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                  <text>Reds walkout on

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SAIGON (UPI) - Copt· m~ delegates, aqgered bY a
deildlock on , the exchange of
Vietnamese prisoners walked
' Com-'
out of a Joint Military
mission (JMC) meeting today
and a North Vietnamese official warned the action could
, delay the next release of
American I'OWs.
The North Vietnamese and
VietCong delegates left before
the meeting was adjourned
because they said they felt the
week~ld problem has "paralyzed " tbe four-power cornmls·sion. CoriununiSt spokesmen
said tbe Viet Cong would
boycott future meetings until

,'

by' Cpurse &amp;:Millie.:
IT CAN t;TORE: .WAT6K lf\t rrs
A CACnJ~ lS ABLE. To LIVE.~===t
t;TEMS, !HATS W,H'I l.
WHERE ,IT~ V£R'f DR'/·
--=-

AMANDA PANDA

'

'•

Now You Know

A B~AVE-R-TAIL CACTUS
IS IN THIS PoT

QH, 1 MEANT
\o MENTION- CACTI .
OFfEN ·HAVE. STICKE.R6l ' '

some settlement is reached on
the number' of· Vietnamese
prisoners to be set free,
''The . present situation has
paralyzed the operation of the
JMC and is a threat to all
future facets of the work of the
JMC," North Vietnamese
spokesman Lt. Col. Bui Tin told
UPL "We will live up to the
promises we have made but we
also demand that the other side
live up to its promises."
,. Asked if. the deadlock threatened the next release of
Americans scheduled for about
March 13, Tin replied, "The
attitude of the RVN (South
Vietnam) interfered with the
\

c

'

work of the JMC and of course
It will have an influence On the · Action could delay release of
prisoner release. The cause of
that rests entirely on the RVN American POWs; South Vietnam
and the U.S,"
The JMC, composed of U.S., blamed for exchange deadlock .
VietCong and North and South
Vietnamese offi~ials, is
release a number far less than releases to, continue ' on
charged with arranging details that.
schedule. He said repatriation
for all prisoner of war releases,
Capt. Phuong Nam, press could continue while certabt
Adeadlock developed within
officer for tjJe Viet Cong, said disagreements ·are ironed out
the JMC a week ago over tenns
the Communists walked oot of by the peacekeeping body.
for the release of Vietnamese
today's tw!Hlour JMC meeting
An American spokesman
prisoners . The Communist
"in order to express their said the Communists did not
delegations are demandmg the
objections" to the impasse,
formally state they were
release of one quarter of the
A U.S. spokesman said the walking out "and we can 'I
rows that are held by the United States at a JMC
possibly analyze their inSouth VietnameSe but said the
meeting today made it clear tentions."
Saigon government agreed to
Washington expects the POW
(Continued on Page 8)

•

Ancient Egyptians and
Babylonians used a crude form
of bicycle -it had no steering
and the rider propelled it by
pushing with his feet ag\inst
the ground.

VOL XXIV NO. 225
I

JIM BOGGS

-·

BIIL CHANEY

MIKE SAYRE

MARAUDERS HONORED - Jim Boggs, left, Bill Chaney, center, and Mike Sayre, a 11
Marauder semors, were honored by selection to the 1972-73 All-SEOAL Basketball squad an~unced today by the Southeastern Sportswriters and Broadcasters Assn. Boggs, a guard , is
listed on the second team; Chaney, a center, on the third, and Sayre is honorably mentioned,
See squad, MVP, and coach of the year story on Page 3,

Weather

at y
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

£1,Gs

Chance of showers south
tonight but more likely north,
Lows in the upper 30s and
lower 40s north and the upper
40s and lower 50s in the south
Chance of showers Tuesday
with highs in the upper 50s and

en tine

Devoted To The lnterestB Of'I'ht Meig~-Mmon Area
MONDAY, MA~GH 5, 1973

BUT I FoR6oT!

60s,

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

Nixon warns of
national slums
CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI)The U.S. government is
becoming "a nationwide
slumlord," President Nixon
told a national radio audience
SUnday while defending his
decision to eliminate scores of
urban renewal projects and
suspend subsidized housing
programs,
In the fifth installment of a
serialized State of the Union
report to 'the nation, Nixon said
he wanted to turn community
planning over to state and local
officials.
The President said Congress
would receive a written mes-

'

Go bp Bus -L~ave
, the Crr;ing to Us

by
WfJAT DONE IT

??-MAMM'f

WERE TI-V'IT

STOPPED

HARMLESS LI'L

-

CR'fli-.J'l:'

POST-CARD!!'

Br.u~~l

sage on community development and "the quality of life in
our cities and towns" later this
week. He indicated that new
legislation in these areas would
be proposed but gave no hint
when it would be sent to Capitol
Hili or what it might contain,
Nixon was expected to spend
today at Camp David accompanied by his close friend C.G,
"Bebe" Rebozo and his personal secretary, Rose Mary
Woods.
In his speech, Nixon gave an
optimistic assessment of urban
America's general outlook

now, compared with a few
years ago when "we constantly
heard" that the nation's cities
and towns were "on the brink
of collapse."
Nixon claimed the nation's
air is now cleaner, said the
financial condition of most
local governments has been
shored up and cited a decrease
in the crime rate,
"The hour of crisis has
passed," he said,
"The ship of state is hack on
an even keel, and we can put
behind us the fear of cap.
sizing," he declared.

slayings bared

RENO, Nev, (UPI) - A apparently panicked and zter said.
blood-flecked corral In the boiled over a cliff as their
BAND LEADERS- STAN KENTON, left, famed orchestra leader, and Dwight Goins
Blood was all around the
Idaho
mountains arid seven captors attempted to corral holding corral, he said,
Meigs High School band director, chatted informally Saturday night minutes before KilDto~
QUEEN OF HEARTS- DREMA WARD, left, daughter
slain
horses
are
all
that's
left
of
them.
of Mr, and Mrs. Jack Ward, Pmeroy Route 2 was crowned
moved on stage with his 1!Jiliece band at Meigs High School to present a well-received concert
a herd of 60 mustangs brutally
"Those at the bottom of the Mrs. Johnston· said $1,000
to some BOO persons. The orchestra was given a standing ovation at the close of the two and oneMeigs County Queen of Hearts at Sunday's ll~art festiva l in
captured and killed by ran- cliff bad either been pushed was spent on investlga lion of
Pomeroy, Melania Walnig, right, daughter of Mr, and Mrs .
half hour presentation. Saturday afternoon the orchestra members condu cted an instrumental
chers,
Vehna
"Wild
Horse
over or stampeded over during the incident and a report,
workshop for some 300 area high school band students at M~igs High,
Robert Walnig, Racine Route 2, was runner-up, The 15
Annie" Johnston said Sunday. the roundup. Their nostrils had complete with photographs of
contestants brought $1,589J2 into the heart fund drive,, Miss
The horses were driven to a been chocked down to make the dead animals, will be
Walnig's votes totaled $273.28, Total money raised by the
remote ·corral in the Leluni them easier to -handle, It was presented to a meeting of the
contest totaled $2,235 in Ute contest headed by Mrs, James
Mountains of central Idaho by one of the most horribly cruel board March 21-22 in Denver,
Soulsby, Miss Susie Souls by and Ralph Werry.
a helicopter, then hauled away things I've ever seen," Dant- Colo,
for use as dog food said Mrs,
Jolmston, a founding member
By United Press International
of
the national Wild Horse
COLUMBUS - REP. JOSEPH P. TULLEY, R·Mentor, says
Advisory Board ,
he will introduce a bill this week to remove Ohio's 4pet sales tax
Nostrils of the horses were
from the first $50 worth of clothing each person buys a year,
clipped
with metal rings to
"Medicines, prescription drugs and lake-home food are already
Teresa Carr, daughter of Mr.
subdue
them,
said
Frantz
exempt from the sales tax," Tulley said, "Why not clothing?"
Pomeroy police investigated
and Mrs. Charles Carr of
Under Tulley's bill, which he said is "slanted toward the less three traffic accidents on Dantzler, Salt Lake City, Utah. Tuppers Plains, was crowned
fortunate members of our society," Ohio residents could obtain Sundav, Onlv one person. a It was "the most outrageous, princess of the Meigs County
premeditated incident of heart fund drive Sunday in .
small cards to be punched with each clothing purchase in lieu of a child, was injured.
sales tax payment. Wheneachindividuatreachedthe$50markin . At 4:15p.m, on West Main animal cruelty I have seen in 10 Pomeroy.
clothing purchases during the year, the merchant would retain St., a westbound car driven by years," said Dantzler, who is
Her votes at a penny each
the card and send it to the state Taxation Department,
David Barnhart, 17, Pomeroy, director of the National Hu- brought In $120,01 to the drive.
mane Society's Intermountain Runner·UP was Trudy Roach,
.
'
struck the rear of a vehicle Region.
BRUSSElS -THE EUROPEAN COMMON Market ordered driven by Orval Wiles,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Carl
Charg~s of cruelty to
its money marketS closed for on~ week starting today to give its Pomeroy, which in turn struck
Roach, Pomeroy, whose votes
nine members, Japan and the United States time to work out an the rear of a third westbound animals under Idaho law will brought in $77.99, Each first
overall solution to the latest world monetary crisis.
vehicle driven by Harold be filed Tuesday against at place winner in the three
It called for a meeting with the United States and other rich Lawson, Letart, w. va, least four ranchers, Dantzler contests, queen, princess and
Western nations Friday. The Market's week-long closure was the Damage to the Barnhart and said. Two federal laws and one junior princess, received a $25
first such step since World Warn, although the money markets Wiles vehicles was heavy and state law were broken by the bond while $10 gift certificates
have been closed for shorter periods during monetary crises. The to the Lawson car minor, There stockmen· who rounded up and went to the runner-up in each
action symbolized the seriousness of the latest money crisis,
were no injuries , The accident carted off the animals, he said. contest,
He said he visited the area
Contributing bonds were the
, is 'stili under investigation,
where
some of the horses
SANTIAGO -OPPOSITION PARTIES gained in a critical
Pomeroy National Bank, the
At 4:30 p,m, on East Main
election for President Salvador Allende SUnday, but failed to pick
Farmers
Bank and Savings
St., a car driven by Sue
up enough seats in the Chamber of Deputies and Senate to oos!
Co., and the Racine · HomeFollroad, Racine, was struck In
the seif-&lt;lescribed Marxist leader,
National
Bank, Gift cer- ,
the rear by a car driven by
Allende . hailed the results as a triumph for his minority
tificates were provided by
James Counts, Syracuse, Both
government led by a combination of Communists and Social- cars had moderate damage
Bahr Clothiers, Marguerite's
ists, He was imperiled by an impeachment treat in case of an and Counts was cited to court
Sh!!" Store, and the New York
opposition victory ,
Clothing House. '
on assured clear distance
' charges. Eight-year •old Kim
Sh era'ff Rober t C. Har~ Door prizes. awarded at
ATHENS, OHIO- CARL HATF1ELD OF Morgantown,W,
,
,
,
Sunday's festival were conFoilrod, a passenger in the .
tenbach s Dept, mvestigated tr'b 1 db M&amp;R 8
, Ia d
va . won the sixth annual "Athens Marathon" here Sunday,
'd t Saturd
,
1 ue
y
argam n ,
Follrod car, was taken to
one
acct
en
ay
mght
Villa
e
Pharm
c
Dutto
,
·running the 26 miles, 385 yards in 2:20,41, fastest time in the
Veterans · Memorial Hospital and another early today,
8
g
a
y,
,
n
history of the event
,
CROWNED JUNIOR PRINCESS - LORRA WISECUP .
for treatment of a head injury. neither of which resulted in Drugs, the Jones Boys,
left, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. James Wisecup of Pomeroy,'
Don Slusser of Pittsburgh was second, Bill Scholl of Court.j .
Nelson's Drugs, Pomer. oy
At 6:1.0 p.m. Sunday a car persona I m
urtes ,
B 1.
M,
was crowned junior princess at a heart fund festival held
land, Ohio and Wendell Skelley Qf Canton tied for third, For the
,
ow mg Lanes, etgs Inn .and
driven by James Hayes,
Sat
d
t
9
15
ur
ay
a
:
p.m.
m
M
,
St
SUnday afternoon at the Pomeroy Junior High SchooL
first time, a woman entered the race bot did not finish. Anna Hilt Pomeroy, · backed from a
· d Twp
ty
d oore s ore,
, on coun roa
TERESA CARR
Runner-up was Kelly Tyree, right, daughter of Mr. and Mrs,
of Hagerstown, Md, dropped out after 16 miles, A field of 94 driveway on Nye Ave. and , Bedfor
18,
one
mile
north
of
US
Route
-";;
T~h;-----:---:-:--:::--.....!!!!!~~~!L
__
John Tyree of the Racine area. The six junior princess
started and 73 finished ,
struck the parked car of 33, carl Leroy Brown,
ree assisted by Pomeroy unit
contestants at one cent a vote brought in $439.56for the heart
George Hicks, Pomeroy, There Pomeroy, traveling east, went The Pomeroy E-R unit an- the squad went to the Charles
fund, Miss Wis=p's votes totaled $1&amp;1.99 while Miss Tyree's
SAIGON - THE UNFrED STATES RESUMED its withwas no damage to Hayes' car off the road to the right over an swered a call to help James Werry residence on Rock St.
votes totaled $98.77.
. drawal of American troops from South Vietnain,'and sweeping
and minor damage to Hicks'. embankment and hit a fence. Fugate at his residence on for Mrs: Werry, who was ill,
North Vietnam's harbors of mines today wi,thin hours of the
There was minor damage to West Main St. at 11 ' 37 p.m. She was taken to Veterans
release of 106 more POWs by the Communists.
the car. No citation was issued, Saturday, Mr. Fugate was Memorial Hospital where she
~
1n the post-truce hostilities, the level of fighting tapered off
taken
to
Veterans
Memorial
,was
admt
'
tted.
,
PARKERSBUR
,
G,
W,
Va,
arm
r.obber,y, Jacoby had
Monday at 8a.m, on SR 124 in
(UPI
c
ted
d
sunday with only 26 Communist cea,;;e.fire violations,reported by
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Rutland ,Twp, just east of Hospital where he was adl
onvtc
arme
n livmg m Parkersburg
the Saigon command. But a spokesman said a government UHI
milled.
robber Richard Jacoby, an under the assumed name of
Chance of showers ai!Out
Langsville, Unda Lee Hunter,
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
'
"Huey" helicopter was shot down late Saturday by a Soviet.IJuilt
e!l(;apee from the Ohio State Richard Preston , authorities
Wcdile,sday or .Thursday.
Campbell, Cslif., driving west, At 4:37 a.m. Sunday, the
SA7 strelia, antiaircraft missile with four crewmen and ~o
squad wascall,ed to the parkin•
At 2:28 p,ni, Sun~ay, the Reformatory, facea an ex- said :
Lows In the 40s, dropping
wentoffontherightil!acuvve, lot at Crow's Steak House• M'ddl
h , h
tod ay
soldiers killed in the crash 50 miles north,west·of Saigon,
1
epor t emergency um't tra d't'
1 ton eanng ere
into the 30s by Friday. HighJ
The Viet Cong and North Vietnam accqsed the Saigon
traveled approxlmately 50 feet where' they assisted in the was ca· 11ed to thc puII'ms horne, fo11owing h'ts capture by ctty
'
In the 60s Wednesday,
government of post·tru~e violations today, the Hanoi accusation
along
railroad tracks there, delivery of a baby to Mrs, Long B0 ttom Route 1• f0~ Mrs, poi'tee,
LOCAL TEMPS
h
dropping Into the 50s by
asserting the South Viet~mese have a "white book'' detailing
t en jumped on the tracks and Patricia Graham of New Elizabeth Biddle who was · Jacoby, so. escaped the Ohio The ,rtemperature in downThursday.
plans for massextenmnatwn aud torture of pnsonrs of war.
stopped. There was medium Haven, Mrs, Graham later was inJ'ured in a falL She was taken prison last May 23 and was town Pomeroy at 11:30 a. m,
d
t th
(Continued on Page 8) ,
a mage 0 e car, No arrest taken to the Holzer , Medical to Veterans Memorial Hospital jailed here Friilay on a fugitive , Monday was 67 degrees under
was made,
.Center. At 7, 11 p,m, Sunday, where she .was admitted.
warrant, sentenced in 1971 for partially sunny skies,
~·
c

•

•
GOO'B'fE LI'L

OF-I,MAMM'I DEAR-NO OFFENSE

FAMBJ..)' O'MINEIl'WERE. NICE
KNOW IN' '{Cf.

NO YOKUM BLOOD IN'IO'-YO'

INTE:NDED-BUT~'HAIN'T Gar

pv;;;;~~

WA$ BORN PANS"' HU"'KS!!

Police log
·· 3 weekend

·

Princess crowned

accidents

CAPTAIN ·E ASY
e&gt;L.AZE5! DID 'IOU 5EE HER.
EXPRE~ION A'7 $HE
PULLE-D THE FIF.JNe PIN~

PAZEP

THAT GRENADE'
LOOK? TO ME
LJKE'THS llEIIL

McCOY!

'

'

by ·crook:s &amp; Lawrence.
PON'T SE ?ll.1.Y! Jn:;.
?OME KINDA PUBLICITY
?TUNT! '"WHY WO,UL.O

ANY GIRL FOOLAI&lt;OUNJ:&gt;
WITH A REOAL,J.IVS-

Accidents

hurt none

.

Escapee taken in Parkersburg

~J

I
t

l

'\

�3- The DallY Sentlnet Mlddleoort-l'oiDElO•. o.. March 5,1973

Finesse·
NORDI

5

.AJ2

.64

• J8
.QJ9832
WEST

EAST

.108764
.K9
¥K95
¥AI0873
• 973
.106 542
.64
SOUDI (D)

.A

.Q53
¥QJ2

.AKQ
.KI075
Both wlnerable
w..t North East South
!N.T.
Pass
3NT PallS POliS
Pass

Opemng lead-• 6
'-----------'
By Oswald &amp; Jameo Jacoby
Oswald "The firSt play a
beginner learns 1s the fl·
nesse "
J1m "At least the s1mple
fmesse It lakes a whlle to
learn double !messes, deep
sea !messes and all the strategy involved m trymg to
make a low card do the work
of a h1gher one "
Oswald " After he does
learn about !messes he may
get finesse happy and try too
many ' '
Jim "There are many occasions when you should refuse a finesse The most common one occurs when you
are sure of your contract 1f
you refuse one and nsk your
contract 1f you take 1!."
Oswald "South is m a
very normal three no-trump
contract West makes hls
normal lead of the six of
spades. A successful fmesse
w11l let South make at least
10 tricks An unsuccessful
finesse will not hurt h1m 1f
spades are contmued, but an
1mmed1ate heart shlft wlll
cost South h1s contract "
Jim "At rubber br1dge
South should refuse the finesse because if he goes
right up with the ace of
spades nothmg can keep him
from mak10g mne tricks He
should be thankful that a
heart wasn't opened and
take game and rubber "
(NEWSPAPER EHTUPRISE ASSN)

The b1ddmg has been·
West
North East South
Dble

1.

?

Pass
1•
Pass
You, South, hald

.AK54 ¥AQ83

•2

.KQ107

What do you do now?
A-BJd two diamonds to show

thlt you hold almost enough for
In immediate cue bid. Your
serond chou:e is a jump to four
hearts.

TODAY'S QUESTION
You b1d two d1amonds and
your partner b1ds two hearts
What do you do now?
Answer tomorrow

Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN book
to · "Wm at Br~dg•," (c/o tltis newJ·
popor), PO Box -119, Radio City
Stotion, New York, NY 10019.

The Almanac
By United Press Jnteruallonal
Today Is Monday, March 5,
the 841h day of 1973 w11h 301 to
follow
The moon lS between 1ts new
phase and first quarter
The morning stars are Venus,
~rs and Jup1ter
The evening stars are Mer·
cury and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Pisces.
Arnencan hlhographer James
Ives of the Corner and Ives
team, was born March 5, 1806
On lhis day m Jilitory.
In 1770, British coloma,l
troops kllled f1ve civilians In
the S'l-Clllled "Boston Massac·
re "
In 1953, the Soviet Umon
announced that Prermer Josef
Stalin had died at the age of 73
In 1966, a British ai~llner
crashed mto Japan's Mt. Fuji,
killing 124 persons aboard.
In 1968, an Air France
jetliner hit a mounlam top in
Guadeloupe, kllhng 62

BY JACK O'BR~N
WEDDING'S OFF BUT
FROST COLLECTS CHINA
NEW YORK (KFS) - David Frost's off to'
Pekmg for a "Frost in China" TV specl8l. Savs
Kissinger helped ... Mrs. Sander Vanocur, wife
of the TV bulletm shooter, lS Ill .. Princess
Grace's blasts at wearing real furs strike lhe fur
marketeers as sour ermine· Grace lS "serene"
and not royal nor even noble and doesn't rate
ennme &amp; velvet m proper palaces .. Solon
Wnghl Patman's In for a shock ... TV Nixonneedier Dan Rather was delivering the
mreally-late news m new-ch1c pub J. G
Melon's a couple of hours after his 11 p.m. CBS.
flashes .
Rich and lovely Amanda Burden's love rs
stable but secret . . Greatest-quarterback
Johnny Umtas announces his new majQr advertising frnn (LewiS-Umtas) any edttion
The Uncle Smiley "Sesame Street" sequence
(wllh an old car) was filmed tn Kent, Conn,
with Jots of charmtng, happy kids - until lhe
filming ended. The director then chased them
wllh very un-Sesame Street.-explehves ... What
happens to Diahann Carroll's "Fever Grass"
111m announced to be shot in Jamaica by
Paradine Productions? That's Davtd Frost's
f1rm
Everyone works m Washtnglon Sen
Mark Hatfield's wtfe sells real estate
Jane Ellen Wayne (Elmhurst, L.l ) was an
NBC page and was mtroduced bnefly to lhe late
Robert Taylor .•She was so struck by his lookahkeness to her pohceman brolher, she dec1ded
to wr1te hlS bto. Taylor d1ed, but Jane Ellen's
resolve remained She researched and wrote for
seven years, divorced husband Ronald Wayne
(Gleason's TV producer now wed to Sheila
MacRae) and here lhe waillng ends her "Life
of Robert Taylor" 1s an Aprll Warner Paperback Library pubhcallon. Her next "K10gs of
Tragedy," qwrky screen stars w11h wrlls-todestroy.
Dr. Bruno von Buettner R1stow of Braz1l
was operating at Manhattan Eye &amp; Ear
Ho•pttal He was startled to discover the pretty
nose he was excavating belonged to Renate

Ravache- h!S own cousin' Renate glfi·Frldays
lor famed author Rose Franken
Christopher Byron, who wrote the Time
cover piece about returmng VIet--vets, was
promoted all the way to Bonn, Gennany. Clms
is the Wilton, Conn., son of the late Eddie Byron
who created-wrote a flock of radio shows (Mr .
D.A., What's My Name, Pot O'Gold, etc ) ...
Barman Charles Pochar1 at the My Place pub
on 63rd &amp; F~rst marveled. "Just as we were
wondering what ever happened to Jackie
Gleason, there he lurned up on TV as Nixon's
chauffeur ' 1
Chnssy Slab1le appears wllh Barry Nelson
m the Bdwy .--auned "Detective Story" rev1val
She's mece of the Ralph Bellamys and the
retired radto-TV director Marx B. Loebs . TV
makeup gemus Ruth Regtna Is discouraged by
regress1ve TV standards: " Mr Clean disappeared, and now we get Mr Dirt "
Guy Lombardo's brother Vtctor has hlS own
orchestra. Roseland's George Doerner band
follows V1ctor at BU'lTlingham's The Club, one of
the country's most elegant . Btll's Gay 90s ts
havtng a run of gr1m luck: p1amst Knuckles
O'Craven died las! week, Its old-vaude pwnist
Bernard Harvey's hosp1tahzed w1th pneumoma,
and composer-in-res1dence. Jacques Belasco
JUSt out of surgery, must return for more of the
open-same
V1ctor1a Medlin, who stars in the V!laliscommerclal whereto she strolls about the
M1am1 Dolphins locker room and pats quarterback Bob Gnese on the popo w1th a "N1ce
game, Bob," was a natural for the fonnerlystag ass1gment Vic slarred two years in Bdwy 's coedanudte cast of 11 Hair."
Totie F1elda was lhe natural selection for
lhe heavy role as girl spokeswoman for Blg
Mama Pantyhose TV commercwls a1med at
femtnme fatsos . . Two Bulganan hlgh·w~rc
walkers, Kara Belkenta and Vladimir Polokov,
asked Ringling Bros c1rcus pres. lrvm Feld to
arrange thelf weddtng. Anyth10g the mce kids
want; such as? They ms1st on be10g mamed on
the h1gh wrre Anyone know a levrtatable
mrmster• Pay's good and the hours are short

DR. LAWRENCE
E. LAMB

Helen Help
'

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

'

Diet and
Exercise

Television Log

&amp; THINIJS

Voice along Br'Way

Pro Standings

)

MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1973

BY PAUL CRABTREE
Decide for yourselves, tllscermng readers, whelher I am
ready for the funny farm or not:
I'd like to kill my dog.
Now, I am of genUe disposition and a very sweet nature (I
really am; Just ask my mother - Area Code 614, 68U224).
I have always loved dogs, and have almost always owned
one: AIeist named Tokey in my boyhood who was loyal if worthless; a f10e black--an~an beagle mixture who was named
Crtcket and chased rabbits dlnerrlngly toward my trembling
shotgun 10 my teenage years; a \d-.able par~A:ollie named Lady
who once presented us w1th a fitter of the ugliest pups every
whelped
The last real dog I owned was an Indeterminately-bred little
bltch named Coco. She wasn 'I very smart, but she was gentle-and
- well, a dog-type dog. Her reasonably-long lifespan ended
abruptly 10 1967 under the wheels of a Cadillac which she Incautiously faUed to notice
The next day. my wife went to see some nice folks 10 Middleport who sold her a registered French poodle, black m color
and m soul, with bloodlines that were certifl8ble, and a blood-lust
that was msatiable.
The Amencan Kennel Club duly registered him as Campaign
Ace and he became known as Campy I was delighted at first,
sm~e the poodle is a dog of supenor mtelligence and considerable
beauty.
That was before he decided to start biting us I mean my
family, not \he stranger, burglar or paper boy.
He learned to sit, heel, speak, slay, and attack with
prodigious speed. He caughl onto fetching, conung, and snubbing
everyone 10 the family except my wife Wlth lightning quickness.
Campy's ftrst laste of human blood was under provocation, I
must admit. Youngest daughter Carole was about three, and she
was playing wrlh him by draggmg hlm arcund by his collar. He
opened a still-dimly-vwible gash in her upper lip.
Then oldest daughter Margie was rompmg w1lh younger son
Matlhew, and playfully chased hun out the kitchen door. Campy,
who normally would have stood by and seen Matthew drawn,
quartered and fed to the lions, m this mstance, was constrained
to act Result· Marg1e's forearm was baclly bitten, with another
slash on her hand.
Then, one day he got loose whil6 I was In lhe yard. In a
moment of rmsd~rected charity, I called for him to slay. He
stayed. I approached hun, gently reached down to p1ck him up,
and leapt back with blood gushing from my lhumb and little
finger
Now do you begm to understand?
The !mal blow came today when middle daughter Vyvyanne,
who's recovermg from the flu, tried to play Wlth him, and coaxed
him to speak, fetch, etc. With a heck-to-you atlltudt, Campy
acted stupid Vyvy was crushed.
,·
But five mmutes later, his rmstress was eliciting from him
all sorts of tr1cks, and he bounced around, show10g off his
repertoire w1th all the independence of an imp from the regions
as black as h1s coat.
At the moment, I'm peacefully co-exiSting with thlS AKC
purebred monster But one of these days, when my wife lS gone
and there's a hatchet conveniently at hand

2·30- Paling Game13; Ooctors3, 4, 15; Edge of NightS, 10.
3·00- General Hospital 6, 13, Another World 3, 4, 1S; Love
Splendored Thing 8, 10, 30 -Minutes With 20.
3 30- Return to Peytcn Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
Secret Storm 10; French Chef 20, Merv Griffin 8
4 oo- Mr Cartoon 3, Fllnfsfones 6; Sesame St. 20, 33; Lo~e
American Style 13) Somerset 15. Merv Griffin 4, Movie "The
Secret of the Purple Reef" 10.
4 30- Peftlcoat Junction 3; I Love Lucy 6; Gilligan's Island 8;
Daniel Boone 13, Dick Van Dyke 15
5 oo- Bonan•• 3, 4, Daniel Boone6; Fla&lt;el8, Mr •Rogors 20, 33;
Andy Grlfllth 15
5 30- Elec Co 33, Gomer Pyle 13, Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Marshall Dillon 15; Beverly Hillbillies 8
6 oo- News3, 4, 8, 10, Truth or Conseq.6, News 13; Around The
Bend 33, Sesame St 20.
6 30- ABC News 6, CBS News 8, 10, I Dream of Jeannie 13;
News 3. 4, 15, Insight 33.
7 oo- Truth or Conseq 3, Beat The Clock 4, News 6, 10; Circus
13, What's My Line 8, Saint IS; Electric Co 20; Read Your
Way Up 33.
'
7 30- To Tell The Truth 6, Young Dr Kildare 8; Hollywood
Squares 4, Tarzan 13, Traffic Court 10, Hodgepodge Lodge
20, Episode Action 33; Bobby Goldsboro 3.
8 oo - Rowan &amp; Martin's Laugh-In 3, 4, 1S; Rookie• 6, Gunsmoke 8 10, Hollywood TeleviSion Theatre 20, 33
9.00- He;e's Lucy 10, 8; Movie "Brock's Last Case" J. 4, 15.
Fuu Brolhers 6, 13.
9· 30 - Doris Day 10, Beat 20, 33
10: oo - News 20, Bill Cosby 8, 10, Doc Elliot 6, 13; C.pltcl Beat
33
10:30 - Wall Street Week 33.
11:00 - News3,A,6,8,10, 13, 15.

11 :30 Thy
r·oo 1:30 -

Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Jack Paar 6, 13; Movies " Honor
Father" 8, "Jeanne Eagles" 10
Focus on Columbus 4. News 13
News 4

TUESDAY, MARCH 6,1973
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4. Sacred Heart \0
6 15 - F•rm Report 13, Farml1me 10
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4. Bible Answers 8, Concern &amp; Comment 10, Faith For Today 13.
6 45 - Corncob Report 3.
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10 , News 6, Fllntstones 13
7 30- Sleepy Jeffers 8, Romper Room 6, Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13; Popeye 10
8 110 - Capt. Kangaroo 10. New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame St 33;
Lassie 6
8 30 - Jack La La nne 13; Romper Room 8, New Zoo Revue 6.
9 110 - Paul Dixon" 4, Phil Donahue 15, Concentration 6;
Friendly Junction 10, Ben Casey 13, Capt. Kangaroo B;
Mister Rogers 33, AM 3
9 30- To Tell The Truth 3. Jeopardy 6
10 110 - Dinah Shore 3, 15, Columbus Six Calling 6, Joker's Wild
8, 10, Dick Van Dyke 13
10 30- Concentration 3, 15, Phil Donohue4, Price Is Right 8, 10 ,
Split Second 13
11 oo- Saleofthe Century 3, 15. Love Amencan Style 6, Gambit
8, 10 , Password 13, Elec Co. 20
II 30- Hollywood Squares3. 4, 15. Love or Life 8, 10, Bewitched
6, 13 , Sesame St 20
12 oo- Jackie Oblinger 8, Jeopardy 3. 1S; Bob Braun's 50 50
Club 4, Password 6, News 10, 13
12 25- CBS News 8
12·30 - Who, What or Where 3, 15. Spill Second 6, Search For

A !hough! for the day: Soviet
Divorce CAN Be Conlaglous
Dear He)en .
Communist dictator Josef stalin
I tr1ed your "probability test" (re "Is divorce catching 1 ") on
sa1d, "In the U.S.S.R., work Is
my Chrwtmas card llat, and d1scovered that well over half our
the duty of every able-bodied
crtizen,
according to the princifriends have been divorced at least once It's true I'm more apt
ple· he who does not work,
to thlilk of divorce as a solution sunply because I know so many
people who have spilt - and survived; who have even gone on to
neither shall he eat."
happter marriages,
Another thing l wonder about What percentage of divorced
set of ammals about one- Even moderate ex e r c lS e
persons remarry, and are the~r marr1ages better• - PON- By Lawrence E. Lamb M.D. third less the number of cal- helps to mamtam the body
Dear Dr. Lamb-! thought ones that a control group of metabohsm and ensures a
DERING BUT NOT REALLY TEMPrED
that for once you might llke ammals 1s getting, the am- more satisfactory e If e c t
to hear from someone Wllh- mats on short rations live from sens1ble eating. ConDear Pon
out troubles. I am 71 and
gratulatrons for your own
The U S. Census Bureau reports that about four-f1fths of all have no physical problems. longer in good health
ach1evement, and I hope 1t
One of the advantages of helps pomt the way for many
divorced men remarry, and about three-fourths of all divorced
Three years ago, at age 68,
exerc1se
that 1s often m1ssed others to do as well.
women try again Many repeaters rate the1r second marriages and rellred smce 1963, I real(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
better. On the other hand, some say that a second split tsn't as Ized that I was detenoratmg is its sllmulatlon of the
body's
metabohsm.
When
a
fast.
I
werghed
197
with
a
traumatic as lhe flfst, and lhe lhtrd comes quite easily. Thus,
waist of 44 10ches and my person goes on a diet, the
Senr:l your quest1ons to Dr Lomb,
even though the marrtage is "better" It may be d1ssolved for arms were getting flabby. I body shuts down 1ts rnetabolesser reasons. (Those "lesser" troubles are often children, his was short of breath w1th lit- hsm to conserve food. This rn care ol dus newspaper, P0 BoK
tle exerbon I shpped and would be fine 1f you were in 1551, Rod1o C11~ Stotton, N~ Yorlc,
or hers.) - H.
fell
and fortunately d1dn't in- an Arctic surviVal sttuation N Y 10019 Foro copy ol Dr lamb•s
P. S. Keep on being "Not Really Tempted"! The vaguely
Jure
myself but had a devil and that's what nature boolclet on low blood sugar, send SO
dissatisfied person who gets a divorce because "all my fnends
Bronson" 8, "The Quiet Man " 10
of a ll10e gettmg to my feet meant 1t for, but tt's not cents to the some address and ask 1 00Came
- Your Health 4. News 13
have one" probably isn't capable of a real relallonship, and By the way, my he1ght is 5 very good if you are on a
130 - News4
d1et tryrng to lose we1ght lor "Low Blood Sugor" booUet
should never have been mamed 10 the hrst place.
feet llmches.
+++
Today, three years later,
through daily exercise •and
carefully watchtng my food
Dear Helen :
consumptwn, my we1ght lS
I've been wtlh lh!S guy, Pete, for five years. When we're 175, wars! 38 mches, my
together, everythmg Is cool, but he's a music1an and travels a lot . arms are muscular and I do
Then the trouble begins. He won 't let me go Wlth hun because he not get out of breath when I
exerc1se or move about
says being on the road Is rough, but he calla at crazy hours - Along
with better physical
even them1ddle of lhenight - tocheckonme I can't be home all cond11lon my mental outlook
the time, and he Suspects The Worst. He starts with 20 quest10ns has 1mproved I have taken
and 1t ends up10 a fight because he just wpn't believe me. I never a new lease on llfe
pry about HIS activities.
There has been no special
I'm completely true, and he should know lh!S. Besrdes, I diet I eat about two-lhtrds
figure what he does on tour 1s his own busmess, and thmk he the amount of food l used to
The exerc1ses I do
should g1ve me lhe same kind of trust. What's w1th a man like consume
I made up as I went along.
thrs • - JUST ABOUT HAD IT
I was determmed to 1mprove
my phys1cal cond1hon
Dear JAHI
Now, 1f one older person
Perhaps Pete sus~ts YOU 'because of HIS actions. When a can do th1s others can too,
musician on lhe road meets a g~rl on lhe make, he may af- but they are not hkely to do
so. It takes an almost fanabterwards wonder, "Is MY g~rl domg this, too?"
cal
determmatwn backed by
Maybe you can cure hun by asking those "20 questions" f1rst.
your
own knowledge that unI mean, put him on the defenSive, get hun off balance, and - well less you
do something, you
at least he'lllearn how it feels to be third-degreed. - H.
are on your way out. ln the
torturous begmmng the exerCises were the worst, but
after awhtle tt became easiDear Helen.
er, and now it 1s a da1ly
The oth!!" -;-: r heard tt agam! This time on a TV Jalk show, routine I look forward to
ARE TO HOLD STUDIO HOURS IN OUR STOllE
but I've notic.: .ay men frrends react this way, too
Self-reJuvenatiOn ts p o sThe moderator said to the interviewee : "Hey man, you sure sible and worth 1t 1f a person
have a good lookrng Wlfe' " And the guy answered, "Thank you." is really interested in living
As if his w1fe's looks were something he'd accomplished! Or she
Dear Reader - Thank you
was It possession lhat people complunent him for owning, like a for your well-said prescripdog or an imported car
•
tion to prevent agrng One of
The husband should agree that h1s wife is attracllve, but he the maJor factors in agmg Is
d1suse. There ts a great deal
shouldn'ttake credit. What do you lhink? - S.V.B.
of evtdence to support your
;
pomt of v1ew. As people get
DearS
older, the amount of vttal
Actually, I hadn't thought of 11 this way before, but you've hormones produced b~ the
TO INTIIOPUCE THEIR COLO~ ART/STAY
made a good point Husbands (and "thankful" wtves, too), take adrenal glands dtmimshes .
WE Off!~ /-1/x/11- liVINGhowever 1 m most mstances
note. - H.
th1s
decrease
m
lhese
vttal
COI.ON-PONIWT
+++
hormones 1s directly related
Dear Helen
• ~Hrt!t/11 II fi'Wif/4101/YKK'Kfl) (III)(JJI
J the decrease In the
A social worker tella me lhat one of lhe problems 10volved amount ol muscles. Regular,
oiiQ(IIJ.f/llofl'lffMTf'•l(p .fi/IKCT
with unmarried teenagers keepmg the1r babies ts lhat lhey have proper . physrcal exerctse
oliOA/if11/flf
a change of heart several years later (when being--a-molher helps to stimulate the entire
•III'IIT 1111 Jva11tr -J PU rAifltY
palls) and turn them over to adoption agenc1es By this tune lhe hormone and nervous system ln add1t10n, rt helps
children have been so hurt by neglect that they're m lhe "hard to maintain the strength of th&lt;
110/U 0111(/.JOJIAI/JINGAYE. J(/Pl(IYIILI 1711/d -1-$~62
.f IJ.O~ COVR!£
adopt" category.
bones , helprng to prevent deGtiARANTii{)
It's a growrng oonCjlrn among welfare workers, for the calclflcatwn and the deform~~~~~J~ef/H
tiles
that
1!
mduces
percentage of "retutned" yourigsters IS hrgh and mcreasmg
Th1s IS a plea to unwed mothers. Be ,sure before you dec1de.
What vou have done fr
1 I '
Those sweet, cuddly bab1es grow trito tremendous rcspon- }OUl d •~ l ts also 1-flllp011 .. n .
\l
~ve n amro,al st1id1es hvvc
s•b•htws If you can'r cope, don't try - CONCERNED
,ho"n t11a1 11 }''" g•ve one

Prescription to
Prevent Aging

IN
POINT PLEASANT,
W.VA.
NEAR END OF

SHADLE BRIDGE

DIVOTID TO THE
INTEREST OF
MIIOS·MASON A.EA
CHI! STU L. TANNEHILL,
Inc. ld.
•oiiRT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Publllhld dally eoxctpt
Slluraov by Tho Ohio Volley
Publish ing Company , 111
Court Sl. Pomeroy, Ohio.
45769 8u11neas Office Phone
992 2156, Editorlol Phone 992
2157
Second clan posteg1 peld at

Pomtrny, Ohio
N l\l r nel tdvertlslng
rtpr 1 • •alive
Bottlnt/11
Gil'
• ·, Inc, 12 Eut 42na
St , '1 1 ~ 1 ''ork (lty, Ntw York
s~
~ v lptlon
ratts Dt
llvt• t ~ by cerrler where
tvalltblt 50 ctnts per Wltk,
ly Motor Route where carrier
service not avellablt One
month S1 15 B, ,. , ~ 1*" Oh"

end

w

Vt , One

v•••

51.4 00

5/)1 month I S7 25 Three
monlhl $4 50 S\lbscrlptlon
r•ct lncludlt Sundly Times
tftlir'ltl

WEDNESD.AY THRU SATURDAY
12 NOON 'TIL 8 P.M.

