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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.

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SAVE ALL

f

S~ESLIPS

FROM

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

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

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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)
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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

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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!

'

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ews•• in Briefsf

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

I/

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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

~

�nel Mlddleport-P001eroy, 0 Feb 14 1973

3-TheDailySentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Feb 14 1973

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

&amp; THINBS

New Boolc May Help

More Confusion on Cholesterol
By Lawrence Lamb M D
Dear Dr Lamb - I have
a problem of overweight and
my doctor advised me
that my cholesterol IS okay
"but that I have high tngly
cendes As a result I ve
been put on a low carbohy
drate diet
My questiOns are What
are triglycendes? Are they
a forever thmg or when the
the weight loss IS accom
pbshed Will they Improve
lessen or disappear? C a n
you tell me where I can get
a booklet on low carbohy
drate plannmg? All I ve been
able to get so far Is a listing
of foods with the carbohy
drate content m grams How
many grams a day are al
lowed on such a diet? Cut
ting o u t potatoes pastas
and sweets IS not difficult
but what in the world can
one substitute for bread?
I ve been doctormg f o r

high blood pressure for the
past ten years
Dear Reader - Confuswn
about cholesterol Is ramp
ant Doctors measure I he
cholesterol level as an mdex
of the number of fatty par
hcles In the blood stream
The fatty particles called
hpo~&gt;rotems are associated
With atherosclerosis or hard
enmg of the arteries and are
really made of cholesterol
a blood protem and the fats
called tnglycerides
Most of the fats are c~r
ned m the bloodstream m
the chemiCal form of trigly
cer1des They are basically
a combmahon of glycerol
which chemically IS an al
cobol and three fatty acids
hence the term lr1glycende
The ratio of cholesterol and
triglycerides w1thm the fat
ty particles vary and this
explams why a person can
have a fairly normal choles
terol but can have high tn

Dear Helen
I'm much In favor of the current local commercials that
warn against shopUfting, but why Is it that on radio and TV the
shoplifter Is always female' My Dad says thls Is because she
almost always Is, but I disagree Boys and men go Into stores too
- and come out secretly loaded
Maybe a few public service ad people wlli read thls and tell
their writers about discrimination - LET S PLAY FAIR
Dear Lets
What do you bet they ve already been told- and the change
wiD come sooner than you think• If women can spot
discrimination In first grade readers (fathers and boys brave
strong leaders mothers and girla helpless followers) they U
surely demand equal time to name men shoplifters Let me know
lfimrlght -H

Dear Helen

+++

L

I feel like my husband and I are headed for divorce He treals
me very bad He puUs off my wig when we have a fight He won t
let me go into the bathroom alone when were arguing just
blocks my way so we U keep on fighting
He doem t like my family and my mother says marriage IS
ruining my health He s very jealous too He doesn t want me to
get a job, and he won t let me go to Me11lco foc a vacation (alone)
On his days off I get very bored with him as he s very passive
except when mad ~?
I have a couple of careers I d like to know more about nude
photography modeling, and massag~ I know a girl who makes
good money at both and she says it doesn t take much training or
effort, and I wouldn t have any !rouble breaking into the field Is
she right' - ABOUT TO LEAVE HIM
Dear ATLH
18118pect the trouble would come AFTER you break mtb the
field A nude modeling.plliiHilBssage job that doesn t take
much training might require considerable later effort not
the leaat of which is staying out of jail'
Maybe your husband has a right to be jeaiOIIS - H

+++
Dear Helen
I m surprised at the findings of the teen hot Une manager
who said his anonymous telephone service gets more distraught

BY JACK 0 BRIAN
GAMBINO GETS AN
A IN DEPORTMENT
NEW YORK (KFS) - The Feds have
fibned enough footage of Mafia boss-of bosses
Carlo Gambino to have him shipped back to
Italy despite hiS bad heart pleas Maureen
Stapleton arrived at Junmy Weston s Jazzene m
a plain cloth coat Her date Tennessee
Williams was resplendent m mmk
Phyllis
Diller had a $500 cosmetics case heisted at LA
airport She told hall'styllst MIChel Katan
They lifted my face agam'
Sarge Shnver s been runmng for everythmg
smce he missed a streetcar 45 years 8gl( His
next chase Will be after the Maryland Senate
seat now bottomed by Charles Mathias Jr
Rose Kennedy isn t seen much at Pabn Beach
frolics this wmter No slowdown for the lovely
lady - she s just busy wn ling her memoirs
pre-eold for a million &amp; a half
Flip Wilson s a relenUess motor touriSt
swnmers just drives his Rolls Royce where his
whbn directs He stopped durmg his last
odyssey at a tiny Alabama country church
where two black youngsters stared He looks
like Flip Wilson one said He sure Is Flip
Wilson Flips chauffeur beamed l was just
driving by and God told me to stop ~nd say
Hello
Flip explained The tyke concluded
That sure is Flip WUson all right'
The Henry Ford _party at 21 for daughter
Ann s 30th bll'lhday was the splashiest bash of
the year 105 guests wildly entertaining Joyous
enough for the host to have both his present
wife Cristina and his remarried ex Anne on
hand without a raised eyebrow Stuard Klein s
TV review of the Jane Fonda Donald Sutherland
Dick Steelyard Blues concluded with Of by
and for Idiots Such vaCilial!on
We focecast here weeks ago the amazmg
escalal!on of the value of herem and other hard
narcotics from the N Y police coffers and
Comm Murphy s subsequent estimate of $13
million wocth heiSted Is only the half of it
There s stlll enough sugar and flour used m the
swllch for a Pillsbury bake-off
The Eric Sevare1ds severed
Vanety
reporla Paul Mccartney and John Lennon
received flj,OOO 000 apiece just m royal lies lor
their songs - and Lennon Is sumg for $9 000 000
more he claims he s owed but was camouflaged
Last Tango in Paris director ha• his rel!gi
ous priori ties mixed he calls the star of the

By BRUCE BIOSSAT

(Ftrst of two related art1cles )

guees

••

smut smash a sam!
Stewardesses are
forming their own lib group Coffee Tea or
Glona Ste1nem
We know a N Y dress
designer who had a nervous breakdown after
fashwmng 40 frocks Don Foote who created
1 000 new costumes for thiS years Ringling
Bros Circus did II m a breeze Includmg a
dmger with 30 000 rhinestones for an elephant
Ex (for exported) madam Xaviera
Hollander tried to hang onto her rent frozen N
Y pad but the landlord fmaliy won Hiked the
lab because of the boss hookers prwr oc
cupanty In this Age of Vulgarity that s con
sldered m some square circles a coup to brag
about Norman Jew1son expected no problems
editing Greg Pecks Billy Two Hats Western
filmed m Israel - until he caught the
anachroniSm In his Mov1eola spotted an Israeli
Phantom Jet (and not the baby Moses)m the
rushes
Stan Getz and Lionel Hampton won their
sax vibes category m Playboy s All Star Band
for the 17th straight year Very slra1ght Tom
Conrad makes his screen debut m UA s Tom
Sawyer The 14-year-old lad IS son of Navy
Capt Charles Conrad who walked the moon
durmg the Apollo 12 space spm
Rock star
Todd Rundgren IS backed by musicians Hunt &amp;
Tony Hunt affects a white streak through hiS
locks Tony s hair IS pmk
Monaco Is Las
Vegas pnme competitor for the Fischer
Spassky return chess bout
After ali these years Renny Youngman s
earmng h1s biggest income So heavily booked
ahead he couldn t take the TV offer he most
wanted - on a Bob Hope special Big new
buiidmg Is mmg at 42nd St &amp; 8th Ave The
architects are listed Poor &amp; Swanke
Associates
Write On' Dore Schary
president of the feevee system TheatreVIsion
(already cablmg home happy hystena at its
reception m Fla ) says he expects cable TV to
brmg back the greatest renaissance for writers
m the history of the scribbled word Actor Ralph
Bellamy prophesies the same prosperity looms
for actors
ABC TV sports boss Roone Arledge Is
almost the lone TV -super executiVe who doesn t
seek personal publicity - and he s the gent who
brwgs m the biggest single pile of sports-ep1els
m the booming persp1ratwn trade $100 million
In 72 commerCials Both rival skems ,.auld give
their executiVes eye teeth to grab h1m he won t
junop

Culbertson Played This One

The 1970 Census revealed
that 149 300 000 or 73 5 per
cent of the 203 200 000 per
sons counted lived m urban
areas a sigmficant mcrease
over the 125 300 000 urban
residents counted m !960
The World Almanac notes
Although the land classified
as urban mcreased by more
than one third It accounts
for only 1 53 per cent of the
total land area of the U S
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BARBS

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By PHIL PASTORET

Pass

Pass

Pass

••

Open ng lead-• 2
That cmp crackle m the
air these wmter days Is the
snappmg of ankles on ski lly Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
slopes
Remember the televisiOn
'
show You are there ? To
There s noth•ng wrong day you are back playing m
W!th plane travel that a the finals of the 1930 Vander
good tram nde won t cure
hilt
'
Cover up the East and
West hands and try to play
four hearts You got there
after the b1ddmg shewn m
the box but remember you
are back m 1930

..
..

The only thmg that takes
a woman longer than putting
on her complexiOn IS mak
mg up her mmd

• • •

People womed about
the ecology shouldn t dts
tribute so many throwaway handbilL! about 1t to
add to the litter

QUICK QUIZ
Q- Wiult treason trial m
the Umted States lasted 57
rlays

A-T hat of Mrs Iva
d Aqumo Tokyo Rose of
World War II
Q-What IS t11e mterval
between high and low tide

tl•e Atlantic coast?
A-About s1x hours

011

Q- Why

IS

Flag Day on

June 14'
A- That was the date
the Contmental Congress
adopted the StaiS and
Stnpes

TheAimaaac
By Uaited Press International
Today Is Wednesday Feb 14
the 45th day of 1973 With 320 to
follow This is St Valentines
day
The moon IS approachmg Its
lull phase
The mornmg stars are Venus
Mars and Jupiter
The evemng stars are Mer
cury and Saturn
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aquanus
Amertcan suffrage leader
Anna Howard Shaw was born
Feb 14 1874
On this day m hiStory
In 1886 the West Coast Citrus
mdustry was born as the first
trainiOBd of oranges left Los
Angeles for eastern markels
In 1903 President Theodore
Roosevelt signed a law creating
a Department of Commerce
and Labor

West opens the deuce of

spades East takes the ace
and returns the queen You
play your km~ West ruffs
and leads the Jack of clubs
You play low from dummy
East plays the seven Pian
your play
II clubs are gomg to break
3 3 you let the 1ack hold
Eventually you Will be able
to discard your last spade on
dummy s fourth club
Suppose East h a s four
clubs You Will still make
your contract because you
will draw two r o u n d s of
trumps cash two high d1a
mends ruff your last d1a
mond and play the last two
trumps while d 1scar d 1n g
dummy s last spade East
lVIII be squeezed m spades
and clubs and you will still
come to your 10 tricks
When Ely Culbertson
played the hand he had a
different odea He decided
that West would be ion~ m
clubs so he won the tnck
drew trumps Then he played
kmg ace and his last d1a
mood to ruff m dum my
c ashe d dummy s kmg of
clubs and threw East m with
a spade
Now look at the East West
cards Ely was right He had
stnpped the hand and East
had to lead a fourth spade
which allowed Ely to ruff m
dummy and discard his los
mg club at the same time
{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

The bidding has been
We•t North East

1

WASHINGTON &lt;,NEAJ
The angry bellowmg from Congress over President
Nixon s Impoundment of $8 billion m a~proprlated funds
and his declared mtent to Impose a cedmg on spending
Is the cry of a self enfeebled mstitubon
First off Its brandmg of the new struggle as a con
sl!tutlonal Issue registers lightly against the memory
that It made no big fuss when the four previous pres!
dents also refused to spend voted funds
Beneath the bellowmg one catches an undertone of
wh1mpermg self p1ty as if the lawmakers all these years
had been helpless to do anythmg but fad repeatedly m
vital money matters
Long ago Congress could have done what 11 now says
1t will- coordmate Its spendmg moves establish ceilings
of Its own keep the strmgs the Constitution gave 11 on
the federal purse
Its pleas of msuffiCient committee staffmg have a
stale air and sound no fresher commg from Ralph
Nader s mouth In this highly advanced computer age
the lawmakers still complam as if they had to use an
abacus to count with
Their whole appropriation procedure IS sluggish
sloppy unbelievably old fashiOned It seems an etermty
smce they passed all appropriations by the July 1 fiscal
year deadlme as required by law Agam and agam the
White House has had to plan Its next budget with
little Idea how the current one was workmg
Repeatedly too Congress has voted to sP,end money
m excess of budget requests Its economies have been
erratic and limited
The General Accountmg Office Is Congress own
watchdog on spendmg by the fiscal agencies Its mquiries
cost the laxpayers around $100 million a year If you
listen sharply you can hear some conscienti&lt;I's bureau
crats assert rather convmcmgly that GAO doesn t always
do the world s best Job of checkmg Admittedly measur
mg performance m expenmental agencies like the evl
dently doomed Office of Economic Opportumty IS not
easy - which Is a story In Itself
ObviOusly the While House through the years has had
Its own serious faiimgs m federal fmancmg-also largely another story But 11 can t be overlooked that from
1964 to 1973 a penod covermg the nahon s longest war
and greatest expansiOn of costly social progress in Its
history Congress has collaborated to say the least in
three substanhai tax reductions By contrast two tax
mcreases were voted m the much bnefer span of the
Korean war
Without those three cuts the US Treasury today
would be gettmg nearly $o0 bdhon more a year m
revenue
There was glib talk of a huge peace dividend to
follow the wmddown of the VIetnam war As early as
1969 with troop withdrawals JUst startmg the then
president18l adviser Damei (Pat) Moymhan forecast that
war savmgs would be gobbled up fast - swept mto the
new or enlarged social programs many of which Con
gress had mterlaced with escalators assurmg their
further expansiOn as population and other factors moved
upward
As Mr Nixon defmes human resources they would
consume $125 billion of his new $269 billion 1974 budget
The figure will nse yearly Added to this the defense
requests are on the me agam past $81 billion Congress
may cut some but that figure will remam high
The net of It ob~1ous to all Is. an enormous money
squeeze and Congress has played a crucial role in
creatm~ It Its present anger IS human enough but 11
has mv1ted the storm

Television Log
WEDNESDAY FEB 14 1973
6 00- Truth oc Conseq 6 News 3 4 8 tO IS Sesame St 20
Aroynd the Bend 33
6 30 - News3 4 6 8 10 IS I Dream of Jeannle13 Societies in
Transition 33
7 00- News 6 10 What s My Line 8 Truth or Conseq 3J Beat
the Clock 4 Anything You Con Do 13 Know Your Schools 33
Elec Co 20 Fabulous Seven 15
7 30- To Tell the Truth 6 The Judge 10 Pollee Surgeon 3 4
Beat the Clock 13 Andy Griffith IS Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Episode Action 33 George K rby 8
s 00 - Adam 12 3 4 IS Paul Lynde 6 13 Under the Dome 33
Sonny &amp; Cher 8 10 America 73
8 30- Movie Poor Devil 3 4 IS Movie The Girls of Huntington Hoose 6 13
9 00-Medlcal Centeno EyetoEye20 33
9 30 - San Francisco Mix 20 33
10 OO - Sool33 News20 Cannons CMenMarshall6 13 Search
IS 3 4
II 00- News3 4 6 8 10 13 IS
II 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Screaming Skull6 13 Movies
Doctor You ve Got To Be Kidding! 8 Escape from East
Berlin 10
I 00 - News 4 13
THURSDAY FEB 15 1973
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10

6 15 6 256 30 -

Farmllme 10
Paul Harvey 13
Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers s Americas
Problems 10 Patterns For Living 13
6 45 - Corncob Rep!lrt 3
6 ss - Take Five tor Life rs
7 00 - Today 3 4 IS CBS News 8 10 News 6 Popeye 10
Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle 13
7 ~~ - Romper R'l"m 6 Sleepy Jelfers 8 Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
8 00- Capt Kangaroo 10 Sesame St 33 New Zoo Revue 13
Lassie 6
8 30 - Jack La La nne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room s
9 00 - Ben Casey 13 Concentration 6 Paul Dixon 4 Phil
Donahue 15 Capt Kangaroos Friendly Junction 10 AM 3
9 30-Jeopardy6 ToTelltheTruth3
10 OOC - 1 Dick Van Dyke 13 Dinah Shore 3 15 Columbys Six
al lng 6 Joker s Wild 8 10
10 30- Concentration 3 IS Price Is Righi&amp; 10 Phil Donahue 4
Split Second 13
11 00 - Sale oflhe Century 3 15 Gambit 8 10 Love American
Style 6 Password 13 Electric Co 20
11 30 - Bewitched 13 Hollywood Squareo 3 4 IS Search F
Tomorrow 8 10 Sesame st 20
or
12 ~-Password 13 News to Jeopardy 3 15 Jackie Oblinger
I ~ - All MJ Children 6 13 News 3 Green Acres 10 watch
1 30our3COnhiiA20 33 Secret Storm a Not For Women Only 15
- Id T Match 3 4 IS Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As The
Wor
urns 8 10
2 OOG - DaysofOur Llves3 4 15 Guiding Lights 10 Newlywed
ame 13 Mike Dooglaos 6
2 30-Doctors3 4 IS Edge of Night a 10 DallngGame13
3 DOS - Another World 3 4 IS General Hospital 6 13 Lo
plendoced Thing 8 to Behind the Lines 20
ve
3 3SO - Return to Peyton Place 3 4 15 One Lite to Live 6 13
ecret Storm 10 Merv Griffin a Eye to Eye20
4 00 - Mister Cartoon 3 Merv Gr!lfln 4 Fllntstones
American Style 13 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 6 MLovle
Pirate ot The Half Moon 10
ov e
;

~•nli'~~~:~t·am:~; .~.7~~~r'W!~ ~an'D~~~e.;ucy 6

Andy ~~~~lr\l,"'\~e 6 HazelS Bonanza 3 4 Mr Rogert 20 33
Pass
Pass
S 30- Marshall Dillon15 Elec Co 33 G
p I
Pass
Pass
Beverly Hillbillies 8 Hodgepodge Lod~:~o Y • USMC 13
You South hold
~= ~~'t'~e~: 154 News6.8
10 TruthorConseq 6
5
.AK54 ¥AQ63 t2 ... KQI07
Des I~ I~ Wom!n 3J C~~CNN::.s: ~ Dream of Jeannie 13
What do you do now?
7 ~;cr~::~r Llnr BlvRedJubileels News6
10 s...t
A-If you ore on optimiSt bid
Conse~
3
Let";
Ma"k:oA
f,:~s~
of
Our
Times
33
Truth
oc
four no trump to ask for aces
3
W1th eury intention of bldchna- 7 3
4
the
s•x 1f your partner shows one
20
Legislature
73
33
oom
If you art more consen1th t
8 00 - Ffip Wilson 3 4 15 Mods~· d 6 13 A
JUst b1d fiVe club&amp;
National Geographic 1 10
.,.a
dvocales 20 33
900-KingFu6 13. AnAmerlcanFamil 33 20
IODAY'S QUESTION
15 American Revolution 10 Movie L~st T llr'Wslde 3 ~
Instead o b1ddmg two clubs
Hill 8 Movie North 8~ Northwest 10 ra n rom Gun
your partner has JUmped to 10
thu!e clubs n response to your
~e~:~oMIN~s3 ~ ~~::~,:~~~ ~~n Franclsco6 13 CBS
openma b1d What do you do 11 30- Johnny Carson 3 4 15 And The Bones Came T ethe
now ?
13 Movie The Geisha Boy 1 Movie La Hog
r6
Faces 10
ve '" Many
1 00 - News 13 Roller Derby 4

3•2•

!

1

~;~~ ~~Xf&lt;'l~~d~r1~ L~~~~~~~.!1~~~~!3ockTo13Te111

'SEOAL Standmgs

Seniors how out on big victory

Money Hangup Is
Fault of Congress

BY PAUL CRABTREE

There s a story about a famO\IS prize winning buU which
America gave to one of the underdeveloped emerging nations
glycerides Incidentally the What Yoij Need To Know
overseas
In hope the bull would produce many offaprlng to feed
cholesterol values are qmte Abou\ Food and Cooking For
$1ll1Sfactory m testmg most Health (published by Vikmg the people and to beef up the country s agricultural output (That
men but are not qmte as Press 625 Madison Avenue pun was Intentional )
good a measurement for New York New York 10022
The bull arrived m fme shape but- to be blunt - he showed
women as far as correlation price $10) It has tables no Interest in doing his thing and just stood around looking at aU
with heart disease Is con which mclude almost all of
cerned
the common food Items that the specunens of bovine beauty paraded before him His new
There just 1sn t a good people use and all the values owners began to complain whereupon the bull wt~ndered over
I misunderstood - I thought I was sent
substitute for bread that are expressed In calories and said ' Oh I
doesn t also contam carbo not g r a m s for carbohy over here just as a consultant
drates fats and protems as
hydrates
Today that sme I ma consultant (nota bull)
Particularly s 1n c e you well as the cholesterol con
The
Sixty First West Virginia Legislature is In !le9Slon and
have high blood pressure tent of the various foods I m back in harness officially, Consultant to the Speaker Of the
the most Important thmg This Is the only source I
you can do IS to elimmate know of that provides th1s House of Delegates
You folks in Ohio don t know what you re missing Ill years
all of your excess weight or k 1n d of mformahon m a
fa I deposits That means usable form for the public past the West Vll'glnia Legislature has been a circus, medicine
cutting down on your total m calories as opposed to show tent revival and often a crashing bore - ull wrapped up in
calories I know Its hard to grams
to 60 fun-fllled days In smoke.filled rooms
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
fmd a source of mformation
The Ohio General Assembly IS always meeting 11 seems
on the calones of carbohy
West
Virginia s legislative sessions mel'(lfully come to an end
drates fats and protems m
Send your quett ons to Dr Lamb
the vanous foods and that n core of th1s newspo~r P0 Box after two months on the prenuse I suppose that that s all the
most people Who have heart 1551 Radro C1ty Stol1011 New Yorl City of Charleston can stand -not to mention the legislators and
problems or diet {lroblems NY 10019 Foro copy ol Dr Lomb s the general public
need such information This booklet on loJ ng Wf ght senJ SO
Nowadays there are more and more earnest educated
Is the mam reason that I cents to the Jome oddress and ask
articulate
young men in the Legisla~ and it getts tamer every
recently w r o I e the book for Los ng We oht' ~lrlet
year But In the past - \VboooooOO'
There was a poker game every night at the Daniel Boone
Hotel and many a legiSlator showed up next day with eyes &lt;1. red
and
a hip pocket fuU of green the end product of a hard day s
By Heltn Hottel
rught
There was and still is a party or reception thrown by one
group or another almost every evening, and expanding
caDs dUI'llll! a new moon
waiStlines were easy to attsm and hard to get rid of
I work in an expensive department stoce and our usual
Lobbyists prowled the area around the 'well that separates
customers are pleasant but they are strange sometimes -when House and Senate ever-ready to pounce on an unwary
the moon is FUlL'
lawmaker to flU hiS mind with the merits of their own special
ThiS Is when we get people returnmg two-year-old coats cause or biD
only worn a bit or matenuty dresses after the baby has
A makeshift cafeteria did a land-office busmess tucked
arrived
away nght ouls1de the stately marble columns of the House
Saturday nights when the moon Is full are the worst Durmg chamber
the last full moon weekend an entire famlly of siX from GrandGood night Columbus I don t think you could take anything
ma on down spent two hours m my department scroongmg like the West Virginia Legislature, at least the way 11 used to be
through the coats tossmg them on the floor etc Finally the
But the old order passeth and there s a moce sedate atmother complained that our selection was lousy (we have 2 000 mosphere In Charleston any more The most creative Legislator
coats') andshewas verydisappointedm the store
I ve ever known Speaker Ivor Boiarsky died late In the 1971
Come to think of it I didn t consider swc1de but con- session and even some of his enenues admit they miss his arm
templated murder as I spent the next 45 mmutes p1ckmg up after twisting sessions - when he used equal parts of profaruty
them - SALESCLERK
persuasion and name-your-polson to forge a fine legislative
record that did much to modenuze State Government
Dear Helen
In his place IS Lew McManus a quiet and mtrospectlve ruceMyhusband(nowex) told me II was ullmyfault that our love guy type who wUI leave his own mark But Lew IS the antithesiS
life was so poor Uke a fool I believed hun too~ ail the blame of the old days He doesn t drink or smoke and I ve heard him
and began to think I was hopeless After the divorce I met his say damn maybe a dozen times - when he was really upset
former wife now happily married and we became friends It And he calls the Governor str ' (I can't print what Boiarsky
fmally came out that she too lost her self-confidence because of sometimes called the Governor and vice versa J
this man s constant criticisms (Neither of us had been very
But before Ohio readers start feeling too superior let me
experienced )
make a pomt and II s an Important one
Only when sh~ married agam and to a REAL man did she
The West Vll'guua Legislature then and now, Is highly ef
realize she wasn t the one with the problem This Is to let other fective when It comes right down to the nitty-gritty of getting the
blamed wives know that sometunes they re called frigid job done and passmg the laws by which West Vll'glnlans live In
because thell' husbands won t admit - or don t understand fact an mdependent rankmg of the States In 1971 put these
their own shortcomings - NO LONGER AFRAID
seemmg mlsnts among the top 10 State Legislatures in the nation
m functional effiCiency
Don t asl&lt; me how or why II works because I couldn t tell
CONGRESS SHOULD Acr
you
But It DOES work even when consultants stand around and
CLEVELAND (UP!)- US
get
m
the way
Attorney General Richard
+++
Kleindienst said Monday at the
ON THE TV DIAL Sonny &amp; Cher have a valentine for
American Bar AssociatiOn
everyone Joe Namath (for the 8ll'ls) and 12 Playboy centerfold
mldwmter meetmg Congress
beauties (for the men) at 8 on WCHS-TV The IMOvative San
should
Investigate the
FranciSco Mix a 1971 creation returns to WOUB TV at 9 30
Watergate tiuggmg case The
Justice Department has not
closed Its mvestigatlon of the
WIN AT BRIDGE
break-In and bugging of
Democratic national
headquarters he added

Helen Help Us.
Are Shoplifters UIIIUIII;y Womea•

BRUCE BIOSSAT

'

ROCKSPRINGS- This was
a game presenting Coach Carl
Wolfe and his octet of seniors m
their final homes land as
Marauder cOBch and players
It marked the last appearance
of Rich Bailey Floyd Burney
Bill Vaughan Mike Sayre
Andy Vaughan Bill Chaney
and Jimmy Boggs
These boys played a fast
anW dllsfurious defense to hand
e ton their 13th loss of the
f!Cason Comblmng all of the
Meigs talent, the Marauders

absolutely crushed the Gol~n
Rockets by a score of 79-42 a
fitting gomg-away gift for thell'
coach who has resigned
With Meigs grabbmg an
early ~ lead Wellston d1dn t
score Its first pomts unlll
midway m the first period Two
free throws by Charlie Arnold
and a qUick lay up by dynamic
DaveSoudersgaveWellstonits
closest ca tch-up of the game at
6-4 In the fmal 30 second
Meigs raised Its lead to 16-9 on
a 20 footer (what else?) by

guard Jimmy Boggs
~ second quarter rally
staged by Souders of Wellston
caught the Marauders off
guard He netted 8 pomls to
bnng tlie Golden Rockets
w1thm 8 Semor forward
Charles Snare currently 4th tn
free throw percentage con
tr1buted his share by stealing
the ball twice
Meigs wasn t about to lose
another game and they proved
they meant business m the
!mal half Early m the third

Four OC teams
share top spot
United Preas International
Everyone seems to be trying
to get Into the act In the Ohio
Conference Four of the 13
member teams are No 1
The four way tie for first
place developed Tuesday mght
when Capital
defeated
Muskmgum Wittenberg beat
Heidelberg and Otterbein
downed Mount Union
The results gave ldentlcal9-2
OC marks to Capital Musking
wn Otterbein and Wittenberg
The Capital Musklngum
game was the classic butting of

By

league s top offensive team
with an average of 80 6 pomts
per game The Muskies were
the best m the conference on
defense holding opponents to
an average of 50 6 points per
game
The Crusaders eigh,h
ranked among small college
teams m the nation were hot
shooting 53 8 per cent from the
field and 88 9 per cent from the
Une to post a 53-46 VICtory over
the Musk1es Both teams are
18-3 overall
Jun Burson coach of Mus
klngum said we didn t play

as well as we could But you got
to giVe most of the credit for
that to them Cap Coach
Vmce Chickerella caUed the
win a great team effort and I
think we gave them a lesson 1n
thell' brand of basketball
Otterbem beat Mount Uruon
84-79 Wittenberg beat Heidel
berg 54-47 and Oberlin downed
Kenyon 67-&lt;il m the other OC
games
In other action Manetta
whipped Carnegie Mellon
(Pa ) 83 46 Wnght State
topped Wilberforce 100-69 and
Urbana edged CedarVIlle 87-85
In overtune

quarter on a steal by center
Bill Chaney Meigs pulled out
to a 48-36lead The Marauders
held Souders and the rest of the
Wellston team scoreless from
2 45 10 the third quarter to 6 30
10 the fmal period
Bill Vaughan fimshed the
onslaught m the third quarter
by puttwg Meigs ahead by 20
with a free throw to make the
score 56-36 Souders made four
of his teams SIX pomts m the
!mal penod as Meigs outscored
Wellston 23-6
Andy Vaughan wa&amp; the chief
architect of the victory for
Meigs The semor forward was
the high pmnt maker with 22
and he pulled down 11 caroms
second only to Bill Chaney
Also scormg m the double
figures were Captam Jimmy
Boggs and Bill Vaughan who
notched 14 aqd 12 respecl!vely
Greeted by an enthusulst1c
ovatiOn Paul FISh Cun
mngham suited up and par
ticipated m the !mal mwutes of
play
Chaney controlled the back
boards for both teams
crashwg for 14 of the &amp;I

rebounds fur Meigs Meigs
made 33 of 69 shots for a 47
percent from the floor and was
13 of 23 for as percent from the
chanty lme
Souders paced the Golden
Rockets with 7 field goals and 6
free throws for 20 pomts
almost half of h1s team s
pomts Wellston had 24
rebounds They connected for
16 of 23 shots for 25 pet from
the floor and made 10 of 14
from the free throw Ime for 71
percent
Coach Bob Hootman s team
has now run up a stqng of 13
straight league losses They
will meet the Athens Bulldogs
fur the Conal game of the season
Fnday mght That means
another defeat
Meigs now has sole
possesswn of 4th place as
Logan fell to Athens Tuesday
mght
The win upped the
Marauders season record to
10.7 overall and 7-&lt;i 10 the
SEOAL Meigs plays Its fmal
game of the regular season at
Logan Friday mght

Blue Devils
•
cop 15th wln

Galhpohs tuned up for Fnday s rematch wtth
Waverly by slappmg a 96 5'.! defeat on Jacksons
cap went Into the game the
v1s1tmg Ironmen Tuesday mght
Meanwhtle the lads of Coach Carroll Hawhee
clmched at least a he for the 1972 73 Southeastern
OhiO League basketball champwnshtp last mght by
rompmg over Ironton 77 43
WAVERLY - With four Tigers with John Shoemaker made 13 of 21 at the chant)

horns

Waverly gets title share
players h11tmg m double
figures Tuesday mght the
Waverly Tigers defeated
visitmg Ironton 77-43 to clinch
at least a share of their third
SEOAL basketball tiUe
Tuesday s easy victory over
Ironton shoved Waverly wto a
12 1 league mark while IHS
dipped to 4-9 m league com
petition WHS has now won 38
atralghl league games
Mjke Oyer s 19 pomts led the

addmg 18
Dave Rann was the only
Ironton player m double
ligures as he tallied 15
Waverly canned 29 of 60 field
goals lor a good 45 pet average
and converted 19 of 21 free
throws
They grabbed ofl33 reoounds
with big Ed Thompson
snaggmg 11
Ironton connected on 15 of 49
from the floor for 30 pet and

Athens trips
I

Logan, 60-51
ATHENS - the Athens
Bulldogs used the charity line
to stave off the determmed
Logan Chiellstns Tuesday
night to post a 80-51 victory
over the viSitors and remam m
thtrd place m the SEOAL
After Athens had led off
leadmg 18-13 34 29 and 5(1.35 at
the quarter marks the Chiefs
rallied to wlthm four pomts 51
47 with three mmutes left but
Athens continued fo hit free
throws to put the game out of
reach
W1th the Bulldogs leadmg 5035 going Into the fmal period
Logan hit 10 consecutive pomts
openmg the fourth quarter to
reduce the margm to 50-15
However the AHS cagers
responded by hittmg eight of 13
free throws m that quarte1 to
keep the Chiefs at bay
M~rk Mace bagged 19 pomts
and Andy Chonko 14 for the
wmners while hot-ehootmg Jim
Pierce canned 17 for Logan
The Bulldogs made good on
18 of 39 from the floor for 46 pet
and 24 of 34 free throws
Logan also had 18 field goals
but on 45 shois for a 40 pet
average and dropped m 15 of
24 free throws
Andy Chonko s 11 rebounds
led Athens in carooms 27 25

The Daily Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THI
INTI REST 0,
MilOS MASON AlilA
CHESTER L TANNIHILL
lxtt Ed
AOIEIIT HOEFLICH
City ld lor
Publtlhtd

dally

except

Salurclav by Ttle Oh o Valley

Publishing Comp1ny

Court St

Pomerov

111
Ohio

45769 Bu11neu Off ce Phone

9921156 Eallor a Phono 992
1157

second clns postage PI Cl 11

Pomeroy Ohio

National

advertlslnO

representative

Bottlntlll
Gallagher Inc 12 Eaat 42nCI
St New York City New York

retn Dt
llvtrtd by curler where
avel!ablt so cents ptr w11k.
Subscr ptlon

av Motor Route wh•rt carrier
ct not avallablt
One
month 11 75 By m.,l In Ohio

strv

and w va One year su 00
Six monthl 11 U Thrtt

months 14 50 Subscrlr,llon
prlct lncludH Sundl¥' T mts
Stnllntl

with Randy Norris grabbmg
mne for Logan
LOGAN (51l- P erce 6 5 17
Wh ltcrall I 57 Campbell 1 1
3 Norris 3 3 9 Culbertson 3 1
7 Kemper 4 0 8 TOTALS 18
15 51
ATHENS 160) -Mace 7 5 19
Mcinturf 1 0 2 Sk nner 0 3 3
Essex 5 1 11 Chonko 3 8 14
lnbooy I 4 6 Toppong o 2 2
Locke 1 1 3 TOTALS 18 24 60
Score by quarlers
Logan
13 16 6 16- 51
Athens
18 16 16 1(}-60
Reserve score

Athens 39

Loqan 42

Ticket orders
to be accepted
for pro battle
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
Slate Umverslty wiD begm ac
ceptlng ticket orders this week
lor the second annusl Cmcln
nati
Bengais Cleveland
Browns pre season football
game at Ohio Stadium Sunday
Aug 19
The OSU Athletic Ticket Of
f1ce smd appUcaUons would be
mailed to aU 1972 OSU season
ticket buyers and also to un
successful applicants Over the
counter orders also will be
taken from students faculty
and staff members starling
Thursday
Anyone wishing tickets who
are not In the precedfug cate
gories also may order llckels
but thell' applications will be
held and filled after a 31).day
period
The Browns and Bengals also
will sell tickets to their season
Ucket holders
If tickets remain after AprU
15 they will be made available
by OSU the Browns and Bengals
Tickets range from $8 for a
box seat to $7 for a reserved
seat and $6 for a field seat and
the 110uth stands Each ocder
should include a 30-&lt;:ent hand!
lng charge
Checks or money orders
should he made payable to The
Ohio State University and
mailed to the AthleUc Ticket
Office 410 W Woodruff Ave
COlumbus Ohio 43210

