh Diem,
port of Brest mto the North tapmg saw a stzable slice of the audience fltck playmg a detective Nothing to sniff at
D - None of the above
woofled Standard wall decoratiOn for Greek Joan Blondell's tram of thought won't let her fly
Sea
3- Who forecast bloody revolution wtthin hts country when
he said two months before the war began "This coun'try
belongs to the people who mhabtt 11 Whenev;r they grow weacy
of the eJUSttng government, they can exercise their constitutional
nght of amending tt, or thetr revolutionary right of dlsmem·
bermg or overthrowing tt "
A - Czar Nicholas ll, B _ Leon Trotsky, C _ Fidel
Castro, D - None of the above
4 - Who threatened Ill leave his native land because of
"rac~t" Issues, saymg tbat'I!~clst elements seized power "I
shall prefer emJgrating to some other country "
'
By Lawrence Lamb, M D should be cons tderably pro· Its JUSt as good or a better A- That's what 1 went to
A - Stokely CarmJchael, B _ Rap Br~;· C _ Martin
Dear Dr Lamb - Would longed c ompar~d to the nor- sedattve than a lot of sleep· medtcal school for
Luther
King, D - Non~ of the above
you please explam the read mal blood The obJect IS to mg p1 lls which ate used It" (NEWSPA. PER EHTERPRISE ASSH J
5 - Whtch national leader boldly cut in half one of the
mgs m a prothrombm blood prevent your blood from hav doe.n t happen to be the
mg
a
tendency
to
clot,
hop
that
I
usually
pre
medtcme
governments
makmg war agamst his armies, and placed the
lest of 25/ 13 I am lakmg
mg
to
prevent
a
new
heart
scrtbe
for
thts
purpose,
bul
Send vour 4uestron.s to Dr Lomb, disputed territory on a co-equal footing with other territories
ft ve Coumadm t ab 1e t s a
week I had a heart allack attack Too much medtctne on the other hand I seo no m core of t,1.s ne wspaper P 0 Bo11 under his rule?
may cause bleedmg whtle harm m 1! m reasonable
last year
1551 Rod1o C1ty Stot1on New York ,
A - Adolf Hitler ; B - Beruto Mussollnl; c _ Fulgenclo
too hltle ISn't effecttve m amounts m spec1f1c cases
Dear Reader- Many peo preventmg blood clottmg
Batista,
D - None of the above.
NY
J00/9
For
o
copy
of
Dr
Q- You tell your readers
pie are lakmg Coumadm
Dear Dr. Lamb - I read not to smoke tobacco and lambs boofc/er on blood sugar , send
8 - Who justified the raiSing of an army of conquest b
afte1 heart attacks so I am
dally
column
and
al
your
not
to
drmk
coffee
w
h
y
saying
the question ts "whether any government not too st Y
SO cents to the some address and
sure your questiOn wtll be of
ways
fmd
11
mtereslmg
I
don
't
you
tell
them
'not
to
general mtet est To hnd out
Olk lor HB/ood Sugar' boofllef
for the llberttes of tis people, can be strong enough' to malnta~~:
how effechve the medtcme woWd apprectate some an· drmk alcohol'
exiStence m great emergencies "
,
1S m preventmg yo ur blood !wers to these quesllons
A- If you've read my
A - Josef Stalin, B. - Emperor Halle Selaasie· C
Q- How ca n 10 glasses of columns regularly as you
from clollmg, a sample of
Chtang
Kalo~~hek, D - None of the above
'
normal blood Is tested at the alcoholic beverage b e polson mentioned you'd know that
7- What natlonalleader was slain as he attempted to chart
same tune yo ur b I o o d IS tf one ts not '
I rlo
tested The number 13 re
A- That s stmple E v e n
The Almanac
a path of peaceful Cll-&lt;!XIStence with his country's former
fers lo 13 seconds reqmred our best medtcmes tf taken
By United Press International enenlles?
for the no r m a I control m excesstve amounts can be
Today ts Monday, Feb 12, y A - JohnF Kennecty, B.-MohandasK. Gandhi; C.-Sun
blood s clottmg mechamsm pmsonous Digttahs for ex~ Q- Should anyone beSides
ato~~en , D - None of the above ,
and the 25 refers to the 25 ample, one Of our most COm· husband and Wife Or those the 43rd day of 1973 with 322 to
seconds tt requtres fo r your mon heart medtcmes when engaged to become husband folio" Thts ts Lmcoln's btrlh· '
, +++
blood to react Bastcally thts given m lhe nghl amount and wtfe ktss on the hps'
day
As you've probably guessed, "D" Ia tbe anawer to all seven
means that the c I o t t 1n g can prevent heart failure
A- That's a moral ques
The moon ts approaching Its queAtions. All the actions and quotationsarefroma man who W1IS
mechamsm of your blood ts When g1ven m too large an han not JUSt a medtcal one
full
phase
the greatest of all American Prealdenta Abraham Uncoln
prolonged to about twtce that amount tl can be tox1c and and up to the mdlvtduals
The mornmg stars are Venus,
The founder of today's C0118ervaUv~ Republican Party. !ot a normal md1vidual
even cause death Even small concerned Between healthy
tered each statement noted above, preeipltated the 111
uln
These labot atory les ts are amounts of alcohol howeve 1 people 11 1s unbkely to cause Mars and Juptter
reasonably complex and tend are harmful tO SOme people any problems It IS ' hOW·
The evenmg stars are Mer· the Civil War by his very aliCI!IIJion to power
lo vat y dependmg on the re
Q- lf your pah~nt need&amp; a ever, a means of transmtt· cury and Saturn
Western Virginia to the Unloo, freed the ala;ea and ~~
agents used a nd thts ts why sedatiVe do you pl escrlbe hng colds, resptratory mfec·
Those
born
on
thts
date
are
'
tended the hand of brotherhood to the defeated' South
•
ttons and somehmes other
a controlled blood sample alcohol"'
achieved greatness
- and
Illnesses wh e th er one 15 under the s1gn of Aquartus
h om a normal pet son ts used
A ~ If th e mdtvldual tolet
marned to a ktssmg parlne1
Bnhsh
btolog1st
Charles
Dar.
Happy
birthday,
Abe
to check agamsl your blood ates alcohol well and 1t 1s 01 not
each tune the test •s done
wm was born Feb 12, ~
+++
not upsettmg lor h1m to use
Q- Do you believe m pre
ON THE TV DIAL: A look, at the hoiTCI'tl II heroin ·in 1
JJ vo ur medl&lt;:lllc rs effpc 1t I ~&gt;ouldn t hes1t ale to pt c· venting pam and spread of Abraham Lincoln was born on
t1vr your pr oth1 nmh111 flmt St t dw tt to un m(!n tdual (h.sease 1
Ihe same day
WLWC·TV documentary, at 8 ... Ohio State-Ion ~lball
foUows, same apot, 8::10.

I Voice along Br'Way

I

1

Expectant Falhers Have A Say

t

WIN AT BRIDG:!

tzaR: I:11 ZM!&amp;IJ

'"'2.

&amp; THINGS

DR. LAWRENCE E.LAMB
Heart Attack Factor

Test Measures Blood Clotting

boldly~

'

I

PALM SPRINGS, Calif.
(UP!) - Patience IS a virtue
ooly the aging can appreciate
and the young ought to practice
but never do.
For 25-year-old Johnny Mfi•
ler •who bad a chance to tie 43year-old Arnold Palmer in the
windup round Sunday of the
Bob Hope Desert Classic, but
finished tleCOnd two strokes
back, It was, hopefully, a
Ieason well learned.
For Jack Nicklaus, who tied
for second with Mlller ,It was a
chance missed but he was
bappy to see hts old friend
Arnie finally win one

It rained for all but four boles
on Palmer, Nicklaus and
Mlller, but once Arnie jumped
into the lead, he admitted he
never gave a tleCOnd thought to
the weather

Miller said the rain bothered
him. "The more I kept thinking
about that the less I started
paying attention to my game
It was a case of lneltperience
and It's something I'll just have
14 learn."
"! feel just super," Palmer
aaid after tapping a short
birdie putt on the 18th green at
Bermuda Dunes In the windup

Sunday to win Itt. fifth Hope
classic and the61st tournament
overall.
"I'm excited about my
putting," he said "It's better
than It has been In a long time
and that's the secret to playing
well. U you can't putt you can't
win I missed a few this week
but I made all the key putts "
Pabner won $32,000 for his
five-day effort and he left the
desert area be loves so much to
go back East and tend to
business Interests He won't
rejoin the IDur now until after
this week's San Diego Open.
Miller and Nicklaus won

SH,800 each while Gary
Brewerand Jim Wlechers, who
finished three strokes back at
~. won S'1,040 each. Schlee,
winner of the HawaUan Open a ·
week ago, was all alooe at 348
and won $5,760 while Lanny
Wadkins won $5,120 for
finishing at 349

Lee Trevino, who still doesn't
have his game under control,
wounl up at 356, 13 shots
behind Palmer, while Bob
Rosburg, the 1972 Hope winner,
packed up after making the
turn in the final rolUld with a
40.

Winles~ Rockets at Meigs Tuesday
BY CONNIE SMITH
1- season the Rockets have fatled
In this Tuesday's contest, the to Ignite any kind of vtctory
struggling Me~gs Marauders flame
will host the wmleM Golden
It Is dtfftcult for any team to
Rockets of Wellston So far this go through an entire season

Ali heavy favorite
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!)Muhammad All has been fn.
tllalled by oddamakers here as
a 7-1 to 8-1 favorite to beat
European heavyweight cham·
pion Joe Bugner of England in
their 12-rolUld fight at the Las
Vegas Convention Center
Wednesday night
Both men are sched111ed to
complete their training today
with light workouts at Caesars
Palace, the fight headquarters
"I'm in my best shape since
1967," the 31-year-old All said

&amp;mday after he completed
etght rolUlda of assorted sparring, beg punching and rope
skipping.
His 22-year-old Hungananborn opponent took the day off
Sunday.
Ali sparred four rounds
Sunday, two each with Billy
Daniels of New York and Tony
Doyle of Salt Lake City.
The 6-foot-4 Bugner is expected to outweigh the 6-3 Ali
by one or two pounds at
Wednesday's 11 a m PST
weigh-in

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sport~ Editor

wtth nothing but losses, but
Wellston seems to be heading
in that direction It ts really too
bad, because one of the best
players in the SEOAL league 1S
on the Golden Rockets' team
He ts a 5-8 semor guard
dnyamo, Dave Souders In hlS
last two outmgs Souders has
scored 65 pomts, Including a
career h1gh 42 pomt performance agat119tlronlon a few
weeks ago.
Souders ts the leadmg pomt
maker in the league, averaging
20.7 pomts a game Charles
Snare, 5-9 senior guard 1S
another standout player for the
Golden Rockets Snare has a
free throw percentage of .652
Other than these two, Wellston
has a pretty much saggmg
offense, averaging 53 pomts a
game They lost to Jackson on
Frtday 91-58
Me1gs also has had Its

Matmen
•
•
mwm

The Meigs grapplers weren't
&gt; satisfied with just breaking one
record so they broke two in one
NEW YORK (UP!) -Peace, It was wonderful
week
Too bad It lasted only a few days.
Last week Coach John
Now both ~es are talking about digging In again, and before
Bentley's
squad delea•ed
you know It they could be fighting the same old war which
Wahama 55-12 This point total
everyon~ Is tired of again
was
the highest Metgs bad ever
Last week everything seemed nne.
The baseball owners had made this ''wonderful" offer to the accumulated in one meet.
Saturday mght the wrestlers
players
met
Wahama agam and this
They called it a "lreakthrough offer" because for the first
time ever the owners agreed to submit to outside arbltrattoo if time beat them 61).8 The 80
the players weren't aatlsfied with terms offered them m thetr pomts broke their one week old
record of 55 and tbe &amp; pomts
contracts
This was such a revolutionary offer that there were those on that Wahama scored was the
both sides who thought 11 would guarantee peace for the next lowest that Meigs has ever beld
an opponent The rampaging
three years.
wrestlers have evened thetr
But wait a minute
season stanllngs at four wins
They Read the Floe Print
The players read some of the !!he print in this wonderful offer and four losses.
Meigs won 12 out of 13,
and now they don't think It's so wooderful any more
allowing
Wahama just one pm.
They've looked lhlS gift horse In the mouth and discovered
The Marauders had six pUIS,
some false teeth
four
decisi0119 and two forfetts.
Accordingly, it's a pretty good bet that when Marvin Miller
Here's the results
geta up at this news conference he has called today he will have
101 lbs. class-Warner, M,
ooe word for the owners, and the word will be "no "
MarvinMlller heads the Players' AlaoclaUon, or if you want to pinned Reed, w
108lbs class - Williamson,
say It another way, you can say he does their thinking for them.
This Is just as well for the ballplayers becauae wben It COIIles to W, pinned D Rosenbaum, M.
115lb class T McClure, M,
pure thinking, m the majority of cases, simply are not In the
declsloned King, W
same league with Marvm Miller. Neither are most of the owners
1221bs class -Rosenbaum,
but that's another story
'
For some time now, Marvin Miller bas been pushing for out- M, plnned.Newell, W
129lbs. claa-J. Musser, M,
side arbitration, and one of the reasons could be he Is something
of an authority in tbe field, having served on national arbitration declsloned Yonker, W.
135 lba. claa - Moore, M,
boards before aSSI111linll his present poeltion
pinned Gibbs, W
Some GI"OWIII Ralel
141 lba. class - Hysell, M,
Wilen the owners agreed to arbitration In theU" latest offer to
the players, they insisted on some ground rules, Including one dectsloned Kobler, W.
148 lbs. class - McLaughlin,
which says no player can deliWld outside arbitration two years
M, pinned Olinger, W
in a row
148lbs. class - Brlcltles, M,
To discourage "fnvolous" offers on either side, the players
dectsloned
Young, W.
made a proposal of their own. They stipulated that any salary
170 lbs class -Lehew, M,
deadlock taken to arbitration be setUed at either the club's figure
pinned
HusseU, W.
or the player's figure, with no compromise. That means if a
178 lbs. claa - Pickens, M,
player Is asking ~,000 and a club Is offermg $40,000, the ardectstoned
Roush, w
bitrator must declae on ooe of those two figures . He can't say
188 lbs. claM - Slack, M,
$80,000.
won
by forfeit
But the owners are seeking to Impose some otber conditions,
Heavyweight - Haley, M,
and these are the ones Marvin Mlller Isn't buying
won
by forfeit.
When a dispute goes to arbitration, the owners say, a player
Meigs has won Its last three
w1ll not be permitted to Introduce such factors as
matches
and has been
1 - The club's attendance total,
wrestling tremendously this
2 - Revenue to the club derived from TV contracts,
3 ~ch Intangibles as the player's personal popularity wtth last part of the season. Meigs
the fans and how many people it may be respo119ible for at the will be hosted by Athel19 this
Saturday, Feb 17 at 7 30.
gate, and
4.-The player'lt press clippings.
The t.ut Collllltlon
The DIU,-:-Stntintl
That last condition Is tbl one that gets me
DEVOTIO TO THE
INTIRIST OF
Naturally, the players don't want any of lhese conditions
MEIGS-MASON UEA
Imposed when they go to arbitration.
CHISTill L TANNEHILL,
"What for?" says ooe "We'll be worse off that way than we
ROIERT HOIFLICH,
are now. The owners caU their offer 'a big breakthrough • 1doo't
City ••ttor
Publ•sntd dally ucept
see where It Is The way things are now they can ooly cut us 20 Solurday
by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Comp1ny, 111
per cent If we go along with this 'wonderful' proposal of theU"s,
Court St , Pomeroy Ohio
they could cut us anything they want and when It came to ar- ~5769
Buslneu Office Phone
bitratloo, we wouldn't be able to offer certain arguments In our 992 2156 Edllorlal Phont 992
2157
own favor"
Second CIISS pOSfiQe Pl'd at
The fact the owners are wllllng lo go to arbitration representa Pomtroy, Ohio
Natlonel adverflslng
definite J11"011resB for the players.
representative aottlntlll
Inc 12 Ent &lt;2nd
I ce_n understand them not wlahlng to be stripped of certain Glllaghor
St Nrw York C!lty, New York
arguments at the arbltratioo table, and X also can see why the
Sub1crlption rates
De
livered by (lrrler wtlert
owners would wish to eUminate these argumenta from con- available
50 ctntt. ptr wttk
By Motor Route wnere carr1er
alderatioo.
not available Ont
To me, it seems ooe Bide is determined 14 defeat the other, I serv.ce
month Sl 75 By moll In Ohio
can't help feeling what a shame that Ia because In the long run and W va, Ont ';'ear su O!l..:
Six months S7 2S
Thne
the ooly ooe who'll suffer Is Joe Fan.
mor'lths '"' 50 Subscr•pt.on
pr.ct IOCIUdtl Sunday Times:
What's hts crime?
Stnllnel .
Only that he shelled'Otlt hilllllllley to 1ee the game

•••••••

\

I

'\

troubles the past few weeks
During this time they have
won just one of four games
The most recent setback of the
Marauders was last Frtday at
Ironton where the Ttgers
downed Metgs 73·49 Rtch
Batl.!!Y was htgh scorer for
Metgs m that game
The Marauders have many
capable scorers m Bailey, Bill
Vaughan, Mtke Sayre and
Junmy Boggs, so they are not
lackmg m pomt makers Senior
Btll Chaney has good control of
the backboards to Insure Meigs
of a strong defense These last
outmgs senior forward Andy
Vaughan has proved htmself to
be another crasher for
rebounds
Agamst Metgs, the Golden
Rockets wtll probably rack up
theU" 13th col19ecuhve loss this
season
Metgs IS now m a tle for 4th
place w1th Logan, both havmg
records of 6-6 m the SEOAL A
wm over Wellston would keep
the Marauders over the 500
mark

Pro Standirws
NBA Standlllfll
By Unoted Press tntorn~llonol
Eastern Conferanct
Atlantic Division
w. I pet. g.b
Boston
ol5 12 789 New York
&lt;46 15 75-4 1
Bulfalo
18 40 310 27V2
Philadelphia 4 58 065 43V•
Central DiviSion
w I pet. g.b
8altlmore
37 20 649
Atlanta
34 28 548 S'h
Houston
23 36 390 15
Cleveland
21 37 362 16'h
Western Conference
Midwest Division
w I pel g.b.
Milwaukee
41 18 695
Chicago
35 22 614 5
KC Omaha 30 33 476 13
Detrol!
26 32 448 U•h
Paclf1c Division
w I pet. g.b.
LosAngeles 45 13 776
Golden State 36 22 621 9
Phoenix
28 30 &lt;483 18
Seaflle
19 42 311 27'h
Portland
14 ~ 241 31
Sunday's Resull$
Boston 120 Milwaukee 96
Golden St 101 Chicago 96
Buffalo 128 Seal!le 125
Allan Ia 115 Cleveland 107
Los Ang 108 Philadelphia 90
Baltimore 102 Portland 97
(Only games scheduled)
Monday's Games
(No games scheduled)

carolina

Ken!ucky
V1rglma
New York
MemphiS

Redmen top Jackets

by 70-66 count
Rio Grande College rallied from a l~point
halftime deficit to defeat visiting Cedarville 70-66 at
Lyne Center Saturday night
The triumph assured Coach Art Lanham's
Redmen of at least a share of the 1972-73 Mid-Ohio
Conference title. Rio is 6-1 in MOC play, jlnd 11-10 on
the year. The Yellow Jackets dropped to 2-4 in the
conference, and are now 1~10 overall.
Rio has only one conference
game remammg -Feb 21 at Urbana. The Redmen play
at Berea, Ky , on Feb 15, and
at Wilberforce on Feb 24
Cedarville jumped out m
front ~ m the first few
mmutes of play Sabuday The
visitors held 12 pomt leads on
several occastons before Rio
cut it to 10 JUSI before tn·
termlSSton
·
After the Jackets took a 4().28
lea~ to start the second half,
Rio s Dan Bollinger, Capt Ron
Lambert and Steve Bartram
combmed efforts to pull Rio to
coo• ti
th IO
te left
a..,..,. e WI
rrunu S
m the game.
Lambert
ftntShed
the contest
wtth
20 pomts
Bollinger
and
Bartram each had 16. Don
Young had 18 for the Jackets

Pohcy is

tailored to needs.
Whether you want auto, lite
or homeowners Insurance.
we wilt design a policy to Ill
your lndlv1dual require

ments

Discuss your

spec1tlc needs with us

Davis-Warner Ins.
114 eo:~~

9912

'~meroy

lli•~R~Io~2~8--~!!!!!!!!~~=========

SEO Standings

NHL Sloncllngs
By Un1ted Press Internoloonal
East
w I t. pts gl ga
Montrel 36 7 13 85 230 123
NY Rgrs 38 13 S 81 226 132
Boston 34 16 S 73 231 168
Detroit 29 20 7 65 188 171
Bu(lalo 28 20 8 64 196 157
Torbnto 18 30 7 43 169 187
Vncuvr 15 35 7 37 162 248
NY lsldrs 7 ol5 5 19 113 262
West
wltptsgfga
Chicago 33 17 6 72 215 161
M1nn
25 23 8 58 174 164
Ph1la
25 23 9 58 201 201
By United Press lnternallonal StLouis 23 22 10 56 165 170
Atlanta 23 26 9 55 152 164
East
Los Ang 23 27 7 53 169 187
Brooklyn Coli 92 Brandeis 78
P11tsbgh 22 28 6 50 186 191
Manhattan 94 Hofslra 82
Calif
9 36 12 30 152 243
K1ngs PI 67 Trinity 60
Sunday's Resull$
Kutztown 66 W Chester 63
NY Rangers 2 Mil 2, lie
Lafayette 79 Gettysbg 62
Mmnesota 6 Vancouver 3
Bflo 103 Stqny Brook 163
Boston 2 Los Angeles 0
StJohn's NY 78 Fordhm 73
Detroit
5 Buffalo 2
FDU 48 Adelphia 40
Ch1cago 7 Philadelphia 2
Scranton 98 Wagner 69
Atlanta 3 California 1
Princeton 82 Columbia 64
!Qnly games scheduled)
Susquehnna 64 Del Val 57
Monday's Games
Albrght 74 Frkln&amp;Mrohl 58
(No
games
scheduled!
Leh1gh 72 Delaware 70
Lycomong 66 Elmira 57
AHL Standongs
Penn St 73 Navy 63
By Unoted Press lnternollonal
Bethany 69 Thiel 62
So Car 75 Sl Bon 74
East
w. I. I. pis gf ga
MIT 92 Crngle Mlln 65
NS
Dartmouth 83 Yale 69
14 128 64
70 214
141
Boston 29
28 20
192 187
Canlsluo 74 Colgate 54
Rchstr 24 20 9 57 173 t89
Mass 83 UConn 67
Prov
20 23 11 51 181 t86
Fa~rfld 85 Holy Cross 82
Brown 65 Harvard 60
~;r.fld 15 26 14 44 208 240
13 31 11 37 1114 247
Merrimack 80 AIC 76
West
Prov 102 Rhode Is 81
w I. I. pis gf ga
Penn 81 Cornell 52
Clnc1
41 15 4 86 259 t68
Rutgers 97 Wm &amp; Mary 78
Hrshy 29 16 11 69 235 168
Wasll&amp;Lee 82 York 67
Va
27 15 12 66 194 170
Geotwn 66 Dlckmson 65
Rchmnd 21 28 8 so 194 210
Bucknell 57 Rider 49
Jcksnvl 18 30 7 43 183 217
Leb Val 76 Widener 55
Ball
9 36 9 27 153 247
Akron 71 Brckprt St 67
Sunday's Results
Muhlnbrg 91 Urslnus 74
Prov 5 Boston 5, he
W Conn 51 79 Kmgs 78
New Haven ~ Richmond 1
Williams 76 Amherst 53
Rochester 3 Cincinnati o
Assumption 106 Cath U 78
Hershey at N S., ppd snow
Coast Guard 56 QIJeens 55
&lt;Only games scheduled I
Syracuse 82 W Va 62
Monday's Games
Manhattan 94 Hofstra 82
(No
gamesscheduled)
South
Vanderbllt87 Georgia 52
Murray St 83 Morehed St 69
WHA Standings
W Ky 75 Tenn Tech 67
By Unoled Press lnternal•onal
Kentucky 88 Mississippi 70
East
LSU 72 Alabama 70
w I I pis gf gl
No Car 84 Clemson 69
Cleve
34 20 2 70 204 163
G Wash 69 Pittsburgh 66
New Eng 32 23 2 66 233 191
Mid Tenn St 71 E Tenn.St 58 NY
27 31 1 55 236 242
South Ala 66 Slhern Miss 60
Quebec 24 27 4 52 196 217
V~rglnla 104 Wake Forest 73
Phi Ia
24 31 0 &lt;4ft 199 233
N C. St 118 Georgia Tech 9~
O!!awa 21 33 4 46 204 246
Lenoir Rhyne 68 High PI 61
West
Furman 94 VMI 60
wltptsgfgo
WVa 51 81 Wes! Lib 75
Wmlpg 33 23 3 69 215 183
Sewanee 98 Centre 82
Houston 28 23 4 60 210 188
Appalachian St 88 E Car 79
Mlnn
27 28 3 57 187 205
SE La 66 Delta St 63
Los Ang 26 26 4 56 194 191
Samford 73 West Fla 59
Alberta 27 26 2 56 193 186
Flonda 76 Auburn 74
Chicago 21 J3 1 43 177 203
Davidson 86 Citadel 75
Sunday's Results
Midwest
Winnipeg 3 Los Angeles 0
Notre Dame 87 LaSalle 71
Philadelphia 6 Cleveland 1
Purdue 72 Indiana 69
New York 3 O!tawa 2
Miami 0 69 Ohio U 65
Alberta 7 Minnesota s
Clnc1 89 Florida S! 62
Quebec 2 N E 2, lie, ot
Mlnn 80 Ohio St 78
Mt Union 91 Kenron 74
Wisconsin 99 Illinois 88
Franklin 99 Wabash 81
Bwlng Grn 73 West Mlch 69
Marian 99 No Ky 5187
Ashlnd 130 Wllbrfrce 78
M1chlgan 97 M1Ch St 81
SAME DAY
Marquette 88 Tulane 59
Rio Grande 70 Cedrvl 66
SERVICE
Capl!al 70 Bldwn Wllce 65
In At 9-0ut At 5
Buller 62 De Pauw 59
Use
Our Free Porkmg Lol
Wayne 51 55 Hlllsdle 51
Sttsn Fla 81 Ferrs St. 68
Eau Cla1re 79 No Mlch 63
De!rolt83 Xavier 0 81
Wnona St 84 Mlch Tech 77
Green Bay 56 Ill Tech 29
~" E 2nd, Pomeroy
Oklahoma 82 Okla St. 78

College Scores

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Waverly
15 1 1164 856
Gallipolis
14 2 1071 788
Fed Hocking 12 4 923 883
Soulh Point
12 5 11% 9&lt;48
Chesapeake
10 5 942 824
Por!smoulh
10 7 1157 1154
Meigs
9 7 969 996
Athens
9 7 883 816
Logan
8 8 1059 1015
Ironton
S 10 906 896
Jackson
3 13 807 1039
Welloton
0 t6 867 1374
Saturday's Results.
Portsmouth 64 Gallipolis 54
Springfield South 68 Waverly 57
Fed Hocking 63 Miller 41
Tuesday's Games
Jackson at Gallipolis
Wellston at Meigs
Ironton al Waverly
Logan at Athens
WIJCH SIGNS
DETROIT (UP!) ..:. Mickey
Lolich, who bad a 22-14 record
for the Detroit Tigers In 1972
after posting a 24-14 mark in
1971, signed his 1973 contract
Sunday for an eatilruated
$100,000.
The signing of the contract
was B11111lunced by Lollch's
lawyer, Robert Fenton Lollch
has won 163 games for the
Tigers during hls career and
joins 24-game wmner Gaylord
Perry of the Cleveland Indians

Special family meal prices after 4 p.m.

