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                  <text>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

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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.
.

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corner-blocked for added strength. Upholstering is expert and
tailoring
carefully detailed.
..

.

CLE.ANLINESS
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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

�J

3- The lllllly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 11, 19'13
As a former congressman, senator, Vice Presi- \
dent, a d~feated candidate for the Presidency by
a margin of three-tenths of nne percent, a defeated
candidate for the governorship of ·California by a
humiUating margin and a tireless and de~icated
worker for all Republican causes and candidates,
President-elect Nixon knew there were grave, spiritsapping flaws in the American body politic, knew
that stringent measures would be required to correct
them, knew that it was now his duty to recommend
such measures and knew, above all else, that if he
introduced corrective measures early on they would
almost certainly be rejected by a Democraticcontrolled and skeptical Congress.
It was characteristic of Nixon's political expertise
that his inaugural address was a bland, superbly
phrased .collection of socio-political homilies tinctured with hope and that no winter-spring flood
of bills from the. White House inundated congressional hoppers, as had been the case during the First
100 Days of Franklin Roosevelt's Administration
and Johnson's second term.
,
An introspective, cautious and secretive man,
Nixon has always taken pains to do his homework
well before displaying his handiwork to the public. .
For example, when he went before a nationwide
television audience in the spring of 1972 to announce
that he had decided to mine Nonh Vietnamese har-'
bors in retaliation for their renewed attacks on South
Vietnam, the President remarked, almost as an
aside, "This is going on as I am talking to you."
Nixon began the globe-trotting that would make
Thlrty·IIVInth President Richard Nixon
him the most traveled of all the Presidents with
(AdmlnlotraHon: January 20, 1968-)
an eight-day visit to the capitals of Western Europe
shortly after taking office.
Reviwl "American Spirit Most Important Thing."
This penchant for continent-1."1'1';.. ;; would
eventually take President Nixon to the Philippine
The presidential election of 1968 featured the . Islands, Indochina, India, .Pakistan, Thailand, ·
most incredible comeback and the most incredible Great Britain and Roumania and would be climaxed I
comedown in the history of the Presidency, as in 1972 by precedent-shattering visits to the capitals
Richard Nixon, rising phoenix-like from the still of the Communist giants, Red China and Russia.
smoldering ashes of two major political defeats, gave
"The greatest honor history can bestow is the
the finishing blow to the political demise of President title of peacemaker," President Nixon had said in
Lyndon Johnson, who had been elected four years his inaugural address. Apparently, he was going
before by the largest plurality ever given to a Presi- all out to earn this honor for himself and his country.
dent.
'
Candidate Nixon had promised a solution to the
The record shows that Nixon defeated Hubert unpopular Vietnamese war. Three months after takH~mphrer, not Lyndon Johnson. However, since
ing office, President Nixon declared that "a political
Vtce Prestdent Humphrey was indelibly identified solution is the heart of the matter. " H e then
in the public mind m such unflattering terms as
announced a policy of gradual withdrawal of Ameri"the weeping hawk" and "Johnson's water boy,"
can troops from Vietnam, although he qualified the
there can be little reasonable doubt that Nixon's
plan by declaring that he would not accept a "peace
slim seven-tenths of one percent vicfory margin was
of humiliation" that would reduce America to "a
made possible by Democratic registrants voting
second-rate power. "
against President Johnson's Vietnam fiasco and his
Welfare reform had long held top priority in
Nixon's thinking, so it was · not surprising that the
ever-soreadimr "credibilitY 2ao."

WIN AT BRIDGE

False Card Poses Question
NORTH

13

• AJS

•Qs
.KJ104
.8652
WEST

EAST

.QI03
.J9754
.8 3
.A9 3

.812
¥K103
t9752
.K74

SOUTH (D)

·, .K964
¥A62
tAQS
.QJIO
West
Pass
Pass

Both vulnerable
North East South

IN.T.
3 N.T.

Pass

Opening lead-•

when following suit . Some
false card plays should he
automatic
East's king of hearts cov·
ers dumm y's queen at tnck
one. The king holds and the
10 is returned . Declarer
plays low and west overtakes
with his jack in order to lead
the nine. South wins with the
ace, leads a diamond to
dummy's jack and wins the
next two tricks with the ace
and queen .
West dtscards the nine of
clubs as a signal
South leads a spade and
plays dummy 's jack which

holds
the trick. and
He cashes
the
last diamond
discards
the 10 of clubs from his hand.
West discards the three of The bidding has been
the same suit
West North East South
Now South cashes dum.
I •
.P•.;:u s!!h hol;oss !
false card of the queen •A KG4 •AQ6B · •KQ t07
South knows that West holds Wli'at uo you' do now' '
that queen. He doesn't know A:-Bid two spades only. This
who holds theiO
bul, o fm·ce herc.
The chances are that South
TODAY'S QUESTION
wtll go up with his king of Your partner rebids to three
spades after East follows to "clubs What do you do now '!
the thn·d lead of that suit and
make his contract, but it is
Answer 1"'""""w
not a certainty
On the other hand. if West Send II '"JACOBY MODERN book
dropped the 10 instead of the to. "Win otBridge," (c/o this ••••·
queen , South wo uld have no poperl, P.O. Box 489 • Radio Citr
Station, New York, N.Y. 10019.
Problem at all

~~~~ "~a~fespt~~e.s a;'l~!~f~

•2

' .
first major bill from the :White House suggested
historic changes in that troubled and muddied area.
The main features of the omnibus bill were a
guaranteed income (Family Assistance Plan),
revenue-sharing with the states and health insurance
for the poor. Going into the summer of 1972, after
three years of wrangling by the 91st and 92nd Congresses, no final action had been taken on the proposals.
. It was apparently difficult for the highest paid
Chief Executive in the nation's history ($200,000
per )'Car) to become seriously disturbed by an unemployment rate that hovered persistently around 6
%when both the GNP-now edging past $I QQ.billion yearly-and the number of employed persons
are rising. In any case, the Nixon Administration
did little about unemployment and that little did
little good.
In support of the "New Nixonomics," the President reversed his long-held convictions by ordering
wage and price controls in August, 1971. A year
later the annual rate of inflation had dropped from
4% to}%, but it is a moot point among fiscal experts
whether this change was brought about by Administration policies or was simply the result of normal
economic fluctuations .
When it appeared that imports would exceed
exports in 1971 for the first time since 189}, Nixon
took still another daring gamble by devaluing the
dollar on the international exchange by an aggregate
of about 11%, by severing the dbllar from its foreign
mooring to gold and by suspending the U.S. government's promise to redeem in gold at $H and ounce
some $50 billion in foreign hands.
In effect he declared that gold had no monetary
value whatever as international currency so far as
the U.S. Treasury was concerned.
By conceding that the United States could not
meet its fiscal obligations· in effect, was bankrupt-Nixon's main objectives in floating and
devaluing the dollar were to achieve rough equilibrium in the balance of payments between the United
States and its major trading partners and to restore
worldwide confidence in the dollar as a stable fiscal
unit by agreed upon revaluations of other major
currencies. These, in turn, were expected to stem
the outflow of speculative American dollars, to
increase foreign investments in American stocks and

Generation Rap

I

By Helen and Sue Bottel
Uberadon's Veud001 ... Coal.

Rap:

m a co11ege stud en t• a delivery truck driver (afternoon
run),anda girl.Itookthejob because they offered II tome, not to
"prove" anything, and I've carried my weight (sometimes
literally),
Last weeki got a promotion, but! must train the man who Is
I'

) on ylng my wmer- all tbla
100 'ld' : 'doai,.;t ·
sca~ed ~ ~~th ~~nev::r:. ge'::hlnd the wheel, .I can see he's
,
·
ra, ve ndrivlngmyngforayear,
and he s just~ beginner. I'm a darn good driver, with a perfect
wreconoderdr..But I'm also a ll().pouad female, and I'm beginning to
ll
. men ever rea Yaccept women In what they COIIIIider
"Utetr world"? - BLUE JEANS

wui

B.J.:
... Some wiU. Some won't. But most men just need time to
dj
a ust, as you probably discovered last year when you were the

{HEW:S ..APEA ENTERPRIS E "SSN.l

r~.:s::=:::::::::~-=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-;::::::;:;:::::·:::-;·~:·:.:::::::.-:.-:··.....v.--:-:·:.:·:-:•:•!-!.....:.:.-.:...........;.x-:.·~:-=-:·:··········.:-:-······················x.

By Otwald" &amp; James Jacoby
One of the most elemen·
lary form s of deception is
the false card, or play of a
higher card than necessary,

I Voice al~~i.WB;·;·w~y····.w.·.w.·l

BY JACK O'BRIAN
AT LEAST ALI TALKS
A GOOD FIGIIT
NEW YORK (KFS) _ Last month
Muhammad Ali at Benihana Palace expressed
fear that next time he'd "murder" Joe Frazier·
Me
there again this month, he explained he'll
By United Press International destroy new-champ George Freeman ...
Today is Tuesday, Feb. 13, Beautiful actress Diana Rigg and director
the 44th day of 1973 with 321 to Philip Sa vile split; unwed, just publicly lived
toget~r ... Andy Warhol's surname's a
follow.
The moon is approaching its variation of the Polish word meaning "one who
sows discord."
full phase.
Flock of Bdwy. stars showed up at the Act
The morning stars are Venus,
One Restaurant (atop the old Times Tower) for
Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mer- Actors' Equity's 60th anniversary cham)l8gne
drlnkall - but the belle of the bash was actress
cury and Saturn.
Those born on this date are Olga Dallas who joined Equity the year it was
founded- 1913.
under the sign of Aquarius.
Jane Alexander's line in "6 Rms ruv Vu"
French statesman Maurice
Talleyrand was born Feb. 13, about Eve Arden wasn't meant for howls but it
got them the other night: Eve was In the
1754.
audience ... The St. Regis King Cole Bar has its
On this day in history :
In 1635, the oldest public "Cirrhosis Club" over In the southeast corner
institution in America-the late-afternoons - and the Lamba Club has Its
Boston Latin School- was foun- "Campbell's Corner," facetiOU8 for Campbell's
funeral homes, where old members coogregate
ded.·
In 1914, the American Society daily lor lunch. Oldest has to be Jlnl Meighan
of Composers, Authors and handsome brother of the late fine screen ac~'
Publishers - ASCAP- was lor- Thomas Meighan: •Jim's well into hi.ll 91m,
slraight as a skyscrpaer, never wears an
med.
In 1945, Russian troops took overcoat even on the zeroes! days.
Thirty-two years ago, Horton Spurr
Budapest alter 49 days of
produced
a kiddles' show at CBS-TV (no
ligh'ting in which more than
50,000 German Nazi troops were sponsors In those days). He was told by the
usual Impeding vice-president that cowboys
killed.
In 1968, the United States clowns, puppets and magic were "out of date ,:
shipped 10,500 more troops to so after 25 years in every showbiz corner fr~
burl~ue to Ziegfeld and Billy Rose, Hortoo
South Vietnam.
quit and joined the military. Slarted a 23-year
Athoughtfor the day : British career: "I note they still use cowboys, clowns,
philosopher Samuel Pepys said puppets magic aad Joe Laurie's old vaudevllle
he was "as happy a man as jokes, aad not the good ooes. Mediocrity now 1.11
any in the world, lor the whole the standard." ... But wbat raises q,e standard
world seems to smile at me." are such shows as the Mary Tyler Moore Show
and "MASH" which have a lock on the
Sll'ighUiest comedy oo the TV screen. Horton's
SIGN CONTRACI'S
right about most of 11.
CINCINNATI (UP!) -l.£ft- · VIctor Borge knows what he'll be doing a
hlnded pitchers Mel Behney year from now: conduclin8 the Londoo
llld WW Mcenaney and right.. Philharmonic.
-.
••
hinder Rawly Easlwick have . Putnam publishes "Frained" this month.
liiJIId their 11173 contracts with It's being filmed by Mort Bri.llkin, who produced
the Cincinnati Reds. All three seve~ai hits for Bing Crosby's finn; this one is
, played In the minor leagues on hiS own. The author o1 the book Is "Arthur
Jut year.
Michaels,'' who woo't attend the fi~ nor the

Todfly's
Alma

i

&amp; THINGS

premieres. Arthur Michaels actually is the
:elscoped nom de pen or Arthur Powers and
Michael Misehelmer, They 're inmates of InBY PAUL · CRABTREE
1
diana State Penitentiary.
Psst! Hey, friend, come over here - I've got something 1
Beverly Hllls has more psychiatrists than want to sell you. And I can't afford the mooey for spots 1n the
plumbers. One psych-filled street is called The paper or TV.
Mental Block ... Cliff Arquette of the assorted
Nope, it isn't '1eelthy peectures" or drugs or even ·a
talk shows Is in a wheelchair since his stroke recently-!!tolen watch. It's even more valuable:
butithasn'tbecalmedthecheerluloldwlndbag:
How'd you like to buy some bargain-basement educatim?
He'll do his own voice tn a cartoon series based
Now Ute quality is just as good as you'll lind upatalrs, out of
on hi.ll "Mt. Idy" lunacies ... Golfer Jack thebargaln.!Jasementlevel, butlt'sreallyagreatvalue.
Nicklaus has a million-plus aMual income and
It's cslled "community college."
now Is intemati9nal - opened offices 1n
Uyou'vegotakld (orareakld)looldngloracruU.cetogetln
Geneva; London and Tokyo nell ... That old two years of college at low, law prices - right there within
Card Stan Musial's also a tycoon - just took commuting dlslllnce of your own home - and then move on to
over the Hilton Inn in Clearwater, Fla. Has graduate at another school, .tbla is for you.
others, too.
Or if you would like an tionest-to-Pete college degree 1n just
Max Kase at his Briefkase Pub answered two short years In such fields as electronics general buslnesa or
our suspicion that pro golfers aD earn exec.&amp;ze medical technology (aad maybe a greatd~l more), then yo~'ll
salaries : "Bob BeUey ," Max said, kaslng the '72 love community college.
ll.sts, "is a pro, and last year made exactly six
Maybe you're just an average person who would like to get
bucks." ... Hockey whiz Derek Saaderson, who some additional educatim just for the sake of having It _
just was paid an icy million settlement by the perhaps the noblest kind of education of all- you ought to look
Phllly club, owned a Rolls-Royce before that into community college,
winter windfall.
There'D be a slight delay while the blueprints are approved
Top lnternatiorial screen slar whose career and the people decide whether it's really worth the effort but by
has been In abeyance for years had her bazoom nert September, there's a 'very good chance that a ~tioning
· lifted and tununy tightened In a Westchester communi!Y college will be opera!~ on the campus of Rio
!Jospital ... CUs D'Amato, who Svengalled Floyd Grande - less than a thirty.miliute drive away from the doorPatterson to the heavyweight champ,onshlp _ stepsolmostofthepeoplet-hoarereadlngtbla.
twice - said at. the 37th St. Hideaway that
I'mgotngtobeperlecUyhooestwithyou,pal,be.;.useldon't
Muhanunad Ali bas the height, weight, reach want you to get· the wrong Idea :
and style to beat George Foreman: "He would • Most people around here can'tafford to aend their klda to Rio
box him ~lily and make him look like an Grand~, and ita regular four-year program. The price 1.11 not
amateur"; wall ... How come the planned play advertised to be law,.and It ian't.
"Alpha Beta" management clliims It signed for
But this is a whole new ball game, folks, with the COli runthe Cort Theater In March1 "The Jockey Club nlng only about 15 to 20 pet, ol the present going rate. If you can't
Stakes" Is there, and a delightful comedy In- travel in a Uncoln or Cadillac, what's wrong with getting there in
deed.
·
a Pinto or Vega, i.lltheway I think of 11.
Mary Martin's return to Bdwy. 1.11 set ten.n.e program has been designed by the people In Gallla,
tatively ; a musical version of "The COm Is Metgs, Vinton and Jackson counties, cooperaling witll the of.
Green" ; Ita new title: "Miss Moffat." Emlyn fictsla of Rio Grande. 'lbe whole works 1.11 go~ to be IIUbmitted to
Williams will write the tuned-up copy of his own the Ohio Board ol Regenlll any day naw - and may be given a
play, ·Josh Logan would produce.dlrect and slamp of apll'oval within a month or 10,
Albert Hague provide songs. Who's Albert
Then, there'll be an electloo, and a majority of tile people ol
!Jague1 He's had at leu! one hit, "Young and those counties will have a chance lAt buy community college 'lb
Foolish."
exact cost hasn't been llgured yet, but It's estimated thlt 11 ~·~
BlU Chan, owner of the fine Chinese . be more than about tbree dollars per peraon per year_ and that
restaurant The Gold Coin, went to the Greek lsabupln,anywayyoulookatlt,lrlend.
Fortnight at the Rainbow Room, and before
{If it goes okay In Ohlo,lbere'n chance Maaon County can
anyone could say Onasais, Bill wu leaping parllclpall! when the p:ogram begins Ia !t73-74 ·or a bit later )
through Athenian choreography with Alice
President Aiphua OlriatenaeJj lu:.U,. toe:cPi.aln aome of the
Faye, Sir Winston's sjlrlg Sarah Churchill, and things I've left out when he IJIPIII'I m WSAZ-TV'a "AI Iuue" 011
her niece Ed~ Sandys. Bill's explanatloo, "If Feb. !8,110 don't miss him, folb,lhen make up your mind
Anthooy ~can do 1.11110 can II" Bill's wife
Pef.8011ally,I think a cut-rate CllllllliUnll)' collect i.ll·a great
Anne (the balf-Irlsh-half-Chinese beauty) chance for us to do aome bedly-needecl calcblngo~~p In the
couldn't make it. Too vertigo.
.
educatioo field .

I

.,

moneY tfee

· By Ualled Pr.s llilmatlcw•l
Capital coocludel-ita bome
lchedule . loolght; 11111 if the
O'wiaden ever needed their
faoa, tbla wUI be the game.
Cap, ooe hop out of nr.t place
In the Ohio Cooference, takes
on the league leader
Musklngum,
.'
'lbe Musklea are 9-1. Capital
otterbein and Wittenberg
~ lleCOnd with 11-2 marb.
Meanwhile, Otterbein hosts
Mount Unim, Kenyoo playa at
OberUn and Wittenberg 1.11 at
Heidelberg In other oc action.
MI!Bkjngum baa the beat'

ati

Monday's ColleGe Bukelball
Reoulls
By United Press International
East
S.C. 84 Nle~ora 74
St. Michaels 83 Vermont 81
La Salle 72 Drexel 57
Wsn . Mo. 76 Swarthmore 48
Providence 113 Cleve. St. 79
LIU 101 St. Peter's 95
Glassboro Sl. n York 5~
South
Tenn. 51 Miss . 49
LSU 76 Auburn 74
Ky. 100 Miss. St: 87
Vanderbilt 78 Fla. 71
Wsn. Ky. 68 E. Tenn. 53
Jackson St. 96 Texas South·
ern 94
Alobama 78 Georgia 67
West Ga. 96 Valdosta St. 83
Albany Sl. 108 Tuskegee lnst:

68

Midwest
Indiana 87 Illinois 66
Ohio St. 86 Iowa 80
Creighton 76 Colorodo 67
Bowling Green 87 Central
Mich. 80
Steubenville 69 West Liberty

53

Wichita St. 73 Bradley 65
Missouri 6~ Oklahoma 62

+++

Blue Jeans:
Honest naw, B. J., don't you agree tbla 1.11 part of the funII'Oving yourself1 If males accepted you u an equal rlcbt off tile
bat, breaking Into "their" fields wouldn't be half so Challe~lng.
- SUE

77

Southwest
SW Texas 96 McMurry 86
Abilene Christian 93 Lamar

Tex . Wesleyan 78 St. Ed·
ward's 59
Southern U. 87 Prairie VIew
85
Sam Houston 81 Angelo State

+++

Helen and Sue ·.
My girl has great legs. Why does she hide them with long
dresses and pants? I resent tbla covero~~p stuff, and say: if
femalesretiUydreAiormales andnottolmpreAotbetfemales
lhey11 back mini
'
'
go
to
-aklrta. How do other guys feel about it? ...
.... , ...... . ,. .,........ · ····.
· Good ~estlon, "Leg Man."
Let's see haw many of our male readers agree with y6U
What's the vote, men -long skirts or short; Fred Aatalre panlll:
orcut-offs?(Alldwbateverbecameofhotpants') - HELEN

+++

69

West
UCLA 76 Washington 67
USC 80 Wash. St. 63
~::

CANTON - On the strength
or a 70-66 victory over
Cedarville, Rio Grande College
has clinched at least a tie for its
first Mid-Ohio Conference
basketball title. Rio's Redmen
show a 6-1 Conference mark,
while Urbana 1.11 in ~~econd place
and two games back, at 3-2. To
tie with Rio Grande, Urbana
would have to sweep its last
three MOC games, against
Cedarville, Malone, and Rio
Grande.
Ohio Dominican has completed Its Mld.()hio season,
with a 4-4 record, and
Cedarville (2-4) and Malone (I5) both have two Conference
games left on their schedules.
In other Conference tilts last
week, Ohio Dominican handed
Rio Ita only league loss 9'M7,
but ODC's Panthers also were
victims to Malone'd first
Conference win 106-95.
Ken Richardson, the· 6'6"

e:.:·«··:w~

.,

'

.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Too bad Cliff Cuahman couldn't have
seen his little boy.
It would've made him feel so good,so wann Inside .
But CUff Culhman, a major In the U.S. Air Force, had no
poaalble way of being 1111 hand here Monday for the meeting
between his blond, 7-year-old 110n, Colin, and Colin's Idol 'or all
ldoJs.....&lt;iext to his Daddy, ol course-football
Johnny
Unltaa.
Maj. CUff Cushman tsa POW, or to be more specific, an MIA,
which me&amp;M he'a mlaalng In actloo.
He was llhot down flying a mi.llsion In Indochina on Sept. 25,
1986, when his son was only nine monthll old, and he wasn't
among the flrat 142 Americlll! Pri.lloners of War who walked to
freedom at Clark Air Force Base In the PHl!pplnes Monday. ,
Before so~ off to Vlebuun, CUff Cushman loved football. He
had an athle~c background to begin with, having been a silver
medalist In the 400meter hurdles during the 1960 Olympics In
Rome.
"CIIH always enjoyed watching football," says his wife,
carolyn, an attractive 32-year.Old brunette, who lives with her
son In Omaha, Neb., from where they traveled on sh!l't notice
SUnday to be here so CoUn could lneei bil bero, Johnny U.
'lbe entire occulon waaln Clllljunctlon with a program called
"No Greater Love," a Waahlngton, D.C.-baled program
originated by American athletes for the children ol servicemen
either captured or mlaalng In acUon In Indochina and one which
now finds ltaelf needing funds.
"Anyway, the flrat time I was aware of the program was In
December of 1971 when I saw thla form and completed it," explained Carolyn Cushman at Monday's get-together, which was
co-lt08ted by Sporlll ruustrated and bad 811Ch athletes oo hand as
Joe Frazier, Rod GObert, Ron Swoboda and Jerry Lucu as well
as Unltas.
•'!be first thing that happened was that Colln receJ.ved an
autographed picture of Johnny Unitas," said Mrs. Cuslunan.
·"We bad to get him a helmet after thllt and a uniform with No. 19
oolt, the same numberas Johnny Unitas wears.
"Later, Colin a1eo received an autographed photo of RotJer
Staubach and he put the two pictures beneath our Chri.lltmas tree
110 Santa Claus could see them. The next morning, there was a
note !rom Santa Claus to Colin, telling him he knew those two
fellows, toO.
"I can't say enoutlh about lhl.a program, No Greater Love. It
has helped me alllo. Instead ol being the typical mother In the
kitchen, I ll.sten to the football games naw aad enjoy them very

TUESDAY, FEB. ll, 1973
6: Oil- News3, ~. 8, 10·, 13, 15; Truth or Con seq. 6 · Sesame Sf 20·
Around The Bend 33.
'
· '
6:30 - News 3, 4, 6. 8, 10. 15; I Dream of Jeannie 13 · Growing
Him Up 33.
'
7:00- What's My Line 8; I've Got A Secret 13; Elec. Co. 20:
Beat The Clock 4; News 6. 10; Unfomed World 13; TV Honor
Society 15; Truth or Consequences 3.
7:30 - This Is Your Llfe3 ; To Tell The Truth 6: Price Is Right 8,
~~: Beat The Clock 13; RFD 20; Circus~~ Greol Decisions '73
B:OO - Temperatures Rising 6, 13; Maude 8, 10; Book Beal33.
Ohio: This Week 20; Movie "The Greot Man's Whiskers " i

great

I

8: ~?- Hawaii Flve·O8, 10; Bill Moyer's Journal 20, 33; Movie
The Great American Beauty Contest," 6, 13.
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 14, 1971
6:00 - Sunrise Seminar~ ~ Sacred Hearl 10
6:15 - Farm lime 10; English 3.
·
6:20- Farm Report 13.
6:25 - Paul Harvey 13.
6:30Columbus
The Story
13. Today 4; Bible Answers 8·' Urban Leogue 10;

;:~, ~~~: f3!;~;~ iB~o~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~:~n~s~~~~~~

B:OOLass
- ~Cap{
Kangaroo 10; New Zoo Revuel3; Sesame St . 33 ,·
e 6.

Romper Room a.
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue IS · What E
W
Wants lo Know 3; Concenfrall 6· C
very oman
. Friendly Junction 10; Ben Case/~J . • apl. Kangoroo 8;
9:
30- EDiec. Co. 33; To Tell the Trulh3 ; Jeoftardy 6
10 .00
- lnah Shore3• 15,· Columbus Six Ca ling 6· ·Joker's Wild
8' 10 '. Dl ck Van Dyke
13.
'
10
' 3J'plltc~c~~rfJ~on3,1S; Phil Donahuu ; Price Is Rights, lO;
II:OO-SaleoftheCentury3
8, 10; Pallword 13.
' 15 '· Love Amerlcan Style 6: Gambit
6:

11 : ~7"s';:~~:~ S2~~ares 4, 13; Love of Life 8, 10; Bewitched 6,
12 :00- Jeopardy 3. ll; Password 6 · s b B ,
News 13; Contact 8; News 10. ' o raun s 50·50 Club~~
12:30 - Split Second6; SNrch for Tomorrow 8 0. '
1:00 - News, Weather, Sports 3, All My ChliJ · 3W·~· 15.
Storm 8; Not For Women Only IS· Gree A ren 6, 13, Secret
. 1:20 - Fashions In Sewing 3.
'
n crestO.
0-lDOn AMatch 3, ~. 15; Let's Make a Deal6 '13
21;3
·00 - ays of our Lives 3 4 15· N 1
' ·
. Dou~ass 6: Guiding Llg~t 8, Hl. ew ywed Game 13; Mike
2
3 ; ~ _ ~~ph~~'Wo~1~ ~f-5 3.4.15; EdgeofNight8,tO.
Splendored Thing 8 10 : RFDG;eral Hospital 6, 13; Love
3:30 - Relurn to Peyt~n Ploce 3 4 ·15 . 0 Ll
·
Secret Storm a, 10; Ohio: This Week 2~• veto Live 6, 13;
4:00 - Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset IS · s.'
S
Amerlcon Stt• 13; Merv Griffin ~ · F~~~~ I, 33:· Love

~:~~:2!~~: ~~~~~~1eg;~~~~e:~'M~1~~it~~~:v~:

much."

But Monday's big moment came when COlin CUShman met
Johnny Unltaa for the very ljrllt time In the flesh.
.
"I wu apoaking with Jobr)ny at the time, telling him an about
COlin, and then Colin came Into tile' room," said his mother.
"Here be 1.11 naw," I said to Jolwiy. Colin simply stood there and
stared'with pure amazement In hil eyes. He couldn't move. He
jUit lrta."
!Ill lather llhould'vl! been tllere to aee lt.
"I ain aense hoW he leela," laid Unltai, who has five chllilren
of his own. '"i'hLB little boy was mly nine month&amp; old when hla
fatber went lAt war. I lOet my fath.. when I WM 5. At leaat I bad
him for 5 years."
'lbe name of CUff CUihnll11. U.S. Air Force major, was not on
the lilt of Uvbtg or !lead pri.llollll'llumilbed IIlii country by the
comm1111,11t Vlelrl'W".
·
''We'vi nner beard from Cliff," 1111)'1 his wife, "bUt we have
• 11111 . . . Ull bope. Colln lhra7l pt'l)'l ffl' bll fllther every night
jU1t btftn be fill to liMp. AI lanl u there II the lli&amp;bteat
polllbllltJ be'uliw, n 111111 111nt lin • htipe ... "
'

S: OilAndy
- Mr. Rogers 33 · O.nl0 1 Bo
Griffith 15, '
one 6' ·Bonanza 3, ~ ~ Hazel 8;
5
' ~iiilil~~\a) 1 t\'~~~;~ ~1 •c.idcgoe Gomer Pyle 13: Beverly
6:00- Trulh or Conseq 6· N 3 4 ·8 1
Around the Bend 33. · : ews ' ' • lO, 5; Seseme St. 20;
6:30 - News3,4, 6,8 10 t5·1 Dr•• 0 fJ·• 1
Transition 33.
' ' '
...... m
vann e 13; Societies In
7:00 ~ News6 tO · What' M L ~
the Clock •:'AnYthing ~ou l(.~~bTr~th or YCohsoq. 3; Stat
Elec:. Co. 20; Fobulous Seven 15 ' now our Schools33;
7:30 - To Tell the Truth 6 · The J ,j 1 ·
B114t the Clock 13; Andy Grlfft~h
Pollce_turgton 3, ~~
Episode: Action 33; George Kirby 011llOPG-.e Lodge 20;
8:00 - Adam.l23, 4 15 • p fL de ·
'
Sonny &amp; Cher I , 'lo ;. Amer
au Icayn'73.6, 13; Under
Ihe Dome 33.•
·
8:30- Movie "Poor Devil" 3 ~ 15 . Mo ..
tlngton HouH" 6, 13,
• • ' vie The Girls of Hun9:00 - Medlcal CenterlO; EyetoEye 2o 33
9.30 - San Francisco Mix 20 33 · ' ·
tO:OO-Soui33
' •
15, 3, 4. '· New• 20·'Cannon&amp;;
O.VenMershall6, 13; Search

W

rs.a·U

ll:~= ~=~·~.6.8;10, 13,15.
.
·•
"Doctor: y~~~~t ~ •·~"!' ScrNrrt,l,llll Skull 6, 13; Movies
Berlin" 10.
1:00 ;,., News 4. -13.

hurled at owners

o.,. Klddlngl ., "Eacepe from Ent
I

J

''

Having explained tile present period. What if a player who is
players' position In the close In negotiations decides
negotiations (outlined In a five- 110t to submit his contract to
page slnglwpaced typewritten arbitration in that short time
handout which mentioned the period. WeD, as soon as Feb. IO
word "lockout" 18 times), goes by, the owners can tum
Miller then assailed the around and renege on their
owners' latest offer concerning offer with noprecourse lor the
the Issue or arbitration.
player.
"A few weeks ago Commls"Finally," Miller conclude~,
sioner Bawle Kuhn said the "the owners' proposal stales
owners would never agree to that no one from the Players
arbltradog. I think he's right . Association can assist In lite
even though they have," he arbitration. That meam lor
said witll a wry smile.
one thing the players have to go
Under the offer made by the out and hire an attorney at
owners, a player with three or their own expense."
more years of service in
Miller said he expected to
baseball could submit his meet with all 24 of the player
contract to outside arbitration representatives here on Friday
and then agree to either the to rurther evaluate the state of
figure offered by the arbitrator the negotiations. He hinted,
or the owner. Also, the player however, that some of the
could not make use of outside players may be weakening in
arbltradon two years in sue- their stand.
cession.
"I've talked to about 25 or 30
"AB for the 'no two years in a players and their opinions have
row' part," Miller said, ''why run the gamut," he said.
shouldn't a player be allowed "Some of them are concerned
to submit his contract to ar- about hqw all of this is afbltration two years in sue- feeling the game of baseball.
cesslon1 On what basis do they Others, though, have said the
(the owners) make this owners know what they can do
statement? Under those terms, with their offer."
the owners could take it out on
the player the following year.
"Secondly, the owners have
set aside a period of Feb. !Feb. 10 as the arbitration

to share title with Rio

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI 8)10111 Edllar

TeleVI·si·on .Log

9

'

Sport Parade

_

::rs =J~i~sL~3~nne 13; New Zoo Revue

...

Tooay"s .

NCYrE FROM SUE: What's wrong with all lour styles'.
Nowadays a girl can wear whatever length she wants· and lfyer
guyi.llalegman she'dbetterkeepafewmlnlsinhercioeet
'
·

I

Bad faith charge

gu~m

ABA Standings
By United Press tnt-rnatlnat
East
w. t. pet. g.b.
Carolina · .u 18 .710
Kentucky
38 22 ..633 5
VIrginia
92 30 .516 12
22 37 .373 20'12
' New 'fork
19 40 .322 i3112
Memphis
West
w. l. pet. g.b.
Utah
38 23 .623
Indiana
36 26 .581 2'12
Denver
31 29 .517 6'12
By BilL MADDEN
22 37 .373 15
Allan Hm~yak scored 24 points and Cornelius Cash 23 Dallas
20 40 .333 17'12 UPI Sports Writer
points to lead the Buckeyes to a for Bowllns Green u the Fal- San Diego
MonUy's Results
NEW YORK (UP!)
come-from-behlnd win over cons evened their IIOaSon rec- Carolina 118 Dallas 111
lowa at Iowa City, Luke Witte ord at 10.10. Their MAC mark Indiana 127 Virginia 119 (oil "Lockout" rather than
Utah 119 Denver 107
"strike" has become the
contributed 22 polnlll and War· was Improved to 8-3.
(only gomes scheduled I
keyword
In the latest episode of
dell Jackaon I4. ·
· BlUKelaoscored33polnta for
Tuesday's Games
New
York
at
Memphis
baseball airing its dirty
Eleventll-ranked Providence Central Michigan, now 1a-10
Kentucky at San Diego
laundry
tn public.
grabbed 1111 11eventh straight and 3-5.
(only games scheduled)
Marvin Miller, executive dlwin with the victory over
Steubenville scored the first
NBA Standings
rectDI: of the Players AssociaCleveland. Providence 1.11 17-2, !Opolnlllofthe game and never
Pross International tion, In an effort Monday to
Cleveland 1.11 11-10.
traDed In taking 1111 17th win By United
Eastorn Conference
shift the blame of baseball's
'lbe Rhode Island team ex- against five defeats. Jim
Atlantic Division
w.
I.
pet.
g.b.
labor squabbles squarely onto
tended Its lead to 31 points In Glll'l'lgan )18ced tile Baro1111
Boston
45 12 .789
the owners, Issued a customary
the lleCood half, before Coach witll 20 points.
New York
46 15 .754 1
Dave Gavitt removed his start- Dave Maurer scored 25 Buffalo
18 40 .310 27'12 well-elocuted broadside that In
• 58 .065 43112 effect accused the owners of:
1ng five with more than 11 points for Ohio Dmtlnlcan, now Phila
Central
Division
-Threatening an "lllegal
minutes to play.
II-15..Sam WOks wu higher for
w. I. pet. g.b.
lockout" of spring training and
Baltmr
37 20 .649
Brian ·Scanlan scored 25 Walsh witll 23.
Atlanta
34 28 .540 5'12 -Falling to agree In prinHouston
23 36 .390 15
Clevtnd
21 37 .362 l61f2 ciple over the Issue of outside
Western Conference
arbitration of a players' conMidwest Division
.
w. l. pet. g.b. tract.
''Thete has been no threat of
Mllwkee
41 18 .695
Chicago
35 22 .614 5
a strike In these negotiations,"
KC·Omaha
30 33 .476 13 Miller said, ''but there is a very
Delrolt
26 32 .4ofll 14'12
dellnltethreatofalockout. The
Pacific Division
w. I. pet. g.b. owners have Imposed wltat
Los Ang
45 13 .776
Goldn Ste
36 22 .621 9 may be a lockout of spring
Phoenix
28 30 .403 18
training- this is In effect a
Ohio Dominican center, leads average tops all •conference seattle
19 42 .311 27'12 strike of the owners.
14 .u .241 31
the stati.lltical categories lor scorers, and the Panther Portland
"Meanwhile, we (the
Monday's Results
the sixth straight week. juniors' 17.1 rebounding
(no games scheduled)
Players Association) are InRichardson's 25.3point scoring average outdistances the other
Tue'Sdoy's Games
Houston vs. KC.Qmoha at trigued that most of the news
MOC leaders. In the runnero~~p
stories lollowing the owners'
City
slots are Ron Lambert (22.0 Kansas
Golden State at Cleveland
announcement last Thursday
ppg, Rio Grande) In scoring,
Boston at Chicago
have dealt with a threatened
Milwaukee at Detroit
and Phil Hodge ( 13.3 reboun!is,
strike, not a threatened
Seattle at Los Angeles
Malone) In rebounding.
Buffalo at Portland
lockout."
(only games scheduled)
Urbana's Tony Vance leads
In field goal accuracy. The
WHA Standings
Blue Knight center Is conBy
United
Press International
necting on 61.7 pet. of his floor
East
shots. Richardson Is also over
wltptsgfga
Clevelond 35 20 2 72 212 165
sixty percent, at 61.1.
Englnd 32 23 2 66 233 191
College IIBiketbaU Roudup
Cedarville's Steve Young Nw
New York 27 32 1 55 238 250
By UDIIed· Preas JJttemillonal con Unues to be the best foul Quebec 24 27 4 52 196 211 IOWA CITY, Iowa (UP!) ~
'!be numbers game con- shooter, with an 87.7 pet. mark Phlladelph 24 31 0 40 199 233 Indiana is No. lin the Big Ten,
21 33 4 46 204 246
tlnues its relentleA climb to !rom the line. Teammate Rick Ottawa
West
but Oblo State is trying hard
staggering proportions Watson is second, at 85.7 pet.
wltplsgf ~~ 110t to be counted out In the
33 23 3 69 215 1
whenever UCLA steps on the
Cedarville is involved in both Winnipeg
Houston 28 23 4 60 210 1es stampede to keep up.
basketball court.
Mid-Ohio contests this week. Minnesota 27 28 3 57 187 205 The Buckeyes trailed 45-42 at
'!be Bruins paid a visit to The Yellow Jackets host Ur- Los Angels 26 26 4 56 194
halftime here Monday night
Alberta 27 26 2 56 193
SeatUe, Wash., Monday night bana on Tuesday, and then Chicago
21 33 1 43 m 203 but steamed ahead In the
and came away with a 76-67 travel to Malone on Saturday.
Monday's Results ·
second hall to beat Iowa 86-80.
Cleveland 8 New York 2
victory over Washington thllt Big non-league lilts include
It made Ohio State M in the
(only gome scheduled)
wun't anywhere as close u Ohio Dominican at Defiance,
conference.
Tuesday's Games
the final score might Indicate. and Urbana at Otterbein.
Houston at Alberta
Indiana leads the league with
New England at Philadelphia
·~;!i!Y~W..UC14.' ~~~.d . ........ · , . . .
a
7-2
mark.
Chlcogo at Los Angeles
IQ all-time i:olleglate record MIO·OHIO CONFERENCE
Winnipeg
at
Minnesota
Allan . Hornyak scored 24
.
•c~!L
""
.... BASKETBALL STATISTICS
wlmln
(only games scheduled)
g s......,. to &amp;4 games,
(MOCl
points and Luke Witte added 22
including a 19-G mark this
·
(Overall)
even though be sat on the bench
season, aad registered ita 21st Team
W. l W L
NHL Standings
By United Press lnternatlona 1 lor 10 minutes tn the first hall
Consecutive success against Rio Grande
6 1 11 10
.
Urbana
3 2 13 9
alter accumulating three
East
Washington.
Ohio Dominican ~ 4 7 15
wltpts gt ga personal fouls.
The Unlvt!ntity of Southern Cedarville
2 4 10 10 Montreal 36 7 13 85 230 123
Hornyak dropped out of •the
Malone
1 5 10 12 N.Y . Rngrs
•
California, Which lit trying to
SCORING LEADERS
38 13 5 81 226 132 lead In tlie Big Ten individual
stay close to CI'OII8town rival Scorer
Ft ft To Av. Boston 34 16 s 73 231 168 scoring race. He has 21$ points
Detroit 29 20 7 65 168 171
UCLA In the Paclflc Coast Richardson (ODC)
Conference race boosted its
135 83 355 25.3 Buffalo 28 20 8 64 196 157 In eight games ror a 28.9 av•
Lambert IRGI 191 81 463 22.0 Toronto 18 30 7 43 169 '187 erage, while Mike Robinson of
league record to 11-1 by over- Eck (C)
144 79 ~7 18.4 Vancouvr 15 35 7 37 162 248 Michigan State bas 216 in eight
N.Y. lsldrs.7 45 5 19 llJ 262
romlng Washington State, 8(). Klein(~)
~~ l~
games for a 27.0 average.
West
83. '!be Trojans, ranked 14th, ~:::l~ !Ml
t79 28 386 17.6
wttplsgf ga Iowa center Kevin Kunnert
traDed 28-25 at halftime, but Goines (U)
151 73 375 11.0 Chicago 33 17 6 12 215 161
25 23 9 59 201 201 scored a gamHIIgh 31 points,
started the second half with 11 Aikman ( U)
149 55 353 16.0 Phlla
REBOUNDING LEADERS
Mlnnesot 25 23 8 58 174 164 putting him over the l,OOililolnl
consecutive points to take the Rebounder
G. Reb. Av. St. Louis 23 22 10 56 165 170
lead for good.
Richardson (ODC) 14 239 11.1 Atlanta 23 26 9 55 152 164 mar~ with a total of 1,029 points
Am
other nked te
Hodge (M)
22 292 13.3 Los Ang 23 27 7 53 169 187 in his college career.
ong
ra
ams, Young (C&gt;
20 200 10.0 Pittsbgh 22 28 6 50 186 191 ''The kids played a tremenNo. 10 Indiana b!&gt;it Dllnois, 87- Lambert( RG )
21 197 9.4 Calif
9 36 12 30 152 243
dous second half - I can't say
Monday's Results
88, to take over undisputed Bollinger (RG)
21 191 9,1
(no
games
scheduled)
of first place In the Yuskewlch (ODC&gt; 22 172 7.9
possess!~
~·
Alkman(U)
22172 7.9
Tuesday's Gamn
Big 10; 11th-ranked Providence Rouse IRGl
21 ISS 7.4 NY Islanders'at Philadelphia
Vancouver at Boston
routed Cleveland State 113-79•
FIELD GOAL LEADERS
This Week's Special
•
• Player (School) Fgm Fgt Pet
Los Angeles at St. Louis
12th-ranked Missouri edged Vance ( U)
so 81 61.7
(only games scheduled)
Oklaboma, ~; and South- Richardson (ODCl 135 237 61 .1
western Louisiana the No 17 Aikman lUI
149 275 5~. 2
,
•
·
Cutp !Ul
75 144 52 8
lellnl, ran over the University Watson (C)
53 101 52:5
The Daily Sentinel
of Texas-Arlington lll-96.
Voung &lt;C&gt;
146 279 52.3
DEVOTED
TD THE
•
Lambert
191 368 51 8
INTERESl
OF
Sam Houston State, the top. Eck (C)
144 2S5 so:5
MEtGS·MASDN AREA
USED CARS
ranked team In the small Dledalls (ODC)
57 113 50.5 CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec
.
Ed.
college ratings ran Its record Klein IMl
123 247 49.8
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
•
Harris tMl
85 174 40 9
City Editor
to 21-D by beating Angelo Stale, F~usnaugh (RG) 34 72 40:6
Published daily except
81-$.
Cornwell IODC)
53 110 40.2 Seturdav
bV The Ohio Valley
Hod !I" ( M)
179 383 40 0 Publishing
Company, 111
In other games, , Wendell Montgomery
( U) 75 161 46:6 Court St . Pomerov,
Ohio ,
Hudson scored 22 points and Potter (C)
Ill 245 45.3 .ol5769. Bu1lness Office Phont
had 12 rebounds u Alabama
FREE THIIOW LEADERS
992·21S6, Ed itorial Phone 992
Six cylinder, std. trans.
player.
Ftm Fta Pet 2157.
Nice little car.
baatGeorgia, 'IU7; Ohio Stale Young (C)
71 ao 87 .7
Stcond class post1ge paid at
, Oh10 .
beat Iowa, 88-80, behind Allan Watson (C)
24 28 85.7 Pomeroy
National advertising
Hornyak's 24 points· RoMie Stoner IODCl
24 29 82.8 repre
se ntative
Bottlntlli ·
•
Bartram (RGl
50 64 78.1 Gallagher.
Inc ., 12 East .t2nd
Lyons scored a career high 28 Goines ( U)
73 rn 75.3 St
, New York City, New York
points to 11ft hard-pressed Lamberl (RG&gt;
81 106 75.2
Subscription rates : oe :
livered by cerrltr whtre
Kentu~y to 8 I00-87 overtime Branon (q
32
43 773.8
u available
50 cents per week ;
""
Eck (C)
79 107
victory over Mississippi State; Crewford ( U)
31 42 73.8 av Motor Route wtlere carrier
not available : One
"You'll Like Our QualitY.
Vanderbilt beat Florida 78-71 Potter (Cl
28 39 71.8 service
month
S1.7S
By mall In Ohio
'
' Poling (RG)
17 24 70.8 and W. Va .•. One
Way
of Doing Business. '
year Sl,. 00
with Ten'Y Compton scoring 19
LAST WEEK'S RESULTS: Six months S7 .25
GMAC FINANCING
. Three
points; Tennessee retained
Ohio Dominican 92, Ria months S-4 .50 . Subscr ipt ion
"2-.5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'TiiB:OO
price includes Sunday Tlmes flrat place In the Southeastern ~~~= r~. Ohio Dominican 95 StntineL
.
Til 5 P.M. Sat.

Urbana needs sweep

•'J:

·

4, 15,

overall college record In Oblo
111-2,11111 OWIIII the leaiue's tJest
defenalve average, 50.8 points
per game: Cap 1.11 the offense
giant II! the OC, with an 110.6
points per game average.
In basketball acdm Monday
night, OhloSI!lte evened 1111 Big
Ten record at 4-4 with an 88-110
win owr Iowa; Bowllns Green
downed Central Mlcligan 87-110
In the Mid-American ConfereiiOe; Steubenville whipped
Weal Uberty (W.Va.) 5.63;
Providence (RJ.) demolished
Cleveland Slllte 113-79; and
Ohio Dominican beat Walsh eo.

69.

:takemyplace. Whenwegoou\oqttJe~,wbal,~~guy ~ ~

JoJd~~l/'~t,sJquim~1!\{~::ly~ d~~or. ll!!!, w~~,Iet IJ)e l!E;lp

•

crucial battle tonight

new "llo.pound lady trucl!drlver." -HElEN

Pass ·

5

Capital, Mus

inpustry and to act as a general spur to American
business activity.
.
· Results of the 'fllew Nixonomics have b~en
mixed. The c11nsensus of fiscal and p&lt;&gt;litical experts
seems to be tliat long-range res,ults will prov~ ~nefi­
cial to the t,Jnited States. True, ~he a~mtss1.on of
insolvency was damaging to the Amencan ,1mage
of superabundance and omnipotence at horiie and
abroad. Granted, too, thatthe,re was immediate consternation in many of the world's financial cent~rs
and that the international monetary system, desptte
revised exchange rates, remains seriously shaken a
.,
year and a half later. ·
Granted all this and more, Richard Nixon's
realistic acceptance of the nation's actual fiscal condition-beginning with a $450 billion national debt
that makes the U.S. government a national as well
as an international bankrupt-and his drastic actions f
to correct it may succeed in forcing .luxury-sated
Americans and the recipients of American largesse
to revise their "easy-rider" concept of the U.S.
Treasury as"the ever-flowering
for all
humankind .
.
While there is considerable and justifiable doubt
regarding the final outcome of these Nixonian fiscal
maneuvers, there can be little reasonable doubt that
Richard Nixon has metamorphosed into one of the
most daring and innovative Chief Executives in the
history of the Presidency.
' Extending his newly revealed ima~nativeness
and boldness to diplomatic affairs dunng the last
year of his Administration, President Nixon made
unprecedented visits to Russia and Red China,
negotiating a nuclear arms limitation pact with Russia and getting important trade and diplomatic agreements with both of the Asiatic giants.
It is generally agreed, though officially softpedaled for diplomatic reasons, that a major aim
of the President's visits to the Communist capitals
was to bring the Vietnamese war to a satisfactory
end . The practice of this perilous summitry,
· together with his steady withdrawal of American
combat troops from Vietnam, suggests that Richard
Milhous Nixon, Quaker-born and Quaker-bred,
fancied himself in the role of "The Peacemaker,"
a role that might help "to restore the American
spirit"-the problem he had called "the most important thing of all."

Pro Standings .

Washington
falls to
UCLA five

OSU tops Iowa enough about it," said Ohio
State Coach Fred Taylor, who
tskes the team to Illinois Saturday.
"I'm really proud Of the way
our guys hung in there."
The difference was clearly at
the charity line, where Ohio
State connected on 30 of 35
tries. Iowa made only 10 of 20.
Iowa Coach Dick Schultz said
his players "were v~~¥ ,fiat the
second hall."
1
"This club has been in a posidon about four times this
year to make a run and Improve the record but hasn't
done it," Schultz said.
The loss made Iowa 2-6 in the
Big Ten.

l:l

m

WATSON OUT
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) DefeiL'!eman Joe Watson will
be lost to the Philadelphia
Flyers of the National· Hockey
League for about 10 days with a
badly bruised shoulder.

lN

@cAN
GIVE YOU A
NEW START!
As a member, all you

~ a ve

to

do os call for AAA Emergency
Road ser,.ce We'll send one of
our IOO,OOO·plus servocemen " '
as fast as posso ble Thai's whal
AAA is for ... yet it's only one
of the many benef1ts you can en·
joy as a member. Call us no\'f
tc find out mote:· ' t1 •
·~ f '

'w

@
... A Great Idea
for over 70 Years

Automobile Club
of Southern Ohio
Phone:
Pomeroy 992·2590
Gallipolis 446·0699

'69 FORD

FALCON 4 DOOR

~ ~ power-packed lightweight in the "minitlldlze rang~ to give you a new power-to-size
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·
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'895

Karr &amp;Van landt

Conference
by holding
off
Mlsslaalppi, 51-49;
and Danny
Traylor scored 23 points and
grabbed 13 rebounds to lead
South Carolina to an 114-74
victory over Niagara. .

Rio Grande
70, Cedarville
66
Urbana
71, Wolsh
56
Cedarville 77, Walsh 47
Malone 89, Tiffin 85.
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE:
Urbana et CedarviHe (Tu)
Malone at Wolsh ( Wl
Ohio Dominican at Defiance
IWl
The abbreviation "lb." Rio Grandeat Bereo, Ky. (Th)
at Malone tSI
stems from the Latin word Cedarville
Kenyon at Ohio Dominican (S)
"libra," meaning llOund.
Urbano at Otterbein (S)

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

INSURANCE ·• BONDS
MUtUAL FUNDS.
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FACTORY TRAINED IECHANICS ON DUTY

'

�J

3- The lllllly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 11, 19'13
As a former congressman, senator, Vice Presi- \
dent, a d~feated candidate for the Presidency by
a margin of three-tenths of nne percent, a defeated
candidate for the governorship of ·California by a
humiUating margin and a tireless and de~icated
worker for all Republican causes and candidates,
President-elect Nixon knew there were grave, spiritsapping flaws in the American body politic, knew
that stringent measures would be required to correct
them, knew that it was now his duty to recommend
such measures and knew, above all else, that if he
introduced corrective measures early on they would
almost certainly be rejected by a Democraticcontrolled and skeptical Congress.
It was characteristic of Nixon's political expertise
that his inaugural address was a bland, superbly
phrased .collection of socio-political homilies tinctured with hope and that no winter-spring flood
of bills from the. White House inundated congressional hoppers, as had been the case during the First
100 Days of Franklin Roosevelt's Administration
and Johnson's second term.
,
An introspective, cautious and secretive man,
Nixon has always taken pains to do his homework
well before displaying his handiwork to the public. .
For example, when he went before a nationwide
television audience in the spring of 1972 to announce
that he had decided to mine Nonh Vietnamese har-'
bors in retaliation for their renewed attacks on South
Vietnam, the President remarked, almost as an
aside, "This is going on as I am talking to you."
Nixon began the globe-trotting that would make
Thlrty·IIVInth President Richard Nixon
him the most traveled of all the Presidents with
(AdmlnlotraHon: January 20, 1968-)
an eight-day visit to the capitals of Western Europe
shortly after taking office.
Reviwl "American Spirit Most Important Thing."
This penchant for continent-1."1'1';.. ;; would
eventually take President Nixon to the Philippine
The presidential election of 1968 featured the . Islands, Indochina, India, .Pakistan, Thailand, ·
most incredible comeback and the most incredible Great Britain and Roumania and would be climaxed I
comedown in the history of the Presidency, as in 1972 by precedent-shattering visits to the capitals
Richard Nixon, rising phoenix-like from the still of the Communist giants, Red China and Russia.
smoldering ashes of two major political defeats, gave
"The greatest honor history can bestow is the
the finishing blow to the political demise of President title of peacemaker," President Nixon had said in
Lyndon Johnson, who had been elected four years his inaugural address. Apparently, he was going
before by the largest plurality ever given to a Presi- all out to earn this honor for himself and his country.
dent.
'
Candidate Nixon had promised a solution to the
The record shows that Nixon defeated Hubert unpopular Vietnamese war. Three months after takH~mphrer, not Lyndon Johnson. However, since
ing office, President Nixon declared that "a political
Vtce Prestdent Humphrey was indelibly identified solution is the heart of the matter. " H e then
in the public mind m such unflattering terms as
announced a policy of gradual withdrawal of Ameri"the weeping hawk" and "Johnson's water boy,"
can troops from Vietnam, although he qualified the
there can be little reasonable doubt that Nixon's
plan by declaring that he would not accept a "peace
slim seven-tenths of one percent vicfory margin was
of humiliation" that would reduce America to "a
made possible by Democratic registrants voting
second-rate power. "
against President Johnson's Vietnam fiasco and his
Welfare reform had long held top priority in
Nixon's thinking, so it was · not surprising that the
ever-soreadimr "credibilitY 2ao."

WIN AT BRIDGE

False Card Poses Question
NORTH

13

• AJS

•Qs
.KJ104
.8652
WEST

EAST

.QI03
.J9754
.8 3
.A9 3

.812
¥K103
t9752
.K74

SOUTH (D)

·, .K964
¥A62
tAQS
.QJIO
West
Pass
Pass

Both vulnerable
North East South

IN.T.
3 N.T.

Pass

Opening lead-•

when following suit . Some
false card plays should he
automatic
East's king of hearts cov·
ers dumm y's queen at tnck
one. The king holds and the
10 is returned . Declarer
plays low and west overtakes
with his jack in order to lead
the nine. South wins with the
ace, leads a diamond to
dummy's jack and wins the
next two tricks with the ace
and queen .
West dtscards the nine of
clubs as a signal
South leads a spade and
plays dummy 's jack which

holds
the trick. and
He cashes
the
last diamond
discards
the 10 of clubs from his hand.
West discards the three of The bidding has been
the same suit
West North East South
Now South cashes dum.
I •
.P•.;:u s!!h hol;oss !
false card of the queen •A KG4 •AQ6B · •KQ t07
South knows that West holds Wli'at uo you' do now' '
that queen. He doesn't know A:-Bid two spades only. This
who holds theiO
bul, o fm·ce herc.
The chances are that South
TODAY'S QUESTION
wtll go up with his king of Your partner rebids to three
spades after East follows to "clubs What do you do now '!
the thn·d lead of that suit and
make his contract, but it is
Answer 1"'""""w
not a certainty
On the other hand. if West Send II '"JACOBY MODERN book
dropped the 10 instead of the to. "Win otBridge," (c/o this ••••·
queen , South wo uld have no poperl, P.O. Box 489 • Radio Citr
Station, New York, N.Y. 10019.
Problem at all

