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'.

8 _Tile Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 26, 1973

Veteraas Memorial Hospllal
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Raymond Hartley, .Cindy
Kindy, Rosa Greene, Pauline
Bowland, James Jones, Marie
Roy, Timothy Kerns, John
Sauvage and lA!ther Caldwell .
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Connie Manley, Deborah
Pickens and Elmer Norvell .

Exodus 20: 16

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
FBI tapped the phones of new
White House aides in an attempt to trace possible leaks to
the press, Time magazine
reported Sunday . Time said
"four different sources in the
government" reported the
CLUB TO MEET
wiretapping, which began
The Wildwood Garden Club three years ago over the obwill meet at 7:30 p.m. Wed- jections of FBI Director J.
nesday at the home of Mrs. Edgar Hoover. The taps were
Vernon Nease with Mrs.
Dwight Milhoan assisting.

Passenger

(Continued from Page l)
Hospital, treated ana released.
Damages to the Cornell car
Tonight&amp; Tuesday
were light and to the Johnson
Feb. 26 &amp; 27
vehicle medium.
Police also reported that a
PLAY IT AS IT IS
car driven by Calvin Imboden,
ITechnicolor)
Tuesday Weld, Anthony Jr., 27, Minersville, was
Perkins, Tammy Gnmes,
heavily damaged Saturday
Adam Roarke.
when Imboden swerved to
I Rl
Colorcartoons.
avoid hitting an animal on East
Show startsat7 p.m.
Main St. and struck a utility
.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . pole. Imboden was not' injured.

MEIGS THEATRE

but who really cares?
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:=:~::::::::::~:!:::~:::!:!:~:::~:~:::~:::::

WJtil his death. Time said
Deputy Attorney General
Richard Kleindienst tried to
force Hoover to step down. But
Hoover was enraged and indicated if called to testify on
Capitol Hillhe might disclose
the wiretaps, the magazine
said.
'fhe magazine said the
wiretaps continued with the
permission of Acting FBI
Director L. Patrick Gray III
WJtil the Supreme Court ruled
that a court order was
necessary for wiretapping .
Time said Mitchell lied about
the eavesdropping, calling it

ordered 6ecause ''the White
House was concerned by a
series of leaks," th~ magazine
quoted one of its sources as
saying.
Time said Hoover balked at
the White House orders and
demanded authorization from
U. S. Attorney General John
Mitchell. Mitchell did so and
the operation began ·with only
one tap, but was expanded to
include surveillance of six or
seven reporters plus an undisclosed number of White
House aides, Time said.
Time said the wiretapping
helped Hoover keep his job

Bloodless
(Continued from Page I)
them frequently at informal
sessions.

He scoffed at the idea of a
strain in relations between
himself and President Nixon,
especjally when the Vietnam
peace was delayed for 10 weeks
WJtil the end of January.

In this complicated world, it's
tough enough to cope with today,
much leas think about tomorrow.
So one wide-awake part of our
business is future-watching for
our customers. And another,part
ia providing them with new and
improved services to meet the
demands of the time.
Bank wide-awake and we'll look
out for you. The same way we're
looking out for niany others.

The wide-ow(lke bonk
makes it!!!!Jo eti-Q'...

Farmersra;nk &amp; Savi

Co.

POMEROY I OHIO
Member of Federal Reserve System

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m

I Conllnuou&gt;IY I.

SjO,OOO MIXimum Insurance for Each Depositor

Need

Cummings

Cows: Commercial,, 34'.75 to

37.75; Utility 30.10 to 33.50;
Canner~ and Cutters, 27.10 to
29.

w ith

color.)

IF IT IS FINE
UPHOLSTERED
FURNITURE
YOU ARE LOOKING FOR

.•- . .....
,-' .

•,

. :

. ..
1 ~ -

'

You are invited to come, look, create
beautiful rooms! With the fines~ fu.rniture for beauty, comfort, and styling 1n
this area. Flexsteel .and other fine
makes.

AT SPECIAL SAVINGS
EASY
TERMS

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

.

ents, Levi . Jackson and
ra Gibbs Rousht;h • son •
Richard; three bro ers, on 0
step.son, a step-daughter, and
his first wife, VIrgie Love
Roush.
Mr R~ush, a retired carnter was a member ot tne
Pa'ul Lutheran Church In
lancaster. and Masonic lodge
57 F&amp;AM Lancaster .
He is s~rvlved by his wife,
Golda . Deweese MournMing
Roush; two daughters, rs.
Genevieve Hamilfon. and Mrs.
Richard {Ruby) Wolfinger,

Temple Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
after 3 p. m. Tuesday .

Ple.8sant;
seven
grand children, and .four great-

FREE
DELIVERY

following an · extended

Illness at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Ernard.
Mr.

Taylor was born

at

Jacksonville, the son of the late
Thomas and Snowden Taylor.

He was also preceded in death

his wife. Alura, In 1912. and
two sisters. Nellie and Polly.
by

He was a farmer and an

r.'

part of his llfe. He was a

Jackson County, W. Va., the

Surviving are a son, Charles
Taylor. Torch ; two stepsons,

Eunice Beulah, in 1957: two
sisters, and three brothers .

Jerlc.

step. son,

Rollin Hawk, Pomeroy, and
A farmer In the Coolville
Otis Eu9ene Hawk, Gal lpqlls; · area the greater part of his life,
a stepdaughter, Nrs. Zelda Mr . Morris . is survived by a
two

Richard

Carter ,

brothers. Ernest and John, of Toledo; a step-daughter,
Guysville Route 1; a sister, Kathleen Maple, Ravenswood,
Miss Gertrude Taylor, of w. Va.; lhree brothers, Allen,
Jacksonville; a grandson, In St. Petersburg, .Fia.; Edwl~,

FRANKLIN KNOX

Brian, of Torch, and several

Columbus.

at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the

grandchildren, and several

nieces and nephews.
Funeral services wil l be held

and

Buell,

tn

California; a sister, Mrs. Nellie
Fosnaugh, Sylvania; six step-

Alfred United Methodist nieces and nephews.
Church with the Rev. Jacob
Funeral services will be held
Lehman officiating. Burial will at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the White
be in the Coolville cemetery. Funeral Home at Callville wllh
Friends may call at the White the Rev . Roy Deeter of.

A Vinton County native,
Knox lives with his wife, the
former Phyllis Saunders, and a Funeral Home at anytime. The
son, Ricky. The appoiniment body will lie in state at the
one hour p~ior to the
was announced by Raphaer church
service.
Horwitz, state personnel
director.
Knox succeeds Mose Canterbury who resigned Jan. 5.

ficlating . Burial will

Torch

September.

•·

PresldenCNixon submitted to the
Congress at the time of his 1972 State of the
, Union message a supplement in writing
d\lScribing In details many of the proposals
mentioned during the ac!IJal speech. The
following quote is from that supplement
relating to the President's views on
emergency medical 5ervice:
"Last year, more than 115,000
Americans lost their lives i~ accidents.
Four hundred thousand more were permanent disabled and 10 million were
temporarily disabled. The loss to our
economy from accidents last year is
estimated at over $28 billion. These are sad
and staggering figures, especially since
this toll could be greatly reduced by
upgrading our emergency medical ser.vices. Such improvement does not even

require new scientific breakthroughs; only
that we apply our present knowledge more
effectively.
"To help in this Offort,lt ·am directing
the Department of Health, ,.:ducation and
Welfare to develop new ways of organizing
emergency medical services and of
providing care. to accident victims. By
improving communication, transportation, and the training of emergency
personnel, we can save many thousands of
lives which would otherwise be lost to
accidents and sudden illnesses."

emergency room. Yet for decades, the
general public and the medical profession
",have passively accepted ambulances
sufficient only for transporting the injured
on a litter; with little or no eqilip111ent for
emergency care, r.nanned by inadequately
trained drivers or attendants."
Why ·is the caliber of ambulance
service generally so low, when
statistically each of us may need it twice in
his lifetime and all of us daily face the
possibility of "death in a ditch?"
In 'an emergency the critical moment
may occur long before a patient reaches
IT IS CERTAIN that ·many thousands the hospital; at the accideni scene where
of Americans die or are disabled every emergency workers first find him.
year for lack of proper care at the scene of Mistakes are costly. An unsplinted !raean accident or enroute to a hospital. The ture can. become compounded, producing
Ambulance Associatioq Of America has permanent crippling . An unsecured
estimated that 25,000 persons are per- broken neck can produce permanent
manently injured or disabled every year . paralysis. An unstaunched woWJd can
by untrained ambulance attendants and bleed out a patient's life. An WJconscious
rescue workers. Adds a report of the patient, without an airway, can choke to
National Research Council: "More than death on his tongue. Extrication or rescue
one-thirdoftheaccidentfatalities In the U. if a vital consideration but too often
S. occur at the scene, in the ambulance, or bystanders rush in to get the victims out of
within minutes ·after arrival In the a wreck as soon as possible, which can

be in

Baptist Cemetery.

Friends may call at the funeral
home any time.

lead to further injury.
Extrication from crashed vehicles and
on-\he-spot care may be as critical to the
victim's well being as definitive repair in
·the hospital operating room, but
bystanders and even res1:4e workers are
seldom adequately trained . Most times,
WJiess there 's danger of fire or explosion,
there need be no hurry about extricating
accident victims. With trained ambulance
attendants, the first consideration is to
sustain life.
Extensive training and quality
victim care are vital aspects of the
SEOj&lt;:MS project. Today the counties of
Athens, Hocking, VInton, Meigs, Gallia,
Jackson and Lawrence are provided
with ambulance service by 33 funeral
homes, nine volunteer or community
squads and two municipal squads.
Since the funeral directors who
provide 80 pet. of all emergency transportation in southeast Ohio have stated in
an Ohio Department of Health survey that
they wish to discontinue that service, the
situation is critical. Even where there are

Now You Know

VOL
XXIV-- NO. 221
-

Devoted To Tire Interests OfTh~i,Meig.,·Mason Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MEJCis WREBI'LING SQUAD- .Maanen of Meigs High
llcbool had their best &amp;eaiiOII this year, 4-5, since the wrestling
e.u. were arpnized. Coach of the squad is John Bentley.
are, front row, 1-r, Gary O'Dell, Ed Sisson,
Butch Roush, Rick Gilmore, Tony Manley, Rick McFarland

n.m_.,

f1 ~ews .. in

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1973

By United Pre•• lnternallonal
,.
WASHINGTON - NEW GOVERNMENT figures due for
publication Wednesday probably will show retail beef prices in
January leaped to a new all-time record average of over $1.20 a
pound, it was learned today.
The jump in the monthly average of all cuts of choice grade
beef, complied by the Agriculture Department, was
foreshadowed by publication last week of the Labor Depart, ment's monthly consumer price statistics for January showing a
5 pet. hike for beef. Tbe Agriculture Department figure is expected to be higher, since it measures beef prices all through the
month while the Labor Department figures are gathered In the
first week of the month.

..
Stop in the music department on the 2nd floor- See the many RCA
25 inch diagonal measure TV sets on sale .now. All with famous
XL100 ;solld state chassis · Instant picture - instant sound • good
selection of styles.

.

' - - - - - - - · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . .

PHONE 992-2156

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Middleport Village Council
meeting in regular session
Monday
night
voted
unanimously to advertise for
bids on a second hand street
sweeper.
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
explained in the discussion that
Solicitor Bernard Fultz had
checked with state officials on a proposal that
Middleport rent a certain
used sweeper for $1,000
a month for six months and
then purchase it for an additional $500.
According lo Fultz, the
village is required to advertise

and Bob Musser; second row, Ken Moore, Jeff Warner, Mlck
Ash, Roger Hysell, Mlke_Haley and John Lehew; back row,
Terry Pickens, AI McLaughlin, Steve Brickles, Jim McClure,
Joe Rosenbaum, Roger Pearch and Bill Slack. Absent were
Doug Rosenbaum, Jeff Musser, Steve Pickens, Harold Sisson
and Charley Neece.

Briefsl· Welcome

WASHINGTON - AN OFF1CIAL'S statement that Lt.
William L. Calley Jr. was still drawing a federal salary of $10,600
per year despite . his conviction for mass murder has been .
retracted by the Army. Army officials said Monday that Calley
was still receiving a first Ueutenant's pay, making him in effect a
·
salaried federal prisoner.
But an Army spek~n said later Monday this information
was in error. He said Calley stopped receiving his pay the day his
sentence in th,e massacre case was signed, Aug. 18,' 1971, five
months. after his conviction for murdering at least 22' South
Vietnamese ciyillans in the 1968 Incident.

'

Considerable cloudiness and
continued cool today. High in
the 30s . Partly cloudy tonight,
low in the 20s. Wednesday
increasing cloudiness and
warmer high in upper 30s tc
mid 40s.

enttne

SAlOON -FIGHTING PERSISTED in South Vietnam, Laos
and Cambodia today one month after. the VIetnam cease-lire and
nearly one week after agreement to halt hostilities in Laos. The
United States ordered more raids In Cambodia and threatened to
resume bombing targets in Laos unless CommWJists there
adhere to the truce.
In a Hanoi Radio broadcast, the Viet Cong accused South
Vietnam of more than 12,000 cease-fire violations during the first
27 days of the truce.
The Saigon command reported another no Communtst truce
violations during the 24-hour period ending at dawn today,
raising the overall total since the Jan. 28 truce to more than 5,000.

PROMPT DEUVERY, SENSlBLE CREDIT, DEPENDABLE
-VICE
.

Weather

TEN- -·· CENTS• "1

used sweeper equipment

Special Sale
Stereos and Color TV Sets

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
-

understand that people are being maimed
for life or dying needlessly because of the
following conditions:
Poorly trained personnel.
Lack of proper ambulance equipment.
Insufficient numbers of attendants.
Multiple handlings; careening rides;
insufficient alert, response and communications capability.
And inadequately staffed and underequipped hospital emergency rooms.
So it goes across the nation!
THE GREAT majority of funeral
directors have conscientiously provided
the best possible service, although handicapped by costs. For lack of standards
and requirements, instances of poor
ambulance service management and
practices have been reported . Dne
example of the latter · occurred recently
when one ambulance driver, arriving at
the scene of a highway accident, loaded
two dead persons into his vehicle, leaving
several grievously injured victims to fend
(Continued on Page 5)

•

m:'&lt;l'&lt;'::r.::~::::::::r.::r.:&gt;~:::::::::::::x-,&gt;.:::::~~:~::&lt;i:l:::::&lt;:::::::::::;&lt;,:,:&gt;::&gt;~:::::::::.~&gt;.:;:::&gt;,

Stop in right away and select the stereo or color TV you want and
really save during this sJ)ecial sale.
.

It cannot tax our imagination then, to

Middleport to purchase

TOLAN SIGNS
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Bobby Tolan, the Natioruil
League's "comeback player of
the year" in 1972, signed his
1973 contract with the Cincinnati Reds Monday.
Tolan, who missed the entire
1971 season with an Achilles
tendon Injury, hit .283 with
el~ht homers and 82 runs
batted in for the NL champion
Reds last season. He also stole
42 bases.
Among those Reds still
WJsigned are Pete Rose, Joe
Morgan, Tony Perez and Clay
Carroll.
Players are due to report
Wednesday for spring training
at Tam~, Fla, with workouts
schedwell tO begin Thursday.

And the RCA Stereos on sale have AM-FM and FM Stereo radios and
buill-in 8 track tape player.
·
.
.
·

township or volunteer services, these are
presenUy effective in part because of the
existence of the funeral homes' service.
To explain : volunteer 'squads now,
within their confines, pick up a victim and
deliver him to the nearby hospital in the
same·coWJ!y. If the nature of the victim's
condition is beyond the capability of that
hospital's medical staff expertise for
treatment, or if a doctor is not available,
the victim is routed to another hospital in
another county or, in some instances, the
closest out-of-state medical center.
FEW VOLUNTEER units make these
rWJs, and so deliver the ~ictim to the
closest fWJeral director for transfer or
destination.
The same applies to the two municipal
squads, which only operate within the
corporate limits of Athens and Ironton
(Ironton transports no victims, only
reports to the scene and treats victims,
leaving transportation to mortuary
vehicles). The lapsed time, multiple
handlings and inadequate care en route is
detrimental to a victim's condition, to say
the least.

z

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

phrey, D-Minn., say they will
introduce measures that would
allow Congress to assert more
muscle over federal expenditures.
The Javits' bill, to be Introduced today,
would
authorize the Department
of
Health,
Education
and Welfare to spend
an estimated $3 · billion
more than the White House
requested for this fiscal year.
The bill .would be aimed at
locking any cutbacks on impounding of authorized funds
by Nixon.
Humphrey's
legislation
would limit presidential
authority to withhold SllE!nding
of funds appropriated by
Congress.
"For too long, the Congress
has been content to accept the
President's definition of what
the nation's priorities should
be," Hwnphrey said in a
statement Sunday. "It should
do so no longer."
Aside from the new
legislation, the Senate was to
finish work on a series of
continuing resolutions to fund a
number of federal programs
through the current fiscal year
at levels· higher than Nixon
wants them.
DIRECTOR NAMED .
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Harold D. Mahan, director of
the Center for Cultural and
Natural History In Michigan,
has been named director of the
Museum of Natural History
here. Mshan, ·n, succeeds
William E. Scheele, who
tesigned last summer to
become executive director of
the U. S. World Widelife Fund
in Washington, D. C.
Jl!ltY RESUMES WORK
AKRON,Ohio (UP!) - After
a week recess, the jury
deliberating !be murder trial of
Larry Via, 28, was to resume
its deliberations today. Jane
McGuire, 19, Washington, Pa.,
an Ohio University student,
was murdered near Cuyahoga
Falls while eilroute to visit a
•isler in West Virginia in

Ed. Note: This is the second In a series
of four articles glvJnc an lnodepth look al
, the emergency medlcalaervlce that will
place,soutbeast Ohio ahead of'lts tlme iJI
the emergency health field, Initial
operation wW be occurring In some
counties In March ol1973).

Hospital l~

Selby General

member of the Alfred United son of the late Mordlca and
Methodist Church and was a Harriett Lewis Morris. He was
World War I veteran.
preceded In death by his wife,

Brecksville;

Need cited for better emergency medical care

In ancient times missing
natural teeth were often
replaced by human and animal
teeth or wooden substitutes.

grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
SPECIAL PRAYERS
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at
CLEVELAND
(UP!)
Smith Funeral Home, Lan·
caster, with the Rev. Theodore Roman Catholic · Bishop
Partridge officiating. Burial Clarence G. Issenmann of
will be In Maple Grove
Cemetery, Lancaster. Friends Cleveland warned his 880,000
may call this evening from 7 to par\shioners Sunday not to
9 at Rawlings Coats Funeral take part in abortions, despite
Home and at Smith Funeral
Home Tuesday from 2 to 4 and their legality, or risk ex7 to 9 p.m.
coinmunlcatlon, and he or1110rns'
dered special prayers against
lUI
abortions to be included In
Floyd Morris, 92, Coolville, masses here.
Route 2, died Saturday at the

employe of the Preston Oil Co. Marietta, following a long
In the Dutch Ridge area · of illness.
Athens County for the greater
Mr. Morris was born In

Javits, Humphrey
challenge Nixon
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Nixon was expected
to be chalienged again this
week by an angry Congress
over federal spending levels
and the power of the purse.
Sens. Jacob K. Javits, RN.Y., and Hubert H. Hum-

.. -

brother. George; a sister, Mrs.
Carrie wefbb, and another
sister In 1nancy .
. Mr. Cummings was a lard·
mer, teacher and retire
employe of the Rardin Lumber
Co. In Athens. He was a
member and Elder of the
Latter Day Saints Church at
The Plains. .
. :
He Is survtved by h1s wtfe,
Ardis; one daughter, Mrs.
Marie Brown• CRe ynolbdsburgd;
two sons. Cia 1r. o1um us, ~n
Floyd, address unknown; none
grandchildren, two great-

nlng

paneling selections? Come

mouldings to match in
almost every style and

Walton C. Roush, 821
Madison Ave .. Lancaster, died
suddenly
at
Veteran\
Memorial Hospital Sunday

evening. He was born June 14,
death by his parents, VIncent • 1894 at Pt. Pleasant. Mr. Roush
and Florence Cummings ; on~as preceded In death by his

Herman
Taylor.
77,
Guysvil le, died Sunday mor·

your

to the Panel Headquarters
of
the
POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK CO.. the
home of the " FRIENDLY
ONES "
!Trim .and

Roush

Cummings was preceded m

Taylor

state bureau

'

help

I Area

Good, 41.75 to 42.80; Holstein,
36 to 41.60.
Heifers: Choice 42 to 44.60;
.
Good, 39.50 to 41.50; Stsndard
David I Bind) Cummings. 84,
Athens, died early this mor·
3H5 to 38.85;
ning atO'Bieness Hospital . Mf-

Knox managing

during that period of a strained
relationship
with
the
PrPsident. he said, "You have
.1J&gt; remember that this town
(Washington) is obsessed with
power and that it lives on
Franklin 0. Knox, 34, of 24
reading little significancies or Grape St., Gallipolis, has been
major significancies into little appointed manager of the
acts."
Bureau of Employment Services serving Gallia and Meigs
Counties, effective Feb. 18.
Knox was transferred from
the Employment Services
Division to the Gallipolis Office
as an Employment Security
Specialist IV .
The local bureau office is
headquarters for both Gallla
and Meigs counties with offices
located at 443 Second Ave. in
Gallipolis and in the City Hall
in Pomeroy.
Except for a brief period,
Knox has been employed with
the bureau since January, 1961,
when he joined the Gallipolis
Employment Service staff. In
1965, he accepted a position
with the Central office as field
representative. Gallia County
M&lt;. Fdt,o dl!l was one of the 44 counties he
served during that empl,nty of
spoce avolloble r people
ployment. He also worked out
wha let •ucceu OCt to tkelr
ol the Jackson DES
htod•,"
Headquarters for 18 months
prior to his present appointment.
1

SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Steers: Choice, 44.50 to 46;

Bulls: CommerciaI 36 to 41.
Stockers and Feeders: Steer
Calves 42 to 60; Heifer Calves
42 to 60; Heifer Calves 30.50 to
44; Yearlings 41 to 47.
Veal Calves: Choice 62.50 to
54; Good 60.50.
Hogs: 200-230, 38.50; No. J,
"a pipe dream." Kleindienst, 38.75; 230-240, 38.25.
according to the magazine,
grandc:hlld~en. and two sisters, and one son, Walton E. Roush,
said he "never heard of
Mrs.
EIIZabethHarveY. , allot Lancaster; these stepbugging
reporters'
Columbus. and Mrs. Ethel children, James Mourning,
telephones." And Time quotes
CLUB TO MEET
Radekln, McAdhur.
Columbus; Carl Mourning,
Funeral serv1ces will be held Elyria; Mrs. William (Mary)
a White House spokesman as The Friendly Neighbors Club
Wednesday at 2 p. m. at the Price Bloomington, Ind., and
saying: "No one 8t the White will meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday Blgony Funeral Home with the Mrs. 'william {Nona) Nelson,
House asked for or ordered any at the home of Mrs. Eleanor Rev . James Cummings of· Pomeroy· one brother, Ray
· ficlatlng, assisted by Stan Roush pf Pleasant; a sister,
such taps."
Werry.
Mengel. Burial will be In Mrs 'Bia.nche Yeager, Pt.

HI was never conscious

U~'ve got an eye on yourfoture

---------•
Death~ I

r----------~-----

Market Report

Pleasant VaHey H01pl1ai .
DISCHARGES - Donita .
McCartney, Mrs. Ray Hoffman :
and daughter, Mrs. Rickey .
Higgins and daughter, Thomas .
Williams, Betty Berry, Conrad .
Berkley, Donovan Thornton,
Bonnie Uttle, all of Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Frank Young
Jr., New Haven; James
DeWeese, Delbert Rollins,
Mrs. David Sayre and
daughter, aU of Leon; Usa
HoUey, Ashton; Mrs. Earl
Starkey and son, Gallipolla;
Mrs. Ja~k Riley, Letart;
George Wainsley, Mrs. Roy
Bush, both of Henderson; Mrs.
Herbert Harrington,
Gallipolis; Mrs. John likens, ·
Gallipolla Ferry.
Births: February 25th - A
son to Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Price; Middleport; a son to Mr.
and Mrs. Dennis Fitch, Vinton.
February 28th- Ason to Mr.
and Mrs. Samuel Ferrell, Point
Pleasant; a daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. William Oldaker, Jr.,
Letart; a daughter to Mr. and
Mrs. James Allen Bush, Jr.,
Liberty.

•

•'

.•
·,

COLUMBUS -FORMER GOV. JAMES A. RHODES, still
seeking to set his credentials in order to make. another run for
governor, already has begun counter-pWJchlng at his likely foe Gov. John J: Gllllgan, Tile Gilligan administration put out a
"wanted" memo almost a year a~~- ~'\' any poor, loose or
scandalous practices of the Rhodes a~tration, and came up
virtually empty-banded.
Now Rhodes is putting that word out of his real estate
developmenl office between tri~ to Flori.da and Michigan.
"They haven't got a thing on us," Rhodes told United Press Inlernation~ Monday. "And ii they got anything," he added
Jlllrenthetically, ")hey'll save it for the campaign."
COLUMBUS - HOUSE SPEAKER A. G. Limcione, 0Bellaire, plans to press for a study of the poljSibillty of expanding ·
the propillled Vietnam veterans' bonuses ~nd financing th":"l
with general stale revenues, including state )ottery proceeds.
Lancione said he favors bonuses· "subatantially greater" .
than the maximum $500 approved by the House and Senate this
month,' as well , as eiJIIInded opportunities in jobs, housing,
(Continued on Page 10)

Mrs. Paul Anton, Athens, of
Welcome Wagon International
and Mrs. Carl Will, "hostess"
of Meigs County, were guest
speakers Monday at noon
following lunch of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce at the
Meigs Inn.
A sound film was shown
explaining how welcome
wagon serves a community.
WWI came into being during
the days of the great

for bids on any purchase of
$1,500 or more regardless of the
length of time involved in the
purchase. Council approved
the ordinance to advertise for
the used sweeper as an
emergency measure .
Robert Fisher and Raymond
(Pete ) Kloes, representing the
Middleport Fire Department,
discussed the alleged failure of
the contractor on the new fire
department"bulldlng to complete his work. Fisher said that
the contract called for the
company, the X-L Corporation,
to finish his job by Nov. 5 and
that the firemen had given the
company until Nov. 25.

Wagon Rolls

depression of the 30s. At
present, there are 8,000
"welcome wagon hostesses"
who serve all over the world
including all 50 states. Main
headquarters in Memphis,
Tenn . Welcome wagon is
"International in scope and
local in service," said Mrs.
Anton.
·
•
It was noted that 12 million
families move each year. The
duties of welcome wagon

Dismantling
.

said illegal
WASHINGTON (UP!) -President Nixon's dismantlement
of much of the apparatus of the federal anti-poverty program is
being challenged in a series of lawsuits which claim he is acting
illegally.
, The suits were filed in federal courts here and in Chicago
Monday by lawyers groups, community poverty agencies and
employes of the Office of Ec.onomic Opportunity (OEO) the
agency which has been running the anti-poverty program.
.
has decIared h'ts tn·
. ·········:·;·;·,·····················
....,...,...,...............
~.·.•.•;·
...
Ntxon
-~·~·:-:..........·.·o~-:.:·:·:&gt;:-:.:.:-~.:.:.:.:
.-••••.•••:.:.
tention to dismantle OEO, to
JOINS SUITS
·transfer some of its programs
NELSONVILLE, Ohio
to other federal agencies but to (UP!) - The organization
give much of the ani-poverty responsible for federal antieffort back to the states and poverty programs In Ohio
localitilis to be · conducted said Monday It will join In a
Wider revenue sharing.
lawsuit aimed at preventing
The suits challenge the the dismantling of the Office
legality of disbanding OEO and of · Economic Opportunity
the ending of fWlding of its (OEO) and Community
programs. Named as defen- Action Progr~m (CAP).
dants were Howard 'Phillips,
"We calUiot stand Idly by
whom Nixon has named acting while the President aban·
OE9 directpr, with ihe task of dons America's prisoners of
dismantling the agency, and poverty," said the CorRoy L. Ash, director of the poralion lor Ohio ApOffice of Management and palacbfan Development
Budget.
(COAD) In a statement.
In general the suits charge .~:::::::~::::::::::::&gt;;::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
that termination of federal Reorganization Act, the
poverty · program funds President is required to submit
violates the intent of Congress such a reorganization of
that they be spent and that, · government to Congress for its
under
the
Executive approval.

hostesses are to welcome new
families by calling on them and
giving them printed information of the new area in
which they live .
Gifts from local sponsors are
also given when the hostess for
welcome wagon visits new
families. Information as to
what is available such as
grocery stores, banks,
hospitals, schools, churches,
etc., is given in the brochure.
Welcome Wagon contributes to
every phase of life. There are
over 100,000 sponsors.
Welcome Wagon Inc.
cooperates with all civic and
service agencies; each local
club
undertakd
a
humanitarian project. WWI
calls on new mothers, gives
parties for engaged yoWlg

•
n'Btnage m edzum

ladies and cooperates· in local
special events.
Mrs. Carl (Jean) Will will be
offering the above services and
will begin servicing Meigs
County. Mrs. Will presently
has nine sponsors.
The Chamber agreed to
approach the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce to see if
possibly it would co-spon99r
the program. Alone or with
help, the Pomeroy Chamber
will sponsor the program.
In other business, Jack Kerr,
president, pointed out that the
Coast Guard will assist during
Regatta Weekend In June and .
that the Athens Boat and Ski
Club will be among attractions
at the Regatta.
The next meeting of the
Chamber .will be held March
19. "Fingertip facts" of Meigs
County were distributed.
(Fingertip Facts 'gives the
population, taxes, etc., in
Meigs CoWlty.)
Attending were Kerr, Mrs.
Anton, Mrs. Will, John Fultz,
Wendell Hoover, Bob Jacobs,
Richard Chambers, Fred
Crow, Dale Warner, Ralph
Graves, Ted Reed, Jack
Carsey, Dennis Keney, C. E. '
Blakeslee, Virgil Teaford,
Carolyn Thomas, secretary,
Beulah Jones and Katie Crow.

One vehicle had medium
damage and a driver was cited
to mayor's court after an accident on East Main St.,
Pomeroy, at 7:30 a .m.
Tuesday.
Police said a car driven by
Claude Nease, 44, Minersville,
stopped at the traffic signal,
backeduphisvehicletopermit
a tractor-trailer moving from
Nye onto East Main St., to have
more l"j)om, and into a car
driven by Harry Pickens, Jr.,
23, of Pomeroy. Damage. to the
LOCAL TEMPS
Pickens car was moderate.
Tempera lure in downtown
The Nease vehicle was not Pomeroy Tuesday at ll a.m.
damaged. Nease was cited to was 38 degrees under cloudy
court for improper backing. skies.

:::::~:::!:!:!:;~~~~:::;:;:!::~:::::::::::::::::::::::~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::;:;::;:::~:::::::::::=:~~=~

.if
M
~

Mother, son missi~g «II

Middleport police disclosed
today a Middleport woman and
her 18-year-old son, last seen
Saturday night, are missing.
They are Mrs. Alice V. Ellis,
38, and her son, Donald E.
Ellis. 'Mrs. Ellis is five feet,
four inches tall and weighs 195
pounds. She has hazel eyes.
Donald is 5'~. has long

«

blonde hair, weighs about 170
lbs., wears glasses, and has
blue eyes .
Missing also is the family
vehicle which is a 1964 tudor
grey -Fiat, license number Z...
880-E . Anyone kilowing ' the
whereabouts of the two Is
asked to notify Middleport
Pollee Chief J. J. Cremeans.

However, the work was not
completed as provided under
the contract, Fisher said, and
firemen have been working in
the evenings and on weekends
to complete it.
They asked that the village
notify the contractor that he
had not fulfilled the contract
TWO ERRORS
P'ollc·e
reported only two infractions
of a curfew which went Into
effect Monday at 9 p.m. for
an indefinite period. The
siren sounds once at 9 to
signal the beginning of the
curlew for all persons under
18 yeard old. · Reports of
vandalism In the community
led to Invoking the curfew,
Pollee Chief J. J. Cremeans,
said.
Middleport

Gas rates to go

up March 1
Residents of Pomeroy will
begin paying a few cents more
per month for natural gas
beginning March 31, it was
annoWlced today by Columbia
Gas of Ohio, Inc.
The adjustment- one and 37
one-hundredths cents per 1,000
cubic feet, or about 21 cents a
month for the average
customer who heats his home
with gas - is a result of an
increase in the cost of gas from
a wholesale supplier.
The adjustment is being
passed on to customers
through provisions of the
community's contract with the
gas company.
It will apply in 305 Ohio
commWJities.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
DISCHARGED - Anna
Wheeler, Kenneth Hartley,
Salem Yates, Steve Eblin,
George Carter, Denna CWldiff,
Worthy Bright, Wesley D.
Clark and Oswell Durham.

and that a final $1,400 payment
will not be made. Firemen Will
use that amoWJt to finish the
building. Fisher and Kloes
pointed out that the contract
provided for a $75 a day
penalty for the time ·lapsing in
the contract date and the date
the j&gt;uilding was completed.
The '$!,400 on hand would be
much less than the penalty,
(Continued on Page 10) -~

$5 License
tag charge

tried again
If the old adage "third time's
a charm" rings true, Middleport Village could have
clear sailing this year with
their $5 permission auto license
tax plan . One councilman
however, disagreed.
Meeting Monday night,
coWJcil voted 4-1 with Councilman Fred Hoffman casting
the dissenting vote, to approve
the first of three required
readings of an ordinance which
will require Middleport
residents to pay a $5 fee for
each motor vehicle over the
regular charge for their auto
license plates. Council stressed
that all proceeds woUld be used
for street maintenance.
Twice before council has
passed legislation providing
for the tax and twice before by
referendum action
th e
measure has been taken to the
voters who both times turned
down the permissive lax, Two
more readings must be approved by council.
Hoffman argued, without
success that another attempt to
impose the tax would be
fruitless and a waste of the
taxpayers' money, predicting
that it would be defeated in a
third referendum.

John Sauvage dies ..
John Sauvage, 92, former
mayor of Pomeroy and a
retired businessm'an died
'
,
Tuesday morning at his home
at 121 Bulternut Ave. in
Pomeroy.
Mr. 'Sauvage operated a
confectionary many years
where the Blue and Grey
Restaurant is located and was
active in civic affairs through
those years. He was a member
of the United Methodist Church
in Pomeroy and had received
his 60-year membership pin
from the IOOF Lodge,
The sqn of the late Valentine
and Elizabeth Hamm Sauvage,
he was also preceded in deafh '
by his wife, Alberta Cuater

.

a

Sauvage, daughter' and 10
brothers and sisters.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. Garland (Elizabeth )
Weaver of Day~on; a son, John
G. Sauvage, Syracuse; three
grandchildren, Anne Weaver
Warren of College Park, Md. ;
Jean Sauvage · Weaver ,
Syracuse, and John Richard
Sauvage, Gallipolis , and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Rev. Robert Card officiating.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the {Wleral home anytime.

�'

•

2-The Daily Sentmel, Middleport Pomeroy, 0 , Feb Tl, 1973

DR. LA~RENCE E. LAMB
Check With Your Doctor

EDITORIALS

"'

Safety of Private
Flying up, Up, UP
A .,-JO,OOO airplane, anyone' Or how about $1,500 worth
ot twllon toward a pnvate p1lot ratmg'
These are among the mducements bemg offered by the
General Av1atlon Manufacturers Assn (GAMA) to en
coura~e pilots and those 'who would hke to be p1lots to
participate 1n the Federal Av1ahon Admm1stration s Ac
c1dent Prevention Program
Between June 1, 1972 and Jan 31, 1973 more than
115 000 p1lots and nonp1lots quahf1ed for these and 102
other priZes m GAMA s Safe P1lot Sweepstakes by at
tendmg an FAA safety semmar and a1rcraft clime
Thousands more are expected to quallfr before the sweep
stakes ends on May 31 and the wmners names are drawn
The FAA program began m 1971 after mvesllgabons of
general aviallon accidents and estabhshed that more
than 80 per cent of them were attnbutable to pilot error
The program wh1ch 1s entirely voluntary consists of
the safety education semmars and aircraft climes as well
as courtesy check ndes to enable p1lots to Improve weaknesses and discussions w1th mdustry, representatives on
a1rcraft and eq u1pment Pilots are also encouraged to
f1le reports regardmg unsafe airway or airport condillons
An FAA Accident Prevention Specialist handles the program at each of 84 general av1atlon d1stnct off1ces around
the country
This emphas1s on general av1atwn safety 1s hardly new,
however Safety has always been stressed-by the manu
facturers of aircraft engmes, radios and other com
ponents through teshng and certification, through the
traming and licensmg of pilots, mechanics, a1r traff1c
controllers and other spec1alists and by var1ous p1lot
organizallons
The result has been a steady •mprovement m the acc1
dent picture over the years In 1980 for example, there
were 4 793 acc1dents recorded for 13 I million hours and
I 7 bllbon m1les flown by general (non a1rline) av1ation
By 1970, the hours and m1les flown had Increased to 25 5
m1lbon and 3 9 bllbon respectively, but the number of ac
c1dents Increased only slightly to 4 927 The accident rate
per 100 000 flying hours was cut almost m half
PriVate pilots and others who would hke to part1c1pate
~ m the program-and enter the GAMA Sweepstakes-can
fmd out the t1mes and locallons of semmars and clmlcs
by contacbng thm local FAA office

Ah, Er, You Know, Uh--You ve heard of 'pregnant pauses Lmgmsts and
Qther students of human behavlo~ now report that or
dmary conversatiOn contams all kmds of d1fferent pauses
and they have dlv\ded them Into two mam categor1es
First are the S1!ent Pauses (pregnant or otherwise)
These may be natural pauses at the ends of sentences or
phrases Or they may indicate that the speaker Is think
ing of what to say next or allowmg his hstener to absorb
'\'hat he has said
Then there are the F11led Pauses wh1ch mclude false
starts, repeats cliches Uke You know ' and what are
called ' 1dllng ' sounds-uh ah umm er and other no1ses
The latter are especially useful m helpmg a person keep
control of the conversational ball by s•gnallng 'I'm sllll
talking don't mterrupt me '
According to one scientist spontaneous speech actually
contains about 40 to 50 per cent silence A good guess
would be that the uhs ahs umms and ers not to menhon
the You knows " account for another 40 to 50 per cent
That leaves from zero to 20 per cent for meamnglul
dialogue '
Is It any wonder we complain of a commumcallons gap'

&amp; THINIJS

Digitalis and Calcium Don't Mix
By Lawrence Lamb, M D
Dear Dr Lamb - In your
column, you stated that
adults need approximately a
quart of milk a day and m
another column you stated
that anyone takmg d1g1tahs
should av01d excess calciUm
mtake Now my quesllon 1s
th1s How much m1lk would
be considered excessive for
anyone takmg d1g1tahs 1 I
am ret1red, age 69 we~gh 195
pounds and take d1g1tal•s to
control a tendency towards
paroxysmal tachycardia My
doctor tells me 11 1s safe for
me to r1de my biCycle 20
m1les a day wh1ch I do and
feel great m domg 11
Dear Reader - Individuals
takmg di~1tahs and the var1
ous medicines that contam
dig1tahs products w 1ll not
have any trouble drmkmg
ordmary quanhties one to
two quarts a day
The problem IS that cal
cmm tablets are available
without prescnption to the
general pubhc Th1s mcludes

bone meal preparations and
a number of vitam1n tablets
w1th calciUm If you add
these sources of calciUm m
take to ordmary m1lk mtake,
1t could cause dlff~eultii!S
For th1s reason, I thmk any
one who takes digitalis medi
cme regularly should av01d
t a k 1n g mmeral tablets or
other health foods Without
the1r doctor s recommends
twn Sounds to me hke
you re domg rather well 1f
you are able to bicycle 20
m1les a day
Dear Dr Lamb - I d ap
prec1ate your comment on
an article that stated that
the combmatwn of aspum
and alcohol are poten
tially dangerous Accordmg
to the arllcle, aspmn some
t1mes causes small bleedmg
and alcohol can penetrate
the stomach and cause the
bleedmg to be worse I have
been usmg two aspmns w1th
a glass of wme at bedtime as
a sedallve and considered 11
safer than sleepmg p1lls but
now I am concerned about

the effect on my stomach If
you a~ree w•th tb1s article,
what m your op1mon would
be a sale mterval between
the two' For example1 Jf one
had a couple of drmKs and
then later found 11 necessary
to take asp1rm I am a 46year-old grandmother and m
good health except for bemg
a 11 I tl e overweight w1th
shghtiy h1gh blood pressure
for wh1ch I take medlCme
under a doctor's supervisiOn
Dear Reader-Small flakes
of aspmn mater1al Will actually stick to the lmmg of
the stomach and can burn
small holes m it and can
cause bleed1n1: Large
amounts of aspmn also affect the clotting mechamsm
of the blood to cause a bleed
mg tendency Because alcohol does cause the stomach
hmng to be engorged With
bl o ad and causes an m
creased secretion of acId
JUices by t h e stomach, I
would read1lr believe that
the combmallon IS not good
The best way to take as

Generation Rap

Isms: Scientism
And Historicism
1

lmpottru:e booklet

By United Pres' IJlternallonal
Today IS Tuesday Feb 27
the 58th day of 1973 w1th 307 to
follow
The moon 1s between Its last
quarter and new phase
The mormng stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter
Tbe evenmg stars are Mercury and Saturn
Tbll&amp;e born on this date are
under the Sign of Pisces
Amencan poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was born
Feb '!I, 1807
On th1s day m history
In 1939, so-called 's1t-down '
str1kes were outlawed by the
Umted States Supreme Court
In 1942, fll'st salvos were
f1red m the battle of the Java
Sea, a Pacif1c naval engagement m the early days of World
War II m wh1ch Japsn sank 13
Amencan warships while losmg
only two
In 1963, M1ckey ManUe of the
New York Yankees s1gned a
contract for $1110,000 highest
m baseball to that tune
1

"

6 I

WIN AT BRIDGE

BRUCE BIOSSAT
1

Sertd your quesllons to Dt Lamb
m co,. of tiUs newspc~ptr , 0 lo.r
1551 Rad10 City Stat1on New Yorlr
H Y 10019 for • topy ol Dr Lamb's
~Itt on 'mpottnce send 50 cMts
to tlte scrme address and asl: lor

Alnu~nac

thiS one What's he landed on lately•
"No Sex Please, We're British" Ia a drab,
trivial British museum1»ece The best (only)
thing about 1t was 11ll title, It wasn't dirty, only
hopeless Maureen O'Sullivan had better
dialogue from Tarzan
Greg Bautzer, legal aide to Howard Hughes,
Is confemng more paSSionately with Nicole
DanUne, daughter of the late fUm tycoon Nick
Schenck and ex-wife to Hehnut DanUne
Gunther Sachs, Brigitte Bardot's ex, IS a pure
Indoor sport this tr1p to Manhattan He's at the
Pierre Hotel and bypasses room service to have
all meals sent up from the Pierre's chic supper
club, La Foret
The Smgles syndrome's spreading to the
exurbs The Chateau D'Vle in Spring Valley, N
Y , bars guesta who don't fall between 20 and 40
Daytimes 1t's outdoor sports, nights - what
else'
Arnold Palmer's golfing comeback was his
happ1est news More than the satisfaction &lt;i
ownmg large mterests m about 20 golf courses
now being built Baseball's bad press has the
horsehide establishment scouting Mad Ave
Image-makers
Max Kase told us at his
Br1efkase Pub that Joe Pepitone has a fabulous
offer for three Toky(Hiaseball seasons It broke
Joe's wallet to sign again with the Chi CUbs

'