MEIGS MARAUDERS
TP
F~! F;: RSB PF
4
8
10 13 2 s 11
I 22
6
•
3 9 0 o 14
4
71~ ~ ~ ~
3
I
12
19 2 3 3 3 4

ra\~~ER
A VaYghan
Chaney

~~:uahan
Ba ley

~

Pr ce

~~~~:

j

~~

1 2 00
Fl Burney
1 1 oo
~ayBurney
~
Cunnmgham
oo o 1
3
TOTALS
WELLSTON GOLDEN ~~~K~i~
PLAYER
FG A FT A
Dave SoYders
7 29 6 6
~~::; 1!~~~:~;n
3\j : ;
Charhe Arnold
3 10 2 3
~:;r~YM~~~~1s
~~ ~~
steve Arnold
o1 o1
TOTALS
16 63 10 oq
Score by Quarters
Metg s Marauders
Wellston Golden Rockets

b b;

0

~

u

u
6
2
2
3
0
0

2

0

o I
~ 0I
o I
6q 15 79
RB PF TP
4 20
5
3

2q

3
7

4

8

5
I

4

0

25

0
0

42

1636 5679
9303642

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Waverly
16 I 1241 899
Gal l po os
15 2 167 840
South Poonl 13 S 1268 999
Fed Hock ng 12 4 923 883
Chesapeake II 5 1029 868
Portsmouth

renton

5 11

Jackson
We lslon

Little Ms win big one
ROCK SPRINGS- The little
Marauders made playmg
basketball look easy as they
rolled over the Wellston re
serves here 46 31 Tuesday
mght
Sophomore Danny Dodson
came on strong as did the
entire team Dodson was all
over the court smkmg hiS own
shots and blockmg Wellston s
In a sconng spurt Meigs
notched 10 points to 2 by Well
stan early m the th1rd quarter
This only mcreased the little
Marauders lead and deepened
Wellston s despair
Perk Ault sure footed guard
for the Marauders was the
high man for the game with 6
held goals for a total of 12
pomls Dodson followed with
10 and the semor student
manager Cunmngham came
off the bench to contribute 4
pmnts They shot &gt;7 pet from
the foul line and from the floor
21 of 41 attempts for 53 pet
Meigs pulled down 12
rebounds
Weilstonwasnotaslucky lis
lone scorer m the double fig
ures was forward Gilliand with
10 pomts Phillips was next
high with 9 The Golden
Rockets made 13 of 41 field

goals for a shootmg percentage
of 31 pel and shot 44 pet from
the chanty line
This loss was the 12th set
back agamst the victory for
Coach Mark Mullen
Coach Roger Borch s team Is
now 6-7 on the year They will
meet the reserve leadmg
Logan Papooses at Logan
Fnday mght
WELLSTON - Gtlliand 5-010 Ph1ihps 3 3 9 Gilliand 3 ().
6 Arnold II 3 Milliken I I 3
Totals 13-5-31
MEIGS - Ault 6-0-12 Quails
2-2-' Cremeans 2.0-4 S Wail
burn 0 2 2 Dodson 5 0 10
Coates 3-0-6 Cunmngham 2-04 Roley 1-0-2 Totals 21-4-46
Score by Quarters
Wellston
6 10 21 31
Meigs
12 22 40 46

Transfers

973

44

SEOAL VARSITY
TEAM
W L P DP
Waver y
13 0 966 634
Gal po s
12
9 3 634
Athens
9 5 723 651
Me gs
7 6 771 806
Logan
6 7 825 810
Ironton
4 9 745 769
Jackson
2 II 668 887
Wei ston
o 3 688 1103
TOTALS
52 52 6299 6299
Tuesday s Results

Gal pol s 96 Jackson 52
Me gs 79 We Is on 42
Waver

y

77 Ironton 43

Alhens 60 Logan 51
SEOAL RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
Logan
12 1 604 448
1 2

570

438

Gall pol s
Athens
Me gs

8 5 468 450
8 5 563 476
6 7 547 527

Jackson
Wei ston
TOTALS

1 2 403 692
52 52 4181 4181

renton

4 9 514 548
2
5 2 602

Tuesday s Results
35 Ja ckson

Gall•pol s

30

Megs 46 Wels on 31
Waver y 52 Iron on 43
L o~an

42 Athens 39

,Fnday s Games
Gal pol s at Waver y
Ironton at Jackson
Me gs at logan
Athens at We Iston

TEAM

SEOALFROSH
W L

P OP
2 679 437
9 4 555 392

Jackson
Ga 1 po s

ll

Waverly
Athens
Logan
Me gs
Ironton
Wellston
TOTALS

7 5 515 392
7 6 477 459

7 6 487 470
5 7 428 439
5 8 425 51 7
0 13 286 746
51 51 3852 3852

Mondays Results
40 Athens 32

Logan

Waverly 38 Ironton 25

Me gs 48 We lslon 28

Thursdays Games

Waverly at Gall pol s
Jackson at Ironton

Logan at Me gs
E A K1bble to J B 0 Bnen Wellston at Athens
parcels Olive
Lomsa M Ne\\land to Grant
A Newland parcels Orange
Olive
Edna K Russell Richard W
Russell to Letta A Spencer
lots Mddleporl
Letta A Spencer to Richard
W Russell Edna K Russell
!Qts M,i~dleport

Myrtle " Kmg
)ilyr lie
Robwson aka IFr.ed B
Robmson to Ida Kmg Susan
Thompson parcels Sc1p10
Garnet W Clark to Sidney R
Hayman Carol Hayman
parcels Salisbury
Charles Cook Sylvia Cook to
Carol G Mowery Doily F
Mowery parcels Salisbury
Freeland S Noms Lucille
Noms to Charles B Cook
Sylvia M Cook lots Carlelon
AdditiOn Syracuse
FranciS H Andrew Nellie
Andrew to Johnny Diehl
Phyllis Diehl parcel Olive
Elberfeld Realty Co to
Donald W Mayer Lmda L
Mayer lot Pomeroy
Anton Liter Anna Liter to
Anton L ter Anna loter
Lebanon
PI hp Baer Janece Baer to
Leadmg CreekConservancy
parcel Salem

Watch For
Spec1al Promotions
All Thru
The Month'

Me1gs Co. Branch

(!)
The Athens County
Savmgs &amp; loan Co

296 Second St

Pomeroy Oh10

All Accounts Insured To

120 00 0 oo by FSLIC

G. E. SALE

Moc!el WWA 8350N

USED CARS
WEATHER

COLDER•..
VALUES

HOOTER!

LOWEST PRICED GE 3 CYCLE,
2 SPEED WASHER WITH MINI
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Mm1 Basket saves
on hC~nd wash!

MATCHING DRYER

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOl
OHIO

949

3 14 859 I 35
0 7 909 1453

Non League Results
South Pomt 72 Coa Grove 51
Chesapeake 87 Symmes Va ley

ON

"-1_....-~POMEROY

10 7 943 867
10 7 1048 1038
8 9 11 0 075

Waver y

Coach Jom Osborne s Blue
stnpe
VIce McCreary pulled down Devils can \liD a share of the second un1t played 3 28 of the
SEOAL litle by defeatmg the second penod
13 of Ironton s 32 rebounds
ll shou ld be noted that Tigers at Waverly Fnday
The GAHS regulars played
Waverly committed 14 turn mght
the fu st five mmutes of the
Should Waverly WID II ll1rd period before gomg to the
overs but their tenacwus
defense forced Ironton mto a would giVe the Hawheemen bench for good woth a 61 28
their second straight perfect lead
fantas tic 30 turnovers
season m the SEOAL third
It was this combmatwn of
Galhpohs led 69 37 after
undisputed
forced mistakes and well consecutive
three penods Galiia s second
balanced sconryg that enabled championship and 39th umt outscored the Ironmen 27
Waverly 1&lt;f- posl quarter score strmghl loop win
15 m the l)~al stanza Biggest tUl novers
Tuesday
s
victdty
over
GAHS
lead was 45 pomts 9449
Jackson hit 20 of 67 from
leads ol r!S-6 39 14 and 62 21
Ja
ckson
left
Gallipolis
with
a
With
remammg
the field for 29 8 pel JHS was
enroute to theor 16th WID
1 11
Ia
2
season
mark
The
Devils
~
Gll
Pnce
6-4
JUnior
center
1!
of 22 from the foul elrdes
agamst a smgie loss
are 12 I m conference play p!cked off 10 rebounds an'.!. lor 54 4 pet Thelronmen had
The box score
Jackson dropped to 3 14 on the scored lOpomls m two quarteit 22 personals 27 rebounds
IRONTON 143) - Rann 55 year and 2-11m league action of actwn David Brown 6-4 and 20 turnovers
15 Howard 3 3 9 Han non 3 0
Coach Osborne played ius JUnior picked off seven
Tom Conroy a 8 JUnior
6 Mark n 2 2 6 Green I 0 2
JUSt
under
16
mmutes
rebounds
and
scored
eight
guard
led Jackson s attack
regulars
McCreary 1 3 5 TOTALS IS 13
43
Tuesday as the Gallians closed pomts for the Blue Devils
with 13 pomts Semor center
WAVERLY (77) - Maloy 3 out their 1972.73 home cam
All
told
GAHS
hit
39
of
71 Dan Morrow had mne rebounds
0 6 Oyer 7 5 19 Thompson 4 2
10 Shoemaker 8 2 18 Salyers pa!gn With a 7 2 mark Four from the field for 55 pet At the for the Ironmen
5 7 17 Tracy 0 3 3 Acord 1 0 2 teen Blue Devols saw actiOn foul Circles GAHS was 18 of 25
Jackson will host Ironton m
Thomas I 0 2 TOTALS 29 19
and 12 entered the sconng fur 72 pet The Gaiiians had 20 Its fmal regular season game
77
:&gt;core by quarters
column
personals &gt;9 rebounds and 18 Fnday
Ironton
6 8 7 22- 43
Stx semors saw action at
Waverly
16 23 23 15- 77
JACKSON IRONMEN (52)
Reserve score Waverl y 52 home as Blue Devils !01 the
PLAYER-Pos
FG A FT A PF RB TO TP
fin
al
lime
Tuesday
They
Ironton 43
Paul
White
I
15
13 1 3 5 3
were Topper Orr forward Dan Morrow c
4 10
14
4
9
1
9
who led the Galiians attack Randy Warrtngton f
14 02 2 4 5 2
2 11
22 3 2 5 6
w1tl 16 po1nts and eight Arl DeStephen g
Tom Conroy g
6 16
1
I 2 3 1 13
rebounds Jimmy Noe for Rocky Marhn c
01
12 3 3 1 1
word \1 ho scored 14 pomls and Mke McDonald I
27
01
1
0
1
4
BROWN APPOINTED
Don
Jenktns
f
13
00
I
1
0
2
pulled down eoght rebounds Earl Henderson c
WASHINGTON (UP!)
15 44 '
1 0 6
25
22
1
0
1
6
Rep Clarence J Brown R Mark Kiesling guard 10 Rock Bollman I
J m Chonn g
00
01
0
1
0
0
pomls
Kev
Sheets
guard
six
Ohw will serve a two year
26 67 12 22 22 27 21
52
TOTALS
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS 196)
term on the National Advisory poin ts Skipper Johnson
center
nme
pom
ts
and
SIX PLAYER- Pos
FG A FT A PF RB TO TP
Commission
on
In
G1! Pr ce c
5 10
0 0 2 10 1 10
rebounds
and
Steve
Lee
tergo~ernmental
Relallons
JmmyNoel
711
00 1 8 3 14
Mark Kleshng g
48
2 2 2 2 2 10
The commiSSion proposes guard SIX pomts
Topper Orr I
69
4 5 2 8 I 16
II was also Parents Night
policy relationships between
Kev
Sheets
g
2
6
2
2 2 4 2 6
lor the varsity cagers Prior J m Niday g
various levels of government
12 4 4
2 2 6
to the opening tipoff parents Sk pper Johnson c
45 1 2 2 6 2 9
00 00 0 0 I 0
or guardians of the 14 Blue J m Songer g
MkeBemdgel
''
12 1 2 I 3
Devil players were In
Roger Da ley I
1'
00 o 3 2 2
INDUSTRIAL DEATH
33 00 0
4 0 6
troduced at mid court along B II Lemley I
Ken Will g
00
02
0 I 0 0
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ed "Ith their sons
Dav d Brown c
34
23 4 7 I 8
ward Gomes 19 of Columbus
The1score was hed once 2 2 Steve Lee g
25 1 2 2 2 0 6
was killed Monday while Will 7 07leftm the hrstpenod TOTALS
39 71 18 25 20 59 18 96
Score By Quarters
cleanmg a converyor belt at Kev Sheets layup at the 6 39
Ja ckson lronmen
4 12 21 15-52
Uruted Parcel Sel'Vlce here mark put the Gallians ahead to GAHS
Blue Dev Is
26 21 22 21- 96
Police say the youth was slay GAHS led 26-4 after one
Ofhcoals - Adkons &amp; Breeden Cholhcothe Chapter
crushed when his clothes peood It was 47 16 durmg the
caought on the machinery
halfhme mtermission GAHS

3rd Ave

10 7 11 57 11 54

Alhens
Me gs
Logan

Middleport

1

*17800

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
MIDDLEPORT, 0
f

�nel Mlddleport-P001eroy, 0 Feb 14 1973

3-TheDailySentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Feb 14 1973

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

&amp; THINBS

New Boolc May Help

More Confusion on Cholesterol
By Lawrence Lamb M D
Dear Dr Lamb - I have
a problem of overweight and
my doctor advised me
that my cholesterol IS okay
"but that I have high tngly
cendes As a result I ve
been put on a low carbohy
drate diet
My questiOns are What
are triglycendes? Are they
a forever thmg or when the
the weight loss IS accom
pbshed Will they Improve
lessen or disappear? C a n
you tell me where I can get
a booklet on low carbohy
drate plannmg? All I ve been
able to get so far Is a listing
of foods with the carbohy
drate content m grams How
many grams a day are al
lowed on such a diet? Cut
ting o u t potatoes pastas
and sweets IS not difficult
but what in the world can
one substitute for bread?
I ve been doctormg f o r

high blood pressure for the
past ten years
Dear Reader - Confuswn
about cholesterol Is ramp
ant Doctors measure I he
cholesterol level as an mdex
of the number of fatty par
hcles In the blood stream
The fatty particles called
hpo~&gt;rotems are associated
With atherosclerosis or hard
enmg of the arteries and are
really made of cholesterol
a blood protem and the fats
called tnglycerides
Most of the fats are c~r
ned m the bloodstream m
the chemiCal form of trigly
cer1des They are basically
a combmahon of glycerol
which chemically IS an al
cobol and three fatty acids
hence the term lr1glycende
The ratio of cholesterol and
triglycerides w1thm the fat
ty particles vary and this
explams why a person can
have a fairly normal choles
terol but can have high tn

Dear Helen
I'm much In favor of the current local commercials that
warn against shopUfting, but why Is it that on radio and TV the
shoplifter Is always female' My Dad says thls Is because she
almost always Is, but I disagree Boys and men go Into stores too
- and come out secretly loaded
Maybe a few public service ad people wlli read thls and tell
their writers about discrimination - LET S PLAY FAIR
Dear Lets
What do you bet they ve already been told- and the change
wiD come sooner than you think• If women can spot
discrimination In first grade readers (fathers and boys brave
strong leaders mothers and girla helpless followers) they U
surely demand equal time to name men shoplifters Let me know
lfimrlght -H

Dear Helen

+++

L

I feel like my husband and I are headed for divorce He treals
me very bad He puUs off my wig when we have a fight He won t
let me go into the bathroom alone when were arguing just
blocks my way so we U keep on fighting
He doem t like my family and my mother says marriage IS
ruining my health He s very jealous too He doesn t want me to
get a job, and he won t let me go to Me11lco foc a vacation (alone)
On his days off I get very bored with him as he s very passive
except when mad ~?
I have a couple of careers I d like to know more about nude
photography modeling, and massag~ I know a girl who makes
good money at both and she says it doesn t take much training or
effort, and I wouldn t have any !rouble breaking into the field Is
she right' - ABOUT TO LEAVE HIM
Dear ATLH
18118pect the trouble would come AFTER you break mtb the
field A nude modeling.plliiHilBssage job that doesn t take
much training might require considerable later effort not
the leaat of which is staying out of jail'
Maybe your husband has a right to be jeaiOIIS - H

+++
Dear Helen
I m surprised at the findings of the teen hot Une manager
who said his anonymous telephone service gets more distraught

BY JACK 0 BRIAN
GAMBINO GETS AN
A IN DEPORTMENT
NEW YORK (KFS) - The Feds have
fibned enough footage of Mafia boss-of bosses
Carlo Gambino to have him shipped back to
Italy despite hiS bad heart pleas Maureen
Stapleton arrived at Junmy Weston s Jazzene m
a plain cloth coat Her date Tennessee
Williams was resplendent m mmk
Phyllis
Diller had a $500 cosmetics case heisted at LA
airport She told hall'styllst MIChel Katan
They lifted my face agam'
Sarge Shnver s been runmng for everythmg
smce he missed a streetcar 45 years 8gl( His
next chase Will be after the Maryland Senate
seat now bottomed by Charles Mathias Jr
Rose Kennedy isn t seen much at Pabn Beach
frolics this wmter No slowdown for the lovely
lady - she s just busy wn ling her memoirs
pre-eold for a million &amp; a half
Flip Wilson s a relenUess motor touriSt
swnmers just drives his Rolls Royce where his
whbn directs He stopped durmg his last
odyssey at a tiny Alabama country church
where two black youngsters stared He looks
like Flip Wilson one said He sure Is Flip
Wilson Flips chauffeur beamed l was just
driving by and God told me to stop ~nd say
Hello
Flip explained The tyke concluded
That sure is Flip WUson all right'
The Henry Ford _party at 21 for daughter
Ann s 30th bll'lhday was the splashiest bash of
the year 105 guests wildly entertaining Joyous
enough for the host to have both his present
wife Cristina and his remarried ex Anne on
hand without a raised eyebrow Stuard Klein s
TV review of the Jane Fonda Donald Sutherland
Dick Steelyard Blues concluded with Of by
and for Idiots Such vaCilial!on
We focecast here weeks ago the amazmg
escalal!on of the value of herem and other hard
narcotics from the N Y police coffers and
Comm Murphy s subsequent estimate of $13
million wocth heiSted Is only the half of it
There s stlll enough sugar and flour used m the
swllch for a Pillsbury bake-off
The Eric Sevare1ds severed
Vanety
reporla Paul Mccartney and John Lennon
received flj,OOO 000 apiece just m royal lies lor
their songs - and Lennon Is sumg for $9 000 000
more he claims he s owed but was camouflaged
Last Tango in Paris director ha• his rel!gi
ous priori ties mixed he calls the star of the

By BRUCE BIOSSAT

(Ftrst of two related art1cles )

guees

••

smut smash a sam!
Stewardesses are
forming their own lib group Coffee Tea or
Glona Ste1nem
We know a N Y dress
designer who had a nervous breakdown after
fashwmng 40 frocks Don Foote who created
1 000 new costumes for thiS years Ringling
Bros Circus did II m a breeze Includmg a
dmger with 30 000 rhinestones for an elephant
Ex (for exported) madam Xaviera
Hollander tried to hang onto her rent frozen N
Y pad but the landlord fmaliy won Hiked the
lab because of the boss hookers prwr oc
cupanty In this Age of Vulgarity that s con
sldered m some square circles a coup to brag
about Norman Jew1son expected no problems
editing Greg Pecks Billy Two Hats Western
filmed m Israel - until he caught the
anachroniSm In his Mov1eola spotted an Israeli
Phantom Jet (and not the baby Moses)m the
rushes
Stan Getz and Lionel Hampton won their
sax vibes category m Playboy s All Star Band
for the 17th straight year Very slra1ght Tom
Conrad makes his screen debut m UA s Tom
Sawyer The 14-year-old lad IS son of Navy
Capt Charles Conrad who walked the moon
durmg the Apollo 12 space spm
Rock star
Todd Rundgren IS backed by musicians Hunt &amp;
Tony Hunt affects a white streak through hiS
locks Tony s hair IS pmk
Monaco Is Las
Vegas pnme competitor for the Fischer
Spassky return chess bout
After ali these years Renny Youngman s
earmng h1s biggest income So heavily booked
ahead he couldn t take the TV offer he most
wanted - on a Bob Hope special Big new
buiidmg Is mmg at 42nd St &amp; 8th Ave The
architects are listed Poor &amp; Swanke
Associates
Write On' Dore Schary
president of the feevee system TheatreVIsion
(already cablmg home happy hystena at its
reception m Fla ) says he expects cable TV to
brmg back the greatest renaissance for writers
m the history of the scribbled word Actor Ralph
Bellamy prophesies the same prosperity looms
for actors
ABC TV sports boss Roone Arledge Is
almost the lone TV -super executiVe who doesn t
seek personal publicity - and he s the gent who
brwgs m the biggest single pile of sports-ep1els
m the booming persp1ratwn trade $100 million
In 72 commerCials Both rival skems ,.auld give
their executiVes eye teeth to grab h1m he won t
junop

Culbertson Played This One

The 1970 Census revealed
that 149 300 000 or 73 5 per
cent of the 203 200 000 per
sons counted lived m urban
areas a sigmficant mcrease
over the 125 300 000 urban
residents counted m !960
The World Almanac notes
Although the land classified
as urban mcreased by more
than one third It accounts
for only 1 53 per cent of the
total land area of the U S
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NORTH '
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WEST
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tQ98 32
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SOUTH (D)
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North South vulnerable

West

North

Fast

Soulh

BARBS

Pass

2¥

2•

4¥

By PHIL PASTORET

Pass

Pass

Pass

••

Open ng lead-• 2
That cmp crackle m the
air these wmter days Is the
snappmg of ankles on ski lly Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
slopes
Remember the televisiOn
'
show You are there ? To
There s noth•ng wrong day you are back playing m
W!th plane travel that a the finals of the 1930 Vander
good tram nde won t cure
hilt
'
Cover up the East and
West hands and try to play
four hearts You got there
after the b1ddmg shewn m
the box but remember you
are back m 1930

..
..

The only thmg that takes
a woman longer than putting
on her complexiOn IS mak
mg up her mmd

• • •

People womed about
the ecology shouldn t dts
tribute so many throwaway handbilL! about 1t to
add to the litter

QUICK QUIZ
Q- Wiult treason trial m
the Umted States lasted 57
rlays

A-T hat of Mrs Iva
d Aqumo Tokyo Rose of
World War II
Q-What IS t11e mterval
between high and low tide

tl•e Atlantic coast?
A-About s1x hours

011

Q- Why

IS

Flag Day on

June 14'
A- That was the date
the Contmental Congress
adopted the StaiS and
Stnpes

TheAimaaac
By Uaited Press International
Today Is Wednesday Feb 14
the 45th day of 1973 With 320 to
follow This is St Valentines
day
The moon IS approachmg Its
lull phase
The mornmg stars are Venus
Mars and Jupiter
The evemng stars are Mer
cury and Saturn
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aquanus
Amertcan suffrage leader
Anna Howard Shaw was born
Feb 14 1874
On this day m hiStory
In 1886 the West Coast Citrus
mdustry was born as the first
trainiOBd of oranges left Los
Angeles for eastern markels
In 1903 President Theodore
Roosevelt signed a law creating
a Department of Commerce
and Labor

West opens the deuce of

spades East takes the ace
and returns the queen You
play your km~ West ruffs
and leads the Jack of clubs
You play low from dummy
East plays the seven Pian
your play
II clubs are gomg to break
3 3 you let the 1ack hold
Eventually you Will be able
to discard your last spade on
dummy s fourth club
Suppose East h a s four
clubs You Will still make
your contract because you
will draw two r o u n d s of
trumps cash two high d1a
mends ruff your last d1a
mond and play the last two
trumps while d 1scar d 1n g
dummy s last spade East
lVIII be squeezed m spades
and clubs and you will still
come to your 10 tricks
When Ely Culbertson
played the hand he had a
different odea He decided
that West would be ion~ m
clubs so he won the tnck
drew trumps Then he played
kmg ace and his last d1a
mood to ruff m dum my
c ashe d dummy s kmg of
clubs and threw East m with
a spade
Now look at the East West
cards Ely was right He had
stnpped the hand and East
had to lead a fourth spade
which allowed Ely to ruff m
dummy and discard his los
mg club at the same time
{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

The bidding has been
We•t North East

1

WASHINGTON &lt;,NEAJ
The angry bellowmg from Congress over President
Nixon s Impoundment of $8 billion m a~proprlated funds
and his declared mtent to Impose a cedmg on spending
Is the cry of a self enfeebled mstitubon
First off Its brandmg of the new struggle as a con
sl!tutlonal Issue registers lightly against the memory
that It made no big fuss when the four previous pres!
dents also refused to spend voted funds
Beneath the bellowmg one catches an undertone of
wh1mpermg self p1ty as if the lawmakers all these years
had been helpless to do anythmg but fad repeatedly m
vital money matters
Long ago Congress could have done what 11 now says
1t will- coordmate Its spendmg moves establish ceilings
of Its own keep the strmgs the Constitution gave 11 on
the federal purse
Its pleas of msuffiCient committee staffmg have a
stale air and sound no fresher commg from Ralph
Nader s mouth In this highly advanced computer age
the lawmakers still complam as if they had to use an
abacus to count with
Their whole appropriation procedure IS sluggish
sloppy unbelievably old fashiOned It seems an etermty
smce they passed all appropriations by the July 1 fiscal
year deadlme as required by law Agam and agam the
White House has had to plan Its next budget with
little Idea how the current one was workmg
Repeatedly too Congress has voted to sP,end money
m excess of budget requests Its economies have been
erratic and limited
The General Accountmg Office Is Congress own
watchdog on spendmg by the fiscal agencies Its mquiries
cost the laxpayers around $100 million a year If you
listen sharply you can hear some conscienti&lt;I's bureau
crats assert rather convmcmgly that GAO doesn t always
do the world s best Job of checkmg Admittedly measur
mg performance m expenmental agencies like the evl
dently doomed Office of Economic Opportumty IS not
easy - which Is a story In Itself
ObviOusly the While House through the years has had
Its own serious faiimgs m federal fmancmg-also largely another story But 11 can t be overlooked that from
1964 to 1973 a penod covermg the nahon s longest war
and greatest expansiOn of costly social progress in Its
history Congress has collaborated to say the least in
three substanhai tax reductions By contrast two tax
mcreases were voted m the much bnefer span of the
Korean war
Without those three cuts the US Treasury today
would be gettmg nearly $o0 bdhon more a year m
revenue
There was glib talk of a huge peace dividend to
follow the wmddown of the VIetnam war As early as
1969 with troop withdrawals JUst startmg the then
president18l adviser Damei (Pat) Moymhan forecast that
war savmgs would be gobbled up fast - swept mto the
new or enlarged social programs many of which Con
gress had mterlaced with escalators assurmg their
further expansiOn as population and other factors moved
upward
As Mr Nixon defmes human resources they would
consume $125 billion of his new $269 billion 1974 budget
The figure will nse yearly Added to this the defense
requests are on the me agam past $81 billion Congress
may cut some but that figure will remam high
The net of It ob~1ous to all Is. an enormous money
squeeze and Congress has played a crucial role in
creatm~ It Its present anger IS human enough but 11
has mv1ted the storm

Television Log
WEDNESDAY FEB 14 1973
6 00- Truth oc Conseq 6 News 3 4 8 tO IS Sesame St 20
Aroynd the Bend 33
6 30 - News3 4 6 8 10 IS I Dream of Jeannle13 Societies in
Transition 33
7 00- News 6 10 What s My Line 8 Truth or Conseq 3J Beat
the Clock 4 Anything You Con Do 13 Know Your Schools 33
Elec Co 20 Fabulous Seven 15
7 30- To Tell the Truth 6 The Judge 10 Pollee Surgeon 3 4
Beat the Clock 13 Andy Griffith IS Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Episode Action 33 George K rby 8
s 00 - Adam 12 3 4 IS Paul Lynde 6 13 Under the Dome 33
Sonny &amp; Cher 8 10 America 73
8 30- Movie Poor Devil 3 4 IS Movie The Girls of Huntington Hoose 6 13
9 00-Medlcal Centeno EyetoEye20 33
9 30 - San Francisco Mix 20 33
10 OO - Sool33 News20 Cannons CMenMarshall6 13 Search
IS 3 4
II 00- News3 4 6 8 10 13 IS
II 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Screaming Skull6 13 Movies
Doctor You ve Got To Be Kidding! 8 Escape from East
Berlin 10
I 00 - News 4 13
THURSDAY FEB 15 1973
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10

6 15 6 256 30 -

Farmllme 10
Paul Harvey 13
Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers s Americas
Problems 10 Patterns For Living 13
6 45 - Corncob Rep!lrt 3
6 ss - Take Five tor Life rs
7 00 - Today 3 4 IS CBS News 8 10 News 6 Popeye 10
Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle 13
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Lassie 6
8 30 - Jack La La nne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room s
9 00 - Ben Casey 13 Concentration 6 Paul Dixon 4 Phil
Donahue 15 Capt Kangaroos Friendly Junction 10 AM 3
9 30-Jeopardy6 ToTelltheTruth3
10 OOC - 1 Dick Van Dyke 13 Dinah Shore 3 15 Columbys Six
al lng 6 Joker s Wild 8 10
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Split Second 13
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Style 6 Password 13 Electric Co 20
11 30 - Bewitched 13 Hollywood Squareo 3 4 IS Search F
Tomorrow 8 10 Sesame st 20
or
12 ~-Password 13 News to Jeopardy 3 15 Jackie Oblinger
I ~ - All MJ Children 6 13 News 3 Green Acres 10 watch
1 30our3COnhiiA20 33 Secret Storm a Not For Women Only 15
- Id T Match 3 4 IS Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As The
Wor
urns 8 10
2 OOG - DaysofOur Llves3 4 15 Guiding Lights 10 Newlywed
ame 13 Mike Dooglaos 6
2 30-Doctors3 4 IS Edge of Night a 10 DallngGame13
3 DOS - Another World 3 4 IS General Hospital 6 13 Lo
plendoced Thing 8 to Behind the Lines 20
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3 3SO - Return to Peyton Place 3 4 15 One Lite to Live 6 13
ecret Storm 10 Merv Griffin a Eye to Eye20
4 00 - Mister Cartoon 3 Merv Gr!lfln 4 Fllntstones
American Style 13 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 6 MLovle
Pirate ot The Half Moon 10
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Beverly Hillbillies 8 Hodgepodge Lod~:~o Y • USMC 13
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~= ~~'t'~e~: 154 News6.8
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7 ~;cr~::~r Llnr BlvRedJubileels News6
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Times
33
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3
W1th eury intention of bldchna- 7 3
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20
Legislature
73
33
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If you art more consen1th t
8 00 - Ffip Wilson 3 4 15 Mods~· d 6 13 A
JUst b1d fiVe club&amp;
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dvocales 20 33
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IODAY'S QUESTION
15 American Revolution 10 Movie L~st T llr'Wslde 3 ~
Instead o b1ddmg two clubs
Hill 8 Movie North 8~ Northwest 10 ra n rom Gun
your partner has JUmped to 10
thu!e clubs n response to your
~e~:~oMIN~s3 ~ ~~::~,:~~~ ~~n Franclsco6 13 CBS
openma b1d What do you do 11 30- Johnny Carson 3 4 15 And The Bones Came T ethe
now ?
13 Movie The Geisha Boy 1 Movie La Hog
r6
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1

~;~~ ~~Xf&lt;'l~~d~r1~ L~~~~~~~.!1~~~~!3ockTo13Te111

'SEOAL Standmgs

Seniors how out on big victory

Money Hangup Is
Fault of Congress

BY PAUL CRABTREE

There s a story about a famO\IS prize winning buU which
America gave to one of the underdeveloped emerging nations
glycerides Incidentally the What Yoij Need To Know
overseas
In hope the bull would produce many offaprlng to feed
cholesterol values are qmte Abou\ Food and Cooking For
$1ll1Sfactory m testmg most Health (published by Vikmg the people and to beef up the country s agricultural output (That
men but are not qmte as Press 625 Madison Avenue pun was Intentional )
good a measurement for New York New York 10022
The bull arrived m fme shape but- to be blunt - he showed
women as far as correlation price $10) It has tables no Interest in doing his thing and just stood around looking at aU
with heart disease Is con which mclude almost all of
cerned
the common food Items that the specunens of bovine beauty paraded before him His new
There just 1sn t a good people use and all the values owners began to complain whereupon the bull wt~ndered over
I misunderstood - I thought I was sent
substitute for bread that are expressed In calories and said ' Oh I
doesn t also contam carbo not g r a m s for carbohy over here just as a consultant
drates fats and protems as
hydrates
Today that sme I ma consultant (nota bull)
Particularly s 1n c e you well as the cholesterol con
The
Sixty First West Virginia Legislature is In !le9Slon and
have high blood pressure tent of the various foods I m back in harness officially, Consultant to the Speaker Of the
the most Important thmg This Is the only source I
you can do IS to elimmate know of that provides th1s House of Delegates
You folks in Ohio don t know what you re missing Ill years
all of your excess weight or k 1n d of mformahon m a
fa I deposits That means usable form for the public past the West Vll'glnia Legislature has been a circus, medicine
cutting down on your total m calories as opposed to show tent revival and often a crashing bore - ull wrapped up in
calories I know Its hard to grams
to 60 fun-fllled days In smoke.filled rooms
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
fmd a source of mformation
The Ohio General Assembly IS always meeting 11 seems
on the calones of carbohy
West
Virginia s legislative sessions mel'(lfully come to an end
drates fats and protems m
Send your quett ons to Dr Lamb
the vanous foods and that n core of th1s newspo~r P0 Box after two months on the prenuse I suppose that that s all the
most people Who have heart 1551 Radro C1ty Stol1011 New Yorl City of Charleston can stand -not to mention the legislators and
problems or diet {lroblems NY 10019 Foro copy ol Dr Lomb s the general public
need such information This booklet on loJ ng Wf ght senJ SO
Nowadays there are more and more earnest educated
Is the mam reason that I cents to the Jome oddress and ask
articulate
young men in the Legisla~ and it getts tamer every
recently w r o I e the book for Los ng We oht' ~lrlet
year But In the past - \VboooooOO'
There was a poker game every night at the Daniel Boone
Hotel and many a legiSlator showed up next day with eyes &lt;1. red
and
a hip pocket fuU of green the end product of a hard day s
By Heltn Hottel
rught
There was and still is a party or reception thrown by one
group or another almost every evening, and expanding
caDs dUI'llll! a new moon
waiStlines were easy to attsm and hard to get rid of
I work in an expensive department stoce and our usual
Lobbyists prowled the area around the 'well that separates
customers are pleasant but they are strange sometimes -when House and Senate ever-ready to pounce on an unwary
the moon is FUlL'
lawmaker to flU hiS mind with the merits of their own special
ThiS Is when we get people returnmg two-year-old coats cause or biD
only worn a bit or matenuty dresses after the baby has
A makeshift cafeteria did a land-office busmess tucked
arrived
away nght ouls1de the stately marble columns of the House
Saturday nights when the moon Is full are the worst Durmg chamber
the last full moon weekend an entire famlly of siX from GrandGood night Columbus I don t think you could take anything
ma on down spent two hours m my department scroongmg like the West Virginia Legislature, at least the way 11 used to be
through the coats tossmg them on the floor etc Finally the
But the old order passeth and there s a moce sedate atmother complained that our selection was lousy (we have 2 000 mosphere In Charleston any more The most creative Legislator
coats') andshewas verydisappointedm the store
I ve ever known Speaker Ivor Boiarsky died late In the 1971
Come to think of it I didn t consider swc1de but con- session and even some of his enenues admit they miss his arm
templated murder as I spent the next 45 mmutes p1ckmg up after twisting sessions - when he used equal parts of profaruty
them - SALESCLERK
persuasion and name-your-polson to forge a fine legislative
record that did much to modenuze State Government
Dear Helen
In his place IS Lew McManus a quiet and mtrospectlve ruceMyhusband(nowex) told me II was ullmyfault that our love guy type who wUI leave his own mark But Lew IS the antithesiS
life was so poor Uke a fool I believed hun too~ ail the blame of the old days He doesn t drink or smoke and I ve heard him
and began to think I was hopeless After the divorce I met his say damn maybe a dozen times - when he was really upset
former wife now happily married and we became friends It And he calls the Governor str ' (I can't print what Boiarsky
fmally came out that she too lost her self-confidence because of sometimes called the Governor and vice versa J
this man s constant criticisms (Neither of us had been very
But before Ohio readers start feeling too superior let me
experienced )
make a pomt and II s an Important one
Only when sh~ married agam and to a REAL man did she
The West Vll'guua Legislature then and now, Is highly ef
realize she wasn t the one with the problem This Is to let other fective when It comes right down to the nitty-gritty of getting the
blamed wives know that sometunes they re called frigid job done and passmg the laws by which West Vll'glnlans live In
because thell' husbands won t admit - or don t understand fact an mdependent rankmg of the States In 1971 put these
their own shortcomings - NO LONGER AFRAID
seemmg mlsnts among the top 10 State Legislatures in the nation
m functional effiCiency
Don t asl&lt; me how or why II works because I couldn t tell
CONGRESS SHOULD Acr
you
But It DOES work even when consultants stand around and
CLEVELAND (UP!)- US
get
m
the way
Attorney General Richard
+++
Kleindienst said Monday at the
ON THE TV DIAL Sonny &amp; Cher have a valentine for
American Bar AssociatiOn
everyone Joe Namath (for the 8ll'ls) and 12 Playboy centerfold
mldwmter meetmg Congress
beauties (for the men) at 8 on WCHS-TV The IMOvative San
should
Investigate the
FranciSco Mix a 1971 creation returns to WOUB TV at 9 30
Watergate tiuggmg case The
Justice Department has not
closed Its mvestigatlon of the
WIN AT BRIDGE
break-In and bugging of
Democratic national
headquarters he added

Helen Help Us.
Are Shoplifters UIIIUIII;y Womea•

BRUCE BIOSSAT

'

ROCKSPRINGS- This was
a game presenting Coach Carl
Wolfe and his octet of seniors m
their final homes land as
Marauder cOBch and players
It marked the last appearance
of Rich Bailey Floyd Burney
Bill Vaughan Mike Sayre
Andy Vaughan Bill Chaney
and Jimmy Boggs
These boys played a fast
anW dllsfurious defense to hand
e ton their 13th loss of the
f!Cason Comblmng all of the
Meigs talent, the Marauders

absolutely crushed the Gol~n
Rockets by a score of 79-42 a
fitting gomg-away gift for thell'
coach who has resigned
With Meigs grabbmg an
early ~ lead Wellston d1dn t
score Its first pomts unlll
midway m the first period Two
free throws by Charlie Arnold
and a qUick lay up by dynamic
DaveSoudersgaveWellstonits
closest ca tch-up of the game at
6-4 In the fmal 30 second
Meigs raised Its lead to 16-9 on
a 20 footer (what else?) by

guard Jimmy Boggs
~ second quarter rally
staged by Souders of Wellston
caught the Marauders off
guard He netted 8 pomls to
bnng tlie Golden Rockets
w1thm 8 Semor forward
Charles Snare currently 4th tn
free throw percentage con
tr1buted his share by stealing
the ball twice
Meigs wasn t about to lose
another game and they proved
they meant business m the
!mal half Early m the third

Four OC teams
share top spot
United Preas International
Everyone seems to be trying
to get Into the act In the Ohio
Conference Four of the 13
member teams are No 1
The four way tie for first
place developed Tuesday mght
when Capital
defeated
Muskmgum Wittenberg beat
Heidelberg and Otterbein
downed Mount Union
The results gave ldentlcal9-2
OC marks to Capital Musking
wn Otterbein and Wittenberg
The Capital Musklngum
game was the classic butting of

By

league s top offensive team
with an average of 80 6 pomts
per game The Muskies were
the best m the conference on
defense holding opponents to
an average of 50 6 points per
game
The Crusaders eigh,h
ranked among small college
teams m the nation were hot
shooting 53 8 per cent from the
field and 88 9 per cent from the
Une to post a 53-46 VICtory over
the Musk1es Both teams are
18-3 overall
Jun Burson coach of Mus
klngum said we didn t play

as well as we could But you got
to giVe most of the credit for
that to them Cap Coach
Vmce Chickerella caUed the
win a great team effort and I
think we gave them a lesson 1n
thell' brand of basketball
Otterbem beat Mount Uruon
84-79 Wittenberg beat Heidel
berg 54-47 and Oberlin downed
Kenyon 67-&lt;il m the other OC
games
In other action Manetta
whipped Carnegie Mellon
(Pa ) 83 46 Wnght State
topped Wilberforce 100-69 and
Urbana edged CedarVIlle 87-85
In overtune

quarter on a steal by center
Bill Chaney Meigs pulled out
to a 48-36lead The Marauders
held Souders and the rest of the
Wellston team scoreless from
2 45 10 the third quarter to 6 30
10 the fmal period
Bill Vaughan fimshed the
onslaught m the third quarter
by puttwg Meigs ahead by 20
with a free throw to make the
score 56-36 Souders made four
of his teams SIX pomts m the
!mal penod as Meigs outscored
Wellston 23-6
Andy Vaughan wa&amp; the chief
architect of the victory for
Meigs The semor forward was
the high pmnt maker with 22
and he pulled down 11 caroms
second only to Bill Chaney
Also scormg m the double
figures were Captam Jimmy
Boggs and Bill Vaughan who
notched 14 aqd 12 respecl!vely
Greeted by an enthusulst1c
ovatiOn Paul FISh Cun
mngham suited up and par
ticipated m the !mal mwutes of
play
Chaney controlled the back
boards for both teams
crashwg for 14 of the &amp;I

rebounds fur Meigs Meigs
made 33 of 69 shots for a 47
percent from the floor and was
13 of 23 for as percent from the
chanty lme
Souders paced the Golden
Rockets with 7 field goals and 6
free throws for 20 pomts
almost half of h1s team s
pomts Wellston had 24
rebounds They connected for
16 of 23 shots for 25 pet from
the floor and made 10 of 14
from the free throw Ime for 71
percent
Coach Bob Hootman s team
has now run up a stqng of 13
straight league losses They
will meet the Athens Bulldogs
fur the Conal game of the season
Fnday mght That means
another defeat
Meigs now has sole
possesswn of 4th place as
Logan fell to Athens Tuesday
mght
The win upped the
Marauders season record to
10.7 overall and 7-&lt;i 10 the
SEOAL Meigs plays Its fmal
game of the regular season at
Logan Friday mght

Blue Devils
•
cop 15th wln

Galhpohs tuned up for Fnday s rematch wtth
Waverly by slappmg a 96 5'.! defeat on Jacksons
cap went Into the game the
v1s1tmg Ironmen Tuesday mght
Meanwhtle the lads of Coach Carroll Hawhee
clmched at least a he for the 1972 73 Southeastern
OhiO League basketball champwnshtp last mght by
rompmg over Ironton 77 43
WAVERLY - With four Tigers with John Shoemaker made 13 of 21 at the chant)

horns

Waverly gets title share
players h11tmg m double
figures Tuesday mght the
Waverly Tigers defeated
visitmg Ironton 77-43 to clinch
at least a share of their third
SEOAL basketball tiUe
Tuesday s easy victory over
Ironton shoved Waverly wto a
12 1 league mark while IHS
dipped to 4-9 m league com
petition WHS has now won 38
atralghl league games
Mjke Oyer s 19 pomts led the

addmg 18
Dave Rann was the only
Ironton player m double
ligures as he tallied 15
Waverly canned 29 of 60 field
goals lor a good 45 pet average
and converted 19 of 21 free
throws
They grabbed ofl33 reoounds
with big Ed Thompson
snaggmg 11
Ironton connected on 15 of 49
from the floor for 30 pet and

Athens trips
I

Logan, 60-51
ATHENS - the Athens
Bulldogs used the charity line
to stave off the determmed
Logan Chiellstns Tuesday
night to post a 80-51 victory
over the viSitors and remam m
thtrd place m the SEOAL
After Athens had led off
leadmg 18-13 34 29 and 5(1.35 at
the quarter marks the Chiefs
rallied to wlthm four pomts 51
47 with three mmutes left but
Athens continued fo hit free
throws to put the game out of
reach
W1th the Bulldogs leadmg 5035 going Into the fmal period
Logan hit 10 consecutive pomts
openmg the fourth quarter to
reduce the margm to 50-15
However the AHS cagers
responded by hittmg eight of 13
free throws m that quarte1 to
keep the Chiefs at bay
M~rk Mace bagged 19 pomts
and Andy Chonko 14 for the
wmners while hot-ehootmg Jim
Pierce canned 17 for Logan
The Bulldogs made good on
18 of 39 from the floor for 46 pet
and 24 of 34 free throws
Logan also had 18 field goals
but on 45 shois for a 40 pet
average and dropped m 15 of
24 free throws
Andy Chonko s 11 rebounds
led Athens in carooms 27 25

The Daily Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THI
INTI REST 0,
MilOS MASON AlilA
CHESTER L TANNIHILL
lxtt Ed
AOIEIIT HOEFLICH
City ld lor
Publtlhtd

dally

except

Salurclav by Ttle Oh o Valley

Publishing Comp1ny

Court St

Pomerov

111
Ohio

45769 Bu11neu Off ce Phone

9921156 Eallor a Phono 992
1157

second clns postage PI Cl 11

Pomeroy Ohio

National

advertlslnO

representative

Bottlntlll
Gallagher Inc 12 Eaat 42nCI
St New York City New York

retn Dt
llvtrtd by curler where
avel!ablt so cents ptr w11k.
Subscr ptlon

av Motor Route wh•rt carrier
ct not avallablt
One
month 11 75 By m.,l In Ohio

strv

and w va One year su 00
Six monthl 11 U Thrtt

months 14 50 Subscrlr,llon
prlct lncludH Sundl¥' T mts
Stnllntl

with Randy Norris grabbmg
mne for Logan
LOGAN (51l- P erce 6 5 17
Wh ltcrall I 57 Campbell 1 1
3 Norris 3 3 9 Culbertson 3 1
7 Kemper 4 0 8 TOTALS 18
15 51
ATHENS 160) -Mace 7 5 19
Mcinturf 1 0 2 Sk nner 0 3 3
Essex 5 1 11 Chonko 3 8 14
lnbooy I 4 6 Toppong o 2 2
Locke 1 1 3 TOTALS 18 24 60
Score by quarlers
Logan
13 16 6 16- 51
Athens
18 16 16 1(}-60
Reserve score

Athens 39

Loqan 42

Ticket orders
to be accepted
for pro battle
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
Slate Umverslty wiD begm ac
ceptlng ticket orders this week
lor the second annusl Cmcln
nati
Bengais Cleveland
Browns pre season football
game at Ohio Stadium Sunday
Aug 19
The OSU Athletic Ticket Of
f1ce smd appUcaUons would be
mailed to aU 1972 OSU season
ticket buyers and also to un
successful applicants Over the
counter orders also will be
taken from students faculty
and staff members starling
Thursday
Anyone wishing tickets who
are not In the precedfug cate
gories also may order llckels
but thell' applications will be
held and filled after a 31).day
period
The Browns and Bengals also
will sell tickets to their season
Ucket holders
If tickets remain after AprU
15 they will be made available
by OSU the Browns and Bengals
Tickets range from $8 for a
box seat to $7 for a reserved
seat and $6 for a field seat and
the 110uth stands Each ocder
should include a 30-&lt;:ent hand!
lng charge
Checks or money orders
should he made payable to The
Ohio State University and
mailed to the AthleUc Ticket
Office 410 W Woodruff Ave
COlumbus Ohio 43210

MEIGS MARAUDERS
TP
F~! F;: RSB PF
4
8
10 13 2 s 11
I 22
6
•
3 9 0 o 14
4
71~ ~ ~ ~
3
I
12
19 2 3 3 3 4

ra\~~ER
A VaYghan
Chaney

~~:uahan
Ba ley

~

Pr ce

~~~~:

j

~~

1 2 00
Fl Burney
1 1 oo
~ayBurney
~
Cunnmgham
oo o 1
3
TOTALS
WELLSTON GOLDEN ~~~K~i~
PLAYER
FG A FT A
Dave SoYders
7 29 6 6
~~::; 1!~~~:~;n
3\j : ;
Charhe Arnold
3 10 2 3
~:;r~YM~~~~1s
~~ ~~
steve Arnold
o1 o1
TOTALS
16 63 10 oq
Score by Quarters
Metg s Marauders
Wellston Golden Rockets

b b;

0

~

u

u
6
2
2
3
0
0

2

0

o I
~ 0I
o I
6q 15 79
RB PF TP
4 20
5
3

2q

3
7

4

8

5
I

4

0

25

0
0

42

1636 5679
9303642

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Waverly
16 I 1241 899
Gal l po os
15 2 167 840
South Poonl 13 S 1268 999
Fed Hock ng 12 4 923 883
Chesapeake II 5 1029 868
Portsmouth

renton

5 11

Jackson
We lslon

Little Ms win big one
ROCK SPRINGS- The little
Marauders made playmg
basketball look easy as they
rolled over the Wellston re
serves here 46 31 Tuesday
mght
Sophomore Danny Dodson
came on strong as did the
entire team Dodson was all
over the court smkmg hiS own
shots and blockmg Wellston s
In a sconng spurt Meigs
notched 10 points to 2 by Well
stan early m the th1rd quarter
This only mcreased the little
Marauders lead and deepened
Wellston s despair
Perk Ault sure footed guard
for the Marauders was the
high man for the game with 6
held goals for a total of 12
pomls Dodson followed with
10 and the semor student
manager Cunmngham came
off the bench to contribute 4
pmnts They shot &gt;7 pet from
the foul line and from the floor
21 of 41 attempts for 53 pet
Meigs pulled down 12
rebounds
Weilstonwasnotaslucky lis
lone scorer m the double fig
ures was forward Gilliand with
10 pomts Phillips was next
high with 9 The Golden
Rockets made 13 of 41 field

goals for a shootmg percentage
of 31 pel and shot 44 pet from
the chanty line
This loss was the 12th set
back agamst the victory for
Coach Mark Mullen
Coach Roger Borch s team Is
now 6-7 on the year They will
meet the reserve leadmg
Logan Papooses at Logan
Fnday mght
WELLSTON - Gtlliand 5-010 Ph1ihps 3 3 9 Gilliand 3 ().
6 Arnold II 3 Milliken I I 3
Totals 13-5-31
MEIGS - Ault 6-0-12 Quails
2-2-' Cremeans 2.0-4 S Wail
burn 0 2 2 Dodson 5 0 10
Coates 3-0-6 Cunmngham 2-04 Roley 1-0-2 Totals 21-4-46
Score by Quarters
Wellston
6 10 21 31
Meigs
12 22 40 46

Transfers

973

44

SEOAL VARSITY
TEAM
W L P DP
Waver y
13 0 966 634
Gal po s
12
9 3 634
Athens
9 5 723 651
Me gs
7 6 771 806
Logan
6 7 825 810
Ironton
4 9 745 769
Jackson
2 II 668 887
Wei ston
o 3 688 1103
TOTALS
52 52 6299 6299
Tuesday s Results

Gal pol s 96 Jackson 52
Me gs 79 We Is on 42
Waver

y

77 Ironton 43

Alhens 60 Logan 51
SEOAL RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
Logan
12 1 604 448
1 2

570

438

Gall pol s
Athens
Me gs

8 5 468 450
8 5 563 476
6 7 547 527

Jackson
Wei ston
TOTALS

1 2 403 692
52 52 4181 4181

renton

4 9 514 548
2
5 2 602

Tuesday s Results
35 Ja ckson

Gall•pol s

30

Megs 46 Wels on 31
Waver y 52 Iron on 43
L o~an

42 Athens 39

,Fnday s Games
Gal pol s at Waver y
Ironton at Jackson
Me gs at logan
Athens at We Iston

TEAM

SEOALFROSH
W L

P OP
2 679 437
9 4 555 392

Jackson
Ga 1 po s

ll

Waverly
Athens
Logan
Me gs
Ironton
Wellston
TOTALS

7 5 515 392
7 6 477 459

7 6 487 470
5 7 428 439
5 8 425 51 7
0 13 286 746
51 51 3852 3852

Mondays Results
40 Athens 32

Logan

Waverly 38 Ironton 25

Me gs 48 We lslon 28

Thursdays Games

Waverly at Gall pol s
Jackson at Ironton

Logan at Me gs
E A K1bble to J B 0 Bnen Wellston at Athens
parcels Olive
Lomsa M Ne\\land to Grant
A Newland parcels Orange
Olive
Edna K Russell Richard W
Russell to Letta A Spencer
lots Mddleporl
Letta A Spencer to Richard
W Russell Edna K Russell
!Qts M,i~dleport

Myrtle " Kmg
)ilyr lie
Robwson aka IFr.ed B
Robmson to Ida Kmg Susan
Thompson parcels Sc1p10
Garnet W Clark to Sidney R
Hayman Carol Hayman
parcels Salisbury
Charles Cook Sylvia Cook to
Carol G Mowery Doily F
Mowery parcels Salisbury
Freeland S Noms Lucille
Noms to Charles B Cook
Sylvia M Cook lots Carlelon
AdditiOn Syracuse
FranciS H Andrew Nellie
Andrew to Johnny Diehl
Phyllis Diehl parcel Olive
Elberfeld Realty Co to
Donald W Mayer Lmda L
Mayer lot Pomeroy
Anton Liter Anna Liter to
Anton L ter Anna loter
Lebanon
PI hp Baer Janece Baer to
Leadmg CreekConservancy
parcel Salem

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Non League Results
South Pomt 72 Coa Grove 51
Chesapeake 87 Symmes Va ley

ON

"-1_....-~POMEROY

10 7 943 867
10 7 1048 1038
8 9 11 0 075

Waver y

Coach Jom Osborne s Blue
stnpe
VIce McCreary pulled down Devils can \liD a share of the second un1t played 3 28 of the
SEOAL litle by defeatmg the second penod
13 of Ironton s 32 rebounds
ll shou ld be noted that Tigers at Waverly Fnday
The GAHS regulars played
Waverly committed 14 turn mght
the fu st five mmutes of the
Should Waverly WID II ll1rd period before gomg to the
overs but their tenacwus
defense forced Ironton mto a would giVe the Hawheemen bench for good woth a 61 28
their second straight perfect lead
fantas tic 30 turnovers
season m the SEOAL third
It was this combmatwn of
Galhpohs led 69 37 after
undisputed
forced mistakes and well consecutive
three penods Galiia s second
balanced sconryg that enabled championship and 39th umt outscored the Ironmen 27
Waverly 1&lt;f- posl quarter score strmghl loop win
15 m the l)~al stanza Biggest tUl novers
Tuesday
s
victdty
over
GAHS
lead was 45 pomts 9449
Jackson hit 20 of 67 from
leads ol r!S-6 39 14 and 62 21
Ja
ckson
left
Gallipolis
with
a
With
remammg
the field for 29 8 pel JHS was
enroute to theor 16th WID
1 11
Ia
2
season
mark
The
Devils
~
Gll
Pnce
6-4
JUnior
center
1!
of 22 from the foul elrdes
agamst a smgie loss
are 12 I m conference play p!cked off 10 rebounds an'.!. lor 54 4 pet Thelronmen had
The box score
Jackson dropped to 3 14 on the scored lOpomls m two quarteit 22 personals 27 rebounds
IRONTON 143) - Rann 55 year and 2-11m league action of actwn David Brown 6-4 and 20 turnovers
15 Howard 3 3 9 Han non 3 0
Coach Osborne played ius JUnior picked off seven
Tom Conroy a 8 JUnior
6 Mark n 2 2 6 Green I 0 2
JUSt
under
16
mmutes
rebounds
and
scored
eight
guard
led Jackson s attack
regulars
McCreary 1 3 5 TOTALS IS 13
43
Tuesday as the Gallians closed pomts for the Blue Devils
with 13 pomts Semor center
WAVERLY (77) - Maloy 3 out their 1972.73 home cam
All
told
GAHS
hit
39
of
71 Dan Morrow had mne rebounds
0 6 Oyer 7 5 19 Thompson 4 2
10 Shoemaker 8 2 18 Salyers pa!gn With a 7 2 mark Four from the field for 55 pet At the for the Ironmen
5 7 17 Tracy 0 3 3 Acord 1 0 2 teen Blue Devols saw actiOn foul Circles GAHS was 18 of 25
Jackson will host Ironton m
Thomas I 0 2 TOTALS 29 19
and 12 entered the sconng fur 72 pet The Gaiiians had 20 Its fmal regular season game
77
:&gt;core by quarters
column
personals &gt;9 rebounds and 18 Fnday
Ironton
6 8 7 22- 43
Stx semors saw action at
Waverly
16 23 23 15- 77
JACKSON IRONMEN (52)
Reserve score Waverl y 52 home as Blue Devils !01 the
PLAYER-Pos
FG A FT A PF RB TO TP
fin
al
lime
Tuesday
They
Ironton 43
Paul
White
I
15
13 1 3 5 3
were Topper Orr forward Dan Morrow c
4 10
14
4
9
1
9
who led the Galiians attack Randy Warrtngton f
14 02 2 4 5 2
2 11
22 3 2 5 6
w1tl 16 po1nts and eight Arl DeStephen g
Tom Conroy g
6 16
1
I 2 3 1 13
rebounds Jimmy Noe for Rocky Marhn c
01
12 3 3 1 1
word \1 ho scored 14 pomls and Mke McDonald I
27
01
1
0
1
4
BROWN APPOINTED
Don
Jenktns
f
13
00
I
1
0
2
pulled down eoght rebounds Earl Henderson c
WASHINGTON (UP!)
15 44 '
1 0 6
25
22
1
0
1
6
Rep Clarence J Brown R Mark Kiesling guard 10 Rock Bollman I
J m Chonn g
00
01
0
1
0
0
pomls
Kev
Sheets
guard
six
Ohw will serve a two year
26 67 12 22 22 27 21
52
TOTALS
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS 196)
term on the National Advisory poin ts Skipper Johnson
center
nme
pom
ts
and
SIX PLAYER- Pos
FG A FT A PF RB TO TP
Commission
on
In
G1! Pr ce c
5 10
0 0 2 10 1 10
rebounds
and
Steve
Lee
tergo~ernmental
Relallons
JmmyNoel
711
00 1 8 3 14
Mark Kleshng g
48
2 2 2 2 2 10
The commiSSion proposes guard SIX pomts
Topper Orr I
69
4 5 2 8 I 16
II was also Parents Night
policy relationships between
Kev
Sheets
g
2
6
2
2 2 4 2 6
lor the varsity cagers Prior J m Niday g
various levels of government
12 4 4
2 2 6
to the opening tipoff parents Sk pper Johnson c
45 1 2 2 6 2 9
00 00 0 0 I 0
or guardians of the 14 Blue J m Songer g
MkeBemdgel
''
12 1 2 I 3
Devil players were In
Roger Da ley I
1'
00 o 3 2 2
INDUSTRIAL DEATH
33 00 0
4 0 6
troduced at mid court along B II Lemley I
Ken Will g
00
02
0 I 0 0
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ed "Ith their sons
Dav d Brown c
34
23 4 7 I 8
ward Gomes 19 of Columbus
The1score was hed once 2 2 Steve Lee g
25 1 2 2 2 0 6
was killed Monday while Will 7 07leftm the hrstpenod TOTALS
39 71 18 25 20 59 18 96
Score By Quarters
cleanmg a converyor belt at Kev Sheets layup at the 6 39
Ja ckson lronmen
4 12 21 15-52
Uruted Parcel Sel'Vlce here mark put the Gallians ahead to GAHS
Blue Dev Is
26 21 22 21- 96
Police say the youth was slay GAHS led 26-4 after one
Ofhcoals - Adkons &amp; Breeden Cholhcothe Chapter
crushed when his clothes peood It was 47 16 durmg the
caought on the machinery
halfhme mtermission GAHS

3rd Ave

10 7 11 57 11 54

Alhens
Me gs
Logan

Middleport

1

*17800

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
MIDDLEPORT, 0
f

�.