For Adults

For Kids

Btg Shet•
French Fnes
Turnover and
Large Soft Drink
Only

Funburger r•
French Fnes
Small Soft Drink
and Loll1pop
Only

50~

'1

GALLIPOLIS: 1503 EASTERN AVENUE

~in~th~e~$~100~,~000ofialmy~~~cla~ss~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Some people
do fine without
the~ll

Savings Plan.
It depends on your dreams.
If all they need to come true

is a dime here and a
quarter there, you'll do fme
with B sturdy piggy bank.
But if you've got some
bigger plans, like a vacation,
college tuition for the kids,
or a new car, you need
something more.
You need a savings
program that delivers steady
growth and healthy interest.
You need the Payroll
Savings Plan. Just sign up
for It at work. Then an
amount you specify is
automatically set aside from
your paycheck and used to
~uy U.S. Savings Bonds.
You can use your
take-home pay for daily

SHIRT
FINISHING

Robinson's Cleaners

~~~~ooooooo

L.ee Eck finlShed with 15 Rio
pulled down 46 rebounds,
Cedarville had 37 The Redmen
had 16 turnovers, Cedarville
had 13 rruscues
The Rto Jayvees edged
Cedarville 73-71 m Saturday's
preliminary contest
Box score of the varstty
game
CEDARVILLE (661- Eck 6
3-15, Brannon 2 7 11, Wa!son 6
2·14, Melford 3 0-6, Young 8-2
18 Potter 1·0 2 TOTALS 26-14·
66RIO GRANDE (701 _
Bartram 6 4 16, Rose 1 o 2,
Thompson J.2 8, Fausnaugh 1
0 2, Rouse 2 0.4, Lambert 8 4
20, Bollinger 8 0.16, Hart 1 0 2
TOTALS 30·111-70
Hollllme score Cedarville

.... ooooo~ooooooooooo&lt;tooooo

Worrisome bills a problem ?

expenses. And at the same
time you'll be bmldmg fiunds
for the future.
U.S. Savings Bonds
through the Payroll Savings
Plan. For people w1th b1g
dr~ams.

Buy U.S. Savings Bonds
Now E flond t pt y S i r'- ln~-trw wh11 held to Mtlllrll)'
111 6 )lttr. tO month• (4 ..~ th~ firM y..ar Hondt .,.,.
rt plutd It la.t t tolen or dl,.troytd Whtn needed they
ct.n be ct. llwd tl yo ur bank l nltrtt l ll not 1ubjo..;\ lu
ltale or loctl Income t i UI aNI ff'd ~rll 111 mty be

del"'rud unt I ~~ nptlan

Conlrlbuled As A PubliC Service by The Dally Sentmel

125 E. Matn

Pomeroy, Ohio

Ph, 992-2171

'"'" •o............. ,.., ...

G~ O..on•o••

" ' ' '' '" " " " " " " "

••c••• ••••• ..••e••••• '' ''''"''''' •••

1101111 t 1

\

tt,JII•-~­
,~.

Cl . . . . . . .~.~ .. ...

.-1- l"n"" .... T.. ,..,. I lo~l ttoll4hl

•

t

�•

•
1-Tbe DIII)'SelilDei,Mlddleport-Pcmaoy, 0., Feb.12; 19'13 ·
4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 12, 19'13

Vikings rip Southern
. WILLOW WOOD -Symmes
Valley, now 9-2ln lite Soutltei'n
Valley Conference, and 1~
overall, kept itll hQPeS alive for
undisputed league champion
Saturday night with a decisive
92-64 drubbing of the SOuthern
Tornadoes of Meigs County.
Coach Wayne White's boys
need only a victory at Eastern
Saturday night to win the first
tiUe for S-V sin~ rejoining the
league several years ago. Lose,
and they drop in.to a three-way

tie with Eastern and Hannan
Trace .
·Four of the winners were in
double figures .• They were
Lafon 12, Corn 12, Jene Myers
17, and Robinson 15. Other
scorers were Jay Myers 9,
Webb 5, Burcham 9, Bennett 8,
Br.iwn 3 and Quisenberry 2
(this Quisenberry is the
grandson of 1)en Qui~nberry
of Syracu5e, and is a 6-3
sophomore with g~at promise,
according to Southern High

High school
cage
scores·
Norman

Coach Bob Ord l.
For Southern,
Curfman had\ 16, Vernon Ord
and Bob Miller 10 each, Mick
Nease 8, Dave Sayre 6, Ron Hill
2, Nick lhle 1, and Amos Moore

..

satvrdoly

1

Panthers are
top-seeded
Favored Chesapeake will
play Southern in the opening
game of the Class A Sectional
Tournament at Meigs High
School on Friday, Feb. 23. The
Panthers are 10-5 while
Southern is 6-10. The second
game will be played at 8:30
p.m. with North Gallla (4-14)
meeting Kyger Creek (4-14).
At 7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 24,
Southwestern (3-14) will play
Ironton St. Joe (6-9) . The
second game should be a
thriller with Hannan Trace (162) battling Symmes Valley (II).

Class A competition while
Hannan, Trace is 13-2 and
Symmes Valley 11).2.
Meigs Athletic Director
Charles Chancey is the
tournament director. Officials
will be assigned by the Ohio
Athletic Commission. Each
school is allocated 300 tickets
and 24 complimentary passes.
According to tournament
rules, no pep bands, noise
makers or signs will be permitted.
The semifinals will be held
on March I. The championship
6).
game is slated at 7:15 p.m.
Chesapeake is r...o against March 2,

Alabama and Indiana
upset over weekend
By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sparta Writer
The latest teams to suffer
setbacks on the way to a title
were seventh-ranked Alabama
in the Southeaatem Conference
and fourth-rated Indiana in the
Big Ten. Alabama, which two
'
weeks ago was two games
ahead of the SEC pack, slipped
into second place behind
Tennessee Saturday night after
losing, 72-70, at Louisiana
State.
Indiana, which moved onto
the inside track for the Big Ten
crown when pre-season favorites MiMesota, Ohio State and
Michigan stumbled, ran into an
ambush on the road against
Purdue on Saturday, falling,
7U9. Tile victory hoisted the
surprising Boilermakers into a
Ue for first place with the
Hoosiers.
Elsewhere in weekend action
across the country, top..ranked
UCLA rolled methodically to
its 83rd straight victory,
purilmeling Waahington State,
IIW(), on the road. And No. 2
North Carolina State also kept
Its record unblemished by
posting a ·pair of wins in the·
North-South Classic at
Charlotte, N.C. Tile Wolfpack
!COred triumphs over Clemson
and Georgia Tech.

Third-ranked Long Beach
Slateuppedilarecord to19-1 by
whipping San Diego State, 84 66; fifth-ranked Minnesota
remained in the thick of the Big
Ten race by nipping Ohio State,
80-78, at Columbus, Ohio,
(minus the violence of last
year); sixth-rated North
Carolina also picked up two
wins in the North-south
Classic, the second one over
Clemson ending when Tigers'
coach Tates Locke pulled his
team off the floor late in the
second half because of his
disgust with the officiating.
Other results included Maryland over Buffalo, 9U4, on
Sunday, Houston on top of
Southwestern Louisiana, 82-80,
Santa Clara upsetting San
Francisco, 83-72, Brigham
Young over Colorado State, 71174, Memphis State besUng
Tulsa, 91-8'1,and Providence on
top bl Rhode l!Jiand, 102-81.
A thought for the day:
French philosopher Jean Rousseau said, "Nature never
deceives us; it is always we
who deceive nature . ~~
Dakar, capital of Senegal,
is the African city situated
closest to the American continent. .

"If you dQQ't play good bali

Buttalo I'N. Y.( Nichols 79
against tough opposition, you
Cleve Unlv. School 54 don't
win,"
remarked
Lorain Catholic ~ Avon 49 · Gallipolis Basketball Coach
Cleve, Hawken Sch . 74 Grand Jim Osborne following
Valley 59
Saturday night's 64-54 Blue
I.
Elyria 49 Ashland 46
,
.
Southern made 19 of 68 goal West. Res. Academy 63
, Devil loss here to the Ports. Plllsburgh Shadyside 51 mouth Trojans of the Greater
attempts and 16of 27 at the foul
Cleve JFK 88 Cleve So. 52
Ohio League
line and had 40 rebounds.
Cleve.
E.
Tech
68 Cleve St. lgn.
Osborne was
· referrmg
. to s1x
62
Symmes Valley was :IS of 33
Indian Valley South 66 firs! period Blue Devil turn·at the foUl line.
Ridgewood
56
·
( 13 d · th
By quarters :
fllvervlew
88 Danville 64
overs.
. urmg e game) 10
27506892
West
Holmes
55
Garaway
46
missed
free throws with the
S-V
'
Slrasburg
73
Newcqmerstown
bonus
rule
in effect plus the
Southern
10 23 33 54
6
w ~usklngum 68 Trl Valley 61 fact GAHS "blew" several
Amhel'$1 75 Vermillion 62
easy layups throughout the
Clearvlew 88 Brookside 73
contest
St. Joseph 88 Max Hayes 64
·
Twinsburg 97 lndependent:e 77
Th~ below-par Blue Devll
Saint Edward 79 Benedictine 65 perionnance, combined with
SECTig~.f'sLs ~IRING
Beachw~ 91 Gilmour 76
Portsmouth's hot-shooting
Canton Lehman 57 Bay VIllage
ed
. 1m
'
(AI Coli Grov.)
49
·
spe and qu1c ess, enabled
Can.
McKinley 74 Akron South the Trojans to snap Gallia's
HillFeb. 23- Fairland vs. ,Rock
..
68
Feb. 24 - South Point va. Barberton 76 Canlon Lincoln 4s six-game winning streak.
Ironton
Wooster 75 Canton Tlmkln 59 GAHS is 14-~ on the year. PRS
Malhr.
1Pl
G,AHSI
vs.tFaiFrllandl·
Alliance 67 New Philadelphia is 11).7 overall
Sou
on wnne . . nas . s.·
March 3. Winner to Rio Grande ' Canton South 79 Oakwood 56
The Trojans bave heen a
District.
No. Canton Hoover 73 Jackson "hot and cold" bail club
IAI Waverly)
59
Feb. 23 - Oak Hill vs. LOI!Isvllle 82 GlenwoOd 46
from the !leld all winter.
Wellston
Perry 37 Falrle55 36
Feb. 24 - Greenfield vs. Tuslaw 63 Northwest 34
Hillsboro
Canfield 49 Marlington 48
Mar. 1-Alexander vs. Oak Tuxcarawas Valley 43
HIU.Wellston winner. Finals
Sandy Valley 41
March 3. Winner to Rio Grande East Canton 79 Lake 69
Dlslrlcl.
Ak. Cent. Hower 58 Akron
IAI Stewart)
Hoban 38
Feb. 23 - VInton County vs. Akron Ellet 97 Mogadore 39
Warren Local
Akron St. VIncent 57 Akron No.
Feb. 24 - Sheridan vs. New
30
Lexington
Talmadge 78 Walsh Jewett 71 By Ualted Press Iuternatiowli
Feb. 27 - Belpre vs. VC·WL Dover 70 Cambridge 66
The IO,OOOth point of LBrry
winner
Feb. 28 - S'.NL winner vs.
Jones' career wasn't nearly a.s
Neloonvllle.York
imporlant
as his 10,019th and
Mar. 3- Finals. Winner to
RECORD BROKEN
Rio District
10,020th.
(AI Lucasville)
LEIDEN, The Netherlands
Early in the game Jones
Feb. 23 - Northwest vs. (UP!) - Emile Puttemans of
became only the fourth player
Wheelersburg
Feb. 24- Minford •s. Porls- Belgium won the 3,000 meter in American Basketball As·
moulh West .
race at The Netherlands in- soctatlon history to reach the
Mar. 1- Waverly vs. Nw.w
ternational track and field 10,000-point plateau - Inwinner
..,
Mar. 3 - Finals. Winner to meet.in the world Indoor record diana's Mel Daniels and Roger
Rio District
time o! 7-15.2.
Brown and Kentucky's Louie
Dampier are the others, aU
gaining that distinction this
season.
Jones Ufted his total to 10,020
on a driving layup with only siX
seconds left to play in overtime. That final basket proved
to be the wiMing points for the
Dallas Chaparrals as they
By Ualted Preso IDiematlooal winning streak 'by the edged the San Diego
Dave , Cowens, firing Bulls. Nate Thurmond led Conquistadors, 11!&gt;-113, Sunday
slingshot ouU~t passes and Golden State with 28 points, night.
Jones wound up with 30
playing rugged defense, felled Barry had 22 and Jeff Mulllns
another giant Sunday af- had 21. Olet Walker had 38 points for the night to lead aU
ternoon when he shackled points and Bob Love 28 for Dallas scorers, although Stew
Milwaultee's. Kareem Abdul· Chicago.
Jabber to only six points in the WUt Chamberlain helped ~x­
second half after the 7-foot-2 tend the · 76ers' NBA record
center paced the Bucks with 19 losing streak to 20 games with
points in the first half.
a 31 rebound performance. Jim
Cowens' defense took the McMillian, with 28 points, and
heart out of the Bucks attack Gail Goodrich, with 24 points,
and the B01ton Celtlca jumped helpad pick up · the scoring
on their opportunity to crush slack for the Lakers caused by
Milwaukee, IIJ6.86, and retain the absence of Jerry West, who
the best record in the National was out with a strained
Basketball Association, 40-12. hamstring muscle.
In other NBA action Sunday,
Lou Hudson tossed in 34
Golden State beat Chicago, 101- points and Pete Maravich
96, Los Angeles routed added 32 to lead the Hawks
Philadelphia, 108-80, Baltimore over'the Cavaliers, who lost the
clipped Portland, 102-97, game and probably their coach
Atlanta downed Ceveland, 11:0. for awhile.
97, and Buffalo edged Seattle,
After being handed a techni126-125.
cal foul by referee Bob l\akel,
After a fairly close game Fitch tossed a Chair onto the
through most of the first half, a court and went after Rakel.
five-minute spurt at the close The
Cavalier
players
of the second period, gave the restrained Fitch but he was
Celtics a half-time lead of 58..'i4 assessed a second technical
and the momentum at the start foul and automatic ejection
of the third quarter. Boston from the game.
conUnued to run hard and work
Elvin Hayes led Baltimore
their fast break against the with 34 points and Phil Chenier
Bucks and led Milwaukee, 93- hit eight of his 16 points in the
76, at the end of the third fourth period to lead the
period.
Bullets past the TrailblaZers.
Cowens applied a little Baltimore outscored Portland
muscle to his antagonist and 14-4 in the last seven minutes to
Jabbar ~ tired of Cower~~' gain their fourth triumph of the
physical lapproach and sat out year over the Trailblazers.
the last two minutes of the
Two clutch free throws by
third period and most of the Bob Kauffman with SO seconds
final stanza.
left and a steal and breakaway
Cowens scored 28 points and stuff shot by Randy &amp;nlth
John Havllcek contributed 21 to helped the Braves snap a fiveROGER DILLARD
Boston's attack.
game losing streak and
Pomeroy Motor Co.
Rick Barry Dipped In four squeeze by the SuperSonics
free throws in his distindlve after blowing a 13-point bulge.
underhand style over the final Buffalo was led in the IJCOI'in8
28 seconds to clinch the by Rookie of the Year canwin for the Warriors and didate Bob McAdoo with 39
break a four • game points.
·
'

Celtics rip
Bucks 120-96

68-57.

South, whose only Joss in 17
games thus far was 77-69 to the
Portsmouth Trojans in
January, hit a sizzling 57 pet.
from the field in the first half,
sinking 17 of 29 field goal attempts while the Tigers hit
i&gt;nly 28 pet., nine of 32, and that
the big differ~nce in the
game's final outcome. Waverly
is now 1S.I on the year.
South·led 20-12, 37-18, and ~
30 at the quartermarks. Tile
Tigers finally found the range
in the last stanza, outscoring

'I'••

South 26-18, but the dsmage
had been done.
Mike Oyer regained his
shooting eye which earned him
all-state honors as a junior.
The ian ky Tiger center
pumped in 19 points to lead
Waverly's attack. John
Shoemaker added 15 and Bill
Malw had 12. ,
Tony Hubbard, 6-6 ace for
Springfield South, popped in 25
to lead the winners. Chuck Peal
had 16 and Ed Peal 11.
Waverly hit 35 pet., from the
field, sinking 25 of 71 field goal
attempts. WHS was seven of 13
from the foul circles. The
Tigers had 27 rebounds. South
hit 31 of 56 field goal attempts
for 55 pet., and the home club

was six of 12 at the charity Gallipolis on Friday.
stripe. South plucked off 40
South won the r!!Silrv.e game,
.
rebounds, 23 in the first half. 71-29.
• Waverly will close out its
Box score of the varsity Wt:
regular campaign this week
SPRINGFIELD SOUTH (61)
with home games against - Brown 1-0·2; Hardy 6-0·12;
Ironton on Tuesday and Hubbard 11·3-25; Keener 1·0.2;
E. Peal 5·1·11: C. Peal 7·2·16.
TOTALS 31-6-61.
'
WAVERLY (51)- Maloy 60·12; Oyer 8·3-19; Thompson 2·
1·5; Shoemaker 7·1·15; Salyers
WESJ' LOST
2·2-6. TOTALS 25-7-57.
By Ou1rters:
.
LOS ANGELES (UPlJ
Waverly
12
6
12
26-57
·
Jerry West, many-time a!I.Pro ..S. South
20 17 13 18-68
guard, will be lost to the Los
RIHrvl Score - Soulh 71
·
Angele~ Lakeri with a pulled Waverly 29
hamstring mUJCie for a week to
10 days, it was announced by
the club on Sunday.
· In 1953, the Soviet Union
West injured his leg in the broke off relations with Israel
early minutes of last Friday's
game in ·Milwaukee.
·

~~~.Rt~~:!~~n ~~!7!vi~e

for

PORTSMOUTH TROJANS (641
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT·A PF RB TO RP
Keith Williamson, f
3· 4 3· 3 3 1 0 9
Tom Doll, g
o. 0 o. 0 0 0 0 0
Bo Clemens, g
8·13 I· 2 3 2 3 17
Ralph White, g
5·10 o. 0 3 1 3 10
Dave Cropper, f
o. 1 o. 0 I 0 0 0
Fred McCoy, c
3· 7 0· 1 4 3 1 6
Rick McGlone, f
6· 8
I· 1 2 4 3 13 .
Jim Oliver, I
4· 7 I· 1 3 9 1 9
TOTALS
29·50 6· 8 19 20 II 64
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS (541
PLAYER-Pos.
FG·A Ff.A PF RB TO TP
Gil Price, c
9·14 2· 5 1 8 · 4 20
Jimmy Noe,f
8·14 2· 3 4 7 ' 3 18
Mark Kiesling, g
0· 2 0· 0 1 0 1 0
Topper Orr, I
1· 2 1· 5 1 6 2 3
Kev . Sheels, g
2· 6 5· 6 3 2 2 9
Jimmy Niday. g
2· 7 0· 1 1 6 1 4
Jim Singer. g
0· 0 o. 0 0 0 0 0
Mike Berridge. t
o. 0 Q. 0 0 1 0 0
TOTALS
22·45 10·20 II 3G 13 54
Score By Quarters:
PortsmOI!Ih Troians
25 13 15 '11-64
GAHS Blue Devils
IS 12 16 11-54
Officials- Hall and Newman, Portsmouth Chapter .

.

W. W•.CO~TON. .D.
.

OPTOM _RIST . · . , . ,

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO l2. 2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.
POM R Y.

Activities
are planned
Several fund raising projects
were planned and contributions of $5 each were
made to the March of Dimes
and the Heart Fund during a
meeting of the Catholic
WD~J~en's Club held Thursday
night at the Sacred Heart
Church.
Mrs. Susan Baer was named
to solicit for the Heart Fund in
the Pomeroy business district.
Plans wer.e made for bake
sales to take place after the
Feb . 17 and 18 Masses with
proceeds to go into the DoriJ
Reinhart Fund. A card party
wifl be held on March 15, and
more bake sales on April 7 and

A
Cure
For
The

Uncommon
Cold!

.J

0

Delco

•

RECEIVE YOUR •1.00 TRADE-IN

.

AT. DEALERS LISTED
. BELOW•

FRANK MILLS
Mills Ashland Ser.

Mi~~,~~~~ Service
Cor. Locust &amp; Beech

$

•

·

Middleport

;Pomeroy Motor Co~
Ph,'992-2126

Joa e. Mairi

.

nzmalfilm shown Rotar.1'1,

Mrs. Jean Will of Pomeroy,
general chairman of the Meigs
County Humane Society,
showed the film, "The Animals
are Crying," and answered
questions related to It, Fridsy
evening at a regular meeting of
the Middleport • Pomeroy
Rotary club in the Heath
United Methodist Church
social rooms.
This nationally recognized
film, which in two years has
made an impact on how people
think aboui the "pet
population" emergency,-treats
the subject of llmiUng dog and
cat population with equal
sympathy for the animals and
the desire of adults and
children to have loving peta.
Tbe problem is' the unwanted
pet, which has not been spayed
or neutered.
MiIllona are killed annually
in the nation's highways, by
humane societies by painless
methods, and by starvation
and disease running wi!Q, even
in the great cities.
"In Meigs County," Mrs.
Will said, "3,500 dogs were
taken into cos tod Y bY the

1
l.'l:f~

v.~flh

SOn

bOffl

Mr.and Mrs. Jack M. Braley
of 9021&gt; East Main St.,
Pomeroy, are announcing the
birth of their fifth son at the
Holzer Medical Center, Feb. 8.
The seven pound, 12 ounce
infant has been named James
Clifford .
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Powell
and Mrs. Lucille Braley of
Pomeroy are the grandparents. The late Homer M.
Braley was a grandfather. Mr.
and Mrs. Braley's four other
sons are Jack, Jr., nine;
Timothy Wayne, eight; Kurtias
Lee, four, and Sean Patrick, 14
months. The new baby was
named for his paternal greatgrandfathers.

humarie officer, or turned in at
thecounlypound between June
and Dec. 311ast year, of which
3,000 had to be killed. And the
population of unwanted dogs is
hardly dented."
President Gene Riggs
presided over the meeting.
Chet Tannehill introduced the
speaker. Guests were the Rev.
Ed Fischer of Racine and Dr.
Russell Jones of Ravenna, who
conducted a series of revivals
at the First Baptist Church of
Racine last week.
Ladles of Heath Church
served the dinner.

Pomeroy

-~._..,..,P.0."..,.1•0_re_d;.·.b...:y....;;G~&amp;;;J~A;;:u~t:.;o:.:.P~a::r~t:.!.I:..!C~o::.•_;...~J

TO BE RELEASED

Mrs. Ernest A. Jonu (Ailc;t
Louiae Lama), . a surgical
patient at. Gran! Hospital,,
Columbus, wiU be releued on
Tuesday. She Ia ·the sister cf
Mrs. Barry s. Moore, Sr.,
Mkldleport.

.

.

.R'/tt¥10• ttc• PIYf! a-r/tm

·marked PTA meet

TIIE
"LOVE
BUNDLE''

Local Bowling

Budget Line
of Dresses

Wednesday Late Mixed
Febrvory 7• 1973
Pis
Rosenbaum.Meadows
24
Fultz.Benlley
20
Holter·Rawllngs
18
Blakeslee-Hoyt
14
fW:ttxe.Mt&gt;rrow
10
~?;,'~~~."G:~":':.. Men: R~~
Holter 194, John Tyree 187,
Chuck Bl.akeslee 186; Women:
Mary
156, Belly
RawlingsMorrow
149, Virginia
Hoyt
148.
·
High Series
Chuck
Blakeslee
518, Roy -Holler
5;3,
John Tr,ree 491; Mary Morrow
418, V rglnla Hoyt 394, Joy
Bentley 387. ,
Team High Game - Moore·
Mt&gt;rrow 608.
Team High Series - HollerRawlings 1703.
Women's Thursday Afternoon
J1nuary 25, 1973
Won Lost
Pullins Excavating
20
4
Pomeroy Lanes
16 B
New York Clothing
14 10
Simon's Markel
10 14
Pt-meroy Motors
8 16
Helen's
Beauty
Shop
4 _20
High Team Three Games
New York Clothing 1679,
Pullins Excavating 1662,
Helen's Beauty Shop 1660.
High Team Game - New
York Clothing 612, Pullins
Excavating 584, Simon's
Market 577.
High Ind. Series - Eileen
Searls 486, Marlene Wilson 469,
Maxine Dugan 467.
High Ind . Game - Eileen
Searls, Norma Amsbary.
Marlene Wilson, 174, Maxine
Dugan 173, Elteen Searls 172.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 80 •
Royal Arch Masons, meeting
at .7:30p.m. Wednesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. •. .
JtJ!IIIOR American Legion-•
Auxiliary Drew Webster Post'
'
39, 6 p.m. Wednesday at haU.
ALL SOUTHERN High
School students invited to
youth prayer breakfast,
Racine Wesleyan United
Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Club, home of Mrs. Richard
Owen, 2 p.m. Wednesday. Mrs.
Dwig ht ZaVltz
·
·
to review
· "Bring Me a Unicorn" by Ann
Lindbergh. Members to
.
respond to roll call with an
unusual valentine.
THURSDAY
GRACE EPISCOPAL
Church Women will host a
1unc he on at 12:30 p.m. Thursday. Mrs. Claude Sowle will
speak on Ohio University
·'

WORLD ALMANAC
F~11S

The world's largest tan!\

desi~ned for fish is at Cali·

forma's Marineland of the
P.acific. ~arineland .,.l1a~.

renoyta~\!&lt;1 . II&amp; i)SQ,OQIJ·g~I).QI\

tank ancl ,has als? · deye!,
oped the largest Simulated
undersea habitat anywhere
The World Almanac says. '
Copyright © i973
:\t•WJoi!IAJ!f' r J~ nt ~ rpri l!l e ..\t&lt;t&lt;ll.

1s oomooo&amp;/A\vmoo
.-'""' :'"','.We
. , __ ~"*
,.,M~o.·o_..nr
_y store
'

l

.,

;1 ,

BEDFORD
Meip Local S.D. ---·-·:.:c·.c1"'.3"0_l:c:,5::::0-,03:.:.L::::n0,_ __-"'.5"3-·~66~1~.0~'"·2--'!'
0
39c:.5~
0
CHESTER
Eastern L.S.D. ........ 4.30 2.60 26.60
.53 .65 1.00 .2 35.60
Meigs L.S.D........... 4.30 2.50 31.50
.53 .65 1.00 .2 40.50
COLUMBIA
Alexander L.S.D...... _ 4.30 1.60 27.60
.63 .65 1.00 .2 35.60
-·
LEBANON
Eastern L.S.D. ....... -. 4.30 2.00 26.50
.53 .65 1.00 .2 35,00
Southern L.S.D. ........ 4.30 2.00 2.7:;..o:.;o_ _...;·:::;53:......:.6::::'5__:.1:::..00::.....;·::.
2..:3::::5=.
50
LETART
.63 .66 1.00 .2 36.00
S&lt;&gt;uthern L.S.D: . .. .... ·4.30 2.50 . 27.00
··-- ··--·
OLIVE
~!!!!'~:.. ·•c·.:c::_
· _4.3_0_ !:~i!...!:~:50 _ ___;·.::::
53 .65 t.OO .2 34.50
ORANGE
_!:~_!: S. D. - c..::.::=c~.,~~-] .00_. 260.::
.5:::.0_ _ ,.:.53
::::.....::
·6:::.
5 _,
1.::.:
00c....::.2:....,:3:::.
5 .~
00
RIITLAND
Meigo L.S:D..... ....... 4.30 2.50 31.50
.53 .65 1.00 .2 40.50
Rutl•nd Villare . ....... 4.30 1.40 31.60 9~!_ .63 ~~-~()()__ ~.-~~,~~
SALEM
Meigo L.S.O. -----·---· · 4.30 1.50 31.50
.53 .65 1.00 .2 39.50
SALISBURY
···- - ---- -- - -· -- -.53 .65 1.00 .2 39.30
•Meigs L.S.D.... ....... 4.30 1.30 31.50
Middleport Village ..... UO .20 31.50 3.70 .53 .65 1.00 .2 41.90
_ !;:o_meroy Vlllare ....... 4.80 ~20 - ~.!:50 _7_.7~_
. 53_,_£L l.:!l.L·:::.
2 _4
;.::5:::.
.90
SCIPIO
. .
,
Q
'
Melg• L.S.D. --"•--- .... 4.30 2.50 31.50
.63 . .Go 1.00 .2 40.50.
SU'M'ON
·--· -- .. ---· -- --- -- ·-·- -- -·- ·- - - - S&lt;&gt;uthern L.S.D. ....... ~ 4.30 2.00 27.00
.53 '.66 1.00 .2 36.60
Racine Vlllare ....... .. 4.30 .70 27.00 8.00 .53 .65 1.00 .2 42.20
Syracuoe Village ....... 4.30 .;.7.0 27.00 10.30 .53 .65 1.00 .2 44.50
Sutton-Metro Local ..... 4.30 • 00 31.50
.53 .65 1.00 .2 40.00 ,
Real fl!ltate taxes whlc!h have not been PRid at the cloMe tlf each collection
c1rry a penalty uf ten pe1~ cent. Tuea mtt.v 'be paid at tht; office of the county
.t ruaunr or PY mail. Pl~ut brlnr your laftb tax receipt and if you pny by mail
be aura to locate your property by taxing di8trict nnd ertclose stamped self nd·
dl'tAfted envelope. Alw&amp;yM examine your tax receipt tu :ree th11t it covers all
yo~r property. Office Hour~t 9:00 A.M1 to 4:00P.M. dRily except Saturday when
oft1ce cloaes at flfoon. Tlti.X. L110kl will open December Hi, 1972, tu Jan. 20. 1973.

