<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="17102" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/17102?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-10T19:48:47+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="50252">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/d124896059f11242644605bc63285930.pdf</src>
      <authentication>ae9087cddce840442fa03dfe87359d6b</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="54554">
                  <text>a-'lbeSII!dl.vTimes-sentinei,Sunday, Feb. l8, 19'13

10 OZ. lOX IROCK
CHOCOLATE COVERED

RADIO

CHERRIES

122 PER STORE

LIMIT ONE
WITH COUPON

, ••,,.,,., fl&lt;·. ..•

22C

EACH

WITHOUT COUPON
57'
COSMETIC IIIIT.

40 PER STORE
LIMIT OIIE

WITH COUPON

u

CLARK AIR BASE, PhiU~
pines(UPJ)-Another20freed
American POWs, who initially
balked at their rei~ fearing
Communist trlckery, arrived
. from Hanoi to a cheering
welcome Sunday and three
hours later sat down to steak
cii!Jners.....4eir flrstln at least
five yean,
In Saigon, a North Vietnamese spokesman said more
than 100 other U.S. prtsOners
will go free ln .aboul one week.
One of the 20, Navy Lt. James
'1lallef, left on a mercy lllght
ahead of the others today to go
to the bedside of his critically
W father In Carthage, Miss.
M!Utary sources said the rest
of the men ·should complete
their paperwork and medical
examinations by Tuesday and
leave for Travis Air Force
Base, Calif., either Tuesday or
earlY Wednesday.
·

SALE
IN EFFECT
MON. FEB. 19'h
y

$222

EACH
WITHOUT COUPON $4.96
IEWEllr IJIPT.

is detained

%"x66"

30 MIN. CASSETTE .

TAPE

122 PIR STOll

. ··••··· . . .

drag. All metal prechion

'

cost a ears. Eauiooed with

LIIIIT ONE
WITH COUPON

/~,\ 22cucH

/ ":,:)~/f.--: co~ ' ~. ; \

-·

• -~-- -~- • --L J
· - •c.I!IQ..!!.Jii!!!I
..!LDII;.=-

Gear ratio 3 to 1.

llPERSTORE
LIMIT OIIE
WITH COUPON

22C

EACH
WITHOUT COUPON

County Sheriff Robert C.
Hartenbach said today his
office has learned that James
Odom, Pomeroy, RD, wanted
by the department in connection with grand larceny
charges and possible breaking
and eotering, is being detained
by the sheriff at Hillsboro in
Highland County.
The sheriff also reported that
Craig A. Haning, 19, Albany,
Rt. 2, held on charges of
breaking and entering the
Mont Vance store In Snowville
on Jan. IS, has come before
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge John C. Bacon on
a bill of information by
Prosecuting- Attorney Bernard

ELECTRIC TAPE

Long range pres~ure type

144 PER STORE

22¢

99'
WITHOUT COUPON
LIMIT 1

. .. ... . .
OOOMON f!8 190Nl

32

8 TRACK

HEAD CLEANER
122 PEl STORE
LIMIT ONE
WITH COUPON

22(

EACH
WITHOUT COUPOII $1.59 .

eREGULAR
122PERSTORE
LIMIT ONE
WITH COUPON

22C

EACH
WITHOUT COUPON
99'
HWillr IIIPT.

KODAl VP 126 lUCK &amp;WHITE

INSTAMATIC
FILM
122 PER STORE
LIMIT ONE
WITH COUPON

22C

EACH
WITHOUT COUPON
II'

JIWiliY IIPT.

HECK'S DETERGENT
122 PERSTORE
LIMIT ONE
WITH COUPON

2l

RECORD ALBUMS

HALF

oz.

HATCHET

A 26 oz. sharpened hatch!!! on a purt white
a sh handle ..Heod is blo c~ en ame led with polished edge .

48 !'ER STOlE

LIMIT ONE
WITH COUPON

WITHOUT COUPON 44'

EACH
WITHOUT COUPON
66'
NDUSIWARI DEPT.

oz.
SIMOIIZ
CHROME
CLEANER·
8

48PER STORE
LIMIT ONE
WITH COUPON

22C

EACH
WITHOUT COUPON
47•
AUTOMOT/111 DEPT.

A tremendous as·sortment of stereo and mono
albums- sound-tracks-hit artisfs-mood mu·
sic, etc.

422 PER STOREOnly.

Customer Limit of 5

--

-··Asp1rio

..T•h.!!.l!. ~

I

~l~~~~~~ ~·

VALUISTO
$4.91

CHOICEANY

IOO's

...... .

Record~

22~ACH

HARIWAIE DEPT.

36"x84"
122 PERSTORE
LIMIT ONE
WITH COUPON

22c

SPECIAL GROUP ONLY

22~
EACH
WITHOUT COUPON S1.44

FACH

ITEM THIS GROUP

122 PER STORE
LIMIT ONE
WITH COUPON

22~AW

22C

UCH
WITHOUT COUPON

HICK'S.REG. 79'

48'

A.

COSMETIC DEPT,

9QT. WASTEBASKET
122 PER STORE
LIMIT ONE

14QT.
OIL CAN

UTILinTUB

POURING
SPOUT

122 PIRSTORE

LIMIT ONE

48 PEII STORE
LIMIT ONE
WITH COUPON

BUSHEL
LAUNDRY BASKET

22c

EACH
WITHOUT COQPON 59'

122 PIR STOiE
LIMIT ONE
IOQT.DISHPAI
122 PER STOll

LIMIT ONE

STAllARD OIL FILTER

WRENCH

UPUSTORE
LIMIT ONE
WITH
COUPON

22c

EACH
WITHOUT COUPON
41'
AfTOMOT/111 DEPT.

FUNNEL
48 PER STOll
LIMil ONE
WITH COUPON

22C

EACH
WITHOUT COUPON
57'

Official mllltary sources said
the latest group of PoWs
balked after North Vielruimese
authorities told them about
· their early telease, .a goodwill
geature to mark presidential
adviser Henry A. Kissinger's
trip last week to Hanoi.
"They thought it was a
trick," the sources said, "and
responded by saying they
didn't want to go."
It took a visit by a member of
the International ConunisSion
of Control and Supervision
(ICCS) 'to convince the men
their release was for real, the
SQurces said.
"This is the sort of prison
banky panky which goes on all
the tllne," a source said. "The
men thought the ·North Vietnamese were roofing with them
and they thought they'd play
the same game."
In Saigon, Lt. Col. Bui Tin, a

ante
man
d
W

WHILE QUANTITIES
LAST

SUNSET

6J.:.

More PO s .sit down to
steak dinners at Clark

OPIIIU.Y
10 TO 9

OPRIAIY
19 TO 9

144 PER STORE

LIMIT ONE
WITH COUPON ·

22c

EACH
WITIOUT COUPON
. 77'

CUTLERY
TRAY
122 PIR STORE
LIMITONI

Fultz.

•

'

spqkesman fo~ the North debriefing process. Nine hours
Vleinamest! de"gat\on lo' the after their arrival, they had all
peac~eeplng ~oint Military showered, had a brief ph)'lllcal
.Conimission (Jrjl:C), said Silll- . examination, eaten, met their
day: "W:e ihtnk \bat the reiurn . escort officers and made phone
of the prisoners' of the second. calls home to wives ar~d
pha!!4! will be' carried irut parents.
normally In the second 15 da)'ll
The men ate about three
after the (Jan: 26 Vielnam) hours after their arrival at a
cease-fire." :
speci81 candlelight dinner arThatmeans ule next group of ranged by the hospital at
V.S. POWs should go free In Clark. One of the men woHed
North and S.oulh Vietnam down five steaks and six eggs
about Feb. '!/,
during the meal, which was
· IU POWs Released
enhanced by the presence of
The release of the· latest pretty nurses and Red Cross
·group ofprlsoners brings to 163 girls. The girls attracted the
thenumbero!U.S. POWs freed · attention of the men abnostas
by H8nol and the VIet Gong much as tiM! food.
since the cease-fire and leaves
Some Blew Kisses
362 Americaris still in captivity
Some of the Red Cross girls
In North Vietnam. In South blew the men kisses as they
Vietnam, 81 are still held by the stood oulslde the door. "Who
Viet Cong.
wants to blow kisses?" said one
The 20 men who arrived of the men, and a group of them
Sunday at Clark, all Navy and jumped up from their tables,
Air Force pilots shot down over went outside and kissed the
NorthVietnaminl966andl967, girls on the cheeks.
gotofftoaquickstartontheir
Doctors said all the men

were In good physical condition. When they got off the
plane tbat flew them from
Hanoi, all looked healthy and
carried themselves well as
they walked spritely to a
waiting ambulance bus,
A cheeririg crowd of about
2,000, mostly Air Force
families and Filipino base
workers, welcomed the men.
Some of the crowd carried
signs reading: "Free and
Beautiful." The arrival came
just after dusk and the men
stepped off the plane Into
bright television lights wearing
big grins, dark blue pants and
light blue shirts. They waved
enthusiastically to the crowd.
"We're proud to he Ameri·
cans," said Navy Cmdr. James
R. Pirie of Bessemer, Ala., the
group's senior ranking officer.
"We are proud of our com·mander-in-chief, President
Nixon. We are proud of the
American people who have
supported us over the years."

.

•

t.+H MC1

S ~ur r11 Ill!'
t~ll f ~~~.""

FIFTEEN MEIGS COUNTY High school girls are competing for the Meigs County Queen
of Hearts title In a contest being conducted by the coQDty heart association In conjunction with
the annual heart fund drive. Residents may vote - a penny per vote - be depositing contributions In containers placed in business houses. Pictured are front row, I tor, Patty Searles,
Diana Smith, Rose Roseberry, Rita Wilson; second row, llo r, Tammy Tyree, Drema Ward,
Debbie Lawrence, Debbie Mllllron; third row, Ito r, Vicki Newell, Lore.!ta Tackett, Karen
Neigler, Mel Faulkner and Melania Waldnig. Other contestants are Darla Ehersbach and
Cindy Schneider.

at y

0

Saturday evening and 7 a.m.
today . Approximately $60
worth of tools were missing.
Details as to how entry was
gained was not available.
Sunday the department
investigated two automobile
accidents. At 8:48 a.m. on SR
124 in Minersville, Freda
Duffy, Syracuse, traveling
dpwn river, took her eyes off
the road to look down at the
seat and the car went off the
road to the right and hit a stone
wall.
Mrs. Duffy had visible injuries but was not immediately
treated. No citation was issued.
There was heavy llamage to
the car.
·
At 2:57 p.m. in Chester Twp.
on SR 7, Harry A. Davis,
Coolville Rt. 1, was traveling
north when he struck a doe
deer. There was heavy damage
to the front of his car. No
personal Injuries were
reported. Condition of the deer
was not known .

.

.

•

enttne

Devo!ed To The Interests OJ The Meigs-Mason Area

POMEROY:MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXV NO. 215

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1973

Brezhnev visit to
U. S. is revived
LONDON (UP!) - Plans for
Soviet Communist Party
leader Leonid I. Brezhnev to
visit President Nixon in
Washlngtoo are. -again• .under
"acUve consideration" in the

American bombing of North
Vietnam in December caused
the plans to be revised by
Moscow and the planned visit
to be put off. until later this
year. A date in the !aU was
anticipated.
Diplomatic reports said the
visit is once again under
review and that urgent con·
sideration is being given by the

Kremlin, diplomatic sources
Haning pleaded guilty and
said today .
was placed In county jail
The reported success of the
pending a report from state
Sino-American talks in Peking
probation officer, Allan Smith.
in the past few days has added
The department was notified
a sense of urgency to Kremlin
at 9:15a.m. today of a breaking
considerations, they said.
and entering of the Jaymar
Brezhnev was to have visited
Coal Co. below Hobson between
tho United States for a summit
..... · .• ~~~:::::~.:::::~=:~=::::::::::::::.-::::d**e:·~hW!::.":..~.~.:::::x~-::::;:
with the President this spring .
A date in April had been
COLUMBUS (UP!)
mentioned earlier . But Twenty abortions were perdomestic troubles In the Soviet formed Sunday at a clinic here,
Union and the escalation of the Ohio Abortion Alliance
MOSOOW-SOVIET COMMUNIST party authorities have
reported, on women ranging in
.. decided to weed out Ideological slackers and misfits startage from 17 to 36.
Ing March 1 when 14.5 mllllon members begin turning in their
Mrs. Mary Ann Hanson of
MEETING CALLED
red-colored cards for new ones. ACentral Co~ttee resolution
Bob Ord, Southern High Columbus, head of the alliance,
Sunday set the date for the start of the exchange, the first In 20
School basketball coach, and said one of the women was
years. If judged worthy of continued membership, the members
president of the Southeru from West Virginia and the
will get back a new card. If not, they will be dropped from the
Valley Athletic Conference, rest from Central Ohio. Two
party roDs.
announced today that the women decided in counseling
The resolution said the two-year exchange wlll progress
SV AC will hold lis spring sessions not to have their
"graduaUy without haste." The party earlier stressed that the
meeting on Tuesday, March pregnancies terminated, she
exchange Is not a purge but a careful pruning of unworthy
6 at Oscar's Restaurant in said.
members designed to boost Communist efficiency. The party
Mrs. Hanson said 10 more
Gallipolis.
newspaper Pravda said today the move would bririg about a
All league basketball abortions are planned here
''fresh surge of creative power In the party organizations ... "
coaches are asked to submit later this week. The minor
their selecllons for the all surgery, which takes about five
PRAGUE -A SOVIET AIRUNES PLANE on a fUght from
SVAC dream team to minutes, was performed at a
M08COW to Prague overshot the runway today, crashed Into
secretary Mel Carter as soon temporary clinic in east
trees, exploded and caught fire, a ~ague Airport spokesman
Columbus, she said, staffed by
as possible.
said. Airport sources said the plane carried about 87 passengers.
gynecologists and
In addllion to tbe all league two
'lbe airport said the crash occurred at aboutiO a. m. (4 a. m. team balloting, the up· operating under the highest
EST).
coming track and baseball medical standards . The
-· The plane craShed Into uie Prague suburb of Uhrineves,
seasons will be discussed abortions cost about $150.
about a mile from the airport, the airport spokesman said.
along with the All .Con·
At least one other abortion
Although first reports Indicated all aboard the.plane were killed,
fereoce Banquet.
has been reported since a U. S.
the head of Uie Protocol Department of the Soviet Aviation
Ministry In Moscow, said some persons aboard survived today's ;;;;;; ...:.:.::::::.:. .m:1;o~r...,.. ... ,. District judge In Colwnbua
crash. He declined lo give figures but said a Soviet Investigating
•
•
team was en route to Prague.
'

Kremlin to a visit by Brezhnev
to Washington, possibly in the
swnnier.
The reports said the Soviet
Ambassador to Washington
Anatoly Dobyrnin , who is
presently in Moscow, is
discussing the projected visit
with the Soviet leadership after ·
having sounded out the White
House.

Abortion count: 20

ews•• in Briefsf

declared Ohio 's abor tion
statute unconstitutional. Dr.
Harley Blank, a suburban
Reynoldsburg physician ,
terminated the pregnancy of
"Mary Doe ," the unidentified
yoWlg woman who successfully
challenged the state abortion
law.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Cool Wednesday, chalice of
rain or snow north and .rain
south Thursday, turning
cooler Friday. Highs upper
20s to mid 30s Wednesday, In
the 30s Thursday and In the
20s and lower 30s Friday .
Overnight lows in the 20s
north and 30s south.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Monday was 39 degrees ·under
cloudy skies.
FUNERAL RITES SET
COLUMBUS
( UPI) Fu~eral rites for Roman
Catholic Bishop Clarence
Elwell will be held Thursday In
St. Joseph's Cathedral. Elwell,
69, bishop of the Columbus
diocese since 1968, died last
Friday of an apparent heart
attack .
PUBLIC WELCOMED
The public is invited to attend the installation of Meigs
High School VICA officers at 6
p.m. Wednesday at the high
school. There will be a tour of
vocational fac ilities and
refreshments will be served.

G-T adds channels
POMEROY - General
Telephone Co. of Ohio
technicians are working on a
projeot to increase PomeroyAthens calling circuits, the
compan y announced today _
Kenley R. Krinn, Athens
district commercial manager,

l13id 24 additional channels will
be added to the existing
"carrier~' system.
A carrier electronically
converts voice impulses to
radio frequencies for transmission. AI the receiving end
the frequencies are changed
back, Krinn added.

"Carrier systems make
more efficient use of existing
cable facilities," said Krinn.
" It eliminates the need for
installing vast amounts of new
cable and helps keep down the
cost of providing service."
"This $26,000 addition is
necessarydue to the increasing
number of calls in the area,"
the manager added. "The job
is expected to take about a
month to complete ." The
Pomeroy exchange served
.4,719 telephones in a 90.4
square mile area of Meigs
county.

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

Kissinger·
ending tour
TOKYO
(UPI)
Presidential adviser Henry A.
Kissinger arrived today In
Tokyo on the last step of an
Asian tour tbal took him to
Hanoi ahd Peking to discuss
the post-Vielnam War era.
His major engagement
during a on~ay Japanese
visit was a meeting with Prime I
Minister Kakuel Tanaka.
Earlier, a White House
spokesman said In Key Biscayne, Fla., where President
Nixon is staying, that
Kissinger and Chinese Premier
Chou Enlai mel for five hours
on his last day in Peking.
White House spokesman Ronald L. Ziegler did not comment on what the two men
discussed but said their talks
were "frank and wideranging" and-look place "in an
unrestrained atmosphere."
During his four-day visit,
Kissinger also mel Communist
party Chairman Mao Tse-tung,
who, sources said, asked
Kissinger to convey his
regards to Nixon . The

Weather
Chance of mixed snow and
rain south Tuesday. Warmer
tonight, turning cooler by late
Tuesday. High today and
Tuesday lower .41);. Low tonight
lower 311s. ·

President saw Mao when \le
went to China last spring.
Japanese newspapers said
Ute fact that Mao received
Kissinger, who ·technically
holds subcabinet status, at his
home Indicated that talks on
Chinese-American rap·
proaclunent may have made
substantial progress.
They said Kissinger must
have reached agreement with
Chinese officials on withdrawal
of American troops from
Taiwan, on ~tablishtnent of a
U.S. trade office In Peking and
an exchange of newsmen.
The subjects of the
Kissinger-Tanaka meeting was
not disclosed, but government
sources said they might deal
with VIetnam, U.S..Japanese
relations In the aftermath of
the latest dollar devaluation
and the general Asian
situation.
Kissinger planned to leave
Tuesday for the United Stales.
As he left Peking, the New
China news agency said Kiss·
Inger was seen off by Foreign
Minister Chi Peng.fei, Vice
Foreign Minister Chiao 'Kuan.
hua and other officials.
During his China visit,
Kissinger conferred 'with for
more than 20 hours with
Chinese officials and spent
another hour with Mao.

"

LONDON - GOLD IDT A NEW IDGH at today's morning
official fixing on a the foreign exchange, jumping 32\2 cents to
f13.70 an ounce. It continued to rocket ahead after the fixing In
fairly light trading, being quoted between $73.50 and $74.25.
"Demand has come In from Europe, United Stales and the
:; Ear East, bul,nowhere so heavy as last week," dealers said.

.'

'

'

BELFAST - CRUISING GUNMEN SHOT two Belfaat
postmen &lt;lea! Sunday In a Roman Catholic area and wounded a
third man In the latest shooting blamed by pollee on political and
religious hatreds In Northern Ireland.ln other weekend violence, ·
troops battled gumnen early today In a Catholic area. An anny
'JPOkelllllllll said .troops thought they hit one gunman.
.
Two rocket attacks, at poets 25 miles from BeHast and at a
site along the border dividing Northern Ireland and the Iriah
.• r'epilbllc to the south, caUBed aome damage but no casualties.
Meanwhile, In ·political developmenlll, Protestant leaders ·
:'. rejected a Catholic overture to start peace talks Intended to end
the violence .

·.•,·•
•

WASHINGTON- THE FOOD AND DRUG. Administration
·. has ordered an East Palestln~, Ohio, caruiery to reeall'29,500 1
·. cans o! mushrooms beca111e of the discovery ol a toxin that •

· proiluces botulllnl.

.
'

'

.·
.'

eannu.

·

••

The FDA said United
·eo. of East Palestine In
Columbiana County discovered a swollen can on its warehouSe
lbelvea and labol'al«y testa showed It ·contalntd deadlY.
(Continued on Page 8) '

MRS. JUDY RIGGS, contest director, Jlfllsenls

the

traVIIIing trophy' to four studenlll of the Scott-Eres Ballin
Studio of NUei, Ohio, who traveled 22:'1 miles to take parlin

&amp;tnday's baton twirling contest held at the Meigs Junior
High School In Middleport.

THREE IDGH POINT contestillll In their respective
age classes as the result af a baton lwlrHng contest held
Sunday a\ the Meigs :Junior High School in Middleport. From
the left, Sandy Craft, 7, Belpre, juvenile blgh point; Donna
Rowley, 11, Charleston, junior high point, and Kathy
Eggleton, 15, Hurrican, W. Va., senior high point. MM~ . Judy
Riggs was contest director .

�' '

3- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,~.• Fe~.. IP,_I!m .
. r
2-

Tlie lllllyljeniiDel,MlddJeport-1'1111er0y, 0 ., Feb.l9, 1973

Wildlife packets available

Helen Help

Us.

By HeleQ Bottel

enlire open land on the fann. some wildlife species conBy Jolul Cooper
Part of the land is already slating of hazelnut, Chlneae
Soli COlli. Service
·
g
rown up In native hardwood chestnut, Norway spruce and
PT. PLEASANT - The
Western Soil Conservation trees and shrub$. The pine Amur honeysuckle.
DISTRICT work crew
District In Mason County stiU planlationswillbeplantedonly
in the open areas since these under the direction of H. S.
h a rdwood natural Benedlcthasbeenworkingona
Lay of the kind
reforestation areas will not be spring develpplll!lnt on the
has several wildlife plant cleared in order to be Merton ·Siinde farm on Warnerpackets available. These are replanted. Species that were ' Branch of Mud Lick Fork on
intended to be used around selected to be planted consist of Thirteen Mile Creek. Mr.
suburban homes or around while pine, Virginia pine and Slinde is collecting water at a
· spring to provide running
farm · homes .to incretlse
water in his home. Water is
wlldllfe habitat, as weU as in
being collected at the spring by
some cases for beautlfieation.
means of two parallel lines of
There are 30 trees and shrubs
.
FACTS
drain tile. From a collection
available consisting of Chinese
basin immediately below this
chestnut, Colorado · blue
spring the water will be carried
spruce.- Canadian Hemlock,
to a reservoir which will still be
While pine, hazelnut, Grey
100 or more vertical feet above
dogwood, Amur honeysuckle
their mobile home. He plans to
and Washington hawthorn.
use a 1,000 gallon pre-cast
These are all plants which have
concrete reservoir in which to
been proven to improve
store the water.
wildlife habjtat, either by
providing food for them or
needed cover.
The price of this packet is
$6.75. Orders will be filled on a
Pomeroy Bowling ~ants
Pro football's aU-time at·
Saturday
Bantam Lfague
tcndance,
including
pre-sea·
first-come basis and are now .
Feb. 10, 1J73
son
and
post-season
games,
being taken at the Soli ConStandings
rose to an aU-time high of
Pis.
servation office on Main Street 14,371 ,784 in 1971, The World Team
12
Red
Barons
in Pt. Pleasant. The ASCS and Almanac notes. This record Ball Bombers
8
County Extension Service haye totaled 268 games ,and rep- All Stars
7
7
order forms for this packet in resented an increase of 6.5 Pin Busters
6
Banano
Spills
per cent over 1970, which
their olflce also.
2
drew
13,488,708 fans . The Cyclones
WE HELPED Edison paid attendance
High
lndlvlduol
Game
during the
,
Parsons of Ripley· with a plan -'1r e g u 1a r 1971 season was Debbie Hatfield 143.
Second High Ind. Game revision for the famUy fann on 10,076,035 for a per game Keith Krauelter 133.
High Series - Dovld Smith
Morrison Ridge above Tribble. average of 55,363 which rep241.
resented
95.2
per
cent
of
This farm was Mrs. Parsons'
Second High Series - Debbie
.
family farm in her youth, They capacity.
Hatfield 238.
C op yrl~ h t © 1 973
Team High Game - Red
Xif'WBJIIlPe r E nt er pr ise Assn.
now use the farm as a weekend
Barons
740.
retreat where they enjoy
Team High Series - Red
Women veter@ns may now Barons 1478.
outdoor living, hunting and just
claim
their husbands as
getting away from it all. ·
Mr. Parsons and his son are dependents, to qualify for
Saturday Junior League
now mosUy interested In tree additional GI Bill allowances
Feb. 10, 1973
Standings
planting. We made plans for a on the same basis as married Team
Pts.
tree planting program for the male veterans.
Dreamers
Apaches
12
- - ..- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . Impacts
11
1 Ball Busters
Le«en af apbliOD are welcomed. Tiley lboald be lesl
Rams
8
.. _ • wordl lOIII (or be sabject to redacllou by tile
1 Alley Cats
4
1
-••-High Individual Game
editlr) ud mut be slped with the alpee'•
I Steve Bachnerh 181.
1d G
I NUDel may be wlthlteld apca pablleaiiOD. However, 1111 I Second Hlg 161
n . a me -t,ll8lllelwlllbedlle'-'I.Lettenlbouldbe1Diood
1
Chuck
Follrod
·
I •-,-High Series - Steve Bachner
Iaiiie, addnulq l11aes, DOt penonaUUes.
1471.
Second High Series - Chuck
£) _._ L
Fot~~ ~l7g·h Game _ Impacts

THE

••

CoiUIIIlllll PallJ I SW!Ieb
Dear Helen :
.
You wrote me a letter postmarked November I. I reeelved II
yesterday -from a neJsbbor who said It llad been In her vacation
111111111 thewblle they were on an estended cruise.
Several years ago llllliled a letter at a hntel desk - and
learned that It arrived at Its destination, four blockB away, three
weeb later I
Your bualness deptlllds on maU, Helen, and wblle II probably
wouldn't do any good, I wl.!h you'd write a column on the maU
frustrations we 8Uffer. - POSTAL BLUES
Dear P.B.:

Sorry, I'm going to take the ''Jmpopular" side - which will
probably 8lll'lll'ile everyone, lnclu,dlng me.
We Ill have our favorite atorles about'the pony exprell·
paced l'oltial Sei'vlce, but how about the millions of letters which
arrive on time? Perhapa we Amerlclna are 80 apolled by ef.
flclency that we aren't geared for j)CCSS(onal goofs.
Yea 1 simmer too when a piece cl maU Ia delayed or lost'
.
but I must be honest: oat ol several bundted !etten, perhaps one
arrives late. MY margin cl error Ia a lot higher than that! So who
am I to complain?
,
(You're welcome, POII!maater General Klasaen ... And now1
there's this little matter of hurrying up those BIG packages of
flnt claaa maU that come from my syridicate. My correspondents aren't third-cluB people!) - H.

+++

Dear Helen :

My Blllfpartner at the club BBidhis wife was "cold," ao in the
aplrlt of friendship, I proved abe wasn't.
1bad no ulterior motives -just wanted to help. Let's say It
wu an educational laboratory course without the high ~Ice tag.
It took me aeveral months to break away and get ·her baCk to
her !lllband. The problem between them has disappeared rww,
thanks to me, but do I get credit? No! 'l'llla woman had the bad
sense to "confe88," and I have lost a good friend and golf bud4y.
Before he found out our secret, he confided In me that his
wife was a changed woman, which made him a changed man,
and a very llappy one. Wouldn't you think he'd be grateful? ARCHIE
Dear Archie :
No! - H.

WORLD ALMANAC

Local Bowling

:!

Dear Helen :
. My fiance and llroke up over a sU1y argument. He didn't
.want me to finish college and I was determined to get my degree,
· either before or after marriage.
Hlareaaonawere: There had been several rapes on campus;
and he didn't want me UBOclaling with "the college crowd." He
Ia very jealous about my talking with other men. Frowns on my
having a career.
I've always tried to please him, but the more I gave In, the
more he demanded. Thla once,l stood up for what I wanted, and
now he's gone.
1feel incomplete without him. Should I give In and become a
droJI'(Iut? - TIGER

I
I

-UI-·

~
•••
,.

I
1
1
I

•

•
•

I
1 en.
I Team High
I Apaches 2530.

Series

I

_

PUBLIC NOTICE
FINANCIAL R!PORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
PorDtctmbtr31st,
Fiscal Ytor lndlnl
1t72 .
lldford Township
Mel'.:o~:.•:,t~omoroy, Ohio
· Januarv l1tlf1l

1certify the following report
to be correct.
. Glenn Lee
.
Townshlf Clerk
a~U.!:_~t::. ~=ci~P~S

Television L~g

'

Eagles upset Vikings .to tie for SVAC title

"

MONDAY FEB. 19, 1-•
u•
,
_
Elk
Co.
,
,
Gomer
Pyle
13;
Hodgepodge
Lodge 20;
33
5 30
8News
.
Marshall Dillon .15; Beverly Hclllbllllos
13 15 . Around
6

6:00- News3, 4, 8, 101 Truth or on seq .

1

1

.

Eastern's Eagles used two hot shooting quarters Saturday
nlgpt enroute to a 69-68 upeet victory over ihe Synunes Valley
VIkings In the .championship game of the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference
·
The victory imabled the Eagles, VIkings and Hannan Trace
WUdcats to finish In a three-way tie for first with idenllcal10,2
leagu~ records. U was the first tlnie Hanitan Trace bad ever
flnlahed atop the league In any sport.
It w8s the second time the league has had a three-way
championship, In 1968, Eastern, North Gallla and Kyger Creek
shared it.
'
Trailing ~3 moving Into the final stanza, Coach Wayne
White's Vikings used a presaing defm to get baCk In the game.
At the 3:11 mark, the score .stood 8l"i after PbU Robinson 510 senior, hit a jumper. The lead changed hands untU the 1:16
mark when Eastern called time out with a one point lead.
With 41 seconds left, Alan Duvall, 6-1 senior forward, W89
fouled. Hntep~ to the line and converted both ends of a one

'

the Bend 33; Sesame St. 20.
1 13
6, 30 _ ABC 'News 6: CBS News a, tO; I Dream of Jea11n e I
·News 31 .., lSI Supervision 33. .
. r •
7, 00 _ Truth or COnseq. 31 Beet the Clock 4; News 6. 10; Circus
. 13; What's My Line 8; S•lnt 15; Eledrlc Co. 20; Reed Your

. AN~,:~:~:n~l~1~~2ES
7,:•Y ~¥in The Truth 6; Young Or. Kildare 8! Coll'i'&amp;~ .
Generol Fund ·
$1,911.23
Basketball · I; Traffic Court 10; Hodgepodge L:odge 2 •
Motor vehicle License
Eplsode ·Actlon 33; Bobby Goldsboro 3.
'
Tex Fund
4,291.13 8. 00 _Rowan &amp; Martin's Laugh-In 3, 4, 15; Rookies 6; Gun- .
5,290.58
· smoke 8, 10; Mysterious Mr. Ellof 20, 33.
,.
, ·
Guollne Tax Fund
Totals Totol Receipts 11.552.94 9:00 - Here's Lucy 10; Movies "The Alamo" 3, 4, 15; Riot' 6,
General Fund
3.627.36
13.
Motor Vehicle License
9:30- Doris Day 10; Book Beat20,33.
'
Tax Fund
6.031 .99 10:00- News20i Bill Cosby 8, 10; An American Family 33.
Gasoline Tax Fund
121100.00 n·OO - News3,4,6,8, 10,13115.
·
"VII
Totals .
22,459.35 11 ;30-JohnnyCanon3,4, 15; OlckCavett6,13; Movies a ey
TotoiRocelpll' ltloncts
of the Dolls" 8; "Ad One"10.
·
General Fund
5,598 .59
Motor. Vahlcle License
'
· TUESDAY, FEB. 20, 1973
Tax Fund
10,323.12 6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
Gasoline Tax Fund
18,090.58
:15 _ Farm Report 13; Farmlline 10.
34•012 ·29 66:25 _ Paul Harvey 13.
Totals
&gt;
General :U~~enditurn 2.967.13 6:30- Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Concer~ &amp; Com·
Motor Vehicle License
men! 10; Faith For Today 13.
Tex Fund
7,594.9'1 6·-45 - COrncob Report 3.
Gasoline Tax Fund
13,151.31 7;00 _Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10; News 6; Fllntslones 13.
Totals
24.313.43 7:30 _Sleepy Jeffers 8; Romper Room 6; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
aatanceJan.ll, 1972
Po
10
13;.
peye
.
263146
Genera IF un d
• ·
8:00- Capt. Kangaroo
10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame 51· 33 ;
Motor Vehicle License
Lassie 6.
To~:~ Fund
::m: :~ 8:30 - Jack LaLanne 13; Romper Room 8; New Zoo Revue 6.
CASH BALANCE, RECEIPTS 9·00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 1S; Concentration 6;
AND EXPENOITURES
. Friendly Junction 10; Ben Casey 13; Capt. Kangaroo 8;
BY FUND
Mister Rogers 33; A.M. 3.
Generol Fund
9:30- To Tell The Truth 3; Jeopardy6.
,
Balance. Jan . 1, 1972
1,971.23 10 , 00 _ Dinah ,Shore 3, 15; Columbus Six Calling 6; Jokers Wild
Receipts
8. 10; Dick Van Dyke 13.
o
'
Gee:r.~~ r~~~:~~y . Tax '2.1~~g) 10:30- Concentration 3, 15; Phil Donohue 4; Price Is Rlghl8, 10;
Tangible Personal Property
Spill Second 13.
Tax (Gross)
39.01 11:00 - Saleollhe Century 3, 15: Love American Style 6; Gambit
Local Government
8! 10; PaSsword 13; Elec:. Co. 20.
Distribution
·
520.85 11 :30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Love of Life 8. 10; Bewitched
Cigarette License Fees

8 l::~~
01~~~ Fines &lt;Gros•l
Transfers
50.56
Total Receipts
3.627.36
To1al Beginning Balance
'
Plus Receipts
5,598.59
Expenditures
Tol~'m1~1~V~:N:;es- 2,840 .56
Town Halls. Memorial
76 57
B lldl g. &amp; Groun ds
Frre P~otectlon
5o:oo
Grand Total Expenditures General Fund
2,967 .13
Balance. Doc. 31 , 1972 2.631.46
Total Expenditures Plus
Bal.,
Dec . 31, 1972
5,598.59
Motor Vehicle License
Ttx Fund
Balance, Jan . 1, 1972
4.291.13
Receipts
Motor vehicle License
Ta x
6,031.9'1
Total Receipts
6,031.9'1
Tolal Beginning Balance
Plus Rei!::~ditures 10 •323 ·12
Total Expenditures Expenditures
Maintenance

. 5,182.93
709.52

Improvement
1.002.54
Total Expenditures MTao!oFruvndehlcle Llcenso7 ,59' .9'1
•
•
Balanr.e. Dec. 31 , 1972 2,728 .13
Total Expenditures Plu•
Bai ., Dtc.31.1972
18,090.58
Gasoline Tox Fund
Balance, Jan . 1. 1912
5.290.58
Gasol ine To~ocelpls 12 ,800 .00
Toto I Receipts
12 ,800 .00
T0 t 1 B 1 1 g Balance
P~us ::c~rprs
18,090.58
Expenditures
Total Expenditures Miscellaneous

5,502.77

61

l3; Sesame

st.

20.

1

.

,

12:00 _ Jackie Oblinger 8; Jeopardy 3, 15; Bob Brauns SO.SO
Club I; Password 6; News 10, 13.
12:25- CBS News 8.
12:30- Who, What or Where 3, 15; Split Second 6; Search For
Tomorrow 8, 10.
12:5S _ NBC News 3, 15.
·
'
1:00- News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Green Acres 10; Secret
Storm 8; Not For Women Only 15.
1:20 - Fashions In Sewing 3.
1:30 - Three On A Match 3, 4, 15; Let's Make A Deal 6. 13; A$
The World Turns 8, 10.
2:00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
DouglaS! 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
,
2 30 _ Doctors3, 4, 15; Dating Game 13; Edge of Nlghl8,10.
J·. oo - Another World 3, 4, 1S; General Hospital 6, 13; World
Press 20; Love Is AMany Splendored Thing 8, 10.
3:30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
Secret Storm 10; Maggie &amp; The Beautiful Machine 20; Merv
Griffin 8.
4·00- Mister Cartoon 3; Love American Style 13; Fllnlstones 6;
· Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15; Sesame St. 20, 33 ; Movie "The

.2

All American" 10.

4:30 _ Petticoat Junction 3; 1 Love Lucy 6; Daniel Boone 13;
Gilligan's Island 8; Dick Van Dyke 15.
5:00- Daniel Boone 6; Mr. Rogers 20, 33; Andy Griffith 15 ;
Bonanza 3, _.; Hazel 8.

5:30 _ Electric Co. 33 ; Gomer Pyle 13; Marshall Dillon 15 :
Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Beverly Hillbillies a.
6:00 - News3,4, 8, 10, 13, 1S; Truth or Conseq . 6; Sesame St . 20 ;
ArntJnu
-· Th I! r-.nn
n ....
·""
A: ~~News J, 4, 8, 10, 13, 15; I.Dream of J~annle 13; Growing
Him Up33.
7:00 - Whars My Line 8: "I've Got A Secref' 15; TV Honor
Society 15; Electric Co. 20; BeaiTheCiock 4.
7:30 - This Is Your Lite J ; To Tell The Truth 6; Price Is R~ht 8.
10; Beat Tho Clocl&lt;, 13; RFD 20; Great Oeclslons 73 33; rcu•
4; Andy Griffith 15.
.
8:00 - Ohio: This Week 20; Dr. Seuss Cartoon 8, 10; Book Beat
33; Temperotures Rising 6, 13.
8:30- Hawaii Flve-08, 10; Bill Moyers Journol 20; Movie " A
Brand New Life" 6, 13.

Meigs

Property
Tr8llSfers

1.

The Dllr

.,

......,,

..

r.

J

I

•

0

•

Waterford Wildcats 6().69 here
Saturday night. This was the
last game of the season for both
teams ,. Coach Bob Ord 's
Tornadoes ended with a 7-11
over811 reconl.

College Scores

r·- ----·_._____. . .; ,; . _______,
&amp; THINGS

Voice alongBr'Way

was later fouled with II seconds remaining and got both shots for
a 32-28lead. Boring's layup made It 34-28 at the half.
Eastern added 21 points In the third quarter behind the hot
smoUng of Dill, Spencer, Duvall and Boring. DU1 scored II
points, Duvall had six, ~andSpencertwoeach.
Lafon and Jene Myers kept the Vikings within reach.
Duvall, enjoying one of lis best night's this season, led all
scorers with 23 pqlnts on seven baskets and Dine free throws.
Three other Eagles In double figures were Dill with 16,
Boring 15, and Spencer 13.
Pl1l1 Roblnaon'sl~ points gave him the SVAC scoring tiUe. H,e
entered the contest with a 16.8 point average, one tenth of a point
lead over Boring. His final av~ge Ia 18.6, Boring's 16.5.
Teammate Jamie Lafon scored 198 points, an ·average of
16.5.
Jene Myen led the Vltlng attaCk with 19 points. Lafon
finished with 15.