()JJf

Port ran Size Available from Wallets to 30x40

jf~~/t

•

,,

'

Monday's Games

Ch1cago at New York
(only game scheduled)

It will be Waverly (19-1) vs no reserved seats
The R10 Grande AA D1strtct
Alexander (lS-2) and Gallipohs
(17·3) vs. Nelsonville--York (12- should prove to be one of lhe
7) In first round Class M toughest m the slate. Waverly
DIStrict high school basketball was f1rs t In the last weekly UP!
tournament aclton at R10 statew1de poll Feb. 14.
Grande College's Lyne Center Alexander finiShed sixth m lhe
lhls week
state, and Galltpolts placed
The SEOAL champ1on 15th after holdmg down lhe
Tigers, out to win their fourlh number seven and e1ght spots
stra1ghl M Dlstr1ct '!tile, wlll several weeks.
battle powerful Alexander on
All four district finaliSts have
Tuesday, beginning at 7 30 been to the state finals m
pm.
Columbus at one tlm4! or
Coach Jim ()sborue'a Blue
another during lhe past 4ll
Devils wtll take on Ceach
years GAHS made 1t to the
VIrgil ~Dick) Grady's
semi-finals as an old Class B
Buckeyes on Wednesday,
parllc1pant in 1927 Nelsonville
beginning at 7:30 p.m.
made tt alllhe way to the finals
Winners wUJ collide for the
m the same classification in
championship of southern
1952 before consolidating wilh
Ohio on Saturday, March 10,
Buchtel-York Alexander
beginning at 7:30 p.m,
advanced to lhe old Class A
The d1str1ct wmner w11l semtfinals m 1967. Waverly
advance to the Dayton advanced to the old Class M
Regtonals, slated March 16, 17 sem1flnals in 1970
Each parllcrpatmg school
The Waverly Tigers ad·
was allocated 900 llckets for
vanced to the district by
Tuesday and Wednesday's
downing Portsmouth West
sem1fmal
aclton.
Ap· 75-53 and Wheelersburg 7&amp;-56
proximately 400 tickets w11l be
In the Lucasville Sectional.
sold at the door each mght
GAHS ousted Fa1rland 73-52
.,T1ckets are $1.25 per person, and South Pomt 67-03 m lhe
: and may be purchased locally Coal Grove Sectional
: at the h1gh school athlellc
Nelsonv11le-York, former
: d1rector's offtce. There wtll be member of the Southeastern
Ohto League, made rl by
Southwest
defeahng New Lexmgton 69-60
, Tex 83 SMU 77
• Tex A&amp;M 95 TCU 82
and Vinton County 47--43 m lhe
:. Ark 105 Rice 79
Federal-Hockmg Sectional.
' Tex Tech 77 Baylor 74
Albany of Alexander
~ Tulsa 97 Wichita St 91
.. Corpus Chmtl 86 Pan Am 80
remamed alive by thumpmg
• Olda 60 Kan 58
Oak
Htll80-30 and H11laboro 84'
u\
•
West
62 m the Waverly Sectional.
" UCLA 51 Slanford 45
Waverly and GAHS are
Utah 86 Brigham Young 71
members of the Southeastern
,. Ar l• 84 Wyo 82
- N M St 102 W Texas St 63
Ohto League. Nelsonville-York
~ A F 64 Denver 57
Is a member of the Tn-Valley
Colo St. 87
League. Alexander 1s an mN.M. 60
65
dependent
Art W. Lanham, Rio
Grande College coach, will
serve as
tournament
manager. BUI Grey Is the
tournament's sports In·
formation director,
No pep bands, noise makers,
s1gns or banners are permitted. All tournament officials must have proper
passes Doors will be open one
hour pnor to game time each
night.
Your

.

Price MVP; Noe
First Team

'

m·····m···.

..........,
o;....................
........................~.,....
.......·.···w·
·..
..~········""
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• ..,..;•·•.-••••·!&gt;'''''~''"'
,... ..........
••• •••

College Scores
By Un1ted Pres• tnternahonal

Tournaments and Conferen&lt;:e

Playolfs
NAJA Playoffs
( D•strlct 4)
Sam Hstn St. 61 St. Mary Tex
54
Southern Conference Playoff
(final round)
Furman 99 Dav1dson 81

Middle Atlantic Conference
Unlv D1v Playoff
(final round)
St Jsph 's 70 Temple 60
East
Providence 93 St John -NY 90
Vermont 82 BrandeiS 78
Columb•a 73 Yale 71
Penn 74 Darlmouth 46
Rutgers 81 Pe"" St 52
Princeton 90 Harvard 79

Boston Col 78 Seton Hall 76 ot
Conn 66 Boston U 53
Williams 85 Amherst 63
Bryant 74 Boston St 71
Holy Cross 119 R I 117
Mass 72 Fordham 59
Buffalo 91 Roches fer 90
Navy 110 Sl Franm NY 80
Midwest
Notre Dame 73 S C 69
Mo. 79 Okla St 73
Wls 94 Mich 79
Kan St. 97 Neb 70
Mlch St 86 N'wsn 72
Akron 70 Central M1ch 65
Mmn 79 Purdue 66

Kent St 75 Oh1o U 71
Toledo 59 Bowling Green 40
St Louis 70 Memphis St. 56
Augustana 70 N D 67
M1aml 0. 71 Wsn M1ch 68
OSU 65 Ill 64
lnd 80 Iowa 64

All-games
standings
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Waver Iy
19 1 1439 1053
Gallipolis
17 3 1352 1008
South Point 14 6 1393 1113
Chesapeake 14 7 1363 1127
Fed Hocking 13 7 1185 1128
Portsmouth 12 8 1360 1320
Athens
11 a 1070 977
Me1gs
II 9 1212 12 14
Logan
9 10 1221 1182
Ironton
5 14 1075 1172
Jackson
5 15 1004 1302
Wellston
0 19 1032 1608
Saturday's Results
Gallipolis 67 South Pomr 63
Waverly 70 Wheelersburg 56
Chillicothe 72 Portsmouth 58
Crooksville 71 Fed Hocking 69
Nels- York 47 Vinton County 43
Alexander 84 Hillsboro 62
Porlsmouth ND 86 South
Websler 67
Peebles 71 Western 50
Ross SE 62 Bishop Flaget 59
(AA DISTRICT AT RIO)
Tuesday•s Game·

Waverly vs Alexander. 7 30
pm
Wednesday's Game:
Gallipolis vs Nelsonville York,
7 30 p m
Sslurday's Game
Championship game. 7 30 p m

Other repeaters to thrs yea~'s
squad include J elf Hannon of
Ironton, Jun Pierce of Logan
and B11l Maloy of Waverly, who
were all third team members
one year ago
Only four players, Price,
Oyer, Shoemaker and P1erce
were Wiammous selections

Sectional
box scores
(AI Rio Grande)
Chillicothe ~ 72) - Blake 1-24, Ratzlaff 6--4-16, Ray 2-3-7;
Bayless 11-0-22; Gause 3-2-ll,
Beverly 5-0-10; Gatbff 1-3-5
Totals 29--14-72.
Portsmouth
(58)
Wllliamson 2--4-ll; Spnggs 2-4-ll,
Clemens 6-1·13; McGlone 4-0-8;
McCoy 2-1-5; Oliver 4-0-8 and
Wh1te 3-2-ll Totals 23-12-58.
By Quarters :
Chllhcothe
17 22 16 17- 72
Portsouth
9 18 14 17---56
~At Lucasville)

Waverly ~70) - Shoemaker
5-5-15; Salyers 6-6--18; Oyer 5-212, Maloy 3-1-7; Thompson
4-il-14, Pfiefer 1-2-4, Totals 2422·70.
Wheelersburg ~56) - Fanmn
3-5-11, Thomas 2-5-9; Jusllce 10-2, Race 1-0-2; Day 9-0-18;
Valley 6-0-12, Stanley 1-0-2
Tolals 23-10-56.
By Quarters :
Waverly
11 11 20 28--70
Wheelersburg 14 8 15 19-56
,
(AtStewart)
Nelsonvllle·Vort' (i_7) ";::_
Pr1tchard 4-3--11; Smathers 8-319; Koker 2-2-6, Wright 3-0-8,
Pitts 1-1-3; Coe 1'0-2. Totals 199-47.
VInton County ~ 43) - Caudtll
6-2-14, Pndemore 7·1·15 ,
Barber 4-0-8; Hale 1-0-2,
Eberts 1-ll-2; N1ce 1-0-?. , Tolals
20-3--43.
By Qua!'lers:
Nels-York
10 9 14 14-47
Vm Cty
10 16 6 9-43

...

' ' m····~~--.~
:-:.--..--.-~· ·,.,.

s~:·

·-===:::~::::-::::::::.

1972-73 All-SEOAL Dream Team
FIRST TEAM

PLAYER-SCHOOL

G•l Pn ce Gall•t&gt;olls--

J•m Noe. Gallipolis

Waverly and Gallipolis, a pair of exciting Ed Thompson, Waverl y
basketball teams which finished one-two in the John Shoemaker , Wa verly
Southeastern Ohio League, completely dommated
SECOND TEAM
the 1972·73 All·SEOAL Team selected in Jackson on Mark Mace, Athens
Je1f Hannon , Ironton
Sunday, Feb. 25.
Jtm Pterce, logan
Members of the SEO Sportswriters and Broad· Jtm Boggs, Me1gs
casters Association picked Jim Osborne of B•ll Maloy, Waverly
THIRD TEAM
Gallipolis as Coach Of The Year and Gil Price of Dan Morrow, Jack son
Randy Norns , Logan
Gallipolis as the Most Valuable Player.
~111 L.haney, Me1gs
Pr1ce, a 6--4 jumor, joms
teammate Jun Nae on the f1rst
team Wllh three outslandmg
Waverly Tigers -Mike Dyer,
Ed Thompson and John
Shoemaker.
WilhB1ll Maloy named to lhe
second team, Dave Salyers to
lhe thlrd team, and Doug
Pfeifer on honorable mentton'
lhe Tigers f1rst srx players
received all-loop honors
Waverly's championship
team was so well balanced
that the starling five all
averaged between 11 and I&amp;
poinla In posting a 14-ll
league record and 17·1
regular season mark In all
games.
In wmnmg the Most Valuable
player award, Price beat out
teammate Jun Noe, along w1th
Waverly 's John Shoemaker
and last year's MVP, Mtke
Oyer
Oyer 1s the lone f1rst team
holdover from 1972 whlle Pr1ce
moved up from the second
team un1t.

~'&gt;X-!il'o

··=·=.=.:·=-=·======:::·::=:::-:::::::~::-=::~::*=:::::~:=:*:::: ..:~:=:::::::. ·=~~:::::. ··===·:::

M1ke Oyer, Waverly

mm
m

Nelsonville-York

.-

Master Portrait

WHA Standings
By Unltod Press International
East
wltpts gf ga
Cleve
37 25 2 76
New Eng 35 26 2 72
Phlla
30 34 o 60 237 265
New York 29 36 I 59 ~~
Quebec 27 32 5 59
Oltawa 27 36 4 58 233 271
West
wltpfsgf ~~
Wonnlpeg 40 23 3 83 247 1
Houston 33 28 4 70 742 225
Mlnnsta 32 30 3 67 213 223
Los Ang 30 31 5 6S 223
Alberta 28 33 2 58 219 ~~
Ch1cago 24 38 1 49 205 236
Sunday's Results
Philadelphia 4 New York 2
Quebec 6 Houston 3
Winnipeg 2 Los Angeles 1
Oltawa 6 Chicago 4
M1nnesota 4 New England 2
(only games scheduled)

Three Marauders on All SEO team

'

12· 55 - NBC News 3, 15

r·oo - News 3, All My Children 6 13 , Green Acres 10; Secret
Slorm 8, Not for Women Only 15
1 20 - Fashions In Sewing 3.
1 30 - Three On A Match 3, 4, 15, Let's Make A Deal 6, 13, As
The World Turns 8, 10.
2 oo - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Douglas 6 , Guiding Light B, 10
2 30 - Doctors3, 4, 15, Dating Game 13. Edge of NightS. 10.
3 00 - Another World 3, 4, IS, General Hospital 6. 13. World
Press20, Love Is A Many Splendored Thing 8, 10.
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15, One Life to Live 6, 13.
Secret Stcrm 10, Maggie &amp; The Beautiful Machine 20. Merv
Griffin 8
4 oo - Mister Cartoon 3, Love American Style 13. Fllntstones6.
Merv Grlflln 4; Somerset 15, Sesame St. 20, 33. Movie
"House of Numbers" 10
4 30 - Petticoat Junction 3, I Love Lucy 6, Daniel Boone 13,
Gilligan's Island 8, Dick Van Dyke 15
s 00 - Dan~el Boone 6, Mr Rogers 20, 33, Bonan•a 3, 4, HazelS,
Andy Griffith 15 .
5 30 - ' Electric CO. 33, 'Gomer Pyle \3, Mlo¥s~all Dillon 15 ,
Hodgepodge Lodge; 20; Beverly Hillbillies 8.
6 00- News3, 4, B, 10, 13, 15, Truth or Con seq 6, Sesame St 20.
Around The Bend 33
6 30- News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15 , I Dream of Jeannie 13, Growing
Him Up 33
J
7 00- What's My Line 8, Truth or Conseq. 3. News 8, 10; Un
tamed World 13 , TV Honor Soclely 15; Electric Co 20; Beat
The Clock 4
7 30- This Is Your Llfe3 , To Tell The Truth 6, Price Is Right 8,
10 , Beat The Clock 13, RFD 20, Great Decisions '73 33 , Circus
4, Andy Griffith 15
8 00 - Olllo Thl~ Week 20, Temperatures Rising 6, 13, Movie
• The President's Analysl" 3, 4, 15, Maude 8, 10, Book Beat
33
8 30 - Hawaii F1ve 0 8, 10, Bill Boyers Journal20 , Mov•e "The
Letters" 6, 13
9 00 - Behind the L1nes 20, ~
9 30 - Black Journal20, 33, Movie "Crime Club" B. 10
10 00 - News 20, Biography 33; Marcus Welby MD 6. 13. First
Tuesday 3, 4, 15
11 00 - News3, 4, 6, 10, 13,15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Jack Paar 6. 13. Movies "Then

NHL Stoncllng's
By United PrHS lnternotlonal
Eosl
w 1 t pis gt go
Montreal 43 8 14 roo 212 147
NY Rngru2 17 6 90 258 167
Boston 41 19 5 87 275 200
Buffalo 33 22 10 76 223 178
Detroit 32 22 11 75 218 196
Toronto 21 33 9 51 194 213
Vancouvr 17 42 8 42 193 299
NY lslndrs 9 53 5 23 139 304
West
w I I pts gf ga
Chicago 36 22 8 110 240 192
Phil a
31 26 9 71 247 222
Mlnnesot 31 26 8 70 211 191
St Louis 27 28 10 64 191 205
Plltsbgh 27 32 7 61 212 212
Los Ang 26 J 1 9 61 194 214
Atlanta 24 29 13 61 169 190
Calli
36 163 279
1 11 41 14
Suncloy's Results
Boston 4 Chicago 0
Montreal 4 Buffalo 2
Philadelphia 10 Toronto o
Vancouver 4 NY Rangers 3
Minnesota 5 Plltsburgh 2
Atlanta 3 California 2
Delroll5 NY Islanders 1
(only games scheduled)
Monday's Games
(no games scheduled)

Blue Devils get

Tomorrow 8, 10

MARCH 7, 8, 9, 10 ..

The Dilly Sentinel

NBA Stoncllngs
By Unltld l'ress lnlorMHo.. l
hstem Conference
Allonllc Division
Bo 1
w I. pet g.b.·
s on
·ss 13 .809
New York
51 21 708 6
~uh:ralo
19 49 .279 36
a
9 62 .127 47'1•
Contra! Division
w I. pet g.b.
Baltimore
44 24 .647
At Ionia
40 30 .571 5
Houston
27 42 .391 17'1•
Cleve
24 44 .353 19 1h
Western Conference
Midwest Dlvls1on
w. I pet g.b.
Mllwke
49 22 .686
Chicago
45 24 .652 2'1•
Detroit
32 37 .464 15112
KC-Omaha
33 40 .452 16'1•
Pac1flc Division
w. I Dcl. a.b.
Los Ang
S1 18 .739
~~doennStfx 1 41 28 594 10
32 37 464 19
Seallle
23 49 319 30V•
Portland
17 52 246 34
Sunday's Results
Baltimore 106 New York 97
Atlanta 138 Philadelphia 130
Milwaukee 116 Houston 101
Boston 125 Buffalo 113
Ch1cago 118 Phoenix 117
Los Angeles 127 Cleveland 84
Detroit 113 Portland 109
(only games scheduled)
~nday's Game•
!no games scheduled)
- ABA Standing•
By United Pres• International
'II
East
w. I pel. g.b.
Carolina
52 21 .712
Kentucky
46 26 .639 5'1,
Virginia
35 34 .507 15
New York
27 45 375 24V&gt;
Memphis
22 50 306 29'1•
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
Utah
45 25 643
Indiana
42 30 583 4
Denver
39 32 549 6'1•
Dallas
24 44 353 20
San Diego
23 48 324 22'1•
Sunday's Results
Carollna123 New York 111
Kentucky 121 Memphis 91
Indiana 121 Dallas 118
Denver 133 Utah 12S (of)
San Diego 115 VIrginia 110
Monday's Games
Virginia al Ulah
(only game scheduled)

Dave Salyers, Waverly

Dave Souders, Wellston

(AI Lucasville l
By Un1led Press lnlernational
Waverly 70 Wheelersburg 56
Saturday
tAt Mar~ettal
(Class AAA)
River Local 55 Pholo 47
IAI Bowling Green)
Morgan 91 Meadowbrook 76
Celma 63 Wapakonela 52
IAI New Philadelphia)
AI Toledo)
Toledo Sl Johns 67 Toledo West Holmes 54 We st
Mu sk mgum 53
DevilbiSs 47
tAt Ashlabulal
Toledo Sl Franc•s 65 Sylvan ia
Ashlabula Harbor 50 Ashlabula
61
Sf John 49
(At Ashland)
(AI Elyr~a)
Mansf1eld Sen1or 66 Ashland 65
(of)
Elyr~a Calhol• c 10 North
Ridgeville 8
(AI Salem)
(Class A)
Youngslown North 63 East
(At 51 Marys)
Paleshne 60
Fl Recovery 72 Ridg emont 55
(At R1oGrande)
(At Van Wert)
Chillicothe 72 Porlsmoulh 58
Lmcoln V1ew 59 Spencerville 41
(At Steubenville)
!At ottawa)
Cambr~dge 58 East L1verpool
Continental 69 Fort Jennmgs 61
55
(At Flndtayl
Zanesv•lle 58 Dover 53
Upper Sc1oto Valley 67 Ada 55
(At Cleveland JFKl
(At Bryan)
Cleveland JFK 53 Cleve
Stryker 76 Montpelier 66
Benedictine 47
(AI Patrick Henry)
(At Cleveland L•ncoln West)
Ciev Sf lgnahus 85 Cleve Holgate 60 Ayersville 58
(AI Fostoml
Wesl Tech 42
Mohawk 68 Bettsville 58
(At Baldwin Watlacel
(AI W1Uardl
M1dpark 76 Garfield He•ghts 51
Man s St Peter 68 South
(AI Eastlake Norlhl
Central66 (of)
Wickliffe 51 Mentor 46
(At Nelsonville-York)
(At Lorain)
Crooksville 71 Federal Hockmg
Loreln 58 North Olmsled 55
69
!Class AA)
(At Hillsboro)
Elyna 58 North Olmsted 55
Peebles 71 Western !P1kel 50
(AI Lima Shawnee)
!AI Portsmouth)
Coldwater 86 El1da 76
Portsmouth Notre Dame 86
!At Dehance)
Delphos St Joh11 80 Wayne South Webster 57
!At Chillicothe)
Trace 69
Ross
Southeastern
62
(At Napoleon)
Ch1111cothe BIShop Flaget 59
Archbold 55 Bryan 40
(AI North Ridgeville)
tAt Northwood)
Lake 58 Toledo Cardmal Cleve Lvtheran Wesl 58
Cuyahoga He1ghls 51
Slntch 48
!At Gallon)
T1lfm Calvert 55 Col Crawford
52
(AI Sandusky)
Clyde 72 Mar9aretta 57
South
!At Manst1eld Malabar)
Md
92
Va
81
Ontar~o 49 Shelby 45
Vanderbilt 86 Tenn 74
(AI Columbus)
Ky St 90 Grambling 76
Teays Valley 91 Circleville 70 Lou1svllle
66 Drake 60
(At Waverly)
LSU
70
MISS
69
Alexander 84 Hillsboro 62
Ala
92
M1ss
Sf
87
(At Coal Grovel
N
C
St
100
Wake
Foresl 77
GallipoliS 67 South Po1nt 63
Fla
St
112
Mercer
94
!At Federal Hocking)
N C 72 Duke 70
Nelsonville York 47 Vmton Austm
Pear 75 Murray St. 73
County 43

HT. YR.
64
Jr
63
Sr
63
Sr
62
Sr
6I
Jr
6I
6I

Jr
Sr
Jr
Sr
Sr

6I

Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr

511
59
6-2
63

61

62

58

HONORABLE MFNTION
ATHENS- Andy Chonko. GALLIPOLis-Mark K1eslmq ,
IRONTON - Ken Green, JACKSON- Tom Conroy LOGANJell Campbell , MEIGS - Mike Sayre. WAVERLY- Doug
Pfe1fer, WELLSTON - Charlie Snare
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
Gil Pr1ce - GallipOliS
COACH OF THE YEAR
J•m Osborne- Galhpohs

The 15 man team mcludes 11
seniors and four Jumors
Twenty-five players were
nominated for the three
teams and honorable
menllon. Twenty-three made
It and will be honored at the
Ali-8EOAL banquet, to be
held in Waverly In April.
In gutdmg h1s Blue Devrls to
a 15-3 season record, Coach
Osborne became the flrst
GAHS mentor to show 15
v1ctones m a regular season
smce B1ll Camthers' 1935-56
~am 17 years ago
Last year Osborne and
Waverly 's veteran coach,
Carroll Ha whee , were named
co-coaches of the year.
Attendmg lhe meetmg to a1d
m the selectron of the team

tourney results

were the etght head coaches,
Charhe McAfee, Athens; J1m
Osborne, Galhpolis; Paul Alk·
man, Ironton; AI Berger,
Jackson; Scott Fitzgerald ,
Logan, Carl Wolfe, Me1gs; Bob
Hootman, Wellston, and
Carroll Hawhee of Waverly
Members of the med1a
assoc1ahon attending and
casllng ballots were B11l Grey
and Od1e O'Donnell, Galltpohs;
Bob Roberts, Meigs ; Tom
Metiers and Don Voltz,
Athens , Earl James, Wav·
erly, Bob Wtllis, SIS Baker
and Tom Evans, Wellston; AI
Eisnaugle and Pete Wilson,
Jackson; Frank Houston and
Don Saul, Ironton, and Roger
Hmeman and Harold Roach,
Logan.

Tourney Pairings

Do Yourself

Class A
Wednesday- Galhpohs (17.
~At Chillicothe)
3) vs Nelsonv1lle-York (12-7)
Tuesday- Crooksville (9-14) 7 30 p.m.
vs Ross ( 14-9), 7 30 p m
Saturday- Ftnals, 7 30 p m
Wednesday - Chesapeake Wmner to Dayton Reg10nals
(14-7) vs. Peebles (21·1) 9 p m
ClassAAA
Portsmouth Notre Dame (17-4)
(AI Athens)
vs Tuesday mght wmner at
Friday- Miam1 Trace (14-6)
7 30 p m Two Ch1lhcothe vs Cambridge (6--13) 7 30 p m.
wmners advance to Athens
Zanesville
( 12-6)
vs.
Reg10nals
Chllllcothe (17-3) 8 4&gt; p m
~ ~ • (,:lid :\A
•
Sallln!ay - Fmals at 7:30
(At Rio Grande)
p m Winner advances to
Tuesday - Waverly (19-1) Columbus Reg10nals
vs Alexander (lS-2) 7 30p.m.

A Flavor/
Drive In for a delicious sundae, shake,
malt or cone. Let us fill your party
needs, too.

McCLURE'S
4th &amp; Locust

P92-5248

'M iddleport, 0.

Alexander ~ 84) - Brown 5-212; Wh1te 7-3--17; Brooks 8-0-16;
Ervm 6-7-19 , D1shong 3-2-l!;
Dlllinger 2-0-4; Gllkey 1-0-2;
Thomas 1-2--4, Gliders 0-2·2,
Totals 33-18-84.
Hillsboro (62)- Vance 0-2-2,
Roush 1-0-2; A Jewett 1-0-2;
Ba1ley 2-0-4, Lanmer 3-5-11,
Coffman 1-0-2, D Jewett 13-733, Turner 2-2-6, Totals 23·1662.
By Quarters:
Alexander
20 20 17 27--ll4
t111lsboro
10 14 14 24-62
GIRLS LOSE
RACINE - Soulhern High
School's gtrls basketball team
Satw day lost to Belpre 52-23m
the openmg round of the
Southeastern Ohto G1rls
Basketball Tournament

2-HOUR
- -- CLEANING
(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5428 ,

Insurance

Agent

,,

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DALE

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Poltcy is·
tailored to needs.

By Ihe end ot this century, lhe waters ot our world may be llfetess Since the bevlnnlng of thl1
century, contamlnallng wasles dumped Into our lakes, rivers and streams have Increased 600%.
Fish are dying And the water we drink doesn't taste ~u•le the same
We hove a very few years to reverse1hls ugly trend II sa Job for people For people In govern·
ment and major 1ndustry For mdependen1 businessmen like us. For mdlv•duals, like you It's a lob
lor all of us, lor all people who en10Y the water and reall•e how much 11 means to file
II requires so lillie ellorl Simply never lhrow trash In the water or anywhere near II Report
malor cases ot water pollution lo authorities Always sel an example for others
Water without !ish smelling and clogged wl1h IIIIer, IS the only allerna11ve We 1h•nk lha1 your
grandchildren, and ours, deserve beller

'

Wl\ether you w•nt autc, lite
or homtowners Insurance,

we will design a policy lo Ill
your Individual require
ments .
Discuss y-our
specific needs wllh us

Davis-Warner Ins.

Dtl~lwiiC a ID! t y 11\e "'"" 0" Hl l llltllCh iiiiO OUI Cuat uii:IYI ntu ~'•roo.
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114 Clurt St.

,

l'llm-

INational Automob'tle Dealers Assoc'tat'ton
Oll.c:.-4 0091"'11 100&lt;&gt; Dl ......,&gt;!:I t hancl&gt; ud new co• a" a ""ck Oftltr1 • W•.nong!Qon D C

One In a series presented by N A D A, The Dally Sent mel and The

••

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Tr~- County

Automobile Dealers Assoc

•

�3- The DallY Sentlnet Mlddleoort-l'oiDElO•. o.. March 5,1973

Finesse·
NORDI

5

.AJ2

.64

• J8
.QJ9832
WEST

EAST

.108764
.K9
¥K95
¥AI0873
• 973
.106 542
.64
SOUDI (D)

.A

.Q53
¥QJ2

.AKQ
.KI075
Both wlnerable
w..t North East South
!N.T.
Pass
3NT PallS POliS
Pass

Opemng lead-• 6
'-----------'
By Oswald &amp; Jameo Jacoby
Oswald "The firSt play a
beginner learns 1s the fl·
nesse "
J1m "At least the s1mple
fmesse It lakes a whlle to
learn double !messes, deep
sea !messes and all the strategy involved m trymg to
make a low card do the work
of a h1gher one "
Oswald " After he does
learn about !messes he may
get finesse happy and try too
many ' '
Jim "There are many occasions when you should refuse a finesse The most common one occurs when you
are sure of your contract 1f
you refuse one and nsk your
contract 1f you take 1!."
Oswald "South is m a
very normal three no-trump
contract West makes hls
normal lead of the six of
spades. A successful fmesse
w11l let South make at least
10 tricks An unsuccessful
finesse will not hurt h1m 1f
spades are contmued, but an
1mmed1ate heart shlft wlll
cost South h1s contract "
Jim "At rubber br1dge
South should refuse the finesse because if he goes
right up with the ace of
spades nothmg can keep him
from mak10g mne tricks He
should be thankful that a
heart wasn't opened and
take game and rubber "
(NEWSPAPER EHTUPRISE ASSN)

The b1ddmg has been·
West
North East South
Dble

1.

?

Pass
1•
Pass
You, South, hald

.AK54 ¥AQ83

•2

.KQ107

What do you do now?
A-BJd two diamonds to show

thlt you hold almost enough for
In immediate cue bid. Your
serond chou:e is a jump to four
hearts.

TODAY'S QUESTION
You b1d two d1amonds and
your partner b1ds two hearts
What do you do now?
Answer tomorrow

Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN book
to · "Wm at Br~dg•," (c/o tltis newJ·
popor), PO Box -119, Radio City
Stotion, New York, NY 10019.

