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                  <text>.tO-The Daily Sentinel ; Middleport-Pomeroy, o-., March 20; 197'

·· ·--~':::'''~'' ' ' '"'''' ' ' '' ' '''&gt;., ~,,.,..,~~~~ ·

ews .. in nriefsl
By Untied Press International

,,

:

SPRING WAS USHERED IN TODAY WITII RAIN
·~ading across the nation's interior. Rain fell from extreme
.·Mmem Kansas across the middle Mississippi Valley to the Ohio
~nd TeMessee valley·s. Showers and a few thundershowers. OC·
'"'Tt'd over the lower Mississippi Valley and spread east mto

·"•rnnna.

.

Hain also fell from Washington to south-central California.
1,ifo\ht •now contjnued to fall in sectio~ of the northern Ap.
t&gt;~la.·hians . However, the flrst day of spnng had fall' skies from
th••t;n•at I"kes to the South AUantlc coastal states, and from the
S.'utl••nt Plateau to' the Western Plains states.
1\II.UMBU!j- WITHOUT DISSENT, the state Controlling
1~1;11'11 Mttnday approved the expenditure of $140,000 in Ohio State
\ t11in•r$ity funds for the purchase of a house for OSU President
H:~r.•ld ~~narson . The ex~nditure had been criticized by several
&gt;t:~h· t.-~i$lators who felt the campus residence used by past
umwr~itY presidents was adequate. ·
l\"\1·,,ffidals defended the purchase, emphasizing it was to
;,. (itt:Uk't'&lt;i by private donations, not state funds. The board also
'l't'r''"''t rdease of $6,593,921 to the Hamilton County com"""-"•'11t'r for Millcreek Waste Water Treatment Plant, and
l\,1;,&lt;.,q,t&gt;ll for sewage treatment facilities for the cit~ of Parma.
)ltiNTr.OMERY, ALA. -GOV. GEORGE C. Wallace un,k•rw••nt his second aeupuncture treatment Monday, but aides
&lt;.ihl tllt're was litUe change in his condition. Dr. Ling Sun-chu
IWf,,rmed the needle .treatment, as he did last Monday, in an
.&lt;th•mpt to reduce Wallace's pain.
The 53-vear-&lt;&gt;ld Wallace turned to acupuncture after un·k·r~·ting si~ operations since being shot May 15, 1972. He was
·~traii'Zed
. from the waist down alter the assassination attempt,
.ut&lt;l Iefl the University of Alabama Medical Center at Blrmingham last month after a prostate gland operation.

.

.

Bait 'n switch·artists
conning careless buyer
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
Commerce Director Dennis
Shaul said today his department and other state agencies
have started a crackdown on
"bait and switch" freezer meat
suppliers.
Shaul )S81d some meat sup.
pliers promise "fabulous
savings" on bulk meat for

Students will be
in writing test
RACINE - Mrs. Helen
Hayes, Great Bend, Meigs
County Ohioana Library
Chairman, has announced that
the Southern Local School
District will be participating in
the creative writing contest
sponsored by Batelle Institute
in conjunction with Ohioana.
Mrs. Elizabeth · Hobbs,
faculty member at Southern
High School, Racine, and two
sludents have been authorized
to attend a workshop and
luncheon on April 7 at Batelle
in Columbus.

home freezers, but the bargainpriced meat turns out to be old
and fatty. Salesmen then try to
get customers to switch to.
higher priced beef by showing
them a lean and freshly cut
carcass, according to Shaul.
Many consumers ba ve
complained that by the time
the more expensive meat was
cut and trimmed, they were
paying up to $3 per pound.
Shaul said customers also
have complained of "shortweighting'' by the suwller,
sometimes by as much as 100
pounds, and failure of dealers
to give advertised "free
bonus" packages such as
chicken, pork chops and bacon.
"Anyone with a complaint
about 'bait and switch' com,panles should contact the
Department of Commerce
Consumer ProtecUon Division
hoUine : 1-aoo-282-1960," Shaul
said, adding, '"The state
Department of Agriculture is
drafting legislation against
unscrupulous freezer meat
dealers."

HOSPiTAL NEWS

Two couples in British pull

in eXtremists

divorce court
Two suits for. divorce have
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court and three
final decrees were granled.
Asking divorce were Eugene
Hudson Racine vs Drema
Hudso~, Racin'e, and Ina
VanMeter Reedsville vs Gary
VanMete; Portland each
charging g;oss neglect~ duty
and extreme crueltY, Decrees
were entered for Roger Theiss
from Betty TheisS, Shirley
Schultz from Carl Schult:z, Jr.,
and David Hindy · from Jan
Hindy.

They want no

nwre of that
guy's bombs
PHNOM PENH (UP!)- U.
S.-made antiaircraft guns were
placed · today around the
presidential palace, the scene
of a weekend bombing raid by
a hijacked warplane that killed
47 persons and wounded at
least 50.
"We aren't laking any
chances," a palace source Said
of the installation of new antiaircraft guns in the palace
grounds. "So Potra still has the
plane and he could come back
and try again."
He referred to ex-Royal
Cambodian Air Force pilot .So
Potra, son-in-law of deposed
Prince Norodom Sihanouk,
who was identified by the
government as the renegade
pilot who stole a single-engine
T28 bomber from nearby
Poch~ntong
Airport and
dropped two ·250-pound bombs
on the palace compound.
So Potra flew off unchallenged after the bombing,
which President Lon No! said
was an assassination attempt
on him. Government sources
said they think the pilot landed
the plane at a Communist-held
rubber plantation near the
South Vietnam border.

Implanted.

Otamher,

(Continued from page I)
could to attend.
Blakeslee observed that the
BELFAST (UP!) - The
British Army arresled 25 ex- Ohio 1'\o~eer and' Historical
tremists today and moved Society plan to have ''!Jeritage
troop reinforcements Into Day" again during Regatta
Belfaststreetsto.guard against weekend.
an eruptiQil of viOlence on the
Fred Crow, past grand
release by Britain of its white croaker of the Ohio Soceity for
the Promotion of Bull Frogs,
paper on Northern Ireland.
The White Paper an- reported that "several sur·
nounce'."e?l in London , slated prises" are in store at the 1973
that Br1tam would continue to Regatta .Frog Jlunps.
wield direct rule of the
lt was alllo brought out that
province but would set up an the facilities at the Pomeroy
80-member Northern Ireland Junior High School auditorium
provincial assembly to be will be available for use during
elected u~der pr.oportional Regatta weekend.
representahon. Th1s was exGrueser relliyed a request
pected to give the minority from Ralph Conti, Chagrin
Roman Catholics in the Falls, Ohio, who is interesled in
province a greater share in displaying fireworks at a cost
government.
of $100 and up. Crow agreed .to
write for additional inLOCAL TEMPS
formation.
Temperature in downtown
Attending were Kenney,
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m.
Mrs. Thomas, Hoover, Ralph
was 44 degrees, under cloudy
Graves, Crow, .Earl Ingels,
skies.

(Continued from page 1) ·
chest over the · Implanted
receiver. The battery poweA\1
transmitter Is worn on a belt ot
cal'ried In a shirt pocket.
U Mr. Karr prepa~ for
strenuOUI activity, or if heart.
patna occur uneiqlectedly, he
switches on llle transmitter for
a maximum of 60 seconds to ·
avoid or relieve pain.
Patients receiving llle lm·
plantation and elec(!'odes SUCh
as Mr. Karr wait 30 days after.
llle operation to begin using llle
transmitter.
The implantation is resorled
to only In exlre!Jlely . serious
heart cases.

growing
at ·Tri-Co clinics
.

•

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

CHARLESTON LINE- Making up the "Charleston" line in a Variety Show to be staged
Friday !lil!ht at 7:30p. m. at Syracuse Elementary School are (1-r) Julie Thorn, Jody Grueser,
Paula Barnett, Darlene Priddy and Tina Gibbs. Absent was Donna Hubbard. The show is under
the direction of Miss Beverly Price; the.pianist, Rlith ~earns, and tile master of ceremonies,
Bub Patterson. Other numbers to be presenled are : "On With the Show", first and second
graders; "California Here I Come", mixed chorus; "Lullaby of Broadway," by John Evans:
Tiny Tim, starring Debbie Brown; "Pretty Baby", boys chorus backed by a girls' dance line;
"Bye Bye Blackbird", third grade quartet; "Tea for Two," by Bub Patterson and Lorna
Grindley; dance and baton number, by Cindy Patterson; "Army Life" by carrie Guinter and
Vicki Cund!H; "Ma, He's Making~~ Me," sixth grade girls; the Beatles, sixth grade
boys; "Give My Regards to BroadWay," song and dance by a mixed chorus from the fifth
grade, and the entire cast singing, "ll'sA Grand Old Flag,"

SALE! RED HEART KNITTING YARN
,,~A SKEIN

Now You .Know

oz.

...

' W~

VOL XXIV

NO. 237

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Supreme Court ruled constitutional today the · use of
local property b!xes to fipance
public sol!oo.b ,.The Couft split
~ to 4 In lhe decision.
In a Texas case, the court
had been asked to decide that
the system that tends to ignore
differences between rich and
poor school district violated the
Constitution's guarantee of
"eqUal protection of the laws."

FREE LECTURE SERIES

Speaking for the five-man
majority, Justice Lewis F.
Powell Jr. said the system is
concededly imperfect, but said
it bears~ 'rational relationship
to a legitimate slate purpose.

Powell said that while
assuring basic education fur
every child in the state, It
permitted and encouraged
participation in and significant
control of each district's school

MONDAYS, MARCH 26, APRIL 2 &amp; 9 • 8 P.M.
HOLIDAY INN, GALLIPOLIS

CLEANING

(Upon Request)

Old Time Values of Safety
and Security Meap Still

about investing

ROBINSON 'S

CLEANERS

*

*but were afraid to a8k.

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TODAY

Each depositor Insured to 120,000

SPECIAL!
THIS WEEK ONLY

The series will be conducted by the Brokerage Firm of Singer,
Deane &amp; Scribner, member of the New York Stock Exchange, Inc.,
the American Stock Exchange and other principal security ex·
changes .
The lectures cover many aspects of investing, from fundamentals to
advanced techniques .

fEDERAl DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORAIIOH

Since 'way batk when, we've been providing !be people
A question and answer period will follow each lecture.

ill !Ills communily with sound, deplftdable bonking . , .
serving you steadfastly, keeping ybur money sale and

REG. 69'

IICUrt, working for you. Your monty is, as always, safe-

guarded by our substantial assets and reserves. Now,

...
'

YOU VISIT. PARK FREE

"'•

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percent

sheer super stength

nylons. Fils 5' to 5'6". 100 lb . to
150 lb. Colors : Beige. Pecan.
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SINGER, DEANE
NAME--~------------------~

PITTSBURGh

lltbens /4alional
-..4CINCIHNATI

.~

Gentlemen: Please' enroll me in your free lectures
to be 'conducted at the Holiday Inn on M.ar. 26,
April 2 &amp; April 9.

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pnltdion .. . eve.ry deposit insured up to $20,000.

WHE~

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for added safely, dapositors enjoy I!Kreased insurance

AUTO TELLER . WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS5To7 P. M.

To enroll, fill out and mail the coupon. Or phone (304) 522-7318

~

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

STREET------------------~--­

RALL'S
BEN FRANKLIN
992-3481

MIDDLEPORT, OtJIO
Member hd.:ral Depolll IIIIIU"IIDce Corporalloa

Middleport, 0.
Open 9 Til5 Weekdays
9 Til9 Sat.

CITY - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - STATE-- - . . - - - - - - - ZIP________
PHONE-----------------~--~

&amp;SCRIBNER

Members of New York Stock Exch•"''• lnc.
and olhu !l'incipaJ securit7 exchanges
Fl"n HUNTiptQTON NATIONAL BANK ARCADE

HUNTINGTON, W . VA. 25720
TECKPHONI (304) e22·731B

&lt;

of Middleport and the Racine
Home National Bank were
awarded bids for active accoun t.s according to Howard
Frank,
Meigs
County
Treasurer.
The Commissioners, in other
business, voted to advertise for
bids for bituminous and
aggregate materials for the
Meigs County Highway

QUEEN AND RUNNERUP- Chosen "FFA Queen" at
the annual parent-son banquet Saturday night by FFA
members of the Southern High School chapter was Carol
Michael, sealed, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Michael,
Syracuse. Runnerup was Rhonda Ash, standing, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. ·Edwin Ash, Minersville. The girls were
presented trophies and corsages.

Department.
Bids
for
bituminous material may be
submitted until 9:30 a. m. on
April 10 and aggregate bids
until 9:30 a. m. on April 24.
Gasoline and ihesel fuel bids

enttne

Devoted To The Interests Of .The Weigs-Mason Area
WEDNESDAY, MARCH £1, 1973

will also be accepted by 9a. m.
on April 3.
Attending were Charles R.
Karr , Robert Clark, and
Warden Ours, commissioners,
and Martha Chambers, clerk.

Weather

•

at y
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

year of operation. The first
year's operating funds were
from the county commissioners of the three
counties, with the state sup.
porting 75 pel. of the total cost.
Other business of the board
as approved for next year's
comml!llity plan, July, 1973, to
June, 1974 and final approval
was made t\, an application to
be submitted for federal funds
for a comprehensive mental
health center to serve the three
counties. The group approved
Mrs. Mary Martin of Meigs
(Continued on Page 14)

Banks selected
Depositories for county funds
were selected by the Meigs
County Commissioners
Tuesday morning.
The Pomeroy National Bank
was awarded the bid for
inactive funds and The Fanners Bank and Savings
Company the bid for interim
tuhds.
In addition, those two banks,
and the Citizens National Bank

..
.
.,
•••••
.

.

Variable cloudiness and cool
today . Highs in the 40s. ParUy
cloudy and cool again tonight
lows near 20 north to 30 south.
Mostly sunny and a lltUe
warmer Thursday. Higha In the
40s to low 50s.

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

Court upholds tax system for schools
IProfiles •••
-~

ELBERFELDS IN POM£ROY.

Everything you've
always wanted to know

Jackson completes the goals of
the menial health hoard with
clinics operating in the three
counties. The other clinics are
located at Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy and at 16
Slate St. in Gallipolis where the
board also has its administrative offices.
The funding of the clinics is
made 'i&gt;OSSible by a mental
health levy passed last May in
the three counties. The Ohio
Department of Mental Hygiene
funds 75 pet. of ·the operating
costs of th'e program.
This is the board's second

•

The first commercial movie
produced in Hollywood . was
"The Count of Monle Cristo,"
which was begun in Chicago
but finished on the West Coast
ln 1908.

MEIGS THEATRE

..--------t
2HOUR

Incr.eased, professional
psychatric service is forthcoming in the three mental
health clinics serving Me~s,
Gallia and Jackson Counties
. due to long waiting lines, it was ·
annOI\Ilced Monday night at the
monthly meeting of the three
COunties COmml!llity mental
health board.
dinner at the Colonial
Res urant in
Jackson
· preced the business meetiJlg
at the
ard's new mental
health clio located at 239
Water St., Ja son.
Malcolm
rebaugh,
chainnan of the board, slated
that
the
professional
psychiatrist will be increasing
his number of days at the three
clinics due to the number of
patients on waiting lists to be
seen. The clinics are staffed by
mental health teams which
include a child psychiatrist,
psychologist, social worker,
and mental health technicians.
The cost to the patient is
based on a fee schedule, but no
one is refused service. The
patients are referred from
doctors, schools, courts, other
agencies, and self referrals.
The opening of the clinic in

Richard Chambers, Tom
Cassell, Blll Grueser, Ted
Reed, Jack Carsey, Blakeslee,
Virgll Teaford, Bob Jacobs,
Marge Hoffner, Beulah Jones
and Katie Crow.

and daughter, Eloda Webb,
Holzer Medical Center
Jessie
West,
Margaret
!Discharges)
WOODLAND, WASH - FBI AGENTS have resumed the
Glenna Roush, Andrew Williams, Leona Willis,
hunt lor parachuting hijacker "D. B. Cooper" in this !ann area VanMeter, Foreman Stevens, Michael Wickline, Vivian
~· here he disappeared 18 months ago, the Portland (Ore.)
Roger Rippeth, Juanita Boggs, Trowbridge, Rex Roberts,
RED HEART
Journal said Monday.
Iva Whaley, Wanda Cooper, Cecil Miles, Pauline Miller,
A man who signed the flight manifest as "Cooper" hijacked a Stephan Burns, Frances White, Oscar Maynard, Christy
St'attle-hound jetliner on Thanksgiving Eve of 1971 and obtained Tracy Waugh, Ora Waugh, Koenig, Ora Hively, Bessie
a $'200,000 ranson!. He parachuted from the back door of the 727 Agnes Walker,
Your choice of
Robert Fife, Mary Davis, Clyde Davis,
without leaving a trace. Authorities have searched this area Steinebrunner, Ollve DeShawn Caldwell, Mittie
·Red Heart Wintuk
across the Columbia River from Oregon se~eraltimes in ~e past Stapleton, Jack Moore, Ronald Crace, Vernon Blevins, KenOrion Yarn or the
without success.
Robinson, Carl Kloes, Mrs. neth Black, Ann Yeager, Mrs.
popular
Red
Floyd Clary, Jr. and daughter, Keith Grueser and son,
Heart Kn ltting
Clarence Carter, Donald Thomas Doer fer, Wayne
Worsted. Ready
Burchett and Thurman Bor- Stafford, Robert Jewell, Mrs.
David Ondera and son, Lycy
PLy to _knit pull out
WASHINGTON (UP! )- The in increments of lJ, or% point. den.
4
4
Amsbery, Mrs. Jay Osborne
(Birth)
skems.
Go\'ernment Monday sumAthur F. Burns, chairman of
and
daughter,
Donald
Boggess,
Mrs.
Jerry
Jacks,
a
son,
Rutmoned six of the nation's the Federal Reserve Board and
Six "Tangle-Proof" Pull-Out Skeins in a Box
John David, Joanna Polcyn,
largest banks to appear here ...... also head of the ~ommittee on land.
Mrs. William Nance and son,
Thursday and explain' their Interest and D1v1dends, wh1ch
Big selection of
Mrs. Darrell Smith and
Holzer Medical Center
raising of interest rates for is part of the government's
daughter, Clara Richmond,
1Discharges Mar. 1'-17-18)
solid
colors,
prime business loans.
wag e-pri ce control system,
Marjorie Carpenter, Wanda Ellen Reynolds, Mrs. Larry
heathertone and
Led by the Manufacturers quickly challenged the In·
Petrie
and
daughter,
Charles
Williams
,
Joseph
Nagle,
variegated colors.
Hover Trust co. of New York, creases, saying it was not clear
Perroud,
Patricia
Mills,
Mrs.
Georgia
Greene,
Marjorie
the banks announced increases they complied with govern. in the, prime interest rate men! criteria set last month. Rhea, Richard Davis, Davi« Melvin Massie and son, Mark
Caslor, Carolyn Fitchpatrick, Howard, Mildred Frazier,
· :llonday from 6'1• to 6%. Past
Adele Nonnan, Mary Warren, Jeffrey Ferrell, Norma CanE-R SQUAD
increases have normally been
The Pomeroy E-R squad Susan Veith, Iva Shinn, Mrs. terbury, Elizaheth Carman,
answered a call at II p.m. Michael Rose and son, Mrs. Lecta Bush.
OPEN EACH WEEKDAY 9:30 AM TO 5 PM
. SALE DAY SET
(Births Mar. 15-17-18)
Monday to 534 West Main St., Nelson Porterfield and son,
Mrs. Vincent Laudermilt, The WSCS of the Forest Run
lor Leora Zwilling, who was Virgie Montgomery, Melissa
OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 AM TO 9 PM
Tonight, March 20
taken to Veterans Memorial Nance, Vera Miles, James son, Mason; Mrs . Charles Uniled Methndist Church will
Hospital where she was ad- Marcum, Deidre Lyons, Richard Tucker, son, Point hold a bake sale Friday at the
I DOLLARS I
{Technicolor)
mitted as a medical patient. Kathryn Logan, Gertrude Pleasant; Mrs. Gilbert Davis-Warner Insurance ofWarren Beatty
Kloes , Dorothy Kitchen, Milliron, daughter, Gallipolis; flee, corner of Court and
Goldie Hawn
Thomas Justice, Kevin Mrs. Charles Masters, son, Second Sts., beginning at 9
tRJ
Gilman, Shannon Houck, Gallipolis; Mrs. Ivan Beaver, a.m.
Co lore a rloon
SORORITY TO MEET
Show starts 7 p.m.
The XI Gamma Mu Sorority Teresa Hill, Lowell Harrison, daughter, Gallipolis; Mrs .
Grace,
Donna Michael W. Austin, son, Point
will meet Thursday at 7:45 George
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Gaultney,
Martha
Fulton,
Julie Pleasant; Mrs. William
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Nellie
March 21 -22
Brown with Mrs. Vera Crow Evans, Joseph Edwards, Collins, daughter, Radcliff;
NOT OPEN
William Chamberlain, Delsie Mrs. Ronnie Blazer, son,
the co-hostess.
Burgess, Charles Broyles, Gallipolis and Mrs. Flem
Wilda Kincaid, Nial Minton, Meade, daughter, Gallipolis.
Fred McComb, Anna Roach,
Lillian Bumgardner, Blondiena Holley, Albert Kihn,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
James Ridgeway, Doris
ADMITTED - Crystal RichSimpson, Timothy Bartlett,
CO-ENDORSED BY
Connie Hysell, Eleanor mond, Pomeroy; Elizabeth
Withers, Shawn Green, Gladys Findley, Racine; Flora Kinsch,
Croy, Mrs. Glenn Young and Pomeroy; Donald Hendricks,
THE POMEROY, GALLIPOLIS &amp; PT. PLEASANT
daughter, Mrs. Roy Sprague Syracuse; Sherry Jewell, Rutland; Winona Hoffman,
CHAMBERS OF COMMERCE
Pomeroy; Ora Weddle, Middleport;
Robert Shook,
Pomeroy; Goldie Basham,
' why invest
•
Coolville ; Laura Hill, Red
House,W.Va.;MaryLawhorn,
• types of securities
Mason; James Eblin, Rutland;
• the New York Stock Exchange
John Brogan, Rutland; Selwyn
•- mutual funds
Evans, Kermit, w. Va., and
t research
Leora Zwilling, Pomeroy.
• portfolio management
DISCHARGED - Nellie
,. tax-free municipal bonds
- -- ·
Price, Earl Phelps, William
• the over-the-counter market
McKnight, Anna Legg,
1 Catherine
Laudermirt
and
Pom.r.y \ .
210 E. 2nd
.
. . R1chard Gtbbs.
.:
Phone 992-5428
As a service to area residents, the Pomeroy, Gallipolis &amp; Pt .
&lt;
Pleasant Chambers of Commerce offers • a free, three· part In ·
vestment discussion on stocks, bonds and the stock market.
.

Richest banks are called in

Servic~s

•

WASHINGTON (UPJl - The cost of
living, led by a record 2.4 per cent Increase in
· food prices, soared 0.8 per cent in Februarythe largest monthly i-lse in 22 years after
seasonal adjustment. The Labor Department's Bureau or Labor Statistics, in making
the report today, said food prices in supermarkets went up 2.4 per cent last month,
surpassing the previous record advances of 2
per cent in January and March of 1958.
The BLS said most or the sharp rise in food
prices came from meat, poultry and fish,
which went up 5 per cent In February after
seasonal adjustment, . the largest increase
since June, 1965.
__

at the local level.
Critics of the system argued
that school districts with
valuable property can provide
a high-quality education at a
low tax rate, while those with
low-value properly must get
along with inferior schools
even though the tax rate is
higher.
Dissenters in the decision
were Justices William 0.
Douglas, William J . Brennan
Jr., Byron R. White and
Thurgood Marshall.
Texas fi~ances its public
schools through both slate and
local partl~ ipatiorr. The state
provides about half the funds
and each district supplements
them through a property tax .
The Texas case was initiated
In 1968 by 15 parents and
children who protesled use of
the property lax for financing
schools in San Antonio's

Edgewood Independent School
District, a Mexican-American
community. A special threejudge federal court which ruled
in their favor was reversed by
the Powell opinion.
A similar ruling was handed
down by the California
Supreme Court in 1971 in a case
which went back to Los
Angeles and was reeently tried
there.
The Texas panel found that
wealth
was
''suspect''
classification, as race had been
found by the Supreme Court to
be suspect when constitutional
rights it deems "fundamental" .
have been denied.
Powell held, however, that
the Texas system did not
disadvantage any "suspect"
class of people. He said it had
not been shown to discriminate
aga inst any definable class of
poor .

Work resumed

.=-m~:~~::=:-~::::::::::::::~=~~rr .. w·:om~-~~

ews•. in Briefs;·
.•.

By UDlled Presolnternattonal
SAIGON -SAIGON REPORTED MORE Communist truce
violations today, among them the bombardment of a besieged
government base where 12 ·~uth Vietnamese rangers were
reported killed and 68 wounded ln a week of fighting, Despite the
attack and other scattered fighting across the country, Saigon
command spokesman Lt. Col, Le Trung Hlen said the exchange
of prisoners between the two Vletnams would end by Sunday,
three days ahead of the Parla cease.ftre agreement schedule.
By Sunday, 28,722 Communist prisoners will have heen exchanged for 4,753 South Vietnamese troops. In another
development, Brlj!. Gen. John A. Wickham told the chiefs of the
Joint Military · Commission that the United States has
photographs of Communist tanks, arUllery and vehicles entering
South Vietnam in violation of the Jan. 28 cease-fire agreement.

CHESHIRE- Work resumed this morning at Ohio Electric
Company's $488 million James M. Gavin Plant here following
ratification late Tuesday night of a one-year contract for the
idied workers of Local577 of the Plumbers and Steam Fitters of
America.
Plant construction had been delayed since March 8. The wage
agreement calls for a 48-cent per hour pay hike across the board .
Union members meeting Tuesday in Portsmouth accepted the
proposal by a vote of 159-28.
Construction at the plant carne to a halt when ~me 2,000
workers walked off their jobs in sympathy with the pipefitters.
Local 577 had allegedly been "lockerl out" of their jobs two days
earlier when the workers failed to accept a 38 cent per hour raise.

:::::::::::::=:=:=:=:~:= :::::::::::::::i:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::!:!:=:=:.·::::::::::::::::~:::=:::::::::::~~:::~::::!:::!..Y.!::::::::::::=:-":!::s*:::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::z:::::::::::::::::::::::?:'::::::::::::::::-::~&amp;!:::

~::

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in coal
BY JOHN REECE
The complexities of life are oft
.... times compounded by one individual
:::: attempting to do too many 'things.
This may be exemplified best by W.
Paul Graves, a man literally "of three

:§:
::::

hats."
Many folks have trouble trying to
~r~~.~~~~on

three: a target-shooter's campaign
hat, a farmer's straw hat, and a coal
@ miner's hard hat. Although his
...
i!~ campaign hat hasn't been put on for
~:; some time, the other two are worn
:·~ nearly every day.

~ ~:~:hi:r~;~i: ~~:~rc':~':~~
at

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Man of three hats
already has a start on raising beef