~~~~ "~a~fespt~~e.s a;'l~!~f~

•2

' .
first major bill from the :White House suggested
historic changes in that troubled and muddied area.
The main features of the omnibus bill were a
guaranteed income (Family Assistance Plan),
revenue-sharing with the states and health insurance
for the poor. Going into the summer of 1972, after
three years of wrangling by the 91st and 92nd Congresses, no final action had been taken on the proposals.
. It was apparently difficult for the highest paid
Chief Executive in the nation's history ($200,000
per )'Car) to become seriously disturbed by an unemployment rate that hovered persistently around 6
%when both the GNP-now edging past $I QQ.billion yearly-and the number of employed persons
are rising. In any case, the Nixon Administration
did little about unemployment and that little did
little good.
In support of the "New Nixonomics," the President reversed his long-held convictions by ordering
wage and price controls in August, 1971. A year
later the annual rate of inflation had dropped from
4% to}%, but it is a moot point among fiscal experts
whether this change was brought about by Administration policies or was simply the result of normal
economic fluctuations .
When it appeared that imports would exceed
exports in 1971 for the first time since 189}, Nixon
took still another daring gamble by devaluing the
dollar on the international exchange by an aggregate
of about 11%, by severing the dbllar from its foreign
mooring to gold and by suspending the U.S. government's promise to redeem in gold at $H and ounce
some $50 billion in foreign hands.
In effect he declared that gold had no monetary
value whatever as international currency so far as
the U.S. Treasury was concerned.
By conceding that the United States could not
meet its fiscal obligations· in effect, was bankrupt-Nixon's main objectives in floating and
devaluing the dollar were to achieve rough equilibrium in the balance of payments between the United
States and its major trading partners and to restore
worldwide confidence in the dollar as a stable fiscal
unit by agreed upon revaluations of other major
currencies. These, in turn, were expected to stem
the outflow of speculative American dollars, to
increase foreign investments in American stocks and

Generation Rap

I

By Helen and Sue Bottel
Uberadon's Veud001 ... Coal.

Rap:

m a co11ege stud en t• a delivery truck driver (afternoon
run),anda girl.Itookthejob because they offered II tome, not to
"prove" anything, and I've carried my weight (sometimes
literally),
Last weeki got a promotion, but! must train the man who Is
I'

) on ylng my wmer- all tbla
100 'ld' : 'doai,.;t ·
sca~ed ~ ~~th ~~nev::r:. ge'::hlnd the wheel, .I can see he's
,
·
ra, ve ndrivlngmyngforayear,
and he s just~ beginner. I'm a darn good driver, with a perfect
wreconoderdr..But I'm also a ll().pouad female, and I'm beginning to
ll
. men ever rea Yaccept women In what they COIIIIider
"Utetr world"? - BLUE JEANS

wui

B.J.:
... Some wiU. Some won't. But most men just need time to
dj
a ust, as you probably discovered last year when you were the

{HEW:S ..APEA ENTERPRIS E "SSN.l

r~.:s::=:::::::::~-=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-;::::::;:;:::::·:::-;·~:·:.:::::::.-:.-:··.....v.--:-:·:.:·:-:•:•!-!.....:.:.-.:...........;.x-:.·~:-=-:·:··········.:-:-······················x.

By Otwald" &amp; James Jacoby
One of the most elemen·
lary form s of deception is
the false card, or play of a
higher card than necessary,

I Voice al~~i.WB;·;·w~y····.w.·.w.·l

BY JACK O'BRIAN
AT LEAST ALI TALKS
A GOOD FIGIIT
NEW YORK (KFS) _ Last month
Muhammad Ali at Benihana Palace expressed
fear that next time he'd "murder" Joe Frazier·
Me
there again this month, he explained he'll
By United Press International destroy new-champ George Freeman ...
Today is Tuesday, Feb. 13, Beautiful actress Diana Rigg and director
the 44th day of 1973 with 321 to Philip Sa vile split; unwed, just publicly lived
toget~r ... Andy Warhol's surname's a
follow.
The moon is approaching its variation of the Polish word meaning "one who
sows discord."
full phase.
Flock of Bdwy. stars showed up at the Act
The morning stars are Venus,
One Restaurant (atop the old Times Tower) for
Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mer- Actors' Equity's 60th anniversary cham)l8gne
drlnkall - but the belle of the bash was actress
cury and Saturn.
Those born on this date are Olga Dallas who joined Equity the year it was
founded- 1913.
under the sign of Aquarius.
Jane Alexander's line in "6 Rms ruv Vu"
French statesman Maurice
Talleyrand was born Feb. 13, about Eve Arden wasn't meant for howls but it
got them the other night: Eve was In the
1754.
audience ... The St. Regis King Cole Bar has its
On this day in history :
In 1635, the oldest public "Cirrhosis Club" over In the southeast corner
institution in America-the late-afternoons - and the Lamba Club has Its
Boston Latin School- was foun- "Campbell's Corner," facetiOU8 for Campbell's
funeral homes, where old members coogregate
ded.·
In 1914, the American Society daily lor lunch. Oldest has to be Jlnl Meighan
of Composers, Authors and handsome brother of the late fine screen ac~'
Publishers - ASCAP- was lor- Thomas Meighan: •Jim's well into hi.ll 91m,
slraight as a skyscrpaer, never wears an
med.
In 1945, Russian troops took overcoat even on the zeroes! days.
Thirty-two years ago, Horton Spurr
Budapest alter 49 days of
produced
a kiddles' show at CBS-TV (no
ligh'ting in which more than
50,000 German Nazi troops were sponsors In those days). He was told by the
usual Impeding vice-president that cowboys
killed.
In 1968, the United States clowns, puppets and magic were "out of date ,:
shipped 10,500 more troops to so after 25 years in every showbiz corner fr~
burl~ue to Ziegfeld and Billy Rose, Hortoo
South Vietnam.
quit and joined the military. Slarted a 23-year
Athoughtfor the day : British career: "I note they still use cowboys, clowns,
philosopher Samuel Pepys said puppets magic aad Joe Laurie's old vaudevllle
he was "as happy a man as jokes, aad not the good ooes. Mediocrity now 1.11
any in the world, lor the whole the standard." ... But wbat raises q,e standard
world seems to smile at me." are such shows as the Mary Tyler Moore Show
and "MASH" which have a lock on the
Sll'ighUiest comedy oo the TV screen. Horton's
SIGN CONTRACI'S
right about most of 11.
CINCINNATI (UP!) -l.£ft- · VIctor Borge knows what he'll be doing a
hlnded pitchers Mel Behney year from now: conduclin8 the Londoo
llld WW Mcenaney and right.. Philharmonic.
-.
••
hinder Rawly Easlwick have . Putnam publishes "Frained" this month.
liiJIId their 11173 contracts with It's being filmed by Mort Bri.llkin, who produced
the Cincinnati Reds. All three seve~ai hits for Bing Crosby's finn; this one is
, played In the minor leagues on hiS own. The author o1 the book Is "Arthur
Jut year.
Michaels,'' who woo't attend the fi~ nor the

Todfly's
Alma

i

&amp; THINGS

premieres. Arthur Michaels actually is the
:elscoped nom de pen or Arthur Powers and
Michael Misehelmer, They 're inmates of InBY PAUL · CRABTREE
1
diana State Penitentiary.
Psst! Hey, friend, come over here - I've got something 1
Beverly Hllls has more psychiatrists than want to sell you. And I can't afford the mooey for spots 1n the
plumbers. One psych-filled street is called The paper or TV.
Mental Block ... Cliff Arquette of the assorted
Nope, it isn't '1eelthy peectures" or drugs or even ·a
talk shows Is in a wheelchair since his stroke recently-!!tolen watch. It's even more valuable:
butithasn'tbecalmedthecheerluloldwlndbag:
How'd you like to buy some bargain-basement educatim?
He'll do his own voice tn a cartoon series based
Now Ute quality is just as good as you'll lind upatalrs, out of
on hi.ll "Mt. Idy" lunacies ... Golfer Jack thebargaln.!Jasementlevel, butlt'sreallyagreatvalue.
Nicklaus has a million-plus aMual income and
It's cslled "community college."
now Is intemati9nal - opened offices 1n
Uyou'vegotakld (orareakld)looldngloracruU.cetogetln
Geneva; London and Tokyo nell ... That old two years of college at low, law prices - right there within
Card Stan Musial's also a tycoon - just took commuting dlslllnce of your own home - and then move on to
over the Hilton Inn in Clearwater, Fla. Has graduate at another school, .tbla is for you.
others, too.
Or if you would like an tionest-to-Pete college degree 1n just
Max Kase at his Briefkase Pub answered two short years In such fields as electronics general buslnesa or
our suspicion that pro golfers aD earn exec.&amp;ze medical technology (aad maybe a greatd~l more), then yo~'ll
salaries : "Bob BeUey ," Max said, kaslng the '72 love community college.
ll.sts, "is a pro, and last year made exactly six
Maybe you're just an average person who would like to get
bucks." ... Hockey whiz Derek Saaderson, who some additional educatim just for the sake of having It _
just was paid an icy million settlement by the perhaps the noblest kind of education of all- you ought to look
Phllly club, owned a Rolls-Royce before that into community college,
winter windfall.
There'D be a slight delay while the blueprints are approved
Top lnternatiorial screen slar whose career and the people decide whether it's really worth the effort but by
has been In abeyance for years had her bazoom nert September, there's a 'very good chance that a ~tioning
· lifted and tununy tightened In a Westchester communi!Y college will be opera!~ on the campus of Rio
!Jospital ... CUs D'Amato, who Svengalled Floyd Grande - less than a thirty.miliute drive away from the doorPatterson to the heavyweight champ,onshlp _ stepsolmostofthepeoplet-hoarereadlngtbla.
twice - said at. the 37th St. Hideaway that
I'mgotngtobeperlecUyhooestwithyou,pal,be.;.useldon't
Muhanunad Ali bas the height, weight, reach want you to get· the wrong Idea :
and style to beat George Foreman: "He would • Most people around here can'tafford to aend their klda to Rio
box him ~lily and make him look like an Grand~, and ita regular four-year program. The price 1.11 not
amateur"; wall ... How come the planned play advertised to be law,.and It ian't.
"Alpha Beta" management clliims It signed for
But this is a whole new ball game, folks, with the COli runthe Cort Theater In March1 "The Jockey Club nlng only about 15 to 20 pet, ol the present going rate. If you can't
Stakes" Is there, and a delightful comedy In- travel in a Uncoln or Cadillac, what's wrong with getting there in
deed.
·
a Pinto or Vega, i.lltheway I think of 11.
Mary Martin's return to Bdwy. 1.11 set ten.n.e program has been designed by the people In Gallla,
tatively ; a musical version of "The COm Is Metgs, Vinton and Jackson counties, cooperaling witll the of.
Green" ; Ita new title: "Miss Moffat." Emlyn fictsla of Rio Grande. 'lbe whole works 1.11 go~ to be IIUbmitted to
Williams will write the tuned-up copy of his own the Ohio Board ol Regenlll any day naw - and may be given a
play, ·Josh Logan would produce.dlrect and slamp of apll'oval within a month or 10,
Albert Hague provide songs. Who's Albert
Then, there'll be an electloo, and a majority of tile people ol
!Jague1 He's had at leu! one hit, "Young and those counties will have a chance lAt buy community college 'lb
Foolish."
exact cost hasn't been llgured yet, but It's estimated thlt 11 ~·~
BlU Chan, owner of the fine Chinese . be more than about tbree dollars per peraon per year_ and that
restaurant The Gold Coin, went to the Greek lsabupln,anywayyoulookatlt,lrlend.
Fortnight at the Rainbow Room, and before
{If it goes okay In Ohlo,lbere'n chance Maaon County can
anyone could say Onasais, Bill wu leaping parllclpall! when the p:ogram begins Ia !t73-74 ·or a bit later )
through Athenian choreography with Alice
President Aiphua OlriatenaeJj lu:.U,. toe:cPi.aln aome of the
Faye, Sir Winston's sjlrlg Sarah Churchill, and things I've left out when he IJIPIII'I m WSAZ-TV'a "AI Iuue" 011
her niece Ed~ Sandys. Bill's explanatloo, "If Feb. !8,110 don't miss him, folb,lhen make up your mind
Anthooy ~can do 1.11110 can II" Bill's wife
Pef.8011ally,I think a cut-rate CllllllliUnll)' collect i.ll·a great
Anne (the balf-Irlsh-half-Chinese beauty) chance for us to do aome bedly-needecl calcblngo~~p In the
couldn't make it. Too vertigo.
.
educatioo field .

I

.,

moneY tfee

· By Ualled Pr.s llilmatlcw•l
Capital coocludel-ita bome
lchedule . loolght; 11111 if the
O'wiaden ever needed their
faoa, tbla wUI be the game.
Cap, ooe hop out of nr.t place
In the Ohio Cooference, takes
on the league leader
Musklngum,
.'
'lbe Musklea are 9-1. Capital
otterbein and Wittenberg
~ lleCOnd with 11-2 marb.
Meanwhile, Otterbein hosts
Mount Unim, Kenyoo playa at
OberUn and Wittenberg 1.11 at
Heidelberg In other oc action.
MI!Bkjngum baa the beat'

ati

Monday's ColleGe Bukelball
Reoulls
By United Press International
East
S.C. 84 Nle~ora 74
St. Michaels 83 Vermont 81
La Salle 72 Drexel 57
Wsn . Mo. 76 Swarthmore 48
Providence 113 Cleve. St. 79
LIU 101 St. Peter's 95
Glassboro Sl. n York 5~
South
Tenn. 51 Miss . 49
LSU 76 Auburn 74
Ky. 100 Miss. St: 87
Vanderbilt 78 Fla. 71
Wsn. Ky. 68 E. Tenn. 53
Jackson St. 96 Texas South·
ern 94
Alobama 78 Georgia 67
West Ga. 96 Valdosta St. 83
Albany Sl. 108 Tuskegee lnst:

68

Midwest
Indiana 87 Illinois 66
Ohio St. 86 Iowa 80
Creighton 76 Colorodo 67
Bowling Green 87 Central
Mich. 80
Steubenville 69 West Liberty

53

Wichita St. 73 Bradley 65
Missouri 6~ Oklahoma 62

+++

Blue Jeans:
Honest naw, B. J., don't you agree tbla 1.11 part of the funII'Oving yourself1 If males accepted you u an equal rlcbt off tile
bat, breaking Into "their" fields wouldn't be half so Challe~lng.
- SUE

77

Southwest
SW Texas 96 McMurry 86
Abilene Christian 93 Lamar

Tex . Wesleyan 78 St. Ed·
ward's 59
Southern U. 87 Prairie VIew
85
Sam Houston 81 Angelo State

+++

Helen and Sue ·.
My girl has great legs. Why does she hide them with long
dresses and pants? I resent tbla covero~~p stuff, and say: if
femalesretiUydreAiormales andnottolmpreAotbetfemales
lhey11 back mini
'
'
go
to
-aklrta. How do other guys feel about it? ...
.... , ...... . ,. .,........ · ····.
· Good ~estlon, "Leg Man."
Let's see haw many of our male readers agree with y6U
What's the vote, men -long skirts or short; Fred Aatalre panlll:
orcut-offs?(Alldwbateverbecameofhotpants') - HELEN

+++

69

West
UCLA 76 Washington 67
USC 80 Wash. St. 63
~::

CANTON - On the strength
or a 70-66 victory over
Cedarville, Rio Grande College
has clinched at least a tie for its
first Mid-Ohio Conference
basketball title. Rio's Redmen
show a 6-1 Conference mark,
while Urbana 1.11 in ~~econd place
and two games back, at 3-2. To
tie with Rio Grande, Urbana
would have to sweep its last
three MOC games, against
Cedarville, Malone, and Rio
Grande.
Ohio Dominican has completed Its Mld.()hio season,
with a 4-4 record, and
Cedarville (2-4) and Malone (I5) both have two Conference
games left on their schedules.
In other Conference tilts last
week, Ohio Dominican handed
Rio Ita only league loss 9'M7,
but ODC's Panthers also were
victims to Malone'd first
Conference win 106-95.
Ken Richardson, the· 6'6"

e:.:·«··:w~

.,

'

.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Too bad Cliff Cuahman couldn't have
seen his little boy.
It would've made him feel so good,so wann Inside .
But CUff Culhman, a major In the U.S. Air Force, had no
poaalble way of being 1111 hand here Monday for the meeting
between his blond, 7-year-old 110n, Colin, and Colin's Idol 'or all
ldoJs.....&lt;iext to his Daddy, ol course-football
Johnny
Unltaa.
Maj. CUff Cushman tsa POW, or to be more specific, an MIA,
which me&amp;M he'a mlaalng In actloo.
He was llhot down flying a mi.llsion In Indochina on Sept. 25,
1986, when his son was only nine monthll old, and he wasn't
among the flrat 142 Americlll! Pri.lloners of War who walked to
freedom at Clark Air Force Base In the PHl!pplnes Monday. ,
Before so~ off to Vlebuun, CUff Cushman loved football. He
had an athle~c background to begin with, having been a silver
medalist In the 400meter hurdles during the 1960 Olympics In
Rome.
"CIIH always enjoyed watching football," says his wife,
carolyn, an attractive 32-year.Old brunette, who lives with her
son In Omaha, Neb., from where they traveled on sh!l't notice
SUnday to be here so CoUn could lneei bil bero, Johnny U.
'lbe entire occulon waaln Clllljunctlon with a program called
"No Greater Love," a Waahlngton, D.C.-baled program
originated by American athletes for the children ol servicemen
either captured or mlaalng In acUon In Indochina and one which
now finds ltaelf needing funds.
"Anyway, the flrat time I was aware of the program was In
December of 1971 when I saw thla form and completed it," explained Carolyn Cushman at Monday's get-together, which was
co-lt08ted by Sporlll ruustrated and bad 811Ch athletes oo hand as
Joe Frazier, Rod GObert, Ron Swoboda and Jerry Lucu as well
as Unltas.
•'!be first thing that happened was that Colln receJ.ved an
autographed picture of Johnny Unitas," said Mrs. Cuslunan.
·"We bad to get him a helmet after thllt and a uniform with No. 19
oolt, the same numberas Johnny Unitas wears.
"Later, Colin a1eo received an autographed photo of RotJer
Staubach and he put the two pictures beneath our Chri.lltmas tree
110 Santa Claus could see them. The next morning, there was a
note !rom Santa Claus to Colin, telling him he knew those two
fellows, toO.
"I can't say enoutlh about lhl.a program, No Greater Love. It
has helped me alllo. Instead ol being the typical mother In the
kitchen, I ll.sten to the football games naw aad enjoy them very

TUESDAY, FEB. ll, 1973
6: Oil- News3, ~. 8, 10·, 13, 15; Truth or Con seq. 6 · Sesame Sf 20·
Around The Bend 33.
'
· '
6:30 - News 3, 4, 6. 8, 10. 15; I Dream of Jeannie 13 · Growing
Him Up 33.
'
7:00- What's My Line 8; I've Got A Secret 13; Elec. Co. 20:
Beat The Clock 4; News 6. 10; Unfomed World 13; TV Honor
Society 15; Truth or Consequences 3.
7:30 - This Is Your Llfe3 ; To Tell The Truth 6: Price Is Right 8,
~~: Beat The Clock 13; RFD 20; Circus~~ Greol Decisions '73
B:OO - Temperatures Rising 6, 13; Maude 8, 10; Book Beal33.
Ohio: This Week 20; Movie "The Greot Man's Whiskers " i

great

I

8: ~?- Hawaii Flve·O8, 10; Bill Moyer's Journal 20, 33; Movie
The Great American Beauty Contest," 6, 13.
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 14, 1971
6:00 - Sunrise Seminar~ ~ Sacred Hearl 10
6:15 - Farm lime 10; English 3.
·
6:20- Farm Report 13.
6:25 - Paul Harvey 13.
6:30Columbus
The Story
13. Today 4; Bible Answers 8·' Urban Leogue 10;

;:~, ~~~: f3!;~;~ iB~o~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~:~n~s~~~~~~

B:OOLass
- ~Cap{
Kangaroo 10; New Zoo Revuel3; Sesame St . 33 ,·
e 6.