The Almanac
By United Press Jnteruallonal
Today Is Monday, March 5,
the 841h day of 1973 w11h 301 to
follow
The moon lS between 1ts new
phase and first quarter
The morning stars are Venus,
~rs and Jup1ter
The evening stars are Mer·
cury and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Pisces.
Arnencan hlhographer James
Ives of the Corner and Ives
team, was born March 5, 1806
On lhis day m Jilitory.
In 1770, British coloma,l
troops kllled f1ve civilians In
the S'l-Clllled "Boston Massac·
re "
In 1953, the Soviet Umon
announced that Prermer Josef
Stalin had died at the age of 73
In 1966, a British ai~llner
crashed mto Japan's Mt. Fuji,
killing 124 persons aboard.
In 1968, an Air France
jetliner hit a mounlam top in
Guadeloupe, kllhng 62

BY JACK O'BR~N
WEDDING'S OFF BUT
FROST COLLECTS CHINA
NEW YORK (KFS) - David Frost's off to'
Pekmg for a "Frost in China" TV specl8l. Savs
Kissinger helped ... Mrs. Sander Vanocur, wife
of the TV bulletm shooter, lS Ill .. Princess
Grace's blasts at wearing real furs strike lhe fur
marketeers as sour ermine· Grace lS "serene"
and not royal nor even noble and doesn't rate
ennme &amp; velvet m proper palaces .. Solon
Wnghl Patman's In for a shock ... TV Nixonneedier Dan Rather was delivering the
mreally-late news m new-ch1c pub J. G
Melon's a couple of hours after his 11 p.m. CBS.
flashes .
Rich and lovely Amanda Burden's love rs
stable but secret . . Greatest-quarterback
Johnny Umtas announces his new majQr advertising frnn (LewiS-Umtas) any edttion
The Uncle Smiley "Sesame Street" sequence
(wllh an old car) was filmed tn Kent, Conn,
with Jots of charmtng, happy kids - until lhe
filming ended. The director then chased them
wllh very un-Sesame Street.-explehves ... What
happens to Diahann Carroll's "Fever Grass"
111m announced to be shot in Jamaica by
Paradine Productions? That's Davtd Frost's
f1rm
Everyone works m Washtnglon Sen
Mark Hatfield's wtfe sells real estate
Jane Ellen Wayne (Elmhurst, L.l ) was an
NBC page and was mtroduced bnefly to lhe late
Robert Taylor .•She was so struck by his lookahkeness to her pohceman brolher, she dec1ded
to wr1te hlS bto. Taylor d1ed, but Jane Ellen's
resolve remained She researched and wrote for
seven years, divorced husband Ronald Wayne
(Gleason's TV producer now wed to Sheila
MacRae) and here lhe waillng ends her "Life
of Robert Taylor" 1s an Aprll Warner Paperback Library pubhcallon. Her next "K10gs of
Tragedy," qwrky screen stars w11h wrlls-todestroy.
Dr. Bruno von Buettner R1stow of Braz1l
was operating at Manhattan Eye &amp; Ear
Ho•pttal He was startled to discover the pretty
nose he was excavating belonged to Renate

Ravache- h!S own cousin' Renate glfi·Frldays
lor famed author Rose Franken
Christopher Byron, who wrote the Time
cover piece about returmng VIet--vets, was
promoted all the way to Bonn, Gennany. Clms
is the Wilton, Conn., son of the late Eddie Byron
who created-wrote a flock of radio shows (Mr .
D.A., What's My Name, Pot O'Gold, etc ) ...
Barman Charles Pochar1 at the My Place pub
on 63rd &amp; F~rst marveled. "Just as we were
wondering what ever happened to Jackie
Gleason, there he lurned up on TV as Nixon's
chauffeur ' 1
Chnssy Slab1le appears wllh Barry Nelson
m the Bdwy .--auned "Detective Story" rev1val
She's mece of the Ralph Bellamys and the
retired radto-TV director Marx B. Loebs . TV
makeup gemus Ruth Regtna Is discouraged by
regress1ve TV standards: " Mr Clean disappeared, and now we get Mr Dirt "
Guy Lombardo's brother Vtctor has hlS own
orchestra. Roseland's George Doerner band
follows V1ctor at BU'lTlingham's The Club, one of
the country's most elegant . Btll's Gay 90s ts
havtng a run of gr1m luck: p1amst Knuckles
O'Craven died las! week, Its old-vaude pwnist
Bernard Harvey's hosp1tahzed w1th pneumoma,
and composer-in-res1dence. Jacques Belasco
JUSt out of surgery, must return for more of the
open-same
V1ctor1a Medlin, who stars in the V!laliscommerclal whereto she strolls about the
M1am1 Dolphins locker room and pats quarterback Bob Gnese on the popo w1th a "N1ce
game, Bob," was a natural for the fonnerlystag ass1gment Vic slarred two years in Bdwy 's coedanudte cast of 11 Hair."
Totie F1elda was lhe natural selection for
lhe heavy role as girl spokeswoman for Blg
Mama Pantyhose TV commercwls a1med at
femtnme fatsos . . Two Bulganan hlgh·w~rc
walkers, Kara Belkenta and Vladimir Polokov,
asked Ringling Bros c1rcus pres. lrvm Feld to
arrange thelf weddtng. Anyth10g the mce kids
want; such as? They ms1st on be10g mamed on
the h1gh wrre Anyone know a levrtatable
mrmster• Pay's good and the hours are short

DR. LAWRENCE
E. LAMB

Helen Help
'

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

'

Diet and
Exercise

Television Log

&amp; THINIJS

Voice along Br'Way

Pro Standings

)

MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1973

BY PAUL CRABTREE
Decide for yourselves, tllscermng readers, whelher I am
ready for the funny farm or not:
I'd like to kill my dog.
Now, I am of genUe disposition and a very sweet nature (I
really am; Just ask my mother - Area Code 614, 68U224).
I have always loved dogs, and have almost always owned
one: AIeist named Tokey in my boyhood who was loyal if worthless; a f10e black--an~an beagle mixture who was named
Crtcket and chased rabbits dlnerrlngly toward my trembling
shotgun 10 my teenage years; a \d-.able par~A:ollie named Lady
who once presented us w1th a fitter of the ugliest pups every
whelped
The last real dog I owned was an Indeterminately-bred little
bltch named Coco. She wasn 'I very smart, but she was gentle-and
- well, a dog-type dog. Her reasonably-long lifespan ended
abruptly 10 1967 under the wheels of a Cadillac which she Incautiously faUed to notice
The next day. my wife went to see some nice folks 10 Middleport who sold her a registered French poodle, black m color
and m soul, with bloodlines that were certifl8ble, and a blood-lust
that was msatiable.
The Amencan Kennel Club duly registered him as Campaign
Ace and he became known as Campy I was delighted at first,
sm~e the poodle is a dog of supenor mtelligence and considerable
beauty.
That was before he decided to start biting us I mean my
family, not \he stranger, burglar or paper boy.
He learned to sit, heel, speak, slay, and attack with
prodigious speed. He caughl onto fetching, conung, and snubbing
everyone 10 the family except my wife Wlth lightning quickness.
Campy's ftrst laste of human blood was under provocation, I
must admit. Youngest daughter Carole was about three, and she
was playing wrlh him by draggmg hlm arcund by his collar. He
opened a still-dimly-vwible gash in her upper lip.
Then oldest daughter Margie was rompmg w1lh younger son
Matlhew, and playfully chased hun out the kitchen door. Campy,
who normally would have stood by and seen Matthew drawn,
quartered and fed to the lions, m this mstance, was constrained
to act Result· Marg1e's forearm was baclly bitten, with another
slash on her hand.
Then, one day he got loose whil6 I was In lhe yard. In a
moment of rmsd~rected charity, I called for him to slay. He
stayed. I approached hun, gently reached down to p1ck him up,
and leapt back with blood gushing from my lhumb and little
finger
Now do you begm to understand?
The !mal blow came today when middle daughter Vyvyanne,
who's recovermg from the flu, tried to play Wlth him, and coaxed
him to speak, fetch, etc. With a heck-to-you atlltudt, Campy
acted stupid Vyvy was crushed.
,·
But five mmutes later, his rmstress was eliciting from him
all sorts of tr1cks, and he bounced around, show10g off his
repertoire w1th all the independence of an imp from the regions
as black as h1s coat.
At the moment, I'm peacefully co-exiSting with thlS AKC
purebred monster But one of these days, when my wife lS gone
and there's a hatchet conveniently at hand

2·30- Paling Game13; Ooctors3, 4, 15; Edge of NightS, 10.
3·00- General Hospital 6, 13, Another World 3, 4, 1S; Love
Splendored Thing 8, 10, 30 -Minutes With 20.
3 30- Return to Peytcn Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
Secret Storm 10; French Chef 20, Merv Griffin 8
4 oo- Mr Cartoon 3, Fllnfsfones 6; Sesame St. 20, 33; Lo~e
American Style 13) Somerset 15. Merv Griffin 4, Movie "The
Secret of the Purple Reef" 10.
4 30- Peftlcoat Junction 3; I Love Lucy 6; Gilligan's Island 8;
Daniel Boone 13, Dick Van Dyke 15
5 oo- Bonan•• 3, 4, Daniel Boone6; Fla&lt;el8, Mr •Rogors 20, 33;
Andy Grlfllth 15
5 30- Elec Co 33, Gomer Pyle 13, Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Marshall Dillon 15; Beverly Hillbillies 8
6 oo- News3, 4, 8, 10, Truth or Conseq.6, News 13; Around The
Bend 33, Sesame St 20.
6 30- ABC News 6, CBS News 8, 10, I Dream of Jeannie 13;
News 3. 4, 15, Insight 33.
7 oo- Truth or Conseq 3, Beat The Clock 4, News 6, 10; Circus
13, What's My Line 8, Saint IS; Electric Co 20; Read Your
Way Up 33.
'
7 30- To Tell The Truth 6, Young Dr Kildare 8; Hollywood
Squares 4, Tarzan 13, Traffic Court 10, Hodgepodge Lodge
20, Episode Action 33; Bobby Goldsboro 3.
8 oo - Rowan &amp; Martin's Laugh-In 3, 4, 1S; Rookie• 6, Gunsmoke 8 10, Hollywood TeleviSion Theatre 20, 33
9.00- He;e's Lucy 10, 8; Movie "Brock's Last Case" J. 4, 15.
Fuu Brolhers 6, 13.
9· 30 - Doris Day 10, Beat 20, 33
10: oo - News 20, Bill Cosby 8, 10, Doc Elliot 6, 13; C.pltcl Beat
33
10:30 - Wall Street Week 33.
11:00 - News3,A,6,8,10, 13, 15.

11 :30 Thy
r·oo 1:30 -

Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Jack Paar 6, 13; Movies " Honor
Father" 8, "Jeanne Eagles" 10
Focus on Columbus 4. News 13
News 4

TUESDAY, MARCH 6,1973
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4. Sacred Heart \0
6 15 - F•rm Report 13, Farml1me 10
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4. Bible Answers 8, Concern &amp; Comment 10, Faith For Today 13.
6 45 - Corncob Report 3.
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10 , News 6, Fllntstones 13
7 30- Sleepy Jeffers 8, Romper Room 6, Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13; Popeye 10
8 110 - Capt. Kangaroo 10. New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame St 33;
Lassie 6
8 30 - Jack La La nne 13; Romper Room 8, New Zoo Revue 6.
9 110 - Paul Dixon" 4, Phil Donahue 15, Concentration 6;
Friendly Junction 10, Ben Casey 13, Capt. Kangaroo B;
Mister Rogers 33, AM 3
9 30- To Tell The Truth 3. Jeopardy 6
10 110 - Dinah Shore 3, 15, Columbus Six Calling 6, Joker's Wild
8, 10, Dick Van Dyke 13
10 30- Concentration 3, 15, Phil Donohue4, Price Is Right 8, 10 ,
Split Second 13
11 oo- Saleofthe Century 3, 15. Love Amencan Style 6, Gambit
8, 10 , Password 13, Elec Co. 20
II 30- Hollywood Squares3. 4, 15. Love or Life 8, 10, Bewitched
6, 13 , Sesame St 20
12 oo- Jackie Oblinger 8, Jeopardy 3. 1S; Bob Braun's 50 50
Club 4, Password 6, News 10, 13
12 25- CBS News 8
12·30 - Who, What or Where 3, 15. Spill Second 6, Search For

A !hough! for the day: Soviet
Divorce CAN Be Conlaglous
Dear He)en .
Communist dictator Josef stalin
I tr1ed your "probability test" (re "Is divorce catching 1 ") on
sa1d, "In the U.S.S.R., work Is
my Chrwtmas card llat, and d1scovered that well over half our
the duty of every able-bodied
crtizen,
according to the princifriends have been divorced at least once It's true I'm more apt
ple· he who does not work,
to thlilk of divorce as a solution sunply because I know so many
people who have spilt - and survived; who have even gone on to
neither shall he eat."
happter marriages,
Another thing l wonder about What percentage of divorced
set of ammals about one- Even moderate ex e r c lS e
persons remarry, and are the~r marr1ages better• - PON- By Lawrence E. Lamb M.D. third less the number of cal- helps to mamtam the body
Dear Dr. Lamb-! thought ones that a control group of metabohsm and ensures a
DERING BUT NOT REALLY TEMPrED
that for once you might llke ammals 1s getting, the am- more satisfactory e If e c t
to hear from someone Wllh- mats on short rations live from sens1ble eating. ConDear Pon
out troubles. I am 71 and
gratulatrons for your own
The U S. Census Bureau reports that about four-f1fths of all have no physical problems. longer in good health
ach1evement, and I hope 1t
One of the advantages of helps pomt the way for many
divorced men remarry, and about three-fourths of all divorced
Three years ago, at age 68,
exerc1se
that 1s often m1ssed others to do as well.
women try again Many repeaters rate the1r second marriages and rellred smce 1963, I real(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
better. On the other hand, some say that a second split tsn't as Ized that I was detenoratmg is its sllmulatlon of the
body's
metabohsm.
When
a
fast.
I
werghed
197
with
a
traumatic as lhe flfst, and lhe lhtrd comes quite easily. Thus,
waist of 44 10ches and my person goes on a diet, the
Senr:l your quest1ons to Dr Lomb,
even though the marrtage is "better" It may be d1ssolved for arms were getting flabby. I body shuts down 1ts rnetabolesser reasons. (Those "lesser" troubles are often children, his was short of breath w1th lit- hsm to conserve food. This rn care ol dus newspaper, P0 BoK
tle exerbon I shpped and would be fine 1f you were in 1551, Rod1o C11~ Stotton, N~ Yorlc,
or hers.) - H.
fell
and fortunately d1dn't in- an Arctic surviVal sttuation N Y 10019 Foro copy ol Dr lamb•s
P. S. Keep on being "Not Really Tempted"! The vaguely
Jure
myself but had a devil and that's what nature boolclet on low blood sugar, send SO
dissatisfied person who gets a divorce because "all my fnends
Bronson" 8, "The Quiet Man " 10
of a ll10e gettmg to my feet meant 1t for, but tt's not cents to the some address and ask 1 00Came
- Your Health 4. News 13
have one" probably isn't capable of a real relallonship, and By the way, my he1ght is 5 very good if you are on a
130 - News4
d1et tryrng to lose we1ght lor "Low Blood Sugor" booUet
should never have been mamed 10 the hrst place.
feet llmches.
+++
Today, three years later,
through daily exercise •and
carefully watchtng my food
Dear Helen :
consumptwn, my we1ght lS
I've been wtlh lh!S guy, Pete, for five years. When we're 175, wars! 38 mches, my
together, everythmg Is cool, but he's a music1an and travels a lot . arms are muscular and I do
Then the trouble begins. He won 't let me go Wlth hun because he not get out of breath when I
exerc1se or move about
says being on the road Is rough, but he calla at crazy hours - Along
with better physical
even them1ddle of lhenight - tocheckonme I can't be home all cond11lon my mental outlook
the time, and he Suspects The Worst. He starts with 20 quest10ns has 1mproved I have taken
and 1t ends up10 a fight because he just wpn't believe me. I never a new lease on llfe
pry about HIS activities.
There has been no special
I'm completely true, and he should know lh!S. Besrdes, I diet I eat about two-lhtrds
figure what he does on tour 1s his own busmess, and thmk he the amount of food l used to
The exerc1ses I do
should g1ve me lhe same kind of trust. What's w1th a man like consume
I made up as I went along.
thrs • - JUST ABOUT HAD IT
I was determmed to 1mprove
my phys1cal cond1hon
Dear JAHI
Now, 1f one older person
Perhaps Pete sus~ts YOU 'because of HIS actions. When a can do th1s others can too,
musician on lhe road meets a g~rl on lhe make, he may af- but they are not hkely to do
so. It takes an almost fanabterwards wonder, "Is MY g~rl domg this, too?"
cal
determmatwn backed by
Maybe you can cure hun by asking those "20 questions" f1rst.
your
own knowledge that unI mean, put him on the defenSive, get hun off balance, and - well less you
do something, you
at least he'lllearn how it feels to be third-degreed. - H.
are on your way out. ln the
torturous begmmng the exerCises were the worst, but
after awhtle tt became easiDear Helen.
er, and now it 1s a da1ly
The oth!!" -;-: r heard tt agam! This time on a TV Jalk show, routine I look forward to
ARE TO HOLD STUDIO HOURS IN OUR STOllE
but I've notic.: .ay men frrends react this way, too
Self-reJuvenatiOn ts p o sThe moderator said to the interviewee : "Hey man, you sure sible and worth 1t 1f a person
have a good lookrng Wlfe' " And the guy answered, "Thank you." is really interested in living
As if his w1fe's looks were something he'd accomplished! Or she
Dear Reader - Thank you
was It possession lhat people complunent him for owning, like a for your well-said prescripdog or an imported car
•
tion to prevent agrng One of
The husband should agree that h1s wife is attracllve, but he the maJor factors in agmg Is
d1suse. There ts a great deal
shouldn'ttake credit. What do you lhink? - S.V.B.
of evtdence to support your
;
pomt of v1ew. As people get
DearS
older, the amount of vttal
Actually, I hadn't thought of 11 this way before, but you've hormones produced b~ the
TO INTIIOPUCE THEIR COLO~ ART/STAY
made a good point Husbands (and "thankful" wtves, too), take adrenal glands dtmimshes .
WE Off!~ /-1/x/11- liVINGhowever 1 m most mstances
note. - H.
th1s
decrease
m
lhese
vttal
COI.ON-PONIWT
+++
hormones 1s directly related
Dear Helen
• ~Hrt!t/11 II fi'Wif/4101/YKK'Kfl) (III)(JJI
J the decrease In the
A social worker tella me lhat one of lhe problems 10volved amount ol muscles. Regular,
oiiQ(IIJ.f/llofl'lffMTf'•l(p .fi/IKCT
with unmarried teenagers keepmg the1r babies ts lhat lhey have proper . physrcal exerctse
oliOA/if11/flf
a change of heart several years later (when being--a-molher helps to stimulate the entire
•III'IIT 1111 Jva11tr -J PU rAifltY
palls) and turn them over to adoption agenc1es By this tune lhe hormone and nervous system ln add1t10n, rt helps
children have been so hurt by neglect that they're m lhe "hard to maintain the strength of th&lt;
110/U 0111(/.JOJIAI/JINGAYE. J(/Pl(IYIILI 1711/d -1-$~62
.f IJ.O~ COVR!£
adopt" category.
bones , helprng to prevent deGtiARANTii{)
It's a growrng oonCjlrn among welfare workers, for the calclflcatwn and the deform~~~~~J~ef/H
tiles
that
1!
mduces
percentage of "retutned" yourigsters IS hrgh and mcreasmg
Th1s IS a plea to unwed mothers. Be ,sure before you dec1de.
What vou have done fr
1 I '
Those sweet, cuddly bab1es grow trito tremendous rcspon- }OUl d •~ l ts also 1-flllp011 .. n .
\l
~ve n amro,al st1id1es hvvc
s•b•htws If you can'r cope, don't try - CONCERNED
,ho"n t11a1 11 }''" g•ve one

Prescription to
Prevent Aging

IN
POINT PLEASANT,
W.VA.
NEAR END OF

SHADLE BRIDGE

DIVOTID TO THE
INTEREST OF
MIIOS·MASON A.EA
CHI! STU L. TANNEHILL,
Inc. ld.
•oiiRT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Publllhld dally eoxctpt
Slluraov by Tho Ohio Volley
Publish ing Company , 111
Court Sl. Pomeroy, Ohio.
45769 8u11neas Office Phone
992 2156, Editorlol Phone 992
2157
Second clan posteg1 peld at

Pomtrny, Ohio
N l\l r nel tdvertlslng
rtpr 1 • •alive
Bottlnt/11
Gil'
• ·, Inc, 12 Eut 42na
St , '1 1 ~ 1 ''ork (lty, Ntw York
s~
~ v lptlon
ratts Dt
llvt• t ~ by cerrler where
tvalltblt 50 ctnts per Wltk,
ly Motor Route where carrier
service not avellablt One
month S1 15 B, ,. , ~ 1*" Oh"

end

w

Vt , One

v•••

51.4 00

5/)1 month I S7 25 Three
monlhl $4 50 S\lbscrlptlon
r•ct lncludlt Sundly Times
tftlir'ltl

WEDNESD.AY THRU SATURDAY
12 NOON 'TIL 8 P.M.

()JJf

Port ran Size Available from Wallets to 30x40

jf~~/t

•

,,

'

Monday's Games

Ch1cago at New York
(only game scheduled)

It will be Waverly (19-1) vs no reserved seats
The R10 Grande AA D1strtct
Alexander (lS-2) and Gallipohs
(17·3) vs. Nelsonville--York (12- should prove to be one of lhe
7) In first round Class M toughest m the slate. Waverly
DIStrict high school basketball was f1rs t In the last weekly UP!
tournament aclton at R10 statew1de poll Feb. 14.
Grande College's Lyne Center Alexander finiShed sixth m lhe
lhls week
state, and Galltpolts placed
The SEOAL champ1on 15th after holdmg down lhe
Tigers, out to win their fourlh number seven and e1ght spots
stra1ghl M Dlstr1ct '!tile, wlll several weeks.
battle powerful Alexander on
All four district finaliSts have
Tuesday, beginning at 7 30 been to the state finals m
pm.
Columbus at one tlm4! or
Coach Jim ()sborue'a Blue
another during lhe past 4ll
Devils wtll take on Ceach
years GAHS made 1t to the
VIrgil ~Dick) Grady's
semi-finals as an old Class B
Buckeyes on Wednesday,
parllc1pant in 1927 Nelsonville
beginning at 7:30 p.m.
made tt alllhe way to the finals
Winners wUJ collide for the
m the same classification in
championship of southern
1952 before consolidating wilh
Ohio on Saturday, March 10,
Buchtel-York Alexander
beginning at 7:30 p.m,
advanced to lhe old Class A
The d1str1ct wmner w11l semtfinals m 1967. Waverly
advance to the Dayton advanced to the old Class M
Regtonals, slated March 16, 17 sem1flnals in 1970
Each parllcrpatmg school
The Waverly Tigers ad·
was allocated 900 llckets for
vanced to the district by
Tuesday and Wednesday's
downing Portsmouth West
sem1fmal
aclton.
Ap· 75-53 and Wheelersburg 7&amp;-56
proximately 400 tickets w11l be
In the Lucasville Sectional.
sold at the door each mght
GAHS ousted Fa1rland 73-52
.,T1ckets are $1.25 per person, and South Pomt 67-03 m lhe
: and may be purchased locally Coal Grove Sectional
: at the h1gh school athlellc
Nelsonv11le-York, former
: d1rector's offtce. There wtll be member of the Southeastern
Ohto League, made rl by
Southwest
defeahng New Lexmgton 69-60
, Tex 83 SMU 77
• Tex A&amp;M 95 TCU 82
and Vinton County 47--43 m lhe
:. Ark 105 Rice 79
Federal-Hockmg Sectional.
' Tex Tech 77 Baylor 74
Albany of Alexander
~ Tulsa 97 Wichita St 91
.. Corpus Chmtl 86 Pan Am 80
remamed alive by thumpmg
• Olda 60 Kan 58
Oak
Htll80-30 and H11laboro 84'
u\
•
West
62 m the Waverly Sectional.
" UCLA 51 Slanford 45
Waverly and GAHS are
Utah 86 Brigham Young 71
members of the Southeastern
,. Ar l• 84 Wyo 82
- N M St 102 W Texas St 63
Ohto League. Nelsonville-York
~ A F 64 Denver 57
Is a member of the Tn-Valley
Colo St. 87
League. Alexander 1s an mN.M. 60
65
dependent
Art W. Lanham, Rio
Grande College coach, will
serve as
tournament
manager. BUI Grey Is the
tournament's sports In·
formation director,
No pep bands, noise makers,
s1gns or banners are permitted. All tournament officials must have proper
passes Doors will be open one
hour pnor to game time each
night.
Your

.

Price MVP; Noe
First Team

'

m·····m···.

..........,
o;....................
........................~.,....
.......·.···w·
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• ..,..;•·•.-••••·!&gt;'''''~''"'
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••• •••

College Scores
By Un1ted Pres• tnternahonal

Tournaments and Conferen&lt;:e

Playolfs
NAJA Playoffs
( D•strlct 4)
Sam Hstn St. 61 St. Mary Tex
54
Southern Conference Playoff
(final round)
Furman 99 Dav1dson 81

Middle Atlantic Conference
Unlv D1v Playoff
(final round)
St Jsph 's 70 Temple 60
East
Providence 93 St John -NY 90
Vermont 82 BrandeiS 78
Columb•a 73 Yale 71
Penn 74 Darlmouth 46
Rutgers 81 Pe"" St 52
Princeton 90 Harvard 79

Boston Col 78 Seton Hall 76 ot
Conn 66 Boston U 53
Williams 85 Amherst 63
Bryant 74 Boston St 71
Holy Cross 119 R I 117
Mass 72 Fordham 59
Buffalo 91 Roches fer 90
Navy 110 Sl Franm NY 80
Midwest
Notre Dame 73 S C 69
Mo. 79 Okla St 73
Wls 94 Mich 79
Kan St. 97 Neb 70
Mlch St 86 N'wsn 72
Akron 70 Central M1ch 65
Mmn 79 Purdue 66

Kent St 75 Oh1o U 71
Toledo 59 Bowling Green 40
St Louis 70 Memphis St. 56
Augustana 70 N D 67
M1aml 0. 71 Wsn M1ch 68
OSU 65 Ill 64
lnd 80 Iowa 64

All-games
standings
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Waver Iy
19 1 1439 1053
Gallipolis
17 3 1352 1008
South Point 14 6 1393 1113
Chesapeake 14 7 1363 1127
Fed Hocking 13 7 1185 1128
Portsmouth 12 8 1360 1320
Athens
11 a 1070 977
Me1gs
II 9 1212 12 14
Logan
9 10 1221 1182
Ironton
5 14 1075 1172
Jackson
5 15 1004 1302
Wellston
0 19 1032 1608
Saturday's Results
Gallipolis 67 South Pomr 63
Waverly 70 Wheelersburg 56
Chillicothe 72 Portsmouth 58
Crooksville 71 Fed Hocking 69
Nels- York 47 Vinton County 43
Alexander 84 Hillsboro 62
Porlsmouth ND 86 South
Websler 67
Peebles 71 Western 50
Ross SE 62 Bishop Flaget 59
(AA DISTRICT AT RIO)
Tuesday•s Game·

Waverly vs Alexander. 7 30
pm
Wednesday's Game:
Gallipolis vs Nelsonville York,
7 30 p m
Sslurday's Game
Championship game. 7 30 p m

Other repeaters to thrs yea~'s
squad include J elf Hannon of
Ironton, Jun Pierce of Logan
and B11l Maloy of Waverly, who
were all third team members
one year ago
Only four players, Price,
Oyer, Shoemaker and P1erce
were Wiammous selections

Sectional
box scores
(AI Rio Grande)
Chillicothe ~ 72) - Blake 1-24, Ratzlaff 6--4-16, Ray 2-3-7;
Bayless 11-0-22; Gause 3-2-ll,
Beverly 5-0-10; Gatbff 1-3-5
Totals 29--14-72.
Portsmouth
(58)
Wllliamson 2--4-ll; Spnggs 2-4-ll,
Clemens 6-1·13; McGlone 4-0-8;
McCoy 2-1-5; Oliver 4-0-8 and
Wh1te 3-2-ll Totals 23-12-58.
By Quarters :
Chllhcothe
17 22 16 17- 72
Portsouth
9 18 14 17---56
~At Lucasville)

Waverly ~70) - Shoemaker
5-5-15; Salyers 6-6--18; Oyer 5-212, Maloy 3-1-7; Thompson
4-il-14, Pfiefer 1-2-4, Totals 2422·70.
Wheelersburg ~56) - Fanmn
3-5-11, Thomas 2-5-9; Jusllce 10-2, Race 1-0-2; Day 9-0-18;
Valley 6-0-12, Stanley 1-0-2
Tolals 23-10-56.
By Quarters :
Waverly
11 11 20 28--70
Wheelersburg 14 8 15 19-56
,
(AtStewart)
Nelsonvllle·Vort' (i_7) ";::_
Pr1tchard 4-3--11; Smathers 8-319; Koker 2-2-6, Wright 3-0-8,
Pitts 1-1-3; Coe 1'0-2. Totals 199-47.
VInton County ~ 43) - Caudtll
6-2-14, Pndemore 7·1·15 ,
Barber 4-0-8; Hale 1-0-2,
Eberts 1-ll-2; N1ce 1-0-?. , Tolals
20-3--43.
By Qua!'lers:
Nels-York
10 9 14 14-47
Vm Cty
10 16 6 9-43

...

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s~:·

·-===:::~::::-::::::::.

1972-73 All-SEOAL Dream Team
FIRST TEAM

PLAYER-SCHOOL

G•l Pn ce Gall•t&gt;olls--

J•m Noe. Gallipolis

Waverly and Gallipolis, a pair of exciting Ed Thompson, Waverl y
basketball teams which finished one-two in the John Shoemaker , Wa verly
Southeastern Ohio League, completely dommated
SECOND TEAM
the 1972·73 All·SEOAL Team selected in Jackson on Mark Mace, Athens
Je1f Hannon , Ironton
Sunday, Feb. 25.
Jtm Pterce, logan
Members of the SEO Sportswriters and Broad· Jtm Boggs, Me1gs
casters Association picked Jim Osborne of B•ll Maloy, Waverly
THIRD TEAM
Gallipolis as Coach Of The Year and Gil Price of Dan Morrow, Jack son
Randy Norns , Logan
Gallipolis as the Most Valuable Player.
~111 L.haney, Me1gs
Pr1ce, a 6--4 jumor, joms
teammate Jun Nae on the f1rst
team Wllh three outslandmg
Waverly Tigers -Mike Dyer,
Ed Thompson and John
Shoemaker.
WilhB1ll Maloy named to lhe
second team, Dave Salyers to
lhe thlrd team, and Doug
Pfeifer on honorable mentton'
lhe Tigers f1rst srx players
received all-loop honors
Waverly's championship
team was so well balanced
that the starling five all
averaged between 11 and I&amp;
poinla In posting a 14-ll
league record and 17·1
regular season mark In all
games.
In wmnmg the Most Valuable
player award, Price beat out
teammate Jun Noe, along w1th
Waverly 's John Shoemaker
and last year's MVP, Mtke
Oyer
Oyer 1s the lone f1rst team
holdover from 1972 whlle Pr1ce
moved up from the second
team un1t.

~'&gt;X-!il'o

··=·=.=.:·=-=·======:::·::=:::-:::::::~::-=::~::*=:::::~:=:*:::: ..:~:=:::::::. ·=~~:::::. ··===·:::

M1ke Oyer, Waverly

mm
m

Nelsonville-York

.-

Master Portrait

WHA Standings
By Unltod Press International
East
wltpts gf ga
Cleve
37 25 2 76
New Eng 35 26 2 72
Phlla
30 34 o 60 237 265
New York 29 36 I 59 ~~
Quebec 27 32 5 59
Oltawa 27 36 4 58 233 271
West
wltpfsgf ~~
Wonnlpeg 40 23 3 83 247 1
Houston 33 28 4 70 742 225
Mlnnsta 32 30 3 67 213 223
Los Ang 30 31 5 6S 223
Alberta 28 33 2 58 219 ~~
Ch1cago 24 38 1 49 205 236
Sunday's Results
Philadelphia 4 New York 2
Quebec 6 Houston 3
Winnipeg 2 Los Angeles 1
Oltawa 6 Chicago 4
M1nnesota 4 New England 2
(only games scheduled)

Three Marauders on All SEO team

'

12· 55 - NBC News 3, 15

r·oo - News 3, All My Children 6 13 , Green Acres 10; Secret
Slorm 8, Not for Women Only 15
1 20 - Fashions In Sewing 3.
1 30 - Three On A Match 3, 4, 15, Let's Make A Deal 6, 13, As
The World Turns 8, 10.
2 oo - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Douglas 6 , Guiding Light B, 10
2 30 - Doctors3, 4, 15, Dating Game 13. Edge of NightS. 10.
3 00 - Another World 3, 4, IS, General Hospital 6. 13. World
Press20, Love Is A Many Splendored Thing 8, 10.
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15, One Life to Live 6, 13.
Secret Stcrm 10, Maggie &amp; The Beautiful Machine 20. Merv
Griffin 8
4 oo - Mister Cartoon 3, Love American Style 13. Fllntstones6.
Merv Grlflln 4; Somerset 15, Sesame St. 20, 33. Movie
"House of Numbers" 10
4 30 - Petticoat Junction 3, I Love Lucy 6, Daniel Boone 13,
Gilligan's Island 8, Dick Van Dyke 15
s 00 - Dan~el Boone 6, Mr Rogers 20, 33, Bonan•a 3, 4, HazelS,
Andy Griffith 15 .
5 30 - ' Electric CO. 33, 'Gomer Pyle \3, Mlo¥s~all Dillon 15 ,
Hodgepodge Lodge; 20; Beverly Hillbillies 8.
6 00- News3, 4, B, 10, 13, 15, Truth or Con seq 6, Sesame St 20.
Around The Bend 33
6 30- News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15 , I Dream of Jeannie 13, Growing
Him Up 33
J
7 00- What's My Line 8, Truth or Conseq. 3. News 8, 10; Un
tamed World 13 , TV Honor Soclely 15; Electric Co 20; Beat
The Clock 4
7 30- This Is Your Llfe3 , To Tell The Truth 6, Price Is Right 8,
10 , Beat The Clock 13, RFD 20, Great Decisions '73 33 , Circus
4, Andy Griffith 15
8 00 - Olllo Thl~ Week 20, Temperatures Rising 6, 13, Movie
• The President's Analysl" 3, 4, 15, Maude 8, 10, Book Beat
33
8 30 - Hawaii F1ve 0 8, 10, Bill Boyers Journal20 , Mov•e "The
Letters" 6, 13
9 00 - Behind the L1nes 20, ~
9 30 - Black Journal20, 33, Movie "Crime Club" B. 10
10 00 - News 20, Biography 33; Marcus Welby MD 6. 13. First
Tuesday 3, 4, 15
11 00 - News3, 4, 6, 10, 13,15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Jack Paar 6. 13. Movies "Then

NHL Stoncllng's
By United PrHS lnternotlonal
Eosl
w 1 t pis gt go
Montreal 43 8 14 roo 212 147
NY Rngru2 17 6 90 258 167
Boston 41 19 5 87 275 200
Buffalo 33 22 10 76 223 178
Detroit 32 22 11 75 218 196
Toronto 21 33 9 51 194 213
Vancouvr 17 42 8 42 193 299
NY lslndrs 9 53 5 23 139 304
West
w I I pts gf ga
Chicago 36 22 8 110 240 192
Phil a
31 26 9 71 247 222
Mlnnesot 31 26 8 70 211 191
St Louis 27 28 10 64 191 205
Plltsbgh 27 32 7 61 212 212
Los Ang 26 J 1 9 61 194 214
Atlanta 24 29 13 61 169 190
Calli
36 163 279
1 11 41 14
Suncloy's Results
Boston 4 Chicago 0
Montreal 4 Buffalo 2
Philadelphia 10 Toronto o
Vancouver 4 NY Rangers 3
Minnesota 5 Plltsburgh 2
Atlanta 3 California 2
Delroll5 NY Islanders 1
(only games scheduled)
Monday's Games
(no games scheduled)

Blue Devils get

Tomorrow 8, 10

MARCH 7, 8, 9, 10 ..

The Dilly Sentinel

NBA Stoncllngs
By Unltld l'ress lnlorMHo.. l
hstem Conference
Allonllc Division
Bo 1
w I. pet g.b.·
s on
·ss 13 .809
New York
51 21 708 6
~uh:ralo
19 49 .279 36
a
9 62 .127 47'1•
Contra! Division
w I. pet g.b.
Baltimore
44 24 .647
At Ionia
40 30 .571 5
Houston
27 42 .391 17'1•
Cleve
24 44 .353 19 1h
Western Conference
Midwest Dlvls1on
w. I pet g.b.
Mllwke
49 22 .686
Chicago
45 24 .652 2'1•
Detroit
32 37 .464 15112
KC-Omaha
33 40 .452 16'1•
Pac1flc Division
w. I Dcl. a.b.
Los Ang
S1 18 .739
~~doennStfx 1 41 28 594 10
32 37 464 19
Seallle
23 49 319 30V•
Portland
17 52 246 34
Sunday's Results
Baltimore 106 New York 97
Atlanta 138 Philadelphia 130
Milwaukee 116 Houston 101
Boston 125 Buffalo 113
Ch1cago 118 Phoenix 117
Los Angeles 127 Cleveland 84
Detroit 113 Portland 109
(only games scheduled)
~nday's Game•
!no games scheduled)
- ABA Standing•
By United Pres• International
'II
East
w. I pel. g.b.
Carolina
52 21 .712
Kentucky
46 26 .639 5'1,
Virginia
35 34 .507 15
New York
27 45 375 24V&gt;
Memphis
22 50 306 29'1•
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
Utah
45 25 643
Indiana
42 30 583 4
Denver
39 32 549 6'1•
Dallas
24 44 353 20
San Diego
23 48 324 22'1•
Sunday's Results
Carollna123 New York 111
Kentucky 121 Memphis 91
Indiana 121 Dallas 118
Denver 133 Utah 12S (of)
San Diego 115 VIrginia 110
Monday's Games
Virginia al Ulah
(only game scheduled)

Dave Salyers, Waverly

Dave Souders, Wellston

(AI Lucasville l
By Un1led Press lnlernational
Waverly 70 Wheelersburg 56
Saturday
tAt Mar~ettal
(Class AAA)
River Local 55 Pholo 47
IAI Bowling Green)
Morgan 91 Meadowbrook 76
Celma 63 Wapakonela 52
IAI New Philadelphia)
AI Toledo)
Toledo Sl Johns 67 Toledo West Holmes 54 We st
Mu sk mgum 53
DevilbiSs 47
tAt Ashlabulal
Toledo Sl Franc•s 65 Sylvan ia
Ashlabula Harbor 50 Ashlabula
61
Sf John 49
(At Ashland)
(AI Elyr~a)
Mansf1eld Sen1or 66 Ashland 65
(of)
Elyr~a Calhol• c 10 North
Ridgeville 8
(AI Salem)
(Class A)
Youngslown North 63 East
(At 51 Marys)
Paleshne 60
Fl Recovery 72 Ridg emont 55
(At R1oGrande)
(At Van Wert)
Chillicothe 72 Porlsmoulh 58
Lmcoln V1ew 59 Spencerville 41
(At Steubenville)
!At ottawa)
Cambr~dge 58 East L1verpool
Continental 69 Fort Jennmgs 61
55
(At Flndtayl
Zanesv•lle 58 Dover 53
Upper Sc1oto Valley 67 Ada 55
(At Cleveland JFKl
(At Bryan)
Cleveland JFK 53 Cleve
Stryker 76 Montpelier 66
Benedictine 47
(AI Patrick Henry)
(At Cleveland L•ncoln West)
Ciev Sf lgnahus 85 Cleve Holgate 60 Ayersville 58
(AI Fostoml
Wesl Tech 42
Mohawk 68 Bettsville 58
(At Baldwin Watlacel
(AI W1Uardl
M1dpark 76 Garfield He•ghts 51
Man s St Peter 68 South
(AI Eastlake Norlhl
Central66 (of)
Wickliffe 51 Mentor 46
(At Nelsonville-York)
(At Lorain)
Crooksville 71 Federal Hockmg
Loreln 58 North Olmsled 55
69
!Class AA)
(At Hillsboro)
Elyna 58 North Olmsted 55
Peebles 71 Western !P1kel 50
(AI Lima Shawnee)
!AI Portsmouth)
Coldwater 86 El1da 76
Portsmouth Notre Dame 86
!At Dehance)
Delphos St Joh11 80 Wayne South Webster 57
!At Chillicothe)
Trace 69
Ross
Southeastern
62
(At Napoleon)
Ch1111cothe BIShop Flaget 59
Archbold 55 Bryan 40
(AI North Ridgeville)
tAt Northwood)
Lake 58 Toledo Cardmal Cleve Lvtheran Wesl 58
Cuyahoga He1ghls 51
Slntch 48
!At Gallon)
T1lfm Calvert 55 Col Crawford
52
(AI Sandusky)
Clyde 72 Mar9aretta 57
South
!At Manst1eld Malabar)
Md
92
Va
81
Ontar~o 49 Shelby 45
Vanderbilt 86 Tenn 74
(AI Columbus)
Ky St 90 Grambling 76
Teays Valley 91 Circleville 70 Lou1svllle
66 Drake 60
(At Waverly)
LSU
70
MISS
69
Alexander 84 Hillsboro 62
Ala
92
M1ss
Sf
87
(At Coal Grovel
N
C
St
100
Wake
Foresl 77
GallipoliS 67 South Po1nt 63
Fla
St
112
Mercer
94
!At Federal Hocking)
N C 72 Duke 70
Nelsonville York 47 Vmton Austm
Pear 75 Murray St. 73
County 43

HT. YR.
64
Jr
63
Sr
63
Sr
62
Sr
6I
Jr
6I
6I

Jr
Sr
Jr
Sr
Sr

6I

Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr

511
59
6-2
63

61

62

58

HONORABLE MFNTION
ATHENS- Andy Chonko. GALLIPOLis-Mark K1eslmq ,
IRONTON - Ken Green, JACKSON- Tom Conroy LOGANJell Campbell , MEIGS - Mike Sayre. WAVERLY- Doug
Pfe1fer, WELLSTON - Charlie Snare
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
Gil Pr1ce - GallipOliS
COACH OF THE YEAR
J•m Osborne- Galhpohs

The 15 man team mcludes 11
seniors and four Jumors
Twenty-five players were
nominated for the three
teams and honorable
menllon. Twenty-three made
It and will be honored at the
Ali-8EOAL banquet, to be
held in Waverly In April.
In gutdmg h1s Blue Devrls to
a 15-3 season record, Coach
Osborne became the flrst
GAHS mentor to show 15
v1ctones m a regular season
smce B1ll Camthers' 1935-56
~am 17 years ago
Last year Osborne and
Waverly 's veteran coach,
Carroll Ha whee , were named
co-coaches of the year.
Attendmg lhe meetmg to a1d
m the selectron of the team

tourney results

were the etght head coaches,
Charhe McAfee, Athens; J1m
Osborne, Galhpolis; Paul Alk·
man, Ironton; AI Berger,
Jackson; Scott Fitzgerald ,
Logan, Carl Wolfe, Me1gs; Bob
Hootman, Wellston, and
Carroll Hawhee of Waverly
Members of the med1a
assoc1ahon attending and
casllng ballots were B11l Grey
and Od1e O'Donnell, Galltpohs;
Bob Roberts, Meigs ; Tom
Metiers and Don Voltz,
Athens , Earl James, Wav·
erly, Bob Wtllis, SIS Baker
and Tom Evans, Wellston; AI
Eisnaugle and Pete Wilson,
Jackson; Frank Houston and
Don Saul, Ironton, and Roger
Hmeman and Harold Roach,
Logan.