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will-be-boys ' room."

~~~~ ~: 12r!f~~rl:lale~~a~~:r ~oi~!l ~~;~~sl~!~~
\17i~e~~is1Tkhedre tahree adlso
two!
V19a4.3)Gt~~;:
l~ct~!~ltGhb:f~~~
g~~~!~o~~~
ve a ways 1 e
1 ea o
o en is
e Navy. He served

responstb e or a
mechamca .
maintenance inside and outside of the
mine. This is the job the Swiss, W.Va .
native accepled in June 1972. Prior to
· this assignment, he spent 24 years in
Union Carbide's Mining and Melals
Division, starting out as an electrician's helper and working his way
up to m•intenance supervisor.
The straw hat gets a workout
when Paul is not at the mine. The
Graves bought a farm at Route I ,

1n

being a farmer," he said, "and we've
aboard the U, S: Taussig and attained
always had a pretty big garden." The
the rank of 1st Class machinist. While
"we" refers to his wife, the former
in the Navy, he completed his ·high
Connie Dunbar, and two sons, William · school education and completed the
Paul II, age 9, and St'an, age 7. Both
Naval Machinist's Male course at the
boysattendSalemCenter Elementary
University of Minnesota. After servSchool where Mrs. Graves volunteers
ice, he completed a course offered by
as a teacher's aide .
Nashv ill e (Tenn .) Refrige ration
"I plan to raise hay and corn to School and attended Coyne Electrical
help feed my stock" the master School in Chi cago.
mechanic slated. "Also, living out on
"Oh, I guess I've always just liked

COlll'llliDI __..

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WASHINGTON- THE WHITE HOUSE and the Senate
Judiciary Committee are at an Impasse over the nomination of L.
Patrick Gray nr to be pennanent FBI director, ~nd it could stall.
his approval indefinitely,,
·
"It doean 't look good for Mr .. Gray," a committee spokesman
said. "There are some other people the comintttee would like to
bear, but they are in no hurry to actortovole."
WASHINGTON -THE SENATE HAS VOTED 19 give
President Nixon broad powers to control the economy for
anolheryear,butonly if rent controls are part of the package. In
an ~2 vote Tuesday;nlght, the Senate approved and sent to the
Hauae a bill that would extel)d for 12 montha the President's
authority to QIJpoae wage and price controls. That authorit!
expires April 30.
.
The action cime during acontinuing o;ontroversy over the rate
ot Inflation. Under the admlniltratlon's Phase Ill economic
prol!l'am, wblcb uaee Jargmy voll!lltary controls, prices ~ particularly those for food -have shown t.,rge Increases. There was
~to be more of thla bad news today when the government
illlled Ill Consumer Price Inde1 (CPI) for February. ~te ·
RepubUcan Wblp Robert P. Griflln, R-Mlch., hinted strongly at
111 conlalt Tuaday when he Aid it "Ia not going to be en'·

II

1

. ~EORGE NESSE;LROAD, Pomeroy Route S, left, World War II veteran, ~nd Lawrence
Smith, Pomeroy Route 2, World War I veteran, shared "Legionnaire of the Year" honors at the
annual birthday party of Drew Webste~ P011t 39, American Legion, in Pomeroy Tuesday night.
Leonard Jewell, center, chairman of the selection committee, exhibits the trophy on whicb the
names of Nesselroad and Smith, who Ued for the honor, have been engraved. Commander
Kenneth E. Harris also presented awards to members who ~ere active in securing memberships the past year.
·
·

.

MRS. GRACE PRA'IT, president, presented Kennelh 8. Harris, commander of Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legion, the auxiliary's gift to the post Tuesday night when the
annual post birthday party was held. Looking on la Robl!rt Waddell, eighth district commander
of LithOpolis. The fioral centerpiece on the table was a gift of Mrs. Tom CrOlf, Pomeroy, in
memory of her brother, the late Drew Webater,.World War I veteran for whom the local post la
named. Group singing and a skit by lhe junior auxiliary highlighted the program at the post
home.
·

�·~~~~lt!:ll'!:· !Hei~

uS

:~

Sealed bids will be rec e1 ved
by the under!!Hgned , Presr d ent
of
the
Lead lnQ
Cr ee k
Conserv llncy Ors l rl c t , herer n
referred to as th e Dr st rrct a(

~

f

,-:

~
the Offoce of the Leadong Cree k ~
Con se-rvan cy D l str rct State S.

Rout e 114 (M a rn St, RtJIIand
45715, until ten o 'c l o~.:K
am , Eastern Stand e rd T rme m

~:
:&gt;.

By Helen Bottel
e e e

·:·
~·~

~:

~

::%

Ills Fancy Just Passing?

OhtO

Ohio , on th e 12th day of April, • Dea r Helen

Wh
tru t?
0 can you
S
the purchase of bonds of' the
I met this fellow at a smgles har but he wasn't like the otners
District tn the agyr egate
k
ha darealthing gcmg. He
amountofS2.12IOCOaut
norozed - solt seemed After th reeweeswe
by resolUtion adopted Marc h 13 satd I was the only gtrl he ever loved enough to marry, since he
m~· and amended March 1!, divorced htS wtfe, and as soon as the ftnal paperS Came through

1973, at which t!me th e b1ds w il l
be publrcly opened and re ad lor

The bpnd&amp; are ISSlied fo r the
purpose of pay ing cos t s of
construc tm g a water sup p ly,
di strlbu t•on and treatm en t
system
The bonds are not gener al
Obllgat.ons of the D•sfnct but
w il l be payable , togeth er w•th
&amp;dd1trona l par.ty bond s w h•c h
may hereafter be tssue d
pur suant to th e r esolulio n

authorl1mg the bonds solely
from r evenues dert ved fro m
fen. rates and cha rges tor the
use of th e waterworks sy stem
after prov la ton for the paym ent
of costs and ex pen ses of
operatiOn and maintenan ce
ttlereof
The bonds sh all be da ted th e
date of their de!l verv sha ll be 1n

Well, wtllj those kinds of promtses, I thought 1! was all rrght
for htm to move mto my apartment which he dtd
It's been a year and when I'd ask, he'd say there was some

kind of delay on the divorce But [was lookmg through his papers
the other day an&lt;l there 1t was, as !mal as anythmg
Last mght I faced hun wtlh tt, and we had one cf our btg
!tghls He ended up telling me I was stupid not to see I was just a
passing fancy wtth htm, but if I treated him r1ght he'd let me stay
lor a while.
What do I do new? - HURT

Dear Hurt :
Let YOU stay? Remmd this guy It's your apartment- just
the denomlnat.on of Sl,OOO eac h
or may be issued m fu lly before you show him the door.
registered form In 11'14.' de
He made some pretty fancy passmg for a "passing laney " nom Ination of SlOO or any

•

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multiple thereof as r equeste d
by the purchaser , sha ll draw
ln~rest payable se m annual
1'1
on
the
f1rst
day
of
January
and
tn e
first day of Ju ly of each
vur commencing on the first
day of January next succeeding
the date of the bonds at the rate
ol five per centum (S pet ) per
annum Anyone desiring to do
so may present a bid for sa 1d
bondS based upon their bear1ng
1 d lfferent rate of Interest. but
l"'ot Ill exce&amp;s of eight per cen

tum

not less th an th e par value
thereof
Said
bonds mature
on
January 1 In each of the years
as IOtiOWS
Yr . Amt
Yr Amt
1977 $21,000
1989 $37 ,000

1978
1979
1980

1981
1982
t983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
Yr

..,•
'.
•,

2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006

2007
2COB
1009
2010
2011
2012
201 3

..•

~ct . l

per annum.
f)rovlded that where a frac
tiona/, 1ntertst rate Is b1d such
fract on shall be one quarter of
one percent or a mu l t i ple
tt.ereof Spill rate bid s will not
be considered Ea ch blel stlall be
for the purchase of said bonds at
{8

22,000

23 ,000
24 000

25 oco
27,000
20 000
29 ooo
31 coo
32 000
34 000
36 000

H

+++ '

Dear Helen
Here's onefcrthe books I read It m cur local paper. An rrate
subscriber reported the story to the editor who passed 1t en to us
readers It bear$ repeatmg.
Seems the subscriber had gone to the supennarkel to buy a
pound of wieners which was all he could afford.
He stoud m the check-out line hehmd a young man who was
trymg to buy some dog food with food stamps. When the clerk
told him stamps could not be applied to nonessentials like pet
food, the fellow said, "Walt a minute," ran back to the meat
counter and returned with an expensive steak which he paid for
with food stamps Just outstde the market door, he fed the entire,
pubhc-money-fmanced, over-$2 steak to his dog?
How do you like them apples? - IRATE ALSO

Dear Irate:
"Them apples" are downrtght sour. But I'll bet the dog loved
1990 39.000 the steak. And, aruma I lovers bemg ever Wlth us (no matter who
.. 199 1 41 ,000 finances food stamps) I'll b•t the reader comments on your letter
1992
43, 000
199) 46,000 will favor Fide's master - H
1994 .Hl,OUO
1995 50 000
1996
53 ooo Dear Helen
1997 55 000
You ha-e helped several hospttals tecetve hfe-savmg
1998
58 000
1999 61,000 equtpment tluoogh your nal wnwtde requests for Betty Crocker
2000 6·1 000
toupons

Plc:.~se

he1p us, too

St Mary's Mercy Hospttal Auxthary m Gary, Indiana
stat ted a Betty Crocker Coupon dnve to purchase an Electrocardwgraph Monitor for the new St Mary's Mercy Hospital
bemg butlt tn nea rby Hobart We need 600,000 coupons and the
ttme ts short
Would your kind read ers please send any Belly Crocket
coupons the; don I need to Ahcc Messtn a, Couron Cltatrman. St
Mary's Merq Hospttai Auxt ltary, rate of The Allee Shoppe, 322
Mam Street, Holl&gt;l rt, lndtan&lt;~ '' !'hank you very much Hopeful!) you rs, Altce i&lt;lesstna

Amt
$67 OCO
71, 000
74.000
78 ,000
82.000
86,000
90.000
95.000
99 ,GOO
104,000
110 000
115 000

123,000

Bond s m u1ur mq on and af ter

.,

•~·.
•'

•

January 1 1985 r~ re ~u i JJec t to
r ed c mp llon on &lt;J n d alter
Janu ar y l , 198 1 at !he-r pa r
val ue p lus a cc r ued mft• r e~1 to
th e d a t l' l1x ed lo r r edempllon
Th e bonds are pa yable 1:11 t hl:'
Oll •ce of t he Farm e r s HomP
Adm 1n 1st ra t to n 77 Eas t St ate

'

.,
'

.•
'

•'•

.,
•'•.
.,
•

• Vo1d

Con ser v.an cy D•stn ct Laws of
Sa1d b •d S w II be promp t ly
con s1d er ed and sa•d bonds will
be sold at not less t h ;:m pi.H anct
a cc rued
ml e rE.'S I
to
th r
high es t bidde r off er. ng the
!.n.w e$ 1 lnh:r est
1ate
as
here •naft er dcf1n ed The lowe !&gt; !
Int er es t ra te Wilt b e d eler m mt:d
by c a lcut at mg th e to ta l 1n le• cst
to the st at ed matur it y at lhf'
rat e
b1d
and
d e duct1 ng
therefrom the prem 1um bid If
each of two or more bid S 1S the
11 1ghest b1d offermg the low est
Inter e st r a te the bon ds wil l be
awarded on such one of srwt
h1 gt1 es t b1 ds as IS chosen by lot
All bid S m us t be acc ompa n •erf
by a bon d or chec k drawn on
and cert1f 1ed by a sot\len t bank
lwh• ch banK must be one other
th an th e b dder 1f ttl c b 1dder •s
a ban k.) paya ble to th e Dts tnct
In the am ount of on e pe r ce nt of
the par am ount of t he bo nds
herem off ered, upon con d1 t •on
that. If th e bid tS acc ept ed th e
bidder wil l r ec el\le and p ay for
such b'onds 10 accord.1n ce w1lh
the terms and provls•on s of th •s
not ice , or forfe •t the sam e as
liquidated damages In the event
said condition 1S not fulfilled
Bids Shall be sealed and
endor se d "Bid for lead ing
Creek Conservancy D1Si r •ct
Waterwo rks System Revenue
Bonds "
The proceedtngs lor th 1S 1ssue
hAve b een taken under the
superviS IOn of SC!U1re , Sand ers
&amp; De mp se v, Bond Attorneys,
Cleveland, Oh•o, whose ap
proving opinion will be fur
nlahtd by tht District to the
aucclasful blddtr without ex
penae end will be printed on the
bonds It the expense of the
Dlatrlct Complete transcript of
procuctlngs 1ne1 the prrntect
bonds will be furnished by the
Olatrlct, together with cer

tlflceto• ohowlng no tlttgetlon
PtndlnQ or thrtatened at the
time of tht dttlvory. to en loin

dtllverv or to contest the
Yllldlty of the bonds or the
power to Issue ttrem or the levy
or coiiKtlon of the assessments

for thofr payment
THE FARMERS HOME
ADMINISTRATION (FHAI OF
THE
UNitED
STATES
DEPARTMENT
OF
AGRICULTURE HAS
AGREED TO ENTER INTO A
LOAN AGREEI,\ENT WITH
TH! tSSUER,,PURSUANT TO
WHICH FH" WILL PUR
(HA$E SAID l2,121,000 OF
BONDS AT PAR AT AN IN ·
TIRESl RATE OF FIVE PER
CENTUM (5 PCT) PER AN
HUM

I

The bonds will be delivered on
or tbout May 1, 1973 tf the
•ucctt.lful b i dder desires
dtllvtrv 11 1 pl1ce outside tt,e
State ot Ohio. tht blddtr shall
pay tKPtnae of dellvtrv 1t sucl"'
other place

Tho riGht IJ rt1orved to roltct
bldJ.
LEADING CREEK
CONSERVANCY
DISTRICT
By. Jeck w. Crllp,
Prtlldent
(ll 21 • 2, (.re~. ~t· · 614 742-5922

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4
¥
t
olo

4JlU 95!
¥ Q J108
t 3
+1 072

42
97!&gt;
10952
Q 96 5

SOUTH ( D)

Ito Vo•d

., 3 2
. AK Q J 87G 4
&gt;!&gt; J84
Both vulnerable
West North East South

,.7.

Puss
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Pass 4t
Pass
5N 1
Pa:;s
Pa•,s
Pa~s
Pass
Ope nmg hw i10

+

By Oswald &amp; .James Jacob)

Some hands t·eally don't
appear to belong 111 a brrdge
column Today's ts an example You can throw seven
diamonds agamst lhe wall
and collect 13 trrcks You can
also make your tncks at
etther spades ot· no-trump,
but anyone who has eve1
played brtdge 1s gomg to
play the hand m dtamonds
That assmnptton looks rea
sonable, yet when the hand
cropped up at the recent
Dallas secltonal 1! seems
that most pairs played tn
spade or no-trump slams
Wlth conspicuous lack of success A few got to six dfa,
monds and Just a couple to
the grand slam
The hand should be a cmch
for anyone playing solid smt
mmor preempts It should
also be easy for those who
opened Wllh four or five dla·
monds Responder could )ust
bid five no-trump and open·
er wltfi absolutely sohd d1a·
monds could go nght to the

and

DIYOTID TO THI
INURIITDP
MIIOS·MASON Alii A
CHISTifl L. TAN NIH ILL,
laoc. I d.
ROIIRT HOEFLICH,
City ldltor
Publllhtd dally IXCtpl
Soturdoy by Tho Ohio Volley
Publishing Company, 111
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio.
4.1769 luJintll Oftlct Phono
"2 2156, Edltorilt Phone 992
2157.
Stcond CIIU poJflgt Plld It
Pomeroy, OhiO.
National advertising
reprountoll•o Botttnoltl
Goltoghor, Inc, 12 Eut 4!nd
St, Ntw York City, Now York.
Sublcrlpllon rlttt

Dt·

llvtrtd by carrltr where

avtlltble JO Cents

~er Wllk •

urv [ce not available One
month Sl 15 By mall tn Ohio

1nd W Vo , Ont yur SIA.OO
Six monthJ S7.25 Throe
monlhJ U 50 Sub•crlpllon
price Includes Sunday TimtS·
Sonll.ntt.

55
16
43
26

The to ugh patl came wtlh
those wh o opened one dt a
mond We appt ovc ot lht s
btd The South hand has 11
h1gli card pomts and a pre
empt ct owds matters. wlule
a pass IS JII S ( Silly
North res ponds two spades
and at thts pomt South
sho uld Jump to four ~ta ·
monds to convey the message that South has dta
monds and ltttle or nothing
else
North could go nght to
seven 01 try the ftve noIt ump grand slam Ioree On
!Ius b1ddmg sequence the
grand slam Ioree should ask
tl South has sohd dtamonds
smce hts prevtous btds have
clcatly guaranteed at least
two of the three top honors

20, 81lly Gr aham Crusa de 15

Sun n se Sem1nar 4. Sacred Heart 10
6 15 -- Farmt 1me 10, Far m Report 13
6 2G- Paul Ha: r vey 13
6 30 - Columbus Toda y 4 81ble An swer s 8, Amen ca' s
P roblems 10 , Pa tlerns for L 1v1ng
6 45 - Corncob Repor t 3
7 CO - Today 3, 4 15
7 30 - Romper Room 6 Sleepy Jeffers 8, Rocky &amp; Bullwmkle

24

R C. Cola
22 JO
H1gh lnd Game - Betty
Fr~denck 195, Marlene W1l son

187

H1gh lnd Senes - Marlene
Wilson 489. Betty Fredenck

446
H1gh Team Game and Se n es
- Lodw 1ck 's Mark et , 398, 1028

Wedn es day Aftern oon l eague
Marc h 7 1973

Won
Gauls ' Shdke Haven
Ri denour's TV
Lodw tck's M arket

H1gh lnd
Russel l 166,

163

Lost

61

19

49
48

31
31.

32

26

Ganw -

1&lt;

•a
54

56

Pear l
F lor 1ne G1n fh er
F lo1me

Gmtllcr 424 Pear l Russe ll 421
H• gh
Senes

Team s Game an d
Guul s Shake Haven

337 ond 950

Tn Co unty League

Marc h 13, 1973

Dav1 s Warner In s
R H Rawlmg s Inc

Pts
76
62

Gro Boy s

50

Pom eroy Cemen t Block Co
H&amp;R F~restone Co

40
32

Mayer &amp; Hill Barber Shop 2B
Hogh lnd Game - A L
Phelps Jr 223 Harvey Van
Vranken 212, Dale Dav1s 209
H 1oh Senes - A L Ph el ps

Jr 591, Ed

Voss

551 Jack

Pet erson 546
Team H1gh Game - Dav1s
War ner In s 933
Team H1 gh Sen es Gro
Boys 2604

13, Popeye 10
La ss1e 6

a 3C - Jack LaLanne 13. Romper Room B, New Zoo Revue 6
9·00 - Paul D1xon 4, Phil Donahuel5 , Ben Casey 13, Romper
Room a, Peyton Place 13, Capt Kangaroo B; Mr. Roberts 6:
Fnendly Junctmn 10, AM 3

9 3C - ToTelltheTruth3, Haze t8, Jeopardy6
10 00 - Hathayoga 33 , Do ck Van Dyke 13 , Dmah Shore 3, 15
Columbus S1x Ca ll1ng 6, Joker' s Wi ld 8, 10
10 30 - Concentratoon 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4: Split Second 13 ,
Prt ce Is R1 ght 8, 10
Sal e of Century 3, 4, 15 love of L1 fe 8, 10, Bew1tched6,

11 00 -

13, Sesame St 20
12 CO - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's SC 5C Club 4, News 10, 13,
Jack1 e Oblinger 8. Password 6

12 30- 3 W's Game 3. Search for Tomorrow 8, 10. Split Second6.
, I CO - News 3, All My Chlldr ~n 6, 13 , It's Your Bet 8, Green
Acres 10 , Not For Women Only15, Secret Storm 8
1 20 - Fash1ons m Sewing 3

I 30- Let's Make A Deal6, 13 As the World Turns s, 10; Three
Henry Ktssmger's m Acapulco; so IS Today's
on A Match 3. 4. 15
Barbara Wal ters Howard Hughes has beeno 2 00 - Days of Our l1ves 3, 4, 15 , Newlywed Game 13, M 1ke
Douglas 6, Gu1d1ng L1ght a, 10
seen by at least one oulstder in London: a tatlor 2 30Ooctors 3, 4, 15 , Datmg Gdme 13, Edge of N1ght8 10
. Bob Hope's buymg h1s own Jel alter all these 3 00 - Ano ther World 3, 4 15 , General Hosp ilal 6, 13, Love
Splendor ed Th 1ng 8 10 Behind the L1 nes 20
commerclal,mthtary atrborne years
Elv1s
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3 4 15, One L1t e to L•ve 6, 13,
Presley gone modest? Bought h1mself a $35,000
Secret Storm 10
Slutz wtthout hts name or tnttials on the license 4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Love Amen can Style 13, Flln t stones 6
15 G ll1gan s Isle 8 Scsarne Sf 20 33 Mov1e ' The Battle of
plate, JUSt 'STUTZ 1" . Sylva Koscma's
Apa che Pass 10
hospttahzed tn Rome Car crash
4 30 - I Love lucy 6 Dan1e l Boone 13. Pett1 coat J unction 3.
G1ll1gan's Island 8 D1ck Va n Dyke 15
5.00- Mister Rogers 20 33, Andy Gnft1th 15,, Bonanza 3, 4,
Hazel 8, B1g Va lley 6
5 30 - Elec Co 33 , Gom er Pyle 13 , Hodgepodge Lodge 20,
Beverly Hollbol liesa Deot h Valle y Days 15 Oh1o H1gh School
Baeketball To urnamE'n l 4

6 00 - Nev.. s 3, 4, B 1015 l1uthor Conseq 13,A roundtheBend
33 , Ses arne S l 20
6 30 - NBC News 4 15 ABC News 8, 10, I Dream of Jcan me 13 ,
Des1qn '19 Women 13
7 oo - r uih or Conseq 3 Bea t !he Clock ~ Course of Our
T1mes JJ D1ck Vt)ll Dyke I Wl1a l s My Lme 8, 8 1q Red

Last time,! noted how the .Ja~a nese are mcreasmgly pourmg
both adverllsing dollars and merchsnd1se mto the U S.A , and I
am therefore gomg to let you mona ''"·' are am of mme
About once a month, I mentally It ansport myself to San
Franctsco, where I occupy an opule nt office overlooking the bay,
earn a fa bulous salary wh1ch ena bles me to own a suburban
mans1on and a beachfront retreat, and all this, just lor over·
seemg the mflux of millions of trans1stor rad1os, TVs, cars,
moto rc) des, and assorted gtmcr.wk;; fo r Amertcan sale
It occurs, tiltS daydrewn, bec:wsc tt actually a ~nost hap-

a 00 - Fli p W1 lson 3. 4, 15. Mod Squad 6, 13, Wattons 8, IC, In
tertel Law &amp; Orde r 20, 33
Noght' IC
9 30 - Oh1o H1gh School Basketball Tournament 4

10 oo--News:lO, Streets of San Fra nclsco6, 13 , Dean Martm 3 4
15 Worl d Pres!'i 33
' •
ll 00 - News 3 l, 6 B lJ, 15 D1c:k Cavett 6. 13. M ovies " Joy
House' B ' Be loved Infidel 10
1 00 - Roller De rby -l N( ws 13
-

B~ck

m 1917, I nasa grass -~rr1 n uuck sergeant w1th the U
S Occupatton For crs, and st.1t toned IH!h the Army m
Yokoh.mln M) JOb was to supet ·"" "half-&lt;lozen Gis and a dozen
clerks, plus about 50 laborers, tn I'Unnmg a btg 11arehouse for
consumer goods from lite U S itl~&lt;lt &gt;a Sllll&lt;h m tlself, .ts thmgs
worked out )
·,
Now, the laboret s carne from a umon - but nothmg that
Arnold Mtllet of the Mme Workl'rs, or even George Meany, would
I CCOgntze The men dC!Uatly WOI ked for the prCSldent Of the
un ton , and he asstgned them to Jobs as they were needed, 01' a
contract hasts whtclt nMdc h1111 wealthy mdeed
I knrm th1s parwula1 umon pre~1de nt was really well-to-do,
because he could a!fot d to d11ve d 1938 wood-borntng (that's
nght ) Studebaker around the luel-ohort, bombed-{)u(, desolate
ctty that was Yokohama alter till' war
Wtth the supreme arl'Ogance of bemg 18 years old and too
dumb to respect my elders, regardless of nattOnality, I struck up
a great friendship wtlh thts man, 11 hose name was Tachikawa
He was defmitely old-school, 11e.u mg a severe mornmg coat,
Western-style, when he VlSlted th e 8th Army's warehouse which I
pretended to rwt He was about 65 th en, and a strict Oriental
tradiltonaltst.
Somehow, whtle other Gls were le:trntng only the Japanese
words for beer, sex, and goodbye, I picked up enough cf the
language to carry on a semt·ltterate conversatton, and even
learned the Japanese tea ntual to a degree that I was not totally
embarrassmg Mr Tachikawa rame to the warehouse, and we
drank tea and talked - me m my half-baked Japanese and he m

1 00 - New; 4 · - _ _ · - - - -- - - - - - - - equal!) -unfHnttltar EngliSh
When my lutch " '" u ~ , tho ugh, Tachtkawa-san tnt me pght
between the eyes wtlli a propostlton ' thai sounded, tolt!ll~ tnl·
plaus1ble al Lhat tune (tlurmg whtch the Japanese prmc1pal
mdustrial output was faulty ctga rette hghters made out of
discarded Budwetscr c,ms )
Ti te Japanese mdu.,lnal comple• was abo ut to re-emerge, he
told me, and he felt Wtlhm ten years, substanttal exports would
be bo ught by Ihe Unlled Slates r seemed a mcc young m~ to
htm , and "ould [ lhercfm e t·rmam on the West Coast after my
discharge, and take chat ge of ce1tam mdustnes m 11 hteh he had
an mtc1 c:st
I had Just enough gRll to gtvc tl senous thooght - but finally
had to tell hun no , when I rcahzed that I was sttll almost three
years !rem my 21st Ltrthday, and therefore legally unable to
represent lum durmg a pertod which he regarded as most
cr11tcal
He accepted my refusal with typical courtesy, and I came
back tc Southeastern Oh1o instead cl the Goldljll Gate country,
and haven't really regretted tt
·
Yet, every tune I see a Datsun or Honda wheeling past me, or
turn on a Sony TV camera or Toyo tape player,my mmd wanders
hack to what m1ght have been ..
&lt;)

ON THE TV DIAL · More of the Billy Graham Crusade at 8
WCHS-TV . Sonny &amp;Cher can be seen, same hour, on WBNS.TV
catch Graham

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An ear thquake Renso1 sttuated tn an abandoned Coio·
, _ado gold mtne ts so sensl·
hve tt can detect vtbrat 10ns
South m. the earth as famt as 20
2N.T. tr~llionths of an 1n c h m
3NT amphtude.

Ruins Save Carvings
Some cl the fmest carvmgs
or
antiqutty survtve today
The b1ddmg has been
because the Pers1an capital
West
North Eut
of Persepolts was sacked m
1+
Pus
331 B C A thousand years
Pass
3t
Pass
later, when Moslems ccctl?
Pass
4NT
Pass
pled the rutns , they de·
You South, hold
fh·e dubs to show that you stroyed all sculpture they
4KJ3 .KJ3 +Kt054 .K96 don't have an ace.
found because thetr fa tth lor·
TODAY'S QUESTION
What do you do now?
bade tmages They m1ssed
Instead of btddmg three d1a· the ones burted •m the rub·
A- If this is just • · raise in
no· trump, pass or bid five DO• monds your partner has b1d ble which were not found
trump with a very comerv1tive three clubs over your two no- unhl dug up by archeolog1sts
portnor. it It ls Blockwood hid trump What do you do now ? in the 20th century

OOLUMBUS (UPI)- Coach
Charles Huggw of toJH"anked
Indian Valley South, voted the
United Press International
Class A coach of the year for
the second year in a row,
refuses to take the credit fer
his team's second straight
tmdefeated season.
"It's the Good Lord really,"
said the mastermind of a 50game winning streak during
the past two seasons, "nothing
that we've done."
Huggins, a graduate or
Alderson-Broadus College in
Ph!Uppi, W. Va., a school
which also turned out this
year's Class AM coach of the

9 00 - Kung Fu 6, 13, An Amencan Family 20, 33 , lrons1de 3, 4,
15 , Mov1es 'The Bedford ln c1denf" a, "This Could Be the

pened. or could lla\ e

of koowing which way the d&amp;fensive man is shading him.
He's a real good offensive
board man. He really goes for
the ball."
King Is Runnerup
Second to Hagen mthe voting
and also named to a ftrst team
berth was Marion Pleasant's IJ.
4 Terry King, a second team
choice as a junior.
King, playing on' a weii..IJalanced and unbeaten Spartan
tearo, averaged 19 points a
gsme this year, his third as a
regular for coach Stan Kirby.
King was also an AIIOhlo end
on Pleasant's state championship Class A football team
last fall.
Third in the voting and also
on the first team was Kevin
Dilworth of Fort Recovery,
who led Coach AI Souder's
team to a ~ regular season
record and third in the final
UPI coaches' ratings behind
Indian Valley South and
Pleasant.
Dilworth, who was a sopho-

more, starter on Fort
Recovery's 19'11 championship
squad, averaged 23 points per
game this season.
Rounding oul the first five
are a pair of towering juniors,
6-6 Larry Harris of Lorain
Clearvlew and 6-7 Mark Hay.
more of Cleveland Heights Lu·
theran East, giving the Northeast Ohio area three of the top
Ove spots,lncludlng Hagen.
HJtlbScoms
Harris ledCiearviewto a 17·1
regular selllllln record with a 25
pomts per game scoring
average, while Haymore was
the top scorer on the first team
with a 28 per game mark.
McDonald's 8..1 Bob McClary, top scorer on a strong
McDonald team, heads up the
second team, which also includes Riek Heinl cf unbeaten
Wapa~neta St. Joseph, Tom
Kramb of Greenwich South
Central, Vince Ellis of
Zanesville Rosecrans and Pat
Mulherin of Mansfield St.
Peter's.

Cincinnati Elder in Thursday
night's second contest, 6nlshed
19th.
Friday afternoon, the Class
Ateams take over, with second
ranked Marion Pleasant (~)
meeting 12th ranked Mansfield
St. Peters (23-4)at 1:30and No.
I and defending champion
Indian Valley South (24.0)
playmg No. 5 Selrmg (23-1) at
3:30.
At 7:30, Elyr1a Catholic (241) plays Delphos St. John's (17·
7) and Columbus Ready (21-3)
tangles with Bellefontaine (17·
6) at 9:30 in Class AA.
South, coached by Dick Ricketis, will carry a IS-game
wuming streak into the game

Ir~sh

against Central-Hower, and
w11l be seeking Columbus'
seventh championship in the
last 11 years and the Bulldogs'
second in that span. South won •
in 1965.
'lblrd Straight Trip
Central-Hower (18-6), which
will take the worst record of
the four AM teams into the
tournament, isn't any stranger
to the big show, as the Eagles
will be making their third
straight trip to St. John Arena
tmder Coach Joe Slegferth.
South's last loss was a 61-$
decision to Columbus Eastmoor and the Bulldogs' only
other defeat was at the banda
of AA Columbus Bishop Ready,,

year, Barberton's Jack
Greyoolds, entered the season
as the defendmg Class A
champion and carrying a 26game wm streak.
Huggins, who won a previous
state Class A title at Strasburg
in 1967, sa1d he is "amazed"
that his team was so successful
this year.

Although he lost one starter
from a year ago, it was hts 6-1
son, Bob, who was voted the
Class A player of the year last
season and now plays at Oh1o
University.
"There was added pressure
on us this year because of being
the state champions," Huggins
said. "You have to have a

1972-73 Oass A
All-Ohio Team·
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
1973 United Press International
Class A All Ohio Basketball
Team. with height, grade and

nan

Trace;

8111

Dressel,

Ironton St. Joseph; Bob Edgar,
Frontier, Mike Gruber, Canal
Winchester, Clyde Honeycutt,
South Central.
scoring average
Kent Hofacker, Tri.Village,
FIRST TEAM
Dan
Ha Jl, Federal Hocking:
Dan Hagen, Columbus. 6-7,
Herchek,
Atwater
Sr, 26 2; Terry King, Marion J1m
Waterloo,
Clay
Hudson,
Kyger
Pleasant, 6-4, Sr , 19.0, Kevin
Pat
lodlclan1,
Dilworth, Fort Recovery, 5 10, Creek;
Sr, 23 0; Larry Harris, Lorain Lowellville, Monroe Jones,
Clearvlew, 6 6, Jr., 2S 0: Mark Windham , Keith Kline, Black
Haymore, Cleveland Hgts. River , Rusty Lytle, McDon.
Randy
Luyster,
Lutheran East, 6 7, Jr., 28.0. aid ,
Lakeland, Dick Murphy,
SECOND TEAM
Bob McClary, McDonald, 6-3, Jonathan Alder, Ken Martin,
Sr , 18 0, Rick Heinl, B"sfolvllle, Steve Mihalic,
Wapakoneta Sf Joseph, 6-0, Clearvlew; Jeff Miller,
Sr, 17.0; Tom Kramb, South Covington, Greg McDaniel,
Central , 6-7, Jr, 22 5: VInce Starr-Washington.
Mike Ross, Portsmouth
Ellis, Zan~svllle Rosecrans, 6·
1, Sr; 13 9, Pat Mulherin, Notre Dame; Randy Rex,
Mansfield St Peter's, 6 5, Sr , Caldwell , Ron Roesch,
Chesopeake; Phil Robinson,
18 0
Symmes Valley; Ron SlrlmTHIRD TEAM
Scott Van Fossen, Strasburg, phel. Western Reserve, Rick
6 I, Sr, 23 2; Ed Leggett, In- Schulz, Northwestern; Charlie
dian Valley North, 6 3, Sr , Strete, Wapakoneta St.
Jeff
Schrock,
4.6, John Figurski, Buckeye Joseph,
Ron
Schorr ,
West, 6·5, Sr., 20 0, Rex Garaway ,
Shreve, Ayersvllle, 6-5, Sr., Ridgedale, Steve Sturgill,
22.0, Greg Romano, Lanca1ter Portsmouth East: Cliff
Washington , Ripley; Hal
Ftsher, 5 10, Sr, 29 0
Wahlers, Danbury Lakeside,
SPECIAL MENTION
Phil Bur'ks, Brlstolvtlle; Joel Tim Whetsel, Ridgemont,
Cochran, Indian Valley South; Gary Wade, Fostoria Sf En
Mike Cross, Franklin-Monroe: delln ; Rick Williams, Green
Jerry Fetter, Ridgedale, John Town•hip; Jim Zurbrugg,
Fnk, Riverdale, Van Henry, Sebrmg.
Player-of-the-year - Dan
Indian Valley South , Mark
Henschen, New Knoxville, Hagen
Coach-of the-year - Charles
Chuck Johnsbn, Peebles, Jerry
Langen hop, Liberty Center: Huggins, Indian Valley South.
Dave Mauk, Marton Pleasant;
Frank Monterosso, St. Hernard: Chuck McComb, Indian
Velley South, Tim O'Brien,
Kirtland: Greg Rlggar,
Sebring , Larry
Shade,
Newlon, Phil Saunders,
For your concern
Cuyahoga Heights, Greg
of H&amp; R Firestone
Spltnale, Contmental: Mike
Tanner, Ottawa Hills ; Dan
Store
Zerllngo, Lowellville
HONORABLE MENTION
Tha Store
Walt Acra , Middletown
Fenwick; Eric Alexander,
Millersport. Jerry Belter,
Ha1 Not Sold
Newcomerstown, Mark
I've been contacted by
Barbee, Ross Southeastern;
Randy Chronister, Grand so many of our fine
Valley, Mike Coldwetl, Han- customers wishing us
to continue business.

Thank You ••

NEW YORK (UP!) -Notre
Dame Coach Digger Phelps
expected to travel to St. Lows
for Ute NCAA Championships
oo Fr1day after Notre Dame's
clash with Louisville in the
National Invitation Tour·
nament Tuesday night, but
things didn't work out as
planned.
"I'm very surprised to reach
Ute NIT semlfmals," Phelps
88ld. "I had previous reserva·
