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;

President Resubmits Manpower Bill
WASHINGTON (UPI)~sldent Nixon resulxnltted to · '11le nation needs better trained workers to restore I~
Congress today a billion manpower lraliling program, saying productivity growth and f!l8ke American goods more competiit would cut unemployment and Increase productivity of . tive witll prOducts of nations that have a lower paid but less efAmerican wOI'kers.
.
·
ficient work force, the President told the House and Senate.
E118e111ially unchanged from a' plan first sent up to Capltpl Hill
In addition, Nixon aald, proper job training will help unemlast Mari:h II would provide that $1.7 billion be divided amorig ployed workers quallfy for available jobs.
atates, cities and counties on a formula based on.the siZe of their
"We coricerned abOut the individual American~ncerned
labor force aro the numbers of unemployed and disadvantllged. thai he learn the Skills to gain employment or learn more skills to
The other $300 million would be retaliled by the Labor Depart- gain better employment,'' Nixon said.
ment for nationw ·tralnlng )rOgralllB.
,.
.
"We are concerned aboUt the health of our economy, knowing
Nixon noted that the steady increase In productivity-the that a strong, .highly productive economy is the individual
output per Am~can worker- which averaged 3.4 per cent a · American's best Insurance against unemployment."
The propOsal is one Of six special revenue sharing progr811lB
year In the late 19508 and early 1960s had declined to an average
of only 1.8 per cent by the end of the last decade.
Nixon seeks, aimed at giving state and local governments
.
\-

n

are

' ' ·' ·~

greater llexlbllity in using spending grants from Washington.
The sjJecial .revenue sharing plan folds in the funds which
would finance ex~ single-purpose programs into broad .
grants, to give the state and local governments discretion on how
to tailor programs to local needs.
'The proposed manpower program is essentially unchanged
from last year.
Congress did not pass any of Nixon's revenue sharing plansthe six special purpose programs or the general revenue sharing
measuie-1a!t year.
'
In today's message, the President said current federal
assislance meas\lres, keyed to specillc programs and often
requiring special actions by state · or local governments,
represented "a hardening of governmental arteries ."

.

'·

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Devoted To 'lJullnlere.ll

NO. XXIV NO. 209

POMEROY-MIDDlEPO.RT OHIO

•

~&amp;'AKING !IAI'~V 5UT WE ·CAN ,
KEEP AFLOAT·M~VB6- WITH.THE

PUMP. I CAN'T G5T A 51~Hr ~0 t
t:'ON"T' KNOW OU!t J&gt;&lt;AC.T POSITION •

This 8ookworm has
®a Happt; Endin~ · ·
PRESIPENT !.'

mEN G ITRID
· o: Tf.\l&gt;.T NASTY

THIS
PRESIDENT-

LI'LWOR~I!

TM'LATI

DINJ.JER IS A · '

CIRI!AT HONOR!! '

.JAMISK.

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1972
-~ I

PHONE 992-2156'

lEN CENT§

Viet Cong Rockets
Hit Rural Capital

___ ..

GUESS WJ.ItJ'S COMIIII'
TO DINNER ?- TJ.f

Of 'lJie Meigi·MfUOn Area

AH GOTTA INVITE..
MAMMY!!' r-.--c';l

POLK!!

DEVOTEDFAJII - Mrs.Mabel VanMeter, who will be 83
years old the 27th of this month, very rarely misses an
Eastern lligh School basketball game. Mrs. VanMeter is .
Dennis Eichinger's grandmother. Dennis is having another
great year in basketball, his fourth as a starter. Mrs. VanMeter follows aU sports. Friday night she was keeping her
own tally of the Eastern-Glouster game.

Ice Dangerous
On Meigs Roads

.. -~~-~!q
in a building commWiist of· 1UhWmw·.,=~~~,-···-.
y.•.v.•;,N:·.-.·:~ .......m~:;a;:.............:.•':·•!•Mlm
fensive in the Highlands, ac4,000 Year-Old Document Found
cording to allied intelligence.
· Two rockets exploded near :B
CAIRO (UPI) - Archeologists cUgglng near Cairo
the province headquarters, ·"
·"!:
have discovered a papyrnt document about 4,000 years
killing one Vietnamese and
At 4:47 p. m. Wilbert J.
1'hree accidents were inold written ID Aramaic, the language of Christ, an
wounding three others, field
McClain,
39, Racine, Rt. I, was
vestigated by the Meigs County
Egyptian antiquarian said today.
reports said.
traveling east on 124 when his
Sheriff's Dept. Sunday.
Kontum, a town of 30,000
Kamal Mallnllh, an authority Ill ancient languages,
At 10:40 a. m. at the in- car went off the highway on the
population 260 miles north of
said It wu "a major discovery."
tersection of Vine and Fifth right, traveled along the berm
Saigon, has been widely
Papyrus !A a' reed ID abllndane&lt;o aloag the banks of
Sts. in Racine, 'William M. and Into a ditch, hitting a
mentioned by allied officers as
the Nne. During biblical Umes the Egyptians used It to
Beegle, 18, Racine, Rt. 1, and culvert.
the most likely point to be
· make parchment for wrldng and to COII8truct sea-coing ~ William R. Arnott, 43, Racine~
McClain was taken to
attacked in any guerrilla ofvessels.
:$
Rt. 2, collided. Beegle was Veterans Memorial Hospital
fensive, expected to be timed
"lbe document appears to tell of a plan dating from !~i stopped at the intersection and by the Racine E-R squad where
with President Nixon's Feb. 21
2,000 years before the birth of Christ for a Syrian In· ~ did not see Arnott's vehicle he was treale\1 for lacerations
visit to Peking.
vaslon of Egypt and of bow the Egyptians countered the ~ approach.
to an eye and arm , and
Besides Kontum,
the .
plan;" Mallakb said.
~:
released.
guerrillas shelled a hamlet
.:-· There were no Injuries or
McClain was cited to court on
~!!! n . .....,:.~:•:»r.:~:;'i§:~».::::'*&gt;~~:x~~~w.~'fd(, arrests and medium darruige to
near Chuong Nghia, 26 miles
MEIGS CHEERLEAPERS for' the eighth grade A
charges
of reckless oper~Uon .
the Beegle car, light to Ar·
northeast of Kontum then
football and basketball teams are : front row, Tamra
BOSTON (UP!)- Prealdent attacked !lie militia outpost
nott's.
Stanley; second row, 1-r, Usa Thomas and Kathy Harris;
Nixon is far and way the most defending it.
At 3 p. m. on SR 33 near the
popular candidate among
back row, Kathy Werry, Merri Ault and Debbie Bailey.
roadside
park, Howard A.
One South Vietnamese
....
potential RejJubllcan votera in soldier was wounded and .-two
'
' .
Dailey, 48, Middltport, Willi
· the New ltlimpshlre prlmilry, VietCong were killed, military
WASHINGTON (UP!)- • using the prisoners as pawns to traveling south when his car hit
according to a newspaper poll,
Hanoi's Xuan '11luy and U.S. gain concessions from the ice. It went off the highway on
The poll, copyrighted in the sources said.
In 11 sizeable clashes and Secretary of State Wlll1am P. United States. "It is Mr. Nixon the left, returned across the
Boston Sunday Globe, showed
Rogers dlaagree on how to end who uses the POWs as pawns, highway and skidded sideways
Rep. Paul N. McCloskey, R· shellings in the 24 hours ending the Indochina war, and how the not us," he said.
into a guardrail. There were no
Calif., favored .by, only 14 per at 6 a.m. today (6 p.m. EST United States can recover
'l1luy, Vietnam's chief dele- Injuries and only· medium
BY UNITED PRESS INTERIIIATIONAL
cent of New Hampshire Repub- Sunday) the South Vietnamese prisoners of war.
gate
to the P~ris talks, also damage to the car.
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UP!) CHAPEL HIU., N.C.- SEN. EDWARD M. .Kennedy, D- lican voters, with President command reported 74 Com"Why
doesn't
President
asked
whY
It
was
necessary
for
With only one more pr1111)lecMass., probably would be the strongest Democratic presidential Nixon supported by 71 per cent, munist !loops killed. Military Nixon make a statement the North Vietnamese to allow
sources
said
11
South
Viettive juror to be selected to the
candidate In North Carolina, according to a survey taken by the and conservative Rep. John
stopping •commitment to the a team of medical experts tend
namese
and
one
American
.
preliminary panel, the Jfarria.
Institute for Research In Social Sciences at the University of Ashbrook, R.()hlo, by 4 per were killed and 50 injured or Saigon administration and then to the captives who may be sick
burg Seven appsrenUy wiU be
cen\.
North Caroilna.
Cloudy northeast and tried by a jury predominantly
the Vietnam problem would be or hurt.
wounded,
Including
five
One per cent favored
Further, the institute said, the survey showed President
very rapidly settled, both
"If now we let those people clearing elsewhere tonight and female, of middle-age, and
Americans.
·
comedian
Pat
Paulsen,
I
per
Nixon could outpoU any of the leading Democratic contenders, as
The heaviest fighting was In political and militarily," Thuy viait camps it might help Mr. cold wl th a few snow flurries Protestant.
cent
supported
other
cannortheast. Low tonight zero to
well as Alabama Gov. George Wallace. The institute said in a
Nixon in his aim..."
the U Minh Forest in the said SUnday.
The kidnBiHJomb conspiracy
didates,
and
9
per
cent
said
random survey of 1,091 adult North Carolinians between August ·
Rogers retorted "It is not the
Rogers said the North 10 above. Tuesday partly trial entered Its third week
Mekong
Delta
where
46
and November, 35 pet. of aU Democrats and Independents they were undecided.
guerrillas were killed in three Saigon regime we're support- Vietnamese have been ar- cloudy northeast and fair with only one·person needed to
In
the
poll,
30
per
cent
said
lng . We're supporting the bltrary In discussions about elsewhere. High Tuesday J2 to flU a panel of 48, from wlich
favored Kennedy.
they did not know enough about clashes at a cost of nine South people in South Vietnam so that release of the prisonera ...
20 north and 18 to 25 south.
VIetnamese killed and 50
the final 12 jurors wiU be
NEWRY, NOR'l11ER IRELAND - MORE than 20,000 McCloskey to form an opinion wounded.
they can decide their own
'"'They have said, 'we won't
selected by an elimination
of him. Almost two-thirds of
future."
return your POWs unless you
persons marched in the biggest demonstration In Northern those polled _ 84 per cent _
· process lo!laY or Tuesday.
LOCAL TEMPS
'11luy and Rogers were in- throw out the government in
Ireland history Sunday but turned back to avoid a clash with said they had no opinion of
TWO CA~MADE
The temperature in down- Then, sll alternate jurors will
interviewed
In
separate
halfVIetnam
and
meet
our
other
British troops. March organizers today called for a "day of Ashbrook .
The Pomeroy E-R squad ho\lr segments on CBS-TV's considerations.' It has never town Pomeroy at II a. m. . be picked In a process that may
take the rest of the week.
disruption" we&lt;Jnesday to protest the six-month anniversary of
Nixon was alandallde winner answered a call to the home of
"Face
the
Nation.''
been
any other way," Rogers Monday was 26 degrees under
In tivo weeks of clearing
the government policy of detention without trial.
· 1n the 1968 New Hampshire Mrs. Iva Fields, 650 Osborne
sunny skies.
Thuy denied that Hanoi was said.
veniremen
from the ll~unty
A spokesman for the Northern Ireland Civil Rights primary, receiving 77.6 per St., lit 12:04 p.m. Saturday,
Federal Court District of
Association said a province-wide slldown demonstration was cent, of the Republican ballots · who was ill. Mrs. Fields was
Middle Pennsylvania, 45 have
planned this week "to dislocate the functioning of the state and cast. New York Gov. Nelson A. taken to Veterans Memorial
been selected; 28 of them ire
Iring Northern Ireland to a standstill."
Rockefeller was runnerup with Hospital a!ld admitted.
women;
23 are between the
At 11:15 p.m. Sunday the
10.8 per cent.
ages 40 to 60; and only five are.
The poll of 1,035 New Hamp- squad was . called for Mrs.
SONOMA, CAUF. -A WOMAIII who received over $12,000 in
By Ualted Preu International
Patrolman Carl L. Thursh, jured. The accldent remained Roman Catholics.
welfare payments, deaplte assets estimated at close to $1))0,000, . shire Republicans who said Gerald Grate who suffered an
An
Ohio
Highway
Patrolman
'11le Rev. Philip F. Berrigan
30,
was one of two persons ldll- under Investigation.
was to surrender to authorities today on charges of welfare they plan to vote In the primary apparent heart attack at her enroute to the scene of a traffic
Thrush, of Creola, joined the and six other antiwar activists
fraud. Betty S. Pohlman, mother of six, was charged in a six- was conducted exclusively for home on Route 124 near accident Sunday was killed ed In the crash on Ohio 93 four
patrol
in 1984 and was first as- are on trial on charges of
miles
north
of
McArthur
in
. count felony complaint with receiving $12,713.48 under the Aid to the Globe by the Becker Pomeroy. She was taken to when his cruiser plowed into
VInton County.
signed to the Wilmington )XI6t, plotting to kidnap Henry A.
Research Corp. 'lbe polling· Holzer Medical Center.
Families with Dependent Children program.
·another
car on a snow-covered
A paaaenger in the other car, then transferred to the sub-post Kissinger, blow up the
Assistant District Attorney John Hawkes said the woman was completed Jan. 24.
highway,
boosting
the
weekend
.Washington, D.C., heating
Mrs. Sharon Griffy, 25, of Cre- at McArthur In 1968.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
transf~ tiUe to a seven-room house 911 a two-acre estate ~th ~.:.u.e. •.•.u.•.u.&amp;.;:¥:_._;_..w_.:.n.m: .;;..£
traffic
toll
in
the
state
to
at
ola, was also killed, and her
It was the only multiple . system, and vandalize draft
Plans to build a new cona swlnuning pool to another member of the family and claimed
least
12.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
husband and small son were in- death accident of the weekend boards In nine states.
cession stand and bleachers
direct income of only $736 during a 'jleriod In which her actual
Ohio extended outlook will be made when the
as Inches of snow kept travel · Six of the defendants are
income was more than $9,000.
. Wednesday lbrough Friday · Southern High School Athletic
and speed at a minimum In ·present or former clergy
Cold Wednesday through Boosters meet at 7:30 p.m.
members of the Roman Catho,
most parts of the state.
WS A!IIGELES - GIRI.8 WHO ENGAGE in sexual inFriday with a chance of Ugbt tonight at the high school in
Taking advantage of the Congressman will travel to
Three pedeatrisns were kill- lic left. The other is a Moslem
tercourse In their teens may be more likely to develop cancet of snow or snow flurries Tbuts- Racine .
Lincoln Day Congressional Pomeroy where he will conduct ed, two on Saturday and one ·scholar from Pakistan, a fellow
the cervix; according to a medical researcher.
day 8lld Friday. Daytime
Recess, !Oth District lawmaker an' Open Door Session in the Friday .night. The previous at the Adlai Stevenson Institute
TAKEN
TO
HOSPITAL
Dr. Duane E . Townsend said that Spanish-jjpeaking women highs mostly Ill tbe ZOs
in Chicago.
Clarence Miller returns to Jury Room at lhe Meigs weekend's toll was 14.
RtrrLAND
James
W,
In the mostly Mexlcart-~erlcan area of East Los Angeles
Wednetday and the upper
Southeastern Ohio this Thurs- County CoUrthouse from 3 to 4
develop cancer of the cervix at a rate two to four times as great ZOt to lower, 301 Thunday Whittington , Rutland, was day for three days of con- p.m. That evening Miller
and Friday. Overnight lows 5 taken to Veterans Memorial stituent activities .
concludes his schedule in
as the national average.
'
Hospital
by
the
Middleport
E-R
to 10 early Wednesday
The Congressman
on Nelsonville where he will
BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND - ROMAIII CathoUc
moderating to the upper unit at 2:54 p.m. Sunday from Thur&amp;day and Friday will be in address the Annual Athens
civil rights leaders today proclaimed Wednesday a "day of
teens and lower ZOs by his home. Experiencing dif- the Marietta and Zanesville County lincoln Day Banquet
MASON - Ervin Clayton . three brothers , Bernard
disruption" thtoughout Northern Ireland despite a pollee crackficulty · In breathing, he was areas.
Thursday night •.
which will be held at the Tri- Roush, 66, Letart, W. Va., was Bennett,. Reedsville ; Ben
down on leadera of Sunday's mammoth protest march by 20,000 · ~,
admitted.
®.~
dead on arrival at Veterans Bennett, New Castle, Pa ., and
On Salurday, Feb. 12, the County Vocational School.
persons In Newry.
Memorial Hospital Saturday Emery Bennett, Homesworth,
. Pollee In Belfast said 28 persons, including some members of
evening where he was taken by Ohio; five sisters, Mrs.
the British and Northern Ireland Parliaments, wiU be prosecuted
the New Haven E-R squad Beatrice Donohue, Letart;
after being found along the Mrs. Ralph Gilber, Coshocton;
for taking pirt In SUnday's Illegal civil rights mal'cb In Newry,
road near his home.
Mrs.
Bridget
Snyder,
the biggest in Northern Ireland history.
It was repOrted that he had Millwood, W. Va.; Mrs. Betty
NEW YORK (UPI)-A 1954, Newsweek said in an Book Co. to prove that he had lrvlng deposited It In Swiss
gone, to look for a cab and was Wilson, Ravenswood, and Mra.
met with Hughes in a Series of bank accounta.
NEW YORK - PRESIDENTIAL Adviser Henry A. transcript with marginal notes article in Its current Issue.
The New York Daily News, found after he failed to retUrn Birdie Rhodes, in Florida . .
Stephen White, who wrote interviews, was ~cbeduled to
l(lsalngt!l', in an interview publlahed Sunday, said the Nixon in Howard Hughes' han'd·
reported
Saturday that Irving home. Death apparently was
Friends may call at the
writing
that
Clifford
Irving
.the
Look
article,
confirmed
appear
before
a
federaJ
grand
adnilnlatration was very anxious to.end the Vietnam war but in a
had attempted to coilVert all due ·to natural causes. Mr. residence at Letart after 4 p,
11111111er that would not injure Americans "spirit" or sell- used as proof that an that tapes and,trrinacrlpta were jury today.
autobiography : of
the made of his Hughes'lnterviews
'lbe grand jury, In- his stocks into cash but agents Roush, a retired storekeeper, m. today. Funeral services wiD
confidence.
·
. Klaslnger, Nixon's asalstant for national security affairs, billionaire was authentic may In 1964, Newsweek aaid, and vestigating whether mail fraud of the lntemal Revenue Ser- . was born March 22; 1900 at be held at 2 p. m. Tuesday ~
'
the Asbury United Methmade his remarks to Interviewer Hugh Sldey of Ufe magazine. he IS yeara old, Newaweek that he thought he remem- . or other federal offenses are vice placed a detainer on ·the Letart.
magazine reported Sunday.
bered that Hughes had made involved, summo~ed Irving portfollo and said they would
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. od!st Church at Letart
An agent of Intertel, Hughes' •• andwrltten · corrections. and his . wife Edith to testify file a legal lien today. In ad- Genevieve Roush; three with the Rev. Mrs. Ashach
SAProRO, JAPAN ...:. Ll'M'LE JANET Lynn of Rockford,
intelligence
claimed White, however, said he behind closed doors on \be book dillon, Ute paper said, the IRS daughters, Mrs. Ruby Grimm ·Miller officiating. Burial wiD
m., brougb.t the United States its second medal of lhe 1972 Winter the transcriptnetwork,
originally may thought aU that ~tertal had that cost McGraw-Hill $850,000 moved to tie up the lrvlngs' and Mrs. June Brooks, both of be in the Eversreen,CematwJ
Olympic Garnes today when she placed thlrd anJI took the bronze
have been used as the baals for been burned years ago.
· in advance payments. 'lbe bank accounts and asked them Letart, and Mrs. Ruth Steele, at Letart. Arr11111emenla 11'1
medal In women's figure skating. .
·
a long profile on Hughes thaf Irvin~. who ~bowed the company thought the money to immediately file a 197l · Pomeroy; 11 grandchildren, 1111der . the directi911 of lilt
lContinued on Page 8)
aPPeared in Look magazine in· transcript to McGraw-Hill w~ going to Hugbes but Edith Income tax return.
three great-grandchildren, Foglesong Fun~al Home.
I