Romper Room a.
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue IS · What E
W
Wants lo Know 3; Concenfrall 6· C
very oman
. Friendly Junction 10; Ben Case/~J . • apl. Kangoroo 8;
9:
30- EDiec. Co. 33; To Tell the Trulh3 ; Jeoftardy 6
10 .00
- lnah Shore3• 15,· Columbus Six Ca ling 6· ·Joker's Wild
8' 10 '. Dl ck Van Dyke
13.
'
10
' 3J'plltc~c~~rfJ~on3,1S; Phil Donahuu ; Price Is Rights, lO;
II:OO-SaleoftheCentury3
8, 10; Pallword 13.
' 15 '· Love Amerlcan Style 6: Gambit
6:

11 : ~7"s';:~~:~ S2~~ares 4, 13; Love of Life 8, 10; Bewitched 6,
12 :00- Jeopardy 3. ll; Password 6 · s b B ,
News 13; Contact 8; News 10. ' o raun s 50·50 Club~~
12:30 - Split Second6; SNrch for Tomorrow 8 0. '
1:00 - News, Weather, Sports 3, All My ChliJ · 3W·~· 15.
Storm 8; Not For Women Only IS· Gree A ren 6, 13, Secret
. 1:20 - Fashions In Sewing 3.
'
n crestO.
0-lDOn AMatch 3, ~. 15; Let's Make a Deal6 '13
21;3
·00 - ays of our Lives 3 4 15· N 1
' ·
. Dou~ass 6: Guiding Llg~t 8, Hl. ew ywed Game 13; Mike
2
3 ; ~ _ ~~ph~~'Wo~1~ ~f-5 3.4.15; EdgeofNight8,tO.
Splendored Thing 8 10 : RFDG;eral Hospital 6, 13; Love
3:30 - Relurn to Peyt~n Ploce 3 4 ·15 . 0 Ll
·
Secret Storm a, 10; Ohio: This Week 2~• veto Live 6, 13;
4:00 - Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset IS · s.'
S
Amerlcon Stt• 13; Merv Griffin ~ · F~~~~ I, 33:· Love

~:~~:2!~~: ~~~~~~1eg;~~~~e:~'M~1~~it~~~:v~:

much."

But Monday's big moment came when COlin CUShman met
Johnny Unltaa for the very ljrllt time In the flesh.
.
"I wu apoaking with Jobr)ny at the time, telling him an about
COlin, and then Colin came Into tile' room," said his mother.
"Here be 1.11 naw," I said to Jolwiy. Colin simply stood there and
stared'with pure amazement In hil eyes. He couldn't move. He
jUit lrta."
!Ill lather llhould'vl! been tllere to aee lt.
"I ain aense hoW he leela," laid Unltai, who has five chllilren
of his own. '"i'hLB little boy was mly nine month&amp; old when hla
fatber went lAt war. I lOet my fath.. when I WM 5. At leaat I bad
him for 5 years."
'lbe name of CUff CUihnll11. U.S. Air Force major, was not on
the lilt of Uvbtg or !lead pri.llollll'llumilbed IIlii country by the
comm1111,11t Vlelrl'W".
·
''We'vi nner beard from Cliff," 1111)'1 his wife, "bUt we have
• 11111 . . . Ull bope. Colln lhra7l pt'l)'l ffl' bll fllther every night
jU1t btftn be fill to liMp. AI lanl u there II the lli&amp;bteat
polllbllltJ be'uliw, n 111111 111nt lin • htipe ... "
'

S: OilAndy
- Mr. Rogers 33 · O.nl0 1 Bo
Griffith 15, '
one 6' ·Bonanza 3, ~ ~ Hazel 8;
5
' ~iiilil~~\a) 1 t\'~~~;~ ~1 •c.idcgoe Gomer Pyle 13: Beverly
6:00- Trulh or Conseq 6· N 3 4 ·8 1
Around the Bend 33. · : ews ' ' • lO, 5; Seseme St. 20;
6:30 - News3,4, 6,8 10 t5·1 Dr•• 0 fJ·• 1
Transition 33.
' ' '
...... m
vann e 13; Societies In
7:00 ~ News6 tO · What' M L ~
the Clock •:'AnYthing ~ou l(.~~bTr~th or YCohsoq. 3; Stat
Elec:. Co. 20; Fobulous Seven 15 ' now our Schools33;
7:30 - To Tell the Truth 6 · The J ,j 1 ·
B114t the Clock 13; Andy Grlfft~h
Pollce_turgton 3, ~~
Episode: Action 33; George Kirby 011llOPG-.e Lodge 20;
8:00 - Adam.l23, 4 15 • p fL de ·
'
Sonny &amp; Cher I , 'lo ;. Amer
au Icayn'73.6, 13; Under
Ihe Dome 33.•
·
8:30- Movie "Poor Devil" 3 ~ 15 . Mo ..
tlngton HouH" 6, 13,
• • ' vie The Girls of Hun9:00 - Medlcal CenterlO; EyetoEye 2o 33
9.30 - San Francisco Mix 20 33 · ' ·
tO:OO-Soui33
' •
15, 3, 4. '· New• 20·'Cannon&amp;;
O.VenMershall6, 13; Search

W

rs.a·U

ll:~= ~=~·~.6.8;10, 13,15.
.
·•
"Doctor: y~~~~t ~ •·~"!' ScrNrrt,l,llll Skull 6, 13; Movies
Berlin" 10.
1:00 ;,., News 4. -13.

hurled at owners

o.,. Klddlngl ., "Eacepe from Ent
I

J

''

Having explained tile present period. What if a player who is
players' position In the close In negotiations decides
negotiations (outlined In a five- 110t to submit his contract to
page slnglwpaced typewritten arbitration in that short time
handout which mentioned the period. WeD, as soon as Feb. IO
word "lockout" 18 times), goes by, the owners can tum
Miller then assailed the around and renege on their
owners' latest offer concerning offer with noprecourse lor the
the Issue or arbitration.
player.
"A few weeks ago Commls"Finally," Miller conclude~,
sioner Bawle Kuhn said the "the owners' proposal stales
owners would never agree to that no one from the Players
arbltradog. I think he's right . Association can assist In lite
even though they have," he arbitration. That meam lor
said witll a wry smile.
one thing the players have to go
Under the offer made by the out and hire an attorney at
owners, a player with three or their own expense."
more years of service in
Miller said he expected to
baseball could submit his meet with all 24 of the player
contract to outside arbitration representatives here on Friday
and then agree to either the to rurther evaluate the state of
figure offered by the arbitrator the negotiations. He hinted,
or the owner. Also, the player however, that some of the
could not make use of outside players may be weakening in
arbltradon two years in sue- their stand.
cession.
"I've talked to about 25 or 30
"AB for the 'no two years in a players and their opinions have
row' part," Miller said, ''why run the gamut," he said.
shouldn't a player be allowed "Some of them are concerned
to submit his contract to ar- about hqw all of this is afbltration two years in sue- feeling the game of baseball.
cesslon1 On what basis do they Others, though, have said the
(the owners) make this owners know what they can do
statement? Under those terms, with their offer."
the owners could take it out on
the player the following year.
"Secondly, the owners have
set aside a period of Feb. !Feb. 10 as the arbitration

to share title with Rio

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI 8)10111 Edllar

TeleVI·si·on .Log

9

'

Sport Parade

_

::rs =J~i~sL~3~nne 13; New Zoo Revue

...

Tooay"s .

NCYrE FROM SUE: What's wrong with all lour styles'.
Nowadays a girl can wear whatever length she wants· and lfyer
guyi.llalegman she'dbetterkeepafewmlnlsinhercioeet
'
·

I

Bad faith charge

gu~m

ABA Standings
By United Press tnt-rnatlnat
East
w. t. pet. g.b.
Carolina · .u 18 .710
Kentucky
38 22 ..633 5
VIrginia
92 30 .516 12
22 37 .373 20'12
' New 'fork
19 40 .322 i3112
Memphis
West
w. l. pet. g.b.
Utah
38 23 .623
Indiana
36 26 .581 2'12
Denver
31 29 .517 6'12
By BilL MADDEN
22 37 .373 15
Allan Hm~yak scored 24 points and Cornelius Cash 23 Dallas
20 40 .333 17'12 UPI Sports Writer
points to lead the Buckeyes to a for Bowllns Green u the Fal- San Diego
MonUy's Results
NEW YORK (UP!)
come-from-behlnd win over cons evened their IIOaSon rec- Carolina 118 Dallas 111
lowa at Iowa City, Luke Witte ord at 10.10. Their MAC mark Indiana 127 Virginia 119 (oil "Lockout" rather than
Utah 119 Denver 107
"strike" has become the
contributed 22 polnlll and War· was Improved to 8-3.
(only gomes scheduled I
keyword
In the latest episode of
dell Jackaon I4. ·
· BlUKelaoscored33polnta for
Tuesday's Games
New
York
at
Memphis
baseball airing its dirty
Eleventll-ranked Providence Central Michigan, now 1a-10
Kentucky at San Diego
laundry
tn public.
grabbed 1111 11eventh straight and 3-5.
(only games scheduled)
Marvin Miller, executive dlwin with the victory over
Steubenville scored the first
NBA Standings
rectDI: of the Players AssociaCleveland. Providence 1.11 17-2, !Opolnlllofthe game and never
Pross International tion, In an effort Monday to
Cleveland 1.11 11-10.
traDed In taking 1111 17th win By United
Eastorn Conference
shift the blame of baseball's
'lbe Rhode Island team ex- against five defeats. Jim
Atlantic Division
w.
I.
pet.
g.b.
labor squabbles squarely onto
tended Its lead to 31 points In Glll'l'lgan )18ced tile Baro1111
Boston
45 12 .789
the owners, Issued a customary
the lleCood half, before Coach witll 20 points.
New York
46 15 .754 1
Dave Gavitt removed his start- Dave Maurer scored 25 Buffalo
18 40 .310 27'12 well-elocuted broadside that In
• 58 .065 43112 effect accused the owners of:
1ng five with more than 11 points for Ohio Dmtlnlcan, now Phila
Central
Division
-Threatening an "lllegal
minutes to play.
II-15..Sam WOks wu higher for
w. I. pet. g.b.
lockout" of spring training and
Baltmr
37 20 .649
Brian ·Scanlan scored 25 Walsh witll 23.
Atlanta
34 28 .540 5'12 -Falling to agree In prinHouston
23 36 .390 15
Clevtnd
21 37 .362 l61f2 ciple over the Issue of outside
Western Conference
arbitration of a players' conMidwest Division
.
w. l. pet. g.b. tract.
''Thete has been no threat of
Mllwkee
41 18 .695
Chicago
35 22 .614 5
a strike In these negotiations,"
KC·Omaha
30 33 .476 13 Miller said, ''but there is a very
Delrolt
26 32 .4ofll 14'12
dellnltethreatofalockout. The
Pacific Division
w. I. pet. g.b. owners have Imposed wltat
Los Ang
45 13 .776
Goldn Ste
36 22 .621 9 may be a lockout of spring
Phoenix
28 30 .403 18
training- this is In effect a
Ohio Dominican center, leads average tops all •conference seattle
19 42 .311 27'12 strike of the owners.
14 .u .241 31
the stati.lltical categories lor scorers, and the Panther Portland
"Meanwhile, we (the
Monday's Results
the sixth straight week. juniors' 17.1 rebounding
(no games scheduled)
Players Association) are InRichardson's 25.3point scoring average outdistances the other
Tue'Sdoy's Games
Houston vs. KC.Qmoha at trigued that most of the news
MOC leaders. In the runnero~~p
stories lollowing the owners'
City
slots are Ron Lambert (22.0 Kansas
Golden State at Cleveland
announcement last Thursday
ppg, Rio Grande) In scoring,
Boston at Chicago
have dealt with a threatened
Milwaukee at Detroit
and Phil Hodge ( 13.3 reboun!is,
strike, not a threatened
Seattle at Los Angeles
Malone) In rebounding.
Buffalo at Portland
lockout."
(only games scheduled)
Urbana's Tony Vance leads
In field goal accuracy. The
WHA Standings
Blue Knight center Is conBy
United
Press International
necting on 61.7 pet. of his floor
East
shots. Richardson Is also over
wltptsgfga
Clevelond 35 20 2 72 212 165
sixty percent, at 61.1.
Englnd 32 23 2 66 233 191
College IIBiketbaU Roudup
Cedarville's Steve Young Nw
New York 27 32 1 55 238 250
By UDIIed· Preas JJttemillonal con Unues to be the best foul Quebec 24 27 4 52 196 211 IOWA CITY, Iowa (UP!) ~
'!be numbers game con- shooter, with an 87.7 pet. mark Phlladelph 24 31 0 40 199 233 Indiana is No. lin the Big Ten,
21 33 4 46 204 246
tlnues its relentleA climb to !rom the line. Teammate Rick Ottawa
West
but Oblo State is trying hard
staggering proportions Watson is second, at 85.7 pet.
wltplsgf ~~ 110t to be counted out In the
33 23 3 69 215 1
whenever UCLA steps on the
Cedarville is involved in both Winnipeg
Houston 28 23 4 60 210 1es stampede to keep up.
basketball court.
Mid-Ohio contests this week. Minnesota 27 28 3 57 187 205 The Buckeyes trailed 45-42 at
'!be Bruins paid a visit to The Yellow Jackets host Ur- Los Angels 26 26 4 56 194
halftime here Monday night
Alberta 27 26 2 56 193
SeatUe, Wash., Monday night bana on Tuesday, and then Chicago
21 33 1 43 m 203 but steamed ahead In the
and came away with a 76-67 travel to Malone on Saturday.
Monday's Results ·
second hall to beat Iowa 86-80.
Cleveland 8 New York 2
victory over Washington thllt Big non-league lilts include
It made Ohio State M in the
(only gome scheduled)
wun't anywhere as close u Ohio Dominican at Defiance,
conference.
Tuesday's Games
the final score might Indicate. and Urbana at Otterbein.
Houston at Alberta
Indiana leads the league with
New England at Philadelphia
·~;!i!Y~W..UC14.' ~~~.d . ........ · , . . .
a
7-2
mark.
Chlcogo at Los Angeles
IQ all-time i:olleglate record MIO·OHIO CONFERENCE
Winnipeg
at
Minnesota
Allan . Hornyak scored 24
.
•c~!L
""
.... BASKETBALL STATISTICS
wlmln
(only games scheduled)
g s......,. to &amp;4 games,
(MOCl
points and Luke Witte added 22
including a 19-G mark this
·
(Overall)
even though be sat on the bench
season, aad registered ita 21st Team
W. l W L
NHL Standings
By United Press lnternatlona 1 lor 10 minutes tn the first hall
Consecutive success against Rio Grande
6 1 11 10
.
Urbana
3 2 13 9
alter accumulating three
East
Washington.
Ohio Dominican ~ 4 7 15
wltpts gt ga personal fouls.
The Unlvt!ntity of Southern Cedarville
2 4 10 10 Montreal 36 7 13 85 230 123
Hornyak dropped out of •the
Malone
1 5 10 12 N.Y . Rngrs
•
California, Which lit trying to
SCORING LEADERS
38 13 5 81 226 132 lead In tlie Big Ten individual
stay close to CI'OII8town rival Scorer
Ft ft To Av. Boston 34 16 s 73 231 168 scoring race. He has 21$ points
Detroit 29 20 7 65 168 171
UCLA In the Paclflc Coast Richardson (ODC)
Conference race boosted its
135 83 355 25.3 Buffalo 28 20 8 64 196 157 In eight games ror a 28.9 av•
Lambert IRGI 191 81 463 22.0 Toronto 18 30 7 43 169 '187 erage, while Mike Robinson of
league record to 11-1 by over- Eck (C)
144 79 ~7 18.4 Vancouvr 15 35 7 37 162 248 Michigan State bas 216 in eight
N.Y. lsldrs.7 45 5 19 llJ 262
romlng Washington State, 8(). Klein(~)
~~ l~
games for a 27.0 average.
West
83. '!be Trojans, ranked 14th, ~:::l~ !Ml
t79 28 386 17.6
wttplsgf ga Iowa center Kevin Kunnert
traDed 28-25 at halftime, but Goines (U)
151 73 375 11.0 Chicago 33 17 6 12 215 161
25 23 9 59 201 201 scored a gamHIIgh 31 points,
started the second half with 11 Aikman ( U)
149 55 353 16.0 Phlla
REBOUNDING LEADERS
Mlnnesot 25 23 8 58 174 164 putting him over the l,OOililolnl
consecutive points to take the Rebounder
G. Reb. Av. St. Louis 23 22 10 56 165 170
lead for good.
Richardson (ODC) 14 239 11.1 Atlanta 23 26 9 55 152 164 mar~ with a total of 1,029 points
Am
other nked te
Hodge (M)
22 292 13.3 Los Ang 23 27 7 53 169 187 in his college career.
ong
ra
ams, Young (C&gt;
20 200 10.0 Pittsbgh 22 28 6 50 186 191 ''The kids played a tremenNo. 10 Indiana b!&gt;it Dllnois, 87- Lambert( RG )
21 197 9.4 Calif
9 36 12 30 152 243
dous second half - I can't say
Monday's Results
88, to take over undisputed Bollinger (RG)
21 191 9,1
(no
games
scheduled)
of first place In the Yuskewlch (ODC&gt; 22 172 7.9
possess!~
~·
Alkman(U)
22172 7.9
Tuesday's Gamn
Big 10; 11th-ranked Providence Rouse IRGl
21 ISS 7.4 NY Islanders'at Philadelphia
Vancouver at Boston
routed Cleveland State 113-79•
FIELD GOAL LEADERS
This Week's Special
•
• Player (School) Fgm Fgt Pet
Los Angeles at St. Louis
12th-ranked Missouri edged Vance ( U)
so 81 61.7
(only games scheduled)
Oklaboma, ~; and South- Richardson (ODCl 135 237 61 .1
western Louisiana the No 17 Aikman lUI
149 275 5~. 2
,
•
·
Cutp !Ul
75 144 52 8
lellnl, ran over the University Watson (C)
53 101 52:5
The Daily Sentinel
of Texas-Arlington lll-96.
Voung &lt;C&gt;
146 279 52.3
DEVOTED
TD THE
•
Lambert
191 368 51 8
INTERESl
OF
Sam Houston State, the top. Eck (C)
144 2S5 so:5
MEtGS·MASDN AREA
USED CARS
ranked team In the small Dledalls (ODC)
57 113 50.5 CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec
.
Ed.
college ratings ran Its record Klein IMl
123 247 49.8
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
•
Harris tMl
85 174 40 9
City Editor
to 21-D by beating Angelo Stale, F~usnaugh (RG) 34 72 40:6
Published daily except
81-$.
Cornwell IODC)
53 110 40.2 Seturdav
bV The Ohio Valley
Hod !I" ( M)
179 383 40 0 Publishing
Company, 111
In other games, , Wendell Montgomery
( U) 75 161 46:6 Court St . Pomerov,
Ohio ,
Hudson scored 22 points and Potter (C)
Ill 245 45.3 .ol5769. Bu1lness Office Phont
had 12 rebounds u Alabama
FREE THIIOW LEADERS
992·21S6, Ed itorial Phone 992
Six cylinder, std. trans.
player.
Ftm Fta Pet 2157.
Nice little car.
baatGeorgia, 'IU7; Ohio Stale Young (C)
71 ao 87 .7
Stcond class post1ge paid at
, Oh10 .
beat Iowa, 88-80, behind Allan Watson (C)
24 28 85.7 Pomeroy
National advertising
Hornyak's 24 points· RoMie Stoner IODCl
24 29 82.8 repre
se ntative
Bottlntlli ·
•
Bartram (RGl
50 64 78.1 Gallagher.
Inc ., 12 East .t2nd
Lyons scored a career high 28 Goines ( U)
73 rn 75.3 St
, New York City, New York
points to 11ft hard-pressed Lamberl (RG&gt;
81 106 75.2
Subscription rates : oe :
livered by cerrltr whtre
Kentu~y to 8 I00-87 overtime Branon (q
32
43 773.8
u available
50 cents per week ;
""
Eck (C)
79 107
victory over Mississippi State; Crewford ( U)
31 42 73.8 av Motor Route wtlere carrier
not available : One
"You'll Like Our QualitY.
Vanderbilt beat Florida 78-71 Potter (Cl
28 39 71.8 service
month
S1.7S
By mall In Ohio
'
' Poling (RG)
17 24 70.8 and W. Va .•. One
Way
of Doing Business. '
year Sl,. 00
with Ten'Y Compton scoring 19
LAST WEEK'S RESULTS: Six months S7 .25
GMAC FINANCING
. Three
points; Tennessee retained
Ohio Dominican 92, Ria months S-4 .50 . Subscr ipt ion
"2-.5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'TiiB:OO
price includes Sunday Tlmes flrat place In the Southeastern ~~~= r~. Ohio Dominican 95 StntineL
.
Til 5 P.M. Sat.

Urbana needs sweep

•'J:

·

4, 15,

overall college record In Oblo
111-2,11111 OWIIII the leaiue's tJest
defenalve average, 50.8 points
per game: Cap 1.11 the offense
giant II! the OC, with an 110.6
points per game average.
In basketball acdm Monday
night, OhloSI!lte evened 1111 Big
Ten record at 4-4 with an 88-110
win owr Iowa; Bowllns Green
downed Central Mlcligan 87-110
In the Mid-American ConfereiiOe; Steubenville whipped
Weal Uberty (W.Va.) 5.63;
Providence (RJ.) demolished
Cleveland Slllte 113-79; and
Ohio Dominican beat Walsh eo.

69.

:takemyplace. Whenwegoou\oqttJe~,wbal,~~guy ~ ~

JoJd~~l/'~t,sJquim~1!\{~::ly~ d~~or. ll!!!, w~~,Iet IJ)e l!E;lp

•

crucial battle tonight

new "llo.pound lady trucl!drlver." -HElEN

Pass ·

5

Capital, Mus

inpustry and to act as a general spur to American
business activity.
.
· Results of the 'fllew Nixonomics have b~en
mixed. The c11nsensus of fiscal and p&lt;&gt;litical experts
seems to be tliat long-range res,ults will prov~ ~nefi­
cial to the t,Jnited States. True, ~he a~mtss1.on of
insolvency was damaging to the Amencan ,1mage
of superabundance and omnipotence at horiie and
abroad. Granted, too, thatthe,re was immediate consternation in many of the world's financial cent~rs
and that the international monetary system, desptte
revised exchange rates, remains seriously shaken a
.,
year and a half later. ·
Granted all this and more, Richard Nixon's
realistic acceptance of the nation's actual fiscal condition-beginning with a $450 billion national debt
that makes the U.S. government a national as well
as an international bankrupt-and his drastic actions f
to correct it may succeed in forcing .luxury-sated
Americans and the recipients of American largesse
to revise their "easy-rider" concept of the U.S.
Treasury as"the ever-flowering
for all
humankind .
.
While there is considerable and justifiable doubt
regarding the final outcome of these Nixonian fiscal
maneuvers, there can be little reasonable doubt that
Richard Nixon has metamorphosed into one of the
most daring and innovative Chief Executives in the
history of the Presidency.
' Extending his newly revealed ima~nativeness
and boldness to diplomatic affairs dunng the last
year of his Administration, President Nixon made
unprecedented visits to Russia and Red China,
negotiating a nuclear arms limitation pact with Russia and getting important trade and diplomatic agreements with both of the Asiatic giants.
It is generally agreed, though officially softpedaled for diplomatic reasons, that a major aim
of the President's visits to the Communist capitals
was to bring the Vietnamese war to a satisfactory
end . The practice of this perilous summitry,
· together with his steady withdrawal of American
combat troops from Vietnam, suggests that Richard
Milhous Nixon, Quaker-born and Quaker-bred,
fancied himself in the role of "The Peacemaker,"
a role that might help "to restore the American
spirit"-the problem he had called "the most important thing of all."

Pro Standings .

Washington
falls to
UCLA five

OSU tops Iowa enough about it," said Ohio
State Coach Fred Taylor, who
tskes the team to Illinois Saturday.
"I'm really proud Of the way
our guys hung in there."
The difference was clearly at
the charity line, where Ohio
State connected on 30 of 35
tries. Iowa made only 10 of 20.
Iowa Coach Dick Schultz said
his players "were v~~¥ ,fiat the
second hall."
1
"This club has been in a posidon about four times this
year to make a run and Improve the record but hasn't
done it," Schultz said.
The loss made Iowa 2-6 in the
Big Ten.

l:l

m

WATSON OUT
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) DefeiL'!eman Joe Watson will
be lost to the Philadelphia
Flyers of the National· Hockey
League for about 10 days with a
badly bruised shoulder.

lN

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GIVE YOU A
NEW START!
As a member, all you

~ a ve

to

do os call for AAA Emergency
Road ser,.ce We'll send one of
our IOO,OOO·plus servocemen " '
as fast as posso ble Thai's whal
AAA is for ... yet it's only one
of the many benef1ts you can en·
joy as a member. Call us no\'f
tc find out mote:· ' t1 •
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'w

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... A Great Idea
for over 70 Years

Automobile Club
of Southern Ohio
Phone:
Pomeroy 992·2590
Gallipolis 446·0699

'69 FORD

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'895

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Conference
by holding
off
Mlsslaalppi, 51-49;
and Danny
Traylor scored 23 points and
grabbed 13 rebounds to lead
South Carolina to an 114-74
victory over Niagara. .

Rio Grande
70, Cedarville
66
Urbana
71, Wolsh
56
Cedarville 77, Walsh 47
Malone 89, Tiffin 85.
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE:
Urbana et CedarviHe (Tu)
Malone at Wolsh ( Wl
Ohio Dominican at Defiance
IWl
The abbreviation "lb." Rio Grandeat Bereo, Ky. (Th)
at Malone tSI
stems from the Latin word Cedarville
Kenyon at Ohio Dominican (S)
"libra," meaning llOund.
Urbano at Otterbein (S)

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MUtUAL FUNDS.
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�,
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•
S-TbeDaii)'Sentlllei,Middleport-Pametoy, O., Feb. 13,1173

4- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Puneroy, 0., Feb. 13, 1973

Alston signs 20th contract
. LOSAI'/GELES(UPI) -In a
profession where the awrage
tenure is 2
years, Wa~tet
Alston Is awaiting No.
Alston has signed his 20th 011e
-year contract as manager of
the Los Angeles Dodgers since
replacing Charlie Dressen at a
New York news conference
Nov. 24, 1953.
"! feel real good," the 61year-old !)odger ~kipper said
Monday. "In fact, I've never
felt better in my life. I've got
just as much vigor as I've ever

*

·:ll:

had."

The skeeHI!ooting squire of
Oarrtown, Ohio, appeared with
hll four coaches-Jim GUllam,
Red Adams, Tommy Lasorda
and Monty Basgall-at a
Dodger Stadh_IIII luncheon for
the news media.
- He did, indeed, look fit and
trim.
Only two men-Connie Mack
(50 yesrs with the Philadelphia
A's) and John McGraw (31
, with the New York Giants)have managed for a longer
period of time In the majors
, than Alston.
The man who has been
nicknamed "The Quiet Man"ls
opUmlstic about the future of
, the club that he has led to four
: world champlonshlpa - 1955,
; 1959, 1963 and 1965--but which
: hasn't won a National League
. pennant since 1966 and finished
: a disappointing third In the
league's Western Division last
season.
"We've been talking," Alson
said, "about our good young
· ball players the past couple of
years but now these young
people look ready to show what
we've been talking about.
I "Maybe the problem was we
brought them up too fast."
One of the Dodger
youngsters he referred to was
23-year-old Bill Buckner, the
leading candidate to replace
. retired Wes Parker at first
base. Buckner hit .319 In 1972.
"This guy may lead the
league In hitting one of these
years," Alston noted.
Part of the Dodger problem
1

,

*

Southem
rallies to
win 39-34
RACINE - Southern's
reserves, trailing by 7 points In
the last two minutes of play,
came from behind to defeat
Symmes Valley Saturday night
39 to 34. Southern shot 34 pet.
from the field and made 15 out
of 27 foul shots.
For Southern, Danny Brown
and Tim Hill led in doubie
figures with 13 and 10 points
respectively. Other scorers
were Mitch Nease with 1,
Buddy Ervin and Greg Dunning 4.each and Terry Sayre
had I. For Symmes Valley
Hilgenberg was high with 13.
Southern will finish the
season in second place with a
SVAC record of 9-3. North
Gallia was the league winner •
with a 11).2 record. Southern's
overall record is 11-5.
Southern will play at home
Tuesday against Glouster and
will host Waterford"Ssturday.
Duane Wolfe Is Southern's
coach.
By Quarters
Southern
12 14 24 39
Symmes V.
11 17 'll 34

Bench signs ..

'
SvAC ·stANPtNGS
ALL GAME$
TEAM
.
W L P .OP ·fo~
other guy, At tlila time , It's Hannan Tr~ce 16 2 12•5 866
hard for me to say who's the Symmn Volley
.
.
best and make out a lineup."
10 6 1211 1)13
CINCINNATI (UPI) Eaatern
106 10.
6 '"
As an eumple, be cited Saufl)ern
w 152
937 . catcher Johnny Bench, . the
second base, where be will go Kyger Criek
• 1• 1067 1-133 National League's most
North Gallia
• 1• 999 1162 valuab'• player
" last year bas
with either Lee Lacy Or Dave Saufhwestern
3 1• 863 1in
"'
'
Lopes,
.
SVAC ONLy
agreed to a 1973 COIII!'act with
"That's pretty much of a-,· TEAM ' · W L P OP the Clnclmati Reds for an
Symmn
\/alley 10 1 893 658 estimated
•••·-·
to11up," AI1t on remarked, '·,..."· • of f1!5 •000•
!lhaklng his ~4.
Hannan Trace 10 2 805 ,a~ . the Cln~innatl Enquirer
The dean iif big league Eastern
' 2 680 }49 reported todaY.
managers • blamed
the :::,~~~G~Uia
: ~ ~:
ctub
declined to
Dodgers'lll!!clq for the club's Kyger Creek
3 ' 685 891 confltm lbe report, but Bench's
Inability to come do- to the Sau!h~~~rnRESOE~v:c;o 86~ father, 'red Bench, was quoted
Reda last season. Hla team led TEAM .
w L p OP as aaylng. contract terms had
the National League with 162 :.rtt~~llla 1g ~ ~~ :
bee11 reached.
errors.
Symmet Valley 7 ~ 496 m
"You can say it was In six
"We definitely have to 1m- Hannan Trace 6 6 &lt;1« «7 figures," be added.
prove on that ._..._ 1 .. hie Eastern
· 5 6 ..._ m . Bench was 1n Los Angeles
....--- • , Kyger Creek
• 8 lf76 ·553 M da
said. ''Of course, you can make Saufhweitern o 12 289 572
on Y and unavailable for
a lot of errOI'Il and still win If
This weok'o Gamn:
comment. The Reds were
runa but we Waterford
Friday- Eastern at Miller; expected to make the allYou score en~·""
...,...
at Southern.
weren't that kind of a club last
S.turdey: Symmes Valley at nouncement soon. - f
year."
Eastern. All Gall Ia Coonty
Bench drew an estimated
About the Dodger pitching teams Idle after Saturday until $90,000 ··•-· after the 1970
Sectional Tournament play
-•
staff which led the league with begins.
season when he also was the
a combined ERA of 2.78,Alston
league's MVP. In 1972 when he
said:
·
&gt; esperienced a slump, the AD"Tbe trade (which brought
Star catcher reportedly took a
the Dodgers starting pitcher
cut to about $85,0011.
POMEROY LANES
Andy Mesaenmlth from the
S.turdoy Bantam
Csllfornls Angela) makes us
February 3, 1973
Ptt
even better. I think our staff is Red Barons
10
Ba~hner 165. Mlck Davenport
as good as any around."
Ball Bombers
8 162.
PIn
Busters
7
Alson welcomed
tbe
High Series- Steve Bachner
5 483,
reduction of size of Dodger ~l~ars
Mlck Davenport ~16.
Banana Splits
~
Team
High Game and Series
Stadium In 1973, a move Cyclones
2
- Ball Busters 830 and 2399.
High
Ind.
Game
David
designed to give Los Angeles
Smith 139, Lena Phalln and
more sock.
Jonl Murray 128.
S.turday Senior
High Series - David Smith
"Moat of our staff are low
February 3, 1973
249,
Kevin
Yeauger
246.
ball pitchers," he offered.
Pts.
Team High Game and Series
Herbtes
13
"Don Sutton Ia the only starter - Red Barons 725 and 1427.
Pin Crushers
13
who gets the ball up and I don't
Gutter Dusters
11
think It will bother him because
Dlng·A· Lings
11
Saturdly Junior
Pin Busters
5
February 3, 1973
he has so much stuff.
Born
Losers
1
Pts.
''Now, even though we don't
High
Ind.
Game
Rich
12
Dreamers
have a big home run hitter, Apaches
12 Batley 201 and Rick Stobart
11 179.
most of our guys can put It out . Impacts
High Series - Rich Batley
10
Ba II Busters
at home. I think we'll compare Rams
6 538, Rick Stobart 496.
Team High Game and Series
with the rest of the teams In Alley Cats
3
High Ind. Game - Steve - Gutter Dusters 811 and 2288.
home run prodllctlon."

8115,000

m·

offlc..

Local BowJmg

discuss issues
MASON - ..Mason citizens,
in teres ted in their community
are invited to attend a meeting
at 7p.m. Wednesday at the fire
station.
Robert Fluharty, a Parkersburg attorney, will be present
to discuss problems pertaining
to the town with its townspeople.
In recent months there have
been differences of opinion between Mason town officials and
residents on garbage collections, a shape up in the police
·department, and limited travel
on one of the town streets.

Tonight's games
Jackson at Galfipolis
Logan at Athens
Wellston at Meigs
South Point at COlli Grove
Rock Hill at Clak Hilt
Fairland al Ironton St. Joe
Symmes Valley at Chesapeake
Barboursville at Pt. Pleasant
Wahama at Rlpley
Glouster at Southern
Reemelln at Starr-Washington

'

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'

.

'

l

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forfnvolitr

with the·bottle

QUICK QUIZ

•

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...,...,_.,....,,............,.~~--;'~

1

National Saf~ty Countil.
Johnny Boyd is fully qualified ~ speak
0

you how to be a better driver•

,
The pro~ram has ~n developed by the
Champion
Spark Plug Company, and has
.

on the important subject' of Highway Safety.
In additio~ to having driven race · cars for
· ' ,a year
years, he, averages· 35,000 .miles
a

received the. Public Servi.ce Award of the

highway driver.

, ·

1r !!!!I :
~

~n

88

Coo.Sponsored by the G&amp;J Auto Parts Co.
iil!iiii· · •. , ,..•, •· ·, .

,.

· · ·. ·, .. . .

•••
•

.

~~west Ohl~: No. 2 wheat

2.331 higher; No. 2 sh. com 1.32,
uncnanged; No. 2 oats .98, u"'
changed; No. 1 soybeans 5.32,
higher.
,
Central Ohio: No. 2 wheat

~ Milo and

'

.. -.

1

~ ' '

•

1.0cuat Streeta. It

h111 at feet of frontage on the
Oblo River.
Aramp over ~eet wide irlll
be constructed to accommodate the boat laun' cblng.
.Included In the project wiD
be a boat launching ramp,
picnic facilities, play areas,
rest rooms, a 11111 ..thlngflahlng area, off«reet lighted
parking areas for 30 vehicles
and trallers, and lighted path-

Ruby A. Burke, 58, Rt. 2,
chalnnan of !hoi 1oih District
Committee, William A. Keslar,
was . directed to appoint a
committee with representation
from e,ach county to study and
recommend to the State
Central Committeeman and
Committeewoman the action
they feel the lOth District
Republican voters prefer in
regard to the screening
proposal.
It was favorably voted. The
District, 11 had represencommittee
was appointed to
tatives there.
and
make
The agenda consisted of a investigate
recommendations
at
a
district
report from Mr. Ralph Triplett
of Beverly , State Central dinner tb be held the middle of
Committeeman and Mrs. the coming summer. Members
Marian Sensll, State Central of this committee are James
Committeewoman from the Shipman, Athens; Clarence
lOth District, each of whom Blosser, Logan; Mrs. Maxine
explained the screening Charlton, Lancaster; A. K.
proposal offered to the State Wilson, Somerset, and Eugene
Committee at a meeting in Stevens, Rt. I, Bidwell.
Aresolution was proposed by
Columbus earlier that same
Glenn Peters of Vinton County,
day .
, After discussion,
the Republican Chairman, and
passed by the committee tha l
Governor Gilligan be advised

Committee to set
district policy
Polley ·of
the · tOth·
Congressional District In the
State Republican Central
Committee's announced
"screening of candidates"
program will be formed in
coming weeks.
This was detennlned at a
meeting of the Republican
Committee of the Ohio lOth
Cangresslonsl District at Burr
Oak Lodge on the evening ol
Feb. 8.
Of the counties comprising
. the Ohio lOth Congressional
'

btre

~ of the IStli arslual

&lt;lllo .uiiOciaUon ~ Eleme11tal')' Schoal Prlnclpall will be
"Jdeia Into AI:Uon."
llpelkln. 1rt 1o Include CBS
lltWIIDIII MUtt Walllice;
OollunbU' Suparldlindent al
·Publle llchoOII ' Jom Ellla, Dr.
JIJIIII Paplllm, pral" lht UCLA F~duate ICbool ~
Artllll' w. Bve,
e director Ill the

;
=
w.

Vlnlllhr••
....IIIF ol . , . nrtts

laatlt•te for Ooveraanltl
em~et~. 11111 OeGrp Dlcaon,

... ., lilt UDiwntll7 al
TaiiC nD • " lducltkill.
f'

ZONAK NAMED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - John
S. Zonak, a Democrat from
suburban Upper Arlington, has
been named to the Board of
Tax Appeals, it was announce~
Monday.
Zonak, 45, a real estate
broker and attorney, succeeds
Edwin F. Sawicki whose tenn
expired.