lions to be in St. Lows on
Friday that had to be canceUed

when we won."
These plans were changed
when the Fighting Irish defeated Ute Cardinals, 79-71, in a
mild upset to reach Saturday

successful bunch cf kids to stay
en top. Our kids are dedicated
and have a lot of desire."
Minor Tinkering
W1thout the ftrepower of son
Bob, who averaged nearly 30
points per game his senior
year, Huggins had to de some
miner tinkermg with hts team.
"We tried to play more d&amp;fense thts season because we
knew we didn't have the scorers," he sa1d, •'and we tr1ed
emphasize offens1ve rebound·
mg more."
Durmg the regular season,
the Rebels held 18 opponents to JUst under
40 pomts per game,
a good indicahon of the kind of
defense they play, wh1le
scoring at a ~us points per
game clip.
Huggins picked up 33 of the
115 votes cast in the Class A
coach of the year competition,
with Marlon Pleasant's Stan
Kirby second with 11. Pleasant
also finished second to IVS in

afternoon-'ll Semifinal contest.
In the first quarter.final game
Tuesday night, North Carolina
used a 1~ spurt early in the
second half to defeat Massa·
chusetts, 73-Q, and advance to
Saturday's meeting w1th Notre

Dame.
Louisville had gone ahead,
41-39, for the first time in the
game after Notre Dame
opened the contest by scortng
the first SlX points and led most
of the half. John Shumate, IJ.
feet-9, scored 13 points mostly
on layups. Then Phelps called
his players mto a huddle.
"When we caned time out,
we decided to drop the zone,
get more aggressive and start

Come in or call us
anytime.

H&amp;R
FIRESTONE
Bob Haggerty·partn~r

992-2238

Middleport

the Class A ratings.
Tied for third with six votes
each were Bob Walsh of Loram
Clearvtew and Joe Madden of
Wapakoneta St. Joseph.
other coaches with mere
than one vote were Rick Brook
of Sebrmg, Bob McClary of
McDonald, Dale Nordyke of
Cedarville, Lewis D' Antom of
Chesapeake, Phil Dubbs of
FranklinMonroe, AI Souder of
Fort Recovery, Terry Hunt of
South Central, and Bob Smith
of jjuckeye West.

running," Phelps said. Four
minutes later, Notre Dame
grabbed the lead for good,
when sophomore guard Dwight
Clay canned three straight
jumpers and scored 10 points in
an Irish 15-2 burst in a sevenminute span.
Louisville's 6-5 forward Allen
Murphy, the high scorer to date
in this 36th NIT with 36 points,
was held to just 10 points by the
Irish defense.
North Carolina won its
second consecutive NIT con·
test by a margm in double
f1gures, but had a difficult time
with the Massachusetts
defense.
"It'shard to regulate a game
like thts," Tar Heel Coach
Dean Smith said. "Massa·
chusetts played excellent, ag.
gressive defense and was
readier to play mentally than
we were. They picked up loose
ball after loose ball and had
rune mure ball possessionswhich gave them nine more
chances to score."
The Minutemen stayed sur·
prtsingly close to North Carolina, tied 31).30 with the Tar
Heels at halftime, and were
never out of the game until
e~ght straight Tar Heel points
gave NC an insunnountable IS.
potnt lead w1th two minutes
remaining.

Other starters besides
But he admitted !'we have a lot
· Moore, are 6-1 Steve Dotes,
to offer."
who Siegferth says has " played
Cllell Tough Sclledule
In Centrai·Hower, the Bull- very gopd tournament ball," IJ.
dogs will be meeting a team 4 Donald Thornton, the team's
which had a 12-6 regular season leading rebounder, 6-1 Lamont
mark, but one which Siegferth Wilson and 6-2 Carl Hill Dotes
and Hl1l l!re juniors.
is not ashamed of.
Coming off the bench lor the
"With the kind of comEagles
will be 6-5 Gerald Harpetition we play," Siegferth
said, "a 12-6 record IS pretty rison, 5-8 Dave Bradley, a
good. Playing this type of starter until injured, and 6-4
Tom Beaver.
schedule helps us."
"We know we're up against a
Pointing to his team's
three straight trips to tough club," Slegferth said.
the
semi
finals, "We are going to have to be at
Slegferth sa1d, "we gear to- our best to beat them."
The second game of Thurswards this ... we don't let the
dsy night's card finds two late
kids forget it."
•
Leading the Eagles in blooming teams going against
scoring is 6-foot guard David each other, Elyria (21-3),
Moore with a 20-pomts per sporting an U.game win streak
game average, but Siegfertb and Elder (~) the Wll11ler of
says depth is the key to this 12 in a row.
Elder Coach Paul Frey will
year's Eagles team.
"I think this is one thing that start the smallest team among
favors us this year over last the AAA clubs, with the biggest
year," he said. "I can go to my man being 6-4 junior Rick
Apke.
bench."

• Flats repaired prompllyl

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• Tire sales It service for
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700 E. Main St.

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2101

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We Wish To
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a seml.finalist in that division,
in the opening game of the season.
Williams, at 6-4, led the Bull·
dogs in scormg with a 24.4
average and 13 rellounds, but
all five South starters
averaged in double figures.
Other South regulars are 6-7
junior Mike White, 8..1 senior
Howard Thornton, a husky 22Spounder, 11-1 Byron Phllmore,
and S-9 Greg Binion.
Ricketts, destnte his team's
record and higher ranking,
doesn't like the favorite's tag
pinned on his squad.
"No one is favored now," be
said. "! can't see how anyone
could be favored at this level."

upset Cards

Huggins renamed top-Class A mentor

Jubilee I&gt; News 6 Etec Co 1U. Let 5MakeADeal13

7 30 - Ho llyNof'd Squar es 3 To Te ll the Trut h 6, Wild K ingdom
10 1' 11Sei!You•nCourl4 , La ss te 8 Zoom 20. Newsmaker '72
13 , Democracy 's Trum pet W Va Leg1slature 33

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

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2 lb.
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" arolD!d the basket and a sense

COLUMBUS (UPI)
Columbia's Dan Hagen, a 6-7
repeater from last year, heads
up the 1973 United Prf!S8 International Class A All-Ollie
Basketball Team announced
today.
Hagen, the only junior on the
lint team a year ago, was the
top choice of the 93 coaches,
sportawrlters and sports.
casters by a w1de margin,
earning for him the honor of
Class A player of the year.
N! A studelll who bas his
sights set on becoming a phyai.clan, Hagen was a four year
starter for Columbia, the last
three years under Coach Bruce
Hurley. He averaged 26.2
points per game and 17
rebounds this season and
scored 1,1103 pomts in his career
of 83 games.
"There hasn't been a thmg
we've asked him to do that he
hasn't done," Hurley 88ld of his
star, "and we've called on him
to do a lot for us."
Hagen, Hurley said, "has the
ability to move in heavy traff1c

8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame St 33

BY PAU L CRABTREE

ball tournament this weekend, Akron Central-Bower with a 21but doo't bet on it.
2 record, best amonj! the large
The Bulldogs, paced by AAA schools.
co-player of the year Brian
South was ralilted fourth in
Williams, go into their 5:30 the final ratings, the only one of
p.m. tournament-opening the four semlflniallsts in the
game Thursday night a~ainst top ten. Elyria, which meeta

Hagen top player

6 00 -

success - m Moscow 1

17
'16
29
46
lB

•

OOLUMBUS (UPI) - B8sed
on the final United Press International Ohio High School
Bolll'd of Coaches' ratings, Col·
umbus So11th should be considered the favorite to capture the
Class AM high school basket·

00 - News3. 4 6 a 10,13 IS
30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 D1ck Cavett 6, 13 Movte "The
Blac k Sc01 p1on" a. 'Once More, My Darlmg" 10
1 oo - News 4 13
THURSDAY, MARC H 22, 1973

Won Los1
Gaul 's Sha ke Haven
Lodw•ck s Market
R1denour s TV
Good's Pennzod "
R1ggs Used Cars

•

11
11

February 28, 1973

H 1g h lnd Sen es -

sl .. un

1bt DliiJ Sentillf

Bv Motor Rout&amp; where carrie;

A thought.ror the day: Brthsh
ncYelist William Thackeray
aid, "Til strange what a man
e.tn do, and women yel think
him Ill 11111el."

gt

msult the res t of the country was considered
from a New York perspective awash w1th
umnformed htcks llvmg in suspended inte llectual amma hon ; Variety once headlined
that the coun tt y west of Hoboken rejected
movtes about farmers w1th the brtllianUy
p~tromzmg " H1x N1x Stix PlX" wh1ch has gone
up tn JOurnalistic htstory as the Ideally tromc
Jacome theatncal comment.
Broadway once was separated from the rest
of Amertca by lack of communicahons which
hasn't extsted smce the wtde sprawl c[
te lev1ston TV has bt ought every argument pohhcal (Vtetnam) and thealrtcal (Jack Paar
versus evet ybody I and has revealed the secrets
of Washmgton and backstage Broadway, upstage Hollywood, backdoor cnme, stdedoor sex,
news and analysts from all sides tn to the hvmg
and bedrooms of the nalton Htnlcrlanders no
longer wear yokel su1ts and dollar house
dresses; they see the luxurtes of the world and
buy them ; they see and understand the news,
are just as bored by bad plays, mov1es and TV
shows as the Eastern Establishment's snooty
self-aggrand tzed
an d
self-appomted
"spokesmen " You ca n't fool them any mere.
They 'te also not so hkely to be fcoled ,by
Vlctous one-stded slan ted, fabncated
propaganda wh tch "Sltcks and Benes" ts. Ar,
tisttcally tt's fa lse, emotionally 1l's multimagmfted to prey on wartorn d1ssahsfaction
Pertment comments nghl now are the.news
stones that "Shcks and Bones " is a great

Wednesday Afternoon League

R C Cola

NOil'fll
. AKQS7b
fi AK64

WEDNESDAY MAR~H21, 1913
6 00 - News, Weather, Sports l, 4, B, 10, 15, Truth or Conseq. 6:
Sesame Sf 20, Around the Bend 33
6· 30 ~ Truth or Conseq 3, Beat the Clock 4: News6, 10, Whats
My Line 8, Anythmg You Can Do 13, Elec Co. 20: Know Your
Schools 33 , Mayor's ,Report 'l5
7 30 - Eposode Action 33. The Judge 10, Lassie 1S t Beat the
Clock 13, Pol1ce Surgeon 3, Billy Graham Crusade 6, Earth
keeptng 20 Ha ll the Geo rge Kirby Comedy Hour 8
8·00 - Paul Lvnde6, 13, Adam 1215, Paul Lynde6, 13; Sonny&amp;
Cher 8, tO , Amenca '73 20, 33 , B1tly Graham CrusadeS
8 30 - Banacek3,4, 15, Mov1e"Toma"6, 13
9 co - Med1cal Centers, 10. Eye to Eye2C, 33
9 30 - Turning Pomts 20, 33
tO CO - Search 3, 4, 15, Cannon 8, 10 ONen MarShall 6, 13, News

&amp; THINGS

POMEROY LANES

Good s Pcn nz01l

l

Wrong co·ntract Easy Here

Stre et , A th en s OhiO , Wll holl1
deduc 11on fo r 1t s se r v .ces vs thE'
DISi rlc t 's paying ag ent anrJ Me
ISSued unde1 the au t h or•ty or ttu
Oh1 0 (Rev1sed Cod e Ser.honr,
6101 01 et St!q I

'"

Local Bowling

Roggs Used CAr;

WIN AT BRIDGE
I

JACK O'BRIAN
NETWORK HALF-NELSONS
PAPP PLAY
NEW YORK (UP!) - The Joe Papp play
"Sltcks and Bones," barred from the CBS-TV
atr, was an ugly httle exerc1se tn hate-Amertca
We saw It on Bdwy., and tl romped the gamut of
anti-everythmg mcludmg a vtcwus attack on a
fme ramtly of mnocent not-even-bystanders
Ozz1e and Hamel Nelson
The play's diseases meataxmg portrayed a
lamtly of nastily bland ntlwlts who welcomed a
blinded crippled son home from VIetnam He
zombted through depresswn and !antastes of h1s
VIetnamese m1stress who appeared m mute,
clumsy portentousness m and out of the mactton
wh1le the others In the cast acted out an entirely
depraved he that the typtcal Amerrcan famtly
cared not a wh1t for the crushed body and
crtppled soul of their sen . The dtrly
dramaturgical pool ccncermng the Nelsons was
the Wlfatr nammg of the parents "Ozzie" and
"Hatriet" and the sons "Dav1d 11 and "Ricky."
The play set up false emotional plots,
strawmen taken seriously by cr1tics who thmk
they thmk, phlegmallcally by the ones who
cons1der themselves above pohltcs but actually
are below, and wardy by the crew that wtshes
not to be but of step w1th the permtsstve
establishment.
We are against censcrh1p, we ftght s1mply
lor the nght to, net ban this un1tatwn-estheltc
trash, but to pcmt out what tl ts, sheer shallow
slashmg at the decent, which includes notably
the !me Ozzte Nelson family . CBS.TV banned
11 because some 70 or tts affiliates prevtewed tt
over closed ctrcutt and were outraged on behalf
of its viewers and themselves . Naturally
loyalists to lh1s grade of Papp howled that the
great M1ddle Amerrca ts reacttonary and worse.
The s1mple truth ts that these days th e mid·
Manhattan ltberal es tablishmen t can't
patrontze the rest of the country Once upon an

'

Akron Central-Hower hopes third time in
m~et will be charm; action to start Th.ursday

J'elevision Log
BY

.

.

3-The
n,Uy Sentlilei,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., March 21,1973
"

•

2- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., March, 21 1973

NAME--~-------------------­

•-6i1l. ~~~~~~.

Galli• and
Meson Counttes

Ph. 992-2181
Jack W, Carsey, Mgr,
Open Daily Unttl
6.ooP.M.

STREET--- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - CITY - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - STATE :--_ _ _ _:__zl p _______

PHONE----------~----------~

SINGER, DEANE

&amp;SCRIBNER

Mtmlurr of Ntw York Stock Exchangt, Inc
and olher prme~pal stcunty txchangts
FIR.r HUNTINQTON NATIONAL BANK ARCADE
HUNTINGTON, W VA. 215720
TILIP'HONI (30 .. ) !522· 7318

�·~~~~lt!:ll'!:· !Hei~

uS

:~

Sealed bids will be rec e1 ved
by the under!!Hgned , Presr d ent
of
the
Lead lnQ
Cr ee k
Conserv llncy Ors l rl c t , herer n
referred to as th e Dr st rrct a(

~

f

,-:

~
the Offoce of the Leadong Cree k ~
Con se-rvan cy D l str rct State S.

Rout e 114 (M a rn St, RtJIIand
45715, until ten o 'c l o~.:K
am , Eastern Stand e rd T rme m

~:
:&gt;.

By Helen Bottel
e e e

·:·
~·~

~:

~

::%

Ills Fancy Just Passing?

OhtO

Ohio , on th e 12th day of April, • Dea r Helen

Wh
tru t?
0 can you
S
the purchase of bonds of' the
I met this fellow at a smgles har but he wasn't like the otners
District tn the agyr egate
k
ha darealthing gcmg. He
amountofS2.12IOCOaut
norozed - solt seemed After th reeweeswe
by resolUtion adopted Marc h 13 satd I was the only gtrl he ever loved enough to marry, since he
m~· and amended March 1!, divorced htS wtfe, and as soon as the ftnal paperS Came through

1973, at which t!me th e b1ds w il l
be publrcly opened and re ad lor

The bpnd&amp; are ISSlied fo r the
purpose of pay ing cos t s of
construc tm g a water sup p ly,
di strlbu t•on and treatm en t
system
The bonds are not gener al
Obllgat.ons of the D•sfnct but
w il l be payable , togeth er w•th
&amp;dd1trona l par.ty bond s w h•c h
may hereafter be tssue d
pur suant to th e r esolulio n

authorl1mg the bonds solely
from r evenues dert ved fro m
fen. rates and cha rges tor the
use of th e waterworks sy stem
after prov la ton for the paym ent
of costs and ex pen ses of
operatiOn and maintenan ce
ttlereof
The bonds sh all be da ted th e
date of their de!l verv sha ll be 1n

Well, wtllj those kinds of promtses, I thought 1! was all rrght
for htm to move mto my apartment which he dtd
It's been a year and when I'd ask, he'd say there was some

kind of delay on the divorce But [was lookmg through his papers
the other day an&lt;l there 1t was, as !mal as anythmg
Last mght I faced hun wtlh tt, and we had one cf our btg
!tghls He ended up telling me I was stupid not to see I was just a
passing fancy wtth htm, but if I treated him r1ght he'd let me stay
lor a while.
What do I do new? - HURT

Dear Hurt :
Let YOU stay? Remmd this guy It's your apartment- just
the denomlnat.on of Sl,OOO eac h
or may be issued m fu lly before you show him the door.
registered form In 11'14.' de
He made some pretty fancy passmg for a "passing laney " nom Ination of SlOO or any

•

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f
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I•

••

•'••
o'

1:

•'•
•
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•
:
..•
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(

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•
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multiple thereof as r equeste d
by the purchaser , sha ll draw
ln~rest payable se m annual
1'1
on
the
f1rst
day
of
January
and
tn e
first day of Ju ly of each
vur commencing on the first
day of January next succeeding
the date of the bonds at the rate
ol five per centum (S pet ) per
annum Anyone desiring to do
so may present a bid for sa 1d
bondS based upon their bear1ng
1 d lfferent rate of Interest. but
l"'ot Ill exce&amp;s of eight per cen

tum

not less th an th e par value
thereof
Said
bonds mature
on
January 1 In each of the years
as IOtiOWS
Yr . Amt
Yr Amt
1977 $21,000
1989 $37 ,000

1978
1979
1980

1981
1982
t983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
Yr

..,•
'.
•,

2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006

2007
2COB
1009
2010
2011
2012
201 3

..•

~ct . l

per annum.
f)rovlded that where a frac
tiona/, 1ntertst rate Is b1d such
fract on shall be one quarter of
one percent or a mu l t i ple
tt.ereof Spill rate bid s will not
be considered Ea ch blel stlall be
for the purchase of said bonds at
{8

22,000

23 ,000
24 000

25 oco
27,000
20 000
29 ooo
31 coo
32 000
34 000
36 000

H

+++ '

Dear Helen
Here's onefcrthe books I read It m cur local paper. An rrate
subscriber reported the story to the editor who passed 1t en to us
readers It bear$ repeatmg.
Seems the subscriber had gone to the supennarkel to buy a
pound of wieners which was all he could afford.
He stoud m the check-out line hehmd a young man who was
trymg to buy some dog food with food stamps. When the clerk
told him stamps could not be applied to nonessentials like pet
food, the fellow said, "Walt a minute," ran back to the meat
counter and returned with an expensive steak which he paid for
with food stamps Just outstde the market door, he fed the entire,
pubhc-money-fmanced, over-$2 steak to his dog?
How do you like them apples? - IRATE ALSO

Dear Irate:
"Them apples" are downrtght sour. But I'll bet the dog loved
1990 39.000 the steak. And, aruma I lovers bemg ever Wlth us (no matter who
.. 199 1 41 ,000 finances food stamps) I'll b•t the reader comments on your letter
1992
43, 000
199) 46,000 will favor Fide's master - H
1994 .Hl,OUO
1995 50 000
1996
53 ooo Dear Helen
1997 55 000
You ha-e helped several hospttals tecetve hfe-savmg
1998
58 000
1999 61,000 equtpment tluoogh your nal wnwtde requests for Betty Crocker
2000 6·1 000
toupons

Plc:.~se

he1p us, too

St Mary's Mercy Hospttal Auxthary m Gary, Indiana
stat ted a Betty Crocker Coupon dnve to purchase an Electrocardwgraph Monitor for the new St Mary's Mercy Hospital
bemg butlt tn nea rby Hobart We need 600,000 coupons and the
ttme ts short
Would your kind read ers please send any Belly Crocket
coupons the; don I need to Ahcc Messtn a, Couron Cltatrman. St
Mary's Merq Hospttai Auxt ltary, rate of The Allee Shoppe, 322
Mam Street, Holl&gt;l rt, lndtan&lt;~ '' !'hank you very much Hopeful!) you rs, Altce i&lt;lesstna

Amt
$67 OCO
71, 000
74.000
78 ,000
82.000
86,000
90.000
95.000
99 ,GOO
104,000
110 000
115 000

123,000

Bond s m u1ur mq on and af ter

.,

•~·.
•'

•

January 1 1985 r~ re ~u i JJec t to
r ed c mp llon on &lt;J n d alter
Janu ar y l , 198 1 at !he-r pa r
val ue p lus a cc r ued mft• r e~1 to
th e d a t l' l1x ed lo r r edempllon
Th e bonds are pa yable 1:11 t hl:'
Oll •ce of t he Farm e r s HomP
Adm 1n 1st ra t to n 77 Eas t St ate

'

.,
'

.•
'

•'•

.,
•'•.
.,
•

• Vo1d

Con ser v.an cy D•stn ct Laws of
Sa1d b •d S w II be promp t ly
con s1d er ed and sa•d bonds will
be sold at not less t h ;:m pi.H anct
a cc rued
ml e rE.'S I
to
th r
high es t bidde r off er. ng the
!.n.w e$ 1 lnh:r est
1ate
as
here •naft er dcf1n ed The lowe !&gt; !
Int er es t ra te Wilt b e d eler m mt:d
by c a lcut at mg th e to ta l 1n le• cst
to the st at ed matur it y at lhf'
rat e
b1d
and
d e duct1 ng
therefrom the prem 1um bid If
each of two or more bid S 1S the
11 1ghest b1d offermg the low est
Inter e st r a te the bon ds wil l be
awarded on such one of srwt
h1 gt1 es t b1 ds as IS chosen by lot
All bid S m us t be acc ompa n •erf
by a bon d or chec k drawn on
and cert1f 1ed by a sot\len t bank
lwh• ch banK must be one other
th an th e b dder 1f ttl c b 1dder •s
a ban k.) paya ble to th e Dts tnct
In the am ount of on e pe r ce nt of
the par am ount of t he bo nds
herem off ered, upon con d1 t •on
that. If th e bid tS acc ept ed th e
bidder wil l r ec el\le and p ay for
such b'onds 10 accord.1n ce w1lh
the terms and provls•on s of th •s
not ice , or forfe •t the sam e as
liquidated damages In the event
said condition 1S not fulfilled
Bids Shall be sealed and
endor se d "Bid for lead ing
Creek Conservancy D1Si r •ct
Waterwo rks System Revenue
Bonds "
The proceedtngs lor th 1S 1ssue
hAve b een taken under the
superviS IOn of SC!U1re , Sand ers
&amp; De mp se v, Bond Attorneys,
Cleveland, Oh•o, whose ap
proving opinion will be fur
nlahtd by tht District to the
aucclasful blddtr without ex
penae end will be printed on the
bonds It the expense of the
Dlatrlct Complete transcript of
procuctlngs 1ne1 the prrntect
bonds will be furnished by the
Olatrlct, together with cer

tlflceto• ohowlng no tlttgetlon
PtndlnQ or thrtatened at the
time of tht dttlvory. to en loin

dtllverv or to contest the
Yllldlty of the bonds or the
power to Issue ttrem or the levy
or coiiKtlon of the assessments

for thofr payment
THE FARMERS HOME
ADMINISTRATION (FHAI OF
THE
UNitED
STATES
DEPARTMENT
OF
AGRICULTURE HAS
AGREED TO ENTER INTO A
LOAN AGREEI,\ENT WITH
TH! tSSUER,,PURSUANT TO
WHICH FH" WILL PUR
(HA$E SAID l2,121,000 OF
BONDS AT PAR AT AN IN ·
TIRESl RATE OF FIVE PER
CENTUM (5 PCT) PER AN
HUM

I

The bonds will be delivered on
or tbout May 1, 1973 tf the
•ucctt.lful b i dder desires
dtllvtrv 11 1 pl1ce outside tt,e
State ot Ohio. tht blddtr shall
pay tKPtnae of dellvtrv 1t sucl"'
other place

Tho riGht IJ rt1orved to roltct
bldJ.
LEADING CREEK
CONSERVANCY
DISTRICT
By. Jeck w. Crllp,
Prtlldent
(ll 21 • 2, (.re~. ~t· · 614 742-5922

!J

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wt;s t'

EA s·r

4
¥
t
olo

4JlU 95!
¥ Q J108
t 3
+1 072

42
97!&gt;
10952
Q 96 5

SOUTH ( D)

Ito Vo•d

., 3 2
. AK Q J 87G 4
&gt;!&gt; J84
Both vulnerable
West North East South

,.7.

Puss
~ •
Pass 4t
Pass
5N 1
Pa:;s
Pa•,s
Pa~s
Pass
Ope nmg hw i10

+

By Oswald &amp; .James Jacob)

Some hands t·eally don't
appear to belong 111 a brrdge
column Today's ts an example You can throw seven
diamonds agamst lhe wall
and collect 13 trrcks You can
also make your tncks at
etther spades ot· no-trump,
but anyone who has eve1
played brtdge 1s gomg to
play the hand m dtamonds
That assmnptton looks rea
sonable, yet when the hand
cropped up at the recent
Dallas secltonal 1! seems
that most pairs played tn
spade or no-trump slams
Wlth conspicuous lack of success A few got to six dfa,
monds and Just a couple to
the grand slam
The hand should be a cmch
for anyone playing solid smt
mmor preempts It should
also be easy for those who
opened Wllh four or five dla·
monds Responder could )ust
bid five no-trump and open·
er wltfi absolutely sohd d1a·
monds could go nght to the

and

DIYOTID TO THI
INURIITDP
MIIOS·MASON Alii A
CHISTifl L. TAN NIH ILL,
laoc. I d.
ROIIRT HOEFLICH,
City ldltor
Publllhtd dally IXCtpl
Soturdoy by Tho Ohio Volley
Publishing Company, 111
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio.
4.1769 luJintll Oftlct Phono
"2 2156, Edltorilt Phone 992
2157.
Stcond CIIU poJflgt Plld It
Pomeroy, OhiO.
National advertising
reprountoll•o Botttnoltl
Goltoghor, Inc, 12 Eut 4!nd
St, Ntw York City, Now York.
Sublcrlpllon rlttt

Dt·

llvtrtd by carrltr where

avtlltble JO Cents

~er Wllk •

urv [ce not available One
month Sl 15 By mall tn Ohio

1nd W Vo , Ont yur SIA.OO
Six monthJ S7.25 Throe
monlhJ U 50 Sub•crlpllon
price Includes Sunday TimtS·
Sonll.ntt.

55
16
43
26

The to ugh patl came wtlh
those wh o opened one dt a
mond We appt ovc ot lht s
btd The South hand has 11
h1gli card pomts and a pre
empt ct owds matters. wlule
a pass IS JII S ( Silly
North res ponds two spades
and at thts pomt South
sho uld Jump to four ~ta ·
monds to convey the message that South has dta
monds and ltttle or nothing
else
North could go nght to
seven 01 try the ftve noIt ump grand slam Ioree On
!Ius b1ddmg sequence the
grand slam Ioree should ask
tl South has sohd dtamonds
smce hts prevtous btds have
clcatly guaranteed at least
two of the three top honors

20, 81lly Gr aham Crusa de 15

Sun n se Sem1nar 4. Sacred Heart 10
6 15 -- Farmt 1me 10, Far m Report 13
6 2G- Paul Ha: r vey 13
6 30 - Columbus Toda y 4 81ble An swer s 8, Amen ca' s
P roblems 10 , Pa tlerns for L 1v1ng
6 45 - Corncob Repor t 3
7 CO - Today 3, 4 15
7 30 - Romper Room 6 Sleepy Jeffers 8, Rocky &amp; Bullwmkle

24

R C. Cola
22 JO
H1gh lnd Game - Betty
Fr~denck 195, Marlene W1l son

187

H1gh lnd Senes - Marlene
Wilson 489. Betty Fredenck

446
H1gh Team Game and Se n es
- Lodw 1ck 's Mark et , 398, 1028

Wedn es day Aftern oon l eague
Marc h 7 1973

Won
Gauls ' Shdke Haven
Ri denour's TV
Lodw tck's M arket

H1gh lnd
Russel l 166,

163

Lost

61

19

49
48

31
31.

32

26

Ganw -

1&lt;

•a
54

56

Pear l
F lor 1ne G1n fh er
F lo1me

Gmtllcr 424 Pear l Russe ll 421
H• gh
Senes

Team s Game an d
Guul s Shake Haven

337 ond 950

Tn Co unty League

Marc h 13, 1973

Dav1 s Warner In s
R H Rawlmg s Inc

Pts
76
62

Gro Boy s

50

Pom eroy Cemen t Block Co
H&amp;R F~restone Co

40
32

Mayer &amp; Hill Barber Shop 2B
Hogh lnd Game - A L
Phelps Jr 223 Harvey Van
Vranken 212, Dale Dav1s 209
H 1oh Senes - A L Ph el ps

Jr 591, Ed

Voss

551 Jack

Pet erson 546
Team H1gh Game - Dav1s
War ner In s 933
Team H1 gh Sen es Gro
Boys 2604

13, Popeye 10
La ss1e 6

a 3C - Jack LaLanne 13. Romper Room B, New Zoo Revue 6
9·00 - Paul D1xon 4, Phil Donahuel5 , Ben Casey 13, Romper
Room a, Peyton Place 13, Capt Kangaroo B; Mr. Roberts 6:
Fnendly Junctmn 10, AM 3

9 3C - ToTelltheTruth3, Haze t8, Jeopardy6
10 00 - Hathayoga 33 , Do ck Van Dyke 13 , Dmah Shore 3, 15
Columbus S1x Ca ll1ng 6, Joker' s Wi ld 8, 10
10 30 - Concentratoon 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4: Split Second 13 ,
Prt ce Is R1 ght 8, 10
Sal e of Century 3, 4, 15 love of L1 fe 8, 10, Bew1tched6,

11 00 -

13, Sesame St 20
12 CO - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's SC 5C Club 4, News 10, 13,
Jack1 e Oblinger 8. Password 6

12 30- 3 W's Game 3. Search for Tomorrow 8, 10. Split Second6.
, I CO - News 3, All My Chlldr ~n 6, 13 , It's Your Bet 8, Green
Acres 10 , Not For Women Only15, Secret Storm 8
1 20 - Fash1ons m Sewing 3

I 30- Let's Make A Deal6, 13 As the World Turns s, 10; Three
Henry Ktssmger's m Acapulco; so IS Today's
on A Match 3. 4. 15
Barbara Wal ters Howard Hughes has beeno 2 00 - Days of Our l1ves 3, 4, 15 , Newlywed Game 13, M 1ke
Douglas 6, Gu1d1ng L1ght a, 10
seen by at least one oulstder in London: a tatlor 2 30Ooctors 3, 4, 15 , Datmg Gdme 13, Edge of N1ght8 10
. Bob Hope's buymg h1s own Jel alter all these 3 00 - Ano ther World 3, 4 15 , General Hosp ilal 6, 13, Love
Splendor ed Th 1ng 8 10 Behind the L1 nes 20
commerclal,mthtary atrborne years
Elv1s
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3 4 15, One L1t e to L•ve 6, 13,
Presley gone modest? Bought h1mself a $35,000
Secret Storm 10
Slutz wtthout hts name or tnttials on the license 4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Love Amen can Style 13, Flln t stones 6
15 G ll1gan s Isle 8 Scsarne Sf 20 33 Mov1e ' The Battle of
plate, JUSt 'STUTZ 1" . Sylva Koscma's
Apa che Pass 10
hospttahzed tn Rome Car crash
4 30 - I Love lucy 6 Dan1e l Boone 13. Pett1 coat J unction 3.
G1ll1gan's Island 8 D1ck Va n Dyke 15
5.00- Mister Rogers 20 33, Andy Gnft1th 15,, Bonanza 3, 4,
Hazel 8, B1g Va lley 6
5 30 - Elec Co 33 , Gom er Pyle 13 , Hodgepodge Lodge 20,
Beverly Hollbol liesa Deot h Valle y Days 15 Oh1o H1gh School
Baeketball To urnamE'n l 4

6 00 - Nev.. s 3, 4, B 1015 l1uthor Conseq 13,A roundtheBend
33 , Ses arne S l 20
6 30 - NBC News 4 15 ABC News 8, 10, I Dream of Jcan me 13 ,
Des1qn '19 Women 13
7 oo - r uih or Conseq 3 Bea t !he Clock ~ Course of Our
T1mes JJ D1ck Vt)ll Dyke I Wl1a l s My Lme 8, 8 1q Red

Last time,! noted how the .Ja~a nese are mcreasmgly pourmg
both adverllsing dollars and merchsnd1se mto the U S.A , and I
am therefore gomg to let you mona ''"·' are am of mme
About once a month, I mentally It ansport myself to San
Franctsco, where I occupy an opule nt office overlooking the bay,
earn a fa bulous salary wh1ch ena bles me to own a suburban
mans1on and a beachfront retreat, and all this, just lor over·
seemg the mflux of millions of trans1stor rad1os, TVs, cars,
moto rc) des, and assorted gtmcr.wk;; fo r Amertcan sale
It occurs, tiltS daydrewn, bec:wsc tt actually a ~nost hap-

a 00 - Fli p W1 lson 3. 4, 15. Mod Squad 6, 13, Wattons 8, IC, In
tertel Law &amp; Orde r 20, 33
Noght' IC
9 30 - Oh1o H1gh School Basketball Tournament 4

10 oo--News:lO, Streets of San Fra nclsco6, 13 , Dean Martm 3 4
15 Worl d Pres!'i 33
' •
ll 00 - News 3 l, 6 B lJ, 15 D1c:k Cavett 6. 13. M ovies " Joy
House' B ' Be loved Infidel 10
1 00 - Roller De rby -l N( ws 13
-

B~ck

m 1917, I nasa grass -~rr1 n uuck sergeant w1th the U
S Occupatton For crs, and st.1t toned IH!h the Army m
Yokoh.mln M) JOb was to supet ·"" "half-&lt;lozen Gis and a dozen
clerks, plus about 50 laborers, tn I'Unnmg a btg 11arehouse for
consumer goods from lite U S itl~&lt;lt &gt;a Sllll&lt;h m tlself, .ts thmgs
worked out )
·,
Now, the laboret s carne from a umon - but nothmg that
Arnold Mtllet of the Mme Workl'rs, or even George Meany, would
I CCOgntze The men dC!Uatly WOI ked for the prCSldent Of the
un ton , and he asstgned them to Jobs as they were needed, 01' a
contract hasts whtclt nMdc h1111 wealthy mdeed
I knrm th1s parwula1 umon pre~1de nt was really well-to-do,
because he could a!fot d to d11ve d 1938 wood-borntng (that's
nght ) Studebaker around the luel-ohort, bombed-{)u(, desolate
ctty that was Yokohama alter till' war
Wtth the supreme arl'Ogance of bemg 18 years old and too
dumb to respect my elders, regardless of nattOnality, I struck up
a great friendship wtlh thts man, 11 hose name was Tachikawa
He was defmitely old-school, 11e.u mg a severe mornmg coat,
Western-style, when he VlSlted th e 8th Army's warehouse which I
pretended to rwt He was about 65 th en, and a strict Oriental
tradiltonaltst.
Somehow, whtle other Gls were le:trntng only the Japanese
words for beer, sex, and goodbye, I picked up enough cf the
language to carry on a semt·ltterate conversatton, and even
learned the Japanese tea ntual to a degree that I was not totally