HOWARD li:. FRANK, Meigs Co~nty Tre&amp;~~urer
.
.
'

'

'

'.

Providing Complete and
Accurate Records of
\'our Expense on

Earth, like the planet Jupiter, sporadically emits lowfrequency r ad i o ·signals,
which still mystify scientists.

Prescription Medicine.

Red Hot.Range Special
one
of a sale
Model KF432
30'' Westinghouse
Electric Range with
Continuous-Cleaning
Oven

''
''· ~
'
'''
'

•j

DUDLEY'S
FLORIST

YOUR PHARMACIST

In puuuance o( l&amp;.w, I, HowHrd K FJ'ank Treasurer of Meigs Countv Ohio
do hereby give notice that the number' of Mills levied on each dollar of jn:opert)!
shown on tile Gener1l Tax Duplicate of Real Estlate, Public Utility and Perl!onAI Property within sald County for the yeAr 1972 is as follows ;

•

'12.50

lOLA'S

RATES Ot' TAXA'FION FOR 1972

A skating party was tentatively scheduled for the
parish for Feb. 18. Thank you
qotes were read· from Ruth
TI!ornton Heilman, Mlaa Hulda
Klein and Mlaa Edith Klein,
MarUn Brode.rJck, Nita Conde,
and the St. John Villa ,Qr.
phanage. ·
The Rev. Fr. Bernard
Krajcovlc spoke to the group
on the sacrament of Extreme
Unction. No refreshments will
be ·served at the March
meeting due to Lent. Adessert
course was served by 'Mrs.
Shirley Husion; Jl!rs. Loretta
Beegle, Mrs. Dorothy Gloeck·
ner, an&lt;l Mrs. Vlkkl Gloeckner.
MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting of the Rock
Springs ' Better Health Club
scheduled for Thursday has
been cancelled .

'
Mrs. Orval Wiles, Mrs. Games were played and Christians by our Love"
Harry Bailey, Mrs. William refreshments .served. The opened.themeetingalld Mrs. J.
Barnhart, and Mrs. Oliver children demonstrated some of Edward Foster, pre,ident,
Michael cpnducted the party their activities for the Baptist read "Simple , Words ."
with the children receiving women and each one thanked Scripture was taken from the
13th chapter of 1st Corinthians.
balloons and valentines . them for coming.
'
Slides ·of activities at the
A report on the party was
given at a meeting of the Gallipolis State Institute were
Society that evening· at the shown by the Rev. Robert
I VO I U
church. A note from Mrs. Kuhn. Mrs. Albert Smith and
Thomas,
ad- Mrs. Couch were hostesses.
Jeanette
ministrator of the classes for The table was centered with a
retarded children, was read large red candle surrounded by
MEIGS CHAPTEI\ 53, DAV,
and as a special project it was red and white flowers and
7' 30 p.m. Monday at chapter
decided that each member will valentine hearts . Cherry
hqme on Butternut Ave.,
provide a pillow for their use. cheesecake was served with
Pomeroy· Refreshments. AU A patriotic program Magnotti, Tina Shelley, Debbie
Mrs. L. P. Sterrett gave a mtnts, nuts, coffee and tea.
members asked to attend.
highlighted the Thursdax night Smith.
Mrs. Betty Fultz' class . did report on the fellowship tea of Attending besides those named
RIVERVIEW PTA, Monday meeting of the Bradbury PTA.
the Middleport First Baptist were Mrs. rl. B. Walker, Mrs.
night, 7' 30 p.m. at the A choral reading about "What Might Have Happened Church Monday night Three Lester Price, Mrs. · George
Riverview Eiemenlary School. George Washington was given . If ... ". Taking parts were Lori
from the Society attended. The Skin.ner, Mrs. Robert Kuhn,
A Found"'i's Day Skit will be by Mrs. Phyllls Hackett's class Kloes, Steven Fife, Sterling love gift Offering was dedicated and Mrs. William Watson.
presented by the teachers and
ed of
parents and there will be a compos
Joy Edwards, Neville, Mark McDonald, by Mrs. Ellen Couch, and
Margaret Martin, Bruce Angela Dailey, Don Karr, Wes scholarship money was
cultural arts exhibit. Refresh- Fisher, Rhmda Snider, Sandy Simons, Jon Hanning, Terri collected. A $10 offering went
menta will he served.
McDonald, Lisa Becker, Ruth McDaniel, Terry Gardner, to the Doris Reinhart fund.
TUPPERS PLAINS Boosters Carsey, Ricky Hovatter, Janet Timmy Miller and Jo
"You Will Know We are
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Monday at . Horky, Gena Snowden, Todd McKinney.
"Our Country 'Tis of Thee"
Tuppers Plains School. Science Morrison, Terry Zirkle, and
was
presented by Mrs. Sabra
fair, explanation of new Angela Martin.
reading program and opening A skit, "Message for George Morrison's class. This was a
of new school library to he Washington," was given by portrayal of America from its
features. -,
Mrs. Maxine Philson's class of beginning to the signing of the
REVIVAL SET
POMEROY PTA, 7:30 Carin Bailey, John Byer, Chris peace treaty in Vietnam .
A revival will be held starMonday night at the school. Darst, Janell Kelly, Kevin Taking part were Carin Bailey, ting Friday at the Midway
Past presidenta to be honored. King, Jeffrey Daniels, Sharon Terry Zirkle, Vicki Parsons, Community Churclllocated on
Speaker from the Huntington Karr, Jeff Lsudermilt, Mark Janet Horky, Toni Pope, Robin the Langsville . Dexter road.
Snowden, Marianne Welsh, The Rev. Norman Taylor will
Red Cross blood center.
Kevin King, Ricky Hovatter, be the speaker and there will
TUESDAY
Greg
Becker, Todd Morrison, be special music. Pastor
POMEI\OY-MIDDLEPORT
Danny Smith and Mark Venoy. Worley Haley invites the public
Lions Club, special meeting
Mrs.
Manning Kloes to attend.
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at the Women's Thursday Afternoon
197
1
presided
at
the meeting during
Meigs Inn. Ladies night to be
February • ~on Lost
is for your
observed and aU Lions and Pullins Excavating
25
6 which time it was announced
their ladies are invited to at- New York Clothing
22 10 that a creative movement
SEE OUR
love bundle
tend
Pomeroy Lanes
18 14 program will be presented in
·
Pomeroy Motors
14 18
SYRACUSE Elementary Simon's Market
10 22 April. The April meeting of the
PTA Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at Helen's Beauty Shop
6 26 Meigs County Council of
school. Founder's Day p~~~~s Tw::::.:~~~~me~ 776 , Parents and Teachers will be
program. Members may come Pomeroy Lanes 1676, New held at the Bradbury school.
It was noted that $150 is
in old-fashion dress.
- York Clothing 1586.
RACINE Lo&amp;ge 461, F&amp;AM, E~~~~a~:~ ~;~e Po~"~~~~ available to the teachers to be
Misses &amp; Half Sizes.
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at temple. Lanes 603, Pullins Excavating used for school materials. The
attendance banner was won by
Refreshments; ail Master 588 ·
Serving, Middleport.
Pomeroy &amp; Gallipolis, 0 .
Masons invited.
W~~~~ ~~: s:~~~~ smmrl:~~ Mrs. Philson's room. Mrs. Tom
and Mason Co., W. Va.
Main &amp; Sycamore, Pomeroy
WSCS, Pomeroy United Julie Boyles 452, Maxine Kelly reported membership at
Dugan and Drema Smith 433. 72.
Methodist Church, Tuesday,
High Ind. Game - Marlene
7:30 p.m. at the church. Wilson 197, April Smith 184,
Program topic : "Living and Marlene Wilson 178 ·
Acting in Love."
. RUTLAND - A valentine
party for children of the Meigs
Conununily Classes at Rutl8nd
was staged Thursday by the
MONDAY
Missionary · Society of the
AMERJCANISM Program Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
by Lewis Manley American
Legion Auxiliary 363, 7:30 ;
Monday night at the N!!Omi .
Baptist Church, Pomeroy.
U f II
Rev. Samuel Jackson, guest
spea)!;er. Public1Jivited.

8.95

Local Bowling

8.

Delco Energizers will give you the big burst
of starting pewer your car needs on cold
mornings. A lop-of·the-line l;nergizer, for
example, delivers up to 3750 peak watts .of
starling power in the first few seconds of
starting even at zero degrees.
Best of all, you can check the cranking
power an Energizer can deliver because the
Peak Watts Rating is molded right into the
case .
Energizers are vacuum-sealed too, so you
get ali the power you pay for . Stop in and get
lhe Energizer thafs right for your car
~nd right for your budget . .

I

•
open suite that evening. A Thornton, Mrs. Marguerite
breakfast will precede the 10 Darst, and Frank ~brew.
a.m. meeting. Attending from Around-robincardwassigned
the Meiga County Salon will be for Mrs. Gladys Mowery who
.Mrs. Mary Martin, nalloilal resides in California. Several
pouvior ,member, Mrs. Knapp, · secret sisters exchanged
Mrs. Walke~. Mrs. Eunle valentines and gifts.
Brinker, Mrs. Hackett, and
Mrs. Walker,
nurses
·
·
Mrs. Welah.
scholarship c,halrman., conArrangements were made to dueled li game in which $16.95
have the constitutions and by· was collected for the fund. An
laws upctsied, Displayed at the invitation was extended by
meeUng was a silver plate Mrs. Hampton to the members
engraved with "Ruth H. to attend an Americanism
Thornton," a memorial piece program which will be
for the Salon. Reported ill were prese~ted at the Naomi I!Jptist
Mrs. Veda Davis and Mrs. Church tonight at 7:30~.m, The
'
Zuelella Smith. The trophies program is sponsored by the
won last year are · to be LewiS Manley Auxiliary 283.
engraved thla month.
Attending besides thoae named
Thank you notes were read were Mrs. Eileen searles and
from the families of Mrs. Mrs. Ferne Cheesebrew.

A ,

WHEN YOU TRADE IT IN
. ON A NEW DELCO
ENERGIZER I

i

Zn-·..e 14" :i \

Numeroua conll'ibutlons
were made and plans were
dlscuaaed for the seventh
anniversary ' .observance in
Aprtbtarecentmeetingofthe
Melga County Salon 710, Eight
and Forty, held at the home &lt;if
Mrs: Julie HyseU. '
"A-tton ••
On the recqmme......
"'
Mrs. Marte Boyd, children and
youth chainnan of the Salon,
.the group voted to contribute
... to the Ameri can Legion
,..
Child .Welfare Foundation in
memory of Ruth H. Thornton;
""" toward the bed endowment
...,
for the National Jewish
Hospital i De
•• to the
n nver; ..
Ohio medicine fund; $10 to the
aU partners project; $50 to the
C)oatic Fibrosis Chapter of
Ohio; and $5 to the National
CysUc Fibrosis Foundation.
II was also voted to send $5
for medicine, ,5 f•r bed
maintenance, f20 for a party,
· $20 for a campout, $5 for the
phone fund, $5 for the camera
fund, $51or the band, $5 for the
clothing fund, and $14.35
birthday cards to the National
Jewish H01pltal in Denver,
Colo.
Arrangements were also
made to remember Sherrie
Marshall, a local cystic
fibrosis child, with gifts on
valentine's day, her birthday
and Easter.
Theannualob3ervance of the
Salon's birthday was planned
with Evalina Berkley, chapeau
departemental, to be the
honored guest. Ail depar·
temental officers will be invited to the dinner along with
members of 11 other salons
across Ohio.
Appointed to committees
were Mrs. Edith Fox, Mrs.
Pearl Knapp, and Mrs. Mary
Martin , decorating; Mrs.
MyrUe Walker, Mrs. Mary
Roush and Mrs. Catherine
Welsh, gifts, and Mrs. Julia
Hysell, reservations.
Chapeau Rhoda Hackett
Presided at the meeUng with
Mrs .
Lula
Hampton,
I'aumoni er, giVlllg
· the prayer.
Mrs. Hampton requested
favorite prayers from ·the
me mbers for both a IocaI
~~erapbook and a slate scrapbook to be prepared by Mar:ella Huston, departemental
l'aumonier.
Mrs. Welah announced the
midwinter pouvior to be held ·
Feb. 24 and 25 at the Fort
Hayes Hotel. A dutch supper
will be held on the 24th with the
departemental ch8peau to hold

YOUR OLD BATTERY
IS WORTH •8.00

=·

IE

•

Johnson of San Diego took
game honors with 34 points.
Tile second-place Kentucky
Colonels moved to within 4-1&gt;
games of firat.piace Carolina
in the Eaatem Division by
beating the Indiana Pacers; 9687, while the . Cougars were
dropping a 117-108 vardict to
the Denver Rockets. In the only
other game, the Memphis
Tams beat the New York Nets,
i19-97.
Artis Gilmore srored 24
points and took down 26
rebounds to lift Kentucky past
Indiana. The Colonels, who
broke a three-game losing
streak, caught fire following a
flstfight between their 6-1
guard, Jim O'Brien, and &amp;-9
Mel Daniels of Indiana.
Guards Ralph Simpson and
Warren Jabali had 30 and 22
points respectively as Denver
beat Carolina for the first time
in six meetings tliis season

-.,

'

Springfield South, Ohio's
eighth-ranked Class AAA
powerhouse, inflicted the first
defeat of the year on Waverly's
visiting Tigers Saturday night,

Saturday, the lads ol Coach
Bob DOll were bot, especially
in the first period.
After 2-2, 4-4 and 8-8
deadlocks, Portsmouth's Keith
Williamson, 6-0 senior forward,
put the Trojans abead to stay
with a long jumper at the 4:03
mark.
Portsmouth connected on its
first eight shots from tlie field
(Gil Price blocked the ninth)
and was12 of 14·during the first
eight minutes of play (85 pet).
The 14th PHS field goal attempt of "the quarter was a
desperation shot at the bqzzer.
After the sinoke settled, PHS
enjoyed a 25-15 advantage. The
Trojans increased their lead to
14 points, 31-17, with 5:43left in
the first half. PHS led aa:27 at
halftime.
With Trojan sub Jim
Oliver off the bench and on
the hoards (he picked off all
six Trojan rebounds in the
third period) Portsmouth

Jones has big
goal for Dallas

.waverly· drops 68-57 ·e ncounter

SalOn 71 0 plans seventh
Social ·• P9rty 'given for community classes
anniversary event in April .Calenpar

Trojans·· stop Gallians

Chillicothe quint top-seeded at Rio
Chillicothe was seeded first nament champions.
and Meigs second in the Class
On Feb. 28, powerful
AAA Sectional Basketball Chillicothe will meet the
Tournament drawings at Rio Logan-Jackson winner at 7:30
Grande College sunday al· p.m. On March 2, Meigs
ternoon.
Lancaster will play the Miami
Nine teams will take part ln Trace-Athens wiMer at 7:30
the Rio sectional this year.
p.m. On March 3, the PortsFirst-round games pit Meigs . mouth • Marietta winner will
against Lancaster on Feb. 23, play the Logan, Chillicothe,
beginning at 7 p.m. Logan will Jackson winner at 7:30 p.m.
battle Jackson al8:30 p.m., on
The sectional champion will
Feb. 23.
\
advance to Ohio University for
On Feb. 24, Miami Trace wiU district tournament commeet Athens at 7 p.m., and petition.
Portsmouth will tackle
Art Lanham will serve as
Marietta at 8:30 p.m. The tournament manager for the
Trojans are defending" tour- Rio Grande sectional.

with a three.point piay at the
1:11 !Dark.
·
.
Cle~eDI, a 5·1 jualor
cuard, wao everywbere aU .
ulgbt. H~ fillllhed witti 17
· points to lead the ~ju
butlt up its biggest lead of tile
altack. McGio&amp;e added 13
game, .41-31, with 5:25 left in
polnto. Rolph Wblle, · S.t
the third period.
sealor guard, lolled In 10.
From ihat point on, however,
Price Jed Gallla's attack with
the Blue Devils performed Ilk.• 20 points and eight rebounda.
old times. With l&lt;ev Sheets, Gd .. Noe finis~ lVlth 18 markers
Price, Jim Niday and Jimmy while Kev Sheela tossed in
Noe leading the WlfY, !It• nne.
i
,
Gailians outscored Portsmouth · Gallipolis hit 22 of 45 from the
12-7 during the final five field for 48.8 pet. GAHS was.10
minutes of the third period, and of 20 from the foul circles for 50
9-2 during the first six minutes pet. GAHS had 11 persooala
of the last stanza. That redu~d and 30 rebounds.
a 15-point deficit to five, 57-li2,
Portsmouth finished the
with 2:08 left in the game. night with a sizzling $7.1 pet.
During that 21-9 surge by from the field, sinking 29 of 50
GAHS, Price and Topper Orr field gosl attempts. PHS was 76
controlled .the boards. Noe put pet., at the foul circles with sbt
10 big points on the board of eight tosses. The Trojans
despite four fouls.
had 19 personals, 20 rebounda
Noe sat out four minutes of and 11 turnovers. Oliver picked
the first half with three per- off nine rebounds for the
sonais. He picked up his fourth visitors.
with 19 seconds left in the third
Pat Spriggs, 6-3 senior
stanza. He returned in the final center, and the 'rrojaDS top
period and finished the game scorer · and rebouader,
for GAHS.
missed Saturday's game due
After GAHS reduced the to a death in bls fomUy.
Trojans' lead to five, Ports- Mark Klesliug, H oealor
mouth went into a semi-stall guard for GARS, sat out
with the four-corner offense. most of tbe game with u
Bo Clemens' short jumper ankle Injury.
from the right base fiqe gave
GAHS will host Jackson
PHS a 59-li2 lead with 1:56left. Tuesday. Portsmouth plays at
Rick McGlone wrapped it up Ironton Saturday night.

• Cleaning begins every time you bake
• Continually cleans itself during baking,
roasting or broiling
• Automatic timing center
• Plug-out Corox' surface units
• Deluxe styling with fu ll-width fluorescent·
platform light .
• Oven and surface unit signal lights

ONLY

29995

No Turn Speed-Broil'"
a·c cessory-broils faster,
juicier-because
it cooks both sides
at once!

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

Bank Rate Financing

MIDDLEPORT

�•

•
1-Tbe DIII)'SelilDei,Mlddleport-Pcmaoy, 0., Feb.12; 19'13 ·
4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 12, 19'13

Vikings rip Southern
. WILLOW WOOD -Symmes
Valley, now 9-2ln lite Soutltei'n
Valley Conference, and 1~
overall, kept itll hQPeS alive for
undisputed league champion
Saturday night with a decisive
92-64 drubbing of the SOuthern
Tornadoes of Meigs County.
Coach Wayne White's boys
need only a victory at Eastern
Saturday night to win the first
tiUe for S-V sin~ rejoining the
league several years ago. Lose,
and they drop in.to a three-way

tie with Eastern and Hannan
Trace .
·Four of the winners were in
double figures .• They were
Lafon 12, Corn 12, Jene Myers
17, and Robinson 15. Other
scorers were Jay Myers 9,
Webb 5, Burcham 9, Bennett 8,
Br.iwn 3 and Quisenberry 2
(this Quisenberry is the
grandson of 1)en Qui~nberry
of Syracu5e, and is a 6-3
sophomore with g~at promise,
according to Southern High

High school
cage
scores·
Norman

Coach Bob Ord l.
For Southern,
Curfman had\ 16, Vernon Ord
and Bob Miller 10 each, Mick
Nease 8, Dave Sayre 6, Ron Hill
2, Nick lhle 1, and Amos Moore

..

satvrdoly

1

Panthers are
top-seeded
Favored Chesapeake will
play Southern in the opening
game of the Class A Sectional
Tournament at Meigs High
School on Friday, Feb. 23. The
Panthers are 10-5 while
Southern is 6-10. The second
game will be played at 8:30
p.m. with North Gallla (4-14)
meeting Kyger Creek (4-14).
At 7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 24,
Southwestern (3-14) will play
Ironton St. Joe (6-9) . The
second game should be a
thriller with Hannan Trace (162) battling Symmes Valley (II).

Class A competition while
Hannan, Trace is 13-2 and
Symmes Valley 11).2.
Meigs Athletic Director
Charles Chancey is the
tournament director. Officials
will be assigned by the Ohio
Athletic Commission. Each
school is allocated 300 tickets
and 24 complimentary passes.
According to tournament
rules, no pep bands, noise
makers or signs will be permitted.
The semifinals will be held
on March I. The championship
6).
game is slated at 7:15 p.m.
Chesapeake is r...o against March 2,

Alabama and Indiana
upset over weekend
By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sparta Writer
The latest teams to suffer
setbacks on the way to a title
were seventh-ranked Alabama
in the Southeaatem Conference
and fourth-rated Indiana in the
Big Ten. Alabama, which two
'
weeks ago was two games
ahead of the SEC pack, slipped
into second place behind
Tennessee Saturday night after
losing, 72-70, at Louisiana
State.
Indiana, which moved onto
the inside track for the Big Ten
crown when pre-season favorites MiMesota, Ohio State and
Michigan stumbled, ran into an
ambush on the road against
Purdue on Saturday, falling,
7U9. Tile victory hoisted the
surprising Boilermakers into a
Ue for first place with the
Hoosiers.
Elsewhere in weekend action
across the country, top..ranked
UCLA rolled methodically to
its 83rd straight victory,
purilmeling Waahington State,
IIW(), on the road. And No. 2
North Carolina State also kept
Its record unblemished by
posting a ·pair of wins in the·
North-South Classic at
Charlotte, N.C. Tile Wolfpack
!COred triumphs over Clemson
and Georgia Tech.

Third-ranked Long Beach
Slateuppedilarecord to19-1 by
whipping San Diego State, 84 66; fifth-ranked Minnesota
remained in the thick of the Big
Ten race by nipping Ohio State,
80-78, at Columbus, Ohio,
(minus the violence of last
year); sixth-rated North
Carolina also picked up two
wins in the North-south
Classic, the second one over
Clemson ending when Tigers'
coach Tates Locke pulled his
team off the floor late in the
second half because of his
disgust with the officiating.
Other results included Maryland over Buffalo, 9U4, on
Sunday, Houston on top of
Southwestern Louisiana, 82-80,
Santa Clara upsetting San
Francisco, 83-72, Brigham
Young over Colorado State, 71174, Memphis State besUng
Tulsa, 91-8'1,and Providence on
top bl Rhode l!Jiand, 102-81.
A thought for the day:
French philosopher Jean Rousseau said, "Nature never
deceives us; it is always we
who deceive nature . ~~
Dakar, capital of Senegal,
is the African city situated
closest to the American continent. .