Pro Standings
NBA Standl.ngs
By Unitod Press tnternationol
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
w. I. pd. g.b.
Boston
50 12 .806
New York
48 17 .738 3'1'
Buffalo
18 44 .290 32
Philadelphia 7 59 .106 45
Central Division
w. I. pd. g.b.
Baltimore
40 21 .656
Atlanta
36 28 .563 5'h
Cleveland
23 39 .371 l1'12
Houston
23 40 .365 18

Symmes Valley hit 29cl 88floor attempts for 42pct. and eight
of 14 free throws. Eastern converted 17 of 28 at the charity Blripe·
and 28 of 57 from the floor .
Symmes Valley took the reserve game, 46.."15.
Brown topped the winners wilh 14 point&amp;, Steve Goebel led
Eastern with 13 points.
'
Eastern will play Starr•Washlngton at 7p. m. Saturday In the
Clasa A Sectional Tournament at Nelapnville-York.
Symmes Valley meets Hannan Trace at 8:30p.m. Saturday
in·theCiass ASectional Tournament at Meigs High School.
Symmes VaBey
Roblnaon, a;t-18; Lafon, 7-1·15; Corn, 4~: Jene Myers, 7,(,.19; Jaye Myers, 1~2 ; and Webb, ~.
Totals ZN411.
Eutem (89) - Borq, 7-1-15; Duvall, 7..g..23; Dill, 6+16;
Sheets, 1~2. and Spencer, 5-3-13. Totals Z&amp;-17-89.
Symmes Valley Vikings '
16 28 43 68
Eastern Eagles
15 34 55 69

&lt;•&gt; -

Petty .Daytona ·ch3;mpion

Tigers
share
OC lead

'·l r

.7

.

.

plua one sib~&amp;lion to put the Eaglea Into a three point lesd. ·
Jamie. Lafon Ued the score at.H on a driving ~yup and
loll! sl!ot. Duvall was JOllied again with 29 8econds remalJilng.
He converted the flnt shot but missed the second.
Eastern grabbed the rebotind, scoring five seconds later 00 a
drive by Randy Boring .
During the Viking COIIIebact, Jene Myera,'&amp;-1 senior, and
Robinson were tbe lllllln guns. Robinson had 10 points, Myers
four, and bla rebounding aided Symmes VaHey's cause.
Coach Bill Pllilllpa' Eagles dropped behind, 16-15 at the end
of the first peri~ but jumped Into a 34-28 halftime lead.
DuvaU, Tim Spencer and 6-4 junior Steve Dill were the big
guna during the second period Eastern uprising. Eastern was
down by four points at the 6:24 mark when DuvaU was fouled. He
camed both ends to reduce It to two points.
Spencer bed the score at 26-26 with a jumper and Eastern
moved ahead with. 2:38left In the quarter on Dill's jwnper. He

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. Chevrolet belched fire going NASCARafter two years on the
The score was close shot 69 percent from the free
(UPI) - Buddy Baker sat Into the first turn and the USAC circuit, also thought he
ibroughout the game. At the throw. line.
dejectedly and viciously Tlnunonaville, S.C., charger had the race won untU ·his
half it was tied at 26 all. In ~
Southern had three players
pounded the steering wheel of was out with a blown engine. engine blew.
.
third period the Wildcats got up in double figures, Norm
his Dodge wbUe rival Richard Wben the green flag fell and
"I could get around Baker,"
by eight, but the Tornadoes Curfman topped them with 18
Petty casually headed for racing resw;ned, Petty was.on be said. "I had a good shot atit.
fought back to within 4 (4HO) points, and gettirig 12 each
victory lane, posting his fourth Baker's bumper with 100 miles Baker knew there wu
at Its cl09e. II turned out to be a were Dave Sayre and "Tree"
victory In the Daytona 500.
somebody behind him."
to go.
hair-raising final. period. The HilL H~l grabbed 10 of the
"Oh no," ~claimed Baker.
Then, with Baker out of the
The only serious accident
point total was so close no one Tornadoes 32 rebounds. Like
race, Petty took the nag two involved country music singer
"Dammit', No."
western Conference
knew who the winner was until Waterford, Southern had a iii
Midwest Division
Baker's anguish showed laps ahead of Bobby Isaac In a Marty Robbins who crashed
w. I. pet. g.b.
the final bell.
percent for field goals. The
after
he led 1571apa ,of the 201). Ford, with . Dick Brooks · his Dodge on the 69th lap when
« 20 .688
The 37 point performance by Tornadoes , made 10 of 15 at- Milwaukee
Chicago
38 · 23 .623 41'1 lap race only to watch his another lap back In a Dodge. he nudged Vic Parsons'
Waterford's D. McFerren on 16 tempts from the foul line for 66 KC-Omaha
31 36 .463 uv, ·hopes evaporate when his Defending champion A. J. Foyt Mercury on the fron,t stretch.
Detroi I
27 JS .435 15'1'
field goals and 5 free !brows pet.
engine blew just 15 miles fr0111 finished fourth In Chevrolet,
Robbins' car slammed Into
Pacific Division
wasn't quite enough. WaterNow that the regular SVAC
w. I. pet. g.b. the finish Sunday.
with Hershel McGriff fifth In a the wall and skidded some 1,000
ford was 25 of 49 from the floor action is over, Southern will LosAngeles 48 14 .774 Petty, NASCAR's aU-time Plymouth.
feet along the concrete before
Stale 37 25 .597 11
for 51 percent. The Wildcats meet Chesapeake in the first Golden
Concerning
champion, admitted Baker had
his
un- sliding into the Infield. Darrell
Phoenix
30 32 .484 18
round of the tournament at Seattle
20 4S .308 30
the "strongest" car. Bul'wben precedented fourth Daytona Waltrip, driving a Mercury,
16 46 .258 32
Meigs High School Friday, Portland
asked
if be could have beaten 500.victory, which earned him and Red Farmer's Ford also
Sunday's Results
Feb. 23 at 7 p.m.
Baker in a race to the finish, $34,100, Petty said, "It's spun Into the grasay Infield to
Philadelphia 114 New York 98
Waterford - Hughes · J.i-7; Delroit1« KC-Omaha 100
Petty replied, ''That's just one something to win It one lime. I avoid Robbins.
Wagner 1~2; Bauerbach 2-3-7.; Baltimore 96 Milwaukee 93
question I will never have to guess It's the thrill of a
Chicago 110 Houston 99
Needs 2-0-4 ; McFerren 16-S-37; Boston 106 Seattle lOS
lifetime. To win It four times is
worry about."
Sampson 1~2. Totals 25-!h'ill. Cleveland 122 Buffalo 98
Baker, who started on the just unebllevable."
Portland 119 Phoenix 118
Southern - I hie 2~0-4 · Atlanta
pole
In his Harry Hyde"This was one of the toughest
99 Los Angeles 92
Curfman 8-2-18; Hill 6-3-12;'
Monday's Games
prepared DOdge, raced with losses ever for me." Baker
(No games scheduled)
Miller 2-3-7 ; Sayre 5-2-12 ;
Cale Yarborough for nearly 390 said. "It is hard to believe that
Nease 2.(1.4 ; Ord 1-3-5. Totals
miles while Petty stayed a car can run so good and then
ABA Standings
comfortably In third place In just let go like this one did.
By
United
Press
International
--• 25-IO-liO.
By Uolted Press lntel'lllll1,_.
By Quarters
East
his Dodge.
Maybe my luCk will change."
w. I. pet. g.b.
The Ohio Conference tiUe Waterfilrd
10 26 44 59 Carolina
Yarborough, returning to
Suddenly
Yarborough's
46 19 .708 fight is still a horse race and it Southern .
12 26 40 60 k'c.nf11('k v
42 23 .646 4
32 31 .508 13 o
'lfould take a magician to
Reserve Score : Waterford Virginia
Your
"New York
23
40 .36S 22
Jl'edict which of several tenms 40, Southern 36 _
Memphis
20 43 .317 25
lmuranct
will be the champion when the
West
. Agent
dust settles Feb. 27.
w. I; pet. g.b.
Utah
41 24 .631
Wittenberg, Capital and
3
Musklngum all share the lead
Southwest
with 1().2 marks. Otterbein SI.Mry's-Tex. 73 Southwslrn 66
San Diego
20 .~2 .323 19'1,
SAN ·DIEGO (UPI)
Mter But Dickson sank a 15-foot
could put It again In a four-way Tarleto~ 76 Angelo 73
Sunday's Results
k - •k~
Tex. Lulh . 68 Austin Coil. 59
I ·' \' 1
Carolina 138 Memphis 114 _ . .. se":e~ c~~ve d~ys q~ g~, , birdie putt on the 14th to draw.
w,,.., ""': ' · TCU 80 SMU '? ~ ' ···
•h'nv uu lu If..,) Jd:.t urr
. Kentucky
Denver 10994Utah
90
•
'·,
"
liK:l'"''•rl'
tli'
,
•
u,_,:l\ 'rOOIH! •· ·eveft'llllld 'said'1le' felt ' 111\!n'~e 1
,
~·.,,Arkapsas 76 Biiyl6i' i4
New York 85
~'6 e qua~,mg
. ._,, . . , , _
..PQ t.GY_, IS.. , ...... , ,.
, 1aeason
·~ ·
Texas Tech 65 Rice 61
·'
Indiana 118 San Diego 103
and two rounds of pro-am play, could wrn it.
tailored to needs.
Lamar 94 Ark. St.' 84
!Only games scheduled)
Bob Dickaon Sunday won the . "I had missed a lot of abort
The OC playoffs begin Thurs- S. F.Austin 103 Mcmurry 81
dny at Denison and Wooster East Tex. 83 Sui Ross 70
Monday's Games ·
WUI!ams Open Along with a putts before that but when I
Whether you wani auto, lite
Dallas at New York
·
, ·
and end Saturday with the Sam Hous. 106 H. Payne 85
San
Diego
at
Utah
$34,000
check
to
help
pay
some
made
the
one
on
14,
he
~~or
homeowners Insurance.
Lamar 94 Arkansas St. 84
we will design a policy lo fit
(Only games scheduled)
baCk hills he aJao gained plained, ''lknewlwasthlnking
North and South division win- Okla. 67 Nebraska 59
your Individual require·
ners going to the champlonahlp D. Roberts 122 Trinity 12
automatic berths in the Mas- right and I had a chance."
ments . . . Discuss· your
WHA
Standings
Tulsa 78 N. M. St. 76
ORO SHOOTS - Vfll'll Ord goes high with a jump shot
Dickson paased in the rest of
gsme at Denison three days Cent. Okla . 73 NW Okla. 61
By United Press lntern•tianal ters, the Tournament of Otamp
specific needs with ~s .
Saturday night for the Southern High Tornadoes when
East
later,
Texas 71 Texas A&amp;M 68
l o n s and the PGA Cham· the way but Crampton, who
w. I. I. pis gf ga
Southern upset Waterford 60-,;9 at Racine In a non-league,
Wittenberg rolled over Marl- UCLA 96 Was~~~ton St. 64
Cleve
35 22 2 72 220 178 plonshlp., not to mention this had putted so superbly in
season-ending basketbaU gsme. At left, oot of the action, is
New Eng 34 24 2 70 249 205 week ' s Jackie Gleason- earlier rounds of 87-7().68,
etta 75-62 Saturday wbUe Capi· New Mexico 76 BYU 66
N.. Y.
W. Needs of Waterford. - Photo by leo HUI.
27 33 1 55 240 259 Inverrary Classic at Ft. Lau- suddenly couldn't find the hole
tal edged Wooster· 61.eG, Mus· Colorado 77 Missouri 68
Phone 992-2966
Phil a
27 32 0 54 220 248
114
Court
St.
Pomeroy
klngum downed Baldwln-Wal- Lon~ Bch 51. as Pacific 6~
Quebec 21 29 5 53 205 231 derdnle, Fla., an event which and he bogied 15, 16 and 17 to
••
,;.-and
Otterbein
got
Was
lnglon
73
So.
Calif.
70
lace ..,.....,
Ottawa 23 34 4 50 213 253 carries a winner's prize of faU three shots back.
Utah Sl. 84 Air Force 58
West
past Urbana 78-77 In a non- So. Utah ,84 W. New Mex. 79
, - - - - - -- -- -- -- w. I. I. pis gf ga $52,000.
conference game.
Colo. St. 60 Wyom ing 54
Winlpg 36 23 3 75 233 187 Dickson's victory should
Calif. 79 Oregon St. 77
By United Press International points and while Spencer
Mlnn
30 28 3 63 204 213 prove a good leBBOn to all those
Despite
the
losa
by
BaldwinOregon
76
Stanford
69
The PhUsdelphla 76ers have Haywood led Seattle with 34.
Houston 29 26 4 62 220 207
Wallace, Dean Marlin scored Ar iz. 51. 110 Arizona 105
Los Ang 27 28 5 59 206 206 other youngsters trying to win
discovered winning-and they
Idaho 80 No. Arizona 73
Pete Maravich scored 31
21
points
to
become
the
fifth
Denver
115
1
Alberta
28 27 2 58 201 194 fame and fortune on the PGA
like it !
points and Lou Hudson hit 27'to
Chicago 22 36 1 45 191 221 tour, because It was one of
player
In
OC
history
to
score
Colo.Mines
80
After dropping 48 of their lead AUanta over the Lalters.
Sunday's Results
over 2,000 points In his college Fort Lewis
patience and perseverance as
Los
Angeles
4 Philadelphia 1
first 52 games and putting Los Angeles came to within two
·
Cai-S.B. 96
Winnipeg I Houston 2
well as good play. He got It by
together losing streaks of 15 points, at 90-88, when Maravich career. Martin bas 2,014 total SanOegoSI.
Minnesota 7 Chicago 5
points.
Lyla-L.A.
aboollng a IQ.under.par 278,
and 20 games, the 76ers turned hit a pair of free throws with
San Fran
three shots better than Bruce
In other basketba11 acUon, Snta Clra 100
tiger this week. Firat they 1:36 left and after Gall
Ohio
State
feU
out
of
the
Big
Nev.Reno
101
Peiiorlt,ne
Crampton, PbU Rodgers, BWy
knocked off the rugged Mil· Goodrich agsln put the Lakers
Ten race by losing to Illinois 79- Wh ittier 101 Cal
Casper
ahd Grier Jones.
RINN
WINS
waukee Bucks, followed by within two points, Hudson hit a &amp;8; Toledo beat Miami &amp;7-&amp;, Weber St. 70 Gonzaga
The 6-foot.."l scholarly looking
BERLIN (UPI) - Hans Hlnn
upending the Detroit Pistons ~~tree-point play to put the
•
Midwest
Dickson
abot a cloaing-round 72
Bowling
Green
defeated
Kent
st.
Jos.
Pa.
78
Xav
ier
6S
of
East
Germany,
the
and after a Saturdny night 1089 game out of reach. Goodrich
State
77"7and0hio
U.
downed
Creighton
78
Houston
77
European champion, won the In a head to head duel with
in New York, rebounded had 38 points to lead the Western Michigan 101-110, all in Kansas 75 Okla. St. 66
men
's world championship in Crampton, the man wao had
&amp;tndny to wallop the Knlcks, Lakers.
Minn. 82 Indiana 75
single seat toboggan Sunday won two other tourney titles
Archie Clark scored 26 the Mid-American Conference. Marquette 77 Oetroll 55
nwa.
Also, Mount Union downed No. Ill. 83 Indiana St. 82
and led bla team to a sweep of this year and already was
With new Coach Kevin points, including a pair of Heidelberg 74-81, Oberlin Buller 74 Ind . Central 66
the flrat four places In th.e closing in on the $100,000
Akron 77 Ky. Wesleyan 73
Loughery experimenting with crucial free throws with five
edged
Ohio
Wealeyen
68-&amp;,
Ohio.
U,
101
w.
Mich.
80
competition.
money winning plateau after
new
combinations
and seconds left as the Bullets beat Kenyon lost to Ohio Dominican Ferris St. 97 Dakland 73
Rim won with an aggregate only seven events In 1973.
defenses, PhUsdelphla took an Milwaukee in a nationally
Sl. Jos. 110 Oe Pauw 80
Crampton started the final
time
of 3:07.37.
~2;
Denison
dropped
CarIowa
100
Wisconsin
76
early lead and held on all the televised game. Clark, who
negie-MeUon
(Pa.)
81-68;
and
Yngslwn
38
Sleubenvl
37
round a abot ahead of Dickson
way. Tom VanArsdale was the al80 had 14 assists, converted Ashland beat Fredonia Stale Wesleyan 98 Carthage 95
and Jones and was still ahead
key man In the 76er attack, his free throws with the Bullets
Sl. Louis 61 Drake 58
H. W. Soffo.rd
by a shot after the 13th hole.
(N.Y.) 26-14 In a deliberate . Kansas St. 119 Iowa St. 76
MYERS TO REDSKINS
scoring 29 points, while Leroy ahead, 94-93.
slow-down by Fredonia, top Louisville 84 Bradley 78
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Son Diego, Calif.
Ellis added 24 points and 20
defensive team in the NAIA. Purdue 88 Mich. St. 84
Dick
Myers,
a
former
sports.
rebounds and Fred Carter
SATURDAY NIGHT
. Bill Higgins of Ashland, who ~~~~96?~~~~~:~· St. 67
writer for United Preas Jn..
contribuled 23 points. Wall
B~~~~PJ~~Ls~~g~~s
had averaged 27.4 points per Illinois 79 Oh io St. 68
ternational and an aide in the
Frazier led the Knicks with 25.
1
6
By
United
Press
lnternetlonal
game,
was
held
to
eight.
·
~~\~a
~r
~~r~~~r.~.
r
$/
National Football League's
71
"We've put In a lot of new Parma 62 Cleveland He!ghts 54
Y o u n g s to w n
be a t Pttsbg St. 76 No. Colo. 70
player
personnel department,
SAME DAY
things, especially on defense," Euclid 68 Garfield Heights 53 Steubenville 38-37 iJi another So. Colo. 79 Emporia St. 70
bas been hired as top adSERVICE
"'•ll · bU Akr
South
said Loughery, who took over Lakewood 61 Valley Forge 53
1 ""'
Shaker
Heights
67
Normandy
game
0
,
W e
on
Wm&amp;Mary
80 East car . 69
In
At
9- 0ut At S
ministrative
assiatant
to
the
for Roy Rubin after the team
Tha t quote is from an actual lette r se nt to the
58
BeatKentuekyWesleyan77-73; Va . Tech 86 WestVa. 68
Washington Redsklns.
Use Our Free Parking Lot
could manage only a 4-48 mark.
Bette r Bus iness Bureau. And it 's so true;
~e~~e;~t~~~~r~~ ~~~~~Ye ~~ St. Joseph (Pa.) downed Geotwn 56 Boston Coli. 55
Myen' duties will be to help
"We have a lot of new guys and
Tennessee 85 Georg ia 71
lgh
vi
tate
beat
sometimes
the BBB doesn't even have lo do
·
·Kis k1Prep 57 Xa er7~ ; Wr IS
.
So. Car. 77VIIIanova53
sign players to contracts and to
they aren't used lo playing Cleve.
Rhodes 72 Cleve. C.C. 59 Ross-Hulman (Ind.) 81.eG, and Trnsylvnla 104 Centre 79
anything to hel p you get you r money's worth.
supervise the administrative
logether.lt's going to lake time Eastlake Norlh 57 Painesville · Walah whl d Penn Slate- Duke 86 Notre Dame 74
,116 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
Just dropp ing ou r name is frequently
office of the Redaklns.
1
ppe
N C St 81 Wake Forest 59
but I'm confident this club can Harvey 49
enough to get action from a busin ess
Strongsville 45 Midpark 41
Behrends D:J-09.
Hi~h Point 64 catawba 61
win. That's why I took the job." Chanel 99 Cleve. Gilmour 56
1
u
·
b
G
C
you' re having problems with.
Cine nna
eat
eorge U ·Ashvl102 King Coli. 88
In other NBA action Sunday, Cleveland Lutheran East 8~•
I I
Howord 90 N.C. A&amp;T 81
But when you really do need our
Cleveland Lutheran West61 Was~tngton 71-85 ; F nd ay Stetson 81 Ga. Tech 70
Boston nipped Seatue, 10&amp;-105,
~
e
lp, we're ready. On any
Cleve. Benedictine 54 Cleve. edged Taylor (lnd ) SUO· HI- Mercer 87 South Fla 80
•
•
.
.
Atlanta defeated Los ·Angeles, John HBY 53
Do
Yourself
product or service . We don 't al way s
Cleve. Kennedy 69 Brecksville ram stopped Bethany (W.Va.) Morehead·St. 112 W. Ky. 93
99-92, Baltimore stopped Mil- 52
77-62· Northwood (lnd) beat Va. Union 101 Va . St. 100
succeed, but we always try.
waukee, 96-93, Chicago Brooklyn 80 Hawken 64
'
.
Clncl 71 Geo. Wash. 65
When you have a problem with
A Flavor!
whipped Houston, 110·99, Cleve. st. Ignatius 66 Cleve. St.. Central State 77·72 In over· E. Ky. 74 Middle Tenn. 58
business,
it 's bad fo r you and for
Edward 54
time; Earlham (Ind.) downed Kentucky 94 Florida 83
Detroit manhandled Kansas Streetsboro 57 Aurora 44
·Bluffton 90-76. St John's (N Maryland 69 Clemson 66
busi ness. A nd no one knows that
Clty.Omaha, 144-100, Cleveland Perry 65 Fairport 64
• ·
· Vanderbilt 82 LSU 72
better
than the businessmen
Y.) whipped Dayton 118-$3; Alabama 87 Auburn 75
cruahed Buffalo, 122-98 and Kirtland 62 Wickliffe 54
Drive
in
for
a
delicious
sundae,
shake,
who support the BB B.
Youngs. North 73 Ash Harbor Hanover
(Im\.)
beat Miss. 83 Miss . St. 64
Portland shaded Phoenix, 119- 61
·
Alcrn A&amp;M 104 Jcksn St. 98 malt or cone. Let us fill your party
Lorain Admiral King 92
Wilmington 81-76, and Defiance Memphis St. 116 W. Tex. St. 79
118.
.
needs, too.
Lorain
Southvlew&gt;5
downed
Anderson (Ind.) C-78. Ui'IC·Charlotte 77 Ga. Sl. 55
oave Cowens lipped In a Riverview 90 Utica 66
'
Fla. A&amp;M 87 Benltdl&lt;l 67
rebound with two seconds 'left Da~ton Roosevelt 77 Col s.
111!!~-.CALL lOUt BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU
to give Boaton Its victory over
S1
•
SeatUe. The Sonlcs led, 100.104, Newcomerstown 88
HELPING 'YOU GET 'YOUR MONEY'S WORTH.
7
when Don Nelson m~ a shot
75
· ·
··
.00 Cowens Cllllle· out of a ndat•dnowvbar,oolekY s ovth 59 z. nes·
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (C. LOSE'
ville
Rosecrans
41
•·
Middleport.
992-5241
scramble under the boards to Portsmouth 79 Ironton 35
4th &amp; L.o,cust
AT'
NOON ON THURS.) - EAST. COURT ST.
lip 1n tbfl wiiiiiDI bllket. Jo Jo Belpre 60 Federal-Hocking 58
y
·
White lid tbe (llitlc:l with • loll

By CONNIE SMITH
RACINE - In a close contest
that went right down to the
final buzzer, the Southern
Tornadoes surged ahead in the
final ~ to defeat the

Ma lntenonce
7,711 .9'1 9·00 - Behind the Lines 20, 33.
Saturday Senior League
Improvement
536.55 9: 30 _ Tll c.am.dv Years 8 10· Block Journal20 33
,
',, I ,.., •,- v' ···••II I . l
Feb. lO, 1973.' . .
' I \"&lt; Grud IT..1al ex-ptndtturn . _,,.,o:~News-tft:- Biography 33·, Marcus Welby, M
.D.
6, 13; NBC
Dear Tiger·
,.,, ·,• :1.''•1 •I 1" • .~ .... , ••,,, •
"
'
. ·:· - · . ,,
'tr
·
·,·;
•
1
.. . , , ..
.,.,
S!o""inas
Guoll~eT.O,l\Fund, 131751 131 ., · R'~
, '
•
.
·.: ·'·
·•· ; '· · m
· · ~.. ,T ~, •· ' ptJ '''~Ba H,D'tC :'31 , lt'12 tn.s ~~~39.27
iij)or't,.
.
. •
~ You.ruihtfeellncomplete WITH him too.•Acareer girl \ype·,. Somethtng. T'~lly kJ enJOY
o ' o~~~ ... ~ , .. , • ··~··~ 1 "
c
h • · .-.-· ·· H .... . ,. • 16. . Total Expendltur'n Plus
n :oo - News314, 8110, 13, 15.
H\.'~s ers
Bel. , Dec. 31, 1912
18,090.58 11:30 - Johnny Carson 3. I , 15; Dick Cavett 6, 13; Movies " 10
marry a:·jealo\la· Jllan who resents her trains. U abe Dear Sir:
16
er
•es
Township
DebtBonds
Rllllnglon Place" 8; "What AWay To Go I" 10.
14 Purpose tor WhiCh Bond
doee,abe'll DJn begin resenting IUM.Don'tgiveln! -H.
. In reading my Dally Sentinel Feb. 4, I was really amazed to Ding-A-Lings
1:00 _ Your Health 4; News 13.
11 Debt WIS Cnattd
•
find one of my school mates, name and picture, Mrs. Merle Gutter Ousters
1. 30 _ News 1
Pin
Busters
5
Purchase
of
Grader
WIN AT BRIDGE
(Reeves) Johnson. I haven'theard from her since 1945 when we Born Losers
1 Outstanding Jan . 1,
High Individual Game
1m
1o.ooo.oo
departed from school.
Steve Burton 208 .
Redeemed
Ourlno
Year
1972
3,333 .00
1got married ·thahummer; moved away. 1 had asked many
Second High Ind. Game Balance outstanding
times abOut her but no one seemed to know her whereabouts. So _Debl Gallagher 193.
Dec. 31.1972
6,667.00
High S'erles Debl Rateotlnt.
6 Pet.
you
see,
theDaUy
~llnelsentthlsnews
500miles,
to
my
Crystal
show a good heart suit, but
Gallagher 478.
Doteol Final Mat.
7-l·H
NOR'I1l (D)
not much in high cards and Lake, W. home.
lt
Second High Series - Steve 121 19 11
I've taken the paper ever since I left Pomeroy In 1967. And I Burton 47S.
certainly no first round con·
• AK54
BY PAUL CRABTREE
Pin
Team High Game
.AQ63
trol in any other suit. In really enjoy sitting down after my work is done in the evening to
Crushers 834.
Public brosdcasters,llke eommerclalstatlons, 8re subjeCt to
other words, he Is very a hot cup of coffee and my Daily Sentinel.
u
Pin
Team High Series
.KQ107
happy with game, but has
ratings, gr.dea, other njeailurea of service. In any dlac\18Slon of
Mrs. Mildred Terrell, 39 Woodstock street, Crystal Lake, W. Crushers 238&lt;1.
WEST
EAST
little slam Interest."
the pre-eminent stations In non-commercial telecasting, a grade
.J9873
.106
Jim : " North has just two llll!ll!IJIIIIllllll!ll!IJIIIIllfm:W~:w».:-;~:x:-st.~~- . , .,.~·· ... ·~ .... v·oo· a. e :9$
of "A" would certainly go to stations such as WGBH·TV In · '
aces so he knows there Is no
Boston (maybe A.plus), WQED In Pittsburgh and KQED in San
tAJ8754 tKQ103
slam and passes."
.3
.A86H2
Oswald: "Without the
Francisco.
SOUTH
splinter bid North and South
But II lllrlkes me that both the public stations In our area .Q2
might stlll stop at just four
WOUB·TV In Athens and WMtJL.TV in Huntington - deserve at
.KJ109854
hearts, but they mt~ht also
U6 '
concrete. Today, gang-ltllled corpses are just
lealll a grade of "B," or maybe a B.plus.
get to five. Five won t make
BY JACK O'BRIAN
• J9
discarded where they die, mostly.
Iwouldn'tattempt to rate one over the other. WOUB was on
because the defense will
GRIMM TALE OF A
Both wlnerable
probably find the club ruff.
British
aclre88
&amp;san
George
nixed
$20,000
Charley
King,
dec'd.
to
Ida
the
afr
more than six years before WMUL at Maraball made Its
CROWNING INSULT
Wost North Eut South That is bad luck, but bad
NEW YORK (KFS) - Age of Vulgarity : one to pose for. a Playboy 'nude. Her boy friend, M. . King, MyrUe Robinson, appearance in 1968 - tr.eaningtbatMarahallhasamuchnewer
luck follows players who get
1•
Pass 1•
transmitter and general facilities. It al80 has access to the gear
tract of a new album by The Grimms (a groop singer Jack Jones, urged the deciding nCHto ... Parcel, Scipio.
beyond game ."
Pus 3t
Pass 4•
Pass Pass
Pass
that Includes Beatie Paul McCartney's brother, Mrs. MaynardDeWittWolfe clMontelair,N. J ., . Ida M. King, Myrtle andequlpmentofWSWP·TV, Olannel91n Beckley· Grandview,
(HIWSPAPU. fNTEIPR.ISE ASSH.I
Opening lead- • 3
Mike McGear) is titled "Swnmer with the , offers this biblical proverb abe. saye pertains to Robinson to Franklln King, Jr., which has facUlties which many commercUtl broadcasters would
ll!onarch." The lyrics describe Uz as a pot. today's dropout hippies: ''Thlire is a generation Louella E . King , Parcel, envy.
Of the two, WOUB Ia more news-oriented, with Its e:rcellent
By Olwald &amp; James Jacoby
puffing queen of the Liverpool pop scene ... pure in their own eyes and yet not washed from Scipio.
The bidding has been:
their filthiness ."
James 0 . Barringer, dec 'd. "11 o'clock news at 10" (the only TV pews thst emphasizes
Oswald : "North's three- West North East South Someone has respect for Eastertide : 20th-Fox
The
same
old
Ruby
Keeler-film
lightning
to
Ruth M. Barringer, Patty Southeastern Ohio), and WMUL Ieana more to entertainment.
booked "Sound of Music" into 350 U. S. cities ...
diamond call Is not a sign of
WOUB's allegiance to news is perhaps a carry~ver from the
Insanity. It Is a 'splinter' Pus
Saverlo Sarldls, the singing N. Y. cop who made sUU strikes : nene Graft, 23-year~ld Bellerose, Powell, Carl Barrenter, Cert.
1•
PBM 3t
N.
Y.,
lass,
was
ecstatic
when
tapped
last
year
for
trans.,
Olive.
fine
job done by Its radio sister at Ohio U., WOtJB..FM (which
bid."
?
Pou
~•
Poss
his debut at the Plaza's Persian Room whose
Frank Marion Hoschar, dec. rates an "A"ln what It does). WMUL, coming along later, took a
Jim : "The splinter bid Is You, South, hold:
beat then took hiin back to obscurity hasn't for a road troupe of "Promises, Pr~s: • for
a modern Invention. Specifi· oUK54 .AQU tZ • .KQI07 given up : he's being trained for opera by David Merrick; today abe's. beyond euphoril!- to Ora Hoschar, Dorothy different direction (partially because of two conunerclal TV
cally It provides that when What do you do now?
Carnegie Hall vocal coach Carlo Menotti ... The won the female lead In the hit Dlllsical Bigelow, Naomi Hoschar , news teams already In town).
you bid one m o r e than
"Grease."
Leonard Hoschar, Aff, for.
WMUL Ieana to entertainment In Its local productions, or In
A-P.... Your partner Is Prince Von Furatenbergs, 'whose brags and
necessary to force in a new showlRJ
•
lot
of
heorto,
but
no
John
caasavetes
is.
one
of
the
best
trans.,
Middleport.
·
the
shows It opts to put together from varied sources. The
drags, via their own odd quotes inN. Y. mag.,
suit you are forcing to game olde oc:e.
SybU Ebersbach, Com., Ora balance, for viewers In this area, is a mutually-beneficial one.
In partner's last bid suit and
wallowing lrito their BSI!Orted sex Uvea and wUd customers for French · champagne (that's a
TODAY'S QUESTION .
showing a singleton In the
redundancy
,Isn't
It?
Real
champagne
always
is
Hoschar
, dec. to Dorothy
The station's molll ambitious undertaking, perhaps, was an
Instead of biddilll four hearts preferences - aren't having so much fun
one you are lilddlng. Two your
•·•-·1)
he
tl""'
bla
·"
'ocal
"Appalachian soap opera," called "Hand!ula of Ashes,"
French). Admlts (proc........ .
....ea
Bigelow, Naomi Hoschar , """
has bid three already.
•
diamonds would have been a hearts partner
over your three dianose with a bottle a day ... Theagony.clbook· leonard Hoschar, Lot, Mid· whlcbwaan'tatallbad(aoapoperasarenotmythlng,however).
one-round force , so three monds. What do you do now?
The prosecutor In the famed Adolf Eichman reviewing: 79,000 last year In the U.S. alone; dleport.
It was locally wrltlen, produced, and acted, and was credible, If
diamonds is a splinter and
Answer
tomorrow
case,
Gideon
Hausner,
was
retained
by
the
546,00il
worldwide
...
Those
blue
denim
jeans
Leonard
Hoschar,
Mary
K.
not
great, entertainment.
forces the bidding to con·
tlnue to game or higher in - - - - - - - - - Johnny Walker scotch people to sue the Israe li you say your youngster abould abandon to a H09char tO John Bigelow, Lot,
Paul Nuchlms ho~ a talk show that covers· the arena of
hearts."
Stn4 $1 for JACOIY MOOUH book booze firm (calls Itself Ascot Scotch) for traahcan - are selling In their most abused Middleport.
public affaln once a week, and frequently Ia top.notch con- '·
Oswald: "This spUnter bid lo: "Win of 8•i4r•." lc/o this - •·
Walter ~- Crooks, Emog~ne veraatlon -although usually localized In Interest, and perhapa " '
makes it easy for South to papa1l, P.O. lo• m. Rddio Cllr alleg~y "damaging the good name of Scotch condition all over Europe for more than they
1
'
Whisky"
...
Jeramle
Rain,
who
plays
the
pert
cost
originally;
the
abroads
especially
are
Crooks
to Valley Lumber &amp; notofanyspeclalvaluetovlewerslnOhlo.
give a picture of his hand. Station, N... Ya•k. H.Y. 10019.
oorse In NBC-TV's ''The Doctors" aoapera, imitating our lowest subculture.
Supply co., Lots, Middleport.
Alain this year, WMUL wll) focus on the State Legislature,
He jumps to four hearts to
~
The Atmailac
callsN. Y. "Ripoff City": since moving here her
Film Director John Huston lllllollded b1a
Roma c . Rothgeb, Gary emphasizing the workings and operationa of that body In a way .• :
By Untied Prmllltel'lllllional car's been stolen, the motorcycle abe then man.sion In Ireland but keeps his citizenship. conley, Anna Eloyse Conley to the general public can understand, ape! leaving the hard news ·•i
Today is Monday, Feb. 19, bought was robbed, and•the bicycle abe sellle&lt;l there ... Ladybird's White House assiatant, Valley Lumber 1c Supply co., abOut what the Legislature does to the commercial broadcasters &gt;I
1'
the 50th day of 1973 with 315 to forwaunatched as abe watChed on 3rd Ave. in HelenLindow,julllmoVI!d toN. Y. for a job with Lots, Middleport,
.
- a ·decent-enough ltacje.
Stoililll follow.
'
the 2011. Jertmle now walks - and keeps an eye the Muscular Dystrophy Aas'n ... The Dallas
Wayne Chase, Thelma Chase
Of course, nothing probably gets the general public turning
OIYOTID TD TMI
INTI.IITDP
The moon is approaching its on her shoes.
·
Cowboys
Texas
Stadium
this
off-eeasonla
being
to
David
Riggs,
Gloria
Riggs,
their
cllalJ to Olannel33 (Cable 01. 9) u WMUL'it color telecasts r'
MIIOS·MASDN Alii A
last quarter.
, Actor Kunu Hank, who plays Injun Joe In used as a drive-in movie, canny notion of owner 211 Acres, Scipio.
ofMarahlll's baaketba11 team. Last year, when the Herd had a e.
CMISTI• L. TANNIMILL,
The
stars
are
Venus,
Mars
the
''Tom'
SaWyer"
film,
Ia
a
fuU-blooded
Clint
Murchison
...
We've
alwsye
WOlldered
why
Ronald
E.
vance,
Joyce
E.
great team, and this year, when It haa a good one, lana all over ,.:
. •on•T MDIPLICM,
1'
City Ultor
and Jupiter.
Winnebago Indian and full.fleshed former L.A. ·Bdwy. theater ownera didn't rent out their . Vance to Leland E. Clonch, the area were foUowlng MU's forlunea via televlalon.
Published dolly ucopt
The evening stars are Mer- Ram ... Nina Van Pallandt's flrat movie, ''The. premlaell to convenllona, meetings etc.; they're Realha v . Clonch, Lot 12,
But my favorite Pl'U8l'am of Ill -a lllrange mlKture of old •·
SoturdiY by Tht OhiO Vtltty
PubliShing Com pony, 11 I cury and Saturn.
Long Goodbye" (not about her qulckle affair occupied only six nights and two matinees a Rutland VIllage.
celluloldandlocalflavor - is"EpisodeAcUon,"whlchlanotbing '"
caur't ·st.. POnuroy, Otlto·,
Those
born
on
this
date
are
With
Cllflord
Irving
of
the
Hughes
who),
will
week.
Andthe]l'reemptyalot.
The
new
Shubert
Dollie
Mae
l'tctett·to
Mark
more than reruns of those great old ,Saturday-matinee movie ')
45169. lustn.Ss Office Phone
"J.JIU. lditorlol Phon• "2· under the sign of Pisces.
have Its theme e,ong penned by the great Johnny · management Ia planning to abut that fiscal gap. Markham, Parcel, Bedford. aer1a11 of the Thirties and Forties, abcnm two chapters at a clip '''
lUI .
Swedish
explorer
Sven
Hedin
Mercer
... WbUe .Tony Francl088 was making .
Woulckt't a ~rles cl Sunday Nlghllt at the
MUo B. Hutcheson, Betty A. . · each week, and leaving the hero cllff-ltauging at lhe end ol each ~.
Second Cllll pOttiOt Plid II
Pomeroy, Ohio.
"Acroas IIOth St." be bad cops in his car aa WlnterGardl!!lbeasmasb - witb,say,lllarlaf Hutcheson to Je88e J. Carroll, eplaode.ArealmovlenutnamedBlDMcDowell[ll'llidesov.-the ·:t
Nollonol odvortllino was born Feb. ID, 1865. •
roprountollvo lottlntlfl .
On this day In history:
technical advisel-s and drove tMough a red FredAitalre · Bingl:;rosby i PerryCcmoslze? Anna L. Carroll, Parcel, mow,andhuanencyclopedlcmemoryofthenlmesandfacesol
Glllllhtr, Inc .. 12 1111 12nd
"
In
1922;
.
vaudeville
and
ligbt,
accidentally be says: "They ga'l'l! me a ... Newlyopenedateak.~elnournabe (at334 E. Scipio.
these thrl11en af the put.
St .. Now York City, Now York .
Subscription rolls : oo . musical comedy star Ed WyM llctet! My lint driving ticket!"
73rd St. - haVI!n't sot to It yet- too near) Ia
Rl&amp;btnow would ba • good time to start niching ''Epilode
tlvtrU by cerrlor whoro became the flnt big name In
1bt
gangland
Italian
fUm
"lie:
Lucky
called
The
Bmn
Steer.
oWner
is
Marty
Rolls,
a
Action."
The folD at WMUL ha'l'l! just atarted one of the few t
lvllllblt JO con II per wnk;
ly Motor huto whtro cerrttr show businesS to sign· for a ·Luciano" Ia being shot InN; '(. Tbe ltallsn crew stockbfOker whose preferred~~~ now II the
aerlallmade by the law,greatTom Mix, andlu a fe'w weelrawtll ~
nrvlct not ovellobll : Ono
shooting
th~
Mafia-boss
movie
researched
l!IJs..
best
beef
...
Funny
11cene
at
Mike
Manucbe's
Some
61,000
veterans
who
be sbowlrlg one made by a cowboy wbo 11118 - of all tblnga. His ''
regular
radio
program.
monlll 11.15. ly moll In Ohio
W. VI., Ont yur IU.OO;
In 1945, American Marines 311i!lanlland ·rubouts and discovered Olarlle sports hangout : ,Yogi Berra lllncllq away are wearing [ll'GitheUc devices · name Is Gille Autry.
.
,
•·
Sl• months 17 .25. nrtt
•Lucky'1lads
depoliled
11101tcl
their
stiffs
In
the
wbenamanBBtdownandate
Yogi's
dessert:
be
are
eUglble
for
an
annual
VA
Mor&amp;llldmore,publlcteievlllon
ilolferlltcanlltlrnatiftto
'I
landed
onlwo
Jlma
to
start
one
months 11.50. SubscriptiOn
lct lftctudll sunaty Tlmts· of the blOO&lt;f!est battles in' the EastRI\'el' at Aatorla, ~118, and that'swbere was the Meta' high-lee relief pltchdr Tug clothing · allowance oi fl50, commerclal'TV -__.JIId 0111' own llatkinl 11.-e _ , dolaa bldQ-, W ·
.
tnlllltt.
the fictional corpses will end up - wearing McGraw.
under a recent law.
at all.
Psclflc during World War II.