embarrassmg Mr Tachikawa rame to the warehouse, and we
drank tea and talked - me m my half-baked Japanese and he m

1 00 - New; 4 · - _ _ · - - - -- - - - - - - - equal!) -unfHnttltar EngliSh
When my lutch " '" u ~ , tho ugh, Tachtkawa-san tnt me pght
between the eyes wtlli a propostlton ' thai sounded, tolt!ll~ tnl·
plaus1ble al Lhat tune (tlurmg whtch the Japanese prmc1pal
mdustrial output was faulty ctga rette hghters made out of
discarded Budwetscr c,ms )
Ti te Japanese mdu.,lnal comple• was abo ut to re-emerge, he
told me, and he felt Wtlhm ten years, substanttal exports would
be bo ught by Ihe Unlled Slates r seemed a mcc young m~ to
htm , and "ould [ lhercfm e t·rmam on the West Coast after my
discharge, and take chat ge of ce1tam mdustnes m 11 hteh he had
an mtc1 c:st
I had Just enough gRll to gtvc tl senous thooght - but finally
had to tell hun no , when I rcahzed that I was sttll almost three
years !rem my 21st Ltrthday, and therefore legally unable to
represent lum durmg a pertod which he regarded as most
cr11tcal
He accepted my refusal with typical courtesy, and I came
back tc Southeastern Oh1o instead cl the Goldljll Gate country,
and haven't really regretted tt
·
Yet, every tune I see a Datsun or Honda wheeling past me, or
turn on a Sony TV camera or Toyo tape player,my mmd wanders
hack to what m1ght have been ..
&lt;)

ON THE TV DIAL · More of the Billy Graham Crusade at 8
WCHS-TV . Sonny &amp;Cher can be seen, same hour, on WBNS.TV
catch Graham

AND

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An ear thquake Renso1 sttuated tn an abandoned Coio·
, _ado gold mtne ts so sensl·
hve tt can detect vtbrat 10ns
South m. the earth as famt as 20
2N.T. tr~llionths of an 1n c h m
3NT amphtude.

Ruins Save Carvings
Some cl the fmest carvmgs
or
antiqutty survtve today
The b1ddmg has been
because the Pers1an capital
West
North Eut
of Persepolts was sacked m
1+
Pus
331 B C A thousand years
Pass
3t
Pass
later, when Moslems ccctl?
Pass
4NT
Pass
pled the rutns , they de·
You South, hold
fh·e dubs to show that you stroyed all sculpture they
4KJ3 .KJ3 +Kt054 .K96 don't have an ace.
found because thetr fa tth lor·
TODAY'S QUESTION
What do you do now?
bade tmages They m1ssed
Instead of btddmg three d1a· the ones burted •m the rub·
A- If this is just • · raise in
no· trump, pass or bid five DO• monds your partner has b1d ble which were not found
trump with a very comerv1tive three clubs over your two no- unhl dug up by archeolog1sts
portnor. it It ls Blockwood hid trump What do you do now ? in the 20th century

OOLUMBUS (UPI)- Coach
Charles Huggw of toJH"anked
Indian Valley South, voted the
United Press International
Class A coach of the year for
the second year in a row,
refuses to take the credit fer
his team's second straight
tmdefeated season.
"It's the Good Lord really,"
said the mastermind of a 50game winning streak during
the past two seasons, "nothing
that we've done."
Huggins, a graduate or
Alderson-Broadus College in
Ph!Uppi, W. Va., a school
which also turned out this
year's Class AM coach of the

9 00 - Kung Fu 6, 13, An Amencan Family 20, 33 , lrons1de 3, 4,
15 , Mov1es 'The Bedford ln c1denf" a, "This Could Be the

pened. or could lla\ e

of koowing which way the d&amp;fensive man is shading him.
He's a real good offensive
board man. He really goes for
the ball."
King Is Runnerup
Second to Hagen mthe voting
and also named to a ftrst team
berth was Marion Pleasant's IJ.
4 Terry King, a second team
choice as a junior.
King, playing on' a weii..IJalanced and unbeaten Spartan
tearo, averaged 19 points a
gsme this year, his third as a
regular for coach Stan Kirby.
King was also an AIIOhlo end
on Pleasant's state championship Class A football team
last fall.
Third in the voting and also
on the first team was Kevin
Dilworth of Fort Recovery,
who led Coach AI Souder's
team to a ~ regular season
record and third in the final
UPI coaches' ratings behind
Indian Valley South and
Pleasant.
Dilworth, who was a sopho-

more, starter on Fort
Recovery's 19'11 championship
squad, averaged 23 points per
game this season.
Rounding oul the first five
are a pair of towering juniors,
6-6 Larry Harris of Lorain
Clearvlew and 6-7 Mark Hay.
more of Cleveland Heights Lu·
theran East, giving the Northeast Ohio area three of the top
Ove spots,lncludlng Hagen.
HJtlbScoms
Harris ledCiearviewto a 17·1
regular selllllln record with a 25
pomts per game scoring
average, while Haymore was
the top scorer on the first team
with a 28 per game mark.
McDonald's 8..1 Bob McClary, top scorer on a strong
McDonald team, heads up the
second team, which also includes Riek Heinl cf unbeaten
Wapa~neta St. Joseph, Tom
Kramb of Greenwich South
Central, Vince Ellis of
Zanesville Rosecrans and Pat
Mulherin of Mansfield St.
Peter's.

Cincinnati Elder in Thursday
night's second contest, 6nlshed
19th.
Friday afternoon, the Class
Ateams take over, with second
ranked Marion Pleasant (~)
meeting 12th ranked Mansfield
St. Peters (23-4)at 1:30and No.
I and defending champion
Indian Valley South (24.0)
playmg No. 5 Selrmg (23-1) at
3:30.
At 7:30, Elyr1a Catholic (241) plays Delphos St. John's (17·
7) and Columbus Ready (21-3)
tangles with Bellefontaine (17·
6) at 9:30 in Class AA.
South, coached by Dick Ricketis, will carry a IS-game
wuming streak into the game

Ir~sh

against Central-Hower, and
w11l be seeking Columbus'
seventh championship in the
last 11 years and the Bulldogs'
second in that span. South won •
in 1965.
'lblrd Straight Trip
Central-Hower (18-6), which
will take the worst record of
the four AM teams into the
tournament, isn't any stranger
to the big show, as the Eagles
will be making their third
straight trip to St. John Arena
tmder Coach Joe Slegferth.
South's last loss was a 61-$
decision to Columbus Eastmoor and the Bulldogs' only
other defeat was at the banda
of AA Columbus Bishop Ready,,

year, Barberton's Jack
Greyoolds, entered the season
as the defendmg Class A
champion and carrying a 26game wm streak.
Huggins, who won a previous
state Class A title at Strasburg
in 1967, sa1d he is "amazed"
that his team was so successful
this year.

Although he lost one starter
from a year ago, it was hts 6-1
son, Bob, who was voted the
Class A player of the year last
season and now plays at Oh1o
University.
"There was added pressure
on us this year because of being
the state champions," Huggins
said. "You have to have a

1972-73 Oass A
All-Ohio Team·
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
1973 United Press International
Class A All Ohio Basketball
Team. with height, grade and

nan

Trace;

8111

Dressel,

Ironton St. Joseph; Bob Edgar,
Frontier, Mike Gruber, Canal
Winchester, Clyde Honeycutt,
South Central.
scoring average
Kent Hofacker, Tri.Village,
FIRST TEAM
Dan
Ha Jl, Federal Hocking:
Dan Hagen, Columbus. 6-7,
Herchek,
Atwater
Sr, 26 2; Terry King, Marion J1m
Waterloo,
Clay
Hudson,
Kyger
Pleasant, 6-4, Sr , 19.0, Kevin
Pat
lodlclan1,
Dilworth, Fort Recovery, 5 10, Creek;
Sr, 23 0; Larry Harris, Lorain Lowellville, Monroe Jones,
Clearvlew, 6 6, Jr., 2S 0: Mark Windham , Keith Kline, Black
Haymore, Cleveland Hgts. River , Rusty Lytle, McDon.
Randy
Luyster,
Lutheran East, 6 7, Jr., 28.0. aid ,
Lakeland, Dick Murphy,
SECOND TEAM
Bob McClary, McDonald, 6-3, Jonathan Alder, Ken Martin,
Sr , 18 0, Rick Heinl, B"sfolvllle, Steve Mihalic,
Wapakoneta Sf Joseph, 6-0, Clearvlew; Jeff Miller,
Sr, 17.0; Tom Kramb, South Covington, Greg McDaniel,
Central , 6-7, Jr, 22 5: VInce Starr-Washington.
Mike Ross, Portsmouth
Ellis, Zan~svllle Rosecrans, 6·
1, Sr; 13 9, Pat Mulherin, Notre Dame; Randy Rex,
Mansfield St Peter's, 6 5, Sr , Caldwell , Ron Roesch,
Chesopeake; Phil Robinson,
18 0
Symmes Valley; Ron SlrlmTHIRD TEAM
Scott Van Fossen, Strasburg, phel. Western Reserve, Rick
6 I, Sr, 23 2; Ed Leggett, In- Schulz, Northwestern; Charlie
dian Valley North, 6 3, Sr , Strete, Wapakoneta St.
Jeff
Schrock,
4.6, John Figurski, Buckeye Joseph,
Ron
Schorr ,
West, 6·5, Sr., 20 0, Rex Garaway ,
Shreve, Ayersvllle, 6-5, Sr., Ridgedale, Steve Sturgill,
22.0, Greg Romano, Lanca1ter Portsmouth East: Cliff
Washington , Ripley; Hal
Ftsher, 5 10, Sr, 29 0
Wahlers, Danbury Lakeside,
SPECIAL MENTION
Phil Bur'ks, Brlstolvtlle; Joel Tim Whetsel, Ridgemont,
Cochran, Indian Valley South; Gary Wade, Fostoria Sf En
Mike Cross, Franklin-Monroe: delln ; Rick Williams, Green
Jerry Fetter, Ridgedale, John Town•hip; Jim Zurbrugg,
Fnk, Riverdale, Van Henry, Sebrmg.
Player-of-the-year - Dan
Indian Valley South , Mark
Henschen, New Knoxville, Hagen
Coach-of the-year - Charles
Chuck Johnsbn, Peebles, Jerry
Langen hop, Liberty Center: Huggins, Indian Valley South.
Dave Mauk, Marton Pleasant;
Frank Monterosso, St. Hernard: Chuck McComb, Indian
Velley South, Tim O'Brien,
Kirtland: Greg Rlggar,
Sebring , Larry
Shade,
Newlon, Phil Saunders,
For your concern
Cuyahoga Heights, Greg
of H&amp; R Firestone
Spltnale, Contmental: Mike
Tanner, Ottawa Hills ; Dan
Store
Zerllngo, Lowellville
HONORABLE MENTION
Tha Store
Walt Acra , Middletown
Fenwick; Eric Alexander,
Millersport. Jerry Belter,
Ha1 Not Sold
Newcomerstown, Mark
I've been contacted by
Barbee, Ross Southeastern;
Randy Chronister, Grand so many of our fine
Valley, Mike Coldwetl, Han- customers wishing us
to continue business.

Thank You ••

NEW YORK (UP!) -Notre
Dame Coach Digger Phelps
expected to travel to St. Lows
for Ute NCAA Championships
oo Fr1day after Notre Dame's
clash with Louisville in the
National Invitation Tour·
nament Tuesday night, but
things didn't work out as
planned.
"I'm very surprised to reach
Ute NIT semlfmals," Phelps
88ld. "I had previous reserva·
lions to be in St. Lows on
Friday that had to be canceUed

when we won."
These plans were changed
when the Fighting Irish defeated Ute Cardinals, 79-71, in a
mild upset to reach Saturday

successful bunch cf kids to stay
en top. Our kids are dedicated
and have a lot of desire."
Minor Tinkering
W1thout the ftrepower of son
Bob, who averaged nearly 30
points per game his senior
year, Huggins had to de some
miner tinkermg with hts team.
"We tried to play more d&amp;fense thts season because we
knew we didn't have the scorers," he sa1d, •'and we tr1ed
emphasize offens1ve rebound·
mg more."
Durmg the regular season,
the Rebels held 18 opponents to JUst under
40 pomts per game,
a good indicahon of the kind of
defense they play, wh1le
scoring at a ~us points per
game clip.
Huggins picked up 33 of the
115 votes cast in the Class A
coach of the year competition,
with Marlon Pleasant's Stan
Kirby second with 11. Pleasant
also finished second to IVS in

afternoon-'ll Semifinal contest.
In the first quarter.final game
Tuesday night, North Carolina
used a 1~ spurt early in the
second half to defeat Massa·
chusetts, 73-Q, and advance to
Saturday's meeting w1th Notre

Dame.
Louisville had gone ahead,
41-39, for the first time in the
game after Notre Dame
opened the contest by scortng
the first SlX points and led most
of the half. John Shumate, IJ.
feet-9, scored 13 points mostly
on layups. Then Phelps called
his players mto a huddle.
"When we caned time out,
we decided to drop the zone,
get more aggressive and start

Come in or call us
anytime.

H&amp;R
FIRESTONE
Bob Haggerty·partn~r

992-2238

Middleport

the Class A ratings.
Tied for third with six votes
each were Bob Walsh of Loram
Clearvtew and Joe Madden of
Wapakoneta St. Joseph.
other coaches with mere
than one vote were Rick Brook
of Sebrmg, Bob McClary of
McDonald, Dale Nordyke of
Cedarville, Lewis D' Antom of
Chesapeake, Phil Dubbs of
FranklinMonroe, AI Souder of
Fort Recovery, Terry Hunt of
South Central, and Bob Smith
of jjuckeye West.

running," Phelps said. Four
minutes later, Notre Dame
grabbed the lead for good,
when sophomore guard Dwight
Clay canned three straight
jumpers and scored 10 points in
an Irish 15-2 burst in a sevenminute span.
Louisville's 6-5 forward Allen
Murphy, the high scorer to date
in this 36th NIT with 36 points,
was held to just 10 points by the
Irish defense.
North Carolina won its
second consecutive NIT con·
test by a margm in double
f1gures, but had a difficult time
with the Massachusetts
defense.
"It'shard to regulate a game
like thts," Tar Heel Coach
Dean Smith said. "Massa·
chusetts played excellent, ag.
gressive defense and was
readier to play mentally than
we were. They picked up loose
ball after loose ball and had
rune mure ball possessionswhich gave them nine more
chances to score."
The Minutemen stayed sur·
prtsingly close to North Carolina, tied 31).30 with the Tar
Heels at halftime, and were
never out of the game until
e~ght straight Tar Heel points
gave NC an insunnountable IS.
potnt lead w1th two minutes
remaining.

Other starters besides
But he admitted !'we have a lot
· Moore, are 6-1 Steve Dotes,
to offer."
who Siegferth says has " played
Cllell Tough Sclledule
In Centrai·Hower, the Bull- very gopd tournament ball," IJ.
dogs will be meeting a team 4 Donald Thornton, the team's
which had a 12-6 regular season leading rebounder, 6-1 Lamont
mark, but one which Siegferth Wilson and 6-2 Carl Hill Dotes
and Hl1l l!re juniors.
is not ashamed of.
Coming off the bench lor the
"With the kind of comEagles
will be 6-5 Gerald Harpetition we play," Siegferth
said, "a 12-6 record IS pretty rison, 5-8 Dave Bradley, a
good. Playing this type of starter until injured, and 6-4
Tom Beaver.
schedule helps us."
"We know we're up against a
Pointing to his team's
three straight trips to tough club," Slegferth said.
the
semi
finals, "We are going to have to be at
Slegferth sa1d, "we gear to- our best to beat them."
The second game of Thurswards this ... we don't let the
dsy night's card finds two late
kids forget it."
•
Leading the Eagles in blooming teams going against
scoring is 6-foot guard David each other, Elyria (21-3),
Moore with a 20-pomts per sporting an U.game win streak
game average, but Siegfertb and Elder (~) the Wll11ler of
says depth is the key to this 12 in a row.
Elder Coach Paul Frey will
year's Eagles team.
"I think this is one thing that start the smallest team among
favors us this year over last the AAA clubs, with the biggest
year," he said. "I can go to my man being 6-4 junior Rick
Apke.
bench."

• Flats repaired prompllyl

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• Tire sales It service for
every truck, tcactor, an~
auto on your farm I

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700 E. Main St.

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2101

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We Wish To
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a seml.finalist in that division,
in the opening game of the season.
Williams, at 6-4, led the Bull·
dogs in scormg with a 24.4
average and 13 rellounds, but
all five South starters
averaged in double figures.
Other South regulars are 6-7
junior Mike White, 8..1 senior
Howard Thornton, a husky 22Spounder, 11-1 Byron Phllmore,
and S-9 Greg Binion.
Ricketts, destnte his team's
record and higher ranking,
doesn't like the favorite's tag
pinned on his squad.
"No one is favored now," be
said. "! can't see how anyone
could be favored at this level."

upset Cards

Huggins renamed top-Class A mentor

Jubilee I&gt; News 6 Etec Co 1U. Let 5MakeADeal13

7 30 - Ho llyNof'd Squar es 3 To Te ll the Trut h 6, Wild K ingdom
10 1' 11Sei!You•nCourl4 , La ss te 8 Zoom 20. Newsmaker '72
13 , Democracy 's Trum pet W Va Leg1slature 33

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

3 lb
2 lb.
Jib
4 tb
2 tb

" arolD!d the basket and a sense

COLUMBUS (UPI)
Columbia's Dan Hagen, a 6-7
repeater from last year, heads
up the 1973 United Prf!S8 International Class A All-Ollie
Basketball Team announced
today.
Hagen, the only junior on the
lint team a year ago, was the
top choice of the 93 coaches,
sportawrlters and sports.
casters by a w1de margin,
earning for him the honor of
Class A player of the year.
N! A studelll who bas his
sights set on becoming a phyai.clan, Hagen was a four year
starter for Columbia, the last
three years under Coach Bruce
Hurley. He averaged 26.2
points per game and 17
rebounds this season and
scored 1,1103 pomts in his career
of 83 games.
"There hasn't been a thmg
we've asked him to do that he
hasn't done," Hurley 88ld of his
star, "and we've called on him
to do a lot for us."
Hagen, Hurley said, "has the
ability to move in heavy traff1c

8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame St 33

BY PAU L CRABTREE

ball tournament this weekend, Akron Central-Bower with a 21but doo't bet on it.
2 record, best amonj! the large
The Bulldogs, paced by AAA schools.
co-player of the year Brian
South was ralilted fourth in
Williams, go into their 5:30 the final ratings, the only one of
p.m. tournament-opening the four semlflniallsts in the
game Thursday night a~ainst top ten. Elyria, which meeta

Hagen top player

6 00 -

success - m Moscow 1

17
'16
29
46
lB

•

OOLUMBUS (UPI) - B8sed
on the final United Press International Ohio High School
Bolll'd of Coaches' ratings, Col·
umbus So11th should be considered the favorite to capture the
Class AM high school basket·

00 - News3. 4 6 a 10,13 IS
30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 D1ck Cavett 6, 13 Movte "The
Blac k Sc01 p1on" a. 'Once More, My Darlmg" 10
1 oo - News 4 13
THURSDAY, MARC H 22, 1973

Won Los1
Gaul 's Sha ke Haven
Lodw•ck s Market
R1denour s TV
Good's Pennzod "
R1ggs Used Cars

•

11
11

February 28, 1973

H 1g h lnd Sen es -

sl .. un

1bt DliiJ Sentillf

Bv Motor Rout&amp; where carrie;

A thought.ror the day: Brthsh
ncYelist William Thackeray
aid, "Til strange what a man
e.tn do, and women yel think
him Ill 11111el."

gt

msult the res t of the country was considered
from a New York perspective awash w1th
umnformed htcks llvmg in suspended inte llectual amma hon ; Variety once headlined
that the coun tt y west of Hoboken rejected
movtes about farmers w1th the brtllianUy
p~tromzmg " H1x N1x Stix PlX" wh1ch has gone
up tn JOurnalistic htstory as the Ideally tromc
Jacome theatncal comment.
Broadway once was separated from the rest
of Amertca by lack of communicahons which
hasn't extsted smce the wtde sprawl c[
te lev1ston TV has bt ought every argument pohhcal (Vtetnam) and thealrtcal (Jack Paar
versus evet ybody I and has revealed the secrets
of Washmgton and backstage Broadway, upstage Hollywood, backdoor cnme, stdedoor sex,
news and analysts from all sides tn to the hvmg
and bedrooms of the nalton Htnlcrlanders no
longer wear yokel su1ts and dollar house
dresses; they see the luxurtes of the world and
buy them ; they see and understand the news,
are just as bored by bad plays, mov1es and TV
shows as the Eastern Establishment's snooty
self-aggrand tzed
an d
self-appomted
"spokesmen " You ca n't fool them any mere.
They 'te also not so hkely to be fcoled ,by
Vlctous one-stded slan ted, fabncated
propaganda wh tch "Sltcks and Benes" ts. Ar,
tisttcally tt's fa lse, emotionally 1l's multimagmfted to prey on wartorn d1ssahsfaction
Pertment comments nghl now are the.news
stones that "Shcks and Bones " is a great

Wednesday Afternoon League

R C Cola

NOil'fll
. AKQS7b
fi AK64

WEDNESDAY MAR~H21, 1913
6 00 - News, Weather, Sports l, 4, B, 10, 15, Truth or Conseq. 6:
Sesame Sf 20, Around the Bend 33
6· 30 ~ Truth or Conseq 3, Beat the Clock 4: News6, 10, Whats
My Line 8, Anythmg You Can Do 13, Elec Co. 20: Know Your
Schools 33 , Mayor's ,Report 'l5
7 30 - Eposode Action 33. The Judge 10, Lassie 1S t Beat the
Clock 13, Pol1ce Surgeon 3, Billy Graham Crusade 6, Earth
keeptng 20 Ha ll the Geo rge Kirby Comedy Hour 8
8·00 - Paul Lvnde6, 13, Adam 1215, Paul Lynde6, 13; Sonny&amp;
Cher 8, tO , Amenca '73 20, 33 , B1tly Graham CrusadeS
8 30 - Banacek3,4, 15, Mov1e"Toma"6, 13
9 co - Med1cal Centers, 10. Eye to Eye2C, 33
9 30 - Turning Pomts 20, 33
tO CO - Search 3, 4, 15, Cannon 8, 10 ONen MarShall 6, 13, News

&amp; THINGS

POMEROY LANES

Good s Pcn nz01l

l

Wrong co·ntract Easy Here

Stre et , A th en s OhiO , Wll holl1
deduc 11on fo r 1t s se r v .ces vs thE'
DISi rlc t 's paying ag ent anrJ Me
ISSued unde1 the au t h or•ty or ttu
Oh1 0 (Rev1sed Cod e Ser.honr,
6101 01 et St!q I

'"

Local Bowling

Roggs Used CAr;

WIN AT BRIDGE
I

JACK O'BRIAN
NETWORK HALF-NELSONS
PAPP PLAY
NEW YORK (UP!) - The Joe Papp play
"Sltcks and Bones," barred from the CBS-TV
atr, was an ugly httle exerc1se tn hate-Amertca
We saw It on Bdwy., and tl romped the gamut of
anti-everythmg mcludmg a vtcwus attack on a
fme ramtly of mnocent not-even-bystanders
Ozz1e and Hamel Nelson
The play's diseases meataxmg portrayed a
lamtly of nastily bland ntlwlts who welcomed a
blinded crippled son home from VIetnam He
zombted through depresswn and !antastes of h1s
VIetnamese m1stress who appeared m mute,
clumsy portentousness m and out of the mactton
wh1le the others In the cast acted out an entirely
depraved he that the typtcal Amerrcan famtly
cared not a wh1t for the crushed body and
crtppled soul of their sen . The dtrly
dramaturgical pool ccncermng the Nelsons was
the Wlfatr nammg of the parents "Ozzie" and
"Hatriet" and the sons "Dav1d 11 and "Ricky."
The play set up false emotional plots,
strawmen taken seriously by cr1tics who thmk
they thmk, phlegmallcally by the ones who
cons1der themselves above pohltcs but actually
are below, and wardy by the crew that wtshes
not to be but of step w1th the permtsstve
establishment.
We are against censcrh1p, we ftght s1mply
lor the nght to, net ban this un1tatwn-estheltc
trash, but to pcmt out what tl ts, sheer shallow
slashmg at the decent, which includes notably
the !me Ozzte Nelson family . CBS.TV banned
11 because some 70 or tts affiliates prevtewed tt
over closed ctrcutt and were outraged on behalf
of its viewers and themselves . Naturally
loyalists to lh1s grade of Papp howled that the
great M1ddle Amerrca ts reacttonary and worse.
The s1mple truth ts that these days th e mid·
Manhattan ltberal es tablishmen t can't
patrontze the rest of the country Once upon an

'

Akron Central-Hower hopes third time in
m~et will be charm; action to start Th.ursday

J'elevision Log
BY

.

.

3-The
n,Uy Sentlilei,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., March 21,1973
"

•

2- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., March, 21 1973

NAME--~-------------------­

•-6i1l. ~~~~~~.

Galli• and
Meson Counttes

Ph. 992-2181
Jack W, Carsey, Mgr,
Open Daily Unttl
6.ooP.M.

STREET--- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - CITY - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - STATE :--_ _ _ _:__zl p _______

PHONE----------~----------~

SINGER, DEANE

&amp;SCRIBNER

Mtmlurr of Ntw York Stock Exchangt, Inc
and olher prme~pal stcunty txchangts
FIR.r HUNTINQTON NATIONAL BANK ARCADE
HUNTINGTON, W VA. 215720
TILIP'HONI (30 .. ) !522· 7318

�..

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_. - ~ IMUv Sentili8I,,~ri..Pomeroy, 0., ~~~ 21,197) ·

et ,bill marked for quick action in HouSe

OPEN DAILY .
.10 TO 9

OPIUAILY
10TO 9

By LEE LEONARD
there's 110t f!.O'ns to be any
UPI Slalebirile Rejlorter
Easter lnak unlells we get the
OOLUMBUS (UPl) ~ Holl8e budget out of here," said Rep.
Democrats, specmcally thole · Myrl H. Shoemaker, D·
niUI1ng the Finance Com· Bourmivllle,· chairman of' the
mlttee, are under strict orders .Finance Conimlttee, as budget
~ get Gov, Jolin J, Gilligan's
hearings Cllntlnued Tuesday.
budget for fiscal ~974-75
. "You're darn right. I said
through the House by April 19, that," confirmed Lanclone.
U they don't~ can forget . . "You thlhk.We could go home H
abollt an anticlpaled Easter ""'· we didn't have the IRidget out
cess of )0 days, said House of here by · AprU 19? NQ way.
~ker A. G. Lanctone, D- The newspapers would crucify
Bellaire
US •..
•"llle.•...gpeaker has told us
Lancione and Senate
l'resldent Pro Tempore
Theodore M. Gray, R·
·:· .·:--:- .... -:-.·:·.·::·.·.i 1m
;;:;:;- .
.
..
~

, Columbua, hav.e plamed a .proposed by .the governor.
other municipal officers.
recess from April 19-May 1.
In IIoor action Tuesday, the ~ But some of the legiSlators
"We're going to start some House passed, 79-14, and sent to complained such a proposal
meetings with· the Democratic the Senate legislation allowing would lead to legislation to ex·
leadership and our subcommlt- voters "in noncharter munl· pand the terms of cily council·
tee .chairmen," Shoemaker cipalitles of more than 5,000 man to four years,
And one lawmaker, Rep.
said, "and we hope to have the residents to chose their city
budget back before the full
· council presidents for . Raymond P, Luther, R·
committee by AprU 1.
four-year terms instead of two- Newark, said it was a "stalking
'.'We hope :... we more than year tenns..
.horse" for an eventual attempt
hiipe ~we will have the bud· The ch~ sponsor, Rep. J: to extend the tenns of state
get pasSed by the House by Leonard ~era, D-Lorain, legislators to four years.·
AprU 19," he said, "I think we ·originaUylntended to make the . Rep. Robert E. Levitt, R·
can do II."
four-year term mandatory for Canton, got the bill amended
To Offer Amendments
. council presidents, to match til require a vote of tbC people.
Republicans are preparing to them with mayors, treasurers, Initiative petitions or two·
offer amendments to the $9.8 auditors, city solicitors and thirds approval of city council
billion spending outlay

Miss Mary .Lou King,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil King of the Kingsbury'
area of Meigs County, Is a
member of the "living witness
learn" of the Mt. Vernon
Nazarene CoUege which will be
conducUng revival services at
7:30 each evenlng Friday,
Saturday and Sunday at the
Carleton Olurch.
The revival will continue
from March 26 through April 1
with the Rev, Harold Holmes
as speaker, Jay Stiles, pastor
of the church located on Counly
Road 18, three miles off State
Route 33, invites the public .

Auditions will be held Merch
h
fruit nd candy for 24 . and 25 by the Gallia
.,:~e~~ ijost.:.es are Elva Dramatic Arts .Sociely for its
, Dailey· and Margaret Bailey, historical musical pageant to
PUBLIC meeting, Wed· be preSented during July in the
nesday, at Letart FaUs com· Washington Elementary
munily building, 7:30 p.m. on School
auditorium
in
social security and Council on Gallipolis.
Aging; speaker,NormanCupp, . The sociely is a non-profit
Marietta social security office. association formed in the past
WrnD!NG TRAIL Garden few months by a group of
Gallipolis area residents inClub Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at tere s ted m
· presen t'mg an
Meigs Inn,
h" t · 1dr
b d
THE YOUNG WIVES' Club ts ortca ama ase on the
history of southern Ohio, ac·
Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at home
d' to B b c d
f th
o on ee o e
of Virginia Klrkha rt, Tuppers cor mg
new group.
Plains.
The historical drama, ·
"Gallla ~ountry," is being
underwritten by Bob Evans
Farms, Inc. of Columbus and
Rio Grande. The company wiU
Randy Snider. Rick Stobart, provide the book, score and
Brenda Van Meter, Paul Voss,
g
ts d "II k
Karen Wheeler, Christine acran emen ' an Wl rna e
Wilson, David Wolfe.
available the use of ti natural
SENIORS - Edgar Abbott, amphitheater, outdoor stage
. Shirley Alkire, Barbara Ar· · d
t'
d
k"
cher, linda Atkinson, Richard an sea mg an par mg
Bailey , Lynne Baker, Debra facilities . at its Homestead
Barnhart, Liz Blaettnar, Jim Farm at Rio Grande,
Boggs, Francis Broderick, Jon
B~nth , Janice Burns, Terry · " Gallia Country" is an
Cadle, Rita Cast\, Bill Chaney, original work by Lee Dureiux
Jerry . Coleman, , Paul Cun· of Mt. Vernon, Ohio, author of
nlngham, Brenda Donahue,
Robin Duckworth , Chuck the original "Birth of Dixie"
Eastman, Bonnie Ebersbach, musical drama produced at
th
Merrl Ebersbach, Donna ·Mt v
Francis. Keith French, Beth
· ernon 1968 rough 1970.
Fultz, Deb\ Gallagher, Kaaron Durieux,
through
his
Gilmore, Karen Hale, Ken association with Byer &amp;
Harr is, Randy Haynes, Connie
Herdman, Jeanne Hooper, Bowman Advertising Agency
Debbie Jewett, Janet Kennedy, of Columbus, has had a part in
Barbara Klein, Barbara Lowe. developing many activities at
Ragena McG uire, Eugene
McKinney, Sheila McKnight, the Homestead Fann including
Edith Mees. Terry Metheny, the Bob Evans Farm Festival.
Donna MichaeL Heidi Milhoan,
h h
John Miller, Sherrie Miller,
T e
istorical musical
Kim Nv&gt;wery, ; Desir~ Pike, page~n !_ d~p[cts t_h ~ ~~r ly"
Tom Reed, Mike Sayre, James settlement and life in the
Schmoll, Dorothy Seth, Jeff
Shank, Connie Smilh. Dixie original Gallia County area
Snyder, James Snyder, Judy (now the five counties in
Sopher, ·Christi St;mley, southern Ohio) beginning in
Delores Stan ley, Darryl
Swartz, Jane Thomas, Richard 1790 and featuring many of the
Vaughan, Ernestine Kay characters who contributed so
Ward, Stephen Warner • Paftl much to this colorful area.
Well , Sharon Wilson. Mindy
Young.
A large cast is proposed,

.

CRUSHED VELVET

Meigs student
on ,revival team ~

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WEDNEsDAY
BOSWORTH Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
staled assembly, Wednesday,
7:30 p.m., Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
SYRACUSE Third Wed·
nesday Homemakers Club
Wednesday at house at
Municipal park. Covered dish
·dinner at noon. Easter baskets
to be made to take to local
nursing home. Members are
asked .to make donations to

1999

McCune, Debbie Mclaughlin,

Sharon Murray, Roger Nelson,

Floyd Ohllng&lt;r.
Philip
Ollllnger, Cathy Osborne, Rose
Ramsburg, Kennel" Rife,
Daniel Taylor, Susie Tillis,
Eugenia Walburn, Steven
Wa lburn , Dan Walker, Joy
White, Pamela Wilson ,
Basheba Witte.
JUNIORS Christine
Bailey, David Barnhart, Jane
Barrett,

Brenda

Barton ,

Regina Bing, Rick Bolin ,
Debbie Janey, Nancy Jean Donna Boyd, Diana Carsey,
Jeffers, Bonita Johnson; M:ma Shelly Clark. VIcki Clelland ,
Lee King, Michael Magnotta, Joyte Ann Davis, Rita Faye
Tammy Michael , Tammy Davis, Barbara Demoskey ,
Nv&gt;wery. Kim Ollllnger, Larry Dinah Erlewlne, Theodore
Pickens. Judith Radford, Fisher, Sandra Flocarri, Grace
Bruce Reed, Rebecca Roush, Frakes, Connie Garnes ,
Ralph Searles, Angola Sisson , Bridget Goble, Dave Grant,
Peggy Snyder, Tamara Cathy Harrison, Ingrid
Stanley, George Stewart, Mike Hawley, Randy Hill , Sherry
Swick, Melissa Thomas, Donna Holt, Cheryl Hudson, Jackie
Hulton, Mary Janey, Dana
Thornton, Greg Van Meter.
TENTH GRADE - Teresa Johnson, Geneva King, Ezra
Bruchett, Julia Capehart, Jo Kizer. Mary Krawsczyn,
Chafin, Jennifer Chapman, Lionel LeFebre. Mike May,
Marcell•· !jhorles. Rose, Diana .Mc:Angus, ~tan Nvlorl.
Colburn, RicHard Couch; Carla Mark • Nv&gt;rrls, Janel Nv&gt;rrls,
