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IU _ The Dnily Sentmt•l, Mi&lt;hUcport-Pomerny. Q . J~r1. 2:l, 197•\

Property

Crash program proposed
U S policy has become mar~
fa1r to th e Arabs than rn the
past and, "Now that th e
Am en ca ns h~:~v e made a
ges tur e, the Arabs should
make one, too."
In Conf,'l'ess, momentwn appeared to be burldmg for some
form of controls on the proflt.s
use of coal, oil shale, and and tax benriht.s of the 011
busmess. But there were big
ttuclear power.
Nixon also will ask the differences on how wmdfall
lawma kers to de-regulate the
wellhead pnce of natural gas,
an actwn expec ted to lrtgger a
sharp rise m the retail price or
natural gas now used lo heat
more than half the natwn's
(Continued from page I)
homes.
But in a spectal energy years wrth the Orroles m 1970
message to Congress, Ntxon and 1971 .
Pos1llon by positwn, Analso will urge leg islators to act
derson
sard the 1974 B1g Red
speedily on his versiOn of
windfall tax leg islation de- Machine which won the
;rgned to force the 01! industry Western DlvlSton title last year
to pump some prohls from oil only to be ousted from the
price rises back mto otl ex- World Senes by the Eastern
D1v1sion tithsl New York Met.s,
ploration programs.
Others ttems in the message rs the s tronge st club in
Will include a plea for actwn on baseball .
The Reds' opening day lineup
legislatiOn giving the Federal
is
expected to have all star
Energy Office powers to encatcher
Johnny Bench behind
fo rce gasolme ratwnmg 1f 1t
decides to adopt rationing. the plate; 19-gamewinner Jack
Congress fatled to act on the Billmgham on the mound ; Mr.
b1ll before rt adjoined last Consistency, Tony Perez at
first base; all-star Joe Morgan
month.
at second base; rookie senNixon to Brief Leaders
sa
twn Danny Dnessen at tlurd
Nixon was to brief leaders of
both the House and Senate on base; Improved Dave Conthe message A~ a White House cepcion at shortstop; MVP
Pete Rose m leftfield ; Merv
meeting thts mormng.
Meanwh ile, Secretary of Rettenmund in center and
State Henry Kissmger said rookie speedster Ken Griffy in
Tuesday he expects the Arab right.
Anderson plans to go w1th a
oil embargo-a b1g factor in
the U S energy shortage- to four man pitching rQtation
be lifted before Egyptian and composed of Billingham, lefty
Israeh forces complete their Don Gullett; Clay Kirby and
40-day disengagement of Fred Norman during the first
forces, which is to begm month of the season.
" Thus far, our reports on
Fr1day.
K1ssmger, who helped Gary Nolan and Roger Nelson
negotiate the troop agreement, are scanty. We will have to
sard failure of the Arabs to lift wait and see how they both
the embargo " in a reasonable come back from last year's
time" would raise "serious injuries and layoff," the Reds
questtons of confidence in our skipper stated.
When asked rf all-star catmrnds.''
Without mentio.. mg the 011 cher Johnny Bench was tired
en.bargo specifically, Egyp- toward the end of 1973 season
tian President Anwar Sadat Anderson said, "Bench was
said in Algiers, Tuesday that tired, but that was my fault. I
should have rested him earlier
in the year. Bench is like
anyone else, he was worried
Our Interest Is
over his operation and dtd
Greater t=or You
weaken at the end, but I feel
Bench will snap back and
become the league's Most
Valuable Player again."
Sparky said he was flattered
by
Oakland A's owner Charley
On 90-Day
Finley's offer to manage the
Certificates
world champions.
" I was home painting the
5.75 per cent per
stairway, when my son, Albert,
year paid on 90 day
said Mr. Charles Finley was on
Certificates
of
the telephone and wanted to
Deposrt. $1,000.00
talk to me. First, I thought it
Minimum . )nterest
was a JOke being played by my
Payable Quarterly
neighbor or brother-in-law, but
I found out it really was Mr.
Finley. He offered me the
Mei~
manager's job after telling me
he had secured Bob Howsam's
permission to talk to me.
I told Mr. Finley that I owed
too
much to Mr. Howsam to
The Athens County
accept
his offer. When Mr.
Savmgs &amp; loan Co.
296 Second St.
Howsam called me in 1969 I
Pomeroy, Ohir
was a nobody, no one knew me.
The headlines read "SparkY
Who?" I will never leave this
club until Mr. Howsam fires
me. When he does, then I'll talk
to you. Finley replied,
"Congratulations, it's nice to
By ROBERT F. BUCKHORN
WASHINGTON (UP!) - In
an all-out drtve to make the
Umted States self suff1c1ent rn
energy ~y the 1980's, President
N1xon ~uday wtll ask Congress
to approve spending more than
$1.5 billion next fiscal year for
n crash program to promote

Reds best

5.75%

Co. Branch

@

ADMIRAL

SPECIAL VALUE!
Model C1897P
(18" Oia. Meas.)
Coniemporary portable features hand·
some roil-around stand, Walnut
grained finish on durable polystyrene
cabinet. Wide-Angle 172 sq. in. picture
tube, Super Span VHF/YHF tuners
and Admiral.lnstaQI.P.leY~---- THE JOPLIN

BAKER

profits rmght be controlled .

' - Rill Still Pending
Under the energy eme rgency
btll , winch Congress fm lcd to
pass before Christmas, and

which IS st1ll pendmg, excess
profr ts would go back to
the public m the form of
gaso line pnce cuts.
Federal
energy ch ief
Wrlham E. S1mon ca lls that
method "unworkable." Under

11 Falcon hand
~tudents earn
state ranking
PT . PLEASANT -

Eleven
band students from Wahama
H1gh School and four from
Po1nt Pleasant have successfully auditioned for seals
in the All-State Band
Students selected wrll meet
in Huntington in March for a
West V1rg1ma Music Educators
Conference where they wrll
rehearse and then m concluswn are to present a concert_
Gerald
Srmmons,
Wahama band director, said
they are Lou Ellen Roush,
flute ; Vivian Woodrum. D1ane
Finnicum, Cheryl Huber ,
Dtane Evans and Lmda
Bumgarner, clarinets; Carolyn
Roush, bass clarinet; Terri
Blackhurst, bassoon; Barbara
Clark, tenor saxophone; Rex
Howar1, trumpet, and Robert
Jarrell, tuba , all Wahama, and
Point Pleasant High students
named to the state positions
are: Katrinka Hart, bassoon,
Patty Meaige, clarinet; K1m
Dunsmoor, flute, and Davrd
Kayser ,
trombone,
Pt.
Pleasant.

$12,500 coming
to each county
State Auditor Joseph T.
Ferguson has announced that
each county will receive at
least $12,500 a month m local
government funds beginmng
with January's distribution.
This new procedure was
established by Ferguson's
office in accordance with the
state law which guarantees
each county a minimum of
$150,000 in such funds annually
to assist counties in budgeting.
Meigs County will receive
$12,500 a month while larger
counties will receive considerably more.
DIVORCES GRANTED
Gladys
Rayburn,
128
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, has
been granted a divorce from
Charles F . Rayburn, ChiCago,
and Ralph E. Brownrigg, 85
Elm St., Middleport, a divorce
from Debra Lynn Brownngg,
Crestline, Ohio.
know there IS still mtegrity left
in baseball."
Others speaking on an optimistic note were such frontline players as Ken Griffy,
infielder Darrell Chaney, and
starting pitchers, Billingham,
Gullett and Kirby, batting
coach Ted Kluszewski and
broadcaster Joe NuxhalL
Nuldtall will be entering his
seventh year as a Reds sportscaster with a new partner,
Marty Brennaman.
Brennaman was one of 200
persons seeking the top radio
play-by-play job vacated by the
talented Al Michaels last fall.
Brennaman was introduced to
the Cmcinnati news media
Tuesday _ He did not accompany the Reds on the
caravan.
It was announced that Bench
was the first player to sign his
1974 contract.
Although Bench is the first
player to sign, the Reds are not
expected to have serious signee
problems. Two big names,
Pete Rose and Joe Morgan,
may be the toughest to get on
the dotted lines.
Other members of the Reds'
family attending Tuesday's
session were Chief Bender,
assistant to Bob Howsam ; Paul
Campbell, Jim Ferguson,
Gordy Coleman, Russ Nixon,
minor league manager; Scott
Breede\J, minor league pitctring iAstructor; Jim Vennari,
Lyle Woverton and Gene
Bennett, Cincinnati Reds
scouts.

MEIGS THEATRE
WED. &amp; THURS.
JAN. 23-24
NO,T OPEN

Fri.-Saf. -Sun.- Mon.-Tues.
Jan. 25-26-27-28-29
ONE LITTLE INDIAN
James Garner
Also

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

BONGO

Show&gt;tariS7p.m.

~-----------------~--••

(G)

~

th(' adrmmstrat1on's version,
profits declarc&gt;d excessive by a
govcrruncnt board ~ould be
plowed back into development
of new energy resources.
Sen. Henry M. Ja&gt;kson , DWasiL , whose hearings on otl
supphes and profits continue
today, sa1d Tuesday the pnce
of erude oil has doubled "m a
matter of months" and that :
"We need a rollback, that's
what , and tax reform-411&gt;solutely ."
For the first nine months of
1973, he said, the sales volume
of seven brg 011 firms was up 6
per cent from a like penod in
1972, but in the same time
revenue was up 22 per cent and
net ea rrungs soared by 46 per

Transfers

.............. ' . /::n 111 Ofll)'

hurt .~

' " I• &lt;&gt;• I I ~ '~ ''

cent.

Teamster President Frank
F1tzsmunons Tuesday urged
President Nixon to mcrease the
fuel allowance for the nation's
truckers. He said his internatwna l umon was preparing to
reopen contract talks with
shippers to mcrease revenue
reduced by the energy crisis.

Truckers
(Continued from page I)
Raw H1de, Drrty Dan, Jumping
Bean, Night Crawler, B1g John,
Doggie Doggie, Born Loser,
Hrll Billy Bear and others
broadcast that I am here, I
know that for five miles around
everybody IS going to observe
the speed limit," said Lordick.
Lordick admitted he gets
slightly annoyed when a trucker spots hlm and tells other
truckers, "Smokey wears panty hose ."
He also gets a httle more an·
noyed when a trucker suggests
to other truckers that they run
him down.
When Lordick was preparmg
to get out of his car 'to check a
truck that had broken down on
Interstate 76 he heard :
"Smokey is on foot. Run him
down."
However, none ol the broadcasts is accompanied by call
letters which vrolates Federal
Communtcahons Comrmsswn
regulations.
Lord1ck told of a new use of
the CB which is in clear violation of FCC regulations.
" We have heard of
prostitutes who use Channel 10
(the truckers channel) on the
CB," he said. "Mostly at mght
they w1ll pull alongside a
trucker, turn on the interior
light and broadcast to the
trucker . What you see is what
you get for $"0."
"This is extremely difficult
to police and many times
dangerous to the truckers who
are tempted," he said. "They
are sometimes robbed durmg
the transaction."
Two men were arrested near
here Tuesday after they allegedly drove alongside a trailer
truck on Ohio II and smashed
ils rearview mirror with pick
handles.
Columbiana County Sheriff's
deputies sa1d Thomas Hebron,
45, and George Cekovich, 38,
both of East Liverpool, were
charged with vandalism.

Four fined by
Mayor Zerkle
Four defendants were fined
and two others forfeited bonds
in Middleport Mayor John
Zerkle's court Tuesday night.
Fined were Sarah L. Boyle~,
19, Middleport, $5 and costs,
improper backing; Virginia
Duckworth, 41, Middleport,
$150 and costs, three days
confinement, driving while
intoxicated; Terry D. Michael,
26, Pomeroy, $5 and costs,
operating a vehicle without
regard to safety ; Donna Bush,
28, Middleport, $10 and costs,
no operator's license. Forfeiting bonds were Paul W.
Hayes, 25, Ripley, $25,
speeding, and Alvie C. Purkey,
49, Mason, $300, driving while
intoxicated.
SERVICES SET
The Rev. Jack Welch will
officiate at funeral services to
be held at 1:30 p.m. Thursday
at the Foglesong Funeral
Home for Nada A. Allen,
formerly of New Haven, who
died Sunday in Tampa, Fla.
Other survivors of Mrs. Allen
not listed earlier include an
aunt, Mrs. Hattie Yeager of
Ripley, W. Va., who is 105
years of age.

DIVORCE ASKED
Kathryn Denison, Mid·
dleport, has flied for a divorce
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court from Harry' J .
Denison, Rutland, on grounds
of gross neglect of duty.

... ,,
111

_llrl. 1'

.\ltm· j\ ixo 11
wvrtl~ ,eow·

•'

l .r undJ

J1erc

"'' !I • I

DIANA NEAL is a newspaper carrier for the Daily
Sentmel. Diana , age II, is a resident of Clifton, \V . Va., the
daughter of Mrs. Delores L. Neal. Diana is a sixth grade
student at West Columbia Elementary SehooL She is a junior
band member, a cheerleader and loves ice skating and
swimming. She has managed to go ice skating twice this
wmter . She is savmg her profits from her route to purchase a
ll)..gpeed bike. Diana also managed to do what work rs asked
of her around her home.
PLEASANT VALLEY
Discliarges: Albert Boyles,
Jack
Wheeler, William
Roberts, Point Pleasant;
Cynthia Smith , Henderson;
Mrs. Dallas Stewart, Letart;
Mrs . Harry Bass, West
Columbia;
Mrs. Wayne
Cleland, daughter, Langsville,
0.; Eugene Mullins, Hanover,
W. Va ., and Mrs. Tex Corfee,
Leon.
CLUB TO MEET
REEDSVILLE
The
Riverview Garden Club will
meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday at
the home of Mrs. Claremont
Harns with Mrs. Herman
Grossmckle as co-hostess.
SHRINE'ITES TO MEET
The Twin City Shrinettes will
meet at the home or Mrs.
Beulah Ewing, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, at 7:30 p.m. Thursday.

Zenan Guthrie

Virgil C. King, Mary D. King
to John Hess, Charlotte Hess, 3
A., Bedford.
John P. Young, Janet
Kathleen Young to William A.
Young, Lot, Pomeroy .
Mae Van Meter to Paul E.
Evans, Merle L. Evans, 4\2 A.,
Lebanon.
C. E. Custer, aha, Corwin
Earl Custer, dec. to Mayme
Custer, Cert. of Trans., Racine.
Daisy Evelyn Montgomery
to Paul H. Montgomery, Larry
P. Montgomery, Cert. of
trans ., Salem.
Kenneth E. Riggs, Judith A.
Riggs to Fred B. Goeglein,
Barbara A. Goeglein, Lot,
Orange.
Lawrence A. Smith, dec'd.,
to Oscar F. Smith, Donna Jean
Smith, Larry M. Smith, Cert.
Trans., Salisbury.
Oscar F . Smith, Madgle
Smith, Larry M. Smith, Janet
Smith, Dan Smith, Donna Jean
Smith to Ronald J _ Browning,
Anna L. Browning, Parcels,
Salrsbury.
Harold Dewhurst, June
Dewhurst to 0 . 0. Patterson,
Audrey Patterson, .57 A.,
Rutland Village.
Esther Price, Clarence V.
Prke, Maxine Price to Racine
Home National Bank, Lot.s,
Racine .
DaleS. Machir, Jennifer Lou
Machir to Dale S. Machir,
Jennifer Lou Machir, 1.85 • 3.6
A., Chester.

died on Monday
Funeral serv1ces . for Zenan
Guthrie, Bl, Cincinnati, for merly of M iddleport, who died
Monday at the Veterans

Hospital in Clnc(nnatl, will be
held at 10 a.m. Saturday at the

Glen Hill Funeral Home,
Wayne Ave. , in Lockland.
Mr. Guthrie was the son of
the late Florence and Charles
Guthrie of Gallia County. and
was also prece.ded in death by
four sisters and three brothers.
Surviving are his wife,
Marie, a sister, Mrs . Nellie
Winston ,
Middleport;
a
brother.in-law, Charles Smith,
Middleport; a niece, VIrginia
Stalworth, in New York. and a
nephew, Miles Manley of
Columbus. Burial will be at

Lockland.

BAKE SALE SET
The S1lver Circle Senior
Citizens of Rutland will hold a
bake sale Saturday, Jan. 26, in
the old bank building beginning
at 9 a.m.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, Jan. 22 I
William Adkins, Wilma
Bahr, Sharon Bailey, DoUie
Barton, Mrs. Lawrence
Caldwell and daughter, Edna
Claypool, LaDon Clonch, Mrs.
James Dovenbarger and son,
Mrs . Richard Elliott ahd
daughter, David Evans, Jack
Frey, Saundra Gatewood,
Lewis Gilland, Luella Hearon,
George Henderson, Alicia
Mullins, Mrs. Tim Neal and
daughter, Rosemary Neal,
Mrs. Jerry Nisbltt and son,
Lena Pooler, William Ramey,
Patricia Saffell, Shirley Smith,
Christopher Tackett, Earl
Watson and Lora Williams.
(Births)
Mr. and Mrs. Dickie Miller, a
son, Oak Hill.

-

~

Dwigh_t R. Cole
died on Tuesday

•

REEDSVILLE '- Dwlghl ' R.
Cole, 44, Reedsville, Rt. 1. died

New Haven site ·o f-new power plant

Tuesday In an Athens Hosplta\.followlng an extended Illness.
Mr. Cole was born In Meigs

County, the son of Rub(
Caldwell Cole, Reedsville, R .
I, and the late Pearl E. Cole.
In addition fo his father he

was also preceded in death by
two brothers , Oorsel and
Bernard.
Mr. Cole was employed at

the Delco Products Co. In
Dayton several years .

In addition to his mother he

Is survived by three brothers,

Orville,

Dayton; Otis, Cin-

cinnati,
and
Gallipolis; one

Floyd, of
half·brother.

Homer Cole. Tuppers Plains ;

three sisters, Mrs. Marjorie
Mercer, Coolville; Mrs. Augie
Craig, Louisa, Va ., and Miss
Enid Cole, Reedsville, Rt. 1.
and several nieces and
nephews.
Private funeral services will

be held Thursday at

1

p m. at

the White Funeral Home in
Coolville for family members
only . The Rev. Roy Deeter will
officiate. Burial will be 10
Success Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
any t1me.

Veterans Memorial Hospllal
ADMISSIONS - Audria
Arnold, Minersville; Goldie
Findley, Pomeroy; Paul Klein,
Pomeroy; Janet Connolly,
Reedsville; Carolyn Wright,
Mason; Wallace Hatfield II,
Pomeroy; Job Fairchild,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES - Oswell
· Durham, Carolyn Thompson,
Hallie Cross, Charles Hoback,
Richard Thomas, Vern Uttle.
::::::::::::::::;:;~~»"D.!:·X~«~

JAYCEES TO MEET
The Meigs County Jaycees
will meet al 8 p.m. today al
Pomeroy village haU.
~::~:!:!:~'.!:::::~~=·:·*·~.••.;§}{o;wm:l_,l!'l!'9.)'9.$.~~
Marriage Uceose
John Wesley Roush, 18,
Middleport, and Patricia Lynn
Crossen, 20, Minersville.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Wednesday was 55 degrees
with light rain falling.

Weather
Clearing and colder tonight.
Lows 16 to 24 north and mostly
20s south. Thursday mosUy
sunny. Highs in the 40s.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
MUd with a chance of
showen each day. Highs In
the 50s and upper 4lls. Lows
In the 30s.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Canal plan
favored at
Eureka dam
HUNTINGTON - H approved all the way up the line to
White House, construction of a canal and new locks around
existing Gallipolis Locks and Dam at Eureka will begin in tbe fall
of 1977. Cost of the project is $149million.
This was favored Wednesday afternoon at the Federal
Building here in a public hearing sponsored by the U. S. Corps of
Engineers, rather than construction of a new dam downstream.
Supporters or improved Ohio RIVer transportation encouraged the Corps to proceed with its tentatiye canal-locks
improvement plan at the GaUipolis Locks and Dam.
Representatives of industry
and business along the Ohio cost ration for the canal plan
explained the need for im· would be 3.7 to 1, which means
provement at the Gallipolis the project would provide $3.70
structure and encouraged the in benefits for each taxpayer
Corps to Implement the canal dollar spent. The benefit-eost
proposal as soon as possible. ratio for the downstream dam
Col. Kenneth Mcintyre, proposal was 3.4 to I.
"The cost for the canal
Huntington District enginner,
project
is $149 million and the
presented the Corps' plan.
price
of
the downstream dam
"The majority of the in·
dustrial spokesmen favored would be $165.9 million (almost
the canal plan for various $17 million more), yet the
reasons,'' Conrad Ripley , benefits or the two are almost
public relations supervisor for equal," Neal Jenkins of the
Corps explained.
the Corps, said.
"We believe the canal plan is
"It wfll be completed faster,
cost less and provide less the most appropriate, feasible
complications
than
the way to go, but our report is not
proposed new dam down- yet compltte," Jenkins said.
Written statements on the
stream," Ripley added.
(Conllllued on Page 2)
The Corps said the benefit-

ews.. in Briefs(
By United Press International
&lt;XlLUMBUS- A THREATENED NATIONWIDE shutdown
of the trucking industry which was to be started by independent
truckers in Ohio failed to materialize early today, apparently
because of a strong show of force by the Ohio Highway Patrol.
Patrol officers would not say how many men they had on the
Interstate highways or the Ohio Turnpike but they were visible to
almost every trucker passing through the state,
"We have enough out to handle any situation," said a patrol
spokesman here. "We are not doing anthing to them unless they
break the law." Truckers last December closed several interstate highways here near Toledo and near Cambridge and
blocked the Ohio Turnpike when they first began protesting the
, high prices of fuel and low speed limits.

nDARNETTE" CHILDREN'S WEAR
SLIGHT IRREGULARS Of FAMOUS MAKER KNIT PLA YWEAR

WASHINGTON- A &lt;XlAUTION OF truck drivers' groups
voted early today to shut down their rigs Jan. 31 in protest of
govenunent fuel policies,,The result of the voting was announced
by Mike Parkhurst, editor of OVerdrive Magazine. "The truckers
pledged an unlimited shutdown and demand~ an immedi~te
price ceiling on all petroleum products, regulatton of the ent1re
oil inudstry if oil companies have lied and an eventual rollback to
freeze fuel prices at their May 15, 1973level," Parkhurst said.
He said 18 representatives of truckers' organizations were
nearly unanimous m voting for the work stoppage after a day long
meeting at a downtown Washington hotel. He said those participating in the session represented 30 to 4() per cent of aU long
haul drivers and most of the owner-operators, or about 100,000
trucks.

;/

DETROIT -THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, by cutting
funds to operate and administer unemployment compensation, is
failing to protect laid off workers in Ohio, the United Auto
Workers (UAW) P~"esident Leonard Woodock said here Wed-

neA~~~al decision to cut $1.4 million in allocations from the
Ohio Bureau or Employment Services was termed '!heartless"
by Woodcock. Woodcock, who said the Nixon administration ''put

lis head in the sand like an ostrich and is pretending there is no
Wlemployment crisis," predicted "chaos will result in the filing
and processing of unemployment claims unless the federal
govenunent reacts swiftly to help Ohio."
&lt;XlLUMBUS - GASOIJNE RATIONING coupons will be
required for state agencies to obtain fuel for th~ir vehicles after
Feb. 1, J. Phillip Richley, state Transportation Department
director said.
More than 38,000 coupons will be printed for the month of
February and will be used by all state owned vehlcl~s. e~cept
those opereated by the Ohio Highway Patrol and the d1~1on of
highways. Richley said the decision to adopt the coupon rationmg
plan was made after petroleum suppliers told the state gasoline
aUocations would be cut by as much, as 2:! per cent over 1972
levels.

Be Sure To Read Our Storewide
January Sale Advertisement In
Thuisday's Newspaper

WAsHINGTON- HOUSE JUDICIARY Chairman Peter W.
Rodino Jr. has changed his mind and agreed to share subpoena
powers with committee Republicans, removing an Immediate
threat of a partisan squabble over impeachment of President
Nixon.
.
The question of subpoena powers and the unpasse over
-committee access to facts gathered by Special Prosecutor Leon
Jaworski were on the agenda for a meeting of the panel's senior
members today. Asked Wednesday if he would continue to resist
an effort to force him to share subpoena power with ranking
tConllnued on Page Zl

SAVE YOUR SALESLIPS FOR VALUABLE PREMIUMS

ELBERF LDS IN POMEROY

'

,

.f\

local purchases of goods and servtces of additional nullions of
dollars.
THE GOVERNOR pomted out that the above benefrt.s do not
mclude those which could be attributed to the new plant's use of
West V1rginia coal and 1ts transportation, nor to the ind~rect
henefit.s that would flow from the new or expanded servrces that
would be needed to serve tbe constructwn and operatmg personnel.
He said that the new plant's required annual coal tonnage
represenled the need for the development or expanswn of mmes
mvolvmg an estimated capital cost of $80--million. This in turn, he
added, would represent: employment of an estimated 1,500
mining personnel wrth an annual payroll (at present pay scales)
of about $18-million; expenditures of additional millions of
dollars per year for materials aod supplies, many of them
purchased locally, and still other major expenditures involved in
the transportation of the coal from mine to plant, with its own
employment, payroll, local purchases and taxes.
"This new plant near New Haven," Cook emphasized, "will

•

Devoted To The

VOL XXV NO. 198

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

lnler~ls

'

in every way with the environmental requirements of the
state of West Virgm1a ." The environmental fea tures of the
gene rating station will include a giant cooling tower to safeguard
the quality of the water in the Ohio River, and very large electrostatic precipitators (designed to remove 99.7 per cent of the
plant's fly ash emissions) and a chimney at least 1,000 feet high
to protect the quahty of the am brent air .
ConstructiOn is expected to start in the spring. The site for
the plant comprises approximately 600 acres between th e rrver
and U.S. Route33upstream from New Haven .
TI1e site was selected for the AEP System's newest expansion, Cook explamed, because of its location on the river, tts
proxiimty to West Virginia coal, it.s accessibility to the prmcipal
high-voltage transmission network of the seven-state utility
system, and because of the area 's "cooperative labor climate."
He noted that a project agreement had been worked out with a
number of bmlding trade unions in the area to help assure
completion of the protect w1thout costly and disruptive labor
disputes
com~ly

•

at y

e11ttne

Of The MeigJ-Mason Area

THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1974

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

NOT EVEN A RIPPLE OF RESPONSE

•

First aid service began zn '37

•

l"WR~~i&gt;m*'·:;;::;x::::::-».::::::::::::::-..;-.:::-.::::::-n::::x:~::::::::~::::::"~:::::~:::::.::::-""::::::-;:::,

Special Purchase and Sale

Long Sleeve Knit Shirts - . . .
Sale 1.50
Long Sleeve Turtleneck Shirts
Sale 1.50
Boys Denim Look or Check Pants
Sale 2.20
Girls Long Sleeve Shirts
Sale 1.50
Girls Fash,ion Pants
Sale 1.75
Girls Boxer Pants
Sale 1.50
Girls Scooter Skirts
Sale 1.75
Assorted Corduroy Pants
Sale 2.25
Infants Long Sleeve Shirts
Sale 1.15
Permanent Press Pants
Sale 1.50
Infants and Toddlers Shorts
Sale 1.00
Sale 1.75
Boys Corduroy Pants
Childrens Cotton Anklets .
Sale s pairs 1.00
Girls Knee Socks
Sale soc
Womens Cotton Anklets
Sale 4 prs. 1.00
Sale 2 prs. 1.00
Womens Crew Socks
Infants and Girls Tights
Sale 75c

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Appalachian Power Company, a West Virginra coal annually.
major operating company of the American Electric Power
Mr. Cook sa1d location os the new facility m West VIrginia
System, will build a 1.3-million-kilowatt, coal--burning generating '\'as still another example of the AEP System's continuing
plant on the Ohio River near New Haven, W. Va.
dedication to coal as its basic energy source, which he termed
Announcement of the new facility - the 20th major power "the natton's most abundant, most available fueL"
plant on the AEP System upon its completion in 1977 - was made
Gov. Moore c1ted "the tremendous economic benefits" that
in a joint news CO!Iference today by West Virginra Gov. Arch A. would be realized from the project, including:
Moore, Jr. and Donald C. Cook, chairman of AEP and president
of Appalachian Power. Ohio Power Company is another of the
-Construction employment for three-and-a-half years, with
seven operating companies in the AEP System.
a peak of 2,600 workers and with the bulk of them made up of
The $421knillion plant will prov1de not only added electric · residents of the site's area.
energy for this part of the country but also millnons or dollars in
-A construction payroll estimated at more than $135--million
added economic benefits to the inunediate area, especially ~er the three-and-a-half years, a major part of wh1ch would be
Mason County.
·
spe'nt or invested in tbe area.
Gov. Moore hailed the project as a welcome addition to the
- Permanent employment for Hill operating personnel after
state's electric power supply and one which would operate in a completion of the plant.
manner compatible with the requirements of protecting the
- A permanent payroll estimated at $1.35--million per year to
envirorunent. He took particular satisfactiOn, he sa1d, in the fact start (based on present pay scales).
that the new plant would burn an estrmated 3 8-million tons of
- Local taxes of many millions of dollars each year, and

11

SHOP THURSDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM
OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 PM

'

'

MIDDLEPORT FIREMEN are hoping foc a strong
public response in their appeal for funds to he used to purchase a new emergency vehicle to replace this 1965 truck _

Krogh could
wreck Nixon
WASHINGTON (UP!) Former White House plwnber
Egil "Bud" Krogh Jr. may be
ready to "spill his guts" and
damage President Nixon after
he is sentenced today on a
federal civll rights conspiracy
charge, a close friend says.
Krogh, 34, director or the
White House investigative unit
formed in 1971 to plug leaks or
alleged national security information, pleaded guilty Nov. 30
to conspiring to deprive Dr.
Lewis Fielding of his civil
rights by directing the
burglary of his Los Angeles
office in Sept. 1971.
He could get a maximum 10
years in jail and a $10,000 fine.
Sentencing was seheduled
for 1:45 p.m. EDT.
Fielding was the psychiatrist
of Daniel Ellsberg, who had
been indicted for leaking the
Pentagon Papers to tbe press.
Krogh, who resigned as
undersecretary or transportation May 9, 1973, and took "full
responsibility" for the breakin, later renounced his actions
and promised Watergate
prosecutors " a full and truthful
disclosure'' after sentencing.
He said he would walt until
he was sentenced before
testifying, to &lt;~avoid any
possible suggestion that I am
seeking leniency through testifying."
Edward L. Morgan, a close
friend and former White House
aide who resigned from a
Treasury Department post last
week, predicted Wednesday
Krogh would "spill his guts"
about the plumbers operation
and that his disclosures may
lead to Nixon's impeachment.
"Bud's confession and the
tape erasures will probably do

Weather
Partly cloudy north and
cloudy extreme south today
high in upper 30s and lower 40s.
Partly cloudy tonight and little
change in temperature low
from ld 20s to lower 30s.
Friday fair and high In the 40s.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Temperatures averaging
above normal with highs
from mid 4h lo mid 50s.
Lows al lllghl In 3h and
lower 4()s. Chance of ocCIIIonal showen during ·the
period.

By Bob Hoeflich
Sunday the Middleport Fire
Department announced a
campaign for money to purchase a replacement for its
1965 model emergency vehicle.
In their announcement,
firemen asked for volunteer
solicitors, organizations to
schedule fund raising events,
and for business and individual
contributions.
As of Wednesday the firemen
had not received the first
response to the announcement.
Last year, the firemen answered 244 first aid calls, 163 in
town and 81 out of town.
The Middleport emergency
unit is one of the first such
volunteer emergency and
rescue squads in Ohio.
The squad started way back
on Aug. I, 1937 when firemen
decided to purchase a first aid
kit. Then it was decided to
purchase
other related
equipment and first aid classes
were started. An inhalator was
secured from the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
Co., and in 1938 other pieces of
equipment were ob~lned.
Early in 1939, a committee
was appomted to investigate
the possibilities of pu,chasing
a truck to relieve some of the
emergency equipment load
which was at the time berng
carried on the fire trucks.
In 1939, a new inhalator was

purchased and by then ) he
equipment truck had been
bought and a special cabinet
built on the vehicle to carry the
new equipment.
On Aug. 3, 1939, two years
and one day after the motwn
had been made to buy a first
aid kit, another mohon was
made which was to set the
stage for the present day
volunteer emergency-rescue
unit. It was the late B. F.
Parmalee who made the
motion to notify surrounding
towns of the willingness to help
in case of an emergency. The
late Mr _Parma lee became the
first chief or first aid.
It wasn't until January, 1950,
that a complete mobile unit
was purchased to serve as an
emergency truck . This truck
was used for a full seven years.
Then on Dec. 15, 1957, another
vehicle was purchased by the
department.

Miller announces
candidacy in '74

The steady increase in calls
each year teamed with the
variety of the calls had led to
the addition of more p1eces of
equipment. One of the pieces is
a resuscitator which cost over
$800.
Some 12 years ago, the
emergency unit was answermg
about 145 calls annually.
Today, the work load has increased to some 24~250 a yearFiremen spent 1,525 hours last
year answering those calls.
Firemen are asking that
organizations hold some sort of
fund raising events with
proceeds earmarked for the
truck fund. Businesses and
individuals are asked to contribute and to mail their
donations to P. 0 . Box 144,
Middleport. Volunteer workers

for a planned house-to-house
campaign are also asked to
mdicate willingness to help by
calling Pete Kloes at 992-2406.
Areas served by the squad
outside of Middleport Cheshire Village and Township, and Salisbury Township
- are also asked to participate.
Some $15,000 will be needed
to purchase a vehicle which
will comply with the Federal
Highway Safety Act. Firemen
have about $3,000 on hand
which they wrll add to the mcoming contributions for the
purchase of the new vehicle.
Let's face 1t : Plainly
speaking, the Middleport
Volunteer Ftre Department
would like to hear from you,
you and YOU.

Cassels is dead
WASHINGTON (UP!) Louis Cassels, United Press
International senior editor and
prize-winning religion writer
who covered nearly every
major religious and social
welfare story during the turbulent 1960s, has 'died at his
home in Aiken, S. C. He was 52.
Cassels, who had a history of
heart trouble, apparentlY.
suffered a coronary attack
Wednesday evening shortly
after finishing dinner at his
home, his wife Charlotte said.
A veteran of 32 years service
with UP!, Cassels was the
authot of numerous magazine
articles and more than a half

dozen books on religion aud
ethical problems in contemporary America - the field
he regularly covered for UP!.
His
weekly
column,
"Religion in America," appeared in afternoon papers i
another, "World of Religion, "
was for morning newspaper
use. He was the first wire
service reporter to write
regularly and in depth on
religious news of interest to
every faith as a topic of continuing importance to secular
newspaper readers.

the President in," Morgan told
Congressman Clarence E.
the Wall Street Journal WedMiller announced today he will
nesday. He said he considers
seek re-election to a fifth term
impea~hment inevitable.
as Representative to Congress
Federal charges of lying to a
from the Tenth District of Ohio.
grand jury, and a Los Angeles
" It has been a privilege to
charge of burglary, were
work for the people or the
dropped after Krogh pleaded
Tenth District. I repledge my
guilty.
effort. to provide responsive,
Krogh originally pleaded mfull time representation in the
nocent to the federal charges
U. S. Congress," Miller said.
and in subsequent court moMiller add"'1, "I will continue
tions his lawyers said he lied to $193,964 given
to do the best job I can and
protect information "officially
New projects are
honor the trust' that has been
classified by the highest
to local schools
placed in me."
security office In the governnoted by Lions
ment of the United States, the
After deductions for basic
President himself."
and transportation, retirement ;:;:;:;:-&lt;.::m.-~.w..w-.«Tm:·:·:·:·:·x-:-:~:::::::::=:::::::::::::::;::m:;:::::::::;..,;:v:·:·:~-:·:·:·:·=~~:-::::: • Each member reported on
for teachers and non~eachers
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Dividing for the flnit time on
new projects m their company
and allotments to the county
party Jines the Senate Watergate committee has decided to
or community when the
board of education, Meigs
hold,puhlt~ hearings on President Nixon's campaign conPomeroy-Middleport Lions
County's three local school
trlbutlons from billionaire Howard Hughes and from dairy
Club met for a luncheon at the
cooperatives.
districts received $193,963.53
Meigs Inn Wednesday.
for the January State School
The committee unanimously decided to ask again for a
During the meeting, pres1ded
Foundation subsidy payment.
meeting with President Nixon to question him on the
over by Richard Chambers,
The
Eastern
District
Watergate scandal. U he refUBes, the committee said It may
third vice presrdent, general
received $36,872.22; the Meigs
send him a written questionnaire.
club business was also
Local District, $114,362.01, and
0 didn 't say what would happen If he refused to answer
discussed and C. J . Struble
that.
reported on an apprectatlon
the Southern Local District,
open house to he held at the
Committee Chairman Sam J. Ervin, D·N.C., emerged
$42.729.30. The county board
SYRACUSE
Mayor received a direct allotment or
from a threH!our closed meeting Wednesday to announce
Meigs High School cafeteria
Herman London and Richard $5,468.01 plus allotments from
that members had voted to conduct the Inquiries In two
for C. E. Blakeslee on Sunday,
p _ Newell, systems manager each or the local school
weeks of public hearings next Tuesday, Its four Democrats
Feb. 10. Struble also ~nfor PoinTView Cable TV in Pt. districts for a total payment or
vollng In favor and the three Republicans against.
nounced a directors meeting
Pleasant, toway announced the $10,145 .70.
for
Jan. 26 at the Meigs Inn.
. ue :u mmu•;m:=::::cw:::::.;;m
extension of service to the
Syracuse-Minersvllle area of
Meigs County.
The actual construction is
being done by the Tacy Cable
Communications of Marietta.
Barring extended periods · or
bad weather, the work shohld
be completed within eight
weeks.
Newell expressed ap·
preclation to Mayor London
and other elected Syracuse
CHILLICOTHE
Patrolman
village officials for their ~Hayman Keith Barnitz, left, native of
cooperation in making the Pomeroy, has been honored by his fellow
project a reality. Syracuse officers of the Olillicothe Highway Patrol
Councll adopted a resolution Post as "Patrolman or the Year for 1973."
several months ago urging the
An award w_as presented to Ptl.
PolnTView firm to extend its Barnitz by Captam R. C. W1lson , Com·
cable television system to mander of District 9, with headquarters at
Syraeuse.
Jackson on Jan. 17.
_
Residents of -the Syracuse·
The Outstanding Highway Patrolman rs
Minersville area should not chosen annually with each patrol post
call for h'ook-upa at this time. , competing for the honor of State H1ghway
They will be contacted and Pa,trolmanoftheYear . Though Patrolman
given the opportunity to sub- ~rnitz didnot win the ~~e award, Capt.
scrille to the service.
Wilson indrcated Barn1tz s lor,aity, _mWhen the work Is completed tegrit~, and job performance ce~~inly
and the homes wired for cable rate w1th the best m the state of Ohro .
upwards of .joo subscribers wni
I'lL Barnitz graduated from the Patrol
be added to the 40oo currenUy Academy in June of 1966, and ~as been
enj~ying cable TV.
stationed at the_ Chillicothe post smce. H1s
PoinTVlew operates cable borne was originally Pomeroy, where he
TV systems for Middleport, graduated from high school in 1961. He rs
Pomeroy and Gallipolis in Ohio currently enrolled as a part-time :rtudent,
I'll. Barnitz is married to the former sons, Thomas 7, and Tinuny 6. He is the
and Mason, New Haven, Pt. for the seco~d y~ar at the Clnll1cothe
Francis
Peacock, of Ontario, Canada. son of Mr. and Mrs. Hayman Barnitz,
Pleaant, Ripley and Raven- Branch of Oh10 Umvers1ty, and rs-seeking_._(
swood in West Virginia.
a degree m Law Enforcement.
-,l They reside in Kingston with their lwo Uncoln Heights, Pomeroy.

Cable tv
extended
in Meigs

;

".

Chillicothe
post names
top officer

\

•

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L---~------........_._......J...._~--~~------~-----'---'----.L~-----'- -- - ----

�.

'

3- The Daily Sentmel, M1ddlepo1 !-Pomeroy, 0, Jar1 24,1974
2- The Dally Senhnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Jan.

Friars edge Boston College 79-77

Nixon wants to scrap
Education Act of 1965
WASHINGTON (UP!) President N~&lt;on w1ll ask
Congress m a special educatwn
message today to cooperate
w1th the adminisllatlOn to
replace the Great Society-era
Elementary and Secondary
Education Act (ESEA) of 1965,
which expires June 30
Breaking from tradition, the
President 1s expeeted to spell
out school budget details for
1975 wh1ch normally would not
be available until his budget
goes to Congress Feb. 4
The message aga10 Will
propose the consolidation of
more than 30 categorical grant
programs for needy, han dicapped and other elementary
and high school children and m
vocational and adull education,
.a form of special revenue-

shanng the adm1mstra1Ion
unsuccessfully has promoted m
the past
Gerald Warren, Wh1te House
deputy press secretary, told
reporters Wednesday that the
proposals would follow "very
closely" the lines of N1xon's
proposed $2.5 billion Better
Schools Act of 1973
N1xon w11l commend both
houses of Congress for movmg
toward grant consohdatwn m
pendmg legiSlation but will ask
for " further consoiidahon
still "
A Senate education b1ll
supports limited grants consolidallon. A House bill would
merge fundmg authorities for
such actlv1tles as school
libraries, books and eqwpment, guidance and counseling, nulrillOn and health

Wednesday rught why he's M1
C.1 utch around Providence
Stacom,lost m the shadow of
All-Anienca Erme D1Gregono
last season, htt a 30-foot JUmp
shot at the !mal buzzer to give
the seventh-ranked Fnru s a 7977 overhme \tclory O\er
Boston College The victory

dropout prevention and adult
education.
To mterest state and local
school off1c1als m grant consobdallon Nixon will propose
one-year advance fundmg for
elementary and h1gh school
programs. The SO&lt;alled forward fundmg IS of v1tal unportance to local school
diStrlcls' whlch would, for the
first time, know during a
school year how much federal
a1d to expect next year. AppropriatiOns for the upcommg
year often are incomplete
when schools close for the

the maJor ml comparues.

PORTABLE CRANE - Five seruor students m a weldmg class at Me1gs High Sehool haH
made a portable crane It took them e1ght hoW's Above, w1th a V.a engme m the hmst (1 ... ) are,
Rob Vance, Bill M1ller (mstructor ), Paul Searls, Jeff Grate and Ted F1s~er Absent was Rob
Brrchf1eld Students m the class are exposed to equ1pment actually used m mdustry This year
a new Uncoln ldealarc welding machme was added The machme enables students to weld
alummum, slamless steel and copper The last mne weeks of school students are placed with
employers for on-the-Job trammg

In a message dehvered to
Congress Wednesday, Nixon
asked for passage of legiSlalion
designed to end "wmdfall"
profits and asked for mandatory reportmg of 011 mventones
and an e!Irmnatwn of the
foreign depletiOn allowance

Dr. Lawrence E. Lamb

Lecithin and cholestrol
DEAR DR LAMB-Will you
please explain to me about
taking lec1Ulin for cholesterol
trouble• My cholestrol has
been h1gh, from what the
doctor tells me, and I have
been taking lec1Ulin, at least
four tablespoons a day, but 11
doesn't seem to help I watch
my rats m the d1et and
anythmg that IS cooked,
eliminatmg all fatty foods,
butter, whole rrulk, etc
Will Iec1Ulin help lower my
cholestrol' Am I wasting my
money m continumg to take 1l'
The doctor says 1t w11l not help,
and he has never heard of
lec11hin helpmg cholesterol
DEAR READER-II you are
on a proper d1el to begm w1th,
II Will not help m any way
except to decrease the amount
of money you w1ll have
available to spend on food
l..ec1thm IS a fatty ac1d, combmed w1th chohne and a
phosphate When you swallow
1t, the lec1thm w1ll be broken
down mto these three parts

~cal

Bowling

ALA Bowlrng League

Early Fnday- 6 1S P M
January lB. 1974
Team Standmgs

P0111ts

Jt Gutter Dusters
22
Feeney Bennett Stnke Outs 18
Feeney Bennett F l ters
Rut land -467 P1oneers

12

10

10
H1gh Team Ser1es - Feeney
Bennelf F'1ers 1385 Jr Gutter
Dusters •311 5 Feeney Bennett
Rac1ne 602 Rocketts

Strtke Outs 1341
H1gh Team Game -

Feeney

Bennet! Stnke Outs 487 Jr
Gut1er Du sters -475 , Feeney

Bennet! Filers 470
Htgh lnd

Senes -

Max ne

Dugan 410 Mary Hoover 448
Gerry Kessmger 439

H1gh lnd Game Mary
Hoover 191 Maxme Dugan 181
Maxme Dugan 163

Early Sunday Muted
Jan 20 1974
W

L

Tuesday Afternoon Leapue
Pomeroy Bowling lane
Jan lS, 1974
Last day of f1rst half
Standrngs
W L
Roval Crown Bottling
83 45
Fr1endly Taver11
76 52
No A
70 58
Forest Run Block
59 69
No 1
52 76
No 2 •
44 8Jl
Tellm H1gh Game - Team
No 1, 467
Team H1gh Seres - Team
No 1, 1360
lnd H1gh Game - Pa ndora
Co1l1ns 184 Pat Carson 176
lnd Hq;;~h Senes - Pandora
Collins 511 Betty Smith 5D6
Wednesday
early Btrd League
Jan 14, 1974
W L
Helen s Beauty Shop
31
0
Ben Tom Corp
30 2
16 16
Bertha 's Grocery

'

Rawlmgs Auto Part s
8 24
Stewart Hardware
6 26
Roush s Landmg
-l 28
Team H1gh Game - Helens
Beauty Shop 836
Team H1gh Senes - Helens
Beauty Shop 2-lJ8
lnd H1gh Game - Mary
voss 197 Ftoss te Maxson 186
lnd H1gh Series - Mary
Voss 537 Mar lene Wilson SD I
late Monday M •xed
Jan 14, 1974
W L
Dann •e s Mobt le Homes 8
1
Team No 4
5
4
Team No 1
5
4
Evelyn's Gro
4
5
Ja ck s Cl ub
4
5
Mark v
1 8
Team H 1gh Ser1es - Dan
n te's Mob de Homes 2123 Team
No I 2047
lnd Htgh Series - Larry
Dugan 632 Ray Roach 563,
Mary Voss 554 Mar l ene Wtlson

503

Fnendly Tavel"n
26 14
Tom s Carry Out
24 16
Pu l linS Excavatmg
20 20
Eagles Cub
19 21
Sw•sher &amp; Lohse Pharm 18 'J.2
Roseberry Pennzoll
1J 7.7
Team H1gh Ser1es - Tom 's
Carry Out 2121. Pull•ns Ex
ca vatmg 2015
Team High Game - Pullins
Ex cava tmg 755 Tom s Carry
Out 715
lnd H1gh Game - (Men)
Jeff Wilson 233 Larry Dugan
196 (Women) Betty Wh•tlatch
205 Marl ene W•lson 203
lnd H1gh Senes - {Menl
B1ll Wilford 56 1 Jeff W•lson
548 (Women) Max1ne Dugan
543, Marlene Wilson 516

'

before II can even be absorbed
You get plenty of phosphate
anyway If you eat lean meat
you w1ll be gettmg plenty of
cholme The remammg fatty
acid 1s JUSt fat, and you don 't
need any more of that
Sometimes the fatty acrd IS
unsaturated rat, and 1! a person
IS def1c1ent m fatty ac1ds, Il
rrught help. But you should be
getting plenty of polyunsaturated fat m your food from
fiSh, vegetable o1J. and cereal
In my opmwn, encouragmg
healthy people who eat a
normal d1et to take Iec1thm to
lower their cholesterol borders
on fraud
DEAR DR LAMB-I really
need your help My nose has
really fiXed me I have a
feeling just bke a headache m
the nose (Just the left half) SIX
years ago I had this a few
times, then ll rapidly diSappeared
Recently 11 appeared ahnost
every day lor a month I tried
very hard to diScover the

Team H1gh Game - Dan
nte's Mob1le Homes 754 Team
No 1 725
lnd H1gh Game - Larry
Dugan 235 Larry Dugan 225,
Mary Voss 221, Betty Sm 1fh

200

common causes and to analyze
the sun1lanties, but I !ailed It
usually happens m the mormng
and 1t's JUSI hke an electromc
pulse hils me once every lew
seconds The frequency and
annplitude become h1gher and
bigger as lime goes on After a
peak II becomes slower It lasts
about an hour, and 11 makes me
feel terrible (somellmes Intolerable)
Dunng the penod of
diScomfort, my left eye can
feel some tears commg out,
and my left nostr1l may gather
some liqwd I am 27 now and m
good health except the nose
problem
Any p1ece of advice from you
would be highly appreciated
Thanks a m1lhon, Doc'
DEAR READER- You have
gtven me a classic descnpllon
of a cluster headache They are
so called because they occur 10
clusters and may occur every
day for a week or month and
then slop suddenly After the
cluster of headaches are over,

,:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:::::::::·:·::.:::
LETART, W. VA -Miss
Alice Roach, Letart, as
many know, was a third

grade teacher at Mason
Grade School many years.
Over 40 years she taught
pupils at Mason, Clifton,
Gibbstown and Hartford.
After retirement, she
missed the children so four
years ago she started
teaching a Sunday School
class of young boys and girls
at Lakin State Hospital.
Every Saturday, which is
their meeting day, the
youths wail eagerly for their
teacher, who also briogs
them goodies. It is an enJoyable 45 minutes when
they sing, PfliY and enjoy
refreshments and their
Sunday School lesson.