.--N-

Elactric Cclmpany.
The two and one half acre
tract Ia at the northeast Cm.

PRINC!P ALs MEET
. COLUMBUS (UPI) _ Some
1,110 ,lemen\ary school prlncipaiiii'OIII •cro•lh,e state are
expected to attend a ~ay
meeUJw beginning Tbursdlly at
tile &lt;lllo State Fairground

This informative,. interesting and educational
talk by a man
, who has lived
. racing, can show

. COLUMBUS (UP!) - Av.erage ca!lhgraln prices .(per bu.~
paid to Ianners by grain elevators In the principii! marketing
areas of Ohio after the market
clOse on Monday, until the
market closes Tuesday.
Northeast Ohio : No.2 wheat
2.29,hlgher; No. 2 sh. corn 1.34,
unchanged; No.·z oats .98, unchanged; -No. 1 soybeans .5.30,

0

The racWty wiD be buUt on
the· forme~: , Verla . Myer-11
property 1IGif owried by Oblo

and plopped down. "I want to
go see daddy," he said.
On television, Jeffrey had
just watched daddy- Army
Capt. Mark Allyn Smith of
llawlhome, Calif. - and 141
other AmriCID prlaoners ~
war step alf planesiO,OOO mJiea
away in the Pbillpplnes. Jef.
frey couldn't even remember
the last time he ·saw daddy
more tliao 10 montha ago,
before Smllb we11t !Jack to
Vietnam for his third ·tour Ill
duty; before Loc Nlnh fell and
be was captured by the VIet
Cong.
In Its directness, Je!frey'a
reaction to hll father's release
was as expressive as anything
the adults said or did as their
aona, husbands, brotlin returned to freedom .
By tlila mOI'IIinfl, slightly
l11ll1't! than half the returned
prisoners, Uned up at Clark Air
Base In the PhWpplnes, had'
e~Ued home. Relatlvea ol the
rest stayed by their phones.
Air Force Capt. 'lbomu E.
CoiUn8 Ill ~ Clinton, Mill.,
who loll 36 pounds Wring
~even years of captivity, uprellled the basic yearnings ol
111011 POWa when be told hll
redhaired wife Donnie, "! got
· up this morning wanUng six

IndianQpolis "600" will tell why ...

'".,
w'

'

- .· CHESHIRE"- Ohio Electric Company, owner of
the General James.M. Gavin Power Plant here will
· "'!fld a pilb~ic ,boat la~ching facility in.this village
Q ,PBJ1Qf tta KilO!' ne~ghbor policy.
.
., Upon.completi~, 1t WUI be deeded to the village
aild wjll become village property. This was anllOUllced Monday night by J~hn Reece; public affail'a
coordinator at the Gavin Plant.
.
·
· Reece was_speaking during a public meeting
held in the Bradbury building.

hall)burger,

llld himself over to a chair, but me," she said.

veteran of the

'•

•

'lbree-yaar-old Jeffrey Smith pizza, a milk !!hake, ice cream
picked up his rumpled sleeping and beer."
"You don't need any of that
..g from the Door, dragged It

J' 0 H N NY .B 0 Y D 1

Monday grain report

t

CHE;SHIRE, OHIO

•m Chesliire
..

By Ulited Preu llderutl-.1 things - you,

error meWJs you must pay additional tax,
you pay only the tax.• We pay any interest
or penalty.

Athens, 0.

•

for ex-prisoners

great while we make a mistake. But if our

592-2851

&gt;

1•

Re&amp;IK.n 2. We're human, and once in a

51 Court St. ·

I

aOA T LAUNCH &amp;
PARK FACILITIES

Coolville, was charged with
failure to yield right of way
following a traffic accident at
6:45a.m. Monday on SR 7at its
juncUon with SR 68Jln Tuppers
Plains.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said. Mrs.
Burke's car collided with an
auto driven by.Danny R. Tillis,
26, Rutland.
The impact knocked Tillis'

Generally, prisoners and
relatives were delighted. But
there was some apprehension.
Mrs . Shirley Johnson .of
Detroit was 16 and seven
montha pregnant when her
husband Bobby was shot down

Jtie roadt€iea&lt;lln8 to Burr,Oilk

&gt;ul w.

.. .,

I

.:~

Reg. 32' nOW

8~

. SMIRT
FINISHING
.
SAME DAY

SERVICE
In At 9- 0ut At 5
Use 041r Free Parking Lot

Robinson's Cleaners
~16

.

E. 2od, Pomeroy

N " ' ..!

'

J

.

,, .

I

Reg. '1.29

10~

now
COVERED
STORAGE DISH

75~

LISTERINE
ANTISEPTIC

10~

Limit 2

32-oz .

Limit 2

GIGANTIC
VALUE I

~~~.

Limit 2

LYSOL
SPRAY
DISINFECTANT

BAYER

Aspirin for
children

14-oz .

90~·

On
Thursday Feb . 15, 1973

From
9 A.M. to 12 Noon

M,r. . Garshaw will be
glad to give you a free
hearing lest wl!h the
latest Bellone ·Eiec·
Ironic equipment.

West Central Ohio : No. .2
wheat 2.36, higher; No. 2 sh.
corn 1.36, unchiulied; No. 2
oall! UK, IIIICNnged; No. I
soybeans 5.36, higher, .
Southwest Ohio: No.2 wheat
2.311 higher; No.2 !lh. corn 1.35,
uncnanged; No. 2 oats 1.05, unchanged; No. I soybeans 5.32,
higher.
•
Ear com gen~ally 2 cents
_per bu!lhel le115. · ·

~

rt-~

.....

Mr. Bruce Garshaw
Will Be At
Meigs Inn
Pomeroy, Ohio

Batteries and supplies
for all,makes for sale.

... .· .

15-oz.

BELlONE
.
HEARl NG AID
. SERVICE CENTER .

repair and service
hearing aid$·

·\

VASELINE
INTENSIVE
CARE
LOTION

..

To

~

60 - 75 · 100 Watt

r----~---·

now

hidler

Mollohan, 39, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
flipped stone into the windshield of an auto driven by
Herbert A. Rollins, 30, Rt. !,
Gallipolis.
Lester D. Bills, 30, St. Macys,
W. Va ., was charged with
failure to stop within the
assured clear distance
following a traffic accident on
Rt. 7 at the junction to Rt. 55•.
The patrol said Bills' auto
struck the rear end of a car
driven by Robert S. Burdette,
21, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, causing
moderate damage to both cars.

Bl&amp;~ -

l,LIQJtT

~

Lodge indicated that he
evidently had plans once again
to close the State Parks.
After a presentation by Jim
Buchanan of the Ohio
·Republican Finance Commlttee, the meeting was addressed by James Marsh,
Elections Officer of the
Secretary of States office, who
discussed possible nsw State
Legislation in regard to voting
· and the status of certain legal
actions that have not been
finalized In regard to voting
rights In certain parts of the
state.

six years ago. "I can't aay that .
I love him," she said. "We've
been separated for a long time
and I was very young when we
got married. It's going to be
difficult. I jusl don't know If I
want to get back with him."
Navy capt. Jeremiah Denton
of VIrginia Beach, Va., was the
very first POW to step off the
lmge holpltal plane. When he
returns to his wife and sewn
children, "ll's going to be a
tense moment," said his son
Jim,
21. "I'm going to see
a min who l haven't seen In
eight years and · he's my
father:"
Air Force Maj. Robert Peel
Of Big Sandy, Tenn., lost some
hair. said . his mother. Mrs.
Fred Peel. "I told him I'd buy
him a ·toupee," !!he aald. Air
Force Lt. Col. Richard Keirn ol .
Tampa, Fla., said he now doa
100 pu!lhupa, 100 leg lifts, 100
sltupa and rull8 In place 15
minutes each day.
Navy Lt. Cmdr. Anthony
Moore of Scottsdale, Ariz., told
his parents many prisoners
"became calfee addicts." Air
Force Lt. Col. Robert B.
Purcell of Loullvllle, Ky., said.
he started 110oking clgarettel
"to keep frohl loelng my
mind." He wanted lo be sure
.Ilia three yollll8 80118 had not
started wearing long hair. U
!bey had, be said, he would.not
take them to Dllneylatld.

automobile into a parked car
owned by Chester Wigal of
Middleport. There was
moderate damage to all 'three
vehicles. Both drivers suffered
lacerations but were not
treated.
Another Meigs County
mishap occurred at •:i5 p.m.
on Rt. 124, one and five tenths
miles easf of Rt. 32$ where a
truck driven by Richard L.

2.36=higber; No: 2!lh. corn !·38,.
un
ed ; No. 2oats 1.08; unchang ; No. I aoybeana 5.41,

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH FEBRUARY 21, 1973

,; i--· .. :litthe~~maln~niih\i.on ..· \ ~

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax h~lp.

992-3795 · Pomerriy
Open 9 n1 5 Mon. Thru Sal
· No Appointment Necessary

'

Nmeheld

Raymond Walburn, Mary
Edna Walburn to Raymond
Walburn , Mary Edna Walburn,
Lot, Middleport.
Marcella Eblin, dec. to Ben
Eblin, Imogene Conkle,
Charles .E. Eblin, Bonnie Lou
Krautter, Benle Reese Eblin,
Homer W. Eblin, Aff. for
trans., Salisbury.
Maynard Bahr, Shirley Bahr
to Larry H. Farley, Louise
Farley, 3.80 Acres, Chester.
Lester McKenzie, Frances
McKenzie, Ernest Wingett,
Maxine Wingett to Trustees
Sutton Township, Ease .,
Sutton.
Charles Miles, Exec., Leroy
Miles, Exec., Mary Wright,
dec. to George H. Warner,
Grace M. Warner, 115 Acres,
Bedford.
Anna Welch to Don and
Paula Van Cooney, '» Acre,
Rutland.
Peat·) Taylor deed., Sybil
Eberstiach, Comm. to Wilford
Taylor, Lot 3, Behan's Add. to
Sheffield, Middleport.
Wilford Taylor to Maxine
Matthews, Lot 3, Behan •s Add.
to Sheffield, MidQieport.

304 L Main

·~ ~

economic arrangements for
you.
Arrangements are the keys ·
to .lle"lp provided by the agent.
Secondly, cost is another factor
since In 99 pet. of cases the
Travel Agent service costs one
nothing.
Tbe main job of a Travel
Agent, of course, is to handle
travel arrangements. They can
be ~onfuslng for an amateur,
especially If a .detailed
itinerary Is Involved. By
arrangements are meant
everything from transportation to hotel facilities,
sightseeing, entertalnme land
even babysitters If n
Also, Travel Agents can lp
Fish, game hearing with .visas, cust s
regulations, currency e
and many more Items.
scheduled April 8 change
PT. PLEASANT - InWhen a reputable Travel
toxication charges produced
ATHENS- The annual Fish Age11,t sels up a trip, and the arrest of nine persons over
and Game Heartng for Wlldllfe confirms it all ~long the way, the weekend.
District Four will be held
State pollee arrested three
Sunday, April 8, beglnnlhg at 1
persons on DWI charges,
p.m. in the meeting room of the
Jordon A. Comer, 52,
Ohio Department of Natural MURCER OK
Gallipolis,
0.;
Robert
Resources Building at 360 East
NEW YORK (UPI) - Out- Berkhead, Dayton, 0., and
State St., Athena. Individuals fielder Bobby Murcer is eJ:- Howard Harper, 45, Gallipolis
Interested In changes In fishing pected to be ready for the Ferry, and four othel'!l for ·
and hunting regulations for scheduled . spring camp Intoxication, ·William Art
1973 and 1974 are urged to opening of the New York . Snyder, 31, Arbuckle; James
attend.
Yankees Feb. 28 despite an R. Hop Ute , 65, Hen derson;
annOWICement by the club Vernon W. Stone, Leon, and
.
Monday that he broke hll right Orvin Dunlap, 48, 1108 Viand
Q-How did the frank· hand In Puerto Rico last week. Street.
furter get the name hot dog? The Injury occurred, accordA!~year old Gallipolis youth
A-A sports cartoonist, log to the Yankees, when was cited by Point Pleasant
Thomas (Tad) Dorgan, gave Murcer tripped over some ' city police on a OWl charge
it that name in 1905 because In•
...,gage In ,~·.. room and feU and driving without an
of its dachshund shape.
be avuY· Dr• Sldney Gaynor, operator's license. Also,
cf-How many sides does · the club Phys!clan • sald I't was Harley Henry, 'l/, Kanauga,
a. honeycomb have?
u, 1 br k nd tha t was arrested by the Sheriff's
A-six. Honeycombs are a sma c ean ea 8
00 setting was necessary.
called cells.
Department for Intoxication.

Have you heard someone
say, "In the past two decades
of travei.I have taken only one
or two trips without the services of a travel agent." Why
use a travel agent, you might
ask?
·
The American Society of
Travel Agents has. put the
ans.wer in . a nulihell: The
prime purpose of using services of a Travel Agent falls
Into "traveling the way YOU
like it." You just tell the
professional Travel Agent
what, where and when .YOU
wantto,goand he can make the
most proficient as well as

Irroperty

. THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

•

one can travel wlth:ulurlnce
that hll enjOylllel!~ ,~t ·
and convenience hd;h.ld prime
corlslderation and ~~ be Ia
· g~ttlng his mon~f.·• ~orth
w1thout any unheceaary
headaches.
,
That Is ·why ~ewapa_per
Tours Ltd. utiUzesthe llei'VIces
of a vbteran. profeplorial
Travel Agent In organl#nc aM
operating the packaf!e lripa
sponsored.

Meigs

.IJ:IJIOO.BLOCM

Boat ·launch

Travel agents,~portan~ to
enjoyment and .convenie:d.ce

Transfers

Attorney will

Ironton at Waverly

last season in compiling an ar..
70 record and finishing 10
games behind the Cincinnati
Reds was, observers felt,
Alston's Inability to COD!e up
with a ilet lineup.
The skipper said he may
have trouble making up his
mind again this year.
''The unfortunate thing," he
said, "is we have several
positions on this club where one
guy .is so close in ability as the

SVAC standing$-

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limit 2

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Ill ITEMff
MIXING
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MEASURING
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2 quart

with cover
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If hearing is your

problem Beltone is
the answer

BELTONE
Hearing Aid .Center
601 Sixth ~venue

Huntington, W.Va.
Phone: 525-7221

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ONE DQZEN SPRING FLOWERS
ONE HEART.SH~PED BOX OF

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DUDLEY'S
FLORIST
.
59 N. Second St.
Middleport, o.

RUSSELL .
STOVER
CANDY·

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DIJTTON'S
.Prescriptions Are Our Main
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MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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•
S-TbeDaii)'Sentlllei,Middleport-Pametoy, O., Feb. 13,1173

4- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Puneroy, 0., Feb. 13, 1973

Alston signs 20th contract
. LOSAI'/GELES(UPI) -In a
profession where the awrage
tenure is 2
years, Wa~tet
Alston Is awaiting No.
Alston has signed his 20th 011e
-year contract as manager of
the Los Angeles Dodgers since
replacing Charlie Dressen at a
New York news conference
Nov. 24, 1953.
"! feel real good," the 61year-old !)odger ~kipper said
Monday. "In fact, I've never
felt better in my life. I've got
just as much vigor as I've ever

*

·:ll:

had."

The skeeHI!ooting squire of
Oarrtown, Ohio, appeared with
hll four coaches-Jim GUllam,
Red Adams, Tommy Lasorda
and Monty Basgall-at a
Dodger Stadh_IIII luncheon for
the news media.
- He did, indeed, look fit and
trim.
Only two men-Connie Mack
(50 yesrs with the Philadelphia
A's) and John McGraw (31
, with the New York Giants)have managed for a longer
period of time In the majors
, than Alston.
The man who has been
nicknamed "The Quiet Man"ls
opUmlstic about the future of
, the club that he has led to four
: world champlonshlpa - 1955,
; 1959, 1963 and 1965--but which
: hasn't won a National League
. pennant since 1966 and finished
: a disappointing third In the
league's Western Division last
season.
"We've been talking," Alson
said, "about our good young
· ball players the past couple of
years but now these young
people look ready to show what
we've been talking about.
I "Maybe the problem was we
brought them up too fast."
One of the Dodger
youngsters he referred to was
23-year-old Bill Buckner, the
leading candidate to replace
. retired Wes Parker at first
base. Buckner hit .319 In 1972.
"This guy may lead the
league In hitting one of these
years," Alston noted.
Part of the Dodger problem
1

,

*

Southem
rallies to
win 39-34
RACINE - Southern's
reserves, trailing by 7 points In
the last two minutes of play,
came from behind to defeat
Symmes Valley Saturday night
39 to 34. Southern shot 34 pet.
from the field and made 15 out
of 27 foul shots.
For Southern, Danny Brown
and Tim Hill led in doubie
figures with 13 and 10 points
respectively. Other scorers
were Mitch Nease with 1,
Buddy Ervin and Greg Dunning 4.each and Terry Sayre
had I. For Symmes Valley
Hilgenberg was high with 13.
Southern will finish the
season in second place with a
SVAC record of 9-3. North
Gallia was the league winner •
with a 11).2 record. Southern's
overall record is 11-5.
Southern will play at home
Tuesday against Glouster and
will host Waterford"Ssturday.
Duane Wolfe Is Southern's
coach.
By Quarters
Southern
12 14 24 39
Symmes V.
11 17 'll 34

Bench signs ..

'
SvAC ·stANPtNGS
ALL GAME$
TEAM
.
W L P .OP ·fo~
other guy, At tlila time , It's Hannan Tr~ce 16 2 12•5 866
hard for me to say who's the Symmn Volley
.
.
best and make out a lineup."
10 6 1211 1)13
CINCINNATI (UPI) Eaatern
106 10.
6 '"
As an eumple, be cited Saufl)ern
w 152
937 . catcher Johnny Bench, . the
second base, where be will go Kyger Criek
• 1• 1067 1-133 National League's most
North Gallia
• 1• 999 1162 valuab'• player
" last year bas
with either Lee Lacy Or Dave Saufhwestern
3 1• 863 1in
"'
'
Lopes,
.
SVAC ONLy
agreed to a 1973 COIII!'act with
"That's pretty much of a-,· TEAM ' · W L P OP the Clnclmati Reds for an
Symmn
\/alley 10 1 893 658 estimated
•••·-·
to11up," AI1t on remarked, '·,..."· • of f1!5 •000•
!lhaklng his ~4.
Hannan Trace 10 2 805 ,a~ . the Cln~innatl Enquirer
The dean iif big league Eastern
' 2 680 }49 reported todaY.
managers • blamed
the :::,~~~G~Uia
: ~ ~:
ctub
declined to
Dodgers'lll!!clq for the club's Kyger Creek
3 ' 685 891 confltm lbe report, but Bench's
Inability to come do- to the Sau!h~~~rnRESOE~v:c;o 86~ father, 'red Bench, was quoted
Reda last season. Hla team led TEAM .
w L p OP as aaylng. contract terms had
the National League with 162 :.rtt~~llla 1g ~ ~~ :
bee11 reached.
errors.
Symmet Valley 7 ~ 496 m
"You can say it was In six
"We definitely have to 1m- Hannan Trace 6 6 &lt;1« «7 figures," be added.
prove on that ._..._ 1 .. hie Eastern
· 5 6 ..._ m . Bench was 1n Los Angeles
....--- • , Kyger Creek
• 8 lf76 ·553 M da
said. ''Of course, you can make Saufhweitern o 12 289 572
on Y and unavailable for
a lot of errOI'Il and still win If
This weok'o Gamn:
comment. The Reds were
runa but we Waterford
Friday- Eastern at Miller; expected to make the allYou score en~·""
...,...
at Southern.
weren't that kind of a club last
S.turdey: Symmes Valley at nouncement soon. - f
year."
Eastern. All Gall Ia Coonty
Bench drew an estimated
About the Dodger pitching teams Idle after Saturday until $90,000 ··•-· after the 1970
Sectional Tournament play
-•
staff which led the league with begins.
season when he also was the
a combined ERA of 2.78,Alston
league's MVP. In 1972 when he
said:
·
&gt; esperienced a slump, the AD"Tbe trade (which brought
Star catcher reportedly took a
the Dodgers starting pitcher
cut to about $85,0011.
POMEROY LANES
Andy Mesaenmlth from the
S.turdoy Bantam
Csllfornls Angela) makes us
February 3, 1973
Ptt
even better. I think our staff is Red Barons
10
Ba~hner 165. Mlck Davenport
as good as any around."
Ball Bombers
8 162.
PIn
Busters
7
Alson welcomed
tbe
High Series- Steve Bachner
5 483,
reduction of size of Dodger ~l~ars
Mlck Davenport ~16.
Banana Splits
~
Team
High Game and Series
Stadium In 1973, a move Cyclones
2
- Ball Busters 830 and 2399.
High
Ind.
Game
David
designed to give Los Angeles
Smith 139, Lena Phalln and
more sock.
Jonl Murray 128.
S.turday Senior
High Series - David Smith
"Moat of our staff are low
February 3, 1973
249,
Kevin
Yeauger
246.
ball pitchers," he offered.
Pts.
Team High Game and Series
Herbtes
13
"Don Sutton Ia the only starter - Red Barons 725 and 1427.
Pin Crushers
13
who gets the ball up and I don't
Gutter Dusters
11
think It will bother him because
Dlng·A· Lings
11
Saturdly Junior
Pin Busters
5
February 3, 1973
he has so much stuff.
Born
Losers
1
Pts.
''Now, even though we don't
High
Ind.
Game
Rich
12
Dreamers
have a big home run hitter, Apaches
12 Batley 201 and Rick Stobart
11 179.
most of our guys can put It out . Impacts
High Series - Rich Batley
10
Ba II Busters
at home. I think we'll compare Rams
6 538, Rick Stobart 496.
Team High Game and Series
with the rest of the teams In Alley Cats
3
High Ind. Game - Steve - Gutter Dusters 811 and 2288.
home run prodllctlon."

8115,000

m·

offlc..

Local BowJmg

discuss issues
MASON - ..Mason citizens,
in teres ted in their community
are invited to attend a meeting
at 7p.m. Wednesday at the fire
station.
Robert Fluharty, a Parkersburg attorney, will be present
to discuss problems pertaining
to the town with its townspeople.
In recent months there have
been differences of opinion between Mason town officials and
residents on garbage collections, a shape up in the police
·department, and limited travel
on one of the town streets.

Tonight's games
Jackson at Galfipolis
Logan at Athens
Wellston at Meigs
South Point at COlli Grove
Rock Hill at Clak Hilt
Fairland al Ironton St. Joe
Symmes Valley at Chesapeake
Barboursville at Pt. Pleasant
Wahama at Rlpley
Glouster at Southern
Reemelln at Starr-Washington

'

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forfnvolitr

with the·bottle

QUICK QUIZ

•

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...,...,_.,....,,............,.~~--;'~

1

National Saf~ty Countil.
Johnny Boyd is fully qualified ~ speak
0

you how to be a better driver•

,
The pro~ram has ~n developed by the
Champion
Spark Plug Company, and has
.

on the important subject' of Highway Safety.
In additio~ to having driven race · cars for
· ' ,a year
years, he, averages· 35,000 .miles
a

received the. Public Servi.ce Award of the

highway driver.

, ·

1r !!!!I :
~

~n

88

Coo.Sponsored by the G&amp;J Auto Parts Co.
iil!iiii· · •. , ,..•, •· ·, .

,.

· · ·. ·, .. . .

•••
•

.

~~west Ohl~: No. 2 wheat

2.331 higher; No. 2 sh. com 1.32,
uncnanged; No. 2 oats .98, u"'
changed; No. 1 soybeans 5.32,
higher.
,
Central Ohio: No. 2 wheat

~ Milo and

'

.. -.

1

~ ' '

•

1.0cuat Streeta. It

h111 at feet of frontage on the
Oblo River.
Aramp over ~eet wide irlll
be constructed to accommodate the boat laun' cblng.
.Included In the project wiD
be a boat launching ramp,
picnic facilities, play areas,
rest rooms, a 11111 ..thlngflahlng area, off«reet lighted
parking areas for 30 vehicles
and trallers, and lighted path-

Ruby A. Burke, 58, Rt. 2,
chalnnan of !hoi 1oih District
Committee, William A. Keslar,
was . directed to appoint a
committee with representation
from e,ach county to study and
recommend to the State
Central Committeeman and
Committeewoman the action
they feel the lOth District
Republican voters prefer in
regard to the screening
proposal.
It was favorably voted. The
District, 11 had represencommittee
was appointed to
tatives there.
and
make
The agenda consisted of a investigate
recommendations
at
a
district
report from Mr. Ralph Triplett
of Beverly , State Central dinner tb be held the middle of
Committeeman and Mrs. the coming summer. Members
Marian Sensll, State Central of this committee are James
Committeewoman from the Shipman, Athens; Clarence
lOth District, each of whom Blosser, Logan; Mrs. Maxine
explained the screening Charlton, Lancaster; A. K.
proposal offered to the State Wilson, Somerset, and Eugene
Committee at a meeting in Stevens, Rt. I, Bidwell.
Aresolution was proposed by
Columbus earlier that same
Glenn Peters of Vinton County,
day .
, After discussion,
the Republican Chairman, and
passed by the committee tha l
Governor Gilligan be advised

Committee to set
district policy
Polley ·of
the · tOth·
Congressional District In the
State Republican Central
Committee's announced
"screening of candidates"
program will be formed in
coming weeks.
This was detennlned at a
meeting of the Republican
Committee of the Ohio lOth
Cangresslonsl District at Burr
Oak Lodge on the evening ol
Feb. 8.
Of the counties comprising
. the Ohio lOth Congressional
'

btre

~ of the IStli arslual

&lt;lllo .uiiOciaUon ~ Eleme11tal')' Schoal Prlnclpall will be
"Jdeia Into AI:Uon."
llpelkln. 1rt 1o Include CBS
lltWIIDIII MUtt Walllice;
OollunbU' Suparldlindent al
·Publle llchoOII ' Jom Ellla, Dr.
JIJIIII Paplllm, pral" lht UCLA F~duate ICbool ~
Artllll' w. Bve,
e director Ill the

;
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w.

Vlnlllhr••
....IIIF ol . , . nrtts

laatlt•te for Ooveraanltl
em~et~. 11111 OeGrp Dlcaon,

... ., lilt UDiwntll7 al
TaiiC nD • " lducltkill.
f'

ZONAK NAMED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - John
S. Zonak, a Democrat from
suburban Upper Arlington, has
been named to the Board of
Tax Appeals, it was announce~
Monday.
Zonak, 45, a real estate
broker and attorney, succeeds
Edwin F. Sawicki whose tenn
expired.

.--N-

Elactric Cclmpany.
The two and one half acre
tract Ia at the northeast Cm.

PRINC!P ALs MEET
. COLUMBUS (UPI) _ Some
1,110 ,lemen\ary school prlncipaiiii'OIII •cro•lh,e state are
expected to attend a ~ay
meeUJw beginning Tbursdlly at
tile &lt;lllo State Fairground

This informative,. interesting and educational
talk by a man
, who has lived
. racing, can show

. COLUMBUS (UP!) - Av.erage ca!lhgraln prices .(per bu.~
paid to Ianners by grain elevators In the principii! marketing
areas of Ohio after the market
clOse on Monday, until the
market closes Tuesday.
Northeast Ohio : No.2 wheat
2.29,hlgher; No. 2 sh. corn 1.34,
unchanged; No.·z oats .98, unchanged; -No. 1 soybeans .5.30,

0

The racWty wiD be buUt on
the· forme~: , Verla . Myer-11
property 1IGif owried by Oblo

and plopped down. "I want to
go see daddy," he said.
On television, Jeffrey had
just watched daddy- Army
Capt. Mark Allyn Smith of
llawlhome, Calif. - and 141
other AmriCID prlaoners ~
war step alf planesiO,OOO mJiea
away in the Pbillpplnes. Jef.
frey couldn't even remember
the last time he ·saw daddy
more tliao 10 montha ago,
before Smllb we11t !Jack to
Vietnam for his third ·tour Ill
duty; before Loc Nlnh fell and
be was captured by the VIet
Cong.
In Its directness, Je!frey'a
reaction to hll father's release
was as expressive as anything
the adults said or did as their
aona, husbands, brotlin returned to freedom .
By tlila mOI'IIinfl, slightly
l11ll1't! than half the returned
prisoners, Uned up at Clark Air
Base In the PhWpplnes, had'
e~Ued home. Relatlvea ol the
rest stayed by their phones.
Air Force Capt. 'lbomu E.
CoiUn8 Ill ~ Clinton, Mill.,
who loll 36 pounds Wring
~even years of captivity, uprellled the basic yearnings ol
111011 POWa when be told hll
redhaired wife Donnie, "! got
· up this morning wanUng six

IndianQpolis "600" will tell why ...

'".,
w'

'

- .· CHESHIRE"- Ohio Electric Company, owner of
the General James.M. Gavin Power Plant here will
· "'!fld a pilb~ic ,boat la~ching facility in.this village
Q ,PBJ1Qf tta KilO!' ne~ghbor policy.
.
., Upon.completi~, 1t WUI be deeded to the village
aild wjll become village property. This was anllOUllced Monday night by J~hn Reece; public affail'a
coordinator at the Gavin Plant.
.
·
· Reece was_speaking during a public meeting
held in the Bradbury building.

hall)burger,

llld himself over to a chair, but me," she said.

veteran of the

'•

•

'lbree-yaar-old Jeffrey Smith pizza, a milk !!hake, ice cream
picked up his rumpled sleeping and beer."
"You don't need any of that
..g from the Door, dragged It

J' 0 H N NY .B 0 Y D 1

Monday grain report

t

CHE;SHIRE, OHIO

•m Chesliire
..

By Ulited Preu llderutl-.1 things - you,

error meWJs you must pay additional tax,
you pay only the tax.• We pay any interest
or penalty.

Athens, 0.

•

for ex-prisoners

great while we make a mistake. But if our

592-2851

&gt;

1•

Re&amp;IK.n 2. We're human, and once in a

51 Court St. ·

I

aOA T LAUNCH &amp;
PARK FACILITIES

Coolville, was charged with
failure to yield right of way
following a traffic accident at
6:45a.m. Monday on SR 7at its
juncUon with SR 68Jln Tuppers
Plains.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said. Mrs.
Burke's car collided with an
auto driven by.Danny R. Tillis,
26, Rutland.
The impact knocked Tillis'

Generally, prisoners and
relatives were delighted. But
there was some apprehension.
Mrs . Shirley Johnson .of
Detroit was 16 and seven
montha pregnant when her
husband Bobby was shot down

Jtie roadt€iea&lt;lln8 to Burr,Oilk

&gt;ul w.

.. .,

I

.:~

Reg. 32' nOW

8~

. SMIRT
FINISHING
.
SAME DAY

SERVICE
In At 9- 0ut At 5
Use 041r Free Parking Lot

Robinson's Cleaners
~16

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E. 2od, Pomeroy

N " ' ..!

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Reg. '1.29

10~

now
COVERED
STORAGE DISH

75~

LISTERINE
ANTISEPTIC

10~

Limit 2

32-oz .

Limit 2

GIGANTIC
VALUE I

~~~.

Limit 2

LYSOL
SPRAY
DISINFECTANT

BAYER

Aspirin for
children

14-oz .

90~·

On
Thursday Feb . 15, 1973

From
9 A.M. to 12 Noon

M,r. . Garshaw will be
glad to give you a free
hearing lest wl!h the
latest Bellone ·Eiec·
Ironic equipment.

West Central Ohio : No. .2
wheat 2.36, higher; No. 2 sh.
corn 1.36, unchiulied; No. 2
oall! UK, IIIICNnged; No. I
soybeans 5.36, higher, .
Southwest Ohio: No.2 wheat
2.311 higher; No.2 !lh. corn 1.35,
uncnanged; No. 2 oats 1.05, unchanged; No. I soybeans 5.32,
higher.
•
Ear com gen~ally 2 cents
_per bu!lhel le115. · ·

~

rt-~

.....

Mr. Bruce Garshaw
Will Be At
Meigs Inn
Pomeroy, Ohio

Batteries and supplies
for all,makes for sale.

... .· .

15-oz.

BELlONE
.
HEARl NG AID
. SERVICE CENTER .

repair and service
hearing aid$·

·\

VASELINE
INTENSIVE
CARE
LOTION

..

To

~

60 - 75 · 100 Watt

r----~---·

now

hidler

Mollohan, 39, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
flipped stone into the windshield of an auto driven by
Herbert A. Rollins, 30, Rt. !,
Gallipolis.
Lester D. Bills, 30, St. Macys,
W. Va ., was charged with
failure to stop within the
assured clear distance
following a traffic accident on
Rt. 7 at the junction to Rt. 55•.
The patrol said Bills' auto
struck the rear end of a car
driven by Robert S. Burdette,
21, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, causing
moderate damage to both cars.

Bl&amp;~ -

l,LIQJtT

~

Lodge indicated that he
evidently had plans once again
to close the State Parks.
After a presentation by Jim
Buchanan of the Ohio
·Republican Finance Commlttee, the meeting was addressed by James Marsh,
Elections Officer of the
Secretary of States office, who
discussed possible nsw State
Legislation in regard to voting
· and the status of certain legal
actions that have not been
finalized In regard to voting
rights In certain parts of the
state.

six years ago. "I can't aay that .
I love him," she said. "We've
been separated for a long time
and I was very young when we
got married. It's going to be
difficult. I jusl don't know If I
want to get back with him."
Navy capt. Jeremiah Denton
of VIrginia Beach, Va., was the
very first POW to step off the
lmge holpltal plane. When he
returns to his wife and sewn
children, "ll's going to be a
tense moment," said his son
Jim,
21. "I'm going to see
a min who l haven't seen In
eight years and · he's my
father:"
Air Force Maj. Robert Peel
Of Big Sandy, Tenn., lost some
hair. said . his mother. Mrs.
Fred Peel. "I told him I'd buy
him a ·toupee," !!he aald. Air
Force Lt. Col. Richard Keirn ol .
Tampa, Fla., said he now doa
100 pu!lhupa, 100 leg lifts, 100
sltupa and rull8 In place 15
minutes each day.
Navy Lt. Cmdr. Anthony
Moore of Scottsdale, Ariz., told
his parents many prisoners
"became calfee addicts." Air
Force Lt. Col. Robert B.
Purcell of Loullvllle, Ky., said.
he started 110oking clgarettel
"to keep frohl loelng my
mind." He wanted lo be sure
.Ilia three yollll8 80118 had not
started wearing long hair. U
!bey had, be said, he would.not
take them to Dllneylatld.

automobile into a parked car
owned by Chester Wigal of
Middleport. There was
moderate damage to all 'three
vehicles. Both drivers suffered
lacerations but were not
treated.
Another Meigs County
mishap occurred at •:i5 p.m.
on Rt. 124, one and five tenths
miles easf of Rt. 32$ where a
truck driven by Richard L.

2.36=higber; No: 2!lh. corn !·38,.
un
ed ; No. 2oats 1.08; unchang ; No. I aoybeana 5.41,

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH FEBRUARY 21, 1973

,; i--· .. :litthe~~maln~niih\i.on ..· \ ~

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax h~lp.

992-3795 · Pomerriy
Open 9 n1 5 Mon. Thru Sal
· No Appointment Necessary

'

Nmeheld

Raymond Walburn, Mary
Edna Walburn to Raymond
Walburn , Mary Edna Walburn,
Lot, Middleport.
Marcella Eblin, dec. to Ben
Eblin, Imogene Conkle,
Charles .E. Eblin, Bonnie Lou
Krautter, Benle Reese Eblin,
Homer W. Eblin, Aff. for
trans., Salisbury.
Maynard Bahr, Shirley Bahr
to Larry H. Farley, Louise
Farley, 3.80 Acres, Chester.
Lester McKenzie, Frances
McKenzie, Ernest Wingett,
Maxine Wingett to Trustees
Sutton Township, Ease .,
Sutton.
Charles Miles, Exec., Leroy
Miles, Exec., Mary Wright,
dec. to George H. Warner,
Grace M. Warner, 115 Acres,
Bedford.
Anna Welch to Don and
Paula Van Cooney, '» Acre,
Rutland.
Peat·) Taylor deed., Sybil
Eberstiach, Comm. to Wilford
Taylor, Lot 3, Behan's Add. to
Sheffield, Middleport.
Wilford Taylor to Maxine
Matthews, Lot 3, Behan •s Add.
to Sheffield, MidQieport.

304 L Main

·~ ~

economic arrangements for
you.
Arrangements are the keys ·
to .lle"lp provided by the agent.
Secondly, cost is another factor
since In 99 pet. of cases the
Travel Agent service costs one
nothing.
Tbe main job of a Travel
Agent, of course, is to handle
travel arrangements. They can
be ~onfuslng for an amateur,
especially If a .detailed
itinerary Is Involved. By
arrangements are meant
everything from transportation to hotel facilities,
sightseeing, entertalnme land
even babysitters If n
Also, Travel Agents can lp
Fish, game hearing with .visas, cust s
regulations, currency e
and many more Items.
scheduled April 8 change
PT. PLEASANT - InWhen a reputable Travel
toxication charges produced
ATHENS- The annual Fish Age11,t sels up a trip, and the arrest of nine persons over
and Game Heartng for Wlldllfe confirms it all ~long the way, the weekend.
District Four will be held
State pollee arrested three
Sunday, April 8, beglnnlhg at 1
persons on DWI charges,
p.m. in the meeting room of the
Jordon A. Comer, 52,
Ohio Department of Natural MURCER OK
Gallipolis,
0.;
Robert
Resources Building at 360 East
NEW YORK (UPI) - Out- Berkhead, Dayton, 0., and
State St., Athena. Individuals fielder Bobby Murcer is eJ:- Howard Harper, 45, Gallipolis
Interested In changes In fishing pected to be ready for the Ferry, and four othel'!l for ·
and hunting regulations for scheduled . spring camp Intoxication, ·William Art
1973 and 1974 are urged to opening of the New York . Snyder, 31, Arbuckle; James
attend.
Yankees Feb. 28 despite an R. Hop Ute , 65, Hen derson;
annOWICement by the club Vernon W. Stone, Leon, and
.
Monday that he broke hll right Orvin Dunlap, 48, 1108 Viand
Q-How did the frank· hand In Puerto Rico last week. Street.
furter get the name hot dog? The Injury occurred, accordA!~year old Gallipolis youth
A-A sports cartoonist, log to the Yankees, when was cited by Point Pleasant
Thomas (Tad) Dorgan, gave Murcer tripped over some ' city police on a OWl charge
it that name in 1905 because In•
...,gage In ,~·.. room and feU and driving without an
of its dachshund shape.
be avuY· Dr• Sldney Gaynor, operator's license. Also,
cf-How many sides does · the club Phys!clan • sald I't was Harley Henry, 'l/, Kanauga,
a. honeycomb have?
u, 1 br k nd tha t was arrested by the Sheriff's
A-six. Honeycombs are a sma c ean ea 8
00 setting was necessary.
called cells.
Department for Intoxication.

