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                  <text>u; - The Daily &amp;'ntinol, Middl&lt;'port-Po)lleroy, 0 ., Jan . 16, 1974

,_

'Blue Angels, open season, trip Meigs
&lt;o~tch Ann Adams· Ga llia
.\r &lt;H.Iemy High Sehoul's IJlue
:\n gl'ls oprn ed t heir 1974

basketball campaign Tuesday
night by turning back t1ost
Mc ig·s. :l!i-33, in the Larry
Mo rrison Gym at Roek

.

Springs

'"'"·---------

After. lead ing 10-9 at the fi rst

whistle stope Ga ll ipolis fell
beh ind 18-15 at halflune.
· Meigs still led by three, 26-23,

Just Highest
Interest Rates
In The Area

aft('!' three periods. Gallipolis

5 1f4%

ra llied to outscore the
Marauder Babes D-7 in the
final period to hand the home
team its seco nct Joss in two
starts .

ON PASSBOOK
SA VINGS

Galha"s attack w1th l l points . .

Brenda

Wilso n

paced

Pam Eslwnaur added eight.

s1.1 pe r cent year pa1d on

Patty Burnett seven, Ca thy
Wall fiv e and Terry Short four .

RCQlii&lt;H P.1 ssbook Savingo;
No M111imum
lnt e r·est
fr om ct.1l t&gt; o f depo s 1t to d,1te
o f Wltlldra w,l l Int er est
col npoiJndrd qut1rl erly

P;~nt

Vaughn 's 11 points led

We ll ~ i ~ fir~ t

4")MEIGS

~BRANC H

Henry Wells, Pomeroy Route
2, is the first candidate to fi le
The A! hens CovnJy
hi s peti tion in the May
SCIYlnQS llo Loan Co .
primaries
with the Me igs
296 Second St.
County Board of Elections.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Wells, a Republican, who is
J.'\11 Accounts lns urf'd To
serving
as a Meigs County
5 70 OOU by F Sl IC
commissioner, hav ing been
.
-~
appointed to replace Charles
. '
.Rm:
"
Karr, Sr., · who resigned, has
~'A~ ·'&gt;\
filed for nomination to a full
term. Deadline for fi ling is 4
,.,....,_ _ _ _ _ _ __. p.m . on Wednesday, Feb. 6.

/

L

!'\.

r

Dance and Listen To The
Music of

GEORGE HALL
10:00 TIL 2:00
~

''

Playing Tuesday Thru

~

Saturday At

~

I
~'

the char ges of Coach Joy Bentley ._
11mrsday, the GAHS girls
will host Southwestern at 4
p.m. in the JUnior high gym.
Box score :
JI LUE ANGE LS (36) Wilson 12; Eshenaur 8; Burnett
7; Wa ll 5; Short 4; Sprague 0;
Edelman 0; Weaver 0.
MEIGS (33 ) - Vaughn II;
Weyersmiller 9; Ash 7; B.
Va ughn 6: Seth 0; Wltile 0;
Maze 0.
By quarters:
Gallipolis
to 5 8 13- 36
Meigs
9 9 8 7-33

Oshorn e infant

dil·fl in slee p
NEW HAVEN - Rhonda
.Joyce Osborne, three-month
old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
. Rona ld Osborne of New Haven
died unexpectedly Tuesday.
The child was ta ken to
Pleasa nt Valley Hospital by
the New Haven E-R squad but
was dead on arrival. It was
reported the infant apparently
died in her sleep.
Survivin g bes id es the
parents are a brother, Rodney
Lee; the ma ternal gra ndpa rents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Wag ner of Pennsville, N. J .,
an d pa ternal grandp ar ent s,
Mr. and Mrs. Pa ul Osborne,
Welc h, W. Va.
Rhonda was born Oct. 17,
1973 at the Holzer Medical
Center. Funeral services will
be held at I :30 p.m. Thursday
a t th e F bg lesong Funeral
Home wi th the Rev . William
Demoss officiating. Burial will
b e in Gra ha m Ce metery.
Friends may ca ll at the funeral
home anytime.
TWO RUNS MADE
The SEOEMS made two runs
Tuesday, at 4:44 p.m. for
J ose ph Wil son, a medi ca l
patient, to Veterans Memorial
Hospi tal and at 6: 31 p.m.
Sheld a Baum ga rdn er , suffe ring from a possible fra ctu red arm, to Veterans
Me morial Hospi tal.

THE MEIGS INN
POMEROY, OHIO

·Deer killed in h-io-hwar
~
-'

f:XTF:NQE DOIJTLOoK
Chance of showers Friduy
·
•
becoming mixed with snow
The Me 1~s County Sheriff 's
flurri es north ern sec ti ons , Dept. mvest1ga ted two acSa turd ay. F air Sunda y. .. cidenls Tuesday, one in which
Temp eratures gra du all y a deer wa s killed .
turning cooler. Highs Friday
Leonard Lee Barber, 26,
middle 40s north to mlddl ~ Reedsville, traveling north on
50s south dropping to the 30s SR 124 just south of the Meigsand lower 40s Sunday. Lows Athens C.o. line, hit a deer when
in the 30s early Friday and in it leaped fr om a steep bank on
the 20s early Sunday.
the right side of the road into
the path .of Barber 's auto.
There wa s moderate damage
to the auto. Barber had no
apparent injuri es.
Two defendan ts we re
assesse d cos ts only and
another was fi ned in Mid0Wfl S
dleport Mayor J ohn Zerkle's
Middleport Village receipts
court Tuesday night.
for
December totaled $34,D28.0D
Paul E. Knapp, 29, Pomeroy,
whi
le expendi lures tota led
and Curt Roush, Middlepor t,
charged . wi th speed ing and $55,333.74, according to the
trash accumul ati on ~ res pec· December report of Clerk'

Two draw fines

T

Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges, Jan. 1,51
Joyce At kin son, Tammy
Blake, Patricia Brady, Landon
Bu rnett , Th elma Campbell ,
Mrs. Robert Cod ner and son,
Raymond Cox, Lester Dav is,
Richard Dow, Merrill Eva ns,
John Fa ul krer, Lena Hamm,
J ohn Hender son,
Jerry
Johnson, Jr .. Earl King , Albert
Kuhn , George Malone, Howard
McGinnis, Bryan Poore,
Patricia Pyles, Betty R1ce,
Robert Roberts, Elmer Rose ,
Helen Saunders, Steven Stover,
Goldie Terry, Mary Tomblin ,
Verna Towns, Ly la VanMeter,
Preston Webb, J ohn Wood Ill,
Eldon Wri ght.
I Births I
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Chattin,
a son, Leon , W. Va.

At 12: .18 p.m: ail accide nt
occurred at the mtersectwn of
Elm and Fifth Sis. in Racine.
Accordmg · t6 Shenff Ha rtenbach 's Dept., Edna Swan
Deem , 62, Ht. 2, Racme, was
traveling west of Elm St;..when
Olden A. Thaxton, Racine,
stopped for a slop s1gn and then
drove into the side of the Deem
a uto _ Minor damage was
caused to both vehicles . No
inj uries were reported, and no
ci tation was issued.

' revenue reported

'
tively, were assessed costs Treasur er Gene Grate.
Receipts and expenditures of
on ly. Olevy Lemaster, 3D,

Pomeroy, was fined $150 and
costs and was given a three day
jail sentence on a charge of
dr iving while intoxicated .

..

I

the various funds and the
balance as of Dec . 31,
respectively, include : general,
$21 ,679 .55,
$24,266.84 ,
$46,588.69; cemetery, $387.32;
$294.01 , $1,683.09; fire equipment, no rece ipts, $463.02,
$130.1 7; swimming pool, no
rece ipts, $6.65, $2,6~1.2 8 ;
planning commission, · no
receipts, $37.71. $2 1D.79; street
$1,730.23,
ma in tena nce,
$8 ,855.76, ·$226.81; sanitary
sewer, $3,843.39, $3,543.62,
$30,349.46; wate r , $6, 167.60 ,
$1, 166. 13, $25 ,788 .44; wate r
meter deposit trusts , $175, $40,

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Dennis
Holley, Ashton; Wade Rolli ns,
Leon; Mrs. F ra,nklin Imboden,
daughter , Syr acuse; Mrs.
Donald Robinson, da ughter ,
Pliny; Jennifer Herron, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Dallas Bailes,
Roberts burg;
Mrs. Te n
Melr ose , Point Pleasant;
Frances Johnson, Mason ;
Floyd Stover, Point Pleasant,
and John Tay lor , Ashland.

UNIT CALLED
The Middleport E-R squad
was called Tuesday at 11:26
a. m. to city hall for Helen Lane
POST TO MEET
who was ha vin g difri cully
The Raci ne American Legion
brea thing. She was taken to Post 602 will meet Thursday
Holzer Medical Ce nter.evening at 8 p.m.

$6 ,466 .38 ; sanitary sewe r
escrow, $945, no disbursement,
$64, 100 .36; federal revenue
sharing, no receipts, $4,297,
$2,876 ; fiJ;e house construction,
no receipl"i, no disbursements,
$11 .99. The ba lance in all funds
as of Dec. 31 was $197,989.4 1.

News.

• •

in Briefs

, Continued from Page I
test imony, sayill!l he intended to honor a pledge made to the
Watergate investigators that he wouldn't discuss it pr ior to.the
hearing s.

Peace at hand on Suez battlefronts

LONDON - RAJLROAD ENGINEERS ENQED a 24-hour
walk out today, but industrial turmoil raged in Britai n, with
subway workers taking a strike vote and coal miners mainta inin g ~ crippling slowdown.
·
'
TI1e nation's 29,000 trairunen returned to work today, ending
th eir SeC(lnd one-day walkout in five days. The engineers ,
however, kept up a month-&lt;1 id slowdown aimed at winning pay
dema nds. London 's 10,000 subway emp loyes voted to strike Feb.
4 and shu t down the city's mass transit system un less authorities
grant a $14 .4D millton pay boost.
'II

.FBI probirig
tampered tape
WAsHINGTON (UP!) - The
FBI has launched an investigation to determine who erased a
key portion of one of President
Nixon's Watergate tapes.
An FBI spokesman confirmed
the Investigation is Wtder way ,
but gave no details. It was
reportedly requested tiy Special
Prosecutor Leon Jaworski . The
Westinghouse Broadcasting network said Jaworski had been
assured by FBI Director
Clarence Kelley that the
investigation would be safeguarded from any While House
influence . The Justice Department decllned' comment.
Court evidenc• now seems to
indicate at least part of the
erasure occurred at the White
House within a 4().m!nute period
in the early afternoon last Oct.
I, shortly after the machine
believed responsible was delivered.
Although both the tape and
the recorder at the time were
in the possession of Nixon's
secretary, ROlle Mary Woods ,
the evidence does not show who
was responsible for pushing the
buttons that caused the erasure.
Miss Woods says it was not
she, and the White House said
Wednesday lt was not the
President, either accidentally
or deliberately.
Chief U. S. District Judge
John J. Sirica will continue his
efforts to solve the m.Yslery
today, as two more Secret
Service agents whose responsibilities included care of the
White House tapes are recalled
to the stand.
Sirica said Wednesday he
hopes to wrap up his hearings
on the tapes case- which began
Nov. !-by the end of the week.
He said he is considering
whether to recommend that it
be referred to a grand jury for

ROME - POL ICE SAJD TODAY THEY HAVE arrested
three persons in connection with the kidnaping of J . Paul Getty
Ill and recove red what they believe was part of the $2 .9 million
ransom paid last month for his release.
Auth orities identified the three men as Domenico Barbino,
27; Vincenzo Mammoliti, 32, and Antonio Mancuso, 34 . All three
are from southern Italy. Police sa id two suspects were arrested
in Calabria, located at the southern tip of Italy, and the third was
pic ked up in R;ome. No other detai ls were disclosed.

Gilligan

Employment Wanted
Marriage License
Pa ul Jose ph Berish, Jr., 31, SE CURITY gu ard work wan t ed. e)(perienced Need Job
Continued from Page 1
Par kersburg, and Kath ryn
badly . Phone 992 -6ld4 . Russ
now, f1rmly and mlelltgently;-&lt;-oar lene Biddle 28 ParkersE she l man
we can and we will keep Ohio's burg.
' '
1-16 -4tp
-------------economy strong.
"Saving energy means wor k
ind sacrifice, bu t savin g
energy will mean saving jobs,"
he said. " And save jobs we
MENS HOODED
mus t do if we are to attain o~;r
goal of providing a job for
every Ohioan capa ble of
working - a goal toward which
we have made great progress
in recent years."
War m laminated lining
zip
per fron t co a t s tyl e .
Gi ll igan was applauded
dr awstring c losure l ined hood.
heavily when he said aid to
pr imary an!;! secondary
80 pet . colton . 20 pet.
education has been increased
pol yeste r b lend in sizes :; mal l ,
me d i u m, la r ge and ext r a
by more than 50 pet. over the
large. Solid co lors : red , navy
last two years.
bl u e and grey .
"No otner state has ever
equalled tha t record," he said,
The governor also drew an
enthusiastic reaction whe n he
said Ohio, "when compared to
Be sure to see all th e other
all other states in the union,
sty le m e ns and boys swea t
has never in its long his tory
shi r t s.
bee n sounder· or stronger
Men s a nd Boys departm ent .
economica lly."
1st fl oor .
Gilligan also said unemployment has dropped under
his guidance and business has
expanded.

JERUSALEM (UP!) - Israel, Egypt, the ·United States
and the Soviet Union will issue
a joint communiq ue today announcing an agreement on a
troop disengagement fo rmula
for the Suez Cana l battlefront,
Israeli officials said.
The officials said the statement will be released simultaneously
in Jerusalem, Cairo,
possible criminal action.
W
ashington
and Moscow at . 9
At issue is the tape of a
p.
m.
(3
p.m.
EDT) . They gave
conversation Nixon had June
20, 1972, just three days after no details on the substance of
'the bugg ing arrests at the
Watergate, with then-White
House Chief of Staff H. R.
Haldeman . The tape is marred
in the middle by a loud buzz
lasting 111-'k minutes that
obliterates any voices.
Haldeman's own notes of that
meeting, introduced as evidence before Sirica, show that
the discussion concerned Watergate and a need to "be on the
attack for diversion.' '
Miss Woods, assigned by the
President to transcribe portions VOl. XXV NO. 193
of that and other tapes subpoena ed by Waterga te
prosecutors, testified in late
November that she had an
uacc ident" while working with
the June 20 tape the afternoon
Rl. . ' '--•
' \
1' '
of Oct. 1.
•
She said she had been
.'
distracted by a telephone call
and might hav f pushed the
"record" button by mistake
instead of "stop " while keeping
C.n"..... I' ' ' '. "r~ ···
her foot on a pedal tha t kept
the machine moving, thus ·
1\. ' ! "' • ' •
perhaps erasing 4-'fz to 5

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SWEAT SHIDTI

l

1
'

7.95

/

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

..JANUARY

..the agrccri1cn t..
Pr ime Minister Golda Meir's
cabinet co nvened at her home
to rev iew the deta ils of the.
agreement, re3chec;l in a final
round of consul tations between
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger and Israeli ministers
at a meeting delayed by a ra re
Je rusa lem blizzard.
The Israeli leaders used
four-whee l drive Jeeps to pass
thro ugh the snow-blocked
streets of Jerusalem to Kissin-

minutes but no more.

r ,.

\J _,

.. almost surely " was the one·

t·' I ' 1 .
•

a

\

'

('!
~

POM EROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Living Room Suites

DINETTE SETS

EVERY SUITE IN STOCK

ENTIRE
STOCK

%
TO
OFF

SAVEl

ALL LAMPS

%

.BEST
VALUES

SAV.EI

OFF

SAVEl

FREE
DELIVERY

OFF

AS

SAVEl

Frost Clear

FUR

OFF

WASIDNGTON - KENNETH R. COLE JR. , ONCE John D.
Ehrliclunan's assistant, has been promoted to Ehrlichman's old
job, assistant to the President for domestic affairs.
The White House announcement Wednesday said Nixon had
directed the :ll&gt;-year-&lt;Jld fonner advertising executive "to work
closely with the vice president " and . cabinet members in
developing and implementing domestic policy. The job pa ys
$42,500 per year.

Gibson Refrigerator
16 cu. ft . .

OFF

ATHENS, OIDO - DEMOCRATIC PARTY leaders from 12
southeastern Ohio counties will meet here Saturday to review a
list of challengers in an attempt to unseat Rep. Clarence Miller,
R-{)hio.
Democrats have been unsuccessful in their last four a ttempts to Wtseat Miller, a fonner mayor of Lancaster. The
district, bordered on the north by Interstate 70 and the south by
the Ohio River, is geographically the sta te's largest.

'

, ..
~

'. ,

•
PLANNING COMMissroN BRIEFED - Charles (Chuck) Combs, planning director, Ohio
Valley Regional Development Commission, outlined steps required for county-wide or rural
zoning during Wednesday night 's seC&lt;lnd annual Ga llia CoWt ty Planni ng Commission meeting
at Rio Grande. Ga llia could be one of the first counties in southern 'Oh io to adopt rural wn ing if

Now Only

ITURE

If Gallia - or any county is to have orderly grow th the
next 10 years and thereafter,
rura l zon ing is a must. -- .
That, according to Charles
(Chu ck ) Combs , plan ning
direc tor, Ohio Valley Regional
Development Comm iss ion,
Por tsmouth, was the point
dri ven home Wednesday night
at the second annual meeting
of the Gallia Coun ty Plan ning
Commission .
Twe nty-t hree per so ns, includ ing members of the county
planni ng co mmi ss ion a nd
Gallia Coun ty Commissioners,
we re briefed by Combs on what
must be done in order to
in itiate zon ing laws in rural
Gal lia Coon ty followin g dinner
in Rio Grande College
Cafeteria.
The city of Ga llipolis has had
zon ing laws since 1967, Since
the industrial boom hit Ga llia
and surrounding areas, talk of
county-wide zoning has been
the chi ef concern of the Gallia
County Planning Commission.
Combs defi ned what has to be
done:
Steps Outlined
First step is a resolution of
intenti on, by Gallia planners,
or petition by 8 pet. of the
voters for rura l zoning.
0 11ce. this accomplished, the
Gallia County Commissioners
must appoint a rural zoning
commission.
The rural zoning commission
must then prepare maps and
text, and then conduct heari ngs
in each township. Ma terials
are then turn ed over to the
coWt ty planning commission

95

WASffiNGTON - THE AGRICULTURE Department
(Continued on page 10)

.I

$25,000 loaned
WASHINGTON, D. C. , Rep. Clarence E. Miller and
the Farmers Home Ad ministration (FHA) Wednesday announced approval of
an additional $25,000 in loan
funds to Tuppers PlainsChester Water Distr ict in
Meigs CoWtty, Ohio to helj&gt;
finance its enlargement of the
existing water sys\em for more
water users In the area.
Farmers Home has loaned a
total of $800,000 for the
development of the project
since 1968.
.
'!be loan will enable the

,.

organization to extend service
to 46 new water cu'stomers . The
enlarged system's 285 miles of
line will serve a total of more
than 1,400 homes and other
establishments in Meigs and
Athens CoWttles.
RepaJ able in 40 years at an
interest rate of 5 percent, the
loan is provided under the
Rural Community Facilities
pr ogram adm inis tere d by
Farmers
Home
Administration, a rural credit
service in the U. S. Department
of Agri culture .

plans.
The issue ·would then be
Plans then go back to the
rural zoning commission which submitted to voters in either a
certifies the zon ing plan. Then primary or special election. A
it is return ed to the county si!"ple majority vote would
commissioners. A seco nd rule.
If ap pr ove d, a five-man
public hearing (advertised 10
board
of appeals must be
days in advance ) would be held
at coWtty-wide level. If no appointed to handle cases. This
conflicts developed, a move would be done on either a
(Con tinued on page 10)
would be made to adopt the
by review.

Nixon erasures
strongly denied
By EUGENE V, RISHER
WASHINGTON (UP!) Whi te House officials say
President Nixon did not erase
18-Y. minutes of
key
Watergate tape, but beyond
. that they had virtually no
information to offer on what
happened.
Presidential spokesman Gerald L. Warren Wednesday
denied that Nixon himse lf had
erased the tape, either acc identally or deliberately.
But beyond this, White House
offi cials, both publicly and
privately, declined to comment
on the disclosure by a team of
experts in U.S .. District Court
that a critical portion of a
recording of Nixon's conversation on the Watergate burgla ry
with .his former Chief of Staff,

a

Fire losses
estimated at
$52,215 in '73

Mount Vernon
Jan Holter, Southeast Ohio
Junior Miss.. and Peggy
O'Brien, Meigs County JWtior
Miss are compe ting for the
Ohio Junior Miss title in Mount
Vern on, Ohio F riday an d
Satrn:day.
Miss Holter, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs. Roy Holler, Route 3,
Pomer oy , will present a n
original dramatic reading wi th
orga n a nd tr umpet accompaniment. Miss O'Brien,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
James O'Brie n, Li ncoln Hill,
Pomeroy, will present a n
&lt;irigirral dance routine in her
ta lent competi tion.
Both Me igs Hig h School
· seniors were selected to
represent this area during the
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss
Pageant last November in
Middleport sponsored by the
Southea st Ohio Jun ior Miss
Pageant Committee : of Mrs.
Sally Ingles, Mrs. Susie Soulsby, Mrs. Susie Abbott and
Ralph Werry , with DWight
Goins in charge of music .
A few tickets are sti ll
. available from the Southeast
Ohio Jun ior Miss Pageant for
the finals of the siate pageant.
Tickets are $6 per set for both
Friday and Saturday nights.
Advane(! tickets for Sa turday
night only are $3 from the
cor-1mi!tee . The door price on
Saturday night at Mount
Vernon will be .$4.

•

SOME HIGH JJ1'lKS - This.car, driven by Emma J . Stanley, 31, M~son , struck the house
above owned by P~ul Honaker in Mason about midnight last night. She suffered pa inful injuries.

Total losses resulting from 42
fire calls answered by the
Middleport 'Fire Deparimenl
during 1973 totaled $52,215,
Fire Chief Bob E. Byer reports.
With fire and emergency
calls, th e fi re depar tment
made a total of 289 runs during
1973 - the 42 fire calls, 244 first
runs
and
three
aid
mis~ellane ous run s.
Losses to homes resulting in
the 24 in-town fires totaled
$26,250; losses to trucks and
autOll totaled $6600 and there
was $150 loss to other buildings.
Content loss in the 24 in-town
fires was $13,225 in homes; $150
to autos and $50 in other
buildings. In 18 out-&lt;~f -tow fi fire
calls, losses were $350 to homes
and $150 to contents; $5200 to
autos or trucks and $40 to
contents and $50 to other
buildings to bring the overall
loss total to $52,215.
Of the total first aid calls, 163
were in town and 79 out of town.

Skidding car strikes house
MASON - A car, &lt;.:i:treening where she was trea ted for a
out of control about mid night in laceration of the right eye lid,

Mason, played some antics,
like going)nto a house and
hi tti ng a 'Parked car befor•
finally coming to a halt,
resulting in injury to the dr ive r
and high property damages.
Emma J. Stanley, 31, Mason,
was transported to Pleasant
Valley Hospita l in a Mason
Emergency Squad ambulance

TEN CENTS

Zoning needed in
rural areas for
orderly growth

-J

I ''\ I

..

PHONE 992-2156

Meigs seniors
competing at

ENTIRE
. STOCK

ALL CHAIRS

TAKE
YOUR CHOICE

BEDROOM SUITES

Whether the storm could
delay Kissinger's return to
Aswan was not immediately
clear. The heavy snowfalls
blocked hi ghways and police
ordered the streets of Jerusalem cleared of private motor
traffi c-€xcept for the Jeepbo rne Israeli leaders.

enttne

THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 1974

By United Press International
/
SAN FRANCISCQ - A MASSIVE STORM that roared down ·
from the Pacific Northwest into Northern California mellowed to
NEW YORK !UP!) - J ohn and changu are also the times the awa rct satcJ li lenn was
a drizzle today, but forecasters said another one could hit this Glenn said today "that fragile of greatest opportunity to alter " never urJe to desire material
weekend. Nine men were trapped under a mudslide in a bond of confidence between our course to the fu ture for the benefi ts," but instead led a life
telephone cable relay station at Canyonville, Ore., but their fate people and their leaders" has benefit of all," said Glenn , a that was characterized by a
will not be knoivn until workmen dig through the still-sliding never been more strained than candidate for the Democratic "deep commitment to his faith,
hillside to reach them. One man who escaped said the 15-by-20 at the present time.
senatoria l nomination in Ohio. fellow man and country .
n Like Fra nklin , he ha s
foot bulldblg's walls had been "pulverized ."
The former astronaut made " Now is one of those rare
sna
tched the li ghtning from the
Those inside the building, which had eight-inch-thick con- the statemen t in remarks pre- ti mes. We must not miss this
heave ns, advanced rr an's
crete walls, had been repairing damage caused by an earlier pared for delivery at a banquet opportunity to build."
slide on the main coaxial cable between California and Portland. here where he will receive the
The cita tion accompa nying progress into new fron tiers of
science and edu cation while
Heavy rain sent rivers overflowing their banks, triggered mud Benjamin Frapklin Award for
speading ,good will to the
slides on major highways, washed out railroad tra cks and for ced huma nitar iani sm from th e
, I?,CPP.les of the'wor ld ," sa id the
evacuations of hWtdreds of homes in Washington, Oregon, Idah o,
Printing
In dustries
of
ci tation.
Montana and California. utilities were knocked out.
HALL ELECTED
America.
Past winn ers of the ward inJay Hall was reelected a
"Honesty apd integrity have
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. - JUST OVEH three montbs ago become trite words in po litics, director of the Middlepor t clude U Thanl, former Secrefriends and constituents said goodbye to Congressman Gerald R.
but poli tics - the business of Ci tizens Bank at the annual tary-General of the Uni ted NaFord at the end of a routine visit to his home district. Toda y tbey all the people - m4sl have a meetin g of stockholders tions, Nobe l Peace prize
greeted him with a proclamation saying, "J erry, Our Vice
rebi rth of honesty and in tegrity Tuesday, a fact om itted winner Ralph Bunche, artist
Rockwe ll
and
President , Come Home," as Ford made his first visit back to if we are to move ahead to the Wednesday because of te letype Norman
Presidents
Harry
Truman
and
Grand Rapids since he was sworn in Dec. 6 as the nation's 4oth
America tha t can be," said malfunction in the regular
lJwighl
D.
Eisenhower
.
vice president.
repor t of the meeting.
Glenn in his prepared text.
Fonner mayors of Grand Rapids dating back over the 25
"Times of ,turmoil, ferment
years that Ford served in the House lined up along with a hig h
school band to meet Ford and his wife, Betty, at the Kent County
Airport when they arrived aboard an Air Force plane late
Wednesday night. About 200 persons showed up in below freezin g
weather for the event, one with 3'placa rd reading: "Th e Grand
Old Party's Mr. Clean."

DON'T WAIT-SHOP NOW &amp; SAVE

"It's going all right," Kissinger told newsmen after his
session with Mrs. Meir.
The nea r -~li zzard condi tions
cut electric power in
.Jerusalem for 10 minutes and

fo r.eed clos ing of the
Jerusalem-Tel Aviv highway
whic h snakes upward through
th e hills from coastal Tel Aviv.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs- Mason Area

~J;;B~ i:~d fragile. strained

The Savings Are Yours At Mason Furniture

drove through the snowstorm
fo r a visit with Mrs. Meir who
has been confined to her home
with an a1t:ack ·oi shingles.
Much of the actual negotiations
were ccarried out by A!lon,
perhaps her closest confida nte.

•

y

rRL ~ ~ ~ Z"'r: · G1

This past Tuesday, a panel of
six audio experts jointly approved by the White House and
Watergate prosecutors reported
to Sirica that the erasure could
only ha ve happened through
hand operation of the keyboard,
not by means of a foot pedaL
Further, the experts said, the
buzz resulted from at least f~ve
and perhaps as many as nine
separate erase-and-rerecord actions, each requiring manual
operation of the controls. And
they said the Uher 5000
machine Miss Woods used

used to erase alllil-'fz minu tes.

,

Egypt were wit hin 90 per cen t
of a sol ution on troop pullbacks
and tha t "all the rea l gut issues
are movi ng toward a solution."
Kissinger emerged from a
two and one ha lf hour sesion
witl1 deputy Prime Min ister
Yigal Allon, Defense Min ister
Moshe Dayan,
Foreign
Minister Abba Eban and the
chief of staff, Lt. Gen. David
E lazar, and told newsmen the
talks went "very well ."
Af ter the meeting Kissinger
~

r-kURt·;- ZO--N]i,~,

I .c.c · · ·r ·

gr 1·'s hotel, the King David, for
thl' crudal session and the n the
cabinet mel to give its officjal
approval.
The di se ngage ment plans
had been worked out by
Kissinger In a series of shutUe
fl ights between Jerusalem and
the sun-baked Ni lo River resort
city of Aswtin . Egypt, ·where
Presiden t Anwa r Sadat is
recuperati ng from i nnuenz&lt;:~ .
A U.S. official sa id at start of
todk!y 's sess ion Israe l and

forehead and eight leg and then
released.
She was the driver of a car
Deputy Rupert Rice said was
owned by Martin L. Stanley,
Jr., Mason. She was traveling
southat 11 :o5 p.m. Wednesday
on US 33 in Mason, when she
lost con trot' of the vehicle . It
left skid marks for 135 feet on

the highway before going left of
ce nter to the curb, jumping it
and going on 90 feet ac.ross the
yard, before striking the Paul
A. Honaker home, the officers
said.
The ca r hit the hocse,
glancing off it and !hen went
into Honaker 's c~r , which was
parked in his driveway.
Althougli ,police gave the
• (Continued on page 10)

E XTENDED OUTLOOK
Chance of
Saturday,
cloudy Sunday, and fai r
Monday. Highs ln the 40s
north and 50s south portions
on Saturday and in the 40s
entire state Monday. Lows in
the 30s north portions and 40s
south early Saturday and
lowering Into the 20s early

rain

Mo n~ay.

''

.f

H. R. Haldeman, apparently
had been erased.
" It hurts, it hurls," said one
middle level presidential aide.
Others solicited for comment
simply shrugged and said
nothing.
Despite a barrage of questions, Warren declined to say
anything beyond issuing a brief
statement from Nixon's lawyers
saying that other technical
testimony has not yet been
heard and that "premature judgments ... are altogether

unwarranted."
He declined· to say whether
Nixon was disturbed by the
findings of the panel, named
jointly by the White House and
the Special PrOllecutor to
detennine the cause of a
mysterious gap in a recording
of Nixon 's conversation with
Haldeman three days after the
burglary of the National Democratic headquarters in 1972.
He declined to say whether
Nixon had discussed the new
development with his lawyers,
whether other presidential
tapes which might also be
sought as evidence In the case
are well guarded or whether
Nixon was conducting his own
investigation into who is responsible for the erasure.

ACT will
meet Friday
Minis te rs of three local
churches and a fourth !rom
Huntington, W. Va. will attend
a reg ular meeting of the
southeas tern Ohio Adopt-AChild Tpday Chapter (ACT )
Friday at 8 p.m. ~t Trinity
Church, East Second and Lynn
Sis., Pomeroy.
They are the Revs. Bill
Perrin, of the host church;
Robert Bumgarner, Hea th
United Methodist Church,
Middleport ; William Sydens tr icker, Enterprise United
Methodist Church,
and
Richard Miller, Huntington.
Discussion will center on how
to build interest on the part of
people in positions of public
auth ority (welfare and the
courts) that would lead to
easing difficulties local
families have in adopting
children. Couples interested in
adoption are welcome.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Tannehill, Rock Springs Road, will
bring with them their newly
adop te d three-m &lt;yt th -old
daughter; April Alana, to be
welcomed by the members.

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Po111eroy, 0,, Jan.t7, 1974
2 - The Dallv Sentmel. M1ddleoort-Pomerov. 0

Jan

17 11174

i.

DR. LAWHENCE
E. LAMB
•

Don't pick pimples

MORE SEOEMS STAFF COMPLETE TRAINING Tra~rung d1rector John Peters presents a certificate of class
completiOn to new EMT, D. Kenneth Morgan, director of
Southeast Ohio's Emergency Medical Service (SEOEMS)
An EMT IS an ' emergency medical techmc1an" certified by
the State of Ohio, Department of EducaUon after havmg
successfully completed 60-bours of advanced emergency
VIC tim care Over 80 per cent of SEOEMS headquarters staff

are now certified EMTs Staffers recently completing the
course taught at Holzer Medical Center are, left to right D
Kenneth Morgan, Mrs Sarah (Sally) Mathews, Steve Sirback, Fred Staley, Ric Able, and DaVId Dunn Another
SEOEMS staff member graduating was Mike Yates, not
pictured Other members of the class are Robert G Bennett,
Jeffrey Farrmgton, Donley Strong and CherYl Vance

DEAR DR LAMB - Some
time ago my son picked a
pimple on hiS nose, and the
pressure of the fluid In II flew
across the room He hardly got
It stopped bleed10g Now th1s
punple IS a red spot that rises
up at limes, but he never
makes the mistake of
reopemng It agam.
A few weeks ago I was
readmg m the paper Items of 5ll
years ago There was a story
about a yoimg man picking a
pimple on his face and m a
short tune he was dead I
118Sume he bled to death I don't
have the name of the disease
but II still wornes me about my
son Could he have the same
thmg as thiS man • Could you
tell me the name of thiS disease
and what can be done about it•
I hke to read your column

as well as offfermg OhiOans the
assurance that a pound will
denote the same weight m
every part of Ohio," Wittenberg said
Pnor to adoptmg the bill,
Democrats defeated
Republican attempts to cut out
some of the enforcement
powers on grounds they were
not properly vested with the
director of agriculture
Wittenberg sa1d the Republican proposals would have
"gutted the bill "
Both the House and Senate
received a comprehensive
drug abuse control bill sulr
milled by Attorney General
Wilham J. Brown
Rep Myrl H Shoemaker, 0Bournev•lle, Introduced

Brown's bill m the House, while
Sen. Ronald M Mottl, DParma , offered II m the Senate
Both clauned there was bipartisan support despite recent
Republican obJections that
Brown copied one of their bills
which was buried m committee
by House Democrats last year
Brown's bill provides for
- A "Controlled Substance
Board" to classify drugs of
abuse under a recogmzed
federal system
- Mandatory Jail sentences
rangmg from 18 months to 12
years for certam offenses such
as pushmg or stealmg drugs, or
corrupting another with drugs
- Encouragement of voluntary treatment and rehabilitatiOn and restructurmg of meth-

Hard sell made for famous
Cincinnati Union Terminal
By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
question of whether this city
will lose one of Its histone
landmarks should be answered
soon
Uruon Termmal, recogmzed
as the gateway to the Queen
1City durmg railroad's heyday,
could go under the ball and
cham unless a buyer w1th $1
million Is found
Thousands of rml passengers
once hustled and bustled" under the giant rotunda of the
termmal Today the mammoth
complex sits vacant
The Cmcmnati Union Termmal Co says the termmal1s a
g1ant liability
HJf we can't selltt, we've got
to tear 1t down/' acknowledges
Termmal Co lawyer John
Hudson "The cost of mamtammg It and the taxes are JUst
tremendous If II can't be sold,

pnce to save the term mal from
destructiOn
But city officials want more
than JUSt "architectural beauty" for their money and Mitchell's group has come forward
with a plan for turmng the
termmal back mto a transpor~~ It's representative of an artation center
chitectural style that must be
Mitchell, a 2o-year-old
preserved," says M1ke Milchgraphic designer, IS trymg to
ell, chairman of the Committee
sell the City on an Idea that the
to ReVIve Umon Ternunal.
termmal can be used m four
"What can I say except that the different transportallon ways
rotunda itself IS a 'grand
- as a rail termmal for exspace.' They just don 'I design
panded Amtrak serVIce, a bus
them like that anymore."
termmal, an airport check-m
Amtrak ran Its last passencenter and a rapid transit lmk
ger tram through the termmal
to the downtown area
on Oct 29,1972 and then moved
Those proposals are currentto a new facility here. The "for
ly
under study by the city
sale 11 stgn has now gone up
Hudson, the Termmal Co atA four month sale penod
torney, probably IS the most
established by the Termmal
knowledgable person m the
Co. ends In March and city ofCity on the termmal The 73ficials are trymg to decide
yearold lawyer has served as
whether to spend the $1 askmg
legal counsel for the company
ever smce the termmal was
opened 10 1933
"Personally, I would like to
see the rotunda stand 1f some
economical use can be made of
ll," says Hudson "But I'm
skepllcal about the place becommg a transportatiOn
m the river study, the agency centet. I JUS! don't thmk It's
sa1d But pollutants such as going to work out
phosphorus and mtrogen,
"About the only prospect I
which can enter the nvers see IS for the city to buy II and
naturally from erosion of the use II for a storage and mainland or from commercial and tenance garage for Its city busmdustnal sources such as est" he sa1d. 11 But as for tlungs
detergents, are on the m- lik,e railroads - well, the rail
crease.
busmess IS gone as far as this
Up to 84 per cent of the part of the countrY IS constretches -,?f rivers studied cerned."
showed mcreased phosphorus
Another CII!zens group called
levels durmg the 1968 tel' 1972 "save the terminal'' came up
penod compared to the preVI- with enough money to transous five years, the report sa1d. port 14 huge moSBlc murals
Nitrogen nutrients mcreased m from the termmal to the local
up to 74 per cent of the stret- airport Despite a massive
ches.of water cpvered by the public relations effort, atsurvey
•
tempts to rmse enough money
to buy the termmal have fallen
The Daily Sentinel
far short.
DEVOTED TOniE
Local newspapers have run
INTEREST OF
and feature stories,
editorials
MElG&amp;IWION AREA
dozens of meet10gs called and
CHESTER L. TAHNEIID.J..,
posters c1rcula ted to try to salROB rAT BOEFLIDI,
vage
the termmal. Even the
Otrl!"Aitor
pnze-wmnmg float 10 the Uru""'"""" daily ........,. .,. Tho
Ohio VaHey PubUahinl Company m
versily
of
Cmcmnati
Caurt St, Pometo)', Ohio N'1ll BuaiMa1
Office ~tt2.21M Editorial Phone ggz.
bomecommg parade last fall
21$7
depicted the termmal rotunda
StcorJd dua postap p1kt al Pomeroy ,
and was entitled, "When It's
NaUontl advertl.tlnl reprt!HDtatlve
Gone, It's Gone "
Bottinelli..C.U.Jher Inc 12 Eut tlnd St
But posters and floats don't
New Yori New Yori
~blcripUm ntel Dell \"mmd br earner
Impress Hudson; a practiejil'
It's got to be disposed of "
Som~traged citizens, high
on spirit but sh~rt on money,
reverently refer to the termmal as an architectural landmark that should be saved

Ohio River among
nation's dirtiest
By MICHAEL J. CIJNtON
WASHINGTON (UPI) Some of the nation 's biggest
rivers-mcludm g parts of the
OhiO, MisSISSippi and MISsouri
-are also the dirtiest, accordmg to a ne\\ study by the Envtronmental

Protection

Agency (EPA)
The agency said the maJor
problem appeared to be nutnents, such as phosphorus and
nitrogen, whtch can over-

fertilize waters, causmg heavy
growth of vegetatiOn and
shuttmg off oxygen supplies
EPA said the clea nest nvers
among 22 II studied were the
Upper M1ssoun, Columbia,
Snake, W1llamette, Upper Misstssippa, Yukon, Tennessee,

Susquehanna, and the Lower
Colorado.
The worst third m the survey
were the Lower Red , Hudson,
Lower
Ohio,
Lower
Mtsstsstppt, Lower Arkansas,

Middle Ohio, the MissisSippi
near Mmneapohs, the Lower
Missouri, Upper Arkansas and
Middle MISSOUri.
In between were the Rio
Grande, Alabama, Upper Ohio,
Upper Red, Brazos, Potomac,
Uppe r Colorado, Middle
MissiSSippi, and Sacramento
Pollutants which have been
the subJect of the most control,

........

"""'

whert available 10 centl pet,._ By
Motor ~ Route wbin auTier ..-vice not

ez

anU..bie eN mooth, eo. By 10111 In
Cllkl frld W Va , Om Year $11, SU:
monU!a, h $0, Three monthl, f6
Ebewht'l't $22 00 yatt II.J: montha 111 50,

such as sewage and bacteria,

showed unprovements overall

I

thra mmthl, f1 IG &amp;Vblcrtption price
~ Judel !luxily 11me.sent.lneJ

''--------

..

adone treatment programs under the Department of Mental
Health and Mental RetardatiOn
Mottl and Shoemaker held a
JOint news conference Wllh
Brown to plug the new bill
Four other Democrallc
sponsors and one Republican
attended
Brown demed Republican
charges that he plagiarized a
bill offered last year by Rep
George E. Mastics, R-Fa1rv1ew
Park, contaimng sunilar proVIswns.
The attorney general Issued
a news release comparm~
pomt-by-pomt hLS own bill and
Mashes'
He
basiCally
downgraded the GOP bill,
parllcularly a " No-kno ck"
proVIsion which would .. uow
pollee to enter and search a
dwelling without advance

notice.
Mottl and Mastics are both
candidates for the same congressiOnal seat. Brown IS a
candidate for re-election as attorney general
"Let's take the politics out of
this and get down to brass
tacks," Shoemaker said
11
There are lives at stake m this

" Ulcers" booklet.

RIO Grande College, playing
Without the services of veteran
guard Steve Bartram, held on
to edge visilmg Wilberforce 8582 at Lyne Center m a nonleagtte basketball ga me
Wednesday mght
Bartram, 5-8 seruor from
Ironton , reportedly IS no longer
with the squad
Last mght; Ron Lambert

poured '1:/ pomts through the
hoops to pace Coach Art
Lanham's squad to Its seventh
VIctory m 13 starts Coach
Charles Lee's Bulldogs, led by
5-8 freshman guard Abe
Turner's 23 pomts, dropped to
6-8 on the year.
RIO Grande held a 4&amp;-34
halfhme lead The Bulldogs,
however, rallied to catch the

In other legiSlallve developments
Personal - Rep. Wilham E
Hm1g, 0-New Philadelphia, Introduced a bill reducmg to 3o
per cent the level of assessmenton mventones and equipment for busmesses
Usury - Rep Thomas Fries,
D-Dayton, said he would mtroduce legislation to repeal
Oh1o's usury law wh1ch sets a
ceilmg of 8 per cent on mterest
rates for large loans
Housing -The House adopted a resolutiOn callmg on
President Nixon and Congress
to restore federal funds for lowlllCOme housing
Insurance - The Senate
agreed to House amendments
and sent to Gov John J Gilligan legiSlallon reducmg the
number of persons that must
be m group insurance plans.
Boats - The Senate unarumously passed and sent to the
House a bill allowmg persons to
sleep overmght on a properly
equipped watercraft on state
park waters.
The Senate was to reconvene
today at 10 a m , while the
House was to meet one bour
later

TUCSON, Ariz (UPI ) Johnny Miller, who already
has $60,000 under his hell,
neads a field, Including this
year's seven top money wmners, as the $150,000 Dean
Martm Tucson Open gets under
way today
Miller was th e odds on man
to bea t m this third stop on the
ProfessiOnal Goif Assoc1al1on
tour He captured both the
Phoemx
and
Bmg
Crosby Opens and \\as out to
see If the third tune was really
the charm
The 26-year-old Miller has

never had a good game on the
7,200 yard Tucson National
Golf Course m the five years he
has been on the pro cirt'Uit
However, this year Miller sa1d
he 1s ready with an understatement "I'm gomg good "
Also 1n the field are top
money wmners Gner Jones,
Hubert Green, Dave Stockton,
Rod Funseth, John Schroeder
and Miller Barber. Lanny
Wadkins, m second place m
ear nings this year, IS
bypassmg the event as are
Arnold Palmer and Jack
Nicklaus

Irish priest
apologizes for

leaders They have, at this wntmg, been unable to work out
assistance plans they consider reasonable They reportedly are
losmg hope any such plans can be developed
The Frendl will certamly end up wvmg aid to the North
VIetnamese, if only to bold on to their historic economic and
pohhcal mterests m the area. But as things look now , that
assistance Will be considerably less than ongmally planned
By contrast, the French have unproved relations with the
Th1eu government The men from PariS have found the South
VIetnamese more realisllc m economic plannmg , more certain of
what they want to accompliSh and more willing to take the steps
necessary to assure that French aid will be well used
The questiOn here IS whether these HanOI men who spent 40
years as revolutionaries can adJust sufficiently to peace to make
their country economically VIable and pohllcally stable.
The answer IS unportant to the Uruted States The survival of
South VIetnam, peace m Southeast Asia and our ab1hty to work
out more normal relatiOnships with the Asian countries rests to
an Important degree on the ab1hty of the North VIetnamese
rulers to handle peace.
That Is, the warm South VIetnam may continue because the
North VIetnamese revolutwnanes cannot cope with an absence
of war. They do not have the attitudes, the skills or the
organizational ability to operate a peaceliiDe economy or to
govern a peacetime state They may be forced to go on With the
fightmg m order to make their real world fit the only type of
operatmg they know - wartime regunentahon and controls,
wartune mdustnal and agncullural plannmg, government by
CrlStS

The Russl8n and Chmese revolutionaries were able to make
this shift But these two lands had much lil the way of resources
They had some considerable mduslrY, sizeable numbers of
techmcally tramed men and expenenced middle grade officials
able to do techmcal planning and to keep wheels moVIng.

his politics

ships' masts and charcoal, and then crossed the Atlanllc to explOit the wgm lands of the New World
Had they contmued to depend upon wood for fuel or waterwheels for energy, there would have been no IndustrlBl
Revolution But then came the age of coal, and long before the
world's store of that resource was even dented, coal was supplanted by the more convement and versatile petroleum and
natural gas
In the early days of this century, gasolme was considered a
nmsance by-product of petroleum refimng and was burned or
dumped. The great automobile mdustrY, which directly or mdirectly employs one out of everY SIX or seven people m this
country today, was built on this cheap and plentiful fuel.
Even 70 years ago, II was obviOus that the world contamed
only so much 011 Should men have decided to limit the number of
cars they would manufacture so that future generatiOns would
not run out of gasolme, not to mentiOn the other resources consumed by automobiles?
If so, how many should they have built, and how h1gh should
they have pnced them to discourage ownership• And who would
have made these decisions•
This Is no bnef for waste or wanton consumption It IS merely
tu suggest that the modern mdustrial and technologiCal world IS
the product not only of abundant •nergy but of abondant opIIIIUsm at everY turn. And maybe also a lit tie luck.
All the lines are shU converging on the graph -population,
resources, consumption, pollution - more sharply than ever
There IS no denymg them.
But the only way we could have avOided the challenge they
present would have been to remam m some earlier more
priiDitive stage
'

To You Know Who

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Saymg
that sometimes "IriSh Catholic
pnests become en\hllljiastlc
about• pohlicians;'' actmg
House Chaplam Colby Grimes
apologized Wednesday for
closmg a prayer the day before
with a request that God grant
Gov. John J Gilligan the
preSidency.
Some Republicans refused to
hear Grimes' prayer and walked off the House floor Wednesday
Tu~y _QriiDes asked that
Gilligan, aJiOliii\ lrishMoiic,
someday become Presideht
and deliver the "State of the

ThiS Is a reasonable facsimile of an anonymous poem(?)
which first appeared m "Kreohte News," published by the
JenniSOn-Wright Corp. ·
To you wbo tell me ''youknQw,you know , you know,"
Do you tell me ''you know" because you know I know• Then
why tell me I know if you know I know ?
But if you know I don 'I know, Don 'I tell me "you know "
Because I don't know
'
Just tell me, and then I'll know
And you won 'I have to tell me "you know ,'' Because you 'II
know I know You know•

LOcal Bowling
POMEROY LANES
BEND LEAGUE

Uruon" address

ThreeH1ts&amp;AM1~

'

"I feel sorry lor you, son. You may never be able to
asp1re to a b1g, luxury, top-ol-the-lme 'automobtle'"

ZENITH
COLOR TV

•
e BlACi&lt;

TRI COUNTY LEAGUE
January 15, 1974

p ..
89

87
78
65
46
43

Three NuiS &amp; A Bolt
High lnd Game - AI Fl'tlelps
Jr 268, George Horak 238 8 111
WilfOrd 2:15
H1gh Series - A L Phelps
Jr 691. Bill W1Uord 665, George
Horak 601
Teqm H 1g h Game and series
- Crow s Comets 744 and 2066

Sea rs Cat Merchants
12
Rawlings Auto Parts
10
Pomeroy Cement Blk co
10
H&amp;R F1restone
8
M1dwest Steel Co
6
Roach Gun Shopt
2
H1gh lnd
Game Bill
Radford and Henry Clatworthy
221 , A L Phelps Jr 219 Dale
DaviS 21.4
High Series - Bill Radford
634, Dele D1v 1s and Henro;
Clatworthv 572 , A L Phelps

Jr , 555

Team H igh Game ,
Catalog Merchants 8?0
Team High Series Firestone 25?'i
'

Sens
H&amp;R

.