"If you dQQ't play good bali

Buttalo I'N. Y.( Nichols 79
against tough opposition, you
Cleve Unlv. School 54 don't
win,"
remarked
Lorain Catholic ~ Avon 49 · Gallipolis Basketball Coach
Cleve, Hawken Sch . 74 Grand Jim Osborne following
Valley 59
Saturday night's 64-54 Blue
I.
Elyria 49 Ashland 46
,
.
Southern made 19 of 68 goal West. Res. Academy 63
, Devil loss here to the Ports. Plllsburgh Shadyside 51 mouth Trojans of the Greater
attempts and 16of 27 at the foul
Cleve JFK 88 Cleve So. 52
Ohio League
line and had 40 rebounds.
Cleve.
E.
Tech
68 Cleve St. lgn.
Osborne was
· referrmg
. to s1x
62
Symmes Valley was :IS of 33
Indian Valley South 66 firs! period Blue Devil turn·at the foUl line.
Ridgewood
56
·
( 13 d · th
By quarters :
fllvervlew
88 Danville 64
overs.
. urmg e game) 10
27506892
West
Holmes
55
Garaway
46
missed
free throws with the
S-V
'
Slrasburg
73
Newcqmerstown
bonus
rule
in effect plus the
Southern
10 23 33 54
6
w ~usklngum 68 Trl Valley 61 fact GAHS "blew" several
Amhel'$1 75 Vermillion 62
easy layups throughout the
Clearvlew 88 Brookside 73
contest
St. Joseph 88 Max Hayes 64
·
Twinsburg 97 lndependent:e 77
Th~ below-par Blue Devll
Saint Edward 79 Benedictine 65 perionnance, combined with
SECTig~.f'sLs ~IRING
Beachw~ 91 Gilmour 76
Portsmouth's hot-shooting
Canton Lehman 57 Bay VIllage
ed
. 1m
'
(AI Coli Grov.)
49
·
spe and qu1c ess, enabled
Can.
McKinley 74 Akron South the Trojans to snap Gallia's
HillFeb. 23- Fairland vs. ,Rock
..
68
Feb. 24 - South Point va. Barberton 76 Canlon Lincoln 4s six-game winning streak.
Ironton
Wooster 75 Canton Tlmkln 59 GAHS is 14-~ on the year. PRS
Malhr.
1Pl
G,AHSI
vs.tFaiFrllandl·
Alliance 67 New Philadelphia is 11).7 overall
Sou
on wnne . . nas . s.·
March 3. Winner to Rio Grande ' Canton South 79 Oakwood 56
The Trojans bave heen a
District.
No. Canton Hoover 73 Jackson "hot and cold" bail club
IAI Waverly)
59
Feb. 23 - Oak Hill vs. LOI!Isvllle 82 GlenwoOd 46
from the !leld all winter.
Wellston
Perry 37 Falrle55 36
Feb. 24 - Greenfield vs. Tuslaw 63 Northwest 34
Hillsboro
Canfield 49 Marlington 48
Mar. 1-Alexander vs. Oak Tuxcarawas Valley 43
HIU.Wellston winner. Finals
Sandy Valley 41
March 3. Winner to Rio Grande East Canton 79 Lake 69
Dlslrlcl.
Ak. Cent. Hower 58 Akron
IAI Stewart)
Hoban 38
Feb. 23 - VInton County vs. Akron Ellet 97 Mogadore 39
Warren Local
Akron St. VIncent 57 Akron No.
Feb. 24 - Sheridan vs. New
30
Lexington
Talmadge 78 Walsh Jewett 71 By Ualted Press Iuternatiowli
Feb. 27 - Belpre vs. VC·WL Dover 70 Cambridge 66
The IO,OOOth point of LBrry
winner
Feb. 28 - S'.NL winner vs.
Jones' career wasn't nearly a.s
Neloonvllle.York
imporlant
as his 10,019th and
Mar. 3- Finals. Winner to
RECORD BROKEN
Rio District
10,020th.
(AI Lucasville)
LEIDEN, The Netherlands
Early in the game Jones
Feb. 23 - Northwest vs. (UP!) - Emile Puttemans of
became only the fourth player
Wheelersburg
Feb. 24- Minford •s. Porls- Belgium won the 3,000 meter in American Basketball As·
moulh West .
race at The Netherlands in- soctatlon history to reach the
Mar. 1- Waverly vs. Nw.w
ternational track and field 10,000-point plateau - Inwinner
..,
Mar. 3 - Finals. Winner to meet.in the world Indoor record diana's Mel Daniels and Roger
Rio District
time o! 7-15.2.
Brown and Kentucky's Louie
Dampier are the others, aU
gaining that distinction this
season.
Jones Ufted his total to 10,020
on a driving layup with only siX
seconds left to play in overtime. That final basket proved
to be the wiMing points for the
Dallas Chaparrals as they
By Ualted Preso IDiematlooal winning streak 'by the edged the San Diego
Dave , Cowens, firing Bulls. Nate Thurmond led Conquistadors, 11!&gt;-113, Sunday
slingshot ouU~t passes and Golden State with 28 points, night.
Jones wound up with 30
playing rugged defense, felled Barry had 22 and Jeff Mulllns
another giant Sunday af- had 21. Olet Walker had 38 points for the night to lead aU
ternoon when he shackled points and Bob Love 28 for Dallas scorers, although Stew
Milwaultee's. Kareem Abdul· Chicago.
Jabber to only six points in the WUt Chamberlain helped ~x­
second half after the 7-foot-2 tend the · 76ers' NBA record
center paced the Bucks with 19 losing streak to 20 games with
points in the first half.
a 31 rebound performance. Jim
Cowens' defense took the McMillian, with 28 points, and
heart out of the Bucks attack Gail Goodrich, with 24 points,
and the B01ton Celtlca jumped helpad pick up · the scoring
on their opportunity to crush slack for the Lakers caused by
Milwaukee, IIJ6.86, and retain the absence of Jerry West, who
the best record in the National was out with a strained
Basketball Association, 40-12. hamstring muscle.
In other NBA action Sunday,
Lou Hudson tossed in 34
Golden State beat Chicago, 101- points and Pete Maravich
96, Los Angeles routed added 32 to lead the Hawks
Philadelphia, 108-80, Baltimore over'the Cavaliers, who lost the
clipped Portland, 102-97, game and probably their coach
Atlanta downed Ceveland, 11:0. for awhile.
97, and Buffalo edged Seattle,
After being handed a techni126-125.
cal foul by referee Bob l\akel,
After a fairly close game Fitch tossed a Chair onto the
through most of the first half, a court and went after Rakel.
five-minute spurt at the close The
Cavalier
players
of the second period, gave the restrained Fitch but he was
Celtics a half-time lead of 58..'i4 assessed a second technical
and the momentum at the start foul and automatic ejection
of the third quarter. Boston from the game.
conUnued to run hard and work
Elvin Hayes led Baltimore
their fast break against the with 34 points and Phil Chenier
Bucks and led Milwaukee, 93- hit eight of his 16 points in the
76, at the end of the third fourth period to lead the
period.
Bullets past the TrailblaZers.
Cowens applied a little Baltimore outscored Portland
muscle to his antagonist and 14-4 in the last seven minutes to
Jabbar ~ tired of Cower~~' gain their fourth triumph of the
physical lapproach and sat out year over the Trailblazers.
the last two minutes of the
Two clutch free throws by
third period and most of the Bob Kauffman with SO seconds
final stanza.
left and a steal and breakaway
Cowens scored 28 points and stuff shot by Randy &amp;nlth
John Havllcek contributed 21 to helped the Braves snap a fiveROGER DILLARD
Boston's attack.
game losing streak and
Pomeroy Motor Co.
Rick Barry Dipped In four squeeze by the SuperSonics
free throws in his distindlve after blowing a 13-point bulge.
underhand style over the final Buffalo was led in the IJCOI'in8
28 seconds to clinch the by Rookie of the Year canwin for the Warriors and didate Bob McAdoo with 39
break a four • game points.
·
'

Celtics rip
Bucks 120-96

68-57.

South, whose only Joss in 17
games thus far was 77-69 to the
Portsmouth Trojans in
January, hit a sizzling 57 pet.
from the field in the first half,
sinking 17 of 29 field goal attempts while the Tigers hit
i&gt;nly 28 pet., nine of 32, and that
the big differ~nce in the
game's final outcome. Waverly
is now 1S.I on the year.
South·led 20-12, 37-18, and ~
30 at the quartermarks. Tile
Tigers finally found the range
in the last stanza, outscoring

'I'••

South 26-18, but the dsmage
had been done.
Mike Oyer regained his
shooting eye which earned him
all-state honors as a junior.
The ian ky Tiger center
pumped in 19 points to lead
Waverly's attack. John
Shoemaker added 15 and Bill
Malw had 12. ,
Tony Hubbard, 6-6 ace for
Springfield South, popped in 25
to lead the winners. Chuck Peal
had 16 and Ed Peal 11.
Waverly hit 35 pet., from the
field, sinking 25 of 71 field goal
attempts. WHS was seven of 13
from the foul circles. The
Tigers had 27 rebounds. South
hit 31 of 56 field goal attempts
for 55 pet., and the home club