POMEROY
BOWLING LANES

Bend League
Jan 21,1974
Standings

T-eam
Po1nh
Shake Haven
8
Fo ur Aces
6
Three H 1tS &amp; a MIS
4
Top Cats
4
Crow's Comets
2
Three Nuts &amp; A Bolt
0
H tgh lnd Game - A L
Phelps Jr 236 Joe SiSSon 224
Ed Voss 216
H1gh Ser'tes - Ed voss 614
A L Phelps, Jr 608, Chester
Kn1ght 532
Team H1gh Game
Top
Cats 736
Team H1gh Senes Top
Cats 2069
Tn County League
Jan . 22, 1974
Sla'ndmgs

Team
Pomts
Sea r s Catalog Merch
20
Raw !1 ngs Auto Pts
16
Pomeroy Cement Block Co 10
Roa ch's Gun Shop
9
H&amp;R F re stone
9
M1dwe st Steel Co
8
Htgh tnd Game
Lou
Osborne 226 Henry Clatworthy
222 B1ll Radford 215
H19h Ser.es · Dale Qav.s 588
A L Phelps Jr ~76 Harold
Anderson 565
Team High Game - Roach s
Gun Shop 913
Team High Senes - Roach s
Gun Shop 2582 4

the person fee!. JUSt !me
Some authont1es consider
them to be related to m1grame
headaches Durmg the cluster
of attacks, alcohol seems to
mduce
attacks
Unlike
m1grames, they are more
common m men than In

women
Cluster headaches usually
begm at around age 30. The
tearmg of the eye and the nmd
m the nostnl are conunon

characlerisllcs, and they are
usually on one side
Your doctor can treat your
problem You w1llllli'IP to take
med1cmes durmg the time the
clusters strike In between
time, you should be all right.
Send your queslloas to Dr.
Lamb ln care of this
newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
N.Y. 10019. For a copy of Dr.
Lamb's booklet on cholesterol,
send 50 cents to the same address
and
ask
for
"Cholesterol'' booklet.

Honor
pupils
announced
RAC INE - The honor ro ll of
Southern H 1gh School for the
th1rd s1x weeks grad 1ng penod
1s bemg announced Maktng a
grade of 'B" or above 1n all
lhe1r sub teds lo be named lo
the roll were
{Names 1n
cap1tal letters denote a ll As)

SENIORS -

Linda All ey

Cherr 1 Bass. Mary Congo

Della Cross. Cynthta Gooch.

Beverly Hart, Dennts Hawk,
J1 l l
Houdashelt
V1ck1e
Johnston Rebecca Kouns ,
Roma Nease, Verne Ord,

Robert
Sayre,
MARY
SHOULTS, Fatth Varney,
Patnc1a Woods

JUNIORS - RONDA ASH,

Steve

Hupr., Cheryl

Moore,

Nola Netg er, STEPHANIE

ORO, Tammy Roush, Terri
Roush, Jeanme Sellers, PAUL

11 more file
for committee
Nme additional Republicans
and two add1110nal Democrats
have filed pellllons of candidacy for central comm1ttee
posts of their respechve
parlles with the Me1gs County
Board of Electwns
The latest Republicans to me
are Leroy Dono hew, East
~tart; Larry Young, Tuppers
Piams, Will1ann .F Harris,
Mmersv11le; Henry Wells,
Pomeroy Prec10ct; Dav1d
Koblenlz, South Chester; Paul
F Andrews, Long Bottom;
George Nesselroad, Rock
Sprmgs; Eldon Morris, Middleport Precmcl, Robert
Wood, North Chester
The new Democrat candidates are Edwm S Cozart,
Rac'me Precmct, and Patricia

•

SIMPSON
SOPHOMORES - Wt lltam
Bush. Paul Cross MOLLY
FISHER. Becky Harrts,

Den1se Hendnx, Koste Hysel l ,
Cheryl
Lark1ns
DAVE

NEIGLER, Corena Rhodes,
BECKY SAYRE
FRESHMEN
MARY
AUTHERSON, Sharon Baker,

Bobb1 Kay Chapman, Dan
Codner, M•ke Dalley, Darlene
Duncan, Enc Dunnmg, Chns
Forbes, Anna Frank, Carol
Glenn, Jul1e Gooch, Ailsa
Harns. Steve Hendricks, Chns
HtiL Debra Holsmger, CARL

JOHNSTON.
BRENDA
LEWIS, Roger Mtchael, Kathy
P1ckens. Candy Rlflle. Denose
Roberts , Lee Smtth. Tim
Smtth, Denise Talbott, Tract
Weese, KEVIN WILLFORD.
Robert W1lson. Dan1el Wolfe

SCOTT WOLFE

Kn1ght, Pomeroy Second
Ward.
A central committee
member from each of the 40
votmg precincts will be elected
by each party m the May
prunanes.

Marvm Barnes led Prov1-

Bill Aikman and Glen
Johnson combmed lor 46 pomts
at Urbana Wednesday mght as
Urbana throttl ed M1d-Ohw
Conference foe RIO G1ande, 94-

summer
Some congressiOnal critics of
the adrmmstratwn's proposed
educatiOn revenue shar10g
contend IllS a mask for school
spendmg cuts

56

Aikman pumped m 24 pomt.o;
and Johnson 22 to lead Urbana
to Its fourth league tnumph m
f1ve outmgs The Blue Kmght.o;
of Coach John SIJJnley are 8-9
on the year
Rio Grande dropped to 7-ll
overall and 2-2 ms1de the
conference
In the JV game, Rw defeated
Urbana 76-42
Coach Art Lanham's Redmen are now tdle until

"We must not pernut private the mdustry rrught go along
prof1teermg at the expense of With some form of an excess
public sacrifice," NIXon sat.d m profits tax
''Foretgn tax credits are
his message to Ccngress "The
PRESENTS CORPS PLAN - Col Kenneth Mcintyre,
sacnfices made by the Amen- absolutely essential to the
Huntmgton District engmeer for the U. S Corps of
can people must be for the petroleum mdustry and to
Engmeers, presented the corps' plan yesterday for unrenef11 of all the people, not American industry generally,"
provements at the Gallipolis Locks and Dam. Those atJUSt for the benef1t of b1g API President Frank Ikard
tending the public hearmg were told the corps favors a
S8ld
busmess "
"canal-locks" proJect over an alternate proposal to bu1ld a
While callmg NIXon's energy
NIXon's message to Congress
new
dam and locks
- which contamed five new message "constructive" and
leglSlalive proposals for .. most encouragmg," Ikard
Oil, Inc , Robert Gray, and
deahng w1th the energy S8ld it was 'absolutely
Rolla Campbell of Huntington,
Slluallon- canne as Exxon, the necessary" for the oil mdustry
preSident of the Ohio Valley
world's largest ml f1rm, to mamtain the foreign
(Continued from Page I l
Improvement Assocl8tion, also
reported 11 had worldwide depletion allowance to remam
profits of $2.4 billion last year compelllive in world markets matter will be accepted lor the favored the canal ptan
In other energy develop- next 30 days, and our !mal
"These men favor the lffi·
and Congress contmued 1ts
medl8le benefit of getting the
mvest1gatl0n of the oil 10- ments
survey IS due m March "
dustry 's economic Situation
-Alvm J. Arnell, director of
The canal plan as 11 now proJect completed," Tom
the Office of Econorruc Oppor- stands calls for three mam Wilson of the corps sa1d. "The
Committee Takiag Look
The Senate Fmance Commit- tunity, told Congress 11 was the proposaJ., wh1ch are
canal program w1ll take at
tee IS takmg a long, hard look poor who were suffermg the
Construction of two 1,200-foot least five years and the
at the o1l compames' profit - 10 most from the current Situation locks and a canal at the present downstream dam project
preparation for wntmg leglsla- because they could not get dam s1te; initial renovation of would take SIX or seven years "
llon deahng w1th wmdfall enough fuel to heat their the dam structure (anchoring
Wllson added that If the
profits
homes.
downstream
dam was chosen
the dam foundation), and
And even though President
Import Quotas Imposed
the
barges
gomg
up and down
replacement of roller gates at
- For the fll'st trrne, the the dam, located about 30 miles the river would have to move
Nixon attacked wmdfall
profits, energy ch1ef Willllllll Umted States has unposed upstream from Huntington
through locks at both s1tes Simon warned Congress the lfnport quotas on petroleum
Harry M. Herald of Pills- mstead of JUst the Gallipolis
wrong kind of wmdfall profits products, limiting to 46,000 burgh, preSident of the dam - wh1le the new dam was
taxes would stifle development barrels per day, the quantity Waterways
Improvement be10g bu1lt.
that can be sh1pped from the Association, sa1d he favors the
of new energy sources.
If approved all the way up
Some members of Congress Uruted States
quick completion of the canal the line, the earhest the
have proposed that such profits
-Sen Henry M Jackson struclllfe.
program's actual construction
be converted mto cheaper srud he had eVIdence some
would
begm IS m the fall of
A spokesman for Ashland
prices for consumers, but AmeriCan 011 companies,
1977," Ripley sa1d
Simon said such a move would actmg on Arab countries'
re ''u;.workable" and recom- orders, reduced the supply of
mended plowmg profits back oil products to the U.S military
ON PLANNING GROUP
mto a search for more 011 while durmg
the
worldw1de
Robert
V. King of King's
g1vmg
compames
"a American aleri at the time of
Builders Supply m Middleport,
reasonable profit, a fair return, the Middle East war.
Clarence W Kuhn, 72,
-Egyptian President Anwar the Me1gs County chairman for
not a wmdfall profit "
Mmeral
C1ty, Ohw, father of
the
Oh1o
Hardware
Assn
,
IS
a
NIXon, m hiS message to Sadat refused to take a poSition
Congress, sa1d he would on the Arab oil embargo, member of the Important the Rev. Robert W. Kuhn of
recommend Wlthm the next saymg only the oiliJroducing retailer plaMmg cormnittee Pomeroy, d1ed unexpectedly
few weeks legiSlatiOn to countries could dec1de to end for the 1974 Mid-America Wednesday night while atHardware-Housewares, Lawn lendmg church serviCes at the
elunmate fore1gn oil depletion the embargo.
allowances, accelerate
- Interior Secretary Rogers and Garden Show and the Church of God m Carrolllon
Mr. Kuhn, a member of the
hcensmg of nuclear facilities, C B. Morton Signed right of association's 8lst convention at
the
Ohio
State
Fairgrounds
m
way
permits
for
the
begmning
Church of God, 1s surv1ved by
make mandatory labelmg of
major
appliances
and of constructiOn of the Alaska Columbus, Feb. 24-26
his wife, lzora; two sons, the
designed
to
Rev Mr. Kuhn, pastor of the
automobiles to show energy pipehne,
use and efficiency, change the ultunately brmg two million
Pomeroy First Baptist Church,
Clean Air Act to relax in- barrels of oil a day into the
and Edward E. Kuhn of Glen
dustria I emiSSIOn standards Umted States.
Burme, Md ; two daughters,
Pleasant Valley Hospital
and establish a facilities act to
-George Stafford, charrman
Mrs John A Miller, Uverpool,
Discharges - Mrs Robert N.Y., and Mrs. James Hundcoordmate government ap- of the Interstate Commerce
proval of s1les lor energy CommiSSion, met with Team- Chattin, West Columbl8, Mrs. ly, Ind1anapohs; seven
faclhlles.
sters President Frank Fltzsun- Clarence McCloud, Mason, grandchildren, and several ,
mons and followmg the Mrs. LewiS Taylor, Gall1pobs, meces and nephews.
Proposals Rejected
NIXon's proposals to reduce meeting urged trucking Martha Francisco, Lakm,
Funeral services will be held
tax breaks g1ven to the oil companies to seek a rate m- Paul Turnbull, Mason, Mrs at 2 p.m Saturday at the
mdustry
were strongly crease to compensate dr1vers Lawrence Cline, Mmersvtlle, Gordon Funeral Home 10
reJected by a spokesman for for lost mcorne as a result of and Eldon Vanscoy, Pomt Mineral C1ty With burial in
Pleasant
American Petroleum lnslltute, the energy Situation.
Memorl81 Gardens at Canton.
although the spokesman sa1d

A year ago the Meigs
Marauder wrestling tea m
blasted Wahama, 60-6.
Only one starter was lost v1a
graduation from that 1972-73
team Yet Wednesday evenmg,
Wahama
handed
the
Marauders a 35-23 setback,
their IOW'lh dual match loss m
as many attempts
A dismayed and puzzled
head coach, John Bentley,
smd, 'I guess the only thmg
you can say IS that the) wanted
It more We wrestled sloppy "
l11e Marauders were down
18-0 before they even knew

-

For the Lowest

Tire l'nces
111 the

Area

It's

NEW HAVEN•
DISCOUNT TIRE

Pastor Kuhn's

father is dead

aB2 2811

News • • • in Briefs

what hit them. For starters,
Me1gs had to forfeit the 100 lb
match !:&lt;!cause of the mJured
shoulder of M1ckey Lyons
Then Bnan Russell pinned
freshman Rick Goerge m the
107 lb match, and W11l
Louderm1ll pmned Butch
Roush m the 114 lb class
Me1gs got on the scoreboard
via co""aptam Joe Rosenbaum
who de clswned Scott King, 9-2
But Wahanna came nght back,
wIlh White Falcon Captam
Karl Kehler toppmg Marauder
Tony Branham, 6-3 m the 128
lb match Metgs countered 10
the 134 lb battle, w1th Jeff
Musser declsiomn g Randy
Grmstead 9-3
Whama then took the nee\
two matches, w1th Rob VanMeter pmnmg Roger Hysell m
the 140 lb match up, and 147lb.
Ke' m Roush pmnmg Harold
Sisson
The next three matches
belonged to Meigs, as 157 lb.
Steve Bmkles pmned Dale
Lewis,
Terry
Pickens
deciswned 169 lb Bruce
Hussell, 14-11, and B1ll Slack, m

l

I'.IC!W rtaven, W va.

CECIL ROSEBERRY
PENNZOIL
RACINE, OHIO
Has A Big Giveaway!
BETTER STOP &amp; SEE HIM NOW!

dence w1th 30 pomls and
Stacom had 24 Jere Nolan and
Bob Carrmgton had 20 each for
BC
Elsewhere, No. 10 Alabama,
with Ray Odums hlltmg 18
pomts and Charles Cleveland
16, crushed Georgia Tech, 10283, m a game marred by 61
fouls Alabama attempted 50
foul shots and made 32
Uoyd Batts scored 30 pomts,
mcludmg four foul shots m the
last three mmutes, as Cmcmnall beat Drake, 7~7. and Jeff
Re1smger h1t 14 of his 16 pomts
m the second half to lift

':::

\:~

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

:\:\

,..

NEW YORK (UPI) - It's not
a good Idea for anyone to call
Joe Frazter ''Ignorant ''
Especially Muhammad AIL
Goaded beyond endW'ance
by Muhammad All's alternate
braymg and qu1el needlmg,
Fraz1er burst from hiS chair at
a TV network studiO Wednesday and got mto a full..scale
brawl w1th the man he Will
fight on Monday at Madison
Square Garden
FraZier, Slllmg cabnly while
watchmg Ire r.... un of their
March 1971 bout which Joe won
by Wlammous dects1on, commented after the nmth round
that All had had to go to the
hospital after the f1ght.
Ali Ignites Fury
All countered "I went to the
hospital for 10 mmutes. You
went for a month Why brmg
somethmg hke the hosp1tal up?
That's 1gnorant It shows how
dumb you are "

The word "Ignorant" ign1ted
the IW'y m Fraz1er He leaped
to hiS feet and shouted "I'm
bred of you calhng me
1gnorant. Dalrm llred of It Who
are you callmg Ignorant'"
Ali did not budge from his

the 187 lb class pmned Ron
Russell
The Unluniled we1ght class
match, plllmg Marauder M1ke
Haley against Falcon Mark
Mitchell ended m a 4-4 draw.
In exhlblhon matches,,
Wahanna took the first Mlh
Don Johnson deciSioning Rick
Johnson, 6-1, but that was the
end of While Falcon viCiones
for the mght
The Marauders took the final
five matches, begiMmg Wllh
Duane McLaughlin's pmnmg of
Joe Parsons m the 119lb class.
That was followed by 126 lb.
Steve Pickens' pm of Bill
Hubbard, 138 lb. Jun McClure's pm of Dan Rickard, 167
lb Marty Dugan's pm of Scott
Kebler and Paul Clay's 9-2
decision over John Oldaker m
the Unlimited weight class.
Meigs, at 0-4, wdl try to get
mto the VICtory column Fr1day,
taking on the Pl. Pleasant B1g
Blacks at 2 p m tn front of the
PI Pleasant student body.
In a match earher this
season at Me1gs, the B1g
Blacks canne out on top, 33-14

Mark Swa 1n, Hannan Trace
John Shoemaker Waverly
Mark Mace, Athens
Dave Rann, I ron ton
Ttm Seevers, Tnmble
Dan B1se, Fed Hockmg
J1m P1erce. Logan
Dave Pntchard Nels York
T1m Stout, North Gall1a
John Lus~er Hannan Trace

126
109
104
95
102
92
105

48
51
52
45
25
35
23

CGI Avg
27 3
24 5
21 7
21 2
20 8
19 9
19 4
19 0
(Ill 18 8
(II)
18 0

300
269
260
233
2'W
219
233

82

45

209

83
Bl

41
36

207
198

I II I
(II)
I 12 I
I II)
I 11I
I II I
I 121
I II I

SEOAL SCORING
FG FT Pis

NAME, TEAM

John Shoemaker, Wav erly
Dave Rann, Ironton
Mark Mace, Athens
G1l Pnce, Gall1polts
Jtm P1erce Logan
"
M1ke McDonald, Jack son
Paul Wh ite Jackson
Danny Dodson Me1gs
J1m N1day. Gallipolis

87
70

37
34

67

28

59
61
55
54

23
15
28
18

211
174
162
141
139
138
126

52

22

126

38

18

94

CGl
(81
(81
(8)
(8)

Avg
26'
21 8
20 3
17 6
(8)
17 4
(8)
(8)

50
4B
JB
46
32

26
25
B
5
17

126
121
84
96
79

45
42

17

107
101

36

30

17
14
7

Dave Moore. Warren Local

39

14

Wtllte Strall Belpre

SVAC SCORING
NAME. TEAM
FG
Mark Swam Hannan Trace
84
Ste'Je Dill, Eastern
65
T1m Stout N Gallla
51
John Lusher, Hannan Trace
56
Jaye Myers S Valley
43
Bob Miller, Southern
36

(81
(8)

Pete Sayre Southern
lloyd Wood Southwestern
John Sheets. Eastern
Clay Hudson Kyger Creek

(7)

92

18
32

44
47

12
20

57

14

128

38

17

93

REGULAR
RETREADS

GALLON
NEW
IMPROVED
VAN'fl !TE-an 1 out
stfnO•n; latex patnf madf' w •ll"o a new Acrylic

v.nyl

Latex

Po\ymtr

.o.OAPTABLE- lor Ill
types of mter1or wall&amp; fn&lt;'
ct•hnliJS- ECOJ'tOMICAL
t h•nntr•9 EASY TO
APPL v - tlr tlrusl'l roller

The ~ Sentinel

or

sprav

RAPIDLY

-

11"1

mmvtes ltlvmo
pteasanl odor -

I

OR IES
th .rty
no un
CLEAN

EASILY wun equtp
men!'" warm soapy water

58

'

2lOR$21

Quart

2.12
SHOP OUR COMPLETE

Plus Casings

PAINT DEPARTMENT

SUPERIOR
WASHABILITY - dirt and

hnQtr prmls
USt iV bt'CliU5t

was h otl
the

f'ltW

vanyl •IP has unsurpasud
"'ater res •stance

Ebersbach Hardware

992-7161
Middleport, 0.

Pickens' Brand
Black Roof
Paint. 5GAL'3''
~
-n•••.m.to., .. ,.... DIII1Y

773-5583 lo m.lotp.m. Fr;IUy"SolurdoY

.
I

years of age or older
Awards w1ll be presented to
the !1rst 10 finishers w1th
special awards gomg to the top
fmiSher over 40 years of age
and to a team champion

'

Mason W VI
'

'

173

17 3
16 7
16 3
16 0
155

(8)
(6)

TEAM STATISTICS
Fteld Coal Percentage

Team
Logan
Waverly
Athens
Gallipolis
Jackson
Ironton
Meigs
Wellston

FGM A
246 474
241 490
201 435
200 457
201-482
204-514
192 492
110 364

Pet.

Team
Athens
Waverly
Jackson
Meigs
Logan
Ga llipolis
Ironton
Wellston

101 151
97-149
106-168
101 161
97 I56
87 140
91 157
73 148

669
651
631
627
622
621
580
493

umers

519

Gallipolis at Wheelersburg

492

Eastern at Federal Hockmg

462
438
417
397
390
302

Free Throw Percentage
FGM.A Pet

Rebounds

No G

Team

Gallipolis
Logan
Meigs

Avg

346 8 43 3
344 8 43 0
304 8 38 0
299 8 37 4
288 8 36 0
255 8 31 9
251 8 31 4
201 8 25 1

Ironton

Waverly
Athens
Jackson
Wellston

Personal Fouls

Team
No G Avg
Jackson
120 8 15 0
129 8 16 I
Alhens
Gallipolis
130 8 16 3
Waverly
132 8 16 5
Meigs
145 8 18 I
Ironton
150 8 18 8
Logan
152 8 19 0
Wellston
166 8 20 8
IND. LEADERS
Field Goal Percentage

Name, T
FGM-A Pet
Yovng. L
31 48 646
Dudult, Wav
36 61 590
White, J
54 95 568
Shoemaker, Wav 87 154 565
Skinner, A
32 59 542
Free Throw Percentage

Name, T
FTM-A Pet
Conroy, J
27 32 844
Shoemaker, Wav
37 49 755
Mace, Athens
28 38 737
McDona ld, J
28 39 718
Coats, M
25 37 676
Rebounds
Name, T
No G Avg
Price, G
139 8 17 4
Young. L
100 8 12 5
Myers, M
86 8 10 8
Fitzpatrick, I
83 8 10 4
Shoemaker, Wav 76 8 9 5
UPCOMING SCHEDULE
FRIDAY
SEOAL
Athens at Ironton

Wellston at Gallipolis
Logan at Jackson
Meigs at Waverly
TRI-VALLEY
Belpre at VInton County
Fed. Hocking at Nels York
SVAC
Kyger Creek at Southern

North Gall Ia at Symmes Valley
Others
Huntington at Portsmovth
Warren Local at Williamstown

PI Pleasant at Parkersburg
South
Wahama at Poca

Chesapeake at South Polnl
Valley at Wheelersburg
SATURDAY
SVAC
Symmes
Trace

VAlley

at

Hannan

VInton County at Trlbmle
Fort Frye at Warren Local
Chillicothe at Portsmouth
TUESDAY 1Jan.29l
SEOAL
Meigs at Athens
Ironton at GallipoliS
Jackson at Waverly
Logan at Wellsron
TRI-VALLEY
Belpre at Alexander

SVAC
Hannan Trace at Kyger Creek
Others

Eastern (Pike) at North Gallla

Southern at Tnmble

Symmes Valley at Fairland
Parkersburg at Pt Pleasant
Buffalo at Wahama
Rock Hill at Chesapeake
South Point at Ironton St Joe
TEAM

ALL GAMES

W l

P OP

GallipOliS
9 1 613 498
Wnerly
9 2 753 587
Looan
9 3 B76 737
south Point
9 4 889 129
Wheelersburg
8 4 750 617
Portsmouth
8 5 918 847
Athens
7 s 714 628
Chesapeake
6 5 6\8 646
JackSon
5 7 746 797
Ironton
3 B 617 79~Metgs
2 10 116 785
Wellston
1 1() 443 846
SEOA.L VARSITY
Team
W L
P OP
Gallipolis
7 1 487 3Y8
Wavertv
7 1 579 408
Logan
5 3 569 486
Athens
s 3 503 404
Jackson
4 4 508 516
Jronton
3 5 .499 523
Me.gs
1 7 485 536
Wellston
o B 293 652
TOTALS
32 32 3923 3923
SEOAL RESERVES
Team
W L P OP
Jackson
8 0 393 JOS
Ironton
6 2 400 362
GallipOliS
4 4 325 305
Athens
4 4 316 275
Logan
4 -l -lll 351
Me1gS
3 5 336 354
Waverly
3 5 310 274
Wellston
0 8 238 503
TOTALS
32 32 2729 2729
SEOAL FROSH
W L
P

Team

Gall•polis
logan
Meigs
At hens
Jackson
Ironton
Waverly
Wellston
TOTALS

324
2 420
4 291
4 281
A 224

8

0

6
4

4
3
3
3

-l
5

268
273

OP
230
265
292
271

244
280
264

0 8 164 399
31 31 2145 2245

5VAC STANDINGS

ALL GAMES
Team
W L P
Hannan Trace
11 D 898
::.outhern
8 3 66'11
Eastern
5 7 738
North Gal Ita
4 8 820
Symmes Valley
3 7 650
Kyger Creek
3 8 689
Southwestern
2 e 575

738

Team

OP

SVAC ONLY

W L
0
6 I
5 3
2 4
2 5
1 5
1 7

P

OP

6o47

ouo~

705

765
794
723

Hannan Trace
Southern
Eastern
Symmes Valley
North Ga l l•a
Kyger Creek
Southwestern

- 9

Team
Hannan Trace
North Gal Ita
Southern

W L P OP
6 2 3 44 279

623 452
444 398

?30 472
385
455
l04
424

SVAC RESERVES

Georgta 1ea ds th e na 1ton m . Kvoer
EasternCreek
peanutproductwn,morethan svmmesVa l ley
twice that of any other state Southwestern

472

480
429

522

5 2 312 265
5 2 271 2JO

5

3 317

267

2 4 !98 241
1 5 228 261
1 7 204 331

Factory Retreads
For Two
Federal Tax and
Mounting Charge Included

• Plus Recappable Tire
• Any Size • Passenger Car Tire

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
'

Avg
2s 8
20 0
18 6
18 0

(7)

11 4

p..yard-s,IS_.ope_n-torun-n-ers-17- - - - - - . ,

SALES

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"
110 W,.. MAIN
POMEROY

-·-

MARATHON
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!)- The
seventh annual A!hens
Marathon wlll be held here
Sunday, March 10. The race,
which covers 26 rrules, 385

5

Ill

Pts CG!
206 (8)
160 181
130 (7)
144 (8)
104 (6)
104 (6)
(6)
100

32

a

11

II

CG! Avg
(61 21 0
(7)
17 3
(51 16 a
(61 16 0
(5)
158
(7)
15 3
(7)
14 4
(61 14 3
(5) IJ4

86
67

FT
38
30
28

15 8
158

(B)

Jell Campbell Logan
40 12
92
TRI VALLEY SCORING
NAME, TEAM
FG FT Pis

Dan B1se, Fed Hocktng
Steve Thomas, Alexander
Greg Smathers, Nels York
Ketfh N1ce, Vmton County
Dave Pntchard, Ne ls York
V1c Kn1ck , Warren local
Randy Offenberger. Warren L
Harold Caud1ll. VInton Co

173

TIRE SALE

- one coat c;ovtr&amp; most
sur lacn. I.ISt tap water tor

..

Sport Parade

~~

Frazier storms
out of studio

SIX

-

:·:

~:

OVERALL SCORING
FG FT Pis

Name, Team

NEW YORK (UP!) - Joe Frazier had httle stomach lor the
whole thmg from the very begmmng
Why should he bother making a special trip to an out-of-theway TV stud1o 7
To watch a re-run of h1s first f1ght with Muhammad Ah?
He'd seen It a hundred !niles
To Sll there and swap comments With All so ABC-TV could run
11 this Saturday, two days before the fight, on the W1de World of
Sports'
The prospect didn't parllcularly enchant Joe Frazier at all. He
feels he can beat All w1th his fists He knows he's no match for his
mouth
One more thing
Howard Ccsell was gomg to s1t with both lighters, watchmg the
tapes of their March 1971 meetmg and domg the commentary
chair, but h1s brother RahaJoe FraZier's heart skipped a real over that also
man, who was among the SOHe Decided to Come
odd onlookers m the m1dtown
After mullmg II over awhile, he lmally decided okay, he'd
ABC-TV studio, Jumped m come, but before he dul--after both he and Ah took their
front of Joe
physicals for Monday mght 's 12... ounder at Madison Square
"You m thts too? 11 a Garden-Joe Frazier made 11 abundantly clear to the network
glowenng Frazier demand- thalli Ali got out of !me at all, he'd get up and walk out -TV
cameras or no TV cameras
ed
Immediately, Ali was on his
For awhile everythmg went fme Wednesday
feel to defend his brother He
Ali showed up first at the huge concrete-floored studiO along
hurled himself at Fraz1er, w1th his brother, Rahaman, who at30 IS two years younger and
puttmg a headlock on the once was a fighter hlrDself Twenty mmutes later, Fraz1er
former heavyweight champ arnved with h1s manager, Eddie Futch, and his younger brother,
They rolled onto the two-foot Tom, 28
high plalforrn, trymg mefThe two lighters sat alongs1de each other on a raiSed platform
fectually to punch at each other two feet off the floor Cosell flanked them on the left and shortly
as stagehands and handlers before the first fight was to be shown on three momtors m front of
rushed to seoarate them
them, some of the producllon men attached the necessary earSick of Abose
phones to the program's parllcipants
11
1 don't want anyone callmg
Ccsell Begias
me lgllorant and I'm SICk of
"ThiS was three years ago," Cosell began, directmg his attaking h1s abuse- Just wail tentiOn to All after thef1bn started up "You lost, but d1dn't crawl
untd Monday rught," Fraz1er across the nng hke you promised you would "
blistered as he was led from
He hardly got a nse out of Muhammad
the studio, fa1lmg to watch the
"While people say I lost," Ah crooned "Black people say I
!mal SIX rounds of the rerun won ThiS 1s a raciSt expression. I know I didn't take no wh1ppmg
and leavmg Ali and Howard I got h1t a coupIa ' limes, but I didn'tlose, I won "
Cosell to take 11 from there
Cosell then asked Frazier what he thought of the first fight •
Fraz1er whirled at the door
"I felt I won the f1ght fair and§quare," said Frazier. "I don't
and Ali shouted to h1m thmk while or black had anything to do w1th 11 "
"Monday rught, boy, you be on
The two of them then settled back and watched the fight, All
resplendentm a brown pm-slriped swt, brown-and-while be and
tune 1"
~
"I'll be there," Frazier white shirt, and FrazlCr more casual in a fawn~lored open-neck
snapped. "Make damn sure sport shirt, matchmg slacks and thick-heeled ox-blood colored
you're there ''
shoes
Foreman to Analy&gt;:e Fight
Eddie Futch, Fraz1er's trainer, S8ld afterwards that he
"On Thursday," shilled Cosell, "George Foreman will analyze
''took the blanne" for the m- the light Wllh me "
cldent. "! didn't follow my
"The Washwoman," Ali muttered
!:&lt;!Iter judgment I knew what "Who, George Foreman•" Cosell wanted to make sure
would happen Despite all his
"Yeah," sa1d Ah "He can't f1ght. He fights hke a Sissy, hke a
assurances, Cosell didn't c'On- girl, Whoosh, Whoosh "
trol the show and failed All swung h1s arms roundhouse style
miserably I took hun at his Once or tWice as the first light unfolded on the momtors m front
word and he was un- of them, Ali would attempt to startle FraZier, or make hun flinch,
by suddenly gettmg111p from h1s chair and pretending to swing a
successful "
Futch sa1d he first refused to punch at him
let Fraz1er appear but changed Joe Frazier never moved a muscle.
his mmd after Cosell conVInced But he suddenly boiled over when Ali ch1ded hun for bemg
h1m there would be no "Ignorant 11
Fraz1er suddenly tore the earphones off and bolted out of his
problems
The TV show followed the seat. He stepped squarely m front of All and, fire in h1s eye,
earlier phys1cal exams when challenged "who are you callmg Ignorant•"
Rahamao Springs Up
the two fighters were
exammed at different tunes to W1th that, Rahaman All, part of the 60 or so onlookers m the
studio, sprang to h1s brother's Side
avoid a confrontatiOn.
"You here, too 1 " Frazier sneered at him
Muhammad then jumped out of his seat, shouted "You crazy,
- Joe," and apphed a headlock on FraZier In no time both were
FIRST MALE PLAYER
puniShmg each other on the ground and risked hurling themPHILADELPHIA (UP!)
selves by fallmg of! the platform A moment or so later both d1d.
The Philadelphia Freedoms of
By th1s tune Tom Frazier charged over from the other Side to
the World Team Tenms League get at both Ali's. Muhmammad's back was on the noor at this
have signed Bnan Frurhe of time and nobody was k1ddmg around
New Zealand to a 1974 contract
A half dozen men pulled the combatants apart
He is the first male player to
Fraz1er, bolting, put on his black mmk and walked out
reach an agreement Wllh the
Ali stayed and watched the end of the f1rst fight even though he
club, wh1ch boasts B1ll1e Jean also had seen Il hundreds of tunes before
"Gotta Be Crasy"
King as a player""oach.
"I was trym' to keep 11 qwel," sa1d Ali, "but any man who
wears high-heeled shoes gotta be crazy I used to show my shoes
when !was m JUnior high school That's a b1gthing w1th hlrnnow,
TWO HONORED
his shoes
NEW YORK (UPI) - Ted
"He buys a mink coat and he calls the press I got two RollsTurner of Atlanta and Sally Royces but I don't drive them m the ghettos. The man IS a
Undsay of Swampscott, Mass , savage HeblowshlScool HerewegotiOrmlhonon this fight and
were honored Wednesday With he jumps up and gets all upset You see him wh1p off those earMartini &amp; RoSSI awards as 1973 plugs'
Yaehtsman and Yachtswoman
"I can see 11 now A couple guys down m Waycross, Georgia,
of the Year The 35-year-old hear about thiS and one says, 'Hey, Eddie,yousee what those two
Turner will skipper The Marm- guys went and d1d' I'm gonna get me a IIcket to see 'em fight "'
er m the America's Cup 12Muhammad Ali shook his head
meter yacht ellfDmatwns this
One thmg for sure, Joe FraZier wasn't play actmg Wednesday
summer
Neither was All w1th hiS back on the floor and the enraged
FraZier on top of hlrn, looking to get m one good whistler JUSI
one
He never could though because his arms were bemg pmned
back

and BEAUTY
TO EVERY ROOM

weeks, one hour each week
on
Wednesday
evemng
beginmng at 7 p m.
Rick Abel, diStrict 93 VIcepresident, gave a summary of
the activities that w11l transpire this weekend at the allstate convention In Cincmnatl
and the importance of the UA
course. The next regularly
scheduled meeting IS Feb. 14,
alB pm
There will be a board of
directors meeting Wednesday,
Jan. 30, at village hall at 7 30
p.m All Jaycee members are
mviled

(Includes games through Jan 19)

Today's

In other games, West VIrgm1a edged Richmond, 79-76,
Marshall downed Duquesne,
78-75, Syracuse crushed
Bucknell, 110-53, Penn npped
VIllanova, 83-61, Davidson
nipped VIrgmia, 64-ll3, Wake
Forest clubbed Duke, 00-71,
M1am1 (Ohw) shaded Kent
State, 78-76, Toledo bombed
Central M1ch1gan, 90-74, and
LouiSville manhandled
Dayton, 00-72

• •

1973-74 HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL

Clemson to a 58-54 vtclory over ~;.:::.::.··:::·:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:·:·:=:·:·.
Furman Mel Utley's 22 pomts :::
~~d St John 's beat Temple, j\j

ADD CHARM

Gun Safety course planned

The Me1gs County Jaycees, formed, consisting of Dwight
meeting Wednesday everung at Goms, Vic Gaul and Teaford.
the Pomeroy village hall,
President Richard Pouhn
announced thai the "Shooters announced that the newspaper
Education program" will get drlve 1s well under way.
under way in _February. Anyone Wishing to donate
Everyone who ~uld like to papers should call Denny
LOCAL TEMPs
have their children participate Fobes, Roger Zeigler, Vmce
The temperature in down- in this gun safety program Knight, Don NeJ.on, Jerry
town Pomeroy at II a.m should contact Vmce Knight or Vanlnwagen or Rick Collins
Thursday was 39 degrees w1th J;larry McCoy.
Their phone munhers are m the
ram falling
Guest speakers for the teleph60e book.
meeting representing the
Poulin also announced that
Meigs County umt of the 20 "Leadership in Action"
SOUP SUPPER
American Cancer Society, (UA) books are being ordered
WILKESVILLE - A soup followed by Jaycee speak-ups Jaycee members wishing to
supper, which w11l mclude presented by Vic Gaul and take this course should see
sandwiChes and pie, will be Bruce Teaford.
Poulin The pro~ram will last
held at the Pythlan SJ.ters hall
An auditing committee was
here Wednesday from 12 noon
to 8 p.m. The event IS open to
the public.
(Coulfnned from Page 1l
cormnittee Republican Rep. Edward Hutchinson, R-Mich ,
Rodino said, "! certainly will not. We are going to do this m a
SPEAKER COMTNG
A speaker from the Ohio bipartisan way."
Bible Institute at Beverly will
attend the Hemlock Grove
ISRAEL AND EGYPTIAN MILITARY commanders went
Christian Church at 7.30 p m. back to the desert today to negotiate the fmal details of the troop
Sw)day. The public is invited. pullback accord worked out by Secretary of State Henry A
Kissinger.
Milltary sources S8ld Israel has pulled al111s heavy eqwpment and transport vehicles out of the first section of Egyptian
Marriage Ucense1
John Wesley Moore, 19, tem!ory to be evacuated. They S8ld troops, tanks and artillery
'
Pomeroy,
and Lenora Marie pieces would be gone by Sunday. Lt. Gen. DaVld Elazar, the
Davis, 17, Pomeroy; Steven Israeli chief of staff, and Lt. Gen. Mohammed Gamassy, his
Kelly Lane, 20, Middleport, and Eyptlan counterpart, returned to the Kilometer 101 desert outLoretta Lynn Tackett, 16, post near the Suez Canal today to work out tbe last detalls of the
pullback.
R"tl,ond
I
t

Saturday mght when they meet
the Central Stale Marauders at
Central State In a non-league
game ·
In other MOC action at
Canton Wednesday Ph1l
Marz1ck and Mark Klem
shared scor10g honors With 18
pomts as Malone rolled to a 7613 M1d-Oh1o Conference victory
over T1flm
Malone used mamly a fast
break to post Its 12th wm
agamst six losses, and fourth
conference wtn agamst one
loss
Don Mack had 16 pomts lor
T1ffm, 4-13 overall and 1-6 m
the MOC

Falcon grapplers
pin Meigs, 35-23

Canal plan

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Timothy
Drake, New Haven; Ruth
Parso,ns, Racine; Jeffrey
Bable, Racme; Mayme
Buchanan, Reedsville.
DISCHARGES - Maggie
G1bnore, Charles Ohlinger.

to tie the game

Urbana, Malone in
tie for top spot

Excess profits challenged
WASHINGTON (UP() President NIXon, m a maJOr
move alfned at allev1atmg the
fuel shortage, .has asked Congress for $1.8 bilhon lor energy
research and challenged any
attempts at "prof1teermg" by

Y.as Provtdeoce 's 14th agamst
two losses and 35th 10 a ro\\ at
the1r home court
Boston College led, 73-71, but
Rick Santos sent the game mto
overtime with h1s basket with
2 02 left Boston College twice
took the lead m overtime but
Joe Hassett and Stacom scored

By Umted Press International
Kevm Stacom showed agam

SEO cage stats.

700 E. Main St.
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2101

�.

'

3- The Daily Sentmel, M1ddlepo1 !-Pomeroy, 0, Jar1 24,1974
2- The Dally Senhnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Jan.

Friars edge Boston College 79-77

Nixon wants to scrap
Education Act of 1965
WASHINGTON (UP!) President N~&lt;on w1ll ask
Congress m a special educatwn
message today to cooperate
w1th the adminisllatlOn to
replace the Great Society-era
Elementary and Secondary
Education Act (ESEA) of 1965,
which expires June 30
Breaking from tradition, the
President 1s expeeted to spell
out school budget details for
1975 wh1ch normally would not
be available until his budget
goes to Congress Feb. 4
The message aga10 Will
propose the consolidation of
more than 30 categorical grant
programs for needy, han dicapped and other elementary
and high school children and m
vocational and adull education,
.a form of special revenue-

shanng the adm1mstra1Ion
unsuccessfully has promoted m
the past
Gerald Warren, Wh1te House
deputy press secretary, told
reporters Wednesday that the
proposals would follow "very
closely" the lines of N1xon's
proposed $2.5 billion Better
Schools Act of 1973
N1xon w11l commend both
houses of Congress for movmg
toward grant consohdatwn m
pendmg legiSlation but will ask
for " further consoiidahon
still "
A Senate education b1ll
supports limited grants consolidallon. A House bill would
merge fundmg authorities for
such actlv1tles as school
libraries, books and eqwpment, guidance and counseling, nulrillOn and health

Wednesday rught why he's M1
C.1 utch around Providence
Stacom,lost m the shadow of
All-Anienca Erme D1Gregono
last season, htt a 30-foot JUmp
shot at the !mal buzzer to give
the seventh-ranked Fnru s a 7977 overhme \tclory O\er
Boston College The victory

dropout prevention and adult
education.
To mterest state and local
school off1c1als m grant consobdallon Nixon will propose
one-year advance fundmg for
elementary and h1gh school
programs. The SO&lt;alled forward fundmg IS of v1tal unportance to local school
diStrlcls' whlch would, for the
first time, know during a
school year how much federal
a1d to expect next year. AppropriatiOns for the upcommg
year often are incomplete
when schools close for the

the maJor ml comparues.

PORTABLE CRANE - Five seruor students m a weldmg class at Me1gs High Sehool haH
made a portable crane It took them e1ght hoW's Above, w1th a V.a engme m the hmst (1 ... ) are,
Rob Vance, Bill M1ller (mstructor ), Paul Searls, Jeff Grate and Ted F1s~er Absent was Rob
Brrchf1eld Students m the class are exposed to equ1pment actually used m mdustry This year
a new Uncoln ldealarc welding machme was added The machme enables students to weld
alummum, slamless steel and copper The last mne weeks of school students are placed with
employers for on-the-Job trammg

In a message dehvered to
Congress Wednesday, Nixon
asked for passage of legiSlalion
designed to end "wmdfall"
profits and asked for mandatory reportmg of 011 mventones
and an e!Irmnatwn of the
foreign depletiOn allowance

Dr. Lawrence E. Lamb

Lecithin and cholestrol
DEAR DR LAMB-Will you
please explain to me about
taking lec1Ulin for cholesterol
trouble• My cholestrol has
been h1gh, from what the
doctor tells me, and I have
been taking lec1Ulin, at least
four tablespoons a day, but 11
doesn't seem to help I watch
my rats m the d1et and
anythmg that IS cooked,
eliminatmg all fatty foods,
butter, whole rrulk, etc
Will Iec1Ulin help lower my
cholestrol' Am I wasting my
money m continumg to take 1l'
The doctor says 1t w11l not help,
and he has never heard of
lec11hin helpmg cholesterol
DEAR READER-II you are
on a proper d1el to begm w1th,
II Will not help m any way
except to decrease the amount
of money you w1ll have
available to spend on food
l..ec1thm IS a fatty ac1d, combmed w1th chohne and a
phosphate When you swallow
1t, the lec1thm w1ll be broken
down mto these three parts

~cal

Bowling

ALA Bowlrng League

Early Fnday- 6 1S P M
January lB. 1974
Team Standmgs

P0111ts

Jt Gutter Dusters
22
Feeney Bennett Stnke Outs 18
Feeney Bennett F l ters
Rut land -467 P1oneers

12

10

10
H1gh Team Ser1es - Feeney
Bennelf F'1ers 1385 Jr Gutter
Dusters •311 5 Feeney Bennett
Rac1ne 602 Rocketts

Strtke Outs 1341
H1gh Team Game -

Feeney

Bennet! Stnke Outs 487 Jr
Gut1er Du sters -475 , Feeney

Bennet! Filers 470
Htgh lnd

Senes -

Max ne

Dugan 410 Mary Hoover 448
Gerry Kessmger 439

H1gh lnd Game Mary
Hoover 191 Maxme Dugan 181
Maxme Dugan 163

Early Sunday Muted
Jan 20 1974
W

L

Tuesday Afternoon Leapue
Pomeroy Bowling lane
Jan lS, 1974
Last day of f1rst half
Standrngs
W L
Roval Crown Bottling
83 45
Fr1endly Taver11
76 52
No A
70 58
Forest Run Block
59 69
No 1
52 76
No 2 •
44 8Jl
Tellm H1gh Game - Team
No 1, 467
Team H1gh Seres - Team
No 1, 1360
lnd H1gh Game - Pa ndora
Co1l1ns 184 Pat Carson 176
lnd Hq;;~h Senes - Pandora
Collins 511 Betty Smith 5D6
Wednesday
early Btrd League
Jan 14, 1974
W L
Helen s Beauty Shop
31
0
Ben Tom Corp
30 2
16 16
Bertha 's Grocery

'

Rawlmgs Auto Part s
8 24
Stewart Hardware
6 26
Roush s Landmg
-l 28
Team H1gh Game - Helens
Beauty Shop 836
Team H1gh Senes - Helens
Beauty Shop 2-lJ8
lnd H1gh Game - Mary
voss 197 Ftoss te Maxson 186
lnd H1gh Series - Mary
Voss 537 Mar lene Wilson SD I
late Monday M •xed
Jan 14, 1974
W L
Dann •e s Mobt le Homes 8
1
Team No 4
5
4
Team No 1
5
4
Evelyn's Gro
4
5
Ja ck s Cl ub
4
5
Mark v
1 8
Team H 1gh Ser1es - Dan
n te's Mob de Homes 2123 Team
No I 2047
lnd Htgh Series - Larry
Dugan 632 Ray Roach 563,
Mary Voss 554 Mar l ene Wtlson

503

Fnendly Tavel"n
26 14
Tom s Carry Out
24 16
Pu l linS Excavatmg
20 20
Eagles Cub
19 21
Sw•sher &amp; Lohse Pharm 18 'J.2
Roseberry Pennzoll
1J 7.7
Team H1gh Ser1es - Tom 's
Carry Out 2121. Pull•ns Ex
ca vatmg 2015
Team High Game - Pullins
Ex cava tmg 755 Tom s Carry
Out 715
lnd H1gh Game - (Men)
Jeff Wilson 233 Larry Dugan
196 (Women) Betty Wh•tlatch
205 Marl ene W•lson 203
lnd H1gh Senes - {Menl
B1ll Wilford 56 1 Jeff W•lson
548 (Women) Max1ne Dugan
543, Marlene Wilson 516

'

before II can even be absorbed
You get plenty of phosphate
anyway If you eat lean meat
you w1ll be gettmg plenty of
cholme The remammg fatty
acid 1s JUSt fat, and you don 't
need any more of that
Sometimes the fatty acrd IS
unsaturated rat, and 1! a person
IS def1c1ent m fatty ac1ds, Il
rrught help. But you should be
getting plenty of polyunsaturated fat m your food from
fiSh, vegetable o1J. and cereal
In my opmwn, encouragmg
healthy people who eat a
normal d1et to take Iec1thm to
lower their cholesterol borders
on fraud
DEAR DR LAMB-I really
need your help My nose has
really fiXed me I have a
feeling just bke a headache m
the nose (Just the left half) SIX
years ago I had this a few
times, then ll rapidly diSappeared
Recently 11 appeared ahnost
every day lor a month I tried
very hard to diScover the

Team H1gh Game - Dan
nte's Mob1le Homes 754 Team
No 1 725
lnd H1gh Game - Larry
Dugan 235 Larry Dugan 225,
Mary Voss 221, Betty Sm 1fh

200

common causes and to analyze
the sun1lanties, but I !ailed It
usually happens m the mormng
and 1t's JUSI hke an electromc
pulse hils me once every lew
seconds The frequency and
annplitude become h1gher and
bigger as lime goes on After a
peak II becomes slower It lasts
about an hour, and 11 makes me
feel terrible (somellmes Intolerable)
Dunng the penod of
diScomfort, my left eye can
feel some tears commg out,
and my left nostr1l may gather
some liqwd I am 27 now and m
good health except the nose
problem
Any p1ece of advice from you
would be highly appreciated
Thanks a m1lhon, Doc'
DEAR READER- You have
gtven me a classic descnpllon
of a cluster headache They are
so called because they occur 10
clusters and may occur every
day for a week or month and
then slop suddenly After the
cluster of headaches are over,

,:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:::::::::·:·::.:::
LETART, W. VA -Miss
Alice Roach, Letart, as
many know, was a third

grade teacher at Mason
Grade School many years.
Over 40 years she taught
pupils at Mason, Clifton,
Gibbstown and Hartford.
After retirement, she
missed the children so four
years ago she started
teaching a Sunday School
class of young boys and girls
at Lakin State Hospital.
Every Saturday, which is
their meeting day, the
youths wail eagerly for their
teacher, who also briogs
them goodies. It is an enJoyable 45 minutes when
they sing, PfliY and enjoy
refreshments and their
Sunday School lesson.