&amp;

WHITE TV

Pis

Januray 14 , 1914

Craw's Comets
Shake Haven
Four Aces
Top Cats

NEW YORK (UPI) - Mickey Mantle retired fiVe years ago,
but he still hasn 't quit.
Not subconsciously anyway
He said so Wednesday on an unprecedented occasion, one m
which he and his old Yankee buddy, Whitey Ford, became the
first two players from the same club ever to be voted mto
Baseball's Hall of Fame simultaneously
This Isn't the first time Mickey Mantle has bared his soul He
has done II before, but m the 23years I've known him, I can't ever
recall hun reachmg thiS far back m the recesses of his psyche .
He talked about how much he miSSes the competitive psrt of
baseball now that he's out of 11.
"I still dream about 11 almost every mght,'' he said "I dream
that I'm trymg to make a comeback "
Later on, he went deeper yet
"I dream about trymg to get bac~ mto Yankee StadiUm and
they won'tletmem," he said "I pull up in a cab and try to get m
by crawling through a small hole, but I can't. 1 see peOple all
around me . maybe 70,000 and I hear Casey Stengel on the
bench, saymg, 'Where's Mantle • Where's Mantle•' Then
somebody else says 'It's okay, he'll be here soon.'''
Mickey Mantle became only the seventh player to make the
Hall of Fame m hiS first year of eligibility Wednesday and
naturally t.j)at pleased hun , but not as much perhaps as gomg m
together With hiS ex-roomie, Whitey Ford
The two come from entirely different backgrounds - Mantle
from small, rural Commerce, Okla., and Ford from busy,
bustling Astona, Long Island, in..New York City-but from the
first lime they met 23 years ago, they hit it off magnificently.
They generally could be found together hke some kind of entry, 1
and 1-A
It didn't seem to matter to either that one was country and the
other big city.
"I'd say 'over yonder,'" Mickey Mantle laughed at Wednesday's sesswn, "and Whitey would say 'where the hell IS over
yonder•• But you know he says 'vodkar..--r and soda '"
Now both were laughing
At first, Mantle explamed, there were three of them with the
Yankees, Btlly Martin, Ford and hunself
"I remember the three of us gomg huntmg together down m
Commerce after the 1956 season,'' S8ld Ford "Mickey's wife,
Merlyn, didn't know much about baseball then, and If you recall
Mickey won the Tr1ple Crown that year
"I said to Merlyn, 'What do you think of the year Mickey had ••
"'Did he do good?' she asked.
"He won the Triple Crown, I said
"'What does that mean•"' she sa1d
Ford then went on to tell how hospitable Mickey's family was
to hun durmg his viSit
"Mickey woke me this one mornmg and satd, 'C'mon downstairs Mom's got breakfast ready ' Well, you know being from
New York, I'm used to bacon and eggs Now I see thisqua1lon the
table BiscUits and breasts of quail on top of 11, and home-made
gravy on top of that I didn't think I could ever eat 1!. But then
everYbody started eatmg and I began picking on 11 When 1
fmally fm1shed I found out II was great. We had more the next
mormng. You know, they're such plam, honest people down
there, you love 1em "
There IS no question about the way Whitey Ford feels about
Mickey Mantle and vice versa That goes personally and
professionally
''I had the greatest respect for Whitey of anybody I ever played
with," said Mantle "We were from different parts of the countrY
and we could make fun of each other's talk, but from the
beginmng, we JUst kinda hit II off. I can't ever remember havmg
one cross word with Whitey "
Ford Is returmng to the Yankees as a coach thiS year, and
Mantle, who represents an msurance company and a bank m
Dallas, says he's never had II better He claims he doesn't care to
manage a ball club
In their day, and there IS no real evidence that this one still
LSn't, the 42-year-old Mantle and 45-year-old Ford had some good
tunes together dff the field, so 11 seemed a bit appropriate that
Wednesday's news conference was held m a plush supper club of
the Americana Hotel
Any poSSible significance the location might have wasn't entirely lost on Mantle either Asked what II could possibly have
been that drew, and then held, hun and Ford together, Mickey's
blue eyes twinkled a moment.
"I thmk probably we both hke Scotch," he laughed.

•
e STEREO
Easy Terms!
Free Dell very!

MASON AJRNITURE
HERMAN GRATE
773-5592
MASON, W VA

were Dean Fausnaugh, w1th 18,
and Doug Hart, 21 Henry
Blakeney and Isaac Green
each had 16 for the visitors.
Saturday, RIO w11l host
Wri ght
State
powerful
Umvers1ty m a non-league
game Tipoff time at Lyne
Center IS 8 p m
Wednesday's box :
WILBERFORCE (821 -

Blakeney 8 0 16 Green a o 16
Jones 2 0 4, M1tchell 2 1 5,
McBeth , 2 0 4 Perdue 50 10
Tu,-ner 11 1 23 Hunter 2 0 4
TOTALS 40 2 U .
RIO GRANDE (85)
Lambert 11 5 27 Fausnaugh
8 2 18 Hart 9 3 21 Bollmger
1 2 4 Stewart , 2 2 6. Noe 3 1 7
Al ban ese 0 2 2 TOTALS 34 . 17
85

Score

at

Hall -

W lberforce 34

R 1o

48

Pro Standings
Amencan Baksetball
A ss oc1ilt1on Standmg s
By Un1ted P,-es~ lnternaftona l

East

TEAM

9

0

9

1

1 000
900

Belpre
GallipoliS

6
7

1
1

669
675

Wave rly
Tnmble

a

2

7

2

3

800
800

a

700

Athens

7

6

3

667

Alexander

6

5

545

Mo:&gt;krm v dh• York

5
4
3
4

5

500
444
42a
400

4

Sy mmes Valley
North Gall1a
Kyger Creek
Ironton
Me1gs
Federal Hockmg

3
3
3
3
2
2

Southwestern

I

4

5

s
6

6
6
6
6

636

400

7
6
6

333
333
333
300
200
200

7

125

~ b

pel.
636

....L

625

61 2

12

357

255

'I;

17 1/]

West

w
t pet g b
Utah
29 17 630
lndtana
24 22 522
5
San An tonl o
23 24 489
6' '
Denver
20 24 455 8
Sa n 0 1ego
20 29 408 10 1 1
WeCinesday·s Results
Carolma 131 New Yo rk 105
Kentucky 105 Denver 102

Vlrg1n a 116 Sa n D1 ego 109
Utah 123 lnd1ana 105
(only gam es sc heduled )
Thursday's Gam es
Indiana at Memphis
San D1ego at San Anton10
(o nly games sc heduled )

Nat1onal Hockey

Bos ton

(Includes games through Jan 12)
Hannan Trace
Vtnton County

I

28 16
30 18
30 19
15 27
12 35

league Sfindmgs
By Un.ted Press International
East
w 1 t pts g f ga

1973 74 HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
!OVERALL STANDit.:GSI
W L PCT

w

Kentucky
· New York
Carol1na
V1rgm1 a
M emphi S

SEO cage stats

Warr en Local
Wahama
Jackson
Eastern

Wouldn't we have nm short of caves?

BEARY'S WORLD

Wilberforce hit 40 of 86 field
goal attempts, and the
Bulldogs were 2 of 6 at the foul
circles for 33 3 pet
Other Redmen m double
figures m sconng Wednesday

Southern

Don Oakley

To be an instant sage these days, It's only necessary to say,
or wnte, something like: "For years thiS country has been gomg
1ts merrY way as If energy would always be cheap and plentiful.
Now we're havmg to pay the piper "
Everyone will nod m sober agreement because, of course,
It's qUite true. Our modern affluence, with all Its attendant
comforts and convemences, has been made possible by cheap
and abundant energy, and few among us ever bothered before
now to wonder what would happen when the day came that
energy was no longer so cheap or abundant.
Yet - not to minimize the seriOusness of the situahon haven't men always explOited the resources at hand and
proceeded on the assumption that there would always be enough
for their needs•
At any given pomt m history, econonuc forecasters could
have plotted the lines of consumption and resources mto the
future and warned that eventually the former would cross the
latter
In England in the Middle Ages, for example, priiDIIIve as
mdustry was, men cut down the forests with reckless abandon for

Redmen late m the game,
gomg ahead for the first time,
76-75, with 3.15 remallllng
Mter an exchange of buckets
Lambert's goal with 2 26
remammg put the Redmen on
top for keeps
RIO hit 34 of 67 field goal
attempts for 52 pet The
Redmen were 17 of 28 from the
foul circles for 60 7pct RIO had
47 rebounds Lambert snagged

Miller heads Tucson field ~4~~ Stewart 12 and Jimmy

Hanoi's problem: tooling up for peace
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The focus is on South VIetnam,
where the North has pumped m foot soldiers and weapons at a
heady pace. President Th1eu readies hunself for an all-out attack
which threatens hiS country's existence
But my Hong Kong informants say the real news IS m HanOI
Usually sympathetic visitors report the North VIetnamese
are m bad shape econonucaUy. The politburo, bobblmg ecoP.omic
planning, can't decide on priOrities
VIsitors say that after four decades of fighting the Hanoi
deciSion makers are fmding 11 most difficult to readjust to
peacetune economics and normal development They think of
econom1c reconstruction m terms of militarY potential Most
North VIetnamese leaders have never operated a peacetune
economy
The pohllcal situation is as confused as the economic one.
Here agam, the Hanoi men have little experience m peacetime
operatwns. The mternal struggle between Ho Chi Mmh's successors continues una bated The argument over whether to
contmue the war full tilt m the South or to give first priority to
rebwld10g the North has not been resolved. Hanoi IS attempting
to play tl1e game both ways, bwldmg Its strength 10 the South,
ImproVIng Its military position by attacks on key southern
positiOns, probmg for weak spots m Saigon's first-line armies and
local forces and holdmg 1ts options open, either for an all-out
attack or a long drawn-out low-key war of mfightmg, terroriSm
and sabotage
As a straw m the wind, take the case of France which has
been sympathetic to Hanoi Durmg the war PariS mamtamed
close Informal economic lies with Ho Chi Minh and his successors. It brought backroom pressures man attempt to Improve
Hanoi's position vis-a-vis Saigon in the peace talks It had plans
for large-ocate post-war economic assiStance to Hanoi
Despite this history of friendship, the latest reports md1cate
the French are becom10g disillusioned with North VIetnam's

Action heavy in SVAC
circles this weekend

Rio Redmen edge Bulldogs

Logan

matter ''

WedneSday GriiDes pra~d
(RC;JWttl~bii.Jni~~ike
man.
w
the Hon~~ floor ts"not til~ 'pia~
"Everybody has protested to display political enthusiasm
and said, 'Oh, you must keep and asked for forgiVeness by
It,'" he said. "But no body's yet reading a biblical confessiOn
come along with the money to by Dav1d contained m the 51st
do tt "
Psalm

.'

'

ruptured his pllllple and some
of the mfec ted material spread
into the surroundmg tissue and
was picked up by the blood
The nose and mouth area IS
particularly rich m tiny bl~
vessels, especially vems
The mfection ca n be earned
by the vems m this area to the
bra10 Here It sets up an mfechon m the large venous
Sinuses or large pockets of
blood encased around the bram
called the cavernous smus
When these are Infected large
clots can form m them, a
condition called cavernous
SinUS thrombOSIS, and the
1nfection Is very dangerous
Th1s 1s one of the mam reasons
people are always adviSed
agamst squeezmg pimples
around the nose and mouth
Today when an mfection does

"

RAY CROMLEY

Senate has weights-measures bill
By Lt:t: Lt:UNARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP[) - The
' OhiO House has adopted, 85-8,
and sent to the Senate legislation giVIng the state director of
agnculture additiOnal enforcement powers In the area of
weights and measures , placmg
OhiO on a standardized system
The measure, sponsored by
Rep Richard L Wittenberg,
D-Toledo. also would standardize a voluntary umt
pncmg system m Ohio for
stores m all cities
Urut pr1cmg IS the markmg
of an Item with Its pnce per
pound or per quart along with
the total pnce.
"The bill will sunphfy Ohw's
laws on y, etghts and measures,

every day as you give plam,
everyday advice I ca n un derstand, so hope you can help
me
DEAR READER - My
guess IS that your son has a
very small artery at the surface of the skin When he
succeeded m breaking 11, the
h1gh pressure m the small
artery caused the ~lood to
sqwrt. An artery will actually
pump blood out with each
heartbeat In a spurtmg fashiOn
A ve10 merely allows blood to
flow out There Is a lot more
pressure ms1de an arterY than
there IS Inside a vem
I doubt the man you read
about 10 the paper had the
same problem your son has
Fifty years ago we didn't have
antibiOtics to combat Infections The man probably

occur II can be qwckly treated
with antibiOtics So, 11 Is not the
dreaded rare complication II ·
used to be Nevertheless, It Is
still good advice no to squeeze
for cefully on punples Rather II
1s best to let them mature and
then carefully lift off the top
and gently express the
material The area should be
cleaned with alcohol first and a
clean needle also stenbzed or
at least soaked m alcohol used.
Never squeeze hard
Your son should leave his
spot alone If might be worthwhile seemg If he can have the
spot treated with an electric
needle. A dermatologist should
be able to treat 11 eaSily so that
it will not be a problem m the
future for hun and will not
affect his appearan~ But, I
thmk you can put your nund at
ease about the possibility •that
he has the same problem you
read about
Send your questions to Dr.
Lamb, In care of this newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551, Radio
City Statton, New York, N. Y.
10019. For a copy of Dr. Lamb's
booklet on ulcers, send 5{) cents
to the same address and ask for

PTS OPP
702 511
665 559
519
454
503
395
656
539
588
557
726 596
562
515
663
571
696
698
679
67 4
565
610
423
461
617
672
561
602
607
695
594
540
596
612
608
663
606
663
560
607
425
570
351
671
556
723
266
322

Wellston
1 B
111
Miller
1 10
091
Pomt Pleasant
o 5
ooo
OVERALL SCORINGIAsofJan 121
NAME, T~AM
FG FT Pis IGI Avg
Mark Swam, H Trace
100 40 240 19)
26 7
John Shoemake,-, Waverl y
97
41
235 ( 101 23 5
Mark Mace, Athens
96 50 242 111) 22 0
Dave Rann, Ironton
86
39
211
110) 21 1
T1m Seevers, Tnmble
83
21
1a7
(91 20 6
(10) 19 2
Jim P1erce, Logan
87
18
192
Dan B1se. Fed . Hock Ina
80
31
19 1 110) 19 1
T1m Stout N Gall la
66
32 164 191 18 2
Dave Pntchard , Nels York
64 36
164
I 91 18 2
Jaye Myers, Symmes Valley
63 38
164
(91 16 2
SEOAL SCOR lNG
NAME, TEAM
FG FT Pis IGI Avg
John Shoemaker, Waverly
75
27
177 (7)
25 3
Dave Rann, Ironton
62
28
152
171 21 7
Mark Mace , Athens
59
26
144
171 20 6
M1ke McDonald. Jackson
52 26 130 171 16 6
G1l Pnce, Gallipolis
50 20 120 171 17 I
J1m P1 erce, Logan
53
13
119
17) 17 0
Danny Dodson, Meq)S
46
20
11 2
171 16 0
Paul Wh1t e, Jack&amp;on
41
12
94
171 13 4
J1m Niday, Gallipolis
34 15
83 (7) 11 9
Jeff Campbell Logan
34 12 BO 171 114
TRI VALLEY SCORING
NAME, TEAM
FG FT Pts. IGI Avg.
Dan Bl se Fed Hock1ng
37
22
98
(5 ) 19 6
Greg Smathers Nel s York
34
6 74
( 4)
16 5
(4)
Steve Thomas. Alexander
26
17
69
17 3
Keith N1ce, VInton Co
40
5 85 Ill 17 0
VIc Kn1ck W Local
35 14 64 151 16 6
Randy Offenberg..-, W Local
30 12 72 151 14 4
14) 14 3
Dave Pntchard, Nels York
21
IS 57
WlllleStra 11, Belpre
30
7 67 IS) 13 4
Harold Caud1ll, Vmton Co
25
13
63
IS) 12 6
Charles Preston, Belpre
28
2 sa
151 116
SVAC SCORING
NAME, TEAM
FG FT Pis. (G) Avg
Mark Swa1n, H Trace
74 32 160 171 25 7
JayeMy er s, S Valley
38 18
94 15) 16 6
54
22
130
Steve Dtll, Eastern
171 16 6
John Lusher, H Trace
50 30 130 I7) 16 6
T1m Stout, N Gallla
42 27 111 16) 16 5
Lloyd Wood Southwestern
42 20 104 (6) 17 3
Bob M1ller, Southern
36 32 104 161 17 J
Pete Sayre, Southern
44 12 100 16) 16 7
John Sheets, Ea stern
50
14
114
171 16 3
Clay Hudson, Kyger Creek
32 17
81 15) 16 2

'
SEOAL STANDINGS
Dudu1t
Wav
32
55
582
IVARSITY&gt;
75 136 551
Team
W l P OP Shoe'mkr, Wav
28 51
549
Waverly
6 1 482 360 Sk 1nner, A
35 64
547
Galli polis
6 1 430 347 Kemper, L
FREE THROW PCT.
Athens
5 2 452 347
FTM-A Pel
Logan
4 3 494 417 Name, T
Conroy,
J
25 30 633
Jackson
3 4 447 465
Coats, M
22 29 759
Ironton
3 4 430 446
Mace
A
26 36 122
Me1gs
1 6 434 475
27 38 711
Welfston
0 7 245 555 Shoe'mkr. Wav
Rann, I
26·41 663
(RESERVE)
REBOUNDS
Team
W l P OP
No G Avg
Jackson
7 0 347 264 Name, T
Pnce, G
125 7 17 9
Ironton
6 I 356 296
75 7 10 7
Athens
4 J 262 235 Myers, M
72 7 10 3
Logan
3 4 345 307 Young, L
Meigs
3 4 295 JOB Shoemaker, Wav 70 7 10 0
69 7 9 9
Gallipolis
3 4 285 271 F1tspatn ck, I
OFFENSIVELY
Waverly
2 5 252 256
Pts (GI Avg.
Wellston
o 3 220 445 Team
H Trace
702 191 76 0
TRI-VALLEY STANDINGS
Logan
726 I101 72 6
(VARSITY)
616 191 68 4
Team
W L P OP Nels York
607 191 67 4
Vmton Co
4 1 316 286 S Valley
665 1101 66 5
Belpre
4 1 283 262 Von ton Co
594 191 66 o
Nels York
2 2 280 270 N Gall1a
Waverly
656 I'01 65 6
AleXa nde,2 2 241 241
W Local
2 3 333 363 K Creek
512 (81 64 0
Fed Hockong 0 5 298 329 Alexander
636 1101 63 6
f RESERVE)
Gall1polls
503 161 62 9
565 (9) 62 B
Team
W L P OP W Local
Vmton Co
3 1 169 170 Southern
562 (9) 62 4
Nel s York
3 1 167 123
Wahama
373 16) 62 2
Alexander
3 1 146 135
Jackson
617 I 101 61 7
Belpre
3 2 161 155 Ironton
60a ( lOJ 60 8
Fed. Hock1ng 1 4 136 151 Me1gs
606 1101 60 6
W Local
0 5 152 217 Athens
663 111 I 60 3
TEAM STATISTICS
Tnmble
588 ( 101 58 8
FIELD GOAL PCT
Eastern
581 ( 101 58 1
Team
FGM A Pel Fed Hockong
580 (101 58 0
Logan
219 413 530 Belpre
519 (91 57 7
Waverly
203 416 486 PI Pleas
226 141 566
Athens
161 367 466 Southwestern
425 IB) 53 1
558 (11) 507
Gallipolis
177 410 432 Moiler
Jackson
178 426 418
Wellston
351 191 39 o
Me~gs
173 431 401
DEFENSIVELY
Ironton
177 447 396 Team
Pts ( Gl Avg
Wellston
92 230 286 Gallopolos
395 IBI 49 4
FREE THROW PCT.
Belpre
454 191 SO 4
Team
FTM A Pel Athens
571 ( 111 51 9
Athens
90 1~ 647 Waverly
539 (101 53 9
Waverly
76 118 644 Tnmble
557 (101 55 7
Logan
76 119 639 V1nlon Co
559 (10) 55 9
Jackson
91 143 636 H. Trace
511 191 56 B
MeigS
68 140 629 Southern
515 191 57 2
Gallipolis
76 124 613 logan
596 I 101 59 6
Ironton
76 129 589 N Gallla
540 191 60 0
Wellston
61 128 477
Eastern
602 ( 10) 60 2
REBOUNDS
Fed Hockmg
607 110) 60 7
Team
No. G Avg. Wahama
376 16) 62 7
Gallipolis
312 7 44 6 Alexander
635 1101 63 5
Logan
291 7 41 6 .I r onton
663 (tO) 66 3
663 1101 66 3
Ironton
263 7 37 6 Meigs
723 111 ) 65 7
Me1gs
262 7 37 4 Miller
267 (4) 66 6
Waverly
250 7 35 7 Pt Pleasant
672 ( 10) 67 2
Athens
234 7 JJ 4 Jackson
610 (91 67 6
Jackson
214 7 30 6 W Local
614 191 66 2
Wellston
I82 7 26 0 Nels York
K Creek
551 181 &amp;8 9
PERSONAL FOULS
Southwestern
570 (81 71 1
Team
No G Avg
611 (91 74 6
Jackson
109 7 15 7 Wellston
695 19) 77 2
Waverly
113 7 16 1 S Valley
UPCOMING SCHEDULE
Athens
113 7 16 1
FRIDAY
Gallipolis
119 7 17 o
SEOAl
Meigs
123 7 17 6
Ironton
125 7 17 9 Gallipolis at Athens
L99an
129 7 18 4 Ironton at logan
Wellston
144 7 20 6 Jackson at Me1gs
FIELD GOAL PCT.
Waverly at Wellston
Name, T.
FGM A Pel.
TRI-VALLEY
2~43
62r' Vmton Co ,.at Alexander
Young,l

"'

27

7

6 60 18 2 11 3

24 10
2 1 15
NY Rngrs20 14

6 54 146 109
8 50 16 2 131
10 50 160137

Monfr eal

Toronto

Buffalo
21
Detrotf
16
N Y Island ers
10
Vancouver 10

18
21

4 46 144 138
6 38 142 17 2

21 11 31 101 138
25 7 27 110160
W es t
w I I piS gf ga
25 9 s 55 127 75

Ph Ia
Ch•cago

19
8
18 16
17 19
lo s Angels 15 20
M 1nnesota 13 19
Pi ttSburgh 11 26

89
107
123
136
147
159
24 112 1a2

14
6
7
7
10

St LOU IS
Atlanta

146
116
11 0
11 7
13 1
110

52
42
41
37
36
27

s

CalifOrnia 9 28 6
Wednesday 's Resulls
Toronto 5 Ca!ltorn1a s
N Y Rangers 4 Oet,-o•t 4
Boston 5 Ch1cago s
Los Angeles 2 P1ttsburgh o
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
M1nnesota at Montreal
N Y Rangers at Sl LOUI S
Buffalo at Philadel ph ia
(only gam es sc heduled)

World H 0 C k e V ASSOCiatiOn
Standmgs
Bv Un.ted Press lnternat1onal
East

w

Nw En9Jnd 25

pts gf ga
2 52 163 140

1
16

t

Toronto
22 2 1
Cleveland 2 1 16

4 48 179 157
5 47 133 127

Quebec
Chicago

20 20

3

43 161 142

17 19

J

37 125 136

Jersey

17

23

2 36113 14 7

West

w
23

I
13

pts gt ga
4 50 160 109

Edmonton 23

20

0 46 153 146

Houston

Wmn1peg 21 2 1 4 46 153 162
M.nnesota 21 2 1 1 43 159 161
Vancouver 17 26 0 J4 151. 181
los Angel s 16 27 0 32 13 5 177
Wednesday's Results
Houston 4 Toronto 1
New England 4 Je rsey 2
(only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
Vancouver Houston
Chicago at New England
(on ly games sc hedul ed)

AMERICAN HOCKEY
LEAGUE STANDINGS

By United Press International
North

w I I pis

New Haven

26
23
20

7

59 174 129

18
12

6
7

51 160 137

17

8

5~.

202 143

22
16

V1rgln1a 13
R 1chmond
10

Myers has an 18 2 average 1n
JuniOr, Terry Carter, 6-0 JuniOr
nine games and an 18 8
and Phil Lewis, 6-2 semor
Coach Bill Ph1lhps' Eastern average m five SV AC contests
Eagles Will seek their second
straight VIctory agamst a taller
Glouster squad
The Tomcats manhandled
Eastern eaSJly In an earlier
outmg Glouster, enJoymg one
of Its better years on the hardwood, IS 8-2 Tim Seevers Is the
Tomcats' leadmg scorer He
has averaged 20 8 pomts m 10
games
Eastern IS led offensively by
big Steve Dill, 6-3 semor ce nter
and John Sheets, 6-1 semor
forward Dill IS the SVAC's
th~rd best pomt producer w1th
an 18 6 average, Sheets has a
16 3 aver.age agamst league
teams
PIus Casings
Coach Carl Wolfe 's sur pnsmg Southern Tornados
l&lt;lke their 6-3 record agamst
the Wahama White Falcons.
Wahama 1s 3-3.
Pete Sayre, 6-1 semor, and
Bobby Miller, 5-11 semor, have
be~n the big offensive cogs for
the Tornados Sayre has a 16 7
pomt average In the SV AC
Coach Ferrell Hesson's
Symmes Valley V1kmgs are 36 The V1kmgs are led by Mike
992-7161
Burcham, 6·0 semor , Rod
Middleport, 0.
Bennett, 5-9 semor a "~ Jaye
Myers, 6-1 Junior

TIRE SALE

REGULAR
RETREADS

SALES

~1011Clf

.,'Ct.'·•• DllUG twa
PIICI. 992-5759

u ..,.,

271 M.tm
.a~ee

m ..

pu~

I

Ohle

Jflvr Dmg NHt/1

.:18 145 130
162
160

Boston
16 25 .:1 36 137
Sprmg11eld 9 21 9 27 121
South
w I I pts gf
Hershey 23 12 8 5.:1 179
Cmcmnah
Ba1t1more 22
Jacksonv111e

ga

12

Prov 1dence
Rochester 22
Nova Scotia

gf

' mcludmg two
Seven games
league
encounters
are
sc heduled thiS weekend 10 the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference
League lilts are North Galha
at Hannan Trace and Southwestern at Kyger Creek Fnday
mght Non-league battles will
feature Glouster at Eastern
and Wahalllil at Southern
Saturday mght, Symmes
Valley will play at Eastern m
the only league game while
Hannan Trace travels to
Hannan, W Va and North
Galha meets Eastern of Pike
County at Beaver, Ohw
League leadmg Hannan
Trace !HI goes after Its lOth
straight VIctory agamst Coach
Jim Foster' s North Gallia
Pirates North Galha, 3-S this
season, has had InJUr)
problems the past two weeks
OffensiVely, the Pirates rely
on Tim Stout, 5-IOsemor guard,
who IS averagmg 18 2 points m
mne outmgs this wmter, and
Greg James, 6-2 sophorr.ore
guard
James had 21 po10ts last
week
agamst
Eastern
Rebounding strength IS
prov1ded by 6-2 Ke1th Weddmgton and 6-2 seniOr Dave
Robmette
Hannan Trace has all but
wrapped up the 1973-74 SVAC
cage champiOnship The
Wildcats must shU play
Southern who IS 5-l 10 the
league
The Tornados are the only
team with a chance for at least
a share of the league crown
Mark Swam, 6-0 jumor
guard, IS the Wildcat scormg
ace Swam IS the top area
pomt-maker with a 26.7
average He IS also averaging
25.7 pomts per outmg agamst
SVAC opposition John Lusher,
6-1 semor forward, IS
averagmg 18.6 pomts in the
SVAC
Coach Jim Arledge's Kyger
Creek Bobcats will seek their
second straight victory and
fourth of the season agamst
Southwestern . Earlier this
year , the Bobcats defeated the
Highlanders, 66-57 at Southwestern
KC's John Rumley had 40
pomts Tuesday mght aga1nst
Hannan, W Va Teammate
David Clay, 6-3 senwr center,
had 20 pomts. Clay Hudson, 6-0
semor guard, Is the top Bobcat
scorer agamst league foes
Hudson IS averagmg 16 2
pmnts m five outmgs
Southwestern IS led offensively by 6-2 Junior center
Lloyd Wood Wood ha s
averaged 17 3 pomts m siX
league contests Other scoring
threats are Kevm Walker, 6-1

s

ga
126

14
15

3

.:19 1.:1 3 131
47 144 129

24
24

3
4

35 125 164
JO 11 6 155

28

4

24 103 183

Wed,.esday's Res ults

Hershey 3 Cinc1nnat1 1
New Haven 4 Nova Sc ot 1a 2
Ro cheste,- 5 Prov 1d ence 3
R1chmond 3 Boston 2
Only games sch eduled
Thursday's Games
No game s scheduled

Warren Local at Fed Hockmg

SVAC

YOUR

BEST
BUY

North Gall Ia at Hannan Trace
Southwestern at Kyger Creek
Others

South Pomt at Fal,-land
Tnmble at Eastern
Wahama at Southern
Ports mouth at Spr1ngf1eld

South

Po1nt Pl easa nt at R1pl ey
Coal Grove at Chesapeake
Wheelersburg at Portsmoulh

NO

SATURDAY
t.RI VALLEY

Alexander at Warren Local

SVAC

Symmes Valley at Eastern
Others
Whe elersburg at Greenup, K y
Greenf1eld at Jackson

Logan at Nelsonville York

Wellston at Vmton County
Belpre at Fort Frye
Hannan Trace at Hannan W

Va

North Gal11a at Eastern P1ke
Miller at Waterfo,-d
Portsmouth at F1ndlay

TUESDAY (Jan
SVAC

22)

Southwestern at Southern
Others

South Poml at GallipoliS
Meigs at Pomt Pleasant

MOR-FLO
52 GAL GlASS LINED
ELECTRIC .
WATER HEATER
ONLY •94.95
Jacbt diameter 20 112", ~lght from floor Including
nlppln 32", nipple size '~.", between nipples 1",

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''

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'''

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hllght of electric outl-' 2• 111", Immersion type 4500
watt lower and upper twin elements Capacity 52
gal .• wetlln1ulated whit. ~name led outer lackel 5

..

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YEAR OUTRIGHT WARRANTY

Frontier at Belpre
Kyger Creek at Waham a
M1ller at Crooksville

For the Lowest ,
Tire Price~ ·
'"the Area

GAS MODELS
30 Gallon

HARDWARE

It' s

NEW HAVEN
DISCOUNT TIRE
New Haven, W Va

EBERSBACH
Phone "2-281 I

.

HOW, Main

Pomeroy

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Po111eroy, 0,, Jan.t7, 1974
2 - The Dallv Sentmel. M1ddleoort-Pomerov. 0

Jan

17 11174

i.

DR. LAWHENCE
E. LAMB
•

Don't pick pimples

MORE SEOEMS STAFF COMPLETE TRAINING Tra~rung d1rector John Peters presents a certificate of class
completiOn to new EMT, D. Kenneth Morgan, director of
Southeast Ohio's Emergency Medical Service (SEOEMS)
An EMT IS an ' emergency medical techmc1an" certified by
the State of Ohio, Department of EducaUon after havmg
successfully completed 60-bours of advanced emergency
VIC tim care Over 80 per cent of SEOEMS headquarters staff

are now certified EMTs Staffers recently completing the
course taught at Holzer Medical Center are, left to right D
Kenneth Morgan, Mrs Sarah (Sally) Mathews, Steve Sirback, Fred Staley, Ric Able, and DaVId Dunn Another
SEOEMS staff member graduating was Mike Yates, not
pictured Other members of the class are Robert G Bennett,
Jeffrey Farrmgton, Donley Strong and CherYl Vance

DEAR DR LAMB - Some
time ago my son picked a
pimple on hiS nose, and the
pressure of the fluid In II flew
across the room He hardly got
It stopped bleed10g Now th1s
punple IS a red spot that rises
up at limes, but he never
makes the mistake of
reopemng It agam.
A few weeks ago I was
readmg m the paper Items of 5ll
years ago There was a story
about a yoimg man picking a
pimple on his face and m a
short tune he was dead I
118Sume he bled to death I don't
have the name of the disease
but II still wornes me about my
son Could he have the same
thmg as thiS man • Could you
tell me the name of thiS disease
and what can be done about it•
I hke to read your column

as well as offfermg OhiOans the
assurance that a pound will
denote the same weight m
every part of Ohio," Wittenberg said
Pnor to adoptmg the bill,
Democrats defeated
Republican attempts to cut out
some of the enforcement
powers on grounds they were
not properly vested with the
director of agriculture
Wittenberg sa1d the Republican proposals would have
"gutted the bill "
Both the House and Senate
received a comprehensive
drug abuse control bill sulr
milled by Attorney General
Wilham J. Brown
Rep Myrl H Shoemaker, 0Bournev•lle, Introduced

Brown's bill m the House, while
Sen. Ronald M Mottl, DParma , offered II m the Senate
Both clauned there was bipartisan support despite recent
Republican obJections that
Brown copied one of their bills
which was buried m committee
by House Democrats last year
Brown's bill provides for
- A "Controlled Substance
Board" to classify drugs of
abuse under a recogmzed
federal system
- Mandatory Jail sentences
rangmg from 18 months to 12
years for certam offenses such
as pushmg or stealmg drugs, or
corrupting another with drugs
- Encouragement of voluntary treatment and rehabilitatiOn and restructurmg of meth-

Hard sell made for famous
Cincinnati Union Terminal
By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
question of whether this city
will lose one of Its histone
landmarks should be answered
soon
Uruon Termmal, recogmzed
as the gateway to the Queen
1City durmg railroad's heyday,
could go under the ball and
cham unless a buyer w1th $1
million Is found
Thousands of rml passengers
once hustled and bustled" under the giant rotunda of the
termmal Today the mammoth
complex sits vacant
The Cmcmnati Union Termmal Co says the termmal1s a
g1ant liability
HJf we can't selltt, we've got
to tear 1t down/' acknowledges
Termmal Co lawyer John
Hudson "The cost of mamtammg It and the taxes are JUst
tremendous If II can't be sold,

pnce to save the term mal from
destructiOn
But city officials want more
than JUSt "architectural beauty" for their money and Mitchell's group has come forward
with a plan for turmng the
termmal back mto a transpor~~ It's representative of an artation center
chitectural style that must be
Mitchell, a 2o-year-old
preserved," says M1ke Milchgraphic designer, IS trymg to
ell, chairman of the Committee
sell the City on an Idea that the
to ReVIve Umon Ternunal.
termmal can be used m four
"What can I say except that the different transportallon ways
rotunda itself IS a 'grand
- as a rail termmal for exspace.' They just don 'I design
panded Amtrak serVIce, a bus
them like that anymore."
termmal, an airport check-m
Amtrak ran Its last passencenter and a rapid transit lmk
ger tram through the termmal
to the downtown area
on Oct 29,1972 and then moved
Those proposals are currentto a new facility here. The "for
ly
under study by the city
sale 11 stgn has now gone up
Hudson, the Termmal Co atA four month sale penod
torney, probably IS the most
established by the Termmal
knowledgable person m the
Co. ends In March and city ofCity on the termmal The 73ficials are trymg to decide
yearold lawyer has served as
whether to spend the $1 askmg
legal counsel for the company
ever smce the termmal was
opened 10 1933
"Personally, I would like to
see the rotunda stand 1f some
economical use can be made of
ll," says Hudson "But I'm
skepllcal about the place becommg a transportatiOn
m the river study, the agency centet. I JUS! don't thmk It's
sa1d But pollutants such as going to work out
phosphorus and mtrogen,
"About the only prospect I
which can enter the nvers see IS for the city to buy II and
naturally from erosion of the use II for a storage and mainland or from commercial and tenance garage for Its city busmdustnal sources such as est" he sa1d. 11 But as for tlungs
detergents, are on the m- lik,e railroads - well, the rail
crease.
busmess IS gone as far as this
Up to 84 per cent of the part of the countrY IS constretches -,?f rivers studied cerned."
showed mcreased phosphorus
Another CII!zens group called
levels durmg the 1968 tel' 1972 "save the terminal'' came up
penod compared to the preVI- with enough money to transous five years, the report sa1d. port 14 huge moSBlc murals
Nitrogen nutrients mcreased m from the termmal to the local
up to 74 per cent of the stret- airport Despite a massive
ches.of water cpvered by the public relations effort, atsurvey
•
tempts to rmse enough money
to buy the termmal have fallen
The Daily Sentinel
far short.
DEVOTED TOniE
Local newspapers have run
INTEREST OF
and feature stories,
editorials
MElG&amp;IWION AREA
dozens of meet10gs called and
CHESTER L. TAHNEIID.J..,
posters c1rcula ted to try to salROB rAT BOEFLIDI,
vage
the termmal. Even the
Otrl!"Aitor
pnze-wmnmg float 10 the Uru""'"""" daily ........,. .,. Tho
Ohio VaHey PubUahinl Company m
versily
of
Cmcmnati
Caurt St, Pometo)', Ohio N'1ll BuaiMa1
Office ~tt2.21M Editorial Phone ggz.
bomecommg parade last fall
21$7
depicted the termmal rotunda
StcorJd dua postap p1kt al Pomeroy ,
and was entitled, "When It's
NaUontl advertl.tlnl reprt!HDtatlve
Gone, It's Gone "
Bottinelli..C.U.Jher Inc 12 Eut tlnd St
But posters and floats don't
New Yori New Yori
~blcripUm ntel Dell \"mmd br earner
Impress Hudson; a practiejil'
It's got to be disposed of "
Som~traged citizens, high
on spirit but sh~rt on money,
reverently refer to the termmal as an architectural landmark that should be saved

Ohio River among
nation's dirtiest
By MICHAEL J. CIJNtON
WASHINGTON (UPI) Some of the nation 's biggest
rivers-mcludm g parts of the
OhiO, MisSISSippi and MISsouri
-are also the dirtiest, accordmg to a ne\\ study by the Envtronmental

Protection

Agency (EPA)
The agency said the maJor
problem appeared to be nutnents, such as phosphorus and
nitrogen, whtch can over-

fertilize waters, causmg heavy
growth of vegetatiOn and
shuttmg off oxygen supplies
EPA said the clea nest nvers
among 22 II studied were the
Upper M1ssoun, Columbia,
Snake, W1llamette, Upper Misstssippa, Yukon, Tennessee,

Susquehanna, and the Lower
Colorado.
The worst third m the survey
were the Lower Red , Hudson,
Lower
Ohio,
Lower
Mtsstsstppt, Lower Arkansas,

Middle Ohio, the MissisSippi
near Mmneapohs, the Lower
Missouri, Upper Arkansas and
Middle MISSOUri.
In between were the Rio
Grande, Alabama, Upper Ohio,
Upper Red, Brazos, Potomac,
Uppe r Colorado, Middle
MissiSSippi, and Sacramento
Pollutants which have been
the subJect of the most control,

........

"""'

whert available 10 centl pet,._ By
Motor ~ Route wbin auTier ..-vice not

ez

anU..bie eN mooth, eo. By 10111 In
Cllkl frld W Va , Om Year $11, SU:
monU!a, h $0, Three monthl, f6
Ebewht'l't $22 00 yatt II.J: montha 111 50,

such as sewage and bacteria,

showed unprovements overall

I

thra mmthl, f1 IG &amp;Vblcrtption price
~ Judel !luxily 11me.sent.lneJ

''--------

..

adone treatment programs under the Department of Mental
Health and Mental RetardatiOn
Mottl and Shoemaker held a
JOint news conference Wllh
Brown to plug the new bill
Four other Democrallc
sponsors and one Republican
attended
Brown demed Republican
charges that he plagiarized a
bill offered last year by Rep
George E. Mastics, R-Fa1rv1ew
Park, contaimng sunilar proVIswns.
The attorney general Issued
a news release comparm~
pomt-by-pomt hLS own bill and
Mashes'
He
basiCally
downgraded the GOP bill,
parllcularly a " No-kno ck"
proVIsion which would .. uow
pollee to enter and search a
dwelling without advance

notice.
Mottl and Mastics are both
candidates for the same congressiOnal seat. Brown IS a
candidate for re-election as attorney general
"Let's take the politics out of
this and get down to brass
tacks," Shoemaker said
11
There are lives at stake m this

" Ulcers" booklet.

RIO Grande College, playing
Without the services of veteran
guard Steve Bartram, held on
to edge visilmg Wilberforce 8582 at Lyne Center m a nonleagtte basketball ga me
Wednesday mght
Bartram, 5-8 seruor from
Ironton , reportedly IS no longer
with the squad
Last mght; Ron Lambert

poured '1:/ pomts through the
hoops to pace Coach Art
Lanham's squad to Its seventh
VIctory m 13 starts Coach
Charles Lee's Bulldogs, led by
5-8 freshman guard Abe
Turner's 23 pomts, dropped to
6-8 on the year.
RIO Grande held a 4&amp;-34
halfhme lead The Bulldogs,
however, rallied to catch the

In other legiSlallve developments
Personal - Rep. Wilham E
Hm1g, 0-New Philadelphia, Introduced a bill reducmg to 3o
per cent the level of assessmenton mventones and equipment for busmesses
Usury - Rep Thomas Fries,
D-Dayton, said he would mtroduce legislation to repeal
Oh1o's usury law wh1ch sets a
ceilmg of 8 per cent on mterest
rates for large loans
Housing -The House adopted a resolutiOn callmg on
President Nixon and Congress
to restore federal funds for lowlllCOme housing
Insurance - The Senate
agreed to House amendments
and sent to Gov John J Gilligan legiSlallon reducmg the
number of persons that must
be m group insurance plans.
Boats - The Senate unarumously passed and sent to the
House a bill allowmg persons to
sleep overmght on a properly
equipped watercraft on state
park waters.
The Senate was to reconvene
today at 10 a m , while the
House was to meet one bour
later

TUCSON, Ariz (UPI ) Johnny Miller, who already
has $60,000 under his hell,
neads a field, Including this
year's seven top money wmners, as the $150,000 Dean
Martm Tucson Open gets under
way today
Miller was th e odds on man
to bea t m this third stop on the
ProfessiOnal Goif Assoc1al1on
tour He captured both the
Phoemx
and
Bmg
Crosby Opens and \\as out to
see If the third tune was really
the charm
The 26-year-old Miller has

never had a good game on the
7,200 yard Tucson National
Golf Course m the five years he
has been on the pro cirt'Uit
However, this year Miller sa1d
he 1s ready with an understatement "I'm gomg good "
Also 1n the field are top
money wmners Gner Jones,
Hubert Green, Dave Stockton,
Rod Funseth, John Schroeder
and Miller Barber. Lanny
Wadkins, m second place m
ear nings this year, IS
bypassmg the event as are
Arnold Palmer and Jack
Nicklaus

Irish priest
apologizes for

leaders They have, at this wntmg, been unable to work out
assistance plans they consider reasonable They reportedly are
losmg hope any such plans can be developed
The Frendl will certamly end up wvmg aid to the North
VIetnamese, if only to bold on to their historic economic and
pohhcal mterests m the area. But as things look now , that
assistance Will be considerably less than ongmally planned
By contrast, the French have unproved relations with the
Th1eu government The men from PariS have found the South
VIetnamese more realisllc m economic plannmg , more certain of
what they want to accompliSh and more willing to take the steps
necessary to assure that French aid will be well used
The questiOn here IS whether these HanOI men who spent 40
years as revolutionaries can adJust sufficiently to peace to make
their country economically VIable and pohllcally stable.
The answer IS unportant to the Uruted States The survival of
South VIetnam, peace m Southeast Asia and our ab1hty to work
out more normal relatiOnships with the Asian countries rests to
an Important degree on the ab1hty of the North VIetnamese
rulers to handle peace.
That Is, the warm South VIetnam may continue because the
North VIetnamese revolutwnanes cannot cope with an absence
of war. They do not have the attitudes, the skills or the
organizational ability to operate a peaceliiDe economy or to
govern a peacetime state They may be forced to go on With the
fightmg m order to make their real world fit the only type of
operatmg they know - wartime regunentahon and controls,
wartune mdustnal and agncullural plannmg, government by
CrlStS

The Russl8n and Chmese revolutionaries were able to make
this shift But these two lands had much lil the way of resources
They had some considerable mduslrY, sizeable numbers of
techmcally tramed men and expenenced middle grade officials
able to do techmcal planning and to keep wheels moVIng.

his politics

ships' masts and charcoal, and then crossed the Atlanllc to explOit the wgm lands of the New World
Had they contmued to depend upon wood for fuel or waterwheels for energy, there would have been no IndustrlBl
Revolution But then came the age of coal, and long before the
world's store of that resource was even dented, coal was supplanted by the more convement and versatile petroleum and
natural gas
In the early days of this century, gasolme was considered a
nmsance by-product of petroleum refimng and was burned or
dumped. The great automobile mdustrY, which directly or mdirectly employs one out of everY SIX or seven people m this
country today, was built on this cheap and plentiful fuel.
Even 70 years ago, II was obviOus that the world contamed
only so much 011 Should men have decided to limit the number of
cars they would manufacture so that future generatiOns would
not run out of gasolme, not to mentiOn the other resources consumed by automobiles?
If so, how many should they have built, and how h1gh should
they have pnced them to discourage ownership• And who would
have made these decisions•
This Is no bnef for waste or wanton consumption It IS merely
tu suggest that the modern mdustrial and technologiCal world IS
the product not only of abundant •nergy but of abondant opIIIIUsm at everY turn. And maybe also a lit tie luck.
All the lines are shU converging on the graph -population,
resources, consumption, pollution - more sharply than ever
There IS no denymg them.
But the only way we could have avOided the challenge they
present would have been to remam m some earlier more
priiDitive stage
'

To You Know Who

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Saymg
that sometimes "IriSh Catholic
pnests become en\hllljiastlc
about• pohlicians;'' actmg
House Chaplam Colby Grimes
apologized Wednesday for
closmg a prayer the day before
with a request that God grant
Gov. John J Gilligan the
preSidency.
Some Republicans refused to
hear Grimes' prayer and walked off the House floor Wednesday
Tu~y _QriiDes asked that
Gilligan, aJiOliii\ lrishMoiic,
someday become Presideht
and deliver the "State of the

ThiS Is a reasonable facsimile of an anonymous poem(?)
which first appeared m "Kreohte News," published by the
JenniSOn-Wright Corp. ·
To you wbo tell me ''youknQw,you know , you know,"
Do you tell me ''you know" because you know I know• Then
why tell me I know if you know I know ?
But if you know I don 'I know, Don 'I tell me "you know "
Because I don't know
'
Just tell me, and then I'll know
And you won 'I have to tell me "you know ,'' Because you 'II
know I know You know•

LOcal Bowling
POMEROY LANES
BEND LEAGUE

Uruon" address

ThreeH1ts&amp;AM1~

'

"I feel sorry lor you, son. You may never be able to
asp1re to a b1g, luxury, top-ol-the-lme 'automobtle'"

ZENITH
COLOR TV

•
e BlACi&lt;

TRI COUNTY LEAGUE
January 15, 1974

p ..
89

87
78
65
46
43

Three NuiS &amp; A Bolt
High lnd Game - AI Fl'tlelps
Jr 268, George Horak 238 8 111
WilfOrd 2:15
H1gh Series - A L Phelps
Jr 691. Bill W1Uord 665, George
Horak 601
Teqm H 1g h Game and series
- Crow s Comets 744 and 2066

Sea rs Cat Merchants
12
Rawlings Auto Parts
10
Pomeroy Cement Blk co
10
H&amp;R F1restone
8
M1dwest Steel Co
6
Roach Gun Shopt
2
H1gh lnd
Game Bill
Radford and Henry Clatworthy
221 , A L Phelps Jr 219 Dale
DaviS 21.4
High Series - Bill Radford
634, Dele D1v 1s and Henro;
Clatworthv 572 , A L Phelps

Jr , 555

Team H igh Game ,
Catalog Merchants 8?0
Team High Series Firestone 25?'i
'

Sens
H&amp;R

.