Have you heard someone
say, "In the past two decades
of travei.I have taken only one
or two trips without the services of a travel agent." Why
use a travel agent, you might
ask?
·
The American Society of
Travel Agents has. put the
ans.wer in . a nulihell: The
prime purpose of using services of a Travel Agent falls
Into "traveling the way YOU
like it." You just tell the
professional Travel Agent
what, where and when .YOU
wantto,goand he can make the
most proficient as well as

Irroperty

. THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

•

one can travel wlth:ulurlnce
that hll enjOylllel!~ ,~t ·
and convenience hd;h.ld prime
corlslderation and ~~ be Ia
· g~ttlng his mon~f.·• ~orth
w1thout any unheceaary
headaches.
,
That Is ·why ~ewapa_per
Tours Ltd. utiUzesthe llei'VIces
of a vbteran. profeplorial
Travel Agent In organl#nc aM
operating the packaf!e lripa
sponsored.

Meigs

.IJ:IJIOO.BLOCM

Boat ·launch

Travel agents,~portan~ to
enjoyment and .convenie:d.ce

Transfers

Attorney will

Ironton at Waverly

last season in compiling an ar..
70 record and finishing 10
games behind the Cincinnati
Reds was, observers felt,
Alston's Inability to COD!e up
with a ilet lineup.
The skipper said he may
have trouble making up his
mind again this year.
''The unfortunate thing," he
said, "is we have several
positions on this club where one
guy .is so close in ability as the

SVAC standing$-

f

CON.TAC
COLD CAPSULES

36 tablets

Limit 2

D

10 capsules

limit 2

Limit 2

as~

30•~CHOOSE Ill 4 ITEMS FOR .JUST '1

Ill ITEMff
MIXING
~
BOWL

~

·?11

Quantities Limited

MEASURING
CUP

2 quart

with cover
'

If hearing is your

problem Beltone is
the answer

BELTONE
Hearing Aid .Center
601 Sixth ~venue

Huntington, W.Va.
Phone: 525-7221

~~
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HANDY SCOOPS

-;..

DUSTPAN

3 sizes in set

11-QT. UTILITY PAIL

Your Family _Independent Pharmocy

. I

•

ONE DQZEN SPRING FLOWERS
ONE HEART.SH~PED BOX OF

.WHI'rMAN CANI)y '7.50
'I.SO•dellverecl · Cash and Carry

DUDLEY'S
FLORIST
.
59 N. Second St.
Middleport, o.

RUSSELL .
STOVER
CANDY·

'

h·
'

.

DIJTTON'S
.Prescriptions Are Our Main
Business
.
.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

HALLMARK
. .
CARDS '

�Religious freedom found
to be greatest of all

LORNA BELL
RACINE- Soatbem mgb

ScbGOI's 1973 llelty Crocker
Homemaker of Tomorrow Ia
Lorna Bell who will re&lt;!elve a
specially designed award
from General MUla, apon~r
of the Betty Crocker Search
lor American Homemakers
iii Tomorrow. In addillon,
Miss Bellis eligible lor slate
and nallooal honors. She Is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Don Bell, Letart Falls.
I; '1 '

'O'o' o ' ; '~;'

Social
Calendar
TUESDAY
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, spe~:lal meellng
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m·. at the
Melga Inn. Ladles night to be
observed and all Lions and
their ladles are invited to attend.
SYRACUSE Elementary
PTA Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at
school. Founder's Day
program. Members may come
In old-fashion dress.
. RACINE Lodge 461, F&amp;AM,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at temple.
Refreshments: all Master
Masons invited. .
WSCS, Pomeroy United
Methodist Church, Tuesday,
7:30 p.m . at the church.
Program topic : "Living and
Acting in Love."
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 80,
iiil\oyal Arch Masons,· meeUng
a'! 7~ p.m. Wednesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, 6 p.m. Wednesday at hall.
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.
Dwight Z.avitz to review
"Bring Me a Unicorn" by Ann
Lindbergh. Members to
respond to roll call with an
unusual valentine.
REGULAR meeting Tuppers
Plains Community Club
· Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at home
of Murl Griffith. All·interested
persons invited.
WHITE Rose Lodge, I p.m.
Wednesday at lhe American
Legion Hall, Middleport.
PAST Councilors, Chester
Council 323; Daughters of
America, Wednesday evening
at the home of Mrs. Erma
Cleland. Members are to take a
pretty valentine.
THURSDAY
ROCK Springs Grange, 7:30
Thursday night at the Grange
hall.
SOUTHERN Local Board of
Education Thursday, 7:30p.m.
at the high school in Racine.
THURSDAY meeting of
Class 12, Heath 1 United
Methodist Church, is cancelled.
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens Club, 7:30p.m. Thursday at school. spi,aker on tax
exemptions for those .over 65
and director from Senior
Citizens Volunteer Program
will be present. Refreshments.
REVIVAL starling Feb. 14
running through Feb. 18 at MI.
Union Missionary Baptist ·
Church near Carpenter. The
Rev. John W. Elswick
speaking, 7:30 each evening .
Public invited.
GRACE EPISCOPAL
·Church Women will hOISt a
luncheon at 12:30 p.m. Thursday. Mts. Claude Sowle will
speak on Ohio University.
FRIDAY;

SOUP SUPPER Friday al
Southern HJ&amp;h School beglnnhlg at 4 p.m. Sponsored by the
lllctne PTA.

THEMES NOTED
Group motlvatloa and
comniu.ue&amp; aa leaden
will be a'W~ lhe prluclfllll
themes explored at . the '
Leadership Worbhop OD two
Wedaesdays, Feb. 21 111111 Z8
!tom 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the
Meigs hill.
C. E. Blakeslee, esteulon
ageat, said this worbbop Is
open to everyone In the
county Involved In clubs,
commuallles and groups.
Reservations should be
called In to the ciiuoty Ex·
teaslon Offtee, 992-3815, by
Thursday, Feb. )5:
m~m~.;:!8!81~;n~:;o;~·;::;;:;ms.:~:;o; ~ ;:;m

reception served by the class.
Acontribution was made to lhe
Epilepsy Fund. Reported ill
were Mrs. Mildred Headley
and Mrs. Ruby Erb, home and
recuperating, and a card was
signed from 'Mrs. Nell Graves
who is hOISpitallzed. It was also
reported lhat Mrs. Frances
Reibel had Injured herseH in a
fall and is now a patient at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Plans were discussed forM
T
,7
serving .the annual dinner of
1 6 1
1
the Gallia County Salon, Eight
POLL1:"S POINTERS . and Forty.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Clara
Wants to Recycle
Karr, Miss Erma Smith, Mrs.
Lanning, Miss Sybil Ebers100 Two-by-fours
bach, and Mrs. Gladys
Cuckler. Mrs. Polly Legar, a
By POLLY CRAMER
guest, won the door prize.
Refreshments were served
; ~ w•
. , _ Polly's Problem !4~~·;:mu:!l« ; !
by Mrs. Eva Dessauer and
. · DEAR POLLY-I have at least 100 good smooth
Mrs. Carrie Meinhart. Mrs.
white 2"x4" pieces of lumber lhat are about six m Erb was a contributing
"Love Story," in keeping
inches long. They are far too nice to burn and since W hostess. Attending the meeting with the valentine season, was
I .am handy working with wood I hope someone can [;
. . giVe me some ideas about knickknacks I could r~ . besides thOISe named were Mrs. the theme of a demonstration
make with these pieces or what else I might do ;r; Stella Kloes, · Mrs. Ruth by Mrs. Earl Ingles at the
ll1 with them.- HAROLD
·( Massar;
Mrs.
'Ethel recent meeting of the Chesler
~~~m~im'!a'W~R~'.lli&lt;.~:
&lt;:&lt;~:.:w~~"*-""""'" '="*'". .f i'"d.:Y Willlamson, .Mrs. Lillie Houck, Garden Club at the home of
»11"'-"-'«!11'11'
-'-~'m,:
' r:);
~.
· ,
"
rli~ :. -:MfW.~'~W&gt;I:rt-'f&lt;-~
DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with the children and Mrs. Wilma Terrell, Mrs. Ella Mrs. Ivan Walker.
bicycle riders who really take advantage ofthose radio Smith, and Mrs. Genevieve
Mrs. Ingles' demonstration
announcers who say "Look out for the children." They Meinhart.
featured artificial flowers. She
form a big gang and walk right out in the middle of the
made a hogarth curve
street. You drive slowly and honk lightly and then they
arrangement using pink roses,
barely give you enough room to get through and often hlt
one with yellow iris and pear
the car as you pass . Several times I would have hit
bicycle riders had I not been going slowly. When they
branches, another of drift:
want to change lanes they often dart right out in front
wood, daisies and fern, and a
of a car. I am surprised there are not even more acci·
while basket with a summer
dents. Of course, the radio announcers should continue
bouquet.
to say "Look out ior the children," BUT I also suggest
The program by Mrs.
they add "Children, watch that traffic. " I do hope this
serves as a warning to careless children and bicycle
Purchase of an amplifier lor Howard Knight was a book
riders.-VJOLETIE .
· ·
the Pomeroy Nazarene Church review of "The Palace of
DEAR POLLY-1 have removed black magic marker was discussed by the Rev. Versailles." Mrs. Rose Ginther
streaks from mirrors with brown vinegar. After the Clyde Henderson at a meeting used "Expressions of Love" as
marks are removed I use my regular mirror cleaner to
of the Adult Class held recently her devotional topic and read
take off any smudges.-M. L. U.
selected verses from St. John
at the church.
DEAR POLLY-and M.P. K.-My brother marked up
Mrs. Frieda Mossman and First Corinthians. The 19
my make·UJ.&gt; mirror with a magic marker pen and I remembers present gave
moved it wtth nail polish remover and a facial tissue. The p~sided at the meeting which
quotations
about love in
marks came off very easily and the mirror was lert opened with a hymn sing led by
sparkling clean.-ANNE
Raymond Walburn. Prayer response to roll call.
A quiz on the names of
DEAR POLLY-While busy holding the reins on a large was by the minister and of- flowers was given by · Mrs.
ficers reports were given by
family I have devised a few
.
short cuts and would like
Robert Eblin and Barbara Ginther, with Mrs. Knight
to pass on some of them .
Colmer. Mrs. Colmer resigned taking first, and Mrs. Woodi-ow
My 'four.year-old is !asci·
as treasurer of the class and Mora , second. Mrs . Karl
nated with all sewing paraJerry Colmer was selected to Krautler was winner of the
phernalia. To keep her
•
I"
., , ··t succeed her. It was decided to .,4,0.W ~rir.e ·
little fingers busy and out
of things I am using I give
\'':~uitih~se a large thermos "·l?or the ammgements btl
her a pile of spools or
.• '·''bJttfe lor the cra'.S meetings. exhibit blue ribbons went tb
thread to rewind for me
Mrs. Roy Miller, Mrs. Roy
Eblin will take care of this.
and a jar of buttons to sort
Walburn took the class of- Holler, Mrs. Ada Holter, Mrs. ·
out by color. This not only
•••
keeps her busy but she
fering. Mrs. Colmer read a Ginther, and Mrs. Ingles. Mrs.
feels important because she is "helping" me. The last poem and Walburn sang two Roy Holter's arrangement was
time my son mopped floors for me he mutilated my selections. Refreshments were unusual in that it featured the
string mop. Not being able to dash right out to get a new
use of fluorescent materials
one we tore an old towel into two·inch strips, folded them served. Attending were the
in hall and clamped them onto the mop handle. This is Rev. and Mrs. Henderson, Mr. with black lights. Mrs. Walker
really great, cleans ~Iter and there .are no strings all and Mrs. Eslie Mo.,;man, Mr. and Mrs . Woodrow Mora
over my clean floor when I am finished .-Shirley, and Mrs. Robert Eblin, Mr. served a dessert ·eourse.
M. G. P. H. !Mother, Grandma, Psychologist and and Mrs. Arthur Koenig, Mr.
Handyman.!
TWO PROMOTED
and Mrs . William R.
(NEWSPAPER EHTlAPIISI .ASSN.)
MARION - The promotion
Stephenson, Mr . and Mrs.
of
two General Telephone Co.
Jerry Colmer, Fred Pullins,
You will receive a dollar II Polly uaes your favorite Nancy Whltteking, Mrs. of Ohio department heads to
homemaldnc Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly' a Problem or solation
Paulette LA:ach and son, . vice president positions has
to a problem. Write Polly In care of thl1 newapaper.
Jamie , Mrs. Clyda Bing, been approved by the board of
Raymond Walburn, Myrtle directors.
FILM SCHEDULED
Robert M. Wopat, president,
Durst, Betty Brown, and
TUPPERS F:..AINS - The Gladys Gibson.
said Robert C. Fletcher,
Mrs. Cora Beegle was Tuppers Plains Elementary
director of personnel, is now
hostess recently for a meeting School will have a lull length
vice president of personnel,
of the Past Councilor's Club of feature film, at 1:30 p.m.
and G. Thomas Winn, director
Theodorus Council
17, Friday in the school gymRETURNED HOME
of public affairs, becomes vice
Daughters of America.
nasium . The public is invited.
Mrs. Eula Francis, confined . president of public affairs. ·
Miss Erna Jesse presided at
to Veterans Memorial Hospital · Wopat said the steps were
the meeting which opened with
for several weeks, was taken "because lhe widespread
scripture by Mrs. Eva
returned home Monday. Mrs. operations of the two departDessauer, past president. S~e
SUPPER PLANNED
Francis underwent major ments should be recognized
read Psalm 114. Mrs. Mabel
TUPPERS PLAINS - The surgery.
with corporate tiUes.
Bearhs and Mrs. Mabel Wolfe sophomore class of Eastern
were reported home from the . High School will sponsor a
hospital. Games were played jitney supper from 5 to 6:30
with prizes going to Miss Jesse, p.m. Saturday and a dance
Mrs. Dessauer, Mrs. Carrie from 10 p.m. to midnight.
is Pleased
..
Meinhart, and Mrs. Eva
tu
Robson. Miss Jesse will host
the next meeting . Refresh11
ments were served.
CRAMPI'ON LEADS
. ..
NEW YORK (UPI) - Australian Bruce Crampton
IN NATURAL LIVING COLOR
SITTERS MEET
eonUnues to lead the money list
Demonstrations were given among PGA tour players wllh ·
by Leigh Enavoldsen and earnings thus far of $83,398,
Cindy Domigan when the with Jack NictlaUII a close
Meigs County Saddle Sitters second at ~7,1S$. ·
·
met at the home of Darwin
Arnold Palmer, winner of the
Enevoldsen . . Demonstrations Bob Hope Desert Clalllic on
dealt with the English and Sunday, used the S32,000 firat
Western saddle and bridle. · prize ID vault from 88th place ID
Refreshments were served by sixth on the earnings list with
COMPLETe·
the Enevoldsens.
$38,338.
"This is America" was the tomorrow. She cOncluded with
program topic used by Mrs. a prayer for America.
Edith Lanning at a meeting of Questions on the Bible were
the Happy Harvesters Class conducted by ~rs. Freda
Friday night at Trinity Chnrch. Dully, the program leader,
Mrs. Lanning spoke of the who also read a poem "Going
freedom to worship God as the . Back."
&amp;rea test of all freedoms en- · Mrs . Carrie Neutzling
joyed by Americans Wday, and presided at lhe meeting which
of the opportunity to become opened with prayer from lhe
Fords , Woo I worth s, yearbook. Acknowledged was a
FlrestQnes, and Lincolns of · check from lhe Bates-Felly

rs. na es

speaks of

Valentines

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Church adult
class meets

Women meet

~~~~ '"~~~~;;F~·~·~·O RT;~~; ~

~~ · .~:~t;s
By Charlene Hoeflich

Corner

~~

::~:

at

ereat~n.

wHEN COMPILING A LIST of the early quUters with the
Buay Bees Of the Trinity Church, someone overlooked lhe late
Bernice Ebersb&amp;ch, so her name. wasn't incl)lded in Sunday's
Tlmes-8entlnel report of the 66th anniversary of the group. She
waa there, however, quilting away year after year.
PAUL FISHER WAS BROUGIIT home .Friday from
University HOBpilal where he has been a patient since before
ChriStmas. Durjng his hospitalization, his wile spent much time
with Mrs. Anna Jones at her Columbus flome.
· TIUNGS ARE GETI'!NG back 1D nonnal now at the Albert
Roush oome after a bit of a heclic lime.
Two weeks ago Mrs. Roush accompanied her daughter,
Kathern Smith, a vlctinl of rheumatoid arthritis, to Columbus
where she was scheduled for additional treatment. A day alter
getting to Columb)ts, Mrs. Roush became very ill and her family
rushed her back to Pomeroy where she was admitted to Veterans
Memorisl Hospital for treatinent of the flu, a djabetic condition,
and other aUments.
Meanwhile, Becky and Keuny Roush came down with the flu.
Becky, alao a diabetic, was admitted to the Holzer Medical
Center for treat;ment. Kenny recuperated and went back to
school alter being out aboot two weeks.
Alber! Roush was busy trying to keep things on an even keel
at home while l'lllllllng between Holzer and Veterans Memorial to
visit his wife and daughter. But that ended Suoday when Mrs.
RoUsh was discharged from the hospital. Becky came oome a
few days ago.

Tl'PPERS PUJNS .:... Tbe
Tuppers Plains Communi~y
Club has selected rlew officers.
They are Mrs. Nita Ritchie,
president: Mrs. Dorothy Stout,
vice president: Mrs. Helen
· Caldwell, treasurer: Mrs.
Mildred Brook, secretary;
Mrs. Doris Koenig, ways and
means chairinan: Mrs. Mamie
Headley, . cooking c~!J;mln:
Mrs. Oneitz Cole, advertising:
Mrs. Cliff Longenette, news
reporter: Mrs. Hazel BarhhiU,
telephone chairman. . '·
The club will plllce con·
talners in several locations for
the collection of Betty Crocker
coupons ,whicb would be used
towards lhe purchase of a,,new
fire truck. Asquare dft!lce has
been planned for March .with ·
details to be announced later.
Proceeil's from this event wlll 1
also go on the lire truck pur- '
chase.

BUSINESSES, CHURCH groupa and organizations are
needed to co-sponsor girls to Buckeye Girls' State at Capital
University In Columbua this June. ·
_
· A program In governlnent by the American Legion
Auxiliary, gtrJs·can spend a week at Capital for $70. Sponsors are
permitted to select the girl they want to send from a Us! of
eUglble students provided by the high schools. This year for the
firat time plans are being made to Include Juniors from Eastern
High School.
.
Hopefully, Blx girls will be sent frtm the Auxiliary of FeeneyBennett POll! 121, Middleport. If your organization 15 interested In
COolpOIIIOring a girl, contact Mn. Albert Roush, 992-3156.
Selections must be completed in March.

.

SW.n'S ·PREMIUM
EVERSWEET

BACON.
"

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10
We Accept Federal Food Stamps
• rHUNE: 9~l-348U

.
IN ROOM 136
Mrs. Vena Whaley is. a
medical patient at the
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Room 136.

Make it a memor·
able gift.
Give him an
Accutron watch
by Bulova. So

59~

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A Regular

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GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE
Court St., Pomeroy

wm adJu•t tD this 1
ntciUiry, Gumnt11

ing, straight-stitching, zig-zag stitching. Everything a real sewer wanls
0~ sale-a big -20% oft regular·
pnce . on every ~tylist sewing
lllBChtne Come in today for a
demonstration.

SALE :sl5995
Reg.

1

GROUND CHUCK

lb.

WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE

t
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DAIRY VALUES
FROZEN FOOD VALUES

RED KIDNEY BEAN.S
APPLE SAUCE
•

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Match

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$

cans ·
for

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BAYER
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Reg.

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STRAWBERRIES
SALEsl7600

$2
47
DOG FOOD---------~-~-.
1
MARGARINE--------5
e
VANILLA-----------------1 9 ·.
0
MARGARINE------1
'1
BRE~ D·---------------·5 ~ '1
FRISKIES

25 lb b

..

MRS. FILBERrS

~ lb. ,

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mugs

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6 oz. bot

SCOT LAD

·

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rons

fiw

Moctol413wtiii071c-

Reg.

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.SALE $13600

JOE SMITH, MEAT MGR.

CHOPPED 'SIRLOI

Come in and see

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'

Pomeroy, Ohio

FIN~

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%
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1.00

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3 pak

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bottle

CONTAC

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olfu ptr subject and one p1r fGmllyevtry lhrtt montha. Groupa
11 .00 ellfra ptr pt.tton . •
.

..... '67"

SALE
'Sf'
Carrytng case extra

THURSDAY, FEB. 15,)973
HOURS: 1 PM TO 7 PM

THE SINGER STORE
. 115 W. Second 992-2284 Pomtroy
Wll hlwo I Cre&lt;Nf pion dotlgntd 10 lit tc~~r
We olio hav. . llbtralllode·ln POlicy,

budge\

AT
.
FIRE HALL

APPROVED lllltiR DEALER

'

•

·

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SIZE ·

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~
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Sh
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raw
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ort
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e;..:
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· BOOTH's · 16 oz. Pit&amp;- · ·
Medium Size
Pie Crust·_!~-~~--~-~--.:.!!~~~-- 29'
. EG~S
Pot Pies-~E.!---~----~-5 • Ollly •1 oo_
.

The Fabric Shop

PRESENT THIS AD TO OUR PHOTOGRAPHER

• Middleport, Ohio

lb.

CA~· 3.79

a minute
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See our full

·1.29

. I

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to within

.

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precise that

lb.

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12 oz.
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'

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by Bulova

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r

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/

WITH I
THIS AD ·

LA·Z-BOV

I

A jack rabbit lopes along
at an easy gait of 35 miles
an hour: 45 m.p.h.' is top
speed.

Mr. and Mrs. Harvey W.
(Sam) Van Maire, Middleport
Route I, are ann"!!"cing the
birth of their fftsVJilld, a nine •'
pound son, Ken Everett, on
Jan. 26 at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Grandparents are Mrs .
Myrtle Clark, Middleport
Route I, and Mrs. Goldie Van
Maire, West Columbia Route 1,
W.Va. Great-grandparents are
Mrs. Minnie Miller, Pomeroy
Route 4: and Mrs. Gaye Helton
of Grundy, Va., and Jake
Helton, Middleport Route 1..

'

FREE ON·STREET PARKING AFTER 5 PM

J

TCliiiOIT01V Is more lban St. Y.atenllne's Day f~ Sadie Brown
of Minersville. It's her birthday amiversary, and she'll be 86
yean old. Mrs. Brown has had a paceinaker for several years
now bui' remains aclive regularly attending &amp;Jnclay school and
church the Mlnenvllle Uni!edMethodiatChurch, the w.s.c.s.,
and, the quilting session lhere.
· She:. bas a son, RUBSell, Of Pomeroy, two grandsons, Dr.
' RAliMirt Brown CJl Dayton and Dr. Harolil Bmm of Pomeroy and a

First born a son

' '•

.

'

ea.

1.99

.

DR. PEPPER
ALL WEEK LONGI

•

�Religious freedom found
to be greatest of all

LORNA BELL
RACINE- Soatbem mgb

ScbGOI's 1973 llelty Crocker
Homemaker of Tomorrow Ia
Lorna Bell who will re&lt;!elve a
specially designed award
from General MUla, apon~r
of the Betty Crocker Search
lor American Homemakers
iii Tomorrow. In addillon,
Miss Bellis eligible lor slate
and nallooal honors. She Is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Don Bell, Letart Falls.
I; '1 '

'O'o' o ' ; '~;'

Social
Calendar
TUESDAY
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, spe~:lal meellng
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m·. at the
Melga Inn. Ladles night to be
observed and all Lions and
their ladles are invited to attend.
SYRACUSE Elementary
PTA Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at
school. Founder's Day
program. Members may come
In old-fashion dress.
. RACINE Lodge 461, F&amp;AM,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at temple.
Refreshments: all Master
Masons invited. .
WSCS, Pomeroy United
Methodist Church, Tuesday,
7:30 p.m . at the church.
Program topic : "Living and
Acting in Love."
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 80,
iiil\oyal Arch Masons,· meeUng
a'! 7~ p.m. Wednesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, 6 p.m. Wednesday at hall.
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.
Dwight Z.avitz to review
"Bring Me a Unicorn" by Ann
Lindbergh. Members to
respond to roll call with an
unusual valentine.
REGULAR meeting Tuppers
Plains Community Club
· Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at home
of Murl Griffith. All·interested
persons invited.
WHITE Rose Lodge, I p.m.
Wednesday at lhe American
Legion Hall, Middleport.
PAST Councilors, Chester
Council 323; Daughters of
America, Wednesday evening
at the home of Mrs. Erma
Cleland. Members are to take a
pretty valentine.
THURSDAY
ROCK Springs Grange, 7:30
Thursday night at the Grange
hall.
SOUTHERN Local Board of
Education Thursday, 7:30p.m.
at the high school in Racine.
THURSDAY meeting of
Class 12, Heath 1 United
Methodist Church, is cancelled.
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens Club, 7:30p.m. Thursday at school. spi,aker on tax
exemptions for those .over 65
and director from Senior
Citizens Volunteer Program
will be present. Refreshments.
REVIVAL starling Feb. 14
running through Feb. 18 at MI.
Union Missionary Baptist ·
Church near Carpenter. The
Rev. John W. Elswick
speaking, 7:30 each evening .
Public invited.
GRACE EPISCOPAL
·Church Women will hOISt a
luncheon at 12:30 p.m. Thursday. Mts. Claude Sowle will
speak on Ohio University.
FRIDAY;

SOUP SUPPER Friday al
Southern HJ&amp;h School beglnnhlg at 4 p.m. Sponsored by the
lllctne PTA.

THEMES NOTED
Group motlvatloa and
comniu.ue&amp; aa leaden
will be a'W~ lhe prluclfllll
themes explored at . the '
Leadership Worbhop OD two
Wedaesdays, Feb. 21 111111 Z8
!tom 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the
Meigs hill.
C. E. Blakeslee, esteulon
ageat, said this worbbop Is
open to everyone In the
county Involved In clubs,
commuallles and groups.
Reservations should be
called In to the ciiuoty Ex·
teaslon Offtee, 992-3815, by
Thursday, Feb. )5:
m~m~.;:!8!81~;n~:;o;~·;::;;:;ms.:~:;o; ~ ;:;m

reception served by the class.
Acontribution was made to lhe
Epilepsy Fund. Reported ill
were Mrs. Mildred Headley
and Mrs. Ruby Erb, home and
recuperating, and a card was
signed from 'Mrs. Nell Graves
who is hOISpitallzed. It was also
reported lhat Mrs. Frances
Reibel had Injured herseH in a
fall and is now a patient at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Plans were discussed forM
T
,7
serving .the annual dinner of
1 6 1
1
the Gallia County Salon, Eight
POLL1:"S POINTERS . and Forty.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Clara
Wants to Recycle
Karr, Miss Erma Smith, Mrs.
Lanning, Miss Sybil Ebers100 Two-by-fours
bach, and Mrs. Gladys
Cuckler. Mrs. Polly Legar, a
By POLLY CRAMER
guest, won the door prize.
Refreshments were served
; ~ w•
. , _ Polly's Problem !4~~·;:mu:!l« ; !
by Mrs. Eva Dessauer and
. · DEAR POLLY-I have at least 100 good smooth
Mrs. Carrie Meinhart. Mrs.
white 2"x4" pieces of lumber lhat are about six m Erb was a contributing
"Love Story," in keeping
inches long. They are far too nice to burn and since W hostess. Attending the meeting with the valentine season, was
I .am handy working with wood I hope someone can [;
. . giVe me some ideas about knickknacks I could r~ . besides thOISe named were Mrs. the theme of a demonstration
make with these pieces or what else I might do ;r; Stella Kloes, · Mrs. Ruth by Mrs. Earl Ingles at the
ll1 with them.- HAROLD
·( Massar;
Mrs.
'Ethel recent meeting of the Chesler
~~~m~im'!a'W~R~'.lli&lt;.~:
&lt;:&lt;~:.:w~~"*-""""'" '="*'". .f i'"d.:Y Willlamson, .Mrs. Lillie Houck, Garden Club at the home of
»11"'-"-'«!11'11'
-'-~'m,:
' r:);
~.
· ,
"
rli~ :. -:MfW.~'~W&gt;I:rt-'f&lt;-~
DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with the children and Mrs. Wilma Terrell, Mrs. Ella Mrs. Ivan Walker.
bicycle riders who really take advantage ofthose radio Smith, and Mrs. Genevieve
Mrs. Ingles' demonstration
announcers who say "Look out for the children." They Meinhart.
featured artificial flowers. She
form a big gang and walk right out in the middle of the
made a hogarth curve
street. You drive slowly and honk lightly and then they
arrangement using pink roses,
barely give you enough room to get through and often hlt
one with yellow iris and pear
the car as you pass . Several times I would have hit
bicycle riders had I not been going slowly. When they
branches, another of drift:
want to change lanes they often dart right out in front
wood, daisies and fern, and a
of a car. I am surprised there are not even more acci·
while basket with a summer
dents. Of course, the radio announcers should continue
bouquet.
to say "Look out ior the children," BUT I also suggest
The program by Mrs.
they add "Children, watch that traffic. " I do hope this
serves as a warning to careless children and bicycle
Purchase of an amplifier lor Howard Knight was a book
riders.-VJOLETIE .
· ·
the Pomeroy Nazarene Church review of "The Palace of
DEAR POLLY-1 have removed black magic marker was discussed by the Rev. Versailles." Mrs. Rose Ginther
streaks from mirrors with brown vinegar. After the Clyde Henderson at a meeting used "Expressions of Love" as
marks are removed I use my regular mirror cleaner to
of the Adult Class held recently her devotional topic and read
take off any smudges.-M. L. U.
selected verses from St. John
at the church.
DEAR POLLY-and M.P. K.-My brother marked up
Mrs. Frieda Mossman and First Corinthians. The 19
my make·UJ.&gt; mirror with a magic marker pen and I remembers present gave
moved it wtth nail polish remover and a facial tissue. The p~sided at the meeting which
quotations
about love in
marks came off very easily and the mirror was lert opened with a hymn sing led by
sparkling clean.-ANNE
Raymond Walburn. Prayer response to roll call.
A quiz on the names of
DEAR POLLY-While busy holding the reins on a large was by the minister and of- flowers was given by · Mrs.
ficers reports were given by
family I have devised a few
.
short cuts and would like
Robert Eblin and Barbara Ginther, with Mrs. Knight
to pass on some of them .
Colmer. Mrs. Colmer resigned taking first, and Mrs. Woodi-ow
My 'four.year-old is !asci·
as treasurer of the class and Mora , second. Mrs . Karl
nated with all sewing paraJerry Colmer was selected to Krautler was winner of the
phernalia. To keep her
•
I"
., , ··t succeed her. It was decided to .,4,0.W ~rir.e ·
little fingers busy and out
of things I am using I give
\'':~uitih~se a large thermos "·l?or the ammgements btl
her a pile of spools or
.• '·''bJttfe lor the cra'.S meetings. exhibit blue ribbons went tb
thread to rewind for me
Mrs. Roy Miller, Mrs. Roy
Eblin will take care of this.
and a jar of buttons to sort
Walburn took the class of- Holler, Mrs. Ada Holter, Mrs. ·
out by color. This not only
•••
keeps her busy but she
fering. Mrs. Colmer read a Ginther, and Mrs. Ingles. Mrs.
feels important because she is "helping" me. The last poem and Walburn sang two Roy Holter's arrangement was
time my son mopped floors for me he mutilated my selections. Refreshments were unusual in that it featured the
string mop. Not being able to dash right out to get a new
use of fluorescent materials
one we tore an old towel into two·inch strips, folded them served. Attending were the
in hall and clamped them onto the mop handle. This is Rev. and Mrs. Henderson, Mr. with black lights. Mrs. Walker
really great, cleans ~Iter and there .are no strings all and Mrs. Eslie Mo.,;man, Mr. and Mrs . Woodrow Mora
over my clean floor when I am finished .-Shirley, and Mrs. Robert Eblin, Mr. served a dessert ·eourse.
M. G. P. H. !Mother, Grandma, Psychologist and and Mrs. Arthur Koenig, Mr.
Handyman.!
TWO PROMOTED
and Mrs . William R.
(NEWSPAPER EHTlAPIISI .ASSN.)
MARION - The promotion
Stephenson, Mr . and Mrs.
of
two General Telephone Co.
Jerry Colmer, Fred Pullins,
You will receive a dollar II Polly uaes your favorite Nancy Whltteking, Mrs. of Ohio department heads to
homemaldnc Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly' a Problem or solation
Paulette LA:ach and son, . vice president positions has
to a problem. Write Polly In care of thl1 newapaper.
Jamie , Mrs. Clyda Bing, been approved by the board of
Raymond Walburn, Myrtle directors.
FILM SCHEDULED
Robert M. Wopat, president,
Durst, Betty Brown, and
TUPPERS F:..AINS - The Gladys Gibson.
said Robert C. Fletcher,
Mrs. Cora Beegle was Tuppers Plains Elementary
director of personnel, is now
hostess recently for a meeting School will have a lull length
vice president of personnel,
of the Past Councilor's Club of feature film, at 1:30 p.m.
and G. Thomas Winn, director
Theodorus Council
17, Friday in the school gymRETURNED HOME
of public affairs, becomes vice
Daughters of America.
nasium . The public is invited.
Mrs. Eula Francis, confined . president of public affairs. ·
Miss Erna Jesse presided at
to Veterans Memorial Hospital · Wopat said the steps were
the meeting which opened with
for several weeks, was taken "because lhe widespread
scripture by Mrs. Eva
returned home Monday. Mrs. operations of the two departDessauer, past president. S~e
SUPPER PLANNED
Francis underwent major ments should be recognized
read Psalm 114. Mrs. Mabel
TUPPERS PLAINS - The surgery.
with corporate tiUes.
Bearhs and Mrs. Mabel Wolfe sophomore class of Eastern
were reported home from the . High School will sponsor a
hospital. Games were played jitney supper from 5 to 6:30
with prizes going to Miss Jesse, p.m. Saturday and a dance
Mrs. Dessauer, Mrs. Carrie from 10 p.m. to midnight.
is Pleased
..
Meinhart, and Mrs. Eva
tu
Robson. Miss Jesse will host
the next meeting . Refresh11
ments were served.
CRAMPI'ON LEADS
. ..
NEW YORK (UPI) - Australian Bruce Crampton
IN NATURAL LIVING COLOR
SITTERS MEET
eonUnues to lead the money list
Demonstrations were given among PGA tour players wllh ·
by Leigh Enavoldsen and earnings thus far of $83,398,
Cindy Domigan when the with Jack NictlaUII a close
Meigs County Saddle Sitters second at ~7,1S$. ·
·
met at the home of Darwin
Arnold Palmer, winner of the
Enevoldsen . . Demonstrations Bob Hope Desert Clalllic on
dealt with the English and Sunday, used the S32,000 firat
Western saddle and bridle. · prize ID vault from 88th place ID
Refreshments were served by sixth on the earnings list with
COMPLETe·
the Enevoldsens.
$38,338.
"This is America" was the tomorrow. She cOncluded with
program topic used by Mrs. a prayer for America.
Edith Lanning at a meeting of Questions on the Bible were
the Happy Harvesters Class conducted by ~rs. Freda
Friday night at Trinity Chnrch. Dully, the program leader,
Mrs. Lanning spoke of the who also read a poem "Going
freedom to worship God as the . Back."
&amp;rea test of all freedoms en- · Mrs . Carrie Neutzling
joyed by Americans Wday, and presided at lhe meeting which
of the opportunity to become opened with prayer from lhe
Fords , Woo I worth s, yearbook. Acknowledged was a
FlrestQnes, and Lincolns of · check from lhe Bates-Felly

rs. na es

speaks of

Valentines

~

I

.. •

Church adult
class meets

Women meet

~~~~ '"~~~~;;F~·~·~·O RT;~~; ~

~~ · .~:~t;s
By Charlene Hoeflich

Corner

~~

::~:

at

ereat~n.

wHEN COMPILING A LIST of the early quUters with the
Buay Bees Of the Trinity Church, someone overlooked lhe late
Bernice Ebersb&amp;ch, so her name. wasn't incl)lded in Sunday's
Tlmes-8entlnel report of the 66th anniversary of the group. She
waa there, however, quilting away year after year.
PAUL FISHER WAS BROUGIIT home .Friday from
University HOBpilal where he has been a patient since before
ChriStmas. Durjng his hospitalization, his wile spent much time
with Mrs. Anna Jones at her Columbus flome.
· TIUNGS ARE GETI'!NG back 1D nonnal now at the Albert
Roush oome after a bit of a heclic lime.
Two weeks ago Mrs. Roush accompanied her daughter,
Kathern Smith, a vlctinl of rheumatoid arthritis, to Columbus
where she was scheduled for additional treatment. A day alter
getting to Columb)ts, Mrs. Roush became very ill and her family
rushed her back to Pomeroy where she was admitted to Veterans
Memorisl Hospital for treatinent of the flu, a djabetic condition,
and other aUments.
Meanwhile, Becky and Keuny Roush came down with the flu.
Becky, alao a diabetic, was admitted to the Holzer Medical
Center for treat;ment. Kenny recuperated and went back to
school alter being out aboot two weeks.
Alber! Roush was busy trying to keep things on an even keel
at home while l'lllllllng between Holzer and Veterans Memorial to
visit his wife and daughter. But that ended Suoday when Mrs.
RoUsh was discharged from the hospital. Becky came oome a
few days ago.