SAIGON (UP!) - Communist troops fired rockets Into
the Central Highlands province
capital of Kontum today, and
along the Cen,ral Coast
. militiamen claimed to 'have
killed the VietCong "chief" of
troubled Binh Dinh Province,
military spokesmen said.
The rockets marked the first
assault on Kontum, the city
expected to be a prime target

'ilf
.

~

Nixon in
Runaway

Debate ·on Air

Composition of
-~

Jury for Seven

•

ews •• ln

SHE.
~LOPPID!I

WORM!! •AH f.\l&gt;.IN'T SA'/ IN' YO'
~IN'T TH' L ATE.

IT .WERE A NICE TR'f,
WORM-AN' WEHAIN'T

AN'CQLI)/,1
SHE'SST1~F

JAMES K.

POLK - BUTAH HAIN'T

GONNA IGUA&amp;J.I '10'
FO'IT-

SHI."SIN

ADMITYIJ.J' '/0' I t - UNTIL AH
IN

r----

KIN LIVE A FULL,RICH LIFE.

INTHISMAILORDE.RCATT'I· LOG.
IT BJ;.GIJ.JS WIF' ABDOMINAL
SUPPORTS, AN' f'NDS WIF

:ZINC SINKS-

.

TOUC:H!!-

, UcAIIIWHILe•.,
.,.AT A J.OCAJ.

.~or -tsr. sur re~L.

IF NEW~ LE-AK? OIJT ABOUT THAT
C~EAT!]J&lt;e 5ETTIN6 l..OG:;E' fROM
OUR t:XPERIMENTAI.. !.AS- McKEe
I~PU!?TRIE£&gt; 1-S RUII-JEDt

Becoming Clear

Weather

Officer Dies Near McArthur

CAPTAIN EASY
Mc.K!lS W(::'RIS FL.YJN6
A SE:A~CH PATTeRN!

TELEVJ,JON

. 5TATION,..

. A~D NOW, W!:' l~TI:RFWPT
· OUR LATS·NIGHf HOflRO~

lt10VIi TO .~~~ YOU '!;HI=&gt;.

WORP FROM OIJK5,P~O~
'

Miller Conii.ng To Courthouse

Ervin Roush Dead

DO YOU HAVE: A TE~D!&lt;NCY .·

TO see:

~TRAN6E

5POT5

1HEtJ TRY

THI~ l..ITTL!':

TURN OFF THAT AW, IS"f:J;:, MOM~ TH~ 1£&gt; THE
~HRIEI&lt;ING TV · 6J;:5ATE~T MON5TEJZ. 5HOW

EYE·OPe;NeR~

5EF0r&lt;:E YOUR t:YE5 AFTE:I&lt;:
TOO ·MUCH CEL.EBJ&lt;ATINIG?.,.

, 5ST AND GET

EVIOJii!:

WAIT A MI~UTEH
WE MAV BEl ON TO
'OMETHIN51

ISROAPC~n

TO e.SP!

..........

:

Authentication 18 Years .O ld!

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2-'l'beDIIIJseattnei,Mldcleport-Ptmetot.O.,Feb. 1,1m

fDIJORIAL

Grim Harvest from
Seeds of Hate
A visitor from outer space would be at a loss to under·
stand' what ls going on in Northern Ireland.
Here are people who are making life a hell for ta'ch
other and who are killing each other on an increasing
scale. ret there are no visible differences between them,
no obv10us reasons why they should be mortal enemies.
One side Is not light·skinned, the other dark. Qne is not
curly·haired, the other straight. Physically they are idenllcal and interchangeable with one another, sex for sex
and age group for age group.
Any child's game has different colored or different
shaped tokens so that the players can tell one another
apart.
Everyone in Northern Ireland speaks the same Jan·
guage. Cultural differences are only the most superficial,
and they are not natural or necessary differences but dif·
ferences that result purely from an artificially imposed
distinction.
What is that? What is it that distinguishes one resident
of Northern Ireland from another? What is It that he is
willin~, to kill the other man (or woman or child) for , ·and
is wilbng to die for himself?
It is based on the most artificial and invented of dif·
ferences-religious sectarianism. And the really tragic
thing is that tens of millions of people in other countries
. who are of the same two religious persuasions as the
Northern Irish feel no need to kill one another, or even to
argue about so minor a difference.
There is, of course, the factor of the majority (Protestant) denying the minority (Catholic) its civil rights . But
you have to.know what. a man · ~ religion is before you can
oppress him. It helps to know h1s address and what school
he went to, but these things are merely consequences of
his r.eligion.
There is, also, the matter o( the Catholics' desire for
and the Protestants' opposition to political union with the
Republic of Ireland. Yet here again, tbe desire of the
Catholics is religious, not nationalistic ; and the opposition
of the Protestants flows not from patriotic love of Northern Ireland but from fear of officially Catholic Ireland.
This is not to say that the hatred that is rampant in
Northern Ireland is not very real. Even blood brothers
can· be deadly enemies.
But the hatred was not universal, nor did it seem to
have gone beyond aU hope of reconciliation, until fairly
recently-until the extremists set to work in earnest.
The bombers and snipers and assassins have killed
more than :b:lO people since the present "troubles" began
in Northern Ireland two years ago. Now the British army
has added 13 to that number, in a mass killing in Londonderry.
The Irish Republican Army has. of course, vowed revenge for that.
Yet at bottom, it is almost as if the Irish needed to hate
one another-almost as if, they didn't have religion to
fight about or to use as a sign to tell friend from foe ,
they would have to invent something else.
Speaking of outer space, a story on the Star Trek
television series a few years ago dealt with the last two
survivors of two warring races oceupying the same
planet. One was pure white all down the right side of his
body and solid black on his left side. The other was a
mirror image of the first-black on his right and white
on his left This was the basis for their consuming hatred.
That television fantasy made more sense than the
reality of what is going on in Northern Ireland.
j

...

"Dirty Old Man!"
~-

faSCinating ewry day; and the folD wllo 117 the
great alot:1 is a bore, are bores ... ~
SEX Sl'MJIOi. GETS
Banker editor Bill RaP11811ye laid, ''CIII't yau
FIXED UP
NEW YORK (KFS) - lfenrY Killinger's just see Harold Robblnl at the tJpewilter
blind date (night 11 thew~ press dln- alrel!dY changing only the nameaT" ... CBSIJ!'r) waa IIIT8llpd by Pbyllil Cerf: Olarlotte chatier~aster Sherry Henr7 was • witnea to
Ford ... Gregory Pavlldea, Sherman Ye\&gt;tolhenko's date (by colncldellc:e, Jewlab)
Billlqslry'a ricbt.band In the Stork Club's who said 8he also was wtm. to the etbnlc
palmy days, told ualn P. J. Clarke's abOut how lllash. and later tried to get out of tbe fact that
not even Howard Hullhes' money made up for stie (ihe date, not Sherry) heard It In the lim
biB shabby clotbel and sneakers: Hugbes came place.
ltu him'
George
Rafl's
.emp!IY!Mlma.
In the Stork drMMd like that and Sherman told
Gregory: "Stick him In the back and push him hospitalized again ... Barbara Walten doe111't
around a little. I don't want him back In here." know yet whether she's going to ·~ with
Henry Kissinger's eyes-open date Sat. night Nixon (aurguessisshewill), butshe'ataldng all
at the Broadhurst Theater (later at "21") was the sliota In case ... 'Barbara got another neat
Nancy McGinnis. They went to see ''Vivat, exclusive for her "Today" show: \be flrlt inVlvat Regina !", where some chutzpatic pest terview with Nixon's top·aide, H.R. ~eJ!1811.,
yelled at him to "Stop the KIDing!" How come Her "Not for Women Only" dally NSC half-boor
these goofs didn't scream at JFK, Ike, Trwnan gets Washington, D. C., espoaure starting Feb,
etc., only belatedly now that Nixon's truly 14 -featuring the Nixon cabinet's w1vee ... In
all the old movies on TV, folks enter and leave ,
hauling our men out of there.
N. y, apartments without recourse to keys.
That's a real reckless fantasy today In Gotham.
At "21" ABC-Paramount cha!nnan Len
wealthy Martha Cuneo (Mrs. Staal) Reed,
Goldenson;all okay after biB siege; N.Y. State who got heisted for $150,1100ln diamonds, left ua
Attorney General .l..4luis LefkowitZ having a at57th&amp;5thAve.thedaybefore-onherwayto
giggle over the item in this column which said Van C1eef &amp;Arpe1s to pick up her Just-repaired
be would retire after hlB current tenn. Told us gems. Should've waited a few more days ... The
the reporters cornered· him and be slipperied in-gals call it ''VanCleef &amp; Our Pill" ... "21"
out of it somehow. But it was Louis himself who • lunching: Pulitzer Prize (for "Men ln, White")
told ualn the flratplace, verypersonally,lhat he playwright Sidney Kingllley, who'sbee!l writing
wouldretln!; now good friend Louis, get outoflt hlB latest playforflve yeare. He'almpetuoua ...
again.
Sidney's an old friend over at these two-lingers
Russian poet Yevtushenko got nasty and and he's one of showbiz' legendary thrlft.tlds:
whiney at Barbara Walters fer asklnjj how he once In Miami Beach we staYecl ~ the same
Q- Whatofischarcoal?
the dominant had 80
·" -nlng
ingredient
much trave1 freedom whi!e other poets hotel (San Soucl), went out for the......,.,
,
A-Carbon.
and writers clocked prison time. Tore Into her and at near-dawn as we wel'e going 'to bed, we
after the "Today" show, but Barbara had made realized Sidney hadn't hoisted one .tab. So we
Q- What is the ld iJ l1 est ber point The Soviet
w. l--Ist ll a called him through the hotel ""'
--'tch,__.. and
notu:ommissioned 0 f f i c e r
·
poe poiUII • rea Y
,..,...."
rank in the U.S. Army?
trained Soviet seal Juggling hlB own best in- had the operator ask if he'd take a "collect call
A-Sergeant major. The teresta,a!sowaaquoted by a girl in hlB company from the next floor"; stayed right In character
By Helen Bottel
rank was created in 1965. . as making an antl-8emltic crack as they IVj!J'e - told the operator he couldn't afford It ...
Q-What South American arriving for a party at Sen. Jake Javi!S' Wonder who was hosting hlB lunch In "21"?
HAS IT REDEEMING SOCIAL VALUE?
country is known as the "em· apartment ... What In the name of Golda Melr Forgot to ask ... GreerGarson In theaame butch
Dear Helen:
erald capital of the world"? was Marian Javits interested In having a proven crowd told Mervyn Leroy and tbe Brian
A-Colombia, which pro· anti-Semitic Intellectual clown in the first Ahernes she wants to get rid of her mansion and
Would I get arrested if I sent in my movie film to be
move into an apartment holllll!; 80 the unsubtle
developed, and would a coi!Unercial company develop it? It's of d u c e s 95 per cent of the place! H rd
world's
gem
emeralds.
The
owa
Hughes
case
gets
more
shUt
into f~rtress-livlng continues.
nudes and things like that. - MR. TI!OMAS

Helen Help

Us.

••

+++
Dear Mr. T.: (Does your first name begin with "P" as in
"Peeping"?)
,
It all depends on the "things like that." Commercial film
processors are allowed by law to destroy ''pornographic" films
sent in by customers, and the dec;ision rests with tbe company. If
your nudles are naughty, you'll receive a letter saying they are
forever gone - but you won't be arrested.
Smaller, privately owned outfits do your films - at a price.

"E~.otage" i~ a combination of " ecology" and "sabo-

tage. As defined by former Secretary of the Interior
Stewart Udall and Jeff Stansbury co·authors of a new
c~n.servation-oriented syndicated 'column, "ecotage is
v1gl!ante tactics whereby pollution is daringly blocked
slyly revealed or boomeranged back upon the polluter." '
The word wa~ apparently coined by a group called Environmental . Achof!. Inc, The ~rganization recently announced wmners m 1ts f1rst nationwide "ecotage" contest.
The actions or suggested actions range from the clever
and harmless"Spiking" a burning landfill near Purdue University
with foul·smelling. chemicals in an effort to nudge the
Indiana A1r PollutiOn Control Board into doing something
about the problem.
To the legally dubiousUsing inflatable stoppers to plug up offending drainpipes.
To the potentially viciousDrawing up a list of corporate officials who are
"~!early responsible" for major acts of pollution and then
starting a chain-letter campaign to get tens of thousands
of people to mall appropriate types of trash to them-for
instance, sending empty pop bottles to the president of a
food chain that sells them ,
Never mind that judges, lawyers and juries, carefully
we1ghmg and s1ftmg evidence according to precise rules
in the courtroom, are often unable to determine who is
"clearly res!jonsible" for an act. To the "ecoteur " a
'
suspected po uter is considered guilty, period.
Udall an.d Stansbury caution that "ecotage" can either
be used .w1se!y or abused, noting that its chief value lies
In Its ab1hty to shock the public into an awareness of the
scope and sourc~s of poUution. They then quote approvIngly from the mtroduct10n to Environmental Action's
paperback handbooK, "Ecotage."
"If ecotage is condemned, the condemnation is of a
system w~ich demands ecotage, a system which is 80
unresponsive to the needs and dreams of its constituents
that it forces them underground to effect change."
Three cheers for the forces of ecological morality!
The only trouble is, with the change of a few words here
and there, the same self-righteous, self·serving manifesto
could have been uttered by every crackpot who ever came
down the p1ke .
. "If planting bombs inside office buildings is condemned,
&lt;he condemnahon IS of a system which demands bombing, a system which ... "
"If kidnaping diplomats and holding them for political
ra~som 1s conde~ned, the condemnation is of .a system
which demands k1dnapmg, a system which ... "-etc.,
etc., ad nauseum .
. ~his nation has had ample expe~ience with vigilantism
m 1ts h1story. But at least there was reason for it in the
Old West .when ~1v1hzed soc1ety .was just be~inning to
establish Itself. There 1s no Justification for 'ecotage"
today.
"The environmentalisl.s," remarked Maj. Gen , F, B.
Koisch of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers a few months
ago, "must get u~ed to the fact that these days they are
wlnning.J!ot one fight out of 10, but 10 out of 10, and that
this pos1t~on places a greater responsibility on them .than
they had m the days when they could consider themselves
just gadflies ."
.
Responsibility and "ecotage" don't mix.

