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~ Ironton publisher stricken
IRONTON - The editor and
publisher of the Ironton
Tribune, Clifford L. Waller, 46,
of 1500 Karin Drive, was
pronounced dead on arrival
yesterday at 8 a .m. at
Lawrence County General
Hospital after being stricken ill
at home.
Funeral arrangements were
incomplete last night.
Waller was born Sept. 17,
1927 in Lawrence County.
Mle; graduation from Coal

Royalty method
is rescheduled
for heart fund .

MATT WEAVER. age II, a carrier for The Daily Sentinel
in Middleport, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Abe Grueser. He ts
in the sixth grade at Bradbury . Matt has had his route for one
year. He enjoys baseball and football and ~ves hts proftts
from his route. Matt has two brothers and astster.

Allotments for tobacco opened
The
Meigs
County
Agriculture Stabilization and
Conservation office is accepting requests from farmers
who wish to raise cigar leaf
tobacco in 1974.
Cigar leaf allotments will be
released from counties having

allotments, and farmers in
Meigs County may request
permission to raise the
released allotments.
All farm owners and
operators are eligible to make
an application. The amount of
allotments received in Meigs
County will then be allocated
among those filing an ap..
plication. Requests should be
received iii the county ASC
SUIT FILED
office
located in the Masonic
Bob Evans Hidden VaHey
Tef!Iple
building by March L
Ranch Inc., Rt. 2, Bidwell, has
filed a judgment suit in Gallia
County Common Pleas Court
against Thomas T. Potts of
Tax receipts up
Columbus. Plaintiff seeks
$3,537.74 plus six pet. interest
in Meigs county
from Nov. 26, 1973.
Retail sales tax receipts in
In other Common Pleas
Court news, Minnie E. Hum- Meigs County were up 53.76
phreys, 18, Vinton St ., percent for January and motor
Gallipolis, has filed a petition vehicle sales tax receipts were
seeking a divorce on grounds of up 12.53 percent over January,
gross neglect of duty and ex- 1973, according to the report of
treme cruelty from Paige A. Mrs. Gertrude Donahey, state
Humphreys, same address. treasurer.
Retail sales tax for January
They were married Aug . 29,
of
this year totaled $71,976.50
l946 and have three children,
compared
to receipts of
all emancipated.
$46,810.18 for January last
year, an increase of $25,166.32.
~les tax receipts on motor
vehicles in January, 1974,
totaled $20,651.33 compared to
$18,350.22
for January, last
Tues . thru Thurs.
Feb. 19-20-2 1-22
year, an increase of $2,301.11.

MEIGS THEATRE

The activity which raised the
greatest amount of money for
the Meigs County Heart Fund
last year - the selection of
"Royalty" - will be repealed
this year.
Three separate contests will
be held to determine the
winners with prizes to be
awarded in each. There will be
a queen of hearts event for
girls from grades nine through
12, a princess of hearts event
for girls of the seventh and
eighth grades, and a junior
princess contest for fourth,
fifth and sixth graders.
As many girls as possible are
asked to register by Monday
when Radio Day will be observed. A day-long broadcast
will be held that day
originating from the Pomeroy
Junior High School.
All interested girls are to
contact Mrs. James Soulsby at
992-2377 at once for details or
Mrs. Roger Abbott, 992.$41
after 5 p.m.
Residents of Meigs County
who have had heart surgery
also are invited to participate
in Radio Day. Anyone having
undergone surgery is asked to
contact Mrs. Soulsby .

Menke traded
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Veteran Cincinnati Reds infielder Dennis Menke has been
traded to the Houston Astros
for righthanded pitcher Pat
Darcy and another player to be
named later.
Menke, traded Monday,
originally went to Cincinnati
from Houston. He hit .190 for
the Reds last seasot• in a utility
role. Darcy had a &amp;-9 record
with Denver of the American
Association last season and an
earned run average of 3.56.

Grove High School, he served
in the Army Signal Corps. He
spent 14 months with the occupation forces in Japan and
was discharged from the army
as a staff sergeant.
In 1949, Waller joined the
dispJ8y advertising staff of the
Ironton Tribune. During his 25year career with the newspaper, he served as advertising
director and vice-president of
the board of directors of the
Ironton Newspapers Inc.
On March 17 1969, he was
named editor ~nd publisher.

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, Feb. l8)
Libby Adkins, Lisa Bloomer,
Charles Chapman, Callie
Cremeans, Normal Dean,
Joanne Ford, Molly Fosler,
Gladys Grove, Kevin Hawks,
Russell Jenkins, Velma
Johnson, Mrs. Herman Koby
and son, Mrs. Jerry Lowery
and son, Willie Lyons, Arthur
Morrison, Mrs. Herman
Mounts, Jr., and daughter,
Janet Pettus, James Riggs,
Audrey Rollins, Robyn Sheline,
Percy Snyder, David Stanley,
Geneva Vance, Elladene
Watson, Frank Westfall and
Nada Wolfe.
(BirlhB)
Mr. and Mrs. George Zespan,
daughter, Mason ; Mr . and
Mrs. Charles Hampton, a son,
Ewington; Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Wray, a son, Vinton;
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Stewart,
a daughter, Minersville.

a

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Harry
Vickers, Mason; Donna Smith,
Syracuse; Teresa Ho11and,
Cheshire; James Hemsley,
Pomeroy; James Morris,
Pomeroy; Ellsworth Dill,
Pomeroy; Eric Walker, Langsville; Charles Klein, III,
Langsville.
DISCHARGES - Virginia
Covert, William Fry, Emily
Kuhn, Jocelyn Zirkle, Harriett
Hyatt, Gale Cain.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES: Beatrice
Jenkins, Lakin; Robert
Warren, Gallipolis; Carl Settle,
Buffalo; Mrs. James Pashkie,
Jackson; Emma McCarty,
Henderson; Chris Angel, New
Haven; Tangy Perry, Leon;
Mrs. John Kauff, Mrs. Edward
Hughert, Point Pleasant;
Carlos Harri, Letart; Loraine
Bratcher, Hartford.

NOT OPEN

REPORT ERRED
COMING SOON

Fri. thru Tues .
Feb. 22-26

Walt Disney's
THAT OARN
CAT

It was erroneously reported

on the records of Meigs County
Court that Horace R. Abbott,
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, was fined in
court Friday on charges of
speeding.

BERRY'S WORLD

I High cQurt ·to settle

Waller's commitmimt to his
county was also ~easured by
his involvement m ctvtc affairs .
Waller was twice president
of the Ironton Junwr Chamber
of Commerce, a director of the
Ironton Cham~er of Commerce, and a dtrector of .the
Community Chest (now Umted
Way).
.
.
A member of the Kiwams
Club, Rotary Club and Lions
Club, he attended the Ftrst
Baptist Church in Ironton.
Slirviving him are his wtdow,
Pat Fra;&lt;er Waller; a son, Tun
Wa11er of Athens, Ohio; a
daughter, Miss Nickie Wa1ler,
at home; a sister, Mrs .
Evalena Thacker of Gallipolis,
and a half-brother , Floyd
Waller, Ironton .

ear ·supply
at 80 days
says

free press qu.estion
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Supreme Court agreed today to
decide if a Georgia law
prohibiting use of names of
rape victints in news stories
violates constitutional guarantrees of a free press.
The court will hear oral
arguments in the case next fall
or winter.
The Georgia Supreme Court
found that the stale legislature
struck a proper balance between free press rights and the
rights of personal privacy
when it passed the statute.
Martin Cohn, father of the 17year~ld rape victim, brought
civil suit seeking damages
against the Cox Broadcasling
Corp., owners of WSB-TV,
Atlanta, and Thomas Wasselln
a reporter for the station.
Cohn's daughter died Aug.

Balloonist is
dealers over Atlantic

DETROIT (UPI ) - The
gasoline .shortage scare has
left U. S. car dealers with an 8().
day supply of unsold cars- the
highest in history and enough
to last until early May even if
all auto plants were closed
until late April.
What that means for the
average buyer is the best deal
in a long time on standard-size
cars, the kind the automakers
say are built for Mom, Dad, a
couple of kids and their
luggage. On some of those
models, the auto plants have
already built enough to last
until July if sales don't pick up.
AJI modfls wouldn't be
available into May since the
hot-selling small ·Cars are in
extremely short supply. A 4().
day supply is considered low
and there are only enough
Vegas on hand to last 21 days
with Gremlin standing at '!I
days and Pinto 31 days.
Fully loaded standard - size
cars are selling for hundreds of
dollars Jess than the sticker
price for a basic model. Hotselling small cars, on the other
hand, are usually going out the
door for the full sticker price
and a low trade-in on the old
car.
"Right now, I can get a
customer any big car he wants
without any wait and usually
give him a price way below
what the sticker Says,'' said
Joe Girard, the salesman who
has sold more cars than any
other for the past eight years.

18, 1971, and six young men
were subsequently indicted for
murder and rape, although the
murder charges were later
dropped.
The girl's name was not
mentioned by any Atlanta
media unill Apri!IO, 1972, when
Wassell reported on the courtroom proceedings against the
suspects.
Wassell based his entire
news report on information
available in open court, and
then mentioned the girl's name
on the air.
The trial judge ruled Cohn
had standing to sue under the
criminal Jaw . The station
appealed to the stale supreme
court, which upheld the law's
constitutionallty but added that
Cohn could sue only under civil
statutes protecting privacy

Taft wants to
protect Jaworski
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R-Ohio,
may renew his efforts to obtain
added legal protection for
special Watergate prosecutor
Leon Jaworski, the senator
said Monday.
Taft said he was investigating the possibility of
trying to get Senate action on
his bill to set strict limits on
grounds for dismissal by the
While House. ·I( Jaworski attempts in coitrt to get tapes and
other documents refused him
by the White House and falls,
said Taft, "the last resort
would be through the Impeachment process in the

rather than the rape identification law.
Attorneys for WSB told the
u_ s. Supreme Court that
names of rape victims are
matters of public record and
subject to free choice whether
they are newsworthy. They
added that permitting the stale
legislature to determine the
news value of names or wha~
news is m the public mterest
was a dangerous precedent.

Watergate
(Continued from page I)
administration.
Having described the
election repeatedly as "a
referendum on the moral
bankruptcy of
Richard
Nixon," Vander Veen said his
victory showed clearly that
"Nixon should resign."
"People want a change," he
declared. "It's an expression of

outrage."
At his victory party, he was
frequently drowned out by
chants of "NixOn Must Go."
"We're sending a message to
Washington tonight," Vallder
Veen told hundreds of cheering
supporters. ''We're sending
that message to two different
addresses. One is to Congress.
The other is to 1600 Pennsyl-

HARRISBURG, Pa. (UP! )Balloonist Thomas L. Gatch
soared eastward across the
Atlantic Ocean toward Europe
today at speeds above 100 miles
per hour in an attempt to make
the first manned trans-Atlantic
balloon flight in history,
Gatch was not in contact with
vania."
the U. S. mainland and
Republicans had predicted
knowledge of his position
an easy victory, expecling
depended on commercial
Vander Laan, a former high
aircraft and land vessels which
school civic teacher, to pick up
he might contact by radio.
at least 55 per cent of the vote.
He was last picked up by
Vander Laan, who had
radar at John F. Kennedy
resigned from his leaderShip
Airport in New York at 2:44
post in the senate after winning
a.m., EDT, at which time he
the GOP primary Jan. 15,
was about 100 miles east - House."
declined to assess his defeat.
southeast of Bermuda,
Depicting himself as his own
PTA POSTPONED
traveling at speeds between 80
man throughout his campaign,
A meeting of the Salisbury he had kept his distance both
and 130 miles per hour at an
PTA scheduled for 7:30 p.m. from Watergate and Nixon.
altitude of 36,000 feet.
today has been postponed for
"I've had 15 good elections
one week due to the high rate of and one bad one," said Vander
TWO FINED
illness In the school. The Laan, who had outdistanced
SYRACUSE - Two defen- meeting will be the observance three opponents in his primary
dants fined in Syracuse Mayor of Founders Day.
win. "That's not a bad record."
Herman London's court
Monday nigh.t were Rickey
. Allen Wilt, Pomeroy, $15 and
costs for speeding, and Glen
Edwin Hudson, Syracuse, $100
(Continued from page I)
and costs and three. days
confinment for driving while pany officials said. It Is priced at $2,200.
Robert Stone, marketing director for the firm, said the
intoxicated. Both defendants
were cited to court by Police electric vehicle is designed as a second car for urban driving and
not as a competitor for internal combustion engine cars. Stone
Chief Milton Varian.
said he has been driving one for several weeks. "It's smog free
and silent and when I need a fill-up I just stick a plug in the wall,"
NOT ALONE
Stone
said. "I think it's the car of the future."
NEWARK, Ohio (UPI)
Ohio will not implement a
CINCINNATI - OLNER J. KELLER, SECRETARY of
gasoline rationing program by
itself, the state registrar of Health and Rehabilitation Services for Florida, Mo~day told the
motor vehicles said here Citizens Conunittee on Youth here juvenile delinquency will not
Monday, adding that the be solved with a get tough approach. Keller said the current
federal government should pay American correctional system isn't correcting anyone'' and . get
pay for state rationing tough approach will only serve to increase the problem,
"Tough policies attract the sadists of our society to prisons
programs.
as employes," Keller said. Keller suggested better results would
be obtained with respect and concern, but added he did not
ASK TOWED
Robert W. Vaughan, 53, believe in being permissive.
"With this type of approach (respect and concern) the kids
Ric bard P. Newell, manager Pomeroy, clerk, and Gladys
of the PoinTView Cable TV in Joan Rayburn, 42, Pomeroy, will respond properly," Keller said. "I don't think it's coddling if
you are effectively changing attitudes."
Point Pleasant, today an- clerk.
nounce«! that Paul Girard, who
has been serving as program
director, will assume the additional duties of office
manager, effective immediately, and that 1'om
Grimm has been named chief
SHOP WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM ·
technician and will bave the
:~~:
primary responsibility for
&amp;&lt;" ....
.,_
j'!~ ~--:-:maintaining the cable TV
,, : ;::··
/;.. ,.
systems operated by PoinTView.
Gerard, single, lives in
Middleport. Grimm is married
and resides in Mason with his
wife, Linda. PoinTView has
THE FRAGRANCE EVENT OF THE YEAR!
cable TV systems serving the
communities of Middleport,
Pomeroy and Gallipolis in Ohio
and Pt. Pleasant, Mason, New
Haven, Ravenswood and
Ripley in West Virginia.

News.

• •

in Briefs

Gerard named
office boss

for PoinTView

I

Our Favorite Word is

IIIII

•••••

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
.

COTY CELEBRATES:

Placon

/
@ 1974 by NEA. Inc.

"Gee dad! I know lhe truth about the tooth fairy .
What's the story on the fuel oil shortage?"

LOANS

Yes ... that's what we like

to say When you apply lor a loan at our bank .
If you need a persona l. home improve ment.
new car, o r ins tallmen t loan, try us . We want
to help .. .a nd our favorite word is "Yes" '

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
Auto Teller Window and Walk- Up Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 p. mPlTTSBUI~GH

l'Jlbens /4a~ional

Headquarters
..
For
Admiral
.

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Del!'lSit Insurance Co111oration

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

CALLED TWICE
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
called Monday at II :54 a.m. to
129 Locust St. for Juanita
Owens who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. At 12:08 a.m..
today lite unit went to the
Homer . Smith residence for
Teresa Smith, who was taken
to
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.

DONATIONS NEDED
SYRACUSE - Members of
the auxiliary of the Syracuse
Fire Dept. wiJJ solicit the
viiJage this week and possibly
next week for donations toward
their annual Easter project of
maktn~dy Easter eggs,
DIVORCE FILED
Josephine
G.
Tyree,
Pomeroy, has filed for a
divorce in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court from
Charles Tyree, Jr., Middleport,
on grounds of gross neglect of
duty.
·

In your favorite
·Coty fragrance!
Just$2 75
Limited Time Only!

200th birthday projects
proposed to commission
Twenty-five representatives
of Meigs County townships and
villages considered possible
projects in observance of the
nation's 200th birthday when
the Meigs County Bicentennial
Commission held its first
meeting Tuesday night at the
Meigs Museum in Pomeroy.
There were no definite
projects pinpointed for the
observance, but among the
suggestions
were
th e
publishing of a new Meigs
County History. An atlas,
staging a hidstorical drama ,
marking the Buckeye Trail
through Meigs County, historic
home tours, marking historical

sites, restoration of historical
locations, community cleanup,
monuments, beautification
projects, water improvements

and es tablishmen t of new special phase of the bicenparks.
tennial. She encouraged
It was agreed that the comm issi on members to
represen tatives attending who con tact groups to undertake
make up the commission , special ob5ervances and a
study the suggested · projects speakers' bureau will be set up
until the next meeting - set inside the commission and
March 19 - so that, perhaps, members of this group will
definite projects to be carried visit organizations to enout can be confirmed .
courage participation. Letters
Mrs . Jennifer Sheets, requesting participation will
president of the new com- also be sent.
mission, sa id, "Realistically,
A by-laws committee was
the cOmmission cannot carry established at Tuesday night's
out many major projects and session to draw up an unwill have to decide on one or complicated procedure to be
two.''
followed in selecting new
However, she said many of commission members and for
the suggested projects could be handling such details as
carried out by townships or financial operations. All
communities or even by commission members have
organizations that might have been named to serve only for
a particular interest in a 1974. Named to the committee

•

t\ ',\

'

',. , I"'' "

' '.

to map the by-laws were Mrs.
Sheets. C. E. Blakeslee, first
vice president; Gerald Powell,
second vice president, and
Mrs. Shirley Huston, who was
named secretary last night,
and Mrs. Elizabeth Hilferty
and Michael Gerlach .
The commission is without
financing at present. It was
agreed the organization will
need some funds to function.
John Fultz volunteered to
ask the Middleport American
Legion Post and ~' rank
Cleland, the Racine American
Legion Post, for money contributions . Representa tives·
will ask their local governing
bodies to make small dona lions
to the co,nmission to help meet
expenses in postage and other
(Continued on page 161

at y

Hearst
offers
food

,,

(

' ',
l

'

\

-

·N·
,,

COMMISSION OFFICERS - These are the officers of the new Meigs County Bicentennial
Commission which met Tuesday night at the Meigs Museum in Pomeroy the first time. Gerald
Powell, center, second vice president, holds a list of proposed projects which may be carried
out to mark the 2ooth birthday of the nation. On the left is Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, president, and
Mrs. Shirley Huston, right , is the secretary. The first vice president, C, E. Blakeslee was out of
town .

•

enttne

Schools closed

by flu epidemic
LANCASTER, Obto (UP!)
- County health offlctals
here Tuesday ordered all
public and non-public
schools In tbl• central Ohio
community closed until oext
Monday In an outbreak of
Influenza tbat left 2,244
students absent from classes
Tuesday.
Officials said they hoped
the five-day break from
school would allow the
111ness to run its course.
About 8,000 students are
eoroUed in the public school
system here.
..
bJ

•

Gasoline supplies zn Ohio
reduced by Simon-Nixon
ews .. in

Brief~

~

wzt c arges

Miss Turner
soloist with
Swiss radio

i

Two accidents
investigated

Four fined in
mayor's court

Otance to

act, help
is offered

Meigs county jail

Elegant, long-lastmg llacdns
in Emeraude , L'Aimant and
L'O ri gan. Boxed lor gilt-giving.

Elberfelds
In Pomeroy

DemOcrat committee will meet

COSMETICS DEPARTMENT, SECOND FLOOR
,_
.

r

'

occasion.

No Reprisals
But there was no immediate
Devoted To The Interest&amp; Of The Meig!·Mason Area
word from the kidnapers who
took the girl from her Berkeley
apartment two weeks ago.
Hearst, appearing before a
VOL XXV NO. 217
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1974
PHONE 992-2156
TEN CENTS
horde of reporters and television news cameras outside the
family home, announced he
had picked A. Ludlow Kramer,
secretary of state for Washington, to set up a program
modeled on one successful in
that state after mass layoffs by
Boeing Co.
The publisher said he would
be "eternally grateful" to six
activist organizations approved by the SLA who would
act as a sort of "executive
committee" over the handout
starting Friday.
-----:w.~:~:;,::::~::::::~:&lt;»:l:'&lt;&lt;W.w.w.-,_:~:&gt;:::::::c;.~w.l
He promised no reprisals
against the "coalition."
Kramer,
a
liberal
Republican elected three times
as secretary of said, said the
BYUPI
"
food distribution centers would
WASHINGTON -NEVER RECAPTURING THE spotlight
be determined by the coalition
it held last swnmer, the Senate Watergate committee apparently
is nearing the end of its existence. The committee voted 5-l
RUTLAND
Marilyn and called for 1,000 volunteers.
WASHINGTON (Up!)- Energy Chief William
Help For All
Monday to end the public hearings that began last May 17 in the
Turner, daughter of Mr. and
E. Simon has ordered an "emergency injection" of Mrs. Wayne Turner of Rutland,
" We will buy our fo od
dazzle of national television. Its staff will appeal a ruling by U. S.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - ,State
wholesale,
as cheap as we
District Court Judge Gerhard A. Gesell denying the committee
political
activity.
gasoline
for
20
of
the
hardest-hit
states.
Simon
also
has- been named contralto
Sen. Michael J. Maloney, Rcan,"
he
said.
"We will seek
access to President Nixon 's Watergate tape recordings, and will
"This blatant disregard for said those s tates scheduled to lose gasoline, which soloist with the Swiss Radio of
Cincinnati, said today Gov. Ohio
Civil
Service
Law,
the
donations.
We
will
seck free
work on the final report due May 28.
Lugano, Switze~land from
John J. Gilligan has been using misuse of public funds involved inclues Ohio, will remain on the reduction list.
warehouses and trucks."
Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr., D.N.C., Tuesday held open the
17 state employes, 10 of them in the payment of the advance
Ohio will have its allocation cutback by two per where she is heard regularly
A newsman asked Kramer :
"small possibility" that hearings might be resumed if new
under Civil Service, since last men and use of public cent. "Those states that were scheduled to lose by Swiss and Italian listeners
"What kind of standards will
developments warrant. This appeared doubtful. "The committee
August to act as "advance automobiles demand that the gasoline of up to 2 per cent on Feb. 9 will not be as soloist with the orchestra you set up~"
believes it should be careful not to interfere unduly with the
men" for his political strips auditor of Stale and other required to give up any more gasoline than has and chorus.
"We don't have time for
ongoing impeaclunent process in the House Judiciary Conunittee
Among the most recent
throughout Ohio,
appropriate agencies in- a lready been requested under the terms of the Feb. 9 music performed are Bach's standards, sir, we want to feed
or the criminal cases which will soon be prosecuted by the
Maloney, who said his in- vestigate and report to the request," said Simon.
special prosecutor, on which the attention of the country appears
" Magnificat", Handel 's people," Kramer replied.
formation
came
from
a
study
people
of
Ohio,"
Maloney
said.
" And if people come in and
now to be focused, '' Ervin said in a statement.
prompted by an anonymous
Thesenator said Gilligan has
Mler meeting with President within 30 days after approval "Hercules," and Mogart's say they need help, we will give
David Penilenle.
frono
a been " hiding" staff employes Nixon at the White House by both houses.
NEW YORK - ATTORNEYS FOR FORMER Nixon cabinet memorandum
Miss Turner, who has lived in them help."
"Those who demagogue the
"disgusted
Democrat,"
said
on
the
payrolls
of
other.
Tuesday,
Simon
said
the
extra
Russell Means, a leader of
members John N. Mitchell and Maurice Stans asked Tuesday
chant of 'no rationing fail to Europe for the past 10 years, · the
the
employes
and
their
coordepartments
and
agencies.
allocation
would
increase
American
Indian
that the trial be moved out of New York, arguing that adverse
understand that people would has performed in most
dinator,
Rupert
F
.
Ruppert,
He
said
although
Gilligan
gasoline
supplies
by
5
per
cent
Movement (AIM ), confirmpublicity has biased the Joeal populace. But U. S. District Judge
were paid a total $216,097.
had promised to limit his in IDol the stales and 2 per cent far prefer rationing to European countries, and is ed
tha t
"tentative
Lee Parsons Gagliardi said, "I think we'll have to find out by
behaving like animals at the espectally known to Italian
employes
traveled
"These
personal
staff
to
39
he
now
has
in
.~he
others.
.
agreement"
had
been
reached
interroga lion of the jury."
gas pump," Weicker said.
audiences, where she has sung
the
stale
on
taxpayers'
time,
at
least
87
persons
serving
his
!he
Prestdent
dtrecled
me
Former Attorney General Mitchell, 60, and former ComStmon said the "emergency at the Opera of Genoa, Opera of after an afternoon meeting at
merce Secretary Stans, 65, who ran Nixon's presidential cam- driving state-owned cars," "personal political needs, as . to ftndway.~ to.cut down these injection" of gasoline for 20 Florence, and the "Piccola the Airport Hilton Hotel with
two leather jacketed Indians
paigns in 1968 and 1972, are accused of exchanging government Maloney said. "They are in- well as the needs of his office." long lmes: Sunon satd, ex- stale would he made during the Scala" of Milan.
plainmg his order.
structed
in
their
travels
to
use
the doors of the
guarding
favors for a $200,000 donation from financier Robert L. Vesco,
remaining dsys of this month
Italian critics who have conference room.
Meanwhile,
the
Senate,
after
so-called
'cover'
license
plates
now a fugitive. The two ex-eabinet members are each accused of
almost two month's delay, and would reduce service praised her contralto voice,
to conceal state ownership of
The coalition included AIM,
10 counts of perjury, conspiracy and obstruction of justice and
Tuesday passed the emergency station lines "within a matter have called her "a remarkable the Glide Memorial Methodist
the
cars.
could get up to 50 years in prison each if convicted.
artist, with wann deep con- Church, Black Teachers Ca uenergy bill which, among other of days. ''
Maloney said six of the 17
receiving
a
5
per
cent
States
tralto tones, and with a cus, Nairobi College of East
things, would authorize PresiWASffiNGTON - SECRETARY OF STATE Henry A. employes are under classified
increase
in
gasoline
allocations
.
of lechnlcal resources Palo Alto, the United Prisoners
richness
dent Nixon to impose national
Kissinger's trip to the Middle East next week to try to get Israel civil service. He said Ohio's
are
Alabama,
Arizona,
and refined sensibility."
and Syria to begin military disengagement talks presents the civil service law prohibits
The Meigs County Sheriff's gasoline rationing. Nixon has
Union and the National
New
Georgia,
Nevada
,
he
would
do
that
only
as
a
said
globe-trotting diplomat with his toughest task solar in that area. engagement in partisan Dept. investigated two auto
Welfare Rights organiMlion .
last resort. The bill now goes to Hampshire, New Jersey,
Diplomatic sources said President Nixon's decision to send
accidents early today .
Dennis Banks, an AIM leader
Oregon, Vermont, Virginia and
Kissinger out to the turbulent area so urgently-only a day after
At I a.m. on SR 143, Clifford the House.
on
trial with Means in Sl. Paul,
The prospect of rationing, if West Virginia .
he returns from a meeting with Latin American foreign
Whittington, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
Minn.,
in connection with the
Those getting 2 per cent
ministers in Mexico-represented acceptance of an Arab forbacked out of a private drive anything, increased with word
Wounded Knee uprising, came
more are Connecticut, Florida,
mula agreed upon in Algeria last week to try to move ahead with
onto the highway and into an from Saudi Arabian Foreign
here
after the federal trial
Illinois, Indiana, Maryland,
Four defendants were fined,
peacemaking in the area.
embankment, then apparently Minister Omar Sakkaf that it
judge
agreed to Hearst's
Massachusetts, Missouri, New
Foreign Ministers Ismail Fahmy of Egypt and Omar Sakkaf
left the scene. The incident is may be a long time before the York, Pennsylvania and Rhode one was a8sessed costs only, request to suspend their trial
and another forfeited bond in
Arab oil embargo against the
of Saudi Arabia never did disclose the "good news" they had told
still under investigation.
temporarily.
Island.
Middleport Mayor John
reporters tbey planned to present to Nixon during their meeting
Walter E. King, Harrison- United Stales is lifted.
Banks said tbat one condition
Simon said the extra alloca- Zerkle's Court Tuesday night.
Some 30 per cent of Ameriwith htm at the White House Tuesday. Nor did the United Stales
ville, was driving his pickup
of
the tentative agreement with
tion- 2 million barrels-will be
Fined were Robert M. Hearst was that "diplomatic
disclose exacUy what it was they had said. However, Sakkaf told
truck northwest on SR 143 at 2 ca's normal supply of crude oil made by drawiilg down the
Pooler, 27, Middleport, $100 immunity" be granted to
is imported, mostly from the
a news conference it was only the "first step" in a proposal,
Men and boys are wan led for a.m. when he went off the left Arab countries.
estimated
219
million
barrel
and
costs, three days con- participants in the coalition,
agreed to by Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Algeria and Syria, for
the spring musical, "Little side of the highway, over an
inventory
now
in
producers'
finement, driving whlle in- meaning they would be' ImWelcker Offers Bill
breaking the deadlock over the disengagement of Israeli and
Abner" to be presented at embankment, and into a creek.
tanks,
Producers
keep
storage
toxicated; Albert W. Fry, 51,
Sen,
Lowell
P.
Weicker,
RSyrian troops on the Golan front.
Meigs High School the latter King reportedly suffered no Conn., not content to wait for this inventory as a cushion Middlep&amp;rt, $150 and costs, mune from prosecution by Jaw
part of April or early in May, injuries, but he was cited for passage of the emergency against future contingencies, three days confinement, enforcement agencies inISRAEL SAID TODAY SECRETARY OF State Henry A.
according to Dwight Goins, driving while under the in- energy legislation, meanwhile, such as an expected increase in driving while intoxicated ; cluding the FBI. .
Kissinger expected to set the stage for troop pullback talks with
Hearst said he hoped the
fluence of alcohol.
Meigs Band Director.
introduced his own bill to make motoring in the spring and Larry Edwards, 20, Mid- program could feed 100,000
Syria during next week's Middle East peace mission.
The director of the musical,
(Continued on page 16)
gasoline rationing mandatory
dleport, .$15 and costs, no people a month for 12 months.
The Israeli national radio, quoting "knowledgeable senior
Charles Corder, is asking the
operator's license; Robert A.
observers" in Washington, said Kissinger hoped to get Syria to
He said the $500,000 he was
general public to play parts in
Foster, 49, Smithtown, N. Y., personally contributing was a
meet Israel's two deiJ)8nds for the start of talks-a list of POWs
B&amp;E
CONFESSED
the production.
$150 and costs, three days quarter of his total worth. A
and a promise of Red Cross visits.
Middleport Police Chief J . J.
A meeting is scheduled
confinement,
driving while Hearst family foundation was
Friday at 7 p.m. in the band Cremeans said today a
intoxicated, and $5 and costs, putting up $15 million.
breaking and entering oc·
room at the high school.
SSI signup hour is 10 on Friday
failure to stop after accident.
Kramer said the Washington
Anyone in the county in- curred at King Builder's
Bernice Ann Durst, 47, "Neighbor In Need" program
Slgntip day for Supplemental Marietta and Athens will be at terested in taking a part, either Supply, North Third Ave., in
Middleport, paid costs ·only for had gone on successfuJJy for
Security Income will be Friday the Center to assist those over in the play or doing art work, Middleport at 9 p.m. Monday.
failure to yield right of way. 3'h years.
beginning at 10 a.m. at the 65, blind and disabled in serving on committees, or Entry was made _through a
Karr
Construction
of
R.D.
plumbing,
heating
and
venEverett Lee Caldwell, 46,
Under the NIN program in
Senior Citizens Center in the completing applications, ·
stage crew, is urged to attend. rear door. Missing is $25 in Pomeroy was the low bidder on tilating, $34,'!11 and Roberts Middleport, forfeited $25 for
former Pomeroy Junior High
that
stale, he said, a needy
On the same day, volunteers
cash
and
other
items.
One
male
At present, 40 students at the
family of four gets· $6 worth of
School building.
to assist with the project will be high school are trying out for youth was apprehended today the general contract Tuesday Electric, Proctorville, $13,800, running a stop sign.
Representatlyes of the trained. Anyone interested in the musical. If the director Is atl:OO a.m. and has confessed. when the Meigs County electrical wQrk.
food a week at a reduced price.
DOUBLE .SALE
Other bids submitted were
Ad- the volunteer training is asked unable to cast needed male The incident is still under in- Commissioners for the second
Society
. Security
time opened bids to renovate by King Contractors, general
The Pomeroy ·Fire Departministration offices in both to be at the Center at 10.
parts (there are 20 to 25) the vestigation.
the Meigs County jail.
contract, $89,300 and Nor- ment will hold an auction on
UNIT CALLED
musical will have to be
Earlier bids called for about thwest Electric, $14,948.
March 2 at Pomeroy Village
The Middleport ER squad
dropped, Goins said.
u:::
$15,000 over the money
In other business the com- ' Hall. The Preceptot: Chapter of was called Tuesday at I: 11
Persons attending Friday
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
available . The commissioners missioners cancelled an ap.. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will p.m. for Dorothy Hannon, a
The Central Committee of central committee posts are
ChaDce of rain changing to
since then raised the estimated plication for a SEOEMS unit conduct a bake sale in con- medical patient, who was
the Meigs County Democratic invited to this meeting to "get night's meeting a•e asked to
enter and leave by the band snow on Friday and a 'chance
Party will hold a regular acquainted."
cost to remodel the jail from for Racine Village, since junction with the auction with taken to Veterans Memorial
·
room
door.
Those
who
cannot
of
,
rain
or
snow
Sunday.
$100,000
to $160,597.
meeting Thursday, at 7:31•, .•11.
Racine refused the unit. '
Wingett added that' plans will
proceeds going to the ftre Hospital.
attend
the
meeting
and
are
Highs In tbe 30s aod low 40s.
Bids sold Tuesday were to
at the Episcopal Parish House, be made for a campaign in the
Attending . were Robert department. Sorority members
LOCAL TEMPS
East Main St., Pomeroy,
Karr Construction, general Clark, Warden Ours and Henry are to ~ring their baked goods
primary election, and that two interested in participating are Lows In the 30s Friday
The temperature in downE . A. "Bud" Wingett, or three state candidates may asked to call Mr. Corder at the droppiDg to IS to 25 saturday contract, $67,700; Stockmeisler Wells, commissioners, and to village hall rather than to town Pomeroy at lla.m. today
high i!Chool. The nl"''ber Is 992- and Sunday.
chairman, said all the 42 at lend.
· Plumbing and · Heating , Martha Chambers, clerk . .
the junior high school .jJs an- was 40 degrees Ullder cloudy
3156:'
'
t
I
dem~a~ wHo ha"&lt;e filed for
11'111"111'~;;~'iii?PIA'IIIIIIIilllllllllllltiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!IJilll l Jacksoh, a combined bid for
nounced previously.
skies.

Karr to renovate

Once-a-year opportunity to
luxuriate in Coty's worldfamous fragrance s, al an
un believable low price'

By DONALD B. THACKREY
SAN FRANCISCO IUPI) Newspapermat. Randolph
Hearst met a deadline for his
kidnaped daughter 's life today
with a sweeping " People In
Need" project to feed 100,000
needy people free for a year.
The son of ultra-eonservative
William Rando lph Hearst
came up with an u·ltra liberal offer of a food
bank to be overseen by
militant radicals and directed
by a savvy Washin gton stale
expert on private we lfare
programs that work.
Today was the 2oth birthday
of Patricia Hearst .
Her father was right on
target time for the demands of
the terrori st Symbionese
Liberation Army for a display
by Tuesday of good faith that
might lead to her release.
The girl's mother, Catherine,
said she hoped Patty would be
released today on her birthday
and that she had a "pretty
bright dress" to wear for the

/• '

�.- .• ......

2- The Daily Sen tinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , ~-eb. 20, 1974

DR. LA WHENCE E.
LAMB

Stomach
•
exercises

··'

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR . LAMB - I had
Vl!'al hepatitis and d1dn 't listen
to my doctor . I had a daughter
to send through school , alone
and an ill mother. I am a
widow.
I never stopped long enough

to rest five minutes. In three
months I was taken to the
hospital unconscious and tox1c
with plenty of liver damage
and wrecked nerves.
Now I am on total disability,
my mother has passed away
and my last child married. I
never did drink, but I smoked
three packs of cigarettes a day
for 30 years. After I was left
alone, I would make a pot of
coffee and sit down with my
cigarettes and my pot of coffee.
I lighted one ciga rette off the
last one while I watched my
favorite T.V. programs, then I
would eat and smoke more for
hours .
One night I saw a religious
program on T.V., and I have
never smoked since, but I
gained 75 pounds. My doctor
put me on a diet, and I have lost
40 pounds, but I still don 't and
won 't smoke any more.
Now I have started a new life
at 55. The only exercise I can
take is to walk, so I walk a mile
a day and am losing weight.
My bad problem now is my
abdominal muscles. I can't he
on the floor and take exercise.
Do you know any thing I can
do while walking my mile that
will ti ghten my s tomach
muscles' I have lost inches
every place from my walkmg,
but don't kn ow any exe rcise I
can take standing up to help
my stomac h muscl es . My
dieting. my wa lkmg, my not
smokmg are worth all 1\ has
taken.
DEAR
READER
Congratulation s on a b1g im7
provcmenl in your life sty le. It
may save yo u a lot of trouble
later on. I hope you have also
cut down or eliminated that
coffee habit.
I'm not sure why you can't lie

COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - Ohio's
medical schools would be required to establish oompet1t1ve
family practice programs to

down on the floor to do exercises. You must lie down
some time. If you can he on
your back in bed you could do
exercises such as lifting the
legs up and down to strengthen
abdomina l muscles or do sit-up
exercises . If you do sit-up
exercises, try them with your
knees bent upward so you will
be using mostly your abdommal muscles. The s1t-up
exercises are good for the
upper abdomen. Even lifting
and lowering the head will
have some e!fect. Leg lifts are
good for the lower abdomen If
you are not strong enough to
lift both of them, you can lift
one leg at a time until you get
stronger .
You can also simply tighten
your abdominal muscles as
much as yo u can by forc1bly
pulhng in your muscles then
holding your stomach muscles
m that contracted positwn for
at least 30 seconds. Repeat this
exercise as of~n as you can
until you develop some muscle
tone.
You can also do the abdominal muscle tightening
exervise while standing up. If
you are able, you can bend over
and repeat the process by
mcreasing the number of these
you do and repeating them
several times a day, you will
soon be on the road to stronger
abdommal muscles and lose
inches off that waistline.
Send your questions to Dr.
Lamb, in 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 diverticulosis, send
50 cents to the same address
and ask for "Diverticulosis"
booklet.

The 21J .OOO members of the
Huttente sect now liv ing in
the Umted St ates an d Canada
share fewe r than 20 sur·
nam es .

House bill would require
Jamily doctor departments
eontmue

receivin g

state

support under legJs lat10n
passed Tuesday m the Ohio
House.
The House approved, 82-5,
and sent to the Senate a
measure appropria tmg $1
million to Oh1o's four operating
medical schools to subsidize a
family med1cme department
for fiscal 1975.
Although the bi-partiSan proposal calls fo r the money to
come from general reve nue
funds , the Off1ce of Budget and
Management warned the
money may n~t be avai lable m
1975.
An amendment to allow the
Board of Regents to determine
the source of funding was defeated on the House floor. Opponents claimed it might result
m medical schools having to
chop other departmental budgets to fund the required new
program.
Rep. Phale D. Hale, DColumbus, sponsor of th e
measure, told House members
the number of fam1ly
physicians in Ohio is declining
and special family programs
would encourage medical
students to enter the field
Galbraith Opposes Bill
Opposition to Hale's bill
came from Rep. John A.
Galbraith, R·Maumee, who
said the trend of medical
students is to enter specialized
areas.
"I'd rather see us encourage
group practices, which would
better serve the community,~~
Galbraith said.
Medical schools have opposed the bill for mandating
curriculum . The schools would
prefer the state to offer fun ds
as an incentive to create fam•ly
practi ce departments rather
than threaten to cut-off all
state subsidies.
In related action, the House
also passed 86-1, legislation allowing U.S. citizens to take
four years of medical school
training in a foreign country
but complete required years of
clinical work and internshiPS

at Oh io hospitals .
Ohioans In Mexico

C.o lled the "fifth pathway"
bv other st.ates who have
adopted ~ imi l ar licensmg
l ~gi sla tion , th·e bill Is !Hwed

fin ish their medical trainingone year of supervised clinical
work and a one-year internShip ," he sa id .
In other legislative developments :

specifi cally at !50 Ohioans
att endmg the Med ica l Scho.ol of
Guadalajara, MeXIco.
'll~ese students are required
to spend one yea r m socJal
serviCe in Mex ico, or pay $5,000

DRIVER - The Senate
unammously adopted Housepassed legislation allowing the
state to subsidize commercial
driver training for pupils
whose sc hedul es preclude
to recetv e a " title'' after four them from taking the co urse in
years of medical schoo l. But school.
the title - wh1ch under current
BUSES - The Senate
Ohio law is needed before a passed, 28-1, and sent to the
license can be granted - Is still House a bill permitting public
ma rked "void.''
boards of educahon to lease
"No a hen ts allowed to prac- buses to nonpublic schools for
tiee medJCmr m Mexico even if school-related activities.
he receives a "title" and
TRANSIT - Rep. James
American students receive no Mueller, D-Chesterland, introsubsidy from the Mexican gov- duced legislation to set up a
ernment." saul Hep Arthur R. transit authority for Cuyahoga,
Bowers, D"'teubenvlilc
Gea uga, Lake, Lorain and
" It costs $5.000 for the f1rst Summit coun ties.
vear and $4,000 lor each of the
GAS- Rep. Robert E . Netz~ext three years of schooling ley. R-Larua, offered a bill reSo the Mexican government qu irmg owners of 1970 or later
wtll not cl ose Its doors to Ohio model cars to remove any polstud ent s if we pass tht s lutiOn control devices which
leg islatwn ," Bowers sa1d.
cause their vehicles to burn
Complete Training: In Ohio
more gas.
"This bill would all ow these
Both chambers adjourned
students to come to OhiO and rmlll I :30 p.m. Wednesday.

M11rie Ui illdn .~ort
dies itt C;mlon
Mar ie Beach Wilk in.cwn ,
formerly of Me1gs County, died
Feb to at the Kinley Nursing
Horne in Canton. She was born
and reared at Bradbury and
attended the Bradbury Chu rc h
of Chnst. Mrs. Ailee Johnson,
Bradbury, a lung tmw fnend ,
a ttended sc rva;es at LouiSVIlle,
Ohw. Mrs . Wilkmson wa s a
fr iend and housekeeper for the
la te Sen . and Mrs Tom Jones
m Middleport many years~

CHOIR HAS PARTY
The youth choir of Trinity
Church had a party Monday
night followmg rehearsal for
singing a t the Sunday morn ing
service. Soft drmks, potato
ch1ps and sandwiches were
served.

Pomeroy funds standi.J:tg
at $156,789 January ·31
Pomeroy Village funds as of
Jan . 31 totaled $156,789.40
according to a report submitted to council Monday night
by Jane Walton, clerk .
In tlle active funds , receipts,
ex penditures and bala nce
respectively were : gene ral,
$7,509.77, $5,440.72, $20,968.80 ;
federal revenue shari ng,
$5,161, no ex penditures,
. $25,445 ; water well lm·
provernenl, $1,100, $1,500, no
balance; sewe r , $4,839.63,
$10 ,002.54 , $3,639.69; fire ,
$1 ,512.96, $267 .62, $3,964.50;
cemetery, $166.70, $269.21 ,
$421.76 ; street, $2,263.48,
$1,414 .69, $6,933.12 ; water
operating, $7,900.12, $7,891.09,
($1,280.86 ); guaranty meter ,
$125, $355.76, $5,274.96; water
improvement, no receipts, no
expenditures, $15.61; parking
meter, $1,757, no expenditures,
$23 ,392.30 ; utility , $2,925.23 ,
$990.49, $19,681.89; fire house,
no receipts,
$25,387.23,
$12,409.27. Total rece ipts,
expenditures and balance in all
acllve funds re spectively ,
$35,260. 89 ,
$53,519 .3 5,
$120,866.04.
Receipts, expenditures and
balance in the inactive funds
respectively, bond retirement,

$4,388.89, no expendi tures,
$31,691.35; sewer bond repair
.and Improvement, $650, no
expend itures, $3,584.26; special
street bona repair, $1177.77, oo
expenditures, $647.75. Total m
all funds , recei pts, expendi lures and balan ce
re s pec tively, $41,177 .55,
$53,519.35, $156,789.40.

Oass A tourney action
begins ·Thursday night

..
....._••
N o

~­

PARENTS VISITED
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Wilt of
Lancaster, were recent visitors
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Felix Alkire .

PANELI

Ci

For some Southern Valley
Athletic Conference teams, the
long road to Columbus could
end abruptly this weekend as
action gets underway in the
Class A cage tournament.
Thursday night, Eastern of
Meigs County, second place
winner of the SVAC, wiD battle
the Southwestern Highlanders

'

'

MADE EASY

.

,

"'
·. .

With Our Special

s::~··
=:=:

Cheny Plank

I1

;

Paneling

.95

.

4x8
SHEET

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTEDTO'IHE
1NTERFSl' OF
MEir..s-MASON AREA
CIIF.SI'ER L TANNEHD...L,
Eut.FA.
ROBERTHOEFUCH,
City F.dkcr
Published daily ncept Saturday by The
Ohio Valley PubliAhlng Company, 111
Court st., Pomeroy, Ohio, ~69. Business
OffiC@ Phone 992-2HI6. Editorial Phone 992-

"

HONEY ORCHARD

~~i::~~~~~-~~ . . . . . . . . . . 595
PALOMINO
MEADOW GREEN
VALLEY GOLD
WHITE GLACIER .......... ... ,...... ..

·"

695

~·

21~7

Second clau postage pa1d at Pomern)l,
Ohio.
National adve rtising represtntatlve
BottlneW-Gal.llgber. lnc., 12 East .t2nd St,
Nn.Yort.,NewYorll
&amp;abscrlptim rates: Deliver«! by carrter
where Bvailable 60 cents per week ; By
Motor Route where mrrl« service not
available One mooth, 1%.60. By mall In
Ohto and W. Va., One Year, $18; SU:
months , ~ $0; Three mon ths, $6.
Elsewhere $22.00 year , si1 months $ll.5(1,
tllret mooths, ts.5(1. &amp;ll:lscrlptlm pnce

lndlks Sunday 11mea-Sentinel

**********
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*
*

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

MASON, W. VA.