Crisp, Richard Dailey, Carl Bill Myers, Brenda Nelson,
Davidson, Leno•a Davis, Eddie Tina Nlert, Vickie Oberholzer,
Diddle, Bennie Dillon, Larry Diana Painter. Ro•le Pal·
Fridley, Belinda Friend, terson. Debra Pierce, Diane
Cynthia Garnes, Joy Hayes, Ridgway, Pat Roboon, Joe
Maureen Hennessy, Brian Rosenbaum, Sandra Ruschel,
Justice, Anita King, Nancy Jeannie Schneider, Patty
Lawrence, Cynth ia Manley, Searles, Gall Sizemore, Bill
Vlclor McCI 0ud, VI rginia Slack, Albert Smith, Jill Smith,
Laura Hoover, Jim Hutton,

HECK'S REG. $2.49 PAIR

ClOTH//" DEPT.

-----,..--

The Meigs High School honor
roll for the fourth six weeks
grading period Is being announced. Making a grade of
"8" of above In all their
subjects to be listed are:
NINTH GRADE - Sandra ·
Carleton , Karen Coleman,
Ginger Cullums, Cindy Eads,
Elaine Fish, Scott Fraser,
Cherie Fry, Crystal Glaie,
Cynthia Glaze, William Gloyd,
Darla Harper, Andrew Hoover,

PILLOW
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due!ed legislation to require
any Income tax lncreiles to be
approved by the voters or twothirds of the legislature, and to
return Veterans' · Day to.
November 11.
- Senate Minority ~
Anthony 0. Calabrese.• J).
Cleveland, offered &amp; resolution
caUing for the gradual phaling
out of Cleveland Slate Hoapltal.
-Sen. Donald E. Lukens, R·
Middletown, introduced a resolution opposing amnesty for
draft dodgers and deserters.
Both chambers return at 1:30
p.m. todav,

and sent to the Senate a bill
authorizing an additional
judgeship each for EtYrta and
Lorain J;Ilunlcipal' courts.
Camera and Rep, Donald J.
Pease, J).()berlin, pointed out
each city is close to the 1110,.000
population required for a
second judge.
Pease
said
criminal
caseloads have nearly trebled
in Elyria during the last 10
years, and Camera said they.
have doubled in Lorain.
ln other legislative action:
- House Minority Whip Alan
E. Norris, R·Westerville, inlro-

Auditions for. Gallia Country planned
including actors, act~esses,
singers and dancers, along
with choruses, quartets and
madrigals. A minimum .of 14
male and eight female. parts
are needed, plus understudies.
All production phases will be
under the supervision of Murl
Rush, executive producerdirector. Mr. Rush has had
many years experience in
professional theater and is
employed by Taft Broad·
casting in Cincinnati. The
music has been arranged by AI
Evans, an internationallyknown arranger and composer.

Vocal supervision will be by
Anne Fisher, music director of
Gallia Academy.
Choreography is by Gillian
Moore ,
who
danced
professionally for many years
with the Royal Academy of
Dance in London, England and
throughout Europe, and now
teaches in Gallipolis.
Auditions for the roles in
"Gallia Country" will be open
to the public starting at I p, m.
Saturday and Sunday, March
24 and 2a, at the auditorium of
Wa sh ington Elementary

School, 4th Avenue, Gallipolis. Thelma Elliott at the GalllpoiL!i
Anyone interested in further Chamber of Commerce, 16
information should notify Mrs. State St., or call 446-0596.

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MEN'S FOOTBALL NUMBEII .

would be needed to get the
question on the ballot.
The bill wotild affect about 90
nonebarter cities, the largest of
which are Lorain, Parma and
Canton.
1u An Unneeded Bill"
'
"There is no interest in four·
year tenns .in Canton," Levitt
said. "If they want four-year
terms they can adopt a
charter. Without my amend·
ment, this is a very, very bad
bill -an unneeded bill."
Levitt's amendment carried,
47-43.
The House also pa!ised, 91·1,

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REBEL
LURES

HECK'S REG. $19.99

SPOITS DEPT.

$14

99

SLEEPING BAG
Feotures practica l ond economical
quilt-through design with 2 Y.l lb. warm
1 11
' •

HECK'S RIG.

$

f88

'

.

$l3.9 9 SPOITS DEPT.

GOLF BALLS

99

ROOSTER

NO. 90, PKG. OF 3

LURES

LANDING
NETS

59

HECK'S REG.
$1.45

TAIL

HECK'S REG.

T090'

5x7 ·

VINYLTARPS

SORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $3.28

OLD TIMER KNIFE
HECK'S REG.
$488
$6 .99

HECK'S REG.
$.1 .58

99&lt;

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store.With A Heart,
You, WE LIKE"
Right reserved to limit quantities
0

SPOITS DEPT.

SPOITS DEPT.

We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps

.

10 QT.

MINNOW
BUCKET
$168
HECK'S REG.
. $2.77

STEELON
'
LEADERS
6"-9"-12"

HECK'S
REG.
TO 35 1

25(

SPOITS DIPT.

ILASH UGHI

IAnERY

BAIT CANTEEN
HECK'S REG. .
$2.99

$1 88

SPOITSDIIT.

HECK'S REG.
16' EACH

SPOITS DEPT.

HECK'S
"D'' SIZE
BATTERIES

EVEREADY

Prices Effective Mar. 21·28

6VOLT

Monday Thru Friday

LANTERN
BATTERY

9:00 to 7:00

'99(
50(
4FOR

SI'Oin/JIIr.

Saturday 9 to 9

CLOSED SUNDAYS .

•

Fairmont Buys! ·

OnAGE CHEESE

: ·69•

30

MIGHTY

2%
MILK
.
.

· 89~

2
. -,

No. 1
cans

GOLDEN - GRAIN
.
MACARONI AND
CHEDDAR DINNER
.WAGNER'S
.
.
ORANGE-PINEAPPLE

SPALDING DOT

HECK'S REG.
TO $1.68

NYLON

..

CAMPBELL'S
VEGETABLE
SOUP ·

pkgs.

for

32 oz.
jars

LIPTON
INSTANT
TEA
CHEF BOY~AR-DEE
CHEESE PIZZA
SINGLES

1 lit

jar

Fresh
.Lean

$

LB.

$
GROUND ROUND

$ 19

From
USDA Choice

HOME MADE

on~

_
CHEESE
SPREAD

can
Reg. 55'

39

tb. '

0

FRESH ALL MEAT

$ 05

lb
I

SLICED
BOLOGNA

lb.

CELERY

half Size
'

;:·.:

\' ,,
I' I

•• ' • I

-~umbo

..

1; 1,

' ~J

bunch

300
·cans

PORK&amp;· BEANS

\

'•
'

each

sHOWBOAT
HERSHEY'S.
INSTANT cOCOA

USDA Choice

Beef

BUNKER HILL
BEEF STEW
STAR KIST
CHUNK
UTE TUNA

$

2~b.

can

U.S. Nq. ~

.

IDAHO 10 lb.
pOTATOES

Large Size

99~

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_. - ~ IMUv Sentili8I,,~ri..Pomeroy, 0., ~~~ 21,197) ·

et ,bill marked for quick action in HouSe

OPEN DAILY .
.10 TO 9

OPIUAILY
10TO 9

By LEE LEONARD
there's 110t f!.O'ns to be any
UPI Slalebirile Rejlorter
Easter lnak unlells we get the
OOLUMBUS (UPl) ~ Holl8e budget out of here," said Rep.
Democrats, specmcally thole · Myrl H. Shoemaker, D·
niUI1ng the Finance Com· Bourmivllle,· chairman of' the
mlttee, are under strict orders .Finance Conimlttee, as budget
~ get Gov, Jolin J, Gilligan's
hearings Cllntlnued Tuesday.
budget for fiscal ~974-75
. "You're darn right. I said
through the House by April 19, that," confirmed Lanclone.
U they don't~ can forget . . "You thlhk.We could go home H
abollt an anticlpaled Easter ""'· we didn't have the IRidget out
cess of )0 days, said House of here by · AprU 19? NQ way.
~ker A. G. Lanctone, D- The newspapers would crucify
Bellaire
US •..
•"llle.•...gpeaker has told us
Lancione and Senate
l'resldent Pro Tempore
Theodore M. Gray, R·
·:· .·:--:- .... -:-.·:·.·::·.·.i 1m
;;:;:;- .
.
..
~

, Columbua, hav.e plamed a .proposed by .the governor.
other municipal officers.
recess from April 19-May 1.
In IIoor action Tuesday, the ~ But some of the legiSlators
"We're going to start some House passed, 79-14, and sent to complained such a proposal
meetings with· the Democratic the Senate legislation allowing would lead to legislation to ex·
leadership and our subcommlt- voters "in noncharter munl· pand the terms of cily council·
tee .chairmen," Shoemaker cipalitles of more than 5,000 man to four years,
And one lawmaker, Rep.
said, "and we hope to have the residents to chose their city
budget back before the full
· council presidents for . Raymond P, Luther, R·
committee by AprU 1.
four-year terms instead of two- Newark, said it was a "stalking
'.'We hope :... we more than year tenns..
.horse" for an eventual attempt
hiipe ~we will have the bud· The ch~ sponsor, Rep. J: to extend the tenns of state
get pasSed by the House by Leonard ~era, D-Lorain, legislators to four years.·
AprU 19," he said, "I think we ·originaUylntended to make the . Rep. Robert E. Levitt, R·
can do II."
four-year term mandatory for Canton, got the bill amended
To Offer Amendments
. council presidents, to match til require a vote of tbC people.
Republicans are preparing to them with mayors, treasurers, Initiative petitions or two·
offer amendments to the $9.8 auditors, city solicitors and thirds approval of city council
billion spending outlay

Miss Mary .Lou King,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil King of the Kingsbury'
area of Meigs County, Is a
member of the "living witness
learn" of the Mt. Vernon
Nazarene CoUege which will be
conducUng revival services at
7:30 each evenlng Friday,
Saturday and Sunday at the
Carleton Olurch.
The revival will continue
from March 26 through April 1
with the Rev, Harold Holmes
as speaker, Jay Stiles, pastor
of the church located on Counly
Road 18, three miles off State
Route 33, invites the public .

Auditions will be held Merch
h
fruit nd candy for 24 . and 25 by the Gallia
.,:~e~~ ijost.:.es are Elva Dramatic Arts .Sociely for its
, Dailey· and Margaret Bailey, historical musical pageant to
PUBLIC meeting, Wed· be preSented during July in the
nesday, at Letart FaUs com· Washington Elementary
munily building, 7:30 p.m. on School
auditorium
in
social security and Council on Gallipolis.
Aging; speaker,NormanCupp, . The sociely is a non-profit
Marietta social security office. association formed in the past
WrnD!NG TRAIL Garden few months by a group of
Gallipolis area residents inClub Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at tere s ted m
· presen t'mg an
Meigs Inn,
h" t · 1dr
b d
THE YOUNG WIVES' Club ts ortca ama ase on the
history of southern Ohio, ac·
Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at home
d' to B b c d
f th
o on ee o e
of Virginia Klrkha rt, Tuppers cor mg
new group.
Plains.
The historical drama, ·
"Gallla ~ountry," is being
underwritten by Bob Evans
Farms, Inc. of Columbus and
Rio Grande. The company wiU
Randy Snider. Rick Stobart, provide the book, score and
Brenda Van Meter, Paul Voss,
g
ts d "II k
Karen Wheeler, Christine acran emen ' an Wl rna e
Wilson, David Wolfe.
available the use of ti natural
SENIORS - Edgar Abbott, amphitheater, outdoor stage
. Shirley Alkire, Barbara Ar· · d
t'
d
k"
cher, linda Atkinson, Richard an sea mg an par mg
Bailey , Lynne Baker, Debra facilities . at its Homestead
Barnhart, Liz Blaettnar, Jim Farm at Rio Grande,
Boggs, Francis Broderick, Jon
B~nth , Janice Burns, Terry · " Gallia Country" is an
Cadle, Rita Cast\, Bill Chaney, original work by Lee Dureiux
Jerry . Coleman, , Paul Cun· of Mt. Vernon, Ohio, author of
nlngham, Brenda Donahue,
Robin Duckworth , Chuck the original "Birth of Dixie"
Eastman, Bonnie Ebersbach, musical drama produced at
th
Merrl Ebersbach, Donna ·Mt v
Francis. Keith French, Beth
· ernon 1968 rough 1970.
Fultz, Deb\ Gallagher, Kaaron Durieux,
through
his
Gilmore, Karen Hale, Ken association with Byer &amp;
Harr is, Randy Haynes, Connie
Herdman, Jeanne Hooper, Bowman Advertising Agency
Debbie Jewett, Janet Kennedy, of Columbus, has had a part in
Barbara Klein, Barbara Lowe. developing many activities at
Ragena McG uire, Eugene
McKinney, Sheila McKnight, the Homestead Fann including
Edith Mees. Terry Metheny, the Bob Evans Farm Festival.
Donna MichaeL Heidi Milhoan,
h h
John Miller, Sherrie Miller,
T e
istorical musical
Kim Nv&gt;wery, ; Desir~ Pike, page~n !_ d~p[cts t_h ~ ~~r ly"
Tom Reed, Mike Sayre, James settlement and life in the
Schmoll, Dorothy Seth, Jeff
Shank, Connie Smilh. Dixie original Gallia County area
Snyder, James Snyder, Judy (now the five counties in
Sopher, ·Christi St;mley, southern Ohio) beginning in
Delores Stan ley, Darryl
Swartz, Jane Thomas, Richard 1790 and featuring many of the
Vaughan, Ernestine Kay characters who contributed so
Ward, Stephen Warner • Paftl much to this colorful area.
Well , Sharon Wilson. Mindy
Young.
A large cast is proposed,

.

CRUSHED VELVET

Meigs student
on ,revival team ~

BEDSPREAD

cCft, no-iron, cruthH ¥tlw+ Mckpread. Te•~
iur• look end feel. Rounded corften. FU U..V
TRIMMED WITH IEAUTifU LFRINGE. COMPLETE·
LY MACHINE WASHABLE AND DRY AILE.

&amp;uy

HECK'SREG •.

•19.99

tlOTIIINfi OIPT.

SLEEVE
SHIRT

BOY'S
PERMANENT
PRESS

TEE SHIRT

A real winner for leisure living. Assorted
colors. Sizes S, M, L, XL

'17''

SHEETS

LADIES
HOUSE DRESSES

50% Fortrel Polyester 50% Combed
Cotton. In decorator colors of blue,

green, yellow, and lilac.
'

All Sizes

81"x104"

HECK'S
REG.
. $4.99

OR

FULL FITTED
27"x44"

Tho NEW culled style look in blue

18"x18"

denims or chambray fabric. Siz:es

8 to 18.

72"x104"

Choose from polyester ny·

OR

ids. All with a 100% wolfle

18"LONG

2

·Solid or floral covering in assorted

$4.9P

To

llluilrolior~

••••

HECK'S
REG. $5.99

PRO-SHOT

Heck's
Reg. $1999

WILSON

BASKETBALL

$59~

HECK'S
REG.
$7.99

2FOR

.. ,

BASKETBALL
BACKBOARD &amp;
NET &amp;RIM SET

81352

colors . .. foam filled.
HECK'S REG. TO
$2.49
tlOTIIINfi DEPT.

.. .

::~:;·:

HECK'S REG.

backing.

BOLSTER CUSHION

FOR

•3.29

ttOT/11/IfDIPT.

BERKLEY RODS
Open and Closed Face

HECK'S REG. $12.99

"

'

'

~~z~~us;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==a•z DAIS~·~; GUN
DAISY BB's
HECK'S REG. 88'

.¢
1

HECK'S REG. 24.39

''

,,.,,,

VINYL PONCHO
HECK'S
REG.
$1.58

$

66

·

.

·

~

. ail

WEDNEsDAY
BOSWORTH Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
staled assembly, Wednesday,
7:30 p.m., Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
SYRACUSE Third Wed·
nesday Homemakers Club
Wednesday at house at
Municipal park. Covered dish
·dinner at noon. Easter baskets
to be made to take to local
nursing home. Members are
asked .to make donations to

1999

McCune, Debbie Mclaughlin,

Sharon Murray, Roger Nelson,

Floyd Ohllng&lt;r.
Philip
Ollllnger, Cathy Osborne, Rose
Ramsburg, Kennel" Rife,
Daniel Taylor, Susie Tillis,
Eugenia Walburn, Steven
Wa lburn , Dan Walker, Joy
White, Pamela Wilson ,
Basheba Witte.
JUNIORS Christine
Bailey, David Barnhart, Jane
Barrett,

Brenda

Barton ,

Regina Bing, Rick Bolin ,
Debbie Janey, Nancy Jean Donna Boyd, Diana Carsey,
Jeffers, Bonita Johnson; M:ma Shelly Clark. VIcki Clelland ,
Lee King, Michael Magnotta, Joyte Ann Davis, Rita Faye
Tammy Michael , Tammy Davis, Barbara Demoskey ,
Nv&gt;wery. Kim Ollllnger, Larry Dinah Erlewlne, Theodore
Pickens. Judith Radford, Fisher, Sandra Flocarri, Grace
Bruce Reed, Rebecca Roush, Frakes, Connie Garnes ,
Ralph Searles, Angola Sisson , Bridget Goble, Dave Grant,
Peggy Snyder, Tamara Cathy Harrison, Ingrid
Stanley, George Stewart, Mike Hawley, Randy Hill , Sherry
Swick, Melissa Thomas, Donna Holt, Cheryl Hudson, Jackie
Hulton, Mary Janey, Dana
Thornton, Greg Van Meter.
TENTH GRADE - Teresa Johnson, Geneva King, Ezra
Bruchett, Julia Capehart, Jo Kizer. Mary Krawsczyn,
Chafin, Jennifer Chapman, Lionel LeFebre. Mike May,
Marcell•· !jhorles. Rose, Diana .Mc:Angus, ~tan Nvlorl.
Colburn, RicHard Couch; Carla Mark • Nv&gt;rrls, Janel Nv&gt;rrls,
Crisp, Richard Dailey, Carl Bill Myers, Brenda Nelson,
Davidson, Leno•a Davis, Eddie Tina Nlert, Vickie Oberholzer,
Diddle, Bennie Dillon, Larry Diana Painter. Ro•le Pal·
Fridley, Belinda Friend, terson. Debra Pierce, Diane
Cynthia Garnes, Joy Hayes, Ridgway, Pat Roboon, Joe
Maureen Hennessy, Brian Rosenbaum, Sandra Ruschel,
Justice, Anita King, Nancy Jeannie Schneider, Patty
Lawrence, Cynth ia Manley, Searles, Gall Sizemore, Bill
Vlclor McCI 0ud, VI rginia Slack, Albert Smith, Jill Smith,
Laura Hoover, Jim Hutton,

HECK'S REG. $2.49 PAIR

ClOTH//" DEPT.

-----,..--

The Meigs High School honor
roll for the fourth six weeks
grading period Is being announced. Making a grade of
"8" of above In all their
subjects to be listed are:
NINTH GRADE - Sandra ·
Carleton , Karen Coleman,
Ginger Cullums, Cindy Eads,
Elaine Fish, Scott Fraser,
Cherie Fry, Crystal Glaie,
Cynthia Glaze, William Gloyd,
Darla Harper, Andrew Hoover,

PILLOW
CASES

$500

HECK'S REG. $3.99 EACH

$]00

•

9t

·'

due!ed legislation to require
any Income tax lncreiles to be
approved by the voters or twothirds of the legislature, and to
return Veterans' · Day to.
November 11.
- Senate Minority ~
Anthony 0. Calabrese.• J).
Cleveland, offered &amp; resolution
caUing for the gradual phaling
out of Cleveland Slate Hoapltal.
-Sen. Donald E. Lukens, R·
Middletown, introduced a resolution opposing amnesty for
draft dodgers and deserters.
Both chambers return at 1:30
p.m. todav,

and sent to the Senate a bill
authorizing an additional
judgeship each for EtYrta and
Lorain J;Ilunlcipal' courts.
Camera and Rep, Donald J.
Pease, J).()berlin, pointed out
each city is close to the 1110,.000
population required for a
second judge.
Pease
said
criminal
caseloads have nearly trebled
in Elyria during the last 10
years, and Camera said they.
have doubled in Lorain.
ln other legislative action:
- House Minority Whip Alan
E. Norris, R·Westerville, inlro-

Auditions for. Gallia Country planned
including actors, act~esses,
singers and dancers, along
with choruses, quartets and
madrigals. A minimum .of 14
male and eight female. parts
are needed, plus understudies.
All production phases will be
under the supervision of Murl
Rush, executive producerdirector. Mr. Rush has had
many years experience in
professional theater and is
employed by Taft Broad·
casting in Cincinnati. The
music has been arranged by AI
Evans, an internationallyknown arranger and composer.

Vocal supervision will be by
Anne Fisher, music director of
Gallia Academy.
Choreography is by Gillian
Moore ,
who
danced
professionally for many years
with the Royal Academy of
Dance in London, England and
throughout Europe, and now
teaches in Gallipolis.
Auditions for the roles in
"Gallia Country" will be open
to the public starting at I p, m.
Saturday and Sunday, March
24 and 2a, at the auditorium of
Wa sh ington Elementary

School, 4th Avenue, Gallipolis. Thelma Elliott at the GalllpoiL!i
Anyone interested in further Chamber of Commerce, 16
information should notify Mrs. State St., or call 446-0596.

•· :·.
··,

.

~-

' .

. _: ·1
.,

.·· :

....

PPLIES

BUILDING?
·REMODELING?
REPAIRING?
ON

'I .,
• . !,
.\

'

USED CARS

:-

~:

'•,'1_:,

•••

WEATHER

t'.
' I ,•·
j

-Framing lumber

WARMER •••
VALUES .

Check Our Price Before You Buy!

HOTIER!
,

..... LO

.

:1.\,_
··- ·,
. ·''

'

'"

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT.

·Jrd Ave.

ij

' •.':

-Ooors, Windows
-Roofing, Paints

Middleport

PH. 773·5554

MASON, W. VA.

. SPORTS DEPT.

~--~

' I.

Free Delivery

Meigs honor winners announced

TWIN FITTED

Ions, shags, tweeds, or sol-

OR

Social
.*
1Ca Iend ar

HECK'S REG. $3.99

AREA RUGS

FUR TOSS PILLOW

Similar

$144

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

tlOT~DIPT.

PANTS

HECK'S REG.

DAN PRESS-NO IRON

Football JerHty look with colored num~t~r on frofll . Contra5ting 'olored neck &amp; slee¥e band. Sizes S, M, l, XL.

$199

. HECK'S REG.
$2.99

DAN RIVER

MEN'S FOOTBALL NUMBEII .

would be needed to get the
question on the ballot.
The bill wotild affect about 90
nonebarter cities, the largest of
which are Lorain, Parma and
Canton.
1u An Unneeded Bill"
'
"There is no interest in four·
year tenns .in Canton," Levitt
said. "If they want four-year
terms they can adopt a
charter. Without my amend·
ment, this is a very, very bad
bill -an unneeded bill."
Levitt's amendment carried,
47-43.
The House also pa!ised, 91·1,

.·,: ."•'•

',:. •..,_

.. ,.

ZEBCO 600
REEL
Closed Face

EVEREADY 6 VOLT •.

LANTERN
W~h

Heck's

Reg. 4.99
1

Batteries

$299

•s••

12 x 12 DINING CANOPY
Complete witt~ nylon ropes, steel stakes, 6' eaves,

adjustable ce nter pole to 8 feet . Water and rot proof.

HECK'S REG. s7.99

REBEL
LURES

HECK'S REG. $19.99

SPOITS DEPT.

$14

99

SLEEPING BAG
Feotures practica l ond economical
quilt-through design with 2 Y.l lb. warm
1 11
' •

HECK'S RIG.

$

f88

'

.

$l3.9 9 SPOITS DEPT.

GOLF BALLS

99

ROOSTER

NO. 90, PKG. OF 3

LURES

LANDING
NETS

59

HECK'S REG.
$1.45

TAIL

HECK'S REG.

T090'

5x7 ·

VINYLTARPS

SORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $3.28

OLD TIMER KNIFE
HECK'S REG.
$488
$6 .99

HECK'S REG.
$.1 .58

99&lt;

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store.With A Heart,
You, WE LIKE"
Right reserved to limit quantities
0

SPOITS DEPT.

SPOITS DEPT.

We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps

.

10 QT.

MINNOW
BUCKET
$168
HECK'S REG.
. $2.77

STEELON
'
LEADERS
6"-9"-12"

HECK'S
REG.
TO 35 1

25(

SPOITS DIPT.

ILASH UGHI

IAnERY

BAIT CANTEEN
HECK'S REG. .
$2.99

$1 88

SPOITSDIIT.

HECK'S REG.
16' EACH

SPOITS DEPT.

HECK'S
"D'' SIZE
BATTERIES

EVEREADY

Prices Effective Mar. 21·28

6VOLT

Monday Thru Friday

LANTERN
BATTERY

9:00 to 7:00

'99(
50(
4FOR

SI'Oin/JIIr.

Saturday 9 to 9

CLOSED SUNDAYS .

•

Fairmont Buys! ·

OnAGE CHEESE

: ·69•

30

MIGHTY

2%
MILK
.
.

· 89~

2
. -,

No. 1
cans

GOLDEN - GRAIN
.
MACARONI AND
CHEDDAR DINNER
.WAGNER'S
.
.
ORANGE-PINEAPPLE

SPALDING DOT

HECK'S REG.
TO $1.68

NYLON

..

CAMPBELL'S
VEGETABLE
SOUP ·

pkgs.

for

32 oz.
jars

LIPTON
INSTANT
TEA
CHEF BOY~AR-DEE
CHEESE PIZZA
SINGLES

1 lit

jar

Fresh
.Lean

$

LB.

$
GROUND ROUND

$ 19

From
USDA Choice

HOME MADE

on~

_
CHEESE
SPREAD

can
Reg. 55'

39

tb. '

0

FRESH ALL MEAT

$ 05

lb
I

SLICED
BOLOGNA

lb.

CELERY

half Size
'

;:·.:

\' ,,
I' I

•• ' • I

-~umbo

..

1; 1,

' ~J

bunch

300
·cans

PORK&amp;· BEANS

\

'•
'

each

sHOWBOAT
HERSHEY'S.
INSTANT cOCOA

USDA Choice

Beef

BUNKER HILL
BEEF STEW
STAR KIST
CHUNK
UTE TUNA

$

2~b.

can

U.S. Nq. ~

.

IDAHO 10 lb.
pOTATOES

Large Size

99~

HEAD

Lmurl

eazs~

•

�. ,.

..

•I.

'
'

•' r
J

'

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-

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.

12- The DaUySentlllel. ~dti"'~Pcmeroy,O., Marcb21 'f/3

Sei&amp;tinel Classifieds Get ActiontSentinel Classifieds·'(;ef RBsultsi
-~

1\A.t
IN~ORM.ATIQN

'(l\ ·2 OF

IIIADL~NI!S'

.,

I

J --P.M . Dly Btforo Publlclilon.
Mondty Dtad"ne·9 a.m.
C•nctlll.tlon.- Corrections
Will btac~pled unlll9"o·.m. !Iii
Dey ot.PubiiCatlon
. . lti~ULATIONS
,
Tift Publisher reserv" the
right to edit oweltct any Ids
:doomed . otrlftllonol. . Tht
:Publl"'er will not bt roaponslblt
lor ~· More · than ont ,lnc:dfrtd
Insertion .
·
·'
,
UTES
, For Wtftl Ad Serv.l~• .
.5 cents per word one ln.. rt.~
,
l'ollni!I.!Um Chorgel~: :' .
12 . ~entr ·per word '..thi'.. .
conte.c.UHvt ll'\ltrtlona.
· 11 centa per word six "-·
aecullvt Insertions.
·. ·:.
25 Per Coni Olscoun 1 .,;, po_~
edsond eds!lald wit~ In "to·di!,V.
CUD OF THANKS -· ' ;,
&amp; OIITUARY ···
$1.50,... 50 word mlnlmpl!\
Each addltlon-.1 word 2c. ~ ..
ILINO ADS · ,Additional 15c Char~ !~r
'ctvettlument.
.· '
OFFICJ; HOURS
1:30 l .m. 10 .5:00 p.m. -.O IIIy,
1: 30 e.m. to 12 :00 N""r

~

PolllrOJ

. .,

..

,•

.... .

'

;fAK!: HER ...
PLACE,

.. ... I

.PAw ..

·-Busm·'·es"s'. Se.-iqr:c·.e·s·-

•
·AUDITIONS!!

:'f •• '

!

1910 PONTIAC
$1391
Flreblrd Esprit. Local. 1 owner car, 350 V-8 engine, P.
steering &amp; automotic trans., AM-FM radio, like new while
1 lettered tires , dark brown finish. bucket seat &amp; blk. vinyl
trim. A sharp one. Really loaded.

•

i

i ' '--~-

•

_____

1969CHEVELLE
$1795
Malibu Cpe., local I owner car, dark grn. finish , ilk~ new
white loitered tires, 307 V-8, power steering &amp; bral&lt;es,
·
radio, clean Int.

FOR RENT

il~~~~:"'?'
OFFJCf SUPPLIFs" l
·· All WEAtHER
lriir· ·
ROOFING AND_
SM11H
NFI SON. I
MNSTRUCilON ;s;op InFORNITURE
.
ltid 'see- our:
MOTORS.
.INC.
.
. .:Floor
Display.
:
ftt4174"
·
·
l'omeNy
.
PRIME~ 992-2550
.
'

BARGAINS~ ARE OUR MID· ·

GRAY MANOR
APARtMENTS ·

Pomeroy Motor Co.

. ; · PRqfiABLY THE

! \\ONDeR WHAT

'

~O SE

. ,.,,

FARMERS ARE

PROS ANP CONS OF
ORGANIC FARMING

' HAVE vou· ~ EARO THE
ONE ABOUT T~ E PROF~SSOR'S
PAUG~TE'~ ~ ,

D I SCUSSING~

1

j
EXPERT
: ~Mieet" Alignment

r.ooD TRUSSES

"HElL'' '

50L,THEFJ RST

DUKE COULD
CONCEAL .

HIS .1. · .
DI5Gf'JICE.--

I

I ·'

l. •·

HrtinNG &amp;
COOL.•ING

i

- - - - - --

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

to

...

. ' f ..
' .'. ~

.'•

tVE: 15EEN AFRAID
ADMIT IT, CIIEN 1tl
M'lOEL~ BUT l
7HINI( J:M IN
Lrof: WITH
HAL.

.'
.'

••

--

-------

DANCE

:,:·
./
...,...•,· .

..

BUT.:t 'TI:M.D YOU ...
THE TV IS BWOKfiN,.,

STOP WAIC'I~ MV
WEFWIGEWATOR 't'OU
HAIR-BWAINEC' ~RE!

1'1'16 NOT

· •.

,

WORI&lt;IN~I

L

REALLY CIII?E
WHAT HAPPENe
TO HIM . WHEN l

~OUGHT

HE WA&amp;
GONE I WAf7
Mt:}EAAeLE. L
WANT HIM 1lJ
13E HAPPY!

o.

-

,.•. ' ' 'i

,;

. POMEROY

OLE NAME II Shopping
around now so that your
INCOME TAX REFUND
.
.
..
CHECK will stretch further
this year? Come on out to ·
~.....,.,...,.,..,-__, . - ~~::::::::;;=~
KUHL'S BARGAIN CENTER ' a.. to· 1.'.1ASK US ABOUT
&amp; see for yourHif that you 1111
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
PAY
LESS
&amp;
GET
MORE,
.
..
Middleport, 0.
PRE-FABRICATED
POMEROY, OHIO
Slturda·y.
whether you're shopping for 1972 HONDA 500 moforcycle, 4
NEW furniture, USED fur cylinder, many extru, like · I
' '·
.
nlfure or GUARANTEED,
new; phone 985-3828.
I Efflcloncy Apt. with new
USED appliances. NEW
3·9-Hc
furniture , all utllilles paid.
Card of Thanb
Notice
Notice
FURNITURE :
Couches,
011 Mosf Anlirlcari ·ea,
mafchlng ·chairs, set $149.95 1968 VOLKSWAGEN station
WE WISH to thank the many .. . . ..
·
RUMM
2 Furnished Apfs. with new
· ·· ·
· · · ·
· • ' ....friends and relellvos for their 2 PIECE lradlllonalllvlng room
AGE Sale at Coals
up (quality nylon or herculon
furniture , with or wllhoul
wagon. See aliOS Union Ave..
-GUARANTEEDflowers, food, help and exsuite with 90" sofa and extra . Building In Middleport;
coverings even In lowest price
Built to Your 'Specs'
Pomeroy. C. II '192·3293.
Phone 992·2094 i
hiAh back Mr. Chair; special
'March 22 and 23; 9 a.m. to 3 utilities. Both have I or 2
presslons of sympathy; also
range); ~ pc. maple bedroom:
Dtlivor_
t dto_Job ~Ill
3·20-6fc
.
.
-.
·
,
.
bedrooms.
No
Pet-5.
the White Funeral Home for
this week only $139.50, casti
p.m.
dresser, mirror, chest, bookPomeroy Home &amp; Auto
and
carry:
Pomeroy
3-21-21c
their kindness during the
case headboard bed, $100; . .. ..
oPeniTIIS
.,
HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
recent death of our husband,
Recovery, 622 E. Main St.,
Phone: 992-3863
maple chest of . drawers, 4· 1965 MERCURY, good 390
father and grandfather, Jesse . Pomeroy, phone 9'12-75~ .
YARD Sale, Thursday and
engine
and
transmission
.
Monday
thru
Saturday
·.
drawer
$25,
5-drawer
SJO;
3
Till P. M.
MATERIALS CO.
Body damages, $150. See
E. Main, Pomore ,0,
M. Newell. Wife, Velma 'l-~---"""'o.......3_·~16--6...;,1p
Friday, March 22nd and 23rd,
pc. coffee, step-table sets
606
or 992-5844
owner
In
tr1ller
across
from
._
..
......
..
.
·
173-5554
MISOII, W. ~I_·
Newell; sons, Hobert and r
~~ a.m. fill dark, Clair Boso
$16.95; patchwork, prlnf or
Bradbury
School.
Clair Newell and nrand-'
residence, Great Btrid ; Men,
Alter6 p.m.
solid swivel rockers $69.95 ;
3-20-3tp EX~AVATING, dozer, loedeiwomen's
children's
vinyl recliners, block,tan and
children.
winter and and
summer
Clothing
and backhoe work; Hptlc G &amp; E APpliance Repair; repair
S69.95; cloth sola beds
3-21 -ltp
Including complete Boy Seoul PRIVATE meeting room for green
tanks Installed: dump truck• : on all laundry equipment,
S72.95 (one In gold -green . 1969 FORO Ronger 1 ton F-350;
uniform, formal, long dress,
refrigeration equipment and
any organization ; phone 992- floral brocade! ; 7 pc. c~rome
and
to-boys for hire; will haul
with or wllhouf new 12 fl.
house · wiring ; welding,
girls ' site 11 new pants, · 3975.
fill dirt, top son; llmesfone
Lost
dinettes
$88. KUHL'S stock of
factory
slake
body,
390
tft
Tupperware, small apelectric
and gas. Call 9'12-3802
3-11-lfc
arid
gravel;
call
Bob"
or
Rogor
·USED furniture Includes: 8 engine, long wheel base,
~OST OR STOLEN - English
pllances, records, books,
or otter 4:30 p.m. cell 992·
Jelfei'S, day phone 9'12·7019;
pet.
wooden
dining
room
power
brakes,
power
Springer Spaniel, liver and
flrescreen
and
other
6050.
steering, rough fires, air· nlohf phone 992·3525 or 992·
trailer ; lf&lt; mile suites $125; chest-5, dressers,
white. "Corky" on Kingsbury
household
Items
too FURNISHED
J.2f.30fp
5232.
.
bookcases
;
desk;
conditioned,
47,300
miles;
beds;
Rd., Reward . Harold H.
from Pomeroy Corp . on Rt.
Furnac~
Controlsnumerous
to
mention;
for
2·11-lft
chrome dlnefles: TV's,
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom,
Smith, Phone 992-6656.
33; phone 9'12-2941.
"READY -MIX
CONCR-ETE
more Information call 8-13record
players,
radios.
ALL
phone
985-3554.
3-20·4tp
3-18-7tc
delivered
.
right
to your
HUMIDIFIERS
24u.
major appliances have 30-day
3-4-lfc {EI! ·us FOR:' Awnings. 'storm~
·: -·
pro/eel.
Fesf
and
eesy.
FrH
J.21
-21p
GUARANTEES:
relrlg - - - -- --....:..-.::.:
doors and windows, carporfs,' est males, Phone 992-3214.
jl
Hot Water Heaters'
DUPLEX wall to wall car- erat~rs
found
$25 up; chest, 1972 GMC Sprint 1'2 fan pickup; ' marquees, aluminum siding
'
'
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
REDUCE excess fluids with peting, 2 bedrooms; 2 upright freeters from $65;
Plumblnft·
350 V-8, automatic, power
and ralllnu . A. Jacob, sales
AT POMEROY Elementary
bedroom house : phone 992MlddltfiOI'I, Ohio.
·
Fluldex,
Lose
weight
with
aulo. washers W ; gas or
steering and brakes; low
represenfelive. For freiJ
. Electrical Work
School, small brown and
6-30-IIC .
Dex-A-Diet capsules af 2780 or 992-3432.
mileage; phone 7-42-3111.
esllmefes. phone Chari•
elect. dryers $35; 30", 36" gas
while dog, perf Basenji, 6 to 8
Nelson Drugs.
Or elect. ranges ; 1 port. dishJ.21-6tc
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
months old. Phone 593-8040 or
SEPTIC TANKS CLIANED
3-21 -Jtp
washer. KUHL'S BARGAIN
Johnson and Son, Inc.
992-2710.
~EASONABLE ratos. Ph . .U..
CENTER, St. Rf . 1 " at 1963 VOLKSWAGEN; phone .
3-2-lfc . 4782, Gallipolis, John Ruuell ,
Pets For Sale
3-20-Jtc
Employment Wanted
caution light," Tuppers . 98H118.
.. -- .
..:
Owner &amp; Operator.
REGISTERED Toy
Fox Plains, Ohio. Open to 6 p.m.
J.21-3tc BEAT the rush! Get your
•
5·12·11•
EXI'EIUENCED pointer, In·
Terriers ; -2 males ; 8 weeks Closed MONDAYS ONLY.
lawnmower and filler tuned '
992-2448
terlor and exterior. Phone
old; $35; phone 742-5625.
Phone 667·3858.
Mobile Homes. For Sale·
up now; Small Engine Repair
AucfionHr
1'85-3951.
Pomeroy.
3·18-6tc
3-18-71c
Shop on Third St., Mason, W. I C. BRADFORD,
Complete Service
3-20-JOip
~------_.:
1969 GREGORY mobile h~e, Va.
Phone 949-3821
· Your Right Know
I WILL not be res onslble for
ONE
Registered
Charolals
bull,
2-bedroom, front klfchen, 81
J.6-301c
children playing and gelling BABYSITTING In my home, 5 For Sale
tr~''lrJr.d ·
days a week, 7:30a.m; to 5:30
3 years old. Phone 9'12·3640 ·fl. by .200 II., lot, Vlno St., O'DELL WHEEL alignment