&amp;

WHITE TV

Pis

Januray 14 , 1914

Craw's Comets
Shake Haven
Four Aces
Top Cats

NEW YORK (UPI) - Mickey Mantle retired fiVe years ago,
but he still hasn 't quit.
Not subconsciously anyway
He said so Wednesday on an unprecedented occasion, one m
which he and his old Yankee buddy, Whitey Ford, became the
first two players from the same club ever to be voted mto
Baseball's Hall of Fame simultaneously
This Isn't the first time Mickey Mantle has bared his soul He
has done II before, but m the 23years I've known him, I can't ever
recall hun reachmg thiS far back m the recesses of his psyche .
He talked about how much he miSSes the competitive psrt of
baseball now that he's out of 11.
"I still dream about 11 almost every mght,'' he said "I dream
that I'm trymg to make a comeback "
Later on, he went deeper yet
"I dream about trymg to get bac~ mto Yankee StadiUm and
they won'tletmem," he said "I pull up in a cab and try to get m
by crawling through a small hole, but I can't. 1 see peOple all
around me . maybe 70,000 and I hear Casey Stengel on the
bench, saymg, 'Where's Mantle • Where's Mantle•' Then
somebody else says 'It's okay, he'll be here soon.'''
Mickey Mantle became only the seventh player to make the
Hall of Fame m hiS first year of eligibility Wednesday and
naturally t.j)at pleased hun , but not as much perhaps as gomg m
together With hiS ex-roomie, Whitey Ford
The two come from entirely different backgrounds - Mantle
from small, rural Commerce, Okla., and Ford from busy,
bustling Astona, Long Island, in..New York City-but from the
first lime they met 23 years ago, they hit it off magnificently.
They generally could be found together hke some kind of entry, 1
and 1-A
It didn't seem to matter to either that one was country and the
other big city.
"I'd say 'over yonder,'" Mickey Mantle laughed at Wednesday's sesswn, "and Whitey would say 'where the hell IS over
yonder•• But you know he says 'vodkar..--r and soda '"
Now both were laughing
At first, Mantle explamed, there were three of them with the
Yankees, Btlly Martin, Ford and hunself
"I remember the three of us gomg huntmg together down m
Commerce after the 1956 season,'' S8ld Ford "Mickey's wife,
Merlyn, didn't know much about baseball then, and If you recall
Mickey won the Tr1ple Crown that year
"I said to Merlyn, 'What do you think of the year Mickey had ••
"'Did he do good?' she asked.
"He won the Triple Crown, I said
"'What does that mean•"' she sa1d
Ford then went on to tell how hospitable Mickey's family was
to hun durmg his viSit
"Mickey woke me this one mornmg and satd, 'C'mon downstairs Mom's got breakfast ready ' Well, you know being from
New York, I'm used to bacon and eggs Now I see thisqua1lon the
table BiscUits and breasts of quail on top of 11, and home-made
gravy on top of that I didn't think I could ever eat 1!. But then
everYbody started eatmg and I began picking on 11 When 1
fmally fm1shed I found out II was great. We had more the next
mormng. You know, they're such plam, honest people down
there, you love 1em "
There IS no question about the way Whitey Ford feels about
Mickey Mantle and vice versa That goes personally and
professionally
''I had the greatest respect for Whitey of anybody I ever played
with," said Mantle "We were from different parts of the countrY
and we could make fun of each other's talk, but from the
beginmng, we JUst kinda hit II off. I can't ever remember havmg
one cross word with Whitey "
Ford Is returmng to the Yankees as a coach thiS year, and
Mantle, who represents an msurance company and a bank m
Dallas, says he's never had II better He claims he doesn't care to
manage a ball club
In their day, and there IS no real evidence that this one still
LSn't, the 42-year-old Mantle and 45-year-old Ford had some good
tunes together dff the field, so 11 seemed a bit appropriate that
Wednesday's news conference was held m a plush supper club of
the Americana Hotel
Any poSSible significance the location might have wasn't entirely lost on Mantle either Asked what II could possibly have
been that drew, and then held, hun and Ford together, Mickey's
blue eyes twinkled a moment.
"I thmk probably we both hke Scotch," he laughed.

•
e STEREO
Easy Terms!
Free Dell very!

MASON AJRNITURE
HERMAN GRATE
773-5592
MASON, W VA

were Dean Fausnaugh, w1th 18,
and Doug Hart, 21 Henry
Blakeney and Isaac Green
each had 16 for the visitors.
Saturday, RIO w11l host
Wri ght
State
powerful
Umvers1ty m a non-league
game Tipoff time at Lyne
Center IS 8 p m
Wednesday's box :
WILBERFORCE (821 -

Blakeney 8 0 16 Green a o 16
Jones 2 0 4, M1tchell 2 1 5,
McBeth , 2 0 4 Perdue 50 10
Tu,-ner 11 1 23 Hunter 2 0 4
TOTALS 40 2 U .
RIO GRANDE (85)
Lambert 11 5 27 Fausnaugh
8 2 18 Hart 9 3 21 Bollmger
1 2 4 Stewart , 2 2 6. Noe 3 1 7
Al ban ese 0 2 2 TOTALS 34 . 17
85

Score

at

Hall -

W lberforce 34

R 1o

48

Pro Standings
Amencan Baksetball
A ss oc1ilt1on Standmg s
By Un1ted P,-es~ lnternaftona l

East

TEAM

9

0

9

1

1 000
900

Belpre
GallipoliS

6
7

1
1

669
675

Wave rly
Tnmble

a

2

7

2

3

800
800

a

700

Athens

7

6

3

667

Alexander

6

5

545

Mo:&gt;krm v dh• York

5
4
3
4

5

500
444
42a
400

4

Sy mmes Valley
North Gall1a
Kyger Creek
Ironton
Me1gs
Federal Hockmg

3
3
3
3
2
2

Southwestern

I

4

5

s
6

6
6
6
6

636

400

7
6
6

333
333
333
300
200
200

7

125

~ b

pel.
636

....L

625

61 2

12

357

255

'I;

17 1/]

West

w
t pet g b
Utah
29 17 630
lndtana
24 22 522
5
San An tonl o
23 24 489
6' '
Denver
20 24 455 8
Sa n 0 1ego
20 29 408 10 1 1
WeCinesday·s Results
Carolma 131 New Yo rk 105
Kentucky 105 Denver 102

Vlrg1n a 116 Sa n D1 ego 109
Utah 123 lnd1ana 105
(only gam es sc heduled )
Thursday's Gam es
Indiana at Memphis
San D1ego at San Anton10
(o nly games sc heduled )

Nat1onal Hockey

Bos ton

(Includes games through Jan 12)
Hannan Trace
Vtnton County

I

28 16
30 18
30 19
15 27
12 35

league Sfindmgs
By Un.ted Press International
East
w 1 t pts g f ga

1973 74 HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
!OVERALL STANDit.:GSI
W L PCT

w

Kentucky
· New York
Carol1na
V1rgm1 a
M emphi S

SEO cage stats

Warr en Local
Wahama
Jackson
Eastern

Wouldn't we have nm short of caves?

BEARY'S WORLD

Wilberforce hit 40 of 86 field
goal attempts, and the
Bulldogs were 2 of 6 at the foul
circles for 33 3 pet
Other Redmen m double
figures m sconng Wednesday

Southern

Don Oakley

To be an instant sage these days, It's only necessary to say,
or wnte, something like: "For years thiS country has been gomg
1ts merrY way as If energy would always be cheap and plentiful.
Now we're havmg to pay the piper "
Everyone will nod m sober agreement because, of course,
It's qUite true. Our modern affluence, with all Its attendant
comforts and convemences, has been made possible by cheap
and abundant energy, and few among us ever bothered before
now to wonder what would happen when the day came that
energy was no longer so cheap or abundant.
Yet - not to minimize the seriOusness of the situahon haven't men always explOited the resources at hand and
proceeded on the assumption that there would always be enough
for their needs•
At any given pomt m history, econonuc forecasters could
have plotted the lines of consumption and resources mto the
future and warned that eventually the former would cross the
latter
In England in the Middle Ages, for example, priiDIIIve as
mdustry was, men cut down the forests with reckless abandon for

Redmen late m the game,
gomg ahead for the first time,
76-75, with 3.15 remallllng
Mter an exchange of buckets
Lambert's goal with 2 26
remammg put the Redmen on
top for keeps
RIO hit 34 of 67 field goal
attempts for 52 pet The
Redmen were 17 of 28 from the
foul circles for 60 7pct RIO had
47 rebounds Lambert snagged

Miller heads Tucson field ~4~~ Stewart 12 and Jimmy

Hanoi's problem: tooling up for peace
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The focus is on South VIetnam,
where the North has pumped m foot soldiers and weapons at a
heady pace. President Th1eu readies hunself for an all-out attack
which threatens hiS country's existence
But my Hong Kong informants say the real news IS m HanOI
Usually sympathetic visitors report the North VIetnamese
are m bad shape econonucaUy. The politburo, bobblmg ecoP.omic
planning, can't decide on priOrities
VIsitors say that after four decades of fighting the Hanoi
deciSion makers are fmding 11 most difficult to readjust to
peacetune economics and normal development They think of
econom1c reconstruction m terms of militarY potential Most
North VIetnamese leaders have never operated a peacetune
economy
The pohllcal situation is as confused as the economic one.
Here agam, the Hanoi men have little experience m peacetime
operatwns. The mternal struggle between Ho Chi Mmh's successors continues una bated The argument over whether to
contmue the war full tilt m the South or to give first priority to
rebwld10g the North has not been resolved. Hanoi IS attempting
to play tl1e game both ways, bwldmg Its strength 10 the South,
ImproVIng Its military position by attacks on key southern
positiOns, probmg for weak spots m Saigon's first-line armies and
local forces and holdmg 1ts options open, either for an all-out
attack or a long drawn-out low-key war of mfightmg, terroriSm
and sabotage
As a straw m the wind, take the case of France which has
been sympathetic to Hanoi Durmg the war PariS mamtamed
close Informal economic lies with Ho Chi Minh and his successors. It brought backroom pressures man attempt to Improve
Hanoi's position vis-a-vis Saigon in the peace talks It had plans
for large-ocate post-war economic assiStance to Hanoi
Despite this history of friendship, the latest reports md1cate
the French are becom10g disillusioned with North VIetnam's

Action heavy in SVAC
circles this weekend

Rio Redmen edge Bulldogs

Logan

matter ''

WedneSday GriiDes pra~d
(RC;JWttl~bii.Jni~~ike
man.
w
the Hon~~ floor ts"not til~ 'pia~
"Everybody has protested to display political enthusiasm
and said, 'Oh, you must keep and asked for forgiVeness by
It,'" he said. "But no body's yet reading a biblical confessiOn
come along with the money to by Dav1d contained m the 51st
do tt "
Psalm

.'

'

ruptured his pllllple and some
of the mfec ted material spread
into the surroundmg tissue and
was picked up by the blood
The nose and mouth area IS
particularly rich m tiny bl~
vessels, especially vems
The mfection ca n be earned
by the vems m this area to the
bra10 Here It sets up an mfechon m the large venous
Sinuses or large pockets of
blood encased around the bram
called the cavernous smus
When these are Infected large
clots can form m them, a
condition called cavernous
SinUS thrombOSIS, and the
1nfection Is very dangerous
Th1s 1s one of the mam reasons
people are always adviSed
agamst squeezmg pimples
around the nose and mouth
Today when an mfection does

"

RAY CROMLEY

Senate has weights-measures bill
By Lt:t: Lt:UNARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP[) - The
' OhiO House has adopted, 85-8,
and sent to the Senate legislation giVIng the state director of
agnculture additiOnal enforcement powers In the area of
weights and measures , placmg
OhiO on a standardized system
The measure, sponsored by
Rep Richard L Wittenberg,
D-Toledo. also would standardize a voluntary umt
pncmg system m Ohio for
stores m all cities
Urut pr1cmg IS the markmg
of an Item with Its pnce per
pound or per quart along with
the total pnce.
"The bill will sunphfy Ohw's
laws on y, etghts and measures,

every day as you give plam,
everyday advice I ca n un derstand, so hope you can help
me
DEAR READER - My
guess IS that your son has a
very small artery at the surface of the skin When he
succeeded m breaking 11, the
h1gh pressure m the small
artery caused the ~lood to
sqwrt. An artery will actually
pump blood out with each
heartbeat In a spurtmg fashiOn
A ve10 merely allows blood to
flow out There Is a lot more
pressure ms1de an arterY than
there IS Inside a vem
I doubt the man you read
about 10 the paper had the
same problem your son has
Fifty years ago we didn't have
antibiOtics to combat Infections The man probably

occur II can be qwckly treated
with antibiOtics So, 11 Is not the
dreaded rare complication II ·
used to be Nevertheless, It Is
still good advice no to squeeze
for cefully on punples Rather II
1s best to let them mature and
then carefully lift off the top
and gently express the
material The area should be
cleaned with alcohol first and a
clean needle also stenbzed or
at least soaked m alcohol used.
Never squeeze hard
Your son should leave his
spot alone If might be worthwhile seemg If he can have the
spot treated with an electric
needle. A dermatologist should
be able to treat 11 eaSily so that
it will not be a problem m the
future for hun and will not
affect his appearan~ But, I
thmk you can put your nund at
ease about the possibility •that
he has the same problem you
read about
Send your questions to Dr.
Lamb, In care of this newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551, Radio
City Statton, New York, N. Y.
10019. For a copy of Dr. Lamb's
booklet on ulcers, send 5{) cents
to the same address and ask for

PTS OPP
702 511
665 559
519
454
503
395
656
539
588
557
726 596
562
515
663
571
696
698
679
67 4
565
610
423
461
617
672
561
602
607
695
594
540
596
612
608
663
606
663
560
607
425
570
351
671
556
723
266
322

Wellston
1 B
111
Miller
1 10
091
Pomt Pleasant
o 5
ooo
OVERALL SCORINGIAsofJan 121
NAME, T~AM
FG FT Pis IGI Avg
Mark Swam, H Trace
100 40 240 19)
26 7
John Shoemake,-, Waverl y
97
41
235 ( 101 23 5
Mark Mace, Athens
96 50 242 111) 22 0
Dave Rann, Ironton
86
39
211
110) 21 1
T1m Seevers, Tnmble
83
21
1a7
(91 20 6
(10) 19 2
Jim P1erce, Logan
87
18
192
Dan B1se. Fed . Hock Ina
80
31
19 1 110) 19 1
T1m Stout N Gall la
66
32 164 191 18 2
Dave Pntchard , Nels York
64 36
164
I 91 18 2
Jaye Myers, Symmes Valley
63 38
164
(91 16 2
SEOAL SCOR lNG
NAME, TEAM
FG FT Pis IGI Avg
John Shoemaker, Waverly
75
27
177 (7)
25 3
Dave Rann, Ironton
62
28
152
171 21 7
Mark Mace , Athens
59
26
144
171 20 6
M1ke McDonald. Jackson
52 26 130 171 16 6
G1l Pnce, Gallipolis
50 20 120 171 17 I
J1m P1 erce, Logan
53
13
119
17) 17 0
Danny Dodson, Meq)S
46
20
11 2
171 16 0
Paul Wh1t e, Jack&amp;on
41
12
94
171 13 4
J1m Niday, Gallipolis
34 15
83 (7) 11 9
Jeff Campbell Logan
34 12 BO 171 114
TRI VALLEY SCORING
NAME, TEAM
FG FT Pts. IGI Avg.
Dan Bl se Fed Hock1ng
37
22
98
(5 ) 19 6
Greg Smathers Nel s York
34
6 74
( 4)
16 5
(4)
Steve Thomas. Alexander
26
17
69
17 3
Keith N1ce, VInton Co
40
5 85 Ill 17 0
VIc Kn1ck W Local
35 14 64 151 16 6
Randy Offenberg..-, W Local
30 12 72 151 14 4
14) 14 3
Dave Pntchard, Nels York
21
IS 57
WlllleStra 11, Belpre
30
7 67 IS) 13 4
Harold Caud1ll, Vmton Co
25
13
63
IS) 12 6
Charles Preston, Belpre
28
2 sa
151 116
SVAC SCORING
NAME, TEAM
FG FT Pis. (G) Avg
Mark Swa1n, H Trace
74 32 160 171 25 7
JayeMy er s, S Valley
38 18
94 15) 16 6
54
22
130
Steve Dtll, Eastern
171 16 6
John Lusher, H Trace
50 30 130 I7) 16 6
T1m Stout, N Gallla
42 27 111 16) 16 5
Lloyd Wood Southwestern
42 20 104 (6) 17 3
Bob M1ller, Southern
36 32 104 161 17 J
Pete Sayre, Southern
44 12 100 16) 16 7
John Sheets, Ea stern
50
14
114
171 16 3
Clay Hudson, Kyger Creek
32 17
81 15) 16 2

'
SEOAL STANDINGS
Dudu1t
Wav
32
55
582
IVARSITY&gt;
75 136 551
Team
W l P OP Shoe'mkr, Wav
28 51
549
Waverly
6 1 482 360 Sk 1nner, A
35 64
547
Galli polis
6 1 430 347 Kemper, L
FREE THROW PCT.
Athens
5 2 452 347
FTM-A Pel
Logan
4 3 494 417 Name, T
Conroy,
J
25 30 633
Jackson
3 4 447 465
Coats, M
22 29 759
Ironton
3 4 430 446
Mace
A
26 36 122
Me1gs
1 6 434 475
27 38 711
Welfston
0 7 245 555 Shoe'mkr. Wav
Rann, I
26·41 663
(RESERVE)
REBOUNDS
Team
W l P OP
No G Avg
Jackson
7 0 347 264 Name, T
Pnce, G
125 7 17 9
Ironton
6 I 356 296
75 7 10 7
Athens
4 J 262 235 Myers, M
72 7 10 3
Logan
3 4 345 307 Young, L
Meigs
3 4 295 JOB Shoemaker, Wav 70 7 10 0
69 7 9 9
Gallipolis
3 4 285 271 F1tspatn ck, I
OFFENSIVELY
Waverly
2 5 252 256
Pts (GI Avg.
Wellston
o 3 220 445 Team
H Trace
702 191 76 0
TRI-VALLEY STANDINGS
Logan
726 I101 72 6
(VARSITY)
616 191 68 4
Team
W L P OP Nels York
607 191 67 4
Vmton Co
4 1 316 286 S Valley
665 1101 66 5
Belpre
4 1 283 262 Von ton Co
594 191 66 o
Nels York
2 2 280 270 N Gall1a
Waverly
656 I'01 65 6
AleXa nde,2 2 241 241
W Local
2 3 333 363 K Creek
512 (81 64 0
Fed Hockong 0 5 298 329 Alexander
636 1101 63 6
f RESERVE)
Gall1polls
503 161 62 9
565 (9) 62 B
Team
W L P OP W Local
Vmton Co
3 1 169 170 Southern
562 (9) 62 4
Nel s York
3 1 167 123
Wahama
373 16) 62 2
Alexander
3 1 146 135
Jackson
617 I 101 61 7
Belpre
3 2 161 155 Ironton
60a ( lOJ 60 8
Fed. Hock1ng 1 4 136 151 Me1gs
606 1101 60 6
W Local
0 5 152 217 Athens
663 111 I 60 3
TEAM STATISTICS
Tnmble
588 ( 101 58 8
FIELD GOAL PCT
Eastern
581 ( 101 58 1
Team
FGM A Pel Fed Hockong
580 (101 58 0
Logan
219 413 530 Belpre
519 (91 57 7
Waverly
203 416 486 PI Pleas
226 141 566
Athens
161 367 466 Southwestern
425 IB) 53 1
558 (11) 507
Gallipolis
177 410 432 Moiler
Jackson
178 426 418
Wellston
351 191 39 o
Me~gs
173 431 401
DEFENSIVELY
Ironton
177 447 396 Team
Pts ( Gl Avg
Wellston
92 230 286 Gallopolos
395 IBI 49 4
FREE THROW PCT.
Belpre
454 191 SO 4
Team
FTM A Pel Athens
571 ( 111 51 9
Athens
90 1~ 647 Waverly
539 (101 53 9
Waverly
76 118 644 Tnmble
557 (101 55 7
Logan
76 119 639 V1nlon Co
559 (10) 55 9
Jackson
91 143 636 H. Trace
511 191 56 B
MeigS
68 140 629 Southern
515 191 57 2
Gallipolis
76 124 613 logan
596 I 101 59 6
Ironton
76 129 589 N Gallla
540 191 60 0
Wellston
61 128 477
Eastern
602 ( 10) 60 2
REBOUNDS
Fed Hockmg
607 110) 60 7
Team
No. G Avg. Wahama
376 16) 62 7
Gallipolis
312 7 44 6 Alexander
635 1101 63 5
Logan
291 7 41 6 .I r onton
663 (tO) 66 3
663 1101 66 3
Ironton
263 7 37 6 Meigs
723 111 ) 65 7
Me1gs
262 7 37 4 Miller
267 (4) 66 6
Waverly
250 7 35 7 Pt Pleasant
672 ( 10) 67 2
Athens
234 7 JJ 4 Jackson
610 (91 67 6
Jackson
214 7 30 6 W Local
614 191 66 2
Wellston
I82 7 26 0 Nels York
K Creek
551 181 &amp;8 9
PERSONAL FOULS
Southwestern
570 (81 71 1
Team
No G Avg
611 (91 74 6
Jackson
109 7 15 7 Wellston
695 19) 77 2
Waverly
113 7 16 1 S Valley
UPCOMING SCHEDULE
Athens
113 7 16 1
FRIDAY
Gallipolis
119 7 17 o
SEOAl
Meigs
123 7 17 6
Ironton
125 7 17 9 Gallipolis at Athens
L99an
129 7 18 4 Ironton at logan
Wellston
144 7 20 6 Jackson at Me1gs
FIELD GOAL PCT.
Waverly at Wellston
Name, T.
FGM A Pel.
TRI-VALLEY
2~43
62r' Vmton Co ,.at Alexander
Young,l

"'

27

7

6 60 18 2 11 3

24 10
2 1 15
NY Rngrs20 14

6 54 146 109
8 50 16 2 131
10 50 160137

Monfr eal

Toronto

Buffalo
21
Detrotf
16
N Y Island ers
10
Vancouver 10

18
21

4 46 144 138
6 38 142 17 2

21 11 31 101 138
25 7 27 110160
W es t
w I I piS gf ga
25 9 s 55 127 75

Ph Ia
Ch•cago

19
8
18 16
17 19
lo s Angels 15 20
M 1nnesota 13 19
Pi ttSburgh 11 26

89
107
123
136
147
159
24 112 1a2

14
6
7
7
10

St LOU IS
Atlanta

146
116
11 0
11 7
13 1
110

52
42
41
37
36
27

s

CalifOrnia 9 28 6
Wednesday 's Resulls
Toronto 5 Ca!ltorn1a s
N Y Rangers 4 Oet,-o•t 4
Boston 5 Ch1cago s
Los Angeles 2 P1ttsburgh o
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
M1nnesota at Montreal
N Y Rangers at Sl LOUI S
Buffalo at Philadel ph ia
(only gam es sc heduled)

World H 0 C k e V ASSOCiatiOn
Standmgs
Bv Un.ted Press lnternat1onal
East

w

Nw En9Jnd 25

pts gf ga
2 52 163 140

1
16

t

Toronto
22 2 1
Cleveland 2 1 16

4 48 179 157
5 47 133 127

Quebec
Chicago

20 20

3

43 161 142

17 19

J

37 125 136

Jersey

17

23

2 36113 14 7

West

w
23

I
13

pts gt ga
4 50 160 109

Edmonton 23

20

0 46 153 146

Houston

Wmn1peg 21 2 1 4 46 153 162
M.nnesota 21 2 1 1 43 159 161
Vancouver 17 26 0 J4 151. 181
los Angel s 16 27 0 32 13 5 177
Wednesday's Results
Houston 4 Toronto 1
New England 4 Je rsey 2
(only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
Vancouver Houston
Chicago at New England
(on ly games sc hedul ed)

AMERICAN HOCKEY
LEAGUE STANDINGS

By United Press International
North

w I I pis

New Haven

26
23
20

7

59 174 129

18
12

6
7

51 160 137

17

8

5~.

202 143

22
16

V1rgln1a 13
R 1chmond
10

Myers has an 18 2 average 1n
JuniOr, Terry Carter, 6-0 JuniOr
nine games and an 18 8
and Phil Lewis, 6-2 semor
Coach Bill Ph1lhps' Eastern average m five SV AC contests
Eagles Will seek their second
straight VIctory agamst a taller
Glouster squad
The Tomcats manhandled
Eastern eaSJly In an earlier
outmg Glouster, enJoymg one
of Its better years on the hardwood, IS 8-2 Tim Seevers Is the
Tomcats' leadmg scorer He
has averaged 20 8 pomts m 10
games
Eastern IS led offensively by
big Steve Dill, 6-3 semor ce nter
and John Sheets, 6-1 semor
forward Dill IS the SVAC's
th~rd best pomt producer w1th
an 18 6 average, Sheets has a
16 3 aver.age agamst league
teams
PIus Casings
Coach Carl Wolfe 's sur pnsmg Southern Tornados
l&lt;lke their 6-3 record agamst
the Wahama White Falcons.
Wahama 1s 3-3.
Pete Sayre, 6-1 semor, and
Bobby Miller, 5-11 semor, have
be~n the big offensive cogs for
the Tornados Sayre has a 16 7
pomt average In the SV AC
Coach Ferrell Hesson's
Symmes Valley V1kmgs are 36 The V1kmgs are led by Mike
992-7161
Burcham, 6·0 semor , Rod
Middleport, 0.
Bennett, 5-9 semor a "~ Jaye
Myers, 6-1 Junior

TIRE SALE

REGULAR
RETREADS

SALES

~1011Clf

.,'Ct.'·•• DllUG twa
PIICI. 992-5759

u ..,.,

271 M.tm
.a~ee

m ..

pu~

I

Ohle

Jflvr Dmg NHt/1

.:18 145 130
162
160

Boston
16 25 .:1 36 137
Sprmg11eld 9 21 9 27 121
South
w I I pts gf
Hershey 23 12 8 5.:1 179
Cmcmnah
Ba1t1more 22
Jacksonv111e

ga

12

Prov 1dence
Rochester 22
Nova Scotia

gf

' mcludmg two
Seven games
league
encounters
are
sc heduled thiS weekend 10 the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference
League lilts are North Galha
at Hannan Trace and Southwestern at Kyger Creek Fnday
mght Non-league battles will
feature Glouster at Eastern
and Wahalllil at Southern
Saturday mght, Symmes
Valley will play at Eastern m
the only league game while
Hannan Trace travels to
Hannan, W Va and North
Galha meets Eastern of Pike
County at Beaver, Ohw
League leadmg Hannan
Trace !HI goes after Its lOth
straight VIctory agamst Coach
Jim Foster' s North Gallia
Pirates North Galha, 3-S this
season, has had InJUr)
problems the past two weeks
OffensiVely, the Pirates rely
on Tim Stout, 5-IOsemor guard,
who IS averagmg 18 2 points m
mne outmgs this wmter, and
Greg James, 6-2 sophorr.ore
guard
James had 21 po10ts last
week
agamst
Eastern
Rebounding strength IS
prov1ded by 6-2 Ke1th Weddmgton and 6-2 seniOr Dave
Robmette
Hannan Trace has all but
wrapped up the 1973-74 SVAC
cage champiOnship The
Wildcats must shU play
Southern who IS 5-l 10 the
league
The Tornados are the only
team with a chance for at least
a share of the league crown
Mark Swam, 6-0 jumor
guard, IS the Wildcat scormg
ace Swam IS the top area
pomt-maker with a 26.7
average He IS also averaging
25.7 pomts per outmg agamst
SVAC opposition John Lusher,
6-1 semor forward, IS
averagmg 18.6 pomts in the
SVAC
Coach Jim Arledge's Kyger
Creek Bobcats will seek their
second straight victory and
fourth of the season agamst
Southwestern . Earlier this
year , the Bobcats defeated the
Highlanders, 66-57 at Southwestern
KC's John Rumley had 40
pomts Tuesday mght aga1nst
Hannan, W Va Teammate
David Clay, 6-3 senwr center,
had 20 pomts. Clay Hudson, 6-0
semor guard, Is the top Bobcat
scorer agamst league foes
Hudson IS averagmg 16 2
pmnts m five outmgs
Southwestern IS led offensively by 6-2 Junior center
Lloyd Wood Wood ha s
averaged 17 3 pomts m siX
league contests Other scoring
threats are Kevm Walker, 6-1

s

ga
126

14
15

3

.:19 1.:1 3 131
47 144 129

24
24

3
4

35 125 164
JO 11 6 155

28

4

24 103 183

Wed,.esday's Res ults

Hershey 3 Cinc1nnat1 1
New Haven 4 Nova Sc ot 1a 2
Ro cheste,- 5 Prov 1d ence 3
R1chmond 3 Boston 2
Only games sch eduled
Thursday's Games
No game s scheduled

Warren Local at Fed Hockmg

SVAC

YOUR

BEST
BUY

North Gall Ia at Hannan Trace
Southwestern at Kyger Creek
Others

South Pomt at Fal,-land
Tnmble at Eastern
Wahama at Southern
Ports mouth at Spr1ngf1eld

South

Po1nt Pl easa nt at R1pl ey
Coal Grove at Chesapeake
Wheelersburg at Portsmoulh

NO

SATURDAY
t.RI VALLEY

Alexander at Warren Local

SVAC

Symmes Valley at Eastern
Others
Whe elersburg at Greenup, K y
Greenf1eld at Jackson

Logan at Nelsonville York

Wellston at Vmton County
Belpre at Fort Frye
Hannan Trace at Hannan W

Va

North Gal11a at Eastern P1ke
Miller at Waterfo,-d
Portsmouth at F1ndlay

TUESDAY (Jan
SVAC

22)

Southwestern at Southern
Others

South Poml at GallipoliS
Meigs at Pomt Pleasant

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Kyger Creek at Waham a
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For the Lowest ,
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i

ND's .P helps says he isn't worried' .~:
4 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Jan . 17, 1974

College Basketball Roundup br ui se, Will probably see
By United Press International limited ac tion . Walton, twice
Digger Phelps says he isn't Player of the Year, is expected
worried and doesn't plan any to be pretty mu.ch himself by
tricks when his second-ranked Sa turday afternoon' s awa1ted
Notre DanJC squad l&lt;!kes on showdown.
But Phelps still isn 'I worried.
powerhouse UCLA Satmday.
"We' re playing UCLA, not
'"I've played against them
four tim es , and • I'm not Walton, " Phelps said. "The kid
worrying about their game, " may get 25 or, 30 points. He's
Phelps said. "We've got to take got that capability. Om job is
a positive approach to the to try to hold the other guys
game . We don 't hav e 87 down.
straight, but we've got nine,
"The guy I always respected,
and all of our mne are this who keeps them together, is
Keith Wilkes. Against Maryyear ."
By the tirpe the top-ranked land, he fouls out with 3:51 to
· Bruins meet Notre Da!lle in the go and Maryland gets right
nationally-t el e,~sed'cl ash ; they back in the game. Against
probably won 't have 87 straight Nor'th Cai'blina State, Walton is
anymore. They 'll probably in foul trouble, anjl Wilkes gets
27 points and in one stretch
have 88.
Iowa wil l -tie UCLA 's when they were losing he got
sparring partner tonight and six straight pomts.
"Wilkes is one of the most
Bill Walton, still nursing pains
underestimated
players in the
in his back from a muscle

country ."
.
In action Wednesday night,
fifth-ranked North Carolina
whipped · ACC ri-val Wake
Forest, 95-78, Davidson upset
13th-ranked South carolina, 70,
59, 20th-ranked Syracuse
defeated Canisius, 87-74,
Villanova downed Detroit, 8().
67, Duke beat Oemson, 63--50
and Depaul beat Marshall, 7&amp;68.
Olympian Bobby Jones hit 18
points Wednesday night to lead
fifth-ranked North Carolina to
an easy win over Wake Forest.
The Davidson Wildcats ,
paced b~ junior Larry
Horowitz with 16 points built a
wide first half margin and held
off a late drive by Sauth
Carolina 'to upset the
Gamecocks. The Gamecocks
quickly found themselves down
18·5 after seven minutes of
play .

BG, OU post MA triumphs
By United Press International
Bowling Green's Falcons,
down by seven points with just
five minutes left to play in the
game, rallied behind the scoring and rebounding of 7-() center Mark Cartwright and Cornelius Cash to post a 65-56 overtime victory over Mid-American Conference foe Central
Michigan Wednesday night.
Cartwright dropped in 19
points and pulled down 16 rebounds while Cash added 15
points and a game-high '22 caroms to lead the Falcons to their
eighth ~ctory in 12 games
overall and a 2-1 mark in the
conference.
Central Michigan is now 7~
for the season and 1·1 in the
league.
Ohio University paced by 22
points from Walter Luckett,
the loop's leading scorer ,
notched a 73-71 MAC win over
Miami.
The Bobcats are now 8-5
over aD and hold a 3-() record in
the conference while Miami,

AMERICA'

SHOES

BETTER
THAN
BAREFOOT
"Butterball"
• Blue
• Camel

led by Phil Lumpkin with 25
points, slumped to 4-8 in all
games and are winless alter
three MAC outings.
In another MAC contest, Toledo used the talents of three
Michigan high school products
to beat Western Michigan 6961.
Mike Larsen scored 17 points
and Larry Cole added 15 to
pace the Rockets to their tenth
~ctory in 13 outings and raise
their conference record to 2-1.
The third Michigan productn
forward Jim Brown, pulled
down a game-high 15 rebounds
for Toledo.
The Broncos, now 7-5 in all
games and 1-1 in the MAC,
were led by Jeff Tyson with 18
points.
Kent State took the lead midway through the second half on
a driving layup by Mike Lovenguthn· who finished with 22
points, and went on to beat
Wright State University 87-78
in a non-conference game.
TIIC Golden Flashes, now 7~
on the season, got 22 rebounds
from Fred Walker.
Wright Sl&lt;lte, now 11-6, was
led by Bob Grotrote with 23
points .
In other action Wednesday
night, highly-regarded Cincinnati found itself on the short
end of a 99-82 score in a game
against Ball Sl&lt;lte.
The 10-4 Bearcats could not
stop the gunning of Larry Bull·
ington and Kim Kaufman, who
dropped in 22 points each for
the Cardinals, now 9-5.
Wittenberg' s powerful
Tigers dumped Central State,
66~0. with a balanced scoring
attack led by Jim Evans v.:ith
13 points.
The Tigers ran their season
record to Hl-1 while CSU;led by
Ray Byard with 21 points, is
now 3-10.
Wooster boosted its season

SIGNS IN DARK
NEW YORK (UPI) Certaioly, It could be no
more than coincidence, but
just moments after Bill
Amsparger was Introduced
as the new head coach of the
New York Giants the lights
went out because of a power
failure.
It was power failure of
another kind, along with an
inability to defuse the opposition's altack, that made
the signing of Arnsparger
necessary. On Wednesday,
to the surprise of no one,
Arnsparger accepted a
three-year contract to
reshape and revive the
faltering Giants, who won
ooly tw~ games all last year
after turning In a perfect
exhibition record.
record to 8-5 and improved
their Ohio Conference mark to
2-3 with ·an 83-47 romp over
Ohio Wesleyan.
Qhio Wesleyan has yet to win
a game this season in nine outings . .
Rio Grande edged Wilberforce ~2 behind a 27-point
scoring performance from Rnn
Lambert to post their seventh
~ctory il113 games.
Wilberforce was led by Abraham Turner with 23 points. The
Redmen now own a 6-8 record.
Tony Mitchell pumped in 25
points to top all scorers and
lead his Youngstown State
team to a 9~9 thrashing of
Alliance College (Pa.)
YSU is now 8-5 on the season
while All_iance slumped to 2-11.
Mount Union got 29 points
from Harold Young as the Purple Raiders turned back
Hiram,-97-87, to improve their
season record to 9-5.
Hiram, paced by Glen Neal
with 24 markers, is now &amp;-2.

Shrider hoping for coach soon
OXFORD, Ohio (UP!) Miami University Athletic
Director Dick Shrider says he
hopes to announce the appointment of a new head
football coach this weekend . .
Shrldet said interview with
four of the eight candidates for
the job had been completed by
Wednesday and the other four
would be her~ today and

I THE SHOE BOX
..,...

~. "'•'"-~bly

,.lctdl

MIODLEI"'IIIT. 0.

COLUMBUS
(UPI) Aiabama quarterback Gary
Rutledge and hls favorite
receiver, Wayne Wheeler, will
be given "awards of distinc·
tion" by the Touchdown Club of
Columbus at its 19th annual
dinner here Jan, 20.

GET ACQUAINTED SALE

Friday. He refused to disclose
names of the applicants, ex·
cept to confirm that Dick
Crum, an assistant coach here,
was one of the eight can·
did;!tes.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
- It will be' OSU vs. OSU
Sept. Zl In Ohio Stadium.
It's not an Intra-squad
game; it's Ohio State against
Oregon Stale In what will be
the first meeting ever between the two teams,
The contest, wbich had
been rumored for the past
couple of weeks, was assured
Wednesday when the Obio
State Aihletic Council pulits
stamp of approval on the
game.

Han·k ·, gets
fi~st __
try
•
zn Cincy
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Hank
Aaron's first chance in 1974 to
tie Babe Ruth's record of 714
home runs will come here at
Riverfront Stadium against the
Cincinnati Reds on April 4, it
was disclosed today as the
Reds announced their 1974
home schedule.
The Reds, who traditionally
host the National League opening game, play the Atlanla
Braves on the Thursday afternoon, April 4 season starter.

Aaron finished the 1973 season with 713 career homers and
he should tie and break Ruth's
record very early in the 1974
season, which he says will be
his last.
The Reds and Braves also
play here [or the second and
third games of the season, on
Saturday and Sunday afternoon, April 6 and 7.
The Reds' 81-game home
schedule includes six doubleheaders - April 21 against San
Diego, May 12 with Houston,
June 23 against Atlanta, July 3
with Los Angeles, July 7
against St. Louis and July 25
with San Francisc. The July 3
and July 25 doubleheaders are
twi-night affairs, beginning at
5:30p.m.

Apple Grove
News, Events
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Gerald Hayman and
son, Keith, called on Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Hart Sunday at
fulcine.
,Mrs. June Wickersham, Mrs.
Erwin Gloeckner, Mrs. Ferne
B. Hayman, Mrs. Roy
Donohew attended a shower for
Mr. and Mrs. David Gloeckner
(newlyweds ), at the home of
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Davis at
Parkersburg Saturday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Me·
Cullogh and daughter, Sally, or
Parkersburg, Mr. and Mrs.
David Gloeckner were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Gloeckner.
Art Hill returned home from
visiting relatives in Florida
and will begin his studies at
Moorehead .col l ege,
Moorehead Ky., Monday. Art
spent the weekend visiting his
parents before going on to
Kentucky .
Valerie Johnson, Rodney
Neigler and Mrs. Martin
Cunningham visited Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Smith Sr., Sunday.
Mrs. Smith was recently
discharged from Veterans
Memorial where she had
surgery. Visiting Mr. Smith
and Mrs. Smith at the hospital
were their children, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Freeman and son
Jimmy of Millvale, Pa., Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Deowin,
children, Kelly and Marti, of
Oarington, 0., Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Johnson and children of
fulcine. Other visitors were

Wednesday ' s College Basketball
Results

Bv United Pre s s lnternat•onal
East
Las a l l e 85 Dr exe l 73

C W . Pos i 73 C C N Y 46
Southha m pton 80 F rlgh D c kn 5n
64
Dick•nson 61 Juniata 69
Shippen s burg 73 Btoo m sbgh 65
Penn St 75 De laware 63
Syracu se 87 C anesiu s 7.:1 '
St. Fran t iS· N Y . 101 Aldelph,1 93
Bethany 70 wa sh &amp; Jeff 69
Pha Te xt i l e 57 Sc ranton Sd

P•tt 96 G washington 56
V i~ lanoV'a

BO D e troit 67

south
Duke 63 Clem son SO
F lor ida A &amp; M 100 S HFia 88
N C 95 Wak e Fores t 78
Davidson 70 S. C 59
Tf!nn . State 85 Ea s tern Ill 77
Vb Poly In st . 82 W . Va. 80
Jack sonvill e 77 Furman 68
Midwest
Toledo 69 Western M •chigan 61
Bowfing Gr ee n 65 Centra l Mich

56

St Xavre r 52 ltl . Tech 51

Woos te r 83 Ohio wesleyan 47
Kent Sf 87 Wright Sf
Wooster 83 Ohio Wes leyan 47
Wrttenberg 66 Centra l St 60
Bal f St 9iil Cin c rnnati 82

ily M;s, Francis Morris
The Estber Missionary
Circle met Monday evening
Jan. 14 at the home of Mrs.
Gretta Simpson. The meeting
opened with -devotions by Mrs .
Mildred Hart using "Faith" for
her topic. The gr~up sang "My
Faith Looks Up to Thee".'
Scripture was from Matthew 8.
Mrs. Hart had a reading ,
"Toward a Deeper Faith" and
a poem " Faith" closed with a
prayer for the Seventies. In the
business session, Vera Beegle
reported on sick calls and fruit
plates taken and also on fruit
taken to Arcadia Rest Home.
Gifts were sent to each one
having a birthday in January
at the Children's Home. Mrs.
Chlorus Grimm was present as
a guest speaker and presented
a program on "Gospel Tide in
Thailand". She used 1\laps
showing Baptist mission
locations , described the

to choose

North

w
MuskeQon

Coupon Sale In Progress Until Jan. 20

w 1 t

Our Reg, 22:00
Heat Permanent 17.50

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other leading paints
.

....."·,

29 11 3 141

5
4
2
2
1
0

o
1
3
3
4
4
6

by the editor
~- have deep sympathy for Secretary of · State Henry
Klssmger. He may never make it back to his adopted homeland
the good old U.S.A., from his present working base in the Middl~
East.
·
~ng_age~ upon the most noble of all human endeavor, the
creation of peace out of jl'ar, Mr. Kissinger, in case you hadn't
hear~, was r"l:'"rted by the news service to bave been told by his
boss m the White House (in effect, bui quite plainly):
. ' ~Don't come back until you have an aRreemenl toston the
f1ghtmg between Israel and its warring Semetric neighbors."
That's about like Gov. Gilligan directing Lt. Gov. Brown to
pr~~ to a co~venient crossroads somewhere along the OhioMichigan state !me w1th orders to convert the annual WolverineBuckeye gridiron extravaganza into a convention of the
OJri~tian Athletes Assn. This is not intended to disparage Mr.
Kissmger; mdeed, should the U. S. State Dept. star come up with
peac_e in the lands astride the Red Sea we would suggest
Kissmger be offered an entirely new office. Something like
President of the World!
Should he fail, we can hope that the White House would make
one more of its statements inoperative.

695

596 612
594 540
425 570

OP

384
350
429
373

540

387
431
342
387
323
318

397

371
424

. · SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP

5 1 276 225
5 2 304 243
Southern
4 2 240 208
Eastern
4 3 263 244
Kyger Creek
2 3 174 209
Symmes Valley 1 4 205 207
Southwestern
0 6 150 276
North Gallia

Hannan Trace

Gallipolis were Sunday guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle.
Mr. and Mrs . Martin
Wilcoxen and Helen spent
Sunday in Columbus with
relatives.

C. E. (Charley) Blakeslee, whose energy and intelligence as
county extension agent, agriculture, has made living better in
Meigs County since his arrival in 1940, is retiring Feb. 1. He's
already had one "This is your Life" sort of reception sponsored
by his co-workers in lhe extension service.
Since 1946 Charley has COI)tributed a weekly article of
comment and information on agricultural topics. This feat earns
llim the record in longevity as a contributing commentator. In
fact, no one comes close to him.
·
Charley never got a penny from us for his contributions. He
regarded the hours bf research and organization necessary to
produce weekly an average of 1,000 words that make sense as
part of his job which, indeed, is true. But the point is that few
agricultural agents of Ohio and the nation are willing to devote
the effort required to produce a "New in Fanning" 52 times a
year for '!I years. His work in public information area is a
---monument to Charley Blakeslee.
Now fn the twilight of his professional career, OJarley has
assigned himself one last mission. He bad informed us and his
readers he would re~ew the years of extension service in Meigs
County since Its founding in the early 192t\s. He had surmised he
could write "fmis" to this history by his retirement date, Feb. 1.
No so. Now be has found the material is so vast (and his
Interest so deep) tbat the Feb. I date is an UIU'ealistic target.
Certainly, he could have glossed over a half decade or so; who
would have known the difference?; but that is not OJarley
Blakeslee's style. He'll do il the best he can or not at all.
The upshot is that Blakeslee will continue his weekly
columns stunmarizing extension work history into retirement
until he has completed it.
He wrote me Wednesday :
"If you have no objection, I will attempt to cover five years
lf history during each week of the next eight weeks, so would
1lnclude this ill late February or early -March. My title, of
·ourse, will change on Feb, I to County Extension Agent,
:meritus.''
Neither we or our readers have anv obiections wh•t.•nver
,'harley. In fact, we couldn't be more_pleased.

Reg. 2_.99

$}92

·

GAMES &amp; JIG~W PUZZLES FOR
THESE LONG WINTER NIGHTS.
·
BARRELS OF YARN
BtGBOZ. S K E I N S - - - - - - - - - J U:STI.99
PLASTIC STORM WINDOWS
4 P1eces, each 36x72-in. - - - - -- - --

pts

gf

ga

Thursday's Games
No games schedu l ed

69c

-

RENT A CARPET SHAMPOOER
Sl.OO a Day with purchase of Blue Lustre

MAKE POMEROY Y()UR.SHOPPING CENTER

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·~··········6'.09n.• .•.•.•.~•!•:OX~•:•!•!•Y.-:WXO:•:O~·~.«•.o:»&gt;:~o:o:o'".o!~O:~":'-o~•.&lt;$
•.•.•.•.•,•,•,•,•.•.•,•.•.•.•

BEN,FRANKUQI
PHONE
992-3498

200-202 East Main St.

POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN FRIOAY&amp;SATURDAY NIGHTSTIU

Use Our Convenient Lay-A-Way Plan.

Reserve District No. 4

LEAGUE TO MEET
The
Pomeroy Boys
BasebalU.eagne wlll meet at
2 p. m. Sunday In the lint aid
room of the Pomeroy VIllage
Hall for an organitatlonal
meeting. Officers will be
elected. All lQterested
persons are Invited to attend.

State No. 223

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON OF

The Farmers Bank and Savings Company
of Pomeroy, Ohio And Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of
business December 31, 1973, a state banking lnslitulion organized and operating
wader the banking laws of this State and a member of !he Federal Reserve
System. Published In accordance with a call made by the State Banking
Authorities and by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
ASSETS
.
Cash and due from banks · · · · · · • · • · · · · · · · · · · $ 1,254,513.30
U.S. Treasury securities •••• • · • - •
• •••••. 3,106,847.42
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations • • · · · · · •
· · · · · · - 276,320.40
Obligations of States and political subdMsions · • • • •
1,022,352.85
Other securities · · - • • · · · · • • · · • · · • •
· · · 21,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell . • • . • .
. • 700,000.00
Other loans . . . . . . . • · · • · ·
. . . 8,160,263.45
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
. . • 430,530.99
other assets representing bank premises ·
. . . • . 50.82" \
Other assets . • • '- · · · · ·
TOTAL ASSETS · · · · . . • · • • • · . . . . . .. $14,971,879.23
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations - • - - · · · · · · • · · . . . . . $ 3,380,262.08
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
• 9,506,619.88
partnerships, and corporations - • · - • - • · . • •
Deposits of United States Government · · · • • • • .
. . 94,082.38
Deposits of States and political subdi~sions · · · · · · • . • 499,477.23
Deposits of commercial banks • · · · · • • • . . . . . • 2,777.59
Certified and officers' checks, etc. · · · · • • · · · · . •
!07,972.63
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • · • · · · • · $13,591,191.79
(a) Total demand deposits · · · · • ·
$ 3,1134,571.91
(b) Total time and savings deposits · · · · · $ 9,756,619.88
Other liabilities • • - • • • · · • • • • • • - . 456 520 28
TOTAL UABIUTIES • · · · • • • · · · · • - • · $14,047,712.07
RESERVE'! ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS
rulings) •
45,393.30
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
$45,393.30
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total . . . . . . .
s 878 773 86
Common stock-total par value • • • • . .
300,000.00
No. shares authorized 12,000
No. shares outstandlng 12,000
400,000.00
Surplus • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • · • . . .
Undlvidlld profits • . . . . . . . • •
178,'/13.86
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
876,773.86
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS ' • . · . .
$14,971,879.23
1
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar
days endlng with call date • · · · • • • • · · . . . • . $13,555,287,90
Average of total loans for the -15 calendar
days endlng with.call date - • · · . . • • • • • • •
$ 9,188,856.26
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value):
· U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
pledged to secure deposits and other liabilities • •
700,00o.OO
TOTAL ·• · • - - • • • • • · • . • . • • •
. • . $700,000.00

-~

~ ·0
&lt;:l' "\'S
~~ '»~
-~

.~ LO
SPEW~_lfiL
PRICES

------·

New Spring
Fabrics
Arriving

' ....Un:ra.m.tn:.W,.... Dauy

· · · W '

773-5513 , o:m. tot,_,., Frldoy" tolu,...y Mason,

, V•,

Society News
By Mrs. Evelyn Brlckles
Mrs. Cora Grimes of Athens
spent a couple days last week
with Mrs. Neisel Weatherman.
Mrs. Edna Beahrs developed
bursitis in her shoulder and
arm and had to quit work at
Mrs. Weatherman's.
Mrs. Josephine Babcock is
recuperating at her home after
undergoing minor surgery at
Parkersburg last week.
Mrs. Mirna Walker spent last
week with her brother Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Howard of Fort
Myers, Fla.
Mrs. Ronald Golden and two
daughters of Athens spent
Sunday afternoon with her
parents, Mr. and .Mrs. Way
Clark.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Halsey
of Dayton visited his mother,
Mrs. Eunice Halsey and his
sister, Mr. and Mrs. fullph
Brooks and they took Mrs.
Halsey back home to Dayton
with them for a visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Torrence
of Columbus spent a couple
days here with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Roland Torrence . ·

In 1942, screen star carole
Lombard, her mother, and 20
other persons were killed in a
commercial airliner crash
near Las Vegas, Nev. Miss
Lombard was the wife of actor
Oark Gable.