Tourney Pairings

Do Yourself

Class A
Wednesday- Galhpohs (17.
~At Chillicothe)
3) vs Nelsonv1lle-York (12-7)
Tuesday- Crooksville (9-14) 7 30 p.m.
vs Ross ( 14-9), 7 30 p m
Saturday- Ftnals, 7 30 p m
Wednesday - Chesapeake Wmner to Dayton Reg10nals
(14-7) vs. Peebles (21·1) 9 p m
ClassAAA
Portsmouth Notre Dame (17-4)
(AI Athens)
vs Tuesday mght wmner at
Friday- Miam1 Trace (14-6)
7 30 p m Two Ch1lhcothe vs Cambridge (6--13) 7 30 p m.
wmners advance to Athens
Zanesville
( 12-6)
vs.
Reg10nals
Chllllcothe (17-3) 8 4&gt; p m
~ ~ • (,:lid :\A
•
Sallln!ay - Fmals at 7:30
(At Rio Grande)
p m Winner advances to
Tuesday - Waverly (19-1) Columbus Reg10nals
vs Alexander (lS-2) 7 30p.m.

A Flavor/
Drive In for a delicious sundae, shake,
malt or cone. Let us fill your party
needs, too.

McCLURE'S
4th &amp; Locust

P92-5248

'M iddleport, 0.

Alexander ~ 84) - Brown 5-212; Wh1te 7-3--17; Brooks 8-0-16;
Ervm 6-7-19 , D1shong 3-2-l!;
Dlllinger 2-0-4; Gllkey 1-0-2;
Thomas 1-2--4, Gliders 0-2·2,
Totals 33-18-84.
Hillsboro (62)- Vance 0-2-2,
Roush 1-0-2; A Jewett 1-0-2;
Ba1ley 2-0-4, Lanmer 3-5-11,
Coffman 1-0-2, D Jewett 13-733, Turner 2-2-6, Totals 23·1662.
By Quarters:
Alexander
20 20 17 27--ll4
t111lsboro
10 14 14 24-62
GIRLS LOSE
RACINE - Soulhern High
School's gtrls basketball team
Satw day lost to Belpre 52-23m
the openmg round of the
Southeastern Ohto G1rls
Basketball Tournament

2-HOUR
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By Ihe end ot this century, lhe waters ot our world may be llfetess Since the bevlnnlng of thl1
century, contamlnallng wasles dumped Into our lakes, rivers and streams have Increased 600%.
Fish are dying And the water we drink doesn't taste ~u•le the same
We hove a very few years to reverse1hls ugly trend II sa Job for people For people In govern·
ment and major 1ndustry For mdependen1 businessmen like us. For mdlv•duals, like you It's a lob
lor all of us, lor all people who en10Y the water and reall•e how much 11 means to file
II requires so lillie ellorl Simply never lhrow trash In the water or anywhere near II Report
malor cases ot water pollution lo authorities Always sel an example for others
Water without !ish smelling and clogged wl1h IIIIer, IS the only allerna11ve We 1h•nk lha1 your
grandchildren, and ours, deserve beller

'

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Discuss y-our
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•

�1-The Dilly Senlinel,Mlddlepoft.Pimeroy, o., March a; 1973

Abernathy threatens ren·ewed ca1npaign
.
.

OXFORD, Ohio (UP!)
Southern Chrjstian Leader~ip
Conference Director Rev.
Ralph Abema!hy, angered at
the Nixon adl)linistration's
cutback of Office of Economic
Opportunity (OEO) programs,
said Saturday night "if Mr.
Nixon is allowed to proceed,
this nation wUI eiperience the
"""" aII over
ho t summers oI lorvw
again."
Abernathy said the SCLC
was organizing marches on
statehouses in several states
and a march in Washington,

D.C. on April 4 "to take cutbacks." April 4 is the fifth
anni·versary
of
the
assassination of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., former head
of the.SCLC,
Abernathy, calling the April
4 marches the "spring offen. sive" of the SCLC, said "244
years of slavery and 100 years
L t
"J._. 'separa t·C"IIU
-equaI' didn't .
stop us and Richard M. Nixon
isn't going to stop us either."
"I am deeply concerned over
the course the Nixon .administration is following," he said.

deepen the desP.air in the .a!- light for equality 1and J~ce
ready depressing ghettoes for all AmericaliB, regatdl11111
throughout the nation. .
of whether they are bl*«lk af
"I owe no allegiance to any white, Chicanos; . Puetto
political party," Abernathy Ril:ans, Indians or whatever."
said. "The Republicans have Abernathy addressed about'ilo
failed us and the Demo- persons at a Black Cl!lture
cratshavetakenus lor granted Week program· at Miami Uni.
and tricked us. We all have to verslly ·
·
.
-~··,v.w.·.·····~·m.'om!''""
.
,
w'
•
"'''''l•',...'i!'''''""'f,OO""'"'''~';';««&lt;•-"&lt;•:&lt;•:•r.&lt;•:•.&lt;&lt;m:;:::;::~-;:;::::::::::;:;::*;::::::~::::~:::::;:&gt;.
-::r-:.:-;~:::::&gt;,X::::::::;:;:::o:o::s::;:::
':!, •,:*:::~
, .....,.,, , , o, , , o •• • •'•'o'O"o'o"•'• •'• ,•,•o:oo"§:i,
o, o ;-;•,, ,.,.,....,, .,•, •'•, ,,
o o, o ::!::~=::::::::::-:,
.. o,,, •• • • -."~.::::::&gt;&gt;.:::::::::~::::::=::::::-~:::::::?.~*!::;:;:;:;:;z::~w.~
• o, !0:0, o oo• • • • • • . ,o:;, • • • • • ••
· · .. · .. · .. .. .. ..
·
.
·
"The cutback of the OEO pJogram is alarming and spelling.
"This is clear evidence that
Mr. ·Nixon is insensitiye to the
needs of poor people. His proposed 'cutback in the area of
health will reduce the life expectancy of this nation. The
freeze on new housing will only

EASTERN'S FRESHMAN BASKETBALL SQUAD- Eastern's freshman squad ended its
season with a ~record . The team was coached by Larry Heines. Front row, 1-4, Gary
U!ngenette, Dana Fick, Brian Conde, George Pickens, and Jeff Holter; back row, Steve
Nelson, Don Eichinger, Jim Landon, Dave Good, Dan Hannum and Larry Heines, coach.

·-

J"'34

.,

.,
EASTERN RESERVES - Eastern's reserve squad ended its season with a 5-13 record
losing five games by only ?points. Front row, 1-r, Greg Bailey and Rick Hollon; back row. Mike
Larkins, Steve Goebel, Randy Orr, Philip Bowen and Dave Weber. Coach 'of the team was
Mark Vennis.

GAHS staves off late Pointer
rally to cop Sectional meet
Gallipolis captured the
school's first Class AA Sectional Tournament championship at Coal Grove
Saturday night by turning back
a fired-up South Point quintet,
67-63.
Four consecutive free throws
by 6-4 junior center Gil Price
with less than three minutes
remaining and two key iayups
by 6-3 Senior forward Jimmy
Noe in the !ina! 90 seconds
choked off a late Pointer rally
to preserve the Blue Devils
lead and eventual victory.
By winning, the lads of Coach
Jim Osborne advanced to the
Rio Grande Class AA District
Tournament, to be held this
week at Lyne Center. GAHS
drew Nelsonville-York Sunday
afternoon, and will meet the
Buckeyes in a semifinal round
game at 7;30 p.m., on Wednesday.
Defending champion
Waverly drew Alexander in
the other semifinal battle.
Those two teams will collide
at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday at
Lyne Center.
In Saturday's AA Sectional
final at Coal Grove, it looked
like GAHS was going to push
Coach Mike Hughes' Pointers
into the nearby Ohio River in
the early goiqg.
After spotting the Ohio
Valley Conference champions
a 2-0 lead following the opening
tip, Mark Kiesling's long
jumper (6: 30 ) and Topper
Orr's tipin (5:58) put 'the
Galiians ahead to stay.
Abalanced GAHS attack, led
by Kiesling's six markers, shot
the Blue Devils into a 19·9 first
period lead.
The Blue Devils continued
their assault in the second
canto, increasing their lead to
23-9 before the Pointers broke a
scoreless s ~a n of 3:09 on a tipin
by Rick Sharp. The Devils
outscored SP \2.() during that
spurt.
Noe's layup doubled the
score on the Pointers with 1:11
left in the hslf, 34-17. GAHS
held a 36-19 halftime advantage. Price led Gallia's
second period attack with eight
points.
South Point used a zone press
and man-to-man defe nse
throughout the second hail
after having been forced from
a zone .by the Gallians' sizzling

outside shooting in the first
half.
At first, the ,press didn't
bother the Gallians as they
increased their lead to 19
points, 44-25, with 4:o3
remaining in the third stanza.
That was Gaiiia's biggest lead
of the night.
However, with lour fouls
each on the. Devils' 6-1 senior
forward Topper Orr ahd lanky
Gil Price, the tide began to turn
in favor of the Pointers.
Price went out with 6:54
left in the third period. He
was replaced by lanky 6-4
senior Skipper Johnson, who
pcrlorm-.d tremendously for
the Gallians. Orr was
replaced by Mike Berridge
with three minutes left.
Berridge, a junior forward,
chipped in with two important rebounds to help the
Devils cause.
But constant pressure applied by the sometime overaggressive Poir.ter defenders
forced the Galiians in to turnover a£ter turnover, and
within a span of nine minutes
and 57 seconds, the Pointers
cut a 19-point deficit down to
. one, &gt;8-57 , outscoring the
Gallians 32-14.
Price returned after sitting
out 9;()5 of the third and fourth
periods, and the South Point
comeback fizzled before the
Hughcsmen could overtake the
Gaiiians.
In that hectic four th period,
it was the outside shooting of 59 senior guard Kev Morris
which nearly killed the

Gallians . Morris tallied 12 of
his 16 markers during the
Pointer comeback.
Kenny Hurst, one of the
finest cagers to perform
against GAHS this winter,
chipped.in with six big markers
in the final stanza .
The Pointers blanked
GAHS 10-0 early in the final
period to cut Gallla's lead to
56-51 with 4:03 left in the
game.
Noe's layup made it &gt;8-51
before two goals by Hurst and
one by Morris cut it to 58-57
with 2:56 remaining.
Price then canned two free
throws at the 2:31 mark, and
added two more charily tosses
at the 1:56 mark following
three consecutive Pointer
turnovers. That made it 62..57.
Noe worked loose lor an easy
layup at the I :33 mark. Morris
countered with a long bomb at
the I ; 20 mark. Noe again
eluded his man for a .layup with
48 seconds left to make it 66..59.
Morris countered with a bomb
at the 0:31 mark. Mark
Kiesling's free throw with five
seconds completed Gallia's
scoring. Marty Patrick
dropped in a long jumper at the
buzzer.
•
Gallipolis upped its mark to
17-3. The Pointers bowed out
with a respectable 14-li season
record .
The torrid first half shooting
by GAHS and an air-tight
defense caught the Pointers off
guard. In that first half, GAHS
hit 16 of ~ from the field for 65
pet. and. limited the Pointers to

SOUTH POINT POINTERS 1631
PLAYER- Pos.
FG+A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Ken Hu rst, g
11 ·16
). j
1
7
7 23
Kev Morris, g
8·13
o: o 4 4 3 16
Marty Patrick. f
3· 8
o, a 1 2 2 6

RlckSharp.f
Bob Winlers. c
Ron Tennanl . f
Ron Schrlller,

1· 3

0· 2

o

1

2

2

O· 0
2
1
1
o
5· 10
4. 6
5 10
6 JA
1· 3
O· 0
4
0
0
2
TOTALS
29-66
5-15 18 25 21. 63
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS 1671
PLAYER- Pos,
FG·A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Mike Berridge, I
o. ·o o. o o 2 0 0
Mark Kesling, g
•· 6
1. 2
3
3
6 9
Jim Nlday, g
o. o o. o o o I 0
Jimmy Noe, f
10. 14
6· 9
2
8
4 26
Topper Orr . f
4· 5
o. 1 5 7 3 8
Gi l Price. c
5· 8
4. 4
4 13
1
14
Kev Sheets. g
1. 5
o. 1 1 1 8 2
Ski pper Johnson, c
4. 6
O· o o 3
0
8
TOTALS
28-44 11 · 17 H :. ; 2) 1.1
Score By Quarters :
So uth Poi nt Pointe rs
,
9 10 20 24- 63
GAHS Blue Devils
19 17 14 · 17- 61
Official ~- Ove rl y ttn d Neuman, Portsmouth Chapter.

u. J

nine of 30 attempts for 30 pel.
GAHS shot 63 pet. for the
night, blttlug 28 of 44. The
Pointers were 29 of 66 lor 43
pet. At the foul ~lrcles,
GAHS was 11 of 17 for 64 pet.
South Point actually lost It at
the foul line, bitting only live
of 15 for 33.3 pet.
Ron Tennant, who had the
assignment of guarding Noe,
fouled out with 4:31jleft. N~
scored 10 of his 26 game-high
points in the final period.
Gallia's Topper Orr fouled out
with 39 seconds left in the
game. Hurst led SP with 23
points.
GAHS controlled the boards
with 3'i rebounds compared to
South Point's ~ snags. Price
hsuled down 13 to lead GAHS in
that department. Tennant
grabbed 1() for the winners, six
in the third period when Price
was on the bench.
GAHS played errorless ball
in the first period, but had eight
turnovers in the second, seven
in the third and eight more in
the fourth lor a near-season
high of 23. South Point had 21
turnovers, four in the final
moments of the game.
Last time GAHS participated In the district
tournament was In 1954.55.
The Devils heat Marietta 8367 in a lone sectional outing
at Athens, then lost 61-58 to
Greenfield in their district
opener at Athens, Tbe GAHS
squad of 18 years ago
compiled the school's best
overall woil-lost· mart, 2t-Z.
Prior to 1955, .area teams
went direclly to the district
without sectional eliminations.
The 1955-56 GAHS team got
to the sectional finals at Athens
before .losing 56-49 to the
Athens Bulldogs. Last year's
Blue Devils reached the
Symmes Valley Sectional
!ina ts· before bowing out to
Ironton, 57..52.
Otherwise, it's been a long
dry spell in district tournament
play for Blue Devil roundbailers. The Osbornemen hope
to change ,that situation later
this week.

from noon to 6 p.m. Several of
the woman's club volunteered ·
to give blood.
Other points made by Blake:
- Blood not used for transfusions is separated into
component parts. Plasma,
which can be frozen for one
year, is used for control of mild
bleeding in hemophilia; fresh
whole blood (no more than an
hour old) is used to make the
components
(cryoprecipitates): lor acute bleeding of hemophilia and
platelet concentrates; fpr
treatment of leukemia;
gamma globulin for prevention
and modification of measles
and
hepatities;
serum
albumin, emergency treatment for shock, and
replacement oflost proteins, as
in kidney and liver diseases,
A GIFT WAS presented by
the' president, Mrs, Robert T,
(Peggy) Gurtis, to the guest
speaker.
Mrs.
Charles
Dodd,
Community Improvement,
chairman, said the Woman's
Club wiD canvass tbe town in
March for lands to keep the
Bloodmobile in Mason
County.
A card of thanks to the club
was acknowledged from Mr,
and Mrs. !(obert Gurtis of New
Haven. Mr. Gurtis' perents
died within a few 'days of each
other; also, a letter was read
from Mrs. Unda Young, asking
to be re-instated.
Mrs. Charles Smith will be
chairman of a barbecue to be
held soon.
Mrs. Gurlis displayed
beautiful handmade com,
memorative plates which
depicts a complete and moving
"Portrait of Liberty." These
plates which will be in a series
of four will be released each
year for lour consecutive
years, 1973-1974-1975-1976.
The sale of these plates is a
four year project which will be
conducted by the General
Federation of Women's Club in
coordination with the Bicentennial Celebration of the
United States of America.
These beautiful handmade
commemorative plates are
being designed and produced
for the GFWC by the
prestigious Fenton Art Glass
Company of Williamstown.
Mrs. Kermit V. Haugan,
President, General Federation
of Women's Clubs presented
the first Bicentennial Plate to
our Nation's First Lady, Mrs.
.Richard M. Nixon at the White
House on December 5, 1972.
At the opening of the dinner
meeting,
Mrs .
Donald
Bumgardner, presented
devotionals. Hostesses were
Mrs . 'Donald Bumgardner,
Mrs . Harold Bumgardner,
Mrs. Charles Smith and Mrs.
Robert HickeL Saint Patrick's
Day decorations were used on
the dining ·tables.
Registering were Mr. Dwight
E. Blake, Mrs. Dan Edwards,
Mrs. Herman Knapp, Mrs.
Karl Wiles, Mrs. Charles Dodd,
Mrs. Richsrd Linden, Mrs.
Gary Batey, M~s. Frank White,
Mrs. Diane Hickel, Mrs .
Eugene Hester, Mrs. George
Ingels, Mrs. Mark Ward, Mrs.
Kenneth Thompson, Mrs .
Robert Gurtis, Mrs. Donald
Bumgardner, Mrs. Tom
Hoffman, Mrs. Thelma Scally,
Mrs. Emo Wood, Mrs, John
Wolfe,. Mrs. F. C. Reichert, .
Carol Roush, Myra Roush,
Hilda Smith, Dorothy James,
Mrs . Harold Baumgardner,
Mrs. James C. Drake, Mrs. R.
G. Greene, and Mrs. J. Marshall.
Thursday Nightlndustriot
Won Lost
K&amp;C Jewelers
48
24
Team 4
46
26
Midwest Steel
44
2B '
Landmark
36
36
Mil hone Sollie
22
50
Superior
·
20
52
High Ind . Game- Raymond
Roach 234, Jerry Black 213.
High Series - Raymond
Roach 585, Bill Boyles 551.
Team High Game

ByMRB.JAMESCARPENTER
.
" Rutlalld Friendly Gardeners
.
Celebrate A!'bor Day '73, on Friday, April p, and help
protect our evnironrne1J( by 'planting trees. To assist' you, the
Ohio AssOciation of·Garden Clubs, Inc., and The. Ohio Dep!ll't,
ment pi Natural Reso\Jrces are selling spruce seedlings at'cost.
Orders
be accepted from any individual or organization.
The orders !Will be combined, and the evergreen seedlings will he
purchased from a large wholesale nursery. By ordering the
seedlings in quantity directly from the grower, the price of each
three-y,ear~ld, bare root seedling will be a very reasonable
twenty cenls each.
When YD!ll:Onsider all that trees do lor us, the price is un~lievabie! Trees are becoming more indispensable to man's
habitat lor several reasons:
TREES ARE CLEAN AIR MACHINES_ They help supply
needed oxygen to breathe, they keep a1r fresh by absorbing
carbon dlo~de produced by cars, factories and people; their leaf
surfaces trap and remove, ash, pollen, dust and other particles
from the air.
TREES ARE GUARDIANS OF NATURE _ The provide
shelter and food for birds and wildlife; they prevent soil erosion
by uaing their root systems to bold the soil and their branches to
break the fall of rain; they slow forceful winds; they provide ·
valuable organic material to the soil by dropping their leaves and
needles; and they cool the nir by enlisting the sun's energy to
evaporate water from the leaves.
TREES ARE FffiENDS OF MAN -They provide us with
such thing~! as paper, lumber, nuts, mulches, oils, gums, syrups
and fruits; they reduce noise pollution by absorbing sound; they
provide shede from direct S\Ulllght; and they beautify our visual
environment.
Orders lor trees may be mailed to Garden Club Trees, P. 0.
Box 393, Reynoldsburg, or given to any member of a Meig~
County Garden Club, by March 9. Checks should he made out to
Garden Club Trees.
8eedlinll:s will be available for pickup on April26, 27 and 28
a1 Jtuttand. Minimum order is 25 seedlings for $5 and the trees
must be ordered in multiples of ~-If you do not have use for
twenty.flve trees, consider joining orders with il friend or
frienda, under one name, or presenting extras to neighbors,
friends, business associates, etc. as an environmental Arbor Day
gift. You will receive an order confirmation in mid-April that will
iletall the time and specific location for picking up trees, and
planting instructions will be included with your trees at the time
of pickup.
Remember, trees are ... Clean air machines, guardians of
nature, and friends of man. And in the words of poet, Henry Van
Dyke,
A SERVICE TEAM meeting wUI be held at 1:30 Tuesday at
"He that planteth a tree is a servant of God, He provideth a
kindness for many generations, and faces that he hath not seen thJ' home of Mrs. William Ohlinger.
shall bless him."

IN COLUMBUS
L. D. Hartinger and Mrs .
Jean Craig of Middleport were
in Colul{lbus Sunday to attend
· the antique show at Ve'.erans Su~erlor 86~.
eam HiQh Series ~;;:::l;~:l::."?.;.~:~:=~=~~1~!1;~j~j~~;~:1:~~:i:~:~:::::::i:j:j:~:J:~:~:~~f:m1:i:f;i~!j;;~~;~1i!ii1i~i;l:~~i~ili1~1;1~~~m1~;;!;;m1mf!~ Mem ori a1Aud i tori urn .
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NA.snc

MONDAY
SALEM Center School PTA
open house and potluck supper,
&amp;:30 p.m: Monday at schooL
Grate Family will entertain at
the annual family nigmt observance.
POMEROY Garden Club,
7:30 p.m., Monday, home of
Mrs. Harvey Van Vranken,
Spring Ave.

""·~-

~·.

'"

" .,

'

Mrs. Jerry Fry, who recently
returned to the States from the
Philippines where the family
spent two years, will be
hohored by the Kin Club with a
dinner at the Holiday Inn
Wednesday night.
Plans for the dinner were
made . when the Club mel
Thursday night at the home of
Mrs. Grace Pratt in Middleport. · Mrs .
Robert

Card Patty set
The annual St. Patrick's Day
card party of the Catholic
Women's Club of Sacred Heart
Church has been scheduled for
March 1o in the church
basement.
Tickets are available ·from
any member or may be
secured by telephoning Mrs.
Don Mullen or Mrs. Paul Casci.
The tickets are available for
$1.25 donation and the public is
invited to attend. Table prizes
and door prizes will be
awarded and refreshments will
be served.

Pocklington presided at the
meeting. Following the dinner
members will go to the home of
Mrs. Harry Davis, Spring Ave.,
Pomeroy, for a party.
During the meeting the
group decided to send flowers
to Waiier Boyer of Baltimore
who is ill, and round-robin
cards were signed for Boyer,
Dorothy Leifheit, Edith Wolfe,

VISIT RELATIVES
Mr. and Mrs , Jerry Fry and
two children, Marc, seven, and
Mandi, two, are home visiting
his mother, Mrs. Faye Fry, his
grandfather, Narley Hysell,
Mrs. Fry's mother, Mrs. Ellen
Ebersbach, and other area
relatives. For the pest two
years the Fry family has been
stationed at the Clark Air
Force Base in the Philippines.
While there, Fry won the
champion shooter award for
the Rod and Gun Club at Clark.
The family will leave for Eglin,
Fla . about the middle of this
month.

and Alma Johnson. Members
also signed a birthday card for
Kathleen Epple. . ·'
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Fry and
Mrs. Richsrd Vaughan . Joyce
Ebersbach won the door prize
and also the .traveling prize
which was donated by Mrs.
Pratt.
Refreshments of sandwiches, chips and coffee were
served to .those named and
Mrs. James Clifford, Mrs.
Waide Windon, Mrs. Norman
Harbrecht, Debbie Harbrecht,
Mrs. Ellen Ehershach, Mrs.
Frank Powers, Robert and
Pam. Mrs . Brocklingtbn will
host the next meeting. I··

PARTY PLANNED
A skating party lor children
and adults of the Sacred Heart
Parish and their friends, will
be held Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
Skate-a-Way Rink on Route 7.
The Catholic Women's Club
will sponsor the skating party.

Buy Now! Pay Later!
When You Get Your Income Tax Refund
It's as simple as that! Buy what you want, take delivery at once . Pay
for the merchandise when your check arrives.

Five go to
Chauncey·

Women of Sacred Heart
Parish were in Chauncey
Sunday afternoon at the St.
Jude's Mission lor a Natiyity of
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
Mary Deanery meeting .
NEW HAVEN - Mrs. F. C.
Going from the Pomeroy
Reichert, a volunteer Red church were Mrs. Katie Biron,
Cross worker for over 30 years, Mrs. Barbara Mullen, . M~rs ..
neoos'·'PI!.,Ple . to ' donate their Catherine Welsh, Mrs. ' Helen
serviCes to' cafiVaSs· the townSr Handley, and Mrs. Gemma
of Mason, Hartford and rural easeL
areas of the county for the Red
The Rev. Fr. Frank Baudo,
C~oss fund drive on March 19. moderator, was absent due to
Workers willing to ·help are illness and substituting for him
asked to call Mrs. Reichert, at were Brother David Lenz, a
882-3227.
teaoller at St. Paul's Catholic
School in Athens. He spoke
concerning the Brotherhood
and their role in the church
cooperation by the media. Mrs. program. The Rev. Fr. Frank
Carpenter reminded them of Patala spoke briefly at the
the April I deadline for articles meeting attended by women
to be included in the Garden from St. Paul's Church in
Path Magazine, and of the need Athens, St . Andrew in
for accurate and complete Nelsonville, St. Patrick in
news items to he presented to Buchtel, Holy Cross in
area publicity sources, to bring Glouster, and Sacred Heart in
knowledge of club projects to Pomeroy.
the public.
Officers for the next two
One point for improvement years elected were Rosemary
of regional projects is for Shay, president; Regina
representatives from ea~h club Matthews, vice president;
to meet the responsibility of Teresa Skinner, secretary;
reporting
the
various Lynn Pierce, treasurer;
programs of work to the proper Patricia Pollitt, auditor; and
ngional chairman, or state Margaret Gordei, historian.
chairman, whichever is
designated by the OAGC
New Spring ·
guidelines, as stated in the
Handbook and the Garden
Path. Reading these books and
keeping up-to-date is imperative for a smooth and
AI i Polyester
successful operation.
Mrs. Bolin served refreshSlQ
ments to those attending;
assisted by regional secretary,
Mrs. William Willford, of the
Rutland Friendly Gard~ners,
Main at Sycamore. Pomeroy
and Mrs. Stewart.

By Suzy Carpenter
clubs to do more actual Chairman, noted she hsd all·
RUTLAND _ Mrs. Joe therapy work with their con- books and pamphlets available
Bolin, Director of Region 11, !acts, giving them experiences for purchase by members and
Ohio Association of Garden that will motivate them to other interested persons.
Clubs, Inc., presided at a become integrated with the
All clubs were invited to
regional board meeting held at community. She also reported attend a program on "The
her home here Sunday on work done at the Galllpolls Forgotten Art of Flower
Feb. 25, when a high- State Institute, saying more Cookery," by Leota Woodring
light
was
a
uiscus- clubs could work with the girls Smith, of Florida, on May 10, at
sion of the upcoming there;afternoons from 1-3 p.m. Grace ' United Methodist
OAGC Tree Sales by the or on weekends, but not during Church, qallipolis. There will
chairman, Mrs. Howard Birch- the evenings. .
be a · charge of 50 cents per
field, president of the Rutland
Mrs. Bolin expressed person to the program,
Friendly Gardeners, who are disappointment that the region sponsored by the Gallipolis
handling the sales project for did not have a candidate lor Garden Club.
the region.
regioruil Outstanding Gardener
Members of the nomina.ting
Mrs . Robert Lewis, of this year and urged clubs to committee for the candidates
Winding Trail Club, announced nominate one.
for new regional director
plans for the spring regional . Mrs.
Gilbert
Cullen, present were Chairman, Mrs.
meeting April 14 are well Marietta, Judges Clinics John Reese, Gallipolis, Ye Olde
underway by a committee and Schools Chairman, an- Village Club, Mrs. John
chaired by Mrs. Lewis, in- nounced the next school on Broughton, Marietta, and Mrs.
eluding members of the June 5, 6, and 7, at Ramada Inn Robert Lewis, Winding Trail
Wildwood and Bend 0' The North, Columbus, which is Club. The committee asked
River Garden Clubs, who will valuable lor all exhibitors who that names of potential canco-host the event.
want to learn more about didates be submitted to them
The meeting will be at arranging and gardening, not for consideration, and that the
Pomeroy Elementary School 'just to become judges.
. new director must attend a
with luncheon to be served by
Junior
Garden
Club school at Harrisburg, July 12,
the local PTA. Luncheon Chairma·n, Mrs . Robert for orientation lo the office.
reservations may be sent $2 Thompson, Winding Trail Club,
Mrs . . James Carpenter,
prepaid, to the treasurer of the said registration slips must be Coolville, of the Rutland
region, Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, returned 'by June 1 for these Friendly Gardeners, who is
283 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, clubs. The region bas only two regional Radio, Television, and
45769, by the April 9 deadline. junior clubs, so she urged more News Release Chairman,
Mrs. Bolin asked lor clubs to take up such a project, commented on the Jack of radio
suggestions for improvement staling that it is not too difficult and television programs
of the region's activities in the as the children are very eager presented by clubs . in the
coming year, from the various and willing to try, with the region, as they are mi~ing a
regi~l chairmen present.
senior club ·giving suggestions very important means of inMrs. Earl Bender, Marietta, and supervision.
forming the public. Problems
~
OPTOMETRIST .
Flower Show Chairman,
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, Rutland of clubs with radio and newsOFFfCE HOURS CJ~30 TO 12; 2 TO 5 (ClOSE
alresaed the importance of · Club, and State and County paper
publicity
were
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST 'COURT ST
roll owing the score . sheet, Fair Flower $how Chairman, discussed, with some sections
POM
Y.
meeting
deadlines
for reported only two county shows reporting ex c e II en t
reglslration and reports, and in the region were entered in ,......,"":'_...,.,.,....,,....,.,....,,.,._...,.,....,..,.._ __......,_....,..,.._.,.._...,....,~~:::::~1
being sure that the books are state competition, Meigs and I
sent to the proper State. Washington, with other fairs
chairman, including pictures holding only junlor lalrs.
or show arrangements,
Sears Community Inspecimens and noor plan ~nd - volvement Chairman, Mrs .
layout, rather than people.
Kenneth Frazier, Gallipolis,
Mrs. Homer Parker, Rutland hoped ·for more. entries in this
Friendly Gardener, and year's contest, as there were
We Are The Only Store
regional Publicity Books only five last year. II plantings
Chairman, noted a slight drop' are done, perennial, long
Providing CoRiplete and
~ entries thia year, but with lasting projects are en..
nluch improvement in thllllll couraged, but projects can be
Accurate Records qf
entered. Accurate publiahed of things such as s_avl~g
accounts .of actual work .done natural ·resources, recycling
should be included in the book, materials, or clean•up of
Your Expense on
which is ·due to the regional natural settings. Maintenance
chiirman by Decembei- 1.
of the projects is extremely
Mrs. Gomer Phillips, important.
Prescription Medicine.
Gllllpolla, re1ional Garden
Mrs. Tom Stewart, Regional
Th~rapy Chairman, urged OAGC Publications Sales

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Troop 67 of Reedsville surprised (11rs. Lyle Balderson,
leader, last Monday with 11 party in 'observance of her birthday
anniversary.
A cake decorated in green and white was served with ice
cream and 'punch. A 'gift was .presented to Mrs. Balderson.
Planning the party were the girls and the other leaders, Mrs. Roy
Hannum and Mrs. Harold Holter.
Scouts attendh&gt;.g w'ere Carla Cowdery, Kellie Powell, Denise
Persans, Brend11 Jlucker, 'BOnnie Dailey, Jlebra Lewis, Diana
MlDDLEPORT Garden
~vans, Treasa Dailey, Denise Hauber, Susuan Hamum, Judy Club, home of Mrs: C. M.
Holter, Teresa Hannum, candy Dailey, Kim Reed, Sheila Hennesy, 7:30 p.m. Monday.
Buchanan, Kay Balderson, and a new girl scout who was Mrs . Crary Davis, Mrs .
welcomed to the troop, Patti Weyersmiller.
Mildred McDaniel, Mrs. B. B.
DUring the meeting held at Stewart Hall, the scouts made Zeigler, and . Mrs. Malcolm
miniature flowers from braid and glue to be sent to Miss Karen Roller, hostesses.
Reese a Four Rivers Scout Council aide, who entertained at the
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
'
'
recently Thinking Day program.
'DeMolay, 7:30 p.m. Monday
'1
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
night at the Middleport
Plans for attending church at the Heath United Methodist
Masonic Temple.
Church dn Scout Sunday, March 11, were made during a meeting
TUESDAY
of the 'rl-ooP 39. .
CHESTER
Council 323,
Officers were elected and new patrols were formed. during
the meeting. Angela Payne is the new treasurer, and Debbie Daughters of America, 7:30
Zirkle, ' the scribe. Thli patrols ·are as follows; Cake Tuesday at the hall. Games to
Makers, working on a cooking badge, Cindy Weaver, leader; be held following the meetin_g
by the Good of the Order
Katie Lewis,. assistantieader, Lydia Johnson, Mindy Long, and
committee.
Angela Payne; the Meigs Marauders Writers, working on the
writers badge, Marianne Welsh, leader, Carin Bailey, lli!Sistant WAYSIDE Garden Club will
·leader, Janell Kelly; Sara Diddle, Lori Kloes, and She Die Roush; meet at Columbia Gas Office in
and The Super Flies, working on world games, Kim Payne, 'Middleport at 7;30 p.m. Betty
leader, ,J:ulie KitChen, assistant leader, Terry Zirkle, Debbie Newton will have a demonZirkle, and Julie Byer.
stration.
SALISBURY JUNIOR TROOP 100
WEDNF.'&gt;DAY
Badge work was displayed by three members and officers
SACRED HEART Catholic
were elected at a meeting of the Salisbury Junior Troop.
Church Ash Wednesday serCarol Morr)s displayed a collection, Camille Swindell had a
vice, 7 a.m. and 7;30 p.m.
book badge report, and Regina Dorst talked on her cooking acfollowed by distribution of
tivities and also completed requirements for the housekeeping
ashes.
badge.
GRACE Episcopal Church,
Officers elected were Regina Dorst, patrol leader; Camille
Ash Wednesday service, 7:3()
Swindell, assistant; Patty Parker, scribe; Carol Morris,
p.m. The Rev, Roma King will
treasurer ; Laura Ohlinger, news reporter; Becky Dorst, first aid
keeper; Kathy Quivey,refreshments; and Gwen Folmer, games. be the speaker. ··
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S Club,
It was reported that $9.90 was reteived from bottle cap
Wednesday night following the
redemption. The troop will use the money for a skating party and
Ash Wednesday service at 7:30
for civic projects. .
Plans were made for the girls and their mothers to work on a p.m.
school pennant as a fund raising project. The pennant will be for
the Salisbury Blue Streaks.
The troop will give the flag ceremony on March 20at the PTA
meeting. Regina will be the fiagbearer, Gwen and Patty will be
the color guard, and Becky Dorst will be the sergeant at arms.