., '•

773-5554

. '" '

.
-

'"

Open 8 a .m .-S p.m Mon . thru Fr1 . Close at noon Saturday

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COMING UP

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
FEBRUARY 22 AND 23

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FABULOUS BARGAINS IN

.,

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

CollegeBaskefball Results
Bv United Press International.
E;nt
Providen ce 76 R I 73
Marist 10 2 Nyack 82
NMY . Mrtm 49 Cat hedra l 46
Ptymth St 88 Lyndn St 57
Bklyn Coli 64 N .Y Tech 60
Navy 89 Adelphi 62
Mt . Union l16Geneva 94
Wi lkes 68 Scranton 62

...
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'"

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St . Lawrence 87 Clarkson 69
Salem 80 Shepherd 77
Rochester U 108 Hamllton as
Merr imack 80 Clark I Mass . l 75
Babson 85 Barrington 71

Boston St . 74 Fitchburg 73
Curry 72 Eastern Nazaren e ti9

t

.

Midwest
Elmhur :.· · J. III. wesievan 71
Grace 89 . edarville 78

Southwest

...

Texas 75 Texas Tech 74
AJ"kansas 109 TCU 99
SMU 78 Baylor 70
Te:KaS A&amp;M 96 Rice 82

...

West
Creighton 83 UC -Irvine 52

I

••

Oenver82 RegiS69
Sante Fe 84 Western St . .49 .
Portland St . 82 Boise St 56
Westmont ~A Cal Lutheran 70
Point Lama 76 Occidental 68

ca reer high 23 rebounds and
19 points In the win over
Miami, then added 15 points
victor)' over
Wt•stcrn
Michigan.
Green is averaging 10.8
points per game and is sixth

in the league in free throw
shooting with a .158 clip.
=·m·!!:::~=-~~:;:~;::::,;:::::;:;;;:;:::::o:a:::;:;:.:·:::.:-:-:-:-

Federal Hocking and Athens
game of the Me1gs Jum or H1gh
basketball tournament Thursday aftern oon, as the Lancers
defeated the Marauders, 43-40
m a nip and tuck ga me
Tuesday evening while th e
Bullpups
defeated
the
Gallipolis Blue Devils 40-33.
The Maraud ers of Marv in
McKelvy, ahead by as much as
eight points in the final stanza,
turned the ball over severa l
times against a tight Federal
Hocking press, and miSsed a
chance to lie at the end when a
shot rolled off the rim.
The score wa s tied at 14-a ll
after the firs t period with FH
movi ng out to a slim 25·23 lead
at intermission.
The Mara uders outscored
the Little Lancers 10-4 'in the
third frame to take a 33-29 lea d
before going ahead by as much
as eight in tha t final quarter.
J ay Harri s led Federal

Pomerox.

Last year th e leag ue
consisted of 8 teams . th.: ...

Pomeroy Phlllies, the
Pomeroy A's, En ste rn 1
Racine, the Middloporl
Am ertca ns 1 Syra c use,
Middleport A and Rutland.
This season a much larger
league

Js

ex per ted .

Representatives of all new
Meigs teams from nearby
areas should also be a! the
meeting.

ROSCOE WORD SIGNS
NEW YORK (UP!) - Defensive back Roscoe Word of
Jackson Slate has signed with
the New York Jets of the
National Football Leag ue .
Word, who led the natwn in
kickoff returns as a collegwn
last season, was tbe Jets' No .1
draft cho1ce.

radio s tati on WHK will
broadcast the Browns football
games for

Ute

next

three

seasons. WHK has broadcast
the Browns' games since 1968
and is the originating station
for a regional network of over
40 stations in Ohio a nd Western
Pennsylvania that carry the
contests.

LAY-AWAY
SH OP EARLY WHI LE
QUAN TITIES lAST

·BUDGET BOOSTERS
Don't Let Any Gross Grow Under
Your Feel . Save On This One Nowl

MODEl
G0 / 420

REG .

65

•8 .47

Minford 60 Portsmouth North

west 54

Shenandoah 72 M adison 46
Ca ldw ell 70 Beallsville 58
Bellatr e S t. John 101 Jewe tt .
Sc io 70
M inford 60 Northwe st 54
R1ver View 73 Cl aymont 57
North Gallia 84 Kyger Cr eek 54
Chi ll iCOthe 58 Newark 51
Barnesville 65 St . Cl airSv ille 61
Granville 88 Lick ing Heights 57
Union Local 80 Meadowbrook

58.99

1
I IU ' n
l rJ.v

lu i lj lll rfilt IIHJW ('I u l ll
p •r r r•l ! fHIS u ll th ~
1 •.., yu u '•' 'f..' lrr! re , o nd 11 S
fu l l y • ' IU• pj K:d wr t h l!ll pur turrt
•,(d •·lt l••r rl11 r1., lu o
Pow&lt;.· d u ll y
r I p • 1 11 i(ll ,f, · Br 1 rJCI ~ &amp; Str u tt o n l'n

66

Well svill e 103 Jefferson Un ion

ft .,,, ,

48

Martins Fer ry 70 Steub env ill e
61
Man s fi e ld S t
Pet e r 's 53
Wynford 51
Huntrngton
V i nson
64
Chesapeake 60
Clay 71 Rock H ill 30

DANIELEWICZ SIGNS
EAST LANSING, Mich.
(UP!) - Mike Danielewicz, a
wide receiver from Michigan
State University, has signed a
contract with the Detroit
Wheels of the new World
Football League. The 6-foot,
180-pound Danielewicz, the
third player to put his name on
a contract with the Wheels,
reportedly signed for $16,000.

, ••

77c

Reg•

DOUBLE
KNIT

I

'4995

POUNO

Mo lted n 11 lk b cdl s pe nr 1ut
n on pm~ tls do u·
b led1ppr ·tl p f• ( rrl uts, m o re '

dvs tc rs,

C'(JS y to j ,,I,.. C u perled r n k 1• 111 o rw of th ese
cup jl l lrl ~ l'lOII ~ tre k rc fl or l '' G'ln le rr o r rl]( r~ es

l ci&lt;,O nr

DELUXE CRIB AND YARD
ALSO PORTABLE CRIB- TOTE-A-CRIB
Folds
Compactly
to 6' Wide

St~ched

Warp
Resistant

Size 10.18

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2" Lucile
Casters

Reg. '7.99

2 Dr. Sedan . 6 cyl., std. shift.

t:om position
Floor

NOW
ONLY

REGULAR

'29.99

Sta .- Wagon. Small V-8, auto . trans .

See Fred Blaettnar, Danny Thompson,

4l"x26"

or Keith Goble

Keith Goble Ford, Inc.

u p C(I'&gt;y too f cmgf'llrH', (. n l &lt;f &lt;lll l fA •.. ocultO

DuPonl s H!'9• 5le red JM lor •h non shrk lm1shes

Crease

'2195

1965 OLDS "F85"- - - - -'195

ALUMINUM BUNDI CAKE PANS
WIIH 71110rt"II COATING
REG.

Washable

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Y' ' "l$ O f SC I VIC\..',

'&gt; il lrl ' J &lt;, rr ln lu '.t h e r&lt;.

'2 .99

9!r

1969 PLYMOUTH FURY 11 - - - '795

W• ll gr v"

l ' u •r rtv w

MOUNTAIN OF CANDY

'2395

Dr. Sedan . V-8, 4 dr., auto . trans.

(j 11 •

'Jr1

c 1. ·

Work•lavlng Grass Catcher

2 Dr. hardtop, 318 cu . in V-8 engine. auto. trans.
Extra sharp. Power steering .

1970 FORD MAVERICK -

KIT

l&lt; nd O&lt; crocl 1e t 0 11 of g hnn rr • o lC
o f our nwny ru orn· l;r rg ht • 111tly
co lor C0111bos DuPont s m C~d,.nc
wo ~ l wblc Orion 'Y
m o kcs on
of g hon Cl b uu l J5 !1 6 0 111 ci1 CS.

REG.

2 dr. H. T.. very low mileage'. Like new condition .

I

BROWNS BROADCAST
CLEVE LAND (UP!)
Clevela nd Browns owner Art
Mod ell and Milt on Maltz,
president of Malrile Broa dcas tin g announ ced Tue!lday

\

The Meigs Pony League
will hold Its first meeting
Monday, Feb. 25, •I 7:30
p.m. at Village Hnl! iu

S1

1971 LINOOLN MADi Ill

I

I.

Meigs and Ga llipolis w1ll
meet Thursday at 4:30 in the
consola tion rou nd, with the
Athen s - Federal Hock ing
championship ma tch slated to
begm at 5:45 p.m

meet Monday

quarter in a come back led by

Meigs, Gallia defeated
will meet in the championship

Pony League to

CASH, CHARGE,

.One local owner . Low mileage, 4 cyl economy.
Nice.

4

c hampions hip ga me of the firs t

an nual Eastern Junior High Eag les Joe Kuhn and Eugene
Invit a tional
Basketba ll Johnson.
~uurnament.
With 14 second::; rernaming in
This was the result Tuesday the game, the Tornados led by
evening when the Tornados a poin t at 31-:JO when Southern
held back a surpns ing Eastern m1sscd the front end of a onesquad, 32-30, and Waterloo and-one and Kuhn drove the
cru s hed Hio Grande of length of the floor but cou ldn 't
Gallipolis 41 -20 1n semifmal get a shot off. Southern was
action at the Eastern H1gh then fouled w1U1 a second
Gym.
remninlng, and the fir st free
In Tue::;day 's opener, the throw went m to ice the vactory .
Tornados of John Dudding led
The Tornados led at all the
wlustle stops, 4-0, 15-12 and 2120, paced by the outside
shooting of Joe Sayre who hit
five field goa ls and five free
Hockmg , pourmg m I ~ poin ts, throws for 15 point,;. The
wh1le Kelly Wmebrenner h1t 14 Eag les were led by Kuhn with
for the Marauders, followed by 13 point.s.
Greg Wille with 10, Gene · In the evem ng's finale, the
Ha! lcy with 8, Chuck ~·ollr od Waterloo Rockets of James
with 6 and Brent Stanley with 2. Bye rs were neve r really
In Tuesday's other game, the con tested, jumpmg out to a 10-4
Blue Devils led most of the firs t first quarter lead, ex tendmg 1t
ha lf, taking a 14-8 first quarter each quar ter , 20-10 at half and
lea d, and holdmg the uppe1· 27-16 after three periods.
lwnd at the half, 21-18.
P. Moore led the Rockets ,
But the Bullpups outscored pump mg 1n e~ght field goat,;
the GAHS lads, 14-Q in the th1rd and five free throws for 21
frame to ta ke a 32-27 lea d going poin t,;, while Grigsby added 14.
mlo the fm al frame.
Jones hit for 12 poinl• for the
Jagers led Athens w1Lh 10 Ga lila cagers of Gary Atkins .
point,;, while Wall 's to were
The Waterloo - Sou thern
tops for Ga llipoliS
ga me Saturday afternoon will
Other Gal hpolis scorers were beg1n al 1 p.m.
Dabney with 8, Graham 6,
Brown 4, Sayre 2, and Edelman

Pori Cl i nton 78 Ant hony Wayne

1971 DODGE "DiARGER"

Kv St. 80 Campbellsville 55

last week, was named today
as th e Mld-Amerkan Confe re nce Player of the Week.
Green, a 6-6 junior, had a

It will be Waterloo versus , almost tne en tire way, before
Sou thern for all the marbles being ca ught by the lads of
Sa turda y a ft ernoon in the An·h1c Rose late in the fwal

79

16
Massachusetts 89 vermont 61
St. Pete,.. •s 113 Boston U . 108
UT -Martin ~S Union (Tenn . ) 78
Wofford 85 Lander 61
Trnsvlvn 80 Union (K y .l7 2
Grg Mason 96 o .c Tchrs 87

··'

performances •

Toledo DeBI 1SS 73 Toledo Sar i

Less !han 112 price.

South
Louisville 106 Wich ita St. 90

'•.,.

Ohto Htgtl School
Scores
By United Press lnt ernatronal
Ashland 69 Bell ev u e 55
Ca nton Lincoln 64 Woo st er 53
Celtna 59 Marion Harding 48
Niles 75 Howland 64
Austtn town F itc h 89 Hubbard

Nasson 85 Gordon 84

·
New Hampshire 88 HawthornP

ob •J'l"t

:;:;

1972 VOLKSWAGEN "BUG"

Hartwick 90 Elmira 57

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•

Pickup Truck . Power steering, auto . trans .,
heavy duly nylon type !ires. Positive traction.

Rutgers 89 Connecticut 82
Colgate 83 Ithaca so

.

,!i!

Bill Philhps' Eagles are led by
6-4 Steve Dill, semor center.
The Highlanders' lead in g
rebounder and point maker has
been Uoyd Wood , 6-2 junior
center .
fhe winner of Thursday 's
game will mee t North Gallia
Saturday night at Meigs High
School. Friday night, Southern,
the top seeded te11m in the
tournament, will battle Kyger
Creek.
Southern finished with a
third place spot in the league
and 10-ll overall record . The
Tornados will be playing
without two of their top team
members , Bob Miller and
Norm Curfman. Miller suffered a leg injury against
North Gallia and has missed
the last five games. Curfman
has quit the squad.
Kyger Creek, one of the
area's hard-luck teams this
year, owns an overall 4-14
record.
The Bobcats are ca pable of
giving anyone trouble on a
given night. Clay Hudson, IHl
senior guard, is the club's top
offensive player.
Other scorers and reboun·
ders are John Rumley , 6-1
senior and Dave Wise, 5-10
junior. Joe Stidham, 6-2 junior
center, is becoming more of an
offensive threat lately.
North Gallia, coached by Jim
Foster, has been gaining
momentum toward the end of
the season.
The Pirates, coached by Jim
Foster, has been ga ining
momentum toward the end of
the season.
The Pirates, after a
horrendous start, have won
their last five games. Offensively, Greg James , 6-2
sophomore has become the
mainstay along with 5-10 senior
Tim Stout.
Dave Robinette and Keith

1972 DODGE % TON

Hofstra y9 Stony Brook 57

co~ca ptain

George Gret•u, who had two

outstanding

Weddington, both se mors,
handle the rebounding chores.
The tourn ame nt championship is slated March 2 at
Meigs High School.
The area 's top offensive club
and Southern Valley Athletic
Conference champs, Hannan
Trace, will play Fairland
Friday night m the Class A
Sectional a t Iron ton H1gh
School.
The Wildcats finish ed with
an outstanding 17-1 record .
Their only loss was a three
pom t loss to Coal Grove.
Coach Paul Dillon's Wildca ts
have been paced by the
shootmg of Mark Swain, 6-0
junior guard, John Lusher, 6-1
senior forward , Randy Halley,
5-10 senior guard , Wayne
Hesson and B11l Hall, 6-2
juniors and the rebounding of 65 senior center Don Wells.
Hannan Trace and Fairland
have both defeated one common opponent, Eastern, twice.
Coac h Ferrell Hesson's
Symmes Valley Vikings, 6-12
overall and 5-7 in the SV AC will
battle Coal Grove Saturday
night. The Hornets have a 12-4
record . The winner of the
Hannan Trace- Fairland game
will play Green Twp. on Feb.
28. The championship game is
slated Saturday, March 2.
All games start at 7:30p.m.

FABULOUS
FEBRUARY VALUES
Our Loss - - Your Gain

College Scores

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WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The photos of three formet &lt;'1 esidents grace one of the walls of Sen. Tom Eagleton's office, and
maybe it's sheer coincidence, then again maybe not, but the
place of honar is occupied by a vke president.
Stan "The Man" Musial, vice president of the St. Louis Cardinals, doesn't look the least bit out of place up there on tbe wall
flanked by such other long ball hitters as Harry S Truman, John
F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnsonm
'\Stan's a close friend of mine / ' sayd Eagleton, D·Mo. "I saw
him Saturday !light, and he was giving me a rundown on some of
the new fellows coming up with the Cardinals.
"He's very happy. He said to me 'I've got the greatest job in
the world.l'm vice ~resident with the Cardinals and don 't even
know what the job IS."
·
Tom Eagleton laughed.
He does that easily considering the experience he has been
through , the kind which might have turned some other men inward for life .
Denies Bitterness
A year-and-a-hall has passed since Sen. GeorgeS. McGovern,
D.S.D. chose him as his running mate, the Democratic vice
)H'esidential candidate, and then dropped him three weeks later
because it was discovered that he had been treated for a temporary mental problem.
" It was the most exciting and challenging three weeks of my
life," says Eagleton . "I (ion '\ regret the experience, but I
wouldn't be anxious to repeat it. Am I bitter over what happened? No. I never had any feelings, recrinunances or remorse.
I say now the same thing I said then, right after it happened.
"They asked me whether I'd be interested in some other job. I
said only one, the baseball commissionership . But please tell
Bowie Kuhn I'm not after his job," Eagleton laughed again.
The affable, 44-year-old Senator from Missouri has been
reared in sports.
His late father, Mark Eagleton, Sr., was a trial lawyer who
represented Musial and other cardinal players occasionally with
their endorsements and salary negotiations. He also was legal
adviser for former world heavyweight champion Gene Tunney
with whom he had served in tbe Marines. Tom Eagleton himself
put in two years as legal counsel for tbe cardinals.
"As a boy, I remember going to the ball games in St. Louis with
the Knot Hole Gang," says Eagleton." ") was in Sportsman's
Park the day Chet Iaabs hit two home runs to help the
Browns win their only pennant in 1944."
Heard From Tunney ·
- The senator also remembers his father helping Cardinal
players deal with the late Branch Rickey at contract time.
"Johnny Mize came to my dad one day with his contract after
he had led the league in home runs and runs batted in. He said
Mr. Rickey was trying to cut him $500 and he was flabbergasted.
"Rickey told him: 'John, yes, you led the league in home runs
and runs batted, but your average went down and you 're slowing
up in the field.' So Mize came to my dad and I think he wound up
with a $1,000 raise. My rough recollection was that his salary was
$17,000. If you lead the league in home runs and runs batted in
today, you get $117,000."
After Eagleton bad been dropped from the Democratic ticket,
he received 80,000 letters and wires within a llklay period.
Virtually all those who wrote and wired told him how well they
felt he had conducted himself.
Gene Tunnel was one of those who contacted Eagleton .
Likes Present Job
He wrote me this very warm personal letter telling me how
)H'oud he was at the way I handled myself under the enormous
strain and adversity and bow proud my father would've been,"
says Eagleton.
Before the older Eagleton died in the summer of 1970, he would
go to St. Petersburg,Fla., with him, never missing any year.
Now Tom Eagleton doesn't go any more. He's too busy here in
the Senate.
He really has no designs on the baseball commissionership.
What he's like to do, he says, is remain in the Senate.
"On my gravestone, I'd like it to be said of me, 'He was a
damn' good Senator,'" Tom Eagleton laughs. "I'll settle for
that."

Celtics, Knicks w1nners
The Celtic s downed the
Bucks 23-14 and the Knicks just
got by the Lakers 19-18
Tuesday in Meigs Grade School
intramural basketball at the
old Pomeroy junior high.
·~ Leading the Celtics were
Lonnie Mays with 14:'polnts,
and Ed Nottingham and Cliff
Kennedy with 5 a nd 4
respectively.
Don Icenhower had 6 for the
£l ucks, followed by Rick
Blaettnar with 4, and Danny
Carman and Charles Stone
w1th 2 each.
In the second game , Carman
led the Knicks with II points,
followed by Mays with 4 and
Kennedy and Icenhower with 2
each.
Frank Haggy's 10 points
paced the Lakers, with Steve
Kinzen, Steve Call , Mark
Atkins and Rick Blaettnar each
ge ttm g 2.

:-~=

Sport Parade

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X

To dav 's

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Intramural aellon will
continue Thursday night at the
old Pomeroy Junior High, with
a pair of games beginning at 7
p.m. and 8 p.m.

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Southern in title game

COLUMBUS I UPI) - Ohio
University

and nine rebounds in the

at Meigs High School.
Coach
Keith
Ca rter 's
Highlanders were at the bottom of the league standings
with Kyger Creek .
Eastern goes into tourney
action with an overall 9-9
record and 9-3 slate in the
SVAC. Southwestern finished 3-14 and 1-11 in the SVAC. Coach

~.f::::!:!;:;':';:;:;~;;;;;;:;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;;;;;.;o:•!;!~!;~;!;!:!;~!;!;!:!;!;!;!;!;!;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:::-:•:•:-; !:?.'

~

REGULAR 5.50

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3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 20, 1974

HOSPITALIZED
HARTFORD, W. Va . - Mrs .
carl H. Rairden (Beatrice),
Hartford, w.va. , is a patient at
Mercy Hospital, Columb:'IS•
Room 404. She is confined there
for treatment of injuries re·
ceived last October .

~

'

SAVE 110.00

Plastic
Teething Rails""
{ON ALL FOUR SIDES)

Silver Bridge Plaza - Both Gallipolis Stor~- Pt._Ple~sant Sto~e

MiddlePOrt. Ohib

•

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�.- .• ......

2- The Daily Sen tinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , ~-eb. 20, 1974

DR. LA WHENCE E.
LAMB

Stomach
•
exercises

··'

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR . LAMB - I had
Vl!'al hepatitis and d1dn 't listen
to my doctor . I had a daughter
to send through school , alone
and an ill mother. I am a
widow.
I never stopped long enough

to rest five minutes. In three
months I was taken to the
hospital unconscious and tox1c
with plenty of liver damage
and wrecked nerves.
Now I am on total disability,
my mother has passed away
and my last child married. I
never did drink, but I smoked
three packs of cigarettes a day
for 30 years. After I was left
alone, I would make a pot of
coffee and sit down with my
cigarettes and my pot of coffee.
I lighted one ciga rette off the
last one while I watched my
favorite T.V. programs, then I
would eat and smoke more for
hours .
One night I saw a religious
program on T.V., and I have
never smoked since, but I
gained 75 pounds. My doctor
put me on a diet, and I have lost
40 pounds, but I still don 't and
won 't smoke any more.
Now I have started a new life
at 55. The only exercise I can
take is to walk, so I walk a mile
a day and am losing weight.
My bad problem now is my
abdominal muscles. I can't he
on the floor and take exercise.
Do you know any thing I can
do while walking my mile that
will ti ghten my s tomach
muscles' I have lost inches
every place from my walkmg,
but don't kn ow any exe rcise I
can take standing up to help
my stomac h muscl es . My
dieting. my wa lkmg, my not
smokmg are worth all 1\ has
taken.
DEAR
READER
Congratulation s on a b1g im7
provcmenl in your life sty le. It
may save yo u a lot of trouble
later on. I hope you have also
cut down or eliminated that
coffee habit.
I'm not sure why you can't lie

COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - Ohio's
medical schools would be required to establish oompet1t1ve
family practice programs to

down on the floor to do exercises. You must lie down
some time. If you can he on
your back in bed you could do
exercises such as lifting the
legs up and down to strengthen
abdomina l muscles or do sit-up
exercises . If you do sit-up
exercises, try them with your
knees bent upward so you will
be using mostly your abdommal muscles. The s1t-up
exercises are good for the
upper abdomen. Even lifting
and lowering the head will
have some e!fect. Leg lifts are
good for the lower abdomen If
you are not strong enough to
lift both of them, you can lift
one leg at a time until you get
stronger .
You can also simply tighten
your abdominal muscles as
much as yo u can by forc1bly
pulhng in your muscles then
holding your stomach muscles
m that contracted positwn for
at least 30 seconds. Repeat this
exercise as of~n as you can
until you develop some muscle
tone.
You can also do the abdominal muscle tightening
exervise while standing up. If
you are able, you can bend over
and repeat the process by
mcreasing the number of these
you do and repeating them
several times a day, you will
soon be on the road to stronger
abdommal muscles and lose
inches off that waistline.
Send your questions to Dr.
Lamb, in 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 diverticulosis, send
50 cents to the same address
and ask for "Diverticulosis"
booklet.

The 21J .OOO members of the
Huttente sect now liv ing in
the Umted St ates an d Canada
share fewe r than 20 sur·
nam es .

House bill would require
Jamily doctor departments
eontmue

receivin g

state

support under legJs lat10n
passed Tuesday m the Ohio
House.
The House approved, 82-5,
and sent to the Senate a
measure appropria tmg $1
million to Oh1o's four operating
medical schools to subsidize a
family med1cme department
for fiscal 1975.
Although the bi-partiSan proposal calls fo r the money to
come from general reve nue
funds , the Off1ce of Budget and
Management warned the
money may n~t be avai lable m
1975.
An amendment to allow the
Board of Regents to determine
the source of funding was defeated on the House floor. Opponents claimed it might result
m medical schools having to
chop other departmental budgets to fund the required new
program.
Rep. Phale D. Hale, DColumbus, sponsor of th e
measure, told House members
the number of fam1ly
physicians in Ohio is declining
and special family programs
would encourage medical
students to enter the field
Galbraith Opposes Bill
Opposition to Hale's bill
came from Rep. John A.
Galbraith, R·Maumee, who
said the trend of medical
students is to enter specialized
areas.
"I'd rather see us encourage
group practices, which would
better serve the community,~~
Galbraith said.
Medical schools have opposed the bill for mandating
curriculum . The schools would
prefer the state to offer fun ds
as an incentive to create fam•ly
practi ce departments rather
than threaten to cut-off all
state subsidies.
In related action, the House
also passed 86-1, legislation allowing U.S. citizens to take
four years of medical school
training in a foreign country
but complete required years of
clinical work and internshiPS

at Oh io hospitals .
Ohioans In Mexico

C.o lled the "fifth pathway"
bv other st.ates who have
adopted ~ imi l ar licensmg
l ~gi sla tion , th·e bill Is !Hwed

fin ish their medical trainingone year of supervised clinical
work and a one-year internShip ," he sa id .
In other legislative developments :

specifi cally at !50 Ohioans
att endmg the Med ica l Scho.ol of
Guadalajara, MeXIco.
'll~ese students are required
to spend one yea r m socJal
serviCe in Mex ico, or pay $5,000

DRIVER - The Senate
unammously adopted Housepassed legislation allowing the
state to subsidize commercial
driver training for pupils
whose sc hedul es preclude
to recetv e a " title'' after four them from taking the co urse in
years of medical schoo l. But school.
the title - wh1ch under current
BUSES - The Senate
Ohio law is needed before a passed, 28-1, and sent to the
license can be granted - Is still House a bill permitting public
ma rked "void.''
boards of educahon to lease
"No a hen ts allowed to prac- buses to nonpublic schools for
tiee medJCmr m Mexico even if school-related activities.
he receives a "title" and
TRANSIT - Rep. James
American students receive no Mueller, D-Chesterland, introsubsidy from the Mexican gov- duced legislation to set up a
ernment." saul Hep Arthur R. transit authority for Cuyahoga,
Bowers, D"'teubenvlilc
Gea uga, Lake, Lorain and
" It costs $5.000 for the f1rst Summit coun ties.
vear and $4,000 lor each of the
GAS- Rep. Robert E . Netz~ext three years of schooling ley. R-Larua, offered a bill reSo the Mexican government qu irmg owners of 1970 or later
wtll not cl ose Its doors to Ohio model cars to remove any polstud ent s if we pass tht s lutiOn control devices which
leg islatwn ," Bowers sa1d.
cause their vehicles to burn
Complete Training: In Ohio
more gas.
"This bill would all ow these
Both chambers adjourned
students to come to OhiO and rmlll I :30 p.m. Wednesday.

M11rie Ui illdn .~ort
dies itt C;mlon
Mar ie Beach Wilk in.cwn ,
formerly of Me1gs County, died
Feb to at the Kinley Nursing
Horne in Canton. She was born
and reared at Bradbury and
attended the Bradbury Chu rc h
of Chnst. Mrs. Ailee Johnson,
Bradbury, a lung tmw fnend ,
a ttended sc rva;es at LouiSVIlle,
Ohw. Mrs . Wilkmson wa s a
fr iend and housekeeper for the
la te Sen . and Mrs Tom Jones
m Middleport many years~

CHOIR HAS PARTY
The youth choir of Trinity
Church had a party Monday
night followmg rehearsal for
singing a t the Sunday morn ing
service. Soft drmks, potato
ch1ps and sandwiches were
served.

Pomeroy funds standi.J:tg
at $156,789 January ·31
Pomeroy Village funds as of
Jan . 31 totaled $156,789.40
according to a report submitted to council Monday night
by Jane Walton, clerk .
In tlle active funds , receipts,
ex penditures and bala nce
respectively were : gene ral,
$7,509.77, $5,440.72, $20,968.80 ;
federal revenue shari ng,
$5,161, no ex penditures,
. $25,445 ; water well lm·
provernenl, $1,100, $1,500, no
balance; sewe r , $4,839.63,
$10 ,002.54 , $3,639.69; fire ,
$1 ,512.96, $267 .62, $3,964.50;
cemetery, $166.70, $269.21 ,
$421.76 ; street, $2,263.48,
$1,414 .69, $6,933.12 ; water
operating, $7,900.12, $7,891.09,
($1,280.86 ); guaranty meter ,
$125, $355.76, $5,274.96; water
improvement, no receipts, no
expenditures, $15.61; parking
meter, $1,757, no expenditures,
$23 ,392.30 ; utility , $2,925.23 ,
$990.49, $19,681.89; fire house,
no receipts,
$25,387.23,
$12,409.27. Total rece ipts,
expenditures and balance in all
acllve funds re spectively ,
$35,260. 89 ,
$53,519 .3 5,
$120,866.04.
Receipts, expenditures and
balance in the inactive funds
respectively, bond retirement,

$4,388.89, no expendi tures,
$31,691.35; sewer bond repair
.and Improvement, $650, no
expend itures, $3,584.26; special
street bona repair, $1177.77, oo
expenditures, $647.75. Total m
all funds , recei pts, expendi lures and balan ce
re s pec tively, $41,177 .55,
$53,519.35, $156,789.40.

Oass A tourney action
begins ·Thursday night

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N o

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PARENTS VISITED
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Wilt of
Lancaster, were recent visitors
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Felix Alkire .

PANELI

Ci

For some Southern Valley
Athletic Conference teams, the
long road to Columbus could
end abruptly this weekend as
action gets underway in the
Class A cage tournament.
Thursday night, Eastern of
Meigs County, second place
winner of the SVAC, wiD battle
the Southwestern Highlanders

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MADE EASY

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With Our Special

s::~··
=:=:

Cheny Plank

I1

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Paneling

.95

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4x8
SHEET

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTEDTO'IHE
1NTERFSl' OF
MEir..s-MASON AREA
CIIF.SI'ER L TANNEHD...L,
Eut.FA.
ROBERTHOEFUCH,
City F.dkcr
Published daily ncept Saturday by The
Ohio Valley PubliAhlng Company, 111
Court st., Pomeroy, Ohio, ~69. Business
OffiC@ Phone 992-2HI6. Editorial Phone 992-

"

HONEY ORCHARD

~~i::~~~~~-~~ . . . . . . . . . . 595
PALOMINO
MEADOW GREEN
VALLEY GOLD
WHITE GLACIER .......... ... ,...... ..

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695

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21~7

Second clau postage pa1d at Pomern)l,
Ohio.
National adve rtising represtntatlve
BottlneW-Gal.llgber. lnc., 12 East .t2nd St,
Nn.Yort.,NewYorll
&amp;abscrlptim rates: Deliver«! by carrter
where Bvailable 60 cents per week ; By
Motor Route where mrrl« service not
available One mooth, 1%.60. By mall In
Ohto and W. Va., One Year, $18; SU:
months , ~ $0; Three mon ths, $6.
Elsewhere $22.00 year , si1 months $ll.5(1,
tllret mooths, ts.5(1. &amp;ll:lscrlptlm pnce

lndlks Sunday 11mea-Sentinel

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*
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HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

MASON, W. VA.

., '•

773-5554

. '" '

.
-

'"

Open 8 a .m .-S p.m Mon . thru Fr1 . Close at noon Saturday

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COMING UP

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
FEBRUARY 22 AND 23

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FABULOUS BARGAINS IN

.,

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

CollegeBaskefball Results
Bv United Press International.
E;nt
Providen ce 76 R I 73
Marist 10 2 Nyack 82
NMY . Mrtm 49 Cat hedra l 46
Ptymth St 88 Lyndn St 57
Bklyn Coli 64 N .Y Tech 60
Navy 89 Adelphi 62
Mt . Union l16Geneva 94
Wi lkes 68 Scranton 62

...
,.r
'"

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St . Lawrence 87 Clarkson 69
Salem 80 Shepherd 77
Rochester U 108 Hamllton as
Merr imack 80 Clark I Mass . l 75
Babson 85 Barrington 71

Boston St . 74 Fitchburg 73
Curry 72 Eastern Nazaren e ti9

t

.

Midwest
Elmhur :.· · J. III. wesievan 71
Grace 89 . edarville 78

Southwest

...

Texas 75 Texas Tech 74
AJ"kansas 109 TCU 99
SMU 78 Baylor 70
Te:KaS A&amp;M 96 Rice 82

...

West
Creighton 83 UC -Irvine 52

I

••

Oenver82 RegiS69
Sante Fe 84 Western St . .49 .
Portland St . 82 Boise St 56
Westmont ~A Cal Lutheran 70
Point Lama 76 Occidental 68

ca reer high 23 rebounds and
19 points In the win over
Miami, then added 15 points
victor)' over
Wt•stcrn
Michigan.
Green is averaging 10.8
points per game and is sixth

in the league in free throw
shooting with a .158 clip.
=·m·!!:::~=-~~:;:~;::::,;:::::;:;;;:;:::::o:a:::;:;:.:·:::.:-:-:-:-

Federal Hocking and Athens
game of the Me1gs Jum or H1gh
basketball tournament Thursday aftern oon, as the Lancers
defeated the Marauders, 43-40
m a nip and tuck ga me
Tuesday evening while th e
Bullpups
defeated
the
Gallipolis Blue Devils 40-33.
The Maraud ers of Marv in
McKelvy, ahead by as much as
eight points in the final stanza,
turned the ball over severa l
times against a tight Federal
Hocking press, and miSsed a
chance to lie at the end when a
shot rolled off the rim.
The score wa s tied at 14-a ll
after the firs t period with FH
movi ng out to a slim 25·23 lead
at intermission.
The Mara uders outscored
the Little Lancers 10-4 'in the
third frame to take a 33-29 lea d
before going ahead by as much
as eight in tha t final quarter.
J ay Harri s led Federal

Pomerox.

Last year th e leag ue
consisted of 8 teams . th.: ...

Pomeroy Phlllies, the
Pomeroy A's, En ste rn 1
Racine, the Middloporl
Am ertca ns 1 Syra c use,
Middleport A and Rutland.
This season a much larger
league

Js

ex per ted .

Representatives of all new
Meigs teams from nearby
areas should also be a! the
meeting.

ROSCOE WORD SIGNS
NEW YORK (UP!) - Defensive back Roscoe Word of
Jackson Slate has signed with
the New York Jets of the
National Football Leag ue .
Word, who led the natwn in
kickoff returns as a collegwn
last season, was tbe Jets' No .1
draft cho1ce.

radio s tati on WHK will
broadcast the Browns football
games for

Ute

next

three

seasons. WHK has broadcast
the Browns' games since 1968
and is the originating station
for a regional network of over
40 stations in Ohio a nd Western
Pennsylvania that carry the
contests.

LAY-AWAY
SH OP EARLY WHI LE
QUAN TITIES lAST

·BUDGET BOOSTERS
Don't Let Any Gross Grow Under
Your Feel . Save On This One Nowl

MODEl
G0 / 420

REG .

65

•8 .47

Minford 60 Portsmouth North

west 54

Shenandoah 72 M adison 46
Ca ldw ell 70 Beallsville 58
Bellatr e S t. John 101 Jewe tt .
Sc io 70
M inford 60 Northwe st 54
R1ver View 73 Cl aymont 57
North Gallia 84 Kyger Cr eek 54
Chi ll iCOthe 58 Newark 51
Barnesville 65 St . Cl airSv ille 61
Granville 88 Lick ing Heights 57
Union Local 80 Meadowbrook

58.99

1
I IU ' n
l rJ.v

lu i lj lll rfilt IIHJW ('I u l ll
p •r r r•l ! fHIS u ll th ~
1 •.., yu u '•' 'f..' lrr! re , o nd 11 S
fu l l y • ' IU• pj K:d wr t h l!ll pur turrt
•,(d •·lt l••r rl11 r1., lu o
Pow&lt;.· d u ll y
r I p • 1 11 i(ll ,f, · Br 1 rJCI ~ &amp; Str u tt o n l'n

66

Well svill e 103 Jefferson Un ion

ft .,,, ,

48

Martins Fer ry 70 Steub env ill e
61
Man s fi e ld S t
Pet e r 's 53
Wynford 51
Huntrngton
V i nson
64
Chesapeake 60
Clay 71 Rock H ill 30

DANIELEWICZ SIGNS
EAST LANSING, Mich.
(UP!) - Mike Danielewicz, a
wide receiver from Michigan
State University, has signed a
contract with the Detroit
Wheels of the new World
Football League. The 6-foot,
180-pound Danielewicz, the
third player to put his name on
a contract with the Wheels,
reportedly signed for $16,000.

, ••

77c

Reg•

DOUBLE
KNIT

I

'4995

POUNO

Mo lted n 11 lk b cdl s pe nr 1ut
n on pm~ tls do u·
b led1ppr ·tl p f• ( rrl uts, m o re '

dvs tc rs,

C'(JS y to j ,,I,.. C u perled r n k 1• 111 o rw of th ese
cup jl l lrl ~ l'lOII ~ tre k rc fl or l '' G'ln le rr o r rl]( r~ es

l ci&lt;,O nr

DELUXE CRIB AND YARD
ALSO PORTABLE CRIB- TOTE-A-CRIB
Folds
Compactly
to 6' Wide

St~ched

Warp
Resistant

Size 10.18

- -'1495

2" Lucile
Casters

Reg. '7.99

2 Dr. Sedan . 6 cyl., std. shift.

t:om position
Floor

NOW
ONLY

REGULAR

'29.99

Sta .- Wagon. Small V-8, auto . trans .

See Fred Blaettnar, Danny Thompson,

4l"x26"

or Keith Goble

Keith Goble Ford, Inc.

u p C(I'&gt;y too f cmgf'llrH', (. n l &lt;f &lt;lll l fA •.. ocultO

DuPonl s H!'9• 5le red JM lor •h non shrk lm1shes

Crease

'2195

1965 OLDS "F85"- - - - -'195

ALUMINUM BUNDI CAKE PANS
WIIH 71110rt"II COATING
REG.

Washable

'

Y' ' "l$ O f SC I VIC\..',

'&gt; il lrl ' J &lt;, rr ln lu '.t h e r&lt;.

'2 .99

9!r

1969 PLYMOUTH FURY 11 - - - '795

W• ll gr v"

l ' u •r rtv w

MOUNTAIN OF CANDY

'2395

Dr. Sedan . V-8, 4 dr., auto . trans.

(j 11 •

'Jr1

c 1. ·

Work•lavlng Grass Catcher

2 Dr. hardtop, 318 cu . in V-8 engine. auto. trans.
Extra sharp. Power steering .

1970 FORD MAVERICK -

KIT

l&lt; nd O&lt; crocl 1e t 0 11 of g hnn rr • o lC
o f our nwny ru orn· l;r rg ht • 111tly
co lor C0111bos DuPont s m C~d,.nc
wo ~ l wblc Orion 'Y
m o kcs on
of g hon Cl b uu l J5 !1 6 0 111 ci1 CS.

REG.

2 dr. H. T.. very low mileage'. Like new condition .

I

BROWNS BROADCAST
CLEVE LAND (UP!)
Clevela nd Browns owner Art
Mod ell and Milt on Maltz,
president of Malrile Broa dcas tin g announ ced Tue!lday

\

The Meigs Pony League
will hold Its first meeting
Monday, Feb. 25, •I 7:30
p.m. at Village Hnl! iu

S1

1971 LINOOLN MADi Ill

I

I.

Meigs and Ga llipolis w1ll
meet Thursday at 4:30 in the
consola tion rou nd, with the
Athen s - Federal Hock ing
championship ma tch slated to
begm at 5:45 p.m

meet Monday

quarter in a come back led by

Meigs, Gallia defeated
will meet in the championship

Pony League to

CASH, CHARGE,

.One local owner . Low mileage, 4 cyl economy.
Nice.

4

c hampions hip ga me of the firs t

an nual Eastern Junior High Eag les Joe Kuhn and Eugene
Invit a tional
Basketba ll Johnson.
~uurnament.
With 14 second::; rernaming in
This was the result Tuesday the game, the Tornados led by
evening when the Tornados a poin t at 31-:JO when Southern
held back a surpns ing Eastern m1sscd the front end of a onesquad, 32-30, and Waterloo and-one and Kuhn drove the
cru s hed Hio Grande of length of the floor but cou ldn 't
Gallipolis 41 -20 1n semifmal get a shot off. Southern was
action at the Eastern H1gh then fouled w1U1 a second
Gym.
remninlng, and the fir st free
In Tue::;day 's opener, the throw went m to ice the vactory .
Tornados of John Dudding led
The Tornados led at all the
wlustle stops, 4-0, 15-12 and 2120, paced by the outside
shooting of Joe Sayre who hit
five field goa ls and five free
Hockmg , pourmg m I ~ poin ts, throws for 15 point,;. The
wh1le Kelly Wmebrenner h1t 14 Eag les were led by Kuhn with
for the Marauders, followed by 13 point.s.
Greg Wille with 10, Gene · In the evem ng's finale, the
Ha! lcy with 8, Chuck ~·ollr od Waterloo Rockets of James
with 6 and Brent Stanley with 2. Bye rs were neve r really
In Tuesday's other game, the con tested, jumpmg out to a 10-4
Blue Devils led most of the firs t first quarter lead, ex tendmg 1t
ha lf, taking a 14-8 first quarter each quar ter , 20-10 at half and
lea d, and holdmg the uppe1· 27-16 after three periods.
lwnd at the half, 21-18.
P. Moore led the Rockets ,
But the Bullpups outscored pump mg 1n e~ght field goat,;
the GAHS lads, 14-Q in the th1rd and five free throws for 21
frame to ta ke a 32-27 lea d going poin t,;, while Grigsby added 14.
mlo the fm al frame.
Jones hit for 12 poinl• for the
Jagers led Athens w1Lh 10 Ga lila cagers of Gary Atkins .
point,;, while Wall 's to were
The Waterloo - Sou thern
tops for Ga llipoliS
ga me Saturday afternoon will
Other Gal hpolis scorers were beg1n al 1 p.m.
Dabney with 8, Graham 6,
Brown 4, Sayre 2, and Edelman

Pori Cl i nton 78 Ant hony Wayne

1971 DODGE "DiARGER"

Kv St. 80 Campbellsville 55

last week, was named today
as th e Mld-Amerkan Confe re nce Player of the Week.
Green, a 6-6 junior, had a

It will be Waterloo versus , almost tne en tire way, before
Sou thern for all the marbles being ca ught by the lads of
Sa turda y a ft ernoon in the An·h1c Rose late in the fwal

79

16
Massachusetts 89 vermont 61
St. Pete,.. •s 113 Boston U . 108
UT -Martin ~S Union (Tenn . ) 78
Wofford 85 Lander 61
Trnsvlvn 80 Union (K y .l7 2
Grg Mason 96 o .c Tchrs 87

··'

performances •

Toledo DeBI 1SS 73 Toledo Sar i

Less !han 112 price.

South
Louisville 106 Wich ita St. 90

'•.,.

Ohto Htgtl School
Scores
By United Press lnt ernatronal
Ashland 69 Bell ev u e 55
Ca nton Lincoln 64 Woo st er 53
Celtna 59 Marion Harding 48
Niles 75 Howland 64
Austtn town F itc h 89 Hubbard

Nasson 85 Gordon 84

·
New Hampshire 88 HawthornP

ob •J'l"t

:;:;

1972 VOLKSWAGEN "BUG"

Hartwick 90 Elmira 57

--

•

Pickup Truck . Power steering, auto . trans .,
heavy duly nylon type !ires. Positive traction.

Rutgers 89 Connecticut 82
Colgate 83 Ithaca so

.

,!i!

Bill Philhps' Eagles are led by
6-4 Steve Dill, semor center.
The Highlanders' lead in g
rebounder and point maker has
been Uoyd Wood , 6-2 junior
center .
fhe winner of Thursday 's
game will mee t North Gallia
Saturday night at Meigs High
School. Friday night, Southern,
the top seeded te11m in the
tournament, will battle Kyger
Creek.
Southern finished with a
third place spot in the league
and 10-ll overall record . The
Tornados will be playing
without two of their top team
members , Bob Miller and
Norm Curfman. Miller suffered a leg injury against
North Gallia and has missed
the last five games. Curfman
has quit the squad.
Kyger Creek, one of the
area's hard-luck teams this
year, owns an overall 4-14
record.
The Bobcats are ca pable of
giving anyone trouble on a
given night. Clay Hudson, IHl
senior guard, is the club's top
offensive player.
Other scorers and reboun·
ders are John Rumley , 6-1
senior and Dave Wise, 5-10
junior. Joe Stidham, 6-2 junior
center, is becoming more of an
offensive threat lately.
North Gallia, coached by Jim
Foster, has been gaining
momentum toward the end of
the season.
The Pirates, coached by Jim
Foster, has been ga ining
momentum toward the end of
the season.
The Pirates, after a
horrendous start, have won
their last five games. Offensively, Greg James , 6-2
sophomore has become the
mainstay along with 5-10 senior
Tim Stout.
Dave Robinette and Keith

1972 DODGE % TON

Hofstra y9 Stony Brook 57

co~ca ptain

George Gret•u, who had two

outstanding

Weddington, both se mors,
handle the rebounding chores.
The tourn ame nt championship is slated March 2 at
Meigs High School.
The area 's top offensive club
and Southern Valley Athletic
Conference champs, Hannan
Trace, will play Fairland
Friday night m the Class A
Sectional a t Iron ton H1gh
School.
The Wildcats finish ed with
an outstanding 17-1 record .
Their only loss was a three
pom t loss to Coal Grove.
Coach Paul Dillon's Wildca ts
have been paced by the
shootmg of Mark Swain, 6-0
junior guard, John Lusher, 6-1
senior forward , Randy Halley,
5-10 senior guard , Wayne
Hesson and B11l Hall, 6-2
juniors and the rebounding of 65 senior center Don Wells.
Hannan Trace and Fairland
have both defeated one common opponent, Eastern, twice.
Coac h Ferrell Hesson's
Symmes Valley Vikings, 6-12
overall and 5-7 in the SV AC will
battle Coal Grove Saturday
night. The Hornets have a 12-4
record . The winner of the
Hannan Trace- Fairland game
will play Green Twp. on Feb.
28. The championship game is
slated Saturday, March 2.
All games start at 7:30p.m.