-

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S

•
''

New controls on oil firms
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Terming the energy crisis an
.oil industry fabrication, Ralph
Nader urged Congress todsy to
legislate new controls on the oil
·industry tb keep consumer
energy costs down.
With .new and sometimes
conflicting supply and demand
statistics coming out daily
from the industry and
government, congressmen,
mostly Democrats, are also
pressing for action to soothe
the public.
Five senators and three
repre~ntatives
Wednesday
jointly called for a 90-day

freeze on prices of domestic
crude oil and petroleum produels , charging the Nixon

dollar trauma for· consumers
over the next 20 years~" Nader

said in prepared testimony
before a House Small Business
to " the extortion of the Subcommittee .
American people by the major
He asked Congress to set up a
petrolewn companies.''
government-run corporation to
Sen ,, Richard Schweiker, R. explore for gas and . oil on
J?a, said he will propose a bill to federally owned lands.
create a federal commission to
A House Interior subcommitsubsidize do'mestic fuel tee was to begin hearings today
·production for the purpose of to determine the extent of oil
making the country self- and natural gas under public
sufficient in energy and to land.
regulate U.S. Qil firms.
Nader said oil from federal
Unless the lawmakers act, lands-could be sold cheaply to
"the fabricated energy crisis of small independent dealers who
1974 will gerrerate a trillion are "now being squeezed out of
administration with giving in

the Duke gave as much
as he took at Harvard
Wayne was challenged to a
verbal shoot-out with students
by the Harvard Lampoon
because of his conservative
~ews and tough-guy image.
The college humor magazine's
editors dared him to "appear
in the most radical, most in·
tellectual, in s~ort, most
hostile territory on earth."
Instead, Wayne received a
standing ovation from the
capacity audience of 1,600
persons. "Duke, Duke, Duke,"
they chanted as Wayne walked
on stage carrying a toy rifle.
He was given the Lampoon's
"Brass Balls Award" and
made an honorary colonel in
the Army reserve.
"Coming here is like being
invited to lunch by the
Borgias," said Wayne.
AIM Pickets Theater
About 20 members of the
American Indian Movement
picketed outside tbe theater
with
signs
reading
"Remember Wounded Knee"
and " Why Support Indian
Killer Jolm Wayne?"
"This man has maligned us

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPIJ
- "ill that a wig you're
wearing?" shouted a student
from the back of the theater.
Jolm Wayne, the aging hero
of scores of Westerns and war
movies, grinned and pulled
ever so gently at his light
brown hairpiece. "This is real
hair," he shouted back. "It's
not mine. But it's real hair."
The audience cheered and
roared with laughter,
Wayne, 86, was pelted with
snowballs and picketed by
unfriendly Indians as he
braved enemy territory at
Harvard University Tuesday
for a goodnatured roasting. He
even managed some quips of
his own about President Nixon
and the White House tapes.
He Dodges Snowballs
Wayne, bare-headed, smiling
and smoking a cigar, dodged
snowballs as he rode 10 blocks
atop ali Army armored person·
nel carrier through the streets
of Cambridge to the Harvard
Square Theater. A few of the
snowballs hit their target out
Wayne batted some away.

in every movie he's ever
made," said an Indian spokeswoman.
Inside, Wayne was asked in a
question and answer session
whether he was a ''racist in
lndlan movies." ·

"I've always treated Indians
with human dignity in any
movie I've ever made," he
said.

One student shouted, "What
have you done with the tapes,
Duke?"
"Well, if anyone is taping
this show I hope it's a
Democrat, because if it's a
Republican, he'd lose them for
sure," Wayne answered.
"Is it true that Richard
Nixon is going to star in a
movie about your life," asked
another student. "He's a good
enough actor," said Wayne.
Would Wayne pose for a
magazine centerfold? "No,
I've got too many calluses."
"He was fantastic," said
Lampoon Editor Walter Isaacson. "He's tough. I guess If he
can handle all those cowboys
and injWls, he can handle us."

Legion party set in March
A committee to arrange the
annual birthday party in
March was named by Drew
. Webster Post 39, American
Legion, Tuesday night.
Named to the committee
w~re Leonard Jewell, Elza
G1Irnore, Edgar Vanlnwagen,
George Nesselroad and Don
Runnel. Roy Renier, Russell
Moore and Harry Davis were
named to a committee to select
nominees for the Legionnaire
of the Year Award.
Paul Casci was appointed
chairman of Boys State
selections, and it was noted
that the Boys State fee has
increased to $65 for each
representative sent to the
event.

Nesselroad and Runnel were
named to the sick committee,
It was reported that a get-well
card had been sent to Olin
Boothe and that memorial
services were held for the late

BAKER

, ., '·'
.}
· ·•··
SWorn to and subscribed before me this 14th day of January, 1974.
Mary P. Young, Notary Public
My Commission"Expires July 1, 1974.

Middleport, 0.

adiutant for the post records.
"Chaplain Sunday" was
announced for Feb. 3 when the
local post will attend services
in a group at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church. Post
Everlasting rites for members
who have died during the past
year were set for the Feb. 19
meeting. An oyster stew dinner
will be served prior to that
meeting. A meeting of past
commanders and trustees was
announced for 7:30 p. m. on
Jan. 29 at the post home.
Paul Casci was presented a
birthday cake. Casci and Fred
Wolfe served a spaghetti
supper. Commander George
Nesselroad presided over the
meeting.

9 A.M. TO 5 P.M. DAILY
SATURDAY9AM TOS PM
(Closed Sundays)

Rail's Ben Franklin
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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MIDDLEPORT DERT~~ STQRE
OVER ALL THE STORE

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Work Shoes
Reg.

&amp; Sleet Toe

20% OFF ·
REGULAR PRICE

heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

OFF
THE

KIDDIE SHOPPE
ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

Charter No. 8441
Nailooal Bank Region No.4
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF TilE

~

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of Middleport, Ohio In the Stale of Ohio, at ihe close of boslness on December 31,
1973 published In response to Call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under
Tille IZ, United Stales Code, Section 161.
·
ASSETS
Cash and due. from banks · • · · · • · · · · · · · · · • . . · $ 1,034,029.60
U.S. Treasury securities • - · · · · · · · · · · . - •
2, 783,430.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions · • • .
1,519,328.77
Other securities •. · • • · · • · · • · · •
. 15,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
. • •
1,350,000.00
under agreements to resell · • • - • · •
Loans • . . • • • . . . . . . • · · . • · . •
4,681,386.30
Bank premises, furniture and fixtmes, and
other assets representing bank premises · • • .
• · IZ2,496.60
.
.
. . . ~.869.70
Real estate owned other thank bank premises • · . .
. . • 18,662.06
Other assets • . - - . . • · · • · · • · · . .
$11,531,203.03
TOTAL ASSETS · · • • · • • • · • • • - • • •
LIABILll'IES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations . . . • · · · · • • $ •2,352,484.97
Time and savings deposits of indi~duals,
partnerships, and corporations • · · · ·
· · 7,045,260.78
Deposits of United States Government · · • • · . . . • • • 103,122.05
Deposits of States and political subdi~sions · · · . . . . . . . 763,221.07
Deposits of commercial banks · • · • · · · · · · · · · · · · 5,000.00
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • • • • • • • - • • . • 41,740.99
TOTAL DEPOSITS • · · · • • - • · $10,310,S29.86
(a) Total demand deposits • · · · · · ·
$ 3,101,046.4li
(b) Total time and savings deposits • · · · • $ 7,209,783.41
Other liabilities · • · • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 239,910.87
TOTAL UABIUTIES • • • · · • · • • • · - · · $10,550,740.73
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) · · • • • • · · · · · · · · · $62,309.97
TOTAL RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES · ·
$62,359.97
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total • . • • •
$918,102.33
100,000.00
Common Stock-total par value • • • • · • •
No. shares authorized 2,000
No. shares outstandlng 2,000
Surplus - • - . • . • • • • . . . . • . . . . . . . . • 400,000.00
Undivided profits · - • · • • • • . •
• 418,102.33
$918,102.33
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
• $l1,531,203.03
CAPITAJ. ACCOUNTS • • · • • •
MEMORANDA
Average of total dePosits for the 15 calendlar
$10,074,094.10
days endlng with call date • · • • · · · · ·
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
$ 4,650,632.62
days endlng with call date .• · · • · · · ·
"

'

I, Marullng iooei, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that
this report"of condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and
belief.
Manning Kloes
I

We, the Jlndersigned directors attest the correctness of this report of condition artd' ileclare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
·
PaolS.Smari
Rose S. Reynolds - Directors
Dole Dutton
' "

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Men ' s

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

NEW STORE HOURS

SALE CONTINUED

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Mass., said in Boston Congress
should put higher priority on
legislation to set up a "Federal
Bureau of . Investigation"
within the oil industry to locate
reserves and monitor marketing cost ·and company profits.
API . President F~ank N.
Ikard said industry profits
were at a !I)-year low in 1972
and profit increases last year
"barely bring the industry
back to the level of previous
years."

January
Clearance .Sale

Temperature of clean snow
melting in the sun at sea
level is always 0 degrees C.
or 32 degrees F.

Call No. 488

UffiE GIRLS - . SKIRTS, KNIT TOPS, SlACKS,
BLOUSES, COATS
TODDLER 2 PIEcE PANT SETS FOR BOYS AND 'GIRLS.,
FURNITURE

shorl&lt;lge should not cause us to
paniG. " He said .gas.oline
consumption in the last week of
December was 18.7 per cent
less than normal.
FEO policy analysis chief
William Johnson warned _oil
industry leaders that among
congressmen and the public
there are "major sLLSpicions of
the oil companies that could
have ugly results,"
Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wis.,
asked API to explain why oil
prices are climbing when
supplies are higher . and
demand lower than last year.
He charged that fuel stocks in
the country are 28.5 per cent
higher than a year ago while
demand is up only 5.4 per cent.
Rep. HenryS. Reuss, IJ..Wis.,
said he is introducing a bill to
roll back recent price increases on crude oil from well
that were already producing
before world prices began
soaring.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D·

business" because they are
forced to buy .high-priced
imported oil and cannot coinpete with the cheaper domesti·
cally produced oil sold by
many of the-major producers.
He also ur.-ged Congress to
issue federal charters to oil
corporations, which are now
chartered by the states, and to
enforce the antitrust laws "to
break up the ·power of the big
oil firms and promote a
competitive industry from . the
oil well to the gas station."
As oil industry leaders heard
from goveriUIIent officials and
congressmen Wednesda'y that
there is public suspicion abQut
the reality of an energy crisis,
the American Petroleum Institute (API) said domestic crude
oil production and crude imports were lower last week
than the week before .'
API said gasoline stocks
were down along with the
"middle distillate" fuel used
for diesel oil and home heating
oil, but substantially higher
than they were a year a&amp;o.
Federal Energy Office chief
William Simon said fuel ;upplies are expected to be 13 per
cent below demand during the
first three months of this year,
but that "the magnitude of this

PUBLIC NOTICE!

•

demande~

Alfred Elberfeld.
Charles Swatzel, finance
officer, presented the quar·
terly financial report, a copy of
which was turned over to the

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LADIES _COATS, DRESSES, BODY ~LOUSES,
BLAZER JACKETS, LONG SKIRTS
GROUP OF JUNIOR AND MISSES JEANS
JUNIOR BLOUSES AND SlACKS

We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this report of
. , . .. c;ondltion and declare tbat It has been examined by us an!l to the best of our
laiowledge and belief is true and correct.
Theodore T. •Reed, Jr.
Ferman E. Moore - Directors
R. C. Follr,pd ., ,

.

.

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MEN AND BOYS COATS

Ii

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JANUARY CLEARANCE

·· ~at; of Ohio County of Meig. ss:

"

•

Tuppers Plains

I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above-named bank d~ hereby declare
that this report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. ·
Rog~r W, Hysell
",

,..,,

127
111
163
164

Only gttmes scheduled

eGoes .on fast, dries even faster, soap
.

147
183
147
119

Muskegon 2 Des Moines 2
Saginaw 5 Columbus 3
Fort Wayne 6 Tol edo 3
Dayton 7 F l int 2

eLUCITE lets you paint what you think

~,

ga "

Wednesday's Results

e Whatever LUCITE covers wet stays
· covered when it dries .

e ....

1

gf

D es Moines
25 14 3 63 170 146
Dayton
~3
19 3 49 160 42
Fort Wayne '
23 19 0 46 147 157
Co lumbus 22 22 2 -46 181 179

Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill and
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe.
Mr. and Mrs. Llovd Sayre
and family of Racine, Mrs.
Zelpha Boggess, ·' Wayne
Roseberry were Sunday guests
of Jess Anderson.
Mrs . Delores Reese and
family of Marietta, Cathy
Boney and two sons of
Parkersburg spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Everett
Connolly.
Jeff Miller called on Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush and Roger
recently.
· Mr. and Mrs. Roy Van
Meter, children Becky and
Melanie of Morning Star, spent
Friday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Adams.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell spent
the weekend with Dr. and Mrs.
Earl Grimm in Cdlumbus and
also visited Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Grimm. On Sunday
Lorna Bell, Bruce Hart and
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Grimm
joined them for Sunday dinner
at .t)j~ Earl Grimm home.
Mrs. Emma Yokley of
Columbiana, 0., sister of Mrs.
Iva Orr, is confined to Salem
City Hospital, Salem, Ohio.

and.,VfAt~r ,.F.~~~:m,-.y,p

26

South

Excellent covering
power stops see~lhrouah

·15.00

t " pts

24 25 5 53
20 23 1 41
19 23 1 39
17 26 2 36

14

Reg. Up To $1.00

12.50

1

Saginaw
Toledo
Flint
Port Huron

WESTMORE COSMETICS

Our Reg. 15.00
Permanents
1 UIJr Reg. 17.50

Hannan Trace "' 7

:·f:

By United Press International

Beauty Special

January 17-26

511
515
602

SVAC ONLY
W L P

Southern
Eastern
Symmes Valley
North Gallia
Kyger Creek
Southwestern

-t he day after ... · ~

OP

L ~
702 ·
562
581
607

LEAGUE STANDINGS

Stare 70

ATLANTA, Ga. (UPI)Steve Ortmayer, a native of
Painesville, · Ohio, defensive
line coach and recruiting
coordinator at Colorado since
1968, has been named an
assistant coach at Georgia
Tech under new Coach Pepper
. Rodgers.
Ortmayer, a graduate of LaVerne College in Pomona,
Calif. , was described by Rodgers as "a great recruiter."

TEAM

W
0
6 3
4 6
3 6
3·6
3 6
1 7
9

frort~.

INTERNATIONAl HOCKEY

, Southwest
N TeJC 93 Texas Arlrngton 82
How a rd Payne 84 Tarleton

Occiden ta l 67 Pomona 57
Wh i tl1er iil8 Claremont 78

TEAM
Hannan Tro"e
Southern
'
Eastern
Symmes Valley
Kyger Creek
North Gallia
Southwestern

20 Gallon
Garbage Cans
Two Numbers

E vans'.'llle82 St. Joseph lnd 79
Valpara iso 102 Wabash 71
Depau l 76 Marshall 68
Ohio 73 Miami 0 . 71 .

west

'I'.., . .,, ,... ,, ....,..

country, its climate, living ..-------------~~-----.,
conditions, crops, economic
SPECIALS,
condition, religion, etc. and
- - ---- also gave the story of the Pig.
The Love Gift program by Mrs.
Marie Roush foilowed. Her
subject was "Seeker Not Her.
Own" Scripture was I Cor. with
the singing of "I'll Go Where
SPECIAL
REG. 23.98
You Want Me to Go" and the
offering was given. !!'he
SUPER SPECIALS
meeting dosed with prayer.

ON

•TruGlo Brush Make Up
•Brush On Eyeshadow
•Liquid Eyeliner
•Lipstick · Lipgloss
eNail Polish - Many More

During the fellowship hour,
Mrs. Simpson served refresh·
ments to 14 members and one
guest.
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Wingett
.and Mrs. Ann Coe were visitors
in Columbus for a few days and
visited Mr. Dave Thomas, a
.former fulcine resident, who is
very ill.
Recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Turley were Mr.
and Mrs. Sheridan Russell Jr.
of Mason, W. Va. and SP4 and
Mrs. Sheridan Russell III and
daughter of Middleport . SP4
Russell will be leaving to go
back to Germany, Jan. 17 afier
a month lea vue. He is a brother
of Mrs. Turley.
Mrs
Gretta
Simpson
return~d home after spending
the hdlidays with her son, Mr.
and Mrs. Bud Simpson at
Seymour, Ind.
Mr . and Mrs. Bill McKenzie,
Philip, Jeff, and Jozie, of

5- The Daily Senth1el, MiddleportJ'omeroy, 0., Jan. 17 1974

•'~o;o•:;::•:~··•:•:•;o;-;•-.;&gt;;•,•,• q,•,-'' •'''' ' '' oo' ' • • • • • • • • •
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·.·&gt;:·:·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:;:::·:::::::::::,~:::::~=::::::::::~:::=:wn,

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES

Racine Social Events

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Mike
Adams, Capital University's
senior center and captain, has
been named to the 1973 Lutheran All-America football team.
Adams was a four-year letterman for Cap coach Gene
Slaughter:
Named to the second team
was senior halfback Craig Snider of Celina;-a three-year Cap
regular.'

PERMANENTS
ON SALE

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ND's .P helps says he isn't worried' .~:
4 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Jan . 17, 1974

College Basketball Roundup br ui se, Will probably see
By United Press International limited ac tion . Walton, twice
Digger Phelps says he isn't Player of the Year, is expected
worried and doesn't plan any to be pretty mu.ch himself by
tricks when his second-ranked Sa turday afternoon' s awa1ted
Notre DanJC squad l&lt;!kes on showdown.
But Phelps still isn 'I worried.
powerhouse UCLA Satmday.
"We' re playing UCLA, not
'"I've played against them
four tim es , and • I'm not Walton, " Phelps said. "The kid
worrying about their game, " may get 25 or, 30 points. He's
Phelps said. "We've got to take got that capability. Om job is
a positive approach to the to try to hold the other guys
game . We don 't hav e 87 down.
straight, but we've got nine,
"The guy I always respected,
and all of our mne are this who keeps them together, is
Keith Wilkes. Against Maryyear ."
By the tirpe the top-ranked land, he fouls out with 3:51 to
· Bruins meet Notre Da!lle in the go and Maryland gets right
nationally-t el e,~sed'cl ash ; they back in the game. Against
probably won 't have 87 straight Nor'th Cai'blina State, Walton is
anymore. They 'll probably in foul trouble, anjl Wilkes gets
27 points and in one stretch
have 88.
Iowa wil l -tie UCLA 's when they were losing he got
sparring partner tonight and six straight pomts.
"Wilkes is one of the most
Bill Walton, still nursing pains
underestimated
players in the
in his back from a muscle

country ."
.
In action Wednesday night,
fifth-ranked North Carolina
whipped · ACC ri-val Wake
Forest, 95-78, Davidson upset
13th-ranked South carolina, 70,
59, 20th-ranked Syracuse
defeated Canisius, 87-74,
Villanova downed Detroit, 8().
67, Duke beat Oemson, 63--50
and Depaul beat Marshall, 7&amp;68.
Olympian Bobby Jones hit 18
points Wednesday night to lead
fifth-ranked North Carolina to
an easy win over Wake Forest.
The Davidson Wildcats ,
paced b~ junior Larry
Horowitz with 16 points built a
wide first half margin and held
off a late drive by Sauth
Carolina 'to upset the
Gamecocks. The Gamecocks
quickly found themselves down
18·5 after seven minutes of
play .

BG, OU post MA triumphs
By United Press International
Bowling Green's Falcons,
down by seven points with just
five minutes left to play in the
game, rallied behind the scoring and rebounding of 7-() center Mark Cartwright and Cornelius Cash to post a 65-56 overtime victory over Mid-American Conference foe Central
Michigan Wednesday night.
Cartwright dropped in 19
points and pulled down 16 rebounds while Cash added 15
points and a game-high '22 caroms to lead the Falcons to their
eighth ~ctory in 12 games
overall and a 2-1 mark in the
conference.
Central Michigan is now 7~
for the season and 1·1 in the
league.
Ohio University paced by 22
points from Walter Luckett,
the loop's leading scorer ,
notched a 73-71 MAC win over
Miami.
The Bobcats are now 8-5
over aD and hold a 3-() record in
the conference while Miami,

AMERICA'

SHOES

BETTER
THAN
BAREFOOT
"Butterball"
• Blue
• Camel

led by Phil Lumpkin with 25
points, slumped to 4-8 in all
games and are winless alter
three MAC outings.
In another MAC contest, Toledo used the talents of three
Michigan high school products
to beat Western Michigan 6961.
Mike Larsen scored 17 points
and Larry Cole added 15 to
pace the Rockets to their tenth
~ctory in 13 outings and raise
their conference record to 2-1.
The third Michigan productn
forward Jim Brown, pulled
down a game-high 15 rebounds
for Toledo.
The Broncos, now 7-5 in all
games and 1-1 in the MAC,
were led by Jeff Tyson with 18
points.
Kent State took the lead midway through the second half on
a driving layup by Mike Lovenguthn· who finished with 22
points, and went on to beat
Wright State University 87-78
in a non-conference game.
TIIC Golden Flashes, now 7~
on the season, got 22 rebounds
from Fred Walker.
Wright Sl&lt;lte, now 11-6, was
led by Bob Grotrote with 23
points .
In other action Wednesday
night, highly-regarded Cincinnati found itself on the short
end of a 99-82 score in a game
against Ball Sl&lt;lte.
The 10-4 Bearcats could not
stop the gunning of Larry Bull·
ington and Kim Kaufman, who
dropped in 22 points each for
the Cardinals, now 9-5.
Wittenberg' s powerful
Tigers dumped Central State,
66~0. with a balanced scoring
attack led by Jim Evans v.:ith
13 points.
The Tigers ran their season
record to Hl-1 while CSU;led by
Ray Byard with 21 points, is
now 3-10.
Wooster boosted its season

SIGNS IN DARK
NEW YORK (UPI) Certaioly, It could be no
more than coincidence, but
just moments after Bill
Amsparger was Introduced
as the new head coach of the
New York Giants the lights
went out because of a power
failure.
It was power failure of
another kind, along with an
inability to defuse the opposition's altack, that made
the signing of Arnsparger
necessary. On Wednesday,
to the surprise of no one,
Arnsparger accepted a
three-year contract to
reshape and revive the
faltering Giants, who won
ooly tw~ games all last year
after turning In a perfect
exhibition record.
record to 8-5 and improved
their Ohio Conference mark to
2-3 with ·an 83-47 romp over
Ohio Wesleyan.
Qhio Wesleyan has yet to win
a game this season in nine outings . .
Rio Grande edged Wilberforce ~2 behind a 27-point
scoring performance from Rnn
Lambert to post their seventh
~ctory il113 games.
Wilberforce was led by Abraham Turner with 23 points. The
Redmen now own a 6-8 record.
Tony Mitchell pumped in 25
points to top all scorers and
lead his Youngstown State
team to a 9~9 thrashing of
Alliance College (Pa.)
YSU is now 8-5 on the season
while All_iance slumped to 2-11.
Mount Union got 29 points
from Harold Young as the Purple Raiders turned back
Hiram,-97-87, to improve their
season record to 9-5.
Hiram, paced by Glen Neal
with 24 markers, is now &amp;-2.

Shrider hoping for coach soon
OXFORD, Ohio (UP!) Miami University Athletic
Director Dick Shrider says he
hopes to announce the appointment of a new head
football coach this weekend . .
Shrldet said interview with
four of the eight candidates for
the job had been completed by
Wednesday and the other four
would be her~ today and

I THE SHOE BOX
..,...

~. "'•'"-~bly

,.lctdl

MIODLEI"'IIIT. 0.

COLUMBUS
(UPI) Aiabama quarterback Gary
Rutledge and hls favorite
receiver, Wayne Wheeler, will
be given "awards of distinc·
tion" by the Touchdown Club of
Columbus at its 19th annual
dinner here Jan, 20.

GET ACQUAINTED SALE

Friday. He refused to disclose
names of the applicants, ex·
cept to confirm that Dick
Crum, an assistant coach here,
was one of the eight can·
did;!tes.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
- It will be' OSU vs. OSU
Sept. Zl In Ohio Stadium.
It's not an Intra-squad
game; it's Ohio State against
Oregon Stale In what will be
the first meeting ever between the two teams,
The contest, wbich had
been rumored for the past
couple of weeks, was assured
Wednesday when the Obio
State Aihletic Council pulits
stamp of approval on the
game.

Han·k ·, gets
fi~st __
try
•
zn Cincy
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Hank
Aaron's first chance in 1974 to
tie Babe Ruth's record of 714
home runs will come here at
Riverfront Stadium against the
Cincinnati Reds on April 4, it
was disclosed today as the
Reds announced their 1974
home schedule.
The Reds, who traditionally
host the National League opening game, play the Atlanla
Braves on the Thursday afternoon, April 4 season starter.

Aaron finished the 1973 season with 713 career homers and
he should tie and break Ruth's
record very early in the 1974
season, which he says will be
his last.
The Reds and Braves also
play here [or the second and
third games of the season, on
Saturday and Sunday afternoon, April 6 and 7.
The Reds' 81-game home
schedule includes six doubleheaders - April 21 against San
Diego, May 12 with Houston,
June 23 against Atlanta, July 3
with Los Angeles, July 7
against St. Louis and July 25
with San Francisc. The July 3
and July 25 doubleheaders are
twi-night affairs, beginning at
5:30p.m.

Apple Grove
News, Events
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Gerald Hayman and
son, Keith, called on Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Hart Sunday at
fulcine.
,Mrs. June Wickersham, Mrs.
Erwin Gloeckner, Mrs. Ferne
B. Hayman, Mrs. Roy
Donohew attended a shower for
Mr. and Mrs. David Gloeckner
(newlyweds ), at the home of
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Davis at
Parkersburg Saturday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Me·
Cullogh and daughter, Sally, or
Parkersburg, Mr. and Mrs.
David Gloeckner were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Gloeckner.
Art Hill returned home from
visiting relatives in Florida
and will begin his studies at
Moorehead .col l ege,
Moorehead Ky., Monday. Art
spent the weekend visiting his
parents before going on to
Kentucky .
Valerie Johnson, Rodney
Neigler and Mrs. Martin
Cunningham visited Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Smith Sr., Sunday.
Mrs. Smith was recently
discharged from Veterans
Memorial where she had
surgery. Visiting Mr. Smith
and Mrs. Smith at the hospital
were their children, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Freeman and son
Jimmy of Millvale, Pa., Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Deowin,
children, Kelly and Marti, of
Oarington, 0., Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Johnson and children of
fulcine. Other visitors were

Wednesday ' s College Basketball
Results

Bv United Pre s s lnternat•onal
East
Las a l l e 85 Dr exe l 73

C W . Pos i 73 C C N Y 46
Southha m pton 80 F rlgh D c kn 5n
64
Dick•nson 61 Juniata 69
Shippen s burg 73 Btoo m sbgh 65
Penn St 75 De laware 63
Syracu se 87 C anesiu s 7.:1 '
St. Fran t iS· N Y . 101 Aldelph,1 93
Bethany 70 wa sh &amp; Jeff 69
Pha Te xt i l e 57 Sc ranton Sd

P•tt 96 G washington 56
V i~ lanoV'a

BO D e troit 67

south
Duke 63 Clem son SO
F lor ida A &amp; M 100 S HFia 88
N C 95 Wak e Fores t 78
Davidson 70 S. C 59
Tf!nn . State 85 Ea s tern Ill 77
Vb Poly In st . 82 W . Va. 80
Jack sonvill e 77 Furman 68
Midwest
Toledo 69 Western M •chigan 61
Bowfing Gr ee n 65 Centra l Mich

56

St Xavre r 52 ltl . Tech 51

Woos te r 83 Ohio wesleyan 47
Kent Sf 87 Wright Sf
Wooster 83 Ohio Wes leyan 47
Wrttenberg 66 Centra l St 60
Bal f St 9iil Cin c rnnati 82

ily M;s, Francis Morris
The Estber Missionary
Circle met Monday evening
Jan. 14 at the home of Mrs.
Gretta Simpson. The meeting
opened with -devotions by Mrs .
Mildred Hart using "Faith" for
her topic. The gr~up sang "My
Faith Looks Up to Thee".'
Scripture was from Matthew 8.
Mrs. Hart had a reading ,
"Toward a Deeper Faith" and
a poem " Faith" closed with a
prayer for the Seventies. In the
business session, Vera Beegle
reported on sick calls and fruit
plates taken and also on fruit
taken to Arcadia Rest Home.
Gifts were sent to each one
having a birthday in January
at the Children's Home. Mrs.
Chlorus Grimm was present as
a guest speaker and presented
a program on "Gospel Tide in
Thailand". She used 1\laps
showing Baptist mission
locations , described the

to choose

North

w
MuskeQon

Coupon Sale In Progress Until Jan. 20

w 1 t

Our Reg, 22:00
Heat Permanent 17.50

~ ~

• • Never needs stirring, doesn't drip like'
other leading paints
.

....."·,

29 11 3 141

5
4
2
2
1
0

o
1
3
3
4
4
6

by the editor
~- have deep sympathy for Secretary of · State Henry
Klssmger. He may never make it back to his adopted homeland
the good old U.S.A., from his present working base in the Middl~
East.
·
~ng_age~ upon the most noble of all human endeavor, the
creation of peace out of jl'ar, Mr. Kissinger, in case you hadn't
hear~, was r"l:'"rted by the news service to bave been told by his
boss m the White House (in effect, bui quite plainly):
. ' ~Don't come back until you have an aRreemenl toston the
f1ghtmg between Israel and its warring Semetric neighbors."
That's about like Gov. Gilligan directing Lt. Gov. Brown to
pr~~ to a co~venient crossroads somewhere along the OhioMichigan state !me w1th orders to convert the annual WolverineBuckeye gridiron extravaganza into a convention of the
OJri~tian Athletes Assn. This is not intended to disparage Mr.
Kissmger; mdeed, should the U. S. State Dept. star come up with
peac_e in the lands astride the Red Sea we would suggest
Kissmger be offered an entirely new office. Something like
President of the World!
Should he fail, we can hope that the White House would make
one more of its statements inoperative.

695

596 612
594 540
425 570

OP

384
350
429
373

540

387
431
342
387
323
318

397

371
424

. · SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP

5 1 276 225
5 2 304 243
Southern
4 2 240 208
Eastern
4 3 263 244
Kyger Creek
2 3 174 209
Symmes Valley 1 4 205 207
Southwestern
0 6 150 276
North Gallia

Hannan Trace

Gallipolis were Sunday guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle.
Mr. and Mrs . Martin
Wilcoxen and Helen spent
Sunday in Columbus with
relatives.

C. E. (Charley) Blakeslee, whose energy and intelligence as
county extension agent, agriculture, has made living better in
Meigs County since his arrival in 1940, is retiring Feb. 1. He's
already had one "This is your Life" sort of reception sponsored
by his co-workers in lhe extension service.
Since 1946 Charley has COI)tributed a weekly article of
comment and information on agricultural topics. This feat earns
llim the record in longevity as a contributing commentator. In
fact, no one comes close to him.
·
Charley never got a penny from us for his contributions. He
regarded the hours bf research and organization necessary to
produce weekly an average of 1,000 words that make sense as
part of his job which, indeed, is true. But the point is that few
agricultural agents of Ohio and the nation are willing to devote
the effort required to produce a "New in Fanning" 52 times a
year for '!I years. His work in public information area is a
---monument to Charley Blakeslee.
Now fn the twilight of his professional career, OJarley has
assigned himself one last mission. He bad informed us and his
readers he would re~ew the years of extension service in Meigs
County since Its founding in the early 192t\s. He had surmised he
could write "fmis" to this history by his retirement date, Feb. 1.
No so. Now be has found the material is so vast (and his
Interest so deep) tbat the Feb. I date is an UIU'ealistic target.
Certainly, he could have glossed over a half decade or so; who
would have known the difference?; but that is not OJarley
Blakeslee's style. He'll do il the best he can or not at all.
The upshot is that Blakeslee will continue his weekly
columns stunmarizing extension work history into retirement
until he has completed it.
He wrote me Wednesday :
"If you have no objection, I will attempt to cover five years
lf history during each week of the next eight weeks, so would
1lnclude this ill late February or early -March. My title, of
·ourse, will change on Feb, I to County Extension Agent,
:meritus.''
Neither we or our readers have anv obiections wh•t.•nver
,'harley. In fact, we couldn't be more_pleased.

Reg. 2_.99

$}92

·

GAMES &amp; JIG~W PUZZLES FOR
THESE LONG WINTER NIGHTS.
·
BARRELS OF YARN
BtGBOZ. S K E I N S - - - - - - - - - J U:STI.99
PLASTIC STORM WINDOWS
4 P1eces, each 36x72-in. - - - - -- - --

pts

gf

ga

Thursday's Games
No games schedu l ed

69c

-

RENT A CARPET SHAMPOOER
Sl.OO a Day with purchase of Blue Lustre

MAKE POMEROY Y()UR.SHOPPING CENTER

..*•N.m

:;

·~··········6'.09n.• .•.•.•.~•!•:OX~•:•!•!•Y.-:WXO:•:O~·~.«•.o:»&gt;:~o:o:o'".o!~O:~":'-o~•.&lt;$
•.•.•.•.•,•,•,•,•.•.•,•.•.•.•

BEN,FRANKUQI
PHONE
992-3498

200-202 East Main St.

POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN FRIOAY&amp;SATURDAY NIGHTSTIU

Use Our Convenient Lay-A-Way Plan.

Reserve District No. 4

LEAGUE TO MEET
The
Pomeroy Boys
BasebalU.eagne wlll meet at
2 p. m. Sunday In the lint aid
room of the Pomeroy VIllage
Hall for an organitatlonal
meeting. Officers will be
elected. All lQterested
persons are Invited to attend.

State No. 223

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON OF

The Farmers Bank and Savings Company
of Pomeroy, Ohio And Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of
business December 31, 1973, a state banking lnslitulion organized and operating
wader the banking laws of this State and a member of !he Federal Reserve
System. Published In accordance with a call made by the State Banking
Authorities and by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
ASSETS
.
Cash and due from banks · · · · · · • · • · · · · · · · · · · $ 1,254,513.30
U.S. Treasury securities •••• • · • - •
• •••••. 3,106,847.42
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations • • · · · · · •
· · · · · · - 276,320.40
Obligations of States and political subdMsions · • • • •
1,022,352.85
Other securities · · - • • · · · · • • · · • · · • •
· · · 21,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell . • • . • .
. • 700,000.00
Other loans . . . . . . . • · · • · ·
. . . 8,160,263.45
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
. . • 430,530.99
other assets representing bank premises ·
. . . • . 50.82" \
Other assets . • • '- · · · · ·
TOTAL ASSETS · · · · . . • · • • • · . . . . . .. $14,971,879.23
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations - • - - · · · · · · • · · . . . . . $ 3,380,262.08
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
• 9,506,619.88
partnerships, and corporations - • · - • - • · . • •
Deposits of United States Government · · · • • • • .
. . 94,082.38
Deposits of States and political subdi~sions · · · · · · • . • 499,477.23
Deposits of commercial banks • · · · · • • • . . . . . • 2,777.59
Certified and officers' checks, etc. · · · · • • · · · · . •
!07,972.63
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • · • · · · • · $13,591,191.79
(a) Total demand deposits · · · · • ·
$ 3,1134,571.91
(b) Total time and savings deposits · · · · · $ 9,756,619.88
Other liabilities • • - • • • · · • • • • • • - . 456 520 28
TOTAL UABIUTIES • · · · • • • · · · · • - • · $14,047,712.07
RESERVE'! ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS
rulings) •
45,393.30
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
$45,393.30
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total . . . . . . .
s 878 773 86
Common stock-total par value • • • • . .
300,000.00
No. shares authorized 12,000
No. shares outstandlng 12,000
400,000.00
Surplus • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • · • . . .
Undlvidlld profits • . . . . . . . • •
178,'/13.86
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
876,773.86
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS ' • . · . .
$14,971,879.23
1
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar
days endlng with call date • · · · • • • • · · . . . • . $13,555,287,90
Average of total loans for the -15 calendar
days endlng with.call date - • · · . . • • • • • • •
$ 9,188,856.26
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value):
· U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
pledged to secure deposits and other liabilities • •
700,00o.OO
TOTAL ·• · • - - • • • • • · • . • . • • •
. • . $700,000.00

-~

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-~

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SPEW~_lfiL
PRICES

------·

New Spring
Fabrics
Arriving

' ....Un:ra.m.tn:.W,.... Dauy

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773-5513 , o:m. tot,_,., Frldoy" tolu,...y Mason,

, V•,

Society News
By Mrs. Evelyn Brlckles
Mrs. Cora Grimes of Athens
spent a couple days last week
with Mrs. Neisel Weatherman.
Mrs. Edna Beahrs developed
bursitis in her shoulder and
arm and had to quit work at
Mrs. Weatherman's.
Mrs. Josephine Babcock is
recuperating at her home after
undergoing minor surgery at
Parkersburg last week.
Mrs. Mirna Walker spent last
week with her brother Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Howard of Fort
Myers, Fla.
Mrs. Ronald Golden and two
daughters of Athens spent
Sunday afternoon with her
parents, Mr. and .Mrs. Way
Clark.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Halsey
of Dayton visited his mother,
Mrs. Eunice Halsey and his
sister, Mr. and Mrs. fullph
Brooks and they took Mrs.
Halsey back home to Dayton
with them for a visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Torrence
of Columbus spent a couple
days here with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Roland Torrence . ·

In 1942, screen star carole
Lombard, her mother, and 20
other persons were killed in a
commercial airliner crash
near Las Vegas, Nev. Miss
Lombard was the wife of actor
Oark Gable.

-

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S

•
''

New controls on oil firms
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Terming the energy crisis an
.oil industry fabrication, Ralph
Nader urged Congress todsy to
legislate new controls on the oil
·industry tb keep consumer
energy costs down.
With .new and sometimes
conflicting supply and demand
statistics coming out daily
from the industry and
government, congressmen,
mostly Democrats, are also
pressing for action to soothe
the public.
Five senators and three
repre~ntatives
Wednesday
jointly called for a 90-day

freeze on prices of domestic
crude oil and petroleum produels , charging the Nixon

dollar trauma for· consumers
over the next 20 years~" Nader

said in prepared testimony
before a House Small Business
to " the extortion of the Subcommittee .
American people by the major
He asked Congress to set up a
petrolewn companies.''
government-run corporation to
Sen ,, Richard Schweiker, R. explore for gas and . oil on
J?a, said he will propose a bill to federally owned lands.
create a federal commission to
A House Interior subcommitsubsidize do'mestic fuel tee was to begin hearings today
·production for the purpose of to determine the extent of oil
making the country self- and natural gas under public
sufficient in energy and to land.
regulate U.S. Qil firms.
Nader said oil from federal
Unless the lawmakers act, lands-could be sold cheaply to
"the fabricated energy crisis of small independent dealers who
1974 will gerrerate a trillion are "now being squeezed out of
administration with giving in

the Duke gave as much
as he took at Harvard
Wayne was challenged to a
verbal shoot-out with students
by the Harvard Lampoon
because of his conservative
~ews and tough-guy image.
The college humor magazine's
editors dared him to "appear
in the most radical, most in·
tellectual, in s~ort, most
hostile territory on earth."
Instead, Wayne received a
standing ovation from the
capacity audience of 1,600
persons. "Duke, Duke, Duke,"
they chanted as Wayne walked
on stage carrying a toy rifle.
He was given the Lampoon's
"Brass Balls Award" and
made an honorary colonel in
the Army reserve.
"Coming here is like being
invited to lunch by the
Borgias," said Wayne.
AIM Pickets Theater
About 20 members of the
American Indian Movement
picketed outside tbe theater
with
signs
reading
"Remember Wounded Knee"
and " Why Support Indian
Killer Jolm Wayne?"
"This man has maligned us

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPIJ
- "ill that a wig you're
wearing?" shouted a student
from the back of the theater.
Jolm Wayne, the aging hero
of scores of Westerns and war
movies, grinned and pulled
ever so gently at his light
brown hairpiece. "This is real
hair," he shouted back. "It's
not mine. But it's real hair."
The audience cheered and
roared with laughter,
Wayne, 86, was pelted with
snowballs and picketed by
unfriendly Indians as he
braved enemy territory at
Harvard University Tuesday
for a goodnatured roasting. He
even managed some quips of
his own about President Nixon
and the White House tapes.
He Dodges Snowballs
Wayne, bare-headed, smiling
and smoking a cigar, dodged
snowballs as he rode 10 blocks
atop ali Army armored person·
nel carrier through the streets
of Cambridge to the Harvard
Square Theater. A few of the
snowballs hit their target out
Wayne batted some away.

in every movie he's ever
made," said an Indian spokeswoman.
Inside, Wayne was asked in a
question and answer session
whether he was a ''racist in
lndlan movies." ·

"I've always treated Indians
with human dignity in any
movie I've ever made," he
said.

One student shouted, "What
have you done with the tapes,
Duke?"
"Well, if anyone is taping
this show I hope it's a
Democrat, because if it's a
Republican, he'd lose them for
sure," Wayne answered.
"Is it true that Richard
Nixon is going to star in a
movie about your life," asked
another student. "He's a good
enough actor," said Wayne.
Would Wayne pose for a
magazine centerfold? "No,
I've got too many calluses."
"He was fantastic," said
Lampoon Editor Walter Isaacson. "He's tough. I guess If he
can handle all those cowboys
and injWls, he can handle us."

Legion party set in March
A committee to arrange the
annual birthday party in
March was named by Drew
. Webster Post 39, American
Legion, Tuesday night.
Named to the committee
w~re Leonard Jewell, Elza
G1Irnore, Edgar Vanlnwagen,
George Nesselroad and Don
Runnel. Roy Renier, Russell
Moore and Harry Davis were
named to a committee to select
nominees for the Legionnaire
of the Year Award.
Paul Casci was appointed
chairman of Boys State
selections, and it was noted
that the Boys State fee has
increased to $65 for each
representative sent to the
event.

Nesselroad and Runnel were
named to the sick committee,
It was reported that a get-well
card had been sent to Olin
Boothe and that memorial
services were held for the late

BAKER

, ., '·'
.}
· ·•··
SWorn to and subscribed before me this 14th day of January, 1974.
Mary P. Young, Notary Public
My Commission"Expires July 1, 1974.

Middleport, 0.

adiutant for the post records.
"Chaplain Sunday" was
announced for Feb. 3 when the
local post will attend services
in a group at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church. Post
Everlasting rites for members
who have died during the past
year were set for the Feb. 19
meeting. An oyster stew dinner
will be served prior to that
meeting. A meeting of past
commanders and trustees was
announced for 7:30 p. m. on
Jan. 29 at the post home.
Paul Casci was presented a
birthday cake. Casci and Fred
Wolfe served a spaghetti
supper. Commander George
Nesselroad presided over the
meeting.

9 A.M. TO 5 P.M. DAILY
SATURDAY9AM TOS PM
(Closed Sundays)

Rail's Ben Franklin
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

••
••
•:
••
i
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i•
••
:
•:.
•
MIDDLEPORT DERT~~ STQRE
OVER ALL THE STORE

'

~

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Work Shoes
Reg.

&amp; Sleet Toe

20% OFF ·
REGULAR PRICE

heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

OFF
THE

KIDDIE SHOPPE
ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

Charter No. 8441
Nailooal Bank Region No.4
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF TilE

~

..

of Middleport, Ohio In the Stale of Ohio, at ihe close of boslness on December 31,
1973 published In response to Call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under
Tille IZ, United Stales Code, Section 161.
·
ASSETS
Cash and due. from banks · • · · · • · · · · · · · · · • . . · $ 1,034,029.60
U.S. Treasury securities • - · · · · · · · · · · . - •
2, 783,430.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions · • • .
1,519,328.77
Other securities •. · • • · · • · · • · · •
. 15,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
. • •
1,350,000.00
under agreements to resell · • • - • · •
Loans • . . • • • . . . . . . • · · . • · . •
4,681,386.30
Bank premises, furniture and fixtmes, and
other assets representing bank premises · • • .
• · IZ2,496.60
.
.
. . . ~.869.70
Real estate owned other thank bank premises • · . .
. . • 18,662.06
Other assets • . - - . . • · · • · · • · · . .
$11,531,203.03
TOTAL ASSETS · · • • · • • • · • • • - • • •
LIABILll'IES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations . . . • · · · · • • $ •2,352,484.97
Time and savings deposits of indi~duals,
partnerships, and corporations • · · · ·
· · 7,045,260.78
Deposits of United States Government · · • • · . . . • • • 103,122.05
Deposits of States and political subdi~sions · · · . . . . . . . 763,221.07
Deposits of commercial banks · • · • · · · · · · · · · · · · 5,000.00
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • • • • • • • - • • . • 41,740.99
TOTAL DEPOSITS • · · · • • - • · $10,310,S29.86
(a) Total demand deposits • · · · · · ·
$ 3,101,046.4li
(b) Total time and savings deposits • · · · • $ 7,209,783.41
Other liabilities · • · • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 239,910.87
TOTAL UABIUTIES • • • · · • · • • • · - · · $10,550,740.73
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) · · • • • • · · · · · · · · · $62,309.97
TOTAL RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES · ·
$62,359.97
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total • . • • •
$918,102.33
100,000.00
Common Stock-total par value • • • • · • •
No. shares authorized 2,000
No. shares outstandlng 2,000
Surplus - • - . • . • • • • . . . . • . . . . . . . . • 400,000.00
Undivided profits · - • · • • • • . •
• 418,102.33
$918,102.33
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
• $l1,531,203.03
CAPITAJ. ACCOUNTS • • · • • •
MEMORANDA
Average of total dePosits for the 15 calendlar
$10,074,094.10
days endlng with call date • · • • · · · · ·
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
$ 4,650,632.62
days endlng with call date .• · · • · · · ·
"

'

I, Marullng iooei, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that
this report"of condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and
belief.
Manning Kloes
I

We, the Jlndersigned directors attest the correctness of this report of condition artd' ileclare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
·
PaolS.Smari
Rose S. Reynolds - Directors
Dole Dutton
' "

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Men ' s

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

NEW STORE HOURS

SALE CONTINUED

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Mass., said in Boston Congress
should put higher priority on
legislation to set up a "Federal
Bureau of . Investigation"
within the oil industry to locate
reserves and monitor marketing cost ·and company profits.
API . President F~ank N.
Ikard said industry profits
were at a !I)-year low in 1972
and profit increases last year
"barely bring the industry
back to the level of previous
years."

January
Clearance .Sale

Temperature of clean snow
melting in the sun at sea
level is always 0 degrees C.
or 32 degrees F.

Call No. 488

UffiE GIRLS - . SKIRTS, KNIT TOPS, SlACKS,
BLOUSES, COATS
TODDLER 2 PIEcE PANT SETS FOR BOYS AND 'GIRLS.,
FURNITURE

shorl&lt;lge should not cause us to
paniG. " He said .gas.oline
consumption in the last week of
December was 18.7 per cent
less than normal.
FEO policy analysis chief
William Johnson warned _oil
industry leaders that among
congressmen and the public
there are "major sLLSpicions of
the oil companies that could
have ugly results,"
Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wis.,
asked API to explain why oil
prices are climbing when
supplies are higher . and
demand lower than last year.
He charged that fuel stocks in
the country are 28.5 per cent
higher than a year ago while
demand is up only 5.4 per cent.
Rep. HenryS. Reuss, IJ..Wis.,
said he is introducing a bill to
roll back recent price increases on crude oil from well
that were already producing
before world prices began
soaring.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D·

business" because they are
forced to buy .high-priced
imported oil and cannot coinpete with the cheaper domesti·
cally produced oil sold by
many of the-major producers.
He also ur.-ged Congress to
issue federal charters to oil
corporations, which are now
chartered by the states, and to
enforce the antitrust laws "to
break up the ·power of the big
oil firms and promote a
competitive industry from . the
oil well to the gas station."
As oil industry leaders heard
from goveriUIIent officials and
congressmen Wednesda'y that
there is public suspicion abQut
the reality of an energy crisis,
the American Petroleum Institute (API) said domestic crude
oil production and crude imports were lower last week
than the week before .'
API said gasoline stocks
were down along with the
"middle distillate" fuel used
for diesel oil and home heating
oil, but substantially higher
than they were a year a&amp;o.
Federal Energy Office chief
William Simon said fuel ;upplies are expected to be 13 per
cent below demand during the
first three months of this year,
but that "the magnitude of this

PUBLIC NOTICE!