(NEWSPAPER EHTERPRISE ASSN )

TodJJy's

along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN
TRAMP, TRAMP, TRAMP,
'The GIRLS' AREMARCHIN'
NEWYORK(UPI) -Greatest champ Jack
Dempsey needs emergency hlp surgery - but
his own Internist advised against 11 - the 78year-old tough guy's not up to It
Steve
McQueen's trip to Tokyo was to sign a deal to
TV-p1tch Honda cycles for $1,000,000 In Front'
Gmlstar Roger Staubach on TV right to
Howard Cosell's no doubt pretty face "I'm
your hest fr1end and I don't even like you'"
Jawn Lindsay, running for something anytlung - claims be's vamoosed the prosties
of the showbiZ area 8 30 the other evening
around the theater where Deep Throat's pornlng along, a dozen tramps of the evenmg were
accosting the smutacular's e~ntlng turn-ons and any male ambling by One of the drabs
couldn't have been more than 16 She brazenly
wr~ggled m the center of the sidewalk as the rest
lurked in doorways -while a slight walk away
stood two cops ignonng the wbole filthy mess
Full-eu'cle poor mlllionalres hitch r1des m
Teamster boss Harold Gibbons' private jet
And ex-.!lteelworkers' boss DaVId McDonald
entertains hiS ncb cronies on his yacht Ayear
ago Astroanut Alan Shepsrd was an bonored
player at Bob Hope's celebnty golf tour~, not

p1rm 1s to take 11 at the end
of a meal or to eat some
thing when you take 11, such
as cottage cheese or drink a
glass of milk Milk w•ll help
to neutralize the ac1ds m the
stomach and bel~ to prevent
precipitating aspmn crystals
on the stomach lmmg
It takes several hours to
ehmmate the effects of alco
hoi on the stomach If one
mslsts on taking the two 11
would be better to take !be
asplrm lust w1th a hquid
neutraliZer s u c h as mille
Perhaps an hour or more
later this would have been
emptied from the stomach
and 1t would then be safer to
have a g!as~ , 'lf wme

1

By Helen and Sue Hottel
1

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON !NEAl
I once knew an elderly lady who would often charitably
dlS.mlss ev1dence of a man's personal idiosyncrasy by
saymg
Oh, that s JUSt one of h1s little 'isms '
More recently I heard a distmgmshed Brmsh SClenbst,
S1r Peter Medowar who won a Nobel pme for work In
Immunology argue persuasiVely that too many people
today are capllvated by big '1sms
He wasn t talkmg about the obvwus lnghteners-com
mumsm and fasc1sm H1s complaint was much subtler
and more deeply percepllve of developing trends m hu
man thought
Two of the words he used are a bit hard to gulp downsc•entlsm and historicism Yet they have thm clear
forceful pomt
By 'SClentism S1r Peter means the practice growing
apace of mvestmg excess1ve la1th m sc1ence as capable
of VIrtually every m1racle conceiVable The SClenllflc rev
olut10n of the past three decades, a real thunderbolt has
seemed to make such IIlith plausible
But, m the Bntlsher's JU~gment sc1entlsm thus delmed
contams a danger The peril1s that such mordmate fa1th,
directed down one single channel lifts humamty's ex
pectations beyond reasonable heights In the~r prec1p1tous
nse, these expectatwns already have been g1ven unwar
rented- and hence basically cruel- upward thrust from
glib easy prom1smg polltic1ans
Medowar plainly opposes any mov e toward one
cause" or 'one hope" theones to explam what s happened
or ought to happen m soc~ety
'Historicism he perceives as the habit of laymg too
b1g a load on the back of h1story Those wedded to th1s
notion see h1story as some kmd of predetermmed course,
never truly altered by acc1dents of human behav1or or
personality tra1ts
It Is such thmkmg that leads some analysts today to
contend that the Amencan leaders who took us, stage by
stage Into a b1g scale though sllll lim1ted war m V1et
nam were doomed by h1story
What they mean, of course, 1s that these leaders were
1mpr1soned by ' cold war ' psychology growing out of the
turbulent world events wh1ch followed World War II and
thrust the Western world mto ev1dent severe conflict with
the Sov1et Umon and China
Some of these analysts seem to argue contrarily, smce
1t mtroduces a ' human opllon ' that the doomed-by h1s
tory theory would hardlv permit that our whole As1an
policy (mcluding Vietnam) would have been different had
not the Commun•st witch huntmg of the days of the late
W1sconsm Sen Joseph McCarthy brou~ht the oustm~ of
expert Chma hands" from the US dlplomallc serv1ce
Now l don t know what Su Peter Medowar thmks
about either the cold war or V~etnam But I would guess
he would smlf a questwnable aroma of pre deshny ' m
much of th1s kmd of thmkmg
Which leads me to one of the better known Isms ' that
particularly troubles th1s scientist-fatahsm Th1s Idea
is of course the ulllmate m the realm of pre-destmallon
the most extreme extensiOn of historiCISm ' To be a
fatahst 1s to accept the concept that no one can really
change anythmg by wh1m chance or acc1dent It s all
dec1ded The future 1s locked up
Sir Peter fmds fatallsm deeply scarrmg many people s
concerns over the ev1ronmental cns1s affhctlng the world
W1thout for a second downplaymg the ex1stmg deter1ora
llQn and the menace of more, he refuses to cry doom He
believes that what man makes he can unmake He be
lleves man can use technology to bu1ld Without self-de
!eating destruction I guess he has h1s own 1sm '-hu
manlsm- a faith in man himself

Restraint Brings in Game
NORTH

21

She Deplores Lost FemfDlnlty
.KQ10
Dear Helen and Sue
• 86'
+A102
I am 18, small, and extremely proud of my femuumty I have
oftQJ102
always believed that pore "gl1'1-ness ' IS the best way to a boy's
WEST
EAST
heart The more weak and vulnerable a girl IS, the better I detest
.86
.9754
the sa&lt;alled natural look - no makeup the athletic, blonde,
.AKJ532 .Q9
blue-eyed super-female imsge
+Q975
+J83
oft4
oft9853
Movies about lady sp1es who excel m karate, and women
SOUTH (D)
detectives (etch') tum me off And w1tcbes I stopped believmg
.AJ32
m such junk long ago
.107
The dames are always strong and healthy enough to be men ·
+K64
oftAK76
- and can usually do men m,one way or another Revolting'
None vulnerable
I have lost my steady to one of those blonde tomboy types
W
.;l
North Ea.t Soulh
She wants to be a, get this, policewoman Yecch' How unloft
femmlne can you get • She's sure no llvmg doll
1.
3 oft
Pass
3•
I'm thinkmg of starting a fern-lib club to protect us from such
Pass Pass
Pass 4 •
overpowering blondes Aren't there still places left for us who
Pass
love makeup and lookmg pretly, wbo take pnde In hemg thin,
Opemng lead-• K
unathletic and damty, wbo WANT men to be supenor? By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
FOREVERFEM
North's JUmp to three clubs
Dear Fern
was a lim1t raise South de
A ' lovmg doll" to one boy is deadly dull to another Your ex c1ded that h1s 15 h1gh card
ev1dently wanted more companionship than a forever .fern type pomts warranted a rellid and
tned three spades just m
could give him, but keep looking There are sUII a few fellows left case North m1ght happen to
wbo enjoy playing the b1g protector to the helpless, weak, have four-card support
vulnerable female - HELEN
North d1dn t have four
card support but b1d four
+++
spades anyway on the theory
Dear Forever
10 tr1cks m1ght j us I
that
(But not many, Mom, and you know It')
come m with spades as
You needn't learn karate cbops or maJor m police sc1ence, trump while II tr1cks at
Fern, but don't rely entirely on femininity, makeup, weakness, clubs m1ght prove to be out
etc , or you'll lose more guys than you get Boys want mteresUng, of reach
He was wrong on the sec
active gll'ls l"ho can do more than Sit around and look decorative
and count F1ve clubs makes
Try 1t, you might like 1t - SHE
eas1ly s 1n c e declarer can
+++
make hve trump tncks (m
Rap
I am 17 and have two kids When I was first pregnant my
boyfriend refused to marry me as he dliJ.,•t want to be tied down
A thought for the day
He wanted me to have an abortion bull refused so he left me
Amencan poet Henry Wads
After the baby was born, Joe decided he wanted us after all worth Longfellow said, 'MUSic
We went back together, but before we could get married, I was IS the un1versal language of
pregnant agam He couldn't cope w1th the responsibility of two mankmd poetry the universal
babies and took off
pasllme and dehght "
Then I started going with Dan, wbom I'd known for years I
didn'tlove hun but be was awfully good to me, and befot'e I knew
Stntilel
It I was pregnant again It's like "If you cant be with the one you
OIVOTID TO TMI
INTIRIIT 0,
love, love the one you can be with "BeSides, !needed someone to
MilOS MUON ARIA
take care of me, not having a family
CHISTIII L TANNIHILL,
IIIC ld
Now Joe Is back He wanto me to get an abortion and stay
IIOIIIIT HOI,LICH,
City ldltor
w1th hun Says threatening things like If I don t he'll make life
PubliShed
dolly UCIPt
miserable for me and Dan Dan offers me a better life and wants Stlurdty by Tht
Ohio Vtllty
to marry me Joe doesn't make any promises, but !love Joe and Publllhlng Compony 111
court St
Pomeroy Oh Ia
not Dan What shall I do• - PAD
45769 Bvslntll OIIICt Phont
tl2 2156, Edltorlol Phone t92
2157
p
second clu&amp; po&amp;togt paid ot
Ohio
First, study up on birth control and resolve that you'll Pomeror
NIIIOnll ICIYtrt l aint
practice It Three babies, no husband, by age 17 indicates either reprtltnfatlvt Bottlntlll
Inc )2 Eut •2nd
remarkllble Ignorance or a don't-care attitude that would make GtllagKtr
St Ntw York City, Ntw York
Subacrlpllon ratu Dt
you a very poor mother (Perhaps both )
livtrtd by carrltr whtrt
Next See Joe as he IS an u:respon.sible ' taker" who would avan•bt•
50 cents per w1tk1
leave you each time the going got rough Tell hun you're tllr«&lt;gh By Motor Routt whtrt carrier
serv•ct not avallfblt Ont
and don't let him scare you
month 11 75 By moll In Ohio
W Vo , Ont yeor SI• 00
Third Stop driftmg' Whether you choose Dan as your ond
Six months 17 25
Tt'lrtt
husband or not, at least get bold of your life Several agencies m monlhs U 50 Subscrlr,tton
lftCIUdH Sundly T Mtl
your town can help If you'll send us a stamped, self-addressed price
Stntlntl
envelope we'll put you m touch with them - HELEN AND SUE

Tht DliiJ

cludmg a ruff of a heart)
plus four spades, plus two
diamonds
He was also nght about
spades South had no trouble
making 10 tr1cks there
All that was requ1red was
a little m•ld restramt West
•
d
led out three top hearts an
South just had to hold back
the 1mpulse to ruff Instead
he JUSt discarded h1s four of
diamonds wh1ch would have
been a loser m any event
Then all he had to do was
to take the last 10 tncks With
h1gh cards
(N£WSPAP£R INTEaPRIS£ ASSN I

BY PAUL CRABTREB
I think lt was 1855 when the world was treated to the t11i1t trl·
toned cars, using three or more colors to accent the new mode1,a
If they could see us now, as the song goes
!)e(orating cars with pop art, op art, paialey prmto,
geometric deslgna, and tons and tons cl dacals has become a
full-time pastime for many drivers, usually quite young ones
!think, however, thatlaaw the ultlmate the other day
Heading for GaWpolia was a mlddlwged Ford, bearing the
legend "Please Don't Tail Gate Me" In bright green acrOIS the
entire rear end Most of the doors and rocker panels were done up
In a patriotic plethora of redillld-whlte stripes, plus white stars
on a blue f1eld Just under the driver's window, "Jesus Saves"
was printed mletters a good sb: Inches high
And the hood bore an lndeacrlbable melange ol swirls,
curlicues and patterns that must have taken bours - no, days to paint And every vacant space was plalltered with ublqultousbut.unaginatlve "STP" stickers
'!'be car was moving at a sedate pace, and I wheeled around
It, glancing at the driver and fully ~cling to see a bearded,
long-llalred kid, probably one of the "Jesus peqple "
To my astonishment, the vehicle was driven by a conservatively-dressed, neatly-trimmed middle-aged gentleman,
Sitting bolt upright behind the wheel with a sense of total
ll'Opriety
'
I drove on, wondenng If It was his son's car (or daughter's),
or whether he had really wrought that monstrosity himself

WORLD ALMANAC

High school tourney
play resumes tonight
•

Action resumed tonight m
southern Ohio sectional
basketball tournament&amp;
In Class A, Portsmouth East
Will battle Portsmouth Notre
Dame at Portsmouth, and
Belpre takes on Ymton CoWlty
at Stewart
There are no AA or AAA
games tomght Action will be
continued Wednesday, and
alter a heavy slate Thursday,
will be concluded Friday and
Saturday With semlfll18l and
championship games
Of 69 area high school
basketball teams which began
tournament competlhon
Friday night In 10 southern
Ohio Sectlonals only 39
remamed alive today

When the f1r1ng began
Friday, Were were nme AAA,
21 AA and 39 A Southern Ohio
squads m action Thirty were
elurunated durmg first round
action
FIVe AAA teams remam,
Including Me~gs and Jackson of
the Southeastern Ohio League
Thirteen Class AA qwnteto
are still In the running for
sechonal honors, mcludmg
SEOAL champion Waverly and
runnerup Gallipolis Both those
teams drew first round byes
Twenty-one Class A quintets
are still In tlie running, mcludlng SVAC tTl-champion
Symmes Valley, and North
Gallla, a member of the SVAC
Here's this week's pall'mgs

+++

!get angry when the networks show a program of value at an
hour too late for the kiddles to watch When they show one that IS
on toolateforMEtowatch, I become outraged
Yet, that IS exacUy what happened last Sunday, when ABC
decided to run Cecil B DeMille's super-opus, "The Ten Commandmenta" all the way through in one evening, from 8 p.m
Sunday until 12 30 a.m Monday rooming
Movies of lesser artistic and-or illlplratlonal value for the
wbole family have routinely been cut in half, showmg one part
one night and the remamder the next night (or even the next
week) To run a major film such as this into the wee hours may
not be sacrilege, but 11 Is stupidity
I would have liked to have seen this 1956 classic agam
Fortunately, I dld get to see the movie when It played the theatre
CircUit
And, besides, I've read the Book

+++

FM Station WBES has a commendable idea And a poor
track record
The affiliate of WCHS-AM·TV m Olarleston offers "stereo
bonus hours," presenting 57 minutes of music In a 58-minute
period, with the balance of the hour usually devoted to news
Great'
The only problem IS that their signal, which usually comes m
strong In the Meigs-Gallla-Mason area, has been fading In and
out, due to tr8llSII)itter troubles And the "stereo" broadcasts
often are monaural
What would be wrong With telling the liatener they're having
some problems W1th a good !annat, we'd be patient, wouldn't
we•

+++
Postscript for ''The Ten CoiiUilBndments" The kids and I
got so fllSCIIUited we stayed up and watched the whole thing

+++

ON THE TV DIAL "Circus" fealllresa Parisian show, 7 30,
WLWC.TV, followed by "Sunshine Patriot," 8, same spot
"America,"
Wl:A7-TV
at JO.
1
'
.J
~ -.h':!l
1-,
j ..
i l:..ol
1
J

Television Log
TUESDAY FEB 27,1973
6 OO - News3 4 81013 15 TrulhorConseq 6 Sesame Sf 20

Around The Bend 33
6 30 - What s My Line B I ve Got A Secret 13 Elec Co 20
Beat The Clock 4 News 6 10 Untamed World 13 TV Honor
Society 15 Truth or Consequences 3
7 30-This Is Your Life 3 To Tell The Truth 6 Price Is Right B
10 Beat The Clock 13 RFD 20 Circus 4 Great Decisions '73
33
8 00 - Temperatures Rising 6 13 Maude 8 10 Book Beot 33
Ohio This Week 20 Movie • 1 Love A Mystery' 3, 15 'rhe
Sunshine Polrlol 4
a 30 - Howoll FlveOB 10 Bill Moyers Journal20 33 Movie
•The Connection 6 13
9 oo - Behind the Lines 20 33
9 30 - BiackJournal20 33 Movie CalltoOanger 8 10
10 00 - MarcusWelbyM D 6 13 News20 Amerlca3 4 15
11 oo - News J 4 8 10 13 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Movies 'Five Desperate
Women 6 13 All Ftne Young Cannlbols B The Singer
Not the SonQ" 10
1 00 :::- Your Health 4 News 13
f' 30- News 4
WEDNESDAY, FEB 21,1973
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Formllme 10 English 3
6 20 - Farm Report 13
The b1ddmg has been
6 25 - Paul Harvey 1J
West
Norlh El!l
6 30 - Columbus Today • Bible Answers 8 Urban League 10
The Story 13
2+
Pass
7 00- Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 News 6 Fllntstones 13
Pass
3oft
Pass
7 3D-Sleepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
You, South hold
13 Popeye 10
8
00
- Capt. Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame St 33
.AK54 ¥AQ13 +2 oftKQ107
Lassie 6
What do you do now'
8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
A-Bid three no-tnunp Your 8 55 - News 13
hoort aee-quoen should be sul- 9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15 What Every Womon
Wants to Know 3 Concentration 6 Capt Kangaroo 8
ftclenl to protect that suit
Friendly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13
TODAY'S QUESTION
9 30- Elec Co 33 To Tell The Truth 3 Jeopardy 6
Your partner contmues by 10 00- Dinah ShoreJ 15 Columbus Six Calling 6 Jokers Wild
Jumpmg to five clubs What do
B, 10, Dick Van Dyke 13
you do now?
10 30 - Concentration 3 15, Phil Donahue • Price Is Right 8 10
Spill Second 13
11 00 - Saleolthe Century 3 15 Love American Style6 Gambit
8 10 Password 13
Sond $1 tor JACOIY MODfiN book 11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4 13 Love of Life 8 10 Bewitched 6
to "W•• fJI Jndge.'' (e/~ tbiJ - •
13 Sesame Sl 20
pcopor) '0 lox 419, Rtnl•• Cotr 12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15 Password 16 Bob Brauns 50 50 Club 4
Slat10• Nw YOlk H y 10019
News 13 Contact 8 News 10
'
'
12 30- Spill Second 6 Seorch for Tomorrow 8, 10 3 Ws 3 15
1 00 - News, Weather Sports 3 All My Children 6 13 Secret
Storm 8, Not For Women Only IS Green Acres 10
1 20 - Fashions In Sewing 3
1 30 - 30nAMatch3 •15 LelsMakeADeel6 13
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3 4 15 ~ewlywed Game 13 Mike
FACTS
Douglass 6 Guiding Light B 10
2 30- Dating GamelJ Doctors 3, 4, 15 Edge of NlghtB 10
3 00 - Another World 3 15 General Hospital 6 13 Love
Splendored Thing 8 10 RFD 20
3 30 - Return fo Peyton Place 3 4 15 One Life to Live 6 13
Secret Storm 8 10 This Week 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 3J Love
American Stylell Merv Griffin 4 Fllntstones6 Movie The
Canadians ' 10
4 30 - Petticoat Junction 3 I Love Lucy 6 Gilligan s Island 8
Donlel Boone 13 Dick Van Dyke 15
5 00 - Mr Rogers 33 Daniel Boone 6 Bonanta 3 4 Hazel 8
Andy Griffith 15
5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15 Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Beverly
Hillbillies a Hodgepodge 20
6 110 - Truth or Conseq 6 News 3 4 B, 10 15 Sesame St 20
Around the Bend 33
6 3D-News 3 4 6 8 10 15 I Dream of Jeannie 13 Societies In
Durmg the past _cen·Jury
Transition 33
about 900,000 peo{lle have
7
00
- News 6 10 Whars My Llne 8 Truth or Conseq 3 Beat
been kille4 by earthquakes
The Clock~. Anything You Can Do 13 Know Your Schools33
No area Is Immune from
Elec Co 20 Fabulous Seven 15
the posslb1bty of an earth
7 30 - To Tell the Truth 6 The Judge 10 Pollee Surgeon 3 4
Beat The Clock 13 Andy Grllflt~ 15, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
qua~e. but four out of f1ve
Episode Action 33 George Kirby 8
occur around the frmge of
8 00- Adam 12 3 • 15, Poul Lynde 6 13 Sonny &amp; Cher B, 10
the Pac1f1c 0 c e a n The
America 73 20 33
World A 1m an a c notes
8
~o- Madlgon 3 • 15 Movie You II Never See Me Again' 6,
Earthquakes are however
13
v1tal to the continued de
9 00 - Medlc~ICentertO EyeloEye20 33
velopment of our e a r t h
9 30 - San Francisco Mix 20 33
and without the1r action the 10 00 - Soul32 News 20 Cannon 8 Owen Marshall6 13 ~rc h
15 3 4
earth's surface would become a place of stagnant 11 uo- News3 4 6 8 10 13,15
Johnny Corson 3, • 15 Movlei"Piaymalel" •· 13, "Kid
seas and swamps because 11 30Rodela"
8 'Fall Salt" 10
of erosion
1 00 - News •· 13

1•

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Feb '!1, 1973

Florida State,
Vols are upset
By United Press IDiemaUonal
Minnesota just about clinched the Big Ten title Monday
night by routing Northwestern,
90-74, while Wisconsin upended
Purdue, 71-'3 The victory left
Minnesota, now 19-2, with a 9-2
conference record wb.lle
Purdue dropped to 8-4 Minnesota thus leads by two games
with three conference games
left PUrdue must win 1ts two
remaining conference games
to remain In the running
At Tallahassee Monday,
Marshall's Thundermg Herd of
Huntington, W Va , stunned
the Florida State Seminoles,
71.$
The MU VICtory snapped a
14-game home winnmg streak
for Florida State, and kept
Marshall's post-.!leason tourllllllllllt hopes alive
In pil:king up !hell' 19th wm
agamst s1x losses, Mike
D' Antoni and Randy Noll led
Marshall's attack w1th 16
points ap~ece Lawrence
McCray pumped In 21 for the
losers
""'
Kentucky ,. thhshed
Alabama, 111-95, and moved
back into the SEC title picture
when Louisiana State upset
Tennessee, 78-74 Tennessee
must win Its tllree remaining
games to take the SEC title
Kentucky IS 12-4 In SEC play
while Alabama allpped to I~
Ron Behagen scored 25
points and Jhn Brewer and
Clyde Turner hit 23 each as
Minnesota cruised past Northwestern at Minneapolis
Greg Wells led Northwestern
with 20 polnto
Kim Hughes and Leon Howard scored 19 pomts each to

highlight Wlsconsm's upset of
Purdue at Madison, Wls Frank
Kendrick led Purdue With 17
Nick Weatherspoon's 30
points carried Dllnols past
Michigan at Ann Arbor, Mich ,
and Mike Robinson scored 32
points and center Bill Kilgore
had a career high 29 as
Michigan State upset Ohio
State at East Lansing, Mich
Kentucky raced to a 22.2lead
and went on to crush Alabama
at Lexington, Ky Kevm
Grevey had 29 points for the
WUdcats and reserve Steve
liJchmueller added 18 Wendell
Hudson was high man for
Alabama with 31 points
Elsewhere, Dw1ght Jones
had 26 points and 14 rebounds
to lead loth ranked Houston to
a 94-75 homecourt victory over
Samford and Lee Gilbert came
off the bench to score 20 pomts
and lead Oklshoma to a 78-88
victory over Colorado at
Norman, Okla Kansas State
gained at lead a tie for the B1g
Eight title by clobbmng
Oklahoma ·State, , 91~7, at
Stillwater, Okla , behind Steve
Mitchell's 21 pomts
Sam Houston state, the No I
small college team, finished
the regular season unbeaten
and ran 1ts winning streak to 31
games by ripping Southwest
Texas State, 77 58, behmd
Robert White's 23 pomts

Pro Standings
ABA Standings
By United Press tntemaltonat
East
w I pet I b
Carolina
49 20 710 Kentucky
44 24 647
Virg inia
33 32 508 14
New York
25 44 362 24
Memphis
22 46 324 26'h
West

UCLA keeps top spot in UPI poll

NEW YORK (UP!) Thirteen may be considered an
unlucky number by some, 6ut
UCLA didn't seem to affected
This week's ratings by the
United Press International
CLASS AAA
w I pd gb
IAI Rio Grande)
Board
of Coaches were the 13th
42 24 636 Wednesday- Jackson (5 14) Utah
lndtana
3'1 30 565 411, this season, but the Brums
vs Chillicothe (15 31 7 30 p m Denver
37
30 552 5112 didn't fare any worse than m
Frtdaf - Meigs (11 Bl vs Dallas
24
41 369 11112
Miami race 03 6l 7 30 p m San Diogo
the previous 12 weeks,
21 45 318 21
Winner advances to Athens
Monday's
Results
rece1vlng all 34 flTSt place
District
Indiana
112
New
York
105
Saturday - Portsmouth (12 Dallas 120 San Diego 115
votes cast for a perfect 340
7l vs winner ol Jackson
pomls
I
Only
games
scheduled)
Chillicothe game 7 30 p m
Tuesday's
Games
UCLA upped 1ts record to
winner advances to Athens
Kentucky at Utah
District
23-0
and 1ts consecullve wmIOnly game scheduled)
mng streak to 68 w1th a pau of
CLASS AA
IAIWaverlyl
Thursday - Alexander (16
2l vs Oak Hill (3 16) 7 30 p m
Saturday - Alexander Oak
Hill winner vs Hillsboro (11 8)
7 30 p m Winner to Rio Grande
D•str~cl
Early Thursday Mixed
!AI Coal Grovel
"
Feb 15 1973
Rio Grande College comThursday- Fairland (13 6)
Potn1s
vs Gallipolis (15 3) 7 15 p m Lucky Strikers
40 pleted regular season hard
Saturday - Gallipolis
Alley
Cats
24
wood play m a blaze of glory at
Fatrland winner vs 'So uth Four Jokers
22
f&gt;olnl (145) 7 15 pm Winner Mr and Mrs
22 Lyne Center Monday nlgbt by
to Rio Grande Dlstnct
Them
and
Us
22 turning back Coach Bill Lucas'
IAI Stewart)
Allin
the
Family
14 Central State Unlvers~ty
Tuesday- Belpre (11 71 vs
Team
High
Series
Them
VInton County ( 10-91 7 30 p m and Us 2077 Lucky Strikers Marauders, 72-64 More than
Wednesd1y
New
1,000 fans VIewed the makeup
Lexington (9 10) vs Nelson 2076
Team High Game - All In contest
vil le York (10 7) 7 30 p m
the Family 771 Four Jokers
Saturday - Belpre Vmton 733
The victory left R1o With a 13County wtnner vs New Lex
Men
s
High
Ser.es
Gene
12
season mark as the Redmen
Nels York winner 7 30 p m Murray 584 Keith Phalm 537
Wtnner to Rto Grande Distnct
prepare
lor next Monday's
Men s H1gh Game - Gene
(AI Lucamllel
Thursday- Waverly (171 ) Murray 233 Ke•th Phalm 224 Distr1ct 22 NAIA tournament
Women s High Senes - battle With Defiance
vs Portsmouth West ( 16-3) Sandy
Korn 452 Diane Hawley
730pm
The Marauders, two time
Saturday -- Wheelersburg 445Women s H1gh Game - NAlA champions a few years
(15 41 vs
Waverly West
wtnner 7 30 p m Winner to D•ane Hawley 175 Sandy Korn
165
Rio Grande District
Feb 22 1973
!At Buchtel)
Potnts SIGNED AND UNSIGNED
Friday - Federal Hocking Lucky Strikers
40
(12 6) vs Starr Washington (9 Alley Cats
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
32
7l7pm
Mr
and
Mrs
30
Cincmnati Reds' top relief
Fr~day - Crooksville (7 12)
Four Jokers
22 pitcher, Clay Carroll, Signed
vs M•ller (10 8) 8 15 p m
All m the Family
22
Saturday - FH SW wtnner Them
and
Us
22 his contract for the 1973 season
vs CHS Miller winner 7 30
Team High Series - All In Monday Earlier In the day the
p.m Wmner to Chtlltcothe
the Family 2193 Mr and Mrs
Dlstnct
Reds announced centerf1elder
2056
!At Rock Sprtngsl
Team High Game - All 1n Bobby Tolan had agreed to
Thursday- Chesapeake (12
Family 752 All In the terms
7) vs Ironton Sf Joe (9 101 7 the
Family
735
pm
Also slgnmg were veteran
Mens Hogh Series - Henry
Thursday- North Gallla 15
Hensley
468
Ray
Roach
and
Jack
Billingham, Ed Sprague,
14) vs Symmes Valley Ill Bl
Gene Murray 524
8 30 p m
Mens High Game - Henry Dave Tomhn and Juaqum
Fnday - Chesapeake ISJ
winner vs NG SV winner 7 15 Hensley 225 Ken Longstreth Andujar
p.m Winner to Chi llicothe 205
StW unsigned in the Reds'
Women s High Series Dtsklct
orgamzallon
are outfielder
Sandy Korn 485 Diane Hawley
IAt Htllsborol
Pete Rose and first baseman
Wednesday- Peebles 119 11 432
Women s H1gh Gam e v1 Lynchburg Clay 113 81 7 30
Tony
Perez
Dtane Hawley 189 Sandy Korn
pm
Thursday - West Un ion 19 185
121 vs Pike of Western (14 51
7 30 p m
Saturday - W1nners meet
for title 7 30 p m Wmner
Early Sunday Mixed
advances to Chtlltcothe
POMEROY
Feb 18 1973
District
Slandtngs
BOWLING
LANES
IAt Portsmouth)
Wednesday
Early
Bird
Team
W
L
Tuesday - East 110 91 vs
Feb 21 1973
J8 26
Notre Dame I 14 41 7 15 p m Team No 3
Standmgs
Mark v
36 28
Fr~d~~ rrr South Wehste• IJJ
35 29 Team
81 vs Coal Grove (1 2 7) 7 p m Farmers Bank
54 18
29 35 Evelyn s Grocery
Friday - East NO winner RaCine Food Mkt
to:lng Builders Sup
-u 28
vs sw CG winner a 15 m ..f'iglei-Gftlb ':l f" ,..,, 28 ...36 Dorothy
s Pmnettes
43 29
26 38
Saturday- Finals 7 15 m Tom s Carry Out
R
H
Rawlings
30
42
High
lnd
Game
Jr
Phelps
Wmner to
Bertha
s
Grocery
28
44
266
Betty
Smith
190
Larry
IAI
Royal Crown
17 55
Wednesday _::_-Hurtlin•gton Dugan 236 Betty Sm1th 187
High lnd Game - FlosSie
High Senes - Jr Phelgs 594
(14 5) vs Bishop Flaget
11)
Betty Sm•lh 558 Larry ugan Maxson 192 Mary Voss 191
7 30 p m
Htgh Senes - Mary Voss
Thursday - Pamt Valley 591 Julia Boyles 482
495 Loutse Gtlmore 485
Team H1gh Game - Rac1ne
(10 9) vs Southeastern of Ross
Team Htgh Game
Food Mkt 721
(12 9) 7 30 p m
Evelyn s Grocery 819
Team H1gh Sertes - RacJ ne
Saturday - FIna is 7 30 p m
Team High Senes
Wtnner to Chtlllcolhe District Food Mkt 11197
Evelyn s Grocery 2331

.v,

Local Bowling

Local Bowling

Carroll inks
, 1973 contract

Phoenix next month
The first assistant the Ralllers lost Will John Poloncheck,
wbo qwt as offensive backfield
coach of the Raiders last
February and later jomed the
Green Bay Packers' coachmg
staff
The Raiders clahned NFL
Commissioner Pete Rozelle
fined the Packers a fifth..-ound
draft ch01ce But an NFL
spokesman said Monday night
that the Packers weren't officially fined
''Oakland filed a complaint
but the commissioner did not
aot on it,' he SBld, 'the two
parties worked It out among
themselves "
Oakland received a filthround draft choice from Green

Bay but 1t was originally announced as psrt of the deal in
which Vernon Vanoy was sent
to Oakland for defensiVe end
Carleton Oats
The Raiders lost their second
coach Fnday when assistant
Ray Malavas1 quit Malavas1,
41, had been linebacker coach
for the last two seasons since
leaving Buffalo
Coach John Madden charged
'blatant tampering" and sa1d
an unnamed team had mfluenced MalavaSI to res~gn so
1t could sign him
The NFL spokesman SBld
Oakland had f1led another
complamt In the Malavas1 case
but Rozelle hasn't taken any
action on the case yet
"Tampering" With a coach

107-104 to Los Angeles Stale m
overtime, and dropped to No 5,
but stomped UC Santa Bar
bara, 92~. to clmch the PCAA
tiUe and w1th 1! an NCAA
tournament berth
Mmnesota and Marquette,
both double wmners each
moved up one spot to thrrd and
fourth respecllvely
North Carohna and Kansas
Slate each went I 1 for the
week thus falhng one place to
seventh and e1ghth, respectively Providence a tnple
wmner - mcludmg a 20-pomt
thrashing of f1fth ranked small
college Assumption - chmbed
two pos1tions to s1xth
Houston and Memphis State
each won two games and
moved mto the 9th and lOth
back, finished the campaign pos1twns
with a f&gt;.20 mark
After balding a slun 37-33
halflune lead, the Redmen
never trailed throughout the
NEW YORK IUPil -- The
final hall, leadmg anywhere
Untied Press International top
from four to 10 pomts
20 major college basketball
Four Redmen fm1shed m teams w1th ftrst place votes
won lost records as of
double l1gures m scormg M1ke and
Saturday n parentheses I13th
Rouse ,
Jackson's
6 5 Week)
Pomts
sophomore forward, popped m Team
I UCLA (34) (23 01
340
211 to pace Rio's attack
2 N C St (23 01
304
Capt Ron Lambert added 16 3 Mmnesota I18 2l
245
196
Ironton's f&gt;.ll 1un1or guard 4 Marquette 122 2)
5 Long Beach 51 122 2)
191
Steve Bartram talbed 14, and 6 Prov1dence 121 2)
117
109
Zanesville's Dan Bollmger, 6-5 7 North Carolina (21 l)
sophomore forward, added 12
It was Rio s hest defensiVe
effort of the 1972-73 campa1gn
Central state placed four
men m double ligures, led by
Jack Shardo's 17 markers
Shardo 1s a 6-9 freshman from
W1Uow Dell Ohio
Addmg 12 markers each for
the Marauders were Ray and
M1ke Byrd and Carl Ealy The
latter IS a 6-4 freshman from
Augusta, Ga
R1o was outrebounded by the
Marauders 41 28 The VISitors,
bowever committed 16 turn
overs R10 lost the ball 14
tunes
Box score
CENTRAL STATE (64) W1lliams 2 0 4 Ealy 6 o 12
Ray Byrd 6 0 12 M1ke Byrd 6
0 12 Shardo 8 1 17 Fortson 2
3 7 TOTALS 30 4 64
RIO GRANDE (721 Bartram 7 0 14 Lambert 8 0
16 Bollmger 6 0 12 Rouse 8
4 20 Thompson I 0 2 Hart 2
0 4 Poling 1 0 2 Fausnaugh
102 TOTALS34472
Score at half
Rio 33 Central Stale 33

means trymg to recru1t a coach
or player from another team
Without getting the team's
consent
The most famous example
came three years ago when
Shula left Baltimore for
Miami Rozelle fined M1aml a
f1rstround draft choice which turned out to be Don
McCauley - but when the
Dolphins won the Super Bowl
th1s year, the Dolphins figured
It was a good deal for them
'Wouldn't you trade McCauley for Shula 1 " owner Joe
Robbie asked during Super
Bowl week in Los Angeles
It's obviously gomg to be a
hot topic of discussion at the
meetmg m Phoemx

College Ratings

The on-again-off-again
season of the Oh1o State
Buckeyes was off-again
Monday night
The same team that clobbered Northwestern lallt weekend fell an upset vlcthn to

ADD ANOTHER CARD
CLEARWATER, Fla (UP!)
- The Phlladelpllla Phlllles
have added another St Louis
Cardinals reject to their staff
But this one won't wear a
1111form The Phlls, who picked
up Cy Young Award-wmner
Steve Carlton from the Cards
last year when owner Gussie
Busch became enraged at his
salary demands, signed 69year-old Dr Walter C
Eberhardt,
a
physical
education specialist He helped
the Cards train for 13 years but
SBld he was relealed under
BusCh's austerity proaram

even OSU at 6-6 m the Big Ten
and pushed the Spartans up a
notch to 4-8
Allan Hornyak pJUDped m 32
points for the Bucks, but MSU
also got 32 pomts from Mike
Robinson and another 29 from
Bill Kilgore Ohio state threw
away 1ta last chance to wm
with a pass that sailed out of
boWlds with nine seconds left
and the Bucks trailing 85-83

Oh1o state &lt;{Topped to 12-10
overall Michigan State IS 1111
In other obasketball action,
Rio Grande mpped Central
State 72-64, Defiance downed
Heidelberg 79-71, and Hiram
downed John Carroll 96-85
Tonight Wooster and Wittenberg meet at Denison Unlver·
sity at Granville In the fmals of
the Oh1o Conference ChamploliShlp

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LATEX WALL PAINT

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
TOURNEY SCORES
By IJn1fed Press tnlernahonat
(Class AAAI
!At Columbus!
Lmden McKinley 64 Columbus
West 54
Westervtlle 60 Whetstone 50
IA!Troy)
Dayton Meadowdale 50 Green on
40

!Class AI
IAI Aushntown)
Sebrmg 63 LISbon 49
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCORES
By Untied Press lnfernahonal
Mtchlgan State 87 Oh o State 83
R1o Grande 72 Central State 64
Def•ance 79 Hetdelberg 71
Htram 96 John Carroll 85

Chief Latex

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DOUBLE
BELTED
tlril at everyday low...