Tl'PPERS PUJNS .:... Tbe
Tuppers Plains Communi~y
Club has selected rlew officers.
They are Mrs. Nita Ritchie,
president: Mrs. Dorothy Stout,
vice president: Mrs. Helen
· Caldwell, treasurer: Mrs.
Mildred Brook, secretary;
Mrs. Doris Koenig, ways and
means chairinan: Mrs. Mamie
Headley, . cooking c~!J;mln:
Mrs. Oneitz Cole, advertising:
Mrs. Cliff Longenette, news
reporter: Mrs. Hazel BarhhiU,
telephone chairman. . '·
The club will plllce con·
talners in several locations for
the collection of Betty Crocker
coupons ,whicb would be used
towards lhe purchase of a,,new
fire truck. Asquare dft!lce has
been planned for March .with ·
details to be announced later.
Proceeil's from this event wlll 1
also go on the lire truck pur- '
chase.

BUSINESSES, CHURCH groupa and organizations are
needed to co-sponsor girls to Buckeye Girls' State at Capital
University In Columbua this June. ·
_
· A program In governlnent by the American Legion
Auxiliary, gtrJs·can spend a week at Capital for $70. Sponsors are
permitted to select the girl they want to send from a Us! of
eUglble students provided by the high schools. This year for the
firat time plans are being made to Include Juniors from Eastern
High School.
.
Hopefully, Blx girls will be sent frtm the Auxiliary of FeeneyBennett POll! 121, Middleport. If your organization 15 interested In
COolpOIIIOring a girl, contact Mn. Albert Roush, 992-3156.
Selections must be completed in March.

.

SW.n'S ·PREMIUM
EVERSWEET

BACON.
"

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10
We Accept Federal Food Stamps
• rHUNE: 9~l-348U

.
IN ROOM 136
Mrs. Vena Whaley is. a
medical patient at the
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Room 136.

Make it a memor·
able gift.
Give him an
Accutron watch
by Bulova. So

59~

CHAIRS

A Regular

can

Value!

Now you

comfortable

buy !hat

La·Z· Boy'

chair you've always
dreamed of at our . low
prices.

· Authorized Dealer

MASON
FURNITURE

MI-. w. v....

Horman Grate

in.nn

$20.00

ONE 8x I0 NATURAL LIVING COLOR PORDAIT

ranga of
Accutron

From.
$110.

69e

169-

99~

99e
New at Mark V- Queen of &amp;ot

If/

'

POP-UP
Toaster Pastries

lge.
pkgs.

FROSTED OR PLAIN

; -~~~AM :C~AtKt~S-----·3 ~,~•·1
YELLOW CORN

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE
Court St., Pomeroy

wm adJu•t tD this 1
ntciUiry, Gumnt11

ing, straight-stitching, zig-zag stitching. Everything a real sewer wanls
0~ sale-a big -20% oft regular·
pnce . on every ~tylist sewing
lllBChtne Come in today for a
demonstration.

SALE :sl5995
Reg.

1

GROUND CHUCK

lb.

WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE

t
\
/

DAIRY VALUES
FROZEN FOOD VALUES

RED KIDNEY BEAN.S
APPLE SAUCE
•

Mix or
Match

SCOT LAD

ICE CREAM

$

cans ·
for

Health Aid Specials!

1h gal.

BAYER
ASPIRIN

crt.

'1991

.

Scot Lad

3

-4111 wttii574CIIIJ*Ig . . .

Reg.

21P

1
::

REGUI..AR '1.07

ROLAIDS

STRAWBERRIES
SALEsl7600

$2
47
DOG FOOD---------~-~-.
1
MARGARINE--------5
e
VANILLA-----------------1 9 ·.
0
MARGARINE------1
'1
BRE~ D·---------------·5 ~ '1
FRISKIES

25 lb b

..

MRS. FILBERrS

~ lb. ,

.

mugs

DURKEE'S IMITATION .

6 oz. bot

SCOT LAD

·

.

rons

fiw

Moctol413wtiii071c-

Reg.

USDA CHOICE BEEF

' t

lOLA'S

.SALE $13600

JOE SMITH, MEAT MGR.

CHOPPED 'SIRLOI

Come in and see

Now that you're really , sewing,
here 's a machine for you. And at
20% off! Our unique S)y.!i.§!• line of
sewing machines Is moderately
priced and simple to .op.erate W.illl
the exclusive SinQ2f' front drop-in
bobbin, stretch-stitching, buHonhol- '

MEATS

USDA aiOICE BEEF

'

Pomeroy, Ohio

FIN~

. :•

styles.

2
%
THAT'S SOMETHING TO SING ABOUT!

1.00

REG. 20' EACH
3 pak

100 ct
bottle

CONTAC

1

THURSDAY ONLY
(WITH 13.00 PURCHASE)

RC Cola, Diet Rit~
and Dad's Root Beer
: 16 oz. botUes

8
PAK

COLD CAPSULES

Scot lad Ora~ge Juice
12

THE PERFECT BUY FOR 1ltE BEGINNER
You, too, can own a·
~g.cr*sewing machine
with all the quality Singer
. insists on. MOdel177

Mi"on rriust be occomponitd by a parent. Onlr ant advertlutd
olfu ptr subject and one p1r fGmllyevtry lhrtt montha. Groupa
11 .00 ellfra ptr pt.tton . •
.

..... '67"

SALE
'Sf'
Carrytng case extra

THURSDAY, FEB. 15,)973
HOURS: 1 PM TO 7 PM

THE SINGER STORE
. 115 W. Second 992-2284 Pomtroy
Wll hlwo I Cre&lt;Nf pion dotlgntd 10 lit tc~~r
We olio hav. . llbtralllode·ln POlicy,

budge\

AT
.
FIRE HALL

APPROVED lllltiR DEALER

'

•

·

Reg. 11.69

SIZE ·

~can 49~

1.27

·Fud2e Bars.-~~R~-~r~~----E.!!~-~..39c .FLORIDA ORANGES
•
·Choc. Milk Bars -~~~-~~~~!~~·~_49'
5 lb.
..
39 oz.' size
~
b
Sh
Cak
.
.
raw
errv
ort
.
e;..:
__.____ 99'
St
·bag 49~
·F·.1"sh St1"cks --:---------..,~------79C
· BOOTH's · 16 oz. Pit&amp;- · ·
Medium Size
Pie Crust·_!~-~~--~-~--.:.!!~~~-- 29'
. EG~S
Pot Pies-~E.!---~----~-5 • Ollly •1 oo_
.

The Fabric Shop

PRESENT THIS AD TO OUR PHOTOGRAPHER

• Middleport, Ohio

lb.

CA~· 3.79

a minute
a month. •
See our full

·1.29

. I

La

'BOLOGNA

3

to within

.

99~

ALL MEAT

CANNED HAM

precise that

lb.

BEEF STEW

YOU MUST

Our .New
Sportswear

.

SWIFT'S PREMIUM

COOK'S DELICIOUS

sccutaey is
guaranteed

USDA
CHOICE

CUBE STEAK

;

lb.

ALL MEAT FRANKS
12 oz.
PKG.

'

USDA CHOICE BEEF

SWIFT'S PREMIUM

Accutron
by Bulova

'

Charge

''

· MIDDltPORT, 0.

·'"We t&lt;eSerVe '!be Right To.Limlt

Pluo SOc '
Handling

79~

lb.

.,
r

USDA CHOICE
/

WITH I
THIS AD ·

LA·Z-BOV

I

A jack rabbit lopes along
at an easy gait of 35 miles
an hour: 45 m.p.h.' is top
speed.

Mr. and Mrs. Harvey W.
(Sam) Van Maire, Middleport
Route I, are ann"!!"cing the
birth of their fftsVJilld, a nine •'
pound son, Ken Everett, on
Jan. 26 at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Grandparents are Mrs .
Myrtle Clark, Middleport
Route I, and Mrs. Goldie Van
Maire, West Columbia Route 1,
W.Va. Great-grandparents are
Mrs. Minnie Miller, Pomeroy
Route 4: and Mrs. Gaye Helton
of Grundy, Va., and Jake
Helton, Middleport Route 1..

'

FREE ON·STREET PARKING AFTER 5 PM

J

TCliiiOIT01V Is more lban St. Y.atenllne's Day f~ Sadie Brown
of Minersville. It's her birthday amiversary, and she'll be 86
yean old. Mrs. Brown has had a paceinaker for several years
now bui' remains aclive regularly attending &amp;Jnclay school and
church the Mlnenvllle Uni!edMethodiatChurch, the w.s.c.s.,
and, the quilting session lhere.
· She:. bas a son, RUBSell, Of Pomeroy, two grandsons, Dr.
' RAliMirt Brown CJl Dayton and Dr. Harolil Bmm of Pomeroy and a

First born a son

' '•

.

'

ea.

1.99

.

DR. PEPPER
ALL WEEK LONGI

•

�' '

-The Daily Seminc,, Mlddle~rt-Pomeroy, 0.,

Sentinel ClaJ•sifi~·ds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
HOOD'S AQUARIUMS; fi sh COLONIAL, Early American
style, maple , stereo-rad io,
and supplies; new location,
AM·FM 4 speed, automatic
Your Right to Know
Ash Slreet, Middleport near
changer,
4 speaker system .
park; phone 992-5443.
Balan ce $78 .34 . Use our
and be informed of the func 1-7-tfc
budget ferms. Call 992-7085.
tions of your government are
- -- - -embod ied In public not ids. In
2·8-6lc
GIVE your feet a freat; fry a
that self .government charg es
I
pair of Knapp Shoes; call Bob
all cit izens to be informed .
t his n ewspaper urges every
Hysell. 992·5324.
1911 DODGE PICKUP
11995
CONTEMPORARY Modern . Have your home built by
citizen to read and study these
1·23-tfc
8'
wide
body,
local
1·awner
frade·
ln
wlfh
34,000
miles,
6
Cusfom Builders. Our
Walnut style stereo, radio,
notices . We strongly advise
cylinder
engine,
standard
transmission,
heavy
duty
tires.
carpenters
have 20 years
AM·FM,
4
speaker
sound
t those c itizens. seeking further
experience 10 building
clean cab, wh ite &amp; green finish, deluxe molding s, rear
system, 4 speed automatic
informal ian , to uercise t heir
For Rent
right of access to pub lic
changer. Balance $69.72. Use
homes in. Meigs County.
bumpers. radio. Book Valu e 12300.00.
records and publ ic m ee t ing s.
our
budget
ferm
s.
Call
992On MoSfAmerican Cars
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and 7085.
.
1971 PINTO FORD
$1l99
unfurnished
apartm ents.
2 8-6fc
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992·5434.
2 door, local 1 owner, low mileage, good tires, clean in PUBLIC NOTICE
4·12·ffc
,Phon~ 992-2094 ..
terior, green finis h, radio, 2000cc engine, 4-speed .
NOTICE OF SALE
Bids will be received at the
STEREOS
Track.
repossessed,
UNFURNISHED 3-room looks like new. 4 speaker
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
offi ce of Bernard V. F uttz ,
lf70 DODGE POLARA
$169S
aparfment, adults only. No audio system In wa lnut
Pomeroy National
Bank
0Pen8 Til S
4-door, factory air, V-8 engine, automatic transmission,
pets, 408 Spring Ave., console, take over payments
Building, Pomeroy. Oh io, until
Monday
thru Salurday
February 17 , 1973, at 11 .00
power steering &amp; brakes, good white·wall -tires , wflite
Pomeroy.
of
$1.50
per
week
or
pay
606
E.
fJAain,
Pomeroy, 0 .
O' Clock A.M ., tor the sale of
finish, vinyl fop, radio, clean Inside .
1·7-tfc balance of 589.50. 992-5331.
.
&lt;••
the Ada Cray rea l estate,
situated at 392 S. Third Street,
2 BEDROOM mobile home ; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2_
·9·61c
Middleport, Meigs County,
completely furni s hed ; call
~EE US FOR: Awnings, storm
Ohio .
POMEROY
992·2441 after 5:30 p.m .
The r i ght is reserved to relect
doors and windows, carports,
2·7-tfc
any and all bids ; and the sale
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
marquees, aluminum siding
Is subject to the approval of the
fi)MEROY, OHIO
and railing. A. Jacob, sales ' HOME &amp; AUTO
Court of Common Pleas,
5 ROOMS and bath in Racine;
rep.resentative. For free;·
Prob at e Di vision, Meigs
phone 992·6329.
992-2094
estimates,
phone Charlet.
County, Ohio .
·ffc
2·11
Lisle,
Syracuse,
V.
V.1
606 E. Main Pomeroy
.Bernard V. Fultz
Administrator,
Johnson and Son, Inc.
NICE
8
x
35
frail
er
with
tipout;
WANI '"'"""""'
Estate ot Ada Cray , Employment Wanted
3-2·1fC
ideal for a tOuP.Ie ; 10 miles
.NFORMATION
OFFICE SUPPLIE~
deceased IRONINGS fo do In my home,
----:c--cc-----:-::-norlh of Pomeroy ; call 992"EADLINES .
( 2) 11, 13, 15, 16, 4t
10c per Item ; you deliver and .s P .M . Day Before Publication .
E LNA ana wn11 ; ;,ewing
and
7479.
Monday Deadline ·9 a.m .
pickup; , IS47'12 Nye Sf ..
Machines ... service on all
2·9·tfC USED OFFSET PLATES
Cancellation .- Corrections
HAVE
makes . Reasonable rates .
Pomeroy, upstairs .
FURNITURE
NOTICE ON FILING
Will be acc'epted until 9 a.m . for
MANY USES
2-IJ.6lp
The
Sewing
Ce.nter,
Mid·
Brown
's
Trailer
OF INVENTORY
1 (RAILER ,
Day of-PL!bl ication
dleport, Ohio.
Stop In and See Our
. AND APPRAISEMENT
Park; phone 992·3324.
REGULATIONS
The State of Ohio, Meigs
11 ·16-tfc .Floor Display.
2·13·ffc
Th''e Publisher reserves th E

@)

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Business ·Services

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

EXPERT

·"wheel" Alignment
'5.55

the ·larijest
Bulldoz•er Radiator to
Healer Core.
· Nalhan Biggs
Radiator
St&gt;eclallst
- -·
---

All WEATHER
ROOFING·AND
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE: 992-2550:

Pomeroy Motor Co.

County . Probate Court

To the Admin istratrix of the
estate ; to such of the following
as are residents of the State of
Ohio, v iz: - the surviving
spouse, the next of kin, the
beneficiaries under the will ;
and to the attorney or attorneys
representing any of the
aforemenlioned persons :
Thomas F . Carroll, Deceased,
Rutland Township , Rulland ,

Oh io, No . 20347.

You are hereby nolffied that

the
Inventory
and
Ap .
pralsement of the estate of the
aforementioned, deceased , late
of said County was filed In this
Court. Said Inventory and
Appraisement will be for
hearing before this Court on the
22nd day of February , 1973, at
10 :00 o'clock A.M .
Any person desiring· to ti le
e~eceptlons thereto must file
them at least five days prior to
the date set for hear ing.
Given under my hand ond
seal of said Court, this lOtfl day
of Februarv 1973.
Manning D . Webster
Judge and ex -officio Clerk
of sold Court

(2) 13, 20. 21

By Ann B . Watson
Deputy Clerk

Carpenter
News, Event
Mr.
and Mrs. Glen
Gassaway, Powell, were
recent guesls of their son-Inlaw and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. William Miller and
daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe McWhorter
and family, local, were supper
guests of her brother-in-law
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
Burke and children of Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Stansbury, Julia Ann, Clara Mae
and Bobby, 'Groveport, along
with Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
· Stansbury and children and
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Oxley,
local, visited with their
parenls, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Stansbury.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan
and family spent Sunday in
Columbus with her brother-inlaw and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Rice and sons. Dwaine
Jordan and Alfred Rice attended the Ohio Power Tool
Show at the Ohio State
Fairgrounds. Others from the
area who attended included
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Crabtree
and sons.
Mr . and Mrs . Harold
Gillogly, Vicky and Bruce,
were weekend guests of his
sister, Mrs. Elba McKnight
and family in Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Woodrum,
Timmy and Traci, McArthur,
called on his grandmother,
Murl Galaway.
Roberta Parker of Strasburg
spent a few days here with her
pa_renls, Mr. and Mrs. Ney
Carpenter and sister, Martha
Mays .
Mrs.
Carpenter
celebrated her 86th birthday on
February 3rd.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan
of Gallipolis visited his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mendal
Jordan and other relatives on
Sunday. They called in Albany
at the home of her parenls, Mr.
and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey who
returned Sunday evening from
a trip to Arizona . They also had·
been through . the southern
states to Alabama where they
visited relatives before
returning home.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Greenlees
and Rilla Rhoades entertained
with a family gathering
honoring the 8th birthday of
their granddaughter, Darlene
Hooper. Those present were
Mrs. ROBe Hooper, Darlene
and Janet, J\thens, and Mr. and
Mrs. Clifton Fraley and sons,
local. 1 • , ,

Our record player · was
made in Central America:
it hill 33 revolutions per

minute.

r ight to edif or .reject any ad~
de emed oblet'tional.
Th E
publisher will not be respons!blt=
':for more thon OM incorreci
Insertion.
RATES
For Want Ad Service
s cents per Word one insertio,
Minimum Charge 75c
1:2 centS' per word thrp ~
c(lnsecullve insertions.
\ 8 cents per word six con
secutive insertions .
25 Per Cen t Discount on paid
ads and ads paid w i thin 10 day s
CARD OF THANKS '
&amp; OBITUARY
• 992-7161
51.50 fer 50 word ltdnim!Jm
Each add itional word 2c
Middleport, 0. BLIND ADS
Additiona l 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
OFFICE HOURS
8 :30a .m . to 5:00p .m . Daily
8 : 30 a.m. to 12 : 00 Noor
IN MEMORY of Char les H. Saturday.
Jones who was called hoi'ne

In Memort

Feb. 13, 1969: A fender card of
memory, Is softly touched
fhis day , Loving thoughfs of

2·13·1fp

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

Harrisonville
Society News
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Epple of
Middleport hosted a birthday
party for the 18th birthday -of
M. A. Epple on Feb. 4th. Those
present included Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Waldeck and two
children of Glouster; Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Brown of Ray;
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Pickering
of Columbus, and Mrs. Alice
Davis of Pomeroy. Mr. Epple
received two beautiful birthday cakes, one baked by Mrs.
Earl Foil. He shared them with
his neighbors. Mr. Epple also
received a card containi'ng $50
and also a new TV set complete
with new antenna from his
seven children ..
Mr . and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
have returned from a mor.th's
visit in their camper trailer in
the west. They were in
California and Arizona and
visited his sister, the Don
Updegraffs in Birmingham,
Ala., his nephew, Don Updegraff Jr. in Atlanta, Ga., her
brother, Rev. Ray Russell in
Lexington, Ky., and the F. 0 .
Whaleys in Columbus. They
report a good time in spite of
the deep snow.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Will .of
Albany purchased the rental
property below the store from
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Clark.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob l'Jimcan
are the proud parents of a new
son.
Mr. and Mrs . David
Richards are parents of a
daughter, Sherry Lynn, born at
Holzer Medical Center.
F. 0 . Whaley, who suffered a
second heart attack while
having a cataract removed
from his eye at Riverside
Hospital in Columbus is
recovering slowly.
Dale Williams, Bob Clark,
Bud Douglas and Ava Gilkey
all have bouls with the flu.
Mr. Guy Bolin is in poor
health and is recuperating very
slowly .
Mrs. Frances Young reporls
her sister has been placed in a
rest home. Mrs. Harriet Seiple
Is a victim of arthritis and
suffered a fall recently.

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
Put your best foot forward.
and someone will stomp on
it.

Lest you were worritd
others aren't thinking of
you. we want you to know
!hat Peb. 5-9 is National
Pay Your 81118 Week.
With what?

' ' '

contained. 15 ft. long ; phone

742·4714.

No, Gendolyn. you can't
pick up a mess of grass at
a pot-luck party.

2-13·3fc

NIGHT Club on new Rf . 7 and
Junction Rl. 143.
2·13·51p

Court St

tracf; phone 992-3511.

2-6·12tc
READY -MIX

buttonholes, · fancy designs,

delivered right to your
project. Fast and easy . Free

Pomeroy

esfimates, Phone 992·3284.
Goeg lein Ready ·Mi x Co .,
Mlddleporf, Ohio.
.
6·30·1fc

Pomeroy .

~--~--

C. BRADFORD, Aucfioneer

efc. Paint slighfly blemished. __________2-9-tf '

Comp lete Service

Choite of carrying case or

Phone 949·3821

sewing sfand. 149.80 cash· or DUE to divorce, 1972 8 !rack
available.

Electro

Hyg iene Co .. phone' 992·7755.
2·7 6tc

------

(2 ) E LECTROLUX Sweepe rs
deluxe model. Complete with
all cleaning attathments and

Racine. Ohio
Cr ilt Braatvrd

stereo console; must sell at
once ; ni ce walnut finish. This

set sold much higher , must let
go for $89.60 or 57.47 a month.

S·l-ffc

--.,------

PLUMBING work done ; phone
985·4265.
2·11 ·30tc

Try it in your home. Call 992.

5331.

1·16·tk

uses paper bags . Slighlly used - - - - - - -- -

but cleans and looks like new. AKC Registered Basset Hound :

HEATING &amp;
COOLING _

Will sel l for Sl7.25 cash or

6 months old ; fema le; call

te rm s available . El ect ro
Hygiene Co., phone 992-7755.

992·5510 .

--:; ; : ; : ; : ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; - ,

r

.HUMIDIFIERS

i Sl8CKS I
.

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448
WE WILL NOT be responsJbie
far any debts contracted by
anyone other than ourselves.

sober ; weekly wages; free
insurance and other fringe
benet it s; modern hou se
furnished ; write American

Culvert Co.. 201 Wheeling
Ave .. Cambridge. Ohio.
2·13·6fc

WAITRESS, oul of school; call
992-3697.
2·11 ·3fc

Card of Thanks
WE WISH lo express our si n·
cere heartfelffhanks to all the
fri ends/
ne ighbors and
relatives for the ir consoling
words and flower offerings;

also the Fl rst·Aid, the nurses

and doctors of St. Mary 's

Hospital of Huntington. W.
Va ., Rev. Audry Miller ,

Rawling s-Coats and all who
helped in any way in the death
of our mother and wife, Mary
Jane Geary.

Mr . Donald Geary and

children .

2·13·11P

Poles
Maximum
Diameter
10" on
Largest End

$7.00 Per Ton
DELIVERED
TO

OHIO
PALLET co.:

Open Saturdays·
Iram 8 o.m. to 3:30p.m.
On Old Rt. 33
Phone 992-2689

Pomeroy, Ohio ·.

2·00lc

Call 992·5331.

1-16-tfc AUTOMOBILE Insurance been-

Our Special:

cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992·

Slf)IGER automatic sewing
machine; lik e new*' wa lnut
cabinet . Makes design stlt·
ches, zig-zags, buttonholes.
blind hems, overcasts, etc .•

Buy 2 Pairs, 1
PAIR FREE . The
best buy in the
area. Have slacks
&amp; jeans lor the
whole family ,

2966.

6·15-tfc

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
~ · Call Ravenswood, 273service, all makes. 99:2·2284.
9521 or 273·9893.
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
1-ll .ffc
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
LOCUST fenc e posts; phone 985·
3·29·ffC
4265.
~---,--=-------2-11 -3()fc

POMEROY
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

Phone 992-2181

Signed: Jerry L. &amp; Linda Sue
Jack s, Box 275, Rufland ,
AUCTION
Ohio.
SATURDAY , Feb. 17, sfarling ·cOAL, Li mes tone, ExcelsiOr
• 2·11 ·3fp at 11 :00 A.M . at my farm 112 Sail Work,s, E. Main St ..
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891.
mil e norfh of Sf. Route 681 at
-----4-12·ffC
Allred. Ohio (four miles' West
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp;WIGS.
of Tuppers Plains) .
SPECIALS MONTHLY .
PHONE HELEN JANE
MACHINERY
Sale
BROWN, MIDDLEPORT, 1956 INT. 300 utility lracfor, Pets For
International 2-point pick·up PARKVIEW Kennels going out
OHIO 992·5113 . ·
disc, Int. .2-row corn planter.
12·3·ffc
of business . Big price
Ford 2- 14" plow. Ford 2·row
on all dog;. All AK·
culfiv ator with fert. at - reduction
C. 59.2 Broadway &amp; Ash
tachment, Ford sprayer ,
Help WanteJ
Ford posf.hole digger, Ford 7- Streets, Middl eport, Ohio.
FARM E R; e)( peri enced and
12-13·ffc
ft _ mower, t-ord blade and

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

Phone 949·3221.

2-9·6tc

sew ing
rY) a chine ,
This OIL AND GAS Service, new and
machine
darn s,
em -. used furnaces, new aluminum
broideries , overcasts, but ·
siding and remodeling, 24
tonholes. Pay balance $36 .50
hour service ; phone 843·2833.
or payments can be arranged.
1-25-30fp

AND JEANS

~

Pomeroy, 0.

Wanted

WILL trim Or cut trees, clean
out basements, attics, etc .

2-1·6fc JUST taken in. deluxe zlg.zag

Furnace Controls
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

CONCRETE

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

terms

"HEll"

The
Daily Sentinel

BOB

scoop, Ford manure loader. 2-

row Rotary hoe , New Holland

For Sale or Trade

fee d grinder -mi xe r , New
Holland forager Harvester 70,000 BTU Siegler fuel oil
heateq used Slf:z months ; for
with corn head, 100 bu. Case sale
or would consider trade
power take-off
manure

Real Estate For Sale

HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 .Brick
Streel, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
house, 3 bedrooms, ex cellent

loca tion, close fo school and

c1ty ; contact Lou Osborne or •

ca ll 992.5898.

11·26-ffc
HOUSE in Lon g Bottom, phone
985-3529.

·

~=-:-:-----.,,..-,--:...
6·:_
11 -ffc
_
2 NEW 3 bedroom homes; 1 with
basement, 1 without ; 2 car
garages I acre lots: located at
Rock Springs behind Meigs
Co. Fairground ; will trade or
help finance; also 5 good
building lots, wafer and
disposal in~talled ; Charles H.
Cornell, Alhens, 593·7034 or

for something of equal value;
spreader, Allis Chalmers 303 phone
992.7124.
593-5667.
hay baler . Myers hay
2·11-lfc
2·11-6fp
crusher, 3-pt. New Idea side·
del. rake, 32 fl . Mayrath hay 1966 INTERNATIONAL pickup 4 BE DROM home, 2 baths, gas
and gratn elevator, 1.6 ft . h~y
elevator , 20 ft . x 4 m. gram

auger, John Deere 8 fl. wheel
diSc, 8 ft. smgle roll
cultipa cke r , smoothing
harrow. lime spreader, Black

truck engine and 4 speed
transmission ; complete; good

furnace, full basement, ri ver
frontage, Syracuse, Ohio,

condition · will trade fo 1967
Che 1 1•
.
r
73 4vroe
engine; phone 992·

Phone 992-2360.

1-25-tfc

8·

2-11-3fc HOUSE, 5 rooms and bath.
located in Rutland; priced fo i
quick
sate ; phone 742-3334 .
Moline corn pi cker. Fox Auto Sales
blower, wilh 50 ft. of pipe, 1
. ,
-::-::------___:2:._-7-6tc
flaf·bed wagon, 1 wagon with SHARP
69
Plymoulh
corn and silage bed , wagon
Roadrunner .
Two
door 5 ROOM HOUSE, 108 Stale
Street, Pomeroy, · Phone 992·
un loaders, 3.pf. tift pole, Int. hardtop , 383 . automaflc,
3834.
fractor whee l welghls , brtght orange w1th black vinyl
Electric cemenl mixer.
lop, $1425. Phone 985·3582 or
2-8-6tp
FEED
667·6317.
2-8·6fc TWO and on e. half acres In
APPROX. 800 corn, 70 bu. oafs.
DAIRY EQUIPMENT
-------;- - - - Ffafwoods area; phone 742·
3171.
:AND MISC.
1963 DODGE Station Wagon,
3 SURGE milkers, Hinman runs good, body fair, $190;
2-13-6fc
vacuum pump, sfainless steel phone 992-7523.
wash vats, milk cans, baler
2-11-3fc
twine, elec. 'fence posts, truck
Mobt'le Homes r Sal
rack for Int. pickup, log 1966 OLDS TORONAOO•. air- ,.
rOI'
chains and many other lfems. D,4i'lditloned ; full power, $900;
LUNCH served, not responsi ble phone 992-5367.
·;.Air Condffioners ' .for accidents. In case of ex2·11-6fc
tremely bad weather, wil l be - - - - - - - - Awnings
postponed 1 week. Owner : 1968 CHRYSLER Newporf. 4
•~Underpi nniiig
Shirley Russel Findling . d6or sedan, power steering
Auctioneer : I. 0 . " Mac" and brakes, air condlflonlng, 'tomplefe mQblle ·- hQme/. i
McCoy.
very good condition; good
:service ......- plus gigantic 11:
2-11 ·3fc fires; phone 992-5510.
- - -- - - -- ·
2-11 ·6fc display of mobile homes
;always avallable·af ...
i,
DELUXE zig zag sewing
'
machine . This machine 1965 GMC Tractor with 1966
Hawk 13 disc grain drill , 6 fl .

Cleaners combine,

1-row

e

I

darns, embroideries. over-

casts, buttonholes all without
attachmenfs, just dial and
•sew. Pay balance ot $39.20 or
pay $5 per month, 992-5331 .

TraiiiTJoblle trailer ; with or

without trailer ; wifh wetllne ;
ex cellent · condition ; can be
seen at 929 Hysell Slreef
Middleport.
'

----:-::--::---'--~2~·9-6tc r::-:-=-:-----2~·9-6fc

·· ·

MILLER
'' MOBILE
HOMES,;,
.
-·

.f

.

1220 Washington Blvd.
.423-7521
BE~PRE,O•.

paid for al i makes and
1972 GMC Sprinf truck; phone CASH
. models of mobile homes.
742·3171.
Phone area code 614-423·9531.
OLD furniture , oak table s,
2-9·6fc
4-13-ffc
organs, dishes, clocks, brass - - - - - - - - beds or comp lete households. 1972 LIBERTY trailer 3
Wrlfe M. D. Miller, Rt . 4, bedrooms, 1112 baths, all 'new 1968 WINDSOR, 12x60 2
bedroom; with or without
Pomeroy, Ohio.· Phone 992- furniture , jusf fully carpeted
furn
iture ; phone 992·3511 .
6271 .
two weeks ago ; lived in four
2·ll·ffc
1-7.tfc monfhs; SSOO down and take
::
12-x
60
-:-,-19_7_1
_A
_C
_
A
_
D
_
E_
M
_Y. 3
c"H-A-IN-s-aw
- ,-n-ear-ly_ n_e_w_, ex. ~;:; payments; phone 992·
bedroom; fip-oul, air, washer
cellenf buy, 446·4850 or 992·
7777, Larry Evans, Larry's _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2_·7·6tc
and dryer ; phone 742-3280
after 6 p.m.
Mobile Home, Pomeroy.
2·9-ff
12-11-7tc

Wanted To Buy

Wanted To Buy

C ~ iT LE ,

446·3/92,

------ - 1--

1969 60xl2 2 BEDROOM SchutT
SNARE drum ; phone 742-4714.
Mobile Home; phone 367·7673.
2-IJ.61c
2,- 13-ltc
2·13·tfc
------:--- ~

--

1\lE PAST' COUPLE
OF WEEKS ...

CRACKS~

· -iS"omeroy ·

SLOAN·
&amp;

C. L. KITCHEN
992-5653
EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
and small ; Backhoes ond
Loaders on track and tires;
Dump !rucks - Lo·boY
Service; Septic tanks lnslalled ; George
(81111
Pull ins; phone 992·2478.
2-9-ffc

&lt;lta--

"""1"'"I

- - - -- - -

WlNN'"'·

HARRISON'S TV Service ond
Serv ice Calls; phone 992-2522.
H ·tfC

WHA'IS il&lt;E: IWITTER.
WINNIE? VOU J.00K '
A LITTLE DOWN
IN THE MOUTH I

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, ditching service; top soli, fill
dirt, llmesfone; B&amp;K Excavaflng. Phone 992-5367,
Dick Karr. Jr .
9·1-tfc

11irgil B.

Teaford, Sr.
Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, o·hio
NEW LISTING
INVESTMENT - 5 apartments. One a good 3 bedroom
with one

OF 1HEM

&amp;

Real Estate For Sale

modern home,

JOtNn.Y SV THE HOME SCONO!rliC$1
DESIGN, AN~ ANIMA~ HII$8.4Nl&gt;RY
!&gt;eMRrMENTS
-·--&lt;-~

~NE

\\\::lt.ILD 9TOP i'O
GIVE /fE; MOI."E-'1.

REMODELING

tanks Installed; dump trucks
and lo.boys for hire; will haul
fill dirt, top soli, limestone
and gravel t ca ll Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992·7089;
night phone 992-3525 or 992·
5232.
2·11·1fC

apartment In the basement.
All are gas heated, each with
a bath and nice kitchen.
Located about one block

CONTEMPORARV
ANIMAL

...13UT

HOME BUILDING

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

JEEP Wagoneer - 4 dr .
7 MONTH old trailer 14 x 10: 1967
S.W.
4 wh. dr ., auto .. 327 VB,
unfurnished. fully carpeted. air P.S.
filf. . P.B., bucket
Phone 992-7649 after S p.m . seats, 33,000
jusf overhauled, SEPTIC TANKS CL&amp;ANED
2-4·1 2tc new paint, shocks,
tires, wh REASONABLE rafes . Ph. 446- '
:
SI,000 Sell $1;300 firm . 44.1-4850
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
(4) CLOSE OUT on 1972 full size or
992 ·7777 Larry Evans,
ONner &amp; Operator.
zig-zag sewing machines. For
Larry 's Mobile
Home,
5-12-lfc
se wing stretch fabrics ,

Notice

my dear husband , Will never
Golda Jones

1

1966 BANNER ca mper. self·

j

General
Tire Sales

fade away .

For Sale

ves, TO 8S AllMINtSTERE[)

I 'l'RIED -TO MUG
\:Z' PEOPLE OVER

KITCHEN &amp;SON .
CONSTRUCTION

inf~rior

WILL DO remodeling,

FROt.l THE 8At&lt;tNG
Pllf$1/&gt;ENT
• 81-00MERi

INI)UST~

I'M GIVIN6 LIP NN
LFE OF CRIME..
I'M A li&lt;\IL.URE.

INC. -·

MOTOR~

Ph. ,;1-2174 ·

20~

8 far 51.00

t~ VOU SAV THIS N
RESEA~C~ GRANT tS

SM)))LN_EUUN

For Sale · ~
Aluminum
Sheets

Regular Retreads
'9.95 each
With Exchange
Casings

WE 'RE FIXIN'TO HAVE ·
POACHED CHICKEN
FER SUPPER

for Sale

Notice

PUBUC• NOTICES

I IUAS R€FERRI'-IG
TO 1liE O)'I'S!. ~!

-- AIIJ' NOW IT LOOKS L1 KE

NO!ll!/i6S THE: MATTER ! WHOA! \OJ DON'T
EVERYTHINGSF/NE.DOI IHA\IETOSI1C MY
HAVE 10 WALK AROUND
O!'F.I ONLY
WITH AGRIN ON MY
THCXJGHT )QlJ
FACE ALL. DAY 'I'
MIGHT NEED
SOME

' 90RRY, ~ANIE. . THERE

THA"tiS

IS 50METHIN61ROUBL- WHAT GOOD
tNG ME AND I. ~URE
SISTER5 - INcouLD use·A
LAWARE
SYMPAlHETIC
I'OR,WII~INif:.Ai
EAR. r--__.-

G &amp; E Appliance Repair, repair
on all laundry equipment,
refrigeration equipment and
house wiring ; welding,
electri c and gas. Call 992-~
or after 4:30 p.m. call 9926050.
2·5·301p
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEANED, REPAIRED. MILLER
SANITATION, STEWART,
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
10·~-ttc ,

- -- - - -

from court house, for just

S37 .500.00.
NEW LISTING
SMALL RESTAURANT In a· prime locaflon, doing a
good · business. A good op.

rCLELAND'
REALTY
t

portunity for someone who
wants on their own . All
equipment, and furnishings
needed to run a restaurant

for only SS,OOO.OO.
NEW LISTING
CORNER LOT - Near
school. 2 bedroom home,
nice bath, paneling, utility
building, and garage. Want
only $7,500.00.
NEW LI&lt;TING
4 ROOI';N C\1 porches,

cellar, 2 v~W.;j , 112 acre of

land. Only $3,800.00.
MIDDLEPORT
3 BEDROOMS- Nice bath,
new wall to wall carpeting,
neat kitchen , utility room
and cellar. Level lof. Asking
$15,000.00.
BUSINESS BUILDING
ON ROUTE 7 - 2 large
business rooms. 2 nice rest
rooms, large storage and a

good big all-purpose room .
Large notural gas forced air
furnace, central

air can.

dlt lonlng, and plenty of
parking .
ANTIQUE BRICK
LOVELY OLDER HOME Living abouf 16x36 feet, 4
large bedrooms with closets,
foyer with open stairway,
large basement, porches, 5
car garage. 2 acres with

barn. Asking lust $21;500.00.
NEW HOME
4 BEDROOMS - All have
closets, 1'12 baths, large
beautiful kitchen, utility. All
electric home. garage, large
lot. Only $21,000.00.
NEW LISTING
MIDDLEPORT - Large 4
bedroom home, 2 modern
baths, gas forced air fur.
nace. Large foyer .J..Ifh open
stairs, Iorge fro~t and a
small back porch. Garage,
all on a corner lot. Asking
$21,900.00.
Now Is the time to buy that
house that you have been
looking at so long . Should It
be one of ours, see us for
financing . We have a bunch.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
992-3325

.