FABULOUS
FEBRUARY VALUES
Our Loss - - Your Gain

College Scores

·c

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:....:

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The photos of three formet &lt;'1 esidents grace one of the walls of Sen. Tom Eagleton's office, and
maybe it's sheer coincidence, then again maybe not, but the
place of honar is occupied by a vke president.
Stan "The Man" Musial, vice president of the St. Louis Cardinals, doesn't look the least bit out of place up there on tbe wall
flanked by such other long ball hitters as Harry S Truman, John
F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnsonm
'\Stan's a close friend of mine / ' sayd Eagleton, D·Mo. "I saw
him Saturday !light, and he was giving me a rundown on some of
the new fellows coming up with the Cardinals.
"He's very happy. He said to me 'I've got the greatest job in
the world.l'm vice ~resident with the Cardinals and don 't even
know what the job IS."
·
Tom Eagleton laughed.
He does that easily considering the experience he has been
through , the kind which might have turned some other men inward for life .
Denies Bitterness
A year-and-a-hall has passed since Sen. GeorgeS. McGovern,
D.S.D. chose him as his running mate, the Democratic vice
)H'esidential candidate, and then dropped him three weeks later
because it was discovered that he had been treated for a temporary mental problem.
" It was the most exciting and challenging three weeks of my
life," says Eagleton . "I (ion '\ regret the experience, but I
wouldn't be anxious to repeat it. Am I bitter over what happened? No. I never had any feelings, recrinunances or remorse.
I say now the same thing I said then, right after it happened.
"They asked me whether I'd be interested in some other job. I
said only one, the baseball commissionership . But please tell
Bowie Kuhn I'm not after his job," Eagleton laughed again.
The affable, 44-year-old Senator from Missouri has been
reared in sports.
His late father, Mark Eagleton, Sr., was a trial lawyer who
represented Musial and other cardinal players occasionally with
their endorsements and salary negotiations. He also was legal
adviser for former world heavyweight champion Gene Tunney
with whom he had served in tbe Marines. Tom Eagleton himself
put in two years as legal counsel for tbe cardinals.
"As a boy, I remember going to the ball games in St. Louis with
the Knot Hole Gang," says Eagleton." ") was in Sportsman's
Park the day Chet Iaabs hit two home runs to help the
Browns win their only pennant in 1944."
Heard From Tunney ·
- The senator also remembers his father helping Cardinal
players deal with the late Branch Rickey at contract time.
"Johnny Mize came to my dad one day with his contract after
he had led the league in home runs and runs batted in. He said
Mr. Rickey was trying to cut him $500 and he was flabbergasted.
"Rickey told him: 'John, yes, you led the league in home runs
and runs batted, but your average went down and you 're slowing
up in the field.' So Mize came to my dad and I think he wound up
with a $1,000 raise. My rough recollection was that his salary was
$17,000. If you lead the league in home runs and runs batted in
today, you get $117,000."
After Eagleton bad been dropped from the Democratic ticket,
he received 80,000 letters and wires within a llklay period.
Virtually all those who wrote and wired told him how well they
felt he had conducted himself.
Gene Tunnel was one of those who contacted Eagleton .
Likes Present Job
He wrote me this very warm personal letter telling me how
)H'oud he was at the way I handled myself under the enormous
strain and adversity and bow proud my father would've been,"
says Eagleton.
Before the older Eagleton died in the summer of 1970, he would
go to St. Petersburg,Fla., with him, never missing any year.
Now Tom Eagleton doesn't go any more. He's too busy here in
the Senate.
He really has no designs on the baseball commissionership.
What he's like to do, he says, is remain in the Senate.
"On my gravestone, I'd like it to be said of me, 'He was a
damn' good Senator,'" Tom Eagleton laughs. "I'll settle for
that."

Celtics, Knicks w1nners
The Celtic s downed the
Bucks 23-14 and the Knicks just
got by the Lakers 19-18
Tuesday in Meigs Grade School
intramural basketball at the
old Pomeroy junior high.
·~ Leading the Celtics were
Lonnie Mays with 14:'polnts,
and Ed Nottingham and Cliff
Kennedy with 5 a nd 4
respectively.
Don Icenhower had 6 for the
£l ucks, followed by Rick
Blaettnar with 4, and Danny
Carman and Charles Stone
w1th 2 each.
In the second game , Carman
led the Knicks with II points,
followed by Mays with 4 and
Kennedy and Icenhower with 2
each.
Frank Haggy's 10 points
paced the Lakers, with Steve
Kinzen, Steve Call , Mark
Atkins and Rick Blaettnar each
ge ttm g 2.

:-~=

Sport Parade

;;~

-

X

To dav 's

·;

•

Intramural aellon will
continue Thursday night at the
old Pomeroy Junior High, with
a pair of games beginning at 7
p.m. and 8 p.m.

.. -

'

Southern in title game

COLUMBUS I UPI) - Ohio
University

and nine rebounds in the

at Meigs High School.
Coach
Keith
Ca rter 's
Highlanders were at the bottom of the league standings
with Kyger Creek .
Eastern goes into tourney
action with an overall 9-9
record and 9-3 slate in the
SVAC. Southwestern finished 3-14 and 1-11 in the SVAC. Coach

~.f::::!:!;:;':';:;:;~;;;;;;:;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;;;;;.;o:•!;!~!;~;!;!:!;~!;!;!:!;!;!;!;!;!;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:::-:•:•:-; !:?.'

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REGULAR 5.50

.

.

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 20, 1974

HOSPITALIZED
HARTFORD, W. Va . - Mrs .
carl H. Rairden (Beatrice),
Hartford, w.va. , is a patient at
Mercy Hospital, Columb:'IS•
Room 404. She is confined there
for treatment of injuries re·
ceived last October .

~

'

SAVE 110.00

Plastic
Teething Rails""
{ON ALL FOUR SIDES)

Silver Bridge Plaza - Both Gallipolis Stor~- Pt._Ple~sant Sto~e

MiddlePOrt. Ohib

•

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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 20, 1974

Pirates blitz Bobcats, 84-54
western-Eastern

North Gallla 's red hot
Pirates tuned up for the Class
A Sectional Tournament at
Meigs High School Tuesday
night with an 84-S4 blitzing of
Kyger Creek.
The Pirates finished with a 75 league record and 9-9 slate
overall. North Gallia won its
last six games. The Pirates will
battle the winner of the South-

ga m e

Saturday night at Meigs.
The assa ult Tuesday night
was led by Tim Stout, 5-10
senior and Greg James, 6-2

so phomore. Both players
helped the Pirates to a 67-06
victory over the Bobcats last
week. They had 20 points each.
Tuesday, Jame&lt; and Stout

scored 20 point. each. North
Gallia jumped into a 17-12 lead
at the end of the first quarter.
Mike Ca mden, 6-3 junior
center, who finished with 16
points had five in the first
quarter.
Dave Robinette, &amp;-2 senior,
and James dumped in four
points each. Dave Clay, 6-4

senior center and Dave Wise, 510 junior forl"ard, led the
Bobcat attack wilh six and four
points respectively.
Action picked up during the
second quarter as both teams
run and gunned . The Pirates
outscored KC 22-18 during the
stanza . James, Stou t and
Sterling Logan led the winners

Buffalo stuns Bucks, 145-109
By United Press lnternatiooal

Ask the Buffalo Braves and
they'll tell you the playoff
innovation instituted by the
National Basketball
Association this season is the
fmest bit of legislature ever put
together by the league.
The Braves, third in the
Atlantic Division, ha ve an
excellent chance of making the
post-.;eason games according
to
a
provision
that
automatically qualifies the
conference winners and the
next two teams with the best
won~ost percentage.
Buffalo proved it is a playoff
contender Tuesday night by
ripping Milwaukee 145-HJ9, for
the Braves first win over the
Bucks in 16 games.
Bob McAdoo, the NBA
scoring and field goal percentage leader, scored 36 points for
Buffalo . Newcomer Jack
Marin was in the game just 21
minutes and added 20 points.
Kareem Abdui-Jabbar led Milwaukee with 25 points.
The loss, coupled with Chicago's 13().96 victory over Phoenix, cut the Bucks' lead over
the Bulls to two games in the

Midwest Division.
points that rallied Boston from
In other games, Boston a seven-point deficit. John
trounced Detroit 107-97, Golden Havlicek led Boston with 31
State downed Cleveland 109-98, points. Dave Bing had 21 for
New York edged Portland 119- Detroit.
Warriors 109, Cavallel'li 98
116 in overtime and Kansas
City.()maha tripped Los AnCazzie Russell scored 37
geles 92-86.
points against Cleveland and
Bulls 130, Suns 97
Nate Thurmond grabbed 25
Howard Porter scored a rebounds as the Warr iors
career-high 25 points as Chica- opened a two-game lead over
go won its 14th game in the last Los Angeles in the Pacific
17 •tarts. The Bulls wrapped up Division. Rick Barry of Golden
the game with a 41-point last State was ejected after he was
quarter, with Porter contribut- rapped with two technical fouls
ing 15 points to the surge.
in the last period.
Celtics 107, Pistons 97
Knlcks 119, Trail Blazers 116
Jo Jo White keyed a third
Walt Frazier and Earl
period Celtic drive with 15 Monroe scored al113 New York
overtime points against Port-

land . Frazier's IS-foot jumper
with 15 seconds left in the extra
session was the deciding
basketm He scored 32 points,
two less than the game-high 34
by Portland's Sidney Wicks.
Portd land played the game
under protest after a disputed
shot by Monroe tied the game
with six seco nd s left in
regulation time.
Kings 92, Lakers 86
·Kc.Omaha beat Los Angeles
for the first time in live
meetings this season as Jimmy
Walker scored 30 points and
Sam Lacey con tro ll ed the
boards with 22 rebounds.
Happy Hairston led the !.akers
with 23.
•

New York cops first Wln
of year over Canadiens

AAA action
to start at
Rio thursday
Action in the Triple A Sectional basketball tournament
will begin at Rio Grande
College's Lyne Center Thursday at 7:30p.m.
In a first round game, two
SEOAL rivals, Athens and
Logan , will collide . The
Bulldogs downed Logan twice
during regular season play, 7484 and· 51-46.
Logan enters the game with
a 11-7 season mark. Athens
finished 10-7 overall.
Friday, Lancaster will battle
Chillicothe in another first
round game.
Miami Trace, defending
AAA champion , will play
Marietta on Feb. 28. Portsmouth, which drew a first
roWJd bye, plays the winner of
the Miami Trace-Marietta
game on March 2. On March I,
the Lancaster - Chillicothe
winner battles the Logan, Athens winner. The winners of
the March I and 2 games both
advance to the Muskingum
College District tournament:·

By United Press International
For one game at least, the
New York Islanders solved
their own energy crisis when
they scored their first victory
ever over the Montreal Canadiens.
The Islanders lost all six of
their contests against the
Canadiens in their first season
of action last yea r and had only
a tie in four previous games
against Montreal this campaign
before downing the Habs 5-3
Tuesday night.
In the firs t 20 minutes of .
action, the Islanders, who rank
last in the entire National
Hockey League in goals scored
with 135, outshot the Canadiens
16-J and their total of five goals
for the game matched the
entire amount they had scored
in their last five contests.
Ed Westfall led the Island ers'

attack with two goals while
rookie Bob Nystrom contributed
a goal and two assists as the
New Yorkers moved to within
two points of sixth place Detroit
in the East Division . Nystrom's
goal was his 17th, the most by
any rookie in the league this
season.
In other NHL games, St.
Louis whipped Atlanta 7-1 and
Vancouver edged Los Angeles
4-3 while in the World Hockey
Association, Quebec edged
Cleveland &amp;-5 in overtime and
Toronto overcame Vancouver 54, also in overtime.
Blues 7 Flames 1
Wayne Merrick's two goals
and two assists and two goals
by newly acquired Bill Collins
led St. Louis past Atlanta and
mto undisputed possession of
thtrd place m the West. The
victory was the first lor the

Blues in their last nine games
and moved them two points
ahead of the Flames. Erick
Vail's first NHL goal accounted
for Atlanta's scoring.
Third period goals by Gerry
O'Flaherly and Paulin Bordeleau gave Vancouver its
victory over Los Ange les. The
Canucks took only five shots in
the last 20minutes of action but
connected on two of themm The
loss was the fourth straight for
Los Angeles, leaving the Kings
two points behind fourth place
Atlanta in the West.
Michel Parizeau's third goal
of the game at 5:01 of overtime
enabled Quebec to down Cleveland. Gerry Pinder scored
twice for Cleveland, his second
goal tying the game at 5-6
midway through the third
period . Andre Ga udette also
scored twice for Quebec.

St. John's hot, tops Boston five
By United Press International while Boston College dropped
St. John's may not rank in to 16-6.
Boston College led J&amp;-30 at
the top 20 but the Redmen have
the
half and stayed ahead until
something else to be happy
St
.
John's shooters found the
about. They could be going to
range with about 10 minutes to
the NCAA tournament.
They moved Into prime go. Mel Utley had 21 points and
contention lor an at-large Glen Williams 15 to lead St.
Eastern berth Tuesday night John 's while Mark Raterink
by hitting an incredible 79 per had 21 for B.C.
In other gwmes involving
cent of their shots in the second
ranked
teams, Providence (12)
half to defeat Boston College
Rhode Island 7&amp;-73,
.downed
00-72. The victory was St.
John's' 17th against five losses Creighton ( 16) crushed California-Irvine 83-62 and Louis-

ville (20) ripped Wichita State

ABA Standings

By United Press International
East

while Wiso\ and Clay Hudson ,&amp;0 senior, paced the Bobcats.
Coach Jim Fosler's team
was outscored 111-16 in the third
quarter as the Bobcats broke
the Pirates' zone press and
connected on passes to Wise

and John Rumley. Wise had 10
points during the quarter while
Rumley added six . North
Gallia came back with a strong
'tl pqint fourth quarter led by
Camden, Stout and James.
Wise finished as the game's
leading point-maker with 24
points. Hudson was the only
other Bobcat in double fig ures
with 10.
Coach Jim Arledge's Bobcats finished the season with a
disappointing 4-14 record and Ill slate in the SVAC.
The Bobcats will battle
Southern Friday night in the
Class A Sectional at Meigs
High School. According to the
cha rts, North Gallia connected
on 36 of 86 floor attempts for 42
pet. and 10 of 18 free throws.
KC hit 22 of 51 attempts for 43
pet. and 10 of 21 free throws.
The Pirates held a 53-33
rebounding edge.
North Gallia's reserves
fin ished in a three way tie for
the league's top spot with
Eastern and Hannan Trace
with a 9-3 record after Tuesday
411-20 drubbing of the Bobkittens.
Fred Logan led the winners
with 14 points.
Kyger Creek (54)- Hudso n
4-2-10; Rum ley 3-2-8; Tabor 0-22;

Cla y 2-H; Wise 12-0-24·
1-0-2; Cottre ll 0 -2-2'.

Stidham

Totals 22- 10-54 .

Wed-

. North Gallia (84) -

dm~ton

3 -0-6.

Smi th

2 0 -4 ;

Robinette 4-0-8; Camden 7-2-

w.

New -York
Ken tu cky
Ca rolina
Virginia
Memphis

I . pel .

••••

40 23 .635
37
.604
2
39 29 .57.4
Jl/ 2
38 .3 56 17
15 48 .238 25

"

"

W es t

w. I. pet.

Utan
Indiana

g. b .
19 .698
32 508
33 .492 13
33 .459 15
27 37 .422 1 7 1f~

44
33
32
28

Sa n Antonio

Denver

San Diego

"

By Un1ted Press International
New Eng .
To ronto
Quebec
Cleve land
Chicago

Jersey
Hou sto n

East
w. I. I.

r;tts 9!

32 24
31 27

2

6~

••

214 197

4 66 243 218

30 27

3 63 221 208
5 59 184 192
3 53 182 192

27 26
25 27
26 32 2 54 187 2'21
West

1 63 233 203
5 59 197 2 11

26

27
29

0 56 196 207

·
Tuesday's Results
Kenf u cky l09Memphis97
Indiana 107 San Antonio 102
Wnly games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
Virginia vs. Cine innat i
a t Greensboro
Ken tu cky at Denver
M emphis at New York
Utah at Sa n Diego
(On I y games sc hed uled )

33 D 46 216 231
38 D 40 169 233
Tuesday's Results
Quebec 6 Cl eveland 5 (otl
Toronto 5 Van cou ver 4 (oil
(Only games sc h eduled)
Today's Games
Jersey at Houston
Wi nniCeg at Edmonton
New ngtand at Los Ang .
Wn ly g·ames schedu l ed)

N BA Standings
By United Press I nternationa 1
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division

lnter niilfional Hockey
~eague Standings
By Un1ted Press International
North
wltpfsgfga
Muskegon 36 20 5 77 215 180
Sag inaw
211 27 2 60 236 215
Flint
23 32 5 49 195 217
Toledo
24 33 1 49 195 2211
Port Huron 22 32 3 47 170 191
South
w 1 t pt s gf ga
Des Moines 35 20 4 74 252 197
Columbus 30 28 2 62 227 225
Dayton
27 29 4
207 196
Fort Wayne

w.

I. pel.

42 11 .7 12
Boston
38 25 .603
N ew York
Buffalo
34 32 .515
Ph i l a
19 42 .311
Central Division
w . I. p et.
Cap ita l
35 26 .5 74
Atlanta
28 36 . 438
Houston
23 40 . 365
Cl eve land
si.l 45 .318
W est ern Conference
Midwest Divi sio n

g.b .
6
1111?

24
g .b .
81J1

13

16117

1.

Totals

37 - 10~ 84 .

Mt. Union is
116-94 winner
By United Press International
Mount Un ion Colleg.e
emerged the victor in a
high - scoring game with
Geneva (Pa .) College Tuesday
night that had both teams
scorching the nets for a total of
210 points.
Mount Union, now HHl for the
season, got 74 of its points in
the 116-94 victory from three
players, with Harold Young
capturing game scoring honors
with 27 points. Zettie Sims
added 24 and Barry Ring
another 2J points for Mount
Union.

Marvin Barnes scored 32
Cedarville dropped Its iOth
points and grabbed 2J rebounds
to lead Providence over Rhode game in 2J outings to Grace
Island. It was the Friars' 22nd (Ind.) College, 89-78.
Grace galloped to its 12th win
victory against three losses.
Junior Bridgeman collected in 22 starts hehind a 24-point
28 points and II rebounds as scor ing effort from Roger
Louisville whipped Wichita Haeck .
the
only
State and Gene Harmon scored Steubenville,
24 points and Doug Brookins _other Ohio college team
added 16 as Creighton rolled playing Tuesday, was oulpast UC-Irvine for its -ninth defensed by West Liberty
(W.Va.), 47-42.
straight win .

Ill

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Outside Is Frightful
But Sewing Is
So Delightful!
So While There's
No Gas ToGo

Let Us Sew!

0 54 192 229

pet. a.b.

Let Us Sew!
Let Us Sew!

...
Ill
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P.S. MANY LOVELY
SPRING FABRICS
PRICED REASONABLY! ,,

Ill

I

Meat Distributor

D&amp;D

By Quarter s:
Kyger Creek
12 13 18 11 ~ 54
North Gallia 17 22 16 27- 84

Cl)

The Weather

sa

27 32

-t
0

00

Tunday's Results
No games scheduled
Milwaukee
45 17 .726
Tonight's Games
Ch icago
45 21 .682
2
Detroit
41 22 .651
4 111 Dayton at Des Moines
KC ·Omaha
24 41 .369 22 1!? Saginaw at Co lumbus
Flin t at Fort Wa yne
Pacific D ivisio n
w. I. pet. g .b.
Gol den Sta te 33 26 . 55 9 LosAng
32 29 .525 2
Sea ttle
29 37 .439
71h
PhoeniK
25 38 .403 10
BRIGGS' CONTRACT
Por tl and
21 .41 .339 13112
MILWAUKEE (UPJ) -OutTuesday's R esu lfs
Bos ton 107 Detroit 97 , aft .
fielder John Briggs signed a
Buffalo 145Milwaukee 109
1974 ccontract with the MilN .Y . 119 Portland 116 (of)
Go lden State 104 Cl'eve 98
waukee &amp;ewers Tuesday, one
Ch icago 130 Phoeni x 96
day
before he was to go into
KC .Qmaha 92.los Ang 86
COn ly games scheduled 1
contract
arbitration In
Wednesday's Gam es
Ollcago,
The
signing of Briggs
Portla nd ar Cap ital
P hil a at Houston
and pitcher Ed Sprague left the
Los Ang at Detroit
Brewers with four unsigned
G . St vs. KC -Omaha
at Omaha players, including second
A tl an ta at M i lwaukee
baseman Pedro Garcia.
(O nly games schedu led)

w.

,z

St:

w . I . t. ph gf gil
34 18 5 73 126 f54

Minnesota 31
Winnipeg
27
Edmon ton 28
yancouver 23
Los Ang .
20

5-The Daily Sentinel, MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 24. 1974

Ratingj-:' .

NEW YORK (UPI ) - The.' 1
United Press Inter national 's'
Board of Coaches small college ·•
basketball ratings wit"' number ,
of first place votes and won -lost "
records In parentheses :
Team
.Points 1
1. Ky Wesleyan (HlJ (17 -3) 192,,
.(8) (22 . 2)
183
2. Fairm ont·
3. UT -Challo I• I ( 19-41
182 .
4. Evansville (4) ( 16.5)
160
5. Alcorn A&amp;M (20 -.4)
1.47
6. Jackson St {1} (20 ·31
100
7. 01d Dominion (16.5)
95
8. Tenn!s see Sta t e ( 18.5}
9.4
9. Mldw (Tex .) {22-JJ
73
10. Morgan Stat e {1) (19 -3)
55 •
11 . Wittenberg 117 -3)
53 ··
12. Ken tu cky State (16·.4)
50
13 . Roanoke {18 .4)
.48 . ·
14 . Bentley ( 16.4)
47
15. Grand Can yo n (2) (23 ·0) 41• ·

_WHA Standings

16; James 9-2-20; Stou t 8-4-20;
Logan 2-1- 5 and Garnes 2-1-5.

Geneva, now 1&amp;.7, was paced
by Spencer Johnson 's 26 tallies.

10&amp;-90.

Coil~

Pro Standings

USDA
CHOICE
BEEF SIDES
lb. 951
FRONTS
lb. 8~
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Prices
Include
Cutting
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and
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Beef Sold at
Hanging Weight.

(409)

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Your Orderl
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Prices Effective Feb. 20-27
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Saturday 9 to 9

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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 20, 1974

Pirates blitz Bobcats, 84-54
western-Eastern

North Gallla 's red hot
Pirates tuned up for the Class
A Sectional Tournament at
Meigs High School Tuesday
night with an 84-S4 blitzing of
Kyger Creek.
The Pirates finished with a 75 league record and 9-9 slate
overall. North Gallia won its
last six games. The Pirates will
battle the winner of the South-

ga m e

Saturday night at Meigs.
The assa ult Tuesday night
was led by Tim Stout, 5-10
senior and Greg James, 6-2

so phomore. Both players
helped the Pirates to a 67-06
victory over the Bobcats last
week. They had 20 points each.
Tuesday, Jame&lt; and Stout

scored 20 point. each. North
Gallia jumped into a 17-12 lead
at the end of the first quarter.
Mike Ca mden, 6-3 junior
center, who finished with 16
points had five in the first
quarter.
Dave Robinette, &amp;-2 senior,
and James dumped in four
points each. Dave Clay, 6-4

senior center and Dave Wise, 510 junior forl"ard, led the
Bobcat attack wilh six and four
points respectively.
Action picked up during the
second quarter as both teams
run and gunned . The Pirates
outscored KC 22-18 during the
stanza . James, Stou t and
Sterling Logan led the winners

Buffalo stuns Bucks, 145-109
By United Press lnternatiooal

Ask the Buffalo Braves and
they'll tell you the playoff
innovation instituted by the
National Basketball
Association this season is the
fmest bit of legislature ever put
together by the league.
The Braves, third in the
Atlantic Division, ha ve an
excellent chance of making the
post-.;eason games according
to
a
provision
that
automatically qualifies the
conference winners and the
next two teams with the best
won~ost percentage.
Buffalo proved it is a playoff
contender Tuesday night by
ripping Milwaukee 145-HJ9, for
the Braves first win over the
Bucks in 16 games.
Bob McAdoo, the NBA
scoring and field goal percentage leader, scored 36 points for
Buffalo . Newcomer Jack
Marin was in the game just 21
minutes and added 20 points.
Kareem Abdui-Jabbar led Milwaukee with 25 points.
The loss, coupled with Chicago's 13().96 victory over Phoenix, cut the Bucks' lead over
the Bulls to two games in the

Midwest Division.
points that rallied Boston from
In other games, Boston a seven-point deficit. John
trounced Detroit 107-97, Golden Havlicek led Boston with 31
State downed Cleveland 109-98, points. Dave Bing had 21 for
New York edged Portland 119- Detroit.
Warriors 109, Cavallel'li 98
116 in overtime and Kansas
City.()maha tripped Los AnCazzie Russell scored 37
geles 92-86.
points against Cleveland and
Bulls 130, Suns 97
Nate Thurmond grabbed 25
Howard Porter scored a rebounds as the Warr iors
career-high 25 points as Chica- opened a two-game lead over
go won its 14th game in the last Los Angeles in the Pacific
17 •tarts. The Bulls wrapped up Division. Rick Barry of Golden
the game with a 41-point last State was ejected after he was
quarter, with Porter contribut- rapped with two technical fouls
ing 15 points to the surge.
in the last period.
Celtics 107, Pistons 97
Knlcks 119, Trail Blazers 116
Jo Jo White keyed a third
Walt Frazier and Earl
period Celtic drive with 15 Monroe scored al113 New York
overtime points against Port-

land . Frazier's IS-foot jumper
with 15 seconds left in the extra
session was the deciding
basketm He scored 32 points,
two less than the game-high 34
by Portland's Sidney Wicks.
Portd land played the game
under protest after a disputed
shot by Monroe tied the game
with six seco nd s left in
regulation time.
Kings 92, Lakers 86
·Kc.Omaha beat Los Angeles
for the first time in live
meetings this season as Jimmy
Walker scored 30 points and
Sam Lacey con tro ll ed the
boards with 22 rebounds.
Happy Hairston led the !.akers
with 23.
•

New York cops first Wln
of year over Canadiens

AAA action
to start at
Rio thursday
Action in the Triple A Sectional basketball tournament
will begin at Rio Grande
College's Lyne Center Thursday at 7:30p.m.
In a first round game, two
SEOAL rivals, Athens and
Logan , will collide . The
Bulldogs downed Logan twice
during regular season play, 7484 and· 51-46.
Logan enters the game with
a 11-7 season mark. Athens
finished 10-7 overall.
Friday, Lancaster will battle
Chillicothe in another first
round game.
Miami Trace, defending
AAA champion , will play
Marietta on Feb. 28. Portsmouth, which drew a first
roWJd bye, plays the winner of
the Miami Trace-Marietta
game on March 2. On March I,
the Lancaster - Chillicothe
winner battles the Logan, Athens winner. The winners of
the March I and 2 games both
advance to the Muskingum
College District tournament:·

By United Press International
For one game at least, the
New York Islanders solved
their own energy crisis when
they scored their first victory
ever over the Montreal Canadiens.
The Islanders lost all six of
their contests against the
Canadiens in their first season
of action last yea r and had only
a tie in four previous games
against Montreal this campaign
before downing the Habs 5-3
Tuesday night.
In the firs t 20 minutes of .
action, the Islanders, who rank
last in the entire National
Hockey League in goals scored
with 135, outshot the Canadiens
16-J and their total of five goals
for the game matched the
entire amount they had scored
in their last five contests.
Ed Westfall led the Island ers'

attack with two goals while
rookie Bob Nystrom contributed
a goal and two assists as the
New Yorkers moved to within
two points of sixth place Detroit
in the East Division . Nystrom's
goal was his 17th, the most by
any rookie in the league this
season.
In other NHL games, St.
Louis whipped Atlanta 7-1 and
Vancouver edged Los Angeles
4-3 while in the World Hockey
Association, Quebec edged
Cleveland &amp;-5 in overtime and
Toronto overcame Vancouver 54, also in overtime.
Blues 7 Flames 1
Wayne Merrick's two goals
and two assists and two goals
by newly acquired Bill Collins
led St. Louis past Atlanta and
mto undisputed possession of
thtrd place m the West. The
victory was the first lor the

Blues in their last nine games
and moved them two points
ahead of the Flames. Erick
Vail's first NHL goal accounted
for Atlanta's scoring.
Third period goals by Gerry
O'Flaherly and Paulin Bordeleau gave Vancouver its
victory over Los Ange les. The
Canucks took only five shots in
the last 20minutes of action but
connected on two of themm The
loss was the fourth straight for
Los Angeles, leaving the Kings
two points behind fourth place
Atlanta in the West.
Michel Parizeau's third goal
of the game at 5:01 of overtime
enabled Quebec to down Cleveland. Gerry Pinder scored
twice for Cleveland, his second
goal tying the game at 5-6
midway through the third
period . Andre Ga udette also
scored twice for Quebec.

St. John's hot, tops Boston five
By United Press International while Boston College dropped
St. John's may not rank in to 16-6.
Boston College led J&amp;-30 at
the top 20 but the Redmen have
the
half and stayed ahead until
something else to be happy
St
.
John's shooters found the
about. They could be going to
range with about 10 minutes to
the NCAA tournament.
They moved Into prime go. Mel Utley had 21 points and
contention lor an at-large Glen Williams 15 to lead St.
Eastern berth Tuesday night John 's while Mark Raterink
by hitting an incredible 79 per had 21 for B.C.
In other gwmes involving
cent of their shots in the second
ranked
teams, Providence (12)
half to defeat Boston College
Rhode Island 7&amp;-73,
.downed
00-72. The victory was St.
John's' 17th against five losses Creighton ( 16) crushed California-Irvine 83-62 and Louis-

ville (20) ripped Wichita State

ABA Standings

By United Press International
East

while Wiso\ and Clay Hudson ,&amp;0 senior, paced the Bobcats.
Coach Jim Fosler's team
was outscored 111-16 in the third
quarter as the Bobcats broke
the Pirates' zone press and
connected on passes to Wise

and John Rumley. Wise had 10
points during the quarter while
Rumley added six . North
Gallia came back with a strong
'tl pqint fourth quarter led by
Camden, Stout and James.
Wise finished as the game's
leading point-maker with 24
points. Hudson was the only
other Bobcat in double fig ures
with 10.
Coach Jim Arledge's Bobcats finished the season with a
disappointing 4-14 record and Ill slate in the SVAC.
The Bobcats will battle
Southern Friday night in the
Class A Sectional at Meigs
High School. According to the
cha rts, North Gallia connected
on 36 of 86 floor attempts for 42
pet. and 10 of 18 free throws.
KC hit 22 of 51 attempts for 43
pet. and 10 of 21 free throws.
The Pirates held a 53-33
rebounding edge.
North Gallia's reserves
fin ished in a three way tie for
the league's top spot with
Eastern and Hannan Trace
with a 9-3 record after Tuesday
411-20 drubbing of the Bobkittens.
Fred Logan led the winners
with 14 points.
Kyger Creek (54)- Hudso n
4-2-10; Rum ley 3-2-8; Tabor 0-22;

Cla y 2-H; Wise 12-0-24·
1-0-2; Cottre ll 0 -2-2'.

Stidham

Totals 22- 10-54 .

Wed-

. North Gallia (84) -

dm~ton

3 -0-6.

Smi th

2 0 -4 ;

Robinette 4-0-8; Camden 7-2-

w.

New -York
Ken tu cky
Ca rolina
Virginia
Memphis

I . pel .

••••

40 23 .635
37
.604
2
39 29 .57.4
Jl/ 2
38 .3 56 17
15 48 .238 25

"

"

W es t

w. I. pet.

Utan
Indiana

g. b .
19 .698
32 508
33 .492 13
33 .459 15
27 37 .422 1 7 1f~

44
33
32
28

Sa n Antonio

Denver

San Diego

"

By Un1ted Press International
New Eng .
To ronto
Quebec
Cleve land
Chicago

Jersey
Hou sto n

East
w. I. I.

r;tts 9!

32 24
31 27

2

6~

••

214 197

4 66 243 218

30 27

3 63 221 208
5 59 184 192
3 53 182 192

27 26
25 27
26 32 2 54 187 2'21
West

1 63 233 203
5 59 197 2 11

26

27
29

0 56 196 207

·
Tuesday's Results
Kenf u cky l09Memphis97
Indiana 107 San Antonio 102
Wnly games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
Virginia vs. Cine innat i
a t Greensboro
Ken tu cky at Denver
M emphis at New York
Utah at Sa n Diego
(On I y games sc hed uled )

33 D 46 216 231
38 D 40 169 233
Tuesday's Results
Quebec 6 Cl eveland 5 (otl
Toronto 5 Van cou ver 4 (oil
(Only games sc h eduled)
Today's Games
Jersey at Houston
Wi nniCeg at Edmonton
New ngtand at Los Ang .
Wn ly g·ames schedu l ed)

N BA Standings
By United Press I nternationa 1
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division

lnter niilfional Hockey
~eague Standings
By Un1ted Press International
North
wltpfsgfga
Muskegon 36 20 5 77 215 180
Sag inaw
211 27 2 60 236 215
Flint
23 32 5 49 195 217
Toledo
24 33 1 49 195 2211
Port Huron 22 32 3 47 170 191
South
w 1 t pt s gf ga
Des Moines 35 20 4 74 252 197
Columbus 30 28 2 62 227 225
Dayton
27 29 4
207 196
Fort Wayne

w.

I. pel.

42 11 .7 12
Boston
38 25 .603
N ew York
Buffalo
34 32 .515
Ph i l a
19 42 .311
Central Division
w . I. p et.
Cap ita l
35 26 .5 74
Atlanta
28 36 . 438
Houston
23 40 . 365
Cl eve land
si.l 45 .318
W est ern Conference
Midwest Divi sio n

g.b .
6
1111?

24
g .b .
81J1

13

16117

1.

Totals

37 - 10~ 84 .

Mt. Union is
116-94 winner
By United Press International
Mount Un ion Colleg.e
emerged the victor in a
high - scoring game with
Geneva (Pa .) College Tuesday
night that had both teams
scorching the nets for a total of
210 points.
Mount Union, now HHl for the
season, got 74 of its points in
the 116-94 victory from three
players, with Harold Young
capturing game scoring honors
with 27 points. Zettie Sims
added 24 and Barry Ring
another 2J points for Mount
Union.

Marvin Barnes scored 32
Cedarville dropped Its iOth
points and grabbed 2J rebounds
to lead Providence over Rhode game in 2J outings to Grace
Island. It was the Friars' 22nd (Ind.) College, 89-78.
Grace galloped to its 12th win
victory against three losses.
Junior Bridgeman collected in 22 starts hehind a 24-point
28 points and II rebounds as scor ing effort from Roger
Louisville whipped Wichita Haeck .
the
only
State and Gene Harmon scored Steubenville,
24 points and Doug Brookins _other Ohio college team
added 16 as Creighton rolled playing Tuesday, was oulpast UC-Irvine for its -ninth defensed by West Liberty
(W.Va.), 47-42.
straight win .

Ill

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Outside Is Frightful
But Sewing Is
So Delightful!
So While There's
No Gas ToGo

Let Us Sew!

0 54 192 229

pet. a.b.

Let Us Sew!
Let Us Sew!

...
Ill
.......
.,•
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P.S. MANY LOVELY
SPRING FABRICS
PRICED REASONABLY! ,,

Ill

I

Meat Distributor

D&amp;D

By Quarter s:
Kyger Creek
12 13 18 11 ~ 54
North Gallia 17 22 16 27- 84

Cl)

The Weather

sa

27 32

-t
0

00

Tunday's Results
No games scheduled
Milwaukee
45 17 .726
Tonight's Games
Ch icago
45 21 .682
2
Detroit
41 22 .651
4 111 Dayton at Des Moines
KC ·Omaha
24 41 .369 22 1!? Saginaw at Co lumbus
Flin t at Fort Wa yne
Pacific D ivisio n
w. I. pet. g .b.
Gol den Sta te 33 26 . 55 9 LosAng
32 29 .525 2
Sea ttle
29 37 .439
71h
PhoeniK
25 38 .403 10
BRIGGS' CONTRACT
Por tl and
21 .41 .339 13112
MILWAUKEE (UPJ) -OutTuesday's R esu lfs
Bos ton 107 Detroit 97 , aft .
fielder John Briggs signed a
Buffalo 145Milwaukee 109
1974 ccontract with the MilN .Y . 119 Portland 116 (of)
Go lden State 104 Cl'eve 98
waukee &amp;ewers Tuesday, one
Ch icago 130 Phoeni x 96
day
before he was to go into
KC .Qmaha 92.los Ang 86
COn ly games scheduled 1
contract
arbitration In
Wednesday's Gam es
Ollcago,
The
signing of Briggs
Portla nd ar Cap ital
P hil a at Houston
and pitcher Ed Sprague left the
Los Ang at Detroit
Brewers with four unsigned
G . St vs. KC -Omaha
at Omaha players, including second
A tl an ta at M i lwaukee
baseman Pedro Garcia.
(O nly games schedu led)

w.

,z

St:

w . I . t. ph gf gil
34 18 5 73 126 f54

Minnesota 31
Winnipeg
27
Edmon ton 28
yancouver 23
Los Ang .
20

5-The Daily Sentinel, MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 24. 1974

Ratingj-:' .

NEW YORK (UPI ) - The.' 1
United Press Inter national 's'
Board of Coaches small college ·•
basketball ratings wit"' number ,
of first place votes and won -lost "
records In parentheses :
Team
.Points 1
1. Ky Wesleyan (HlJ (17 -3) 192,,
.(8) (22 . 2)
183
2. Fairm ont·
3. UT -Challo I• I ( 19-41
182 .
4. Evansville (4) ( 16.5)
160
5. Alcorn A&amp;M (20 -.4)
1.47
6. Jackson St {1} (20 ·31
100
7. 01d Dominion (16.5)
95
8. Tenn!s see Sta t e ( 18.5}
9.4
9. Mldw (Tex .) {22-JJ
73
10. Morgan Stat e {1) (19 -3)
55 •
11 . Wittenberg 117 -3)
53 ··
12. Ken tu cky State (16·.4)
50
13 . Roanoke {18 .4)
.48 . ·
14 . Bentley ( 16.4)
47
15. Grand Can yo n (2) (23 ·0) 41• ·

_WHA Standings

16; James 9-2-20; Stou t 8-4-20;
Logan 2-1- 5 and Garnes 2-1-5.

Geneva, now 1&amp;.7, was paced
by Spencer Johnson 's 26 tallies.

10&amp;-90.

Coil~

Pro Standings

USDA
CHOICE
BEEF SIDES
lb. 951
FRONTS
lb. 8~
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Prices
Include
Cutting
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and
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Beef Sold at
Hanging Weight.

(409)

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Your Orderl
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Saturday 9 to 9

I;LOSED SUNDAYS

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Iend arI

, 6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. l.u,

J ~--

7- The Daily Sentinel, Mido;ileport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 20, 1974

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WEDNESDAY
WEEKEND REVIVAL at
Freedom Gospelj\lission, Bald
Knobs, beginning Feb. 22
through Feb. 24, 7:30 nightly,
The Rev. Bernard Thrash,
Parkersburg guest speaker.
Special singmg nightly. The
Choralaires will be featured
Saturday. Public is invited to
attend.

Our friend Marion Michael, whO calls Memphis, Tenn.,
"home," although she's lived here in the Bend area for many
years, loves good old Southern cooking and her recipe box includes a variety of Dixieland dishes.
Stews are a favorite on cold days with Marion and her
husband and she passed along several recipes which they enjoy.
All are economical to prepare, nutritious, and any leftovers
freeze well, she reportS.

PAST PRESIDENTS, Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30p.m. at
the home of Mrs. Harry Davis.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Club, 2 p.m. with Mrs. Nan
Moore. Mrs. 0 . B. Stout to
review, "White House China"
by Marian Klamkin; and Mrs.
M. L. French to give "The
Optimist's Daughter" by
Eudora Welby. Roll call will be
a comment on the program.
YOUNG
Wives
Club
meeting, 7:30p.m. at home of
Ula Van Mater.
THIRD Wednesday
Homemakers Club, 10 a.m. at
Syracuse Municipal Hall;
potluck at noon. Making purses
topic of afternoon program
with Janice Lawson and Jane
Teaford,
leaders.
All ·
homemakers invited and are to
take 'h yard vinyl material; 'h
yard
matching
cotton
material; matching thread,
scissors.
OHIO
VALLEY
Com·
mandery 24, Knights Templar,
special conclave, Wednesday
7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple for the express purpose of conferring the
Red Cross and Malta degrees.
All Sir Knights asked to attend.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Vernon Nease, 7:30p.m.
THURSDAY
MARDI GRAS dinner,
Sacred Heart Church, cream
baked chicken. Serving from 5
to 7 p.m. Public invited.
HAPPY HUSTLER Class of
the
Racine
Wesleyan
Methodist Church Vegetable
and bean soup sale, 75 cents a
quart all day Thursday. Take
own container. Orders may be
placed by calling IH!I-4382 or
IH9-3361.
WEEKEND Revial, 7:30
p.m. Friday through Sunday
with Rev. Bernard Thrash,
Parkersburg, as evangelist;
special singing each evening
with the Choralaires of
Parkersburg on hand Saturday. Public invited.
MIDDLEPORT
Child
Conservation League, 7:30
p.m. , Columbus and Southern
Ohio Elec1ric Co. Joe Struble to
be the speaker.
ROCK Springs Better Health
Club, 1:15 p.m., home of Mrs.
William Radford. Program by
Mrs. Barbara Offutt, and
contest by Mrs. G. J. Morgan.
LOYAL Women's Class,
Middleport Church of Christ,
potluck dinner at the church,
.5:30 p.m. Time change
necessitated
by
WRAP
program at Meigs Junior High
School.
CHURCH Women United of
Meigs County, planned session
with Mrs. Campbell Harper,
president, I p.m. at the Chester
United Methodist Church, for
the World Day of Prayer observance, March 1.
BEEF Vegetable and Bean
Soup Sale, 2 p.m. at United
Wesleyan Methodist Church
annex in Racine. Soup 75 cents
a quart. Bring containers.
11- WILLING Workers Class,
7:30 p.m. , social room, Enterprise United Methodist
Church. Mrs. Ruby Frick,
hostess.
DEFENSIVE - ·o -r i vi n g
. Course, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Meigs Junior High School
auditorium, Middleport .
Sponsored by Middleport
' Business and Professional
Women's Club. Public invited.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club 7:30
p.m. at shrine club house in
Racine. Refreshments. All
shriners invited.
FRIDAY
DONATIONS to be solicited
in Syracuse Village thla week
and possibly next week by
members of the auxiliary of the
Syracuse Fire Dept., for an. nual Easter project of making
candy Easter eggs.
SPRING CARNIVAL, 6:30
p.m. at Harrisonville School
Qym sponsored by PTO. There
will be child ~d adult door
prize. Prince and Princess and
King and Queen to be named. A
variety of games. Adults 25
cents, students 10 cents .
SATURDAY
SPECIAL .MEETING,
Racine Loclse ~1, F&amp;AM' II
a.m. at Greenwood Cen.e·.ery
for Masonic graveside rites of
, Richard Hayman.

'

By Charlene Hoeflich

·;;j

Saluting Mr. A. R. Knight
Mr. A: R. Knight began an association with Pomeroy
Motor Company, in a bookkeeping capacity in 1929, and
advanced to general manager and owner. Mr . Knight
brought new leadership to the area and a pledge to offer
the Chevrolet of your choice at the lowest possible pri ce ,
backed by the finest service and faciliti es in
Southeastern Ohio. This was the policy in 1929. Thi s is th e
policy in 1974. Mr. Knight invites you to take advantage
of the 45th Anniversary Specials.

CREOLE BEEF STEW
2 pounds beef stew meat cut in cubes ; one-third cup ail
purpose flour; 3'h teaspoons salt ; 'h teaspoon black pepper; 2
tablespoons vegetable shortening; I cup of hot water; 1 cup
sliced onion rings; I cup sliced okra ; I cup drained, canned,
whole kernal corn; 2 cups drained, canned tomatoes; I cup diced
potatoes.
Cut beef into cubes, mix flour with salt and pepper, sprinkle
over the beef cubes. Brown the meat in the hot shortening. Add
water, cover and simmer for about two hours or until meat is
tender. Add vegetables about 30 minutes before cooking time is
up.
Serve hot. Yield: six servings.

CHILI-MAC STEW
I pound ground beef; 1 mediwn onion chopped; I medium
green pepper, chopped; I teaspoon salad oil; I eight ounce
package elbow macaroni; I IIi-ounce can kidney beans with
liquid; 21k&gt;unce cans of tomato sauce; I cup water; I teaspoon
chili power; I teaspoon salt; I cup shredded cheese.
Saute the ground beef with onion and pepper in hot oil in a
heavy skillet. Pour off the oil. Add all other ingredients except
the cheese. Simmer bently for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally.
Top with cheese and heat until the cheese melts. Serves six to
eight.