'

-

4- The Dally Sentil~&lt;.•, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 14, I973

..&amp;.~:.~.s...•..•.~.: ....,.;:&lt;~:!:~@.; MYJ.tm: ..

I I I.

Today's
•

•'

'••

Sport·Parade

0•

Celtics roll over Bulls, 105~1 01 .

By United Preu lateroatlonal syuonymous with defense and good example why .
Led by the run and gun of.
The name "Boston Celtics" fast break. Last night's victory
.
.
is, to most basketball fans, over' the Chicago Buils is a fense of John Havlicek, who
By MILTON RICHMAJ-.
'
rolled up 31 poinls, and the
UPJ Sports Editor
rugged play of center Dave
Cowens, who added 26 points,
the Celts downed the Bulls, 105NEW YORK (UPI) -One major league baseball ownerfmally
101, in Chicago.
decided he had enough. Too much, in fact.
But the most significant
Hewassickof all the claims on one side and the counterclaims
aspect of the game was the
on the other.
·
He didn't want to he a party to them any longer. lie wanted to
COLUMBUS (uPI) - Cleve- have a raiher tesiy date · defensive job Boston's Paul
get to the very heart of the matter. He no longer put much stock land East Tech sits idly by this Saturday night with ninth Silas did on Chicago's All-star
in what his fellow owners thought or what the pll!yers thought. He week while Canton Lehman ral\ked Zanesville Rosecrans. forward Bob Love. Love came
NS, the ,defending champion into the game riding the crest
wanted to get his information right from the horse's mouth. He and Barberton, both urlbeaten,
wanted to find out what the fans thought.
take their fmal shots at the and the possessor of a 43-game of the hottest scoring spree in
Without bothering to consult anyone else, this particull!r owner Scarabs' narrow lead .in the winning streak, holds a healthy the league.
called up an independent firm and asked whether it could do an United Press International 285-223 lead over second place
In his last three outings,
in-depth marketing· survey for him.
Ohio High School Board of Marion Pleasant. Pleasant also Love has scored 49 against MilThey said sure, what did he have in mind?
Coaches' Class AAA ratings. has a .rugged fmishing game waukee, 49 against Kansas City
.He told them, and within the past few months, they provided
Tech, which fmished its sea- Friday 'night against 11th
and 44 against Cleveson Saturday with a 118-62 win ranked Ridgedale, 14-3, in the land. That's 142 points in three
him with the answers.
Among other things, the survey revealed there's stU! a deep over Cleveland St. Ignatius in Marion Coliseum. Both NS games. For some people that's
resentment on the part of baseball fans over the strike by the the city championship game, and Pleasant are 17.0.
a whhle season.
Fort Recovery .finished third
players a year ago.
holds 249-247 margin over runBut last night's story was
this
week
with
206
points
and
"And I mean a 'deep resentment,"' says the owner, who took nerup Lehman this week. Bardifferent and Love was
this survey.
berton, second last week, is Noc Wapakoneta St. Joseph fourth reduced to mere mortal
with 191, both with a chance for .dimensions by Silas and
One of the other findings comes out much more ominous, ex- 3 this week with 241.
pecially since it's pretty much the gut reaction of so many fans.
Lehman and Barberton are the title if the two leaders Cowens and Boston's stiff,
"The survey found the fans could live without baseball," says both 17-llon the Sear. The Polar should lose.
give-no-easy-shot defense.
Sebring and South Central Love's scoring line read six
the owner.
Bears meet always-tough
There's a message there.
Canton McKinley Friday night tied for fifth in Class A, but field goals, two of three from
It could he a vital one, if anybody really cares.
in the Canton Fieldhouse, while their 104 poinis is well off the the foul line and just 14 points.
Few fans, if any at aU, really do care which side prevails in this Barberton goes for its perfect leader's pace. Buckeye West, a
And that, more than
present tug-Gf-war heiween the owners and the players. ·
regular season mark against newcomer, to the top ten, took Havlicek or Cowen's scoring or
seventh, followed by Lorain the fact that they each dropped
They have little interest in the squabble now, and wiU have Alliance.
even leas the longer it goes on. This ll!ck of interest already has
The rest of the Class AAA Clearview, Zane'S ville ,two free throws in the final 58
turned to plain disgust in many quarters.
leama appear to be out of the Rosecrans and Strasburg. seconds to break a tie, is why
Buckeye West, 16-0, replaced Chicago lost.
Basically, sports fans aren't turned on by bargaining sessions. championship running.
If they were, they'd buy tickets to listen to heated debates beMcDonald
which dropped to
Springfield South, 15-1,
The victory increased Bostween labor and management olticials trying to hammer out a ctimbed from seventh to fourth 12th.
ton's Atlantic Division lead
COLUMBUS (UPil - This over the Idle New York Knlcks
new contract.
this week, but the Wildcats re- week's
United Press In·
Let's take a look at some of baseball's latest deveiopmenls.
ceived only 180 points, far off ternaflonal Ollie High School to 1 \2 games and kept the
Bowie Kuhn, the baseball commissioner, admonishes Marvin the pace of the three leaders. Board of Coaches' basketball Celtics on top in the league
ratings with first place votes
MiUer, the head of the Players' Association, for abandoning the
Columbus South, 14-2, took and
won -lost records in
bargaining table and "deliberately creating confusion" by over the No. 5 spot this week, parentheses :
CLASSAAA
Bow1~.....
saying what aU these latest maneuvers amount to is an owners' followed by Hamilton Taft in
TEAM
Pis.
&amp;LIJ8
lockout, not a players' strike.
sixth, Mansfield Senior and 1. Cl. East Tech (10) 15-2 249
POMEROY LANES
Marvin Miller now turns around and accuses Bowie Kuhn of Newark tied for seventh, t. Canton Lehman Ill 17-0 247
Bend League
3.
Barberton
(8)
17·0
244
being "defensive."
Lorain Admiral King ninth and .· 4. Sp'fleld So. (4) 15·1
February 5, 1973
180
Can't they both tell that aU they're really doing is turning off Columbus East tenth.
W L Pis.
5. Cols. South (3) 14·2
160
Cats
8 4 24
Hits Top Ten
6. Hamilton Taft (2) 14-2 151 Top
the fans?
Twin City
6 6 16
East,
15-1,
was
mak;na
ils
7.
(tiel
Mansfield
Sr.
152
105
.
Ordinarily the players and owners should've profited by what ·
6 6 16
u..,
7. (tiel Newark 15·2
105 Bombers
happened to them Ills! year, but it becomes more and more ob- fir.Jt top ten appearance, re- 9. Lorain Adm. King 13·3 81 Comets
5 7 16
Team4
6
6 12
placing Cleveland John F. 10. Cols. East 15·1
51 Team 2
vious they haven't.
5 7 12
Second
ten:
11.
Cleveland
My own feeling is that greed is at the base of this whole thing. Kennedy which dropped to John F. Kennedy 36; 12.
High Team Three Games The owners think the players are too. greedy and the players 11th.
Boardman 32; 13. Middletown Top Cats 1989, Twin City 1974,
Comets 1864.
Another three-team fight is 30 ; 14. Chillicothe 27; 15. Crow's
think the owners are, and who knows, they both may he right.
High Team Game - Top
Princeton 23 ; 16. (tiel Akron
That's the impression I often get anyway.
also shaping up in Class AA Buchtel ( 1l and Youngstown Cats 696, Twin City 677 ,
What we need now is for somebody to put out a new button where Waverly and Columbus Ursuline 111 21; 18. (tiel Toledo Bombers 676.
High Ind. Three Games Bishop Ready, the top two St. Francis a~d Cleveland St. Tyree
saying: "Stamp Out Greed."
564, Jr. Pi1elps 549, V.
Joseph 18 each ; 20. Springfield
Wipple 532.
Either that or maybe someone'll come up with another button U!ams for most of the season, North 14. ·
Ind. Game -'- Jr. Phelps
saying: "Stamp Out Baseball."
have been Joined by unbeaten
Others with ten or more 229,HighTyree
_212, Clelland and
WU'••d
points
:
Elyria,
East
Cleveland
The game itself alwars will survive. I'm ."!!t so ~ure about the
.., .
. ..,. ·
,
Shaw , Kettering Fairmont· Roa~~ 206.....
owners and the .pl&amp;yers, though. They seem hladed·-down a
Waverly·lost •much of ·Its 39-• -. Ea~t ;and CantO!&gt; McKinley . , ·
common ~oad of 'extinction together.
.
point lead of last week when
CLASS AA
Back in 1882, railroad,man William Henry Vanderbilt was the Tigers were dumpM ~7 T1~~~verly (51 15-1
asked by a newspaper reporter whether one of his acts wouidn 't Saturday night by fourth 2. Cols. Ready (4) 14-3
184
HAMPTON HONORED
ranked
(AAA
)
Springfield
3.
Willard
(2)
17-0
164
inconvenience the public.
COLUMBUS
(UPI )
,
4. (l1e) Rossford (4) 16·1 147
His answer has become a classic.
South. It was Waverly s first 4. !lie l Steub. Cath. Ill ISForward Rich Hampton has
"The public be damned," he snapped.
loss in 16 games.
1
147 become the first Miami of Ohio
The Tigers picked up Ui8 6. Alb~ny ~lex . (2) 15-2
84
It never works out that way, though. Nobody can actually say
.
.
7. Galhpohs (1) 14-2
75 player ·to be "player-of-thethat and get away with it. William Henry Vanderbilt found that pomts this week to 184 for 8. (tiel Huron (1) 17·0
70 week" in the Mid-American
Ready in second but the big 8. (tiel Poland 111 15·1
70 Conference this season.
out before he died.
·
d
'
b
ilia
d
10.
(tiel
Loveland
(1
l
15-0
44
Most certainly the players and owners will find out the same 001se was rna e Y W r 10. (tiel Manchester (2) 16-0 44
Playing with a tightlything.
•
which moved
into a
Second Nine: 12. Claymont strapped
injured shoulder, the
Eventually, they'll make pe;~ce and throw.a ball, but then they challenging third position with 42 ; 13. Wellsville 35: 14. West 6-6 junior netU!d I~ poinls and
. Musklngum 29 ; 15. Patrick
may find that nobody will come.
164. Will ard had been lodged m Henry 27 ; 16. Leavittsburg pulled down 16 rebounds
the No. 5 spot for five straight Labrae Ill 23: 17. River View aga inst Ohio University last
weeks
22 : 18. River 21: 19. Elyria week.
·
Catholic (1) 20:20. (tie) Genoa
Rossford and Steuhenviile and Ashtabula Harbor ( 1) 19
Catholic, tied for fourth with each.
147 points remain outside
Others with ten or more
•
po~nts : Middletown Madison,
shols for the title. After that, Tioo City, Fairfield Union,
Ohio College
though, was Albany Alexander FPortsmouth West. Fostoria,
Basketball Scores
. .
.
a~rless, Buckeye Valley and
By United Press International
In SIXth With only 84.
Twinsburg Chamberlin (1).
Marietta 83 Carnegie-Mellon
Gallipolis took seventh,
CLASSA
(Pa.l 46 '
Pemberton 1. Wood 4, Smith 7,
CHESAPEAKE
'ed f
TEAM
Pis. Otterbein 84 Mount Union 79
D.
Sheets
4,
Holbrook
2,
Burke
H
d
P
I
nd
Chesapea ke placed five 10, McKinney 6.
uron an
a
ti
or Llndian Val. so. 191 17-0 285 Wittenberg 54 Heidelberg 47
eighth and Loveland and 2. Marion Pleasant (5) 17-0 223 Capital 58 Musklngum 46
players in double figures and
By Quarters :
deadlocked for 3. Ft. Recovery (4) 18-0
206 Wright State 100 Wlberforce 69
the Panthers rambled to an 87- Chesapeake 16 28 25 18-87 Manchester
4. Wapakoneta St. Jos. (5) 19-0 Urbana 87 Cedarville 85 (oil
Symmes Val. 5 12 13 14- 44 tenth. Both are newcomers.
191 Oberlin 67 Kenyon 61
·
44 basketball victory over the
Waverly closes its season 5. (tiel Sebring (2) 15·1
104
Symmes Valley Vikings
Saturday night against seventh 5. (tiel So. Central !1l 15·0 104
Tuesday night.
Ohio High School
7. Buckeye West (2) 16-0
92
Basketball Scores
ranked Gallipolis, while Ready 8. Lorain Clearvlew (3) 16-1 91
Ronnie Roesch led the By United Press International
9. Zones. Rose.crans 14-2 66
. - .. -Chesapeake rout with a Cleve St. Joseph 63 Parma meets Columbus Wehrle and
Willard
c1
ses
b
ho
ling
G
10.
Strasburg
14-3
56
Padua 47
h' h
0
aSecond Ten : 11. Ridgedale
Y s
game lg 20 poinls. But, he Connea ut 87 Ashtabula St. John
lion.
38: 12. McDonald (1) 36 ; 13.
had plenty of scoring help from
51
35 Straight..
Cleveland Heights Lutheran
SAME DAY .
his mates as II Panthers broke Jefferson 63 Madison' 58
Huron,
which
has
won
35
East 25: 14. (tie) Franklin
·10 t0 th
·
1
Medina 56 Wadsworth 52
SERVICE
Moore and Mansfield St.
e pomt co umn .
Parma Byzantine 62 BrunIn At 9- 0ut At S .
straight regular season games, Peter's 24 each: 16. Bristol ville
Randy Hall netted 13 poinls
swlck 60
goes
for
its
second
straight
un23
;
17.
Windham
19:
18.
Newton
Use
Our Free Parking LOt
for Chesapeake, which upped Berne Un ion 65 Millersport 59
beaten season against Fremont 18; 19. (tiel Columbia Station
ils record to 11·5 for the season. Mav'~~ttt8 55 Parkersburg (W.
and Hannan Trace tll14 each.
"
·
Others with ten or more
Paul Wilcox, Gary. Sheels and North Central 87 Camden St. Joseph Friday night.
The Class A tiUe would be aU points : Lowellville, Fostoria
. Denny Burke each scored 10
(Mich.) 50
.
St. Wendel in, Fort Loramie, St.
·216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
poinls for the Panther.
W~je l l ng (W . Va.l 127 Bellaire settled if Indian Valley didn't Bernard,. and Muplewood.
Jamie Lafon tossed in 17 Martins Ferry 71 Llnsly (W,
·
Va.l 63
•
potnls to pace the Vikings, now John Marshall (W V 1 64
10-7 for the season. Gene Myers
Steubenville 55 · a.
added 10 for Symmes Valley . Weirton (W. Va.l Madonna 70
.
·
Toronto 53
Th e Panthers JUmped
out to Paden City (W. Va .) 68
al6-5 first period lead and built
Woodsfield 49
,
the margin to 44-17 by in- licking Heights 78 johnstown
U! ' . '
74
rm1ss1on.
Watkins Memorial 86 Heath 63
Fairfield Union 83 Lancaster
SYMMES VALLEY 5-12 ll·
Fisher 66
14-44 - Lafon llt Corn 1, G. Canal Winchester 103 Liberty
Myers 10, J . Myers 7, Robinson
Union 59
0, Webb 9.
Amanda· Ciearcreek 43
CHESAPEAKE 14-28 18·25Pic kerington 42
87 - Hall 13. Wilcox tO, Roesch Milfl in 75 Groveport 66
20, Edwards 0. G. Sheets 10, Granville 73 Urlca 69

Waverly still

No. I; GHS 7th

-omaha

Local

"::e

Panthers bomb
SVAC leaders

°

SHIRT
FINISHING

Roti1nson's Cleaners

again why he is a le~dlng
candidate for Most Valuable
Player hf!IOrs as he contributed a whopping 4s.point
effort to lead the Kings over the
Rockets. The Kings frittered
away most of .a 20-point lead
before reeling off 10 straight
points ll!te in the fourth quarter
to secure tbe victory.
The Lakers · narrowly
averted their first home Joss

percentage race with 46 wins
and 12 losses.
In other NBA action Tuesday
night, Milwaukee beat Detroit,
11().96, Golden State downed
Cleveland, 103-90, Los Angeles
edged SeatUe, 101-98, Kansas
Ci ty.()maha walloped Houston,
)32.118, arid Portland bombed
Buffalo, 120-100.
Kareem Alldul.Jabbar and
Boil Dandrich each scored 28
points to lead the Bucks aver
the Pis~ons and help
Milwaukee take-advantage of
Chicago's loss to move six
games out in the Midwest
Division race.
'!'he Warriors -hit 11 of their
fir.lt' 12 shots in the third
period, mostly on layups, and
were paced in the scoring by
Rick Barry's 36 points in their
victory over Cleveland. Austin
Carr topped the Cavs with 21
points.
Nate Archibald showed once

,

I.N TOWN ON

GASOLINE

15" and 23" Widths

ClGARETTES ·

SAVE UP
TO 4~ AGAL
Under Major Ethyl

.

INSULATION-·

40f

-

GLOUSTER - Glouster
High's Tomcats posted a 63-50
victory over Southern High of
Meigs County here Tuesday
night in a make-up of a nonleague game postponed
earlier.
Southern lost both ends of the
evening as the Kittens bumped
off the little Tornadoes in the
preliminary 32-12.
A late rally by Southern, in
which only 5 points separated
the teams at 55-50 in the fourth
period fell short. Personal fouls
had a big part in it failing.
Glouster ran away in the final
minutes.
Southern now is 6-9 on the
season. Its regular season ends
Saturday at home against
Waterford .
The SoutU!rn team failed to
shoot a free throw in Tuesday's loss. GlousU!r was 13 of
19 at the charity line. Glouster
committed only four personals
during the contest.
•
GLOUSTER' (63) '"- 'Seevers
12·2·24: Qardan!s 4-0:8; Crow 4-'
7·15: Sikorski ~,~,6; Patton 0-22: Lent 3-0-6. TOTALS 25-13-63.
SOUTHERN 1501 Hill 4-0-8;
Curfman 8·0-16: lhle 6-0-12;
Miller 2 - 0- ~ : Sayre 5-0-10.
TOTALS 25-0-50.
By Quarters:
.
Glouster
11 19 19 1~3
Southern
18 10 10 12- 50
Reserves
Southern
12. - Glouster 32 • • • • • • -

· Pomeroy, 0.

992-9981

/2

Foot

HOGG AND ZUSPAN
PH. 773·5554

MATERIALS CO.
MASON, W. VA.

STORE WIDE

.THURS.D AY-FRIDA Y-SATURDA Y
.,

.,

'

• DAYS

•

• •
10 STORE a.EAN UP

toe gym and ~oxfords. All

s1zes.

1

Sav~

now .

Sale!
REG. 13.99 and 14.99 ·

MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

Regular S3.99 and S4.99
famous brand long

sleeve

sport shirts In assorted styles
and patterns, found only at

values . Limited supply. Final

clearance. Save big now.

*595
I

..

'

•

••

FOOTWEA·R
$ 00

Samples, discontinued
styles, broken sizes, odds
and ends of ladies' footwear in a· variety oQf•stylos
for fall and winter. DresS
lind casual sl)oles. Only 127
so hurry while they

(200 YDS.)
- "'MILL LENGTH GROUP FANCY

"

' '

SPORTS FABRICS

On~

'

big lot of ladles fancy better

Pomeroy
Remnant

(124 ONLY)
REG. 29' VALUE

lheir semi-annual

13tEA.

25

now and get Ire mendous sav lngs at

BANQUET 10 Piece

Chicken Dinner •1.59
l~b.

BROUGHTON'S

Cheese
Smoked Polish

SAUSAGE

45~

Lb.69~

Poplar Sliced

BACON

SPORT SNEAKERS
One Close-Out lot of children's

canvas sport sneakers in

Pork &amp;Beans
Navy Beans
Mexican Beans·
Pinto Beans
Great Northern
Beans

2 for

broken sizes . Cushion Inner
soles.

so~

KNIT and SPORT SHIRTS

ll

72

REG.
PRICE

·scRAMBLE TABLE
I...

'

One table of odds and ends. Values to
11 .79. Scramble table. Your choice
a(ycur friendly store ... Stiffler's.

FRUIT
COCKTAIL
3 for 99c

No.
303

Morton House 12% oz.

-'

IDAHO

POTATOES ·

89~

--

-

-=-

PORK &amp; GRAVY .
BEEF &amp; GRAVY
SALISBURY STEAK
MIX OR MATat

2 for 99$

l30 OILY) Reduced To Go! Ladies'
-

.::!:~!~~l!k $soEA.o
~lng

buy from Slllfler'a.

SLACKS AND JEANS ·

$5~t

FASHION .BOOTS

.
Special Remnant Days group
of ladies' high fashion boots in
asserted styles. Broken sizes.

SALE I

$500
PAIR

now !

72xl08 OR
$179
TWIN FITTED ••••••·
Ea.
81KI08 OR .
$199
FULL FIITEO,,.,..,
Ea.

(27J YDS.)
7 INCH FINE MESH SHEER

NYLON.NET
Fine mesh nylon net in a dozen
pretty colors. ?Z-inches wide
- Remnant Days Value.

:

lo

"

(460 ONLY)
.VALUES TO 39'

paiR
n

SEWING NOTIONS
5¢EA.
Stiffler's.
Sa ve Blg now Values to 39c.
Special Group . Shop early for

OFF
REG.
PRICE

best selection . Stock up now at

-- --

FALL
&amp;WINTER SPORTSWEAR
Values to 13.99. Men's and Boys' fall
$ oo·

(176 ON~YJ
VALUES TO $1.99 22144 VELOUR TERRY

and winter spo'rtswear. Many ,
assorted pieces at a ridiculously low

BATH TOWELS

price. Shop Stiffler's first.

Values to $1.99. 22 x 44 velour
cotton terry bath towels. Sal'c up
to 1&gt; now.
·

! SPECIAL GROUP) ladies' Fall and Winter

BETTER DRESSES
. (l TABLE) ODDS &amp;·ENDS VALUES TO 11.79 .

Del Monte

2

One large group of assorted styles

$100

VALUES JO. '199 MEN'S AND BOYS'

BOYS' FALL AND WIN.TER
Special group of boys' fall and
winter knit and sport shirts.
Long sleeve. Assorted colors.
Hurry!

~

ASST. PICTURES

and sizes of pictures. Regular values
of S1.59, S2.99, $3.99, s•.99, $5.99 and
S7,99. Now all are 112 oft regular
pnce!

I GROUP

25~

MUSLIN SHEETS

1 GROUP ASST. SIZES AND STYLES

--

79~

LB.

the triendly store with even frlen.
dller prices.

I

VALUES TO $8.99
MEN'S FALL AND WINTER
Orie group of famous maker
slacks and jeans. Fall and
winter styles. Regular Values
to $8.99.

AND CHILDREN

Lorgegr!m~~ of~!~QALS

Broken Sizes-Odd Lots Children's

$30~~~

421&lt;36
PIU.OW

children's better sandals. Get yours

Mix or
Teen Queen No. 300

Values to S3.99. Stock up now
Stiffler's.

Fine quality cotton muslin sheets at low
budget saving prices. Lay in a sup'ply

Manufactures samples of
children's plain and fancy better
slacks in assorted colors.

NABISCO

FIG NEWTONS
1 Lb.
2 for 89$ .

children's and Girls' better

fall and winter sportswear.

LOT) Twin &amp; fill Size
MOHAWK FINE COUNT WHITE

BETTER SLACKS

4.9~

18 oz.

"Your Friendly

PECIALGROU
ASSORTED LADIES'

(77 PAIRS) Children's Plain and Fancy

Regular 29c value. Thick
absorbent terry face cloths.
Shop Stiffler's during their
Semi-Annual Remnant Days.

Stiffl~(s ,

BROKEN

$}88 -

Stock up now al Stiffler's In

(142 PAIR)

JELLY

s•.oo.

lf2 IIDir~

winter footwear , latest styles
and fashion s. Save big now at

Lorge group of 220 pieces ot

PAIR

sleepwear. Regular values to

WINTER
FOOTWEAR
Ladles' famous brand fall and

CHILDREN &amp; GIRLS' SPORlSWEAR

GROUP II
VALUES TO '11.99

FANCY' SLEEPWEAR

J

LADIES'
FAMOUS BRAND

PIECES)
VALUES TO 13.99

PAIR

(llDn LADIES' VALUES TO 14.00

/,. fine group o£46-incc,h~~~-J
sports fabrics in a1
oatterns and colors.

FACE CLOTHS .

--·P·R-1C-E•S--EioiF..F
..EiiiioCiiioT~IV E THROUGH FE B. 17
AI. COA
Smucker's Grape

$400 .

GROUP I
VA LUES TO •8.95
BROKEN SIZES

lADIES' FALL AND WINTER

33~R.

Ladles regular •9c and 59c

Dress and casual styles in better
quality Charm Step and Hi Brow
Footwear. Broken sizes, samples
and close-outs of regular values
up to $10.99 .- R~ai .saviluts.

OXFORDS and
LOAFERS .

127 PRS.) BROKEN SIZES-DISCONTINUED

LADIES PANTIES

FOOTWEAR

MENS AND BOYS

OFF

•

•
'

Ladies' fall &amp; l¥inler

CLOSE OUT LOTS

$231

(310 ONLY)
REG. 49' and 59'

(223 PAIRS) Values To S10.99
Close-Outs-Broken Sizes

• Bobbie Brooks
eRuss Togs
•Redeye
•Aileen
Fall &amp;Winter
Sportswear

S!~~!2~~~~!~1aee
$200
!c?
PAIR

......
.... ···· ..o
: 11U'LL LOVE ~....o. ....·..• •••
•• ....

ln.

SATURDAY
NIGHTS
TIU.
9:00PM

• ~ I •. I\}

•••

r--------------a...-----------.. .
ALUMINUM FOIL
18
2 for 894

AND

. (144 Prs.)
Men's &amp; Boys Vinyl Apollo

Stiffler's.

BAKER FURNITURE

• •• • 0. ••

OPEN
FRIDAY

REMNANT •
'

Barleson, -13 from Tim Stod- '
dard and 11 from Monte Towe,
also dominated the boards,
outrebounding the Pirates, 4330.
In the only other game
among the major college
leaders last night, flft!H'a,med
Marquette extended .Its winning streak to eight' games with
a 93-80 victory over Northern
Ulinois.
·
In other games around the
nstlon ll!st night, Harvard beat
Dartmouth, 7U8, Maaaachussetts whipped Boston University, 85-«i, Rutgers dumped
Army, 84-61, Southern Methodist kayoed Rice, 'IN&amp;, Texas
Tech beat Tei&amp;S Chriatlan, 7464·, and San Francisco beat St.
Mary's, 9~72.

3 ROOMS
OF
ALL NEW
FURNITURE

LY

.

SAVE 30% ·,40% ·50% • 75%

'

Tomcats take
Southern 63-50

10 LBS.

Certified
Gas
,
Station
'

538 W. Main

$_A VEl SAVEl SAVEl
FIBERGlAS 61/ e Square

.

Thompson nets ,
33 for 'Pack

SALE

LOWEST.PRICE

P.OMEROY ST()RE 0

ever to the SoperSmlcs before
clincbing the game on a '"'.md
shot by Spencer Haywood and
a crucial rebQund by ·Gill
Goodrich.
IAJTY Steele, a second-year
guard !rain Kentucky ,atole the
ball from Buffalo aeven times
and continually harallled the
Braves with . his aggreplve
Door play, to lead Portland to
its victory over Buffalo. '·,

..

College Basketball Roundup
By United Press .IDieruattonal
David Thorppson may have
had a cold in his chest last
night, but it certainly didn't
extend to his shooting hand.
Thompson, the Atlantic
Coast Conference's leading
scorer, re~led off 33 points as
second:ranked and unbeaten
North Carolina State romped.to
its 20th win of the season,
beating East Carolina, 105-70.
Thompson, coughing and
nursing a chest cold,.shol at a
feverish pace throogbout the
game as he connected on 13 of
15 field goal attempts to lead
the Wolfpack to a 56 per cent
shooting performance. North
Carolina State, which also
received 19 points from Tom

..

P_IECE GOODS REMNANTS

Agreat value group ot better fall
and winter f ~shlons priced low · ·
for quick clearance.

One lot of piece good remnants.
Asst. fabrics. Values to 19c each. Out
they at o low, low price.

(1 LOT) Mill Assorted Loop &amp;Shag

ACCENT AREA RUGS
One lot of mill assorted loop and
shag accent are.~ rugs in assorted
sizes and colors.

(Special

(89 ONLY} .

$100hcb

Ladies' Better Fall &amp; ·

WINTER d.Signs
DRESSES
in new

High
fabrics

!&amp;!!!! p~ui~kid

bathroom rugs. In assorted
colors. Great values!

wall paper, COIUiilting of enough
for llie average

S~~!!~!~!brands ~~2 ~
PRICE.
1\Mio

·88c

Ea.

l 1LOT) Reduced from Stock Room Lot
Room lot remnants of high grade

(SPECIAL GROUP) BOYS FALL AND WINTER
fll)l and winter sporl1woar at on 611 ·
tlmt low price. Save now llko you
never hevt before. Shop Stlftltr'l.

Bon Bon Acrylic Pile

WALLPAPERS

line cottons,
Save!

(120 ONL Yl Manufacturers Samples

lV:2
·

CHILDREN'S SLEEPWEAR
Hurry while they last. Assorted styles
from regular stock and samples from a
leading maker. Fine quality sleepwur
for children. Brushed and knit fabrics.

---- - -

-

(SPECIAL GROUP) INFANTS AND GIRLS

FALL &amp;WINtER SPORTSWEAR ·

Regular

Special group of infants and girls tall
and winter sportswear now at a new

fiC8

popylar low price. Stock up now at
St!ffler's.'
·

p.

$1!~==..

1L· 0~ REG.
7~2 PRICE

REG. '1.59 LADIES

SPORT SN

�.

'

-

4- The Dally Sentil~&lt;.•, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 14, I973

..&amp;.~:.~.s...•..•.~.: ....,.;:&lt;~:!:~@.; MYJ.tm: ..

I I I.

Today's
•

•'

'••

Sport·Parade

0•

Celtics roll over Bulls, 105~1 01 .

By United Preu lateroatlonal syuonymous with defense and good example why .
Led by the run and gun of.
The name "Boston Celtics" fast break. Last night's victory
.
.
is, to most basketball fans, over' the Chicago Buils is a fense of John Havlicek, who
By MILTON RICHMAJ-.
'
rolled up 31 poinls, and the
UPJ Sports Editor
rugged play of center Dave
Cowens, who added 26 points,
the Celts downed the Bulls, 105NEW YORK (UPI) -One major league baseball ownerfmally
101, in Chicago.
decided he had enough. Too much, in fact.
But the most significant
Hewassickof all the claims on one side and the counterclaims
aspect of the game was the
on the other.
·
He didn't want to he a party to them any longer. lie wanted to
COLUMBUS (uPI) - Cleve- have a raiher tesiy date · defensive job Boston's Paul
get to the very heart of the matter. He no longer put much stock land East Tech sits idly by this Saturday night with ninth Silas did on Chicago's All-star
in what his fellow owners thought or what the pll!yers thought. He week while Canton Lehman ral\ked Zanesville Rosecrans. forward Bob Love. Love came
NS, the ,defending champion into the game riding the crest
wanted to get his information right from the horse's mouth. He and Barberton, both urlbeaten,
wanted to find out what the fans thought.
take their fmal shots at the and the possessor of a 43-game of the hottest scoring spree in
Without bothering to consult anyone else, this particull!r owner Scarabs' narrow lead .in the winning streak, holds a healthy the league.
called up an independent firm and asked whether it could do an United Press International 285-223 lead over second place
In his last three outings,
in-depth marketing· survey for him.
Ohio High School Board of Marion Pleasant. Pleasant also Love has scored 49 against MilThey said sure, what did he have in mind?
Coaches' Class AAA ratings. has a .rugged fmishing game waukee, 49 against Kansas City
.He told them, and within the past few months, they provided
Tech, which fmished its sea- Friday 'night against 11th
and 44 against Cleveson Saturday with a 118-62 win ranked Ridgedale, 14-3, in the land. That's 142 points in three
him with the answers.
Among other things, the survey revealed there's stU! a deep over Cleveland St. Ignatius in Marion Coliseum. Both NS games. For some people that's
resentment on the part of baseball fans over the strike by the the city championship game, and Pleasant are 17.0.
a whhle season.
Fort Recovery .finished third
players a year ago.
holds 249-247 margin over runBut last night's story was
this
week
with
206
points
and
"And I mean a 'deep resentment,"' says the owner, who took nerup Lehman this week. Bardifferent and Love was
this survey.
berton, second last week, is Noc Wapakoneta St. Joseph fourth reduced to mere mortal
with 191, both with a chance for .dimensions by Silas and
One of the other findings comes out much more ominous, ex- 3 this week with 241.
pecially since it's pretty much the gut reaction of so many fans.
Lehman and Barberton are the title if the two leaders Cowens and Boston's stiff,
"The survey found the fans could live without baseball," says both 17-llon the Sear. The Polar should lose.
give-no-easy-shot defense.
Sebring and South Central Love's scoring line read six
the owner.
Bears meet always-tough
There's a message there.
Canton McKinley Friday night tied for fifth in Class A, but field goals, two of three from
It could he a vital one, if anybody really cares.
in the Canton Fieldhouse, while their 104 poinis is well off the the foul line and just 14 points.
Few fans, if any at aU, really do care which side prevails in this Barberton goes for its perfect leader's pace. Buckeye West, a
And that, more than
present tug-Gf-war heiween the owners and the players. ·
regular season mark against newcomer, to the top ten, took Havlicek or Cowen's scoring or
seventh, followed by Lorain the fact that they each dropped
They have little interest in the squabble now, and wiU have Alliance.
even leas the longer it goes on. This ll!ck of interest already has
The rest of the Class AAA Clearview, Zane'S ville ,two free throws in the final 58
turned to plain disgust in many quarters.
leama appear to be out of the Rosecrans and Strasburg. seconds to break a tie, is why
Buckeye West, 16-0, replaced Chicago lost.
Basically, sports fans aren't turned on by bargaining sessions. championship running.
If they were, they'd buy tickets to listen to heated debates beMcDonald
which dropped to
Springfield South, 15-1,
The victory increased Bostween labor and management olticials trying to hammer out a ctimbed from seventh to fourth 12th.
ton's Atlantic Division lead
COLUMBUS (UPil - This over the Idle New York Knlcks
new contract.
this week, but the Wildcats re- week's
United Press In·
Let's take a look at some of baseball's latest deveiopmenls.
ceived only 180 points, far off ternaflonal Ollie High School to 1 \2 games and kept the
Bowie Kuhn, the baseball commissioner, admonishes Marvin the pace of the three leaders. Board of Coaches' basketball Celtics on top in the league
ratings with first place votes
MiUer, the head of the Players' Association, for abandoning the
Columbus South, 14-2, took and
won -lost records in
bargaining table and "deliberately creating confusion" by over the No. 5 spot this week, parentheses :
CLASSAAA
Bow1~.....
saying what aU these latest maneuvers amount to is an owners' followed by Hamilton Taft in
TEAM
Pis.
&amp;LIJ8
lockout, not a players' strike.
sixth, Mansfield Senior and 1. Cl. East Tech (10) 15-2 249
POMEROY LANES
Marvin Miller now turns around and accuses Bowie Kuhn of Newark tied for seventh, t. Canton Lehman Ill 17-0 247
Bend League
3.
Barberton
(8)
17·0
244
being "defensive."
Lorain Admiral King ninth and .· 4. Sp'fleld So. (4) 15·1
February 5, 1973
180
Can't they both tell that aU they're really doing is turning off Columbus East tenth.
W L Pis.
5. Cols. South (3) 14·2
160
Cats
8 4 24
Hits Top Ten
6. Hamilton Taft (2) 14-2 151 Top
the fans?
Twin City
6 6 16
East,
15-1,
was
mak;na
ils
7.
(tiel
Mansfield
Sr.
152
105
.
Ordinarily the players and owners should've profited by what ·
6 6 16
u..,
7. (tiel Newark 15·2
105 Bombers
happened to them Ills! year, but it becomes more and more ob- fir.Jt top ten appearance, re- 9. Lorain Adm. King 13·3 81 Comets
5 7 16
Team4
6
6 12
placing Cleveland John F. 10. Cols. East 15·1
51 Team 2
vious they haven't.
5 7 12
Second
ten:
11.
Cleveland
My own feeling is that greed is at the base of this whole thing. Kennedy which dropped to John F. Kennedy 36; 12.
High Team Three Games The owners think the players are too. greedy and the players 11th.
Boardman 32; 13. Middletown Top Cats 1989, Twin City 1974,
Comets 1864.
Another three-team fight is 30 ; 14. Chillicothe 27; 15. Crow's
think the owners are, and who knows, they both may he right.
High Team Game - Top
Princeton 23 ; 16. (tiel Akron
That's the impression I often get anyway.
also shaping up in Class AA Buchtel ( 1l and Youngstown Cats 696, Twin City 677 ,
What we need now is for somebody to put out a new button where Waverly and Columbus Ursuline 111 21; 18. (tiel Toledo Bombers 676.
High Ind. Three Games Bishop Ready, the top two St. Francis a~d Cleveland St. Tyree
saying: "Stamp Out Greed."
564, Jr. Pi1elps 549, V.
Joseph 18 each ; 20. Springfield
Wipple 532.
Either that or maybe someone'll come up with another button U!ams for most of the season, North 14. ·
Ind. Game -'- Jr. Phelps
saying: "Stamp Out Baseball."
have been Joined by unbeaten
Others with ten or more 229,HighTyree
_212, Clelland and
WU'••d
points
:
Elyria,
East
Cleveland
The game itself alwars will survive. I'm ."!!t so ~ure about the
.., .
. ..,. ·
,
Shaw , Kettering Fairmont· Roa~~ 206.....
owners and the .pl&amp;yers, though. They seem hladed·-down a
Waverly·lost •much of ·Its 39-• -. Ea~t ;and CantO!&gt; McKinley . , ·
common ~oad of 'extinction together.
.
point lead of last week when
CLASS AA
Back in 1882, railroad,man William Henry Vanderbilt was the Tigers were dumpM ~7 T1~~~verly (51 15-1
asked by a newspaper reporter whether one of his acts wouidn 't Saturday night by fourth 2. Cols. Ready (4) 14-3
184
HAMPTON HONORED
ranked
(AAA
)
Springfield
3.
Willard
(2)
17-0
164
inconvenience the public.
COLUMBUS
(UPI )
,
4. (l1e) Rossford (4) 16·1 147
His answer has become a classic.
South. It was Waverly s first 4. !lie l Steub. Cath. Ill ISForward Rich Hampton has
"The public be damned," he snapped.
loss in 16 games.
1
147 become the first Miami of Ohio
The Tigers picked up Ui8 6. Alb~ny ~lex . (2) 15-2
84
It never works out that way, though. Nobody can actually say
.
.
7. Galhpohs (1) 14-2
75 player ·to be "player-of-thethat and get away with it. William Henry Vanderbilt found that pomts this week to 184 for 8. (tiel Huron (1) 17·0
70 week" in the Mid-American
Ready in second but the big 8. (tiel Poland 111 15·1
70 Conference this season.
out before he died.
·
d
'
b
ilia
d
10.
(tiel
Loveland
(1
l
15-0
44
Most certainly the players and owners will find out the same 001se was rna e Y W r 10. (tiel Manchester (2) 16-0 44
Playing with a tightlything.
•
which moved
into a
Second Nine: 12. Claymont strapped
injured shoulder, the
Eventually, they'll make pe;~ce and throw.a ball, but then they challenging third position with 42 ; 13. Wellsville 35: 14. West 6-6 junior netU!d I~ poinls and
. Musklngum 29 ; 15. Patrick
may find that nobody will come.
164. Will ard had been lodged m Henry 27 ; 16. Leavittsburg pulled down 16 rebounds
the No. 5 spot for five straight Labrae Ill 23: 17. River View aga inst Ohio University last
weeks
22 : 18. River 21: 19. Elyria week.
·
Catholic (1) 20:20. (tie) Genoa
Rossford and Steuhenviile and Ashtabula Harbor ( 1) 19
Catholic, tied for fourth with each.
147 points remain outside
Others with ten or more
•
po~nts : Middletown Madison,
shols for the title. After that, Tioo City, Fairfield Union,
Ohio College
though, was Albany Alexander FPortsmouth West. Fostoria,
Basketball Scores
. .
.
a~rless, Buckeye Valley and
By United Press International
In SIXth With only 84.
Twinsburg Chamberlin (1).
Marietta 83 Carnegie-Mellon
Gallipolis took seventh,
CLASSA
(Pa.l 46 '
Pemberton 1. Wood 4, Smith 7,
CHESAPEAKE
'ed f
TEAM
Pis. Otterbein 84 Mount Union 79
D.
Sheets
4,
Holbrook
2,
Burke
H
d
P
I
nd
Chesapea ke placed five 10, McKinney 6.
uron an
a
ti
or Llndian Val. so. 191 17-0 285 Wittenberg 54 Heidelberg 47
eighth and Loveland and 2. Marion Pleasant (5) 17-0 223 Capital 58 Musklngum 46
players in double figures and
By Quarters :
deadlocked for 3. Ft. Recovery (4) 18-0
206 Wright State 100 Wlberforce 69
the Panthers rambled to an 87- Chesapeake 16 28 25 18-87 Manchester
4. Wapakoneta St. Jos. (5) 19-0 Urbana 87 Cedarville 85 (oil
Symmes Val. 5 12 13 14- 44 tenth. Both are newcomers.
191 Oberlin 67 Kenyon 61
·
44 basketball victory over the
Waverly closes its season 5. (tiel Sebring (2) 15·1
104
Symmes Valley Vikings
Saturday night against seventh 5. (tiel So. Central !1l 15·0 104
Tuesday night.
Ohio High School
7. Buckeye West (2) 16-0
92
Basketball Scores
ranked Gallipolis, while Ready 8. Lorain Clearvlew (3) 16-1 91
Ronnie Roesch led the By United Press International
9. Zones. Rose.crans 14-2 66
. - .. -Chesapeake rout with a Cleve St. Joseph 63 Parma meets Columbus Wehrle and
Willard
c1
ses
b
ho
ling
G
10.
Strasburg
14-3
56
Padua 47
h' h
0
aSecond Ten : 11. Ridgedale
Y s
game lg 20 poinls. But, he Connea ut 87 Ashtabula St. John
lion.
38: 12. McDonald (1) 36 ; 13.
had plenty of scoring help from
51
35 Straight..
Cleveland Heights Lutheran
SAME DAY .
his mates as II Panthers broke Jefferson 63 Madison' 58
Huron,
which
has
won
35
East 25: 14. (tie) Franklin
·10 t0 th
·
1
Medina 56 Wadsworth 52
SERVICE
Moore and Mansfield St.
e pomt co umn .
Parma Byzantine 62 BrunIn At 9- 0ut At S .
straight regular season games, Peter's 24 each: 16. Bristol ville
Randy Hall netted 13 poinls
swlck 60
goes
for
its
second
straight
un23
;
17.
Windham
19:
18.
Newton
Use
Our Free Parking LOt
for Chesapeake, which upped Berne Un ion 65 Millersport 59
beaten season against Fremont 18; 19. (tiel Columbia Station
ils record to 11·5 for the season. Mav'~~ttt8 55 Parkersburg (W.
and Hannan Trace tll14 each.
"
·
Others with ten or more
Paul Wilcox, Gary. Sheels and North Central 87 Camden St. Joseph Friday night.
The Class A tiUe would be aU points : Lowellville, Fostoria
. Denny Burke each scored 10
(Mich.) 50
.
St. Wendel in, Fort Loramie, St.
·216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
poinls for the Panther.
W~je l l ng (W . Va.l 127 Bellaire settled if Indian Valley didn't Bernard,. and Muplewood.
Jamie Lafon tossed in 17 Martins Ferry 71 Llnsly (W,
·
Va.l 63
•
potnls to pace the Vikings, now John Marshall (W V 1 64
10-7 for the season. Gene Myers
Steubenville 55 · a.
added 10 for Symmes Valley . Weirton (W. Va.l Madonna 70
.
·
Toronto 53
Th e Panthers JUmped
out to Paden City (W. Va .) 68
al6-5 first period lead and built
Woodsfield 49
,
the margin to 44-17 by in- licking Heights 78 johnstown
U! ' . '
74
rm1ss1on.
Watkins Memorial 86 Heath 63
Fairfield Union 83 Lancaster
SYMMES VALLEY 5-12 ll·
Fisher 66
14-44 - Lafon llt Corn 1, G. Canal Winchester 103 Liberty
Myers 10, J . Myers 7, Robinson
Union 59
0, Webb 9.
Amanda· Ciearcreek 43
CHESAPEAKE 14-28 18·25Pic kerington 42
87 - Hall 13. Wilcox tO, Roesch Milfl in 75 Groveport 66
20, Edwards 0. G. Sheets 10, Granville 73 Urlca 69

Waverly still

No. I; GHS 7th

-omaha

Local

"::e

Panthers bomb
SVAC leaders

°

SHIRT
FINISHING

Roti1nson's Cleaners

again why he is a le~dlng
candidate for Most Valuable
Player hf!IOrs as he contributed a whopping 4s.point
effort to lead the Kings over the
Rockets. The Kings frittered
away most of .a 20-point lead
before reeling off 10 straight
points ll!te in the fourth quarter
to secure tbe victory.
The Lakers · narrowly
averted their first home Joss

percentage race with 46 wins
and 12 losses.
In other NBA action Tuesday
night, Milwaukee beat Detroit,
11().96, Golden State downed
Cleveland, 103-90, Los Angeles
edged SeatUe, 101-98, Kansas
Ci ty.()maha walloped Houston,
)32.118, arid Portland bombed
Buffalo, 120-100.
Kareem Alldul.Jabbar and
Boil Dandrich each scored 28
points to lead the Bucks aver
the Pis~ons and help
Milwaukee take-advantage of
Chicago's loss to move six
games out in the Midwest
Division race.
'!'he Warriors -hit 11 of their
fir.lt' 12 shots in the third
period, mostly on layups, and
were paced in the scoring by
Rick Barry's 36 points in their
victory over Cleveland. Austin
Carr topped the Cavs with 21
points.
Nate Archibald showed once

,

I.N TOWN ON

GASOLINE

15" and 23" Widths

ClGARETTES ·

SAVE UP
TO 4~ AGAL
Under Major Ethyl

.