401 E. Moln

~ . Pomeroy

.

.

HEARS OL.D
l story frame, 3 bedrooms W·

large closets. nice bath,
·dining area, beautiful kif·
chen, hardwood floors, some

carpeting, ca rport with
storage. elecftlc heat, lot 100
x 100, low upkeep. 521,500.
10 ACRES
Mostly level, 3 bedrooms,
balh, forced air furnace,

~tUM~td

dining R., porches, barn, out

ce llar, o1her buildings,
blacktop road . $8,900.
S BEDROOMS
1'12 baths, large living R..
Dining R., nice kitchen .
Cellar. Garage. Storm doors
window s.

&amp;

by

2 enclosed

several lots. Good location.

DICK TRACY

Loads of space. $8,200.
OLDER HOME
About 1 acre (level). on
excellent Sl., 4 bedrooms,
balh, din ing R. , 1 Rental
larg e workshop. $18,500. '
Maybe the time has come for
you to consider a more

modern home. CALL US
TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
l SALESMEN
TO ASSIST YOU
992·22S9

23. Caviar
before
processing
24. Was
furious
25. Singer,
Frankie

If no answer

992-lS.S or 985·4209

.'

We talk to yciu
like a person.

-msoivaf. ~r-YII(Ef.
-

SIW'PfR GETS HERe Willi Hl5
·l't)"e, 1llf PIA!teS- !IIIP Till! EVII'ENCE,
WILL IN!
II'~ TilE IIILI'IILUE!

WMP0/1390,
---_:___j

.

~t!1JlOOID!1rn®u..J ==~
Urur:ramble th... fourJumbl..,
one letter to each oquan, to
form four ordinary word1.

I

b
II
II

CEIIEN

11'ELKAN

I

I KJ

I IK J
RICHEP±
I

II

27. Preftx for
mounta!D

Now IITIDie the cin:led !etten
to form the IIII'PriN IIIIWer, u
ouneoted br the above eartoon.

"( I I I I I X )"
(.Aawen lo-.rrow)

28.FlyboJa

Jumble"

29. ••Royal"

Ye•terdar'•

name In
show
businesa
(2 wdo.)
32. Old D11tch

IULLY SQUAW IITRAY IXPOSI

\ A.n1wer1 What lite fJI'Okftrt 11iue of

•culplure

~a• - A

"IUSf"

'1tlU LOOK LIKE
'1tlU Jii5T Sl.illl.OitlfD
A CHOCOUlJE
CAKE ...

DAILY CRYPTOQUOT·E- Here's how to work it:

ALL THE KID!&gt; THAT I PlAI(
AXYDL .BAAXR
.
8ASf!IALL WIT/i ARE 601N6 iO
61VE ME A1EffiiiONrAL DINNER!
Ia LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is f---.--r~;:-...,-.,,---1
!'sed lor 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 code letters are different.

I

New 3·Bedroom 30'x74' Ranch

Ph. tiNsts

Thounds thrronge

U. Dodge

'

With 20'x28' 2-car garage, JO'x46 ,
heated basement, custom built kit .
chen, all electric, fttlly
Located on 2 acre lot, T. p. water
approved 1700 gallons aerated sewag~
system . Under $25,000. ·
·
.

,_,r=

Gfty

'

(Between ,Chester &amp; !uppers Plai.ns on

Gene

\\II\ITING.

CO 19'18 Kinr Future• Syndicate, [ne.)

33. "Royal."
name In
Journal·
lam
(2 wda.)
to. Doing
dark
deeds
U. Frail
U.-Jane

. ON YOUR DIAL

RIGGSCREST MANOR
.

LIE, lOII'Re 6fTTING ~!
WE RIJIITitltOUGit 1llf STUNTS
AIWIANt&gt;. 5IIAI'Pt!to: WILL
HAVe Sfli~ EHO!JG/t

DOWN
1.- semper
tyrannis
Z.Extremely
3. Babylonian deity
4. Tenth of
a sen
5. Allotment
8. South
Am'erican
Yesterday'• Anower ,.,,
plain
18. Non- ·
30. Reckon
7. Dawn
paying
31, Swerve
deity
profession 33. Elongated
8, Mr.
19. Whet·
fish
Onassls
stone
34: 9. Fixed
20. Observed
Gardner
charge
21. Bolster;
35. Dlsen13. - vivant
buttress
cumber
15. Biased
22. - avis
36. I00
person
25. College in
stotinki
16. Peer
Brooklyn
37. Briny
aynt'a
(abbr.)
38. Singular
mother
26. Noah's
39. Come17. Plato!
craft
dian,
(aiF.)~--,..--,~28::.-Tild=alize
Louis _

meuure

-

Ready for Immediate Occupancy!

·

name in

music
(2 wds.)
H.Charsed
atom
15. Royal
name in
"Der
Rosenkavalier"
(2 wds.)
21. Debtor's

. _ __ _ _ ___J .. .,..
.•

Rt.
71
.

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
l.Belle&amp;.Frond
10. Ancient
region of
Asia
Minor
11. Learning .
12. "Royal"

porches. Going af $12,800.
STORAGE OR RENTAL
POMEROY - Large brick &amp;
block building. (now rented).

Yeslerday'o Cryploquote: ONCE IN THE PACK, YOU MAY
NOT HAVE TO BARK-BUT YOU MUST AT LEAST WAG
YOUR TAIL.-RUSSIAN PROVERB

..

CRYPTOQUOTES

-·

MBW'F OP J LQSSJIPV - OP RWQLPVEJS
WB

HJFFPV

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KBR

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CHECK THE CALENDAR ... IT
Mli6r f}E A~IL FOOL'6 DAI( !

�' '

-The Daily Seminc,, Mlddle~rt-Pomeroy, 0.,

Sentinel ClaJ•sifi~·ds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
HOOD'S AQUARIUMS; fi sh COLONIAL, Early American
style, maple , stereo-rad io,
and supplies; new location,
AM·FM 4 speed, automatic
Your Right to Know
Ash Slreet, Middleport near
changer,
4 speaker system .
park; phone 992-5443.
Balan ce $78 .34 . Use our
and be informed of the func 1-7-tfc
budget ferms. Call 992-7085.
tions of your government are
- -- - -embod ied In public not ids. In
2·8-6lc
GIVE your feet a freat; fry a
that self .government charg es
I
pair of Knapp Shoes; call Bob
all cit izens to be informed .
t his n ewspaper urges every
Hysell. 992·5324.
1911 DODGE PICKUP
11995
CONTEMPORARY Modern . Have your home built by
citizen to read and study these
1·23-tfc
8'
wide
body,
local
1·awner
frade·
ln
wlfh
34,000
miles,
6
Cusfom Builders. Our
Walnut style stereo, radio,
notices . We strongly advise
cylinder
engine,
standard
transmission,
heavy
duty
tires.
carpenters
have 20 years
AM·FM,
4
speaker
sound
t those c itizens. seeking further
experience 10 building
clean cab, wh ite &amp; green finish, deluxe molding s, rear
system, 4 speed automatic
informal ian , to uercise t heir
For Rent
right of access to pub lic
changer. Balance $69.72. Use
homes in. Meigs County.
bumpers. radio. Book Valu e 12300.00.
records and publ ic m ee t ing s.
our
budget
ferm
s.
Call
992On MoSfAmerican Cars
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and 7085.
.
1971 PINTO FORD
$1l99
unfurnished
apartm ents.
2 8-6fc
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992·5434.
2 door, local 1 owner, low mileage, good tires, clean in PUBLIC NOTICE
4·12·ffc
,Phon~ 992-2094 ..
terior, green finis h, radio, 2000cc engine, 4-speed .
NOTICE OF SALE
Bids will be received at the
STEREOS
Track.
repossessed,
UNFURNISHED 3-room looks like new. 4 speaker
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
offi ce of Bernard V. F uttz ,
lf70 DODGE POLARA
$169S
aparfment, adults only. No audio system In wa lnut
Pomeroy National
Bank
0Pen8 Til S
4-door, factory air, V-8 engine, automatic transmission,
pets, 408 Spring Ave., console, take over payments
Building, Pomeroy. Oh io, until
Monday
thru Salurday
February 17 , 1973, at 11 .00
power steering &amp; brakes, good white·wall -tires , wflite
Pomeroy.
of
$1.50
per
week
or
pay
606
E.
fJAain,
Pomeroy, 0 .
O' Clock A.M ., tor the sale of
finish, vinyl fop, radio, clean Inside .
1·7-tfc balance of 589.50. 992-5331.
.
&lt;••
the Ada Cray rea l estate,
situated at 392 S. Third Street,
2 BEDROOM mobile home ; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2_
·9·61c
Middleport, Meigs County,
completely furni s hed ; call
~EE US FOR: Awnings, storm
Ohio .
POMEROY
992·2441 after 5:30 p.m .
The r i ght is reserved to relect
doors and windows, carports,
2·7-tfc
any and all bids ; and the sale
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
marquees, aluminum siding
Is subject to the approval of the
fi)MEROY, OHIO
and railing. A. Jacob, sales ' HOME &amp; AUTO
Court of Common Pleas,
5 ROOMS and bath in Racine;
rep.resentative. For free;·
Prob at e Di vision, Meigs
phone 992·6329.
992-2094
estimates,
phone Charlet.
County, Ohio .
·ffc
2·11
Lisle,
Syracuse,
V.
V.1
606 E. Main Pomeroy
.Bernard V. Fultz
Administrator,
Johnson and Son, Inc.
NICE
8
x
35
frail
er
with
tipout;
WANI '"'"""""'
Estate ot Ada Cray , Employment Wanted
3-2·1fC
ideal for a tOuP.Ie ; 10 miles
.NFORMATION
OFFICE SUPPLIE~
deceased IRONINGS fo do In my home,
----:c--cc-----:-::-norlh of Pomeroy ; call 992"EADLINES .
( 2) 11, 13, 15, 16, 4t
10c per Item ; you deliver and .s P .M . Day Before Publication .
E LNA ana wn11 ; ;,ewing
and
7479.
Monday Deadline ·9 a.m .
pickup; , IS47'12 Nye Sf ..
Machines ... service on all
2·9·tfC USED OFFSET PLATES
Cancellation .- Corrections
HAVE
makes . Reasonable rates .
Pomeroy, upstairs .
FURNITURE
NOTICE ON FILING
Will be acc'epted until 9 a.m . for
MANY USES
2-IJ.6lp
The
Sewing
Ce.nter,
Mid·
Brown
's
Trailer
OF INVENTORY
1 (RAILER ,
Day of-PL!bl ication
dleport, Ohio.
Stop In and See Our
. AND APPRAISEMENT
Park; phone 992·3324.
REGULATIONS
The State of Ohio, Meigs
11 ·16-tfc .Floor Display.
2·13·ffc
Th''e Publisher reserves th E

@)

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Business ·Services

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

EXPERT

·"wheel" Alignment
'5.55

the ·larijest
Bulldoz•er Radiator to
Healer Core.
· Nalhan Biggs
Radiator
St&gt;eclallst
- -·
---

All WEATHER
ROOFING·AND
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE: 992-2550:

Pomeroy Motor Co.

County . Probate Court

To the Admin istratrix of the
estate ; to such of the following
as are residents of the State of
Ohio, v iz: - the surviving
spouse, the next of kin, the
beneficiaries under the will ;
and to the attorney or attorneys
representing any of the
aforemenlioned persons :
Thomas F . Carroll, Deceased,
Rutland Township , Rulland ,

Oh io, No . 20347.

You are hereby nolffied that

the
Inventory
and
Ap .
pralsement of the estate of the
aforementioned, deceased , late
of said County was filed In this
Court. Said Inventory and
Appraisement will be for
hearing before this Court on the
22nd day of February , 1973, at
10 :00 o'clock A.M .
Any person desiring· to ti le
e~eceptlons thereto must file
them at least five days prior to
the date set for hear ing.
Given under my hand ond
seal of said Court, this lOtfl day
of Februarv 1973.
Manning D . Webster
Judge and ex -officio Clerk
of sold Court

(2) 13, 20. 21

By Ann B . Watson
Deputy Clerk

Carpenter
News, Event
Mr.
and Mrs. Glen
Gassaway, Powell, were
recent guesls of their son-Inlaw and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. William Miller and
daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe McWhorter
and family, local, were supper
guests of her brother-in-law
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
Burke and children of Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Stansbury, Julia Ann, Clara Mae
and Bobby, 'Groveport, along
with Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
· Stansbury and children and
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Oxley,
local, visited with their
parenls, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Stansbury.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan
and family spent Sunday in
Columbus with her brother-inlaw and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Rice and sons. Dwaine
Jordan and Alfred Rice attended the Ohio Power Tool
Show at the Ohio State
Fairgrounds. Others from the
area who attended included
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Crabtree
and sons.
Mr . and Mrs . Harold
Gillogly, Vicky and Bruce,
were weekend guests of his
sister, Mrs. Elba McKnight
and family in Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Woodrum,
Timmy and Traci, McArthur,
called on his grandmother,
Murl Galaway.
Roberta Parker of Strasburg
spent a few days here with her
pa_renls, Mr. and Mrs. Ney
Carpenter and sister, Martha
Mays .
Mrs.
Carpenter
celebrated her 86th birthday on
February 3rd.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan
of Gallipolis visited his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mendal
Jordan and other relatives on
Sunday. They called in Albany
at the home of her parenls, Mr.
and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey who
returned Sunday evening from
a trip to Arizona . They also had·
been through . the southern
states to Alabama where they
visited relatives before
returning home.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Greenlees
and Rilla Rhoades entertained
with a family gathering
honoring the 8th birthday of
their granddaughter, Darlene
Hooper. Those present were
Mrs. ROBe Hooper, Darlene
and Janet, J\thens, and Mr. and
Mrs. Clifton Fraley and sons,
local. 1 • , ,

Our record player · was
made in Central America:
it hill 33 revolutions per

minute.

r ight to edif or .reject any ad~
de emed oblet'tional.
Th E
publisher will not be respons!blt=
':for more thon OM incorreci
Insertion.
RATES
For Want Ad Service
s cents per Word one insertio,
Minimum Charge 75c
1:2 centS' per word thrp ~
c(lnsecullve insertions.
\ 8 cents per word six con
secutive insertions .
25 Per Cen t Discount on paid
ads and ads paid w i thin 10 day s
CARD OF THANKS '
&amp; OBITUARY
• 992-7161
51.50 fer 50 word ltdnim!Jm
Each add itional word 2c
Middleport, 0. BLIND ADS
Additiona l 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
OFFICE HOURS
8 :30a .m . to 5:00p .m . Daily
8 : 30 a.m. to 12 : 00 Noor
IN MEMORY of Char les H. Saturday.
Jones who was called hoi'ne

In Memort

Feb. 13, 1969: A fender card of
memory, Is softly touched
fhis day , Loving thoughfs of

2·13·1fp

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

Harrisonville
Society News
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Epple of
Middleport hosted a birthday
party for the 18th birthday -of
M. A. Epple on Feb. 4th. Those
present included Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Waldeck and two
children of Glouster; Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Brown of Ray;
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Pickering
of Columbus, and Mrs. Alice
Davis of Pomeroy. Mr. Epple
received two beautiful birthday cakes, one baked by Mrs.
Earl Foil. He shared them with
his neighbors. Mr. Epple also
received a card containi'ng $50
and also a new TV set complete
with new antenna from his
seven children ..
Mr . and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
have returned from a mor.th's
visit in their camper trailer in
the west. They were in
California and Arizona and
visited his sister, the Don
Updegraffs in Birmingham,
Ala., his nephew, Don Updegraff Jr. in Atlanta, Ga., her
brother, Rev. Ray Russell in
Lexington, Ky., and the F. 0 .
Whaleys in Columbus. They
report a good time in spite of
the deep snow.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Will .of
Albany purchased the rental
property below the store from
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Clark.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob l'Jimcan
are the proud parents of a new
son.
Mr. and Mrs . David
Richards are parents of a
daughter, Sherry Lynn, born at
Holzer Medical Center.
F. 0 . Whaley, who suffered a
second heart attack while
having a cataract removed
from his eye at Riverside
Hospital in Columbus is
recovering slowly.
Dale Williams, Bob Clark,
Bud Douglas and Ava Gilkey
all have bouls with the flu.
Mr. Guy Bolin is in poor
health and is recuperating very
slowly .
Mrs. Frances Young reporls
her sister has been placed in a
rest home. Mrs. Harriet Seiple
Is a victim of arthritis and
suffered a fall recently.

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
Put your best foot forward.
and someone will stomp on
it.

Lest you were worritd
others aren't thinking of
you. we want you to know
!hat Peb. 5-9 is National
Pay Your 81118 Week.
With what?

' ' '

contained. 15 ft. long ; phone

742·4714.

No, Gendolyn. you can't
pick up a mess of grass at
a pot-luck party.

2-13·3fc

NIGHT Club on new Rf . 7 and
Junction Rl. 143.
2·13·51p

Court St

tracf; phone 992-3511.

2-6·12tc
READY -MIX

buttonholes, · fancy designs,

delivered right to your
project. Fast and easy . Free

Pomeroy

esfimates, Phone 992·3284.
Goeg lein Ready ·Mi x Co .,
Mlddleporf, Ohio.
.
6·30·1fc

Pomeroy .

~--~--

C. BRADFORD, Aucfioneer

efc. Paint slighfly blemished. __________2-9-tf '

Comp lete Service

Choite of carrying case or

Phone 949·3821

sewing sfand. 149.80 cash· or DUE to divorce, 1972 8 !rack
available.

Electro

Hyg iene Co .. phone' 992·7755.
2·7 6tc

------

(2 ) E LECTROLUX Sweepe rs
deluxe model. Complete with
all cleaning attathments and

Racine. Ohio
Cr ilt Braatvrd

stereo console; must sell at
once ; ni ce walnut finish. This

set sold much higher , must let
go for $89.60 or 57.47 a month.

S·l-ffc

--.,------

PLUMBING work done ; phone
985·4265.
2·11 ·30tc

Try it in your home. Call 992.

5331.

1·16·tk

uses paper bags . Slighlly used - - - - - - -- -

but cleans and looks like new. AKC Registered Basset Hound :

HEATING &amp;
COOLING _

Will sel l for Sl7.25 cash or

6 months old ; fema le; call

te rm s available . El ect ro
Hygiene Co., phone 992-7755.

992·5510 .

--:; ; : ; : ; : ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; - ,

r

.HUMIDIFIERS

i Sl8CKS I
.

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448
WE WILL NOT be responsJbie
far any debts contracted by
anyone other than ourselves.

sober ; weekly wages; free
insurance and other fringe
benet it s; modern hou se
furnished ; write American

Culvert Co.. 201 Wheeling
Ave .. Cambridge. Ohio.
2·13·6fc

WAITRESS, oul of school; call
992-3697.
2·11 ·3fc

Card of Thanks
WE WISH lo express our si n·
cere heartfelffhanks to all the
fri ends/
ne ighbors and
relatives for the ir consoling
words and flower offerings;

also the Fl rst·Aid, the nurses

and doctors of St. Mary 's

Hospital of Huntington. W.
Va ., Rev. Audry Miller ,

Rawling s-Coats and all who
helped in any way in the death
of our mother and wife, Mary
Jane Geary.

Mr . Donald Geary and

children .

2·13·11P

Poles
Maximum
Diameter
10" on
Largest End

$7.00 Per Ton
DELIVERED
TO

OHIO
PALLET co.:

Open Saturdays·
Iram 8 o.m. to 3:30p.m.
On Old Rt. 33
Phone 992-2689

Pomeroy, Ohio ·.

2·00lc

Call 992·5331.

1-16-tfc AUTOMOBILE Insurance been-

Our Special:

cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992·

Slf)IGER automatic sewing
machine; lik e new*' wa lnut
cabinet . Makes design stlt·
ches, zig-zags, buttonholes.
blind hems, overcasts, etc .•

Buy 2 Pairs, 1
PAIR FREE . The
best buy in the
area. Have slacks
&amp; jeans lor the
whole family ,

2966.

6·15-tfc

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
~ · Call Ravenswood, 273service, all makes. 99:2·2284.
9521 or 273·9893.
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
1-ll .ffc
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
LOCUST fenc e posts; phone 985·
3·29·ffC
4265.
~---,--=-------2-11 -3()fc

POMEROY
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

Phone 992-2181

Signed: Jerry L. &amp; Linda Sue
Jack s, Box 275, Rufland ,
AUCTION
Ohio.
SATURDAY , Feb. 17, sfarling ·cOAL, Li mes tone, ExcelsiOr
• 2·11 ·3fp at 11 :00 A.M . at my farm 112 Sail Work,s, E. Main St ..
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891.
mil e norfh of Sf. Route 681 at
-----4-12·ffC
Allred. Ohio (four miles' West
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp;WIGS.
of Tuppers Plains) .
SPECIALS MONTHLY .
PHONE HELEN JANE
MACHINERY
Sale
BROWN, MIDDLEPORT, 1956 INT. 300 utility lracfor, Pets For
International 2-point pick·up PARKVIEW Kennels going out
OHIO 992·5113 . ·
disc, Int. .2-row corn planter.
12·3·ffc
of business . Big price
Ford 2- 14" plow. Ford 2·row
on all dog;. All AK·
culfiv ator with fert. at - reduction
C. 59.2 Broadway &amp; Ash
tachment, Ford sprayer ,
Help WanteJ
Ford posf.hole digger, Ford 7- Streets, Middl eport, Ohio.
FARM E R; e)( peri enced and
12-13·ffc
ft _ mower, t-ord blade and

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

Phone 949·3221.

2-9·6tc

sew ing
rY) a chine ,
This OIL AND GAS Service, new and
machine
darn s,
em -. used furnaces, new aluminum
broideries , overcasts, but ·
siding and remodeling, 24
tonholes. Pay balance $36 .50
hour service ; phone 843·2833.
or payments can be arranged.
1-25-30fp

AND JEANS

~

Pomeroy, 0.

Wanted

WILL trim Or cut trees, clean
out basements, attics, etc .

2-1·6fc JUST taken in. deluxe zlg.zag

Furnace Controls
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

CONCRETE

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

terms

"HEll"

The
Daily Sentinel

BOB

scoop, Ford manure loader. 2-

row Rotary hoe , New Holland

For Sale or Trade

fee d grinder -mi xe r , New
Holland forager Harvester 70,000 BTU Siegler fuel oil
heateq used Slf:z months ; for
with corn head, 100 bu. Case sale
or would consider trade
power take-off
manure

Real Estate For Sale

HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 .Brick
Streel, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
house, 3 bedrooms, ex cellent

loca tion, close fo school and

c1ty ; contact Lou Osborne or •

ca ll 992.5898.

11·26-ffc
HOUSE in Lon g Bottom, phone
985-3529.

·

~=-:-:-----.,,..-,--:...
6·:_
11 -ffc
_
2 NEW 3 bedroom homes; 1 with
basement, 1 without ; 2 car
garages I acre lots: located at
Rock Springs behind Meigs
Co. Fairground ; will trade or
help finance; also 5 good
building lots, wafer and
disposal in~talled ; Charles H.
Cornell, Alhens, 593·7034 or

for something of equal value;
spreader, Allis Chalmers 303 phone
992.7124.
593-5667.
hay baler . Myers hay
2·11-lfc
2·11-6fp
crusher, 3-pt. New Idea side·
del. rake, 32 fl . Mayrath hay 1966 INTERNATIONAL pickup 4 BE DROM home, 2 baths, gas
and gratn elevator, 1.6 ft . h~y
elevator , 20 ft . x 4 m. gram

auger, John Deere 8 fl. wheel
diSc, 8 ft. smgle roll
cultipa cke r , smoothing
harrow. lime spreader, Black

truck engine and 4 speed
transmission ; complete; good

furnace, full basement, ri ver
frontage, Syracuse, Ohio,

condition · will trade fo 1967
Che 1 1•
.
r
73 4vroe
engine; phone 992·

Phone 992-2360.

1-25-tfc

8·

2-11-3fc HOUSE, 5 rooms and bath.
located in Rutland; priced fo i
quick
sate ; phone 742-3334 .
Moline corn pi cker. Fox Auto Sales
blower, wilh 50 ft. of pipe, 1
. ,
-::-::------___:2:._-7-6tc
flaf·bed wagon, 1 wagon with SHARP
69
Plymoulh
corn and silage bed , wagon
Roadrunner .
Two
door 5 ROOM HOUSE, 108 Stale
Street, Pomeroy, · Phone 992·
un loaders, 3.pf. tift pole, Int. hardtop , 383 . automaflc,
3834.
fractor whee l welghls , brtght orange w1th black vinyl
Electric cemenl mixer.
lop, $1425. Phone 985·3582 or
2-8-6tp
FEED
667·6317.
2-8·6fc TWO and on e. half acres In
APPROX. 800 corn, 70 bu. oafs.
DAIRY EQUIPMENT
-------;- - - - Ffafwoods area; phone 742·
3171.
:AND MISC.
1963 DODGE Station Wagon,
3 SURGE milkers, Hinman runs good, body fair, $190;
2-13-6fc
vacuum pump, sfainless steel phone 992-7523.
wash vats, milk cans, baler
2-11-3fc
twine, elec. 'fence posts, truck
Mobt'le Homes r Sal
rack for Int. pickup, log 1966 OLDS TORONAOO•. air- ,.
rOI'
chains and many other lfems. D,4i'lditloned ; full power, $900;
LUNCH served, not responsi ble phone 992-5367.
·;.Air Condffioners ' .for accidents. In case of ex2·11-6fc
tremely bad weather, wil l be - - - - - - - - Awnings
postponed 1 week. Owner : 1968 CHRYSLER Newporf. 4
•~Underpi nniiig
Shirley Russel Findling . d6or sedan, power steering
Auctioneer : I. 0 . " Mac" and brakes, air condlflonlng, 'tomplefe mQblle ·- hQme/. i
McCoy.
very good condition; good
:service ......- plus gigantic 11:
2-11 ·3fc fires; phone 992-5510.
- - -- - - -- ·
2-11 ·6fc display of mobile homes
;always avallable·af ...
i,
DELUXE zig zag sewing
'
machine . This machine 1965 GMC Tractor with 1966
Hawk 13 disc grain drill , 6 fl .

Cleaners combine,

1-row

e

I

darns, embroideries. over-

casts, buttonholes all without
attachmenfs, just dial and
•sew. Pay balance ot $39.20 or
pay $5 per month, 992-5331 .

TraiiiTJoblle trailer ; with or

without trailer ; wifh wetllne ;
ex cellent · condition ; can be
seen at 929 Hysell Slreef
Middleport.
'

----:-::--::---'--~2~·9-6tc r::-:-=-:-----2~·9-6fc

·· ·

MILLER
'' MOBILE
HOMES,;,
.
-·

.f

.

1220 Washington Blvd.
.423-7521
BE~PRE,O•.

paid for al i makes and
1972 GMC Sprinf truck; phone CASH
. models of mobile homes.
742·3171.
Phone area code 614-423·9531.
OLD furniture , oak table s,
2-9·6fc
4-13-ffc
organs, dishes, clocks, brass - - - - - - - - beds or comp lete households. 1972 LIBERTY trailer 3
Wrlfe M. D. Miller, Rt . 4, bedrooms, 1112 baths, all 'new 1968 WINDSOR, 12x60 2
bedroom; with or without
Pomeroy, Ohio.· Phone 992- furniture , jusf fully carpeted
furn
iture ; phone 992·3511 .
6271 .
two weeks ago ; lived in four
2·ll·ffc
1-7.tfc monfhs; SSOO down and take
::
12-x
60
-:-,-19_7_1
_A
_C
_
A
_
D
_
E_
M
_Y. 3
c"H-A-IN-s-aw
- ,-n-ear-ly_ n_e_w_, ex. ~;:; payments; phone 992·
bedroom; fip-oul, air, washer
cellenf buy, 446·4850 or 992·
7777, Larry Evans, Larry's _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2_·7·6tc
and dryer ; phone 742-3280
after 6 p.m.
Mobile Home, Pomeroy.
2·9-ff
12-11-7tc

Wanted To Buy

Wanted To Buy

C ~ iT LE ,

446·3/92,

------ - 1--

1969 60xl2 2 BEDROOM SchutT
SNARE drum ; phone 742-4714.
Mobile Home; phone 367·7673.
2-IJ.61c
2,- 13-ltc
2·13·tfc
------:--- ~

--

1\lE PAST' COUPLE
OF WEEKS ...

CRACKS~

· -iS"omeroy ·

SLOAN·
&amp;

C. L. KITCHEN
992-5653
EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
and small ; Backhoes ond
Loaders on track and tires;
Dump !rucks - Lo·boY
Service; Septic tanks lnslalled ; George
(81111
Pull ins; phone 992·2478.
2-9-ffc

&lt;lta--

"""1"'"I

- - - -- - -

WlNN'"'·

HARRISON'S TV Service ond
Serv ice Calls; phone 992-2522.
H ·tfC

WHA'IS il&lt;E: IWITTER.
WINNIE? VOU J.00K '
A LITTLE DOWN
IN THE MOUTH I

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, ditching service; top soli, fill
dirt, llmesfone; B&amp;K Excavaflng. Phone 992-5367,
Dick Karr. Jr .
9·1-tfc

11irgil B.

Teaford, Sr.
Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, o·hio
NEW LISTING
INVESTMENT - 5 apartments. One a good 3 bedroom
with one

OF 1HEM

&amp;

Real Estate For Sale

modern home,

JOtNn.Y SV THE HOME SCONO!rliC$1
DESIGN, AN~ ANIMA~ HII$8.4Nl&gt;RY
!&gt;eMRrMENTS
-·--&lt;-~

~NE

\\\::lt.ILD 9TOP i'O
GIVE /fE; MOI."E-'1.

REMODELING

tanks Installed; dump trucks
and lo.boys for hire; will haul
fill dirt, top soli, limestone
and gravel t ca ll Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992·7089;
night phone 992-3525 or 992·
5232.
2·11·1fC

apartment In the basement.
All are gas heated, each with
a bath and nice kitchen.
Located about one block

CONTEMPORARV
ANIMAL

...13UT

HOME BUILDING

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

JEEP Wagoneer - 4 dr .
7 MONTH old trailer 14 x 10: 1967
S.W.
4 wh. dr ., auto .. 327 VB,
unfurnished. fully carpeted. air P.S.
filf. . P.B., bucket
Phone 992-7649 after S p.m . seats, 33,000
jusf overhauled, SEPTIC TANKS CL&amp;ANED
2-4·1 2tc new paint, shocks,
tires, wh REASONABLE rafes . Ph. 446- '
:
SI,000 Sell $1;300 firm . 44.1-4850
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
(4) CLOSE OUT on 1972 full size or
992 ·7777 Larry Evans,
ONner &amp; Operator.
zig-zag sewing machines. For
Larry 's Mobile
Home,
5-12-lfc
se wing stretch fabrics ,

Notice

my dear husband , Will never
Golda Jones

1

1966 BANNER ca mper. self·

j

General
Tire Sales

fade away .

For Sale

ves, TO 8S AllMINtSTERE[)

I 'l'RIED -TO MUG
\:Z' PEOPLE OVER

KITCHEN &amp;SON .
CONSTRUCTION

inf~rior

WILL DO remodeling,

FROt.l THE 8At&lt;tNG
Pllf$1/&gt;ENT
• 81-00MERi

INI)UST~

I'M GIVIN6 LIP NN
LFE OF CRIME..
I'M A li&lt;\IL.URE.

INC. -·

MOTOR~

Ph. ,;1-2174 ·

20~

8 far 51.00

t~ VOU SAV THIS N
RESEA~C~ GRANT tS

SM)))LN_EUUN

For Sale · ~
Aluminum
Sheets

Regular Retreads
'9.95 each
With Exchange
Casings

WE 'RE FIXIN'TO HAVE ·
POACHED CHICKEN
FER SUPPER

for Sale

Notice

PUBUC• NOTICES

I IUAS R€FERRI'-IG
TO 1liE O)'I'S!. ~!

-- AIIJ' NOW IT LOOKS L1 KE

NO!ll!/i6S THE: MATTER ! WHOA! \OJ DON'T
EVERYTHINGSF/NE.DOI IHA\IETOSI1C MY
HAVE 10 WALK AROUND
O!'F.I ONLY
WITH AGRIN ON MY
THCXJGHT )QlJ
FACE ALL. DAY 'I'
MIGHT NEED
SOME

' 90RRY, ~ANIE. . THERE

THA"tiS

IS 50METHIN61ROUBL- WHAT GOOD
tNG ME AND I. ~URE
SISTER5 - INcouLD use·A
LAWARE
SYMPAlHETIC
I'OR,WII~INif:.Ai
EAR. r--__.-

G &amp; E Appliance Repair, repair
on all laundry equipment,
refrigeration equipment and
house wiring ; welding,
electri c and gas. Call 992-~
or after 4:30 p.m. call 9926050.
2·5·301p
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEANED, REPAIRED. MILLER
SANITATION, STEWART,
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
10·~-ttc ,

- -- - - -

from court house, for just

S37 .500.00.
NEW LISTING
SMALL RESTAURANT In a· prime locaflon, doing a
good · business. A good op.

rCLELAND'
REALTY
t

portunity for someone who
wants on their own . All
equipment, and furnishings
needed to run a restaurant

for only SS,OOO.OO.
NEW LISTING
CORNER LOT - Near
school. 2 bedroom home,
nice bath, paneling, utility
building, and garage. Want
only $7,500.00.
NEW LI&lt;TING
4 ROOI';N C\1 porches,

cellar, 2 v~W.;j , 112 acre of

land. Only $3,800.00.
MIDDLEPORT
3 BEDROOMS- Nice bath,
new wall to wall carpeting,
neat kitchen , utility room
and cellar. Level lof. Asking
$15,000.00.
BUSINESS BUILDING
ON ROUTE 7 - 2 large
business rooms. 2 nice rest
rooms, large storage and a

good big all-purpose room .
Large notural gas forced air
furnace, central

air can.

dlt lonlng, and plenty of
parking .
ANTIQUE BRICK
LOVELY OLDER HOME Living abouf 16x36 feet, 4
large bedrooms with closets,
foyer with open stairway,
large basement, porches, 5
car garage. 2 acres with

barn. Asking lust $21;500.00.
NEW HOME
4 BEDROOMS - All have
closets, 1'12 baths, large
beautiful kitchen, utility. All
electric home. garage, large
lot. Only $21,000.00.
NEW LISTING
MIDDLEPORT - Large 4
bedroom home, 2 modern
baths, gas forced air fur.
nace. Large foyer .J..Ifh open
stairs, Iorge fro~t and a
small back porch. Garage,
all on a corner lot. Asking
$21,900.00.
Now Is the time to buy that
house that you have been
looking at so long . Should It
be one of ours, see us for
financing . We have a bunch.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
992-3325

.

401 E. Moln

~ . Pomeroy

.

.

HEARS OL.D
l story frame, 3 bedrooms W·

large closets. nice bath,
·dining area, beautiful kif·
chen, hardwood floors, some

carpeting, ca rport with
storage. elecftlc heat, lot 100
x 100, low upkeep. 521,500.
10 ACRES
Mostly level, 3 bedrooms,
balh, forced air furnace,

~tUM~td

dining R., porches, barn, out

ce llar, o1her buildings,
blacktop road . $8,900.
S BEDROOMS
1'12 baths, large living R..
Dining R., nice kitchen .
Cellar. Garage. Storm doors
window s.

&amp;

by

2 enclosed

several lots. Good location.

DICK TRACY

Loads of space. $8,200.
OLDER HOME
About 1 acre (level). on
excellent Sl., 4 bedrooms,
balh, din ing R. , 1 Rental
larg e workshop. $18,500. '
Maybe the time has come for
you to consider a more

modern home. CALL US
TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
l SALESMEN
TO ASSIST YOU
992·22S9

23. Caviar
before
processing
24. Was
furious
25. Singer,
Frankie

If no answer

992-lS.S or 985·4209

.'

We talk to yciu
like a person.

-msoivaf. ~r-YII(Ef.
-

SIW'PfR GETS HERe Willi Hl5
·l't)"e, 1llf PIA!teS- !IIIP Till! EVII'ENCE,
WILL IN!
II'~ TilE IIILI'IILUE!

WMP0/1390,
---_:___j

.

~t!1JlOOID!1rn®u..J ==~
Urur:ramble th... fourJumbl..,
one letter to each oquan, to
form four ordinary word1.

I

b
II
II

CEIIEN

11'ELKAN

I

I KJ

I IK J
RICHEP±
I

II

27. Preftx for
mounta!D

Now IITIDie the cin:led !etten
to form the IIII'PriN IIIIWer, u
ouneoted br the above eartoon.

"( I I I I I X )"
(.Aawen lo-.rrow)

28.FlyboJa

Jumble"

29. ••Royal"

Ye•terdar'•

name In
show
businesa
(2 wdo.)
32. Old D11tch

IULLY SQUAW IITRAY IXPOSI

\ A.n1wer1 What lite fJI'Okftrt 11iue of

•culplure

~a• - A

"IUSf"

'1tlU LOOK LIKE
'1tlU Jii5T Sl.illl.OitlfD
A CHOCOUlJE
CAKE ...

DAILY CRYPTOQUOT·E- Here's how to work it:

ALL THE KID!&gt; THAT I PlAI(
AXYDL .BAAXR
.
8ASf!IALL WIT/i ARE 601N6 iO
61VE ME A1EffiiiONrAL DINNER!
Ia LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is f---.--r~;:-...,-.,,---1
!'sed lor 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 code letters are different.