WINTER STEW
2pounds of stew meat; 2 tablespoons shortening; I teaspoon
seasoned salt; I cup of boiling water; I cup tomato juice; 6 smatl
onions, quartered; 2 medium potatoes diced; l'h cups of whole
kernel corn; I cup of sliced carrots.
Brown the meat in the hot shortening in a heavy skillet.
Sprinkle with seasoned salt as it cooks. Add boiling water and
tomato juice. Simmer covered about I If, hours. Add vegetables
and cook until tender. Add more water or tomato juice if needed,
Serves six.

1111111111111111

•'

'I

ACompany That

SERVICE BUILT
. . .

.... ..

. . . . .

.

. .

.

45th Anniversary

AND what about your favorite recipe . Be sure to send it
along to "Fun with Foods," or just telephone me - 992-5292.
Something new and different in foods is welcomed by a tmost
every homemaker.

Mrs. Grate feted
RUTLAND - Mrs. David ' Esther Kennedy Mrs Twila
Grate was honored with a Hysell, Mrs. Ros~ Cars~n, Mrs.
layette shower recenUy by Dixie Sayre, Mrs. Reva
several fnends at the home of Snowden, Mrs. Joan May, Mrs.
Mrs. Arnold Grate.
Lucy Gaul Miss Brenda
Games were played with Donohue, M;s. Clara Phillips,
pnzes gomg to Mrs. Irene Mrs. Anna Wolfe, Mrs. Marsha
Kennedy,
Mrs.
Delores Elliott, Mrs. Marjorie Rice,
Donohue and Mrs. Margaret · Edna Swick Mrs Bird ·
Bissell. The door prize was won Hysell Mrs. J~dy Mo~ris M.'e
by Mrs. Douglas Bissell.
Janet ' Morris Miss Debb;~
Refreshrne_nts included cake Jewett and 'Mrs. Garnet
decorated wtth pink and blue Williamson.
booties, sandwiches, nuts,
, mints, coffee and tea.
Attending were Mrs. Jack
Walker, Mrs. Violet Grate,
Mrs . Irene Kennedy, Mrs.
Donna Grate, Mrs. Ruth Grate,
The February Parent - Child
Miss Vicki Grate, Miss Janice
Workshop will be Sunday, Feb.
Smith, Mrs. Dolores Donohue
and Kenda, Mrs. Ruth 24 from 2 to 4 p.m. at River by.
This month, Mrs . Susan
Graham, Mrs. Sonia Parsons,
Clarke
will instruct the
Mlllia and Larry, Mrs. Goldie
children in collage.
Graham, Mrs. Sharon Wise
Collage is a composition,
and son, Mrs. Judy McDonald,
abstract or definite, made by
Mrs. Mary Grimm, Mrs. Lydia
using the textures of various
Smith, Mrs. Wanda Vining,
common substances such as
Mrs. Beulah Grate, Miss Jenny
newspaper, colored tissue
Grate, Miss Georgene Grate,
paper, magazine pictures,
Mrs. Jeanette Davis; Mrs .
sand and so on, glued on a flat
Bernice Nelson, Mrs. Ada
background. The children will
Keesee, Mrs. Margaret Bissell,
use their imaginations to
Mrs. Noami Price, Mrs. Sue
compose their designs .
Bissell, Mrs. Douglas Bissell,
Everyone is welcome to
Mrs. Carolyn Bissell, MrS.
attend and you need not be a
Frona Riffle, Mrs. Mildred
member of the . French Art
Grate and Mrs. Flora Donohue
Colony. Any child acand Barbie.
companied by an adult may
Others presenting gifts, but
come and an adult may bring
unable to attend, were Mrs.
as many children as he or she
Glenna Crisp, Mrs. Wanda
can supervise. Since glue wil1
Williams,
Mrs.
Dottie
be used it is best to wear old
Hawkins, Mrs. Pearl Utile,
clothes that cannot be ruined.
Mrs. Marie Birchfield, Mrs.

Workshop slated

Open meetings planned
CINCINNATI - "Weight
Watchers" will conduct a
series of free open meetings
the week of Monday, Feb. 25
through Saturday, March 2.
Overweight ladies, teens and
men may visit all area
locations that week. Although
registration is possible during
Open House Week (persons
with at least 10 poWlds to lose
may join a "Weight Watchers"
class at any time), guests at
Open liouse are welcome to
"Just visit".
"Weight Watchers" staff will
dem'o nstra te
classroom
techniques to visitors and will
introduce successful members
-some of whom have lost in
excess &lt;X 100 pounds each.
Members will model the
"before" clothes worn prior to
their weight loss. New recipes
designed for the weightconscious will be distributed
free.
The successful "Weight
Watchers" Eating Program
. will be discussed. Baaed upon
the latest research in nu1rition,
it permits controlled quantities
of
cereal,
mayonnaise,
margarine, banana, potato,
rice - and other foods normally thought to be "taboos"
for those watching their

weight. Of interest to guests
will be discos8ion of the newest
additions to the program :
pork, ham, fruits canned in
their own juices, dried beans
and soybeans.
Emphasis will be placed on
the ability to eat properly on a
tight budget. Nutritional meat
substitutes are one device for
reducing grocery bills as well
as weight. Budget-watching
recipes will be distributed also.
Weight
Watchers
ln• ternational is in its ,lith year of
helping the overweight. This
special Open House is designed
to permit prospective members to gain insight into the
highly successful " Weight
Watchers" group approach to
permanent weight control.
Area locations free to visitors
from Feb. 25 through March 2
include : Gallipolis : Grace
United Methodist Church, 2nd
at Cedar, Wednesday 10 a.m.,
St. Louis Catholic Church, 91
State St., Tuesday 8 p.m. ;
Pomeroy: St. Paul Lutheran
Church, 231 E. Second St.,
Monday, 8 p.m.; Rio Grande :
United Methodist. Church '
Wednesday 8 p.m. For further
information call toll.free 800582-7026.

ANNIVERSARY
SAVINGS
ON ALL USED CARS
!iee l'our Special Salesman

Building a·. better way
to see the U~S.A.

A. R•.KNIGHT, GEORGE HARRIS, DALLAS BLEVINS, ROGER DILLARD

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
PH. 992-2126

OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8

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Celebration!!!
Iend arI

, 6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. l.u,

J ~--

7- The Daily Sentinel, Mido;ileport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 20, 1974

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WEDNESDAY
WEEKEND REVIVAL at
Freedom Gospelj\lission, Bald
Knobs, beginning Feb. 22
through Feb. 24, 7:30 nightly,
The Rev. Bernard Thrash,
Parkersburg guest speaker.
Special singmg nightly. The
Choralaires will be featured
Saturday. Public is invited to
attend.

Our friend Marion Michael, whO calls Memphis, Tenn.,
"home," although she's lived here in the Bend area for many
years, loves good old Southern cooking and her recipe box includes a variety of Dixieland dishes.
Stews are a favorite on cold days with Marion and her
husband and she passed along several recipes which they enjoy.
All are economical to prepare, nutritious, and any leftovers
freeze well, she reportS.

PAST PRESIDENTS, Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30p.m. at
the home of Mrs. Harry Davis.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Club, 2 p.m. with Mrs. Nan
Moore. Mrs. 0 . B. Stout to
review, "White House China"
by Marian Klamkin; and Mrs.
M. L. French to give "The
Optimist's Daughter" by
Eudora Welby. Roll call will be
a comment on the program.
YOUNG
Wives
Club
meeting, 7:30p.m. at home of
Ula Van Mater.
THIRD Wednesday
Homemakers Club, 10 a.m. at
Syracuse Municipal Hall;
potluck at noon. Making purses
topic of afternoon program
with Janice Lawson and Jane
Teaford,
leaders.
All ·
homemakers invited and are to
take 'h yard vinyl material; 'h
yard
matching
cotton
material; matching thread,
scissors.
OHIO
VALLEY
Com·
mandery 24, Knights Templar,
special conclave, Wednesday
7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple for the express purpose of conferring the
Red Cross and Malta degrees.
All Sir Knights asked to attend.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Vernon Nease, 7:30p.m.
THURSDAY
MARDI GRAS dinner,
Sacred Heart Church, cream
baked chicken. Serving from 5
to 7 p.m. Public invited.
HAPPY HUSTLER Class of
the
Racine
Wesleyan
Methodist Church Vegetable
and bean soup sale, 75 cents a
quart all day Thursday. Take
own container. Orders may be
placed by calling IH!I-4382 or
IH9-3361.
WEEKEND Revial, 7:30
p.m. Friday through Sunday
with Rev. Bernard Thrash,
Parkersburg, as evangelist;
special singing each evening
with the Choralaires of
Parkersburg on hand Saturday. Public invited.
MIDDLEPORT
Child
Conservation League, 7:30
p.m. , Columbus and Southern
Ohio Elec1ric Co. Joe Struble to
be the speaker.
ROCK Springs Better Health
Club, 1:15 p.m., home of Mrs.
William Radford. Program by
Mrs. Barbara Offutt, and
contest by Mrs. G. J. Morgan.
LOYAL Women's Class,
Middleport Church of Christ,
potluck dinner at the church,
.5:30 p.m. Time change
necessitated
by
WRAP
program at Meigs Junior High
School.
CHURCH Women United of
Meigs County, planned session
with Mrs. Campbell Harper,
president, I p.m. at the Chester
United Methodist Church, for
the World Day of Prayer observance, March 1.
BEEF Vegetable and Bean
Soup Sale, 2 p.m. at United
Wesleyan Methodist Church
annex in Racine. Soup 75 cents
a quart. Bring containers.
11- WILLING Workers Class,
7:30 p.m. , social room, Enterprise United Methodist
Church. Mrs. Ruby Frick,
hostess.
DEFENSIVE - ·o -r i vi n g
. Course, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Meigs Junior High School
auditorium, Middleport .
Sponsored by Middleport
' Business and Professional
Women's Club. Public invited.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club 7:30
p.m. at shrine club house in
Racine. Refreshments. All
shriners invited.
FRIDAY
DONATIONS to be solicited
in Syracuse Village thla week
and possibly next week by
members of the auxiliary of the
Syracuse Fire Dept., for an. nual Easter project of making
candy Easter eggs.
SPRING CARNIVAL, 6:30
p.m. at Harrisonville School
Qym sponsored by PTO. There
will be child ~d adult door
prize. Prince and Princess and
King and Queen to be named. A
variety of games. Adults 25
cents, students 10 cents .
SATURDAY
SPECIAL .MEETING,
Racine Loclse ~1, F&amp;AM' II
a.m. at Greenwood Cen.e·.ery
for Masonic graveside rites of
, Richard Hayman.

'

By Charlene Hoeflich

·;;j

Saluting Mr. A. R. Knight
Mr. A: R. Knight began an association with Pomeroy
Motor Company, in a bookkeeping capacity in 1929, and
advanced to general manager and owner. Mr . Knight
brought new leadership to the area and a pledge to offer
the Chevrolet of your choice at the lowest possible pri ce ,
backed by the finest service and faciliti es in
Southeastern Ohio. This was the policy in 1929. Thi s is th e
policy in 1974. Mr. Knight invites you to take advantage
of the 45th Anniversary Specials.

CREOLE BEEF STEW
2 pounds beef stew meat cut in cubes ; one-third cup ail
purpose flour; 3'h teaspoons salt ; 'h teaspoon black pepper; 2
tablespoons vegetable shortening; I cup of hot water; 1 cup
sliced onion rings; I cup sliced okra ; I cup drained, canned,
whole kernal corn; 2 cups drained, canned tomatoes; I cup diced
potatoes.
Cut beef into cubes, mix flour with salt and pepper, sprinkle
over the beef cubes. Brown the meat in the hot shortening. Add
water, cover and simmer for about two hours or until meat is
tender. Add vegetables about 30 minutes before cooking time is
up.
Serve hot. Yield: six servings.

CHILI-MAC STEW
I pound ground beef; 1 mediwn onion chopped; I medium
green pepper, chopped; I teaspoon salad oil; I eight ounce
package elbow macaroni; I IIi-ounce can kidney beans with
liquid; 21k&gt;unce cans of tomato sauce; I cup water; I teaspoon
chili power; I teaspoon salt; I cup shredded cheese.
Saute the ground beef with onion and pepper in hot oil in a
heavy skillet. Pour off the oil. Add all other ingredients except
the cheese. Simmer bently for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally.
Top with cheese and heat until the cheese melts. Serves six to
eight.

WINTER STEW
2pounds of stew meat; 2 tablespoons shortening; I teaspoon
seasoned salt; I cup of boiling water; I cup tomato juice; 6 smatl
onions, quartered; 2 medium potatoes diced; l'h cups of whole
kernel corn; I cup of sliced carrots.
Brown the meat in the hot shortening in a heavy skillet.
Sprinkle with seasoned salt as it cooks. Add boiling water and
tomato juice. Simmer covered about I If, hours. Add vegetables
and cook until tender. Add more water or tomato juice if needed,
Serves six.

1111111111111111

•'

'I

ACompany That

SERVICE BUILT
. . .

.... ..

. . . . .

.

. .

.

45th Anniversary

AND what about your favorite recipe . Be sure to send it
along to "Fun with Foods," or just telephone me - 992-5292.
Something new and different in foods is welcomed by a tmost
every homemaker.

Mrs. Grate feted
RUTLAND - Mrs. David ' Esther Kennedy Mrs Twila
Grate was honored with a Hysell, Mrs. Ros~ Cars~n, Mrs.
layette shower recenUy by Dixie Sayre, Mrs. Reva
several fnends at the home of Snowden, Mrs. Joan May, Mrs.
Mrs. Arnold Grate.
Lucy Gaul Miss Brenda
Games were played with Donohue, M;s. Clara Phillips,
pnzes gomg to Mrs. Irene Mrs. Anna Wolfe, Mrs. Marsha
Kennedy,
Mrs.
Delores Elliott, Mrs. Marjorie Rice,
Donohue and Mrs. Margaret · Edna Swick Mrs Bird ·
Bissell. The door prize was won Hysell Mrs. J~dy Mo~ris M.'e
by Mrs. Douglas Bissell.
Janet ' Morris Miss Debb;~
Refreshrne_nts included cake Jewett and 'Mrs. Garnet
decorated wtth pink and blue Williamson.
booties, sandwiches, nuts,
, mints, coffee and tea.
Attending were Mrs. Jack
Walker, Mrs. Violet Grate,
Mrs . Irene Kennedy, Mrs.
Donna Grate, Mrs. Ruth Grate,
The February Parent - Child
Miss Vicki Grate, Miss Janice
Workshop will be Sunday, Feb.
Smith, Mrs. Dolores Donohue
and Kenda, Mrs. Ruth 24 from 2 to 4 p.m. at River by.
This month, Mrs . Susan
Graham, Mrs. Sonia Parsons,
Clarke
will instruct the
Mlllia and Larry, Mrs. Goldie
children in collage.
Graham, Mrs. Sharon Wise
Collage is a composition,
and son, Mrs. Judy McDonald,
abstract or definite, made by
Mrs. Mary Grimm, Mrs. Lydia
using the textures of various
Smith, Mrs. Wanda Vining,
common substances such as
Mrs. Beulah Grate, Miss Jenny
newspaper, colored tissue
Grate, Miss Georgene Grate,
paper, magazine pictures,
Mrs. Jeanette Davis; Mrs .
sand and so on, glued on a flat
Bernice Nelson, Mrs. Ada
background. The children will
Keesee, Mrs. Margaret Bissell,
use their imaginations to
Mrs. Noami Price, Mrs. Sue
compose their designs .
Bissell, Mrs. Douglas Bissell,
Everyone is welcome to
Mrs. Carolyn Bissell, MrS.
attend and you need not be a
Frona Riffle, Mrs. Mildred
member of the . French Art
Grate and Mrs. Flora Donohue
Colony. Any child acand Barbie.
companied by an adult may
Others presenting gifts, but
come and an adult may bring
unable to attend, were Mrs.
as many children as he or she
Glenna Crisp, Mrs. Wanda
can supervise. Since glue wil1
Williams,
Mrs.
Dottie
be used it is best to wear old
Hawkins, Mrs. Pearl Utile,
clothes that cannot be ruined.
Mrs. Marie Birchfield, Mrs.

Workshop slated

Open meetings planned
CINCINNATI - "Weight
Watchers" will conduct a
series of free open meetings
the week of Monday, Feb. 25
through Saturday, March 2.
Overweight ladies, teens and
men may visit all area
locations that week. Although
registration is possible during
Open House Week (persons
with at least 10 poWlds to lose
may join a "Weight Watchers"
class at any time), guests at
Open liouse are welcome to
"Just visit".
"Weight Watchers" staff will
dem'o nstra te
classroom
techniques to visitors and will
introduce successful members
-some of whom have lost in
excess &lt;X 100 pounds each.
Members will model the
"before" clothes worn prior to
their weight loss. New recipes
designed for the weightconscious will be distributed
free.
The successful "Weight
Watchers" Eating Program
. will be discussed. Baaed upon
the latest research in nu1rition,
it permits controlled quantities
of
cereal,
mayonnaise,
margarine, banana, potato,
rice - and other foods normally thought to be "taboos"
for those watching their

weight. Of interest to guests
will be discos8ion of the newest
additions to the program :
pork, ham, fruits canned in
their own juices, dried beans
and soybeans.
Emphasis will be placed on
the ability to eat properly on a
tight budget. Nutritional meat
substitutes are one device for
reducing grocery bills as well
as weight. Budget-watching
recipes will be distributed also.
Weight
Watchers
ln• ternational is in its ,lith year of
helping the overweight. This
special Open House is designed
to permit prospective members to gain insight into the
highly successful " Weight
Watchers" group approach to
permanent weight control.
Area locations free to visitors
from Feb. 25 through March 2
include : Gallipolis : Grace
United Methodist Church, 2nd
at Cedar, Wednesday 10 a.m.,
St. Louis Catholic Church, 91
State St., Tuesday 8 p.m. ;
Pomeroy: St. Paul Lutheran
Church, 231 E. Second St.,
Monday, 8 p.m.; Rio Grande :
United Methodist. Church '
Wednesday 8 p.m. For further
information call toll.free 800582-7026.

ANNIVERSARY
SAVINGS
ON ALL USED CARS
!iee l'our Special Salesman

Building a·. better way
to see the U~S.A.

A. R•.KNIGHT, GEORGE HARRIS, DALLAS BLEVINS, ROGER DILLARD

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
PH. 992-2126

OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8

..

POMEROY, 0.

'

.

�.
I

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 20, 1974

BPW hears talk on · heart attack
Recognizin g the early
warning signs of heart attack
and
getting immediate
-treatment is the key to
reducing death s, Kermit
Walton told members of the
Middlepor t Busin ess and
Professional Women' s Club
Monday night.
Walton, repres enting the
Meigs
County
Hear t
Association which has a fund
drive in progress now, showed
the film , " Early Warnin g
Signs". He noted that the film
is available to anyone for group
showing. Forty pel. of all
deaths are attributed to heart
disease and attack, Walton
pointed out.
He II' as introduced by Mrs .
Wilma Sargent who, along with
Farie Kennedy, has charge of
the house -to-house solicitation
in Middleport on Heart Sunday ,

March 3.
Final plans for the defensive
driving course to be offered
Thursday night from 7:30 to
10 :30 p.m. in the Meigs Junior
High School auditorium were
outlined by Mrs. Mary Martin,
chairwoman of the WRAP
(Women's Responsibility for
Accident Prevention)
program . She noted that there
will be a film and literature
and that the BPW will serve
coffee during a break each
hour. The public is invited to
attend.
During the meeting condueled by Mrs. John Werner,
members voted to send a
donation to the Middleport
firemen for the new emergency
vehicle.
It was reported by Mrs.
· Sargent that next month the .
club will award a scholarship

to a Meigs County senior girl

going into nurses training at
the Holzer Medical Center.
The budget was presented by
Mrs. Ann Bailey , finance
chairwoman. It was announced
that a bake sale will be held at
Dudley's March 16, and a letter
from the National Federation
noted that Maine and Montana
have ratified the equal rights
amendment. Membership was
also discussed in the communication ,
Mrs. Werner reported on the
presidents' meeting at Jackson
recently. She announced the
stale conference in Columbus,
May 3-5, and the district spring
conference in Jackson, March
31. The fall district meeting
will be Oct. 20.
Miss Freddie Houdashelt
served as secretary at the
meeting , and Mrs. Ann Bailey

read the treasurer's report in
the absence of Mrs. Grace
Pratt who is confined due to a
shoulder fracture. Monday
night's meeting was the first
Mrs. Pratt has missed in
nearly five years.
The attendance award of two
silver dollars was won by Mrs.
Sargent. Mrs. Bailey won the
traveling prize . A silent auction was conducted by Mrs.
Bailey and Mrs . Pearl
Reynolds.
Cherry pie and coffee were
served by the civic participation committee, Mrs .
Kennedy , Mrs. Sargent, Miss
Olga Pierotti, Miss Kathy
King, Mrs. Alice Mills, Mrs.
Mary Kunzelman, Mrs. Bailey,
Mrs. Beulah Strauss, Mrs.
Molly Hill, Mrs. Reynolds and
Mrs. Jean Moore.

Make
POMEROY
Your
Shopping

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9
S.UNDA Y 1 TO 7

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUN., FEB. 24, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

Center

Ohio Eta Phi women plan party

MEN's

NYLON
JACKET

By

cme

A birthday party for one of contribute one item of baked engagement.
the children at the Meigs goods to the sale at the
Darla Hawley and Sandy
County
Home
was
planned
for
Korn
gave a cultural program
Pomeroy village hall March 2
Harness - Dress- and
Saturday during the Tuesday for the benefit of the Pomeroy on "Reasonable Answers", and
Blue Denim
night meeting of the Ohio Eta Fire Deparlment. Members Wilma Reece and Susan Baer
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phil are to have their items there by presented a program on
Sororjty.
marriage with Bob Buck as the
9 a.m.
" Your Thorn MeAn Store"
Arrangements
were
also
speaker.
Members
were
asked
to
Middleporl, 0 .
made for each member to contribute recipes for a
Attending besides those
named were Carol Adams,
• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . casserole
pizza partybeing
was Connie Bailey, Sharon Bailey,
compiled. Acookbook
Bennett, Kathy
set for the first meeting in Phyllis
March at the home of Martha Cummings, Janet Downie,
McPhial with a "do your own Debbie Finlaw, Kathy Fry,
thing" auction to follow. A Barbara Logan, Terri Michael,
"bakeless" bake sale was held Dottie Musser, Susan Oliver,
Iris Payne, Janet Pickens,
following the meeting .
Kathy King distributed Sandi Sargent, Edwina Scott
candy to announce her and Karen Stanley.

HECK'S
"PRINCESS
SUE"

heritage house

=**BIRTHDAY**

Dry Cleaning Special
LADIES' LONG OOATS

.69

(Except Fur Trim)
and

MEN'S TOPOOATS

REG.
$2.35

Cleaned &amp; Finished

~-·----·--··--·----·--··--·---~

ROBINSON'S

LAUNDRY

DRY CLEANING

Pomeroy

216 E. Second

A puppet show by the Middleport kindergarten student.&lt;;.
highlighted the Middleport
PTA meeting Monday night.
The children with their
teacher, Mrs. Mary Frances
Rose, made the puppets which
they used in the presentation
titled, "Mr. Morris' Garage" .
Taking part were John
Epple, Melissa Downie, Terry
Roush, Eric Johnson, Darrell
Skaggs, Pollie Chadwell, Holly
Miller, Kathy Clonch, Lori
Roush, Carole Bailey, Darin
Wolfe, Carrie Karr, Craig
Morris, Carol Smith, Joyce
Roush, Shawn Baker, Judy
Mowery, Richard Stewart, and
David Hendricks. At the
conclusion, the children sang

RUTLAND DEPARTMENT STORE
RUTLAND, 0.

742-5543

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU FEB. 23

g·
g
'
WIENERS••••• !b~
SUPERIORS BULK

lfi2 lb

SUPERIORS

BOILED HAM ................ ... .'.

Mix or Match Sale!
CANDY
BAR
SPECIAL

Mix or Match Sale!
14 oz . Pillsbu r y Butter

Chocolate Cookies
oz. Pillsbury Peanut Butter
Cookies
18 oz. Pillsbury Sugar Cookies

15 1/•

SPECIAL

2

pkgs .

Baby Ruth, 7 pak
Butterfinger, 7 pak

109

89'

45e

Reg. 55', Special ........

NABISCO PIN WHEEL COOKIES ........................ : ...... 12 oz. pkg. 69'
MRS. FILBERT'S
BOWL

16 oz.

MARGARINE
KREY'S

24 oz.

Chicken &amp;
Dumplings

KRAFT

~ Marshmallow
.
.
-

(smooth)

Beautiful
'GIFT!
Cornucopia
Family Pin

0

CREAM 2~a r~

by b. david

eChocolate
QfiP.S

HECK'S REG.

12

j

Especially created to
portray your family's
story In beautiful
birthmonth
colors.

'14.95

bots .

IN

\

POMEROY STORES

I'

HECK 'S REG.
$4.88

lb.

69~

HECK'S REG. $9.99

CI.DTH/11&amp; DEPT.

Cl. OTH/Nti DEPT.

CI.DTH/Nti
-DEPT.

3''.
HECK'S

SLACKS

2 TO 4 TODDLERS

plaids and so lids with flore leg
slacks. Sizes 7-14.

2

Banks

2

Jewelry Stores

2

Fabric Stores

3

Shoe Stores

4

Restaurants and
Drive Ins

10

Building

Supp~

Feed &amp; Grain

Store -

1

Food Stores

4

Barber Shops

Ladies Shops

2

Beauty Shops

Hardware Stores

3

Auto Dealers

3

Mens Stores

3

Florists

2

Catalog Stores

2

Variety Stores
Auto

Supp~

Stores

4
'

1S

VELVET VELOUR
SCATTER RUGS

PARKING
For
Hundreds
Of Cars

21 "x36"

I

I

I

•••

I

e •

I

27"x45" • • •••••••••
27"x70" ••••••••••.
HECK'S REG. TO $9.99
ALSO AVAILABLE

Metered Spaces
In Riverfront
Lots .

$466
5 99
7

TANK SET .............. 4

5 66

KODAK
SUPER 8
MOVIE FILM

HECK'S REG. $5.99

MATCHING LID COVER ._... 5 166
HECK'S REG. $1.99

PWS
FREE PARKING
IN CITY LOT

Heck's
Reg. 12.44

In and o ut fine tuning . Head cleaner . Anti-theft
proof. Solid State . New thum b wheel co ntro ls
and illuminated channel ind icators. Automat ic
or manual channel change. Balance control for
perfect stereo ad justment .

POLAROID CAMERA

Reg. 146.88

'

54

,. __

KODAK
51/PER 8

MOVIE CAMERA
AUtomot1c e lec h ic·eye e~ posure con tro i-Cd S·
ty pe s1gno l in lm de r ,howl whe n to use movoe
ligh t. Fast 14mm f/ 2.7 lern. co lo r-co rrected
an d LUM ENtlED. No /gcuso ng . Fv ll1 e r.do~d
o pti ca l ~ •ewfo n d e r Rug ge d constr vtl io n
Style d on tea ture d bl o c~' and &gt;a l in sol ~er . Palm·
s•l e d &lt;H• d hghlwen,j'hl.

S]599
HECK'S REG. $42.96

1-2-3-4 di ce~ at a
Seleci·Ronic
TM Control . . ~el it und forget it!
Overthe-Counter Replacement Guoronlee.

HECK'E
REG.
$15.96

e

$

JEWElRY
DEPT.

12''

$100
Heck's Reg. $1.66

RIVAL SLOW COOKER

3112 QT. CROCK POT
WORTH ITS WAIT IN FLAVOR! A "must" for
working people, busy homemakers, gourmets.
HECK'S REG.
$18.88

JEWElRY
DEPr.

$1499

. 3100

DISPOSABLE

HI-POWER

68e

4-SLICE TOASTER
lime. e

T om t~

JEWElRY DEPT.

99

Heck's Reg. 99'

of' Pomeroy
..

5

- FlASH
CUBES
Heck's

.

$}99

WITH SPEAKERS

HECK'S REG.
$69;96

The Friendly Stores

e

AUTO 8-TRACK STEREO
"

PROCTOR-SILEX

M-24

INLAND

&gt;

MOST STORES
· OPEN

REVERSIBLE
RAG RUG

$297
I

2
4

24"x45"

-!;--,,&lt;--'

CI.DTNING DEPT.

1

3

Pet Store

8

ti.DTHING
DEPT.

T522W

Department Stores

2

HECK'S
REG.

TO •2.99

HECK'S REG. $3.48

·Geared to Serve You

Drug Stores

Select from ossorted numbers
in sizes S-M-l-Xl

1!:le·lect from an assortment of

$211

REG. s3.99

CI.DTH/Nti DEPT.

FOOTBALL TEE SHIRT

SIZES 12-24 MO.

$

$6.88

MENS'
SHORT SLEEVE

GIRLS'
POLYESTER
&amp; COTTON

INFANTS
SLACKS

This Is Where The Action Is •••

ORANGES

5

$

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG. TO $7.99

Cardigan style with collar and
short sleeve. Sizes 34·40 in colon
of p a ste ls and white.

'I

$ 44 ·

MEN's
WRANGLER FLARE
PLAIDS &amp; SOLIDS

DEPT.

SIZES 29 to 38

SHIRTS

FROZEN. BANQUET

2 lb. 1.99 1o pes.

ClOTHIN'

SLACKS

LADIES'
POLYESTER KNIT

l...

oz.

Pink Liquid
2
Detergent 22 oz.

CHICKEN
DINNER

$1.28
CI.OTH/Nti DEPT.

(

This Message Brought To You By

.'

SWEETHEART

09

JEANS

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS

BAKER'S

PETER PAN

PEANUT
BUnER 28 oz.

CARD SHOWER SET
Mrs. Mary Diehl, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, will celebrate her
97th birthday anniversary Feb.
25. A card shower is planned.

HECK'S REG.
$4.99

MEN'S
Select from o wide assortme nt of
pla ids a nd chambrays in Permo ·
nen t Pr'ess Polye ster and Cotton .
Sty led with Cuffs in a ssort ed col ors. Si ze s 29- 38.

Rev. Perrin
will speak

HAS SURGERY
Roy Kepteina, Aurora, Ill.,
will undergo surgery today at
the Sl. Joseph's Mercy
Hospital at Aurora. His room
number is 464 B. He is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Kapteina.

Gold.

of. panty hose . Co lors of Pa cific, Cin namon, and Brown
in size s Petite, Medium.!
Medium Tall. and Tall.

"Happiness Is" .
The Rev. Thomas Weaver of
the Middleport Church of the
Nazarene gave devotions to
open the meeting. The attendance award was won by
the kindergarten class.
Spring District 16 conference
was announced for May 4 at the
Meigs Junior High School
building. Appointed to the
nominating committee were
Mrs. Betty McKinley, Mrs.
Cathy Erwin, and Mrs. Carolyn
French. The Kindergarten
mothers served as hostesses
and greeters for the meeting.

A program on Americanism
with the Rev. W. H. Perrin as
speaker will be featured at the
Tuesday night, 7:30 meeting of
the American Legion Auxiliary
of Drew Webster Post 39.
The Rev. Mr. Perrin will
relate experiences of his years
in the service during World
War II and the Korean Conflict.
The meeting is open to the
public with ~ial invita lions
to the legionnaires and
auxiliary members.

Selecl from a wide
as sortment
of
pants styled with 2
front pockets and
cuffed. Sizes
6-16.

Select from our be ~ t q uality

Middleport PTA meets

lHURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY

PANTS

Pe rf e ct lor th e Spring
wea the r that is co min g
o ur wa y. Size s S-M·l ·
XL in colors of Na.,. y,
Medi um Blue, Green,
C h oc ol a te , a n d

PANTY
HOSE

3 DAYS OF SAVINGS

LADIES'
DENIM
&amp;
CHAMBRAY

AIRQUiPT

SLIDE VIEWER
NEWSX-70

POLAROID FILM

The radi&lt;alty new SX-70 film . Ten piclur!!s per pock !hot
develo p in brood da ylight .

HECK'S REG .
$5.99

JEWElRY DEPT.

$549

$177
HECK'S REG.
$2.19

CIGARETTE
LIGHTER

World'IIOtJli1Helli"9 di t.pOl&lt;:lbltliglow. 0...·
oelh oil olh•• • combi..,.d- t....o to &lt;one! The lvll
lil&gt;l di1pc•oble• Wi th &gt;hopei. prit:t fCH"IQIII ,
or&gt;d la1nion &lt;olorl lor ,.,.,y ro;utt. Convtn·
ie&lt;~t -,. we• ..,loll . ,.,.vllf rellin l. nerepoir!
D.p.IKI&lt;~ blo - li g hto

fi,ll

lim• .

f-.. ry lime

99c
HECK'S REG. $1 , 19

JEWElRY IJEPT.

.

�.
I

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 20, 1974

BPW hears talk on · heart attack
Recognizin g the early
warning signs of heart attack
and
getting immediate
-treatment is the key to
reducing death s, Kermit
Walton told members of the
Middlepor t Busin ess and
Professional Women' s Club
Monday night.
Walton, repres enting the
Meigs
County
Hear t
Association which has a fund
drive in progress now, showed
the film , " Early Warnin g
Signs". He noted that the film
is available to anyone for group
showing. Forty pel. of all
deaths are attributed to heart
disease and attack, Walton
pointed out.
He II' as introduced by Mrs .
Wilma Sargent who, along with
Farie Kennedy, has charge of
the house -to-house solicitation
in Middleport on Heart Sunday ,

March 3.
Final plans for the defensive
driving course to be offered
Thursday night from 7:30 to
10 :30 p.m. in the Meigs Junior
High School auditorium were
outlined by Mrs. Mary Martin,
chairwoman of the WRAP
(Women's Responsibility for
Accident Prevention)
program . She noted that there
will be a film and literature
and that the BPW will serve
coffee during a break each
hour. The public is invited to
attend.
During the meeting condueled by Mrs. John Werner,
members voted to send a
donation to the Middleport
firemen for the new emergency
vehicle.
It was reported by Mrs.
· Sargent that next month the .
club will award a scholarship

to a Meigs County senior girl

going into nurses training at
the Holzer Medical Center.
The budget was presented by
Mrs. Ann Bailey , finance
chairwoman. It was announced
that a bake sale will be held at
Dudley's March 16, and a letter
from the National Federation
noted that Maine and Montana
have ratified the equal rights
amendment. Membership was
also discussed in the communication ,
Mrs. Werner reported on the
presidents' meeting at Jackson
recently. She announced the
stale conference in Columbus,
May 3-5, and the district spring
conference in Jackson, March
31. The fall district meeting
will be Oct. 20.
Miss Freddie Houdashelt
served as secretary at the
meeting , and Mrs. Ann Bailey

read the treasurer's report in
the absence of Mrs. Grace
Pratt who is confined due to a
shoulder fracture. Monday
night's meeting was the first
Mrs. Pratt has missed in
nearly five years.
The attendance award of two
silver dollars was won by Mrs.
Sargent. Mrs. Bailey won the
traveling prize . A silent auction was conducted by Mrs.
Bailey and Mrs . Pearl
Reynolds.
Cherry pie and coffee were
served by the civic participation committee, Mrs .
Kennedy , Mrs. Sargent, Miss
Olga Pierotti, Miss Kathy
King, Mrs. Alice Mills, Mrs.
Mary Kunzelman, Mrs. Bailey,
Mrs. Beulah Strauss, Mrs.
Molly Hill, Mrs. Reynolds and
Mrs. Jean Moore.

Make
POMEROY
Your
Shopping

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9
S.UNDA Y 1 TO 7

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUN., FEB. 24, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

Center

Ohio Eta Phi women plan party

MEN's

NYLON
JACKET

By

cme

A birthday party for one of contribute one item of baked engagement.
the children at the Meigs goods to the sale at the
Darla Hawley and Sandy
County
Home
was
planned
for
Korn
gave a cultural program
Pomeroy village hall March 2
Harness - Dress- and
Saturday during the Tuesday for the benefit of the Pomeroy on "Reasonable Answers", and
Blue Denim
night meeting of the Ohio Eta Fire Deparlment. Members Wilma Reece and Susan Baer
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phil are to have their items there by presented a program on
Sororjty.
marriage with Bob Buck as the
9 a.m.
" Your Thorn MeAn Store"
Arrangements
were
also
speaker.
Members
were
asked
to
Middleporl, 0 .
made for each member to contribute recipes for a
Attending besides those
named were Carol Adams,
• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . casserole
pizza partybeing
was Connie Bailey, Sharon Bailey,
compiled. Acookbook
Bennett, Kathy
set for the first meeting in Phyllis
March at the home of Martha Cummings, Janet Downie,
McPhial with a "do your own Debbie Finlaw, Kathy Fry,
thing" auction to follow. A Barbara Logan, Terri Michael,
"bakeless" bake sale was held Dottie Musser, Susan Oliver,
Iris Payne, Janet Pickens,
following the meeting .
Kathy King distributed Sandi Sargent, Edwina Scott
candy to announce her and Karen Stanley.

HECK'S
"PRINCESS
SUE"

heritage house

=**BIRTHDAY**

Dry Cleaning Special
LADIES' LONG OOATS

.69

(Except Fur Trim)
and

MEN'S TOPOOATS

REG.
$2.35

Cleaned &amp; Finished

~-·----·--··--·----·--··--·---~

ROBINSON'S

LAUNDRY

DRY CLEANING

Pomeroy

216 E. Second

A puppet show by the Middleport kindergarten student.&lt;;.
highlighted the Middleport
PTA meeting Monday night.
The children with their
teacher, Mrs. Mary Frances
Rose, made the puppets which
they used in the presentation
titled, "Mr. Morris' Garage" .
Taking part were John
Epple, Melissa Downie, Terry
Roush, Eric Johnson, Darrell
Skaggs, Pollie Chadwell, Holly
Miller, Kathy Clonch, Lori
Roush, Carole Bailey, Darin
Wolfe, Carrie Karr, Craig
Morris, Carol Smith, Joyce
Roush, Shawn Baker, Judy
Mowery, Richard Stewart, and
David Hendricks. At the
conclusion, the children sang

RUTLAND DEPARTMENT STORE
RUTLAND, 0.

742-5543

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU FEB. 23

g·
g
'
WIENERS••••• !b~
SUPERIORS BULK

lfi2 lb

SUPERIORS

BOILED HAM ................ ... .'.

Mix or Match Sale!
CANDY
BAR
SPECIAL

Mix or Match Sale!
14 oz . Pillsbu r y Butter

Chocolate Cookies
oz. Pillsbury Peanut Butter
Cookies
18 oz. Pillsbury Sugar Cookies

15 1/•

SPECIAL

2

pkgs .

Baby Ruth, 7 pak
Butterfinger, 7 pak

109

89'

45e

Reg. 55', Special ........

NABISCO PIN WHEEL COOKIES ........................ : ...... 12 oz. pkg. 69'
MRS. FILBERT'S
BOWL

16 oz.

MARGARINE
KREY'S

24 oz.

Chicken &amp;
Dumplings

KRAFT

~ Marshmallow
.
.
-

(smooth)

Beautiful
'GIFT!
Cornucopia
Family Pin

0

CREAM 2~a r~

by b. david

eChocolate
QfiP.S

HECK'S REG.

12

j

Especially created to
portray your family's
story In beautiful
birthmonth
colors.

'14.95

bots .

IN

\

POMEROY STORES

I'

HECK 'S REG.
$4.88

lb.

69~

HECK'S REG. $9.99

CI.DTH/11&amp; DEPT.

Cl. OTH/Nti DEPT.

CI.DTH/Nti
-DEPT.

3''.
HECK'S

SLACKS

2 TO 4 TODDLERS

plaids and so lids with flore leg
slacks. Sizes 7-14.

2

Banks

2

Jewelry Stores

2

Fabric Stores

3

Shoe Stores

4

Restaurants and
Drive Ins

10

Building

Supp~

Feed &amp; Grain

Store -

1

Food Stores

4

Barber Shops

Ladies Shops

2

Beauty Shops

Hardware Stores

3

Auto Dealers

3

Mens Stores

3

Florists

2

Catalog Stores

2

Variety Stores
Auto

Supp~

Stores

4
'

1S

VELVET VELOUR
SCATTER RUGS

PARKING
For
Hundreds
Of Cars

21 "x36"

I

I

I

•••

I

e •

I

27"x45" • • •••••••••
27"x70" ••••••••••.
HECK'S REG. TO $9.99
ALSO AVAILABLE

Metered Spaces
In Riverfront
Lots .

$466
5 99
7

TANK SET .............. 4

5 66

KODAK
SUPER 8
MOVIE FILM

HECK'S REG. $5.99

MATCHING LID COVER ._... 5 166
HECK'S REG. $1.99

PWS
FREE PARKING
IN CITY LOT

Heck's
Reg. 12.44

In and o ut fine tuning . Head cleaner . Anti-theft
proof. Solid State . New thum b wheel co ntro ls
and illuminated channel ind icators. Automat ic
or manual channel change. Balance control for
perfect stereo ad justment .

POLAROID CAMERA

Reg. 146.88

'

54

,. __

KODAK
51/PER 8

MOVIE CAMERA
AUtomot1c e lec h ic·eye e~ posure con tro i-Cd S·
ty pe s1gno l in lm de r ,howl whe n to use movoe
ligh t. Fast 14mm f/ 2.7 lern. co lo r-co rrected
an d LUM ENtlED. No /gcuso ng . Fv ll1 e r.do~d
o pti ca l ~ •ewfo n d e r Rug ge d constr vtl io n
Style d on tea ture d bl o c~' and &gt;a l in sol ~er . Palm·
s•l e d &lt;H• d hghlwen,j'hl.

S]599
HECK'S REG. $42.96

1-2-3-4 di ce~ at a
Seleci·Ronic
TM Control . . ~el it und forget it!
Overthe-Counter Replacement Guoronlee.

HECK'E
REG.
$15.96

e

$

JEWElRY
DEPT.

12''

$100
Heck's Reg. $1.66

RIVAL SLOW COOKER

3112 QT. CROCK POT
WORTH ITS WAIT IN FLAVOR! A "must" for
working people, busy homemakers, gourmets.
HECK'S REG.
$18.88

JEWElRY
DEPr.

$1499

. 3100

DISPOSABLE

HI-POWER

68e

4-SLICE TOASTER
lime. e

T om t~

JEWElRY DEPT.

99

Heck's Reg. 99'

of' Pomeroy
..

5

- FlASH
CUBES
Heck's

.

$}99

WITH SPEAKERS

HECK'S REG.
$69;96

The Friendly Stores

e

AUTO 8-TRACK STEREO
"

PROCTOR-SILEX

M-24

INLAND

&gt;

MOST STORES
· OPEN

REVERSIBLE
RAG RUG

$297
I

2
4

24"x45"

-!;--,,&lt;--'

CI.DTNING DEPT.

1

3

Pet Store

8

ti.DTHING
DEPT.

T522W

Department Stores

2

HECK'S
REG.

TO •2.99

HECK'S REG. $3.48

·Geared to Serve You

Drug Stores

Select from ossorted numbers
in sizes S-M-l-Xl

1!:le·lect from an assortment of

$211

REG. s3.99

CI.DTH/Nti DEPT.

FOOTBALL TEE SHIRT

SIZES 12-24 MO.

$

$6.88

MENS'
SHORT SLEEVE

GIRLS'
POLYESTER
&amp; COTTON

INFANTS
SLACKS

This Is Where The Action Is •••

ORANGES

5

$

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG. TO $7.99

Cardigan style with collar and
short sleeve. Sizes 34·40 in colon
of p a ste ls and white.

'I

$ 44 ·

MEN's
WRANGLER FLARE
PLAIDS &amp; SOLIDS

DEPT.

SIZES 29 to 38

SHIRTS

FROZEN. BANQUET

2 lb. 1.99 1o pes.

ClOTHIN'

SLACKS

LADIES'
POLYESTER KNIT

l...

oz.

Pink Liquid
2
Detergent 22 oz.

CHICKEN
DINNER

$1.28
CI.OTH/Nti DEPT.

(

This Message Brought To You By

.'

SWEETHEART

09

JEANS

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS

BAKER'S

PETER PAN

PEANUT
BUnER 28 oz.

CARD SHOWER SET
Mrs. Mary Diehl, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, will celebrate her
97th birthday anniversary Feb.
25. A card shower is planned.

HECK'S REG.
$4.99

MEN'S
Select from o wide assortme nt of
pla ids a nd chambrays in Permo ·
nen t Pr'ess Polye ster and Cotton .
Sty led with Cuffs in a ssort ed col ors. Si ze s 29- 38.

Rev. Perrin
will speak

HAS SURGERY
Roy Kepteina, Aurora, Ill.,
will undergo surgery today at
the Sl. Joseph's Mercy
Hospital at Aurora. His room
number is 464 B. He is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Kapteina.

Gold.

of. panty hose . Co lors of Pa cific, Cin namon, and Brown
in size s Petite, Medium.!
Medium Tall. and Tall.

"Happiness Is" .
The Rev. Thomas Weaver of
the Middleport Church of the
Nazarene gave devotions to
open the meeting. The attendance award was won by
the kindergarten class.
Spring District 16 conference
was announced for May 4 at the
Meigs Junior High School
building. Appointed to the
nominating committee were
Mrs. Betty McKinley, Mrs.
Cathy Erwin, and Mrs. Carolyn
French. The Kindergarten
mothers served as hostesses
and greeters for the meeting.

A program on Americanism
with the Rev. W. H. Perrin as
speaker will be featured at the
Tuesday night, 7:30 meeting of
the American Legion Auxiliary
of Drew Webster Post 39.
The Rev. Mr. Perrin will
relate experiences of his years
in the service during World
War II and the Korean Conflict.
The meeting is open to the
public with ~ial invita lions
to the legionnaires and
auxiliary members.

Selecl from a wide
as sortment
of
pants styled with 2
front pockets and
cuffed. Sizes
6-16.

Select from our be ~ t q uality

Middleport PTA meets

lHURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY

PANTS

Pe rf e ct lor th e Spring
wea the r that is co min g
o ur wa y. Size s S-M·l ·
XL in colors of Na.,. y,
Medi um Blue, Green,
C h oc ol a te , a n d

PANTY
HOSE

3 DAYS OF SAVINGS

LADIES'
DENIM
&amp;
CHAMBRAY

AIRQUiPT

SLIDE VIEWER
NEWSX-70

POLAROID FILM

The radi&lt;alty new SX-70 film . Ten piclur!!s per pock !hot
develo p in brood da ylight .