INSULATION-·

40f

-

GLOUSTER - Glouster
High's Tomcats posted a 63-50
victory over Southern High of
Meigs County here Tuesday
night in a make-up of a nonleague game postponed
earlier.
Southern lost both ends of the
evening as the Kittens bumped
off the little Tornadoes in the
preliminary 32-12.
A late rally by Southern, in
which only 5 points separated
the teams at 55-50 in the fourth
period fell short. Personal fouls
had a big part in it failing.
Glouster ran away in the final
minutes.
Southern now is 6-9 on the
season. Its regular season ends
Saturday at home against
Waterford .
The SoutU!rn team failed to
shoot a free throw in Tuesday's loss. GlousU!r was 13 of
19 at the charity line. Glouster
committed only four personals
during the contest.
•
GLOUSTER' (63) '"- 'Seevers
12·2·24: Qardan!s 4-0:8; Crow 4-'
7·15: Sikorski ~,~,6; Patton 0-22: Lent 3-0-6. TOTALS 25-13-63.
SOUTHERN 1501 Hill 4-0-8;
Curfman 8·0-16: lhle 6-0-12;
Miller 2 - 0- ~ : Sayre 5-0-10.
TOTALS 25-0-50.
By Quarters:
.
Glouster
11 19 19 1~3
Southern
18 10 10 12- 50
Reserves
Southern
12. - Glouster 32 • • • • • • -

· Pomeroy, 0.

992-9981

/2

Foot

HOGG AND ZUSPAN
PH. 773·5554

MATERIALS CO.
MASON, W. VA.

STORE WIDE

.THURS.D AY-FRIDA Y-SATURDA Y
.,

.,

'

• DAYS

•

• •
10 STORE a.EAN UP

toe gym and ~oxfords. All

s1zes.

1

Sav~

now .

Sale!
REG. 13.99 and 14.99 ·

MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

Regular S3.99 and S4.99
famous brand long

sleeve

sport shirts In assorted styles
and patterns, found only at

values . Limited supply. Final

clearance. Save big now.

*595
I

..

'

•

••

FOOTWEA·R
$ 00

Samples, discontinued
styles, broken sizes, odds
and ends of ladies' footwear in a· variety oQf•stylos
for fall and winter. DresS
lind casual sl)oles. Only 127
so hurry while they

(200 YDS.)
- "'MILL LENGTH GROUP FANCY

"

' '

SPORTS FABRICS

On~

'

big lot of ladles fancy better

Pomeroy
Remnant

(124 ONLY)
REG. 29' VALUE

lheir semi-annual

13tEA.

25

now and get Ire mendous sav lngs at

BANQUET 10 Piece

Chicken Dinner •1.59
l~b.

BROUGHTON'S

Cheese
Smoked Polish

SAUSAGE

45~

Lb.69~

Poplar Sliced

BACON

SPORT SNEAKERS
One Close-Out lot of children's

canvas sport sneakers in

Pork &amp;Beans
Navy Beans
Mexican Beans·
Pinto Beans
Great Northern
Beans

2 for

broken sizes . Cushion Inner
soles.

so~

KNIT and SPORT SHIRTS

ll

72

REG.
PRICE

·scRAMBLE TABLE
I...

'

One table of odds and ends. Values to
11 .79. Scramble table. Your choice
a(ycur friendly store ... Stiffler's.

FRUIT
COCKTAIL
3 for 99c

No.
303

Morton House 12% oz.

-'

IDAHO

POTATOES ·

89~

--

-

-=-

PORK &amp; GRAVY .
BEEF &amp; GRAVY
SALISBURY STEAK
MIX OR MATat

2 for 99$

l30 OILY) Reduced To Go! Ladies'
-

.::!:~!~~l!k $soEA.o
~lng

buy from Slllfler'a.

SLACKS AND JEANS ·

$5~t

FASHION .BOOTS

.
Special Remnant Days group
of ladies' high fashion boots in
asserted styles. Broken sizes.

SALE I

$500
PAIR

now !

72xl08 OR
$179
TWIN FITTED ••••••·
Ea.
81KI08 OR .
$199
FULL FIITEO,,.,..,
Ea.

(27J YDS.)
7 INCH FINE MESH SHEER

NYLON.NET
Fine mesh nylon net in a dozen
pretty colors. ?Z-inches wide
- Remnant Days Value.

:

lo

"

(460 ONLY)
.VALUES TO 39'

paiR
n

SEWING NOTIONS
5¢EA.
Stiffler's.
Sa ve Blg now Values to 39c.
Special Group . Shop early for

OFF
REG.
PRICE

best selection . Stock up now at

-- --

FALL
&amp;WINTER SPORTSWEAR
Values to 13.99. Men's and Boys' fall
$ oo·

(176 ON~YJ
VALUES TO $1.99 22144 VELOUR TERRY

and winter spo'rtswear. Many ,
assorted pieces at a ridiculously low

BATH TOWELS

price. Shop Stiffler's first.

Values to $1.99. 22 x 44 velour
cotton terry bath towels. Sal'c up
to 1&gt; now.
·

! SPECIAL GROUP) ladies' Fall and Winter

BETTER DRESSES
. (l TABLE) ODDS &amp;·ENDS VALUES TO 11.79 .

Del Monte

2

One large group of assorted styles

$100

VALUES JO. '199 MEN'S AND BOYS'

BOYS' FALL AND WIN.TER
Special group of boys' fall and
winter knit and sport shirts.
Long sleeve. Assorted colors.
Hurry!

~

ASST. PICTURES

and sizes of pictures. Regular values
of S1.59, S2.99, $3.99, s•.99, $5.99 and
S7,99. Now all are 112 oft regular
pnce!

I GROUP

25~

MUSLIN SHEETS

1 GROUP ASST. SIZES AND STYLES

--

79~

LB.

the triendly store with even frlen.
dller prices.

I

VALUES TO $8.99
MEN'S FALL AND WINTER
Orie group of famous maker
slacks and jeans. Fall and
winter styles. Regular Values
to $8.99.

AND CHILDREN

Lorgegr!m~~ of~!~QALS

Broken Sizes-Odd Lots Children's

$30~~~

421&lt;36
PIU.OW

children's better sandals. Get yours

Mix or
Teen Queen No. 300

Values to S3.99. Stock up now
Stiffler's.

Fine quality cotton muslin sheets at low
budget saving prices. Lay in a sup'ply

Manufactures samples of
children's plain and fancy better
slacks in assorted colors.

NABISCO

FIG NEWTONS
1 Lb.
2 for 89$ .

children's and Girls' better

fall and winter sportswear.

LOT) Twin &amp; fill Size
MOHAWK FINE COUNT WHITE

BETTER SLACKS

4.9~

18 oz.

"Your Friendly

PECIALGROU
ASSORTED LADIES'

(77 PAIRS) Children's Plain and Fancy

Regular 29c value. Thick
absorbent terry face cloths.
Shop Stiffler's during their
Semi-Annual Remnant Days.

Stiffl~(s ,

BROKEN

$}88 -

Stock up now al Stiffler's In

(142 PAIR)

JELLY

s•.oo.

lf2 IIDir~

winter footwear , latest styles
and fashion s. Save big now at

Lorge group of 220 pieces ot

PAIR

sleepwear. Regular values to

WINTER
FOOTWEAR
Ladles' famous brand fall and

CHILDREN &amp; GIRLS' SPORlSWEAR

GROUP II
VALUES TO '11.99

FANCY' SLEEPWEAR

J

LADIES'
FAMOUS BRAND

PIECES)
VALUES TO 13.99

PAIR

(llDn LADIES' VALUES TO 14.00

/,. fine group o£46-incc,h~~~-J
sports fabrics in a1
oatterns and colors.

FACE CLOTHS .

--·P·R-1C-E•S--EioiF..F
..EiiiioCiiioT~IV E THROUGH FE B. 17
AI. COA
Smucker's Grape

$400 .

GROUP I
VA LUES TO •8.95
BROKEN SIZES

lADIES' FALL AND WINTER

33~R.

Ladles regular •9c and 59c

Dress and casual styles in better
quality Charm Step and Hi Brow
Footwear. Broken sizes, samples
and close-outs of regular values
up to $10.99 .- R~ai .saviluts.

OXFORDS and
LOAFERS .

127 PRS.) BROKEN SIZES-DISCONTINUED

LADIES PANTIES

FOOTWEAR

MENS AND BOYS

OFF

•

•
'

Ladies' fall &amp; l¥inler

CLOSE OUT LOTS

$231

(310 ONLY)
REG. 49' and 59'

(223 PAIRS) Values To S10.99
Close-Outs-Broken Sizes

• Bobbie Brooks
eRuss Togs
•Redeye
•Aileen
Fall &amp;Winter
Sportswear

S!~~!2~~~~!~1aee
$200
!c?
PAIR

......
.... ···· ..o
: 11U'LL LOVE ~....o. ....·..• •••
•• ....

ln.

SATURDAY
NIGHTS
TIU.
9:00PM

• ~ I •. I\}

•••

r--------------a...-----------.. .
ALUMINUM FOIL
18
2 for 894

AND

. (144 Prs.)
Men's &amp; Boys Vinyl Apollo

Stiffler's.

BAKER FURNITURE

• •• • 0. ••

OPEN
FRIDAY

REMNANT •
'

Barleson, -13 from Tim Stod- '
dard and 11 from Monte Towe,
also dominated the boards,
outrebounding the Pirates, 4330.
In the only other game
among the major college
leaders last night, flft!H'a,med
Marquette extended .Its winning streak to eight' games with
a 93-80 victory over Northern
Ulinois.
·
In other games around the
nstlon ll!st night, Harvard beat
Dartmouth, 7U8, Maaaachussetts whipped Boston University, 85-«i, Rutgers dumped
Army, 84-61, Southern Methodist kayoed Rice, 'IN&amp;, Texas
Tech beat Tei&amp;S Chriatlan, 7464·, and San Francisco beat St.
Mary's, 9~72.

3 ROOMS
OF
ALL NEW
FURNITURE

LY

.

SAVE 30% ·,40% ·50% • 75%

'

Tomcats take
Southern 63-50

10 LBS.

Certified
Gas
,
Station
'

538 W. Main

$_A VEl SAVEl SAVEl
FIBERGlAS 61/ e Square

.

Thompson nets ,
33 for 'Pack

SALE

LOWEST.PRICE

P.OMEROY ST()RE 0

ever to the SoperSmlcs before
clincbing the game on a '"'.md
shot by Spencer Haywood and
a crucial rebQund by ·Gill
Goodrich.
IAJTY Steele, a second-year
guard !rain Kentucky ,atole the
ball from Buffalo aeven times
and continually harallled the
Braves with . his aggreplve
Door play, to lead Portland to
its victory over Buffalo. '·,

..

College Basketball Roundup
By United Press .IDieruattonal
David Thorppson may have
had a cold in his chest last
night, but it certainly didn't
extend to his shooting hand.
Thompson, the Atlantic
Coast Conference's leading
scorer, re~led off 33 points as
second:ranked and unbeaten
North Carolina State romped.to
its 20th win of the season,
beating East Carolina, 105-70.
Thompson, coughing and
nursing a chest cold,.shol at a
feverish pace throogbout the
game as he connected on 13 of
15 field goal attempts to lead
the Wolfpack to a 56 per cent
shooting performance. North
Carolina State, which also
received 19 points from Tom

..

P_IECE GOODS REMNANTS

Agreat value group ot better fall
and winter f ~shlons priced low · ·
for quick clearance.

One lot of piece good remnants.
Asst. fabrics. Values to 19c each. Out
they at o low, low price.

(1 LOT) Mill Assorted Loop &amp;Shag

ACCENT AREA RUGS
One lot of mill assorted loop and
shag accent are.~ rugs in assorted
sizes and colors.

(Special

(89 ONLY} .

$100hcb

Ladies' Better Fall &amp; ·

WINTER d.Signs
DRESSES
in new

High
fabrics

!&amp;!!!! p~ui~kid

bathroom rugs. In assorted
colors. Great values!

wall paper, COIUiilting of enough
for llie average

S~~!!~!~!brands ~~2 ~
PRICE.
1\Mio

·88c

Ea.

l 1LOT) Reduced from Stock Room Lot
Room lot remnants of high grade

(SPECIAL GROUP) BOYS FALL AND WINTER
fll)l and winter sporl1woar at on 611 ·
tlmt low price. Save now llko you
never hevt before. Shop Stlftltr'l.

Bon Bon Acrylic Pile

WALLPAPERS

line cottons,
Save!

(120 ONL Yl Manufacturers Samples

lV:2
·

CHILDREN'S SLEEPWEAR
Hurry while they last. Assorted styles
from regular stock and samples from a
leading maker. Fine quality sleepwur
for children. Brushed and knit fabrics.

---- - -

-

(SPECIAL GROUP) INFANTS AND GIRLS

FALL &amp;WINtER SPORTSWEAR ·

Regular

Special group of infants and girls tall
and winter sportswear now at a new

fiC8

popylar low price. Stock up now at
St!ffler's.'
·

p.

$1!~==..

1L· 0~ REG.
7~2 PRICE

REG. '1.59 LADIES

SPORT SN

�.'

)

,·

,7 - Tbe Dally Sentinel;' Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 14,1973
8- The Daily Semu ..l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb.l4,1973

I' :ruSocia j'caie"n!aa~~:;~@&gt;iPatrio tis~

Past presidents
are recognized
Recognition
of
past it works. He proposed a
presidents a patriotic program· prograf!l of PTA support
bv the music students of Mrs. whereby 20 pet. of families
Lucille Swackhamer, and a giving blood would guarantee
talk on the Meigs County blood blood for all families of the
program highlighted a meeting elementary school. The
of the Pomeroy PTA Monday program received the support
of the PTA and Robert Morris,
night.
principal,
was appi&gt;lnted Eo
Mrs. Pearl Williams and
Mrs. Jerry Fields presented proceed toward instituting It in
corsages to the past presidents the school.
attending, Mrs. Chester
Mrs. J'arl Thoma presided at
Knight, Mrs. John Terrell, . the meeting during which time
Mrs. Harry Dav •IS , Sr ., Mrs. a communication was read
Jean Will, Mrs. Robert regarding the search lor
Warner, and Mrs. Edward consensus program atarted
Baer. 'The past presidents led last spring. The Region 7
the PTA in the parent-teacher "Consensus 1973" meeting has
prayer.
been scheduled for Feb. 20 at
A skit, "The Unknown Bugle Athens at which lime goals for
Boy of Cemetery Hill," was Ohio Education are to be
presented by fourth grade delined. To be distributed at
muSic students who sang "This the meeting will be the comLand Is Your Land," "Fifty pilation of the iiG,OOO citizen
Stars," and "From Main to responses on the 88 major
California." In the group were issues as determined in
Jan Belling, Connie Mossman, previous meetings. Several
' Lena Phalin, Kathy Whitlatch, Meigs Countians will be atEilora Faulkner, Lori Rupe, tending the meeting.
Robbie Landers, Douglas
Discussed was tbe lack of
Neece, Velvet Justice, Linda tele,vision cable hookup so that
Kovalchik, Brenda Chap- sets put in worltlng order last
peleai, Lorra Wisecup, Jerry fall can be .. used in the
Fields, Andrea Riggs, Clifford educational program. Read at
Murray, Shain Smith, Andy the meeting was a letter from
Pocklington, Bill Branham, · Supt. George Hargraves to
Cleo Bego, Deanne Neece, Paul Crabtree requesting the
Kevin Smith, Beth Perrin, service.
Julie Richards, and Robert
II was noted that Mrs. Orval
Evans.
·
Wiles, Mrs. Charles Goeglein,
Dwight Blake of the Tri-State Mrs. Thoma and Robert Morris
Blood Center at Huntington, W. had attended the Meigs County
Va . spoke to the PTA members Council of Parents and
f on the blood program and .how Teachers meeting held at the

.I

I

WEDNESD,\Y
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, meeting
at 7:30p.m. Wednesday at the
POmeroy Masonic Temple.
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxitlary, Drew Webster Post
Syracuse school . last month.
The spring cooference . was
announc~ for April 28 at the
Chesapeake West Elementary
School.
Mrs. Thoma noted that the
cu'ltural arts display will iake
place at the March meeting
rather than in April as earlier
planned. The science fair will
be held in April.
A thank you note .was read
from the Larry l!forrlson
family. Flowers have been sent
to Austin Phllllps, a patient at
Veterans Memorial' Hospital,
and Mrs. Joyce Vance, 'llchool
secretary.
Notes from the second graders for a reward from . the
P.T.A. for attendance were
read. Mrs. Thoma aimounced
that the Junior American
Legion Auxiliary members of
Drew Webster Post 39 will
present a program 'at · the
March meeting. The fourth
grade won the attendance
banner.
The Pomeroy J!rownle troop
led in the pledge of allegiance,
and Mr. Hoyt Allen of the

sOtlTHERN Local Board of and Buckeye Girls' State and
troops they sponsor,
Ed.uca. 11on Thursday, 7..30 p.m. the scout
U as lhe an ti -su bverstve
.
th
.
hi
h
h
.
Ra
in
as
we
.
at e g sc oo1 tn c e.
. 1.
THUIISDAY meeting of orgamza tOns.
Class 12 Heath Unlied
U~mg the 13 th chapter of
'
.
Cormthlans, he compared Am·
Methodist Church, ts can. .
the
f Chr' 1
celled
encan 1Sf!' 1o 1ove o
ts
Pomerdoy oti~onsurchTheof orChrlst
HAIUuSONVILLE Senior and ~poke of the role of
ga
ve ev
·
c sages · . .
.
Amertcans as the good
and. the centerpiece for the Citizens Club, 7:30p.m. Thurs'ta
da t h00I Sp k
' Ia
samart ns.
.
·
Founder's Day observance
Ya sc
ea er on x
Greetings were extended by
were provided by Mrs· Terrell· exemptions
for
those
over
65
M
I
Kessmger,
.
d dl 1 f
.
rs. Ch ares
A jello salad punch mints and an
rec or rom Semor E' hth D' l
ld I· M
'
'
Cit' · v 01· te Pr .
tg
IS. pres en,
rs.
coffee were served · Hostesses
un er
ogram cath erme
·
we1sh, Etg· hth
.
'IItzens
be
for the meeting were members wt
present. Refreshmenis. District . Americanism
of the Iexecutive committee.
REVIVAL starting Feb. 14 h .
.· M
A ld
running through Feb. IB at MI. c . atrman'
rs.
r_no
.
B
t'
Richards,
department
naltonal
UnIon Ml sstonary ap 1s1
.1y chalrman; th. e Rev.
Churc· h near Carpenter. The secur1
Edd'1e Buff'mg ton, a v·teInam
Rev. John W. Elswick
.
.
veteran, and pastor of the
ki
3
h
spea ng, 7: 0 eac evemng. F 1 R Ba ti 1 Ch h
PUblic in 'ted
ores un
p s
urc ,
and Terry Wyatt. A special
VI
•
Mrs. Etta Will, president of the
tribute was given to the late
GRACE EPISCOPAL Middleport American Legion
William Neulzling, and others fhurch Women wtll host a Auxiliary; and Mrs. MyrUe
who have served were named uncheon at 12:30 p.m. Thurs· Walker passe Je secretaire
including James Pullins, Jack day. Mrs. Claude Sowle .will depart~mental Eight and
Haggy, Tom Lane, Roger speak on Ohio University.
Forty.
Klein, Roger Staats, Ernest
MEtGS COUNTY
Mrs. Hampton and Mrs.
Haggy, Jack Jacobs, Steve Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Harper had closing remarks
Haggy, Merlin Tracy, Larry
lttee , 7:30 p.m., Th urs- with Mrs. Winston, the chapSpencer, Jack Stanley, comm
day at St. Paul Lutheran. lain, giving the pray~r for
Leonard Lyons, Terry Michael,
Pomeroy . Speaker· peace.
Seldon 'Baker ' and Steven Church,
from the Athens Care Line.
A tea was served in. the
Eblin. A World War I veteran -TWIN City Shrineltes, p.m. church dining room from a
given a special tribute was Thursday, home of Mrs. 8Henry table decorated with a floral
Lawrence Smith, who was Ewing, Mulberry . Ave., ~rrangement of blue and white
unable to attend due to lllness. Pomeroy.
with red, while and blue
It was also noted that Mrs.
MEETING of Bricklayers tapers. Mrs. Hampton and
Merlin Tracy served in the Local 32 scheduled for Thurs- Mrs. Harper were hostesses for
armed forces .
day night is cancelled.
the tea.

I·' Servicemen given recognition
'

I

Recognition of servicemen
highlighted the Sunday service
at the Laurel Cliff Free
M.ethodist Church.
Special guests for the service
members of Drew Webster
Posl39, American Legion, who
paraded into the sanctuary as
the congregation sang "My
Country 'Tis of Thee."
·
The Rev. Robert Buckley
al uked "'llhe Four,Men of God''
I' the topic in observance of
Four Chaplains Sunday. In·
traduced by the minister, the
legionnaires formed a line at
the front of the church and
were given a standing tribute
by l_he congregation.
In the group were James

as

Gilmore, George Nesselroad,
Edgar Van lnwagen, Blll
Bailey, Lloyd Wright, Leonard
Jewell, Charles Swatzel,
Robert Vaughan, Frank
Vaughan, Allen Downie,
Rodney Karr, Kenneth Harris,
Clifford Jacobs, Clifford Klein,
Ernest Powell, and Phll Wise.
The congregation sang "All
Hail the Power of Jesus Name"
and Mrs. JOIInn'Ciark and Mrs',
Kathy Pullins sang "Momma's
Teaching Angels How to Sing."
Read during the services
were the names of men now
serving in the armed forces John Klein, Junior Pullins,
Benny Wright, Joh~ Card,
Harold Hanson, Roy Lyons,

PERFECl' A'n'ENDANCE -liecGgntsed t« perfect atftnderw a~ !be "12 CUb" buquet
of the Bradford Olurch Ill Chrlat were Ielt .to rlcht, Drst row, Carol MciiTia and Donna Kay
Hysell, each one year; secood row, ~e Hendricks, 10 years, Diane Painter, two, Unda
HySell, three, and Becky Painter, four; and third row, Frances Hysell, Damy Harriaon and
Tammy Balke; one year, and Donald Hysell, three years.

Perfect attendance recognized by club
Perfect attendance awards
were presented at the "~2 •
Club" hanquel staged recenUy
at the Bradford Church of
Christ.
Following dinner, Clifford
Smith, pastor, presented pins
to Carol Morris, Frances
Hysell, Tammy Blake, Danny
Harrison and Donna Kay
Hysell, one year; Diane
Painter, two years; Donald

PTA approves
two purch(lses ·

and Linda Hysell, three years;
Becky Painter, four years; and
Tressie Hendricks, ten years.
Others with perfect at·
tendance unable to attend the
dinner were Paul and Mildred
Sisson, Horner Forrest, Becky
and Ruby Rife, one year;
Laura Hoover and Terry
Pickens, two years; Carla
Rife, three years; Ben Rife and
Verna Hysell, four years.
A film on the life of Helen

Keller was $hown during the
evening. Jarqes Reed had the
clpsing prayer. Attending were
Mr . .and Mrs. Clifford Smith
· and Christl, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Hysell, Donna, Linda and
Donald Hysell, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Gilkey and Mark,
Mrs. Walter Morris and Can!,
Mrs. Frances Hysell, Becky
and Diana Painter, Mrs. John
Blake and Tammy Blake,
Danny Harrison, Mr. and Mrs.
James Reed and Mrs. Harry
Hendricks.

PARTY GIVEN
Mr . and Mrs. James Clatworthy entertained recently
with a dinner party In Ob·
servance of the 80th birthday
anniversary of his mother,
Mrs. Margaret Clatworthy of
Middleport. A decorated cake
was served following the
dinner. Guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Long (Dorothy),
Mr .. and Mrs. Henry Clal·
worthy, Mr. and Mrs. James
Buchanan (Virginia), and Mrs.
Albert Ebershch. (drs 1
Clatworthy's granddaughter,
Twila, a student at Rio Grande,
telephoned birthday wishes.

RUTLAND - Purchases of
linens for the first aid room and
furniture lor a teachers'lounge
were approved Monday night
by the Rutland PI' A.
Mrs. Shirlev Bishoo oresided
at the meeting during ·which
time the unit also voted to buy
a rug for the kindergarten'
room . The kindergarten
teacher was present and
thanked the PTA for records
suppliedl\er roq111.,Mrs. Bishop
submitted her 1Jesigrialion as
·president of the group.
The pledge and the Lord's
Prayer led by Mrs. BucK
Dewhurst opened the meeting.
The attendance banner was
A thought for the day : Irish
won by first grade with a shorl
poet
James Stephens said,
program being presented by
"Virtue is the performance of
the group.
pleasant actions."

Miss Peggy Russell, a
missionary in Mexico, was a
guest at a meeting of the Young
Adult Class of the Bradford
Church of Christ recenUy . Miss
Russell, assisted by Mrs.
Walter Morris, served Mexican
food to the group and commented on r,~{. \Wrk i,n Mex}sq,
The menu consisted ,of
tamales, flan, cake and soft
drinks.
Richard Gilkey presided at
the brief business meeting.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Gilkey, Mr . and Mrs. Clifford
Smith and Christi, Mrs. Walter
Morris and Carol, Mrs. Ralph
Painter and Miss Russell.

'

POPULAR BRAND

Half or
Whole

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lb. 79~
lb. 65~

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Right reserved to limit quantities

9:00 to .7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

SUPERIORS

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USDA Choice Beef

Regular Size

NEW CABBAGE

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PIE FILLING.-----·-------~~:·
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TOMATO. SOUP~--------~--~~
DINTY

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·Buttermilk

STOKELY
GOLDEN CORN
Whole Kernel or Cream Slyle

APPLE SAUCE

*gal.
crt. ·

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Fresh

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Match

5 Sl
303
cans

MOORE

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79¢
5cans$}

and
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Green

• . 12 oz.
BEEF____ ~------~~!!..

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE . .

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JERZEE.MILK.~v~~.!!..~l!~---

FLO~IDA

o~

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CUCUMBERS-~-----~.OOG FOOD.~~~~~!~~~~c~~~~~ ~:s .$}
5 .·5g~ .
tor

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WYLER'S

3 oz.

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PINTO BEANS.__ .,{___..:___
PEAK BRAND. ·

.

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tor

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FLORIDA

.. .

.

. .
United Preu
The world's major money
market!! reopened· today with
the gold peice surging upwards
and !he.dollar dropping lit price
againlt the healthier . mark,
'!raliC, Pound and yen.
Greece formally announced
a 10 per cent devaluation of the
' draclun&amp;, but 1n Spain, many
.tourists continued ..to receive
)l'e-devaluatlonpricesforthelr
dollars . . 'lbe SpeJIIah foreign
exchange remained c1o6ed and
banks llmi.ted all other dollar
dealinJll ~. ~' .
"'"'.
1n London, the price of gold

alq tbe lines of ."a
new ldeallsir!," not to cut them
back.
i
Wirtz' suggested 11n ex-

' of · the )l!!hlic emploY!Jient program and an
~ucatlon
program . for
tmempioyed and' out-of«hool
teeiHigens.
Job .losses be~ause of
automation could be offset, he
said, by fuii-pay leaws of
absence and retralnln~
)I'Ograma for ,;anybody about
pa~on

to be.replaced ,ll~ a. robot."
He said th&amp;t just aa a
)l'operty owner Is entitled to
compensation when a highway
cuta through his Jsnd, "If
change, which Is In the public
Interest, requires taking a
person's job, ha or she Is fully
ent!Ued to compensation . for
It .II
Work sabbaticals, education
for women whose children are
grown and ''refresher courses"
to prepare the elderly for
retirement also should be tried,
ha said.
Yet Nlson wanta to cut back
on the relatively minimal
p-eaent )I'Ograma, Wirtz said.
''To suggest cutting these
programs--but Increasing
mllltary upendltures and
leaving tax loopholes seems
to me bad business, misguided
government, m!Bplaced human
concern," Wli12 said,

md~eiAviv,prlcesofforelgn
pr~~::~·thefirstPOWs
goods went up 10 per cent In to return to the United States

.

Of parUcular interest In the

new FY 74 federal budget just
submitted to the Congress is
the President's call for the
Congreu to pass a rigid $268.7
billion ceiling on outlays in the
next year before any spending

~!11s
1 . l!JI~' ~~~~,,;,

"i.

ByMc;;nce

would be over $10 billion more
and 1974 spending would be
almost $20 billion more.
All things considered, the FY
1974 budget is a notable
document. With It, the burden
of holding the line on spending

"te'' ili)~~.~..P.W~ ~IWdY , WI,

oe1 eve "'"''an appropr a
way for us In 'the1 COngress to
begin our consideration of the
President's proposals is to look
at the goal which helped shape
11.
In his budget message, the
President stresses the need to
move tbe Nation's economy
toward a goal it has not
achieved in nearly two
decades : A lull-employment
budget. In brief, this principal
holds that, except in
emergency conditions, ex·
penditures should not exceed
the level at which the blidgel
would be balanced under
conditions of full employment.
One of the hallmarks of the
full-employment budget
concept ill its fletdbillty there are times when stimulus
Is appropriate and there are
limes when restraint is
necessary. In the two previous
budgets; adherence to this
principle ·meant providing
fiscal stimulus. to an economy
which was then operating
below capacity. The efficiency
of these and other monetary
. and ecooornic actions was seen
in the calendar year 1972:
Employment climbed 14 pet.
and the rate of increase in the
consumer prive level declined.
Now thal .the economy is on
the · upswing, the full·
employment budget concept
requires that less stimulus be
given to the economy in ·the
form of budgetary deficits,
hence the deficit for 1974 Is
esUmated to be approximately
half of the deficits for 1972 and

100 ~.;ongreas. II the programs
tieing scrapped by the Whl te
House are all reinstituted by
the Congress, then it will be the
Congres.S which will have to
answer for subsequent spendlng.
I intend to support the 1mplementallonollhe President's
recommended spending
ceiling. I'm not broadly sanetioning all budget cuts, but for
the sake of avoiding a tax increase and subduing inflation,
a spending ceiling inusl be
imposed and observed. There
will be some difficult decisions
which wlll have to be made. A
. number of programs of imparlance to specific interest
g;oups are already feeling the
brunt' of budget squeezes. But
above this, we're going to have
to have budgetary discipline
and spending restraints if
economic slabllity is to be
restored.
In the great debate that will
surely unfold as the budget
hatlle begins, Congress can
either &lt;;ontribute to the construction of a fiscally sane
budget, or it can bear the
economic 'albatross of tax
increases and inflation.

reaction to the earlier an- w111 be filled by 20 more
nouncement that Israel would prisoners who ar~ to be
keep ita pound 'pegged to the . released by the North Viet)irlce of the dollar-meaning it namese by Thursday, actoo waa devalued 10 per cent. cording to a Hanoi anMost money markets rescted nouncemenl Tuesday. They
cautiously on the first day of will bring to 163 lbe number of
dealing since President Nlson POWs released this week and
devalued the dollar by 10 per leaving 431 prisoners still In
cent. In Frankfurt, one of the captivity.
centers of the pre-devaluation
Prisoner releases are timed
rush to sell unwanted dollars, to coiilcide with the withdrawal
dealers said the situation waa of American troops from South
...calm."
Vietnam under terms of the
But In Tokyo, the price of the Paris peace agreement. All
dollar inunediately fell to a prisoners are to be released by
record low with the alate bank March 27.
there buying 150 million unThe first prisoners to reach
wanted dollars to keep its price the United States landed at
from falling below 271.10 yen. Miramar Naval Air Station,
Calif., near San Diego, late
Tuesday night. The drama of
their arrival was heightened by
mechanical trouble on their
Cl41 Starllfter plane from the
Philippines, which circled the
field for ~~ minutes with
Middleport parking meter troublesome landing flaps. The
collections for January totaled plane landed without incident,
$1174.50 ·and 36 arrests were however.
Navy Cmdr. Brian D. Woods
made by the Middleport Pollee
was
first off the plane at San
Department during the month
according to the monthly Diego, followed by Air Force
report of Pollee Chief J. J. Maj . Glendon Perkins. Both
men were flown to the United
Cremeans.
States
to be at the hedSides of
Of the total arrests made
during the month 12 were on their critically ill mothers .·
Woods spotted his petite,
intoxication · charges while 10
we,re for driving while in· redhaired wife and blew her. a
todcatedir. l)'hare were :IJu&lt;ee kiss before walking . to ..a
' ' the
'
ll)icrophone. She was wearing
arrests- for disturbing
peace and two each lor a while orchid given her by
speeding, failure to yield right President and Mrs. Nlson.
Then Woods walked over to
of way, and for disturbing the
his
wife and embraced her for 1
,. peace. There was one arrest on
each of the following charges, a full minute. They wound up
assured clear distance, clutching each other happily in
resisting arrest, petty larceny, a full kiss. Woods' three
no operator's license and children-Kathleen, 9, Christo!aUure to pay an old nne and pher, 8, and Michael, 7-stood
to one side and smiled at their
costs.
According to the report 5,167 father.
Woods also embraced his 76miles were driven by the
year-old falher-retlrea Rear
depal1ment In January.
Adm. R.W.D. Woods wbo waa
OHIO GROUP CITIED
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
Fair Housing Contact Service
of Akron, Ohio, will be given
$5,000 Wednesday from th~
National Center for Voluntary
Action for being selected as a
top volunteer of 1972.
The Akron group was credited with achieving peaceful lntregation in sections of that
city.
The organization and
another winner, Nadine
Calllgulrl, a San .Francisco
nun, will be cited ai · the
ceremony at the John F.
Kennedy Center for the Perfor. ming Arts here.

TEENS and WOMENS

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PANT TOPS
-

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Nylons, Polyester blends in v.
necks, crew necks, mock turtle
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colors.

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Med •.
Large

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$244
To s2.94

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AND
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FOR

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9 DAYS!

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~

•
•

NEW SPRING MDSE. IS
ARRIVING DAILY!

For a loc,al interview, write
today with your back1round.

your complete ad·

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•

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•
•

NEW SPRING STYLES ARRIVED!

CASUAL SHOES ·
For Dress, Play, Every Day

Klunk heels. flats, in ;~II that's new for
spring, 1973. Give our selection a look, you'll
like them I
·

For Juniors or Women
All the Newest Leg Looks
· and Easy Care Fabrics!

$

$

Boys Newest Spring

·

SHORT SLEEVE BRAIDED ·RUGS
KNIT SHIRTS

Washable • Reversible!
,,a._.,..White • Red-White • Brown-White

4 tb. ROUND STEAK
4 tb. CHUCK ROAST
3 lb. STEW MEAT
5 lb. GROUND BEEF
4 lb. SLICED ·BACON

2~X45

1

tb. GROUND BEEF
(204) 44 lb.
PORK CHOPS .

3 lb. BULt&lt; SAUSAGE
4 tb. CHUCK ROAST .
'12 SE"'I-BONELESS HAM
16-7 lb. avg.)

Phoria Us

MASON
FABRIC SHOP

of colors a.nd sizes. Discount Priced to
save you money.
·

COPPERTONE

hogs.

4 lb. GROUND BEEF
Jib. SLICED PORK SHOULDER
3 lb. SLICED BACON
2 lb. CUBE. STEAK
2 tb. FRESH CHICKENS

1.00 a yard

1

5 inch toll inch length. A wide variety

BATH OR

WOMENS

If you h~:ve some livestock
experience we will train you
to buy cattle, sf'leep and

4 tb. BULK SAUSAGE
3 tb. ROUND STEAK
4 lb. CHUCK RO!IST
1 lb. HAM SALAD

54" Wide
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••

We T l'ain Men to Work A.s

dress and phone number.

and injured legs and discolored
s1t1n caused by Infections hy
leeches and crude treatment
with 1'\lSly natla and iodine ..
"What happened, and they
all remsrked.on this, was after
two or three Yl!l!rs, \he cycle of
Illness and, for the lack of a
better- term for It, bealth,
stopped alternating and they
alabllized at a somewhat lower .
life-supporting plateau and
became healthy within that
framework and stopped getting
illness," Sieverts said. '.'I think
the alternative of that is
death."
.
For most prisoners, today
waa a round of aperiding the
$250 pocket money given lhein
from their back J)ay-lllllount-

On Tuesday, the POWa
bought stereo recor!l pla:pen, •
clvWan clothee and·~amer111
the of®1atY lhini!J of life far .
most . Americans ' Iiiii . 1~
for men in prison campa for u ·
long
as 7 or 8 years.
•.

5 P.M. ,

APPLY NOW

lnclu~

.

FEBRUARY SAVINGS AT .SHOPPERS
MART

Prices In Effect
·wednesday

PRETTY, NEW
COLORS

1973.
· The President has said many
times that federal spending
can and should be held down to
avoid a tax increase, higher
Interest rates and an Increase
In the coslof llving.1n the new
budget,
the
Presld~.nt
recomme'nds continued and
increased ·support of many
effective
and
needed
programs. However, he also
proposes reducing and terminating many programs
which the Administration
considers lnelfeclive and
obsolete.
In many respects, the course
the President outlines is a
dl!flc:ull one, but the necessity
for malting tlie kind of choices
represented In the budget Is
llluatfatell by wllat Will happen
without this kind of restraint.
Tile 1174 ·badge! esUmates
outllys of $2SO bUB"" In 1173
indf269 bllllon In 1~;~. Without
the alternatives pr~ by
this budget, 1973 apendlng

lt

i

at the
healthy condition of the first
POWs to be released. Most are
silghUy underweight; rui they
are making up for that with
V:oraciou.s appetites in 1the
hospital cafeteria. Deasert in
particular Is a favorite course
for the POWs, some of whom
had not tasted an Ice cream
sundae for as long as 8 'h
years.
.
The )l'lsoners In tbe worst
shape, officials said, were
those released by the Viet Cong
from jungle prison camps in
South Vietnam.
Frank A. Sleverts, the State
Department expert on civilian
POW affairs, said some of the
civilians returned with bruised

'

l~gest.

• •'• • • • • • • • • • • •. .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

--------------------------.I January meter
IWashington 1 take was $1170
I

expr~ssed surp~ise

dressed in a blue civilian ault.
Then the family entered black
reeling 1s aa deep as ours jlnd timouslnes and headl'd for the
that's the highest comp~jmenll ' hospital where Mrs. Woods waa
can pay the wonderful In the Intensive care unit with a
welcom~~efe&lt;;eivedhefl!,"he · cardiac condl.tion.
said, . I d · hke to thank
"Y~II!'prodigalchUdlshome
President Nixon and everyone aitd there ill no reason you can't
associated with this project for get better •' Woods told his
a wonderful experience we'll 'mother · •
never forget."
She. ;eplled: ''God has reThe Air Force also an- warde(my prayers."
nounced that two more
Perkins was Immediately
planeloads of about 20 men tranalerred to a C9 "flying
each · would leave this way- ambulance" for the fllght to
alation on the road home Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala.
Thursday. This waafaster than . to pick up his wife. From there
originally
planned
by he was to go to CrOss Lake,
"Operation Homecoming" Mlm.
. '
·
offlelals and . was made
''Operation HomecClfuing"
possible by the generally good officials in UU, Philippines have

(Continued from Page I)

jumped $1.10 an ounce to health of the 142 POWs being

I

i Report

HAMS

Monday Thru Friday · ·

.,

By

Jl'ograml

I

Missionary to
Mexico visits

Superiors Semi-Boneless

Prices Effective Feb. 14-21

I

WASWNGTON (UP!) Prellldent Nbon'a .budg!ll cut1111*1 of federal employment
~ are "blld businela,
mllgulded govenlment, niiaplaClld lwmwn concern," acllOI'dlill to tlt8 IDID who halped
, crate moat Ill them.
F~rmer Labor Secretary
Wllllrd . Wirtz told Congreu'
Joint Economic Committee
~1 that It Will' wrong to
redjlce progranil for th'e
tmeinployed, the handicapped
and t~@ll . while at the
111!1e ·time increasing the
ilioltary blldget 81Jd falling to
cloee iaz IOQPholl•.
·
. Wirtz wu labor secretary
under Presidents John F .
Kenned,y and Lyndcin B. JohnlOll whan many present manpower programs were begun.
Nixon pr9IJ(JIIes to reduce or
phase OUt , JllOSI Of these
Democratic-era programa In
favor of gl~ the alatea the
moiley to handle 'employment
)l'oblema throllllh revenue sharing.
But Wirtz said that according
to hla arithmetic, proposed
fiiCai 1874 revenue sharing
fundi for 11181lp01Ver would fall
about 15 per cent short of the
fundi originally )I'Oposed for
the old manpower programs In
fllcal 1973. .
Wirtz said tha time had come
to ezpand and redirect these

.
'
ing to as much as SIOO,OOO In the
case Ill those held prlloner •

eibl .20 More POWs are enroute home

•

U. S, GOVERNMENT INSPECTED

We Gladly Aecept Fed. FOod Stamps .

.

\.

.USDA CHOICE

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

·w

·Cuiback policy
Dollars
.
m
0 VIDg
~said 'm isguided
i.&amp;eruati..t

pro oram

39, .6·p.m, Wednesday at hall.
ALL SOUTHERN H!gh
0 .
School students Invited to
youth prayer breakfast, ; The Rev. Samuel Jackspn.
Racine Wesleyan . United )iastor Of lbe Naomi Baptist
Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m. Church, was guest ~ker at
Wednesday.
an Amerlcanisn) program at
MJI'&gt;DLEPORT LITEilARY the Naomi Church Monday
Club, horile of Mrs, Richard night sponsored by the Lewis
,..,_
--•- Mrs. Manley. · American Legion
wwen, 2p.m. Wedn"""'f·
Dwight Zavltz to review Auxiliary 363.
"Bring Me a Unicorn" bY·Ann
Mrs. Allen Hampton
Lindbergh. Members to · presided at the rltuahsllc
resj)ond to roll call with 8IJ opemng wtth Mrs. Nellie
unusual valentine. .
· Winston glying the prayer.
REGUJ,.AR meeting Tuppers Mrs. _lfall_tpton presented the
Plains Commurilty Club AmencaniSffi chatnnan, Mrs.
Wednesday, 7,30 p.m. at home Campbell Harper, who had
of Murl Griffith. All interested charge ~ the pro~ra.m.
perSons Invited.
,; Followmg the smgmg of the
WlirrE Rose Lodge, 1 p.m. Balli~ , Hymn of the
Wednesday at the . American Republic, Mrs. Sherman ButLegion Hall, Middleport.
ler, sergeant at arms, escorted
PAST Councilors Chester the Rev. Mr. Jackson to !!'"
· ··. ..
· ' .
rostrum where he was mCouncll · 323, Daughters . of traduced by Mrs. Harper.
America, Wednesday evenmg Th mi
. · te
veteran of
at tile horne of Mrs. Erilui
e ms r' a
Cleland. Members are to take a World War 11• spoke 0~ the
pretty valentine.
foun_dation ?f the . Arne can
·THURSDAY
Legt~n and tis Auxthary, and
ROCK ·s rin 5 Gran e 7, 30 mentioned the many progra~
·
P g
8. '
supported by the group tn·
Thursday
night
at
the
Grange
hall
c1ud'mg Buc keye B.oys, State

'mt.&gt;m&amp;t I

(205) 5 tb.

GROUND BEEF
CHUCK ROAST
ROUND STEAK
SLICED BACON
SLICED PORK SHOULDER
3 tb. LARGE FRANKS

5 lb.
4 lb.
' 4 lb.
4 lb.

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS
,,

Your Nearest• Point Pleasant
• Mason
Shop

• Silver Bridge
Plaza

3
BUSY
UTilE
STORES

•

••

.'

�.'