End Run Around Hanoi

Nixon Pressures China, Sovi·e t

- H.

Alfalfa is the most impor·
tan! pasture and hay plant
in the United States. It is
important in crop rotation
because it improves the
soli by the nitrogen-fixing
bacteria In Its roots, serves
as wreftective weed control
due to ita ,rapid growth and
possesses a high 'protein con·
tent, The World Almanac
notes .
Gup)'riKhl l{'J 1!171.

t-: nt1 •rprhu• .\ ~1111 .

By RAY CROMLEY

Dear Helen:
I had a "satisfactory" marriage for more than 15 years.
Never a problem about finances, status, even health; rarely an
argument, and then quickly settled. But not much fire either. 1
had th.e opportunity to stray but didn't. Then it happened!
When I first met this wonderful "other" woman, I knew'what
I'd been missing. /lfter a month of fighting with my conscience, I
strayed. It was truly a dre&amp;Ir come true.
'11le awakening came seven weeks later. Suddenly she anDOWiced, "I think I'll get married later In the year." The woman
1thought had been completely true to me was walking out of my
life. I felt like an empty shell.
After 18 months,! still can't get over her. I tried to call. She
got an Wllisted number. I send her gifts and letters. She does not
acknowledge them, and she may not receive them, as she has
moved. (Naturally I put no return address on my correspondence; I couldn't chance their coming back to my house.)
How can someone profess "love" and then so quickly turn it
off? Am I better off with my marriage that is based on mutual
Wlderstandlng, or should I seek another great passion to destroy
the memories? - NUMBED

WASHINGTON (NEA)
President Nixon's talk on Vietnam was addressed more
to Peking than to Hanoi.
This is why his .appeal came just before the mainland
China trip-and his Vietnam talks wtth Mao Tse-tung and
Chou En-lai.
'
For 2'h years Mr. Nixon ahd ·his national security
adviser Henry A. Kissinger were· strongly confident they
could get Hanoi to negotiate. This confidence held up during the ·most frustrating of Hanoi's stalling, double-talk

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Muskie Swamps
McGovern in Poll

WASHINGTON INEA)
The Gallup organization has preliminary results from
a
rare head·tO·head poll showing Sen. Edmund Muskie
+++
Dear Numb:
an overwhelming_ choiae over Sen. George McGovern for
the 1972 Democratic presidential nomination.
Haven't you learned yet that "great passion" doesn't wear
Since the. actual figures may still be formally published
as well as mutual understanding?
by Gallup, I am not privileged to disclose them. They
Askyourselfthisquestion: "U my wife threw me out, would I reflect recent quer1es put just to Democratic voters and
be as desolate as I THINK I am right now?" And before she does, they are indeed crushing.
'
I'd suggest you try working up a bit of passion at home. -H.
Interestingly, too, the regional breakdown shows MeDear Helen:
Govern doing roughly 10 points better in the Middle Wesl
Equality between men and women on the job is still far from than he does nationally.
here! Consider this:
These findings take on significance in the light of
argument
bemg advanced by McGovern-a~d some in·
I worked asPrivale secretary to the president of a good-6ized dependent obser~ers-that his recent showing fu Iowa's
company, and I had a gteat deal of responsibility. When things Democratic precmct caucuses was "seven times" better
becameroilghflnancially,landothersecretariestook our20pct. than his national poll status.
cut along with the men. Tlien came the Ume for the company to
The argument is grossly misleading. It is based upon
'hand out stock- and we women were left in the wings. We were two things which John Davieson of the Gallup orgamza.
told that secretaries were notaUowed to have stock, but even the tio~ says can't fairly b~ compared-a Gallup poll mea·
meninthefactorygotinonthebonanza .
.surmg McGovern m a field of 10 Democratic contenders
Another situation cropped up. The rneii were sent to and giving him just ·three per cent; and incomplete returns fro1_11 2,600 delegate-choosing precinct caucuses in
California to help the company sell a trade show. I had in- Iowa, giVIng McGovern 23 per cent against Muskie's 35.6
valuable knowledge and could have been of great assistance and an uncommitted 35.1 per cent. (Muskie's share should
andatflrstlwaspr.omisedachancetogo.Then-thumbsdown! nse further when all precincts are in.)
,
ltseemedthatthegeneralmanagersaiditwouldcaUBetalk - a
.In the first place, the Gallup test in question was nawoman (ta:velling with men.
Ilona! and affords no hint of McGovern's obviously
Helen ,I've left that company. but !feel a grave injustice has ~!taht/::; ~~:frrs\\il~e~lli~j~dle West. Secondly, the poll
been done me -and others who will follow me may receive the
For all practical purposes, the event in Iowa was in
same treatment. Whom can I contact to stop this discrimination? the nature of a head-to-head test between Muskie and
- EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
McGovern. Technically, any Democrat could draw sup+++
port, and there was a tiny scattering for Sens. Hubert
Dear Secretary:
Humphrey and "t~enry Jackson, for former Sen. Eugene
Contact your local branch of the National Organization for McCarthy, and for black U.S. Rep. Shirley Chisholm of
New York. But ·only Muskie and McGovern had any
Women (NOW), or write to national headquarters: 1957 East sort.of working organization, and the contest was proper73rd Street, Chicago, Ill., 60649.
ly v1ewed at all stages as a direct collision.
You might also alert the Equal Employment Opportunity
McGovern's 23 per cent in the Iowa caucuses was not
Commission, headquartered at 1800 ''G" Street, N.W., far distant fr~m .the. Middle West percentage Gallup
Washington, D. C., 20506. _H. !~""'"="""'· _.... •
Mou~ giVe h1m m 1ts one-on·one measurement with

The -.Daily ~nti~l,,

today· sFUNNY

DEVOTE o TO THE
INTEREST OF

and double dealing. Kissinger, for one, is known to have

believe~ that given time, firmness, patience and logic,

somethmg would move.
This confidence is gone. The two men are understood
now to be convinced Hanoi has no intention of negotiating.
Unless some compelling pressure can be brought to bear.
This is where Peking comes in.
," "'' .
North Vietnam cannot carry on the war without sizltble ~ •
economic aid and arms from China and Russia. Moscow's '
aid would be difficult to deliver in the quantities required
witho)lt Peking's cooperation, so long as the Suez Canal
remams closed.
Therefore, if Mao and Chou can be convinced it is to
their interest to end the war, China can bring compelling
pressure on Hanoi. If Hanoi refuses, China can, by shut·
ling the valves, cut the Indochina war to an insignificant
level.
·
The problem then is convint.og Mao and Chou.
Here Mr. Nixon has a lever. Peking is deeply concerned
over Moscow-the border fights, the threats to China's
nuclear bases and Russia's all·out effort to "encircle"
China from the south.
This encirclement is of such ~real concern that Mao
and Chou have agreed to talks w1th the United States.
The Russians to date have been hi~hly successful In
the south. They've concluded an alliance with India
backed New Delhi in its war with Pakistan. They've made
considerable advances. in Afghanistan, made serious
approaches to Cambod1a, Indonesia and other Southeasi
As1an nations aiming at a defensive alliance with Soviet
sponsorship. ·
.
If Hanoi had a chance of winning the Laos-CambodiaSouth Vietnam wars quickly, Peking would have no reason to agree with Mr. Nixon.
But the .longer those wars continue, the more unsettled ·
the conditions. As t!me passes, U.S. troops withdraw and
U.S, .mfluence declines. All this creates enticing opportunities for the Russians to move in and establish themselves, as in India.
If Laos, Cambodia and South Vietnam cannot get from
the Umted States the help they need to survive they will
turn to any source available.
'
Mao and Chou can read the picture as clearly as Mr.
NIXOn .

Exec . Ed.
ROBEC~I~ ~~~:rLICH,
Published daily except
Sat.urdav by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Corr&gt;panv. 111
CQurt St .• Pomeroy , Ohio,
4f/69. Busin,e.s Office rhone
m;~ls6. Ed&lt;lor lal Phone 992 .
, second class pottage paid at
Pomerov, Ohio.
: Nal•onal. advertiSing
. Gallagher
representol•~e
Bottonelll ·
. me .. 12 East •2nd
St -. New York Clly , New York ,

Bf~~rs w~~lD

, un~ommitted strength in the state is believed by poh-

Todor"s fUNNY •ill ,ar Sl.OO lor
toch orfti110l " httu•y'' uMd Sud fOil
hi: To.dlrJ''I FUNNY, 1200 W'nt TMrd
St , Clt•elaM, Ohia ••Ill.

I

~

By Uuited Press.Jnlern~~tlonal Bruins, winners of 17 in a row

UCLA anQ Marquette won
again Saturday night as the No.
1 and, 2 teams displayed their
muscle on national television
and seemed ·determined as
ever to carry their credentials
to ·a showdown in the NCAA
tournament in March.
John Wooden's top-ranked
BOB CALDWELL (10) OF EASTERN and Mike Crow of Glouster engage lri some arm
Dailing In trying for a rebound. From left. to right, Stewart Patton (21), Glouster; Randy
Boring, Eastern (32),andKenLocke, Glouster (13). Pictures by Katie Crow.
.,

Local Bowling
Pomeroy National Bank
(Junior)

·
NBA Standings
By Onited Press International
EosternCOIIference
Atlantic Division
W. •L. Pet. GB
Boston
41 18 .695
New York
34 22 .607 5'1,
Philadelphia 23 34 .404 17
Buffalo
16 39 .291 23
Central division
W. L Pr:t . r.R
Baltimore. 24 30 .444 .
Atlanta
21 35 .375 4
Cincinnati
18 37 .327 6'h
Cleveland
17 41 .293 9
Western Conference
Midwest Division
Milwaukee ~
,P:fJj GB
Chlca~o
41 17 .707 5
Phoenix
35 25 .583 12
Detroit
20 37 .351 251h
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
LosAnqele• 47 7 .870 ... ,
Golden State 34 23 .596 Wh
Seattle
33 25 .569 16
Houston
21 36 .368 27112
Portland
13 46 .220 J61h
Sunday's Results
Boston 128 Seattle 123
New York 109 Philadelphia 107
Chicago 119 Cinclnnall94
Buffalo 121 Cleveland 108
Houston 120 Atlanta 113
Phoenix 107 Portland 94
Los Angeles 151 Baltimore 127
IOnlygamesscheduled)
Monday's Games
I No games scheduled)

January 22, 1972
Standings:
Team
7
Chiefs
Strike Outs
6
Thundering Herd
4
Zodiac's
~
Rams
Ben9als
3
H1gh Individual Game
' Mick Davenport, 163; David
Miller, 158.
Steve
. High Series · Bachner, 425; Mick Davenport,
4()0,

Team High Game
Thundering Herd, 897.
Team High Series - Chiefs.
2598.
POMEROY LANES
Wednesday Afternoon League
February 2, 1972
Won Lost
.,.. Baum's Lumber
60 36
Team
56 40
Gaul's Shake Haven
52 44
Team I
so 46
Welker's Ashland
47 49
Ridenour's TV
23 73
High Ind. Game - Patsy
Chapman 145 and Florine
Guinther 141 ; High Series Barbara Murray 388 and Patsy
Chapman 377; Team High
Game and Series - Team 4,
269 and 732 .

h

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pel. GB
Kentucky
43 12 .782 "'
Virginia
34 23 .596 10
New York
27 31 .466 17 112
Florldtans 22 34 .393 21'/,
Catalina
22 ' 35&lt; !386 22
Pittsburgh 21 34 .382 22
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Utah
37 19 .661 ... Indiana
32 24 .571 s
Dallas
27 34 .443 12'11
Denver
23 32 .418 131/,
Menphis
23 33 .411 14
Sunday's Results
Dallas 107 Memphis 84
Denver 115 Indiana 107
Kentucky 118 New York 106
Floridians 1«Pittsburgh 117
(Onlygamesscheduled)
Monday's Games
t No games scheduled)
NHL Siandings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pis
Boston
378882
New York
3211973
Montreal
29 13 10 68
2323854
Detroit
21 22 11 53
Toronto
Buffalo
11 20 13 35
Vancouver
15 30 5 35
West
W. L. T. Pis
Chicago
36 11 5 77
Minnesota
27 18 9 63
California
17 27 11 45
St. Louis
18 28 8 44
Philadelphia
1~ 26
9 41
Los Angeles
15 33 7 37
Pittsburgh
13 29 9 35
Sunday's Results
New York 2 Toronto 2
Montreal~

Vancouver 2

Buffalo 8 Boston 2
Detroit 8 California 2
St. Louis 2 Philadelphia 2 •
Chicago 5 Minnesota 0
IOnlygames scheduled)
.
AHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pis
31 16 8 70
Boston
27 15 11 65
Nova Scotia
20 18 12 52
Springfield
19
24 9 47
Providence
1L29 6 42
Rochester
West
W. L. T. Pis
Baltimore
24 19 7 55
Cleveland
23 20 8 54
Hershey
22 16 9 53
Cincinnati
21 23 10 52
Richmond
19 24 9 47
Tidewater
12 32 7 31
Sunday's Results
Cleveland s Cinclnn~ti 1
Boston 2 Baltimore 0
Nova Scotia 1 Tidewater 1
Providence 4 Springfield 2
Richmond 5 Rochester 4
IOnlygamesscheduledl
Mondly's Games

RANDY BORING (32). OF EASTERN goes high for a
layup Saturday night in the Eagles' easy victory over
Glouster in a non-league basketball game. Outmaneuvered
was Glouster's Mike Crow (11).

Gerhard, Jackson
Lead Bucks' Win

BOARD MAN
Wilt Chamberlain holds the
NBA record for most rebounds in one. game, having
grabbed 55 in a con test
against the Boston Celtics
while playing for Philadelphia in 1960.

'

"S' the '

,
• "• ,.. ~ a ge.ntlemon to set you. ·He wants to bow ·I
'' you would be mferesttd in buying the autobi
pit
,,
of Helga R. Hughes!"
ogra Y

MACHINIST END STRIKE
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
-Members of the International Association of
Machinists approved a contract offer during the weekend
and planned to return to work
today at the Champion
Olemlcal Co. plant here.
Some 200 workers had been
on strike since Jan. 'l1 when
their old contract ri:plred. The
new (l!lct calla for a 7 per cent
Jnc:raR over three yllllr.l.

,.
I

.

There's Still Some Left

t*'

BEAT

NEW CAR

'*

i

triumph

over

Wis co ns1 n

~
CALL

l;~;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.~:x:~~.:::::::::::::==*::;::::~:::

P.J. PAULEY
PHONE 'n-mt

l07 Spring An., Pomeroy
)

inteJ'11ational competition, won way's lvar Skobov.
the 15-kilometer cross country ,, Anna Muller led an East
ski with a Ume of 45 minutes, German sweep of the women's
28.24 seconds, beating Russia's luge competition when she won
Fedor Sirnaschov and Nor- the gold med~l in an aggregate

Ume of two minutes, 59.18
seconds. Miss Muller had a
final run of :44.32 to beat Ute
Ruhrold
and
Margit
Schumal]ll .

"

~A~~~~~~-~~

HAliCINWIOE ltfl HIISUAAitCE CO~PAfn

let Your
ro II of I fiJII
wltll tiny purcllt1se tit

Redmen Drop
Battle

· - - -lt

I

Slavs Stunned 5-l by U. _S.