OSU upset by Spartans
By United Press IDtematlonal Michigan State 87-33 The loss

8 Kansas St (19 &lt;I)
9 Houston (20 3)
10 Memphis St 121 4)
11 Maryland 119 4)
12 SW LoUISiana (22 2)
IJ lnd•ana (17 5)
14 New MeXIco 121 41
15 (!tel Mtssourl 118 4)
15 lite I Weber St 119 61
17 (tiel San Fran (20 4)
17 (lie) Tennessee (14 6)
19 (tiel South Car (18 5)
19 (tiel Jacksonville 120 5)
19 (tie) Sf Jos Pa (20 51

Redmen whip CS

Tampering issue raised again

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
issue of 'tampering" With
coaches-which caused quite a
furor when Don Shula left
Baltimore for Miami three
years ago-has flared up again
Cotloge Basketball Results In the National Football
By United Press lnternaltonal
League
East
Am Inti 75 W New Eng 68
The chief victhns this time
S Conn 112 Merrimack 85
are the Oakland Raiders, who
Marlst 107 Yeshiva 68
clahn
they lost two assistanto
Dowling 78 Cathedrol 49
New Homp 77 Dartmouth 66
because of ''tampering "
Vermont 74 Norwich ~7
Art Modell, the owner of the
Geneva 96 Grove City 71
Cleveland Browns, wasn't afManslld 62 Shlppensbg 54
Woynesbg 75 Calli Pa 66
fected In the latest Incident but
Adelphi 84 Queens 67
was so upset that he says he
South
Kentucky 111 Alabama 95
will ask that severe penalties
La St 78 Tennessee 7~
be levied for future tampering
Marshall 71 Fla St 59
He
said he will bring up the
Tenn Tech 85 Mrehed St 79
Western Ky 67 Murray Sf 66 issue at the NFL meetings in
Voldsta Sf 107 Sou Tech 70
Ga Sou 76 Houston Bap 62
Ogiethrpe 73 Tenn Temple 69
Lagrange 92 No Ga 79
Miss 91 Florida 80
Miss St 72 Georgia 68
Auburn 79 Ga Tech 69
Midwest
Michigan 87 Ohio St 83
Wisconsin 71 Purdue 6J
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Illinois 96 Mlc~lgan 89
Cincinnati Reds' top relief
UW Green Bay 79 E Ill 66
Defiance 79 Heidelberg 71
pitcher, Clay CarroJl, s.gned
Rio Grande 72 Cent St. 64
hl5 contract lor the 1973 season
Hiram 96 John Carroll 85
Monday
Lincoln 106 NE No 82
Mlnn 90 Northwestern 74
Carroll was one of five pitchSouthwest
ers
to Ink contracta Earlier m
Houston 9~ Samford 75
the day the Reda announced
La Tech 105 Tex Arl 87
Sam Hous 51 n S W Tex St centerOelder Bobby Tolan had
58
agreed to terms
Hendrix 104 Coli Ozarks 70
Alao signing were veteran
UM- Rolla 82 S W Mo St 73
Kansas St 91 Oklo 51 67
Jack Billingham, Ed Sprague,
McNeese St 86 SE La 69
Dave Tomlin and Juaqum An·
Oklahoma 78 Colorado 68
West
dujar
Prllnd St 71 Cent Wash 52
Carroll, named to the 1971
and 1972 all...tar learns, IS entering his sixth season with
Cincinnati He was named the
National League's ' Fireman
of the year" lut season
ANGELS SIGN SEVEN
Billingham finished last seaANAHEIM (UP!) - The son 12-12 with a 3 18 earned run
California Angels announced average In the 1972 World Sethe signing of seven players ries, the righthander pitched 13
Monday Including pitcher 2-3innings,gave up just six hits
Clyde Wright; first baseman and no earned runs He was
Bob Oliver and second credited with winning the third
baseman Sandy Alomar The gsme
other lour players were young
Still unsigned In the Reds
pltchen- Dave Sells, Sid organlzallon are outfielder
Monae, Arldy Ha111er and l'lte Rose and first baseman
BrllCI Helnbechder
Totty Perez

road victories over Oregon and
Oregon State and can complete
a second stra1ght undefeated
season by wmnmg lis last three
games at home
North Carolma State kept lis
hopes for an undefeale&lt;;l season
al1ve With sound wh1ppmgs of
Duke and UNCCharlotte The
Wolfpack must vlslt the
seventh-ranked Tar Heels and
stop Wake Forest at home
before they achieve that end,
however
Long Beach State suffered 1ts
second setback of the season,

17t13 (810131
l!.ckw1M1
Ph;s1il 90pot ,..
fltd E• •• • •nd 2
1re1ol you e-

992-2848

Pomeroy

�'

•

2-The Daily Sentmel, Middleport Pomeroy, 0 , Feb Tl, 1973

DR. LA~RENCE E. LAMB
Check With Your Doctor

EDITORIALS

"'

Safety of Private
Flying up, Up, UP
A .,-JO,OOO airplane, anyone' Or how about $1,500 worth
ot twllon toward a pnvate p1lot ratmg'
These are among the mducements bemg offered by the
General Av1atlon Manufacturers Assn (GAMA) to en
coura~e pilots and those 'who would hke to be p1lots to
participate 1n the Federal Av1ahon Admm1stration s Ac
c1dent Prevention Program
Between June 1, 1972 and Jan 31, 1973 more than
115 000 p1lots and nonp1lots quahf1ed for these and 102
other priZes m GAMA s Safe P1lot Sweepstakes by at
tendmg an FAA safety semmar and a1rcraft clime
Thousands more are expected to quallfr before the sweep
stakes ends on May 31 and the wmners names are drawn
The FAA program began m 1971 after mvesllgabons of
general aviallon accidents and estabhshed that more
than 80 per cent of them were attnbutable to pilot error
The program wh1ch 1s entirely voluntary consists of
the safety education semmars and aircraft climes as well
as courtesy check ndes to enable p1lots to Improve weaknesses and discussions w1th mdustry, representatives on
a1rcraft and eq u1pment Pilots are also encouraged to
f1le reports regardmg unsafe airway or airport condillons
An FAA Accident Prevention Specialist handles the program at each of 84 general av1atlon d1stnct off1ces around
the country
This emphas1s on general av1atwn safety 1s hardly new,
however Safety has always been stressed-by the manu
facturers of aircraft engmes, radios and other com
ponents through teshng and certification, through the
traming and licensmg of pilots, mechanics, a1r traff1c
controllers and other spec1alists and by var1ous p1lot
organizallons
The result has been a steady •mprovement m the acc1
dent picture over the years In 1980 for example, there
were 4 793 acc1dents recorded for 13 I million hours and
I 7 bllbon m1les flown by general (non a1rline) av1ation
By 1970, the hours and m1les flown had Increased to 25 5
m1lbon and 3 9 bllbon respectively, but the number of ac
c1dents Increased only slightly to 4 927 The accident rate
per 100 000 flying hours was cut almost m half
PriVate pilots and others who would hke to part1c1pate
~ m the program-and enter the GAMA Sweepstakes-can
fmd out the t1mes and locallons of semmars and clmlcs
by contacbng thm local FAA office

Ah, Er, You Know, Uh--You ve heard of 'pregnant pauses Lmgmsts and
Qther students of human behavlo~ now report that or
dmary conversatiOn contams all kmds of d1fferent pauses
and they have dlv\ded them Into two mam categor1es
First are the S1!ent Pauses (pregnant or otherwise)
These may be natural pauses at the ends of sentences or
phrases Or they may indicate that the speaker Is think
ing of what to say next or allowmg his hstener to absorb
'\'hat he has said
Then there are the F11led Pauses wh1ch mclude false
starts, repeats cliches Uke You know ' and what are
called ' 1dllng ' sounds-uh ah umm er and other no1ses
The latter are especially useful m helpmg a person keep
control of the conversational ball by s•gnallng 'I'm sllll
talking don't mterrupt me '
According to one scientist spontaneous speech actually
contains about 40 to 50 per cent silence A good guess
would be that the uhs ahs umms and ers not to menhon
the You knows " account for another 40 to 50 per cent
That leaves from zero to 20 per cent for meamnglul
dialogue '
Is It any wonder we complain of a commumcallons gap'

&amp; THINIJS

Digitalis and Calcium Don't Mix
By Lawrence Lamb, M D
Dear Dr Lamb - In your
column, you stated that
adults need approximately a
quart of milk a day and m
another column you stated
that anyone takmg d1g1tahs
should av01d excess calciUm
mtake Now my quesllon 1s
th1s How much m1lk would
be considered excessive for
anyone takmg d1g1tahs 1 I
am ret1red, age 69 we~gh 195
pounds and take d1g1tal•s to
control a tendency towards
paroxysmal tachycardia My
doctor tells me 11 1s safe for
me to r1de my biCycle 20
m1les a day wh1ch I do and
feel great m domg 11
Dear Reader - Individuals
takmg di~1tahs and the var1
ous medicines that contam
dig1tahs products w 1ll not
have any trouble drmkmg
ordmary quanhties one to
two quarts a day
The problem IS that cal
cmm tablets are available
without prescnption to the
general pubhc Th1s mcludes

bone meal preparations and
a number of vitam1n tablets
w1th calciUm If you add
these sources of calciUm m
take to ordmary m1lk mtake,
1t could cause dlff~eultii!S
For th1s reason, I thmk any
one who takes digitalis medi
cme regularly should av01d
t a k 1n g mmeral tablets or
other health foods Without
the1r doctor s recommends
twn Sounds to me hke
you re domg rather well 1f
you are able to bicycle 20
m1les a day
Dear Dr Lamb - I d ap
prec1ate your comment on
an article that stated that
the combmatwn of aspum
and alcohol are poten
tially dangerous Accordmg
to the arllcle, aspmn some
t1mes causes small bleedmg
and alcohol can penetrate
the stomach and cause the
bleedmg to be worse I have
been usmg two aspmns w1th
a glass of wme at bedtime as
a sedallve and considered 11
safer than sleepmg p1lls but
now I am concerned about

the effect on my stomach If
you a~ree w•th tb1s article,
what m your op1mon would
be a sale mterval between
the two' For example1 Jf one
had a couple of drmKs and
then later found 11 necessary
to take asp1rm I am a 46year-old grandmother and m
good health except for bemg
a 11 I tl e overweight w1th
shghtiy h1gh blood pressure
for wh1ch I take medlCme
under a doctor's supervisiOn
Dear Reader-Small flakes
of aspmn mater1al Will actually stick to the lmmg of
the stomach and can burn
small holes m it and can
cause bleed1n1: Large
amounts of aspmn also affect the clotting mechamsm
of the blood to cause a bleed
mg tendency Because alcohol does cause the stomach
hmng to be engorged With
bl o ad and causes an m
creased secretion of acId
JUices by t h e stomach, I
would read1lr believe that
the combmallon IS not good
The best way to take as

Generation Rap

Isms: Scientism
And Historicism
1

lmpottru:e booklet

By United Pres' IJlternallonal
Today IS Tuesday Feb 27
the 58th day of 1973 w1th 307 to
follow
The moon 1s between Its last
quarter and new phase
The mormng stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter
Tbe evenmg stars are Mercury and Saturn
Tbll&amp;e born on this date are
under the Sign of Pisces
Amencan poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was born
Feb '!I, 1807
On th1s day m history
In 1939, so-called 's1t-down '
str1kes were outlawed by the
Umted States Supreme Court
In 1942, fll'st salvos were
f1red m the battle of the Java
Sea, a Pacif1c naval engagement m the early days of World
War II m wh1ch Japsn sank 13
Amencan warships while losmg
only two
In 1963, M1ckey ManUe of the
New York Yankees s1gned a
contract for $1110,000 highest
m baseball to that tune
1

"

6 I

WIN AT BRIDGE

BRUCE BIOSSAT
1

Sertd your quesllons to Dt Lamb
m co,. of tiUs newspc~ptr , 0 lo.r
1551 Rad10 City Stat1on New Yorlr
H Y 10019 for • topy ol Dr Lamb's
~Itt on 'mpottnce send 50 cMts
to tlte scrme address and asl: lor

Alnu~nac

thiS one What's he landed on lately•
"No Sex Please, We're British" Ia a drab,
trivial British museum1»ece The best (only)
thing about 1t was 11ll title, It wasn't dirty, only
hopeless Maureen O'Sullivan had better
dialogue from Tarzan
Greg Bautzer, legal aide to Howard Hughes,
Is confemng more paSSionately with Nicole
DanUne, daughter of the late fUm tycoon Nick
Schenck and ex-wife to Hehnut DanUne
Gunther Sachs, Brigitte Bardot's ex, IS a pure
Indoor sport this tr1p to Manhattan He's at the
Pierre Hotel and bypasses room service to have
all meals sent up from the Pierre's chic supper
club, La Foret
The Smgles syndrome's spreading to the
exurbs The Chateau D'Vle in Spring Valley, N
Y , bars guesta who don't fall between 20 and 40
Daytimes 1t's outdoor sports, nights - what
else'
Arnold Palmer's golfing comeback was his
happ1est news More than the satisfaction &lt;i
ownmg large mterests m about 20 golf courses
now being built Baseball's bad press has the
horsehide establishment scouting Mad Ave
Image-makers
Max Kase told us at his
Br1efkase Pub that Joe Pepitone has a fabulous
offer for three Toky(Hiaseball seasons It broke
Joe's wallet to sign again with the Chi CUbs

'

(NEWSPAPER EHTERPRISE ASSN )

TodJJy's

along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN
TRAMP, TRAMP, TRAMP,
'The GIRLS' AREMARCHIN'
NEWYORK(UPI) -Greatest champ Jack
Dempsey needs emergency hlp surgery - but
his own Internist advised against 11 - the 78year-old tough guy's not up to It
Steve
McQueen's trip to Tokyo was to sign a deal to
TV-p1tch Honda cycles for $1,000,000 In Front'
Gmlstar Roger Staubach on TV right to
Howard Cosell's no doubt pretty face "I'm
your hest fr1end and I don't even like you'"
Jawn Lindsay, running for something anytlung - claims be's vamoosed the prosties
of the showbiZ area 8 30 the other evening
around the theater where Deep Throat's pornlng along, a dozen tramps of the evenmg were
accosting the smutacular's e~ntlng turn-ons and any male ambling by One of the drabs
couldn't have been more than 16 She brazenly
wr~ggled m the center of the sidewalk as the rest
lurked in doorways -while a slight walk away
stood two cops ignonng the wbole filthy mess
Full-eu'cle poor mlllionalres hitch r1des m
Teamster boss Harold Gibbons' private jet
And ex-.!lteelworkers' boss DaVId McDonald
entertains hiS ncb cronies on his yacht Ayear
ago Astroanut Alan Shepsrd was an bonored
player at Bob Hope's celebnty golf tour~, not

p1rm 1s to take 11 at the end
of a meal or to eat some
thing when you take 11, such
as cottage cheese or drink a
glass of milk Milk w•ll help
to neutralize the ac1ds m the
stomach and bel~ to prevent
precipitating aspmn crystals
on the stomach lmmg
It takes several hours to
ehmmate the effects of alco
hoi on the stomach If one
mslsts on taking the two 11
would be better to take !be
asplrm lust w1th a hquid
neutraliZer s u c h as mille
Perhaps an hour or more
later this would have been
emptied from the stomach
and 1t would then be safer to
have a g!as~ , 'lf wme

1

By Helen and Sue Hottel
1

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON !NEAl
I once knew an elderly lady who would often charitably
dlS.mlss ev1dence of a man's personal idiosyncrasy by
saymg
Oh, that s JUSt one of h1s little 'isms '
More recently I heard a distmgmshed Brmsh SClenbst,
S1r Peter Medowar who won a Nobel pme for work In
Immunology argue persuasiVely that too many people
today are capllvated by big '1sms
He wasn t talkmg about the obvwus lnghteners-com
mumsm and fasc1sm H1s complaint was much subtler
and more deeply percepllve of developing trends m hu
man thought
Two of the words he used are a bit hard to gulp downsc•entlsm and historicism Yet they have thm clear
forceful pomt
By 'SClentism S1r Peter means the practice growing
apace of mvestmg excess1ve la1th m sc1ence as capable
of VIrtually every m1racle conceiVable The SClenllflc rev
olut10n of the past three decades, a real thunderbolt has
seemed to make such IIlith plausible
But, m the Bntlsher's JU~gment sc1entlsm thus delmed
contams a danger The peril1s that such mordmate fa1th,
directed down one single channel lifts humamty's ex
pectations beyond reasonable heights In the~r prec1p1tous
nse, these expectatwns already have been g1ven unwar
rented- and hence basically cruel- upward thrust from
glib easy prom1smg polltic1ans
Medowar plainly opposes any mov e toward one
cause" or 'one hope" theones to explam what s happened
or ought to happen m soc~ety
'Historicism he perceives as the habit of laymg too
b1g a load on the back of h1story Those wedded to th1s
notion see h1story as some kmd of predetermmed course,
never truly altered by acc1dents of human behav1or or
personality tra1ts
It Is such thmkmg that leads some analysts today to
contend that the Amencan leaders who took us, stage by
stage Into a b1g scale though sllll lim1ted war m V1et
nam were doomed by h1story
What they mean, of course, 1s that these leaders were
1mpr1soned by ' cold war ' psychology growing out of the
turbulent world events wh1ch followed World War II and
thrust the Western world mto ev1dent severe conflict with
the Sov1et Umon and China
Some of these analysts seem to argue contrarily, smce
1t mtroduces a ' human opllon ' that the doomed-by h1s
tory theory would hardlv permit that our whole As1an
policy (mcluding Vietnam) would have been different had
not the Commun•st witch huntmg of the days of the late
W1sconsm Sen Joseph McCarthy brou~ht the oustm~ of
expert Chma hands" from the US dlplomallc serv1ce
Now l don t know what Su Peter Medowar thmks
about either the cold war or V~etnam But I would guess
he would smlf a questwnable aroma of pre deshny ' m
much of th1s kmd of thmkmg
Which leads me to one of the better known Isms ' that
particularly troubles th1s scientist-fatahsm Th1s Idea
is of course the ulllmate m the realm of pre-destmallon
the most extreme extensiOn of historiCISm ' To be a
fatahst 1s to accept the concept that no one can really
change anythmg by wh1m chance or acc1dent It s all
dec1ded The future 1s locked up
Sir Peter fmds fatallsm deeply scarrmg many people s
concerns over the ev1ronmental cns1s affhctlng the world
W1thout for a second downplaymg the ex1stmg deter1ora
llQn and the menace of more, he refuses to cry doom He
believes that what man makes he can unmake He be
lleves man can use technology to bu1ld Without self-de
!eating destruction I guess he has h1s own 1sm '-hu
manlsm- a faith in man himself

Restraint Brings in Game
NORTH

21

She Deplores Lost FemfDlnlty
.KQ10
Dear Helen and Sue
• 86'
+A102
I am 18, small, and extremely proud of my femuumty I have
oftQJ102
always believed that pore "gl1'1-ness ' IS the best way to a boy's
WEST
EAST
heart The more weak and vulnerable a girl IS, the better I detest
.86
.9754
the sa&lt;alled natural look - no makeup the athletic, blonde,
.AKJ532 .Q9
blue-eyed super-female imsge
+Q975
+J83
oft4
oft9853
Movies about lady sp1es who excel m karate, and women
SOUTH (D)
detectives (etch') tum me off And w1tcbes I stopped believmg
.AJ32
m such junk long ago
.107
The dames are always strong and healthy enough to be men ·
+K64
oftAK76
- and can usually do men m,one way or another Revolting'
None vulnerable
I have lost my steady to one of those blonde tomboy types
W
.;l
North Ea.t Soulh
She wants to be a, get this, policewoman Yecch' How unloft
femmlne can you get • She's sure no llvmg doll
1.
3 oft
Pass
3•
I'm thinkmg of starting a fern-lib club to protect us from such
Pass Pass
Pass 4 •
overpowering blondes Aren't there still places left for us who
Pass
love makeup and lookmg pretly, wbo take pnde In hemg thin,
Opemng lead-• K
unathletic and damty, wbo WANT men to be supenor? By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
FOREVERFEM
North's JUmp to three clubs
Dear Fern
was a lim1t raise South de
A ' lovmg doll" to one boy is deadly dull to another Your ex c1ded that h1s 15 h1gh card
ev1dently wanted more companionship than a forever .fern type pomts warranted a rellid and
tned three spades just m
could give him, but keep looking There are sUII a few fellows left case North m1ght happen to
wbo enjoy playing the b1g protector to the helpless, weak, have four-card support
vulnerable female - HELEN
North d1dn t have four
card support but b1d four
+++
spades anyway on the theory
Dear Forever
10 tr1cks m1ght j us I
that
(But not many, Mom, and you know It')
come m with spades as
You needn't learn karate cbops or maJor m police sc1ence, trump while II tr1cks at
Fern, but don't rely entirely on femininity, makeup, weakness, clubs m1ght prove to be out
etc , or you'll lose more guys than you get Boys want mteresUng, of reach
He was wrong on the sec
active gll'ls l"ho can do more than Sit around and look decorative
and count F1ve clubs makes
Try 1t, you might like 1t - SHE
eas1ly s 1n c e declarer can
+++
make hve trump tncks (m
Rap
I am 17 and have two kids When I was first pregnant my
boyfriend refused to marry me as he dliJ.,•t want to be tied down
A thought for the day
He wanted me to have an abortion bull refused so he left me
Amencan poet Henry Wads
After the baby was born, Joe decided he wanted us after all worth Longfellow said, 'MUSic
We went back together, but before we could get married, I was IS the un1versal language of
pregnant agam He couldn't cope w1th the responsibility of two mankmd poetry the universal
babies and took off
pasllme and dehght "
Then I started going with Dan, wbom I'd known for years I
didn'tlove hun but be was awfully good to me, and befot'e I knew
Stntilel
It I was pregnant again It's like "If you cant be with the one you
OIVOTID TO TMI
INTIRIIT 0,
love, love the one you can be with "BeSides, !needed someone to
MilOS MUON ARIA
take care of me, not having a family
CHISTIII L TANNIHILL,
IIIC ld
Now Joe Is back He wanto me to get an abortion and stay
IIOIIIIT HOI,LICH,
City ldltor
w1th hun Says threatening things like If I don t he'll make life
PubliShed
dolly UCIPt
miserable for me and Dan Dan offers me a better life and wants Stlurdty by Tht
Ohio Vtllty
to marry me Joe doesn't make any promises, but !love Joe and Publllhlng Compony 111
court St
Pomeroy Oh Ia
not Dan What shall I do• - PAD
45769 Bvslntll OIIICt Phont
tl2 2156, Edltorlol Phone t92
2157
p
second clu&amp; po&amp;togt paid ot
Ohio
First, study up on birth control and resolve that you'll Pomeror
NIIIOnll ICIYtrt l aint
practice It Three babies, no husband, by age 17 indicates either reprtltnfatlvt Bottlntlll
Inc )2 Eut •2nd
remarkllble Ignorance or a don't-care attitude that would make GtllagKtr
St Ntw York City, Ntw York
Subacrlpllon ratu Dt
you a very poor mother (Perhaps both )
livtrtd by carrltr whtrt
Next See Joe as he IS an u:respon.sible ' taker" who would avan•bt•
50 cents per w1tk1
leave you each time the going got rough Tell hun you're tllr«&lt;gh By Motor Routt whtrt carrier
serv•ct not avallfblt Ont
and don't let him scare you
month 11 75 By moll In Ohio
W Vo , Ont yeor SI• 00
Third Stop driftmg' Whether you choose Dan as your ond
Six months 17 25
Tt'lrtt
husband or not, at least get bold of your life Several agencies m monlhs U 50 Subscrlr,tton
lftCIUdH Sundly T Mtl
your town can help If you'll send us a stamped, self-addressed price
Stntlntl
envelope we'll put you m touch with them - HELEN AND SUE

Tht DliiJ

cludmg a ruff of a heart)
plus four spades, plus two
diamonds
He was also nght about
spades South had no trouble
making 10 tr1cks there
All that was requ1red was
a little m•ld restramt West
•
d
led out three top hearts an
South just had to hold back
the 1mpulse to ruff Instead
he JUSt discarded h1s four of
diamonds wh1ch would have
been a loser m any event
Then all he had to do was
to take the last 10 tncks With
h1gh cards
(N£WSPAP£R INTEaPRIS£ ASSN I

BY PAUL CRABTREB
I think lt was 1855 when the world was treated to the t11i1t trl·
toned cars, using three or more colors to accent the new mode1,a
If they could see us now, as the song goes
!)e(orating cars with pop art, op art, paialey prmto,
geometric deslgna, and tons and tons cl dacals has become a
full-time pastime for many drivers, usually quite young ones
!think, however, thatlaaw the ultlmate the other day
Heading for GaWpolia was a mlddlwged Ford, bearing the
legend "Please Don't Tail Gate Me" In bright green acrOIS the
entire rear end Most of the doors and rocker panels were done up
In a patriotic plethora of redillld-whlte stripes, plus white stars
on a blue f1eld Just under the driver's window, "Jesus Saves"
was printed mletters a good sb: Inches high
And the hood bore an lndeacrlbable melange ol swirls,
curlicues and patterns that must have taken bours - no, days to paint And every vacant space was plalltered with ublqultousbut.unaginatlve "STP" stickers
'!'be car was moving at a sedate pace, and I wheeled around
It, glancing at the driver and fully ~cling to see a bearded,
long-llalred kid, probably one of the "Jesus peqple "
To my astonishment, the vehicle was driven by a conservatively-dressed, neatly-trimmed middle-aged gentleman,
Sitting bolt upright behind the wheel with a sense of total
ll'Opriety
'
I drove on, wondenng If It was his son's car (or daughter's),
or whether he had really wrought that monstrosity himself

WORLD ALMANAC

High school tourney
play resumes tonight
•

Action resumed tonight m
southern Ohio sectional
basketball tournament&amp;
In Class A, Portsmouth East
Will battle Portsmouth Notre
Dame at Portsmouth, and
Belpre takes on Ymton CoWlty
at Stewart
There are no AA or AAA
games tomght Action will be
continued Wednesday, and
alter a heavy slate Thursday,
will be concluded Friday and
Saturday With semlfll18l and
championship games
Of 69 area high school
basketball teams which began
tournament competlhon
Friday night In 10 southern
Ohio Sectlonals only 39
remamed alive today

When the f1r1ng began
Friday, Were were nme AAA,
21 AA and 39 A Southern Ohio
squads m action Thirty were
elurunated durmg first round
action
FIVe AAA teams remam,
Including Me~gs and Jackson of
the Southeastern Ohio League
Thirteen Class AA qwnteto
are still In the running for
sechonal honors, mcludmg
SEOAL champion Waverly and
runnerup Gallipolis Both those
teams drew first round byes
Twenty-one Class A quintets
are still In tlie running, mcludlng SVAC tTl-champion
Symmes Valley, and North
Gallla, a member of the SVAC
Here's this week's pall'mgs

+++

!get angry when the networks show a program of value at an
hour too late for the kiddles to watch When they show one that IS
on toolateforMEtowatch, I become outraged
Yet, that IS exacUy what happened last Sunday, when ABC
decided to run Cecil B DeMille's super-opus, "The Ten Commandmenta" all the way through in one evening, from 8 p.m
Sunday until 12 30 a.m Monday rooming
Movies of lesser artistic and-or illlplratlonal value for the
wbole family have routinely been cut in half, showmg one part
one night and the remamder the next night (or even the next
week) To run a major film such as this into the wee hours may
not be sacrilege, but 11 Is stupidity
I would have liked to have seen this 1956 classic agam
Fortunately, I dld get to see the movie when It played the theatre
CircUit
And, besides, I've read the Book

+++

FM Station WBES has a commendable idea And a poor
track record
The affiliate of WCHS-AM·TV m Olarleston offers "stereo
bonus hours," presenting 57 minutes of music In a 58-minute
period, with the balance of the hour usually devoted to news
Great'
The only problem IS that their signal, which usually comes m
strong In the Meigs-Gallla-Mason area, has been fading In and
out, due to tr8llSII)itter troubles And the "stereo" broadcasts
often are monaural
What would be wrong With telling the liatener they're having
some problems W1th a good !annat, we'd be patient, wouldn't
we•

+++
Postscript for ''The Ten CoiiUilBndments" The kids and I
got so fllSCIIUited we stayed up and watched the whole thing

+++

ON THE TV DIAL "Circus" fealllresa Parisian show, 7 30,
WLWC.TV, followed by "Sunshine Patriot," 8, same spot
"America,"
Wl:A7-TV
at JO.
1
'
.J
~ -.h':!l
1-,
j ..
i l:..ol
1
J

Television Log
TUESDAY FEB 27,1973
6 OO - News3 4 81013 15 TrulhorConseq 6 Sesame Sf 20

Around The Bend 33
6 30 - What s My Line B I ve Got A Secret 13 Elec Co 20
Beat The Clock 4 News 6 10 Untamed World 13 TV Honor
Society 15 Truth or Consequences 3
7 30-This Is Your Life 3 To Tell The Truth 6 Price Is Right B
10 Beat The Clock 13 RFD 20 Circus 4 Great Decisions '73
33
8 00 - Temperatures Rising 6 13 Maude 8 10 Book Beot 33
Ohio This Week 20 Movie • 1 Love A Mystery' 3, 15 'rhe
Sunshine Polrlol 4
a 30 - Howoll FlveOB 10 Bill Moyers Journal20 33 Movie
•The Connection 6 13
9 oo - Behind the Lines 20 33
9 30 - BiackJournal20 33 Movie CalltoOanger 8 10
10 00 - MarcusWelbyM D 6 13 News20 Amerlca3 4 15
11 oo - News J 4 8 10 13 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Movies 'Five Desperate
Women 6 13 All Ftne Young Cannlbols B The Singer
Not the SonQ" 10
1 00 :::- Your Health 4 News 13
f' 30- News 4
WEDNESDAY, FEB 21,1973
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Formllme 10 English 3
6 20 - Farm Report 13
The b1ddmg has been
6 25 - Paul Harvey 1J
West
Norlh El!l
6 30 - Columbus Today • Bible Answers 8 Urban League 10
The Story 13
2+
Pass
7 00- Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 News 6 Fllntstones 13
Pass
3oft
Pass
7 3D-Sleepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
You, South hold
13 Popeye 10
8
00
- Capt. Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame St 33
.AK54 ¥AQ13 +2 oftKQ107
Lassie 6
What do you do now'
8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
A-Bid three no-tnunp Your 8 55 - News 13
hoort aee-quoen should be sul- 9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15 What Every Womon
Wants to Know 3 Concentration 6 Capt Kangaroo 8
ftclenl to protect that suit
Friendly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13
TODAY'S QUESTION
9 30- Elec Co 33 To Tell The Truth 3 Jeopardy 6
Your partner contmues by 10 00- Dinah ShoreJ 15 Columbus Six Calling 6 Jokers Wild
Jumpmg to five clubs What do
B, 10, Dick Van Dyke 13
you do now?
10 30 - Concentration 3 15, Phil Donahue • Price Is Right 8 10
Spill Second 13
11 00 - Saleolthe Century 3 15 Love American Style6 Gambit
8 10 Password 13
Sond $1 tor JACOIY MODfiN book 11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4 13 Love of Life 8 10 Bewitched 6
to "W•• fJI Jndge.'' (e/~ tbiJ - •
13 Sesame Sl 20
pcopor) '0 lox 419, Rtnl•• Cotr 12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15 Password 16 Bob Brauns 50 50 Club 4
Slat10• Nw YOlk H y 10019
News 13 Contact 8 News 10
'
'
12 30- Spill Second 6 Seorch for Tomorrow 8, 10 3 Ws 3 15
1 00 - News, Weather Sports 3 All My Children 6 13 Secret
Storm 8, Not For Women Only IS Green Acres 10
1 20 - Fashions In Sewing 3
1 30 - 30nAMatch3 •15 LelsMakeADeel6 13
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3 4 15 ~ewlywed Game 13 Mike
FACTS
Douglass 6 Guiding Light B 10
2 30- Dating GamelJ Doctors 3, 4, 15 Edge of NlghtB 10
3 00 - Another World 3 15 General Hospital 6 13 Love
Splendored Thing 8 10 RFD 20
3 30 - Return fo Peyton Place 3 4 15 One Life to Live 6 13
Secret Storm 8 10 This Week 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 3J Love
American Stylell Merv Griffin 4 Fllntstones6 Movie The
Canadians ' 10
4 30 - Petticoat Junction 3 I Love Lucy 6 Gilligan s Island 8
Donlel Boone 13 Dick Van Dyke 15
5 00 - Mr Rogers 33 Daniel Boone 6 Bonanta 3 4 Hazel 8
Andy Griffith 15
5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15 Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Beverly
Hillbillies a Hodgepodge 20
6 110 - Truth or Conseq 6 News 3 4 B, 10 15 Sesame St 20
Around the Bend 33
6 3D-News 3 4 6 8 10 15 I Dream of Jeannie 13 Societies In
Durmg the past _cen·Jury
Transition 33
about 900,000 peo{lle have
7
00
- News 6 10 Whars My Llne 8 Truth or Conseq 3 Beat
been kille4 by earthquakes
The Clock~. Anything You Can Do 13 Know Your Schools33
No area Is Immune from
Elec Co 20 Fabulous Seven 15
the posslb1bty of an earth
7 30 - To Tell the Truth 6 The Judge 10 Pollee Surgeon 3 4
Beat The Clock 13 Andy Grllflt~ 15, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
qua~e. but four out of f1ve
Episode Action 33 George Kirby 8
occur around the frmge of
8 00- Adam 12 3 • 15, Poul Lynde 6 13 Sonny &amp; Cher B, 10
the Pac1f1c 0 c e a n The
America 73 20 33
World A 1m an a c notes
8
~o- Madlgon 3 • 15 Movie You II Never See Me Again' 6,
Earthquakes are however
13
v1tal to the continued de
9 00 - Medlc~ICentertO EyeloEye20 33
velopment of our e a r t h
9 30 - San Francisco Mix 20 33
and without the1r action the 10 00 - Soul32 News 20 Cannon 8 Owen Marshall6 13 ~rc h
15 3 4
earth's surface would become a place of stagnant 11 uo- News3 4 6 8 10 13,15
Johnny Corson 3, • 15 Movlei"Piaymalel" •· 13, "Kid
seas and swamps because 11 30Rodela"
8 'Fall Salt" 10
of erosion
1 00 - News •· 13

1•

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Feb '!1, 1973

Florida State,
Vols are upset
By United Press IDiemaUonal
Minnesota just about clinched the Big Ten title Monday
night by routing Northwestern,
90-74, while Wisconsin upended
Purdue, 71-'3 The victory left
Minnesota, now 19-2, with a 9-2
conference record wb.lle
Purdue dropped to 8-4 Minnesota thus leads by two games
with three conference games
left PUrdue must win 1ts two
remaining conference games
to remain In the running
At Tallahassee Monday,
Marshall's Thundermg Herd of
Huntington, W Va , stunned
the Florida State Seminoles,
71.$
The MU VICtory snapped a
14-game home winnmg streak
for Florida State, and kept
Marshall's post-.!leason tourllllllllllt hopes alive
In pil:king up !hell' 19th wm
agamst s1x losses, Mike
D' Antoni and Randy Noll led
Marshall's attack w1th 16
points ap~ece Lawrence
McCray pumped In 21 for the
losers
""'
Kentucky ,. thhshed
Alabama, 111-95, and moved
back into the SEC title picture
when Louisiana State upset
Tennessee, 78-74 Tennessee
must win Its tllree remaining
games to take the SEC title
Kentucky IS 12-4 In SEC play
while Alabama allpped to I~
Ron Behagen scored 25
points and Jhn Brewer and
Clyde Turner hit 23 each as
Minnesota cruised past Northwestern at Minneapolis
Greg Wells led Northwestern
with 20 polnto
Kim Hughes and Leon Howard scored 19 pomts each to

highlight Wlsconsm's upset of
Purdue at Madison, Wls Frank
Kendrick led Purdue With 17
Nick Weatherspoon's 30
points carried Dllnols past
Michigan at Ann Arbor, Mich ,
and Mike Robinson scored 32
points and center Bill Kilgore
had a career high 29 as
Michigan State upset Ohio
State at East Lansing, Mich
Kentucky raced to a 22.2lead
and went on to crush Alabama
at Lexington, Ky Kevm
Grevey had 29 points for the
WUdcats and reserve Steve
liJchmueller added 18 Wendell
Hudson was high man for
Alabama with 31 points
Elsewhere, Dw1ght Jones
had 26 points and 14 rebounds
to lead loth ranked Houston to
a 94-75 homecourt victory over
Samford and Lee Gilbert came
off the bench to score 20 pomts
and lead Oklshoma to a 78-88
victory over Colorado at
Norman, Okla Kansas State
gained at lead a tie for the B1g
Eight title by clobbmng
Oklahoma ·State, , 91~7, at
Stillwater, Okla , behind Steve
Mitchell's 21 pomts
Sam Houston state, the No I
small college team, finished
the regular season unbeaten
and ran 1ts winning streak to 31
games by ripping Southwest
Texas State, 77 58, behmd
Robert White's 23 pomts

Pro Standings
ABA Standings
By United Press tntemaltonat
East
w I pet I b
Carolina
49 20 710 Kentucky
44 24 647
Virg inia
33 32 508 14
New York
25 44 362 24
Memphis
22 46 324 26'h
West

UCLA keeps top spot in UPI poll

NEW YORK (UP!) Thirteen may be considered an
unlucky number by some, 6ut
UCLA didn't seem to affected
This week's ratings by the
United Press International
CLASS AAA
w I pd gb
IAI Rio Grande)
Board
of Coaches were the 13th
42 24 636 Wednesday- Jackson (5 14) Utah
lndtana
3'1 30 565 411, this season, but the Brums
vs Chillicothe (15 31 7 30 p m Denver
37
30 552 5112 didn't fare any worse than m
Frtdaf - Meigs (11 Bl vs Dallas
24
41 369 11112
Miami race 03 6l 7 30 p m San Diogo
the previous 12 weeks,
21 45 318 21
Winner advances to Athens
Monday's
Results
rece1vlng all 34 flTSt place
District
Indiana
112
New
York
105
Saturday - Portsmouth (12 Dallas 120 San Diego 115
votes cast for a perfect 340
7l vs winner ol Jackson
pomls
I
Only
games
scheduled)
Chillicothe game 7 30 p m
Tuesday's
Games
UCLA upped 1ts record to
winner advances to Athens
Kentucky at Utah
District
23-0
and 1ts consecullve wmIOnly game scheduled)
mng streak to 68 w1th a pau of
CLASS AA
IAIWaverlyl
Thursday - Alexander (16
2l vs Oak Hill (3 16) 7 30 p m
Saturday - Alexander Oak
Hill winner vs Hillsboro (11 8)
7 30 p m Winner to Rio Grande
D•str~cl
Early Thursday Mixed
!AI Coal Grovel
"
Feb 15 1973
Rio Grande College comThursday- Fairland (13 6)
Potn1s
vs Gallipolis (15 3) 7 15 p m Lucky Strikers
40 pleted regular season hard
Saturday - Gallipolis
Alley
Cats
24
wood play m a blaze of glory at
Fatrland winner vs 'So uth Four Jokers
22
f&gt;olnl (145) 7 15 pm Winner Mr and Mrs
22 Lyne Center Monday nlgbt by
to Rio Grande Dlstnct
Them
and
Us
22 turning back Coach Bill Lucas'
IAI Stewart)
Allin
the
Family
14 Central State Unlvers~ty
Tuesday- Belpre (11 71 vs
Team
High
Series
Them
VInton County ( 10-91 7 30 p m and Us 2077 Lucky Strikers Marauders, 72-64 More than
Wednesd1y
New
1,000 fans VIewed the makeup
Lexington (9 10) vs Nelson 2076
Team High Game - All In contest
vil le York (10 7) 7 30 p m
the Family 771 Four Jokers
Saturday - Belpre Vmton 733
The victory left R1o With a 13County wtnner vs New Lex
Men
s
High
Ser.es
Gene
12
season mark as the Redmen
Nels York winner 7 30 p m Murray 584 Keith Phalm 537
Wtnner to Rto Grande Distnct
prepare
lor next Monday's
Men s H1gh Game - Gene
(AI Lucamllel
Thursday- Waverly (171 ) Murray 233 Ke•th Phalm 224 Distr1ct 22 NAIA tournament
Women s High Senes - battle With Defiance
vs Portsmouth West ( 16-3) Sandy
Korn 452 Diane Hawley
730pm
The Marauders, two time
Saturday -- Wheelersburg 445Women s H1gh Game - NAlA champions a few years
(15 41 vs
Waverly West
wtnner 7 30 p m Winner to D•ane Hawley 175 Sandy Korn
165
Rio Grande District
Feb 22 1973
!At Buchtel)
Potnts SIGNED AND UNSIGNED
Friday - Federal Hocking Lucky Strikers
40
(12 6) vs Starr Washington (9 Alley Cats
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
32
7l7pm
Mr
and
Mrs
30
Cincmnati Reds' top relief
Fr~day - Crooksville (7 12)
Four Jokers
22 pitcher, Clay Carroll, Signed
vs M•ller (10 8) 8 15 p m
All m the Family
22
Saturday - FH SW wtnner Them
and
Us
22 his contract for the 1973 season
vs CHS Miller winner 7 30
Team High Series - All In Monday Earlier In the day the
p.m Wmner to Chtlltcothe
the Family 2193 Mr and Mrs
Dlstnct
Reds announced centerf1elder
2056
!At Rock Sprtngsl
Team High Game - All 1n Bobby Tolan had agreed to
Thursday- Chesapeake (12
Family 752 All In the terms
7) vs Ironton Sf Joe (9 101 7 the
Family
735
pm
Also slgnmg were veteran
Mens Hogh Series - Henry
Thursday- North Gallla 15
Hensley
468
Ray
Roach
and
Jack
Billingham, Ed Sprague,
14) vs Symmes Valley Ill Bl
Gene Murray 524
8 30 p m
Mens High Game - Henry Dave Tomhn and Juaqum
Fnday - Chesapeake ISJ
winner vs NG SV winner 7 15 Hensley 225 Ken Longstreth Andujar
p.m Winner to Chi llicothe 205
StW unsigned in the Reds'
Women s High Series Dtsklct
orgamzallon
are outfielder
Sandy Korn 485 Diane Hawley
IAt Htllsborol
Pete Rose and first baseman
Wednesday- Peebles 119 11 432
Women s H1gh Gam e v1 Lynchburg Clay 113 81 7 30
Tony
Perez
Dtane Hawley 189 Sandy Korn
pm
Thursday - West Un ion 19 185
121 vs Pike of Western (14 51
7 30 p m
Saturday - W1nners meet
for title 7 30 p m Wmner
Early Sunday Mixed
advances to Chtlltcothe
POMEROY
Feb 18 1973
District
Slandtngs
BOWLING
LANES
IAt Portsmouth)
Wednesday
Early
Bird
Team
W
L
Tuesday - East 110 91 vs
Feb 21 1973
J8 26
Notre Dame I 14 41 7 15 p m Team No 3
Standmgs
Mark v
36 28
Fr~d~~ rrr South Wehste• IJJ
35 29 Team
81 vs Coal Grove (1 2 7) 7 p m Farmers Bank
54 18
29 35 Evelyn s Grocery
Friday - East NO winner RaCine Food Mkt
to:lng Builders Sup
-u 28
vs sw CG winner a 15 m ..f'iglei-Gftlb ':l f" ,..,, 28 ...36 Dorothy
s Pmnettes
43 29
26 38
Saturday- Finals 7 15 m Tom s Carry Out
R
H
Rawlings
30
42
High
lnd
Game
Jr
Phelps
Wmner to
Bertha
s
Grocery
28
44
266
Betty
Smith
190
Larry
IAI
Royal Crown
17 55
Wednesday _::_-Hurtlin•gton Dugan 236 Betty Sm1th 187
High lnd Game - FlosSie
High Senes - Jr Phelgs 594
(14 5) vs Bishop Flaget
11)
Betty Sm•lh 558 Larry ugan Maxson 192 Mary Voss 191
7 30 p m
Htgh Senes - Mary Voss
Thursday - Pamt Valley 591 Julia Boyles 482
495 Loutse Gtlmore 485
Team H1gh Game - Rac1ne
(10 9) vs Southeastern of Ross
Team Htgh Game
Food Mkt 721
(12 9) 7 30 p m
Evelyn s Grocery 819
Team H1gh Sertes - RacJ ne
Saturday - FIna is 7 30 p m
Team High Senes
Wtnner to Chtlllcolhe District Food Mkt 11197
Evelyn s Grocery 2331

.v,

Local Bowling

Local Bowling

Carroll inks
, 1973 contract

Phoenix next month
The first assistant the Ralllers lost Will John Poloncheck,
wbo qwt as offensive backfield
coach of the Raiders last
February and later jomed the
Green Bay Packers' coachmg
staff
The Raiders clahned NFL
Commissioner Pete Rozelle
fined the Packers a fifth..-ound
draft ch01ce But an NFL
spokesman said Monday night
that the Packers weren't officially fined
''Oakland filed a complaint
but the commissioner did not
aot on it,' he SBld, 'the two
parties worked It out among
themselves "
Oakland received a filthround draft choice from Green

Bay but 1t was originally announced as psrt of the deal in
which Vernon Vanoy was sent
to Oakland for defensiVe end
Carleton Oats
The Raiders lost their second
coach Fnday when assistant
Ray Malavas1 quit Malavas1,
41, had been linebacker coach
for the last two seasons since
leaving Buffalo
Coach John Madden charged
'blatant tampering" and sa1d
an unnamed team had mfluenced MalavaSI to res~gn so
1t could sign him
The NFL spokesman SBld
Oakland had f1led another
complamt In the Malavas1 case
but Rozelle hasn't taken any
action on the case yet
"Tampering" With a coach

107-104 to Los Angeles Stale m
overtime, and dropped to No 5,
but stomped UC Santa Bar
bara, 92~. to clmch the PCAA
tiUe and w1th 1! an NCAA
tournament berth
Mmnesota and Marquette,
both double wmners each
moved up one spot to thrrd and
fourth respecllvely
North Carohna and Kansas
Slate each went I 1 for the
week thus falhng one place to
seventh and e1ghth, respectively Providence a tnple
wmner - mcludmg a 20-pomt
thrashing of f1fth ranked small
college Assumption - chmbed
two pos1tions to s1xth
Houston and Memphis State
each won two games and
moved mto the 9th and lOth
back, finished the campaign pos1twns
with a f&gt;.20 mark
After balding a slun 37-33
halflune lead, the Redmen
never trailed throughout the
NEW YORK IUPil -- The
final hall, leadmg anywhere
Untied Press International top
from four to 10 pomts
20 major college basketball
Four Redmen fm1shed m teams w1th ftrst place votes
won lost records as of
double l1gures m scormg M1ke and
Saturday n parentheses I13th
Rouse ,
Jackson's
6 5 Week)
Pomts
sophomore forward, popped m Team
I UCLA (34) (23 01
340
211 to pace Rio's attack
2 N C St (23 01
304
Capt Ron Lambert added 16 3 Mmnesota I18 2l
245
196
Ironton's f&gt;.ll 1un1or guard 4 Marquette 122 2)
5 Long Beach 51 122 2)
191
Steve Bartram talbed 14, and 6 Prov1dence 121 2)
117
109
Zanesville's Dan Bollmger, 6-5 7 North Carolina (21 l)
sophomore forward, added 12
It was Rio s hest defensiVe
effort of the 1972-73 campa1gn
Central state placed four
men m double ligures, led by
Jack Shardo's 17 markers
Shardo 1s a 6-9 freshman from
W1Uow Dell Ohio
Addmg 12 markers each for
the Marauders were Ray and
M1ke Byrd and Carl Ealy The
latter IS a 6-4 freshman from
Augusta, Ga
R1o was outrebounded by the
Marauders 41 28 The VISitors,
bowever committed 16 turn
overs R10 lost the ball 14
tunes
Box score
CENTRAL STATE (64) W1lliams 2 0 4 Ealy 6 o 12
Ray Byrd 6 0 12 M1ke Byrd 6
0 12 Shardo 8 1 17 Fortson 2
3 7 TOTALS 30 4 64
RIO GRANDE (721 Bartram 7 0 14 Lambert 8 0
16 Bollmger 6 0 12 Rouse 8
4 20 Thompson I 0 2 Hart 2
0 4 Poling 1 0 2 Fausnaugh
102 TOTALS34472
Score at half
Rio 33 Central Stale 33

means trymg to recru1t a coach
or player from another team
Without getting the team's
consent
The most famous example
came three years ago when
Shula left Baltimore for
Miami Rozelle fined M1aml a
f1rstround draft choice which turned out to be Don
McCauley - but when the
Dolphins won the Super Bowl
th1s year, the Dolphins figured
It was a good deal for them
'Wouldn't you trade McCauley for Shula 1 " owner Joe
Robbie asked during Super
Bowl week in Los Angeles
It's obviously gomg to be a
hot topic of discussion at the
meetmg m Phoemx

College Ratings

The on-again-off-again
season of the Oh1o State
Buckeyes was off-again
Monday night
The same team that clobbered Northwestern lallt weekend fell an upset vlcthn to

ADD ANOTHER CARD
CLEARWATER, Fla (UP!)
- The Phlladelpllla Phlllles
have added another St Louis
Cardinals reject to their staff
But this one won't wear a
1111form The Phlls, who picked
up Cy Young Award-wmner
Steve Carlton from the Cards
last year when owner Gussie
Busch became enraged at his
salary demands, signed 69year-old Dr Walter C
Eberhardt,
a
physical
education specialist He helped
the Cards train for 13 years but
SBld he was relealed under
BusCh's austerity proaram

even OSU at 6-6 m the Big Ten
and pushed the Spartans up a
notch to 4-8
Allan Hornyak pJUDped m 32
points for the Bucks, but MSU
also got 32 pomts from Mike
Robinson and another 29 from
Bill Kilgore Ohio state threw
away 1ta last chance to wm
with a pass that sailed out of
boWlds with nine seconds left
and the Bucks trailing 85-83

Oh1o state &lt;{Topped to 12-10
overall Michigan State IS 1111
In other obasketball action,
Rio Grande mpped Central
State 72-64, Defiance downed
Heidelberg 79-71, and Hiram
downed John Carroll 96-85
Tonight Wooster and Wittenberg meet at Denison Unlver·
sity at Granville In the fmals of
the Oh1o Conference ChamploliShlp

Downing-Childs· Agency Inc.
PHONE 992 2342

63

58
54

49
40
28

11
7
7
6
6

l
5
l

ThiS Week's Spectal

Ml DOLE PORT, 0

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL- FUNDS
M~ County's Oldest and Largest

Insurance Agency

72 BUICK
LaSABRE 4 DR.
Brown wtth beige vmyl top
beige tntenor radro w s w

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14 000

m1les

'3795
Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You II L1ke Our Qualltr,
Way of Oorng Busrness

GMAC FINANCING
992 5342
Pomeroy
Open Even1ngs T1l8 00
Ttl5
PM
___
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_Sal
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Bright Idea! Give Your

Rooms A New Look ...