)

,·

,7 - Tbe Dally Sentinel;' Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 14,1973
8- The Daily Semu ..l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb.l4,1973

I' :ruSocia j'caie"n!aa~~:;~@&gt;iPatrio tis~

Past presidents
are recognized
Recognition
of
past it works. He proposed a
presidents a patriotic program· prograf!l of PTA support
bv the music students of Mrs. whereby 20 pet. of families
Lucille Swackhamer, and a giving blood would guarantee
talk on the Meigs County blood blood for all families of the
program highlighted a meeting elementary school. The
of the Pomeroy PTA Monday program received the support
of the PTA and Robert Morris,
night.
principal,
was appi&gt;lnted Eo
Mrs. Pearl Williams and
Mrs. Jerry Fields presented proceed toward instituting It in
corsages to the past presidents the school.
attending, Mrs. Chester
Mrs. J'arl Thoma presided at
Knight, Mrs. John Terrell, . the meeting during which time
Mrs. Harry Dav •IS , Sr ., Mrs. a communication was read
Jean Will, Mrs. Robert regarding the search lor
Warner, and Mrs. Edward consensus program atarted
Baer. 'The past presidents led last spring. The Region 7
the PTA in the parent-teacher "Consensus 1973" meeting has
prayer.
been scheduled for Feb. 20 at
A skit, "The Unknown Bugle Athens at which lime goals for
Boy of Cemetery Hill," was Ohio Education are to be
presented by fourth grade delined. To be distributed at
muSic students who sang "This the meeting will be the comLand Is Your Land," "Fifty pilation of the iiG,OOO citizen
Stars," and "From Main to responses on the 88 major
California." In the group were issues as determined in
Jan Belling, Connie Mossman, previous meetings. Several
' Lena Phalin, Kathy Whitlatch, Meigs Countians will be atEilora Faulkner, Lori Rupe, tending the meeting.
Robbie Landers, Douglas
Discussed was tbe lack of
Neece, Velvet Justice, Linda tele,vision cable hookup so that
Kovalchik, Brenda Chap- sets put in worltlng order last
peleai, Lorra Wisecup, Jerry fall can be .. used in the
Fields, Andrea Riggs, Clifford educational program. Read at
Murray, Shain Smith, Andy the meeting was a letter from
Pocklington, Bill Branham, · Supt. George Hargraves to
Cleo Bego, Deanne Neece, Paul Crabtree requesting the
Kevin Smith, Beth Perrin, service.
Julie Richards, and Robert
II was noted that Mrs. Orval
Evans.
·
Wiles, Mrs. Charles Goeglein,
Dwight Blake of the Tri-State Mrs. Thoma and Robert Morris
Blood Center at Huntington, W. had attended the Meigs County
Va . spoke to the PTA members Council of Parents and
f on the blood program and .how Teachers meeting held at the

.I

I

WEDNESD,\Y
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, meeting
at 7:30p.m. Wednesday at the
POmeroy Masonic Temple.
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxitlary, Drew Webster Post
Syracuse school . last month.
The spring cooference . was
announc~ for April 28 at the
Chesapeake West Elementary
School.
Mrs. Thoma noted that the
cu'ltural arts display will iake
place at the March meeting
rather than in April as earlier
planned. The science fair will
be held in April.
A thank you note .was read
from the Larry l!forrlson
family. Flowers have been sent
to Austin Phllllps, a patient at
Veterans Memorial' Hospital,
and Mrs. Joyce Vance, 'llchool
secretary.
Notes from the second graders for a reward from . the
P.T.A. for attendance were
read. Mrs. Thoma aimounced
that the Junior American
Legion Auxiliary members of
Drew Webster Post 39 will
present a program 'at · the
March meeting. The fourth
grade won the attendance
banner.
The Pomeroy J!rownle troop
led in the pledge of allegiance,
and Mr. Hoyt Allen of the

sOtlTHERN Local Board of and Buckeye Girls' State and
troops they sponsor,
Ed.uca. 11on Thursday, 7..30 p.m. the scout
U as lhe an ti -su bverstve
.
th
.
hi
h
h
.
Ra
in
as
we
.
at e g sc oo1 tn c e.
. 1.
THUIISDAY meeting of orgamza tOns.
Class 12 Heath Unlied
U~mg the 13 th chapter of
'
.
Cormthlans, he compared Am·
Methodist Church, ts can. .
the
f Chr' 1
celled
encan 1Sf!' 1o 1ove o
ts
Pomerdoy oti~onsurchTheof orChrlst
HAIUuSONVILLE Senior and ~poke of the role of
ga
ve ev
·
c sages · . .
.
Amertcans as the good
and. the centerpiece for the Citizens Club, 7:30p.m. Thurs'ta
da t h00I Sp k
' Ia
samart ns.
.
·
Founder's Day observance
Ya sc
ea er on x
Greetings were extended by
were provided by Mrs· Terrell· exemptions
for
those
over
65
M
I
Kessmger,
.
d dl 1 f
.
rs. Ch ares
A jello salad punch mints and an
rec or rom Semor E' hth D' l
ld I· M
'
'
Cit' · v 01· te Pr .
tg
IS. pres en,
rs.
coffee were served · Hostesses
un er
ogram cath erme
·
we1sh, Etg· hth
.
'IItzens
be
for the meeting were members wt
present. Refreshmenis. District . Americanism
of the Iexecutive committee.
REVIVAL starting Feb. 14 h .
.· M
A ld
running through Feb. IB at MI. c . atrman'
rs.
r_no
.
B
t'
Richards,
department
naltonal
UnIon Ml sstonary ap 1s1
.1y chalrman; th. e Rev.
Churc· h near Carpenter. The secur1
Edd'1e Buff'mg ton, a v·teInam
Rev. John W. Elswick
.
.
veteran, and pastor of the
ki
3
h
spea ng, 7: 0 eac evemng. F 1 R Ba ti 1 Ch h
PUblic in 'ted
ores un
p s
urc ,
and Terry Wyatt. A special
VI
•
Mrs. Etta Will, president of the
tribute was given to the late
GRACE EPISCOPAL Middleport American Legion
William Neulzling, and others fhurch Women wtll host a Auxiliary; and Mrs. MyrUe
who have served were named uncheon at 12:30 p.m. Thurs· Walker passe Je secretaire
including James Pullins, Jack day. Mrs. Claude Sowle .will depart~mental Eight and
Haggy, Tom Lane, Roger speak on Ohio University.
Forty.
Klein, Roger Staats, Ernest
MEtGS COUNTY
Mrs. Hampton and Mrs.
Haggy, Jack Jacobs, Steve Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Harper had closing remarks
Haggy, Merlin Tracy, Larry
lttee , 7:30 p.m., Th urs- with Mrs. Winston, the chapSpencer, Jack Stanley, comm
day at St. Paul Lutheran. lain, giving the pray~r for
Leonard Lyons, Terry Michael,
Pomeroy . Speaker· peace.
Seldon 'Baker ' and Steven Church,
from the Athens Care Line.
A tea was served in. the
Eblin. A World War I veteran -TWIN City Shrineltes, p.m. church dining room from a
given a special tribute was Thursday, home of Mrs. 8Henry table decorated with a floral
Lawrence Smith, who was Ewing, Mulberry . Ave., ~rrangement of blue and white
unable to attend due to lllness. Pomeroy.
with red, while and blue
It was also noted that Mrs.
MEETING of Bricklayers tapers. Mrs. Hampton and
Merlin Tracy served in the Local 32 scheduled for Thurs- Mrs. Harper were hostesses for
armed forces .
day night is cancelled.
the tea.

I·' Servicemen given recognition
'

I

Recognition of servicemen
highlighted the Sunday service
at the Laurel Cliff Free
M.ethodist Church.
Special guests for the service
members of Drew Webster
Posl39, American Legion, who
paraded into the sanctuary as
the congregation sang "My
Country 'Tis of Thee."
·
The Rev. Robert Buckley
al uked "'llhe Four,Men of God''
I' the topic in observance of
Four Chaplains Sunday. In·
traduced by the minister, the
legionnaires formed a line at
the front of the church and
were given a standing tribute
by l_he congregation.
In the group were James

as

Gilmore, George Nesselroad,
Edgar Van lnwagen, Blll
Bailey, Lloyd Wright, Leonard
Jewell, Charles Swatzel,
Robert Vaughan, Frank
Vaughan, Allen Downie,
Rodney Karr, Kenneth Harris,
Clifford Jacobs, Clifford Klein,
Ernest Powell, and Phll Wise.
The congregation sang "All
Hail the Power of Jesus Name"
and Mrs. JOIInn'Ciark and Mrs',
Kathy Pullins sang "Momma's
Teaching Angels How to Sing."
Read during the services
were the names of men now
serving in the armed forces John Klein, Junior Pullins,
Benny Wright, Joh~ Card,
Harold Hanson, Roy Lyons,

PERFECl' A'n'ENDANCE -liecGgntsed t« perfect atftnderw a~ !be "12 CUb" buquet
of the Bradford Olurch Ill Chrlat were Ielt .to rlcht, Drst row, Carol MciiTia and Donna Kay
Hysell, each one year; secood row, ~e Hendricks, 10 years, Diane Painter, two, Unda
HySell, three, and Becky Painter, four; and third row, Frances Hysell, Damy Harriaon and
Tammy Balke; one year, and Donald Hysell, three years.

Perfect attendance recognized by club
Perfect attendance awards
were presented at the "~2 •
Club" hanquel staged recenUy
at the Bradford Church of
Christ.
Following dinner, Clifford
Smith, pastor, presented pins
to Carol Morris, Frances
Hysell, Tammy Blake, Danny
Harrison and Donna Kay
Hysell, one year; Diane
Painter, two years; Donald

PTA approves
two purch(lses ·

and Linda Hysell, three years;
Becky Painter, four years; and
Tressie Hendricks, ten years.
Others with perfect at·
tendance unable to attend the
dinner were Paul and Mildred
Sisson, Horner Forrest, Becky
and Ruby Rife, one year;
Laura Hoover and Terry
Pickens, two years; Carla
Rife, three years; Ben Rife and
Verna Hysell, four years.
A film on the life of Helen

Keller was $hown during the
evening. Jarqes Reed had the
clpsing prayer. Attending were
Mr . .and Mrs. Clifford Smith
· and Christl, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Hysell, Donna, Linda and
Donald Hysell, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Gilkey and Mark,
Mrs. Walter Morris and Can!,
Mrs. Frances Hysell, Becky
and Diana Painter, Mrs. John
Blake and Tammy Blake,
Danny Harrison, Mr. and Mrs.
James Reed and Mrs. Harry
Hendricks.

PARTY GIVEN
Mr . and Mrs. James Clatworthy entertained recently
with a dinner party In Ob·
servance of the 80th birthday
anniversary of his mother,
Mrs. Margaret Clatworthy of
Middleport. A decorated cake
was served following the
dinner. Guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Long (Dorothy),
Mr .. and Mrs. Henry Clal·
worthy, Mr. and Mrs. James
Buchanan (Virginia), and Mrs.
Albert Ebershch. (drs 1
Clatworthy's granddaughter,
Twila, a student at Rio Grande,
telephoned birthday wishes.

RUTLAND - Purchases of
linens for the first aid room and
furniture lor a teachers'lounge
were approved Monday night
by the Rutland PI' A.
Mrs. Shirlev Bishoo oresided
at the meeting during ·which
time the unit also voted to buy
a rug for the kindergarten'
room . The kindergarten
teacher was present and
thanked the PTA for records
suppliedl\er roq111.,Mrs. Bishop
submitted her 1Jesigrialion as
·president of the group.
The pledge and the Lord's
Prayer led by Mrs. BucK
Dewhurst opened the meeting.
The attendance banner was
A thought for the day : Irish
won by first grade with a shorl
poet
James Stephens said,
program being presented by
"Virtue is the performance of
the group.
pleasant actions."

Miss Peggy Russell, a
missionary in Mexico, was a
guest at a meeting of the Young
Adult Class of the Bradford
Church of Christ recenUy . Miss
Russell, assisted by Mrs.
Walter Morris, served Mexican
food to the group and commented on r,~{. \Wrk i,n Mex}sq,
The menu consisted ,of
tamales, flan, cake and soft
drinks.
Richard Gilkey presided at
the brief business meeting.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Gilkey, Mr . and Mrs. Clifford
Smith and Christi, Mrs. Walter
Morris and Carol, Mrs. Ralph
Painter and Miss Russell.

'

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FLORIDA

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. .
United Preu
The world's major money
market!! reopened· today with
the gold peice surging upwards
and !he.dollar dropping lit price
againlt the healthier . mark,
'!raliC, Pound and yen.
Greece formally announced
a 10 per cent devaluation of the
' draclun&amp;, but 1n Spain, many
.tourists continued ..to receive
)l'e-devaluatlonpricesforthelr
dollars . . 'lbe SpeJIIah foreign
exchange remained c1o6ed and
banks llmi.ted all other dollar
dealinJll ~. ~' .
"'"'.
1n London, the price of gold

alq tbe lines of ."a
new ldeallsir!," not to cut them
back.
i
Wirtz' suggested 11n ex-

' of · the )l!!hlic emploY!Jient program and an
~ucatlon
program . for
tmempioyed and' out-of«hool
teeiHigens.
Job .losses be~ause of
automation could be offset, he
said, by fuii-pay leaws of
absence and retralnln~
)I'Ograma for ,;anybody about
pa~on

to be.replaced ,ll~ a. robot."
He said th&amp;t just aa a
)l'operty owner Is entitled to
compensation when a highway
cuta through his Jsnd, "If
change, which Is In the public
Interest, requires taking a
person's job, ha or she Is fully
ent!Ued to compensation . for
It .II
Work sabbaticals, education
for women whose children are
grown and ''refresher courses"
to prepare the elderly for
retirement also should be tried,
ha said.
Yet Nlson wanta to cut back
on the relatively minimal
p-eaent )I'Ograma, Wirtz said.
''To suggest cutting these
programs--but Increasing
mllltary upendltures and
leaving tax loopholes seems
to me bad business, misguided
government, m!Bplaced human
concern," Wli12 said,

md~eiAviv,prlcesofforelgn
pr~~::~·thefirstPOWs
goods went up 10 per cent In to return to the United States

.

Of parUcular interest In the

new FY 74 federal budget just
submitted to the Congress is
the President's call for the
Congreu to pass a rigid $268.7
billion ceiling on outlays in the
next year before any spending

~!11s
1 . l!JI~' ~~~~,,;,

"i.

ByMc;;nce

would be over $10 billion more
and 1974 spending would be
almost $20 billion more.
All things considered, the FY
1974 budget is a notable
document. With It, the burden
of holding the line on spending

"te'' ili)~~.~..P.W~ ~IWdY , WI,

oe1 eve "'"''an appropr a
way for us In 'the1 COngress to
begin our consideration of the
President's proposals is to look
at the goal which helped shape
11.
In his budget message, the
President stresses the need to
move tbe Nation's economy
toward a goal it has not
achieved in nearly two
decades : A lull-employment
budget. In brief, this principal
holds that, except in
emergency conditions, ex·
penditures should not exceed
the level at which the blidgel
would be balanced under
conditions of full employment.
One of the hallmarks of the
full-employment budget
concept ill its fletdbillty there are times when stimulus
Is appropriate and there are
limes when restraint is
necessary. In the two previous
budgets; adherence to this
principle ·meant providing
fiscal stimulus. to an economy
which was then operating
below capacity. The efficiency
of these and other monetary
. and ecooornic actions was seen
in the calendar year 1972:
Employment climbed 14 pet.
and the rate of increase in the
consumer prive level declined.
Now thal .the economy is on
the · upswing, the full·
employment budget concept
requires that less stimulus be
given to the economy in ·the
form of budgetary deficits,
hence the deficit for 1974 Is
esUmated to be approximately
half of the deficits for 1972 and

100 ~.;ongreas. II the programs
tieing scrapped by the Whl te
House are all reinstituted by
the Congress, then it will be the
Congres.S which will have to
answer for subsequent spendlng.
I intend to support the 1mplementallonollhe President's
recommended spending
ceiling. I'm not broadly sanetioning all budget cuts, but for
the sake of avoiding a tax increase and subduing inflation,
a spending ceiling inusl be
imposed and observed. There
will be some difficult decisions
which wlll have to be made. A
. number of programs of imparlance to specific interest
g;oups are already feeling the
brunt' of budget squeezes. But
above this, we're going to have
to have budgetary discipline
and spending restraints if
economic slabllity is to be
restored.
In the great debate that will
surely unfold as the budget
hatlle begins, Congress can
either &lt;;ontribute to the construction of a fiscally sane
budget, or it can bear the
economic 'albatross of tax
increases and inflation.

reaction to the earlier an- w111 be filled by 20 more
nouncement that Israel would prisoners who ar~ to be
keep ita pound 'pegged to the . released by the North Viet)irlce of the dollar-meaning it namese by Thursday, actoo waa devalued 10 per cent. cording to a Hanoi anMost money markets rescted nouncemenl Tuesday. They
cautiously on the first day of will bring to 163 lbe number of
dealing since President Nlson POWs released this week and
devalued the dollar by 10 per leaving 431 prisoners still In
cent. In Frankfurt, one of the captivity.
centers of the pre-devaluation
Prisoner releases are timed
rush to sell unwanted dollars, to coiilcide with the withdrawal
dealers said the situation waa of American troops from South
...calm."
Vietnam under terms of the
But In Tokyo, the price of the Paris peace agreement. All
dollar inunediately fell to a prisoners are to be released by
record low with the alate bank March 27.
there buying 150 million unThe first prisoners to reach
wanted dollars to keep its price the United States landed at
from falling below 271.10 yen. Miramar Naval Air Station,
Calif., near San Diego, late
Tuesday night. The drama of
their arrival was heightened by
mechanical trouble on their
Cl41 Starllfter plane from the
Philippines, which circled the
field for ~~ minutes with
Middleport parking meter troublesome landing flaps. The
collections for January totaled plane landed without incident,
$1174.50 ·and 36 arrests were however.
Navy Cmdr. Brian D. Woods
made by the Middleport Pollee
was
first off the plane at San
Department during the month
according to the monthly Diego, followed by Air Force
report of Pollee Chief J. J. Maj . Glendon Perkins. Both
men were flown to the United
Cremeans.
States
to be at the hedSides of
Of the total arrests made
during the month 12 were on their critically ill mothers .·
Woods spotted his petite,
intoxication · charges while 10
we,re for driving while in· redhaired wife and blew her. a
todcatedir. l)'hare were :IJu&lt;ee kiss before walking . to ..a
' ' the
'
ll)icrophone. She was wearing
arrests- for disturbing
peace and two each lor a while orchid given her by
speeding, failure to yield right President and Mrs. Nlson.
Then Woods walked over to
of way, and for disturbing the
his
wife and embraced her for 1
,. peace. There was one arrest on
each of the following charges, a full minute. They wound up
assured clear distance, clutching each other happily in
resisting arrest, petty larceny, a full kiss. Woods' three
no operator's license and children-Kathleen, 9, Christo!aUure to pay an old nne and pher, 8, and Michael, 7-stood
to one side and smiled at their
costs.
According to the report 5,167 father.
Woods also embraced his 76miles were driven by the
year-old falher-retlrea Rear
depal1ment In January.
Adm. R.W.D. Woods wbo waa
OHIO GROUP CITIED
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
Fair Housing Contact Service
of Akron, Ohio, will be given
$5,000 Wednesday from th~
National Center for Voluntary
Action for being selected as a
top volunteer of 1972.
The Akron group was credited with achieving peaceful lntregation in sections of that
city.
The organization and
another winner, Nadine
Calllgulrl, a San .Francisco
nun, will be cited ai · the
ceremony at the John F.
Kennedy Center for the Perfor. ming Arts here.

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We T l'ain Men to Work A.s

dress and phone number.

and injured legs and discolored
s1t1n caused by Infections hy
leeches and crude treatment
with 1'\lSly natla and iodine ..
"What happened, and they
all remsrked.on this, was after
two or three Yl!l!rs, \he cycle of
Illness and, for the lack of a
better- term for It, bealth,
stopped alternating and they
alabllized at a somewhat lower .
life-supporting plateau and
became healthy within that
framework and stopped getting
illness," Sieverts said. '.'I think
the alternative of that is
death."
.
For most prisoners, today
waa a round of aperiding the
$250 pocket money given lhein
from their back J)ay-lllllount-

On Tuesday, the POWa
bought stereo recor!l pla:pen, •
clvWan clothee and·~amer111
the of®1atY lhini!J of life far .
most . Americans ' Iiiii . 1~
for men in prison campa for u ·
long
as 7 or 8 years.
•.

5 P.M. ,

APPLY NOW

lnclu~

.

FEBRUARY SAVINGS AT .SHOPPERS
MART

Prices In Effect
·wednesday

PRETTY, NEW
COLORS

1973.
· The President has said many
times that federal spending
can and should be held down to
avoid a tax increase, higher
Interest rates and an Increase
In the coslof llving.1n the new
budget,
the
Presld~.nt
recomme'nds continued and
increased ·support of many
effective
and
needed
programs. However, he also
proposes reducing and terminating many programs
which the Administration
considers lnelfeclive and
obsolete.
In many respects, the course
the President outlines is a
dl!flc:ull one, but the necessity
for malting tlie kind of choices
represented In the budget Is
llluatfatell by wllat Will happen
without this kind of restraint.
Tile 1174 ·badge! esUmates
outllys of $2SO bUB"" In 1173
indf269 bllllon In 1~;~. Without
the alternatives pr~ by
this budget, 1973 apendlng

lt

i

at the
healthy condition of the first
POWs to be released. Most are
silghUy underweight; rui they
are making up for that with
V:oraciou.s appetites in 1the
hospital cafeteria. Deasert in
particular Is a favorite course
for the POWs, some of whom
had not tasted an Ice cream
sundae for as long as 8 'h
years.
.
The )l'lsoners In tbe worst
shape, officials said, were
those released by the Viet Cong
from jungle prison camps in
South Vietnam.
Frank A. Sleverts, the State
Department expert on civilian
POW affairs, said some of the
civilians returned with bruised

'

l~gest.

• •'• • • • • • • • • • • •. .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

--------------------------.I January meter
IWashington 1 take was $1170
I

expr~ssed surp~ise

dressed in a blue civilian ault.
Then the family entered black
reeling 1s aa deep as ours jlnd timouslnes and headl'd for the
that's the highest comp~jmenll ' hospital where Mrs. Woods waa
can pay the wonderful In the Intensive care unit with a
welcom~~efe&lt;;eivedhefl!,"he · cardiac condl.tion.
said, . I d · hke to thank
"Y~II!'prodigalchUdlshome
President Nixon and everyone aitd there ill no reason you can't
associated with this project for get better •' Woods told his
a wonderful experience we'll 'mother · •
never forget."
She. ;eplled: ''God has reThe Air Force also an- warde(my prayers."
nounced that two more
Perkins was Immediately
planeloads of about 20 men tranalerred to a C9 "flying
each · would leave this way- ambulance" for the fllght to
alation on the road home Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala.
Thursday. This waafaster than . to pick up his wife. From there
originally
planned
by he was to go to CrOss Lake,
"Operation Homecoming" Mlm.
. '
·
offlelals and . was made
''Operation HomecClfuing"
possible by the generally good officials in UU, Philippines have

(Continued from Page I)

jumped $1.10 an ounce to health of the 142 POWs being

I

i Report

HAMS

Monday Thru Friday · ·

.,

By

Jl'ograml

I

Missionary to
Mexico visits

Superiors Semi-Boneless

Prices Effective Feb. 14-21

I

WASWNGTON (UP!) Prellldent Nbon'a .budg!ll cut1111*1 of federal employment
~ are "blld businela,
mllgulded govenlment, niiaplaClld lwmwn concern," acllOI'dlill to tlt8 IDID who halped
, crate moat Ill them.
F~rmer Labor Secretary
Wllllrd . Wirtz told Congreu'
Joint Economic Committee
~1 that It Will' wrong to
redjlce progranil for th'e
tmeinployed, the handicapped
and t~@ll . while at the
111!1e ·time increasing the
ilioltary blldget 81Jd falling to
cloee iaz IOQPholl•.
·
. Wirtz wu labor secretary
under Presidents John F .
Kenned,y and Lyndcin B. JohnlOll whan many present manpower programs were begun.
Nixon pr9IJ(JIIes to reduce or
phase OUt , JllOSI Of these
Democratic-era programa In
favor of gl~ the alatea the
moiley to handle 'employment
)l'oblema throllllh revenue sharing.
But Wirtz said that according
to hla arithmetic, proposed
fiiCai 1874 revenue sharing
fundi for 11181lp01Ver would fall
about 15 per cent short of the
fundi originally )I'Oposed for
the old manpower programs In
fllcal 1973. .
Wirtz said tha time had come
to ezpand and redirect these

.
'
ing to as much as SIOO,OOO In the
case Ill those held prlloner •

eibl .20 More POWs are enroute home

•

U. S, GOVERNMENT INSPECTED

We Gladly Aecept Fed. FOod Stamps .

.

\.

.USDA CHOICE

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

·w

·Cuiback policy
Dollars
.
m
0 VIDg
~said 'm isguided
i.&amp;eruati..t

pro oram

39, .6·p.m, Wednesday at hall.
ALL SOUTHERN H!gh
0 .
School students Invited to
youth prayer breakfast, ; The Rev. Samuel Jackspn.
Racine Wesleyan . United )iastor Of lbe Naomi Baptist
Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m. Church, was guest ~ker at
Wednesday.
an Amerlcanisn) program at
MJI'&gt;DLEPORT LITEilARY the Naomi Church Monday
Club, horile of Mrs, Richard night sponsored by the Lewis
,..,_
--•- Mrs. Manley. · American Legion
wwen, 2p.m. Wedn"""'f·
Dwight Zavltz to review Auxiliary 363.
"Bring Me a Unicorn" bY·Ann
Mrs. Allen Hampton
Lindbergh. Members to · presided at the rltuahsllc
resj)ond to roll call with 8IJ opemng wtth Mrs. Nellie
unusual valentine. .
· Winston glying the prayer.
REGUJ,.AR meeting Tuppers Mrs. _lfall_tpton presented the
Plains Commurilty Club AmencaniSffi chatnnan, Mrs.
Wednesday, 7,30 p.m. at home Campbell Harper, who had
of Murl Griffith. All interested charge ~ the pro~ra.m.
perSons Invited.
,; Followmg the smgmg of the
WlirrE Rose Lodge, 1 p.m. Balli~ , Hymn of the
Wednesday at the . American Republic, Mrs. Sherman ButLegion Hall, Middleport.
ler, sergeant at arms, escorted
PAST Councilors Chester the Rev. Mr. Jackson to !!'"
· ··. ..
· ' .
rostrum where he was mCouncll · 323, Daughters . of traduced by Mrs. Harper.
America, Wednesday evenmg Th mi
. · te
veteran of
at tile horne of Mrs. Erilui
e ms r' a
Cleland. Members are to take a World War 11• spoke 0~ the
pretty valentine.
foun_dation ?f the . Arne can
·THURSDAY
Legt~n and tis Auxthary, and
ROCK ·s rin 5 Gran e 7, 30 mentioned the many progra~
·
P g
8. '
supported by the group tn·
Thursday
night
at
the
Grange
hall
c1ud'mg Buc keye B.oys, State

'mt.&gt;m&amp;t I

(205) 5 tb.

GROUND BEEF
CHUCK ROAST
ROUND STEAK
SLICED BACON
SLICED PORK SHOULDER
3 tb. LARGE FRANKS

5 lb.
4 lb.
' 4 lb.
4 lb.

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS
,,

Your Nearest• Point Pleasant
• Mason
Shop

• Silver Bridge
Plaza

3
BUSY
UTilE
STORES

•

••

.'

�8-TheDaUy

Ma&amp;ln County .

Lockhart To

News Notes

.,

1- The DallY Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0 ., Feb. 14;'1973

Get City Key

By Alma Marshall
I

MASON - Andy D. Hume of Mason will observe his 99th
birthday Feb. 18 at his home oil Pomeroy St. Mr. Hume, one of
Muon's eldest citizen&amp;, conbibutes his good health to long ho1n
·of hard work In the past. His memory is ercellenl for his age.
While I Interviewed his wife by pbone, ~~everal limes she asked
her h111band about an esact date. He always had the answer 1
Besides walking to the Maaon Post Office every day, approlimately three blocks, he still raises a garden, cuts his own
lawn and several of hill nelghbol'B'.
Perhaps having many lnleresta, has also contributed to Ills
longevity. "Jack of all trades" best sums up his Interests.
His first love was planting trees and watching them grow. He
flnt planted an orchard in Summers CoiDtty, then came to Mallon
County where he starled tlie West Virginia Orchard Company at
New Haven . 'lblsflrm was composed of the late George lemer,
Dr. Tom Ferrell, Jake Stewart and Arthur Gold, thought to be
residing yet at Cowen, W. Va.
'lbe late Nonnan Weln bought the orchard from them and
Mr. Hume continued doing the work he loved, planting, spraying
and PMing the trees and then picking and packing apples,
peaches and cherries.
Mr. Rime met his wife, Mary Ballard, whlle Uving In
&amp;unmers Co111ty. 'lbey are the parents of one daughter, Mrs.
Raymond (Virginia) G.:eathouse, HIDttlnglon; two sons, Andy
Hume, Jr., of Uma, Ohio, and George Hume, Stanton, Mich.
Another daughter, Lucille, dted when she was12 years old.
Before coming to Maaon County be clerked ln,.a store, started
and operated his own sawmill business, and an orchard buslneaa.
'lbe Humes resided.and reared their family In the old large
old farm boUle located on the West Virginia CXchard Company
Fann. They lived there 42 years. After the Iarin was sold they
Mr. IIIII Mn. Alldy D. lfi!De, 111 tl
moved into Mason where they have Uved nine years. 'lbelr
former home, stW standing, is located in a scenic place high on a
h111. Gone are many of the fruit trees which dotted the · lllsuspectlng girls proceeded to start to work packing cigars
surromidlng h11ls.
after getting warm near the stove. Alady employee opened the
Here, working on the farm, was the place Mr: Hume worked lid of the cigar box that was ventilated in the bottom. Mice went
the hardest. Perhaps eating one of liis apples a day helped keep every direction and so did the ladies, their dresses going higher
the doctor away, becauae the pace this energetic man kept than the styles of today as they Bew to get on boxes or anything to
required a healthy body. He operated his own blacksmith shop on get away from the mice.
the farm, shod the horses, sharpened the plows and did many
Old Hans roared with laughter.
ather jobs required of a bl.adaanith. He mUked and fed the cows,
planted a garden, took care of the horlleS and performed the
THE CHEROKEE HOMEMAKERS Club recently conducted
many chores cimnected with the fruit bllliness.
another workshop at the home of Mrs. David Dewhurst at Letart.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Hume are membsrs of the Hartford 'lbese ladles are making items to sell at their Bazaar and Mason
~ptist O.urch.
County Fair booth . Attending the workshop were Mrs. Archie
Browning, Mrs. Kate Roush, Mrs. O.arles Stone, Mrs. Oscar
TALES OF THE PAST
Gasto, Kimberly Casto and Mrs. Dewhurst.
Did you !mow that Mason once had a cigar factory located on
ita Front St. At one lime there were many places oi business on
OTHER LADIES ARE ACTIVE, New Haven Woman's Club
Front St.
members are busy getting re/jdy for their ~owboat Revue. You
According to Millard Gress of Bellaire, Ohio, his father, have heard of Sonny and cher?
PllUlp Gress, bought the old cigar factory, tore It down and had a
Just wait 'til you see Bwmy and Mare. These two will be in
nice home built from its lumber. 1be Greases later sold the New Haven sometime in March. Watch for the date.
house, which stW later burned down .
Gress wrote to me: "A good laugh a day might keep the
FLAT ROCK- The family of Mrs. Nancy Smith of Flat Rock
doctor away, providing the joke that is played on another person gathered at her home to celebrate her 80th birthday.
.
is not carried too far." Here is his tale about a mischievous bWJCh
Enjoying the day were her brothers, John Sayre, Mr. Shirley
of YOWl&amp; men and women employed at the cigar factory who Sayre and Mrs. Sayre; her sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs.
played a trick on another employee named Hans.
Lester Adkins; her daughter, and her son-in.,Jaw and family, Mr.
·Hana waa trurY leaning over packing some full cigar boxes In and Mrs. Donald McDade and children, Donald, Jr., Sandra SUe
a large contaiher, getting them ready for shipment. A and Brenda Gay.
mischievous girl pinned a long rag taU on the back of his pants.
. AlsO visiting were her sons, Beauford Smith and Leo Smith
Another girl touched the rag tail to the hot burnside stove.
and his wife· and children, Debbie and Penny; Summer Smith
Well, when Hims saw the rag tall on fire, he headed for the and wife; Brycle Smith and his wife. Grandchildren and their
riYI!r. The dragging taU, according to Gress, came In contact families visiting Included Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hail and children,
with dry tobacco leaves, the leaves caught on fire and made a lot Linda, Carl, Johnny, Randy and Phyllis; Mr. and Mrs. Delbert
of amoke; .eYI!ryone got out of the building fast, the men using Smith and sons, Tony and Lee; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Dale Smith,
buckets of water to exlingulsh the fire (and Hans).
Mrs. Ricky Smith and son, Oiristopber Scott, and Donna and
Hans got even with the girls. He caught six live mice In a Karen Deweese; her nieces, Mrs. Oscar casta and Mrs, Harding
wire cage trap and proceeded to place them in a cigar box. 'lbe Stephens, and a cousin, Densil Campbell.

·Cookie sale gets
underway Friday
The annual Girl Scout cookie
sale will get underway in the
Big Bend Neighborhood of the
FOtlr Rivers Girl Scout. Council
Friday.
Orders for cookies will be
taken from Feb. 18-28 and
delivery will be made March
21~29 . Mrs. Mary Hunter of
Chester is the cookie chairman
for Meigs County.
·
Cookies this year will be $1 a
box but will contain two to
three times as many cookies as
the ones previously sold by the
scouts. The America Biscuit
Co. is providing the cookies to
Girl Scouts at 42 cents a box.
The remainder will go into
financing scout programs.
From the sale of each box 45
cents will be retained by the
Four Rivers Girl Scout Council
at Parkersburg to finance
outdoor programs and services, 3 cents will go into the
s!Jile scout program, and 10
cents from each box sold will
remain in the troop treasury
for local projects and activities.
··
For sale this year will be
chocolate chip, sandwich
cremes, thin mints, sugared
shortbread, and peanut butter
patties. Payment is made when
the cookies are delivered in
March. All checks are to be

Help offered
smokers.to
kick habit

Point Pleasant has not forgotten its
"hometown boy", Major Hayden
Locldtart Jr., who was one of the lint
American pilots captured in North
Vietnam In 1965.
.
.. The Key to the city will be waiting for
him when he has the opportunity to
relun! here.
1
This decision .was reached by Point
Pleasant's City Cotmcil during a regular
meeting Monday evening, when
Councilman Tom Sauer asked thst of·
ficlals make some kind of communication with the treed Prisoner of
War, who was among POWs flown from
Hanoi to the Philippines early Monday
on the lint leg of their relun! home.
Councilman Bill Wellmsn suggested
thst this he sent in the form of a
telegram Ill a directive to Mayor John
Musgrave, and it was . Councilman
Leonard 'Riffle's idea that the city be
open to r~iving him.
Six other councilmen, Wallace Smith
Jr., Howard Lee Miller, Harry Rhodes,
Delvin Simms, Jack Fowler, and
Russell Holland, along with Mayor
Musgrave and Pstty Burdette, City
Clerk, all held the same views when they
declared "We feel he is a home town

veteran interlocutor

a

' Seminar about

SE Ohio set

Ann in his solo, "Try to
Remember", while Joe Oths,
attorney, will sing "Hello
Dolly." Lurry Kibler, FrickGallagher Mfg . Co. executive,
will sing "Goody-Goody",
while Jim Fox, another Frick·
Gallagher associate, will be
featured in "Rock-A-Bye Your
Baby With a Dixie Melody."
Another Rotarian , LarrY.
Potter, First National Bank
executive, will sing "Margie."
The cast of 70 ·(lOlrsons is
rehearsing three nights weekly
In .the Rotarl;-Teen Town
building . .
Tickets for the Rotary
minstrel may be purchased
from any Wellston Rotarian, at
Ward's Drugs, or at the WHS
box office. Reserved seat
tickets may be o~tained at the
box office or at Ward's Drugs.
This year's show has been
termed the "Anniversary
Minstre" since it is not only the
20th Rotary show, but it falls in
Wellston's Centennial year ,
and also marks the 50th an·
niversary of the founding of the
"Wellston Rotary Club.
In addi lion to his duties as
interlocutor, Gaskill is codirector of the ·minstrel circle
along with Carl Dahlberg while
Dr . Paul Essman is olio
director, and Mrs . Helen
oownard is musical director.
Fox and John Weber are co.
producers this year.

115 W. Main ·

4 lb.

land
res i,Ju ti •~n. ~· hith must b~ in.
the hands r,f Secre!Jir)' r,f State
Ted IV. Br&lt;own by Feb·. 22 fr,r
. preparati•m f&lt;1r the :V!ay 8

to 16

First

Main at Sycamore. Pom&amp;roy

8 Ribs

tJC:tJl.rJt , Wet:'&gt; sent , ttJ Ct
r; t, flllld lt N :.

whi ~ h

J ll J HII~rjj~ tf: f/lf.:f.! ti n~,o; ,

SU ~)~

pl(tn nf.: d
.

SHOES

Main St. '. POMEROY
'

~reat e a wh.ole new look . Have your diamond mounted
m a. sensa.ttonal new settin g fr om our collection of

eamngs, pm~. pendants and r in~s . We promise quality
craftsmansh tp at a moderate pnce.

SEWING BOOK

s

Always do what tS hones! and latr tor every
customer

THIS WEEK GET CHAPTER

4 lb.
pkg,

7 p.m _ F 'd

··

11 an adverttsed specml ts e11P.r sold out ask ltle
Manager lor c. Aatn cneck 11 enttlles you to th e
. same tlem at !he same spe w) l pnce tne tot.
lowing week Or tl yOl' wt sh we'll q tve you a
COmPa rab le tlem .lt the S:llme S~H!CtB I pr tCe .

or

Fall
Shank
Half

GUARANTEE;
A&amp;P offer s an J.lncondtlto na l monev-buck 90tH
antee No mt~ttter wnat. 11 15 no man~r wno
makes tl tl A&amp;P sells tl A&amp;P guaran tees tl

Iee

"Super-

Right"

rt

'12·gal.

12 Price

.Sale

4 lb.

Pure

350
pkg.

Bulk

Frozen

Chi~ken
10

Heat &amp; Eat

pes.

Fried

lb.1gg

Folger's
2
Maxwell House
Chase &amp; Sanborn

EGGS ·

Puss &amp; Boots
ALL FLAVORS

sm·au Size.

10' can
.
~·

3

doz.

i149

1''

MILK

aat1.15
BREAD ..
SIVL 100

BANANAS___________~_, oc
{
•

lb.

pkg.

$169

en.~uw,.._~.,

2

A&amp;P

BRAND

ctn.

~IW&amp; $100

~

lb.

9¢

bag ~ .

WHIPPED MARGARINE

~~
1·1b. 49~
bowl

WITH THIS COUPON ON

avs 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.- Satur-

COFFEE

CAT FOOD

2

s ••.

Pomeroy

PORK SAUSAGE

375

Maxwell House
10 oz. . 1.79

Inside Personality"
'Only 33c At A&amp;P WEP

RAINCHECK:

, ....... u.......... "' .... ....u.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

Instant Nescafe

·FOR THE FAMILY

Cha·pman's

Do something beautiful for your diamond

PORK CHOPS

lOLA'S

Save to 1h off &amp; More

THE COMPLETE FAMILY

M ~ 12W
R I NG SE TTINCI

2.50

pkg.

1

a ~r icultur~l

Boneless

R ING SETTI NG
M O.J!I
RING SETl iNG

GROUND BEEF

1

SHOES

. ''SUPER-RIGHT"' QUALITY

w....,., ,.,.~loiltl

VJ•gal.

ctn.

All Polyester

PRICES WHACKED!
aoseout Lots

Athens 60 Logan 51
Sheridan 91 Crooksville 62
Meigs 79 Wellston · 42
Waverly 77 Ironton 43
Gallipolis 96 Jackson 52
Buckeye Valley 63 Marion
Catholic 41

. MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Open . Daily 9 to 9

M ~2l t

Thurs. 9 a.m. to
days 9 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.

BUDGET
DRESSES
SlQ

Cage Scores

Price• Good Tltru s.turcfay F.brvery 17-th, In

CHERRY MARSHMALLOW

Open Mon. -

New Spring

den!l•1pnn~ n,t.

The

Northup was discharged from the U.S.
Air Force in 1967 as a Sergeant. He
received a B. S. Degree In Chemistry
from Rio Gande College in 1969.
In 1969, Northup was employed at
Sporn Plant as a Chemist and served in
that position unW his recent promotion.

New endmen to harass

Ag Professor opposing

COLUMBUS rUPl i - A st i tut i on~l amendment.
furmer emplo)'e of the United
Stocker took issue with the
States
Department
of Hr,use-passed plan to change
Agricullure ' USDA• testified the Ohio Constitution to
toda)' against a proposed calculate farmers· propert)'
constitutional amendment taxes r,n the productivity of
which wouldgil·e farmers a tax . their land rather than its
break when they figure ' the protential value as an .1~:
\·alue of their real estate.
restment.
Frederick .D. Stocker, form.
Str1cker said similar
er director ad research and. prwisi&lt;,ns in California have
taxation ll'ith the USDA and ~Jir,wed railroads and lwnber
currently a pr&lt;.ofessor at Ohio and rAJ cr,mp~nies to escape
State Unil·ersity, testified hi~h taxation by h•,ldin~ hu~e
before the Senate Wa)'S and tracts &lt;of land under
MeMns Commtuee. which Is agricultur~J prroductir;n. !.liter,
studyin~ the prr,pt,sed cr.n. S:r.r;ker explained. the firrr•s

-

A- native of Gall!a County, Ohio,

ATHENS - Residents of
Athens and surrounding
counties may learn about the
history of southeastern Ohio at
a seminar beginning at Ohio
University on March 1.
The program, consisting of
six evening meetings, will
feature faculty members
sharing the results of their
research and study relating to
the "People, Places and Past
of Southeastern Ohio." In
addition to a general introduction to the history of the
area, the seminar will cover
such subjects as immigration
routes, settlement patterns,
architecture, language and
Indian trails.
The seminar is designed to
generate a greater regional
consciousness among the
residents of the area. Further
information· may be obtained
by writing to the Workshops
Office
or calling 594-1907.
·

crmrert the land to industrial
use and avoided the taxes.
St&lt;.oeker suggested that Ohio
adopt a system whereby farmers may defer a portion of
rea·! estate taxes while their
. land is in agricultural
pr r,ducti ••n. . bu t
make
pa)'men~s if the land is ever
fr, r
crommercial
s••ld

Northup is married and has two so~.
The famlly resides ..in GsiUpolls, Ohio.
Ryan was· born in Ma!IOn County,
W.Va. and completed his schooling at
Wahama High school in Mason. He was
discharged from the U. S. Army In 1948.
In December of .1~ Ryan was employed at Sporn Plant as a Laborer. He
moved into the Maintenance Depm:t.
ment in l9S1 as a Helper. He advan~
through the ranks unW he was
promoted to Master Maintenance Man
In 1968. This is where he ~~erved until his
recent promotion.
Mason, W.Va. !a the home of Ryan and
his family. He is married and has three
sons and one daughter.

Two veteran ell)llloyes at the Philip
Sporn Plant In New ·Haven have been
promoted to new positions.
Edward A. Ryan, a master maintenance man was promoted to main'lenance foreman and Richard E.
Northup has been promoted from
chemist to Performance Engineer, Sr.

Major Lockhart graduated from Point
Pleasant High School and following this
the family moved to Springfield, Ohio
where his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hayden
Lockhart, Sr. reside ai1S15 North Plum
Street.

ATHENS- Assistance to
smokers serious about trying
to break their smoking habits
will be offered in the Smokers
Withdrawal Clinic scheduled
for Feb. 26 to March I at Ohio
Universi ty.
Variations of the method of
smoking reduction which was
the most successful of all
methods tried at last year's
clinic will be used . Each
participant will be expected to
devote one hour of his time for
four consecutive nights to a
formal withd.rawal program.
Detailed procedures will be
CAROLYN MANUEL
explained at the first meeting.
Miss Carolyn Manuel, 21,
Faculty members and daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
graduate students from the Charles R. Manuel, Rt. 2,
Psychology Dept. will conduct Racine, Is presently engaged
the clinic in cooperation with in student teaching In
the Office of Workshops, Washington Elementary
Co nferences and lnstitue s. School, Gallipolis. Miss
Registration information may ' Manuel. is a senior at Rio
be obtained by calling the Grande College where she Is
workshops office at 594-4907. majoring In elementary
education. She Is a 1969
graduate ol Southern Local
VISIT ENDED
School. · Her
Mrs . Marie Steiner of High
Middleport has returned home cooperating teacher Is Mrs.
from a six weeks stay in Belly Kyger, third grade
Warren with her son, Mr. and instructor.
made payable to troop to which Mrs . Earl Steiner and family.
Mr. Steiner underwent major weeks before returning to his
the scout belongs.
·
surgery in January and was employment. Mrs. Steiner also
returned home from the visited in Cleveland with her
hospital Saturday. He will be srm, Ray, and his family .
recuperating at home several

tax break on farm land

2 ·Promoted At Sporn

boy".

WELLSTON - Charles N.
Gaskill, Wellston funeral
director and coroner of
Jackson county, will be in·
terlocutor for . the 19th time
when the Wellston Rotary Club
presents its 20th annual
minstrel show at Wellston high
school auditorium March 9-10.
Gaskill will be harassed by
new set of endmen this year.
They are LeRoy Hutchison,
Jim Fox, Larry Kibler and Joe
Oths. Hutchison, Wellston
Kroger manager, will be
assisted by his daughter Lee

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

EDWARD A. RYAN

RICHARD E•.NOR11IUP

With
This

INSTANT COFFEE

CUT INTO

Maxwell House

I

I

I

3 !. $2
• .~ggc
Breck
Dial Deodorant Spray .•~::ggc

COFFEE

Maxwell House •

I

85

Good Thru Sot., Fob. 17th.
At All A&amp;P WEO Store• - Colo. Dl•.

Blue Bonnet • •

Good Thru Sot .. Fob. 17th.
At All A&amp;P WEO Stor11- Colo. Di•.

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Maxwell House
Maxwell House

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LIMIT ONE

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ANTI·PERSPIRANT

IIHJ Cracker, ~uc
Pie Crist Mix

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Friskiea Dog Food ~~~L~~ ••• • • ·~·17'
' cat Food ,LAvon
ALL
Friskiea
• • • • • • ·····17'
Frlskies Dinners .. , . . . • 25 :; 12.99
Great Grape Hawaiian Punch ...0::· 33'
KHbler Rich 'n Chips .••• •• . .'~'61c
Pepsi Cola
8 16 or. Bottles 69'

l·lb.

I

COFFEE

Limit One Cou1pon

SHAM,OO

I

,.,,37c

STICK WHIPPEO MARGARINE

Pork Chops and Roasts

Coupon

Crisce
With
This

With
This

Coupon

Coupon

Good Thru Sot.,. Fob. 17th.
At All AlP WEO StorH - Colo. Dlv,

Wheatlas
Cereal

'u-os. 29C
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Coupon

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At

011

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pan .
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A&amp;P WEO Stor.s-Cols. Oi.,.

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All A&amp;P WEO Slor11 -Colo. Div.

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Aunt Jemima Pancake Mix ...~ ·. ~~' . 46' :
Ocean Spray Cranberry Juice . . '~~~·55'
La Choy Beef Chow Mein ,l~K "~·~ 11.05
La Choy Chow Mein Noodles .. 'li:'37c
La Choy Chop Suey Vegetables . ;:· 63'
Jell-0 Instant Pudding ·
I

Sunnyfleld
Quick Oats

Crisco

I

tlkL

pkf.

79'

With
This
Coupon

Good ThiU S1t., Fob. 17. At
I A&amp;P WEO Stort~-Cah. Div ·
LIMIT ONE

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Mix~:..

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LIMIT ONl

�8-TheDaUy

Ma&amp;ln County .