SAPPORO,Japan (UP!) -A
yoWig United States team,
sparked by the brilliant goaltending of Mike Curran, pulled
off the upset of the XVI
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Wis- for a breather. But then the Olympic hockey tournament
consin found out the hard way Badgers' Leon Howard took Monday by stunning ·'*vily
Saturday. night that there's over, scoring 15of his team's 22 favored Czechoslovakia 5-l.
Curran, a veteran of internamore to ~topping Ohio State's points as Wisconsin tied it at 228th ranked Buckeyes than putt- 22.
tional competition who joined
Ing the clamps on Allan HornIt was a dogfight the rest of the U.S. club shortly before it
yek and Luke Witte.
the way with the Buckeyes un- departed for Sapporo, was
Jfornyak, the leading scorer. able to take the lead for good sensational after allowing the
in the conference, was held to until Gerhard hit four straight lone Czechoslovakian goal at
13 points by the Badgers: Bob points for a 54..50 OSU lead 4:32 of the nrst period. He
Frasor, most of them coming with 11:02 remaining. Even · turned back 39 shots in the first
in late stage of the game, then, !be Badgers were never two period&amp; alone, and 52 in all,
and Witte, the Buckeyes' 7-foot more than a quick flurry away including a stellar effort on a
center, got into early second from tying the score.
breakway by Jlri Holik.
The U.S. victory, combined
baH foul trouble, possibly by
Witte, playing his second
with
Sweden's 3-3 tie with
design of Wisconsin Coach game since being hospitalized
John Powless.
with a concussion in the Jan. 25 Russia, a co-favorite along
But sophomores
Dan incident at Minnesota, had 15 with Czechoslovakia, turned
Gerhard and Wardell Jackson points but he was benched with the hockey tournament 'into a
stepped forward, scoring 19 17 :441efl in the game, and had wide open race.
and 18 points respectively, and only two points the second half.
The outstanding individual
along with Jackson's 13
Despite Saturday night's win performance of the day came
rebounds, led the Buc)l:eyes to a over Wisconsin and an 82-77 from Ard Schenk, the Dutch
7~ victory over the Badgers,
victory over Iowa Tuesday speed .skating star, who comkeeping Ohio State tied for the night Taylor feels the pleted his gold medal triole by
Big Ten lead with Minnesota. Buckeyes are still not fully winning the gruelling 101(100.
·''Wardell had a heck of a recovered from the harrowing meter event after earlier
night on the boards, " said Minnesota experience.
taking the 1,500 and 5,1100 meter
Coach Fred Taylor. "He really
Tuesday night, the Buckeyes cro1f11S.
went after some of his trek to Iowa for a return en·
Bernhard Russi of Switzerrebounds." ·
gagement with the Hawkeyes, land, the favorite, came
Ohio State jumped to a quick whom they heat 82-77 a week through · to win the men's
~ lead and appeared headed ago at St. John Arena .
downhill ski race with a time of
one minute, 51.43 seconds.
The best U.S. hope for a
medal remained In figure
skating, where Julie Lynn
Hohnes of North Hollywood,
Calif., trailed Beatrix Schuba
of Austria entering the freeskating phase of the competition.
Schenk, a 27-year-old physiotherapist, turned in an Olympic record time of 15:01.35 to
beat
countryman
Cees
Rio
hit
27
of
72
from
the
field,
Coach - Bob
Davis'
Georgetown Tigers caught Art (J7 pet.) and 10 of 14 from the Verkerk, who was more than 3
Lanham's Rio Redmen flat in foul circles. Georgetown was 33 seconds behind. Sten Swensen
the second half Saturday night of B1 from the field (54 pel.) of Norway took third.
Sven-Ake Lundbeck, a 24and the result was an 83-63 and hit 17 or 20 charity tosses.
year-old
in only hlB first year of
Rio must now lake .on Ohio's
victory for the Kentucky
only unbeaten quintet, Capital,
quintet.
The win avenged two at Lyne Center Wednesday,
previous season losses to the beginning alB p.m. Cap upped
Bradley 88 Tulsa 73
Redmen. Rio is now 9-9overall. its season mark to 16-0 over the Lamar
85 Arkansas St. 76
The Tigers upped their season weekend.
Arizona St. 91 Arizona 78
West
Rio will host Walsh on Thursmark to 13~ .
New
Mex
.
80
Utah 69
Mike Calhoun and Gary day and Ohio Dominican on Calli. 84 Stanford
70
Moore were the big guns for Saturday.
Air Force 75 Geo. Tech 53
Colo , St. 80 Wyoming 70
Box score:
Georgetown. Calhoun pumped
Oregon
71 Oregon St. 63
in 29 markers, Moore had 18.
Rio Grande (63) - Bentley 7· Montana 69 Gonzaga 53
0·14 ; Hairston 5-1-11 ; Lambert . UCLA 81 So. Calif. 56
John Owen finished with 16.
4·4·12 ; Jordan 2·0·4: Bartram Hawaii 88 UC Irvine 79
Fot Rio, Capt. Roger Bentley 0·0-0:
Hart 1-0·2; Bollinger 4-2·
Cia 106 Peprdne 85
was high man with 14 points. 10; Rouse 0·1-1; Martin 4·2·10. San
USF 79 Loyola (LAl 66
Ron Lambert )had 12, and Totals 37'10·63.
~an Jose St. 72 Pacific 70
Georgetown (83) - Stewart
Harry Hairston 11.
4-2-10; Phillips 1·1·3; Calhoun
Rio led 38-37 during the half· 12·5·2'1 ; Moore 7·4·18 ; Owen 6-4·
The 1976 men's fast pileh
time intermission. Georgetowr. 16; McGhee 1·1·3: Rugqles 1·0· softball wor.ld championship
outscored Rio 46-25 in the final 2; Swick 1·0·2. Totals 33-17-83. wUl be held in New Zealand.
Score al Half:
The 1972 tournament will be
half.
Rio 38 Georgetown 37.
· In Mnnlla, the Philippines.

83~63

resigned from the squad.
EAGLES COOL
Eastern shot a. cold 31 pet.
from the field, making 25 of 7.1
shots, but made 11 of 14 from
the line from where Glouster
dropped in 16 of ·23 . Eastern
had 39 rebounds.
In the preliminary game,
Coach Bob Ord's little Eagles
upped their season mark to 12-J
with a 41-38 win over the
Glouster reserves. Eastern bad
a 2U first quarter lead, then
had substitutes in nearly the
remainder of the game. Big
John Sheets led the little
Eagles with 14 points although
playing only the first quarter.
The Eagles play again next
Saturday against their Meigs
County rival, the Southern
Local Tornadoes, at Racine,
Eastern won the first game at
Eastern, 71.00.
EASTERN (61) - Duvall 2-26, Eichinger 6-4-16, Boring 6~
12, Young 3-U, CaldweliS-1-13,
Kirkman 0.2-2, Sheets 2-0.4 .
Totals 25-11-Gt
GLOUSTER (36) - Seevers
2-1-5, M. Crow 4-6-14, Patton J.
f&gt;.ll , Cardaras 0-3-3, Locke 1-J.
J. Totals 10-16-36.
BY QUARTERS
Glouster
9 12 13 2-36
Eastern
15 16 21 ~ 1

this season and 32 straight over
the last two· years, zonepressed an injury-racked
Southern California team
almost out of Pauley Pavilion.
The Trojans turned the ball
over 21 times en route to an 81·
56 shellacking.
Bill Walton, UCLA's 6-foot-11
center ,left the game with eight
minutes remaining after scoring a team high 22 points and
collecting 10 rebounds.
Coach -AI McGuire of Marquette watched his son, Allie,
provide the sP'Ifks that eventually burned up DePaul as the
Warriors marched to their 17th
consecutive victory 7~1.
A Loulsvllle Romp
Third-ranked Louisville,
loser earlier in the week to
Memphls State, bounced back
into the Missouri Valley
Conference lead with a convincing 92-75 romp over Drake ;.:~;:;:;:~:?.::;:;s~:~:*:!t'*S::=~='7.~:::!S!:;:o:!:!~::::~===~-::::::::::::::::::::~:=:~::::::~:::-;;::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::, . .- - - - - - - - - .
as the Cardinals drew strength *.:
from Ron Thomas' 21 points, ~
Jim Price's 20 points and Bill ,;~
::&lt;
Booton's 16 rebounds.
ij
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - It took Plt!Bburgh Pirate ::~
Sixth-ranked South Carolina j General Manager JoeL. Brown only five minutes to sign ::;:
put down an upset effort by % superstar Roberto Clemente to a 1972 conlract for a :~;
THE HIGH
Clrecoemrsodn48thafout1sas wbefbo0trhe teSoamuths ~.·.·• reported $150,1100.
!.!.
:~
"Roberto and I have been getting along for 17 y
COST OF
Carolina put an end to the ~ years," Brown said Sunday night at the 36th Annual ~
BUYING A
batile, 62-58, on one and one 11 Dapper Dan banquet. "It wasn't difficult signing him- ~
free throw conversions by Rick it, it wasn't my money."
:;~
Aydlett, Kevin Joyce and Tom ;:;:
Terms of the contract were not disclosed, but It was ;:~
Riker. Riker's 13 points were :;:j reported Clemente received a raise of $25,000 over his ;:~
tops for the Gamecocks.
:~
1971 contract.
~;
finance your ntw car with
.N•tlonwldt.
No. 7 Penn, paced by 6-foot-8 ~:;
Brown then looked around the banquet room and
led th Pi
p1
h hd
~.:.:,:.
l·unior forward Phil Hankin- :.::.:
son's 33 points, routed Dart- :::: no o er rates ayers w o a not come to terms. ::::
LOW COST INSURED
mouth, 86-66, to remain tied iii'.
"Don't worry, boys," he said. ''There's still some 1§
AUTO FINANCING , money left."
«
BY NATIONWIDE
with Brown for the Ivy League ;,:.::.
~
Clemente,
Willie
Stargell
and
manager
Danny
lead.
&lt;:·
•
Ohio State's Buckeyes, ~= Murtaugh, who led the Pirates to the World Series ;~
eighthranked, assured :::: championship last fall, were honored as the sports ~
themselves of at least a tie in ~: figures of 1971 by the Dapper Dans, a charitable sports l$
the Big Ten with a 7~ organization.
~

Lemley's Pennzoil

Good's Pennzoil

748 North 2nd St.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

West Main St.
POME·ROY, OHIO

Kapple's Pennzoil

Roseberry's Pennzoil

. East Main

St.

3rd &amp; Elm Sts., Rt. 124
RACINE, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

Stick With Us •••

Scores

1

pnva le domain almost in every 0 senior for,ward, scored eight
game. r
for the winners in a fine effort.
Bob Caldwell, 5-11 senior
M1ke Crowpaced the 4-11 Bill
guard, added 1J for Coach Bill Kilkelly coached Tomcats with
Phillips' Eagles and Randy 14 points while Stewart Patton
Boring, 5-9 junior guard, added 11. High··scoring
pwnped in 12. Randy Young, 6- Sophomore Tim Seevers was
held to five points by Eastern 's
sticky defense.
The Eagles, who have the
stmgies t defense in the area,
got off to a 15-9 first quarter
Saturday night despite an early lead, then improved it to 31-21
·benching of 7-foot center Luke at the half. Leading comWitte in the second half forl&lt;lbly at 52·34 after three
because or perso nal foul periods, the Eagles flexed their
problems.
,
defensive muscle by allowing
In Other Games
the Tomcats but two points in
In other key contests Satur- ihe fourth quarter while
day night, ninth-ranked Eastern connected for nine .
Virginia edged North Carolina
Still m contention m the
State, 69-68; tenth-ranked Southern Valley Conference
Brigham Young slipped by race with an 11-2 slate, the
Texas-El Paso's stall tactics to Eagles trail league-leading
win in double-overUme 57..53; North Gallia who own a 10-1
Kansas St. upset 12th-ranked league record . Eastern has two
Missouri, 69-67 ; Hawaii league games left, Southern
defeated UC Irvine 83-79; 16th- and Symmes Valley , while
ranked Marshall swept by North Gallia has only one, with
Long Island University 7~1; lhe struggling Kyger Creek
and Minnesota eked out a Bobcats.
victory over Iowa, 53..52.
Eastern , which los t starters
In Sunday's only major Ri ck Williams and Mike
action, Creighton upset 17th· Benedum earlier in the season,
ranked. Jacksonville, 71-66, as two weeks ago lost two · subGene Harmon and Mark slitutes , Rick Sanders and
Mirsky cOmbined for J4 points. Dave Milhone, who apparently

Bruins, W8rriors March On

(Nogamesscheduledl

1

the Eagles (13-2) with 16 points
and 23 rebounds. The 6-3 senior
center, a four-year starter, is
having his best cage season
ever, averaging close to 20
points ·per game and keeping
the areas around the boards his

'

Monday's Games

~ give:u~:le'
s Iowa showing is below what Gallup would
him for the Middle West. But a lot of the presently

surface at later stages.
,
• Thou.gh the Iowa uncommitted •figure of 35.1 per cent
\ was higher than the Musk1e forces and most others
, anticipated, he nevertheless was the clear winner among
1 Democrats who declared themselves
. .
,
'
·
·
It IS JUSt plam silly for McGovern to assert that "we
: have fought Muskle to a stand~till, even though he is
1su~posed to be the front·runner.'· How do you make 35 to
I 23 mto a stalemate? Actually, not even his 23 per cent is
1secure, since the delegates he won in the caucuses are
1 not legally bound and could switch ·
. The truth about the caucuses is that they were peopled
110
1
li.S:r~~~rlfv c"ar~~:;s ~h~;~ I by consistent political activists and other interested peravailable so cenls per week, sons , us~ally ~n~er hard spur from !ocal party leaders,
, By Molor R.ovle where carrier . the candidates field forces, and caus1sts (In Des Moines
service not available : One : Catholi~s oppose
more liberal abortion laws) ·
'
.month SL75 By mall In Ohio ,
•
and w.. va ., One vear 514.00. / In Iowa, McGovern. had the IY!st organization and the
Six months 57.25, Three b1ggest pool of committed activists of the sort who come
months
54 .50. Subscrlpt•on
t
, Pt
;(e includes so•nday T&lt;mes .
o caucuses. And he was worklng territory where he has
, Sen tinel .
'
long been!. far more than a three 11er cent choice among
w.:.::;.. , · .
., . . J Democratic voters.

TUPPERS PWNS - The
Eastern Eagles easily won
tbeir sixth straight basketball
game near here Saturday night
over non-league foe Glouster,
81-36.
Dennis Eichinger again led

(No games scheduled)

c.:~~~~'tA~~=::~~~L. ' tic1ans and analysts to be Muskie's. It is expected to

(NEWSPAPER lNTERPRISE ASSN.)

~e\\·~~~~H· r

RAY CROMLEY

+++

Ecotage," New
Word, New Evil

Eagles Dump Glouster 61•36

BY JACX O'BRIAN

(NEWS,APEk EHTER,RI5£ ASSN.)

11

Voice along Br'Way

Ournan1e
'

'

hC.s been
cha-nge·cl to
•

'•

.r

·'

�-

....

, •

..

f

'·
2-'l'beDIIIJseattnei,Mldcleport-Ptmetot.O.,Feb. 1,1m

fDIJORIAL

Grim Harvest from
Seeds of Hate
A visitor from outer space would be at a loss to under·
stand' what ls going on in Northern Ireland.
Here are people who are making life a hell for ta'ch
other and who are killing each other on an increasing
scale. ret there are no visible differences between them,
no obv10us reasons why they should be mortal enemies.
One side Is not light·skinned, the other dark. Qne is not
curly·haired, the other straight. Physically they are idenllcal and interchangeable with one another, sex for sex
and age group for age group.
Any child's game has different colored or different
shaped tokens so that the players can tell one another
apart.
Everyone in Northern Ireland speaks the same Jan·
guage. Cultural differences are only the most superficial,
and they are not natural or necessary differences but dif·
ferences that result purely from an artificially imposed
distinction.
What is that? What is it that distinguishes one resident
of Northern Ireland from another? What is It that he is
willin~, to kill the other man (or woman or child) for , ·and
is wilbng to die for himself?
It is based on the most artificial and invented of dif·
ferences-religious sectarianism. And the really tragic
thing is that tens of millions of people in other countries
. who are of the same two religious persuasions as the
Northern Irish feel no need to kill one another, or even to
argue about so minor a difference.
There is, of course, the factor of the majority (Protestant) denying the minority (Catholic) its civil rights . But
you have to.know what. a man · ~ religion is before you can
oppress him. It helps to know h1s address and what school
he went to, but these things are merely consequences of
his r.eligion.
There is, also, the matter o( the Catholics' desire for
and the Protestants' opposition to political union with the
Republic of Ireland. Yet here again, tbe desire of the
Catholics is religious, not nationalistic ; and the opposition
of the Protestants flows not from patriotic love of Northern Ireland but from fear of officially Catholic Ireland.
This is not to say that the hatred that is rampant in
Northern Ireland is not very real. Even blood brothers
can· be deadly enemies.
But the hatred was not universal, nor did it seem to
have gone beyond aU hope of reconciliation, until fairly
recently-until the extremists set to work in earnest.
The bombers and snipers and assassins have killed
more than :b:lO people since the present "troubles" began
in Northern Ireland two years ago. Now the British army
has added 13 to that number, in a mass killing in Londonderry.
The Irish Republican Army has. of course, vowed revenge for that.
Yet at bottom, it is almost as if the Irish needed to hate
one another-almost as if, they didn't have religion to
fight about or to use as a sign to tell friend from foe ,
they would have to invent something else.
Speaking of outer space, a story on the Star Trek
television series a few years ago dealt with the last two
survivors of two warring races oceupying the same
planet. One was pure white all down the right side of his
body and solid black on his left side. The other was a
mirror image of the first-black on his right and white
on his left This was the basis for their consuming hatred.
That television fantasy made more sense than the
reality of what is going on in Northern Ireland.
j

...