POMEROY
BOWLING LANES

Bend League
Jan 21,1974
Standings

T-eam
Po1nh
Shake Haven
8
Fo ur Aces
6
Three H 1tS &amp; a MIS
4
Top Cats
4
Crow's Comets
2
Three Nuts &amp; A Bolt
0
H tgh lnd Game - A L
Phelps Jr 236 Joe SiSSon 224
Ed Voss 216
H1gh Ser'tes - Ed voss 614
A L Phelps, Jr 608, Chester
Kn1ght 532
Team H1gh Game
Top
Cats 736
Team H1gh Senes Top
Cats 2069
Tn County League
Jan . 22, 1974
Sla'ndmgs

Team
Pomts
Sea r s Catalog Merch
20
Raw !1 ngs Auto Pts
16
Pomeroy Cement Block Co 10
Roa ch's Gun Shop
9
H&amp;R F re stone
9
M1dwe st Steel Co
8
Htgh tnd Game
Lou
Osborne 226 Henry Clatworthy
222 B1ll Radford 215
H19h Ser.es · Dale Qav.s 588
A L Phelps Jr ~76 Harold
Anderson 565
Team High Game - Roach s
Gun Shop 913
Team High Senes - Roach s
Gun Shop 2582 4

the person fee!. JUSt !me
Some authont1es consider
them to be related to m1grame
headaches Durmg the cluster
of attacks, alcohol seems to
mduce
attacks
Unlike
m1grames, they are more
common m men than In

women
Cluster headaches usually
begm at around age 30. The
tearmg of the eye and the nmd
m the nostnl are conunon

characlerisllcs, and they are
usually on one side
Your doctor can treat your
problem You w1llllli'IP to take
med1cmes durmg the time the
clusters strike In between
time, you should be all right.
Send your queslloas to Dr.
Lamb ln care of this
newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
N.Y. 10019. For a copy of Dr.
Lamb's booklet on cholesterol,
send 50 cents to the same address
and
ask
for
"Cholesterol'' booklet.

Honor
pupils
announced
RAC INE - The honor ro ll of
Southern H 1gh School for the
th1rd s1x weeks grad 1ng penod
1s bemg announced Maktng a
grade of 'B" or above 1n all
lhe1r sub teds lo be named lo
the roll were
{Names 1n
cap1tal letters denote a ll As)

SENIORS -

Linda All ey

Cherr 1 Bass. Mary Congo

Della Cross. Cynthta Gooch.

Beverly Hart, Dennts Hawk,
J1 l l
Houdashelt
V1ck1e
Johnston Rebecca Kouns ,
Roma Nease, Verne Ord,

Robert
Sayre,
MARY
SHOULTS, Fatth Varney,
Patnc1a Woods

JUNIORS - RONDA ASH,

Steve

Hupr., Cheryl

Moore,

Nola Netg er, STEPHANIE

ORO, Tammy Roush, Terri
Roush, Jeanme Sellers, PAUL

11 more file
for committee
Nme additional Republicans
and two add1110nal Democrats
have filed pellllons of candidacy for central comm1ttee
posts of their respechve
parlles with the Me1gs County
Board of Electwns
The latest Republicans to me
are Leroy Dono hew, East
~tart; Larry Young, Tuppers
Piams, Will1ann .F Harris,
Mmersv11le; Henry Wells,
Pomeroy Prec10ct; Dav1d
Koblenlz, South Chester; Paul
F Andrews, Long Bottom;
George Nesselroad, Rock
Sprmgs; Eldon Morris, Middleport Precmcl, Robert
Wood, North Chester
The new Democrat candidates are Edwm S Cozart,
Rac'me Precmct, and Patricia

•

SIMPSON
SOPHOMORES - Wt lltam
Bush. Paul Cross MOLLY
FISHER. Becky Harrts,

Den1se Hendnx, Koste Hysel l ,
Cheryl
Lark1ns
DAVE

NEIGLER, Corena Rhodes,
BECKY SAYRE
FRESHMEN
MARY
AUTHERSON, Sharon Baker,

Bobb1 Kay Chapman, Dan
Codner, M•ke Dalley, Darlene
Duncan, Enc Dunnmg, Chns
Forbes, Anna Frank, Carol
Glenn, Jul1e Gooch, Ailsa
Harns. Steve Hendricks, Chns
HtiL Debra Holsmger, CARL

JOHNSTON.
BRENDA
LEWIS, Roger Mtchael, Kathy
P1ckens. Candy Rlflle. Denose
Roberts , Lee Smtth. Tim
Smtth, Denise Talbott, Tract
Weese, KEVIN WILLFORD.
Robert W1lson. Dan1el Wolfe

SCOTT WOLFE

Kn1ght, Pomeroy Second
Ward.
A central committee
member from each of the 40
votmg precincts will be elected
by each party m the May
prunanes.

Marvm Barnes led Prov1-

Bill Aikman and Glen
Johnson combmed lor 46 pomts
at Urbana Wednesday mght as
Urbana throttl ed M1d-Ohw
Conference foe RIO G1ande, 94-

summer
Some congressiOnal critics of
the adrmmstratwn's proposed
educatiOn revenue shar10g
contend IllS a mask for school
spendmg cuts

56

Aikman pumped m 24 pomt.o;
and Johnson 22 to lead Urbana
to Its fourth league tnumph m
f1ve outmgs The Blue Kmght.o;
of Coach John SIJJnley are 8-9
on the year
Rio Grande dropped to 7-ll
overall and 2-2 ms1de the
conference
In the JV game, Rw defeated
Urbana 76-42
Coach Art Lanham's Redmen are now tdle until

"We must not pernut private the mdustry rrught go along
prof1teermg at the expense of With some form of an excess
public sacrifice," NIXon sat.d m profits tax
''Foretgn tax credits are
his message to Ccngress "The
PRESENTS CORPS PLAN - Col Kenneth Mcintyre,
sacnfices made by the Amen- absolutely essential to the
Huntmgton District engmeer for the U. S Corps of
can people must be for the petroleum mdustry and to
Engmeers, presented the corps' plan yesterday for unrenef11 of all the people, not American industry generally,"
provements at the Gallipolis Locks and Dam. Those atJUSt for the benef1t of b1g API President Frank Ikard
tending the public hearmg were told the corps favors a
S8ld
busmess "
"canal-locks" proJect over an alternate proposal to bu1ld a
While callmg NIXon's energy
NIXon's message to Congress
new
dam and locks
- which contamed five new message "constructive" and
leglSlalive proposals for .. most encouragmg," Ikard
Oil, Inc , Robert Gray, and
deahng w1th the energy S8ld it was 'absolutely
Rolla Campbell of Huntington,
Slluallon- canne as Exxon, the necessary" for the oil mdustry
preSident of the Ohio Valley
world's largest ml f1rm, to mamtain the foreign
(Continued from Page I l
Improvement Assocl8tion, also
reported 11 had worldwide depletion allowance to remam
profits of $2.4 billion last year compelllive in world markets matter will be accepted lor the favored the canal ptan
In other energy develop- next 30 days, and our !mal
"These men favor the lffi·
and Congress contmued 1ts
medl8le benefit of getting the
mvest1gatl0n of the oil 10- ments
survey IS due m March "
dustry 's economic Situation
-Alvm J. Arnell, director of
The canal plan as 11 now proJect completed," Tom
the Office of Econorruc Oppor- stands calls for three mam Wilson of the corps sa1d. "The
Committee Takiag Look
The Senate Fmance Commit- tunity, told Congress 11 was the proposaJ., wh1ch are
canal program w1ll take at
tee IS takmg a long, hard look poor who were suffermg the
Construction of two 1,200-foot least five years and the
at the o1l compames' profit - 10 most from the current Situation locks and a canal at the present downstream dam project
preparation for wntmg leglsla- because they could not get dam s1te; initial renovation of would take SIX or seven years "
llon deahng w1th wmdfall enough fuel to heat their the dam structure (anchoring
Wllson added that If the
profits
homes.
downstream
dam was chosen
the dam foundation), and
And even though President
Import Quotas Imposed
the
barges
gomg
up and down
replacement of roller gates at
- For the fll'st trrne, the the dam, located about 30 miles the river would have to move
Nixon attacked wmdfall
profits, energy ch1ef Willllllll Umted States has unposed upstream from Huntington
through locks at both s1tes Simon warned Congress the lfnport quotas on petroleum
Harry M. Herald of Pills- mstead of JUst the Gallipolis
wrong kind of wmdfall profits products, limiting to 46,000 burgh, preSident of the dam - wh1le the new dam was
taxes would stifle development barrels per day, the quantity Waterways
Improvement be10g bu1lt.
that can be sh1pped from the Association, sa1d he favors the
of new energy sources.
If approved all the way up
Some members of Congress Uruted States
quick completion of the canal the line, the earhest the
have proposed that such profits
-Sen Henry M Jackson struclllfe.
program's actual construction
be converted mto cheaper srud he had eVIdence some
would
begm IS m the fall of
A spokesman for Ashland
prices for consumers, but AmeriCan 011 companies,
1977," Ripley sa1d
Simon said such a move would actmg on Arab countries'
re ''u;.workable" and recom- orders, reduced the supply of
mended plowmg profits back oil products to the U.S military
ON PLANNING GROUP
mto a search for more 011 while durmg
the
worldw1de
Robert
V. King of King's
g1vmg
compames
"a American aleri at the time of
Builders Supply m Middleport,
reasonable profit, a fair return, the Middle East war.
Clarence W Kuhn, 72,
-Egyptian President Anwar the Me1gs County chairman for
not a wmdfall profit "
Mmeral
C1ty, Ohw, father of
the
Oh1o
Hardware
Assn
,
IS
a
NIXon, m hiS message to Sadat refused to take a poSition
Congress, sa1d he would on the Arab oil embargo, member of the Important the Rev. Robert W. Kuhn of
recommend Wlthm the next saymg only the oiliJroducing retailer plaMmg cormnittee Pomeroy, d1ed unexpectedly
few weeks legiSlatiOn to countries could dec1de to end for the 1974 Mid-America Wednesday night while atHardware-Housewares, Lawn lendmg church serviCes at the
elunmate fore1gn oil depletion the embargo.
allowances, accelerate
- Interior Secretary Rogers and Garden Show and the Church of God m Carrolllon
Mr. Kuhn, a member of the
hcensmg of nuclear facilities, C B. Morton Signed right of association's 8lst convention at
the
Ohio
State
Fairgrounds
m
way
permits
for
the
begmning
Church of God, 1s surv1ved by
make mandatory labelmg of
major
appliances
and of constructiOn of the Alaska Columbus, Feb. 24-26
his wife, lzora; two sons, the
designed
to
Rev Mr. Kuhn, pastor of the
automobiles to show energy pipehne,
use and efficiency, change the ultunately brmg two million
Pomeroy First Baptist Church,
Clean Air Act to relax in- barrels of oil a day into the
and Edward E. Kuhn of Glen
dustria I emiSSIOn standards Umted States.
Burme, Md ; two daughters,
Pleasant Valley Hospital
and establish a facilities act to
-George Stafford, charrman
Mrs John A Miller, Uverpool,
Discharges - Mrs Robert N.Y., and Mrs. James Hundcoordmate government ap- of the Interstate Commerce
proval of s1les lor energy CommiSSion, met with Team- Chattin, West Columbl8, Mrs. ly, Ind1anapohs; seven
faclhlles.
sters President Frank Fltzsun- Clarence McCloud, Mason, grandchildren, and several ,
mons and followmg the Mrs. LewiS Taylor, Gall1pobs, meces and nephews.
Proposals Rejected
NIXon's proposals to reduce meeting urged trucking Martha Francisco, Lakm,
Funeral services will be held
tax breaks g1ven to the oil companies to seek a rate m- Paul Turnbull, Mason, Mrs at 2 p.m Saturday at the
mdustry
were strongly crease to compensate dr1vers Lawrence Cline, Mmersvtlle, Gordon Funeral Home 10
reJected by a spokesman for for lost mcorne as a result of and Eldon Vanscoy, Pomt Mineral C1ty With burial in
Pleasant
American Petroleum lnslltute, the energy Situation.
Memorl81 Gardens at Canton.
although the spokesman sa1d

A year ago the Meigs
Marauder wrestling tea m
blasted Wahama, 60-6.
Only one starter was lost v1a
graduation from that 1972-73
team Yet Wednesday evenmg,
Wahama
handed
the
Marauders a 35-23 setback,
their IOW'lh dual match loss m
as many attempts
A dismayed and puzzled
head coach, John Bentley,
smd, 'I guess the only thmg
you can say IS that the) wanted
It more We wrestled sloppy "
l11e Marauders were down
18-0 before they even knew

-

For the Lowest

Tire l'nces
111 the

Area

It's

NEW HAVEN•
DISCOUNT TIRE

Pastor Kuhn's

father is dead

aB2 2811

News • • • in Briefs

what hit them. For starters,
Me1gs had to forfeit the 100 lb
match !:&lt;!cause of the mJured
shoulder of M1ckey Lyons
Then Bnan Russell pinned
freshman Rick Goerge m the
107 lb match, and W11l
Louderm1ll pmned Butch
Roush m the 114 lb class
Me1gs got on the scoreboard
via co""aptam Joe Rosenbaum
who de clswned Scott King, 9-2
But Wahanna came nght back,
wIlh White Falcon Captam
Karl Kehler toppmg Marauder
Tony Branham, 6-3 m the 128
lb match Metgs countered 10
the 134 lb battle, w1th Jeff
Musser declsiomn g Randy
Grmstead 9-3
Whama then took the nee\
two matches, w1th Rob VanMeter pmnmg Roger Hysell m
the 140 lb match up, and 147lb.
Ke' m Roush pmnmg Harold
Sisson
The next three matches
belonged to Meigs, as 157 lb.
Steve Bmkles pmned Dale
Lewis,
Terry
Pickens
deciswned 169 lb Bruce
Hussell, 14-11, and B1ll Slack, m

l

I'.IC!W rtaven, W va.

CECIL ROSEBERRY
PENNZOIL
RACINE, OHIO
Has A Big Giveaway!
BETTER STOP &amp; SEE HIM NOW!

dence w1th 30 pomls and
Stacom had 24 Jere Nolan and
Bob Carrmgton had 20 each for
BC
Elsewhere, No. 10 Alabama,
with Ray Odums hlltmg 18
pomts and Charles Cleveland
16, crushed Georgia Tech, 10283, m a game marred by 61
fouls Alabama attempted 50
foul shots and made 32
Uoyd Batts scored 30 pomts,
mcludmg four foul shots m the
last three mmutes, as Cmcmnall beat Drake, 7~7. and Jeff
Re1smger h1t 14 of his 16 pomts
m the second half to lift

':::

\:~

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

:\:\

,..

NEW YORK (UPI) - It's not
a good Idea for anyone to call
Joe Frazter ''Ignorant ''
Especially Muhammad AIL
Goaded beyond endW'ance
by Muhammad All's alternate
braymg and qu1el needlmg,
Fraz1er burst from hiS chair at
a TV network studiO Wednesday and got mto a full..scale
brawl w1th the man he Will
fight on Monday at Madison
Square Garden
FraZier, Slllmg cabnly while
watchmg Ire r.... un of their
March 1971 bout which Joe won
by Wlammous dects1on, commented after the nmth round
that All had had to go to the
hospital after the f1ght.
Ali Ignites Fury
All countered "I went to the
hospital for 10 mmutes. You
went for a month Why brmg
somethmg hke the hosp1tal up?
That's 1gnorant It shows how
dumb you are "

The word "Ignorant" ign1ted
the IW'y m Fraz1er He leaped
to hiS feet and shouted "I'm
bred of you calhng me
1gnorant. Dalrm llred of It Who
are you callmg Ignorant'"
Ali did not budge from his

the 187 lb class pmned Ron
Russell
The Unluniled we1ght class
match, plllmg Marauder M1ke
Haley against Falcon Mark
Mitchell ended m a 4-4 draw.
In exhlblhon matches,,
Wahanna took the first Mlh
Don Johnson deciSioning Rick
Johnson, 6-1, but that was the
end of While Falcon viCiones
for the mght
The Marauders took the final
five matches, begiMmg Wllh
Duane McLaughlin's pmnmg of
Joe Parsons m the 119lb class.
That was followed by 126 lb.
Steve Pickens' pm of Bill
Hubbard, 138 lb. Jun McClure's pm of Dan Rickard, 167
lb Marty Dugan's pm of Scott
Kebler and Paul Clay's 9-2
decision over John Oldaker m
the Unlimited weight class.
Meigs, at 0-4, wdl try to get
mto the VICtory column Fr1day,
taking on the Pl. Pleasant B1g
Blacks at 2 p m tn front of the
PI Pleasant student body.
In a match earher this
season at Me1gs, the B1g
Blacks canne out on top, 33-14

Mark Swa 1n, Hannan Trace
John Shoemaker Waverly
Mark Mace, Athens
Dave Rann, I ron ton
Ttm Seevers, Tnmble
Dan B1se, Fed Hockmg
J1m P1erce. Logan
Dave Pntchard Nels York
T1m Stout, North Gall1a
John Lus~er Hannan Trace

126
109
104
95
102
92
105

48
51
52
45
25
35
23

CGI Avg
27 3
24 5
21 7
21 2
20 8
19 9
19 4
19 0
(Ill 18 8
(II)
18 0

300
269
260
233
2'W
219
233

82

45

209

83
Bl

41
36

207
198

I II I
(II)
I 12 I
I II)
I 11I
I II I
I 121
I II I

SEOAL SCORING
FG FT Pis

NAME, TEAM

John Shoemaker, Wav erly
Dave Rann, Ironton
Mark Mace, Athens
G1l Pnce, Gall1polts
Jtm P1erce Logan
"
M1ke McDonald, Jack son
Paul Wh ite Jackson
Danny Dodson Me1gs
J1m N1day. Gallipolis

87
70

37
34

67

28

59
61
55
54

23
15
28
18

211
174
162
141
139
138
126

52

22

126

38

18

94

CGl
(81
(81
(8)
(8)

Avg
26'
21 8
20 3
17 6
(8)
17 4
(8)
(8)

50
4B
JB
46
32

26
25
B
5
17

126
121
84
96
79

45
42

17

107
101

36

30

17
14
7

Dave Moore. Warren Local

39

14

Wtllte Strall Belpre

SVAC SCORING
NAME. TEAM
FG
Mark Swam Hannan Trace
84
Ste'Je Dill, Eastern
65
T1m Stout N Gallla
51
John Lusher, Hannan Trace
56
Jaye Myers S Valley
43
Bob Miller, Southern
36

(81
(8)

Pete Sayre Southern
lloyd Wood Southwestern
John Sheets. Eastern
Clay Hudson Kyger Creek

(7)

92

18
32

44
47

12
20

57

14

128

38

17

93

REGULAR
RETREADS

GALLON
NEW
IMPROVED
VAN'fl !TE-an 1 out
stfnO•n; latex patnf madf' w •ll"o a new Acrylic

v.nyl

Latex

Po\ymtr

.o.OAPTABLE- lor Ill
types of mter1or wall&amp; fn&lt;'
ct•hnliJS- ECOJ'tOMICAL
t h•nntr•9 EASY TO
APPL v - tlr tlrusl'l roller

The ~ Sentinel

or

sprav

RAPIDLY

-

11"1

mmvtes ltlvmo
pteasanl odor -

I

OR IES
th .rty
no un
CLEAN

EASILY wun equtp
men!'" warm soapy water

58

'

2lOR$21

Quart

2.12
SHOP OUR COMPLETE

Plus Casings

PAINT DEPARTMENT

SUPERIOR
WASHABILITY - dirt and

hnQtr prmls
USt iV bt'CliU5t

was h otl
the

f'ltW

vanyl •IP has unsurpasud
"'ater res •stance

Ebersbach Hardware

992-7161
Middleport, 0.

Pickens' Brand
Black Roof
Paint. 5GAL'3''
~
-n•••.m.to., .. ,.... DIII1Y

773-5583 lo m.lotp.m. Fr;IUy"SolurdoY

.
I

years of age or older
Awards w1ll be presented to
the !1rst 10 finishers w1th
special awards gomg to the top
fmiSher over 40 years of age
and to a team champion

'

Mason W VI
'

'

173

17 3
16 7
16 3
16 0
155

(8)
(6)

TEAM STATISTICS
Fteld Coal Percentage

Team
Logan
Waverly
Athens
Gallipolis
Jackson
Ironton
Meigs
Wellston

FGM A
246 474
241 490
201 435
200 457
201-482
204-514
192 492
110 364

Pet.

Team
Athens
Waverly
Jackson
Meigs
Logan
Ga llipolis
Ironton
Wellston

101 151
97-149
106-168
101 161
97 I56
87 140
91 157
73 148

669
651
631
627
622
621
580
493

umers

519

Gallipolis at Wheelersburg

492

Eastern at Federal Hockmg

462
438
417
397
390
302

Free Throw Percentage
FGM.A Pet

Rebounds

No G

Team

Gallipolis
Logan
Meigs

Avg

346 8 43 3
344 8 43 0
304 8 38 0
299 8 37 4
288 8 36 0
255 8 31 9
251 8 31 4
201 8 25 1

Ironton

Waverly
Athens
Jackson
Wellston

Personal Fouls

Team
No G Avg
Jackson
120 8 15 0
129 8 16 I
Alhens
Gallipolis
130 8 16 3
Waverly
132 8 16 5
Meigs
145 8 18 I
Ironton
150 8 18 8
Logan
152 8 19 0
Wellston
166 8 20 8
IND. LEADERS
Field Goal Percentage

Name, T
FGM-A Pet
Yovng. L
31 48 646
Dudult, Wav
36 61 590
White, J
54 95 568
Shoemaker, Wav 87 154 565
Skinner, A
32 59 542
Free Throw Percentage

Name, T
FTM-A Pet
Conroy, J
27 32 844
Shoemaker, Wav
37 49 755
Mace, Athens
28 38 737
McDona ld, J
28 39 718
Coats, M
25 37 676
Rebounds
Name, T
No G Avg
Price, G
139 8 17 4
Young. L
100 8 12 5
Myers, M
86 8 10 8
Fitzpatrick, I
83 8 10 4
Shoemaker, Wav 76 8 9 5
UPCOMING SCHEDULE
FRIDAY
SEOAL
Athens at Ironton

Wellston at Gallipolis
Logan at Jackson
Meigs at Waverly
TRI-VALLEY
Belpre at VInton County
Fed. Hocking at Nels York
SVAC
Kyger Creek at Southern

North Gall Ia at Symmes Valley
Others
Huntington at Portsmovth
Warren Local at Williamstown

PI Pleasant at Parkersburg
South
Wahama at Poca

Chesapeake at South Polnl
Valley at Wheelersburg
SATURDAY
SVAC
Symmes
Trace

VAlley

at

Hannan

VInton County at Trlbmle
Fort Frye at Warren Local
Chillicothe at Portsmouth
TUESDAY 1Jan.29l
SEOAL
Meigs at Athens
Ironton at GallipoliS
Jackson at Waverly
Logan at Wellsron
TRI-VALLEY
Belpre at Alexander

SVAC
Hannan Trace at Kyger Creek
Others

Eastern (Pike) at North Gallla

Southern at Tnmble

Symmes Valley at Fairland
Parkersburg at Pt Pleasant
Buffalo at Wahama
Rock Hill at Chesapeake
South Point at Ironton St Joe
TEAM

ALL GAMES

W l

P OP

GallipOliS
9 1 613 498
Wnerly
9 2 753 587
Looan
9 3 B76 737
south Point
9 4 889 129
Wheelersburg
8 4 750 617
Portsmouth
8 5 918 847
Athens
7 s 714 628
Chesapeake
6 5 6\8 646
JackSon
5 7 746 797
Ironton
3 B 617 79~Metgs
2 10 116 785
Wellston
1 1() 443 846
SEOA.L VARSITY
Team
W L
P OP
Gallipolis
7 1 487 3Y8
Wavertv
7 1 579 408
Logan
5 3 569 486
Athens
s 3 503 404
Jackson
4 4 508 516
Jronton
3 5 .499 523
Me.gs
1 7 485 536
Wellston
o B 293 652
TOTALS
32 32 3923 3923
SEOAL RESERVES
Team
W L P OP
Jackson
8 0 393 JOS
Ironton
6 2 400 362
GallipOliS
4 4 325 305
Athens
4 4 316 275
Logan
4 -l -lll 351
Me1gS
3 5 336 354
Waverly
3 5 310 274
Wellston
0 8 238 503
TOTALS
32 32 2729 2729
SEOAL FROSH
W L
P

Team

Gall•polis
logan
Meigs
At hens
Jackson
Ironton
Waverly
Wellston
TOTALS

324
2 420
4 291
4 281
A 224

8

0

6
4

4
3
3
3

-l
5

268
273

OP
230
265
292
271

244
280
264

0 8 164 399
31 31 2145 2245

5VAC STANDINGS

ALL GAMES
Team
W L P
Hannan Trace
11 D 898
::.outhern
8 3 66'11
Eastern
5 7 738
North Gal Ita
4 8 820
Symmes Valley
3 7 650
Kyger Creek
3 8 689
Southwestern
2 e 575

738

Team

OP

SVAC ONLY

W L
0
6 I
5 3
2 4
2 5
1 5
1 7

P

OP

6o47

ouo~

705

765
794
723

Hannan Trace
Southern
Eastern
Symmes Valley
North Ga l l•a
Kyger Creek
Southwestern

- 9

Team
Hannan Trace
North Gal Ita
Southern

W L P OP
6 2 3 44 279

623 452
444 398

?30 472
385
455
l04
424

SVAC RESERVES

Georgta 1ea ds th e na 1ton m . Kvoer
EasternCreek
peanutproductwn,morethan svmmesVa l ley
twice that of any other state Southwestern

472

480
429

522

5 2 312 265
5 2 271 2JO

5

3 317

267

2 4 !98 241
1 5 228 261
1 7 204 331

Factory Retreads
For Two
Federal Tax and
Mounting Charge Included

• Plus Recappable Tire
• Any Size • Passenger Car Tire

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
'

Avg
2s 8
20 0
18 6
18 0

(7)

11 4

p..yard-s,IS_.ope_n-torun-n-ers-17- - - - - - . ,

SALES

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"
110 W,.. MAIN
POMEROY

-·-

MARATHON
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!)- The
seventh annual A!hens
Marathon wlll be held here
Sunday, March 10. The race,
which covers 26 rrules, 385

5

Ill

Pts CG!
206 (8)
160 181
130 (7)
144 (8)
104 (6)
104 (6)
(6)
100

32

a

11

II

CG! Avg
(61 21 0
(7)
17 3
(51 16 a
(61 16 0
(5)
158
(7)
15 3
(7)
14 4
(61 14 3
(5) IJ4

86
67

FT
38
30
28

15 8
158

(B)

Jell Campbell Logan
40 12
92
TRI VALLEY SCORING
NAME, TEAM
FG FT Pis

Dan B1se, Fed Hocktng
Steve Thomas, Alexander
Greg Smathers, Nels York
Ketfh N1ce, Vmton County
Dave Pntchard, Ne ls York
V1c Kn1ck , Warren local
Randy Offenberger. Warren L
Harold Caud1ll. VInton Co

173

TIRE SALE

- one coat c;ovtr&amp; most
sur lacn. I.ISt tap water tor

..

Sport Parade

~~

Frazier storms
out of studio

SIX

-

:·:

~:

OVERALL SCORING
FG FT Pis

Name, Team

NEW YORK (UP!) - Joe Frazier had httle stomach lor the
whole thmg from the very begmmng
Why should he bother making a special trip to an out-of-theway TV stud1o 7
To watch a re-run of h1s first f1ght with Muhammad Ah?
He'd seen It a hundred !niles
To Sll there and swap comments With All so ABC-TV could run
11 this Saturday, two days before the fight, on the W1de World of
Sports'
The prospect didn't parllcularly enchant Joe Frazier at all. He
feels he can beat All w1th his fists He knows he's no match for his
mouth
One more thing
Howard Ccsell was gomg to s1t with both lighters, watchmg the
tapes of their March 1971 meetmg and domg the commentary
chair, but h1s brother RahaJoe FraZier's heart skipped a real over that also
man, who was among the SOHe Decided to Come
odd onlookers m the m1dtown
After mullmg II over awhile, he lmally decided okay, he'd
ABC-TV studio, Jumped m come, but before he dul--after both he and Ah took their
front of Joe
physicals for Monday mght 's 12... ounder at Madison Square
"You m thts too? 11 a Garden-Joe Frazier made 11 abundantly clear to the network
glowenng Frazier demand- thalli Ali got out of !me at all, he'd get up and walk out -TV
cameras or no TV cameras
ed
Immediately, Ali was on his
For awhile everythmg went fme Wednesday
feel to defend his brother He
Ali showed up first at the huge concrete-floored studiO along
hurled himself at Fraz1er, w1th his brother, Rahaman, who at30 IS two years younger and
puttmg a headlock on the once was a fighter hlrDself Twenty mmutes later, Fraz1er
former heavyweight champ arnved with h1s manager, Eddie Futch, and his younger brother,
They rolled onto the two-foot Tom, 28
high plalforrn, trymg mefThe two lighters sat alongs1de each other on a raiSed platform
fectually to punch at each other two feet off the floor Cosell flanked them on the left and shortly
as stagehands and handlers before the first fight was to be shown on three momtors m front of
rushed to seoarate them
them, some of the producllon men attached the necessary earSick of Abose
phones to the program's parllcipants
11
1 don't want anyone callmg
Ccsell Begias
me lgllorant and I'm SICk of
"ThiS was three years ago," Cosell began, directmg his attaking h1s abuse- Just wail tentiOn to All after thef1bn started up "You lost, but d1dn't crawl
untd Monday rught," Fraz1er across the nng hke you promised you would "
blistered as he was led from
He hardly got a nse out of Muhammad
the studio, fa1lmg to watch the
"While people say I lost," Ah crooned "Black people say I
!mal SIX rounds of the rerun won ThiS 1s a raciSt expression. I know I didn't take no wh1ppmg
and leavmg Ali and Howard I got h1t a coupIa ' limes, but I didn'tlose, I won "
Cosell to take 11 from there
Cosell then asked Frazier what he thought of the first fight •
Fraz1er whirled at the door
"I felt I won the f1ght fair and§quare," said Frazier. "I don't
and Ali shouted to h1m thmk while or black had anything to do w1th 11 "
"Monday rught, boy, you be on
The two of them then settled back and watched the fight, All
resplendentm a brown pm-slriped swt, brown-and-while be and
tune 1"
~
"I'll be there," Frazier white shirt, and FrazlCr more casual in a fawn~lored open-neck
snapped. "Make damn sure sport shirt, matchmg slacks and thick-heeled ox-blood colored
you're there ''
shoes
Foreman to Analy&gt;:e Fight
Eddie Futch, Fraz1er's trainer, S8ld afterwards that he
"On Thursday," shilled Cosell, "George Foreman will analyze
''took the blanne" for the m- the light Wllh me "
cldent. "! didn't follow my
"The Washwoman," Ali muttered
!:&lt;!Iter judgment I knew what "Who, George Foreman•" Cosell wanted to make sure
would happen Despite all his
"Yeah," sa1d Ah "He can't f1ght. He fights hke a Sissy, hke a
assurances, Cosell didn't c'On- girl, Whoosh, Whoosh "
trol the show and failed All swung h1s arms roundhouse style
miserably I took hun at his Once or tWice as the first light unfolded on the momtors m front
word and he was un- of them, Ali would attempt to startle FraZier, or make hun flinch,
by suddenly gettmg111p from h1s chair and pretending to swing a
successful "
Futch sa1d he first refused to punch at him
let Fraz1er appear but changed Joe Frazier never moved a muscle.
his mmd after Cosell conVInced But he suddenly boiled over when Ali ch1ded hun for bemg
h1m there would be no "Ignorant 11
Fraz1er suddenly tore the earphones off and bolted out of his
problems
The TV show followed the seat. He stepped squarely m front of All and, fire in h1s eye,
earlier phys1cal exams when challenged "who are you callmg Ignorant•"
Rahamao Springs Up
the two fighters were
exammed at different tunes to W1th that, Rahaman All, part of the 60 or so onlookers m the
studio, sprang to h1s brother's Side
avoid a confrontatiOn.
"You here, too 1 " Frazier sneered at him
Muhammad then jumped out of his seat, shouted "You crazy,
- Joe," and apphed a headlock on FraZier In no time both were
FIRST MALE PLAYER
puniShmg each other on the ground and risked hurling themPHILADELPHIA (UP!)
selves by fallmg of! the platform A moment or so later both d1d.
The Philadelphia Freedoms of
By th1s tune Tom Frazier charged over from the other Side to
the World Team Tenms League get at both Ali's. Muhmammad's back was on the noor at this
have signed Bnan Frurhe of time and nobody was k1ddmg around
New Zealand to a 1974 contract
A half dozen men pulled the combatants apart
He is the first male player to
Fraz1er, bolting, put on his black mmk and walked out
reach an agreement Wllh the
Ali stayed and watched the end of the f1rst fight even though he
club, wh1ch boasts B1ll1e Jean also had seen Il hundreds of tunes before
"Gotta Be Crasy"
King as a player""oach.
"I was trym' to keep 11 qwel," sa1d Ali, "but any man who
wears high-heeled shoes gotta be crazy I used to show my shoes
when !was m JUnior high school That's a b1gthing w1th hlrnnow,
TWO HONORED
his shoes
NEW YORK (UPI) - Ted
"He buys a mink coat and he calls the press I got two RollsTurner of Atlanta and Sally Royces but I don't drive them m the ghettos. The man IS a
Undsay of Swampscott, Mass , savage HeblowshlScool HerewegotiOrmlhonon this fight and
were honored Wednesday With he jumps up and gets all upset You see him wh1p off those earMartini &amp; RoSSI awards as 1973 plugs'
Yaehtsman and Yachtswoman
"I can see 11 now A couple guys down m Waycross, Georgia,
of the Year The 35-year-old hear about thiS and one says, 'Hey, Eddie,yousee what those two
Turner will skipper The Marm- guys went and d1d' I'm gonna get me a IIcket to see 'em fight "'
er m the America's Cup 12Muhammad Ali shook his head
meter yacht ellfDmatwns this
One thmg for sure, Joe FraZier wasn't play actmg Wednesday
summer
Neither was All w1th hiS back on the floor and the enraged
FraZier on top of hlrn, looking to get m one good whistler JUSI
one
He never could though because his arms were bemg pmned
back

and BEAUTY
TO EVERY ROOM

weeks, one hour each week
on
Wednesday
evemng
beginmng at 7 p m.
Rick Abel, diStrict 93 VIcepresident, gave a summary of
the activities that w11l transpire this weekend at the allstate convention In Cincmnatl
and the importance of the UA
course. The next regularly
scheduled meeting IS Feb. 14,
alB pm
There will be a board of
directors meeting Wednesday,
Jan. 30, at village hall at 7 30
p.m All Jaycee members are
mviled

(Includes games through Jan 19)

Today's

In other games, West VIrgm1a edged Richmond, 79-76,
Marshall downed Duquesne,
78-75, Syracuse crushed
Bucknell, 110-53, Penn npped
VIllanova, 83-61, Davidson
nipped VIrgmia, 64-ll3, Wake
Forest clubbed Duke, 00-71,
M1am1 (Ohw) shaded Kent
State, 78-76, Toledo bombed
Central M1ch1gan, 90-74, and
LouiSville manhandled
Dayton, 00-72

• •

1973-74 HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL

Clemson to a 58-54 vtclory over ~;.:::.::.··:::·:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:·:·:=:·:·.
Furman Mel Utley's 22 pomts :::
~~d St John 's beat Temple, j\j

ADD CHARM

Gun Safety course planned

The Me1gs County Jaycees, formed, consisting of Dwight
meeting Wednesday everung at Goms, Vic Gaul and Teaford.
the Pomeroy village hall,
President Richard Pouhn
announced thai the "Shooters announced that the newspaper
Education program" will get drlve 1s well under way.
under way in _February. Anyone Wishing to donate
Everyone who ~uld like to papers should call Denny
LOCAL TEMPs
have their children participate Fobes, Roger Zeigler, Vmce
The temperature in down- in this gun safety program Knight, Don NeJ.on, Jerry
town Pomeroy at II a.m should contact Vmce Knight or Vanlnwagen or Rick Collins
Thursday was 39 degrees w1th J;larry McCoy.
Their phone munhers are m the
ram falling
Guest speakers for the teleph60e book.
meeting representing the
Poulin also announced that
Meigs County umt of the 20 "Leadership in Action"
SOUP SUPPER
American Cancer Society, (UA) books are being ordered
WILKESVILLE - A soup followed by Jaycee speak-ups Jaycee members wishing to
supper, which w11l mclude presented by Vic Gaul and take this course should see
sandwiChes and pie, will be Bruce Teaford.
Poulin The pro~ram will last
held at the Pythlan SJ.ters hall
An auditing committee was
here Wednesday from 12 noon
to 8 p.m. The event IS open to
the public.
(Coulfnned from Page 1l
cormnittee Republican Rep. Edward Hutchinson, R-Mich ,
Rodino said, "! certainly will not. We are going to do this m a
SPEAKER COMTNG
A speaker from the Ohio bipartisan way."
Bible Institute at Beverly will
attend the Hemlock Grove
ISRAEL AND EGYPTIAN MILITARY commanders went
Christian Church at 7.30 p m. back to the desert today to negotiate the fmal details of the troop
Sw)day. The public is invited. pullback accord worked out by Secretary of State Henry A
Kissinger.
Milltary sources S8ld Israel has pulled al111s heavy eqwpment and transport vehicles out of the first section of Egyptian
Marriage Ucense1
John Wesley Moore, 19, tem!ory to be evacuated. They S8ld troops, tanks and artillery
'
Pomeroy,
and Lenora Marie pieces would be gone by Sunday. Lt. Gen. DaVld Elazar, the
Davis, 17, Pomeroy; Steven Israeli chief of staff, and Lt. Gen. Mohammed Gamassy, his
Kelly Lane, 20, Middleport, and Eyptlan counterpart, returned to the Kilometer 101 desert outLoretta Lynn Tackett, 16, post near the Suez Canal today to work out tbe last detalls of the
pullback.
R"tl,ond
I
t

Saturday mght when they meet
the Central Stale Marauders at
Central State In a non-league
game ·
In other MOC action at
Canton Wednesday Ph1l
Marz1ck and Mark Klem
shared scor10g honors With 18
pomts as Malone rolled to a 7613 M1d-Oh1o Conference victory
over T1flm
Malone used mamly a fast
break to post Its 12th wm
agamst six losses, and fourth
conference wtn agamst one
loss
Don Mack had 16 pomts lor
T1ffm, 4-13 overall and 1-6 m
the MOC

Falcon grapplers
pin Meigs, 35-23

Canal plan

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Timothy
Drake, New Haven; Ruth
Parso,ns, Racine; Jeffrey
Bable, Racme; Mayme
Buchanan, Reedsville.
DISCHARGES - Maggie
G1bnore, Charles Ohlinger.

to tie the game

Urbana, Malone in
tie for top spot

Excess profits challenged
WASHINGTON (UP() President NIXon, m a maJOr
move alfned at allev1atmg the
fuel shortage, .has asked Congress for $1.8 bilhon lor energy
research and challenged any
attempts at "prof1teermg" by

Y.as Provtdeoce 's 14th agamst
two losses and 35th 10 a ro\\ at
the1r home court
Boston College led, 73-71, but
Rick Santos sent the game mto
overtime with h1s basket with
2 02 left Boston College twice
took the lead m overtime but
Joe Hassett and Stacom scored

By Umted Press International
Kevm Stacom showed agam

SEO cage stats.

700 E. Main St.
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2101

�L

0

• , 0•

"·

'O; 0

2

Southejn T ea m Lead ers
tj ield Goa l s
Sayre
74 164
451
Theiss
16 J'il
.410
Cu rf man
65 159 .409
Mi ll er
/4 186 .HB
Free Thr ows
Curf man
27 39 .692
Mill er
51 74
689
Wa r ner '
26 39 .666
Total Point s - M i ll er
199 .
Sa yr e 164 and Curfm an . 157 .
Steal s - Mi l ler
26, :;.a yre
13, Nease 12 and Curfman 10
Rebound s -- Sa yr e
94 and
Ord ·94 .

practices since the beginning

of the season. Wolfe, referring
to the missed practices due to
ill health which has plagued the
6-1 se nior this winter, said,
"He's ge tting back into the
routine. We 're waiting for him
to get back in the groove when
his timing should.. come back."
Vern Ord , 6-0 senior center,

are th e surprise team of the area this winter, and is the lone team with a chance of catching
league~eading HaruJan Trace . Members of the 1973-74 Tornado cage team are (fr ont row, 1-r I
Mitch Nease, Tim Hill, Buddy Ervin, Terry Spencer and Glenn Stmpson. (Back row , 1-r) Vern

Ord, Randy Warner, Dave Theiss, Pete Sayre, Norman CUrfman and Bob Miller.

are seniors Randy Warner,

Basketball greatness
returning at Southern

two months ago?

SHARP SHOOTER - Bob
Miller, 5·11 senior guard, Is
one of the reasons the South·
em Tornados are playing at
a successful S.l pace In the
SV AC. Miller demonstrates
tbe lorm here that has made
him the fifth leading scorer
In the SVAC, averaging 17.3
ppg.

Coach Carl Wolfe, one-time
Racine superstar, credits
players' hard work, support
of commwrlty, student body

success,'~

themselves for as long as we

go, The student body has been
tremendous - our pep rallies
are sensational. And the

Enthusiasm - on the part of comrnWJity , as a whole, has
the team, the student body and been just great."

"It's unbelievable. I have all
the respect in the world for
these students," said the
Racine native, who added,
"It's great to be back home ."
Wolfe, who was a cage
standout for Racine High
School in the late '50s while
playing under the late Larry R.
Morrison , continued: ''This is a

basketball hotbed, an area rich
in basketball tradition . But
these kids have never had

:::::!::::;-;m.;:;~:::::~:~::::::::::::::.::::::::::::;:::;:~::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::;:;:::;:;::::::::-.:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:?,?.~:~:::::~::::::::::!=::!=~:::::::::::::::::::::::

I Bengals get 22 picks Wednesday
I

CINCINNATI (UP!) _ Paul
Brown hopes to see some of his
trades for "future draft
choices" pay off next week.
Thanks to deals with other
clubs in which the Cincinnati
Bengals head coach and genera! manager received future
draft choices, Brown will have
11 opportunities to select players in the first six rounds of
next week's National Football
League draft.
All told, the Bengals, who
drafted 16 players last year,
will have the opportnnity to
make 22 selections in the Tuesday and Wednesday session.

But because the Bengal,
choose 23rd out of 26 teams in
the first round, Brown is keeping quiet on who he will go after
for the team's first choice.
"We're drafting so far down
the line it's hard to project just
who will be.available when our
turn comes around ," said
Brown.
CinciruJati's top choice last
year was wide receiver Isaac
CUrtis of San Diego State, who
came along the last half of the
1973 season to provide a deep
pass receiving threat and help
the Bengals win the Central
Division of the American Foot-

Celtics coach
protests loss
When Tommy Heinsohn was
a player for the Boston Celtics,
he was known as a scrapper.
As a coach, he's not much
tamer and maybe that's why
his team is leading the NBA
Atlantic Division by 7'h games.
Heinsohn's team lost to
Seattle, 911-97, Wednesday night
but he's nr.t giving· up. He went
grumbling to the locker room
after the game and announced
he's filing a protest, which he'll
no doubt lose.
Heinsohn's displeasure was
aroused when, with 22 seconds
remaining, Ken Macintosh put
the Sonics ahead, 96-95, with a
24-foot jump shot. Boston
brought the ball downcourt and
missed three shots before the
So nics' Spencer Haywood
grabbeed the rebound. Celtic
Paul Silas clasped Haywood in
a bearhug, drawing his sixth
foul. That stopped the clock
with three seconds left and automatically eliminated Silas
from the game.
"We have 30 seconds in
which to make a substitution
when a player fouls out of a
· game," said Heinsohn. "But
they (the referees ) put the man
(Haywood) on the line and
didn 't let us put in a substitute ."

Irrunediately after conunitting his foul, Silas walked off
the court while refer"~' Darryl
Garretson took Haywood and
the ball to the other end of the
floor to shoot the free throws.
Haywood sank hoth free throws
given him on the backcourt foul
but the whole time there were
only four Celtics officially in
the game.

Wolfe sa id , pointing

out that Southern has had nine
the Racine corrununity- is the
answer, as far as Coach Wolfe
is concerned.
"This crew works, and works
hard, every night in practice,"
the
first-year . mentor
proclaimed . " They bust

Garretson ruled against
Heinsohn when he argued the
call at center court. Boston put
the ball into play with three
seconds remaining and Dave
Cowens tipped in his own
rebowtd at the buzzer to cut the
winning edge to one point.
In other games, Detroit
whipped Portland, 121-95, Mil·
waukee ripped Buffalo, 114-118,
Phoenix beat Cleveland, Ill).
103, and Houston downed
Atlanta , 115-104.
CUrtis Rowe scored 20 points
and Dave Bing·added 16to help
Detroit deal Portland its sixth
straight loss. Detroit jumped
off to a 36-14 first-quarter lead
and the game was never in
doubt. Bob Lanier got 10 of his
12 points in the third quarter
and Bing added a dozen assists.
Kareem Abdui-Jabbar
poured in 38 points to help
Milwaukee defeat Buffalo for
the 15th time without a loss
since the Braves entered the
league . Milwaukee played
without starters Lucius Alleo
and Bob Dandridge because oi
injuries and Buffalo without
league-leading scorer Bob
McAdoo, who suffered a toe
injury in pre-game · warrnups.
Charlie Scoh scored 25 points
and Dick Van Arsdale hit 21 to
lead Phoenix past Oeveland.
Cleveland's top scorer, Austin
Carr, did not dress he cause of a
foot injury suffered Tuesday
rught against Los Angeles.
Rudy Tomjanovich hit 29
points and Mike Newlin 26 to
lead Houston past Atlanta,
despite Lou Hudson's JO.point
performance.

U1rough."
While none of the above

;v;s::$

. RECORD TO DATE
south ern 47 Waterford 49 ot
Southern 75 No . Gallia 74
southe"rn 56 Glouster 59
Southern 68 Ky . Creek J8
southern 58 Han. Trace 46
southern 67 S. Western 41
southern 52 Eastern 50 ot
Southern 67 Sym . Valley 54
Southern 12 Hannan, W.Va. 57
Souther:n SO Wahama 40
Southern ·57 S. Western 48
Jan . 25- Kyger Creek
Jan . 29- At Glouster
Feb . 1- At North Gallia
Feb. 2- Waterford
F eb . 5- Eastern
Feb . 8- At Symmes Valley
F eb . 12- Hann3n T r::: t e

players are more than S..l ,·

Wolfe feels that even
distribution uf height is an
asse t. "We can interchange
positions both offensively and
defensively without being hurt
much."

Before the season bega n,
Wolfe listed one of the expected
weaknesse~of his club to be the
lack of a proven rebounder.
" We don 1 t ha ve just one
rebounder, every body's a
re bounder ." Th·e grabbed
carom department is well
balanced, with Sayre and Ord 's
94 being the squad's highest,
while Miller's 60 rebounds are
Ute fewes t of any starter.
Although seven of the above
II are seniors, the future is also
bright for Southern cage fans.

·o~:

could be for a slice of the SVAC
crown.

Whatever, Wolfe says his
Tornadoes will be playing them
one at a time, hoping to improve each game and eliminate
their mistakes, with the goal
being "a shot at Hannan

Trace.''
is tied with Sayre for the lead in
Th e Tornado reserv es are
rebounds, pulling in 94 missed
currently clipping along at an
LOSE UGLY FAT
shots. Although not a prolific
fl.3 pace, while the freshmen
Start lasing weight today or
scorer, Ord is praised by Wolfe
are 7-3, and eighth graders 9-1 money back . MO(IfADEX is a
for his defensive play. "Vern
tablet and easy to take .
and the seventh graders are 7- tiny
MONADEX will help curb your
always draws the defensive
desire for exc ess food . Eat less
assignment against the op- 1.
weigh less. contains no
Although
Wolfe
feels
that
ponents' biggest boy . He's
dangerous drugs and will not
every remaining game on the make you nervous. No
tough inside."
ew:ercise. Change
sc
hedule will be tough, the two strenuous
Rounding out the top seven
your life . . . start today .
toughest will most likely be MONADEX cost $3.00 for I 20

SURPRISING SOUTHERN TORNADOS - The Southern Tornados, at 6-1 in SVAC play,

Pictures and Story
By Denny Fobes
RACINE - The 1973-74
edition of the Southern Tor·
nados was picked in pre-season
balloting by SV AC coaches to
finish in a third place tie behind
Eastern and North Gallia. And
head coach Carl Wolfe was told
that his team would be lucky to
win three games this season.
Now, after all the pre-seaso.t
polling and other irrelevancies
are over, and the dust has
somewhat cleared, the Tornados have an 6-3 record , (6-1
in SVAC play ) and have the
only team with a chance of
catching the league-leading
Hannan Trace Wildcats.
What is the key to this success that so few foresaw just

:::;r.::&amp;:.eN~:R· ·w~'*

Ill
~

ball Conference.
Dallas has the first pick and
the Bengals figure the first
player to go will be Ed "too
Tall" Jones, a 6-foot-7, 26!lpowtd speedy defensive end
from TeruJessee State.
Brown's son, Pete, the Ben·
gals'
player
personnel
director, has been directing the
team's assistant coaches in
rating the available talent.
While the actual drafting will
be done in New York, the Bengals staff will remain in their
Riverfront Stadium offices
here, telephoning selections to
a Ben gals representative at
draft headquarters.
··
In town Wednesday was
quarterback Wayne Clark,
obtained by the Bengals
recently from the San Diego
Chargers in exchange for
Virgil Carter. Clark discussed
a possible contract with the
Bengals and also showed
Bengals' quarterback and receiver coach Bill Walsh just
what he could do.
Clark said he doesn't want to
remain a backup quarterback.
Although Brown says Clark has
a lot of potential, he would have
a tough assignment in beating
out Ken Anderson - a favorite
of Brown's - for the starting
quarterback job.