;wm

GENIE

=!:&lt;

~
~

Charlene

A weekly lealw'e of Metp
County Gar~ Club meffiben.

Blood explained
BY ALMA MARSHAU
NEW J1A VEN - Mr. Dwight
Blake, director of Blood Donor
Recruitment Services at the
Regional Blood Center in
Huntington, who spoke at the
New Haven Woman's Club
dinner meeting Tuesday at the
New Haven Public library
social room, was introduced by
Mrs. F. C. Reichert of New
Haven, a volunteer Red Cross
worker over 30 years.
Blake emphasized that the
Mason County blood bank "is
in trouble," that chances"of
losing it are very high; then
explained what the Red Cross
program means to the people
of the county, and how it
functions.
He said there are no charges
for the blood Itself when it is
furnished by the Red Cross,
though most hospitals must
charge the patient "laboratory
and administrative" costs in
connection with a transfusion.
A portion of these charges is
refunded to the Red Cross as a
part of its cost in the collection,
processing, storage and
delivery of the blood.
He said the Red Cross Blood
Program is the safest blood
that the people can get.
The bloodmobile sponsored
by Mason Mothers Club will be
in Mason Thursday, March 8,

'Girl Sceut
Diary By

Green.Thumb
Notes .•• •

1Social.l Mrs. ·Fry to be honored by club
.I·.caIen dar
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· MIDDLIPOIIT

�1-The Dilly Senlinel,Mlddlepoft.Pimeroy, o., March a; 1973

Abernathy threatens ren·ewed ca1npaign
.
.

OXFORD, Ohio (UP!)
Southern Chrjstian Leader~ip
Conference Director Rev.
Ralph Abema!hy, angered at
the Nixon adl)linistration's
cutback of Office of Economic
Opportunity (OEO) programs,
said Saturday night "if Mr.
Nixon is allowed to proceed,
this nation wUI eiperience the
"""" aII over
ho t summers oI lorvw
again."
Abernathy said the SCLC
was organizing marches on
statehouses in several states
and a march in Washington,

D.C. on April 4 "to take cutbacks." April 4 is the fifth
anni·versary
of
the
assassination of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., former head
of the.SCLC,
Abernathy, calling the April
4 marches the "spring offen. sive" of the SCLC, said "244
years of slavery and 100 years
L t
"J._. 'separa t·C"IIU
-equaI' didn't .
stop us and Richard M. Nixon
isn't going to stop us either."
"I am deeply concerned over
the course the Nixon .administration is following," he said.

deepen the desP.air in the .a!- light for equality 1and J~ce
ready depressing ghettoes for all AmericaliB, regatdl11111
throughout the nation. .
of whether they are bl*«lk af
"I owe no allegiance to any white, Chicanos; . Puetto
political party," Abernathy Ril:ans, Indians or whatever."
said. "The Republicans have Abernathy addressed about'ilo
failed us and the Demo- persons at a Black Cl!lture
cratshavetakenus lor granted Week program· at Miami Uni.
and tricked us. We all have to verslly ·
·
.
-~··,v.w.·.·····~·m.'om!''""
.
,
w'
•
"'''''l•',...'i!'''''""'f,OO""'"'''~';';««&lt;•-"&lt;•:&lt;•:•r.&lt;•:•.&lt;&lt;m:;:::;::~-;:;::::::::::;:;::*;::::::~::::~:::::;:&gt;.
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• o, !0:0, o oo• • • • • • . ,o:;, • • • • • ••
· · .. · .. · .. .. .. ..
·
.
·
"The cutback of the OEO pJogram is alarming and spelling.
"This is clear evidence that
Mr. ·Nixon is insensitiye to the
needs of poor people. His proposed 'cutback in the area of
health will reduce the life expectancy of this nation. The
freeze on new housing will only

EASTERN'S FRESHMAN BASKETBALL SQUAD- Eastern's freshman squad ended its
season with a ~record . The team was coached by Larry Heines. Front row, 1-4, Gary
U!ngenette, Dana Fick, Brian Conde, George Pickens, and Jeff Holter; back row, Steve
Nelson, Don Eichinger, Jim Landon, Dave Good, Dan Hannum and Larry Heines, coach.

·-

J"'34

.,

.,
EASTERN RESERVES - Eastern's reserve squad ended its season with a 5-13 record
losing five games by only ?points. Front row, 1-r, Greg Bailey and Rick Hollon; back row. Mike
Larkins, Steve Goebel, Randy Orr, Philip Bowen and Dave Weber. Coach 'of the team was
Mark Vennis.

GAHS staves off late Pointer
rally to cop Sectional meet
Gallipolis captured the
school's first Class AA Sectional Tournament championship at Coal Grove
Saturday night by turning back
a fired-up South Point quintet,
67-63.
Four consecutive free throws
by 6-4 junior center Gil Price
with less than three minutes
remaining and two key iayups
by 6-3 Senior forward Jimmy
Noe in the !ina! 90 seconds
choked off a late Pointer rally
to preserve the Blue Devils
lead and eventual victory.
By winning, the lads of Coach
Jim Osborne advanced to the
Rio Grande Class AA District
Tournament, to be held this
week at Lyne Center. GAHS
drew Nelsonville-York Sunday
afternoon, and will meet the
Buckeyes in a semifinal round
game at 7;30 p.m., on Wednesday.
Defending champion
Waverly drew Alexander in
the other semifinal battle.
Those two teams will collide
at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday at
Lyne Center.
In Saturday's AA Sectional
final at Coal Grove, it looked
like GAHS was going to push
Coach Mike Hughes' Pointers
into the nearby Ohio River in
the early goiqg.
After spotting the Ohio
Valley Conference champions
a 2-0 lead following the opening
tip, Mark Kiesling's long
jumper (6: 30 ) and Topper
Orr's tipin (5:58) put 'the
Galiians ahead to stay.
Abalanced GAHS attack, led
by Kiesling's six markers, shot
the Blue Devils into a 19·9 first
period lead.
The Blue Devils continued
their assault in the second
canto, increasing their lead to
23-9 before the Pointers broke a
scoreless s ~a n of 3:09 on a tipin
by Rick Sharp. The Devils
outscored SP \2.() during that
spurt.
Noe's layup doubled the
score on the Pointers with 1:11
left in the hslf, 34-17. GAHS
held a 36-19 halftime advantage. Price led Gallia's
second period attack with eight
points.
South Point used a zone press
and man-to-man defe nse
throughout the second hail
after having been forced from
a zone .by the Gallians' sizzling

outside shooting in the first
half.
At first, the ,press didn't
bother the Gallians as they
increased their lead to 19
points, 44-25, with 4:o3
remaining in the third stanza.
That was Gaiiia's biggest lead
of the night.
However, with lour fouls
each on the. Devils' 6-1 senior
forward Topper Orr ahd lanky
Gil Price, the tide began to turn
in favor of the Pointers.
Price went out with 6:54
left in the third period. He
was replaced by lanky 6-4
senior Skipper Johnson, who
pcrlorm-.d tremendously for
the Gallians. Orr was
replaced by Mike Berridge
with three minutes left.
Berridge, a junior forward,
chipped in with two important rebounds to help the
Devils cause.
But constant pressure applied by the sometime overaggressive Poir.ter defenders
forced the Galiians in to turnover a£ter turnover, and
within a span of nine minutes
and 57 seconds, the Pointers
cut a 19-point deficit down to
. one, &gt;8-57 , outscoring the
Gallians 32-14.
Price returned after sitting
out 9;()5 of the third and fourth
periods, and the South Point
comeback fizzled before the
Hughcsmen could overtake the
Gaiiians.
In that hectic four th period,
it was the outside shooting of 59 senior guard Kev Morris
which nearly killed the

Gallians . Morris tallied 12 of
his 16 markers during the
Pointer comeback.
Kenny Hurst, one of the
finest cagers to perform
against GAHS this winter,
chipped.in with six big markers
in the final stanza .
The Pointers blanked
GAHS 10-0 early in the final
period to cut Gallla's lead to
56-51 with 4:03 left in the
game.
Noe's layup made it &gt;8-51
before two goals by Hurst and
one by Morris cut it to 58-57
with 2:56 remaining.
Price then canned two free
throws at the 2:31 mark, and
added two more charily tosses
at the 1:56 mark following
three consecutive Pointer
turnovers. That made it 62..57.
Noe worked loose lor an easy
layup at the I :33 mark. Morris
countered with a long bomb at
the I ; 20 mark. Noe again
eluded his man for a .layup with
48 seconds left to make it 66..59.
Morris countered with a bomb
at the 0:31 mark. Mark
Kiesling's free throw with five
seconds completed Gallia's
scoring. Marty Patrick
dropped in a long jumper at the
buzzer.
•
Gallipolis upped its mark to
17-3. The Pointers bowed out
with a respectable 14-li season
record .
The torrid first half shooting
by GAHS and an air-tight
defense caught the Pointers off
guard. In that first half, GAHS
hit 16 of ~ from the field for 65
pet. and. limited the Pointers to

SOUTH POINT POINTERS 1631
PLAYER- Pos.
FG+A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Ken Hu rst, g
11 ·16
). j
1
7
7 23
Kev Morris, g
8·13
o: o 4 4 3 16
Marty Patrick. f
3· 8
o, a 1 2 2 6

RlckSharp.f
Bob Winlers. c
Ron Tennanl . f
Ron Schrlller,

1· 3

0· 2

o

1

2

2

O· 0
2
1
1
o
5· 10
4. 6
5 10
6 JA
1· 3
O· 0
4
0
0
2
TOTALS
29-66
5-15 18 25 21. 63
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS 1671
PLAYER- Pos,
FG·A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Mike Berridge, I
o. ·o o. o o 2 0 0
Mark Kesling, g
•· 6
1. 2
3
3
6 9
Jim Nlday, g
o. o o. o o o I 0
Jimmy Noe, f
10. 14
6· 9
2
8
4 26
Topper Orr . f
4· 5
o. 1 5 7 3 8
Gi l Price. c
5· 8
4. 4
4 13
1
14
Kev Sheets. g
1. 5
o. 1 1 1 8 2
Ski pper Johnson, c
4. 6
O· o o 3
0
8
TOTALS
28-44 11 · 17 H :. ; 2) 1.1
Score By Quarters :
So uth Poi nt Pointe rs
,
9 10 20 24- 63
GAHS Blue Devils
19 17 14 · 17- 61
Official ~- Ove rl y ttn d Neuman, Portsmouth Chapter.

u. J

nine of 30 attempts for 30 pel.
GAHS shot 63 pet. for the
night, blttlug 28 of 44. The
Pointers were 29 of 66 lor 43
pet. At the foul ~lrcles,
GAHS was 11 of 17 for 64 pet.
South Point actually lost It at
the foul line, bitting only live
of 15 for 33.3 pet.
Ron Tennant, who had the
assignment of guarding Noe,
fouled out with 4:31jleft. N~
scored 10 of his 26 game-high
points in the final period.
Gallia's Topper Orr fouled out
with 39 seconds left in the
game. Hurst led SP with 23
points.
GAHS controlled the boards
with 3'i rebounds compared to
South Point's ~ snags. Price
hsuled down 13 to lead GAHS in
that department. Tennant
grabbed 1() for the winners, six
in the third period when Price
was on the bench.
GAHS played errorless ball
in the first period, but had eight
turnovers in the second, seven
in the third and eight more in
the fourth lor a near-season
high of 23. South Point had 21
turnovers, four in the final
moments of the game.
Last time GAHS participated In the district
tournament was In 1954.55.
The Devils heat Marietta 8367 in a lone sectional outing
at Athens, then lost 61-58 to
Greenfield in their district
opener at Athens, Tbe GAHS
squad of 18 years ago
compiled the school's best
overall woil-lost· mart, 2t-Z.
Prior to 1955, .area teams
went direclly to the district
without sectional eliminations.
The 1955-56 GAHS team got
to the sectional finals at Athens
before .losing 56-49 to the
Athens Bulldogs. Last year's
Blue Devils reached the
Symmes Valley Sectional
!ina ts· before bowing out to
Ironton, 57..52.
Otherwise, it's been a long
dry spell in district tournament
play for Blue Devil roundbailers. The Osbornemen hope
to change ,that situation later
this week.

from noon to 6 p.m. Several of
the woman's club volunteered ·
to give blood.
Other points made by Blake:
- Blood not used for transfusions is separated into
component parts. Plasma,
which can be frozen for one
year, is used for control of mild
bleeding in hemophilia; fresh
whole blood (no more than an
hour old) is used to make the
components
(cryoprecipitates): lor acute bleeding of hemophilia and
platelet concentrates; fpr
treatment of leukemia;
gamma globulin for prevention
and modification of measles
and
hepatities;
serum
albumin, emergency treatment for shock, and
replacement oflost proteins, as
in kidney and liver diseases,
A GIFT WAS presented by
the' president, Mrs, Robert T,
(Peggy) Gurtis, to the guest
speaker.
Mrs.
Charles
Dodd,
Community Improvement,
chairman, said the Woman's
Club wiD canvass tbe town in
March for lands to keep the
Bloodmobile in Mason
County.
A card of thanks to the club
was acknowledged from Mr,
and Mrs. !(obert Gurtis of New
Haven. Mr. Gurtis' perents
died within a few 'days of each
other; also, a letter was read
from Mrs. Unda Young, asking
to be re-instated.
Mrs. Charles Smith will be
chairman of a barbecue to be
held soon.
Mrs. Gurlis displayed
beautiful handmade com,
memorative plates which
depicts a complete and moving
"Portrait of Liberty." These
plates which will be in a series
of four will be released each
year for lour consecutive
years, 1973-1974-1975-1976.
The sale of these plates is a
four year project which will be
conducted by the General
Federation of Women's Club in
coordination with the Bicentennial Celebration of the
United States of America.
These beautiful handmade
commemorative plates are
being designed and produced
for the GFWC by the
prestigious Fenton Art Glass
Company of Williamstown.
Mrs. Kermit V. Haugan,
President, General Federation
of Women's Clubs presented
the first Bicentennial Plate to
our Nation's First Lady, Mrs.
.Richard M. Nixon at the White
House on December 5, 1972.
At the opening of the dinner
meeting,
Mrs .
Donald
Bumgardner, presented
devotionals. Hostesses were
Mrs . 'Donald Bumgardner,
Mrs . Harold Bumgardner,
Mrs. Charles Smith and Mrs.
Robert HickeL Saint Patrick's
Day decorations were used on
the dining ·tables.
Registering were Mr. Dwight
E. Blake, Mrs. Dan Edwards,
Mrs. Herman Knapp, Mrs.
Karl Wiles, Mrs. Charles Dodd,
Mrs. Richsrd Linden, Mrs.
Gary Batey, M~s. Frank White,
Mrs. Diane Hickel, Mrs .
Eugene Hester, Mrs. George
Ingels, Mrs. Mark Ward, Mrs.
Kenneth Thompson, Mrs .
Robert Gurtis, Mrs. Donald
Bumgardner, Mrs. Tom
Hoffman, Mrs. Thelma Scally,
Mrs. Emo Wood, Mrs, John
Wolfe,. Mrs. F. C. Reichert, .
Carol Roush, Myra Roush,
Hilda Smith, Dorothy James,
Mrs . Harold Baumgardner,
Mrs. James C. Drake, Mrs. R.
G. Greene, and Mrs. J. Marshall.
Thursday Nightlndustriot
Won Lost
K&amp;C Jewelers
48
24
Team 4
46
26
Midwest Steel
44
2B '
Landmark
36
36
Mil hone Sollie
22
50
Superior
·
20
52
High Ind . Game- Raymond
Roach 234, Jerry Black 213.
High Series - Raymond
Roach 585, Bill Boyles 551.
Team High Game

ByMRB.JAMESCARPENTER
.
" Rutlalld Friendly Gardeners
.
Celebrate A!'bor Day '73, on Friday, April p, and help
protect our evnironrne1J( by 'planting trees. To assist' you, the
Ohio AssOciation of·Garden Clubs, Inc., and The. Ohio Dep!ll't,
ment pi Natural Reso\Jrces are selling spruce seedlings at'cost.
Orders
be accepted from any individual or organization.
The orders !Will be combined, and the evergreen seedlings will he
purchased from a large wholesale nursery. By ordering the
seedlings in quantity directly from the grower, the price of each
three-y,ear~ld, bare root seedling will be a very reasonable
twenty cenls each.
When YD!ll:Onsider all that trees do lor us, the price is un~lievabie! Trees are becoming more indispensable to man's
habitat lor several reasons:
TREES ARE CLEAN AIR MACHINES_ They help supply
needed oxygen to breathe, they keep a1r fresh by absorbing
carbon dlo~de produced by cars, factories and people; their leaf
surfaces trap and remove, ash, pollen, dust and other particles
from the air.
TREES ARE GUARDIANS OF NATURE _ The provide
shelter and food for birds and wildlife; they prevent soil erosion
by uaing their root systems to bold the soil and their branches to
break the fall of rain; they slow forceful winds; they provide ·
valuable organic material to the soil by dropping their leaves and
needles; and they cool the nir by enlisting the sun's energy to
evaporate water from the leaves.
TREES ARE FffiENDS OF MAN -They provide us with
such thing~! as paper, lumber, nuts, mulches, oils, gums, syrups
and fruits; they reduce noise pollution by absorbing sound; they
provide shede from direct S\Ulllght; and they beautify our visual
environment.
Orders lor trees may be mailed to Garden Club Trees, P. 0.
Box 393, Reynoldsburg, or given to any member of a Meig~
County Garden Club, by March 9. Checks should he made out to
Garden Club Trees.
8eedlinll:s will be available for pickup on April26, 27 and 28
a1 Jtuttand. Minimum order is 25 seedlings for $5 and the trees
must be ordered in multiples of ~-If you do not have use for
twenty.flve trees, consider joining orders with il friend or
frienda, under one name, or presenting extras to neighbors,
friends, business associates, etc. as an environmental Arbor Day
gift. You will receive an order confirmation in mid-April that will
iletall the time and specific location for picking up trees, and
planting instructions will be included with your trees at the time
of pickup.
Remember, trees are ... Clean air machines, guardians of
nature, and friends of man. And in the words of poet, Henry Van
Dyke,
A SERVICE TEAM meeting wUI be held at 1:30 Tuesday at
"He that planteth a tree is a servant of God, He provideth a
kindness for many generations, and faces that he hath not seen thJ' home of Mrs. William Ohlinger.
shall bless him."

IN COLUMBUS
L. D. Hartinger and Mrs .
Jean Craig of Middleport were
in Colul{lbus Sunday to attend
· the antique show at Ve'.erans Su~erlor 86~.
eam HiQh Series ~;;:::l;~:l::."?.;.~:~:=~=~~1~!1;~j~j~~;~:1:~~:i:~:~:::::::i:j:j:~:J:~:~:~~f:m1:i:f;i~!j;;~~;~1i!ii1i~i;l:~~i~ili1~1;1~~~m1~;;!;;m1mf!~ Mem ori a1Aud i tori urn .
• J ewe Iers 2509.

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NA.snc

MONDAY
SALEM Center School PTA
open house and potluck supper,
&amp;:30 p.m: Monday at schooL
Grate Family will entertain at
the annual family nigmt observance.
POMEROY Garden Club,
7:30 p.m., Monday, home of
Mrs. Harvey Van Vranken,
Spring Ave.

""·~-

~·.

'"

" .,

'

Mrs. Jerry Fry, who recently
returned to the States from the
Philippines where the family
spent two years, will be
hohored by the Kin Club with a
dinner at the Holiday Inn
Wednesday night.
Plans for the dinner were
made . when the Club mel
Thursday night at the home of
Mrs. Grace Pratt in Middleport. · Mrs .
Robert

Card Patty set
The annual St. Patrick's Day
card party of the Catholic
Women's Club of Sacred Heart
Church has been scheduled for
March 1o in the church
basement.
Tickets are available ·from
any member or may be
secured by telephoning Mrs.
Don Mullen or Mrs. Paul Casci.
The tickets are available for
$1.25 donation and the public is
invited to attend. Table prizes
and door prizes will be
awarded and refreshments will
be served.

Pocklington presided at the
meeting. Following the dinner
members will go to the home of
Mrs. Harry Davis, Spring Ave.,
Pomeroy, for a party.
During the meeting the
group decided to send flowers
to Waiier Boyer of Baltimore
who is ill, and round-robin
cards were signed for Boyer,
Dorothy Leifheit, Edith Wolfe,

VISIT RELATIVES
Mr. and Mrs , Jerry Fry and
two children, Marc, seven, and
Mandi, two, are home visiting
his mother, Mrs. Faye Fry, his
grandfather, Narley Hysell,
Mrs. Fry's mother, Mrs. Ellen
Ebersbach, and other area
relatives. For the pest two
years the Fry family has been
stationed at the Clark Air
Force Base in the Philippines.
While there, Fry won the
champion shooter award for
the Rod and Gun Club at Clark.
The family will leave for Eglin,
Fla . about the middle of this
month.

and Alma Johnson. Members
also signed a birthday card for
Kathleen Epple. . ·'
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Fry and
Mrs. Richsrd Vaughan . Joyce
Ebersbach won the door prize
and also the .traveling prize
which was donated by Mrs.
Pratt.
Refreshments of sandwiches, chips and coffee were
served to .those named and
Mrs. James Clifford, Mrs.
Waide Windon, Mrs. Norman
Harbrecht, Debbie Harbrecht,
Mrs. Ellen Ehershach, Mrs.
Frank Powers, Robert and
Pam. Mrs . Brocklingtbn will
host the next meeting. I··

PARTY PLANNED
A skating party lor children
and adults of the Sacred Heart
Parish and their friends, will
be held Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
Skate-a-Way Rink on Route 7.
The Catholic Women's Club
will sponsor the skating party.

Buy Now! Pay Later!
When You Get Your Income Tax Refund
It's as simple as that! Buy what you want, take delivery at once . Pay
for the merchandise when your check arrives.

Five go to
Chauncey·

Women of Sacred Heart
Parish were in Chauncey
Sunday afternoon at the St.
Jude's Mission lor a Natiyity of
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
Mary Deanery meeting .
NEW HAVEN - Mrs. F. C.
Going from the Pomeroy
Reichert, a volunteer Red church were Mrs. Katie Biron,
Cross worker for over 30 years, Mrs. Barbara Mullen, . M~rs ..
neoos'·'PI!.,Ple . to ' donate their Catherine Welsh, Mrs. ' Helen
serviCes to' cafiVaSs· the townSr Handley, and Mrs. Gemma
of Mason, Hartford and rural easeL
areas of the county for the Red
The Rev. Fr. Frank Baudo,
C~oss fund drive on March 19. moderator, was absent due to
Workers willing to ·help are illness and substituting for him
asked to call Mrs. Reichert, at were Brother David Lenz, a
882-3227.
teaoller at St. Paul's Catholic
School in Athens. He spoke
concerning the Brotherhood
and their role in the church
cooperation by the media. Mrs. program. The Rev. Fr. Frank
Carpenter reminded them of Patala spoke briefly at the
the April I deadline for articles meeting attended by women
to be included in the Garden from St. Paul's Church in
Path Magazine, and of the need Athens, St . Andrew in
for accurate and complete Nelsonville, St. Patrick in
news items to he presented to Buchtel, Holy Cross in
area publicity sources, to bring Glouster, and Sacred Heart in
knowledge of club projects to Pomeroy.
the public.
Officers for the next two
One point for improvement years elected were Rosemary
of regional projects is for Shay, president; Regina
representatives from ea~h club Matthews, vice president;
to meet the responsibility of Teresa Skinner, secretary;
reporting
the
various Lynn Pierce, treasurer;
programs of work to the proper Patricia Pollitt, auditor; and
ngional chairman, or state Margaret Gordei, historian.
chairman, whichever is
designated by the OAGC
New Spring ·
guidelines, as stated in the
Handbook and the Garden
Path. Reading these books and
keeping up-to-date is imperative for a smooth and
AI i Polyester
successful operation.
Mrs. Bolin served refreshSlQ
ments to those attending;
assisted by regional secretary,
Mrs. William Willford, of the
Rutland Friendly Gard~ners,
Main at Sycamore. Pomeroy
and Mrs. Stewart.

By Suzy Carpenter
clubs to do more actual Chairman, noted she hsd all·
RUTLAND _ Mrs. Joe therapy work with their con- books and pamphlets available
Bolin, Director of Region 11, !acts, giving them experiences for purchase by members and
Ohio Association of Garden that will motivate them to other interested persons.
Clubs, Inc., presided at a become integrated with the
All clubs were invited to
regional board meeting held at community. She also reported attend a program on "The
her home here Sunday on work done at the Galllpolls Forgotten Art of Flower
Feb. 25, when a high- State Institute, saying more Cookery," by Leota Woodring
light
was
a
uiscus- clubs could work with the girls Smith, of Florida, on May 10, at
sion of the upcoming there;afternoons from 1-3 p.m. Grace ' United Methodist
OAGC Tree Sales by the or on weekends, but not during Church, qallipolis. There will
chairman, Mrs. Howard Birch- the evenings. .
be a · charge of 50 cents per
field, president of the Rutland
Mrs. Bolin expressed person to the program,
Friendly Gardeners, who are disappointment that the region sponsored by the Gallipolis
handling the sales project for did not have a candidate lor Garden Club.
the region.
regioruil Outstanding Gardener
Members of the nomina.ting
Mrs . Robert Lewis, of this year and urged clubs to committee for the candidates
Winding Trail Club, announced nominate one.
for new regional director
plans for the spring regional . Mrs.
Gilbert
Cullen, present were Chairman, Mrs.
meeting April 14 are well Marietta, Judges Clinics John Reese, Gallipolis, Ye Olde
underway by a committee and Schools Chairman, an- Village Club, Mrs. John
chaired by Mrs. Lewis, in- nounced the next school on Broughton, Marietta, and Mrs.
eluding members of the June 5, 6, and 7, at Ramada Inn Robert Lewis, Winding Trail
Wildwood and Bend 0' The North, Columbus, which is Club. The committee asked
River Garden Clubs, who will valuable lor all exhibitors who that names of potential canco-host the event.
want to learn more about didates be submitted to them
The meeting will be at arranging and gardening, not for consideration, and that the
Pomeroy Elementary School 'just to become judges.
. new director must attend a
with luncheon to be served by
Junior
Garden
Club school at Harrisburg, July 12,
the local PTA. Luncheon Chairma·n, Mrs . Robert for orientation lo the office.
reservations may be sent $2 Thompson, Winding Trail Club,
Mrs . . James Carpenter,
prepaid, to the treasurer of the said registration slips must be Coolville, of the Rutland
region, Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, returned 'by June 1 for these Friendly Gardeners, who is
283 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, clubs. The region bas only two regional Radio, Television, and
45769, by the April 9 deadline. junior clubs, so she urged more News Release Chairman,
Mrs. Bolin asked lor clubs to take up such a project, commented on the Jack of radio
suggestions for improvement staling that it is not too difficult and television programs
of the region's activities in the as the children are very eager presented by clubs . in the
coming year, from the various and willing to try, with the region, as they are mi~ing a
regi~l chairmen present.
senior club ·giving suggestions very important means of inMrs. Earl Bender, Marietta, and supervision.
forming the public. Problems
~
OPTOMETRIST .
Flower Show Chairman,
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, Rutland of clubs with radio and newsOFFfCE HOURS CJ~30 TO 12; 2 TO 5 (ClOSE
alresaed the importance of · Club, and State and County paper
publicity
were
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST 'COURT ST
roll owing the score . sheet, Fair Flower $how Chairman, discussed, with some sections
POM
Y.
meeting
deadlines
for reported only two county shows reporting ex c e II en t
reglslration and reports, and in the region were entered in ,......,"":'_...,.,.,....,,....,.,....,,.,._...,.,....,..,.._ __......,_....,..,.._.,.._...,....,~~:::::~1
being sure that the books are state competition, Meigs and I
sent to the proper State. Washington, with other fairs
chairman, including pictures holding only junlor lalrs.
or show arrangements,
Sears Community Inspecimens and noor plan ~nd - volvement Chairman, Mrs .
layout, rather than people.
Kenneth Frazier, Gallipolis,
Mrs. Homer Parker, Rutland hoped ·for more. entries in this
Friendly Gardener, and year's contest, as there were
We Are The Only Store
regional Publicity Books only five last year. II plantings
Chairman, noted a slight drop' are done, perennial, long
Providing CoRiplete and
~ entries thia year, but with lasting projects are en..
nluch improvement in thllllll couraged, but projects can be
Accurate Records qf
entered. Accurate publiahed of things such as s_avl~g
accounts .of actual work .done natural ·resources, recycling
should be included in the book, materials, or clean•up of
Your Expense on
which is ·due to the regional natural settings. Maintenance
chiirman by Decembei- 1.
of the projects is extremely
Mrs. Gomer Phillips, important.
Prescription Medicine.
Gllllpolla, re1ional Garden
Mrs. Tom Stewart, Regional
Th~rapy Chairman, urged OAGC Publications Sales

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.

Hoeflic~

Troop 67 of Reedsville surprised (11rs. Lyle Balderson,
leader, last Monday with 11 party in 'observance of her birthday
anniversary.
A cake decorated in green and white was served with ice
cream and 'punch. A 'gift was .presented to Mrs. Balderson.
Planning the party were the girls and the other leaders, Mrs. Roy
Hannum and Mrs. Harold Holter.
Scouts attendh&gt;.g w'ere Carla Cowdery, Kellie Powell, Denise
Persans, Brend11 Jlucker, 'BOnnie Dailey, Jlebra Lewis, Diana
MlDDLEPORT Garden
~vans, Treasa Dailey, Denise Hauber, Susuan Hamum, Judy Club, home of Mrs: C. M.
Holter, Teresa Hannum, candy Dailey, Kim Reed, Sheila Hennesy, 7:30 p.m. Monday.
Buchanan, Kay Balderson, and a new girl scout who was Mrs . Crary Davis, Mrs .
welcomed to the troop, Patti Weyersmiller.
Mildred McDaniel, Mrs. B. B.
DUring the meeting held at Stewart Hall, the scouts made Zeigler, and . Mrs. Malcolm
miniature flowers from braid and glue to be sent to Miss Karen Roller, hostesses.
Reese a Four Rivers Scout Council aide, who entertained at the
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
'
'
recently Thinking Day program.
'DeMolay, 7:30 p.m. Monday
'1
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
night at the Middleport
Plans for attending church at the Heath United Methodist
Masonic Temple.
Church dn Scout Sunday, March 11, were made during a meeting
TUESDAY
of the 'rl-ooP 39. .
CHESTER
Council 323,
Officers were elected and new patrols were formed. during
the meeting. Angela Payne is the new treasurer, and Debbie Daughters of America, 7:30
Zirkle, ' the scribe. Thli patrols ·are as follows; Cake Tuesday at the hall. Games to
Makers, working on a cooking badge, Cindy Weaver, leader; be held following the meetin_g
by the Good of the Order
Katie Lewis,. assistantieader, Lydia Johnson, Mindy Long, and
committee.
Angela Payne; the Meigs Marauders Writers, working on the
writers badge, Marianne Welsh, leader, Carin Bailey, lli!Sistant WAYSIDE Garden Club will
·leader, Janell Kelly; Sara Diddle, Lori Kloes, and She Die Roush; meet at Columbia Gas Office in
and The Super Flies, working on world games, Kim Payne, 'Middleport at 7;30 p.m. Betty
leader, ,J:ulie KitChen, assistant leader, Terry Zirkle, Debbie Newton will have a demonZirkle, and Julie Byer.
stration.
SALISBURY JUNIOR TROOP 100
WEDNF.'&gt;DAY
Badge work was displayed by three members and officers
SACRED HEART Catholic
were elected at a meeting of the Salisbury Junior Troop.
Church Ash Wednesday serCarol Morr)s displayed a collection, Camille Swindell had a
vice, 7 a.m. and 7;30 p.m.
book badge report, and Regina Dorst talked on her cooking acfollowed by distribution of
tivities and also completed requirements for the housekeeping
ashes.
badge.
GRACE Episcopal Church,
Officers elected were Regina Dorst, patrol leader; Camille
Ash Wednesday service, 7:3()
Swindell, assistant; Patty Parker, scribe; Carol Morris,
p.m. The Rev, Roma King will
treasurer ; Laura Ohlinger, news reporter; Becky Dorst, first aid
keeper; Kathy Quivey,refreshments; and Gwen Folmer, games. be the speaker. ··
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S Club,
It was reported that $9.90 was reteived from bottle cap
Wednesday night following the
redemption. The troop will use the money for a skating party and
Ash Wednesday service at 7:30
for civic projects. .
Plans were made for the girls and their mothers to work on a p.m.
school pennant as a fund raising project. The pennant will be for
the Salisbury Blue Streaks.
The troop will give the flag ceremony on March 20at the PTA
meeting. Regina will be the fiagbearer, Gwen and Patty will be
the color guard, and Becky Dorst will be the sergeant at arms.

;wm

GENIE

=!:&lt;

~
~

Charlene

A weekly lealw'e of Metp
County Gar~ Club meffiben.

Blood explained
BY ALMA MARSHAU
NEW J1A VEN - Mr. Dwight
Blake, director of Blood Donor
Recruitment Services at the
Regional Blood Center in
Huntington, who spoke at the
New Haven Woman's Club
dinner meeting Tuesday at the
New Haven Public library
social room, was introduced by
Mrs. F. C. Reichert of New
Haven, a volunteer Red Cross
worker over 30 years.
Blake emphasized that the
Mason County blood bank "is
in trouble," that chances"of
losing it are very high; then
explained what the Red Cross
program means to the people
of the county, and how it
functions.
He said there are no charges
for the blood Itself when it is
furnished by the Red Cross,
though most hospitals must
charge the patient "laboratory
and administrative" costs in
connection with a transfusion.
A portion of these charges is
refunded to the Red Cross as a
part of its cost in the collection,
processing, storage and
delivery of the blood.
He said the Red Cross Blood
Program is the safest blood
that the people can get.
The bloodmobile sponsored
by Mason Mothers Club will be
in Mason Thursday, March 8,

'Girl Sceut
Diary By

Green.Thumb
Notes .•• •

1Social.l Mrs. ·Fry to be honored by club
.I·.caIen dar
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Amana "(.Urants fo.r 5 years from date ol orl&amp;lnal purthut in U.S.,
replacement or reparr ul parts loun rl dtleclive IS to workmanship or
material under normal use. This incl11de! labor required for replaurnenl
ol delettlve par ts . Defective par ts ! rt to be returned lhrou&amp;h Aman1'1
d ~a le r · d t slr i butor organ izat ion. Owner II responsible lor sttviuman't
travel charges, Iot aI w taa:e, replacement ol&amp;n hts, rubber or plutlc
PRrh tnd ll g1'1 t bulbs, An1 produc lsub/'eclld to acci dent, misuse, n11i·
gence, abuse , delacemenl of se ~ta l pate or allerat ion shall void ~t
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992-2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

· MIDDLIPOIIT

�6- The DaUy Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., March 5, 1973

_

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get. Results!

HONEST· INJUN, PAW--THAR AIN'T NOTHIN.'
""""- I LOVE GOODER 'N A
FAMIL'I PiCNIC

.-

PUBLIC NOTICES
Your Right to Know
and be informed of the tunc .
tlons of your government !!Ire
e'"bodled in public notices. tn

that self.government c harges

all citizens to be Informed ;
thIs newspaper urges every
citizen to read and study these
notices . We strongly adv ise
those citizens, seek i ng further
. information , to exercise their
right of access to public
re cor d~ and publ ic meeting s.

2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1970 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
$2495
Sport Sedan. Local 1 owner car, beautiful turquoise finish
with spotless matching interior trim, black vinyl top,
factory air , V-8 engine, turbo-hydramatlc, power steering
and brakes, radio. good w-w tires, deluxe bumper guards,
nice and clean.
1970 DODGE POLARA
1. $1695
4-door, fa ctory air, V-8 engine, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes. good white-wall -tires, white
finish , vinyl top, radio, clean inside.