and be Informed of the func hurt on my prorrty. James
·
5. ; .t1c
p.m. dally. Call 9'12-7828 after BUILDING lois lor sale at Rock
beRaclne, uli,litv ,building. Can locoteda!Crossroads Rl 124
alter 5:30p. m.
tions ot yOur government art
B. Phillips. 1 Cave Sf.,
5;30
p.m.
embOdied In pubtrc notices. In
3-15-61c
seenafted:30
p.m.
Asking
complete
front
end
'ser~lce;
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Ohio. Close to Meigs
that self-government char ges
$7,000. Contacf Gene Hudson tune up and brake service: . Dl)£t~ and· ·..acli -hoe ,.,,.,
3-20-Sfc Springs,
3-20-Jtp
High
School
with Tuppers
111 citizens to be Informed;
or phone 949·333-4.
Wheels balanced elec- . ,- ponda ond sepflc fanks, dll·
Plain water. Size 112 acre and YoODERN Walnut Console, AMthll newspaper urges everv ,
LIGHT
doter
work
and
set-up
3-19-Jtc
tronlcally.
All
work '
cl•lng service; fop soil. 1111
FM
radio,
4
speed
automaflc
larger. 9'12-2789.
'Citizen to read and si!JdV these .
trailers; phone 742-5980. ·
Reasonable
dirt, llmosfoM; B&amp;K Ex2-25-JOip changer, 4 speaker sound -;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;=~~ guoranteod.
notices . Wt strongly advise ·
rates. Phone 9'12-3213 or 742cevallng . Phone 992-$367,
:J.21-6tc
.
system, separate controls. f'
those citizens, seeking further
32:12.
Dick Ko~r. Jr.
Information, to exercise their
ALUMINUM Car top boats, 10, Balance $78.50. Use our
·r. Air Conditioners • •
right of , aceen to publ ic
2-18-ttc
·
12
and
13
fl.
Kingsbury
Rd
.,
budget
terms.
Call
992-7015.
--~~-~~-.:....:.
9·1-llc
Busiless Opportunities
· '
• Awnings .
records and public meetings,
Co. Rd . 18, Phone 992-6256 _ _____ ___3_-_IH
_ Ic
EX~AVA'TING. Dozers, largo
•·· ·Under~innitlQ
OWN yout own business ; 4 to 6
after 5 p. m.
·
and small; Backhoes and R
hours dally; small investment
3-8-JO!c MAPLE stereo-radio combinallon,
AM-FM
radio,
4
j
omplele
mobile
.
hqm(
·
Loaders on track and tires;
eal Esfate for Sale
buys necessary Inventory ; ·
NOTICE OF
call 1-614-962-5397.
1- 7 year old Palomino mare, 1 ~akers. 4 speed changer,
er"ice
pi 1 1 a II
Dumr. trucks - Lo-boy' - - - - - - - - -....,.APPOINTMENT
•
~ mobile
u g n c
Ser"• ce,· Septic tanks InNo. 20,12J
- year old Palomino stallion,
ua1 vo Iume con Iro I. Bal • nco
lsplay
of
3·11·10tc
.Eita,t e of samuel Q . Barnhart
3weanedagecolls. Phone 742 . $81 .19. Use our budget forms. • 'we ·
bl
.,..
stalled;
George (BIIII
Call 9'12-7085.
'" ys .ave 11 0 e.a 1 "'
P,ul,llns; phone.992
, -2'71.
~ '. .
I
,.I DtCI.. !td.
Fri . 1!o .Silt. Night
2
Nolrce Is hereby Given that
.
'
Help
Wanter'
5
$1
.
3·20-6fc
.
J.15-6tc_
.....
'MI'LLIII;"·'f'.
• 2·9·""'
10 til2
I Emma H1yman whose Post
OffiCI Address Is Syracuse,
WANTED - Driver for garbage
and Balinese kittens; Sl NGEh 1R a 1u1ktomaflc1 sew11ng , MOilLE MOMES
HASaRr~llcSeOCaN'S11 sT.VphonSerev~- end.
Ohio hu betn duly appointed u
Ozark 4 pc . band
truck to drive and pickup In SIAMESE
excellent
quality
;
perfectly
mac
ne;
e
new
n
wa
nul
.
·
.
.
.
,
,,.
•
'" 25
Adm inistratrix with the Will
Pomeroy ; must be over 21;
from Pksbg., W. Va.
annexed of tht Estate of Samuel
trained;
call
614-«6-«1
alter
cabinet.
Makes
design
sHt·
1!!0
Wuillngton
Blvd.
.
2·9-lfc
6
call JOH28-S877 or leave word
Q. Bornhort, lalt of Mttgs
2
p.m.
af
Gallipolis
.
ches,
zig-zags,
buttonholes,
,
!
42~7521
IE
LPRE,
c.
at City Hall .
Coun·ty , Ohio, deceased .
blind hems
ELNA 'and . w" hila s"e"w"ln_H
_
3·16-6lc . 585.
• overcasts ' etc
.•, .__
:.. .
3-21-6tc _ _ _ _ __ _ _:....:,:
Deled lhls 1/th day ol March
Call · Ravenswood,
273Mach ines ... Hrvlce on a
·came and Celebrate
110 Meehan!&lt;: Street
1973.
Landmark's 40th Annlverurv
COLLECTORS •Item, Moun- 9S21 or 273-9893.
.
.· A~.' peru rur all ma&lt;es auu
makes. Reasonable rates.
NEEO someone to -cut grass,
talneer Lady and John Henry.
1-11 -lfc
models of mobile homes . The Sewing Centor, Mid·
Mannino D. Webster
trim grapes and flowers;
Pomeroy, Ohlo
bollle. Phone 992.1138.
--------Phone area code 614-423-9531.
dleporf, Ohio.
SPRING
Common Pleas Court,
write Box 729-E, c-o The Dally
3·1fc
3-20-61c
..
,
4-l
11
·16-lfc
Probate Division ,
Sentinel , Pomeroy, 0.
Meigs County, Ohio
O~EN HOUSE
3-18-61c -Ho_u_s_e_an_d_2-,r-a-ne-r-,o-,s-.-Phone
1968 SKYLINE, 12 • ""· ; SEPTI.C TANKS AROB1t
(31 21. 28 W s, Jtc
BARGAIN
.
.
bedrooms; phone 985-4118.
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEAN·
3APARTMENTS
- all utlllllos
992
5693
MARCH 21·24
36"x2311x.oot
3-21-Jtc
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER - 2 apartments rented.
Wanted
SANITATION, STEWART.' .ocated on Mulberry Ave Only
l
NOTICE ON FILING
FrH
Rtfreshmonts
.
. '
•
DE~D Slock horses, cattle,
,
.
Real
Estate
for
OHIO. PHONE 662-3035.
1 llO,OOO.OO.
OF INVENTORY
Comtln Register For
AN[! APPRAISIMENT
hogs, oheep. Reasonable CARPETS and life too can be ,
4 11
SPACIOUS hEW HOME
70 ACRE farm with limber' 5 -= =,---- ---'0.
'- • &lt;
beautiful II you use Blue
Tho Stilt of Ohio. Meigs
charge. Cali 245-5514.
BEDROOMS
- Garoge,
County. Problfl Court.
Lustre .
Rent
electric ·
bedroom paneled home with "sewiNG MACHINES. R 1.
FREE PRIZES
2·28-JOic
To the Extcutrl x of tt1e
shampooer, Sl. Nelson's Drug I
modern kitchen and bath ; servitl!, all mokos. 992:. large ccrner lot, all electric,
tOiate ; lo such bl lhe following
9.~ ·
POMEROY
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio.
· USED OFFSET PLATES
phone 992-6947.
• The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. large beautiful kitchen, l'h
111 are res idents of the s tate of
Q Jack W. C1rsey, Mgr.
HAVE
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
.:_
3·20
::.:·21c
:
=,.....,,------3-_18-61c "Authorlled Singer Salas anti beths. one with sliding glass
Ohio, viz : - the surviving
Phonet92-2111
MANY
USES
spouse, the next or kin , tht - ·- . . . .
.
'Hous ;;- '" Lonu Boflom, phane Service. We Sharpen Sciuors. doors. Only S21,00.00.
2 CORNER LOTS
beneficiaries under lht will ; KOSCOT "KOSMETICS AND
CORN ; phone 91.1-4211 .
985-3529.
. '
. J.29-ttc
1
Licensed Ohio
tnd to thtlftorney or attorneys
WIGS. SPECIALS MONTHRUTLAND - 2 bedrooms, nlco
3-9-121
6-11-Hc' i-Air; rTm:: Masonr y worli ;" bath, garage, and utility
ropruontlng any ol th e
LV .
BROWN'S
INDE·
Property &amp; Casualty
.:c-.:----~.....,_...,_,,......,..
_ -.:.:.:
free esllmafl : call 773·5580.
atoromtnlloned persons:
PEN~ENT
DISTRIBU ·
I for $1.00
building . ASKING
Just
Fr1nk E . Titus, Pomeroy,
""'
1973 STEREOIIrack, mvst sell
Insurance
Agent
8
ACRES.
Good
building
site
or
3-7-JOip $7,500.00.
Ohio, Salisbury Township,· No .
TOR , MIDDLEPORT .
for balance due of $98.10 or
trailer
lots.
On
Rt.
143.
Phone
-::-::-:-:--:-:---10114.
PHONE 9'12·5113.
An Independent Insurance
take over payments of $7.7! ~
VERY LARGE
9'12-3640 after 5:30p. m.
WILL frim or cut frftl, Clean
You are hereby notified that
2-23-tfc
agency In Pomeroy, needs
per
month.
Call
9'12-5331.
.
CORNER
LOT - 4 Bedrooms,
3·15-6tc out basements, attics, efc.
the
Inventory
and
Ap 3-21-6fc .
living about 38x16. Nice kitPhone U9-3221.
praisement of the eotate of the 'HO'oo·~ ~&lt;QUAR 1u·Ms . fish' someone with license as
lfOrtmentloned, decened, tate
d
~ t .
junior partner and future
J.lf.JO!c ehen, basement, 2 modern
1
of said County. was flied In this , an supples;
new
• ion,
sale to right party. It' you
LEFT in layoway, 1973 Zig-Zag
-;,.;;.--';:-;o
. ~.-;;:0"'-=
---~. ~.-:,-,
..
,.,
_
=,;,
. · - . beth a. Front and back porchos.
Court . Said Inventory and
Ash Street, Middleport near
want to own an Insurance
Sewing Machine . This ·
. AUTOMOBILE· Insurance beeli Went only $21 900 00
.O.pprolumenl will be lor
park ; phone 9'12·5443.
machine darns, ambroldtrs,
St
;"""'CLELAND~
hearing before this Court on lh e
1-7-lfc
agency, write, giving
· cancell~d?
Lost
your
OHIO RIVER LAND
overcasfs and monogram s.
30th dayot March , 1973, at 10 :00
resume to Box 666 , Pomeroy,
.
REALTY
=
.•for
s
license?
Call
9923
ACRES
PLUS- 1972 mobile
Pay balance of 541.50 or pey -~ .. · · ·
·
.
,.
o'clock A.M .
' BEGINNING Afrll I, 1973 , 0 . ~5169.
.oaE.Mtln
U per month . Call 9'12-5331 COAL, Limestone, ExcelsiD)
6-IS-Ifc . home 65x12. · Screened patio
Any person
dltslrlng to file
• Pomtroy ~
3.21 .61,: . Soil Wor~, E. Main _st.
exceptions
thereto
must file
Showalter's We Pet Shop will ..
.....,-~--~--16x20. 11ft baths, air con..
Pomeroy. hone 9'12-3891 .
them 11 least five days prior to
be open 4 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Wanted' To' luy
dlllqlllng. 18' fiberglass boat
ttlt dltt set for hearing .
dally, all day Saturday, .
.~
..
(3) 1973 Zlt'Zag Sewing
·
~- 12-tfc
with 120 H. P. motor and
EXCELLENT LOCATION
Given under my hand and seal
Sunday and Holidays.
WANTED _ 'OLD UPRIGHT
Mach inn le In layaway · rra;
..
• About
All this for $21,500.00.
trailer.
1 acre. 9 room frame.
Baoutllul f.asfel color fuli 2 P
fradlllonarTrvir:f room
Real
For Sale
~a~~~~~~¥."' lhls 17th day of
3·18-121p
PIANOS. Any condition .
. SPLIT LEVEL
size
mode
.
All
bufit.in
sulfa
with
90"
sofa
an
extra
4
bedrooms,
bath,
porches.
10
Mann ing D. Wobsler p
Paying $10 each, First floor
buttonhole, do strotch sewl~ hi?,h back Mr. Chair; special Close to shopping. Also nice
2'1&gt; ACRES in Flatwoods area; 4 BEDROOMS - All electric
Judge and ex-officio UREBR EO sale - 6th annual
only. Write giving directions.
and fancy stitching. Pay Ius
th s week only S139.95, cash apartmenf lor additional
phone 742·3171.
heme, 1'12 baths, basement,
Clerk of sold Court
W. Va . ' Polled Hereford
Pianos, P. 0. Box 188, Sardis.
$48.75 cash or terms and
carry;
Pomeroy Income. $18,500.00.
J.21 -61c nlce,kllchen with dining area. 1
Spring Show and Sale March
Ohio 43946. '
available. Trade-Ins ac - Recovery, 622 E. Main St.,
By Ann B. Wataon
24, 1973 ot Jackson Mills State
--------acres of land nur town .
3·18-6tp
INCOME PROPERTY
Deputy Clerk
Pomeroy, phone 9'12·75~.
cepled. Phone 992-7755,
4·HComp ..Seliing 34 bulls and
IN
Rutland,
3
bedroom
home,
$30,000.00.
131 21, 18, 21c
Electro Hygiene Co.
3·16·6tp l&gt;omeroy. Nice 2, bedroom
18 heifers. For Information, 100 RAILROAD Ties, fair to
fully carpele!l, ' built-In kitCOUNTRY HOME
apartment, baaem1nt ,
write : Jim Westfall, Rt. 2,
3-2t -6tc
ehen
·
with
dlshwesher,
'hot
2
YEARS
OLD - 3 nit* s111
good condition . Phone 742NEW FOAM to fill rour old garage . For living. 10
Box 115, Spencer, W. Va. or
6825.
water
heat,
fenced
yard;
bedrooms
with large closets.
cushions , standard s 11 suite, sleeping rooms for lnccme.
coil 927-2104.
742-317l . ·
3-15-6tp (21 ELECTROLUX Vacuum
Tile Almanac
phone
.
_
c
Large
llvlnu.
nice kitchen wlfh
Pomoroy Call lor an appolntmenf
3 21 61
· Cleaners complete with at- only . $9 .95.
3-20·4tc
Recovery.
622
E.
Main
St.
dining.
all
carpeltd.
Utility and
By Ualled Prell IDienlalloaal
lachments, cordwlnder and
today.
L.O.RGE metal building. Phone , paint
3·8-JOip
two
garagH.
125,000.00.
sprat. Used but In like
!YEARS OLD
LOTS on Wright Sf .. phone 742·
Today Is Wednesday, March
U2-J182.
new cond lion. Pay $34.-15
6630.
'
Beautiful
Middleport.
3
3-20-Jtc
21, thi! IIOth day of 1973 with 285
cash or b~et Y:len evallable. UPHOl STERY mater fills, bedroom home. Lovely
A FREE ATLAS IS YOURS AT
,
3-16-12tc
regularly 53.95 on/1. $1.95.
Phone 99 -7 55, Electro
to follow.
'
•
By PHIL PASTORET
l'HE
OFFICE. DROP IN AND
·OLIJ furniture , oak table~.
Also remnants. omeroy kitchen, dining R.. utility R.,
filiCK
IT UP.
11te moon Is .approaching its Keeping ship-shape is what organs, dishes, clocks, brass Hygiene Co.
bafh,
carpefed.
Pallo, 'HousE · f:OR'·s.o:re; 114 Brick
Recovery, 622 E. Main St.
J.21 -6tc
bed$ or complete houHholds.
HELEN -L. TEAFQRD
last quarter.
3-8.30fp
besimenl.
Level
lot
1QOx120.
·
JIStrHt,
Pomeroy,
·Clhto;
brick
'
some hefty persons do.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt, 4, '10 YAMAHA 175
GO.RDON B. lEA FORD
house, 3 bedrooms, excellent
·/
$23.0110.00.
Enduro ;
The mornillf! stars are Venus,
• • •
Pomeroy, Ohio. · Phone m. phone 742-5980.
UPHOLSTERY materials;
ASSOCIATES
location, close to school and
RUTLAND
AREA
6271.
Man, Mercury and Jupiter.
Nylon
prints,
cotton
prints,
city;
contact
Lou
Osborne
or•
NO
SUNDAY
SHOWINGS
3·21-61c
• years old. • bedrooms.
'
1-7-tfc
velvets of all kinds. Po1eroy closets, kitchen has IO.ds of
cafl 992·5898.
The evening star is Saturn.
··
m-ms
..
Recovery,
622
E.
Main
I.
,
:'
11·26·tfC
BEAR
Cat
r,llce
scanner
radio,
~-UIS
Th4l8e born on this date are
CLEAN copper , 45c lb.;
3-8,301p cablnet·s and range, dining
6 cr ysla s Included ; phone
' ~
area, bath . Storm windows &amp;
Wider the sign of Aries,
Radiators, clean, 211c lb.;
. . ' ..,
247-2404.
'
]1ft
acres
.
Ju
st
Brass , lk lb.; Batteries, 70c ;
UPHOLSTER your own fur· doors.
German composer Johann
3-21
-61c
lit
C1p1clly
Ginseng 160 lb.; M. A. Hall,
nllure. Foam cushions; any $16,900.00.
I
-MIYlll
SebasUan '.Bach was born
size. Cotton, burlap, swivel
. NEW 11/J YEARS
I
No, Gwendolyn, Little Red Reedsville, 378-6249. 3·9-tfc FRIGIDAIRE refrlt~tralor , one
AutoMotlcs
.
bases, tipper. webbing, welt. ,3 1011ely bedrooms • . bath,
March 21, 1185.
year old, excellent condition;
2
lpatd
operation.
!
Rid ing Hood wasn 't an au- - - - - - - - Pomeroy Recovery, 622 E. utility R., beautiful kll.cMn .
phone 949-1725.
On this day in history :
Cholet of Wlttr ,
burn-haired midget gangster
Main
St.
tempt
.
AUto .
3-21-Jtc
Dining
lrll,
hardwood
In 1790, Thomas Jefferson of on horseback.
1
For Rent
3·8 ·301~
Wittr
ltvtl'
floors. Some carpeting.
Virginia became the first u.s.
cbnfrol.
Lint ·
Carport wlfh storage room .
Filter
oiPower
3
AND
4
ROOM
lurnlahed
and'
Secretary of State. He later · ..--'..:....:'--~...-....--.-......._,.,.
Lot 100x100 In now eddlllon .
·Fin Agitator.
unlurnls~od
apartments.
'
waa the lblrd president of tile
521,500.00.
Perm1-Prus
Phone 992-5434.
'
MIYIII
OLD E.A IRICK
United States.
4-12-ttc I
The Edward Ebersbach house having
Nl,lo tf Htat
2
or
3
bedrooms,
bath,
now
-In 1945, 7,0110 Allied planes
Drrtr•
been sold, all of the furniture will be
!"RAILER, · Brown's TraHer
forced air furnace. Storm
Surround clothfl
dropped more than 12,000 tons
Park 1 phone 9'12·332~.
doors &amp; wlndowa. F-..ced lot.
sold. If interested please be at the
With Unfit, IVtn
of explMives on Germany
2·13-lfc
Garegl. se.soo.oo.
hoot. No hoi ipots,
residence
on Wright St., Pomeroy,
·no · ovordrylng, .
during a World War II daytime
TIME IS" GOING BY, :
m
~N;~~U~R~N-IS_H_E_D~-.--room
Fino Moah Lint .
PRICES ARE RISING,
Ohio, between the hours of 1:00 P.M.
bombing raid.
'
ap!lrtmont, 401 Spring Ave.,
~Iller . ·
.·
'
WHY
PUT
OFF?
BUY
NOW.
Pomeroy.
, Woi,.CIIIilt lo
In 1962, Soviet Premier Niklta
until 3:00 P:M, Saturday, March 24,
TO SELL LIST WITH ·US.
' 3-2-tfc
,
., MAYTAO , ·
1973,
, I
Khrushchev pledged tha 1
~ fi--Ctrflll ·
'
'
RwJsla ·would cooperate wllh
HlNRY E. CLELAND
lorvlce
2 BEDROOM mobile. h.,;e;
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
.
'· '
IROKER
completely
furnlahtd
;
call
the Upllld Statea in peaceful
I
n~
Re11 Est. Broker
9'12·2«1 a Her 5:30 p.m.
9t2·22Sf
'
expball1111 of 11P4ce.
'
Phone 915.4116
"741-4211
If ............ f92.2J61
2-1·tfC
P.O. Box 101, . Pomerov, Ohio
~ldGrelt
Rutland .

PUBLIC NOTICES

~··..:i '

- - ----

1970 REBEL
S14f5
American·Motors St. Wagon, onlr 31.500 mllos by original
local owner, good fires, grn. spo less vinyl Inferior, dark
green finish, 6 cyl. engine. std. trans .

•

"•''""''"'" ot:
BUSY'BOOVTO

2 BEDROOM mobile home, air·
conditioned; In Racine area ; S,6,VE 20 pet. Inventory
cle.arance sale now In
.1. 'Y .a
phone 9'12-6329.
3-16-Hc progress . 20 pet. discount on . • ·
~
' .. •
..
· . . ·
.
- ..... .
most of your grocery needs. 'u.!,_t,._,....;.,....;..._•.,,~,.,-:-.,.._;.,.._.,....,_ _ _ _~--~-----..-------,..al
2 BEDROOM trailer, close to This means you can Hve 20 '1-------:,....,--.,
mine site on Rt. 325, ..by week pel. on your groCery bill . Gel
or month, utllifles . pa id; the full details today at the
phone 742-!910.
Brtghf Sfar Market next fo . Hivo yllolr 111.,• built by:
J.20-61p Drive-In Theatre, Mason, W. · Custom lulld•ra. Our. · ' HOMI Ia 'AUTO
:car,.llftra ~~~~ 20 · yoirs
Va .
UNFURNISHED apartment,
3·20-16tc oxperlence In building·
992·2094
newly remodeled, no children, GROCERY business for sale. ,hlmf? In Mtlgs Oounty,
1606 E. Mlin . Pomeroy·
Redletor- to the
phone m-1101.
largest
Building for sale or lease.
Heater
Core.
Phone 773-5618 from 8:30p.m.
. ' . .
.
NoiiNin
lilts
.
to 10 p.m. for appointment.
R.HIIflll:
Sllocletltl
.....:....;
'
3·20-lfc
f,

Motor Co.

QUAlnY

for Sale

: For Rent

..

·, ~~

,~

•

AS A •MATT.ER 0'
l INVITED TH' HOOT IN'
HOlLER KNITTIN ' AN'
.QUI LTIN' SOCIET\1 OVER '
TODA'I FER TEA

.,.

1,

GASOLINE ALLEY

Whispering Pines
NKe Cub

'

t

22

·c· ------- -.....Ji :

for.Sale
Aluminum.

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

--- ---SiJe '

11)'ifi( lHI~ IS A ~~AT

MIIGL.E , (d..Ar:11&gt; !
I JUST RATE:D MYSELF I
fi6 A ~us;BAI•D..

LlJ']LE ORPHAN ANNIE

... .
. ; ..

,.

.;

21)4

.. _

.., .

\

.'.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
'·

\

t

Court

PomeniJ

DiC~TRACY

~ux~~~~~~iNCil
r

·'

1-I~~£!~~~~~~

'-----------J

-----,---

. -.

FOR SALE

We talk to you

:like a person,

·WMP0/1390

FURNITURE

'

YOUR DIAL
.'

)I

•

'

----,...--

.

..

party
lt. Planted
15. Tiny bird
16. ~~-and
Abner"

17. "-

I
l

Got

a Secret"

18. Particular
ZO. Utter
21, Brink
·22, Speek
of
dust
23. Chinese

Estate

IIARIIS

ACROSS
1. Neronian
garment
5. Early hypnotism
adherent
Pianist
Temple·
ton
12. Breathe
1
"
13. Lavish

.
.-1

AMANDA PANDA

,,
·. ·'

DOWN
1. Robert
Alphonso
Z. Derived

from
oil
3. Under·
stand
(colloq.)
(3 wds.)
4. Tennis

score

5. Abuse
&amp;. Armed
foe
1. Haggard
novel
&amp;.Admen's
haunt
(2 wds.)
9. Ennoble

.

I

.

Yeslerday'o ~er
10. Cheap
%8. Food stor·
whiokey
· age room
(hyph.
28. Attack
wd.)
29. Change
16. Sluggish
33. - out
19. Smell . 1
(appor·
22. African
tion )
• republic
35. Son
23. Windof
flower
Jacob
24. Frustrate
38. Rowan
zs; Egg dish
tree

SCERS

IIUMOT

0

~

01

port

. 24. Curse
25. Heavy
blow (si.)
26. Refrain
in
old .
songs
27.My (Fr.)
28. Spittle
30. German
river
31. Annoy
32. Genus
Ul"us

tree

34. Burdened
36. Price paid
17, Hire
SB. Hard fat
39. Youngster

4t. ln

our
midst

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how· to work
"

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGJI'BLLOW
one letter simply standi for 1110ther. In this sample A
J..J.f~,h.._
uted for the three L's, )!: !or the two ·O's, etc. Slnsle ·leti:eril
"lL&lt;f"'
apostrophes; the lencth and formation of the words are I .1 · t'.l! hMi.
' ·binu. Each day the code letters are different.
.
' ,(!IL ~ -r·

1k

.k

·-....

.CRYPTOQUOTBS
CEYAY KM TP JUGJTJYHYTC CP EK
SE P
EY
CEY

MCJ TUM
R i TTPC

C-A YHIQK T D
MYY

'

Yesterday'l ~aote: OOD,~, AS SOliE CYNIC 1WI
,' :~:-;;:,1
SAID, IS ALWAYS ON Tim SIDs WHICH JIA8 TBIIBM ·. ·: · ..: :
FOOTIIALLCOACH-H'iWOODBIOtlN .
, · :, . :1.,
II)Jt'llll:larP•-In....,lt.l..,.l
.; ,~-:• ., . ..

~

The

Daily Sentinel

'•

,., .

~Sheets

WANTED

'

I YRJ VM

0 ~~ -- ~TU , OAP

IYDKTTKTD .- Y .

B.

NQYHHY,

·,

,•

\

,.

�. ,.

..

•I.

'
'

•' r
J

'

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-

i ' :·'....~

.

12- The DaUySentlllel. ~dti"'~Pcmeroy,O., Marcb21 'f/3

Sei&amp;tinel Classifieds Get ActiontSentinel Classifieds·'(;ef RBsultsi
-~

1\A.t
IN~ORM.ATIQN

'(l\ ·2 OF

IIIADL~NI!S'

.,

I

J --P.M . Dly Btforo Publlclilon.
Mondty Dtad"ne·9 a.m.
C•nctlll.tlon.- Corrections
Will btac~pled unlll9"o·.m. !Iii
Dey ot.PubiiCatlon
. . lti~ULATIONS
,
Tift Publisher reserv" the
right to edit oweltct any Ids
:doomed . otrlftllonol. . Tht
:Publl"'er will not bt roaponslblt
lor ~· More · than ont ,lnc:dfrtd
Insertion .
·
·'
,
UTES
, For Wtftl Ad Serv.l~• .
.5 cents per word one ln.. rt.~
,
l'ollni!I.!Um Chorgel~: :' .
12 . ~entr ·per word '..thi'.. .
conte.c.UHvt ll'\ltrtlona.
· 11 centa per word six "-·
aecullvt Insertions.
·. ·:.
25 Per Coni Olscoun 1 .,;, po_~
edsond eds!lald wit~ In "to·di!,V.
CUD OF THANKS -· ' ;,
&amp; OIITUARY ···
$1.50,... 50 word mlnlmpl!\
Each addltlon-.1 word 2c. ~ ..
ILINO ADS · ,Additional 15c Char~ !~r
'ctvettlument.
.· '
OFFICJ; HOURS
1:30 l .m. 10 .5:00 p.m. -.O IIIy,
1: 30 e.m. to 12 :00 N""r

~

PolllrOJ

. .,

..

,•

.... .

'

;fAK!: HER ...
PLACE,

.. ... I

.PAw ..

·-Busm·'·es"s'. Se.-iqr:c·.e·s·-

•
·AUDITIONS!!

:'f •• '

!

1910 PONTIAC
$1391
Flreblrd Esprit. Local. 1 owner car, 350 V-8 engine, P.
steering &amp; automotic trans., AM-FM radio, like new while
1 lettered tires , dark brown finish. bucket seat &amp; blk. vinyl
trim. A sharp one. Really loaded.

•

i

i ' '--~-

•

_____

1969CHEVELLE
$1795
Malibu Cpe., local I owner car, dark grn. finish , ilk~ new
white loitered tires, 307 V-8, power steering &amp; bral&lt;es,
·
radio, clean Int.

FOR RENT

il~~~~:"'?'
OFFJCf SUPPLIFs" l
·· All WEAtHER
lriir· ·
ROOFING AND_
SM11H
NFI SON. I
MNSTRUCilON ;s;op InFORNITURE
.
ltid 'see- our:
MOTORS.
.INC.
.
. .:Floor
Display.
:
ftt4174"
·
·
l'omeNy
.
PRIME~ 992-2550
.
'

BARGAINS~ ARE OUR MID· ·

GRAY MANOR
APARtMENTS ·

Pomeroy Motor Co.

. ; · PRqfiABLY THE

! \\ONDeR WHAT

'

~O SE

. ,.,,

FARMERS ARE

PROS ANP CONS OF
ORGANIC FARMING

' HAVE vou· ~ EARO THE
ONE ABOUT T~ E PROF~SSOR'S
PAUG~TE'~ ~ ,

D I SCUSSING~

1

j
EXPERT
: ~Mieet" Alignment

r.ooD TRUSSES

"HElL'' '

50L,THEFJ RST

DUKE COULD
CONCEAL .

HIS .1. · .
DI5Gf'JICE.--

I

I ·'

l. •·

HrtinNG &amp;
COOL.•ING

i

- - - - - --

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

to

...

. ' f ..
' .'. ~

.'•

tVE: 15EEN AFRAID
ADMIT IT, CIIEN 1tl
M'lOEL~ BUT l
7HINI( J:M IN
Lrof: WITH
HAL.

.'
.'

••

--

-------

DANCE

:,:·
./
...,...•,· .

..

BUT.:t 'TI:M.D YOU ...
THE TV IS BWOKfiN,.,

STOP WAIC'I~ MV
WEFWIGEWATOR 't'OU
HAIR-BWAINEC' ~RE!

1'1'16 NOT

· •.

,

WORI&lt;IN~I

L

REALLY CIII?E
WHAT HAPPENe
TO HIM . WHEN l

~OUGHT

HE WA&amp;
GONE I WAf7
Mt:}EAAeLE. L
WANT HIM 1lJ
13E HAPPY!

o.

-

,.•. ' ' 'i

,;

. POMEROY

OLE NAME II Shopping
around now so that your
INCOME TAX REFUND
.
.
..
CHECK will stretch further
this year? Come on out to ·
~.....,.,...,.,..,-__, . - ~~::::::::;;=~
KUHL'S BARGAIN CENTER ' a.. to· 1.'.1ASK US ABOUT
&amp; see for yourHif that you 1111
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
PAY
LESS
&amp;
GET
MORE,
.
..
Middleport, 0.
PRE-FABRICATED
POMEROY, OHIO
Slturda·y.
whether you're shopping for 1972 HONDA 500 moforcycle, 4
NEW furniture, USED fur cylinder, many extru, like · I
' '·
.
nlfure or GUARANTEED,
new; phone 985-3828.
I Efflcloncy Apt. with new
USED appliances. NEW
3·9-Hc
furniture , all utllilles paid.
Card of Thanb
Notice
Notice
FURNITURE :
Couches,
011 Mosf Anlirlcari ·ea,
mafchlng ·chairs, set $149.95 1968 VOLKSWAGEN station
WE WISH to thank the many .. . . ..
·
RUMM
2 Furnished Apfs. with new
· ·· ·
· · · ·
· • ' ....friends and relellvos for their 2 PIECE lradlllonalllvlng room
AGE Sale at Coals
up (quality nylon or herculon
furniture , with or wllhoul
wagon. See aliOS Union Ave..
-GUARANTEEDflowers, food, help and exsuite with 90" sofa and extra . Building In Middleport;
coverings even In lowest price
Built to Your 'Specs'
Pomeroy. C. II '192·3293.
Phone 992·2094 i
hiAh back Mr. Chair; special
'March 22 and 23; 9 a.m. to 3 utilities. Both have I or 2
presslons of sympathy; also
range); ~ pc. maple bedroom:
Dtlivor_
t dto_Job ~Ill
3·20-6fc
.
.
-.
·
,
.
bedrooms.
No
Pet-5.
the White Funeral Home for
this week only $139.50, casti
p.m.
dresser, mirror, chest, bookPomeroy Home &amp; Auto
and
carry:
Pomeroy
3-21-21c
their kindness during the
case headboard bed, $100; . .. ..
oPeniTIIS
.,
HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
recent death of our husband,
Recovery, 622 E. Main St.,
Phone: 992-3863
maple chest of . drawers, 4· 1965 MERCURY, good 390
father and grandfather, Jesse . Pomeroy, phone 9'12-75~ .
YARD Sale, Thursday and
engine
and
transmission
.
Monday
thru
Saturday
·.
drawer
$25,
5-drawer
SJO;
3
Till P. M.
MATERIALS CO.
Body damages, $150. See
E. Main, Pomore ,0,
M. Newell. Wife, Velma 'l-~---"""'o.......3_·~16--6...;,1p
Friday, March 22nd and 23rd,
pc. coffee, step-table sets
606
or 992-5844
owner
In
tr1ller
across
from
._
..
......
..
.
·
173-5554
MISOII, W. ~I_·
Newell; sons, Hobert and r
~~ a.m. fill dark, Clair Boso
$16.95; patchwork, prlnf or
Bradbury
School.
Clair Newell and nrand-'
residence, Great Btrid ; Men,
Alter6 p.m.
solid swivel rockers $69.95 ;
3-20-3tp EX~AVATING, dozer, loedeiwomen's
children's
vinyl recliners, block,tan and
children.
winter and and
summer
Clothing
and backhoe work; Hptlc G &amp; E APpliance Repair; repair
S69.95; cloth sola beds
3-21 -ltp
Including complete Boy Seoul PRIVATE meeting room for green
tanks Installed: dump truck• : on all laundry equipment,
S72.95 (one In gold -green . 1969 FORO Ronger 1 ton F-350;
uniform, formal, long dress,
refrigeration equipment and
any organization ; phone 992- floral brocade! ; 7 pc. c~rome
and
to-boys for hire; will haul
with or wllhouf new 12 fl.
house · wiring ; welding,
girls ' site 11 new pants, · 3975.
fill dirt, top son; llmesfone
Lost
dinettes
$88. KUHL'S stock of
factory
slake
body,
390
tft
Tupperware, small apelectric
and gas. Call 9'12-3802
3-11-lfc
arid
gravel;
call
Bob"
or
Rogor
·USED furniture Includes: 8 engine, long wheel base,
~OST OR STOLEN - English
pllances, records, books,
or otter 4:30 p.m. cell 992·
Jelfei'S, day phone 9'12·7019;
pet.
wooden
dining
room
power
brakes,
power
Springer Spaniel, liver and
flrescreen
and
other
6050.
steering, rough fires, air· nlohf phone 992·3525 or 992·
trailer ; lf&lt; mile suites $125; chest-5, dressers,
white. "Corky" on Kingsbury
household
Items
too FURNISHED
J.2f.30fp
5232.
.
bookcases
;
desk;
conditioned,
47,300
miles;
beds;
Rd., Reward . Harold H.
from Pomeroy Corp . on Rt.
Furnac~
Controlsnumerous
to
mention;
for
2·11-lft
chrome dlnefles: TV's,
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom,
Smith, Phone 992-6656.
33; phone 9'12-2941.
"READY -MIX
CONCR-ETE
more Information call 8-13record
players,
radios.
ALL
phone
985-3554.
3-20·4tp
3-18-7tc
delivered
.
right
to your
HUMIDIFIERS
24u.
major appliances have 30-day
3-4-lfc {EI! ·us FOR:' Awnings. 'storm~
·: -·
pro/eel.
Fesf
and
eesy.
FrH
J.21
-21p
GUARANTEES:
relrlg - - - -- --....:..-.::.:
doors and windows, carporfs,' est males, Phone 992-3214.
jl
Hot Water Heaters'
DUPLEX wall to wall car- erat~rs
found
$25 up; chest, 1972 GMC Sprint 1'2 fan pickup; ' marquees, aluminum siding
'
'
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
REDUCE excess fluids with peting, 2 bedrooms; 2 upright freeters from $65;
Plumblnft·
350 V-8, automatic, power
and ralllnu . A. Jacob, sales
AT POMEROY Elementary
bedroom house : phone 992MlddltfiOI'I, Ohio.
·
Fluldex,
Lose
weight
with
aulo. washers W ; gas or
steering and brakes; low
represenfelive. For freiJ
. Electrical Work
School, small brown and
6-30-IIC .
Dex-A-Diet capsules af 2780 or 992-3432.
mileage; phone 7-42-3111.
esllmefes. phone Chari•
elect. dryers $35; 30", 36" gas
while dog, perf Basenji, 6 to 8
Nelson Drugs.
Or elect. ranges ; 1 port. dishJ.21-6tc
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
months old. Phone 593-8040 or
SEPTIC TANKS CLIANED
3-21 -Jtp
washer. KUHL'S BARGAIN
Johnson and Son, Inc.
992-2710.
~EASONABLE ratos. Ph . .U..
CENTER, St. Rf . 1 " at 1963 VOLKSWAGEN; phone .
3-2-lfc . 4782, Gallipolis, John Ruuell ,
Pets For Sale
3-20-Jtc
Employment Wanted
caution light," Tuppers . 98H118.
.. -- .
..:
Owner &amp; Operator.
REGISTERED Toy
Fox Plains, Ohio. Open to 6 p.m.
J.21-3tc BEAT the rush! Get your
•
5·12·11•
EXI'EIUENCED pointer, In·
Terriers ; -2 males ; 8 weeks Closed MONDAYS ONLY.
lawnmower and filler tuned '
992-2448
terlor and exterior. Phone
old; $35; phone 742-5625.
Phone 667·3858.
Mobile Homes. For Sale·
up now; Small Engine Repair
AucfionHr
1'85-3951.
Pomeroy.
3·18-6tc
3-18-71c
Shop on Third St., Mason, W. I C. BRADFORD,
Complete Service
3-20-JOip
~------_.:
1969 GREGORY mobile h~e, Va.
Phone 949-3821
· Your Right Know
I WILL not be res onslble for
ONE
Registered
Charolals
bull,
2-bedroom, front klfchen, 81
J.6-301c
children playing and gelling BABYSITTING In my home, 5 For Sale
tr~''lrJr.d ·
days a week, 7:30a.m; to 5:30
3 years old. Phone 9'12·3640 ·fl. by .200 II., lot, Vlno St., O'DELL WHEEL alignment
and be Informed of the func hurt on my prorrty. James
·
5. ; .t1c
p.m. dally. Call 9'12-7828 after BUILDING lois lor sale at Rock
beRaclne, uli,litv ,building. Can locoteda!Crossroads Rl 124
alter 5:30p. m.
tions ot yOur government art
B. Phillips. 1 Cave Sf.,
5;30
p.m.
embOdied In pubtrc notices. In
3-15-61c
seenafted:30
p.m.
Asking
complete
front
end
'ser~lce;
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Ohio. Close to Meigs
that self-government char ges
$7,000. Contacf Gene Hudson tune up and brake service: . Dl)£t~ and· ·..acli -hoe ,.,,.,
3-20-Sfc Springs,
3-20-Jtp
High
School
with Tuppers
111 citizens to be Informed;
or phone 949·333-4.
Wheels balanced elec- . ,- ponda ond sepflc fanks, dll·
Plain water. Size 112 acre and YoODERN Walnut Console, AMthll newspaper urges everv ,
LIGHT
doter
work
and
set-up
3-19-Jtc
tronlcally.
All
work '
cl•lng service; fop soil. 1111
FM
radio,
4
speed
automaflc
larger. 9'12-2789.
'Citizen to read and si!JdV these .
trailers; phone 742-5980. ·
Reasonable
dirt, llmosfoM; B&amp;K Ex2-25-JOip changer, 4 speaker sound -;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;=~~ guoranteod.
notices . Wt strongly advise ·
rates. Phone 9'12-3213 or 742cevallng . Phone 992-$367,
:J.21-6tc
.
system, separate controls. f'
those citizens, seeking further
32:12.
Dick Ko~r. Jr.
Information, to exercise their
ALUMINUM Car top boats, 10, Balance $78.50. Use our
·r. Air Conditioners • •
right of , aceen to publ ic
2-18-ttc
·
12
and
13
fl.
Kingsbury
Rd
.,
budget
terms.
Call
992-7015.
--~~-~~-.:....:.
9·1-llc
Busiless Opportunities
· '
• Awnings .
records and public meetings,
Co. Rd . 18, Phone 992-6256 _ _____ ___3_-_IH
_ Ic
EX~AVA'TING. Dozers, largo
•·· ·Under~innitlQ
OWN yout own business ; 4 to 6
after 5 p. m.
·
and small; Backhoes and R
hours dally; small investment
3-8-JO!c MAPLE stereo-radio combinallon,
AM-FM
radio,
4
j
omplele
mobile
.
hqm(
·
Loaders on track and tires;
eal Esfate for Sale
buys necessary Inventory ; ·
NOTICE OF
call 1-614-962-5397.
1- 7 year old Palomino mare, 1 ~akers. 4 speed changer,
er"ice
pi 1 1 a II
Dumr. trucks - Lo-boy' - - - - - - - - -....,.APPOINTMENT
•
~ mobile
u g n c