How 'Splinter Bid' Works ·

'.

'Fornadoe·s win 60 to ·59

·

..J.j;'t

.

.

~~~~~

Dickson captures
Willi
·
~ E:~: 1~'12
ams tourney

Davis-Warner Ins.

76'ers win third of 4

"•••lUSt
.
indicating .that
acopy1s
be1ng ·
senttofhe
'BBB
can move
·
•
mountains."

SHIRT
FINISHING

Robinson's Deaners

SPEAKUR

::Y~~:I~'l: ~lland

W•..COMPTON. ,D.;.'
OPTOMETR'ST

Me'

•

- ..

·

·McCLURE'S

("'

o.

�' '

3- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,~.• Fe~.. IP,_I!m .
. r
2-

Tlie lllllyljeniiDel,MlddJeport-1'1111er0y, 0 ., Feb.l9, 1973

Wildlife packets available

Helen Help

Us.

By HeleQ Bottel

enlire open land on the fann. some wildlife species conBy Jolul Cooper
Part of the land is already slating of hazelnut, Chlneae
Soli COlli. Service
·
g
rown up In native hardwood chestnut, Norway spruce and
PT. PLEASANT - The
Western Soil Conservation trees and shrub$. The pine Amur honeysuckle.
DISTRICT work crew
District In Mason County stiU planlationswillbeplantedonly
in the open areas since these under the direction of H. S.
h a rdwood natural Benedlcthasbeenworkingona
Lay of the kind
reforestation areas will not be spring develpplll!lnt on the
has several wildlife plant cleared in order to be Merton ·Siinde farm on Warnerpackets available. These are replanted. Species that were ' Branch of Mud Lick Fork on
intended to be used around selected to be planted consist of Thirteen Mile Creek. Mr.
suburban homes or around while pine, Virginia pine and Slinde is collecting water at a
· spring to provide running
farm · homes .to incretlse
water in his home. Water is
wlldllfe habitat, as weU as in
being collected at the spring by
some cases for beautlfieation.
means of two parallel lines of
There are 30 trees and shrubs
.
FACTS
drain tile. From a collection
available consisting of Chinese
basin immediately below this
chestnut, Colorado · blue
spring the water will be carried
spruce.- Canadian Hemlock,
to a reservoir which will still be
While pine, hazelnut, Grey
100 or more vertical feet above
dogwood, Amur honeysuckle
their mobile home. He plans to
and Washington hawthorn.
use a 1,000 gallon pre-cast
These are all plants which have
concrete reservoir in which to
been proven to improve
store the water.
wildlife habjtat, either by
providing food for them or
needed cover.
The price of this packet is
$6.75. Orders will be filled on a
Pomeroy Bowling ~ants
Pro football's aU-time at·
Saturday
Bantam Lfague
tcndance,
including
pre-sea·
first-come basis and are now .
Feb. 10, 1J73
son
and
post-season
games,
being taken at the Soli ConStandings
rose to an aU-time high of
Pis.
servation office on Main Street 14,371 ,784 in 1971, The World Team
12
Red
Barons
in Pt. Pleasant. The ASCS and Almanac notes. This record Ball Bombers
8
County Extension Service haye totaled 268 games ,and rep- All Stars
7
7
order forms for this packet in resented an increase of 6.5 Pin Busters
6
Banano
Spills
per cent over 1970, which
their olflce also.
2
drew
13,488,708 fans . The Cyclones
WE HELPED Edison paid attendance
High
lndlvlduol
Game
during the
,
Parsons of Ripley· with a plan -'1r e g u 1a r 1971 season was Debbie Hatfield 143.
Second High Ind. Game revision for the famUy fann on 10,076,035 for a per game Keith Krauelter 133.
High Series - Dovld Smith
Morrison Ridge above Tribble. average of 55,363 which rep241.
resented
95.2
per
cent
of
This farm was Mrs. Parsons'
Second High Series - Debbie
.
family farm in her youth, They capacity.
Hatfield 238.
C op yrl~ h t © 1 973
Team High Game - Red
Xif'WBJIIlPe r E nt er pr ise Assn.
now use the farm as a weekend
Barons
740.
retreat where they enjoy
Team High Series - Red
Women veter@ns may now Barons 1478.
outdoor living, hunting and just
claim
their husbands as
getting away from it all. ·
Mr. Parsons and his son are dependents, to qualify for
Saturday Junior League
now mosUy interested In tree additional GI Bill allowances
Feb. 10, 1973
Standings
planting. We made plans for a on the same basis as married Team
Pts.
tree planting program for the male veterans.
Dreamers
Apaches
12
- - ..- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . Impacts
11
1 Ball Busters
Le«en af apbliOD are welcomed. Tiley lboald be lesl
Rams
8
.. _ • wordl lOIII (or be sabject to redacllou by tile
1 Alley Cats
4
1
-••-High Individual Game
editlr) ud mut be slped with the alpee'•
I Steve Bachnerh 181.
1d G
I NUDel may be wlthlteld apca pablleaiiOD. However, 1111 I Second Hlg 161
n . a me -t,ll8lllelwlllbedlle'-'I.Lettenlbouldbe1Diood
1
Chuck
Follrod
·
I •-,-High Series - Steve Bachner
Iaiiie, addnulq l11aes, DOt penonaUUes.
1471.
Second High Series - Chuck
£) _._ L
Fot~~ ~l7g·h Game _ Impacts

THE

••

CoiUIIIlllll PallJ I SW!Ieb
Dear Helen :
.
You wrote me a letter postmarked November I. I reeelved II
yesterday -from a neJsbbor who said It llad been In her vacation
111111111 thewblle they were on an estended cruise.
Several years ago llllliled a letter at a hntel desk - and
learned that It arrived at Its destination, four blockB away, three
weeb later I
Your bualness deptlllds on maU, Helen, and wblle II probably
wouldn't do any good, I wl.!h you'd write a column on the maU
frustrations we 8Uffer. - POSTAL BLUES
Dear P.B.:

Sorry, I'm going to take the ''Jmpopular" side - which will
probably 8lll'lll'ile everyone, lnclu,dlng me.
We Ill have our favorite atorles about'the pony exprell·
paced l'oltial Sei'vlce, but how about the millions of letters which
arrive on time? Perhapa we Amerlclna are 80 apolled by ef.
flclency that we aren't geared for j)CCSS(onal goofs.
Yea 1 simmer too when a piece cl maU Ia delayed or lost'
.
but I must be honest: oat ol several bundted !etten, perhaps one
arrives late. MY margin cl error Ia a lot higher than that! So who
am I to complain?
,
(You're welcome, POII!maater General Klasaen ... And now1
there's this little matter of hurrying up those BIG packages of
flnt claaa maU that come from my syridicate. My correspondents aren't third-cluB people!) - H.

+++

Dear Helen :

My Blllfpartner at the club BBidhis wife was "cold," ao in the
aplrlt of friendship, I proved abe wasn't.
1bad no ulterior motives -just wanted to help. Let's say It
wu an educational laboratory course without the high ~Ice tag.
It took me aeveral months to break away and get ·her baCk to
her !lllband. The problem between them has disappeared rww,
thanks to me, but do I get credit? No! 'l'llla woman had the bad
sense to "confe88," and I have lost a good friend and golf bud4y.
Before he found out our secret, he confided In me that his
wife was a changed woman, which made him a changed man,
and a very llappy one. Wouldn't you think he'd be grateful? ARCHIE
Dear Archie :
No! - H.

WORLD ALMANAC

Local Bowling

:!

Dear Helen :
. My fiance and llroke up over a sU1y argument. He didn't
.want me to finish college and I was determined to get my degree,
· either before or after marriage.
Hlareaaonawere: There had been several rapes on campus;
and he didn't want me UBOclaling with "the college crowd." He
Ia very jealous about my talking with other men. Frowns on my
having a career.
I've always tried to please him, but the more I gave In, the
more he demanded. Thla once,l stood up for what I wanted, and
now he's gone.
1feel incomplete without him. Should I give In and become a
droJI'(Iut? - TIGER

I
I

-UI-·

~
•••
,.

I
1
1
I

•

•
•

I
1 en.
I Team High
I Apaches 2530.

Series

I

_

PUBLIC NOTICE
FINANCIAL R!PORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
PorDtctmbtr31st,
Fiscal Ytor lndlnl
1t72 .
lldford Township
Mel'.:o~:.•:,t~omoroy, Ohio
· Januarv l1tlf1l

1certify the following report
to be correct.
. Glenn Lee
.
Townshlf Clerk
a~U.!:_~t::. ~=ci~P~S

Television L~g

'

Eagles upset Vikings .to tie for SVAC title

"

MONDAY FEB. 19, 1-•
u•
,
_
Elk
Co.
,
,
Gomer
Pyle
13;
Hodgepodge
Lodge 20;
33
5 30
8News
.
Marshall Dillon .15; Beverly Hclllbllllos
13 15 . Around
6

6:00- News3, 4, 8, 101 Truth or on seq .

1

1

.

Eastern's Eagles used two hot shooting quarters Saturday
nlgpt enroute to a 69-68 upeet victory over ihe Synunes Valley
VIkings In the .championship game of the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference
·
The victory imabled the Eagles, VIkings and Hannan Trace
WUdcats to finish In a three-way tie for first with idenllcal10,2
leagu~ records. U was the first tlnie Hanitan Trace bad ever
flnlahed atop the league In any sport.
It w8s the second time the league has had a three-way
championship, In 1968, Eastern, North Gallla and Kyger Creek
shared it.
'
Trailing ~3 moving Into the final stanza, Coach Wayne
White's Vikings used a presaing defm to get baCk In the game.
At the 3:11 mark, the score .stood 8l"i after PbU Robinson 510 senior, hit a jumper. The lead changed hands untU the 1:16
mark when Eastern called time out with a one point lead.
With 41 seconds left, Alan Duvall, 6-1 senior forward, W89
fouled. Hntep~ to the line and converted both ends of a one

'

the Bend 33; Sesame St. 20.
1 13
6, 30 _ ABC 'News 6: CBS News a, tO; I Dream of Jea11n e I
·News 31 .., lSI Supervision 33. .
. r •
7, 00 _ Truth or COnseq. 31 Beet the Clock 4; News 6. 10; Circus
. 13; What's My Line 8; S•lnt 15; Eledrlc Co. 20; Reed Your

. AN~,:~:~:n~l~1~~2ES
7,:•Y ~¥in The Truth 6; Young Or. Kildare 8! Coll'i'&amp;~ .
Generol Fund ·
$1,911.23
Basketball · I; Traffic Court 10; Hodgepodge L:odge 2 •
Motor vehicle License
Eplsode ·Actlon 33; Bobby Goldsboro 3.
'
Tex Fund
4,291.13 8. 00 _Rowan &amp; Martin's Laugh-In 3, 4, 15; Rookies 6; Gun- .
5,290.58
· smoke 8, 10; Mysterious Mr. Ellof 20, 33.
,.
, ·
Guollne Tax Fund
Totals Totol Receipts 11.552.94 9:00 - Here's Lucy 10; Movies "The Alamo" 3, 4, 15; Riot' 6,
General Fund
3.627.36
13.
Motor Vehicle License
9:30- Doris Day 10; Book Beat20,33.
'
Tax Fund
6.031 .99 10:00- News20i Bill Cosby 8, 10; An American Family 33.
Gasoline Tax Fund
121100.00 n·OO - News3,4,6,8, 10,13115.
·
"VII
Totals .
22,459.35 11 ;30-JohnnyCanon3,4, 15; OlckCavett6,13; Movies a ey
TotoiRocelpll' ltloncts
of the Dolls" 8; "Ad One"10.
·
General Fund
5,598 .59
Motor. Vahlcle License
'
· TUESDAY, FEB. 20, 1973
Tax Fund
10,323.12 6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
Gasoline Tax Fund
18,090.58
:15 _ Farm Report 13; Farmlline 10.
34•012 ·29 66:25 _ Paul Harvey 13.
Totals
&gt;
General :U~~enditurn 2.967.13 6:30- Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Concer~ &amp; Com·
Motor Vehicle License
men! 10; Faith For Today 13.
Tex Fund
7,594.9'1 6·-45 - COrncob Report 3.
Gasoline Tax Fund
13,151.31 7;00 _Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10; News 6; Fllntslones 13.
Totals
24.313.43 7:30 _Sleepy Jeffers 8; Romper Room 6; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
aatanceJan.ll, 1972
Po
10
13;.
peye
.
263146
Genera IF un d
• ·
8:00- Capt. Kangaroo
10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame 51· 33 ;
Motor Vehicle License
Lassie 6.
To~:~ Fund
::m: :~ 8:30 - Jack LaLanne 13; Romper Room 8; New Zoo Revue 6.
CASH BALANCE, RECEIPTS 9·00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 1S; Concentration 6;
AND EXPENOITURES
. Friendly Junction 10; Ben Casey 13; Capt. Kangaroo 8;
BY FUND
Mister Rogers 33; A.M. 3.
Generol Fund
9:30- To Tell The Truth 3; Jeopardy6.
,
Balance. Jan . 1, 1972
1,971.23 10 , 00 _ Dinah ,Shore 3, 15; Columbus Six Calling 6; Jokers Wild
Receipts
8. 10; Dick Van Dyke 13.
o
'
Gee:r.~~ r~~~:~~y . Tax '2.1~~g) 10:30- Concentration 3, 15; Phil Donohue 4; Price Is Rlghl8, 10;
Tangible Personal Property
Spill Second 13.
Tax (Gross)
39.01 11:00 - Saleollhe Century 3, 15: Love American Style 6; Gambit
Local Government
8! 10; PaSsword 13; Elec:. Co. 20.
Distribution
·
520.85 11 :30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Love of Life 8. 10; Bewitched
Cigarette License Fees

8 l::~~
01~~~ Fines &lt;Gros•l
Transfers
50.56
Total Receipts
3.627.36
To1al Beginning Balance
'
Plus Receipts
5,598.59
Expenditures
Tol~'m1~1~V~:N:;es- 2,840 .56
Town Halls. Memorial
76 57
B lldl g. &amp; Groun ds
Frre P~otectlon
5o:oo
Grand Total Expenditures General Fund
2,967 .13
Balance. Doc. 31 , 1972 2.631.46
Total Expenditures Plus
Bal.,
Dec . 31, 1972
5,598.59
Motor Vehicle License
Ttx Fund
Balance, Jan . 1, 1972
4.291.13
Receipts
Motor vehicle License
Ta x
6,031.9'1
Total Receipts
6,031.9'1
Tolal Beginning Balance
Plus Rei!::~ditures 10 •323 ·12
Total Expenditures Expenditures
Maintenance

. 5,182.93
709.52

Improvement
1.002.54
Total Expenditures MTao!oFruvndehlcle Llcenso7 ,59' .9'1
•
•
Balanr.e. Dec. 31 , 1972 2,728 .13
Total Expenditures Plu•
Bai ., Dtc.31.1972
18,090.58
Gasoline Tox Fund
Balance, Jan . 1. 1912
5.290.58
Gasol ine To~ocelpls 12 ,800 .00
Toto I Receipts
12 ,800 .00
T0 t 1 B 1 1 g Balance
P~us ::c~rprs
18,090.58
Expenditures
Total Expenditures Miscellaneous

5,502.77

61

l3; Sesame

st.

20.

1

.

,

12:00 _ Jackie Oblinger 8; Jeopardy 3, 15; Bob Brauns SO.SO
Club I; Password 6; News 10, 13.
12:25- CBS News 8.
12:30- Who, What or Where 3, 15; Split Second 6; Search For
Tomorrow 8, 10.
12:5S _ NBC News 3, 15.
·
'
1:00- News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Green Acres 10; Secret
Storm 8; Not For Women Only 15.
1:20 - Fashions In Sewing 3.
1:30 - Three On A Match 3, 4, 15; Let's Make A Deal 6. 13; A$
The World Turns 8, 10.
2:00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
DouglaS! 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
,
2 30 _ Doctors3, 4, 15; Dating Game 13; Edge of Nlghl8,10.
J·. oo - Another World 3, 4, 1S; General Hospital 6, 13; World
Press 20; Love Is AMany Splendored Thing 8, 10.
3:30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
Secret Storm 10; Maggie &amp; The Beautiful Machine 20; Merv
Griffin 8.
4·00- Mister Cartoon 3; Love American Style 13; Fllnlstones 6;
· Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15; Sesame St. 20, 33 ; Movie "The

.2

All American" 10.

4:30 _ Petticoat Junction 3; 1 Love Lucy 6; Daniel Boone 13;
Gilligan's Island 8; Dick Van Dyke 15.
5:00- Daniel Boone 6; Mr. Rogers 20, 33; Andy Griffith 15 ;
Bonanza 3, _.; Hazel 8.

5:30 _ Electric Co. 33 ; Gomer Pyle 13; Marshall Dillon 15 :
Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Beverly Hillbillies a.
6:00 - News3,4, 8, 10, 13, 1S; Truth or Conseq . 6; Sesame St . 20 ;
ArntJnu
-· Th I! r-.nn
n ....
·""
A: ~~News J, 4, 8, 10, 13, 15; I.Dream of J~annle 13; Growing
Him Up33.
7:00 - Whars My Line 8: "I've Got A Secref' 15; TV Honor
Society 15; Electric Co. 20; BeaiTheCiock 4.
7:30 - This Is Your Lite J ; To Tell The Truth 6; Price Is R~ht 8.
10; Beat Tho Clocl&lt;, 13; RFD 20; Great Oeclslons 73 33; rcu•
4; Andy Griffith 15.
.
8:00 - Ohio: This Week 20; Dr. Seuss Cartoon 8, 10; Book Beat
33; Temperotures Rising 6, 13.
8:30- Hawaii Flve-08, 10; Bill Moyers Journol 20; Movie " A
Brand New Life" 6, 13.

Meigs

Property
Tr8llSfers

1.

The Dllr

.,

......,,

..

r.

J

I

•

0

•

Waterford Wildcats 6().69 here
Saturday night. This was the
last game of the season for both
teams ,. Coach Bob Ord 's
Tornadoes ended with a 7-11
over811 reconl.

College Scores

r·- ----·_._____. . .; ,; . _______,
&amp; THINGS

Voice alongBr'Way

was later fouled with II seconds remaining and got both shots for
a 32-28lead. Boring's layup made It 34-28 at the half.
Eastern added 21 points In the third quarter behind the hot
smoUng of Dill, Spencer, Duvall and Boring. DU1 scored II
points, Duvall had six, ~andSpencertwoeach.
Lafon and Jene Myers kept the Vikings within reach.
Duvall, enjoying one of lis best night's this season, led all
scorers with 23 pqlnts on seven baskets and Dine free throws.
Three other Eagles In double figures were Dill with 16,
Boring 15, and Spencer 13.
Pl1l1 Roblnaon'sl~ points gave him the SVAC scoring tiUe. H,e
entered the contest with a 16.8 point average, one tenth of a point
lead over Boring. His final av~ge Ia 18.6, Boring's 16.5.
Teammate Jamie Lafon scored 198 points, an ·average of
16.5.
Jene Myen led the Vltlng attaCk with 19 points. Lafon
finished with 15.

Pro Standings
NBA Standl.ngs
By Unitod Press tnternationol
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
w. I. pd. g.b.
Boston
50 12 .806
New York
48 17 .738 3'1'
Buffalo
18 44 .290 32
Philadelphia 7 59 .106 45
Central Division
w. I. pd. g.b.
Baltimore
40 21 .656
Atlanta
36 28 .563 5'h
Cleveland
23 39 .371 l1'12
Houston
23 40 .365 18

Symmes Valley hit 29cl 88floor attempts for 42pct. and eight
of 14 free throws. Eastern converted 17 of 28 at the charity Blripe·
and 28 of 57 from the floor .
Symmes Valley took the reserve game, 46.."15.
Brown topped the winners wilh 14 point&amp;, Steve Goebel led
Eastern with 13 points.
'
Eastern will play Starr•Washlngton at 7p. m. Saturday In the
Clasa A Sectional Tournament at Nelapnville-York.
Symmes Valley meets Hannan Trace at 8:30p.m. Saturday
in·theCiass ASectional Tournament at Meigs High School.
Symmes VaBey
Roblnaon, a;t-18; Lafon, 7-1·15; Corn, 4~: Jene Myers, 7,(,.19; Jaye Myers, 1~2 ; and Webb, ~.
Totals ZN411.
Eutem (89) - Borq, 7-1-15; Duvall, 7..g..23; Dill, 6+16;
Sheets, 1~2. and Spencer, 5-3-13. Totals Z&amp;-17-89.
Symmes Valley Vikings '
16 28 43 68
Eastern Eagles
15 34 55 69

&lt;•&gt; -

Petty .Daytona ·ch3;mpion

Tigers
share
OC lead

'·l r

.7

.

.

plua one sib~&amp;lion to put the Eaglea Into a three point lesd. ·
Jamie. Lafon Ued the score at.H on a driving ~yup and
loll! sl!ot. Duvall was JOllied again with 29 8econds remalJilng.
He converted the flnt shot but missed the second.
Eastern grabbed the rebotind, scoring five seconds later 00 a
drive by Randy Boring .
During the Viking COIIIebact, Jene Myera,'&amp;-1 senior, and
Robinson were tbe lllllln guns. Robinson had 10 points, Myers
four, and bla rebounding aided Symmes VaHey's cause.
Coach Bill Pllilllpa' Eagles dropped behind, 16-15 at the end
of the first peri~ but jumped Into a 34-28 halftime lead.
DuvaU, Tim Spencer and 6-4 junior Steve Dill were the big
guna during the second period Eastern uprising. Eastern was
down by four points at the 6:24 mark when DuvaU was fouled. He
camed both ends to reduce It to two points.
Spencer bed the score at 26-26 with a jumper and Eastern
moved ahead with. 2:38left In the quarter on Dill's jwnper. He

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. Chevrolet belched fire going NASCARafter two years on the
The score was close shot 69 percent from the free
(UPI) - Buddy Baker sat Into the first turn and the USAC circuit, also thought he
ibroughout the game. At the throw. line.
dejectedly and viciously Tlnunonaville, S.C., charger had the race won untU ·his
half it was tied at 26 all. In ~
Southern had three players
pounded the steering wheel of was out with a blown engine. engine blew.
.
third period the Wildcats got up in double figures, Norm
his Dodge wbUe rival Richard Wben the green flag fell and
"I could get around Baker,"
by eight, but the Tornadoes Curfman topped them with 18
Petty casually headed for racing resw;ned, Petty was.on be said. "I had a good shot atit.
fought back to within 4 (4HO) points, and gettirig 12 each
victory lane, posting his fourth Baker's bumper with 100 miles Baker knew there wu
at Its cl09e. II turned out to be a were Dave Sayre and "Tree"
victory In the Daytona 500.
somebody behind him."
to go.
hair-raising final. period. The HilL H~l grabbed 10 of the
"Oh no," ~claimed Baker.
Then, with Baker out of the
The only serious accident
point total was so close no one Tornadoes 32 rebounds. Like
race, Petty took the nag two involved country music singer
"Dammit', No."
western Conference
knew who the winner was until Waterford, Southern had a iii
Midwest Division
Baker's anguish showed laps ahead of Bobby Isaac In a Marty Robbins who crashed
w. I. pet. g.b.
the final bell.
percent for field goals. The
after
he led 1571apa ,of the 201). Ford, with . Dick Brooks · his Dodge on the 69th lap when
« 20 .688
The 37 point performance by Tornadoes , made 10 of 15 at- Milwaukee
Chicago
38 · 23 .623 41'1 lap race only to watch his another lap back In a Dodge. he nudged Vic Parsons'
Waterford's D. McFerren on 16 tempts from the foul line for 66 KC-Omaha
31 36 .463 uv, ·hopes evaporate when his Defending champion A. J. Foyt Mercury on the fron,t stretch.
Detroi I
27 JS .435 15'1'
field goals and 5 free !brows pet.
engine blew just 15 miles fr0111 finished fourth In Chevrolet,
Robbins' car slammed Into
Pacific Division
wasn't quite enough. WaterNow that the regular SVAC
w. I. pet. g.b. the finish Sunday.
with Hershel McGriff fifth In a the wall and skidded some 1,000
ford was 25 of 49 from the floor action is over, Southern will LosAngeles 48 14 .774 Petty, NASCAR's aU-time Plymouth.
feet along the concrete before
Stale 37 25 .597 11
for 51 percent. The Wildcats meet Chesapeake in the first Golden
Concerning
champion, admitted Baker had
his
un- sliding into the Infield. Darrell
Phoenix
30 32 .484 18
round of the tournament at Seattle
20 4S .308 30
the "strongest" car. Bul'wben precedented fourth Daytona Waltrip, driving a Mercury,
16 46 .258 32
Meigs High School Friday, Portland
asked
if be could have beaten 500.victory, which earned him and Red Farmer's Ford also
Sunday's Results
Feb. 23 at 7 p.m.
Baker in a race to the finish, $34,100, Petty said, "It's spun Into the grasay Infield to
Philadelphia 114 New York 98
Waterford - Hughes · J.i-7; Delroit1« KC-Omaha 100
Petty replied, ''That's just one something to win It one lime. I avoid Robbins.
Wagner 1~2; Bauerbach 2-3-7.; Baltimore 96 Milwaukee 93
question I will never have to guess It's the thrill of a
Chicago 110 Houston 99
Needs 2-0-4 ; McFerren 16-S-37; Boston 106 Seattle lOS
lifetime. To win It four times is
worry about."
Sampson 1~2. Totals 25-!h'ill. Cleveland 122 Buffalo 98
Baker, who started on the just unebllevable."
Portland 119 Phoenix 118
Southern - I hie 2~0-4 · Atlanta
pole
In his Harry Hyde"This was one of the toughest
99 Los Angeles 92
Curfman 8-2-18; Hill 6-3-12;'
Monday's Games
prepared DOdge, raced with losses ever for me." Baker
(No games scheduled)
Miller 2-3-7 ; Sayre 5-2-12 ;
Cale Yarborough for nearly 390 said. "It is hard to believe that
Nease 2.(1.4 ; Ord 1-3-5. Totals
miles while Petty stayed a car can run so good and then
ABA Standings
comfortably In third place In just let go like this one did.
By
United
Press
International
--• 25-IO-liO.
By Uolted Press lntel'lllll1,_.
By Quarters
East
his Dodge.
Maybe my luCk will change."
w. I. pet. g.b.
The Ohio Conference tiUe Waterfilrd
10 26 44 59 Carolina
Yarborough, returning to
Suddenly
Yarborough's
46 19 .708 fight is still a horse race and it Southern .
12 26 40 60 k'c.nf11('k v
42 23 .646 4
32 31 .508 13 o
'lfould take a magician to
Reserve Score : Waterford Virginia
Your
"New York
23
40 .36S 22
Jl'edict which of several tenms 40, Southern 36 _
Memphis
20 43 .317 25
lmuranct
will be the champion when the
West
. Agent
dust settles Feb. 27.
w. I; pet. g.b.
Utah
41 24 .631
Wittenberg, Capital and
3
Musklngum all share the lead
Southwest
with 1().2 marks. Otterbein SI.Mry's-Tex. 73 Southwslrn 66
San Diego
20 .~2 .323 19'1,
SAN ·DIEGO (UPI)
Mter But Dickson sank a 15-foot
could put It again In a four-way Tarleto~ 76 Angelo 73
Sunday's Results
k - •k~
Tex. Lulh . 68 Austin Coil. 59
I ·' \' 1
Carolina 138 Memphis 114 _ . .. se":e~ c~~ve d~ys q~ g~, , birdie putt on the 14th to draw.
w,,.., ""': ' · TCU 80 SMU '? ~ ' ···
•h'nv uu lu If..,) Jd:.t urr
. Kentucky
Denver 10994Utah
90
•
'·,
"
liK:l'"''•rl'
tli'
,
•
u,_,:l\ 'rOOIH! •· ·eveft'llllld 'said'1le' felt ' 111\!n'~e 1
,
~·.,,Arkapsas 76 Biiyl6i' i4
New York 85
~'6 e qua~,mg
. ._,, . . , , _
..PQ t.GY_, IS.. , ...... , ,.
, 1aeason
·~ ·
Texas Tech 65 Rice 61
·'
Indiana 118 San Diego 103
and two rounds of pro-am play, could wrn it.
tailored to needs.
Lamar 94 Ark. St.' 84
!Only games scheduled)
Bob Dickaon Sunday won the . "I had missed a lot of abort
The OC playoffs begin Thurs- S. F.Austin 103 Mcmurry 81
dny at Denison and Wooster East Tex. 83 Sui Ross 70
Monday's Games ·
WUI!ams Open Along with a putts before that but when I
Whether you wani auto, lite
Dallas at New York
·
, ·
and end Saturday with the Sam Hous. 106 H. Payne 85
San
Diego
at
Utah
$34,000
check
to
help
pay
some
made
the
one
on
14,
he
~~or
homeowners Insurance.
Lamar 94 Arkansas St. 84
we will design a policy lo fit
(Only games scheduled)
baCk hills he aJao gained plained, ''lknewlwasthlnking
North and South division win- Okla. 67 Nebraska 59
your Individual require·
ners going to the champlonahlp D. Roberts 122 Trinity 12
automatic berths in the Mas- right and I had a chance."
ments . . . Discuss· your
WHA
Standings
Tulsa 78 N. M. St. 76
ORO SHOOTS - Vfll'll Ord goes high with a jump shot
Dickson paased in the rest of
gsme at Denison three days Cent. Okla . 73 NW Okla. 61
By United Press lntern•tianal ters, the Tournament of Otamp
specific needs with ~s .
Saturday night for the Southern High Tornadoes when
East
later,
Texas 71 Texas A&amp;M 68
l o n s and the PGA Cham· the way but Crampton, who
w. I. I. pis gf ga
Southern upset Waterford 60-,;9 at Racine In a non-league,
Wittenberg rolled over Marl- UCLA 96 Was~~~ton St. 64
Cleve
35 22 2 72 220 178 plonshlp., not to mention this had putted so superbly in
season-ending basketbaU gsme. At left, oot of the action, is
New Eng 34 24 2 70 249 205 week ' s Jackie Gleason- earlier rounds of 87-7().68,
etta 75-62 Saturday wbUe Capi· New Mexico 76 BYU 66
N.. Y.
W. Needs of Waterford. - Photo by leo HUI.
27 33 1 55 240 259 Inverrary Classic at Ft. Lau- suddenly couldn't find the hole
tal edged Wooster· 61.eG, Mus· Colorado 77 Missouri 68
Phone 992-2966
Phil a
27 32 0 54 220 248
114
Court
St.
Pomeroy
klngum downed Baldwln-Wal- Lon~ Bch 51. as Pacific 6~
Quebec 21 29 5 53 205 231 derdnle, Fla., an event which and he bogied 15, 16 and 17 to
••
,;.-and
Otterbein
got
Was
lnglon
73
So.
Calif.
70
lace ..,.....,
Ottawa 23 34 4 50 213 253 carries a winner's prize of faU three shots back.
Utah Sl. 84 Air Force 58
West
past Urbana 78-77 In a non- So. Utah ,84 W. New Mex. 79
, - - - - - -- -- -- -- w. I. I. pis gf ga $52,000.
conference game.
Colo. St. 60 Wyom ing 54
Winlpg 36 23 3 75 233 187 Dickson's victory should
Calif. 79 Oregon St. 77
By United Press International points and while Spencer
Mlnn
30 28 3 63 204 213 prove a good leBBOn to all those
Despite
the
losa
by
BaldwinOregon
76
Stanford
69
The PhUsdelphla 76ers have Haywood led Seattle with 34.
Houston 29 26 4 62 220 207
Wallace, Dean Marlin scored Ar iz. 51. 110 Arizona 105
Los Ang 27 28 5 59 206 206 other youngsters trying to win
discovered winning-and they
Idaho 80 No. Arizona 73
Pete Maravich scored 31
21
points
to
become
the
fifth
Denver
115
1
Alberta
28 27 2 58 201 194 fame and fortune on the PGA
like it !
points and Lou Hudson hit 27'to
Chicago 22 36 1 45 191 221 tour, because It was one of
player
In
OC
history
to
score
Colo.Mines
80
After dropping 48 of their lead AUanta over the Lalters.
Sunday's Results
over 2,000 points In his college Fort Lewis
patience and perseverance as
Los
Angeles
4 Philadelphia 1
first 52 games and putting Los Angeles came to within two
·
Cai-S.B. 96
Winnipeg I Houston 2
well as good play. He got It by
together losing streaks of 15 points, at 90-88, when Maravich career. Martin bas 2,014 total SanOegoSI.
Minnesota 7 Chicago 5
points.
Lyla-L.A.
aboollng a IQ.under.par 278,
and 20 games, the 76ers turned hit a pair of free throws with
San Fran
three shots better than Bruce
In other basketba11 acUon, Snta Clra 100
tiger this week. Firat they 1:36 left and after Gall
Ohio
State
feU
out
of
the
Big
Nev.Reno
101
Peiiorlt,ne
Crampton, PbU Rodgers, BWy
knocked off the rugged Mil· Goodrich agsln put the Lakers
Ten race by losing to Illinois 79- Wh ittier 101 Cal
Casper
ahd Grier Jones.
RINN
WINS
waukee Bucks, followed by within two points, Hudson hit a &amp;8; Toledo beat Miami &amp;7-&amp;, Weber St. 70 Gonzaga
The 6-foot.."l scholarly looking
BERLIN (UPI) - Hans Hlnn
upending the Detroit Pistons ~~tree-point play to put the
•
Midwest
Dickson
abot a cloaing-round 72
Bowling
Green
defeated
Kent
st.
Jos.
Pa.
78
Xav
ier
6S
of
East
Germany,
the
and after a Saturdny night 1089 game out of reach. Goodrich
State
77"7and0hio
U.
downed
Creighton
78
Houston
77
European champion, won the In a head to head duel with
in New York, rebounded had 38 points to lead the Western Michigan 101-110, all in Kansas 75 Okla. St. 66
men
's world championship in Crampton, the man wao had
&amp;tndny to wallop the Knlcks, Lakers.
Minn. 82 Indiana 75
single seat toboggan Sunday won two other tourney titles
Archie Clark scored 26 the Mid-American Conference. Marquette 77 Oetroll 55
nwa.
Also, Mount Union downed No. Ill. 83 Indiana St. 82
and led bla team to a sweep of this year and already was
With new Coach Kevin points, including a pair of Heidelberg 74-81, Oberlin Buller 74 Ind . Central 66
the flrat four places In th.e closing in on the $100,000
Akron 77 Ky. Wesleyan 73
Loughery experimenting with crucial free throws with five
edged
Ohio
Wealeyen
68-&amp;,
Ohio.
U,
101
w.
Mich.
80
competition.
money winning plateau after
new
combinations
and seconds left as the Bullets beat Kenyon lost to Ohio Dominican Ferris St. 97 Dakland 73
Rim won with an aggregate only seven events In 1973.
defenses, PhUsdelphla took an Milwaukee in a nationally
Sl. Jos. 110 Oe Pauw 80
Crampton started the final
time
of 3:07.37.
~2;
Denison
dropped
CarIowa
100
Wisconsin
76
early lead and held on all the televised game. Clark, who
negie-MeUon
(Pa.)
81-68;
and
Yngslwn
38
Sleubenvl
37
round a abot ahead of Dickson
way. Tom VanArsdale was the al80 had 14 assists, converted Ashland beat Fredonia Stale Wesleyan 98 Carthage 95
and Jones and was still ahead
key man In the 76er attack, his free throws with the Bullets
Sl. Louis 61 Drake 58
H. W. Soffo.rd
by a shot after the 13th hole.
(N.Y.) 26-14 In a deliberate . Kansas St. 119 Iowa St. 76
MYERS TO REDSKINS
scoring 29 points, while Leroy ahead, 94-93.
slow-down by Fredonia, top Louisville 84 Bradley 78
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Son Diego, Calif.
Ellis added 24 points and 20
defensive team in the NAIA. Purdue 88 Mich. St. 84
Dick
Myers,
a
former
sports.
rebounds and Fred Carter
SATURDAY NIGHT
. Bill Higgins of Ashland, who ~~~~96?~~~~~:~· St. 67
writer for United Preas Jn..
contribuled 23 points. Wall
B~~~~PJ~~Ls~~g~~s
had averaged 27.4 points per Illinois 79 Oh io St. 68
ternational and an aide in the
Frazier led the Knicks with 25.
1
6
By
United
Press
lnternetlonal
game,
was
held
to
eight.
·
~~\~a
~r
~~r~~~r.~.
r
$/
National Football League's
71
"We've put In a lot of new Parma 62 Cleveland He!ghts 54
Y o u n g s to w n
be a t Pttsbg St. 76 No. Colo. 70
player
personnel department,
SAME DAY
things, especially on defense," Euclid 68 Garfield Heights 53 Steubenville 38-37 iJi another So. Colo. 79 Emporia St. 70
bas been hired as top adSERVICE
"'•ll · bU Akr
South
said Loughery, who took over Lakewood 61 Valley Forge 53
1 ""'
Shaker
Heights
67
Normandy
game
0
,
W e
on
Wm&amp;Mary
80 East car . 69
In
At
9- 0ut At S
ministrative
assiatant
to
the
for Roy Rubin after the team
Tha t quote is from an actual lette r se nt to the
58
BeatKentuekyWesleyan77-73; Va . Tech 86 WestVa. 68
Washington Redsklns.
Use Our Free Parking Lot
could manage only a 4-48 mark.
Bette r Bus iness Bureau. And it 's so true;
~e~~e;~t~~~~r~~ ~~~~~Ye ~~ St. Joseph (Pa.) downed Geotwn 56 Boston Coli. 55
Myen' duties will be to help
"We have a lot of new guys and
Tennessee 85 Georg ia 71
lgh
vi
tate
beat
sometimes
the BBB doesn't even have lo do
·
·Kis k1Prep 57 Xa er7~ ; Wr IS
.
So. Car. 77VIIIanova53
sign players to contracts and to
they aren't used lo playing Cleve.
Rhodes 72 Cleve. C.C. 59 Ross-Hulman (Ind.) 81.eG, and Trnsylvnla 104 Centre 79
anything to hel p you get you r money's worth.
supervise the administrative
logether.lt's going to lake time Eastlake Norlh 57 Painesville · Walah whl d Penn Slate- Duke 86 Notre Dame 74
,116 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
Just dropp ing ou r name is frequently
office of the Redaklns.
1
ppe
N C St 81 Wake Forest 59
but I'm confident this club can Harvey 49
enough to get action from a busin ess
Strongsville 45 Midpark 41
Behrends D:J-09.
Hi~h Point 64 catawba 61
win. That's why I took the job." Chanel 99 Cleve. Gilmour 56
1
u
·
b
G
C
you' re having problems with.
Cine nna
eat
eorge U ·Ashvl102 King Coli. 88
In other NBA action Sunday, Cleveland Lutheran East 8~•
I I
Howord 90 N.C. A&amp;T 81
But when you really do need our
Cleveland Lutheran West61 Was~tngton 71-85 ; F nd ay Stetson 81 Ga. Tech 70
Boston nipped Seatue, 10&amp;-105,
~
e
lp, we're ready. On any
Cleve. Benedictine 54 Cleve. edged Taylor (lnd ) SUO· HI- Mercer 87 South Fla 80
•
•
.
.
Atlanta defeated Los ·Angeles, John HBY 53
Do
Yourself
product or service . We don 't al way s
Cleve. Kennedy 69 Brecksville ram stopped Bethany (W.Va.) Morehead·St. 112 W. Ky. 93
99-92, Baltimore stopped Mil- 52
77-62· Northwood (lnd) beat Va. Union 101 Va . St. 100
succeed, but we always try.
waukee, 96-93, Chicago Brooklyn 80 Hawken 64
'
.
Clncl 71 Geo. Wash. 65
When you have a problem with
A Flavor!
whipped Houston, 110·99, Cleve. st. Ignatius 66 Cleve. St.. Central State 77·72 In over· E. Ky. 74 Middle Tenn. 58
business,
it 's bad fo r you and for
Edward 54
time; Earlham (Ind.) downed Kentucky 94 Florida 83
Detroit manhandled Kansas Streetsboro 57 Aurora 44
·Bluffton 90-76. St John's (N Maryland 69 Clemson 66
busi ness. A nd no one knows that
Clty.Omaha, 144-100, Cleveland Perry 65 Fairport 64
• ·
· Vanderbilt 82 LSU 72
better
than the businessmen
Y.) whipped Dayton 118-$3; Alabama 87 Auburn 75
cruahed Buffalo, 122-98 and Kirtland 62 Wickliffe 54
Drive
in
for
a
delicious
sundae,
shake,
who support the BB B.
Youngs. North 73 Ash Harbor Hanover
(Im\.)
beat Miss. 83 Miss . St. 64
Portland shaded Phoenix, 119- 61
·
Alcrn A&amp;M 104 Jcksn St. 98 malt or cone. Let us fill your party
Lorain Admiral King 92
Wilmington 81-76, and Defiance Memphis St. 116 W. Tex. St. 79
118.
.
needs, too.
Lorain
Southvlew&gt;5
downed
Anderson (Ind.) C-78. Ui'IC·Charlotte 77 Ga. Sl. 55
oave Cowens lipped In a Riverview 90 Utica 66
'
Fla. A&amp;M 87 Benltdl&lt;l 67
rebound with two seconds 'left Da~ton Roosevelt 77 Col s.
111!!~-.CALL lOUt BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU
to give Boaton Its victory over
S1
•
SeatUe. The Sonlcs led, 100.104, Newcomerstown 88
HELPING 'YOU GET 'YOUR MONEY'S WORTH.
7
when Don Nelson m~ a shot
75
· ·
··
.00 Cowens Cllllle· out of a ndat•dnowvbar,oolekY s ovth 59 z. nes·
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (C. LOSE'
ville
Rosecrans
41
•·
Middleport.
992-5241
scramble under the boards to Portsmouth 79 Ironton 35
4th &amp; L.o,cust
AT'
NOON ON THURS.) - EAST. COURT ST.
lip 1n tbfl wiiiiiDI bllket. Jo Jo Belpre 60 Federal-Hocking 58
y
·
White lid tbe (llitlc:l with • loll

By CONNIE SMITH
RACINE - In a close contest
that went right down to the
final buzzer, the Southern
Tornadoes surged ahead in the
final ~ to defeat the

Ma lntenonce
7,711 .9'1 9·00 - Behind the Lines 20, 33.
Saturday Senior League
Improvement
536.55 9: 30 _ Tll c.am.dv Years 8 10· Block Journal20 33
,
',, I ,.., •,- v' ···••II I . l
Feb. lO, 1973.' . .
' I \"&lt; Grud IT..1al ex-ptndtturn . _,,.,o:~News-tft:- Biography 33·, Marcus Welby, M
.D.
6, 13; NBC
Dear Tiger·
,.,, ·,• :1.''•1 •I 1" • .~ .... , ••,,, •
"
'
. ·:· - · . ,,
'tr
·
·,·;
•
1
.. . , , ..
.,.,
S!o""inas
Guoll~eT.O,l\Fund, 131751 131 ., · R'~
, '
•
.
·.: ·'·
·•· ; '· · m
· · ~.. ,T ~, •· ' ptJ '''~Ba H,D'tC :'31 , lt'12 tn.s ~~~39.27
iij)or't,.
.
. •
~ You.ruihtfeellncomplete WITH him too.•Acareer girl \ype·,. Somethtng. T'~lly kJ enJOY
o ' o~~~ ... ~ , .. , • ··~··~ 1 "
c
h • · .-.-· ·· H .... . ,. • 16. . Total Expendltur'n Plus
n :oo - News314, 8110, 13, 15.
H\.'~s ers
Bel. , Dec. 31, 1912
18,090.58 11:30 - Johnny Carson 3. I , 15; Dick Cavett 6, 13; Movies " 10
marry a:·jealo\la· Jllan who resents her trains. U abe Dear Sir:
16
er
•es
Township
DebtBonds
Rllllnglon Place" 8; "What AWay To Go I" 10.
14 Purpose tor WhiCh Bond
doee,abe'll DJn begin resenting IUM.Don'tgiveln! -H.
. In reading my Dally Sentinel Feb. 4, I was really amazed to Ding-A-Lings
1:00 _ Your Health 4; News 13.
11 Debt WIS Cnattd
•
find one of my school mates, name and picture, Mrs. Merle Gutter Ousters
1. 30 _ News 1
Pin
Busters
5
Purchase
of
Grader
WIN AT BRIDGE
(Reeves) Johnson. I haven'theard from her since 1945 when we Born Losers
1 Outstanding Jan . 1,
High Individual Game
1m
1o.ooo.oo
departed from school.
Steve Burton 208 .
Redeemed
Ourlno
Year
1972
3,333 .00
1got married ·thahummer; moved away. 1 had asked many
Second High Ind. Game Balance outstanding
times abOut her but no one seemed to know her whereabouts. So _Debl Gallagher 193.
Dec. 31.1972
6,667.00
High S'erles Debl Rateotlnt.
6 Pet.
you
see,
theDaUy
~llnelsentthlsnews
500miles,
to
my
Crystal
show a good heart suit, but
Gallagher 478.
Doteol Final Mat.
7-l·H
NOR'I1l (D)
not much in high cards and Lake, W. home.
lt
Second High Series - Steve 121 19 11
I've taken the paper ever since I left Pomeroy In 1967. And I Burton 47S.
certainly no first round con·
• AK54
BY PAUL CRABTREE
Pin
Team High Game
.AQ63
trol in any other suit. In really enjoy sitting down after my work is done in the evening to
Crushers 834.
Public brosdcasters,llke eommerclalstatlons, 8re subjeCt to
other words, he Is very a hot cup of coffee and my Daily Sentinel.
u
Pin
Team High Series
.KQ107
happy with game, but has
ratings, gr.dea, other njeailurea of service. In any dlac\18Slon of
Mrs. Mildred Terrell, 39 Woodstock street, Crystal Lake, W. Crushers 238&lt;1.
WEST
EAST
little slam Interest."
the pre-eminent stations In non-commercial telecasting, a grade
.J9873
.106
Jim : " North has just two llll!ll!IJIIIIllllll!ll!IJIIIIllfm:W~:w».:-;~:x:-st.~~- . , .,.~·· ... ·~ .... v·oo· a. e :9$
of "A" would certainly go to stations such as WGBH·TV In · '
aces so he knows there Is no
Boston (maybe A.plus), WQED In Pittsburgh and KQED in San
tAJ8754 tKQ103
slam and passes."
.3
.A86H2
Oswald: "Without the
Francisco.
SOUTH
splinter bid North and South
But II lllrlkes me that both the public stations In our area .Q2
might stlll stop at just four
WOUB·TV In Athens and WMtJL.TV in Huntington - deserve at
.KJ109854
hearts, but they mt~ht also
U6 '
concrete. Today, gang-ltllled corpses are just
lealll a grade of "B," or maybe a B.plus.
get to five. Five won t make
BY JACK O'BRIAN
• J9
discarded where they die, mostly.
Iwouldn'tattempt to rate one over the other. WOUB was on
because the defense will
GRIMM TALE OF A
Both wlnerable
probably find the club ruff.
British
aclre88
&amp;san
George
nixed
$20,000
Charley
King,
dec'd.
to
Ida
the
afr
more than six years before WMUL at Maraball made Its
CROWNING INSULT
Wost North Eut South That is bad luck, but bad
NEW YORK (KFS) - Age of Vulgarity : one to pose for. a Playboy 'nude. Her boy friend, M. . King, MyrUe Robinson, appearance in 1968 - tr.eaningtbatMarahallhasamuchnewer
luck follows players who get
1•
Pass 1•
transmitter and general facilities. It al80 has access to the gear
tract of a new album by The Grimms (a groop singer Jack Jones, urged the deciding nCHto ... Parcel, Scipio.
beyond game ."
Pus 3t
Pass 4•
Pass Pass
Pass
that Includes Beatie Paul McCartney's brother, Mrs. MaynardDeWittWolfe clMontelair,N. J ., . Ida M. King, Myrtle andequlpmentofWSWP·TV, Olannel91n Beckley· Grandview,
(HIWSPAPU. fNTEIPR.ISE ASSH.I
Opening lead- • 3
Mike McGear) is titled "Swnmer with the , offers this biblical proverb abe. saye pertains to Robinson to Franklln King, Jr., which has facUlties which many commercUtl broadcasters would
ll!onarch." The lyrics describe Uz as a pot. today's dropout hippies: ''Thlire is a generation Louella E . King , Parcel, envy.
Of the two, WOUB Ia more news-oriented, with Its e:rcellent
By Olwald &amp; James Jacoby
puffing queen of the Liverpool pop scene ... pure in their own eyes and yet not washed from Scipio.
The bidding has been:
their filthiness ."
James 0 . Barringer, dec 'd. "11 o'clock news at 10" (the only TV pews thst emphasizes
Oswald : "North's three- West North East South Someone has respect for Eastertide : 20th-Fox
The
same
old
Ruby
Keeler-film
lightning
to
Ruth M. Barringer, Patty Southeastern Ohio), and WMUL Ieana more to entertainment.
booked "Sound of Music" into 350 U. S. cities ...
diamond call Is not a sign of
WOUB's allegiance to news is perhaps a carry~ver from the
Insanity. It Is a 'splinter' Pus
Saverlo Sarldls, the singing N. Y. cop who made sUU strikes : nene Graft, 23-year~ld Bellerose, Powell, Carl Barrenter, Cert.
1•
PBM 3t
N.
Y.,
lass,
was
ecstatic
when
tapped
last
year
for
trans.,
Olive.
fine
job done by Its radio sister at Ohio U., WOtJB..FM (which
bid."
?
Pou
~•
Poss
his debut at the Plaza's Persian Room whose
Frank Marion Hoschar, dec. rates an "A"ln what It does). WMUL, coming along later, took a
Jim : "The splinter bid Is You, South, hold:
beat then took hiin back to obscurity hasn't for a road troupe of "Promises, Pr~s: • for
a modern Invention. Specifi· oUK54 .AQU tZ • .KQI07 given up : he's being trained for opera by David Merrick; today abe's. beyond euphoril!- to Ora Hoschar, Dorothy different direction (partially because of two conunerclal TV
cally It provides that when What do you do now?
Carnegie Hall vocal coach Carlo Menotti ... The won the female lead In the hit Dlllsical Bigelow, Naomi Hoschar , news teams already In town).
you bid one m o r e than
"Grease."
Leonard Hoschar, Aff, for.
WMUL Ieana to entertainment In Its local productions, or In
A-P.... Your partner Is Prince Von Furatenbergs, 'whose brags and
necessary to force in a new showlRJ
•
lot
of
heorto,
but
no
John
caasavetes
is.
one
of
the
best
trans.,
Middleport.
·
the
shows It opts to put together from varied sources. The
drags, via their own odd quotes inN. Y. mag.,
suit you are forcing to game olde oc:e.
SybU Ebersbach, Com., Ora balance, for viewers In this area, is a mutually-beneficial one.
In partner's last bid suit and
wallowing lrito their BSI!Orted sex Uvea and wUd customers for French · champagne (that's a
TODAY'S QUESTION .
showing a singleton In the
redundancy
,Isn't
It?
Real
champagne
always
is
Hoschar
, dec. to Dorothy
The station's molll ambitious undertaking, perhaps, was an
Instead of biddilll four hearts preferences - aren't having so much fun
one you are lilddlng. Two your
•·•-·1)
he
tl""'
bla
·"
'ocal
"Appalachian soap opera," called "Hand!ula of Ashes,"
French). Admlts (proc........ .
....ea
Bigelow, Naomi Hoschar , """
has bid three already.
•
diamonds would have been a hearts partner
over your three dianose with a bottle a day ... Theagony.clbook· leonard Hoschar, Lot, Mid· whlcbwaan'tatallbad(aoapoperasarenotmythlng,however).
one-round force , so three monds. What do you do now?
The prosecutor In the famed Adolf Eichman reviewing: 79,000 last year In the U.S. alone; dleport.
It was locally wrltlen, produced, and acted, and was credible, If
diamonds is a splinter and
Answer
tomorrow
case,
Gideon
Hausner,
was
retained
by
the
546,00il
worldwide
...
Those
blue
denim
jeans
Leonard
Hoschar,
Mary
K.
not
great, entertainment.
forces the bidding to con·
tlnue to game or higher in - - - - - - - - - Johnny Walker scotch people to sue the Israe li you say your youngster abould abandon to a H09char tO John Bigelow, Lot,
Paul Nuchlms ho~ a talk show that covers· the arena of
hearts."
Stn4 $1 for JACOIY MOOUH book booze firm (calls Itself Ascot Scotch) for traahcan - are selling In their most abused Middleport.
public affaln once a week, and frequently Ia top.notch con- '·
Oswald: "This spUnter bid lo: "Win of 8•i4r•." lc/o this - •·
Walter ~- Crooks, Emog~ne veraatlon -although usually localized In Interest, and perhapa " '
makes it easy for South to papa1l, P.O. lo• m. Rddio Cllr alleg~y "damaging the good name of Scotch condition all over Europe for more than they
1
'
Whisky"
...
Jeramle
Rain,
who
plays
the
pert
cost
originally;
the
abroads
especially
are
Crooks
to Valley Lumber &amp; notofanyspeclalvaluetovlewerslnOhlo.
give a picture of his hand. Station, N... Ya•k. H.Y. 10019.
oorse In NBC-TV's ''The Doctors" aoapera, imitating our lowest subculture.
Supply co., Lots, Middleport.
Alain this year, WMUL wll) focus on the State Legislature,
He jumps to four hearts to
~
The Atmailac
callsN. Y. "Ripoff City": since moving here her
Film Director John Huston lllllollded b1a
Roma c . Rothgeb, Gary emphasizing the workings and operationa of that body In a way .• :
By Untied Prmllltel'lllllional car's been stolen, the motorcycle abe then man.sion In Ireland but keeps his citizenship. conley, Anna Eloyse Conley to the general public can understand, ape! leaving the hard news ·•i
Today is Monday, Feb. 19, bought was robbed, and•the bicycle abe sellle&lt;l there ... Ladybird's White House assiatant, Valley Lumber 1c Supply co., abOut what the Legislature does to the commercial broadcasters &gt;I
1'
the 50th day of 1973 with 315 to forwaunatched as abe watChed on 3rd Ave. in HelenLindow,julllmoVI!d toN. Y. for a job with Lots, Middleport,
.
- a ·decent-enough ltacje.
Stoililll follow.
'
the 2011. Jertmle now walks - and keeps an eye the Muscular Dystrophy Aas'n ... The Dallas
Wayne Chase, Thelma Chase
Of course, nothing probably gets the general public turning
OIYOTID TD TMI
INTI.IITDP
The moon is approaching its on her shoes.
·
Cowboys
Texas
Stadium
this
off-eeasonla
being
to
David
Riggs,
Gloria
Riggs,
their
cllalJ to Olannel33 (Cable 01. 9) u WMUL'it color telecasts r'
MIIOS·MASDN Alii A
last quarter.
, Actor Kunu Hank, who plays Injun Joe In used as a drive-in movie, canny notion of owner 211 Acres, Scipio.
ofMarahlll's baaketba11 team. Last year, when the Herd had a e.
CMISTI• L. TANNIMILL,
The
stars
are
Venus,
Mars
the
''Tom'
SaWyer"
film,
Ia
a
fuU-blooded
Clint
Murchison
...
We've
alwsye
WOlldered
why
Ronald
E.
vance,
Joyce
E.
great team, and this year, when It haa a good one, lana all over ,.:
. •on•T MDIPLICM,
1'
City Ultor
and Jupiter.
Winnebago Indian and full.fleshed former L.A. ·Bdwy. theater ownera didn't rent out their . Vance to Leland E. Clonch, the area were foUowlng MU's forlunea via televlalon.
Published dolly ucopt
The evening stars are Mer- Ram ... Nina Van Pallandt's flrat movie, ''The. premlaell to convenllona, meetings etc.; they're Realha v . Clonch, Lot 12,
But my favorite Pl'U8l'am of Ill -a lllrange mlKture of old •·
SoturdiY by Tht OhiO Vtltty
PubliShing Com pony, 11 I cury and Saturn.
Long Goodbye" (not about her qulckle affair occupied only six nights and two matinees a Rutland VIllage.
celluloldandlocalflavor - is"EpisodeAcUon,"whlchlanotbing '"
caur't ·st.. POnuroy, Otlto·,
Those
born
on
this
date
are
With
Cllflord
Irving
of
the
Hughes
who),
will
week.
Andthe]l'reemptyalot.
The
new
Shubert
Dollie
Mae
l'tctett·to
Mark
more than reruns of those great old ,Saturday-matinee movie ')
45169. lustn.Ss Office Phone
"J.JIU. lditorlol Phon• "2· under the sign of Pisces.
have Its theme e,ong penned by the great Johnny · management Ia planning to abut that fiscal gap. Markham, Parcel, Bedford. aer1a11 of the Thirties and Forties, abcnm two chapters at a clip '''
lUI .
Swedish
explorer
Sven
Hedin
Mercer
... WbUe .Tony Francl088 was making .
Woulckt't a ~rles cl Sunday Nlghllt at the
MUo B. Hutcheson, Betty A. . · each week, and leaving the hero cllff-ltauging at lhe end ol each ~.
Second Cllll pOttiOt Plid II
Pomeroy, Ohio.
"Acroas IIOth St." be bad cops in his car aa WlnterGardl!!lbeasmasb - witb,say,lllarlaf Hutcheson to Je88e J. Carroll, eplaode.ArealmovlenutnamedBlDMcDowell[ll'llidesov.-the ·:t
Nollonol odvortllino was born Feb. ID, 1865. •
roprountollvo lottlntlfl .
On this day In history:
technical advisel-s and drove tMough a red FredAitalre · Bingl:;rosby i PerryCcmoslze? Anna L. Carroll, Parcel, mow,andhuanencyclopedlcmemoryofthenlmesandfacesol
Glllllhtr, Inc .. 12 1111 12nd
"
In
1922;
.
vaudeville
and
ligbt,
accidentally be says: "They ga'l'l! me a ... Newlyopenedateak.~elnournabe (at334 E. Scipio.
these thrl11en af the put.
St .. Now York City, Now York .
Subscription rolls : oo . musical comedy star Ed WyM llctet! My lint driving ticket!"
73rd St. - haVI!n't sot to It yet- too near) Ia
Rl&amp;btnow would ba • good time to start niching ''Epilode
tlvtrU by cerrlor whoro became the flnt big name In
1bt
gangland
Italian
fUm
"lie:
Lucky
called
The
Bmn
Steer.
oWner
is
Marty
Rolls,
a
Action."
The folD at WMUL ha'l'l! just atarted one of the few t
lvllllblt JO con II per wnk;
ly Motor huto whtro cerrttr show businesS to sign· for a ·Luciano" Ia being shot InN; '(. Tbe ltallsn crew stockbfOker whose preferred~~~ now II the
aerlallmade by the law,greatTom Mix, andlu a fe'w weelrawtll ~
nrvlct not ovellobll : Ono
shooting
th~
Mafia-boss
movie
researched
l!IJs..
best
beef
...
Funny
11cene
at
Mike
Manucbe's
Some
61,000
veterans
who
be sbowlrlg one made by a cowboy wbo 11118 - of all tblnga. His ''
regular
radio
program.
monlll 11.15. ly moll In Ohio
W. VI., Ont yur IU.OO;
In 1945, American Marines 311i!lanlland ·rubouts and discovered Olarlle sports hangout : ,Yogi Berra lllncllq away are wearing [ll'GitheUc devices · name Is Gille Autry.
.
,
•·
Sl• months 17 .25. nrtt
•Lucky'1lads
depoliled
11101tcl
their
stiffs
In
the
wbenamanBBtdownandate
Yogi's
dessert:
be
are
eUglble
for
an
annual
VA
Mor&amp;llldmore,publlcteievlllon
ilolferlltcanlltlrnatiftto
'I
landed
onlwo
Jlma
to
start
one
months 11.50. SubscriptiOn
lct lftctudll sunaty Tlmts· of the blOO&lt;f!est battles in' the EastRI\'el' at Aatorla, ~118, and that'swbere was the Meta' high-lee relief pltchdr Tug clothing · allowance oi fl50, commerclal'TV -__.JIId 0111' own llatkinl 11.-e _ , dolaa bldQ-, W ·
.
tnlllltt.
the fictional corpses will end up - wearing McGraw.
under a recent law.
at all.
Psclflc during World War II.

How 'Splinter Bid' Works ·

'.

'Fornadoe·s win 60 to ·59

·

..J.j;'t

.

.