PUBLIC NOTICE
MARTHA
PRICE, aka
1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA
$1895
MARTHA KIBBLE. JACOB
Station wagon. locally owned &amp; clean inside &amp; out. V·B
PRICE , CINCINNATUS
engine, automatic transmission . power steering, power
KIBBLE, CINCINNATUS
brakes, lud'gage rack , green vinyl Interior with white
KIBBLE, JR ., C. KIBBLE , C.
E. KIBBLE. H E. KIBBLE ,
finish . Radio and _all the extras.
GEORGE E. KIBBLE, JOHN
KIBBLE . LEWIS KIBBLE ,
CARRIE KIBBLE. MINNIE
DEVORE, LILLIE SCOTT ,
SARAH E. SAMUELSON,
OPEN EVES. 8: 00P. M.
FRANK KIBBLE , MARTHA
POMEROY, OHIO
KIBBLE, MAMIE SOVEL ,
HOR RACE
E.
KIBBLE.
CLARA CHUTES, CHARLES
KIBBLE, AND HERBERT
WANT A~
Notice
KIBBLE If living, whose exact
INFORMATION
addresses ere unknown and
whose tut known addresses are
DEADL~INES '
Rt . 1, R&amp;edsvllle, Ohio. and If .s-P.M. Dly Before Publication
d
d t
Mt;.nday Deadt1ne ·9 a.m.
ece.~se
hen their
unknown .• 1 Cancellation
.- Corrections · ·
httrs,
d4tvtsees
, legatees,
~
executors, administrators and - nil I be acdpted untll9e.m. fOr
or ass igns will take notice that
Day of, PubtiC:atlon
REGULATIONS
J · B· 0 ' Brien flied his comp laint .nfe Publisher
reserves thE·
February 8. 1973 1n the Common right to edit oweject any ads
Pleas Court of Meigs County, 'deemed . otJtel'tlonal. The .
Ohio, Case No . 15232 alleging ~ubll~er will not be responsible,
that he Is the owner of S-484
Interest In the follow ing 1 or -,.,ore than o11t lm:Orrect
Furnace Controls
described rea r estate, and nsertton . RATES
praying that title to said real
For Wal'lt Ad Service
HUMIDIFIERS
~i~1~~~ 0~ 8s 8q1 ~ 1 ~~:1 =~~~t~~r par- 5 cents per Word one insertio~
Hot Water Heaters
The persons above named wll
Mln l'l!um Charge 75c
12 t:entf' per word thrpt
take notice thai they have been
Plumbingmade parties defendant to said ..consecutive Insertions. . . .
complaint and that tl'ley are '. 18 cents pe~ word SIX con·,
Electrical Work
required to answer within 28 .secutlve Insertions .
25 Per Cent Oisc_
ount on _paid
days after April 2. 1973 or on or
before May 1, 197J.
a~s and ads ~aid W1tr1in 10 da,vs .
Said rea t estate being situated
CA. AD OF THANK 5
In the Township of Olive, county
&amp; OBITUARY
.
5
of Meigs and State of Ohio.
S1. D fM' SO word rhtnlmJJrn .
1. Being In 160 acre lot 1164,
Each Oddltlonat word 2c.
town 4, range II of the Ohio
r BLIND ADS .
992-2448
Company's Purchase. more
Add tlonal 25c Charge P~tr •
Pomeroy,
particularly described as the Aclvertlsemenl.
S.W. quorler of lot 1164 . . OFFICJ! _HOURS
.
beginning at the S.W. corner of .8.30 a.m. to 5. 00 p.m . Dally,
lot116A; thencenorthatonosald 8 · 30 a. m. to 12 : 00 Noon
lot line eo rods ; thence east ao saturday .
Major Chemical Meeting
rods to a stake ; thence south 80
THURS. , MAR. 8
rods to the south line of lot 1164 ;
thence wesl ao rods 1o the place Notice
8:00PM
of beginning, conta ining 40
At Landmark Town
ac&amp;~~e~tf~: :~o~:~~-e parcel out 'HOOD'S AQUARIUMS ; fish
&amp; Country Store
of S.W. corner of said 40 acre and supplies; new location,
101 .
Ash Street, Middleport near
E. Main
Pomeroy
It Is the lnlenl to convey 3o park; phone 992-5443.
acres Which was formerly
1-7-tfc
REFRESHMENTS
owned by Sarah M. Kibble.
DOOR PRIZES
2. Also the following real KnsroT KOSMETICS ANO
INFORMATION
estate In sections 4, and 10, town
WIGS. SPECIALS MONTH4 range 11, 100 acre lot 1159
Everyone Is Welcome!
lY .
BROWN 'S
IN DE·
bounded on tl'le north by land of
PENDENT
DISTRIBU Charles or Lesto Blake, east by
POMEROY
David Rood, soutl'l by Mathilda
TOR,
MIDDLEPORT .
~~
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
Hetz:er 11nd west Jasper Reed,
PHONE 992-5113.
Phone·992·2181
containing nine 11c\es.
3. Also 20 acres n Secl lon 1. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2_·
23-tfc
Town 4, Range ·11 Olive PUBLIC NOTICE
2 BEDROOM mobile home on
Township , Meigs County, Oh io
the S lf2 0f the S.E . 'I• Of the S.W.
private lot for rent . Also want
NOTICE OF
lJ-4 of said section 11 containing
to buy good used 2 bedroom
PUBLIC
SALE
20 acres .
trailer . Must be priced right.
TO WHOM IT MAY CON ·
J . B. O' Brien, CERN
Robert Hill . Racine, phone
:
Pla intiff
Notice
Is
hereby
given
that
on
949-3811.
(2) 12, 19, 26\31 5, 12, 19, 26.
March 19th. 1913, at 10 .00 A.M.
2-27-6tc
a public sale will be held at - - - - - Pomeroy Motor' Company ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pomero 1y, Oh lo to selh for ¢ash
IN THE COURT OF
the folloWihti collater~l, to wit:
COMMON PLEAS,
To
1969 Chevrolet, Spe. Ser . No .
MeiGS COUNTY, OHIO 164479U
162624,
said
collateral
PROBATE DIVISION
fn tht Mltftr ol THE ESTATE being held to secure an
OF Clara Htn, Deceued. obligation arising under a retail
instalment securitv agreement
NOTICE
To the Heirs at Law 1nd Next of executed by Phlllip L. Mowery ,
Kin of Cl1ra Hess, Deceastd: Rt. 1, Middleport. Ohio and held
You ere hereby notified that by G'eneral Motors Acceptance
on the 15th day of February, Corporation as secured party.
1913. an oppllcal lon was filed In Said public sa le is to be con thiS Court to relieve the Estate ducted ac cording to the laws of
of Clara Hess. Deceased, from the State of Ohio. General
adm lnlstratlon and to sell Motors Acceptance Corporation
personal property of Clara Hess reserves the right to bid at thiS
sale .
to apptv on the funeral bill.
Maximum
The cgllateral is presently
You are hereby hHther
notified that this Application stored and may be seen at
·Diameter
will be heard on the 1Sth day of Pom eroy Motor Company,
March. 1973, at 10;0(1 o'clock Pome roy . Oh io.
GENERAL MOTOR S
A .M . before this Court .
iU"
ACCEPTANCE
Mannino D. Webster ,
CO RPORATION
Probate Judge 1
Ill 19, 26 131 , 5. 3t
_::;
~1c.l
~·..cl~l_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Largest End
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE
NOTICE
To Mary v . KestElrson . who se
Bids will be received at ttle
is unknown and cannot
Law Off ice ot Bernard v . Fultz , address
DELIVERED
Pomeroy
National
Sank Wifh reasonable diligence be
ascerta
ined
;
you
are
hereby
TO
Build ing, Pomeroy , Oh io, until
Saturday, March 10, 1973, at ten notified that you have been
nam ed Defendant in · a legal
o'clock A. M ., for the sale of the action
Fred c .
Genevieve Stobart residence on Kesterson.entitled
PIB int iff , vs. Mary
U . s. Route 33, approximately
V. Kesterson. Defendant. This
one.fourth mile north of the action
been assigned Case
Pomeroy corporation line. The No . 15,2has
13, and is pending In the
Open Saturdays
house ma~p~ be seen In advance Court
Common Pl·eas, Meig s
by contacting Eldon Weeks , County,cf Pomeroy
from
8 •·"!· to 3:30·p.m.
, Ohio, 45769.
Executor of the Estate of the
Old Rt. 33
On
The
obj
ect
of
the
Comp
laint
is
decedent, Telept!One : 992 -2784. for divorce ~ nd suC'h other relief
Phone 992-2689
ELDON WEEKS
may be just and proper .
Executor of the Estate of asYou
Pomeroy,
Ohio
are
required
to
answer
Genevieve Stobart, deceased . the Compla int within 28 days
131 1.2. 4. 5, 6, 7. 8. 9,8tc after the last publ ic ation of thi s
notice , which will be published WANTED, Beef Hides ; will pay
once each week tor six con - $9 a piece ; Pomeroy St.,
sec utive Weeks . The last
Mason, W. Va .; phone 773.
publication will be made April
5600.
9, 1973 and lh e 28 days for art 2·16·15tp
swer will commence on that
POMEROY LANES
date .
Women's Th~rsday Afternoon
In case of your fa ilure to OLD furniture, oak tables,
February 15, 1973
answer or oth erw ise respond as
organs, dishes. clocks, brass
Won Lost reQuired by the Ohio Rules of
beds or complete households.
Pullins Excavating
38
10 Civil Procedure, judgment by
Write
M. 0. Miller, Rt . 4,
default
wilt
be
rend
ered
against
New York Clothing
30
18
Pomeroy,
011io. Phone 99!you
for
the
rel
ief
demanded
in
Pomeroy Lanes
30
18 the Complain t.
6271
.
· Pomeroy Motors
18
30
_ _ _ _ _ _ _.:..,:
1-7-ttc
Simon's Markel
18
30 Dated : M.arch 5, 1973.
Helen's Beauty Shop 10
38
· Larry Spencer
High Team Three Games Clerk of Courts, Help Wanted
Me igs County
Pullins 1168; New ' York
Com mon Pleas Court WANTED
Clothing 1728 ; Simon' s Market
.
Immed iately -' Man
(3) s. 12. 19, 26, (4) 2. 9. 61
1679.
or Woman
to supply
High Team Game - Pullins
customers in area wit h
638 ; Helen's 592; Simon's 589.
RAWLE IG H PRODUCTS .
15
High Ind. Series - Marlene Ball Buslers
Profit of SS0-$100 week ly
14
"Wilson 520; Vicky Adkins 476 ; lmpacls
easily. Call coll ect: IBIS) 233·
Rams
11
Julie Bor les 459.
4191 ; Wri te• Rawlelgh Co.,
4
High nd . Game - Betty Alley Cats
Dept. 3003. Freeporl. Ill .
High
Ind.
Game
Mark
Whitlatch 185; Marlene Wilson
61032.
Mitch
194,
Cathy
M~a dows 184.
184; /,\arlene Wilson 178.
3·5·2tc
Hig'h Series Mick
Davenport 485, Mark Mitch - - - - 455.
Tea m High Game and Series
Women's Thursday Afternoon
Ba ll Buslers 908. 2679.
February 22, lt73
Won Lost
42
14
Pullins Excavating
Saturday Senior
38
18
New York Clothing
Pis.
32
24
Pomeroy Lanes
Pin
Crushers
22
24
32
Simon's Market
Herbies
19
18
38
Pomeror Motors
Ding-A-Lings
17
42
Helen's Beauty Shmp 14
14
High Team Series - New Gutter Dusters
Pin
Busters
6
York Clothing 1722, Helen's
Born Losers
3
1681 , Simon's 1648.
High
Ind.
Game
Ted
. High Teani Game - New
York Clothing 598, Helen's 597, Fisher 220, Mike Gilmore 182.
High Series - Ted Fisher
Simr,, · 574.
512,
Debl Ga ll agher 451 .
H·ll' "'d. Series - Norma
Team High Game and Series
Am · ·,:,. y 474, Eileen Searls
- Pin Crushers 835. 2405. ·
4117 •:,r• oa Smith 454.
H•:'• nd . Game - Norma
APPLY in person for position of
Amsbdt y 182, . Eileen Searls
cooks. Red Carpe' tnn, Rt . 62
117. ~etty Whitlatch 174.
N.• Pt. Pleasant .
·An acte of grass releases
2-27-6tc
about 2,400 gallons of wate r
on a summer 's day. llu'ough TWO (iti7P.n Journ~ t ca rri ers ;
Saturday Junior
evaporation
a nd tra" ~ P i,·a­
., .. r
~- " ; " rl l!' po r t, ·
on ~
February 24, 1973
Pts. tion , and providf'~ t! :r- ('nO!Pomeroy . Phone 992-3278.
19 Jng effe('t nf .1 70-tnn .. ,. ('liP
Dreamers
3-l·ffC
18
Apaches
ditione!'

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Wanted .

For Sale

11 ·
'
DEAD Stock horses, cattle, "IF YOU ' RE interested In '.• •.
qualify and service plus the
highest diScount In Tri-State,
It will pay you .to check with
us, on 18 ft . thru 27 ft. Star. '
craft Trailers - new and
used ; we carry a complete
line of Slarcratt Fold-down
campers; Camp Conley
Starcratt Sales, Rt: 62 N. of
Point Pleasant, behind Red
Carpet Inn; phone 675·5384.
. 3·5·5tc

hogs, sheep. R,easonabl e
charge. Ciill 245-SSIA.
2-28-30fc

LOANS. operating capital, etc.
Available for any purpose,
S20,000 up to any amount. Call ·
area cod e · 292-337-1127, .
William L Creekmore CLU .
2-25-10tc

For Sale'
Aluminum
Sheets

r1anted To Rent

36"x23"x.009

FARMHOUSE In: Meigs; low
rent ; will do repairs; Gibbs,
71 Morris Ave .. Athens, 0.
. 3·4-3tp

For Rent

H!AnNG &amp;
COOLING

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
o.

Wanted

.Buy ·

WANTED
CHIPWOOD
Poles

or.

$7.00 Per Ton.
OHIO
PALLET CO.

Local Bowlmg

j'

CARRIER
NEEDED
IN POMEROY.

The Daily Sentinel

.Ph. 992-2156

8 lor $1.00

773-5580.

2-27-61p
.
'
2·13-ffc

-------

- ·-

..

'

..

ASK US ABOUT

The
Daily Sentinel
Court St.

.

..

PRE-FABRICATED

\\000 TRUSSES
~~ .
Built to Your 'Specs'
Delivered to Job Site

HOGG

&amp;ZUSPAN

MATERIALS CO.
Mason, W.Va.
773-5554

Have your· homo built by·
Custom Builders . Our
carpenters have 20 years
experience In · building ,
homes In Meigs County.

ALL WEA1HER
ROOFING AND
-OONSTRiJCilON .·
PHONE~ 992-2550·

lar~,~est

"io:'•eh e
1· Radiator
"'
lest Heater Core.
'Nathan Biggs •
Radiatqr Specialist

.

'

992-2094
. .606 E . Main Pomeroy

...
.

P~
~E Wb.U6.

A

•

THIS WEJ!K :r'o!l SOtNG TO WATCH
THE HARLSM GL08ErROTTERS, 81L4
COSBY, FLIP WILSON;' SANFORt&gt;
AND SON, ANP CHER BONO

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

.FURNITURE

P!ZINT FOR

A FReNCH

CHEF, A COLOR 1V...

SHS'S MV TO~oN

REDSKIN

A NEW SED Wffil
GII..K SHEE~r
LINI..IMn'I:D
PJN·UP P~REG...

)top In and See Our
Floor Display.
'

KITOtENI&amp; SON
OONSTRUCTION
HOME BUILDING

&amp;'
REMODELING

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

SMllH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

I

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

.

EXPERT
Wheel. Alignment
'5.5S
on Most American Cars ·

20e

at
Darwin, all-electric. Phone

Park; phone 992 -3324.

_.

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

MOBILE home in Middleport,
adults. 560 a month. no pets.
Phone 992-5247.
2-27-61p

L.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ----FURNISHED apartment

"HSIL"

Business ·Services·

..

Business Opportunities

----TRAILER, Brown's Trailer

..

.

BOB SLOAN

&amp;

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Bl':i'-~ ·WRIT

APARTMENTS : One efficiency
Pomeroy
with bath, kilchen, living
room and bedroom com ·
' 0;:.;'..-.J
bination, new furniture; two 7 FOOT pool table ; phone 992· L--"-""1-·2_17_4_ _ _P_o_m_e_ro_'i·_.J, L....:::'06::....:E:.::.Ho:::.:a.:.ln::.'_P.:.om.:..:.er;..;o.;.y;..
7001.
furnished apartments, 1
2-28·6fc
bedroom, living room, kltchen and dini ng room ; one
- - - - -- : ELNA and White Sewing WILL do remodeling. interior
u-nfurnished apartment . CUAL Limestone, Excelsior·
Machines ... service on ·an and exterior painting, conPhone992 -3863 'till p. m. and
Salt Worksr E. Main St.,
makes . Reasonable rates. crete work by hour or con992-5844 alfer 6 p. m.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891. ·
The Sewing Center. Mid · tract; phone 992-3511.
Located in
2-21 -121p
3-1-4fc
dleport, Ohio.
·
4-12-tfc
_
11-16-tfc
Mi~dle'port's
UNFURNISHED 3 room LOCUST fence posts; phone 985· • ···-· ·. . G &amp; E Arpllance Repair, repair
4265.
WILL trim or cut trees, clean
on al laundry equipment.
apartment, 40B Spring Ave ..
Pomeroy .
2·11·3otc
out basements, attics, etc.. refrigeration equipment and
Remodel to Suit
Phone 949-3221.
house wiring ; welding,
3-2-tfc - ' - -- - - - -- - - -- BUILDING lots for sale at Rock
2-4-30tq _ electric and gas. Call 992-3802
. Tenant
·
Oh' Ci
t M ·
.~-:------' or after 4:30 p.m. call 9922 BEDROOM mobile home;
Spnngs.
to. ose o etgs EXCAVATING. Dozers. large
6050.
comp letely furnished: call
High School with Tuppers
and small; Backhoes and
2-5-30fp
992-5320
992-2441 after 5:30 p.m.
Plains water. Size 1h acre and
Loaders on track and tires ; - - - - - - - - 2-7-tfc larger . 992 ·2789 ·
992-7889
Dump trucks. Lo-boy· O' DELL WHEEL alignment
2·25 · 301 P
Serv tce; Sepfrc tanks In·
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
stalled;
George
(Bill)
comp lete front end. serv lce.
unfurnished apartments.
Pullins ; phone 992-2478.
tune up and brake service:
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
Phone 992-5434.
2-9-tfc' Wheels
balanced elec and. backhoe work ; septic
4-12-tfc Pels for
--------Ironically.
All
work
tanks Installed ; dump trucks
~--'----..
HARRISON'S TV Service and
guaranteed.
Reasonable
•RKVIEW K
and lo-boys for hire ; will haul
ONE bedroom apartments; P&lt;'
ennels going out
Service Calls; phone 992·2522.
rates. Phone -2·3213 or 742·
of business. Big price
"
fill dirt, top soil, limestone
ideal for couples; phone 9922-9·11 c
reduction on all dogs. All AK3232.
and
gravel; call Bob or Roger
5248 or 992-3436.
2-IB·ffc
C. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash · -READY -MIX - CONCRETE
Jeffers, day phone 992-7089;
2·2B-6fc
Streets, Middleport, Ohio.
delivered right to your
night phone 992·3525 or 992·
---~-5232 • .
12-13-tfo
project. Fast and · easy. Free ~EE US FOR :' Awnings, slorm
2-11-tfc
------~-estimates , Phone 992-3284. doors and windows, carports,
REGISTERED toy lo• terrie r
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co ..
marquees. aruminum siding - - : - - - - - ONE 35 x B Pacemaker 2 ~uppies . 6 weeks old, $35.
Mldd lepott, Ohio.
and railing. A. Jacob , sales DOZER and back hoe ·work,
bedroom mobi le home ; 65
hone 742-5625.
6-30-tfc
representative . For free ' ponds and septic tanks, dll· .
Concord 26 ft . self-contained
3-1-6tc ~~------esllmates , phone Chari""
chino service ; top soli, fill
camper ; phone 992-3954.
SEPTIC TANKS CLiiANED
lisle, Syracuse, V. V. · dirt,&gt; limestone; B&amp;K Ex·
3· 2-3tc
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
Johnson and Son, Inc.
cavatlng . Phone 992-5367,
Auto
4782, Gal lipolis, John Russell,
3-2-ftc
Dick Ka~r , Jr .
!
-SINGER automatic sewing
Owner &amp; Operator.
.
-~------9·1·tfC,
machine'; like new In walnut 1972 HONDA 500. 4 cylinder,
12-tfc
cabinet. Makes design sill·
many extras. like new ; phone - - - : - - - - - . . :5..:.:·
ches. zig-zags. buttonholes,
985-3828.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
5ale
sale
blind hems. overcasts, etc., • - -- - - - - - - 3 --2-tfc
Complete Service
·HOUSE
1n
Long
Bottom,
phone
$85. Call - Ravenswood, 273-·
Phone 949·3821
985-3529.
i
9S21 or 273-9893.
Racine. Ohjo
6-ll ·tfC'
Crill BradfQ.rd
1·11·1fC
5·1-tfc
--~---..:....
HOUSEHOLD furnishings. one
year old - 14 cu. It. trostfree
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
Gibson refrigerator; $175; 42"
1966 CHEVROLET
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·'
Kelvinator electric range.
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
%TON .
$100; 3-piece solid maple
SANITATION,
STEWART,
REALTY
bedroom suite, $175. Reason
OH 10. PHONE 662-JOJS.
601 E. Mli"
~
for sellin~, purchased fur 110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy __r
10·4-tlc
__.._
__:_
PICKUP
TRUCK
ni shed lra1ler. Phone 742-6085
~.,
or 773-5613.
·
Pomeroy, Ohio
INTERIOR and exterior
V-8 · motor. good condition..
MIDDLEPORT RT. 1
2·27-6tc Check this one now .
painting . Phone 992·2368.
1 story. 3 bedrooms. New
Pomeroy.
bath . New F.A. furnace,
YOU saved and slaved for wall
2-2 7-6fp
BAllY FARM
large recreation room,
to wall carpet. · Keep it new
with Blue lustre. Rent
utility R. Storage building
J
ACRESGood
old
house
Ph. 992-2176
Pomeroy SEWING MACHINES. Repair
electric shampooer, $1. L-------- ---'
with
3
bedrooms,
2
baths,
cellar: Asking $9,800.00.
and
service, all makes. 992-2284.
Nelson's
Drug
Store,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
and 3 porches. Medium size
RUTLAND
Pomeroy, Ohio. .
1970 FORD Van, 6 cylinder, A-1 Authorized Singer Sales and
barn. Wanl$10,500.00. WHAT
L Story frame. 6 rooms; 3
3-4-2fc
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
condition, low mileage ; phone
bed R., balh, dining R. Nice
WILL YOU GIVE?
:-:-:::----698·872~, Albany .
·
3·29-tfc
BUSINESS
kitchen.
porches, storage.
MOTOROLA TV, 21 " floor
l ·4·6tc
1
OPPORTUNITY
Interior
paneling and
model; $40; phone 992-2262. ---~-PLliMi'iiNG ~ork done ; phone
HERE IT IS - A place to
plaster. Asking $9,200.00.
·
3·4·3fc 1969 FORD Ranger 1 ton F-350; . 985-4265.
live and run your very own
HARRISONVILLE
390 engine, long wheel base,
2-11·30fc
business
.
J
bedrooms
This
Is
a lovely home tor 1ust
power
brakes
,
power
MODERN Walnul style stereo.
steering,
rough
tires,
airlarge
paneled
home
wllh
$14,900.00.
4 bedrooms. bath,
AUTOMOBILE
.Insurance
been
radio, AM=FM radio, 4
modern fireplace . And a 4
cancel led?
Lost
your
dining R., TV room. Fuel oil
s peak er .sound system, 4 1 conditioned, 47,300 miles;
Harold Brewer, Loog Bottom ,
operator's license? Call 992- room business building on
s peed automatic changer .
heal . Approx. '12 acre.
phone 985-3554.
2966.
Ba lance $68.33. Use our
Rt . 7 loop. ASKING
SYRACUSE
3·4-tfc _ _ __ _ ___:6:..::·15-tfc $25,000.00. MAKE US AN
budget terms . Call 992-7085.
7
room
BRICK.
4 bedrooms,
3-1-6fc - - - - - - OFFER.
New bath and utility, new
IOACRES
F.A. gas furnace, porches,
EARLY Amer ican stereo-radio,
ON
LEADING
CREEK
storage
bldg., fruit trees . 2
AM-FM radio, 4 speed
Bargain
day
·
Old
house,
lots
on
Ohio
Power. Asking
automati c changer, .:1 speaker
cistern, and barn. On hard
$17,900.00.
sound system. Balance $79.56.
road too. Want · $5,000.00 but
Use our budget terms . Call
HARRISONVILLE
The late Will Carmen home, Laurel Cliff. All
992-7085.
ask to see lhen we will talk
lll~ A., .4 bedrooms, l'h
3-l-6tc
electric, bath, upstairs finished large enough
turkey:
balhs, garage, utility room. 2
BUILDING LOT
for two ' bedrooms, kitchen, living room,
buildings, one 40•70 ; In
1970 YAMAHA 175, $250; phone
POMEROY - On Rt. 7
excellent
condition.
bedroom.
glass
enclosed
front
porch
on
first
742-6834.
business
loop.
Seldom
do
we
$21,500.00.
floor. garage, some paneling. Priced at
3- 2-tfc
get anything like this. Be
WE HAVE OTHERS
------$4500.00.
first and see It for only
PLEASE CALL
STEREO 8 track. Must sell at
$1500.00 NOW.
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
once . 1973 B track stereo in
125ACRES
BROKER
lovely walnut console. Take
OF NICE WOODS - Nearly
992-2259
over payments of $7.55 per
'all in timber. Large old home
If
no
answer
992-2568
month or pay $101.50. Cai1 992·
P.O. Box 101, Phone 985-4186
of 9 rooms. 2 baths. drilled
5JJ1.
Pomeroy, Ohio
well w lth gciod water. A rea I
2-23-tfc
setting In the country tor the
1972 ZIG-ZAG Sewing Machine.
2 NEW 3 bedroom homes; 1 with children. Want $26,000.00 but
This machine is a dressmaker Mobile
basement, 1 without ; 2 car see us .
model. Pay balance of 138.50 f':-'---------&lt;'"
garages, 1 acre lots i located NO TIME LIKE NOW TO
or pay balance of S6 per
at Rock Springs behind Meigs BUY. PROPERTY IS LIKE
monlh. Call 992-5331 .
• Air ConditiOners
Co. Fairground. Will lrade or
ELSE ,
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ 2·_
23-tfc
• Awnings
help finance ; also 5 good EVERYTH I NG
building lois, water and GOING UP EVERY DAY.
disposal installed ; Charles H. DON'T WAIT SEE US NOW.
1972 ZIG·ZAG Sewing Machine '
_· ·Underpinnillg
Cornell, Athens, 593·7034 or
left in layaway. Beautiful ' r!.
•
GORDON B.' TEAFORD,
""stel color. lull size mOdel . I ~Complete mqblle hqme, , 593-5667 or 992-7613.
2-lt -tfc
ASSOCIATE
All bui lt-in to buttonhole, do , ~ervtce ~ plus gigantic · ·
stretch sewing and fancy : lspla~. of mobile homes
"HOUSE FOR SAlE: ii4 -Brick
HE~EN l. TEAFORD,
stitching . Pay lust 548.75 cash · always avallable.at .. .
Ohio;
brick
ASSOCIATE
"Street,
Pomeroy,
or terms available . Trade-ins ; •
·M· ILLER
·ON YOUR DIAL
house, 3 bedrooms, excellent
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
accepted. Phone 992 -7755, 1
•
,
location, close to school and
992-3325
Electro Hygie~e Co. 228-6fc ~ MQBILE "OMES
city; contact lou Osborn~ or• - - - - - - - - - r.att 992-5898.
.
. ~--:--;-:=-------'--..._-"'"":~.:0.....;;..__........,
ELECTROLUX vacuum : 4 1nowashingtonBivd. '
11 -26-tfc n
23 75
Big ~IPICity
Cleaner corpplete with at· :, . · 2l
BELPRE, 0 .
. • I
Maytag
I
tachments, cordwlnder and ·
Autom1tits
'
5 ROOMS and bath house ;
paint spray. Used but In like
.
'2tPeed operatiOn .
located on Brick • St. In
new condition. Pay $34.45. 1973
14x70
COMMUNITY
Choice of water
Rutland, $7,000; phone 742cash or budget plan ava ilable. Mobile Home, on a lot 95x135
temps.
Auto .
3334.
Phone 992-7755
Electro in Rutland ; Includes dishwater
level
control .
Lint
Hygiene Co.
washer , washer and dryer
·Htc ',
Fitter or Power
2·28-6fc sta inless steel sink. garbag~ --:-------_:..::3
Fin Agitator .
--------disposal , eye level range and 5 ROOM house ; one third acre ·
Perm a-Pres._
ground; gas heat, basement;
SET ol cullivators, plows, dacron polyester carJ&gt;I!IIng
M1ytag
good location for trailers; S.
Massey -Ferguson Mower throughout ; phone 742-3832
Halo of Hut ·
D. Buskirk, 341 Page St.,
with 7 ft. blade, all with 3 evenings.
·
Dryers
Middleport, Ohio.
point hitch; 2 wheel wagon,
2-21-12tc
Surround'
clothes
set of discs, New Idea Tomato ·
-::-::-:~-~---=3· 4-Jfp
with _gentle,· even
setter, cattle watering tank,
heat . No hot spots~
5 ROOMS and bath, with one ,
1950Ford pickup truck ; phone
no ov.erOi")'lng. '
1
O:ASH ·pa!d tor all makes and
. 247 -2161.
acre of ground; phone Mason,
Fine Mash Lint
models
of
m.
o
blle
homes
.
1-304·773·5615..
•
2·2B·6fc
Filler .
Phone ar'• cOde 6U-423-9531 .
----------"
We Spoclollttln
3·4-6tp
4-13-tfc _ _;.,----'--..:...:
, MAYTAO

"SOL AND

SE.~'- BUT 'TIS

·

LOST!!- THE. "'--RLD Wll.l.
NI.VEI\ SU IT!!