15 SATISFIED
ST. LOUIS (UP!) - The St.
Louis Cardinals brought their
total of satisfied players for the
1974 season to 15 Wednesday
when they signed catcher· Tim
McCarver, third baseman Ken
Reitz, relief pitcher Ken
Tatum, ·centerfielder Bake
McBride and power hitter Ed
Kurpiel.

consecutive losing seaso ns

LONG DRILLER - Pete
Sayre, 6-1 Southern forward,
Is known for his long range
gunning as well as heavy
board work underneath.
Here, he practices his long
shot during a workout this
past week In the Southern
High School gymnasium.

Sayre, who is tied for the
team lead in rebounds with 94,
is described by Wolfe as, "a
tremendous kid as well as a
good athlete." This is only the
second year of organized ball
forSayrewhobegan the 1972-73

until this year.
"I left here when basketball
was in its glory and it's been
season on the Tornado reserve
my lifelong dream to come
team.
back here ," sa id the ex-Meigs
The Tornados' third leading
cage mentor , who guided
scorer
and highest percentage
Marauder basketball the past
10 years.
"I believe in these kids.''
And just who are these
"kids" that Wolfe is so high on?
For one, there's Bob Miller,
5-11 senior guard who leads the
team in scoring with 199 points
and is the SVAC's fifth leading
scorer, averaging 17.3 points
per loop contest.
''The team revolves a lot
around Bob," said Wolfe. "He
gets the ball tip the floor for us
and does an especially good job

free throw shooter is senior

forw a rd Norman Curfm an.
Curfman, according to Wolfe,
"has had tough luck with injuries." Hitting nearly 70 pet.
at the charity stripe, Curfman
is the only Tornado to miss any

Dave Theiss and junior Mitch
Nease, the latter better known
for his feats on the gridiron.
Wamer and Theiss both,
according to Wolfe , have been
handicapped by a lack of
playing time in the past.
"Neither has ever had much of
a chance to play," said Wolfe.
"Randy is a smart ballplayer,
while Dave does a few more
things right each game. He's
especially good against a zone
defense."
Nease, usuallly the first one
to come off the bench, is not
used to that role , said Wolfe.
"Mitch has always been a
starter and I don't think he's
confident coming off the bench
and playing with all these
seniors. We'll start him this
Friday night and hope he can
gain some confidence," added
Wolfe.
While many forget the
players who usually keep the
bench warm for the regulars,
Wolfe doesn't. He has high
praise for juniors Tim Hill,
Buddy Ervin, Glenn Simpson
and senior Terry Spencer. "It
takes something special to
work for the benefit of the boys
who they realize will be playing
most of the time. Their spirit

Feb. 5 and Hannan Trace in the
season finale on Feb. 12.
The Eagles, nipped by Southern 52-50 in overtime in midDecember are reportedly
thirsty for revenge, while the
finale on the twelfth verv well

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FROSH
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!)
- Freshman Steve Grote, who
led Cincinnati Elder to the Ohio
Class AAA high school
basketball tilie last season, is
the second leading scorer on
the University of Michigan
basketball team with a 13.7
average.
Grote, a S-2, 195-pounder,
was also an all.Qhio football
player at Elder.

rI Beat...
I

0

.

,

I Of the Bend
II

In Your Own Home.

B•

·~

,M
·_A · . !
, ,1

1 · Y Bob Hoeflich

How long is your lhoftr1 You,l
IIVII • lot Of hot watat by redt.tclng
tht depth ol your bath and thli tlmt
of your shower. And you'll getjutt

CARL JENNINGS IS confined to the Holzer Medical Center
after having suffered a heart attack.
Jennings who has been assisting with the care of Eldon
Weeks, also Ill, had become ill but drove himself to the medical
center. He was found to have suffered a heart attack and was
placed in the intensive care wing. He's expected to be
hospitalized for some 30 days.

~.

Smoking under fire

Warning too weak
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The Federal Trade Cq_mmission
(FTC) told Congress Wednesday It should order a stronger ·
h.ealth warning printed on cigarette packages, require the same
warning on packs of "little cigars" and launch a government
advertising campaign to discourage smoking.
The agency also said Congress should appropriate money for
a government research project to develop a "safe" cigarette.
The FTC's annual report on cigarette use said total consumption
during 1973 apparently hit 582 billion, another record and an
increase of 3.8 pet. over the previous year - one of the biggest
percentage increases in recent years.
The agency said the current
cigarette package warning commercial broadcasting
which reads: "Warning: The facilities and space in print
Surgeon General has deter- media for.Ute disseminating of
mined that cigarette smoking messages
designed
to
iS dangerous to your health" discourage cigarette
should be more explicit.
smoking."
It suggested this statement
It said the National Institutes
instead: "Warning: cigarette of Health should be given
smoking is dangerous to bealth money for research aimed at
and may cause death from "developing a cigarette not
cancer, coronary heart hazardous to human health."
disease, chronic bronchitis,
puhnonary emphysema and The Almanac
other diseases."
By United Press Inlernallonal
It said the same language
Today is Thursday, Jan. 24,
should be required to appear in the 24th day of 1974·with 341 to
advertisements.
follow.
.; The report said "little cigar"
The moon is between its new
packages should at least say: phase and first quarter.
"Warning: Smoking little ciTechnically there is no
gars may be dangerous to your mornlng star.
health if smoked and inhaled in
The evening stars are Mertpe same quantities as cigaret- cury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
tes," and preferably should
Those horn on Utis date are
also list specific diseases. ·
under the sign of Aquarius.
The commission said it
American sculptor Paul Way''believes that increased em- land Bartlett was horn Jan. 24,
phasis should be placed on
educating
the
'public, l~ this day in history:
especially young persons,
In 1908, the first Boy Scout
about Ute serious damage to troop was organized in England
health which can result from by Sir Robert Baden-Powell, a
cigarette smo)&lt;ing ."
It general in the British army.
recorrunended more governIn 1922, Christian Nelllon of
ment spending on an Onawa, Iowa, received a patent
educational campaign which for his "Eskimo Pie," a brick
would give Ute Secretary of of ice cream encased in a
· ijealth Education and Welfare coating of chocolate.
authority ''to purchase time on
In 1965, the world mourned

portlllly flll lllo bllln wllh
hot waa.r, l'llthtr than let ho1
wtlerQodown the dr~ln .

Automatlo opp11- Hudllhwaahar and wether, YM
loll ol hot woler. Portlll '
wute wtt.r and gai.

II Clean.

.•....,

Need~:•·

' llortwltlt-

Mr. and Mrs. John David
Gillogly, Mark and David,
spent an evening in ~lbany
with Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Butcher and Charla Kay and
celebrated John's birthday.
A. R. Casler, Charleston, W.
Va. called on his brother in law
and sister, Mr . and Mrs. Earl
Starkey and alllo stopped to see
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Swett, as

'

1-~------------------------ I

Chinese ·turning to ·crime
!I
which upsets Mao's theory

!Washington
I
I

II

I

Rep' 0 rt

By Clarence
Miller

I

In all likelihood, old energy
policies will be giving way to
new directions with increasing
frequen cy as the fed eral
government searches for a
solution to one of the nation 's
most criti cal problems in
recent years .. . the energy
he was enroute to New
shortage.
A case in point is the
Lexington to visit another
recent
decision of the
sister, Mrs. Elma Vernon.
Secretary
of the Interior to
Smith,
Miss
Nancy
Columbus, spent a weekend lease six tracts of governmenthere with her parents, Mr. and owned land, rich in shale oil
deposits, for development.
Mrs. Le!Vis Smith.
This decision will allow inMr. apd Mrs. Larry Stansdustry
to begin experimental
bury and son, Reynoldsburg ,
programs
designed to extract
visited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Stansbury . They oil from the large deposits of
joined Mr. and Mrs. Jerry shale on sites in Colorado,
Stansbury and family , local, Utah, and Wyoming. If the
along with Mr. and Mrs. schedule goes as planned, the
Marion McClure and Mr. and first shale oil plants are exMrs. Mer! Davis, Dexter, at the pected to begin production by
home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold 1978, producing about 250,000
Oxley, local, for a family barrels of shale oil a day - or
gathering in honor of the birth- about one percent of the
day of Mrs. Dale Stansbury. nation's daily demand for oil.
Robert Parker, Middleport, The Secretary's decision
spent a day at the home of his represents a departure from
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. past federal policy w.hi.ch
Ney Carpenter while his aunt, -~lected the. general . opmton
Martha Mays took his grand- iliat extracllon of otl from
father for his regular ap- shale was not economtcally
poinlment wiUt his physician. feaSible and that shale otl
Mr. and Mrs . Leon ?ev e lopment caused
Woodrum, Ricky and Randy tr_reparable harrn to the enWoodrum, Jim Petty and vtronment.
.
TarrunyRiley, McArthur, were . However, the new emphasiS
guests of Murl Gala way during on shale otl and the apparent
the week.
shift i~ federal thinking on this
Mr. and Mrs . William potential source of energy can
Lawson and Cheryl spent the be traced to several reasons,
weekend visiting Mr. and Mrs. not the least of whtch lS the
Willard Workman in Ashford current shortage of fuels upon
West VIrginia .
' which we have relied for
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Queen are decades.
announcing the birth of a
Ftrst, energy experts say
daughter, Heidi Lee at that the ml m shale ts exO'Bieness Memorial Hospital,
Athens. Local grandmother is
Clarksville, Tenn.
Mrs. Helen Queen.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Harrison,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
vlllited her parents,
Stoutsville,
were guests of their son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. William Cheadle
and her brother and sister in
Donald Jones in Nelllonville.
Russell and Kevin Crabtree law, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cheadle
spent Saturday night with their and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Perry
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
and Troy called to see his
Arthur Crabtree.
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly spent mother, Mrs. E. C. Perry at the
SWlday with her son-in-law and home of his brother in law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Paul sister, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hodge, Decola, W. Va.
Gaston and family .
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey,
Sunday guests of Laura
by Mr. and Mrs.
accompanied
Krebs and son were her
Mendal
Jordan,
attended the
mother, Mrs. Maude Holcomb
Ohio State Grange District
and another son, Jan Pickett,
Legislative meeting at the
Darwin. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Con Ator, Fairgrounds in Circleville. Mr .
Albany, visited her grand- Starkey Is Meigs County
Pomona Grange Legislative
daughter and family, Mr. and
agent and also agent for
Mrs . Joe McWhorter and
Columbia Grange.
family.
Mr. and Mrs . William
Mr. and Mrs. Granville
Lawson
and Cheryl along wiUt
Lyons have returned from a l!lfriends from Gallipolis, were in
day visit with their granddaughter and her family, Sgt. Huntington, W. Va ., for
Spec. 5 and Mrs ..Bert Christian Holiday on Ice .
The United Methodist
and daughter,- Catrlna,
Women of Temple Church met
the death of famous English with Mrs. Carl Crabtree at her
statesman Sir Winston Chur- mobile home for their January
meeting. The group voted to
. chill, known as the first citizen
assume the assessment for the
of the Free World and leader of
Britain during the darkest days new District Office Building in
Athens as their project. Betty
of Wor ld War 11 .
Mattox
will be hostess in
In 1972, President Nixon sent
February. Devotions were led
bUll
Congress a record $24£. 3
on by Betty Mattox.
budget and annoWlced a cur- Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan,
rent deficit of ahnost $39 Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs.
billion.
Dwaine Jordan, Bryan, Keith
and Sarah Frye, local were
A thought for the day : Sir supper guests of their parents,
.Winston Churchill said, "Dicta- Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan,
tors ride to and fro upon tigers in honor of Dwaine Jordan's
they dare not dismount. And birthday.
the tigers are getting hungry."

II

If the report of street crime man Mao Tse.tung, who is 80.
By WILBUR G. LANDREY
now in the cities is true, there is
Far Deeper Quarrel
UPI Foreign Editor
For watchers of China, a a deeper story behind it, just as
And when polemicists in
story came out of Peking the the controversies in China over Pe king and Taipei quarrel
other day that was little short th e virt ues of Co nfuciu s, abou t the goodness of Jonathan
of sensational.
Ludwi g va n Bee thoven, Franz Livingston Seagull, it is th e
It was a report from a news Schubert and Jonathan ijving- reflection of the far deeper
correspondent based th ere ston Seagull are the surface quarrel over China, past and
saying street crime has in- signs of something else.
future\
The street crime is supposed
creased in the capital and some
In tl1e case of the attacks on
other Chinese cities to the point Confuciu s, Beethove n and to he the ma nifestation of
where neighborhoods are being Schubert, the expe rts believe, something else, too-the dispatrolled night and day bv without really knowing what is patch of literally millions of
militia units.
going on, that they are the sign "educated young people" to
From any other part of th e of a struggle between "radi· the communes and countryside
world, this would hav~ caused cals" and " moderates" that of China during and since the
no surprise. Cities almost bears on such questions as the Cul tural Revo lution which
everywher e have been af. futur e of Premier Chou En-lai, ended in 1969. Eight million or
fiicted with a growing scourge his rapprochement with the so are said to have gone in the
of crime in the past 10 years United States and the quarrel last fi ve years, few with any
reflecting the social tension of with Russia as well as with the hope of coming back.
eventual succession to Chairour times.

'

tracta~le .
The Interior
Department reports that it is
conceivable that as much as 26
trillion barrel, of oil can be
produced from shale ... or
enough to meet proposed U. S.
demands for the next 350 years.
Second, in response to the
argument that shale oil
development is too expensive,
officials are now pointing out
that therising price of crude
petroleum make shale oil more

and more cost competitive .

While the cost of extracting oil
from shale is higher than the
cost of drawing it from underground pools, there have
been successful extracting
experiments which indicate
that the cost differential gap
can he narrowed.
Third, the federal government has conducted several
studies on the possible environmental impact of shale oil
extraction. The landscape
would Wldoubtedly be altered,
and techniques for completely
revegetating some disrupted
areas have not been mastered .
Because the environmental
aspects of shale oil developmentencompass the bulk of the
wtanswered questions on the
matter, it is imperative that
the U. S. put its technological
talents to work to properly
restore tbe lands which would
be affected by the extraction of
oil from -shale. The federal
land-leasing contracts recently
approved Include language
that the leasee is responsible
for restoration of land upon
which the shale oil mining and
processing occurs.
As in the case of all new
ventures, there Is no absolute
guarantee that the experimental shale oil extractlon
program will be completely
successful. Enoogh data is
available, however, to justify
going ahead. Studies provide
ample evidence that shale oil is
marketable and has the
potential to contribute substantially to efforts to meet
projected fuel needs.

From China, however, the
news , if true, is more sensa-

tional. One of the proudest
achievements of the ha rd
working and puritan Chinese
Communists has been that they
say they have virtually abolished crime in their society.
Their achievement, they
have said, is proof of what can
be done when the exploitation
of the working people is ended
and when malfactors are
taught the error of their ways
and encouraged to work for the
good of all.
"Radical" and "Moderates''

Every visitor to Shanghai in
the past few years must have
listened to officials th ere
telling them with pride that
crime, all crime, had been
eliminated from one of the
largest cities in the world, a
port whose name was once
synonymous with vice.
The claim is not as strange
as it seemed to the listeners at
first. The Chinese Commwtists
have organized an amazing
social cohesion in the country.
It is also reported in the earlier
years after their takeover from
Chiang Kai..hek in 1949 that
many persons they considered
incorrigible were shot.

by "Tingley"

'4" ·

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CHILDREN'S BOOTS

.-

j' 1I

. William 0. Bartel,, son of Meigs natives Mr. and Mrs.
Wtll!am C. Bartels, Stevensville, Mich., has been accepted by
Interlochen Arts Academy, Interlochen, Mich., and joined its
lith grade class on Jan. 12.
Young Bartel, already has been cast in the role of Fredka in
the Interlochen school's upcoming production of the musical
"Fiddler on the Roof. "
'
A native of Stevensville, the talented young Bartels has been
active in local and area theatrical productions in the Stevensville
area for a number of years. Among the many roles he has performed are the lead in "Oliver" for the Twin City Players;
Snoopy in "You're a Good Man, Charley Brown" and Walter in
"Don't Drink the Water" produced by Lakeshore High School.
Bartels has been active also in scouting affairs and recently
attained the rating of Eagle Scout.
Bartel, plans to complete his high school education at Interlochen where he will study drama, voice and dance in addition
to his regular academic courses. He is the grandson of Mrs.
Norma Goodwin of Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. Emmet P.
Bartels, Syracuse.
Bill's parents are naturally thrilled with the accomplishments of their talented son. His mother is the former
Mary Goodwin. Congratulations !

When ...vlng,
How deep le your blllh?

I Carpenter
I
&lt; I News, Event

----------------,

DO EARMARK A FEW MINUTES of your time on Sunday,
Feb. lQ, to drop by the Meigs Higb School cafeteria to pay
respects to C. E. Blakeslee who is retiring after 33 long years as
Meigs County's Agricultural Agent. Besides being agricultural
agent, Blakeslee has given uncountable hours and effort to
many, many projects of the COWlty over the past 33 years. The
open house is being staged by associates of the honored guest.

~N1r

offense from the guard spot."
Miller, probably best known
for his patented soft jump shot,
also leads the team in steals
with 26.
Following Miller in team
scoring with 164 points, sixth
best in the SVAC at 16.7 ppg, is
6-1 senior forward Pete Sayre,

_________

Al.C CHESTER A. ROUSH, son of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis C.
Roush, 574 High St., Middleport, is enjoying a leave with his
family and friends. Chester is stationed at the England Air Force
Base in Louisiana.

and determination sure show

against the press. He runs our

OPEN DATES
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP!)
Youngstown Cardinal
Mooney, the 1973 Class AAA
Ohio high school football
playoff champion, has two
open dates remaining on its
1974 schedule.
The Cardinals are interested
in scheduled games on Friday
or Saturday, Sept. 6 or 7 and
Friday or Saturday, Oct. 11 or
12. Any school interested
should contact head coach Don
Bucci.

home encounters 1 Eastern on

,_

'' ) _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 24,1974

STORE

BAKERMIOOLEPORT,
FURN·ITURE
·
0. "

heritage house- Middleport
.

I

..,

f
•,

. ·. l

�L

0

• , 0•

"·

'O; 0

2

Southejn T ea m Lead ers
tj ield Goa l s
Sayre
74 164
451
Theiss
16 J'il
.410
Cu rf man
65 159 .409
Mi ll er
/4 186 .HB
Free Thr ows
Curf man
27 39 .692
Mill er
51 74
689
Wa r ner '
26 39 .666
Total Point s - M i ll er
199 .
Sa yr e 164 and Curfm an . 157 .
Steal s - Mi l ler
26, :;.a yre
13, Nease 12 and Curfman 10
Rebound s -- Sa yr e
94 and
Ord ·94 .

practices since the beginning

of the season. Wolfe, referring
to the missed practices due to
ill health which has plagued the
6-1 se nior this winter, said,
"He's ge tting back into the
routine. We 're waiting for him
to get back in the groove when
his timing should.. come back."
Vern Ord , 6-0 senior center,

are th e surprise team of the area this winter, and is the lone team with a chance of catching
league~eading HaruJan Trace . Members of the 1973-74 Tornado cage team are (fr ont row, 1-r I
Mitch Nease, Tim Hill, Buddy Ervin, Terry Spencer and Glenn Stmpson. (Back row , 1-r) Vern

Ord, Randy Warner, Dave Theiss, Pete Sayre, Norman CUrfman and Bob Miller.

are seniors Randy Warner,

Basketball greatness
returning at Southern

two months ago?

SHARP SHOOTER - Bob
Miller, 5·11 senior guard, Is
one of the reasons the South·
em Tornados are playing at
a successful S.l pace In the
SV AC. Miller demonstrates
tbe lorm here that has made
him the fifth leading scorer
In the SVAC, averaging 17.3
ppg.

Coach Carl Wolfe, one-time
Racine superstar, credits
players' hard work, support
of commwrlty, student body

success,'~

themselves for as long as we

go, The student body has been
tremendous - our pep rallies
are sensational. And the

Enthusiasm - on the part of comrnWJity , as a whole, has
the team, the student body and been just great."

"It's unbelievable. I have all
the respect in the world for
these students," said the
Racine native, who added,
"It's great to be back home ."
Wolfe, who was a cage
standout for Racine High
School in the late '50s while
playing under the late Larry R.
Morrison , continued: ''This is a

basketball hotbed, an area rich
in basketball tradition . But
these kids have never had

:::::!::::;-;m.;:;~:::::~:~::::::::::::::.::::::::::::;:::;:~::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::;:;:::;:;::::::::-.:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:?,?.~:~:::::~::::::::::!=::!=~:::::::::::::::::::::::

I Bengals get 22 picks Wednesday
I

CINCINNATI (UP!) _ Paul
Brown hopes to see some of his
trades for "future draft
choices" pay off next week.
Thanks to deals with other
clubs in which the Cincinnati
Bengals head coach and genera! manager received future
draft choices, Brown will have
11 opportunities to select players in the first six rounds of
next week's National Football
League draft.
All told, the Bengals, who
drafted 16 players last year,
will have the opportnnity to
make 22 selections in the Tuesday and Wednesday session.

But because the Bengal,
choose 23rd out of 26 teams in
the first round, Brown is keeping quiet on who he will go after
for the team's first choice.
"We're drafting so far down
the line it's hard to project just
who will be.available when our
turn comes around ," said
Brown.
CinciruJati's top choice last
year was wide receiver Isaac
CUrtis of San Diego State, who
came along the last half of the
1973 season to provide a deep
pass receiving threat and help
the Bengals win the Central
Division of the American Foot-

Celtics coach
protests loss
When Tommy Heinsohn was
a player for the Boston Celtics,
he was known as a scrapper.
As a coach, he's not much
tamer and maybe that's why
his team is leading the NBA
Atlantic Division by 7'h games.
Heinsohn's team lost to
Seattle, 911-97, Wednesday night
but he's nr.t giving· up. He went
grumbling to the locker room
after the game and announced
he's filing a protest, which he'll
no doubt lose.
Heinsohn's displeasure was
aroused when, with 22 seconds
remaining, Ken Macintosh put
the Sonics ahead, 96-95, with a
24-foot jump shot. Boston
brought the ball downcourt and
missed three shots before the
So nics' Spencer Haywood
grabbeed the rebound. Celtic
Paul Silas clasped Haywood in
a bearhug, drawing his sixth
foul. That stopped the clock
with three seconds left and automatically eliminated Silas
from the game.
"We have 30 seconds in
which to make a substitution
when a player fouls out of a
· game," said Heinsohn. "But
they (the referees ) put the man
(Haywood) on the line and
didn 't let us put in a substitute ."

Irrunediately after conunitting his foul, Silas walked off
the court while refer"~' Darryl
Garretson took Haywood and
the ball to the other end of the
floor to shoot the free throws.
Haywood sank hoth free throws
given him on the backcourt foul
but the whole time there were
only four Celtics officially in
the game.

Wolfe sa id , pointing

out that Southern has had nine
the Racine corrununity- is the
answer, as far as Coach Wolfe
is concerned.
"This crew works, and works
hard, every night in practice,"
the
first-year . mentor
proclaimed . " They bust

Garretson ruled against
Heinsohn when he argued the
call at center court. Boston put
the ball into play with three
seconds remaining and Dave
Cowens tipped in his own
rebowtd at the buzzer to cut the
winning edge to one point.
In other games, Detroit
whipped Portland, 121-95, Mil·
waukee ripped Buffalo, 114-118,
Phoenix beat Cleveland, Ill).
103, and Houston downed
Atlanta , 115-104.
CUrtis Rowe scored 20 points
and Dave Bing·added 16to help
Detroit deal Portland its sixth
straight loss. Detroit jumped
off to a 36-14 first-quarter lead
and the game was never in
doubt. Bob Lanier got 10 of his
12 points in the third quarter
and Bing added a dozen assists.
Kareem Abdui-Jabbar
poured in 38 points to help
Milwaukee defeat Buffalo for
the 15th time without a loss
since the Braves entered the
league . Milwaukee played
without starters Lucius Alleo
and Bob Dandridge because oi
injuries and Buffalo without
league-leading scorer Bob
McAdoo, who suffered a toe
injury in pre-game · warrnups.
Charlie Scoh scored 25 points
and Dick Van Arsdale hit 21 to
lead Phoenix past Oeveland.
Cleveland's top scorer, Austin
Carr, did not dress he cause of a
foot injury suffered Tuesday
rught against Los Angeles.
Rudy Tomjanovich hit 29
points and Mike Newlin 26 to
lead Houston past Atlanta,
despite Lou Hudson's JO.point
performance.

U1rough."
While none of the above

;v;s::$

. RECORD TO DATE
south ern 47 Waterford 49 ot
Southern 75 No . Gallia 74
southe"rn 56 Glouster 59
Southern 68 Ky . Creek J8
southern 58 Han. Trace 46
southern 67 S. Western 41
southern 52 Eastern 50 ot
Southern 67 Sym . Valley 54
Southern 12 Hannan, W.Va. 57
Souther:n SO Wahama 40
Southern ·57 S. Western 48
Jan . 25- Kyger Creek
Jan . 29- At Glouster
Feb . 1- At North Gallia
Feb. 2- Waterford
F eb . 5- Eastern
Feb . 8- At Symmes Valley
F eb . 12- Hann3n T r::: t e

players are more than S..l ,·

Wolfe feels that even
distribution uf height is an
asse t. "We can interchange
positions both offensively and
defensively without being hurt
much."

Before the season bega n,
Wolfe listed one of the expected
weaknesse~of his club to be the
lack of a proven rebounder.
" We don 1 t ha ve just one
rebounder, every body's a
re bounder ." Th·e grabbed
carom department is well
balanced, with Sayre and Ord 's
94 being the squad's highest,
while Miller's 60 rebounds are
Ute fewes t of any starter.
Although seven of the above
II are seniors, the future is also
bright for Southern cage fans.

·o~:

could be for a slice of the SVAC
crown.

Whatever, Wolfe says his
Tornadoes will be playing them
one at a time, hoping to improve each game and eliminate
their mistakes, with the goal
being "a shot at Hannan

Trace.''
is tied with Sayre for the lead in
Th e Tornado reserv es are
rebounds, pulling in 94 missed
currently clipping along at an
LOSE UGLY FAT
shots. Although not a prolific
fl.3 pace, while the freshmen
Start lasing weight today or
scorer, Ord is praised by Wolfe
are 7-3, and eighth graders 9-1 money back . MO(IfADEX is a
for his defensive play. "Vern
tablet and easy to take .
and the seventh graders are 7- tiny
MONADEX will help curb your
always draws the defensive
desire for exc ess food . Eat less
assignment against the op- 1.
weigh less. contains no
Although
Wolfe
feels
that
ponents' biggest boy . He's
dangerous drugs and will not
every remaining game on the make you nervous. No
tough inside."
ew:ercise. Change
sc
hedule will be tough, the two strenuous
Rounding out the top seven
your life . . . start today .
toughest will most likely be MONADEX cost $3.00 for I 20

SURPRISING SOUTHERN TORNADOS - The Southern Tornados, at 6-1 in SVAC play,

Pictures and Story
By Denny Fobes
RACINE - The 1973-74
edition of the Southern Tor·
nados was picked in pre-season
balloting by SV AC coaches to
finish in a third place tie behind
Eastern and North Gallia. And
head coach Carl Wolfe was told
that his team would be lucky to
win three games this season.
Now, after all the pre-seaso.t
polling and other irrelevancies
are over, and the dust has
somewhat cleared, the Tornados have an 6-3 record , (6-1
in SVAC play ) and have the
only team with a chance of
catching the league-leading
Hannan Trace Wildcats.
What is the key to this success that so few foresaw just

:::;r.::&amp;:.eN~:R· ·w~'*

Ill
~

ball Conference.
Dallas has the first pick and
the Bengals figure the first
player to go will be Ed "too
Tall" Jones, a 6-foot-7, 26!lpowtd speedy defensive end
from TeruJessee State.
Brown's son, Pete, the Ben·
gals'
player
personnel
director, has been directing the
team's assistant coaches in
rating the available talent.
While the actual drafting will
be done in New York, the Bengals staff will remain in their
Riverfront Stadium offices
here, telephoning selections to
a Ben gals representative at
draft headquarters.
··
In town Wednesday was
quarterback Wayne Clark,
obtained by the Bengals
recently from the San Diego
Chargers in exchange for
Virgil Carter. Clark discussed
a possible contract with the
Bengals and also showed
Bengals' quarterback and receiver coach Bill Walsh just
what he could do.
Clark said he doesn't want to
remain a backup quarterback.
Although Brown says Clark has
a lot of potential, he would have
a tough assignment in beating
out Ken Anderson - a favorite
of Brown's - for the starting
quarterback job.

15 SATISFIED
ST. LOUIS (UP!) - The St.
Louis Cardinals brought their
total of satisfied players for the
1974 season to 15 Wednesday
when they signed catcher· Tim
McCarver, third baseman Ken
Reitz, relief pitcher Ken
Tatum, ·centerfielder Bake
McBride and power hitter Ed
Kurpiel.

consecutive losing seaso ns

LONG DRILLER - Pete
Sayre, 6-1 Southern forward,
Is known for his long range
gunning as well as heavy
board work underneath.
Here, he practices his long
shot during a workout this
past week In the Southern
High School gymnasium.

Sayre, who is tied for the
team lead in rebounds with 94,
is described by Wolfe as, "a
tremendous kid as well as a
good athlete." This is only the
second year of organized ball
forSayrewhobegan the 1972-73

until this year.
"I left here when basketball
was in its glory and it's been
season on the Tornado reserve
my lifelong dream to come
team.
back here ," sa id the ex-Meigs
The Tornados' third leading
cage mentor , who guided
scorer
and highest percentage
Marauder basketball the past
10 years.
"I believe in these kids.''
And just who are these
"kids" that Wolfe is so high on?
For one, there's Bob Miller,
5-11 senior guard who leads the
team in scoring with 199 points
and is the SVAC's fifth leading
scorer, averaging 17.3 points
per loop contest.
''The team revolves a lot
around Bob," said Wolfe. "He
gets the ball tip the floor for us
and does an especially good job

free throw shooter is senior

forw a rd Norman Curfm an.
Curfman, according to Wolfe,
"has had tough luck with injuries." Hitting nearly 70 pet.
at the charity stripe, Curfman
is the only Tornado to miss any

Dave Theiss and junior Mitch
Nease, the latter better known
for his feats on the gridiron.
Wamer and Theiss both,
according to Wolfe , have been
handicapped by a lack of
playing time in the past.
"Neither has ever had much of
a chance to play," said Wolfe.
"Randy is a smart ballplayer,
while Dave does a few more
things right each game. He's
especially good against a zone
defense."
Nease, usuallly the first one
to come off the bench, is not
used to that role , said Wolfe.
"Mitch has always been a
starter and I don't think he's
confident coming off the bench
and playing with all these
seniors. We'll start him this
Friday night and hope he can
gain some confidence," added
Wolfe.
While many forget the
players who usually keep the
bench warm for the regulars,
Wolfe doesn't. He has high
praise for juniors Tim Hill,
Buddy Ervin, Glenn Simpson
and senior Terry Spencer. "It
takes something special to
work for the benefit of the boys
who they realize will be playing
most of the time. Their spirit

Feb. 5 and Hannan Trace in the
season finale on Feb. 12.
The Eagles, nipped by Southern 52-50 in overtime in midDecember are reportedly
thirsty for revenge, while the
finale on the twelfth verv well

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Also
try
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Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy,
112 E. Main, Pomeroy &amp; Dutton
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Orders Filled .

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Conserve
Two Vital Resources ••.

Water and Natural Gas ••.
FROSH
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!)
- Freshman Steve Grote, who
led Cincinnati Elder to the Ohio
Class AAA high school
basketball tilie last season, is
the second leading scorer on
the University of Michigan
basketball team with a 13.7
average.
Grote, a S-2, 195-pounder,
was also an all.Qhio football
player at Elder.

rI Beat...
I

0

.

,

I Of the Bend
II

In Your Own Home.

B•

·~

,M
·_A · . !
, ,1

1 · Y Bob Hoeflich

How long is your lhoftr1 You,l
IIVII • lot Of hot watat by redt.tclng
tht depth ol your bath and thli tlmt
of your shower. And you'll getjutt

CARL JENNINGS IS confined to the Holzer Medical Center
after having suffered a heart attack.
Jennings who has been assisting with the care of Eldon
Weeks, also Ill, had become ill but drove himself to the medical
center. He was found to have suffered a heart attack and was
placed in the intensive care wing. He's expected to be
hospitalized for some 30 days.

~.

Smoking under fire

Warning too weak
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The Federal Trade Cq_mmission
(FTC) told Congress Wednesday It should order a stronger ·
h.ealth warning printed on cigarette packages, require the same
warning on packs of "little cigars" and launch a government
advertising campaign to discourage smoking.
The agency also said Congress should appropriate money for
a government research project to develop a "safe" cigarette.
The FTC's annual report on cigarette use said total consumption
during 1973 apparently hit 582 billion, another record and an
increase of 3.8 pet. over the previous year - one of the biggest
percentage increases in recent years.
The agency said the current
cigarette package warning commercial broadcasting
which reads: "Warning: The facilities and space in print
Surgeon General has deter- media for.Ute disseminating of
mined that cigarette smoking messages
designed
to
iS dangerous to your health" discourage cigarette
should be more explicit.
smoking."
It suggested this statement
It said the National Institutes
instead: "Warning: cigarette of Health should be given
smoking is dangerous to bealth money for research aimed at
and may cause death from "developing a cigarette not
cancer, coronary heart hazardous to human health."
disease, chronic bronchitis,
puhnonary emphysema and The Almanac
other diseases."
By United Press Inlernallonal
It said the same language
Today is Thursday, Jan. 24,
should be required to appear in the 24th day of 1974·with 341 to
advertisements.
follow.
.; The report said "little cigar"
The moon is between its new
packages should at least say: phase and first quarter.
"Warning: Smoking little ciTechnically there is no
gars may be dangerous to your mornlng star.
health if smoked and inhaled in
The evening stars are Mertpe same quantities as cigaret- cury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
tes," and preferably should
Those horn on Utis date are
also list specific diseases. ·
under the sign of Aquarius.
The commission said it
American sculptor Paul Way''believes that increased em- land Bartlett was horn Jan. 24,
phasis should be placed on
educating
the
'public, l~ this day in history:
especially young persons,
In 1908, the first Boy Scout
about Ute serious damage to troop was organized in England
health which can result from by Sir Robert Baden-Powell, a
cigarette smo)&lt;ing ."
It general in the British army.
recorrunended more governIn 1922, Christian Nelllon of
ment spending on an Onawa, Iowa, received a patent
educational campaign which for his "Eskimo Pie," a brick
would give Ute Secretary of of ice cream encased in a
· ijealth Education and Welfare coating of chocolate.
authority ''to purchase time on
In 1965, the world mourned

portlllly flll lllo bllln wllh
hot waa.r, l'llthtr than let ho1
wtlerQodown the dr~ln .

Automatlo opp11- Hudllhwaahar and wether, YM
loll ol hot woler. Portlll '
wute wtt.r and gai.

II Clean.

.•....,

Need~:•·

' llortwltlt-

Mr. and Mrs. John David
Gillogly, Mark and David,
spent an evening in ~lbany
with Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Butcher and Charla Kay and
celebrated John's birthday.
A. R. Casler, Charleston, W.
Va. called on his brother in law
and sister, Mr . and Mrs. Earl
Starkey and alllo stopped to see
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Swett, as

'

1-~------------------------ I

Chinese ·turning to ·crime
!I
which upsets Mao's theory

!Washington
I
I

II

I

Rep' 0 rt

By Clarence
Miller

I

In all likelihood, old energy
policies will be giving way to
new directions with increasing
frequen cy as the fed eral
government searches for a
solution to one of the nation 's
most criti cal problems in
recent years .. . the energy
he was enroute to New
shortage.
A case in point is the
Lexington to visit another
recent
decision of the
sister, Mrs. Elma Vernon.
Secretary
of the Interior to
Smith,
Miss
Nancy
Columbus, spent a weekend lease six tracts of governmenthere with her parents, Mr. and owned land, rich in shale oil
deposits, for development.
Mrs. Le!Vis Smith.
This decision will allow inMr. apd Mrs. Larry Stansdustry
to begin experimental
bury and son, Reynoldsburg ,
programs
designed to extract
visited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Stansbury . They oil from the large deposits of
joined Mr. and Mrs. Jerry shale on sites in Colorado,
Stansbury and family , local, Utah, and Wyoming. If the
along with Mr. and Mrs. schedule goes as planned, the
Marion McClure and Mr. and first shale oil plants are exMrs. Mer! Davis, Dexter, at the pected to begin production by
home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold 1978, producing about 250,000
Oxley, local, for a family barrels of shale oil a day - or
gathering in honor of the birth- about one percent of the
day of Mrs. Dale Stansbury. nation's daily demand for oil.
Robert Parker, Middleport, The Secretary's decision
spent a day at the home of his represents a departure from
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. past federal policy w.hi.ch
Ney Carpenter while his aunt, -~lected the. general . opmton
Martha Mays took his grand- iliat extracllon of otl from
father for his regular ap- shale was not economtcally
poinlment wiUt his physician. feaSible and that shale otl
Mr. and Mrs . Leon ?ev e lopment caused
Woodrum, Ricky and Randy tr_reparable harrn to the enWoodrum, Jim Petty and vtronment.
.
TarrunyRiley, McArthur, were . However, the new emphasiS
guests of Murl Gala way during on shale otl and the apparent
the week.
shift i~ federal thinking on this
Mr. and Mrs . William potential source of energy can
Lawson and Cheryl spent the be traced to several reasons,
weekend visiting Mr. and Mrs. not the least of whtch lS the
Willard Workman in Ashford current shortage of fuels upon
West VIrginia .
' which we have relied for
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Queen are decades.
announcing the birth of a
Ftrst, energy experts say
daughter, Heidi Lee at that the ml m shale ts exO'Bieness Memorial Hospital,
Athens. Local grandmother is
Clarksville, Tenn.
Mrs. Helen Queen.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Harrison,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
vlllited her parents,
Stoutsville,
were guests of their son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. William Cheadle
and her brother and sister in
Donald Jones in Nelllonville.
Russell and Kevin Crabtree law, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cheadle
spent Saturday night with their and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Perry
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
and Troy called to see his
Arthur Crabtree.
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly spent mother, Mrs. E. C. Perry at the
SWlday with her son-in-law and home of his brother in law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Paul sister, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hodge, Decola, W. Va.
Gaston and family .
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey,
Sunday guests of Laura
by Mr. and Mrs.
accompanied
Krebs and son were her
Mendal
Jordan,
attended the
mother, Mrs. Maude Holcomb
Ohio State Grange District
and another son, Jan Pickett,
Legislative meeting at the
Darwin. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Con Ator, Fairgrounds in Circleville. Mr .
Albany, visited her grand- Starkey Is Meigs County
Pomona Grange Legislative
daughter and family, Mr. and
agent and also agent for
Mrs . Joe McWhorter and
Columbia Grange.
family.
Mr. and Mrs . William
Mr. and Mrs. Granville
Lawson
and Cheryl along wiUt
Lyons have returned from a l!lfriends from Gallipolis, were in
day visit with their granddaughter and her family, Sgt. Huntington, W. Va ., for
Spec. 5 and Mrs ..Bert Christian Holiday on Ice .
The United Methodist
and daughter,- Catrlna,
Women of Temple Church met
the death of famous English with Mrs. Carl Crabtree at her
statesman Sir Winston Chur- mobile home for their January
meeting. The group voted to
. chill, known as the first citizen
assume the assessment for the
of the Free World and leader of
Britain during the darkest days new District Office Building in
Athens as their project. Betty
of Wor ld War 11 .
Mattox
will be hostess in
In 1972, President Nixon sent
February. Devotions were led
bUll
Congress a record $24£. 3
on by Betty Mattox.
budget and annoWlced a cur- Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan,
rent deficit of ahnost $39 Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs.
billion.
Dwaine Jordan, Bryan, Keith
and Sarah Frye, local were
A thought for the day : Sir supper guests of their parents,
.Winston Churchill said, "Dicta- Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan,
tors ride to and fro upon tigers in honor of Dwaine Jordan's
they dare not dismount. And birthday.
the tigers are getting hungry."

II

If the report of street crime man Mao Tse.tung, who is 80.
By WILBUR G. LANDREY
now in the cities is true, there is
Far Deeper Quarrel
UPI Foreign Editor
For watchers of China, a a deeper story behind it, just as
And when polemicists in
story came out of Peking the the controversies in China over Pe king and Taipei quarrel
other day that was little short th e virt ues of Co nfuciu s, abou t the goodness of Jonathan
of sensational.
Ludwi g va n Bee thoven, Franz Livingston Seagull, it is th e
It was a report from a news Schubert and Jonathan ijving- reflection of the far deeper
correspondent based th ere ston Seagull are the surface quarrel over China, past and
saying street crime has in- signs of something else.
future\
The street crime is supposed
creased in the capital and some
In tl1e case of the attacks on
other Chinese cities to the point Confuciu s, Beethove n and to he the ma nifestation of
where neighborhoods are being Schubert, the expe rts believe, something else, too-the dispatrolled night and day bv without really knowing what is patch of literally millions of
militia units.
going on, that they are the sign "educated young people" to
From any other part of th e of a struggle between "radi· the communes and countryside
world, this would hav~ caused cals" and " moderates" that of China during and since the
no surprise. Cities almost bears on such questions as the Cul tural Revo lution which
everywher e have been af. futur e of Premier Chou En-lai, ended in 1969. Eight million or
fiicted with a growing scourge his rapprochement with the so are said to have gone in the
of crime in the past 10 years United States and the quarrel last fi ve years, few with any
reflecting the social tension of with Russia as well as with the hope of coming back.
eventual succession to Chairour times.

'

tracta~le .
The Interior
Department reports that it is
conceivable that as much as 26
trillion barrel, of oil can be
produced from shale ... or
enough to meet proposed U. S.
demands for the next 350 years.
Second, in response to the
argument that shale oil
development is too expensive,
officials are now pointing out
that therising price of crude
petroleum make shale oil more

and more cost competitive .

While the cost of extracting oil
from shale is higher than the
cost of drawing it from underground pools, there have
been successful extracting
experiments which indicate
that the cost differential gap
can he narrowed.
Third, the federal government has conducted several
studies on the possible environmental impact of shale oil
extraction. The landscape
would Wldoubtedly be altered,
and techniques for completely
revegetating some disrupted
areas have not been mastered .
Because the environmental
aspects of shale oil developmentencompass the bulk of the
wtanswered questions on the
matter, it is imperative that
the U. S. put its technological
talents to work to properly
restore tbe lands which would
be affected by the extraction of
oil from -shale. The federal
land-leasing contracts recently
approved Include language
that the leasee is responsible
for restoration of land upon
which the shale oil mining and
processing occurs.
As in the case of all new
ventures, there Is no absolute
guarantee that the experimental shale oil extractlon
program will be completely
successful. Enoogh data is
available, however, to justify
going ahead. Studies provide
ample evidence that shale oil is
marketable and has the
potential to contribute substantially to efforts to meet
projected fuel needs.

From China, however, the
news , if true, is more sensa-

tional. One of the proudest
achievements of the ha rd
working and puritan Chinese
Communists has been that they
say they have virtually abolished crime in their society.
Their achievement, they
have said, is proof of what can
be done when the exploitation
of the working people is ended
and when malfactors are
taught the error of their ways
and encouraged to work for the
good of all.
"Radical" and "Moderates''

Every visitor to Shanghai in
the past few years must have
listened to officials th ere
telling them with pride that
crime, all crime, had been
eliminated from one of the
largest cities in the world, a
port whose name was once
synonymous with vice.
The claim is not as strange
as it seemed to the listeners at
first. The Chinese Commwtists
have organized an amazing
social cohesion in the country.
It is also reported in the earlier
years after their takeover from
Chiang Kai..hek in 1949 that
many persons they considered
incorrigible were shot.

by "Tingley"

'4" ·

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CHILDREN'S BOOTS

.-

j' 1I

. William 0. Bartel,, son of Meigs natives Mr. and Mrs.
Wtll!am C. Bartels, Stevensville, Mich., has been accepted by
Interlochen Arts Academy, Interlochen, Mich., and joined its
lith grade class on Jan. 12.
Young Bartel, already has been cast in the role of Fredka in
the Interlochen school's upcoming production of the musical
"Fiddler on the Roof. "
'
A native of Stevensville, the talented young Bartels has been
active in local and area theatrical productions in the Stevensville
area for a number of years. Among the many roles he has performed are the lead in "Oliver" for the Twin City Players;
Snoopy in "You're a Good Man, Charley Brown" and Walter in
"Don't Drink the Water" produced by Lakeshore High School.
Bartels has been active also in scouting affairs and recently
attained the rating of Eagle Scout.
Bartel, plans to complete his high school education at Interlochen where he will study drama, voice and dance in addition
to his regular academic courses. He is the grandson of Mrs.
Norma Goodwin of Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. Emmet P.
Bartels, Syracuse.
Bill's parents are naturally thrilled with the accomplishments of their talented son. His mother is the former
Mary Goodwin. Congratulations !

When ...vlng,
How deep le your blllh?

I Carpenter
I
&lt; I News, Event

----------------,

DO EARMARK A FEW MINUTES of your time on Sunday,
Feb. lQ, to drop by the Meigs Higb School cafeteria to pay
respects to C. E. Blakeslee who is retiring after 33 long years as
Meigs County's Agricultural Agent. Besides being agricultural
agent, Blakeslee has given uncountable hours and effort to
many, many projects of the COWlty over the past 33 years. The
open house is being staged by associates of the honored guest.

~N1r

offense from the guard spot."
Miller, probably best known
for his patented soft jump shot,
also leads the team in steals
with 26.
Following Miller in team
scoring with 164 points, sixth
best in the SVAC at 16.7 ppg, is
6-1 senior forward Pete Sayre,

_________

Al.C CHESTER A. ROUSH, son of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis C.
Roush, 574 High St., Middleport, is enjoying a leave with his
family and friends. Chester is stationed at the England Air Force
Base in Louisiana.

and determination sure show

against the press. He runs our

OPEN DATES
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP!)
Youngstown Cardinal
Mooney, the 1973 Class AAA
Ohio high school football
playoff champion, has two
open dates remaining on its
1974 schedule.
The Cardinals are interested
in scheduled games on Friday
or Saturday, Sept. 6 or 7 and
Friday or Saturday, Oct. 11 or
12. Any school interested
should contact head coach Don
Bucci.

home encounters 1 Eastern on

,_

'' ) _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 24,1974

STORE

BAKERMIOOLEPORT,
FURN·ITURE
·
0. "

heritage house- Middleport
.

I

..,

f
•,

. ·. l

�' .
7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Jan. 24, 1974
ORDINANCE NO . lOOl -74
coupons author,ized by thiS
Council's Ordinance No . 918,
" N
0 R: 0 I N A N c E adopted November 9, 19'6 7, and
\ U T ,H 0 R I z 1 N G
T H e shall constitute an additiona l
1SSUANCE 0~ DUPLICATE original cont ractual obligation
BONO NUMBER 12 OF THE to the Village .
ISSUE OF $415,000 FIRST
SEC TION 4 _ That lhis or
MORTGAGE WATERWORKS dfnance is hereby declared to be
REVENUE BONDS OF THE an emergency measure in that
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPORT the publ ic pea ce, health , safe ty
MEIGS COUNTY
OHto' and welfare require th e im
DATED NOVEMBER 1 1967· ·- mifdiate authorization of the
IN THE DENOMINATION oF duplicate bond described here in
$ 5 , 000,
M A T U R 1 N G and therefore it shalt take eff ect
NOVEMBER 1, 1991. WITH on its adoption .
APPURTENANT
COUPONS
Adopted this 14fn day of
OUE ON MAY 1. 1974, AND January , 1974 .
T HEREAFTER
TO
John W . Zerkle
MATURITY ,
i&gt;.NO
Mayor
DECLARING
AN Attest :
EMERGENCY.
Gene Grate
Village Clerk
WHEREAS , bond number 12
of the Issue of S415,000 First (II 24, 31, 2tc
Mortgage Waterworks Revenue
Bonds of the Village of Mid ·
dleport , Meigs County , Ohio,
dated November 1, 1967, in the
deno"'!ination
ol
ss.ooo,
matur~ng
November l, 1991,
with appurtenant co upons due
May 1. 1974, and thereafter to
m_aturlty, owned by Harry H.
B1tier and Hazel Biller of Lima
O~io , was heretofore lost:
miSlaid, stolen or destroyed,
and cannot be found or
produced ; and
WHEREAS , this Council has
e,.amined
the
aff idavit
d~lineating the circumstances
With respect to loss of said bond
a~d coupons, and describing
bond and coupons as to
With particularity the missing
number. denomination
. title,
•
aggregate
principal amount,
I
date, _issuer and maturity.
subscnbed
swornand
to byHazel
said
1I
Cou_pon
Harry H. and
Bitler

'
·,

1

r~mSw·'*·,-c.~a-~,,, ,,~,,1¢.~~,~ Band

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan . 24, 197~

Auxiliary contributes to funds
Radio Free Europe, the
, Pomeroy Fire Department, the
American Legion National
· Foundation for Children and
: Youth, ar.d lhe Danny Thoma~
Leukemia Fund all received a
contribution Tuesday night
,from the American Legion
•Auxiliary of Drew Webster
••Post 39, Pomeroy _
: The Auxiliary voted to send
to Radio Free Euope, $10 to
;the Pomeroy firemen, and $5
;each to the Leukemia Fund
•and the Foundation for
:children and Youth.
: Reports on service to
:veterans during the holiday
~ season by both lhe senior and
·the junior units were given
:during the meeling, as well as
:a report on the bloodmobile
:canteen served by the
:auxiliary.