Lockhart To

News Notes

.,

1- The DallY Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0 ., Feb. 14;'1973

Get City Key

By Alma Marshall
I

MASON - Andy D. Hume of Mason will observe his 99th
birthday Feb. 18 at his home oil Pomeroy St. Mr. Hume, one of
Muon's eldest citizen&amp;, conbibutes his good health to long ho1n
·of hard work In the past. His memory is ercellenl for his age.
While I Interviewed his wife by pbone, ~~everal limes she asked
her h111band about an esact date. He always had the answer 1
Besides walking to the Maaon Post Office every day, approlimately three blocks, he still raises a garden, cuts his own
lawn and several of hill nelghbol'B'.
Perhaps having many lnleresta, has also contributed to Ills
longevity. "Jack of all trades" best sums up his Interests.
His first love was planting trees and watching them grow. He
flnt planted an orchard in Summers CoiDtty, then came to Mallon
County where he starled tlie West Virginia Orchard Company at
New Haven . 'lblsflrm was composed of the late George lemer,
Dr. Tom Ferrell, Jake Stewart and Arthur Gold, thought to be
residing yet at Cowen, W. Va.
'lbe late Nonnan Weln bought the orchard from them and
Mr. Hume continued doing the work he loved, planting, spraying
and PMing the trees and then picking and packing apples,
peaches and cherries.
Mr. Rime met his wife, Mary Ballard, whlle Uving In
&amp;unmers Co111ty. 'lbey are the parents of one daughter, Mrs.
Raymond (Virginia) G.:eathouse, HIDttlnglon; two sons, Andy
Hume, Jr., of Uma, Ohio, and George Hume, Stanton, Mich.
Another daughter, Lucille, dted when she was12 years old.
Before coming to Maaon County be clerked ln,.a store, started
and operated his own sawmill business, and an orchard buslneaa.
'lbe Humes resided.and reared their family In the old large
old farm boUle located on the West Virginia CXchard Company
Fann. They lived there 42 years. After the Iarin was sold they
Mr. IIIII Mn. Alldy D. lfi!De, 111 tl
moved into Mason where they have Uved nine years. 'lbelr
former home, stW standing, is located in a scenic place high on a
h111. Gone are many of the fruit trees which dotted the · lllsuspectlng girls proceeded to start to work packing cigars
surromidlng h11ls.
after getting warm near the stove. Alady employee opened the
Here, working on the farm, was the place Mr: Hume worked lid of the cigar box that was ventilated in the bottom. Mice went
the hardest. Perhaps eating one of liis apples a day helped keep every direction and so did the ladies, their dresses going higher
the doctor away, becauae the pace this energetic man kept than the styles of today as they Bew to get on boxes or anything to
required a healthy body. He operated his own blacksmith shop on get away from the mice.
the farm, shod the horses, sharpened the plows and did many
Old Hans roared with laughter.
ather jobs required of a bl.adaanith. He mUked and fed the cows,
planted a garden, took care of the horlleS and performed the
THE CHEROKEE HOMEMAKERS Club recently conducted
many chores cimnected with the fruit bllliness.
another workshop at the home of Mrs. David Dewhurst at Letart.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Hume are membsrs of the Hartford 'lbese ladles are making items to sell at their Bazaar and Mason
~ptist O.urch.
County Fair booth . Attending the workshop were Mrs. Archie
Browning, Mrs. Kate Roush, Mrs. O.arles Stone, Mrs. Oscar
TALES OF THE PAST
Gasto, Kimberly Casto and Mrs. Dewhurst.
Did you !mow that Mason once had a cigar factory located on
ita Front St. At one lime there were many places oi business on
OTHER LADIES ARE ACTIVE, New Haven Woman's Club
Front St.
members are busy getting re/jdy for their ~owboat Revue. You
According to Millard Gress of Bellaire, Ohio, his father, have heard of Sonny and cher?
PllUlp Gress, bought the old cigar factory, tore It down and had a
Just wait 'til you see Bwmy and Mare. These two will be in
nice home built from its lumber. 1be Greases later sold the New Haven sometime in March. Watch for the date.
house, which stW later burned down .
Gress wrote to me: "A good laugh a day might keep the
FLAT ROCK- The family of Mrs. Nancy Smith of Flat Rock
doctor away, providing the joke that is played on another person gathered at her home to celebrate her 80th birthday.
.
is not carried too far." Here is his tale about a mischievous bWJCh
Enjoying the day were her brothers, John Sayre, Mr. Shirley
of YOWl&amp; men and women employed at the cigar factory who Sayre and Mrs. Sayre; her sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs.
played a trick on another employee named Hans.
Lester Adkins; her daughter, and her son-in.,Jaw and family, Mr.
·Hana waa trurY leaning over packing some full cigar boxes In and Mrs. Donald McDade and children, Donald, Jr., Sandra SUe
a large contaiher, getting them ready for shipment. A and Brenda Gay.
mischievous girl pinned a long rag taU on the back of his pants.
. AlsO visiting were her sons, Beauford Smith and Leo Smith
Another girl touched the rag tail to the hot burnside stove.
and his wife· and children, Debbie and Penny; Summer Smith
Well, when Hims saw the rag tall on fire, he headed for the and wife; Brycle Smith and his wife. Grandchildren and their
riYI!r. The dragging taU, according to Gress, came In contact families visiting Included Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hail and children,
with dry tobacco leaves, the leaves caught on fire and made a lot Linda, Carl, Johnny, Randy and Phyllis; Mr. and Mrs. Delbert
of amoke; .eYI!ryone got out of the building fast, the men using Smith and sons, Tony and Lee; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Dale Smith,
buckets of water to exlingulsh the fire (and Hans).
Mrs. Ricky Smith and son, Oiristopber Scott, and Donna and
Hans got even with the girls. He caught six live mice In a Karen Deweese; her nieces, Mrs. Oscar casta and Mrs, Harding
wire cage trap and proceeded to place them in a cigar box. 'lbe Stephens, and a cousin, Densil Campbell.

·Cookie sale gets
underway Friday
The annual Girl Scout cookie
sale will get underway in the
Big Bend Neighborhood of the
FOtlr Rivers Girl Scout. Council
Friday.
Orders for cookies will be
taken from Feb. 18-28 and
delivery will be made March
21~29 . Mrs. Mary Hunter of
Chester is the cookie chairman
for Meigs County.
·
Cookies this year will be $1 a
box but will contain two to
three times as many cookies as
the ones previously sold by the
scouts. The America Biscuit
Co. is providing the cookies to
Girl Scouts at 42 cents a box.
The remainder will go into
financing scout programs.
From the sale of each box 45
cents will be retained by the
Four Rivers Girl Scout Council
at Parkersburg to finance
outdoor programs and services, 3 cents will go into the
s!Jile scout program, and 10
cents from each box sold will
remain in the troop treasury
for local projects and activities.
··
For sale this year will be
chocolate chip, sandwich
cremes, thin mints, sugared
shortbread, and peanut butter
patties. Payment is made when
the cookies are delivered in
March. All checks are to be

Help offered
smokers.to
kick habit

Point Pleasant has not forgotten its
"hometown boy", Major Hayden
Locldtart Jr., who was one of the lint
American pilots captured in North
Vietnam In 1965.
.
.. The Key to the city will be waiting for
him when he has the opportunity to
relun! here.
1
This decision .was reached by Point
Pleasant's City Cotmcil during a regular
meeting Monday evening, when
Councilman Tom Sauer asked thst of·
ficlals make some kind of communication with the treed Prisoner of
War, who was among POWs flown from
Hanoi to the Philippines early Monday
on the lint leg of their relun! home.
Councilman Bill Wellmsn suggested
thst this he sent in the form of a
telegram Ill a directive to Mayor John
Musgrave, and it was . Councilman
Leonard 'Riffle's idea that the city be
open to r~iving him.
Six other councilmen, Wallace Smith
Jr., Howard Lee Miller, Harry Rhodes,
Delvin Simms, Jack Fowler, and
Russell Holland, along with Mayor
Musgrave and Pstty Burdette, City
Clerk, all held the same views when they
declared "We feel he is a home town

veteran interlocutor

a

' Seminar about

SE Ohio set

Ann in his solo, "Try to
Remember", while Joe Oths,
attorney, will sing "Hello
Dolly." Lurry Kibler, FrickGallagher Mfg . Co. executive,
will sing "Goody-Goody",
while Jim Fox, another Frick·
Gallagher associate, will be
featured in "Rock-A-Bye Your
Baby With a Dixie Melody."
Another Rotarian , LarrY.
Potter, First National Bank
executive, will sing "Margie."
The cast of 70 ·(lOlrsons is
rehearsing three nights weekly
In .the Rotarl;-Teen Town
building . .
Tickets for the Rotary
minstrel may be purchased
from any Wellston Rotarian, at
Ward's Drugs, or at the WHS
box office. Reserved seat
tickets may be o~tained at the
box office or at Ward's Drugs.
This year's show has been
termed the "Anniversary
Minstre" since it is not only the
20th Rotary show, but it falls in
Wellston's Centennial year ,
and also marks the 50th an·
niversary of the founding of the
"Wellston Rotary Club.
In addi lion to his duties as
interlocutor, Gaskill is codirector of the ·minstrel circle
along with Carl Dahlberg while
Dr . Paul Essman is olio
director, and Mrs . Helen
oownard is musical director.
Fox and John Weber are co.
producers this year.

115 W. Main ·

4 lb.

land
res i,Ju ti •~n. ~· hith must b~ in.
the hands r,f Secre!Jir)' r,f State
Ted IV. Br&lt;own by Feb·. 22 fr,r
. preparati•m f&lt;1r the :V!ay 8

to 16

First

Main at Sycamore. Pom&amp;roy

8 Ribs

tJC:tJl.rJt , Wet:'&gt; sent , ttJ Ct
r; t, flllld lt N :.

whi ~ h

J ll J HII~rjj~ tf: f/lf.:f.! ti n~,o; ,

SU ~)~

pl(tn nf.: d
.

SHOES

Main St. '. POMEROY
'

~reat e a wh.ole new look . Have your diamond mounted
m a. sensa.ttonal new settin g fr om our collection of

eamngs, pm~. pendants and r in~s . We promise quality
craftsmansh tp at a moderate pnce.

SEWING BOOK

s

Always do what tS hones! and latr tor every
customer

THIS WEEK GET CHAPTER

4 lb.
pkg,

7 p.m _ F 'd

··

11 an adverttsed specml ts e11P.r sold out ask ltle
Manager lor c. Aatn cneck 11 enttlles you to th e
. same tlem at !he same spe w) l pnce tne tot.
lowing week Or tl yOl' wt sh we'll q tve you a
COmPa rab le tlem .lt the S:llme S~H!CtB I pr tCe .

or

Fall
Shank
Half

GUARANTEE;
A&amp;P offer s an J.lncondtlto na l monev-buck 90tH
antee No mt~ttter wnat. 11 15 no man~r wno
makes tl tl A&amp;P sells tl A&amp;P guaran tees tl

Iee

"Super-

Right"

rt

'12·gal.

12 Price

.Sale

4 lb.

Pure

350
pkg.

Bulk

Frozen

Chi~ken
10

Heat &amp; Eat

pes.

Fried

lb.1gg

Folger's
2
Maxwell House
Chase &amp; Sanborn

EGGS ·

Puss &amp; Boots
ALL FLAVORS

sm·au Size.

10' can
.
~·

3

doz.

i149

1''

MILK

aat1.15
BREAD ..
SIVL 100

BANANAS___________~_, oc
{
•

lb.

pkg.

$169

en.~uw,.._~.,

2

A&amp;P

BRAND

ctn.

~IW&amp; $100

~

lb.

9¢

bag ~ .

WHIPPED MARGARINE

~~
1·1b. 49~
bowl

WITH THIS COUPON ON

avs 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.- Satur-

COFFEE

CAT FOOD

2

s ••.

Pomeroy

PORK SAUSAGE

375

Maxwell House
10 oz. . 1.79

Inside Personality"
'Only 33c At A&amp;P WEP

RAINCHECK:

, ....... u.......... "' .... ....u.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

Instant Nescafe

·FOR THE FAMILY

Cha·pman's

Do something beautiful for your diamond

PORK CHOPS

lOLA'S

Save to 1h off &amp; More

THE COMPLETE FAMILY

M ~ 12W
R I NG SE TTINCI

2.50

pkg.

1

a ~r icultur~l

Boneless

R ING SETTI NG
M O.J!I
RING SETl iNG

GROUND BEEF

1

SHOES

. ''SUPER-RIGHT"' QUALITY

w....,., ,.,.~loiltl

VJ•gal.

ctn.

All Polyester

PRICES WHACKED!
aoseout Lots

Athens 60 Logan 51
Sheridan 91 Crooksville 62
Meigs 79 Wellston · 42
Waverly 77 Ironton 43
Gallipolis 96 Jackson 52
Buckeye Valley 63 Marion
Catholic 41

. MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Open . Daily 9 to 9

M ~2l t

Thurs. 9 a.m. to
days 9 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.

BUDGET
DRESSES
SlQ

Cage Scores

Price• Good Tltru s.turcfay F.brvery 17-th, In

CHERRY MARSHMALLOW

Open Mon. -

New Spring

den!l•1pnn~ n,t.

The

Northup was discharged from the U.S.
Air Force in 1967 as a Sergeant. He
received a B. S. Degree In Chemistry
from Rio Gande College in 1969.
In 1969, Northup was employed at
Sporn Plant as a Chemist and served in
that position unW his recent promotion.

New endmen to harass

Ag Professor opposing

COLUMBUS rUPl i - A st i tut i on~l amendment.
furmer emplo)'e of the United
Stocker took issue with the
States
Department
of Hr,use-passed plan to change
Agricullure ' USDA• testified the Ohio Constitution to
toda)' against a proposed calculate farmers· propert)'
constitutional amendment taxes r,n the productivity of
which wouldgil·e farmers a tax . their land rather than its
break when they figure ' the protential value as an .1~:
\·alue of their real estate.
restment.
Frederick .D. Stocker, form.
Str1cker said similar
er director ad research and. prwisi&lt;,ns in California have
taxation ll'ith the USDA and ~Jir,wed railroads and lwnber
currently a pr&lt;.ofessor at Ohio and rAJ cr,mp~nies to escape
State Unil·ersity, testified hi~h taxation by h•,ldin~ hu~e
before the Senate Wa)'S and tracts &lt;of land under
MeMns Commtuee. which Is agricultur~J prroductir;n. !.liter,
studyin~ the prr,pt,sed cr.n. S:r.r;ker explained. the firrr•s

-

A- native of Gall!a County, Ohio,

ATHENS - Residents of
Athens and surrounding
counties may learn about the
history of southeastern Ohio at
a seminar beginning at Ohio
University on March 1.
The program, consisting of
six evening meetings, will
feature faculty members
sharing the results of their
research and study relating to
the "People, Places and Past
of Southeastern Ohio." In
addition to a general introduction to the history of the
area, the seminar will cover
such subjects as immigration
routes, settlement patterns,
architecture, language and
Indian trails.
The seminar is designed to
generate a greater regional
consciousness among the
residents of the area. Further
information· may be obtained
by writing to the Workshops
Office
or calling 594-1907.
·

crmrert the land to industrial
use and avoided the taxes.
St&lt;.oeker suggested that Ohio
adopt a system whereby farmers may defer a portion of
rea·! estate taxes while their
. land is in agricultural
pr r,ducti ••n. . bu t
make
pa)'men~s if the land is ever
fr, r
crommercial
s••ld

Northup is married and has two so~.
The famlly resides ..in GsiUpolls, Ohio.
Ryan was· born in Ma!IOn County,
W.Va. and completed his schooling at
Wahama High school in Mason. He was
discharged from the U. S. Army In 1948.
In December of .1~ Ryan was employed at Sporn Plant as a Laborer. He
moved into the Maintenance Depm:t.
ment in l9S1 as a Helper. He advan~
through the ranks unW he was
promoted to Master Maintenance Man
In 1968. This is where he ~~erved until his
recent promotion.
Mason, W.Va. !a the home of Ryan and
his family. He is married and has three
sons and one daughter.

Two veteran ell)llloyes at the Philip
Sporn Plant In New ·Haven have been
promoted to new positions.
Edward A. Ryan, a master maintenance man was promoted to main'lenance foreman and Richard E.
Northup has been promoted from
chemist to Performance Engineer, Sr.

Major Lockhart graduated from Point
Pleasant High School and following this
the family moved to Springfield, Ohio
where his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hayden
Lockhart, Sr. reside ai1S15 North Plum
Street.

ATHENS- Assistance to
smokers serious about trying
to break their smoking habits
will be offered in the Smokers
Withdrawal Clinic scheduled
for Feb. 26 to March I at Ohio
Universi ty.
Variations of the method of
smoking reduction which was
the most successful of all
methods tried at last year's
clinic will be used . Each
participant will be expected to
devote one hour of his time for
four consecutive nights to a
formal withd.rawal program.
Detailed procedures will be
CAROLYN MANUEL
explained at the first meeting.
Miss Carolyn Manuel, 21,
Faculty members and daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
graduate students from the Charles R. Manuel, Rt. 2,
Psychology Dept. will conduct Racine, Is presently engaged
the clinic in cooperation with in student teaching In
the Office of Workshops, Washington Elementary
Co nferences and lnstitue s. School, Gallipolis. Miss
Registration information may ' Manuel. is a senior at Rio
be obtained by calling the Grande College where she Is
workshops office at 594-4907. majoring In elementary
education. She Is a 1969
graduate ol Southern Local
VISIT ENDED
School. · Her
Mrs . Marie Steiner of High
Middleport has returned home cooperating teacher Is Mrs.
from a six weeks stay in Belly Kyger, third grade
Warren with her son, Mr. and instructor.
made payable to troop to which Mrs . Earl Steiner and family.
Mr. Steiner underwent major weeks before returning to his
the scout belongs.
·
surgery in January and was employment. Mrs. Steiner also
returned home from the visited in Cleveland with her
hospital Saturday. He will be srm, Ray, and his family .
recuperating at home several

tax break on farm land

2 ·Promoted At Sporn

boy".

WELLSTON - Charles N.
Gaskill, Wellston funeral
director and coroner of
Jackson county, will be in·
terlocutor for . the 19th time
when the Wellston Rotary Club
presents its 20th annual
minstrel show at Wellston high
school auditorium March 9-10.
Gaskill will be harassed by
new set of endmen this year.
They are LeRoy Hutchison,
Jim Fox, Larry Kibler and Joe
Oths. Hutchison, Wellston
Kroger manager, will be
assisted by his daughter Lee

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

EDWARD A. RYAN

RICHARD E•.NOR11IUP

With
This

INSTANT COFFEE

CUT INTO

Maxwell House

I

I

I

3 !. $2
• .~ggc
Breck
Dial Deodorant Spray .•~::ggc

COFFEE

Maxwell House •

I

85

Good Thru Sot., Fob. 17th.
At All A&amp;P WEO Store• - Colo. Dl•.

Blue Bonnet • •

Good Thru Sot .. Fob. 17th.
At All A&amp;P WEO Stor11- Colo. Di•.

I

I

I

Maxwell House
Maxwell House

"

n- L&amp; ~~~

'3 ,.... u7-

Coupttt

e-1 Thru Sot., Fob. IT. At
AU A., WiO Sto.-colo. Olv
UMif OHI COUI'ON

Scott VIva
llapklns

3 SCJc w·~

pllp..,
n:i.
Ul
Coupon
·Good Thru Sot., Fob. 17. At
All A&amp;P WEO Storot-Colt. Dlv

LIMIT ONE

I

•

I

I

I

~sg~

SHORTENING

ANTI·PERSPIRANT

IIHJ Cracker, ~uc
Pie Crist Mix

I

COFFEE

I

Friskiea Dog Food ~~~L~~ ••• • • ·~·17'
' cat Food ,LAvon
ALL
Friskiea
• • • • • • ·····17'
Frlskies Dinners .. , . . . • 25 :; 12.99
Great Grape Hawaiian Punch ...0::· 33'
KHbler Rich 'n Chips .••• •• . .'~'61c
Pepsi Cola
8 16 or. Bottles 69'

l·lb.

I

COFFEE

Limit One Cou1pon

SHAM,OO

I

,.,,37c

STICK WHIPPEO MARGARINE

Pork Chops and Roasts

Coupon

Crisce
With
This

With
This

Coupon

Coupon

Good Thru Sot.,. Fob. 17th.
At All AlP WEO StorH - Colo. Dlv,

Wheatlas
Cereal

'u-os. 29C
Pkl·

With
Thio
Coupon

Goad Thru S•t ... Fob. 17. At

Nl AlP 'wto Storoo-Cols. Div .

At

011

s::· 6~
'

With
Thlo

Coupon

Good Thru Sot.,. Fob. 17. At
!Ill "" WEO Stores-Colo. Oiv,

p (.

2Sc

Wit~
Tb!l

$£1c.
pan .
.

Coupon

Goo·d Thru Sat.. Fob. ;l; At
A&amp;P WEO Stor.s-Cols. Oi.,.

ONE

•

I

=:

Good Th!U Sot .. Fob. 17th.
All A&amp;P WEO Slor11 -Colo. Div.

~k

I

Aunt Jemima Pancake Mix ...~ ·. ~~' . 46' :
Ocean Spray Cranberry Juice . . '~~~·55'
La Choy Beef Chow Mein ,l~K "~·~ 11.05
La Choy Chow Mein Noodles .. 'li:'37c
La Choy Chop Suey Vegetables . ;:· 63'
Jell-0 Instant Pudding ·
I

Sunnyfleld
Quick Oats

Crisco

I

tlkL

pkf.

79'

With
This
Coupon

Good ThiU S1t., Fob. 17. At
I A&amp;P WEO Stort~-Cah. Div ·
LIMIT ONE

Carnation

Mix~:..

lt-oa.

pkr.

59' eo'.,.."'•
With

Good Th&gt;u Sot.. Fob. 17. At
All A&amp;P WEO Sloroo-C~I1. Dl•
LIMIT ONl

�' • t r • ... • r r ,-I'~ · ' ·,

11

•

10 - The Daily Sentinei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 14,1VI3

·

·

·

Sentinel Cl~.JSsifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
PUBLIC NOTICES
Your Right to Know

DEAO~INES I

.

January 2:6, 1973
Contract Sale1 Legal Copy
No. 73·44

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

·

CARD OF THANKS . ' '
&amp; OBITUARY
.
SUO tot 50 word mlnlm~m .
Ea ch ctddlflonal word 2c .
• BLIND ADS
Addit ional 25c Charge ·· per

Advertisement

Sealed proposals wil l be
OFFIC.E HOURS
received at the office of the
1:30 a.m. to 5:00p .m . Daily,
Director of the Ohio Depart . 8 : 30 a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon l ·
ment
of
Transportat ion, Saturdav
Columbus, Ohio, until 10 :00 1
A .M ., Eastern _Standard Ti me,
Thursday. February 2:Z, 1973,

Card of Thanks

for Improvements In :

OF
QUAliTY
1968 NOVA 55 CPE.

1969 CHEV. BIS. 4 DR., ';

In Meigs county ; state
Routes 7, 26, lAS, 255, 260, 379,

all of our many friends.
Wife. Marie, sons, Bob and

692

536, 537, 556, 565, 724, 800 In

Monroe county ; State Routes

37, 60, 76, 78, 266. ·284, 329, 339",
376, 377, 555 , 669 , 676, 792 In

Morgan County ; State Routes

76, 78. 145, 146, 147, 26o. 285, 313,
339, 340, 513. 564, 565, 566, 574,

670, 724, 821 in Noble County : U.
s. Route 50, State Routes 56 , 93 ,
12~ . 160, 278, 32 .. , 328, 328, 3.. 9.

356, 671, 677. 683, 689 In VInton

County ;

u. s.

Route 50A, State

Routes 7, 26, 60. 76, 124, 145, 260,
339, 530, 555, 676, 792, 821 In

Washington County , by her.
blcldal spraying· for weed and
brush control.
Work Length - 1,416.12 miles

Clarence

f'j)MEROY, OHIO

. in the blddlng proposal."
Each bidder shafl be required

lo file with hIs bid

(

1

certified

check tor an amount equal to
live per cent of hi I bid, but In no
event more than ten thousand
dollars. or 1 bond for ten per
c:enl of hl1 bid, payable to the
·
Director .
Bidders must apply, on the
proper forms, for qualification
at least ten days prior to the
date set for opening bids In
accordance with Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code.
Pions and specifications are
on file In the Department of
Transpottatlon and the office of
the District Deputy Director .
The Director reserves the
r ight to re(ect any and all bids .
J . PHILLIP R ICHLEY
Rev . 9 -29 -72

DIRECTOR

( :2} 7, 14, 21
PUB~IC

NOTICE

The
Southeast
Ohio
Emergencv Medical Service ,
Inc . located at 25 West
Washington Street. Athens
Ohio -i5701 , desires to recelv~
sealed proposals for insuring

. ambulances.

equipment,

prem lse and malpractice
liability Insurance, rad i o
towers, life, and hospitalization
Insurance .
Specifications and other In ·
formation pertaining to and
insurance bidding may be
. secured by writing to :
Richard
Abel ,
Finance
Director
Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Service

P. 0 . Box 927

25 W. Wnhlngton Street

Athens , Ohio ~5701
Proposal&amp; shall be presented
to the Finance Director on or
before ~ : 00 P.M ., March B, 1973.
At . the specified time ,
pl"opos11s will be opened and
read aloud . Any person haVIng
submitted a bid may attend . It
Is not contemplated that an
Immediate decision shall be
rendered · concerning
the
proposal submitted until all bids
have been tabulated and
.
studied .

park; phone 992·5443.
_ __ _ _ _ __:_:
1·7-lfc

Help Wanted

COUNTRY music , Saturday
night, 9 till 2 at Jack's Club.
2-14-3lp

sober ; weekly wages; free

Insurance and other fringe
benefits; modern house
furnished; write American
Culvert Co.. 201 Wheeling
Ave .. Cambridge. Ohio.
2-13-6tc

Pro standings

••HElL"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING .

NHL Standings
Furnace Controls
By United Press International
East
HUMIDIFIERS
w. I. t. pts gf ga
Monlreal 36 7 13 85 230 123
Hot Water Heaters·
N.Y. Rngrs
Plumbing
38 13 5 81 226 132
Electrical Work
Boston . 35 16 s 75 238 171
Delrolf 29 20 7 65 188 171
Butlalo 28 20 8 "64 196 157
I
Toronto 18 30 7 43 169 187
Vancouvr IS 36 7 37 165 255
N.Y. lslndrs
. 746 5 19 Ill 270
West
992-2448
w. 1. I. pis gf ga
Pomeroy, 0.
Chicago 33 17 6 72 215 161
Phlla
26 23 9 61 209, 203
Minns Ia 25 23 8 58 174 164 LOSE wel~ht with "New Shape
Tablets, ' 10 day supply only
Sl. Louis 24 22 10 58 169 172
$1.49 at Ne lson Drug,
Atlanta 23 26 9 55 152 164
Pomeroy and Dutton Drug,
LosAng 23 28 7 53 171 191
Middleport.
Pitlsbgh 22 28 6 so 186 191
2-14·31c
Ca lli
9 36 12 30 152 243
Tuesday's Results
_K_O_S-CO
_T
_ K-OS_M
_E
_T
_I_C_S_&amp;_W
_IGS.
Philadelphia 8 NY Islanders 2
SPECIALS
MONTHLY
.
Boston 7 Vancouver 3
St. Louis 4 Los Angeles 2
PHONE HELEN JANE
(only games scheduled)
BROWN, MIDDLEPORT.
Wednesday's Games
OHIO 992-5113. ·
NY Rangers al Montreal
12-3-lfc
Butlalo at Toronto
-- - - - - - -NY Islanders at Chicago
Detroit at Los Angeles
Vancouver at Pittsburgh
St. Louis at Minnesota
Atlanta at California
!only games scheduled)
Whispering Pines

. ARNOLD
BROTHERS

DANCE

WHA Standings
Night Club
By United Press International
East
Friday &amp; Saturday
w. I. t. pis gf ga
Night
Cleve
35 20 2 72 ·212 165
New Eng 32 24 2 66 237 196
10 Til2
All bids submitted shall be New York 27 32 1 55 238 250
valid for a period ot at least 30 Quebec
24 27 4 52 196 217
Music By
days from the date of proposal. Phlla
25 31 0 SO 204 237
Changes s11a11 be allowed after ottawa
21 33 4 46 204 246
The Mavericks
bid openings only If arising
West
from
changes
made
In
w. I. t. pis gf ga
published fire rates .
Ttle Soutlleast Ohio Medical Winnipeg 33 23 3 69 215 183
Service. In c. reserves the right Houston 28 24 4 60 213 203 ln·Memory
to accept or re ject any bids.
Alberta 28 26 2 58 198 189 IN LOVING memory of our
Richard Abel , Minns Ia 27 28 3 57 187 205
dear brother, Leonard (Buck)
Finan ce Director Los Ang 26 21 4 56 195 197
Icenhower, who passed away
Southeast Ohio
two years ago, February 13,
Chicago
22
33
I
45
183
204
Medical Service . Inc .
1971 ; Dearest Brother: you
Tu11day' s Results
didn't have lime to say ·
(21 14, II
Philadelphia 5 New England 4
goodbye to us, because the
Alberta 5 Houston 3
end was so sudden . Although
Chicago 6 Los Angeles 1
we know you had your fallh in
(only
games
scheduled!
NOTICE OF
God,
but It Is so lonely, Buck,
Wednesday's
Games
APPOINTMENT
without you . When we visit
Case No. 20,141 Cleveland al Philadelphia
your home, there Is a vacant
ESiate
ol
GENEVIEVE Ottawa at Quebec
STOBART. Deceased .
chair, wllh no kind, loving
(only games scheduled)
Notice Is hereby given that
smile to greet us . That Is
NBA Standings .
Eldon Weeks , of Pomeroy ,
something we just can ' t
Ohio , has been duly appointed
By United Pross lnltrnational
forget. Sadly missed by
EKecutor of the Estate of
Elsltrn Conference
sister,
Helen Jeffers and
Genev i eve Stobart. · deceased ,
Atlantic Division
family;
late ol Melos County , Ohio .
w. I. pet. g.b.
2·14-llp
Creditors are requ ired to file
46 12 .793
tt'lelr clai'm s with sa id fiduciary Boston
New York
46 ' 15 .754 l'h
with in four months .
18 41 .305 281J,
Daled lhl s 29th day of Buffalo
Tuesday's College Basketball
January 1973.
·
Phil a
4 58 .065 44
Resulls
Manning D. Webster
Central Division
Judge
w.
1. pet. g.b. By United Press International
Court of Common Pleas, Baltimore
East
37 20 .649
Probate Div ision
N.H.
61
Curry
58
Atlanta
34 28 .548 51J• Gordan 86 Suffolk
(II 31 (21 7, 14, 31
81 ot
Houston
23 37 .383 15'h
Coli.
94
Wrcslr
Poly 84
Trin
ity
Cleveland
21 38 .356 17
Adelphi 79 Stony Brook 73
Western Conference
Spgfld 73 Westtleid St. 63
.
Midwest Division
84 Ar my 61
w. I. pet. g.b. Rutgers
Bullaio St. 76 Geneseo St. 69
Milwaukee
42 18 .700
LeMoyne 72 Ithaca 71
Chicago
35 23 .603 6
Salem 83 W.Va . Tech 68
KC- Oma~a
31 33 .484 13
ABA Standings
Detroit
26 33 .441 15'h Allegheny 81 Bethany 65
Harvard 72 Dartmouth 68
By United Preos International
Pacific Division
Mass.
U. 65
East
w. I. pet. g.b. Del. St.8567Boston
W· I· Pet· g. b· Los Angeles 46
Bowie St. 64
13 .780
Carolina
44 l8 .710
Golden State 37 22 .627 9 .
39 22 .639 4'1' Phoenix
Kentucky
South
28 30 .483 18'h
1
2
VIrginia
N.C.
St.
105
E.
Carolina 70
32 30 .516
Seattle
~ 19 43 .306 28
New York
Ky
.
St.
73
Un
ion
(Ky .! 72
~~ ~~ .367 21
Portland
15 44 .254 31
Memphis
Duke 90 Va. 66
·333 23
'
Tuesday's Results
Canlslus 64 Catholi c 59
West
Mliwauk·ee 110 Detroit 96
Richmond 78 W.Va . 75
w. 1· pet. g.b. Boston 105 Chicago 101
Utah
36 23 .623
Golden State 103 Cleveland 90
Midwest
lnalana
36 26 .581 211, KC Om
Denver
.SI7
1J,
•
aha 132 Houston fiB
Marquette
31
93
No. Ill. 8Q
29
6
Dallas
Los Angeles 101 Seattle 98
37 373 15
22
Huntington
94
St. Francis 75
San Dao
Portland 120 Buffalo 100
20 41 ·328 18
Kan . 51. 67 Kan . 66
Wtdnesdoy's Results
- (only games scheduled!
Otterbein 84 Mount Union 79
.. _
Wednesday's Games
Wittenberg SA Heidelberg 47
momphls 95 New York 93
Chicago at New York
Oberlin
67 Kenyon 61
Kentucky 110 San Diego 103
Milwaukee at Philadelphia
Boslon vs. KC-Omaha al Capital 58 Muskingum 46
(only games scheduled!
Western Mich. 92 Loyola·Ch i. 60
Thurm.v's G1mes
Om h
New York at Utah .
a a
Baltimore at Seattle
Kentucky al Denver
Southwest
Buffalo at Phoenix
SMU 19 Rice 66
Indiana at Mamphis
(on,ly games scheduled!
Ark. 86 Tex as 7A
(only gamn scheduled)

Pro Standings .

I

992-7161

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

Middleport.

and railing. A. Jacob, sales

o.

OHIO

PALLET CO. ·,

Open Saturdays
from 8 a.m. to 3:30p.m.
On Old Rt. 33

Phone 992-2689
Pomeroy, Ohio

Wanted To Buy
2·1J.6tc
_:__:

CHAIN saw, nearly new, ex -

cellent buy, 446-4850 or 992-

7777 , Larry Evans , larry's
Mobile Home, Pomeroy.

2-9-lf

- - -- - - -

OLD furnitur e , oak tables,
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
beds or complete households.

------

SNARE drum ; phone 742 -4714.
2·13-3tc

For Rent
··,·RAILER , Brown ' s Trailer

Park ; phone 992 -3324.
_ _ _ __ _ _ _ _2_·
13-tfc

The Sewing Center , Mid dleport, Oh io.
11 -16-tlc

WILL trim or C!Jt trees, clean
oul basements, attics, etc .

SM]TH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
.
991-2174
Pomeroy
KITCHEN &amp;SON
CONSTRUCTION
HOME BUILDING
&amp;

REMODELING

BOB SLOAN .
&amp;

C. L. KITCHEN

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets
36"x23"x.009

1·25-301p

The
Daily Sentinel
Court Sl

Pomeroy

1967 JEEP Wagoneer - 4 dr.
S.W. 4 wh . dr ., auto .• 327 VB,
--:-----~,_..;,2·--11 -tfc air P.S. till, _ P.B., bucket
NICE 8 x 351ralier with llpout ; seats, 33.000 just overhauled,
Ideal for a couple; 10 miles new paint, shocks, tires, wh
north of Pomeroy ; call 992- $1,000 Sell $1 ,300 firm . 446-4850
or 992-7777 Larry Evans,
7479.
Home,
2-9-tlc Larry 's Mobile
Pomeroy.
2-9-11
2 BEDROOM mobile home; -- - - -- - - compl et ely furnished ; call AKC Registered Basset Hound;
. 992-2441 after 5:30p .m.
6 months old ; female ; call
2-7-lfc
992-5510.
2-9·6tc
phone 992-6329.

- - -- - - -

UNFURNISHED 3-room Sti'JGER automatic sewing
apartment. adults only. No machine ; like new In walnut
pets, 408 Spring Ave . , cabinet . Makes design slit..
Pomeroy .

1-7-lfc

- ------

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
apartments .

____:
4·12-lfc

For Sale
7 MONTH old trailer 14 x 70,
unfurnished, fully carpeted.
Phone 992-7649 after s p.m.
2-4-, 12tc
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:_
~

sewing

machine. This ma c hine
darns, embroideries , over -

casts, buttonholes ali without
attachments, just dial and
sew. Pay balance of $39.20 or
pay $5 per month , 992-5331.
2-9-61t

-----(3) NEW 1972 Zig-Zag Sewing
Machines In qrlglnal factory
carton . Zig -Zag to make
buttonholes, sew on butt.ons,
monograms and make fancy

designs with justthe twist ola
single-dial. Left In layaway
and never been used. Will sell
far on ly $47 cash, or terms
available. Electro Hygiene
Co. Phone 992-7755.
2-14-6tc

-----(3) ELECTROLUX Vacuum

Cleaners complete with attachments. cordwlnder and
paint spray. Used but In like
new condition. Pay $34.45
cash or budget plan a vailable.
Electro Hygiene Co. Phone
992-7755.
2·1Htc

110 Mechanic Street
Pom~roy, o'hio

OIL AND GAS Service, new and
hour service ; phone 843·2833.

far $1.00

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?

Lost

your

operator's license? Call 9922966.

'

6-15-tft
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The F~bric Shop, Pomeroy.
Aulhomed Singer Sales and
Service . We Sharpen Sc:lssors .

- - - - , -- ---=3..:
·29 -tlt

S'IITIS~Y

YOVR NEEDS

Mobile Homes For Sale
1969 60xl2 2 BEDROOM Schull
Mobile Home; phone 367-7673.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __:2_::·
1J.tlc
1968

WINDSOR ,

bedroom,

with

12x60, . 2
or

without

furn iture; phone 992-3511.
_ _ __ _ _ __:2~
- 11 -lfc
12 x 60, 1971 ACADEMY 3
bedroom ; t ip-out, alr, washer

and dryer; phone 742-3280
after 6 p.m.
12-11-llt

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

Ail are gas healed, each with
a bath and nice kitchen .
Located about one block
from court house, for 1ust

m.500.oo.
1
NEW LISTING
SMALL RESTAURANT In a prime location, doing a
good business. A good OP·

cellar, 2l ~W.:J. 112 acre of

land . Only $3,800.00.
.
MIDDLEPORT
3 BEDROOMS - Ni ~e bath.
new wall to wall carpeting,
neal kitchen , utillly room
and cellar.. Level lot. 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 natural gas forced air
furnace, central

air

con -

CASH paid for all makes and ' ditioning, and pl e nty of
models of mobile homes . parking.
$~5 . Call · Ravenswood, 273Phone area code 614·423-9531.
ANTIQUE BRICK
9521 or 273-9893.
4-13-lft
LOVELY
OLDER HOME 1·11 -tfc
Living about 16x36 teet, 4
- - - - - - - -- large bedrooms wllh closets,
L~6~STfence posts; phone 985..-.Air Conditioners
foyer with open stairway,
large basement, porches, 5
2-ll ·JOtc
·Awnings _
car
garage. 2 acres with
·cOAL. Limestone, Excelsior
:··Underpinni.n_g
barn . Asking just $21 .500.00.
Sail Work,s, E. Malh St.; · '11
·
NEW HOME
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891 .
' \.amp e e mQbile hQrr / · A BEDROOMS - All have
4 -12-lfc ;service - plus glgantlc' l ·
closets, 1112 baths, large
- - -- - -- - &lt;lisplay of mobile homes
beautiful kitchen, utility. All
. ~lways avallabfe ,at ...
electric
home. gar&lt;~ge , large
Pets
Sale
lot. Only $21 ,000.00.
PARKVIEW Kennels going out -, •
"· · ·
·
NEW LISTING
·ot business. Big price • MOBILE HOMES
MIDDLEPORT
- Large A
reduction on all dogs. All AK- .
bedroom home, 2 modern
C. 592 .Broadway &amp; Ash
1220 Washington Blvd.
423·7521
baths, gas forced · air furStreets, Middleport, Ohio.
BELPRE, 0 .
12-13-tk . ~__ _ __ _ _ __jJ
nace . Large foyer with open
-----~
stairs,· large front and a
small back porch. Garage,
Real EState For Sale
For Sale or Trade
ali on a corner lot. Asking
70,000 BTU Siegler fuel oil HOUSE FOR- SAL E, iu Br ick $21.900.00 .
heater ; used SlJ2 months ; for -'· Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; br ick
sale or would consider trade
house , 3 bedrooms, excellent Now Is the time to buy that
for something of equal value;
location, close to school and
house that you have been
phone 992-7124.
city; contact Lou Osborne or • looking at so long. Should II
r.all 992·5898.
2-11 -61p
be one of ours, see us for
11 -26-tlc financing . We ~ave a bunch.
- -- -- - - HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Auto Sales
'House fii-L.ori9 Bottom. phon e
ASSOCIATE
985-3529.
.
SHARP
' 69
Plymouth
NO SUN DAY SHOWINGS
Roadrunner .
Two
dear - - -- - - ---=
6---11-tlt
992-3325
hardtop , 383 automatic ,
bright orange with black vinyl
top, $1425. Phone 985-3582 or

For.

MILLER

.

I GET 114E IMPRESSION
~OU OON'T COMRREHEHD

Stop In and See
_Floor Display.

.

v

J
"ll:)U

I Ai.WA'IG LIKE 10 ,
TALK 10 ATfORNEYS
IN lllEIR OWN

WHAT A~E
DOiNG, CADET
HARPER 1

JUST BECAUSE I
NeED SOME! HE~P WITH
IIIV TAKE·AWA~S.i

ANAL'/r!C GEOMET'~Y
4N~ CALCIJLUS D.

FURNITURE

l.ANGUPGE!

Our

Have your home built by
Custom Builders. Our
carpenters have 20 years
uperience in building
homes in Meigs County.
·

ALL WEATHER
ROOFING AND
CONSTRUCfiON
PHONE~ . 992-2550i
EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
and small ; Backhoes and
Loaders on track and tires;
Dump trucks .- Lo-boy
Se rvice ; Septic tanks in !Bill)
stalled ; George
Pull ins; phone 992-2478.
2-9-tfc

- " - - - - --

HARRISON'S TV Service and
Serv ice Call s; phone 992-2522.
2-9-tfc

WINNIE
IT DIDN'T DAWN ON liE ~AT
OUR ~'IE5 C05r HAL
PRACTICALLY NOTHING-.
I REA~~y ENJOYED
JUST I!IEIN6 WITH
HIM!

AS ..OU KNON..Lt'AL MARTINS
HAS 8EEN IN TOWN fOR
A WEI:K. HE'S DATED
liE EVERY DAY AND

WE)/E HAD LOAD$
OF RJN .

AFTER TH' MEAL HE
HAD, HI! WAKIM' UP
MAV TAKE AWHILE,

G &amp; E Arpllance Repair, repair
on al laundry equipment,
refrigerat ion equipment and
house wiring; welding ,
electric and gas. Call 99:i·3802
or after 4:30 p.m. c&amp;ll 9926050.
2-5-JOtp

VOUA HIGHNESS!

GASOUNE AILEY
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC.
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
SANITATtON, STEWART,
OH 10. PHONE 662-3035.
10·A·IIC,

--:---:----

Real

EState For Sale

HaPPLl fiftu-seconcl
bil'thdau, Mr. Wallet!

•Slim,
there's
rlOWCII.j

c~d
lock

~our~ elf

IF IT ~T lb'&gt;ITNa~ T\Tiu..ATS

in thl6

portunity for someone who

wants on their own. All
equipment, and furnishings
needed to run a restaurant
for only $5,000.00.
NEW LISTING
COR NE .R LOT Near
school. 2 bedroom home,
nice bath, paneling, utility
building, and garage. Want
only $7.500.00.
NEW LI&lt;TING
4 ROO~';N t\1 porches,

ARE ~OU SURE!

YOU BEJ,.ONG I"' '!'HiS
CLASS, MISS
.S tZEMO~E~

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, dll·
ching service ; top soil, 1111
dlrl, limestone; B&amp;K Ex·
cavating. Phone 992 -5367,
Dick Karr, Jr.
9-1-tft

Virgil B. ·

modern home. with one
apartment in the basement.

siding and remodeling, 24

and

------

2+ 3otc
used furnaces, new aluminum

20c
a

Real Estate For Sale

NEW LISTING
INVESTMENT - 5 apartments. One a good 3 bedroom

Phone 949-3221.

5 ROOMS and bath in Racine ;

zag

makes. Reasonable rates.

Modern

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
Write M. D. Miller. Rt. 4, ,
MANY
USES
Pomeroy, Oillo. Phone 9926271.
1-7-Ift

zig

H-tlc
MilS=I'lines ... service on all

CATTLE , 446-3792,

DELUXE

Johnson and Son, Inc.

SEPTIC TANKS CLiiANED
Walnut style stereo, radio, REASONABLE rates . Ph. 446·
4782. Gallipolis, John RusselL
AM-FM, 4 speaker sound
Owner &amp; operator.
system , 4 speed automatic
5-12-fl,
changer . Ba lance $69.72. Use
our budget terms . Call 992C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
7085.
Complete Service
2-8-61t
Phone 949-3821
Racine. Oh io
Crill Bradford
STEREOS Track. repossessed,
looks like new. 4 speaker
5-1-Ift
audio system In walnut - - - - - -console, take over payments PLUMBING work done ; phone
of SUO per week or pay
985·4265.
balance of $89 .50. 992-5331.
2-ll-30k
2·9·6fC
CONTEMPORARY

_TO

_____

free :·

' Nathan Biggs '
Specialist___

Radla_t~r

2-13-3tc
992-5653
.
- - -- - - - - WILL 00 remodeling , interior
NIGHT Club on new Rt . 7 and . and exterior painting, con· L---...,,...-----~
Junction Rt. 143.
crete work by hour or conEXCAVATING, dozer, loader
tract ; phone 992-3511.
2-13-51p
and backhoe work; septic
2-6-12tc
tanks installed ; dump trucks
COLONIAL, Earlr American - - - - -and
lo-boys lor hire; will haul
CONCRETE
style, maple, s ereo -radlo, READY -MIX
fill
dirt,
top soil, limestone
de l ivered right to 'fOUr
AM-FM 4 speed, automatic
and gravel; call Bob or Roger
project.
Fasl
and
easy.
Free
,changer, 4 speaker system .
Jeffers, day phone 992-7069 ;
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Balance $76.34 . Use our
night phone 992-3525 or 992Goeg
leln
Ready-Mix
Co
..
budget terms. Call 992-7065.
5232.
·
Middleport, Ohio.
2·8-6lc
2-11 -lfc
6-30.tft

DELIVERED

Phone 992-5434.

For

estimates, phone Charles
Lisle , Syracuse, V. V,

E LNA and. While s 'ewlng

742 ~ 4714.

$7.00 Per Ton

unfurnished

representative.

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

1966 BANNER camper, sell·
contained , 15 ft. long ; phone

Poles
Maximum
Diameter
10" on
Largest End

_____

·-

.

doors and windows, carports',
. marquees. aluminum siding

General
Tire Sales

Wanted

&amp;Auto

SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm

With Exchange
Casings

OPEM EVES. 1:00 P.M.

.

OFFICE SUPPLIES

!lest Heater COre.

oi&gt;en8Ti15
Monday thru Saturday
606 E..f&gt;lain, Pomeroy, Q;

--

606 E. Mai!l · Pomeroy ·

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Regular Retreads
'9.95 each

Pomeroy Motor Co.

992-2094

On Most American Cars

Pomeroy Home

.

,lf.l 1t1J ..,Nr..., .... . r ,.. ... us .... 011.

HOME &amp; AUTO

~

.·Wheel Alignment
'5.55

POMEROY
Jack w. carsey, Mgr •.
Phoria 992-2111

mean .

.

TH' VARMII\IT.'S
PLI\'111\1' ALONE

Business -Services .

' J

%;,.

1968 CHEVROLET ~. TON
$1495
8' Stepside, v.a engine. std. column shill, good H. duty
Trk. tires, radio &amp; healer. 'tou "otto" see this i&gt;ne, clean I

and

" The dale set for completion
of this work shall be as set forth FARMER; experienced and

$899

Value $1150.00. Early Bird Special.

Employment Wanted

1

PAIR FREE . The

327 V-Benglne, automatic tra.ns. , power steering &amp; brakes,
good fires, green finish with matching interior. Book ·

daughter, COSMETICS
AND
WIGS
FOR
SALE.
SPECIALS
2·14-llt
MONTHLY.BROWN'S .
- - - - -- - - - " IND EPENDENT
DIS·
MIDDLE·
TRIBUTORS,"
Wanted To Do
PORT, PHO"NE 992-5ll3.
2-14-tlt
EXPERIENCED seamstress
wants work in Bend area ; . , - - - - - . , . , - - - sewed for Ripley citizens RUMMAGE Sale, Feb. 16th and
17th, Coats Building, Midbefore moving here ; Call
Mrs . Ed Crum, 713-5410, . dleport, from 9 a.m. to 3:30
p.m .
Mason.
2-14·21c
2-14-31c
Betty.

•

2 Pairs,

..

MAILMAN IS 50 DADBURN
L.ATE TODAV,
.