LATEX WALL PAINT

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
TOURNEY SCORES
By IJn1fed Press tnlernahonat
(Class AAAI
!At Columbus!
Lmden McKinley 64 Columbus
West 54
Westervtlle 60 Whetstone 50
IA!Troy)
Dayton Meadowdale 50 Green on
40

!Class AI
IAI Aushntown)
Sebrmg 63 LISbon 49
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCORES
By Untied Press lnfernahonal
Mtchlgan State 87 Oh o State 83
R1o Grande 72 Central State 64
Def•ance 79 Hetdelberg 71
Htram 96 John Carroll 85

Chief Latex

Wall Paint
WHITE AND
NEW COLORS

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

MOORE'S
124 W Mam

DOUBLE
BELTED
tlril at everyday low...

OSU upset by Spartans
By United Press IDtematlonal Michigan State 87-33 The loss

8 Kansas St (19 &lt;I)
9 Houston (20 3)
10 Memphis St 121 4)
11 Maryland 119 4)
12 SW LoUISiana (22 2)
IJ lnd•ana (17 5)
14 New MeXIco 121 41
15 (!tel Mtssourl 118 4)
15 lite I Weber St 119 61
17 (tiel San Fran (20 4)
17 (lie) Tennessee (14 6)
19 (tiel South Car (18 5)
19 (tiel Jacksonville 120 5)
19 (tie) Sf Jos Pa (20 51

Redmen whip CS

Tampering issue raised again

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
issue of 'tampering" With
coaches-which caused quite a
furor when Don Shula left
Baltimore for Miami three
years ago-has flared up again
Cotloge Basketball Results In the National Football
By United Press lnternaltonal
League
East
Am Inti 75 W New Eng 68
The chief victhns this time
S Conn 112 Merrimack 85
are the Oakland Raiders, who
Marlst 107 Yeshiva 68
clahn
they lost two assistanto
Dowling 78 Cathedrol 49
New Homp 77 Dartmouth 66
because of ''tampering "
Vermont 74 Norwich ~7
Art Modell, the owner of the
Geneva 96 Grove City 71
Cleveland Browns, wasn't afManslld 62 Shlppensbg 54
Woynesbg 75 Calli Pa 66
fected In the latest Incident but
Adelphi 84 Queens 67
was so upset that he says he
South
Kentucky 111 Alabama 95
will ask that severe penalties
La St 78 Tennessee 7~
be levied for future tampering
Marshall 71 Fla St 59
He
said he will bring up the
Tenn Tech 85 Mrehed St 79
Western Ky 67 Murray Sf 66 issue at the NFL meetings in
Voldsta Sf 107 Sou Tech 70
Ga Sou 76 Houston Bap 62
Ogiethrpe 73 Tenn Temple 69
Lagrange 92 No Ga 79
Miss 91 Florida 80
Miss St 72 Georgia 68
Auburn 79 Ga Tech 69
Midwest
Michigan 87 Ohio St 83
Wisconsin 71 Purdue 6J
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Illinois 96 Mlc~lgan 89
Cincinnati Reds' top relief
UW Green Bay 79 E Ill 66
Defiance 79 Heidelberg 71
pitcher, Clay CarroJl, s.gned
Rio Grande 72 Cent St. 64
hl5 contract lor the 1973 season
Hiram 96 John Carroll 85
Monday
Lincoln 106 NE No 82
Mlnn 90 Northwestern 74
Carroll was one of five pitchSouthwest
ers
to Ink contracta Earlier m
Houston 9~ Samford 75
the day the Reda announced
La Tech 105 Tex Arl 87
Sam Hous 51 n S W Tex St centerOelder Bobby Tolan had
58
agreed to terms
Hendrix 104 Coli Ozarks 70
Alao signing were veteran
UM- Rolla 82 S W Mo St 73
Kansas St 91 Oklo 51 67
Jack Billingham, Ed Sprague,
McNeese St 86 SE La 69
Dave Tomlin and Juaqum An·
Oklahoma 78 Colorado 68
West
dujar
Prllnd St 71 Cent Wash 52
Carroll, named to the 1971
and 1972 all...tar learns, IS entering his sixth season with
Cincinnati He was named the
National League's ' Fireman
of the year" lut season
ANGELS SIGN SEVEN
Billingham finished last seaANAHEIM (UP!) - The son 12-12 with a 3 18 earned run
California Angels announced average In the 1972 World Sethe signing of seven players ries, the righthander pitched 13
Monday Including pitcher 2-3innings,gave up just six hits
Clyde Wright; first baseman and no earned runs He was
Bob Oliver and second credited with winning the third
baseman Sandy Alomar The gsme
other lour players were young
Still unsigned In the Reds
pltchen- Dave Sells, Sid organlzallon are outfielder
Monae, Arldy Ha111er and l'lte Rose and first baseman
BrllCI Helnbechder
Totty Perez

road victories over Oregon and
Oregon State and can complete
a second stra1ght undefeated
season by wmnmg lis last three
games at home
North Carolma State kept lis
hopes for an undefeale&lt;;l season
al1ve With sound wh1ppmgs of
Duke and UNCCharlotte The
Wolfpack must vlslt the
seventh-ranked Tar Heels and
stop Wake Forest at home
before they achieve that end,
however
Long Beach State suffered 1ts
second setback of the season,

17t13 (810131
l!.ckw1M1
Ph;s1il 90pot ,..
fltd E• •• • •nd 2
1re1ol you e-

992-2848

Pomeroy

�Celtics and Bobcats
win
.
.

SIXTH GRADE CHAMPS - Letart Falls ~h grade team won the ehampionshlp in the
Southern Local District with a 5-1 record. Coach of the winners is Jim Wickline . Front row, 1-r,
are Mark Paraons, Barry Allen, Paul Holsinger, Jeff Wickersham, Dwij:ht Hill, David Findley
and Ed Roush; back row, Wickline,,coach, Todd Roberts, Dale Riffle, Jim O'Brien, Carl Alley,
Jeff Thornton, and Jim Powell.

LETART FAILS fourth and fifth grade basketball team coached by Roger Roush ended its
season with a ~I record. Team members shown are, front, 1-r, Chuck Fortune, Rick Miller,
Chuck Michael, Mike Roush, Chris Hupp and RObin Fortune; back row, Roger Roush, coach,
Kenneth Kiser, Mark Wolfe, Dave Foreman, Steve Riffle, Bria.n Hupp and Chris Wolfe.

The Middleport Celtics 'and
the Harrisonville Bobca~ were
victors in Monday's sixth
grade basketball tournament
action. The Celtics lieat
Pomeroy B 19-7 and the Bobcats nipped the Rutland Devils
29-19.
In the rtrst game of the
doubleheader, the' Celtics led
the entire contest. Both teams
had a scoreless second quarter
and the score at the half was 4-2
In favor of Middleport. Paced.
by Keith Lynch, the. Celtics
broke loose for 9 points in the
third period and held Pomeroy
·scoreless in the final quarter.
Lynch lead the Celtics with 8
points and Greg Becker
followed with 6. Cletos Bego
had 3 for the losers.
An exciting fourth quarter
climaxed the action in the
Harrisonville-Rutland game.
The Devils of Rutland held a
one or two point lead most of
the game. Halfway into the
final quarter Harrisonville

~:·

Scored IQUI' unanswefed polnll,
enough to put them oil top aild
win the game. For llarriR!I·
ville, 11M! high .scorer .w1,1
Reeves with 8. Arnold had 6.
This afternoon the _Mid."
dleport Bucks will take on the
Pomeroy B team, beginning at
5:30p.m.

~

(Coolinued from .Page I), ·
for themaelv04. ·
• In an accident just previous to that
•another victim, unatteilded on a cot in the
ba~k of the.ambulanc:e, dr9wned in his own
vomit as the driver went screaming down
the road.
·
We require barbers to be Ucensed,
after !,BOO hours of technical training, to
cui •hair; we require beauticians to SUC·
cesafully complete 1,500 hours of training
loarrang~mllady'scolffure. We appear to
be fairly advanced as a publlc In
· requirements fiJ!' appearance sake, yet for
· aomethlng that goes llterally more than
skin deep •we have practic.ally no
requirements or responsibilities for
emergency medical services, or for those
· people who briefly care for our life and
limb. '
Is II allY wonder lbere Is immense
· llluth to llie statement that should you
become acutely ill or gravely Injured,
your chances for survival would have .
been much greater In Vielnam War than
lD Atbeu CoUDty! ... or Hocking County!
... or Gallla ... or Jackaon ... or
Lawrence ... or Meigs ... or VInton?
But as Is so often true in Appalachia,
the best has been done with the resources
available. David 'Hughes of the Hughes
' ' Funeral Home in Athens was quoted
recently in the Athens Messenger : "My
feellng about It Is that there is no doubt
that SEOEMS will have better-trained
personnel and better life-saving equipment than that which any fWleral home
can offer. Our personnel are trained to
render · funeral service. EMS will be
trained to off~r emergency ambulance and
MEDICAL services."
Experts in the field estimate it costs
between $40 and $60 thousand\ a year to
operate an ambulance vehicle. Funeral
directors have been providing this costly
serviCe to these communities for years at a
loss to themselves. They are to be commended.
·
As noted In President Nixon 's
remarks, It doesn't have to be this way ...
"such Improvement does not require new
scientific breakthroughs; It only requires
that we apply our present knowledge more
effectively."
Behind the application of training
knowledge In the SEOEMS project is a 22year-old Emergency Medical Technician
(EMT) training course as taught by the
Ohio Department of Education and accepted as one of the finest In the country.
Based on the manual on Emergency
Victim Care, the 00-hour class sessions
cover such subjects as bleeding control;
fractures, heart attacks and stroke;
breathln.s llf/1.~1~A i 1 ,qr,ug overdose;
diabetes; polson; convulsions; mentally
disturbed; burns; and extrication. Recent
innovations to the training course have
significantly increased the EMTs'
technical ability In closed-ehest heart
compression, artificial respiration ,
mechanical re3Ctscltation and more.
The EMT is charged with carrying out
efficient emergency treatment designed to
sustain and prolong tile through proper
victim care measures, both at the scene
and in transit.
THE NATIONWIDE concern with
emergency medical services Is rightfully
becoming a concern among our area
hospitals. With the sophisticated training
being received by the EMTs relative to
their on-the-llcene and in-trans! t technical

Lambert
All-District
WILBERFORCE, . Ohio
(UPI) - Defiance College .
basketball coach Mar~
Hohenberger has been named
"coach of the year" In Dl!trlct
22 of the NMA. .
The award was vilted by
coaches In the 12-member ell&amp;'
trict. Defiance, which llnllhed
with a 21-3 season, a1ao placed
two players In the "top ten" as
voted by the coacheS.
Junior forward Bruce Baer
and junior guard Ken Bush
_represented Defiance; senior
.forwards Clair Recker and
John Brown, Bluffton;. junior
forward Phll Hodge, Malone;
sophomore center Fletcher
Yates, Wilmington; senior
guard Lee Eck, Cedarville;
senior center Ken Richardson,
Ohio Dominican; junior for·
ward Ron Lambert, Rio
Grande, and senior forward
Mike Byrd, Central State.
PACE TO GEORGIA
ATLANTA (UP!) - Bill
Pace, former coach and athlet·
lc director at Vanderlilt, was
named Monday as offensive
coordinator at Georgia Tech.
Pace, 41, had signed a
.contract just last .week lor a ·
slmllar post with lhe Jl'ofesslonal New England Patriots.
But he said after talking to
Georgia Tech Coach Bill
Fulcher in Boston he agreed to
abandon the pro job to remain
in the college ranks.

POMEROY'S FIFTH AND SIXTH "A" SQUAD - Coached by Tom Grueser and Gene
Mitch, this team,had a &gt;·I record. Front row, 1-r, are, Scott McKinney, Steve Williams, Martin
Norton, Steve Little and Todd Smith; back, Tom Grueser, coach, Chris Taylor, Rick Blaettnar,
Scott Williams, Jeff Grueser, and Raymond Andrews.

,,

POMEROY'S FIFTH AND SIXTH "B" SQUAD - Front
row , 1-r ' Wesley Smith, Tim
Faulk and Cliff KeMedy;
back,
~
.
OJris Woods, Dan Thomas and De!Uly Allen. Coacqes of the
team are Don Thomas and Jim Sisson.
'

SIXTH GRADE CHEERLEADERS - Letart Falls sixth
grade cheerleaders are front, Norma Jarrell; back, 1-r,
Darla White; Diana Thoma and Tamels Bradford.

Foote Mineral

manufacturing
streamlined

-·

products.
~' oote

GRAHAM STATION, W. Va.
- Foote Mineral Company,
from its home offices in Exton ,
Pa ., said Friday It had combin ed its Kemco and
Metallurgical
Produ cts
Divisions into a single
manufacturing and marketing
group to be known as the
Ferroalloys
Division ,
responsible for the company's
en tire line of metallurgical

Buffet Luncheons
All Week

Red Carpet Inn
Rt. 62N, Pt. Pleasant

1

1
1

I
also announced its

I

Letten of opinion are welcomed. Tbey should be less
than 300 words long (or be aubjecl lo reduction by the
editor) and must be signed wltb th~ signee's llddress.
Names may be wltbbeld upon pubUcatlon. However, on
request, names will be dlsciOBed. Letters should be In good
Iaale, addressing lasues, aot penonaUties.

C

HILTON ON TOP
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(UP!) - Richard Petty moved
into 'second place Monday in
th e NASCAR Winston Cup
Point standings, only 25 ¥•
points behind leader James
Hylton following Petty's victory in Sunday's Richmond 500.
Hylton remained on top with ·
829 polnts while Petty has
803.75.

... '

'

1111.~..
"Vl·

' . ")

•

I

I
1

1
I

.Q.eat.:Fdifh

board of directors had elected
Robert W. Roth vice president I
•••
and ge nera( manager of the I
new division. Roth had I
previou sly headed
the I
Metal lurgical
Pr·oducts Responders .to
Also elected to new positions
by the board were Leon W.
Coquillette, vice president adminis tration, and John H.
Ross, vice president - legal
affairs, and secretary. The
board accepted the resignation
of William R Spofford, Jr. , as
vice president-fi nance and
administration , and as a
member of the board. Robert .
J . Johnston, vice president &amp;
treasurer, becom es the
comp any's chi ef financial
officer .

l

In 1972, President Nixon
ended his historic visit to
Communist China, issuing a
joint statement with Premier
Chou En-lai which _reported
severatf3~1iients: ' ' ' '· ']:·

II--------------------------~II '
I

Division.

l,f '"l

I

:

I

I
I

I

survey thanked '

capabilities, it logically follows that they
be versed in procedures to assist in victim
care through einergency treatment even
after ·arrival at the hospital emergency
room. With this capability as a goal, the
Ohio Hospital Association, in harmony
with the Ohio Departnlents of Health and
Education, has developed an In-hospital
training course for certified EMTs. This Is
a follow-on to the Emergency VIctim,Care
course. All EMTs in SEOEMS will he
enrolled in the hospital course.
This course wlli provide In-hospital
professional instruction in the emergency
•department, Intensive care, obstetrics,
pediatrics, psychiatric , surgery and
morgue. A nine-hour defensive driving
course will also be required.
To qualify for employmenl with
SEOEMS, the applicant must be a high .
school graduate or have the· equivalent
education and experience and be at least
18 years of age', He or she must have a
valid Ohio driver's Ucense, good physical
and mental health, and be free from
communicable disease. They should have
a knowledge of the geographic area and
community resources, and be certified
under the program "Emergency Victim
Care" or its equivalent.
They must have the ability to make
sound decisions, follow directions and
supervise others. SEOEMS EMTs must
also be certified by a practicing cardiologist.of skill and Wlderslanding in use
of resuscitation , defibrillation_ heart
monitor and closed cardiac massage when
equipment for these Items is part of the
service. Understanding of com·
municatlons equipment and standard
operating procedures is also required.
Within the seven-county area ,
SEOEMS now fias 13 EMT training classes
in progress at no charge to the enrollee.
There are 357 trainees-in these classes
which are being taught by graduates of a
recent instructors school held .ln Wellston .
The new instructors and the communities
in which they are teaching are Clyde
Baker who teaches the Glouster class;
Larry Baker, Racine; Bob Conley, Rome;
Royce Cooley, Coolville; Jack Davis, Oak
Hill; David Harkins, Wellston; Earl
James, Jackson; AI Pierce, Athens; Joe
Struble, Pomeroy; Carroll Thornton,
Gallipolis, and Louis Trego, NelsonvilleLogan.
Other instructors are George Bruce,
Ironton and Gallipolis; Jim Lennon,
Nelsonville; and Don Mathers, Logan.
There are also 55 persons who have
already completed the training. Total
number of trainees Is 412 for all seven
counties.
THE TESTING process Is a continual
function of the training course. The
ultimate determination of qualification of
the EMT is ihe decision of the instructor.
His decision is predicated on attendance,
class participation and final exam, both
written and practical. He attaches a
percentage value to each of the categories.
The trainee must obtain 75 pet. in each
category .
The selection of all Emergency
Medical Technicians, ~ither lull-or-parttime, rests with the Director of SEOEMS
or his designee. All prospective employees
must be recommended by the official
appointed to r_epresent the local unit of
government (coordinator ).
Pay scale throughout the seven
counties Is $2 an hour with time and a hail

UJT'S TRUE" ...

BmER

VALUES

I will be absent from
my office March Jrd to
March 19th. The office
will be closed March
12th to March 19th.

J. J. DAVIS, M.D.

SPEAKER NOTED
The Virginia Kunkle, chief of
elementary education, Ohio
Department of Education and
chairman of the "right to
read" program in Ohio, will
speak to Meigs County
superintendents and principals
on March 6 at a meeting to be
held at the Meigs Inn. A dinner
at 5 p.m. will follow the
meeting which begi!ls at 3,

oll~r

Youths present
.
.
evenzng servzce

C''-·· h

th

in Fellowship

repo'rts were read ahd approved.
At the March 21 meeting,
· Easter baskets will be made to
buy fruit and candy to fill
them. The annual trip will also
be discussed. Roll call will be
answered with St. Patrick's
Day or spring verse; devotions
will he by Mildred Pierce, and
a poem by Eileen Clark.
Hostesses to he Elva Dailey
and Margaret Bailey.
A delicious covered dish
A $25 contribution was made dinner was enjoyed at noon.
to the Middleport firemen and Table grace was by Edith
$10 to the Doris Reinhart Fund Hnod.
when the Busy Bee Class of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church met Thursday night at
the home of Mrs. Lettie Roush.
Mrs .
Beulah
White,
president, opened the meeting
with a poem entitled "Teach us
SYRACUSE - Jean Hall was
to Love More and to , Hate
Less." The class song was sWlg hostess to a house ware ·party
by the group, and Mrs. Wbite Tuesday, Feb. 13, at 10 a.m. in
the D. of A. Lodge hall with
had prayer.
Phyllis
Baker of Middleport
Mrs. Catherine Werner's
devotions were on the topic the demonstrator. Games were
"Valentine's Day - A Good played and prizes awarded. All
Day to Fallin Love with Life." attending were given favors.
"A thank you note was read · The door prize was won by
from Mrs. Elects Souders. The Margaret Cottrill.
program by Mrs. Elizabeth . Refreshments of cup cakes
Slavin was on Bible knowledge. and coffee were served by the
Mrs. Roush, Mrs. Isabelle hostess to Edith Hood, Eileen
WinebreMer and Mrs. Freda Clark, Helen Harris, Helen
Edwards served a dessert. Diddle, Esther Harden, Janice
Lawson, Thelma Grueser,
course.
Mildred Pierce, Pauline
Morarity, Betty "I:eaford a~d
SON BORN
Mr . and Mrs. Michael A. two children, Eleanor Bohram,
Heck, San Diego, Calif., are Margaret Cottrill and Kathryn
announcing the birth of a seven Johnson.
pOWld, 14 ounce son, Jacob
Eric, Feb. 17 at the San Diego
Naval Hospital where Mr.
Heck is serving with the U. S.
Navy, Maternal grandparents
are the Rev. and Mrs. Robert
Card, ·and paternal grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Scott
Shank, all of Pomeroy. Mrs.
Edith Nash, Middleport, is the
great-grandmother.

Two donations
made by class

SAME DAY .
SERVICE

GaiJ Stewart
Quintet
Wed., Feb. 28
9 till 1 P.M.

Red Carpet Inn
Rt. 62N Pl Pleasant

FOLIAGE
GARDENS
Cheer The Sick

•3.00
DUDLEY'S. A.ORrST
.59 N. Second St.
Middleport,

o.

This Week's Feature

LADIES ROLL-UP
SLEEVE·SHIRTS

SALE PLANNED
The Middleport Business and
Professional Women 's Club
will sponsor a rummage sale
on March &gt;and 6 from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. at the Reynolds
Buildihg, Mill St., Middleport.

Sfiop Here·
and

Save Dollars
YOU'LL BE GLAD
YOU DID!

lOLA'S

Permanent press,
long pointed collars,
full button front, shirt
tail bottom - 35%,
cotton, 65% Polyester

White, Navy, Lilac, Lt. Blue,
Pink, and Mint
Sizes 32-38 Made In U.S.A.

•2.99 each
Extra Sizes 40-42-44

'3.49 each
RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Main at Sycamore, Pomeroy

... is the most extenstve and extraordmary selection of fun
and fashion styles for th e second phone that. honestly, every
home should have. Give your life more ple asu re, more
convenience, and mo re securi ly .. . plus a wonde rful
decorator touch of the wild 'n crazy, the witty 'n clever, or
solid and sophisticated. There's a General Te lephone
extension phone lor every place and persona lity.

SHIRT
FINISHING

Crail leaders were Irene
Parker and Janice La"son .
Colorful waste paper haskell
were made from colored egg
cartons. Hostesses were Mrs.
Hall and Mrs. Lawaon.
Enjoying the day were
Thelma Grueser, Betty Hayes;
Margaret Cottrill, Agnes
White, Eleanor Bohram,
Charlotte Nease, Eileen Clark,
Edith Hnod, Mildred Pierce,
Irene Parker, Janice Lawson,
Jean Hail, Margaret Bailey,
Virginia Salser, Margaret
Eichinger and Elva Dailey.

Houseware party
given recently

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Use Our Free Parking Lol

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In At 9-0ut At 5

Robinson's Cleaners

CHESTPHONE ... a real man-type
decora tor phone for the living
room, his special room , desk or
table . Modern styli zed instrument
handsomely set in a black leathe r
chest with walnut trim . .. In
carved walnut ... or even with a
sardonyx stone hunling scene In·
set on the lid!

~~Cit,-Ht4t/e,

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CANDLESTICK PHONE .,. lhe

New Materials

For A New Season ·

FURNITURE

Ring can be made to
hold from two to si1
birthstones.
In procious lOki: yellow
or white gold.

THE SINGER STORE
11S W. Second 992-2284 Pomeroy
We also have a liberal trade -in policy.

We honor Ba.nkAmeric nrd nnd Master Chnrge credit cards .

APPROVED IIH!II DEALER

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•A Ttadtml~ot THE SINGEA COMPANY.

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•2300

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$3.00 oddillo.;'ol
for •'111ch

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:

birfhdont

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telephone puis the
works right in the palm of your
hand . .. handset. dial and recall
button. Make call afoer call wilhoul
se lling down the phone . Comes in
white. green. 1'.'ory , yellow . pink,
beiqe. and avocado.
STYLELINE'

We have a credit plan designed to fit your budget.

MIDDLEPORT, 0. ·

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Set with radiant birth.
stones - one stone for
uch member of the
family.

The ·Fabric Shop
I

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Save At Our

fellow's fdrnily

new-

tashio n old - f ashione d phon e
styled right out of the roaring
twenties in Black Bottom Black,
Whilfenpoot Wh ite and Razzamatazz Red . Except that we did away
w1th the separate big old be ll box.

Ring Stylo
No. 68

Come and browse now ...
New polyester &amp; cotton
blends, polyester knits,
gingham checks. Kettle
cloth, polyester material
lor formals, spring tr ims
and lots more. Start to sew
Up spring now.

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MOTHER

New from Peter Paul. They're
worth 10 cents each. And they're
delicious ... real peanut butter,
dotted with crispies, and covered
with pure milk chocolate. Free
at participating Ashland Oil
stations.

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FOR

GET TWO NO JELLY CANDY BARS
WITH EACH $3 GASOLINE·

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216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

FOR THAT SPECIAL OCCASION

•

nth lCk ;tnd stroke llr t or1ly ttl( !

BAKER

read by Mrs. Hail and roll ~ail
was answered with a Valentine
verse. ·~he Origin of Valen·
tine's Day" was . read ·by
Virginia Salser. Janice Lawson
read an article, "Build Your
House
of
Happiness."
Secretary and treasurer

General Telephone's
extension extravaganza

the March meeting will be
annDWlCed later.

MEETING POSTPONED
The Laurel Cliff Better
...- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . Health Club meeting scheduled
for Thursday has been postSpring Has Arrived at the Fabric Shop
poned. The date and place of

~nche dar~ .

you lb111k 1/1at t1eilrl

for overtime. However this figure may be
misleading; in some station EMTs
working a 24-hour-on, 24-hour-off shift will
he earning to $6,600 ·a year. Base pay,
however, in .all areas, Is $2 an hour.
No major problems are expected by
SEOEMS as far as having EMTs trained
by the time the vehicles arrive, According
to state regulations, anyone involved with
. training can operate the vehicle and
function as attendant, but SEOEMS
requires a substantial level of training
helore actual assignment. Each station's
particular needs along these lines are now
being studied and adjusted if necessary.
' In full operation, the Southeast Ohio
Emergency Medical Service will employ
EMTs either full-time or part-time along
these designs: Athens CoWlty, 12 employed, 66 volunteers; Hocking CoWlty, 7
employed, 61 volunteers; Vinton, 5 employed, 22 volWlteers; Jackson, 7 employed, 61 volunteers; Lawrence, II
The SWlday evening service
employed, 89 volunteers; Gallia, 12 em- at the Laurel Cliff Free
ployed, 35 volunteers; and Meigs CoWlty, 4 Methodist Church was under
employed and 64 volunteers.
the direction of the Free
The ninnber of employees blred and Methodist Youths and their
at wbat status Is determined by the advisors,. Mr. and Mrs. Steve
amounl of money committed by each Eblin,
county to their share of total' persoMel
Narrator for the program
cos Is ( ZO pet.). But the basic value Ues In was Charles Diehl. Mrs. Magel
having at least two certified attendants Smith was at the piano for
available to cover every ambulance group singing led by Barbara
when a call Is received.
.
Kline. Robert Barton had the
EVERY AMERICAN feels it Is his prayer, and Miss Kline sang a
birthright to receive emergency treatment solo.- There was scripture by
when he is Injured. He thinks that all he Diane mith, a song by Steve
has to do Is dial the operator and a and Becky Eblin, and prayer
gleaming ambulance, equipped with all by Uoyd Wright.
the marvels of modern technology will Receiving the offering were
arrive instantly, staffed by ambulance Diana Lewis, Belinda Friend,
attendants who know everything there is to Becky Eblin and Sharon
know about first aid and beyond.
Buckley. The Rev . Robert
He thinks that when he arrives at the Buckley used as his sermon
emergency department he will be treated topic "Ye are the Body of
by doctors and nurses who know Christ and Members in Pareverything there is to know about what is ticular". He took his scripture
wrong with him and will treat him with the from I Cor. 12, 13-27.
best and most up-to-date techniques,
equipment and medication .
He is equally certain that ambulance '
company management, ambulance atfJUfC .JOU S
tendants, emergency department
physicians and nurses are saintly public
servants deriving their sustenance from
the satisfaction of a job well done.
He thinks too, that HE will never have
need for any of this !
A Youth Fellowship was
The truth is that emergency rooms organized Sunday night at the
and ambulance services have, like Topsy, Middleport First United
"just growed," in haphazard shapes and Presbyterian Church. Officers
directions. Something is better than elected were Beth Vaughan,
nothing, and fll&amp;ny dedicated people have president; Don Vaughan, vice'
devoted themselves to the business of president ; Cathy Coleman,
saving and prolonging human life - fast. secretary-treasurer. Others
In the few communities in this nation the a'itendtng' · · were '. Iiecky'
job has been done so well that the great Coleman, Jeannie Schneider,
American · dream described above has Bill Vaughan, Steve Walburn,
seemed to be nearly true. In others, and the advisor, James
emergency care has more nearly Buchanan.
resembled a nightmare.
Next meeting was set for
The time is approaching when at least March II at 6:30p.m . Members
part of that dream will come closer to of the youth group at the
reality . for everyone in these seven Syracuse Church will be incounties because of Southeast Ohio's vited. A Bible study was
Emergency Medical Service and its conducted and refreshments
were served.
Emergency Medical Technicians.
As quoted from a special health
segment of l~st week's CBS-TV Morning
Show, "It Is th~ attendaqt aboard who
,
determines whether the ambulance is an
angel of mercy, or the harbinger of ·
death."

DINNER GIVEN
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gaul ,
Mark and David, Chester,
entertained Sunday with a
birthday dinner for he r.
mother, Mrs. Ralph Ours. Also
present were Mrs. Mildred
Frank and Rick . Gaul,
Pomeroy.

Popular Prices! .. ,
If

SYRACUSE ::.. "If you are
acquainted with happiness,
introduce him to your neighbor," was the thought for the
day when the Third Wednesday
Homemakers Club met
Wednesday at the little house
at Municipal Park.
The meeting, conducted by
the president, Jean Hall,
·opened with the Lord's Prayer
and Flag Pledge in unison.
"Real Motive for Expresliing
Love," was the devotional
topic frio Upper Room, read
by Margaret Eichinger,
followed with prayer.
A poem, "Don't Quit," was

Feb. 22, 1973
Dear Citizens:
I want to tha·nk all of you who participated In the citizen
survey for Pomeroy, Ohio. This is just one way in which you can
he come involved in making Meigs County a betler place in which
to live .
The primary purpose of the survey was to help us in
designing a planning program for the villages of Pomeroy and
Middleport. It was handled as a public service by the newspaper
and the local chamber of commerce. No plalllling cost was
directly related to this inventory.
There have been numerous articles In the newspaper concerning our previous planning efforts within Meigs County. Many
times it was pointed out that we had projected lhings to he
developed that had aiready been completed; e.g. fire stations. At
the time of our inventory these facilities were still in the planning
stage and were not completed. Whenever a community completes a project previous to its planning date, it can feel quite
proud of its accomplishments and should move its atlention to
some other community undertakiqg. It is only through the involvement ol our local citizens and their participation that we
can make our County a better place in which to live.
Again I want lo say, "Thanks for your participation and
involvement during our studies." I look forward to your contlnued support in the redevelopment and growth of Meigs
County .
Patrick G. Meeker
Surveys Unlimited

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GEnERAL TE;lEPHDnE

Goessler J~welry Store

Court St.

Pomeroy

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�Celtics and Bobcats
win
.
.

SIXTH GRADE CHAMPS - Letart Falls ~h grade team won the ehampionshlp in the
Southern Local District with a 5-1 record. Coach of the winners is Jim Wickline . Front row, 1-r,
are Mark Paraons, Barry Allen, Paul Holsinger, Jeff Wickersham, Dwij:ht Hill, David Findley
and Ed Roush; back row, Wickline,,coach, Todd Roberts, Dale Riffle, Jim O'Brien, Carl Alley,
Jeff Thornton, and Jim Powell.

LETART FAILS fourth and fifth grade basketball team coached by Roger Roush ended its
season with a ~I record. Team members shown are, front, 1-r, Chuck Fortune, Rick Miller,
Chuck Michael, Mike Roush, Chris Hupp and RObin Fortune; back row, Roger Roush, coach,
Kenneth Kiser, Mark Wolfe, Dave Foreman, Steve Riffle, Bria.n Hupp and Chris Wolfe.

The Middleport Celtics 'and
the Harrisonville Bobca~ were
victors in Monday's sixth
grade basketball tournament
action. The Celtics lieat
Pomeroy B 19-7 and the Bobcats nipped the Rutland Devils
29-19.
In the rtrst game of the
doubleheader, the' Celtics led
the entire contest. Both teams
had a scoreless second quarter
and the score at the half was 4-2
In favor of Middleport. Paced.
by Keith Lynch, the. Celtics
broke loose for 9 points in the
third period and held Pomeroy
·scoreless in the final quarter.
Lynch lead the Celtics with 8
points and Greg Becker
followed with 6. Cletos Bego
had 3 for the losers.
An exciting fourth quarter
climaxed the action in the
Harrisonville-Rutland game.
The Devils of Rutland held a
one or two point lead most of
the game. Halfway into the
final quarter Harrisonville

~:·

Scored IQUI' unanswefed polnll,
enough to put them oil top aild
win the game. For llarriR!I·
ville, 11M! high .scorer .w1,1
Reeves with 8. Arnold had 6.
This afternoon the _Mid."
dleport Bucks will take on the
Pomeroy B team, beginning at
5:30p.m.

~

(Coolinued from .Page I), ·
for themaelv04. ·
• In an accident just previous to that
•another victim, unatteilded on a cot in the
ba~k of the.ambulanc:e, dr9wned in his own
vomit as the driver went screaming down
the road.
·
We require barbers to be Ucensed,
after !,BOO hours of technical training, to
cui •hair; we require beauticians to SUC·
cesafully complete 1,500 hours of training
loarrang~mllady'scolffure. We appear to
be fairly advanced as a publlc In
· requirements fiJ!' appearance sake, yet for
· aomethlng that goes llterally more than
skin deep •we have practic.ally no
requirements or responsibilities for
emergency medical services, or for those
· people who briefly care for our life and
limb. '
Is II allY wonder lbere Is immense
· llluth to llie statement that should you
become acutely ill or gravely Injured,
your chances for survival would have .
been much greater In Vielnam War than
lD Atbeu CoUDty! ... or Hocking County!
... or Gallla ... or Jackaon ... or
Lawrence ... or Meigs ... or VInton?
But as Is so often true in Appalachia,
the best has been done with the resources
available. David 'Hughes of the Hughes
' ' Funeral Home in Athens was quoted
recently in the Athens Messenger : "My
feellng about It Is that there is no doubt
that SEOEMS will have better-trained
personnel and better life-saving equipment than that which any fWleral home
can offer. Our personnel are trained to
render · funeral service. EMS will be
trained to off~r emergency ambulance and
MEDICAL services."
Experts in the field estimate it costs
between $40 and $60 thousand\ a year to
operate an ambulance vehicle. Funeral
directors have been providing this costly
serviCe to these communities for years at a
loss to themselves. They are to be commended.
·
As noted In President Nixon 's
remarks, It doesn't have to be this way ...
"such Improvement does not require new
scientific breakthroughs; It only requires
that we apply our present knowledge more
effectively."
Behind the application of training
knowledge In the SEOEMS project is a 22year-old Emergency Medical Technician
(EMT) training course as taught by the
Ohio Department of Education and accepted as one of the finest In the country.
Based on the manual on Emergency
Victim Care, the 00-hour class sessions
cover such subjects as bleeding control;
fractures, heart attacks and stroke;
breathln.s llf/1.~1~A i 1 ,qr,ug overdose;
diabetes; polson; convulsions; mentally
disturbed; burns; and extrication. Recent
innovations to the training course have
significantly increased the EMTs'
technical ability In closed-ehest heart
compression, artificial respiration ,
mechanical re3Ctscltation and more.
The EMT is charged with carrying out
efficient emergency treatment designed to
sustain and prolong tile through proper
victim care measures, both at the scene
and in transit.
THE NATIONWIDE concern with
emergency medical services Is rightfully
becoming a concern among our area
hospitals. With the sophisticated training
being received by the EMTs relative to
their on-the-llcene and in-trans! t technical

Lambert
All-District
WILBERFORCE, . Ohio
(UPI) - Defiance College .
basketball coach Mar~
Hohenberger has been named
"coach of the year" In Dl!trlct
22 of the NMA. .
The award was vilted by
coaches In the 12-member ell&amp;'
trict. Defiance, which llnllhed
with a 21-3 season, a1ao placed
two players In the "top ten" as
voted by the coacheS.
Junior forward Bruce Baer
and junior guard Ken Bush
_represented Defiance; senior
.forwards Clair Recker and
John Brown, Bluffton;. junior
forward Phll Hodge, Malone;
sophomore center Fletcher
Yates, Wilmington; senior
guard Lee Eck, Cedarville;
senior center Ken Richardson,
Ohio Dominican; junior for·
ward Ron Lambert, Rio
Grande, and senior forward
Mike Byrd, Central State.
PACE TO GEORGIA
ATLANTA (UP!) - Bill
Pace, former coach and athlet·
lc director at Vanderlilt, was
named Monday as offensive
coordinator at Georgia Tech.
Pace, 41, had signed a
.contract just last .week lor a ·
slmllar post with lhe Jl'ofesslonal New England Patriots.
But he said after talking to
Georgia Tech Coach Bill
Fulcher in Boston he agreed to
abandon the pro job to remain
in the college ranks.

POMEROY'S FIFTH AND SIXTH "A" SQUAD - Coached by Tom Grueser and Gene
Mitch, this team,had a &gt;·I record. Front row, 1-r, are, Scott McKinney, Steve Williams, Martin
Norton, Steve Little and Todd Smith; back, Tom Grueser, coach, Chris Taylor, Rick Blaettnar,
Scott Williams, Jeff Grueser, and Raymond Andrews.

,,

POMEROY'S FIFTH AND SIXTH "B" SQUAD - Front
row , 1-r ' Wesley Smith, Tim
Faulk and Cliff KeMedy;
back,
~
.
OJris Woods, Dan Thomas and De!Uly Allen. Coacqes of the
team are Don Thomas and Jim Sisson.
'

SIXTH GRADE CHEERLEADERS - Letart Falls sixth
grade cheerleaders are front, Norma Jarrell; back, 1-r,
Darla White; Diana Thoma and Tamels Bradford.

Foote Mineral

manufacturing
streamlined

-·

products.
~' oote

GRAHAM STATION, W. Va.
- Foote Mineral Company,
from its home offices in Exton ,
Pa ., said Friday It had combin ed its Kemco and
Metallurgical
Produ cts
Divisions into a single
manufacturing and marketing
group to be known as the
Ferroalloys
Division ,
responsible for the company's
en tire line of metallurgical

Buffet Luncheons
All Week

Red Carpet Inn
Rt. 62N, Pt. Pleasant

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1

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also announced its

I

Letten of opinion are welcomed. Tbey should be less
than 300 words long (or be aubjecl lo reduction by the
editor) and must be signed wltb th~ signee's llddress.
Names may be wltbbeld upon pubUcatlon. However, on
request, names will be dlsciOBed. Letters should be In good
Iaale, addressing lasues, aot penonaUties.

C

HILTON ON TOP
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(UP!) - Richard Petty moved
into 'second place Monday in
th e NASCAR Winston Cup
Point standings, only 25 ¥•
points behind leader James
Hylton following Petty's victory in Sunday's Richmond 500.
Hylton remained on top with ·
829 polnts while Petty has
803.75.

... '

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1111.~..
"Vl·

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.Q.eat.:Fdifh

board of directors had elected
Robert W. Roth vice president I
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and ge nera( manager of the I
new division. Roth had I
previou sly headed
the I
Metal lurgical
Pr·oducts Responders .to
Also elected to new positions
by the board were Leon W.
Coquillette, vice president adminis tration, and John H.
Ross, vice president - legal
affairs, and secretary. The
board accepted the resignation
of William R Spofford, Jr. , as
vice president-fi nance and
administration , and as a
member of the board. Robert .
J . Johnston, vice president &amp;
treasurer, becom es the
comp any's chi ef financial
officer .

l

In 1972, President Nixon
ended his historic visit to
Communist China, issuing a
joint statement with Premier
Chou En-lai which _reported
severatf3~1iients: ' ' ' '· ']:·

II--------------------------~II '
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Division.

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survey thanked '

capabilities, it logically follows that they
be versed in procedures to assist in victim
care through einergency treatment even
after ·arrival at the hospital emergency
room. With this capability as a goal, the
Ohio Hospital Association, in harmony
with the Ohio Departnlents of Health and
Education, has developed an In-hospital
training course for certified EMTs. This Is
a follow-on to the Emergency VIctim,Care
course. All EMTs in SEOEMS will he
enrolled in the hospital course.
This course wlli provide In-hospital
professional instruction in the emergency
•department, Intensive care, obstetrics,
pediatrics, psychiatric , surgery and
morgue. A nine-hour defensive driving
course will also be required.
To qualify for employmenl with
SEOEMS, the applicant must be a high .
school graduate or have the· equivalent
education and experience and be at least
18 years of age', He or she must have a
valid Ohio driver's Ucense, good physical
and mental health, and be free from
communicable disease. They should have
a knowledge of the geographic area and
community resources, and be certified
under the program "Emergency Victim
Care" or its equivalent.
They must have the ability to make
sound decisions, follow directions and
supervise others. SEOEMS EMTs must
also be certified by a practicing cardiologist.of skill and Wlderslanding in use
of resuscitation , defibrillation_ heart
monitor and closed cardiac massage when
equipment for these Items is part of the
service. Understanding of com·
municatlons equipment and standard
operating procedures is also required.
Within the seven-county area ,
SEOEMS now fias 13 EMT training classes
in progress at no charge to the enrollee.
There are 357 trainees-in these classes
which are being taught by graduates of a
recent instructors school held .ln Wellston .
The new instructors and the communities
in which they are teaching are Clyde
Baker who teaches the Glouster class;
Larry Baker, Racine; Bob Conley, Rome;
Royce Cooley, Coolville; Jack Davis, Oak
Hill; David Harkins, Wellston; Earl
James, Jackson; AI Pierce, Athens; Joe
Struble, Pomeroy; Carroll Thornton,
Gallipolis, and Louis Trego, NelsonvilleLogan.
Other instructors are George Bruce,
Ironton and Gallipolis; Jim Lennon,
Nelsonville; and Don Mathers, Logan.
There are also 55 persons who have
already completed the training. Total
number of trainees Is 412 for all seven
counties.
THE TESTING process Is a continual
function of the training course. The
ultimate determination of qualification of
the EMT is ihe decision of the instructor.
His decision is predicated on attendance,
class participation and final exam, both
written and practical. He attaches a
percentage value to each of the categories.
The trainee must obtain 75 pet. in each
category .
The selection of all Emergency
Medical Technicians, ~ither lull-or-parttime, rests with the Director of SEOEMS
or his designee. All prospective employees
must be recommended by the official
appointed to r_epresent the local unit of
government (coordinator ).
Pay scale throughout the seven
counties Is $2 an hour with time and a hail

UJT'S TRUE" ...