~~~~~

Dickson captures
Willi
·
~ E:~: 1~'12
ams tourney

Davis-Warner Ins.

76'ers win third of 4

"•••lUSt
.
indicating .that
acopy1s
be1ng ·
senttofhe
'BBB
can move
·
•
mountains."

SHIRT
FINISHING

Robinson's Deaners

SPEAKUR

::Y~~:I~'l: ~lland

W•..COMPTON. ,D.;.'
OPTOMETR'ST

Me'

•

- ..

·

·McCLURE'S

("'

o.

�.

ONE REpoRTED -Trudy Roach, Pomeroy, right, wu
the only prinC!lSB candidate in the heart lund drive to report
her progress to the commlitee of Mrs, James Soulsby, Susie
Soulsby and Ralph Werry Sunday. Other princess COli•
testanl8 are· Ima Jean Blevili, Arlena Wilaon add Tel'l!lll
carr. The candida tea are to report their cootest priJI!rell
each SUnday unW March 4 when the contest for selectloo of
the ~ss ends. Other contestant pictures on pages 1and 5
today.

hosted a dlmer Sunday evening for the Eastern High School
championahlp basketball team at Crow's Steak House.
Guests of Sheets also were the coaches and others associated

with Ure team. ~ted, from the lett, are Hlcllard \:ross, John
Sheets, son of the host; .Larry Millloan, Steve Dill, Tim
Baum, Tim Spencer; standing, Larry Atherton, Rusty
Walker, Alan Duvaii, Byron McCoy, 'Mark VeMis, assistant
coach; Coach llill Phllllps and Mr. Sheets.
· NHL Standings
By United Press International
East
· w. I. t. pis gf ga
Montrel 38 8 13 89 244 134
NY Rgrs 39 15 5 8J 233 144
Boston 37 17 5 79 247 178
Buffalo 31 20 9 71 210 164
Detroit 29 20 10 68 194 177
Toronto 19 32 7 45 178 194
Vncuvr 16 37 8 40 174 263
NY lsldrs 7 49 5 19 121 283
West
w. I. t. pts gf ga
Chicago 34 19 6 li 223 171
Phila
28 24 9 65 220 211
Minn
27 24 8 62 · 185 173
St.Louis 25 23 10 60 175 180
Atlanta 23 27 11 57 158 175
Los Ang 24 28 9 57 180 196
Pittsbgh 23 29 7 53 196 200
Calif
9 37 14 32 159 252
Sunday's Results
Montreal 2 Toronto 1
Los Ang 4 California 2
NY Rngrs 3 NY lslndrs 2
Bosto.n 4 Chicago 1
Bulfalo 4 Pittsburgh 1
Philadelphia 5 Minnesota 1
(Only games scheduled I

· GUIDANCE COUNSELORS of central Ohio who recently attended a three-day seminar on
Navy Hie at tbe Great Lakes Naval Training Center Included Martha Vennari and John
Redovtan, Meigs lfigh; Allred Scarberry, North Gallia; Bill Northup, Guidance Supervisor,
' Gallia County Schools; Gary Minton, Kyger Creek; Carmen LoRubblo, Federal Hocking and
William Sfaklanos, Alexander.

Monday~s

DAUGhTER BORN .
A daughter, Jill Marij!, was
born to Mr. and Mrs. James W.
Hawley, Jr., .of TecUm.Seh,
Mich. on Feb. 10.' The couple
have twin sons, Scott and
Shawn, two years old. Grand·
paren 18 are Mr. and Mrs.
James Hawley, Sr. of Millbury.
Mrs. Grace Hawley lif Mid·
dleport
is a great·
grandmother. Mrs . Grace
Hawley, Mrs. Flossie Alienswort]) and James Hawley, Sr.
visited . over the weekend in
Tecumseh with the family.
Enroute to Millbury, Mrs .
Hawley and Mrs. Allensworth
visited in Mt. Gilead with Mr.
and Mrs. John Allensworth.

·Girl Scout
·, Diary sy IIJeflC!

,

Veteraus Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Erma M. Smith, Raymond
Labert, Roger Stobart, Wilbur
Leifheit, Gary Dill, Elmer ·
Whittington, Clayton Tipple,
Patricia Tolley and Christine
Beegle.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Dorothy Warth, Thomu
Steevers, Robert Bissell .and
Edith McCoy.
,.. ., '
STilL CRITICAL
PALM .SPRINGS, Calif.
I UP!) - Former Arkansas
Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller,
hospitalized here two weeks
ago for possible cancer of the
liver and pancreas, remained
in critical condition today at
Desert Hospital.

d
D
b
vv e zn ecem

BIG SAVINGS ON TOOLS!

ALL THI'S WEEKI

Girls' Shoes

1.-~----

~Lnf!cin·

STANLEY

~

UTILITY

6 IIIICI
JIG SAW

KNIFE

BLADE SET

Games

REG.

1.69

97~

Schoolcraft, 23, Longbranch,
W. Va., and Charles Marvin,
'ZI. Canvass, W. Va. were taken
to the Holzer Medical Center
by the Gallia Co unty
Emergency Squad lor treatment of minor injuries. There
was moderate dama~e to all
three vehicles.
Schoolcraft was cha rged
with failure to yield the right of
way while turning left.
A horse was killed in an
The impact knocked th e accident at 10 p.m. Saturday on
Schoolcraft car into an auto Rt. 143, four and two tenths
driven by John Gill, 17, Rt. 2, miles west of 692 in Meigs
Patriot. Schoolcraft and two County. The animal ran into
passengers in his car, Roger the path of an auto driven by

REG. ,14

2.49

CANVAS
SHOES

1..,.;,

im

Congress asked
to get with it

N.S.
Boston
Rchstr
Prov

Oma William s, 24, Rt. 1,
.Athens. There was moderate
damage. No charge was filed.

~tf.fld

No one was injured or cited

in a two car collision at 6:30
p.m. Saturday on Rt. 7, five
tenths of a mile south of Rt. 218
where cars driven by Vernon
K. Houck, 17, Rl. 2, Crown City,
and Craig Thompson, 16,
Eureka Star Rt., collided.
A final weekend accident
occurred at 10:20 p.m: Sunday
on Rt. 35, two tenths of a mile
east of Rio Grande where a
horse owned by Bob Evans ran
into the path of a semi operated
by Alexander Stewart, 58,
Newark. There was moderate
damage and the horse
sustained minor injuries.

CHUCK A
BOOTs·

DEWXE lWQ.SNED
High •p.. d for wood and ,om·

pollllont, low speed fo r metals,
plo111c, tile . Includes I blodt .
Big 1/ 4 HP mo lar.

•76 10

The peace symbol, an in·
verted "Y" in a circle, or·
iginally represented the semaphore code for ND (nuclear
disarmament).

H~

compc:.ill ons. 3/ 4

AND

MISS WONDERFUL

motor.

NOW
POR EASTER

FINISHING SANDER
Easy one-hand control, Flush sa nds
on 3 1ide1. Use lor wood , metal ,
plosth;,
1

YOUR PHARMACIST

1s riDmooo®~vmoo ~;;J

~~~

3/8" VARIABLE
SPEED

DRILL
with speed lock

e .,.

POWER SHOP

. 199!~N

DRILL BIT

SHARPENER
Resharpens carbon .ond
steel twist drill bits , A«eptl
Irom 1/8" to 3/8" sires.

Tr igge r squueu1 11iecls th e
speed yay need, trigger lode

10" blade cuts lu ll 3" deep. On top,
up-front control lor •osy operation.
Worp-rtllltant tob lts 1 metal leg stand.

holds ill 1/ 6 HP .

E·POX·E
GLUE
Bonds metal, wood,
glo u. Wate rproof.
110. ) ;00

57$

&amp;Ya" or 7'h"

-

YOUR
CHOICE

247EACH -

THESE SEVEN FOUR11f, !lfth and rdxth graden are
among the cootestants lor Junior Princess In the current
Meigs County Heart Association fund drive event. They are
front row, from the. left, Lora Wl.secup, Kelly Tyree, Angela
Baker; second row, from the left, Jan Betzlng, R,uth AM
Blake, and third row, from the left, Lori Rupe and Beverly
Faulkner. Other contestants are Vicky King, Elizabeth
· Blevln, Brenda Richards, Cindy Richards and Julie
Rlcharda. Residents may vote for their favorite by depositing
mooey In the containers of candidates placed in various ·
business houses.

For sta ndard, medium-weight
jobs. Tempered 1teel blad e has

Round shank mechanic
screwdrlvtt for IOIJQh job•.
Chrome ·flnilh btade.

chrome finl1h.

727

TOW CHAIN

~~~·

666

Has bright, tine -plated
finish, working load limit
of 1440 lb1.
l-'YLOR

KIT
IIOULAI
1.49

Patriotism is themi .

l/161odoxl4foal

I'IIOPANE

FUEl.
CYLlNI;IER
. lEG . 1.29

'a(IOH

FLOOR JACKS

89~

SlOP FLOOR SAG
SliCKING DOOU
&amp;.WINDOWS
SAU I'IIICI

3/18
.677 .
81

01

leakproof guarantee, 7~ e..tra
'
service.

Fits major brands of
camp

sto~es.

Heov\' duty corbon •leel
lube. AdjY III from 4' 7" to
)'Q··.

• .

omeroY Cement
Block
oi
The Department Store
'

1.\01

Building Since 1917.

SANDALS

heritage house

lOLA'S

CIRCULAR SAW BLADES
Ch rome nickel alloy steel blade
co ts plywood, plastic, lormko .