"Dirty Old Man!"
~-

faSCinating ewry day; and the folD wllo 117 the
great alot:1 is a bore, are bores ... ~
SEX Sl'MJIOi. GETS
Banker editor Bill RaP11811ye laid, ''CIII't yau
FIXED UP
NEW YORK (KFS) - lfenrY Killinger's just see Harold Robblnl at the tJpewilter
blind date (night 11 thew~ press dln- alrel!dY changing only the nameaT" ... CBSIJ!'r) waa IIIT8llpd by Pbyllil Cerf: Olarlotte chatier~aster Sherry Henr7 was • witnea to
Ford ... Gregory Pavlldea, Sherman Ye\&gt;tolhenko's date (by colncldellc:e, Jewlab)
Billlqslry'a ricbt.band In the Stork Club's who said 8he also was wtm. to the etbnlc
palmy days, told ualn P. J. Clarke's abOut how lllash. and later tried to get out of tbe fact that
not even Howard Hullhes' money made up for stie (ihe date, not Sherry) heard It In the lim
biB shabby clotbel and sneakers: Hugbes came place.
ltu him'
George
Rafl's
.emp!IY!Mlma.
In the Stork drMMd like that and Sherman told
Gregory: "Stick him In the back and push him hospitalized again ... Barbara Walten doe111't
around a little. I don't want him back In here." know yet whether she's going to ·~ with
Henry Kissinger's eyes-open date Sat. night Nixon (aurguessisshewill), butshe'ataldng all
at the Broadhurst Theater (later at "21") was the sliota In case ... 'Barbara got another neat
Nancy McGinnis. They went to see ''Vivat, exclusive for her "Today" show: \be flrlt inVlvat Regina !", where some chutzpatic pest terview with Nixon's top·aide, H.R. ~eJ!1811.,
yelled at him to "Stop the KIDing!" How come Her "Not for Women Only" dally NSC half-boor
these goofs didn't scream at JFK, Ike, Trwnan gets Washington, D. C., espoaure starting Feb,
etc., only belatedly now that Nixon's truly 14 -featuring the Nixon cabinet's w1vee ... In
all the old movies on TV, folks enter and leave ,
hauling our men out of there.
N. y, apartments without recourse to keys.
That's a real reckless fantasy today In Gotham.
At "21" ABC-Paramount cha!nnan Len
wealthy Martha Cuneo (Mrs. Staal) Reed,
Goldenson;all okay after biB siege; N.Y. State who got heisted for $150,1100ln diamonds, left ua
Attorney General .l..4luis LefkowitZ having a at57th&amp;5thAve.thedaybefore-onherwayto
giggle over the item in this column which said Van C1eef &amp;Arpe1s to pick up her Just-repaired
be would retire after hlB current tenn. Told us gems. Should've waited a few more days ... The
the reporters cornered· him and be slipperied in-gals call it ''VanCleef &amp; Our Pill" ... "21"
out of it somehow. But it was Louis himself who • lunching: Pulitzer Prize (for "Men ln, White")
told ualn the flratplace, verypersonally,lhat he playwright Sidney Kingllley, who'sbee!l writing
wouldretln!; now good friend Louis, get outoflt hlB latest playforflve yeare. He'almpetuoua ...
again.
Sidney's an old friend over at these two-lingers
Russian poet Yevtushenko got nasty and and he's one of showbiz' legendary thrlft.tlds:
whiney at Barbara Walters fer asklnjj how he once In Miami Beach we staYecl ~ the same
Q- Whatofischarcoal?
the dominant had 80
·" -nlng
ingredient
much trave1 freedom whi!e other poets hotel (San Soucl), went out for the......,.,
,
A-Carbon.
and writers clocked prison time. Tore Into her and at near-dawn as we wel'e going 'to bed, we
after the "Today" show, but Barbara had made realized Sidney hadn't hoisted one .tab. So we
Q- What is the ld iJ l1 est ber point The Soviet
w. l--Ist ll a called him through the hotel ""'
--'tch,__.. and
notu:ommissioned 0 f f i c e r
·
poe poiUII • rea Y
,..,...."
rank in the U.S. Army?
trained Soviet seal Juggling hlB own best in- had the operator ask if he'd take a "collect call
A-Sergeant major. The teresta,a!sowaaquoted by a girl in hlB company from the next floor"; stayed right In character
By Helen Bottel
rank was created in 1965. . as making an antl-8emltic crack as they IVj!J'e - told the operator he couldn't afford It ...
Q-What South American arriving for a party at Sen. Jake Javi!S' Wonder who was hosting hlB lunch In "21"?
HAS IT REDEEMING SOCIAL VALUE?
country is known as the "em· apartment ... What In the name of Golda Melr Forgot to ask ... GreerGarson In theaame butch
Dear Helen:
erald capital of the world"? was Marian Javits interested In having a proven crowd told Mervyn Leroy and tbe Brian
A-Colombia, which pro· anti-Semitic Intellectual clown in the first Ahernes she wants to get rid of her mansion and
Would I get arrested if I sent in my movie film to be
move into an apartment holllll!; 80 the unsubtle
developed, and would a coi!Unercial company develop it? It's of d u c e s 95 per cent of the place! H rd
world's
gem
emeralds.
The
owa
Hughes
case
gets
more
shUt
into f~rtress-livlng continues.
nudes and things like that. - MR. TI!OMAS

Helen Help

Us.

••

+++
Dear Mr. T.: (Does your first name begin with "P" as in
"Peeping"?)
,
It all depends on the "things like that." Commercial film
processors are allowed by law to destroy ''pornographic" films
sent in by customers, and the dec;ision rests with tbe company. If
your nudles are naughty, you'll receive a letter saying they are
forever gone - but you won't be arrested.
Smaller, privately owned outfits do your films - at a price.

"E~.otage" i~ a combination of " ecology" and "sabo-

tage. As defined by former Secretary of the Interior
Stewart Udall and Jeff Stansbury co·authors of a new
c~n.servation-oriented syndicated 'column, "ecotage is
v1gl!ante tactics whereby pollution is daringly blocked
slyly revealed or boomeranged back upon the polluter." '
The word wa~ apparently coined by a group called Environmental . Achof!. Inc, The ~rganization recently announced wmners m 1ts f1rst nationwide "ecotage" contest.
The actions or suggested actions range from the clever
and harmless"Spiking" a burning landfill near Purdue University
with foul·smelling. chemicals in an effort to nudge the
Indiana A1r PollutiOn Control Board into doing something
about the problem.
To the legally dubiousUsing inflatable stoppers to plug up offending drainpipes.
To the potentially viciousDrawing up a list of corporate officials who are
"~!early responsible" for major acts of pollution and then
starting a chain-letter campaign to get tens of thousands
of people to mall appropriate types of trash to them-for
instance, sending empty pop bottles to the president of a
food chain that sells them ,
Never mind that judges, lawyers and juries, carefully
we1ghmg and s1ftmg evidence according to precise rules
in the courtroom, are often unable to determine who is
"clearly res!jonsible" for an act. To the "ecoteur " a
'
suspected po uter is considered guilty, period.
Udall an.d Stansbury caution that "ecotage" can either
be used .w1se!y or abused, noting that its chief value lies
In Its ab1hty to shock the public into an awareness of the
scope and sourc~s of poUution. They then quote approvIngly from the mtroduct10n to Environmental Action's
paperback handbooK, "Ecotage."
"If ecotage is condemned, the condemnation is of a
system w~ich demands ecotage, a system which is 80
unresponsive to the needs and dreams of its constituents
that it forces them underground to effect change."
Three cheers for the forces of ecological morality!
The only trouble is, with the change of a few words here
and there, the same self-righteous, self·serving manifesto
could have been uttered by every crackpot who ever came
down the p1ke .
. "If planting bombs inside office buildings is condemned,
&lt;he condemnahon IS of a system which demands bombing, a system which ... "
"If kidnaping diplomats and holding them for political
ra~som 1s conde~ned, the condemnation is of .a system
which demands k1dnapmg, a system which ... "-etc.,
etc., ad nauseum .
. ~his nation has had ample expe~ience with vigilantism
m 1ts h1story. But at least there was reason for it in the
Old West .when ~1v1hzed soc1ety .was just be~inning to
establish Itself. There 1s no Justification for 'ecotage"
today.
"The environmentalisl.s," remarked Maj. Gen , F, B.
Koisch of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers a few months
ago, "must get u~ed to the fact that these days they are
wlnning.J!ot one fight out of 10, but 10 out of 10, and that
this pos1t~on places a greater responsibility on them .than
they had m the days when they could consider themselves
just gadflies ."
.
Responsibility and "ecotage" don't mix.

End Run Around Hanoi

Nixon Pressures China, Sovi·e t

- H.

Alfalfa is the most impor·
tan! pasture and hay plant
in the United States. It is
important in crop rotation
because it improves the
soli by the nitrogen-fixing
bacteria In Its roots, serves
as wreftective weed control
due to ita ,rapid growth and
possesses a high 'protein con·
tent, The World Almanac
notes .
Gup)'riKhl l{'J 1!171.

t-: nt1 •rprhu• .\ ~1111 .

By RAY CROMLEY

Dear Helen:
I had a "satisfactory" marriage for more than 15 years.
Never a problem about finances, status, even health; rarely an
argument, and then quickly settled. But not much fire either. 1
had th.e opportunity to stray but didn't. Then it happened!
When I first met this wonderful "other" woman, I knew'what
I'd been missing. /lfter a month of fighting with my conscience, I
strayed. It was truly a dre&amp;Ir come true.
'11le awakening came seven weeks later. Suddenly she anDOWiced, "I think I'll get married later In the year." The woman
1thought had been completely true to me was walking out of my
life. I felt like an empty shell.
After 18 months,! still can't get over her. I tried to call. She
got an Wllisted number. I send her gifts and letters. She does not
acknowledge them, and she may not receive them, as she has
moved. (Naturally I put no return address on my correspondence; I couldn't chance their coming back to my house.)
How can someone profess "love" and then so quickly turn it
off? Am I better off with my marriage that is based on mutual
Wlderstandlng, or should I seek another great passion to destroy
the memories? - NUMBED

WASHINGTON (NEA)
President Nixon's talk on Vietnam was addressed more
to Peking than to Hanoi.
This is why his .appeal came just before the mainland
China trip-and his Vietnam talks wtth Mao Tse-tung and
Chou En-lai.
'
For 2'h years Mr. Nixon ahd ·his national security
adviser Henry A. Kissinger were· strongly confident they
could get Hanoi to negotiate. This confidence held up during the ·most frustrating of Hanoi's stalling, double-talk

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Muskie Swamps
McGovern in Poll

WASHINGTON INEA)
The Gallup organization has preliminary results from
a
rare head·tO·head poll showing Sen. Edmund Muskie
+++
Dear Numb:
an overwhelming_ choiae over Sen. George McGovern for
the 1972 Democratic presidential nomination.
Haven't you learned yet that "great passion" doesn't wear
Since the. actual figures may still be formally published
as well as mutual understanding?
by Gallup, I am not privileged to disclose them. They
Askyourselfthisquestion: "U my wife threw me out, would I reflect recent quer1es put just to Democratic voters and
be as desolate as I THINK I am right now?" And before she does, they are indeed crushing.
'
I'd suggest you try working up a bit of passion at home. -H.
Interestingly, too, the regional breakdown shows MeDear Helen:
Govern doing roughly 10 points better in the Middle Wesl
Equality between men and women on the job is still far from than he does nationally.
here! Consider this:
These findings take on significance in the light of
argument
bemg advanced by McGovern-a~d some in·
I worked asPrivale secretary to the president of a good-6ized dependent obser~ers-that his recent showing fu Iowa's
company, and I had a gteat deal of responsibility. When things Democratic precmct caucuses was "seven times" better
becameroilghflnancially,landothersecretariestook our20pct. than his national poll status.
cut along with the men. Tlien came the Ume for the company to
The argument is grossly misleading. It is based upon
'hand out stock- and we women were left in the wings. We were two things which John Davieson of the Gallup orgamza.
told that secretaries were notaUowed to have stock, but even the tio~ says can't fairly b~ compared-a Gallup poll mea·
meninthefactorygotinonthebonanza .
.surmg McGovern m a field of 10 Democratic contenders
Another situation cropped up. The rneii were sent to and giving him just ·three per cent; and incomplete returns fro1_11 2,600 delegate-choosing precinct caucuses in
California to help the company sell a trade show. I had in- Iowa, giVIng McGovern 23 per cent against Muskie's 35.6
valuable knowledge and could have been of great assistance and an uncommitted 35.1 per cent. (Muskie's share should
andatflrstlwaspr.omisedachancetogo.Then-thumbsdown! nse further when all precincts are in.)
,
ltseemedthatthegeneralmanagersaiditwouldcaUBetalk - a
.In the first place, the Gallup test in question was nawoman (ta:velling with men.
Ilona! and affords no hint of McGovern's obviously
Helen ,I've left that company. but !feel a grave injustice has ~!taht/::; ~~:frrs\\il~e~lli~j~dle West. Secondly, the poll
been done me -and others who will follow me may receive the
For all practical purposes, the event in Iowa was in
same treatment. Whom can I contact to stop this discrimination? the nature of a head-to-head test between Muskie and
- EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
McGovern. Technically, any Democrat could draw sup+++
port, and there was a tiny scattering for Sens. Hubert
Dear Secretary:
Humphrey and "t~enry Jackson, for former Sen. Eugene
Contact your local branch of the National Organization for McCarthy, and for black U.S. Rep. Shirley Chisholm of
New York. But ·only Muskie and McGovern had any
Women (NOW), or write to national headquarters: 1957 East sort.of working organization, and the contest was proper73rd Street, Chicago, Ill., 60649.
ly v1ewed at all stages as a direct collision.
You might also alert the Equal Employment Opportunity
McGovern's 23 per cent in the Iowa caucuses was not
Commission, headquartered at 1800 ''G" Street, N.W., far distant fr~m .the. Middle West percentage Gallup
Washington, D. C., 20506. _H. !~""'"="""'· _.... •
Mou~ giVe h1m m 1ts one-on·one measurement with

The -.Daily ~nti~l,,

today· sFUNNY

DEVOTE o TO THE
INTEREST OF

and double dealing. Kissinger, for one, is known to have

believe~ that given time, firmness, patience and logic,

somethmg would move.
This confidence is gone. The two men are understood
now to be convinced Hanoi has no intention of negotiating.
Unless some compelling pressure can be brought to bear.
This is where Peking comes in.
," "'' .
North Vietnam cannot carry on the war without sizltble ~ •
economic aid and arms from China and Russia. Moscow's '
aid would be difficult to deliver in the quantities required
witho)lt Peking's cooperation, so long as the Suez Canal
remams closed.
Therefore, if Mao and Chou can be convinced it is to
their interest to end the war, China can bring compelling
pressure on Hanoi. If Hanoi refuses, China can, by shut·
ling the valves, cut the Indochina war to an insignificant
level.
·
The problem then is convint.og Mao and Chou.
Here Mr. Nixon has a lever. Peking is deeply concerned
over Moscow-the border fights, the threats to China's
nuclear bases and Russia's all·out effort to "encircle"
China from the south.
This encirclement is of such ~real concern that Mao
and Chou have agreed to talks w1th the United States.
The Russians to date have been hi~hly successful In
the south. They've concluded an alliance with India
backed New Delhi in its war with Pakistan. They've made
considerable advances. in Afghanistan, made serious
approaches to Cambod1a, Indonesia and other Southeasi
As1an nations aiming at a defensive alliance with Soviet
sponsorship. ·
.
If Hanoi had a chance of winning the Laos-CambodiaSouth Vietnam wars quickly, Peking would have no reason to agree with Mr. Nixon.
But the .longer those wars continue, the more unsettled ·
the conditions. As t!me passes, U.S. troops withdraw and
U.S, .mfluence declines. All this creates enticing opportunities for the Russians to move in and establish themselves, as in India.
If Laos, Cambodia and South Vietnam cannot get from
the Umted States the help they need to survive they will
turn to any source available.
'
Mao and Chou can read the picture as clearly as Mr.
NIXOn .

Exec . Ed.
ROBEC~I~ ~~~:rLICH,
Published daily except
Sat.urdav by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Corr&gt;panv. 111
CQurt St .• Pomeroy , Ohio,
4f/69. Busin,e.s Office rhone
m;~ls6. Ed&lt;lor lal Phone 992 .
, second class pottage paid at
Pomerov, Ohio.
: Nal•onal. advertiSing
. Gallagher
representol•~e
Bottonelll ·
. me .. 12 East •2nd
St -. New York Clly , New York ,

Bf~~rs w~~lD

, un~ommitted strength in the state is believed by poh-

Todor"s fUNNY •ill ,ar Sl.OO lor
toch orfti110l " httu•y'' uMd Sud fOil
hi: To.dlrJ''I FUNNY, 1200 W'nt TMrd
St , Clt•elaM, Ohia ••Ill.