HECK'S REG .
$5.99

JEWElRY DEPT.

$549

$177
HECK'S REG.
$2.19

CIGARETTE
LIGHTER

World'IIOtJli1Helli"9 di t.pOl&lt;:lbltliglow. 0...·
oelh oil olh•• • combi..,.d- t....o to &lt;one! The lvll
lil&gt;l di1pc•oble• Wi th &gt;hopei. prit:t fCH"IQIII ,
or&gt;d la1nion &lt;olorl lor ,.,.,y ro;utt. Convtn·
ie&lt;~t -,. we• ..,loll . ,.,.vllf rellin l. nerepoir!
D.p.IKI&lt;~ blo - li g hto

fi,ll

lim• .

f-.. ry lime

99c
HECK'S REG. $1 , 19

JEWElRY IJEPT.

.

�.

•'

'

'

'·

,,

If

••
I

;

•
Wednesday, Feb. 20, 11174

10 -

'

I('

.

'

''

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

OF FREE

.'',
''
'
•'

OPUDAILY
IOT09

.

FREE

•

,'

.
.'
'

'

'I

5

•
'' .

QUART
PENNZOIL .
10W30
I

•

&amp;

'I

MOTOR ~. PE'!!!JIIL .

·•.

0 I L I..· \, · · . ':&lt; '\
' ij '··.,\·"
:T. ,/ ·~. 7..... &gt;

./.

\ '·

BRAKE
AND
TAIL LIGHT
LARGE

METAL
FLEXIBLE

TRANSMISSION
FILLER
$144
.

BULBS

RUBBER
MALLET

69'

/J.

' '·.

HEAVY DUTY

BRAKE
FLUID

.

STOP
LEAK

2
,,

ABOIIOriVI

99(

°

79'
'"""'""''""'

HECK' S REG. 99'

GILLETTE
SUPER
STAINLESS

SINE-AID

CLAIROL

sac

24'S

PSSSSST

$1.41

c

AUTOMOniiE

..,. ....·

89' lA.

79'

DENTURE
CLEANSER
TABLETS

HECK'S REG .

HECK'S REG.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

HECK' S REG.

$1 .35

6

oz.

SOYD.

NOXZEMA

DENTAL

SKIN
CREAM

FLOSS
WAXED
&amp;
UNWAXED

$1.29
COSMETIC
DEPT.

69'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

_

60's

48c

HECK' S
REG.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

............ . ....

EFFERDENT

BLADES
5'5

INSTANT
SHAMPOO
REGULAR&amp; OILY

$1.18

HECK'S REG. $1.34

HECK ' S
REG.

70Z.

HEC.K'S REG.

HICK'SIIG.

0
FOI$1

HICK'S IIG.

ENGINE
CLEANER
AND DECiREASER

TUFF
STUFF
MULTI-CLEANER

PRESTONE

99'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

DUPONT

2201.

TOOTH PASTE

c

PINT

oz.

SENSODYNE

REG. &amp; UNSCENTED

12 oz.

HICK'S IIG.

$1.99

..

.

DUPONT

66(

HECK'S REG .
$1.39

,.

ANTI-PERSPIRANT

,·

AUTOMOnVE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

PACKAGE OF 2

88(

HECK'S REG .

49

,:I '

2 .2

VERY DRY

.. ...;.•;, / '
I. . ·. MOTOR
OI L: ' / ; ·
/ '

bigger ·

DIAL

•
'
'

.,

oz.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

HECK 'S
REG.

HECK' S REG .

99'

69'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

VINYL COVERED

BATTERY
TERMINAL ENDS

CHROME

DOOR TRIM
One pa ir. Rus t &amp;. tOrni sh proof . Protects
a ga inst nick s, chips , dents.

.H:~~:s
$1.39
AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

7l~
.
"
PAll

HECK'S
REG.

$1.09
AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

66C

OIL CAN

CAP TYPE

PR!~~!~!eSeAP

OIL FILTER

SPOUT

HE K~

REG.
$1.38
AUTOMOT..1VE
DEPT.

HECK' S REG.

$1.31

PAIR

88

\

I

Design~d for extra sa fety. Cop cannot be
re~oved unless lever is lift ed and pressure is

WRENCH
c

99(

--

&lt;

rel1eve d. Pressu re is automa tica ll y e.Jtha usted thru the overflow tube . Sizes to fit most

~"

,J,

HECK'S
REG.
$2.29

AUTOMOniiE
DEPT.

s 144

· '-.. /

I

I

'

CHAIN LIGHTS ·

I'

.i

HARDWARE

TIVE

Screw Into Any Socket, like A Light Bulb.

$

Serves a multitude of purposes . Table
fold s easily and compactly. Straight Vbraced legs, self-leveling tips.
HECK"S
REG.

s

99

$17.88

HECK'S REG.

$13.66
HARDWARE
DEPT.

KITCHEN
ASSORTMENT

20 OZ. AEROSOL

BATHROOM
CLEANER

c

'$24.88

TANK SPRAYER

55

DOW

HECK's REG.

HA/IDWA/11
DEPT.

HECK' S REG . TO $1.78

8 OZ. AEROSOL

OVEN CLEANER
PISTOL GRIP

.4QT.

.HOSE POTTING
NOZZLE
SOIL

99c 77(
HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

$1.77
HARDWARE
DEPT.

$1.09
HARDWARE
.DEPT.

This handy sprayer will
let you keep in check
your flow.r garden or
small vegetable garden.

OUTDOOR
HAND

GARDEN
TOOLS
Transplanter
Cultivator
Trawel

CHOICE

66(

EACH

HECK'S REG. 88'

HARDWARE
DEPT.

CLOTHES DRYER

Allows you to hang out a largo am011nt of
clothes in ·a limited space. Perfect for bock
yards, apartments or roof tops.

7HOOK
HECK'S REG.. $1.9::l

$1188

· TWINPAK
9" ROLLER REFILLS.

··66C

HICK'S RIG.

$14.99

HECK'S lEG. 19'

HARDWARE
DEPT.

IIAIIWARE
/JIIIr.

'

CLOTHES "T" POST

H:~::s $466

51''

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

BRILLO
SOAP PADS
18 CT.
HECK'S REG.

$5.66

HICK'S

53'

- ALSO AVAILABLE-

IIG.

1101/SEWARE

$2.55

DEPT.

CLOTHES PROP

64'

c

82'

640Z.

BO PEEP

AMMONIA
HECK'S
REG. 44'

00

39e

HOUSEWAREDEPT.

NOUSEWARE DEPT.

BAB-0
CLEANSER
10~

JUMBO ROLL

SARAN
WRAP

sse
~1

O"x 14"

CAKE COOLING
RACKS

HECK'S

SET OF 2

REG. Ir
'

HOUSIWAM , ,

99
EACH

100FT.

DOW

HECK'S REG.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

EACH

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HAND
SPRAYER

$

CHOICE

$14.88

A. Giant Hat &amp; Caat Rack
B. Decorative Cutting Boards 14." x 1/J" x7"
C. 9" Glass Jar in Assorted Colors
D. I 0 " Salad Bowl
E. Ice Cube Tray With Lifter
F. Broiler Pan With Rack
G. Milk Stool
H. Aluminum Iundt Mold
I. 14 'I&gt;'' Service Tray

CHOICE

HECK' S REG. 91 '

$988

$

HECK' S
REG .

EACH

WITH 3" FOAM MATTRESS

Perf ec t to brighten any room of the h o u ~e. Supplied wi th 16 ft .
wi re, 12ft. ct: a in, hoo ks, switch &amp; instructio ns .

CHOICE

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

"Dua lock'' center leg construction. 3" thick poly foam mattress in a
modern multi-colored print cotton ticking one side, solid color on the
reverse side. Tailored construction . Rollaway wheels . Pillow rest.

••

Available in an assortment of colors.

HECK'S
REG .
$3 .99

FOLDING BED

30"x72"

FIBERGLASS SHADES

'

HECK'S ,
REG.

73'

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

�.

•'

'

'

'·

,,

If

••
I

;

•
Wednesday, Feb. 20, 11174

10 -

'

I('

.

'

''

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

OF FREE

.'',
''
'
•'

OPUDAILY
IOT09

.

FREE

•

,'

.
.'
'

'

'I

5

•
'' .

QUART
PENNZOIL .
10W30
I

•

&amp;

'I

MOTOR ~. PE'!!!JIIL .

·•.

0 I L I..· \, · · . ':&lt; '\
' ij '··.,\·"
:T. ,/ ·~. 7..... &gt;

./.

\ '·

BRAKE
AND
TAIL LIGHT
LARGE

METAL
FLEXIBLE

TRANSMISSION
FILLER
$144
.

BULBS

RUBBER
MALLET

69'

/J.

' '·.

HEAVY DUTY

BRAKE
FLUID

.

STOP
LEAK

2
,,

ABOIIOriVI

99(

°

79'
'"""'""''""'

HECK' S REG. 99'

GILLETTE
SUPER
STAINLESS

SINE-AID

CLAIROL

sac

24'S

PSSSSST

$1.41

c

AUTOMOniiE

..,. ....·

89' lA.

79'

DENTURE
CLEANSER
TABLETS

HECK'S REG .

HECK'S REG.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

HECK' S REG.

$1 .35

6

oz.

SOYD.

NOXZEMA

DENTAL

SKIN
CREAM

FLOSS
WAXED
&amp;
UNWAXED

$1.29
COSMETIC
DEPT.

69'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

_

60's

48c

HECK' S
REG.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

............ . ....

EFFERDENT

BLADES
5'5

INSTANT
SHAMPOO
REGULAR&amp; OILY

$1.18

HECK'S REG. $1.34

HECK ' S
REG.

70Z.

HEC.K'S REG.

HICK'SIIG.

0
FOI$1

HICK'S IIG.

ENGINE
CLEANER
AND DECiREASER

TUFF
STUFF
MULTI-CLEANER

PRESTONE

99'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

DUPONT

2201.

TOOTH PASTE

c

PINT

oz.

SENSODYNE

REG. &amp; UNSCENTED

12 oz.

HICK'S IIG.

$1.99

..

.

DUPONT

66(

HECK'S REG .
$1.39

,.

ANTI-PERSPIRANT

,·

AUTOMOnVE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

PACKAGE OF 2

88(

HECK'S REG .

49

,:I '

2 .2

VERY DRY

.. ...;.•;, / '
I. . ·. MOTOR
OI L: ' / ; ·
/ '

bigger ·

DIAL

•
'
'

.,

oz.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

HECK 'S
REG.

HECK' S REG .

99'

69'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

VINYL COVERED

BATTERY
TERMINAL ENDS

CHROME

DOOR TRIM
One pa ir. Rus t &amp;. tOrni sh proof . Protects
a ga inst nick s, chips , dents.

.H:~~:s
$1.39
AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

7l~
.
"
PAll

HECK'S
REG.

$1.09
AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

66C

OIL CAN

CAP TYPE

PR!~~!~!eSeAP

OIL FILTER

SPOUT

HE K~

REG.
$1.38
AUTOMOT..1VE
DEPT.

HECK' S REG.

$1.31

PAIR

88

\

I

Design~d for extra sa fety. Cop cannot be
re~oved unless lever is lift ed and pressure is

WRENCH
c

99(

--

&lt;

rel1eve d. Pressu re is automa tica ll y e.Jtha usted thru the overflow tube . Sizes to fit most

~"

,J,

HECK'S
REG.
$2.29

AUTOMOniiE
DEPT.

s 144

· '-.. /

I

I

'

CHAIN LIGHTS ·

I'

.i

HARDWARE

TIVE

Screw Into Any Socket, like A Light Bulb.

$

Serves a multitude of purposes . Table
fold s easily and compactly. Straight Vbraced legs, self-leveling tips.
HECK"S
REG.

s

99

$17.88

HECK'S REG.

$13.66
HARDWARE
DEPT.

KITCHEN
ASSORTMENT

20 OZ. AEROSOL

BATHROOM
CLEANER

c

'$24.88

TANK SPRAYER

55

DOW

HECK's REG.

HA/IDWA/11
DEPT.

HECK' S REG . TO $1.78

8 OZ. AEROSOL

OVEN CLEANER
PISTOL GRIP

.4QT.

.HOSE POTTING
NOZZLE
SOIL

99c 77(
HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

$1.77
HARDWARE
DEPT.

$1.09
HARDWARE
.DEPT.

This handy sprayer will
let you keep in check
your flow.r garden or
small vegetable garden.

OUTDOOR
HAND

GARDEN
TOOLS
Transplanter
Cultivator
Trawel

CHOICE

66(

EACH

HECK'S REG. 88'

HARDWARE
DEPT.

CLOTHES DRYER

Allows you to hang out a largo am011nt of
clothes in ·a limited space. Perfect for bock
yards, apartments or roof tops.

7HOOK
HECK'S REG.. $1.9::l

$1188

· TWINPAK
9" ROLLER REFILLS.

··66C

HICK'S RIG.

$14.99

HECK'S lEG. 19'

HARDWARE
DEPT.

IIAIIWARE
/JIIIr.

'

CLOTHES "T" POST

H:~::s $466

51''

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

BRILLO
SOAP PADS
18 CT.
HECK'S REG.

$5.66

HICK'S

53'

- ALSO AVAILABLE-

IIG.

1101/SEWARE

$2.55

DEPT.

CLOTHES PROP

64'

c

82'

640Z.

BO PEEP

AMMONIA
HECK'S
REG. 44'

00

39e

HOUSEWAREDEPT.

NOUSEWARE DEPT.

BAB-0
CLEANSER
10~

JUMBO ROLL

SARAN
WRAP

sse
~1

O"x 14"

CAKE COOLING
RACKS

HECK'S

SET OF 2

REG. Ir
'

HOUSIWAM , ,

99
EACH

100FT.

DOW

HECK'S REG.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

EACH

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HAND
SPRAYER

$

CHOICE

$14.88

A. Giant Hat &amp; Caat Rack
B. Decorative Cutting Boards 14." x 1/J" x7"
C. 9" Glass Jar in Assorted Colors
D. I 0 " Salad Bowl
E. Ice Cube Tray With Lifter
F. Broiler Pan With Rack
G. Milk Stool
H. Aluminum Iundt Mold
I. 14 'I&gt;'' Service Tray

CHOICE

HECK' S REG. 91 '

$988

$

HECK' S
REG .

EACH

WITH 3" FOAM MATTRESS

Perf ec t to brighten any room of the h o u ~e. Supplied wi th 16 ft .
wi re, 12ft. ct: a in, hoo ks, switch &amp; instructio ns .

CHOICE

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

"Dua lock'' center leg construction. 3" thick poly foam mattress in a
modern multi-colored print cotton ticking one side, solid color on the
reverse side. Tailored construction . Rollaway wheels . Pillow rest.

••

Available in an assortment of colors.

HECK'S
REG .
$3 .99

FOLDING BED

30"x72"

FIBERGLASS SHADES

'

HECK'S ,
REG.

73'

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

�I ,

':
13-The Daily Sentinel, Middlej,ort-Pomeroy, 0 .. Feb. 20. 1974

~

News
Notes
I
.
!

·Mason County
OPEN DAILY

:~

By Alma Marshall .·.

IOT09
SUNDAY

....... . MASON

I TO 7

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, FEB. 24, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
9X12

·CABIN
TENT
ALL CANVAS

COLEMAN DELUXE

2-BURNER
STOVE

•

door, window~. ur1d ~ ho ight
wolh . • Roo f mode of 673
a t . canory vellow , 6 oz . wal l~
• Huge wide ~cree n d oo r w1th

$20.88
SPORTS DEPT.

3 -woy nylon zipper. ~ t orm flop

Thermocloud Synthetic Fiberfill . Durable

con be 11pped 1n place or tie d
bo&lt;k lor lull ve nlilollon _ • Fiberglm\ ~cr ee ni ng through 01.1 1
w ill not d e te ri &lt;Jrote in

99

$

.,~

WASHABLE
SLEEPING BAG

A leg111mate lull \ize fa mily

&lt;cmp1119 tent w 1l h o lo r y c

Two Burners . 11" between centers. 1 y,
pint fuel capacity . Folded size
22"x13 3/.i''x614''

HECK'S REG.

3 LB. POLY

spuntex lop material. Cotton lining. Zipper closure.

~ unlight

$10''

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S
REG.

$14.99
SPORTS DEPT.

$99.88

TRUE TEMPER

2D CELL

PI.ASTIC

FLASHLIGHT

. '

• •"

•.;., ' &gt;

~. ......,.J

SPIN CAST
REEL ·.
All Die Cost Aluminvm HOtJ$ing With Hard

Chromed, Stainless Steel Free Running

ULTRA LIGHT SPINNING ROD

5' Ultra light teakwood finish wonderod. Gold anodized metal fiHings
with gold plated carbide top. Four Guides.

HfCIC'S RE_G.
99' c l c
SPORTS DEPT.

.·· ,

Roller Pick Up Pin . Rubber Line Snubber
Accurate Co~B And Long line Life .
Lorg e, Easy Grip Cronk Handle. Brass
Knob Shalt

. '·
'.

$1599

HECK'S REG.

$19.99
SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $9.91

SPORTS DEPT.

PUP

SHAKESPEARE

TENT

ULTRA LIGHT

SPINNING REEL

TRUE TEMPER

SPIN OR SPIN CAST ROD

Two-piece sol id gloss rods. White blank, dark brown windings and whi te trim .
Three heavy Chrome V-frame guides and tip top. Fixed reel seat, locking ring,
with 6-inch lower co rk grip, 4-i nch upper grip . Weighs 7 oz.

HECK'S REG.

CHOICE$
$7.99
SPORTS DEPT.

The low priced tent, designed
to keep the youngsters in their
own back yard . Complete with
all poles, ~teel stokes and 9u)
lines. 4 oz. Yellow tent doth.

Weight 9 oz. Ball Bearing mounted gears,
powerful 60 drag. 4.7 to 1 gear ratio for
lost retrieve. Stainle" Stool Bail holds 150
yds . 6 # lest mono line.

5!.!.

5 1699

HECK'S REG.

$19.99
SPORTS DEPT.

TUBULAR SPIN CAST ROD

:~~dti~l.ass 2 pc. spin or spin cast rods. Three hard$chome guid es

HECK'S REG.

.''' .

$7.99
SPORTS DEPT.

5 1099

'
' '.

HECK'S
REG.

$14.99

' '.

.'
. ·:

•
'

'

cans
for

510 feet of 10 # tell Deluxe monofilament line.

5

... .

HOOKO
S

The &lt;e ntury reel wi th ex tra capacity mu ltiple shoE! drag ,
rig ht or le ft hond retrieve ; dual anti r e,.e r~e. T u ng~ten
carbide p i &lt;~ up pin . Bronze Beo ring5. Equipped with op p .

49

$13.99

ASSORTED CAN

CITATION
SPIN CAST REEL

.' .

HECK'S REG.

SPORTS DEPT.

JOHNSON

TRUE TEMPER

59''

SPORTS
DEPT.

=·TiieSdaf.iiias··:cmeriforiible day for a group of

Mason County Homemakers who ·took the bus tour to the state
capitol building.
I had visited the capitol in Charleston once before and have
never ceased to marvel at the beauty of its crystal chandeliers
imported from Czechoslovakia; the huge colWIUIS of marble, and
some of the walls also in marble, and the eagle motif engraved in
marble, throughout the magnificent structure.
In the back of my mind I had hoped to meet Phyllis Evans
Given, formerly from Pomeroy, now a delegate from Kanawha
County. Phyllis and I attended Pomeroy High School at the same
time- had not seen her in person for years - but many times I
bad seen her on TV . I was proud that she had become interested
in public service and had become well known in the political
world.
We mel in the office of Conunissioner of Agriculture, Gus
Douglass, where we were served coffee and cookies. It was nice
to have someone who was so very busy take time to visit with our
group.
Of course, many of us had met Conpnissloner Douglass and
ills attractive wife, the former Anna Lee Roush of Letart, the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs, A, P, Roush.
We visited Secretary of State Edgar Heiskell's office but
were disappointed that he was not in. We also visited Gov. Arch
Moore's office, accompanied by Mike Shaw, member of the
House of Delegates (R·Mason County). Gov. Moore also was
absent, but pictures of the groop were taken by a photographer in
the ·governor's office.
Senator Orton Jones of Roane County spoke to us and
complimented delegate Mike Shaw of Point Pleasant.
In praising Shaw he said Shaw is a likely candid.!te to be
minority leader of the house.
SINCE MANY PERSONS in the Bend area remember
PhyUisEv8118 Givens and! don't believe much bas been written
about lhls dedicated, channing lady. I want to tell you a little bit
about her. She is the widow of Atty. Harold Givens who died in
1959. Her husband got her interested in politics, so besides being
the motber of two children (now college students), she became
acUve in politics.
She was elected to the House of Delegates in 1970 from
Kanawha County and reelected in 1972.In 1971 she became one of
two women elected to the 26-member Board of Governprs of the
NaUonal Society of State Legislators National OrganlzaUon
which represents state legislators of the 50 states.
In 1972 she was reelected to tbe Board of Governors and in
1973 became the first woman to serve as an officer of this
National Organization. Last year the Kroger Company created a
lfHnember NaUonal Consumers Advisory Council and Mrs.
Givens was tbe only West Virginian chosen on it. She is vicepresident of the West Virginia Federation of Democratic
Women; she serves on the NaUonal Education Task Force, which
is a liaison group Unklng Congress, tbe White House and the state
legislators and she has been selected for Who's Who in American
Women, Who's Who in the World, and Who's Who in Politics.
This year tbe speaker of the house appointed her to serve as
vice-cllalrman of the powerful Education Committee.
She Is the daughter of Mrs. Ray Evans of Pomeroy.

bend area.
The association voted to sponsor a variety show to be given
at Wahama HighSchool the latter part of March by the grade
school students. Tickets will be sold in advance.
Mrs. Helen Johnson reported a soup and bake sale will be
held March 2. Kenneth Reyrnonds, president of the PrA,
presided. PlaygroWld equipment, in need of repair, was
discussed.
Melanie White aM Diana Dillon of the Busy Bee 4-H Club
presented devotionals. Refreshments were served.·

E-R fund now $13,600

DIRECTOR GERALD STEWART, formerly of Mason. now
of Pl. Pleasant, bas every reason to be proud of his Point
Pleasant High Black Knight Band. Musicians from his band
attended the recent Regional Solo and Ensemble Festival at
Marshall University. The Point Pleasant group, accompanied by
Director Stewart, received several good and superior ratings.
The following competed as soloists or in ensemble groops: David
Kayser and Kim Dunsmoor, both given the opportunity to make
taped applications for State recognition at the State Music
Conference, and Jeff Parsons, Danny Dunsmoor, Denise McDaniel, Rebecca Langstaff, Patty Meaige,!Uilph Grimm, Chip
Armstrong, Katrinka Hart and Kathy Foster.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admissions Delbert
Teaford, Rutland; Tracy
McKinney, Rutland ; Teresa
Smith, Pomeroy ; Lillian
Moore, Pomeroy ; Ariella
Vanover, Syracuse; Margaret
Allen, Pomeroy; John Me-

Nemar, Pomeroy; Glenna
Little, Middleport ; Samuel P.
McKinney, Rutland; Robert
Pullins, Coolville.
Discharges
Homer
Delong, Linda Bailey, Teresa
Smith, Carl Greenlees, Moses
Keiser .

The
Middleport
Fire
Department's emergency
ambulance fWld has reached
$13,600,
Contributions continu~d
arriving Tuesday at the
department's headquarters
encouraging firemen's hopes
that the $15,000 fund drive can
be concluded Feb. 24. one
month after the first contribution was received .
Pete Kloes, chairman of the
ways and means committee,
said that business contributions are coming in but
stressed hope that business and
professional contributions will
be received soon. Meantime,
door-to-door solicitations are
being conducted in the western
section of Meigs CoWlty and in
Cheshire Township on behalf of
the department's lund drive.
Kloes also reported good
response from residents out·
side of the county. He stressed
that contributions no matter
how small are more than

welcome. Donations may he lu ck eydoo, Edith Thoma s,
left at the fire station or mailed Hea rth stone Class of Mid dleport First Baptist Church ;
toP. 0. Box 144 in Middleport. Charles
Wayland . Mark V
Latest contributions to the Supermarket; Grill Thomp·
drive were

made by Mrs.
Homer Hawkins. leo Reuter,

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth I m.
boden,
Vona
M cK night.
Philathea Society of t he
Middleport Church of Christ;
Jean Zirkle, Mr.. and Mrs.
Raymond Stewart, Mr . and
Mrs . Gerald Anthony, Vernon
and Bertha's Grocery, Amy

son, Mildred Beeson, Dudley's
Florist, Middleport Amateur
Garden
Club,
Pomeroy

Luigi's.Pizza
POMEROY, OHIO

PLAYER OF WEEK

PHONE 992-3984

CLEVELAND (UP!)
Heidelberg's Larry Remmer, a
&amp;.5 jwnplng jack. today was
named the Ohio Conference
Player of the Week. Remmer,
who has been playing
basketball for only two years,
hit!or 25 points and snatched 18
rebounds against Mount Union,
and came back with 18 points
and 14 rebounds against
Wittenberg.

Starting Friday, Feb. 22
Through Thursday, Feb. 28
YOU GET · THE 3RD ITEM ON A
PIZZA FOR ...

ONLY A NICKEL

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

~~
Coe·p~

I W'J 'Th.iA,tJ,L
&amp; SGA~e~$216

Good Thru Sat., Feb. 23rd., 1973 In

All Franklin Co.
A&amp;P WEO Stores
BONELESS

MASON - The Mason Homemakers met Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Matilda Noble. Mrs. Elmer VanMeter presented
the devotionals. Lesson on nutrition was given by Mrs. J. Mar·
shall. Various foods were passed around for club members to
taste and recipes sul:mltted for club members to copy. The club
members started on their project of making items t,o sell.
Refreslunents were served to Mrs. Elmer VanMeter, Mrs,
Landon Smith, Mrs. Lawrence Roush, Mrs. Evelyn Stewart,
Mrs. Alburtlce Young, Mrs, Law-ene Lewis, Mrs. Uoyd
Wllllam8, Mrs. John Roach, Mrs. Dorothy Cartwright and Mrs .
J. Marshall.

~$1:J9
lb.

MASON- Dick Young of the West Virginia State Pollee will
talk on "Drug Awareness" when the Mason Parent Teachers
Assn. meets in March. All Interested persons are invited, A
question· and answer period will follow.
At tbe meeting recently. at l'lfason Grade School the group
enjoyed a program presented by the Christian Community Choir
made up of pupils from the seventh to eleventh grade from the

t~=~~~

U.S. GOV'T. INSPECTED

A&amp;P SKINLESS

11CHC~AI·

tJaMea£

e~
of Giblels

3 -Leg Qlrs. w Backs
3-Breast Qtrs. w Backs

w~

4 gA

l·lb.
pkg.

~

,

lb.

·

99~

SUNNYBROOK

Gtuule ''(L"

HECK'S REG. 29• CAN

MEDICARE

MeclfaUIII

£gga,

SUPPLEMENT-INSURANCE
Enrollment Open Here
YOU MUST BE ON MEDICARE

ZEBCO

SHAKESPEARE
1/, LB. SPOOL

MONO LINE

99(

CHAIN
STRINGER

SPIN CAST REEL
Mt di,...,·ligllr fo~ lh ... ote~ ooel Oil·••toonin'oJ, ho:.n:le""d molal
~"" · o tod " "'~••d melol b.oor&gt;"'ii•· Hordtnod otul cenle,.~afl
ond ctanl: ohoh. tiog ldmpoct Krolo,.ic bod, oncl &lt;DIIet. Pol iohocl
otuOnlell opimoeol,.ud wit lo t .. onlyp&lt;&gt;i"' pic'oup lo&gt;&lt; in&lt;lnn l rehio.,
rMp&lt;&gt;nM. fu ll &lt;&lt;tde brake rin.., lock• li~~t l •r m l, ,.itho,.t piMhln~
or lrocluriny. 5priny·o&lt;twttod ral&lt;l•• d•uy &gt;y&gt;htm. Thum ~ap#t•
o lo d doay &lt;on l•cl.

69(

MITCHELL 300

5 PLY

~ ... perl&lt;l)l,.. wolem of .,qht 1)1".-;ilion·..,Oift ~~·• lo .-~ .... ih
FlO""., in """'-t hu1~. l'w~ lpOOio . • -~ with G dilfH- ~IW.

BASKETBALL

,..,.....,,, D•oe ~....b. onto·•-lltolot ""d Teflon · drog. f•o·

'"'" Ollt· opoti..O rt&lt;ol.., n, thtNR~bo&amp;;td &lt;orrolion · rt~oilfonl ion·
ooh. con..,nient Q&lt;Oio·••"frM ·OftC! ftldtne Mnole ..;1~ ,_,~&lt;1·

$499

HECK'S
REG.
$3.99

SPHTS
DEPT.

lo,..,.d 'ii"P·

·

.

ctn.

doz.

...
....

Gna pelfu«it,

'

·L~r.$100

Available To $100 ADay For Hospital
Expenses 365 Days After Medicare

'

'

.
...
.'
'

Mix ar Match Sale!

Pays In extended care facilities. Here is a list of some
of the features, no one too old. NO HEALTH
REQUIREMENTS, protects you for any condition you

..

79e

Indian River White Seedless

expenses.

'

SPHTS

REG. 94' SPORTS DEPT.

'h·gal.

Senior citizens here have an opportunity to enroll in a
unique hospital and extended care program which supplements Medicare to pay the ever increasing medical

SPIN REEL

NYLON WOUND

Emergency
Squad,
John
Taylor, Jim Mitchell , Kenny
Cooke , Rawlings - Coats
Funeral Hom e, Anna Qqdin.
Mr . and Mrs. Willard Walker,
Rod Karr, Mr . and Mrs. Mike
Shuler, G. and J . Auto Parts
Co ., Mr. and Mrs . Max Lam ·
bert, Mr . and Mrs . Joe Shuler,
Jr ., Mrs. Pearl Darst, Mr .. and
Mrs. Homer Forrest. John
Blosser, Mr . and Mrs. John
Davidson and Mr . and Mrs.
Deb Becker.

'""' ""'o'

Head Lettuce

F;:~h Carrots

have. Even covers CANCER. ARTHRITIS, HEART

'""" ""'

CONDITION, DIABETES or any other illness.
ALL ACCIDENTS COVERED

•ascal Celery

$I
3

FINE FOR COOKING

OO Yellow Onions

'•" cho;c•

F••

3"'&amp;9·
h :tl.'

CALIFORNIA

Navel. Oranges

Benefit Effective On Enrollment ·Date
1

NO WAITING PERIODS
..

MILTON BRADLEY

FINGER PAINT
SET
FOR AGES 3 TO ADULT

YAHTZEE

AN EXCITING GAME OF
SKILL AND CHANCE.

JIGSAW PUZZL~
ASSORTMENT

COLORFORMS

You do not pay extra regardleSs of age or condition .
Guaranteed renewable for life, can never be tan celled by
company.
Licensed by the State of Ohio . Good in any state
licensed hospital or extended care facility .
Pays in addition to any coverage you now have. All
' benefits paid to you. In Ohio is underwritten by Capital

LimE PEOPLE

Creote your own odveoture with the Colorforms pinstic pieces. Choose lrom assorted styles that stick like
mogic . No scissors. No paste.

,Insurance Co. of Ohio.

AT SCHOOL OR
Safe so~ plastic and nort tox_ic colors

HICK'SIIG, $1.14

FRENCH'S INSTANT

REGULAR

••. •
With This =_
pkg.
e Coupon : ·
Thru Sat.. Feb. 23ft!. A~
WEO. Limit One Coupon ~
Limit One Per Family !iiD-,-

8514 N. Main St.
O.yton. Ohio 45415

1 t Understand .There Is No Obligation ..

I

I NAME ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I
,
I ADDRE;SS.~ ••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I.
'
I CITY ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
,.
I ••••••• • . •

.

.

••

'

.

69'
·;:::;·
Modess

54-oa.

1~-----------------------I Would Like Addilional Information
·
1 About Medicare Supplement

'

3,:':;$333 ~~~itime Dog F~'od" 33.

SENIOR CITIZEN SERVICE AGENCY

HECK'S REG. 84' lA.

Tlf -T.

M~;;~rritouse

CLIP AND MAlL TODAY
FOR FREE FACTS, MAIL TO:

CHOia
58(1ACH

HECK'S REG. $2.38 TOY DEPT.

GROUND COFFEE

Mashed Potatoes

CHUG CHUG
CHOQ. CHOO
.

Choose from 100 or 500 pieo:e pun le assortment to give you
~ours of fo mily fun.

CHOICI

HECK'S REG. $1.18

GROUND COFFEE

·

MILTON BRADLEY

Maxwell House . ·~.:- s213 L;nd~~0 -Lakes B;t;~; 954
....slls w"'AhR~ARINEd
. I ... ... ..594
1ppe Impem
Maxwell House . ,;..
25 C~~~b~;~d Mix . ·~~~- 33'
2
.
~
:
;
,
s2
Maxwell House

'

Ir

•

•

'
PHONE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••T•

t-~----~--.,..--~---------.--..)
HI$~E·••••••·•••••i•••WIFE'SAGE •••••••••• ••

~·

$1
Doans Pills . . ."!O:'
Maxim Coffee .
•• $139 ~

FOR. FAST RELIEF

k of Magnesia

09

,~·

....

1•1 .. ,

INSTANT

ALL VARIETIES

\JElro

Jell-0 . .

29• Woollte Liquid

·
Jiffy Pie Crust Mlx 16 'oz. 2-::;:;:
A·Penn Wick Deodorizer . . •:;;~ · 56•
Frozen Coffee Rich .

To A&amp;P. WEO , This

79

VALUABLE COUPO
FOR COOKING

J;~

~Oif,
41 .••. $129 With This
btl.
Coupon
Good Thru Sat., Feb. 23rd. AA&amp;P WEO. Limit One Coupon
Limit One Per Family

l1I1ll •

Week And
·I

.- .

�I ,

':
13-The Daily Sentinel, Middlej,ort-Pomeroy, 0 .. Feb. 20. 1974

~

News
Notes
I
.
!

·Mason County
OPEN DAILY

:~

By Alma Marshall .·.

IOT09
SUNDAY

....... . MASON

I TO 7

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, FEB. 24, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
9X12

·CABIN
TENT
ALL CANVAS

COLEMAN DELUXE

2-BURNER
STOVE

•

door, window~. ur1d ~ ho ight
wolh . • Roo f mode of 673
a t . canory vellow , 6 oz . wal l~
• Huge wide ~cree n d oo r w1th

$20.88
SPORTS DEPT.

3 -woy nylon zipper. ~ t orm flop

Thermocloud Synthetic Fiberfill . Durable

con be 11pped 1n place or tie d
bo&lt;k lor lull ve nlilollon _ • Fiberglm\ ~cr ee ni ng through 01.1 1
w ill not d e te ri &lt;Jrote in

99

$

.,~

WASHABLE
SLEEPING BAG

A leg111mate lull \ize fa mily

&lt;cmp1119 tent w 1l h o lo r y c

Two Burners . 11" between centers. 1 y,
pint fuel capacity . Folded size
22"x13 3/.i''x614''

HECK'S REG.

3 LB. POLY

spuntex lop material. Cotton lining. Zipper closure.

~ unlight

$10''

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S
REG.

$14.99
SPORTS DEPT.

$99.88

TRUE TEMPER

2D CELL

PI.ASTIC

FLASHLIGHT

. '

• •"

•.;., ' &gt;

~. ......,.J

SPIN CAST
REEL ·.
All Die Cost Aluminvm HOtJ$ing With Hard

Chromed, Stainless Steel Free Running

ULTRA LIGHT SPINNING ROD

5' Ultra light teakwood finish wonderod. Gold anodized metal fiHings
with gold plated carbide top. Four Guides.

HfCIC'S RE_G.
99' c l c
SPORTS DEPT.

.·· ,

Roller Pick Up Pin . Rubber Line Snubber
Accurate Co~B And Long line Life .
Lorg e, Easy Grip Cronk Handle. Brass
Knob Shalt

. '·
'.

$1599

HECK'S REG.

$19.99
SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $9.91

SPORTS DEPT.

PUP

SHAKESPEARE

TENT

ULTRA LIGHT

SPINNING REEL

TRUE TEMPER

SPIN OR SPIN CAST ROD

Two-piece sol id gloss rods. White blank, dark brown windings and whi te trim .
Three heavy Chrome V-frame guides and tip top. Fixed reel seat, locking ring,
with 6-inch lower co rk grip, 4-i nch upper grip . Weighs 7 oz.

HECK'S REG.

CHOICE$
$7.99
SPORTS DEPT.

The low priced tent, designed
to keep the youngsters in their
own back yard . Complete with
all poles, ~teel stokes and 9u)
lines. 4 oz. Yellow tent doth.

Weight 9 oz. Ball Bearing mounted gears,
powerful 60 drag. 4.7 to 1 gear ratio for
lost retrieve. Stainle" Stool Bail holds 150
yds . 6 # lest mono line.

5!.!.

5 1699

HECK'S REG.

$19.99
SPORTS DEPT.

TUBULAR SPIN CAST ROD

:~~dti~l.ass 2 pc. spin or spin cast rods. Three hard$chome guid es

HECK'S REG.

.''' .

$7.99
SPORTS DEPT.

5 1099

'
' '.

HECK'S
REG.

$14.99

' '.

.'
. ·:

•
'

'

cans
for

510 feet of 10 # tell Deluxe monofilament line.

5

... .

HOOKO
S

The &lt;e ntury reel wi th ex tra capacity mu ltiple shoE! drag ,
rig ht or le ft hond retrieve ; dual anti r e,.e r~e. T u ng~ten
carbide p i &lt;~ up pin . Bronze Beo ring5. Equipped with op p .

49

$13.99

ASSORTED CAN

CITATION
SPIN CAST REEL

.' .

HECK'S REG.

SPORTS DEPT.

JOHNSON

TRUE TEMPER

59''

SPORTS
DEPT.

=·TiieSdaf.iiias··:cmeriforiible day for a group of

Mason County Homemakers who ·took the bus tour to the state
capitol building.
I had visited the capitol in Charleston once before and have
never ceased to marvel at the beauty of its crystal chandeliers
imported from Czechoslovakia; the huge colWIUIS of marble, and
some of the walls also in marble, and the eagle motif engraved in
marble, throughout the magnificent structure.
In the back of my mind I had hoped to meet Phyllis Evans
Given, formerly from Pomeroy, now a delegate from Kanawha
County. Phyllis and I attended Pomeroy High School at the same
time- had not seen her in person for years - but many times I
bad seen her on TV . I was proud that she had become interested
in public service and had become well known in the political
world.
We mel in the office of Conunissioner of Agriculture, Gus
Douglass, where we were served coffee and cookies. It was nice
to have someone who was so very busy take time to visit with our
group.
Of course, many of us had met Conpnissloner Douglass and
ills attractive wife, the former Anna Lee Roush of Letart, the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs, A, P, Roush.
We visited Secretary of State Edgar Heiskell's office but
were disappointed that he was not in. We also visited Gov. Arch
Moore's office, accompanied by Mike Shaw, member of the
House of Delegates (R·Mason County). Gov. Moore also was
absent, but pictures of the groop were taken by a photographer in
the ·governor's office.
Senator Orton Jones of Roane County spoke to us and
complimented delegate Mike Shaw of Point Pleasant.
In praising Shaw he said Shaw is a likely candid.!te to be
minority leader of the house.
SINCE MANY PERSONS in the Bend area remember
PhyUisEv8118 Givens and! don't believe much bas been written
about lhls dedicated, channing lady. I want to tell you a little bit
about her. She is the widow of Atty. Harold Givens who died in
1959. Her husband got her interested in politics, so besides being
the motber of two children (now college students), she became
acUve in politics.
She was elected to the House of Delegates in 1970 from
Kanawha County and reelected in 1972.In 1971 she became one of
two women elected to the 26-member Board of Governprs of the
NaUonal Society of State Legislators National OrganlzaUon
which represents state legislators of the 50 states.
In 1972 she was reelected to tbe Board of Governors and in
1973 became the first woman to serve as an officer of this
National Organization. Last year the Kroger Company created a
lfHnember NaUonal Consumers Advisory Council and Mrs.
Givens was tbe only West Virginian chosen on it. She is vicepresident of the West Virginia Federation of Democratic
Women; she serves on the NaUonal Education Task Force, which
is a liaison group Unklng Congress, tbe White House and the state
legislators and she has been selected for Who's Who in American
Women, Who's Who in the World, and Who's Who in Politics.
This year tbe speaker of the house appointed her to serve as
vice-cllalrman of the powerful Education Committee.
She Is the daughter of Mrs. Ray Evans of Pomeroy.

bend area.
The association voted to sponsor a variety show to be given
at Wahama HighSchool the latter part of March by the grade
school students. Tickets will be sold in advance.
Mrs. Helen Johnson reported a soup and bake sale will be
held March 2. Kenneth Reyrnonds, president of the PrA,
presided. PlaygroWld equipment, in need of repair, was
discussed.
Melanie White aM Diana Dillon of the Busy Bee 4-H Club
presented devotionals. Refreshments were served.·

E-R fund now $13,600

DIRECTOR GERALD STEWART, formerly of Mason. now
of Pl. Pleasant, bas every reason to be proud of his Point
Pleasant High Black Knight Band. Musicians from his band
attended the recent Regional Solo and Ensemble Festival at
Marshall University. The Point Pleasant group, accompanied by
Director Stewart, received several good and superior ratings.
The following competed as soloists or in ensemble groops: David
Kayser and Kim Dunsmoor, both given the opportunity to make
taped applications for State recognition at the State Music
Conference, and Jeff Parsons, Danny Dunsmoor, Denise McDaniel, Rebecca Langstaff, Patty Meaige,!Uilph Grimm, Chip
Armstrong, Katrinka Hart and Kathy Foster.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admissions Delbert
Teaford, Rutland; Tracy
McKinney, Rutland ; Teresa
Smith, Pomeroy ; Lillian
Moore, Pomeroy ; Ariella
Vanover, Syracuse; Margaret
Allen, Pomeroy; John Me-

Nemar, Pomeroy; Glenna
Little, Middleport ; Samuel P.
McKinney, Rutland; Robert
Pullins, Coolville.
Discharges
Homer
Delong, Linda Bailey, Teresa
Smith, Carl Greenlees, Moses
Keiser .

The
Middleport
Fire
Department's emergency
ambulance fWld has reached
$13,600,
Contributions continu~d
arriving Tuesday at the
department's headquarters
encouraging firemen's hopes
that the $15,000 fund drive can
be concluded Feb. 24. one
month after the first contribution was received .
Pete Kloes, chairman of the
ways and means committee,
said that business contributions are coming in but
stressed hope that business and
professional contributions will
be received soon. Meantime,
door-to-door solicitations are
being conducted in the western
section of Meigs CoWlty and in
Cheshire Township on behalf of
the department's lund drive.
Kloes also reported good
response from residents out·
side of the county. He stressed
that contributions no matter
how small are more than

welcome. Donations may he lu ck eydoo, Edith Thoma s,
left at the fire station or mailed Hea rth stone Class of Mid dleport First Baptist Church ;
toP. 0. Box 144 in Middleport. Charles
Wayland . Mark V
Latest contributions to the Supermarket; Grill Thomp·
drive were

made by Mrs.
Homer Hawkins. leo Reuter,

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth I m.
boden,
Vona
M cK night.
Philathea Society of t he
Middleport Church of Christ;
Jean Zirkle, Mr.. and Mrs.
Raymond Stewart, Mr . and
Mrs . Gerald Anthony, Vernon
and Bertha's Grocery, Amy

son, Mildred Beeson, Dudley's
Florist, Middleport Amateur
Garden
Club,
Pomeroy

Luigi's.Pizza
POMEROY, OHIO

PLAYER OF WEEK

PHONE 992-3984

CLEVELAND (UP!)
Heidelberg's Larry Remmer, a
&amp;.5 jwnplng jack. today was
named the Ohio Conference
Player of the Week. Remmer,
who has been playing
basketball for only two years,
hit!or 25 points and snatched 18
rebounds against Mount Union,
and came back with 18 points
and 14 rebounds against
Wittenberg.

Starting Friday, Feb. 22
Through Thursday, Feb. 28
YOU GET · THE 3RD ITEM ON A
PIZZA FOR ...

ONLY A NICKEL

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

~~
Coe·p~

I W'J 'Th.iA,tJ,L
&amp; SGA~e~$216

Good Thru Sat., Feb. 23rd., 1973 In

All Franklin Co.
A&amp;P WEO Stores
BONELESS

MASON - The Mason Homemakers met Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Matilda Noble. Mrs. Elmer VanMeter presented
the devotionals. Lesson on nutrition was given by Mrs. J. Mar·
shall. Various foods were passed around for club members to
taste and recipes sul:mltted for club members to copy. The club
members started on their project of making items t,o sell.
Refreslunents were served to Mrs. Elmer VanMeter, Mrs,
Landon Smith, Mrs. Lawrence Roush, Mrs. Evelyn Stewart,
Mrs. Alburtlce Young, Mrs, Law-ene Lewis, Mrs. Uoyd
Wllllam8, Mrs. John Roach, Mrs. Dorothy Cartwright and Mrs .
J. Marshall.

~$1:J9
lb.

MASON- Dick Young of the West Virginia State Pollee will
talk on "Drug Awareness" when the Mason Parent Teachers
Assn. meets in March. All Interested persons are invited, A
question· and answer period will follow.
At tbe meeting recently. at l'lfason Grade School the group
enjoyed a program presented by the Christian Community Choir
made up of pupils from the seventh to eleventh grade from the

t~=~~~

U.S. GOV'T. INSPECTED

A&amp;P SKINLESS

11CHC~AI·

tJaMea£

e~
of Giblels

3 -Leg Qlrs. w Backs
3-Breast Qtrs. w Backs

w~

4 gA

l·lb.
pkg.

~

,

lb.