•

demande~

Alfred Elberfeld.
Charles Swatzel, finance
officer, presented the quar·
terly financial report, a copy of
which was turned over to the

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LADIES _COATS, DRESSES, BODY ~LOUSES,
BLAZER JACKETS, LONG SKIRTS
GROUP OF JUNIOR AND MISSES JEANS
JUNIOR BLOUSES AND SlACKS

We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this report of
. , . .. c;ondltion and declare tbat It has been examined by us an!l to the best of our
laiowledge and belief is true and correct.
Theodore T. •Reed, Jr.
Ferman E. Moore - Directors
R. C. Follr,pd ., ,

.

.

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MEN AND BOYS COATS

Ii

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JANUARY CLEARANCE

·· ~at; of Ohio County of Meig. ss:

"

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Tuppers Plains

I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above-named bank d~ hereby declare
that this report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. ·
Rog~r W, Hysell
",

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127
111
163
164

Only gttmes scheduled

eGoes .on fast, dries even faster, soap
.

147
183
147
119

Muskegon 2 Des Moines 2
Saginaw 5 Columbus 3
Fort Wayne 6 Tol edo 3
Dayton 7 F l int 2

eLUCITE lets you paint what you think

~,

ga "

Wednesday's Results

e Whatever LUCITE covers wet stays
· covered when it dries .

e ....

1

gf

D es Moines
25 14 3 63 170 146
Dayton
~3
19 3 49 160 42
Fort Wayne '
23 19 0 46 147 157
Co lumbus 22 22 2 -46 181 179

Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill and
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe.
Mr. and Mrs. Llovd Sayre
and family of Racine, Mrs.
Zelpha Boggess, ·' Wayne
Roseberry were Sunday guests
of Jess Anderson.
Mrs . Delores Reese and
family of Marietta, Cathy
Boney and two sons of
Parkersburg spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Everett
Connolly.
Jeff Miller called on Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush and Roger
recently.
· Mr. and Mrs. Roy Van
Meter, children Becky and
Melanie of Morning Star, spent
Friday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Adams.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell spent
the weekend with Dr. and Mrs.
Earl Grimm in Cdlumbus and
also visited Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Grimm. On Sunday
Lorna Bell, Bruce Hart and
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Grimm
joined them for Sunday dinner
at .t)j~ Earl Grimm home.
Mrs. Emma Yokley of
Columbiana, 0., sister of Mrs.
Iva Orr, is confined to Salem
City Hospital, Salem, Ohio.

and.,VfAt~r ,.F.~~~:m,-.y,p

26

South

Excellent covering
power stops see~lhrouah

·15.00

t " pts

24 25 5 53
20 23 1 41
19 23 1 39
17 26 2 36

14

Reg. Up To $1.00

12.50

1

Saginaw
Toledo
Flint
Port Huron

WESTMORE COSMETICS

Our Reg. 15.00
Permanents
1 UIJr Reg. 17.50

Hannan Trace "' 7

:·f:

By United Press International

Beauty Special

January 17-26

511
515
602

SVAC ONLY
W L P

Southern
Eastern
Symmes Valley
North Gallia
Kyger Creek
Southwestern

-t he day after ... · ~

OP

L ~
702 ·
562
581
607

LEAGUE STANDINGS

Stare 70

ATLANTA, Ga. (UPI)Steve Ortmayer, a native of
Painesville, · Ohio, defensive
line coach and recruiting
coordinator at Colorado since
1968, has been named an
assistant coach at Georgia
Tech under new Coach Pepper
. Rodgers.
Ortmayer, a graduate of LaVerne College in Pomona,
Calif. , was described by Rodgers as "a great recruiter."

TEAM

W
0
6 3
4 6
3 6
3·6
3 6
1 7
9

frort~.

INTERNATIONAl HOCKEY

, Southwest
N TeJC 93 Texas Arlrngton 82
How a rd Payne 84 Tarleton

Occiden ta l 67 Pomona 57
Wh i tl1er iil8 Claremont 78

TEAM
Hannan Tro"e
Southern
'
Eastern
Symmes Valley
Kyger Creek
North Gallia
Southwestern

20 Gallon
Garbage Cans
Two Numbers

E vans'.'llle82 St. Joseph lnd 79
Valpara iso 102 Wabash 71
Depau l 76 Marshall 68
Ohio 73 Miami 0 . 71 .

west

'I'.., . .,, ,... ,, ....,..

country, its climate, living ..-------------~~-----.,
conditions, crops, economic
SPECIALS,
condition, religion, etc. and
- - ---- also gave the story of the Pig.
The Love Gift program by Mrs.
Marie Roush foilowed. Her
subject was "Seeker Not Her.
Own" Scripture was I Cor. with
the singing of "I'll Go Where
SPECIAL
REG. 23.98
You Want Me to Go" and the
offering was given. !!'he
SUPER SPECIALS
meeting dosed with prayer.

ON

•TruGlo Brush Make Up
•Brush On Eyeshadow
•Liquid Eyeliner
•Lipstick · Lipgloss
eNail Polish - Many More

During the fellowship hour,
Mrs. Simpson served refresh·
ments to 14 members and one
guest.
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Wingett
.and Mrs. Ann Coe were visitors
in Columbus for a few days and
visited Mr. Dave Thomas, a
.former fulcine resident, who is
very ill.
Recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Turley were Mr.
and Mrs. Sheridan Russell Jr.
of Mason, W. Va. and SP4 and
Mrs. Sheridan Russell III and
daughter of Middleport . SP4
Russell will be leaving to go
back to Germany, Jan. 17 afier
a month lea vue. He is a brother
of Mrs. Turley.
Mrs
Gretta
Simpson
return~d home after spending
the hdlidays with her son, Mr.
and Mrs. Bud Simpson at
Seymour, Ind.
Mr . and Mrs. Bill McKenzie,
Philip, Jeff, and Jozie, of

5- The Daily Senth1el, MiddleportJ'omeroy, 0., Jan. 17 1974

•'~o;o•:;::•:~··•:•:•;o;-;•-.;&gt;;•,•,• q,•,-'' •'''' ' '' oo' ' • • • • • • • • •
'
I
·.·&gt;:·:·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:;:::·:::::::::::,~:::::~=::::::::::~:::=:wn,

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES

Racine Social Events

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Mike
Adams, Capital University's
senior center and captain, has
been named to the 1973 Lutheran All-America football team.
Adams was a four-year letterman for Cap coach Gene
Slaughter:
Named to the second team
was senior halfback Craig Snider of Celina;-a three-year Cap
regular.'

PERMANENTS
ON SALE

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___________________

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., 7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,...:,Jan.17, 1974

I

SPECiaL SALE I
'

THURSDAY
CLASS 12, 7:30p.m., at the
Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport. Mrs. L. W.
McComas to have the lesson;
Mrs . Dianne George to give
devotions . Hostesses will be the
officers.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club will
hold its regular meeting at the
Shrine Park in Racine. All
Nobles are welcome. An oyster
dinner will be served following
the 7:30 p,m. meeting .

MRS. PEARL LEIFHEIT, RN, takes the blood pressure of Mrs. Grace Wagner, Middleport, an active senior citizen at the Center in Pomeroy.

Health service initiated
Wednesday a new health
service program was initiated

by the Meigs County Council on
Aging at the Senior Citizens
Center.
Mrs. Pearl Leifheit, RN ,
began her monthly visits to the
center to check the blood
pressures of senior citizens.
Plans are for her to be there on
the third Wednesday of each
month from 12:30 to 2:30p. m.
The service is free to senior
citizens and Mrs. Leifheit is a
volunteer receiving no com·
pensation for her service.
Dw"ing the two hour period
Wednesday, 'Mrs. Leifheit took
the blood pressure of 36 men
and women. Working with her

to record the figures so that

permanent charts can be made
on each person was Mrs. Alice
Wamsley, an employe at the
center.
The procedure of Mrs.
Leifheit is to take the pressure
and then advi se th e senior
citizen as to wheth er it is low,
high or normal. If treatment is

indicated, and it was in several
instances Wednesday , the
individual is then referred to
his doctor. An appointment
was made by Mrs . Wamsley
for .one individual whose
pressure was extremely high.
Mrs. Leifheit is a graduate of
the Holzer School of Nursing
and worked for several years
at Holzer Hospital and later as
an industrial nurse at Kaiser.

Syracuse PTA meets
SYRACUSE - Pros and cons outdoor basketball court.
The valentine party was set
of a possible change in the time
schedule in the Southern Local for 2:30p.m. Feb . .15 with the
School District were aired homeroom mothers to have
Tuesday night at a meeting of charge. Also planned was a
the Syracuse PTA at the spring fes tival with David
Flagg as chairperson and Mrs.
Elementary School.
Judy
Flagg, Mrs. Minnie
David Nease, a member of
Emogene
the Southern Board of Harris, Mrs .
Education, was present at the Holstein and Mrs. Susie
meeting to get the views of the Grueser on the committee.
At the February meeting
. parents as to whether the time
should be changed so that Founder's Day will be obchildren would not be going to served. Teachers will also
discuss the reading programs
school in the dark.
The PTA voted to sponsor a of their respective rooms. The
baskethall banquet this spring, refreshments will be served at
and to order .monogranuned the meeting by Mrs. Ettamae
shirts for the boys and the Norton, Mrs. Mary B. Warner,
cheerleaders .. Plans were also Mrs . Lois Cunningham, Mrs.
discussed for installing an Flagg and Mrs. Grueser.

She and her husband have two
children, Stephanie, five, and
Sam, three .

D of A meets
Tuesday night
Mrs. Erma Cleland, councilor, presided at the Tuesday
night meeting of Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, held at the hall with
23 members attending.
It was reported that Joe
Bissell and Mrs. Goldie Wolfe
are bo th home from the
hospital, and that Mrs. Maxine
Goeglein is ill at home. Also
noted was the birth of a new
granddaughter to Mrs. Ada
Van Meter. A sympathy card
was signed by the members for
Mrs. Zana Gainer whose sisterin-law, Mrs . Stella . Clark ,
recently died.
Refreshments were served
following the meeting to
Dorothy Ritchie, deputy slate
councilor; Mrs. Ada Morris,
Mrs. Zona Biggs, Mrs. Mary K.
Holter, Mrs. Helen Wolf, Mrs.
Margaret Tuttle, Mr• . Dorothy
Lawson, Mrs. Ada Neutzling,
Mrs. Hattie Frederick, Mrs.
Goldie Frederick, Mrs. Opal
Hollon, Mrs. Erma Cleland,
Mrs. Zelda Weber, Mrs. Ada
Van Meter, Mrs . Ethel Orr,
Mrs. Dorothy Myers, Mrs.
Thelma White, Mrs. Mabel Van
Meter, Mrs. Letha Wood, Mrs.
Doris Grueser, Mrs. Marcia
Keller, Mrs . Mary Showalter
and Mrs. Jean Summerfteld.

held at the home of Mrs . Katie
Anthony.
It was noted that the Baptist
· scholarship student had been
sent a Christmas gift and that
two of the children at the Meigs
County Home had been
remembered on their birthdays. The love gift offering was
dedicated by Mrs. Janet Lewis,
and it was noted that Mrs.
Sarah Dawn Owen will be
hostess for the February
meeting.
Devotions by Mrs. Owen
were on the theme "Consider
the Caterpillar". Mrs. Beulah
White, chairman, conducted a
Bible quiz and also read an
article by Dr. Joseph I.
Chapman relating to his
mother's death.
Mrs. Anthony served a salad
course and coffee to those
&amp;,ut·ins.
named and Mrs . Alwilda
Members were asked to lake Werner, Mrs. Helen Bodimer,
religious Chrisbnas cards to Mrs. Pearl Hoffman, Mrs.
the next meeting. There was Winnie White and Mrs. Clara
silent prayer for Mrs. Dana
Harnm following devotions by
Miss Rhoda Hall who used
PLAN SHOWER
Philippians 2 as her scripture
A miscellaneous shower for
and read excerpts from . Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Darst,
11
Fragrance of Beauty". Plans whose
home
and all
were discussed for making possessions were destroyed by
another visit to the Elmwood fire Tuesday night, will be held
Nursing Home in the future. at 7:30p.m. Saturday night at
Read at the meeting was a the Rock Springs Unit~d
thank-you note from Mrs . Methodist Church. The public
Raymond Saxton for a is invited.
Christmas remembrance, and
letters from the Rev . and Mrs .
Dickerson,
overseas
PTATOMEET
missionaries, by Mrs. Freda
The Chester PTA will meet
Hood and Mrs. Hughes. The
at the CheSler~ Elementary
Lord's Prayer in unison conSchool Monday, Jan. 21, at 7:30
cluded the meeting with Mrs.
p. m. Father's Night will be
Hughes serving refreshments.
osberved and refreshments
Attendmg besides those named
will be served. Everyone is
were Mrs. Frances Smart,
welcome.
president, Mrs. Louise Skaggs, ·
Mrs. ·Martha King and son,
Michl, Mrs. Sarah Fowler,
Mrs. Ethel Hughes and Mrs.
MEETING SET
Lillie Hubhard.
The next meeting of the
ELECTA CIRCLI):
South Central Ohio PreserValentine remembrances for vation Society, Inc., will be
shut-ins and a visit to the held at 2 p.m. SUl'day, Jan. 'tl,
SyrQcuse Rest Home were in the historical "old canal
among the projecls planned at house" on Mulberry and Main
a meeting of the Elecla Circle Sis., in Chillicothe.

J8 attend

Mae Darst.
DORCAS·CIRCLE
Mrs. Iva Turner hosted the
meeting of the Dorcas Circle
presided over by Mrs. Leora
Sigman . Devotions were by
Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner and
the program presented by Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavin consisted of
poems by Helen Steiner Rice.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Turner to Mrs. Pauline
Hoffman, MrS. Freddie
Houdashelt, Mrs. Harry
Houdashelt, Mrs. Gardner,
Mrs. Sigman, Mrs. Eloise
Wilson, Mrs. Marilyn Fultz,
Mrs. Freda Edwards, Mrs.
June Kloes, Mrs. Slavin and
Mrs. Isabelle Winebrenner.

:' { .

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Final Congressional approval of legislation to give
greater federal assistance to
the eslabllshment . of Health
Maintenance Organizations
(HMOs) was one of the last
acts of the first session of the
93rd ·congress. The compromise bill signed by the
President authorizes $375
milllon for fiscal years 19741978 to aid in the development
of a projected 100 HMO plans
under which persons would
receive virtually all medical
services lor a fixed monthly
price.
The HMO proposal was first
initiated by the Nixon Adminlstratio~ in February 1971.
Although Congress waited until

....

65Tii WEDDING ANNIVERSARY - Mr. ' and Mrs.
Gurney L. Michael, seated in the center row, are pictured
here with members of the family. Mrs. Martha Poole holds
the floral arrangements and others standing in the hack row,
left to tight, are Samuel Michael, Gary Michael, Mrs. Wilbur
Parker, and Edward Parker, and front, Louise Michael, Eric
Parker holding Will Poole and Randy Parker, and Lenora
Mi chael.
•

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SPRAY COLOGNE
4 fabulous fra gran ces
in elegant spray
flacons ... only

Nuptials
planned

now operate the farm.
The Michaels arr the parents
of two children, Samuel and
Nellie (Mrs. Wilber Parker).
They have six grandchildren
and two great-grandsons.
They received a floral
arrangement of red carnations
from their children and many
cards of congratulations from
friends.
Those present besides the
honored couple were Samuel
Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Michael, Lenora Mi'chael,
Louise Michael, Mr. and Mrs .
Wilber Parker, Mrs. Martha
Poole and Will, all local;
Edward Parker, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Parker and
Randy, Plano, Til.

LIMITED TIME ON LY

TABU • AMBUSH • 20 CARATS • EMIR

J'

Kenneth McCuilough, R. P~.~

...

L---------------~

Stayfree

ALKA

COLGATE
100

the

concep t has been advancing

funds lor on ly about 100 more .

Mouthwa sh
12 oz.
$1.29 Value
No . 88,3

MODESS

MINI PADS

SELTZER

Q-TIPS

30's

.1

$2 .19 Value

liO's

99c
Value

I
I

HALO
SHAMPOO
7 oz.

$1.08 Valu e

No . 053
Regu lar 69c

.,
.i

JEWELRY ·~

]anllliry Clearance

'

Pee Wee game
A kick-off benefit game for
"Butch" Zeigler, nephew of
Mrs. Earl Davenport, South
Third St., Middleport, will be
sp&lt;insored Friday at 7 p. m. at
the- Middle School Gym in
Belpre by the Pee Wee
Basketba"ll League. The game
will launch a continuing
campaign for the Butch Zeigler
Fund. Butch is paralyzed from
his -neck down.
Butch, a seventh grader, has'
been a patient in Camden Clark
Memorial Hospital since
August 22 when he feU from a
tree. He refurned home for a
brief period from Dec. 22 until
Jan. 8 when he was again
admitted to the hos'pital.
He had participted in aU
sporls in the Belpre area and
was in the Pee Wee Basketball
League lour years. He is also a
Boy Scout.
The Pee Wee BaskethaU
Le,gue has established a fund,
through the First Bank of
Belpre, in Butch's n~me, to
help cover medical expenses
which have mounted since his
long slay in the hospital and for
future expenses which will be
necessary.
The League urges all
businesses and citizens of
ll&lt;t!pre and surrounding areas
w· join in making this campaign a real success.
Anyone who would like to
bring their checks to the game
may do so. There wiD be a f1111d
bolt at the door and anyone else
who wishes to contribute may
send their check to: The
usutch" Zeigler Fund, C..()
Fii'st Bank of Marietta, Belpre
Office, P. 0 . Box 446, Belpre,
Olllo 35714.

"

Large Table

"

Reg. s2.00 to
s10.00 Values

.,~ ,

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PRICE

"·~

Ropes, pins, chaitis , ear rings, pierced ear rings , clips, hoops,
fo Omega Smiley Rings. All from slock.

,,

Alpha

Goessler Jewelry Store
COURT ST.

POMEROY

'"

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----------,
COUPON

NEW! ·

PRINGLES:

LISTEROL

1

Potato Chips
Twin Pack

59¢

Don't heat the great outdoors.
Keep opening and closing of outside doors to a minimum . Kids
and pets are great travelers.

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;REEDSVILLE - Bids are
irjvited by the Huntington
Djstrict, U. S. Corps or
Engineers on a contract to
cfean and paint tainter gates on
BeUevlUe Locks and Dam here.
Approximate value of the
project was set at between
$25,000 and $100,000.
;Bids wiD be opened about
March 14, 1974 and work should
be completed within 180 days
h!om receipt of notice to
proceed. It consists essentially
o( dry-blast cleaning of the
exterior surfaces of the bottom
2jj feet of the eight enclosed
tliinter - type
(non·
s6bmerglble) gates and spray
.pjlinling them with govern11Jent - furnished vinyl-type
~in!.
,

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SAVE GAS..• AND MON

~MBIAGAS

.t.l.'-1!1..•:::;;;1\11

Gas is precious . .. pure energy .. . use It wisely. ..,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

)
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Non -allergic -mi Idew
proof, lint fr ee
mothproof

14 oz .
$1.89 Value

99~

PAINT-BY-NUMBER
PAINT SETS

NOW

r.~liRI
H
I
J
L
l
NI
)
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1

Velvet Assortment
$1.00 Value .. . : .. ..... .

Max· Factor
UNTRALUCENT
WHIPPED CREAM

s3•00
s3,50

Creamy
Shades
ing

Playtex

DISPOSABLE
BOnLES .
SO's- $1.19 Value
100's-$ 1.99 Value

-DRY SKIN!

PERFECT

69~

•1.19

Prince
Matchabelli

..

$119

New Artist I

\Z;
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~ .._ ~..

MAKE-UP

1, 2, 379~
$1.00 Value ....... .

Special

COLOGNE

$]95

14 VAlUE FOR

SPRAY MIST

DOOR MATS
by Monsanto
$4 .98

*3"
1
I
I
I Wind Song,

I
1Beloved PnJPt•ecy.l
1 Golden Autumn

r

... ,,..........
,_....
................
.._,_ ..
......

I

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~

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KID S WI LL LOV[ IT
AND so W~L_L_ MOM '

Walt Disnt,

STOR.AGE
CHEST
Many uses. stores
&amp; protects toys &amp;
books .

Plastic

New!

BOOT
TRAY

DRANO II
Oo ~ ble

Action

Or~•n Ope~~·

In Convenient
Packets

*-1 " .

79e ·
I

DELUXE IRONING BOARD COVER ~~·~:e 99e

.;::;~:o::;;:!S;:;9Y,(.:::;:::~::~:::::~~:::::::::::

J

BED
PILLOWS
Polyester

'

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Regular Price
69c Each

..

...and make your home more comfortable, too.

Full Size

Spray
Disinfectant

Toothbrushes

t~ be painted
Keep your furnace filters
clean to let the warm air
flow freely. Replace filters
at least twice during the
heating season. Get . your
money's worth from your
clean gas heat. Prices are
going up all over. Don't waste
money by wasting heat.

With
Coupon

J

TEK.

•

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

s in ce

organization would pro vid e

IN FOR YOUR
FREE ENTRY BLANK

Tainter gates

House Slippers &amp; Sno Boots -'h Price ,

ow n ,

The growth of the HMO

to benefit at

0.~0
,_____
\"

Make sure your registers
and air vents are not covered or obstructed by fur- "'::.;
niture and drapes. Let the
warm a~ circulate freely.

th ei r

care."

Zeigler Fund

,.,

Lei the
i in. Even on the
coldest day, you sho!lld let direct
sunlight in through your windows.
Open drapes and blinds and let
sun help heat your home.

•

POMEROY

In ir oning out the differences
between the or igm~l House and
Senate bills, the Conference
Committee took three other
key · ac tions. It dropped a

Start !CJsi n g we igh t tCJday c1
MONEY BACK . MONADE X i·.
a t iny tab l et that wi ll help cur ll
VCJ Ur d es i re for excess tood E;Jt
less· weigh l ess. con t a1n s n o
d;angerou·s. d rug s. anct will not
m ake
you
n ervous
N 11
str e nuou s C)(e r cise . Cha·n(1 C·
you r l ife . . , s t art tod :q
MO NADE X cosh Sl .OO for a 2J
day s upply a nd ~5 . 00 for tw 11···
the a m oun t . Lo se ug l y fat r r
your money wi ll be relund r I
w ith n o q uest ion s a sked !J ·
S.wis h er &amp; Lohse Dru g , 111 I
Ma in, Pomero y &amp; Dutton Dru 11
Store, Middl rpo r l. M ,l.il O r &lt;lP r,
Fil l ed.

BUTCH ZEIGLER

OF THE YEAR CONTINUES
I

MAIN ST.

deve lopment

LOSE UGLY FA T

Charles Riflle , R. Ph .

PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
Friendly Service
112 E. MAIN

~---:·
. &gt;· .

MISS AMERICA&amp; CQNNIES
DRESS AND
REG. TO 18.99
SPORT STYLES
8.64 to 12.50

inn.o.vative
programs.

provide adequate funding for steadily as the search for more
tria l purposes. Coupled with effi cient heal th ca re delivery
funds from the private sector hasg rown. In 1970 there were
... U1e legislation just passed only 25 such pr ograms
will provide a level or spending operating in the nation,
to demonstrate such virtues as compared with t1 7 at th e
the HMO concept may have. present time. Federal health .
What we oppose is the idea of officia ls estima te that nearly
subsidizing HMOs to a point JOO more are in the dev elopwhere they ' would have an ment slage. The HMO Act w1il
unfair advantage over other require that the majori ty of
methods of providing health new plans be developed on

Open Dolly 1:00 o.m . .to 10:00 p.m:
Sundoy 10:30. 12:30 oncl51o t p.m.

)

•

genera l authority to fos ter

a House provision earmarking ment and initial operati.ng
20 pet. of all appropriations for expenses of programs rather
a id to HMOs in rural areas. It th an providin ~ in d e fi ~ite
·
also retained a House 5ec tion future fundings.
The America n Medical
that would require employers
of more than 25 persons to offer Association ( AMA ) called the
an HMO insuran ce option if bill ~~ rather modest in scale"
' they offered traditional health and sa id that AMA ~as not "so
ins'uran ce coverage to thei~ much opposed to the basic
employees.
The
final philosophy of the HMO concept
legis Ia tion al so reru·sed to as it was to the idea of massive
provide for cons truction funds fed eral spending to support it. "
AMA further commented
for HMO faci lities. And it
that
the bill " is sa tisfactory to
limited assistance grants to
us
in
the sense that it wi ll ,
feas ibili ty studi es, develop-

f'
;:,

SYRACUSE - The wedding

(

previ~us

und er

1

of Miss Lura Phyllis Carroll to

PARTY HELD
The eighth birthday of
Zandra Vaughan, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Vaughan, was observed
Wednesday with a party in her
second grade class at the
Middleporr Elementary
School. Ice cream, cupcakes
with the numeral "8" inscribed
and milk were served by Mrs.
Vaughan. Mrs. Jennifer
Butcher is the second grade
· teacher.

pro jec ts

I

COSTUME

Victor R. Counts wiD take
place at 2 p. m. Jan. 26 at the
Syracuse First Chu,ch of the
Nazarene.
The bride-elect is the
daughter ol Mrs. Mae Carroll,
Rutland, and her fiance, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Counts, is
a 1973 graduate of Meigs High
School and is employed at the
Phil co Plant in Lorain.

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limited grants to 110 HMO pilot

the closing days of 1973 to give ·Senate provision ea rmarking
the program its final approval, funds for grants to HMOs for
the Administration had in the the ca re of indigenls or inmeantime
spent
ap, dividuals with high medical
proximately $26 million in insuran ce risks. But it retained

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$2.00 EACH

Anniversary observed
CHESTER ,- Mr. and Mrs.
Gurney L. Michael celebrated
their 65th wedding anniversary
at tlteir home near here, Dec.
'tl, with a family dinner. All
members of their immediate
family were present except a
grandson-in-law on duty with
the Air Force in Thailand.
Gurney
Michael
and
Florence Atkinson were
married at the home of her
parenls in Mead, Wash., Dec.
27, 1908. They were both
teachers. Later they farmed in
Washington State, West
Virginia and Ohio. They have
lived in their present home
since March, 1920. Their son,
Samuel, and grandson, Gary,

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G'reat Values Every Day!

SHOE SALE

\

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"'

RACINE - Eighteen youth
attended the Weekly Prayer
Breakfast held at Raci_ne
Wesleyan United Methodtst
Church Wednesday morning.
Devotions were opened with
group singing as Roma Nease
accompanied. Prayer was by
Rev. Howard Shiveley. Rev.
Steve Wilson, Southern Cluster
Meigs Ministry, had the
morning meditation.
Rev. Wilson alsg presented
information on the Billy
Graham film to be shown at the
Colony Theater in Gallipolis
Jan. 30 to Feb. 2. Feb. 2 will be
· Meigs United Methodist Youth ·
Day and County Youth will
attend the 2 p. m. showing.
Breakfast of donuts, toast,
hot chocolate, orange juice and
coffee was served by Mrs. BiUy
Hill, Mrs. Robert Hill and Mrs.
CLUBS TO MEET
Howard Shiveley.
The Middleport Garden Club
Those present were Mike
will meet at 7:30p.m. Monday Warner, Bill Shiveley, Gene
at the home of Mrs. C. M. Shiveley, Chris Hill, Randy
Hennesy, 180 Garfield Ave., Warner, Tim Hill, David
Middleport. Mrs. M. L. French Theiss, Connie Roush, Elisa
will present the program ., on McMillan, Helen Wllcoxen,
"Stalking the Wild Asparagus" Molly Fisher, Rhonda, West,
by Ewell Gibbons. Hostesses Roma Nease, Becky Kouns,
will be. Mrs. Hennesy, Mrs. 'Debbie Harden, Vicki ~olfe,
Charles McDaniel, Mrs. Crary Stephen Nease and Kenton
Davis and Mrs. B. B. Zeigler. Holman.

CHAPMAN'S

"-1

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SATURDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Retired
Teachers Association at noon,
the Pomeroy Elementary
School. Potluck luncheon, with
members to lake a covered
dish and their own !able service. New officers will be installed, and Miss Mildred
Hawley will show slides of her
trip to Alaska. Dues for 1974
are payable.

breakfast

Missionary society plans tea
Final arrangements for the
annual fellowship tea of the B.
H. Sanborn Missionary Society
of the Middleport First Baptist
Church Feb. 4 were completed
when the three circles met
Tuesday night.
Speaker for the tea to which
all Baptist women of the area
will be invited will be Mrs. C.
E. Hoyt, Granville, wife of a
former pastor of the Middleport Church . She will also be
showing slides of her trip to the
Holy Land.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Mary Hn~her , l.~ e Love Joy
Circle made plans to send a
valentine gift to the Baptist
to
scholarship
student,
remember the birthday of a
shut-in, and to prepare
valentine treats for all .of the

ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club at home of Mrs.
Opha Offutt, I: 15 p.m. Mrs. G.
J . Morgan, program, and Mrs .
Homer Radford , contest.
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC
Booster meeting, 7:30p.m.
GRACE
EPISCOPAL
Church Women, Luncheon ,
12 :30 p.m . at the home of Mrs.
A. R. Knight, Lincoln Hill .
Hostesses, Mrs. Knight, Mrs.
Roger Dillard, Mrs. Vincent
Knight and Mrs. Paul Amberger.
MEIGS COUNTY Democrat
Committee will meet at the
county court room at 7:30p.m.
Visitors welcome.
FRIDAY
REVIVAL AT Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene
Wednesday through Jan. 27,
7:30 nightly. The Rev. Leo C.
Davis, Bedford, Ind., formerly
district superintendent of the
Southwest Indiana District for
many years will serve as
evangelist. The Rev. Davis will
be accompanied by his wife.
Pastor is the Rev. M. C.
Larimore . There will be
special singing each evening.
The public is invited to attend.
OHIO VALLEY Chapter of
Adopt-A-Child Today , Inc. ,
January meeting at Trinity
Church, Pomeroy, 8 p.m.
Friday.
FRIDAY Dance Pomeroy
Junior High School sponsored
by Meigs High cheerleaders;
music by Wood Quilt.

v···

c

! Washington
By Clarence
I Report j\tiller

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3~~~~:::w.::.:;:~~;~:::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~:=

'

ENTER TODAY-

GRAND
PRIZE

1974 DODGE STATION WAGON 1950 OTHER PRIZES

�.·. ',.

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., 7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,...:,Jan.17, 1974

I

SPECiaL SALE I
'

THURSDAY
CLASS 12, 7:30p.m., at the
Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport. Mrs. L. W.
McComas to have the lesson;
Mrs . Dianne George to give
devotions . Hostesses will be the
officers.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club will
hold its regular meeting at the
Shrine Park in Racine. All
Nobles are welcome. An oyster
dinner will be served following
the 7:30 p,m. meeting .

MRS. PEARL LEIFHEIT, RN, takes the blood pressure of Mrs. Grace Wagner, Middleport, an active senior citizen at the Center in Pomeroy.

Health service initiated
Wednesday a new health
service program was initiated

by the Meigs County Council on
Aging at the Senior Citizens
Center.
Mrs. Pearl Leifheit, RN ,
began her monthly visits to the
center to check the blood
pressures of senior citizens.
Plans are for her to be there on
the third Wednesday of each
month from 12:30 to 2:30p. m.
The service is free to senior
citizens and Mrs. Leifheit is a
volunteer receiving no com·
pensation for her service.
Dw"ing the two hour period
Wednesday, 'Mrs. Leifheit took
the blood pressure of 36 men
and women. Working with her

to record the figures so that

permanent charts can be made
on each person was Mrs. Alice
Wamsley, an employe at the
center.
The procedure of Mrs.
Leifheit is to take the pressure
and then advi se th e senior
citizen as to wheth er it is low,
high or normal. If treatment is

indicated, and it was in several
instances Wednesday , the
individual is then referred to
his doctor. An appointment
was made by Mrs . Wamsley
for .one individual whose
pressure was extremely high.
Mrs. Leifheit is a graduate of
the Holzer School of Nursing
and worked for several years
at Holzer Hospital and later as
an industrial nurse at Kaiser.

Syracuse PTA meets
SYRACUSE - Pros and cons outdoor basketball court.
The valentine party was set
of a possible change in the time
schedule in the Southern Local for 2:30p.m. Feb . .15 with the
School District were aired homeroom mothers to have
Tuesday night at a meeting of charge. Also planned was a
the Syracuse PTA at the spring fes tival with David
Flagg as chairperson and Mrs.
Elementary School.
Judy
Flagg, Mrs. Minnie
David Nease, a member of
Emogene
the Southern Board of Harris, Mrs .
Education, was present at the Holstein and Mrs. Susie
meeting to get the views of the Grueser on the committee.
At the February meeting
. parents as to whether the time
should be changed so that Founder's Day will be obchildren would not be going to served. Teachers will also
discuss the reading programs
school in the dark.
The PTA voted to sponsor a of their respective rooms. The
baskethall banquet this spring, refreshments will be served at
and to order .monogranuned the meeting by Mrs. Ettamae
shirts for the boys and the Norton, Mrs. Mary B. Warner,
cheerleaders .. Plans were also Mrs . Lois Cunningham, Mrs.
discussed for installing an Flagg and Mrs. Grueser.

She and her husband have two
children, Stephanie, five, and
Sam, three .

D of A meets
Tuesday night
Mrs. Erma Cleland, councilor, presided at the Tuesday
night meeting of Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, held at the hall with
23 members attending.
It was reported that Joe
Bissell and Mrs. Goldie Wolfe
are bo th home from the
hospital, and that Mrs. Maxine
Goeglein is ill at home. Also
noted was the birth of a new
granddaughter to Mrs. Ada
Van Meter. A sympathy card
was signed by the members for
Mrs. Zana Gainer whose sisterin-law, Mrs . Stella . Clark ,
recently died.
Refreshments were served
following the meeting to
Dorothy Ritchie, deputy slate
councilor; Mrs. Ada Morris,
Mrs. Zona Biggs, Mrs. Mary K.
Holter, Mrs. Helen Wolf, Mrs.
Margaret Tuttle, Mr• . Dorothy
Lawson, Mrs. Ada Neutzling,
Mrs. Hattie Frederick, Mrs.
Goldie Frederick, Mrs. Opal
Hollon, Mrs. Erma Cleland,
Mrs. Zelda Weber, Mrs. Ada
Van Meter, Mrs . Ethel Orr,
Mrs. Dorothy Myers, Mrs.
Thelma White, Mrs. Mabel Van
Meter, Mrs. Letha Wood, Mrs.
Doris Grueser, Mrs. Marcia
Keller, Mrs . Mary Showalter
and Mrs. Jean Summerfteld.

held at the home of Mrs . Katie
Anthony.
It was noted that the Baptist
· scholarship student had been
sent a Christmas gift and that
two of the children at the Meigs
County Home had been
remembered on their birthdays. The love gift offering was
dedicated by Mrs. Janet Lewis,
and it was noted that Mrs.
Sarah Dawn Owen will be
hostess for the February
meeting.
Devotions by Mrs. Owen
were on the theme "Consider
the Caterpillar". Mrs. Beulah
White, chairman, conducted a
Bible quiz and also read an
article by Dr. Joseph I.
Chapman relating to his
mother's death.
Mrs. Anthony served a salad
course and coffee to those
&amp;,ut·ins.
named and Mrs . Alwilda
Members were asked to lake Werner, Mrs. Helen Bodimer,
religious Chrisbnas cards to Mrs. Pearl Hoffman, Mrs.
the next meeting. There was Winnie White and Mrs. Clara
silent prayer for Mrs. Dana
Harnm following devotions by
Miss Rhoda Hall who used
PLAN SHOWER
Philippians 2 as her scripture
A miscellaneous shower for
and read excerpts from . Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Darst,
11
Fragrance of Beauty". Plans whose
home
and all
were discussed for making possessions were destroyed by
another visit to the Elmwood fire Tuesday night, will be held
Nursing Home in the future. at 7:30p.m. Saturday night at
Read at the meeting was a the Rock Springs Unit~d
thank-you note from Mrs . Methodist Church. The public
Raymond Saxton for a is invited.
Christmas remembrance, and
letters from the Rev . and Mrs .
Dickerson,
overseas
PTATOMEET
missionaries, by Mrs. Freda
The Chester PTA will meet
Hood and Mrs. Hughes. The
at the CheSler~ Elementary
Lord's Prayer in unison conSchool Monday, Jan. 21, at 7:30
cluded the meeting with Mrs.
p. m. Father's Night will be
Hughes serving refreshments.
osberved and refreshments
Attendmg besides those named
will be served. Everyone is
were Mrs. Frances Smart,
welcome.
president, Mrs. Louise Skaggs, ·
Mrs. ·Martha King and son,
Michl, Mrs. Sarah Fowler,
Mrs. Ethel Hughes and Mrs.
MEETING SET
Lillie Hubhard.
The next meeting of the
ELECTA CIRCLI):
South Central Ohio PreserValentine remembrances for vation Society, Inc., will be
shut-ins and a visit to the held at 2 p.m. SUl'day, Jan. 'tl,
SyrQcuse Rest Home were in the historical "old canal
among the projecls planned at house" on Mulberry and Main
a meeting of the Elecla Circle Sis., in Chillicothe.

J8 attend

Mae Darst.
DORCAS·CIRCLE
Mrs. Iva Turner hosted the
meeting of the Dorcas Circle
presided over by Mrs. Leora
Sigman . Devotions were by
Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner and
the program presented by Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavin consisted of
poems by Helen Steiner Rice.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Turner to Mrs. Pauline
Hoffman, MrS. Freddie
Houdashelt, Mrs. Harry
Houdashelt, Mrs. Gardner,
Mrs. Sigman, Mrs. Eloise
Wilson, Mrs. Marilyn Fultz,
Mrs. Freda Edwards, Mrs.
June Kloes, Mrs. Slavin and
Mrs. Isabelle Winebrenner.

:' { .

'

Final Congressional approval of legislation to give
greater federal assistance to
the eslabllshment . of Health
Maintenance Organizations
(HMOs) was one of the last
acts of the first session of the
93rd ·congress. The compromise bill signed by the
President authorizes $375
milllon for fiscal years 19741978 to aid in the development
of a projected 100 HMO plans
under which persons would
receive virtually all medical
services lor a fixed monthly
price.
The HMO proposal was first
initiated by the Nixon Adminlstratio~ in February 1971.
Although Congress waited until

....

65Tii WEDDING ANNIVERSARY - Mr. ' and Mrs.
Gurney L. Michael, seated in the center row, are pictured
here with members of the family. Mrs. Martha Poole holds
the floral arrangements and others standing in the hack row,
left to tight, are Samuel Michael, Gary Michael, Mrs. Wilbur
Parker, and Edward Parker, and front, Louise Michael, Eric
Parker holding Will Poole and Randy Parker, and Lenora
Mi chael.
•

."

SPRAY COLOGNE
4 fabulous fra gran ces
in elegant spray
flacons ... only

Nuptials
planned

now operate the farm.
The Michaels arr the parents
of two children, Samuel and
Nellie (Mrs. Wilber Parker).
They have six grandchildren
and two great-grandsons.
They received a floral
arrangement of red carnations
from their children and many
cards of congratulations from
friends.
Those present besides the
honored couple were Samuel
Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Michael, Lenora Mi'chael,
Louise Michael, Mr. and Mrs .
Wilber Parker, Mrs. Martha
Poole and Will, all local;
Edward Parker, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Parker and
Randy, Plano, Til.

LIMITED TIME ON LY

TABU • AMBUSH • 20 CARATS • EMIR

J'

Kenneth McCuilough, R. P~.~

...

L---------------~

Stayfree

ALKA

COLGATE
100

the

concep t has been advancing

funds lor on ly about 100 more .

Mouthwa sh
12 oz.
$1.29 Value
No . 88,3

MODESS

MINI PADS

SELTZER

Q-TIPS

30's

.1

$2 .19 Value

liO's

99c
Value

I
I

HALO
SHAMPOO
7 oz.

$1.08 Valu e

No . 053
Regu lar 69c

.,
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JEWELRY ·~

]anllliry Clearance

'

Pee Wee game
A kick-off benefit game for
"Butch" Zeigler, nephew of
Mrs. Earl Davenport, South
Third St., Middleport, will be
sp&lt;insored Friday at 7 p. m. at
the- Middle School Gym in
Belpre by the Pee Wee
Basketba"ll League. The game
will launch a continuing
campaign for the Butch Zeigler
Fund. Butch is paralyzed from
his -neck down.
Butch, a seventh grader, has'
been a patient in Camden Clark
Memorial Hospital since
August 22 when he feU from a
tree. He refurned home for a
brief period from Dec. 22 until
Jan. 8 when he was again
admitted to the hos'pital.
He had participted in aU
sporls in the Belpre area and
was in the Pee Wee Basketball
League lour years. He is also a
Boy Scout.
The Pee Wee BaskethaU
Le,gue has established a fund,
through the First Bank of
Belpre, in Butch's n~me, to
help cover medical expenses
which have mounted since his
long slay in the hospital and for
future expenses which will be
necessary.
The League urges all
businesses and citizens of
ll&lt;t!pre and surrounding areas
w· join in making this campaign a real success.
Anyone who would like to
bring their checks to the game
may do so. There wiD be a f1111d
bolt at the door and anyone else
who wishes to contribute may
send their check to: The
usutch" Zeigler Fund, C..()
Fii'st Bank of Marietta, Belpre
Office, P. 0 . Box 446, Belpre,
Olllo 35714.

"

Large Table

"

Reg. s2.00 to
s10.00 Values

.,~ ,

,.,

NOW
''

,.

PRICE

"·~

Ropes, pins, chaitis , ear rings, pierced ear rings , clips, hoops,
fo Omega Smiley Rings. All from slock.

,,

Alpha

Goessler Jewelry Store
COURT ST.

POMEROY

'"

)(

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COUPON

NEW! ·

PRINGLES:

LISTEROL

1

Potato Chips
Twin Pack

59¢

Don't heat the great outdoors.
Keep opening and closing of outside doors to a minimum . Kids
and pets are great travelers.

'~ \ I I I ,, II;

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;REEDSVILLE - Bids are
irjvited by the Huntington
Djstrict, U. S. Corps or
Engineers on a contract to
cfean and paint tainter gates on
BeUevlUe Locks and Dam here.
Approximate value of the
project was set at between
$25,000 and $100,000.
;Bids wiD be opened about
March 14, 1974 and work should
be completed within 180 days
h!om receipt of notice to
proceed. It consists essentially
o( dry-blast cleaning of the
exterior surfaces of the bottom
2jj feet of the eight enclosed
tliinter - type
(non·
s6bmerglble) gates and spray
.pjlinling them with govern11Jent - furnished vinyl-type
~in!.
,

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SAVE GAS..• AND MON

~MBIAGAS

.t.l.'-1!1..•:::;;;1\11

Gas is precious . .. pure energy .. . use It wisely. ..,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

)
;.-.·

I

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Non -allergic -mi Idew
proof, lint fr ee
mothproof

14 oz .
$1.89 Value

99~

PAINT-BY-NUMBER
PAINT SETS

NOW

r.~liRI
H
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Velvet Assortment
$1.00 Value .. . : .. ..... .

Max· Factor
UNTRALUCENT
WHIPPED CREAM

s3•00
s3,50

Creamy
Shades
ing

Playtex

DISPOSABLE
BOnLES .
SO's- $1.19 Value
100's-$ 1.99 Value

-DRY SKIN!

PERFECT

69~

•1.19

Prince
Matchabelli

..