was six of 12 at the charity Gallipolis on Friday.
stripe. South plucked off 40
South won the r!!Silrv.e game,
.
rebounds, 23 in the first half. 71-29.
• Waverly will close out its
Box score of the varsity Wt:
regular campaign this week
SPRINGFIELD SOUTH (61)
with home games against - Brown 1-0·2; Hardy 6-0·12;
Ironton on Tuesday and Hubbard 11·3-25; Keener 1·0.2;
E. Peal 5·1·11: C. Peal 7·2·16.
TOTALS 31-6-61.
'
WAVERLY (51)- Maloy 60·12; Oyer 8·3-19; Thompson 2·
1·5; Shoemaker 7·1·15; Salyers
WESJ' LOST
2·2-6. TOTALS 25-7-57.
By Ou1rters:
.
LOS ANGELES (UPlJ
Waverly
12
6
12
26-57
·
Jerry West, many-time a!I.Pro ..S. South
20 17 13 18-68
guard, will be lost to the Los
RIHrvl Score - Soulh 71
·
Angele~ Lakeri with a pulled Waverly 29
hamstring mUJCie for a week to
10 days, it was announced by
the club on Sunday.
· In 1953, the Soviet Union
West injured his leg in the broke off relations with Israel
early minutes of last Friday's
game in ·Milwaukee.
·

~~~.Rt~~:!~~n ~~!7!vi~e

for

PORTSMOUTH TROJANS (641
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT·A PF RB TO RP
Keith Williamson, f
3· 4 3· 3 3 1 0 9
Tom Doll, g
o. 0 o. 0 0 0 0 0
Bo Clemens, g
8·13 I· 2 3 2 3 17
Ralph White, g
5·10 o. 0 3 1 3 10
Dave Cropper, f
o. 1 o. 0 I 0 0 0
Fred McCoy, c
3· 7 0· 1 4 3 1 6
Rick McGlone, f
6· 8
I· 1 2 4 3 13 .
Jim Oliver, I
4· 7 I· 1 3 9 1 9
TOTALS
29·50 6· 8 19 20 II 64
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS (541
PLAYER-Pos.
FG·A Ff.A PF RB TO TP
Gil Price, c
9·14 2· 5 1 8 · 4 20
Jimmy Noe,f
8·14 2· 3 4 7 ' 3 18
Mark Kiesling, g
0· 2 0· 0 1 0 1 0
Topper Orr, I
1· 2 1· 5 1 6 2 3
Kev . Sheels, g
2· 6 5· 6 3 2 2 9
Jimmy Niday. g
2· 7 0· 1 1 6 1 4
Jim Singer. g
0· 0 o. 0 0 0 0 0
Mike Berridge. t
o. 0 Q. 0 0 1 0 0
TOTALS
22·45 10·20 II 3G 13 54
Score By Quarters:
PortsmOI!Ih Troians
25 13 15 '11-64
GAHS Blue Devils
IS 12 16 11-54
Officials- Hall and Newman, Portsmouth Chapter .

.

W. W•.CO~TON. .D.
.

OPTOM _RIST . · . , . ,

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO l2. 2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.
POM R Y.

Activities
are planned
Several fund raising projects
were planned and contributions of $5 each were
made to the March of Dimes
and the Heart Fund during a
meeting of the Catholic
WD~J~en's Club held Thursday
night at the Sacred Heart
Church.
Mrs. Susan Baer was named
to solicit for the Heart Fund in
the Pomeroy business district.
Plans wer.e made for bake
sales to take place after the
Feb . 17 and 18 Masses with
proceeds to go into the DoriJ
Reinhart Fund. A card party
wifl be held on March 15, and
more bake sales on April 7 and

A
Cure
For
The

Uncommon
Cold!

.J

0

Delco

•

RECEIVE YOUR •1.00 TRADE-IN

.

AT. DEALERS LISTED
. BELOW•

FRANK MILLS
Mills Ashland Ser.

Mi~~,~~~~ Service
Cor. Locust &amp; Beech

$

•

·

Middleport

;Pomeroy Motor Co~
Ph,'992-2126

Joa e. Mairi

.

nzmalfilm shown Rotar.1'1,

Mrs. Jean Will of Pomeroy,
general chairman of the Meigs
County Humane Society,
showed the film, "The Animals
are Crying," and answered
questions related to It, Fridsy
evening at a regular meeting of
the Middleport • Pomeroy
Rotary club in the Heath
United Methodist Church
social rooms.
This nationally recognized
film, which in two years has
made an impact on how people
think aboui the "pet
population" emergency,-treats
the subject of llmiUng dog and
cat population with equal
sympathy for the animals and
the desire of adults and
children to have loving peta.
Tbe problem is' the unwanted
pet, which has not been spayed
or neutered.
MiIllona are killed annually
in the nation's highways, by
humane societies by painless
methods, and by starvation
and disease running wi!Q, even
in the great cities.
"In Meigs County," Mrs.
Will said, "3,500 dogs were
taken into cos tod Y bY the

1
l.'l:f~

v.~flh

SOn

bOffl

Mr.and Mrs. Jack M. Braley
of 9021&gt; East Main St.,
Pomeroy, are announcing the
birth of their fifth son at the
Holzer Medical Center, Feb. 8.
The seven pound, 12 ounce
infant has been named James
Clifford .
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Powell
and Mrs. Lucille Braley of
Pomeroy are the grandparents. The late Homer M.
Braley was a grandfather. Mr.
and Mrs. Braley's four other
sons are Jack, Jr., nine;
Timothy Wayne, eight; Kurtias
Lee, four, and Sean Patrick, 14
months. The new baby was
named for his paternal greatgrandfathers.

humarie officer, or turned in at
thecounlypound between June
and Dec. 311ast year, of which
3,000 had to be killed. And the
population of unwanted dogs is
hardly dented."
President Gene Riggs
presided over the meeting.
Chet Tannehill introduced the
speaker. Guests were the Rev.
Ed Fischer of Racine and Dr.
Russell Jones of Ravenna, who
conducted a series of revivals
at the First Baptist Church of
Racine last week.
Ladles of Heath Church
served the dinner.

Pomeroy

-~._..,..,P.0."..,.1•0_re_d;.·.b...:y....;;G~&amp;;;J~A;;:u~t:.;o:.:.P~a::r~t:.!.I:..!C~o::.•_;...~J

TO BE RELEASED

Mrs. Ernest A. Jonu (Ailc;t
Louiae Lama), . a surgical
patient at. Gran! Hospital,,
Columbus, wiU be releued on
Tuesday. She Ia ·the sister cf
Mrs. Barry s. Moore, Sr.,
Mkldleport.

.

.

.R'/tt¥10• ttc• PIYf! a-r/tm

·marked PTA meet

TIIE
"LOVE
BUNDLE''

Local Bowling

Budget Line
of Dresses

Wednesday Late Mixed
Febrvory 7• 1973
Pis
Rosenbaum.Meadows
24
Fultz.Benlley
20
Holter·Rawllngs
18
Blakeslee-Hoyt
14
fW:ttxe.Mt&gt;rrow
10
~?;,'~~~."G:~":':.. Men: R~~
Holter 194, John Tyree 187,
Chuck Bl.akeslee 186; Women:
Mary
156, Belly
RawlingsMorrow
149, Virginia
Hoyt
148.
·
High Series
Chuck
Blakeslee
518, Roy -Holler
5;3,
John Tr,ree 491; Mary Morrow
418, V rglnla Hoyt 394, Joy
Bentley 387. ,
Team High Game - Moore·
Mt&gt;rrow 608.
Team High Series - HollerRawlings 1703.
Women's Thursday Afternoon
J1nuary 25, 1973
Won Lost
Pullins Excavating
20
4
Pomeroy Lanes
16 B
New York Clothing
14 10
Simon's Markel
10 14
Pt-meroy Motors
8 16
Helen's
Beauty
Shop
4 _20
High Team Three Games
New York Clothing 1679,
Pullins Excavating 1662,
Helen's Beauty Shop 1660.
High Team Game - New
York Clothing 612, Pullins
Excavating 584, Simon's
Market 577.
High Ind. Series - Eileen
Searls 486, Marlene Wilson 469,
Maxine Dugan 467.
High Ind . Game - Eileen
Searls, Norma Amsbary.
Marlene Wilson, 174, Maxine
Dugan 173, Elteen Searls 172.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 80 •
Royal Arch Masons, meeting
at .7:30p.m. Wednesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. •. .
JtJ!IIIOR American Legion-•
Auxiliary Drew Webster Post'
'
39, 6 p.m. Wednesday at haU.
ALL SOUTHERN High
School students invited to
youth prayer breakfast,
Racine Wesleyan United
Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Club, home of Mrs. Richard
Owen, 2 p.m. Wednesday. Mrs.
Dwig ht ZaVltz
·
·
to review
· "Bring Me a Unicorn" by Ann
Lindbergh. Members to
.
respond to roll call with an
unusual valentine.
THURSDAY
GRACE EPISCOPAL
Church Women will host a
1unc he on at 12:30 p.m. Thursday. Mrs. Claude Sowle will
speak on Ohio University
·'

WORLD ALMANAC
F~11S

The world's largest tan!\

desi~ned for fish is at Cali·

forma's Marineland of the
P.acific. ~arineland .,.l1a~.

renoyta~\!&lt;1 . II&amp; i)SQ,OQIJ·g~I).QI\

tank ancl ,has als? · deye!,
oped the largest Simulated
undersea habitat anywhere
The World Almanac says. '
Copyright © i973
:\t•WJoi!IAJ!f' r J~ nt ~ rpri l!l e ..\t&lt;t&lt;ll.

1s oomooo&amp;/A\vmoo
.-'""' :'"','.We
. , __ ~"*
,.,M~o.·o_..nr
_y store
'

l

.,

;1 ,

BEDFORD
Meip Local S.D. ---·-·:.:c·.c1"'.3"0_l:c:,5::::0-,03:.:.L::::n0,_ __-"'.5"3-·~66~1~.0~'"·2--'!'
0
39c:.5~
0
CHESTER
Eastern L.S.D. ........ 4.30 2.60 26.60
.53 .65 1.00 .2 35.60
Meigs L.S.D........... 4.30 2.50 31.50
.53 .65 1.00 .2 40.50
COLUMBIA
Alexander L.S.D...... _ 4.30 1.60 27.60
.63 .65 1.00 .2 35.60
-·
LEBANON
Eastern L.S.D. ....... -. 4.30 2.00 26.50
.53 .65 1.00 .2 35,00
Southern L.S.D. ........ 4.30 2.00 2.7:;..o:.;o_ _...;·:::;53:......:.6::::'5__:.1:::..00::.....;·::.
2..:3::::5=.
50
LETART
.63 .66 1.00 .2 36.00
S&lt;&gt;uthern L.S.D: . .. .... ·4.30 2.50 . 27.00
··-- ··--·
OLIVE
~!!!!'~:.. ·•c·.:c::_
· _4.3_0_ !:~i!...!:~:50 _ ___;·.::::
53 .65 t.OO .2 34.50
ORANGE
_!:~_!: S. D. - c..::.::=c~.,~~-] .00_. 260.::
.5:::.0_ _ ,.:.53
::::.....::
·6:::.
5 _,
1.::.:
00c....::.2:....,:3:::.
5 .~
00
RIITLAND
Meigo L.S:D..... ....... 4.30 2.50 31.50
.53 .65 1.00 .2 40.50
Rutl•nd Villare . ....... 4.30 1.40 31.60 9~!_ .63 ~~-~()()__ ~.-~~,~~
SALEM
Meigo L.S.O. -----·---· · 4.30 1.50 31.50
.53 .65 1.00 .2 39.50
SALISBURY
···- - ---- -- - -· -- -.53 .65 1.00 .2 39.30
•Meigs L.S.D.... ....... 4.30 1.30 31.50
Middleport Village ..... UO .20 31.50 3.70 .53 .65 1.00 .2 41.90
_ !;:o_meroy Vlllare ....... 4.80 ~20 - ~.!:50 _7_.7~_
. 53_,_£L l.:!l.L·:::.
2 _4
;.::5:::.
.90
SCIPIO
. .
,
Q
'
Melg• L.S.D. --"•--- .... 4.30 2.50 31.50
.63 . .Go 1.00 .2 40.50.
SU'M'ON
·--· -- .. ---· -- --- -- ·-·- -- -·- ·- - - - S&lt;&gt;uthern L.S.D. ....... ~ 4.30 2.00 27.00
.53 '.66 1.00 .2 36.60
Racine Vlllare ....... .. 4.30 .70 27.00 8.00 .53 .65 1.00 .2 42.20
Syracuoe Village ....... 4.30 .;.7.0 27.00 10.30 .53 .65 1.00 .2 44.50
Sutton-Metro Local ..... 4.30 • 00 31.50
.53 .65 1.00 .2 40.00 ,
Real fl!ltate taxes whlc!h have not been PRid at the cloMe tlf each collection
c1rry a penalty uf ten pe1~ cent. Tuea mtt.v 'be paid at tht; office of the county
.t ruaunr or PY mail. Pl~ut brlnr your laftb tax receipt and if you pny by mail
be aura to locate your property by taxing di8trict nnd ertclose stamped self nd·
dl'tAfted envelope. Alw&amp;yM examine your tax receipt tu :ree th11t it covers all
yo~r property. Office Hour~t 9:00 A.M1 to 4:00P.M. dRily except Saturday when
oft1ce cloaes at flfoon. Tlti.X. L110kl will open December Hi, 1972, tu Jan. 20. 1973.

HOWARD li:. FRANK, Meigs Co~nty Tre&amp;~~urer
.
.
'

'

'

'.

Providing Complete and
Accurate Records of
\'our Expense on

Earth, like the planet Jupiter, sporadically emits lowfrequency r ad i o ·signals,
which still mystify scientists.

Prescription Medicine.

Red Hot.Range Special
one
of a sale
Model KF432
30'' Westinghouse
Electric Range with
Continuous-Cleaning
Oven

''
''· ~
'
'''
'

•j

DUDLEY'S
FLORIST

YOUR PHARMACIST

In puuuance o( l&amp;.w, I, HowHrd K FJ'ank Treasurer of Meigs Countv Ohio
do hereby give notice that the number' of Mills levied on each dollar of jn:opert)!
shown on tile Gener1l Tax Duplicate of Real Estlate, Public Utility and Perl!onAI Property within sald County for the yeAr 1972 is as follows ;

•

'12.50

lOLA'S

RATES Ot' TAXA'FION FOR 1972

A skating party was tentatively scheduled for the
parish for Feb. 18. Thank you
qotes were read· from Ruth
TI!ornton Heilman, Mlaa Hulda
Klein and Mlaa Edith Klein,
MarUn Brode.rJck, Nita Conde,
and the St. John Villa ,Qr.
phanage. ·
The Rev. Fr. Bernard
Krajcovlc spoke to the group
on the sacrament of Extreme
Unction. No refreshments will
be ·served at the March
meeting due to Lent. Adessert
course was served by 'Mrs.
Shirley Husion; Jl!rs. Loretta
Beegle, Mrs. Dorothy Gloeck·
ner, an&lt;l Mrs. Vlkkl Gloeckner.
MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting of the Rock
Springs ' Better Health Club
scheduled for Thursday has
been cancelled .

'
Mrs. Orval Wiles, Mrs. Games were played and Christians by our Love"
Harry Bailey, Mrs. William refreshments .served. The opened.themeetingalld Mrs. J.
Barnhart, and Mrs. Oliver children demonstrated some of Edward Foster, pre,ident,
Michael cpnducted the party their activities for the Baptist read "Simple , Words ."
with the children receiving women and each one thanked Scripture was taken from the
13th chapter of 1st Corinthians.
balloons and valentines . them for coming.
'
Slides ·of activities at the
A report on the party was
given at a meeting of the Gallipolis State Institute were
Society that evening· at the shown by the Rev. Robert
I VO I U
church. A note from Mrs. Kuhn. Mrs. Albert Smith and
Thomas,
ad- Mrs. Couch were hostesses.
Jeanette
ministrator of the classes for The table was centered with a
retarded children, was read large red candle surrounded by
MEIGS CHAPTEI\ 53, DAV,
and as a special project it was red and white flowers and
7' 30 p.m. Monday at chapter
decided that each member will valentine hearts . Cherry
hqme on Butternut Ave.,
provide a pillow for their use. cheesecake was served with
Pomeroy· Refreshments. AU A patriotic program Magnotti, Tina Shelley, Debbie
Mrs. L. P. Sterrett gave a mtnts, nuts, coffee and tea.
members asked to attend.
highlighted the Thursdax night Smith.
Mrs. Betty Fultz' class . did report on the fellowship tea of Attending besides those named
RIVERVIEW PTA, Monday meeting of the Bradbury PTA.
the Middleport First Baptist were Mrs. rl. B. Walker, Mrs.
night, 7' 30 p.m. at the A choral reading about "What Might Have Happened Church Monday night Three Lester Price, Mrs. · George
Riverview Eiemenlary School. George Washington was given . If ... ". Taking parts were Lori
from the Society attended. The Skin.ner, Mrs. Robert Kuhn,
A Found"'i's Day Skit will be by Mrs. Phyllls Hackett's class Kloes, Steven Fife, Sterling love gift Offering was dedicated and Mrs. William Watson.
presented by the teachers and
ed of
parents and there will be a compos
Joy Edwards, Neville, Mark McDonald, by Mrs. Ellen Couch, and
Margaret Martin, Bruce Angela Dailey, Don Karr, Wes scholarship money was
cultural arts exhibit. Refresh- Fisher, Rhmda Snider, Sandy Simons, Jon Hanning, Terri collected. A $10 offering went
menta will he served.
McDonald, Lisa Becker, Ruth McDaniel, Terry Gardner, to the Doris Reinhart fund.
TUPPERS PLAINS Boosters Carsey, Ricky Hovatter, Janet Timmy Miller and Jo
"You Will Know We are
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Monday at . Horky, Gena Snowden, Todd McKinney.
"Our Country 'Tis of Thee"
Tuppers Plains School. Science Morrison, Terry Zirkle, and
was
presented by Mrs. Sabra
fair, explanation of new Angela Martin.
reading program and opening A skit, "Message for George Morrison's class. This was a
of new school library to he Washington," was given by portrayal of America from its
features. -,
Mrs. Maxine Philson's class of beginning to the signing of the
REVIVAL SET
POMEROY PTA, 7:30 Carin Bailey, John Byer, Chris peace treaty in Vietnam .
A revival will be held starMonday night at the school. Darst, Janell Kelly, Kevin Taking part were Carin Bailey, ting Friday at the Midway
Past presidenta to be honored. King, Jeffrey Daniels, Sharon Terry Zirkle, Vicki Parsons, Community Churclllocated on
Speaker from the Huntington Karr, Jeff Lsudermilt, Mark Janet Horky, Toni Pope, Robin the Langsville . Dexter road.
Snowden, Marianne Welsh, The Rev. Norman Taylor will
Red Cross blood center.
Kevin King, Ricky Hovatter, be the speaker and there will
TUESDAY
Greg
Becker, Todd Morrison, be special music. Pastor
POMEI\OY-MIDDLEPORT
Danny Smith and Mark Venoy. Worley Haley invites the public
Lions Club, special meeting
Mrs.
Manning Kloes to attend.
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at the Women's Thursday Afternoon
197
1
presided
at
the meeting during
Meigs Inn. Ladies night to be
February • ~on Lost
is for your
observed and aU Lions and Pullins Excavating
25
6 which time it was announced
their ladies are invited to at- New York Clothing
22 10 that a creative movement
SEE OUR
love bundle
tend
Pomeroy Lanes
18 14 program will be presented in
·
Pomeroy Motors
14 18
SYRACUSE Elementary Simon's Market
10 22 April. The April meeting of the
PTA Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at Helen's Beauty Shop
6 26 Meigs County Council of
school. Founder's Day p~~~~s Tw::::.:~~~~me~ 776 , Parents and Teachers will be
program. Members may come Pomeroy Lanes 1676, New held at the Bradbury school.
It was noted that $150 is
in old-fashion dress.
- York Clothing 1586.
RACINE Lo&amp;ge 461, F&amp;AM, E~~~~a~:~ ~;~e Po~"~~~~ available to the teachers to be
Misses &amp; Half Sizes.
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at temple. Lanes 603, Pullins Excavating used for school materials. The
attendance banner was won by
Refreshments; ail Master 588 ·
Serving, Middleport.
Pomeroy &amp; Gallipolis, 0 .
Masons invited.
W~~~~ ~~: s:~~~~ smmrl:~~ Mrs. Philson's room. Mrs. Tom
and Mason Co., W. Va.
Main &amp; Sycamore, Pomeroy
WSCS, Pomeroy United Julie Boyles 452, Maxine Kelly reported membership at
Dugan and Drema Smith 433. 72.
Methodist Church, Tuesday,
High Ind. Game - Marlene
7:30 p.m. at the church. Wilson 197, April Smith 184,
Program topic : "Living and Marlene Wilson 178 ·
Acting in Love."
. RUTLAND - A valentine
party for children of the Meigs
Conununily Classes at Rutl8nd
was staged Thursday by the
MONDAY
Missionary · Society of the
AMERJCANISM Program Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
by Lewis Manley American
Legion Auxiliary 363, 7:30 ;
Monday night at the N!!Omi .
Baptist Church, Pomeroy.
U f II
Rev. Samuel Jackson, guest
spea)!;er. Public1Jivited.

8.95

Local Bowling

8.

Delco Energizers will give you the big burst
of starting pewer your car needs on cold
mornings. A lop-of·the-line l;nergizer, for
example, delivers up to 3750 peak watts .of
starling power in the first few seconds of
starting even at zero degrees.
Best of all, you can check the cranking
power an Energizer can deliver because the
Peak Watts Rating is molded right into the
case .
Energizers are vacuum-sealed too, so you
get ali the power you pay for . Stop in and get
lhe Energizer thafs right for your car
~nd right for your budget . .

I

•
open suite that evening. A Thornton, Mrs. Marguerite
breakfast will precede the 10 Darst, and Frank ~brew.
a.m. meeting. Attending from Around-robincardwassigned
the Meiga County Salon will be for Mrs. Gladys Mowery who
.Mrs. Mary Martin, nalloilal resides in California. Several
pouvior ,member, Mrs. Knapp, · secret sisters exchanged
Mrs. Walke~. Mrs. Eunle valentines and gifts.
Brinker, Mrs. Hackett, and
Mrs. Walker,
nurses
·
·
Mrs. Welah.
scholarship c,halrman., conArrangements were made to dueled li game in which $16.95
have the constitutions and by· was collected for the fund. An
laws upctsied, Displayed at the invitation was extended by
meeUng was a silver plate Mrs. Hampton to the members
engraved with "Ruth H. to attend an Americanism
Thornton," a memorial piece program which will be
for the Salon. Reported ill were prese~ted at the Naomi I!Jptist
Mrs. Veda Davis and Mrs. Church tonight at 7:30~.m, The
'
Zuelella Smith. The trophies program is sponsored by the
won last year are · to be LewiS Manley Auxiliary 283.
engraved thla month.
Attending besides thoae named
Thank you notes were read were Mrs. Eileen searles and
from the families of Mrs. Mrs. Ferne Cheesebrew.

A ,

WHEN YOU TRADE IT IN
. ON A NEW DELCO
ENERGIZER I

i

Zn-·..e 14" :i \

Numeroua conll'ibutlons
were made and plans were
dlscuaaed for the seventh
anniversary ' .observance in
Aprtbtarecentmeetingofthe
Melga County Salon 710, Eight
and Forty, held at the home &lt;if
Mrs: Julie HyseU. '
"A-tton ••
On the recqmme......
"'
Mrs. Marte Boyd, children and
youth chainnan of the Salon,
.the group voted to contribute
... to the Ameri can Legion
,..
Child .Welfare Foundation in
memory of Ruth H. Thornton;
""" toward the bed endowment
...,
for the National Jewish
Hospital i De
•• to the
n nver; ..
Ohio medicine fund; $10 to the
aU partners project; $50 to the
C)oatic Fibrosis Chapter of
Ohio; and $5 to the National
CysUc Fibrosis Foundation.
II was also voted to send $5
for medicine, ,5 f•r bed
maintenance, f20 for a party,
· $20 for a campout, $5 for the
phone fund, $5 for the camera
fund, $51or the band, $5 for the
clothing fund, and $14.35
birthday cards to the National
Jewish H01pltal in Denver,
Colo.
Arrangements were also
made to remember Sherrie
Marshall, a local cystic
fibrosis child, with gifts on
valentine's day, her birthday
and Easter.
Theannualob3ervance of the
Salon's birthday was planned
with Evalina Berkley, chapeau
departemental, to be the
honored guest. Ail depar·
temental officers will be invited to the dinner along with
members of 11 other salons
across Ohio.
Appointed to committees
were Mrs. Edith Fox, Mrs.
Pearl Knapp, and Mrs. Mary
Martin , decorating; Mrs.
MyrUe Walker, Mrs. Mary
Roush and Mrs. Catherine
Welsh, gifts, and Mrs. Julia
Hysell, reservations.
Chapeau Rhoda Hackett
Presided at the meeUng with
Mrs .
Lula
Hampton,
I'aumoni er, giVlllg
· the prayer.
Mrs. Hampton requested
favorite prayers from ·the
me mbers for both a IocaI
~~erapbook and a slate scrapbook to be prepared by Mar:ella Huston, departemental
l'aumonier.
Mrs. Welah announced the
midwinter pouvior to be held ·
Feb. 24 and 25 at the Fort
Hayes Hotel. A dutch supper
will be held on the 24th with the
departemental ch8peau to hold

YOUR OLD BATTERY
IS WORTH •8.00

=·

IE

•

Johnson of San Diego took
game honors with 34 points.
Tile second-place Kentucky
Colonels moved to within 4-1&gt;
games of firat.piace Carolina
in the Eaatem Division by
beating the Indiana Pacers; 9687, while the . Cougars were
dropping a 117-108 vardict to
the Denver Rockets. In the only
other game, the Memphis
Tams beat the New York Nets,
i19-97.
Artis Gilmore srored 24
points and took down 26
rebounds to lift Kentucky past
Indiana. The Colonels, who
broke a three-game losing
streak, caught fire following a
flstfight between their 6-1
guard, Jim O'Brien, and &amp;-9
Mel Daniels of Indiana.
Guards Ralph Simpson and
Warren Jabali had 30 and 22
points respectively as Denver
beat Carolina for the first time
in six meetings tliis season

-.,

'

Springfield South, Ohio's
eighth-ranked Class AAA
powerhouse, inflicted the first
defeat of the year on Waverly's
visiting Tigers Saturday night,

Saturday, the lads ol Coach
Bob DOll were bot, especially
in the first period.
After 2-2, 4-4 and 8-8
deadlocks, Portsmouth's Keith
Williamson, 6-0 senior forward,
put the Trojans abead to stay
with a long jumper at the 4:03
mark.
Portsmouth connected on its
first eight shots from tlie field
(Gil Price blocked the ninth)
and was12 of 14·during the first
eight minutes of play (85 pet).
The 14th PHS field goal attempt of "the quarter was a
desperation shot at the bqzzer.
After the sinoke settled, PHS
enjoyed a 25-15 advantage. The
Trojans increased their lead to
14 points, 31-17, with 5:43left in
the first half. PHS led aa:27 at
halftime.
With Trojan sub Jim
Oliver off the bench and on
the hoards (he picked off all
six Trojan rebounds in the
third period) Portsmouth

Jones has big
goal for Dallas

.waverly· drops 68-57 ·e ncounter

SalOn 71 0 plans seventh
Social ·• P9rty 'given for community classes
anniversary event in April .Calenpar

Trojans·· stop Gallians

Chillicothe quint top-seeded at Rio
Chillicothe was seeded first nament champions.
and Meigs second in the Class
On Feb. 28, powerful
AAA Sectional Basketball Chillicothe will meet the
Tournament drawings at Rio Logan-Jackson winner at 7:30
Grande College sunday al· p.m. On March 2, Meigs
ternoon.
Lancaster will play the Miami
Nine teams will take part ln Trace-Athens wiMer at 7:30
the Rio sectional this year.
p.m. On March 3, the PortsFirst-round games pit Meigs . mouth • Marietta winner will
against Lancaster on Feb. 23, play the Logan, Chillicothe,
beginning at 7 p.m. Logan will Jackson winner at 7:30 p.m.
battle Jackson al8:30 p.m., on
The sectional champion will
Feb. 23.
\
advance to Ohio University for
On Feb. 24, Miami Trace wiU district tournament commeet Athens at 7 p.m., and petition.
Portsmouth will tackle
Art Lanham will serve as
Marietta at 8:30 p.m. The tournament manager for the
Trojans are defending" tour- Rio Grande sectional.

with a three.point piay at the
1:11 !Dark.
·
.
Cle~eDI, a 5·1 jualor
cuard, wao everywbere aU .
ulgbt. H~ fillllhed witti 17
· points to lead the ~ju
butlt up its biggest lead of tile
altack. McGio&amp;e added 13
game, .41-31, with 5:25 left in
polnto. Rolph Wblle, · S.t
the third period.
sealor guard, lolled In 10.
From ihat point on, however,
Price Jed Gallla's attack with
the Blue Devils performed Ilk.• 20 points and eight rebounda.
old times. With l&lt;ev Sheets, Gd .. Noe finis~ lVlth 18 markers
Price, Jim Niday and Jimmy while Kev Sheela tossed in
Noe leading the WlfY, !It• nne.
i
,
Gailians outscored Portsmouth · Gallipolis hit 22 of 45 from the
12-7 during the final five field for 48.8 pet. GAHS was.10
minutes of the third period, and of 20 from the foul circles for 50
9-2 during the first six minutes pet. GAHS had 11 persooala
of the last stanza. That redu~d and 30 rebounds.
a 15-point deficit to five, 57-li2,
Portsmouth finished the
with 2:08 left in the game. night with a sizzling $7.1 pet.
During that 21-9 surge by from the field, sinking 29 of 50
GAHS, Price and Topper Orr field gosl attempts. PHS was 76
controlled .the boards. Noe put pet., at the foul circles with sbt
10 big points on the board of eight tosses. The Trojans
despite four fouls.
had 19 personals, 20 rebounda
Noe sat out four minutes of and 11 turnovers. Oliver picked
the first half with three per- off nine rebounds for the
sonais. He picked up his fourth visitors.
with 19 seconds left in the third
Pat Spriggs, 6-3 senior
stanza. He returned in the final center, and the 'rrojaDS top
period and finished the game scorer · and rebouader,
for GAHS.
missed Saturday's game due
After GAHS reduced the to a death in bls fomUy.
Trojans' lead to five, Ports- Mark Klesliug, H oealor
mouth went into a semi-stall guard for GARS, sat out
with the four-corner offense. most of tbe game with u
Bo Clemens' short jumper ankle Injury.
from the right base fiqe gave
GAHS will host Jackson
PHS a 59-li2 lead with 1:56left. Tuesday. Portsmouth plays at
Rick McGlone wrapped it up Ironton Saturday night.

• Cleaning begins every time you bake
• Continually cleans itself during baking,
roasting or broiling
• Automatic timing center
• Plug-out Corox' surface units
• Deluxe styling with fu ll-width fluorescent·
platform light .
• Oven and surface unit signal lights

ONLY

29995

No Turn Speed-Broil'"
a·c cessory-broils faster,
juicier-because
it cooks both sides
at once!

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

Bank Rate Financing

MIDDLEPORT

�r

rn rr ~ rrry · · · ·

'

..

/

6-TbeDellySentlnel, Middleport-Pcmoroy,O.,Feb. l2,1!1'13

.

1

rr IS ... P.t/T 11\E'(RE

PUBLIC NOTICES

Of

and be informed of the func ·
tlons of your government are
embodied In publi~ notices . In
that self ·oovernment charges

citizens to

QUALITY

Information , to exercise their

1969 CHEll. BIS. 4 DR.
$199
327 V·8englne, automatic trans., powersleering &amp; brakes,
good ilres, green finish with matching Interior. Book
Value 51150.00 Early Bird Special.

r1ght ot access to public
records and public meetlnQs .

PUBLIC NOTICE
. SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
&amp; EXPENDITURES

1968CHEVROLET BELAIR

g:;~1~:~~:~·~;und :;:::~:::
District Board or

7,771.95
1.327.25

Public Assistance
A5 ,583.81
Community
Mentel Health
and
Retardation Board 55,326 .06
Real Estate Assessment
Fund
21,013.71
Motor Vehicle and Gasoline

$1D95

Station Wagon , V-8 engine, standard transmission, radio,
good tires, clean vinyl interior, green finish, 1-owner, new
car trade-ln.

Balance January 111
General Fund
S 161,735.26

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 I'.M.

r_-___

.,.""'EROY OHIO

l _____

·----~~--"-----J

5 ROOMS and bath In Racine ;
phone 992·6329.
·
2-11 -tfc

,.,.,,., AQ.!i_
INFORMATION
,PEADl'IN ES

Bond Retirement Funds
15,330 .97
Memorial Hosp. Bldg .

with red collar in Wilkesville ·.5 P.M. Day Before Publication
area; call 773·5692, Mason ;,
Monday Oeadllne ·9 a.m.
owner to pay for ad.
Cancell~tlan .- Corrections
Facilities
239.08
2-9-3yc Will be acC~pted untll9 a.m. for.
Day Of-Publication
Rent- Uncla i med Monies - - - - - - -- REGULATIONS
Recount- Crippled

6,697 .33

Totals
519,487 .12
Tuberculosis
15.295.51
T. Federal Funds Also
Revenue Sharing
160,456.8-4
Solid Waste Fund
S.OD
Totals - E:.:cludlng Agency
.

Funds

695.24 •. 47 ·

Agency Funds

Totals

124,056.02

819,300.49

Receipts

Revenue

111,447.86

Dlatrlct Board ol
Health

22,353.44

FoodServlce

1,143.00

Public Assistance
120,707.66
Community Mental Heelth and
Retardation Board 38,457 .45
Real Estate Assessment
Fund
U,A63. 75
Motor Vehicle and Gasoline

Tax Fund

701.505.21

Solid and Water Cons .

Special Fund

Bond Retirement Funds

21,151.60

Totals

Tuberculosis
T. Federal Funds
Also Rev . Sharing

1... 79, 155.28
2~,997 . 35

197,214.77

deemed

EVERYBODY
Shops the

EKcludlng

Agencv Funds

Totals

1,701,369.40