:rn

: Events announced at the

•meeting included lhe mid: winter conference in Columbus
:at the Neil House, Feb. 22 and
:23 when awards will be
:presented. Members were
' asked to furnish cookies for a
tea at lhe conference and were
:advised that Feb. 23, a dinner
wiU be served with the tickets
:available for $6~75.
·
Buckeye
Girls'
Stale
. represen-t atives will be
;selected at the February
:meeting, Mrs. Carrie Neutzling
:reported, and organizations
interested in e&lt;&gt;-Sponsoring a
, girl are asked to contact her. ·
•Cost is $70 per girl. At lhe
February meeting also, lhe
· auxiliary scholarship will be
' awarded, and Mrs. Neutzling
will present a program on
Americanism.

Service to veterans in
December was reported on by
Mrs. Grace Pratt who noted
that the auxiliary contributed
items estimated to cost $74.61,
for the Chillicothe birthday
party. This consisted of favors
provided by the junior unit, 80
carlons of chewing gum, cakes,
25 loot bags made by the
members, homemade candy,
clothing, paperback books, and
other miscellaneous items. The
unit also contributed JO pounds
of candy to the Chillicothe
hospital. Reporting on the
party Mrs. Pratt told of visiting
several patients from Meigs
County and presenting each
one with a special box of gifts.
Other holiday projects included a Christmas party
staged by the juniors at the
Athens Mental Hospital with
gilts of candy, shaving supplies, hose, handkerchiefs, and
writing paper at a cost of $77
being given to each one. The
juniors also presented gifts to
Bill Rovnak, a veteran at the
Arcadia Rest Home.
Mrs . Mary Marlin, field
service chairwoman, reported
on boxes prepared for the two
veterans at the Meigs County
Infirmary, gift boxes for the
six veterans at Arcadia each
containing a comb, paperback
book, pen and pencil set, toothbrush, gum, candy, deodorant,
playing cards, socks, shaving
supplies, cigarette lighters and
tobacco and of special gills of
clothing for Bill Rovnak. She
also reported that some articles of clothing had been
purchased for the son of a

Racine Social Events

)

By Mrs. Francis Morris
The Booster Class of First
: Baptist Church School met
: Friday evening, Jan. 18 with
· Mrs. Ralph Webb, hostess at
: her home. "Charily and
: Sacrifice" was the subject of
' the program presented by Mrs.
: Ura Morris. Scripture reading
was I Peter 2:1-6 and a
meditation, "In Charity".
. After group singing "I
Surrender All" readings by
members were : •'The True
Spirit of Sacrifice", "Examples of Sacrifice'', ''Expression
of Sacrifice", "Expense of
Sacrifice", "Known as a
Praying Man", "AbrahamThe Man of Faith", "DavidThe Man After God's Own
Heart", ''Moses-The Man of
Deliverance", ''JerusalemThe City of Peace", "The
Friend Who Stands By", "New
Year", ucommlt thy way unto
the Lord". The program cloSed
with group singing "Oh, How I
Love Jesus" and "My Jesus I
Love Thee" followed with
prayer by Mrs. Bikacsan. Mrs.
Marie Roush presided at the
business
session.
The
nominating committee report
was accepted and officers
elected were Edna Pickens,
President; Marie Roush, Vice
President; Dorothy Badgley,
Secretary; Grella Simpson,
Treasurer; Isabel Simpson
~onducted a Bible Quiz. Twelve
present enjoyed lovely refreshments served by Mr. and Mrs.
Webb.
Mr. James Cleland of New
York is here with his mother,
Mrs. Mabel Cleland while his
brother Paul is in Veterans
Hospital, Huntington, for
cataracts operation. On Jan. 6
children and grandchildren
came and surprised Mrs.
Cleland for her 83rd birthday
which was Jan. 7-.
Mrs. W. B. Wilson and
brother i..Oonard Parsons of
Marietta visited Mrs. Maude
Young Sunday. .
Crill Bradford, Jr. of Worthington, spent the week end
· with Mr. and Mrs. Crill
Bradford.
Mr. and Mrs . Dennis
Blkacson of Dayton spent the
week end with his parents,
Rev. and Mrs. Walter ·P.
Blkacson.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Shively
and children of Columbus spent
the week end with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Powell.
Mrs. Ralph Badgley has
returned home from Fairfax,
Va. alter spending several
weeks with her daughter-Inwho has been iU.
Mrs. Evelyn Yo~, J. F.

law

and Aaron of Gallipolis were
week end guests of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland.
Mrs. Ann Coe, Mrs. Grace
Krider and Mrs. Betty
Christopherson were visitors in
Gallipolis recentiy.
Mr. Billy Joe Janes of
Columbus was a week end
guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. A.
Wingett.
Mr. and Mrs. Palmer have
returned home after spending
several weeks with relatives in
Alabama.
Mrs. Vashti Grimm of Letart
Falls was a recent visitor of
Mrs. Frankie Neigler.
Mr. Clifford Bryson of Pittsburgh, Pa. spent the weekend
with his mother, Mrs. Hobart
Bryson.

deceased vel&lt;!ran at the Meigs the Girls State Tea May 5 at
County Infirmary .
Logan, and noted the dPath of
Notes of appreciation rrom Mrs. Rv::,.:,iter Williams, Jan. 8.
the Meigs Community School Mrs. Williams was a past
for literature and a Christmas district president,
past
tree presented to them were department chaplain, and had
read by Mrs . Veda Davis, served on many committees.
junior acitivities chairwoman. Both she and her husband were
She also displayed a skel&lt;h of a active in legion affairs many
Korean doll to be used in the years.
dress-a-doll contest.
The hospitalization of Mrs.
Mrs. Ellen Couch, com- Henry Patro, department
munity service chairwom- treasurer, and the ankle injury
an, reported on bloodmobile of Mrs. Henry Miller, past
canteen noting the con- department president, were
tribulions of members of the noted . It was also reported that
unit and the A. &amp; P. Co. Serving Mrs. Gail Stableton, wife of the
·were Mrs. Edith Sauer, Mrs. commander of Fairfield
lsablle Couch, Miss Janice County !Post II, recently died.
Couch, Miss Sherrie Reuter, Get well and sympathy cards
Mrs. Leona Smith and Mrs. were sent.
Faye Wildermuth. Several
Mrs. Sauer, unit chaplain,
senior citizen volunteers also asked for prayers and favorite
assisted.
religiou s articles for her
A letter was read from Mrs. prayer book. This will be enDonald Miller, past depart- tered in competition and then
men! president, warning units sent to a veterans hospital. '
about a fraudulent cookbook
Appointed to the ways and
promotion using letters of means committee were Mrs.
introduction which bear her Ellen . Couch, Mrs . Marge
forged
signature. ..She Reuter, Mrs. Wildermuth, Mrs.
cautioned units not to become Neutzling,
Mrs.
Lena
involved in the cookbook Nesselroad, Mrs. Leona Smith,
scheme which has alread cost Mrs. Frances Hunnel and Mrs.
units over the slate hundreds of Davis. A meeting was set for
dollars.
7:30p.m. Jan. 30, when plans
The auxiliary was advised by will be made for the annual
letter to start ordering American Legion birthday
auxiliary pins from lh~:_ party .
of
Ohio --r· Mrs. Reuter, children and
Department
headquarters in Zanesville youth chairwoman, noted that
instead of from the National the unit bought socks, hose and
Emblem Sales Co. at In- games for the children at the
dianapo!is Letters were also Meigs County Home. Among
read regarding the candidacies those sent sympathy cards by
for department treasurer of Mrs. Couch were Miss Erma
Mrs. Billy E. Peeples, and Mrs . Smith and Mrs. Genevieve
George Bagnal.
Meinhart:
Miss Smith reported that all
Letters of thanks were read
from the Four Chaplains Fund items purchased for ways and
for a $10 contribution, and from means projects have been sold.
Janice Couch for a gift while The unit legislative leader, ·
hospitalized. Mrs. Esther Mrs. Edith Fox, gave a comTipple, diStrict president, in prehensive
report
on
her bulletin, urged units to legislative objectives for 1974.
submit reports. She announced She spoke of the "failure of

Loyal Bereans meet

Contmued support with a ... again named card chairmonthly contribution for the woman.
parties staged by the
Thank-you card from Mrs.
Homebuilders Class at the Martha Haggerty was read and
Athens Mental Health Center reported ill were Mrs. Lillian
was pledged during the T~iplett and Mrs. Ernestine
Tuesday night meeting of the Boggess . The birthdays of
Loyal Bereans Class of the Cynthia Cohring, Mrs. Edith
Middleport Church of Christ. Spencer, Mrs. Allensworth,
The Bereans also voted to and Mrs. Louise McElhinny
send a substantial sum to the were observed at the meeting.
Masako Mission in Rhodesia.
Mrs. Childs gave the
During March and April, class devotions reading Psalm 124, a
members will have charge of meditation from Billy Sunday's
preparing the communion Bible, and a poem, "What is
elements and laundering the Faith"" · Mrs. Allensworth
baptismal robes. A pancake conducted a game and refreshsupper was planned for the ments were served by the
February meeting.
officers.
for
the
year
Elected
officers
Saturday evening guests of
Clara Follrod and Nina were Mrs. Clyda Allensworth,
president; Mrs. Regina Swift,
SON BORN
. Robinson were Mr. and Mrs.
vice
president;
George
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Pete
Bill Follrod and Sue Ann, of
Meinhart,
first
vice·
president;
Yakoubian, Columbus, the
Athens, and Leola Swartz of
Marvin Kelly, second vice former Zana Thomas of
Shade. Sunday guests were Mr.
Mrs.
Lena Pomeroy, are announcing the
and Mrs. Robert Robinson and president;
McKinley,
secretary;
Mrs. birth of a 6 lb., 8 oz., son,
family of Belpre, 0.
Martha Childs, treasurer; and George Gregory, atrRiverside
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost of
Mrs. Ruth Karr, assistant Hospital in Columbus, Dec. 28.
Sugar Grove, 0., were weeksecretary.
Maternal grandparents are
end guests of Genevieve
Mrs. Cotheryn Ervin and Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Thomas,
Guthrie, and attended church
Mrs. Betty Cline were ap- Nye Ave., Pomeroy, and the
here Sunday morning.
poin led to the flower com- paternal grandparents are
Recent guests of Mr. and
mittee, and Mrs. McKinley was Mrs.
Anna
Yakoubian,
Mrs. VereSWartzwereMr. and
Stratford, Conn., and lhe late
Mrs. Vernon Swartz and family
George Yakoubian. The couple
of Hockingport, 0.; Mr. and
CALL
AT
HOME
also has a daughter, Crisliena
Mrs. Millard Swartz, Garner
Mrs. Grace Prall, Mrs. Lynn, age 9.
Griffin, and the Elmer Bibbee
Garnet Harbrecht, Mrs.
family, all local.
Florence Windon and Mr. and
Mr.andMrs. Chas. D. Woode
ARE VISITORS
Mrs. Harry Davis were in
went to Athens to Dr. Fugate,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis
Logan Tuesday to call at the
last Tuesday, and called to see
spent the weekend in
Leonard Lyke Funeral Home
his sister, Carrie Burson in
Springfield visiting Mrs.
to pay last respects to Thomas
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.
Harold Johnson. On Saturday
R. Wolfe. He is survived by his
Word has been received from
they visited Miss Dorothy
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Henderson, wife, the former Edith Leifheit Leifheit at Orient.
of Pomeroy.
in St. Cloud, Fla., that Mrs.
Henderson has been ill with
high blood pressure. They
VALENTINES AND
would appreciate prayer and
mail from friends and neighVALENTINE GIFTS
bors here.
B~xes of Valentines at special
pnces •. and we have the single
Va lenhnes, too. Valentine gifts candy, hankies, party favors,
napkins and all the other goodies.

Alfred
Social Notes

SALE PLANNED
The annual ''white elephant"
sale of the Ken Amsbary
Chapter, lzaak Walton League
of America, will be held when
the chapter meets at 7 p. m.
Monday at the clubhouse.
Dinner for membe~s and their
wives will be held at 7 p. m.
Those attending are to take
, something for the sale.

NOTICE

SUPER SPECIALS
20 Galton

Garbage Cans Reg. 2_. 99 Reg. 4.99
Two Numbers
to choose
Irom.

.. ·
:;:;

Congress to respond fully to the
needs of the Vietnam veteran"
and of the Lrg !on's · ~:~l:)Surance
lhal more will be done during
the coming months.
Mrs. Fox said that the Legion
has asked for relief from postal
rate increases imposed on
national and department
publications, has asked for a
revision of the flag code, and
lhe restoration of the ob-servance of Memorial Day and
Veterans Day to the original
dates. She told of what has
been done to assist the Vietnam
veteran in his transition from
military to civilian life, and of
the Legion's role in securing
these things and of Its appreciation for what has been
done to date. She concluded her
report with a patriotic
message.
"Play it Safe" is the civil
defense theme, Mrs. Hunnel
reported. She talked on
procedures to follow in the
event of floods, tornadoes,
earthquakes and fires and of
the first concern being always
for life.
Law and order was discussed
by Mrs. Rhoda Hackett,
na tiona I security chairwoman.
She commented on the advantages of joining the armed
forces and the educational
opportunities they offer. She
also suggested the ROTC
program for both men and
women when they enroll in
college.
Kitchen committees appointed for the games parties
were Jan . 25, Mrs. Neutzling;
Feb. I, Mrs. Martin and Mrs.
Hackett; Feb. 4, Mrs. Reuter;
.Feb. 8, Mrs. Wildermuth; Feb.
11, Mrs. Davis; Feb. 15, Mrs.
Hunnel; Feb. 18, Mrs.
Catherine Welsh; Feb. 22, Mrs.
Iva Powell and Mrs. Gladys
Cummings, and Feb. 25, Mrs.
Peggy Harris.
Mrs. Marlin invited members to attend a March 15
meeting of the Middleport
_Business and Professional
Women when a WRAP
(Women's Responsiblity for
Accident Prevention) program
will be presnted.
Mrs. Davis won the door
prize. Mrs. cummings and
Mrs. Powell served refreshments. Mrs. Martin and Mrs.
Charles Marshall will host the
February meeting.

t
t

0

II

-~
~:-

t

;: Ca Iend arl;:

THURSDAY
PERCICPTOR CHAPTER,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
regular meeting, Thursday,
7:46 p. m. at home of Velma
Rue with Ann Rupe, co-hostess.
MIDDLEPORT
Child
.conservation
League,
husbands' night to be observed
with a bowling party at the
Skyline Lanes, Gallipolis.
Members and husbands to
meet there at 6:30 p.m.
MEETING to organize BiCentennial Celebration at
Letart FallsSchoolal6:30 p.m.
All citizens of Letart Township
urged to attend.
RIVERVIEW Garden Club,
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Claremont Harris with Mrs.
Herman Grossnickle,
cohostess.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 7:30
p.m. at home of Beulah Ewing,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
SUNDAY
REVIVAL at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday at
Flatwoods Church. Special
music by the Flowers'
Brothers.

Historical
society gets
donations

A donation to the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society for the development of
a museum was made by the Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Soi-ority meeting
Tuesday night at the home of
Mrs. Linda Riffle.
The chapter also agreed to
donate baked items for a sale
being planned by the Pomeroy
Fire Department as a fund
raising project for the new
building. Each member will
contribute one il&lt;!m of baked
goods.
Donations were also made to
the three funds of International, the endowment
fund, the loan fund and the
exemplar fund.
Mrs. Carol McCullough
presided at the session with
Miss Marilyn Swan reporting
on the Mothers' March of
Dimes and extending thanks to
those who assisted.
DAUGHTER BORN
Mrs. Charlotte Hanning
Mr. and Mrs. David M. announced lhe annual rush
Warner, formerly of this area p;~rty for March 28 with the
and now of Richmond, Va., are theme "My Favorite Month".
announcing the birth of their The social committee also
first daughter and second announced a couple's party
child, Jan. 23, at 3:31p.m. in St. March 8 at the Orchid Room in
Mary's Hospital, Richmond. Pomeroy and the theme for it
The infant weighed 7lbs., 4 ozs. will be "The Gay Fifties".
and has been named Natalie
Mrs. Annie Chapman gave a
Elaine. Mr. and Mrs. Warner cultural report on entertaining
were also the parents of a son, and hobbies. She talked about
David Michael II, who is antiques, displaying booklets
four years old. Maternal on antiques and home
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. decorating, and gave tips on
Niday, Gallipolis, and paternal entertaining.
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
A pizza party was held in
Ralph E. Warner, Sandy conjunction with the meeting
Heights, Point Pleasant. Mrs. attended by Mrs. A. R. Knight,
CarlA. Warner, Red House, W. sponsor, Mrs. Becky Anderson,
Va., is a paternal great- Mrs. Jennifer Anderson, Mrs.
grandmother. The David Chapman, Miss Sarah Bechtle,
Warners' new address in Rich- Mrs. Judy Crooks, Mrs. Lynn
mond is 6301 Claudhart Rd., Shuler, Mrs. Doris Ewing, Mrs.
23234.
Vikki Gloeckner, Mrs. Han-

camp scheduled

A week at summer band
camp for the Meigs High

cleared . on t he B'1g Ben d
Minstrel Association show last

School Marching Band under
sponsorship of the Meigs Band
Boosters wa.s approveJ at a
meeti"g Monday night.
At the suggestion of Dwight
Goins, instrumental director,
the boosters also made plans to
retain Judy Riggs to train the
majorettes and a 12-girl flag
corps which he proposes to add
to the marching band in the
fall. Mrs. Riggs would also be
requested to a !tend band
camp. Dal&lt;!s selected were
either July 28lo Aug. 3 or Aug .
4 to Aug. 10.
Goins also reported that the
band has received an invitation
to enl&lt;!r competition at Myrtle
Beach, June 7 and the boosters
agreed to sponsor the trip. He
reported that $877.61 had been

fall.
Tag day prizes of $10 each
were awarded to Scott Fraser
and Mark Davis. The band
director reported _that the
Meigs Local School Board had
approved $4,427.15 for the
purchase of instruments. The
boosters will se nd a letter of
appreciation to the Board.
Events announced by Goins
included the spring band
concert, April 26; a trip to
King's Island on April 27 ; the
junior-senior prom on May 4;
the band banquet on May 11; a
choral concert on May 12;
baccalaureate on May 19 ;
commencement on May 21.
Mrs. Donna Ohlinger was
authorized to pay bills incurred
in the operation of concession
stands at the games.

A review of Ewell Gibbon's
book, "Stalking the Wild
Asparagus" was given by Mrs.
Marion French at the Monday
night meeting of the Middleport Garden Club held at the
home of Mrs. C. M. Hennesy,
So. Third Ave.
Mrs. French commenl&lt;!d on
Gibbons' credentials as a food
and nutrition expert and of his
use of wild foods as well as the
use of herbs for medicinal
purposes.
The 21 members attending
the meeting responded to roll
call by relating a past error in
planting. Mrs. Bert Grimm,
Meigs County contact chairwoman, and Mrs . Nora Cross
of the Bend 0 ' the River
Garden Club, were guests at
the meeting . Mrs . Grimm
spoke briefly on her role as
county contact chairwoman.
Mrs. Roy Cassell Rresided at
the
business
meeting.
Arrangements were by Mrs.
Malcolm Roller who used a
holly in a wicker basket accented with cardinal replicas

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in front of the living room
fireplace, and an arrangement
of yellow chrysanthemums and
glads on the buffet in the dining
room.
A salad course was served by
Mrs. Hennesy, Mrs. Charles
McDaniel, Mrs. Crary Davis,
and Mrs. B. B. Zeigler.

"For two years after delivery
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~~~!\oo:~lh~f :he w~?o':'est~~~~
facts , before an offi cer

Meigs 4-H
Club News
New officers were elected at
a recent meeting of the Meigs
County 4-H Junior Leaders at
the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. social room
in Middleport.
They are Ed Kennedy,
president; Mandie Rose and
Teresa carr, vice presidents;
Donna Thornton, secretary;
Janet Mauer, treasurer;
Debbie Lawrence, publicity
chairperson; Paul Cross,
recreation chairperson; and
Faye Reibel and Edie
Woodard, refreshment committee.

Kennelh McCuilough, R. i&gt;f..

Chorlos Riffle, R.

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Sunday 10:30. 12:3ooniu tot

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Area· News, Notes

reporteilly suffered a heart
attack, and while recuperating
his wife, was hospitalized
following an auto accident in
Mason .. She was slightly injured. Their daughter, Mrs .
John Mason of Vienna, W. Va.
is here to assist her . parents.
Chester Roush , Addison
Ohio, son of Mrs. CharlotU:
Jenks is a patient at Good
Samitarian Ho s pital ,
Zanesville, Ohio. He reportedly
suffered a heart attack and
was in intensive care from
Tuesday until Friday evening.

Watson who was 80.· About 30
guests surprised the honoree.
Recent visitors of Mrs .
· Jessie Cartwright in Clifton,
included Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Pull.
. ms, Marcella Chapman of
New Bremen, Ohio·, Mr. Glenn
Cartwright, Glendale, W.Va .;
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gibbs, Jr .
0f New Haven.
Reverend and Mrs. Clarence
M
cCioud of Mason are both
patients at Pleasant Valley
H
'
ospital. The
minister

He was
employed at
Zanesville.
Recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Darrell Jenks were Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Huck and
family of Moundsville, W. Va .
and the Hucks' daughl&lt;!r and
husband, Mr . and Mrs. James
Richmond, Mrs. James R.
Richmond, and Joe Richmond
ali of Moundsville .

FIRST ENTRY
ONTARIO, Colifm (UPf) Da\rid nSalt" Walther, who
suffered third degree burns on
40 per cent of his body in a fiery
crash in last year's lllodianapolis 500, has become th~
fi rst confirmed entry for the
California 500 here March 10.
"I was a little nervous at
first," said Walther, "but 1 had
been preparing myself menqerman silver is a silver· Ially for this moment for a long
whJte ,alloy of t:opper , zi nc time .... I feel real good. I'm
a.nd mcke l. 1t c.:on lain s no
confident! can do the job ."
Si lver .

IN FOR YOUR
FREE ENTRY BLANK
....- ·- -

lh~~~~~~~g~~~~~f.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

M rs French reviews book
'

Ma

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
TO WHOM IT MAY CON
S()fi
CERN :
Notice is hereby gi¥en that on
Mr~. Cec_il ~ith, Mrs.
:e~~~fi~y s1iu!97~'itft bl~ ~~~~ ·"::"; Denrus ~rrts, Mn IDld Mrs.
Pomeroy , Ohio, to se ll for cash Fred Trtpp, all_of Mason, went
the
collateral,
to wit
1'170following
Oldsmobile.
2 or ser
No : ·to Akron, Oh 1o where they
3JI_77 0M27HOJ , said ·co llatera i attended a surprise. birthday
be1.ng . held : t~ secure an ' party ror Mrs. Smith's and
obl rgahon an smg under an
. ,
.
instalment sale con tra cl Mrs . Tnpp s, Aunt Ah,ce
exec~led by TOMMY N, LANE .
Rt . 4. Pomeroy, Ohio and held
by General Motors Acceptance
Co~poratiC?n as sec ur'ed party .
Sa1d publtc sale is to be con stored and may be seen at
du cted according to the laws ol Pomeroy Motor Company,
the State of Ohio . General Pomeroy , Ohio.
Motors Acceptance Corporation
GENERAL MOTORS
sreasleerves the right to bid, at thi.s
ACCEPTANCE
CORPORATION
The co llateral is presently (1) 24, ltc

authorized by law to administer
oaths , hereto ""ached as
Exhibit
A; and The
wHEREAS.
First
National Bank of Cincinnati,
Cinclnnall. Ohio . Trustees
under the lndenlure of Mort gage dated os ol No• ember 1,
1967. securing lhe issue of
1415,000
First Mortgage
Waterworks Revenue Bonds of
the Vil lage of Mlddteport, Meigs
County. Ohio, dated November
1, 1967, has pursuant to Section 3
of sai~ Indenture of Mortgage,
elC:ammed said affidavit of
Harrv H, Bitler and Hazel Bitler
and considers such affidavit to
be satisfaclory evidence ot the
loss of said bond, as evidenced
by the certificate signed by a
Trust Officer of The First
National Bank of Cincinnati.
hereto attached as Exhibit B;
and
WHEREAS . this Council has
e)( am ined the Lost Securities
Bond, purchased by said Harry
H. Bitler and Haze l Bitler,
w~ltten by a surety company
w1th assets In excess of
$50,000,000, naming the Village
of Middleport, Ohio, and The
First National Bank of Cin ·
cinnali as obligees, as their
"interest or Interests may aj:l ·
pear, In the penal sum of twice
the principal amount of the
missing bond and conditioned
upon payment by the surety of
said Lost Securities Bond of all
losses or expenses which the
Village of Middleport, Ohio, or
The First National Bank of
Cincinnati, Paying Agent, may
incur, in the usua l language,
with respect to the missing bond
or coupons, or the duplicate
bond or coupons. in excess of
the principal amount of the
bond, plus interest, hereto at tached as Exhibit C; and
WHEREAS,
The
Firs I
Nationa l Bank of Cincinnati
has, pursuant to Section 3 of
said Indenture of Mortgage,
examined said Lost Securities
Bond and considers such Lost
Securities Bond to
be
satisfactory. as evidenced by
the certificate signed by a Trust
Off icer of The First N.atlona l
Bank of Clnc:lnnall. hereto
tttached as Exhibit o; and
WHEREAS. said Harry H
13itler and Haze l Bitler have
·equeated the issurance of a
:Jupllcate bond and coupons to
·eplace said missing boncl and
have derosited with The First
Natlona Bank of Cincinnati a
sum of money to pay all printing
costs, delivery costs and other
direct costs Incurred l&gt;y the
Vil lage of Middleport, Ohio, in
the issuance of a duplicate bond
and coupons, including the tees
and expenses of bond counsel
for the Village and counsel for
The First National Bank of
Cincinnati. Paying Agent and
Trustee as evidenced by the
certificate of receipt from The
First National Bank of Cin ·
cinnati, hereto attached as
E,.hibit E;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT
ORDAINED by the Council of
the Vil lage of Middleport. Meigs
County, Ohio, three -fourths of
all the members elected thereto
concurring:
SECTION 1. That pursuant to
Section 3 of the Indenture of
Mortgage, dated as ot
November 1, 1967, by and be·
lween the Village of Middleport.
Ohio, and The Firs! National
Bank of Cincinnati, thiS Council
considers
the
affidavit
delineating the circumstances
with respect to loss·of said bond
and coupons, and describing
with particularity the missing
bond and coupons as to
aggregate principal amount,
number. denomination, title,
date, Issuer and matur·ity,
subscribed and sworn to by s111d
Harry H. Bit ler and Hazel
·Bitler, all as described in the
Pre-am btes
hereto,
as
satisfactory and that this
Counci l hereby approves its
form and uecution .
SECTION 2 . That pursuant to
Section 3 of said Indenture of
Mortgage, thiS Council con ·
Siders the Lost Securities Bond,
purchased by said Harry H.
Bitler and Hazel Bitler and
naming the Village of Mid ·
dleport, Ohio, and The First
National Bank of Cincinnati as
obligees, as their Interest or
Interests may appear, in the
penal sum of twice the principal
amount of the miss ing bond and
· conditioned uj:lon payment by
the surety of said Lost
Securities Bond of all losses or
expenses which the Village of
Middleport , Ohio. or The First
Nationa l Bank of Cincinnati,
Paying Agent, may incur -with
respect to the missing bond or
coupons. or the du):)llcete bond
or coupons, In excess of the
princlp"al amount of lhe bond .
all as described In the
Preambles
hereto,
as
satisfactory and that this
Council hereby approves its
form and execullon .
• SECTION J . Thol !he Vllloge
Clerk, or his designee, be and he
Is hereby authorized to cause to
· be printed, executed, issued and
;. de-livered a duplicate bond
number . 12 and appurtenant
' coupons due May 1, 1974, and
thereafter to maturity, to or
~ upon the order of Harry H
Bitler and Hazel Bitler .
, Execution of Sa lei bOnd and
, coupons. shall be provided in
this Council's Ordinance No.
918, adopted November 9, 1967,
with
respect to . origlnlf
e.ecutlon of the /.Jsut of bonds
• Of whiCh the lost bond forms 1
~rt~ and said duplicate bond.
and coupons shall be in the
tame form as such lost bond
and coupons. e)(cept that the
prefix "0·" shall be used In its
numeration l[ld lt Shllll be
stamped or ~tinted with the
word
"Duplicate ."
Said
' duplicate bond and coupons
r shall
be equivalent for all
;; purposes with the · bOnds and

"

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Tablets
$1. 7 5 Value

Valuable Coupon

4-WAY
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No . HP-3108

WORTHALL

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100 pet . wetproof, 3 position
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$5.95 Value

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CONTEST ENDS JANU,ARY 28, 1974

�' .
7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Jan. 24, 1974
ORDINANCE NO . lOOl -74
coupons author,ized by thiS
Council's Ordinance No . 918,
" N
0 R: 0 I N A N c E adopted November 9, 19'6 7, and
\ U T ,H 0 R I z 1 N G
T H e shall constitute an additiona l
1SSUANCE 0~ DUPLICATE original cont ractual obligation
BONO NUMBER 12 OF THE to the Village .
ISSUE OF $415,000 FIRST
SEC TION 4 _ That lhis or
MORTGAGE WATERWORKS dfnance is hereby declared to be
REVENUE BONDS OF THE an emergency measure in that
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPORT the publ ic pea ce, health , safe ty
MEIGS COUNTY
OHto' and welfare require th e im
DATED NOVEMBER 1 1967· ·- mifdiate authorization of the
IN THE DENOMINATION oF duplicate bond described here in
$ 5 , 000,
M A T U R 1 N G and therefore it shalt take eff ect
NOVEMBER 1, 1991. WITH on its adoption .
APPURTENANT
COUPONS
Adopted this 14fn day of
OUE ON MAY 1. 1974, AND January , 1974 .
T HEREAFTER
TO
John W . Zerkle
MATURITY ,
i&gt;.NO
Mayor
DECLARING
AN Attest :
EMERGENCY.
Gene Grate
Village Clerk
WHEREAS , bond number 12
of the Issue of S415,000 First (II 24, 31, 2tc
Mortgage Waterworks Revenue
Bonds of the Village of Mid ·
dleport , Meigs County , Ohio,
dated November 1, 1967, in the
deno"'!ination
ol
ss.ooo,
matur~ng
November l, 1991,
with appurtenant co upons due
May 1. 1974, and thereafter to
m_aturlty, owned by Harry H.
B1tier and Hazel Biller of Lima
O~io , was heretofore lost:
miSlaid, stolen or destroyed,
and cannot be found or
produced ; and
WHEREAS , this Council has
e,.amined
the
aff idavit
d~lineating the circumstances
With respect to loss of said bond
a~d coupons, and describing
bond and coupons as to
With particularity the missing
number. denomination
. title,
•
aggregate
principal amount,
I
date, _issuer and maturity.
subscnbed
swornand
to byHazel
said
1I
Cou_pon
Harry H. and
Bitler

'
·,

1

r~mSw·'*·,-c.~a-~,,, ,,~,,1¢.~~,~ Band

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan . 24, 197~

Auxiliary contributes to funds
Radio Free Europe, the
, Pomeroy Fire Department, the
American Legion National
· Foundation for Children and
: Youth, ar.d lhe Danny Thoma~
Leukemia Fund all received a
contribution Tuesday night
,from the American Legion
•Auxiliary of Drew Webster
••Post 39, Pomeroy _
: The Auxiliary voted to send
to Radio Free Euope, $10 to
;the Pomeroy firemen, and $5
;each to the Leukemia Fund
•and the Foundation for
:children and Youth.
: Reports on service to
:veterans during the holiday
~ season by both lhe senior and
·the junior units were given
:during the meeling, as well as
:a report on the bloodmobile
:canteen served by the
:auxiliary.

:rn

: Events announced at the

•meeting included lhe mid: winter conference in Columbus
:at the Neil House, Feb. 22 and
:23 when awards will be
:presented. Members were
' asked to furnish cookies for a
tea at lhe conference and were
:advised that Feb. 23, a dinner
wiU be served with the tickets
:available for $6~75.
·
Buckeye
Girls'
Stale
. represen-t atives will be
;selected at the February
:meeting, Mrs. Carrie Neutzling
:reported, and organizations
interested in e&lt;&gt;-Sponsoring a
, girl are asked to contact her. ·
•Cost is $70 per girl. At lhe
February meeting also, lhe
· auxiliary scholarship will be
' awarded, and Mrs. Neutzling
will present a program on
Americanism.

Service to veterans in
December was reported on by
Mrs. Grace Pratt who noted
that the auxiliary contributed
items estimated to cost $74.61,
for the Chillicothe birthday
party. This consisted of favors
provided by the junior unit, 80
carlons of chewing gum, cakes,
25 loot bags made by the
members, homemade candy,
clothing, paperback books, and
other miscellaneous items. The
unit also contributed JO pounds
of candy to the Chillicothe
hospital. Reporting on the
party Mrs. Pratt told of visiting
several patients from Meigs
County and presenting each
one with a special box of gifts.
Other holiday projects included a Christmas party
staged by the juniors at the
Athens Mental Hospital with
gilts of candy, shaving supplies, hose, handkerchiefs, and
writing paper at a cost of $77
being given to each one. The
juniors also presented gifts to
Bill Rovnak, a veteran at the
Arcadia Rest Home.
Mrs . Mary Marlin, field
service chairwoman, reported
on boxes prepared for the two
veterans at the Meigs County
Infirmary, gift boxes for the
six veterans at Arcadia each
containing a comb, paperback
book, pen and pencil set, toothbrush, gum, candy, deodorant,
playing cards, socks, shaving
supplies, cigarette lighters and
tobacco and of special gills of
clothing for Bill Rovnak. She
also reported that some articles of clothing had been
purchased for the son of a

Racine Social Events

)

By Mrs. Francis Morris
The Booster Class of First
: Baptist Church School met
: Friday evening, Jan. 18 with
· Mrs. Ralph Webb, hostess at
: her home. "Charily and
: Sacrifice" was the subject of
' the program presented by Mrs.
: Ura Morris. Scripture reading
was I Peter 2:1-6 and a
meditation, "In Charity".
. After group singing "I
Surrender All" readings by
members were : •'The True
Spirit of Sacrifice", "Examples of Sacrifice'', ''Expression
of Sacrifice", "Expense of
Sacrifice", "Known as a
Praying Man", "AbrahamThe Man of Faith", "DavidThe Man After God's Own
Heart", ''Moses-The Man of
Deliverance", ''JerusalemThe City of Peace", "The
Friend Who Stands By", "New
Year", ucommlt thy way unto
the Lord". The program cloSed
with group singing "Oh, How I
Love Jesus" and "My Jesus I
Love Thee" followed with
prayer by Mrs. Bikacsan. Mrs.
Marie Roush presided at the
business
session.
The
nominating committee report
was accepted and officers
elected were Edna Pickens,
President; Marie Roush, Vice
President; Dorothy Badgley,
Secretary; Grella Simpson,
Treasurer; Isabel Simpson
~onducted a Bible Quiz. Twelve
present enjoyed lovely refreshments served by Mr. and Mrs.
Webb.
Mr. James Cleland of New
York is here with his mother,
Mrs. Mabel Cleland while his
brother Paul is in Veterans
Hospital, Huntington, for
cataracts operation. On Jan. 6
children and grandchildren
came and surprised Mrs.
Cleland for her 83rd birthday
which was Jan. 7-.
Mrs. W. B. Wilson and
brother i..Oonard Parsons of
Marietta visited Mrs. Maude
Young Sunday. .
Crill Bradford, Jr. of Worthington, spent the week end
· with Mr. and Mrs. Crill
Bradford.
Mr. and Mrs . Dennis
Blkacson of Dayton spent the
week end with his parents,
Rev. and Mrs. Walter ·P.
Blkacson.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Shively
and children of Columbus spent
the week end with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Powell.
Mrs. Ralph Badgley has
returned home from Fairfax,
Va. alter spending several
weeks with her daughter-Inwho has been iU.
Mrs. Evelyn Yo~, J. F.

law

and Aaron of Gallipolis were
week end guests of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland.
Mrs. Ann Coe, Mrs. Grace
Krider and Mrs. Betty
Christopherson were visitors in
Gallipolis recentiy.
Mr. Billy Joe Janes of
Columbus was a week end
guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. A.
Wingett.
Mr. and Mrs. Palmer have
returned home after spending
several weeks with relatives in
Alabama.
Mrs. Vashti Grimm of Letart
Falls was a recent visitor of
Mrs. Frankie Neigler.
Mr. Clifford Bryson of Pittsburgh, Pa. spent the weekend
with his mother, Mrs. Hobart
Bryson.

deceased vel&lt;!ran at the Meigs the Girls State Tea May 5 at
County Infirmary .
Logan, and noted the dPath of
Notes of appreciation rrom Mrs. Rv::,.:,iter Williams, Jan. 8.
the Meigs Community School Mrs. Williams was a past
for literature and a Christmas district president,
past
tree presented to them were department chaplain, and had
read by Mrs . Veda Davis, served on many committees.
junior acitivities chairwoman. Both she and her husband were
She also displayed a skel&lt;h of a active in legion affairs many
Korean doll to be used in the years.
dress-a-doll contest.
The hospitalization of Mrs.
Mrs. Ellen Couch, com- Henry Patro, department
munity service chairwom- treasurer, and the ankle injury
an, reported on bloodmobile of Mrs. Henry Miller, past
canteen noting the con- department president, were
tribulions of members of the noted . It was also reported that
unit and the A. &amp; P. Co. Serving Mrs. Gail Stableton, wife of the
·were Mrs. Edith Sauer, Mrs. commander of Fairfield
lsablle Couch, Miss Janice County !Post II, recently died.
Couch, Miss Sherrie Reuter, Get well and sympathy cards
Mrs. Leona Smith and Mrs. were sent.
Faye Wildermuth. Several
Mrs. Sauer, unit chaplain,
senior citizen volunteers also asked for prayers and favorite
assisted.
religiou s articles for her
A letter was read from Mrs. prayer book. This will be enDonald Miller, past depart- tered in competition and then
men! president, warning units sent to a veterans hospital. '
about a fraudulent cookbook
Appointed to the ways and
promotion using letters of means committee were Mrs.
introduction which bear her Ellen . Couch, Mrs . Marge
forged
signature. ..She Reuter, Mrs. Wildermuth, Mrs.
cautioned units not to become Neutzling,
Mrs.
Lena
involved in the cookbook Nesselroad, Mrs. Leona Smith,
scheme which has alread cost Mrs. Frances Hunnel and Mrs.
units over the slate hundreds of Davis. A meeting was set for
dollars.
7:30p.m. Jan. 30, when plans
The auxiliary was advised by will be made for the annual
letter to start ordering American Legion birthday
auxiliary pins from lh~:_ party .
of
Ohio --r· Mrs. Reuter, children and
Department
headquarters in Zanesville youth chairwoman, noted that
instead of from the National the unit bought socks, hose and
Emblem Sales Co. at In- games for the children at the
dianapo!is Letters were also Meigs County Home. Among
read regarding the candidacies those sent sympathy cards by
for department treasurer of Mrs. Couch were Miss Erma
Mrs. Billy E. Peeples, and Mrs . Smith and Mrs. Genevieve
George Bagnal.
Meinhart:
Miss Smith reported that all
Letters of thanks were read
from the Four Chaplains Fund items purchased for ways and
for a $10 contribution, and from means projects have been sold.
Janice Couch for a gift while The unit legislative leader, ·
hospitalized. Mrs. Esther Mrs. Edith Fox, gave a comTipple, diStrict president, in prehensive
report
on
her bulletin, urged units to legislative objectives for 1974.
submit reports. She announced She spoke of the "failure of

Loyal Bereans meet

Contmued support with a ... again named card chairmonthly contribution for the woman.
parties staged by the
Thank-you card from Mrs.
Homebuilders Class at the Martha Haggerty was read and
Athens Mental Health Center reported ill were Mrs. Lillian
was pledged during the T~iplett and Mrs. Ernestine
Tuesday night meeting of the Boggess . The birthdays of
Loyal Bereans Class of the Cynthia Cohring, Mrs. Edith
Middleport Church of Christ. Spencer, Mrs. Allensworth,
The Bereans also voted to and Mrs. Louise McElhinny
send a substantial sum to the were observed at the meeting.
Masako Mission in Rhodesia.
Mrs. Childs gave the
During March and April, class devotions reading Psalm 124, a
members will have charge of meditation from Billy Sunday's
preparing the communion Bible, and a poem, "What is
elements and laundering the Faith"" · Mrs. Allensworth
baptismal robes. A pancake conducted a game and refreshsupper was planned for the ments were served by the
February meeting.
officers.
for
the
year
Elected
officers
Saturday evening guests of
Clara Follrod and Nina were Mrs. Clyda Allensworth,
president; Mrs. Regina Swift,
SON BORN
. Robinson were Mr. and Mrs.
vice
president;
George
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Pete
Bill Follrod and Sue Ann, of
Meinhart,
first
vice·
president;
Yakoubian, Columbus, the
Athens, and Leola Swartz of
Marvin Kelly, second vice former Zana Thomas of
Shade. Sunday guests were Mr.
Mrs.
Lena Pomeroy, are announcing the
and Mrs. Robert Robinson and president;
McKinley,
secretary;
Mrs. birth of a 6 lb., 8 oz., son,
family of Belpre, 0.
Martha Childs, treasurer; and George Gregory, atrRiverside
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost of
Mrs. Ruth Karr, assistant Hospital in Columbus, Dec. 28.
Sugar Grove, 0., were weeksecretary.
Maternal grandparents are
end guests of Genevieve
Mrs. Cotheryn Ervin and Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Thomas,
Guthrie, and attended church
Mrs. Betty Cline were ap- Nye Ave., Pomeroy, and the
here Sunday morning.
poin led to the flower com- paternal grandparents are
Recent guests of Mr. and
mittee, and Mrs. McKinley was Mrs.
Anna
Yakoubian,
Mrs. VereSWartzwereMr. and
Stratford, Conn., and lhe late
Mrs. Vernon Swartz and family
George Yakoubian. The couple
of Hockingport, 0.; Mr. and
CALL
AT
HOME
also has a daughter, Crisliena
Mrs. Millard Swartz, Garner
Mrs. Grace Prall, Mrs. Lynn, age 9.
Griffin, and the Elmer Bibbee
Garnet Harbrecht, Mrs.
family, all local.
Florence Windon and Mr. and
Mr.andMrs. Chas. D. Woode
ARE VISITORS
Mrs. Harry Davis were in
went to Athens to Dr. Fugate,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis
Logan Tuesday to call at the
last Tuesday, and called to see
spent the weekend in
Leonard Lyke Funeral Home
his sister, Carrie Burson in
Springfield visiting Mrs.
to pay last respects to Thomas
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.
Harold Johnson. On Saturday
R. Wolfe. He is survived by his
Word has been received from
they visited Miss Dorothy
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Henderson, wife, the former Edith Leifheit Leifheit at Orient.
of Pomeroy.
in St. Cloud, Fla., that Mrs.
Henderson has been ill with
high blood pressure. They
VALENTINES AND
would appreciate prayer and
mail from friends and neighVALENTINE GIFTS
bors here.
B~xes of Valentines at special
pnces •. and we have the single
Va lenhnes, too. Valentine gifts candy, hankies, party favors,
napkins and all the other goodies.

Alfred
Social Notes

SALE PLANNED
The annual ''white elephant"
sale of the Ken Amsbary
Chapter, lzaak Walton League
of America, will be held when
the chapter meets at 7 p. m.
Monday at the clubhouse.
Dinner for membe~s and their
wives will be held at 7 p. m.
Those attending are to take
, something for the sale.

NOTICE

SUPER SPECIALS
20 Galton

Garbage Cans Reg. 2_. 99 Reg. 4.99
Two Numbers
to choose
Irom.

.. ·
:;:;

Congress to respond fully to the
needs of the Vietnam veteran"
and of the Lrg !on's · ~:~l:)Surance
lhal more will be done during
the coming months.
Mrs. Fox said that the Legion
has asked for relief from postal
rate increases imposed on
national and department
publications, has asked for a
revision of the flag code, and
lhe restoration of the ob-servance of Memorial Day and
Veterans Day to the original
dates. She told of what has
been done to assist the Vietnam
veteran in his transition from
military to civilian life, and of
the Legion's role in securing
these things and of Its appreciation for what has been
done to date. She concluded her
report with a patriotic
message.
"Play it Safe" is the civil
defense theme, Mrs. Hunnel
reported. She talked on
procedures to follow in the
event of floods, tornadoes,
earthquakes and fires and of
the first concern being always
for life.
Law and order was discussed
by Mrs. Rhoda Hackett,
na tiona I security chairwoman.
She commented on the advantages of joining the armed
forces and the educational
opportunities they offer. She
also suggested the ROTC
program for both men and
women when they enroll in
college.
Kitchen committees appointed for the games parties
were Jan . 25, Mrs. Neutzling;
Feb. I, Mrs. Martin and Mrs.
Hackett; Feb. 4, Mrs. Reuter;
.Feb. 8, Mrs. Wildermuth; Feb.
11, Mrs. Davis; Feb. 15, Mrs.
Hunnel; Feb. 18, Mrs.
Catherine Welsh; Feb. 22, Mrs.
Iva Powell and Mrs. Gladys
Cummings, and Feb. 25, Mrs.
Peggy Harris.
Mrs. Marlin invited members to attend a March 15
meeting of the Middleport
_Business and Professional
Women when a WRAP
(Women's Responsiblity for
Accident Prevention) program
will be presnted.
Mrs. Davis won the door
prize. Mrs. cummings and
Mrs. Powell served refreshments. Mrs. Martin and Mrs.
Charles Marshall will host the
February meeting.

t
t

0

II

-~
~:-

t

;: Ca Iend arl;:

THURSDAY
PERCICPTOR CHAPTER,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
regular meeting, Thursday,
7:46 p. m. at home of Velma
Rue with Ann Rupe, co-hostess.
MIDDLEPORT
Child
.conservation
League,
husbands' night to be observed
with a bowling party at the
Skyline Lanes, Gallipolis.
Members and husbands to
meet there at 6:30 p.m.
MEETING to organize BiCentennial Celebration at
Letart FallsSchoolal6:30 p.m.
All citizens of Letart Township
urged to attend.
RIVERVIEW Garden Club,
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Claremont Harris with Mrs.
Herman Grossnickle,
cohostess.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 7:30
p.m. at home of Beulah Ewing,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
SUNDAY
REVIVAL at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday at
Flatwoods Church. Special
music by the Flowers'
Brothers.

Historical
society gets
donations

A donation to the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society for the development of
a museum was made by the Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Soi-ority meeting
Tuesday night at the home of
Mrs. Linda Riffle.
The chapter also agreed to
donate baked items for a sale
being planned by the Pomeroy
Fire Department as a fund
raising project for the new
building. Each member will
contribute one il&lt;!m of baked
goods.
Donations were also made to
the three funds of International, the endowment
fund, the loan fund and the
exemplar fund.
Mrs. Carol McCullough
presided at the session with
Miss Marilyn Swan reporting
on the Mothers' March of
Dimes and extending thanks to
those who assisted.
DAUGHTER BORN
Mrs. Charlotte Hanning
Mr. and Mrs. David M. announced lhe annual rush
Warner, formerly of this area p;~rty for March 28 with the
and now of Richmond, Va., are theme "My Favorite Month".
announcing the birth of their The social committee also
first daughter and second announced a couple's party
child, Jan. 23, at 3:31p.m. in St. March 8 at the Orchid Room in
Mary's Hospital, Richmond. Pomeroy and the theme for it
The infant weighed 7lbs., 4 ozs. will be "The Gay Fifties".
and has been named Natalie
Mrs. Annie Chapman gave a
Elaine. Mr. and Mrs. Warner cultural report on entertaining
were also the parents of a son, and hobbies. She talked about
David Michael II, who is antiques, displaying booklets
four years old. Maternal on antiques and home
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. decorating, and gave tips on
Niday, Gallipolis, and paternal entertaining.
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
A pizza party was held in
Ralph E. Warner, Sandy conjunction with the meeting
Heights, Point Pleasant. Mrs. attended by Mrs. A. R. Knight,
CarlA. Warner, Red House, W. sponsor, Mrs. Becky Anderson,
Va., is a paternal great- Mrs. Jennifer Anderson, Mrs.
grandmother. The David Chapman, Miss Sarah Bechtle,
Warners' new address in Rich- Mrs. Judy Crooks, Mrs. Lynn
mond is 6301 Claudhart Rd., Shuler, Mrs. Doris Ewing, Mrs.
23234.
Vikki Gloeckner, Mrs. Han-

camp scheduled

A week at summer band
camp for the Meigs High

cleared . on t he B'1g Ben d
Minstrel Association show last

School Marching Band under
sponsorship of the Meigs Band
Boosters wa.s approveJ at a
meeti"g Monday night.
At the suggestion of Dwight
Goins, instrumental director,
the boosters also made plans to
retain Judy Riggs to train the
majorettes and a 12-girl flag
corps which he proposes to add
to the marching band in the
fall. Mrs. Riggs would also be
requested to a !tend band
camp. Dal&lt;!s selected were
either July 28lo Aug. 3 or Aug .
4 to Aug. 10.
Goins also reported that the
band has received an invitation
to enl&lt;!r competition at Myrtle
Beach, June 7 and the boosters
agreed to sponsor the trip. He
reported that $877.61 had been

fall.
Tag day prizes of $10 each
were awarded to Scott Fraser
and Mark Davis. The band
director reported _that the
Meigs Local School Board had
approved $4,427.15 for the
purchase of instruments. The
boosters will se nd a letter of
appreciation to the Board.
Events announced by Goins
included the spring band
concert, April 26; a trip to
King's Island on April 27 ; the
junior-senior prom on May 4;
the band banquet on May 11; a
choral concert on May 12;
baccalaureate on May 19 ;
commencement on May 21.
Mrs. Donna Ohlinger was
authorized to pay bills incurred
in the operation of concession
stands at the games.