BmER

VALUES

I will be absent from
my office March Jrd to
March 19th. The office
will be closed March
12th to March 19th.

J. J. DAVIS, M.D.

SPEAKER NOTED
The Virginia Kunkle, chief of
elementary education, Ohio
Department of Education and
chairman of the "right to
read" program in Ohio, will
speak to Meigs County
superintendents and principals
on March 6 at a meeting to be
held at the Meigs Inn. A dinner
at 5 p.m. will follow the
meeting which begi!ls at 3,

oll~r

Youths present
.
.
evenzng servzce

C''-·· h

th

in Fellowship

repo'rts were read ahd approved.
At the March 21 meeting,
· Easter baskets will be made to
buy fruit and candy to fill
them. The annual trip will also
be discussed. Roll call will be
answered with St. Patrick's
Day or spring verse; devotions
will he by Mildred Pierce, and
a poem by Eileen Clark.
Hostesses to he Elva Dailey
and Margaret Bailey.
A delicious covered dish
A $25 contribution was made dinner was enjoyed at noon.
to the Middleport firemen and Table grace was by Edith
$10 to the Doris Reinhart Fund Hnod.
when the Busy Bee Class of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church met Thursday night at
the home of Mrs. Lettie Roush.
Mrs .
Beulah
White,
president, opened the meeting
with a poem entitled "Teach us
SYRACUSE - Jean Hall was
to Love More and to , Hate
Less." The class song was sWlg hostess to a house ware ·party
by the group, and Mrs. Wbite Tuesday, Feb. 13, at 10 a.m. in
the D. of A. Lodge hall with
had prayer.
Phyllis
Baker of Middleport
Mrs. Catherine Werner's
devotions were on the topic the demonstrator. Games were
"Valentine's Day - A Good played and prizes awarded. All
Day to Fallin Love with Life." attending were given favors.
"A thank you note was read · The door prize was won by
from Mrs. Elects Souders. The Margaret Cottrill.
program by Mrs. Elizabeth . Refreshments of cup cakes
Slavin was on Bible knowledge. and coffee were served by the
Mrs. Roush, Mrs. Isabelle hostess to Edith Hood, Eileen
WinebreMer and Mrs. Freda Clark, Helen Harris, Helen
Edwards served a dessert. Diddle, Esther Harden, Janice
Lawson, Thelma Grueser,
course.
Mildred Pierce, Pauline
Morarity, Betty "I:eaford a~d
SON BORN
Mr . and Mrs. Michael A. two children, Eleanor Bohram,
Heck, San Diego, Calif., are Margaret Cottrill and Kathryn
announcing the birth of a seven Johnson.
pOWld, 14 ounce son, Jacob
Eric, Feb. 17 at the San Diego
Naval Hospital where Mr.
Heck is serving with the U. S.
Navy, Maternal grandparents
are the Rev. and Mrs. Robert
Card, ·and paternal grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Scott
Shank, all of Pomeroy. Mrs.
Edith Nash, Middleport, is the
great-grandmother.

Two donations
made by class

SAME DAY .
SERVICE

GaiJ Stewart
Quintet
Wed., Feb. 28
9 till 1 P.M.

Red Carpet Inn
Rt. 62N Pl Pleasant

FOLIAGE
GARDENS
Cheer The Sick

•3.00
DUDLEY'S. A.ORrST
.59 N. Second St.
Middleport,

o.

This Week's Feature

LADIES ROLL-UP
SLEEVE·SHIRTS

SALE PLANNED
The Middleport Business and
Professional Women 's Club
will sponsor a rummage sale
on March &gt;and 6 from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. at the Reynolds
Buildihg, Mill St., Middleport.

Sfiop Here·
and

Save Dollars
YOU'LL BE GLAD
YOU DID!

lOLA'S

Permanent press,
long pointed collars,
full button front, shirt
tail bottom - 35%,
cotton, 65% Polyester

White, Navy, Lilac, Lt. Blue,
Pink, and Mint
Sizes 32-38 Made In U.S.A.

•2.99 each
Extra Sizes 40-42-44

'3.49 each
RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Main at Sycamore, Pomeroy

... is the most extenstve and extraordmary selection of fun
and fashion styles for th e second phone that. honestly, every
home should have. Give your life more ple asu re, more
convenience, and mo re securi ly .. . plus a wonde rful
decorator touch of the wild 'n crazy, the witty 'n clever, or
solid and sophisticated. There's a General Te lephone
extension phone lor every place and persona lity.

SHIRT
FINISHING

Crail leaders were Irene
Parker and Janice La"son .
Colorful waste paper haskell
were made from colored egg
cartons. Hostesses were Mrs.
Hall and Mrs. Lawaon.
Enjoying the day were
Thelma Grueser, Betty Hayes;
Margaret Cottrill, Agnes
White, Eleanor Bohram,
Charlotte Nease, Eileen Clark,
Edith Hnod, Mildred Pierce,
Irene Parker, Janice Lawson,
Jean Hail, Margaret Bailey,
Virginia Salser, Margaret
Eichinger and Elva Dailey.

Houseware party
given recently

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Use Our Free Parking Lol

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In At 9-0ut At 5

Robinson's Cleaners

CHESTPHONE ... a real man-type
decora tor phone for the living
room, his special room , desk or
table . Modern styli zed instrument
handsomely set in a black leathe r
chest with walnut trim . .. In
carved walnut ... or even with a
sardonyx stone hunling scene In·
set on the lid!

~~Cit,-Ht4t/e,

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CANDLESTICK PHONE .,. lhe

New Materials

For A New Season ·

FURNITURE

Ring can be made to
hold from two to si1
birthstones.
In procious lOki: yellow
or white gold.

THE SINGER STORE
11S W. Second 992-2284 Pomeroy
We also have a liberal trade -in policy.

We honor Ba.nkAmeric nrd nnd Master Chnrge credit cards .

APPROVED IIH!II DEALER

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•A Ttadtml~ot THE SINGEA COMPANY.

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•2300

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$3.00 oddillo.;'ol
for •'111ch

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birfhdont

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telephone puis the
works right in the palm of your
hand . .. handset. dial and recall
button. Make call afoer call wilhoul
se lling down the phone . Comes in
white. green. 1'.'ory , yellow . pink,
beiqe. and avocado.
STYLELINE'

We have a credit plan designed to fit your budget.

MIDDLEPORT, 0. ·

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Set with radiant birth.
stones - one stone for
uch member of the
family.

The ·Fabric Shop
I

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Save At Our

fellow's fdrnily

new-

tashio n old - f ashione d phon e
styled right out of the roaring
twenties in Black Bottom Black,
Whilfenpoot Wh ite and Razzamatazz Red . Except that we did away
w1th the separate big old be ll box.

Ring Stylo
No. 68

Come and browse now ...
New polyester &amp; cotton
blends, polyester knits,
gingham checks. Kettle
cloth, polyester material
lor formals, spring tr ims
and lots more. Start to sew
Up spring now.

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MOTHER

New from Peter Paul. They're
worth 10 cents each. And they're
delicious ... real peanut butter,
dotted with crispies, and covered
with pure milk chocolate. Free
at participating Ashland Oil
stations.

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FOR

GET TWO NO JELLY CANDY BARS
WITH EACH $3 GASOLINE·

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216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

FOR THAT SPECIAL OCCASION

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nth lCk ;tnd stroke llr t or1ly ttl( !

BAKER

read by Mrs. Hail and roll ~ail
was answered with a Valentine
verse. ·~he Origin of Valen·
tine's Day" was . read ·by
Virginia Salser. Janice Lawson
read an article, "Build Your
House
of
Happiness."
Secretary and treasurer

General Telephone's
extension extravaganza

the March meeting will be
annDWlCed later.

MEETING POSTPONED
The Laurel Cliff Better
...- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . Health Club meeting scheduled
for Thursday has been postSpring Has Arrived at the Fabric Shop
poned. The date and place of

~nche dar~ .

you lb111k 1/1at t1eilrl

for overtime. However this figure may be
misleading; in some station EMTs
working a 24-hour-on, 24-hour-off shift will
he earning to $6,600 ·a year. Base pay,
however, in .all areas, Is $2 an hour.
No major problems are expected by
SEOEMS as far as having EMTs trained
by the time the vehicles arrive, According
to state regulations, anyone involved with
. training can operate the vehicle and
function as attendant, but SEOEMS
requires a substantial level of training
helore actual assignment. Each station's
particular needs along these lines are now
being studied and adjusted if necessary.
' In full operation, the Southeast Ohio
Emergency Medical Service will employ
EMTs either full-time or part-time along
these designs: Athens CoWlty, 12 employed, 66 volunteers; Hocking CoWlty, 7
employed, 61 volunteers; Vinton, 5 employed, 22 volWlteers; Jackson, 7 employed, 61 volunteers; Lawrence, II
The SWlday evening service
employed, 89 volunteers; Gallia, 12 em- at the Laurel Cliff Free
ployed, 35 volunteers; and Meigs CoWlty, 4 Methodist Church was under
employed and 64 volunteers.
the direction of the Free
The ninnber of employees blred and Methodist Youths and their
at wbat status Is determined by the advisors,. Mr. and Mrs. Steve
amounl of money committed by each Eblin,
county to their share of total' persoMel
Narrator for the program
cos Is ( ZO pet.). But the basic value Ues In was Charles Diehl. Mrs. Magel
having at least two certified attendants Smith was at the piano for
available to cover every ambulance group singing led by Barbara
when a call Is received.
.
Kline. Robert Barton had the
EVERY AMERICAN feels it Is his prayer, and Miss Kline sang a
birthright to receive emergency treatment solo.- There was scripture by
when he is Injured. He thinks that all he Diane mith, a song by Steve
has to do Is dial the operator and a and Becky Eblin, and prayer
gleaming ambulance, equipped with all by Uoyd Wright.
the marvels of modern technology will Receiving the offering were
arrive instantly, staffed by ambulance Diana Lewis, Belinda Friend,
attendants who know everything there is to Becky Eblin and Sharon
know about first aid and beyond.
Buckley. The Rev . Robert
He thinks that when he arrives at the Buckley used as his sermon
emergency department he will be treated topic "Ye are the Body of
by doctors and nurses who know Christ and Members in Pareverything there is to know about what is ticular". He took his scripture
wrong with him and will treat him with the from I Cor. 12, 13-27.
best and most up-to-date techniques,
equipment and medication .
He is equally certain that ambulance '
company management, ambulance atfJUfC .JOU S
tendants, emergency department
physicians and nurses are saintly public
servants deriving their sustenance from
the satisfaction of a job well done.
He thinks too, that HE will never have
need for any of this !
A Youth Fellowship was
The truth is that emergency rooms organized Sunday night at the
and ambulance services have, like Topsy, Middleport First United
"just growed," in haphazard shapes and Presbyterian Church. Officers
directions. Something is better than elected were Beth Vaughan,
nothing, and fll&amp;ny dedicated people have president; Don Vaughan, vice'
devoted themselves to the business of president ; Cathy Coleman,
saving and prolonging human life - fast. secretary-treasurer. Others
In the few communities in this nation the a'itendtng' · · were '. Iiecky'
job has been done so well that the great Coleman, Jeannie Schneider,
American · dream described above has Bill Vaughan, Steve Walburn,
seemed to be nearly true. In others, and the advisor, James
emergency care has more nearly Buchanan.
resembled a nightmare.
Next meeting was set for
The time is approaching when at least March II at 6:30p.m . Members
part of that dream will come closer to of the youth group at the
reality . for everyone in these seven Syracuse Church will be incounties because of Southeast Ohio's vited. A Bible study was
Emergency Medical Service and its conducted and refreshments
were served.
Emergency Medical Technicians.
As quoted from a special health
segment of l~st week's CBS-TV Morning
Show, "It Is th~ attendaqt aboard who
,
determines whether the ambulance is an
angel of mercy, or the harbinger of ·
death."

DINNER GIVEN
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gaul ,
Mark and David, Chester,
entertained Sunday with a
birthday dinner for he r.
mother, Mrs. Ralph Ours. Also
present were Mrs. Mildred
Frank and Rick . Gaul,
Pomeroy.

Popular Prices! .. ,
If

SYRACUSE ::.. "If you are
acquainted with happiness,
introduce him to your neighbor," was the thought for the
day when the Third Wednesday
Homemakers Club met
Wednesday at the little house
at Municipal Park.
The meeting, conducted by
the president, Jean Hall,
·opened with the Lord's Prayer
and Flag Pledge in unison.
"Real Motive for Expresliing
Love," was the devotional
topic frio Upper Room, read
by Margaret Eichinger,
followed with prayer.
A poem, "Don't Quit," was

Feb. 22, 1973
Dear Citizens:
I want to tha·nk all of you who participated In the citizen
survey for Pomeroy, Ohio. This is just one way in which you can
he come involved in making Meigs County a betler place in which
to live .
The primary purpose of the survey was to help us in
designing a planning program for the villages of Pomeroy and
Middleport. It was handled as a public service by the newspaper
and the local chamber of commerce. No plalllling cost was
directly related to this inventory.
There have been numerous articles In the newspaper concerning our previous planning efforts within Meigs County. Many
times it was pointed out that we had projected lhings to he
developed that had aiready been completed; e.g. fire stations. At
the time of our inventory these facilities were still in the planning
stage and were not completed. Whenever a community completes a project previous to its planning date, it can feel quite
proud of its accomplishments and should move its atlention to
some other community undertakiqg. It is only through the involvement ol our local citizens and their participation that we
can make our County a better place in which to live.
Again I want lo say, "Thanks for your participation and
involvement during our studies." I look forward to your contlnued support in the redevelopment and growth of Meigs
County .
Patrick G. Meeker
Surveys Unlimited

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GEnERAL TE;lEPHDnE

Goessler J~welry Store

Court St.

Pomeroy

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6- The Daily Sen.tinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 27,1973 .

F~fi!&lt;·~iW~

\ Roger Coast exhibit opens
at qalleries on ·Saturday
A visit to the .French. Art
.
Col?ny gallerie:' m Galbp.ohs
durmg March will be a trip mto
the world of fantasy created by
Roger Coast of Cleveland, an
artist whose ~ork covers a
variety of
rangmg from
the simplicity of pen and ink to
the complexity of metal
engraving.
. ..
Imagine . ~ magmf1cenlly
:· decora~Oyl.ngmachine (that
couldn t POSSibly Oy) noating
in space, supported by six huge
striped balloons. Think of an
elaborate polka dot train, a
smoke-puffing riverboat, or an
elaborate Victorian house, with
towering gables and colored
lights In each window, every
mch of which is ornamentally
detailed.
Consider a cluster of
amusing and satirical faces
dra~ on ping pong balls, a
groupmg of sensitively drawn
nudes, or a romantic scene of
two lovers standing in a field of
blue and violet Dowers, with
the tiUe "You'll always be a
part of me".
Or visualize "Oh, how I want
to go home", showing a man
anH woman, with a horse, near

~18

a ho use m
· the m1'dst of a f1eld
· of
soft warm daisies and a broken
down fence . There is humor in
the warm and amusing series
of draWings that satirize and
comment on the ways of life
today and yesterday.
A native Ohioan and
graduate of Pratt Institute in
New York, Roger is 39,
married, and has two sons. He
has exhibited his work widely
throughout this· country and
won numerous awards for his
unique and affectionate
designs . He is a member of the
faculty . of the Cleveland Institute of · Art and au art
director at the Cleveland Plain
Dealer.
Don'tmiss this delightful and
happ~ exhibit of drawings,,
paintings and engravings by
Roger Coast. The show opens
Saturday, March 3, and the
galleries are open every
Saturday and sun\iay from 1 to
5 p.m. and each Tuesday from
10 to 3 p.m. Groups may
arrange for special tours
throughout the week by calling
Mrs. Betty McGinness, 4460547.

Emily Circle
meeting held

Practice set
;: on March 4th
'
for lodge rally
SYRACUSE - Guiding Star
Council124, D. of A. Lodge met
In regular ·session Thursday
night with Councilor Eileen
Clark in the chair. Communications were read pertaining to the District 13 Rally
to be held April 11 in Marietta.
There will be a practice on
March 4.
Recuperating at home from
injuries received in a recent
auto accident Is Mabel
Pickens; her husband is
confined to the Holzer Medical
Center with a broken leg and
other Injuries from the same
accident. Laura Sayre was
• taken to her home from Holzer
H_ospltal, and Edward Hawley
iB not well at home.
A blind auction will be held at
the March 8 meeting .
Members present were
Deputy Jean Hall, Eileen
Clark,
Sadie• Thuener •
Margaret Cottrill, Esther
Harden, Mildred Pierce, Edith
Hood, Charlotte Nease,
Margaret. Eichinger, and
Pauline Morarity.
During the social hour
refreshments of hamburgers,
i, chips and pop were served
honoring the birthdays of Mrs.
Hood and Mrs. Cottrill.
PUBLIC NOTICE

NOOT~~~v~~,."J~~NG
AND APPRAISEMENT
The St1te of Ohio , Meigs
Counly. Probate court.
To the Execulor or Ad .
mlniSirolor of lhe estate · lo
such of the following as' are
~1:1denfl~ of lhe Stale of Oh io,
• e surv 1vlng spouse, fhe
nexl of kin, the beneficiaries
under the will: and to the at.
I orney
or
attorneys
representing any of I he
aforemenlloned persons ·
Charles Wayne Hoback, Pori .
~~~~i Meigs County, Ohio. No.
You aro hereby notified thai

SYRACUSE - The Emily
Missionary Circle of the First
United Presbyterian Church
met in the church annex on
Tuesday, Feb. 6, at 1:30 p.m.
Conducted by the president,
Laura Pickens, the meeting
opened by reading in unison
from The Dial "Purpose of
Presbyterian Women,"
followed with prayer by Mrs.
Ruth Zavitz.
Mrs. Pickens read Psalm 33
lor devotions ; thought for the
month was, '~life's Disappointments are Veiled Love's
Appointments." Roll call was
answered with a verse containing the word 11 heart. 11
Secretary and treasurer
reports were read and approved.
A letter was read by Hache!
McBride pertaining to the
circle's projects from Mrs.
Roger Benner. Yearbooks
made by Mrs. Zavitz were
distributed.
A reading of "The Least
Coin," from the Circle Prayer
book by Frankie Mumaw·•
missionaries to be prayed for,
from the prayer book, and
articles about the Southeastern
Ohio Health Fair and the
Presbyterys of Steubenville
and Wooster were read by
Agnes White.
Forth e program, B1'ble study
was on th b k f R th "F
eooo u. ear
versus Faith " was read by
Mrs , Pick:ns and Miss
Mumaw· "Life " by Mr
.

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s.

White and Mrs. McBride, and
"Hope" by Mrs Zavitz and
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'
Mrs. White. The closing prayer
for the church mission was
1
read in unison from the Prayer
Book (old and New)
·
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During the social period
d . .
'
ehc1ous refreshments of fruit
salad, cake and coffee were
served by the hostess, Mrs.
the
Inventory
and
Ap
p· k
t th
bo
d
pralsement of the estate of th ·
IC ens, o
e a ve an
a torementioned , deceased , tar! Daisy Roush. Table grace was
o1 said County , was filed in this
·
b
.
Cour-t . Sa i d Inventory and giVen Y Mrs. McBrtde.
App~alsement

will be for
hearmg before this Court on the
lOth day of Mar ch, 1973, atlo · oo

o'c lock A.M .
,

·

Any person desiring to fi le
exceptions there to must file
them tit least five days prior 10

the date set for hearing
Given under my hand ai1d seal
Of Uld Court, this 22nd day of
February 1973.
Manning D. Webster
Judge and ti&lt; ·Otficio
Clerk of sa id Court

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By Janet E . Morris
(J) 6 .c~~ief Deputy Clerk

PUBLIC NOTICE

Tfle Board of Me i gs county

Commissioners will hold a
Public Hear ing concerning the
proposed Sub - division
regulations for Meigs County .
This meeting will be held on

March 22nd 9 :00a .m . o'clock at
the Court room. Court House

Pomeroy , Oh lo.

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Martha Chambers , Clerk
( Meigs County Commissioners
2} 20, 27, 21

HAYES DIES ..
TERRELL, Tex. (UPI) E.O. "Doc" Hayes, the most
successful basketball coach in
Southwest Conference history,
died Monday in an automobile
accident.
Hayes, 67, who retired from
the head coaching job at
Southern Methodist in 1967, and
his wife, Kathleen, died when
their car struck a concrete
abutment on Interstate 20 near
Terrell, 35 miles east of Dallas.
In 19 seasons at SMU, Hayes
compiled a 299-192 won-loss
record and won more championships - eight - then any
other coach in conf~rence
history.

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.pomeroy . . . .. Mother-Daughter
SYRACUSE- May 9 was the Annex.
Personal Notes date
set for the 'IJlnual MotherNamed

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhill
and Mr. and Mrs. James·stout,
Connie and Terri, Tuppers
Plains, were recent visitors at
· · · xm ·YK'I'I'.:W.:*:~ .. F1orida's Silver Springs.
lf.'.l81l;
:!:;:
,
M Dr. and Mrs. Edward Tracy
'*'
of Columbus spentthe weekend
:l!:
~ here with his mother, Mrs.
·:;:;
:::~ Nellie Tracy.
Mr.andMrs.HarryHenryof
Amesville were Sunday guests
:$
::i of Mr. and Mrs . Patrick
TUESDAY
Lochary:
RACINE American Legion
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Peyton
Auxiliary, 7: 30"1'uesday night and son, Richard II, visited her
at the American Legion HaiL parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
AMERICAN
Legion Jeffers of Syracuse on Sunday.
Auxiliary, Drew Wbster Post
Mrs. Murl Ours, Bashan, and
39, joint meeting of junior and Mrs. Betty Gaul, Chester, were
senior members, 7:30 p.fll. recent visitors of the former's
Mrs . Ray Fox to hRve sister, Mrs. Mildred Frank,
FRIENDLY Neighbors Club, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Oehler of
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the home
Belpre spent the weekend here
of Mrs. Eleanor Werry.
Americanism program, guest with Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
speaker and a skit, "I Am Old
:::; ............ '""''"..,....m····........,..w.;,,
Glory" by the juniors.
CHARTER membership
~j
j!j!
meeting of the Middleport Pomeroy Area Branch of the
American .Association of &lt;:;
=~~ll
University Women, 8 p.m. at ~::
the Meigs Inn, 'rues day.
Mrs. Howard Rauch and
Dinner at 6:30 p.m. with daughters,. Barbara and Pam
reservations to be made with of Newark, visited her mother,
Mrs. Bernice Carpenter.
Mrs. Blanche Painter at the
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter of home of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
the American Red Cross Painter in Middleport Sunday.
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at cafeteri~ Calling in the evening was
of
.Veterans
Memorial Robert Painter.
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell
IMPORTANT MEETING Painter, Jr. and Robin of South
Southern Local Band Boosters Shore, Ky. visited his mother,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at high Mrs. Blanche Painter at the
school, Racine.
. Middleport home of Mr. and
WEDNESDAY
Mrs. Ralph Painter on
AMERICAN LEGION Saturday.
Auxiliary, both junior and
Mr. and Mrs. John Lyons and
senior units, Feeney-Bennett grandson, Eddie Miller, were
Post 128, 7:30p.m. Wednesday in Pontiac, Mich. over the
at the hall. Potluck dinner to weekend to visit their son and
precede at 6:30.
·l
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
PoMEROY- MIDDLEPORT Tom Lyons, and their
Lions Club, noon Wednesday at daughter, Linda .
the Meigs Inn.
OHIO VALLEY Comrnandery 24, Knights Templar,
stated conclave, Wednesday
7:30 p.m. Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. Potluck dinner at 6:30
for knights, their ladies and
families.

Soc IaI ~!:
t cI
i
~~ aendar; :

~;:':':&gt;.' ' ' ' ' '~.,.,. ,-,~~-~;
~
Middleport

*: Personal Notes

WOMEN'S
Christian
Temperance
Union
of
Pomeroy. 2 p.m. Wednesday at'
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, annual Frances
Willard Tea. Mrs. T. T. Shelton
to have the program.
MEIGS County Jaycees, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday, 8 p.m. at
Pomeroy Village Hall.
ALL Southern High School
students invited to youth
prayer and breakfast, 7:30
a.m. Wednesday at Racine
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Mrs .
Emerson Jones, hostess. Mrs.
E
H
t
.
vere 11 ayes o review
"Getl G.
·
n e
emus - Felix
Mendelsohn." Roll call to be
answered with a response on
the book
·
THURSDAY '
CHILDREN'S HOME
..
.
Citizens Cormruttee, 12:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Ch'ldr
•
1 ens
Home. All interested persons
· 'te
IDVI d to attend.
EVANGELINE C
hapter,
O.E.S., 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
Middleport Masonic Temple.

,,

banquet date set by church class
drawn for the year.
Hostesses to the March 15
meeting will be Mildred Pierce
and Thelma Grueser; the Bible
verse will pertain to the Cross,
with devotions by Beatrice
Blake. Men of the Bible will be
studied. Each member is to
bring something about Jesus.
The closing prayer was by

the Rev. Dwight Z!Jvltz .. Durjng
the social hour delicious
refreshments, in keeping .with
the Valentine motif were
served by the hostesses, Jean
Hall and Janice Lawson, to the
Rev. and Mrs. Z!Jvitz, BeatJ:Ice
Blake, Margaret Cottrill,
Charlotte Nease, )!ildred
Pierce and Agnes Wbite. ;

to the banquet
committee were Jean Hall,
chairman, Ruth Z!Jvitz, and
Charlotte • Nease. It will be
served in the annex Wednesday, May 9, at 6:30p.m.
The meeting was conducied
by the vice-president, Janice
Lawson. Devotions were by
Margaret Cottrill, reading
excerpts from Mark, Chap. 6, ·----------111111!---·--~
on tile topic·, "Amazing Things
Can Happen,'' from the
booklet, "What the Bible Can
do for 'You;" by Dr. Norman
VIncent Peale, followed by
prayer.
Roll call wa~ answered by
Now . you can . b~y ttipi_
nine members with a heart or
~omfortable
l;lii-Z-Boy
valentine verse. The secretary
chair you've always
and treasurer reports were
dreamed of at our . low 1'
read and accepted. Dues were
prices.
paid and a free will offering '
••
taken.
· Authorized Dea liir
The class will purchase
materials needed for the craft
class held on Tuesday
.
following the 6:30 Youth choir
practice.
Secret pal names were
· Herman Grote ··- ·

Daughter banquet by the
Sunshine Makers Class of The
First United Presbyterian
Sunday School Thursday night,
February 15, in the Church
Wright.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jacobs
and son are now making their
home in Largo, Fla. Jack is
working there as an apprentice
- ~ectrician, and his wife, Jane,
IS employed at the telephone
company. The couple spent
several weeks here with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Jacobs, following Jack's
discharge from service before
returning to Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dick
Karr had as their weekend
guests, Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Matthew· and Mr. Matthew's
mother of Huron.
Mrs. James Gilmore was
returned home Thursday from
Veterans Memorial Hospital
following hospitalization for
observation and treatment.

.We Accept
food
- Federal
.
. Stamps
PHONE: 992·3480
·

eve~ing

MASON ·

Right

Limit Quantities"

~OP-UP

Moson,W.

VI.

WINTER SALE!

box

Mate

Favorite

UTILITY

6.P/ECE
JIG SAW

KNIFE

BLADE SET

English

Large Size
1~b.

WALNUTS

..

¢

pkg.

Superiors Brand

lb.

59¢

POTATO

Humpty-Dumpty

JIG SAW

•7531

Hig h spud for wood and tompositions, low ~peed lor me ta ls,
plastic, tile . Includes I blode.
Big 1/ 4 HP motor .

Ovh tond lng ¥alue general purp~Xt
For 7~ 1/4 " a'ld 6-1/2" blades.

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with speed lock

SPEED

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SHARPENER

C/h

Ru~ orpens

carbon ond
steel twist drill bits. A&lt;&lt;oopt• l

I r igger liqu t"ue selech the
ipBed yov n.:~ed, tr i g~er la c~

fr om 1/8" to J/8" siu~&amp;.

holds It! 1/6 HP.

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compOiltloru. 3/4 HP motor.

ONLY

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10'' blade cuts fy(l 3" dnp. On top,
yp.fronl c.onlrol for *tlly operation.
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99~

6'13" or7'1•"

CIRCULAR SAW BLADES
Chrome nickel aOoy steel blade

1

cuts plywood, ploii lic, fo rmica.

::.a· 57$

For 11onda rd , med ium-weight
(obi. Tempered steal blade has
chrome fln llh .

247EACH
TWO TANK

TORCH KIT
8,,

727

shan~

me cha nic

screwdriver fo r tough jobs.
Chrome·fln i1h blade.

cylinden, bu rner 01•
sembly, brut ll flo me tip ond
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5 lb.

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I
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WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A.14-0Z. JAR OF

I
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Instant

MAXWELL HOUSE'

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14 OZ. JAR ONLY $159

L__0!! COUPO'!_

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WITH COUPON

PUFAMILY • OFf!! E!!'l!$.; MAR.

2, 1973 = _

59~
WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A_ 8_OZ. JAR OF

MAXIM®

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GAL

MARK V SUPER MARKET

THURSDAY ONLY

DEEP FRIES

RC COLA

u: 23~

16 oz.
bois.

RICH'S WHIPPED

ON SALE ALL WEEKI

7-UP

69e

Wi 1h $3.00 Purchase

FUEL
CYLINDER

TOPPING
fUR
$1

,UROH

FLOOR JACKS
STOP FLOOR SAG

3

,

STitiCIHG DOORS
&amp;WINDOW$

SALI NICI

J

3/1819 .
01

677 ..

Diet Rite Cola or Dad's Root Bear

REAME1SEGG

IACH

Heovy duty 'tarbon 1 teel
lube. Adjullf from .4' 7" j0
7'9" ,
•

omeroy Cement Block
•

cans

I

I

crt.

PIOPANE

flts molar bronds of
tQmp stove5.

I

I

¥.!gal.

ICE MilK

Hos br igh t, l int ·plated
finish, working lood limit
91).440 lbs.
tAYlOR

~Juel

¢

CHOC. MILK

:~.~ fi66

(Hwl)

.. 57 Court St.
592-2851
Alh ens. 0 .
Cor. Sec. &amp; Sycamore 446-0303 Gallipolis, o.

GRAPEFRUIT

Nice 'N Lite

SOOT-PRIDE

TOW CHAIN

89~
304 E. Main 992·3795 Pomeftr1, 0.
0oen 9 n1 5 Moo. lhru Sat
.No.Appointment Necessary

TOMATOES

AT

3/1• inch • 14 foot

Ro"nd

RIEG. 1.29

THE INCOMI! TAX PEOPLE

Aorida White

FREEZE-DRIED COFFEE

57$

(Hwi)

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Bo nd• metal, wood,
glou. Woterprool.
110. 1.00

"-1/21NOt
CABINET
SCREWDRIV'ERA

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CHEESE

2

199~~.

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Sugar Freee

E·POX·E
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Loc.-

Fresh Red Ripe

fAYGO

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oi'et P·o-p'"·r

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2;.-. fAK .

bag

trims and

in wood, plostia ,

Black &amp; Decker/DEWAL T
10 INCH DE LUXE

plastic.

59 N. Second St.

Reai!Oo 1. We specialize in income tax
preparation. We know the wrinkles. We dig
out every honesi deduction. There is very
little chance we will let you overpay your
taxes.

Home Made

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Cuts,

16

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ACTION

Eosr one-hand conlfol. Flush sond5
on 3 sides. Use fo, wood, metal ,

YOUR
CHOICE

lb.

2· lb.
box

CHIPS
•.. ·. A

TWO·SPEED

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19.99

BLOOMING
PLANTS

Henry BloCk has
17 reasons why you
should come·to us
for income tax help..

¢

Home Made

PRINGLE$

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FINISHING SANDER

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.

Real Budget Pleaser!

$

lvs. for

BREAD

21fz lb. pkg.

WlTH COUPON

THURSDAY
TROUP Camping meeting
for leaders and assistants of
Junior and Cadette Scouts will
be held at 9:30 Thursday
morning at the home of Mrs.
April Smith.
FRinAY
MEIGS County Pomona
Grange, 8 p.m. Friday, Rock
Springs Grange, Fifth Degree
to be conferred. Subordinate
granges invited to take the
degree work . Harrisonville
Grange wfU host the meeting.

lrom $7.50

9
9¢
nds &amp; P1eces .............
7
9
Pol ish Sausa2e ........ ~~:.
7
·9' ¢
Ham Salad ~......................
39•
Pork SausaJ!e ........... ~.:..
.
. .

Elm Hill Bacon

BRAUNSCHWEIGER

11 oz. jar

.2999

from $3.50
from $2.49

E

lb.

8-TRACK TAPES

Tulips
Hyacinths
Azaleas

BOLOGNA

18 oz.

CORN FLAKES

STANLEY

TAPE RUL

lb.

. jumbo$
rolls

Post Toasties

I.------

16 FOOT

¢

•

BIG SAVINGS ON TOOLS!
[iJ Lnflrin

Scot Lad
.. PAPER .T~LS

5 to 7 lb. Average

KEY BRAND

Reg. 39c

PEANUTS u oz. bag

Fully Cooked

$279

lb~

FURNITURE

:;~ r-------------------::=========:.:m: -5:59:2:

lb. can

WIENERS

PASTRIES

Marshmallow

.3

MIDDLtPORT, 0.

ELM HILL

()leen of Scot Toaster

BY Elm Hill

LUNCH
MEAT

SUPER MARKET • Open D.aily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10

LA-z--·s ov··

CHAIRS,'.

SMOKED .PICNICS

ARMOUR
SPICED

BANQUET

·, . . , 89¢
BUI:RT

~

, ;.,SUPPERS each

. .

NOODtES
8.oz.
P~ .

29~

16 ~ bots.

8
pak

ON SALE ALL WEEKI

DR. PEPPER
16 oz.
bots.

The Department Store of Building Since 1917.

I~ .
I .

'•

:
I

J

�•

-'

•
~

6- The Daily Sen.tinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 27,1973 .

F~fi!&lt;·~iW~

\ Roger Coast exhibit opens
at qalleries on ·Saturday
A visit to the .French. Art
.
Col?ny gallerie:' m Galbp.ohs
durmg March will be a trip mto
the world of fantasy created by
Roger Coast of Cleveland, an
artist whose ~ork covers a
variety of
rangmg from
the simplicity of pen and ink to
the complexity of metal
engraving.
. ..
Imagine . ~ magmf1cenlly
:· decora~Oyl.ngmachine (that
couldn t POSSibly Oy) noating
in space, supported by six huge
striped balloons. Think of an
elaborate polka dot train, a
smoke-puffing riverboat, or an
elaborate Victorian house, with
towering gables and colored
lights In each window, every
mch of which is ornamentally
detailed.
Consider a cluster of
amusing and satirical faces
dra~ on ping pong balls, a
groupmg of sensitively drawn
nudes, or a romantic scene of
two lovers standing in a field of
blue and violet Dowers, with
the tiUe "You'll always be a
part of me".
Or visualize "Oh, how I want
to go home", showing a man
anH woman, with a horse, near

~18

a ho use m
· the m1'dst of a f1eld
· of
soft warm daisies and a broken
down fence . There is humor in
the warm and amusing series
of draWings that satirize and
comment on the ways of life
today and yesterday.
A native Ohioan and
graduate of Pratt Institute in
New York, Roger is 39,
married, and has two sons. He
has exhibited his work widely
throughout this· country and
won numerous awards for his
unique and affectionate
designs . He is a member of the
faculty . of the Cleveland Institute of · Art and au art
director at the Cleveland Plain
Dealer.
Don'tmiss this delightful and
happ~ exhibit of drawings,,
paintings and engravings by
Roger Coast. The show opens
Saturday, March 3, and the
galleries are open every
Saturday and sun\iay from 1 to
5 p.m. and each Tuesday from
10 to 3 p.m. Groups may
arrange for special tours
throughout the week by calling
Mrs. Betty McGinness, 4460547.

Emily Circle
meeting held

Practice set
;: on March 4th
'
for lodge rally
SYRACUSE - Guiding Star
Council124, D. of A. Lodge met
In regular ·session Thursday
night with Councilor Eileen
Clark in the chair. Communications were read pertaining to the District 13 Rally
to be held April 11 in Marietta.
There will be a practice on
March 4.
Recuperating at home from
injuries received in a recent
auto accident Is Mabel
Pickens; her husband is
confined to the Holzer Medical
Center with a broken leg and
other Injuries from the same
accident. Laura Sayre was
• taken to her home from Holzer
H_ospltal, and Edward Hawley
iB not well at home.
A blind auction will be held at
the March 8 meeting .
Members present were
Deputy Jean Hall, Eileen
Clark,
Sadie• Thuener •
Margaret Cottrill, Esther
Harden, Mildred Pierce, Edith
Hood, Charlotte Nease,
Margaret. Eichinger, and
Pauline Morarity.
During the social hour
refreshments of hamburgers,
i, chips and pop were served
honoring the birthdays of Mrs.
Hood and Mrs. Cottrill.
PUBLIC NOTICE

NOOT~~~v~~,."J~~NG
AND APPRAISEMENT
The St1te of Ohio , Meigs
Counly. Probate court.
To the Execulor or Ad .
mlniSirolor of lhe estate · lo
such of the following as' are
~1:1denfl~ of lhe Stale of Oh io,
• e surv 1vlng spouse, fhe
nexl of kin, the beneficiaries
under the will: and to the at.
I orney
or
attorneys
representing any of I he
aforemenlloned persons ·
Charles Wayne Hoback, Pori .
~~~~i Meigs County, Ohio. No.
You aro hereby notified thai

SYRACUSE - The Emily
Missionary Circle of the First
United Presbyterian Church
met in the church annex on
Tuesday, Feb. 6, at 1:30 p.m.
Conducted by the president,
Laura Pickens, the meeting
opened by reading in unison
from The Dial "Purpose of
Presbyterian Women,"
followed with prayer by Mrs.
Ruth Zavitz.
Mrs. Pickens read Psalm 33
lor devotions ; thought for the
month was, '~life's Disappointments are Veiled Love's
Appointments." Roll call was
answered with a verse containing the word 11 heart. 11
Secretary and treasurer
reports were read and approved.
A letter was read by Hache!
McBride pertaining to the
circle's projects from Mrs.
Roger Benner. Yearbooks
made by Mrs. Zavitz were
distributed.
A reading of "The Least
Coin," from the Circle Prayer
book by Frankie Mumaw·•
missionaries to be prayed for,
from the prayer book, and
articles about the Southeastern
Ohio Health Fair and the
Presbyterys of Steubenville
and Wooster were read by
Agnes White.
Forth e program, B1'ble study
was on th b k f R th "F
eooo u. ear
versus Faith " was read by
Mrs , Pick:ns and Miss
Mumaw· "Life " by Mr
.

'

•

s.

White and Mrs. McBride, and
"Hope" by Mrs Zavitz and
'
'
Mrs. White. The closing prayer
for the church mission was
1
read in unison from the Prayer
Book (old and New)
·
'
During the social period
d . .
'
ehc1ous refreshments of fruit
salad, cake and coffee were
served by the hostess, Mrs.
the
Inventory
and
Ap
p· k
t th
bo
d
pralsement of the estate of th ·
IC ens, o
e a ve an
a torementioned , deceased , tar! Daisy Roush. Table grace was
o1 said County , was filed in this
·
b
.
Cour-t . Sa i d Inventory and giVen Y Mrs. McBrtde.
App~alsement

will be for
hearmg before this Court on the
lOth day of Mar ch, 1973, atlo · oo

o'c lock A.M .
,

·

Any person desiring to fi le
exceptions there to must file
them tit least five days prior 10

the date set for hearing
Given under my hand ai1d seal
Of Uld Court, this 22nd day of
February 1973.
Manning D. Webster
Judge and ti&lt; ·Otficio
Clerk of sa id Court

~
~ (l ) H ,

~._

~
IIi

By Janet E . Morris
(J) 6 .c~~ief Deputy Clerk

PUBLIC NOTICE

Tfle Board of Me i gs county

Commissioners will hold a
Public Hear ing concerning the
proposed Sub - division
regulations for Meigs County .
This meeting will be held on

March 22nd 9 :00a .m . o'clock at
the Court room. Court House

Pomeroy , Oh lo.

·

'

I

~

"'
loo"'

Martha Chambers , Clerk
( Meigs County Commissioners
2} 20, 27, 21

HAYES DIES ..
TERRELL, Tex. (UPI) E.O. "Doc" Hayes, the most
successful basketball coach in
Southwest Conference history,
died Monday in an automobile
accident.
Hayes, 67, who retired from
the head coaching job at
Southern Methodist in 1967, and
his wife, Kathleen, died when
their car struck a concrete
abutment on Interstate 20 near
Terrell, 35 miles east of Dallas.
In 19 seasons at SMU, Hayes
compiled a 299-192 won-loss
record and won more championships - eight - then any
other coach in conf~rence
history.

•~

i

.pomeroy . . . .. Mother-Daughter
SYRACUSE- May 9 was the Annex.
Personal Notes date
set for the 'IJlnual MotherNamed

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhill
and Mr. and Mrs. James·stout,
Connie and Terri, Tuppers
Plains, were recent visitors at
· · · xm ·YK'I'I'.:W.:*:~ .. F1orida's Silver Springs.
lf.'.l81l;
:!:;:
,
M Dr. and Mrs. Edward Tracy
'*'
of Columbus spentthe weekend
:l!:
~ here with his mother, Mrs.
·:;:;
:::~ Nellie Tracy.
Mr.andMrs.HarryHenryof
Amesville were Sunday guests
:$
::i of Mr. and Mrs . Patrick
TUESDAY
Lochary:
RACINE American Legion
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Peyton
Auxiliary, 7: 30"1'uesday night and son, Richard II, visited her
at the American Legion HaiL parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
AMERICAN
Legion Jeffers of Syracuse on Sunday.
Auxiliary, Drew Wbster Post
Mrs. Murl Ours, Bashan, and
39, joint meeting of junior and Mrs. Betty Gaul, Chester, were
senior members, 7:30 p.fll. recent visitors of the former's
Mrs . Ray Fox to hRve sister, Mrs. Mildred Frank,
FRIENDLY Neighbors Club, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Oehler of
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the home
Belpre spent the weekend here
of Mrs. Eleanor Werry.
Americanism program, guest with Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
speaker and a skit, "I Am Old
:::; ............ '""''"..,....m····........,..w.;,,
Glory" by the juniors.
CHARTER membership
~j
j!j!
meeting of the Middleport Pomeroy Area Branch of the
American .Association of &lt;:;
=~~ll
University Women, 8 p.m. at ~::
the Meigs Inn, 'rues day.
Mrs. Howard Rauch and
Dinner at 6:30 p.m. with daughters,. Barbara and Pam
reservations to be made with of Newark, visited her mother,
Mrs. Bernice Carpenter.
Mrs. Blanche Painter at the
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter of home of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
the American Red Cross Painter in Middleport Sunday.
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at cafeteri~ Calling in the evening was
of
.Veterans
Memorial Robert Painter.
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell
IMPORTANT MEETING Painter, Jr. and Robin of South
Southern Local Band Boosters Shore, Ky. visited his mother,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at high Mrs. Blanche Painter at the
school, Racine.
. Middleport home of Mr. and
WEDNESDAY
Mrs. Ralph Painter on
AMERICAN LEGION Saturday.
Auxiliary, both junior and
Mr. and Mrs. John Lyons and
senior units, Feeney-Bennett grandson, Eddie Miller, were
Post 128, 7:30p.m. Wednesday in Pontiac, Mich. over the
at the hall. Potluck dinner to weekend to visit their son and
precede at 6:30.
·l
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
PoMEROY- MIDDLEPORT Tom Lyons, and their
Lions Club, noon Wednesday at daughter, Linda .
the Meigs Inn.
OHIO VALLEY Comrnandery 24, Knights Templar,
stated conclave, Wednesday
7:30 p.m. Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. Potluck dinner at 6:30
for knights, their ladies and
families.