$119

New Artist I

\Z;
~~~
~ .._ ~..

MAKE-UP

1, 2, 379~
$1.00 Value ....... .

Special

COLOGNE

$]95

14 VAlUE FOR

SPRAY MIST

DOOR MATS
by Monsanto
$4 .98

*3"
1
I
I
I Wind Song,

I
1Beloved PnJPt•ecy.l
1 Golden Autumn

r

... ,,..........
,_....
................
.._,_ ..
......

I

. .. ............,
~

I
I

KID S WI LL LOV[ IT
AND so W~L_L_ MOM '

Walt Disnt,

STOR.AGE
CHEST
Many uses. stores
&amp; protects toys &amp;
books .

Plastic

New!

BOOT
TRAY

DRANO II
Oo ~ ble

Action

Or~•n Ope~~·

In Convenient
Packets

*-1 " .

79e ·
I

DELUXE IRONING BOARD COVER ~~·~:e 99e

.;::;~:o::;;:!S;:;9Y,(.:::;:::~::~:::::~~:::::::::::

J

BED
PILLOWS
Polyester

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Regular Price
69c Each

..

...and make your home more comfortable, too.

Full Size

Spray
Disinfectant

Toothbrushes

t~ be painted
Keep your furnace filters
clean to let the warm air
flow freely. Replace filters
at least twice during the
heating season. Get . your
money's worth from your
clean gas heat. Prices are
going up all over. Don't waste
money by wasting heat.

With
Coupon

J

TEK.

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CHAPMAN'S SHOES

s in ce

organization would pro vid e

IN FOR YOUR
FREE ENTRY BLANK

Tainter gates

House Slippers &amp; Sno Boots -'h Price ,

ow n ,

The growth of the HMO

to benefit at

0.~0
,_____
\"

Make sure your registers
and air vents are not covered or obstructed by fur- "'::.;
niture and drapes. Let the
warm a~ circulate freely.

th ei r

care."

Zeigler Fund

,.,

Lei the
i in. Even on the
coldest day, you sho!lld let direct
sunlight in through your windows.
Open drapes and blinds and let
sun help heat your home.

•

POMEROY

In ir oning out the differences
between the or igm~l House and
Senate bills, the Conference
Committee took three other
key · ac tions. It dropped a

Start !CJsi n g we igh t tCJday c1
MONEY BACK . MONADE X i·.
a t iny tab l et that wi ll help cur ll
VCJ Ur d es i re for excess tood E;Jt
less· weigh l ess. con t a1n s n o
d;angerou·s. d rug s. anct will not
m ake
you
n ervous
N 11
str e nuou s C)(e r cise . Cha·n(1 C·
you r l ife . . , s t art tod :q
MO NADE X cosh Sl .OO for a 2J
day s upply a nd ~5 . 00 for tw 11···
the a m oun t . Lo se ug l y fat r r
your money wi ll be relund r I
w ith n o q uest ion s a sked !J ·
S.wis h er &amp; Lohse Dru g , 111 I
Ma in, Pomero y &amp; Dutton Dru 11
Store, Middl rpo r l. M ,l.il O r &lt;lP r,
Fil l ed.

BUTCH ZEIGLER

OF THE YEAR CONTINUES
I

MAIN ST.

deve lopment

LOSE UGLY FA T

Charles Riflle , R. Ph .

PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
Friendly Service
112 E. MAIN

~---:·
. &gt;· .

MISS AMERICA&amp; CQNNIES
DRESS AND
REG. TO 18.99
SPORT STYLES
8.64 to 12.50

inn.o.vative
programs.

provide adequate funding for steadily as the search for more
tria l purposes. Coupled with effi cient heal th ca re delivery
funds from the private sector hasg rown. In 1970 there were
... U1e legislation just passed only 25 such pr ograms
will provide a level or spending operating in the nation,
to demonstrate such virtues as compared with t1 7 at th e
the HMO concept may have. present time. Federal health .
What we oppose is the idea of officia ls estima te that nearly
subsidizing HMOs to a point JOO more are in the dev elopwhere they ' would have an ment slage. The HMO Act w1il
unfair advantage over other require that the majori ty of
methods of providing health new plans be developed on

Open Dolly 1:00 o.m . .to 10:00 p.m:
Sundoy 10:30. 12:30 oncl51o t p.m.

)

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genera l authority to fos ter

a House provision earmarking ment and initial operati.ng
20 pet. of all appropriations for expenses of programs rather
a id to HMOs in rural areas. It th an providin ~ in d e fi ~ite
·
also retained a House 5ec tion future fundings.
The America n Medical
that would require employers
of more than 25 persons to offer Association ( AMA ) called the
an HMO insuran ce option if bill ~~ rather modest in scale"
' they offered traditional health and sa id that AMA ~as not "so
ins'uran ce coverage to thei~ much opposed to the basic
employees.
The
final philosophy of the HMO concept
legis Ia tion al so reru·sed to as it was to the idea of massive
provide for cons truction funds fed eral spending to support it. "
AMA further commented
for HMO faci lities. And it
that
the bill " is sa tisfactory to
limited assistance grants to
us
in
the sense that it wi ll ,
feas ibili ty studi es, develop-

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SYRACUSE - The wedding

(

previ~us

und er

1

of Miss Lura Phyllis Carroll to

PARTY HELD
The eighth birthday of
Zandra Vaughan, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Vaughan, was observed
Wednesday with a party in her
second grade class at the
Middleporr Elementary
School. Ice cream, cupcakes
with the numeral "8" inscribed
and milk were served by Mrs.
Vaughan. Mrs. Jennifer
Butcher is the second grade
· teacher.

pro jec ts

I

COSTUME

Victor R. Counts wiD take
place at 2 p. m. Jan. 26 at the
Syracuse First Chu,ch of the
Nazarene.
The bride-elect is the
daughter ol Mrs. Mae Carroll,
Rutland, and her fiance, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Counts, is
a 1973 graduate of Meigs High
School and is employed at the
Phil co Plant in Lorain.

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limited grants to 110 HMO pilot

the closing days of 1973 to give ·Senate provision ea rmarking
the program its final approval, funds for grants to HMOs for
the Administration had in the the ca re of indigenls or inmeantime
spent
ap, dividuals with high medical
proximately $26 million in insuran ce risks. But it retained

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$2.00 EACH

Anniversary observed
CHESTER ,- Mr. and Mrs.
Gurney L. Michael celebrated
their 65th wedding anniversary
at tlteir home near here, Dec.
'tl, with a family dinner. All
members of their immediate
family were present except a
grandson-in-law on duty with
the Air Force in Thailand.
Gurney
Michael
and
Florence Atkinson were
married at the home of her
parenls in Mead, Wash., Dec.
27, 1908. They were both
teachers. Later they farmed in
Washington State, West
Virginia and Ohio. They have
lived in their present home
since March, 1920. Their son,
Samuel, and grandson, Gary,

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G'reat Values Every Day!

SHOE SALE

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RACINE - Eighteen youth
attended the Weekly Prayer
Breakfast held at Raci_ne
Wesleyan United Methodtst
Church Wednesday morning.
Devotions were opened with
group singing as Roma Nease
accompanied. Prayer was by
Rev. Howard Shiveley. Rev.
Steve Wilson, Southern Cluster
Meigs Ministry, had the
morning meditation.
Rev. Wilson alsg presented
information on the Billy
Graham film to be shown at the
Colony Theater in Gallipolis
Jan. 30 to Feb. 2. Feb. 2 will be
· Meigs United Methodist Youth ·
Day and County Youth will
attend the 2 p. m. showing.
Breakfast of donuts, toast,
hot chocolate, orange juice and
coffee was served by Mrs. BiUy
Hill, Mrs. Robert Hill and Mrs.
CLUBS TO MEET
Howard Shiveley.
The Middleport Garden Club
Those present were Mike
will meet at 7:30p.m. Monday Warner, Bill Shiveley, Gene
at the home of Mrs. C. M. Shiveley, Chris Hill, Randy
Hennesy, 180 Garfield Ave., Warner, Tim Hill, David
Middleport. Mrs. M. L. French Theiss, Connie Roush, Elisa
will present the program ., on McMillan, Helen Wllcoxen,
"Stalking the Wild Asparagus" Molly Fisher, Rhonda, West,
by Ewell Gibbons. Hostesses Roma Nease, Becky Kouns,
will be. Mrs. Hennesy, Mrs. 'Debbie Harden, Vicki ~olfe,
Charles McDaniel, Mrs. Crary Stephen Nease and Kenton
Davis and Mrs. B. B. Zeigler. Holman.

CHAPMAN'S

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SATURDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Retired
Teachers Association at noon,
the Pomeroy Elementary
School. Potluck luncheon, with
members to lake a covered
dish and their own !able service. New officers will be installed, and Miss Mildred
Hawley will show slides of her
trip to Alaska. Dues for 1974
are payable.

breakfast

Missionary society plans tea
Final arrangements for the
annual fellowship tea of the B.
H. Sanborn Missionary Society
of the Middleport First Baptist
Church Feb. 4 were completed
when the three circles met
Tuesday night.
Speaker for the tea to which
all Baptist women of the area
will be invited will be Mrs. C.
E. Hoyt, Granville, wife of a
former pastor of the Middleport Church . She will also be
showing slides of her trip to the
Holy Land.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Mary Hn~her , l.~ e Love Joy
Circle made plans to send a
valentine gift to the Baptist
to
scholarship
student,
remember the birthday of a
shut-in, and to prepare
valentine treats for all .of the

ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club at home of Mrs.
Opha Offutt, I: 15 p.m. Mrs. G.
J . Morgan, program, and Mrs .
Homer Radford , contest.
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC
Booster meeting, 7:30p.m.
GRACE
EPISCOPAL
Church Women, Luncheon ,
12 :30 p.m . at the home of Mrs.
A. R. Knight, Lincoln Hill .
Hostesses, Mrs. Knight, Mrs.
Roger Dillard, Mrs. Vincent
Knight and Mrs. Paul Amberger.
MEIGS COUNTY Democrat
Committee will meet at the
county court room at 7:30p.m.
Visitors welcome.
FRIDAY
REVIVAL AT Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene
Wednesday through Jan. 27,
7:30 nightly. The Rev. Leo C.
Davis, Bedford, Ind., formerly
district superintendent of the
Southwest Indiana District for
many years will serve as
evangelist. The Rev. Davis will
be accompanied by his wife.
Pastor is the Rev. M. C.
Larimore . There will be
special singing each evening.
The public is invited to attend.
OHIO VALLEY Chapter of
Adopt-A-Child Today , Inc. ,
January meeting at Trinity
Church, Pomeroy, 8 p.m.
Friday.
FRIDAY Dance Pomeroy
Junior High School sponsored
by Meigs High cheerleaders;
music by Wood Quilt.

v···

c

! Washington
By Clarence
I Report j\tiller

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ENTER TODAY-

GRAND
PRIZE

1974 DODGE STATION WAGON 1950 OTHER PRIZES

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•
9 - The Daily Sentmel, M1ddleport·Pomeroy, 0., Jan 17, 1974

Business Services

BOYS

WANT ADS

INFORMATION

2 SIGNS
OF

DEADLINES

il P M Day Before PubH cal10n
' ) .. Monday Dead lin~ 118 'fl1
Ca ncellatiOn Correctors
w I! be accepted until 9 a m for
Day of P.ubl cati on

QUALITY

REGULATIONS

The PubliSher reserves t he
nght to edt! or re1ect any ads
deemed obtect•onal
The
publ iSher Will not be respon
Sible tor more than one 10
correc t lnser t1on

1?12 CHEVROLET BELAIR

G

3c

dLIN DADS
Add•flonal 25c Charge per
Advert•sement
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 am toto5 0012p 00
m Da1
ly
8 30 a m
Noon
Sat.urd ay

1•12 NOVA 2 DOOR

on

1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER

engrne lockmg frt hubs automatiC
trans power steenng &amp; brakes rad1o veh cle of many
uses custom tnm sharp l owner

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES 8 00 P.M
POMEROY, OHIO

'--- --------------------....1

Help Wanted

WANTED
PAPER CARRIER

Hug" Ledhert
1 16 3t p
SHO O T N G Mat ell Rac rne Gun
Club Sunday Jan 20 1 p m

11

Assorted meats
choked guns only

factory
1 16 3t c

L I VING

ROOM

sudes

rn

modern and Med rterranean
sty les You r chorce of colors
1n
velvets or nylon wrth

OR OLDER

Sco t chgard
Only
$27 9 95
whrle th ey la st
Pomeroy
Recovery 622 E Marn Street

Pomeroy

BE A
PAPER
CARRIER.

Phone 992 7554
I 10 8tc

INCOME Tax ::ierv iCf' 9 am to
5 p m Dady except Sunday
even1ngs by appointment
only Co Rd 22 o ff Rt 7
bypa ss Phone Wanda Ebl•n
992 2272
1 2 JOtc

WANTED IN
POMEROY
PHONE 992-2156

lHE
DAILY SENTINEL
POMEROY, 0.
NEED woman to 1 ve n and
take mothers place of 2
childr en m a new respectab l e
home You may also hav e 1
child of your own Phone 992
2536
I 8 tfc

KOSCOT KOSMETICS

&amp; WIGS
We have the product on hand
and we deliver to you per
sonally Helen Jane Brown
992 51 13
12 30 ti C

S&amp;G GARAGE
Bradbury
across WMPO Rad10 phone
992 2942
Grand
open1ng
Monday Now through Ja n D IR ECT Sa le s D1s tr 1buto rs
31 a V 8 tuneup 527 95 Free
wanted for v 1tam 11iS and
lube lob w •th o I cha nge
organ c products Part or full
1 13 12tc
t1me For •ntervlew wr te
Mary Engl e RR 1 Box 19
Un1on OhiO 45322
I 16 161p

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

WANT to h1re someone to do
general housework 3 days a
week Phone 992 2623
1 16 tf c

DELIVER
The
Daily

....

"'"'" ,

ATTRACTIVE outgomg g 1rl 18
32 Manager for Jewel T1me
Jewe lr y part1es 1n Me .gs
County Opportun1ty to make
$7 000 th1 s year Phone Jef
trey 304 422 0929
1 17 4tp

A

SHOOTING MATCH
Forked
Run Sportsman Club noon
Sunday Fac tory choked guns
only
1 17 Jtc

Sentinel

52895

.J wh dnve 350 V a

the school

bu s are not msured on my
pr vate property S gned

$2295

307 V 8 eng me au tomalt c w1 lh power sfeermg good w w
t.res Rally wheels body mldgs rad10 wh1te fl m sh &amp;
spotless clean mter~or A r eal stopper &amp; priCed way below
ctty !)riCes

Notrce
T H E CHILDREN

52495

4 door loca l1 owner car w1th less than 15 000 miles bctge
ltmsh blk v1nyl top good w w t.res standard V 8 eng r~ e
automaf1c power steenng &amp; brakes rad1o spotless clean
ll)tenor Want a sharp car a t the pnce of ave rage car?

RATES

For Want Ad Serv1ce
5 cen ts per Word one •nsert1on
Mln•mum ChargeS I 00
14 cents per word three
conse clJiille 1ns er t1o ns
26 cents per word s. x con
secut•ve •nse r t1ons
25 Per Cent D1Scounl on pad
ads and ads pa•d w lhm 10
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 tor 50 word m n
1mum Each~ add 1f10nal word

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

News Notes

SHOOTING MATCH
Horner
H1ll Gun Club Rt 143 Sun
day Jan 20 12 I"'OOn Fac tory
choked guns only
1 17 3tc

B&amp;G AUCTION

•

OR Fill OUT

AND MAIL

lHE COUPON
BELOW

~;c~~A~;;;;;;;;;;- -li.-...:C;;O~L;,;L;,;E,;C~T:--.1

Alfred
Social Notes

t"'

THE RALPH

EMERY SttOW

I ,. .WMPO-f'M
"

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STEREO 921

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COR N

Phone 992 7336

I 16 3tp

OLD turn•ture oak tables
clocks 1ce bo)(es brass beds
dtSheS
or
complete
householdS Wrtle M
0
M1ller Rl 4 Pomerov Oh10
call 992 ~11 1
5 13 tfc
~~--~ - ---------

CASH pa1d for all makes and
models of mob ile homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tfc

--- -----

In pursuance W1lh an Order ot
Sale m Part lion 1ssued out of
the Cou rt ot Common Pleas of
Me1gs Cou nty Oh10 •n the case
of Glenn I
Cund1ft
Jr
Plamtlff liS Patnc •a Cundiff
Mar c mko et al
Defendants
bemg Case No 15 376 •n said
Court I wIt offer at publ iC
auc t1 0n at tile front door of tne
Court House at Pom eroy n sa •d
County on the 21st day of
January 197 4 at 10 00 0 Clock
A M
the followmg descnbed
real estate to w 1t
S•tuated •n tne TownShip of
Sutton County of Me1gs State
of Oh•o and •n the VIl l age of
Syracuse
Begmn1ng at an ~ron pin on
the north s1de of a 1.4 foot alley
tflence south 6lll• degrees east
158 feet from tt1e sout nea st
corner of the res1dence of
Martma McBride then ce north
12 degrees west 187 feet thence
north 02 112 degrees east 26 51h
feet to the south I me of Mrs J
W Shaver s lot I hence wlth
sa1d lme south 12 degrees east
130 feet to the northeast corn er
of a lot owned by the former
grantor, W S McBr ide thence
south 85 1h degrees west 100 feet
to the northwest corner of said
lot thence south 12 112 degrees
east 87 feet to the sou thw est
corner of sa1d lot and to the
north ltne of sa1d 14 foot alley
thence west a long t he north I me
of sa•d lane or alley 170 feet to
the place of beginnmg con
tam ng an acre more or tess
Except1ng and reservtng
from the aforesa•d reel estate 75
feet on the we st s1de th ereof
together with the r1ght to use a
14 foot alley whiCh was con
veyed by Ruth E Cundiff to
Kenneth Cundiff and Mary
Cundiff by deed dated February
8 1955, re corded m Deed Book
181 Page 639 of the Me,gs
County
Deed
Records
reference to wh1ch 1s hereby
made Also excep ttng and
reserv1ng a parce l 30 feet w1de
adtacent to th e east s1d e of the
parcel conveyed by Ruth E
Cund 1ff to Kenne t h Cund1H and
Mary Cundiff and descnbed as
follows Beg~nnmg on the north
S1de of the 14 tool alley and at
the southeast corner of that
certa1n parcel conveyed by
Ruth E Cundiff to Kenneth
Cund•ff and Mary Cund iff by
deed recorded 1c Deed Book 181
Page 6J9 of the Me1gs County
Deed Records thence In an
easterly dtrect•on along the
north S1de of said alley 30 feet
thencll! north 12 degrees west 187
feet to the north I me of the sa1d
one acre parcel thence south
82 'h degrees west 30 feet to the
northeast corner of the la nd
conveyed to Kenneth and M ary
Cund1ff as aforesaid thence
sou th 12 degrees east 187 feet
followmg the east l •ne of sa 1d
Cund !ff land to the place of
begmn1ng be 1ng a parcel of
land front1ng 30 feet on sa1d
all ey and extending northerly at
that Width to the north end of
sa1d one acre parcel together
w1th th e nght to use In common
W1lh all other persons lawfully
ent1tled to use the same, the 14
foot alley on the south s1de of
the real estate herein conveved
and extendmg mto the public
h•ghway as a means of Ingress
and egress to and from the satd
30 foot parcel to the publ1c high

Body Shop ,

GAS and OIL
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Res1dence, commercial or
mob1le homes Save on parts
&amp; labor

21S N 2nd Ave

Ph . 992-5271

'5.55

Lincoln Hill Pomeroy, 0

On Most Amencan Cars

Painting ASpecialty

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992-2094

Phone 992 JS09

All work guaranteed

DINNER RING l as t Thursday
Jan
10
n
VIC n ty
of
Pom eroy Reward Call W R
Manley 667 3226
1 17 6tp

Employment Wanted

slalled

SEC URITY guard work wan
t ed exper.enced Need lOb
badly Phone 992 6144 Russ
Eshelman
I 16 4fP

For Rent
SLEEPING room over w1ne
store m Pomeroy Reference
requ1red Call 992 5293
1 10 ttc
OFF ICE rooms for rent on 2nd
floor of ColliS bulld•ng over
Dutton s Drug Store Call 992
36.:11 or 9925141
1 4 12tc

---- ----

5 ROOM apartment w1th bath

ilnd l aundry ground floor
unfurn•shed
Brownell
Avenue Call 985 3974
1 13 4tp

3 ROOM furniShed house w1th
bath Adults only Phone 992

5592

1 10 tf c

FUR NISHED apartm ent
3
rooms and bath No pets
lnQu•re at Kay s Beauty
Salon 169 N Second M1d
dleport
1 17 6tc
LARGE unturn1shed Jrd floor
apt tor rent 1n downtown
Pomeroy 6 rooms and bath
Call q92 2789
1 17 tfc
J AND 4 ROOM furniShed and

unfurn•shed
apar t ments
Phone 992 5,j34
4 12 tfc
PRIVATE meeting room for
any organ tzst1 0n phone 992

3975

3 11 tfc

Auto Sales
1973 DUSTER
7631

318

Hollywood Squares 3 Wild Kingdom 10 Sale of lhe
Century 4, To Tell the Trulh 6 Ozzle s Girls 8 Beat the Clock
13 Johnnv Mann's Stand Up &amp; Cheer IS Zoom 20 Read1ng
Fo r the Classroom Teacher 33

1 15 7tc

1962 OLDSMOB ILE Star F1re
Phone Rex Roy 949 2091
1 16 3tc

Sale

1973 2 BEDROOM tra1ler 2
m 1les from Harnsonvllle 20
m 1nute dnve to m1nes Ca ll

'" 3821

1 17 tfc

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radtator to the
smallest Heater Core
Rad1ator Spec1al1st

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

A&amp;A HEATING

WOOD TRUSSES

INSTALLING
AND

I

s;f\)

Bu1ltto Your 'Specs

.

MATERIALS CO
773 5554
Mason, W Va

PHONE 843·2341

WILKINSON Small Eng1ne
Sales Repa1r on all sma ll
engmes
chan
saws.
prec1S10n ground 39q W Matn
Street Phone 992 3092
1 17 26tc

---------- -- --ELNA and Wh•te Sewing

Machtnes
Ser111 ce on all
makes Reasonable rates
The Sew•ng Center
Mid
dleport Oh1o
11 16 tfc

--------------PRICE CONSTRUCTION

Rootmg spout1ng kitchens
and bathrooms Complete
remodel1ng Phone 742 6273
12 J tfC

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

DOZER and back hoe work
ponds and sept1c tanks, d1t
chmg serv1ce top so•l fill
d1rt
limestone
B&amp;K E:.t
ca vatlng Phone 992 5367 or
9 1 tfc

N E IGLERS for building hOUses
and k1tchen cabmets Call
Guy Ne•gler Ractne Oh io
949 360.4
12 20 26tc

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

AUTOMOBILE In surance been
cancell ed.,
Lost
your
operators liCense Call 992
7428
61Stfc

----------

SeWING MACHINES Repair
service, all makes 992 2284
The Fabr1c Shop Pomeroy
Authonzed Singer Sa les and
Serv•ce We Sharpen SCissors
J 29 ttc

- - - --

For Sale

----------

For Sale

6 30 -

EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
sept •c
tanks Installed dump trucks
and lo boys for h ire w•tl haul
t1ll d1rt top soli l1mestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers dav phone 992 7089
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 992

S232

Blue R1dge Quartet 13

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

8
8

992-2094
606 E. Mam Pomeroy

9
9

9

10
10
11

Douglas 6

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay.

Jackpot' 3, 15

12 30 - Spl1l Second 6 Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Baffle 3 15
12 45 - Electric Company 33
12 55 - NBC News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Choldren 6 13 Concentrahon B Not lor
Women Only 15 Secret Storm 10
1 30-Threeona Malch3 4 15 AslheWorldTurnsB 10, Leis
Make A Deal 6 13
2 00-DaysofOur Llves3 4 15 Guiding L1ghl8, 10, Newlywed
Game 6 13
2 30- Doctors 3 4, lS Edge of Night 8 10 Girl In My L1le 6 13
3 00 - Another World 3 4, 15 General Hospital 6, 13, Pr1ce IS
R1ghl 10 8 Lock Stock and Barrell 20
3 30 - One Li te to L1ve 13, Phol Donahue 4 Match Game 8 10
Oh10 This Week 20 How To Survove A Marriage 3 15
4 00 - Mr Cartoon and the Banana Spills 3 Somerset lS
Sesame Slreet33, 20 Speed racer 6 Love American Style 13

BU I LD IN G
construCtiOn
remodeling and room ad
d1tions Also profess•onal
floor sJndmg and reftn1Sh1ng
Phone 949 3833
1 15 6tc
WILL trim or cut trees and
shrubbery Also cl ean out
basements , attic s, etc Call
949 322 1 or 742 4441
1 2 26tc

Real Estate For Sale

2 11 tfc

TEAFORD

DOZER work land cl earing by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w1th over
20 years experience Pullins
E:.tcavatmg Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 2478
12 19 tfc

Hinel 8 Mov•e

4 Gilligan s Island 6 Bonanza 15

s oo -

Bonanza 3, Merv Gnffm 4 Mission lmposstble 6 Andy
Griffith a Mtster Rogers20, JJ I Dream bf Jeannte 13

V11q1l B. T, .lfo•d '&gt;•
Brol{. ·•
l'CM• ·c hd111 ( &lt;;, l rf· f• l
Pnnwruy . Oh1o l'l/61.J

.

,

5 30- Beverly Hillbillies 8 Electric Co 33 Gomer Pyle USMC

13 Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Trails West IS
5 55 - Earl N1ghhngale 15
6 oo - News 3 4 8 10 15 ABC News 13 Sesame Slreel 20

¥fdkiiei&gt;Orl

G &amp; E Appliance Repa~r Phone
ES - In
at the shop 992 3802 or 949 Route 7 Loop Excellent for
4254
12 30 26tp houstng or bus.ness
WARM - 3 n•ce s11e bedrooms,
READY MIX
CONCRETE steam heat w1lh gas boller
delivered fight to your Modern k1tchen, d1sposa l 2
prolect Fast and easy Free lazy susans washer and dryer,
estimates Phone 992 3284 2
por c hes
and
garage
Goegteln Ready M1x Co
REDUCED
M•ddleport, Oh10
6 30 lfc TUPPERS PLAINS - 5 rooms
n1 ce bath
automatiC heat
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED Garage and one acre Only
REASONABLE rates, Ph 446 SB500 00
.4782 Galllpol•s John Russell SYRACUSE 3 bedrooms
Owner and Operator
w1lh closets bath furnace
5 12 tfc garage and nice lol

Adl ertan Counseling Techniques 33~ Truth or Consequences 6

6 30- NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6, CBS News 8. 10
Hogan's Heroes 13

What s My Lone? 8 Wold K1ngdom 13 I Spy 15, Electric Co

Stayman Convention not pushy
NORTH ID)
17
• J83
'KJ7
AK42
.. Ai09
WEST
EAST
• 76
• AK9
'A943
'85
• 96
+QJ1073
.. KJ843
.. Q65
SOUTH
• Qi0542
106 2

+

PLAYGROUND
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC -CHILDREN'S
Large
yard
for pnvacy 2
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED bedrooms washer dryer and
MILLER SAN ITATION , most furn1lure Only $7 500 00
STEWART OHIO PH 662 REDUCED - 6 room frame on
3035
level lot Back porch garage

All SIZES IN STOCK
Let Us Install Now 1

SUPFI&gt; SERVICE SrA

9 __ Jack w Carsey, Mgr

_. . , Phone 992-9932

t_
· ------....,--:'

EXCELSIOR Sail works E-' Main 51, Pomeroy All kinds
of salt water pellets , water
nuggets block salt and own
Ohio River Salt Phone 9'12
3891
"6 s tfc

----------.-------

400 LOCUST post
7336l

Phone

1 16 61P'

Phone 992

1 16 31P

I

&amp; THINGS

By Helen and Sue Hottel
She Drh e$ Him to Drink
What's wrong w1th me' Ever smce I met lh1s gt-eat grrl,
Donna, I overdrinll at part1es and make an 1d10t of myself 1 m
not a boozer, but1f th1s keeps on, she'll dump me
We're both college sophomores I met her th1s month after
she'd had a bad break-up w1tb a -guy shed bee n datmg mghl
months She took 11 hard, and says she doesn 't want another
ser1ous relallonsh1p nght now I can understand that because 1
don't want to Jump mto a b1g mvolvement e1ther When we are
alone and can talk !Qgether, we both agree to take 11 slow and
easy and JUs! let our friendship grow
So great Except that my crowd g1ves lots of parties, and of
course there 's always booze, wh1ch I never had any trouble w1th
before. But twice now I've taken Donna to a fnend's party where
I got dnmk and JUst went nuts I felt frustrated that I wasn 't
bemg more affectionate to her, and worned that 1f I tr1ed she'd
reJect me, and frant1c think1ng she probably wasn't havmg a
good lime, and so generally uneasy that I slugged 11 down and
ended up m a parking lot k1ckmg tires Usually I'm a hght
drmker
She forgave me and sa1d she understood, but if th1s happens
agam she'll probably th10k I'm hopeless I don t feel the need of
liquor' when I'm alone Wlth her How can 1 convmce he ~&gt; l'm not a
lush - and how can !keep from ~1ng one- and eventually have
her for my gJr!' Keep m mmd we can't avmd every campus
party - DAVID
Dav1d
1think your rrustake was m takmg Donna to parties g1ven by
YOUR fnends before you really got to know her When you
couldn't talk to her comfortably (mall that crowd) you turned to
something else -alcohol -to ease the tenswn But 11 onl) made
you dnmk, and so embarrassed you ran outs1de
Before you chance another party, take Donna out to dmner
bowling on a plcmc or even some long walks, where you can
really Jearn how you react on one another Show10g he• off to the
gang IS a poor way' to start a relabonshlp, especially when you're
both a httle unsure wh1ch way you want 11 tQ go - SUE

+++

You b1d foor clubs and your
partner b1ds four spades What do
youclonow?
LITTLE ORPHAN ANN:-

More and more, nostalg1a collectors are resurrectmg the
great old rad1o shows, re-recordmg or recreallng them on
reco rds or tapes, and domg very mcely w1th them, Indeed
W1th the nation hooked on a ' Great Gats by" Era, the over-40
cro\\d can boast many of 1ts heroes and heromes of "those
thnlhng days of yesteryear; as the announcer on the "Lone
Ranger" show used to put tt
Available are F1bber McGee and Molly, The FBI m Peace
and War, Sgt Preston of the Yukon, Little O!'phan Anme, Jack
Armstrong, George Burns and Grac1e Allen, to name just a few
Well, I have a favonte of my own that I'd pay cold hard cash
to hear agam - the marvelous parody of Westerns wh1ch Jack
Ben11y d1d for most of a" hole season under the lltle "Buck Benny
Rides Agam '
Benny \las at h1s peak, a far cry from the elderly old gentleman you) ounge1 folks are seemg th1s month m "Jack Benny's
Second Farewell Special " He was a gemliS of llm10g, the
protracted 'ms1de ' joke, the putdown of his supporting cast A
super-comedian w1th a super show m bnef
Why he dec1ded to do 'Buck Benny" at all escapes my
memory, and may be known only to Benny and his wnters But
along about 1936, I thmk 1t was, he began devotmg about ten
mmutes ofh1shalf-hour program (he owned 7 p m Sunday mghts
the way Arch1e Bunker owns 8 p m on Saturdays now) to this
travesty of the noble cowboy
They even brought 10 a guest star, Which was rare, so he
11 s pretty hard k~ekmg yourself, even when sober
I'm qmte sure Donna understands I'm also sure you didn't
go as w1Id' as you unagme But take Sue's adviCe and get to
kno" her better before you do much more partymg
Or else ask HER to watch YOUR drmk10g pattern
HELEN

+++

Dear Rap
Regardmg KOP s suggestiOn of' M1stress" m place of "Ms"
I agree wholeheartedly It makes a much mcer sound, and says,

l'm a woman, different but equal '

1

Dear DaVId
Look at 1t thiS way You wanted to make a great 1mpresswn,
and you figured a few drinks m1ght ease the tenswn You may
have slugged them down fast, hoping the new g1rl "ould
recogmzeyour statusw1th the crowd And nothmg chcked
When worry or frustrallon turn a light drmker mto a tern
porary "boozer," he's m double trouble he not only can't control
hls aellons, rut h1s consc1ence (wh1ch never geti'THAT drunk)
stands off to one s1de, watchmg Every tune he tr1ps over his feet
or hiS longue, Old Man Consc1ence wh1ps on the gullt w1th, Boy
you tore 11 that time," or "She'll never forget what a fool you re
makmR of yourself"'
So you ran outdoors to h1de And you k1cked t1res because
20 Av1ahon Weather 33
7 30 - Porter Wagoner l To Tell the Truth 6 Concen tr a t1on 8
Wall Street Week 20 New Trea sure Hunt iO Beat the Clock
13 Hollywood Squares 4
8 00 - Sanford and Son 3 4 15 Brady Bunch i 3 6 Wash •ngton
Revtew 20, 33 D1rty Sa llv 1 S 10
B 30 - Mountain Scene 33 Washington Sir a ght Ta lk 20 Mov1e
'Bells Are R1ng•ng' 10 S•x Mtll ion Doll a r Man 6 13 Lot sa
Luck' 3 4, 15, Movie The Undefea ted 8
9 00 - Masterpiece Theater 33 Gtrl W th Som et hmg Extr a J tl

15 Sloge Center 20

9 30 - Brian Keith 3 4 15 Odd Couple 13 Owes G~rls 6
10 00 - News 20 Mounta 1n Scene 33 Toma 6 13 Dean Martm 3
4 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4 15 In Concert 6 Movte Genests II
8 T1ger By the Ta1 l ' 13 Mutmy In Outer Space 10
1 00 - M1dn1ght Spec1al 3 4 New s 13
1 15- Movie Portratt 1n Terror 10
2 30 - Focus on Columbus 4

3.00- News

BY PAUL CRABTREE

~

Women have made so much headway recently that I'm sure
1t wouldn't be any problem overcoming the former had lm·
phcahon of the word 'mistress " - H H

Jll111~'&amp;rn;.':f..:::~-t.=
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordmary words.

I REESH

[)

)

ISll.AMY, I
C/PTED
V)

I
HOL.c:&gt; UP IN

THE

EMCK.

I

Now

O!'I"IU1Ce

discount

2. Sacrificial

1tem

13. Hades'

Slte

chief
rJver
U.Zoroas
tnan of
Bombay
15. Suffered
from

3. Order,

demand
(4 wds)
4 Put
right
5 Complain
6. Plowed
ground
1. Exclude
8. See 3
Down
(2 wds)
9.Even
smaller

16.Sur

rounded
by
17. Goal
18. 'Ivanhoe"
herome
20. Inlet

(Sp)

Yesterday's Answer
12. Insect
27 Flower
(2 wds )
cluster
16. Simple
29 Amencan
19 Sagactous
snake
22 T1ff
30 Dentists
23 Blow
sug·
one's top
gestion
(2 wds )
34 Equal
24 Ta lllnn 1S
36. Oklahoma
1ts cap1tal
c1ty
25 - dnnk
37 Pasture

21. Telegraph 1

22. Bnllsh
carbtne
2!. Reason
ableness
25. Bl&amp;
spender

1,.,-4--1-+-

Z6.Famlly

that ruled
Ferrara
111. Pamted
pony
28. AngloSaxon
letter
.119. Roof
beam
S1. Small

m+-1--W!i

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter elmply etandJ for another In this eample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,
1postrophes, the length 1nd fonnatlon of the wordJ are all
blnll Each day the code !etten are different

the etreleclletton

to form 1M ourprlH INWer, u

I III J

(A.wwn la••~n~w)

Junobl•" LEGAL MILKY VACUUM DEADLY
Anowuo

DOWN
I Kmd of

CRYPTOQUOTES

by the above cutaon.

I

40. Cognizant
41 South·
west
wmd

II

I~=::::;~1:,;2~~~·
I
=;;;~-~~;·u~r;reotod
IL _Pril :.:.=.,:lli :..:•='=IIISE::..::AIISWII=:..::•::.:.__.JI r I
'Ve1lerd•r'•

ACROSS
L Leg Plll"l
S. Moroccan
c1ty
10. Turkish
reg1ment
11. School
supply

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:

II

!I

by THOMAS JOSEPH

SS, Wee taste
35. Twine
37. Smooth
consonant
18. Crown
19. Add!·
tlonaliy

.

I tJ

~lteVJtd

deer
IZ. Officiate

·.~T:.=-

iiiYPON
1 I

could have a comic s1deklck (Most cowboys had a com1c
s1dekick In those days - usually Gabby Hayes or AI "F uzzy" Sl
.John or Pat Buttram ) He was Andy Devme, a good funnyman m
h1s own r1ght, Wlth a vmce like a road grader
Anyhow, "Buck" rolled along week after week, w1th the plot
gomg nowhere m part1cular, but with some of the funmest lines
ever written I was only slx or seven, but the hwnor was there for
me, as well as those ten limes my age It was nonsense, but what
wonderfully conlr1ved nonsense lt was
So, yo\Dlger people out there, when you see Benny - an
agmg, anacromstic f1gure 10 today's hiP world, remember that
here 1s a man who was enormously funny m hiS day - and a long
day 11 was, at that

C../4 6e 0

~~q,..,_

VM FB LMANVNTS
OV

VXB

VML

VM FB YNAVOGBE

MU

MEB'A

TMNWB -

OYF!MAB FNBIWB
Yelllerd11'1 CrJptoqaote: WITH WISDOM YEARS CAN
KEEP US YOUNG IN HEART AND MIND WITHOUT IT WE
GROW OLD -DORE SCHARY

IJo liN &lt;Milby- A YALLIY

&lt;O tn• Klq Fo•w- BrUiuto, I...l

East West vulnerable

•.. West
"
-.. Pass
Pass

North
IN T
2+
Pass

Eaot
Pass
Pass

South

2•

2•

Pass

Openmg lead -Q+

_._____________________

~

0~

YEAH I R.EMEM8'R t:I!EADIN~
A&amp;O UT ATTEMPTS 'TO TRACE THEM ~

~

THEY

ve

NEVER TURNED LIP

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

,
When you play the Jacoby
transfer you use Stayman
along w1th 11 The form of
Stafman we use 1s what we
cal very non·forcmg, m that
the two-club response re·
qu1res the opener to reb1d two
diamonds unless he has a
four card major If he holds
two four·card majors he b1ds
the better one
South has a bad hand w1th
four hearts and f1ve spades.
He doesn't hke to leave h11
partner m one notrump and
playmg the Jacoby form of
Stayman he can afford to b1d
two clubs He mtends to pall
1f Nortl\ b1ds e1ther major but
North b1ds two d1amonds
whereupon South goes to two
spades and plays the hand

WINKLE

•
SHI:S NOT BAD

BAa &lt;;o SCOIJ WITH 1lle

NOT BAD AT

CAAISfl •;!,M~I%~~~

ALL

0
0

0

there
Why does he use Stayman
and not a transfer to two
spades' Because 1f his
partner does hold four heart.
he wants to have the hand
epa des

i~?UIGI~~~~~~~~~; ~

- play
The.mplay
thatatsmt
two1nstead
spades of
is f:j~
11mple and successful South
wms the d1amond lead in
dummy and plays a trump.
West wms and can hold South
to h1s contract 1! he shifts to
h1s doubleton heart and Ellst
ducks Otherwise, South wlll
score an overtnck by Ios1ng
Just one club, one heart ana
two trumps
Tomorrow we'll show how
to respond w1th a good hand
and 5·4 m the majors

IF YOUR OIL FURNACE

2

ALLEY OOP
ALTHOUGH THAT
..JOKE- COST TE-N

MILLVUN DOLLARS
MAH SENSE- 0 HOOMER

CAINT

W~ERE

ARE ZEL

A ND TH K\OS? I
DIDN'T SI:E EM
A~N0 1

SAYIN'

1NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

is not working properly in your trailer
or home

IT COULD
SHORE
USE ONE

SWITCH TO AN
The b1dd1ng has been
17
North Eaot South
West
Pass I+
Pass
"
Pass a
Piss
Pass '
You, South, hold
J 8 5 •2 +A Q 10 8 5
43
What do yoo do oow?
A - Bid four clubs The time

LP GAS FURNACE

1•

!!if! ·~

•K

RUTLAND FURNITURE
1

~

2•

.K

has come te lbow yeur 1trenglb

There lliiJ' well .. 1 ehlb 111m.

f

.·..~

• 85

'

budget terms Coli 992 3•65
PH. 742-4211
RUTLAND, O.
- - - - - - - - - - - 1~ 1 t"'
fc,_-l_ _ _ _ _..::_
" .....:._..:.,.:.;..:.....
· ~----------'

•

;:;:·&gt;::::·:::·: ·:::::-:::::&gt;:·~:·::::::::·:·::::::

.. 72

'':'"'" CALL

STEREO RADIO am fm, 8
track tape comb• nation, 4 way
speaker
sound
system
Balance $102 66 or use our

.. ..

'Q

___________

60";000 BTU Gas heater
992 2602

..

10 30 - Who Is Man? 33
11 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Janaki3J

WIN AT BRIDGE

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

PoSitive ~top and Go In Mud

Truth or Conseouences 3 Beat the Clock 4 News 10 6 ,

7 00 -

•

The Great Amer'lcan Pastime' 10

4 JO - Gr~n Acres 3, Lucy Show B Got ligan 's Island 13, TBA

Real Estate For Scile

&amp; Snow

Street 33 Jells Colloe 6
30 - Dick Van Dyke 13 Brady Bunch 6
15 - News 13
00 - AM 3 Paul D1xon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Abbott and
Coslello 8 Fnendly Ju nction 10 Movoe 13, W1ld Wold Wesl6
30 - To Tell the Truth 3 Secret Storm 8
55 - Chuck Wh1le Reports 10
00 - Dinah Shore 3, IS Jokers W1ld 8 10 Company 6
30 - $10,000 Pyram1dB, 10 Jeopardy' 3 4 15
00 - Wizardof0dds3 4 15, Gambll lO 8 Password 13 M1ke

11 30 - HollywoodSquares3 415 BradyBunchl3 Loveolllfe
8 10, Sesame Slreet 33
11 55 - CBS NewsB Dan Imel s World 10
12 00 - Password 6 News B 10 13 Bob Braun's SO SO Club 4

Pets For Sale

ELECTR:OLUX Sweeper deluxe
model
Complete with al~ _
c leanmg attachments and
uses paoer bags Slightly used
but cleans and looks new Will
sell for S37 25 cash or terms
.availab le Phone 992 2984
1 14 t-tc

Sunnse Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
Consumers World 10 Folk Literature 3
Farm Report 13
Pa ul Harvey 13
F tve Mmutes to L1ve By 4 News 6 B1ble Answers 8

6 35 - Columbus Today 4
6 45 - Farm•ng 10 Morn•ng Report 3
1 00 - Today 3 4 IS CBS News 8 10 Farmer's Daughter 13
P1xanne 6
7 30 - New Zoo Revue6 Rocky and Bullwmkle 13
8 00 - Captam Kangaroo 6 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame

WE HAVE all your upholsterv
needs
Burlap
denim ....
SALT FOR I CE AND SNO\.
cambr~c foam glue Zippers.
10 4 t fc wtth ultiJty tn town $3500 00
Rock salt for townships
ra ck tn g str1p springs and
towns and busmesses 1n
cl1ps
ch1pboard
button SEPT IC
TANKS cleaned
bulks and bags for ICe and
twine sew1ng thread legs ~
Modern San. tat•on 992 3954 or SE LLING REAL ESTATE IS A
snow E:.tcels1or Salt Works
LOT OF TROUBLE AN
upholst ery books, dacron,
9.2 734.
Phone 9q2 3891
SWER
ING THE PHONE,
webbing sprmg twine, tacks
10
23
ttc
l l l l t fc
welt cord, cotton swivel
GETT IN G THE PROSPECTS
Darts TO SEE, AND ADVERTIS;!Hf;
bases and foam foam foam SWEEPER ReDalfs
supplies, 446 0294 10 a m 5
Pomeroy Recovery 622 East
LOSE weight w1th New Shape
p m Davis Vacuum Cleaner IS HIGH CALL US, AND LET
Ma~n Street Pomeroy Phone
Tablets and Hydrex Water
Store Georges Creek Road, VIRG DO IT
992 75S4
Pills at Dutton Drug m
next to Bob's CB Rad10 Sales
12
23
26tc
Middleport &amp; Nelson Drug
1 16 ltc
1 15 Jtc
VACUUM Cleaners new 1973
Model
Complete with all IF YOUR oil furnace 1S not
FR IDAY AND SATURDAY
workmg right In vour tra1ler
cleaning tools Small pamt
JANUARY 18TH &amp; 19TH
or home, switch to LP Gas
damage
m
Sh
ipping
Will
take
1974 9a m toBp m TRUCK
Furnace
Call
R uti and
$21 cash or budget plan
LOAD SALE OF FACTORY
Furniture Company, 742 4211
available Phone 992 2984
SECOND LIVING ROOM
1 16 6tc
12 18 lie
SUITES THE SE TWO DAYS
ONLY PLU S BIG SAVINGS PAINT DAMAGE, 1973 ZIG FOR etectn ca l plumbmg and
ON OUR REGULAR STORE
remodeling work Call 8.43
ZAG SE WING MACHINES
STOCK PLUS 10 PCT (}'FF
2341 for FREE ESTIMATES
Stil
l
in
ono•nal
cartons
No
ON ALL UPHOLSTERY
1 11 26tc
attachments
needed
as
our
SUPPLIE S AND FABRICS 8 controls are built In Sews
TRACK TAPES
GOSPEL
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
ROCK
COUNTRY
&amp;
buttonholes sew on buttons AKC Toy Poodle Pupp1es
WESTERN ONLY 9 AM TO
monograms, and blind hem
$75 00 1 Stamese K1ttens 515
8
PM
FRIDAY
AND
stttch Full cash pnce S3'B 50
Phone 1 256 6247
SATUR DAY JANUARY 18th
budget plan avanable
1 10 26tc
11.
19th
POMEROY orPhone
992 2984
RECOVERY 622 E MAIN
12 18 tfc AKC Cairn Terr~ors 6 weeks
STREET,
POMEROY
old
Mate
and
female
PHONE 992 7554
Champion line , SlOO Phone
MIDDLEPORT - Traoler
1 15 41C SI NGER Automatic Zig Zag
Sewing Mach1nes, In sewlno
949 4609
space
and
Home
4
table Makes buttonholes Jl
1 10 5t c
1971 12 X 60 REBEL mobile
bedrooms Bath Cellar &amp;
sews
on
buttons
blind
he
ms
home tot 100 x 200 1949 Ford
Garage Several lots 1n
etc Top notch cond•tton Pay
p1ckup truck runs good
eluded MAKE AN OFFER
S51 or terms ava11able Phone
Phone 667 3347
992 2984
TUPPERS PLAINS
DESIRABLE two bedroom
I 15 6tp
12 18 tfc
house In Middleport, ready to
MU ST SELL - MOVING occupy Call 992-5310
9 FT X 12 FT gold and brown
3 nice BRs, large closets
123026tc
o11al bra ,ded rug S30 500 GROCERY busmess for sale
Lovely bath K1tchen has lots
Bulld •no _tqr sale or lease
bates m 1xed hay 50c a bale
of
cabmets Range and Oven
Phone
771=5118
from
8
30
p
m
NEW 3 bedroom home Ph bath
Phone Chester 985 3333
Uftllty room 3 vrs old 1/~
to
10
p
m
tor
appointment
garage
basement
on
Gravel
I 15 3tc
acre $16 000 00
J 20 lie
Htll Middleport Natural gas
already
In
Phone
Dale
POMEROY - PI? story
FOAM to f1ll your old couch and SINGER sewmg machines 1972
Dutton, 992 3369 even•nas
frame 3 BR w1th closets
chair cushions as low as
model In beautiful walnut
992 2534
Bath Gas furnace, Carpeted
$10 95 Upholstery books only
cabinet Makes design stlt
1 17 ttc
Paneling, Porch Basement
SOc, 4 mch covered foam
ches zig zag buttonholes,
mattresses for standard size
W Utohly N1ce lol ASKING
blmd hems etc Like new HOME 4 rooms and 112 bath
bed ,
$29 95
Pomeroy
$10 000 00
Only
S89
95
Call
Ravenswood
downstairs
3
rooms
and
full
Recovery
622 E
Main
MIDDLEPORT
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
bath\ upstairs
Basement
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
12
7
tfc
MODERN
BUILDING with
garage
and
shop
Call
12r23 26tc
Young's Market, Middleport
busmess room &amp; apartment
Oh lo 992 3094
3 BR {Lots of closets), 1'12
UPHOLSTERY Fabncs by )he COAL FOR SALE JAYMAR
1 17 41p baths, D1ning room , N1ce
COAL
COMPANY
THE
yard 54 Inches wide as low as
MEIGS &amp; GALLIA LINE
$1 95 per yard velvets as low
Hardwood floors
STATE ROUTE 7 AT SPACIOUS bl Level and split kitchen
as $3 45, Imported velvet,,
(carpeting over) A1r cond
CHESHIRE
OPEN
7
AM
level homes are now under
S9 95 We also have nylon
Gas Hot Water Heat up and
TILL 6 30 PM 5 DAYS A
construction on c1ty water
Herculon
co tton prints
down 2 garages
WEEK
PHONE
992
5693
and sewer
Many deluKe
vinyls and remnants by the
BUY A HOME OWN SOME
' 14 5t c
features mcludmg l l f con
yard or by the p iece Pomeroy
OF THE BEST COUNTRY
dltlonmg
Best fmanclng
Recovery
622 East Ma.n
CLOSE OUT on new Z1g Zag
IN THE WORLD , THE
available Other type homes
Street, Pomeroy Phone 992
Sew.ng Machmes For sew.ng
m d1fferent areas on F H
GOOD
OLD USA
75S4
stretch fabncs buttonholes,
Adm financing w1th no down
12 23 26tc
HENRY
E CLEI.AND
laney designs etc
Paint
payment Call collect (837
BROKER
slightly blem1shed Choice of
6540) or wnte to MEIGS
9'12 2259
carry1 ng case or sew1ng
DEVELOPMENT, P 0 BOX
If
no
answer
992 2S68
st.snd ,,.9 80 cash or terms
33 Middleport , Oh10 .4S76D
It's Snow Tire T•mP.!
ava•lable Phone 992 2984
1 9 tfc
•_l~ tfc

CO-OP COUNTRY
SOUIRE 120

News 4

6 15 6 20 6 25 -

FURNITURE

C BRADFORD Auct1oneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821
Rac1ne Ohio
Cntt Bradford
5 1 tfc

Movtes Movies Movtesl 6 13

FRIDAY, JAN 18,1974

and

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

15, Kung Fu

Johnny Carson 3 15

2 00 -

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Res1dence and
Mob1le Homes

4,

Movoes. The Rounders' 8 ' The Queen of Babylon' ' 10
1 00 - Tomorrow 3, 4 N~ws 13

Phone 992 2798
Kerr Street
Pomeroy, Ohto

I

6 13

10 30 - CBS News Spec1al 10, Travelure 33
News8 1013 Janaki33,News3 4 6,15

11 OO 11 30 -

OICK SEYLER. Owner

REPAIR

Delivered lo Job Sole

00 - IronSide 3

6 00 -

Pomeroy

F~rehouse

6 13 College Baskelball 8.
Evemng at Pops 20 Movie' The Horror at 37,000 Feet' '0
Evemng at Pops 33
10 OO - News20 WholsMan?J3,StreetsofSanFranCisCo6 13 ,
Mustc Country U S A 3 4, 15
9

We Slnp Pa1nt Varmshes,
etc from Furniture
Ant1ques Modern Metals
We buy Anttques Coltec
llbles, etc
Ptck up Serv1ce Avatlable

SMITH NElSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph ••2 2174

TheWaltonsB. 10 Trial By Wilderness
3 4, IS Chepper One 6 13

00 - Advocat~20,33

8 30 -

"STRIPPERS'"

Nathan Biggs

Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992-7089
N1ghl 992 3525
or 992-5232

Phone 992

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

Of

Mulligan Stew 33

7 30 -

Hoard House

See or Call

992 3861

1970 FORD Falcon Stat 1on
Wagon 6 cyl.nder, automa tiC
Sl 150 Phone 992 : 194
1 16 3tc

For Rent

20 Truth or Conseq 3 Lets Make A Dealll Sports Desk 15

Dick's

Water Ltnf:S and Power
Lmes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and septic tanks 1n

15

7 00 - Beallhe Clock 4 What s My L1ne B, News 10,6 Elec Co

606 E Ma1n, Pomerov 0

DITCHING SERVICE

4

Insight 33'

News 15 , ABC News 6 Hogans Heroes 13, Your Future Is
Now 33

8

':.&gt;'&amp;,..~~·~':$:,)~~...;;-

Generation Rap

6 30 - News 3 4: CBS News 8, 10, Your Fulure Is Now 33, NBC

Open8 TotS
Monday lhru Saturday

Lost

- - - - --

Truth or Consequences 6

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Area's Most
Reasonable Pr1ces

Middleport

THURSDAY, JAN 17, 1974
6 00 - News 8 10 Sesame Sl 20 JIBl: News 13 News 3

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Gene's

P&amp;J HEATING
AND COOUNG

Television Log

- --~-- -

NOTICE OF SALE

BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance
Th•s could be your
Jan 13 was 97 Offermg for all
golden opportunity to
serv1ces was $200 50 There
GUN Shoot January 12 6 p m
learn
bus1 ness
.M'1I~ H1ll
Road
Factory
were 18 choir members
choked guns on l y Assorted
methods, save money
present Fifty-e1ght attended
meats Sponsored by Racme
for clothing or college,
F tre Dept
worship
service
1 15 4tc
wm pnzes These and
The M A H A rally w11l be
many other benef1ts FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
held at the local church Jan 29
JANUARY 18th and 19th
are
ava1lable
to
Everyone 1s mv1ted
1974 9a m toSp m TRUCK
LOAD SALE OF FACTORY
deserv1ng
Senl1nel
The LLM w11l meet Jan 26 at
SECOND
LIV IN G ROOM
earners
the
home of Mr and Ml"ll
SUITES THESE TWO DAYS
ONLY P~US BIG SAVINGS R1chard Fr1end for a sausage
ON OUR REGULAR STORE
For years, The Sen
,
STOCK PLUS 10 PCT OFF and pancake breakfast
ON ALL UPHOLSTERY
Mr
and
Mrs
Phil
W1se,
!mel has helped young
SUPPLIES AND FABRICS B
McCvnnelsv1lle attended
people develop the
TRACK T APES
GOSPEL
ROCK
COUNTRY
&amp;
Sunday
mornmg worsh1p
attnbutes and talents
WESTERN ONLY S2 50
serv1ce
at
the local church
way
EACH
FREE
COFFEE
AND
wh1ch spell success 1n
DONUTS OPEN 9 AM TO 8
Also the follOWing described
Klmberlee
Kay
Alk1re,
adult l1fe
FRIDAY
AND
p M
real estate Situat ed In the
SATURDAY JANUARY 18th Colwnbus, who IS a student at County of Me1gs and State of
and
19th
POMEROY Ohw State Umvers1ty, made a Oh10 and '" 100 Acre Lot No
RECOVERY 633 E MAIN
299 m Town No 7 and Range
grade of 3 02 M1ss Allure IS a No 13 of the Ohio Companv s
ST POMEROY PHONE 992
A route m1ght be open
Purchase and bounded and
7554
granddaughter of Mrs Bertha descnbed
m your neighborhood,
1 15 4t C
as follows to w1t
Parker
Begmn•ng a t the southeast
to f1nd out
NOTICE oil shortage Oil land
of the sa1d John Me
Mr and Mrs Calvm Lane, corner
for lease 1n Southern Oh10
Br1de s 6 93 100 acre lot In said
Middleport, Mr and Mrs 100 Acre Lot No 299 thence
lnqu~re to George Newberry
p
0
Box 1485
Yuma
95 feet thence west 100
Thomas Lane and children , north
feet
thence south 87 teet
Arizona 853641
I 15 Jtc Harnsonv1lle Road, were then ce east 100 feet to the place
beg Inn 1ng
dinner guests Chr1strnas day of of Deed
Reference Volume 202
Mr and Mrs Chff Klem
Page 155, Meigs County Deed
Mrs Pearl Jacobs, who fell Records
The appra1sed value ot the
.,
at her home, 1s 1mprovmg very real estate 1S 52 soo 00
14 R1vers1de Dr
Sa1d real estat e Is s1tuated on
well
Carroll Str!!"et Carroll Street
Athens, Oh1o
The W M S met Tuesday •ntersects State Route No 12,.
th e east and 1s a dead end
evemng at the home of Mr and on
Btll Wade Auct1oneer
toward the west There 1S no
Mrs Uoyd Wnght
house number
SALE EVERY
Terms of sa l e Cash 1n hand
Leana Karr has been upon
del•very of deed
reported 1ll
SATURDAY
Robert C Hartenbach
Della Stahl and Bertha
NIGHT 7 PM
SherIff of
Parker attended the quilting at
Me1gs County
Consignments
ac·
Ohio
the Semor Citizens Monday (121 20 27 Ill 3Pomeroy
cepted 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
10, 17 SIC
dally, or w1ll pay cash
for your household
afems.
KIDNEY REMOVED
PHO~E 593-5035
TAMPA, Fla (UP!) - Gene
W1lhams, All-Southern Confer·
l
Sunday Schoolattendance'on ence safety at V1rginla
I
PARTY LINES
Jan 13 was 44, the offermg M11itary Inst1tute last season,
I THE DAILY SENTINEL
COURT ST
1 COLUMBUS (UP!) ,
$18 76 Worsh1p serv1ces were was hsted m farr cond1tlon
I Democrahc legiSlators praiSed '"'
' "ld a t II o'c1oc k , Wl th th e Rev Tuesday after removal of a
I POMEROY, OHIO 4576•
I
I Gov John J Gilligan's 'State Meei'O brmgmg the message kidney that was damaged In
4
I of the State" message Tuesday from Acts 11 19-26 "And They the Amencan Bowl Game Jan
I
I mght as "comprehensive," Were Called ChrisUans Frrst m 6
W1lhams, 22, underwent
I
I while Republicans cnticiZed Anhoch", • What Is A
surgery
Monday night at
l
NAME
lthe message as "hombly Chr1Silan'" (Believer,
1 Disciple,
Follower, and Tampa General Hospital for
I bland" and "vague"
I
1
•'!' Brother) Attendance was 42 removal of the kidney
!----A-:-G-:-E- - - - 1
Offering $23 54, Pledges $59 50
Your
Favonle
Counlry
Due to the fuel shortage, our
I Mus1c Stars V1s1t On
1
Wednesday evening Prayer Bottom, 0 , on Saturday
1-----:c::-::-:::-:::c:----1
Services wlll not be held dur10g
Mr and Mrs Hobart Swartz
ADDRESS
I
the montbof January But each werr11ble to attend church
I
member Is asked to malntam Sunday here, after several
1
the devotional tune, 7 45, of weeks absence, due to the
!---------1
4:30 TO 5:30
these serv1ces m a combmed after-effects of the flu
CITY
effort of Prayer and Pra!Se m
1
Martha Elliott attended
1
Monday thru Fnday
his own home
cf)urcll here ~un¢iy morning
On
Mr
and Mrs
Arthur
School and maU were closed
f---'-------1
Atherton assisted w1th but- off by h1gh water last Friday
ZIP CODE
1
chermg at the home of their
Rev and Mrs Robert Meece
I
1
•
•
son, Mr and Mrrs Clarence called at the Charles D. Woode
MIOOieporl Pomeroy
Atherton and family, at Long home la st Monday
~tr

Call
992-2156

Wanted To Buy

~

•
HE OOESNT SEEM 10 I-lAVE
100 MAN'i AIIX 'ETIE5

�'

•
9 - The Daily Sentmel, M1ddleport·Pomeroy, 0., Jan 17, 1974

Business Services

BOYS

WANT ADS

INFORMATION

2 SIGNS
OF

DEADLINES

il P M Day Before PubH cal10n
' ) .. Monday Dead lin~ 118 'fl1
Ca ncellatiOn Correctors
w I! be accepted until 9 a m for
Day of P.ubl cati on

QUALITY

REGULATIONS

The PubliSher reserves t he
nght to edt! or re1ect any ads
deemed obtect•onal
The
publ iSher Will not be respon
Sible tor more than one 10
correc t lnser t1on

1?12 CHEVROLET BELAIR

G

3c

dLIN DADS
Add•flonal 25c Charge per
Advert•sement
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 am toto5 0012p 00
m Da1
ly
8 30 a m
Noon
Sat.urd ay

1•12 NOVA 2 DOOR

on

1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER

engrne lockmg frt hubs automatiC
trans power steenng &amp; brakes rad1o veh cle of many
uses custom tnm sharp l owner

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES 8 00 P.M
POMEROY, OHIO

'--- --------------------....1

Help Wanted

WANTED
PAPER CARRIER

Hug" Ledhert
1 16 3t p
SHO O T N G Mat ell Rac rne Gun
Club Sunday Jan 20 1 p m

11

Assorted meats
choked guns only

factory
1 16 3t c

L I VING

ROOM

sudes

rn

modern and Med rterranean
sty les You r chorce of colors
1n
velvets or nylon wrth

OR OLDER

Sco t chgard
Only
$27 9 95
whrle th ey la st
Pomeroy
Recovery 622 E Marn Street

Pomeroy

BE A
PAPER
CARRIER.

Phone 992 7554
I 10 8tc

INCOME Tax ::ierv iCf' 9 am to
5 p m Dady except Sunday
even1ngs by appointment
only Co Rd 22 o ff Rt 7
bypa ss Phone Wanda Ebl•n
992 2272
1 2 JOtc

WANTED IN
POMEROY
PHONE 992-2156

lHE
DAILY SENTINEL
POMEROY, 0.
NEED woman to 1 ve n and
take mothers place of 2
childr en m a new respectab l e
home You may also hav e 1
child of your own Phone 992
2536
I 8 tfc

KOSCOT KOSMETICS

&amp; WIGS
We have the product on hand
and we deliver to you per
sonally Helen Jane Brown
992 51 13
12 30 ti C

S&amp;G GARAGE
Bradbury
across WMPO Rad10 phone
992 2942
Grand
open1ng
Monday Now through Ja n D IR ECT Sa le s D1s tr 1buto rs
31 a V 8 tuneup 527 95 Free
wanted for v 1tam 11iS and
lube lob w •th o I cha nge
organ c products Part or full
1 13 12tc
t1me For •ntervlew wr te
Mary Engl e RR 1 Box 19
Un1on OhiO 45322
I 16 161p

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

WANT to h1re someone to do
general housework 3 days a
week Phone 992 2623
1 16 tf c

DELIVER
The
Daily

....

"'"'" ,

ATTRACTIVE outgomg g 1rl 18
32 Manager for Jewel T1me
Jewe lr y part1es 1n Me .gs
County Opportun1ty to make
$7 000 th1 s year Phone Jef
trey 304 422 0929
1 17 4tp

A

SHOOTING MATCH
Forked
Run Sportsman Club noon
Sunday Fac tory choked guns
only
1 17 Jtc

Sentinel

52895

.J wh dnve 350 V a

the school

bu s are not msured on my
pr vate property S gned

$2295

307 V 8 eng me au tomalt c w1 lh power sfeermg good w w
t.res Rally wheels body mldgs rad10 wh1te fl m sh &amp;
spotless clean mter~or A r eal stopper &amp; priCed way below
ctty !)riCes

Notrce
T H E CHILDREN

52495

4 door loca l1 owner car w1th less than 15 000 miles bctge
ltmsh blk v1nyl top good w w t.res standard V 8 eng r~ e
automaf1c power steenng &amp; brakes rad1o spotless clean
ll)tenor Want a sharp car a t the pnce of ave rage car?

RATES

For Want Ad Serv1ce
5 cen ts per Word one •nsert1on
Mln•mum ChargeS I 00
14 cents per word three
conse clJiille 1ns er t1o ns
26 cents per word s. x con
secut•ve •nse r t1ons
25 Per Cent D1Scounl on pad
ads and ads pa•d w lhm 10
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 tor 50 word m n
1mum Each~ add 1f10nal word

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

News Notes

SHOOTING MATCH
Horner
H1ll Gun Club Rt 143 Sun
day Jan 20 12 I"'OOn Fac tory
choked guns only
1 17 3tc

B&amp;G AUCTION

•

OR Fill OUT

AND MAIL

lHE COUPON
BELOW

~;c~~A~;;;;;;;;;;- -li.-...:C;;O~L;,;L;,;E,;C~T:--.1

Alfred
Social Notes

t"'

THE RALPH

EMERY SttOW

I ,. .WMPO-f'M
"

'------------l

STEREO 921

'

COR N

Phone 992 7336

I 16 3tp

OLD turn•ture oak tables
clocks 1ce bo)(es brass beds
dtSheS
or
complete
householdS Wrtle M
0
M1ller Rl 4 Pomerov Oh10
call 992 ~11 1
5 13 tfc
~~--~ - ---------

CASH pa1d for all makes and
models of mob ile homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tfc

--- -----

In pursuance W1lh an Order ot
Sale m Part lion 1ssued out of
the Cou rt ot Common Pleas of
Me1gs Cou nty Oh10 •n the case
of Glenn I
Cund1ft
Jr
Plamtlff liS Patnc •a Cundiff
Mar c mko et al
Defendants
bemg Case No 15 376 •n said
Court I wIt offer at publ iC
auc t1 0n at tile front door of tne
Court House at Pom eroy n sa •d
County on the 21st day of
January 197 4 at 10 00 0 Clock
A M
the followmg descnbed
real estate to w 1t
S•tuated •n tne TownShip of
Sutton County of Me1gs State
of Oh•o and •n the VIl l age of
Syracuse
Begmn1ng at an ~ron pin on
the north s1de of a 1.4 foot alley
tflence south 6lll• degrees east
158 feet from tt1e sout nea st
corner of the res1dence of
Martma McBride then ce north
12 degrees west 187 feet thence
north 02 112 degrees east 26 51h
feet to the south I me of Mrs J
W Shaver s lot I hence wlth
sa1d lme south 12 degrees east
130 feet to the northeast corn er
of a lot owned by the former
grantor, W S McBr ide thence
south 85 1h degrees west 100 feet
to the northwest corner of said
lot thence south 12 112 degrees
east 87 feet to the sou thw est
corner of sa1d lot and to the
north ltne of sa1d 14 foot alley
thence west a long t he north I me
of sa•d lane or alley 170 feet to
the place of beginnmg con
tam ng an acre more or tess
Except1ng and reservtng
from the aforesa•d reel estate 75
feet on the we st s1de th ereof
together with the r1ght to use a
14 foot alley whiCh was con
veyed by Ruth E Cundiff to
Kenneth Cundiff and Mary
Cundiff by deed dated February
8 1955, re corded m Deed Book
181 Page 639 of the Me,gs
County
Deed
Records
reference to wh1ch 1s hereby
made Also excep ttng and
reserv1ng a parce l 30 feet w1de
adtacent to th e east s1d e of the
parcel conveyed by Ruth E
Cund 1ff to Kenne t h Cund1H and
Mary Cundiff and descnbed as
follows Beg~nnmg on the north
S1de of the 14 tool alley and at
the southeast corner of that
certa1n parcel conveyed by
Ruth E Cundiff to Kenneth
Cund•ff and Mary Cund iff by
deed recorded 1c Deed Book 181
Page 6J9 of the Me1gs County
Deed Records thence In an
easterly dtrect•on along the
north S1de of said alley 30 feet
thencll! north 12 degrees west 187
feet to the north I me of the sa1d
one acre parcel thence south
82 'h degrees west 30 feet to the
northeast corner of the la nd
conveyed to Kenneth and M ary
Cund1ff as aforesaid thence
sou th 12 degrees east 187 feet
followmg the east l •ne of sa 1d
Cund !ff land to the place of
begmn1ng be 1ng a parcel of
land front1ng 30 feet on sa1d
all ey and extending northerly at
that Width to the north end of
sa1d one acre parcel together
w1th th e nght to use In common
W1lh all other persons lawfully
ent1tled to use the same, the 14
foot alley on the south s1de of
the real estate herein conveved
and extendmg mto the public
h•ghway as a means of Ingress
and egress to and from the satd
30 foot parcel to the publ1c high

Body Shop ,

GAS and OIL
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Res1dence, commercial or
mob1le homes Save on parts
&amp; labor

21S N 2nd Ave

Ph . 992-5271

'5.55

Lincoln Hill Pomeroy, 0

On Most Amencan Cars

Painting ASpecialty

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992-2094

Phone 992 JS09

All work guaranteed

DINNER RING l as t Thursday
Jan
10
n
VIC n ty
of
Pom eroy Reward Call W R
Manley 667 3226
1 17 6tp

Employment Wanted

slalled

SEC URITY guard work wan
t ed exper.enced Need lOb
badly Phone 992 6144 Russ
Eshelman
I 16 4fP

For Rent
SLEEPING room over w1ne
store m Pomeroy Reference
requ1red Call 992 5293
1 10 ttc
OFF ICE rooms for rent on 2nd
floor of ColliS bulld•ng over
Dutton s Drug Store Call 992
36.:11 or 9925141
1 4 12tc

---- ----

5 ROOM apartment w1th bath

ilnd l aundry ground floor
unfurn•shed
Brownell
Avenue Call 985 3974
1 13 4tp

3 ROOM furniShed house w1th
bath Adults only Phone 992

5592

1 10 tf c

FUR NISHED apartm ent
3
rooms and bath No pets
lnQu•re at Kay s Beauty
Salon 169 N Second M1d
dleport
1 17 6tc
LARGE unturn1shed Jrd floor
apt tor rent 1n downtown
Pomeroy 6 rooms and bath
Call q92 2789
1 17 tfc
J AND 4 ROOM furniShed and

unfurn•shed
apar t ments
Phone 992 5,j34
4 12 tfc
PRIVATE meeting room for
any organ tzst1 0n phone 992

3975

3 11 tfc

Auto Sales
1973 DUSTER
7631

318

Hollywood Squares 3 Wild Kingdom 10 Sale of lhe
Century 4, To Tell the Trulh 6 Ozzle s Girls 8 Beat the Clock