A review of Ewell Gibbon's
book, "Stalking the Wild
Asparagus" was given by Mrs.
Marion French at the Monday
night meeting of the Middleport Garden Club held at the
home of Mrs. C. M. Hennesy,
So. Third Ave.
Mrs. French commenl&lt;!d on
Gibbons' credentials as a food
and nutrition expert and of his
use of wild foods as well as the
use of herbs for medicinal
purposes.
The 21 members attending
the meeting responded to roll
call by relating a past error in
planting. Mrs. Bert Grimm,
Meigs County contact chairwoman, and Mrs . Nora Cross
of the Bend 0 ' the River
Garden Club, were guests at
the meeting . Mrs . Grimm
spoke briefly on her role as
county contact chairwoman.
Mrs. Roy Cassell Rresided at
the
business
meeting.
Arrangements were by Mrs.
Malcolm Roller who used a
holly in a wicker basket accented with cardinal replicas

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(Wed. for Permanents)
Call 992-5694 or 992-7056 for · an 'appointment.
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in front of the living room
fireplace, and an arrangement
of yellow chrysanthemums and
glads on the buffet in the dining
room.
A salad course was served by
Mrs. Hennesy, Mrs. Charles
McDaniel, Mrs. Crary Davis,
and Mrs. B. B. Zeigler.

"For two years after delivery
we'll fix anything that's our fauit."

GAMES &amp; JIGSAW PUZZLES FOR
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Riffle, Mrs. Ruth Riffle, Miss
Swan . and Mrs. Jeanette
Thomas.

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~~~!\oo:~lh~f :he w~?o':'est~~~~
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Meigs 4-H
Club News
New officers were elected at
a recent meeting of the Meigs
County 4-H Junior Leaders at
the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. social room
in Middleport.
They are Ed Kennedy,
president; Mandie Rose and
Teresa carr, vice presidents;
Donna Thornton, secretary;
Janet Mauer, treasurer;
Debbie Lawrence, publicity
chairperson; Paul Cross,
recreation chairperson; and
Faye Reibel and Edie
Woodard, refreshment committee.

Kennelh McCuilough, R. i&gt;f..

Chorlos Riffle, R.

Open Dolly 1:00 a.m. to 10·00 P m ·
Sunday 10:30. 12:3ooniu tot

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Area· News, Notes

reporteilly suffered a heart
attack, and while recuperating
his wife, was hospitalized
following an auto accident in
Mason .. She was slightly injured. Their daughter, Mrs .
John Mason of Vienna, W. Va.
is here to assist her . parents.
Chester Roush , Addison
Ohio, son of Mrs. CharlotU:
Jenks is a patient at Good
Samitarian Ho s pital ,
Zanesville, Ohio. He reportedly
suffered a heart attack and
was in intensive care from
Tuesday until Friday evening.

Watson who was 80.· About 30
guests surprised the honoree.
Recent visitors of Mrs .
· Jessie Cartwright in Clifton,
included Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Pull.
. ms, Marcella Chapman of
New Bremen, Ohio·, Mr. Glenn
Cartwright, Glendale, W.Va .;
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gibbs, Jr .
0f New Haven.
Reverend and Mrs. Clarence
M
cCioud of Mason are both
patients at Pleasant Valley
H
'
ospital. The
minister

He was
employed at
Zanesville.
Recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Darrell Jenks were Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Huck and
family of Moundsville, W. Va .
and the Hucks' daughl&lt;!r and
husband, Mr . and Mrs. James
Richmond, Mrs. James R.
Richmond, and Joe Richmond
ali of Moundsville .

FIRST ENTRY
ONTARIO, Colifm (UPf) Da\rid nSalt" Walther, who
suffered third degree burns on
40 per cent of his body in a fiery
crash in last year's lllodianapolis 500, has become th~
fi rst confirmed entry for the
California 500 here March 10.
"I was a little nervous at
first," said Walther, "but 1 had
been preparing myself menqerman silver is a silver· Ially for this moment for a long
whJte ,alloy of t:opper , zi nc time .... I feel real good. I'm
a.nd mcke l. 1t c.:on lain s no
confident! can do the job ."
Si lver .

IN FOR YOUR
FREE ENTRY BLANK
....- ·- -

lh~~~~~~~g~~~~~f.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

M rs French reviews book
'

Ma

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
TO WHOM IT MAY CON
S()fi
CERN :
Notice is hereby gi¥en that on
Mr~. Cec_il ~ith, Mrs.
:e~~~fi~y s1iu!97~'itft bl~ ~~~~ ·"::"; Denrus ~rrts, Mn IDld Mrs.
Pomeroy , Ohio, to se ll for cash Fred Trtpp, all_of Mason, went
the
collateral,
to wit
1'170following
Oldsmobile.
2 or ser
No : ·to Akron, Oh 1o where they
3JI_77 0M27HOJ , said ·co llatera i attended a surprise. birthday
be1.ng . held : t~ secure an ' party ror Mrs. Smith's and
obl rgahon an smg under an
. ,
.
instalment sale con tra cl Mrs . Tnpp s, Aunt Ah,ce
exec~led by TOMMY N, LANE .
Rt . 4. Pomeroy, Ohio and held
by General Motors Acceptance
Co~poratiC?n as sec ur'ed party .
Sa1d publtc sale is to be con stored and may be seen at
du cted according to the laws ol Pomeroy Motor Company,
the State of Ohio . General Pomeroy , Ohio.
Motors Acceptance Corporation
GENERAL MOTORS
sreasleerves the right to bid, at thi.s
ACCEPTANCE
CORPORATION
The co llateral is presently (1) 24, ltc

authorized by law to administer
oaths , hereto ""ached as
Exhibit
A; and The
wHEREAS.
First
National Bank of Cincinnati,
Cinclnnall. Ohio . Trustees
under the lndenlure of Mort gage dated os ol No• ember 1,
1967. securing lhe issue of
1415,000
First Mortgage
Waterworks Revenue Bonds of
the Vil lage of Mlddteport, Meigs
County. Ohio, dated November
1, 1967, has pursuant to Section 3
of sai~ Indenture of Mortgage,
elC:ammed said affidavit of
Harrv H, Bitler and Hazel Bitler
and considers such affidavit to
be satisfaclory evidence ot the
loss of said bond, as evidenced
by the certificate signed by a
Trust Officer of The First
National Bank of Cincinnati.
hereto attached as Exhibit B;
and
WHEREAS . this Council has
e)( am ined the Lost Securities
Bond, purchased by said Harry
H. Bitler and Haze l Bitler,
w~ltten by a surety company
w1th assets In excess of
$50,000,000, naming the Village
of Middleport, Ohio, and The
First National Bank of Cin ·
cinnali as obligees, as their
"interest or Interests may aj:l ·
pear, In the penal sum of twice
the principal amount of the
missing bond and conditioned
upon payment by the surety of
said Lost Securities Bond of all
losses or expenses which the
Village of Middleport, Ohio, or
The First National Bank of
Cincinnati, Paying Agent, may
incur, in the usua l language,
with respect to the missing bond
or coupons, or the duplicate
bond or coupons. in excess of
the principal amount of the
bond, plus interest, hereto at tached as Exhibit C; and
WHEREAS,
The
Firs I
Nationa l Bank of Cincinnati
has, pursuant to Section 3 of
said Indenture of Mortgage,
examined said Lost Securities
Bond and considers such Lost
Securities Bond to
be
satisfactory. as evidenced by
the certificate signed by a Trust
Off icer of The First N.atlona l
Bank of Clnc:lnnall. hereto
tttached as Exhibit o; and
WHEREAS. said Harry H
13itler and Haze l Bitler have
·equeated the issurance of a
:Jupllcate bond and coupons to
·eplace said missing boncl and
have derosited with The First
Natlona Bank of Cincinnati a
sum of money to pay all printing
costs, delivery costs and other
direct costs Incurred l&gt;y the
Vil lage of Middleport, Ohio, in
the issuance of a duplicate bond
and coupons, including the tees
and expenses of bond counsel
for the Village and counsel for
The First National Bank of
Cincinnati. Paying Agent and
Trustee as evidenced by the
certificate of receipt from The
First National Bank of Cin ·
cinnati, hereto attached as
E,.hibit E;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT
ORDAINED by the Council of
the Vil lage of Middleport. Meigs
County, Ohio, three -fourths of
all the members elected thereto
concurring:
SECTION 1. That pursuant to
Section 3 of the Indenture of
Mortgage, dated as ot
November 1, 1967, by and be·
lween the Village of Middleport.
Ohio, and The Firs! National
Bank of Cincinnati, thiS Council
considers
the
affidavit
delineating the circumstances
with respect to loss·of said bond
and coupons, and describing
with particularity the missing
bond and coupons as to
aggregate principal amount,
number. denomination, title,
date, Issuer and matur·ity,
subscribed and sworn to by s111d
Harry H. Bit ler and Hazel
·Bitler, all as described in the
Pre-am btes
hereto,
as
satisfactory and that this
Counci l hereby approves its
form and uecution .
SECTION 2 . That pursuant to
Section 3 of said Indenture of
Mortgage, thiS Council con ·
Siders the Lost Securities Bond,
purchased by said Harry H.
Bitler and Hazel Bitler and
naming the Village of Mid ·
dleport, Ohio, and The First
National Bank of Cincinnati as
obligees, as their Interest or
Interests may appear, in the
penal sum of twice the principal
amount of the miss ing bond and
· conditioned uj:lon payment by
the surety of said Lost
Securities Bond of all losses or
expenses which the Village of
Middleport , Ohio. or The First
Nationa l Bank of Cincinnati,
Paying Agent, may incur -with
respect to the missing bond or
coupons. or the du):)llcete bond
or coupons, In excess of the
princlp"al amount of lhe bond .
all as described In the
Preambles
hereto,
as
satisfactory and that this
Council hereby approves its
form and execullon .
• SECTION J . Thol !he Vllloge
Clerk, or his designee, be and he
Is hereby authorized to cause to
· be printed, executed, issued and
;. de-livered a duplicate bond
number . 12 and appurtenant
' coupons due May 1, 1974, and
thereafter to maturity, to or
~ upon the order of Harry H
Bitler and Hazel Bitler .
, Execution of Sa lei bOnd and
, coupons. shall be provided in
this Council's Ordinance No.
918, adopted November 9, 1967,
with
respect to . origlnlf
e.ecutlon of the /.Jsut of bonds
• Of whiCh the lost bond forms 1
~rt~ and said duplicate bond.
and coupons shall be in the
tame form as such lost bond
and coupons. e)(cept that the
prefix "0·" shall be used In its
numeration l[ld lt Shllll be
stamped or ~tinted with the
word
"Duplicate ."
Said
' duplicate bond and coupons
r shall
be equivalent for all
;; purposes with the · bOnds and

"

I
1
I
1
1

I
I

BUFFER IN
100
Tablets
$1. 7 5 Value

Valuable Coupon

4-WAY
.: ._
~- .:

-----..
__- .-.
-..:---"--

1
I
I
1
I
I
I
I
1
I
I

Valuable Coupon

,_....,.., YUCCA

BAN

DEW

1

'

Nasal
Spray

Roll-On
Deodorant

V20Z.
$1.08 Value

l.5oz .
$1.19 Value

ALBERTO

·~~'!"~...--....
r1f.~::;::lr ALBERTO

BALSAM

SHAMP(){)

·

Shampoo
Regular
Dry-Oily
75
· oz .

7

oz.

$1.39

R 1159

eg. .

BALSAM
CREME RINSE

.,..-'
1
·· -·-~
lliiiJIII

&amp;

--~2"....,....~ CONDITIONER
·-· ...

'"•

8 oz.
1

Reg. 1.59

1

--====~~=

JOY

,

DISHWASHING

·LIQUID
32 oz.

t

SUN-HEAT
LAMP
No . HP-3108

WORTHALL

HEATING PAD
No. 1811 -6

'1672

$27.95 Value

100 pet . wetproof, 3 position
switch, 2 year guarantee

KLEEN

$5.95 Value

GUARD
WORT HALL

VAPORIZER
No. 800-A
2 year

guarante~

Reg. '7.99

ALADDIN
WORTH ALL

Cleans &amp; Shines
just about anylhing

THERMOS
No. 3740
Pint Size
Wide Mouth
$3 .19 $199

9 oz .

79c Value

'4"

!"'----1950

OTHER
PRIZES
-STEREOS
-SAILBOATS
Complete woth 318 CIO V8,

automatic transmission,
power steering, front power
!11sc brakes, AM radio,
white sidewall tires/deluxe
wheel covers. Electronic
lgnilion.

-SHAVERS
-FURNITURE
AND MORE

Mfr'l. Utt price: $3,100

COTY LIQUID

MOISTURE
MAJ_(E-UP
Soft-Sheer
Protein- Rich
9 _S hades

Prince Matchabelli

POLAROID

CACHET

COLORPACK

108

Cologne
Spray Mist
SPECIAL

COLOR
FilM
$5.75 Value

TUSSY
LIPSTICKS
12 Shades
ON SALE

2 for

.

H'of'O.ALILRGOtl&lt;

N('l!/;r~r;t'tM

NEUTROGENf
Transparent Skin Care Soap
Non-Drying, Hypo-Allergenic
No Free-Alkali
Reg.
Sl.OO a Bar

ENTER TODAY

EVEREADY

BAnERIES
No. 950

2- Pack

60c Value

CONTEST ENDS JANU,ARY 28, 1974

�8 - 'l'he Datly Senllnel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Jan 24, 1974

Sentinel Classifieds Get-Results!

BOYS

I

Notice

WANT ADS

2 SIGNS

5 P M Day Before Pobl ca t•on

,

Monday Deadline 9 am
on - Correct ons

Ca nn~ Ji a t

OF
QUALITY

w I! be accept ed un t I 9 a m for
Day

ot P.ubl ca t on

REGULATIONS
The Pllbl she r reserves It e
r gnt to edit or r ejec t any adS
de e med
Object onal
Th e
publ sil er w It not be r es pon
s bl e tor more th an one n

correc t 1n sert on

RATES

For W..ant Ad SerVICe

5 cen ls per Word one nser tw n
M.n mum Charge Sl 00
P'er word th ree
co nsecut ve nsert•ons
26 cents per word s x con
sec ut ve msert ons
25 Per Cent DI SCount on pad
ad s and ads pa d Wlfll n 10
d ays
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 f or 50 word m n
m um Each add ton a l word
14 cents

GIRLS

3c

BLIND ADS
Add ttonal 25c Cll arg e per
Advert semen!
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a n to 5 00 p m Da 1ly
8 30 a m
to 12 00 N oon
Sa tu rday

In Memory

BE A

PUBLIC NOTICE
Perm t No OH 0004 58
4pp l ca lion No OH 072 OYD
2 0002 57

PAPER
CARRIER.

NATIONAL
POLLUTANT
DISCHARGE
ELIMINATION
SYSTEM I NPDESl PERMIT
PROGRAM
( Scct1on
402
Federal
Water
Pollution
Control Act AS AMENDED)
JOINT PUBLIC
NOTICE
Proposed NPDEA Perm t to
D1s ch ;,rge
nto
Nav1gable
Waters
U
S
Env!fonmenta l
Prot ec t on Age ncy
Reg on V Perm t Branch
1 North Wa cker Dr1v e
Ch1cago Ill no• s 60606
312 353 1346
Oh o
En v r onmental
Protect on Age nc y
Seneca Tower s
P 0 Box 1049
Columbus Oh o 432 16
61 4 469 3543

DELIVER

The
Daily
Sentinel
Th1s could be your
golden opportumty to
learn
bus1ness
methods save money
for clothmg or college,
wm pnzes These and
many other benefits
are
avatl able
to
deser v tng
Sent tnel
earners
For years The Sen
tmel has helped young
people develop the
attnbutes and talents
whtch spell success m
adult ltfe

A route mtght be open
1n your netghborhood,
to fmd out

Call

992-2156

•
OR FILl OUT
AND MAIL

TliE WUPON
BELOW
;;;c~~A-;;;;;;;;;;--,

ITHE
DAILY SENTINEL
I
111 COURT ST
IPOMEROY OHIO 4576~ :
I
I
I
II - ---:-:-:.,..,.-::----:
NAME
I
I
AGE

ADDRESS

I
I

r-------.:
ZIP CO DE

l ____________

I Door

I

l

'

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill

ILV ER COIN
Pl ease quot e
pn ce and ma I to Jnc k e
Wan sley Rt 4 Pa taskal a
Oh10 &lt;l3062
1 24 6t c

1129S

1~6~

CHEVELLE HT CPE

Std V 8 eng me au tom at1c t rans P sl eermg factory a tr
buck et seats A sha r p clean car t ha t anyone would love
dnrk green f1n 1sh rad 10
1967

CHEVELLE 4 DOOR

POMEROY MOTOR

OLD furn1ture o ak tables
c locks ce box es brass bed
dishes
or
complete
hou se hold s Wr t e M
D
M1ller Rt 4 Pom er oy Oh•o
c all 992 6771
5 13 li e

cO.

OPEN EVES8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

Not1ce

SALE EVERY
SATURDAY
NIGHT 7 PM

Consagnments
ac ·
cepted 1oa m to 6 p m.
datly, or wall pay cash
lor your household
lfPmS

PHONE 593-5035
COLLECT
INCOME Ta x :::,erv!CP 9 am to
5 p m Da tv except Sunday
evenmgs by ap po n tmen t
only Co Rd 22 off Rt 7
bypass Phone Wanda Eblm
992 2272
1 2 JO tc

CASH pa•d tor all makes an d
models of mob1l e nom es
Phone area cod e 614 423 9531
4 IJ lf c

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mam Pomeroy 0

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

WANTED

PAPER CARRIER

·WANTED IN
POMEROY
PHONE 992-2156

TliE
DAILY SENTINEL
POMEROY, 0.

ARENTIOI
C1garette LICense Fees
18 75
and F me s (Gross)
G ft s and Donat tons
100 00
lntang bles
1 205 16
Tota l Rece•pts
8 173 03
To tal Beg nnmg Ba ance
Plus Rece1pts
Expendttures 9 7 14 42
Tota l Expend tures Admm1stratlve
6 2.41 12
Town Halls Memonal
Bulidmgs &amp;
Grounds
35 1 75
F.re Protect iOn
60 00
Cemeter 1es
652 00
L ghting
100 13
Grand Total dxpendltures
- General Fund
7 405 00
Bal Dec 31 1973
2 309 42
Total Expenditures Plus
Bat Dec 31 1973
9 114 42
Motor VehiCle L•cense
Tax Fund
Bat Jan 1 1973
1 913 48
Recetpts
Motor Veh cle l cense
Tax
6 1dl 72
Total Receipts
6 141 72
Total Beg1nn1ng Balance
Plus Receipts
6 055 20
Expendttures
Total Expenditures MISCellaneous
2 382 98
Mamtenance
4 648 97
Grand Total Expenditures
Motor Veh1cle
L cense Tax Fund
7 03195
1 023 25
Bat Dec 31 1973
Total Expenditures Plus
Bal Dec 31 1973
8 OS5 20
Gasoltne Tax Fund
Bal Jan 1 1973
1 812 01
Rece•pts
GaSOline Tax
13 200 00
Othe1
70 85
Total Recerpts
13 270 85
Total Beg nning Balance
Plus r.!ece1pts
15 082 86
E x:penditures
Total Expend•tures M tscellaneous
7 988 83
Ma ntenance
5 886 01
Grand Total Expenditures 13 874 84
Gasot ne Tax Fund
Bat Dec 31 1973
1 208 02
Total Expend•tures Plus
Bat Dec 31 1973
15 082 86
..., .. .. ~ .... !! ..! .... Fund
Ba l Jan 1 1973
Recetpfs
General Property Tax tv Tax Real Estate (Gross)
341 10
Tolal R ece1pt s
341 10
Total Beginnmg Balance
Plus Receipts
356 69
Expenditures
Total Expenditures 8 94
M scellaneous
Maintenance
294 78
Grand Total Expenditures Road and Br.dge Fund 303 12
Bal Dec 31 1973
52 97
Total Expenditures Plus
Bat Dec 31 1973
356 69
General Federal
Revenue Sharing
Rece1pts
Federal Revenue
Shanng
J 985 oo
Total Rece 1pts
39 8500
Expenditures
Payouts
3 985 00
Total Expend•tures
3 98S oo
Total Expenditures Plus
Bat Dec 31 1973
3 985 00
Township Debt- Notu
Purpose For Which
Note Debt Was Created
Motor
grader
New Issues Dunng
Year 1973
4 313 02
Redeemed Durmo Year

'313 02

BEAUTIFUL Walnut stereo
rad•O am tm
tape com
b lnat•on 8 track tape deck
Balance $103 49
or terms
ava tabl e Call 992 3965
1 21 tfc

NEED woman to l1v e n and
tak e mothers place of 2
c htldren 10 a new respectabl e
home You may also hav e 1
ch ld of your own Phon e 99 '1
2536
1 8 li e

NEW 19 74 ZI G ZAG SEWING
MACHINES
10
ongmal
factory cart on
Z1g Zag to
make bultonholes sew on
buttons monograms ~nd
make fancy d es 1gns w 1fh lust
fhe tw1st of a smgte d1a1 L ett
m lay a way and never been
used W II sell for only $47
cash
or terms available
Phone 992 2984
1 21 ttc

Wanted
Sa l esman or Agent Wanted
TEXAS 0 I Company needs
matur e person for short tr ps
surrounding Middleport
Pomeroy
area
Contact
customers We tram A1r ma I
c H D ck Pres Sout h
western
Petroleum
Ft
Worth Tex
1 23 4t c

II'"'----------..
WANTED!

POSITIONS OPEN

W ILKIN SON Small Eng ne
Sates Repa r on al l small
engmes
chan
saws
prec son ground 399 W Ma n
Street Phone 992 3092
1 17 26tc

FOOD STORE
All kmds of food
store employees cash1ers,
carryouts,
stock
men, bakery help,
experienced meat
cutter, etc

Write to:

Powell's
Super Valu
Box 746
Pomeroy, 0 , 45769

An EQual Opportun1ty
Employer

.

For Rent

SALT F OR
Rock salt for town sh1ps
towns and busmesses m
bulk s and bags for 1ce and
snow Exce ls or Salt Work s
Phone 992 3891
11 11 ti c
19}2
DA- ,&lt;;;;--;o-:;--:;--~-1 2U or._

It's Snow Ttre Ttme'

HOUSE 1632 Lm coln He1gh1:::. 4
rooms and bath Fenced yard
and p1cture wmdow Phon e
992 2780 or 992 3432
I 24 tf c

-------

ROOM w•th or Without board
who •s will1ng to help w th
work on property
Must
furnish references Call 992
2649
1 24 3tc

------

3 AND 4 ROOM furniShed and
unfurniShed
apartm en ts
Phone 992 5434

------------ ~~~fc
PRIVATE meet1ng room to r
anv organ1zat on phone 992
3975
3 11 tfc
SLEEPIN~..:&gt;

room over w ne
store m Pomeroy Reference
required Call 992 5293
1 10 tf c

--------------UPSTAIRS apartment 4 room s
and balh nicety furnished
rent reasonable No ch•ldren
and no pets Privat e entrance
Phone 992 2731
1 22 tfc

-----

- -------

Pos•hv~ Sf"p and Go In Mud

BUNDY
trumpet
and
saxophone Call 949 510 1
l 20 6t c

&amp;

------

ALL SIZES IN STOCK

GOOD m xed -ha~-for- ~ale
Phone 388 8847
1 23 6tc

Let Us Install Now•

-------------EXCELSIOR Salt Works

E
Mam St Pomeroy All kmds
ol salt water pellets water
nuggets block salt and own
Oh10 R1ver Sa lt Phone 992
3891
6 5 tfc

Auto- sales - ------

1969 OLDSMOBILE Stat 1on
Wagon all power ectu•pmen t
Good t1res a r cond l•onmg
etc $130 or poss1bly trade for
small car Phone 949 591 t
1 23 Stc
1972 5 10 4 OR DATSUN Sedan
Excellent cond1t1on John
lyons Chester near Chester
Grade School
1 22 6tp

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

Snow

;:,

Pets For Sale

--- -- - --------Employment W11ted

a

REMEMBER

o•

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

Bob Braun

s 50 50 Club 4

13
Search for Tomorrow 8 10

Days of Our ltves

3 4 15 Newlywed Game 6 13

6

love

Amencan

Style

13

Lucy

Show

Movies Man In The Saddle 10

8

4 30 - Green Acres J Gtlltgan s Isle 13 Bonanza 15 Hazel 8
Jackpot• 4

Generation Rap

,

&amp; THINGS

~

By Helen and Sue Bottel
BY HELEN ANDSUEBOl'TEt
Nothing Is Ever Hopeless

DEAR RAP
I am 12 and I am pregnant and a hopeless case Don't know
who IS the father
I don 't have anyone to turn to because my mother IS the
neighborhood you-know-what and my father h1ls the bars every
rught No one cares
I ran around because everybody else dtd and mamly because
I dubt t want to stay home alone and thmk But I have thought a
lot this month and I want to reform I m scared I want to start
over I don't have money for an abortion or know how to ask for
one even Who can help me•- HOPELESS CASE
DEAR HC
You d be surprtsed how many people are out there wruttng to
help a hopeless' 12-year-old who thmks no one cares
If you can't conf1de m an understanding teacher or co~n•
selor, then call the Chtld and Fam1ly Welfare Agency or the
Planned Parenthood Assoc1at10n m your town
A legal abortion can be arranged, if you want 1t but
pregnancy tsn t your b1ggest problem You need a good foster
home where you'll recetve the love and constderation you ve
m1ssed all these years Let's hope w1th the help of Family
Welfare, you ll soon have 11 - HELEN AND SUE

RAP
TillS IS what I get for

bemg a 'nice guy!' (Female type)
My g1rl friend had JUSI broken up With her guy, so I asked my
boyfrtend to be especially mce to her Wluch wasn t the smartest
thmg I ever dtd, because he kept rtght on bemg mce In fact he
told me he'd like to go out wtlh her
At that porn! I f1gured the best way to cool thiS was w1th my
g1rl frtend s help So I asked her if she d go wtth hun once or
tw1ce to 'prove' they weren't a good match Y'see , she told me
she dtdn't like hts t,ype a b1t SheS8ldshe'd try to turn him off but
mstead-they really fell for each other
And here lam mmus one boy frtend , and not speakmg to one
gtrl friend, all because I felt sorry for her and asked HIM to help
out
q
I wasn't madly m love wtth the guy so I m not ready to ktll
myself or anything, but don't you thmk this IS a double dirty
trtck • -NICE AND STUPID
DEAR NAND S
Since you practically threw your ex-boy friend at thts g1rl,
you can't really call hiS ca tchmg her a 'dirty tnck " And smce
the gtrl really fell for hun (whale he was JUSt another guy to you)
there s no real loss
So enJOY your freedom and, when you ftnd a new b f don't
!ann hun out to lonely gtrl fnends -SUE

5 00- M1ster Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Gr1tftn 4 Andy

GrlfflthB MISSIOn lmposSible6 Gomer Pyle USMC13
5 30 - Eiec Co 33 HodgepodgeLodge 20 BeverlyHIIIbPII1esB

e 00 -

Tratls West IS

Hogans Heroes 13

Adler 1an Counselmg Techntques 33 Truth or Consequences 6
6 30 - NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 Room

222 13

7 00 - Trulh or Conseq 3 6 Beat The Clock 4

News 10 6
What s My Line B W1ld K1nodom 13 Elec Co 20 I Spy 15
Aviation Weather 33

WIN AT BRIDGE

Open minor suits when possible
NORTH !D)
• AK94

It seems mcred1ble, Citizens, but 1t was JUSt a few short years
ago that every young man wanted to grow up to be a college
student or fathng that to getmto the NatiOnal Guard
Places m both these dissmular mstltutions were at a
premtwn, and louts who had never got more than a low 'C" m
thetr studies were takmg the SAT, Acr, and other adrmss10n
tests reqmred to enter the halls of 1vy and to rove the groves of

33

Beat The Clock

13
Sanford &amp; Son 3 4

Washmgton Week In Revrew 20 33

15 Brady Bunch 6 13 D~rlv Sally B 10
8 3Q-lotsa Luck 3 4 1S Movlt:S Kotak and Marcus Nelson
Murders 8
The Joker Is Wild 10 Srx Million Dollar Man
6 13 Washtngfon Connecfton 20 Campus Scene 33
9 00 - Masterpiece Theater 33 Gtrl W tth Somethtng E xtra 3 4
9

~&amp;MID!1rn®:=:..:::!:! .-.~
Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words

=

11 00 - News Weather Sports6 8 10 3 4 13 15 Janakl33

11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 15 4 Possession 6 Mov1es The Green
Slime 8 Atragon 10 The Pndeof St LOUIS 13
00 - M1dn1ght Spec1a l 3 4 Don K~rshner s Rock Concert 6
Possess 1on 13
1 15 - Movte Begmnmg of the End 10
2 30 - Focus on Columbus 4 News 13

ment

antelope
41 Sacred
Image

Mtlkfi sh
Senonta s

42 D1slull
r abbit

parha

Louts who had never seen a low C were super-patnots,
stnvmg manfully w1th all the strmgs they could pull to be ad
nutted to the servtce m the National Guard, and demonstrate
thetr loyalty and patnottsm m those handsome off..green
umforms every weekend
There was a reason for all thiS, of coorse Back there m the
late Sixties and early Seventies, 1t seems we were mvolved in a
btt of a thmg called a war m Southeast Asta, and wh1le 11 was
perfectly all nght for other people's k1ds to f1ght and die m the
aforementioned war 1t wasn t the ' m thing for most young men
(and thetr fanuhes) to actually get trapped up m the draft which
had a nasty habttofsendmg young men to Nam or Cambodia, or
some other undesirable station
But, m the Amencan way, soluttons were qmckly found
There were absolutely no full-tune college students ftghtmg m
the Southeast Astan JUngles, and therefore the campus was an
asylum (m more meamngs than one) from the VlCissttudes of
combat
D1tto for the National Guard Although perfectly legal, the
Federal Government opted not to call up the Guardsmen One of
the reasons may have been the fact that they m1ght have been
needed to take care of some unpleasanlness occurrmg on the
college campuses mentioned above Duty w1th a Guard umt,
therefore, was on a par wtth college attendance
Then a fme and marvelous thing happened They dectded to
shut down the war, atleast from an Amer~can standpomt
Surpnse, SlUllriSe 11 1 College attendance dropped sharply,
and youths born to pwnp gasoline or dig dttches could gtve up the
pretense of bemg mterestegm accOWlting, secondary education
or coachmg And membership m the National Guard tailed off

love'
9 John -

13

Closely
confined

DOWN

Garner

!2 Knock

1 Airport

down
!3 In a-

2 Mrs

need

(excited )

15 H1gh

(mus )
16 Type
measures
17

Common

verb
18 - dela
Plata
19 Slower
(mus)

20

thriller

(3 wds

22 Pcrstan
rose

wds )

6 MlS8
Amenca

ment

con stella

7 Insect

t10n
23. Elderly
114 William
0
Douglas
Cor one

to

23 Statuh
2~

measure

ship and a

mstru
ment
!3 Go

16 Cup1d

Down

(Ger)

toxm
31 Cliburn s

pape

covenant

Never

\ell
29 Venom

\

11 Unearthly
14 Past orn l

5 See3
(3

J7 Papal

10 Ptl chcr s
stratagem

With 5
Down
(2 wds l
4 - of the

;!l Jasons

~6

\ eslf rd:i) s Answf'r

Bloomer
3 Class1c

press

38 F am1ly

Czec h
rl\ (! l

membe1

26 Palm
vanety

t9 Unef

swun

Chrtstmas
song

28 Bar by

legal
mean s
30 Exas
perate

31 Pnor to

(pre!)
32 Coxcomb
34 Remu
neratlon
35 Your
(Ger)
36 Moham
medan

sa1nt
31sucker
(2 wda )
39 Female
Hmdu
~lave

D !\ILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's h ow to "ot k tl

I I J
ITEASTE

I

10 30 - Who Is Man 33

1 U krame

~

I

Is

I I

~ (

MARINe
FOmA110N6

J

Now arnnce the &lt;In:ted letten
to form the 1urprtH answer, u
~=·=~·~~~~~~~~·:u~n~e~oted~ by the
eartoon

10 00 - News 20 Dean 3 4 15 Mounta1n Scene 33 Tom a 6 13

by THOMAS JOSEPH
!\CROSS
40 Afncan

:~

CEPTIK

15 Stage Center 20
3!1-Bnan Ke1th 3 4 15 Odd Couple 13 Owes G~rls 6

6&gt;MU.e"W

academe

DEAR NAND S
The moral of thiS !ale IS Girl who shares boyfnend wtth
chum who was dumped ends up chwn who IS dumped - HELEN

Week 20

sharply, to the dtsgust of old t1mers "bo we re m the Guwd
before 1t became so popular
Both colleges and the Nabonal Guard are now out re crUiting
students and enlistees, and fwding the pH kin[' s hm What a
ptly'

BY PAUL CRABTREE

7 30 - Porter Wagoner 3 Hollywood Squares 4 New Tr eas ure
Hunt 10 To Tell The Truth 6 Concentratton 8 Wall Street

5 55 - Earl Nightmgale 15
6 00 - News 3 4 B 10 15 ABC News 13 Sesame St 20

I I

abo••

t'---Piili=·=SUIIPIIISI=ANSWIII==·:.___Jt
l'or1terd•y'•

r

umbl'" LILAC FUZZY

rJ xxr J
("-wen tomorro•'

CAMPUS\ TIPTOE

-'n1""r.r1 Mag mn IH. h11td homleH- ALLEYS

3 30 - News 4

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGF ElLOW

One letter Simply stands for another 11 th1 s s am I le A 1s
used for the three L s X for the two 0 s etc Smglc lc th r
apostrophes the length and t01 matlon of tt P \~ o hl~ :~rP :t ll
hmts Each da.&gt; the co de lett ers arc dliTctenl

R II

NJD

RC

CRYPTOOUOTFS
M LCP
D [ C II I W I

FRAARUJGll

ROUS - USRWM CM

K I II 'A

(Li!Wf

Il l

1\1

KVI OMVN

Yeoterdoy's Cryptoquote DON T TELL YOUR FRIENDS
THEIR SOCIAL FAULTS THEY WILL CURE THE FAUL'I
AND NEVER FORGIVE YOU -LOGAN PEARSALL SMITH
(@ 1874 King Features Synd1cale Inc)

' 7 52

• Q3
... AQ82
WEST
• J7
'K9863
• 102
... K 1063
SOUTH
• 863
'AQ
AK865

THESE CHANGES - LET
US
SELL
YOUR
PROPERTY 9 YEARS
EX PERIENCE
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
3ASSOCIATES
~92 2259

A

LIE TEST? WIIAlS

C~ ARC.E?

A ND W~
DO YOU MEAN BOLT
IN HERE LI KE THI 'S

EAST
.QI052

'J

104
• J9 74
... J5

+

... 974

If no answer 992 2568

North South vulnerable

West

TEAFORD

Pass
Pass
Pass

V1rqd B. T t ,1ford. S1
Brok ··r
I 10 Mf•Ch!'lll!r 51!~&gt;cl
Pomeroy. Oh1o -15769
Electric heat large
k1tch en 3 mce bedroom s w tth
enormous close ts F1realarm
u t1lit y space for washer dryer
!garage and nearly an acre for

W1th waler

Paneled

A reat caltle

a

farm A large farm house of
rooms and bath large barn
and 80 acres of tractor lrmd

for only Sl 800 00

F 0 Rr,- F ergu;;-r;ac to;- $5 75
Phone 992 7106
I 22 Jtc

'

'

.

GREAT
;OUNTRY

14
3N T

1+
2N T
Pass

"

On the other hand 1t IS
good pohcy to open a four
card major SUit only when
you really can fmd no other
reasonable call
The b1ddmg m the box IS
normal modern btddmg
South becomes declarer at
three notrump After the
heart openmg he 1s sure of
two spades two hearts four
dtamonds and one club He
may wmd up takmg the club
fmesse for an overtrtck
Back m the 1930s most
North players would open one
spade South would respond
two dtamonds If North pro
ceeded to btd two notrump
East would defeat the con
tract
If North rebtd three cll!bs,
South mtght btd three
notrump But some South
players mtght go back to
spades, whereupon North
would wmd up playmg an un·
satisfactory spade or
notrump contract

92.1

I MOORE WENDY 1'&gt;1LL BE VERY
PLEASED lHAT '10lJ REQUE5TED
HE~AN I E, AND 5HE cAN ,..,..tlo..I5TAI&lt;I WRKINCi FOR '&gt;OtJ
ON MONIMY 1

NEVAH MIOT NOON!':
GOODEROR

DECENTER-CU5S
IT"

~NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

I

The b1ddmg has been

STI:kfO

GASOLINE ALLEY

reason

4bedrooms mce large k1tchen
'"IQ bath 7 rooms m all
msulated 1 , o:.o'"'res $18 000 00

157 ACRES -

South

Pass
Pass
Pass

I

b a th s
enclosed
ba se ment and
large hom e for only

full

A
$20 000 00
ONE ACRE -

East

In the 1930s people opened
four card su1ts 1n
dtscnmmately Then the
Roth·Sto~system m whiCh
four·card ma1ors are never
opened pu m 1ls appearance
The system m toto has never
achteVed any real success.
The absolute reliance on ftve·
card major opemngs IS one

only $22 000 00
5 BEDROOMS - For the large
2

North

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

NEW -

family
porc h
garaQe

1•

Opemng lead-a.

LOSE w erght With New Shape
Tablets and Hydrex Water
Pills Dutton Drug
M1d
dleport and Nel son Drug
1 22 Jtc

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

10

B

Password 6

12 55-NBC News 3 15
1 oo - News 3 All My Ch1ldren 6 13 Not For Women Only 15

Our

SPRING BUYERS WILL
SOON BE IN LIST YOUR
PROPERTY WITH US FOR
BEST RESULTS

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

News

chang ng worl d
ts today s
byword Condtttons m r ea l
estate ch ange tu st as surely
as 1n other f 1elds WE KNOW

'-l'l.c;V t&lt;AOIO
am fm
8
track tape comb nat1on 4 way
speaker
sound
system
Balance $102 66 or use our
budget term s Call 992 3965
I 11 tfc

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

Jackpot• 3 15

12 30- Baffle 3 15 Split Second 6
12 45 - Electnc Company 33

I 34 acres 2 story frame 4
BR 2 ca rpeted Bath Om ng
room l1vmg room carpeted
So me panelmg &amp; t1te Idea!
loca tion for ch1ldren $9 500

$60 000 00
NEW LISTING - 2 leve l lots

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

12 00 -

borhood $2 000
POMEROY - CLOSE IN

6iil Ptfone 992 9932

Rate
of
tnt
6
Pet
1972 vw bus excellent con 1972 K.) t.Ht::v T Hlalzer 4 wneel
Purpose for Wh ch Note
dr ve A speed transmiSSIOn
d1ton $2900 Phone (30.4) 773
Debt Was Created
Motor
5867
bfue W1th white removable
grader
top All new 10 15 new t~res
New Issues Durmg
1 20 5tc
FURNISHED apt lor rent 1
excelten I condtt on Call q92
Year 1973
4313 02
bedroom '" Middleport Call
7205 alter 4 p m
Balance Outstand•ng
after 4 p m 992 317 3
1 18 6tc
Dec 31 1973
8 626 04
1 23 41C
AKC Toy Pood l e Pupp es
Rate of tnt
6 Pet
S75 oo S1amese K1ttens S15 HAY
Date of Fmal Mat
.419 1975 LARGE unfurntshed 3rd floo r
timothy and second
Phon.e 1 256 62.47
Purpose for Wh 1Ch Note
cuttmg 60 cents per bale
ap t for rent n downtown
Debt Was Created
Motor
Phone Leonard E Amos 985
1 10 26t c
Pomeroy 6 rooms and bath
4127
grader
Call 992 2789
New Issues Durmg
1 17 tf c
1 22 Stp
Year 1973
4 313 02
Balance Outstanding
4 kUOM nouse w1th bath ano WrLL babysit In my home by 6
PUREBRI;:D
Horned
Dec 31 1973
626
hour day or week No nights
garage tnqu 1re at 916 Locu st
H~refords
yearling he1fers
Rate of tnt
6 Pet
P~one 992 7102
Str eet in Middleport 01110
E A W1ngett Racine
4 19 1976
Date of Fmat Mat
I 20 He
1 12 6tc
1 22 Jt c
n 1 24 ltc

Chuck Wh1te Reports 10

B 10 Sesame Street 33
11 55 - CBSNewsB Dantmel sWorld 10

MIDDLEPORT - Large lot

l "'"'

SUPER SERVICE STA

Story

11 00- Gamb1t 8 10 Password 13 W1zard of Odds 3 4 15 M tke
Douglass 6
11 30 - HollywoodSquaresJ 415 BradyBunch13 Loveof L 1fe

70x90
A ll u tlld tes close
Wooded area
Ideal for
Mob1 le Home Good ne1g h

COUNTRY HOME -

• • ~ .. ack W '-arsey, Mgr

9 55 -

A

1000 - DmahShore315 JokersW1IdB 10 Company6
10 30 - $10 000 Pyram1d B 10 Jeopardy 3 4 15

CLOSE IN

11h baths ga s
force d atr furna ce breakfa st
nook large ltvtng and d 1nmg
Basement
and
garag e
$ 1B000 00

I

AM3 Abbott &amp; Costello 8 Wild Wild West 6 Movie
of David 13
9 30- To Tell The Truth 3 Secrel Slorm 8

Racer

4 BEDROOMS -

CO-OP COUNTRY
SQUIRE 120

Zoo Revue 13

Oh1o This Week 20 How To Survive A Mamage 3 15
4 oo - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 Speed

ectn c &amp; se pt1c tank on
; . - - - - - - - - · ·- - - - , el
blacktop road Only $2 800 00

HQN

--------

POMEROY

Phone
992 3802 or 949

For Sale

Farmers

B 55 - News 13
9 00 - Paul Dtxon 4 Phll Donahue 15 Fnendly Junct1on 10

ABOUT $d 000 down 2 yr s
old 3 n1 ce BR wlfh double
c lose t s Colored bath &amp;
shower K1tchen ha s lots of
ca b•n ets ra n ge dmmg area
Utd1ty
HW floors
som e
car pet ng
Curta1ns
&amp;
D rapes Carpo rt &amp; storage
large l ot

G &amp; E Appl 1an ce Repa r

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

Daughter 13
Rocky &amp; Bullwmkle 13 New Zoo Revue6
Capt Kangaroo 8 10 Sesame Sf 33 New
s Collie 6
Oock Van Dyke 13 9&lt; ady Bunch 6

7 30 a 00 Jeff
8 30 -

POMEROY, 0

---

----ICE AND SNO\

6 30 - Columbus Today •
6 35 - Columbus Today 4
6 45 - Farmtlme 10 Morntng Report 3
7 00 - Today 3 4 IS CBS News 8 10 P1x anne 6

Ftve

3 Jo-O'le Ltfe to l1ve 6 13 Ph1l Donahue 4 Match Game 8 10

DOZER work land clearmg by
t he acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w th over
10 years expenence Pullms
E x cavatmg Pomeroy ot11o
Phone 992 2478
1219 tfc

washer deluxe 4 wash cycles WILL tnm or cut trees and
shrubbery Also clean out
exce llent cond t1on used only
basements attics etc Call
4 months cutt ng board to
949 3221 or 742 4441
S320 reta11 price sn 5 t='horfe
1 2 26tc
992 2042 after s p m
I 23 5tc

-

Sunrise Semtnar 4 Sacred Heart 10
Consumer s World 10 Folk Literature 3
6 20 - Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - B1ble Answers 8 Blue R 1dge Quartet 13 News 6
Minutes to L1ve By 4

3 00 - Another World J 4 15 General Hosp1tal 6 13 Pnce ts
R1ght 10 8 Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20

----

iRLPOOL-~-;;ab/;-d;;h

6 00 6 15 -

Gu1dlng Light 8 10
2 30- Doctors 3 4 15 Edge ol N1ghl B 10 Girl In My L1fe 6 13

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

WH

News4

2 00 -

f,.

2 BEDROOM home n M d
12 30 26tp
dleport pr vate own er new
---roo I and bath Phone 949 3832 - -- - - - - - READY MIX
CONCRETE
or 843 2667
del1ver ed r ight to your
1 24 6tc
project Fast and easy Free
est mates Phone 992 3284
Goegle1n Ready M x Co
8 W EEKS old pigS Call 949 5953
M ddleporl Oh10
1 24 6tc
-6 30 tfc
I95S DOZER D 9 International --- ~---- ------SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
d1ese1 $2 500 00 Tractor
Massey Harr1s 1958 with front REASONABLE rates Ph 446
4782 Galtlpol s John Russell
end load er $650 00 Ford
Owner and Operator
Tractor
19.48 wlfh farm
equ 1pment S900 00 Ca ll 992
12 tfc
2720 or q92 6721
AROBIC
1 2.4 3tc SEPTIC TANKS
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
BE DROOM S uiTE - Kr~;hi;r
CLEANED
REPAIRED
excellent cond 1flon
Two
MILLER SANITATION
p1eces - bookcase bed and
STEWART OHIO PH 662
s1x drawer 52 1nch dre sser
3035
W1th mtrror both w th for
10 4 tfc
m ca tops Mattress and box
spr ngs •ncluded $100 Mrs SEPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
Bob Hoert1ch 992 5292
Modern Sanltat 1on 992 3954 or
992 7349
1 24 tfc
- -----10 23 tfc
GROCERY business for sate
Bultdlna for sa te or lea se PRICE CONSTRUCTIONPhOne 773 56 18 from 8 30 p m
Roofmg spouting
kitchens
to 10 p m for appomtment
and bathrooms Complete
3 20 tfc
r emodel ng Phone 742 6273
12 3 ttc
SINGER se wing mach nes 1972 ---- -- ---- -- ~-model m beaullful walnut DOZER and back hoe work
cab net Makes des1gn stit
ponds and septic tanks d t
ches WJ zag buttonholes
chlng service top soil fill
bl nd h ems etc L1ke new
dlrt
lim esto ne
B&amp;K Ex
Only $89 95 Call Ravenswood
cavatlng Phone 992 5367 or
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
992 386 1
12 7 tfc
9 1 tf c

--

2 00 -

130 - 30nAMatch3 415 LetsMakeADeal6 13 As The
World Turns B 10

E XCA VATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
sept• c
tanks nstalled dump trucks
and lo ooys for htre w 11 hau l
d rt top so11 11mestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffer s day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 99 2 3525 or 992
523 2
2 ll tfc

at t he shop
4254

30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 D1ck Cavett 6 13 Mov1es The
Face of Fear 8
The Story on Page One 10
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 News 13

Concentration 8 Secret Storm 10

C BRAUf-Ut&lt;lJ AUCfiOneer
Complete Serv ce
Phone 949 3821
Ra cme Oh o
Cnt t Bradford
5 I tfc

ELECTROLUX
vacuum
cleaner A I cond1t 1on uses
paper bags has cordw nder
and many attachments Also
shampooer attachment n
el uded (Only 4 ava•lable l at
$37 70
cas h
or
terms
ava1lable Phone 992 2984
I 21 tfc

----

ROOM H ome
ba th
gas
fu rnace and
garage
n
M1ner sv dle Plenty of garde l
space Pn ced for QUI Ck sa le
$5SOO 00 Phone 992 5778
1 24 6tc

6

s

IN NEW

------

F OR electrica l plumbmg and
remodel ng work Call 843
2341 for F REE E STIMATES
1 11 26tc

For Sale

KOSCOT KOSMETICS

.......___....