'THAR SHORE
Ail\l'J NO EXCUSE
FER IT, I'Ll
TELL 'IE 'THAT

S=====~~;;:;;;;;;;:::;:;.t=~=
- ~J
POMEROY
EXPERT

best buy in the
area. Have slacks
&amp; I earls tor · the
whole family.

finish. blk. bucket seats. console, radio-tape . Sharp car &amp;
priced to move. ~

- - -- - Notice

player. Isabelle Simpson and

$1295

350 Engine . 4-speed trans .• wide oval tires, wh . rings, red

Athens . Ga lll a, Ho cking ,
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble. WE WISH to thank everyone IRONINGS to do in my home,
V Inton
and
Washington
who helped lnany way during
10c per Item : you deliver and
Counties , Ohio , on var i ous
the illness and death of our
pickup ; 1547'1• Nye St .,
sec.flons of u . s . Routes 33, so,
h.usband and father, Claud
Pomeroy, upstairs .
SOA, State Routes 7, 13, 56, 78,
2-13-6tp
1'3, 1&lt;4, 278. 329, 356, 377, 681 ,
"Hopper" Roy . Special
685, 690, 691 in Athens county ;
thanks to the pallbearers, ·
U. s. Route 35. State Routes 7,
Rev. Howard Shiveley, Rev.
14 1, 160, 218, 233, 325 , 553, 554,
Edward Fischer, Ewing
588, 775, 790 in Gall Ia County ; u.
Funeral Home, Veterans
s . Route 33, State Routes 56, 78,
Memorial Hospital staff. Or. HOOD'S AQUARIUMS; fish
93, 180, 216, 278, 327, 328, 374, J h Rid
and supplies ; new location,
595, 664, 678 In Hocking county ;
o n
gway, those sending
Ash Street, Middleport near
U. s . Route 33, State Routes 7,
flowers,
singers! organ

124, 143, 248, 325, 681, 684, 689,

•. '

· Buv

. :I WONDER WHY TH'
PAW.

For Sal&amp;

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2SIGIIS

1.s P.M . Di'y Before Publication
Monday Deldllne ·9 a.m .
cancellation - Corrections ·
WUI be act'tpted untll9 a.m. tor
Day of-Publ ication

and be in form ed ol the fun c REGULATIONS
tion s of you r govern ment are
Th'"e Publisher reserves the
embod ied in public not ices . In
r ight to edit or,wetecl any ads
thaf 'se lf -gover nment charges
doomed
oblertlonal. Tho
all ci tizens t o b e inform ed ; · 'ubllsher wfll not be respon sible.
this new~j&gt;aper urges every
.1or more then one incorrect
clflzen to read and study th ese
insertion .
notices. we strongly adv ise
RATES
those citizens , seeking further
· ~ For Waftt Ad service
'· \nJormation, to exercise their S cents per Word o'ne lnser'tlon
right of access to public
Minlfllum Charge 75c
.
r ecords and public meetings.
12 centS" per word thr'f!
con ~ e c ullve .Insertions.
,
18 cents per word six cori .
NOTICE TO
·secutlve insertions .
CONTRACTORS
25 Per Cerlt Discount on paid
STATE OF. OH 10
ads and ads paid within 10 days.

DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, OhiO

..--------~-

, WAll'f"Aii$
INFORMATION

~.
~

·

'IOOR T.b6TE 6UDS I 1'1..1- 'fAKE ~(Xi

OUT FOR DttJ~!
lYEARS OLD
I story frame. 3 bedrooms w·
large closets, nice bath.
dining area . beautiful kll·
chen , hardwood floors, some
carp eting, carport with
storage. electric heat, lot 100
x 100. low upkeep . $21 ,500.
10 ACRES
Mostly level , 3 bedrooms,
ba th, forced air furnace ,
dining R.. porches. barn, out
cellar , other buildings ,
blacktop road. $8.900.
5BEDROOMS
1'12 baths, large living R.,
Dining R., nice kitchen .
Cellar. Garage. Storm doors
&amp;

windows ,

LITl1.E ORPHAN ANNIE

~'&lt;'t~r'
by
.

2 enclosed

porches. Going al $12,800.
STORAGE OR RENTAL
POMEROY - Large brick &amp;
block building. !now rented) ,
several lots. Good location.
Loads ot space. $8,200.
OLDER HOME
About 1 acre (level). on
excellent St.. 4 bedrooms.
bath, dining R:, 1 Rental,
large wor,l&lt;shop. $18,500.
Maybe the time has come for
you

..

to consider

a

DICK TRACY

BUT, 8055,1M NOT

ON A. DRUNK,
I'M COLD 508ER.

more

modern home. CALL US
TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
3 SALESMEN
TO ASSIST YOU
992·2259
II no answer
992-2568 or 985-4209

THOMAS

ACROSS
I.-and
call
5. Dolt
8. Site of
the Taj
Mahal
9. Alternate
J:l"---~~----•13. Donkey's
utterance
Free
from
PR!PARE
fear
TO PICK
"Da,"
UP YOUR
translated
----1=~:::iru16.
Doze off
17. Ark
builder
·, (var.)
18. Hypothe·
sis
ZD. Failure
Z1. Beyond
22. Abject
23. Using few
words
25. Attuned
26. Medicinal
plant
27. Region of

JOSEPH

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: DO N'T BE A VI LLAGER _ BE
UNIVERSAL NO MATTER WHERE YOU LIVE - AUTHOR
UNKNOWN
.
I

CO 1973 Ki ng Fea LI.ares S;vAdicate. Inc.)

40~ Take a
mate
41. Overly os·
tentatious
DOWN
1. 'J:reetop
dweller
Z. Heron
3. Emergency undertaking
· (2 wds.)
4. Songstress
Starr
5. Classify
6. Shabby
7. Part of a
min.
10. Poor man
atthe
·wheel
( 2 wds.)
11. Excite
12. Culled

~!gMJ]3l1J1;/J,J 14llfw"J -.1 , _
Unocramble these lour Jumble1,

one letter

to

each square,

to

form four ordinary word1.

Yesterday's Answer
16. Probos·
27. Surned
cis
29. Struck
19. Alleviate
30. Happen22. Nota
ing
34. "Show
Boat"
23. Meddle
captain
with
36. Cut
24. Maid of
the
Astolat
lawn
25. Pueblo
37. Hour
sacred
(lt.)
chamber

b I I ....
I tJ I I I I
r;UAVE

___ ...

f'WNJX

YOU'LL. !!IE EKCU5EC&gt;
IF 'YOU'FI:e FOR THIS!

'

L..,--------..1

We talk to you
. like a'permn.

Pakistan
r:-.-----,.~-----. r::--------------,
28.Typeof
1
MEATIWHILE, I'VE !Lf!UE~ THf,ljRfi?II'T
5fCURITt P!OPlE 10 tCIIFt ME OF
MY SUSPICiotJ' ACTION~..

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

667-6317.

publicatian
(colloq.)
Z!l. Stringent
3l.Maham·
medan
saint
32. Lambkin's
cry
33. Marsh
elder
.35. lnftame
with love
37.Bakery
fixture
38. Unapproach·
able
39. Wrest

(A-wen lomorrowl

]umLI.,. IVOKI HENCE ANKLIT CIPHER
Yulerd•y••

Antwert Spok~n h'ith n li•p - "TtJPOKIN"

ilAILY CRYI'TOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One lct\er simplv stands (or another. ln this sample A is '?e~E~VE~
used for the three 'L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letter&lt;. II
apostrophes, the length and formation ol the words are all ..__ _,.._ _,
hintS! Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
MUAS

KSUKIS

MUJ CSE T V P ME
UN
2-9-61c

--

2-13-6tc

741 -4211

Arnold Grale

'

KSUKIS

FGD!JY S D

Rutland
, ·I '
I

-'

·'

1'

MEDSYFERSY

ERS

W T W S C Y F E R S H C Y B L-.....J..;:::._

F.RST

GD S - VURY

L

_:.,_£,;::.,1.,__..:.:1

I CAN'TWITH
GO
1H~H
IT~ I'M 601N6

fP,IIE ~

AAUGHII
••

�' • t r • ... • r r ,-I'~ · ' ·,

11

•

10 - The Daily Sentinei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 14,1VI3

·

·

·

Sentinel Cl~.JSsifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
PUBLIC NOTICES
Your Right to Know

DEAO~INES I

.

January 2:6, 1973
Contract Sale1 Legal Copy
No. 73·44

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

·

CARD OF THANKS . ' '
&amp; OBITUARY
.
SUO tot 50 word mlnlm~m .
Ea ch ctddlflonal word 2c .
• BLIND ADS
Addit ional 25c Charge ·· per

Advertisement

Sealed proposals wil l be
OFFIC.E HOURS
received at the office of the
1:30 a.m. to 5:00p .m . Daily,
Director of the Ohio Depart . 8 : 30 a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon l ·
ment
of
Transportat ion, Saturdav
Columbus, Ohio, until 10 :00 1
A .M ., Eastern _Standard Ti me,
Thursday. February 2:Z, 1973,

Card of Thanks

for Improvements In :

OF
QUAliTY
1968 NOVA 55 CPE.

1969 CHEV. BIS. 4 DR., ';

In Meigs county ; state
Routes 7, 26, lAS, 255, 260, 379,

all of our many friends.
Wife. Marie, sons, Bob and

692

536, 537, 556, 565, 724, 800 In

Monroe county ; State Routes

37, 60, 76, 78, 266. ·284, 329, 339",
376, 377, 555 , 669 , 676, 792 In

Morgan County ; State Routes

76, 78. 145, 146, 147, 26o. 285, 313,
339, 340, 513. 564, 565, 566, 574,

670, 724, 821 in Noble County : U.
s. Route 50, State Routes 56 , 93 ,
12~ . 160, 278, 32 .. , 328, 328, 3.. 9.

356, 671, 677. 683, 689 In VInton

County ;

u. s.

Route 50A, State

Routes 7, 26, 60. 76, 124, 145, 260,
339, 530, 555, 676, 792, 821 In

Washington County , by her.
blcldal spraying· for weed and
brush control.
Work Length - 1,416.12 miles

Clarence

f'j)MEROY, OHIO

. in the blddlng proposal."
Each bidder shafl be required

lo file with hIs bid

(

1

certified

check tor an amount equal to
live per cent of hi I bid, but In no
event more than ten thousand
dollars. or 1 bond for ten per
c:enl of hl1 bid, payable to the
·
Director .
Bidders must apply, on the
proper forms, for qualification
at least ten days prior to the
date set for opening bids In
accordance with Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code.
Pions and specifications are
on file In the Department of
Transpottatlon and the office of
the District Deputy Director .
The Director reserves the
r ight to re(ect any and all bids .
J . PHILLIP R ICHLEY
Rev . 9 -29 -72

DIRECTOR

( :2} 7, 14, 21
PUB~IC

NOTICE

The
Southeast
Ohio
Emergencv Medical Service ,
Inc . located at 25 West
Washington Street. Athens
Ohio -i5701 , desires to recelv~
sealed proposals for insuring

. ambulances.

equipment,

prem lse and malpractice
liability Insurance, rad i o
towers, life, and hospitalization
Insurance .
Specifications and other In ·
formation pertaining to and
insurance bidding may be
. secured by writing to :
Richard
Abel ,
Finance
Director
Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Service

P. 0 . Box 927

25 W. Wnhlngton Street

Athens , Ohio ~5701
Proposal&amp; shall be presented
to the Finance Director on or
before ~ : 00 P.M ., March B, 1973.
At . the specified time ,
pl"opos11s will be opened and
read aloud . Any person haVIng
submitted a bid may attend . It
Is not contemplated that an
Immediate decision shall be
rendered · concerning
the
proposal submitted until all bids
have been tabulated and
.
studied .

park; phone 992·5443.
_ __ _ _ _ __:_:
1·7-lfc

Help Wanted

COUNTRY music , Saturday
night, 9 till 2 at Jack's Club.
2-14-3lp

sober ; weekly wages; free

Insurance and other fringe
benefits; modern house
furnished; write American
Culvert Co.. 201 Wheeling
Ave .. Cambridge. Ohio.
2-13-6tc

Pro standings

••HElL"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING .

NHL Standings
Furnace Controls
By United Press International
East
HUMIDIFIERS
w. I. t. pts gf ga
Monlreal 36 7 13 85 230 123
Hot Water Heaters·
N.Y. Rngrs
Plumbing
38 13 5 81 226 132
Electrical Work
Boston . 35 16 s 75 238 171
Delrolf 29 20 7 65 188 171
Butlalo 28 20 8 "64 196 157
I
Toronto 18 30 7 43 169 187
Vancouvr IS 36 7 37 165 255
N.Y. lslndrs
. 746 5 19 Ill 270
West
992-2448
w. 1. I. pis gf ga
Pomeroy, 0.
Chicago 33 17 6 72 215 161
Phlla
26 23 9 61 209, 203
Minns Ia 25 23 8 58 174 164 LOSE wel~ht with "New Shape
Tablets, ' 10 day supply only
Sl. Louis 24 22 10 58 169 172
$1.49 at Ne lson Drug,
Atlanta 23 26 9 55 152 164
Pomeroy and Dutton Drug,
LosAng 23 28 7 53 171 191
Middleport.
Pitlsbgh 22 28 6 so 186 191
2-14·31c
Ca lli
9 36 12 30 152 243
Tuesday's Results
_K_O_S-CO
_T
_ K-OS_M
_E
_T
_I_C_S_&amp;_W
_IGS.
Philadelphia 8 NY Islanders 2
SPECIALS
MONTHLY
.
Boston 7 Vancouver 3
St. Louis 4 Los Angeles 2
PHONE HELEN JANE
(only games scheduled)
BROWN, MIDDLEPORT.
Wednesday's Games
OHIO 992-5113. ·
NY Rangers al Montreal
12-3-lfc
Butlalo at Toronto
-- - - - - - -NY Islanders at Chicago
Detroit at Los Angeles
Vancouver at Pittsburgh
St. Louis at Minnesota
Atlanta at California
!only games scheduled)
Whispering Pines

. ARNOLD
BROTHERS

DANCE

WHA Standings
Night Club
By United Press International
East
Friday &amp; Saturday
w. I. t. pis gf ga
Night
Cleve
35 20 2 72 ·212 165
New Eng 32 24 2 66 237 196
10 Til2
All bids submitted shall be New York 27 32 1 55 238 250
valid for a period ot at least 30 Quebec
24 27 4 52 196 217
Music By
days from the date of proposal. Phlla
25 31 0 SO 204 237
Changes s11a11 be allowed after ottawa
21 33 4 46 204 246
The Mavericks
bid openings only If arising
West
from
changes
made
In
w. I. t. pis gf ga
published fire rates .
Ttle Soutlleast Ohio Medical Winnipeg 33 23 3 69 215 183
Service. In c. reserves the right Houston 28 24 4 60 213 203 ln·Memory
to accept or re ject any bids.
Alberta 28 26 2 58 198 189 IN LOVING memory of our
Richard Abel , Minns Ia 27 28 3 57 187 205
dear brother, Leonard (Buck)
Finan ce Director Los Ang 26 21 4 56 195 197
Icenhower, who passed away
Southeast Ohio
two years ago, February 13,
Chicago
22
33
I
45
183
204
Medical Service . Inc .
1971 ; Dearest Brother: you
Tu11day' s Results
didn't have lime to say ·
(21 14, II
Philadelphia 5 New England 4
goodbye to us, because the
Alberta 5 Houston 3
end was so sudden . Although
Chicago 6 Los Angeles 1
we know you had your fallh in
(only
games
scheduled!
NOTICE OF
God,
but It Is so lonely, Buck,
Wednesday's
Games
APPOINTMENT
without you . When we visit
Case No. 20,141 Cleveland al Philadelphia
your home, there Is a vacant
ESiate
ol
GENEVIEVE Ottawa at Quebec
STOBART. Deceased .
chair, wllh no kind, loving
(only games scheduled)
Notice Is hereby given that
smile to greet us . That Is
NBA Standings .
Eldon Weeks , of Pomeroy ,
something we just can ' t
Ohio , has been duly appointed
By United Pross lnltrnational
forget. Sadly missed by
EKecutor of the Estate of
Elsltrn Conference
sister,
Helen Jeffers and
Genev i eve Stobart. · deceased ,
Atlantic Division
family;
late ol Melos County , Ohio .
w. I. pet. g.b.
2·14-llp
Creditors are requ ired to file
46 12 .793
tt'lelr clai'm s with sa id fiduciary Boston
New York
46 ' 15 .754 l'h
with in four months .
18 41 .305 281J,
Daled lhl s 29th day of Buffalo
Tuesday's College Basketball
January 1973.
·
Phil a
4 58 .065 44
Resulls
Manning D. Webster
Central Division
Judge
w.
1. pet. g.b. By United Press International
Court of Common Pleas, Baltimore
East
37 20 .649
Probate Div ision
N.H.
61
Curry
58
Atlanta
34 28 .548 51J• Gordan 86 Suffolk
(II 31 (21 7, 14, 31
81 ot
Houston
23 37 .383 15'h
Coli.
94
Wrcslr
Poly 84
Trin
ity
Cleveland
21 38 .356 17
Adelphi 79 Stony Brook 73
Western Conference
Spgfld 73 Westtleid St. 63
.
Midwest Division
84 Ar my 61
w. I. pet. g.b. Rutgers
Bullaio St. 76 Geneseo St. 69
Milwaukee
42 18 .700
LeMoyne 72 Ithaca 71
Chicago
35 23 .603 6
Salem 83 W.Va . Tech 68
KC- Oma~a
31 33 .484 13
ABA Standings
Detroit
26 33 .441 15'h Allegheny 81 Bethany 65
Harvard 72 Dartmouth 68
By United Preos International
Pacific Division
Mass.
U. 65
East
w. I. pet. g.b. Del. St.8567Boston
W· I· Pet· g. b· Los Angeles 46
Bowie St. 64
13 .780
Carolina
44 l8 .710
Golden State 37 22 .627 9 .
39 22 .639 4'1' Phoenix
Kentucky
South
28 30 .483 18'h
1
2
VIrginia
N.C.
St.
105
E.
Carolina 70
32 30 .516
Seattle
~ 19 43 .306 28
New York
Ky
.
St.
73
Un
ion
(Ky .! 72
~~ ~~ .367 21
Portland
15 44 .254 31
Memphis
Duke 90 Va. 66
·333 23
'
Tuesday's Results
Canlslus 64 Catholi c 59
West
Mliwauk·ee 110 Detroit 96
Richmond 78 W.Va . 75
w. 1· pet. g.b. Boston 105 Chicago 101
Utah
36 23 .623
Golden State 103 Cleveland 90
Midwest
lnalana
36 26 .581 211, KC Om
Denver
.SI7
1J,
•
aha 132 Houston fiB
Marquette
31
93
No. Ill. 8Q
29
6
Dallas
Los Angeles 101 Seattle 98
37 373 15
22
Huntington
94
St. Francis 75
San Dao
Portland 120 Buffalo 100
20 41 ·328 18
Kan . 51. 67 Kan . 66
Wtdnesdoy's Results
- (only games scheduled!
Otterbein 84 Mount Union 79
.. _
Wednesday's Games
Wittenberg SA Heidelberg 47
momphls 95 New York 93
Chicago at New York
Oberlin
67 Kenyon 61
Kentucky 110 San Diego 103
Milwaukee at Philadelphia
Boslon vs. KC-Omaha al Capital 58 Muskingum 46
(only games scheduled!
Western Mich. 92 Loyola·Ch i. 60
Thurm.v's G1mes
Om h
New York at Utah .
a a
Baltimore at Seattle
Kentucky al Denver
Southwest
Buffalo at Phoenix
SMU 19 Rice 66
Indiana at Mamphis
(on,ly games scheduled!
Ark. 86 Tex as 7A
(only gamn scheduled)

Pro Standings .

I

992-7161

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

Middleport.

and railing. A. Jacob, sales

o.

OHIO

PALLET CO. ·,

Open Saturdays
from 8 a.m. to 3:30p.m.
On Old Rt. 33

Phone 992-2689
Pomeroy, Ohio

Wanted To Buy
2·1J.6tc
_:__:

CHAIN saw, nearly new, ex -

cellent buy, 446-4850 or 992-

7777 , Larry Evans , larry's
Mobile Home, Pomeroy.

2-9-lf

- - -- - - -

OLD furnitur e , oak tables,
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
beds or complete households.

------

SNARE drum ; phone 742 -4714.
2·13-3tc

For Rent
··,·RAILER , Brown ' s Trailer

Park ; phone 992 -3324.
_ _ _ __ _ _ _ _2_·
13-tfc

The Sewing Center , Mid dleport, Oh io.
11 -16-tlc

WILL trim or C!Jt trees, clean
oul basements, attics, etc .

SM]TH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
.
991-2174
Pomeroy
KITCHEN &amp;SON
CONSTRUCTION
HOME BUILDING
&amp;

REMODELING

BOB SLOAN .
&amp;

C. L. KITCHEN

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets
36"x23"x.009

1·25-301p

The
Daily Sentinel
Court Sl

Pomeroy

1967 JEEP Wagoneer - 4 dr.
S.W. 4 wh . dr ., auto .• 327 VB,
--:-----~,_..;,2·--11 -tfc air P.S. till, _ P.B., bucket
NICE 8 x 351ralier with llpout ; seats, 33.000 just overhauled,
Ideal for a couple; 10 miles new paint, shocks, tires, wh
north of Pomeroy ; call 992- $1,000 Sell $1 ,300 firm . 446-4850
or 992-7777 Larry Evans,
7479.
Home,
2-9-tlc Larry 's Mobile
Pomeroy.
2-9-11
2 BEDROOM mobile home; -- - - -- - - compl et ely furnished ; call AKC Registered Basset Hound;
. 992-2441 after 5:30p .m.
6 months old ; female ; call
2-7-lfc
992-5510.
2-9·6tc
phone 992-6329.

- - -- - - -

UNFURNISHED 3-room Sti'JGER automatic sewing
apartment. adults only. No machine ; like new In walnut
pets, 408 Spring Ave . , cabinet . Makes design slit..
Pomeroy .

1-7-lfc

- ------

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
apartments .

____:
4·12-lfc

For Sale
7 MONTH old trailer 14 x 70,
unfurnished, fully carpeted.
Phone 992-7649 after s p.m.
2-4-, 12tc
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:_
~

sewing

machine. This ma c hine
darns, embroideries , over -

casts, buttonholes ali without
attachments, just dial and
sew. Pay balance of $39.20 or
pay $5 per month , 992-5331.
2-9-61t

-----(3) NEW 1972 Zig-Zag Sewing
Machines In qrlglnal factory
carton . Zig -Zag to make
buttonholes, sew on butt.ons,
monograms and make fancy

designs with justthe twist ola
single-dial. Left In layaway
and never been used. Will sell
far on ly $47 cash, or terms
available. Electro Hygiene
Co. Phone 992-7755.
2-14-6tc

-----(3) ELECTROLUX Vacuum

Cleaners complete with attachments. cordwlnder and
paint spray. Used but In like
new condition. Pay $34.45
cash or budget plan a vailable.
Electro Hygiene Co. Phone
992-7755.
2·1Htc

110 Mechanic Street
Pom~roy, o'hio

OIL AND GAS Service, new and
hour service ; phone 843·2833.

far $1.00

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?

Lost

your

operator's license? Call 9922966.

'

6-15-tft
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The F~bric Shop, Pomeroy.
Aulhomed Singer Sales and
Service . We Sharpen Sc:lssors .

- - - - , -- ---=3..:
·29 -tlt

S'IITIS~Y

YOVR NEEDS

Mobile Homes For Sale
1969 60xl2 2 BEDROOM Schull
Mobile Home; phone 367-7673.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __:2_::·
1J.tlc
1968

WINDSOR ,

bedroom,

with

12x60, . 2
or

without

furn iture; phone 992-3511.
_ _ __ _ _ __:2~
- 11 -lfc
12 x 60, 1971 ACADEMY 3
bedroom ; t ip-out, alr, washer

and dryer; phone 742-3280
after 6 p.m.
12-11-llt

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

Ail are gas healed, each with
a bath and nice kitchen .
Located about one block
from court house, for 1ust

m.500.oo.
1
NEW LISTING
SMALL RESTAURANT In a prime location, doing a
good business. A good OP·

cellar, 2l ~W.:J. 112 acre of

land . Only $3,800.00.
.
MIDDLEPORT
3 BEDROOMS - Ni ~e bath.
new wall to wall carpeting,
neal kitchen , utillly room
and cellar.. Level lot. 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 natural gas forced air
furnace, central

air

con -

CASH paid for all makes and ' ditioning, and pl e nty of
models of mobile homes . parking.
$~5 . Call · Ravenswood, 273Phone area code 614·423-9531.
ANTIQUE BRICK
9521 or 273-9893.
4-13-lft
LOVELY
OLDER HOME 1·11 -tfc
Living about 16x36 teet, 4
- - - - - - - -- large bedrooms wllh closets,
L~6~STfence posts; phone 985..-.Air Conditioners
foyer with open stairway,
large basement, porches, 5
2-ll ·JOtc
·Awnings _
car
garage. 2 acres with
·cOAL. Limestone, Excelsior
:··Underpinni.n_g
barn . Asking just $21 .500.00.
Sail Work,s, E. Malh St.; · '11
·
NEW HOME
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891 .
' \.amp e e mQbile hQrr / · A BEDROOMS - All have
4 -12-lfc ;service - plus glgantlc' l ·
closets, 1112 baths, large
- - -- - -- - &lt;lisplay of mobile homes
beautiful kitchen, utility. All
. ~lways avallabfe ,at ...
electric
home. gar&lt;~ge , large
Pets
Sale
lot. Only $21 ,000.00.
PARKVIEW Kennels going out -, •
"· · ·
·
NEW LISTING
·ot business. Big price • MOBILE HOMES
MIDDLEPORT
- Large A
reduction on all dogs. All AK- .
bedroom home, 2 modern
C. 592 .Broadway &amp; Ash
1220 Washington Blvd.
423·7521
baths, gas forced · air furStreets, Middleport, Ohio.
BELPRE, 0 .
12-13-tk . ~__ _ __ _ _ __jJ
nace . Large foyer with open
-----~
stairs,· large front and a
small back porch. Garage,
Real EState For Sale
For Sale or Trade
ali on a corner lot. Asking
70,000 BTU Siegler fuel oil HOUSE FOR- SAL E, iu Br ick $21.900.00 .
heater ; used SlJ2 months ; for -'· Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; br ick
sale or would consider trade
house , 3 bedrooms, excellent Now Is the time to buy that
for something of equal value;
location, close to school and
house that you have been
phone 992-7124.
city; contact Lou Osborne or • looking at so long. Should II
r.all 992·5898.
2-11 -61p
be one of ours, see us for
11 -26-tlc financing . We ~ave a bunch.
- -- -- - - HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Auto Sales
'House fii-L.ori9 Bottom. phon e
ASSOCIATE
985-3529.
.
SHARP
' 69
Plymouth
NO SUN DAY SHOWINGS
Roadrunner .
Two
dear - - -- - - ---=
6---11-tlt
992-3325
hardtop , 383 automatic ,
bright orange with black vinyl
top, $1425. Phone 985-3582 or

For.

MILLER

.

I GET 114E IMPRESSION
~OU OON'T COMRREHEHD

Stop In and See
_Floor Display.

.

v

J
"ll:)U

I Ai.WA'IG LIKE 10 ,
TALK 10 ATfORNEYS
IN lllEIR OWN

WHAT A~E
DOiNG, CADET
HARPER 1

JUST BECAUSE I
NeED SOME! HE~P WITH
IIIV TAKE·AWA~S.i

ANAL'/r!C GEOMET'~Y
4N~ CALCIJLUS D.

FURNITURE

l.ANGUPGE!

Our

Have your home built by
Custom Builders. Our
carpenters have 20 years
uperience in building
homes in Meigs County.
·

ALL WEATHER
ROOFING AND
CONSTRUCfiON
PHONE~ . 992-2550i
EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
and small ; Backhoes and
Loaders on track and tires;
Dump trucks .- Lo-boy
Se rvice ; Septic tanks in !Bill)
stalled ; George
Pull ins; phone 992-2478.
2-9-tfc

- " - - - - --

HARRISON'S TV Service and
Serv ice Call s; phone 992-2522.
2-9-tfc

WINNIE
IT DIDN'T DAWN ON liE ~AT
OUR ~'IE5 C05r HAL
PRACTICALLY NOTHING-.
I REA~~y ENJOYED
JUST I!IEIN6 WITH
HIM!

AS ..OU KNON..Lt'AL MARTINS
HAS 8EEN IN TOWN fOR
A WEI:K. HE'S DATED
liE EVERY DAY AND

WE)/E HAD LOAD$
OF RJN .

AFTER TH' MEAL HE
HAD, HI! WAKIM' UP
MAV TAKE AWHILE,

G &amp; E Arpllance Repair, repair
on al laundry equipment,
refrigerat ion equipment and
house wiring; welding ,
electric and gas. Call 99:i·3802
or after 4:30 p.m. c&amp;ll 9926050.
2-5-JOtp

VOUA HIGHNESS!

GASOUNE AILEY
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC.
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
SANITATtON, STEWART,
OH 10. PHONE 662-3035.
10·A·IIC,

--:---:----

Real

EState For Sale

HaPPLl fiftu-seconcl
bil'thdau, Mr. Wallet!

•Slim,
there's
rlOWCII.j

c~d
lock

~our~ elf

IF IT ~T lb'&gt;ITNa~ T\Tiu..ATS

in thl6

portunity for someone who

wants on their own. All
equipment, and furnishings
needed to run a restaurant
for only $5,000.00.
NEW LISTING
COR NE .R LOT Near
school. 2 bedroom home,
nice bath, paneling, utility
building, and garage. Want
only $7.500.00.
NEW LI&lt;TING
4 ROO~';N t\1 porches,

ARE ~OU SURE!

YOU BEJ,.ONG I"' '!'HiS
CLASS, MISS
.S tZEMO~E~

DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, dll·
ching service ; top soil, 1111
dlrl, limestone; B&amp;K Ex·
cavating. Phone 992 -5367,
Dick Karr, Jr.
9-1-tft

Virgil B. ·

modern home. with one
apartment in the basement.

siding and remodeling, 24

and

------

2+ 3otc
used furnaces, new aluminum

20c
a

Real Estate For Sale

NEW LISTING
INVESTMENT - 5 apartments. One a good 3 bedroom

Phone 949-3221.

5 ROOMS and bath in Racine ;

zag

makes. Reasonable rates.

Modern

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
Write M. D. Miller. Rt. 4, ,
MANY
USES
Pomeroy, Oillo. Phone 9926271.
1-7-Ift

zig

H-tlc
MilS=I'lines ... service on all

CATTLE , 446-3792,

DELUXE

Johnson and Son, Inc.

SEPTIC TANKS CLiiANED
Walnut style stereo, radio, REASONABLE rates . Ph. 446·
4782. Gallipolis, John RusselL
AM-FM, 4 speaker sound
Owner &amp; operator.
system , 4 speed automatic
5-12-fl,
changer . Ba lance $69.72. Use
our budget terms . Call 992C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
7085.
Complete Service
2-8-61t
Phone 949-3821
Racine. Oh io
Crill Bradford
STEREOS Track. repossessed,
looks like new. 4 speaker
5-1-Ift
audio system In walnut - - - - - -console, take over payments PLUMBING work done ; phone
of SUO per week or pay
985·4265.
balance of $89 .50. 992-5331.
2-ll-30k
2·9·6fC
CONTEMPORARY

_TO

_____

free :·

' Nathan Biggs '
Specialist___

Radla_t~r

2-13-3tc
992-5653
.
- - -- - - - - WILL 00 remodeling , interior
NIGHT Club on new Rt . 7 and . and exterior painting, con· L---...,,...-----~
Junction Rt. 143.
crete work by hour or conEXCAVATING, dozer, loader
tract ; phone 992-3511.
2-13-51p
and backhoe work; septic
2-6-12tc
tanks installed ; dump trucks
COLONIAL, Earlr American - - - - -and
lo-boys lor hire; will haul
CONCRETE
style, maple, s ereo -radlo, READY -MIX
fill
dirt,
top soil, limestone
de l ivered right to 'fOUr
AM-FM 4 speed, automatic
and gravel; call Bob or Roger
project.
Fasl
and
easy.
Free
,changer, 4 speaker system .
Jeffers, day phone 992-7069 ;
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Balance $76.34 . Use our
night phone 992-3525 or 992Goeg
leln
Ready-Mix
Co
..
budget terms. Call 992-7065.
5232.
·
Middleport, Ohio.
2·8-6lc
2-11 -lfc
6-30.tft

DELIVERED

Phone 992-5434.

For

estimates, phone Charles
Lisle , Syracuse, V. V,

E LNA and. While s 'ewlng

742 ~ 4714.

$7.00 Per Ton

unfurnished

representative.

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

1966 BANNER camper, sell·
contained , 15 ft. long ; phone

Poles
Maximum
Diameter
10" on
Largest End

_____

·-

.

doors and windows, carports',
. marquees. aluminum siding

General
Tire Sales

Wanted

&amp;Auto

SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm

With Exchange
Casings

OPEM EVES. 1:00 P.M.

.

OFFICE SUPPLIES

!lest Heater COre.

oi&gt;en8Ti15
Monday thru Saturday
606 E..f&gt;lain, Pomeroy, Q;

--

606 E. Mai!l · Pomeroy ·

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Regular Retreads
'9.95 each

Pomeroy Motor Co.

992-2094

On Most American Cars

Pomeroy Home

.

,lf.l 1t1J ..,Nr..., .... . r ,.. ... us .... 011.

HOME &amp; AUTO

~

.·Wheel Alignment
'5.55

POMEROY
Jack w. carsey, Mgr •.
Phoria 992-2111

mean .

.

TH' VARMII\IT.'S
PLI\'111\1' ALONE

Business -Services .

' J

%;,.

1968 CHEVROLET ~. TON
$1495
8' Stepside, v.a engine. std. column shill, good H. duty
Trk. tires, radio &amp; healer. 'tou "otto" see this i&gt;ne, clean I

and

" The dale set for completion
of this work shall be as set forth FARMER; experienced and

$899

Value $1150.00. Early Bird Special.

Employment Wanted

1

PAIR FREE . The

327 V-Benglne, automatic tra.ns. , power steering &amp; brakes,
good fires, green finish with matching interior. Book ·

daughter, COSMETICS
AND
WIGS
FOR
SALE.
SPECIALS
2·14-llt
MONTHLY.BROWN'S .
- - - - -- - - - " IND EPENDENT
DIS·
MIDDLE·
TRIBUTORS,"
Wanted To Do
PORT, PHO"NE 992-5ll3.
2-14-tlt
EXPERIENCED seamstress
wants work in Bend area ; . , - - - - - . , . , - - - sewed for Ripley citizens RUMMAGE Sale, Feb. 16th and
17th, Coats Building, Midbefore moving here ; Call
Mrs . Ed Crum, 713-5410, . dleport, from 9 a.m. to 3:30
p.m .
Mason.
2-14·21c
2-14-31c
Betty.

•

2 Pairs,

..

MAILMAN IS 50 DADBURN
L.ATE TODAV,
.

'THAR SHORE
Ail\l'J NO EXCUSE
FER IT, I'Ll
TELL 'IE 'THAT

S=====~~;;:;;;;;;;:::;:;.t=~=
- ~J
POMEROY
EXPERT

best buy in the
area. Have slacks
&amp; I earls tor · the
whole family.

finish. blk. bucket seats. console, radio-tape . Sharp car &amp;
priced to move. ~

- - -- - Notice

player. Isabelle Simpson and

$1295

350 Engine . 4-speed trans .• wide oval tires, wh . rings, red

Athens . Ga lll a, Ho cking ,
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble. WE WISH to thank everyone IRONINGS to do in my home,
V Inton
and
Washington
who helped lnany way during
10c per Item : you deliver and
Counties , Ohio , on var i ous
the illness and death of our
pickup ; 1547'1• Nye St .,
sec.flons of u . s . Routes 33, so,
h.usband and father, Claud
Pomeroy, upstairs .
SOA, State Routes 7, 13, 56, 78,
2-13-6tp
1'3, 1&lt;4, 278. 329, 356, 377, 681 ,
"Hopper" Roy . Special
685, 690, 691 in Athens county ;
thanks to the pallbearers, ·
U. s. Route 35. State Routes 7,
Rev. Howard Shiveley, Rev.
14 1, 160, 218, 233, 325 , 553, 554,
Edward Fischer, Ewing
588, 775, 790 in Gall Ia County ; u.
Funeral Home, Veterans
s . Route 33, State Routes 56, 78,
Memorial Hospital staff. Or. HOOD'S AQUARIUMS; fish
93, 180, 216, 278, 327, 328, 374, J h Rid
and supplies ; new location,
595, 664, 678 In Hocking county ;
o n
gway, those sending
Ash Street, Middleport near
U. s . Route 33, State Routes 7,
flowers,
singers! organ

124, 143, 248, 325, 681, 684, 689,

•. '

· Buv

. :I WONDER WHY TH'
PAW.

For Sal&amp;

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2SIGIIS

1.s P.M . Di'y Before Publication
Monday Deldllne ·9 a.m .
cancellation - Corrections ·
WUI be act'tpted untll9 a.m. tor
Day of-Publ ication

and be in form ed ol the fun c REGULATIONS
tion s of you r govern ment are
Th'"e Publisher reserves the
embod ied in public not ices . In
r ight to edit or,wetecl any ads
thaf 'se lf -gover nment charges
doomed
oblertlonal. Tho
all ci tizens t o b e inform ed ; · 'ubllsher wfll not be respon sible.
this new~j&gt;aper urges every
.1or more then one incorrect
clflzen to read and study th ese
insertion .
notices. we strongly adv ise
RATES
those citizens , seeking further
· ~ For Waftt Ad service
'· \nJormation, to exercise their S cents per Word o'ne lnser'tlon
right of access to public
Minlfllum Charge 75c
.
r ecords and public meetings.
12 centS" per word thr'f!
con ~ e c ullve .Insertions.
,
18 cents per word six cori .
NOTICE TO
·secutlve insertions .
CONTRACTORS
25 Per Cerlt Discount on paid
STATE OF. OH 10
ads and ads paid within 10 days.

DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, OhiO

..--------~-

, WAll'f"Aii$
INFORMATION

~.
~

·

'IOOR T.b6TE 6UDS I 1'1..1- 'fAKE ~(Xi

OUT FOR DttJ~!
lYEARS OLD
I story frame. 3 bedrooms w·
large closets, nice bath.
dining area . beautiful kll·
chen , hardwood floors, some
carp eting, carport with
storage. electric heat, lot 100
x 100. low upkeep . $21 ,500.
10 ACRES
Mostly level , 3 bedrooms,
ba th, forced air furnace ,
dining R.. porches. barn, out
cellar , other buildings ,
blacktop road. $8.900.
5BEDROOMS
1'12 baths, large living R.,
Dining R., nice kitchen .
Cellar. Garage. Storm doors
&amp;

windows ,

LITl1.E ORPHAN ANNIE

~'&lt;'t~r'
by
.

2 enclosed

porches. Going al $12,800.
STORAGE OR RENTAL
POMEROY - Large brick &amp;
block building. !now rented) ,
several lots. Good location.
Loads ot space. $8,200.
OLDER HOME
About 1 acre (level). on
excellent St.. 4 bedrooms.
bath, dining R:, 1 Rental,
large wor,l&lt;shop. $18,500.
Maybe the time has come for
you

..

to consider

a

DICK TRACY

BUT, 8055,1M NOT

ON A. DRUNK,
I'M COLD 508ER.

more

modern home. CALL US
TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
3 SALESMEN
TO ASSIST YOU
992·2259
II no answer
992-2568 or 985-4209

THOMAS

ACROSS
I.-and
call
5. Dolt
8. Site of
the Taj
Mahal
9. Alternate
J:l"---~~----•13. Donkey's
utterance
Free
from
PR!PARE
fear
TO PICK
"Da,"
UP YOUR
translated
----1=~:::iru16.
Doze off
17. Ark
builder
·, (var.)
18. Hypothe·
sis
ZD. Failure
Z1. Beyond
22. Abject
23. Using few
words
25. Attuned
26. Medicinal
plant
27. Region of

JOSEPH

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: DO N'T BE A VI LLAGER _ BE
UNIVERSAL NO MATTER WHERE YOU LIVE - AUTHOR
UNKNOWN
.
I

CO 1973 Ki ng Fea LI.ares S;vAdicate. Inc.)

40~ Take a
mate
41. Overly os·
tentatious
DOWN
1. 'J:reetop
dweller
Z. Heron
3. Emergency undertaking
· (2 wds.)
4. Songstress
Starr
5. Classify
6. Shabby
7. Part of a
min.
10. Poor man
atthe
·wheel
( 2 wds.)
11. Excite
12. Culled

~!gMJ]3l1J1;/J,J 14llfw"J -.1 , _
Unocramble these lour Jumble1,

one letter

to

each square,

to

form four ordinary word1.

Yesterday's Answer
16. Probos·
27. Surned
cis
29. Struck
19. Alleviate
30. Happen22. Nota
ing
34. "Show
Boat"
23. Meddle
captain
with
36. Cut
24. Maid of
the
Astolat
lawn
25. Pueblo
37. Hour
sacred
(lt.)
chamber

b I I ....
I tJ I I I I
r;UAVE

___ ...

f'WNJX

YOU'LL. !!IE EKCU5EC&gt;
IF 'YOU'FI:e FOR THIS!

'

L..,--------..1

We talk to you
. like a'permn.

Pakistan
r:-.-----,.~-----. r::--------------,
28.Typeof
1
MEATIWHILE, I'VE !Lf!UE~ THf,ljRfi?II'T
5fCURITt P!OPlE 10 tCIIFt ME OF
MY SUSPICiotJ' ACTION~..

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

667-6317.

publicatian
(colloq.)
Z!l. Stringent
3l.Maham·
medan
saint
32. Lambkin's
cry
33. Marsh
elder
.35. lnftame
with love
37.Bakery
fixture
38. Unapproach·
able
39. Wrest

(A-wen lomorrowl

]umLI.,. IVOKI HENCE ANKLIT CIPHER
Yulerd•y••

Antwert Spok~n h'ith n li•p - "TtJPOKIN"

ilAILY CRYI'TOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One lct\er simplv stands (or another. ln this sample A is '?e~E~VE~
used for the three 'L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letter&lt;. II
apostrophes, the length and formation ol the words are all ..__ _,.._ _,
hintS! Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
MUAS

KSUKIS

MUJ CSE T V P ME
UN
2-9-61c

--

2-13-6tc

741 -4211

Arnold Grale

'

KSUKIS

FGD!JY S D

Rutland
, ·I '
I

-'

·'

1'

MEDSYFERSY

ERS

W T W S C Y F E R S H C Y B L-.....J..;:::._

F.RST

GD S - VURY

L

_:.,_£,;::.,1.,__..:.:1

I CAN'TWITH
GO
1H~H
IT~ I'M 601N6

fP,IIE ~

AAUGHII
••

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....

Lions, ladies entertained
Pomeroy Loins and their
wives enjoyed a ladles' night
dinner at the Meigs Inn
Tuesday evening attended by
13-K District Governor RUB.$
WllllamB o( Chesterhill and
Tom Ro6e of Athens, zone
chatnnan.
'Highlight of the evening was
seven vocal solos presented by
members ol the Rio Grande

Miss Rizer in
Angel Flight
at Ohio State
Milisa K. Rizer, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Rizer of
Pomeroy, joined the Ohio·State
University · Angel Flight
Tuesday.
Angel Flight is a national
honorary service organization
for college women desiring to
serve Air Force ROTC, their
university, their community
and their counlry.
Angela serve as hostesses for
many Ohio State functions,
participate in flag raisings at
football games, are flight
hostesses on university airplanes, have a drill team which
competes with other c~
teams in the midwest and help
promote Air Force ROTC, their
sponsoring organization.
Selection is rigorous, each
girl going through a series of
interviews. Angels are chosen
on the basis of poise, personality and willingness to
actively participate in all
Angel Fliglit functions. Mlas
Rizer is a lreslunan majoring
in nursing.
•

Comer of House
struck by auto
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. is investigating a single car accident that occurred at midnight last night In Chester Twp.
on Sumner Road.
Paul Card, 19, Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy, traveling west,
went off the road on the right
and struck · the corner of the
~•rl Pe•n home. The driver
was not injured.
•' .

. .- - - - - - - - .

rATDE

MEIGS lHt.ftl R
Tonight &amp; Thursday
February 14 &amp; u
NOT OPEN
.

Friday &amp; Saturday
February 16 &amp; 17
COUNTRY MUSIC
ITochnlcoior)
Marly Robbins, Sammy
Jackson, Barbara Mandrell,
Dotfie West, Carl Smith.

IG)
THE SALTBURG
CONNECTION

Barry Newman
Anna Karina
lPG)
Show Starts 7 p.m.

College Chorale under
direction ol Merlyn Ross.
Wendell Hoover, vice
president, introduced Williams
and Rose, both of whom spoke
briefly of Lions IJllltlers. Rose
met w!Ulthe local club's board
of directors following the
dlnre£. Frank Porter was
Jl'esenled a 15-year pin by
secretary Clarence Struble.
The well-received musical
program was made up ol these
· selections and singers:
"Adam and . Eve," a
recitation from God's Trom-

The first year's work is
period of the next year. ·
completed on the Rio Grande
Entry of the Pomeroy school campus and the second year at .
-first in Meigs County -into the Holzer Medical Center
the Red cross blood program laboratory.
wlll relieve the rounding ~P of
Dr. J. A. deLamerens,
donors should a blood need Holzer
Medical Center
arise. Only an hour is required Pathologist and Clinical
to give blood, including a free Director of the MLT program,
(limited) medical checkup of said he felt the achemoglobin, blood pressure, complishmen l of the first
weight, temperature and a graduating class was a
verbal medical history.
remarkable feat.
Par.ents of students are
"This is not an easy
asked to sign forms indicating examination," he said, Hmany
when they will report to a unit
people have to take it more
as a donor. The kickoff is than once. To have an entire
Monday when the blondmobile class pass with such high
is at the elementary school scores on the first lry speaks
from I to 6 p. m. Other dates well of both the program and
throughout the year when the
the studenls who enrolled. I am
unit will visit Pomeroy are
very proud of both."
April23; June 18; Aug. 20; Oct.
Dr. David Stauffer, pastor of
Steve Elberfeld, educational
the · Calvary Church Temple, 22, and Dec. 17. Parents may coordinator of the MLT
l.ouis. Mo.. and former sign for any of the visits .
program, works with the
. _ __ter _at Me!gs County's
students during their second
Hemlock Grove Christian
year practical laboratory
Church, will be the guest
training at Holzer Medical
s~eaker tonight at the "Faith
Center.
He too expressed his
Promise Rally" at the Mid·
delight · that the first class
dleport Church of Christ. The
Mrs. Madge E. Strauss, 71, of made such a good showing .
rally, to beginal7:30p. m., will
Ken ·Myers, project director
be preceded by a good old- 259 W. Union, Athens, formerly
fashioned fellowship dinner at of Pomeroy, was dead on for MLT on the Rio Grande
the church starting al 6:15 p. arrival at O'Bleness Memorial campus, works with the
m.
Hospital in Athens Tuesday student during their first
Dr. Stauffer, who received night. Mrs. Strauss was born in year in the program. He said
his Ph.D. from Ohio University
these nine students are to be
in 1972, also will be the Pomeroy, the daughter of the commended and that they have
evangelistis speaker at late Jacob and Margaret Mees.
Thursday evening's revival She was also preceded in death set high standards for other
kickoff "meeting at the by a daughter, Mrs. Margaret MLT classes to follow.
Pomeroy Church of Christ Ann (Peggy) Howard.
spop~9r~ by the Meigs Men's
Surviving are her husband,
Fellowship.
· Herman J. (Sam) Strauss; a
The joint revival of Meigs granddaughter, Mrs . Cinda
County Churches of Christ will Bartlett, Athens Route 4; two
be held June 3-8 at the Meigs great-grandchildren, and a
During routine business
Junior High School.
sister, Mrs. S. A. (Jean) Tuesday the Meigs County
McKnight of Kansas City, Commissioners approved a
Kansas. Mrs. Strauss was a resolution to accept apMORE DONORS
Latest contributors to the · member of the First Church of plications from any financial
institution
for
public
fund for :Mrs. Doria Reinhart, Christ in Athens.
Funeral services will be held depository ci active, inactive,
Pomeroy, were reported today.
The group Includes the at I p. m. Friday at the Hughes and interim deposits of public
Pomeroy First Baptist lllurch Funeral Home in Athens with money. The applications will
Mlsslonary Society, Mr. and the Rev. James Grooms of- be received by the comMrs. Ollver Michael, Ethel ficiating. Burial will be in the missioners at their office until
Hatfield, Middleport; Mr. and Athens Memory Gardens. 9 a. m. on March ~Applications must be sealed
Mrs. Don Mullen, Mabel and Friends may call at the funeral
home
Thursday
from
3
to
5
and
and endorsed "Applications
Heleo Waddell, Anna McGhee,
under the Uniform Depository
Mrs. Mildred Long, all of from 7 to 9 p. m.
Act." Attending were Charles
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
R. Karr, Robert Clark and
Samuel Russell and Mrs. Elsie Three taken
Warden Ours, conuniasioners
McKnlgbt, Urbana.
to hospital
and Martha Chambers, clerk.

e.xams

. .' .