THAT

COMPARE.TH
WITH "f',OME.O

C. L. KITCHEN
992-5653

Mond~~r~~!:urdav

W GP.EATEST PLAY 'WAS

THE.'/ SA'/ THAT
NEVE: I"- HATH A
LOVE. STORY

AND Jlli.IET"-

BUSINESS SPACE

WINNIE WINKLE
THAT$ NOT" lRUc, HA L, T \'MAT el5E CAN I "11-t iNK?
AND YOU SHOULDN'T
NOT ONe 51&gt;GLE JOil" OFFER I

r~~~~~ ()UCH

MY

~~~~~~~N~~~' rM
DON'T KNOW WHERE
lO "IURN!

OOLLY, I FEEL SO SORRY
FOR HIM. $HOULD I
OFFER HI'-'&gt; A JOI3 AT
BONNAZ OR YI.OUtD :t

BEo MAKING- A 1ERRII3L.C
,MISTAKE ? S:."-""""

Sale

- ·:

-..

:-.~:

For Sale

ALLEY

Sales

.-~----

Real Estate For

Real Estate For

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

FOR QUICK SALE!

_ __

CLELAND~

LOOt&lt;, SOtJ' Jll5T
{.aJE. (),IT t.aJ(p
E~lO"'Ve;
~

t

~e;"' 1-11~

..

&amp;&amp;:&gt; Kl'$$\

Meigs Equipment

Real Estate For Sale

BEIM' A liUfST 111 A I.OOHEY BIN
MEANS WE. GOT T• ACT Lit&lt;£

~

ONLY THt
JHMA'rES
SEEM TO B£
IH CHARGE!

_..

1. Forever
11

IIAS!llEH
CCJW!Mtn:D

TO Pf/l.TK·..

l

741 -4211

FURNITURE R~~~.~~:·'

Arnold Grate.

Yelter4l,l''o Cr7ploquote: THE HOLE AND THE PATCH
SHOULD BE COMMENSURATE.-THO~S JEFFERSO.N
'"&lt;® 1978 Xlnr Foataret Syndicate, 1110.)

DICK TRACY
WHAT~

THAT

PIECE OF PAPER
YOU CWUCKLED
OVER?

UMCramble thue faar Jumblt1,
one letter IG eaeh tquare, IG
form four ordinary wordt.

"eve·
ning"

12. Endure
13. India or
Ceylon
tea
(2 wds.)
15. Calendar
abbrevia·
tlon
16. Roman

5. The royal
way
6. Backslide
7. Rlblcolf
8.Fun
vehicle
9. Redolence
10. Shep·
herd's
pipe
14. Slippery
19. Enraged
20. Mikado's

bronze
17. Large

crowd,

•.,

~l1JJWID~IMJ~=~.-Jc:

magic
(2 wda .)
4. Poet's

nique
volcano

Cockney
style
18. Did In
Zl. Like the
gates of
St. Peter
23. Barren
27. Marshal
Z8. Italian
city
29. Latvian
30. Onus
31. Paradis!·

court

21. Buddy
22. Before
U. Humanitarian
organization
(2 wds.)

25. Feminine
· suffix
26. Danger-

ous-

rn
()

SUPIO

McGrew
Z8.New

Hampshire

resort
town
30.-nolr
32. Trifte
33. Notice

Now IIITIIIP tho cln:lod leUoil
IG r- tiM ....,.U. ....,., •
lllll"lld br tho aboM can-.

(A....,.IIa

acal

I

I""""'"• CIOON

33. Briny
II. Onetime
(2 wds.)
Non-

·WMP0/1390

R~TLAND

loot, T.M.I6f. U.l r.t. 1111'.

mancy;

6. Work
11. Marti·

like a person.

4 BE DROM home, 2 baths, gas·
3 BEDROOM trailer . parllally 1968 WINDSOR , 12•60, 2 furnace, full basement, river
fur nish ed. Pri ced to se ll.
bedroom, with or· wl1hout
tronlage, Syracuse. Ohio,
. furniture ; ph9ne 992-3511 .
Ph one 74? "833
Phone 992·2360.
J. J 6tc
•
2·11
-ttc
1-25-tfc
_,

MU.

Z. Simple
3. Nec:ro-

ACROSS

Jll!D Jllllil&amp;

We·falk to YGll

· --~-~-

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

REAL ESTATE BROKER

Mobile Homes For Sale

H'll

~HtM"Oesf

I&lt;AilHOUSE ••

GEORGE S. HOBSTEITER Jr.

Homes For Sale

Bftri'

NUTS IS 1'1\R FOR THE COURse!

REAL ESTATE FOR sALE

------

0

lllwrdl!lf•

APION

·

Aalwen I'Aal to driM

•II•)

PAUnl TIIIAL

tMtlttf oul

. of" ltall&lt;o-NICTAl

•

sense!
tO. Ornate

I CAN'T DO IT... I OON'TTHINK
THAT 'ttlV RfAlL'f ME 'IYP!CAL
Of A t&gt;!El611S~J.IOOO OC'6 ...

writing
(2 wds.)
U.Bay

· window
«.Artist's
purchase
45. Mournful
46. Ford
dynasty
member

DOWN
1. Footless
WHile ON A RE:AR PORCH .

animal

1\PJOINING HI? lloEPROOM?oL!DY...

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXII
II LONGFELLOW
One tetter simply stands for another. In this sample A ·ts
used for the three L's, X for the two O's •. etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the len&amp;lh and fonnaUon ·of the words ·are ali
. hintr;. Each da)' the code letters are different.

THIS IS

BLACKMAIL!!

CRYPTOQUOTES

QLKLW .JM MKRKUMJ .L'::=::=::::::~~::..::J

VGKMITJVGP :
YJ •.TBJST

r,. .r J.

~

P

WI

KT TIMQUMJ

•.r ,~ r roT

VSI U MJ CT .-

•· 1. y ,. ,.

.I
.

-

\

�6- The DaUy Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., March 5, 1973

_

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get. Results!

HONEST· INJUN, PAW--THAR AIN'T NOTHIN.'
""""- I LOVE GOODER 'N A
FAMIL'I PiCNIC

.-

PUBLIC NOTICES
Your Right to Know
and be informed of the tunc .
tlons of your government !!Ire
e'"bodled in public notices. tn

that self.government c harges

all citizens to be Informed ;
thIs newspaper urges every
citizen to read and study these
notices . We strongly adv ise
those citizens, seek i ng further
. information , to exercise their
right of access to public
re cor d~ and publ ic meeting s.

2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1970 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
$2495
Sport Sedan. Local 1 owner car, beautiful turquoise finish
with spotless matching interior trim, black vinyl top,
factory air , V-8 engine, turbo-hydramatlc, power steering
and brakes, radio. good w-w tires, deluxe bumper guards,
nice and clean.
1970 DODGE POLARA
1. $1695
4-door, fa ctory air, V-8 engine, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes. good white-wall -tires, white
finish , vinyl top, radio, clean inside.

PUBLIC NOTICE
MARTHA
PRICE, aka
1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA
$1895
MARTHA KIBBLE. JACOB
Station wagon. locally owned &amp; clean inside &amp; out. V·B
PRICE , CINCINNATUS
engine, automatic transmission . power steering, power
KIBBLE, CINCINNATUS
brakes, lud'gage rack , green vinyl Interior with white
KIBBLE, JR ., C. KIBBLE , C.
E. KIBBLE. H E. KIBBLE ,
finish . Radio and _all the extras.
GEORGE E. KIBBLE, JOHN
KIBBLE . LEWIS KIBBLE ,
CARRIE KIBBLE. MINNIE
DEVORE, LILLIE SCOTT ,
SARAH E. SAMUELSON,
OPEN EVES. 8: 00P. M.
FRANK KIBBLE , MARTHA
POMEROY, OHIO
KIBBLE, MAMIE SOVEL ,
HOR RACE
E.
KIBBLE.
CLARA CHUTES, CHARLES
KIBBLE, AND HERBERT
WANT A~
Notice
KIBBLE If living, whose exact
INFORMATION
addresses ere unknown and
whose tut known addresses are
DEADL~INES '
Rt . 1, R&amp;edsvllle, Ohio. and If .s-P.M. Dly Before Publication
d
d t
Mt;.nday Deadt1ne ·9 a.m.
ece.~se
hen their
unknown .• 1 Cancellation
.- Corrections · ·
httrs,
d4tvtsees
, legatees,
~
executors, administrators and - nil I be acdpted untll9e.m. fOr
or ass igns will take notice that
Day of, PubtiC:atlon
REGULATIONS
J · B· 0 ' Brien flied his comp laint .nfe Publisher
reserves thE·
February 8. 1973 1n the Common right to edit oweject any ads
Pleas Court of Meigs County, 'deemed . otJtel'tlonal. The .
Ohio, Case No . 15232 alleging ~ubll~er will not be responsible,
that he Is the owner of S-484
Interest In the follow ing 1 or -,.,ore than o11t lm:Orrect
Furnace Controls
described rea r estate, and nsertton . RATES
praying that title to said real
For Wal'lt Ad Service
HUMIDIFIERS
~i~1~~~ 0~ 8s 8q1 ~ 1 ~~:1 =~~~t~~r par- 5 cents per Word one insertio~
Hot Water Heaters
The persons above named wll
Mln l'l!um Charge 75c
12 t:entf' per word thrpt
take notice thai they have been
Plumbingmade parties defendant to said ..consecutive Insertions. . . .
complaint and that tl'ley are '. 18 cents pe~ word SIX con·,
Electrical Work
required to answer within 28 .secutlve Insertions .
25 Per Cent Oisc_
ount on _paid
days after April 2. 1973 or on or
before May 1, 197J.
a~s and ads ~aid W1tr1in 10 da,vs .
Said rea t estate being situated
CA. AD OF THANK 5
In the Township of Olive, county
&amp; OBITUARY
.
5
of Meigs and State of Ohio.
S1. D fM' SO word rhtnlmJJrn .
1. Being In 160 acre lot 1164,
Each Oddltlonat word 2c.
town 4, range II of the Ohio
r BLIND ADS .
992-2448
Company's Purchase. more
Add tlonal 25c Charge P~tr •
Pomeroy,
particularly described as the Aclvertlsemenl.
S.W. quorler of lot 1164 . . OFFICJ! _HOURS
.
beginning at the S.W. corner of .8.30 a.m. to 5. 00 p.m . Dally,
lot116A; thencenorthatonosald 8 · 30 a. m. to 12 : 00 Noon
lot line eo rods ; thence east ao saturday .
Major Chemical Meeting
rods to a stake ; thence south 80
THURS. , MAR. 8
rods to the south line of lot 1164 ;
thence wesl ao rods 1o the place Notice
8:00PM
of beginning, conta ining 40
At Landmark Town
ac&amp;~~e~tf~: :~o~:~~-e parcel out 'HOOD'S AQUARIUMS ; fish
&amp; Country Store
of S.W. corner of said 40 acre and supplies; new location,
101 .
Ash Street, Middleport near
E. Main
Pomeroy
It Is the lnlenl to convey 3o park; phone 992-5443.
acres Which was formerly
1-7-tfc
REFRESHMENTS
owned by Sarah M. Kibble.
DOOR PRIZES
2. Also the following real KnsroT KOSMETICS ANO
INFORMATION
estate In sections 4, and 10, town
WIGS. SPECIALS MONTH4 range 11, 100 acre lot 1159
Everyone Is Welcome!
lY .
BROWN 'S
IN DE·
bounded on tl'le north by land of
PENDENT
DISTRIBU Charles or Lesto Blake, east by
POMEROY
David Rood, soutl'l by Mathilda
TOR,
MIDDLEPORT .
~~
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
Hetz:er 11nd west Jasper Reed,
PHONE 992-5113.
Phone·992·2181
containing nine 11c\es.
3. Also 20 acres n Secl lon 1. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2_·
23-tfc
Town 4, Range ·11 Olive PUBLIC NOTICE
2 BEDROOM mobile home on
Township , Meigs County, Oh io
the S lf2 0f the S.E . 'I• Of the S.W.
private lot for rent . Also want
NOTICE OF
lJ-4 of said section 11 containing
to buy good used 2 bedroom
PUBLIC
SALE
20 acres .
trailer . Must be priced right.
TO WHOM IT MAY CON ·
J . B. O' Brien, CERN
Robert Hill . Racine, phone
:
Pla intiff
Notice
Is
hereby
given
that
on
949-3811.
(2) 12, 19, 26\31 5, 12, 19, 26.
March 19th. 1913, at 10 .00 A.M.
2-27-6tc
a public sale will be held at - - - - - Pomeroy Motor' Company ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pomero 1y, Oh lo to selh for ¢ash
IN THE COURT OF
the folloWihti collater~l, to wit:
COMMON PLEAS,
To
1969 Chevrolet, Spe. Ser . No .
MeiGS COUNTY, OHIO 164479U
162624,
said
collateral
PROBATE DIVISION
fn tht Mltftr ol THE ESTATE being held to secure an
OF Clara Htn, Deceued. obligation arising under a retail
instalment securitv agreement
NOTICE
To the Heirs at Law 1nd Next of executed by Phlllip L. Mowery ,
Kin of Cl1ra Hess, Deceastd: Rt. 1, Middleport. Ohio and held
You ere hereby notified that by G'eneral Motors Acceptance
on the 15th day of February, Corporation as secured party.
1913. an oppllcal lon was filed In Said public sa le is to be con thiS Court to relieve the Estate ducted ac cording to the laws of
of Clara Hess. Deceased, from the State of Ohio. General
adm lnlstratlon and to sell Motors Acceptance Corporation
personal property of Clara Hess reserves the right to bid at thiS
sale .
to apptv on the funeral bill.
Maximum
The cgllateral is presently
You are hereby hHther
notified that this Application stored and may be seen at
·Diameter
will be heard on the 1Sth day of Pom eroy Motor Company,
March. 1973, at 10;0(1 o'clock Pome roy . Oh io.
GENERAL MOTOR S
A .M . before this Court .
iU"
ACCEPTANCE
Mannino D. Webster ,
CO RPORATION
Probate Judge 1
Ill 19, 26 131 , 5. 3t
_::;
~1c.l
~·..cl~l_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Largest End
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE
NOTICE
To Mary v . KestElrson . who se
Bids will be received at ttle
is unknown and cannot
Law Off ice ot Bernard v . Fultz , address
DELIVERED
Pomeroy
National
Sank Wifh reasonable diligence be
ascerta
ined
;
you
are
hereby
TO
Build ing, Pomeroy , Oh io, until
Saturday, March 10, 1973, at ten notified that you have been
nam ed Defendant in · a legal
o'clock A. M ., for the sale of the action
Fred c .
Genevieve Stobart residence on Kesterson.entitled
PIB int iff , vs. Mary
U . s. Route 33, approximately
V. Kesterson. Defendant. This
one.fourth mile north of the action
been assigned Case
Pomeroy corporation line. The No . 15,2has
13, and is pending In the
Open Saturdays
house ma~p~ be seen In advance Court
Common Pl·eas, Meig s
by contacting Eldon Weeks , County,cf Pomeroy
from
8 •·"!· to 3:30·p.m.
, Ohio, 45769.
Executor of the Estate of the
Old Rt. 33
On
The
obj
ect
of
the
Comp
laint
is
decedent, Telept!One : 992 -2784. for divorce ~ nd suC'h other relief
Phone 992-2689
ELDON WEEKS
may be just and proper .
Executor of the Estate of asYou
Pomeroy,
Ohio
are
required
to
answer
Genevieve Stobart, deceased . the Compla int within 28 days
131 1.2. 4. 5, 6, 7. 8. 9,8tc after the last publ ic ation of thi s
notice , which will be published WANTED, Beef Hides ; will pay
once each week tor six con - $9 a piece ; Pomeroy St.,
sec utive Weeks . The last
Mason, W. Va .; phone 773.
publication will be made April
5600.
9, 1973 and lh e 28 days for art 2·16·15tp
swer will commence on that
POMEROY LANES
date .
Women's Th~rsday Afternoon
In case of your fa ilure to OLD furniture, oak tables,
February 15, 1973
answer or oth erw ise respond as
organs, dishes. clocks, brass
Won Lost reQuired by the Ohio Rules of
beds or complete households.
Pullins Excavating
38
10 Civil Procedure, judgment by
Write
M. 0. Miller, Rt . 4,
default
wilt
be
rend
ered
against
New York Clothing
30
18
Pomeroy,
011io. Phone 99!you
for
the
rel
ief
demanded
in
Pomeroy Lanes
30
18 the Complain t.
6271
.
· Pomeroy Motors
18
30
_ _ _ _ _ _ _.:..,:
1-7-ttc
Simon's Markel
18
30 Dated : M.arch 5, 1973.
Helen's Beauty Shop 10
38
· Larry Spencer
High Team Three Games Clerk of Courts, Help Wanted
Me igs County
Pullins 1168; New ' York
Com mon Pleas Court WANTED
Clothing 1728 ; Simon' s Market
.
Immed iately -' Man
(3) s. 12. 19, 26, (4) 2. 9. 61
1679.
or Woman
to supply
High Team Game - Pullins
customers in area wit h
638 ; Helen's 592; Simon's 589.
RAWLE IG H PRODUCTS .
15
High Ind. Series - Marlene Ball Buslers
Profit of SS0-$100 week ly
14
"Wilson 520; Vicky Adkins 476 ; lmpacls
easily. Call coll ect: IBIS) 233·
Rams
11
Julie Bor les 459.
4191 ; Wri te• Rawlelgh Co.,
4
High nd . Game - Betty Alley Cats
Dept. 3003. Freeporl. Ill .
High
Ind.
Game
Mark
Whitlatch 185; Marlene Wilson
61032.
Mitch
194,
Cathy
M~a dows 184.
184; /,\arlene Wilson 178.
3·5·2tc
Hig'h Series Mick
Davenport 485, Mark Mitch - - - - 455.
Tea m High Game and Series
Women's Thursday Afternoon
Ba ll Buslers 908. 2679.
February 22, lt73
Won Lost
42
14
Pullins Excavating
Saturday Senior
38
18
New York Clothing
Pis.
32
24
Pomeroy Lanes
Pin
Crushers
22
24
32
Simon's Market
Herbies
19
18
38
Pomeror Motors
Ding-A-Lings
17
42
Helen's Beauty Shmp 14
14
High Team Series - New Gutter Dusters
Pin
Busters
6
York Clothing 1722, Helen's
Born Losers
3
1681 , Simon's 1648.
High
Ind.
Game
Ted
. High Teani Game - New
York Clothing 598, Helen's 597, Fisher 220, Mike Gilmore 182.
High Series - Ted Fisher
Simr,, · 574.
512,
Debl Ga ll agher 451 .
H·ll' "'d. Series - Norma
Team High Game and Series
Am · ·,:,. y 474, Eileen Searls
- Pin Crushers 835. 2405. ·
4117 •:,r• oa Smith 454.
H•:'• nd . Game - Norma
APPLY in person for position of
Amsbdt y 182, . Eileen Searls
cooks. Red Carpe' tnn, Rt . 62
117. ~etty Whitlatch 174.
N.• Pt. Pleasant .
·An acte of grass releases
2-27-6tc
about 2,400 gallons of wate r
on a summer 's day. llu'ough TWO (iti7P.n Journ~ t ca rri ers ;
Saturday Junior
evaporation
a nd tra" ~ P i,·a­
., .. r
~- " ; " rl l!' po r t, ·
on ~
February 24, 1973
Pts. tion , and providf'~ t! :r- ('nO!Pomeroy . Phone 992-3278.
19 Jng effe('t nf .1 70-tnn .. ,. ('liP
Dreamers
3-l·ffC
18
Apaches
ditione!'

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Wanted .

For Sale

11 ·
'
DEAD Stock horses, cattle, "IF YOU ' RE interested In '.• •.
qualify and service plus the
highest diScount In Tri-State,
It will pay you .to check with
us, on 18 ft . thru 27 ft. Star. '
craft Trailers - new and
used ; we carry a complete
line of Slarcratt Fold-down
campers; Camp Conley
Starcratt Sales, Rt: 62 N. of
Point Pleasant, behind Red
Carpet Inn; phone 675·5384.
. 3·5·5tc

hogs, sheep. R,easonabl e
charge. Ciill 245-SSIA.
2-28-30fc

LOANS. operating capital, etc.
Available for any purpose,
S20,000 up to any amount. Call ·
area cod e · 292-337-1127, .
William L Creekmore CLU .
2-25-10tc

For Sale'
Aluminum
Sheets

r1anted To Rent

36"x23"x.009

FARMHOUSE In: Meigs; low
rent ; will do repairs; Gibbs,
71 Morris Ave .. Athens, 0.
. 3·4-3tp

For Rent

H!AnNG &amp;
COOLING

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
o.

Wanted

.Buy ·

WANTED
CHIPWOOD
Poles

or.

$7.00 Per Ton.
OHIO
PALLET CO.

Local Bowlmg

j'

CARRIER
NEEDED
IN POMEROY.

The Daily Sentinel

.Ph. 992-2156

8 lor $1.00

773-5580.

2-27-61p
.
'
2·13-ffc

-------

- ·-

..

'

..

ASK US ABOUT

The
Daily Sentinel
Court St.

.

..

PRE-FABRICATED

\\000 TRUSSES
~~ .
Built to Your 'Specs'
Delivered to Job Site

HOGG

&amp;ZUSPAN

MATERIALS CO.
Mason, W.Va.
773-5554

Have your· homo built by·
Custom Builders . Our
carpenters have 20 years
experience In · building ,
homes In Meigs County.

ALL WEA1HER
ROOFING AND
-OONSTRiJCilON .·
PHONE~ 992-2550·

lar~,~est

"io:'•eh e
1· Radiator
"'
lest Heater Core.
'Nathan Biggs •
Radiatqr Specialist

.

'

992-2094
. .606 E . Main Pomeroy

...
.

P~
~E Wb.U6.

A

•

THIS WEJ!K :r'o!l SOtNG TO WATCH
THE HARLSM GL08ErROTTERS, 81L4
COSBY, FLIP WILSON;' SANFORt&gt;
AND SON, ANP CHER BONO

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

.FURNITURE

P!ZINT FOR

A FReNCH

CHEF, A COLOR 1V...

SHS'S MV TO~oN

REDSKIN

A NEW SED Wffil
GII..K SHEE~r
LINI..IMn'I:D
PJN·UP P~REG...

)top In and See Our
Floor Display.
'

KITOtENI&amp; SON
OONSTRUCTION
HOME BUILDING

&amp;'
REMODELING

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

SMllH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

I

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

.

EXPERT
Wheel. Alignment
'5.5S
on Most American Cars ·

20e

at
Darwin, all-electric. Phone

Park; phone 992 -3324.

_.

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

MOBILE home in Middleport,
adults. 560 a month. no pets.
Phone 992-5247.
2-27-61p

L.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ----FURNISHED apartment

"HSIL"

Business ·Services·

..

Business Opportunities

----TRAILER, Brown's Trailer

..

.

BOB SLOAN

&amp;

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Bl':i'-~ ·WRIT

APARTMENTS : One efficiency
Pomeroy
with bath, kilchen, living
room and bedroom com ·
' 0;:.;'..-.J
bination, new furniture; two 7 FOOT pool table ; phone 992· L--"-""1-·2_17_4_ _ _P_o_m_e_ro_'i·_.J, L....:::'06::....:E:.::.Ho:::.:a.:.ln::.'_P.:.om.:..:.er;..;o.;.y;..
7001.
furnished apartments, 1
2-28·6fc
bedroom, living room, kltchen and dini ng room ; one
- - - - -- : ELNA and White Sewing WILL do remodeling. interior
u-nfurnished apartment . CUAL Limestone, Excelsior·
Machines ... service on ·an and exterior painting, conPhone992 -3863 'till p. m. and
Salt Worksr E. Main St.,
makes . Reasonable rates. crete work by hour or con992-5844 alfer 6 p. m.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891. ·
The Sewing Center. Mid · tract; phone 992-3511.
Located in
2-21 -121p
3-1-4fc
dleport, Ohio.
·
4-12-tfc
_
11-16-tfc
Mi~dle'port's
UNFURNISHED 3 room LOCUST fence posts; phone 985· • ···-· ·. . G &amp; E Arpllance Repair, repair
4265.
WILL trim or cut trees, clean
on al laundry equipment.
apartment, 40B Spring Ave ..
Pomeroy .
2·11·3otc
out basements, attics, etc.. refrigeration equipment and
Remodel to Suit
Phone 949-3221.
house wiring ; welding,
3-2-tfc - ' - -- - - - -- - - -- BUILDING lots for sale at Rock
2-4-30tq _ electric and gas. Call 992-3802
. Tenant
·
Oh' Ci
t M ·
.~-:------' or after 4:30 p.m. call 9922 BEDROOM mobile home;
Spnngs.
to. ose o etgs EXCAVATING. Dozers. large
6050.
comp letely furnished: call
High School with Tuppers
and small; Backhoes and
2-5-30fp
992-5320
992-2441 after 5:30 p.m.
Plains water. Size 1h acre and
Loaders on track and tires ; - - - - - - - - 2-7-tfc larger . 992 ·2789 ·
992-7889
Dump trucks. Lo-boy· O' DELL WHEEL alignment
2·25 · 301 P
Serv tce; Sepfrc tanks In·
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
stalled;
George
(Bill)
comp lete front end. serv lce.
unfurnished apartments.
Pullins ; phone 992-2478.
tune up and brake service:
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
Phone 992-5434.
2-9-tfc' Wheels
balanced elec and. backhoe work ; septic
4-12-tfc Pels for
--------Ironically.
All
work
tanks Installed ; dump trucks
~--'----..
HARRISON'S TV Service and
guaranteed.
Reasonable
•RKVIEW K
and lo-boys for hire ; will haul
ONE bedroom apartments; P&lt;'
ennels going out
Service Calls; phone 992·2522.
rates. Phone -2·3213 or 742·
of business. Big price
"
fill dirt, top soil, limestone
ideal for couples; phone 9922-9·11 c
reduction on all dogs. All AK3232.
and
gravel; call Bob or Roger
5248 or 992-3436.
2-IB·ffc
C. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash · -READY -MIX - CONCRETE
Jeffers, day phone 992-7089;
2·2B-6fc
Streets, Middleport, Ohio.
delivered right to your
night phone 992·3525 or 992·
---~-5232 • .
12-13-tfo
project. Fast and · easy. Free ~EE US FOR :' Awnings, slorm
2-11-tfc
------~-estimates , Phone 992-3284. doors and windows, carports,
REGISTERED toy lo• terrie r
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co ..
marquees. aruminum siding - - : - - - - - ONE 35 x B Pacemaker 2 ~uppies . 6 weeks old, $35.
Mldd lepott, Ohio.
and railing. A. Jacob , sales DOZER and back hoe ·work,
bedroom mobi le home ; 65
hone 742-5625.
6-30-tfc
representative . For free ' ponds and septic tanks, dll· .
Concord 26 ft . self-contained
3-1-6tc ~~------esllmates , phone Chari""
chino service ; top soli, fill
camper ; phone 992-3954.
SEPTIC TANKS CLiiANED
lisle, Syracuse, V. V. · dirt,&gt; limestone; B&amp;K Ex·
3· 2-3tc
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
Johnson and Son, Inc.
cavatlng . Phone 992-5367,
Auto
4782, Gal lipolis, John Russell,
3-2-ftc
Dick Ka~r , Jr .
!
-SINGER automatic sewing
Owner &amp; Operator.
.
-~------9·1·tfC,
machine'; like new In walnut 1972 HONDA 500. 4 cylinder,
12-tfc
cabinet. Makes design sill·
many extras. like new ; phone - - - : - - - - - . . :5..:.:·
ches. zig-zags. buttonholes,
985-3828.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
5ale
sale
blind hems. overcasts, etc., • - -- - - - - - - 3 --2-tfc
Complete Service
·HOUSE
1n
Long
Bottom,
phone
$85. Call - Ravenswood, 273-·
Phone 949·3821
985-3529.
i
9S21 or 273-9893.
Racine. Ohjo
6-ll ·tfC'
Crill BradfQ.rd
1·11·1fC
5·1-tfc
--~---..:....
HOUSEHOLD furnishings. one
year old - 14 cu. It. trostfree
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
Gibson refrigerator; $175; 42"
1966 CHEVROLET
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·'
Kelvinator electric range.
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
%TON .
$100; 3-piece solid maple
SANITATION,
STEWART,
REALTY
bedroom suite, $175. Reason
OH 10. PHONE 662-JOJS.
601 E. Mli"
~
for sellin~, purchased fur 110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy __r
10·4-tlc
__.._
__:_
PICKUP
TRUCK
ni shed lra1ler. Phone 742-6085
~.,
or 773-5613.
·
Pomeroy, Ohio
INTERIOR and exterior
V-8 · motor. good condition..
MIDDLEPORT RT. 1
2·27-6tc Check this one now .
painting . Phone 992·2368.
1 story. 3 bedrooms. New
Pomeroy.
bath . New F.A. furnace,
YOU saved and slaved for wall
2-2 7-6fp
BAllY FARM
large recreation room,
to wall carpet. · Keep it new
with Blue lustre. Rent
utility R. Storage building
J
ACRESGood
old
house
Ph. 992-2176
Pomeroy SEWING MACHINES. Repair
electric shampooer, $1. L-------- ---'
with
3
bedrooms,
2
baths,
cellar: Asking $9,800.00.
and
service, all makes. 992-2284.
Nelson's
Drug
Store,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
and 3 porches. Medium size
RUTLAND
Pomeroy, Ohio. .
1970 FORD Van, 6 cylinder, A-1 Authorized Singer Sales and
barn. Wanl$10,500.00. WHAT
L Story frame. 6 rooms; 3
3-4-2fc
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
condition, low mileage ; phone
bed R., balh, dining R. Nice
WILL YOU GIVE?
:-:-:::----698·872~, Albany .
·
3·29-tfc
BUSINESS
kitchen.
porches, storage.
MOTOROLA TV, 21 " floor
l ·4·6tc
1
OPPORTUNITY
Interior
paneling and
model; $40; phone 992-2262. ---~-PLliMi'iiNG ~ork done ; phone
HERE IT IS - A place to
plaster. Asking $9,200.00.
·
3·4·3fc 1969 FORD Ranger 1 ton F-350; . 985-4265.
live and run your very own
HARRISONVILLE
390 engine, long wheel base,
2-11·30fc
business
.
J
bedrooms
This
Is
a lovely home tor 1ust
power
brakes
,
power
MODERN Walnul style stereo.
steering,
rough
tires,
airlarge
paneled
home
wllh
$14,900.00.
4 bedrooms. bath,
AUTOMOBILE
.Insurance
been
radio, AM=FM radio, 4
modern fireplace . And a 4
cancel led?
Lost
your
dining R., TV room. Fuel oil
s peak er .sound system, 4 1 conditioned, 47,300 miles;
Harold Brewer, Loog Bottom ,
operator's license? Call 992- room business building on
s peed automatic changer .
heal . Approx. '12 acre.
phone 985-3554.
2966.
Ba lance $68.33. Use our
Rt . 7 loop. ASKING
SYRACUSE
3·4-tfc _ _ __ _ ___:6:..::·15-tfc $25,000.00. MAKE US AN
budget terms . Call 992-7085.
7
room
BRICK.
4 bedrooms,
3-1-6fc - - - - - - OFFER.
New bath and utility, new
IOACRES
F.A. gas furnace, porches,
EARLY Amer ican stereo-radio,
ON
LEADING
CREEK
storage
bldg., fruit trees . 2
AM-FM radio, 4 speed
Bargain
day
·
Old
house,
lots
on
Ohio
Power. Asking
automati c changer, .:1 speaker
cistern, and barn. On hard
$17,900.00.
sound system. Balance $79.56.
road too. Want · $5,000.00 but
Use our budget terms . Call
HARRISONVILLE
The late Will Carmen home, Laurel Cliff. All
992-7085.
ask to see lhen we will talk
lll~ A., .4 bedrooms, l'h
3-l-6tc
electric, bath, upstairs finished large enough
turkey:
balhs, garage, utility room. 2
BUILDING LOT
for two ' bedrooms, kitchen, living room,
buildings, one 40•70 ; In
1970 YAMAHA 175, $250; phone
POMEROY - On Rt. 7
excellent
condition.
bedroom.
glass
enclosed
front
porch
on
first
742-6834.
business
loop.
Seldom
do
we
$21,500.00.
floor. garage, some paneling. Priced at
3- 2-tfc
get anything like this. Be
WE HAVE OTHERS
------$4500.00.
first and see It for only
PLEASE CALL
STEREO 8 track. Must sell at
$1500.00 NOW.
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
once . 1973 B track stereo in
125ACRES
BROKER
lovely walnut console. Take
OF NICE WOODS - Nearly
992-2259
over payments of $7.55 per
'all in timber. Large old home
If
no
answer
992-2568
month or pay $101.50. Cai1 992·
P.O. Box 101, Phone 985-4186
of 9 rooms. 2 baths. drilled
5JJ1.
Pomeroy, Ohio
well w lth gciod water. A rea I
2-23-tfc
setting In the country tor the
1972 ZIG-ZAG Sewing Machine.
2 NEW 3 bedroom homes; 1 with children. Want $26,000.00 but
This machine is a dressmaker Mobile
basement, 1 without ; 2 car see us .
model. Pay balance of 138.50 f':-'---------&lt;'"
garages, 1 acre lots i located NO TIME LIKE NOW TO
or pay balance of S6 per
at Rock Springs behind Meigs BUY. PROPERTY IS LIKE
monlh. Call 992-5331 .
• Air ConditiOners
Co. Fairground. Will lrade or
ELSE ,
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ 2·_
23-tfc
• Awnings
help finance ; also 5 good EVERYTH I NG
building lois, water and GOING UP EVERY DAY.
disposal installed ; Charles H. DON'T WAIT SEE US NOW.
1972 ZIG·ZAG Sewing Machine '
_· ·Underpinnillg
Cornell, Athens, 593·7034 or
left in layaway. Beautiful ' r!.
•
GORDON B.' TEAFORD,
""stel color. lull size mOdel . I ~Complete mqblle hqme, , 593-5667 or 992-7613.
2-lt -tfc
ASSOCIATE
All bui lt-in to buttonhole, do , ~ervtce ~ plus gigantic · ·
stretch sewing and fancy : lspla~. of mobile homes
"HOUSE FOR SAlE: ii4 -Brick
HE~EN l. TEAFORD,
stitching . Pay lust 548.75 cash · always avallable.at .. .
Ohio;
brick
ASSOCIATE
"Street,
Pomeroy,
or terms available . Trade-ins ; •
·M· ILLER
·ON YOUR DIAL
house, 3 bedrooms, excellent
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
accepted. Phone 992 -7755, 1
•
,
location, close to school and
992-3325
Electro Hygie~e Co. 228-6fc ~ MQBILE "OMES
city; contact lou Osborn~ or• - - - - - - - - - r.att 992-5898.
.
. ~--:--;-:=-------'--..._-"'"":~.:0.....;;..__........,
ELECTROLUX vacuum : 4 1nowashingtonBivd. '
11 -26-tfc n
23 75
Big ~IPICity
Cleaner corpplete with at· :, . · 2l
BELPRE, 0 .
. • I
Maytag
I
tachments, cordwlnder and ·
Autom1tits
'
5 ROOMS and bath house ;
paint spray. Used but In like
.
'2tPeed operatiOn .
located on Brick • St. In
new condition. Pay $34.45. 1973
14x70
COMMUNITY
Choice of water
Rutland, $7,000; phone 742cash or budget plan ava ilable. Mobile Home, on a lot 95x135
temps.
Auto .
3334.
Phone 992-7755
Electro in Rutland ; Includes dishwater
level
control .
Lint
Hygiene Co.
washer , washer and dryer
·Htc ',
Fitter or Power
2·28-6fc sta inless steel sink. garbag~ --:-------_:..::3
Fin Agitator .
--------disposal , eye level range and 5 ROOM house ; one third acre ·
Perm a-Pres._
ground; gas heat, basement;
SET ol cullivators, plows, dacron polyester carJ&gt;I!IIng
M1ytag
good location for trailers; S.
Massey -Ferguson Mower throughout ; phone 742-3832
Halo of Hut ·
D. Buskirk, 341 Page St.,
with 7 ft. blade, all with 3 evenings.
·
Dryers
Middleport, Ohio.
point hitch; 2 wheel wagon,
2-21-12tc
Surround'
clothes
set of discs, New Idea Tomato ·
-::-::-:~-~---=3· 4-Jfp
with _gentle,· even
setter, cattle watering tank,
heat . No hot spots~
5 ROOMS and bath, with one ,
1950Ford pickup truck ; phone
no ov.erOi")'lng. '
1
O:ASH ·pa!d tor all makes and
. 247 -2161.
acre of ground; phone Mason,
Fine Mash Lint
models
of
m.
o
blle
homes
.
1-304·773·5615..
•
2·2B·6fc
Filler .
Phone ar'• cOde 6U-423-9531 .
----------"
We Spoclollttln
3·4-6tp
4-13-tfc _ _;.,----'--..:...:
, MAYTAO

"SOL AND

SE.~'- BUT 'TIS

·

LOST!!- THE. "'--RLD Wll.l.
NI.VEI\ SU IT!!

THAT

COMPARE.TH
WITH "f',OME.O

C. L. KITCHEN
992-5653

Mond~~r~~!:urdav

W GP.EATEST PLAY 'WAS

THE.'/ SA'/ THAT
NEVE: I"- HATH A
LOVE. STORY

AND Jlli.IET"-

BUSINESS SPACE

WINNIE WINKLE
THAT$ NOT" lRUc, HA L, T \'MAT el5E CAN I "11-t iNK?
AND YOU SHOULDN'T
NOT ONe 51&gt;GLE JOil" OFFER I

r~~~~~ ()UCH

MY

~~~~~~~N~~~' rM
DON'T KNOW WHERE
lO "IURN!

OOLLY, I FEEL SO SORRY
FOR HIM. $HOULD I
OFFER HI'-'&gt; A JOI3 AT
BONNAZ OR YI.OUtD :t

BEo MAKING- A 1ERRII3L.C
,MISTAKE ? S:."-""""

Sale

- ·:

-..

:-.~:

For Sale

ALLEY

Sales

.-~----

Real Estate For

Real Estate For

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

FOR QUICK SALE!

_ __

CLELAND~

LOOt&lt;, SOtJ' Jll5T
{.aJE. (),IT t.aJ(p
E~lO"'Ve;
~

t

~e;"' 1-11~

..

&amp;&amp;:&gt; Kl'$$\

Meigs Equipment

Real Estate For Sale

BEIM' A liUfST 111 A I.OOHEY BIN
MEANS WE. GOT T• ACT Lit&lt;£

~

ONLY THt
JHMA'rES
SEEM TO B£
IH CHARGE!

_..

1. Forever
11

IIAS!llEH
CCJW!Mtn:D

TO Pf/l.TK·..

l

741 -4211

FURNITURE R~~~.~~:·'

Arnold Grate.

Yelter4l,l''o Cr7ploquote: THE HOLE AND THE PATCH
SHOULD BE COMMENSURATE.-THO~S JEFFERSO.N
'"&lt;® 1978 Xlnr Foataret Syndicate, 1110.)

DICK TRACY
WHAT~

THAT

PIECE OF PAPER
YOU CWUCKLED
OVER?

UMCramble thue faar Jumblt1,
one letter IG eaeh tquare, IG
form four ordinary wordt.

"eve·
ning"

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13. India or
Ceylon
tea
(2 wds.)
15. Calendar
abbrevia·
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way
6. Backslide
7. Rlblcolf
8.Fun
vehicle
9. Redolence
10. Shep·
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pipe
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19. Enraged
20. Mikado's

bronze
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crowd,

•.,

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magic
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nique
volcano

Cockney
style
18. Did In
Zl. Like the
gates of
St. Peter
23. Barren
27. Marshal
Z8. Italian
city
29. Latvian
30. Onus
31. Paradis!·

court

21. Buddy
22. Before
U. Humanitarian
organization
(2 wds.)

25. Feminine
· suffix
26. Danger-

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McGrew
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Hampshire

resort
town
30.-nolr
32. Trifte
33. Notice

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33. Briny
II. Onetime
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6. Work
11. Marti·

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4 BE DROM home, 2 baths, gas·
3 BEDROOM trailer . parllally 1968 WINDSOR , 12•60, 2 furnace, full basement, river
fur nish ed. Pri ced to se ll.
bedroom, with or· wl1hout
tronlage, Syracuse. Ohio,
. furniture ; ph9ne 992-3511 .
Ph one 74? "833
Phone 992·2360.
J. J 6tc
•
2·11
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1-25-tfc
_,

MU.

Z. Simple
3. Nec:ro-

ACROSS

Jll!D Jllllil&amp;

We·falk to YGll

· --~-~-

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

REAL ESTATE BROKER

Mobile Homes For Sale

H'll

~HtM"Oesf

I&lt;AilHOUSE ••

GEORGE S. HOBSTEITER Jr.

Homes For Sale

Bftri'

NUTS IS 1'1\R FOR THE COURse!

REAL ESTATE FOR sALE

------

0

lllwrdl!lf•

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Of A t&gt;!El611S~J.IOOO OC'6 ...

writing
(2 wds.)
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· window
«.Artist's
purchase
45. Mournful
46. Ford
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member

DOWN
1. Footless
WHile ON A RE:AR PORCH .

animal

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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
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One tetter simply stands for another. In this sample A ·ts
used for the three L's, X for the two O's •. etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the len&amp;lh and fonnaUon ·of the words ·are ali
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THIS IS

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�8- The Daily Sentmel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, March 5,1973

Theodora Orr
died Saturday
Mrs. Theodora C. Orr, 74
(formerly of Pomeroy), 2228
Astor Ave, Columbus, died
Saturday there She was the
former secre~ry to the late
Dr, Henry Schuh who was
president of the Oh10 D1stnct of
the Amencan Luther&amp;n
Church.
Mrs. Orr was also secretary
to Dr. E C Fendt, lormer
president ol the Lutheran
Theolgical Semmary at Capitol
University. She was a member
of Chnst Lutheran Church and
a fonner member of Grace
Lutheran Church.
Surv1vmg are her husband,
Grover, a son, Norman L , of
Bexley, these daughters, Mrs.
Lucille Pitts of M1am1, Fla ,
Mrs Lois Hedges of Miami,
and Mrs Mary Stahl, Lancaster, a siSter, Mrs L1lhan
Klopfer, Columbus; a brother,
Leo Reuter of Columbus, and a
number of grandchildren,
great-grandchildren, meces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 30 p.m Tuesday at
Chnst's Lutheran Church with
bunal m Zwn Cemetery m
Thornville Fnends may call at
the Leach and Son Funeral
Home , East Main at Parkv1ew,
Columbus, from 7 to 9 this
evening.