I

New 3·Bedroom 30'x74' Ranch

Ph. tiNsts

Thounds thrronge

U. Dodge

'

With 20'x28' 2-car garage, JO'x46 ,
heated basement, custom built kit .
chen, all electric, fttlly
Located on 2 acre lot, T. p. water
approved 1700 gallons aerated sewag~
system . Under $25,000. ·
·
.

,_,r=

Gfty

'

(Between ,Chester &amp; !uppers Plai.ns on

Gene

\\II\ITING.

CO 19'18 Kinr Future• Syndicate, [ne.)

33. "Royal."
name In
Journal·
lam
(2 wda.)
to. Doing
dark
deeds
U. Frail
U.-Jane

. ON YOUR DIAL

RIGGSCREST MANOR
.

LIE, lOII'Re 6fTTING ~!
WE RIJIITitltOUGit 1llf STUNTS
AIWIANt&gt;. 5IIAI'Pt!to: WILL
HAVe Sfli~ EHO!JG/t

DOWN
1.- semper
tyrannis
Z.Extremely
3. Babylonian deity
4. Tenth of
a sen
5. Allotment
8. South
Am'erican
Yesterday'• Anower ,.,,
plain
18. Non- ·
30. Reckon
7. Dawn
paying
31, Swerve
deity
profession 33. Elongated
8, Mr.
19. Whet·
fish
Onassls
stone
34: 9. Fixed
20. Observed
Gardner
charge
21. Bolster;
35. Dlsen13. - vivant
buttress
cumber
15. Biased
22. - avis
36. I00
person
25. College in
stotinki
16. Peer
Brooklyn
37. Briny
aynt'a
(abbr.)
38. Singular
mother
26. Noah's
39. Come17. Plato!
craft
dian,
(aiF.)~--,..--,~28::.-Tild=alize
Louis _

meuure

-

Ready for Immediate Occupancy!

·

name in

music
(2 wds.)
H.Charsed
atom
15. Royal
name in
"Der
Rosenkavalier"
(2 wds.)
21. Debtor's

. _ __ _ _ ___J .. .,..
.•

Rt.
71
.

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
l.Belle&amp;.Frond
10. Ancient
region of
Asia
Minor
11. Learning .
12. "Royal"

porches. Going af $12,800.
STORAGE OR RENTAL
POMEROY - Large brick &amp;
block building. (now rented).

Yeslerday'o Cryploquote: ONCE IN THE PACK, YOU MAY
NOT HAVE TO BARK-BUT YOU MUST AT LEAST WAG
YOUR TAIL.-RUSSIAN PROVERB

..

CRYPTOQUOTES

-·

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WB

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CHECK THE CALENDAR ... IT
Mli6r f}E A~IL FOOL'6 DAI( !

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.''.

10-Tbe DRily Semmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Feb. 13,19'13

Deadline is real close
The Meigs County tJeart also for the same age divisions.
Association today announced
The Heart Fund Committee
· the contests for Heart Songs has announced that .a heart .
deadline Ia Wednesday, Feb. fund festival wiii be held in
14. All letters of entry must be Pomeroy on March 4. On that
postmarked no later than Feb. day the queen of hearts,
14.
princess of hearts and the
The first contest Ia to Uat all junior princess of hearts will be
spngs with the word "Heart" in crowned. Each contestant haa
the Iitle. Agift will be awa~ containers in business
winners with the cooiest being establishments about the
divided into two groups, one for county.
studenta up to 18 and one for ·
contestants 18 and older.
The second contest is to tell
why a specific heart song has
some special meaning to the
Tcontest and why it is his or her
favorite song. This contest Ia
SYRACUSE
Mayor
Herman Londoo Monday night
fined two defendants and
forfeited the bonds of two
(Continued from page I)
others.
Harold Chase had gone to
Fined were Elmer C. Newen,
Hamilton recently to inspect a
Chester,
$15 and costs, ancj Joe
gootl used sweeper which can
be purchased for $6,500. The Ellen Roush, Minersville, $10 .
equipment Is in excellent and costs, both for speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were Barry
condition and the mayor slated
W
. McCoy, Syracuse, $10, stop
that an efficient piece of
sign
violation, and Cloyce C.
equipment must be purchased
or street deparbnent personnel Bradford, Worthington, $2C),
MRS. VMAN KIRBY, veteran teacher at Cheshire-Kyger Elementary School was
will have to resort to sweeping speeding. The defendants were
Jl'e&amp;ented a special charm bracelet and was honored Monday night in a surprise "This Is Your
the streets by hand. "Present'" cited to court by Police Chief
Life" JI'Ogram sponsored by the PTA. Mrs. Pauline Thompson, left, president of the
equipment Is just not ef- Milton Varian.
organization made the presentation. Robert Waugh, center, served as emcee for the special
(ectlve," the mayor said.
JI'Ogram.
The four council members
TRAPS TAKEN
present, Fred Hoffman, David
Sheriff Robert C. HarOhlinger, Lawrence Stewart · tenbach's Dept. was notified
and William Walters, agreed Monday night by Richard
some action should be taken Coleman, Long Bottom, Rt. 1,
but exactly what was not that four of his animal traps
known since such an ex- had been taken from Spicer
penditure would require . ad- Creek between Chrisbnas and
vertising for bids and by the New Year's. The deparbnent is
lime that procedure was investigating.
By DALE ROTHGEB JR.
former teachers at Cheshire; Marcia Leach, Terry Lucas
followed, the equipment would
Mrs. Vivian Kirby, a veteran Patsy Metzner, Marilyn 'neese,. and Susan Swisher, Class of
be sold to another source.
of 36 years in the teaching Violet Russell, Cheryl Enyart, 1963 ; Mary Roush, Chris
However, it was reported by
profession, was honored Elaine George, Lucille Preston .and Charity Amos,
Mayor Zerkle that the sweeper
DINNER PLANNED
Monday night by the Cheshire- Haggerty, Jean Alkire, and Class of 1964; Ted Misner and
could be rented and the rent
A family type dinner will be Kyger PTA.
Judy Arnold .
Steve Darst, Class of 1965;
applied on the purchase price. held at Heath United Methodist
Mrs. Kirby was "surprised"
Other guests introduced Cindy Preston and Gr.eg
It was agreed to have clerk- Church at noon Sunday with a special "This Is Your
·
were
former students from Mulford, Class of 1966; Jon
treasurer Gene Grate, Mayor following services. Those at- Life" program which featured
Thompson, Jim Misner, Vicki
Zerkle and solicitor Bernard tending are to lake a covered many of her early teaching 1933 through 1973.
Appearing
were
John
W
.
Winebrenner and Gloria Amos,
Fultz confer on the action to be dish and table service. Meat companions, present teaching
taken to secure the equipment and beverage'will be furnished. associates, friends and former Thomas and Roberta Aliens- Class of 1967; James Casto Joe
worth Kail, class of 1933; Thompson and John ~os.
and a special meeting will be
students.
Wilma
Herrmann Parker and Class of 1968; Melinda Casto,
called If necessary if
Mrs . Kirby is one of six George Junior Veith, class of Shawn
Thomas,
Mike
arrangements can be worked
children born to the late Isaac 1935; Robert Swisher, Class of Shoemaker, Lori Preston ,
out in accordance with legal
and Rosanna Haskins Fowler, 1936; Edmimei Swisher, Class Joyce Winebrenner, Bob
requirements. ·
all of whom became teachers. of 1941; Joyce Darst Newell Misner, Susan L. Roush and
(Continued from page I)
Chase reported that during
Mter
graduating from Rio and Dorothy Ann Leach, Class Lori Painter, Class of 1969;
the recent power outage, the with the local chapter.
Approved was a revised Grande High School in 1929, she of 1942; Marilyn Reese, Class Robert Waugh, Jr., Class of
pumping system of the
enrolled at Rio Grande College. of 1943; Roliert C. Waugh and 1970; Cindy Roush, J . D. ·
Pomeroy Water Plant was out wage scale for cooks and
Two years later, she began
for about 12 hours imd during substitute cooks from $1.80 to teaching in Guyan Twp. She Katie Shoemaker, Class of Bradbury and Jason Cooper,
this time Middleport's well $2 per hour effective Feb. 16. then m~ved to Cheshire. 1944; Joseph L. Thompson, Class of 1972. Mrs. Kirby has
system provided more than They also approved a revised Cheshire school board mem- Class of 1945; Joseph D. Roush, always taught the first grade.
Mrs . Pauline Thompson ,
adequate water for both wage scale for bus drivers, bers aI the time of her em- Class of 1947; Frank Cremeans,
Class
of
1949;
Larry
president
of the Cheshireeffective
Feb.
16,
as
follows:
communities. Even more
ployment
were
Arthur
Rupe,
water could have been pumped Base salary to increase from W. J. Cochran and Otto L. Little and David C. Thomas, Kyger PTA, presented Mrs.
C I ass of 1950; Richard Kirby with a special memento
if it had been needed, Chase $1,944 to $2,100 per school year; Rothgeb.
Wamsley and Wade L. Little, of the occasion. A special
additional pay for each quarter
said.
Teachers and administrators . Class of 1952; Michael Swisher, charm bracelet making her an
hour
daily
on
daily
route
is
now
Also attending last night's
taking part in last night's
meeting was Police Chief J. J. $100 a year with a maximum of program were Kyger Creek Class of 1953; Jerry Hall, Class honorary member of the PTA
of 1954; Rebecca Rothgeb . was also presented.
$400 a year, now ,changed 1c
Cremeans.
District
Supt.
Comer
BradYankuns, Class of 19a7; Sharon The program was planned
$125 per year with a maximum
bury,
Walter
Rife,
elementary
Cooper,
Class of 19:i8; Mike and arranged· through the
of $500 a year; substitutes'
principal;
Mary
Fulton,
Mary
Conkle, Class of 1960; Eddie efforts of Mrs. Donna Waugh.
wage was changed from $9.30
Hughes, Lettie Young,, all Swisher and Dianna Moles, Her husband, Robert, served
to $10.50 per day.
Class of 1962; David Wise, as master of ceremonies.
Also discussed were the
Tonight, February 13
following : seat belts for some
Holzer Medical Center
Wall Disney's
kindergarten students, class(Discharged)
SNOWBALL EXPRESS
room space needed for Salem
Debra
·
Durst, Bonnie Plantz,
ITochnlcolorl
Center,
additional
space
Cecil Sines, Lee Holt, Daisy
Dean Jones. Nancy Olsen,
needed for a bus garage, a Blevins, Ru bert Henry,
Harry Morgan, Keenan
Two Meigs Junior High·
Wynn, Kathleen Cody.
band trip; and student ab- William Robinette, Stella basketbell teams, 7th and 8th,
IGI. senteeism. Hargraves said Smith, Mae Harris, Leona both won from Wellston
THE MAGIC OF
student absences are being Maynard, Forrest Davis, Monday night at Meigs Junior
WASHINGTON (UPI )
WALT DISNEY WORLD
checked
more
closely.
Robert
H. Taylor, chief of the
(Technicolorl
James Hoover, Carolyn High in Middleport. In tbe
Attending were Porter, Don Barker, Joyce Ward, Shirley seventh grade contest Meigs White House Secret Service
Steve Forrest Narrates
(G)
Mullen , Virgil King, and Thacker, Robert Rider, won on a score of 40 to 32. For detail, has been fired following
Admission:
Pierce, board members ; Matthew Lyons, Nora Jones, Meigs, Chuck Foiirod and a rift with presidential
Adulh SUO
Children 7lc
Hargraves, and L. W. Mc- Mrs . Robert Hysell and son, Kelly Winebrenner hit in assistant H. R. Haldeman, it
Show Storts 7 p.m.
Comas, · clerk; Mrs. Jack Neil Graves, Carol Ferguson, double figured with 10 each, was learned today.
Slavin and Greg Walker Normal Dean, Mrs. Victor Greg White had 8, and Ronnie
Wednesdly &amp; Thursday
Taylor has been replaced as
February 14 &amp; 15
representing the Teachers' Counts and daughter ; Mable Casey, Steve Schneider and head of President Nixon 's
NOT OPEN
Assn.
Clark, Ruth Brown and Gary Gene Halley each had 4. High protective detail by Richard
Acree.
for Wellston was Royster with Kaiser, one of the agents under
his former command.
(Births)
18.
Authoritative sources said
Mrs. Max Staats, Letart, W.
In the eighth grade game
Va., a son.
Meigs won 38 to 34. For Meigs tension between Taylor and
Greg Browning was the big gun Haldeman, the White House
(by Northern Electric) They are warm
with 18 points, Mark Haggerty chief of staff, had been growing
REPORT ACCEPTED
They are comfy
Middleport Village council had 8, Steve Randolph 5, and since the November election.
Monday night approved the Bryan Hamilton 1. · F~r It came to a head at the lime
Double bed size with single switch. 45 percent
of the state funeral for
report of Mayor John Zerkle Wellston, Coyan had 13.
Polyester · 35 percent Rayon with nylon
President Lyndon B. Johnson.
for January with total receipts
binding- machine washable. Colors.bl ue and
IN ROOM 408
There was no immediate
of ,$2,422.36. Of the total
pink.
Mrs. John K. (Beulah) Smi'th information why Haldeman ·
$2,255.36 was in fines and fees of Middleport is a patient in the
and $167 in merchant police Holzer Medical Center . Her decided to get rid of Taylor.
collections. ·
Double bed size with double switch controlsroom number is 408.

Two fined by
M.
do

ayor LAJn n

Council

Veteran teacher honored
by Cheshire-Kyger PTA

Memorial

Gloom shrouds
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
United States Ia almost unavoidably headed for an
eeonomic recession later this
year or early in 1974, two
eeonomists said today.
·"Indeed, the challenge
facing policy makers in the
oomlng year will be to avoid a
recession of classic dlmenIlion," said Wilfred Lewis Jr.,
chief . economist fpr the.
National Planning Association,
Wasbington.
Henry Kaufman, an economist with Salomon Brothers,
New York, told the Joint
Economic Conunittee, "Late
this year, or no later than early
1974, the real rate of economic
growth may be only a small
fraction of· the current high
rate, and a complete lack of
. real growth for a short time
span cannot be entirely ruled
out."
Lewis and Kaufman disagreed somewhat on the fine
points of what could be done
about it, but their central
theme was the same : the
economy is booming at such a
pace now that inflatioo is
inevitable, and inflation will
lead to recession.
Kaufman said an "enormously stimulative fiscal and
monetary expansion" had fired
up an economic boom, but that
steps had not been taken to
assure that the boom could be
controlled before inflation set
in.
"Now we are in the midst of
an economic boom, moving to

O'Bleness Hospital in Athens.
The Clelands' first son, Henry
E., III, is one year old.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Henry E. Cleland Sr.,
Pomeroy; maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Donald 0 . Roush, New Haven;
maternal great-grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Roush and
Mrs. Helen Elias, ali of New
Haven.
LOCAL TEMPS
TemiJerature in downtown
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m.
was 36 degrees under sunny
skies.

White House
favorite is
fired off job

'

2 yr .

Beacon Blankets. size 72"x90"
.100 percent Polyester

$4.97
SPECIALS THIS WEEK!
Room size rug, 100 percent Viscose Rayon pile
waffle foamed back - Regular 518.88.

~

Now '12.65
Odd Lot Talon Zippers ~ Price
Music for Magnus Organ Half PricP.

3 ~OOMS
OF

ALL NEW
FURNITURE

'595

LODGE TO MEET
The Twin City Shrinettes will
meet at 8 p.m. Thursday at the
home of .Mrs. Henry Ewing,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.

BAKER FURNITURE

LOCAL WON'T MEET
A meeting of Bricklayers
Local Union No. 32 scheduled

All Kiddies Winter Pajamas Half Price

BEN FRANKLIN
RALL'S • Middle ort
'

' I

DIVORCES ASKED
Two suits for divorce have
heen filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court each
charging gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty. Filing
were Sherry R. Vaughan,
Minersville, against Thomas
E. Vaughan, Athens, and
Donna D. Phillips, Pomeroy,
against Virgil Phillips,
Groveport.

0.

Thursday evening has been

r~ncelled .

a

ble.u

Street maintenance,
$2,151.09, $2,262.15, $1,818.81;
water, $6,172.48,. $7,189,
$24,237.41 ,water meter deposit
trusts, $280, $125, $6,524.02;
sanitary sewer escrow, no
receipts, no disbursements,
$60,520.28; fire house construction, no receipts, no
disbursements, $11.99; federal
government revenue sharing
trust fund, $3,540, no disbursements, $7,229; general bond
retirement, no receipts, no
disbursements, $18,297.75.
Receipts for the month of
January totaled $21,355.23
while expenditures totaled
$18,063.52.

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

SAVE ALL

f

S~ESLIPS

FROM

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

'

-If I

;~

;1

~,

Savings ~ount
Faster at
Citizen's National!
You can save your woy to
financi.al betterment with ~n
account at our bank. Each
deposit makes the raad to suecess shorter. An account af as

.

IHI~

as $5

eorns big interest!
· Interest, safety and availability are three points to consider wh•n

• W1th
•
openmg your savmgs account.
us you receive o liberal 0%
•

•

f'

•

. ;

Most female · coodors lay a
single egg in alternate -years
. a~d it takes about siX weeks for
the offsprlrig to inature.

I ··'

'

int~rest on all your savings. And your money is insured by a Federal

--··-

_V_QL _XXIV · NO. 212

Abortion·

COLUMBUS (UPI)- U.S.
District CoUrt Judge Joseph J;',
Kinneary ruled today Ohio
statutes limiting abortions are
unconstitutional, acCording to
the U. S. Supreme Court
decisions striking down
abortion laws in Georgia and
Texas.
Kinneary, acting oo a suit
filed by the American Civil
Uberties Union of • Ohio on
behalf Of an unidentified young
woman, ruled that the two
challenged slate statutes "are
clearly similar to the Texas
statutes" struck down by the
Supreine Court in the Texas
suit. ·
Klnneary ruled that the
statute prohibiting abortions
unless two physicians certify
the operation Is necessary to
preserve the life of the mother
"violates the woman's constitutional right of privacy,
which right encompasses the
declsioo whether or not to
terminate her pregnancy."
"The statute does not lake
into consideration the stages of
the pregnancy or the other
inter~sts involved,'1 Kinneary
· said.
The
Supreme
Court
prohibited the states from
proscribing abortions during
the first three months of
pregnancy, and allowed only

.,...u,

Teller Window Open Friday Evening 5100-7:00 P.M.

By . ntEDERICK . M. MARK
CLARK AFB, Ph!Upploes
(UPI) - Twenty happy and
llllillng former American
POWa, carrying presents 8nd a
North VIetnamese puppy, flew
to the United States today for
reaniol18 with families some of
them have not seen in inore
!Jlan seVen years.
·
. Tile first big group of former
POWI to head for Travis Air
Forc:e Base; Calif., was airbome Ina gl.m 111- ud gray

WILCOXEN,
above, a seDior at Soalbel'll
HlCb Scbool and tbe son of
Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Wilcoxen, Racine, Rl. 2, is a
flnallslln the National Merit
Scholarship Contest, Jim
Adams, princlpd, an·
nounced today. Larry Is one ·
of
14,500
student•
represeutlag the top one-baH
of one percent of the sludenll
In the Nation compellag for
1,000 $1,000 scholarships.
LARRY

medical safety regulations
during the second threeman ths. The high court said
states may limit or proscribe
abortion during the final
trimester except when
necessary to preserve the
health of tbe mother.
Because the Ohio statute did
not differentiate between the
stages, under the recent
Supreme Court rulings, the
statute violates the Fourteenth
Amendment of the U. S.
Constitution .

·,::Qmh,., .... , :::

.._..,~~

,.
ByUDIIH'"" taieraatlooai .
GENEVA, OIDO ...:. SDc' SCHOOLS Jk GENEVA and
IIUI'I'Ounding tliwliahlpll in nortlnrellt Aaht~~bula County remalped
c1oeed today by a strike of 180 teachers. Geneva Scl!ools
&amp;lperlntendent WUUam Porter said he haa refused to meet with

~;;:u;~S:!ce~aa:!:s!:to~:":t =!~

COLUMBUS- THE HOUSE FINANCE Committee Tuesday
night fiave O.enrhehnlng BRJroval to the Gilligan administration's $92.3 milllon federal revenue sharing allocation
and sent It to the Rules Committee for scheduling for a Thursday
Door vote. The Finance Committee recommended the spending
proposal oo a 26-3 vote, with sit Republicans joining 14
Democrats bt favor of the measure.
The vote came after a meeting of nearly three hours, during
which Republicans tried invaln to gain an additional $6.3 million
for vocatiooal education construction at the e~nse of masa
transit
and
parks
and
recreatloo
projecta,
Majority Demoaoats did, however, agree to a pair of
amendments adding $1.2 milllon to the amount allocated to
vocatlonal ·educatlon.
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO BUREAU OF Employment
Services today told persona who file clailns for \Uiemployrnent
compensation benefits to report just once every two weeks instead ol weekly because the U.S. Department of Labor had cut
more than $4 million from its budget. The change, which wa.s
made an emergency executive order by Gov. John J. Gllligan
Tuesday, will cutthe OBES staff worldood by one half.
OBES Adminlstrator Wiiiiam E. Garnes said that in hardship cases, weekly rewrting would be allowed despite tbe
bureau's "severe budget restrictions." More than 75,000 persons
have been filing weekly claims at OBES offices acrOIIS the state.
1be agency haa received about 10,000 new claims a week.
CLEVELAND - A RE&amp;:&gt;UNDING DEFEAT for a sweeping
automobile Insurance plan marked the end Tuesday ~
tbe mid-winter session of the Ametlcan Bar Association (ABA).
The 318rnember policy-making House of Delegates not ooly
voted overwhehningly against the plan bqt lnalsted on "greatlY
increased steps' •to publicize an alternative approach adopted in
1972.
~u!t

OOLUMBUS - ~L RE.OPENED FOR 3,700 students .
at Hamilton Local School District in southern Franklin County
today as teachers ended twQo(!ay strike. About 140 of 163
teachers In the district refused to work Monday and Tuesday to
(ConUnued oo page 12)
·
·

a

WHf ~ YO II VISII PARK f Rlf

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

,...
~-~----..:Mr,e:m~ber:.:Fede::l'll:.:::::.:••:•::.aee::!Cel:-::"-:.-~~--·

Eight pay ·i n court
Eight defendants were ordered to pay ali parking meter
violation tickets they have
been given by Middleport Police and were assessed costs of
$1.7G each when they appeared
In the court of Middleport
Mayor John zerkle Tuesday·
night.
·
. .
Cited to court for failing to
pay tickets were George Luster, Patricia KtlclltW, Jennings
Wl)'llnd. Wendell L~ Price,
OcieD Jlllb, Robert M. Pooler,
~
I

PHONE 992-2!56

Colder tonight, rain changing
to snow. Lpw in the upper 20s to
lower 30s central and south.
Thursday windy and colder,
snow flurries lill;ely .!Ugh in the

30s.

TEN CENTS

20MorePO s cominghome

.law void i
in Ohio

agency up to $1-0,000. Y.our finan~es are safe-guarded by strong ·
reserves. 1&gt;on 't wait ... Open your ~ccaunt today with us.

enttne

11fwoted To The lnlel'e$1$ Of 'I'IW Meig.•· Ma10n Area
POME~OY-MIDDlEPORT, DHIO ·
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1973

'•

Weather

•

;

under preiiiUre.
GATA President Phil Hayes said money was not the major
Issue. "We want chlldren of Geneva to have better bulldingll,
more BURJlles and equipment, stronger educational programs
and above all, bnproved.staff morale," said Hayes. "This can
ooly come about by the superintendent of board sitting with
GATA In a mutual atmosphere of cooperation rather than confrontation.

'SAYS HERE \
INTEREST . RATES ~

\' ARE HIGHER!

'

'

ews•• in Briefsf

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

I/

.

'

llll.fl~lll.'ll.-'~.':.~~;~

YOUR

ELECTRIC BLANKETS

$11.99
guarantee. $ .
15 99

Lewis Ald. "On the. one Jlal)l~l
"" bave a very raPid lnv.illl-1
men! boom thahre n..., hoif b&gt; I
taper off u we approach
employment. Secolld, ala~ ODd
local government budgetl are
becoming moderately. more
rerrtrlctlve, and the fedeta1
budget, under a~~
plans, sharply more ~
live.
·
"Finally, residential .e~n·
struction Is a~dy ~
to feel the . pinch · fi'QJD
tightelilng In credit .
and will probably be
anyway after Jut year's
strong performance.
sector can decline llharply
acceleration of IJtlatloo c..the monetary authoritlea : to
tighten credit further.
"If these forc:es all come
together. as they ahow every
sign of doing around midyear
or shortly thereafter. recession will be nearly unavolda.

Funds reachL$201,380.

All Middleport Village funds
- active and inactive - as of
Jan. 31 totaled $201,380.77
according to the monthly
report Of Clerk-Treasuret Gene
Grate submitted to Middleport
Council Monday night.
Receipts, disbursements for
the month and the balance as of
Jan . 31 include : general,
$4,!80.45, $3,824.91, $50,796.76;
cemetery, $769.30, $583.92,
$1,611.08; fire equipment, $350,
$481.70, $86.95 overdrawn;
SECOND SON BORN
'planning commission, no
Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. receipts, $1.47, $323.24 ;
Cleland of Long Bottom are swimming pool, no receipts,
announcing the birth of their $235.90, $3,62.1.66.
second son, five pound, II 02 .
Donald Chase, on Feb. 11 at

MEIGS THEATRE

iunior high
teams win 2

even highet utillzatioo of .real
· resoUrces with our une~y­
ment rate faiung perhaj. to U
per cent by midyear," Kaufman saiiL "If additional ezcesses lire to be avoided and
the boom Is to conli!lue,
checking' Inflation is necellllliry
but extremely difficult to
achieve In a setting in which
economic friction is quite
Ukely.
" ... Actually, I believe that it
laprObablytoolateto tame this
economic boom without experiencing some dislocations."
Kaufnian predicted that in
order to clamp restraints on an
economy that will be demanding more ani! more a-edit,
"interest rates, ·partlrularly
money rates, will continue to
rise sharply."
Lewis said all the signs now
point to a "good old fashioned
so called· classic recession."
"At the present time, the
signs are far from promising,"

.Now You Low ·

Michael E. Carruthers, all of
Middleport, and Joseph McCarty, Cbeshire . ·
Risden Miller, Lakin·, W: Vil.,
)Vas assessed costs · when he
appeared on an illegal use of a
publi~ facility charge. Kennel\1
T. Wyant, 62, Vienna, W. Va.,
forfeited .a tao bond posted on
an in~cation charge and
John A. Stepp, 48, Columbus,
forfeited a ~ bond posted on
In assured clear distance
charge,
'

C141 Starlifter flying ambu,
lance on a trip scheduled to
take them just over 18 hours,
including a 90 minute layover
·at Honolulu's Hickam field.
They were to arrive at Travis
at 4:30 p,in, PST Wednesday.
Medical authorities and pro.Ject officers of Operation
Homecoming sped the 20 men
through · their
medical
examinations at the Clark Air
Bue Hollpltal .and sent them
wloging toward ·famlly

'
,

reunioM 24 hours ahead of
schedule.
.T-Bbirted girls, children and
Air Force personnel waved
goodby and cheered as the men
departed only two days after
their dramatic arrival from
North imd South VIetnam.
Earlier, officials said they
expected the men would
remain at Clark for at least 72
hours before leaving for horne.
Moll! returnees boarded the
plane wearing blue hospital

bathrobes over their pajamas
and carrying presents for
families and friends that they
bought in a shopping spree at
.the Base Exchange Tuesday
night.

. Lt. Cmdr. Edward A. Davis
of Leola, Pa., high spirited
despite his 7-"2 years In a North
Vietnamese prison, carrfed
with Ma:(:o, a tan, 7-pound
puppy that Communist jailors
gave him as a departure gUt.
Davis ~he would take the

dog horne to his wife l.qia after
He got the loudeat cheers
he completes a period of when he boarded the ~ plane.
hospitalization at Bethesda
Capt. Jeremia]l A. Denton'
Naval Hospital near Washing- Jr., the first man off the first
plane Monday when It arrived
ton.
u.s. officials said they would from Hanoi and wbo tearfully
· try to ease quarantine restric- said "God hles!J America "
tions to allow man and dog to continued his role as spokesremain together.
man for the POWs.
"Some aald it was just a
"You people here at Clark
name," Davis told newsmen have shown us representing the
who asked hlni what Ma.CO rest of America that your
meant. "Some said it meant
· (Continued on Page 7)
dog without hair."

..

Joint group to

.I
I

guide dollars
for rebuilding
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The benefit."
United Slates and North Viet''nle two sides ezchanged
nam
create a joint views on the manner In which
economic commission to over- the United States will contriblee rebuilding .of the W.r-torn ute to healing the wounds of
country with U.S. dollars, the war and to post war economic
two sides announced today,
reconstruction in North VIetA communique laaued by the nam," the communique aald. .
White House and Hanoi on four
"They agreed to establish a
dsys of talks by President DRVN·U.f!. Joint Economlc
'
I
NIJ:iln's envoy, Henry A. Commission. This commlasion,
Kissinger, and North · VIet- which wlli be composed of an
namese leaders in Hanolllsted equal number ol represents:
no specific figures for U.S. post lives !rain each side, will be
HEARTLINE PROJEt"I' - Year after year women of
cookies and pounds and pounds of candles they made up 59
war
ald.
charged with develaplng the
Heath Methodist Church prepare valentine trays of cookies
attractive trays attaching valentine name tags, and then
But the language displayed a economic relations between
and candles for shut-Ins !)f the C011111\unlty on the day before
delivered them to shut-ins. Mrs. Nan Moore, president of the
new cordiality between the two the Democratic Republic of
St. Valentine's Day. Tuesday about two dozen women
Mternoon Circle, sponsor of the project, Mrs. Enuna
nations.
Vietnam and the United
gathered at the church where with the dozens and dozens of
Wayland, and Mrs. Beulah Hayes were co-cllalrmen.
"The nonnaUzatloo .of rela· States."
lions·between the Democratic While no specifics · were
~~i8i:SI:cm&lt;W.:;8l·
· ·::-~~~~if~;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.&lt;:::::::::::=:~=:=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~-:::::~~ ··:· &amp;.e:·~···e~=~:=::::::::~~'!:~:;:::;:;-;;~~ Republic of (North) VIetnam
contained In the communlqut,
1Uld the·Utltted Sla~ 11rill•halp prior·... Ill ·
"'ceaie-flre
to Insure stable peace in agreement, Prealdent. ·Njzon
Vietnam and contribute to the had spoken ot' a $7.5 ' liWon
cause of peace in Indochina reconstruction program for
and Southeast Asia," the com- Vietnam with $2.5 ·billion
munique said.
targeted for the North.
.The announcement said the
Kissinger said following the.
two
Indochina
war
enemies
cease.flre
agreement however
BY JOHN EPLING .
Now, Valentine had simply
local J. P., one Astedus, who had a
"agreed
that
they
would
that the aid provisions were
Valentine lost his head, for love!
communicated LOVE to his fellow
blind adopted daughter. Right off,
continue
to
have
periodic
~
sub~ to negotiations and that
He was a priest a few years .ago . Brother Val prayed for her healing, in
creatures in the most effective way he :~
~. ~changes of Views In order to there was no reason to focus on
(about 1700 actually) when he was
knew: he has shared the healing :-:-:
Jesus' name, and she could see!
ensure that the (cease.flre
arrested under Gothic Emperor
power of the infinite love of Jesus :?.: agreement) ·and Its protocols the $7.5 bllllon figure .
That impressed the good justice.
.0:0:
Claude, and taken before Claude
through the Holy Spirit. Claude ·~·:·••· are strictly and scrupulously ·
He accepted Jesus Christ as his
himself.
couldn't understand that, so he had ~
Saviour and Lord. So did his family .
implemented."
"Claude tbe mod" questioned
him put out of the way. But then, that
Well, Mod Claude learned of it,
The two sides pledged anew
wasn't really a brand new reaction .
and didn't look with favor on the
:·~ Brother Val about hiJ.activities in the
to carefully adhere to all of the
church, particularly whether he
Remember Pilate'
proceedings. Being a little riled he
provisions which ended the
actually believed the "Jesus
So, :Valentine lost his head. But
sent his hoods out after Valentine
fighting in South Vietnam and
message" he had been talking about.
only because the emperor lost his
again . They picked him up, worked
the bombbtg of North Vietnam.
Val boy said yes, he did, and went
first.
him over rea-l good on the street, and
Kissinger was i,n Hanoi from
on to advise Mod Claude that "Big
And who won ? Well, did you ever
then to Impress the local citizens and
Saturday through Tuesday. He
Jupe" Jupiter, and the fast cat,
send or receive a card, or candybox
Three resignations - two by
earn points with Claude, cut off Val's
Is now resting in Hong Koog
Mercury, were a couple of bad actors.
with the message, "Be my Emperor
teachers
- were accepted
head right there on the Fiaminian
before embarking Thursday on
Claude didn't take too kindly to
Claudius Modius?"
Way, which is sort of off-Broadway
a diplomatic mission to China. Tuesday night when the
that talk. So he sent Valentine to the
near
Rome.
tn the Washington-Hanoi Eastern Local School District
'
:...-=~w::~~:;~::~::::::;s;:;:~::::=::::::::::w:::::::::::::::::::::::::-~::~-::-.::::::~.: · •;c_~snx~~.::re~:::~:::::::;:~:!8::!~=~~:::::::::::::::."::::::::::~;::::::!».:~::=!8!:~:~: communique, the two nations Board of Education met in
pledged to "strive for a new regular session.
Resigning effective at the
relationship based on respect
end
of the current school year
for each other's Independence
and sovereignty, noninterfer- was Roger Kirkhart, teacher
ence in each other's Internal and principal at the Tuppers
Cong. Clarence Miller's members, a mini-bus to painting is expected to begin locate by the Meigs Local affairs, equality and mutual Plains lllementary School and
high school football coach.
office today was advised by provide transportation for the first of the week in quarters School District Board of
Vickie
Cutright,
a
officials of AcriON that a volunteers from their homes, at the former .Pomeroy Junior Education. The council office is
presently
.in
Middleport
over
Mathematics "acher at the
grant of $27,482 has been supplies and ·other expenses. High School where the council
·
the
Quality
Printing
Co.
high school, resigned effective
provided to the Meigs County
Mrs. numas further said has been given permiaaion to
March 16, and Roger Dillon, a
Council on Aging to operate a
bus driver, resigned effective
retired senior volunteer
in the near future, Substitute
program.
bus drivers emploY.ed by the ·
This program which involves
.
board Tuesday night were Ray
placing 120 senior volunteers to
Rain, snow or whatever the
Warth, Carlotta Reed, Robert
serve with the bookmobile
weather, MiddlepOrt .firemen
Reed,
Bill Hannum and
service, hospitals, school for
will stage their first chicken
Virginia Kirkhart.
the mentally retarded and in
barbecue of tbe year Saturday
The Tuppers Plains principal
other sc~ools and parks, Ia
at the park behind the ?.Udexplained the new reading
being funded for a one year
dleport Post Office,
period.
Starting time for the bar- program for grades one, two
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas,
becue will be 11 a. m and and three which is gelling
director of the Meigs Council,
serving will continue until the underway there,' and Mr. and
said the program is for
supply runs out. Re~idents may Mrs. Roger Hudson and Mr.
resldenta 80 years or older wbo
phone in orders at 992-6958 and Mrs. Tom Mankin appearwish to volunteer for some type
anytime SatUrday for pickup ed to discuss kindergarten
of work program. They would
later without delay. Firemen with the board. Day long
volunteer. for any number of
will be unable to deliver. sessions for children enrolled
in kindergarten are still being
hours they wiah and lransProceeds will go toward furheld
in the district.
portatloo and lunch will be
niture for tbe new station,
Faculty member Larry
provided if requested by the
Firemen are in the process of
volunteers. A director,
completing ·their new fire Heines was appointed athletic
secretary and part-time aide
atatioo and are doing aU of the director for the remainder .of
are being employed by the .
inside work with funds from the year, replacing Supt. John
program . The grant will
donatioM and barbeeues. An Riebel. Bills were approved for, .
provide salaries of staff
open house Is expected to be payment. Attending were Supt.
Clerk
Creston
held in March to di8piay the Riebel,
Newland,
and
board
members
:c:::;:m: :e.,:.. ;;s;u;stw··......
. new quarters to the public.
&lt;«
Firemen are now trying to Roger Epple, Howard Cald'··
' the well, Jr., Clyde Kuhn, t 0.
EX:rENDED·OUTLOOK
raise funds for ~lture for
Rather ctld. A tbance of : ·
meeting room and a stove and McCoy and Oris Smith.
snow flurries today, Hlp
refrigerator for the kitchen.
HEAVY EQUlPMEJo!T OF the Coffey Co., Raceland, Ky., has moved into Pomeroy and Is
tempe'ralure~ 15to 25 Friday
Several
people donated toward
Jl'esently working to prepare a hillside behind the Pomeroy P,ost Office for removal of large
moderallq to 25 to 35 by
LOCAL TEMPS
rock overhangs behind the post office. The same firm was in Pomeroy for a number of weeks · exterior concrete work which
The
temperature ih downSunday. Overnlgbllows 8 to
was
not
~ed
bt
the
fJI}i
late Iaiit year removlng·ton.s of bouloors and rocks which fell in a landslide near the post office
18.
because of the weather• ..,_ town Pomeroy at !1 a.m.
bt December, 1971. Meantime, the Pomeroy Post Office Ia continuing to operate in the former
funds have been aet aalde to be Wednesday was 42 degrees
Pomeroy High School. The equipment i.s being used to Jllllke a ditch type excavation whjch will
n~
.hi.:.:l.•m.c.................... :7.$$
·under rainy skies:
bold the large rocks as they are removed..
· used for the project liter.

wUI

Brother ··val lost his

head for . _. ~·-

"tlie•

~
.~

Teachers
•
.resign

Corincilon Aging granted $27,482

First barbecue
of season by
Firemen is set

~

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