Y2 PRICE

WOMEN'S FASHION
SNOW BOOTS

LAYAWAY

as

"

3/4 HP ROUTER
Cyll, routs, yroovu, !rims ond
deco rolu In wood , ploJiiCJ,

DELUXE DUAL ACTION

,
59

'

HOUSE
SLIPPERS

·~~~.u··

lh PRICE

the two senators had introduced a bill to Implement
their budgeting propo5als.
Under the bill, the House and
Senate Appropriations Committees would be required to
report out only one bill con·
tainlng all appropriations and
equaling the spending ceiling.
Now, more than 10 separate
appropriation bills are
reported.
The bill could be amended,
. Eureka Upright With New
but increases in one category
VInyl Brocade Bag And
would have to be balanced by
8-Po1ltlon Dlal·A·Nap
cuts in others.
New colora - moil green and
Under the bill, the ceiling
fawn btlgo. Adjustable 3-poal·
tlon handle; All metal hood, lifeCo1te9e Basketball Results ' would be reviewed by Congress
tim• lubrlo;~ted motitr arid giant
By Umted Press tnternationat after six months and II cculd be
diiPOIIble
dust btg • . Convei!a
East
changed by the President
uolly for lboYa·tho·floor cleanDelaware 70 Rider 57
subject to ccngressional vetO
No. Car. 91 Fla . St. 79
Ing toola. Come In for • Eureka
within 30 days.
Cheyney 82 Kutztown 53
no non11n11 demonstration to- $
5
Niagara 49 St. Bon. 4.1
The spending ceiling would
day,
Madol
20f2.
Only.,,
CCNY 79 Brandeis 72
have to be adopted by Congress
Drexel 94 Frnk ln&amp;Mrsh1171
Penn 59 Columbia 52
within 30 days of receiving the
Swrthmre 66 Haverlrd 57 ·
President's budget request.
Lincoln 97 NY Tech 61
HThe time has come 'for
Albright 94 Drew 55
Seton Hall 64 Holy Cross 80
Congress to bile the bullet and
St. John's 98 Dayton 83
to do il8 jobs properly so to
Rulgers 87 Fordham 85
regain centro! of our nation's
Temple S6 La Selle 54
Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights
Malne110 UConn 105
spending and taxation,"
992-2635
Middleport
CW Post 93 So.Conn.St. 63
Mathias
said.
Stony Brook 85 Brktyn 65
Syracuse 76 Canislus 72
Bentley 83 Catholic 79
Pitt 76 Colgate 63
Edinboro 86 Alliance 6~
.Thiel 57 Wash&amp;Jell 55
Point Park 115 York 66
West Lib. 76 Shepherd 75
Wslmnslr 81 Susquehnna 73
Phita . Tex. 78 Juniata 52 ·
Dnisn 81 Crngie-MIIn 58
Mrshll 116 St. Fran-Pa . 79
Davis&amp;Eikins 80 Wynesbg 71
W.Va. St. 76 Salem 72
We Are The Only Store
W.Va. Tech 76 Bluefld 1J
Cat St.,Pa. 75 Sllpry Rck 74
Gannon 59 Kings 54
Providing Complete and
Gettysburg 69 Lehigh 66
Manslld 76 W. Chslr 5~
Accurate Records of
Middlebury 70 MIT 56
Mass. 65 Rhode Is. 63
Brown 80 Dartmouth 68
New Hamp. 92 Hawthorne 77
Your Expense on
Yale 76 Harvard 70
Bucknell 51 Lafayette 49
Navy 76 Manhattan 75
Buffalo 67 Army 63
Prescription Medicine.
Duq~ne m St. Peter's 85
Princeton S6 Cornell ii
Delaware 70 Rider 57

•

JIG SAW

!7538

WASHINGTON (UP!) Sens. Charles McC. Mathias
Jr ., R-Md., and Adlai E.
Stevenson lii, J).JU,, proposed
today that Congress be ccmpelled to set a spending ceiling
and order the spending priori·
ties within that ceiling.
The two senators, who have
held hearings on congressional
reform, also proposed that the
executive branch be prohibited
from impounding funds to
prevent programs from being
carried out.
In a statement, Mathias said

•

Boys' Shoes

$200

WITH COUPON

(No games scheduled)

Three have minor hurts in wrecks

Costuming, refreshments to participate only after the
The fund is used. to finance
and e~ter~inment ',viil carry scouts have had ample time to international .events for girls
· out the international theme of sample the foods,
from around the free world at
Thinking Day at the annual
Thinking Day, started in World Associa\lon Centers on·
MONDAY
observance of the Big Bend 1933, is an observance of the India, Mexico, and Swit·
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
. '•
Neighborhood of the Four joint birthday of Lord and Lady zerland. It pays lor annual
DeMolay, 7:30 .P· m. Monday
Rivers
Girl Scout Council Baden·Powell, founders of Girl exchange visits of Girl SCouts
~ AD girl !ICOUIIrooil!l of the Big S.00 NeighborhoOd are asked night at the Middleport
Sunday from 2 to 3:30p.m. in Scouting and Guiding. It is and Girl Gqides, and belps
to bave a re)nlelltative at the monthly meeting Wednesday at 1 Masonic Temple. Initiation
th·e Middleport Elementary celebrated by Girl Guides provide new, developing
p. m. at.the Columbus and Southern Ohio EleCtric Co. ·social with all master masitns InSchool auditorium. It is open to around the world and Girl associ.alions with specific
room.
vited. Mothers' Club will meet
the public.
Scouts in America as the day materials, equipment, and
·
1At that Ume,a representative of the Four Rivers Gltl Sccut
at ,the same time in thie
As before, troops have for honoring the founders, and training needed ·for a strong
~ell wW preaent pla111 to merge four councils of the &lt;ihio- Masonic dining room . downselected
the countries they will for thinking oi sister members program 'for girls. ,
Wflll Virginia Division. What that wUI involve and particularly · stairs.
·
represent. At least one, and in in other lands.
I
The U.S.A. gift to the
how It will affect lcOullng programs here wW be explained. ·
BLOODMOBILE, Monday,'
most
cases,
must
of
the
scouts
Traditionally,
the
Juliette
Thinking Day Fund amounts
, . Mrs, W!Wam Ohlinger, Neighborhood chairman, askS that
Pomeroy Elementary from Ito
from
each
troop
will
be
in
Low
World
Fi-iendship
Fund
is
each
year to a sum equivaleltt
lea!l*s brlni!lhelr PUot lights and leaders' klta to the mee!ing
r
6 p.m. ·
.
native
costume.
A
song,
a
taken on Thinking Day. The to ~ British penny (one and
A ftlm will be abown on troop camping and delegates ami
CHESTER PTA Monday,
_dance,
a
skit,
a
game
from
the
fund
is a living memorial to one-sixth cents) for each
aller!Jates for the am~ meeting wW be selected. The leaders'
7:30 p.m. at school. Jennifer
country
will
be
presented
by
Juliette Low, founder of Girl member of the Girl Scouts in
luncheon wiD be held April 28 at the Parkersburg Mall and Sheets guest speaker.
the
girls,
and
"finger
foods
of
Scouting
in the United States. America.
leaders planning to attend are asked to register with Mrs.
Flavoring on sale for $1 a
the land" will be served by the It perpetuates the belief held
Olllln&amp;er. At lilatllme five, ten; fifteen and 25 year pins will be bottle. Everyone welcome to
leaders.
by Mrs. Low that Girl Scouting
awarded; If yoo are eligible for a pin, be IIUre to contact Mrs.
atteod.
Middleport
Junior
Troop
39,
and Guiding can make a
~.
.
Veterans who are 65 or older
MEIGS
BAND
Boosters
Mrs.
Roscoe
Wise
,
will
positive
coolribution
to
peace
may be treated for their nonSome queSI!ona 0!1 the cookie aale have come up and Mrs.
Monday,
8
p.m.
at
the
school
..
represent
Sweden
;
Reedsville
through
the
friendship
of
young
service
connected disabilities
Henry Hunter, chalrman .for Meigs County, will be there to ex·
MEIGS
.ME:N'S
Fellowship
Junior
Troop
67,
Mrs.
Lyle
people
of
the
world
who
have
in VA hospitals, if beds are
plain !lOW procedures this year and answer questions. Suinmer
the
common
boitd
of
Girl
meeting
at
7:30
p.m.
Monday
Balderson
and
Mrs.
RQy
available,
wilhout submitting
activity folders olitlining the established camp programs wW be
at
the
Bradford
Church
of
Hannon,
Scotland;
Pomeroy
Scouting
and
Girl
Guiding
dlstrlbu~.
.
the financial stat~ment .af
Christ.
whatever
Brownie
Troop
76,
Mrs.
their
langtiage
or
inability
to defray the hospital
MIDDLEPORT CADE'ITES 185
Thomas
Grueser
and
Mrs.
nationality.
charges elsewhere. .
Germany will be the country represented by ·the Middleport
POMEROY LmLE League
Michael
Griffith
,
China;
Cadette Troop at the International Thinldng Day observance to planning session, 7 p.m.
Salisbury Juniors, Mrs. Donald
be held SUnday, 2 to 3:30 p. m. at the Middleport Elementary tonight, Pomeroy Village hall.
Dorst and Mrs. Waiter Morris,
School auditorium. Kathy Manley wW be In costuJre for the troop All managers, coaches, and
Mr:
and
Mrs.
Lyndon
Black
the United States ; Pomeroy
and several of the girls wW assist with craft display and interested adults asked to
Juniors 180, Mrs . William
greeting the parents.
attend.
0
. Cookie order forms were distributed at"the meeting attended
Sheridan , Mrs.
Wayne
by Trina Gibbs, Kathy Manley, Judy Gilkey, Jonl MWTay and
CHEST~RESCDoAuYnct'l 323,
erswishe~,
Spain; Middleport
.
.
Cadette Troop 185, Mrs. Fred
Jemifer Wise, Karen Leedy wu a guest.
NEW HAVEN ~ Miss
Miss ·Lisa Ferrell niece of Gibbs, Germany; Salisbury
Daughters of America,
MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR TROOP 38
Tuesday;
7:30
p.m.
at
the
hall.
'
·
Mrs. J ack Har t,
Mrs. Margie Blake, R.N., gave instruction on f'II'st aid at a
Trina Browmes,
Marilyn Joyce Graham, the bride, and Miss
meeting of the Middleport Juniors Monday ·night at Heath Charter will be draped for Mrs. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl . Reeves, were the flower girls. Japan ; and Pome~oy Cadettes,
Methodist Church. Cookie material was distributed and the girls Marie Koblentz. The good of Rairden, Hartford, W. Va., and Tbey were in floor length Mrs. Th~mas Smtih, Mextco.
the order committee will have Mr. Kenneth Lyndon Black, gowns of pink with lace trim
A special dlSpiay of hand·
p-acticed for "Thinking Day".
a silent auction. All members son of Mr. and Mrs. Warren and carried baskets of white work wtll be on exhtbtt for
·
AGAIN THIS YEAR, parents are invited to observe ac· are asked to wear white.
Black, Rutland, exchanged carnation petals.
paren ts to vtew.
tivltiea of International Thinking Day, Sunday, 2to 3:30p. m. at
SPECIAL meeling, Southern wedding vows in a double ring· Serving as best man was Mr.
Another feature of the af·
the Middleport Elementary School .auditorium.
Local Athletic Boosters, 7:30 ceremony on Dec. Iii at 7:30 p. John Landaker, Pomeroy . ternoon will be a presentation
Reg. $3.95-$6.50
~eg . $5.50-$7.99
Atreat for the event will be guitar music and songs by Karen p.m. ; Tuesday at high school, m. at the New Haven Church of Ushers were Mr. Joe Cz. by guitarist Karen Reese, an
God.
jakowski, Mr. Robert Crouse, Ohio University student, and
(Bo) Reese, new field aide for the Four Rivers Girl Sccut Racine.
Council, and a student at Ohio University.
KEY WOMEN of MEligs The Rev. David Fielda of. Mr.JerryFryeandMr. Danny anaideintheFourRiversGirl
Another feature of Thinldng Day will be a craft display and
County Church Women United ficiated at the ceremony before Rairden, brother of the bride, Scout Council. Miss Reese, a
Broken Sizes
all troopa are urged to participate in this. It not only will give the
to meel at the Enterprise an altar decorated with all . of Hartford. Master Tony scout of many years, has
Broken Sizes
Several
les
parents an opportulilty to see what is being dooe in scooting but
RACINE LODGE 461 annual arrangements · of mums Czjakowski served as the ring worked in summer camps in
will provide an exchange of Ideas for thli leaders. An entire table (nspection Tuesday, 7:30p.m. flanked by seven bran~h bearer.
Ohio, Pennsylvania and
will be used for the display and there is no llmltatlon on number All master masons invited. candelabra. A hall-hour of
For her daughter's wedding, Washington and has helped
Reg. $3.95-$5.95
of Items each troop can exhibit.
Refreshments. Jesse Brinker, nuptial music preceding the Mrs. Raiden wore a pink knit with special projects in the
And remember, scouts, bring your sit-upons or pillows. W. M.
ceremony was presented by dress with matching ac· Cincinnati area. Her plan is to
Seating Ia beq reserved for the parenl8 who come.
RUTLAND FIREMEN'S Mrs. Diane Jeffers, organist. cessories. Her corage was of become a Girl Scout executive
Auxiliary Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
Given in marriage by her pink tinted carnations. Mrs. alter graduation from college.
For the Fami
GROUP 11, Middleport First step-father, the bride wore a Black wore a bonded gray
The opening ceremony will
United Presbyterian Church, floor length gown , of chif!O:n dress with red and white trim be presented by the Pomeroy
MEN'S
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the home over taffeta accented with and ·a corsage of white car· Cadette Troop of Mrs. Smith.
Reg. Price $14.99
of Mrs. Karl Owens.
lace. The gown was styled with nations.
Bolh the Middleport and
I
FEBRUARY MEETING of an empire waist, scooped
lnunediately following the Pomeroy Cadette Troops will
Women's Auxiliary of Veterans neckline and VIctorian sleeves. wed\ling. a reception was held be greeting and seating
M,W!fi,Ji!, ~&lt;Wlital.pancelled·, Her lllllt¢JinC~haP,el lenet~ , in ,the socii!! room .o~ ,the . Pcaap~eanc.tst.tie'asn..d helpin~. in other
'
due to '· ainoulit of Illness 1ri • veil of illusion featured a lace , church. A wedding bell and
·
Sizes
7lf2·1
r
county. March meeting will be outline. She carried a bouquet streamers were featured in the
Sealing will be available for
held as scheduled, Tuesday, of white carnations and baby's decorations. and the three- the parents and other visitors,
Women's &amp; Children's
March 20.
breath around a rosebud tiered cake was topped with the but scouts are asked to bring
EVANGEUNE Missionary corsage on a white family traditional miniature bride and floor sit-upons or pillows for
Society, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Bible.
groom. Mrs. Janet Reeves themselves.
Reg. $13.95-$16.95
the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Inside her Bilife was a white served the cake and Mrs.
Leaders are responsible for ·
Missionary recruits to Mon· lace handkerchief which Delores Czjakowski presided providing fingerfo!iils native to
terey, Mexico, Mr. and Mrs . belonged to her maternal at the punch bowl.
the country the troop
Suede and suede-leather
.Bill carter will speak.
grandmother, the late Janie
For a brief wedding trip to represents, beverage, cups and
SALISBURY.. PTA 7'30
Snider. Her only jewelry was a Cincinnati, the bride changed napkins adequate for the .
T d
F
• , · p.m. heart-shaped diamond into a lilac dress with which scouts. Visitors will be invited
ues ay, . ounder s . Day necklace borrowed from her she wore the corsage from her
program w1th past presidents sister and white pearl earrings, bridal bouquet.
to be recognized.
a gift of the groom.
Among the oul-of-county
OHIO ETA .PHI ?hapter,
Mrs. Linda Ferrell, sister of guests at the wedding were
ONE LOT Women's &amp; Children's
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 the bride served as matron of David Pifer Columbus · Mr
p.m. Tuesdayat_the Col~bus honor. she wore a burgundy andMrs. RogerBiack, ~. and
and Southern Oh1o Electric Co. and pink floor length gown Mrs. Jerry Black and Mr. and
CUltural program by Mrs. Ips trinuned with lace, and carried Mrs. Burdell Black, Rutland;
Payne and Mrs. Edwina Scott; a ~ingle white pompon with Mr.andMrs. Ronnie Black and
hostesses, Mrs. Je~nifer An· pink streamers.
Missy of Danville; Mrs .
derson and Mtss Marliyn Swan.
Miss Darlene Riffle, Mrs. William Stephenson and
WEDNESDAY
Diane Johnson and · Miss Tammy, Pomeroy, and Mr.
Your Thom MeAn Store
PAST PRESIDENTS Parley, Debbie Black, sister of the and Mrs. Arthur Koenig of
Main at Sycamore, Pomeroy
Middleport

TJJ

WINTER SALE!
16 FOOl

_Sunday is Thinking Day ·

Social
Calendar

Charlene

ADDITIONAL 01

Three persons were injured,
none seriously, in a three car
accident at 10 p.m. Saturday on
Rt. 7, three tenths of a mile
north of Rt. 35.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
~ Highway Patrol reported
auto driven by James
Schoolcraft, 26, Vinton, turned
into the path of a car driven by
Sharon H. Toms, 26, Rt. I,
Bidwell.

-

1-The DallySenlinel,Middleport-PIXJiei'Oy, 0., Feb. 19,1973

4- Tbe Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Poaieroy, 0., Feb. 19,1973

HOSTS DINNER - Ezra E. Sheets, rjght standlng,

.

American Legion AuxUiary of groom, were the brideSmaids. Reedaville.
Drew Webster Post 39, 7:30 Their goWM were of similar
Wednesday night at the home design to the one worn by the
of ,Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth. matron of honor in mint green,
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, lilac and pale yellow and were
Royal and Select Masters, made by Mrs. Betty Adams of
stated assembly, 7:30 Wed· New Haven. Each carried a
nesday at the Masonic Temple. single white pompon with
Knights of the York Cross of streamers to llllltch her dress.
Honor 'will hold regular
meeting following Bosworth
Rules on tutoring for Gl Bill
Council.
.students recently were
YOUNG WIVES Club, 7:30 liberalized, making it easier
p.m. Wednesday at home of for students in need of tutoring
Esther Mays, Chester.
to qualify.
club members will be expected
to assist with the annual Inspection of Racine Chapter.
The traveling gift brought by
Mrs. Webb was won by
Philson.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Stewart of Athens will host the
next meeting with Mrs. Car·
penler to have devotions and

the Idea that we should
clean our minds and
thoughts and make our
lives a shining example of
what we should be. She also
read "D9 Something for
Somebody,"
Mrs, Webb announced that

a.d'W ,..,..

L.....o------..;;..------------~~--..,...-----J

Gj1t

111 '

TAP in the

'

716

$14.95

No. 717-716·709-209-109
Are all one size, 151f."'x30"x17" high. ·
All have same construc.lion. Baked enamel steel
frame , smooth interior. Padded lid with ad·
justable hinge.
No. ,717 Pep R Mint Kid Vinyl
No. 716 Circus Print Vinyl
No. 709 Early American , Vinyl
No. 209 Walnut Vinyl
No. 109 Leather- Look VInyl in two colors, White
or Red .

Yellow

Pages

SPECIAL

717

Mrs. W. 0 . Barnitz, the
program.
Mrs. Philson assisted by
Mrs . Mlna Lewis served
refreslunents carrying out Ure
valentine theme. A heart.
shaped arrangement, gift. to
Mrs. Philson from her
husband, and red tapers
centered the table.

. A patriotic program by Mrs.
Gretta Simpson at the Thurs·
day night meeting of the Past
Offlcen Club of the Racine
Chapter, O.E.S. carried out the
theme ''Our Heritage." ·
Sever~ readings, including,
"What la ·An AmeHcan" by .:
Mri. WUilam Stewart, ''The
Great Seal of the Nation" by
Mrs. Ralpll Webb, ''Geml from
Poor Richard's Almanac" by
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
''Nalliin Made Great" bY Mrs.
Ben Phlllon, "Inscription at
Mount Vernoo" and "An Ode to
George Waahlnl!lon" by Ben
Pllllson were glven. Mrs. Bart
Grimm clOIO!i ' the procram
with a pr•yer ent!Ued "We
Thank Thee.'~
.
~eetlng at ihe home of Mr.
and Mrs. Philion, Mrs. Webb
prelldeCiat the meeting using a
poem ''One ~e" to open II.
DeYotlolll ' by Mrs. Grimm
wen taken from Dan. 12 and
Included . a poem, "Houae

ARE

;;;:~:::::::::::::::::::

•

BAKER FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT,

o.

�.

ONE REpoRTED -Trudy Roach, Pomeroy, right, wu
the only prinC!lSB candidate in the heart lund drive to report
her progress to the commlitee of Mrs, James Soulsby, Susie
Soulsby and Ralph Werry Sunday. Other princess COli•
testanl8 are· Ima Jean Blevili, Arlena Wilaon add Tel'l!lll
carr. The candida tea are to report their cootest priJI!rell
each SUnday unW March 4 when the contest for selectloo of
the ~ss ends. Other contestant pictures on pages 1and 5
today.

hosted a dlmer Sunday evening for the Eastern High School
championahlp basketball team at Crow's Steak House.
Guests of Sheets also were the coaches and others associated

with Ure team. ~ted, from the lett, are Hlcllard \:ross, John
Sheets, son of the host; .Larry Millloan, Steve Dill, Tim
Baum, Tim Spencer; standing, Larry Atherton, Rusty
Walker, Alan Duvaii, Byron McCoy, 'Mark VeMis, assistant
coach; Coach llill Phllllps and Mr. Sheets.
· NHL Standings
By United Press International
East
· w. I. t. pis gf ga
Montrel 38 8 13 89 244 134
NY Rgrs 39 15 5 8J 233 144
Boston 37 17 5 79 247 178
Buffalo 31 20 9 71 210 164
Detroit 29 20 10 68 194 177
Toronto 19 32 7 45 178 194
Vncuvr 16 37 8 40 174 263
NY lsldrs 7 49 5 19 121 283
West
w. I. t. pts gf ga
Chicago 34 19 6 li 223 171
Phila
28 24 9 65 220 211
Minn
27 24 8 62 · 185 173
St.Louis 25 23 10 60 175 180
Atlanta 23 27 11 57 158 175
Los Ang 24 28 9 57 180 196
Pittsbgh 23 29 7 53 196 200
Calif
9 37 14 32 159 252
Sunday's Results
Montreal 2 Toronto 1
Los Ang 4 California 2
NY Rngrs 3 NY lslndrs 2
Bosto.n 4 Chicago 1
Bulfalo 4 Pittsburgh 1
Philadelphia 5 Minnesota 1
(Only games scheduled I

· GUIDANCE COUNSELORS of central Ohio who recently attended a three-day seminar on
Navy Hie at tbe Great Lakes Naval Training Center Included Martha Vennari and John
Redovtan, Meigs lfigh; Allred Scarberry, North Gallia; Bill Northup, Guidance Supervisor,
' Gallia County Schools; Gary Minton, Kyger Creek; Carmen LoRubblo, Federal Hocking and
William Sfaklanos, Alexander.

Monday~s

DAUGhTER BORN .
A daughter, Jill Marij!, was
born to Mr. and Mrs. James W.
Hawley, Jr., .of TecUm.Seh,
Mich. on Feb. 10.' The couple
have twin sons, Scott and
Shawn, two years old. Grand·
paren 18 are Mr. and Mrs.
James Hawley, Sr. of Millbury.
Mrs. Grace Hawley lif Mid·
dleport
is a great·
grandmother. Mrs . Grace
Hawley, Mrs. Flossie Alienswort]) and James Hawley, Sr.
visited . over the weekend in
Tecumseh with the family.
Enroute to Millbury, Mrs .
Hawley and Mrs. Allensworth
visited in Mt. Gilead with Mr.
and Mrs. John Allensworth.

·Girl Scout
·, Diary sy IIJeflC!

,

Veteraus Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Erma M. Smith, Raymond
Labert, Roger Stobart, Wilbur
Leifheit, Gary Dill, Elmer ·
Whittington, Clayton Tipple,
Patricia Tolley and Christine
Beegle.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Dorothy Warth, Thomu
Steevers, Robert Bissell .and
Edith McCoy.
,.. ., '
STilL CRITICAL
PALM .SPRINGS, Calif.
I UP!) - Former Arkansas
Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller,
hospitalized here two weeks
ago for possible cancer of the
liver and pancreas, remained
in critical condition today at
Desert Hospital.

d
D
b
vv e zn ecem

BIG SAVINGS ON TOOLS!

ALL THI'S WEEKI

Girls' Shoes

1.-~----

~Lnf!cin·

STANLEY

~

UTILITY

6 IIIICI
JIG SAW

KNIFE

BLADE SET

Games

REG.

1.69

97~

Schoolcraft, 23, Longbranch,
W. Va., and Charles Marvin,
'ZI. Canvass, W. Va. were taken
to the Holzer Medical Center
by the Gallia Co unty
Emergency Squad lor treatment of minor injuries. There
was moderate dama~e to all
three vehicles.
Schoolcraft was cha rged
with failure to yield the right of
way while turning left.
A horse was killed in an
The impact knocked th e accident at 10 p.m. Saturday on
Schoolcraft car into an auto Rt. 143, four and two tenths
driven by John Gill, 17, Rt. 2, miles west of 692 in Meigs
Patriot. Schoolcraft and two County. The animal ran into
passengers in his car, Roger the path of an auto driven by

REG. ,14

2.49

CANVAS
SHOES

1..,.;,

im

Congress asked
to get with it

N.S.
Boston
Rchstr
Prov

Oma William s, 24, Rt. 1,
.Athens. There was moderate
damage. No charge was filed.

~tf.fld

No one was injured or cited

in a two car collision at 6:30
p.m. Saturday on Rt. 7, five
tenths of a mile south of Rt. 218
where cars driven by Vernon
K. Houck, 17, Rl. 2, Crown City,
and Craig Thompson, 16,
Eureka Star Rt., collided.
A final weekend accident
occurred at 10:20 p.m: Sunday
on Rt. 35, two tenths of a mile
east of Rio Grande where a
horse owned by Bob Evans ran
into the path of a semi operated
by Alexander Stewart, 58,
Newark. There was moderate
damage and the horse
sustained minor injuries.

CHUCK A
BOOTs·

DEWXE lWQ.SNED
High •p.. d for wood and ,om·

pollllont, low speed fo r metals,
plo111c, tile . Includes I blodt .
Big 1/ 4 HP mo lar.

•76 10

The peace symbol, an in·
verted "Y" in a circle, or·
iginally represented the semaphore code for ND (nuclear
disarmament).

H~

compc:.ill ons. 3/ 4

AND

MISS WONDERFUL

motor.

NOW
POR EASTER

FINISHING SANDER
Easy one-hand control, Flush sa nds
on 3 1ide1. Use lor wood , metal ,
plosth;,
1

YOUR PHARMACIST

1s riDmooo®~vmoo ~;;J

~~~

3/8" VARIABLE
SPEED

DRILL
with speed lock

e .,.

POWER SHOP

. 199!~N

DRILL BIT

SHARPENER
Resharpens carbon .ond
steel twist drill bits , A«eptl
Irom 1/8" to 3/8" sires.

Tr igge r squueu1 11iecls th e
speed yay need, trigger lode

10" blade cuts lu ll 3" deep. On top,
up-front control lor •osy operation.
Worp-rtllltant tob lts 1 metal leg stand.

holds ill 1/ 6 HP .

E·POX·E
GLUE
Bonds metal, wood,
glo u. Wate rproof.
110. ) ;00

57$

&amp;Ya" or 7'h"

-

YOUR
CHOICE

247EACH -

THESE SEVEN FOUR11f, !lfth and rdxth graden are
among the cootestants lor Junior Princess In the current
Meigs County Heart Association fund drive event. They are
front row, from the. left, Lora Wl.secup, Kelly Tyree, Angela
Baker; second row, from the left, Jan Betzlng, R,uth AM
Blake, and third row, from the left, Lori Rupe and Beverly
Faulkner. Other contestants are Vicky King, Elizabeth
· Blevln, Brenda Richards, Cindy Richards and Julie
Rlcharda. Residents may vote for their favorite by depositing
mooey In the containers of candidates placed in various ·
business houses.

For sta ndard, medium-weight
jobs. Tempered 1teel blad e has

Round shank mechanic
screwdrlvtt for IOIJQh job•.
Chrome ·flnilh btade.

chrome finl1h.

727

TOW CHAIN

~~~·

666

Has bright, tine -plated
finish, working load limit
of 1440 lb1.
l-'YLOR

KIT
IIOULAI
1.49

Patriotism is themi .

l/161odoxl4foal

I'IIOPANE

FUEl.
CYLlNI;IER
. lEG . 1.29

'a(IOH

FLOOR JACKS

89~

SlOP FLOOR SAG
SliCKING DOOU
&amp;.WINDOWS
SAU I'IIICI

3/18
.677 .
81

01

leakproof guarantee, 7~ e..tra
'
service.

Fits major brands of
camp

sto~es.

Heov\' duty corbon •leel
lube. AdjY III from 4' 7" to
)'Q··.

• .

omeroY Cement
Block
oi
The Department Store
'

1.\01

Building Since 1917.

SANDALS

heritage house

lOLA'S

CIRCULAR SAW BLADES
Ch rome nickel alloy steel blade
co ts plywood, plastic, lormko .

Y2 PRICE

WOMEN'S FASHION
SNOW BOOTS

LAYAWAY

as

"

3/4 HP ROUTER
Cyll, routs, yroovu, !rims ond
deco rolu In wood , ploJiiCJ,

DELUXE DUAL ACTION

,
59

'

HOUSE
SLIPPERS

·~~~.u··

lh PRICE

the two senators had introduced a bill to Implement
their budgeting propo5als.
Under the bill, the House and
Senate Appropriations Committees would be required to
report out only one bill con·
tainlng all appropriations and
equaling the spending ceiling.
Now, more than 10 separate
appropriation bills are
reported.
The bill could be amended,
. Eureka Upright With New
but increases in one category
VInyl Brocade Bag And
would have to be balanced by
8-Po1ltlon Dlal·A·Nap
cuts in others.
New colora - moil green and
Under the bill, the ceiling
fawn btlgo. Adjustable 3-poal·
tlon handle; All metal hood, lifeCo1te9e Basketball Results ' would be reviewed by Congress
tim• lubrlo;~ted motitr arid giant
By Umted Press tnternationat after six months and II cculd be
diiPOIIble
dust btg • . Convei!a
East
changed by the President
uolly for lboYa·tho·floor cleanDelaware 70 Rider 57
subject to ccngressional vetO
No. Car. 91 Fla . St. 79
Ing toola. Come In for • Eureka
within 30 days.
Cheyney 82 Kutztown 53
no non11n11 demonstration to- $
5
Niagara 49 St. Bon. 4.1
The spending ceiling would
day,
Madol
20f2.
Only.,,
CCNY 79 Brandeis 72
have to be adopted by Congress
Drexel 94 Frnk ln&amp;Mrsh1171
Penn 59 Columbia 52
within 30 days of receiving the
Swrthmre 66 Haverlrd 57 ·
President's budget request.
Lincoln 97 NY Tech 61
HThe time has come 'for
Albright 94 Drew 55
Seton Hall 64 Holy Cross 80
Congress to bile the bullet and
St. John's 98 Dayton 83
to do il8 jobs properly so to
Rulgers 87 Fordham 85
regain centro! of our nation's
Temple S6 La Selle 54
Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights
Malne110 UConn 105
spending and taxation,"
992-2635
Middleport
CW Post 93 So.Conn.St. 63
Mathias
said.
Stony Brook 85 Brktyn 65
Syracuse 76 Canislus 72
Bentley 83 Catholic 79
Pitt 76 Colgate 63
Edinboro 86 Alliance 6~
.Thiel 57 Wash&amp;Jell 55
Point Park 115 York 66
West Lib. 76 Shepherd 75
Wslmnslr 81 Susquehnna 73
Phita . Tex. 78 Juniata 52 ·
Dnisn 81 Crngie-MIIn 58
Mrshll 116 St. Fran-Pa . 79
Davis&amp;Eikins 80 Wynesbg 71
W.Va. St. 76 Salem 72
We Are The Only Store
W.Va. Tech 76 Bluefld 1J
Cat St.,Pa. 75 Sllpry Rck 74
Gannon 59 Kings 54
Providing Complete and
Gettysburg 69 Lehigh 66
Manslld 76 W. Chslr 5~
Accurate Records of
Middlebury 70 MIT 56
Mass. 65 Rhode Is. 63
Brown 80 Dartmouth 68
New Hamp. 92 Hawthorne 77
Your Expense on
Yale 76 Harvard 70
Bucknell 51 Lafayette 49
Navy 76 Manhattan 75
Buffalo 67 Army 63
Prescription Medicine.
Duq~ne m St. Peter's 85
Princeton S6 Cornell ii
Delaware 70 Rider 57

•

JIG SAW

!7538

WASHINGTON (UP!) Sens. Charles McC. Mathias
Jr ., R-Md., and Adlai E.
Stevenson lii, J).JU,, proposed
today that Congress be ccmpelled to set a spending ceiling
and order the spending priori·
ties within that ceiling.
The two senators, who have
held hearings on congressional
reform, also proposed that the
executive branch be prohibited
from impounding funds to
prevent programs from being
carried out.
In a statement, Mathias said

•

Boys' Shoes

$200

WITH COUPON

(No games scheduled)

Three have minor hurts in wrecks

Costuming, refreshments to participate only after the
The fund is used. to finance
and e~ter~inment ',viil carry scouts have had ample time to international .events for girls
· out the international theme of sample the foods,
from around the free world at
Thinking Day at the annual
Thinking Day, started in World Associa\lon Centers on·
MONDAY
observance of the Big Bend 1933, is an observance of the India, Mexico, and Swit·
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
. '•
Neighborhood of the Four joint birthday of Lord and Lady zerland. It pays lor annual
DeMolay, 7:30 .P· m. Monday
Rivers
Girl Scout Council Baden·Powell, founders of Girl exchange visits of Girl SCouts
~ AD girl !ICOUIIrooil!l of the Big S.00 NeighborhoOd are asked night at the Middleport
Sunday from 2 to 3:30p.m. in Scouting and Guiding. It is and Girl Gqides, and belps
to bave a re)nlelltative at the monthly meeting Wednesday at 1 Masonic Temple. Initiation
th·e Middleport Elementary celebrated by Girl Guides provide new, developing
p. m. at.the Columbus and Southern Ohio EleCtric Co. ·social with all master masitns InSchool auditorium. It is open to around the world and Girl associ.alions with specific
room.
vited. Mothers' Club will meet
the public.
Scouts in America as the day materials, equipment, and
·
1At that Ume,a representative of the Four Rivers Gltl Sccut
at ,the same time in thie
As before, troops have for honoring the founders, and training needed ·for a strong
~ell wW preaent pla111 to merge four councils of the &lt;ihio- Masonic dining room . downselected
the countries they will for thinking oi sister members program 'for girls. ,
Wflll Virginia Division. What that wUI involve and particularly · stairs.
·
represent. At least one, and in in other lands.
I
The U.S.A. gift to the
how It will affect lcOullng programs here wW be explained. ·
BLOODMOBILE, Monday,'
most
cases,
must
of
the
scouts
Traditionally,
the
Juliette
Thinking Day Fund amounts
, . Mrs, W!Wam Ohlinger, Neighborhood chairman, askS that
Pomeroy Elementary from Ito
from
each
troop
will
be
in
Low
World
Fi-iendship
Fund
is
each
year to a sum equivaleltt
lea!l*s brlni!lhelr PUot lights and leaders' klta to the mee!ing
r
6 p.m. ·
.
native
costume.
A
song,
a
taken on Thinking Day. The to ~ British penny (one and
A ftlm will be abown on troop camping and delegates ami
CHESTER PTA Monday,
_dance,
a
skit,
a
game
from
the
fund
is a living memorial to one-sixth cents) for each
aller!Jates for the am~ meeting wW be selected. The leaders'
7:30 p.m. at school. Jennifer
country
will
be
presented
by
Juliette Low, founder of Girl member of the Girl Scouts in
luncheon wiD be held April 28 at the Parkersburg Mall and Sheets guest speaker.
the
girls,
and
"finger
foods
of
Scouting
in the United States. America.
leaders planning to attend are asked to register with Mrs.
Flavoring on sale for $1 a
the land" will be served by the It perpetuates the belief held
Olllln&amp;er. At lilatllme five, ten; fifteen and 25 year pins will be bottle. Everyone welcome to
leaders.
by Mrs. Low that Girl Scouting
awarded; If yoo are eligible for a pin, be IIUre to contact Mrs.
atteod.
Middleport
Junior
Troop
39,
and Guiding can make a
~.
.
Veterans who are 65 or older
MEIGS
BAND
Boosters
Mrs.
Roscoe
Wise
,
will
positive
coolribution
to
peace
may be treated for their nonSome queSI!ona 0!1 the cookie aale have come up and Mrs.
Monday,
8
p.m.
at
the
school
..
represent
Sweden
;
Reedsville
through
the
friendship
of
young
service
connected disabilities
Henry Hunter, chalrman .for Meigs County, will be there to ex·
MEIGS
.ME:N'S
Fellowship
Junior
Troop
67,
Mrs.
Lyle
people
of
the
world
who
have
in VA hospitals, if beds are
plain !lOW procedures this year and answer questions. Suinmer
the
common
boitd
of
Girl
meeting
at
7:30
p.m.
Monday
Balderson
and
Mrs.
RQy
available,
wilhout submitting
activity folders olitlining the established camp programs wW be
at
the
Bradford
Church
of
Hannon,
Scotland;
Pomeroy
Scouting
and
Girl
Guiding
dlstrlbu~.
.
the financial stat~ment .af
Christ.
whatever
Brownie
Troop
76,
Mrs.
their
langtiage
or
inability
to defray the hospital
MIDDLEPORT CADE'ITES 185
Thomas
Grueser
and
Mrs.
nationality.
charges elsewhere. .
Germany will be the country represented by ·the Middleport
POMEROY LmLE League
Michael
Griffith
,
China;
Cadette Troop at the International Thinldng Day observance to planning session, 7 p.m.
Salisbury Juniors, Mrs. Donald
be held SUnday, 2 to 3:30 p. m. at the Middleport Elementary tonight, Pomeroy Village hall.
Dorst and Mrs. Waiter Morris,
School auditorium. Kathy Manley wW be In costuJre for the troop All managers, coaches, and
Mr:
and
Mrs.
Lyndon
Black
the United States ; Pomeroy
and several of the girls wW assist with craft display and interested adults asked to
Juniors 180, Mrs . William
greeting the parents.
attend.
0
. Cookie order forms were distributed at"the meeting attended
Sheridan , Mrs.
Wayne
by Trina Gibbs, Kathy Manley, Judy Gilkey, Jonl MWTay and
CHEST~RESCDoAuYnct'l 323,
erswishe~,
Spain; Middleport
.
.
Cadette Troop 185, Mrs. Fred
Jemifer Wise, Karen Leedy wu a guest.
NEW HAVEN ~ Miss
Miss ·Lisa Ferrell niece of Gibbs, Germany; Salisbury
Daughters of America,
MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR TROOP 38
Tuesday;
7:30
p.m.
at
the
hall.
'
·
Mrs. J ack Har t,
Mrs. Margie Blake, R.N., gave instruction on f'II'st aid at a
Trina Browmes,
Marilyn Joyce Graham, the bride, and Miss
meeting of the Middleport Juniors Monday ·night at Heath Charter will be draped for Mrs. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl . Reeves, were the flower girls. Japan ; and Pome~oy Cadettes,
Methodist Church. Cookie material was distributed and the girls Marie Koblentz. The good of Rairden, Hartford, W. Va., and Tbey were in floor length Mrs. Th~mas Smtih, Mextco.
the order committee will have Mr. Kenneth Lyndon Black, gowns of pink with lace trim
A special dlSpiay of hand·
p-acticed for "Thinking Day".
a silent auction. All members son of Mr. and Mrs. Warren and carried baskets of white work wtll be on exhtbtt for
·
AGAIN THIS YEAR, parents are invited to observe ac· are asked to wear white.
Black, Rutland, exchanged carnation petals.
paren ts to vtew.
tivltiea of International Thinking Day, Sunday, 2to 3:30p. m. at
SPECIAL meeling, Southern wedding vows in a double ring· Serving as best man was Mr.
Another feature of the af·
the Middleport Elementary School .auditorium.
Local Athletic Boosters, 7:30 ceremony on Dec. Iii at 7:30 p. John Landaker, Pomeroy . ternoon will be a presentation
Reg. $3.95-$6.50
~eg . $5.50-$7.99
Atreat for the event will be guitar music and songs by Karen p.m. ; Tuesday at high school, m. at the New Haven Church of Ushers were Mr. Joe Cz. by guitarist Karen Reese, an
God.
jakowski, Mr. Robert Crouse, Ohio University student, and
(Bo) Reese, new field aide for the Four Rivers Girl Sccut Racine.
Council, and a student at Ohio University.
KEY WOMEN of MEligs The Rev. David Fielda of. Mr.JerryFryeandMr. Danny anaideintheFourRiversGirl
Another feature of Thinldng Day will be a craft display and
County Church Women United ficiated at the ceremony before Rairden, brother of the bride, Scout Council. Miss Reese, a
Broken Sizes
all troopa are urged to participate in this. It not only will give the
to meel at the Enterprise an altar decorated with all . of Hartford. Master Tony scout of many years, has
Broken Sizes
Several
les
parents an opportulilty to see what is being dooe in scooting but
RACINE LODGE 461 annual arrangements · of mums Czjakowski served as the ring worked in summer camps in
will provide an exchange of Ideas for thli leaders. An entire table (nspection Tuesday, 7:30p.m. flanked by seven bran~h bearer.
Ohio, Pennsylvania and
will be used for the display and there is no llmltatlon on number All master masons invited. candelabra. A hall-hour of
For her daughter's wedding, Washington and has helped
Reg. $3.95-$5.95
of Items each troop can exhibit.
Refreshments. Jesse Brinker, nuptial music preceding the Mrs. Raiden wore a pink knit with special projects in the
And remember, scouts, bring your sit-upons or pillows. W. M.
ceremony was presented by dress with matching ac· Cincinnati area. Her plan is to
Seating Ia beq reserved for the parenl8 who come.
RUTLAND FIREMEN'S Mrs. Diane Jeffers, organist. cessories. Her corage was of become a Girl Scout executive
Auxiliary Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
Given in marriage by her pink tinted carnations. Mrs. alter graduation from college.
For the Fami
GROUP 11, Middleport First step-father, the bride wore a Black wore a bonded gray
The opening ceremony will
United Presbyterian Church, floor length gown , of chif!O:n dress with red and white trim be presented by the Pomeroy
MEN'S
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the home over taffeta accented with and ·a corsage of white car· Cadette Troop of Mrs. Smith.
Reg. Price $14.99
of Mrs. Karl Owens.
lace. The gown was styled with nations.
Bolh the Middleport and
I
FEBRUARY MEETING of an empire waist, scooped
lnunediately following the Pomeroy Cadette Troops will
Women's Auxiliary of Veterans neckline and VIctorian sleeves. wed\ling. a reception was held be greeting and seating
M,W!fi,Ji!, ~&lt;Wlital.pancelled·, Her lllllt¢JinC~haP,el lenet~ , in ,the socii!! room .o~ ,the . Pcaap~eanc.tst.tie'asn..d helpin~. in other
'
due to '· ainoulit of Illness 1ri • veil of illusion featured a lace , church. A wedding bell and
·
Sizes
7lf2·1
r
county. March meeting will be outline. She carried a bouquet streamers were featured in the
Sealing will be available for
held as scheduled, Tuesday, of white carnations and baby's decorations. and the three- the parents and other visitors,
Women's &amp; Children's
March 20.
breath around a rosebud tiered cake was topped with the but scouts are asked to bring
EVANGEUNE Missionary corsage on a white family traditional miniature bride and floor sit-upons or pillows for
Society, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Bible.
groom. Mrs. Janet Reeves themselves.
Reg. $13.95-$16.95
the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Inside her Bilife was a white served the cake and Mrs.
Leaders are responsible for ·
Missionary recruits to Mon· lace handkerchief which Delores Czjakowski presided providing fingerfo!iils native to
terey, Mexico, Mr. and Mrs . belonged to her maternal at the punch bowl.
the country the troop
Suede and suede-leather
.Bill carter will speak.
grandmother, the late Janie
For a brief wedding trip to represents, beverage, cups and
SALISBURY.. PTA 7'30
Snider. Her only jewelry was a Cincinnati, the bride changed napkins adequate for the .
T d
F
• , · p.m. heart-shaped diamond into a lilac dress with which scouts. Visitors will be invited
ues ay, . ounder s . Day necklace borrowed from her she wore the corsage from her
program w1th past presidents sister and white pearl earrings, bridal bouquet.
to be recognized.
a gift of the groom.
Among the oul-of-county
OHIO ETA .PHI ?hapter,
Mrs. Linda Ferrell, sister of guests at the wedding were
ONE LOT Women's &amp; Children's
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 the bride served as matron of David Pifer Columbus · Mr
p.m. Tuesdayat_the Col~bus honor. she wore a burgundy andMrs. RogerBiack, ~. and
and Southern Oh1o Electric Co. and pink floor length gown Mrs. Jerry Black and Mr. and
CUltural program by Mrs. Ips trinuned with lace, and carried Mrs. Burdell Black, Rutland;
Payne and Mrs. Edwina Scott; a ~ingle white pompon with Mr.andMrs. Ronnie Black and
hostesses, Mrs. Je~nifer An· pink streamers.
Missy of Danville; Mrs .
derson and Mtss Marliyn Swan.
Miss Darlene Riffle, Mrs. William Stephenson and
WEDNESDAY
Diane Johnson and · Miss Tammy, Pomeroy, and Mr.
Your Thom MeAn Store
PAST PRESIDENTS Parley, Debbie Black, sister of the and Mrs. Arthur Koenig of
Main at Sycamore, Pomeroy
Middleport

TJJ

WINTER SALE!
16 FOOl

_Sunday is Thinking Day ·

Social
Calendar

Charlene

ADDITIONAL 01

Three persons were injured,
none seriously, in a three car
accident at 10 p.m. Saturday on
Rt. 7, three tenths of a mile
north of Rt. 35.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
~ Highway Patrol reported
auto driven by James
Schoolcraft, 26, Vinton, turned
into the path of a car driven by
Sharon H. Toms, 26, Rt. I,
Bidwell.