Ser"• ce,· Septic tanks InNo. 20,12J
- year old Palomino stallion,
ua1 vo Iume con Iro I. Bal • nco
lsplay
of
3·11·10tc
.Eita,t e of samuel Q . Barnhart
3weanedagecolls. Phone 742 . $81 .19. Use our budget forms. • 'we ·
bl
.,..
stalled;
George (BIIII
Call 9'12-7085.
'" ys .ave 11 0 e.a 1 "'
P,ul,llns; phone.992
, -2'71.
~ '. .
I
,.I DtCI.. !td.
Fri . 1!o .Silt. Night
2
Nolrce Is hereby Given that
.
'
Help
Wanter'
5
$1
.
3·20-6fc
.
J.15-6tc_
.....
'MI'LLIII;"·'f'.
• 2·9·""'
10 til2
I Emma H1yman whose Post
OffiCI Address Is Syracuse,
WANTED - Driver for garbage
and Balinese kittens; Sl NGEh 1R a 1u1ktomaflc1 sew11ng , MOilLE MOMES
HASaRr~llcSeOCaN'S11 sT.VphonSerev~- end.
Ohio hu betn duly appointed u
Ozark 4 pc . band
truck to drive and pickup In SIAMESE
excellent
quality
;
perfectly
mac
ne;
e
new
n
wa
nul
.
·
.
.
.
,
,,.
•
'" 25
Adm inistratrix with the Will
Pomeroy ; must be over 21;
from Pksbg., W. Va.
annexed of tht Estate of Samuel
trained;
call
614-«6-«1
alter
cabinet.
Makes
design
sHt·
1!!0
Wuillngton
Blvd.
.
2·9-lfc
6
call JOH28-S877 or leave word
Q. Bornhort, lalt of Mttgs
2
p.m.
af
Gallipolis
.
ches,
zig-zags,
buttonholes,
,
!
42~7521
IE
LPRE,
c.
at City Hall .
Coun·ty , Ohio, deceased .
blind hems
ELNA 'and . w" hila s"e"w"ln_H
_
3·16-6lc . 585.
• overcasts ' etc
.•, .__
:.. .
3-21-6tc _ _ _ _ __ _ _:....:,:
Deled lhls 1/th day ol March
Call · Ravenswood,
273Mach ines ... Hrvlce on a
·came and Celebrate
110 Meehan!&lt;: Street
1973.
Landmark's 40th Annlverurv
COLLECTORS •Item, Moun- 9S21 or 273-9893.
.
.· A~.' peru rur all ma&lt;es auu
makes. Reasonable rates.
NEEO someone to -cut grass,
talneer Lady and John Henry.
1-11 -lfc
models of mobile homes . The Sewing Centor, Mid·
Mannino D. Webster
trim grapes and flowers;
Pomeroy, Ohlo
bollle. Phone 992.1138.
--------Phone area code 614-423-9531.
dleporf, Ohio.
SPRING
Common Pleas Court,
write Box 729-E, c-o The Dally
3·1fc
3-20-61c
..
,
4-l
11
·16-lfc
Probate Division ,
Sentinel , Pomeroy, 0.
Meigs County, Ohio
O~EN HOUSE
3-18-61c -Ho_u_s_e_an_d_2-,r-a-ne-r-,o-,s-.-Phone
1968 SKYLINE, 12 • ""· ; SEPTI.C TANKS AROB1t
(31 21. 28 W s, Jtc
BARGAIN
.
.
bedrooms; phone 985-4118.
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEAN·
3APARTMENTS
- all utlllllos
992
5693
MARCH 21·24
36"x2311x.oot
3-21-Jtc
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER - 2 apartments rented.
Wanted
SANITATION, STEWART.' .ocated on Mulberry Ave Only
l
NOTICE ON FILING
FrH
Rtfreshmonts
.
. '
•
DE~D Slock horses, cattle,
,
.
Real
Estate
for
OHIO. PHONE 662-3035.
1 llO,OOO.OO.
OF INVENTORY
Comtln Register For
AN[! APPRAISIMENT
hogs, oheep. Reasonable CARPETS and life too can be ,
4 11
SPACIOUS hEW HOME
70 ACRE farm with limber' 5 -= =,---- ---'0.
'- • &lt;
beautiful II you use Blue
Tho Stilt of Ohio. Meigs
charge. Cali 245-5514.
BEDROOMS
- Garoge,
County. Problfl Court.
Lustre .
Rent
electric ·
bedroom paneled home with "sewiNG MACHINES. R 1.
FREE PRIZES
2·28-JOic
To the Extcutrl x of tt1e
shampooer, Sl. Nelson's Drug I
modern kitchen and bath ; servitl!, all mokos. 992:. large ccrner lot, all electric,
tOiate ; lo such bl lhe following
9.~ ·
POMEROY
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio.
· USED OFFSET PLATES
phone 992-6947.
• The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. large beautiful kitchen, l'h
111 are res idents of the s tate of
Q Jack W. C1rsey, Mgr.
HAVE
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
.:_
3·20
::.:·21c
:
=,.....,,------3-_18-61c "Authorlled Singer Salas anti beths. one with sliding glass
Ohio, viz : - the surviving
Phonet92-2111
MANY
USES
spouse, the next or kin , tht - ·- . . . .
.
'Hous ;;- '" Lonu Boflom, phane Service. We Sharpen Sciuors. doors. Only S21,00.00.
2 CORNER LOTS
beneficiaries under lht will ; KOSCOT "KOSMETICS AND
CORN ; phone 91.1-4211 .
985-3529.
. '
. J.29-ttc
1
Licensed Ohio
tnd to thtlftorney or attorneys
WIGS. SPECIALS MONTHRUTLAND - 2 bedrooms, nlco
3-9-121
6-11-Hc' i-Air; rTm:: Masonr y worli ;" bath, garage, and utility
ropruontlng any ol th e
LV .
BROWN'S
INDE·
Property &amp; Casualty
.:c-.:----~.....,_...,_,,......,..
_ -.:.:.:
free esllmafl : call 773·5580.
atoromtnlloned persons:
PEN~ENT
DISTRIBU ·
I for $1.00
building . ASKING
Just
Fr1nk E . Titus, Pomeroy,
""'
1973 STEREOIIrack, mvst sell
Insurance
Agent
8
ACRES.
Good
building
site
or
3-7-JOip $7,500.00.
Ohio, Salisbury Township,· No .
TOR , MIDDLEPORT .
for balance due of $98.10 or
trailer
lots.
On
Rt.
143.
Phone
-::-::-:-:--:-:---10114.
PHONE 9'12·5113.
An Independent Insurance
take over payments of $7.7! ~
VERY LARGE
9'12-3640 after 5:30p. m.
WILL frim or cut frftl, Clean
You are hereby notified that
2-23-tfc
agency In Pomeroy, needs
per
month.
Call
9'12-5331.
.
CORNER
LOT - 4 Bedrooms,
3·15-6tc out basements, attics, efc.
the
Inventory
and
Ap 3-21-6fc .
living about 38x16. Nice kitPhone U9-3221.
praisement of the eotate of the 'HO'oo·~ ~&lt;QUAR 1u·Ms . fish' someone with license as
lfOrtmentloned, decened, tate
d
~ t .
junior partner and future
J.lf.JO!c ehen, basement, 2 modern
1
of said County. was flied In this , an supples;
new
• ion,
sale to right party. It' you
LEFT in layoway, 1973 Zig-Zag
-;,.;;.--';:-;o
. ~.-;;:0"'-=
---~. ~.-:,-,
..
,.,
_
=,;,
. · - . beth a. Front and back porchos.
Court . Said Inventory and
Ash Street, Middleport near
want to own an Insurance
Sewing Machine . This ·
. AUTOMOBILE· Insurance beeli Went only $21 900 00
.O.pprolumenl will be lor
park ; phone 9'12·5443.
machine darns, ambroldtrs,
St
;"""'CLELAND~
hearing before this Court on lh e
1-7-lfc
agency, write, giving
· cancell~d?
Lost
your
OHIO RIVER LAND
overcasfs and monogram s.
30th dayot March , 1973, at 10 :00
resume to Box 666 , Pomeroy,
.
REALTY
=
.•for
s
license?
Call
9923
ACRES
PLUS- 1972 mobile
Pay balance of 541.50 or pey -~ .. · · ·
·
.
,.
o'clock A.M .
' BEGINNING Afrll I, 1973 , 0 . ~5169.
.oaE.Mtln
U per month . Call 9'12-5331 COAL, Limestone, ExcelsiD)
6-IS-Ifc . home 65x12. · Screened patio
Any person
dltslrlng to file
• Pomtroy ~
3.21 .61,: . Soil Wor~, E. Main _st.
exceptions
thereto
must file
Showalter's We Pet Shop will ..
.....,-~--~--16x20. 11ft baths, air con..
Pomeroy. hone 9'12-3891 .
them 11 least five days prior to
be open 4 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Wanted' To' luy
dlllqlllng. 18' fiberglass boat
ttlt dltt set for hearing .
dally, all day Saturday, .
.~
..
(3) 1973 Zlt'Zag Sewing
·
~- 12-tfc
with 120 H. P. motor and
EXCELLENT LOCATION
Given under my hand and seal
Sunday and Holidays.
WANTED _ 'OLD UPRIGHT
Mach inn le In layaway · rra;
..
• About
All this for $21,500.00.
trailer.
1 acre. 9 room frame.
Baoutllul f.asfel color fuli 2 P
fradlllonarTrvir:f room
Real
For Sale
~a~~~~~~¥."' lhls 17th day of
3·18-121p
PIANOS. Any condition .
. SPLIT LEVEL
size
mode
.
All
bufit.in
sulfa
with
90"
sofa
an
extra
4
bedrooms,
bath,
porches.
10
Mann ing D. Wobsler p
Paying $10 each, First floor
buttonhole, do strotch sewl~ hi?,h back Mr. Chair; special Close to shopping. Also nice
2'1&gt; ACRES in Flatwoods area; 4 BEDROOMS - All electric
Judge and ex-officio UREBR EO sale - 6th annual
only. Write giving directions.
and fancy stitching. Pay Ius
th s week only S139.95, cash apartmenf lor additional
phone 742·3171.
heme, 1'12 baths, basement,
Clerk of sold Court
W. Va . ' Polled Hereford
Pianos, P. 0. Box 188, Sardis.
$48.75 cash or terms and
carry;
Pomeroy Income. $18,500.00.
J.21 -61c nlce,kllchen with dining area. 1
Spring Show and Sale March
Ohio 43946. '
available. Trade-Ins ac - Recovery, 622 E. Main St.,
By Ann B. Wataon
24, 1973 ot Jackson Mills State
--------acres of land nur town .
3·18-6tp
INCOME PROPERTY
Deputy Clerk
Pomeroy, phone 9'12·75~.
cepled. Phone 992-7755,
4·HComp ..Seliing 34 bulls and
IN
Rutland,
3
bedroom
home,
$30,000.00.
131 21, 18, 21c
Electro Hygiene Co.
3·16·6tp l&gt;omeroy. Nice 2, bedroom
18 heifers. For Information, 100 RAILROAD Ties, fair to
fully carpele!l, ' built-In kitCOUNTRY HOME
apartment, baaem1nt ,
write : Jim Westfall, Rt. 2,
3-2t -6tc
ehen
·
with
dlshwesher,
'hot
2
YEARS
OLD - 3 nit* s111
good condition . Phone 742NEW FOAM to fill rour old garage . For living. 10
Box 115, Spencer, W. Va. or
6825.
water
heat,
fenced
yard;
bedrooms
with large closets.
cushions , standard s 11 suite, sleeping rooms for lnccme.
coil 927-2104.
742-317l . ·
3-15-6tp (21 ELECTROLUX Vacuum
Tile Almanac
phone
.
_
c
Large
llvlnu.
nice kitchen wlfh
Pomoroy Call lor an appolntmenf
3 21 61
· Cleaners complete with at- only . $9 .95.
3-20·4tc
Recovery.
622
E.
Main
St.
dining.
all
carpeltd.
Utility and
By Ualled Prell IDienlalloaal
lachments, cordwlnder and
today.
L.O.RGE metal building. Phone , paint
3·8-JOip
two
garagH.
125,000.00.
sprat. Used but In like
!YEARS OLD
LOTS on Wright Sf .. phone 742·
Today Is Wednesday, March
U2-J182.
new cond lion. Pay $34.-15
6630.
'
Beautiful
Middleport.
3
3-20-Jtc
21, thi! IIOth day of 1973 with 285
cash or b~et Y:len evallable. UPHOl STERY mater fills, bedroom home. Lovely
A FREE ATLAS IS YOURS AT
,
3-16-12tc
regularly 53.95 on/1. $1.95.
Phone 99 -7 55, Electro
to follow.
'
•
By PHIL PASTORET
l'HE
OFFICE. DROP IN AND
·OLIJ furniture , oak table~.
Also remnants. omeroy kitchen, dining R.. utility R.,
filiCK
IT UP.
11te moon Is .approaching its Keeping ship-shape is what organs, dishes, clocks, brass Hygiene Co.
bafh,
carpefed.
Pallo, 'HousE · f:OR'·s.o:re; 114 Brick
Recovery, 622 E. Main St.
J.21 -6tc
bed$ or complete houHholds.
HELEN -L. TEAFQRD
last quarter.
3-8.30fp
besimenl.
Level
lot
1QOx120.
·
JIStrHt,
Pomeroy,
·Clhto;
brick
'
some hefty persons do.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt, 4, '10 YAMAHA 175
GO.RDON B. lEA FORD
house, 3 bedrooms, excellent
·/
$23.0110.00.
Enduro ;
The mornillf! stars are Venus,
• • •
Pomeroy, Ohio. · Phone m. phone 742-5980.
UPHOLSTERY materials;
ASSOCIATES
location, close to school and
RUTLAND
AREA
6271.
Man, Mercury and Jupiter.
Nylon
prints,
cotton
prints,
city;
contact
Lou
Osborne
or•
NO
SUNDAY
SHOWINGS
3·21-61c
• years old. • bedrooms.
'
1-7-tfc
velvets of all kinds. Po1eroy closets, kitchen has IO.ds of
cafl 992·5898.
The evening star is Saturn.
··
m-ms
..
Recovery,
622
E.
Main
I.
,
:'
11·26·tfC
BEAR
Cat
r,llce
scanner
radio,
~-UIS
Th4l8e born on this date are
CLEAN copper , 45c lb.;
3-8,301p cablnet·s and range, dining
6 cr ysla s Included ; phone
' ~
area, bath . Storm windows &amp;
Wider the sign of Aries,
Radiators, clean, 211c lb.;
. . ' ..,
247-2404.
'
]1ft
acres
.
Ju
st
Brass , lk lb.; Batteries, 70c ;
UPHOLSTER your own fur· doors.
German composer Johann
3-21
-61c
lit
C1p1clly
Ginseng 160 lb.; M. A. Hall,
nllure. Foam cushions; any $16,900.00.
I
-MIYlll
SebasUan '.Bach was born
size. Cotton, burlap, swivel
. NEW 11/J YEARS
I
No, Gwendolyn, Little Red Reedsville, 378-6249. 3·9-tfc FRIGIDAIRE refrlt~tralor , one
AutoMotlcs
.
bases, tipper. webbing, welt. ,3 1011ely bedrooms • . bath,
March 21, 1185.
year old, excellent condition;
2
lpatd
operation.
!
Rid ing Hood wasn 't an au- - - - - - - - Pomeroy Recovery, 622 E. utility R., beautiful kll.cMn .
phone 949-1725.
On this day in history :
Cholet of Wlttr ,
burn-haired midget gangster
Main
St.
tempt
.
AUto .
3-21-Jtc
Dining
lrll,
hardwood
In 1790, Thomas Jefferson of on horseback.
1
For Rent
3·8 ·301~
Wittr
ltvtl'
floors. Some carpeting.
Virginia became the first u.s.
cbnfrol.
Lint ·
Carport wlfh storage room .
Filter
oiPower
3
AND
4
ROOM
lurnlahed
and'
Secretary of State. He later · ..--'..:....:'--~...-....--.-......._,.,.
Lot 100x100 In now eddlllon .
·Fin Agitator.
unlurnls~od
apartments.
'
waa the lblrd president of tile
521,500.00.
Perm1-Prus
Phone 992-5434.
'
MIYIII
OLD E.A IRICK
United States.
4-12-ttc I
The Edward Ebersbach house having
Nl,lo tf Htat
2
or
3
bedrooms,
bath,
now
-In 1945, 7,0110 Allied planes
Drrtr•
been sold, all of the furniture will be
!"RAILER, · Brown's TraHer
forced air furnace. Storm
Surround clothfl
dropped more than 12,000 tons
Park 1 phone 9'12·332~.
doors &amp; wlndowa. F-..ced lot.
sold. If interested please be at the
With Unfit, IVtn
of explMives on Germany
2·13-lfc
Garegl. se.soo.oo.
hoot. No hoi ipots,
residence
on Wright St., Pomeroy,
·no · ovordrylng, .
during a World War II daytime
TIME IS" GOING BY, :
m
~N;~~U~R~N-IS_H_E_D~-.--room
Fino Moah Lint .
PRICES ARE RISING,
Ohio, between the hours of 1:00 P.M.
bombing raid.
'
ap!lrtmont, 401 Spring Ave.,
~Iller . ·
.·
'
WHY
PUT
OFF?
BUY
NOW.
Pomeroy.
, Woi,.CIIIilt lo
In 1962, Soviet Premier Niklta
until 3:00 P:M, Saturday, March 24,
TO SELL LIST WITH ·US.
' 3-2-tfc
,
., MAYTAO , ·
1973,
, I
Khrushchev pledged tha 1
~ fi--Ctrflll ·
'
'
RwJsla ·would cooperate wllh
HlNRY E. CLELAND
lorvlce
2 BEDROOM mobile. h.,;e;
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
.
'· '
IROKER
completely
furnlahtd
;
call
the Upllld Statea in peaceful
I
n~
Re11 Est. Broker
9'12·2«1 a Her 5:30 p.m.
9t2·22Sf
'
expball1111 of 11P4ce.
'
Phone 915.4116
"741-4211
If ............ f92.2J61
2-1·tfC
P.O. Box 101, . Pomerov, Ohio
~ldGrelt
Rutland .

PUBLIC NOTICES

~··..:i '

- - ----

1970 REBEL
S14f5
American·Motors St. Wagon, onlr 31.500 mllos by original
local owner, good fires, grn. spo less vinyl Inferior, dark
green finish, 6 cyl. engine. std. trans .

•

"•''""''"'" ot:
BUSY'BOOVTO

2 BEDROOM mobile home, air·
conditioned; In Racine area ; S,6,VE 20 pet. Inventory
cle.arance sale now In
.1. 'Y .a
phone 9'12-6329.
3-16-Hc progress . 20 pet. discount on . • ·
~
' .. •
..
· . . ·
.
- ..... .
most of your grocery needs. 'u.!,_t,._,....;.,....;..._•.,,~,.,-:-.,.._;.,.._.,....,_ _ _ _~--~-----..-------,..al
2 BEDROOM trailer, close to This means you can Hve 20 '1-------:,....,--.,
mine site on Rt. 325, ..by week pel. on your groCery bill . Gel
or month, utllifles . pa id; the full details today at the
phone 742-!910.
Brtghf Sfar Market next fo . Hivo yllolr 111.,• built by:
J.20-61p Drive-In Theatre, Mason, W. · Custom lulld•ra. Our. · ' HOMI Ia 'AUTO
:car,.llftra ~~~~ 20 · yoirs
Va .
UNFURNISHED apartment,
3·20-16tc oxperlence In building·
992·2094
newly remodeled, no children, GROCERY business for sale. ,hlmf? In Mtlgs Oounty,
1606 E. Mlin . Pomeroy·
Redletor- to the
phone m-1101.
largest
Building for sale or lease.
Heater
Core.
Phone 773-5618 from 8:30p.m.
. ' . .
.
NoiiNin
lilts
.
to 10 p.m. for appointment.
R.HIIflll:
Sllocletltl
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Motor Co.

QUAlnY

for Sale

: For Rent

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AS A •MATT.ER 0'
l INVITED TH' HOOT IN'
HOlLER KNITTIN ' AN'
.QUI LTIN' SOCIET\1 OVER '
TODA'I FER TEA

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1,

GASOLINE ALLEY

Whispering Pines
NKe Cub

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for.Sale
Aluminum.

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

--- ---SiJe '

11)'ifi( lHI~ IS A ~~AT

MIIGL.E , (d..Ar:11&gt; !
I JUST RATE:D MYSELF I
fi6 A ~us;BAI•D..

LlJ']LE ORPHAN ANNIE

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PomeniJ

DiC~TRACY

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FOR SALE

We talk to you

:like a person,

·WMP0/1390

FURNITURE

'

YOUR DIAL
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party
lt. Planted
15. Tiny bird
16. ~~-and
Abner"

17. "-

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Got

a Secret"

18. Particular
ZO. Utter
21, Brink
·22, Speek
of
dust
23. Chinese

Estate

IIARIIS

ACROSS
1. Neronian
garment
5. Early hypnotism
adherent
Pianist
Temple·
ton
12. Breathe
1
"
13. Lavish

.
.-1

AMANDA PANDA

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DOWN
1. Robert
Alphonso
Z. Derived

from
oil
3. Under·
stand
(colloq.)
(3 wds.)
4. Tennis

score

5. Abuse
&amp;. Armed
foe
1. Haggard
novel
&amp;.Admen's
haunt
(2 wds.)
9. Ennoble

.

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.

Yeslerday'o ~er
10. Cheap
%8. Food stor·
whiokey
· age room
(hyph.
28. Attack
wd.)
29. Change
16. Sluggish
33. - out
19. Smell . 1
(appor·
22. African
tion )
• republic
35. Son
23. Windof
flower
Jacob
24. Frustrate
38. Rowan
zs; Egg dish
tree

SCERS

IIUMOT

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port

. 24. Curse
25. Heavy
blow (si.)
26. Refrain
in
old .
songs
27.My (Fr.)
28. Spittle
30. German
river
31. Annoy
32. Genus
Ul"us

tree

34. Burdened
36. Price paid
17, Hire
SB. Hard fat
39. Youngster

4t. ln

our
midst

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how· to work
"

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGJI'BLLOW
one letter simply standi for 1110ther. In this sample A
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uted for the three L's, )!: !or the two ·O's, etc. Slnsle ·leti:eril
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apostrophes; the lencth and formation of the words are I .1 · t'.l! hMi.
' ·binu. Each day the code letters are different.
.
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CEYAY KM TP JUGJTJYHYTC CP EK
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Yesterday'l ~aote: OOD,~, AS SOliE CYNIC 1WI
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SAID, IS ALWAYS ON Tim SIDs WHICH JIA8 TBIIBM ·. ·: · ..: :
FOOTIIALLCOACH-H'iWOODBIOtlN .
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The

Daily Sentinel

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WANTED

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14- ~Dally Se~l, Mlddleport..PCIIleroy, 0., March 21, ..!73

Riffle talks.al)out ~ ·

Meigs Band to compete in Niagara festivity
,.

Niagara · Falls is for
honeymooners - and the
Meigs High School Band 1
The band of 112 musicians,
directed by Dwight Goins, will
visit the falls in May where II
will take part in the marching
competition of the Inlernatlonally famous Orchard
Festival. The festival, with at
least a mjllion orchard trees in
bloom, Is staged to celebrate
the end of winter's deep freeze.
The band members, accompanied by 12 adult
chaperones, will leave the high
school on the afternoon of May
17, traveling by school buses to
Wheeling, W. Va. where they
will board Suburban Bus Unes
vehi~les at 6 p.m. arriving at
Niagara by midnight. The band
has reservations at the Empire
Motel, only about two blocks
from the falls.
On Fril)ay, May 18, the band
will be on a five hour sightseeing tour which will include
visits to Niagara-on-the-Lake,
Fort George, the Weiland
Canal, Fort Weller shipbullaing docks, Queens ton .
Heights, Monument of General
Brock,
Laura
Secord
Homestead, the Sir Adam Beck
Power generation station and
Queen Victoria Park. The tour
will conclude with a view from

Clinics
(Continued from Page

I)

County, as a department of
mental hygiene appointee to
serve· on the board; agreed to
employ an additional social
worker for · the clinic, and
COJIIIIlittees were ·asked to
meet i.n work sessions to
· ·complete their reports by the
May meeting.
· Marshall McGee from the 69
Board in Jackson presented a
project for consideration
concerning rehabilitation
servioos for the area.

the observation tOwer of the . men will swim and hold parade
Skylon, 775 feet above the practices on the motel grounds.
mighty c~taracts and a visit to The parade will be staged at I
the Ripley Believe It or Not p.m. on Saturday, May 19, with
Museum .
top awards to the two best
Following the lour, bands· bands to include $200 and a

trophy and $1QO and a trophy.
Some 50 bands are expected to
be taking part in the. competition. Following the parade
competition, the Meigs Band
and the chaperones will board

'buses for their return to
Wheeling where they will be
met hy school buses. They
expect to be iii Meigs County by
midnight.
The Meigs Band Boosters,

Call-switching MembershipSeven fined by Mayor Zerkle
Seven defendants were fined, costs, intoxication.
equipment
is getters honored three
forfeited bonds and
Fo~eiting bonds we~ Gary
'
Commander Kenneth E. another was assessed costs N. Rife, 22, Middlepott, $25, .
added in Meigs . Harris presented awards for only Tuesday by Middleport running a red·llght and t30 for
POMEROY - A major
11ddilon of call-switching
equipment in the Pomeroy
office is under way by General
Telephone Co . Kenley R.
Krinn, Athens district commercia! manager, said the new
equipment will upgrade
present services and provide
facilities for future area
growth.
Equipment for 400 new
customer lines will be added.
Other equipment includes 300
new phone number terminals
and additional batteries and
charging equipment. · More
Pomeroy-Athens calling paths
also will be part of this $107,300
project.
"Increasing the quantity of
switching equipment created
the need for higher capacity
storage batteries and charing
equipment," Krinn explained.
Telephone equipment
operates on direct current
(DC) rather than alternating
current (AC) provided by
commercial power. The AC
power is fed into our power
equipment and charger. The
charing facilities keep the
storage batteries up to
capacity while DC power is
drawn from the batteries to run
the switching equipment. The
Pomeroy exchange serves
4,738 telephones in a 90.4
square mile area of Meigs
County.

out.standing work in membership Tuesday night at the
annual birthday party of Drew
·webster Post 39, American
Legion . Receiving awards

were :
Bronze Star, for at least five
memberships, Edgar Van
Inwagen,
Fred
Wolfe,
Law'rence Smith, Frank
Vaughan, George Nesseiroad,
~ames Gilmore and Elza
Gilmore ; Silver star, at least
10, Don Hunnell, Bob Vaughan,
Ray Jewell; gold star, 25,
Leonard Jewell, Charles
Swatzel, Don Whaley, Paul
Casci and Commander Harris;
National Commander Awards,
for 25or more, Leonard Jewell,
Charles Swatzel, Don Whaley
and Paul Casci.
Named to the Go4ietters
Club for ·an average of at least
30 memberships were Casci,
Whaley and Harris. These
members will be among the

Mayor John zerkle.' ,
Fined were Jerry Stobart, 21;
and Dennis Wise, 23, both of
Middleport, $75 and costs each
for intoxication, disturbing the
peace and interferring with a
police officer; Coy F. Nitz, 34,
Middleport, $15 and costs,
intoxication; Hubert M. King,
Jr., 34, California, $100 and
costs and three days in jail,
driving while lploxicated ;
Delores Landers Summers,
Pomeroy, $10 ·and costs,
fighting in public; Steven K.
Lane, 18, Middleport, $5 and
costs, spinning tires, and Don
Lovett, 49, Portland,. $25 and

disturbing· the peace; Bertha
&lt;?riffin, .48. Middleport, t:!O,
fighting m public, and Homer
S. Carman, P.oll)eroy • $25, ·
assured clear distance.
·
Coleen A. Hoffman, 41,
Middleport,'was assessed costs
only, her fine being suspended,
~or failing to yield right of way·

Autos

·
Did
CO
e

Sheriff Robert C. Har~nbach's Dept. investigated a
two-car accident Tuesday at
11:45 a. m. In Rutland Township on Township Road 58. No
personal injuries
were
reported.
!chard
A.
Warner,
·Marrtage Uceose
Po
eroy,
Rt.
I, was traveling
Ernest Lee Hawk'
Sou h and Michael G. Small,
Rutland, and June
Albuquerque, N. M. , was
20, Mason.
traveling north when due to the
guests at a dinner staged by the narrow road the cars were
Department of Ohio . Post ''Unable to pass and collided.
champion in membership work There was heavy damage to
was Don Whaley.
both.

sponsoring the trip, are
providing funds for housing,
fondll)ld transportation. Adulta
accompanying the band will
includ~
Mrs.
Kenneth
McLaughlin, Mrs. Don
Thomas, Mrs. Carol Pierce,
Mrs. Charles Werry, Lee
McComas, Mrs. Joan Weyersmiller, Mrs. June Murphy,
John Fultz, Frank Sisson, Mr.
and Mrs. Dwight Goirui and
Fred Ruth.
~
In addition to the trip to
Niagara, several other ac- ·
tivities are in store for the
Meigs Band· this spring and
summer. The band has been
invited to present a 45-minute
concert at King's Island, near
Cincinnati on May 6 and 165
band members have r~gistered
to. attend band camp at Rio
Grande College, Aug. 5-11. A
$10 deposit for each student
planning to attend is required
by April 15. More than half of
those registered ,already have
paid the deposit. ·
To help with the expenses
involved in the Canadian trip,
the band will hold a fund
raising day in April. Activities
of the day will include a car
wash, bake sale and a tag sale.
Residents and business
willing to contribute to the trip
may send contributions to the
Band Boosters at the high
school, Pomeroy Route 3.

Charles (Chuck) Riffle,
pharmacist at the SwisherLohse Drug Store, described
drugs of all kinds 8nd their
effects upon·the body, when he
addressed a recent meeting of
the Meigs COunty Alcohol and
Drug Abuse Committee at the
St. Paul· Lulheran Church ..
The committee discussed the
scholarship program through
which area students represent
Meigs County at .Ohio
Wesleyan · University.
Scholarships for these students
are possible only through
contributions by area mer.
chants.
According to plans made by
the committee, letters are lobe

ii

I

sent to variOUB area merchariil
and professional people ; to
.explain the plll'p08e ol ~ fi~
day 8e!Bion on drugs held eil~h
summer at the · universitY.'
Ex~tlve , members . of ·the
drug.abuse committee will be
calling on theSe business ~
professional people .receiving
the le tiers to discuss the
scholarship program in deta~.

IN HOSPITAL

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(Continued from Page 1)
guns," said the wearer of the campaign hat. "I used to do a lot of target .
shooting and hope ·to get back at it one
of these days."
Paul owns several fireanns. He is
proud of one in particular.
"I have an 1873 Springfield offleer's rifle that is one of only 477 ever
made," he beamed. "It is a trap-door,
single shot, 45-70" he said, in targetshooter's jargon.
No matter which hal Paul Graves
wears when he talks, it Is plain to see
that he likes living in southeastern
Ohio. As time goes on, maybe he'll try
to find a fourth hat to talk about. Just
maybe.

Thursday at the First
Baptist Church In Mason with
the Rev. Robert Wilson of.
Mrs . Winona Cook. 83, of 374 · flclatlng . Burial will be in
East Main St., Pomeroy, died Adamsville Cemetery. Calling
Tuesday at the home of a hours are any time after 4 p.m.
daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Clark of Wednesday at the Foglesong
Pomeroy .
Funeral Home.
Mrs. Cook was a member of
the Oaughers of America
lodge and of the past coun · Mrs. Merle Rice
cllors of that group. She Is
Funeral services for Mrs,
survived by her husband. Merle
Rice. found dead
Thomas J . Cook ; two MondayEdna
at
her
home on North
daughters, Mrs. Clark, and Fourth Are., Middleport,
Mrs. Agnes Bess , East held Tuesday afternoon atwere
the
liverpool ; a brother, Glen Rawllngs.Coats Funeral Home
Hudnall, Albany ; eight with the Rev. Charles Simons
grandchildren, and severo! officiating
.
nieces &amp;nd nephews.
Meigs
County
Dr . R.
Mrs. Cook was preceded In R. Pickens said Coroner
he
was
called
death by her parents, John and to the residence about 3 p. m.
Julia McCumber Hudnall, four

Mrs. Winona Cook

sisters, and a brother.

Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. Thursday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Rev. Robert Kuhn officiating.
Burial will be In Carleton
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral. home any lime.

noticing that Mrs. Rice had not
been tak ing in her milk

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f.)

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SPRING DRESS SALE

MASON - William Heldreth,

54, Mason, was dead on arrival

af Pleasant Valley Hospital
Monday evening . An elec ·
trlclan, he was a veteran of
World War II who was born
June 15, i918 In lumberport,
W. Va., the son of the late Fred
W. and Zora Robinson
Heldreth.
Surviving are his wife ,

Genevieve Looman Heldreth ;

a daughter 1 Mfs. Rosemary
Goodnlle, Manassas, Va .; .two
sons, Patrick, of Columbus,
and Frederick of Mason; four
sisters, Mrs. Ethd Conway,
Mrs . Ruby Keener , Miss
Evelyn Heldreth, all of
Cleveland, and Mrs. Freda
Holt, Columbus ; two brothers,
Pete and Harry , both of
Cleveland, · and two grand·
children.
Funeral services will , be at

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursday
March 2J.22
NOT OPEN
Friday &amp; Saturdly
March 23·24
EASY RIDER
(Technicolorl
Dennis Hopper
Peter Fonda

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WHO SlEW
AUNTIE ROO?
Hochnicolor)
Shelley Winters
MMk lHier
Show,Stlrh 7 p.m.

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natural causes as there was no
Mrs. Rice was preceded in

death by her husband, J. Q.
Rice, and a daughter, Mrs.
George (Edna) Anderson,
Middleport, several years ago.

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Burial was in Beech Grove

Cemetery.
No games, No gimmi cks

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JUst.Highest
Interest Rates

In The Area

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ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS
5 per cent per year. paid on .

CD

Regular Passbook Savings.

No Minimum . Interest
I rom date of deposit to date

of withdrawal . Interest
compounded q~arterly.

"-

MEIGS
BRAN&lt;;H
Tht Athtns County

Save Now On Spring Dresses Selected
From Our Regular Stock
Juniors - Mlues - Half Sizes

DRESSES PANT SUITS ENSEMBLES

S.vinp &amp; loon Co.

296 Second St.
'

All Accounts Insured To
$20.000 by . FSliC.

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vestigated and found Mrs. Rice
dead. Or. Pickens estimated
Mrs. Rice had been dead about
four days. Death was due to

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delivery, and a neighbor , in-

Pomeroy, Ohio

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evidence of foul play, the
coroner said.

William Heldreth

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Monday when a milkman,

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Vele1'811J Memorial Hospital
REPORT CORRECTED
ADMITTED
Floyd
A report on a reoont run by
Rhodes, Middleport; Leverett
the
Pomeroy E-R squad stated
Roush, Middleport; Ernest
Molden, Rutland; Sara Boyles, that the squad was called to the
Middleport; Gladys Gibson, Pomeroy Bowling Lanes for
Pomeroy; David Cowan , Chris Hooker who suffered a
Athens; Larry Van Meter, hand injury when he caught It
Mason, and Roberta ·Musser, in an air conditioner. Vincent
Knight, who occupies a mobile
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Allen home near the bowling lanes,
·Sayre, Rhonda ·Hawley, said that young Hooker caught
Lawrence Walker, Anna his hand in an air conditioner
Wheeler, Dorothy Wright and at the Knight residence, hot at
the bowling lanes.
Clarenoo Potts.

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Mrs . Eva Scbreibe·r,