1~73

All work guaranteed

COAL FOR SALE JAYMAR
COAL
COMPANY
THE
MEIGS &amp; GALLIA LINE
STATE
ROUTE
7
AT
CHESHIRE OPEN 7 AM t II
6 30 PM 5 DAYS A WEEK
PHONE 992 5693
1 21 Stc

&amp; WIGS
We have the produ c t on hand
and we del1ver to you per
sonally Helen Jane Brown
992 511 3
12 30 t fc

GET

Stop In and See Our
Floor Dasplay

30 - Day At N1ghl 33
oo - News 3 4 6 B 10 13 15 Janaki33

FRIDAY JAN 25 1974

SPAC I OUS b1 Level and spit
level homes are- now und er
cons truction on c ty water
and sewer
M a ny de ux e
fe at ur es mcludmg a r con
d 1l1on ng
B es t fmanc ng
av a1labt e Other type homes
m d ff erent ar eas on F H
Adm t nancmg w1th no dow n
pay m ent Cal l collect (637
6540 ) or wr t e to MEIGS
D EVE L OPMENT P 0 Box
33 M dd leport Oh o 45760
I 9 tfc

Areas Most
Reasonable Pnces

00 - Kun9 Fu6 13 Evenmg At Pops 33 20 Bob Hope 3 4 15
Mov1es Houseboat 8
Valley of th e Doll s 10
00 - News 20 Who Is Man? 33 Mu s1c Country USA 3 d IS
Streets of San Franc•sco 6 13

DESIRABLE tw o bedroom
hou se In M dd l ep ort ready to
occupy Ca l l 992 5310
12 30 26tc

Parnting A Specralty

FURNITURE

~

NEW 3 bedroom nomu
.,,Jtt
garag e basement on Gr avd
H II M ddlep ort Nat ura l ga!&gt;
already 1n
Phone Dale
Du tton 992 3369 even ngs
992 2 ~34
I 17 11L

Lmcoln H1ll Pomeroy 0

Reading For the Classroom TeachEr 33

Benny s Second Farewell Special 3 4 15
8 30 - Ftrehouse 6 13

Real Estate For Sale

Ph 992 5271

and

20

B 00 - Waltons B 10 Advoca te s 20 33 Chopper One 6 13 Jack

SEW IN G MACHINES Repa1r
serv1 ce all makes 992 2284
The Fabric Shop Pom ero y
Author zed Singer Sales and
Se rvi ce We Sha rp en Sc ssors
3 29 lfc

Body Shop

OFFICE SUPPLIES

6 Ozz1e s Gtrls 8 Johnny Mann s Stand Up &amp; Cheer 15 Zoom

AU TOMOB ILE Insura nce beel'l
cancel l ed"&gt;
L ost
~our
operator s I ce nse Call 992
7478
6 15 lfc

Gene's

992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

Elec Co 20 Lets Make A Deal 13 News 10 6 Sports Desk
15 Mulligan Slew 33
7 30- Hollywood Squares 3 Wild Kmgdom 10 Beat the Clock
13 Lookmg Ahead 33 Sale ol the Century' To TeU the Truth

Pomeroy

Ph 992 2 17-1

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 -7089
Ntght 992-3525
or 992 5232

Open 8 Til S

MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE MEAT
CUTTER
ex
BERRY MILLER Mob l e Hom e
per.enced Sa lary ba sed on
Sa l es h as a lo t to offer wh en
ab llty A pp ly after Jan 23 to
you star t shopp ng for your
Powel ls Sup er Vatu Second
Mobile Hom e You ca n beat
St r eet Pomeroy
the h gh deprec at on you II
I 20 6t c
have on your hom e the f~r st
two year s by shoppmg for a CA R HOP want ed ap ply n
tat e model used Mob le Home
person Cro ws St eak Hou se
Her e are some every day low
1 20 i&gt;l c
or ces
55x l0 V ndal e 3 bedroom
S2 995 00
60x 12 Buddy 19 71 3 b ed r oom
$4 495 00
60K 2
1971 Champ on
2
bedroom SJ 995 00
60x 12 P M c
2 bedroom
$4 995 00
6011.12 H ll cr es t
2 bedro om
S4 495 00
60 x12 R embrandt 4 bedroom
i3 995 00
65x 12
1971
L 1b erty
3
bedroom l 1 1 baths spec1a l
$4 795 00
W e also
hav e three 19 74
Detro ters tha t Will be sold at
a very larg e d scount These
are most ly al l late model
homes and the pr ces nclude
your del1very and comp l ete
set up So for an honest to
goodness good deal stop 1n DIRECT Sa le s D s tr.but ors
today at Berry MIt er Mob l e
wanted for v tam 1ns and
Home Sates
705 F arson
organ•c products Part or full
St reet B elpre Ohio phone
t me For mterv• ew
wr te
423 953 1 closed Sundays
Mary Engle R R 1 BOK 19
1 24 nt c
Un on Oh10 45322
1 16 161p

NEW 2 p1ece Early Amer can
L v ng room su f es n 100 pc1
n y lon scotc hg ar d mater al
Your cho 1ce ol col or s or
fabr cs
Th s week only
S1 99 95 c ash a 11d carry
Pom eroy Recovery 622 E
Man St r ee t Pomeroy Pt10n e
99 '} 7554
1 22 6tc

Jo1nt Pl.lbllc Noll ce No 45 1
0100
Jomt Pub! c Not ce Issued on
January 24 1974 Nam e and GUN SHOOT January 26 6
p m Mile H II Road Fac tory
Address of Applicant
choked guns only Ass ort ed
The Ex ce ls1or Sa lf Works
m eats Spon so r ed hy Rae ne
Inc
F •re Dept
P 0 Box 267
1 n ~lc
East Ma1n Street
Pomeroy Oh o 45769
Name and Address of Fac•llty SHOO TING Ma tc h Ra e ne Gun
Club Su nday January 27 1
wh er e D sc harge Occur s
p m Assorted meat s fa c to ry
The E KceiSIO r Sal! WorkS
cho ked guns only
In c
1 23 3tc
East Ma n Street
Pomeroy Oh o 45769
Beauty
S wp
Rece vmg Water
The Oh o H E L E N S
Pomeroy
s happy to an
R1v er
nounce Jan1 ce Bo gg s to our
sta ff We feature blow CLII S
NOTICE
hot ron curling M ss Ga bor
The above nam ed app l cant
w1gs
January
Spe c at
has app l ed for an NPDE S
Permanent wav es $20 now
Perm1t to d scharge nto the
$17 50 Sl7 50 now $15 SIS
des•gnated rece111 ng water and
now S12 50 $12 50 now S10
requested Sta te Certlf cat on of
Phone 992 2890 Hel en Adel
sad d scharge The perm•! wil l
Jan ce
be ssued by e1ther the U 5
Env•ronmental
Protect•on
1 20 61 c
Agency or other NPDE S ssu1ng
author1ty for a term of ap NEW
SPRIN G FABRIC S
proJC•mately 5 years
Po l yester kn I s S2 49 to SJ 98
Exce lSIOr manufa ctures rock
Polyester m ! l end s $1 19
salt by coal fred evaporat•on of
yard colton from polyest er
br ne The d scharge resu lt s
79c and up per yard Beaut fu l
from Quenchtng spent coal and
handmade
Nau ga hyde
rece ves treatment tor removal
handbags co mplet e l1ne of
of ash The plant s untreated
crafts and craft suppt, es
san tary wastes al so d scharge
Ma s te r Charge welcome
through the s ngle outfall wh1ch
Novel t y FabriC Shop &amp; Crafts
1S loca ted d rectly south of the
2JO Washmgton Blvd Belpr e
Oh10
plant on the rver bank about
200 teet west of another 1nactlve
1 20 6tc
discharge p pe
- - - - - -- - ----On the ba ss of prelim nary
Bradbury
staff revi ew and appl•cat•on of S&amp;G GARAG E
across WMPO Rad o phone
appl c able
standards
and
992 29d2
Grand
openmg
regutat ons th e Reg1onal Ad
Monday Now thr ough Jan
mm strator of th e U S En
31 a V 8 tuneup $27 95 Free
v~ronmental Protect1on Agen c y
l ube rot-&gt; w th o 1 change
or other
NPDE S i s sumg
1 13 1'ltc
authonty proposes to .ssue a
permtt for the discharge sub 1ect
to cer ta n effluent I 1m tat ons
FINANCIAL REPORT
and spec1al conditions
The
OF TOWNSHIPS
State after rev1ew of all the
For F1scal Year Endmg
comment s and object•ons also
December 31 1973
proposes to 1ssue a cert f1 cat•on
Columbia TownShip
pursuant to Section 401 of the
Me•gs County
Federa l
Water
Pollut on
Rf J Albany OhiO
Cont rol Ac t as amended State
January 21 1974
cert•f•cat on
w II
not
be
I cert1fy the follow ng report
necessary 1f the NPDES Perm t to be correct
ISSUing euthOnty s granted to
Glona Holton
the State pnor to ssuance
Township Clerk
The proposed determ nat on
SUMMARY OF CASH
to ISSUe an NPDES Perm t 1S
BALANCES RECEIPTS
tentatiVe to ssue an NPDES
AND EXPENDITURES
Perm 11 Is tentat1ve Interested
Balance Jan 1 1973
per sons are mv ted to subm '' Genera l Fund
wr1t1en comments upon
he Motor Veh 1cle L cen::.e S 1 541 39
proposed d1scharge Comments
Ta x Fund
191348
should be subm •tied n person
1 812 01
or by ma11 no tater than 30 days Gasolme Tax Fund
and Br1dge
affer the lomt publ i C not ce of Road
Fund
IS 59
th1S appl cat on 1S ssued
Totals
5
282
47
Deliver or ma I ali comments
Total Rece1pts
lo
General Fund
8 173 03
Mr s Carolyn Cates
Motor Veh1cle L cense
Reg 10n v Perm t Branch
Tax Fund
6 141 72
U
S
Env•ronmental Gasoline Tax Fund
13 270 85
Protect on Agen cy
Road and Bridge
1 North Wacker Dr.ve
Fund
341 10
Ch !CiiQO lll1n0 S 60606
Fed Revenue
The appl1cat10n and 10 1nt Gen
Sharmg
3 985 00
pubh c not1 ce numbers should
Totals
31 911 70
appear next to the above ad
Total Rece1pts &amp; Balances
dress on the envelop e and on
General Fund
9 714 72
each page of any subm 1tted Motor
Veht c le L cen se
comment s
All
comme nts
Tax Fund
8 055 20
rece ved no later than 30 days
Gasoline Ta x Fund
1508266
after the 10 nt publi c nollce Is Road and Br1dge
ISSUed w II be conSidered n the
Fund
356 69
formulat1on of f nat deter
Gen Fed Revenue
m nat1ons
The U
S En
Sharmg
3985 00
V1 ro nmental Prot ec tiOn Agency
Expend1tures
or other NPOES author ty W1ll
7 d05 00
ISSue I nat det erm 1nat on s m a Genera l Fund
Motor VehiCle L1cense
f•mely manner after t he ex
Tax Fund
7 031 ~5
P• r a11on of the public commen t
1J 874 84
penod Cop1es of all comments Gasoline Tax Fund
and ob techons rece1ved w II be Road and Bridge
F und
303 72
transm tted to the State
Gen
Fed
Revenue
The appl•callon proposed
Sharmg
3 985 00
permit mclud1ng proposed
32 600 51
elftuent I m•tat1on s speCial Total
Balance Dec 31 1973
conditions comments rece ved
2 309 42
and other do c uments are General Fund
ava•lable for 1nspect10n and Motor Veh1cle L •cense
Tax Fund
1 023 25
may be cop1es at a cost of 20
1 208 02
cents per page at the U S Gasoline Tax Fund
Env1ronmental
Prolect•on Road and Bridge
Fund
52 97
Agency at anytime between
Total s
4 59 3 66
9 30 a m and 3 30 p m Mon
CASH BALANCE
day through Fr1day Cop,es of
RECEIPTS AND
the Jomt Publ c Not1 ce ar e
EXPENDITURES
ava tab le at no charg e at the
BY FUND
address shown abov e for th e
General Fund
d es gnated State agency and th e
Ba t Jan I 197 3
1 54 1 39
U S Env ronmental Protect iOn
Rece,pts
Agency
P lease br ng the foregomg to General Property Tax Real Est.!lte (GroSS ) 4 465 OS
the attent on of persons whom
you know would be Interest ed m Tang 1bl e Personal Property
Tax ( Grossi
1431 oo
th s m alter
In her lan ce Ta x
- 35
Local Government
( 1) 24 lie
D!SiflbUflOn
2 369 41

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

7 00 - Truth or Con seq 3 Beat the Clock 4 Whal s My Lme 8

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

Water l1nes and Power
Lmes All work done by the
fool or contract Also dozer
work and septic tanks m
slalled

On Most Amencan Cars

Help Wanted

Mob1le Homes For Sale

Bulldojer Rad1alor to the

DITCHING SERVICE

•s.ss

6 00 - News 3 4 S, 10 15 S&amp;same St 20 ABC News 13 T ruth
or Consequences 6 Ltllas Yoga and You 33
6 30 - NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 Your
Future IS Now 33 Room 222 TJ

smallest Heater Core
Nathan Btggs
Radrator SpeCialist

PHONE 843-2341

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Television Log

From the larges t Tru ck or

Restdence and
Mobale Homes

Mason W Va

~~~~·=·~·~~~~~~o:~o~=c&lt;~~~~~,~~~-~~~&gt;:~~S~x~~~~

THURSDAY JAN 24 1974

REPAIR

MATERIALS CO

SM A LL farm tra c t o r an d
equ1pm ent
Phone 997 7190
I 2'1 ) I p

6 cy l automal• c tr ans sharp ca r w• th clean mlenor
good !~r es bege lm1 sh ra d iO

INSTALLING
AND

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
713 SSS4

l9~S

EXPERIENCED

Bu1lt to Your 1 Specs
Oehvered to Job S1te

to 2 ACR E s of land on lar ge tot
for trailer Must be dose to
water and elec tr c•IY Phon "
9~2 S323
I 74 3tp

11695

- The Daily Sentmel, Mtddleport.Pomeroy, 0, Jan 24,1974

WOOD TRUSSES

Wanted To Buy

power
~teen ng rad o good hres spotl ess nl enor bl ue fm1 sh
Now only $1295

Business Services

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

V 8 eng ne 3 8 CIO autom.at1 c tran s

B&amp;G AUCTION

OR OLDER

.I'

.

IN LOV I NG memo r y of our SHOOT IN G MATC H
Horn er
dear husband and fa the r
H II Gun Clu b Rt 143 Sun
Cha r les Robert W nebrenner
day Jan 27 12 noon Factory
wllO departed Ill s I fe Jan
ch oked guns only
2&lt;1 1972
..
1 24 3tc
Dea r Bob Ano ff er year ha S
- - - - - - - --go n e and the lo v ng memory
of yoLI I r gers on we f ee l you
are ever near for you I
a lway s live n our hearts
dei'H Res t n p eacef ul sle ep
14 Rtverstde Dr
Our lovm g m emor es we II
alwav s ke eo
Athens , Ohto
Sor rowfu l ly m S!H~ d and dearly
lov ed
bY
w te
Mabe l
Btl! Wade Auctione er
daughters In s Ald11e Donn a
and gr&lt;tndchtldr en
I 14 lt p

11

CITY

P I ANO tun ng pt on e 99? 20 87
La n e Dan1els No tun ng Dll er
3 lsi
1 20 lOt c

INFORMATION
O~AOLINES

r-

•

W01t

1•

North

Pass
3+
You, Sooth hold

4

East

South

Pass
Pass

1+
?

WMP0-FM

.KJ65,2+AQI065.K43

M•ddleporl Pomeroy _

A.-Ju1tbldfour notrump You
will JO to atx if your partner

What do you do now?

shews two aces

TODAY S QUEWION
You do bid four notrump and
your partner btds five spades to

show three aces What do you do
now"

(SNIF SNIF) 'IOU
TREAT ME LII&lt;E A
DADBURN WORK HOSS,
PAW"

AN I M GITliN' OUT
OF THIS DADBURN
BARN
'

WHOA
THAR !!

I

~A~E

[ (CI)[.()

rnrs HORRH&gt;LF
f?fU.j1

m:1..1;~:.

AND lOX II

�8 - 'l'he Datly Senllnel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Jan 24, 1974

Sentinel Classifieds Get-Results!

BOYS

I

Notice

WANT ADS

2 SIGNS

5 P M Day Before Pobl ca t•on

,

Monday Deadline 9 am
on - Correct ons

Ca nn~ Ji a t

OF
QUALITY

w I! be accept ed un t I 9 a m for
Day

ot P.ubl ca t on

REGULATIONS
The Pllbl she r reserves It e
r gnt to edit or r ejec t any adS
de e med
Object onal
Th e
publ sil er w It not be r es pon
s bl e tor more th an one n

correc t 1n sert on

RATES

For W..ant Ad SerVICe

5 cen ls per Word one nser tw n
M.n mum Charge Sl 00
P'er word th ree
co nsecut ve nsert•ons
26 cents per word s x con
sec ut ve msert ons
25 Per Cent DI SCount on pad
ad s and ads pa d Wlfll n 10
d ays
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 f or 50 word m n
m um Each add ton a l word
14 cents

GIRLS

3c

BLIND ADS
Add ttonal 25c Cll arg e per
Advert semen!
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a n to 5 00 p m Da 1ly
8 30 a m
to 12 00 N oon
Sa tu rday

In Memory

BE A

PUBLIC NOTICE
Perm t No OH 0004 58
4pp l ca lion No OH 072 OYD
2 0002 57

PAPER
CARRIER.

NATIONAL
POLLUTANT
DISCHARGE
ELIMINATION
SYSTEM I NPDESl PERMIT
PROGRAM
( Scct1on
402
Federal
Water
Pollution
Control Act AS AMENDED)
JOINT PUBLIC
NOTICE
Proposed NPDEA Perm t to
D1s ch ;,rge
nto
Nav1gable
Waters
U
S
Env!fonmenta l
Prot ec t on Age ncy
Reg on V Perm t Branch
1 North Wa cker Dr1v e
Ch1cago Ill no• s 60606
312 353 1346
Oh o
En v r onmental
Protect on Age nc y
Seneca Tower s
P 0 Box 1049
Columbus Oh o 432 16
61 4 469 3543

DELIVER

The
Daily
Sentinel
Th1s could be your
golden opportumty to
learn
bus1ness
methods save money
for clothmg or college,
wm pnzes These and
many other benefits
are
avatl able
to
deser v tng
Sent tnel
earners
For years The Sen
tmel has helped young
people develop the
attnbutes and talents
whtch spell success m
adult ltfe

A route mtght be open
1n your netghborhood,
to fmd out

Call

992-2156

•
OR FILl OUT
AND MAIL

TliE WUPON
BELOW
;;;c~~A-;;;;;;;;;;--,

ITHE
DAILY SENTINEL
I
111 COURT ST
IPOMEROY OHIO 4576~ :
I
I
I
II - ---:-:-:.,..,.-::----:
NAME
I
I
AGE

ADDRESS

I
I

r-------.:
ZIP CO DE

l ____________

I Door

I

l

'

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill

ILV ER COIN
Pl ease quot e
pn ce and ma I to Jnc k e
Wan sley Rt 4 Pa taskal a
Oh10 &lt;l3062
1 24 6t c

1129S

1~6~

CHEVELLE HT CPE

Std V 8 eng me au tom at1c t rans P sl eermg factory a tr
buck et seats A sha r p clean car t ha t anyone would love
dnrk green f1n 1sh rad 10
1967

CHEVELLE 4 DOOR

POMEROY MOTOR

OLD furn1ture o ak tables
c locks ce box es brass bed
dishes
or
complete
hou se hold s Wr t e M
D
M1ller Rt 4 Pom er oy Oh•o
c all 992 6771
5 13 li e

cO.

OPEN EVES8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

Not1ce

SALE EVERY
SATURDAY
NIGHT 7 PM

Consagnments
ac ·
cepted 1oa m to 6 p m.
datly, or wall pay cash
lor your household
lfPmS

PHONE 593-5035
COLLECT
INCOME Ta x :::,erv!CP 9 am to
5 p m Da tv except Sunday
evenmgs by ap po n tmen t
only Co Rd 22 off Rt 7
bypass Phone Wanda Eblm
992 2272
1 2 JO tc

CASH pa•d tor all makes an d
models of mob1l e nom es
Phone area cod e 614 423 9531
4 IJ lf c

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mam Pomeroy 0

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

WANTED

PAPER CARRIER

·WANTED IN
POMEROY
PHONE 992-2156

TliE
DAILY SENTINEL
POMEROY, 0.

ARENTIOI
C1garette LICense Fees
18 75
and F me s (Gross)
G ft s and Donat tons
100 00
lntang bles
1 205 16
Tota l Rece•pts
8 173 03
To tal Beg nnmg Ba ance
Plus Rece1pts
Expendttures 9 7 14 42
Tota l Expend tures Admm1stratlve
6 2.41 12
Town Halls Memonal
Bulidmgs &amp;
Grounds
35 1 75
F.re Protect iOn
60 00
Cemeter 1es
652 00
L ghting
100 13
Grand Total dxpendltures
- General Fund
7 405 00
Bal Dec 31 1973
2 309 42
Total Expenditures Plus
Bat Dec 31 1973
9 114 42
Motor VehiCle L•cense
Tax Fund
Bat Jan 1 1973
1 913 48
Recetpts
Motor Veh cle l cense
Tax
6 1dl 72
Total Receipts
6 141 72
Total Beg1nn1ng Balance
Plus Receipts
6 055 20
Expendttures
Total Expenditures MISCellaneous
2 382 98
Mamtenance
4 648 97
Grand Total Expenditures
Motor Veh1cle
L cense Tax Fund
7 03195
1 023 25
Bat Dec 31 1973
Total Expenditures Plus
Bal Dec 31 1973
8 OS5 20
Gasoltne Tax Fund
Bal Jan 1 1973
1 812 01
Rece•pts
GaSOline Tax
13 200 00
Othe1
70 85
Total Recerpts
13 270 85
Total Beg nning Balance
Plus r.!ece1pts
15 082 86
E x:penditures
Total Expend•tures M tscellaneous
7 988 83
Ma ntenance
5 886 01
Grand Total Expenditures 13 874 84
Gasot ne Tax Fund
Bat Dec 31 1973
1 208 02
Total Expend•tures Plus
Bat Dec 31 1973
15 082 86
..., .. .. ~ .... !! ..! .... Fund
Ba l Jan 1 1973
Recetpfs
General Property Tax tv Tax Real Estate (Gross)
341 10
Tolal R ece1pt s
341 10
Total Beginnmg Balance
Plus Receipts
356 69
Expenditures
Total Expenditures 8 94
M scellaneous
Maintenance
294 78
Grand Total Expenditures Road and Br.dge Fund 303 12
Bal Dec 31 1973
52 97
Total Expenditures Plus
Bat Dec 31 1973
356 69
General Federal
Revenue Sharing
Rece1pts
Federal Revenue
Shanng
J 985 oo
Total Rece 1pts
39 8500
Expenditures
Payouts
3 985 00
Total Expend•tures
3 98S oo
Total Expenditures Plus
Bat Dec 31 1973
3 985 00
Township Debt- Notu
Purpose For Which
Note Debt Was Created
Motor
grader
New Issues Dunng
Year 1973
4 313 02
Redeemed Durmo Year

'313 02

BEAUTIFUL Walnut stereo
rad•O am tm
tape com
b lnat•on 8 track tape deck
Balance $103 49
or terms
ava tabl e Call 992 3965
1 21 tfc

NEED woman to l1v e n and
tak e mothers place of 2
c htldren 10 a new respectabl e
home You may also hav e 1
ch ld of your own Phon e 99 '1
2536
1 8 li e

NEW 19 74 ZI G ZAG SEWING
MACHINES
10
ongmal
factory cart on
Z1g Zag to
make bultonholes sew on
buttons monograms ~nd
make fancy d es 1gns w 1fh lust
fhe tw1st of a smgte d1a1 L ett
m lay a way and never been
used W II sell for only $47
cash
or terms available
Phone 992 2984
1 21 ttc

Wanted
Sa l esman or Agent Wanted
TEXAS 0 I Company needs
matur e person for short tr ps
surrounding Middleport
Pomeroy
area
Contact
customers We tram A1r ma I
c H D ck Pres Sout h
western
Petroleum
Ft
Worth Tex
1 23 4t c

II'"'----------..
WANTED!

POSITIONS OPEN

W ILKIN SON Small Eng ne
Sates Repa r on al l small
engmes
chan
saws
prec son ground 399 W Ma n
Street Phone 992 3092
1 17 26tc

FOOD STORE
All kmds of food
store employees cash1ers,
carryouts,
stock
men, bakery help,
experienced meat
cutter, etc

Write to:

Powell's
Super Valu
Box 746
Pomeroy, 0 , 45769

An EQual Opportun1ty
Employer

.

For Rent

SALT F OR
Rock salt for town sh1ps
towns and busmesses m
bulk s and bags for 1ce and
snow Exce ls or Salt Work s
Phone 992 3891
11 11 ti c
19}2
DA- ,&lt;;;;--;o-:;--:;--~-1 2U or._

It's Snow Ttre Ttme'

HOUSE 1632 Lm coln He1gh1:::. 4
rooms and bath Fenced yard
and p1cture wmdow Phon e
992 2780 or 992 3432
I 24 tf c

-------

ROOM w•th or Without board
who •s will1ng to help w th
work on property
Must
furnish references Call 992
2649
1 24 3tc

------

3 AND 4 ROOM furniShed and
unfurniShed
apartm en ts
Phone 992 5434

------------ ~~~fc
PRIVATE meet1ng room to r
anv organ1zat on phone 992
3975
3 11 tfc
SLEEPIN~..:&gt;

room over w ne
store m Pomeroy Reference
required Call 992 5293
1 10 tf c

--------------UPSTAIRS apartment 4 room s
and balh nicety furnished
rent reasonable No ch•ldren
and no pets Privat e entrance
Phone 992 2731
1 22 tfc

-----

- -------

Pos•hv~ Sf"p and Go In Mud

BUNDY
trumpet
and
saxophone Call 949 510 1
l 20 6t c

&amp;

------

ALL SIZES IN STOCK

GOOD m xed -ha~-for- ~ale
Phone 388 8847
1 23 6tc

Let Us Install Now•

-------------EXCELSIOR Salt Works

E
Mam St Pomeroy All kmds
ol salt water pellets water
nuggets block salt and own
Oh10 R1ver Sa lt Phone 992
3891
6 5 tfc

Auto- sales - ------

1969 OLDSMOBILE Stat 1on
Wagon all power ectu•pmen t
Good t1res a r cond l•onmg
etc $130 or poss1bly trade for
small car Phone 949 591 t
1 23 Stc
1972 5 10 4 OR DATSUN Sedan
Excellent cond1t1on John
lyons Chester near Chester
Grade School
1 22 6tp

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

Snow

;:,

Pets For Sale

--- -- - --------Employment W11ted

a

REMEMBER

o•

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

Bob Braun

s 50 50 Club 4

13
Search for Tomorrow 8 10

Days of Our ltves

3 4 15 Newlywed Game 6 13

6

love

Amencan

Style

13

Lucy

Show

Movies Man In The Saddle 10

8

4 30 - Green Acres J Gtlltgan s Isle 13 Bonanza 15 Hazel 8
Jackpot• 4

Generation Rap

,

&amp; THINGS

~

By Helen and Sue Bottel
BY HELEN ANDSUEBOl'TEt
Nothing Is Ever Hopeless

DEAR RAP
I am 12 and I am pregnant and a hopeless case Don't know
who IS the father
I don 't have anyone to turn to because my mother IS the
neighborhood you-know-what and my father h1ls the bars every
rught No one cares
I ran around because everybody else dtd and mamly because
I dubt t want to stay home alone and thmk But I have thought a
lot this month and I want to reform I m scared I want to start
over I don't have money for an abortion or know how to ask for
one even Who can help me•- HOPELESS CASE
DEAR HC
You d be surprtsed how many people are out there wruttng to
help a hopeless' 12-year-old who thmks no one cares
If you can't conf1de m an understanding teacher or co~n•
selor, then call the Chtld and Fam1ly Welfare Agency or the
Planned Parenthood Assoc1at10n m your town
A legal abortion can be arranged, if you want 1t but
pregnancy tsn t your b1ggest problem You need a good foster
home where you'll recetve the love and constderation you ve
m1ssed all these years Let's hope w1th the help of Family
Welfare, you ll soon have 11 - HELEN AND SUE

RAP
TillS IS what I get for

bemg a 'nice guy!' (Female type)
My g1rl friend had JUSI broken up With her guy, so I asked my
boyfrtend to be especially mce to her Wluch wasn t the smartest
thmg I ever dtd, because he kept rtght on bemg mce In fact he
told me he'd like to go out wtlh her
At that porn! I f1gured the best way to cool thiS was w1th my
g1rl frtend s help So I asked her if she d go wtth hun once or
tw1ce to 'prove' they weren't a good match Y'see , she told me
she dtdn't like hts t,ype a b1t SheS8ldshe'd try to turn him off but
mstead-they really fell for each other
And here lam mmus one boy frtend , and not speakmg to one
gtrl friend, all because I felt sorry for her and asked HIM to help
out
q
I wasn't madly m love wtth the guy so I m not ready to ktll
myself or anything, but don't you thmk this IS a double dirty
trtck • -NICE AND STUPID
DEAR NAND S
Since you practically threw your ex-boy friend at thts g1rl,
you can't really call hiS ca tchmg her a 'dirty tnck " And smce
the gtrl really fell for hun (whale he was JUSt another guy to you)
there s no real loss
So enJOY your freedom and, when you ftnd a new b f don't
!ann hun out to lonely gtrl fnends -SUE

5 00- M1ster Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Gr1tftn 4 Andy

GrlfflthB MISSIOn lmposSible6 Gomer Pyle USMC13
5 30 - Eiec Co 33 HodgepodgeLodge 20 BeverlyHIIIbPII1esB

e 00 -

Tratls West IS

Hogans Heroes 13

Adler 1an Counselmg Techntques 33 Truth or Consequences 6
6 30 - NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 Room

222 13

7 00 - Trulh or Conseq 3 6 Beat The Clock 4

News 10 6
What s My Line B W1ld K1nodom 13 Elec Co 20 I Spy 15
Aviation Weather 33

WIN AT BRIDGE

Open minor suits when possible
NORTH !D)
• AK94

It seems mcred1ble, Citizens, but 1t was JUSt a few short years
ago that every young man wanted to grow up to be a college
student or fathng that to getmto the NatiOnal Guard
Places m both these dissmular mstltutions were at a
premtwn, and louts who had never got more than a low 'C" m
thetr studies were takmg the SAT, Acr, and other adrmss10n
tests reqmred to enter the halls of 1vy and to rove the groves of

33

Beat The Clock

13
Sanford &amp; Son 3 4

Washmgton Week In Revrew 20 33

15 Brady Bunch 6 13 D~rlv Sally B 10
8 3Q-lotsa Luck 3 4 1S Movlt:S Kotak and Marcus Nelson
Murders 8
The Joker Is Wild 10 Srx Million Dollar Man
6 13 Washtngfon Connecfton 20 Campus Scene 33
9 00 - Masterpiece Theater 33 Gtrl W tth Somethtng E xtra 3 4
9

~&amp;MID!1rn®:=:..:::!:! .-.~
Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words

=

11 00 - News Weather Sports6 8 10 3 4 13 15 Janakl33

11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 15 4 Possession 6 Mov1es The Green
Slime 8 Atragon 10 The Pndeof St LOUIS 13
00 - M1dn1ght Spec1a l 3 4 Don K~rshner s Rock Concert 6
Possess 1on 13
1 15 - Movte Begmnmg of the End 10
2 30 - Focus on Columbus 4 News 13

ment

antelope
41 Sacred
Image

Mtlkfi sh
Senonta s

42 D1slull
r abbit

parha

Louts who had never seen a low C were super-patnots,
stnvmg manfully w1th all the strmgs they could pull to be ad
nutted to the servtce m the National Guard, and demonstrate
thetr loyalty and patnottsm m those handsome off..green
umforms every weekend
There was a reason for all thiS, of coorse Back there m the
late Sixties and early Seventies, 1t seems we were mvolved in a
btt of a thmg called a war m Southeast Asta, and wh1le 11 was
perfectly all nght for other people's k1ds to f1ght and die m the
aforementioned war 1t wasn t the ' m thing for most young men
(and thetr fanuhes) to actually get trapped up m the draft which
had a nasty habttofsendmg young men to Nam or Cambodia, or
some other undesirable station
But, m the Amencan way, soluttons were qmckly found
There were absolutely no full-tune college students ftghtmg m
the Southeast Astan JUngles, and therefore the campus was an
asylum (m more meamngs than one) from the VlCissttudes of
combat
D1tto for the National Guard Although perfectly legal, the
Federal Government opted not to call up the Guardsmen One of
the reasons may have been the fact that they m1ght have been
needed to take care of some unpleasanlness occurrmg on the
college campuses mentioned above Duty w1th a Guard umt,
therefore, was on a par wtth college attendance
Then a fme and marvelous thing happened They dectded to
shut down the war, atleast from an Amer~can standpomt
Surpnse, SlUllriSe 11 1 College attendance dropped sharply,
and youths born to pwnp gasoline or dig dttches could gtve up the
pretense of bemg mterestegm accOWlting, secondary education
or coachmg And membership m the National Guard tailed off

love'
9 John -

13

Closely
confined

DOWN

Garner

!2 Knock

1 Airport

down
!3 In a-

2 Mrs

need

(excited )

15 H1gh

(mus )
16 Type
measures
17

Common

verb
18 - dela
Plata
19 Slower
(mus)

20

thriller

(3 wds

22 Pcrstan
rose

wds )

6 MlS8
Amenca

ment

con stella

7 Insect

t10n
23. Elderly
114 William
0
Douglas
Cor one

to

23 Statuh
2~

measure

ship and a

mstru
ment
!3 Go

16 Cup1d

Down

(Ger)

toxm
31 Cliburn s

pape

covenant

Never

\ell
29 Venom

\

11 Unearthly
14 Past orn l

5 See3
(3

J7 Papal

10 Ptl chcr s
stratagem

With 5
Down
(2 wds l
4 - of the

;!l Jasons

~6

\ eslf rd:i) s Answf'r

Bloomer
3 Class1c

press

38 F am1ly

Czec h
rl\ (! l

membe1

26 Palm
vanety

t9 Unef

swun

Chrtstmas
song

28 Bar by

legal
mean s
30 Exas
perate

31 Pnor to

(pre!)
32 Coxcomb
34 Remu
neratlon
35 Your
(Ger)
36 Moham
medan

sa1nt
31sucker
(2 wda )
39 Female
Hmdu
~lave

D !\ILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's h ow to "ot k tl

I I J
ITEASTE

I

10 30 - Who Is Man 33

1 U krame

~

I

Is

I I

~ (

MARINe
FOmA110N6

J

Now arnnce the &lt;In:ted letten
to form the 1urprtH answer, u
~=·=~·~~~~~~~~·:u~n~e~oted~ by the
eartoon

10 00 - News 20 Dean 3 4 15 Mounta1n Scene 33 Tom a 6 13

by THOMAS JOSEPH
!\CROSS
40 Afncan

:~

CEPTIK

15 Stage Center 20
3!1-Bnan Ke1th 3 4 15 Odd Couple 13 Owes G~rls 6

6&gt;MU.e"W

academe

DEAR NAND S
The moral of thiS !ale IS Girl who shares boyfnend wtth
chum who was dumped ends up chwn who IS dumped - HELEN

Week 20

sharply, to the dtsgust of old t1mers "bo we re m the Guwd
before 1t became so popular
Both colleges and the Nabonal Guard are now out re crUiting
students and enlistees, and fwding the pH kin[' s hm What a
ptly'

BY PAUL CRABTREE

7 30 - Porter Wagoner 3 Hollywood Squares 4 New Tr eas ure
Hunt 10 To Tell The Truth 6 Concentratton 8 Wall Street

5 55 - Earl Nightmgale 15
6 00 - News 3 4 B 10 15 ABC News 13 Sesame St 20

I I

abo••

t'---Piili=·=SUIIPIIISI=ANSWIII==·:.___Jt
l'or1terd•y'•

r

umbl'" LILAC FUZZY

rJ xxr J
("-wen tomorro•'

CAMPUS\ TIPTOE

-'n1""r.r1 Mag mn IH. h11td homleH- ALLEYS

3 30 - News 4

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGF ElLOW

One letter Simply stands for another 11 th1 s s am I le A 1s
used for the three L s X for the two 0 s etc Smglc lc th r
apostrophes the length and t01 matlon of tt P \~ o hl~ :~rP :t ll
hmts Each da.&gt; the co de lett ers arc dliTctenl

R II

NJD

RC

CRYPTOOUOTFS
M LCP
D [ C II I W I

FRAARUJGll

ROUS - USRWM CM

K I II 'A

(Li!Wf

Il l

1\1

KVI OMVN

Yeoterdoy's Cryptoquote DON T TELL YOUR FRIENDS
THEIR SOCIAL FAULTS THEY WILL CURE THE FAUL'I
AND NEVER FORGIVE YOU -LOGAN PEARSALL SMITH
(@ 1874 King Features Synd1cale Inc)

' 7 52

• Q3
... AQ82
WEST
• J7
'K9863
• 102
... K 1063
SOUTH
• 863
'AQ
AK865

THESE CHANGES - LET
US
SELL
YOUR
PROPERTY 9 YEARS
EX PERIENCE
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
3ASSOCIATES
~92 2259

A

LIE TEST? WIIAlS

C~ ARC.E?

A ND W~
DO YOU MEAN BOLT
IN HERE LI KE THI 'S

EAST
.QI052

'J

104
• J9 74
... J5

+

... 974

If no answer 992 2568

North South vulnerable

West

TEAFORD

Pass
Pass
Pass

V1rqd B. T t ,1ford. S1
Brok ··r
I 10 Mf•Ch!'lll!r 51!~&gt;cl
Pomeroy. Oh1o -15769
Electric heat large
k1tch en 3 mce bedroom s w tth
enormous close ts F1realarm
u t1lit y space for washer dryer
!garage and nearly an acre for

W1th waler

Paneled

A reat caltle

a

farm A large farm house of
rooms and bath large barn
and 80 acres of tractor lrmd

for only Sl 800 00

F 0 Rr,- F ergu;;-r;ac to;- $5 75
Phone 992 7106
I 22 Jtc

'

'

.

GREAT
;OUNTRY

14
3N T

1+
2N T
Pass

"

On the other hand 1t IS
good pohcy to open a four
card major SUit only when
you really can fmd no other
reasonable call
The b1ddmg m the box IS
normal modern btddmg
South becomes declarer at
three notrump After the
heart openmg he 1s sure of
two spades two hearts four
dtamonds and one club He
may wmd up takmg the club
fmesse for an overtrtck
Back m the 1930s most
North players would open one
spade South would respond
two dtamonds If North pro
ceeded to btd two notrump
East would defeat the con
tract
If North rebtd three cll!bs,
South mtght btd three
notrump But some South
players mtght go back to
spades, whereupon North
would wmd up playmg an un·
satisfactory spade or
notrump contract

92.1

I MOORE WENDY 1'&gt;1LL BE VERY
PLEASED lHAT '10lJ REQUE5TED
HE~AN I E, AND 5HE cAN ,..,..tlo..I5TAI&lt;I WRKINCi FOR '&gt;OtJ
ON MONIMY 1

NEVAH MIOT NOON!':
GOODEROR

DECENTER-CU5S
IT"

~NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

I

The b1ddmg has been

STI:kfO

GASOLINE ALLEY

reason

4bedrooms mce large k1tchen
'"IQ bath 7 rooms m all
msulated 1 , o:.o'"'res $18 000 00

157 ACRES -

South

Pass
Pass
Pass

I

b a th s
enclosed
ba se ment and
large hom e for only

full

A
$20 000 00
ONE ACRE -

East

In the 1930s people opened
four card su1ts 1n
dtscnmmately Then the
Roth·Sto~system m whiCh
four·card ma1ors are never
opened pu m 1ls appearance
The system m toto has never
achteVed any real success.
The absolute reliance on ftve·
card major opemngs IS one

only $22 000 00
5 BEDROOMS - For the large
2

North

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

NEW -

family
porc h
garaQe

1•

Opemng lead-a.

LOSE w erght With New Shape
Tablets and Hydrex Water
Pills Dutton Drug
M1d
dleport and Nel son Drug
1 22 Jtc

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

10

B

Password 6

12 55-NBC News 3 15
1 oo - News 3 All My Ch1ldren 6 13 Not For Women Only 15

Our

SPRING BUYERS WILL
SOON BE IN LIST YOUR
PROPERTY WITH US FOR
BEST RESULTS

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

News

chang ng worl d
ts today s
byword Condtttons m r ea l
estate ch ange tu st as surely
as 1n other f 1elds WE KNOW

'-l'l.c;V t&lt;AOIO
am fm
8
track tape comb nat1on 4 way
speaker
sound
system
Balance $102 66 or use our
budget term s Call 992 3965
I 11 tfc

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

Jackpot• 3 15

12 30- Baffle 3 15 Split Second 6
12 45 - Electnc Company 33

I 34 acres 2 story frame 4
BR 2 ca rpeted Bath Om ng
room l1vmg room carpeted
So me panelmg &amp; t1te Idea!
loca tion for ch1ldren $9 500

$60 000 00
NEW LISTING - 2 leve l lots

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

12 00 -

borhood $2 000
POMEROY - CLOSE IN

6iil Ptfone 992 9932

Rate
of
tnt
6
Pet
1972 vw bus excellent con 1972 K.) t.Ht::v T Hlalzer 4 wneel
Purpose for Wh ch Note
dr ve A speed transmiSSIOn
d1ton $2900 Phone (30.4) 773
Debt Was Created
Motor
5867
bfue W1th white removable
grader
top All new 10 15 new t~res
New Issues Durmg
1 20 5tc
FURNISHED apt lor rent 1
excelten I condtt on Call q92
Year 1973
4313 02
bedroom '" Middleport Call
7205 alter 4 p m
Balance Outstand•ng
after 4 p m 992 317 3
1 18 6tc
Dec 31 1973
8 626 04
1 23 41C
AKC Toy Pood l e Pupp es
Rate of tnt
6 Pet
S75 oo S1amese K1ttens S15 HAY
Date of Fmal Mat
.419 1975 LARGE unfurntshed 3rd floo r
timothy and second
Phon.e 1 256 62.47
Purpose for Wh 1Ch Note
cuttmg 60 cents per bale
ap t for rent n downtown
Debt Was Created
Motor
Phone Leonard E Amos 985
1 10 26t c
Pomeroy 6 rooms and bath
4127
grader
Call 992 2789
New Issues Durmg
1 17 tf c
1 22 Stp
Year 1973
4 313 02
Balance Outstanding
4 kUOM nouse w1th bath ano WrLL babysit In my home by 6
PUREBRI;:D
Horned
Dec 31 1973
626
hour day or week No nights
garage tnqu 1re at 916 Locu st
H~refords
yearling he1fers
Rate of tnt
6 Pet
P~one 992 7102
Str eet in Middleport 01110
E A W1ngett Racine
4 19 1976
Date of Fmat Mat
I 20 He
1 12 6tc
1 22 Jt c
n 1 24 ltc

Chuck Wh1te Reports 10

B 10 Sesame Street 33
11 55 - CBSNewsB Dantmel sWorld 10

MIDDLEPORT - Large lot

l "'"'

SUPER SERVICE STA

Story

11 00- Gamb1t 8 10 Password 13 W1zard of Odds 3 4 15 M tke
Douglass 6
11 30 - HollywoodSquaresJ 415 BradyBunch13 Loveof L 1fe

70x90
A ll u tlld tes close
Wooded area
Ideal for
Mob1 le Home Good ne1g h

COUNTRY HOME -

• • ~ .. ack W '-arsey, Mgr

9 55 -

A

1000 - DmahShore315 JokersW1IdB 10 Company6
10 30 - $10 000 Pyram1d B 10 Jeopardy 3 4 15

CLOSE IN

11h baths ga s
force d atr furna ce breakfa st
nook large ltvtng and d 1nmg
Basement
and
garag e
$ 1B000 00

I

AM3 Abbott &amp; Costello 8 Wild Wild West 6 Movie
of David 13
9 30- To Tell The Truth 3 Secrel Slorm 8

Racer

4 BEDROOMS -

CO-OP COUNTRY
SQUIRE 120

Zoo Revue 13

Oh1o This Week 20 How To Survive A Mamage 3 15
4 oo - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 Speed

ectn c &amp; se pt1c tank on
; . - - - - - - - - · ·- - - - , el
blacktop road Only $2 800 00

HQN

--------

POMEROY

Phone
992 3802 or 949

For Sale

Farmers

B 55 - News 13
9 00 - Paul Dtxon 4 Phll Donahue 15 Fnendly Junct1on 10

ABOUT $d 000 down 2 yr s
old 3 n1 ce BR wlfh double
c lose t s Colored bath &amp;
shower K1tchen ha s lots of
ca b•n ets ra n ge dmmg area
Utd1ty
HW floors
som e
car pet ng
Curta1ns
&amp;
D rapes Carpo rt &amp; storage
large l ot

G &amp; E Appl 1an ce Repa r

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

Daughter 13
Rocky &amp; Bullwmkle 13 New Zoo Revue6
Capt Kangaroo 8 10 Sesame Sf 33 New
s Collie 6
Oock Van Dyke 13 9&lt; ady Bunch 6

7 30 a 00 Jeff
8 30 -

POMEROY, 0

---

----ICE AND SNO\

6 30 - Columbus Today •
6 35 - Columbus Today 4
6 45 - Farmtlme 10 Morntng Report 3
7 00 - Today 3 4 IS CBS News 8 10 P1x anne 6

Ftve

3 Jo-O'le Ltfe to l1ve 6 13 Ph1l Donahue 4 Match Game 8 10

DOZER work land clearmg by
t he acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w th over
10 years expenence Pullms
E x cavatmg Pomeroy ot11o
Phone 992 2478
1219 tfc

washer deluxe 4 wash cycles WILL tnm or cut trees and
shrubbery Also clean out
exce llent cond t1on used only
basements attics etc Call
4 months cutt ng board to
949 3221 or 742 4441
S320 reta11 price sn 5 t='horfe
1 2 26tc
992 2042 after s p m
I 23 5tc

-

Sunrise Semtnar 4 Sacred Heart 10
Consumer s World 10 Folk Literature 3
6 20 - Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - B1ble Answers 8 Blue R 1dge Quartet 13 News 6
Minutes to L1ve By 4

3 00 - Another World J 4 15 General Hosp1tal 6 13 Pnce ts
R1ght 10 8 Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20

----

iRLPOOL-~-;;ab/;-d;;h

6 00 6 15 -

Gu1dlng Light 8 10
2 30- Doctors 3 4 15 Edge ol N1ghl B 10 Girl In My L1fe 6 13

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

WH

News4

2 00 -

f,.

2 BEDROOM home n M d
12 30 26tp
dleport pr vate own er new
---roo I and bath Phone 949 3832 - -- - - - - - READY MIX
CONCRETE
or 843 2667
del1ver ed r ight to your
1 24 6tc
project Fast and easy Free
est mates Phone 992 3284
Goegle1n Ready M x Co
8 W EEKS old pigS Call 949 5953
M ddleporl Oh10
1 24 6tc
-6 30 tfc
I95S DOZER D 9 International --- ~---- ------SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
d1ese1 $2 500 00 Tractor
Massey Harr1s 1958 with front REASONABLE rates Ph 446
4782 Galtlpol s John Russell
end load er $650 00 Ford
Owner and Operator
Tractor
19.48 wlfh farm
equ 1pment S900 00 Ca ll 992
12 tfc
2720 or q92 6721
AROBIC
1 2.4 3tc SEPTIC TANKS
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
BE DROOM S uiTE - Kr~;hi;r
CLEANED
REPAIRED
excellent cond 1flon
Two
MILLER SANITATION
p1eces - bookcase bed and
STEWART OHIO PH 662
s1x drawer 52 1nch dre sser
3035
W1th mtrror both w th for
10 4 tfc
m ca tops Mattress and box
spr ngs •ncluded $100 Mrs SEPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
Bob Hoert1ch 992 5292
Modern Sanltat 1on 992 3954 or
992 7349
1 24 tfc
- -----10 23 tfc
GROCERY business for sate
Bultdlna for sa te or lea se PRICE CONSTRUCTIONPhOne 773 56 18 from 8 30 p m
Roofmg spouting
kitchens
to 10 p m for appomtment
and bathrooms Complete
3 20 tfc
r emodel ng Phone 742 6273
12 3 ttc
SINGER se wing mach nes 1972 ---- -- ---- -- ~-model m beaullful walnut DOZER and back hoe work
cab net Makes des1gn stit
ponds and septic tanks d t
ches WJ zag buttonholes
chlng service top soil fill
bl nd h ems etc L1ke new
dlrt
lim esto ne
B&amp;K Ex
Only $89 95 Call Ravenswood
cavatlng Phone 992 5367 or
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
992 386 1
12 7 tfc
9 1 tf c

--

2 00 -

130 - 30nAMatch3 415 LetsMakeADeal6 13 As The
World Turns B 10

E XCA VATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
sept• c
tanks nstalled dump trucks
and lo ooys for htre w 11 hau l
d rt top so11 11mestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffer s day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 99 2 3525 or 992
523 2
2 ll tfc

at t he shop
4254

30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 D1ck Cavett 6 13 Mov1es The
Face of Fear 8
The Story on Page One 10
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 News 13

Concentration 8 Secret Storm 10

C BRAUf-Ut&lt;lJ AUCfiOneer
Complete Serv ce
Phone 949 3821
Ra cme Oh o
Cnt t Bradford
5 I tfc

ELECTROLUX
vacuum
cleaner A I cond1t 1on uses
paper bags has cordw nder
and many attachments Also
shampooer attachment n
el uded (Only 4 ava•lable l at
$37 70
cas h
or
terms
ava1lable Phone 992 2984
I 21 tfc

----

ROOM H ome
ba th
gas
fu rnace and
garage
n
M1ner sv dle Plenty of garde l
space Pn ced for QUI Ck sa le
$5SOO 00 Phone 992 5778
1 24 6tc

6

s

IN NEW

------

F OR electrica l plumbmg and
remodel ng work Call 843
2341 for F REE E STIMATES
1 11 26tc

For Sale

KOSCOT KOSMETICS

.......___....

1~73

All work guaranteed

COAL FOR SALE JAYMAR
COAL
COMPANY
THE
MEIGS &amp; GALLIA LINE
STATE
ROUTE
7
AT
CHESHIRE OPEN 7 AM t II
6 30 PM 5 DAYS A WEEK
PHONE 992 5693
1 21 Stc

&amp; WIGS
We have the produ c t on hand
and we del1ver to you per
sonally Helen Jane Brown
992 511 3
12 30 t fc

GET

Stop In and See Our
Floor Dasplay

30 - Day At N1ghl 33
oo - News 3 4 6 B 10 13 15 Janaki33

FRIDAY JAN 25 1974

SPAC I OUS b1 Level and spit
level homes are- now und er
cons truction on c ty water
and sewer
M a ny de ux e
fe at ur es mcludmg a r con
d 1l1on ng
B es t fmanc ng
av a1labt e Other type homes
m d ff erent ar eas on F H
Adm t nancmg w1th no dow n
pay m ent Cal l collect (637
6540 ) or wr t e to MEIGS
D EVE L OPMENT P 0 Box
33 M dd leport Oh o 45760
I 9 tfc

Areas Most
Reasonable Pnces

00 - Kun9 Fu6 13 Evenmg At Pops 33 20 Bob Hope 3 4 15
Mov1es Houseboat 8
Valley of th e Doll s 10
00 - News 20 Who Is Man? 33 Mu s1c Country USA 3 d IS
Streets of San Franc•sco 6 13

DESIRABLE tw o bedroom
hou se In M dd l ep ort ready to
occupy Ca l l 992 5310
12 30 26tc

Parnting A Specralty

FURNITURE

~

NEW 3 bedroom nomu
.,,Jtt
garag e basement on Gr avd
H II M ddlep ort Nat ura l ga!&gt;
already 1n
Phone Dale
Du tton 992 3369 even ngs
992 2 ~34
I 17 11L

Lmcoln H1ll Pomeroy 0

Reading For the Classroom TeachEr 33

Benny s Second Farewell Special 3 4 15
8 30 - Ftrehouse 6 13

Real Estate For Sale

Ph 992 5271

and

20

B 00 - Waltons B 10 Advoca te s 20 33 Chopper One 6 13 Jack

SEW IN G MACHINES Repa1r
serv1 ce all makes 992 2284
The Fabric Shop Pom ero y
Author zed Singer Sales and
Se rvi ce We Sha rp en Sc ssors
3 29 lfc

Body Shop

OFFICE SUPPLIES

6 Ozz1e s Gtrls 8 Johnny Mann s Stand Up &amp; Cheer 15 Zoom

AU TOMOB ILE Insura nce beel'l
cancel l ed"&gt;
L ost
~our
operator s I ce nse Call 992
7478
6 15 lfc

Gene's

992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

Elec Co 20 Lets Make A Deal 13 News 10 6 Sports Desk
15 Mulligan Slew 33
7 30- Hollywood Squares 3 Wild Kmgdom 10 Beat the Clock
13 Lookmg Ahead 33 Sale ol the Century' To TeU the Truth

Pomeroy

Ph 992 2 17-1

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 -7089
Ntght 992-3525
or 992 5232

Open 8 Til S

MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE MEAT
CUTTER
ex
BERRY MILLER Mob l e Hom e
per.enced Sa lary ba sed on
Sa l es h as a lo t to offer wh en
ab llty A pp ly after Jan 23 to
you star t shopp ng for your
Powel ls Sup er Vatu Second
Mobile Hom e You ca n beat
St r eet Pomeroy
the h gh deprec at on you II
I 20 6t c
have on your hom e the f~r st
two year s by shoppmg for a CA R HOP want ed ap ply n
tat e model used Mob le Home
person Cro ws St eak Hou se
Her e are some every day low
1 20 i&gt;l c
or ces
55x l0 V ndal e 3 bedroom
S2 995 00
60x 12 Buddy 19 71 3 b ed r oom
$4 495 00
60K 2
1971 Champ on
2
bedroom SJ 995 00
60x 12 P M c
2 bedroom
$4 995 00
6011.12 H ll cr es t
2 bedro om
S4 495 00
60 x12 R embrandt 4 bedroom
i3 995 00
65x 12
1971
L 1b erty
3
bedroom l 1 1 baths spec1a l
$4 795 00
W e also
hav e three 19 74
Detro ters tha t Will be sold at
a very larg e d scount These
are most ly al l late model
homes and the pr ces nclude
your del1very and comp l ete
set up So for an honest to
goodness good deal stop 1n DIRECT Sa le s D s tr.but ors
today at Berry MIt er Mob l e
wanted for v tam 1ns and
Home Sates
705 F arson
organ•c products Part or full
St reet B elpre Ohio phone
t me For mterv• ew
wr te
423 953 1 closed Sundays
Mary Engle R R 1 BOK 19
1 24 nt c
Un on Oh10 45322
1 16 161p

NEW 2 p1ece Early Amer can
L v ng room su f es n 100 pc1
n y lon scotc hg ar d mater al
Your cho 1ce ol col or s or
fabr cs
Th s week only
S1 99 95 c ash a 11d carry
Pom eroy Recovery 622 E
Man St r ee t Pomeroy Pt10n e
99 '} 7554
1 22 6tc

Jo1nt Pl.lbllc Noll ce No 45 1
0100
Jomt Pub! c Not ce Issued on
January 24 1974 Nam e and GUN SHOOT January 26 6
p m Mile H II Road Fac tory
Address of Applicant
choked guns only Ass ort ed
The Ex ce ls1or Sa lf Works
m eats Spon so r ed hy Rae ne
Inc
F •re Dept
P 0 Box 267
1 n ~lc
East Ma1n Street
Pomeroy Oh o 45769
Name and Address of Fac•llty SHOO TING Ma tc h Ra e ne Gun
Club Su nday January 27 1
wh er e D sc harge Occur s
p m Assorted meat s fa c to ry
The E KceiSIO r Sal! WorkS
cho ked guns only
In c
1 23 3tc
East Ma n Street
Pomeroy Oh o 45769
Beauty
S wp
Rece vmg Water
The Oh o H E L E N S
Pomeroy
s happy to an
R1v er
nounce Jan1 ce Bo gg s to our
sta ff We feature blow CLII S
NOTICE
hot ron curling M ss Ga bor
The above nam ed app l cant
w1gs
January
Spe c at
has app l ed for an NPDE S
Permanent wav es $20 now
Perm1t to d scharge nto the
$17 50 Sl7 50 now $15 SIS
des•gnated rece111 ng water and
now S12 50 $12 50 now S10
requested Sta te Certlf cat on of
Phone 992 2890 Hel en Adel
sad d scharge The perm•! wil l
Jan ce
be ssued by e1ther the U 5
Env•ronmental
Protect•on
1 20 61 c
Agency or other NPDE S ssu1ng
author1ty for a term of ap NEW
SPRIN G FABRIC S
proJC•mately 5 years
Po l yester kn I s S2 49 to SJ 98
Exce lSIOr manufa ctures rock
Polyester m ! l end s $1 19
salt by coal fred evaporat•on of
yard colton from polyest er
br ne The d scharge resu lt s
79c and up per yard Beaut fu l
from Quenchtng spent coal and
handmade
Nau ga hyde
rece ves treatment tor removal
handbags co mplet e l1ne of
of ash The plant s untreated
crafts and craft suppt, es
san tary wastes al so d scharge
Ma s te r Charge welcome
through the s ngle outfall wh1ch
Novel t y FabriC Shop &amp; Crafts
1S loca ted d rectly south of the
2JO Washmgton Blvd Belpr e
Oh10
plant on the rver bank about
200 teet west of another 1nactlve
1 20 6tc
discharge p pe
- - - - - -- - ----On the ba ss of prelim nary
Bradbury
staff revi ew and appl•cat•on of S&amp;G GARAG E
across WMPO Rad o phone
appl c able
standards
and
992 29d2
Grand
openmg
regutat ons th e Reg1onal Ad
Monday Now thr ough Jan
mm strator of th e U S En
31 a V 8 tuneup $27 95 Free
v~ronmental Protect1on Agen c y
l ube rot-&gt; w th o 1 change
or other
NPDE S i s sumg
1 13 1'ltc
authonty proposes to .ssue a
permtt for the discharge sub 1ect
to cer ta n effluent I 1m tat ons
FINANCIAL REPORT
and spec1al conditions
The
OF TOWNSHIPS
State after rev1ew of all the
For F1scal Year Endmg
comment s and object•ons also
December 31 1973
proposes to 1ssue a cert f1 cat•on
Columbia TownShip
pursuant to Section 401 of the
Me•gs County
Federa l
Water
Pollut on
Rf J Albany OhiO
Cont rol Ac t as amended State
January 21 1974
cert•f•cat on
w II
not
be
I cert1fy the follow ng report
necessary 1f the NPDES Perm t to be correct
ISSUing euthOnty s granted to
Glona Holton
the State pnor to ssuance
Township Clerk
The proposed determ nat on
SUMMARY OF CASH
to ISSUe an NPDES Perm t 1S
BALANCES RECEIPTS
tentatiVe to ssue an NPDES
AND EXPENDITURES
Perm 11 Is tentat1ve Interested
Balance Jan 1 1973
per sons are mv ted to subm '' Genera l Fund
wr1t1en comments upon
he Motor Veh 1cle L cen::.e S 1 541 39
proposed d1scharge Comments
Ta x Fund
191348
should be subm •tied n person
1 812 01
or by ma11 no tater than 30 days Gasolme Tax Fund
and Br1dge
affer the lomt publ i C not ce of Road
Fund
IS 59
th1S appl cat on 1S ssued
Totals
5
282
47
Deliver or ma I ali comments
Total Rece1pts
lo
General Fund
8 173 03
Mr s Carolyn Cates
Motor Veh1cle L cense
Reg 10n v Perm t Branch
Tax Fund
6 141 72
U
S
Env•ronmental Gasoline Tax Fund
13 270 85
Protect on Agen cy
Road and Bridge
1 North Wacker Dr.ve
Fund
341 10
Ch !CiiQO lll1n0 S 60606
Fed Revenue
The appl1cat10n and 10 1nt Gen
Sharmg
3 985 00
pubh c not1 ce numbers should
Totals
31 911 70
appear next to the above ad
Total Rece1pts &amp; Balances
dress on the envelop e and on
General Fund
9 714 72
each page of any subm 1tted Motor
Veht c le L cen se
comment s
All
comme nts
Tax Fund
8 055 20
rece ved no later than 30 days
Gasoline Ta x Fund
1508266
after the 10 nt publi c nollce Is Road and Br1dge
ISSUed w II be conSidered n the
Fund
356 69
formulat1on of f nat deter
Gen Fed Revenue
m nat1ons
The U
S En
Sharmg
3985 00
V1 ro nmental Prot ec tiOn Agency
Expend1tures
or other NPOES author ty W1ll
7 d05 00
ISSue I nat det erm 1nat on s m a Genera l Fund
Motor VehiCle L1cense
f•mely manner after t he ex
Tax Fund
7 031 ~5
P• r a11on of the public commen t
1J 874 84
penod Cop1es of all comments Gasoline Tax Fund
and ob techons rece1ved w II be Road and Bridge
F und
303 72
transm tted to the State
Gen
Fed
Revenue
The appl•callon proposed
Sharmg
3 985 00
permit mclud1ng proposed
32 600 51
elftuent I m•tat1on s speCial Total
Balance Dec 31 1973
conditions comments rece ved
2 309 42
and other do c uments are General Fund
ava•lable for 1nspect10n and Motor Veh1cle L •cense
Tax Fund
1 023 25
may be cop1es at a cost of 20
1 208 02
cents per page at the U S Gasoline Tax Fund
Env1ronmental
Prolect•on Road and Bridge
Fund
52 97
Agency at anytime between
Total s
4 59 3 66
9 30 a m and 3 30 p m Mon
CASH BALANCE
day through Fr1day Cop,es of
RECEIPTS AND
the Jomt Publ c Not1 ce ar e
EXPENDITURES
ava tab le at no charg e at the
BY FUND
address shown abov e for th e
General Fund
d es gnated State agency and th e
Ba t Jan I 197 3
1 54 1 39
U S Env ronmental Protect iOn
Rece,pts
Agency
P lease br ng the foregomg to General Property Tax Real Est.!lte (GroSS ) 4 465 OS
the attent on of persons whom
you know would be Interest ed m Tang 1bl e Personal Property
Tax ( Grossi
1431 oo
th s m alter
In her lan ce Ta x
- 35
Local Government
( 1) 24 lie
D!SiflbUflOn
2 369 41

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

7 00 - Truth or Con seq 3 Beat the Clock 4 Whal s My Lme 8

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

Water l1nes and Power
Lmes All work done by the
fool or contract Also dozer
work and septic tanks m
slalled

On Most Amencan Cars

Help Wanted

Mob1le Homes For Sale

Bulldojer Rad1alor to the

DITCHING SERVICE

•s.ss

6 00 - News 3 4 S, 10 15 S&amp;same St 20 ABC News 13 T ruth
or Consequences 6 Ltllas Yoga and You 33
6 30 - NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 Your
Future IS Now 33 Room 222 TJ

smallest Heater Core
Nathan Btggs
Radrator SpeCialist

PHONE 843-2341

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Television Log

From the larges t Tru ck or

Restdence and
Mobale Homes

Mason W Va