-

1-The DallySenlinel,Middleport-PIXJiei'Oy, 0., Feb. 19,1973

4- Tbe Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Poaieroy, 0., Feb. 19,1973

HOSTS DINNER - Ezra E. Sheets, rjght standlng,

.

American Legion AuxUiary of groom, were the brideSmaids. Reedaville.
Drew Webster Post 39, 7:30 Their goWM were of similar
Wednesday night at the home design to the one worn by the
of ,Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth. matron of honor in mint green,
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, lilac and pale yellow and were
Royal and Select Masters, made by Mrs. Betty Adams of
stated assembly, 7:30 Wed· New Haven. Each carried a
nesday at the Masonic Temple. single white pompon with
Knights of the York Cross of streamers to llllltch her dress.
Honor 'will hold regular
meeting following Bosworth
Rules on tutoring for Gl Bill
Council.
.students recently were
YOUNG WIVES Club, 7:30 liberalized, making it easier
p.m. Wednesday at home of for students in need of tutoring
Esther Mays, Chester.
to qualify.
club members will be expected
to assist with the annual Inspection of Racine Chapter.
The traveling gift brought by
Mrs. Webb was won by
Philson.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Stewart of Athens will host the
next meeting with Mrs. Car·
penler to have devotions and

the Idea that we should
clean our minds and
thoughts and make our
lives a shining example of
what we should be. She also
read "D9 Something for
Somebody,"
Mrs, Webb announced that

a.d'W ,..,..

L.....o------..;;..------------~~--..,...-----J

Gj1t

111 '

TAP in the

'

716

$14.95

No. 717-716·709-209-109
Are all one size, 151f."'x30"x17" high. ·
All have same construc.lion. Baked enamel steel
frame , smooth interior. Padded lid with ad·
justable hinge.
No. ,717 Pep R Mint Kid Vinyl
No. 716 Circus Print Vinyl
No. 709 Early American , Vinyl
No. 209 Walnut Vinyl
No. 109 Leather- Look VInyl in two colors, White
or Red .

Yellow

Pages

SPECIAL

717

Mrs. W. 0 . Barnitz, the
program.
Mrs. Philson assisted by
Mrs . Mlna Lewis served
refreslunents carrying out Ure
valentine theme. A heart.
shaped arrangement, gift. to
Mrs. Philson from her
husband, and red tapers
centered the table.

. A patriotic program by Mrs.
Gretta Simpson at the Thurs·
day night meeting of the Past
Offlcen Club of the Racine
Chapter, O.E.S. carried out the
theme ''Our Heritage." ·
Sever~ readings, including,
"What la ·An AmeHcan" by .:
Mri. WUilam Stewart, ''The
Great Seal of the Nation" by
Mrs. Ralpll Webb, ''Geml from
Poor Richard's Almanac" by
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
''Nalliin Made Great" bY Mrs.
Ben Phlllon, "Inscription at
Mount Vernoo" and "An Ode to
George Waahlnl!lon" by Ben
Pllllson were glven. Mrs. Bart
Grimm clOIO!i ' the procram
with a pr•yer ent!Ued "We
Thank Thee.'~
.
~eetlng at ihe home of Mr.
and Mrs. Philion, Mrs. Webb
prelldeCiat the meeting using a
poem ''One ~e" to open II.
DeYotlolll ' by Mrs. Grimm
wen taken from Dan. 12 and
Included . a poem, "Houae

ARE

;;;:~:::::::::::::::::::

•

BAKER FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT,

o.

�1-

:r'- Ilally Sentlnel,:r.fiddle_I)CII'I-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 19. 1973

-c;Jassifieds ·Get Action/Sentinel Classi/ieds·Get Resu~tsl/

·sentin~l
PUBLIC NOTICES

.

EmploJnient w
anted
'

®

Your Right to Know
and be Informed of the func tiOns of your government arr
embOdied In public nailers, In
thlt self-government charges
all citizens to be Informed;
this newspaper urges every
citizen to read and study these
notices. We strongly advise
those citizens, seeking further
lnformeflon, to exercise their
right of access tO public
records ltl'ld public meetings.

Melg&amp;

County, Ofilo, at the office of the

Township Clerk, Nina Robin ·

son, R. D. No. I, Coolville, Ohio

Pomeroy Motor Co.

until I P .M. on March 5th,

1973, to continue to furnish,
Install, operate and maintain 15,

aooo Lumen Mercury Vapor

OPEN EVES. 1:110 ,,Ill.
t'PMEROY, OHIO

Street Lighting Units, mounted

on metal brackets attached to

wooden poles·1 at present
locations in the unincorporated
VII laue of Tuppers Plains,

Orange

Township,

··

Meigs

ni&gt;

'

INFORMATION

Ol.b ' furniture. oak 'lobI e!i ,

Monday DeadPine·9 a.m.
Cancell~tlon .- Corre.c tlors •.

Tuppers Plains, Foster's, Rio

entered Into ; the cost therefor 'ubtlaher wHI not be respo~slble
Grande,
Murphv's
and
to be paid monthly.
'or more than o.- Incorrect
Brunlcardl's, Gallipolis, and
No bid will be considered ·lnnrtlon.
Carpenter ' s
Grocery,
unless In the opinion of said
RATES
Board of Township Trustees,
" For Waftt Ad Service · ." '· ' Rutland.
2·1B-21c
the partv has the necessary 5 cents per Word one lnsertloa·
equipment, ability and financial
Minimum Charge 75c .· ~ - - - - - - -- - resources lo fulfill the con.
12 ton If' por word · thr'l PARASOL B 11
1
t
dltions of the contract . Said consecutfve Insertions. ·
'
cu que a on nex
contract shall be awarded to fhe · 18 cents per word six con
to Skate-A-Way announces
lowest and best bidder, but the "Secutlve Insertions.
Permanent Special . February
right Is reserved to relect any ' 25 Per cent Dlscount .on. paid
20th thru March lOth. Breck
and all bids.
ads and ad1 paid. wltJlln 10 davs ~
perm. and the new Phase 7

s

Nina Robinson

Clerk
w. S. Henderson

Roland Torrence
0 . J , Pennington

'

C4RO OF THANKS .' ,.
suo f:,. ~t'!~r~R~Inlmpm .

perm. regular Sl7.50 now
$13.50; phone 985-4141;

BLIND ADS
,
Additional 25c Charge · '~or

Sandra Kerns.

Each •ddltlonal word .2c.

:.

operators :

Richard

and

I'
'

.
...T~E WAV OUR .
PRESIDENTS THROW
I.IONEV AROUNP!

GERT'S a gay girl -ready tor
POMEROY
a whirl after cleaning carpals , ~EE US FOR : Awnings, storm ,
doors and '""'ows, carports,
with Blue Lusfre. Rent
. ·.
. . ..
marquees, ·aluminum siding
·
eleclric shampooer $1.
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
HOME &amp; AUTO .·
Nelson's
Drug
Store,
representative. For free,
,.__
I
Pomeroy. Ohio.
estimates,
·
phone
Char
IN
771. 2094
''
2·19·2tc
HOME BUILDING
Lisle, Syracuse. · V. V. .. •,606 E. Main Pomeroy
Johnson
and
Son,
Inc.
&amp;
(3) ELECTROLU.X Vacuum
3
2
REMODELING
Cleaners complete with at·
OFFICE SUPPLIES
· -tfc '
1achments, cordwlnder Bfld ::E::-L-,
N:-:A-a-nd-:-.-. -,W-,h-11-e-::-Sewing
and
paint spray. Used but In like
Machines ... service on all
BOB SLOAN
new condition. Pay $34.45
makes
. Reasonable rates .
FURNITURE
cash or budget plan available:
&amp;
The Sewing Center, Mid·
Electro Hyg iene Co. Phone
C. L. KITCHEN
dleport, Ohio.
· ;Stop · In and See Our:
992.ns5.
11
16
992-5653
2-14-6tc
' -ttc . :Floor Display.
WILL DO remodeling, Inferior
"
and eKferlor painting, concrete work by hour or con- EXCAVATING, dozer, loader . O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124,
tract; phone 992-3511.
and backhoe work ; septic
complete
front ·end service,
2-6-12tc
Installed;
dump
trucks
tanks
36"x23"x.OOf
tune up and brake service.
- - - - ,- - - - : and lc)·boys for hire; will haul
Wheels balanced elec·
01 LAND GAS Service, new and·
fill dirt. top soil. limestone
All
work
Ironically .
and gravel; call Bob or Roger
used furnaces, new aluminum.,
guaranteed .
Reasonable
siding and remodeling, 24. Jeffers, day phone 992·7089;
rates. Phone 992·3213 or 742·
night phone 992-3525 or 992·
hour service; phone 1143·2833.
3232.
5232.
1·2S-30tp
2·18·tfC
USED OFFSET PLATES
2·11-ttc
HAVE
:AuTOMOBILE Insurance
WILL trim or cut .trees, clean·
MANY USES
cancelled?
Lost
your
out basements, attics, etc.
operator's license? Call 992- PLUMBING work done; phone
985·6265.
· Phone 9~9- 3221.
2966.
2·ll -30tc
2·4-30tc
6-15-ffc
8 lor $1.00
7
1
7
-~-~- -- - -- .:;;R;;;E A"'
Ov· ;o;;M:;;IX.--;..C:;;;OuNcr.R&gt;&lt;EtE'
G &amp; E Appliance Repair, repair EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
delivered right to your
on all laundry equipment,
and small; Backhoes and
pro/ect. F~st and easy. Free
refrlgerallon equipment and
Loaders on track and tires:
est mates, Phone 992-3286.
house wiring; welding,
Dump trucks Lo -boy
G 1 1 R d Ml C
Service ; Septic tanks In oeg en
ea Y· •
o.,
electric and gas. Call 992-3802
stalled;
George
(Bill)
Middleport, Ohio.
or after 4:30 p.m. call 992·
6050.
Pullins; phone 992-2478.
.
6-JO.tfc
2-5·30tp
2·9-lfc' SEPTIC TANKS CLIANED .
Court St
_
H
_
A_
R
_
R-IS
_
O
_
N
-'S
_
T
_
V
_S
_e-rv-lc
e-and
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 646DOZER a·nd back hoe work.
Servlce
Calls
;
phone
.
.
6782, GaiiiJlolls. John Russell, ·
992
2522
Za s 1
ponds and septic tanks, dft.
H ·lfc
Owner &amp; Operator:
·(3) NEW 1972 Zig· g ""'ng " chlng service; top soil, 1111
Machines In original factory dirt. limestone; B&amp;K EK·
-----,--5-12-ftc .
carton. Zig-Zag to make cavatln~. Phone 992·5367, S.EPTIC TANKS AROB1C' C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
buttonholes, sew on buttons.
monograms and make fancy
Dick Ka r • Jr ·
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·
Complete Ser•lce
designs with justthe twlsl of a
9-1 -ffc . ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
Phone96f-3821
single-dial. Left In layaway --,.....,-- -,-,.-" '·7· -=-SANITATION, STEWART,'
RaclnJ!, Ohll&gt;
and never been used. Will sell SEWING MACHINES. Repllr
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
Crill Bradf(ff'd
tor only $47 cash, cir terms service, all makes. 992-2284.1
10·6-ttc ,
5·1-tfc
available. Electro Hygiene The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. - - - - ' - -- Co. Phone 992·7755.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Real Estate For Sile ·
2-lHtc Service. We Sharpen Scissors. ·
3·29-ffc
For Sale

KITCHEN &amp;SON
CONSTRUCTION

Poles
'
Maximum
Diameter
10" on
Largest End

$7.00 Per Ton.
DELIVERED
TO

OHIO
PALLET CO.

For Sale:
Aluminum

WE ~VE A :tO'MiU.ION-DOLJ.A~

NOTHING
DEI..IGHrS
THE AFF'LLiENT
OF
l:h'IDEELSPORT
LIKEACI-\ANCE
'IODOGOODWITH SOMEONE
E1S£'S MONE'f-

U.S. GAANT 10 8UILJ) HOUSING

IN SOMEONE

ELSE!s
NI:JGI-IE!&gt;ORtlooo

Sheets

been

2·18-12tc
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES, Advertisement. '
·
-:-=----- - '
ORANGE TOWNSHIP,
OfFICJ! HOURS
I WILL not be responsible for
MEIGS COUNTY,
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m . Oally,
any debts contracted by my
STATE OF OHIO . 1:30 a.m . to U:OO Noon ' wife, Joanne Aleshire Cook,
Open Saturdays
Saturday,
(II 19, It
frorrr..B.~ ,I!!.. to 3:30p.m.
Rt. 1, Middleport, Ohio, c-o
Thomas King after this date
On Old Rt. 33
received other than my own.
Phone 992-2689
PUBLIC NOTICE
Signed: James R. Cook, 2201
IN THE COURT OF
Pomero_
y , Ohio.
I
WILL
DO
bookkeeping
and
Renshaw Ave., Dayton, Ohio
COMMON PLEAS,
clerical
work
In
my
home.
45439.
'
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIOPhone 742·6085.
2·18·31p
PROBATE DIVISION
2· lHtp
In the Motter ol THE ESTATE
For Rent ·
OF Clar• Heu, Deceased .
'HOOD' S AQUARIUMS; fish 3 ROOM AND bath furnished
NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
To 1ht Htlrs 11 Law and NUl of
and supplies; new location ,
apartment; utilities paid;
MARTHA
PRICE . aka
Kin of Clara Hn.a, Dtctlltd: MARTHA KIBBLE , JACOB
Ash Street, Middleport near
$23.00 per week . 356 N. 4th St.,
You are hereby notified that PRICE,
park; phone 992-5443.
CINCINNATUS
Middleport, William Smith.
on the 15th day of February,, KIBBLE , CINCINNATUS
1·7-ftc
2·15-61p
1973, an application was flied n KIBBLE, JR., C. KIBBLE. C.
thla Court to relieve the Estate E. KIBBLE , H. E. KIBBLE,
4 BEDROOMS, 2 full baths,
of Clara Hess , Deceased, from GEORGE E. KIBBLE, JOHN
administration and to sell KIBBLE , LEWIS KIBBLE,
buill-In all electric kitchen
ersonal property of Clara Hess CARRIE KIBBLE , MINNIE
with
dishwasher, forced air
r.o apply on the funeral bill . DEVORE, LILLIE SCOTT ,
furnace. Phone Gallipolis 446·
You are hereby further SARAH E. SAMUELSON ,
4060, alter 5 p. m. 646-1279.
notified that this Application FRANK KIBBLE. MARTHA
2-lHtc
will be heard on the 15th day of KIBBLE , MAMIE SOVEL,
March, 1973, at 10:00 o'clock HORRACE
E. KIBBLE ,
2 BEDROOM trailer, close to
A.M . before this Court.
CLARA CHUTES, CHARLES
mine site on Rf. 315, by week
Manning D. Webster, KIBBLE , AND HERBERT
Probate Judge KIBBLE If living, whose exact
or month, utilities paid.
For
(I) 19, 16 (31 5, 3t.
Phone 742·5980.
addresses are unknown and
For Sale
whose last known 'addres~es are
2·15-61p
· r,""cLELAN~
Furnace Controls
FH . 1, R:eedsviiJe, Ohio, and If
OHIO COLLEGE
REALTY
decened then their unknown
Brown's Trailer
HUMIDIFIER'S TRAILER,
BASKETBALL SCORES
heirs , devlstes, legatees,
601E. Moln
Park; phone 992-3324.
Br. Unlltd Pross lnlornollonol
executors, administrators and ·
• Pomeroy
Hot
Water
Heaters'
.2-13-tfc
· or assigns will take notice that
Ill nola 79 Ohio State 68
Seven
room,
1'12
baths,
two
car
garage
on
nice
-----J . B. O'Brien flied his compla int
Toledo 67 Miami 63
Plum bin !I'
February
8,
1973
In
the
Common
ONE bedroom apartments,
lot. close to elementary school, and Veterans
Bowling Green 77 Kent State 67
11,0 Mechanic Street
IN .POMEROY
Electrical Work
Court of Meigs County,
ideal
for
cou
ples.
phone
992·
Ohio University 101 Western Pleas
IVlemorlal Hospital. on Wright Street. (Ed
Ohio. Cue No. 1523'2 alleging
Nice
apartment,
with
·1'9mft:f, Qllll 457D
5248 or 992-3436.
Michigan 80
that he is the owner of 5·-484
Ebersbach property). Priced to sell fast at
business. 10 sleeping rooms,
2·18·Stc
St. Josephs (Pa.) 78 Xavier 65 Interest In the following
$15,000.00. . 31/, baths, basement, utility
NEW LISTING
St. Johns (N. Y.l 98 Dayton 83 described real estate, and
.room,
storage room , porCincinnati
71
George praying that title to said real
MIDDLEPORT
2
2 BEDROOM mobile home ;
estate be quieted and for par ·
Washington 65
GEORGE
S.
HOBSTETTER
JR.
ches, garage, good Income
bedrooms.
balh,
gi!S circall
completely
furnished
;
of 1ald real tstate .
Akron 77 Kenfllcky Wesleyan tltlon
992-2441 after 5: 30 p.m.
property . Call for par·
culator heat. All utilities.
The
persons above named will
992-2448
73
REAL ESTATE BROKER
2-7·tfc
Near store and schools.
tlculars.
take notice that they hawe been
Ashland 20 Fredonia State fN . made parties defendant to said
Pomeroy,
Asking
only S5,500.00.
I
YEARS
OLD
•
BOX 101, POMEROY, OHIO
Y.) 14
complaint and that they are
30ACRES
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
Lot
100K120
(Ievell.
3
large
PHONE 985-4186
Youngstown
State
38 required to answer within 28
unfurnished
apartments
.
4
BEDROOMS
- Warm with
W.C..
lovely
bedrooms
days after April 2, 1973 or on or · I WILL NOT be responsible for . Phone 992·543~.
Steubenville 37
free
gas
heat.
All mlnerols.
May
1,
1973.
any
debts
contracted
by
any
kltclten
all
builtin,
dining
R
.•
before
Musklngum 86
Baldwin
4-12-ffc
10
acres
or
more
of .farm
Said real estate being situated
one ether than myself.
large living R.. utility R.•
Wallace 64
land.
About
$15,000.00.
In
I
he
Township
of
Olive,
County
Signed:
Daniel
Jeffers.
REAL
ESTATE
FOR
SALE
Capitol 61 Wooster 60
II replace, bath, carpeted,
and Stat~ ot Ohio .
2 18 31
RIVER FRONTAGE
Denison 81 Carnegie-Mellon of I.Meigs
basement. EKcellent neigh.
Boing In 160 acre lot 116&lt;,
· · P UNFURNISHED 3· room
Close to town. Enterprise; next to church, Route 33 : 4
NEARLY 600 FT. New 1972
apartment. adults only. No
( Pa.) 58
borhood. Storm doors &amp;
ICres &amp; 6 r&lt;NIM frame house, 4 bedrooms, 2 porches, storm
•·· rang• 11 of the Ohio HEALTHY. fat, cute' puppies pets, 408 Spring Ave .,
Fleetwood 3 bedroom mobile
Mount Union 74 Heidelberg 61 town
Company ' s Purchase. mor&amp;
windows.
$23,000.00.
doors
&amp;
windows,
fuel
oil
furnace,
1
out
building
&amp;
gorogo,
Pomeroy .
home. 12K6S. An 18 foot boat
Ohio Dominican 89 Kenyon 62 particularly described as the FREE; phone 992·6083.
electric by Ohio Power.- $15,800.00.
RUTLAND
2·11f.61p
S.W. quarter of lot 1164
1-7-tfc
with 120 H.P. motor, and
Wittenberg 75 Marietta 52
EKcellent business. Stock
Space for 2nd trailer.
trailer.
·Oberlin 66 Ohio Wesleyan 63 .beginning at the S.W. corner of
Rutland - 3 nice tots on good grovel road . (New Lima
lot 116&lt; ; thence north along said WANTED Private couple or
and equipment Included.
Otterbein 78 Urbana 77
ALL
MINERALS
Road) - snso.oo each.
lot line 80 rods; thence out 80 lady to keep and care for In Pets For Sale
Lovely apartment over. s
Northwood llnd.l 77 Centro! rods
117 ACRES - High land,
to a stake; thence south 80
rooms, 3 bedrooms, bath, ·
State 73 loll
rods to tho south line of lot 1164; my home ; phone 1143-2601.
New 3 bedroom all electric home wlfh lull basement, on
locust thicket, gas well. dug
·Pt\RKVIEW Kennels going oui
2-18-ltc
Hanover lind.) 81 Wilmington thence west 80 rods to the place
nice kitchen, H.W. floors. 2
wall, house, bern and several ·
large lot, locoted at Tuppers Plolns, Ohio near
of
business.
Big
price
Of beginning, containing 40 -:-:.,-- - - -- -75
outbuildings. Just $19,500.00.
glassed porches. Furnace.
playground. $19,800.00.
reduction on all dogs. All AK-·
COSMETICS AND WIGS FOR
Earlham (Ind.) 90 Bluffton 76 acres , more or less .
C. 592 Broad·way &amp; Ash
MODERN
JUST $17,900.00.
.
GEORGES.
HOBSTETTER
JR.
E•copllng
a
10acre
parcel
out
SALE
.
SPECIAL
MONTHLY.
Deflance82 Anderson llnd.l78
Streets,
Middleport,
Ohio.
·
7
ACRES
4 bedrooms. All
~STORY BRICK
of S.W. corner of said •o acre
"INDEPENDENT
DIS·
REAL ESTATE BROKER. Phont98S-4186
Findlay 83 Toylor (Ind.) 80
electric,
l'h
baths,
12·13·tf&lt;·
MIDDLEPORT
Srooms,
2
or
Hiram 77 Bethany (W. Va.) 62 lotlt is the intent to convey 30
TRIBUTORS,"
BROWN'S,
basement.
Near
Rt.
7.
bath,
dining
R.,
bedrooms,
Hilton Wolle-Solesman-Phone 949·3211
Malone 75 Cedarville 69
acres which was formerly
MIDDLEPORT.
PHONE
NEW HOME
new forced al r furnace. Lvel
992-5113.
Walsh 93 Penn State-Behrends owned by Sarah M. Klbblo .
RUTLAND
- 3 bedroom all
Auto
Sales
2. Also the following real
2-18-ttc ·
59
lot. Garage. Fenced for
•
Homes
~or
·
Sale
2NEW3bedroonitioines;twlih
electric
.
Full
basement •
1
estate
In
sections
4,
and
10,
town
-Wright State 81 Rose-Hulman
1963 FORD Falrlane 500, V-8, ~ Mobl
r'
. basement, 1 without; 2 car children. Storm doors &amp;
-' range 11, 100 acre lot 1159
garage
and
nice
lot . . O.ty
(lnd.l 60
door, runs good; price $250;
' garages 1ecre lots; located at windows. 58,500.00.
bounded on ttte north bv lend of lost
S20,500.00.
phone
992-737~.
.
1966
RICHARDSON
2
bedroom,
Rock
Springs
behind
Meigs
Charles or Lesto Blake, east by
6ROOMS
David Rood, south by Mathilda NORWEGIAN Elkhound, 16"·
2·16-tfc
10.50 mobile h'ome, eKcellent
Co. Fairground; will trade or
MIDDLEPORT
3
HELPI HELP! WE HAVE
Hetzer and west Jesper Reed,
18" tall ; gray, male; name - -- - -- - - condition; phone 992-6222.
help flnonce; also 5 good
bedrooms,
bath.
dining,
nice
containing
nine
acres;
PROPERTY RUNNING
OHIO COLLEGE
" Bruno"; reward offered; 1963 INTERNATIONAL t;, ton
2- 1~ ·6tp
building lots, water and kitchen, paneling, tiled, nice
3. Also 20 acres In Section 1,
OUT OUR EARS.
cell 992·6708 after 6 p.m. or
pickup;
very
good
condition
_
_
_
__
_
_
_
_..:.
disposal
Installed;
Charles
H.
. BASKEtBALL SCHEDULE
Town 4 , Range 11 Olive
· floors, utility R., gas F.A.
992·3371 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
HELEN L TEAFORD,
By Unlltd Press tnternotto""l
for model ; $350.00; Robert 1968 WINDSOR, 12x60. 2· Cornell, Athens, 593-7036 or
Township, Meigs County , Ohio
lteot, garage, nice level lot,
2·18-Jtc
ASSOCIATE
Monday
the S '12 01the S.E. '4 Olthe S.W.
Burton, Pomeroy, 992·2912. bedroom, with or without
593-5667.
cellar. $10,000.00.
Purdue at Ohio State
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
'I• of said section 11 containing
2·11·tfc
2·18-Jtp furniture; phone 992·3511.
20 acres .
Xavier at Miami
992-332S
- - - -- -- 2·11-tfc --:--- - - , -- -J . B. O'Brien, Business Opportunities
Central Mlchlgon at Kent State
WE
OFFER
YOU
8
YEARS
REMODELED
10
room
hoiJse
1965 CHEVROLET 1mpala, ~ 12 x 60, 1971 ACADEMY, 3
IIll
on 70 acres land; modern
Mount Union at Geheva (Pa.) Ill ll. 19,26 131 5, 12, 19,Plain
REAL
ESTATE
EX·
26.
HIGH
Volume
Service
Station
door, 283, V-8. powergllde, bedroom; flp.out, air, washer
kitchen, tile bath, oil furnace,
Malone at Ashland
PERIENCE
IN
MEIGS
CO.
runs
gOOd.
looks
good;
cheap
d
d
h
tor lease; paid training;
Tiffin at Wright State
.transportation, s250; phone an
ryer; P one 742·3280
soft water ; also barn.
3
SALESMEN
TO
ASSIST
IN
please call 61~ -992-5221 be.
Tuasday
85.3949.
after 6 p.m.
·
buildings and standing
9
THE
SALE
OF
YOUR
•
tween 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Marquette of Bowling Green
1
NOTICE OF
PROPERTY .
AD .
7tc
limber;
mile off
Rt . 33from
2-18·12tc - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2·_18-31p t======::;::':2·:l:.l-Wisconsin at Ohio University
APPOINTMENT
..
Darwin. 4Phone
992·6967.
11/ERTISING
11
Cleveland State at Creighton
C.ue No. 20836
2·16-6tc
Otterbein at Baldwin-Wallace Estate of 0 . H. Keefer AKA Orn '
~ like
.
~Air·
C;onditioner·s::
I
6
_
_
B
_
E_D.
ROM--h-om_e_._2_ba_t
.
h-s, gas
For
Sale
Homer
Keefer
Deceased
.
THROUGHOUT OHIO &amp; W.
Denison at Marietta
Help
Wanted
..
Notice Is hereby given that
Wooster at Hiram
·,Awnings
· · furnace , full basement, river· VA. WHY TAKE A
EARLY American stereo.radlo ,
Ralph
Keefer
of
RD,
Athens.
Central State at Lincoln (Mo.l Athens County, Ohio, has been FARMER ; ••perlenced and
CHANCE? LIST WITH · US
combination, AM-FM radio.~ :
• ::•tUnderpin.n_i_n.g..· ·
frontage, Syracuse, Ohio,
sober; weekly wages; free
Ohio Northern at Hillsdale duly appointed Administrator
TODAY.
Phone
992-2360.
.
speaker .sound system, ~ i .~ · .
"
~
.
(Mich .)
Insurance and other fringe
With the Will Annexed of lhe
1·25-lfc ·
speed automatic changer. ~omplete mqblle hQme.
Anderson llnd.l' at Wilmington Estate of 0 . H. Keefer AKA Orn
benefits ; modern house
HENRY E. CLELAND
Balonce $77 .59 . Use our
ervloe · ~ plus gigantic'
Bluffton at Manchester (Ind.) Homer Keeter, deceased, late of
furnished ; write American
' BROKER
budget
terms.
Call
992-7085.
:HousE
FOR
sillE,
116
Brick
Rt . 3, Albany, Meigs County, Culvert Co.. 201 · Wheeling
,of mobile homes
Cedarville at Grace (Ind.)
2-15-6tc .1 ~!splay,
992·22S9
;·"'Sit'ft.
Pomeroy,
Ohio;.
brick
Ohio.
·
always .avellable•ot ...
;
•
Walsh at Mercyhurst (Pa.)
Ave .. Cambridge, Ohio.
house,
3
bedrooms,
excellent
If
no
1111wer
Credllon
are
r'equlred
to
file
Wldnasdoy
l ·l3-6tc MODERN Walnut style stereo· '
claims with said fiduciary
location, close to school and
;U_
ILL
..
.
E
'R
..
·
992-2568 or f85·4209
Xavier vs. Cincinnati (Cin- their
within four months .
radio, AM-FM radio, 4
l!' .
city; contact Lou Osborne or
cinnati Gardens) ·
Dated this 31st day of Januery BABYSITTER
needed at
1 call 992·5898.
speaker
sound
system,
4
i
MOBILE
HOMES\
Kent State at Dayton
1973.
Washington, W. Va. Separate
speed automatic changer. '
·. · · ·
., ..
Manning 0 . Webster
Miami at Ncrth Carolina
housing provided. with all
Balance S69.57 . lise our [!
1220WishlngtanBivd.
Judge
Toledo ot Western Michigan
e.penses paid. Excellent
budget terms. Call 992-7085. ~J.7S21
BELPRE, 0.
Court of Common Pitas,
Akron at Western Illinois
2·1S-6tc ·
··
opportunity for good job and
Probate
Division
Clevelond Stole at South ' m s. 11, 19, 31
own place to live. Wrl e P. 0 .
Dakota
Box 71, Washington, W. Ve.
Youngstown Stole at Gannon
26181 .
!Po.l
2·18-61c
Grand Valley State (Mich.) at Help Wanted
Ashland .
John Carroll at Case Western
Malone at Steubenville
Defiance at Goshen (Ind.)
Findley at Earlham (Ind .)
Carnegie-Mellon · (Pa·. ) at
HI rom
Rio Gronde at Urbana
Thursday
Wilberforce at Wheeling
(Ohio Conference Tour""IJI"'I)
Southern Division at Denison
Northern Division at Wooster
Frldly
Htllldole (Mich.) af Walsh
Northern Kentucf&lt;y State at
Wright State
741-4211
Arnold Gr1ft
Ohio Confar\nce Tournoment

uANIE TlliNK5 THAT
WOULD BE A MI&amp;TAKE .
&amp;HE l'H INK5 HE'D
EVENTUALLY
!?£$£NT WORK·
lNG FORME.

OH, MYGO$H,
TilE J'OOR MAN •

2(r

WHAT C'\N WE 00

10 HELP HiM?

The
•Daily Sentinel

Notice

llUT '!HE DEPA~MEIIIT MIST'
SfA'/ IN COMPLIANCE W1111
ALL COURT .DECISIOI-JS.

IT SEEM6 Sil-L-'1,
6GT. 6t.OI'TER. ..

'

. .

.

;&gt;.. ,,

POMEROY
...,. Jack W. C.rsey, Mgr•
Phone 992-2111

·wANTED
CHIPWOOD .

Book Store, Gaul s Market,
Chester. Lodwick's Market,

•.

.,

9..

Wanted

live ISl years lrom dote It Is doomed . obl~~tlonal. . The·

Th'e Publisher reserve$ th.e
right to edit o~elect any ads;

..' '

slacks and jeans ..~ for ttie.
family. 10 Days Only.

2·16-l5tp

Markel Syracuse Bill &amp;
Lee's, -Pomeroy, ,Middleport

WHAT 'ARE
• 'IE DOIN'
IN THAT
THAR
APERN?

,.

S AV IT OUER ME,
·PARSON .. I'MTH'
ONE THAT'S GOT
· TO EAT IT

1 PAIR FREE·

5600.

burning during the night seuon Will beacflpted un.tll9o.m. l&lt;lr
lapproKimotely 4000 hours per
.
DRayGotU.PLuAbTillcOaNIIosn
.
annum) each and every night
E
during the term of the contract,
which shall be for a period of

BUY ONE PAIR
GET

WANTED, Beef Hides; will pay
$9 a piece; Pomeroy St..
Mason. W. Va.; phone nJ.

Dream Girl'' Is on sale at
Racine Dept. store, Sadie's

•

..

Hove YOI/I' . hem• butH by
' Custom Builders. Our.
:carpentors have 20 y11rsl
experle)lc• In building :
homes In Meigs County. . '

.SLAQ&lt;S SALE

.

®

;Busmess
.•
s·
.
.
.
· ervt~es ..~:
.

.:

SNUFFY!

.

'

WASHitJGION':;
HI f&lt;l 111!/\Y !.'

organs, dishes, clocks, brass
beds or complete househ olds.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt • '-4,
Pomeroy, Ohio.' Phone 9112·
6271.
1·7-tfc

·
· PEAOL'INES •
DUANE . Wolfe's
record
lighting unlh, said party shall ·,S·P.M. Dly Before Publication : "Broken Hearled" and "My

furnish sufficient electric ,
energy to ke~p said lamps

.

.

UH .. WOULD
'IOU FELLERS
LIKE I'ER ME
TOStiiTH'
!" C&lt;: ::'"' IW

~~~~~ ~
·- --~~~
. ~~------~~~

..

Wanted To .BUy

Notice

' . WAN:r A,..._

County, Ohio ; and upon going
Into service of said 15 street

.

~~~~~~~hon~-992~1.st

$199 '
t969 CHEV. BIS. 4 DR.
327 V•8 engine, automallc trans., power steering &amp; brakes, '
~ tires, goeen finish with matching Interior. Book
· 1ox38llSEtfiractor ilre; phone
•
e u.e $1150. . Early Bird Special.
949-3050.
'
2·16·3tp
$695
1967 FORD LTD
H.T. Sedan, v.8 en~lne, automatic trans .• P. steering &amp;
CATILE, top prices ; phone
brakes. radio, blue i~lsh , blk. vinyl top, good tires, radio.
. Gallipolis 646-3792.
Special!! I
2·16-12tp

sealed bids will be received

~5723,

Of
QUALITY

a.

b·y the Township Trustees of
Township,

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

'

IRONINGHo do In ~y home, For Sale
10c per Item ; you deliver and ·COAL. limestone. EKcerslor
~ckup; 15671h
Nye St.,
meroy, upstairs.
.
.•.
2-1J.61p
·
·
4-12-tfc

$tZ9S .
1961 NOVA 55 CPE.
. 350 En~lne, 6-speed trans., wide oval tires. wh. rings. red
finish, lk. bucket seats, console. radlo·lape. Sharp car
priced fo move.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

Orange

.

'

BARNEY .

WELL, FIRST TI-liNG$ ~I R5T!
I 'M GOING TO CALL THAT
YOUNG MAN AND INVITE

HIM lOBE:OUR GUESTFOR
A'$ LONG AS HES INCUNED
TO STAY !

Plimeroy

"H&amp;IL"

HfATIN'G &amp;

COOLING

I'll 511ow it to

Real Estate

Real Estate·

Sale

Real Estate

REAL ESTATE FOR SAtE

t

t W r4D,D Cl4 in t he builclinq
ha5 kelj,Ciovia 1 lt 'G the

lJOU~ Wc;~tch lJOur
head!~,_~.

\Store room~

. Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

ARNOLD .
BROTHERS
o.

... AN' I UK!' T' Bt: THERE WHEN

IIRR1VES!
WEll, TAKE CARE 0' lO&lt;IRSt:LF
1
~ ~,

·

:I

ACROSS
1. Golfs
11
Cham·

..

R.N.'s Needed In New
Geriatric Unit • STAT

ON YOUR ·DIAL

Yesterdar's Cl)'ploquote&gt; LOVE CURES PEOPLE - BOTH
THE ONES WHO GIVE IT A:ND THE ONES WHO RECEIVE.
lT.-DR. KARL MENNINGER

pagne

!II).VE TllEIR
RIGHT ON

Tllf ACTt0H II! IS
$1111! !$lAKING
IUC~, &amp;YOI!I7e~­

· ING AFIII!I1T OF

U .S.A.F.I'IQCTf~

111)0 Til! M!A.