Pomeroy. Rt. 2, is a patient
Pleasant Valley Hospital .
where she will undergo minor
surgery later this week. Her
room number Is 167.
·

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SPRING :~ COA T SALE
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Our ·Entire Stock of S_prlng Coats
Is .Included In ·This.Sale
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MAIN STORE AND ELBERFELDS MECH~~IC, STREET WAREHOUSE OPEN ALL DAY
lHURSDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM-SHOP FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 p,_ ·

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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14- ~Dally Se~l, Mlddleport..PCIIleroy, 0., March 21, ..!73

Riffle talks.al)out ~ ·

Meigs Band to compete in Niagara festivity
,.

Niagara · Falls is for
honeymooners - and the
Meigs High School Band 1
The band of 112 musicians,
directed by Dwight Goins, will
visit the falls in May where II
will take part in the marching
competition of the Inlernatlonally famous Orchard
Festival. The festival, with at
least a mjllion orchard trees in
bloom, Is staged to celebrate
the end of winter's deep freeze.
The band members, accompanied by 12 adult
chaperones, will leave the high
school on the afternoon of May
17, traveling by school buses to
Wheeling, W. Va. where they
will board Suburban Bus Unes
vehi~les at 6 p.m. arriving at
Niagara by midnight. The band
has reservations at the Empire
Motel, only about two blocks
from the falls.
On Fril)ay, May 18, the band
will be on a five hour sightseeing tour which will include
visits to Niagara-on-the-Lake,
Fort George, the Weiland
Canal, Fort Weller shipbullaing docks, Queens ton .
Heights, Monument of General
Brock,
Laura
Secord
Homestead, the Sir Adam Beck
Power generation station and
Queen Victoria Park. The tour
will conclude with a view from

Clinics
(Continued from Page

I)

County, as a department of
mental hygiene appointee to
serve· on the board; agreed to
employ an additional social
worker for · the clinic, and
COJIIIIlittees were ·asked to
meet i.n work sessions to
· ·complete their reports by the
May meeting.
· Marshall McGee from the 69
Board in Jackson presented a
project for consideration
concerning rehabilitation
servioos for the area.

the observation tOwer of the . men will swim and hold parade
Skylon, 775 feet above the practices on the motel grounds.
mighty c~taracts and a visit to The parade will be staged at I
the Ripley Believe It or Not p.m. on Saturday, May 19, with
Museum .
top awards to the two best
Following the lour, bands· bands to include $200 and a

trophy and $1QO and a trophy.
Some 50 bands are expected to
be taking part in the. competition. Following the parade
competition, the Meigs Band
and the chaperones will board

'buses for their return to
Wheeling where they will be
met hy school buses. They
expect to be iii Meigs County by
midnight.
The Meigs Band Boosters,

Call-switching MembershipSeven fined by Mayor Zerkle
Seven defendants were fined, costs, intoxication.
equipment
is getters honored three
forfeited bonds and
Fo~eiting bonds we~ Gary
'
Commander Kenneth E. another was assessed costs N. Rife, 22, Middlepott, $25, .
added in Meigs . Harris presented awards for only Tuesday by Middleport running a red·llght and t30 for
POMEROY - A major
11ddilon of call-switching
equipment in the Pomeroy
office is under way by General
Telephone Co . Kenley R.
Krinn, Athens district commercia! manager, said the new
equipment will upgrade
present services and provide
facilities for future area
growth.
Equipment for 400 new
customer lines will be added.
Other equipment includes 300
new phone number terminals
and additional batteries and
charging equipment. · More
Pomeroy-Athens calling paths
also will be part of this $107,300
project.
"Increasing the quantity of
switching equipment created
the need for higher capacity
storage batteries and charing
equipment," Krinn explained.
Telephone equipment
operates on direct current
(DC) rather than alternating
current (AC) provided by
commercial power. The AC
power is fed into our power
equipment and charger. The
charing facilities keep the
storage batteries up to
capacity while DC power is
drawn from the batteries to run
the switching equipment. The
Pomeroy exchange serves
4,738 telephones in a 90.4
square mile area of Meigs
County.

out.standing work in membership Tuesday night at the
annual birthday party of Drew
·webster Post 39, American
Legion . Receiving awards

were :
Bronze Star, for at least five
memberships, Edgar Van
Inwagen,
Fred
Wolfe,
Law'rence Smith, Frank
Vaughan, George Nesseiroad,
~ames Gilmore and Elza
Gilmore ; Silver star, at least
10, Don Hunnell, Bob Vaughan,
Ray Jewell; gold star, 25,
Leonard Jewell, Charles
Swatzel, Don Whaley, Paul
Casci and Commander Harris;
National Commander Awards,
for 25or more, Leonard Jewell,
Charles Swatzel, Don Whaley
and Paul Casci.
Named to the Go4ietters
Club for ·an average of at least
30 memberships were Casci,
Whaley and Harris. These
members will be among the

Mayor John zerkle.' ,
Fined were Jerry Stobart, 21;
and Dennis Wise, 23, both of
Middleport, $75 and costs each
for intoxication, disturbing the
peace and interferring with a
police officer; Coy F. Nitz, 34,
Middleport, $15 and costs,
intoxication; Hubert M. King,
Jr., 34, California, $100 and
costs and three days in jail,
driving while lploxicated ;
Delores Landers Summers,
Pomeroy, $10 ·and costs,
fighting in public; Steven K.
Lane, 18, Middleport, $5 and
costs, spinning tires, and Don
Lovett, 49, Portland,. $25 and

disturbing· the peace; Bertha
&lt;?riffin, .48. Middleport, t:!O,
fighting m public, and Homer
S. Carman, P.oll)eroy • $25, ·
assured clear distance.
·
Coleen A. Hoffman, 41,
Middleport,'was assessed costs
only, her fine being suspended,
~or failing to yield right of way·

Autos

·
Did
CO
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Sheriff Robert C. Har~nbach's Dept. investigated a
two-car accident Tuesday at
11:45 a. m. In Rutland Township on Township Road 58. No
personal injuries
were
reported.
!chard
A.
Warner,
·Marrtage Uceose
Po
eroy,
Rt.
I, was traveling
Ernest Lee Hawk'
Sou h and Michael G. Small,
Rutland, and June
Albuquerque, N. M. , was
20, Mason.
traveling north when due to the
guests at a dinner staged by the narrow road the cars were
Department of Ohio . Post ''Unable to pass and collided.
champion in membership work There was heavy damage to
was Don Whaley.
both.

sponsoring the trip, are
providing funds for housing,
fondll)ld transportation. Adulta
accompanying the band will
includ~
Mrs.
Kenneth
McLaughlin, Mrs. Don
Thomas, Mrs. Carol Pierce,
Mrs. Charles Werry, Lee
McComas, Mrs. Joan Weyersmiller, Mrs. June Murphy,
John Fultz, Frank Sisson, Mr.
and Mrs. Dwight Goirui and
Fred Ruth.
~
In addition to the trip to
Niagara, several other ac- ·
tivities are in store for the
Meigs Band· this spring and
summer. The band has been
invited to present a 45-minute
concert at King's Island, near
Cincinnati on May 6 and 165
band members have r~gistered
to. attend band camp at Rio
Grande College, Aug. 5-11. A
$10 deposit for each student
planning to attend is required
by April 15. More than half of
those registered ,already have
paid the deposit. ·
To help with the expenses
involved in the Canadian trip,
the band will hold a fund
raising day in April. Activities
of the day will include a car
wash, bake sale and a tag sale.
Residents and business
willing to contribute to the trip
may send contributions to the
Band Boosters at the high
school, Pomeroy Route 3.

Charles (Chuck) Riffle,
pharmacist at the SwisherLohse Drug Store, described
drugs of all kinds 8nd their
effects upon·the body, when he
addressed a recent meeting of
the Meigs COunty Alcohol and
Drug Abuse Committee at the
St. Paul· Lulheran Church ..
The committee discussed the
scholarship program through
which area students represent
Meigs County at .Ohio
Wesleyan · University.
Scholarships for these students
are possible only through
contributions by area mer.
chants.
According to plans made by
the committee, letters are lobe

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I

sent to variOUB area merchariil
and professional people ; to
.explain the plll'p08e ol ~ fi~
day 8e!Bion on drugs held eil~h
summer at the · universitY.'
Ex~tlve , members . of ·the
drug.abuse committee will be
calling on theSe business ~
professional people .receiving
the le tiers to discuss the
scholarship program in deta~.

IN HOSPITAL

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(Continued from Page 1)
guns," said the wearer of the campaign hat. "I used to do a lot of target .
shooting and hope ·to get back at it one
of these days."
Paul owns several fireanns. He is
proud of one in particular.
"I have an 1873 Springfield offleer's rifle that is one of only 477 ever
made," he beamed. "It is a trap-door,
single shot, 45-70" he said, in targetshooter's jargon.
No matter which hal Paul Graves
wears when he talks, it Is plain to see
that he likes living in southeastern
Ohio. As time goes on, maybe he'll try
to find a fourth hat to talk about. Just
maybe.

Thursday at the First
Baptist Church In Mason with
the Rev. Robert Wilson of.
Mrs . Winona Cook. 83, of 374 · flclatlng . Burial will be in
East Main St., Pomeroy, died Adamsville Cemetery. Calling
Tuesday at the home of a hours are any time after 4 p.m.
daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Clark of Wednesday at the Foglesong
Pomeroy .
Funeral Home.
Mrs. Cook was a member of
the Oaughers of America
lodge and of the past coun · Mrs. Merle Rice
cllors of that group. She Is
Funeral services for Mrs,
survived by her husband. Merle
Rice. found dead
Thomas J . Cook ; two MondayEdna
at
her
home on North
daughters, Mrs. Clark, and Fourth Are., Middleport,
Mrs. Agnes Bess , East held Tuesday afternoon atwere
the
liverpool ; a brother, Glen Rawllngs.Coats Funeral Home
Hudnall, Albany ; eight with the Rev. Charles Simons
grandchildren, and severo! officiating
.
nieces &amp;nd nephews.
Meigs
County
Dr . R.
Mrs. Cook was preceded In R. Pickens said Coroner
he
was
called
death by her parents, John and to the residence about 3 p. m.
Julia McCumber Hudnall, four

Mrs. Winona Cook

sisters, and a brother.

Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. Thursday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Rev. Robert Kuhn officiating.
Burial will be In Carleton
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral. home any lime.

noticing that Mrs. Rice had not
been tak ing in her milk

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f.)

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SPRING DRESS SALE

MASON - William Heldreth,

54, Mason, was dead on arrival

af Pleasant Valley Hospital
Monday evening . An elec ·
trlclan, he was a veteran of
World War II who was born
June 15, i918 In lumberport,
W. Va., the son of the late Fred
W. and Zora Robinson
Heldreth.
Surviving are his wife ,

Genevieve Looman Heldreth ;

a daughter 1 Mfs. Rosemary
Goodnlle, Manassas, Va .; .two
sons, Patrick, of Columbus,
and Frederick of Mason; four
sisters, Mrs. Ethd Conway,
Mrs . Ruby Keener , Miss
Evelyn Heldreth, all of
Cleveland, and Mrs. Freda
Holt, Columbus ; two brothers,
Pete and Harry , both of
Cleveland, · and two grand·
children.
Funeral services will , be at

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursday
March 2J.22
NOT OPEN
Friday &amp; Saturdly
March 23·24
EASY RIDER
(Technicolorl
Dennis Hopper
Peter Fonda

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WHO SlEW
AUNTIE ROO?
Hochnicolor)
Shelley Winters
MMk lHier
Show,Stlrh 7 p.m.

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natural causes as there was no
Mrs. Rice was preceded in

death by her husband, J. Q.
Rice, and a daughter, Mrs.
George (Edna) Anderson,
Middleport, several years ago.

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Burial was in Beech Grove

Cemetery.
No games, No gimmi cks

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JUst.Highest
Interest Rates

In The Area

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ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS
5 per cent per year. paid on .

CD

Regular Passbook Savings.

No Minimum . Interest
I rom date of deposit to date

of withdrawal . Interest
compounded q~arterly.

"-

MEIGS
BRAN&lt;;H
Tht Athtns County

Save Now On Spring Dresses Selected
From Our Regular Stock
Juniors - Mlues - Half Sizes

DRESSES PANT SUITS ENSEMBLES

S.vinp &amp; loon Co.

296 Second St.
'

All Accounts Insured To
$20.000 by . FSliC.

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vestigated and found Mrs. Rice
dead. Or. Pickens estimated
Mrs. Rice had been dead about
four days. Death was due to

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delivery, and a neighbor , in-

Pomeroy, Ohio

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coroner said.

William Heldreth

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Monday when a milkman,

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Vele1'811J Memorial Hospital
REPORT CORRECTED
ADMITTED
Floyd
A report on a reoont run by
Rhodes, Middleport; Leverett
the
Pomeroy E-R squad stated
Roush, Middleport; Ernest
Molden, Rutland; Sara Boyles, that the squad was called to the
Middleport; Gladys Gibson, Pomeroy Bowling Lanes for
Pomeroy; David Cowan , Chris Hooker who suffered a
Athens; Larry Van Meter, hand injury when he caught It
Mason, and Roberta ·Musser, in an air conditioner. Vincent
Knight, who occupies a mobile
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Allen home near the bowling lanes,
·Sayre, Rhonda ·Hawley, said that young Hooker caught
Lawrence Walker, Anna his hand in an air conditioner
Wheeler, Dorothy Wright and at the Knight residence, hot at
the bowling lanes.
Clarenoo Potts.

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Mrs . Eva Scbreibe·r,
Pomeroy. Rt. 2, is a patient
Pleasant Valley Hospital .
where she will undergo minor
surgery later this week. Her
room number Is 167.
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Is .Included In ·This.Sale
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MAIN STORE AND ELBERFELDS MECH~~IC, STREET WAREHOUSE OPEN ALL DAY
lHURSDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM-SHOP FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 p,_ ·

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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Of light reflected
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Considerable cloudiness
today, highs in the middle 30s
near Lake Erie and in low to
mid 41)s •. elsewhere. Clearing.
tonight, lows in the low and mid
30s. Mostly sunny and wamler
tomorrow with highs in the
uooor 40s and 50s.

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Devoted To The
Area
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WINNERS IN CUL'11JRAL ART of the fourth, fifth and
sixth grade at Racine Elementary are front row, 1-r, Sonja
Hill, Eric Bentz, Eric Hill, Melissa Ihle, and Pam Harden;
back row, Seth Hill; Bob Bill Lee, Tim Brinager, Doug Bell,

Dwayne Curfman and Pam Spencer. Principal Robert
Beegle reported that judging of the art work was done by
Jack Slavin Monday evening. Parents viewed the work of the
students at Tuesday night's P.T.A. meeting.

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CULTURAL ART WINNERS at Racine Elementary who
will enter county competition are blue ribbon winners from
th~"!IJ'St, secorid and thh'd grades. Front row,' l-r',' Craton

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By United Preaalnternallonal
PARIS - SOUTH VIETNAM AND the Viet Cong blamed
each other today for new fighting in VIetnam and said it could
wreck their talks on the pollticalluture of the country. Saigon
negotiator Nguyen Luu Vien said the &amp;linmunists were
responsible for new fighting round Tong Le Chan,. north of
Saigon.
"H this continues, It will disrupt the atmosphere of these
negotiations," be said. "Saigon has deliberately an~ cruelly
committed a grave violation of the Paris agreement by launching
mUitary operations against the liberated zones," said Nguyen
Van Hieu, a VietCong spokesman. "The Saigon command itself
announced the start of the operation.
"This is a grave situation which we wish to denounce," he said.
"How can we solve other problems here unless peace is maintained? The U. S. government and the Saigon administration
must bear the full consequences for the situation."

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PANAMA CITY - PANAMA SAID today it will carry its
demands for control of the Canal Zone to the U. N. General
Assembly despite an American veto that killed a similar
resolution under consideration by the Security Council. The veto
Wednesday night was only the third by the United States since
the foll!lding of the world organization 27 years ago.
Ambassador John Scali cast the veto vote because be said,
the resolution was "unbalanced and incomplete and therefore
subject to serious misinterpretation." Thirteen other members
of the Council, including China, the Soviet Union and France,
voted for the resolution, which in effect would 10rce the United
States to sign a treaty with Panama that would end 70 years of
American control of the waterway. Britain, the other member of
the Council, abstained .
WASHINGTON- A CIVIL Rights lawyer predicted today
there will be more equal funding of schools in rich and poor
districts despite the Supreme Court ruling it is not constitutionally required.
"The systematic exposure of unfairness" developed through
lawsuits has focused public attention on school financing as
never before, according to Burt Neuborne of the American Civil
Uberties Union. He saw a marked shift toward equality in urbanized states in the course of the next few yeats because of the
polltical Implications.

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___:__ _ _.:.__ _P_:_HO
.:.:.
. N:.::..E..:.:99:.::..2·.:.:21..:.:56:____ _ _ _ _ _...:..:::.:TEN CENTS

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON'S chief economic
adviser e~pressed concern today that soaring Prices of food as
well as .other consumer Items mi:;ht trigger big, new wage
contract demanda. ·
· Herbert Stein, chairman .of the White House Council of
Economic Advisers, predicted that if a wage spiral can be
averted - "a problem we're ·conce.rned about" - the price
situation would be under control by year's end. ·

Wolfe, Randy Lee, Sherry Bell, Cindy Cross, Kimberly
Foilrod, Kim~erly Bickers and Rita Sloter; back row,
Michael Gheen, Sherry Patterson, Usa Deem, Alan Pape,
Richard Lyons, and David Parsons.

SAIGON (UPI) - The chief detail the American troop
Viet Cong delegate to the Joint withdrawal plan, starting on
Mi)itary Commission (JMC) Sunday. It was apparently
said today the Communists will based on an expected prisoner
not release the last group of release in Hanoi on Saturday of
American prisoners until li)e 107 Americans. The Viet Cong
United States agrees to with- hold an additional 32 and there
draw all American troops from are seven military and two
Vietnam, including 825 soldiers civilian prisoners known to be
assigned to the JMC.
in Laos.
" ... We are temporarily susBoth the Viet Cong and the
pending the turnover of the list North Vietnamese said all
of American military per- prisoners would beturned over
sonnel to be released and those no later than Wednesday, and
foreign civilian prisoners who probably on Saturday or
are presently being held while Sunday.
we wait for an answer from the
The release would presumaUnited States," said Lt. Gen. bly be held 48 hours after the
Tran Van Tra.
list is turned over. 'The list was
The Viet Cong had offered expected to be given to the
Wednesday to fre.e 32 Americans today .
American prisoners this
weekend.
The surprise announcement
"
CRACKDOWN
HERE
came only hours alter Maj .
A crackdown on doga
Gen. John A. Wickham, deputy
running loose in MiddlepOrt
U.S. delegate to the JMC, made
was promised today by
public a latter saying
Pollee
Chief J, J. Cremeans
American troop withdrawals
who said owners of doga
would not resume until the
prisoner release actually running loose will be cited to
court under the appropriate
begins and arrangements
ordinance.
The Humane
made to free those prisoners
, Society and dog warden wDI
held in Laos.
There are about 6,300 ameri- . be notified in cases where
the owners of dogs cannot be
can soldiers left in Vietnam
determined.
and United States sources said
earlier all but ·about 1,000 ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
would be withdrawn as soon as
BIKE RIDE
'final details were arranged lor
Members of the Trinity
the return of the POWs. The Sunday School will hold a
Paris cease-fire agreement bicycle ride and wiener roast
calls for prisoner release and Sunday, meeting at the Roy
U.S. withdrawal to be com- .. Smith residence on old Route
pleted by next Wednesday.
33 at 2 p. m. and riding to the
Wickham's letter outlined in roadside park on new Route 33.

8

ostage

BICYCLES AWARDED - As pert of tlte 50th anniversary celebration of the Athens County Savings and Loan
Company two bicycles were awarded by the Pomeroy
Branch Wednesday. Winners were Johnnie Riebel, front,
eight-year old son of Mr. and Mrs. John Riebel, Pomeroy, Rt.
3, and Don Covert, owner and operator of the Court Street
Cab Company, back, right. Making the presentations was
Earl Ingels, vice president' of tlie company. and Pomeroy
Branch Mallager. Covert Is donating his· bike to children of
the children's home.

Fire Station bids accepted
Bids to build Pomeroy's new $79,596; plumbing and heating,
fire station were accepted by A. J . Stockmeister, Inc.,
town council in a special Jackson, $12,272, and electric,
session Wednesday night.
K&amp;K Electric, Athens, for
Meeting with council was $11,395
Charles Legar, Pomeroy Fire
Legar explained that total
Chief, who recommended that cost of the building which incouncil acce pt the lowest cludes legal and architect fees
bidders. Bids approved were and in terest on money they will
lor general construction, borrow during construction
Athens Masonry, Albany, amounts to $116,263. An EDA

Damage suit filed
demands $21,900
J

A suit for damages in the
amount of $21,900 has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Fleas Court by Carl R. Janes ,
Pennsville, Ohio and Bill Janes
Chevrolet, Inc., McConnelsville, against Wilhelmina M.
Roedel, Pomeroy.
The plaintiff, Carl R. Janes,
petitions tiiBt he was driving an
auto owned by Bill Janes
Chevrolet south on SR 7 in
Meigs County on May 11, 1971,
when the defendant, Mrs.
Roedel, traveling west on
county road five, drove into the
intersection of 7 and county
road five directly in front of the
plaintiff's auto, caushig a
collision. The suit is for personal injuries suffered by Carl
Janes and damages to the car
owned by Bill Janes Chevrolet.
. Gene Buckley, who was
sentenced to ·t to 15 years in
Mansfield Reformatory on
Nov. 24, 1972 on conviction of
breaking and entering, upon
recommendation of the
probation officer, has been
placed on probation lor two
years.

Bonnie Marie Mathews has
been granted a divorce from
Charles M. Mathews on
charges of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty.

grant expected by the fire hinted that a house to house
department is $75,200, leaving canvass for donations may be
the fire department's share made.
$41,063.
The above bids will be sent to
Legar said the firemen will EDA for approval after which
borrow $30,000 from local village officials, bidders and
hanks, and turn the money the architects will confer. ,
over to the village clerk. The Legar, former mayor of
firemen feel that balance of Pomeroy, said it is hoped
their obligation can be raised construction can begin by the
by the fire department and

Changes were made in a
hearing on proposed sub·
division regulations in . Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
this morning.
Eight changes were made in
the subdivisions regulations
prepared for the Meigs County
Regional Planning Commission by Surveys Unlimited,
planning consultants.
Following the approval of
the changes, Prosecuting

Attorney Bernard Ful~ said
the commissioners would take
the changes under advisement
and add their approval when
· deemed adviseabie.
Attending were Fultz, Robert
Clark, Warden Ours, and
Charles R. Karr, commissioners; Wesley Buehl,
Meigs County engineer; Pat
Meeker of Surveys Unlimited
and C. E. Blakeslee, county
agricultural agent.

Deer the only road casualty

,

Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept.• investigated·
two accidents Wednesday in
which no personal injuries
were reported.
At 9:50 a. m. ~~the Ashland
Station in Tuppers Plains,
Kenneth W. · Wilcox, Middleport, driving ·a truck
belonging to Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric
Compeny backed from the

driveway there and struck a
parked car belonging to R&amp;S
Sales Com., Marietta. There
was light damage to both
vehicles.
At 7:10 p. nl. in Scipio twp.
Ray N. Haning, Pomeroy, Rt:
4, was traveling south when a
buck deer which ran in front of
his car was struck and killed.
There was medium property
damage .

~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;::::::::::~::::::::::::%::::::::::::::::::::::;::::;::.:::::::::::;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:::t:::

EUGENE FINK
RUTLAND - Eugene M.
Fink, Rutland, will be
presented a gold watch by , shaking their heads In disbelief, reported that the animal
the gas · company in
COLUMBUS - STATE HIGHWAY SAFETY Director
recognition of 25 years ·of ili\ ~~I:~~::a~o:~:a:,e~~~g pulled at 60 miles an b~r ::::
Eugene P. O'Grady vigorously defended a bill requiring use of
service when he is inducted
The horse got up, shook himself and trotted across the :;:;
automobile seat belts Wednesday and argued that tl)e use of the
Into the Columbia Gas ·~ centtrline into the path of a station wagon driven by
EXTENDED
OUTLOOK.
safety strap!! is ''more than an individual. decision."
Robert Long of Marya ville, who said he was going about 60
Mild . with a 'chance of , System Southern Quarter
."Crashes involve not only individuals, but society in
Century· Club Wednesday,
showers
through
the
period.
when
he hit the animal. The horse went over
top of the
general," O'Brady S!lid in testimony before the House Tran·
Aprilll,'at
the
club~s
annual
vehicle,
wrecking
the
front
of
it.
Highs In the up(ler 50i and
aportatlon Committee. "A crash which injures an individual or
banquet at the American
Long, who had ducked to the floor, was not hurt.
60s
Saturday, falling to the
other parties, a crash which wrecks public or private property_
Legion
Hall,
Lancaster.
The
.
·50s and lower 60i by. Monday.
Neither was the horae which stood up again, shook
becomes more than an individual decision and the proper purSouthern
Quarter
Century
himself
an~ trotted over to Waidenmar, who had just
""w• In the mid 40s to the
view of the government."
Club
has
a
membership
of
mid 50s saturday, falling to
287 active and retired em- r~: ~~!u:~et~nth~;~· :::~ve the sturdy animal back to :\\l
the mid 30s to mtd 40s by
COLUMBUS - GOV. JOHN J . GilLIGAN'S proposal to
ployees of Cotumbls Gas
Monday .
(ConUnued on page 6)
·=···· ... · .····· ..... ...... .
:::::::::::::::::;:;:::;::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::-":::::::::::::::::::::~::~:::::::::::·.~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;(::
·····••······· Transmission Corp.

~,:!~., mar~~!~.~~e W~s~~u~:I ~tate'~lc:;:~~!~~~~ :l,~:f

J:.:

'he

.

latter pert of April or early
May.
The building will be located
on Butternut Ave.
In other business council
entered into a lease with the
Bureau of Employment Services to use the council
chambers from July 1, 1973 to
June 30, 1975. The village will

receive an annual rent of $600
from the room.
Attending were Don Collins,
acting mayor in the absence of
Mayor William Baronick ,
William
Ralph
Werry,
Snouffer, Elma Russell and
Jim Mees, council members ;
Jane Walton, clerk; Legar, and
Jed .Webster, police chief.

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - An
Ohio Education Association official said Wednesday the U.S.
Supreme Court, in upholding
property taxes lor public
school financing, ruled that
equality of education is not a
constitutional right.
The high court ruled in a
Texas case, most school systems in the U.S. are financed
largely by property taxes.
"We are disappointed that
the U.S. Supreme Court has
ruled that education is not a
fundamental right that comes
under the equal protection
clause of the 14th Amendment," Dr. Stayner F.
Brighten OEA executive
secretary, said at a news conference.
"The unfortunate thing about
the decision today is the fact
that inequality between school
districts in education financing
still remains," ' he said. "In
Ohio that range is bout four to
one. In other words, some districts have four times the
money available to finance an ·
educational program as other
districts."
Brighten said an OEA
federal su8t challenging the
property tax as a school
financing base ''is now a dead
Issue," although OEA lawyers
will study the SUpreme Court
ruling to detennine what legal
action might be appropriate.
''To Work Harder"
Brighten said the OEA will

continue to push lor reform
legislation in the General
Assembly, including passage ·
of a bill by Rep. Donald J.
Pease, DOberiin, to con·
soiidate some school districts
and spread the higher tax
income.
"We'll just have to work
harder for that type of legislation now without the SUpreme
Court's help," he said.
State School Supt. Martin W.
Essex said the court's decision
was the right one at the present
time.
II the justices had thrown out
the property tax base, a wideranging precedent would have
been set, Essex said.
"The decision
would
drastically affect many other
elements or practices of
American life and woUld have
required
far
reaching
changes," he said. "The
decision would be too disruptive for the nation at this

time.'l
He said Ohio would work to
eliminate inequality among ·
school districl-1' through tax reform.'
Benson Wolman, executive
director of the Ohio American
Civil Uberties Union, said the
decision "spell$ doom lor any
such litigation in Ohio ."
" It is a blow to the poor. and
to minority groups~prticular­
ly to those where 1111! central
city Is hemmed in by rich surburban areas," Wolman said.

II

'

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