~~~~·=·~·~~~~~~o:~o~=c&lt;~~~~~,~~~-~~~&gt;:~~S~x~~~~

THURSDAY JAN 24 1974

REPAIR

MATERIALS CO

SM A LL farm tra c t o r an d
equ1pm ent
Phone 997 7190
I 2'1 ) I p

6 cy l automal• c tr ans sharp ca r w• th clean mlenor
good !~r es bege lm1 sh ra d iO

INSTALLING
AND

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
713 SSS4

l9~S

EXPERIENCED

Bu1lt to Your 1 Specs
Oehvered to Job S1te

to 2 ACR E s of land on lar ge tot
for trailer Must be dose to
water and elec tr c•IY Phon "
9~2 S323
I 74 3tp

11695

- The Daily Sentmel, Mtddleport.Pomeroy, 0, Jan 24,1974

WOOD TRUSSES

Wanted To Buy

power
~teen ng rad o good hres spotl ess nl enor bl ue fm1 sh
Now only $1295

Business Services

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

V 8 eng ne 3 8 CIO autom.at1 c tran s

B&amp;G AUCTION

OR OLDER

.I'

.

IN LOV I NG memo r y of our SHOOT IN G MATC H
Horn er
dear husband and fa the r
H II Gun Clu b Rt 143 Sun
Cha r les Robert W nebrenner
day Jan 27 12 noon Factory
wllO departed Ill s I fe Jan
ch oked guns only
2&lt;1 1972
..
1 24 3tc
Dea r Bob Ano ff er year ha S
- - - - - - - --go n e and the lo v ng memory
of yoLI I r gers on we f ee l you
are ever near for you I
a lway s live n our hearts
dei'H Res t n p eacef ul sle ep
14 Rtverstde Dr
Our lovm g m emor es we II
alwav s ke eo
Athens , Ohto
Sor rowfu l ly m S!H~ d and dearly
lov ed
bY
w te
Mabe l
Btl! Wade Auctione er
daughters In s Ald11e Donn a
and gr&lt;tndchtldr en
I 14 lt p

11

CITY

P I ANO tun ng pt on e 99? 20 87
La n e Dan1els No tun ng Dll er
3 lsi
1 20 lOt c

INFORMATION
O~AOLINES

r-

•

W01t

1•

North

Pass
3+
You, Sooth hold

4

East

South

Pass
Pass

1+
?

WMP0-FM

.KJ65,2+AQI065.K43

M•ddleporl Pomeroy _

A.-Ju1tbldfour notrump You
will JO to atx if your partner

What do you do now?

shews two aces

TODAY S QUEWION
You do bid four notrump and
your partner btds five spades to

show three aces What do you do
now"

(SNIF SNIF) 'IOU
TREAT ME LII&lt;E A
DADBURN WORK HOSS,
PAW"

AN I M GITliN' OUT
OF THIS DADBURN
BARN
'

WHOA
THAR !!

I

~A~E

[ (CI)[.()

rnrs HORRH&gt;LF
f?fU.j1

m:1..1;~:.

AND lOX II

�.

-.- -

•

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Ja11. 24, 1974

Legion conference set
The Ohio American Legion
w\11 hold il' annual Mid-Winter
Co nference in the Rhode s

Ce nter ,

Ohio

Exposition

Grounds, Columbus, on Sun·

day, Jan . 27, at 10 a.m. when
several hundred Le~ionna ires
rcpresc1 ting the 692 Legion
Posts of the state will attend
the one-d ay even t.
A highlig ht of the conference

will be the official visit to Ohio
of Nat ional American Legion
Comm an der Robert E . L.

f:ato n of Maryl and . ComJnml(lcr Eaton, a retired Air
Fun·r Major General , heads
his ow n public relations and
man agement consulting fj rm

in IV&lt;tshington, D. C. He will
address the rrorrsen t.atives of

Hughes tried to ·buy two Presidents

ELBERFELD$ -IN POMEROY
STOREWIDE JANUARY SALE
__ .

the 127, 000-membeu Ohio
American . ,f.-eg ion on th e
national programs and policies
of the American Legion.
Another highlight will be an
address by Cong. Tennyson
Guyer, who represents Ohio's
Fourth Congressional District. r~:;l 6~o;;,----· - - - - - - · ---T-s-;-a-~-~-G~r-;~u-p_,...,_h"--"---h.-,-·Reg~-slAS _ _ _ _
Others who are scheduled to
address the Ohio Leglonnaires .
Col.
Robert
M.
are
ChiaramonU!, SuperinU!ndent
Sever a l colors . Broken sizes . All 100 pel . wov e n
of the Ohio State Highway
lextur ized po lyes ter with zip ou t pil e lining .
Reg. 11.80 and 15.80
YARN
Patrol , and Franklin CoWJty
Sale
Common
Pleas
Judge
Frederick T. Williams of
Wes terville.
$1.15 skein
SALE 5.88
The conference will be under
tl&gt;e direction of Ohio Legion
_O_N__
Commander David A. Cropper
Save over 50 pet . now on misses and juniors
of Portsmouth.
coats. Only 50 coats in group.

Women's All Weather Coats
SALE 24.99

WOMEN'S WINTER COATS AND JACKETS

SAL;--PR-IC-E~S

SALE! BOYS SWEATERS
lncl udes our entire stock of boys long sleeve coal
and slipover sweaters. Boys sleeveless sweaters
s izes 3 to 7 and 8 to 18.

WINTUK

CANVAS TOTES

Y2 PRICE

I

~Mens Davis 4 0 Cushion Sole

Bj.ED-S-PR--E~;;, ;~;- I

WORK SOCKS
Sizes 10-101!2, 11 -11'12, 12-12'12 in white or ~olid
color gre y. Comfortable and long wearing .

COVERS, NO-IRON SHEETS, TOWELS
. - - d - W - - - s - - : - - - - · - - - · - · - - - - 1 AND WASH CLOTHS DURING OUR

Reclamation costs
force 7 4 Ohio strip
firms to close

Mrsses an

COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR
Groups from fine famou s makers. Not all s izes in
all styl es and colors .

SALE Y2 PRICE

11

JANUARY WHITE SALE

--":"'-----·-~
Faii-Wmter

·.- -------4

14 Only
Boys 8.95 Unlined

8 Only
Mens 1D.95 Unlined

DRESS FABRIC

Group~ALES 50;·YARD
6

0

9

CPO JACKETS

SAVE OVER /z

SAVE OVER '-h

)o---~-L_E_4_.o_o.....~--~SA-~E_5_h~-~----

VOL. XXV

-·----

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (UP!) - A spokesman for about
200 independent truck drivers says a shutdown over high diesel
fuel prices and reduced speed llmits may become more militant
today because company drivers were ignoring pleas to join the
protest.
"We don't expect any trouble," one driver declared at a
meetil\g Thursday night, "but if any truck other than a milk,
bread and mail truck comes through, there is no one who can ooll
whether he'll make it where he's going ." Non-independent
drivers, employed by large firms, virtually ignored the shutdown
of privately-owned tractor-trailers here and 'in Clarksburg
Thursday.
Larry Barnes, a spokesman day, and troopers reporood "no
for the National Council of trouble and no complaints."
Independent Truckers, termed
However, news reporters
the first day ,of picketing coverlog the "cbeckpolots"
"disappointing," but said his told of at least two locldents.
fellow truckers would stand by One trucker told a reporter
their rigs along major high- he waved down a tractorways leading into the two trailer and spotted a pistol In
cities.
the lap of the driver. A
Dissident truckers insisted at television crew filmed the
the Thursday meeting they attempt by a tractor-trailer
wouldn't tolerate acts of driver to run from a group of
violence on picket lines, but pickets.
Barnes, while insisting he
emphasized they "won't accept
responsibility for what hap- wanted only a "peaceful"
pens."
demonstration, conceded
One angry driver said non- Thursday that "being peaceful
independent truckers who is not working:" The NIT
attempt to pass up the check- spokesman also observed that
points would be "asking for some drivers are conducting
trouble and taking their separate protests in other parts
equipment into their own of the state, apart !rom his
hands."
organiza lion.
"A lot of the guys are being '
Protest leaders said the
strike would continue on an peaceful, but plenty of truck
·· around-the-dock, seven day a drivers up and down the river
week schedule, if necessary, to here are on their own," he said .
"We're really letdown on the
dramatize the need for relief to
federal authorities, who have shutdown," he said . "All these
failed to accede to their carriers knew what we're
going to do. The big truck
demands.
Despite the presence of companies are giving us fits.
pickets, State Police here in- You could stand right in the
dicated that only "routine middle of the road, and they 'd
patrols" were In effect Thurs- nm you down .1 '

SALE '-h PRICE

Alfred

1f2 PRICE SALE

1

SALE 4 88

MEIGS THEATRE

l-----·-_..._--..-._------------·----------------------------

HAND CROCHETED

~-~~~~ER ~--L SALE 2!__

Just Arrived!
A New Shipment Of

_____ .:-. ---.....-.------ -· ... ,.._,... .... _.~

eSHORTS
.HALTERS

Scarfs • Gloves •
Mittens • Hats
SALE Y2 PRICE

% Price on Odds &amp; Ends

Middleport Department Store
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Accessories Department. First Floor

,

~ ~~

Authentic western styling . Neck sizes 141h to 17.
Good pattern selection.

SALE

6.99

Mens 6.95 and 7.50 Blue Chambray
Wester~J Shirts - - - - - - - - - Sale 5.89

'
---------------------------~
Special (one only)
:
Reg. 419.95 Whirlpool Refrigerator- Freezer
·;
Side by side· Harvest Gold-15.1 cu. ft . frost free. ,

SALE 359.95

·--------------------------.;.f
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

Gas

253 .95 1o,ooo BTU
Heaters -. . - - . .
227 .95 50,000BTU Gas Heaters . - - - - •
132.95 35,000 BTU Gas Heaters • . - - - .
86.50 20,000 BTU Gas Heaters - · - - · 237 .95 45,000 BTU Fuel 011 Heaters . . -

si,e
Sole
Sale
Sole
Sale

:
,

·m.oo :
135.00
15.00
55.00 •
145,00

~------------------------L------~--------~---------~----~------------------~
;
MAIN STORE AND MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 PM

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•

•

.,

WASHINGTON - THE SMELL OF OIL pervaded the capital
Thursday and although members of Col\gress talked much of
curbing excessive profits and increasing supplies the industry
: survived very well. Nothing really changed in the spaU! of
resolutions, speeches, briefings and Interviews given by taw
makers and the Nixon administration. It boiled down to an attitude of being reasonable with the oil giants and not punitive .
With the oil companies reporting their highest ever profits in
an energy-hungry economy, Feder,al Energy Office administrator William E. Simon told a Senate finance subcommittee that at least one profits tax proposal was '1ocused on
an elusive concept of excessive profits rather than the real
culprit, excessive crude oil prices."
He said he preferred Nixon's bill for an "emergency windfall
profits tax" which would more or less leave the oil industry
alone, including sizeable tax grants and "incentives" to find and
produce more oil.

j

Super Savings on Gas and Oil Heaters
By Perfection

1

By United Press International
CINCINNATI - JESUS CHRIST WASN'T a male chauvinist,
so male leaders of the catholic Church shouldn't be either, says
an outspoken nun.who wants women to become eligible for the
priesthood.
Sister Albertus Magnus McGrath says the church should
heed "the remarkable fairness and halance Jesus showed in
dealing with women and his freedom to rise above the male
chauvinism In his culture." The remarks of the sister, a
Dominican nun and chairman of the history department at
Olicago's Rosary College, were made in an article published
here Thursday in a nationally distribured catholic magazine, the
41
St. Antllony Messenger ."

__________________________
SALE 169,95

WESTERN SHIRTS

•SLACKS
•DIFFERENT TOPS

of Sheets &amp; Drapes

Mens 9.95

Worn ens Knit

red eye

m;;;;;::&lt;:, ,,i;i'' B
' ;i;l;i

I
r...---....._.._.._.._..._____------;

BOYS LONG SLIEVE KNIT SHIRTS

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I
I

-

HOUSTON- GULF OIL CO. U.S.A. president Z. D. Bomer
said Thursday Arab leaders forced some major American oil
companies to quit sending petroleum supplies to the .l.J. S.
military during the Middle East war. ·
.
Bomer said the American oil companies Involved had no
choice but to obey the Arabs and the American governme~t knew
ail about the situation. "The oil industry was slmply to ld by the
Arab government, "You will not be allowed to supply the U. S.
military overseas from our &lt;&gt;il. If you do you'll be cut of{__com(Continued on page 10)
-\

r

Maheu said he discussed
Hu ghes' desire to pay $1
million to Nixon with another
top a ide to th e recl use
billionaire, Frank Gay .
" I told Mr. Gay that I was
ve ry much con·cerned about the
attempts that Howard Hughes
made in asking me to make big
payoffs to presidents of the
United States, wni ch I
categorically refused to do,"
Maheu said . " I felt that certain
political contributions which
were recommended by him
(Hughes ) were far in excess of
what they ought to be. "
"Mr. Gay also was very
(Continued on page 10 )

en tine

FRIDAY, JANUARY 25,,1974

REP. CLARENCE MILLER

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

•

Highways zn
battle mood

··I

SALE

!

NO. 199

•

SALE 14.88

GIRLS COATS
DRESSES AND
SPORTSWEAR

hotel empire in Neva da.
"Again in 1970, I talked with
Hughes relative to a matter
that Mr. Hughes wanted me to
handle forthwith and fly to Key
Biscayne, Fla.," Maheu said.
"! went to Key Biscayne, met
with Rebozo , and I cawgorical·
ly refused to carry on the instructions of Howard Hughes.''
The coW't ret:ord is not clear
about the purpose of the
Florida visit, but a source
currently close to the Hughes
organization told UP! Maheu
was sent by Hughes to offer
Rebozo $1 million in exchange
for a promise to call off the
nuclear testing.

Devoted To The lnleresl$ Of The Meigs-Mason Area

SALE 1.29

SALE Y2 PRICE

at y

CPO JACKETS

By RITA SHADE
mands. Ninety-six per cent of
COLUMBUS (UP!) - StaU. tl1e electric power generated is
SALE! COOKING BAGS
and federa l regulations have fueled by coal," Lowrie said.
finuncially dralned Ohio's strlp ;'There also has been a deHousewares Department - 1st floor.
mine companies, forcing more crease in the demand for coal
Misses - Juniors
Many Sty les
Ha lf Sizes
than one-third of them out of as consumers look for alter ~
and Co lors
37c box
59c Cooking Bags! 10) size 8"x 10"
busi ness, according to the Ohio nate fuels .11
89c
Cooking
Bags
!101
size
10"xl5"
57c
box
~-~~~---~~--~~-~Ti c:clamation Association .
Two of the immediate chang1
Neal S. Tostenson, executive es Tostenson will recommend
~-West
- Bend 29.95~-------------------------1
2.25 SKINNY DIP
vice president of the associa~ to the legislature are slmplified
Porcelain Lined Aluminum
lion . sa ld he will ask the Ohio licensing procedures and
Womens
Spray
or
splash
on
Cologne.
Regular
or
·lemon.
General Assemb ly this week to abolishment of double bonding.
change state requirements in
"Right now, TosU!nson said,
COOKWARE SETS
SHIRTS AND BLOUSES
order to halt steadily decreas- "Ohio law requires a strip minSet contains 1'12 qt. Saucepan with cover . 2112 qt. Saucepan
with cover - 5 qt. Dutch Oven w ith cover and 10" skillet (uses
ing coal production . However, er to apply for a new license
Selected from our regular sfock.
Dutch oven cover) .
._
t11e Ohio Division of Redama- every 12 months, regardless of
Oven safe handles, knobs.
tlon said lt will resist efforts to whether the tract of land is
While They Last
soften state regulations.
eompletely mined of its coal.
Increased costs due to state We would like to ellminate the
recl amation req uiremen '.s, red tape and have the license
~--------~--~--~~~~~"~~~~~~~~~----PROTEIN" 21 SHAMPOO
double bonding, and im- issued for the duration of the
plementation of the federal time it takes to remove all the
For dry hair or oily hair .
SALE! YAMAHA GUITARS
t;oal Mine Health and Safety coal from the land ."
1 Only
Act have forced 74 of Ohio's 179
When the license is renewed
Choose
I 00
pet .
99~
99.50 Six String Guitar - - - - - Sale 79.00
strip mine companies out of annually, a new bond must be
polyesfer or 100 pet.
1 Only
business sin ce May , 1972, posted WJtil the land Is rea crylic . Sizes 6 fo 20.
168.00
Electric or Acoustic Guitar
Sale 135.00
Tostenson said .
clalmed, Tostenson said. ·
1 Only
Strip Tonnage Down
These bonds; he explained,
189.50 Twelve String Guitar Sale 139.00
lie ci ted a 7 per cent de- ran ging up to $3,000, are
2 Only
crease in Ohio strip tonnage in driving the smaller strip mine
159.00 Six String Guitars - •
Sale 120.00
1972, with prellminary figures operations out of business.
indicati ng a 20 per cent reduc·
1 Only 340.00 Kinqston
lion in 1973. Total coal producBass Guitar &amp; bass amplifier Sale 250.00
tlun in the state dropped !rom
~~~~~~~----w------~----~h-------------~----~
51 million tons in 1972 to 47.5
Social Notes
million tons, according to a
prcllminary report by the U.S. Sunday School atU.ndance on
Jan. 20, was 45, the offering
Bureau of Mines.
LIVING ROOM FURNITURE
$20.00.
Worship services were
Tostenson said he will ask
2-817.00 modern sofa, love seat and chair leg islators to permit postpone- held at 11 :00 a.m., with the
Junior-Misses
Upholstered in Gold Herculon and Green Her·
m€nt of reclama tion deadlines Rev. Meece bringing the
culon.
message
from
Mark
4:35-41,
during U1e wlnter months.
SALE 408,50
"During the winter, with "Master, the Tempest Is
Oh io's mud , ice and rain, com. Raging", "Come unto Me, Ye
11
panics ha ve to grade the land Weary. Attendance was 26,
over and over," Tostenson offering was $17.00, pledges
said. "If we could wait till $22.00.
warmer weather and grade the Thelma Henderson, Nina
land once, lt would take less Robinson, and Helen Woode,
time and increase efficiency." atU.nded the C,ounty Council on
It cos ts between $250 and Ministries meeting held at the
$1 ,000 an acre to reclaim strip- Forest Run United Methodist
Famous Maker
ped land, he said, depending on Church, on Monday evening,
FLARE DENIM JEANS
Jan. 14.
the terrain and weather.
-----------------~--------Blue denim in waist sizes 29to 36. 4 pockets. Very
1-319.00 Contemporary Sofa, 3 cushion. '
Ray Lowrie, chief of the staU! The United Methodist women
WOMEN'S
SLEEPWEAR
popular style.
Upholstered in 100 pet. nylon, black and white
Di\ision of Reclamation, said held their regular meeting on
i1c opposes such changes in Tuesday evening, Jan. 15, at
Houndstooth.
Discontinued styles and colors. Gowns the home of June SU.arns, with
reclamation requirements.
•
.
SALE 159.50
Pajamas - Robes.
"We would be opposed to any an atU.ndance of 12. "call to
softening (of regulations) or Prayer and Self Denial" was
Mens Long Sleeve
1-169.00 Recliner
del aying of re clamation ," the program subject led by
Modern Grey Herculon - - - - - Sale 84.50
Lowrie said. ''The production June Stearns, with all par1-169.00 Swivel Rocker
SPORT SHIRTS
of coal is just as high in the ticipating. The next meeting
-~~--~~
------~Modern Grey Herculon - • - - - Sale 84.50
Small , medium. large and extra large.
swmucr as it is in the winter, will be held at the home of
100 Pet. Acrylic
1-129.00Recliner. gold vinyl - · • Sale 64.50
Solid co lors - plaids - smart patferns .
and I don 't know how they Clara Follrod and Nina
1-129.00 Swivel Rocker
wou ld keep up with the Robinson on Tuesday evening,
MENS 4.95 SHIRTS - - - - - - - - SALE 2.48
Brown and Gold - - - - - - - - Sale 64.50
backlog. ''
Feb. 12 (a week early) .
MENS 5.95 SHIRTS - - - - - - - - SALE 2.98
1-189.00 Swivel Rocker
Lowrie also said Ohio is pro- Gene.vieve Guthrie will be
MENS
6.95
SHIRTS
SALE
3.48
Early American - - - • - - - - Sale 94.50
ducing enough coal to meet its program leader.
SHAWLS
SALE
3.98
MENS
7.95SHIRTS
·
1-79.00 Boudoir Chair
needs.
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Swartz
MENS
8.95
SHIRTS
·
SALE
4.48
WhitePink
Patchwork Cover - - - - - - - - Sale 39.50
Alternate Fuels
attended the "Full Gospel
4
MENS
9.95
SHIRTS
·
SALE
4.98
"
1-179;00 Lounge Chair
Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to ' ·
Blue . Beige
"Ohi o i:: in good shape in Prayer Breakfast" in Athens,
MENS 10.95 SHIRTS- - - - - - - - SALE 5.48
Green Fun Fur - - - - · - · - Sale 89.50
terms of meeting its ~.: oal de~ last Saturday morning. On
1-129.00
Occasional Chair
Saturday evening they took
Boys
Long
Sleeve
Gold, Brown. White - - - - - Sale 64.50
supper with Mr. and Mrs.
James Wright (Sandra) and
daughU.r, at Bidwell, 0 .
SPORT AND DRESS SHIRTS
ON SALE AT
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Swartz
WOMEN'S DAYTIME DRESSES
TONIGHT
Boys
sizes
8
to
18.
Solid
colors
patterns
.
All
visited Pearl and Wm. RanNOT OPEN
permanent press .
ELB_ERFELDS WAREHOUSE
dolph on Saturday. They took
Sale prices on our entire stock of misses
supper witl1' Mr. and Mrs.
and half size daytime dresses.
BOYS 3.95 SHIRTS - - - - - - - SALE 1.98
Fri .. Sa 1.- Sun .- Mon .-Tues.
James Wright and daughU!r at
ON MECHANIC STREET
J.1 n. 25-26 -27-28-29
BOYS 4.95 SHIRTS - - - - - - - SALE 2.48
Bidwell,
0
.,
Sunday
evening.
ONE liTTLE
1-·--h--rh___
,...,_.....,.._.._ • - ,_..._._.._...,. • .__.._.._._.._
Special !One Only)
BOYS 5.95 SHIRTS - · - - - - - SALE 2.98
INDIAN
Mr. and Mrs . Dale Kuhn, and
Reg. 359.95 Whirlpool Imperial Mark 18
Al so
two sons of Uttle Hocking,
Automatic Washer
BONGO
were recent dinner guests of
BESTFORM JANUARY SALE
Harvest Gold · . 18 lb. capacity- Heavy duty
Show Stu rts 1 p.m .
her parents, Mr. and Mrs .
motor .
Millard Swartz.
...,.
Reg . 7.00 Long Leg Panty Girdle - - - Sale 5.99
Sizes 8 to 18. Includes our entire stock. Good
SALE
299.00
Reg . 5.00 Boy Leg Panty Girdle - - - Sale 3.99
selection styles and colors.
Reg. 4.00 Brief Girdle - - - - - - - Sale 2.99
Special (one only)
%PRICE
Reg. 234 .95 Whirlpool Portable Dishwasher
Foundations Department - First Floor
.
2 cycles - avocado

SALE 1.00 YARD

derrauded Hughes.
In his deposition, Maheu
said: "In 1967 I receiV:ed a
handwrltten memo from Mr.
Hughes wherein Mr . Hughes
was asking me to make a
million doltar payoff to a
President of the United States
(Johnson) ."
Sources said Hughes wanood
to make the payment as part of
his effort to get the Atomic
Energy Commission (AEC) to
halt nuclear testing in Nevada.
Hughes oppo&lt;ed the testing lor
envi ronmental reasons and
because he feared the explosions physically would damage
his $400 million gambling and

•

e

- - --· -

LONG-DREssEs-lwo"ME'Ni---4
SKIRTS AND TOPS
BODYSHIRTS
'(;-;:~;ii---------------------·
1
Values from 3.00 to 5.49

I

He said the first request came elabora te on his depositlon.
in 1967 while Lyndon B. He said he !eared pretrial
Johnson was in office, the publicity on a number of legal
second in 1970 during Richard matters.
Nixon's administratlon.
Maheu and Hughes, -a long
The suggested $1 million wiU1 several others, are under
"payoff" to Nixon apparently indictment for stock manipula·
was unrelawd to the $100,000 tion in connection with the sale
contribution from Hughes to of Air West Airlines to Hughes
Nixon's close friend, Charles for a reported $90 million .
G. "Bebe" Rebozo , in 1969 and Additionally, Hu ghes and
1970. That contribution is being Maheu are locked in multlmilinvestigawd by the Senate lion dollar suits stemming
Watergate commltU.C and Spe- from Hughes' fir ing of Maheu.
cial Watergate Prosecutor · Maheu gave the lengthy
Leon Jaworski .
deposition to Hughes' lawyers
In an interview with UP! in in connection with his lawsuit
the office or his Las Vegas against Hughes and a counterattorney, Maheu refused to suit claiming th at Maheu

3 PAIR 1.89

j

omens rze

By CLAY F . RICHARDS
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) Howard Hughes wanted to
make a ''million dollar payoff
to a president of the Uniwd
States," according to sworn
testlmony from former top
Hughes alde Robert A. Maheu .
Maheu said he refused to
carry out the orders because he
was worried about Hughes'
desire to 11 0wn ... politicians at
all levels."
Maheu , a former FBI man
Hughes fired in 1970, said in a
1,505-page deposition t hat
Hughes lnstructed hlm at least
three tlmes to make a payment
of $1 million to two presidents.

ater repairs
near complete
HAROLD CARNAHAN
HAROLD CARNAHAN,
prominent dairyman of the
Racine area , h~s been
honored by the Ohlo
Federation of the Soil and
Water Conservation Service
as the oldest member lo
length or service of a district
service board In Ohio.
Carnahan has served lor Zll
of the 30 years that the Meigs
Soli and Water Conservation
District Board of Supervisors has been organized, IS
years as president. A gift of
engraved, footed crystal has
been sent here for delivery to
Mr. Carnahan, who Js
wloterlng In Florida.

A scuba diver has been
called in to make repairs
possible
in
Pomeroy's
waterworks . As a result,
Pomeroy's water problems
may be solved over the
weekend, Charles Legar,
president of the board of public
affairs, said today.

Legar staU!d that a valve
failed in the line that carries
water from the river to the
pumps. When this happened
the pumps, located in a pit,
were covered by water.
Ronnie Anderson, in a scuba
diving suit, went down in the
pit and managed to repair the

Resignation favored by
majority of executives
NEW YORK (UPI ) ·President Nixon should resign,
the majority of 300 corporate
chief executives queried by the
magazine Dun's Review said.
The February issue of the
·business magazine said nearly
all the 300 voted for Nixon in
1972 but a majority now want
him to quit.

· Thechiefreasongivenby the
corporate chiefs was that the
President "cannot regain the
confidence of the people so we
need a fresh start." A majority
of the executives are against
impeachment, fearing such
proceedings too exacerbating
on a nation already divided .

valve temporarily, permitting
employes to pump the water
from the pit so the pumps and
motors could be removed. The
motors are in Athens beillg
repaired and dried out. Legar
said that the pumps should be
back ln operation possibly
Saturday, but no later than
Sunday.
Middleport has been supplying water to Pomeroy since
Wednesday morning Legar
disclosed.
Residents are still asked to
conserve water. There are a lot
of people without water, Legar
said, especially those residing
on high rerrain.
Water is being hauled to a
tank to supply Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Salisbury School closed
Thursday and is closed today .
Studen Is and U!achers reported
for school Thursday but were
sent home before noon .

John Rice succeeding Blakeslee
John C. Rice, County ExU.nsion Agent, Agriculture, of
Muskingum County has been
recommended to the Board of
Trustees of Ohio State
University to fill the position or
County Extension Agent,
Agriculture, of Meigs County.
The recommendation was
made by the Meigs County
Extension Advisory Committee last week with Carl
Barnhill the chainnan.
Rice will be appointed to the
local position effective Feb. 15
to fill the position vacated by C.
E . Qlakeslee, County Extension Agent, Meigs County,
on January 31.
The new agent, a native of
Meigs County, son of Mr. and
Mrs. W. A. Rice or Tuppers
Plains is a graduate of OliveOrange High School, and

complered seven years as an
outstanding 4-H club member
in Meigs County. His principal
projects were in sheep and beef
cattle. He was the president or
the Meigs County Better
Livestock
Club
and
represented the county at both
Ohio Conservation Camp and
Ohio 4-H Club Congress .
Rice and his wife Anna have
tllree sons, Mark, 9; John, 5,
and David, 3. Mrs. Rice is a
former Muskingum County
home economics agent.
Rice says he is looking
forward with pleasure to
returning to his native home
and will be happy to work with
the people of Meigs County in
all phases of agriculture, 4-H
club
work,
resource
development and community
life.

was
appointed
Rice
Muskingum County 4-H agent
In JWJe 1965, and became
county extension agent three
years later.
Prior to joining the Extension Service, Rice was a
vocational agricultural teacher
at Frazeysburg High School six
years . He earned his
bachelor's degree in animal
science in 1957 and his master's
degree
in agricultural
education in 1973 from Ohio
State University.
Rice is a member of Zanesville Rotary Club, Joe Berg
Society, Muskingum County
United Fund and Red Cross.
He was presented to the
Meigs County Exrenslon Advisory Commltree by Charles
Knotts, Area Extensio n

Nixon about to
pay off taxes
CAMP DAVID, Md. (UP! ) President Nixon has just about
made up his mind to pay his
California state income taxes
and dlsputed back federal
income taxes, according to
White House aides.
Nixon was working today at
his moWJtaintop retreat on
final drafts or the State of the
Union address he will deliver to
Congress Wednesday night.
Nixon 's two tax taywers, H.
Chapman Rose and Kenneth
Gam mill , are preparing a
comprehensive new statement
on Nixon's taxes dealing with
both the stare and federa l income tax .
When the president made his
tax returns [or his first lour
years in office public laU! last
year, it was learned he had
paid no state income tax and
had taken a $567,000 deductlon
for
turning
his
vice
presidential papers over to the
National Archives. The legality
of both matters is now under
investigation by the HouseSenare Joint Committee on
InU!rnal Revenue Taxation.
Committee chairman Sen.
Russell Long , D-La. , said

• •
trace ongtns

of churches

Nixon almost certa inly will be
asked to pay hack federal
taxes, but Nixon's aides say he
wi ll announce his intention to
pay before th e committee
makes a decision .
The amount is estimated
roughly at $300,000. According
to his financial records, Nixon
has a net worth of about $1
milhon.
White House advisers believe
Nixon has been more hur t in
the popularity polls by the tax
que sti on tha n almo st any
Watergate allegation.

6 donate
to fund
The firs t six contributions
have been received in the new
lund drive of the Middleport
Fire Dept. to raise money to
purchase a new emergency
vehicle replacing the present
1965 model truck.
The first six contrlbutions
came from the Imperial'
Electric Co., Karl and Virginia
Owens, Charles Ohlinger, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Will, Sr.,
Jimmy Will and Bobby Joe
Lemley.
Others may se nd contributions to the department at
PO Box 1!4, Middleport.
Firemen are sb'essing that no
contribution is too small and all
donations
will
be
acknowledged. The firemen
request volWJteer solicitors to
regisrer to take part in a house
to house campaign and also are
encouraging organizations to
sponsor events with proceeds
marked for the truck lund .
Individuals and organizations
willing to help are asked to
contact Pew Kloes, 992-2406.
The entire area served by the
Middleport squad - Middleport, Salisbury Township,
Cheshire Village and Cheshire
Township - is asked to participate in the drive which
firemen hope will move rapldly
so that the new vehicle can be
ordered soon.

A program entitled, "Our
Local Religious Heritage," will
be presented by Mrs. Mae
JOHN RICE
Mora at a meeting of the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society Tuesday at I :30 p.m. at
Supervisor or Jackson. At- the Museum on Butrernut Ave.
U.nding in addition to those
Mrs . Mora has compiled her
mO¥Jtioned were Dorsey Jor- maU!rial on the early churches
dan , vice chainnan, Frances over the past three years. All
deceptively tells people they Spencer , Marta Guilkey,
Brown.
major denominations are inThe suit charges United have been named as out- Eleanor Thomas , Pansy cluded. Areas in her discussion
States Publlc Relations Ser- standing Ohioan through a Jordan, Joyce )!owen, W. L. are the time and method of
vices of Atlanta, Ga., with re sponsible nomination and Carr, Warren Pickens, John early organization, the location
creating false lmpressions of selection process.
Colwell, Earl Ingels, Roy of the early buildings, key
" There is no selection Miller, David Nease, Hazel
the publisher's size, afpersons in the on-going work,
filiations,
history
and process," said Brown. "This McKelvey and Blakeslee.
the roles of women and lay
outfit is flattering people all
responsibility.
·
persons in the early churches,
Brown said the firm over the' state by saying they
and men who were ordained to
are 'outstanding' and then
Christ's work !rom several
asking them to send $30 for a
congregations.
0
book with their name in it."
There will also be a time lor
The attorney general also
sharing memories and in·
charged the firm with falsely
DEER KILLED
fonnation on various churches
lmptyingitisa!!iliatedwiththe
A
175lb,
doe deer was killed
during the meeting, and
publishers of "Who's Who in
refreshments will be served. when it ran into the path of a
The nation, he said, depends America" and with the federal
The
meeting is open to the car driven by Everett L.
on petroleum for 46 pet. of its government.
Randall
.
D.
Snyder,
17
,
Schuler, 19, Rt. I, Middleport,
public.
energy needs and natural gas
Since Dec. 2.1, at least 10
Pomeroy,
suffered
fractures
of
on SR 124 around 7 p.m. Thursfor 32 pet. of them. careful Gallia countians have been
~·=::::::::::::::::::::f.(-:::;:;::,c
:
•
:
••.••
:;-;:;:::::::;::
day. The car had moderate
savings could mean enough named for selection In the the arm and leg in a traffic
EXTENDED OUTWOK
damage. Schuler was not in11
:55
p.m.
Thursaccident
at
petroleum to last until the year pubiication, Including ·eight
Mild Sunday through jured, the Sheriff's Dept. said.
day
on
Rt.
33,
n!ne
U.nths
of
a
2,1100 then it would be gone.
during the month of January.
Tuesday with chance of
Anderson said the key is to · Fewer numbers h3ve been mile north of Rt. 681.
According to the Gallia - showers daily. High tembegin developing other energy "nominated" in Meigs County.
Melgs Post State Highway peratures mostly lo the 50s
sources.' Batoolle, he said, Is
UNIT CALLED
Patrol, Snyder lost control of Sunday lowering Into the !Os
looking to coal because it is
Tuesday,
Lows
ln
the
lOs
RACINE
- The Racipe E-R
his
car,
which
ran
of!
the
right
estimated there Is enough coal
early
Sunday
and
lo
the
30s
squad was called Thursday at
side of the highway Into a
to last 600 years.
early
Tuesday.
oolephone
pole,
then
over
an
1:20 p.m. to ' the John Proffitt
He predicted the problem
Mostly sunny and mild
&amp;:::.-:.%.:.;s:
~
m:~~
.ii
··s.~~*
residence in Great Bend where
embankment
and
Into
a
fence.
would be the next few years today, high In the 40s. Partly
Mr.
Profiitt was dead on
LOC~L 'I;EMPS
until the Alaskan pipeline is cloudy tonight, low in upper 20s Snyder was taken to the Holzer
temperature in downtown arrival of the squad . The body
operating, until other sources and 30s . Saturday cloud y and Medical Center by the
Pomeroy
was . 34 degrees was taken to Ewing Funeral
Pomeroy
Emergency
Squad.
of energy are available.
chance of showers, high in 40s
at
11
a .m. with fog . ' home.1
Friday
He
ls
reported
in
lair
condition.
and low 50s .

•
f the
Depresston
• •
30S ' Jike a plCDIC
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
research scientist with Batrelle
Memorial Institute said Thursday night the present energy
crisis could make a depression
like the one of the 1930s "look
like a picnic."
Richard Anderson made the
comment during an address to
the Columbus Chaprer of the
American Institute of Ar chitecls.
.
"II is our contention that the
energy crisis is not a false
situation ," said Anderson .
Anderson said the United
States has been using more
petroleum than lt has been
finding since 1970.

Rep. Clarence E. Mlller (R.-Ohio ) of Lancaster, ma rked his
announcement Thursday as a ca ndldaU! for election to a !i!th
term in Congress with signs of disatisfaction over the Administration's handling of the petroleum price increases.
The Tenth District legislator, normally a strong Nixon
supporter , asked Energy Chief William Simon to immediately
begin a "thorough investigation into the rapid increases in
petroleum prices." Miller charged skyrocketing fuel prlces, oil
industry profits and alleged fuel stockpiling are lmposing the
greatest hardship on the consumer and are working against
efforts to resolve the energy shortage.
"Consumers are told that price increases are supposed to be
limited to the increase in the cost of production, yet we see in·
credible increases such as 100 per cent rise in the cost of propane
gas in six months," Miller said. ''How can such a jump in cost be
justified?"

Program will

Who's Who publisher is in court
TOLEDO (UP!) - A suit
seeking
a
temporary
restraining order to stop
alleged deceptive acts by
publishers of "Who's Who in
Ohio" was !iled in Lucas
County Common Pleas Court
here Thursday by stare Attorney General William J .

Miller rrould probe oil firms'
hefty petroleum price boosts

Youths limbs

fractured in

auto accident

Weather

'I

'\

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