CAPI'AlN E'ASY

I CALLEDT~E POLICE AND
GAVE T~EM TillS PI-lONE
NUMBER, T~EV COULD
TRACE THE

17"~------:r

..

least~

(2wds. )
Engltsh
,T,.,.,,1 .~..~~iW~:~J.~~
novelist
:
13. Years ~go
(3 wds.)
15. Traffic
sign
16. Irritate
17. Note the
rate of
18. Gold (Sp. l
!i. Inexpen-·
slve
U.In the
middle of
14. Place for
the big
boss(Zwds. )
U. Dude
"-1...:1~
territory
27. Shade of
gray
Merino's

·Unocramble these I'Gur Jumbleo,
one leUer to eaeh aquore, lo
form four ordinary worde.

equip-

ment
18. Exclude
19. Far
East
'staple
zo. Poem

21. Bird's

crop
22. Sock
23. From a
distance
U. Proles·
slonal
charge
25. Sheep's

woolen

coat
29. Besmirch
30. Actress,
Barbara

tonlinen!
33. French·
· Belgian
river

34.Janltor
ial
Item
35. Exasperate
36. Loud
noise
37. Allow

t
II I
FRJVED

'\I

I

Now orranp tho cll'l!led lettero

to form lhellll'llrioe 1111wer, u

._I-=Pril=..===•=•==•=•.;;.___l ( I I I 1 l

(Aoowen Mowdo1l
Ynlerd.)'tl

J....I.,, LINIR AOILI IIATIN MUSJIR
\ A.alwen

•
S.weiLI&amp;a ••irlen at mealtime-GILATIN

DID 'IOVHAVE
A GOODTIME
SKIING ?

-

how to

work

it:

AXYDLBAAXI.
LONGFIILLOW

It
One letter simply stonds for onother. In lhlo ssmple A Is ·
used for lhe three, L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnale letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are aU
hints. Eocb day the code lettero are dltrerent.
'
·CRYPTOQUOTES

-BXIR

(]

I I

~==~===~~,A~~~~~·u:r~r:••::;UdbJih•~•e~L

'
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's

ZRBX

~...
0 \ -1

31. Uncover
3Z.A

gone
a-wooing
French
river
Laurel
tree
Boor·
geoisle
(2 wds.l
Bay
window
Unearthly
-ante
Sunder
DOWN
1. Statutes
Z. Famlllor
Latin ab·
brevlatlon
(2 wds.l

NMH

=

A1VCOP

sense! '

8. Chemical
suftlx
9. Count·
down
number
11. Reata
U . Equa·
nlmlty
n.camper's

1978 KinR' Future• Syndicate, Inc.)

JllYWID~"'-~=!!: ..J

4. Priestly
vestment
5. Arkansas
sharecropper
6. Whimper
7.Non·

5. Circum·
ference
_._,._......,::_:::;__;;;_..!:!JJ 10. In the
JUST REMEM8ERED-

(0

3. Actress,
Virginia

Tony"

.We talk to you
a-persorL · ,

WMP0/13901

~.~ .. ~Y
by THOMAS JOSEPH

.

i

MA.,.Be 11 WASrt'T sucH A BRIQHT ICEA

T' HOOF IT HOME} 'SAND'(~ OOPS!
MAYBE THIS GUV' Ll GWE US A LIFT 011

tii S BIKE! ll 'S S URE BIG ENOUGH
~OR TI1REE!

'le

.

Al"' I'Ll BE COMI!i' BACK 1' VtSIT
'r'OU Art' MRS . SCRIBBLE !

W!ARY HOORS LAT£R ...

HE

F~XE

R.CH

OHFOXH

NMFWH

TMRWH

QMF

QMF

KHUHC

KHUHC

NCE.

I ONLL( BROKE
~OUR

LE6S..

-

-· -- ---

·-

"'

RJ~VNAIEL&lt;( TH E~ wiRE
ALL ON OTHER f'EOP&lt;..E!

�1-

:r'- Ilally Sentlnel,:r.fiddle_I)CII'I-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 19. 1973

-c;Jassifieds ·Get Action/Sentinel Classi/ieds·Get Resu~tsl/

·sentin~l
PUBLIC NOTICES

.

EmploJnient w
anted
'

®

Your Right to Know
and be Informed of the func tiOns of your government arr
embOdied In public nailers, In
thlt self-government charges
all citizens to be Informed;
this newspaper urges every
citizen to read and study these
notices. We strongly advise
those citizens, seeking further
lnformeflon, to exercise their
right of access tO public
records ltl'ld public meetings.

Melg&amp;

County, Ofilo, at the office of the

Township Clerk, Nina Robin ·

son, R. D. No. I, Coolville, Ohio

Pomeroy Motor Co.

until I P .M. on March 5th,

1973, to continue to furnish,
Install, operate and maintain 15,

aooo Lumen Mercury Vapor

OPEN EVES. 1:110 ,,Ill.
t'PMEROY, OHIO

Street Lighting Units, mounted

on metal brackets attached to

wooden poles·1 at present
locations in the unincorporated
VII laue of Tuppers Plains,

Orange

Township,

··

Meigs

ni&gt;

'

INFORMATION

Ol.b ' furniture. oak 'lobI e!i ,

Monday DeadPine·9 a.m.
Cancell~tlon .- Corre.c tlors •.

Tuppers Plains, Foster's, Rio

entered Into ; the cost therefor 'ubtlaher wHI not be respo~slble
Grande,
Murphv's
and
to be paid monthly.
'or more than o.- Incorrect
Brunlcardl's, Gallipolis, and
No bid will be considered ·lnnrtlon.
Carpenter ' s
Grocery,
unless In the opinion of said
RATES
Board of Township Trustees,
" For Waftt Ad Service · ." '· ' Rutland.
2·1B-21c
the partv has the necessary 5 cents per Word one lnsertloa·
equipment, ability and financial
Minimum Charge 75c .· ~ - - - - - - -- - resources lo fulfill the con.
12 ton If' por word · thr'l PARASOL B 11
1
t
dltions of the contract . Said consecutfve Insertions. ·
'
cu que a on nex
contract shall be awarded to fhe · 18 cents per word six con
to Skate-A-Way announces
lowest and best bidder, but the "Secutlve Insertions.
Permanent Special . February
right Is reserved to relect any ' 25 Per cent Dlscount .on. paid
20th thru March lOth. Breck
and all bids.
ads and ad1 paid. wltJlln 10 davs ~
perm. and the new Phase 7

s

Nina Robinson

Clerk
w. S. Henderson

Roland Torrence
0 . J , Pennington

'

C4RO OF THANKS .' ,.
suo f:,. ~t'!~r~R~Inlmpm .

perm. regular Sl7.50 now
$13.50; phone 985-4141;

BLIND ADS
,
Additional 25c Charge · '~or

Sandra Kerns.

Each •ddltlonal word .2c.

:.

operators :

Richard

and

I'
'

.
...T~E WAV OUR .
PRESIDENTS THROW
I.IONEV AROUNP!

GERT'S a gay girl -ready tor
POMEROY
a whirl after cleaning carpals , ~EE US FOR : Awnings, storm ,
doors and '""'ows, carports,
with Blue Lusfre. Rent
. ·.
. . ..
marquees, ·aluminum siding
·
eleclric shampooer $1.
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
HOME &amp; AUTO .·
Nelson's
Drug
Store,
representative. For free,
,.__
I
Pomeroy. Ohio.
estimates,
·
phone
Char
IN
771. 2094
''
2·19·2tc
HOME BUILDING
Lisle, Syracuse. · V. V. .. •,606 E. Main Pomeroy
Johnson
and
Son,
Inc.
&amp;
(3) ELECTROLU.X Vacuum
3
2
REMODELING
Cleaners complete with at·
OFFICE SUPPLIES
· -tfc '
1achments, cordwlnder Bfld ::E::-L-,
N:-:A-a-nd-:-.-. -,W-,h-11-e-::-Sewing
and
paint spray. Used but In like
Machines ... service on all
BOB SLOAN
new condition. Pay $34.45
makes
. Reasonable rates .
FURNITURE
cash or budget plan available:
&amp;
The Sewing Center, Mid·
Electro Hyg iene Co. Phone
C. L. KITCHEN
dleport, Ohio.
· ;Stop · In and See Our:
992.ns5.
11
16
992-5653
2-14-6tc
' -ttc . :Floor Display.
WILL DO remodeling, Inferior
"
and eKferlor painting, concrete work by hour or con- EXCAVATING, dozer, loader . O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124,
tract; phone 992-3511.
and backhoe work ; septic
complete
front ·end service,
2-6-12tc
Installed;
dump
trucks
tanks
36"x23"x.OOf
tune up and brake service.
- - - - ,- - - - : and lc)·boys for hire; will haul
Wheels balanced elec·
01 LAND GAS Service, new and·
fill dirt. top soil. limestone
All
work
Ironically .
and gravel; call Bob or Roger
used furnaces, new aluminum.,
guaranteed .
Reasonable
siding and remodeling, 24. Jeffers, day phone 992·7089;
rates. Phone 992·3213 or 742·
night phone 992-3525 or 992·
hour service; phone 1143·2833.
3232.
5232.
1·2S-30tp
2·18·tfC
USED OFFSET PLATES
2·11-ttc
HAVE
:AuTOMOBILE Insurance
WILL trim or cut .trees, clean·
MANY USES
cancelled?
Lost
your
out basements, attics, etc.
operator's license? Call 992- PLUMBING work done; phone
985·6265.
· Phone 9~9- 3221.
2966.
2·ll -30tc
2·4-30tc
6-15-ffc
8 lor $1.00
7
1
7
-~-~- -- - -- .:;;R;;;E A"'
Ov· ;o;;M:;;IX.--;..C:;;;OuNcr.R&gt;&lt;EtE'
G &amp; E Appliance Repair, repair EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
delivered right to your
on all laundry equipment,
and small; Backhoes and
pro/ect. F~st and easy. Free
refrlgerallon equipment and
Loaders on track and tires:
est mates, Phone 992-3286.
house wiring; welding,
Dump trucks Lo -boy
G 1 1 R d Ml C
Service ; Septic tanks In oeg en
ea Y· •
o.,
electric and gas. Call 992-3802
stalled;
George
(Bill)
Middleport, Ohio.
or after 4:30 p.m. call 992·
6050.
Pullins; phone 992-2478.
.
6-JO.tfc
2-5·30tp
2·9-lfc' SEPTIC TANKS CLIANED .
Court St
_
H
_
A_
R
_
R-IS
_
O
_
N
-'S
_
T
_
V
_S
_e-rv-lc
e-and
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 646DOZER a·nd back hoe work.
Servlce
Calls
;
phone
.
.
6782, GaiiiJlolls. John Russell, ·
992
2522
Za s 1
ponds and septic tanks, dft.
H ·lfc
Owner &amp; Operator:
·(3) NEW 1972 Zig· g ""'ng " chlng service; top soil, 1111
Machines In original factory dirt. limestone; B&amp;K EK·
-----,--5-12-ftc .
carton. Zig-Zag to make cavatln~. Phone 992·5367, S.EPTIC TANKS AROB1C' C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
buttonholes, sew on buttons.
monograms and make fancy
Dick Ka r • Jr ·
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·
Complete Ser•lce
designs with justthe twlsl of a
9-1 -ffc . ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
Phone96f-3821
single-dial. Left In layaway --,.....,-- -,-,.-" '·7· -=-SANITATION, STEWART,'
RaclnJ!, Ohll&gt;
and never been used. Will sell SEWING MACHINES. Repllr
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
Crill Bradf(ff'd
tor only $47 cash, cir terms service, all makes. 992-2284.1
10·6-ttc ,
5·1-tfc
available. Electro Hygiene The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. - - - - ' - -- Co. Phone 992·7755.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Real Estate For Sile ·
2-lHtc Service. We Sharpen Scissors. ·
3·29-ffc
For Sale

KITCHEN &amp;SON
CONSTRUCTION

Poles
'
Maximum
Diameter
10" on
Largest End

$7.00 Per Ton.
DELIVERED
TO

OHIO
PALLET CO.

For Sale:
Aluminum

WE ~VE A :tO'MiU.ION-DOLJ.A~

NOTHING
DEI..IGHrS
THE AFF'LLiENT
OF
l:h'IDEELSPORT
LIKEACI-\ANCE
'IODOGOODWITH SOMEONE
E1S£'S MONE'f-

U.S. GAANT 10 8UILJ) HOUSING

IN SOMEONE

ELSE!s
NI:JGI-IE!&gt;ORtlooo

Sheets

been

2·18-12tc
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES, Advertisement. '
·
-:-=----- - '
ORANGE TOWNSHIP,
OfFICJ! HOURS
I WILL not be responsible for
MEIGS COUNTY,
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m . Oally,
any debts contracted by my
STATE OF OHIO . 1:30 a.m . to U:OO Noon ' wife, Joanne Aleshire Cook,
Open Saturdays
Saturday,
(II 19, It
frorrr..B.~ ,I!!.. to 3:30p.m.
Rt. 1, Middleport, Ohio, c-o
Thomas King after this date
On Old Rt. 33
received other than my own.
Phone 992-2689
PUBLIC NOTICE
Signed: James R. Cook, 2201
IN THE COURT OF
Pomero_
y , Ohio.
I
WILL
DO
bookkeeping
and
Renshaw Ave., Dayton, Ohio
COMMON PLEAS,
clerical
work
In
my
home.
45439.
'
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIOPhone 742·6085.
2·18·31p
PROBATE DIVISION
2· lHtp
In the Motter ol THE ESTATE
For Rent ·
OF Clar• Heu, Deceased .
'HOOD' S AQUARIUMS; fish 3 ROOM AND bath furnished
NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
To 1ht Htlrs 11 Law and NUl of
and supplies; new location ,
apartment; utilities paid;
MARTHA
PRICE . aka
Kin of Clara Hn.a, Dtctlltd: MARTHA KIBBLE , JACOB
Ash Street, Middleport near
$23.00 per week . 356 N. 4th St.,
You are hereby notified that PRICE,
park; phone 992-5443.
CINCINNATUS
Middleport, William Smith.
on the 15th day of February,, KIBBLE , CINCINNATUS
1·7-ftc
2·15-61p
1973, an application was flied n KIBBLE, JR., C. KIBBLE. C.
thla Court to relieve the Estate E. KIBBLE , H. E. KIBBLE,
4 BEDROOMS, 2 full baths,
of Clara Hess , Deceased, from GEORGE E. KIBBLE, JOHN
administration and to sell KIBBLE , LEWIS KIBBLE,
buill-In all electric kitchen
ersonal property of Clara Hess CARRIE KIBBLE , MINNIE
with
dishwasher, forced air
r.o apply on the funeral bill . DEVORE, LILLIE SCOTT ,
furnace. Phone Gallipolis 446·
You are hereby further SARAH E. SAMUELSON ,
4060, alter 5 p. m. 646-1279.
notified that this Application FRANK KIBBLE. MARTHA
2-lHtc
will be heard on the 15th day of KIBBLE , MAMIE SOVEL,
March, 1973, at 10:00 o'clock HORRACE
E. KIBBLE ,
2 BEDROOM trailer, close to
A.M . before this Court.
CLARA CHUTES, CHARLES
mine site on Rf. 315, by week
Manning D. Webster, KIBBLE , AND HERBERT
Probate Judge KIBBLE If living, whose exact
or month, utilities paid.
For
(I) 19, 16 (31 5, 3t.
Phone 742·5980.
addresses are unknown and
For Sale
whose last known 'addres~es are
2·15-61p
· r,""cLELAN~
Furnace Controls
FH . 1, R:eedsviiJe, Ohio, and If
OHIO COLLEGE
REALTY
decened then their unknown
Brown's Trailer
HUMIDIFIER'S TRAILER,
BASKETBALL SCORES
heirs , devlstes, legatees,
601E. Moln
Park; phone 992-3324.
Br. Unlltd Pross lnlornollonol
executors, administrators and ·
• Pomeroy
Hot
Water
Heaters'
.2-13-tfc
· or assigns will take notice that
Ill nola 79 Ohio State 68
Seven
room,
1'12
baths,
two
car
garage
on
nice
-----J . B. O'Brien flied his compla int
Toledo 67 Miami 63
Plum bin !I'
February
8,
1973
In
the
Common
ONE bedroom apartments,
lot. close to elementary school, and Veterans
Bowling Green 77 Kent State 67
11,0 Mechanic Street
IN .POMEROY
Electrical Work
Court of Meigs County,
ideal
for
cou
ples.
phone
992·
Ohio University 101 Western Pleas
IVlemorlal Hospital. on Wright Street. (Ed
Ohio. Cue No. 1523'2 alleging
Nice
apartment,
with
·1'9mft:f, Qllll 457D
5248 or 992-3436.
Michigan 80
that he is the owner of 5·-484
Ebersbach property). Priced to sell fast at
business. 10 sleeping rooms,
2·18·Stc
St. Josephs (Pa.) 78 Xavier 65 Interest In the following
$15,000.00. . 31/, baths, basement, utility
NEW LISTING
St. Johns (N. Y.l 98 Dayton 83 described real estate, and
.room,
storage room , porCincinnati
71
George praying that title to said real
MIDDLEPORT
2
2 BEDROOM mobile home ;
estate be quieted and for par ·
Washington 65
GEORGE
S.
HOBSTETTER
JR.
ches, garage, good Income
bedrooms.
balh,
gi!S circall
completely
furnished
;
of 1ald real tstate .
Akron 77 Kenfllcky Wesleyan tltlon
992-2441 after 5: 30 p.m.
property . Call for par·
culator heat. All utilities.
The
persons above named will
992-2448
73
REAL ESTATE BROKER
2-7·tfc
Near store and schools.
tlculars.
take notice that they hawe been
Ashland 20 Fredonia State fN . made parties defendant to said
Pomeroy,
Asking
only S5,500.00.
I
YEARS
OLD
•
BOX 101, POMEROY, OHIO
Y.) 14
complaint and that they are
30ACRES
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
Lot
100K120
(Ievell.
3
large
PHONE 985-4186
Youngstown
State
38 required to answer within 28
unfurnished
apartments
.
4
BEDROOMS
- Warm with
W.C..
lovely
bedrooms
days after April 2, 1973 or on or · I WILL NOT be responsible for . Phone 992·543~.
Steubenville 37
free
gas
heat.
All mlnerols.
May
1,
1973.
any
debts
contracted
by
any
kltclten
all
builtin,
dining
R
.•
before
Musklngum 86
Baldwin
4-12-ffc
10
acres
or
more
of .farm
Said real estate being situated
one ether than myself.
large living R.. utility R.•
Wallace 64
land.
About
$15,000.00.
In
I
he
Township
of
Olive,
County
Signed:
Daniel
Jeffers.
REAL
ESTATE
FOR
SALE
Capitol 61 Wooster 60
II replace, bath, carpeted,
and Stat~ ot Ohio .
2 18 31
RIVER FRONTAGE
Denison 81 Carnegie-Mellon of I.Meigs
basement. EKcellent neigh.
Boing In 160 acre lot 116&lt;,
· · P UNFURNISHED 3· room
Close to town. Enterprise; next to church, Route 33 : 4
NEARLY 600 FT. New 1972
apartment. adults only. No
( Pa.) 58
borhood. Storm doors &amp;
ICres &amp; 6 r&lt;NIM frame house, 4 bedrooms, 2 porches, storm
•·· rang• 11 of the Ohio HEALTHY. fat, cute' puppies pets, 408 Spring Ave .,
Fleetwood 3 bedroom mobile
Mount Union 74 Heidelberg 61 town
Company ' s Purchase. mor&amp;
windows.
$23,000.00.
doors
&amp;
windows,
fuel
oil
furnace,
1
out
building
&amp;
gorogo,
Pomeroy .
home. 12K6S. An 18 foot boat
Ohio Dominican 89 Kenyon 62 particularly described as the FREE; phone 992·6083.
electric by Ohio Power.- $15,800.00.
RUTLAND
2·11f.61p
S.W. quarter of lot 1164
1-7-tfc
with 120 H.P. motor, and
Wittenberg 75 Marietta 52
EKcellent business. Stock
Space for 2nd trailer.
trailer.
·Oberlin 66 Ohio Wesleyan 63 .beginning at the S.W. corner of
Rutland - 3 nice tots on good grovel road . (New Lima
lot 116&lt; ; thence north along said WANTED Private couple or
and equipment Included.
Otterbein 78 Urbana 77
ALL
MINERALS
Road) - snso.oo each.
lot line 80 rods; thence out 80 lady to keep and care for In Pets For Sale
Lovely apartment over. s
Northwood llnd.l 77 Centro! rods
117 ACRES - High land,
to a stake; thence south 80
rooms, 3 bedrooms, bath, ·
State 73 loll
rods to tho south line of lot 1164; my home ; phone 1143-2601.
New 3 bedroom all electric home wlfh lull basement, on
locust thicket, gas well. dug
·Pt\RKVIEW Kennels going oui
2-18-ltc
Hanover lind.) 81 Wilmington thence west 80 rods to the place
nice kitchen, H.W. floors. 2
wall, house, bern and several ·
large lot, locoted at Tuppers Plolns, Ohio near
of
business.
Big
price
Of beginning, containing 40 -:-:.,-- - - -- -75
outbuildings. Just $19,500.00.
glassed porches. Furnace.
playground. $19,800.00.
reduction on all dogs. All AK-·
COSMETICS AND WIGS FOR
Earlham (Ind.) 90 Bluffton 76 acres , more or less .
C. 592 Broad·way &amp; Ash
MODERN
JUST $17,900.00.
.
GEORGES.
HOBSTETTER
JR.
E•copllng
a
10acre
parcel
out
SALE
.
SPECIAL
MONTHLY.
Deflance82 Anderson llnd.l78
Streets,
Middleport,
Ohio.
·
7
ACRES
4 bedrooms. All
~STORY BRICK
of S.W. corner of said •o acre
"INDEPENDENT
DIS·
REAL ESTATE BROKER. Phont98S-4186
Findlay 83 Toylor (Ind.) 80
electric,
l'h
baths,
12·13·tf&lt;·
MIDDLEPORT
Srooms,
2
or
Hiram 77 Bethany (W. Va.) 62 lotlt is the intent to convey 30
TRIBUTORS,"
BROWN'S,
basement.
Near
Rt.
7.
bath,
dining
R.,
bedrooms,
Hilton Wolle-Solesman-Phone 949·3211
Malone 75 Cedarville 69
acres which was formerly
MIDDLEPORT.
PHONE
NEW HOME
new forced al r furnace. Lvel
992-5113.
Walsh 93 Penn State-Behrends owned by Sarah M. Klbblo .
RUTLAND
- 3 bedroom all
Auto
Sales
2. Also the following real
2-18-ttc ·
59
lot. Garage. Fenced for
•
Homes
~or
·
Sale
2NEW3bedroonitioines;twlih
electric
.
Full
basement •
1
estate
In
sections
4,
and
10,
town
-Wright State 81 Rose-Hulman
1963 FORD Falrlane 500, V-8, ~ Mobl
r'
. basement, 1 without; 2 car children. Storm doors &amp;
-' range 11, 100 acre lot 1159
garage
and
nice
lot . . O.ty
(lnd.l 60
door, runs good; price $250;
' garages 1ecre lots; located at windows. 58,500.00.
bounded on ttte north bv lend of lost
S20,500.00.
phone
992-737~.
.
1966
RICHARDSON
2
bedroom,
Rock
Springs
behind
Meigs
Charles or Lesto Blake, east by
6ROOMS
David Rood, south by Mathilda NORWEGIAN Elkhound, 16"·
2·16-tfc
10.50 mobile h'ome, eKcellent
Co. Fairground; will trade or
MIDDLEPORT
3
HELPI HELP! WE HAVE
Hetzer and west Jesper Reed,
18" tall ; gray, male; name - -- - -- - - condition; phone 992-6222.
help flnonce; also 5 good
bedrooms,
bath.
dining,
nice
containing
nine
acres;
PROPERTY RUNNING
OHIO COLLEGE
" Bruno"; reward offered; 1963 INTERNATIONAL t;, ton
2- 1~ ·6tp
building lots, water and kitchen, paneling, tiled, nice
3. Also 20 acres In Section 1,
OUT OUR EARS.
cell 992·6708 after 6 p.m. or
pickup;
very
good
condition
_
_
_
__
_
_
_
_..:.
disposal
Installed;
Charles
H.
. BASKEtBALL SCHEDULE
Town 4 , Range 11 Olive
· floors, utility R., gas F.A.
992·3371 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
HELEN L TEAFORD,
By Unlltd Press tnternotto""l
for model ; $350.00; Robert 1968 WINDSOR, 12x60. 2· Cornell, Athens, 593-7036 or
Township, Meigs County , Ohio
lteot, garage, nice level lot,
2·18-Jtc
ASSOCIATE
Monday
the S '12 01the S.E. '4 Olthe S.W.
Burton, Pomeroy, 992·2912. bedroom, with or without
593-5667.
cellar. $10,000.00.
Purdue at Ohio State
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
'I• of said section 11 containing
2·11·tfc
2·18-Jtp furniture; phone 992·3511.
20 acres .
Xavier at Miami
992-332S
- - - -- -- 2·11-tfc --:--- - - , -- -J . B. O'Brien, Business Opportunities
Central Mlchlgon at Kent State
WE
OFFER
YOU
8
YEARS
REMODELED
10
room
hoiJse
1965 CHEVROLET 1mpala, ~ 12 x 60, 1971 ACADEMY, 3
IIll
on 70 acres land; modern
Mount Union at Geheva (Pa.) Ill ll. 19,26 131 5, 12, 19,Plain
REAL
ESTATE
EX·
26.
HIGH
Volume
Service
Station
door, 283, V-8. powergllde, bedroom; flp.out, air, washer
kitchen, tile bath, oil furnace,
Malone at Ashland
PERIENCE
IN
MEIGS
CO.
runs
gOOd.
looks
good;
cheap
d
d
h
tor lease; paid training;
Tiffin at Wright State
.transportation, s250; phone an
ryer; P one 742·3280
soft water ; also barn.
3
SALESMEN
TO
ASSIST
IN
please call 61~ -992-5221 be.
Tuasday
85.3949.
after 6 p.m.
·
buildings and standing
9
THE
SALE
OF
YOUR
•
tween 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Marquette of Bowling Green
1
NOTICE OF
PROPERTY .
AD .
7tc
limber;
mile off
Rt . 33from
2-18·12tc - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2·_18-31p t======::;::':2·:l:.l-Wisconsin at Ohio University
APPOINTMENT
..
Darwin. 4Phone
992·6967.
11/ERTISING
11
Cleveland State at Creighton
C.ue No. 20836
2·16-6tc
Otterbein at Baldwin-Wallace Estate of 0 . H. Keefer AKA Orn '
~ like
.
~Air·
C;onditioner·s::
I
6
_
_
B
_
E_D.
ROM--h-om_e_._2_ba_t
.
h-s, gas
For
Sale
Homer
Keefer
Deceased
.
THROUGHOUT OHIO &amp; W.
Denison at Marietta
Help
Wanted
..
Notice Is hereby given that
Wooster at Hiram
·,Awnings
· · furnace , full basement, river· VA. WHY TAKE A
EARLY American stereo.radlo ,
Ralph
Keefer
of
RD,
Athens.
Central State at Lincoln (Mo.l Athens County, Ohio, has been FARMER ; ••perlenced and
CHANCE? LIST WITH · US
combination, AM-FM radio.~ :
• ::•tUnderpin.n_i_n.g..· ·
frontage, Syracuse, Ohio,
sober; weekly wages; free
Ohio Northern at Hillsdale duly appointed Administrator
TODAY.
Phone
992-2360.
.
speaker .sound system, ~ i .~ · .
"
~
.
(Mich .)
Insurance and other fringe
With the Will Annexed of lhe
1·25-lfc ·
speed automatic changer. ~omplete mqblle hQme.
Anderson llnd.l' at Wilmington Estate of 0 . H. Keefer AKA Orn
benefits ; modern house
HENRY E. CLELAND
Balonce $77 .59 . Use our
ervloe · ~ plus gigantic'
Bluffton at Manchester (Ind.) Homer Keeter, deceased, late of
furnished ; write American
' BROKER
budget
terms.
Call
992-7085.
:HousE
FOR
sillE,
116
Brick
Rt . 3, Albany, Meigs County, Culvert Co.. 201 · Wheeling
,of mobile homes
Cedarville at Grace (Ind.)
2-15-6tc .1 ~!splay,
992·22S9
;·"'Sit'ft.
Pomeroy,
Ohio;.
brick
Ohio.
·
always .avellable•ot ...
;
•
Walsh at Mercyhurst (Pa.)
Ave .. Cambridge, Ohio.
house,
3
bedrooms,
excellent
If
no
1111wer
Credllon
are
r'equlred
to
file
Wldnasdoy
l ·l3-6tc MODERN Walnut style stereo· '
claims with said fiduciary
location, close to school and
;U_
ILL
..
.
E
'R
..
·
992-2568 or f85·4209
Xavier vs. Cincinnati (Cin- their
within four months .
radio, AM-FM radio, 4
l!' .
city; contact Lou Osborne or
cinnati Gardens) ·
Dated this 31st day of Januery BABYSITTER
needed at
1 call 992·5898.
speaker
sound
system,
4
i
MOBILE
HOMES\
Kent State at Dayton
1973.
Washington, W. Va. Separate
speed automatic changer. '
·. · · ·
., ..
Manning 0 . Webster
Miami at Ncrth Carolina
housing provided. with all
Balance S69.57 . lise our [!
1220WishlngtanBivd.
Judge
Toledo ot Western Michigan
e.penses paid. Excellent
budget terms. Call 992-7085. ~J.7S21
BELPRE, 0.
Court of Common Pitas,
Akron at Western Illinois
2·1S-6tc ·
··
opportunity for good job and
Probate
Division
Clevelond Stole at South ' m s. 11, 19, 31
own place to live. Wrl e P. 0 .
Dakota
Box 71, Washington, W. Ve.
Youngstown Stole at Gannon
26181 .
!Po.l
2·18-61c
Grand Valley State (Mich.) at Help Wanted
Ashland .
John Carroll at Case Western
Malone at Steubenville
Defiance at Goshen (Ind.)
Findley at Earlham (Ind .)
Carnegie-Mellon · (Pa·. ) at
HI rom
Rio Gronde at Urbana
Thursday
Wilberforce at Wheeling
(Ohio Conference Tour""IJI"'I)
Southern Division at Denison
Northern Division at Wooster
Frldly
Htllldole (Mich.) af Walsh
Northern Kentucf&lt;y State at
Wright State
741-4211
Arnold Gr1ft
Ohio Confar\nce Tournoment

uANIE TlliNK5 THAT
WOULD BE A MI&amp;TAKE .
&amp;HE l'H INK5 HE'D
EVENTUALLY
!?£$£NT WORK·
lNG FORME.

OH, MYGO$H,
TilE J'OOR MAN •

2(r

WHAT C'\N WE 00

10 HELP HiM?

The
•Daily Sentinel

Notice

llUT '!HE DEPA~MEIIIT MIST'
SfA'/ IN COMPLIANCE W1111
ALL COURT .DECISIOI-JS.

IT SEEM6 Sil-L-'1,
6GT. 6t.OI'TER. ..

'

. .

.

;&gt;.. ,,

POMEROY
...,. Jack W. C.rsey, Mgr•
Phone 992-2111

·wANTED
CHIPWOOD .

Book Store, Gaul s Market,
Chester. Lodwick's Market,

•.

.,

9..

Wanted

live ISl years lrom dote It Is doomed . obl~~tlonal. . The·

Th'e Publisher reserve$ th.e
right to edit o~elect any ads;

..' '

slacks and jeans ..~ for ttie.
family. 10 Days Only.

2·16-l5tp

Markel Syracuse Bill &amp;
Lee's, -Pomeroy, ,Middleport

WHAT 'ARE
• 'IE DOIN'
IN THAT
THAR
APERN?

,.

S AV IT OUER ME,
·PARSON .. I'MTH'
ONE THAT'S GOT
· TO EAT IT

1 PAIR FREE·

5600.

burning during the night seuon Will beacflpted un.tll9o.m. l&lt;lr
lapproKimotely 4000 hours per
.
DRayGotU.PLuAbTillcOaNIIosn
.
annum) each and every night
E
during the term of the contract,
which shall be for a period of

BUY ONE PAIR
GET

WANTED, Beef Hides; will pay
$9 a piece; Pomeroy St..
Mason. W. Va.; phone nJ.

Dream Girl'' Is on sale at
Racine Dept. store, Sadie's

•

..

Hove YOI/I' . hem• butH by
' Custom Builders. Our.
:carpentors have 20 y11rsl
experle)lc• In building :
homes In Meigs County. . '

.SLAQ&lt;S SALE

.

®

;Busmess
.•
s·
.
.
.
· ervt~es ..~:
.

.:

SNUFFY!

.

'

WASHitJGION':;
HI f&lt;l 111!/\Y !.'

organs, dishes, clocks, brass
beds or complete househ olds.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt • '-4,
Pomeroy, Ohio.' Phone 9112·
6271.
1·7-tfc

·
· PEAOL'INES •
DUANE . Wolfe's
record
lighting unlh, said party shall ·,S·P.M. Dly Before Publication : "Broken Hearled" and "My

furnish sufficient electric ,
energy to ke~p said lamps

.

.

UH .. WOULD
'IOU FELLERS
LIKE I'ER ME
TOStiiTH'
!" C&lt;: ::'"' IW

~~~~~ ~
·- --~~~
. ~~------~~~

..

Wanted To .BUy

Notice

' . WAN:r A,..._

County, Ohio ; and upon going
Into service of said 15 street

.

~~~~~~~hon~-992~1.st

$199 '
t969 CHEV. BIS. 4 DR.
327 V•8 engine, automallc trans., power steering &amp; brakes, '
~ tires, goeen finish with matching Interior. Book
· 1ox38llSEtfiractor ilre; phone
•
e u.e $1150. . Early Bird Special.
949-3050.
'
2·16·3tp
$695
1967 FORD LTD
H.T. Sedan, v.8 en~lne, automatic trans .• P. steering &amp;
CATILE, top prices ; phone
brakes. radio, blue i~lsh , blk. vinyl top, good tires, radio.
. Gallipolis 646-3792.
Special!! I
2·16-12tp

sealed bids will be received

~5723,

Of
QUALITY

a.

b·y the Township Trustees of
Township,

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

'

IRONINGHo do In ~y home, For Sale
10c per Item ; you deliver and ·COAL. limestone. EKcerslor
~ckup; 15671h
Nye St.,
meroy, upstairs.
.
.•.
2-1J.61p
·
·
4-12-tfc

$tZ9S .
1961 NOVA 55 CPE.
. 350 En~lne, 6-speed trans., wide oval tires. wh. rings. red
finish, lk. bucket seats, console. radlo·lape. Sharp car
priced fo move.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

Orange

.

'

BARNEY .

WELL, FIRST TI-liNG$ ~I R5T!
I 'M GOING TO CALL THAT
YOUNG MAN AND INVITE

HIM lOBE:OUR GUESTFOR
A'$ LONG AS HES INCUNED
TO STAY !

Plimeroy

"H&amp;IL"

HfATIN'G &amp;

COOLING

I'll 511ow it to

Real Estate

Real Estate·

Sale

Real Estate

REAL ESTATE FOR SAtE

t

t W r4D,D Cl4 in t he builclinq
ha5 kelj,Ciovia 1 lt 'G the

lJOU~ Wc;~tch lJOur
head!~,_~.

\Store room~

. Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

ARNOLD .
BROTHERS
o.

... AN' I UK!' T' Bt: THERE WHEN

IIRR1VES!
WEll, TAKE CARE 0' lO&lt;IRSt:LF
1
~ ~,

·

:I

ACROSS
1. Golfs
11
Cham·

..

R.N.'s Needed In New
Geriatric Unit • STAT

ON YOUR ·DIAL

Yesterdar's Cl)'ploquote&gt; LOVE CURES PEOPLE - BOTH
THE ONES WHO GIVE IT A:ND THE ONES WHO RECEIVE.
lT.-DR. KARL MENNINGER

pagne

!II).VE TllEIR
RIGHT ON

Tllf ACTt0H II! IS
$1111! !$lAKING
IUC~, &amp;YOI!I7e~­

· ING AFIII!I1T OF

U .S.A.F.I'IQCTf~

111)0 Til! M!A.

CAPI'AlN E'ASY

I CALLEDT~E POLICE AND
GAVE T~EM TillS PI-lONE
NUMBER, T~EV COULD
TRACE THE

17"~------:r

..

least~

(2wds. )
Engltsh
,T,.,.,,1 .~..~~iW~:~J.~~
novelist
:
13. Years ~go
(3 wds.)
15. Traffic
sign
16. Irritate
17. Note the
rate of
18. Gold (Sp. l
!i. Inexpen-·
slve
U.In the
middle of
14. Place for
the big
boss(Zwds. )
U. Dude
"-1...:1~
territory
27. Shade of
gray
Merino's

·Unocramble these I'Gur Jumbleo,
one leUer to eaeh aquore, lo
form four ordinary worde.

equip-

ment
18. Exclude
19. Far
East
'staple
zo. Poem

21. Bird's

crop
22. Sock
23. From a
distance
U. Proles·
slonal
charge
25. Sheep's

woolen

coat
29. Besmirch
30. Actress,
Barbara

tonlinen!
33. French·
· Belgian
river

34.Janltor
ial
Item
35. Exasperate
36. Loud
noise
37. Allow

t
II I
FRJVED

'\I

I

Now orranp tho cll'l!led lettero

to form lhellll'llrioe 1111wer, u

._I-=Pril=..===•=•==•=•.;;.___l ( I I I 1 l

(Aoowen Mowdo1l
Ynlerd.)'tl

J....I.,, LINIR AOILI IIATIN MUSJIR
\ A.alwen

•
S.weiLI&amp;a ••irlen at mealtime-GILATIN

DID 'IOVHAVE
A GOODTIME
SKIING ?

-

how to

work

it:

AXYDLBAAXI.
LONGFIILLOW

It
One letter simply stonds for onother. In lhlo ssmple A Is ·
used for lhe three, L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnale letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are aU
hints. Eocb day the code lettero are dltrerent.
'
·CRYPTOQUOTES

-BXIR

(]

I I

~==~===~~,A~~~~~·u:r~r:••::;UdbJih•~•e~L

'
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's

ZRBX

~...
0 \ -1

31. Uncover
3Z.A

gone
a-wooing
French
river
Laurel
tree
Boor·
geoisle
(2 wds.l
Bay
window
Unearthly
-ante
Sunder
DOWN
1. Statutes
Z. Famlllor
Latin ab·
brevlatlon
(2 wds.l

NMH

=

A1VCOP

sense! '

8. Chemical
suftlx
9. Count·
down
number
11. Reata
U . Equa·
nlmlty
n.camper's

1978 KinR' Future• Syndicate, Inc.)

JllYWID~"'-~=!!: ..J

4. Priestly
vestment
5. Arkansas
sharecropper
6. Whimper
7.Non·

5. Circum·
ference
_._,._......,::_:::;__;;;_..!:!JJ 10. In the
JUST REMEM8ERED-

(0

3. Actress,
Virginia

Tony"

.We talk to you
a-persorL · ,

WMP0/13901

~.~ .. ~Y
by THOMAS JOSEPH

.

i

MA.,.Be 11 WASrt'T sucH A BRIQHT ICEA

T' HOOF IT HOME} 'SAND'(~ OOPS!
MAYBE THIS GUV' Ll GWE US A LIFT 011

tii S BIKE! ll 'S S URE BIG ENOUGH
~OR TI1REE!