Soc IaI ~!:
t cI
i
~~ aendar; :

~;:':':&gt;.' ' ' ' ' '~.,.,. ,-,~~-~;
~
Middleport

*: Personal Notes

WOMEN'S
Christian
Temperance
Union
of
Pomeroy. 2 p.m. Wednesday at'
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, annual Frances
Willard Tea. Mrs. T. T. Shelton
to have the program.
MEIGS County Jaycees, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday, 8 p.m. at
Pomeroy Village Hall.
ALL Southern High School
students invited to youth
prayer and breakfast, 7:30
a.m. Wednesday at Racine
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Mrs .
Emerson Jones, hostess. Mrs.
E
H
t
.
vere 11 ayes o review
"Getl G.
·
n e
emus - Felix
Mendelsohn." Roll call to be
answered with a response on
the book
·
THURSDAY '
CHILDREN'S HOME
..
.
Citizens Cormruttee, 12:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Ch'ldr
•
1 ens
Home. All interested persons
· 'te
IDVI d to attend.
EVANGELINE C
hapter,
O.E.S., 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
Middleport Masonic Temple.

,,

banquet date set by church class
drawn for the year.
Hostesses to the March 15
meeting will be Mildred Pierce
and Thelma Grueser; the Bible
verse will pertain to the Cross,
with devotions by Beatrice
Blake. Men of the Bible will be
studied. Each member is to
bring something about Jesus.
The closing prayer was by

the Rev. Dwight Z!Jvltz .. Durjng
the social hour delicious
refreshments, in keeping .with
the Valentine motif were
served by the hostesses, Jean
Hall and Janice Lawson, to the
Rev. and Mrs. Z!Jvitz, BeatJ:Ice
Blake, Margaret Cottrill,
Charlotte Nease, )!ildred
Pierce and Agnes Wbite. ;

to the banquet
committee were Jean Hall,
chairman, Ruth Z!Jvitz, and
Charlotte • Nease. It will be
served in the annex Wednesday, May 9, at 6:30p.m.
The meeting was conducied
by the vice-president, Janice
Lawson. Devotions were by
Margaret Cottrill, reading
excerpts from Mark, Chap. 6, ·----------111111!---·--~
on tile topic·, "Amazing Things
Can Happen,'' from the
booklet, "What the Bible Can
do for 'You;" by Dr. Norman
VIncent Peale, followed by
prayer.
Roll call wa~ answered by
Now . you can . b~y ttipi_
nine members with a heart or
~omfortable
l;lii-Z-Boy
valentine verse. The secretary
chair you've always
and treasurer reports were
dreamed of at our . low 1'
read and accepted. Dues were
prices.
paid and a free will offering '
••
taken.
· Authorized Dea liir
The class will purchase
materials needed for the craft
class held on Tuesday
.
following the 6:30 Youth choir
practice.
Secret pal names were
· Herman Grote ··- ·

Daughter banquet by the
Sunshine Makers Class of The
First United Presbyterian
Sunday School Thursday night,
February 15, in the Church
Wright.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jacobs
and son are now making their
home in Largo, Fla. Jack is
working there as an apprentice
- ~ectrician, and his wife, Jane,
IS employed at the telephone
company. The couple spent
several weeks here with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Jacobs, following Jack's
discharge from service before
returning to Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dick
Karr had as their weekend
guests, Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Matthew· and Mr. Matthew's
mother of Huron.
Mrs. James Gilmore was
returned home Thursday from
Veterans Memorial Hospital
following hospitalization for
observation and treatment.

.We Accept
food
- Federal
.
. Stamps
PHONE: 992·3480
·

eve~ing

MASON ·

Right

Limit Quantities"

~OP-UP

Moson,W.

VI.

WINTER SALE!

box

Mate

Favorite

UTILITY

6.P/ECE
JIG SAW

KNIFE

BLADE SET

English

Large Size
1~b.

WALNUTS

..

¢

pkg.

Superiors Brand

lb.

59¢

POTATO

Humpty-Dumpty

JIG SAW

•7531

Hig h spud for wood and tompositions, low ~peed lor me ta ls,
plastic, tile . Includes I blode.
Big 1/ 4 HP motor .

Ovh tond lng ¥alue general purp~Xt
For 7~ 1/4 " a'ld 6-1/2" blades.

1aw,

2499
1

7610

e
DeLUXE DUAL

.

fOIJII, g rooYU,

d • t or o t •

1

e

~:;g~

3/8" VARIABLE

DRILL
with speed lock

SPEED

DRILL BIT

SHARPENER

C/h

Ru~ orpens

carbon ond
steel twist drill bits. A&lt;&lt;oopt• l

I r igger liqu t"ue selech the
ipBed yov n.:~ed, tr i g~er la c~

fr om 1/8" to J/8" siu~&amp;.

holds It! 1/6 HP.

C·

FAIRMONT
NICE 'N LITE

compOiltloru. 3/4 HP motor.

ONLY

OZ.

8

% gals.

10'' blade cuts fy(l 3" dnp. On top,
yp.fronl c.onlrol for *tlly operation.
Worp·reslslonl tub les, metal leo stand.

99~

6'13" or7'1•"

CIRCULAR SAW BLADES
Chrome nickel aOoy steel blade

1

cuts plywood, ploii lic, fo rmica.

::.a· 57$

For 11onda rd , med ium-weight
(obi. Tempered steal blade has
chrome fln llh .

247EACH
TWO TANK

TORCH KIT
8,,

727

shan~

me cha nic

screwdriver fo r tough jobs.
Chrome·fln i1h blade.

cylinden, bu rner 01•
sembly, brut ll flo me tip ond
m11tol clle•t.

5 lb.

.¢

I
I

·-----.,·t
l

I
I

I

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A.14-0Z. JAR OF

I
I
I

Instant

MAXWELL HOUSE'

I

I

I

COFFEE

I
AT

I

MARK V SUPER MARKET

14 OZ. JAR ONLY $159

L__0!! COUPO'!_

I
WITH COUPON

PUFAMILY • OFf!! E!!'l!$.; MAR.

2, 1973 = _

59~
WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A_ 8_OZ. JAR OF

MAXIM®

ORE IDA

GAL

MARK V SUPER MARKET

THURSDAY ONLY

DEEP FRIES

RC COLA

u: 23~

16 oz.
bois.

RICH'S WHIPPED

ON SALE ALL WEEKI

7-UP

69e

Wi 1h $3.00 Purchase

FUEL
CYLINDER

TOPPING
fUR
$1

,UROH

FLOOR JACKS
STOP FLOOR SAG

3

,

STitiCIHG DOORS
&amp;WINDOW$

SALI NICI

J

3/1819 .
01

677 ..

Diet Rite Cola or Dad's Root Bear

REAME1SEGG

IACH

Heovy duty 'tarbon 1 teel
lube. Adjullf from .4' 7" j0
7'9" ,
•

omeroy Cement Block
•

cans

I

I

crt.

PIOPANE

flts molar bronds of
tQmp stove5.

I

I

¥.!gal.

ICE MilK

Hos br igh t, l int ·plated
finish, working lood limit
91).440 lbs.
tAYlOR

~Juel

¢

CHOC. MILK

:~.~ fi66

(Hwl)

.. 57 Court St.
592-2851
Alh ens. 0 .
Cor. Sec. &amp; Sycamore 446-0303 Gallipolis, o.

GRAPEFRUIT

Nice 'N Lite

SOOT-PRIDE

TOW CHAIN

89~
304 E. Main 992·3795 Pomeftr1, 0.
0oen 9 n1 5 Moo. lhru Sat
.No.Appointment Necessary

TOMATOES

AT

3/1• inch • 14 foot

Ro"nd

RIEG. 1.29

THE INCOMI! TAX PEOPLE

Aorida White

FREEZE-DRIED COFFEE

57$

(Hwi)

I

I
I

Bo nd• metal, wood,
glou. Woterprool.
110. 1.00

"-1/21NOt
CABINET
SCREWDRIV'ERA

I

I

COTTAGE
.
CHEESE

2

199~~.

I

Sugar Freee

E·POX·E
. GLUE

Loc.-

Fresh Red Ripe

fAYGO

I

MILK.

Middleport. o.

IIEGULAI

b

oi'et P·o-p'"·r

FAIRMONT

POWER SHOP

'
'7980

2;.-. fAK .

bag

trims and

in wood, plostia ,

Black &amp; Decker/DEWAL T
10 INCH DE LUXE

plastic.

59 N. Second St.

Reai!Oo 1. We specialize in income tax
preparation. We know the wrinkles. We dig
out every honesi deduction. There is very
little chance we will let you overpay your
taxes.

Home Made

-

'FAIRMONT DAIRY BUYS

3/4 HP ROUTER
Cuts,

16

'

POTATO CHIPS

ACTION

Eosr one-hand conlfol. Flush sond5
on 3 sides. Use fo, wood, metal ,

YOUR
CHOICE

lb.

2· lb.
box

CHIPS
•.. ·. A

TWO·SPEED

WAS
19.99

BLOOMING
PLANTS

Henry BloCk has
17 reasons why you
should come·to us
for income tax help..

¢

Home Made

PRINGLE$

Country, Western, Popular

FINISHING SANDER

Dudley's Aorist

.

Real Budget Pleaser!

$

lvs. for

BREAD

21fz lb. pkg.

WlTH COUPON

THURSDAY
TROUP Camping meeting
for leaders and assistants of
Junior and Cadette Scouts will
be held at 9:30 Thursday
morning at the home of Mrs.
April Smith.
FRinAY
MEIGS County Pomona
Grange, 8 p.m. Friday, Rock
Springs Grange, Fifth Degree
to be conferred. Subordinate
granges invited to take the
degree work . Harrisonville
Grange wfU host the meeting.

lrom $7.50

9
9¢
nds &amp; P1eces .............
7
9
Pol ish Sausa2e ........ ~~:.
7
·9' ¢
Ham Salad ~......................
39•
Pork SausaJ!e ........... ~.:..
.
. .

Elm Hill Bacon

BRAUNSCHWEIGER

11 oz. jar

.2999

from $3.50
from $2.49

E

lb.

8-TRACK TAPES

Tulips
Hyacinths
Azaleas

BOLOGNA

18 oz.

CORN FLAKES

STANLEY

TAPE RUL

lb.

. jumbo$
rolls

Post Toasties

I.------

16 FOOT

¢

•

BIG SAVINGS ON TOOLS!
[iJ Lnflrin

Scot Lad
.. PAPER .T~LS

5 to 7 lb. Average

KEY BRAND

Reg. 39c

PEANUTS u oz. bag

Fully Cooked

$279

lb~

FURNITURE

:;~ r-------------------::=========:.:m: -5:59:2:

lb. can

WIENERS

PASTRIES

Marshmallow

.3

MIDDLtPORT, 0.

ELM HILL

()leen of Scot Toaster

BY Elm Hill

LUNCH
MEAT

SUPER MARKET • Open D.aily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10

LA-z--·s ov··

CHAIRS,'.

SMOKED .PICNICS

ARMOUR
SPICED

BANQUET

·, . . , 89¢
BUI:RT

~

, ;.,SUPPERS each

. .

NOODtES
8.oz.
P~ .

29~

16 ~ bots.

8
pak

ON SALE ALL WEEKI

DR. PEPPER
16 oz.
bots.

The Department Store of Building Since 1917.

I~ .
I .

'•

:
I

J

�8- ThP Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 27, 197:1

' ·

.

,.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action/Sentinel Classifieds Get Res~lt~!
• . W~NT ,lQ$.,
In MemOIJ
INFORMATION
.DEAOL'INU'
·
':-P.M. .Diy .Before Publication. IN MEMORY of Russell P.
Monday Deedtlne ·9 a.m .
1 Painter, Sr., who passed
,., Cencella,llon .- Corrections trf
away one year ago today,
will be acfttpted untu9 ·1 .m . tor
Feb. 27, 1972: Gone but not
Day of~PubiiCation
'
forgotten
, nor never will you
.
REGULATIONS
be, as long as lite shall last,
Ttfr Publisher reserves thE
we'll still remember thee.
rloht to edit owelect dny ads
Sadly missed by wife ,
deemed . ob·fftflonal. . Thf
children and grandchildren .
•ubllsher will not be responsible
for more than o,. IncOrrect
2-27-ltc
Insertion .
RATES
·•·, !i=or Waftt Ad Servl,e
S cents per Word one lr:aaertiOi,l

QUALITY

·

25 Per Cent Discount ori J&gt;•ld

·

C4RD OF TH~NKS . ' '
&amp; OBITUARY .
. '
suo tor sp word mlnlmpm .
Each O.ddltlonel word 2c . ·

,

BLIND AOS

Add tiona I 25c Char'ge ''lS•r
Advertisement. ·
·

OFFICJi HOURS .
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. -Oally,
8 :3 0 a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon
'Saturday.

PUBUC NOTICES
Your Right to Know
and be informed of the tunc .
tlons of your government are
embodied in public notices . In,
that 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
information, to eKercise their
right of access to publ ic
records and publ ic meetings .

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF THE BOARD
OF EDUCATION
For Flsc11 Ye1r Ending
December 31st, 1972
Eastern LOCII
School Dis.trtct,
Meigs. County
fU. 1, Reedsville, Ohio
Feb. 24, 1913
1 certify the following report
to be correct.
C. 0 . Newland
Clerk, Treasurer of tl'le
Board of Education .
CASH RECONCILIATION
Total Fund Balances ,
Dec . 31 , 1972

$123,773 .89

S249S

and brakes, radio, good

nice and clean.
1970 DODGE POLARA

•

------

1G.ET YOUR order In lor
strawberry
plants
Robinson, Catskill, Midland,
Surecrop, Sparkle, Midway
and Sunrise. Also raspberry

'p;~;~~oyadi;;o;slci. •~
·~

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
"PMERor, OHIO

IN POMEROY

Help Wanted

For Rent .

and asparagus roots. Phone

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
. 991-2174 ·
.·omerov ··
1

niversary

FURNISHED 2 bedroom house,
newly decorated. Phone 9926788.
2-27-5tc
- - - - - - -- APPLY in person for position of MOBILE home in Middleport,
cooks. Red Carpet Inn, Rt. 62 adults, $60 a month, no pets.
N., Pt. Pleasant .
Phone992-5247.
2-27-61c
2-27-61p
--------- - - - - -- - FURNISHED apartment at
Lost

PARASOL Boutique Salon next
to Skate-A-Way announces
Permanent Special . February
20ih lhru March lOth. Breck
perm . and the new Phase 7
perm . regular $17.50 now
$13.50; phone 985-4141 ;
operators : Ric hard and
Darwin, all -electric. Phone
Sandra Kerns.
SMALL BLACK and hrnwn
773-5580.
2-18-12tc
Beagle pup, last seen in
2-27-61p
veterans
Memorial
Hospital
TRIPLE A driver education
area
on
Sunday.
If
found
or
1
NEWLY
r
enovated
large
classes will begin Monday,
seen, please phone Richard
second floor apartment in
March 5, 1973 . For In downtown Pomeroy. Balcony
P I 992 6475
formation call Ben Slawter.
ey on,
·
2-26-3tc
over looking river. Phone 992992-5628.
--------~
2789.
2-27-4tc
1-25-6tp
Wanted To Buy
- - - - - - -- THERE IS a reviva l now )n
progress at the Pomeroy 30 OR MORE 'acres in Chester 2 BEDROOM trailer, close to
mine site on Rt. 325, by week
Wesleyan Holiness Church on
Township, with or without
or month, util iti es paid.
Rt . 143, at 7:30 p.m . each
buildings. isolated. Phone 949 Phone 742-5980.
evening.
Everyone
Is . 3915.
2 61
welcome. The pastor Is Rev .
2-27 -5tc
·22- &lt;
O'Dell Manley.
:-:
'f
_
R
_AIL
_E
_R
_.B-ro_w_n_'s_T_r-ai-ler
2-27-4tc 2 TO 10 acres, suitable tor
Park ; phone 992-3324.
•
tra iler ; nice country location;
2 BEDROOM mobile home on
phone 992 -5947,
1
private lot tor rent. Also want
- - - - - -- - 2--13-tfc
___ _J__ _
_ 2-25-Jtc
to buy ,good used 2 bedroom
BEDROOM mobile home ;
trailer. Must be priced right. CATTLE: top prices; phone 2 completely
; call
992 -2441 afterfurnished
Robert Hill , Racine, phone
Gallipolis 446-3792.
5:30p.m.
949-3811 .
2-16-12tp
2-7-ttc
2-27-61c
-:-:~--::-:-~~-=--WANTED, Beef Hides; will pay UNFURNISHED 3-room ·
·; WILL not be responsible for
$9 a piece ; Pomeroy St.,
apartment, adults only. No
any debts contracted by
Mason, W. Va .; phone 773pels, 408 Spring Ave ...
anyone other than myself.
5600 .
Pomeroy.
Signed. Michael A. Capehart,
2-16-151p
1-7-If c • ·
Rt. 2. Pomeroy.

- - -- --

in

TUPPERS

Business Opportunities

PLAINs. KUHL'S BARGAIN
CENTER offers qualify NEW
FURNITURE at LOWEST
PRICES in area . Shop and
compare; you PAY LESS
AND GET MORE al KUHL 'S

LOANS. operating capital. etc.
Avai lable for any purpose,
$20,000 up to any amount. Call
area code 292 -337-1127,

-- the "cash 'n carry" store,

William L. Creekmore CLU.

where

old - fa s h io ned

2-25-JOtc

BARGAINS
are
an
EVERYDAY EVENT! NEW HIGH Volume Service Station
FURNITURE :
Maple
for lease ; paid training;
bedroom suite: dresser and
pleose call 614-992-5221 bemir..ror. chest, bookcase
tween 8 a.m. and 5 p.m .
headboard bed, SIOO; 3 pc.
2-18-121c
coffee, steplable sets $16.95 ;
PAIR table lamps $11.95;
vinyl recliners, black. tan. Employment Wanted
green S69.95; Patchwork or
floral swivel rockers 569.96 ; WOULD LIKE to have a job In
Maple chest of drawers, 4town . Call 992·5863.
drawer 125. 5-drawer 130 ;
2-27-51p
Boston rockers 125; Cloth sofa
beds $72.95; couches, match- BABYSITTING _in my home ;
lng chairs, set $139 .95 up; 5
expenenced ; reliable; -phone
pc. Maple dinette, round table
992-7719, Middleport .
Sl29.95. KUHL 'S also stocks
2-25-6tc
USED furn iture : chests and
dresse rs; bookcases ; desk s;
dmettes; baby beds, ium - Mobile Homes For Sale·
pers; TV's , floor -model 145,

port.

$35;

record players;

ra dios. ALL m~·or a~pl 1' ances

• ,606 E. Main

CALEB?

. SIX-PACKS

-

.,

.'

Pomeroy
..

;~top

j

"' --and

See Our:
iFloor Display •

-

•

-- ..-, ..

l

'\HElL''·

Rooms
By The Week
or Month

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Red Carpet Inn

ARN''OLD.
BROTHERS

i.-"

I

AU WEAtHER
ROOFING AND_

l

OONSTRUCOON
.
.
..

1

PHONE~ 99~:~:
·'

'

IT's

~IS

~WIN,

PLACE, SHOW,
AND OUT.OF T~e. .

G~ADI~

STATISTICAL
PROBABILITY

Molveyl

S~STEM

!

L.

•

OnMo•tAmericarl Caro

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy_ Home &amp; Auto
Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
6~ __E: ~iiin,_ P~~e~oy, 0.
and

exterior

painting . Phone 992-2368 ,
Pomeroy.

2-27-6tp

KITDiEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION
'

HOME BUILDING

'

&amp;
REMODELING

'

' i

•

BOB SLOAN

&amp;
C. L. KITCHEN

992-5653
READY -MIX
CONCR"ETE
delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and etSjl. FrH
est mates, Phone 992-328•.
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.

l

I.VllRY&amp;oD'f GOES
euT l'vE.MADE

l

iO 'OUR PiCTURE'S!!

'IOU THE

ONLY BECAUSE
®
'&gt;'OU'LL LOP THEIR
I!ARS OFF IF THE'l'
DON'T-

IT'S THE OHLV WA"/ !!
'IClLJ LOVE ME.'&gt;'I'-SBuT "'OU'RE A ROTfEN
ACTF&gt;.E\O.S !.' ~-m---"

WOST POPULAR
6TAR IN

THINKS/

LOVE 11/M-IMA

GIU!AT
ACTR£55 .'!'

OL~AGIST-'N!!

•'

EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
and small; Backhoes and
6·30-Hc :
Loaders on track and tlresi
· Dump trucks Lo · boy
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Service; Septic tanks In - REASONABLE roles. Ph. ~ 1
stalled;
George
(Bill) . 4782, Gallipolis, John Russell, I
Pullins ; phone 992-2478.
Owner &amp; Operator.
2-9-ffc'
5-12-tfc .

I DON'T WANT A~
YOU~ .JUI&gt;IK !

OF

- - - -- - -- -

HARR ISDN'S TV Service and
Service Calls; phone 992-2522.
2-9-llc
.- :------::-:::-:::--O' DELL WHEE[ alignment
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124,

complete front end service,

A' C d ' t ·
• tr on 1 toners,

AllOUr

lliE 'TWIN&amp;. BUT
lliERE II&gt; 5TILL 50
MCICH I WANT llJ
KNOW AllOtJr YOUR
DI\UGH'fER , MR.
WINKLE ,

------

Real Estate

---------

YE~LAND

C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
Complete Se&gt; '' Ice
Phone94V-3821
Raclnt. OttiD
Crill. Bracflill'd
5-l·TTC