0HWI

"One of the greatest
labor -sav1ng
ln lvPntions of today - is
tomorrow"
Don't put off 'til tomorrow
installing that vanity that
your wrfe has been talk ing
about for so long See one of

our " FRIENDLY ONE S"
today and gel the (Ob over
with

'

;

34 POWs land News ••• in Briefs Meany warns President:
in Philippines
CLARK AIR BASE, Philippines (UPI ) - A group of 34
priSOners of war - mcluding 30 Americans arrl the only known
fema le POW - arrived m the Phibppmes today, markmg the
halfway pomt m the attempt to get all Americans out of Commums! prison camps by the end_of the month.
The priSOners, released earlier in the day in Hanoi, brought
to 142 the number released m the past two days by the Communists The Cl41 Starhfter ambulance plane brmgmg them
home landed at Clark All' Base at 4 51 a.m. (EST.)
But as U1e men were flymg promtses."
The JMC IS m charge of
back, a North Vietnamese
makmg
arrangements for the
spokesman m Sa1gon mdicated
a deadlock m the four-power prisoner release A U.S
Joint Military Comm1sswn spokesman said the Umted
over the exchange of VIet- States made it clear at today's
namese prisoners might delay JMC meeting that 11 expects
the next release of American the releases to go as scheduled.
The first of the newest batch
POWs
The 34 returnmg today of priSOners were expected
consisted of 27 U S. ser- back m the Umled States by the
Vicemen, three American middle of the week
Like the first group of
civilians, two F1lipmos and two
West Germans, mcludmg Americans released Feb 12,
nurse Momka Schwmn, the the new amvals Sunday ai&gt;'
only known female held by the peared m generally good
Communists All had been held health, professed the1r thanks
by the V1et Cong but were and love for their country and
flown to Hanoi for the1r began nght away gettmg back
mto the swmg of Amencan life
release.
Another 106 Americans,
"We went to VIetnam to do a
lookmg pale and thm but a!&gt;' JOb that had to be done," said
parently m good health, and A1r Force Col James H.
two Thai POWs walked down Kasler, 36, of IndianapoliS,
the a1rplane ramp at Clark Air Jnd ., the f1rst one off the fll'st
Base m the Plulippmes Sunday plane to land Sunday. "And we
to the cheers of hundreds who were wilhng to stay until our
had massed to greet them
JOb was L'()mplete
The men spent their Ill's! day
"We wanted to come home
of freedom telephoning thell' but we wanted to come home
famlh es in the Uruted States, with honor President NIXon
gettmg haircuts, undergoing has brought us home with
dental and physical examma- honor Ills good to be home."
llons and plowing mto mounAir Force Lt . Col. John A
Drames1, 40, of Blackwood,
tams of American food
Their release and the release N.J., griMed when he walked
today brought to 299 the off the plane Sunday and then
number of Amencans freed so pulled out of his pocket a
far and left another 292 POWs handkerchief on which he had
still m Commumst pnson made an Amencan flag. The
camps. Accordmg to the Jan crowd cheered when he waved
27 cease-fire agreement, all II
V1a the long-distance telePOWs must be released m 60
phone, the POWs got reacdays of that date.
But m Saigon, North Viet- quamted with their fam1lies
namese spokesman Lt Col Bw Air Force Col Norman C
Tm said, " The present Gaddis of Wmston-Salem,
situation has paralyzed the N C , found out for the fll'sl
operatiOn of the JMC and IS a lime he was a grandfather
"lfeeltust like the song, 'The
threat to all future facets of the
work of the JMC. We will hve Happiest Girl in the Whole
up to the promises we have US A ,"' said Mary Baugh of
made but we also demand that Piqua, Ohio, after talking to
the other side live up to Its her husband, Marme Milj
Wi!Uam J Baugh. "Only I'm
the happiest g1rl in the whole
world''
Air Force Capt Thomas J
Saturday Bantam
Barrett of Lombard, Ill., who
Pts
Red Barons
14 himself was released from a
Banana Splits
10
camp last month, watPm Busters
9
Ball Bombers
9
ched the return of the latest
All Stars
8 group Sunday and said "tears
Cyclon es
4
started rolhng down my
Htg h lnd Game - Jerry
Fields 129, Todd Sm 1th 120
cheeks "

Local Bowling

row

Htgh
Senes Kev•n
Yeauger 220 J e r ry Ftelds 216
Team H1gh Game - Banana
Spirts 739
Team H1gh senes - Banana
Spi rts 1387

(Continued from Page 1)
ERIE, PA.- UNUSUALLY TIGHT COURTROOM security
set the tone today in the (II'St day of the triple-murder trial of
Wilham J. Prater, accused of hiring assassins to kill dissident
mine union leader Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski, his wife and
daughter.
Yablonski and hiS family were slain Dec . 31, 1969, three
weeksafterYablonski'sunsuccessfu!bidtounseatformerUMW
Pres1dent w. A "Tony" Boyle. Prater, a fonner United Mine
Workers field orgamzerfrom LaFollette, Tenn., IS the first of two
high-ranking fonner UMW officials to face trw! m the murders.
The other IS Albert Pass, a former executiVe board member,
whose trw! date has not been set

KHARTOUM -THE GOVERNMENT PROMISED today it
would punish eight Black September guerrillas who murdered
the U S. ambassador to Sudan, another U. S. envoy arrl a
Belg~an diplomat durmg a 6lJ.lJour s1ege that ended with the
Arabs fmlmg m theU' attempt to wm freedom for jailed
colleagues.
But a government spokesman did no! say what pumshment 11
would pronounce. Information Minister Omar HaJ Mousa told
parliament only that the eight "will not go unpuniShed ." The
e1ght Arab gunmen, flashing V-for-v1ctory signs, were whiSked
away from the Saudi Arabwn embassy at dawn Sunday m a
convoy of rrulitary cars after ending thell' siege by surrendermg
to authorilles who negollated all mght w1th them by telephone
PASADENA, CALIF. -TilE RINGS that encircle the planet
Saturn are up to 3 3 feet m diameter, rough and rocky, not made
of gas, 1ce or dust as previously believed, according to two
astronomers at Cal Tech's Jet PropulsiOn Laboratory The bands
"must be considered an extreme hazard to any spacecraft sent
mto or near the rmgs," warned Dr. Richard M. Goldstem and
George A. Moms Jr.
Usmg the NASA 204-foot antenna at Goldstone Trackmg
Station m Califorma's Mojave Desert, they camed out the fii'St
radar probe of Saturn, dll'ectmg 400-kilowatt beams at the planet
m December and January. "We received much stronger bounceback signals than we expected from such a distance,"
astronomers said m a joml report Sunday Saturn IS 700 million
miles from the Earth.
NEW YORK-A GANG OF YOUTHS threatened, punched
and robbed passengers on two cars of a subway trmn Sunday as 11
lurched underground for 57 blocks. At one pomt, one of the dozen
youths waved a piStol Pollee said three of the teenagers who
allegedly took part m the escapade were arrested as the tram
pulled mto the 125th Street station in Harlem Another two were
arrested at tlie1r homes.
The mcident began m the early afternoon when the youths
boarded a car of a tram headmg from Columbus Circle at 59th
Street on Manhattan's West Side. As the tram started out on wlvit
IS normally a siX-mmute nonstop run to 125th Street, pohce said
the youths began muggiDg and threatenmg the passengers,
shakmg them down one by one for cash and Jewelry
PARIS- A COALITION OF COMMUNISTS and Soc13llsts
clauned victory today after Sunday's fll'st round of
parliamentary elections, but their strength did not appear sufficient to topple conservative Gaul!JSt control of the government.
Gaulllst leaders, obVIously concerned over the votmg
strength of the Umon of the Left, warned that the country's
political future w1ll be at stake m next Sunday's dec1s1ve run.off
ballot. As m most European countries, the group controlling
parl18ment runs the government. Early forecasts indicated the
GaulliSt bloc will come out of the twin ballot showdown election
with 255 to 265 seats - a majonty of 10 to 20

Austin Allen died on Sunday
PORTLAND Aushn
Clifford Allen, :;s, Portland,
died Sunday at Veterans
Memonal Hospital. Mr Allen
was preceded m death by his
parents, the late James H and
Jessie Belle Allen , a brother,
Charles, and a son, Clifford
Survivmg are two daughters,
Mrs James (Garnet) Holtzman, East Liverpool , and Mrs .
Joann Hall, Newell, W. Va.; a
son, Joseph D Allen, East
Liverpool; three brothers,
Joseph, of Pataskala , Wesley,
of Portland, and Arthur of
Newark, a sister, Mrs Ronald
(Hilda) Hart, Ra cme , 14
grandchildren, and several
meces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at I p m Tuesday at the Ewmg

Funeral Home with the Rev.
Freeland Norris offlclalmg.
Burial w11l be m SIIversville
Cemetery Friends may call at
the funeral home any time

Walkout

(Continued from Page 1)
MaJ. Gen G1lbert H. Woodward,chie!U.S delegate to the
LEAGUE TO MEET
JMC, demed Commumst
MASON - Ray Tucker,
charges that the United States
president of the Mason Ultle
was conniving w1th South
League, has announced an
VIetnam to cause the current
elecllon of officers next Sunday
Impasse. A US spokesman
at 4 p m. at the Mason Youth
said Woodward termed the
Center All peewee, pony and
reference to U S. conmvance
T-hall parents are urged to
"a false statement which he
attend as other Important
wished to label for what it is."
busmess of the program will be
Woodward, according to the
discussed
spokesman, sa1d the Amencan
position was threefold: agree...- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ment on the return of POWs
should be adhered to, POWs
should be released at the
agreed mtervals in mcrernents
of 25 per cent and the releases
should be completed by March
28m accordance With ti)e cease
-fire signed Jan. 27 m Paris.
He said the Umted States
considers the lists of priSOners
exchanged m Paris to fonn the
"baSis" for the releases. The
two..star general said he felt
POW repatr1ahon can take
place while other pomts are
being worked out; the spokesman sa1d.
The Hanoi Government and
V1et Cong last week delayed
the release of American
priSoners but Sunday and
today freed 136 U.S and siX
other POWs
"It IS a very serious and
critical Situation," Tin sa1d
after today's JMC meeting
We fol'e&lt;ee that nny day of the yeo1 ou1 wide"The responsibility rests enawoke owl ca n be ybtll most favorable Mign The
tirely w1th the Americans and
'' 1de-a\\ Rke bank promise8 to help you wtth the
RVN (Republic of VIetnam) "
nnttctpated ar1d the untmttcapated. Bec~tu:o~e we
mnke It all"' eR&lt;y, many people than k the11· lucky
ASK TO WED
stu1 K
Mark Allen Haley, 21,
Middleport, and Brenda Kay
Murray, 16, Pomeroy

A Sign For Our Times

·

WASHINGTON (UP!)
rents and by Treasury SecreAFL-CIO President George tary George Shultz tlvit It
Meany warns that organized would not be good to control
laborhas"a~tlckmthecloset" !ann prices.
if the administration's Phase
"The President Is saying (to)
DI economic program Is not the landlord, we can't touch
applied with equity.
him because he will go on
Meany, the head of 14 million strike if we touch him, and
umon members, said Sunday George Shultz IS saying, lhe
he wanted to cooperate with fanner, we can't touch him, be
President Nixon "In order to will go on strike-he won't
keep the pnces down "
plant.
But he complained of
"So the pomt IS .. tlvit there
"galloping inflation" and food IS a stick in the closet for
prices that were "absolutely labor," Meany said.
runnmg wild "
H1s reference was to a
"The only thing we have got statement Nixon made earlier
under control is the workers' thiSyearthalhehadabigstick
wages, and we think thiS IS In his closetthat he would use If
eminenUy and vety definitely inflation got out of line
unfall'," Meany said.
Meany was interviewed on
Meany criticized statements NBC's Meet the Press.
by NIXon that it would not be
He said he was ''mystified"
WISe to continue controls on, by the statements of adminis-

traUon officials last week tlvi~
the 5.5per cent wage ceiling in
earlier phases ol the economic
program would be strictly
enforced in the curr~t Phase
Ul
Meany said the Advisory
Committee to the Cost of
Living Council, which was
assigned lhe task of recommending policy for Phase Dl,
drafted a statement saying no
single wage standard could be
applied practically to the
economy.
"U you aak me where we are
going on the 5.5 per cent, I am
justa&amp; mystified liS you are,"
Meany said.
"I am quite sure that there
will be higher setUements ...
and I am quite sure they will be
approved by the Cost of Living
Council this year as they were
last year."

Bud Crew of
Reynoldsburg
died on Swtday

Va., and Richard Joseph
Boggs, at home; two sisters,
Mrs. Francis Browning,
Columbus, and Mrs Helen
Shaw, Pt Pleasant; one
brother, Robert L. Boggs, New
Haven, and 16 grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
2 p.m., Wednesday at the
Poplar Ridge Free Will BapUst
Church with Rev . John Jeffrey

VOL. XXIV NO. 226

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- ]:dna Stiles, Sanme Phillips,
Edley McDonald, Hazel Arnold, Carol Staats, John Elch,
Myrtle Norman , Jenny
Newmyer, Earl Custer,
Herman Hoffner, Franklin
Lemley, Iva Stewart, Freda
Fields, Conme Barnett, Bonnie
Barnett, Kenneth Barnett,
Terry Derenberger and Ruth
Priddy .
SUNDAY DISCHARGE
Jacquelyn McDonald;

officiating Burial will be m
Mound
Hlll Cemetery,
Gallipolis. Mllitary graveside
services will be conducted.
Fnends may call at the
Crow-Russell Funeral Home in
Pt Pleasant after 6 p.m.,
today.
The body will be taken to Mr
Boggs home on Tuesday where
friends may call after 4 p,m

Electric
Dryer with
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Rust proof. ch1p proof, corros1on proal sla1n

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stamless steel drum w1ll last the lifetime of

lhe dryer and r~ smoolh surfate IS ideal tor
the proper "''' ol durable press fabrrcs
Other leatures rnclude a multi cyr:le hmer
w1lh automatiC seltrngs tor normal heawy,
delicate and durable press fabr1 cs plus a hme
dry cycle ol up to 75 mrnules
Speed Queen automat1c washers and wnnre1
washers are ava1lable w1th stamless steel
tubs, too So when you are ready for a new
washer or dryer, remember Speed Queen

"Quality cosls less ' rn the longJUn

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Be thifty! Save all of your saleslips from

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
don't forget to visit the warehouse on
Mechanic Street for appliances - floor
co.v ering - lawn mowers - storage cabinets.

lo\le n 1: a ft' ech on based on 1the f&amp;stenmg of
Mfety bel ts Ill: ''a rm attELChment, enthmn

a.sm, or de\ ot1on 3: tlte aet

POMEROY, OHIO
Member of Federal Reserve System

01 '=r1days Our Or1ve In W1ndow is Open 9 1m to 7 p m.
(Continuou sly)
120,000 Maxrmum Insurance for Each Dtposltor

MEIGS lHEATRE
Tonrght &amp; Tuesday
March5&amp;6
THE BURGLARS
( Technrcolor)
mar Sharlti, Jean Paul

SAIGON -SOUTH VIETNAM and Cambodw reported more
Intensive f1ghtmg Monday while some progress WIIS reported 10
post-truce talks m Laos. The Sa1gon command, c1ting updated
reported received from the field, reported a substantial mcrease
in casualties from post- truce fighting. Command spokesman Lt.
Col. Le Trung Hien sa1d that since the Jan. 28 cease-fll'e, Communists have committed 5,797 truce vtolatioll.'! and have lost
12,192 men killed and 195 captured.
In Phnom Penh, officials reported fierce fighting along the
southern Highway 2 as Communist troops attacked two major
government outposts only 23 miles south of Phnom Penh.
Military spokesmen claimed 106 Communists were killed with
two government soldiers dead and military sources attributed
the heavy CommuniSt CIISUalties to saturations by U. S warplanes.

accepts anotl1er m loyalty
and seeks Jus good

Safety bells, when you think about it, ih a

nice way to say I love you;

..

Belmonth, Dyan Cannon

lPG)
Colorcartoons

Show starts at 7p.m.

WASHINGTON (UPI) Despite official demals that the
admiDistrahon 1s near10g a
decision to control meat prices,
Rep William J Scherle, Rlowa, today renewed his cla1m

or persons

to IVea.r Ra.fety belts 4: un
selfi sh concern that freely

'The wide-awoke bonk
makes itol/soRD\'11,
~~

Farmers Bank·&amp;

Lid on meat near

AdvertiSing contrrbuted for Ihe public good 1n cooperalton with The Advertising Council,
National Safety Council and International Newspaper Advertising Executives

Pomeroy council Monday
night voted IQ place a "no left
turn" s1gnat the mtersection of
Butternut Ave, and West Mam
St. as soon as an ordmance can
be approved.
The corner IZ an area of
heavy congestion at peak times
of traffic
Councilman Wilham
Snouffer revealed that the
Standard 011 Compony wh1ch
has purchased the Shamrock
Motel at lhe approach to the
Pomeroy -Mason Bndge has
leased the building back to the
Shamrock's former owner until
Dec. 31, 1973.
Snouffer pomled out that the
village owns a street that goes
to the steps of the motel He
suggested counc1l fmd out
exactly where Its right of way
hes . Don Collins, council
president, pres1dmg m the
absence of Mayor Wilham
Baronick, suggested that the
Standard 011 Co be mv11ed to
"1'\ : :·:·:·.·: : •'

the Wh1te House Is "seriously
considering" such action along
Wlth alternative, less drastic
steps
Scherle said the admimstration IS "In a real
dilemma " Top officials have
repeatedly mdlcated they
regarded flat ce1hngs on farm
or retail food prices as unworkable and hkely to produce
shortages and rationing
9ut 1! the current food price

:·::

:·:=:·:·:

send a representative here to
coordmate planmng.
Council approved the third
and !mal readmgs of an ordinance to vacate F1fth St.
from Butternut to Mechamc St.
for the locatiOn of the new '
proposed fire statiOn.
Jane
Walton
clerk
presented a letter' to ' council
from Meigs County Treasurer
Howard Frank relating to local
government money. VIllages
received last year a check each
month for Its share of state
mcome tax money This has
been changed, so that villages
now w11l receive a variable
amount each month
Calvin Lane, street
superintendent, reporting on
the street sweeper, satd a
new sweeper would cost
$1~,500 with $2,000 to be
allowed on tbe old sweeper.
Lane said repair to tbe
present sweeper would cost
between $3,000 and $3,500.

Upon the advice of Lane,
Council voted to repair the
present equipment.
Pollee Chief Jed Webster
asked council to consider
parking cars on one Side of
Lasley St. only
He pomled out tlvit when
cars
are
parked on
both sides II Is dlfdl!ult to get up the hill there.
Council, before makmg a
dec1s1on, decided to ask
residents of the area their
opm1on.
D1rt and the rock behmd the
post office can be used by the
village, Colhns said. Council
decided to haul the dll't to fill in
Mechamc St and the rock will
be placed under the upper
parking lot wall
A proposed contract with
Burgess
and
N1ple,
engmeermg f1rm, to make a
prehmmary survey of the
sewage syste!ll, extending 11
and separating storm sewers
from samtary sewers, at a cost
:·::=:=:.:=:=·:.=·:..=:=·:.:.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·. :···:::. :·: : :·: : :«: ::·:·::».:::·:·:··::::: :=:~ of $5,000 was not approved
\ Council felt 11 was too costly,
and the matter was tabled
Elma
Russell,
counCilwoman, reported that she

.;~ 80 Prisoners of War flying

:., home to reunions Wednesday

•'

TEN CENTS

;::
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.
:·:
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·:
,.

!:!

:;:,
::::
...

:~!

o~~ebanksOhiO

·:0.
~:·:·:::;:.:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·· : :·:·:·!·!·!·!·.·!·!·!·!·

BAKERSFIEW, CAUF - A WARRANT has been issued
for the arrest of Glenn W Turner, 38, a Florida biiSiness
promotor, on charges be failed to pay more than $500,000 In
awards agamst him. Kern County Superior Court Judge John M.
Nairn Issued the warrant Monday after two lawyers said he
failed to pay the awards to 148 persons who !lye In the Stockton,
Calif., and San Jose, CaW., areas.
The lawyers, Roy Hall and AI Cavagnaro, said their chents
paid $3,000 lo $3,500 each for distributorships m Kosco! Interplanetary, Inc., manufacturer of mmk oil cosmet1cs They
said Kosco! Interplanetary, a Turner venture, was Illegal under
California law and urider a consent decree the CaliforDIBns were
entiUed to refunds.
·
(Continued on page 10)

The former Wisconsin congressman sa1d that after the
Japanese had failed m efforts
to develop thell' own m1sslle
system "lmhallve for the
Japan - McDonald - Douglas
deal was developed at a 1971
meellng m Tokyo between US
cabinet officers and their
Japanese counterparts."
"That meetmg m effect
ratif1ed the negotiations that
bad been underway · for the
missile system sale," he said.
"Part of the deal was an
agreement by Japan to penn1t
mvestment
by
US
multinational firms in Its
automotive industry "
B1emiller d1d not reveal

where his mformation came
from but md1cated that the
Japanese would copy the u.s developed prototype m order to
bu1ld later umts and models on
their own.
The Thor-Delta rocket previously had also been used to
launch weather and other
satellites for Canada, France,
an~Jomtiyfor seven European'
natwns
He said the Thor-Delta
rocket system was developed
w1th Amencan tax dollars but
that the sale to Japan ai&gt;'
parently was for "exclusive
profit of McDonald-Douglas,
While the nation loses a baSIC
resource "

Nixon budget catastrophic to
tri·county boo~mobile service
By Mrs. VIlma Plkkoja
Bookmobile Supervisor
Urgent appeals for library
funds are heard m many
places.
If Congress concurs w1th the
President's budget recommendations, the effect on the
State Library and Oh1o library
semces w1ll be catastrophic.
The Chrishan Science
Monttor on February 5·
"Consumer advocate Ralph
Nader, asked to speak to the
ALA group suddenly m midweek, urged tlvit llbranes not
give up the f1ght and step up
their visibility In hopes of
gaming a higher pnority when
it com'lll to fund allocations
l\LA delegates put their cases
personally
to
their
congressmen and senators at a
special congressional lunch "

'

Education
uauy,
on
February 2 "Why has library
fundmg been totally ehmmated
from the N1xon budget for
HEW's Educat10n Division?
Because the admlmstration
doesn't beheve the cuts will be
effectively challenged, ombudsman without portfolio
Ralph Nader charged Wednesday at the Midwmter
meeting of the American
Library Association in
Washmgton
"Inform legislators of
library needs In a coordinated
pattern," Nader contmued.
" Elected representatives
respond to expresswns of mterest by tbe1r coll.'!tituents and
that too often Citizens neglect
this opportumty for getting
desired legislative action," he
said.

$30 Million will
fund farm loans

f
4% Slice

1
}

bad talked to Bernard Fultz,
prosecutmg attorney ,m regard
to the sidewalk that has been
taken by the Jon.., l!oys Store
as part of Its parkmg area
Council felt that the sidewalk
should be replaced The matter
Will be given further study
Snouffer asked that a street
hght be placed on Ross St and
Jim Mees asked that one be put
on East Mam St near the
Wh1te House No action was
taken
It was decided to ask Jack
Cnsp of the Leading Creek
Conservance DIStrict to have
several trees removed on
Fisher St.
Pohce Chief Webster's
report for February showed
that h1s department mvestigated 23 accidents, made
39 arrests, drove 4,756 miles
and Issued 795 parkmg Uckets.
Collection from street meters
totaled $1,400.50 and from
parking lot meters, $1,457 50,
for a total of $2,858
Attendmg were Colhns,
Snouffer, Russell, Mees, Ralph
Werry, council members; Jane
Walton, clerk, Chief Webster,
and Mr Lane

CLARK AIR BASE, Philippines (UPI) - Eighty
American prisoners of war will fly to the United States •,•,
Wednesday for reunions with their famiUes at four
separate military bases around the country, mlUtary \1\:
.•.
'•'•
spokesmen announced today. The men, who returned ::·
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A $30 and keep people in busmess
from Communist prison camps Sunday and Monday, wUI
m1lhon program of state who would probably go out of
fly in %0-man groups aboard four C141 StarWter hospital
guarantejOd emergency farm busme1111 if the dollars were not
' planes at two holD' tatervali.
loans to replace loans curtailed available," he said.
Spokesman said the first Plane wU!Ieave at 8 a.m.
by the Nixon administration
Abercrombie said because of
Wednesday (7 p.m. EST Tuesday) for Andrews Air Base,
was aMounced Monday by the state guarantee, banks wiD
W11Shlngton and arrive at 5:15 p.m. EST time Wednesday.
Ohw Agriculture Director be issuing loans to young
The arrival times and destlnallons of the other planes
Gene S Abercrombie.
farmers, the extremely
were 5:10p.m. EST at Scott AFB, fll.; 6:30p.m. EST at
''Oh1o
is
ready
to
take
care
of
poor and others who ordmarlly
Kelly AFB, Tex., and 5:30p.m. EST at Travis AFB, CaW.
1ts
own,"
Abercrombie
said
wouldn't
he given credit. He
The names of those aboard the planes will be anThe state agriculture sa1d the loans would be availnounced later, a spokesman said. All of the early returdirector SBid U.S. Agnculture
(Continued on Page 10)
nees were expected to be from the group of 106 miUtary
Secretary Eat Butz had
Hyers whv returned Sunday from Hanoi in what base
author!l.ed the use of $1.5
•
doctors described as "very, very good condition."
milhon in a DepressiOIH'ra
0
The 30 Americans who returned Monday from VIet
Oh10 Rural Reba bihta tion
~:::.ss~:ps were still going lhrougb the routine
Fund to guarantee loans by

Japs buy U. S. missile system

Sale

ot ask mg pe rson

'l1fE CHAMPS"- Taking first place In the recent Marauder Sixth Grade Basketball
Tourney WIIS the Salisbury basketball squad, front row, 1-r, Bnan Teaford, Gary Basham,
Bnan King, Billy Carswell, Mike Smith, DaVId Kennedy; second row, Gary Pullins, Frank
Haggy, Don Icenhower, Bob Seelig, Dav1d Blake, Chuck Kennedy, Steve Ohlinger and Ed
Nottmgham, and In back, coach Keith Vanlnwagen. A banquet, when the players will be
honored and awarded trophies, will be held at Salisbury School March 17 at6 p m , accordmg lo
John Usle, prmcipal

spiral 1s not eased, the admimstration faces the gnm
prospect that orgamzed labor
will demand wage hikes gomg
beyond the current 5 5 per cent
"guideline" range, Scherle
said
Scherle , m a newsletter
ISsued today, said the admlmstrahon " Is seriously
considermg placmg raw
agncultural products under
pnce control." In an IDterview,
By United Press International
he md1cated he felt most atWASHINGTON - OFFICIALS OF President Nixon's
tention was being given to a
reelection campaign sent FBI agents on ''fishing expildiUdns" to
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
possible
ceiling on raw or retail
keepJhemfrom "gettmg Ill the II'Uth" about the Watergate case,
The Middleport E-R squad meat pnces
accordmg to a document given a Senate comnuttee,
was called for George Ve1th,
The Iowan sa1d he did not
The document WIIS a letter sent by the FBI to John W Dean
312 Pearl St , at 4'45 p m. beheve admm1strahon officials
Jr., White House counsel, July 21 This was four days after the
Monday. Ve1th was taken to have made any !mal deciSIOn .
break-mat Democratic National Cmrumttee headquarters in the
Veterans Memor1al Hospital But, he added, "I don't care
Watergate apariment building. The letter, along with other FBI
where he was admitted as a what anybody says. They are
documents, was released Monday by the Senate Jud1c1ary
medical pallent
m a real bind Somethmg 1s
Committee, wh1ch today resumes its hearmgs on the nommation
gomg to have to g1ve, and they
of Acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray Ill to be permanent head
LOCAL
TEMPS
know 1t."
of the agency
The temperature m down.
The steps, Scherle said,
town
Pomeroy
al
11 a.m mclude a freeze on rela1l mea.t
QNE OF THE DECISIONS FACING RETURNING priSoners
of war Is whether to continue their careers m the m1htary A Tuesday was fi7 degrees under pnces at January - February
average levels.
Navy POW sa1d Monday not only would he stay but he would sunny skies
have been w1lhng to spend another 711 years m pr1son lOr his
country
Lt Cmdr. Robert P Doremus, 40, who was shol down over
North V1elnam m August, 1965, sa1d m Philadelphia he would
stay m the Navy and ask for another flytng assignment. "We
came back with honor and I would serve another 7\1 years," the
WASHINGTON(UPI ) - The Biem11ler, chief AFL-CIO
Montclair, N J, native told a news conference at the naval
AFL-C!O said today 11 had lobbyist, sa1d m testimony
hospital
learned that an American firm, prepared for the Senate subwith the government's ai&gt;' committee on mternahonal
N~ES, FRANCE -TRANSPORT Minister Robert Galley
said today that two SpaniSh jetliner~ collided Monday over proval, was "exportmg" to trade
"A prototype rocket is bemg
France because of a miX-up that placed both all'craft in the Japan a missile system tlvit
eas1ly
could
be
modified
into
an
built
m nearby Santa Monica,"
wrong place at the wrong time. He implied that the fault did not
offensive
mtercontmental
miS· Biem1ller said, and "It 1s exlie with military traffic controllers who took over the ~uties of
pected that upon completion,
stnklng clvU13ns a week ago, but with the pilots of the airlines. s1le.
A
spokesman
for
the
labor
the system will be set up on an
Nevertheless, Bntlsb, French and SpaniSh pilots said they
federation
Identified
the
fll'm
ISland
west of Japan.
would not fly over France until the strike ends.
as
the
McDonald-Douglas
"A Thor-Delta system 1s
A spokesman for t1!e 5,000 members of the BriUsh 811'!ine
Corp.
and
the
missile
system
capable
of carry1ng several
pilots assocwtion said pilots reported several near nusses 1n the
as
the
Thor-Delta
rocket,
used
hundred pound objects mto
a1r smce the strike began. In the tragedy, an Iberia Airlines DC9
up
to
now
for
launchmg
space
orbit or, w1th lltUe
carrying 68 persons and a chartered Spantax Convall' 990
satellites.
modificatiOn, can carry a
carrymg 108 persons collided near this WOjll coat city. The DC9
"Japanese
engmeers
are
nuclear
warhead in the 1,500 to
exploded and crashed In a fireball , killing everyone on board,
currently
at
Vandenberg
Air
5,000 mile range , clearly a
while the cr1ppled Convair managed to land safely at a m1htary
Force
Base
m
California
bemg
potentially offensive weapon,"
base
trained
in
the
development
and
he Sl'ld.
Galley said the crash occurred because "Instructions were
use
of
the
system,"
Andrew
J.
not followed." The DC9, he sa1d, was !lying three minutes behind
schedule while the Conva1r was 11 minutes ahead of Its set
course. The collision came a tan altitude of 29,000feet.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

PHONE 992-2156

(Showers hkely tomght, lows
m the lower 50s Chance of
showers m the south Wednesday Highs m the 60s

Congested intersection
at Butternut is changed

Graham
WASHINGTON (UP!) Evangelist B1l!y Graham has
disassociated himself from any
"gimmicks, coercion and lnllmidatwn" aimed at convertmg Jews durmg the
Protestant evangelism campaign known as Key 73
' In a statement Monday,
Graham sa1d, "Just as
Judaism
frowns
on
proselytizing that 1s coercive,
or that seeks to commit men
against their will, so do I.
Glmm1cks, coercion, and lntimidahon have had no place m
my evangelistic efforts, certainly not m histone Biblical
evangelism."
Graham's statement was
welcomed by Rabbi Marc H.
Tanenbaum as "a constructive
r
contribution to mterrehgwus
understandmg."
There had been widespread
en hc1sm among Jewish
leaders, IDcludiDg Tanenbaum,
of the Key 73 effort. Key 73 Is a
nationwide campaign among
some churches, rehg10us
agenc1es and paracclesiastical
groups to "call the continent to
Christ."

enttne

Devoted To 17w lntere&amp;t. OJTheMeig1-Mcuon Area
TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1973

loses

~~~

®
®

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Weather

•

at y

Key 73

. Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES - John Tammy
Snyder,
Point
Utchfield, New Heven; Mrs. Pleasant; Genevieve CampRobert Roush, Mason; Ernest hell, Leon; Randall Roach,
Keefer, Letart; William West Columb18; Mrs. Larry
Whittington, Point Pleasant; Jordan, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
E'mory Summers, Kanauga; R D. Tillis, Point Pleasant;
Mrs James McKnight, New Robert Shiflet, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Haven; Samuel Meadows, Dan1el Hawthorne, Long
Point Pleasant; Mrs James Bottom ; Mrs. Harold Adams,
Long, son, Gallipolis Ferry; Gallipolis ; Mrs. Foster
James Kinder, Galhpolls; Weimer, New Haven ; Inez
George Nibert, Galllpol\s Gleason, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Ferry; Stella Lee, Henderson; Robert Hummell, Middleport.

REYNOLDSBURG - Leo
(Bud) Crew, 48, Reynoldsburg,
formerly of Pomeroy, died
Sunday mght at MI. Carmel
Hospital. Mr. Crew was born
March 8, 1924 m Racme. He
operated a dental laboratory a
number of years In Pomeroy. ,
He IS survived by h1s wife,
V1rgm1a; three daughters and
a son, Jenmfer, Pamela, Robm
and Todd; his mother, Mrs.
MyrUe Durst, Pomeroy; one
brother, Frank, of Warren, and
several me~es and nephews.
Funeral serv1ces will be held
Wednesday w1th bur~al m
Reynoldsburg . Complete
details will be announced

•

The scientific name lor the
American red wolf IS "caniS
mger" - Latm for black dog.

Riverboat captain is dead at 59
Bernard J. Boggs, 59, Rt 1,
Bidwell, died 5 15 p.m., Sunday
m Pleasant Valley Hospital
followmg a short Illness.
Mr. Boggs was a nverboat
captaiD for the Ohio River Co.,
of Cincmnah for the past 25
years. AWorld War II veteran,
he was born June 24, 1913, m
Gallia County, son of the late
Clifford and Mattie Frazier
Boggs
He is survived by h1s w1fe,
MarJOrie L. Bandy Boggs;
thr" daughters, Mrs. Martha
Morr1son, Circleville, Mrs
Judy Thompson, Galhpolis,
and Mrs. Betty Burge, Milfwood, W Va. ; four sons,
Bernard Eugene Boggs,
Galhpohs; Howard Joseph
Boggs, Vmton; Gerald Richard
Boggs, Gallipolis t'erry, W

'

Now You Know

The American Library
Assoc1a lion's Council
unammously has passed a
resolution protesting President
Nixon's new federal budget
and urged Congress to approve
a budget that "meets the needs
of all the people whQSe access
to information is the key to
effective participation in
soc1ety, and often the key to
survlval1tsel!."
Mrs Nellie Groce, well in her
90s, did not nund the ram the
day she came to tell us that she
had wntten a letter to Mr
Miller, the Congressman, and
when the folks m Keno took out
20 some books they too staled
that they too had sent a letter to
Mr Miller
If you know the Bashan
Road, you also have a good
Idea how desolate and lonely 1t

IS on a ramy day That IS why
the Keno and Bashan residents
assured us how much they
depend on the service tlvit
brmgs the books to them free of
charge
One customer, a man out of
the hospital just a few days
before, pomted at the books
and said "There wouldn't he
any other way I coul\1 read all
these books," and he was right
' he had chosen were
The books
techmcal and varied, per book
the1r cost would have exceeded
$10 per book
' But every lime another
person borrows this book the
price 1s d1v1ded, and the shared
cost isn't so much, as long as
the bookmobile keeps 1t
movmg from one place to
another

Bankers
Assocwtion has agreed to loan
$30 mill10n on the $1.5 rrullion
guarantee and later could
possibly loan more than $30
mllhon, Abercrombie said.
The state will guarantee
loans of up to $7,500 to fanners
who can justify the need
because of a poor crop harvest
caused by bad weather. Banks
may grant larger loans, but the
state Will guarantee only the
f1rst $7,500.
A maxunum of 7 per cent interest will he charged on the
loans m some cases less and
they ~ill be repayable m ihree
years Abercrombie said
"~r Intent 18 to keep Ohio
agnculture on top of the pile
0

State chaplain
wz'll address
Grange dinner
The Rev Robert Wells,
chaplain of the Ohio State
Grange, will be the speaker at
the annual Meigs County
Grange banquet April 6 at the
Salisbury School, 7 15 p m
Plans for the event were
announced at a meeting of
Pomona Grange Friday night
at the Rock Sprmgs ball
Norman Will, master, pres1ded
when work m the !11th degree
was exemplified for one
cand1date
VIsitation was worked out
with Vmton County for an
exchange of programs. Mrs
Pauhne Atkms announced that
April 30 is the deadline for
national and state sewmg
contests to be judged at the
May meetmg of Pomona
Grange
The Harrisonville Grange
served refreshments .
Columbia Grange will be hosts
for the May meeting Tickets
for the April 6 banquet are
hemg lvindled b~ Mr. and M~ .
Mendel Jordan. The dinner Is
open to the public.

funds wanted

by council
RACINE - A request from
the Meigs County Council on
Agmg for four per cent of the
village's revenue sharmg fund
for the year was tabled for
further diSCussion when the
Racme VIllage Counci!Jpet In
regular session recently .
A letter was read from the
county commissioners advismg officials that the cost of
meals for each prisoner in the
county tail will be 75 cents and
the turnkey charge will now be
$2
Marshall Alfred Lyons
reported two arrests, 32 pohce
calls received and travelmg 122
m1les durmg February Mayor
Charles Pyles spoke on the
need for a full time pohce offiCer. He will contact the
Bureau of Public Inspection
askmg clothiDg reqmrements
for an arresting officer It was
agreed that Ernest Triplett of
the street department Will
grade down an alley and apply
gravel if needed near the home
of Mrs . Brad Wolfe
Larry Wolfe and Mrs
Harriet Neigler were asked to
ask David Parry of the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservahon
office for new trees to be
plan ted on Arbor Day
replacmg trees that have been
cut down In the commumty
Plans were made for removal
of two large'1rees
Council agreed to request the
Board of Public Affairs to turn
over revenues to the village to
help pay for a fire truck to be
dehvered early this summer.
The board would be permitted
to hold $5,000 for Its use, and
more 1f needed. Bills were
approved for payment.
Attendmg were Mayor Pyles ,
Clerk Mae Cleland, Harriet
Ne1gler, treasurer , and council
members Glenn Rizer, Linley
Hart, Larry Wolfe , Av1ce
Frecker, Mane Roush )and
Grace Roush.

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