'le

.

Al"' I'Ll BE COMI!i' BACK 1' VtSIT
'r'OU Art' MRS . SCRIBBLE !

W!ARY HOORS LAT£R ...

HE

F~XE

R.CH

OHFOXH

NMFWH

TMRWH

QMF

QMF

KHUHC

KHUHC

NCE.

I ONLL( BROKE
~OUR

LE6S..

-

-· -- ---

·-

"'

RJ~VNAIEL&lt;( TH E~ wiRE
ALL ON OTHER f'EOP&lt;..E!

�...•

..

8- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-~omeroy, 0., Feb. 19. 1973

DR. LJ!WRENCE E. LAMB

John Mitchell died Saturdar:

They Molc:e ·Up Proteins

Boggess, Mrs. Diane Thornton,
all in West Virginia , and Mrs.
Noel Herrmann, Middleport;
two brothers, Frank of
Columbus, and James in Indiana; 25 grandchildren, and II
grea t.granctch ildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 2p.m. Tuesaay at the Martin
Funeral Home in Rutland with
the Rev . Uoyd Grimm of·
ficiating. Burial will be in By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Beech Grove Cemetery.
Dear Dr. Lamb-For over
Friends may call at the funeral a year I have been a vege·
tarian. I'm v ery careful
home any time.
about choosing the foods I
eat and I feel fine, ·however,
I read in your column that
there are e i g ht amino
15.
acids that the body cannot
Mrs. Irma Yoho brought manufacture itself and that
several stuffed animals to the one should vary his source
of proteins to obtain these.
meeting which she is making This
leads me to ask whether
for the Crippled Children's animal protein is the only ·
Hospital and Burns Institute so source of the eight amino
that other members could acids the human body canmake some or havtl- some not make itself and in what
particular foods are these
made.
amino acids to be found .
Refreshments were served to
Dear Reader- Proteins are
the abOve and Mrs. Cora made
up of amino acids.
Beegle, Mrs. Gertrude Mit- There are about 25 of these
chell, Mrs. Emma Clatworthy, and 10 of them are consid·
erect essential for growth
and Mrs. Mary Hughes.
which must be supplied by
the diet. Adequate amounts
of eight of these are suffiTuesday at 7 p.m. Children cient for adults after their
wishing to join must be in the growth period.
Proteins are complete or
second through the sixth
incomplete
on the basis of
grade, and must attend some
whether they contain all of
church (not. necessarily the
the necessary amino acids
Rutland Nazarene). New or not. Incomplete proteins
members may con tact Rev. contain only part of the esLloyd Grimm, pastor.
sential amino acids. If a person
eats a variety of foods
The Caravan is similar to the
with
incomplete proteins, as
Boy and Girl Scout movement.
long as they complement
each other to provide the
total amount of necessary
amino acids. the diet will be
all right.
Only a few food groups
IN HOSPITAL
have
complete proteins conClifford J enkinson was
taining
all the necessary
removed to Veterans Memorial amino acids.
The main ones
Hospital by the Pomeroy E-R are corn, · eggs, Jean meat,
squad at 8:59 p.m. Saturday milk, soybeans, wheat and
after becoming ill at his Second cheese, although cheese is
St. residence. Visiting him low in cystine. If you really
meant foods that were not
S\Ulday were his son-in,law and animal products this would
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Roberi make the list pretty small,
Russell of Crooksville. .!lis specifically corn, soybeans
granddau ghter, Mrs . Bette and wheat. If you just meant
Grant of Crooksville is eliminating meat products,
yo u co uld add to this list
remaining with Mr, Jenkinson cheese, milk and eggs . Of
a few days. His room number is course, corn and wheat have
120.
limited amounts of protein
even though what protein
they contain is a complete
protein . You'd need to eat
an awful lot of wheat and

RUTLAND - John Henry
Mitchell, 73, Salem St., a retired eleclrician, died Saturday·:
at the_Holzer Medical Cen.ter.
Surviving are his . wife ,
Loshia; two daughters, Mrs.
Arlene Taylor, Helper, Utah,
and Mrs. Shirley Hyman, •
Rutland ; six sons, Kenton, of
Gallipolis; Delbert, Langsville; Vernon, Cheshire, and
Pat, Merlin and Darrell, all of
-· Rutland; five sisters, Mrs.
Eddie Ramson, Mrs. Orner
Coleman,
Mrs.
Gerald

Amino Acids
Help Balance Diet

Shrinettes met at Ewing home
The Twin City Shrinettes met
at the home of Mrs. Beulah
Ewing Thursday evening when
she gave the club a photo
album already started on the
club's activities since its
organization in 1967.
A Valentine box was made by
Shirley Beegle and a Valentine
exchange was enjoyed by all.
The Philanthropy report for
the fiscal year 1972-1973 was
requested by Mrs. Jean Moore
to be returned to her by March

Caravan party held at church
RUTLAND

The

"Caravan" sponsored by the

Rutland Church of the
Nazarene conducted a wiener
roast last Tuesday night on the
church parking Jot. Games also
were played. Twenty children
and seven guides were present.
Guides . were Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Kennedy, Rev. and Mrs.
Lloyd Grimm, Esther Black,
Wanda Vining and Robert
Hawkins.
The Caravan meets every

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight&amp; Tuesday
February 19 &amp; 20
BUCK AND THE
PREACHER
(Technlco)or)
Poltler.
Harry
Sidney
Belafonte,
Ruby
Dee.
Cameron M llchell, Denny
Miller, Nita Talbol, John
Kelly .
Colore• rloons:
A Good Deed
Winter Wonders

Show Starts at 7 p.m.

CORRECTION
The Wrong Illustration
on Electric Tape
Was Used In

HECK 5
1

SUNDAY AD
•

Feather
your own
nestfirst
posit in n wide-awake bank
saving!-! accoun t. Becn usc the
wide-awake bank has a fiscu\
fitness plan yo u cun count on.
So, in t he future, you ean
really en joy yourself whrn h
you take a Rye r.

"To see or not' to see,

'lite 1uide-orvnke

that is the question]
( Hi• 5hadow, lhat is)"

Sll/llllgJ OCCOIIIII

mnkes ttt!1.so ensJ..l
The Groundhog reminds us

that we have a chore to do

Farmers Bank &amp;

with spring just around the

Co.

POMEROY, OHIO .
,
Membe ~ot Federal ReserVe System
On Fr.tdays. Our Dnve-ln Window is Open 9 a,m. to i'p.m.

( Conhnuously).

.•'

·

S20,000 Ma xtmum Insurance for Each

·

Depositor

lhat our .house Is In good
shape.
See
your
"FRIENDLY ONES" at
the Pomeroy Cement Block
Company for the supplies
you'll need. Don't walt till
the last minute ...

POMEROY CEMEN'
BlOCK CO
I

•

N.Y. 10019. Fer cr ropy of Dr. l.omb'J
bookfrt on balr.nctd diet, send 50

;;;~:.s:~.:~:/·;:~.~db~;;.~~·d ••k

distrust" generated during the
turbulent Democratic convention of 1968.
Strauss' remarks came ln an
adc!ress to Kansas Democrats
gathered for the annual Washington Day Dinner Saturday,
an affair designed as a morale
· booster for a minority party
which has produced a fourterm governor, Robert B.
Docking.
"We let such hate and
suspicion build in Chicago in·
1968 and endure through the
campaign to deny a great
American the presidency. Our
nation and the entire world was
the loser-not Hubert Humphrey," Strauss said.
"Instead of learning so that
we might better our nation, we
continued and compounded our
attitudes. November, 1972, was
the result.
"I rel!laln committed to the
proposition that we have
permitted a few strident voices
to make us lose our values,
disturb our judgment and
approach those with whom we
differ In ,,a mood of sUBpicion
and dislrust," he said.
15 HOSPITALIZED
HOOANSVILLE, Ga . (UPI)
- Police and theater officials
were trying to determine the
cause of a carbon monoxide
leak in the Royal Theater that
ho,:;pitalized at least 15 persons.
A spokesman at a hospital In
nearby LaGrange said none of
the victims was seriously hurt.
He said the movie projector in
the theater uses carbon and
possibly malfunctioned ,
releasing carbon monoxide.

corner, and that Is to see

~

, ,•

.

,

FELToN, Calif. · (UPI) The latest In a string of mur·
ders, four youths found shot to
death in a tiny thatched cabln
of the secluded Garden of
Eden, had just wanted to Jive
"away from It all," the brother
of one victim said Sunday.
The youths· were killed by a
small-caliber weapon investigators said. Tbe slayings
brought to 13 the number of
known murders ln Santa Cruz
County since Jan. 9.
An autopsy was planned
today.
Sheriff's deputies cordoned
off the dirt trail leading to the
small but sturdy cabin built
under'tbe shadows of an oak
grove ln the rugged Santa Cruz

Mountains and said a mwtve
"leaf by ieaf" foot search of the
area ·Would continue today, .
Murder Capital of the World
"We mUBt be the murder
capital of the world now," said
Peter ~hang, Santa Cruz
COunty lllstrict attorney. .
Jeffrey .D. Card, 22, dlscovered tbe body of his brother,
Brian, 20, and · the three
unidentified victims Saturday
afternoon when he visited their
shelter tllddeni,n the damp gl~n
of Henry COwell Redwood State
CURIOUS TRASH
SPOKANE, Wash. (UP!) _
.,..
uash collectors have picked
· of curious objects
up a vanety
·
smce new security measures
went into effect at Spokane
. International Airport. Knives, ·
chisels, pistols and even a
motorcycle Chal·n wrapped a t
one end with tape have turned
up in trash and cigarette
receptacles.

Park.
.
. Santa Cruz countyf Shed. ~
The youths were apparently Douglas James re use ·
~tting doWn for macaroni comment on whether Mullin ·
meal when they were shot. ·was a suspect ln the latest.
Jeffrey told Investigaton a .22 slaylnp.
caliber rifle was millslng from
"There appears to have beeP .
the cabin.
some kind af scuffle," Under·
''That's how they wanted to . llherlffLeJandDavil said. ~'But
Jive, away frOm it all," said It was impOS8ible at ·flrlt
Jeffrey, of Boulder Creek, who glance to estimate how long
built the shelter last summer. theyhad·beendead. One victim
. A spokesman tor the Santa had mold on .bls hand."
·
Cruz COunty CO!'oner's office
Mullln was charged last
said X-rays :revealed the ThursdaY with the execut10Jio
wounds were made by a style slayings of five PII'IOI!I at
weapon simUar to the one that two remote cabins Jan ... ~ and
killed Fred rerez, 72, whUe he Jan. 25, and with the shooting
was gardening last week,
of Perez, a fishennan.
Arrested for gunning down
The butchered bodies of
Perez and klUing ·five , olhwere found in
~·
was Herbert W
. • Mullin, 25,
ountalns In recent
hav
described by authorities as an weeks
several others
e
outstanding student whose per- disappeared.
sonality changed when he
Police were also In·
of
turned to drugs. ~en Mullin vestlgatlng the discovery
was arrested last ru-•_
•u, a two headless women found ing
40
~
.22caliberriflewasfoundin bls miles away as poeslbly be
car which investigators said two coeds who disappeared ln
killed Perez.
Santa Cruz Feb. 5.

a

3eds

':-.,.· . .

·. iii'id~: ;la;~j=i~"';h:P:hl

'By CHARLENE HOEFLICH ·
: Winnie-the-Pooh
· ·has
.
delighted audiences for years
b,ut probably never more than
Monday night when.Middleport
kindergarten child~en gave
their -version of Pooh and his.

.

For mbst of the five and six- their·apparent uncertainties as
playmates.
year
olda il was a '.' first"~ the to what was to happen next,
The playlets on Pooh were
presented by t1]e youngsters at first Unle on stage, the first delighted the appreciative
·
the. Middleport PTA meetinl[ time to recite li11es, the· first · audience.
Costuming
for
the
presen·
'
under the caP~~ble direction of time in costume.
tati9n was simpie but effective.
Their
ad
fibs,
their
antics,
their teacher, Miss Mary
their baffling expressions, · (Continued on page .5)
Francis.

Assemblymen lose expense account amendment
·COLUMBUS (UP I) - The members supported the t~ouse·
Seiu.ie Judiciary Committee JIBSSed propilsal which was to
tOday defeated a proposed . have appeared on the May 8
constitutional amendment primarY ballot. Four members
which would have authOrized of the committee opposed the
limit expense allowances for expense provisions. They were
members of the Ohio General Sens. Robert 'J, Corts, R·
Assembly.
Elyria; Paul R. Malia, R·
Only
two
committee We s t I a k e ; Rober t

O'Shaughnessy, D-Columbus;
Gene Slagle, D-Galion. ·

MOmER DIES
Mrs. Vernece A. Turley,
mother of Armond TUrley ·and
Lillian Turley Moore of Mid·
. dleport, died Feb. 5 in Pinole,
Calif., of cancer. Mrs. Turley is
survived by Armond and Mrs.'
Ferman E. (LU)ian) Moore of
Middleport; Mrs. Frank (~
' Loris) Osgood, South Lake
Tahoe, Calif.; seven grand·
children, and 12 great grandchildren, all in California
and Texas.

News • . • in Briefs
(Continued trom Page I )
Botulinum Type B toxin. None of the 534 other cans in the lot still
ln the warehouse showed botulinum-contamination, the FDA
said, but the remainder of tbe lot, 3,9:i4 cans, was being recalled.
Ten other lots packed at the same time were also belng recalled.
NEW YORK - FRANK COSTELLO, an inunigrant who
.!lacarne known as ''prime minister of the underworld" and
survived attempts to assassinate and deport him, died Sunday In
a hospital bed. He was 82. A spokesman for Doctors Hospital
where Costello died refused to reveal tbe cause of death.
However, Costello had been suffering from throat cancer for
several years. He entered the hospital!O days ago.
In 1951, Costello's hands on nationwide television kept
viewers rooted before the screen while the mobster, in his raspy
voice, testified before the Senate investigations (Kefauver)
subcommittee. The stocky, nattily dressed Costello refused to
have his face televised. So the camera focused on his mobile,
manicured hands. Costello avoided most questions and claimed
to have no knowledge of organized crime. He admitted he had
been a bootlegger and bookmaker, but said he had reformed.

leave Indonesia, It ostensibly highlands of remote Ballem
was for conducting research on Valley. '
In January, a newspaper on
West Irian tribes without
the
West Irian island published
goverrunent pennission.
But some officials said that a photo showing Mrs. Sargent
what angered and em- clad In safari gear, hand-Inbarrassed Jakljrla was Mrs. hand with her new husband,
Sargent's IIUIITiage to ·Chief who stoQd naked except for a
Obahorok, the leader of one of kind of G-61rlng.
the island's · most remote
lribes.
SALES REPORT
Indonesian authorities last
Oblo Valley Livestock Co.
month said they had spent "a
GaJUpoliB, Ohio
small fortune" tryin~ to
civilize New Guinea lribes, but
Saturday, Feb. 17, 1973 ,
thaI their efforts were hamHOOS - 175 to 220 lbs: 34.50
pered by the lribal wedding of to 35.75; 220 to 250 lbs: 35.50 to
Mrs. Sarjlent. ·
36.30; Light 28 to 32; Fat Sows
In a recent Interview ln 28 to 32.25; Stags 24.75 Down;
Jakarta, Mrs. Sargent said she Bars 24.50 to 29.25; Pigs 15 to
married the chief In order to · 27.50; Shoats by head, 20 to
prevent bloodshed among 32.50.
CATTLE - Steers 36.50 to
three hostile jungle tribes.
"I married Obahorok to 41.50; Heifers 35.50 to 42.25;
bring the three savage, Baby Beef 45 to57.50; Fat COws
warring tribes to Jive together 23 to 32.50; Canners 21 to 35.25;
ln peace and hannony," she Bulls 28.50 to 35.50; Milk Cows
said then. "It was a traditional 285 to 500.
(tribal) marriage." Sbe said
VEAL CALVES - Tops.
ber dowry included pigs, an 65.35; Seconds 60 . to 63.50;
axe, knife and a spade.
Medium 54 to 60; Com. &amp; Hvs.
"The chief was overwhel- 55 ·to 64.50; Culls 55 Down.
· Baby Cillvea 30 to 85.
med," she recalled.
Mrs. Sargent, who spent
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
nearly fl~ months In the New
Cattle: Good_ to Choice
Guinean jungle, told the Inter· Steers, 42.10 to 43.50; Good
viewer that ber wrists were cut Steers, 39.70 to 41.60.
and her blood rubbed together
Heifers: Good 41 to 42.40;
with that of two other chiefs Standard 35.75 to 40.
and that later .the "blood
COws: Commercial 33.50 to
sister" ceremony was followed 35; Utility 28.50 to 30.50;
by the marriage.
Canners and CUtters 23.85 to
The primitive island Is the 26.50.
one on which Michael Rock·
Bulls: Commercial 32.50 to
efeller, 23,son of the New York 35.
governor, disappeared ln 1959
Stock Cattle: Stock Calves
and was reportedly slain by a Steers 47 to 55.25; Stock Calves
cannibal tribe.
.Heifers 41 to 45.50; Yearling
Mrs. Sargent, a divorcee and Feeders 40 to 47.50.
mother of a 17-year-old son,
Veal Calves: Choice 65; Good
Jinuny, left for New Guinea 45.50 to 54.50.
last Oct. 1 and In a series of
Hogs : 200-230, 36; No. 1,
letters advised her family that 36.25; 2:10-240, 35.75; Sows, 29.50
she had penetrated the central to 33.35; Boars, 27.60.

Market Report

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Special Sale!

SERTA

QUILT TOP MAnRESSES

upgra~e a variety

of legislative

procedures." '

The amendment called for
While turning down the
"reasonable
and necessary"
expense accounts,
the
Judiciary Committee gave expense allowances for the
unanimous approval to ano\her legislators during the time they
constitutional amendment spend on busjness in Columbus.
designed to modernize 'and

~ow You Know

"POOH GETS I.OS'r• was the playlet ~nted by the
morning class of the Middleport kindergarten at Monday
night's PTA meeting, Taking roles of flowers in tbe forest

•

' Approximately three
'Quarters of the American
population Jive on 1.5 per cent
of the land.

a1 y

Chief's ex-wife won't talk

onto Democrats
TOPEKA, Kan. (UP!) - The
Democratic party must
broaden its scope and allow a
wider range of viewpoints to
exist within it, if it is to survive,
according to party chairman
Robert S. Slrauss.
He said he believed "that our
conservatives are no bigots,
that our liberals are not fools,
that our business community is
not evil, that our minorities are
not selfish and that our
Democratic party Is not
leaderless or without purpose.
Strauss also said George
McGovern's defeat last
November was caused by "a
mood of suspicion and

Four hermitlike yoL
u ths slain .

BILL INTRODUCED
WASHING TON (UP!)
Legislation that would put the
United States on year-round
Daylight Savings Time has
been introduced by Rep .
Stewart B. McKinney, R-Conn.
McKinney said Sunday he
believed the change to
used as a major source of Daylight Savings Time would
food the individuals are
healthy but in those coun- reduce street crime, cut . the
tries where corn alone .is number of auto accidents and
used nutritional problems reduce energy consumption at
LOS ANGELES (UP!) often develop.
peak times by 5 pet.
Mrs. Wyn Sargent, an AmeriA very strict vegetarian
can
writer expelled last week
who wanted to avoid all anifrom Indonesia, arrived
lnal products could eat ceSunday night and led a pack of
real, specifically wheat, a
NOW YOU KNOW
100 newsmen down the
considerable amount of mature bean seeds and corn. If Before lighthouses were corridors of International
mature soybeans are avail- built, sailors used the smoke
Airport without saying a word
able, they would be an excel- and fire from Mediterrean
to
about
her short and unhappy
lent source of protein. If a volcanoes as guides
marriage to a New Guinea
person •m e reI y wanted to navigation .
chief.
avoid eat i n g meats, they
could use corn, wheat, milk,
The 46-year~Jd amateur exbeans, eggs and cheese . To
plorer, who said earlier she
limit the amount of fat in·
49'ers, LIONS SET
planned to spend one year in
take, fortified skim milk and
CLEVELAND
(UP!)
the
Indonesian island jungle
uncreamed cottage c he e s e
Cleveland Browns' owner Art researching a book on sexual
can be used.
Because lean meats are an Modell announced today that customs of primitive tribes,
excellent source of complete his team will host San Fran- declined comment bu: said she
proteins, they are usually cisco and Delroit in two single would hold a news conference
recommended for the diet. night exhibition games here soon.
However, the protein and
Mrs. Sargent, distinctively
amino acid requirements can this summer . Both games,
be met on a meat-free diet. against the 49ers on Aug. 6 and clad in desert pants and an
against the Lions on Sept. I, Australian bush bat trimmed
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
will start at 8 p. m. EDT, and ln flowers, was met by her
replace the annual football family and friends and quickly
Send your quesfions to o,. Lomb,
doubleheader and football · drove to ber home ln Hunin care of this n~wspaper, P.O. Bu .
variety show that had been tington Beach, Calif.
1551, Radio Cit'! Station, New York,
When she was ordered to
scheduled in years past.

Tolerance urged

Get hardboi led about your
n es t('g-g, Avoid di st ra ctions
s uch as s urc~ fl re, nion ey-m nking schemes :~nd on('e-in-aliretime opportunities.
Out of every week's pay, thC'
first thin g to do is mak e n de-

..

corn containing a tremendous number of calories to
meet your protein , requirements in this manner .
Some sources of incom·
plete protein, w hi c h are
nevertheless important in
planning a diet, are gelatin
(an animal product) and
mature bean seeds, like
navy beans . Beans are an
excellent source of protein
and will contain a larger
quantity of protein t h. an
either wheat or corn,
for example . The combination of beans and corn in
adequate quantities in the
diet will meet . the protein
requirements that a person
needs, without using any
animal products . This is the
basis for the observation
that in those countries where
beans and corn are both

'

matt~ess~s ~re very comfortable - look better and have durable, attract.Jve ttck1ng covers.
· ·

Sale •38.00

Matching $59.00 Box Springs· full or twin size ............................Sale $38.00
"l

.

'

.

Stop in the Furniture Depi!rlm(i!nt on the 3rd floor and save now on quality serta
Mattresses and Box Springs.
·
·

Use our own sensible credit service.

•

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
,.

'

Wines and Usa Ashley.

Weather

•

enttne

·Tonight partly cloudy central
· and south; cooler tonight .
Turning stiil cooler W~d­
nesday, chance or snow
flurries. High Wednesday
lower 40s.

Devoled To 1'1w Jntere~ts OfThe, Meig.~·Mason Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, DHIO

VOL XXIV NO. 216

PHONE 992-2156

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1973

TEN CENTS

•
eace . teams out ID war . zones
~-·f.

NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY - Eleven students were
tapped for membership In Southern's National Honor Society
Monday afternoon . Front row, 1-r, Barbara Fisber, Charles
,. Manuel, Denise Cross; Mary Walker and Dennis Hawk, new
members ; second row, Becky Kouns, Bob Sayre, David

Theiss, Verne Ord, Roma Nease, and Jill Houdashelt, new
members; hack row, Patsy Sayre, Lorna Bell, vice
president, Debbie Nelson, President, Larry Wilcoxen,
·Barbara Nease, secretary ~nd Judi Roberts, reporter. James
Ray Lawrence is the advisor .

Brieisf Laos peace

~~!!lm&gt;WS:~WW·»'·'I/.'' »"_."i$.~~~ ···~~v.s.:».:&gt;::~"W-,~

ews·:·:~i·ri

By Qnlted Press Inleruatlooal

TOKYO -PRESIDENTIAL ADVISER Henry A. Kissinger
left for home today after an Asian tour that took him to Hanoi and
Peking for prolonged talks on the post-Vietnam war era and the
United States' role ln it. OfflcW sources said Kissinger would
,report in detail to President Nllon shortly after his arrival on his
meeting with Chinese and North VIetnamese leaders, including a
discUBSion with. Mao Tse-tung ln Peking. ·. ,
Kissinger's special plane~ Tokyo airport at I :30a.m. EST.
He arrived Monday from Peking on the last stop of his trip, to
lrlef Prime Minister Kakuel T!lllllka on bls earlier talks with
Asian Jea~rs and to discuss such Issues as the world monetary
crisis. Kissinger also saw former Prime Minister Eisak~ Sato for
what a U.S. Embassy spokesman described as an Informal talk.

in distance
.

The development appeared
VIENTIANE (tml-An end
to tbe fighting ln Laos ap- 'to leave no end to the fighting
peared as far away as ever in Laos, with no concrete
today with the government results reported in private
formally rejecting the latest negotiations that have been
Communist Pathet Lao under way since Jan. 31 and
regulary weekly sessions that
proposal for a cease-fiFe.
High government sources began last October.
said the COmmunlat plan for a
In the meantime, ·u.S. war·
temporary cease-fire, to he planes continued their born·
unaccompanied by written bing strikes in support of proWRIGIIT·PATTERSON AFB, OHIO- AIR base officials terms, was rejected in a government forces.
were preparing to welcome two more freed American prisoners special cabinet session called
Pathel Lao spokesman Soth
of war who left the Philippines enroute to the United States by Prime Minister Souvanna Petrasy disclosed the new
today. Alr Force Capt. Edward J. Mechenbier, 30, of Dayton, Phouma. The sources said the Communist cease-fire proposal
Ohio, and Alr Force Maj. Donald L. Heiliger of Madison, Wis., government rejection was early today but gave no details
were expected to be put oil an airplane for Wright-Patterson conveyed to Pathet Lao specW of its contents.
ShorUy after arriving at Travis AFB, CaW., at 7p.m. EST.
negotiator Phowni Vongvichlt
Government sources said
Mechen bier, whose wife Claudia, lives with his parents in following the cabinet meeting. that following today's ~abinet
Dayton, Ohio, was captured June 14, 1967, when his F4 Phantom
Souvanna had earlier said an meeting, Interior Minister
jet flgjlter-bomber was shot down over North_Vietnam. He was unwritten.· cease-fire without Pbeng Phongsavan mel with
feleased Sunday and completed his medical exaR)S and . provisions for withdrawal of Pboumi and told him of the
processing In about 44 hours.
·
foreign troops was unaccepta- goverJ1111ent's rejection. The
ble. The latest Commwlist sources said Pheng told the
· YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO - A NEWBORN.baby girl, with the lruce proposal was contained Communist official the
umbilical cord still attached was found in a toilet buwl ab9ard a ln a message he received government required a written
. United Airlines Boeing. 737 at Youngstown Municipal Airport
Monday
fro'll
Prince ceas~tre and that its ~lion
Monday nigh\. Tbe full-term black baby was taken to Warren Souphanouvong, Souvanna's was that any agreement
General Hospital where she was reported ln "satisfactory haU-brother and nominal head covering a ceaseflre should he
condition."
of the Pathet Lao.
permanent, not temporary.'
Mrs. Marilyn King, night supervisor at the hoepltal, stild the
Infant was not weighed, but appeared to be "In the vicinity of five
to six pounds." The adrplarle, Flight 699, had originated at
: wu~lngton D.C. National Airport at 7:10p.m. (EST), went to
; Piltsburgh, Pa., and then to \ioungstown, arriving here at 9:02
.
.
· p.m. EST.
DEARBORN, Mich. (UP!)- Alley.
PHILADELPHIA
STRIKING TEACHERS said they A meeting between two feuding
She said that 'she sent a
would walk picket lines today ani! risk further arre&amp;ts as a antibusing organizations Monspecial delivery letter Jan. 31
' walkout In tbe city's public s.chools dragged through the seventh . day night erupted Into a namedeclaring Mrs. Coleman's NAG
· week with no end in sight1 aose to 400 pickets marching lp C!IIIIng, hair1JUllli1g melee.
group "null and void" because
: support of tbe Philadelphia Federation of Teachers (PFT) we~e
The ftght was between op. sbe got repeated complaints
. arrested Monday for defying a common plea~ court Injunction. posing factions ollhe National
.from antibusing mothers ln
, ·· Ball of t300 was set for those who were residents fl the c.ity, Action Groull (NAG )-One
Dearborn that Mrs. Coleman
while a bond of t500 was ~ for nQIIJ'esldents. Picketa who had faction Jed by Irene McCabe of
was not properly,-representing
· been arrested previDU8lY were ordered to JlOIII ball of ,1,000. The 'Pontiac anti the Olher by
the antibusing movement.
· strike has effeeted about 280,000 students.
Jlarbara Colenian of Dearborn.
When Mrs. Coleman stood up
Mrs. McCabe, generally ac- to defend herself, a man, Joe
. WASHINGTON - THE DEMOCRATIC LEADERSHIP of knowledged as .the founder of
Crawford of Wyandotte, called
the Senate hasiPllt over tile confirmation of L. Patrick Gray III
the antiboalng movement In
Coleman
forces
u dire'clor of the FBI. Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield Detroit's suburbs, was jeered the
"beatbens." A defender of
of MCIIJiana said Monday that be Ia likely to support Gray, but
by COleman forces when she Mrs . Coleman, Linda Van
[)ernciCnllc whip R9bert C. Byrd of West Virginia charged In a
took the podium at· a meeting Steeings, of Redford, jumped
(C wn Td • ...e lZI
room In lbe Satellite Bowling up and said, "It's JieiLI!I" Li~&lt;~n

SAIGON (UP!) - Peace·
keeping teams moved into
combat zones for the first time
today as the fighting In Vietnam dipped to its lowest level
in 10 days. But the Saigon
command reported heavy
casualties in a 16-hour-long
battle in the Mekong Delta.
The command reported 134
alleged Communist truce
violations in the 24 hours ending at 6 a.m., 60 fewer than
Monday and the lowest since
120 were reported Feb. 8.
The heaviest fighting broke
out near Hong Ngu on tbe Plaln
of Reeds ln tbe Mekong Delta,
90 miles west of Saigon. The
command reported 64 COmmunists and two South Viet.nam~se killed and 17 govern·ment InfantrYmen and· tank
crewmen wounded in the IIi·
hour battle that ended· at
midday Monday.
On the cease.fire front, two
truce-policing teams went into
combat zones for the first time
since the lruce came Into force
Jan. 28 in Vietnam.
The International Commission of Control and
Supervision (ICCS) sent teams

Mr. Beegle
is dead
Theodore Beegle, 71, Meigs
County Engineer, died Monday
ni ght at the Holzer Medical
Center. The son of the late
Daniel and Anna Wolfe Beegle,
he had served as the county's
engineer the past six years.
, Surviving are his wife ,
Lbretta · Meier
Beegle,
Pomeroy; two daughters, Mrs.
Shirley Huston, Syracuse, and
Mrs. Rita Fisher , Hebron; a
son , Theodore M. Beegle ,
Worthington; a brother,
Lawrence, of Racine ; a sister,
Mrs. Esther Price, Portland ;
seven grandchildren, and a
number of nieces and nephews.
Rosary services will be beld
at 7:30p.m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home. Services
will be at 10:30 a.m. Thursday
at the 'Sacred Heart Church
with the Rev. Father Bernard
Krajcovic officiating. Bu~ial
will be in Sacred Heart
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home any time
after 7 this evening.

to An Loc, so· miles north of
Saigon, to investigate the
shooting down last Friday of an
unarmed U.S. Chinook
helicopter assigned to tbe Jolnt
· Military COmmission (JMC).
The helicopter was hit three
miles south of the surrounded
provincial capital and U.S.
officials blamed the VietCong.
The commission sent teams
to Sa Huynh on the South China
$fa, 295 miles north of Saigon,
where there were reports a
Communist post-truce of·
fensive had all but cut South
Vietnam in haU.

Military sources said the
V(et Cong possibly is trying to
establish Sa Huynh as one of its
legal ports of entry lnto South
VIetnam.
It was first ICCS field ln·
vestigation of a truce violation.
Delegates from Oilnada, In·
donesia, Poland and Hungary
lried two weeks ago to in·
vestigate a · complaint of a
tiuce violation at Quang Tri,
but were driven back by shell
fire.
The conunission is charged
with investigating prisoner of
war camps alii) with providing
transportation, food and other

supplies for the ICCS.
More than 4,000 truce violations have been reported by the
South Vietnamese since the
cease-fire officially began at· 8
a.m. Jan. 28. It reporta 8,548
persons dead, 6,210 wounded
and 1,614 prisoners, missing or
abducted since that date.
A South Vielrl!lmese spokes·
man also said in a delayed
report Monday that the Viet
Cong abducted 479 civilians
last Wednesday in the hamlet
of Plel Long, 21 .iniles southwest of Pleilru In tbe Central
Highlands, and burned down
all their homes.

New Station ~ m.ay

replace Shamrock
The Standard Oil Company is
building a service station at the
present site of the Shamrock
Motel situated at the entrance
of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
on Pomeroy's West Main St.,
according to a Jetter lrom the
company to Pomeroy Council
President Don Collins which he
read at the regular council
meeting Wednesday night. ·
No other details of the
proposal were made available.
Collins said 13 bids on the
new Pomeroy fire station were
opened Monday at noon but all
were considerably higher than
the expected cost. Tbe bids
have been turned over to the
architects lor study. Council
_approved the final reading of
an ordinance requiring a $25
deposit for the erection of
pos ters and political advertisement in Pomeroy.
If all signs are removed

within 10 days of the event a meal. The turnkey cost of $2
advertised all deposits will be would remain the same.
Elma
Russell,
counrefunded .
1cilwoman,
asked
who
was
The second reading of an
ordinance to vacate Fifth St. responsible for repair to
from Butternut to Mechanic sidewalks in the village. It was
Streets 'for the erection of the noted that repair o{ sidewalks
new fire station was approved . is the responsibility of property
owners.
Discussed by council was the
The mayor's report for
sidewalks that are In front of January showing receipts of
lhe Jones Boys Store on $1,597.62 was approved. A
Pomeroy's West Main St. It letter was read from the Meigs
was noted that the sidewalks County Council on Aging
had been taken as part of the asking four percent of
parking area.
Pomeroy 's share of the
Chief of Police Jed Webster revenue sharing fund, it was
said questions on that matter recalled that funds to be
should be taken to Atty. Ber· received from revenue sharing
nard Ful12,.
already have been allocated.
Council was notified by the
Attending were Collins, Mrs.
Meigs County commissioners Russell, William Snouffer,
that due to the rising food Ralph Werry, and Lucien
costs, cost of meals for Poulin, council members; Jane
prisoners would be increased Walton , clerk, and Chief
from 50 cents a meal to 75 cents Webster.

.

'

Donors give 95 pints blood
Ninety-five pints of blood
were received from 125 persons
offering themselves Monday at
the Bloodmobile visit to
Pomeroy elementary school, 1
to 6 p.m. Of the 95, 57 pints
were. given in replacement.
There were 32 first-time
donors, with Dorothy Douglas
and
Phyllis
Edwar~s

Mcoming gallon donors .
Edward Fisher became a six
gallo11 donor.
Nurses were Charles
Vaughan, LPN ; Mary Al'mes,
LPN; Naomi London, LPN;
Frances Brewington.
Doctors were- Aaron Boonsue, M.D.; L. D. Te11e, M.D.;
Thomas McGowan, D.O.;
Raymond Boice, M.D.
The can teen was served by
Grace Weber
, the Sunday SChool Class of
Chester Methodist Church,
¥
on county board
Mrs. Grace Gwnpf, chairman.
Loading and unloading were
Grace Weber was appointed
being a liar and a cheat like her to the Meigs County Board of boys
from
Pomeroy
(Mrs. Mccabe )."
Retardation to replace Helen Elementary School, Blil
At that point, Crawford's
Williams for a four year term
wife Ann made a beeline for
by tl)e county commissioners :::::::::~~!!!!!&amp;6'!~:!:~:;:.::.~--m~~::::::::
Mrs. Van Steelngs but was
today. Meeting with ' the
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
waylaid by two men and Olivia
. commissioners· in regard to the
Very cold ~hursday
Shaltis of Redford Township,
.appointment was Jeannette through Saturday with
who· pushed Mrs. Crawford
. Thomas, director of the Meigs cl!ance of snow flurries
against the wall and ripped off
County Retardation Program. Thursday mainly northeast.
her wig. Mrs. McCabe left the
In other business the com- Daytime blgbs mid 288 to
room about the same time.
missioners accepted a plat of lower 30s Thursday In the 20s
The meeting of about 100 Hick ory Acres located in Friday and ' Saturday.
persons then broke into a Or ange T11p . in Tuppers O.vernlgbtlow tee~ to lower
shOuting match between the Plains. Attending were Charles 20s early Thunclay and 5 to
two factions, with both sides R. Karr ,' Robert Clark and IS Friday night aid Saturday
rallying forces and stomping Warden Ours, commissioners, night.
and Martha Chambers I clerk
• =cddbdtLC:UJJdbbbblJb
• · ;;;;;;
'
•
ULL
out.

Antihusers ·into battle

A regular 559.00 Mattress- twin o~ full bed ~izes. These quilt .top Serta

ac:ene wJiere W'llllle-llle-P played were, left to ri8lrt. Jody
Miller, CarOl Simons, MeUssa Wise, Peggy Cremeans, Qlella

Nease's Boy Scouts.
Clerical work was dpne by
Mary Nease, Jean Nease, Jean
'Sayre, Juanita Sayre, Lula
Hampton, Eloise White,
Dorothy Smith, Mary Lou
Beegle, Clara Mcintyre,
Beulah Strauss , Louise
Thompson,- Vernon Nease,
Grace Fisher, Helen Pickens,
Phyllis Edwards, Edith Sisson,
Becky Anderson and Karen
Clark.
· Donations were by Quality
Print Shop, Meigs Local
School, Dally Sentinel, Athens
Messenger, WMPO Radio,
Ewing
Funeral
Home,
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Krogers and Gaul's Store.
(Continued on Page 5)

SUIT FILED
A- suit for money ' lias been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by the State of
Ohio versus Larry J. Queens,
dba Aliside Builders, for
$4,115.39. The action was
brought by tbe state under and
by virtue of the Workmen's
Compenlatlon Law.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="735">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11135">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="54556">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="54555">
              <text>February 19, 1973</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="74">
      <name>mitchell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2149">
      <name>turley</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