tune up and brake service. EXCAVATING, dozer, loaaer
have 30-day G AR NTEES:
Wheels
balanced
elec Depository Balances :
and backhoe work; septic
30", 36" gas or elec. ranges;
•Awnings
'
Ironi-cally.
All
work
Pomeroy National
.
tanks Installed; dump trucks
Bonk
111,886.86
auto . washers S45; elect. or
U d
guaranteed.
Reasonable
amll&lt;&gt;boys tor hire; will haul
Tri -Countv Bank
13,713.97
gas dryers 135; refr igeralors
,. -" erpinning
rates. Phone 992-3213 or 742Total Oepo31tory
fi ll dirt, top soli, limestone,
$15 up ; chest or upright deep r~
I 3232.
Balances
and gravel; call Bob or Roger
freezes
trom
$65.
KUHL'S
:
&lt;.omplele
mQbile
hq.,;·e
2-18-ttc
Cuh on Hand:
Jelf&amp;rs, day phone 992-7089;
BARGAINCENTER,St.Rt.7 •service ~plus gigantic ·1 =~:=---:-:---::--,...""'
Cash In Transit to
night
phone 992-3525 or 992·
"at
caution
light
,"
Tuppers
:
'clisplay
of
mobile
homes
·
·
DOZER
and
back
hoe
·
work,
Depository
.4..4~
5232.
Plains, Ohio. Open lo 6 p.m. 'always avallable.at ...
ponds and septic tanks. dltTotal Cash on Hand
4.·U
2·ll·lfC
Closed MONDAYS ONLY.
h'
I
I
II I I
Total
125.605.27
c mg limestone;
serv ce ; opB&amp;K
so , ExII Outstanding Warrents , Dec .
Phone : 667 -3858.
dirt.
:·fltiLLE'R
31 , 1972 (Deduct)
1.831 .38
2-25-31p OLD iuroilture, oa k table\ . -3-=A=N=D=4--=--=
R-00
-::
M::_i-u-.,-.,,-.,-eu-•na
225-7tc
MOBILE HOMES
~~~:~~~~; , .\'rhone 992 -5367,
Total - Clerk organs, dishes, clocks, bras~
Treasurer 's Balance.
llnfurnished
apartments
.
2
LEVEL
lots
in
Middl
eport
;
91 tl
Dec . Jl, 1972
123,773.89 '• WEIMARANER puppies and
beds or complete households.
For
Phone
992-5434.
phone
1!20
Washington
Blvo.
7.C':'"2'c=~;=:-;-:-:-:--:::'
· c.
992
2082_
1
SUMMARY OF CASH
a 1 " year old female to give
Wrile M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
23 -7521
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
4-12-lfc
2-25
-3tp
•
BELPRE.O.
WILL
trim
or
cut
trees
,
clean
r~-:::::;::;;:;:;;;;;;;::--l
away; phone 742-6834.
Pomeroy . Ohio. Phone 992AND EXPENDITURES
2-25-llc
6271.
-=========~ MUZZLE load ing shotgun; 35 1973 14x70 COMMUNITY oul
basements, attics , etc.
BJiilnCt J1n. 1, 1972
Phone 949-3221.
1-7-tlc r
General Fund
28,818 .54 KO~CDT KOSMETICS AND
CLELAND·
gal. copper apple buller kettl e
Mob ile Home, on a lot 95x135
2-4-JO!c
- -- - -Bond Ret irement
16,358.05
WIGS
.
SPECIALS
MONTH
REALTY
with
stand ;
Frigidaire
In Rutland; Includes . dish· - - -- - - - - Lunchroom
5,621.74
LY .
BROWN 'S
INDE upr ight dee pfreeze ; phone
wa~her, washer and dryer, G &amp; E Appliance Repair, repair
601 E. Mlln
E.S.E.A. Tille I
3,651.54
PENDENT
DISTRIBU Total
54.449.87
992-7692.
staml ess steel sink, garbage
on all laundry equipment,
Pomeroy
TOR,
MIDDLEPORT .
.....:..._
.
Total Receipts
2-25-3tc
diSposal. eye level range and
refrigeration equipment and
General
660.214.55
PHONE 992-5113.
·--dacron
polyester
carpeting
house
wiring;
wel~lng,
1
.l~MO-i.L
, M~\~' onHQM~
Bond Retirement
26,891 .06
I
~I·-\. 1 ' 1 ::" ~
2· 2'3.'1
'1c
·1 acra •UT
REGISTERED Angus bulls.
throughout ; phone 742-3$32 &amp;ltalrlcandgas . • aal~992-3802
·
I,,,''
·•·•
·
Lunchrooll')
57,223.49
Call Bill Witte 992-2789. Rock
evenings.
or after 4:30 p.m. call 992·
gro,u(l!ll ,C:klsf ln. Exlondld
, .. ) I" ·1
I I
.,
Uniform Stttoof , ... · ·1:·•, •• • 1
'.
Springs, Ohio.
2-21-121c
6050.
living R., 3 bedrooms, beth,
Supplies
2,155.27 REVIVAL . starling Feb.' 2'sili '
Limited Number
2-25 -30ip
lhru March 11th, 7:30 p.m .;
E.S.E.A . Tille I
32.351.8~
utility space. Air cond.
2-5-JOtp
E.S.E.A. Tille II
1,595 ,48
Rev. Cecil Wise, first week,
56,900.00.
1968 WINDSOR, 12x60 , 2
6 REG IS TE RED A
E.S.E .A. Tille Ill
2.947.01
Rt. 3, Pomeroy , Ohio ;· Rev .
30 ACRES FENCED
ngus
cows
bedroom
,
with
or
without
WILL
do
remodel
ing,
Interior
•
Total
•~
783 ,378.30
Amos Tillis , 2nd week ,
and I yearling bull. Cows to
furniture ; phone 99.,·3511.
and exterior painting, con·
Just
off Rt. 681 . New well &amp;
Total Recelph &amp; Boloncos
ca lve soon . 12,500. 992-2 78'1.
'
t
k b
Rebersburg. Pa. ; everyone is
water
system. Good cistern
2-11-lfc
ere
e
wor
y
hour
or
con689 ,033.09 welcome
General
2· 25-121 P - - - - - - , -- - : Pastor Rev . Lee
Furnace
Controls
Rf.61 N Pt. Pleasant. w.va .
tract ; phone 992-3511.
Bond Retirement
43 ,249.11
and
spring.
4 bedroom home,
Burn em: Rutland Com.
675 ' 5007
Lunchroom
62 ,845.23
2
21
121
bath
,
nice
kitchen. some
·
HUMIDIFIERS
BUILDINGiotsforsaleat
Rock
·..:ASH
paid
for
au
makes
and
'
·
P
munlly Church.
Uniform School
lrulttrees.
Buildings.
Asking
Spring s. Ohio. Close lo Meigs
models of mobile homes. · AUTOMOBiLE 1
- -- ·•
Supplies
2,155.27
2-23-6tc
$12
,900.00,
E.S.E.A. Tille I
Hot
Water
Healers
For
Sale
High
School
wit~
Tuppers
Phone
area
code,
614-423-9531.
·
.
cancelled?
nt':.~nce
~~
36.003.38
E.S .E.A. Tlfle II
POMEROY
1,595.08------- - - - Plumbing ,
Pla;n s water. S;ze ;, acre and
4-1 3-ttc
operator's license? Call 992E.S.E.A. Title Ill
2,947 ,01
New siding, roof &amp; corporl. 3
EI
t
,
'72
HONDA
350
Scrambler
•
larger.
992
2789.
2966.
Total
837 ,828 ,17
bedrooms. bath, dining R.
Receipts
26,891.06
ec neal Work
excellent condition. 3314
2-25-30tp Auto Sales
6-15-lfc
E11pendltures
Asking $5.000.00.
General
584,308.18 To~~~~~~~~~s a~~evenue,
actual miles, $625. Phone 992- - - - - -- -- "'-=··. ---- . Porches.
1972 OLDS .t-dcor hardtop, less ·J..:;=:::-o::===-2865
MIDDLEPORT
Bond Retirement
8
25 . 50&lt;.0~
TranSfers)
26.891.06
·
STEREO track . Must sell at than 5,000 miles. air- . ~EE US FOR : Awnings, storm
Lunchroom
61 ,841 .74 Total
1•1:1 story frame with fur2·22-6tP
Beginning Balance
once. 1973 e track · stereo ln conditioned, power steering,
doors and wlndOYfS, carports,
Uniform School
niture.
5 rooms . Porches.
Plus Receipts
43,249.11
lovely walnut console. Take
power brakes. Owner no
marquees, alumrnum siding
Supplies
2,000 . 2~
Gas
furnace.
Storm doors &amp;
EARLY
AMERICAN
stereoover
payments
of
$7.55
per
longer
needs
two
cars.
Write
and
railing.
A.
Jacob,
sales
.
Expenditures
E.S.E.A. Title I
36,003 .38
Bonds Maturing
19,000.00
. 2_2448
radio combination, AM-FM
month or pay $101.50. Call992P.O. Box 729 _0 J c-o The Daily
representative . For freei windows. Lot 105x135 (level).
E.5.E.A. Tille II
&gt;,.42.09 Interest
99
on Bonds
5,700.00
radio, 4 speaker sound 5331
estlm t
h
Ch 1
$8,500.00.
E.S.E.A. Title Ill
2,947.01
_23 _ffc
- Bond Retirement
p
O
s~stem, 4 speed automall'c
·
Sentinel, Pomeroy.
a es, P one
are&amp;
2
Total
714 ,054.28 Ottler
POMEROY
F d
omeroy, •
.
7.
1c
Lisle
,
Syrocuse,
v
.
v
.:
2 3
Balance Dec. 31 , 1972
un Expend itures - Bond
804.04
c anger
. Balance
$77.69.
Use 1972 ZIG ZAG s
- - - -- - -2Johnson and Son, Inc.
Total
This
home
has everything
b
d
1
Ca
General
104,72~.91
Retirement Fund
25,504 .04
our u get erms.
II 992ewir;p, Machine.
3-2-llc
and mor~ too. BRICK, &amp;
Bond Retirement
17,745.07 Bal., Dec. 31, 1972
17,7 45 .07 Total Expenditures Including
7085 .
Thodis machine is a ressmaker 1972 FORD F 100 pickup 2 tone ?.~:-"'=c:-~---=
about 8 years old. Beautllul
lunchroom
995.49 Total Expenditures Plus
Ba l. B T1raDnster3s1
1,442.09 _ _ _ _ _ ____2_·2_2_-61c m el. Paby balance of $38.50
V-8, SPort custo.;, -seat: ~LNA - and- While Sewfng ' 'kitchen . 3 large B.R.'s, l'h
Uniform School
302
Dec .Jl , 1972
43,249.11 a., ec. , 1972
153.39
or= pay alance of $6 per
t
Machines ... service on all
Supplies
155.03
baths. Dining. Full basement
Lunchroom Fund ·
Total Expenditures Plus
MODERN Walnut style slereomonth. Call 992-5331.
autom~ ic transmlsslot", long
makes . Reasonable rates.
E.S.E.A. Tille II
153.39 Bal., Jan
·
.
1,
1972
5,621
.74
Bal
..
Dec.
31,
1972
·
1,594
.48
rad
AM
FM
radio
lfc
arm
m~rrors,
power
s
eerlng
Th
S
C
with
Rec . R. Carport. I acre.
1
0
Total
2· 23 ·
123,773.89
E.S.E.A. Title lfl Fund
'
·
' 4
and power brakes, radio.
e ew 1ng enter. M/d .
Recelpts.....: lncome
$29,500.00.
CASH BALANCE ,
Sale ot Lunches
31,883.35
Receipts
speaker sound system, 4 - -- - -- --.::..:::
Phone 992-6773 after 5 p.m.
dleporl, Ohio.
RECEIPTS AND
HENRY E. CLELAND
Federal
Subsidy
Federal Subsidy Fu nd
937
.34
speed
automatic
changer.
KEEP carpets beautiful despite
2-27-Jtc
11 -16-tfc:
EXPENDITURES
BROKER
Lunches
21
,825.91
Tota
l
937
.34
Balance
$65.98.
Use
our
footsteps
of
a
busy
fami
ly
.
~-::;:o=:
-·"":'=:-:-:~--=;,_:,:
BY FUND
3 ASSOCIATES
Federal
SubsidyReceiptsTransfers
budget
terms.
Call
992-7085.
Buy
Blue
Lustre
.
Ren
l
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROB1C
Gener11 Fund
992-2259 .
11\llk
2, 441 ,24 TFro1 m1TGen. F
2,009.27
2-22-61c e lect ri c s hampoo er $ L 1970 NOVA SS 350,4 speed, good
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN-'
Bel., Jan. 1.1972
28,8 18.54
1 und
If no answer
Other
Revenue368,99 Total
o a Beginning
rans ers Balance2,009.27 jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.. ,,
condition. Phone 985-3988.
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
1"e 1son . s
Receipts-Revenue
0 rug
Total -Receipts
Sto re,
2S
31
2
992·2"8 or 985-4209
General Property Tax Income
56.519.49
Plus Receipts
2,946.61
SPECIAL SALE
Pomeroy. Ohio.
- - p
SANITATION, STEWART,
Real Eslate (Gross)
Transfers
Total ExpenTdrallnusrfeesrs
2,009.27 .
_ __ _ _ __ __2-_
26-21c 62 FORD Fairlane. $!25, phone
OHIO. PHONE 662-3035()., If
117,135,07 From ReceiptsGeneral Fund
704.00
CO-OP
1 4 c
Tangible Personal fllroperty
Total
Receipts
To
Gen.
Fund
937.34
.
-.,..,.-,,.---~---/
''
985-3545
a
tier
5:30p.m.
Week·
=:-=:-:-:-:-~----1
TaK (Gross)
10,196.46
Transfers
704.0G- T()tal Transfers
937.34
Country Squire
• 1• o
. days and anytime weekends. ·PLUMBING work done; phone·
Foundation Fund
Receipts (Income
Total EXpfmditures Including
~2 rli!5~3tp
985-4265,
·
(Gross)
487,678.75 Total
and Transfers)
57.223.49
Transfers
2,946.61
·
- - - - - - - -Federal Subsidy Total Beginning Balance
Total Expenditures Fllus
MSNUODW&amp;
2·11-JOtc
P . L ,87 ~
6,B5S.OD
Pius Rece iptS
62,845.23
Bal., Dec . 31, 1972
2,9,6.61
36"x23"x.009
1966 OLDSMOBILE Toronado: ·
State of Oh io Expenditures
ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
power Sfet'ring, brakes, seal ,SEWING MACHINES. Repal~
Vocational Education 740.78
Personal
Service- ManagersDEC. 31 , 1972
an d
windows:
air .
service, all makes. 992-22~."
State of Oh io .
SalariesServiceand Wages
·
conditioned;
tilt wheel ; no
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
School Bus Purchases
Cooks- 664.39 Assets
Depository
Balances (Ac tive
t
Personal
17,098 .00
Salaries and wages 14,884.34
and Inactive) Deduct
Worthu .oo
rus · 68,000 actual· miles; good
AUthorized Singer Sales and
Sta te of Oh io Other- Personal Service _
Outstanding Warrants
dependable lu xury car for
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. ·
Other
11,0 Mechall'ic Street
2,820.00
Salaries and wages
551.20
125,605.29
Toward• purchase of
5900 ; phone 992-5367 .
-.,.--------3-_29-lfc,
Tuition - Parents
Supplies and Food
~4.183 .52 Accounts Receiva ble (F or
pair of Snow Tires.
USED OFFSET PLATES
_ __ _ _ __ _ 2_-_25 -7tp
Pomoro~, 0,.." 45169 ,
and Patrons
565.00 Equ ipment
855.40
Supplies. Textbooks,
Good at Landmark
HAVE
R
Total Revenue
RepalrsloEqulpmenl
111.00
Equipment,
etc.)
18,021.76
Super
Service
MANY
USES
For
Receipts
6&lt;3,089, 16 Other- Lunchroom
Inventory Supplies and
Pels Fo Sal
- ·---·
READ AND HEED
Receipti- Nonrevenue
599.89
Materials
2,500.00
Station. Offer good
r
e
HOUSE FOR"" Sl\lE; 114 Brick NEW HOME
3 bed
Fund
Ad/ustments and
Total E•pendltures Londs &lt;Cost! I Bu ild ing
as long as supply
~
· Street. Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
rooms,
Refunds
208.60
Lun chroom Fund
61.8&lt;9.74
Sites, Playgrounds,
lasts.
P(IRKVIEW Kennels going out
house, 3 bedroqrns, excellent with large closets. Nice kitSale of Non .Real
995.49 etc. I
19,000 .00
8 for $1.00
of business . Big price
I&lt;?Callon, close to school and chen, double sink, stove.
Property
· 1, 110.10 Bal .. Dec. 31, 1972
Buildings (CosII &lt;A ll
reduction on all dogs . All AKc1ly; contact Lou Osborne
retrlgerator - freezer and bar.
Other- Nonrevenue
1,952.82 Total Expenditures Plus
01 Carpet on dining and living.
Ba l.. Dec . 31. 1972
62,845 .23
School Bu ild ings
710,000.00
C. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash
call 992-5898.
Total Nonrevenue
Uniform School Supplies
Equ lpmenr (Cos t (ALL
LANDMARK
Slr!!els, Middlepor\, Ohio. I
For a quick sale we will take
Receipts
3,271.52
Fund
School Bldg , Equip. 216,000.00
Super Service Sta.
11 -16-lft
Receipts- Transfers
Receipts- Income
Total Assets ·
1,091.127.03
J kwc
12-13-tfc:
.•
$16,000.00.
From E.S.E.A. Titl e I
1,974.02 Liabil ities:
ac
· arsey, Mgr.
2NEWjbedroom homes; 1 with
RUTLAND
Fund
12,775.58 Sale of workbooks
77.70 Accounts Poyable
34.866.09 ·---·Ph-o·n·e·99·7·
-9"'93;;2_..
Real
Estate
For
Sale
basemen!, 1 without; 2 car 3 BEDROOMS - New bath.
E.S.E.A. Title II Fund
140,95 Sale of Supplies
103 55 Bond Indebtedness
133,000.00
garages I acre lols i located at new kitchen and paneling.
ILS .E.A. Tille Ill Fund 937 . 3~ Other- Re venue
lpts- lncome2,155:27 Totai·Liabilili
Court St.
pomeroy Jlf2 Story, £' Dedroom.. brick Rock Springs behind Meigs Largelotoff12'" . .0nly••~.oo.
Total Transfers
13,853.87 Tota1Rece
Expendlturts
EKcess or Oefes1clen cy 167,866.09 LOCUST! encepos tSi phone 985~
Tota l Receipts &lt;Revenue,
Purchase
of
Workbooks
1.925.24
of
Assets
923.260.94
4265.
house
in
Middleport;
carCo.
Fairground;
will
trade
or
NEW
HOME
·
·
Nonrevenue and
Totol
1,092,127.03
2-11 -JOtc
peled, paneled, kitchen and
help finance; also 5 good 5 BEDROOMS - 1'12 baths,.
Transfers )
660,2 14.55 Other - Uniform
School Supplies
75.00
SCHOOL DEBT- BOND
,
FORD
dining room tile , complete
building lots, water and largekltchenwllhdl 1
. Total-Beginning Ba la nce
Purpose for Which Bond
69
112 ton pickup ; 70 with drapes. $6500 . Call 992- dlsposol Installed; Charles H.
n ng room .
Plus Receipts
689,033 .09 Total Expenditures Unltolrlm School
BuDiedblt wa,s CEre~ted -~
&lt;:oSAILt, Limestone, . 'Excelsioll HDeonltdaa88Ro4addo Blhkea;d't72 Ollds
3465.
Cornell, Alhens, 593-7034 or ' ~~I ~~,:l~yll craoropmellnlag.rGageralogte
Expe·ndituru
S
_ . c
upp es Fund
2,000.24
' ngs ~ qu 1pmen
a Works. E, Main St.,
•
or r op, a r;
593-5667.
·
·
Total EKpendltures 2 22 61
Bal
.,
Dec
.
31
,
1972
155.03
Outstanding
Jan.
I,
Pom
eroy
.
Phone
_
1.
'
Gravely
14
horse
with
front
--,-------~
$32,500.00.
992
389
Administration
29,556.26
2-1111
1972
152,000.00
mounted mower; 1· set · c
OLD BUT NICE
Instructio n
327,413.19 Total Expenditure~ ~Ius
31,
1972
2.155.27
Redeemed
Dur
ing
Year
-----4-....:
12-ffc
'
acetylene
cutting
torches;
4
BED
ROM
home
,
2
baths,
gas
LARGE - Older home of rHI
Bal.
,
Oec
.
Librarles
4,080.17
E.5.E. A. Title 1 Fund
1972
19,000.00
phone 992 _3954 .
furnace, full basemen!, river
. bed
Transpor tat ion of
1ue. 3 n1c:e sze
1
Bal.
,
Jan
.
1, 1972
3,651
.54
Balance
Outstanding
(3)
VACUUM
Cleaners
new
J
frontage,
Syracuse,
Ohio.
·
O
·
·
va
roams. 2
972
Pupils
68,422.03
8ottom. phone baths,e 1eclrJchNeat. Garage far
Receipts
Dec
.
31.
1972
133,000.00
Model.
Complote
with
all
2-2J.6tc
Phone
m
-2360.
H
~~
~
~~
Long
Playg roun ds and Community
21,388 .37 Rate or In t.
3'1!.
cleaning tools. Small paint
1-25-lfc
If · "'vera 1 cars. early 2 acrtl
303.92 Federal Subsidy Fund 21.388
Centers
611
.37 Date of Final Mat.
12-1-79
'57 CHEVY, good condition,
- - c close to Route 12 4•
Au KIIiarv Agencies 67 ,493.65 Total Receipts-Transfers
121 '' · II
damage In shipping. Will lake $250; Portable washer and
RACINE RURAL
Operation ol School
Gen
.
Fund
·
ID.963
.
~7
527
cash
or
budget
plan
dryer
,
excellent
condition,
NEAR
From
Plant
57,467~30
Total Receipts &lt;Receipts
OUT THEY GO
available . Phone 992 -7755, $175 for both ; phone 742 _5263 _
LY NEW-2bedrooma,
SChOOl Plant
Melntenance
Plus TranSfers
32,351.84
Electro Hyg iene Co.
2-2 J.61c
bath, nfce large utility room.
12,678.60 Total
Beg inn ing Balance
Stock Reduction
2-21-6tc --------~
Modern kitchen, carport lind
Capital Outlay
3.216.32
PlusExpenditures
Receipts
36.0
0 3 . 3 B C -HOICE Cemeterv lot . 4· arave
largelovellot · Only· Sl'OOO•
General Fund Debt
23,227.80
5
•• 1 •
Total
Service
570,631 .41
Tronsters
(2)
PAINT
Damage.
1972
Zig:·
plot
In
Meigs
Memory.
even
rooms,
1'12
baths,
two
car
garage
on
TAKE
A
GOOD
LOOR'ATTHt
Transfers
13,676)-4
12.775.58
Zag Sewing Machines. Still In
(;arden ; lots No. 66-D, 1-2-3-4;
nice lot, close to elementary school, and
FACTS, SOON MANY WILL ·
Grand Total Expenditures - To General Fund
12,775.58
.BUY ONE PAIR
original cartons. No at .
5300; phone 949-2820.
Veterans Memorial. Hospital, · on Wr'lght
BE WANTING A NICE HOME
58-4,308.18 Total Transfers
General Fund
lachments needed as our
2-21 ·61c
WHOM WILL THEY SEE us'
Bal., Dec . 31,1972
104,724.91 Total Exp~nd ltures Includ ing
Transfers
36,003.38
GET
controls
are built-in. Sews
Street, (Ed Ebersbach property) . Priced to
OF COURSE · YOU SHO'ULO•
Total Expenditures Plus
Expenditures ('Ius
Bal.
1
Total
,Bat., Dec. 31, 1972 689.033.09
Dec . 31,1972
.
36,003 _38
PAIR
FREE
wi h 1 or 2 needles, makes '60 PONTIAC, st,eet or strip,
sell fast at $15,000.00. WITH FURNITURE
BUY YOUR HOME NOW.
Bond Retirement Fund
E.S .E.A. Tille II Fund
buttonholes, sewd obnllbutthons,
new, engine , 4 speed ,
$16.000.00.
Bal. , Jan. 1, 1972
, 16,358.05
monog rams, an
nd em
posi rae!; also rebuilt 421 cu.
GEQOG
Receipts
Slacks and jeans sale for the
Receipts-Revenue
Federal Subsidy Fund 1.595.48 family .
stitch. Full cash price ~ . 50
in. Pontiac engine ; good 326
"
E S., HO.BSTETTER JR.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
General Property Tax ~
Total
1,595.48
or
budget
plan
available.
cu.
ln
.
Tempest
engine
and
R
E
.
AL
.,_STATE BROK' ER
ASSOCIATI!
- ,.. _
Real Estate (Grossi 2~.660.02 Total Expenditures
1,301.14
9. _
POMEROY
Phone 99;1. -7755, Electro
other Pontiac parts; phone .
t:
Tangible Personal Property
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
nne (Gross)
2,231.04 To Gen . Fu~~onsters
6i1 Jack w. Car,.y, Mgr.
_Hygiene Co.
992-2392.
BOX 101, POMEROY, OHIO
140 _95
992-3325 ,
Totel Revenue
Total Transiers
140.95
Pho~e992-2181
_ __ _ _ _ _ _
2-.:..
21-61c
2-21 -6lp
PHONE 985-4186

- -- --

h

'

EXPERT
,Wheel Alignment . ..
'5.55 . .

INTERIOR

I

·'-- - --- - ~ -

and '

.FURNITuRE

;.

have

OFFIC£ SUPPLIES .

For Sale

992-2565, Midway Market, W.
Main St., Pomeroy.
7 MONTH OLD trailer 14 x 70
_,
2-27 -31c
unfurn ished, tully carpeted:
- -- - - - Phone 9112-7649 after 5 p.m.
ANNIVERSARY . SAVINGS!!!
2-1B-12tc
Celebrating their 2nd an -

2 OR 3 PERSONS needed at
Midway Market, W. Main St.,
Pomeroy, phone 992-2565.
2-27-3tc

GOT SOME THARSTY'
KINFOLKS OVER AT MY
HOUSE, SNUFFY, AN' I NEED
ONE 01' 'lORE BODACIOUS

_;_
· - : - -- - -.....

Hove your homo built llr
Custom
lulfdors. OW
.carpenters
2t , _1
oxperlanca In bulNIIII;
homes In Milts County.
'

992·2094

the lar.gest
5100; 3-piece solid maple ' •Bulldc&gt;zer Radiator
bedroom suile, 5175. Reason
Heater Core.
for seliln~, purchased furNathan.Biggs
nished lra1ler. Phone 742-6085
R_adia!O!'__SP.ciallst
or 773-5613.
2-27-6tc

$1695
4-door, factory air, V-8 engine, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, good while-wall -tires, while

CARRIER
NE;EDED

' POMERC)Y
HOME &amp; AUTO

Kelvinator electric range,

w-w tires, deluxe bumper guards,

WHAT CAN I
DO FER 'IE,

'

·
1-11 -tfc

HOUSEHOLD furn ishings , one
year old- 14 cu . fl . lroslfret'
Gibson refrigerator, $175; 42"

Sport Sedan. Locall owner car, t&gt;eautlful turquoise finish

1-7-lfc

The Dai~ Se~tinel
Ph. 992·2156

blind hems, overcasts, etc., i

$!5. Cal.l ·Ravenswood , 273-:

wl,!ll spotless match ing Interior trim. black vinyl top,
factory air, V-8 engine, turbo-hydramatlc, power steering

park; phone 992-5443.

zig-zags, buttonholes, ·

9521 or 273-9893.

'

Business Services:

cabinet. Makes design sill-,
ches.

clean. Retail $4860. Priced to move.
197~·CHEVROLETCAPRICE

automatic sewing ' . ·

machine; like new In walnut ·

guards, radio &amp; rear speaker. white-wall tires. Nice and

Notice

ads and ads-paid within 10 dav•~

51~GER

1912 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
13995"
4-doOf, new car title &amp; balance of warranty, covert color
with black vinyl roof, tinted glass, factory air, front &amp; rear

Charge75c·
.··~
12 Mlnlll!um
tenll' per
word . :t'hr
· · · ~ooO·s AQUARIUMS,· ilsh
conseeutf.ve Insertions. : . , and supplies; new •ocatlon,
18 cents per word six con
Ash Street. Middleport neao

secutlve Insertions.

For Sale

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

. 2 SIGNS
OF

I

BARNEY

PAW, PERHAPS
WE &amp;HOliLD
LET WINNIE

FILLIN~E

M1551NGPAA-r.;.

MRS. WINKLE~ WINNIE

AND 1 HAVt: NO
SECRI:rS . 'THERE&amp;
JUI&gt;T NEVER ENOUGH
TIME: FOR US
REALLY TO UNIN
ABOUT EACH

o-n..ER.

Sile

~6 ,, I~'?

HALL TASLE.

TIRES

r Sale· 1
1
AI uml•num·
Sheets

J

~.~,.~

20"

I,

by THOMAS JOSEPH

DICK TRACY
BOTTL.E

RICE WINE
ORDER.
5X.Pl.AII-f_WHEN

Virgil B..·

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

eal Estate

Sale

98 3 2

MV ... THAT ~ A (HARMINUgQRV. I WONDeR Wf&lt;AT
l. c~'EK f3eCANIB Of- THAT

®

1-/~1 ·

ORB ~~ .

WHEN f

WAS ;ru.;r A YOUN/.f
THIN(, /IND trOT MARRII'D
FOR 1111' FIR?T!JMI: 1500
YEAR&gt;S A4Q I W0Rf3. A

·I

(@ l87lt Kint&lt; Fnlurto S7ndieote, In~.) .

~&amp;MID~;H.J=:~..J=
Unocnmblethtle f'"'r Jumbltt,
.one Iotter lo each oquare, lo
form four ordinary worda.

Yesterd11'1 Answer

22. Swiss
river
:U.Harem
chamber
25. Young
sheep
26. Fruit·
flavored
beverage
28. Distilling
device
:tz. Means
33. From a
distance

34. Italian
river
35. Vue
handle
3,, Den
38. Sea
eagle
39.Nervous
U.An·

namese .
measure

42.AngloSaxon

coin

m)
II __

1'1NFE

I
I I ()

tlNDIGH

J

DEGULC

L

Now arranp tht elrded lettar1

I ! I l J r J ~:=Jt::r.:-~
1-~~---1 LIKE (

Ye11ent.y'e

Ju..W..o IIIIL

UPPII

,~.~u.

is to inform

""" oneyear's
of the
Award.

chickens

DOWN
1. Parlays
2. Pennsyl·

vania city

CAPl'AIN EASY

2· Z'J
DAILY

CRYPT~Q~~r:~~e:e~ ;~w to work

it: ·wuEEEEEEl
n
•

Ia LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stand• for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sint1e let!el'l!,
apostrophes, &lt;he length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code leUers are different.
WELL, wet. I.!

LI&gt;&lt;S
fHS &amp;~OM LeY!&gt;

CBYPTOQUOTES

$0~ NO,;;

ARE TAKING

NJ CHANCE!&gt;
TCNI~ H f!

EMFHCIM
NOKXVCK '
TV FAA · KXM
DC: A AMI

IIIIII II)

·-·-·1

PAIIOLI PLUIIY

Anewen Made to mrmun-A IULII

- 's

BEI'YOOTIFUI- Wf&lt;ITE DRG,

SLACKS SAL£

I

3. Prudent
4. Where
Addie
Ababa Is
(abbr.)
5.Tocom·
pletion
6. Foreign
7. Service
station
item
8. Regard·
lng
(2wds.)
9. Elbe
tributary
lO.Lump
H . Electrical
leakage
18, Half a
sawbuck
18. Sorts
20.However
(var.)
21. Colonel's
command
(abbr.)

33. Wing (It.)
36, Kind of
muffin
37.C.S.A.
hero
to. Part of a
violin
U incendiarism
.U. Angering
.45. Laughing
46. Mother

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

T

ACROSS
I. Assail
6. In return
11. Love
poetry's
muse
lZ. Horse
wrang.
ler's
equip.
ment
13.Stingy
15.Holy16. Brewery
product
17. Pay dirt
18,Bo,rder
upon
20. Chisholm
and
others
23. Greek
letter
27. Clumsy;
oppressive
(hyph.
wd.)
29, ~Ionster
30, Twilight
years
(2 wds.)
31. Fine

Yeoter . .Y'I CryptoQuote: BOOKS, LIKE FRIENDS,
SHOULD BE FEW AND WELL CHOSEN.-SAMUEL PAT·
ERSON
.

reviews

The

D31'Iy sent'meI

,, ~ 1}1~1( ~$! WAT 1\ll~ IS
BURSTI~ WfiH
Bl" 611-L'S!

,,

.

0

cw 1\le

NMMP

FDKMI. - KXVEFH'

'THE PAISI( lliLL PllfPv CUP!!
I'VE 6EEN NOMINATEP FOR-mE
DAl9t' HILL Plll'P't' CUP!!!

�8- ThP Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 27, 197:1

' ·

.

,.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action/Sentinel Classifieds Get Res~lt~!
• . W~NT ,lQ$.,
In MemOIJ
INFORMATION
.DEAOL'INU'
·
':-P.M. .Diy .Before Publication. IN MEMORY of Russell P.
Monday Deedtlne ·9 a.m .
1 Painter, Sr., who passed
,., Cencella,llon .- Corrections trf
away one year ago today,
will be acfttpted untu9 ·1 .m . tor
Feb. 27, 1972: Gone but not
Day of~PubiiCation
'
forgotten
, nor never will you
.
REGULATIONS
be, as long as lite shall last,
Ttfr Publisher reserves thE
we'll still remember thee.
rloht to edit owelect dny ads
Sadly missed by wife ,
deemed . ob·fftflonal. . Thf
children and grandchildren .
•ubllsher will not be responsible
for more than o,. IncOrrect
2-27-ltc
Insertion .
RATES
·•·, !i=or Waftt Ad Servl,e
S cents per Word one lr:aaertiOi,l

QUALITY

·

25 Per Cent Discount ori J&gt;•ld

·

C4RD OF TH~NKS . ' '
&amp; OBITUARY .
. '
suo tor sp word mlnlmpm .
Each O.ddltlonel word 2c . ·

,

BLIND AOS

Add tiona I 25c Char'ge ''lS•r
Advertisement. ·
·

OFFICJi HOURS .
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. -Oally,
8 :3 0 a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon
'Saturday.

PUBUC NOTICES
Your Right to Know
and be informed of the tunc .
tlons of your government are
embodied in public notices . In,
that 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
information, to eKercise their
right of access to publ ic
records and publ ic meetings .

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF THE BOARD
OF EDUCATION
For Flsc11 Ye1r Ending
December 31st, 1972
Eastern LOCII
School Dis.trtct,
Meigs. County
fU. 1, Reedsville, Ohio
Feb. 24, 1913
1 certify the following report
to be correct.
C. 0 . Newland
Clerk, Treasurer of tl'le
Board of Education .
CASH RECONCILIATION
Total Fund Balances ,
Dec . 31 , 1972

$123,773 .89

S249S

and brakes, radio, good

nice and clean.
1970 DODGE POLARA

•

------

1G.ET YOUR order In lor
strawberry
plants
Robinson, Catskill, Midland,
Surecrop, Sparkle, Midway
and Sunrise. Also raspberry

'p;~;~~oyadi;;o;slci. •~
·~

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
"PMERor, OHIO

IN POMEROY

Help Wanted

For Rent .

and asparagus roots. Phone

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
. 991-2174 ·
.·omerov ··
1

niversary

FURNISHED 2 bedroom house,
newly decorated. Phone 9926788.
2-27-5tc
- - - - - - -- APPLY in person for position of MOBILE home in Middleport,
cooks. Red Carpet Inn, Rt. 62 adults, $60 a month, no pets.
N., Pt. Pleasant .
Phone992-5247.
2-27-61c
2-27-61p
--------- - - - - -- - FURNISHED apartment at
Lost

PARASOL Boutique Salon next
to Skate-A-Way announces
Permanent Special . February
20ih lhru March lOth. Breck
perm . and the new Phase 7
perm . regular $17.50 now
$13.50; phone 985-4141 ;
operators : Ric hard and
Darwin, all -electric. Phone
Sandra Kerns.
SMALL BLACK and hrnwn
773-5580.
2-18-12tc
Beagle pup, last seen in
2-27-61p
veterans
Memorial
Hospital
TRIPLE A driver education
area
on
Sunday.
If
found
or
1
NEWLY
r
enovated
large
classes will begin Monday,
seen, please phone Richard
second floor apartment in
March 5, 1973 . For In downtown Pomeroy. Balcony
P I 992 6475
formation call Ben Slawter.
ey on,
·
2-26-3tc
over looking river. Phone 992992-5628.
--------~
2789.
2-27-4tc
1-25-6tp
Wanted To Buy
- - - - - - -- THERE IS a reviva l now )n
progress at the Pomeroy 30 OR MORE 'acres in Chester 2 BEDROOM trailer, close to
mine site on Rt. 325, by week
Wesleyan Holiness Church on
Township, with or without
or month, util iti es paid.
Rt . 143, at 7:30 p.m . each
buildings. isolated. Phone 949 Phone 742-5980.
evening.
Everyone
Is . 3915.
2 61
welcome. The pastor Is Rev .
2-27 -5tc
·22- &lt;
O'Dell Manley.
:-:
'f
_
R
_AIL
_E
_R
_.B-ro_w_n_'s_T_r-ai-ler
2-27-4tc 2 TO 10 acres, suitable tor
Park ; phone 992-3324.
•
tra iler ; nice country location;
2 BEDROOM mobile home on
phone 992 -5947,
1
private lot tor rent. Also want
- - - - - -- - 2--13-tfc
___ _J__ _
_ 2-25-Jtc
to buy ,good used 2 bedroom
BEDROOM mobile home ;
trailer. Must be priced right. CATTLE: top prices; phone 2 completely
; call
992 -2441 afterfurnished
Robert Hill , Racine, phone
Gallipolis 446-3792.
5:30p.m.
949-3811 .
2-16-12tp
2-7-ttc
2-27-61c
-:-:~--::-:-~~-=--WANTED, Beef Hides; will pay UNFURNISHED 3-room ·
·; WILL not be responsible for
$9 a piece ; Pomeroy St.,
apartment, adults only. No
any debts contracted by
Mason, W. Va .; phone 773pels, 408 Spring Ave ...
anyone other than myself.
5600 .
Pomeroy.
Signed. Michael A. Capehart,
2-16-151p
1-7-If c • ·
Rt. 2. Pomeroy.

- - -- --

in

TUPPERS

Business Opportunities

PLAINs. KUHL'S BARGAIN
CENTER offers qualify NEW
FURNITURE at LOWEST
PRICES in area . Shop and
compare; you PAY LESS
AND GET MORE al KUHL 'S

LOANS. operating capital. etc.
Avai lable for any purpose,
$20,000 up to any amount. Call
area code 292 -337-1127,

-- the "cash 'n carry" store,

William L. Creekmore CLU.

where

old - fa s h io ned

2-25-JOtc

BARGAINS
are
an
EVERYDAY EVENT! NEW HIGH Volume Service Station
FURNITURE :
Maple
for lease ; paid training;
bedroom suite: dresser and
pleose call 614-992-5221 bemir..ror. chest, bookcase
tween 8 a.m. and 5 p.m .
headboard bed, SIOO; 3 pc.
2-18-121c
coffee, steplable sets $16.95 ;
PAIR table lamps $11.95;
vinyl recliners, black. tan. Employment Wanted
green S69.95; Patchwork or
floral swivel rockers 569.96 ; WOULD LIKE to have a job In
Maple chest of drawers, 4town . Call 992·5863.
drawer 125. 5-drawer 130 ;
2-27-51p
Boston rockers 125; Cloth sofa
beds $72.95; couches, match- BABYSITTING _in my home ;
lng chairs, set $139 .95 up; 5
expenenced ; reliable; -phone
pc. Maple dinette, round table
992-7719, Middleport .
Sl29.95. KUHL 'S also stocks
2-25-6tc
USED furn iture : chests and
dresse rs; bookcases ; desk s;
dmettes; baby beds, ium - Mobile Homes For Sale·
pers; TV's , floor -model 145,

port.

$35;

record players;

ra dios. ALL m~·or a~pl 1' ances

• ,606 E. Main

CALEB?

. SIX-PACKS

-

.,

.'

Pomeroy
..

;~top

j

"' --and

See Our:
iFloor Display •

-

•

-- ..-, ..

l

'\HElL''·

Rooms
By The Week
or Month

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Red Carpet Inn

ARN''OLD.
BROTHERS

i.-"

I

AU WEAtHER
ROOFING AND_

l

OONSTRUCOON
.
.
..

1

PHONE~ 99~:~:
·'

'

IT's

~IS

~WIN,

PLACE, SHOW,
AND OUT.OF T~e. .

G~ADI~

STATISTICAL
PROBABILITY

Molveyl

S~STEM

!

L.

•

OnMo•tAmericarl Caro

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy_ Home &amp; Auto
Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
6~ __E: ~iiin,_ P~~e~oy, 0.
and

exterior

painting . Phone 992-2368 ,
Pomeroy.

2-27-6tp

KITDiEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION
'

HOME BUILDING

'

&amp;
REMODELING

'

' i

•

BOB SLOAN

&amp;
C. L. KITCHEN

992-5653
READY -MIX
CONCR"ETE
delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and etSjl. FrH
est mates, Phone 992-328•.
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.

l

I.VllRY&amp;oD'f GOES
euT l'vE.MADE

l

iO 'OUR PiCTURE'S!!

'IOU THE

ONLY BECAUSE
®
'&gt;'OU'LL LOP THEIR
I!ARS OFF IF THE'l'
DON'T-

IT'S THE OHLV WA"/ !!
'IClLJ LOVE ME.'&gt;'I'-SBuT "'OU'RE A ROTfEN
ACTF&gt;.E\O.S !.' ~-m---"

WOST POPULAR
6TAR IN

THINKS/

LOVE 11/M-IMA

GIU!AT
ACTR£55 .'!'

OL~AGIST-'N!!

•'

EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
and small; Backhoes and
6·30-Hc :
Loaders on track and tlresi
· Dump trucks Lo · boy
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Service; Septic tanks In - REASONABLE roles. Ph. ~ 1
stalled;
George
(Bill) . 4782, Gallipolis, John Russell, I
Pullins ; phone 992-2478.
Owner &amp; Operator.
2-9-ffc'
5-12-tfc .

I DON'T WANT A~
YOU~ .JUI&gt;IK !

OF

- - - -- - -- -

HARR ISDN'S TV Service and
Service Calls; phone 992-2522.
2-9-llc
.- :------::-:::-:::--O' DELL WHEE[ alignment
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124,

complete front end service,

A' C d ' t ·
• tr on 1 toners,

AllOUr

lliE 'TWIN&amp;. BUT
lliERE II&gt; 5TILL 50
MCICH I WANT llJ
KNOW AllOtJr YOUR
DI\UGH'fER , MR.
WINKLE ,

------

Real Estate

---------

YE~LAND

C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
Complete Se&gt; '' Ice
Phone94V-3821
Raclnt. OttiD
Crill. Bracflill'd
5-l·TTC

tune up and brake service. EXCAVATING, dozer, loaaer
have 30-day G AR NTEES:
Wheels
balanced
elec Depository Balances :
and backhoe work; septic
30", 36" gas or elec. ranges;
•Awnings
'
Ironi-cally.
All
work
Pomeroy National
.
tanks Installed; dump trucks
Bonk
111,886.86
auto . washers S45; elect. or
U d
guaranteed.
Reasonable
amll&lt;&gt;boys tor hire; will haul
Tri -Countv Bank
13,713.97
gas dryers 135; refr igeralors
,. -" erpinning
rates. Phone 992-3213 or 742Total Oepo31tory
fi ll dirt, top soli, limestone,
$15 up ; chest or upright deep r~
I 3232.
Balances
and gravel; call Bob or Roger
freezes
trom
$65.
KUHL'S
:
&lt;.omplele
mQbile
hq.,;·e
2-18-ttc
Cuh on Hand:
Jelf&amp;rs, day phone 992-7089;
BARGAINCENTER,St.Rt.7 •service ~plus gigantic ·1 =~:=---:-:---::--,...""'
Cash In Transit to
night
phone 992-3525 or 992·
"at
caution
light
,"
Tuppers
:
'clisplay
of
mobile
homes
·
·
DOZER
and
back
hoe
·
work,
Depository
.4..4~
5232.
Plains, Ohio. Open lo 6 p.m. 'always avallable.at ...
ponds and septic tanks. dltTotal Cash on Hand
4.·U
2·ll·lfC
Closed MONDAYS ONLY.
h'
I
I
II I I
Total
125.605.27
c mg limestone;
serv ce ; opB&amp;K
so , ExII Outstanding Warrents , Dec .
Phone : 667 -3858.
dirt.
:·fltiLLE'R
31 , 1972 (Deduct)
1.831 .38
2-25-31p OLD iuroilture, oa k table\ . -3-=A=N=D=4--=--=
R-00
-::
M::_i-u-.,-.,,-.,-eu-•na
225-7tc
MOBILE HOMES
~~~:~~~~; , .\'rhone 992 -5367,
Total - Clerk organs, dishes, clocks, bras~
Treasurer 's Balance.
llnfurnished
apartments
.
2
LEVEL
lots
in
Middl
eport
;
91 tl
Dec . Jl, 1972
123,773.89 '• WEIMARANER puppies and
beds or complete households.
For
Phone
992-5434.
phone
1!20
Washington
Blvo.
7.C':'"2'c=~;=:-;-:-:-:--:::'
· c.
992
2082_
1
SUMMARY OF CASH
a 1 " year old female to give
Wrile M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
23 -7521
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
4-12-lfc
2-25
-3tp
•
BELPRE.O.
WILL
trim
or
cut
trees
,
clean
r~-:::::;::;;:;:;;;;;;;::--l
away; phone 742-6834.
Pomeroy . Ohio. Phone 992AND EXPENDITURES
2-25-llc
6271.
-=========~ MUZZLE load ing shotgun; 35 1973 14x70 COMMUNITY oul
basements, attics , etc.
BJiilnCt J1n. 1, 1972
Phone 949-3221.
1-7-tlc r
General Fund
28,818 .54 KO~CDT KOSMETICS AND
CLELAND·
gal. copper apple buller kettl e
Mob ile Home, on a lot 95x135
2-4-JO!c
- -- - -Bond Ret irement
16,358.05
WIGS
.
SPECIALS
MONTH
REALTY
with
stand ;
Frigidaire
In Rutland; Includes . dish· - - -- - - - - Lunchroom
5,621.74
LY .
BROWN 'S
INDE upr ight dee pfreeze ; phone
wa~her, washer and dryer, G &amp; E Appliance Repair, repair
601 E. Mlln
E.S.E.A. Tille I
3,651.54
PENDENT
DISTRIBU Total
54.449.87
992-7692.
staml ess steel sink, garbage
on all laundry equipment,
Pomeroy
TOR,
MIDDLEPORT .
.....:..._
.
Total Receipts
2-25-3tc
diSposal. eye level range and
refrigeration equipment and
General
660.214.55
PHONE 992-5113.
·--dacron
polyester
carpeting
house
wiring;
wel~lng,
1
.l~MO-i.L
, M~\~' onHQM~
Bond Retirement
26,891 .06
I
~I·-\. 1 ' 1 ::" ~
2· 2'3.'1
'1c
·1 acra •UT
REGISTERED Angus bulls.
throughout ; phone 742-3$32 &amp;ltalrlcandgas . • aal~992-3802
·
I,,,''
·•·•
·
Lunchrooll')
57,223.49
Call Bill Witte 992-2789. Rock
evenings.
or after 4:30 p.m. call 992·
gro,u(l!ll ,C:klsf ln. Exlondld
, .. ) I" ·1
I I
.,
Uniform Stttoof , ... · ·1:·•, •• • 1
'.
Springs, Ohio.
2-21-121c
6050.
living R., 3 bedrooms, beth,
Supplies
2,155.27 REVIVAL . starling Feb.' 2'sili '
Limited Number
2-25 -30ip
lhru March 11th, 7:30 p.m .;
E.S.E.A . Tille I
32.351.8~
utility space. Air cond.
2-5-JOtp
E.S.E.A. Tille II
1,595 ,48
Rev. Cecil Wise, first week,
56,900.00.
1968 WINDSOR, 12x60 , 2
6 REG IS TE RED A
E.S.E .A. Tille Ill
2.947.01
Rt. 3, Pomeroy , Ohio ;· Rev .
30 ACRES FENCED
ngus
cows
bedroom
,
with
or
without
WILL
do
remodel
ing,
Interior
•
Total
•~
783 ,378.30
Amos Tillis , 2nd week ,
and I yearling bull. Cows to
furniture ; phone 99.,·3511.
and exterior painting, con·
Just
off Rt. 681 . New well &amp;
Total Recelph &amp; Boloncos
ca lve soon . 12,500. 992-2 78'1.
'
t
k b
Rebersburg. Pa. ; everyone is
water
system. Good cistern
2-11-lfc
ere
e
wor
y
hour
or
con689 ,033.09 welcome
General
2· 25-121 P - - - - - - , -- - : Pastor Rev . Lee
Furnace
Controls
Rf.61 N Pt. Pleasant. w.va .
tract ; phone 992-3511.
Bond Retirement
43 ,249.11
and
spring.
4 bedroom home,
Burn em: Rutland Com.
675 ' 5007
Lunchroom
62 ,845.23
2
21
121
bath
,
nice
kitchen. some
·
HUMIDIFIERS
BUILDINGiotsforsaleat
Rock
·..:ASH
paid
for
au
makes
and
'
·
P
munlly Church.
Uniform School
lrulttrees.
Buildings.
Asking
Spring s. Ohio. Close lo Meigs
models of mobile homes. · AUTOMOBiLE 1
- -- ·•
Supplies
2,155.27
2-23-6tc
$12
,900.00,
E.S.E.A. Tille I
Hot
Water
Healers
For
Sale
High
School
wit~
Tuppers
Phone
area
code,
614-423-9531.
·
.
cancelled?
nt':.~nce
~~
36.003.38
E.S .E.A. Tlfle II
POMEROY
1,595.08------- - - - Plumbing ,
Pla;n s water. S;ze ;, acre and
4-1 3-ttc
operator's license? Call 992E.S.E.A. Title Ill
2,947 ,01
New siding, roof &amp; corporl. 3
EI
t
,
'72
HONDA
350
Scrambler
•
larger.
992
2789.
2966.
Total
837 ,828 ,17
bedrooms. bath, dining R.
Receipts
26,891.06
ec neal Work
excellent condition. 3314
2-25-30tp Auto Sales
6-15-lfc
E11pendltures
Asking $5.000.00.
General
584,308.18 To~~~~~~~~~s a~~evenue,
actual miles, $625. Phone 992- - - - - -- -- "'-=··. ---- . Porches.
1972 OLDS .t-dcor hardtop, less ·J..:;=:::-o::===-2865
MIDDLEPORT
Bond Retirement
8
25 . 50&lt;.0~
TranSfers)
26.891.06
·
STEREO track . Must sell at than 5,000 miles. air- . ~EE US FOR : Awnings, storm
Lunchroom
61 ,841 .74 Total
1•1:1 story frame with fur2·22-6tP
Beginning Balance
once. 1973 e track · stereo ln conditioned, power steering,
doors and wlndOYfS, carports,
Uniform School
niture.
5 rooms . Porches.
Plus Receipts
43,249.11
lovely walnut console. Take
power brakes. Owner no
marquees, alumrnum siding
Supplies
2,000 . 2~
Gas
furnace.
Storm doors &amp;
EARLY
AMERICAN
stereoover
payments
of
$7.55
per
longer
needs
two
cars.
Write
and
railing.
A.
Jacob,
sales
.
Expenditures
E.S.E.A. Title I
36,003 .38
Bonds Maturing
19,000.00
. 2_2448
radio combination, AM-FM
month or pay $101.50. Call992P.O. Box 729 _0 J c-o The Daily
representative . For freei windows. Lot 105x135 (level).
E.5.E.A. Tille II
&gt;,.42.09 Interest
99
on Bonds
5,700.00
radio, 4 speaker sound 5331
estlm t
h
Ch 1
$8,500.00.
E.S.E.A. Title Ill
2,947.01
_23 _ffc
- Bond Retirement
p
O
s~stem, 4 speed automall'c
·
Sentinel, Pomeroy.
a es, P one
are&amp;
2
Total
714 ,054.28 Ottler
POMEROY
F d
omeroy, •
.
7.
1c
Lisle
,
Syrocuse,
v
.
v
.:
2 3
Balance Dec. 31 , 1972
un Expend itures - Bond
804.04
c anger
. Balance
$77.69.
Use 1972 ZIG ZAG s
- - - -- - -2Johnson and Son, Inc.
Total
This
home
has everything
b
d
1
Ca
General
104,72~.91
Retirement Fund
25,504 .04
our u get erms.
II 992ewir;p, Machine.
3-2-llc
and mor~ too. BRICK, &amp;
Bond Retirement
17,745.07 Bal., Dec. 31, 1972
17,7 45 .07 Total Expenditures Including
7085 .
Thodis machine is a ressmaker 1972 FORD F 100 pickup 2 tone ?.~:-"'=c:-~---=
about 8 years old. Beautllul
lunchroom
995.49 Total Expenditures Plus
Ba l. B T1raDnster3s1
1,442.09 _ _ _ _ _ ____2_·2_2_-61c m el. Paby balance of $38.50
V-8, SPort custo.;, -seat: ~LNA - and- While Sewfng ' 'kitchen . 3 large B.R.'s, l'h
Uniform School
302
Dec .Jl , 1972
43,249.11 a., ec. , 1972
153.39
or= pay alance of $6 per
t
Machines ... service on all
Supplies
155.03
baths. Dining. Full basement
Lunchroom Fund ·
Total Expenditures Plus
MODERN Walnut style slereomonth. Call 992-5331.
autom~ ic transmlsslot", long
makes . Reasonable rates.
E.S.E.A. Tille II
153.39 Bal., Jan
·
.
1,
1972
5,621
.74
Bal
..
Dec.
31,
1972
·
1,594
.48
rad
AM
FM
radio
lfc
arm
m~rrors,
power
s
eerlng
Th
S
C
with
Rec . R. Carport. I acre.
1
0
Total
2· 23 ·
123,773.89
E.S.E.A. Title lfl Fund
'
·
' 4
and power brakes, radio.
e ew 1ng enter. M/d .
Recelpts.....: lncome
$29,500.00.
CASH BALANCE ,
Sale ot Lunches
31,883.35
Receipts
speaker sound system, 4 - -- - -- --.::..:::
Phone 992-6773 after 5 p.m.
dleporl, Ohio.
RECEIPTS AND
HENRY E. CLELAND
Federal
Subsidy
Federal Subsidy Fu nd
937
.34
speed
automatic
changer.
KEEP carpets beautiful despite
2-27-Jtc
11 -16-tfc:
EXPENDITURES
BROKER
Lunches
21
,825.91
Tota
l
937
.34
Balance
$65.98.
Use
our
footsteps
of
a
busy
fami
ly
.
~-::;:o=:
-·"":'=:-:-:~--=;,_:,:
BY FUND
3 ASSOCIATES
Federal
SubsidyReceiptsTransfers
budget
terms.
Call
992-7085.
Buy
Blue
Lustre
.
Ren
l
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROB1C
Gener11 Fund
992-2259 .
11\llk
2, 441 ,24 TFro1 m1TGen. F
2,009.27
2-22-61c e lect ri c s hampoo er $ L 1970 NOVA SS 350,4 speed, good
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN-'
Bel., Jan. 1.1972
28,8 18.54
1 und
If no answer
Other
Revenue368,99 Total
o a Beginning
rans ers Balance2,009.27 jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.. ,,
condition. Phone 985-3988.
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
1"e 1son . s
Receipts-Revenue
0 rug
Total -Receipts
Sto re,
2S
31
2
992·2"8 or 985-4209
General Property Tax Income
56.519.49
Plus Receipts
2,946.61
SPECIAL SALE
Pomeroy. Ohio.
- - p
SANITATION, STEWART,
Real Eslate (Gross)
Transfers
Total ExpenTdrallnusrfeesrs
2,009.27 .
_ __ _ _ __ __2-_
26-21c 62 FORD Fairlane. $!25, phone
OHIO. PHONE 662-3035()., If
117,135,07 From ReceiptsGeneral Fund
704.00
CO-OP
1 4 c
Tangible Personal fllroperty
Total
Receipts
To
Gen.
Fund
937.34
.
-.,..,.-,,.---~---/
''
985-3545
a
tier
5:30p.m.
Week·
=:-=:-:-:-:-~----1
TaK (Gross)
10,196.46
Transfers
704.0G- T()tal Transfers
937.34
Country Squire
• 1• o
. days and anytime weekends. ·PLUMBING work done; phone·
Foundation Fund
Receipts (Income
Total EXpfmditures Including
~2 rli!5~3tp
985-4265,
·
(Gross)
487,678.75 Total
and Transfers)
57.223.49
Transfers
2,946.61
·
- - - - - - - -Federal Subsidy Total Beginning Balance
Total Expenditures Fllus
MSNUODW&amp;
2·11-JOtc
P . L ,87 ~
6,B5S.OD
Pius Rece iptS
62,845.23
Bal., Dec . 31, 1972
2,9,6.61
36"x23"x.009
1966 OLDSMOBILE Toronado: ·
State of Oh io Expenditures
ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
power Sfet'ring, brakes, seal ,SEWING MACHINES. Repal~
Vocational Education 740.78
Personal
Service- ManagersDEC. 31 , 1972
an d
windows:
air .
service, all makes. 992-22~."
State of Oh io .
SalariesServiceand Wages
·
conditioned;
tilt wheel ; no
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
School Bus Purchases
Cooks- 664.39 Assets
Depository
Balances (Ac tive
t
Personal
17,098 .00
Salaries and wages 14,884.34
and Inactive) Deduct
Worthu .oo
rus · 68,000 actual· miles; good
AUthorized Singer Sales and
Sta te of Oh io Other- Personal Service _
Outstanding Warrants
dependable lu xury car for
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. ·
Other
11,0 Mechall'ic Street
2,820.00
Salaries and wages
551.20
125,605.29
Toward• purchase of
5900 ; phone 992-5367 .
-.,.--------3-_29-lfc,
Tuition - Parents
Supplies and Food
~4.183 .52 Accounts Receiva ble (F or
pair of Snow Tires.
USED OFFSET PLATES
_ __ _ _ __ _ 2_-_25 -7tp
Pomoro~, 0,.." 45169 ,
and Patrons
565.00 Equ ipment
855.40
Supplies. Textbooks,
Good at Landmark
HAVE
R
Total Revenue
RepalrsloEqulpmenl
111.00
Equipment,
etc.)
18,021.76
Super
Service
MANY
USES
For
Receipts
6&lt;3,089, 16 Other- Lunchroom
Inventory Supplies and
Pels Fo Sal
- ·---·
READ AND HEED
Receipti- Nonrevenue
599.89
Materials
2,500.00
Station. Offer good
r
e
HOUSE FOR"" Sl\lE; 114 Brick NEW HOME
3 bed
Fund
Ad/ustments and
Total E•pendltures Londs &lt;Cost! I Bu ild ing
as long as supply
~
· Street. Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
rooms,
Refunds
208.60
Lun chroom Fund
61.8&lt;9.74
Sites, Playgrounds,
lasts.
P(IRKVIEW Kennels going out
house, 3 bedroqrns, excellent with large closets. Nice kitSale of Non .Real
995.49 etc. I
19,000 .00
8 for $1.00
of business . Big price
I&lt;?Callon, close to school and chen, double sink, stove.
Property
· 1, 110.10 Bal .. Dec. 31, 1972
Buildings (CosII &lt;A ll
reduction on all dogs . All AKc1ly; contact Lou Osborne
retrlgerator - freezer and bar.
Other- Nonrevenue
1,952.82 Total Expenditures Plus
01 Carpet on dining and living.
Ba l.. Dec . 31. 1972
62,845 .23
School Bu ild ings
710,000.00
C. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash
call 992-5898.
Total Nonrevenue
Uniform School Supplies
Equ lpmenr (Cos t (ALL
LANDMARK
Slr!!els, Middlepor\, Ohio. I
For a quick sale we will take
Receipts
3,271.52
Fund
School Bldg , Equip. 216,000.00
Super Service Sta.
11 -16-lft
Receipts- Transfers
Receipts- Income
Total Assets ·
1,091.127.03
J kwc
12-13-tfc:
.•
$16,000.00.
From E.S.E.A. Titl e I
1,974.02 Liabil ities:
ac
· arsey, Mgr.
2NEWjbedroom homes; 1 with
RUTLAND
Fund
12,775.58 Sale of workbooks
77.70 Accounts Poyable
34.866.09 ·---·Ph-o·n·e·99·7·
-9"'93;;2_..
Real
Estate
For
Sale
basemen!, 1 without; 2 car 3 BEDROOMS - New bath.
E.S.E.A. Title II Fund
140,95 Sale of Supplies
103 55 Bond Indebtedness
133,000.00
garages I acre lols i located at new kitchen and paneling.
ILS .E.A. Tille Ill Fund 937 . 3~ Other- Re venue
lpts- lncome2,155:27 Totai·Liabilili
Court St.
pomeroy Jlf2 Story, £' Dedroom.. brick Rock Springs behind Meigs Largelotoff12'" . .0nly••~.oo.
Total Transfers
13,853.87 Tota1Rece
Expendlturts
EKcess or Oefes1clen cy 167,866.09 LOCUST! encepos tSi phone 985~
Tota l Receipts &lt;Revenue,
Purchase
of
Workbooks
1.925.24
of
Assets
923.260.94
4265.
house
in
Middleport;
carCo.
Fairground;
will
trade
or
NEW
HOME
·
·
Nonrevenue and
Totol
1,092,127.03
2-11 -JOtc
peled, paneled, kitchen and
help finance; also 5 good 5 BEDROOMS - 1'12 baths,.
Transfers )
660,2 14.55 Other - Uniform
School Supplies
75.00
SCHOOL DEBT- BOND
,
FORD
dining room tile , complete
building lots, water and largekltchenwllhdl 1
. Total-Beginning Ba la nce
Purpose for Which Bond
69
112 ton pickup ; 70 with drapes. $6500 . Call 992- dlsposol Installed; Charles H.
n ng room .
Plus Receipts
689,033 .09 Total Expenditures Unltolrlm School
BuDiedblt wa,s CEre~ted -~
&lt;:oSAILt, Limestone, . 'Excelsioll HDeonltdaa88Ro4addo Blhkea;d't72 Ollds
3465.
Cornell, Alhens, 593-7034 or ' ~~I ~~,:l~yll craoropmellnlag.rGageralogte
Expe·ndituru
S
_ . c
upp es Fund
2,000.24
' ngs ~ qu 1pmen
a Works. E, Main St.,
•
or r op, a r;
593-5667.
·
·
Total EKpendltures 2 22 61
Bal
.,
Dec
.
31
,
1972
155.03
Outstanding
Jan.
I,
Pom
eroy
.
Phone
_
1.
'
Gravely
14
horse
with
front
--,-------~
$32,500.00.
992
389
Administration
29,556.26
2-1111
1972
152,000.00
mounted mower; 1· set · c
OLD BUT NICE
Instructio n
327,413.19 Total Expenditure~ ~Ius
31,
1972
2.155.27
Redeemed
Dur
ing
Year
-----4-....:
12-ffc
'
acetylene
cutting
torches;
4
BED
ROM
home
,
2
baths,
gas
LARGE - Older home of rHI
Bal.
,
Oec
.
Librarles
4,080.17
E.5.E. A. Title 1 Fund
1972
19,000.00
phone 992 _3954 .
furnace, full basemen!, river
. bed
Transpor tat ion of
1ue. 3 n1c:e sze
1
Bal.
,
Jan
.
1, 1972
3,651
.54
Balance
Outstanding
(3)
VACUUM
Cleaners
new
J
frontage,
Syracuse,
Ohio.
·
O
·
·
va
roams. 2
972
Pupils
68,422.03
8ottom. phone baths,e 1eclrJchNeat. Garage far
Receipts
Dec
.
31.
1972
133,000.00
Model.
Complote
with
all
2-2J.6tc
Phone
m
-2360.
H
~~
~
~~
Long
Playg roun ds and Community
21,388 .37 Rate or In t.
3'1!.
cleaning tools. Small paint
1-25-lfc
If · "'vera 1 cars. early 2 acrtl
303.92 Federal Subsidy Fund 21.388
Centers
611
.37 Date of Final Mat.
12-1-79
'57 CHEVY, good condition,
- - c close to Route 12 4•
Au KIIiarv Agencies 67 ,493.65 Total Receipts-Transfers
121 '' · II
damage In shipping. Will lake $250; Portable washer and
RACINE RURAL
Operation ol School
Gen
.
Fund
·
ID.963
.
~7
527
cash
or
budget
plan
dryer
,
excellent
condition,
NEAR
From
Plant
57,467~30
Total Receipts &lt;Receipts
OUT THEY GO
available . Phone 992 -7755, $175 for both ; phone 742 _5263 _
LY NEW-2bedrooma,
SChOOl Plant
Melntenance
Plus TranSfers
32,351.84
Electro Hyg iene Co.
2-2 J.61c
bath, nfce large utility room.
12,678.60 Total
Beg inn ing Balance
Stock Reduction
2-21-6tc --------~
Modern kitchen, carport lind
Capital Outlay
3.216.32
PlusExpenditures
Receipts
36.0
0 3 . 3 B C -HOICE Cemeterv lot . 4· arave
largelovellot · Only· Sl'OOO•
General Fund Debt
23,227.80
5
•• 1 •
Total
Service
570,631 .41
Tronsters
(2)
PAINT
Damage.
1972
Zig:·
plot
In
Meigs
Memory.
even
rooms,
1'12
baths,
two
car
garage
on
TAKE
A
GOOD
LOOR'ATTHt
Transfers
13,676)-4
12.775.58
Zag Sewing Machines. Still In
(;arden ; lots No. 66-D, 1-2-3-4;
nice lot, close to elementary school, and
FACTS, SOON MANY WILL ·
Grand Total Expenditures - To General Fund
12,775.58
.BUY ONE PAIR
original cartons. No at .
5300; phone 949-2820.
Veterans Memorial. Hospital, · on Wr'lght
BE WANTING A NICE HOME
58-4,308.18 Total Transfers
General Fund
lachments needed as our
2-21 ·61c
WHOM WILL THEY SEE us'
Bal., Dec . 31,1972
104,724.91 Total Exp~nd ltures Includ ing
Transfers
36,003.38
GET
controls
are built-in. Sews
Street, (Ed Ebersbach property) . Priced to
OF COURSE · YOU SHO'ULO•
Total Expenditures Plus
Expenditures ('Ius
Bal.
1
Total
,Bat., Dec. 31, 1972 689.033.09
Dec . 31,1972
.
36,003 _38
PAIR
FREE
wi h 1 or 2 needles, makes '60 PONTIAC, st,eet or strip,
sell fast at $15,000.00. WITH FURNITURE
BUY YOUR HOME NOW.
Bond Retirement Fund
E.S .E.A. Tille II Fund
buttonholes, sewd obnllbutthons,
new, engine , 4 speed ,
$16.000.00.
Bal. , Jan. 1, 1972
, 16,358.05
monog rams, an
nd em
posi rae!; also rebuilt 421 cu.
GEQOG
Receipts
Slacks and jeans sale for the
Receipts-Revenue
Federal Subsidy Fund 1.595.48 family .
stitch. Full cash price ~ . 50
in. Pontiac engine ; good 326
"
E S., HO.BSTETTER JR.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
General Property Tax ~
Total
1,595.48
or
budget
plan
available.
cu.
ln
.
Tempest
engine
and
R
E
.
AL
.,_STATE BROK' ER
ASSOCIATI!
- ,.. _
Real Estate (Grossi 2~.660.02 Total Expenditures
1,301.14
9. _
POMEROY
Phone 99;1. -7755, Electro
other Pontiac parts; phone .
t:
Tangible Personal Property
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
nne (Gross)
2,231.04 To Gen . Fu~~onsters
6i1 Jack w. Car,.y, Mgr.
_Hygiene Co.
992-2392.
BOX 101, POMEROY, OHIO
140 _95
992-3325 ,
Totel Revenue
Total Transiers
140.95
Pho~e992-2181
_ __ _ _ _ _ _
2-.:..
21-61c
2-21 -6lp
PHONE 985-4186

- -- --

h

'

EXPERT
,Wheel Alignment . ..
'5.55 . .