·

99~

SUNNYBROOK

Gtuule ''(L"

HECK'S REG. 29• CAN

MEDICARE

MeclfaUIII

£gga,

SUPPLEMENT-INSURANCE
Enrollment Open Here
YOU MUST BE ON MEDICARE

ZEBCO

SHAKESPEARE
1/, LB. SPOOL

MONO LINE

99(

CHAIN
STRINGER

SPIN CAST REEL
Mt di,...,·ligllr fo~ lh ... ote~ ooel Oil·••toonin'oJ, ho:.n:le""d molal
~"" · o tod " "'~••d melol b.oor&gt;"'ii•· Hordtnod otul cenle,.~afl
ond ctanl: ohoh. tiog ldmpoct Krolo,.ic bod, oncl &lt;DIIet. Pol iohocl
otuOnlell opimoeol,.ud wit lo t .. onlyp&lt;&gt;i"' pic'oup lo&gt;&lt; in&lt;lnn l rehio.,
rMp&lt;&gt;nM. fu ll &lt;&lt;tde brake rin.., lock• li~~t l •r m l, ,.itho,.t piMhln~
or lrocluriny. 5priny·o&lt;twttod ral&lt;l•• d•uy &gt;y&gt;htm. Thum ~ap#t•
o lo d doay &lt;on l•cl.

69(

MITCHELL 300

5 PLY

~ ... perl&lt;l)l,.. wolem of .,qht 1)1".-;ilion·..,Oift ~~·• lo .-~ .... ih
FlO""., in """'-t hu1~. l'w~ lpOOio . • -~ with G dilfH- ~IW.

BASKETBALL

,..,.....,,, D•oe ~....b. onto·•-lltolot ""d Teflon · drog. f•o·

'"'" Ollt· opoti..O rt&lt;ol.., n, thtNR~bo&amp;;td &lt;orrolion · rt~oilfonl ion·
ooh. con..,nient Q&lt;Oio·••"frM ·OftC! ftldtne Mnole ..;1~ ,_,~&lt;1·

$499

HECK'S
REG.
$3.99

SPHTS
DEPT.

lo,..,.d 'ii"P·

·

.

ctn.

doz.

...
....

Gna pelfu«it,

'

·L~r.$100

Available To $100 ADay For Hospital
Expenses 365 Days After Medicare

'

'

.
...
.'
'

Mix ar Match Sale!

Pays In extended care facilities. Here is a list of some
of the features, no one too old. NO HEALTH
REQUIREMENTS, protects you for any condition you

..

79e

Indian River White Seedless

expenses.

'

SPHTS

REG. 94' SPORTS DEPT.

'h·gal.

Senior citizens here have an opportunity to enroll in a
unique hospital and extended care program which supplements Medicare to pay the ever increasing medical

SPIN REEL

NYLON WOUND

Emergency
Squad,
John
Taylor, Jim Mitchell , Kenny
Cooke , Rawlings - Coats
Funeral Hom e, Anna Qqdin.
Mr . and Mrs. Willard Walker,
Rod Karr, Mr . and Mrs. Mike
Shuler, G. and J . Auto Parts
Co ., Mr. and Mrs . Max Lam ·
bert, Mr . and Mrs . Joe Shuler,
Jr ., Mrs. Pearl Darst, Mr .. and
Mrs. Homer Forrest. John
Blosser, Mr . and Mrs. John
Davidson and Mr . and Mrs.
Deb Becker.

'""' ""'o'

Head Lettuce

F;:~h Carrots

have. Even covers CANCER. ARTHRITIS, HEART

'""" ""'

CONDITION, DIABETES or any other illness.
ALL ACCIDENTS COVERED

•ascal Celery

$I
3

FINE FOR COOKING

OO Yellow Onions

'•" cho;c•

F••

3"'&amp;9·
h :tl.'

CALIFORNIA

Navel. Oranges

Benefit Effective On Enrollment ·Date
1

NO WAITING PERIODS
..

MILTON BRADLEY

FINGER PAINT
SET
FOR AGES 3 TO ADULT

YAHTZEE

AN EXCITING GAME OF
SKILL AND CHANCE.

JIGSAW PUZZL~
ASSORTMENT

COLORFORMS

You do not pay extra regardleSs of age or condition .
Guaranteed renewable for life, can never be tan celled by
company.
Licensed by the State of Ohio . Good in any state
licensed hospital or extended care facility .
Pays in addition to any coverage you now have. All
' benefits paid to you. In Ohio is underwritten by Capital

LimE PEOPLE

Creote your own odveoture with the Colorforms pinstic pieces. Choose lrom assorted styles that stick like
mogic . No scissors. No paste.

,Insurance Co. of Ohio.

AT SCHOOL OR
Safe so~ plastic and nort tox_ic colors

HICK'SIIG, $1.14

FRENCH'S INSTANT

REGULAR

••. •
With This =_
pkg.
e Coupon : ·
Thru Sat.. Feb. 23ft!. A~
WEO. Limit One Coupon ~
Limit One Per Family !iiD-,-

8514 N. Main St.
O.yton. Ohio 45415

1 t Understand .There Is No Obligation ..

I

I NAME ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I
,
I ADDRE;SS.~ ••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I.
'
I CITY ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
,.
I ••••••• • . •

.

.

••

'

.

69'
·;:::;·
Modess

54-oa.

1~-----------------------I Would Like Addilional Information
·
1 About Medicare Supplement

'

3,:':;$333 ~~~itime Dog F~'od" 33.

SENIOR CITIZEN SERVICE AGENCY

HECK'S REG. 84' lA.

Tlf -T.

M~;;~rritouse

CLIP AND MAlL TODAY
FOR FREE FACTS, MAIL TO:

CHOia
58(1ACH

HECK'S REG. $2.38 TOY DEPT.

GROUND COFFEE

Mashed Potatoes

CHUG CHUG
CHOQ. CHOO
.

Choose from 100 or 500 pieo:e pun le assortment to give you
~ours of fo mily fun.

CHOICI

HECK'S REG. $1.18

GROUND COFFEE

·

MILTON BRADLEY

Maxwell House . ·~.:- s213 L;nd~~0 -Lakes B;t;~; 954
....slls w"'AhR~ARINEd
. I ... ... ..594
1ppe Impem
Maxwell House . ,;..
25 C~~~b~;~d Mix . ·~~~- 33'
2
.
~
:
;
,
s2
Maxwell House

'

Ir

•

•

'
PHONE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••T•

t-~----~--.,..--~---------.--..)
HI$~E·••••••·•••••i•••WIFE'SAGE •••••••••• ••

~·

$1
Doans Pills . . ."!O:'
Maxim Coffee .
•• $139 ~

FOR. FAST RELIEF

k of Magnesia

09

,~·

....

1•1 .. ,

INSTANT

ALL VARIETIES

\JElro

Jell-0 . .

29• Woollte Liquid

·
Jiffy Pie Crust Mlx 16 'oz. 2-::;:;:
A·Penn Wick Deodorizer . . •:;;~ · 56•
Frozen Coffee Rich .

To A&amp;P. WEO , This

79

VALUABLE COUPO
FOR COOKING

J;~

~Oif,
41 .••. $129 With This
btl.
Coupon
Good Thru Sat., Feb. 23rd. AA&amp;P WEO. Limit One Coupon
Limit One Per Family

l1I1ll •

Week And
·I

.- .

�15 - The Daily Sentmel, Mltl.Uleport-t'omeroy-, u , r tm

14 - The Datly Sentmel Mtddleporl Pomeroy 0, Feb 20, 1974

Israeli
Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!! Business Services
~=P=Q=M=E=RO==Y==~=E~X~P~ER=IE=N~C=ED~G====~=P=E=RT==~
Wanted
rocked
2 SIGNS
.HOME &amp; AUTO
Wheel Alignment
P!!!nerty
OF
Wanted To Buy
'5.55
Motor Co.
by Dayan
QUALITY
OFFICE SUPPLIES
JERUSALEM (UP!) - De
fense Mmosler Moshe Dayan
rocked Israel s caretaker gov
ernment today woth a call for
new electwns and a threa t to
restgn unless g1ven a dectstve

and wmmutguous endorse
ment II om the ruhng Labor
party
Prtme Mtmster Golda Metr s
cabmet went mto secret emer·
gency sesswn thiS morrung to
discuss Dayan s surpnse statements to a group of student
leaders
Pohttcal leadeo s satd the
moves put Da)an and Mrs
Metr, t\\o of ls1ael s most
powerful pohltcal figures, m
direct confhct ""d could spltt
the Labor pari) \\hoch has run
the natwn smce Independence
In 1948

Muusters were on edge as
they showed up for the meetmg
at Mrs Metr s offoce
' How the hell dtd you fmd
out th ere was gomg to be a
cabon et meetmg thos mor
nmg? Israel Gahh Mrs
Melr's closest pohtocal advtser,
snapped at one newsman

The Israeh nattonal radio
said Da1 an called for new
electtons and threatened to
resogn Tuesday noght m a
speech to student leaders after
failing to get the Labor party to
fonn a coalitton woth the
rightwmg Lilrud opposotton
0

Since a

natwnal umty

government IS not a realistic
posstbohty at the moment, I
propose dossol vmg the Knesset
(parliament) and holdmg new
elecltons, the radw quoted
Dayan as saymg
Dayan was reported saymg,
'I am wtlhng to serve m the
next government of I get
dectstve and unamboguous support from the leaders of the
(Labor party) ahgnment and
tts mstotutoons '
"Under present conditions,

Without such wode support, I
am not wtlhng to be a
mnuster ,' he reportedly saod
Mrs Meor, who met Dayan at
her offtce before the cabmet
meetmg was expected to Inform Prestdent Ephraun Katztr durmg the aftenoon of plans
for a new coaht10n government
wtthout Likud
Dayan m statements made
through assoctates, satd Tuesday afternoon he would refuse
to )Otn Israel's next cabmet
unles the Labor party agrees to
share power wtth the Likud
bloc
Mrs Metr ossued a statement
later m the day, however,
saymg a broad coalthon With
Ukud would create a government of paralysiS unable to
make dec,s!Ons m peace talks
woth the Arabs
Mrs Metr has headed a
shaky, caretaker government
smce the Dec 31 nahonal
elections failed to gove any
party a maJonty m the 12~seat
Knesset

Local Bowling
Pom eroy Bowlmg Lanes
Ben d League
Feb 11 1974
Standmgs
Team
Pomts
Four Aces
26
Crow s Come t s
23
Shake Haven
22
Top Cats
13
Three H1ts &amp; A MIS
8
Three Nuts &amp; A Bol t
.4
H1gh lnd• v •dual Game- Ed
Voss 226 A L Phelps Jr 215
Chester Kn ght 205
H1gh Senes
Ecf Voss 613
A L Ph el ps Jr 593 Bob
Bowen 566
Team Htg h Game Top
Cats &amp; Crows Comets 103
Team H g h 5er es - Crows
Comet s 2055
Tn County League
F eb 12 1974
Standmgs
Team
Pomts
Sears Catalog Merchants
38
Raw11ngs Au to Parts
34
Pomeroy Cem Block Co
20
M1dwes t St eel Co
20
Roach s Gun Shop
17
H&amp;R F•r estone
15
t:llgh lnd•v•dua l Game - A
L Phelps Jr 236 A L Phelps
Jr 225 Cla re nce Boy les 218
H1Qh Se r1es - A L Phelps
Jr 634
Jack Peterson 568
Rtchard Ash 530
Team
H1g h
Game
Rawlmg s A uto Parts 976
Team
H1gh
Ser 1es
Rawlmgs A uto Parts 2664
Saturday Jun1or League
Feb 9, 1974
Standmgs
PIS
Team
14
Bowlmg Stones
13
Gutter Dus ters
Apach es
11
Hot Shots
9'h
6112
Alley cats
High lndlv1dua1 Game Greg Cund iff \72 Ron Case•
166
High Senes - Greg Cund •ft
456 Ron Case• 437
Hot
Team H gh Game
Shots 760
Hot
Team H gh Ser.es
Shots 1148

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 PM Day Before Publi ca ! on
Monday Dea d I ne 9 am
Cance l l at1on Cor re ct•on s
w I I be accepted until 9 am tor
bay of P'-'bllcat on
REGULATiONS
Ttle PubliSher r eserves thf:'
r ght to ed•t or reJec t any ads
deemed' ob,ecl•onal
The
publisher w1 l l not be r es pon
s ble lor more than one n
corre c t nse r f on
RATES

For Want Ad Serv 1c e
S ce nts per Word one n se1'"f10n
M n1m1.1m Charge $1 00
14 cen ts Iller word three
consecut ve mse rt ons
26 cents per word s x con
sec ut1 ve nsert ons
25 Per Cent D scount on pa1d
ads and ads pad w lh1n 10
days
CAR D OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 for 50 word m n
•mum Each add Ilona I word
3c
BLIND ADS
Add t1ona l 1St Charge per
Advert semen!
OFFICE H OURS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m Da ly
8 30 a m
to 12 00 Noon
c;.,turday

'\'\AR R 1EO coup le wants to rent

! Arm or coun try home by
Apr I C:tl
,.. ' "''" 4118 5 1 41
2 19 6tc

606 E Mam

1973CHEV NOVA
$2695
Cus tom Ha tchbac k Cpe dark green f m 1sh l1ke new
wh 1l e wall t 1res lu l l wheel covers protecflve s1de m ldg s
P B rad10 6 c y l eng 1ne stand trans A ver y popu la r
n ode l &amp; pn ced to go
1972 DODGE DEMON
$2295
340 V a eng me automt'll tc t rans power steermg rad to
l1k e new w wIt res blk v myl1ntenor r ed f n1 sh
1969 CHEVELLE
11645
H T Cpe
std V a eng•ne automatic trans
power
stee r •ng factory a ~r bu cket sea ts A sharp clea n ca r that
wou ld please you Dark green fm 1sh rad1o

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

Nohce

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of our
husband and l a th er
Joe
Ebersbach who passed away
8 years ago Feb 19 1966

SHOOT IN G Mat c h Rae ne Gun
Club Sunday F eb 24
p m
Assorted meat s
Factory
choked guns only
1 20 Jtc

Even tho the years have pasr
Our lOV Ing m erno r es of h m w I
a lways last
Sadly m ssed by wde Ann
and ch ldren Frrmk
Tom
Jeane Merr
Dar la
and
Nancy
2 20 1tp

TURN spare ltm e nto mon ey
Otsplay new spr ng Jewelry
tor Sa rah CQ'J entry
No
depos t necessary or no ex
penen ce necessary Call 992
2717 between 10 a m and 3
pm
'} 10 Jt c

IN LOVIN G memo r y of Car l
Man ley who passed away
e tght years ago today Feb
20 1966 The years roll by
can t be etght smce our Dad
was ca l ed to He.,ven
II
see ms more l1ke a w eek or so
s• nce we watched h m ro ck to
and fro He likes 1t th ere and
prays every day that all h•s
Children w II f1nd th e way It
IS a stmple th ng we ha'Je to do
and Dad we II make tf to be
w th you
Sad ly m tssed by c ht dren
and grandch tdren
'1 20 ltc

NEED Easter sewmg done?
W II do sew ng n my home 1n
Chester Ca I 985 3824 week
days
2 20 4tc
WILL buy furn lu re and mer
chand se at Polly s AuctiOn
Hou se Add son Phone 992
3509
2 20 7tc
A U CT ION Sa l es Thursday 7
P m Rt 7 AddiSOn Oh10
' 2 2 0 2tc

WORLD'S LARGEST

lost
WHITE TOY poodle mae lost
•n Rutland Reward Col ar
W1th s l ver be ll s Phone 7 ~ 2
436 1
2 18 6t c

Prime rates
are redUced
to 9 percent
NEW YORK (UPI) - Most
of the nalton s maJor banks
dropped thetr pnme mterest
rate from 9¥. to 9 pet Tuesday,
mdtcatmg the Federal Reserve
Board may be letltng up
somewhat

on

Its

str1ct

monetary poltcy
The prtme rate reached an
all-tmne htgh of 10 pet last
October and agam m
December before decltmng last
month
It wtll be some months
however, before lower mterest
rates extend to the smaller
mdtvtdul and mortgage loans
made by banks, as prome rates
are applicable only to large
loans, usually taken by corporations
The latest reducltons
completed a round of quarterpam t reductions begun last
Thursday by leadmg banks m
New York and Los Angeles
The prevtous rate of 91'.! pet
had prevatled natwnwtde for
only about a week followmg an
earlter cutback from 91', pet
completed Feb 11

CLASSES SET
Classes m beginnmg drawmg
slated for the French Art
Colony, Monday, March 4, wtll
be held from 7 to 9 p m Introduction to art on Tuesday,
March 5 wtll be from 3 15 to
5 15 p m

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED - Jamce
Couch, romeroy, Roland
FISher, Potnt Pleasant
BIRTHS, Feb 20 - Son to
Mr ' and Mrs Rtchard
Meadows , Apple Grove
daughter to Mr and Mrs
Richard Smtih, Pomt Pleasant

Even at mght, the Stars
and Stropes lites over the
Senate vt House wmgs of the
Capttol when the lawmakers
are m sessiOn

. ...
A

,.

Cal

I WOULD like to thank all those
who
sen t
f lowers
and
donat1ons durmg the t1me of
the death of Bess e Jones
Than ks al so for al l the he l p
we rece•ved at the hoSpita l
Claren ce Freeman
2 20 Jtc

- Help Wanted
BABYS I TT ER 1n Harr sonv lll e
area 5 or 6 days a week
Phone 742 6551 or 992 2550
'J 19 tf c

AIRLYgood smal l u se d cham
saw Phone 949 2225
2 20 6t c

N TIQ UE qu It s and tew el ry
Also 1nterested n furn1tur e
and d1shes
Call 992 5262
eve n1ng s or morn1ngs
2 20 TIC
POINT h1!Ch sc rap er bade
and se t of cultivators to f1t
tnt erna t•ona Super C t ra c tor
2 or 3 tt p ckup d 1Sk 6 or 7ft
Phone 992 7190
2 20 Jtp
ECYCLE vour newspapers al
Your
S1 40 per 100 pound
corruga ted pasteboard al
$ 1 40 per 100 pound and your I
B M cards at 6c per po1.1nd We
wtlt also bi.IY your scrap 1ron
cast •ron sheet ~ron copper
brass auto r a d a tor s auto
batter es Our fleet of tra lers
w II serviCe and mdust rv n
your area Conserve r ecyc le
and se l l your waste mater als
to th e Rosenberg Recycling
Co mpany n Athens Oh o We
c lose each Fr day at noon for
balance of week so be aware
when you get 1 al l together
that the Rosenberg Recyc l 1ng
Co 1n A thens s the better
place tor you
2 19 ffc

KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIG S
We ha'Je th e product on hand
and we de l ver to you per
sonally Helen Jane Brown BICYC LE S m any cond1t 10n
A l so b1cycle parts Contact
992 5113
Larry Wyatt (housetra l erJ
12 30 He
on Loc ust Stree t Ru tland
2 19 5tp

Employment Wanted

t.XPERIENCED pa nter
1n
ter or and ex ter or Ca ll Don
Van Meier Phone 985 3951
2 3 29tp

CASH pa1d for all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 6 14 423 9531
4 13 ti c
TON or 'J. ron truck flatbed
14 or 16 ft L a t e f1ft es or
s1xt es Phone 992 7106
2 17 5tp

Pomeroy

and

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Dtsplay

DITCHING SERVICE
Water Lmes and Power
Lmes All work done by the
foot or contract Also do1er
work and septic tanks 1M
stalled

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
Noght992 3525
or 992 5232

Steve Snowden
Ph 9'12 7155

~

OUTSIOE work around homes
Lawns
walls and f en ces
Done w1th motor farm m
ptements A lso have p ckup
truck for h a u ltng
F re e
esttmates Phone 992 3716
2 14 6tp

For Rent or Sale
197 2 12x50 MOBILE
Phone 992 5592

Home
2 20 tfc

R
-o-rravei rra11ern

coNCo
.ce
for coup le Ca 1 992 7479
1 31 tf c

OLD furn1ture oak tabl es
c locks 1ce baKes brass beds
d•shes desks, or complete
hou seh olds
wr te M
0
M ller Rt 4 Pomerov Oh •o
ca ll 992 7760
5 13 tt c
NO I copper 70c rad1ator s
32c red brass 3Sc batter1es
$1 20 M A Hall ReedSville
Oh o Phone 378 6249
1 27 ttc

RIVERSIDE Auto Wreck1ng
w111 pay $5 for all tunk cars
Phone (30 4) 882 5244 or 773
2 HOGS to sel l or tr ade for beef
5890
Phone 607 3031
I 27 26tc
2 20 41p

For Sale or Trade
i

P6874

!lPR IN G SPEC IA L
COTTON
FABRICS 98 CE NT S PER
YARD
POLYESTER
DOUBLE K NIT S S2 88 PER
YARD NEW CRAF T ITEM S
NOVELTY FABRIC SHO P
230 WEST BLVD BEL PRE
OHIO
2 17 6tc
SPRING
FAB RICS
N ew
sh pm ent JI.ISf arr ved W de
select1on coord nated colors
one lot polyester 1ersey kn1t
$2 29 per
yd
Caro l1na
Fabr cs Route 7 Chester
Oh•o 9 am to 7 p m Monday
through Satu rday Henry and
Mary Hun ter owners
2 17 6tp
AliNOUNCING new hours for
1ncom e tax se rv ce Open on ly
on Monday Wednesday and
Fr~day
9
am
to
5
p m
Even1ngs by app t
Wanda Eb l n Co Rd 22 off
Rout e 7 bypass Phone 992

2272

2 8 30t c
GUN SHOO T Rae ne Gun Club
fa ctory chok•d guns on l y
Fnday 1 p m
2 19 12tc

About 173 molhon tons of
man made to x 1 c materials

p o II u t e Umted States aor
each year- roughly a ton lor
every man woman and ch ild

m the cou ntry

Mobile Homes For Sale

CASH oa1d for all makes anti
models of mob 1le homes PtJ
area code (61 4) 446 1425
2 7 26tc

GROCERY busmess for sale
Butldmg for sa le or lease
Phone 773 5618 lrt.m 8 30 p m
to 10 p m tor appo ntment
3 20 tfc
STEREO
Walnut
AM FM
Rad 10 8 track tape com
b nat on Balance $110 73 or
t erms ava !able Phone 992
3965
2 1.4 ttc
EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
Mam St Pomeroy Al l k nds
of salt wat("r petlels water
nuggets block salt and own
Oh10 R1ver Sa lt Phone 992
3891
6 5 tfe;

SA LT FOR ICE AND SNO\,
Rock sa lt for townSh ipS
towns and bus nesses 1n
bulks and bags for 1ce and
snow Excels•or Sal! Works
Phone 992 38Y 1
11 11 lie

GOOD USED

For Sale
sex, but not love,

from a young

BOLEN S Husky 1250 w1th 48
1nch mower and blade Ex
cellent cond•t•on Phone 949
5953
2 20 6tc

gtrl he barely knows m the Xrated ''Last Tango m Par1s "
Brando won m 1954 for "On 1974 HONDA x 1 350 On or off
the Waterfront" and last year
the road b1ke Low m11eage
S1 000 Call Harry C Roush
for 'The Gildfatber," when he
Mason 773 5238
stood the academy on tts ear by
2 20 3tc
sending a gtrl m an Iodtan THREE year old pa1om1no
"O•'ume to appear m hiS place
hor se Phone 742 3884
2 20 3tc
and make a polittcal speech
The other best actor ne&gt;- YOUNGSTOWN k1tchen smk
mmees were Jack Lemon for
With faucets Good cond 1hon
$50 See at 256 So Fourth
'Save the Tiger," AI Pacmo
Ave Middleport
for "Serptco," Robert Redford
2 18 tfc
for 'The Sting" aod Jack
SA LE Large level lot on
Ntcholson for "The Last FOR
New L1ma Road Rutland All
Detail"
uti11t1es available Phone 742
3083
Ellen
Burstyn
was
2 I ftc
nommated for best actress for
her portrayal of the mother m SIN GER sew 1ng machmes 1972
model m beaut1ful walnut
'The ExorCISt," and !~year­
cab1net Makes des1gn slit
old Linda Blatr was nominated
ches z1g zag
buttonholes
blmd hems etc Ltke new
lor best supporting actress for
Only S89 95 Call Ravenswood
her performance as the
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 oo
12 7 tfc
possessed gtrl Also nommated
-------------.---were the pocture 's director, HAY Phone 992 7306
Wtlliam Friedkln, and Jason
2 17 26tc
Mtller, who played a prtest, for
WEEK old black poodle pup
best supporting actor The 9 phone
992 5098
nom malton of Mtller, who
2 17 5tp
wrote the Puhtzer prtzewmmng play "That ChamINFORMATION ABOUT:
pwnslup Season," was the ftrsl
norrunation of a top ranked
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
author for an acting Oscar
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION
Strelsand Named
Other nommees for best
AND
actress
were
Barbara
Streosand - her second
GREAT COUNTRY
nomination-tor 'The Way We
Wer~,'' Marsha Mason for
ST&amp;REO
11
Cmderella Uberty," Joarme
Woodward for "Summer
92.1 FM
WIShes, Wmter Dreams," and
Glenda Jackson for ' A Touch
.Middleport t""omeroy of Class"

WJYlPO

Pomeroy

Ph 992 2114

FOAM to f1ll your old couch and
cha1r cush1ons as low as
$10 95 Upholstery books only
soc
4 mch covered foam
mattresses for standard s ze
bed
S29 95
Pomeroy
Recovery 622 E Man Stree t
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
1 29 26tc
---~:---- ---- -

Real Estate For 5ale
DESIRABLE two bedroom
house In M 1ddleport ready to
occupy Call 992 5310
1 31 26tc
NEW .. oedroom home llh bath
garage basemen t on Gravel
H II Middleport Natural gas
already 10
Phone Dale
Dutton 992 3369 even1ngs
992 253-4
1 17 ttc
-~-----

----

NEW 3 bedroom home good
water 6 acres 3 outbu ld1n1Js
and cellar Off Me1gs County
1 on Wllllam.Smtth Road J h
miles from Sa lem Center
I 27 26fp

----------THE

WISEMAN
AGENCY
Exc1lmg
New Home
YOU WONT BELIEVE
YOUR EVES WHEN YOU
STEP IN SIDE THIS NEW
SPLIT
LEVEL
HUGE
LIVING ROOM WITH A
LOVELY BALCONY EF
FECT GOING TO THE 3
LARGE
BEDROOMS
BEAUTIFUL
BUILT IN
OAK
CABINETS WITH
QUALITY
APPLIANCES
BUILT IN COMPLETELY
CARPETED FOR DAD - A
LARGE 2 CAR GARAGE
WITH WORKSHOP P.LUS 2
ACRES
TO
PUTTER
AROUND ON LOCATED IN
RUTLAND
YOU MUST
SEE THE IN SIDE OF' THIS
ONE TO APPRECIATE IT
Galha Co's Largest Real
Estate Sates Agency
Office 446 3643
Evenmgs Call
E M "Ike" Wneman
446 3796
E N W•seman, -'46 4500
Bud McGhee 446 USS

On Most Amencan Cars

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 T1l S
Monday lhru Sahlrday
606 E Mam, Pomeroy, 0

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

Gene's

Body Shop

-

WOOD TRUSSES

Ph 992 5271
L1ncoln Htll Pomeroy

0

Painting A Specially

Butltto Your 'Specs
Oehvered to Job S1te

.

Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

All work guaranteed

MATERIALS CO
773 5554
Mason, W Va

5 ROOM home 2 bedroom 1' ,
bath workshop gas forced
atr furnace garage Lot 100
ft x 100 ft Phone 992 3022 or
992 3298
2 20 6tp
FIVE room house and ba t h
atta c hed carport forced a r
furna ce hardwood floors
k1 tc hen cab nets large a r
cond1t1oner N1 ce yard w•th
metal storage bulld1ng 1n rear
yard Located In Syracuse on
Route 124 Call 593 6904 after
6 30 p m PriCed $15 000
2 20 3tc
0 ROOM home Wllh bath City
water coal furnace and 3
acres Phone 992 3944
2 20 3tp
HO USE tor sa le
cl o se to
Pomeroy
Phone 992 5248
before 3 p m 992 3436 after 3
pm
2 20 6tc
1 h ACRE lo ts for sa l e Tuppers
Plams water Call 992 5248
before 3 992 3436 after 3 p m
2 20 6tc

SWEEPER Repa rs parts
sup pies 446 0294 10 am 5
p m Dav 1s Vacuum Cleilner
Store Georges Creek Road
next to CB Radio Sales
2 20 lie
B I SSELL ConstructJon room
add1t1ons and remodelmg
Profess .o nal floor sand1ng
and f l n1shmg o l d and new
References ava•lable Phone
949 3833
1 25 26tc
C BRADFORD Auct 1one"'r
Complete Serv 1Ce
Phone 949 3821
Racme Oh•o
Cr tt Bradford
5 1 tfc
EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
septiC
tanks Installed dump trucks
and lo boys for hire will haul
hit dtrt top so11 limestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
night phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
,.. 2 11tfc
DOZER work land cl€armg by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w1th over
20 years expenence Pullins
Excavatmg Pomeroy OhiO
Phone 992 2478
12 19 ttc
NEIGLERS FOR BUILDING
HOUSES We II draw prints
or
bUild
to
your
specifications
Ne1gler s
Building Su pply
Racme
Ohio Call 949 3604
2 5 26tc

(2 Good Ones)
1- Sode by So de
$150

For Rent

HOUSE
unfurniShed
3
bedroom
llv1ng room
kt t
chen and la undry room One
furn1shed apartment 3 rooms
and bath Phone 992 2780 or
992 3432
2 20 tfc

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

REFRIGERATORS

1- 2 Door
12x60 TRA ILER Wllh pull oul
set up 1n P negrove w II
(Top &amp; Bottom) $125
finance
D
R c hardson
Genera l Del very Mann W
va 25635 or phone (304 ) 583
POMEROY LANDMARK
6507
F URNI SHED apartments on
2 20 H e
9 ... _ Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Rt 33 1n Mason One 3 room
apartment shower k1tc:hen
6il!l Phone 992 9932
PRE SPR IN G SALE at Berry
cab m su1table for 2 old people
Miller Mob le Homes
105
or 2 workers ut1 l 1t es fur
Fa r son Street Belpre Oh10
n• sh ed and garden If want ed
AM F M s tereo radiO 8 track
phone 423 9531 Buy now One 2 room
apartment
tape player -4 speaker sound
take del1very n spr1ng - tak e
bedroom and k1tc hen bath
system
Ba l ance 5109 32 or
advantage of w nler t me
shower and kitchen Both are
terms Call 992 3965
pr ces on some outstanding
good apartments Reynolds
2 19 tfc
used Mobiles Homes
Apartments Phone 773 5147
1971
2 bedroom - 60 x 12
2 19 6tp TWIN
NEEDLE
SEWING
Prmcess was $6 -49S 00 sa te
MACH1NES
1974
model
m
pr ce S5 295 00 Oh s mobile
S,LEEP IN G room over wme
walnut stand
All features
home new cost $8 000 00)
store n Pomeroy Referenc("
bu It m to make fancy designs
1971 - 6Sx 12 ChampiOn super
requtred Call 992 5293
and do stretch sew1ng A lso
sale pn ce only $4 995 00
1 10 H e
buttonholes blmd hems etc
1971 - 60x 12 Buddy class c
SA3 35cashor terms avadabe
was $5 49S 00 now on l y
Pl'1one 992 2653
J AND 4 ROOM furntshed and
S4 795 00
2 19 tfc
unfurniShed
apartments
1971
two 60x 12 Champ ton
Phone 992 5434
were $4 495 00 now on ly
4 12 tfc VACUUM CLEANERS Electro
S3 995 00
Hyg 1ene New Demonstrators
1971 - 60x12 El cona Custom
has all ctean1ng attachments
new pr ce Si7 295 00 sa le pr1ce PRIVATE meetmg room for
plus the new Electro Suds for
any organ1zat•on phone 992
$5 795 00
shampoo ng carpet
On ly
3975
1914 - three Detro1ters - up to
S27 50
cash
or
terms
3 n tfc
$1 OOOOOoff
available Phone 992 2653
2 19 tfc
WE HAVE many other SIZeS ROOMING house
furn• shed
and 'Jar~etles of Mobile
construct•on
workers
UPHOLSTERY fabricSby the
welcome Phone 772 5975
Homes on sa le Our pr ces
vard 54 Inches w•de as low as
nclude your delivery and
2 15 tfc
Sl 95 per vard Velvets as tow
complete set up don t wa1t
as S3 45 Imported velvets
shop now you II be g l ad you TRAILER 1 bedroom niCe for
S9 95 we a l so have nylon
d•d
coup le Phone 992 7419
herculon
cotton
prmts
2 15 12tc
2 5 tf c
'J.nyls remnants by the yard
or bv the p1ece Pomeroy
3 BEDROOM mobile homes
Recovery 622 E Mam St
bath and lf2 w1th washer and
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
drver Phone 992 3509
1 29 26tc
2 20 31(

Best '73 movie
may he of devil

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad 1a tar to the
sma llest Hea ter Core
Nathan B1ggs
Radiator Specialist

Real Estate For Sale

For Sale

:1

Card of Thanks
MY SINCERE tha nks tor the
prayers ca rds and f lowers
dur1ng my weeks of Illness
Very spec al tha nk s to my
re lat ves and fr1ends for thei r
thoughtful ness the mm sters
Who ca ll ed Dr Dan els and
Dr Wa l ker and the nursmg
staff at the Hol zer Med 1c al
Center tor the r care and
k1ndness
Ca rl Jenn1ngs
Pomeroy
2 20 ltc

992 2094

608 E

MAIN
_ POMEROY, O, ,
BABY FARM - II acres 1ust
off Rt 33 close 10 "l year old
home 3 BR colored bath w
shower Lovely ktlchen w
range &amp; ref Ufil•fy Barn
garage &amp; storage A ll new
fence $22 500 00
BUY OF THE YEAR - Just
3 yrs old 3 BR colored bath
Uhl 1ty modern kitchen and
d1nmg Carpeted Carport
About 1!2 acre $16 000 00
A BARGAIN 2 story
frame 2 BR
new bath
furnace &amp; hot wa ter tank
Some carpeting paneling &amp;
tile Basement $6 500 00
BETWEEN POMEROY &amp;
MIDDLEPORT on new Rl 7
1112 acre 2 wells &amp; el ecfnc
Approved for sept 1c tank
Idea l for mobile or home
$4 500 00
DELAY
MAY
MEAN
DISAPPOINTMENT
SEE
THESE UNUSUAL OF
FERS TODAY
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259
II no answer 992 2568

TEAFORD
Vnq d B T.,dtHd Sr
H1 ol&lt;·''
11D MPr h,lll l t Strc•t·l
Pnnwroy. Oh 1o ·1)760
CITY CONVENIENCE 3
bedrooms bath modern kif
chen hot water heat storm
wmdows and garage
OUT RT 7 -2 bedrooms bath
large living
T P
water
garage and other bulldtngs
One acre
RANCH TYPE HOME 3
bedrooms bath n1ce k1tchen
nat gas furnace Oty water
and garage
BUSINESS BUILDING- W1lh
over 3 112 acres Can be useful to
builders equ1pment overhauls
truckers
storage
or
church or school Cham lmk
fence Above all f l oods
316 ACRES In Ol1ve
Township Wild and wooly at
S125 00 per acre
24ACRES - In Pomeroy Good
for housmg or small farm
ARE YOU TIRED OF LIVING
IN YOUR OLD HOUSE? GO
MODERN AND LET US SELL
IT WITH LITTLE WORRY TO
YOU NO SALE NO CHARGE

AUlOMOlHLE Insurance been
cancellecP
Lost
your
operators l 1cense Call 992
7428
6 15 tfc

Television Log
WEDNESDAY, FEB 20,1974
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 ABC News 13 Sesa me St 20 Per
sonaltty &amp; Behavioral Development 33
Truth or Con
sequences 6
6 30 - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Room22213
7 00 - News 10 6 What s My Lme 8 Truth or Con seq 3 Beat
the Clock 4 Elec Co 20 Know Your Schools 33 J1mm y
Dean 13 I Spy 15
7 30 - To Tell the Truth 6 Sale of the Century 8 The Judge 10
Bea l the Clock 13 PoliCe Surgeon 3 On the Money 4 An
t 1ques 20 Ep1sode Ad1on 33 TBA 15
8 00 - Son ny &amp; Cher 8 10 Bill Moyers Journal 20 Chase 3 4
15 Washmgton Connect1on 33 The Cowboys 6 lJ
8 30 - Theater In Amenca 33 Woman 20 Mov1e
The
Hellstrom Chron 1cle 6 13
9 00 - CannonS 10 Mov1e A Case of Rape 3 4 15 Children
of Chma 20
•
10 00 - Kotak 8 10 Doc Ell1ol6 13 News 20
11 00 - N ews3 4 6 8 10 13 15
1 I 30 - Johnnv Carson 3 4 15 Horror Hall of Fame - A Mnn
ster Salute 6 13 Mov1es The Southern Star S
Honeymoon
Hotel 10 Day AI N1ghl 33
12 00 - Janak• 33
1 'oO - Tomorrow 3 4 News 13
200 - News4
THURSDAY, FEB 21 1974
6 00 - S unr~se Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Amenca s Problems 10
6 25 - Farm Report 13
6 30 - Btble Answers 8 Patterns for L1vmg 13 News 6 F1ve
Mmutes to LIVe By 4
6 35 - Columbus Today 4
6 45 - Farmt1me 10 Morn1ng Report 3
7 00 - Today3 4 15 News8 10, P1 xanne6 D1ck Van Dyke 13
7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwmkle 13 New Zoo Revue 6
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 10 Sesame St 33 New Zoo Revue 13
Jefl s Col l1e 6
8 25- Jack LaLanne 13
8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13
9 00- Paul DIKOn 4 Phtl Donahue 15 Fnendly Junct1on 10
AM 3 Abbott &amp; Costello 8 W1ld Wild West 6 Biography 33
Movte Return to Peyton Place 13
9 30-ToTell theTruth3 Secre1Storm8
9 55- Chuck Wh1le Reports 10
10 00 - (\inah Shore 3 15 Jokers W1ld 8 10 Company 6
10 30 -$10 000 Pyramid 8 10 Jeopardy 3 4 1S
11 00 - Gamb1tlO 8, Password13 Wlzardof0dds3 4 IS Mike
Douglass 6
11 30- Love of L1le 8 10 Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Brady
Bunch 13
11 55 - CBSNewsB DanlmelsWorldiO
12 00 - Bob Braun s 50 SO Club 4 News 8 10 13 Password 6
Jackpot' 3 15
12 30 - Spi ll Second 6 Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Baffle 3 15
12 45 - Electnc Company 33
12 55 - NBC News 3 IS
1 oo - News 3 All My Children 6 13 Not for Women Only 15
Concentration
Secret Storm 10
1 30 - As the World Turns 8 10 3 On A Match 3 4 IS Lets
Make A Deal 6 13
2 oo - DaysofOur L1ves3 4 15 Gu1dmg L1ghl8 10 Newlywed
Game 6 13
2 30 - Doctors3 415 G1fllnMyLife6 13 EdgeofN1ghl8 10
3 00- Another World 3 4 15 General Hospital 6 13 Price Is
R1ght 10 8 Masterpiece Theater 20
3 30 - One L1le to Live 13. 6 Phil Donahue 4 New Match Game
8 10 HowToSurvlveAMarrlage3 15
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Speedracer 6 Somerset 15 Sesame St
20 33 love American Style 13 Lucy Show 8 Mov1e
Mother D1dn I Tell Me' 10
4 30-GJ IIJgan sls 13 6 GreenAcresJ Bonanza15 HazelS
Jackpot' A
5 00 - M1ster Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Gnffm 4 M1ssion

e

WIN AT BRIDGE

Double finesse doubles your fun
Accept hlo decision

-------MACHINES Repair

- - -- -- -

SEWING
serv1ce all makes 992 2284
The Fabr1c Shop Pomero y
Authonzed S ng r
Jles and
Serv iCe We Sha
Sc ,ssors
3 29 lfc
PRICE
CONSTRUCT I ON
Roof•ng
spout1ng
kitchens
and bathrooms
Comp l ete
remodelmg Phone 742 6273
123tfc
DOZER and back hoe work
ponds and ~e pt1 c tanks d1t
chmg serv1ce top so• l f tll
d1rt
l 1m estone
B&amp;K Ex
cavatmg Phone 992 5367 or
992 3861
9 1 tfc

- -- -- - - -

-------------SEPTIC TANKS ClEANED

REASONABLE rates Ph 446
4782 Gallipolis John Russell
Owner and Operator
5 12 tfc

SEPTIC TANKS
AROBIC
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPA IRED
M ILLER
SAN ITATION
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3035
10 "'tfc
SEPTIC
TANKS
clea ned
Modern Sanitation 992 3954 or
992 7349
10 23 tfc
BAcf&lt; HOE- Ser ... ~;~HARLES
R HATFIELD
Route 1
R uti and Oh10 45775 phone
742 6092 Water l•n es footers
and trenches 24 hours 7
days a week
2 7 26tp
BLOCKS bored and all repairs
on sma ll engines W1lkmson
Small Eng1ne Sa tes 399 w
Ma1n St Phone 992 3092
2 6 26tc
W IL L trim or cut trees and
shrubbery
Also cl ean out
basements attiCS etc Call
949 3221 or 742 4441
2 2 26tc

Real Estate For Sale
SPACIOUS bi Level and Split!
level homes are now undel'
constructiOn on City water
and sewer
Many deluxe
features 1nctudlng air con
dtt 10nmg
Best f1nancmg
available Other type homes
n d1fferent areas on F H
Adm fmanclng Wi th no down
payment Call collect (837
6540) or wr i te to MEIGS
DEVELOPMENT P 0 Box
33 Middleport Ohio 45760
1 9 tfc

-----------Big Capacity

Maytag
Autome11cs
2 speed operation
Choice of water
temps Auto water
level control Lint
F11ter or Power Fin
Agitator
Perma Press
Maytag
Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround
clothes
with gentle even
heat No hot spots,
no overdrylng Fine
Mesh Lint Filter
We Speclallre in
MAYTAG
Red Carpet
Servl,ce

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Arnoui Grate

NORTH
• AQJ
'KQJ
+K J9

20

WhAt rio vou do now?

.10853
WEST
• 97532
' 108 53

.4

Rutland

TODAY S QUESTION
Instead of b1ddong three

notrump your partner has b1d
rour clubs over your three spades

The Almanac
In 1872, the Metropolitan
By lim ted Press International Museum of Art m New York
foda y ts Wednesday, Feb 20 Ctty was opened to the pubhc
the 51s t d.11 of 1974 wtth 314 to fot the forst tome
follow
In 1938 Anthony Eden re
I he moon IS a pp1 oachmg 1ts stgned as Brtttsh foreogn
new phase
secretary to protest the 'ap
Tht: mm mn g star s are Venus peasement pohcy of Bntosh
and Jup1 ter
Pnme Momster Nevolle Cham

Helen Help
By Hel&lt;·n 13ottd

Us.

• •

The eve rung s tar s at e Mer
Mm s and Satw n
1hose born on Uus date are

Unusual AIUlivcrsary Gift
EmphasiS on sexual
overdone these

compatibthty and periormanc e 1s b~.:mg
days, tt seems to me A marrrage can be tnost

saltsfactory wothout tl
My wife and I love each other, of not woth a passiOn at least
wtth warm, endurmg affection all(l great froendshop She a twavs
wanted to please me but her sex drlve ts low She pt efe1 s a pat a
hug, a kiss, as the years crowd on
For our thirty-fifth weddmg anmversary I !fjlve hc1 a
present no more sex, but sttlllots oflove Thos was not offered on
resentment, but wtth consideration for a woman who ts a won
derful wife and mother - but not a very good actress My needs
are not great these days and can be mel "tlhoul beong
psychologtcally untrue to her
Shouldn t ot be conceded by these sexperts that certatn
people just don't need all tha tactoon, although th ey have much
capactty for love' Why must older people be constantly urged to
continue somethmg they never cared much about 111 lhe forsl
place - and made to feel madequate tf they don 't' - SIXI Y
AND SATISFIED
Dear 60
In a contest for most unusual ann"ersar) prese nl of the
year, you'd wm forst place hands down '
But yes, you're rtght sexual drtves vaoy gtea tly and
mamages, espectally those of over 30 years' duratton ca n be
happy and lovmg wtlhout ' all that actton '-tf botlt patlneo s
agree
Here s a smaU prediction, however I II bet youo wofe woll
soon mdicate she d like your gtft exchanged for a betteo odea
much much better' You'd be surprtsed how fast a woman sta rts
wanting that whoch she os no longer asked or expelled to govc
H

+++

Dear Helen
How aDout this 1
In my mat! today I got a come-on from a group po omotmg a

th e ~ 1 g n

under

t\mc Ji td ll

Mal v f hu den

was

CR~"Z-&lt;.1

three orbits of tl1e earth m a
spa cecrart

soprano

til(' Umon

modern-d.tv Utopoa, which of everyone would back to the hnut
11 uu ld elmunute proflt-maktng boll payments, and dirty old
money man everyone--shares world The old soc1ahst pttch v. 1t h

by THOMAS JOSEPH

40 Hebrew
lyre

ash

Please send eontnbutoons of $10, $1o, $25 or or more We
yow support - SAM THE NON-SUPPORTER
Sam

I hese people cvodently believe the old adage 'There's one
lxHnevelymtnutc I ct shopethcy rewrong - H

+++

Dear Helen
Must engagem ent

rmgs always be diamonds, or lS thts JUSt a

traditiOn ? - D S

11 Oper altc

htghhght

1 Dress em
belh sh
ment

12 Opt
13 llchgJOus

2 Mounta1n
nymph

faction

3

beaten

4 Pet fo r

boat

14

15

hy HFNRI ARNI)I 0 , .,,.J llOO LEE

5
6
6
7

7

a
8
9

9
10

10
11
11
1
2

Opulent
( 3 wds )
Dracula

What a

5 Conceal

l augh 1

16

lndtana

10 Found

toothed

35 Poem

16 Sharpen
19 Gael1c

8 Remote

22

J ohn

pOSSJbth

12

23 Notched

9 Ctty m

24 Ntmbu s
25 Frothed

wds)

Oregon

Meat

Chn slJe

6 Onward
7 Pops best

ties

26

28 Less
n sky
29 Love
poetry's
muse
33 Fulda

necess ary

gtrl

tnbe

Gat
18 Shattered
20 Before
(prefix)
21 Wttncssed
22 Dncd
up
23 Beat 1t
17

tnbutary

36 Black or

Red

24 Celebes

ox
l ess plant
26 The R
tn

Unscramble these four Jumbles
one l etter to ench square to
form four ordmary words

Rill

27 Gold (It )
28 Mextcan
shawl
30 My De

fenses -

Down'
31 -

tree

(m
truuble )
(2 wds )

Jfl!1J~)1~® 1J.t lotgw&amp;f.J . - / , _ .
a

Off lhe

25 Flower

Dear D S
All engagement nngs needn t contam diamonds any more
tha n a 11 weddmg gowns need be long and white
I know a gorl who became engaged wtth a rmg from a
Cracket Tack box Heo husband later exchanged tt for a star
sapplure, but she stoll to easures the forst as her real engagement
nng - H

ImpoSS ible 6 Andy Gnff1th
Gomer Pyl e USMC 13
30 - HodgepodgeLodge20 Bever ly H ll blll•es 8 Elec Co J3
Tra 1ls West 15 Hogan s Heroes 13
00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 Sesame St '20 ABC news 13 Tru th or
Consequences 6 Lil •a s Yoga and You 33
30 - NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News B 10 Your
Future I s Now 33 Room 222 13
00 - Truth or Conseq 3 Beat the Clock t What s My Lme 8
Elec Co 20 Lei s Make A Deal 13 New s 10 6 Sporl s Dc c, k
15 Av1af1on Weath er 33
30 - Hollywood Squares 3 W1ld K ngdom 10 Beat the Cock
13 Looking Ahead 33 To Tell the Trutt 6 Ou •e s G r ls B
Johnny Mann s Stand Up 8. Cheer 15 Zoom 20 R ead1ng For
the Classroom Teacher 33 Dea ler s Cho1ce 1
00 - Waltons 8 10 Advocates 20 33 Chopper One 6 13 Flip
W1lson 3 4 15
30 - F1rehouse 6 13
00 - Kung Fu 6 13 Ironside 3 4 15 M ov •es G l B l ues 8
Porgy and Bess lO Black Journal20 Con ll• c l s o f Harry S
Truman 33
30 - Eliot Norton Rev1ews 33
00 - News 20 MusiC Country USA 3 1 15 Sl reets o f S&lt;Jn
Franc1sco 6 13 Who Is Man ? 33
30 - Day AI N1ghl 33
00 - News 3 A 6 8 10 13 15 Janak 33
30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 D •ck Cavett 6 13 M ov 1es
Waterhole No 3 8
Born Yesterday
10
00 - Tomorrow 3 4 News 13
00 - News 4

DOWN

5 Ch mcse

trac k

At the end of the hogh po"ered brochure, was this sup-

Dear

ACROSS
1 Mountain

pocus promotion

phcatwn

need

'

~

b01 n Feb 20

A thought for the day
On th1s ddy 1n hostor)
Amertcan poet John Greenleaf
In 1809 the US Supreme Wluttoer sa od For all sad
Court 1uled tllat the power of words of tongue and pen the
llle fu le1 11 govemment was no saddest are these
It mtght
grcate 1 than that of anv have been

hunts

&lt;?