I

~

By Uuited Press.Jnlern~~tlonal Bruins, winners of 17 in a row

UCLA anQ Marquette won
again Saturday night as the No.
1 and, 2 teams displayed their
muscle on national television
and seemed ·determined as
ever to carry their credentials
to ·a showdown in the NCAA
tournament in March.
John Wooden's top-ranked
BOB CALDWELL (10) OF EASTERN and Mike Crow of Glouster engage lri some arm
Dailing In trying for a rebound. From left. to right, Stewart Patton (21), Glouster; Randy
Boring, Eastern (32),andKenLocke, Glouster (13). Pictures by Katie Crow.
.,

Local Bowling
Pomeroy National Bank
(Junior)

·
NBA Standings
By Onited Press International
EosternCOIIference
Atlantic Division
W. •L. Pet. GB
Boston
41 18 .695
New York
34 22 .607 5'1,
Philadelphia 23 34 .404 17
Buffalo
16 39 .291 23
Central division
W. L Pr:t . r.R
Baltimore. 24 30 .444 .
Atlanta
21 35 .375 4
Cincinnati
18 37 .327 6'h
Cleveland
17 41 .293 9
Western Conference
Midwest Division
Milwaukee ~
,P:fJj GB
Chlca~o
41 17 .707 5
Phoenix
35 25 .583 12
Detroit
20 37 .351 251h
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
LosAnqele• 47 7 .870 ... ,
Golden State 34 23 .596 Wh
Seattle
33 25 .569 16
Houston
21 36 .368 27112
Portland
13 46 .220 J61h
Sunday's Results
Boston 128 Seattle 123
New York 109 Philadelphia 107
Chicago 119 Cinclnnall94
Buffalo 121 Cleveland 108
Houston 120 Atlanta 113
Phoenix 107 Portland 94
Los Angeles 151 Baltimore 127
IOnlygamesscheduled)
Monday's Games
I No games scheduled)

January 22, 1972
Standings:
Team
7
Chiefs
Strike Outs
6
Thundering Herd
4
Zodiac's
~
Rams
Ben9als
3
H1gh Individual Game
' Mick Davenport, 163; David
Miller, 158.
Steve
. High Series · Bachner, 425; Mick Davenport,
4()0,

Team High Game
Thundering Herd, 897.
Team High Series - Chiefs.
2598.
POMEROY LANES
Wednesday Afternoon League
February 2, 1972
Won Lost
.,.. Baum's Lumber
60 36
Team
56 40
Gaul's Shake Haven
52 44
Team I
so 46
Welker's Ashland
47 49
Ridenour's TV
23 73
High Ind. Game - Patsy
Chapman 145 and Florine
Guinther 141 ; High Series Barbara Murray 388 and Patsy
Chapman 377; Team High
Game and Series - Team 4,
269 and 732 .

h

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pel. GB
Kentucky
43 12 .782 "'
Virginia
34 23 .596 10
New York
27 31 .466 17 112
Florldtans 22 34 .393 21'/,
Catalina
22 ' 35&lt; !386 22
Pittsburgh 21 34 .382 22
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Utah
37 19 .661 ... Indiana
32 24 .571 s
Dallas
27 34 .443 12'11
Denver
23 32 .418 131/,
Menphis
23 33 .411 14
Sunday's Results
Dallas 107 Memphis 84
Denver 115 Indiana 107
Kentucky 118 New York 106
Floridians 1«Pittsburgh 117
(Onlygamesscheduled)
Monday's Games
t No games scheduled)
NHL Siandings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pis
Boston
378882
New York
3211973
Montreal
29 13 10 68
2323854
Detroit
21 22 11 53
Toronto
Buffalo
11 20 13 35
Vancouver
15 30 5 35
West
W. L. T. Pis
Chicago
36 11 5 77
Minnesota
27 18 9 63
California
17 27 11 45
St. Louis
18 28 8 44
Philadelphia
1~ 26
9 41
Los Angeles
15 33 7 37
Pittsburgh
13 29 9 35
Sunday's Results
New York 2 Toronto 2
Montreal~

Vancouver 2

Buffalo 8 Boston 2
Detroit 8 California 2
St. Louis 2 Philadelphia 2 •
Chicago 5 Minnesota 0
IOnlygames scheduled)
.
AHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pis
31 16 8 70
Boston
27 15 11 65
Nova Scotia
20 18 12 52
Springfield
19
24 9 47
Providence
1L29 6 42
Rochester
West
W. L. T. Pis
Baltimore
24 19 7 55
Cleveland
23 20 8 54
Hershey
22 16 9 53
Cincinnati
21 23 10 52
Richmond
19 24 9 47
Tidewater
12 32 7 31
Sunday's Results
Cleveland s Cinclnn~ti 1
Boston 2 Baltimore 0
Nova Scotia 1 Tidewater 1
Providence 4 Springfield 2
Richmond 5 Rochester 4
IOnlygamesscheduledl
Mondly's Games

RANDY BORING (32). OF EASTERN goes high for a
layup Saturday night in the Eagles' easy victory over
Glouster in a non-league basketball game. Outmaneuvered
was Glouster's Mike Crow (11).

Gerhard, Jackson
Lead Bucks' Win

BOARD MAN
Wilt Chamberlain holds the
NBA record for most rebounds in one. game, having
grabbed 55 in a con test
against the Boston Celtics
while playing for Philadelphia in 1960.

'

"S' the '

,
• "• ,.. ~ a ge.ntlemon to set you. ·He wants to bow ·I
'' you would be mferesttd in buying the autobi
pit
,,
of Helga R. Hughes!"
ogra Y

MACHINIST END STRIKE
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
-Members of the International Association of
Machinists approved a contract offer during the weekend
and planned to return to work
today at the Champion
Olemlcal Co. plant here.
Some 200 workers had been
on strike since Jan. 'l1 when
their old contract ri:plred. The
new (l!lct calla for a 7 per cent
Jnc:raR over three yllllr.l.

,.
I

.

There's Still Some Left

t*'

BEAT

NEW CAR

'*

i

triumph

over

Wis co ns1 n

~
CALL

l;~;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.~:x:~~.:::::::::::::==*::;::::~:::

P.J. PAULEY
PHONE 'n-mt

l07 Spring An., Pomeroy
)

inteJ'11ational competition, won way's lvar Skobov.
the 15-kilometer cross country ,, Anna Muller led an East
ski with a Ume of 45 minutes, German sweep of the women's
28.24 seconds, beating Russia's luge competition when she won
Fedor Sirnaschov and Nor- the gold med~l in an aggregate

Ume of two minutes, 59.18
seconds. Miss Muller had a
final run of :44.32 to beat Ute
Ruhrold
and
Margit
Schumal]ll .

"

~A~~~~~~-~~

HAliCINWIOE ltfl HIISUAAitCE CO~PAfn

let Your
ro II of I fiJII
wltll tiny purcllt1se tit

Redmen Drop
Battle

· - - -lt

I

Slavs Stunned 5-l by U. _S.

SAPPORO,Japan (UP!) -A
yoWig United States team,
sparked by the brilliant goaltending of Mike Curran, pulled
off the upset of the XVI
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Wis- for a breather. But then the Olympic hockey tournament
consin found out the hard way Badgers' Leon Howard took Monday by stunning ·'*vily
Saturday. night that there's over, scoring 15of his team's 22 favored Czechoslovakia 5-l.
Curran, a veteran of internamore to ~topping Ohio State's points as Wisconsin tied it at 228th ranked Buckeyes than putt- 22.
tional competition who joined
Ing the clamps on Allan HornIt was a dogfight the rest of the U.S. club shortly before it
yek and Luke Witte.
the way with the Buckeyes un- departed for Sapporo, was
Jfornyak, the leading scorer. able to take the lead for good sensational after allowing the
in the conference, was held to until Gerhard hit four straight lone Czechoslovakian goal at
13 points by the Badgers: Bob points for a 54..50 OSU lead 4:32 of the nrst period. He
Frasor, most of them coming with 11:02 remaining. Even · turned back 39 shots in the first
in late stage of the game, then, !be Badgers were never two period&amp; alone, and 52 in all,
and Witte, the Buckeyes' 7-foot more than a quick flurry away including a stellar effort on a
center, got into early second from tying the score.
breakway by Jlri Holik.
The U.S. victory, combined
baH foul trouble, possibly by
Witte, playing his second
with
Sweden's 3-3 tie with
design of Wisconsin Coach game since being hospitalized
John Powless.
with a concussion in the Jan. 25 Russia, a co-favorite along
But sophomores
Dan incident at Minnesota, had 15 with Czechoslovakia, turned
Gerhard and Wardell Jackson points but he was benched with the hockey tournament 'into a
stepped forward, scoring 19 17 :441efl in the game, and had wide open race.
and 18 points respectively, and only two points the second half.
The outstanding individual
along with Jackson's 13
Despite Saturday night's win performance of the day came
rebounds, led the Buc)l:eyes to a over Wisconsin and an 82-77 from Ard Schenk, the Dutch
7~ victory over the Badgers,
victory over Iowa Tuesday speed .skating star, who comkeeping Ohio State tied for the night Taylor feels the pleted his gold medal triole by
Big Ten lead with Minnesota. Buckeyes are still not fully winning the gruelling 101(100.
·''Wardell had a heck of a recovered from the harrowing meter event after earlier
night on the boards, " said Minnesota experience.
taking the 1,500 and 5,1100 meter
Coach Fred Taylor. "He really
Tuesday night, the Buckeyes cro1f11S.
went after some of his trek to Iowa for a return en·
Bernhard Russi of Switzerrebounds." ·
gagement with the Hawkeyes, land, the favorite, came
Ohio State jumped to a quick whom they heat 82-77 a week through · to win the men's
~ lead and appeared headed ago at St. John Arena .
downhill ski race with a time of
one minute, 51.43 seconds.
The best U.S. hope for a
medal remained In figure
skating, where Julie Lynn
Hohnes of North Hollywood,
Calif., trailed Beatrix Schuba
of Austria entering the freeskating phase of the competition.
Schenk, a 27-year-old physiotherapist, turned in an Olympic record time of 15:01.35 to
beat
countryman
Cees
Rio
hit
27
of
72
from
the
field,
Coach - Bob
Davis'
Georgetown Tigers caught Art (J7 pet.) and 10 of 14 from the Verkerk, who was more than 3
Lanham's Rio Redmen flat in foul circles. Georgetown was 33 seconds behind. Sten Swensen
the second half Saturday night of B1 from the field (54 pel.) of Norway took third.
Sven-Ake Lundbeck, a 24and the result was an 83-63 and hit 17 or 20 charity tosses.
year-old
in only hlB first year of
Rio must now lake .on Ohio's
victory for the Kentucky
only unbeaten quintet, Capital,
quintet.
The win avenged two at Lyne Center Wednesday,
previous season losses to the beginning alB p.m. Cap upped
Bradley 88 Tulsa 73
Redmen. Rio is now 9-9overall. its season mark to 16-0 over the Lamar
85 Arkansas St. 76
The Tigers upped their season weekend.
Arizona St. 91 Arizona 78
West
Rio will host Walsh on Thursmark to 13~ .
New
Mex
.
80
Utah 69
Mike Calhoun and Gary day and Ohio Dominican on Calli. 84 Stanford
70
Moore were the big guns for Saturday.
Air Force 75 Geo. Tech 53
Colo , St. 80 Wyoming 70
Box score:
Georgetown. Calhoun pumped
Oregon
71 Oregon St. 63
in 29 markers, Moore had 18.
Rio Grande (63) - Bentley 7· Montana 69 Gonzaga 53
0·14 ; Hairston 5-1-11 ; Lambert . UCLA 81 So. Calif. 56
John Owen finished with 16.
4·4·12 ; Jordan 2·0·4: Bartram Hawaii 88 UC Irvine 79
Fot Rio, Capt. Roger Bentley 0·0-0:
Hart 1-0·2; Bollinger 4-2·
Cia 106 Peprdne 85
was high man with 14 points. 10; Rouse 0·1-1; Martin 4·2·10. San
USF 79 Loyola (LAl 66
Ron Lambert )had 12, and Totals 37'10·63.
~an Jose St. 72 Pacific 70
Georgetown (83) - Stewart
Harry Hairston 11.
4-2-10; Phillips 1·1·3; Calhoun
Rio led 38-37 during the half· 12·5·2'1 ; Moore 7·4·18 ; Owen 6-4·
The 1976 men's fast pileh
time intermission. Georgetowr. 16; McGhee 1·1·3: Rugqles 1·0· softball wor.ld championship
outscored Rio 46-25 in the final 2; Swick 1·0·2. Totals 33-17-83. wUl be held in New Zealand.
Score al Half:
The 1972 tournament will be
half.
Rio 38 Georgetown 37.
· In Mnnlla, the Philippines.

83~63

resigned from the squad.
EAGLES COOL
Eastern shot a. cold 31 pet.
from the field, making 25 of 7.1
shots, but made 11 of 14 from
the line from where Glouster
dropped in 16 of ·23 . Eastern
had 39 rebounds.
In the preliminary game,
Coach Bob Ord's little Eagles
upped their season mark to 12-J
with a 41-38 win over the
Glouster reserves. Eastern bad
a 2U first quarter lead, then
had substitutes in nearly the
remainder of the game. Big
John Sheets led the little
Eagles with 14 points although
playing only the first quarter.
The Eagles play again next
Saturday against their Meigs
County rival, the Southern
Local Tornadoes, at Racine,
Eastern won the first game at
Eastern, 71.00.
EASTERN (61) - Duvall 2-26, Eichinger 6-4-16, Boring 6~
12, Young 3-U, CaldweliS-1-13,
Kirkman 0.2-2, Sheets 2-0.4 .
Totals 25-11-Gt
GLOUSTER (36) - Seevers
2-1-5, M. Crow 4-6-14, Patton J.
f&gt;.ll , Cardaras 0-3-3, Locke 1-J.
J. Totals 10-16-36.
BY QUARTERS
Glouster
9 12 13 2-36
Eastern
15 16 21 ~ 1

this season and 32 straight over
the last two· years, zonepressed an injury-racked
Southern California team
almost out of Pauley Pavilion.
The Trojans turned the ball
over 21 times en route to an 81·
56 shellacking.
Bill Walton, UCLA's 6-foot-11
center ,left the game with eight
minutes remaining after scoring a team high 22 points and
collecting 10 rebounds.
Coach -AI McGuire of Marquette watched his son, Allie,
provide the sP'Ifks that eventually burned up DePaul as the
Warriors marched to their 17th
consecutive victory 7~1.
A Loulsvllle Romp
Third-ranked Louisville,
loser earlier in the week to
Memphls State, bounced back
into the Missouri Valley
Conference lead with a convincing 92-75 romp over Drake ;.:~;:;:;:~:?.::;:;s~:~:*:!t'*S::=~='7.~:::!S!:;:o:!:!~::::~===~-::::::::::::::::::::~:=:~::::::~:::-;;::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::, . .- - - - - - - - - .
as the Cardinals drew strength *.:
from Ron Thomas' 21 points, ~
Jim Price's 20 points and Bill ,;~
::&lt;
Booton's 16 rebounds.
ij
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - It took Plt!Bburgh Pirate ::~
Sixth-ranked South Carolina j General Manager JoeL. Brown only five minutes to sign ::;:
put down an upset effort by % superstar Roberto Clemente to a 1972 conlract for a :~;
THE HIGH
Clrecoemrsodn48thafout1sas wbefbo0trhe teSoamuths ~.·.·• reported $150,1100.
!.!.
:~
"Roberto and I have been getting along for 17 y
COST OF
Carolina put an end to the ~ years," Brown said Sunday night at the 36th Annual ~
BUYING A
batile, 62-58, on one and one 11 Dapper Dan banquet. "It wasn't difficult signing him- ~
free throw conversions by Rick it, it wasn't my money."
:;~
Aydlett, Kevin Joyce and Tom ;:;:
Terms of the contract were not disclosed, but It was ;:~
Riker. Riker's 13 points were :;:j reported Clemente received a raise of $25,000 over his ;:~
tops for the Gamecocks.
:~
1971 contract.
~;
finance your ntw car with
.N•tlonwldt.
No. 7 Penn, paced by 6-foot-8 ~:;
Brown then looked around the banquet room and
led th Pi
p1
h hd
~.:.:,:.
l·unior forward Phil Hankin- :.::.:
son's 33 points, routed Dart- :::: no o er rates ayers w o a not come to terms. ::::
LOW COST INSURED
mouth, 86-66, to remain tied iii'.
"Don't worry, boys," he said. ''There's still some 1§
AUTO FINANCING , money left."
«
BY NATIONWIDE
with Brown for the Ivy League ;,:.::.
~
Clemente,
Willie
Stargell
and
manager
Danny
lead.
&lt;:·
•
Ohio State's Buckeyes, ~= Murtaugh, who led the Pirates to the World Series ;~
eighthranked, assured :::: championship last fall, were honored as the sports ~
themselves of at least a tie in ~: figures of 1971 by the Dapper Dans, a charitable sports l$
the Big Ten with a 7~ organization.
~

Lemley's Pennzoil

Good's Pennzoil

748 North 2nd St.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

West Main St.
POME·ROY, OHIO

Kapple's Pennzoil

Roseberry's Pennzoil

. East Main

St.

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RACINE, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

Stick With Us •••

Scores

1

pnva le domain almost in every 0 senior for,ward, scored eight
game. r
for the winners in a fine effort.
Bob Caldwell, 5-11 senior
M1ke Crowpaced the 4-11 Bill
guard, added 1J for Coach Bill Kilkelly coached Tomcats with
Phillips' Eagles and Randy 14 points while Stewart Patton
Boring, 5-9 junior guard, added 11. High··scoring
pwnped in 12. Randy Young, 6- Sophomore Tim Seevers was
held to five points by Eastern 's
sticky defense.
The Eagles, who have the
stmgies t defense in the area,
got off to a 15-9 first quarter
Saturday night despite an early lead, then improved it to 31-21
·benching of 7-foot center Luke at the half. Leading comWitte in the second half forl&lt;lbly at 52·34 after three
because or perso nal foul periods, the Eagles flexed their
problems.
,
defensive muscle by allowing
In Other Games
the Tomcats but two points in
In other key contests Satur- ihe fourth quarter while
day night, ninth-ranked Eastern connected for nine .
Virginia edged North Carolina
Still m contention m the
State, 69-68; tenth-ranked Southern Valley Conference
Brigham Young slipped by race with an 11-2 slate, the
Texas-El Paso's stall tactics to Eagles trail league-leading
win in double-overUme 57..53; North Gallia who own a 10-1
Kansas St. upset 12th-ranked league record . Eastern has two
Missouri, 69-67 ; Hawaii league games left, Southern
defeated UC Irvine 83-79; 16th- and Symmes Valley , while
ranked Marshall swept by North Gallia has only one, with
Long Island University 7~1; lhe struggling Kyger Creek
and Minnesota eked out a Bobcats.
victory over Iowa, 53..52.
Eastern , which los t starters
In Sunday's only major Ri ck Williams and Mike
action, Creighton upset 17th· Benedum earlier in the season,
ranked. Jacksonville, 71-66, as two weeks ago lost two · subGene Harmon and Mark slitutes , Rick Sanders and
Mirsky cOmbined for J4 points. Dave Milhone, who apparently

Bruins, W8rriors March On

(Nogamesscheduledl

1

the Eagles (13-2) with 16 points
and 23 rebounds. The 6-3 senior
center, a four-year starter, is
having his best cage season
ever, averaging close to 20
points ·per game and keeping
the areas around the boards his

'

Monday's Games

~ give:u~:le'
s Iowa showing is below what Gallup would
him for the Middle West. But a lot of the presently

surface at later stages.
,
• Thou.gh the Iowa uncommitted •figure of 35.1 per cent
\ was higher than the Musk1e forces and most others
, anticipated, he nevertheless was the clear winner among
1 Democrats who declared themselves
. .
,
'
·
·
It IS JUSt plam silly for McGovern to assert that "we
: have fought Muskle to a stand~till, even though he is
1su~posed to be the front·runner.'· How do you make 35 to
I 23 mto a stalemate? Actually, not even his 23 per cent is
1secure, since the delegates he won in the caucuses are
1 not legally bound and could switch ·
. The truth about the caucuses is that they were peopled
110
1
li.S:r~~~rlfv c"ar~~:;s ~h~;~ I by consistent political activists and other interested peravailable so cenls per week, sons , us~ally ~n~er hard spur from !ocal party leaders,
, By Molor R.ovle where carrier . the candidates field forces, and caus1sts (In Des Moines
service not available : One : Catholi~s oppose
more liberal abortion laws) ·
'
.month SL75 By mall In Ohio ,
•
and w.. va ., One vear 514.00. / In Iowa, McGovern. had the IY!st organization and the
Six months 57.25, Three b1ggest pool of committed activists of the sort who come
months
54 .50. Subscrlpt•on
t
, Pt
;(e includes so•nday T&lt;mes .
o caucuses. And he was worklng territory where he has
, Sen tinel .
'
long been!. far more than a three 11er cent choice among
w.:.::;.. , · .
., . . J Democratic voters.