13 Johnnv Mann's Stand Up &amp; Cheer IS Zoom 20 Read1ng
Fo r the Classroom Teacher 33

1 15 7tc

1962 OLDSMOB ILE Star F1re
Phone Rex Roy 949 2091
1 16 3tc

Sale

1973 2 BEDROOM tra1ler 2
m 1les from Harnsonvllle 20
m 1nute dnve to m1nes Ca ll

'" 3821

1 17 tfc

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radtator to the
smallest Heater Core
Rad1ator Spec1al1st

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

A&amp;A HEATING

WOOD TRUSSES

INSTALLING
AND

I

s;f\)

Bu1ltto Your 'Specs

.

MATERIALS CO
773 5554
Mason, W Va

PHONE 843·2341

WILKINSON Small Eng1ne
Sales Repa1r on all sma ll
engmes
chan
saws.
prec1S10n ground 39q W Matn
Street Phone 992 3092
1 17 26tc

---------- -- --ELNA and Wh•te Sewing

Machtnes
Ser111 ce on all
makes Reasonable rates
The Sew•ng Center
Mid
dleport Oh1o
11 16 tfc

--------------PRICE CONSTRUCTION

Rootmg spout1ng kitchens
and bathrooms Complete
remodel1ng Phone 742 6273
12 J tfC

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

DOZER and back hoe work
ponds and sept1c tanks, d1t
chmg serv1ce top so•l fill
d1rt
limestone
B&amp;K E:.t
ca vatlng Phone 992 5367 or
9 1 tfc

N E IGLERS for building hOUses
and k1tchen cabmets Call
Guy Ne•gler Ractne Oh io
949 360.4
12 20 26tc

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

AUTOMOBILE In surance been
cancell ed.,
Lost
your
operators liCense Call 992
7428
61Stfc

----------

SeWING MACHINES Repair
service, all makes 992 2284
The Fabr1c Shop Pomeroy
Authonzed Singer Sa les and
Serv•ce We Sharpen SCissors
J 29 ttc

- - - --

For Sale

----------

For Sale

6 30 -

EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
sept •c
tanks Installed dump trucks
and lo boys for h ire w•tl haul
t1ll d1rt top soli l1mestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers dav phone 992 7089
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 992

S232

Blue R1dge Quartet 13

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

8
8

992-2094
606 E. Mam Pomeroy

9
9

9

10
10
11

Douglas 6

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay.

Jackpot' 3, 15

12 30 - Spl1l Second 6 Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Baffle 3 15
12 45 - Electric Company 33
12 55 - NBC News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Choldren 6 13 Concentrahon B Not lor
Women Only 15 Secret Storm 10
1 30-Threeona Malch3 4 15 AslheWorldTurnsB 10, Leis
Make A Deal 6 13
2 00-DaysofOur Llves3 4 15 Guiding L1ghl8, 10, Newlywed
Game 6 13
2 30- Doctors 3 4, lS Edge of Night 8 10 Girl In My L1le 6 13
3 00 - Another World 3 4, 15 General Hospital 6, 13, Pr1ce IS
R1ghl 10 8 Lock Stock and Barrell 20
3 30 - One Li te to L1ve 13, Phol Donahue 4 Match Game 8 10
Oh10 This Week 20 How To Survove A Marriage 3 15
4 00 - Mr Cartoon and the Banana Spills 3 Somerset lS
Sesame Slreet33, 20 Speed racer 6 Love American Style 13

BU I LD IN G
construCtiOn
remodeling and room ad
d1tions Also profess•onal
floor sJndmg and reftn1Sh1ng
Phone 949 3833
1 15 6tc
WILL trim or cut trees and
shrubbery Also cl ean out
basements , attic s, etc Call
949 322 1 or 742 4441
1 2 26tc

Real Estate For Sale

2 11 tfc

TEAFORD

DOZER work land cl earing by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w1th over
20 years experience Pullins
E:.tcavatmg Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 2478
12 19 tfc

Hinel 8 Mov•e

4 Gilligan s Island 6 Bonanza 15

s oo -

Bonanza 3, Merv Gnffm 4 Mission lmposstble 6 Andy
Griffith a Mtster Rogers20, JJ I Dream bf Jeannte 13

V11q1l B. T, .lfo•d '&gt;•
Brol{. ·•
l'CM• ·c hd111 ( &lt;;, l rf· f• l
Pnnwruy . Oh1o l'l/61.J

.

,

5 30- Beverly Hillbillies 8 Electric Co 33 Gomer Pyle USMC

13 Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Trails West IS
5 55 - Earl N1ghhngale 15
6 oo - News 3 4 8 10 15 ABC News 13 Sesame Slreel 20

¥fdkiiei&gt;Orl

G &amp; E Appliance Repa~r Phone
ES - In
at the shop 992 3802 or 949 Route 7 Loop Excellent for
4254
12 30 26tp houstng or bus.ness
WARM - 3 n•ce s11e bedrooms,
READY MIX
CONCRETE steam heat w1lh gas boller
delivered fight to your Modern k1tchen, d1sposa l 2
prolect Fast and easy Free lazy susans washer and dryer,
estimates Phone 992 3284 2
por c hes
and
garage
Goegteln Ready M1x Co
REDUCED
M•ddleport, Oh10
6 30 lfc TUPPERS PLAINS - 5 rooms
n1 ce bath
automatiC heat
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED Garage and one acre Only
REASONABLE rates, Ph 446 SB500 00
.4782 Galllpol•s John Russell SYRACUSE 3 bedrooms
Owner and Operator
w1lh closets bath furnace
5 12 tfc garage and nice lol

Adl ertan Counseling Techniques 33~ Truth or Consequences 6

6 30- NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6, CBS News 8. 10
Hogan's Heroes 13

What s My Lone? 8 Wold K1ngdom 13 I Spy 15, Electric Co

Stayman Convention not pushy
NORTH ID)
17
• J83
'KJ7
AK42
.. Ai09
WEST
EAST
• 76
• AK9
'A943
'85
• 96
+QJ1073
.. KJ843
.. Q65
SOUTH
• Qi0542
106 2

+

PLAYGROUND
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC -CHILDREN'S
Large
yard
for pnvacy 2
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED bedrooms washer dryer and
MILLER SAN ITATION , most furn1lure Only $7 500 00
STEWART OHIO PH 662 REDUCED - 6 room frame on
3035
level lot Back porch garage

All SIZES IN STOCK
Let Us Install Now 1

SUPFI&gt; SERVICE SrA

9 __ Jack w Carsey, Mgr

_. . , Phone 992-9932

t_
· ------....,--:'

EXCELSIOR Sail works E-' Main 51, Pomeroy All kinds
of salt water pellets , water
nuggets block salt and own
Ohio River Salt Phone 9'12
3891
"6 s tfc

----------.-------

400 LOCUST post
7336l

Phone

1 16 61P'

Phone 992

1 16 31P

I

&amp; THINGS

By Helen and Sue Hottel
She Drh e$ Him to Drink
What's wrong w1th me' Ever smce I met lh1s gt-eat grrl,
Donna, I overdrinll at part1es and make an 1d10t of myself 1 m
not a boozer, but1f th1s keeps on, she'll dump me
We're both college sophomores I met her th1s month after
she'd had a bad break-up w1tb a -guy shed bee n datmg mghl
months She took 11 hard, and says she doesn 't want another
ser1ous relallonsh1p nght now I can understand that because 1
don't want to Jump mto a b1g mvolvement e1ther When we are
alone and can talk !Qgether, we both agree to take 11 slow and
easy and JUs! let our friendship grow
So great Except that my crowd g1ves lots of parties, and of
course there 's always booze, wh1ch I never had any trouble w1th
before. But twice now I've taken Donna to a fnend's party where
I got dnmk and JUst went nuts I felt frustrated that I wasn 't
bemg more affectionate to her, and worned that 1f I tr1ed she'd
reJect me, and frant1c think1ng she probably wasn't havmg a
good lime, and so generally uneasy that I slugged 11 down and
ended up m a parking lot k1ckmg tires Usually I'm a hght
drmker
She forgave me and sa1d she understood, but if th1s happens
agam she'll probably th10k I'm hopeless I don t feel the need of
liquor' when I'm alone Wlth her How can 1 convmce he ~&gt; l'm not a
lush - and how can !keep from ~1ng one- and eventually have
her for my gJr!' Keep m mmd we can't avmd every campus
party - DAVID
Dav1d
1think your rrustake was m takmg Donna to parties g1ven by
YOUR fnends before you really got to know her When you
couldn't talk to her comfortably (mall that crowd) you turned to
something else -alcohol -to ease the tenswn But 11 onl) made
you dnmk, and so embarrassed you ran outs1de
Before you chance another party, take Donna out to dmner
bowling on a plcmc or even some long walks, where you can
really Jearn how you react on one another Show10g he• off to the
gang IS a poor way' to start a relabonshlp, especially when you're
both a httle unsure wh1ch way you want 11 tQ go - SUE

+++

You b1d foor clubs and your
partner b1ds four spades What do
youclonow?
LITTLE ORPHAN ANN:-

More and more, nostalg1a collectors are resurrectmg the
great old rad1o shows, re-recordmg or recreallng them on
reco rds or tapes, and domg very mcely w1th them, Indeed
W1th the nation hooked on a ' Great Gats by" Era, the over-40
cro\\d can boast many of 1ts heroes and heromes of "those
thnlhng days of yesteryear; as the announcer on the "Lone
Ranger" show used to put tt
Available are F1bber McGee and Molly, The FBI m Peace
and War, Sgt Preston of the Yukon, Little O!'phan Anme, Jack
Armstrong, George Burns and Grac1e Allen, to name just a few
Well, I have a favonte of my own that I'd pay cold hard cash
to hear agam - the marvelous parody of Westerns wh1ch Jack
Ben11y d1d for most of a" hole season under the lltle "Buck Benny
Rides Agam '
Benny \las at h1s peak, a far cry from the elderly old gentleman you) ounge1 folks are seemg th1s month m "Jack Benny's
Second Farewell Special " He was a gemliS of llm10g, the
protracted 'ms1de ' joke, the putdown of his supporting cast A
super-comedian w1th a super show m bnef
Why he dec1ded to do 'Buck Benny" at all escapes my
memory, and may be known only to Benny and his wnters But
along about 1936, I thmk 1t was, he began devotmg about ten
mmutes ofh1shalf-hour program (he owned 7 p m Sunday mghts
the way Arch1e Bunker owns 8 p m on Saturdays now) to this
travesty of the noble cowboy
They even brought 10 a guest star, Which was rare, so he
11 s pretty hard k~ekmg yourself, even when sober
I'm qmte sure Donna understands I'm also sure you didn't
go as w1Id' as you unagme But take Sue's adviCe and get to
kno" her better before you do much more partymg
Or else ask HER to watch YOUR drmk10g pattern
HELEN

+++

Dear Rap
Regardmg KOP s suggestiOn of' M1stress" m place of "Ms"
I agree wholeheartedly It makes a much mcer sound, and says,

l'm a woman, different but equal '

1

Dear DaVId
Look at 1t thiS way You wanted to make a great 1mpresswn,
and you figured a few drinks m1ght ease the tenswn You may
have slugged them down fast, hoping the new g1rl "ould
recogmzeyour statusw1th the crowd And nothmg chcked
When worry or frustrallon turn a light drmker mto a tern
porary "boozer," he's m double trouble he not only can't control
hls aellons, rut h1s consc1ence (wh1ch never geti'THAT drunk)
stands off to one s1de, watchmg Every tune he tr1ps over his feet
or hiS longue, Old Man Consc1ence wh1ps on the gullt w1th, Boy
you tore 11 that time," or "She'll never forget what a fool you re
makmR of yourself"'
So you ran outdoors to h1de And you k1cked t1res because
20 Av1ahon Weather 33
7 30 - Porter Wagoner l To Tell the Truth 6 Concen tr a t1on 8
Wall Street Week 20 New Trea sure Hunt iO Beat the Clock
13 Hollywood Squares 4
8 00 - Sanford and Son 3 4 15 Brady Bunch i 3 6 Wash •ngton
Revtew 20, 33 D1rty Sa llv 1 S 10
B 30 - Mountain Scene 33 Washington Sir a ght Ta lk 20 Mov1e
'Bells Are R1ng•ng' 10 S•x Mtll ion Doll a r Man 6 13 Lot sa
Luck' 3 4, 15, Movie The Undefea ted 8
9 00 - Masterpiece Theater 33 Gtrl W th Som et hmg Extr a J tl

15 Sloge Center 20

9 30 - Brian Keith 3 4 15 Odd Couple 13 Owes G~rls 6
10 00 - News 20 Mounta 1n Scene 33 Toma 6 13 Dean Martm 3
4 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4 15 In Concert 6 Movte Genests II
8 T1ger By the Ta1 l ' 13 Mutmy In Outer Space 10
1 00 - M1dn1ght Spec1al 3 4 New s 13
1 15- Movie Portratt 1n Terror 10
2 30 - Focus on Columbus 4

3.00- News

BY PAUL CRABTREE

~

Women have made so much headway recently that I'm sure
1t wouldn't be any problem overcoming the former had lm·
phcahon of the word 'mistress " - H H

Jll111~'&amp;rn;.':f..:::~-t.=
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordmary words.

I REESH

[)

)

ISll.AMY, I
C/PTED
V)

I
HOL.c:&gt; UP IN

THE

EMCK.

I

Now

O!'I"IU1Ce

discount

2. Sacrificial

1tem

13. Hades'

Slte

chief
rJver
U.Zoroas
tnan of
Bombay
15. Suffered
from

3. Order,

demand
(4 wds)
4 Put
right
5 Complain
6. Plowed
ground
1. Exclude
8. See 3
Down
(2 wds)
9.Even
smaller

16.Sur

rounded
by
17. Goal
18. 'Ivanhoe"
herome
20. Inlet

(Sp)

Yesterday's Answer
12. Insect
27 Flower
(2 wds )
cluster
16. Simple
29 Amencan
19 Sagactous
snake
22 T1ff
30 Dentists
23 Blow
sug·
one's top
gestion
(2 wds )
34 Equal
24 Ta lllnn 1S
36. Oklahoma
1ts cap1tal
c1ty
25 - dnnk
37 Pasture

21. Telegraph 1

22. Bnllsh
carbtne
2!. Reason
ableness
25. Bl&amp;
spender

1,.,-4--1-+-

Z6.Famlly

that ruled
Ferrara
111. Pamted
pony
28. AngloSaxon
letter
.119. Roof
beam
S1. Small

m+-1--W!i

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter elmply etandJ for another In this eample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,
1postrophes, the length 1nd fonnatlon of the wordJ are all
blnll Each day the code !etten are different

the etreleclletton

to form 1M ourprlH INWer, u

I III J

(A.wwn la••~n~w)

Junobl•" LEGAL MILKY VACUUM DEADLY
Anowuo

DOWN
I Kmd of

CRYPTOQUOTES

by the above cutaon.

I

40. Cognizant
41 South·
west
wmd

II

I~=::::;~1:,;2~~~·
I
=;;;~-~~;·u~r;reotod
IL _Pril :.:.=.,:lli :..:•='=IIISE::..::AIISWII=:..::•::.:.__.JI r I
'Ve1lerd•r'•

ACROSS
L Leg Plll"l
S. Moroccan
c1ty
10. Turkish
reg1ment
11. School
supply

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:

II

!I

by THOMAS JOSEPH

SS, Wee taste
35. Twine
37. Smooth
consonant
18. Crown
19. Add!·
tlonaliy

.

I tJ

~lteVJtd

deer
IZ. Officiate

·.~T:.=-

iiiYPON
1 I

could have a comic s1deklck (Most cowboys had a com1c
s1dekick In those days - usually Gabby Hayes or AI "F uzzy" Sl
.John or Pat Buttram ) He was Andy Devme, a good funnyman m
h1s own r1ght, Wlth a vmce like a road grader
Anyhow, "Buck" rolled along week after week, w1th the plot
gomg nowhere m part1cular, but with some of the funmest lines
ever written I was only slx or seven, but the hwnor was there for
me, as well as those ten limes my age It was nonsense, but what
wonderfully conlr1ved nonsense lt was
So, yo\Dlger people out there, when you see Benny - an
agmg, anacromstic f1gure 10 today's hiP world, remember that
here 1s a man who was enormously funny m hiS day - and a long
day 11 was, at that

C../4 6e 0

~~q,..,_

VM FB LMANVNTS
OV

VXB

VML

VM FB YNAVOGBE

MU

MEB'A

TMNWB -

OYF!MAB FNBIWB
Yelllerd11'1 CrJptoqaote: WITH WISDOM YEARS CAN
KEEP US YOUNG IN HEART AND MIND WITHOUT IT WE
GROW OLD -DORE SCHARY

IJo liN &lt;Milby- A YALLIY

&lt;O tn• Klq Fo•w- BrUiuto, I...l

East West vulnerable

•.. West
"
-.. Pass
Pass

North
IN T
2+
Pass

Eaot
Pass
Pass

South

2•

2•

Pass

Openmg lead -Q+

_._____________________

~

0~

YEAH I R.EMEM8'R t:I!EADIN~
A&amp;O UT ATTEMPTS 'TO TRACE THEM ~

~

THEY

ve

NEVER TURNED LIP

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

,
When you play the Jacoby
transfer you use Stayman
along w1th 11 The form of
Stafman we use 1s what we
cal very non·forcmg, m that
the two-club response re·
qu1res the opener to reb1d two
diamonds unless he has a
four card major If he holds
two four·card majors he b1ds
the better one
South has a bad hand w1th
four hearts and f1ve spades.
He doesn't hke to leave h11
partner m one notrump and
playmg the Jacoby form of
Stayman he can afford to b1d
two clubs He mtends to pall
1f Nortl\ b1ds e1ther major but
North b1ds two d1amonds
whereupon South goes to two
spades and plays the hand

WINKLE

•
SHI:S NOT BAD

BAa &lt;;o SCOIJ WITH 1lle

NOT BAD AT

CAAISfl •;!,M~I%~~~

ALL

0
0

0

there
Why does he use Stayman
and not a transfer to two
spades' Because 1f his
partner does hold four heart.
he wants to have the hand
epa des

i~?UIGI~~~~~~~~~; ~

- play
The.mplay
thatatsmt
two1nstead
spades of
is f:j~
11mple and successful South
wms the d1amond lead in
dummy and plays a trump.
West wms and can hold South
to h1s contract 1! he shifts to
h1s doubleton heart and Ellst
ducks Otherwise, South wlll
score an overtnck by Ios1ng
Just one club, one heart ana
two trumps
Tomorrow we'll show how
to respond w1th a good hand
and 5·4 m the majors

IF YOUR OIL FURNACE

2

ALLEY OOP
ALTHOUGH THAT
..JOKE- COST TE-N

MILLVUN DOLLARS
MAH SENSE- 0 HOOMER

CAINT

W~ERE

ARE ZEL

A ND TH K\OS? I
DIDN'T SI:E EM
A~N0 1

SAYIN'

1NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

is not working properly in your trailer
or home

IT COULD
SHORE
USE ONE

SWITCH TO AN
The b1dd1ng has been
17
North Eaot South
West
Pass I+
Pass
"
Pass a
Piss
Pass '
You, South, hold
J 8 5 •2 +A Q 10 8 5
43
What do yoo do oow?
A - Bid four clubs The time

LP GAS FURNACE

1•

!!if! ·~

•K

RUTLAND FURNITURE
1

~

2•

.K

has come te lbow yeur 1trenglb

There lliiJ' well .. 1 ehlb 111m.

f

.·..~

• 85

'

budget terms Coli 992 3•65
PH. 742-4211
RUTLAND, O.
- - - - - - - - - - - 1~ 1 t"'
fc,_-l_ _ _ _ _..::_
" .....:._..:.,.:.;..:.....
· ~----------'

•

;:;:·&gt;::::·:::·: ·:::::-:::::&gt;:·~:·::::::::·:·::::::

.. 72

'':'"'" CALL

STEREO RADIO am fm, 8
track tape comb• nation, 4 way
speaker
sound
system
Balance $102 66 or use our

.. ..

'Q

___________

60";000 BTU Gas heater
992 2602

..

10 30 - Who Is Man? 33
11 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Janaki3J

WIN AT BRIDGE

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

PoSitive ~top and Go In Mud

Truth or Conseouences 3 Beat the Clock 4 News 10 6 ,

7 00 -

•

The Great Amer'lcan Pastime' 10

4 JO - Gr~n Acres 3, Lucy Show B Got ligan 's Island 13, TBA

Real Estate For Scile

&amp; Snow

Street 33 Jells Colloe 6
30 - Dick Van Dyke 13 Brady Bunch 6
15 - News 13
00 - AM 3 Paul D1xon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Abbott and
Coslello 8 Fnendly Ju nction 10 Movoe 13, W1ld Wold Wesl6
30 - To Tell the Truth 3 Secret Storm 8
55 - Chuck Wh1le Reports 10
00 - Dinah Shore 3, IS Jokers W1ld 8 10 Company 6
30 - $10,000 Pyram1dB, 10 Jeopardy' 3 4 15
00 - Wizardof0dds3 4 15, Gambll lO 8 Password 13 M1ke

11 30 - HollywoodSquares3 415 BradyBunchl3 Loveolllfe
8 10, Sesame Slreet 33
11 55 - CBS NewsB Dan Imel s World 10
12 00 - Password 6 News B 10 13 Bob Braun's SO SO Club 4

Pets For Sale

ELECTR:OLUX Sweeper deluxe
model
Complete with al~ _
c leanmg attachments and
uses paoer bags Slightly used
but cleans and looks new Will
sell for S37 25 cash or terms
.availab le Phone 992 2984
1 14 t-tc

Sunnse Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
Consumers World 10 Folk Literature 3
Farm Report 13
Pa ul Harvey 13
F tve Mmutes to L1ve By 4 News 6 B1ble Answers 8

6 35 - Columbus Today 4
6 45 - Farm•ng 10 Morn•ng Report 3
1 00 - Today 3 4 IS CBS News 8 10 Farmer's Daughter 13
P1xanne 6
7 30 - New Zoo Revue6 Rocky and Bullwmkle 13
8 00 - Captam Kangaroo 6 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame

WE HAVE all your upholsterv
needs
Burlap
denim ....
SALT FOR I CE AND SNO\.
cambr~c foam glue Zippers.
10 4 t fc wtth ultiJty tn town $3500 00
Rock salt for townships
ra ck tn g str1p springs and
towns and busmesses 1n
cl1ps
ch1pboard
button SEPT IC
TANKS cleaned
bulks and bags for ICe and
twine sew1ng thread legs ~
Modern San. tat•on 992 3954 or SE LLING REAL ESTATE IS A
snow E:.tcels1or Salt Works
LOT OF TROUBLE AN
upholst ery books, dacron,
9.2 734.
Phone 9q2 3891
SWER
ING THE PHONE,
webbing sprmg twine, tacks
10
23
ttc
l l l l t fc
welt cord, cotton swivel
GETT IN G THE PROSPECTS
Darts TO SEE, AND ADVERTIS;!Hf;
bases and foam foam foam SWEEPER ReDalfs
supplies, 446 0294 10 a m 5
Pomeroy Recovery 622 East
LOSE weight w1th New Shape
p m Davis Vacuum Cleaner IS HIGH CALL US, AND LET
Ma~n Street Pomeroy Phone
Tablets and Hydrex Water
Store Georges Creek Road, VIRG DO IT
992 75S4
Pills at Dutton Drug m
next to Bob's CB Rad10 Sales
12
23
26tc
Middleport &amp; Nelson Drug
1 16 ltc
1 15 Jtc
VACUUM Cleaners new 1973
Model
Complete with all IF YOUR oil furnace 1S not
FR IDAY AND SATURDAY
workmg right In vour tra1ler
cleaning tools Small pamt
JANUARY 18TH &amp; 19TH
or home, switch to LP Gas
damage
m
Sh
ipping
Will
take
1974 9a m toBp m TRUCK
Furnace
Call
R uti and
$21 cash or budget plan
LOAD SALE OF FACTORY
Furniture Company, 742 4211
available Phone 992 2984
SECOND LIVING ROOM
1 16 6tc
12 18 lie
SUITES THE SE TWO DAYS
ONLY PLU S BIG SAVINGS PAINT DAMAGE, 1973 ZIG FOR etectn ca l plumbmg and
ON OUR REGULAR STORE
remodeling work Call 8.43
ZAG SE WING MACHINES
STOCK PLUS 10 PCT (}'FF
2341 for FREE ESTIMATES
Stil
l
in
ono•nal
cartons
No
ON ALL UPHOLSTERY
1 11 26tc
attachments
needed
as
our
SUPPLIE S AND FABRICS 8 controls are built In Sews
TRACK TAPES
GOSPEL
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
ROCK
COUNTRY
&amp;
buttonholes sew on buttons AKC Toy Poodle Pupp1es
WESTERN ONLY 9 AM TO
monograms, and blind hem
$75 00 1 Stamese K1ttens 515
8
PM
FRIDAY
AND
stttch Full cash pnce S3'B 50
Phone 1 256 6247
SATUR DAY JANUARY 18th
budget plan avanable
1 10 26tc
11.
19th
POMEROY orPhone
992 2984
RECOVERY 622 E MAIN
12 18 tfc AKC Cairn Terr~ors 6 weeks
STREET,
POMEROY
old
Mate
and
female
PHONE 992 7554
Champion line , SlOO Phone
MIDDLEPORT - Traoler
1 15 41C SI NGER Automatic Zig Zag
Sewing Mach1nes, In sewlno
949 4609
space
and
Home
4
table Makes buttonholes Jl
1 10 5t c
1971 12 X 60 REBEL mobile
bedrooms Bath Cellar &amp;
sews
on
buttons
blind
he
ms
home tot 100 x 200 1949 Ford
Garage Several lots 1n
etc Top notch cond•tton Pay
p1ckup truck runs good
eluded MAKE AN OFFER
S51 or terms ava11able Phone
Phone 667 3347
992 2984
TUPPERS PLAINS
DESIRABLE two bedroom
I 15 6tp
12 18 tfc
house In Middleport, ready to
MU ST SELL - MOVING occupy Call 992-5310
9 FT X 12 FT gold and brown
3 nice BRs, large closets
123026tc
o11al bra ,ded rug S30 500 GROCERY busmess for sale
Lovely bath K1tchen has lots
Bulld •no _tqr sale or lease
bates m 1xed hay 50c a bale
of
cabmets Range and Oven
Phone
771=5118
from
8
30
p
m
NEW 3 bedroom home Ph bath
Phone Chester 985 3333
Uftllty room 3 vrs old 1/~
to
10
p
m
tor
appointment
garage
basement
on
Gravel
I 15 3tc
acre $16 000 00
J 20 lie
Htll Middleport Natural gas
already
In
Phone
Dale
POMEROY - PI? story
FOAM to f1ll your old couch and SINGER sewmg machines 1972
Dutton, 992 3369 even•nas
frame 3 BR w1th closets
chair cushions as low as
model In beautiful walnut
992 2534
Bath Gas furnace, Carpeted
$10 95 Upholstery books only
cabinet Makes design stlt
1 17 ttc
Paneling, Porch Basement
SOc, 4 mch covered foam
ches zig zag buttonholes,
mattresses for standard size
W Utohly N1ce lol ASKING
blmd hems etc Like new HOME 4 rooms and 112 bath
bed ,
$29 95
Pomeroy
$10 000 00
Only
S89
95
Call
Ravenswood
downstairs
3
rooms
and
full
Recovery
622 E
Main
MIDDLEPORT
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
bath\ upstairs
Basement
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
12
7
tfc
MODERN
BUILDING with
garage
and
shop
Call
12r23 26tc
Young's Market, Middleport
busmess room &amp; apartment
Oh lo 992 3094
3 BR {Lots of closets), 1'12
UPHOLSTERY Fabncs by )he COAL FOR SALE JAYMAR
1 17 41p baths, D1ning room , N1ce
COAL
COMPANY
THE
yard 54 Inches wide as low as
MEIGS &amp; GALLIA LINE
$1 95 per yard velvets as low
Hardwood floors
STATE ROUTE 7 AT SPACIOUS bl Level and split kitchen
as $3 45, Imported velvet,,
(carpeting over) A1r cond
CHESHIRE
OPEN
7
AM
level homes are now under
S9 95 We also have nylon
Gas Hot Water Heat up and
TILL 6 30 PM 5 DAYS A
construction on c1ty water
Herculon
co tton prints
down 2 garages
WEEK
PHONE
992
5693
and sewer
Many deluKe
vinyls and remnants by the
BUY A HOME OWN SOME
' 14 5t c
features mcludmg l l f con
yard or by the p iece Pomeroy
OF THE BEST COUNTRY
dltlonmg
Best fmanclng
Recovery
622 East Ma.n
CLOSE OUT on new Z1g Zag
IN THE WORLD , THE
available Other type homes
Street, Pomeroy Phone 992
Sew.ng Machmes For sew.ng
m d1fferent areas on F H
GOOD
OLD USA
75S4
stretch fabncs buttonholes,
Adm financing w1th no down
12 23 26tc
HENRY
E CLEI.AND
laney designs etc
Paint
payment Call collect (837
BROKER
slightly blem1shed Choice of
6540) or wnte to MEIGS
9'12 2259
carry1 ng case or sew1ng
DEVELOPMENT, P 0 BOX
If
no
answer
992 2S68
st.snd ,,.9 80 cash or terms
33 Middleport , Oh10 .4S76D
It's Snow Tire T•mP.!
ava•lable Phone 992 2984
1 9 tfc
•_l~ tfc

CO-OP COUNTRY
SOUIRE 120

News 4

6 15 6 20 6 25 -

FURNITURE

C BRADFORD Auct1oneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821
Rac1ne Ohio
Cntt Bradford
5 1 tfc

Movtes Movies Movtesl 6 13

FRIDAY, JAN 18,1974

and

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

15, Kung Fu

Johnny Carson 3 15

2 00 -

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Res1dence and
Mob1le Homes

4,

Movoes. The Rounders' 8 ' The Queen of Babylon' ' 10
1 00 - Tomorrow 3, 4 N~ws 13

Phone 992 2798
Kerr Street
Pomeroy, Ohto

I

6 13

10 30 - CBS News Spec1al 10, Travelure 33
News8 1013 Janaki33,News3 4 6,15

11 OO 11 30 -

OICK SEYLER. Owner

REPAIR

Delivered lo Job Sole

00 - IronSide 3

6 00 -

Pomeroy

F~rehouse

6 13 College Baskelball 8.
Evemng at Pops 20 Movie' The Horror at 37,000 Feet' '0
Evemng at Pops 33
10 OO - News20 WholsMan?J3,StreetsofSanFranCisCo6 13 ,
Mustc Country U S A 3 4, 15
9

We Slnp Pa1nt Varmshes,
etc from Furniture
Ant1ques Modern Metals
We buy Anttques Coltec
llbles, etc
Ptck up Serv1ce Avatlable

SMITH NElSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph ••2 2174

TheWaltonsB. 10 Trial By Wilderness
3 4, IS Chepper One 6 13

00 - Advocat~20,33

8 30 -

"STRIPPERS'"

Nathan Biggs

Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992-7089
N1ghl 992 3525
or 992-5232

Phone 992

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

Of

Mulligan Stew 33

7 30 -

Hoard House

See or Call

992 3861

1970 FORD Falcon Stat 1on
Wagon 6 cyl.nder, automa tiC
Sl 150 Phone 992 : 194
1 16 3tc

For Rent

20 Truth or Conseq 3 Lets Make A Dealll Sports Desk 15

Dick's

Water Ltnf:S and Power
Lmes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and septic tanks 1n

15

7 00 - Beallhe Clock 4 What s My L1ne B, News 10,6 Elec Co

606 E Ma1n, Pomerov 0

DITCHING SERVICE

4

Insight 33'

News 15 , ABC News 6 Hogans Heroes 13, Your Future Is
Now 33

8

':.&gt;'&amp;,..~~·~':$:,)~~...;;-

Generation Rap

6 30 - News 3 4: CBS News 8, 10, Your Fulure Is Now 33, NBC

Open8 TotS
Monday lhru Saturday

Lost

- - - - --

Truth or Consequences 6

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Area's Most
Reasonable Pr1ces

Middleport

THURSDAY, JAN 17, 1974
6 00 - News 8 10 Sesame Sl 20 JIBl: News 13 News 3

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Gene's

P&amp;J HEATING
AND COOUNG

Television Log

- --~-- -

NOTICE OF SALE

BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance
Th•s could be your
Jan 13 was 97 Offermg for all
golden opportunity to
serv1ces was $200 50 There
GUN Shoot January 12 6 p m
learn
bus1 ness
.M'1I~ H1ll
Road
Factory
were 18 choir members
choked guns on l y Assorted
methods, save money
present Fifty-e1ght attended
meats Sponsored by Racme
for clothing or college,
F tre Dept
worship
service
1 15 4tc
wm pnzes These and
The M A H A rally w11l be
many other benef1ts FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
held at the local church Jan 29
JANUARY 18th and 19th
are
ava1lable
to
Everyone 1s mv1ted
1974 9a m toSp m TRUCK
LOAD SALE OF FACTORY
deserv1ng
Senl1nel
The LLM w11l meet Jan 26 at
SECOND
LIV IN G ROOM
earners
the
home of Mr and Ml"ll
SUITES THESE TWO DAYS
ONLY P~US BIG SAVINGS R1chard Fr1end for a sausage
ON OUR REGULAR STORE
For years, The Sen
,
STOCK PLUS 10 PCT OFF and pancake breakfast
ON ALL UPHOLSTERY
Mr
and
Mrs
Phil
W1se,
!mel has helped young
SUPPLIES AND FABRICS B
McCvnnelsv1lle attended
people develop the
TRACK T APES
GOSPEL
ROCK
COUNTRY
&amp;
Sunday
mornmg worsh1p
attnbutes and talents
WESTERN ONLY S2 50
serv1ce
at
the local church
way
EACH
FREE
COFFEE
AND
wh1ch spell success 1n
DONUTS OPEN 9 AM TO 8
Also the follOWing described
Klmberlee
Kay
Alk1re,
adult l1fe
FRIDAY
AND
p M
real estate Situat ed In the
SATURDAY JANUARY 18th Colwnbus, who IS a student at County of Me1gs and State of
and
19th
POMEROY Ohw State Umvers1ty, made a Oh10 and '" 100 Acre Lot No
RECOVERY 633 E MAIN
299 m Town No 7 and Range
grade of 3 02 M1ss Allure IS a No 13 of the Ohio Companv s
ST POMEROY PHONE 992
A route m1ght be open
Purchase and bounded and
7554
granddaughter of Mrs Bertha descnbed
m your neighborhood,
1 15 4t C
as follows to w1t
Parker
Begmn•ng a t the southeast
to f1nd out
NOTICE oil shortage Oil land
of the sa1d John Me
Mr and Mrs Calvm Lane, corner
for lease 1n Southern Oh10
Br1de s 6 93 100 acre lot In said
Middleport, Mr and Mrs 100 Acre Lot No 299 thence
lnqu~re to George Newberry
p
0
Box 1485
Yuma
95 feet thence west 100
Thomas Lane and children , north
feet
thence south 87 teet
Arizona 853641
I 15 Jtc Harnsonv1lle Road, were then ce east 100 feet to the place
beg Inn 1ng
dinner guests Chr1strnas day of of Deed
Reference Volume 202
Mr and Mrs Chff Klem
Page 155, Meigs County Deed
Mrs Pearl Jacobs, who fell Records
The appra1sed value ot the
.,
at her home, 1s 1mprovmg very real estate 1S 52 soo 00
14 R1vers1de Dr
Sa1d real estat e Is s1tuated on
well
Carroll Str!!"et Carroll Street
Athens, Oh1o
The W M S met Tuesday •ntersects State Route No 12,.
th e east and 1s a dead end
evemng at the home of Mr and on
Btll Wade Auct1oneer
toward the west There 1S no
Mrs Uoyd Wnght
house number
SALE EVERY
Terms of sa l e Cash 1n hand
Leana Karr has been upon
del•very of deed
reported 1ll
SATURDAY
Robert C Hartenbach
Della Stahl and Bertha
NIGHT 7 PM
SherIff of
Parker attended the quilting at
Me1gs County
Consignments
ac·
Ohio
the Semor Citizens Monday (121 20 27 Ill 3Pomeroy
cepted 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
10, 17 SIC
dally, or w1ll pay cash
for your household
afems.
KIDNEY REMOVED
PHO~E 593-5035
TAMPA, Fla (UP!) - Gene
W1lhams, All-Southern Confer·
l
Sunday Schoolattendance'on ence safety at V1rginla
I
PARTY LINES
Jan 13 was 44, the offermg M11itary Inst1tute last season,
I THE DAILY SENTINEL
COURT ST
1 COLUMBUS (UP!) ,
$18 76 Worsh1p serv1ces were was hsted m farr cond1tlon
I Democrahc legiSlators praiSed '"'
' "ld a t II o'c1oc k , Wl th th e Rev Tuesday after removal of a
I POMEROY, OHIO 4576•
I
I Gov John J Gilligan's 'State Meei'O brmgmg the message kidney that was damaged In
4
I of the State" message Tuesday from Acts 11 19-26 "And They the Amencan Bowl Game Jan
I
I mght as "comprehensive," Were Called ChrisUans Frrst m 6
W1lhams, 22, underwent
I
I while Republicans cnticiZed Anhoch", • What Is A
surgery
Monday night at
l
NAME
lthe message as "hombly Chr1Silan'" (Believer,
1 Disciple,
Follower, and Tampa General Hospital for
I bland" and "vague"
I
1
•'!' Brother) Attendance was 42 removal of the kidney
!----A-:-G-:-E- - - - 1
Offering $23 54, Pledges $59 50
Your
Favonle
Counlry
Due to the fuel shortage, our
I Mus1c Stars V1s1t On
1
Wednesday evening Prayer Bottom, 0 , on Saturday
1-----:c::-::-:::-:::c:----1
Services wlll not be held dur10g
Mr and Mrs Hobart Swartz
ADDRESS
I
the montbof January But each werr11ble to attend church
I
member Is asked to malntam Sunday here, after several
1
the devotional tune, 7 45, of weeks absence, due to the
!---------1
4:30 TO 5:30
these serv1ces m a combmed after-effects of the flu
CITY
effort of Prayer and Pra!Se m
1
Martha Elliott attended
1
Monday thru Fnday
his own home
cf)urcll here ~un¢iy morning
On
Mr
and Mrs
Arthur
School and maU were closed
f---'-------1
Atherton assisted w1th but- off by h1gh water last Friday
ZIP CODE
1
chermg at the home of their
Rev and Mrs Robert Meece
I
1
•
•
son, Mr and Mrrs Clarence called at the Charles D. Woode
MIOOieporl Pomeroy
Atherton and family, at Long home la st Monday
~tr

Call
992-2156

Wanted To Buy

~

•
HE OOESNT SEEM 10 I-lAVE
100 MAN'i AIIX 'ETIE5

�.'
~·

10 - The Da1ly Sentmel, Moddleport-Pomeroy, 0, Jan 17. 1974

Zoning ...
(Continued from page I )
volunteer or paod basis.
COMBS POINTED out three
baSic constderattons m rural

What Is good for the

land?
2 - What do you want for
land usage?
3 - What Is practical m the
structure of the county?
The planning dorector sa1d
citizens must become Involved
in the project. He added, "Once
zonmg 1s approved, you must
have a good zonmg admmistrator and stall Wothout
thts, you can't have a successful zonmg program "
Admtslralive costs and
lessoned nghts of pwperty
owners, or gtv't up mrhvtdual

rights for totalomprovement of
county, are probably two
major manus factors m zomng,
the speaker pomted out. But
benefits far outwelgh disadvantages, Combs continued
W1th a tremerxlous growth
predicted for Gallla County
and surrounding area durmg
the next seven to 10 years,
Gallia planners feel zomng In
rural areas 1s a must if the
county os to continue to have
orderly development.
The
speaker,
whose
orgamzallon serves an II·
county area in southern Ohio,
sa1d southern Ohio is lagging
behind in rural zoning, compared to the rest of the
Buckeye State
He added come July I, additional funds are expected
from Washington to help
fmance programs m southern
Ohio, Including zonmg.
It was pointed out that not all
townships have to approve
zomng, but added 11 would be
cheaper for the taxpayers in
the long rWJ to have countywide zonmg
With growth and development, zoning is a must in order
to assure health and sanitation
measures, proper pollee and
lire protection, school and
church locations and good road
connections leading to and
from rural areas
Too, with long-term planniOg, zomng could prevent
mtrusion of mcompallble uses
of property by outsiders.
Pat Meeker, Surveys
Unlimited, reviewed Gallla's
recently approved subdivision
regulations which Will be effective Feb I.
Next step of the Galha
Plannmg Commission 1s to
approve a comprehensive plan
lor zorung. Such a plan normally requires three years to
complete. While working on the
subdivlSion regulations, Uns

was accomplished in one year
by Surveys Unlimited.
Thus It appears Gallia
planners are now ready to
meet with var10us township
trustees to discuss the zoning
Issue.
Ken Myers, pres1dent of the
planning
commiss1on,
pres1ded. County Engineer
Glem A. Smith introduced the
guest speaker.
CAUSE DEFINED
A fr1end VISiting lhe home
near Meigs High School of Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Darst
when fire broke out Tuesday
night, said today the lire was
caused by a fuel oil heater, not
a cook stove, and that Mrs.
Darst was in the house when
lhe explosiOn occurred. Mr
and Mrs. Darst and thell' one
child were left homeless.
SELl"'""-tlr:ATED
RACINE - The Rac10e
Emergency Squad answered a
call Tuesday lor W1lliam
Eugene Sellers, Rac10e Route
I, who was ill at his home. He
W18 given treatment at home

MEIGS THEATRE
Fri., Sat., Sun.
Mon. &amp; Tues.
Jan. 18-19-20-21-22

GOSPEL ROAD
JOHNNY CASH
Show Starts 7 P.M.

prevtous record wh1ch was set last year. The revtsed corn
productwn esllmates for Ohw showed a 44,120 bushel decrease

The 1972eslll'Dale had been set at 284,280,000 bushels, compared
to the rev1sed 1973 estunate of 240,160,000 The estimated y1eld IS
79 bushels per acre

MARK MITCHELL

Mitchell to
take WVAU
scholarship

NASHVILLE, TENN - FOUR MEN, INCLUDING three
brothers and a cousm, were arrested Wednesday on charges of
killing DaVId "Strmgbean" Akeman, a star of "Grand Ole Opry"
and the "Hee Ha11" televlsoon show, arxl hos wife.
John A Brown, 23, and Marv10 Douglas Brown, 23, each
were charged woth two counts of murder Charles Brown, 31, and
Roy Brown, 26, were charged w1th be10g accessories to murder
and recetvmg and conceahng stolen property The three brothers
and the1r cous10 John were raosed on the tiny coonmuruty of
Greenbroer, a few moles from the scene of the ahootmgs at the
modest Akeman farm home

DETROIT - CHRYSLER CORP WILL add a remforcement
to the suspenso on system ol159,149 olots 1974 model cars because
MASON, W. Va - A
Wahama semor athlete, Mark of a defect that could ca use a loss of steer10g control.
In announcmg the recalf of the Dodge Monaco, Plymouth
Mitchell, has been 10lormed he
Fury,
Chrysler and Imperial passenger cars Wednesday, a
w11l rece1ve a footba ll
company spokesman said there were 13 reports m which the
stholarsh1p to West V1rg10oa
drover has lost control of the car In one case, the car was
Umversity
travelmg at about 25moles an hour when tbe driver lost control of
Motchell, a 6-4, 218lb m1ddle
ot The car ve.. ed off the road and came to a stop 10 a dotch
linebacker, IS lhe son of Mr.
Chrysler saod 1t had no reports olmjuroes or colhs10ns as a result
and Mrs James W Motchell of
of the defect.
West Columblll
Mark, who played football
TOKYO - PRIME MINISTER KAKUEI Tanaka returned
under Coach Grant llarnette, home today from a Southeast As1an goodw1ll tour marred by
lettered lour years 10 football, VIOlent protests agaonst Japan 's growong economic mfluence m
lhree years 10 basketball and the regwn
one year 10 wrestling. He was
Tanaka went quickly to the Imperoal Palace after arrivmg,
capta10 of the football team refusmg to make any comments about the bloody demonIbis past season and two tll'Des stratwns during his f1ve~ahon, l!klay tnp He planned to broef
made first team on the All- top government o!locoals tomght on the tour, which ended woth
State AA team as lmebacker VIOlent protests 10 Jakarta rem1mscent of some past demonThe Bend area student was strabons aga10st U S offoclllis tourmg develop10g areas of the
credited w11h 407 tackles m n~.
.
three years. He mamtains a 3 0
average as a student at WHS
and durmg his JuniOr year was
president of his class.
He chose WVU because of
(Continued from page ll
ils high academic standards
offiCial report, two teenage
and because 1t has the type of
A
lawsuit
totahng
$361,802
23 boys in the Honaker family
football program he feels
proud to be associated woth, 11 has been flied m Meogs County have a versoon to tell, too.
Common Pleas Court by three
Paul Honaker Jr , a jWJlor at
IS learned. Mark has expressed
persons
for
damages
suffered
Wahama
High, said he and a
an 10terest in study10g law.
m an auto accident March 12, yoWJger brother, Kelvm, were
1973
up late watching an army
Bernice Mar1e Dalton, Rt 2, mov1e when "! heard the
Albany, JWJior K Dalton, Rt engme and jumped up and
2, Albany, and Martha Mane grabbed Kelvin. By that time
Dalton, Rt 2, Albany, petitoon we
saw
stuff
flying
that they have suffered the everywhere "
Inflation has hit the annual damages as a result of the
"Plates came out of the
Meogs CoWJty Fa1r w1th m- negligentdrovmg of Sharon Lee shelves, a livmg room chair
creased admission charges to Thompson, now Sharon Lee went flymg through the air to
go mto effect when the fair 1s Trout
the kitchen, an old plano was
Bernice Marie Dalton moved and other things fell,"
staged Aug. l3 through Aug.l7,
claomed that as a result of Paul Jr. said.
1974
Trout's
crossing the center
Accordm g to a decision
When other members of the
reached by the fa1r board, hne on SR 692 she has sufferfd famoly, Mr. and Mrs. Honaker
membership llckets thos medical losses, while JuniOr k and two other children,
summer will be sold for $4, a $1 Dalton, owner of the auto, has awakened and further survey
increase over the $3 charged suffered losses totaling $9251or was made, they found the onethe past several years. the demoliShing of lhe car, and story frame house had been
Membership tickets entitle the Martha Mane Dalton, the knocked from 1ts loundahon.
purchasers entrance lo the fall' driver of the auto, claims
The car's front portion came
lor the live days, free parking medical expenses as well as through the livmg room wall,
and the right to vote lor fall' inJuries
but after hitting the house, the
Trout's husband, James Lee rear swung around and hot
board members. Daily gate
admission will be $1.50 a Trout, Columbus, Oh1o, has Honaker's parked car.
person instead of the past $1 a also been named as a defenMrs. Stanley was c1ted for
person In the past a 25 cent dant.
speed too great lor conditions.
parkmg fee has been added to
the a&lt;lmisswn lee. It will be
included now, Free grandstand
entertainment Is prov1ded at
the local fair

$361,802 asked

Skidding

in local court

Inflation hits
'74 Meigs fair

Fairview

News Notes

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mr and Mrs. Bob Lawson
ADMITTED - Wolham and family, Mrs. Dorothy
Sellers, Portland; Nellie Dunn, Parsons and sons of Anhqmty
Middleport; Betty Brown, and Hope Bird were over the
Pomeroy; Grace Price, Long weekend guests of Mr and
Bottom;
Leshe
Carr, Mrs. Charles Lawson
Pomeroy; Frank zerkle, New
Mr. and Mrs Herbert Sayre
Haven;
Bess1e Nutter, spent Thursday mght with Mr
Reedsville; Worley Haley, and Mrs . Buck Rogers at
Middleport; Dons Lee, Clifton. Colwnbus Mrs. Rogers had
DISCHARGED - Anna eye surgery at Grant Hosp1tal,
Hoffman, Shelda Baumgard- Columbus.
The
Sayres
ner, Thomas Burnside, Homer returned home Fnday.
DeLong, Clara Radford,
Moke Rhodes was a Sunday
Louella King, Chllord Thlcker, dinner guest of Dav1d Roush.
William Sellers.
Mrs. Russell Roush, children
Sharon and Coody, called on
CRAIG INJURED
Mr and Mrs. Dana Lew1s at
Steve (Duffy) Craig, em- Chiton, W.Va.
ployed as a boilermaker at the
emdy
Lawson
spent
Gavm Plant, sprained hiS back Saturday evemng w1th Hope
while liflmg equipment there Bird at Antiqmty.
Tuesday. He was treated at the
Mrs Mlidred Spencer IS
Holzer Medical Center and is VISiting herson-m-law, W1lham
now recuperating at home
Jackson and sons at Leetoma,
0.
IN HOSPITAL
Mrs.
Nettie
Warner,
Ebenezer St. , Pomeroy, is a
surgical patient at lhe Holzer
Medical Center.

. '

.

Dance and Listen To The
· Music of

GEORGE HALL·
""1 0:00 TIL 2:00
Playing Tuesday Thru
I,

News .. • in Briefs
(Contmued from page I)
Wednesday trmuued ots estunate of the· l973 corn productiOn
slightly and put the harvest, m a fmal summary, at5,643,256,000
bushels. The change from November forecasts left the crop I per
cent above rev1sed esllmates for 1972, arxl keptot classed as the
b1ggest m b1story, narrowly above the peak of 5,614,112,000
bushels harvested m 1971 The November estimate of 1973
productwn had been 5, 678,141,000 bushels.
The report saod total production of all crops rose to a new
peak, 19 per cent above the 1967 average and 5 per cent above the

zomng:
1 -

.

Saturday At
L1 !

TtiE MEIGS INN
POMEROY, OHIO

Firemen called
out two times

Social Notes

- -~ --

'

.._

SAL£! .WOMEN'S JEANS

____________

SALE! PRETEEN SPORTSWEAR

6'x6'

Checks and floral

•3.99

--·

Accessones DeparlmenJ, 1st floor.
-..._._........._.._.
,... .-...
_.._...._..__.,

LEE WORK UNIFORMS

Stop in on the 1st floor what you need now.

-· __..

~l

,,.

~

:;
·

...

--- --

'

r

,_.._

.&gt;

$35.95 Polaroid Minute Maker
Camera Kit - • - - - - - - Sale 25.00

IW~,~--·--~·---·---~----·------·---------1
In The Music Department
2nd Floor

RCA COLOR TV SETS
All are the popular XL 100 Chassis · all ·
are 25 inch diagonal measure screens.
Just 4 sets to sell.
You'll really save on these new RCA ,
Color TV sets.
Friday and Saturday

WINTER JACKETS

SALE PRICES

Boys sizes and mens sizes 36 to 48. Regular waist
length styles and longer car coat lengths .
Mens and Boys Department · lsi floor.
Friday and Saturday

•
'

SALE! BICYCLES

Y2 PRICE

. . -----...·-----1

'

10 speed bikes, 3 speeds. 5 speeds, standard 26
inch bi~ycles . .Models for boys and girls. All :
American made bikes - Famous brands.
Friday and Saturday you can really save during
this two day sale.

Sale! $12.95

·-----

ELECTRIC FIRE LOGS
Spinner type logs (birch). Fits easily in most '
fireplaces for that cozy comfortable look.
:
•

Friday and Saturday

Marbehzed B1g cho1ce of
co lors Foam back .

SCHOOL OUT
Sate
Due to flooding of the water
pwnps and ensuing problems,
classes will not be held Friday
at the Rutland Elementary
School, George Hargraves, .-------~~~~~~~~--------~~~~
Another Shipment
Supt of Meigs Local School

'

:

--•6.88

,"

"

u

..

Furniture Departmenl-3rd floor ,

SALE PRICES

RED HEART 'WINTUCK" YARN

"

Furniture Deparlment
on the Third Floor

'•

•

•''
•

SALE! BEDROOM SUITES

Shnnk and mothproof Machme washable and dryable
Excellent selection of colors 1n solids ·sparkling - heathers
and vcmegated shades

••
·'

A fjne selection of bedroom suites in maple, oak,
walnut, birch and pecan finishes.
••
Well known brands like Bassett · Dixie . Lenoir '
House.

Reglllar $1.45 skein

, SALE $1.15

SALE PRICES

Keith Shll~. U. S. Navy, has
been spentling a thirty day
leave w1th his parents, Mr. and
Also specia I sale prices on open stock
Mrs Frank Shlltz arxl family .
He will be lea\lmg Ibis week to
Bedroom Furniture in maple.
spend a year in Iceland
,, . .. , LOCAI:J TEMPS'
- Washable non allerge'ril~~~~ lfor' tilllng p1llows, cushions,
Includes single and double dressers •
toys, etc
Francis Queen and Minmc
The temperature in downBookcase Headboard Beds - Chest of
Hale of McConnelsville were town Pomeroy at 11 a.m
Drawers - Student Desks - Bookcases.
evemng callers at the Lavern Thursday was 48degrees under
Jordan home.
cloudy skies.
•.! :.L ' ~
""'li!'J:'
I
Mrs. Avanel Holliday spent
, . 1 ,' ,, " ,
.. ....~.,...·---·--·--· 7 e7·7 ~ ,
~
\,-G
.. ·~"' ~.,
an evenmg With her aunt Mrs.
"''
Save buring the storewide Jatlu'ary Sale- White Good Sale- and the Special
Nellie Vale, Rutland.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Sale at the Warehouse on Mechanic Street.
•
Miss Tma Radekin 1s emDISCHARGES - Pearlie
ployed at the home of Mr. arxl Estep, Mason; Della Denny,
Mrs John Mulhns, Albany, Galhpolis, and Thomas Jones,
Ohoo.
Cheshire.
.

~-------------·----------~--------------~

1'1.29 POLY.fll POI.YESIER ABER FIWNG

-.-. .

~
;::

~
;:;
;!;•!•
;;,
111

111

~l~

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

~

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Gov. nomtc affatrs, satd the economy
ernment ligures show the has probably slowed even more
economy stumbling toward st~ce then. The growlh rate on
possable recess10n wtth econom- the current January-March
IC growth at a three-year low quarter w1ll be "flat at best
and 101latwn soarmg at the and very possibly negallve,"
highest rate smce the Korean Jones told reporters
War .
Two consecutive quarters or
That gloomy pocture, wh1ch negative growth would meet the
experts say w1ll get worse when generally •ccepted defmihon of
the lull effects of the energy a recesston
shortage hot home, occurred m The last recesswn m the
the final three months of 1973
United States was m 1970 when
Accordmg to the Commerce the economy stagnated m the
Department's
prelim10ary wake of the auto workers stroke
Gross Natoonal Product (GNP) agaonst General Motors Corp.
report for the fourth quarter
There was equally depressmg
released Thursday, econom1c news on the proce sode
growth slowed to JUSt 1.3 per lnllatwn, wh1ch was rampant
cent m October-December, all ye~r long, hot a new high of
compared to the hyperacbve 8 7 9 per cent m Octoberper cent pace allhe start of the Decei-dber, the fastest threeyear and the 4 per cent annual month rtses smce the hrst
rate the admlmstrahon consid- quarter of 1951.
ers odeal for long-term, non"Inflation os not a promosmg
inflationary growth.
sector," Jones noted, echomg
Sodney L. JOnes, assistant other admimstrabon economosts
commerce secretary for e("().. who have warned consumers to

- -

By United Pressloternatlonal
WASHINGTON- AMERICANS MIGHT TAKE advantage
of numerous loopholes lh1s year to av01d mcome taxes because
they have seen President NIXon do it, Rep. Charles A. Vamk, DOhw , warned Thursday "From my observahons, 1t 1s quite
apparent the volWJtary mcome tax system established over a
long period m the United States 1s now be10g threatened to the
peril pomt by the moralmdiflerence of the Pres1dent to his own
tax obligations and h1s position as a nahonalleader ," Yanik saod.
A member of the House Ways arxl Means Commttlee, Vanik
said the Treasury Thlpartment "to avoid a disaster by April15"
must quickly clear the question of whether President NIXon
undulv avOided taxes. "The Presodent's unfortunate example
could ;,.,st he treasury bolhons of dollars m lost revenues," Vamk
sa1d "If the Pres1dent can get Jway woth ot, other collzens feel
they have an equal right to stretch their deductions, to stretch
their exemptions and to stretch their wnteolls "

use that money."

Stanton, 41, s81d he would also make public expense
allowances he rece1ves from the government "This means, for
instance, that everyone who buys a ticket to a Stanton cockt81l
party or dance will do so on the understarxlmg that their name
wtll be on the record," he satd

COLUMBUS - THE OHIO GENERAL ASSEMBLY has
adJourned lor the weekend lollowmg House clearance of
legislation requirmg public schools to include the accomplishments of minonty groups m history, government and
geography courses In a rare display of unannruty, all the
seantors sogned a b1ll returnmg Veterans' Day toots tradihonal
Nov 11 dale The name of former Sen. Robert E Stockdale, R·
Kent, who res1gned last Dec. 31, was still on the boll. The House,
which already has adopted 1ts own Veterans' Day boll, now gets
the Senate vers10n, authored by Sen Robert T Secrest, D·
Cambridge
Secrest sa1d veterans' groups were slow to mob1hze agamsta
congresswnalact wh1ch moved the hohday to the fourth Monday
(Continued on page 10)

•

M

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~

:

E
:

•

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•

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

.

•••

Plans to restructure the
membership of the Meigs
County Regoonal Plannmg
CommiSSion and to employ a
part-time coordinator were
made when the comrrussion's
executive committee met

Thursday at The Farmers
Bank and Savings Co.
C E Blakeslee will notify
the persons affected by the new
organizational arrangement
outlined m the corrumssion's
new admmistrahve manual

prepared
by
Surveys
Unlimited, Inc
The
new
table
of
organization os desogned so that
the comm•sswn will qualify for
all state or federal !WJds
available lor planrung and
fundmg of projects.
The mayors of Pomeroy,
Middleport, Rutland, Syracuse
and Ita cone will be members as
will a mWJlClpal member and
an alternate mumcipal
member from each town. The
chairman of the townshop
trustees, or hiS designee, in
each of the townships will be
members. Members ol the
county commissioners or the1r
designees will be members
along with the county engineer
(ex-officio), the ' county
auditor, county prosecutor,
county extension agent, coWJty
superintendent of schools,
deputy director of division 10,
highways; property manager

of the Me1gs Mine (all ex of-

locio )
In addollon, there woll be two
county members at large ,

three citozen members at large
and roundmg out the new table
of orgamzallon will be an
alternate citizen member,
voting only when the regular
member IS absent, a socllll
conserva~ton

representative,

the county treasurer, and a
representative of the Farmers
Home Adnunlstrallon
Durmg the meeting preSided
over by Thereon · Johnson,
chaorman, the group discussed
employment of a part tune
coordinator. It was approved
1 that the commiSSion has about
$1,200 which can be used for
payment of such an employe
and ot was agreed to contact
the Buckeye Hills • Hoclllng
Valley Regional Development
District to see If the district
wtll provide matching fWJds or
some fmancoal help for
payment of the employe.
Blakeslee was named to
arrange an early meeting with
the diStrict lo discuss these
possib1hties.
The group discussed staging
an annual dinner in March,
probably at the Meigs Inn and
listed the names of several
persons to be submitted to tlie
Meigs CoWJty commissioners
as recommended to be appointed to the planning commissiOn. Eleeted olfletals who
serve on the conumssion are to
'.

brace for btg prtce JWTips tn the ures are sttll out, the U S.
trade account was expec ted to
next several months

There were other sobenng
economoc developments Thursday.
- The Census Bureau announced that hous10g starts
continued to shde m December,
dampening an olherwose strong
construction performance by
the homebmldong ondustry on
1973 that saw new home and
apartment Wills top 2 m1lhon
for the third stra1ght year
- The htgh cost of 1m ported
otl, m the optmon of Commerce
Undersecretary John K. Tabor,
w1ll put the U S trade balance
back on the red in 1974 unless
Amencan mdustry does

~~an

unprecedented JOb of exporting" Although year-end fig-

Schools
on DST

More Nixon
words gone

Southern Local School Board
Thursday mght agreed to
continue operatmg schools In
the district on Daylight
Savmgs T1me
Nancy Carnahan, clerk, said
m other bus10ess the board
hired Bertram Grueser as a
custodian and accepted the
resognahon of Floyd D1ddle as
custodian.
WASHINGTON &lt;UP!) - Prestdent N1xon's
Mrs Erma McClurg was
personally recorded recollections of two of his named lWJchroom supervisor
Watergate conversations , surrendered under and Mochaela Hoback, Jeffrey
subpoena, have blank spots in midsentence , federal Vonvogt and Teresa Casc1
were bored as subslllute
court testimony indicated today.
Assistant Watergate, special prosecutor teachers
board also bored the form
Richard Ben-Veniste disclosed existence of the ofThe
Gates McDonald to handle
blank spaces in questionmg White House counsel J WJemployment compensatoon
Fred Buzhardt at a hearing on the tapes before U S. servoces The board also
District Judge John J. Sirica
agreed to purchase a 1965
Ben-VeniSte diSclosed - and manager, on the evemng of p1ckup truck to be used by Bill
Buzhardt confirmed - that a June 20, 1972, contamed a sa- Cozart, head mechantc .
cassette recording of Nixon's second blank space before ot uabohty msurance for board
dictated recollections of a agam p1cked up the Prestdenl's members woll also be purchased A duplicator .for
meeting with John W Dean Ill, voice on mod-sentence
hos counsel at the tll'De, ended
Sirica's court was jammed Syracuse elementary woll also
on modsentence and was with a standing room only be purchased.
The board agreed that
followed by 57 seconds of crowd for the hearmg.
silence
Asked by Ben-Venisti why janitors may work overtime
Buzhardtalso testifled that a blank spots appeared on the each weekend on theor
doctated recollection by NIXon tapes, Buzhardt rephed that respective buold10gs to f1re the
of a telephone call he made to "frequently, doctallon may not furnaces
Mrs. Llza Hobbs was granted
former Attorney General John be 10 the form of complete
permossoon to take any h1gh
N Mitchell, then hjs campa1gn sentences.".
school student who so desores
to Athens on Feb 4 to attend a

Dino Jr. arrested
LOS ANGELES (UP!) Thlan Martin's 22-year-{)ld son
!VaS arrested Thursday afternoon by federal agents who
said they found f1ve machme
guns and a cannon m his

Beverly Hills home.
Dean Paul Martm Jr., a

member of a teenage rock'n-roll group a few years ago
and who recently has been a
pre-med student at UCLA, was
accused of ollegal possesswn of
an unregistered machone gun
Other charges were likely,
federal sow-ces satd.

play,

~~The

Devil's Disciples''

The board recessed unlll
Monday at 7 30 p.m Attend10g
were Grover Salser, Jr , board

president , Denny Evans,
Denme Hoi!, Dav1d Nease, and
Jack Bostic, boord members;
Robert Ord, superlntendnet;
J1m Adams, Bob Beegle, Bill
Baer, J•m Wockhne and Larry
Wolfe, principals; Mrs. Car-

He was arrested at his home nahan, representatives of the
when agents of the Bureau of teachers assoc1al10n, and Carl
Alcohol,
Tobacco
and Wolfe, 'head basketball coach
Fll'earms, a division of the
Treasury Department, went to
his home woth a search
serve durong their tenure of warrant after an undercover
office while appomtees are to agent reported buy10g two
he named to one, two or three automatic weapons from hun
Reta1l sales tax receipts on
year terms so that holdover on Wednesday
Me1gs County were down m
members will always be
Federal officials stressed December, 1973, compared to
servmg
that h1s entertainer lather had Thlcember, 1972, but motor
A commumcatton was no knowledge of hts son 's ac- vehicle sales tax receopts were
presented from Alden E. tivities.
up consodera bly, according to
Stilson and Associates, conFederal sources sa1d Dino, the report of Mrs Gertrude
sulting engineers, who have the name he used, apparently Donahey, state treasurer.
been employed by the state to obtamed the weapons, InRetail sales tax rece1pts for
prepare environmental studies cluding a 20rmn antoaorcralt last
December
totaled
m reference to a planned cannon wtth a spare barrel, for $60,354.55 compared to rece1pts
relocatiOn corrodor on U.S. resale The objecllve was of $64,792 03 lor Dec , 1972, a
Route 33 from Athens to unclear, but one soW'ce ex- decrease of 6 116 percent Motor
Darwon. The commissiOn was pressed doubt it was "for vehicle sales tax receopts lor
asked to update the com- profit "
last
December
totaled
prehensive planmng program
An ADF spokesman saod $29,139.53 with receopts for
which the f1rm 1s usmg lor 1ts young Martm "cooperated" Dec., 1972 totaling $22,179 12,
study and Blakeslee was asked wtth agents m Utell' search, an mcrease of 31 38 per cent.
to forward all materials wh1ch wh1ch took place at2 p.m. PDT
would affect changes.
m his home- wh1ch had a "for
It was reported also that the sale" sogn out front. The
f1rm IS mterested m all spoke~man said Martin's
histoncal spots or structures asking pnce of the house was
which might be in the path of $290,000.
Jon P Karschnok was
the corridor Anyone knowing ~
'J0:::».Z·:?&amp;*=«-» elected as assistant cash1er
of any IS asked to contact
and Mrs. Carroll Norns was
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Blakeslee
A chance of showers about elected a loon off1cer at the
Meetmg with the com- Monday. Highs lD the 30s annual meeting Thursday of
nus.swn's eKecuttve comnuttee north and the 4lls !lOUth the board of directors of The
Thursday were Terry HWJdley Sunday warmlDg Into the 4lls Farmers Bank and Savmgs
of the Department of Economic and 50s by Tuesday, Lows Company
and CommWJlty Development;
Karschnik, a graduate of
middle 20s to lower 30s early
Patnck Meeker and Lee P. Sunday and In lower 30s Wahama High School, served
Phelan of Surveys Unlimited, early Tuesday.
lour years in the Air Force and
the county's officoal planning
is'a graduate of the Ohio School
f1rm . Members attend10g were 3? crr »~ ············~ilh'SI#.~ of Banking, He joined lhe bank
Chance of rain likely tomght. in JWJe ol!969. He IS married
Johnson , Blakeslee, Edison
Baker, Secretary; H. E . Low tomght lower 40s. Mostly to th~.former Conme Harbour,
Shields, E. F. Robinson, David cloudy and cooler Saturday, and they are the parents of one
Parry, James Roush and chance of showers mamly east son, Keoth They res1de 10
High upper 40s.
Wesley Buehl
Mason.

Planning group revised

SPECIAL SALE PRICES

Anti-Fatigue Mats

t\•

'*

WASHINGTON - REP JAMES V. STANTON, D-Cleveland,
Thursday amounced his cand1dacy for a lhll'd terrr. and sa1d he
would make public his campaign f1nancmg. "Starting now, all
my campaigns for pubhc off1ce will be conducted in this manner," he said "The people have a r~ght to know before the
electoon, not after, who 1s g1ving me fmancoal support and how 1

Special Sale

Mens and Boys

BAG

i$
&lt;::

!News .• in Briefsi

Look 'em over . Buy

SALE PRICES
CAMERA DEPARTMENT
lsi Floor