John Glenn landed sa fely after

18"7

md1 v 1du l l state tn

MAI&lt;ES

ii'IINK. 4CtJ ~E

Nazt Germany
In 1962 Amencan astronaut

of Pisces

operatic

W~P.T

berlam to\\ard

cur}

Dear Helen

Bollen

FUNNY BUSINESS

32 Pnor to
34 Notes on

the He

brew 0 T
36

Saurcl
fish

37 MUI:acal

works
38 Femmme
suffix

39 Forsake

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it
AXYDLBAAXR

IF/.B 'IIUf' ~
.sATECK
v~

Is LONGFl!LLOW

I I
rJ

I(

One letter s1mply stands for another In th1s sampl e A ts
used for the three L s X for the two 0 s etc Smgle letters
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are d1flerent

AN OP5f.JINE&gt;
A
PH01061&lt;:APHEI&lt;':
Now &amp;rr8Jll"e the circled letters
to form the IUrprilf: &amp;niWtf, 81

:==h':'::::j=='==:":::::'~:::_, sunested by lhe above cartoon
l'ritit tile SURPRISE ANSW!R KR

l

1rI xxI xI xJ

1

Jumhl u
Yo:8ll"rtla.y ~

I An,wrr

DAILY

OBESE

Jo111l flllllllflfllet/

WIZARD

(Aa.wen 1omorrow'
FROZEN

wllh drmkmg - ELBOW

CRYPTOQUOTES
BNML FVWZTWQ FJVCUD ALV FPS,
BNML
NWFVWZTWQ
ALV
BTWZFCMPW
Yeoterd.oy'o Cryptoqaote NO MAN OF WOMAN BORN,
COWARD OR BRAVE, CAN SHUN HIS DES'I ,;n&gt;
HOMER
(© 1974 K1ng Features Syndicate Inc)

EAST
• 1086

,974

+Q852

+ 1063

.KQ2

'+A

~ou,p

~

THE IIIAP1 eur

A~ T~~S~~IT~~~

62
A74
• I 1976

.c::

TELL YOU'VE GOT

Bf£N Tlh NG TO BRI&lt;AK
THAT COO£ BUT IT 5

I COU'-.0 AtA() THf NOTE I

• K4

MR. TRACY, I CAN

FOI{ f.I"HT YEARS I V£

I (OVLDN T ANNIE - YOV SEt:' 1

SOUTH IDl

JUST

;HE

A

NO IJSE- If 5rJLL

01-1, YES, A SPECIAL
LEFT-~ANDED

CLEAVER,
VINTAGE OF 1930-

lt£MAINS A !&gt;ECR.IT

!lCRiT coDE'

Netther vu lnerable

-----~-

READY MIX
CONCRETE
delivered r~ght to your
pro1ect Fast and easy Free
estimates Phone 992 3284
Goegle n Ready M1x Co
Middleport Ohto
6 30 tfc

.&amp;u, 1~11

West

North

East

Pass
Pass 6N T
Pass
Opemng lcad-•2

South
!NT

,,,ri

Pass

'!I
I

By O~wald &amp; James Jacoby
Any expert would brmg sox
notrump home woth today's
cards He would go after the
clubs by leadmg the 10 from
dummy
An East player mtght solve
hiS problems by covertng, but
an expert East would duck
quockly It wouldn't do expert
East any good Expert South
would let the 10 rode!
He would do thts because
tt's the best play He plans to
take a second fmesse later on
of the 10 loses to the kmg or
queen
Lets see why thiS ts the
best play There ts no way to
avotd the loss of two club
trocks of West holds K Q 4, K
Q 2 or K Q 4 2 Thts play of
two !messes wtll also lose to
K -Q doubleton, but tt wms
any ume east

Cream an' suqars
ther' on

th! table

l GUE5:; 1l4EY lOOK UPON
ME A5 A "TH REAT OR.

IPL~C'IS

EL.5E 1HEY~E 5U5PIC1Ctl5
OF ME BCCAU5E IM "THE

00$5$ DAUGHTER.

etther one or both of the honors
The next best play ts to lay
down the ace Thos wtll wm
agamst K-Q doubleton m the
West hand any other 2-2
break or any 3 1 break wtlh
dovtded honors.
The worst play os to let the
10 rtde wtlh the plan of play
mg the ace next Thos wms
agamst all 2 2 breaks and
agamst any combmalton mcfudmg both kmg-queen m
the East hand but ot loses to
all 3-1 breaks wtth dtvtded
honors
lncodentally the respecttve
chances of success of the
three Iones of play are 76 per
cent for two finesses, 66 per
cent for bangmg down the
ace and only 62 per cent for
one fmesse followed by the
play of the ace

%A~

c:tJSTW ~~

~T~(JJ

I HAD~

WRNITUR£
t~ HER£2'

\NIINTW T\1{:;
rtl\1:8" N\Gf:;

foND

startea Wltn

TID~ I

I.

South

Pass
Pass

It

Pass

1•

Pass

I.
3.

Pass

3N T

Pass

?

ALlEY

OOP

'/()KNOCKED
MAH COW OFF
TH CL..IFF ' '

20
Wl&lt;O WAS THE PILOT OF THE
I'.ANE THAT 1001&lt; RONALD COt ~AN
1D SIIAN6R LA INtOST HO~IZON''

You South hold
•A K 7 6. A K 7 6 t3 Z.K 10 3

What do you do now'
A-rP•ss Your partner has
heard your jump 1o Uree opatlet
and luoo decided to bid notrur p

~UMS!;R

lllRITIGJ.J
aJ lll!'
f\10~

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRlSE ASSN J

The btddmg has been
North East
Wesl

wr

! DID I

11W

•

�15 - The Daily Sentmel, Mltl.Uleport-t'omeroy-, u , r tm

14 - The Datly Sentmel Mtddleporl Pomeroy 0, Feb 20, 1974

Israeli
Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!! Business Services
~=P=Q=M=E=RO==Y==~=E~X~P~ER=IE=N~C=ED~G====~=P=E=RT==~
Wanted
rocked
2 SIGNS
.HOME &amp; AUTO
Wheel Alignment
P!!!nerty
OF
Wanted To Buy
'5.55
Motor Co.
by Dayan
QUALITY
OFFICE SUPPLIES
JERUSALEM (UP!) - De
fense Mmosler Moshe Dayan
rocked Israel s caretaker gov
ernment today woth a call for
new electwns and a threa t to
restgn unless g1ven a dectstve

and wmmutguous endorse
ment II om the ruhng Labor
party
Prtme Mtmster Golda Metr s
cabmet went mto secret emer·
gency sesswn thiS morrung to
discuss Dayan s surpnse statements to a group of student
leaders
Pohttcal leadeo s satd the
moves put Da)an and Mrs
Metr, t\\o of ls1ael s most
powerful pohltcal figures, m
direct confhct ""d could spltt
the Labor pari) \\hoch has run
the natwn smce Independence
In 1948

Muusters were on edge as
they showed up for the meetmg
at Mrs Metr s offoce
' How the hell dtd you fmd
out th ere was gomg to be a
cabon et meetmg thos mor
nmg? Israel Gahh Mrs
Melr's closest pohtocal advtser,
snapped at one newsman

The Israeh nattonal radio
said Da1 an called for new
electtons and threatened to
resogn Tuesday noght m a
speech to student leaders after
failing to get the Labor party to
fonn a coalitton woth the
rightwmg Lilrud opposotton
0

Since a

natwnal umty

government IS not a realistic
posstbohty at the moment, I
propose dossol vmg the Knesset
(parliament) and holdmg new
elecltons, the radw quoted
Dayan as saymg
Dayan was reported saymg,
'I am wtlhng to serve m the
next government of I get
dectstve and unamboguous support from the leaders of the
(Labor party) ahgnment and
tts mstotutoons '
"Under present conditions,

Without such wode support, I
am not wtlhng to be a
mnuster ,' he reportedly saod
Mrs Meor, who met Dayan at
her offtce before the cabmet
meetmg was expected to Inform Prestdent Ephraun Katztr durmg the aftenoon of plans
for a new coaht10n government
wtthout Likud
Dayan m statements made
through assoctates, satd Tuesday afternoon he would refuse
to )Otn Israel's next cabmet
unles the Labor party agrees to
share power wtth the Likud
bloc
Mrs Metr ossued a statement
later m the day, however,
saymg a broad coalthon With
Ukud would create a government of paralysiS unable to
make dec,s!Ons m peace talks
woth the Arabs
Mrs Metr has headed a
shaky, caretaker government
smce the Dec 31 nahonal
elections failed to gove any
party a maJonty m the 12~seat
Knesset

Local Bowling
Pom eroy Bowlmg Lanes
Ben d League
Feb 11 1974
Standmgs
Team
Pomts
Four Aces
26
Crow s Come t s
23
Shake Haven
22
Top Cats
13
Three H1ts &amp; A MIS
8
Three Nuts &amp; A Bol t
.4
H1gh lnd• v •dual Game- Ed
Voss 226 A L Phelps Jr 215
Chester Kn ght 205
H1gh Senes
Ecf Voss 613
A L Ph el ps Jr 593 Bob
Bowen 566
Team Htg h Game Top
Cats &amp; Crows Comets 103
Team H g h 5er es - Crows
Comet s 2055
Tn County League
F eb 12 1974
Standmgs
Team
Pomts
Sears Catalog Merchants
38
Raw11ngs Au to Parts
34
Pomeroy Cem Block Co
20
M1dwes t St eel Co
20
Roach s Gun Shop
17
H&amp;R F•r estone
15
t:llgh lnd•v•dua l Game - A
L Phelps Jr 236 A L Phelps
Jr 225 Cla re nce Boy les 218
H1Qh Se r1es - A L Phelps
Jr 634
Jack Peterson 568
Rtchard Ash 530
Team
H1g h
Game
Rawlmg s A uto Parts 976
Team
H1gh
Ser 1es
Rawlmgs A uto Parts 2664
Saturday Jun1or League
Feb 9, 1974
Standmgs
PIS
Team
14
Bowlmg Stones
13
Gutter Dus ters
Apach es
11
Hot Shots
9'h
6112
Alley cats
High lndlv1dua1 Game Greg Cund iff \72 Ron Case•
166
High Senes - Greg Cund •ft
456 Ron Case• 437
Hot
Team H gh Game
Shots 760
Hot
Team H gh Ser.es
Shots 1148

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 PM Day Before Publi ca ! on
Monday Dea d I ne 9 am
Cance l l at1on Cor re ct•on s
w I I be accepted until 9 am tor
bay of P'-'bllcat on
REGULATiONS
Ttle PubliSher r eserves thf:'
r ght to ed•t or reJec t any ads
deemed' ob,ecl•onal
The
publisher w1 l l not be r es pon
s ble lor more than one n
corre c t nse r f on
RATES

For Want Ad Serv 1c e
S ce nts per Word one n se1'"f10n
M n1m1.1m Charge $1 00
14 cen ts Iller word three
consecut ve mse rt ons
26 cents per word s x con
sec ut1 ve nsert ons
25 Per Cent D scount on pa1d
ads and ads pad w lh1n 10
days
CAR D OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 for 50 word m n
•mum Each add Ilona I word
3c
BLIND ADS
Add t1ona l 1St Charge per
Advert semen!
OFFICE H OURS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m Da ly
8 30 a m
to 12 00 Noon
c;.,turday

'\'\AR R 1EO coup le wants to rent

! Arm or coun try home by
Apr I C:tl
,.. ' "''" 4118 5 1 41
2 19 6tc

606 E Mam

1973CHEV NOVA
$2695
Cus tom Ha tchbac k Cpe dark green f m 1sh l1ke new
wh 1l e wall t 1res lu l l wheel covers protecflve s1de m ldg s
P B rad10 6 c y l eng 1ne stand trans A ver y popu la r
n ode l &amp; pn ced to go
1972 DODGE DEMON
$2295
340 V a eng me automt'll tc t rans power steermg rad to
l1k e new w wIt res blk v myl1ntenor r ed f n1 sh
1969 CHEVELLE
11645
H T Cpe
std V a eng•ne automatic trans
power
stee r •ng factory a ~r bu cket sea ts A sharp clea n ca r that
wou ld please you Dark green fm 1sh rad1o

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

Nohce

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of our
husband and l a th er
Joe
Ebersbach who passed away
8 years ago Feb 19 1966

SHOOT IN G Mat c h Rae ne Gun
Club Sunday F eb 24
p m
Assorted meat s
Factory
choked guns only
1 20 Jtc

Even tho the years have pasr
Our lOV Ing m erno r es of h m w I
a lways last
Sadly m ssed by wde Ann
and ch ldren Frrmk
Tom
Jeane Merr
Dar la
and
Nancy
2 20 1tp

TURN spare ltm e nto mon ey
Otsplay new spr ng Jewelry
tor Sa rah CQ'J entry
No
depos t necessary or no ex
penen ce necessary Call 992
2717 between 10 a m and 3
pm
'} 10 Jt c

IN LOVIN G memo r y of Car l
Man ley who passed away
e tght years ago today Feb
20 1966 The years roll by
can t be etght smce our Dad
was ca l ed to He.,ven
II
see ms more l1ke a w eek or so
s• nce we watched h m ro ck to
and fro He likes 1t th ere and
prays every day that all h•s
Children w II f1nd th e way It
IS a stmple th ng we ha'Je to do
and Dad we II make tf to be
w th you
Sad ly m tssed by c ht dren
and grandch tdren
'1 20 ltc

NEED Easter sewmg done?
W II do sew ng n my home 1n
Chester Ca I 985 3824 week
days
2 20 4tc
WILL buy furn lu re and mer
chand se at Polly s AuctiOn
Hou se Add son Phone 992
3509
2 20 7tc
A U CT ION Sa l es Thursday 7
P m Rt 7 AddiSOn Oh10
' 2 2 0 2tc

WORLD'S LARGEST

lost
WHITE TOY poodle mae lost
•n Rutland Reward Col ar
W1th s l ver be ll s Phone 7 ~ 2
436 1
2 18 6t c

Prime rates
are redUced
to 9 percent
NEW YORK (UPI) - Most
of the nalton s maJor banks
dropped thetr pnme mterest
rate from 9¥. to 9 pet Tuesday,
mdtcatmg the Federal Reserve
Board may be letltng up
somewhat

on

Its

str1ct

monetary poltcy
The prtme rate reached an
all-tmne htgh of 10 pet last
October and agam m
December before decltmng last
month
It wtll be some months
however, before lower mterest
rates extend to the smaller
mdtvtdul and mortgage loans
made by banks, as prome rates
are applicable only to large
loans, usually taken by corporations
The latest reducltons
completed a round of quarterpam t reductions begun last
Thursday by leadmg banks m
New York and Los Angeles
The prevtous rate of 91'.! pet
had prevatled natwnwtde for
only about a week followmg an
earlter cutback from 91', pet
completed Feb 11

CLASSES SET
Classes m beginnmg drawmg
slated for the French Art
Colony, Monday, March 4, wtll
be held from 7 to 9 p m Introduction to art on Tuesday,
March 5 wtll be from 3 15 to
5 15 p m

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED - Jamce
Couch, romeroy, Roland
FISher, Potnt Pleasant
BIRTHS, Feb 20 - Son to
Mr ' and Mrs Rtchard
Meadows , Apple Grove
daughter to Mr and Mrs
Richard Smtih, Pomt Pleasant

Even at mght, the Stars
and Stropes lites over the
Senate vt House wmgs of the
Capttol when the lawmakers
are m sessiOn

. ...
A

,.

Cal

I WOULD like to thank all those
who
sen t
f lowers
and
donat1ons durmg the t1me of
the death of Bess e Jones
Than ks al so for al l the he l p
we rece•ved at the hoSpita l
Claren ce Freeman
2 20 Jtc

- Help Wanted
BABYS I TT ER 1n Harr sonv lll e
area 5 or 6 days a week
Phone 742 6551 or 992 2550
'J 19 tf c

AIRLYgood smal l u se d cham
saw Phone 949 2225
2 20 6t c

N TIQ UE qu It s and tew el ry
Also 1nterested n furn1tur e
and d1shes
Call 992 5262
eve n1ng s or morn1ngs
2 20 TIC
POINT h1!Ch sc rap er bade
and se t of cultivators to f1t
tnt erna t•ona Super C t ra c tor
2 or 3 tt p ckup d 1Sk 6 or 7ft
Phone 992 7190
2 20 Jtp
ECYCLE vour newspapers al
Your
S1 40 per 100 pound
corruga ted pasteboard al
$ 1 40 per 100 pound and your I
B M cards at 6c per po1.1nd We
wtlt also bi.IY your scrap 1ron
cast •ron sheet ~ron copper
brass auto r a d a tor s auto
batter es Our fleet of tra lers
w II serviCe and mdust rv n
your area Conserve r ecyc le
and se l l your waste mater als
to th e Rosenberg Recycling
Co mpany n Athens Oh o We
c lose each Fr day at noon for
balance of week so be aware
when you get 1 al l together
that the Rosenberg Recyc l 1ng
Co 1n A thens s the better
place tor you
2 19 ffc

KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIG S
We ha'Je th e product on hand
and we de l ver to you per
sonally Helen Jane Brown BICYC LE S m any cond1t 10n
A l so b1cycle parts Contact
992 5113
Larry Wyatt (housetra l erJ
12 30 He
on Loc ust Stree t Ru tland
2 19 5tp

Employment Wanted

t.XPERIENCED pa nter
1n
ter or and ex ter or Ca ll Don
Van Meier Phone 985 3951
2 3 29tp

CASH pa1d for all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 6 14 423 9531
4 13 ti c
TON or 'J. ron truck flatbed
14 or 16 ft L a t e f1ft es or
s1xt es Phone 992 7106
2 17 5tp

Pomeroy

and

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Dtsplay

DITCHING SERVICE
Water Lmes and Power
Lmes All work done by the
foot or contract Also do1er
work and septic tanks 1M
stalled

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
Noght992 3525
or 992 5232

Steve Snowden
Ph 9'12 7155

~

OUTSIOE work around homes
Lawns
walls and f en ces
Done w1th motor farm m
ptements A lso have p ckup
truck for h a u ltng
F re e
esttmates Phone 992 3716
2 14 6tp

For Rent or Sale
197 2 12x50 MOBILE
Phone 992 5592

Home
2 20 tfc

R
-o-rravei rra11ern

coNCo
.ce
for coup le Ca 1 992 7479
1 31 tf c

OLD furn1ture oak tabl es
c locks 1ce baKes brass beds
d•shes desks, or complete
hou seh olds
wr te M
0
M ller Rt 4 Pomerov Oh •o
ca ll 992 7760
5 13 tt c
NO I copper 70c rad1ator s
32c red brass 3Sc batter1es
$1 20 M A Hall ReedSville
Oh o Phone 378 6249
1 27 ttc

RIVERSIDE Auto Wreck1ng
w111 pay $5 for all tunk cars
Phone (30 4) 882 5244 or 773
2 HOGS to sel l or tr ade for beef
5890
Phone 607 3031
I 27 26tc
2 20 41p

For Sale or Trade
i

P6874

!lPR IN G SPEC IA L
COTTON
FABRICS 98 CE NT S PER
YARD
POLYESTER
DOUBLE K NIT S S2 88 PER
YARD NEW CRAF T ITEM S
NOVELTY FABRIC SHO P
230 WEST BLVD BEL PRE
OHIO
2 17 6tc
SPRING
FAB RICS
N ew
sh pm ent JI.ISf arr ved W de
select1on coord nated colors
one lot polyester 1ersey kn1t
$2 29 per
yd
Caro l1na
Fabr cs Route 7 Chester
Oh•o 9 am to 7 p m Monday
through Satu rday Henry and
Mary Hun ter owners
2 17 6tp
AliNOUNCING new hours for
1ncom e tax se rv ce Open on ly
on Monday Wednesday and
Fr~day
9
am
to
5
p m
Even1ngs by app t
Wanda Eb l n Co Rd 22 off
Rout e 7 bypass Phone 992

2272

2 8 30t c
GUN SHOO T Rae ne Gun Club
fa ctory chok•d guns on l y
Fnday 1 p m
2 19 12tc

About 173 molhon tons of
man made to x 1 c materials

p o II u t e Umted States aor
each year- roughly a ton lor
every man woman and ch ild

m the cou ntry

Mobile Homes For Sale

CASH oa1d for all makes anti
models of mob 1le homes PtJ
area code (61 4) 446 1425
2 7 26tc

GROCERY busmess for sale
Butldmg for sa le or lease
Phone 773 5618 lrt.m 8 30 p m
to 10 p m tor appo ntment
3 20 tfc
STEREO
Walnut
AM FM
Rad 10 8 track tape com
b nat on Balance $110 73 or
t erms ava !able Phone 992
3965
2 1.4 ttc
EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
Mam St Pomeroy Al l k nds
of salt wat("r petlels water
nuggets block salt and own
Oh10 R1ver Sa lt Phone 992
3891
6 5 tfe;

SA LT FOR ICE AND SNO\,
Rock sa lt for townSh ipS
towns and bus nesses 1n
bulks and bags for 1ce and
snow Excels•or Sal! Works
Phone 992 38Y 1
11 11 lie

GOOD USED

For Sale
sex, but not love,

from a young

BOLEN S Husky 1250 w1th 48
1nch mower and blade Ex
cellent cond•t•on Phone 949
5953
2 20 6tc

gtrl he barely knows m the Xrated ''Last Tango m Par1s "
Brando won m 1954 for "On 1974 HONDA x 1 350 On or off
the Waterfront" and last year
the road b1ke Low m11eage
S1 000 Call Harry C Roush
for 'The Gildfatber," when he
Mason 773 5238
stood the academy on tts ear by
2 20 3tc
sending a gtrl m an Iodtan THREE year old pa1om1no
"O•'ume to appear m hiS place
hor se Phone 742 3884
2 20 3tc
and make a polittcal speech
The other best actor ne&gt;- YOUNGSTOWN k1tchen smk
mmees were Jack Lemon for
With faucets Good cond 1hon
$50 See at 256 So Fourth
'Save the Tiger," AI Pacmo
Ave Middleport
for "Serptco," Robert Redford
2 18 tfc
for 'The Sting" aod Jack
SA LE Large level lot on
Ntcholson for "The Last FOR
New L1ma Road Rutland All
Detail"
uti11t1es available Phone 742
3083
Ellen
Burstyn
was
2 I ftc
nommated for best actress for
her portrayal of the mother m SIN GER sew 1ng machmes 1972
model m beaut1ful walnut
'The ExorCISt," and !~year­
cab1net Makes des1gn slit
old Linda Blatr was nominated
ches z1g zag
buttonholes
blmd hems etc Ltke new
lor best supporting actress for
Only S89 95 Call Ravenswood
her performance as the
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 oo
12 7 tfc
possessed gtrl Also nommated
-------------.---were the pocture 's director, HAY Phone 992 7306
Wtlliam Friedkln, and Jason
2 17 26tc
Mtller, who played a prtest, for
WEEK old black poodle pup
best supporting actor The 9 phone
992 5098
nom malton of Mtller, who
2 17 5tp
wrote the Puhtzer prtzewmmng play "That ChamINFORMATION ABOUT:
pwnslup Season," was the ftrsl
norrunation of a top ranked
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
author for an acting Oscar
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION
Strelsand Named
Other nommees for best
AND
actress
were
Barbara
Streosand - her second
GREAT COUNTRY
nomination-tor 'The Way We
Wer~,'' Marsha Mason for
ST&amp;REO
11
Cmderella Uberty," Joarme
Woodward for "Summer
92.1 FM
WIShes, Wmter Dreams," and
Glenda Jackson for ' A Touch
.Middleport t""omeroy of Class"

WJYlPO

Pomeroy

Ph 992 2114

FOAM to f1ll your old couch and
cha1r cush1ons as low as
$10 95 Upholstery books only
soc
4 mch covered foam
mattresses for standard s ze
bed
S29 95
Pomeroy
Recovery 622 E Man Stree t
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
1 29 26tc
---~:---- ---- -

Real Estate For 5ale
DESIRABLE two bedroom
house In M 1ddleport ready to
occupy Call 992 5310
1 31 26tc
NEW .. oedroom home llh bath
garage basemen t on Gravel
H II Middleport Natural gas
already 10
Phone Dale
Dutton 992 3369 even1ngs
992 253-4
1 17 ttc
-~-----

----

NEW 3 bedroom home good
water 6 acres 3 outbu ld1n1Js
and cellar Off Me1gs County
1 on Wllllam.Smtth Road J h
miles from Sa lem Center
I 27 26fp

----------THE

WISEMAN
AGENCY
Exc1lmg
New Home
YOU WONT BELIEVE
YOUR EVES WHEN YOU
STEP IN SIDE THIS NEW
SPLIT
LEVEL
HUGE
LIVING ROOM WITH A
LOVELY BALCONY EF
FECT GOING TO THE 3
LARGE
BEDROOMS
BEAUTIFUL
BUILT IN
OAK
CABINETS WITH
QUALITY
APPLIANCES
BUILT IN COMPLETELY
CARPETED FOR DAD - A
LARGE 2 CAR GARAGE
WITH WORKSHOP P.LUS 2
ACRES
TO
PUTTER
AROUND ON LOCATED IN
RUTLAND
YOU MUST
SEE THE IN SIDE OF' THIS
ONE TO APPRECIATE IT
Galha Co's Largest Real
Estate Sates Agency
Office 446 3643
Evenmgs Call
E M "Ike" Wneman
446 3796
E N W•seman, -'46 4500
Bud McGhee 446 USS

On Most Amencan Cars

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 T1l S
Monday lhru Sahlrday
606 E Mam, Pomeroy, 0

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

Gene's

Body Shop

-

WOOD TRUSSES

Ph 992 5271
L1ncoln Htll Pomeroy

0

Painting A Specially

Butltto Your 'Specs
Oehvered to Job S1te

.

Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

All work guaranteed

MATERIALS CO
773 5554
Mason, W Va

5 ROOM home 2 bedroom 1' ,
bath workshop gas forced
atr furnace garage Lot 100
ft x 100 ft Phone 992 3022 or
992 3298
2 20 6tp
FIVE room house and ba t h
atta c hed carport forced a r
furna ce hardwood floors
k1 tc hen cab nets large a r
cond1t1oner N1 ce yard w•th
metal storage bulld1ng 1n rear
yard Located In Syracuse on
Route 124 Call 593 6904 after
6 30 p m PriCed $15 000
2 20 3tc
0 ROOM home Wllh bath City
water coal furnace and 3
acres Phone 992 3944
2 20 3tp
HO USE tor sa le
cl o se to
Pomeroy
Phone 992 5248
before 3 p m 992 3436 after 3
pm
2 20 6tc
1 h ACRE lo ts for sa l e Tuppers
Plams water Call 992 5248
before 3 992 3436 after 3 p m
2 20 6tc

SWEEPER Repa rs parts
sup pies 446 0294 10 am 5
p m Dav 1s Vacuum Cleilner
Store Georges Creek Road
next to CB Radio Sales
2 20 lie
B I SSELL ConstructJon room
add1t1ons and remodelmg
Profess .o nal floor sand1ng
and f l n1shmg o l d and new
References ava•lable Phone
949 3833
1 25 26tc
C BRADFORD Auct 1one"'r
Complete Serv 1Ce
Phone 949 3821
Racme Oh•o
Cr tt Bradford
5 1 tfc
EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
septiC
tanks Installed dump trucks
and lo boys for hire will haul
hit dtrt top so11 limestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
night phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
,.. 2 11tfc
DOZER work land cl€armg by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w1th over
20 years expenence Pullins
Excavatmg Pomeroy OhiO
Phone 992 2478
12 19 ttc
NEIGLERS FOR BUILDING
HOUSES We II draw prints
or
bUild
to
your
specifications
Ne1gler s
Building Su pply
Racme
Ohio Call 949 3604
2 5 26tc

(2 Good Ones)
1- Sode by So de
$150

For Rent

HOUSE
unfurniShed
3
bedroom
llv1ng room
kt t
chen and la undry room One
furn1shed apartment 3 rooms
and bath Phone 992 2780 or
992 3432
2 20 tfc

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

REFRIGERATORS

1- 2 Door
12x60 TRA ILER Wllh pull oul
set up 1n P negrove w II
(Top &amp; Bottom) $125
finance
D
R c hardson
Genera l Del very Mann W
va 25635 or phone (304 ) 583
POMEROY LANDMARK
6507
F URNI SHED apartments on
2 20 H e
9 ... _ Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Rt 33 1n Mason One 3 room
apartment shower k1tc:hen
6il!l Phone 992 9932
PRE SPR IN G SALE at Berry
cab m su1table for 2 old people
Miller Mob le Homes
105
or 2 workers ut1 l 1t es fur
Fa r son Street Belpre Oh10
n• sh ed and garden If want ed
AM F M s tereo radiO 8 track
phone 423 9531 Buy now One 2 room
apartment
tape player -4 speaker sound
take del1very n spr1ng - tak e
bedroom and k1tc hen bath
system
Ba l ance 5109 32 or
advantage of w nler t me
shower and kitchen Both are
terms Call 992 3965
pr ces on some outstanding
good apartments Reynolds
2 19 tfc
used Mobiles Homes
Apartments Phone 773 5147
1971
2 bedroom - 60 x 12
2 19 6tp TWIN
NEEDLE
SEWING
Prmcess was $6 -49S 00 sa te
MACH1NES
1974
model
m
pr ce S5 295 00 Oh s mobile
S,LEEP IN G room over wme
walnut stand
All features
home new cost $8 000 00)
store n Pomeroy Referenc("
bu It m to make fancy designs
1971 - 6Sx 12 ChampiOn super
requtred Call 992 5293
and do stretch sew1ng A lso
sale pn ce only $4 995 00
1 10 H e
buttonholes blmd hems etc
1971 - 60x 12 Buddy class c
SA3 35cashor terms avadabe
was $5 49S 00 now on l y
Pl'1one 992 2653
J AND 4 ROOM furntshed and
S4 795 00
2 19 tfc
unfurniShed
apartments
1971
two 60x 12 Champ ton
Phone 992 5434
were $4 495 00 now on ly
4 12 tfc VACUUM CLEANERS Electro
S3 995 00
Hyg 1ene New Demonstrators
1971 - 60x12 El cona Custom
has all ctean1ng attachments
new pr ce Si7 295 00 sa le pr1ce PRIVATE meetmg room for
plus the new Electro Suds for
any organ1zat•on phone 992
$5 795 00
shampoo ng carpet
On ly
3975
1914 - three Detro1ters - up to
S27 50
cash
or
terms
3 n tfc
$1 OOOOOoff
available Phone 992 2653
2 19 tfc
WE HAVE many other SIZeS ROOMING house
furn• shed
and 'Jar~etles of Mobile
construct•on
workers
UPHOLSTERY fabricSby the
welcome Phone 772 5975
Homes on sa le Our pr ces
vard 54 Inches w•de as low as
nclude your delivery and
2 15 tfc
Sl 95 per vard Velvets as tow
complete set up don t wa1t
as S3 45 Imported velvets
shop now you II be g l ad you TRAILER 1 bedroom niCe for
S9 95 we a l so have nylon
d•d
coup le Phone 992 7419
herculon
cotton
prmts
2 15 12tc
2 5 tf c
'J.nyls remnants by the yard
or bv the p1ece Pomeroy
3 BEDROOM mobile homes
Recovery 622 E Mam St
bath and lf2 w1th washer and
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
drver Phone 992 3509
1 29 26tc
2 20 31(

Best '73 movie
may he of devil

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad 1a tar to the
sma llest Hea ter Core
Nathan B1ggs
Radiator Specialist

Real Estate For Sale

For Sale

:1

Card of Thanks
MY SINCERE tha nks tor the
prayers ca rds and f lowers
dur1ng my weeks of Illness
Very spec al tha nk s to my
re lat ves and fr1ends for thei r
thoughtful ness the mm sters
Who ca ll ed Dr Dan els and
Dr Wa l ker and the nursmg
staff at the Hol zer Med 1c al
Center tor the r care and
k1ndness
Ca rl Jenn1ngs
Pomeroy
2 20 ltc

992 2094

608 E

MAIN
_ POMEROY, O, ,
BABY FARM - II acres 1ust
off Rt 33 close 10 "l year old
home 3 BR colored bath w
shower Lovely ktlchen w
range &amp; ref Ufil•fy Barn
garage &amp; storage A ll new
fence $22 500 00
BUY OF THE YEAR - Just
3 yrs old 3 BR colored bath
Uhl 1ty modern kitchen and
d1nmg Carpeted Carport
About 1!2 acre $16 000 00
A BARGAIN 2 story
frame 2 BR
new bath
furnace &amp; hot wa ter tank
Some carpeting paneling &amp;
tile Basement $6 500 00
BETWEEN POMEROY &amp;
MIDDLEPORT on new Rl 7
1112 acre 2 wells &amp; el ecfnc
Approved for sept 1c tank
Idea l for mobile or home
$4 500 00
DELAY
MAY
MEAN
DISAPPOINTMENT
SEE
THESE UNUSUAL OF
FERS TODAY
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259
II no answer 992 2568

TEAFORD
Vnq d B T.,dtHd Sr
H1 ol&lt;·''
11D MPr h,lll l t Strc•t·l
Pnnwroy. Oh 1o ·1)760
CITY CONVENIENCE 3
bedrooms bath modern kif
chen hot water heat storm
wmdows and garage
OUT RT 7 -2 bedrooms bath
large living
T P
water
garage and other bulldtngs
One acre
RANCH TYPE HOME 3
bedrooms bath n1ce k1tchen
nat gas furnace Oty water
and garage
BUSINESS BUILDING- W1lh
over 3 112 acres Can be useful to
builders equ1pment overhauls
truckers
storage
or
church or school Cham lmk
fence Above all f l oods
316 ACRES In Ol1ve
Township Wild and wooly at
S125 00 per acre
24ACRES - In Pomeroy Good
for housmg or small farm
ARE YOU TIRED OF LIVING
IN YOUR OLD HOUSE? GO
MODERN AND LET US SELL
IT WITH LITTLE WORRY TO
YOU NO SALE NO CHARGE

AUlOMOlHLE Insurance been
cancellecP
Lost
your
operators l 1cense Call 992
7428
6 15 tfc

Television Log
WEDNESDAY, FEB 20,1974
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 ABC News 13 Sesa me St 20 Per
sonaltty &amp; Behavioral Development 33
Truth or Con
sequences 6
6 30 - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Room22213
7 00 - News 10 6 What s My Lme 8 Truth or Con seq 3 Beat
the Clock 4 Elec Co 20 Know Your Schools 33 J1mm y
Dean 13 I Spy 15
7 30 - To Tell the Truth 6 Sale of the Century 8 The Judge 10
Bea l the Clock 13 PoliCe Surgeon 3 On the Money 4 An
t 1ques 20 Ep1sode Ad1on 33 TBA 15
8 00 - Son ny &amp; Cher 8 10 Bill Moyers Journal 20 Chase 3 4
15 Washmgton Connect1on 33 The Cowboys 6 lJ
8 30 - Theater In Amenca 33 Woman 20 Mov1e
The
Hellstrom Chron 1cle 6 13
9 00 - CannonS 10 Mov1e A Case of Rape 3 4 15 Children
of Chma 20
•
10 00 - Kotak 8 10 Doc Ell1ol6 13 News 20
11 00 - N ews3 4 6 8 10 13 15
1 I 30 - Johnnv Carson 3 4 15 Horror Hall of Fame - A Mnn
ster Salute 6 13 Mov1es The Southern Star S
Honeymoon
Hotel 10 Day AI N1ghl 33
12 00 - Janak• 33
1 'oO - Tomorrow 3 4 News 13
200 - News4
THURSDAY, FEB 21 1974
6 00 - S unr~se Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Amenca s Problems 10
6 25 - Farm Report 13
6 30 - Btble Answers 8 Patterns for L1vmg 13 News 6 F1ve
Mmutes to LIVe By 4
6 35 - Columbus Today 4
6 45 - Farmt1me 10 Morn1ng Report 3
7 00 - Today3 4 15 News8 10, P1 xanne6 D1ck Van Dyke 13
7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwmkle 13 New Zoo Revue 6
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 10 Sesame St 33 New Zoo Revue 13
Jefl s Col l1e 6
8 25- Jack LaLanne 13
8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13
9 00- Paul DIKOn 4 Phtl Donahue 15 Fnendly Junct1on 10
AM 3 Abbott &amp; Costello 8 W1ld Wild West 6 Biography 33
Movte Return to Peyton Place 13
9 30-ToTell theTruth3 Secre1Storm8
9 55- Chuck Wh1le Reports 10
10 00 - (\inah Shore 3 15 Jokers W1ld 8 10 Company 6
10 30 -$10 000 Pyramid 8 10 Jeopardy 3 4 1S
11 00 - Gamb1tlO 8, Password13 Wlzardof0dds3 4 IS Mike
Douglass 6
11 30- Love of L1le 8 10 Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Brady
Bunch 13
11 55 - CBSNewsB DanlmelsWorldiO
12 00 - Bob Braun s 50 SO Club 4 News 8 10 13 Password 6
Jackpot' 3 15
12 30 - Spi ll Second 6 Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Baffle 3 15
12 45 - Electnc Company 33
12 55 - NBC News 3 IS
1 oo - News 3 All My Children 6 13 Not for Women Only 15
Concentration
Secret Storm 10
1 30 - As the World Turns 8 10 3 On A Match 3 4 IS Lets
Make A Deal 6 13
2 oo - DaysofOur L1ves3 4 15 Gu1dmg L1ghl8 10 Newlywed
Game 6 13
2 30 - Doctors3 415 G1fllnMyLife6 13 EdgeofN1ghl8 10
3 00- Another World 3 4 15 General Hospital 6 13 Price Is
R1ght 10 8 Masterpiece Theater 20
3 30 - One L1le to Live 13. 6 Phil Donahue 4 New Match Game
8 10 HowToSurvlveAMarrlage3 15
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Speedracer 6 Somerset 15 Sesame St
20 33 love American Style 13 Lucy Show 8 Mov1e
Mother D1dn I Tell Me' 10
4 30-GJ IIJgan sls 13 6 GreenAcresJ Bonanza15 HazelS
Jackpot' A
5 00 - M1ster Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Gnffm 4 M1ssion

e

WIN AT BRIDGE

Double finesse doubles your fun
Accept hlo decision

-------MACHINES Repair

- - -- -- -

SEWING
serv1ce all makes 992 2284
The Fabr1c Shop Pomero y
Authonzed S ng r
Jles and
Serv iCe We Sha
Sc ,ssors
3 29 lfc
PRICE
CONSTRUCT I ON
Roof•ng
spout1ng
kitchens
and bathrooms
Comp l ete
remodelmg Phone 742 6273
123tfc
DOZER and back hoe work
ponds and ~e pt1 c tanks d1t
chmg serv1ce top so• l f tll
d1rt
l 1m estone
B&amp;K Ex
cavatmg Phone 992 5367 or
992 3861
9 1 tfc

- -- -- - - -

-------------SEPTIC TANKS ClEANED

REASONABLE rates Ph 446
4782 Gallipolis John Russell
Owner and Operator
5 12 tfc

SEPTIC TANKS
AROBIC
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPA IRED
M ILLER
SAN ITATION
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3035
10 "'tfc
SEPTIC
TANKS
clea ned
Modern Sanitation 992 3954 or
992 7349
10 23 tfc
BAcf&lt; HOE- Ser ... ~;~HARLES
R HATFIELD
Route 1
R uti and Oh10 45775 phone
742 6092 Water l•n es footers
and trenches 24 hours 7
days a week
2 7 26tp
BLOCKS bored and all repairs
on sma ll engines W1lkmson
Small Eng1ne Sa tes 399 w
Ma1n St Phone 992 3092
2 6 26tc
W IL L trim or cut trees and
shrubbery
Also cl ean out
basements attiCS etc Call
949 3221 or 742 4441
2 2 26tc

Real Estate For Sale
SPACIOUS bi Level and Split!
level homes are now undel'
constructiOn on City water
and sewer
Many deluxe
features 1nctudlng air con
dtt 10nmg
Best f1nancmg
available Other type homes
n d1fferent areas on F H
Adm fmanclng Wi th no down
payment Call collect (837
6540) or wr i te to MEIGS
DEVELOPMENT P 0 Box
33 Middleport Ohio 45760
1 9 tfc

-----------Big Capacity

Maytag
Autome11cs
2 speed operation
Choice of water
temps Auto water
level control Lint
F11ter or Power Fin
Agitator
Perma Press
Maytag
Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround
clothes
with gentle even
heat No hot spots,
no overdrylng Fine
Mesh Lint Filter
We Speclallre in
MAYTAG
Red Carpet
Servl,ce

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Arnoui Grate

NORTH
• AQJ
'KQJ
+K J9

20

WhAt rio vou do now?

.10853
WEST
• 97532
' 108 53

.4

Rutland

TODAY S QUESTION
Instead of b1ddong three

notrump your partner has b1d
rour clubs over your three spades

The Almanac
In 1872, the Metropolitan
By lim ted Press International Museum of Art m New York
foda y ts Wednesday, Feb 20 Ctty was opened to the pubhc
the 51s t d.11 of 1974 wtth 314 to fot the forst tome
follow
In 1938 Anthony Eden re
I he moon IS a pp1 oachmg 1ts stgned as Brtttsh foreogn
new phase
secretary to protest the 'ap
Tht: mm mn g star s are Venus peasement pohcy of Bntosh
and Jup1 ter
Pnme Momster Nevolle Cham

Helen Help
By Hel&lt;·n 13ottd

Us.