1,701.369.AO

Ideal for a couple; 10 miles

north of Pomeroy; call 992·
7479.
.
2-9-tfc

Sale
rOr
The ,

obletllonal .

-:======::::==~-t

For Sale ·
Aluminum
.Sheets

tor more than o111t Incorrect

Insertion .

RATES

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

2(1

,

,ubtishor will not be responSible · ALLIS Chalmers 'C" tractor

8 for $1.00

with side mower; call Chester

985·3906.

Homer Keefer Dec!ased .
Notice Is hereby given that
Ralph Keefer of RD. Athens.
Athens County, Ohio, has been
duly appointed Administrator
With the Will Annexeel ot the
Estate of o ..H. Keefer AKA Orn
Homer Keeter. deceased , late of
R:t . J. Albltny, Meigs County ,
Ohio .
•
Creditor&amp; are required to file
their claims with said fiduciary
w ithin four months .
Dated this Jlst day of January

Additional 25c
Advertisement .

Charge ·per

OFFIC.E HOURS

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

•

Manning D. Webster
Judge
Court of Com man Pleas ,
Probate DivisiOn

Salt Worll_s, E. Main St.,
Pomerov . Phone 992-3891.
4-12-tfc

(4) CLOSE OUT on 1972 full size
zig-zag sewing machines. For
sewin~

157.82

Public Assistance
5,311.40
Community Mental Health anel
Retardation Board
9,000.18
Motor Vehicle anel Gasolln,e
Tu Fund
16,327.59
Soli and Water Conserv .
Special Fund
1,6A6.02
Rent-Unclaimed MoniesRecount - Cr\ppleq_Chlldren
..
3,10&lt;4,04
Totals
140,196.21
Tuberculosis
5,053.00
Totals - EKclud lng
Agency Funds
145,249.21
Agency Funds
4,018.002 .04
Totals
A,163 ,251.25
Tot11 Receipts &amp; B•l•nctl
General Fund
706,105 .02
Oag and Kennel Fund 19,559.83
County Bd. of Education .
1,.1 ,226.60
Dlat . BoardofHulth 30,283 .21
Food service
2,-470.25
Public Asalstance
171,602.87
Community Mental Health ind
Retardation Board 102,783.69
Real Estate Assessment
Fund
35.~17.&lt;46
· Motor Vehicle and Gasoline
TaK Fund
880,1-47.06
Soil and Water Conserv .
Special Fund
2,559.60
Bond Retirement Funds
1

Momorlal Ho•p . Bldg. 36,482.57
Facilities
239.08
Rent- Unclaimed MoniesRecount-Crippled .

Children

9,901 .37

Totals
2, 138,838.61
Tuberculosis
&gt;45.3-45.86
T. Federal Funds Also
Revenue Sharing
357,671 .61
Solid Waste Fund
7.00
Totals - E:.:cludlng
Agency Funds
2.541,858.08
Agency Funds
4,142,058.06

Totals

6,683,921."

E xpendlturts

Goneral Fund

485.994.85

Dog &amp; Kennel Fund

Countv Bd . of Education

8,0U .H

101,490.47
District Board or Health

24,811 .36

Food Service
964.49
Public Assistance
117,853.77
Community Mental Healttl and
Retardation Board &lt;45,249 . u
Real Estate Assessment
Fund
29,419.56
Motor Vehicle and Gasoline

Tax Fund

Soil and Water Cons .

Special Fund

66&lt;,119,•7

Bond Retirement Funds

1.918.15

16,200.00

Rent- Unclaimed MoniesRecount- CriDoled

Children
Totals

6,621.52
1,502,717.52

Tuberc:uiOSIS
22,295.69
T . Federal Funds Also
169,722.17
Revenue Sharlnq
Totals - E:.:cludlng

Agencv Funds

Agen cy F=unds

Total•

1.69,,735.98

3,993 ,542.39

5.688,278.37

Balance Dtctmbtr 31st
General Fund
220.110.17
Dog and Kennel Fund li,A85.09
County Board of
Education
39,736.13

Dial. Bd. of Health

5.•71.85

Food Service
1,505.76
Public Assistan ce
53 ,749.10
Community Mental Health and
Retardation Board 57,734 .55
Real Estate Assessment

Fund

6.057.90

Motor Vehicle and Gasoline

Tu Fund

216.027.59

Soil and Water Conserv .
Special Fund
641 .A5
Bond Retirement Funds

20,282.57

Memor!•l Hosp. ·Bldg .
Facilities
· 239 .CI8
Rent- Unclaimed Mon iesRecount- Crippled

Children
Totals
Tuborculo•l•

3,279.85
636, 12l.D9
23,050..17

T, Federal Funds 11so
Revenue Sharing
187,9A8.U
7.00
Solid Waste Fund
Totels - Excluding
Agency Funds
8&gt;47,127.10
Avency Funds
148,515.67

TotalS
995.642.77
COUNTY AUDITOR'S
CERTIFICATE

Auditor's
Office
Meigs
County, Pomeroy, Ohio, Feb . 7,

1973.
1, Gordon

H.

Caldwell ,

Auditor of Meigs .County. Ohio,
de&gt; hereb~ ctrtffy ttlat the
foregoinG report Is correct .

.

{2) 12, 11

'

Gordon H. Caldwell

Audltor,Me/gs County

EXPERT
· Wheel Alignment
.. ' '5.55

I
Have your homo ltiiiH by
Custom Bulldors. Our .
aorpenters h..e 20 yurs
experlonce In ·building
homes In Meigs
. County.
.
.

All WEAlliER
ROORNG.AND
OONSTRUCTION
PHONE:. 992-2550

· -GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094 .. .

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open8TII5
'
Mondoy lhru Saturday
606 E..lola in,.. Pomeroy,
0.
-· . .

POMEROY
doors and wltldows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. A. Jacob, sales ' HOME &amp; AUTO
representative. For free.:
992-2094
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V. 606 E. Main Pomeroy
Johnson and Son. hie.
3·2-tfc
OFACE SUPPLIES
.. ... .. .
and
· E LNA and While SewCng
Machines ... service on all
makes. Reasonable rates .

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

S.W. 4 wh. dr., auto ., 327 V8,
air P.S. lilf, . P.B., bucket
seats, 33,000 just overhauled,

2-6-12tc

READY-MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free
est mates, Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co .,
Middlepcwt, Ohio.
6-30-lfc

~-----

SEPTIC TANKS CLiANED
new paint/ shocks, tires, wh· REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell.
$l,OOO Seil$ 1,300 firm . 446 .4850
or 992-7777 Larry Evans,
Oimer &amp; Operator.
Larry's
Mobile
Home,
5-12-tfc

stretch
fabrics,
Pomeroy.
-:----:-button oles, fancy desighedns,
2-9-lf -c.- BRADFORD,
Auctioneer
etc. Paint sllgh)IV blemis . - - - - - , - - - - Complete
Service
Choice of carrying case or
Phone 949-3821
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or DUE lo divorce, 1972 8 track
Racine, Ohio
stereo console; must sell at
terms available. Electro
Crltl Bradford
once;
nice
walnutllnish
.
This
Hygiene Co., phone 992-7755.
5-t-tfc
sel sold much higher, must let
2-7-6tc
go for $89.60 or $7.47 a month. - - - - - Try It in vour home. Call 992· PLUMifiNG work done; phone
985-4265.
5331.
2-11-JOic
l-16-tfc

WILL .trim or cut trees, clean
Out basements, attics,

Phone 949-3221.

etc.

2·4-JOic
------

PUBLIC NOTICE

The tollowlng entitles located
In Meigs County flied ap .
pllcations tor permits and -or
variances for air contaminant ·
sources with the Ohio Ai r
Pollution Control Board prior to
the effect l ~e date of the Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency . Draft proposed per -• .
m ttl are presently being ' ·
prepared on th\!se applications .
Any aggrleveel or adversely
alfected party may request an
adludlcatlon hearing on these
applications by writlno withln
fourteen
(14)
days
of
publication of this notice, to the
Air Permit Section, 45CI East
Town Street, Columbus , Oh io
43215 .
Applications tor perm Its to
operate
air
conteminant
sources flleel by :
Bradbury School, Central
Building. Harrisonville School,
Meigs High School . Meigs Jr _
High
SchooL
Middleport
Element.uy, Midwest Corp .,
Pomeroy Jr . High Bldg.,
Pomeroy Elementary , Rutland
Elementary , Rutland Gym naslum, Salem Center Elem .,
Salisbury Elementary . ·

OIL AND GAS Service, new and
used furnaces. new aluminum

siding and remodeling, 24
hour oervice; phone 843-2833.
1-2S·301p

:,;~!1t£t
L"
·'":··
.

'

HEATING &amp;
COOLING
Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
PlumbingElectrical Work

J.J6.tfc

AND JEANS •
·our . special:

------

SII)IGER automalic sewing

2 Pairs, 1

machine; like new In walnut

best buy In the
area . HaVe slacks
&amp; jeans for the
whole family.

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

Buy

cabinet. Makes design stil-

PAIR FREE . The

$85. Call · Ravenswood, 273-

9521 or 273-9893.

~

1·11 ·tlc

POMEROY
Jack W. C.rsey, Mgr.
Phone H2-2lll

LOCUST fence posts; phone 985·
4265.
2-11 -30tc

e FOr

on Most American Cars

~EE US FOR: Awnings, storm

tract; phone 992-3511 .

Pomeroy

CARD OF THANKS .
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.SO far 50 word mlnlm~m .
Each llddltlonal word 2c.
BLIND ADS

FURNITURE

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display •.

·From the lar.gest
1
Radiator to
llsst Healer Core.
Nalhan Biggs
Radiofor Special~! ..

IN liN DA'I... A

! DON'T KNOW...
8UT, SEe TAAT

SMlllLNELSON

-----Real

l!r!NCH WOClfERSt

DOME 1WEE1Eii!S,
LINWM11ED

FREQLlENC'I
RESPON5E
I'I?TENIIAL ...

HOMEBUILDING
&amp;

REMODELING
BOB

SLOAN
&amp;

C. L. KITCHEN
992-5653'

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
NEW LISTING
INVESTMENT - 5 apart·
ments. One a good 3 bedroom
modern home, with one
apartment In the basement.
Ail are gas heated, each wllh
a bath and nice kitchen .
Located about one block

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tank,, dll·.
chlng service: top soli, fill ·
dll'/. limestone ; B&amp;K Ex·
cavallng . Phone 992·5367,
Dick Ka~r. Jr.
9-1-tfc

••,,..,. _ _ _

- ~··-

WINNIE WINKLE
IT WA~ ~TUPiO 01' ME 1
I KNON. HON lDNG
COULD 1 CARRY ON
MY CHARI\ DE? --"'

on all laundry equipment,
relrlgerallon equipment and
house wiring; welding ,
electric and gas. Call 992·3802
or after 4:30 p.m. call '192·
6050.
2-5-JOip

-SEPTIC
-- "·--

TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEANED, REPAIRED. MILLER
SANITATION,
STEWART,
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
10·4·tfc 1
- - - - - - -- -

You ~und like

from court house, for just

40U wish it

Real Estate For Sale

rcLELAN~
REALTY
601 E. Ml!in

• Pomeroy

~

wouldn't!

t

"\...---./ Aml'T 'OJ AFF/&gt;JD ~

J'

l))tU.. TIII~K ~~ ~

2YEARS OLD
1story frame, 3 bedrooms wlarge closets, nice bath,
dining area, beaul iful kll·
chen, hardwood lloors, some
carpeting, carport with
slorage, electric h.. t. lol100
x 100, low upkeep . $21,500.
10ACRES
Mostly level. 3 bedrooms,
balh. forced air furnace,
dining R., porches, barn, out
cellar', other buildings ,
blacktop road. $8,900.
l BEOROOMI
1'1• baths, large living R_,
Dining R., nice kitchen.
Cellar. Garage. Storm doors
&amp; windows, 2 enclosed
porches. Goi ng at $12,800.
STORAGE OR RENTAL
POMEROY - Large brick &amp;
block building. (not rented),
several lots. Good locallon .
Loads ol space. $8,200.
OLDER HOME
About 1 acre !level), on

We talk .to you
liMe a.person,

f

:II! -UC

G&amp; eAQpllance Repair, repair

'r------

---

WMP0/1390

;=========:.....,

L-----------.J

____

IF I CArl GET iNTO THIB RIG rABT
EHOUG~. i MAV BE ~JOI.E TO PUI.l OfF

AM ESCAPE THAT'LL 111\1'£ THEIV\
WONOERIHQ lOR~ lQ COME!

~~-"-

.

Yellenl17'1 Cr)-ploqllole: THE POOR MAN . IS NOT HE
WHO IS WITHOUT A CENT, BUT HE WHO IS WITHOUT A
DREAM.-KEMP

by THOMAS JOSEPH

DICK TRACY

ACROSS
L News. paper, informally
6. Pluck a
f!llltar
11. Golf score
lZ. Building
13. Idle
employee
(byph.
wd.)
15. Boy
16. Libertine
11. Appoint·
ment
18. Wonder·
. ment
21. Counsel
2&amp;. Thought
25. Position
of con.trol
(2 wds.)
27. Banquet
28! 1 '-for
the
Memory"
Z9.1mltate
30. Dormouse
:il. Planted
U.Edlble
Hed
IS. Cuater's

5. Balcony
6. Tremor
1. Lacerated
8. Alcoholic
drink
9. Function
10. Debussy's
"La-"
14. City In
New York
n. Cheap
bistro
18. An Arab
land
19. Debilitated
20. Food (sl.)
Zl. Italian
river
Z2. Bore
(colloq.)
23. Abuta
or Iiana
U. Bavarian
rivar

(C 1111 Kin1Featur.S;rndleate, lne. )

JJWJMIDI!JB•~~,:u::-t.c
Ullta'alllble theoe blrJumbln,

one letlfr to each lqlllft, to
form four ordlnorr wordo.

I
Z6. Piece of
.34. Confeder·
bulldin&amp;
ate
material
35. Drunkard
30. French
36. Of
river
the
31. British
nature
carbine
of
32. Dark
(suffix)
red
n . Aunt
33. Ancient , ·
( Sp.)
38. Persian
province
vivant

(

·==:u--'-

I
I I ()

I QUSAW

I

III

!SROKEN
PIECE OF SCU~PiU~

WA5.

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

(.U.wn.

........,.. J_....,
An~wl'rl

(2 wda.)
39. Willow
&amp;0. Regional
&amp;1. Scottish
feudal
lord
U . Adversary
DOWN '
I. Rellctous
croup
%. Sound of
lauahter
3. By Jove!
4. Hebrew
word for
Lord

DAILY

WBLl'

I

Yesterday's Answer

nemesis

Co.

RUTLAND FURNITURE R;~~;:"

·- - - - - -

~

FORA

Sl.&amp;M'

KITCHEN &amp; SON
OONSTRUCfiON

------

·Meigs

11/AS~INGrON
~ERe:•

Pomeroy

------

Help

niER6

or: .

WA6 AU..

lT SAVS,

PLAQUE SACK

MOTORS. INC. __ '

I
~ 9;-:t::zt74

EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
and small; Backhoes and
Loaders on trilck and tires ;
tanks Installed; dump truck!
and lo-boys for hire; will haul. . Dump trucks - Lo-boy
Service; Septic lanks In fill dirt, lop soli, limestone
stalled; George (BIIIl
and grovel; call Bob or Roger
. Pullins; phone 992-2478.
Jeffers, day phone 992·7089;
2-9-llc
night phone 992·3525 or 992·
---=-:-::-:-5232. ·
2-11 -tfc HARRISON'S TV Service and
---,-----Service Calls; phone P92-2522.
2-9-lfc

$37,500.00.
NEW LISTIN.G
SMALL RESTAURANT AUTOMOBILE Insurance been' In -a prime location, doing a
Lost . your
cancelled?
good ltllslne5s. A good opoperator's license? Call 992.
portunity for someone who
2966.
wants
on their own. All
6·15-tfc
equipment, and furnishings
SEWING MACHINES. Repair needed to run a restaurant
service, all makes. 992-2284. for only ss.ooo.oo.
NEW LISTING
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy;
Aulhorl2ed Singer Sales and
CORNER LOT - Near
Service. We Sharpen Scissor&gt;. school . 2 bedroom home,
3·29-tfc
nice bath, paneling, utility
building, and garage. Want
only $7 ,500.00.
NEW LISTING
Estate For Sale
4 ROOMS - 2 porches.
cellar, 2 dug wells. 1h acre ol
HOUSE· FOR SALE, 114 Brief&lt;
land. Only $3,800.00.
Street, Pomeroy, Dh10: brick
house, 3 bedrooms, excellent
MIDDLEPORT
location, close to school and
3 BEDROOMS- Nice bath,
city; contact Lou Osborne or · new wall to wall carpeting,
call 992-5898.
neal kitchen, utility room
11-26-lfc
and cellar. Level lot. Asking
515,000.00.
HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
BUSINESS BUILDING
985·352'1.
6-11 -tfc .ON ROUTE 7 - 2 large

------

1

RERAYS!

PAIR

. AUCTION
p Is
Sale
SATURDAY. Feb. 17, slarllng
al11:00 A.M. at my farm 'h WEIMARANER upples AKC
mile north of St. Route 681 at registered; plfone 7.;2-6834 , ,
Alfred, Ohio (four miles Wesl Rutland, D.
of Tuppers Plain~).
·
MACHINERY
.
l-28-tlc
992-2448 .
----------1956 INT. 300 utlllly tractor,
lnlernalional 2-polnt pick-up PARKVIEW Kennels going out
Pomeroy,
0
.
PUBLIC NOTICE
business. Big price
d lsc, InI · 2-row corn Pan
I ter, 'of
MARTHA
PRICE ,
aka
-~
red_ucllon on all dogs. All AKMARTHA KIBBLE, JACOB WE WILL NOT be responsible
Ford 2- 14" plow, Ford 2-row C. "!; 92 Broadwal &amp; Ash
PRICE . \CINCINNATUS
cultivator
with fert. at - Sl t M.ddl
Dhl
for
any
debts
contracted
by
KI BBLE , CINCINNATUS
lachmenl, Ford sprayer,
ree s, 1 epor'
o.
anvone
other
than
ourselves.
KIBBLE , JR .• C. KIBBLE , C.
Ford
post-hole
digger,
Ford
712·13-tf&lt;
business rooms, 2 nice rest
E. KIBBLE , H. E. KIBBLE , Signed: Jerry L. &amp; Linda Sue
ft . mower, rora blade and
rooms, large storage and a
GEORGE E. KIBBLE , JOHN
Jacks , Box 275, Rutland ,
2 NEW3 bedroom homes; 1 with good big all·purpose room .
KIBBLE , LEWIS KIBBLE,
scoop, Ford manure loader, 2- For Sale or Trade
Ohio.
basement, 1 without; 2 car
row Rotary hoe, New Holland
CARRIE KIBBLE , MINNIE
Large natural gas forced air
2·11·31p
garages 1acre 1&lt;&gt;1$: located at
DEVORE , LILLIE SCOTT,
feed grinder .mlxer , New
70,000
BTU
Siegler
fuel
oil
furnace,
central air conRock
Springs
behind
Meigs
SARAH E. SAMUELSON,
. Holland forager Harveslor heater ; used S'h months; for
FRANK KIBBLE , MARTHA KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS .
ditioning,
and plenty of
Co. Fairground: will lra.de or
with corn head, 100 bu. Case sale or would consider trade
Kl BBLE, MAMIE SOVEL,
SPECIALS M.ONTHL Y.
help
finance;
also
5
good
parking.
power
take·off
manure
something ol equal value;
HORRACE
E . KIBBLE , PHONE HELEN JANE
building lots, water and
ANTIQUE BRICK
spreader,
Allis
Chalmers
303 for
phone 992-7124.
·
CLARA CHUTES, CHARLES
BROWN, MIDDLEPOR1',
disposal
Installed;
Charles
H.
hay
baler.
Myers
hay
LOVEL
V OLDER HOME KIBBLE, AND HERBERT 0Hl0992·5113.
2-11·61p
Cornell, Athens, 593·7"'4 cw
crusher, 3-pt. New Idea sideexcellent St., 4 bedrooms ,
Living about 16x36 feet, 4
KIBBLE It living, whose exact
12·3-tfc
593-5667.
addresses are unknown anel
bath, dining R.. 1 Rental.
del. rake, 32 fl. Mayralh hay 1966 INTERNATIONAL pickup
large
bedrooms
with
closets,
whose last known actdresses are - -- -- - - - 2·11-tfc
large
workshop. $18.500.
and grain eleva,or, 16 fl. hay truck engine and 4 speed
Ioyer with open stairway,
Rl . I. Reedsville , Oh io, and if Wanted To Buy
elevator,
20
fl.
x
4
ln.
grain
transmission
;
complete:
good
Mavbe
the time has come for
~arge basement, porches, s
deceased the unknown · heirs.
1
auger, John Deere 8 fl. wheel condition: will lrade for 1967 4 BEDROM home, 2 baths, gas ear garage. 2 acres with
you to consider a more
devisees , le~atees , executors.
disc, 8 lt . single roll Chevrolet engine; phone 992furnace, full basement, river
administrators and·or assigns CHAIN saw. nearly new 1 ex modern home. CALL US
barn. Asking just $21,500.00.
cultlpacker. smoothing 7384
frontage, Syracuse, Ohio,
of Martha Price. aka Martha cellenl buy, 446·4850 or 992TODAY.
NEW HOME
harrow, lime spreader, Black
·
Phone P92-2360.
Kibble , Jacob Pr ice, Cln 7777. Larry Evans, Larry' s
2-11 -3tc
HENRY E. CLELAND
4
BEDROOMS
- All have
Hawk 13 disc grain drill, 6 fl . - - - - - - clnnatus Kibble. Cinc innatus
Mobile Home, Pomeroy .
1·25-tfc
BROKER
Kibbl e, Jr ., c . Kibble, C. E .
2 9 tf
closets, Jlh baths, large
Cleaners combine, 1-row Auto Sales
.
3
SALESMEN
Kibble, H. E. Kibble, George E. - - - - - - - - - - · .
Moline corn picker, Fox
beautiful klfchen, utility . All
HOUSE, 5 rooms and bath,
Kibble, John Kibble, Lewis
TO ASSIST YOU
blower, with SO ft . of pipe, 1
Kibble, Carrie Kibble. Minnie OLD Curnlture, oak tables ,
eleclrlc home, garage, large
located In Rutland: priced for
SHARP
'69
Plymouth
992-22S9
llat-bed
wa~on,
1
wagon
with
Decore, lillie Scolt, sarah E . organs, dishes, clocks. brass
quick sale; phone 742-3334.
lot. Only $21,000.00.
Roadrunner. · Two
door
If
no
answer
corn
and.
s1lage
bed,
wagon
Samuelson will take not ice that
beds or complete households.
2-7-6tc
NEW LISTING
hardtop,
383
·automatic,
992·2568
or 985·4209 ·
unloaders,
3-pl.
lift
pole,
Int.
J . B. O' Brien filed his complaint
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
1
MIDDLEPORT - Large 4
tractor wheel weights , bright orange with black vinyl
February 8, 1973in the Common
Pomeroy Ohio . Phone 992·
lop, $1425. Phone 985·3582 or 5 ROOM HOUSE, 11HJ Slate bedroom home, 2 modern
Pleas Court of Meigs Countyr
'
Electric
cement
mixer.
6271 ·
667-6317.
Street, Pomeroy, Phone 992·
Ohio , Case No. 15232 alleging
FEED
baths, gas forced air fur---......,~
1-7-lfc
that he Is the owner of 5-48-4
3834.
2-8-6tc
nace.
Large
Ioyer
with
open
'I
Interest In the following - - - APP~~flif&lt;lE~oti~i&gt;~~~Toats.
.
2·8-61p stairs, large front and a
i
aescrlbed real estate, and
AND MISC.
1963 DODGE Slallon wagon,
praying that titl e to said real
Wanted
small back porch. Garage,
estate be quieted ancl for par
3 SURGE milkers, Hinman runs good, body. fair, Sl90; Mobile Homes For Sale
all on a corner lot. Asking
f i lion of said real estate.
vacuum pump, stainless steel phone 992-7523.
$21,900.00.
The persons above named will
wash
vals,
milk
cans,
baler
2-11
·31C
IF YOU ARE MY MAN
take not ice that they have been
twine, elec . fence posts, truck
I VJIII start you wllh
made parties defendant to sa id
"Air ConditionerS'
Now Is the tl me to buy that
rack for Int. pickup, log 1966 OLDS TORONADO, airguaranteed
commissions
ol
complaint and that they are
chains
and
many
other
Items.
conditioned;
full
power,
S900;
house
that you have been
•Awnings
required to answer within 28 ~2000 A QUARTER, send vou
LUNCH •erved, not responsible phone 992-5367.
looking
at so long. Should It
days after April 2, 1973 or on or
to school for J weeks, ex·
,.
··Underpinning ,
lor accidents. In case of exbefore May 1, 1973 .
2-1J.6lc
be one of ours, see us for
penses paid, train you In the
Said real estate being situated
tremely bad weather, will be
field , selling &amp; servicing
financing . We have a bunch.
in the Township of Oli ve, County
postponed 1 week . O.Vner: 1968 CHRYSLER Newport, 4 ; Complete mQblle hQme' I·
established
accounts
.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
of Meigs and State of Ohio .
'Service
~
plus
gigantic
,
Shirley Russel Findling . door sedan, power steering,
Minimum travel. MUST BE :
1. Being In 160 acre lot 1164,
ASSOCIATE
Auctioneer: I. 0. "Mac" and brakes, air conditioning, · 'display of mobile homes
21, have car, able to stand
town 4, range 11 of the Ohio
ON YOUR DIAL
NOSUNOAY
SHOWINGS
McCoy.
very good ·condition; good :&lt;~lways avallable•al ...
thorough
Investigation,
Company ' s Purchase, more
992·332S
2·11 -31c llres: . phone 992-5510.
'
part icularly described ·as the
sports-minded. Outstanding
S.w . quarter of lot 1164 hospitalization &amp; pension
MILLER
begln_n lng at the S.W. ~orner of
2-11-6lc
plan. CALL: Jim Hayes
. '
lot 1164 ; then ce north along said
1965
GMC
Tractor
with
1966 ;' MOBILE HOMES .
M!Jn.,
Tues.,
Wed
..
February
A
Dandy!
Bil COPI&lt;ity
lot line 80 rods ; thence east 80
.
'
Hall mobile trailer ; wllh or
12, 13, 14, 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
1220 Wnhlngton Blvd.
Moylog
rods to a stake; thence south 80
wilhout trailer; with wet line; .423-7521
(6141 446·3373. Long Distance
1970 International
rods to the south line of lot 1164 ;
Autom~tlca
BELPRE, 0.
excellent cohdillon; can be
Call Collect.
thence wt!st 80 rods to the place
2 SJlted operation
1f2 Ton Pickup
seen at 929 Hysell Street,
of beginning , containing &gt;40
Choice or watt~
acres. more or less.
.
Middleport;
Wltll
temps ,
Auto
Excepting a 10 acre parcel out T1 RE Dof seeing the same faces
2-9-6lc CASH paid for all makes and
Aluminum Canopy
Water
levei
of s.w, corner of said 40 acre and rooms ,every day? We
models of mobile homes.
control.
Lint
--~--lot.
need an atlnicllve, Intelligent
Phone area code 614·423·9531.
Filter or Power
1972
GMC
Sprint
truck
;
phone
1000-D
series,
304
engine,
It Is the Intent to convey 30
young 'Yom an to call on Meigs
, 4·13-tfc
Fin Agitator
•
742-3171 .
deluxe Interior and exterior
acre!' which was formerly
area
businesses
and
Ptrma.Pr
•
.,
_.:.._:
2-9·6tc
trim .
owned by Sarah M. Kibble.
~rofesslonal people to sell the
Movtog
2. Also the fotlowlng real
.
1968 WINDSOR, 12x60, 2
Good
Condition
I
Halo
ar Htat
estate in sections •· and 10, 1own
Inest office equipment
bedroom,
wltll
or
without
1972 LIBERTY trailer. 3
Orvers
A range 11, tOO acre lot 1159
available .
Salary
plus
P92-3511.
,
furnllure;
phone
!&gt;edrooms,
1'1•
baths,
all
new
Equipment
Surround· clotheS
bounded on tho norlh bV land Of · commission. Expenses paid.
furnlhJre, Iusl fully carpeted
''
2-11 -llc
Wltt1 gentle, •~en
Charles or Lesto Blake, east by
No nlghtwork. This Is a new
two weeks ago; lived In four
Pomeroy
heat. No hotspots,
Oavld Rood 1 south by Math !lela field for women and we must
Ph. P92·2176
months; S500 ddwn and take 12 x 60, 1971 ACADEMY, 3 •
Hetzer lhd west Jasp.er Reed , have the right person . Send
no ovtrdrYing
bedroom; lip-out, air, washer
over payments: , phone P92containing nine acrea.
Fine Me&amp;h l Lint
1 ture an d resume to Mr s. DELUXE zig zag sewing 2715.
J. Also 20 acres in section 1, PIC
and dryer; phone 742·3280
Filter.
Town 4, Range 11 Oli vo McGee, Box 727, Marietta, 0 .
after 6 p.m.
machine. This machine
2-Hic
We Specialize I~
Township , Meigs County, Oh io
2·6·6tc
darns, embroideries, over- - - - - - - ; - - - -1,.-12-11-71c
'MAYTAG
the S IJ, Ofthe S.E . If• Ollhe S.W. - - - - - - - - casts,
buttonholes
all
without
v.. or said section 11 containing
attachments, fusl dial . and
In 1963, 43 persons were
20 acrea .
· WAITRESS, out of school; ~all
sew.
Pay balance of $39.20 or
J . B. O' Brien , 992-3697.
The word " agnostic "
when a jetliner crashed
killed
pay SS per month, 992·5331.
Pia In tiff
'
2-1t
-3tc
comes from the Greek and
741-4211
~nold Grate
·
(2) 12, " · 26 (3) 5, 12, 19, 6t
2·9-6tc into the Florida Everglades.
means "not knowing ."
, U..---~;---...-.--:.;.::.:.:..___. ~R~ut~ll~nd~
'

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

!ol.'. iHE II,ISIM)T

WONDER IN '
TH' SAME THING .
ABOUT TATER .

-·

- - - -- -

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cue No. 20836
Estate ot o. H. Keefer AKA Orn

Sfbo.AIJG ~~ Of

I WUZ.JEST .

and exterior painting, con- EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
and backhoe work; septic
crete work by hour or con ·

Receipts
(2) 5, 12. 19, 3t
Non-A avenue
General Fund
10A,SA0 .70
County Board of Ecuatlon 8.46

Dill. Board of Heallh

Business ·Service_s~·~
&lt;~

WILL DO remodeling, Interior

2-9-31p
For Waflt Ad Service
5 cents per wor.d one Insertion
Mlnlr{!um Charge75c
' 7 MONTH old trailer 14 x 70,
unfurnished, fully carpeted.
12 centS- per word tt1rp'
con!'lecutlve Insertions.
Phone 992-7649 alter 5 p.m.
18 cents per word SiK cori ·
2·4·12tc
·secutlve Insertions.
·
~------------~
25 Per Cerit Discount on paid ..
..
ads and ads paid within 10 days., COAL Limestone, ExcelSIOr 1967 JEEP Wagoneer - 4 dr.

WANT AD WAY

2.00 1973 .

Solid Wnto Fund
Totals -

900.00

NICE 8 x 35 trailer with lip~ul:

Th'e Publisher reserves the r:
right to edit or.relect anv ads

General Fund
A39,829.06
Dog and Kennel Fund
7,194.25

County Board of
Education

2 BEDROOM mobile home:
completely furnished; call
992-2441 after 5:30p.m.
.
2-7-tfc

36"x23"x.009

Tax Fund
162,314 .26 Found
Soil anel Water Conservation
Special Fund
13 .58 LARGE black and tan male dog

Chiidron

'

HOOD 'S AQUARIUMS ; llsh COLONIAL, Early American
style, maple, ·stereo·radlo,
and supplies; new location,
AM-F M 4 speed, automatic
Ash Streel, Middleporl near
4 speaker system.
changer,
par-k ; phone 992-5443.
Balance
$78.34. Use our
1·7-lfc
budget terms. Call 992·7085.
2·8-61c
GIVE vour feet a lreat; lry a
pair of Knapp Shoes ; call Bob
Hvsell, 992-5324.
CoNTEMPORARY Modern
1-23-lfc
Walnut style stereo, .radio,
AM- FM, 4 speaker sound
system, 4 speed automatic
For Rent
changer. Balance $69.72. Use
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and our budget terms. Call 992unfurnlshed apartments . ~ 0:!tc
Phone 992-5434.
·- - - - - - - - - ol-12-tfc
.
- - - - -- - - ·sTEREO&amp; Track, repossessed,
looks like new, 4 speaker
UNFURNISHED 3·room
apartment, adults only. No audlo system In walnut
console, take over payments
pets, 408 Spring Ave,
of $1.50 f"r week or pay
Pomeroy.
1-7-tlc balance o $89.50. 992-5331 .
--------2-9·61c

1968 NOVA 55 CPE.
m9s
350 Engine, 4·speed trans .• wide oval tires, wh . rings, red
finish, blk. bucket seats, console, ra'!lo-tape. Sharp car &amp;
priced lo move.

be Informed ;

th iS newspaper urges every
citizen to read and study these
notices . We strongly adv ise
those citizens, seeking further

Heallh
Food Service

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

Your Right to Know

1111

·For Sale

Notice

SOME DA'/5 I'M HAPPY AS
A CLAM AT HlGH WAT!:R,
LOWEEZ'r' ··OTHER DA'iS I
FEEL LOW·DOWNER'N A
MOLE

WHAT MAKES ,
ME 50 DADBURN
CHANGEABLE?

•••)

00011 YAPFY HUNGRY MUFFU
Held .up-of o puhlit- nwetUw!-THI ·~

·I

C~YPTOQUOTE~Here's how to
AXYDLBAAXR
li LONGFELLOW

work It:

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single letlers.
apostrophes. lhe length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the eode letlers are different.
·
.
CRYHOQUOTES
GAED
' AGM

,FA

§NPD

NM Bl&gt;NVM

MSD
MG

WNER.

CGL

KNC

QNJR - QLM CGL KLVM

INX CGLJ MNFB . -JLVVFNA u..__

'"iGPDJQ .

'.

f

�r

rn rr ~ rrry · · · ·

'

..

/

6-TbeDellySentlnel, Middleport-Pcmoroy,O.,Feb. l2,1!1'13

.

1

rr IS ... P.t/T 11\E'(RE

PUBLIC NOTICES

Of

and be informed of the func ·
tlons of your government are
embodied In publi~ notices . In
that self ·oovernment charges

citizens to

QUALITY

Information , to exercise their

1969 CHEll. BIS. 4 DR.
$199
327 V·8englne, automatic trans., powersleering &amp; brakes,
good ilres, green finish with matching Interior. Book
Value 51150.00 Early Bird Special.

r1ght ot access to public
records and public meetlnQs .

PUBLIC NOTICE
. SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
&amp; EXPENDITURES

1968CHEVROLET BELAIR

g:;~1~:~~:~·~;und :;:::~:::
District Board or

7,771.95
1.327.25

Public Assistance
A5 ,583.81
Community
Mentel Health
and
Retardation Board 55,326 .06
Real Estate Assessment
Fund
21,013.71
Motor Vehicle and Gasoline

$1D95

Station Wagon , V-8 engine, standard transmission, radio,
good tires, clean vinyl interior, green finish, 1-owner, new
car trade-ln.

Balance January 111
General Fund
S 161,735.26

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 I'.M.