INTERIOR

I

·'-- - --- - ~ -

and '

.FURNITuRE

;.

have

OFFIC£ SUPPLIES .

For Sale

992-2565, Midway Market, W.
Main St., Pomeroy.
7 MONTH OLD trailer 14 x 70
_,
2-27 -31c
unfurn ished, tully carpeted:
- -- - - - Phone 9112-7649 after 5 p.m.
ANNIVERSARY . SAVINGS!!!
2-1B-12tc
Celebrating their 2nd an -

2 OR 3 PERSONS needed at
Midway Market, W. Main St.,
Pomeroy, phone 992-2565.
2-27-3tc

GOT SOME THARSTY'
KINFOLKS OVER AT MY
HOUSE, SNUFFY, AN' I NEED
ONE 01' 'lORE BODACIOUS

_;_
· - : - -- - -.....

Hove your homo built llr
Custom
lulfdors. OW
.carpenters
2t , _1
oxperlanca In bulNIIII;
homes In Milts County.
'

992·2094

the lar.gest
5100; 3-piece solid maple ' •Bulldc&gt;zer Radiator
bedroom suile, 5175. Reason
Heater Core.
for seliln~, purchased furNathan.Biggs
nished lra1ler. Phone 742-6085
R_adia!O!'__SP.ciallst
or 773-5613.
2-27-6tc

$1695
4-door, factory air, V-8 engine, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, good while-wall -tires, while

CARRIER
NE;EDED

' POMERC)Y
HOME &amp; AUTO

Kelvinator electric range,

w-w tires, deluxe bumper guards,

WHAT CAN I
DO FER 'IE,

'

·
1-11 -tfc

HOUSEHOLD furn ishings , one
year old- 14 cu . fl . lroslfret'
Gibson refrigerator, $175; 42"

Sport Sedan. Locall owner car, t&gt;eautlful turquoise finish

1-7-lfc

The Dai~ Se~tinel
Ph. 992·2156

blind hems, overcasts, etc., i

$!5. Cal.l ·Ravenswood , 273-:

wl,!ll spotless match ing Interior trim. black vinyl top,
factory air, V-8 engine, turbo-hydramatlc, power steering

park; phone 992-5443.

zig-zags, buttonholes, ·

9521 or 273-9893.

'

Business Services:

cabinet. Makes design sill-,
ches.

clean. Retail $4860. Priced to move.
197~·CHEVROLETCAPRICE

automatic sewing ' . ·

machine; like new In walnut ·

guards, radio &amp; rear speaker. white-wall tires. Nice and

Notice

ads and ads-paid within 10 dav•~

51~GER

1912 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
13995"
4-doOf, new car title &amp; balance of warranty, covert color
with black vinyl roof, tinted glass, factory air, front &amp; rear

Charge75c·
.··~
12 Mlnlll!um
tenll' per
word . :t'hr
· · · ~ooO·s AQUARIUMS,· ilsh
conseeutf.ve Insertions. : . , and supplies; new •ocatlon,
18 cents per word six con
Ash Street. Middleport neao

secutlve Insertions.

For Sale

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

. 2 SIGNS
OF

I

BARNEY

PAW, PERHAPS
WE &amp;HOliLD
LET WINNIE

FILLIN~E

M1551NGPAA-r.;.

MRS. WINKLE~ WINNIE

AND 1 HAVt: NO
SECRI:rS . 'THERE&amp;
JUI&gt;T NEVER ENOUGH
TIME: FOR US
REALLY TO UNIN
ABOUT EACH

o-n..ER.

Sile

~6 ,, I~'?

HALL TASLE.

TIRES

r Sale· 1
1
AI uml•num·
Sheets

J

~.~,.~

20"

I,

by THOMAS JOSEPH

DICK TRACY
BOTTL.E

RICE WINE
ORDER.
5X.Pl.AII-f_WHEN

Virgil B..·

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

eal Estate

Sale

98 3 2

MV ... THAT ~ A (HARMINUgQRV. I WONDeR Wf&lt;AT
l. c~'EK f3eCANIB Of- THAT

®

1-/~1 ·

ORB ~~ .

WHEN f

WAS ;ru.;r A YOUN/.f
THIN(, /IND trOT MARRII'D
FOR 1111' FIR?T!JMI: 1500
YEAR&gt;S A4Q I W0Rf3. A

·I

(@ l87lt Kint&lt; Fnlurto S7ndieote, In~.) .

~&amp;MID~;H.J=:~..J=
Unocnmblethtle f'"'r Jumbltt,
.one Iotter lo each oquare, lo
form four ordinary worda.

Yesterd11'1 Answer

22. Swiss
river
:U.Harem
chamber
25. Young
sheep
26. Fruit·
flavored
beverage
28. Distilling
device
:tz. Means
33. From a
distance

34. Italian
river
35. Vue
handle
3,, Den
38. Sea
eagle
39.Nervous
U.An·

namese .
measure

42.AngloSaxon

coin

m)
II __

1'1NFE

I
I I ()

tlNDIGH

J

DEGULC

L

Now arranp tht elrded lettar1

I ! I l J r J ~:=Jt::r.:-~
1-~~---1 LIKE (

Ye11ent.y'e

Ju..W..o IIIIL

UPPII

,~.~u.

is to inform

""" oneyear's
of the
Award.

chickens

DOWN
1. Parlays
2. Pennsyl·

vania city

CAPl'AIN EASY

2· Z'J
DAILY

CRYPT~Q~~r:~~e:e~ ;~w to work

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4. Where
Addie
Ababa Is
(abbr.)
5.Tocom·
pletion
6. Foreign
7. Service
station
item
8. Regard·
lng
(2wds.)
9. Elbe
tributary
lO.Lump
H . Electrical
leakage
18, Half a
sawbuck
18. Sorts
20.However
(var.)
21. Colonel's
command
(abbr.)

33. Wing (It.)
36, Kind of
muffin
37.C.S.A.
hero
to. Part of a
violin
U incendiarism
.U. Angering
.45. Laughing
46. Mother

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

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ACROSS
I. Assail
6. In return
11. Love
poetry's
muse
lZ. Horse
wrang.
ler's
equip.
ment
13.Stingy
15.Holy16. Brewery
product
17. Pay dirt
18,Bo,rder
upon
20. Chisholm
and
others
23. Greek
letter
27. Clumsy;
oppressive
(hyph.
wd.)
29, ~Ionster
30, Twilight
years
(2 wds.)
31. Fine

Yeoter . .Y'I CryptoQuote: BOOKS, LIKE FRIENDS,
SHOULD BE FEW AND WELL CHOSEN.-SAMUEL PAT·
ERSON
.

reviews

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'THE PAISI( lliLL PllfPv CUP!!
I'VE 6EEN NOMINATEP FOR-mE
DAl9t' HILL Plll'P't' CUP!!!

�•

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 27,1973

•

•

•

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VI::: ~~p~day i~ ~~ ex~:ng~n~e~:~~:mbrought :-:-:·.· · · · · · · :;KO_·· -~li~"by. llanoi .
0

'

reached agreement with the
United States on many poinls
but acknowledged there were
still major differences about
how to guarantee a lasting
peace in Vietnam.
North Vietnamese Foreign
Mlnlater Nguyen Duy Trinh
told a 13-party conference on
Vietnam: "In the drafting of a
declaration to be submitted to
the conference, (Narth) Vietnam and the United States
have reached agreement on
many poinls, but thl!re still•
remains diBagreement on a
number of major points."
Trinh demanded the conference adopt a declaration
spelling out specific steps to be
taken against any country
violating the cease-lire.
Proposes MenUon
He said his country
"proposes that the International Conference
menUon in the declaration
measures to be taken in case of
violations jeopardizing peace,
Independence, sovereignty,
unity and territorial integrity
of"Vietnam and the South Vietnamese people's right to seHdetermination."
Today's sessio~ lasted an
hour and 55 minutes.
A U.S. spokesman said there
would be no session Wednesday
so more Ume could he devoted
to work on drafting the final
declaration containing the guarantees.
He denied the absence of a
session had any connected with
the -stalling of prisoner-of-war

together foreign ministers
from 11 nations and the Viet
SAIGON (UP!) - North Vietnam today blocked
Cong, and . U.N . Secretary
further release of American prlsooen of war on a series of
General Kurt Waldheim, in
technicalltles. The Uolted States caUed this a direct
talks aimed at guaranteeing
violation of the cesse-flre agreement and demuded that
the Jan. 'l/ peace pact.
Hanoi live up to Its ~ommltmenls and free the men.
Works on Declaration
it. U. S. Embassy spokesman 118id the Communist
As the remalriing ministers
position "could mean an lolermloable deadlock.'' But
delivered their speeches today,
there apparently was oo crisis atmosphere at the ina drafting committee met a
ternational forelgu mlnlsten conference in Paris where a
few doors down from the main
U. s. spokesman said Secretary of State WiWam P.
conference salon-and worked
Rogers bad not discussed it wilb the Commuolsts.
on the joint lleclaration conNorth Vietnam said no more prisonen would be set
tainlng the guarantees, which
free unW the Uulted States lived up to terms of the ceasemlnlaters hope to sign Friday.
fire agreement buttbe United States said the repatriation
A draft was submitted to the
of prisonen is tied by lbe Paris peace agreement ouly to
COIIll]llttee-representlngall 13
the withdrawal of Allied forces from South Vietnam.
participants- by Hanoi and
Washington, who have been
working on a dcument for
authoriZE!d to place a suitable
several weeks outside the
sign
or warning device to alert
conference.
motorists against making such
In speeches today, the Soviet
a
mistake.
Union rejected Canada's deCouncilman Hoffman urged
mand for lruce supervision
(Continued from Page I)
council
to write to two properly
machinery and Britain said
they
said.
owners near the Middleport
practical means might be
It
was
agreed
that
a
comElementary School on Pearl St.
found of ensuring the cease-fire
mittee
of
council
will
ask
urging them to put in sidewalks
success, but this was up to ·the
Solicitor Fultz today to notify in front of their properties
ex-enemies.
Taking part in the meeting the X-L Corp. that the final because school children have
payment will not be made. to walk through mud there.
are the four ex-belligerentsthe United States, North and Arrangements have been made Howeve1, other situations in
South Vietnam and the Viet to paint the interior of the new town where new sidewalks or
Cong, U.N. Security Council fire department headquarters repairs are needed were.
permanent members China, beginning Saturday by the described, and Hoffman's
the Soviet '(Jnion, Britain and firemen who wish to get the motion died for the lack of a
France, the four truce new building completed so that second.
It was suggested that
powers- Canada, Poland, their equipment can be moved
Walters
and
Hungary and Indonesia and into the structure and that a Hoffman,
public
open
house
can
be
held.
Waldbeim.
Dick
Vaughan
should
Maintenance Supervisor study ali of the imAMajor Problem
The Hanoi minister said Harold Chase reported a provements needed as far as
refusal to recognize the Provi- business building now occupied sidewalks are concerned and
sional Revolutionary Govern- on North Second St. is unsafe. prepare recommendations to
ment of South Vietnam- the Chase said that bricks are all property owners involved
Viet Cong- was one of the giving way in the front of the who then can be notified at the
major problems snagging structure and eventually cause same time .
the second floor to cave away.
It was reported that the
TONIGHT
agreement.
Feb. 27
Council
agreed
to
notify
by
swimming pool had been in''The greatest difficulty now
letter
the
out-of-town
owner
of
lies in the fact that a number of
PLAY IT AS IT IS
spected by a pool company and
I Technicolor)
circles do not want to recognize the condition.
was found to be safe and a
Tuesday Weld, Anthony
Council
voted
to
give
$100
of
the existence of the PRG,
letter from a bonding firm was
Perkins, Tammy Grimes,
its
federal
revenue
sharing
although
it
had
diplomatic
Adam Roarke.
read offering its service to the
1Rl
relations with rnore than 30 funds for the first year to the community should a new sewer
Colorcartoons
Meigs County Council on Aging project be undertaken.
countries," Trinh said.
Show starts al1 p.m.
''The only way to settle the which has asked the county
Mrs. Willie Maude Coates
'
political situation in South commissioners and all villages protested the placement of a
Vietnam is for the political to give four percent of their parking meter in the driveway
Wednesday &amp; Thursdoy
Feb. 28 &amp; Mar. 1
forces there to strive to achieve federal revenue sharing funds. at the side of her property on
NOT OPEN
The commissioners recently North Second and Coal Sts . She
national concord."
gave the council $4,600.
said the driveway had been
It was pointed out last night open for 30 years and tbat the
that there may ·he some change meter was a handicap to her in
in the amount Middleport will reachingaparkingspaceat the
receive . There could be an back of her property.
additional payment, said
The matter was referred to a
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate, council committee which will
who has filed an amendment on study the matter to be brought
the village's request. However, up at the March 12 session of
the payment to the village for council. Mrs. Coates indicated
the first year of the revenue thai she will be present for that
sharing program is such thai
meeting.
lour percent would total about
Tom Cassell, a Meigs High
$289.
School student, discussed two
Council gave the Board of traffic problems dealing with
Public Affairs the use of a 'Rutland St. One, he said, is
block building on Ash St. at the parking on both sides of the
request of Chase. He said a street being permitted on ·
laboratory will have to be set Rutland from the corner of
up for an employe who is North Second to the corner of
992-5248
Middleport,
0.
4th &amp; Locust
currently being trained to North Third. The other is on
analyze sewer and drinking Nor-th Third for northbound
water as required by law. The traffic moving onto Rutland St.
block building will be con- Police will look into both
verted into the laboratory.
mal,ters,
Christmas season lights now
Attending the meeting were
stored in the building on Ash St. Mayor John Zerkle, council
will be moved into the present members , Jean Morgan,
fire department garage when it Lawrence Stewart, Ovid
is vacated by the department Ohlinger, Fred Hoffman and
which is attempting to get the WiUiam Walters, Maintenance
final touches on its new Supervisor Chase, Clerkheadquarters.
Treasurer Grate and Police
A discussion was held on Chief J. J. Cremeans.
traffic which is sometimes
moving wrongway on Mill St.
Contrary to popular belief,
across Third into a one-way a shark d!Jes not have to roll
section. Chase and Police Chief over on 1ts back or side to
J. J . CrelJ!~.L _were bite.

Sweeper

MEIGS THEATRE

ES 23e
FISH 39e

Special For Tuesday,
Wednesday and
Thursday Only

McCLURE'S

.
_ (Continued from Page 1)
. •;:'
education and bullneas. 'l'he Vietnam bonua propo1181i:i,
sidetracked from the May 8 primary bl!llot by a. dlsagreemen ::
1s expected
· to be sent to a joint House-Senate:·,
over flnan ..tnn
~M&amp;,
conference committee today.
·

t

ast1ng peace In
•

News • • • in Briefs .,:

Round-the-clock
doctor promised

Doctors would he available was that we weren't going to be
24 hours each day if Meigs able to open.

General Hospital is reopened,
according to a letter directed to
Governor John J . Gilligan
Monday by Delmar A.
Canaday who is protesting the
failure of the state to grant a
permit for the hospital to be
reopened.
Content of the letter signed
by Canaday who is business
agent of the hospital, according
to the communication, follows:
Dear Governor Gilligan:
We have worked for the past
fourteen months in an effort to
open Meigs General Hospital.
We have gone through many·
channels without success. We
have been working with our
District Representative, Mr.
Oakley Collins, Ironton, Ohio
for the last three weeks which
he made a thorough investigation in regard to our
project. We bad a final report
from Mr. Collins Thursday,
February 22, telling us that the
Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis, Ohio, did not want
us to open. We are wondering
why they would have that
much influence in the State
Health Office:
On February 15, Mr. Joe
Ferguson, the Stale Auditor,
and I had a meeting with Dr.
Cashman in the Stale Board of
Health Office. After an hour
conference with Dr. Casbman,
Mr . Ferguson's summation
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged)
Mrs. Roger Schoolcraft and
son ; Angela Tilley, George
Spires, Beatrice Mulhern, Mrs.
Judith Brown and daughter, .
Mrs . Mary Marlin and
daughter, Thornton Burgess,
Clara Adams, Sharon Barnes,
Stephen Baley, Frances
Briggs, Alice Booten, Fred
Deer, Sr., Sharon Rarnes,
infant son of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Gruesler, Rebecca
Koheler, Edith Midkiff, Seth
Oiler, Anna Robinson, infant
son of Mr. and Mrs . Frank
Rose, Lenore Slack, VIrginia
Swain, Jessie Walker and
Golden watson.
(Births)
Mrs. w·ll'
Boo th ,
1 1am
Wellston, a daughter; Mrs.
Herbert Moore, Vinton, a son ;
Mrs. Larry Curry, Gallipolis, a
daughter; Mrs. Donald
Thacker, Vinton, a son and
Mrs. Charles Wrath, Pomeroy,
a daughter.

Governor Gilligan, we would
like an explanation why in the
State of Ohio with so many
good medical schools and
qualified doctors why you went
to Colorado to pick a medical
director for lbe Slate of Ohio.
He Is unfamiliar with the
medical situation and the
needa of the people in Ohio. We
think we are entitled to an
explanation.
Being one of our associates
and workers in your last
election; we spent several
thousand dollars and three
months hard work in Meigs
County in an effort in which
you were very successful in
getting elected. That being the
case, we feel we are entiUed to
some criticism.
It is our intentions to pursue
this project untii we are s~ccessfut m reoperung of Meigs
G al H 'tal
eThener Po ospl ·Chambe of
meroy
r
Commerce en•aged · Surveys
•
Unlimited, 4901 Swisher Rd.,
Cable, Ohio to make a survey
in Pomeroy and their conelusion was in the hospitals,
thai there were no doctors
available. We intend to correct

....

Meigs General Hospital.

~incerely,
FORFEITS BOND
SYRACUSE - Charles S.
Badgley, Columbus, forfeited a
$20 bond in Mayor Herman
tondon's Court here Monday
night. Badgley was cited to
court by Police Chief Milton
Roush for speeding.

Triplett, Mrs. Beulah Strauss,;;
Mrs. Catherine Ervin, Judyr.
Smith, Mrs . Falrie .KeMedy,t
Freddie Houdashell, Frances ·:
•
Roush, Chris Miller, MlllT.
Sauer, Becky Roush, Mrs.;
Grace Pratt, Browyn Dailey,..;
Garnet Demoskey, Judy ·.
Kerns, Ann Bailey, Laura
Hoover, Mrs. Billy Jo.
Krawsczyn, Mrs. · Wilma
Sargent, Cindy Craig, Mrs.,
Emma Kay Clatworthy, Mrs.:
Lillie Hubbard,. Mrs. Mary
Kunzelman, Mrs . Rose
Reynolds, and Mrs . Edith
Forrest.

VIA FOUND GUILTY
AKRON, Ohio (VPI) -Former iUnerant musician · Larry
Via, 28, Cleveland, was convicted late Monday of first degree murder in the shooting of
Ohio University coed Jane McGuire last September. The
DEER KILLED
charge carr!es.. a life prison A doe deer was killed when
sentence.
DEADLINE NOTED
slruck by a car driven by Owen
Sue Imboden, Middleport .
Dailey, Portland, Rt. I,
DIVORCE GRANTED
deputy
registrar, said today
Monday at 7 p.m. on SR 124
Karen White . has ~een
wben moving east one. mUe of March 10 14 the deadline to
jranl&amp;! a aivil1-ce iii common Portland
Ucense plates. Off!cte
.Stale .Pari. There
pleas court Irom James White
hours are from 9 a.m. to 4:30
on charges of gross neglect of was light damage to the front
'
p.m. dally exeepl Sunday.
of the vehicle.
duty and extreme cmelty.

realrve

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

along with your canceled checks
show where your money's going
and where you might cut down.
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS5To7 P.M.

WHE'I YOU VISIT. PARK FREE

~:~~~~I~NA~alioNll

...
'I

'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
IMember Federal Depeslt lnsuraace Corporation

BLUE
DENIM

JEANS

•

Monday thru Saturday, Except Thursday ·
9 a.m. to 12 Noon.

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1973 · · ,

PHONE 992-2156

Flare bottom - four pockets !two front, two
back), wide belt loops.
Tough, durable Indigo blue denim - _zipper fly
with snap closure.
Waist size 29 through 36 inches - 30 through 34
lengths. ·
Ideal for school and general wear.

'488
•
•

TEN CENTS

Troop ·
::::::~-=======~:=:~:=:::::~:;:=:=:=::;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:~:;:::=:=:=:::=:=:=:=::::::::::::::::~~=;~:~:~·.::::::::::::::::::!81:~::::::~:::::::::~=:=:=:~:::::::::::::::::::::s::-®.··

Four Killed in IBlunder
ambush says VC ~= :
/

.'i),.

'

.'

CLOTHING DISTRIBUTED - Mlldred Hawley, Betty Klein and Grace Hawley ,I tor, are
among the women of the Middleport Church of Christ who come to the· basement of the new
addition every Tuesday from 9:30a.m. to 11:30 a.m .. to receive and distribute clothing at a
Meigs County clothing center headquartered at the church. The womeri of the church are
constantly in need of good used clothing, particularly large women's dresses, 44, 46, 48, large
men'sand chlldren's clothing, particularly shoes, and bedding. Everyone with contributions is
asked to visit the center during the designated Ume on Tuesday. Meigs Countians needing
clothlrig also should come at that lime. "'

Plumbers, pipefitters
expect work stoppage
at Gavin plant ,site
.

I

WASHINGTON (UP!) SAIGON (UPI) - Military sources said the Sen. WiUiam Proxmire, DUnited States virtually halted troop withdrawals Wis., charged President Nixon
today with ''grave economic
I
today because of North Vietnam's refusa to release mistakes" thnt have fueled
Amevican POWs.
.
inflation and not cut deeply
. T~e North Viet~amese cited cease-fire enough into unemployment.
VIolations by South V1etnarn as the reason for
Speaking for congressional
freezing POW releases and Radio Hanoi broadcast " Democrats, Proxmire said "in
charged today that four Viet Cong truce ~am the past four years, the
members were killed and two more wounded m an American economy has begun
ambush by South Vietnamese militiamen near the to falter. "
resort area of Dalat Sunday.
He cited the first deficit in
The Hanoi broadcast monitored in Saigon, the balance of trade in 80
· ed h · 'd
'"
t
1
·
years unemployment higher
cla1m
t e met ept was an ex reme Y senous
.'
, . d .al
viQiation" of the cease-fire agreement.
than!. mother dmaJtohr m uslrl d.
na. wns , an
e secon
Radio Hanoi said: "0n Feb.
devaluation of the dollar.
25, a JMC PRG subleam was Commission (JMC) meeting
" ... We vigorously protest the
ambushed by one Saigon Tuesday that the North Viet.- grave economic mistakes of
Regional Forces company on namese immediately release the President that would do
an inspection of a site near the next group of POWs.
little about unemployment and
Dalat. As a consequence of the
Th e
p r o v is i o n a I are pushing us into an inflation
ambush, four PRG officers Revolutionary Government that will cost your pocketbook
were killed and two others (PRG) , the official name for dearly."
wounded. This is an extremely' the VietCong, protested to the
He added, "our answer is to
serious violation of the JMC today that the South cut inflationary military and
agreement by Saigon."
Vietnamese had conducted air foreign aid spending and
Both sides have protested and ground attacks against a channel some but not all of
'that the other side has violated place where PRG represen- ·these funds into programs that
the month-old cease-fire, but tatives to the JMC were to be will not only make for a more
the United. States claims picked up. They did not identify humane America, but a strongrelease of the POWs is not tied the site in a statement to the er country and one in which
to any factor other than with- press later.
housing will be built, the undrawal of American troops .
The U. S. sources would not skilled labor trained and the
More than half of the U.S. say whether the American food produced to hold down the
troops in South Vietnam when troop withdrawal had come to prices you pay ."
the cease-fire began have left a complete standstill, but they
The Wisconsin senator, vice
the country, and the U. S. said no plane carrying U. S. chairman of the Joint Economdemanded at a Joint Military troops home left Saigon today. lc Committee, was chosen by

charged·

congressional Democrats to
reply to Nixon's radio address
on the economy last week. The
networks provided equal Ume.
Proxmire said the "mistaken
· and weak economic policies
that forces the administration
to devalue are unfortunately
not the end of the story. You
and 1as consumers face higher
prices because of even more
important blunders by the
administration."
He said Nixon was proposing

F00d b. asket
.

,

cost IS up
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Spurred by a record monthly
jump in beef prices, the annual
cost of a typical u. s. family's
groceries rose 2.7 per cent, or
$37, inJanuarytoanewpeakof
$1,375, an
Agriculture
Department report showed
today.
,The figure for. last month was
up $102 over the January, 1972,
annual family grocery biU of
$1,273. Officials said a further
increase was likely in
February, and they pointed out
that the $37 increase in
Januarywasthesharpestsince
monthly records were started a
generation ago, in 1947.

~ wqrk stoppage apparently
ill icheduled to lake place
Monday at the new Gaven
Power Plant at Cheshire.
Tbla WM jpdlcatell by two
members of 1). A. Local577 of
the Plumbers and Pipefltters
who lsaue&lt;j. a joint statement
today explaining the impending stoppage . William
Appleton, job steward, and
Aaron Kelton, said the union
has been working without a
contract since Jan. I while
negotflltlons for new contract
have been underway .

Furthermore, an apparent National Construction
lockout of union members wiU Agreement, Article 20,
take place on Friday. This was Paragraph 78 which stales:
indicate~ in a letter to MartJn... 'Duripg the life ·of thil
P. Ward, lion'll'•l ~dept pi · agreement, each. of _tl!e •
the United ASiociation of signatory parUes agrees that
Journeymen and apprentice there will be no strikes, work
Plumbers and Pipefitters stoppage or lockouts by
Washington, D. C., from J . E: membersoflheUnionor by the
Maness, construction manager Employer. In the event of an
of B. F. Shaw Co., Inc ., a area strike over local contract
contraclor at the Gaven site. negotiations, it will be conThe letter to Ward :
sidered a violation of Ui1
"We have been instructed by agreement for the Employer to
the cllent ''Ohio Electric Co' to stop work covered by Uil
exercise the option within the agreement for the duration !li
the strike. The employer ill
J\'lllllll~.~•~e&gt;.::::::::::=:::::::::-:::::::::::::::::::::.-::::::.~;' '
•;oi.w-~··:::::·.:~..:::::::::i.
required to give notification to
the Union five working days
prior to taking such action.
"We are exercising this
By Uolted Presslnlernallonal
option and are advising .you
OOLUMBUS - OPPOSITION TO ANY CHANGE in the that we will stop work at the
state's graduated income tax law to give working married end of this five day period
couples an option in filing of the state tax returns was announced which wiU be March 2, 1973.
'1\lesday by the execuUve board of the Ohio AFL-CIO. The board
" In the event that
offered the following explanations for its action:
negotiations are successful
No responsible alternatives have been offered to replace the during this period please notify
$90 miiiJon per year that would be lost by the changes; if the us immediately so that we may
money Is not replaced, a severe cutin state services such as state provide for an orderly con. IU)lport to schools and property tax relief might occur, and tinuation of work."
changes presently pending raise the possibility of creating
· While the apparent lockout
Inequities in the income tax greater than those charged in will directly involve 26$
·workers of the union, It Is
existing Ia w- •
(Continued on Page 4)
The AFL-CJO said 60 ~r cent of the dollar savings created
MRS. FAY SAUER, . -ted center, was illstalled
by cbanges in the proposaJS pending would go to P.rsons earning
president of Middleport-Pomeroy Area Branch, Ohio
more than $15,000 aonually. "Simply put," the labor group said,
'
Division, American Association of University Women
"three out of every four Ohio wage earners will not benefit from
following a charter dinner at the Meigs Inn Tuesday night.
a change.'"
other officers installed by Mrs. Sharron Helen, second vicepresident of the Ohio Division, were, seated left to right,
WASHINGTON - REP. JOHN M. ASHBROOK, R.Ohio,
Bernice Carpenter, second vice president and membership
called TUesday for CongresS .to exert more authority in foreign
chairman; Jeanne Bowen, fll'st vice president and program
affairs instead of letting the President exel'Cise "virtual unchairman; Mrs. Sauer, Kathryn Knight, treasurer, and
checked power.''
'
Carolyn Smith, recording secretary. Rita Lewis,
No personal injuries were
. "We now haVe a concentration in the executive branch of reported in two accidents invirtually unchecked power over foreign affairs," the Johnstown vesUgated by Sheriff Robert C.
Republican said. "They go overseas and make commitments and Hartenbach's Dept. Tuesday
come back and ten us the honor of the United States is at stake.'' and today.
Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the
Installation of officers by convention of the Ohio Division
.... WASIUNGTON --THE NATION'S GOVERNORS, squeezed
for cash bitween the Republican President and the Democratic intersection of Fifth and Main Mrs. Sharron Helen, second AAUW in Columbus. Mrs.
Sis. in Racine a car driven by vice . president of the Ohio Sauer will be the official state
Congress iook their complaintl about President tilxon's ''twoMaxine Philson, Racine, and Division of · the American and national representative for
by-four" inid_8et-cutlinB strategy to the White House today, The
another
by Gary P. Norris, Association of University the local branch.
governors, here fOr a three-day ~nferenee, were Invited to meet
Racine, Rt . . 2, collided. The Women·, highlighted the
(at 10 a. m. EST) with Ntxon:s Domestlc,Councll and other key
'
Philson car, traveling south on charier dinner meeting of the
Mrs . Helen's remarks emadministration officials for a closed-door briefing on the fedtral
bUdget OllllOok and the 'i,'J'esidont's controversial freeze . on Main, had stopped at the in- Middleport-Pomeroy Area phasized that the AAUW was
selected spellding programs. The President was not listed in lersection but pulled onto Fifth Branch Tuesday night at the organized in 1882 by 65 women
into the path "( the Norris car Meigs Inn.
and has grown to more than
advance as a participant in tlie .meetlilg.
·
Installed as officers o( the
Gov. Dale Bumpers of Arkansas, coJlalrman of the 31-member traveling east on Fifth.
There
was
medium
damage
new
branch which holds the
(Conllr!ued to Page 14)
to the Philson car and llght to distinction of having the
' i
the NorriS vehicle. No citations largest charter membership of
PARIS (UP!) - Secretary of
were issued. .
.
any in Ohio, were Fay Sauer,
Al3:11 a.m. today on County ' president; Jeanne Bowen, first Slate William P. Rogers met
'
Road 24, Salisbury Twp., Ruth vice president and program tod ay . with the foreign
Agenls of the Ohio Depart.- . at the county a~tor's office in A. West, Middleport, Rt. 1, was chairman; Bernice Carpenter, ministers of the three Vietnam
·ment of Talatlon will tie in ' Pomeroy each Friday from 9 travellngeastwhenllghtsfrom . second vice president and delegations to Paris but failed
Meigs and Gtllia Counllea one a.fll. to noon and 'from .1 to 4 · an oncoming car blinded her . members.hip chairman ;
· diyeachwetkdurlns March to 'p.m.'
.
.
,causing her togo off the roa4ljl Carolyn Smith, recording
prOvide taxpayer infonnatloli , taxpayen whO have not hel-,Ief.l, Her car knoc~ed d.qWn , secretary, and Kathryn
DIVORCE ASKED
for thilse filing their stale 111:- re~elved or w~o have a map~ on the Steve Eblin Knight, treasurer. Rita Lewis, Th.elma J. Schoonover,
come tax return.
mliplaced their Ohio personal · propei:Iy, croased the h~hway, the corresponding secretary, Middleport, has filed suit for
L. o. Moore will be at the income tax return can obtain and wer.t . over an -em- ·was unable to attend.
divorce in county common
·county COIIIiplssioners office in additlbnal fOI'J!IS by wriUng the llankment. .
Mrs. Helen presented cor- pleas court from Russell E . .
GaiUpolia from 8 a.m. unW Ohio Department of Tall8tion
There was medium damage sages to the new officers and Schoonover, Rutland, on
noon and from liD 5 p.m. eacb P. 0~ Box 2879, Columbus, Ohi~ · to the car. No citation was announced that a gavel will be charges of gross neglect of
Friday and V. V.Brown wiU be 4Q18.
issued.
given to Mrs . Sauer at the April duty.
7

0

0

7

Buehl in
Pomeroy
The Meigs County Commissioners conferred Tuesday
with Rolland Crabtree,
Superintendent of the county
highway dept., and the newly
appointed engineer, Wesley
Bu,hl qf Noble County.

· ·-:r:~;:ron~=:
blsls due to

' lf!e death of

-.,

Theodore
Beegle.
The
Republican Central Committee
will make a permanent appointment. The conference
related to routine admlnlatration of the highway
department.
James Roush, Meigs County
sanitation officer and building
inspector, notified the commission he will attend
seminars· sponsored by the
Ohio Department of Health, the
first to be held in Columbus.
Topic of the seminars wiU be
"Principals of Environmental
Health."
Attending were Charles R.
Karr, Robert Clark, and
Warden Ours, commissioners,
and Martha Chambers, clerk.

0

Vehicles
collide

. , bllli .
infedeai'
a 19 . on mcrea~ .
r
spending during !isl;al 1974
which, if approved · by
~ngreas, would mean anothe:;
'mammoth ~ederal_ deficit ...
He a~ed, 'what 11 stunning
about this r~cltless $19 billion
inflationary mcrease in spending is that itcomesatthe end of
th~. w~ · .
ThiS will be the first lime
~ver the c;ountry has mcreased
•ts s~ndlng when 8 war was
over, ~xmlre_edsald.ha th
Proxnure dem
t t · e
Democratically controlled
Congress wiU increase spen.
ding even more.
"Absolutely not," Proxmlre
said. "We _woul~ oppose some
of the Presidents culs because
they are_cruel and even lnflatlonary.
"But wewouldcutfar deeper
than the President in some
programs and we would
restore to others only part~
thereductionwewouldmake.

corresponding secretary was not pre11e11l. Standing, left to
right, are the committee chairmen, Co'rriqe Lund, cultural
interests; Phyllis Hackett, international relations ; Daisy
Blakeslee, The Community ; Mrs. Helen, the installing officer; Rosemarie Jones, education, and Dana Kessinger,
public information. Chairmen 'not present were Mrs. 0. B.
Stout, fellowship, Maxine Phiison, co-program chairman,
and Pat Mills, legislative chairman. All are charter members.

TWO FINED
Two defendants were fined
$100 and coals and given three
day jail sentences by Middleport Mayor John Zerkle
Tuesday night on conviction of
driving while intoxicated. They
are Lorraine P. Aeiker, 23,
Pomeroy, and Richard C.
Harrison, 36, Lowen. Harrison
also was fined $25 agd costs for
reckless .operation. Assessed
costs only on an assured clear
distance charge was George H.
Baker, 75, Middleport.

170,000 members in every
state, the District of Columbia,
and Guam . It is an
organization enabling its
members to assume a
responsible role in meeting
society's needs, to continue
individual intellectual growth,
and to secure broader opportunities for all women.

" The AAUW is not just a club are the role of women in
or a social organization," the society and the search for self;
speaker pointed out, "although global interdependence and
it is ' one where .fellowship, ecological problems of the
lriendship and warmth are a world today ; lite issues in
media, including the right to
part."
know the news, the right to
She spoke of the study action. protect the freedom of the
program of the AA UW and the source and the right of in(Continued on Page 5)
four topics of emphasis which

•

Rogers fails to solve crisis over POW returns

State's agents offering hel'P

..

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•
. ...
,.

1

l

New AAUW .Branch officers installed

Mens

WILL BE PAID

Hours That The Bills May Be Paid Are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

XXIV NO. 222

ews .. in Briefsf

·WATER &amp; SEWER BILLS

(Instead of Bill &amp;Lee's Music Center)

Devoted To The lnterettl OfTiu{Meigft·Mason Area

7

POMEROY VILLAGE

NEW YORK ·cLOTHING HOUSE

Partly cloudy today and
tonight, Highs today in the ..
upper 308 and low 401. Lows'
tonight In the low and mid 308. ·
Increasing cloudiness and,
wanner Thursday, highs in the·
toa north and 50s south.

a

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED - Mrs.
Roger Nibert, Gallipolis
Sherry
·Queen,
Ferry ;
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. David
Beaver, Gallipolis; David
Keefer, Leon; Randy Crwnp,
Robertsburg; Mrs. Leonard
McDaniel, daughter, Grimms
Landing; Andrew Gonzales,
Raleigh, La.; Hattie Radcliff,
Leon; - Gainford Upton,
Jackson, 0.; Boyd ~cDaniel ,
Hartford; Orville Casto, Leon,
and Samuel Eads, Point
Pleasant.
BIRTH - Feb. 25, a son to
Mr and Mrs Harold Price
Mid.dl
·
'
eport.

AT THE

Weather

enttne

u
Sunda y prod uced $371 .8() _.::
neart

Young

can save you money. Your statement,

Th,e tallest lighthouse .in
eervice 1!J the United States is
tile 193-lQ\11 ~ Hat't$-as, li..
c.,·tower,!
}-

.

The workers were Mrs. Betty:;
Cline, Linda G
_ erard, Donna:,:
Boyd, Mrs. Alwilda Werner;;:
Mrs. Nan Moore, Judy Owen,;;
Bernice May, Mrs. Clyda;.
Allensworth, Linda Stobart,;:
Edit Stobart, Debra Hunnell,.:
Brenda . Edwards, Becky ;

.

'

NEW ORLEANS -THE GOVERNMENT must pay the::
widow of Lee Harvey Oswald $17,729 for personal property ~lzed;;
by the FBI dill'lng the investigation of the assassination of::
President John F. Kennedy, the 5th U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals ~·
ruled Monday.
:,'
The court agreed with Marina Oswald Porter that she should:;·
receive coUector's value prices for the letters, photographs, ;:
diary, wallet and other personal effects confiscated. The ruling::
overturned a 1970 U. S. district colirt dectslon that had aw_arded;;. ,
Mrs. Porter only $3,000 for the items, which were used m the ::
investigation and afterward placed permanently in the U. S. ::
Archives in Washington.
,:::
,. ,

SAVES
YOU
MONEY

Believe it or not, a checking account

';Now You Know

ATLAN11C CITY N. M. _MAJOR student unrest has been;;
avoided in Toledo, Ohio, schools because of a "get tough" policy;,
and a city ciUzen task force, a Toledo school administrator said,'
here Monday. Hilton H. Murphy, head of_the Toledo Comnwnlty.:
RelatiOns Board said the city took a forceful stand jlt athletic::
evenls ahd fr~ this posture developed· a stronfl network of-;
community involvement.
:-.
"I simply decided four years ago that we've had to, stop;;
excusing youthful violence at games as a '~ign of .~he limes or 8 ;:
'teflecUon of racial tens! 'II' or similar platitudes, Murphy said.:: .
"The hoods, ie\V in number, juvenile delinquents, dropouta&lt;
inherent in any high-school that thrive on gang tacUcs, bad to~:;
collected and floored," he told a convention of school ad-·;
mlnlatrators meeting here.
:~
Murphy advised principals to act first and worry· about the.;
law later because, he said, that is whatthe outside groups do. · ::

t 1 f $37! 80 was
08
0
, collected
A
•
·
Heart Sunday
m
!.fiddleport by the Middleport
· 1
Business and Professions
• CJ b
ber
d
Women s u mem s an
volunteers .
· ·
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, CIVIC
participation chairman for the
club, bad charge ~f ~e h?useI o- house soh c 11&amp;11 on .
H d arters for the day was
this situation by having doctors
~· qu
.
available 24 hours each day at Middleport Village ball.

(Signed)D. A.Canaday.

.

.

- -- - -- - -- - - - - - - - -- --:-

.-

•. .

to solve the crisis brought by
Hanoi's refusal to free more
American prisoners of war,
Communist delegates reported.
Rogers talked for nearly
three hours with ihe foreign
ministers of North Vietnam,
South Vietnam and the Viet
Cong under inslru~ tions from
President Nixon to drop other
wor~ at the 13-nation conference on Vietnam and .try to
resolve the POW impasse.
Mme. Nguyen Thi Binh, the
~

-

Viet Cong foreign minister,
The Hanoi" delegation in
·said after today's meeting, Saigon announced Tuesday It
"We have not arrived at any would release no more
result during olir discussion of American POWs unW there
the question of violations of the was an end to the cease-fin!
cease-fire by Saigon and the violations and until . the
United States."
Communist delegates received
•.
North Vietnamese Foreign better treatme~l.
Minister Nguyen Duy Trinh
said, "The problem is very
ser ious."
LOCAL TEMPS
Asked if a solution bad been
Temperature in downtown
found, he shook his head and Pomeroy Wednesday at 11 a.m. •
said, "I can say 'Dothing about was 43 desrees, under cloudy .
that now."
skies.
•
••'

..

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