• •

The eve rung s tar s at e Mer
Mm s and Satw n
1hose born on Uus date are

Unusual AIUlivcrsary Gift
EmphasiS on sexual
overdone these

compatibthty and periormanc e 1s b~.:mg
days, tt seems to me A marrrage can be tnost

saltsfactory wothout tl
My wife and I love each other, of not woth a passiOn at least
wtth warm, endurmg affection all(l great froendshop She a twavs
wanted to please me but her sex drlve ts low She pt efe1 s a pat a
hug, a kiss, as the years crowd on
For our thirty-fifth weddmg anmversary I !fjlve hc1 a
present no more sex, but sttlllots oflove Thos was not offered on
resentment, but wtth consideration for a woman who ts a won
derful wife and mother - but not a very good actress My needs
are not great these days and can be mel "tlhoul beong
psychologtcally untrue to her
Shouldn t ot be conceded by these sexperts that certatn
people just don't need all tha tactoon, although th ey have much
capactty for love' Why must older people be constantly urged to
continue somethmg they never cared much about 111 lhe forsl
place - and made to feel madequate tf they don 't' - SIXI Y
AND SATISFIED
Dear 60
In a contest for most unusual ann"ersar) prese nl of the
year, you'd wm forst place hands down '
But yes, you're rtght sexual drtves vaoy gtea tly and
mamages, espectally those of over 30 years' duratton ca n be
happy and lovmg wtlhout ' all that actton '-tf botlt patlneo s
agree
Here s a smaU prediction, however I II bet youo wofe woll
soon mdicate she d like your gtft exchanged for a betteo odea
much much better' You'd be surprtsed how fast a woman sta rts
wanting that whoch she os no longer asked or expelled to govc
H

+++

Dear Helen
How aDout this 1
In my mat! today I got a come-on from a group po omotmg a

th e ~ 1 g n

under

t\mc Ji td ll

Mal v f hu den

was

CR~"Z-&lt;.1

three orbits of tl1e earth m a
spa cecrart

soprano

til(' Umon

modern-d.tv Utopoa, which of everyone would back to the hnut
11 uu ld elmunute proflt-maktng boll payments, and dirty old
money man everyone--shares world The old soc1ahst pttch v. 1t h

by THOMAS JOSEPH

40 Hebrew
lyre

ash

Please send eontnbutoons of $10, $1o, $25 or or more We
yow support - SAM THE NON-SUPPORTER
Sam

I hese people cvodently believe the old adage 'There's one
lxHnevelymtnutc I ct shopethcy rewrong - H

+++

Dear Helen
Must engagem ent

rmgs always be diamonds, or lS thts JUSt a

traditiOn ? - D S

11 Oper altc

htghhght

1 Dress em
belh sh
ment

12 Opt
13 llchgJOus

2 Mounta1n
nymph

faction

3

beaten

4 Pet fo r

boat

14

15

hy HFNRI ARNI)I 0 , .,,.J llOO LEE

5
6
6
7

7

a
8
9

9
10

10
11
11
1
2

Opulent
( 3 wds )
Dracula

What a

5 Conceal

l augh 1

16

lndtana

10 Found

toothed

35 Poem

16 Sharpen
19 Gael1c

8 Remote

22

J ohn

pOSSJbth

12

23 Notched

9 Ctty m

24 Ntmbu s
25 Frothed

wds)

Oregon

Meat

Chn slJe

6 Onward
7 Pops best

ties

26

28 Less
n sky
29 Love
poetry's
muse
33 Fulda

necess ary

gtrl

tnbe

Gat
18 Shattered
20 Before
(prefix)
21 Wttncssed
22 Dncd
up
23 Beat 1t
17

tnbutary

36 Black or

Red

24 Celebes

ox
l ess plant
26 The R
tn

Unscramble these four Jumbles
one l etter to ench square to
form four ordmary words

Rill

27 Gold (It )
28 Mextcan
shawl
30 My De

fenses -

Down'
31 -

tree

(m
truuble )
(2 wds )

Jfl!1J~)1~® 1J.t lotgw&amp;f.J . - / , _ .
a

Off lhe

25 Flower

Dear D S
All engagement nngs needn t contam diamonds any more
tha n a 11 weddmg gowns need be long and white
I know a gorl who became engaged wtth a rmg from a
Cracket Tack box Heo husband later exchanged tt for a star
sapplure, but she stoll to easures the forst as her real engagement
nng - H

ImpoSS ible 6 Andy Gnff1th
Gomer Pyl e USMC 13
30 - HodgepodgeLodge20 Bever ly H ll blll•es 8 Elec Co J3
Tra 1ls West 15 Hogan s Heroes 13
00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 Sesame St '20 ABC news 13 Tru th or
Consequences 6 Lil •a s Yoga and You 33
30 - NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News B 10 Your
Future I s Now 33 Room 222 13
00 - Truth or Conseq 3 Beat the Clock t What s My Lme 8
Elec Co 20 Lei s Make A Deal 13 New s 10 6 Sporl s Dc c, k
15 Av1af1on Weath er 33
30 - Hollywood Squares 3 W1ld K ngdom 10 Beat the Cock
13 Looking Ahead 33 To Tell the Trutt 6 Ou •e s G r ls B
Johnny Mann s Stand Up 8. Cheer 15 Zoom 20 R ead1ng For
the Classroom Teacher 33 Dea ler s Cho1ce 1
00 - Waltons 8 10 Advocates 20 33 Chopper One 6 13 Flip
W1lson 3 4 15
30 - F1rehouse 6 13
00 - Kung Fu 6 13 Ironside 3 4 15 M ov •es G l B l ues 8
Porgy and Bess lO Black Journal20 Con ll• c l s o f Harry S
Truman 33
30 - Eliot Norton Rev1ews 33
00 - News 20 MusiC Country USA 3 1 15 Sl reets o f S&lt;Jn
Franc1sco 6 13 Who Is Man ? 33
30 - Day AI N1ghl 33
00 - News 3 A 6 8 10 13 15 Janak 33
30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 D •ck Cavett 6 13 M ov 1es
Waterhole No 3 8
Born Yesterday
10
00 - Tomorrow 3 4 News 13
00 - News 4

DOWN

5 Ch mcse

trac k

At the end of the hogh po"ered brochure, was this sup-

Dear

ACROSS
1 Mountain

pocus promotion

phcatwn

need

'

~

b01 n Feb 20

A thought for the day
On th1s ddy 1n hostor)
Amertcan poet John Greenleaf
In 1809 the US Supreme Wluttoer sa od For all sad
Court 1uled tllat the power of words of tongue and pen the
llle fu le1 11 govemment was no saddest are these
It mtght
grcate 1 than that of anv have been

hunts

&lt;?

John Glenn landed sa fely after

18"7

md1 v 1du l l state tn

MAI&lt;ES

ii'IINK. 4CtJ ~E

Nazt Germany
In 1962 Amencan astronaut

of Pisces

operatic

W~P.T

berlam to\\ard

cur}

Dear Helen

Bollen

FUNNY BUSINESS

32 Pnor to
34 Notes on

the He

brew 0 T
36

Saurcl
fish

37 MUI:acal

works
38 Femmme
suffix

39 Forsake

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it
AXYDLBAAXR

IF/.B 'IIUf' ~
.sATECK
v~

Is LONGFl!LLOW

I I
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One letter s1mply stands for another In th1s sampl e A ts
used for the three L s X for the two 0 s etc Smgle letters
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are d1flerent

AN OP5f.JINE&gt;
A
PH01061&lt;:APHEI&lt;':
Now &amp;rr8Jll"e the circled letters
to form the IUrprilf: &amp;niWtf, 81

:==h':'::::j=='==:":::::'~:::_, sunested by lhe above cartoon
l'ritit tile SURPRISE ANSW!R KR

l

1rI xxI xI xJ

1

Jumhl u
Yo:8ll"rtla.y ~

I An,wrr

DAILY

OBESE

Jo111l flllllllflfllet/

WIZARD

(Aa.wen 1omorrow'
FROZEN

wllh drmkmg - ELBOW

CRYPTOQUOTES
BNML FVWZTWQ FJVCUD ALV FPS,
BNML
NWFVWZTWQ
ALV
BTWZFCMPW
Yeoterd.oy'o Cryptoqaote NO MAN OF WOMAN BORN,
COWARD OR BRAVE, CAN SHUN HIS DES'I ,;n&gt;
HOMER
(© 1974 K1ng Features Syndicate Inc)

EAST
• 1086

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+ 1063

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THE IIIAP1 eur

A~ T~~S~~IT~~~

62
A74
• I 1976

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TELL YOU'VE GOT

Bf£N Tlh NG TO BRI&lt;AK
THAT COO£ BUT IT 5

I COU'-.0 AtA() THf NOTE I

• K4

MR. TRACY, I CAN

FOI{ f.I"HT YEARS I V£

I (OVLDN T ANNIE - YOV SEt:' 1

SOUTH IDl

JUST

;HE

A

NO IJSE- If 5rJLL

01-1, YES, A SPECIAL
LEFT-~ANDED

CLEAVER,
VINTAGE OF 1930-

lt£MAINS A !&gt;ECR.IT

!lCRiT coDE'

Netther vu lnerable

-----~-

READY MIX
CONCRETE
delivered r~ght to your
pro1ect Fast and easy Free
estimates Phone 992 3284
Goegle n Ready M1x Co
Middleport Ohto
6 30 tfc

.&amp;u, 1~11

West

North

East

Pass
Pass 6N T
Pass
Opemng lcad-•2

South
!NT

,,,ri

Pass

'!I
I

By O~wald &amp; James Jacoby
Any expert would brmg sox
notrump home woth today's
cards He would go after the
clubs by leadmg the 10 from
dummy
An East player mtght solve
hiS problems by covertng, but
an expert East would duck
quockly It wouldn't do expert
East any good Expert South
would let the 10 rode!
He would do thts because
tt's the best play He plans to
take a second fmesse later on
of the 10 loses to the kmg or
queen
Lets see why thiS ts the
best play There ts no way to
avotd the loss of two club
trocks of West holds K Q 4, K
Q 2 or K Q 4 2 Thts play of
two !messes wtll also lose to
K -Q doubleton, but tt wms
any ume east

Cream an' suqars
ther' on

th! table

l GUE5:; 1l4EY lOOK UPON
ME A5 A "TH REAT OR.

IPL~C'IS

EL.5E 1HEY~E 5U5PIC1Ctl5
OF ME BCCAU5E IM "THE

00$5$ DAUGHTER.

etther one or both of the honors
The next best play ts to lay
down the ace Thos wtll wm
agamst K-Q doubleton m the
West hand any other 2-2
break or any 3 1 break wtlh
dovtded honors.
The worst play os to let the
10 rtde wtlh the plan of play
mg the ace next Thos wms
agamst all 2 2 breaks and
agamst any combmalton mcfudmg both kmg-queen m
the East hand but ot loses to
all 3-1 breaks wtth dtvtded
honors
lncodentally the respecttve
chances of success of the
three Iones of play are 76 per
cent for two finesses, 66 per
cent for bangmg down the
ace and only 62 per cent for
one fmesse followed by the
play of the ace

%A~

c:tJSTW ~~

~T~(JJ

I HAD~

WRNITUR£
t~ HER£2'

\NIINTW T\1{:;
rtl\1:8" N\Gf:;

foND

startea Wltn

TID~ I

I.

South

Pass
Pass

It

Pass

1•

Pass

I.
3.

Pass

3N T

Pass

?

ALlEY

OOP

'/()KNOCKED
MAH COW OFF
TH CL..IFF ' '

20
Wl&lt;O WAS THE PILOT OF THE
I'.ANE THAT 1001&lt; RONALD COt ~AN
1D SIIAN6R LA INtOST HO~IZON''

You South hold
•A K 7 6. A K 7 6 t3 Z.K 10 3

What do you do now'
A-rP•ss Your partner has
heard your jump 1o Uree opatlet
and luoo decided to bid notrur p

~UMS!;R

lllRITIGJ.J
aJ lll!'
f\10~

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRlSE ASSN J

The btddmg has been
North East
Wesl

wr

! DID I

11W

•

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..

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0

,

JUJC .o::.z.z....•...._&amp;&amp;

16 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 20, 1974

I Mitchell: blue ribbon defendant
~'
~·.·
~:::

~;.:
,:-::.
.

~

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Public interest at the scene of the
drama wrought by the criminal trial of two former Nixon
cabinet members seems to be practically ... well .. .
inoperative, but there' is no doubt who the protagonist of the
.piece is going to be - John N. Mitchell. The 60-year-&lt;lld
Wall Street lawyer and former attorney general arrived 50
minutes early in a blue limousine for juryiJicking at the
federal building on historic Foley Square Tuesday and was
greeted by two dozen reporters and no public.
The press made so much over Mitchell that nobody
noticed the arrival right behind him by cab of the other
defendant, Maurice H. Stans, 65, the former secretary· of
commerce and presidential campaign fund-raiser. .
At a motion-making session that delayed the start of Jury
picking until noon, Mitchell, in a brown suit, slouched his
frame in a green leather armchair to the left of his counsel,
one finger probing a cheek on his dour face, then hand to
mouth, hand to chin- deprived by court rule of his faithful
pipe.
John P. Diuguid, of the Stans lawyer team, moved to
have the trial held elsewhere because of the pretrial

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publicity up ' ·to last
ork area.'·
, . ThiS included, he said, even "an ornate coloring book"
and a printed assertion that Stans was "smart rich" and
had a "reputation for W1scrupulousness." It was hard to
know," Diuguid said, "bow any literate individual in this
town" could not be influenced by all this.
"I think we'll have to find out by interrogation of the
jury," Federal Judge Lee Parsons Gagliardi told him.
The black-robed judge, presiding in front of an American
flag on a staff topped by a silver eagle, is a dark-haired
hallow-cheeked former crack trial attorney who is a usually
smiling figure on the bench, quick in colloquy. He pronounces his name Galyardy, without sounding the middle
G.

Clalmes Jurors Ue
- The "finding out" by prospective juror questioning is a
process of preliminary examination to test competency for

~
.~;

~

200th birthday
(Continued from page 1)
small costs.
It was agreed to secure a
post office box in Pomeroy for
the commission and Gerard
Hilferty will design a letterhead.
Vernon Weber assured the
commission his firm, the

Quality Printing Co. will print
the letterhead free of charge.
Powell was named w head
publicity and Blakeslee will
manage the finances of the new
group. The Pomeroy National
Bank was named the
deposioory for funds for the
first year of operations.
Mrs. Sheets outlined the
phases which a bicentennial ,
observance may include
6eyond
the
traditional
festivals. She stressed that the
commission could help a great
deal with many projects
throughout the county as a
coordinating organization. She
poln ted out several sources of
available financial help, and
stressed that the state observance group is expecting to
have $200,000 to place on a

FREE
COIN

BANK
(SJ Retail Value&gt;

When you deposit
$100.00 in a new
Passbook Savings
Account
or
add to your present
[account.

Meigs Co. Branch

@
The Athens County
Savings &amp; loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

matching basis for observances. This group will
place money on the basis of
merit of a particular project,
she said.
The observances are w be
designed to reach every
citizen, the goal of the bicentennial, and to reflect upon, the
greatness of the nation.

Ohio
(Continued from page 1)
summer. Simon said the
reserve is "comfortable"
enough to be slightly reduced.
Predicts Nixon Veto
Governors of the 20 states
affected will have authority lo
decide where within their
siates the extra fuel goes.
The emergency energy bill
passed by the Senate would roll
back crude oil prices and give
the President broad powers lo
deal with the energy crisis.
But It still faces difficulties in
the House.
Even after that, Simon oold
Republican lawmakers, Nixon
will veoo the btll because
Congress took out parts he
wants and put in parts he
doesn't like.
John Sawhill, deputy
director of the Federal Energy
Office who was with Simon and
the President for 45 minutes on
Tuesday, said any decision on
rationing should be delayed at
least until April 15 to give
current allocation plans a
chance to work.
"I think we·can manage this
situation without rationing,"
he said.
Before receiving his energy
directors, Nixon met with two
leading Arab foreign ministers
-Omar Sakkaf of Saudi Arabia
and Ismail Faluny of Egypt.
Their talks apparently concentrated on getting Syria and
Israel to agree on troop
disengagement and not on
lifting the Arab oil embargo.
But Sakkaf told a news
conference later that ending
the oil boycott on the United
States woold be a "long and
complicated" affair, dousing
bopes of a speedy solution.

Headquarters
.

For
.

Flexsteel

service. It is called "the voir dire." That means "to SPI"'k
the truth ."

This phrase conflicts with an opinion once uttered, i(1 an
interview, by the eminent Judge Harold R. Medina , now
retired from the U.S. Court of Appeals here.

When

State's engineers
High tributes were paid
recenUy to the late Theodore
Beegle of Pomeroy by the
County Engineers Association
of Ohio In Its annual session.
The state association passed
a resolution in the honor of the
late Mr. Beegle who served as
Meigs County Engineer, 10021940 and 1~1973.
The resolution notes:
That Mr. Beegle was born
Nov. 18, 1901 in Racine, Ohio
and died Feb. 19, 1973 at the
age of 71, survived by his wife,
Loretta Meier Beegle, two
daughters, one son, a brother
and sister and seven grandchildren.
He was a member of the
Sacred Heart Church. He
graduated from Tri-State
College,
Angola,
Ind.,
receiVIng his degree in
engineering. He worked in
factories - in order to go w
college, took correspondence
courses and before graduation

MIDDLEPORT, ,0.

•

'

..

'

.

·I

t~

, ,.

Mrs. Anise Strausbaugh, 82,
formerly of Meigs County, died
~~ Feb. 8 at Ames, Iowa.
''
Mrs. Strausbaugh was the
daughter of the late Ernest and
Mary Bolen and lived in Vinton
and Meigs Counties before she
married Edward Strausbaugh.
Since then she has resided near
Ames, Her husband died in 1970
and she and her son, Ernest,
continued to live on the farm .

By PAMELA REEVES
CHICAGO (UPI) - For the
second time in a decade, officials of the Teamsters Union
have been charged with "defrauding working men" by
mllking the organization's pension fund for more than $1.4
million.
A federal grand jury on
Tuesday indicted seven men
and three corporations on
charges of obtaining the money
through a phony Investment
scheme, then using it for their
own bouses, alrplarie trips and
other personal pleasures.
Tivo of !bose indicted are
trustees of the Central States,
Southeast and Southwest Areas
Pension Fund, one is a fonner
special financial consultant to
the fund. Four of the seven
allegedly have underworld
ties.
In 1964, . former Teamster
President James R. Hoffa and
five co-defendants were convicted of conspiring to defraud
the pension fund out of $1.7
m1·mon . Hoffa served flve
years in prison for that convictlon.
Among those indicted in the
current case are Albert Matheson of Detroit and Jack Sheelz
of Dallas, both trustees of the
pension fund; Allen Dorfman
of Deerfield, Ill., who recently
served a one year prison term
for fraud; Irwin Weiner of
suburban Niles, Ronald DeAngeles of Port Ritchey, Fla.,
Anthony Spllotro of Las Vegas,
Nev., and Joseph Lombardo of

MEIGS THEATRE
NOT OpEN
COMING SOON
Fri., Sat., Sun.
Mon. &amp; Tues.
Feb. 22-26
Waif Disney's

THAT DA~N
CAT

.-

.,'

:1.
'

:

MRS. McLAUGHLIN

,,,

?.'

the dogs too ).
Believing in keeping busy,
Mrs . McLaughlin, besides
caring for her husband and
delivering her paper route,
finds time for crochetingturning out beautiful table
covers- embroidering and
quilting.

'·'-:-:

:-:·

::::

~z
::~

.:::

taught school two years.
First elected in 1932 as Meigs
County surveyor, he held post
until1940 when he resigned to
take a position in the surveying
Dept. of Division 10, Ohio
Department of Highways ,
retiring from this post in 1964.
On July 14, 1966 he was appointed county engineer of
Meigs County to fill the
vacancy created by the death
of Paul Christy. He was elected
in 1966 and again in 1972,
serving until his death.
His strong sense of humor
earned him the nickname,
"Grlnny" which he retained
throughout his life in spite of
having had his right leg am·
putated in 1962 and undergoing
open heart surgery. "Grinny"
Beegle was known for his many
interests and hobbies, among
them Civil War' History, little
league football and baseball,
and a man people enjoyed
knowing and working with.

Chicago.
Spilotro was recently tried
and acquitted in Chicago on
charges of murder in the
slaying of crime syndicate loan
shark ~ Foreman.
Weiner, DeAngeles and
Lombardo also reportedly
have connection with underworld figures.
U.S. Attorney James R.
Thompson said Wetner and
DeAngeles took over a plastics
manufacturing site in Deming,
N.M., In 1971 in which the
Teamsters had already invested $4 million.

.

....... .....

VOL. XXV . NO. 218

\

.,

They persuaded the trustees
wbo run the pension fund w
invest more funds, then used
the money for themselves and
the other defendants, Thompson said.
"This is an indictment of
individuals for defrauding
working men," he said. "It is
not an indictment of the union
and it is not an indictment of
the pension fund system."
Thompson said, however,
that federal agents are making
"a continuing investigation of
the Teamsters' pension fund."

&amp;
~·

Million gallons
of gasoline gone
DOLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
apparently has already lost
nearly one million gallons of
fuel since the Federal Energy
Office ordered on Feb. 9 a two
per cent cutback in the
Buckeye State's oil allocation,
It was learned today.
A spokesman in the admlnis·
!ration of Gov. John J. Gilligan
told UPI ooday that Continental
Oil Co. and Shell Oil Co. had
already. made their shipments
to lither states.
. , ·coJ\thtental shipped out
*lllf,QOO gallpns and Shell
·,:j(jji il®. "Cilii!li!ent.lil d SheD

federal panel found the law
unconstitutional and the siate
supreme court upheld it.
"Whether favorable or unfavorable to females, the sexual
prejudice implicit in the thesis
that women are entitled to an
exemption not accorded men
imparts to tbe jliry a potential
prejudice, be it ever so subtle
or intangible, that is real and
meaningful," the panel said.
Another panel in San Diego
found the Navy's promotional
practices an unconstitutional
discrimination in"1,avor of
women. ·It ordered the male
challenger, Lt. Robert C.
Ballard, now assigned to the ·
Fleet Training Group in San
Diego, kept on for 13 years.
The cases were among a
dozen granted a review following the Court's return from a
four-week recess.

liY·'.I!i" oil crlsos. ,

•''J::1i~· FED, in a

~~
.· :nt and a

·~
. .. . . . .. ,, _~·

ews::frt"'B;iefi

Creates a New "Old

Wo~d"

With

THE TYROLEAN SET

Lorraine fashions festive sleep companions tn
nylon tricot to attract admiring looks, no matter
•
where you happen to be. Multi-colored lace
adds a bright sparkle to the robe and a figure conscious
mini gown with its elasticized back. Both in treasur•"
colors of Flame or Royal.

Lingerie Department, 2nd Floor

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

BUY I
Set-of-4
br~id rugs

95

Reg. 89.95
Handsome. long·wearing
rugs that're at home in any
room. A must if you have
Colonial furniture. You get
a 9x12', 30"x54" and two
20"x32" rugs.

I,NGELS FURNITURE
FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
,_
,

\

..

.

sat'd

wi!li ~l.lfte · ·omcials before
taitfillt . ·acilons !bat could
seil.~sly aff~t irur way of life
::~.tid ' our economy." said
GiUl&amp;an,

·, :.: :.~·..·;,•. 7 '' ·._.,;:- ~ . . , ' . '

NOW YOU KNOW
The last direct descendant of
Shakespeare died in 1670. ·

992-2635

trle'ii~ oti! "

:;;~o o! tp~ slates liaroof hit

LANCASTER, Ohio (UP!) An outbreak of influenza has
closed all 'public and nonpublic
schools in this central Ohio
community until at least next
Monday. County health officials
ordered the schools closed after
2,244 students were reported absent Tuesday. About 8,000 students are enrolled in th&lt;! public school system here.

$69

.lid:

I!\. West
. viiilnfu
. ' ' and KeiiiOOk
. ,' y

loRRAINE

UNIT CALLED

RACINE - The Racine ER
squad was called Tuesday at
8:10 p.m. for CUHord Beegle,
64, Racine, RD, who was taken
to
Vet'II'ans
Memorial
Hospital.

~bd:

Tuesday, that Ohio will not lose
any more gasoline than it has
already lost between Feb. 9
and Feb. 19.
The spokesman in the Gilligan administration said:
"We've probably aiready lost
it," meaning the two per cent
cutback.
Some members of Ohio's
congressional delegation and
Gilligan interpreted the FEOs
statements to mean the order
for the two per cent cut had
been rescinded .
Gilligan sai&lt;l Wedneaday he
hlid been intotmed by the FEO
o!fice I"··Clilca(!o that it had
made a. mistake and Ohio
w.quJ&lt;I· no~ Sllffer the two per

ii!dil)it~:'iiPOkl\~.
'
.~;~~itiJ .C!i, of.Oiilli ®s
~~tng. ~;!l!IO. S'ai!Qns or cent l'eilil&lt;iuon.
''lfui·,l :lll!liii:t utge the Feder·
:~a &amp;rtli: t\\'0 BO~Iin pliijJ.Js
al , Ener\1¥ Offi&lt;:e to consult

FLU BUG

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

•
I

· TEN CENTS

nape

mysterious co one

,

HISTORY DOMPILED- Mrs. Agnes Hill, Tuppers Plains, widely known for her work on
the history of Athens and Meigs Counties, right, presents Elizabeth Hilferty, coordinator of the
Meigs Museum, a 186-page history with photographs of Coolville. Mrs. Hill compiled the
history, The book will go into the museum's library.

Cheshire; nine grandchildren,
and 24 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home in Middleport at 2 p.m.
Friday with the Rev. Merlin
Teets officiating. Burial will be
in Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime after
10 a.m . Thursday .

PHONE 992-2156

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1974

•

9:30 TO 5 PM

Archie Ellis
dies Wednesday

Pitch and su.lfur were burned
to create suffocating gases
during the Peloponnesian War
between Sparta and Athens in
431 to 404 B. C., sigmfying what
is believed to have been the
introduction O£ gas in warfare.

Area

I tor

THURSDAY

'

Mei.1!~-Ma.son

•

OPEN

1

Now You Know

enttne

Devoted To The Inreretfl Of The

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

•

at

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Mrs. Strausbaugh is also
survived by a daughter,
Emogene Osborn of Musca tine,
Iowa; four grandchildren; a
sister, Mrs. C. E. Stout of
Albany, and a brother, Albert
Bolen of Dexter.
Burial was in Memory
Gardens near Ames. Mrs.
Stout, the sister of Albany,
went to Ames to attend the
funeral and remained there for
a week S visit.

\

•

1ncreasmg cloudiness and
warmer today. Highs upper 40s
and 50s. Rain likely tonight-and
Friday. Becoming winds late
tonight and Friday . Lows
tonight upper 30s to mid 40s.
Highs Friday in the 50s.

...........
......... ..... -.............
.
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:-:·:::-:·:•:•:•:•:::::.:;:.:::::-:::::W

M
'•' .--~·

56
greatREEDSVILLE
Mrs. children,
Marteena B. Rockhold, 92, grandchildren and 15 greatReedsville, died Tuesday great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will he held
evening at Camden Clark
Memorial Hospital, Parkers- Friday at 2 p.m. at the Eden
burg, following an extended United Brethren Church with
the Rev. Eldon Blake ofillness.
Mrs. Rockhold was born ficiating. Burial will be in the
here, the daughter of the late church cemetery, Friends may
John and Alice Blake Barber. call at the White Funeral Home
She was also preceded in death in Coolville after noon Thursby her husband, Marcellus day.
Rockhold in 1936. Others
preceding her, a daughter, six
brothers and one sister.
Mrs. Rockhold was a lifelong
resident of Reedsville and
attended the Eden United
CHESHIRE - Archie Ellis,
Brethren Church.
80, died at his home near here
She is survived by two early Wednesday morning. The
Middleport E -R squad an daughters, Mrs. Floyd (Lucy) swered
a call to the residence
Schultz and Mrs. Claude but Mr. Ellis was dead upon the
(Gladys) Smith, both of Reeds- squad's arrival.
Born April B. 1893 in
ville; three sons, Clifford, Cheshire,
Mr. Ellis was
Walter and Harvey, all of preceded in death by his
Reedsville; three sisters, Mrs. parents; a daughter, Ada, a
and four sisters .
Edith Grimm, Belpre; Mrs. grandson,
Surviving are his wife , Ina
Bertha Reed, Empire, Ohio, Wise Ellis; two sons, Charles
and Mrs. Martha Holsinger, W.. of Altamont, Ill., and
Stanley A., Circleville ; two
Reedsville; two brothers, daughters.
Mrs. Ruth Cheadle,
Elbert and Leonard Barber, Point Pleasant. and Mrs. Fred
Searls,
near
both of Reedsville; 18 grand- (Martha)

Supreme Court
•
resumes actton
WASHINGTON ZUPI) The Supreme Court is accepting
more
sex
discrimination cases this term
than ever before.
It has already ruled pregnant
teachers may not be required
wleave their jobs four or five
montha before an expected
birth, and In a few weeks the
court will ·hear arguments on
whether a state may exclude
nonnal pregnancy from cover-·
age under its disability insurance program.
Tuesday the Supreme ·Court
agreed to consider two more
questions in this area of law
dealing with:
-State statutes excluding
women
jury duty unless
. they askfrom
to serve.
-The Navy's practice of
dismissing male lieutmants
who have been passed over
twice for promotion, while at
the same time guaranteeing
women Jleutmants 15 years of
active commissioned service.
These cases will not be heard
until next fall.
, The jury question came up in
Louisiana after a •three-judge

An extensive contract for the town of
Mason water storage project was
presented to council during regular
session last by consultants on the water
soorage problem with council turning the
matter over to the city attorney for advice before taking action.
In other matters, council agreed to
check the breaking up of the pavement on
Adams Street as requested by Howard
Johnson, Jr. and also check the city fire
hydrant situation at various locati?ns in
the town and the littering occurrmg In
the town as requested by Russell Barton.
The financial statement for the two
deparbnents were read with the general
fund balance on February 18 standing at
$1,283.73-bills, $244.05, leaving a balance
of $1,039.68 .. Water department balance
$3,991.88 bills, $:417.87, balance $3574.01.
Payment of bills and approval of
previous minutes were given.
Present for the meeting were Mayor
Ira Atkinson, recorder Kenneth Reynolds
and councibnen Walter Werry, George
VanMeter, Robert Roach and Dayton
Raynes.

W~ther

Mrs. Rockhold died Tuesday

Teamsters in trouble again

Feb. 20·21

BAKER FURNITURE

One of the best Daily Sentinel
carriers b Mrs. Florence
McLaughlin, long-time Middleport
resident.
Her
customers vouch for her.
Mrs. McLaughlin has lived
on Oliver St., with her husband,
Thomas, for the past 28 years.
Mr. McLaughlin is disabled.
A vetern of carrying The
Daily
Sentinel,
Mrs .
McLaughlin has been good for
business. When she began her
route almost three years ago,
she delivered 39 Sunday
editions and 41 daily papers.
She has built her route up to 84
Sundays and 88 daily patrons.
Known for her excellent
service, Mrs. McLaughlin has
learned just where wplace the
newspaper for each customer. ·
One paper is delivered to the
lap of an invalid, for whom
Mrs. McLaughlin also runs
errands as needed.
Carrying in the general area
of Grant, Oliver, Hysell and
Beech Sts., Mrs. McLaughlin
walks her route in about an
hour and 45 minutes. She loves
her people along the route (and

Mrs. Strausbaugh died in Iowa

honor Mr. Beegle

WednesdaY. &amp; Thursday

I

~

"Jurors," said the judge, "lie like hell."

He meant they stretch the truth during voir dire in an
effort to get out of being picked to sit in the jury box.
The ritual of opening federal court is often intoned hereif the clerk at hand is a sidewalktalk native New Yorker-in
a charming admixture of Old English and Brooklynese
something like this :
"Heah ya, heah ya, heah ya! All poisons having business
with the United States District Court for the Southern
District of New York, drawr near, give your attention, and
ye shall be hoid."
Veniremen Qulued
This ..accomplished Tuesday, Judge Gagliardi told 79
prospects seated before him that the jury would be locked
up for the duration of the trial, once sworn in-that is,
sequestered at night-and said he wanted to know if this
would cause them any hardship.
The prospects then were questioned one by one. Since the
prospects took up most of the seats, only 10 places were
available for the press. Tbose 10 were to come out and tell
the rest of the working press what went on. The favored
institutions of communicatlon~elected by the courtincluded something called the New York Law Journal.
The judge, in this case, will ask all the juror questions. He
called up the prospects individually to the bench and
questioned each one, with attorneys from both sides
present.
the 10 informing reporters came out, they reported
this. They also said the questions and answers were in a
tone of voice inaudible to tbem in the back row of the room.
Anyhow, oo the day, 94 were questiooed and 58 excused.
There is no question of an interested public hanging
around the corridor outside the cour1room. No one, press
included, is allowed w loiter there.

Washington's .Birthday sale ads appear today

Good'service her mark

Star of the scene

·'·'

;: :? .'!:'fAt •• ::..::.:s::~:n: ......,

ay·uulted Press lnternatloual
DOLUMBUS - GOV. JOHN J. GILLIGAN warned Wed·
nesday he was concerned ovei- the possibility of panic buying of
gasOline in the issuance of false information from the federal
govenunenl. Gilligan said he had been informed the Federal
Energy Office in Chicago admitted it made a )llistake and Ohio
would not suffer tbe 2 per cent reduction in gasoline announced
last week.
"It is a tribute to the common sense of the people of Ohio that
they kept' their heads and're~ to panic," 5aid Gilligan. "The
!Qng-lines bein@ experienced in other states have not formed here
In Ohio and we're confident they won't. But. I again urge the
Federal Engergy Office to consult with state officials before
taking actions that could seriously affect our way of life and our
ecO~my, " he said.
WASIUNGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON hlis decided to
posjpqne a journey \0 Europe in Aprll which he had planned in
C()nn~tion with the 25th anniversary c~lebration of the Norih
Atlaritic Treaty OrganiZation, administration officials said

to&lt;!aY·

. · · Nixon now hopes to reschedule the trip · for sometime in
september or October' officialS disclosed., They said the
President, assessing luttii'e travel, "decided that.this was not he
time" for him to ·lake his EurOpean swing., He had been considermg a twO:week exi:ursion with state visits to six countries Great'Bi-ltain, France, Italy, West 'Gennany, Belgium and the
Netherlands.
NEW YORK
SELECTING OF QUAUFIED juror
prospects proceded entirely In private today in the MitchellStans cabinet scandal trial, with a· federal J.udge feeding the
questions only in the prelience of the lawyers, defendants, and
stenographers . .Queried -as to th\!' priority. of ·plckfn8 a panel
outSide the publiC 'exposure of a oolirtroom, a member of the
defense' legal' staff said the· American Bar Association had
i;ecOmmended such .procedure in cases of unusual publicity
portent.
·The ldea .ls to _keep. the . conten~of the questions out of the
papers and off the. IIi!' so thai .prospective· jorors. cannot figure
how w a!)SWer ·sa as Iii dOdge .duty. .With. prospects being
eUminedJndividuaily .iJi .the·private quarters of Judge Lee-P.
~agllardl after a itial delay of mootlis of paiTytng and stalling
aiKI a }'IQ:1&gt;lcking ctt:ag of a .&lt;lay IU)d a half because of legal
IOgistillS, the judge· said \\'ednesday:
"It is a slow procesS, but we are making progress."
WASHJNGr&lt;:JN - .AFEOE;RAL JUDGE has spurned

claims

by fonner pre8idential aide Dwight L. Chapm tliat star

Watergate witness John W. ~n Ill should be barred from
(Continued on Page 6)

"If the Federal Energy

Office gives us our fair share of
gasoline and if our citizens
continue to remain cairn and
conserve as much gasoline as
possible, lam confident we can ·
avoid the very unpleasant
alternative of gas rationing,"

said Gilligan.
The Sohio spokesman said if
the Feb. 9 order had been
rescinded his company doesn't
know anything a bout it and is
continuing to send the 21,000
gallons a day to the two plants
in Kentucky and West Virginia.
The spokesman emphasized
however, that he did not think
the two per cent curtaUment
would do that much damage to
the Ohio supply.
Gilligan also said he was
concerned over the possibility
of panic buying of gasoline in
the issuance of false information from the federal
goverrunent.
'11 is a tribute .to the common sense of the people of Ohio
that they kept their heads and
refused to panic," said Gilligan . "The long lines being ex·
perienced in other states
haven't formed here in Ohio
and we're confident they
won't."

Hopes
mount for
Patricia
HILLSBOROUGH , Calif.
(UP!) - Hopes for an imminent breakthrough in 'the
Patricia Hearst kidnap case
mounted today as her parents
anxiously waited for word of
their missing daughter.
It ·was learned arly today
that FBI special agent Charles
Bates, head of the San Francisco bureau, would be in Los
Angeles to join a scheduled
news conference there involving U. S. Attorney General
William Saxbe and FBI
direcoor Matthew Kelley.
The
conference
was
scheduled for 9:30 a. m. (12:30
p. m.) EDT in the Beverly
HiltOn hotel in Beverly Hills,
Calif. Adding to the rumors ·of a
possible new development
were reports of a heavy influx
of FBI ·agents inoo the San
Francisco Bay Area in recent
hours. (Overnight report on
Page 2) .

ATLANTA (UP!) - Editor means thari a telephone ,"
John R. "Reg" Murphy of the Fields said.
Atlanta Constitution, Georgia's
At 9:20 p. m., WAGA-TV
largest morning newspaper, received a ca ll from a
apparently was kidnaped "colonel," who claimed, "We
Wednesday night by a group got Reg Murphy." He said he
calling itself the "American ,wa s from the Amerlcan
Revolutionary or Uberation Revolutionary Army or the
Army.''
American Liberation Army,
Aman who identified himself the station spokesman wasn 't
as a "colonel" in that army sure which. Nothing is known
told a Constitution official thut bere about either organization,
the newspaper would hear if such exist.
further from the group.
Shortly afterward, Murphy's
"We have w assume that
.
Reg has been kidnaped," said
Constitution executive editor
Bill Fields this morning.
Murphy, 41l-year-&lt;lld father of
two teen-age daughters, left his
•
•
home around 7:30 p. m. EDT
Wednesday with a man who
claimed he wanted to discuss a
lllness continued tu plague
news story.
Meigs
Local Schools today.
At 9:15 p. m., Jim Minter,
While
attendance in some
managing editor of the Constitution, got a telephone call schools had improved "just a
from a man who said Murphy trifle" over attendance earlier
this week, m some cases abhad been kidnaped.
senteeism
increased. Earlier
He said the Constitution
would hear further from him this week, the highest rate of
by anollier means, "meaning, I absenteeism went to about 30
assume, that it would he other per cent. Today, however, one
school went to 33.5 per cent, the
Pomeroy Elementary School,
where 132 of the total student
body of 394 were absent. The
Salisbury school had 58 out of
181 students absent (32 per
cent) and the Bradbury School
had 40 of 127 absent (31.4 per
cent).
Here is the situation at other
schools in the district:
CHARLESTON, W. Va. Harrisonville 20 of 127, Meigs
(UP!)- Gov. Arch Moore has High School, 222 of 002, Meigs
placed restrictions on the sale Junior High, 87 of 526, Rutlandof gasoline in West Virginia to Elementary 53 of 226, Salem
help eliminate long waiting Center, 23 of 144 and Midlines at service stations and dleport Elementary 52 of 244.
stop panic buying.
Moore issued a two-part
EXCURSION OFFERED .
executive order Wednesday
Earl Ingels, president of
which stipulated no one would
lhe Pomeroy Chamber of
be permitted to buy gasoline
Commerce, · announced that
anywhere in the state unless
be has contracted for the
his fuel gauge showed his tank
excursion bodt, Chaperone,
was three-(!uarters empty or
to run out of Pome~oy on
less . At the same time,
Saturday, May 18, . under
gasoline dealers were ordered
chaml&gt;er sponsorship.
not to fill any gasoline cans or
Tickets for the 11oat trip will
other containers unless they
be plaCed·. on sale Iii local
were certain the fuel would be
buslues' l!ouses In the near
used for non-driving purpOses. future.
The governor said his action,
to be enforced by state police,
was aimed at "easing the
public mind that the gasoline is
there." He said he hoped the
measures would "bring a little
bit of order"" to areas where
hoarding of gasoline was
Mr. and Mrs . Russell Milts,
reported.
Middleport,
left today fur
Moore said he acted under
terms of the 1973 Emergency Pittsburgh where they were
Services Act, which he used called by the unexpected death
earlier this month to activate of their 14-year old grandson ,
the National Guard to deal with George Munns, son of Harry
and Adrienne Mills Munns .
the truckers strike;
.
The youth was found dead
Those emergency provisions
Thursday.
An autopsy will be
also empowered the governor
held
to
detennlne
the·cause 'of
to Institute an odd-even
rationing plan in Monongalia, death. The Mills were joined by
Harrison, Marion, Taylor and their other daughter, Rae Ann
Preston counties where pur- of Cleveland on the trip to
chases were mainly limited to Pittsburgh.
Followmg funeral services in
10 gallons per customer . The
Pittsburgh,
the body will be
governor said that plan
brought
here
for burial in
remained in effect, but the rest
of the state is under no Gravel Hill Cemetery at
rationing system except for the Cheshire. George W'l,~ one of
restrictions he announced seven children of Mr. and Mrs.
Munns.
_Wednesday.

•
Ah sent eeism

contmumg

wife, Virgima, received a call
from aman who said, " lf yJu
want to know about your
husband, call Jim Minter."
More than 14 hours after the

abduction, Fields said, "There
have been no further developments. We are simply waiting.
There has been no contact at
all.''

Asked il Murphy had in-

morning newspaper , writes a
column that appears daily on
the editorial page . Today's
column dealt with the

Mrs . Murphy told UP! this
morning that her husband had
left home at 7:30p. m. with a
man "and he hasn't returned.
''He is missing Wlder s uspi~
cious circumstances, but I

don't know anything else," she
said. "I'm waiting for word
from him."
Neither police nor the FBI in
Atlanta would comment on the

formed anyone on the newspa-

case .

per that he had an appointment
Wednesday night to discuss a
news story, Fields replied:
"Reg meets people every day
and every night and there
would he no reason to tell
anyone ... whether Murphy
knew the man, that 1 don't
know _''
Mrs. Murphy, keeping a vigil
for her husband in the family 's
rambling brick hom e in an old

A spokesman for 'the FBI
External Affairs Division in
Washington sa id he had
nothing so far on the case.
Pressed for comment, he
added : "I'm not able to talk
about it or this organization.
Check back and we may have
something later."
Murphy recently wrote a
column on the dangers of such
kidnapings as that of Patricia
Hearst, daughter of Randolph
A. Hearst, president of the San
Francisco Examiner.
Murphy, who succeeded
Pulitzer Prize winner editor
Eugene Patterson on the

section in northeast Atlanta,

appeared to be holding up very
well. "Reg is a wise person. He
is a strong person. The family
wants to cooperate in ·every
way. n she said.

congressional

election

in

Michigan's 5th District.
Murphy followed in the
Constitution's strong stand
opposing segregation - a
pattern considered liberal for
the South - set by Patterson
and the late publisher Ralph
McGill.
In recent years, however,
Murphy and the Constitution
often had been criticized . by
activists in the Atlanta black
community.

Murphy, a native of Hoschton, Ga ., joined the Constitution in 1961 as a political
editor. He had been the Atlanta
bureau chief for the Macon
Telegraph.
Married to the former
Virginia Rawls, and father of
two daughters, 16 and 12,
Murphy studied history and
politics as a Nieman fellow at
Harvard.

Moore
limits
buying

Grandson found
dead Thursday

""' ••

loi'

He got told!
WASHINGTON iUPI)
Conversation

overheard

Wednesday between an
obviously angered Federal
Energy Office ofllclal and a
government motorpool
driver:

,

Ofllclal: "What du you
mean you can't take me
there?''

Drhrer: ' 'I got no gas."
Official: "Oh."
ASK TOWED
James Barnes Thomas, Jr.,
21, Lincoln Hill, office worker,
and Darla Ne utz ling, 19,
Lincoln Hill, secretary ; Dallas
Blevins, Jr., 25, Middleport,
and Elia Magnusdotter, 23,
Kefiavik, Iceland.

Legion honors five members

Memorial services were
conducted for five members
who died in 1973 when Drew
Webseter Post 39 of the
American Legion of Pomeroy
met
Tuesday evening with
MEET SUNDAY
Commander
George
The SEOAL Sportswriters
and Broadcasters will meet Nesselroad presiding. They
Sunday at 1 p. m. at Jolly were Arthur Wandllng, Alfred
Lanes in Jackson to select all- Elberfeld, Lawrence A. Smith,
league basketball team. Loop Albert Werry and William
coaches are invited to attend to · Baronick.
Thirty-eight members were
aid in making recompresent,.
along with guests,
mendations for the all-league
Roger Davis, Frank Jentsen,
selections .

'

!•

I -

.

'""'

'

'

GIRL SDOUT OOOKIES, ANYONE' - These Meigs
County girl scouts will be among those taking orders next
week for cookies. They are left to right, Paige Smith,
Pomeroy Cadette Troop 52; Trina Gibbs, Middleport Cadette ·
Troop 185; Debbie Morrison, Rutland Junior Troop; and.
Tammy Haley, Rutland Brownie Troop.

Scouts prepare
operation cookie
The annual cookie sale of the
Big Bend Neighborhood girl
scouts will get underway next
week,
·
Scouts will take orders for
cookies from March 1 through
March 10, and then will deliver
the cookies sometime between
April 24 and May 4.
The annual cookie sale is the
largest fund raising activity of

Appreciation is
expressed hy JCs

eighth district commander,

certificate from the National
and John Bramer, eighth Commander for 50 years of
district adjutant.
continual membership in the
New member introduced was American Legion .
Don Laning, and members
Members were invited· to
initiated were Richard Karr, attend the Ladies' meeting,
Rex Cummings, Thomas Feb . 26, to hear the Rev .
Hysell, Donald Laning, Charles William Perrin spea k on
Fry and Ivan L. Wood .
'Americanism'. Past ComThe District Commander manders Nigh t, complete with
presented the post with a, a meal , will be held Feb. 27.
plaque for having achieved its
Oyster stew was served prior
quota before Nov. 11 and Er· to the mee ting by Charles
nest Lallance was presented a Hayes.
·!&gt;

The Meigs County Jaycees
would like to thank all those
people
who
donated
newspapers last Sunday for
their pickup drive.
The Jaycees also apologize to
anyone
who had
old
newspapers on the curb that
were not picked up because of
possible oversight.
Anyone whose p~pers were
missed may have them picked
up by phoning 992-5986 or 992·
7725.

Black Diamond Girl SCoitt
Council with t.he sales
providing funds for improvement and maintenance of
scout camps, some camp ·
administrative and operating
expenses, and troop program
activities.

The selling price of the
cookies baked by the American
Biscuit Co. is $1.00. Chocolate
chip, sandwich cremes, thin
mints, sugared shortbread, ·
and peanut butter patties 'are
the kinds available and·all.Bre
'
family s.tze boxes.
Of ·the $1 for each box; 51 J,&gt;
cents is the cost of the.cookies,
37¥.. cents goes toward. ca10p
development ~nd "· d!Fect -ser"
vice to troops, and 11 cents
goes into the troop trelis\li'Y.
Goal of the Black.: Diamond
Council is 450,000 · pilcJ&lt;ages.
· Mrs. Thomas Smith is coolde
chairman for the Big Bend
Neighborhood and Tuesday
night hosted a troop chairmen'
meeting at which time
literature and order forms
were distributed.

'

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