r_-___

.,.""'EROY OHIO

l _____

·----~~--"-----J

5 ROOMS and bath In Racine ;
phone 992·6329.
·
2-11 -tfc

,.,.,,., AQ.!i_
INFORMATION
,PEADl'IN ES

Bond Retirement Funds
15,330 .97
Memorial Hosp. Bldg .

with red collar in Wilkesville ·.5 P.M. Day Before Publication
area; call 773·5692, Mason ;,
Monday Oeadllne ·9 a.m.
owner to pay for ad.
Cancell~tlan .- Corrections
Facilities
239.08
2-9-3yc Will be acC~pted untll9 a.m. for.
Day Of-Publication
Rent- Uncla i med Monies - - - - - - -- REGULATIONS
Recount- Crippled

6,697 .33

Totals
519,487 .12
Tuberculosis
15.295.51
T. Federal Funds Also
Revenue Sharing
160,456.8-4
Solid Waste Fund
S.OD
Totals - E:.:cludlng Agency
.

Funds

695.24 •. 47 ·

Agency Funds

Totals

124,056.02

819,300.49

Receipts

Revenue

111,447.86

Dlatrlct Board ol
Health

22,353.44

FoodServlce

1,143.00

Public Assistance
120,707.66
Community Mental Heelth and
Retardation Board 38,457 .45
Real Estate Assessment
Fund
U,A63. 75
Motor Vehicle and Gasoline

Tax Fund

701.505.21

Solid and Water Cons .

Special Fund

Bond Retirement Funds

21,151.60

Totals

Tuberculosis
T. Federal Funds
Also Rev . Sharing

1... 79, 155.28
2~,997 . 35

197,214.77

deemed

EVERYBODY
Shops the

EKcludlng

Agencv Funds

Totals

1,701,369.40
1,701.369.AO

Ideal for a couple; 10 miles

north of Pomeroy; call 992·
7479.
.
2-9-tfc

Sale
rOr
The ,

obletllonal .

-:======::::==~-t

For Sale ·
Aluminum
.Sheets

tor more than o111t Incorrect

Insertion .

RATES

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

2(1

,

,ubtishor will not be responSible · ALLIS Chalmers 'C" tractor

8 for $1.00

with side mower; call Chester

985·3906.

Homer Keefer Dec!ased .
Notice Is hereby given that
Ralph Keefer of RD. Athens.
Athens County, Ohio, has been
duly appointed Administrator
With the Will Annexeel ot the
Estate of o ..H. Keefer AKA Orn
Homer Keeter. deceased , late of
R:t . J. Albltny, Meigs County ,
Ohio .
•
Creditor&amp; are required to file
their claims with said fiduciary
w ithin four months .
Dated this Jlst day of January

Additional 25c
Advertisement .

Charge ·per

OFFIC.E HOURS

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

•

Manning D. Webster
Judge
Court of Com man Pleas ,
Probate DivisiOn

Salt Worll_s, E. Main St.,
Pomerov . Phone 992-3891.
4-12-tfc

(4) CLOSE OUT on 1972 full size
zig-zag sewing machines. For
sewin~

157.82

Public Assistance
5,311.40
Community Mental Health anel
Retardation Board
9,000.18
Motor Vehicle anel Gasolln,e
Tu Fund
16,327.59
Soli and Water Conserv .
Special Fund
1,6A6.02
Rent-Unclaimed MoniesRecount - Cr\ppleq_Chlldren
..
3,10&lt;4,04
Totals
140,196.21
Tuberculosis
5,053.00
Totals - EKclud lng
Agency Funds
145,249.21
Agency Funds
4,018.002 .04
Totals
A,163 ,251.25
Tot11 Receipts &amp; B•l•nctl
General Fund
706,105 .02
Oag and Kennel Fund 19,559.83
County Bd. of Education .
1,.1 ,226.60
Dlat . BoardofHulth 30,283 .21
Food service
2,-470.25
Public Asalstance
171,602.87
Community Mental Health ind
Retardation Board 102,783.69
Real Estate Assessment
Fund
35.~17.&lt;46
· Motor Vehicle and Gasoline
TaK Fund
880,1-47.06
Soil and Water Conserv .
Special Fund
2,559.60
Bond Retirement Funds
1

Momorlal Ho•p . Bldg. 36,482.57
Facilities
239.08
Rent- Unclaimed MoniesRecount-Crippled .

Children

9,901 .37

Totals
2, 138,838.61
Tuberculosis
&gt;45.3-45.86
T. Federal Funds Also
Revenue Sharing
357,671 .61
Solid Waste Fund
7.00
Totals - E:.:cludlng
Agency Funds
2.541,858.08
Agency Funds
4,142,058.06

Totals

6,683,921."

E xpendlturts

Goneral Fund

485.994.85

Dog &amp; Kennel Fund

Countv Bd . of Education

8,0U .H

101,490.47
District Board or Health

24,811 .36

Food Service
964.49
Public Assistance
117,853.77
Community Mental Healttl and
Retardation Board &lt;45,249 . u
Real Estate Assessment
Fund
29,419.56
Motor Vehicle and Gasoline

Tax Fund

Soil and Water Cons .

Special Fund

66&lt;,119,•7

Bond Retirement Funds

1.918.15

16,200.00

Rent- Unclaimed MoniesRecount- CriDoled

Children
Totals

6,621.52
1,502,717.52

Tuberc:uiOSIS
22,295.69
T . Federal Funds Also
169,722.17
Revenue Sharlnq
Totals - E:.:cludlng

Agencv Funds

Agen cy F=unds

Total•

1.69,,735.98

3,993 ,542.39

5.688,278.37

Balance Dtctmbtr 31st
General Fund
220.110.17
Dog and Kennel Fund li,A85.09
County Board of
Education
39,736.13

Dial. Bd. of Health

5.•71.85

Food Service
1,505.76
Public Assistan ce
53 ,749.10
Community Mental Health and
Retardation Board 57,734 .55
Real Estate Assessment

Fund

6.057.90

Motor Vehicle and Gasoline

Tu Fund

216.027.59

Soil and Water Conserv .
Special Fund
641 .A5
Bond Retirement Funds

20,282.57

Memor!•l Hosp. ·Bldg .
Facilities
· 239 .CI8
Rent- Unclaimed Mon iesRecount- Crippled

Children
Totals
Tuborculo•l•

3,279.85
636, 12l.D9
23,050..17

T, Federal Funds 11so
Revenue Sharing
187,9A8.U
7.00
Solid Waste Fund
Totels - Excluding
Agency Funds
8&gt;47,127.10
Avency Funds
148,515.67

TotalS
995.642.77
COUNTY AUDITOR'S
CERTIFICATE

Auditor's
Office
Meigs
County, Pomeroy, Ohio, Feb . 7,

1973.
1, Gordon

H.

Caldwell ,

Auditor of Meigs .County. Ohio,
de&gt; hereb~ ctrtffy ttlat the
foregoinG report Is correct .

.

{2) 12, 11

'

Gordon H. Caldwell

Audltor,Me/gs County

EXPERT
· Wheel Alignment
.. ' '5.55

I
Have your homo ltiiiH by
Custom Bulldors. Our .
aorpenters h..e 20 yurs
experlonce In ·building
homes In Meigs
. County.
.
.

All WEAlliER
ROORNG.AND
OONSTRUCTION
PHONE:. 992-2550

· -GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094 .. .

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open8TII5
'
Mondoy lhru Saturday
606 E..lola in,.. Pomeroy,
0.
-· . .

POMEROY
doors and wltldows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. A. Jacob, sales ' HOME &amp; AUTO
representative. For free.:
992-2094
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V. 606 E. Main Pomeroy
Johnson and Son. hie.
3·2-tfc
OFACE SUPPLIES
.. ... .. .
and
· E LNA and While SewCng
Machines ... service on all
makes. Reasonable rates .

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

S.W. 4 wh. dr., auto ., 327 V8,
air P.S. lilf, . P.B., bucket
seats, 33,000 just overhauled,

2-6-12tc

READY-MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free
est mates, Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co .,
Middlepcwt, Ohio.
6-30-lfc

~-----

SEPTIC TANKS CLiANED
new paint/ shocks, tires, wh· REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell.
$l,OOO Seil$ 1,300 firm . 446 .4850
or 992-7777 Larry Evans,
Oimer &amp; Operator.
Larry's
Mobile
Home,
5-12-tfc

stretch
fabrics,
Pomeroy.
-:----:-button oles, fancy desighedns,
2-9-lf -c.- BRADFORD,
Auctioneer
etc. Paint sllgh)IV blemis . - - - - - , - - - - Complete
Service
Choice of carrying case or
Phone 949-3821
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or DUE lo divorce, 1972 8 track
Racine, Ohio
stereo console; must sell at
terms available. Electro
Crltl Bradford
once;
nice
walnutllnish
.
This
Hygiene Co., phone 992-7755.
5-t-tfc
sel sold much higher, must let
2-7-6tc
go for $89.60 or $7.47 a month. - - - - - Try It in vour home. Call 992· PLUMifiNG work done; phone
985-4265.
5331.
2-11-JOic
l-16-tfc

WILL .trim or cut trees, clean
Out basements, attics,

Phone 949-3221.

etc.

2·4-JOic
------

PUBLIC NOTICE

The tollowlng entitles located
In Meigs County flied ap .
pllcations tor permits and -or
variances for air contaminant ·
sources with the Ohio Ai r
Pollution Control Board prior to
the effect l ~e date of the Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency . Draft proposed per -• .
m ttl are presently being ' ·
prepared on th\!se applications .
Any aggrleveel or adversely
alfected party may request an
adludlcatlon hearing on these
applications by writlno withln
fourteen
(14)
days
of
publication of this notice, to the
Air Permit Section, 45CI East
Town Street, Columbus , Oh io
43215 .
Applications tor perm Its to
operate
air
conteminant
sources flleel by :
Bradbury School, Central
Building. Harrisonville School,
Meigs High School . Meigs Jr _
High
SchooL
Middleport
Element.uy, Midwest Corp .,
Pomeroy Jr . High Bldg.,
Pomeroy Elementary , Rutland
Elementary , Rutland Gym naslum, Salem Center Elem .,
Salisbury Elementary . ·

OIL AND GAS Service, new and
used furnaces. new aluminum

siding and remodeling, 24
hour oervice; phone 843-2833.
1-2S·301p

:,;~!1t£t
L"
·'":··
.

'

HEATING &amp;
COOLING
Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
PlumbingElectrical Work

J.J6.tfc

AND JEANS •
·our . special:

------

SII)IGER automalic sewing

2 Pairs, 1

machine; like new In walnut

best buy In the
area . HaVe slacks
&amp; jeans for the
whole family.

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

Buy

cabinet. Makes design stil-

PAIR FREE . The

$85. Call · Ravenswood, 273-

9521 or 273-9893.

~

1·11 ·tlc

POMEROY
Jack W. C.rsey, Mgr.
Phone H2-2lll

LOCUST fence posts; phone 985·
4265.
2-11 -30tc

e FOr

on Most American Cars

~EE US FOR: Awnings, storm

tract; phone 992-3511 .

Pomeroy

CARD OF THANKS .
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.SO far 50 word mlnlm~m .
Each llddltlonal word 2c.
BLIND ADS

FURNITURE

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display •.

·From the lar.gest
1
Radiator to
llsst Healer Core.
Nalhan Biggs
Radiofor Special~! ..

IN liN DA'I... A

! DON'T KNOW...
8UT, SEe TAAT

SMlllLNELSON

-----Real

l!r!NCH WOClfERSt

DOME 1WEE1Eii!S,
LINWM11ED

FREQLlENC'I
RESPON5E
I'I?TENIIAL ...

HOMEBUILDING
&amp;

REMODELING
BOB

SLOAN
&amp;

C. L. KITCHEN
992-5653'

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
NEW LISTING
INVESTMENT - 5 apart·
ments. One a good 3 bedroom
modern home, with one
apartment In the basement.
Ail are gas heated, each wllh
a bath and nice kitchen .
Located about one block

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tank,, dll·.
chlng service: top soli, fill ·
dll'/. limestone ; B&amp;K Ex·
cavallng . Phone 992·5367,
Dick Ka~r. Jr.
9-1-tfc

••,,..,. _ _ _

- ~··-

WINNIE WINKLE
IT WA~ ~TUPiO 01' ME 1
I KNON. HON lDNG
COULD 1 CARRY ON
MY CHARI\ DE? --"'

on all laundry equipment,
relrlgerallon equipment and
house wiring; welding ,
electric and gas. Call 992·3802
or after 4:30 p.m. call '192·
6050.
2-5-JOip

-SEPTIC
-- "·--

TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEANED, REPAIRED. MILLER
SANITATION,
STEWART,
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
10·4·tfc 1
- - - - - - -- -

You ~und like

from court house, for just

40U wish it

Real Estate For Sale

rcLELAN~
REALTY
601 E. Ml!in

• Pomeroy

~

wouldn't!

t

"\...---./ Aml'T 'OJ AFF/&gt;JD ~

J'

l))tU.. TIII~K ~~ ~

2YEARS OLD
1story frame, 3 bedrooms wlarge closets, nice bath,
dining area, beaul iful kll·
chen, hardwood lloors, some
carpeting, carport with
slorage, electric h.. t. lol100
x 100, low upkeep . $21,500.
10ACRES
Mostly level. 3 bedrooms,
balh. forced air furnace,
dining R., porches, barn, out
cellar', other buildings ,
blacktop road. $8,900.
l BEOROOMI
1'1• baths, large living R_,
Dining R., nice kitchen.
Cellar. Garage. Storm doors
&amp; windows, 2 enclosed
porches. Goi ng at $12,800.
STORAGE OR RENTAL
POMEROY - Large brick &amp;
block building. (not rented),
several lots. Good locallon .
Loads ol space. $8,200.
OLDER HOME
About 1 acre !level), on

We talk .to you
liMe a.person,

f

:II! -UC

G&amp; eAQpllance Repair, repair

'r------

---

WMP0/1390

;=========:.....,

L-----------.J

____

IF I CArl GET iNTO THIB RIG rABT
EHOUG~. i MAV BE ~JOI.E TO PUI.l OfF

AM ESCAPE THAT'LL 111\1'£ THEIV\
WONOERIHQ lOR~ lQ COME!

~~-"-

.

Yellenl17'1 Cr)-ploqllole: THE POOR MAN . IS NOT HE
WHO IS WITHOUT A CENT, BUT HE WHO IS WITHOUT A
DREAM.-KEMP

by THOMAS JOSEPH

DICK TRACY

ACROSS
L News. paper, informally
6. Pluck a
f!llltar
11. Golf score
lZ. Building
13. Idle
employee
(byph.
wd.)
15. Boy
16. Libertine
11. Appoint·
ment
18. Wonder·
. ment
21. Counsel
2&amp;. Thought
25. Position
of con.trol
(2 wds.)
27. Banquet
28! 1 '-for
the
Memory"
Z9.1mltate
30. Dormouse
:il. Planted
U.Edlble
Hed
IS. Cuater's

5. Balcony
6. Tremor
1. Lacerated
8. Alcoholic
drink
9. Function
10. Debussy's
"La-"
14. City In
New York
n. Cheap
bistro
18. An Arab
land
19. Debilitated
20. Food (sl.)
Zl. Italian
river
Z2. Bore
(colloq.)
23. Abuta
or Iiana
U. Bavarian
rivar

(C 1111 Kin1Featur.S;rndleate, lne. )

JJWJMIDI!JB•~~,:u::-t.c
Ullta'alllble theoe blrJumbln,

one letlfr to each lqlllft, to
form four ordlnorr wordo.

I
Z6. Piece of
.34. Confeder·
bulldin&amp;
ate
material
35. Drunkard
30. French
36. Of
river
the
31. British
nature
carbine
of
32. Dark
(suffix)
red
n . Aunt
33. Ancient , ·
( Sp.)
38. Persian
province
vivant

(

·==:u--'-

I
I I ()

I QUSAW

I

III

!SROKEN
PIECE OF SCU~PiU~

WA5.

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

(.U.wn.

........,.. J_....,
An~wl'rl

(2 wda.)
39. Willow
&amp;0. Regional
&amp;1. Scottish
feudal
lord
U . Adversary
DOWN '
I. Rellctous
croup
%. Sound of
lauahter
3. By Jove!
4. Hebrew
word for
Lord

DAILY

WBLl'

I

Yesterday's Answer

nemesis

Co.

RUTLAND FURNITURE R;~~;:"

·- - - - - -

~

FORA

Sl.&amp;M'

KITCHEN &amp; SON
OONSTRUCfiON

------

·Meigs

11/AS~INGrON
~ERe:•

Pomeroy

------

Help

niER6

or: .

WA6 AU..

lT SAVS,

PLAQUE SACK

MOTORS. INC. __ '

I
~ 9;-:t::zt74

EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
and small; Backhoes and
Loaders on trilck and tires ;
tanks Installed; dump truck!
and lo-boys for hire; will haul. . Dump trucks - Lo-boy
Service; Septic lanks In fill dirt, lop soli, limestone
stalled; George (BIIIl
and grovel; call Bob or Roger
. Pullins; phone 992-2478.
Jeffers, day phone 992·7089;
2-9-llc
night phone 992·3525 or 992·
---=-:-::-:-5232. ·
2-11 -tfc HARRISON'S TV Service and
---,-----Service Calls; phone P92-2522.
2-9-lfc

$37,500.00.
NEW LISTIN.G
SMALL RESTAURANT AUTOMOBILE Insurance been' In -a prime location, doing a
Lost . your
cancelled?
good ltllslne5s. A good opoperator's license? Call 992.
portunity for someone who
2966.
wants
on their own. All
6·15-tfc
equipment, and furnishings
SEWING MACHINES. Repair needed to run a restaurant
service, all makes. 992-2284. for only ss.ooo.oo.
NEW LISTING
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy;
Aulhorl2ed Singer Sales and
CORNER LOT - Near
Service. We Sharpen Scissor&gt;. school . 2 bedroom home,
3·29-tfc
nice bath, paneling, utility
building, and garage. Want
only $7 ,500.00.
NEW LISTING
Estate For Sale
4 ROOMS - 2 porches.
cellar, 2 dug wells. 1h acre ol
HOUSE· FOR SALE, 114 Brief&lt;
land. Only $3,800.00.
Street, Pomeroy, Dh10: brick
house, 3 bedrooms, excellent
MIDDLEPORT
location, close to school and
3 BEDROOMS- Nice bath,
city; contact Lou Osborne or · new wall to wall carpeting,
call 992-5898.
neal kitchen, utility room
11-26-lfc
and cellar. Level lot. Asking
515,000.00.
HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
BUSINESS BUILDING
985·352'1.
6-11 -tfc .ON ROUTE 7 - 2 large

------

1

RERAYS!

PAIR

. AUCTION
p Is
Sale
SATURDAY. Feb. 17, slarllng
al11:00 A.M. at my farm 'h WEIMARANER upples AKC
mile north of St. Route 681 at registered; plfone 7.;2-6834 , ,
Alfred, Ohio (four miles Wesl Rutland, D.
of Tuppers Plain~).
·
MACHINERY
.
l-28-tlc
992-2448 .
----------1956 INT. 300 utlllly tractor,
lnlernalional 2-polnt pick-up PARKVIEW Kennels going out
Pomeroy,
0
.
PUBLIC NOTICE
business. Big price
d lsc, InI · 2-row corn Pan
I ter, 'of
MARTHA
PRICE ,
aka
-~
red_ucllon on all dogs. All AKMARTHA KIBBLE, JACOB WE WILL NOT be responsible
Ford 2- 14" plow, Ford 2-row C. "!; 92 Broadwal &amp; Ash
PRICE . \CINCINNATUS
cultivator
with fert. at - Sl t M.ddl
Dhl
for
any
debts
contracted
by
KI BBLE , CINCINNATUS
lachmenl, Ford sprayer,
ree s, 1 epor'
o.
anvone
other
than
ourselves.
KIBBLE , JR .• C. KIBBLE , C.
Ford
post-hole
digger,
Ford
712·13-tf&lt;
business rooms, 2 nice rest
E. KIBBLE , H. E. KIBBLE , Signed: Jerry L. &amp; Linda Sue
ft . mower, rora blade and
rooms, large storage and a
GEORGE E. KIBBLE , JOHN
Jacks , Box 275, Rutland ,
2 NEW3 bedroom homes; 1 with good big all·purpose room .
KIBBLE , LEWIS KIBBLE,
scoop, Ford manure loader, 2- For Sale or Trade
Ohio.
basement, 1 without; 2 car
row Rotary hoe, New Holland
CARRIE KIBBLE , MINNIE
Large natural gas forced air
2·11·31p
garages 1acre 1&lt;&gt;1$: located at
DEVORE , LILLIE SCOTT,
feed grinder .mlxer , New
70,000
BTU
Siegler
fuel
oil
furnace,
central air conRock
Springs
behind
Meigs
SARAH E. SAMUELSON,
. Holland forager Harveslor heater ; used S'h months; for
FRANK KIBBLE , MARTHA KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS .
ditioning,
and plenty of
Co. Fairground: will lra.de or
with corn head, 100 bu. Case sale or would consider trade
Kl BBLE, MAMIE SOVEL,
SPECIALS M.ONTHL Y.
help
finance;
also
5
good
parking.
power
take·off
manure
something ol equal value;
HORRACE
E . KIBBLE , PHONE HELEN JANE
building lots, water and
ANTIQUE BRICK
spreader,
Allis
Chalmers
303 for
phone 992-7124.
·
CLARA CHUTES, CHARLES
BROWN, MIDDLEPOR1',
disposal
Installed;
Charles
H.
hay
baler.
Myers
hay
LOVEL
V OLDER HOME KIBBLE, AND HERBERT 0Hl0992·5113.
2-11·61p
Cornell, Athens, 593·7"'4 cw
crusher, 3-pt. New Idea sideexcellent St., 4 bedrooms ,
Living about 16x36 feet, 4
KIBBLE It living, whose exact
12·3-tfc
593-5667.
addresses are unknown anel
bath, dining R.. 1 Rental.
del. rake, 32 fl. Mayralh hay 1966 INTERNATIONAL pickup
large
bedrooms
with
closets,
whose last known actdresses are - -- -- - - - 2·11-tfc
large
workshop. $18.500.
and grain eleva,or, 16 fl. hay truck engine and 4 speed
Ioyer with open stairway,
Rl . I. Reedsville , Oh io, and if Wanted To Buy
elevator,
20
fl.
x
4
ln.
grain
transmission
;
complete:
good
Mavbe
the time has come for
~arge basement, porches, s
deceased the unknown · heirs.
1
auger, John Deere 8 fl. wheel condition: will lrade for 1967 4 BEDROM home, 2 baths, gas ear garage. 2 acres with
you to consider a more
devisees , le~atees , executors.
disc, 8 lt . single roll Chevrolet engine; phone 992furnace, full basement, river
administrators and·or assigns CHAIN saw. nearly new 1 ex modern home. CALL US
barn. Asking just $21,500.00.
cultlpacker. smoothing 7384
frontage, Syracuse, Ohio,
of Martha Price. aka Martha cellenl buy, 446·4850 or 992TODAY.
NEW HOME
harrow, lime spreader, Black
·
Phone P92-2360.
Kibble , Jacob Pr ice, Cln 7777. Larry Evans, Larry' s
2-11 -3tc
HENRY E. CLELAND
4
BEDROOMS
- All have
Hawk 13 disc grain drill, 6 fl . - - - - - - clnnatus Kibble. Cinc innatus
Mobile Home, Pomeroy .
1·25-tfc
BROKER
Kibbl e, Jr ., c . Kibble, C. E .
2 9 tf
closets, Jlh baths, large
Cleaners combine, 1-row Auto Sales
.
3
SALESMEN
Kibble, H. E. Kibble, George E. - - - - - - - - - - · .
Moline corn picker, Fox
beautiful klfchen, utility . All
HOUSE, 5 rooms and bath,
Kibble, John Kibble, Lewis
TO ASSIST YOU
blower, with SO ft . of pipe, 1
Kibble, Carrie Kibble. Minnie OLD Curnlture, oak tables ,
eleclrlc home, garage, large
located In Rutland: priced for
SHARP
'69
Plymouth
992-22S9
llat-bed
wa~on,
1
wagon
with
Decore, lillie Scolt, sarah E . organs, dishes, clocks. brass
quick sale; phone 742-3334.
lot. Only $21,000.00.
Roadrunner. · Two
door
If
no
answer
corn
and.
s1lage
bed,
wagon
Samuelson will take not ice that
beds or complete households.
2-7-6tc
NEW LISTING
hardtop,
383
·automatic,
992·2568
or 985·4209 ·
unloaders,
3-pl.
lift
pole,
Int.
J . B. O' Brien filed his complaint
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
1
MIDDLEPORT - Large 4
tractor wheel weights , bright orange with black vinyl
February 8, 1973in the Common
Pomeroy Ohio . Phone 992·
lop, $1425. Phone 985·3582 or 5 ROOM HOUSE, 11HJ Slate bedroom home, 2 modern
Pleas Court of Meigs Countyr
'
Electric
cement
mixer.
6271 ·
667-6317.
Street, Pomeroy, Phone 992·
Ohio , Case No. 15232 alleging
FEED
baths, gas forced air fur---......,~
1-7-lfc
that he Is the owner of 5-48-4
3834.
2-8-6tc
nace.
Large
Ioyer
with
open
'I
Interest In the following - - - APP~~flif&lt;lE~oti~i&gt;~~~Toats.
.
2·8-61p stairs, large front and a
i
aescrlbed real estate, and
AND MISC.
1963 DODGE Slallon wagon,
praying that titl e to said real
Wanted
small back porch. Garage,
estate be quieted ancl for par
3 SURGE milkers, Hinman runs good, body. fair, Sl90; Mobile Homes For Sale
all on a corner lot. Asking
f i lion of said real estate.
vacuum pump, stainless steel phone 992-7523.
$21,900.00.
The persons above named will
wash
vals,
milk
cans,
baler
2-11
·31C
IF YOU ARE MY MAN
take not ice that they have been
twine, elec . fence posts, truck
I VJIII start you wllh
made parties defendant to sa id
"Air ConditionerS'
Now Is the tl me to buy that
rack for Int. pickup, log 1966 OLDS TORONADO, airguaranteed
commissions
ol
complaint and that they are
chains
and
many
other
Items.
conditioned;
full
power,
S900;
house
that you have been
•Awnings
required to answer within 28 ~2000 A QUARTER, send vou
LUNCH •erved, not responsible phone 992-5367.
looking
at so long. Should It
days after April 2, 1973 or on or
to school for J weeks, ex·
,.
··Underpinning ,
lor accidents. In case of exbefore May 1, 1973 .
2-1J.6lc
be one of ours, see us for
penses paid, train you In the
Said real estate being situated
tremely bad weather, will be
field , selling &amp; servicing
financing . We have a bunch.
in the Township of Oli ve, County
postponed 1 week . O.Vner: 1968 CHRYSLER Newport, 4 ; Complete mQblle hQme' I·
established
accounts
.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
of Meigs and State of Ohio .
'Service
~
plus
gigantic
,
Shirley Russel Findling . door sedan, power steering,
Minimum travel. MUST BE :
1. Being In 160 acre lot 1164,
ASSOCIATE
Auctioneer: I. 0. "Mac" and brakes, air conditioning, · 'display of mobile homes
21, have car, able to stand
town 4, range 11 of the Ohio
ON YOUR DIAL
NOSUNOAY
SHOWINGS
McCoy.
very good ·condition; good :&lt;~lways avallable•al ...
thorough
Investigation,
Company ' s Purchase, more
992·332S
2·11 -31c llres: . phone 992-5510.
'
part icularly described ·as the
sports-minded. Outstanding
S.w . quarter of lot 1164 hospitalization &amp; pension
MILLER
begln_n lng at the S.W. ~orner of
2-11-6lc
plan. CALL: Jim Hayes
. '
lot 1164 ; then ce north along said
1965
GMC
Tractor
with
1966 ;' MOBILE HOMES .
M!Jn.,
Tues.,
Wed
..
February
A
Dandy!
Bil COPI&lt;ity
lot line 80 rods ; thence east 80
.
'
Hall mobile trailer ; wllh or
12, 13, 14, 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
1220 Wnhlngton Blvd.
Moylog
rods to a stake; thence south 80
wilhout trailer; with wet line; .423-7521
(6141 446·3373. Long Distance
1970 International
rods to the south line of lot 1164 ;
Autom~tlca
BELPRE, 0.
excellent cohdillon; can be
Call Collect.
thence wt!st 80 rods to the place
2 SJlted operation
1f2 Ton Pickup
seen at 929 Hysell Street,
of beginning , containing &gt;40
Choice or watt~
acres. more or less.
.
Middleport;
Wltll
temps ,
Auto
Excepting a 10 acre parcel out T1 RE Dof seeing the same faces
2-9-6lc CASH paid for all makes and
Aluminum Canopy
Water
levei
of s.w, corner of said 40 acre and rooms ,every day? We
models of mobile homes.
control.
Lint
--~--lot.
need an atlnicllve, Intelligent
Phone area code 614·423·9531.
Filter or Power
1972
GMC
Sprint
truck
;
phone
1000-D
series,
304
engine,
It Is the Intent to convey 30
young 'Yom an to call on Meigs
, 4·13-tfc
Fin Agitator
•
742-3171 .
deluxe Interior and exterior
acre!' which was formerly
area
businesses
and
Ptrma.Pr
•
.,
_.:.._:
2-9·6tc
trim .
owned by Sarah M. Kibble.
~rofesslonal people to sell the
Movtog
2. Also the fotlowlng real
.
1968 WINDSOR, 12x60, 2
Good
Condition
I
Halo
ar Htat
estate in sections •· and 10, 1own
Inest office equipment
bedroom,
wltll
or
without
1972 LIBERTY trailer. 3
Orvers
A range 11, tOO acre lot 1159
available .
Salary
plus
P92-3511.
,
furnllure;
phone
!&gt;edrooms,
1'1•
baths,
all
new
Equipment
Surround· clotheS
bounded on tho norlh bV land Of · commission. Expenses paid.
furnlhJre, Iusl fully carpeted
''
2-11 -llc
Wltt1 gentle, •~en
Charles or Lesto Blake, east by
No nlghtwork. This Is a new
two weeks ago; lived In four
Pomeroy
heat. No hotspots,
Oavld Rood 1 south by Math !lela field for women and we must
Ph. P92·2176
months; S500 ddwn and take 12 x 60, 1971 ACADEMY, 3 •
Hetzer lhd west Jasp.er Reed , have the right person . Send
no ovtrdrYing
bedroom; lip-out, air, washer
over payments: , phone P92containing nine acrea.
Fine Me&amp;h l Lint
1 ture an d resume to Mr s. DELUXE zig zag sewing 2715.
J. Also 20 acres in section 1, PIC
and dryer; phone 742·3280
Filter.
Town 4, Range 11 Oli vo McGee, Box 727, Marietta, 0 .
after 6 p.m.
machine. This machine
2-Hic
We Specialize I~
Township , Meigs County, Oh io
2·6·6tc
darns, embroideries, over- - - - - - - ; - - - -1,.-12-11-71c
'MAYTAG
the S IJ, Ofthe S.E . If• Ollhe S.W. - - - - - - - - casts,
buttonholes
all
without
v.. or said section 11 containing
attachments, fusl dial . and
In 1963, 43 persons were
20 acrea .
· WAITRESS, out of school; ~all
sew.
Pay balance of $39.20 or
J . B. O' Brien , 992-3697.
The word " agnostic "
when a jetliner crashed
killed
pay SS per month, 992·5331.
Pia In tiff
'
2-1t
-3tc
comes from the Greek and
741-4211
~nold Grate
·
(2) 12, " · 26 (3) 5, 12, 19, 6t
2·9-6tc into the Florida Everglades.
means "not knowing ."
, U..---~;---...-.--:.;.::.:.:..___. ~R~ut~ll~nd~
'

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

!ol.'. iHE II,ISIM)T

WONDER IN '
TH' SAME THING .
ABOUT TATER .

-·

- - - -- -

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cue No. 20836
Estate ot o. H. Keefer AKA Orn

Sfbo.AIJG ~~ Of

I WUZ.JEST .

and exterior painting, con- EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
and backhoe work; septic
crete work by hour or con ·

Receipts
(2) 5, 12. 19, 3t
Non-A avenue
General Fund
10A,SA0 .70
County Board of Ecuatlon 8.46

Dill. Board of Heallh

Business ·Service_s~·~
&lt;~

WILL DO remodeling, Interior

2-9-31p
For Waflt Ad Service
5 cents per wor.d one Insertion
Mlnlr{!um Charge75c
' 7 MONTH old trailer 14 x 70,
unfurnished, fully carpeted.
12 centS- per word tt1rp'
con!'lecutlve Insertions.
Phone 992-7649 alter 5 p.m.
18 cents per word SiK cori ·
2·4·12tc
·secutlve Insertions.
·
~------------~
25 Per Cerit Discount on paid ..
..
ads and ads paid within 10 days., COAL Limestone, ExcelSIOr 1967 JEEP Wagoneer - 4 dr.

WANT AD WAY

2.00 1973 .

Solid Wnto Fund
Totals -

900.00

NICE 8 x 35 trailer with lip~ul:

Th'e Publisher reserves the r:
right to edit or.relect anv ads

General Fund
A39,829.06
Dog and Kennel Fund
7,194.25

County Board of
Education

2 BEDROOM mobile home:
completely furnished; call
992-2441 after 5:30p.m.
.
2-7-tfc

36"x23"x.009

Tax Fund
162,314 .26 Found
Soil anel Water Conservation
Special Fund
13 .58 LARGE black and tan male dog

Chiidron

'

HOOD 'S AQUARIUMS ; llsh COLONIAL, Early American
style, maple, ·stereo·radlo,
and supplies; new location,
AM-F M 4 speed, automatic
Ash Streel, Middleporl near
4 speaker system.
changer,
par-k ; phone 992-5443.
Balance
$78.34. Use our
1·7-lfc
budget terms. Call 992·7085.
2·8-61c
GIVE vour feet a lreat; lry a
pair of Knapp Shoes ; call Bob
Hvsell, 992-5324.
CoNTEMPORARY Modern
1-23-lfc
Walnut style stereo, .radio,
AM- FM, 4 speaker sound
system, 4 speed automatic
For Rent
changer. Balance $69.72. Use
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and our budget terms. Call 992unfurnlshed apartments . ~ 0:!tc
Phone 992-5434.
·- - - - - - - - - ol-12-tfc
.
- - - - -- - - ·sTEREO&amp; Track, repossessed,
looks like new, 4 speaker
UNFURNISHED 3·room
apartment, adults only. No audlo system In walnut
console, take over payments
pets, 408 Spring Ave,
of $1.50 f"r week or pay
Pomeroy.
1-7-tlc balance o $89.50. 992-5331 .
--------2-9·61c

1968 NOVA 55 CPE.
m9s
350 Engine, 4·speed trans .• wide oval tires, wh . rings, red
finish, blk. bucket seats, console, ra'!lo-tape. Sharp car &amp;
priced lo move.

be Informed ;

th iS newspaper urges every
citizen to read and study these
notices . We strongly adv ise
those citizens, seeking further

Heallh
Food Service

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

Your Right to Know

1111

·For Sale

Notice

SOME DA'/5 I'M HAPPY AS
A CLAM AT HlGH WAT!:R,
LOWEEZ'r' ··OTHER DA'iS I
FEEL LOW·DOWNER'N A
MOLE

WHAT MAKES ,
ME 50 DADBURN
CHANGEABLE?

•••)

00011 YAPFY HUNGRY MUFFU
Held .up-of o puhlit- nwetUw!-THI ·~

·I

C~YPTOQUOTE~Here's how to
AXYDLBAAXR
li LONGFELLOW

work It:

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single letlers.
apostrophes. lhe length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the eode letlers are different.
·
.
CRYHOQUOTES