.

.

.

Co.

PARTY TONIGHT
RACINE - The Junior
Auxiliary of Racine American
Legion Post 602 will hold a
party at the home of the leader,
Mrs . Gerald Simpson this
evening .

1\.T

Member of Federal Reserve System

On Froday•Our Orlve-ln Window is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.

electric
models

COME INNOW'S A
SPECIAL TIME
TO BUY!

'·'

UO,OOO Maximum Insurance fOr Each Depositor

••••••llii••IIii..

'

.

'

'

Teachers and the board agreed to a "consent order" issued
late Tuesday In ~ranklin CoUnty Common Pleas court. Under
terms of the agreement, teachers were to return to work today
and negotiations must be reSUII'Ied no later than next Tuesday.

·This is a good time to buy 11 new
Whirlpool washer. There are
specia I sale prices - · an
unusually fine selection - and
you can matc;h the dryer of your
choice.

Special Early Bird Sale
LAWN BOY
Lawn Mowers

.t
neM .s x ,z ~
e1eued
OISJS03

X

I

.~113N\fcl !l131HS 1ANIA
•
:»tJ!:»Pci·Bf6JO~

I! 81n!l
Moqees

Silll
9NI11i)
.

-

OJGNJdSnS
J111ANYW NHOr

I

Sturdy construction
heavier than usual
gauge steel. Choice of
white · avocado · cop·
pertone · woodtone
finishes.
Here's how you save during
the warehouse sale - 36.00
Cabinets ore 29 .00, 54.00
Cllblnets on sole 44.00, 59.00
Cabinets sale priced 48.00, etc.
Now Is the perfect time to buy
the Cabinet or Cabinets yov
need.

LINOLEUM
BY
THE YARD
Well known Armstrong
and Congoleum q·uallty.
9 and 12 foot widths. Big
selection of patterns.
Brlna In your musurements
and save on who! you need.

Fine New Selection of Both
Gas and Electric

MAGIC CHEF. Ranges

M&amp;R FOODLINER M&amp;R BARGAINLAND

FEDERAL
GLASS SET

And All At Sale Prices

Self propelled · 21 Inch cut ·
with grass catchers .
Famous Lawn Boy quality
for years of satisfactory
service.

SET OF 4

Save
s30.00 Now

MOVES TO RACINE
. LETART FALLS - An
evangelistic meeting in
progress at the Letart Falla ·
United Methodist Church will
continue at the Wesleyan
Church in Racine, Thursday
through Sunday, at 7:30 each
evening. There will be special
music each evening and the
junior choir wm sing Friday
evening. The public is invited.

JI'Qiest "a breach lh ~•e negOWIIlons agreement with the board
of education "

Here's a dryer buy you'll be glad you
made now ... and many months from
now. Permanent Press cool-down leaves
most no-iron things ready-to-wear with no touct:rup ironing. Five timed cycles give you settings
for everything - dainties to overalls. Three·
position temperature selector- including AIR
(no heat) setting. TUMBLE PREss~ control
tumbles-out wrinkles in no-iron clothes that
have been packed or stored away, saves touchup ironing. Extra-large lint screen is easy to
reach, clean. Avery special buy in any season!

Gas or

A •7.50
12 OZ. TUMBLERS WITH
GROCERY ORDER
PAPER BACK

BLUE RIBBON·

S~ve

·ICE
CREAM

On Carpet

By The · v~rd

HOLY
BIBLE

TOTEM
TRASH
BAGS ·
20-30 GALS.

PKG. OF 10

IN

THE
BARGAINLAND

KING JAMES
VERSION
OLD &amp; NEW
TESTAMENTS

512 PAGES

Special mill purchase - extra thick ··
rubber back and regular jute back carpeting. Good selection of colors. e'uy now
and really save on what you need for any
ro·o·m-in.v.ou·r·h·o·m-e._
.

ltBUJS •••
in neiS ...
(Conlillued from Page 11

P,OMEROY, OHIO

I

dryer!

LEAGUE TO MEET
The Meigs· Mason Slo. Pitch
Softball League will hold an
organizational meeting for 1973
Sunday, Feb. 18, at 3 p. m. at
the Royal Crown BotUing Co.
garage on North Second Ave.,
Middleport All teams planning
to compete in the loop this year
are to have a representative at
the meeting.

B • ,.t,

\.

Whirlpool

Applications
are invited

The wide-rtwnke brmk
makes it~"
n/lso er1sy.

Farmers Bank &amp;

Stay out of the
cold with this
special price

.otx••t
l11SY1d &gt;IJY11

l11SY1d. &gt;llY11-:

Metal Cabinets
Utility Cabinets
r China Cabinets
Base Cabinets
wall Cabinets

Why wait? Buy a
Whirlpool washer
and dryer

3dld

3dld

... . ._

·---··------1
Sale!

Madge Strauss
died in Athens

FISH FRY SET
R(\CINE
Racine
American Legion Post 602 will
heve a fish fry at its regular
meeting at 7:30 p.rp. Thursday . There . will also be
chicken available for those who
prefer it. Commander Harry
Wilford asl&lt;s all memhers to be
present.

_

See the excellent selection of Wasliirs. Dryers · Ranges - Humidifiers· Linoleum
· Carpet - Rug Padding - Freezers' • frashmashers · Lawn Mowers • Hoover
Washers and Dryers. Metal Cabinets. Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic Street
is completely remodeled- rearranged for your easy shopping- well heated and
lighted and is open every day 9:30A.M. to 5 P.M. - on Friday and Saturday 9:30
A.M. to 9 P.M. Plenty offree parking a tall times.

rnlnisst
•

DIVORCE GRANTED
One suit for divorce was filed
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court and another one
granted since Tuesday. Shirley
Bishop, Rutland, filed suit
against Bob Bishop, Rutland,
and Janice Sayre was granted
a divorce from William Max
Sayre, Jr., each cherged gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.

MON 3AVS 133HS u96.x••st

Visit
Elberfelds
Wareho.use On
-.
·
Mechanic Street in Pomeroy

in Middleport

So whether you bank with us or not, we ~elcome your
questions. Our doors are always open . The wide.o(lpen,
wide-awake bank always makes you feel 3'0u'Ve come to
the right place. And you have !

IIOIIIIW
•

ELBERF·ELDS IN POMEROY

speaks tonight

Medium damages were
reported to three cars ahd \he
driver of one was cited lo
mayor's court in a traffic
accident on West Main St. at 6
p.m. Monday in Pomeroy.
Pomeroy police said a car
driven by Danny Fink, 20,
Middleport, struck a car driven
by Kenneth Bell, 46, South
Point, which was stopped at a
traffic signal. Bell's vehicle
struck the rear of a car·driven
by Charles Lemley, 23,
Pomeroy, also stopped for ~
signal. Lemley had a minor
head injury. Fink has been
cited on an assured clear
distance charge.

SJIYnOs

· &gt; lrivestigated Tuesday by the
;i Gallia-Melgs Post State High-

Dr. Stauffer

fee l free to consult any of our officers. Our easy-going
officers are ready with financial counse l , to help you make
big decisions or plan for your future. W e have the time to
let you take your time. We know how much it matters.

l

RIO GRANDE- Officials of
the Medical J,aboratory
Technician (MLT).Program at
Rio Grande College have
learned that the first Rio
Grande MLT class passed its
examinations with high scores.
Out of a possible 200 points,
Rio Grande students averaged
120.11, considerably higher
than the national average of
112.79. A minimum score of 93

On

lor students of the Pomeroy
Elementary School students
and their parents is getting
underway, Robert Morris,
principal, said today.
Through the program, blood
needs for the students of the
school, · their parents, other
children of the family as well
as both sets of parents can he
providOd If 20 percent of the
parents of students will give
blood to an American Red

All bank s are big on money-so are we. But we're just
as big on service. If our tellers can't answer a question,

I

"I'm Just a Girl Who Can't
Say No," by lsea Wagner;
· ~Lonely Goatherd," by linda
Hubler; "Day by Day," by
Sa.ldl Hunter; "The First Time
Ever I Saw Your Face," by
.Shirley Richardson; and
"llnpoettlble Dream", by Mark
Shreve of JaCkson, Ohio.
Acc;ornpanlats ·were Marsha
Shlelljs, Jackllon, and Mrs.
Merlyn Ross, Rio Grande
College.

and 0

uZ1X.,Z1

SiZIS 11Y ·Nl
SlOt)ldS '&amp;nl HlYI
li01Y.AY1 N:IH)llll

immedjately treated.' ·nter,
was se~ dutage to his Cllj
J way Petrol.
.
No charge was filed.
.:
The firllt occurred at 8:~ a.
A Gl111a County milhap.
m.
in
Meigs
County
where
occurred
at 3:15p.m, on ·1')'9·
The ; examinations were Nelsonville; Teresa . Dearth,
Randall
E.
Pierce,
.
~.
The
Rhos
Rd.,
four t!HI~ of a milt
given in July of 1972, but the Nelsonville; Cynthia Howard,
official results were released to Nelsonville; .Mary Johnson , f'lalns, lost control of hjs car south of Centerpoint Rd. · ·:
Officers said Deln K. Stou_t:,
the college and Medical Center • Gallipolis; Jackie Long, . which left the highway and
17,1;\t. I, Thurman, ~ed tb
only recently,
Albany, and Vicky McCain,
the
rigllt to avoid llrl1dng .~
Students passing the Oak Hill. All nine graduates
Veterans Memorial Hospital
unldenllfled
car, l01t contrQl
examination were Catherine are now registered medical . DISCHARGED - ·Harold
Berry, Gallipolis; Roy Chose, laboratory technologists and Thomas, Mary Bissell, Iris . and struck a power pole.~
Point Pleasant; Christa Cobb, are employed in their newly Carr, Eulah Welker, Carrie was seVere damage to her cu.
No charges were flled.
·:
Point Pleasant; .Joyce Davis, chosen profession.
Bumgarner, Audra Hayes.
.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~------.,
'

Pomeroy s~hool joined 100
The MLT program covers
two years and Is operated
in new blood program :~u~~!.e~OM~~le ~~~r~
A program to insure blood Cross blondmobile over the

More than a word. More than our sm ile s. Our time.
The wide-awake bank has time for you and the eagerness
to se rve you be;it.

. I Continuously) ,

Water" and 11 The Lord's
Prayer" by Alvis Moore.

isrequiredtopass.AllnineRio
Grande
students scored above

f9ur
'Wide-Jwake
'Wide-r9pen 'Door
Policy

.

bones, "Bridge Over Troubled

.•..
'
.
i'~~~~.:.:::-~"'''*'''~.,.,.,.,,.~,,mr..::,-:w.&gt;.:::-;-~:,:·z:==~-~.::::-~~""''*'·=·=~·'·"'"*'''·'''.,.,.,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~~='1 Two injured in accident~ .
~
MLT class went 9
,..separate
Twopersonsw.erelnjuredin turned over. Pl~e 11Uffere4 .
traffic acclde.nts minor injuries but wu nCJ!

I~

8 PAGES

GALLON
CARTON

--~---....iiiii

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

On Mechanic St1'8ilt ·

· Warehouse ·

'

WITH A' •10.00 G

OF MONEY SAVING
.BARGAINS

ORDER

OPEN SUNDAYS .12-6

.

•

•

�....
.•·

I

,,

....

Lions, ladies entertained
Pomeroy Loins and their
wives enjoyed a ladles' night
dinner at the Meigs Inn
Tuesday evening attended by
13-K District Governor RUB.$
WllllamB o( Chesterhill and
Tom Ro6e of Athens, zone
chatnnan.
'Highlight of the evening was
seven vocal solos presented by
members ol the Rio Grande

Miss Rizer in
Angel Flight
at Ohio State
Milisa K. Rizer, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Rizer of
Pomeroy, joined the Ohio·State
University · Angel Flight
Tuesday.
Angel Flight is a national
honorary service organization
for college women desiring to
serve Air Force ROTC, their
university, their community
and their counlry.
Angela serve as hostesses for
many Ohio State functions,
participate in flag raisings at
football games, are flight
hostesses on university airplanes, have a drill team which
competes with other c~
teams in the midwest and help
promote Air Force ROTC, their
sponsoring organization.
Selection is rigorous, each
girl going through a series of
interviews. Angels are chosen
on the basis of poise, personality and willingness to
actively participate in all
Angel Fliglit functions. Mlas
Rizer is a lreslunan majoring
in nursing.
•

Comer of House
struck by auto
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. is investigating a single car accident that occurred at midnight last night In Chester Twp.
on Sumner Road.
Paul Card, 19, Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy, traveling west,
went off the road on the right
and struck · the corner of the
~•rl Pe•n home. The driver
was not injured.
•' .

. .- - - - - - - - .

rATDE

MEIGS lHt.ftl R
Tonight &amp; Thursday
February 14 &amp; u
NOT OPEN
.

Friday &amp; Saturday
February 16 &amp; 17
COUNTRY MUSIC
ITochnlcoior)
Marly Robbins, Sammy
Jackson, Barbara Mandrell,
Dotfie West, Carl Smith.

IG)
THE SALTBURG
CONNECTION

Barry Newman
Anna Karina
lPG)
Show Starts 7 p.m.

College Chorale under
direction ol Merlyn Ross.
Wendell Hoover, vice
president, introduced Williams
and Rose, both of whom spoke
briefly of Lions IJllltlers. Rose
met w!Ulthe local club's board
of directors following the
dlnre£. Frank Porter was
Jl'esenled a 15-year pin by
secretary Clarence Struble.
The well-received musical
program was made up ol these
· selections and singers:
"Adam and . Eve," a
recitation from God's Trom-

The first year's work is
period of the next year. ·
completed on the Rio Grande
Entry of the Pomeroy school campus and the second year at .
-first in Meigs County -into the Holzer Medical Center
the Red cross blood program laboratory.
wlll relieve the rounding ~P of
Dr. J. A. deLamerens,
donors should a blood need Holzer
Medical Center
arise. Only an hour is required Pathologist and Clinical
to give blood, including a free Director of the MLT program,
(limited) medical checkup of said he felt the achemoglobin, blood pressure, complishmen l of the first
weight, temperature and a graduating class was a
verbal medical history.
remarkable feat.
Par.ents of students are
"This is not an easy
asked to sign forms indicating examination," he said, Hmany
when they will report to a unit
people have to take it more
as a donor. The kickoff is than once. To have an entire
Monday when the blondmobile class pass with such high
is at the elementary school scores on the first lry speaks
from I to 6 p. m. Other dates well of both the program and
throughout the year when the
the studenls who enrolled. I am
unit will visit Pomeroy are
very proud of both."
April23; June 18; Aug. 20; Oct.
Dr. David Stauffer, pastor of
Steve Elberfeld, educational
the · Calvary Church Temple, 22, and Dec. 17. Parents may coordinator of the MLT
l.ouis. Mo.. and former sign for any of the visits .
program, works with the
. _ __ter _at Me!gs County's
students during their second
Hemlock Grove Christian
year practical laboratory
Church, will be the guest
training at Holzer Medical
s~eaker tonight at the "Faith
Center.
He too expressed his
Promise Rally" at the Mid·
delight · that the first class
dleport Church of Christ. The
Mrs. Madge E. Strauss, 71, of made such a good showing .
rally, to beginal7:30p. m., will
Ken ·Myers, project director
be preceded by a good old- 259 W. Union, Athens, formerly
fashioned fellowship dinner at of Pomeroy, was dead on for MLT on the Rio Grande
the church starting al 6:15 p. arrival at O'Bleness Memorial campus, works with the
m.
Hospital in Athens Tuesday student during their first
Dr. Stauffer, who received night. Mrs. Strauss was born in year in the program. He said
his Ph.D. from Ohio University
these nine students are to be
in 1972, also will be the Pomeroy, the daughter of the commended and that they have
evangelistis speaker at late Jacob and Margaret Mees.
Thursday evening's revival She was also preceded in death set high standards for other
kickoff "meeting at the by a daughter, Mrs. Margaret MLT classes to follow.
Pomeroy Church of Christ Ann (Peggy) Howard.
spop~9r~ by the Meigs Men's
Surviving are her husband,
Fellowship.
· Herman J. (Sam) Strauss; a
The joint revival of Meigs granddaughter, Mrs . Cinda
County Churches of Christ will Bartlett, Athens Route 4; two
be held June 3-8 at the Meigs great-grandchildren, and a
During routine business
Junior High School.
sister, Mrs. S. A. (Jean) Tuesday the Meigs County
McKnight of Kansas City, Commissioners approved a
Kansas. Mrs. Strauss was a resolution to accept apMORE DONORS
Latest contributors to the · member of the First Church of plications from any financial
institution
for
public
fund for :Mrs. Doria Reinhart, Christ in Athens.
Funeral services will be held depository ci active, inactive,
Pomeroy, were reported today.
The group Includes the at I p. m. Friday at the Hughes and interim deposits of public
Pomeroy First Baptist lllurch Funeral Home in Athens with money. The applications will
Mlsslonary Society, Mr. and the Rev. James Grooms of- be received by the comMrs. Ollver Michael, Ethel ficiating. Burial will be in the missioners at their office until
Hatfield, Middleport; Mr. and Athens Memory Gardens. 9 a. m. on March ~Applications must be sealed
Mrs. Don Mullen, Mabel and Friends may call at the funeral
home
Thursday
from
3
to
5
and
and endorsed "Applications
Heleo Waddell, Anna McGhee,
under the Uniform Depository
Mrs. Mildred Long, all of from 7 to 9 p. m.
Act." Attending were Charles
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
R. Karr, Robert Clark and
Samuel Russell and Mrs. Elsie Three taken
Warden Ours, conuniasioners
McKnlgbt, Urbana.
to hospital
and Martha Chambers, clerk.

e.xams

. .' .

.

.

.

Co.

PARTY TONIGHT
RACINE - The Junior
Auxiliary of Racine American
Legion Post 602 will hold a
party at the home of the leader,
Mrs . Gerald Simpson this
evening .

1\.T

Member of Federal Reserve System

On Froday•Our Orlve-ln Window is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.

electric
models

COME INNOW'S A
SPECIAL TIME
TO BUY!

'·'

UO,OOO Maximum Insurance fOr Each Depositor

••••••llii••IIii..

'

.

'

'

Teachers and the board agreed to a "consent order" issued
late Tuesday In ~ranklin CoUnty Common Pleas court. Under
terms of the agreement, teachers were to return to work today
and negotiations must be reSUII'Ied no later than next Tuesday.

·This is a good time to buy 11 new
Whirlpool washer. There are
specia I sale prices - · an
unusually fine selection - and
you can matc;h the dryer of your
choice.

Special Early Bird Sale
LAWN BOY
Lawn Mowers

.t
neM .s x ,z ~
e1eued
OISJS03

X

I

.~113N\fcl !l131HS 1ANIA
•
:»tJ!:»Pci·Bf6JO~

I! 81n!l
Moqees

Silll
9NI11i)
.

-

OJGNJdSnS
J111ANYW NHOr

I

Sturdy construction
heavier than usual
gauge steel. Choice of
white · avocado · cop·
pertone · woodtone
finishes.
Here's how you save during
the warehouse sale - 36.00
Cabinets ore 29 .00, 54.00
Cllblnets on sole 44.00, 59.00
Cabinets sale priced 48.00, etc.
Now Is the perfect time to buy
the Cabinet or Cabinets yov
need.

LINOLEUM
BY
THE YARD
Well known Armstrong
and Congoleum q·uallty.
9 and 12 foot widths. Big
selection of patterns.
Brlna In your musurements
and save on who! you need.

Fine New Selection of Both
Gas and Electric

MAGIC CHEF. Ranges

M&amp;R FOODLINER M&amp;R BARGAINLAND

FEDERAL
GLASS SET

And All At Sale Prices

Self propelled · 21 Inch cut ·
with grass catchers .
Famous Lawn Boy quality
for years of satisfactory
service.

SET OF 4

Save
s30.00 Now

MOVES TO RACINE
. LETART FALLS - An
evangelistic meeting in
progress at the Letart Falla ·
United Methodist Church will
continue at the Wesleyan
Church in Racine, Thursday
through Sunday, at 7:30 each
evening. There will be special
music each evening and the
junior choir wm sing Friday
evening. The public is invited.

JI'Qiest "a breach lh ~•e negOWIIlons agreement with the board
of education "

Here's a dryer buy you'll be glad you
made now ... and many months from
now. Permanent Press cool-down leaves
most no-iron things ready-to-wear with no touct:rup ironing. Five timed cycles give you settings
for everything - dainties to overalls. Three·
position temperature selector- including AIR
(no heat) setting. TUMBLE PREss~ control
tumbles-out wrinkles in no-iron clothes that
have been packed or stored away, saves touchup ironing. Extra-large lint screen is easy to
reach, clean. Avery special buy in any season!

Gas or

A •7.50
12 OZ. TUMBLERS WITH
GROCERY ORDER
PAPER BACK

BLUE RIBBON·

S~ve

·ICE
CREAM

On Carpet

By The · v~rd

HOLY
BIBLE

TOTEM
TRASH
BAGS ·
20-30 GALS.

PKG. OF 10

IN

THE
BARGAINLAND

KING JAMES
VERSION
OLD &amp; NEW
TESTAMENTS

512 PAGES

Special mill purchase - extra thick ··
rubber back and regular jute back carpeting. Good selection of colors. e'uy now
and really save on what you need for any
ro·o·m-in.v.ou·r·h·o·m-e._
.

ltBUJS •••
in neiS ...
(Conlillued from Page 11

P,OMEROY, OHIO

I

dryer!

LEAGUE TO MEET
The Meigs· Mason Slo. Pitch
Softball League will hold an
organizational meeting for 1973
Sunday, Feb. 18, at 3 p. m. at
the Royal Crown BotUing Co.
garage on North Second Ave.,
Middleport All teams planning
to compete in the loop this year
are to have a representative at
the meeting.

B • ,.t,

\.

Whirlpool

Applications
are invited

The wide-rtwnke brmk
makes it~"
n/lso er1sy.

Farmers Bank &amp;

Stay out of the
cold with this
special price

.otx••t
l11SY1d &gt;IJY11

l11SY1d. &gt;llY11-:

Metal Cabinets
Utility Cabinets
r China Cabinets
Base Cabinets
wall Cabinets

Why wait? Buy a
Whirlpool washer
and dryer

3dld

3dld

... . ._

·---··------1
Sale!

Madge Strauss
died in Athens

FISH FRY SET
R(\CINE
Racine
American Legion Post 602 will
heve a fish fry at its regular
meeting at 7:30 p.rp. Thursday . There . will also be
chicken available for those who
prefer it. Commander Harry
Wilford asl&lt;s all memhers to be
present.

_

See the excellent selection of Wasliirs. Dryers · Ranges - Humidifiers· Linoleum
· Carpet - Rug Padding - Freezers' • frashmashers · Lawn Mowers • Hoover
Washers and Dryers. Metal Cabinets. Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic Street
is completely remodeled- rearranged for your easy shopping- well heated and
lighted and is open every day 9:30A.M. to 5 P.M. - on Friday and Saturday 9:30
A.M. to 9 P.M. Plenty offree parking a tall times.

rnlnisst
•

DIVORCE GRANTED
One suit for divorce was filed
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court and another one
granted since Tuesday. Shirley
Bishop, Rutland, filed suit
against Bob Bishop, Rutland,
and Janice Sayre was granted
a divorce from William Max
Sayre, Jr., each cherged gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.

MON 3AVS 133HS u96.x••st

Visit
Elberfelds
Wareho.use On
-.
·
Mechanic Street in Pomeroy

in Middleport

So whether you bank with us or not, we ~elcome your
questions. Our doors are always open . The wide.o(lpen,
wide-awake bank always makes you feel 3'0u'Ve come to
the right place. And you have !

IIOIIIIW
•

ELBERF·ELDS IN POMEROY

speaks tonight

Medium damages were
reported to three cars ahd \he
driver of one was cited lo
mayor's court in a traffic
accident on West Main St. at 6
p.m. Monday in Pomeroy.
Pomeroy police said a car
driven by Danny Fink, 20,
Middleport, struck a car driven
by Kenneth Bell, 46, South
Point, which was stopped at a
traffic signal. Bell's vehicle
struck the rear of a car·driven
by Charles Lemley, 23,
Pomeroy, also stopped for ~
signal. Lemley had a minor
head injury. Fink has been
cited on an assured clear
distance charge.

SJIYnOs

· &gt; lrivestigated Tuesday by the
;i Gallia-Melgs Post State High-

Dr. Stauffer

fee l free to consult any of our officers. Our easy-going
officers are ready with financial counse l , to help you make
big decisions or plan for your future. W e have the time to
let you take your time. We know how much it matters.

l

RIO GRANDE- Officials of
the Medical J,aboratory
Technician (MLT).Program at
Rio Grande College have
learned that the first Rio
Grande MLT class passed its
examinations with high scores.
Out of a possible 200 points,
Rio Grande students averaged
120.11, considerably higher
than the national average of
112.79. A minimum score of 93

On

lor students of the Pomeroy
Elementary School students
and their parents is getting
underway, Robert Morris,
principal, said today.
Through the program, blood
needs for the students of the
school, · their parents, other
children of the family as well
as both sets of parents can he
providOd If 20 percent of the
parents of students will give
blood to an American Red

All bank s are big on money-so are we. But we're just
as big on service. If our tellers can't answer a question,

I

"I'm Just a Girl Who Can't
Say No," by lsea Wagner;
· ~Lonely Goatherd," by linda
Hubler; "Day by Day," by
Sa.ldl Hunter; "The First Time
Ever I Saw Your Face," by
.Shirley Richardson; and
"llnpoettlble Dream", by Mark
Shreve of JaCkson, Ohio.
Acc;ornpanlats ·were Marsha
Shlelljs, Jackllon, and Mrs.
Merlyn Ross, Rio Grande
College.

and 0

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immedjately treated.' ·nter,
was se~ dutage to his Cllj
J way Petrol.
.
No charge was filed.
.:
The firllt occurred at 8:~ a.
A Gl111a County milhap.
m.
in
Meigs
County
where
occurred
at 3:15p.m, on ·1')'9·
The ; examinations were Nelsonville; Teresa . Dearth,
Randall
E.
Pierce,
.
~.
The
Rhos
Rd.,
four t!HI~ of a milt
given in July of 1972, but the Nelsonville; Cynthia Howard,
official results were released to Nelsonville; .Mary Johnson , f'lalns, lost control of hjs car south of Centerpoint Rd. · ·:
Officers said Deln K. Stou_t:,
the college and Medical Center • Gallipolis; Jackie Long, . which left the highway and
17,1;\t. I, Thurman, ~ed tb
only recently,
Albany, and Vicky McCain,
the
rigllt to avoid llrl1dng .~
Students passing the Oak Hill. All nine graduates
Veterans Memorial Hospital
unldenllfled
car, l01t contrQl
examination were Catherine are now registered medical . DISCHARGED - ·Harold
Berry, Gallipolis; Roy Chose, laboratory technologists and Thomas, Mary Bissell, Iris . and struck a power pole.~
Point Pleasant; Christa Cobb, are employed in their newly Carr, Eulah Welker, Carrie was seVere damage to her cu.
No charges were flled.
·:
Point Pleasant; .Joyce Davis, chosen profession.
Bumgarner, Audra Hayes.
.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~------.,
'

Pomeroy s~hool joined 100
The MLT program covers
two years and Is operated
in new blood program :~u~~!.e~OM~~le ~~~r~
A program to insure blood Cross blondmobile over the

More than a word. More than our sm ile s. Our time.
The wide-awake bank has time for you and the eagerness
to se rve you be;it.

. I Continuously) ,

Water" and 11 The Lord's
Prayer" by Alvis Moore.

isrequiredtopass.AllnineRio
Grande
students scored above

f9ur
'Wide-Jwake
'Wide-r9pen 'Door
Policy

.

bones, "Bridge Over Troubled

.•..
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.
i'~~~~.:.:::-~"'''*'''~.,.,.,.,,.~,,mr..::,-:w.&gt;.:::-;-~:,:·z:==~-~.::::-~~""''*'·=·=~·'·"'"*'''·'''.,.,.,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~~='1 Two injured in accident~ .
~
MLT class went 9
,..separate
Twopersonsw.erelnjuredin turned over. Pl~e 11Uffere4 .
traffic acclde.nts minor injuries but wu nCJ!

I~

8 PAGES

GALLON
CARTON

--~---....iiiii

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

On Mechanic St1'8ilt ·

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·Now 'You Know

•

· Th9mas Ed!son's formal
education wasltrnlted to three '
: rnontlla ln a pu~lic achool at
·Port Hilron, t.ijch.
·

.

'
'

Weather

at y

.

Snow and rain mixed
changing to snow norUt contln~ing this afterno~c­
~ulations of 1 to 3 Indies.
· M~ch colder' tonight · and ·
Friday, chance of snow ·

entine

Devo~ To The lnlerest. Of17aeJMeig~-Maaon Area

V.OL XXIV NO. 213

9.

S31HH3H~

1V9 Zft

~mos

WASHINGTON : (UPI)
Wboleaaie prices rOie 1.3 per
cent in January, led by. con·
tinulngaharp incre~~~~esin farm
and food priees, the Labor
Department said today.
Althollgh unusually large for
January, the overan wholesale
trice rise -aa well as that for
fann prices -was leu than in
December when costs rose at

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By Uolted Preu IDieruttoual minds go to sleep. Their minds

Slock and ecstasy, laul!hlng
and crying. For 20 former
trlaoners tiHi war in Vietnam
and long years of separation
from wives, mothers and
fathera and chUdren ended in
emotional reunions at military
airportl acrose the coWitry.
The 20 arrived at Travis
AFB, Calif., Wednesday night
aboard the first of three
planeloads of freed POWs on
their ·way horne. Two more
planes, each with , 20 former
POWa aboard, left Clark Air
Base in the Phillppines today
for the long journey home.
They arrive later today.
· Frnrn Travis, the 20 scat·
tered acrou the country to
military hospitals near their
homes for checkups, testa and
llbatever treabnent may be
necesaary after their years in

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Voaware of TurmoU
At Clark, the senior Air
Force POW claimed at a news
eonfer~ce todaJ ll!al the
POWa were unaware · of
"seneral· . t~rmoD" In the
United Stale&amp; caused by oppoi\Uon to the war in Vietnam
and Implied that antiwar
propagands broadcasts were
forced from them.
But even so, said Col.
Robinaon Rlaner, Oklahoma
Qty, "I would like to say that
ao far as I know, every man
who baa been a prisoner
aupportB, and has supported,
our , PJ'esident and his
policies."
Rlaner and Marine Lt. Col.
John H. Dunn held a news
conference before abo~t 100
newsnen and bright television
ilghta. Both appeared cairn and
alert.
Risner said the POWs kept
physically and mentally acUve
during their imprisonment.
''They have habitually exercised both mind and body," he
said. "We have conducted
classes on many different
subjects. We never have let our
' .

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JE~_ CENT$

Neither Would Elaborate
While Rlaner and Dunn were
casting the first faint light on
prison life in North Vietnamneither would elaborate because they silid they feared
edverse conunents might endanger future prisoner
releases -00 other prisoners
put that behind them in
emotional reunions at Travis
AFB, Calif., and other military
airfields where ihey were
flown for hospltallxatlon at
military hospitals close to
home.
In the lounge at Travis, the
music was loud and Western on
the juke box. Navy capt.
Jeremiah Denton Jr. !'POke of
returning to his famUy 7'h
years after he entered a
prisoner of war camp.
"I can't define It because I
have nothing to compare It
with.''lle pa~. In the IBIDe
crac~ voice in which he
d~lared
"God · bless
America!'' two days ago when
he arrived in the Philippines,
he went on:
''There was ample Urne in
aoUtude to meditate on the
glory of family and friends.' '
Another pause. "We're almost
in a state of shock.''
The r~ions were as varied
as the men and their experien·

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strong export deinand" helped
feed the January farm price
increase. Prices for UV1!stock,
Vl!getables, Hve poultry, eggs,
rn1ik and wheat all were up for
the month while fresh fruit, oll
feeds and grains other than
wheat declined,
SubslanUal Increases . for

Nine defendants were flni!d
-and two others forfeited bonds
in Pomeroy Mayor's court
· conducted
by
Council
President Don Collins Wed·
nesday night. Mayor Willianl
Baronick remains confined to
·the Holzer Medical Center.
Fined were Don Woods,
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, passing
a school bus; Charles Lewis,
Pomeroy, $5 and costs,
disturbing the peace; Linda
Shuler, Pomeroy, $5 and costa,
improper backing; Richard
Mitchwn, Pomeroy, $50 and
costs and three dsys in jall,
driving while ,intoxicated;
Danny Fink, Middleport, $5
and costs, assured clear
distance; Marion Parsons;
Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
reckless operation; James
Boggs, Racine, $15 and costa,
speeding; Dorsa Parsons,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
assault and battery, and
Kenneth Hartley, 22, Pomeroy,
speeqing, $15 and costs.
Forfell!ng bonds were Ralph Bass, Syracuse, $50, leaving
Ute acene of an accident, and
$2&amp;, assured clear dllitance, .
and Barbara James, Pomeroy,
S25, intoxication.

Athens, Meigs
DeMolay plans
awards night

'

··-

flatlonary trouble · spot, con-, and leathers moved·up again In
Unued to rise under the in- January after a Decen)ber
fluence of a strong construcUon decline.
Based on a 1967 aVl!rage of
market, the BI.S said.
100, the wholesale price index
Adecline in natural gss rates stood at 12t.5 in Jan~. 7.1
helped pertia11y offset higher per-cent above a year earlier,
prices for other fuels such as This means lila~ $10 worlh of
electric power and borne wholesale goods six years ago
healing oil. Prices for hides now costa $1145.

' .

OOAL PREPARATION liANT- Coal isn't brouCbt up 400 fe« frllln
beneath Meiss County and converted dlrecUy into energy. First it has to be
(repared. The scene above is of the coal preparation plant under construction near Meigs Mine No.1 at Salem Center. Coal from Mines No.1 and

MERGER ASKED
WASHINGTON (UPI) The Interstate Commerce
Commission was urged
,District 11 DeMoiay Awards today to consolidate all
ces.
Nlght will be held at 7:30p.m. major railroads west of the
Capt. Mark A. Smith, 26, met Sl!turday at the Middleport Mississippi Into four s~per
his wife privately in a room at Masonic Temple with both lines. An ICC administrative
Letterman General Hospital in Athens and Meigs Chapters law judge, Nathan Klltenlc,
San Francisco. Carole Smith taking part.
made the proposal In the
requested that their renRock Island Railroad
St~art E. Libman will
A new service is available
dezvous be prl vate-no receive the Degree of merger case:
here
for persons receiving a
medical staff, no public in· Chevalier during the evening,
Under KUtenlc's recom·
formation officers, no secll'ity This degree is the second mendallon, the railroads monthly public assistance
forces. Later Smith's chUdren, highest honor a DeMolay can . that would remain In check from the Ohio DepartMisty Ann, 8, and Jeffery, 3, receive and is a citation for operation west of the ment of Public Welfare
were .brought to the room, as outstanding and marked Mississippi · would. be the qualified to receive food
were Smith's parents, Mr. and DeMolay activity and labor. Union Pacific, the Southern stamps.
This service is known as
Mrs. William Smith of Stuart, a 1970 grad~te of Pacific, the Santa ~e and the
Hawthorne, Calif. Smith was Athens High School, is a pre- Burlington Northern. He PubHc Assistance Withholding,
free to spend the night as he medical major at Ohio would spill the Rock Island later referred to- as "PAW."
The difference in this service
chose.
University where he is a among the Union PacHic, and the present system is that
member of Delta Tau Delta Southern PacUic, aod Santa the amount the recipient pays
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• rw.•.Wh''•'·WM~ l; : · · ·' ·····' ,,,,'' '~".W-;(;1,
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. . ..
.
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Fraternity. He is a past master Fe, necessary to correct the each monUt to purchase food
councilor of Athens Chapter "inefficiencies aod stamps at the bank will be
and holds the !Ulpresentative loadequacles of the mid'
!$ DeMolay Award . He Is the son . western railroad system.'' automatically taken out qf his
check by the State Welfare
By Uulted Presalntel'llllllonal
or Mr, and Mrs. Joseph H. ·~:.~·::.;o.&amp;... .::...t ..Of.!.OW.::"::r!';.:;) Office. Then the total amount
OOLUMBUS - A ROAD SIGN ON Interstate 71 reads: Lipman, 34 W. Carpenter,
of food stamps and the
LOCAL TEMPS
"Cleveland, !H miles, 151 kilometers.'' The sign is one of four AU!ens.
The temperature in down- recipeinls check will be mailed
erecled along 1-71 between Cleveland and Cincinnati by the state
Refreshments will be served
to him.
Tranaportation Department In anticipation that the enUre by Ute MoUter's Club of Ute host town Pomeroy at 11 a. m.
This service will eliminate
Thursday
was
43
degrees
under
country will be on the metric system ~ore long. .
chaP\er at Saturday night's
the recipient standing in line at
cloudy skies.
Ohio Transportation Director J, Philllp Richley said he afrair.
a bank to purchase his stamps,
believes Ohio Is the flr!l stale in the country to begin the
.saves money spent on transchangeover in Its signs. Although the United States would not
portation to get to the bank,
convert to the metric system before 1983 If Congress approves
and also makes it possi,bie for
the 1973 Metrical ion Act, Gov. John J. GWigan decided a gradual
the recipient to go directly to
transition would help motorists now.
Ute store to purchase food .
Also, there' are Urnes when a
THE NlNE MEMBERS OF THE EUROPEAN Common
recipient's check arrives on
Market said today President Nixon's decision to devalue the
Saturday and he cannot purdoUar by !Q per cent would contribute to resolving world balance
RIO GRANDE - The Rio proximately 50 persons ~t- chase foO!i stamps on Saturof payments ptoblerns. But Utey said biB action ,would not stop Grande . Community College tended the three hearings to dsy. Thus, if he has to bave hi~ ·
them from going ahead with work on a worldwide· monetary Board of Trustees Monday learn more about the proposed check cashed Uta! day then an
overhaul.
'
night approved the "official new Community College.
extra trip to his hank on
Meanwhile, more money markets opened today and more plan" for the proposed new
Chairman of the Rio Grande another .day is required in
government decided what prices they would set for their own . Community College and ap- College Board of Trustees, order to obtain food stamps.
currencies in buying and selling dollars. Sweden and Finland proved presenting to Ute voters William SlaveRs of Jackson, With the PAW service, Ute
announced a 5per cent devaluation while two other members of of ·the four county Community conducted .Ute hearings on · check arrives approximately
the NQrdic bloc, Derunark and Norway, decided to keep their pre- COllege dislrict a one ml11 tax need, · facilities, . and the same day as the recipient's
devaluation rates. , Iceland has not decided its action yet, but levy.
' desirability of operating the food stamps.
.
SWeden's finance rnlnl8ter said Reykjavik was likely to deval~e
The motion to approve the proposed Community College
To take advantage of lilts
· ita crown by 7 or 10 per cent.
olficial Community College by contract wiUt an existing ne~ ~rvice, it ~snecessary for
The dollar dec)lned today in dealings in Frankfurt, Tokyo and , plan was made by Mrs. Phyllis college rather than in- rec1p1ents to_ stgn a ne':" food
Paris.
Sheets of Gallipolis and the dependently,
stamp apphca\ion whtch · lS
motion to approve the one rnlll
Dr. Raymond Young of provided by the respective
WASIUNGTON - SECRETARY OF STATE WWiam P.
tax levy by, Einon Plummer of· Arthur D. Lillie, Inc. con- caseworker or any personnel at
Rogers today signs an agreement )?ehfeen the United States and
Welistoo Both motions carried sultants to the Cornmitnlty the Meigs County Welfare
Cuba dealin8 with hijacking. Rogers planned to put biB_name on
unanirn~y.
College board, also made three Office . When the ~e~iplent has
the document in his office at about 11:30 a. m. EST. No Cuban
The Board of Trustees presentations .at Ute public been properly certified, he-will
representative would be present. A representative of the Czech
meeting followed three pubUc hearings and was available. to begin recelv~ng his rood
EmbuSy wu upeded to initlallh.e agreernentfot CUba.
hearings, all earlier in the answer questions from Ute stamps by rna1l the foilowmg
Anolherllipinge~~llllill)'was to lake place in Havana, with
evening at the Rio Grande audience.
month.
~f'wdu•••
Pile Ul
College Dining Hall. Ap·
,
The casewor~er will be

•

poultry, fish, animal feeds,
dairy, cereal and bakery
II'Oducts also contributed to
Ute advance ,
Metals and metal products
were responsible for about one
Utlrd of the industrial . commodities Increase while
lumber and wood products
prices, a continuing in·

Nine pay
in court

College ·board
approves plan

·y·g··

~.

are stili alert and their bodies
are in good condition."

rnonlhand(iicesforcoiiSUilier whOlesale priee increase was
. type foods !lliot up 3.7 per cent. adjusted ' to 1.1 per cent,
· Industrial commodities prj. compared to 1.6 per cent a
ces, which make up about three month earner. The December
·fourths of the government's unadjuated increase for all
liilolesale price index, rose 0.5 liiloleaale -oornrnodltles was 1.8
per cept in Jan~ary, the per cent compared to 1.3 per
Bureau of Labor Statisllcs · cent last month.
(BI.S) said.
The BLS aald severe winter
With seasonal factors taken ,.tiMr plus ID ''eJcepllanalJy
into account, the January

ews•• in Briefi :·

XOB

•

the faStest pace in 21 years.
The January increase 'could
pertially reflect the Ufting of
· mandatory wage-price con·
trois on Jan. 10, althoUgh farm
prices were not con~oUed by
the administration's stabiliZa·
Uon program.
Prices of farm products and
proceased foods and feeds
jumped 3.3 per _cent for the

Reunions
emotional·

z 3~1nr

X08 '81

~

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1973

NV'J 'ZO St

.ools
SYid
SNV'J
'ZO.St

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, DHIO ·

. n~tes.

-

'

'

.

from No. 2five mUe1 nay at Paint aQCi: will be made~ here for Ita 10.
mile ride by conveyor belt to the Gavin ~r Plant at Cleshlre. II is
esUrnated there is 36-yean supply of coal for tha Gavin plant's needs_in the
Clarion seam underlying parts of Meigs, GaWa and Vinton oountles. Much or
all of it eventually will be trocessed through the lnslallatlon above.

New PAW service cuts
problem in food stamps
available for any changes
necessary. AU the recipient
needs to do is contact the local
welfare office. The changes are
made ;locally and the state
welfare office is notified what
to deduct and how many
stamps to send each ho~sehold.
The only difference is that Ute
recipient receives the stamps
by mail rather Ulan to go to a
bank to purchase them.
This is a voluntary act on Ute

part of the recipient and
Uterefore he can stop participating anytime he wishes
· by notifying the local welfare
agency. Any month when he
does not receive his stamps at ·
the same time as he receives
his check, all he need do is to
notify the local weUare agency
of the situation and he will
receive his card.
Households having a com·
bined income of a private.

source, which is supplemented
by public assistance checks,
must receive a weUare check
large eno~h to cover the
purchase price of their food
stamps or that household wiU
not he eligible to receive PAW
services.
For detailed Information ,
residents may contact Ute local
welfare office in Middleport in
person or may phone 992-2117.

•
Auditor will help seniors

complete Homestead for1ns
Assistance to residents 65
and over in completing
Homestead Exemption forms
for possible real estate tax
reductions will be provided
through the Meigs County
Council on Aging.
The county auditor's office is
cooperating so that staff
members will be available to
assist any person who requests
aid in completing the
Homestead Exemption rorm.
The forms are available at the
county auditor's office or at the
council's office, 257~ ·Mill St.,
Middleport. The forms also will
he sent by mail to those
telephoning _992-7400.
The reduction in property
taxes is for those 65 and over
and the income of Ute owqer
and spo~se cannot exceed
$8,000 in the previo~s year.
Applications lllusl be filed
annually before June 4.
Thz council is tentatively
planning a county-w ide
meeting of senior citizens in
early March.· The Meigs
County council has received a
federal grant of approximately
$27,000 through the ACfiON

program for a senior citizens
volunteer program through
which volunteers wiD be used
to help at parks, pospitals,
schools and at the bookmobile.
An
amendment
was
presented at the recent
meeting of the council
providing for the replacement

No one hurt in
early accident
Sheriff Robert C. Har ·
tenbach's Dept. investigated a
car-truck accident today at
7:40a.m. In which no one was
. reporled injured.
Two miles southeast of
Letart Falls on SR 338 John N.
Hill, 57, Letart Falls, was
hacking from a driveway into
the highway when a truck
driven by Dana A. Congo, Ri. I,
Portland, traveling west,
struck Hill's car. The truck
was owned by the Collins'
Brothers. The~ was heavy
damage tb the car and light
damage to Ute truck.
'

of council members who miss

three consec~tive meetings
wiUtout a reason. The council
also approved the request of
Mrs. Rose Papier, coordinator
of Ute State Administration on
Aging, that Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, director of the
council, be a member or a
planning committee which will
set up district forwns in the
state. Mrs. Thomas will attend
a meel!ng in Colwnbus today in
conjunction with ·the committee work,
A possible continuing
memorial fund, with money to
be used to carry out senior
citizens programs, was
discuased in connection with
the death last week of Mrs.
Geneva Yates, an active
mtrnber of Ute council.
'

DIVORCE ASKED
Joyce E. Vance, Rutland,
has filed suit for divorce in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court against Ronald E.
Vance, Pomeroy, Rt. 4,
charging grou neglect of duty
and extreine cruelty,
\

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