TUPPERS PWNS - The
Eastern Eagles easily won
tbeir sixth straight basketball
game near here Saturday night
over non-league foe Glouster,
81-36.
Dennis Eichinger again led

(No games scheduled)

c.:~~~~'tA~~=::~~~L. ' tic1ans and analysts to be Muskie's. It is expected to

(NEWSPAPER lNTERPRISE ASSN.)

~e\\·~~~~H· r

RAY CROMLEY

+++

Ecotage," New
Word, New Evil

Eagles Dump Glouster 61•36

BY JACX O'BRIAN

(NEWS,APEk EHTER,RI5£ ASSN.)

11

Voice along Br'Way

Ournan1e
'

'

hC.s been
cha-nge·cl to
•

'•

.r

·'

�.-

.''

4- Tile Dilly Semtinel, Middleport-Pomeroy: o., Feb. 7,lim
'

~Ugh

Three Rookie&amp;

School

Scores

Signed by Reds

Trade War a Frightening ~rospect

BY RlawtD C. LONGWOR'Ill
and. agreed to limit Its textile exports fo the United Statea. yen to share thedollar'sburdenofsupportinllworldtllde. And 1
BASKETBALL SCORES
Ualtad Preu 1D1eraat14u1
European natiOIIB revalued by smaller •IIIIWIJits and agreed to u.s: Presidential Qlmmi.sllon recommended lllflollllloal on
Unltod ·Press lntirMIIOiial
"the eHmination of all barriers to Jnternati0118l.~.IIIII capilli
Middletown 88 Lima Senior 87 · Seldom hasa criJIB.been resolved so fut. And seldom has that make other trade concessions.
Greenville .59 Tlpp Clly 55
NSO!ution left more questl0111 unanswered.
,
StW, the lssuu were far from seWed. There waa no guarantee movements within 25 yean."
Oaymont 79 St. Clairsville 78
When
Prellident
Nixon
announced
the
RolltJng
dollar
on
Aug.15
In
a
rePx-t·
for
the
Presidentl41
Coancll
on blternatiollll
that a trade war would not Rare later.
Coshocton 66 Mans.lleld
economic polley, Pe.ter G. Pete: son who wu ,.med Seeretary
last, and aatd an Imports Into the Unlted States must pay a 10 per
Madison 59
Lakeland 46 Newcomerstown
cent surd!arge, one Eiaropean banker called it "a bombsheil" · .In trade, Washington, B-Js and Tokyo all see ultngs !him- of Commerce Jan. '!1- said probie1111 for tl)e Unltad Slallll
4.1
own 1\'ay. Each has complaints against the others. Each has a · ""include the emergence of discriminatory tradln8 qreements
Indian Valley Soulh 39 Jewell· which the Coinmon Market "jual mlght dedde to tll'ow back."
More bluntly, Japanese Chamber of Comme~ President Sblgeo 'point.
Sclo 19
.
. abroad, the development by some of ClUJ' partnen ,II. e&amp;pa1
Orrville 68 Garaway 68
Nagano denounced It as "a declaration of (economic) war/'
Washington contends tluit Japan sets high tariffs and Import development P'ograms more aggressive than oun.. .a marked
Rlv..- View 83 Rlagewood 69
. 10 far.
Yet, jual four months later, there were Nb:on and French quotas, raises artiftcial barriers against U.S. farm imports, deterioration in Americall competitiveness aggraVIItad by I
74 Valley Forge 60
Ruddell, the Eastern Euclid
t-lormandy 62 Lakewood 55
discriminates aga!Dst American Investment and undercuts u.s. r&amp;pid rise in U.S. labor costs per unit of output." It II a strong
Iague's outstanc!lng pitcher Baptist Chrlsllan 78 Day1on
·
salesnen abroad by dumping low-priced goods in foreign summer of ills, ·
Christian 6J
1aat year, was IU, had a 2.52
Meanwhile
the
protectionists
of
ali
countries -fiWI)' c( them
Falls 60 .Cuyahoga
· : markets. Turning to Europe, Waahington charges that the
ERA and lltnick out 186 batters Olmsted
Helghls 57
Common Market's Common Agricultural Polley (CAP), which politicians whose constituents fear _that lmporta would de.troy
in lA lmlnga.
Rhodes 65 Brooklyn 6J
President
Georges
Pompidou,
amll1ng In the Azores over what keepa European food prices artificiaDy high, blocks U.S. !arm their jobs -call for restrictions. Thelt fears are ganllne,
Blaterlck posted a 13-10 Cleve. Heights 59 Brush 50
Nixon was to call "the moe! significant monetary agreement In exporta, whUe Ita preferential trade agreements with former
The free traders insist that no liation can el)lOri unlea _ltalllo
~rdanda.1.46ERA at 1bree Falrpor1 52 Beachwood 43
Kirtland 78 Cardinal 43
the
history of the world," Soon after, there was Japanese colonies In Africa shuts Alnerica out of traditional markets imports. The world's economies, they say, are so lnteriwlned In
Riven before he was recalled Cleve. S1. Edward 62 Glenville
Premier Eiaaku Sato Dli the lawn at San Clemente, Calif., talking there.
the "global village" that protectionism by one nation would bring
by the Reda at the end of the
54
.
about
"the
unshakeable
relationship
of
mutual
trust
~nd
InBedford
61
Independence
60
TIJe U.S. problem iB aggravated by mge defense expenditures damage to ali.
··
, _
season. He appeared In two Kens1on 77 Mentor 56
terdependence between... the U.S. and Japan."
The
immediate
crisiB
of
1970-71
is
over.
But
the
is8ue
ill
not
in
both
Europe
and
Asia,
Even
worse,
to
some
labor
unionists,
is
Cincinnati games.
Brecksville 53 Wickliffe 33
In
Brussels,
Washington
and
Tokyo,
businessmen
and
the tendency of Americ8n companies to shill manufacturing to · resolved.
Midvlew 70 Elyria Catholic 61
government
officials
slgbed
with
relief.
Most
agreed
with
Gregor
Zanesville
62
Col.
Marion
Saturday Boxes
low-wage areas abroad to escape mounting U.S. labor costs.
Franklin 43
r.
Purdy, president of the u.s. Chamber of Commerce In Japan, Because of this, many union leaders- traditionally free
Zanesville Rosecrans 77
Hannan Tnce (46)
Newark Catholic 66 that "there will alwaya.be competition, but as for a trade war- traders-are turning protectionist.
Caldwell 4·1-9; Lusher 4-1-9 ;
not in the foreseeable future, ihat is, not for the next three
Ours :1-0-6; Wells 7-1-15; Halley Sheridan 84 Philo 40
"We are no longer competing against foreign countries," says
. OPTOMETRIST
2-1 -5; Koehler 2-0-4. Totals 21-4- Ma~sville 71 New Lexington 70 years," But these same men said the 1!orllf had had a narrow Charles Pillard, president ot the International Brotherhood of
loll
46.
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
Trl -Valley
78 escape, The rules that have governed International trade for 25 Electrical Workers (lBEW). ''Our competitors are divisions of
Coat Grove (73)- Belville 6- Dresden
AT
NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
Crooksville
56
years will no longer do, they aald. A major task of the 197~ will domestic corporations."
1-13; Bloomfleldl-1-11; Wells 1Morgan
63
New
Concord
John
0-2; Easterly 5-J-13; Hall B-4·
POMEROY.
be to revamp these rules-perhaps to change them radically.
The Japanese have added insult to Injury by flooding the
Glenn 57
20; Hall 1-4-6; Gossett 1-0-2;
Is free trade, the postwar Ideal, still desirable, or even
relatively open American market, because European tariffs are
Donohue 1-0-2 and Christensen Miller 65 Albany Alexand..- 62
River
View
83
possible? If so, can it be promoted without ruining mllllona of too high.
1-2-4. Totals 29-15-73.
Lafayette Ridgewood 69 persons whose joba depend on protecUonlam? Is the world
By Quarters:
Skyvue
61 River 60 lot)
BrusseiB sees things differently. The Europeans say the
Hannan Trace .7 18 32 46
80 Guernsey monetary syatem stW doing the job It was created in i944 to do? American dollar crisis is Washington's own fault. Heavy U.S.
Coal Grove
15 34 52 73 Shenandoah
Catholic 56
And for Americans, accustomed to the Idea-now dead- that rnWtary and aid spending, in Vietnam and elsewhere, is the real
Cuyahoga
Falls -46 Newark 43
GALLIPO!,IS (591
U.S. buslneM runs the world, the question loomed: How to deal cause, they say, as is the mammoth U.S.Investment lilroad.
(o1)
Ferguson 5-0-10; Boone 0-0-0; Adena
106
Beallsville
74
with
the hostile world of the 197~.
Price 4-3-11 ; Snowden 8-4-20; Can1on Lincoln 78 Toledo
The Common Market says the barriers protecting Europe's
Noe 5-6-16; Sheets 1-0-2.
small,lnefficient fanners are necessary evils, both for social and
DeVilbls 46
TOTALS 2:1-1:1-59.
The
world
trade
system.IDitll recent ilmes rested largely
Can1on
Lehman
73
Jackson
-46
political reasons. The preferential agreements with the exPORTSMOUTH lnl Massillon 74 Canton Tlmken 68 U.S. pr~ence. To achieve currency stability, foreign colonies, II adds, means a humanitarian spreading of Europe's
Lovonguth 6-10-22; Gentry 5-1· Canton
McKinley 72 Youngs- currencies were pegged to the dollar, 11f)llch was pegged to gold.
11; Hopkins 2-0-4; Williamson
prosperity to the Tlllrd World. And Europeans point to America's
town Rayon 63
·
4-2-8; Daehler6-1-13; Spriggs0- Akron
American
dollars
flowed
out
to
Invest
In
foreign
countries
and
to
South
87
Canton
Aquinas
own protective tariffs and farm subaldlea.
1-1; McGlone 2-0·4. TOTALS 2573
rebulld the shilttered po~ar economies of Europe and Asia. At
ll-63.
"In trade," diplomats !Ike to say, ''we're ali sinners."
Canton South 60 Glenwood 34
By Quarters:
American
urging,
world
tariffs
dropped
stesdil;,·.
America
Tokyo is perhaps most sensitive to trade. Its recent agreement
Canton Hoover 70 OakGallipolis
15 12 16 16-59 Nor1h
wood
62
·
achieved
the
highest
wages
and
costs
in
the
world
and
called
it
Portsmouth
17 19 12 1~3
to limit textile exports to America is expected to cost 400,000
progress.
RHtrves- Portsmouth 59 Perry 66 Marflngton 65
Japanese
textile jobs.
S1ausburg 60 Nor1hwest 38
Gallipolis 44.
Sandy Valley 69 Malvern 57
Jt couldn 'I last. Almost unnoticed by Americana, two powerful
America accuses Japan of blocking majority control by U.S.
Tuslaw
47
East
Canton
41
"North ca. lila (93)- Justus 8- Lake 49 Tuscarawas Valley 48 rivals emerged. One was the European Common Market, six capitllinmanyJapaneseflrms. JapanretortathatAmericanbig
2-18; Crosswhite H-14; Clark Akron
Central Hower 74 Walsh nations-now expanded to l~sed In Brussels, with a population business must not take over Japanese Industry. America already
10-2-22; Stout 5-0-10; Brown 4-0Jewell 44
and total annusl exports greater than either the United States or dominates the Japanese instant coffee lnd~~S~rY-a precedent
8; Smith 1-0-:i; Glassburn 0-0-0;
St. Vlncenl 53 Akron Russia, The other was Japan, with an economy growing so fast- often cited to other Americans who want to Invest there.
Robinette 0-3-3; Weddington 0- Akron
Fireslone 32
1-l. Totals 32-14-78.
Barriers to farm Imports also are high in. Japan, because the
Springfield
Twp. 72 Akron 12 per cent each year:... that some analysts think it will become
Fodorai-Hocklng Wl Kenmore 57
ruling Liberal-Democratic Party depends on farmers for its
the world's richest nation.
Russell 4-0-8; Schloss 1-0-2;
This country's never had a problem so big that
Dover 58 Mansfield Malabar 54
Smith 1·1-3; Dllugherty 1-0-2; Siryker
Signs of competition appeared. Where once the world bought parliamentary majority.
62
Montpelier
60
could be solved so simply, All it takes is education.
Meek 3-3-9; Dunfee 4·0-8;
77 Hilltop 47
Heinz and Coca-Cola, strange new lrunds-Volkswagen and
With the Americans getting tougher, Japan looks toward
Mohorney 1-4-6; Springer 0-1-1 Anlwerp
Which means we need more money for
Edon 65 Fayette 55
and Harris 1-0-2. T'otals lt-9·41. Peltlsvllle
Olivetti,
Honda
and
Sony-began
to
capture
the
American
Europe,
which
is
external
n:ade
organization
(JETRO)
calls
better colleges. For stronger faculties. For many
64 Edgerton 59
By Ou1rters:
market.
"the
most
promlalng
export
market
In
the
future."
But
the
Defiance
76
Rossford
61
more students.
North Galli a 16 23 19 20--78
Heights 75 Garfield
The United Slates, hit by 6 per cent Inflation, foun~ itself being Japanese complain that Europe blocks Japanese llgPt consumer
Fed. Hocking 11 12 6 12-41 Shaker
We s_upport 40private, four-year colleges .
Heights 61
undersold
at
home
and
abroad
by
competition
who
(In
Europe)
goods
and
Insists
on
"escape
clauses"
(the
Europeans
call
them
Parma 70 East Cleve. Shaw 61
now educatmg over 4!;),000 students.
Symmes Valley CUI - Columbia
abolished
tariffs
among
themselves
but
kept
them
against
the
"safeguards")
In trade treaties to keep Japan from over87
Cleve.
Lutheran
Wilson 0-0-0; Roach 5-2-12;
Most of the youngsters we help could
West 56
outside world, or who (In Japan) exported goods produced by whelming European markets.
My..-s 7-5-19; Robinson 8-2-18 ; Sou1h
never get to college on·their own. BeCause most
Amherst 70 Keystone 68 lower-cost labor and ofteli subsidized by the government. The
Taylor 2-0-4; Lafon 1-1-3; Willis Brecksville
- ·53
Wickliffe
33
of
them come from families earning less than
4-2-10; Bonnell 4-0-8; Cron 5-0- Clearvlew 51 Rittman 48
balance
of
payments
deficit
skyrocketed
to
$13
billlon
in
qiearly,
the
old
order
needs
repairing.
Familiar
relations
have
U.S.
10; Dunfee 2-1 -5; Robinson 1-0$!;), 000 a year.
Pleasant 70 Warwood (W. 197l.Six mllllon U.S. workers were unemployed. Foreigners held changed and despite shortterm corrections-like the dollar
2; Quisenberry 1-0-2. Tolals, 40- Mt.
Va.J 68
We can stamp out a lot of igQC&gt;l1!ll~ with
IJ-93 ,
so many d~llars ~t,Jn •I :~ on Fort Knox,,!her~ would ~ IIJ&lt;! . devaluation and the Japanese textile agreement-much remains
·
Paden
"C (I{ '(W, Va.) 71
O"•h
elp
-····
" ..,,:'!.-: ,,. . .. , . ,
SoG!hwtstorn ll)l. - Dillon
Y
:tl
' ~2- - ··· ··• ····· · ··· little gold·to pay the bllh·
:
· ·to be done:
• ·
3-6-11) ~wls 3-3-9; Whitt 1-0-2; AIWoodsneld
"'
Se~d
a
cheek
:ON
nat~'ler
yoo
'
c
an
handle.
.
.
IIane~ 6A We!rlon (W.Va.) 51
Nixon acted with auch lruddennesa that !he Japamise billed his
Already, Japan questionS whether it should maintain its
Walk..- 1-0-2; Wood 2-1-5; and Amhers1
Brunswick 61
To UNCF, Dept. A, 55 East 52nd Street,
Hopkins, 0-1-1. Totals 10-11-ll. Mldvlew 76
Aug. IS announcement the "Nixon Shokku." The moves- ·breakneck growth rate or solve its crushing social problems71 Elyria Catholic 68
8y Quarters:
New York, N.Y. 10022.
Soulh Amherst 80 Keystone 68 . particularly the 10 per cent surc~rge-were so protectionist pollution, overcruwdting and the worst housing of any . major
Symmes Val. 27 18 22 2-3 Teays
Your contributions are tax deductible.
Valley 82 Westfall 62
Southwest..-n 4 3 11 .13-31 Upper Arlington 83 Col. that the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which nation. The United States asks whether it can keep providing a
the United States helped create In 1947 to police fair International nuclear umbrealla over Europe and Japan without the income
DeSales 57
Col. Whelslone . 56 Col. trade, denounced them as illegal.
from Its ollCWomlnant economic position, Protectionist voices
Westland 52
Trade
wars
loomed.
Had
Japan
and
the
Common
Market
rise
again In Congreaa. Other voices suggest that the United
Col. Central 74 Col. Wallerson
56
responded In kind, such ~far probably would have been declared. States should convert to the metric system-used by the rest of
Col. Mllflln 72 Col. Hartley 67
But America's rivals held their fire. Frantic negotiatiollll the world-or spend leaa on space and more on motorcycles.
Wes1 Jefferson 69 Mechanicended In a U.S. dollar devaluation of 8.6 per cent and wltlxlrawal
In Brussels, the Common Mai-ket Is beginning to rationalize its
sburg 62
Ohio
Deaf
75
St.
Rlla
52
of
the
Import
aurcharge,
Japan
revalued
Its
yen
upward
by
8
per
agriculture
and iB talking about modifying the . preferential
CIDCAGO (UPI)- The hot
Whitehall
73
Lancaster
71
(s)
cent-In effect, giving America a new 16 per cent trading edge- agreements when they come up for renewal In 1975.
Qlicago llulla dropped the Fairbanks 60 Dublin 40
Economists urge other major currencies, like the mark and
Clncinnllti Royala with a thud, Granville 92 Heath 67
,.
Franklin
Heights
75
Col.
119-tf, here Sunday .as Chet
Wehrle 59
strokes batk. He finished with
Wilker set a team record and Col.
St. Charles 53 Lucas 47
a six-uilder-Qi for a 279 total
personal career~~ with his Circleville 90 Ham lit on
with six others, including Rod
Township 47
66 point outpouring.
-Funseth,
who started the day
Oientangy
68
Col.
Academy
59
Wilker's previous high for a Centerburg 70 Danville 41
HONOLULU (UPI)-Young Oklahoma State, was reflec- from Jacksonville, Fla., said only one stroke back, and Lee
game was 44 points, 1!hich he Ketlerlng Alter 87 Fort
Grier Jones, the 1968 NCAA ting on his 31'. years on the pro the hole that cost him the Trevino.
Loramie 52
let two years ago against
The weather over the 7,122
Xenia 106 Dayton Colonel golf tiWst, sat with a bottle of tour.
tournament was the 14th In
Cincinnati in overtime.
White 83
yard
oceanside course at the .
soda pop in his hands after
"I can say tba t I really which he scored a bogey five
The win waathe lluUs' eighth St. Henry 99 Bradford 55
In their last. 11 contests and Clinton Massie 70 Waynesville winning the $200,000 Ha1!allan worked hard for 31'. years," he after being IS-under and a shot plush Walalae Country Club
63
Open Sunday in a sudden death told newsmen after pocketing ahead of Jones who was was cloudy and cool with slight
puahed the Royals Into an 18-37 Springfield
North 66 Fairborn playoff over chunky Bob the $40,000 winner's check.
breezes.
playing abead of him.
record.
Park Hills 38
Jones dropped a two'foot putt Murphy's second shot was In
Wilker 1&lt;0red 16 points In 'Springboro 80 Blanchester 72 Murphy.
Jones,
26,
from
Wichita,
for a par on the first playoff the sand trap and he miased his
the Orst ·period, 13 in the Fairborn Baker 62 Greenan 50
Twin
Valley
South
54
BrookKan.,
and
a
graduate
of
bole after ending the 72-hole third. His fourth hit the cup and
llecolld, 14ln the third and 13ln
ville 49
tournament with a 14-under- bounced Qllt.
the fourth. He also established
par 'l/4 -.rith Murplly. Mw-phy Picking up third place money
a new Bulls' record for field
Coli~
had just missed a three-footer waa Charles Coody who fash(10811 In one game -.rith 22,
East
and finished with a bogey on ioned a four'Uilder-par 68 for a
llllrpiSSing the old mark of 20 Syracuse 90 Jass~chusetts Mid. Tenn. 78 Wstrn Ky. 67
Geo. Wash. 48 Northestrn 47
the par-four ISth, which was
held by Bob Love.
85
Virginia Tech 82 Richmond 65 being used as the first playoff 275 total. MartY Fleckman of
Port Arthur, Tex., was right
Nate Archibald was high for Marshall 70 LIU 61
Centenary 85 So. Miss. 81
Rutgers 86 Boston U. 53
·
behind with 276 after carding a
Okla.
City
90 Loyola (La.J 89 hole. ·
Cincinnati with 24 pointlJ.
Brown 78 Columbia 72
Mldwost
The 15th had never given four-under~. Tied at 'l/8 were
Archibald acored u points Lafayette 111 Colgate 85
St. Louis 63 Wichita St. 60
Jones
any trouble during the Bob Ro8burg, John Schlee,
Saturday night as the Royala W. Virginia 84 Navy 81
Marquette79 De Paul61
Notre
Dllme
97
LaSalle
71
1!011 I home game, 133-132, in
St Bona at Det U (ppct ,, ralnl four days. But Murphy, who Bunky Henry," Jim Jamieson
Providence 77 Rhde lslnd 67
Purdue 84 Michigan 74
was seeking his first tour- and Curtis Sifford.
overtime over the Detroit Yale
91 Cornell 87
Ill. 68 Northwestern 59
nament win since the Hartford
Old Arnie Palmer
Plat0118.
.
Penn 86 Dartmouth 66
Kansas St. 69 Missouri 67
Penn
St.
63
Grglwn
(
DC)
62
Open
In
1970,
had
a
bogey
and
Arnold Palmer, almost look·
Archibald aank 23 of 24 free
Ohio U. SO Wstrn Mich . 79
Holy Cross 81 Seton Hall 79
Ohio
St.
79
Wisconsin
69
three
pars
on
that
eventful
lhrowa and added II baskets Princeton
lng
the Arnie of old, trieq to ~t
91 Harvard 66
Indiana
83
Mich.
St.
69
bole.
Jones
had
two
birdies
and
and 11 assists In the game.
on one of his patented charges
Army 73 St. John's (NY) 70
Bwlng Grn 77 Miami (0) 75
Canlslus 88 Manhattan 86
two
pars.
by firing five birdies on h1B first
Nrthrn 11177 Kent St. 65
South
Xavier (OJ 77 Dayton 66
Murphy, a cigar-,smoklng pro nine holes, alter beihg eight
Maryland 77 Duke 58
Iowa St. 84 Kansas 83
MIMesota
53 Iowa 52
Davidson 77 Citadel 70
Toledo 89 Cincinnati 87 ol
Kentucky 85 Vndrbit 80 ot
Akron 92 Cen. Mich. 64
Louisville 92 Drake 75
· Southwest
Georgia 74 Florida 6J
SMU 74 Baylor 70
Tennessee 76 Auburn 67
Everybcxly wants to save money . -That extra ~ % ,payable as a
Arkansas 103 Rice 95
W&amp;M 73 Pitt 68
Unfortunately,
most of us seem
bonus at matunty, applies to all
S. Carolina 62 Clemson 58
TCU 88 Texas 75
to
have
a
rough
time
actually
Bond_s issued.since june I, 1970
Wake Forest 57 Temple 51
Tex. A&amp;M 68 Tex Tech 63
doing
it.
We
start,
then
we
stop.
.
.. wnh a comparable improvement
Virginia 69 N.C. St. 68
Tex IAri.J 90 Ab. Chrstn 86
The
money
never
~iies
up.
·
for
ail older Bonds.
Alabama 77 Miss. St. 71
N. Mex. St. 102 Utah St. 92
ThC: Payroll Savmgs Plan is the
join the Payroll Savings Plan
Murray St. 96 Austin Peay 67 Brg Yn 57 Tex-EI Paso 53 2ot
easy way to start saving; the
~ where you wor~. It's~ great. way
LSU 67 Mississippi 66
Oral Rob 126 Oalethrpe 93
Tulane 77 Denver 69
painless way to keep savmg.
to make today s good mtcnt1ons
Oklahoma 78 COlorado 65