~~~~·

Y2 PRICE

99~

\i

ij\'""""''""""'''' ' '·:·;:.·:::·:::;-;,., ,. ·:::::::::::::::·:·::::::'*&lt;:::·:::;::::::::::::::&lt;::;-:-:-:·:::·:·:::::::::::·:::;.

Includes Polaroid Land Camera w1th bu1lt-tn timer · carrymg
case fill)'l and 2 flash cubes .

Selected from our regular stock, Garbardlnes ·
Flannels . Double Knits. Sizes from 29 to 44
waist
Friday and Saturday

SALE

a~gl~;~~ss;~~le~~~~!on:l

lsrae?Y
quarter·
century of confhct today and s1gned an histone
agreement separating their armies along the
explosive Middle East cease-ftre lines
The military commanders of the two
nations s1gned the accord m the Egypttan
desert near the Suez Canal in another tnumph
for Secretary of State Henry A Kissinger's
brand of personal diplomacy President Nixon
sa1d the pact, announced simultaneously
Thursday m Washmgton , Jerusalem and Cmro,
was " the first significant step toward a permanent peace m the Mideast "
Nixon, in announcing the agreement in
Washmgton , promised "the full and complete
support of the United States" in achieving
peace m the war-torn regiOn The accord
cleared away the last major obstacle to fullscale Geneva peace talks aimed at reachmg an
overall settlement to the 25-year, four-war,
Middle East conflict.

..::

$49.95 Polaroid Color Pack
Camera Set · - - · - - - - Sale 37.50

TABLE COVERS

IN HOSPITAL
Mrs. Beatrice L1sle, a
member of the Daily Sentinel's
advertising staff, underwent
surgery
Wednesday
at
Univers1ty
Hospital
In
Colwnbus. Her room number Is
791.

f

·:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·. :;.;:;.;::::=:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:.;-:::::.;:::::::-;::::::::.:-.m::::::=::.-&amp;:·!0:

Includes Square Shooter 2 Polaroid Camera . Camera Case F1lm and 2 Flssh Cubes

Sale! Men's Dress Slacks

A good selection of ovals
rounds
squares and
oblong table covers. Solid
colors and.patterns
Stop 10 on the 1st floor ·
select what you need and
really save no~

t

TEN CENTS

urts

:.::

At the main store on the 1st floor. A big selection

Permanent press Lee Work Pants and matching
Work Sh1rts.
Pants on sozes 29 to 44 Shirts in neck sozes 14 112 to
17112.
Solid colors · navy blue· charcoal suntan and
spr uce green · dark olive.
7.98 Lee Work Pants · • • . • • • · Sale 6.89
6.98 Lee Matching Work Shirts • · · · • Sale 5.69
-....
....-... ..-..- -....

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11~~

_,_,~-------·-··--1 of games for children and adults.

-•

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))

GAMES

Hand croc heted shawls of 100 Pet. acrylic yarn.
Whole, beoge, pink or blue solid colors.
Froday · Saturday

--..--

~::

Friday and Saturday Sale!

WOMEN'S KNIT SHAWLS

.....

!*:·.;

SALE 7'1 PKG.

'

...

:1:1

For all Hoover convertible cleaners.
(4 bags in package)

Womens Ready To Wear Department on the 2nd
floor.

__

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1.00 HOOVER VACUUM a.EANER BAGS

Y2 PRICE
I -·

Sale

::1:

....

5

Small, medium and large sizes . White and solid
colors Famous makes.

o..-. ...... - - · - · _ , _ _ .. .

:;:
·:·:

Sl.OO YD.

WOMEN'S BODY SHIRTS

"

~;:

Heavy vmyl
cloth back
Blue, Black, Gold, Brown,
Green , Be1ge, Wh1te

Sale

Y2 PRICE

o

li

54" VINYL
UPHOLSTERY

patterns

Thos sale oncludes skirts · shirts · s lacks and
blouses. Ideal sozes for the gorls that are between
ch ildrens sizes and ladles . sizes
Friday and Saturday

I

$1.49

Heavy gauge v1nyl plast1c

PHONE 992-215&amp;

i::

:II

PRICE

SHOWER
CURTAINS

1~74

~~::;:::

.•'

REGULAR '1.69 TO •.5.49 YD.

$1.95

::::::;!:-':!::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;!;!::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::.:.: ::: :.!·: :.:.•::.••.•:.: ••..•.•••. .•:

FRIDAY, JANUARY 18,

I Accord signed j conomy
I! by Israel, Egypt

WOOLS AND ACRYLICS.

_______________

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~:.-:;:=:::::~:::=~~

KNITS · CORDUROY · FLANNELS ·

SALE~

entine

Devoted To The lnteresu Of The Meig&amp;-Mason Area

. VOL XXV NO 194

WINTER DRESS FABRIC

Sozes 3 to 16 Solid colors and plaids. Good
selection of styles.
Womens Ready To Wear Department on the 2nd
Floor
7.00 Womens Jeans . . . . . . . . Sale 4.18
7.25 Womens Jeans · · • • • · · • Sale 4.28
8.00 Womens Jeans . • . • • . • • Sale 4.78
9.00 Womens Jeans . . . . . . · · Sale 5.38
10.00 Womens Jeans · · · · · · · · Sale 5.88
11.00 Womens Jeans · · · · · · · · Sale 6.58
12.00 Womens Jeans · · · -· · · · Sale 7.18
13.00 Womens Jeans · · • · • · · · Sale 7.78
14.00 Womens Jeans · · · · · · • • Sale 8.38
15.00 Womens Jeans · · · · · · · · Sale 8.88
................
__.
18.00
Womens
Jeans · · · · · · · · Sale 10.78

Y2 PRICE

Classes will reswne, however,
on •Monday.

a1 y

::

CLEANUP SALE

KNIT SHIRTS

mcident.

•

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9 PM

-

m)unes were reported in e1ther

'

ELiiER~F~Et:l)S IN POM'EROY
F_riduy and S~turdoy - Sale
---------.-.

The Middleport Fire Dept
answered two calls Wed- ~-------..---·--~---Sale! Mens Long .Sleeve
·
~'
nesday, one at 7:01p.m. to the
George Hall residence on SR 7
just south of Middleport where
a truck had caught fire, but
was extinguished before the
Includes our entire stock of mens long sleeve knit
fire fighters arrived
shirts. Crew necks. Turtle necks · U neck styles.
At4:32 a.m. Wednesday the
Sizes sma ll. medium, large and extra large.
department was called to the •
Waffle Shop on N. Second Ave.,
in Middleport where grease in
a deep fryer got up under the
shields above the grill and
Special
Sale Prices
ogniled, causing moderate
$1.89 "Dandee Tred"
damage to msulalion and
framing in the kitchen No

District, announced today.

Point Rock

.... '-..

"'w
"'•

Tax receipts

report mixed

show a lh10 surplus 10 1973
after two stratght deftcot yea rs
The economy was generally
regarded as growmg too fast m

early 1973, and the admomstrallon hoped for a gradual
slo11down woth a "soft landmg"
in the 4 per cent growth range
But the unexpected fallout of
the energy shortage shaved at
least one po10t from the fourth
quarter growth rate, accordmg

to Jones, and doshed hopes of
avert10g a maJor slump

c

MICHAEL J . 'Duffy, chemocal engmeer, environmental
affa1rs, Ashland Otl Co., Ashland, Ky., addressed Thursday
rughl's COVJC meetmg at Oscar's m Galhpohs On left os
former Gallipolis resodent Rex McCormock, who now res odes
on the Huntmgton area

h
run c here

Consumers ~ave not yet seen government, are a must 1f thts
the real cruftch of today 's country is to recover from
energy crisos accordong to current setbacks
Mochael J Duffy, chenucal
Duffy felt pubhc pohcy, or
engmeer tn environmental lack of pubhc pohcoes, got the
aflaors , Ashland Ool Co., nallon 10 the trouble 1t's in
Ashland, Ky.
today. The speaker saod the
Dully addressed Thursday natiOn must conserve tis ml
noght's January monthly products, and new faclhl1es
meeting of the Central Ohoo must be constructed, namely
Valley Industrial CoWJcil at nuclear energy planls, 1f the
Oscar's on Galhpohs Ap· compam es expect to meet
proximately 110 bus10ess and future demands
10dustr1al leaders from the lrt·
Today 29 nuclear energy
state area attended
plants are m operahon m the
Thursday's sessiOn was Umted Stales Construction of
sponsored by the Galhpohs 57 ot~er s are underwa y
Area Chamber of Commerce Seventy-six more are planned
Duffy painted a not too op- and by the year 1985, the nallon
llmosllc pocture 10 discussing must have 250 addotional
the current energy croslS, but nuclear plants m order to meet
added, however, solutions are prOJected needs
avmlable, and that coopCurrent construchon has
eration and understand· been curtailed, due to envoronong, espec1ally between mental problems tn con·
ml firms and the U. S strucbon s1te areas

The speaker sa1d roght now,
lhe Umted States, With SIX
percent of the world 's
populatwn, consumes one-thord
of the world's energy.
He concluded that U S Otl
compames are prOJecting one

trolhon dollars to mamtam
futur e growth, and that of
results are not good, "we're
really m trouble " Duffy saod

Ashland 011 alone has spent
over one b1lhon dollars durmg

the past love years on mvestmenls and new ool well
locations throughout the world
The speaker was mtroduced
by Paul Wagner, Galhpohs
Area Chamber of Commerce
president John Hanna, ·Vlce

preSident of COV!C, pre~dcd .
m the absence of (Jeorg~l)
Harvey, presodent
Next month's meeting w1ll be
held on the HWJlmgton. Ironton
. Ashland area.

State supplies 75%
of our school money
By GEORGE HARGRAVES, Supt.
Meigs Local School District
As you read m Tuesday 's Sentmel, the
Meogs Local Board had a large amount of
busmess to act on dur10g the f~rst meetmg of

ihat rehes heaVJly on the state for school
dollars We w1ll be watching thos matter wtth
great mterest and attempt to keep you aware of
changes as they take place
The preparallon of a year's budget m this
tome of mflallon and the WJCertamty m the
economy os loaded w11h guessmg
How much will gasolme cost next October?
How about the pnce of paper 10 November?
What about the proces of gas, coal, electriCity,
water, !ores, fuel ml, etc., by the moddle or the
end of 1974? Yes, budgetmg has ots share of the
guessmg game.
' REPORT CARDS went home yesterday
woth the midyear report of grades. In the high
school, courses are passed or failed by
semester The grades m the second semester of
a subJect have no effect on those of the l1rst
semester In the elementary grades the final
annual grade os the average lor the whole year
Now os the tll'De to be concerned abootthe
possoble faliure of a student. Don 'l wall unlll
May and be unpleasantly surprised U you have
questoons, call the prmc1pal at school and set u(
a conference w1th the teacher and the prmcopal Don 't call them at home, please They
have no student records there Call the school
and set an appointment for a conference
Perhaps you have receoved a letter from
the school adVIsmg you of the possobolity of
faolure II you have, or if you do get one of these
letters you should follow the advice m the
letter ~na see the folks at school You don't
want a failure . We don't want a failure Your
son or daughter only rarely "really wants" to
fall. Together we have a better chance of
success than we do of we pull separately and
perhaps against each other Call us. Beheve
me, we want to help every student to complete
the work of the school year successfully and

th1s new calendar year.

A key poece of that business was the
adoption of the approprlahons 10 the rev1sed
budget The total approproabons amount to
about $2.3 mollion dollars Th1s w1ll be sup·
ported by a balance of about' $193,000, state
funds m the amount of about $1,612,000, and
local funds of about $550,000
Excludmg the balance, the mcome lor the

Speaking of school.~--No. 301
year w1ll be about $2,162,000. State dollars
make up 74 6 pet of this total Local dollars
make up 25 4 pet
Thus, one can easoly see that we are st1llm
a pos1t10n that makes up heavily dependent
upon state dollars for the support of our school
distroct Three of every lour dollars come from
the state. Only one of every four is a local
dollar. Th1s also means that we must be acutely
aware of any changes that take place in the
state support of schools, parbcularly the School
FoWJdabon Program
Some rather sigmftcant changes m the

FoWJdallon Program were made m the 1973
session of the legislature. These were so farrea ching m theor effect that most school
distriCts had to be placed on some type of
"guarantee" for the 1973-1975 biemmm. As a
matter of fact , only 56 of the 625 or so diStricts
m the state are not on some kmd of "guarantee" whoch keeps them from recemn_g a
decrease m state support. These guarantees
run through June of 1975
The legoslature established a comm1sswn
to study the present Foundallon Program and
to report 1ts recommendations by October I,
1974. The report of th1s group will certamly
1\ave a great mfluence on the school fmancllli
o•clure lor Me1gs Local and every other do striCt

move on to the next one
NEWS &amp; NOTES - School buses cost about

$11,000 each - We try to replace three each
year -Gasoline, 011, t~res and antifreeze cost
(Continued on page 101

I

Bank adds two officers to its staff

:

o o o o o I

0

'

'

Mrs Noms, who jomed the
bank m November 1966, IS a
graduate of Racme H1gh
School and Mountam State
Business College. She and her
husband, Carroll, resode m
Syracuse, and are the parents
of three daughters , Mrs
Mitchell Hopkins, Akron; Mrs.
Jerry Coughlm, West M1llon,
and Deborah Norros, attending
Ohio State Umversoty

Wayne Swtsher, Pomeroy;

Leshe F ·Fultz, Pomeroy;
Rochard C. Follrod, Pomeroy;
Fred W. Crow, Jr, Syracuse;
Dr . FPed R. Carsey, Jr ,
Mason, and Ferman E. Moore ,

Middleport.

In addition to Karschnik and
Mrs Noms, the lollowmg were
re-elected
as
officers ·
Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
president; Thereon Johnson,•
executive
vice president; Paul
Stockholders reelected the
lollow10g dU'ectors, Theodore E. Kloes , ~ice prestdent;
T Reed, Jr, Pomeroy; Roger W. Hysell, cashier;
Thereon Johnson, Racme, E Joanne J. Williams, assostant
Robert Schellhase, Canton; C. caah1er, and Evelyn G. Lan- .
j

I

mng, assostant cash1er
Reed

announced

the

retirement of Mrs. Dorothy B.
W11l, who was an .asslslant
cash1er in the loan department
Mrs. Woll has been w1th the
bank 27 years Her retirement
1!'as effective Thlc 31, 1973
In his report to the shareholders, Reed stated tllllt 1973
far exceeded the hank's expectatiOns m terms of mcrease

m deposits and earmngs.
Following the meeting the
directors were guests for
dmner at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Reed.
I

I '

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