GAED
' AGM

,FA

§NPD

NM Bl&gt;NVM

MSD
MG

WNER.

CGL

KNC

QNJR - QLM CGL KLVM

INX CGLJ MNFB . -JLVVFNA u..__

'"iGPDJQ .

'.

f

�8_The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 12, 1973

News.•.

died

(Continued from Page I)
reforms proPosed will not mean an increase in the taxes already
paid by most Americans.

SWlday

Gene J. Bennett, 53, formerly
of Middle~ort, 631 E. Milhoff
St., Columbus, died Sunday at
the MI. Carmel Hospital tilere.
Mr. Bennett, born in Middleport, was a graduate of
Middleport High School where
he excelled in athletics. He was
a vell!ran of World War II who
was employed as a storekeeper
at General Motors in Columbus.
Surviving are his wife,
Pauline, also fo rmerly of
Middleport ; his mother, Mrs.
Alberta Bennett; a daughll!r,
Paula Joseph ; two grand·
children, and a brother,
James.
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. Wednesday at the
Schoedinger Hilltop Chapel,
3030 West Broad St&gt;1-C&lt;ilumbus.
Friends may call there from 7
to 9 this evening and from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 on Tuesday. Burial
will be in Glen Rest Cemetery
ai Reynoldsburg.

Driver huit

J. Perry Bradbury dies

Gene Bennett

Members of the Meigs Local
Dlatrict Board of Education
Monday night took under
advisement providing a
memorial lit memory of the
late Larry Mon:lson . . ·
. Tile board agreed tjlat before
a memorial Is deslgriated hJs
family be contacted and get Its
wishes before tile board makes
a decillion. ·Mr. Morrison was
assi!Jtant superintendent. The·
nature of the memorial If

NANTY GLO, PA. -ARNOW MILLER, president of lhe
United Mine Workers of America (UMWA), Sunday night
pledged to cut wages and expenses of international officers and
bring the union back to the rank-and-file membership. "I am
saving $5 million a year by cutting wages and expenses !II lhe.
international office," Mlller told a ;victory celebration in this
western Pennsylvania mining community. Mlller unseated W.. A.
"Tony" Boyle In alspeclal court-ordered election last December.
"I didn't realize how bsd the international office was until!
took office," Miller said. "Once lhlngs are revilallzed I will get
out into lhe coalfields where lhe problems really are. Part of my
campaign was to bring back lhe UMW to lhe rank and file and
that's what I'm doing now. Boyle never vlalted the coaHields.
There have been more rank and file members visit the internstional office in the last two monlhs tilan in the preceding 10
years."
Mlller said a credlt union for union members would be
established by tills swnmer. He also pledged to establish a
pension program "lhat was equal for everyone."

''Much of what.we call hard

work

is simply

an

ac-

cumulation of easy things
we didn't do when

we

should have" ...

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharges: Ernest Knopp,
Point Pleasant; James Riffle,
Leon; James King, Milton;
Andrew McCarty, Ewington,
0 .: Brenda Smeltz, Crown
City, 0 .; Helen Fowler, Helen
McCutcheon, Point Pleasant;
Jennings Hess, Mason; Minta
Childress, Point Pleasant;
Richard Nibert, Gallipolis
Ferry; Lillian Walker, Middleport;
Lewis
Rowe ,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Philip Shirley •.
Chesapeake, 0 .: Stacey Slone,
Point Pleasan!; Candie Hall,
West Columbia; Ronald
Plumley, Gallipolis Ferry;
Mrs. Dan VanConney, Middleport; Mrs. Ernest Hesson,
Point Pleasant; John Henry,
Henderson; Tammy Gillenwat,r' Jr Point Pleasatlt;
Mrs .
Marvin
Lanier ,
Southside ; Albert Saunders,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Grover
Fultz, Leon; Mrs. Alta Wolfe,
Gallipolis; Michael Clark, .
Leon; Mrs . Jack Campbell,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Daniel
Hawthorne, Long Bottom ;
Mrs. Gene Scarberry, Point
Pleasimt; James Kelly, Point
Pleasant.
Births: Feb. 6, a son to Mr.
and · Mrs . Philip Shirley ,
Chesapeake, 0., and Feb. 10, a
daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Cotlrill, Ripley.
'I

Hard work is made easier
when you have the r ight

tool s, mater ials and advice. You can find all three
at
the
POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK CO., the
home of the " FRIENDLY
ONES". JUST FRIENDLY
NEIGHBORS WHO AP·
PRECIATE
YOUR
BUSINESS ...

1#de~eiver
There's no need to play catch-up in

th~

money game.

Not when the Wide-Aw ake Bank and the United
States Postal Service will work to put you ahead for

keeps.
Just make it a r egula1· practice to hit a mail box

insurance

BOARD TO MEET
RACINE - The Southern
Local Board of Education will
meet Thursday,at 7:30p.m. at
the high school in Racine.
DIVORCE ASKED
Virginia Wyatt, Pomeroy,
Rt. 4, has filed suit for divorce
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court against James C.
Wyatt, same address, charging
gross neglect of duly and exlreme cruelty.

Safety
(Continued from Page 1)

with I! bank-by-mail deposit for the wide-awake bank.
Th ere's no need to play catch· up in the money game. Not
when the Wide· Awake Bank and the United States Postal
Service w ill work to put you ahead for keeps.
Ju st make it a regular practice to hit a mail box with a
bank.by.mall deposit tor the wide-awake bank .
To do any of your banking needs at any hour. iust stop
In and pick up a Bank ·by .Mail envelope. And look tor your
favor ite wide-r ece iver .

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

2 PO

Shop Week Days
9; 30 to 5 p.m .
Open Both Friday &amp;
Saturday 9;30 to 9 p.m.

Shop our Second Floor
Ready-to- Wear
Department for a large and
complete selection of
dresses, coats, and sportswear in JuniorS'. Misses
and Womens sizes.

PRESENTS FLAG -Tim 1111111, rigbl, a~QP~~amc~re at
Southern Higb8dloo1,1011 oiMr. and Mrs. Henry Benll, Jr.,
Racine, ~ted Jallll!l Adams, principal, with a U. S.
Flag, aent to him from Co~n Clarence Mlller. 'lbe
flag, 5 ft. by 1ft., has flon over lbe capital ~ In
W81hlrigtm, D. C. Tllli wrote to Congreuman Miller asking
for the flq on behalf olthe student boiiY at Soutllern High
Sclxlol.
I

Shown at left-

NEW FOR SPRING

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATIJRDAY DISCHARGES
-- Raymond Hartley, John
Bechtle, Sharon Cogar, Sarah
Woode, Bernice Roush, Ida
Bachner, Orin Norman, Shelia
Conkle, Cindy Conkle, Rosa .
Ball, Ollie Young, Beatrice
Edwards, Stephen Bailey,
Wilma Parmalee, Valsia
Roush, Pride Tackett and
Oswell Durham.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Joe Moore, Bernice Bailey,
Lawrence Smith and Jerry
Grounds .

By UDited Prea lnlenWloul

. 100 PCT. EASY-CARE

WASHINGTON -THEODORE R. TET'ZLAFF, head o1 the
legal services division of !lie Office o1 Ecooomlc Opportunity,
wu fired Monday, admln.latration sources said. Tetzlaff confirmed IU firing In a telephone interview: "They packed up my
lltuff lbls afternoon and changed my name on tile board."
Tetzlaff, 21, a graduate of Princeton and Yale had been actlqg
88.110clate OEO director for legal services since March 1972 wlltn
be SUCceeded Fred Speaker. He had been a staff membe; since ·
11171. Tetzlaff, who had been in Cleveland lobbying for tile
American Bar Association to pass a resolution urging continuation of legal services, was fired when he returned to his
office Monday.
The leg~~! services division of OEO has thousanda of attorneys aC!'OIIS the nation who represented poor people in about
one mlillon court disputes 1ut year.

POLYESTER TAILORED
SHORT-SLEEVE DRESS.

ONLY

'1398

Choose pink, pastel blue or
navy In sizes 10 to 18. By
Style Row.

Finally, at 2:13 p.m. (1:13
a.m. ESI') lhe Communist
prisoners started boarding lhe
planes taking them from Bien
Hoa prison camp near Saigon
to Loc Ninh and other prison
exchange points.

CANTON,OHIO-ARECENTLYDIVORCEDhuabandshot
and killed his former wife and another woman early today in lhe
parking lot of Canton TlmkenMercyHospllaland then turned his
.357 magnum pistol on himself, pollee said. canton Police Capt.
Rllllald Malon said Gary Moyers, 41, Canton, either followed his
wife Annie, 40, and Allee Btllbart, 53, to the hospital or was
waiting for them in tbe parking lot.
''Mi's. Moyers got out ol tile car and walked to the left rear of
the auto where she was shot by Moyers," said Mason. "Moyers,
ecconling to two witnesses, lhen fired his weapon into the car,
killing Mlsll Brilhart."

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

IIIIYS the U.S. P011tal Service has no plana to ellntlnate residential

mall service on Saturdays.
·
Klal8en made tile pledge Monday u he discussed lhe service's annual report. He did aay, however, lhlt Saturday aervtce
to buslneaaes has been trimmed in ca.aea where It was determined the lervice wa1 not needed. "We have no plana at present
to cut back residential Saturday maD service," Klassen aald.

SAIGON - SOUTH VIETNAMESE TROOPS in five northern provinces are stlll battling to retake territory seized by
Communists lfter the cease-fire two wee"- ago, high ranldr!g
military sources said today. Under Ierma 9f the Jan. 28 truce, lhe
two Bides were to keep territory IIley controlled when the cesseflre took effect but were forbidden to launch further landgrabbing forays. But hilh!y·placed military sources told UPI
reporter Edward Bassettin Da Nang lhat government troopa in
the five provinces have been fJshtlng ever since the truce was
declared to wipe out North VIetnamese jiockeb in areas conlidered under government control.
In Satgun, military IPQkemnen said despite the release of
war priiOnen in South Vietnam, ftghtlrw wu on the increase
acroulbe CllUIIIry today and military ol'flclailrepcl'ted a battle
lhat i8.llted 10 hours Monday In the Central HtghlaDds.
.

·c oN.STRUCTION
·Frames are of finest, kiln-dried hardwood, double-dowelled and
corner-blocked for added strength. Upholstering is expert and
tailoring
carefully detailed.
..

.

CLE.ANLINESS
Ffexsteel is easily kept factory-fresh and clean. No cambric bottoms
to gather dust and. allergens.
.

Harry · Morgan, Keenan
Wynn , Kathleeh Co~y .
.

(Gi

SATISFACTION
Flexsteel furniture is not only a smart addition to your home but
also a wise investment'that will give ·years of faultless service.

THE MAGIC OF
WALT DISNEY WORLD

(Technicolor)
Steve Forrest Narrates ·

(Gi
Admission :
Adults $1 .50
Cbiklren 75c
Show Staris 7 p.m.

-

I' .

Baker Furniture

BUY NOW ·
AT
SPECIAL
SAVINGS

'

'

;

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

holding a slnnilar discussion
between the board. and
representatives _of the nori;
teaching employes. Frank W. ,
Porter, board pr:esldent, said ..
he directed a letter to Mrs. Phil
. G.lob~kar indicating the
board's .. willingness to meet
.and discuss all problems: .
Hargraves Is to notify Mrs.
Olobokar by letter of the
board's agreement to meet
(Continued on Page 10) ·

Weather
-

\

Rain southwest. tonight,
chance of rain and snow norlh
and east. Lows tonight low to
mid 30s south. Rain and
· warmer on Wednesday, highs
in the upper 40s to lower 50s
exlreme south.

PHONE 992-2156

TE~

CENTli

s .coming home early
..

20MorePOWs
to be released
WASHINGTON (UPI) North Vietnam bas agreed to
release 20 more American
prisoners of war wlthln the
next few days, the Pentagon
announced today.
The surprise release wlll
raise to 163 the number of
Americ8Ds freed by Hanoi
and the VIetCong. The first
release Monday included 135
U. S. servicemen and eight
clvlllans.

Council on aging asks
$400 from Middleport

CLARK AFB, Philippines (UPI)- Two American prisoners
o1 war headed back to the United States today, tile first U. S.
A request from the Meigs a program by the federal county are being askfl! to give
rows to begin the 9,001Hnlletrlp back to their fanillies.
County Council on Aging for government are good provided four percent of tileif total
AC141 Starllfter transport converted to hospital care took off
$400 from Middleport's federal the local share can be raised. revenue sharing funds to tile
at 7:29 a.m. EST on tile journey across the Pacific to the
Miramar Nayal Air station in San Diego, caUl.
revenue sharing funds was
The program would provide program.
tabled pending further study transportation, a senior
Docton in .the Phlllppines said other POWs may follow
Because only four members
by Middleport Village Council citizens center, informative of tile village council were
110011er than expected because of the general good health of the
Monday night.
and · referral
services, present it was decided to wait
prisoners released by the Communists Monday.
In
a
letter
from
Mrs.
Eleanor
recrea
lion
al
ac
llvi ties, until the matter can be
Medical processing for Navy Cmdr. Brian D. Woods, 40, of
Thomas, director of the Meigs counseling, hot meals, shop- db;cussed wi til other council
San Diego, and Air Force Maj . Glendon W. Perkins, 38, of
County Council on Aging, four ping assistance, a friendly members, and to see what
.Orlando, Fla., had been speeded up so both could return to the .
percent of the village's revenue writing
and
telephone other communities are going to
United Slates where they have relatives who are critically ill.
A&amp;DATOMEET
sharing funds for the year, or reassurance program and do about the requests.
Woods was a last-minute
The
Meigs
County
$400,
was requested to be used possibly a monthly newsletter.
addition to tile released list in
Roger Shields, a Pentagon
Middleport also may be
Alcoholism
and
Drug
Abuse
as a part of local financing to
Her letter also pointed out getting a street sweeper as tile
Hanoi. The Joint Mllltary aide running "Operation
Co1111D1sslon asked that he be Homecoining," said he was Committee wlll meet at 7:30 carry out the council's that lhe Meigs County Com- result of last night's meeting
, missioners recently gave $4,600 when lhe legal ·aspects are ·
freed to lpted to his mother's encoura'ged by lhe mental p.m. Thursday at the St. Paul program.
Lutheran
Church
in
Pomeroy.
T.he
letter
pointed
out
that
a
of the coupty's revenue sharing determlhed.
bedside in tlcronado; ealit rn.e .. health of tile men he had met.
guest
speaker
for
lhe
Athens
A
study of the need of SP.nlor funds to the council to help
detalls · of the emergency in
"I am not aware of any
Mayor John Zerkle said that
.
Care
Une
will
be
present.
All
citizens has been completed carry out the planned he and maintenance supervisor
Maj. Perkins' family were not problems," Shields said. "I
announced.
think IIley are going to adjust interested persons are invited. and that chances of funding for · program. Other villages of lhe
(Continued on Page 10)
WoodsandPerklnsthuunay very well."
be the first II. 143 returnees
Shields said .prisoners held in
from POW camps in Indochins North Vietnam were well
to return to tbe United Stal(!s. organized and well informed on
Col. Alfred Lynn, a member what had been going 0n in the
of the ~!(~vance team lhat went outside world. He said one of
to Hanoi to arrange release of lhe first jobs of new prisoners
the prisoners, aald today some was to pass along news events
other returnees are in good just prior to their capture.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - economy, meaning bigger
ed tbere fell apart under Uttle opposition Is expected,
health and may clear lhelr
"The organization and disci- Acting to force an end to the profits and more jobs.
pressure
from speculators because the dollar already will
medical checkups at Clark Air pllne were very, very · good," world monetary crisis and
The devaluation "will yield a abroad. The U.S. trade bal• be trading at Its new value in
Base Hoapltal sooner than tile Shields said. "At Hanoi llir· bring order to Its own foreign better deal for lhe American
ance, Instead of Improving, world money markets.
:; ••
three
days
originally port, lhey marched off their trade, the United States
workingman and the American nosedlved to an aU-time low.
The devaluation was coupled ;;;
scheduled.
buses in military order. There Monday davalu.ed the dollar by businessman," Shultz said.
The
latest
devaluation,
ac.wilh two other proposals-a ;:::.
This was an encouraging are men wilh a lot of pride. We 10 per cent.
The administration is also companied by lhe floating of tr11de blll lhat would raise and
Indication about the condition knew they did lhelr best to
The move, ordered by Presi- looking for a reversal of the
of the remalnln!l prisoners of maintain themselves In good dent Nixon and announced disastrous $6 billion 1972 tile Japanese yen, ended a lower tariffs and other protecwar. The Paris peace conclltion."
near midnight by Treasury foreign trade deficit. Getting week of frantic scurrying by tionist barrt~rs depending on ...·
finance ministers betiveen the treatment other nationa •. •
agreement stipulated lhat lhe
Shields avoided direct an- Secretary George P. Shultz,
the trsde balance out of the red European capitals in an at- give U.S. goods, and lhe lifting . ·
Injured or ill be lhe first to be swer to a question whether lhe was the second dollar was an object of lhe 8 per cent
tempt to smash the heavy ol the interest equalization tax· •
let go.
men were in better shape lhsn devaluation in 15 months.
of trading that played in- which acts a a control on the ·. :
dollar
devaluation
he had expected.
II means lhat U.S. goods will December, 1971, when nine
"We knew that some of lhem become chesper, and more major nations revalued !heir flationary havoc wilh lhe West outflow of dollara by taxing the : :
German economy and sent the purchase ol foreign Securities , .
were going to be In good con- competitive in overseas mar- currencies
under
the value of lhe dollar to record by Americans.
.,
dition," he said. "We knew that kets. Americans, on the otiler Smithsonian Agreement.
lows.
'
The three-part package was ..
from the men who had been , hand, will have to spend more
Nixon called lhat arrangeTechnicaUy,
the
devaluation
the
administration's attempt .•
freed earlier. "
for foreign-made products.
ment "the m011t significant will not occur unless Congress . "to use tbe crisis as an op- · ·
By midday, only 65 of the 142
The administration is monetary agreement in the
·;
former rows had made tele- banking that this will give a history of the world." But the follows Nixon's request to raise portunlty," Shultz saki.
lhe
price
of
gold
from
·the
Shultz ouWned the· devalua·
pllone calls to lhelr families, boost to the nation's export set of exchange rates negotlatCUI'rellt
$31
to
f42.22
u
ounce.
lion
plan by telephone Monday
authorities said. "It's up to lhe
g~ve
morning to Nlxoo, who had
escort officer and the man
been working at lhe Western
DALLAS (UP!) - Two himself when the calls should
While House in san ·Clemente,
teenaged robbers, one a former be made. When they cleclde
caUl.
The President gave hls
mental patient, held 20 they're 'ready, tile call will be
lppi'OVal and then returned to &gt;
hostages at gunpoint inside a made," an Operation HomeWuhlngton, arriving at the .·
bar Monday night and today, coming spokesman said.
llllll! time Slllltz was briefing
'.
There was no indication
but released tilem unharmed at
reporters on the devaluation.
daylight and gave up to pollee whether the POWs, some of
whom were captive as long as
an hour later.
1\2
years, were hesitant or
' '
The youthful bandits, denied
an airplane and a guaranteed fearful of making tile first
safe getaway, surrendered to contact wilh ~latives since
lhelr attorney and a police lhey were Imprisoned in VIetcaptain afte; negotiating wilh nam. PriSoners ~nllnued to
officers for almost 10 hours,. make calls through lhe day,
The Middleport Fire
The gunmen had barricaded including Navy Lt. (j.g.)
Everett
Alvarez,
the
POW
held
Department
answered 34 calls ·
themselves inside lhe Inner
during January according to :
Circle tavern, refused to gfve longest In North VIetnam of
any
American.
Fire Chief Bob Byers.
up and demanded to speak with
Of tile total there were five
one youth's father before c~ , ···rxn:::
cy;;;
li
""
fire calls, 25 first aid calls, two
surrendering, who was en
false alarms and two of a
EXTENDED OUTLOO~
route from Las Vegas by jet
miscellaneous
nature. Of the 25
Saow Hurries Tbuhday,
when the bsndits agreed to
emergency calls, 14 were In
coallauillg Ia the uortbeut
surrender to their attorney.
town and 11 were out of town.
Biedelman said police Friday. Hlgba Tbup~day Ia
Three
of the calls were' on
arranged for Milton Frank, 18, the 30s to lower tGs 'dropplq
•ccldents involving motor .
to talk by phone during the to the Z8s aorlb and 11011 10111b
vehicles. The total man hours
night wilh his wife of seven Friday aad · warmiDI
on fire calls alone amounted to
:
!l)onlhs. Later . he was COil· Saturday to lbe 11011 BOrth IIIII
41.5 hours. Total mileage on
nected with . his father In 411 south·, Oveniailt lowt Ia
departme~t
vehicles was ~.6, · :
the 281 early Tbunllay alld
Nevadi.
Byer Mid in hls official report • · ·
"Hili father told him he'd pay 10 to ·zo Tbanday.itlgbt alld ·
to council Monday night.
•
any bsil and whatever other Friday night.
v.v:;ux···rt: . .
fees are neceasary if hls son ;c. .:. '; ; .c....
. -'
AS1UNE BRIDGE across the creek to aloe cabin on the llltlte of Mr. and Mn. Richard
would only give hlmaelf up,"
BOOSTERS TO ]IJEET
.·
Rawlings, Union Ave., regarded as a cloaerepUca ofthe chlldhoodh0111e Ot Prestde!it Abnhlm
Veleralll Memorial Hospital . ,
Biedelrllln · Mid. The other · The Easte;n LOcal School
Uncoln in Kentucky proved fascinating Monday - If a bit acary to a few Pomeroy kinDISCHARGED.q- Louise
gunman was Identified by District Band Boosters will
derg~~rten children. The viliit concluded a study of Lincoln's early life. The brlclce, above; also
Barte"', Wlillam Gale, Jerry :. &gt;
officers aa Robert Gordon, 17, meet at 7:30 this evening ·a t the
Is ol early American design. It was used by Mrs. Mary Carolyn Wil", ieacher, to tell of an
Ward, Larry Clymer, Sandy .• of Dallas, who told the holltages high school. All band parents
Incident in young Lincoln's life In which he fell into.a.creek below and had to be fished out by. Utile, Robyn Wills and Gecqt .: . :.:
hedidn'twanttohurtanybody . . are urged to al!efld.
a friend. The point of lhe lesson: safety.
·
·
Kauff.
• '•

...... ""' """. , ". "'. ., J
ews.. in Briefs

The famous Flexsteel springs are made of arched bands of finest
blue steel and a strapped platform top to form a single unit that
suports in restful ease -like floating on air. FLEXSTEEL SPRINGS ARE
SO DURABLE THEY WILL PROVIDE LASTING COMFORT!

(Tech.nicolor)
Dean Jones. Nancy Olsen,

has been notified lhat someone
was interested in leasing the
building as a wholesale
grocery. It was decided lhat
before a decision to raze is
made, the possibility of leasing
the building be explored first.
The board agreed to meet
with representatives ·of the
Meigs Ldcal Teachers Assn.
Monday, Feb. 19, at 8 p.m. in
an informal session.
The board also discussed

enttne

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1973

Processing in Philippines
is going faster tlum expected;
Rlnesses in families of two

PATENTED SPRINGS

SNOW,BALL EXPRESS

said tile efforts of the fire dept.
and DaviS enabled tile board to
keep lhe school open during
tilat period. The well there iS in
operation now.
Hargraves will attend a
regional meeting for "Goals in
.Education in Ohio'' at Athens
High School on Feb. 20:
Advertising of bids on the
demolition and salvage of the
old Coalport School or its sale
was also discussed. The board

•

a1 y

VOL XXIV NO. 211

Co.

Tonight &amp; Tuesday
February 12 &amp; 13
Wall Disney's

1973. The board agreed to grant
a diploma to Mrs. Vicki
Harrison Ellis on lhe recommendation of Jaines Diehl,
principal.
A resolution of "gratitude"
to the Rutland Fire Dept. and .
Bruce DaviS for hauling water
to Salem Cenll!r schpol for
several weeks was approved. It
was suggested that an
arrangement be worked out to
pay for the. water. Hargraves

orris on.·

Devol4!d To The lnlere.ts Of'l'heMeigs-Mason Area

FINE FURNITURE BEGINS ON THE INSIDE

Member of Federa l Reserve System
On 'F ridays Our Drive-In Window is Open 9 a.m . to ,1 p. m.
( CIJnfinuously) .
i20,000 Maximum Insurance for Each Depositor

the end of the school year; Mrs.
Beulah casto, at Pomeroy
elementary, effective Feb. 19'
until the end of u.e' school year,
and Mrs. Ruth Francis, at
Pomeroy Elementary effective
Feb. 5, until the end of the
school year.
Due to illness ihe board ·
approved a ~~)ave of absence
(or Leda Kraeuter from !he
day following tile expiration of
·her sick leave until April I,

•

WASHINGTON-P08'1'MA8TERGENERALE . T. Klassen

POMEROY, OHIO

year; Robert Vaughan as a
substitute citstoctuin ; Charles
E. Blakeslee to a seven year
term (l-1-73 to 12-31-79) on the
Pomeroy • Middleport Ubrary
Board; these aides for lhe
terms specifiect' (to , be jiaid
from.par! C of ~tle I funds in
three Special Education
classes; the salary, $1.8o per
hour for five hours each school
day) Mrs. VIncent Gheen, at
Rutlnnd effective today until

The acarlet giant JapaQese
spider crab, wilh a body one
foot across, has lega capable of
spanning 12 feet, claw-tip to
claw-Uo.

/i2:,. 11/it!e-rtwllke blinking-by-mail
\{JJJ makes it~
·
Farmers Bank &amp;

approved, remains to be
determined.
In other business the board
approved :
Reports
and
recommendations by George
Hargraves, superintendent, of
these appointmentS: Earle L.
Wood · as custodian at Mid·
dleport Elemenlary for lhe
remainder of the school year;
Dale Harrison assistant·
bsseball coach for this school

plans,

salesmanship, programming
insurance needs and methods
of promoting fraternalism and
junior service club and camp
activity. Mrs. Hart was
selected to attend the conference on the basis of general
career performance, her
studies of the life insurance
profession and service to
members.
LEG FRAcTURED
The Pomeroy' E-R squad
answered a call to the Middleport home of Nell Price at
7:38p.m. Saturday. Suffering
a.fractured leg, she was taken
to and admitted at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

to·

propose

Now Y~.:. Know ·

AT CONFERENCE
Mrs. Etilel A. Hart, Shade,
Modem Woodmen of America
representative for.
the
Pomeroy area, attended the
Fraternal Insurance Society's
Pi Itsburgh sales conference
Feb. 6-7 for discussions of
fraternal life and disability
income

'

.

NEW YORK"- ALABORER WHO escaped when the world's
largest gas storage tank exploded and burled 40 workmen under
tons of concrete said Sunday lhe smell of gas was always in the
tank. Aspokesman for Texas Eastern Tranamlssion Co., ~ers
of lheeighwtory high tank on Staten Island, said, "Every safety
precaution had been taken. We have no ideas as to what· !mppened. We're mystified." Just before the workmen went into lhe
tank to repair an old leak, its atmosphere was tested and found
LOCAL TEMPS
safe, lhe spokesman said.
The temperature in · downHowever, John Carroll, 31, whose brotiler was killed in tile
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. explosion Saturday, said, "You always had gas down there. It
Monday was 29 degrees under was only a matter of how much." carroll worked as a laborer on
lhe roof of the tank . He said workmen who entered it told hlm
sunny skies.
Saturday or Friday that tilere W!31'e heavy gas fumes where they
were working. By early today, 26 bodies had been removed from
the blackened tank, which holds liOO,OOO barrels. Acrane lowered
pine boxes into tile tank. One by one, lhe simple boxes were lifted
out, each holding a body charred beyong recognition.

J,""'ll),"'~~-'1

emo

in collision

••

•

CINCINNATI -lACK 0. HICI8, llltional conirnander 11.
lbe oiaahled American Veleranl, IPI*led Monday to President
Nilon to revile the admlnlatration•s PJ'Gil(llal to cut In half
beneflll for amputees and other dlaabled vetera111,
"It Ia Inconceivable to ua lhat a grateful government· can
even COIIIIder such reductiona In dlu~ty conlpeJUUon
paymenll, particularly~ we tn jlllt - Yinlnalbe Joyous .
Nllll'll of prlaen of Wll' from Vietnam " Nlcb llld In
telelfllll to Nlmt. Bli:bllld man titan
velenlna be lffecled b)' lhe Jll'liPCilllto wt tteo 1111111on frGm dlaa~ty
ccmpeualloa P8)'lneiU In lbe '!leal,., btci9nlng July 1.
.

.:ooo

~

\

.

.

0

ar

ev ue

Teenage
·
bandits
•
up

Firemen go
~n

r

. I

l

34 trips

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="735">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11135">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="54538">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="54537">
              <text>February 12, 1973</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="332">
      <name>bradbury</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