Green Thumb

01!10 HIGH SCHOOL '

CINCINNATI (UPI) ~ The
Clnclanatl Reda announced
today Jobn Jackion, Mike
Jluddell and Ste"' lllateric,
roakle P!teher~ at the 1bree
Rlftn club in the Easte111_
League last season, have
1118ned 1m contracts. •
· The Reda have reached
agreeinent with 18 of 38 players

Notes.

..
Prelude to Spring
ByMRS.ANDREWCROSS
BelldoftbeRiverGardeaCJab
ming. The
·
Sp"'ftniB
t,u,.; co
!
firstfewweelr$ofthenew yearare the
weeks of a gardener's dream. While waiting impatiently for the
msllmail to Iring the first &amp;eel! catalogs, sbe pores ,ovl!l' gardening books, reads the gardening maga$es, l\nd builds up a lot
of knowledge to use 118 soon aa spring brings her the opportunity.
The catalogs come, And what a temptation they are!· Each
glowing picture repre8ellis new possibilities. 'I1iis is the lime for
the~ to ·awak\!11 to realities and recognize the size of the
garden she has planned. She must be strict with herself, ot her
garden will overflow lis boiDidaries and give her additional
pro!llemsofaummercarewhentheweatheriBhotandshewants
to relax.
If you are ambitious, try i!fO\VIJ!g some of your plants either
Indoors or In a ~Ollie. Petunlaa, one of most people's
favorites, can be started the last of February, Most other flower
&amp;eel! may be planted Indoors the middle of March.
The most up-IO&lt;Iate method fof aowlng seeda Indoors 1s to
usee potting soil. It Ia usually available where you buy aeeds,
ThiiiiOII holdll moisture well, prevents damping-off, dlaease, and
ill weed free.
Walt for the plant's true leaves to ...,..nd· betore traOS:

N. W. COMPTON, O.D.

pianting. Transplanting to another pot, to -.give it more room, is

advantageous.
Better gel your tools aharpened and your seeds ready.
Felruilry is always later than you think:
Although the calendar aays, "Spring,''
And birda sing every minute,
It im 't spring unless your heart
Removes th~ IJVlnter in it.

on

HELP

.

to

stat t salting away
some of your ·

.

.

3JH)OMS
NEW~

.FURNITURE
.'349.95
$35;00

Need a
. .,
real estate agen ..
who knOWS
a lot?

specify is automatically set aside
from your paycheck and used to
buy U.S. Savings Bonds.
\
You ac'tually salt away savings,

paycheck after paycheck.

' And now' there'S a bonus
interest rate on all U. S. Savings
Bonds-for E Bonds, 5!-i %
·when held to maturity of 5 years,
10 montho (4% the first year).

l)Qwn

:a.lanc;e On
_ __ .,._

'·MASON
-- -.
~

pay off tomorrow.

...

11.:, "" j
.. :.J

.

.

Yellow

_Pages

•)

'I
I

·'
••

•. 1 .• 1~:JJI

:-

r

Projects
Completed

Several projects have lieen
carried out by the Helping
Handa Missionary Circle of the
Bradford Church of ChriBt in
recent weeks.
The circle sent $10 to Peggy
Ruasell to pay on the mortgage
on the orphanage in Mexico,
and gave $20 to the church
benevolence fund . Sunday
school papers have been
collected for the Southeastern
Ohio Mental Health Center at
Athena with Mrs. Albert Roush
to deliver them on Valentine's
Day. A dinner honoring
members for perfect Sunday
school attendance was held
·Saturday night and several
shut-ins of the community have
been remembered with gifts
and visits over the past few
weeks.
,
Plans are being made by the
group to make stuffed animal
pillows for the children at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and a cominlttee has been
appointed to secure the
material and to check with the .
h~pital to find out what month .
the toys are to be delivered.
A contribution of $10 was
made on the cost of a
re!rigerator purchased by the .
adult class. Arrangements
have been made to make new
stage curtains for the church
and a !Jackdrop at the plano.
Read at ond of the meetings
were thank you notes from Mr,
and Mrs. Clifford Smith for a
quill given them as a Christmas gift, and fr!lm Mr. and

... flow IIlli ~. Powtrlul
14 hp lnCIOI' t.lcltM bigger
toor•• ,. I' mGWir, sz·,ln~r,
~-ta~~loldlr. 0'111'

20
llllll-11111111cllmtnll•

t' i

.,'
'•,

•

I

•'

We have all sizes in stock. Stop in or write tt-r

· prlu and literature.
• I

"

,..~

iY.~~-:~m~mr~:m~~~~ir:~~om.t.m~~~m~tt·%Mf.Jft;.'?&amp;J.fi\

DEAR MRS. R, E, 0.-A product Is being advertised
that Is used with ravelfogs from the seams of the garment fabric. I bave not used it but this appears to be aa
Iron-on piece with the sticky side out and the ~avellng~
are applied to lt. Do iDqulre at the notions counter Ia a
variety or department store.-POLLY
DEAR POLLY-One of my Pet Peeves is to open a new
pattern and find most of the pieces so wadded into the
envelope that they are almost beyond use. Also I hate
buttons put on cards with staples that almost require a
·
can opener to get them off.-MRS. B. A. H.
DEAR POLLY-I never throw away a Styrofoam-type
egg carton . but cut off the
tops and use the bottoms
for flats for starting vegetable and flower s e e d s.
· With a pencil point, I runch
a hole in the bottom o each
cup for drainage, fill with
dirt and plant one seed in
. each cup. When the plants
come up there is no sep- ""'
arating to do until ready
for transplanting in the
ground outside.-JACQUELINE
DEAR POLLY-Recently my 7-year-old was going to
spend a few days with her cousin. Not having a small
suitcase, I was looking for a suitable box for h.er clothes
and spotted our picnic basket. This worked perfectly, was
a great substitute for a suitcase and was easy to carry,
too.-MRS. L. S.

· 4' lriou"'aa• 1nd dour.

'.
,•

By POLLY CRAMER

DEAR POLLY-Sandy's problem with iron-on patches
not sticking after a few washings could be caused by not
enough heat being applied to insure a good bond between
the two fabrics. Use a hot iron (no steam I, keep it moving in a small circle over the patch and concentrate on
the edges. I assume she rounds the c~rners as th~ dlreclions say on most packages. If afraid of scorchmg the
garment, use a press cloth over the area with the patch.
I test the bond by trying to lift the edges with a fingernail
and if they are not completely bonded I go over them with
the iron until they are. I find s~ch patches usually outwear the garment-MRS. T. R
DEAR POLLY-If Sandy still finds it impossible to keep
iron-on
patches in place on her son's trousers I suggest
WEDNESDAY
that
she
put a patch on the outside and another. on the
WHITE ROSE Lodge, noon .
inside
and
these will last through many washings-ALICE
Wednesday at the American
Legion Hall, Luncheon with
~~r··"~~;~\ti;J:~:';mm;·:, · ,: ;·~@~(\t{ Po II)'' s, P. rob Iem· ffu.'t&lt;=~mm~~H':I:t""vmur:
new members to be welcomed.
DEAR,POLLY-My husband has som~ almost-new·~:
i¥ part-wool, part-polyester pants with holes in them ;:'
:~ made by ashes _falling. I know how to rewea.ve soft- !0
:1 textured matenals but do not know where to begm 1n.)
;r; with these hard-textured ones.-MRS. R. E. 0 .
. 1,;

.......

:...... ....

.

BETrY CANARY

Mother Dials, Clan Gathers
""•,

By BETTY CANARY

done some 'thinking about The Telephone Syndrome as
1t affects m~n. chtldren and women . I'd like to say 1 can
give you some tips on how to be alone with your teletelephone.
phone.
But I'll level with you. Nothing works .
When a woman listens for the dial tone, little kids who
Chainin~
people to bedposts is against the law.
have been engrossed for hours with papers dolls and
Pretendmg you are real!~ calling the reformatory and
roller skates suddenly want cookies.
Babies awaken from naps. Teenagers who have been arrangmg to have them picked up in five minutes only
works once.
·
unavailable for weeks appear.
Waiting to make calls until you are at the supermarket
Fathers wander in and stand mutely before her with
an empty coffee cup or an unironed shirt. Or, they rum- costs money and, besides, they'll soon discover you and
mage through kitchen cupboards looking for an old bottle start_ hanging around o,utside the phone booth.
Gomg to a ne1ghbor s house to make calls while she
opener that came with their army messkit- the one they
makes
calls from your house only means you'll have
haven't seen in 25 years and need right now.
hovering about you.
strangers
The reason they appear is that when mother picks up
I ~ave personally tried ~verything from offering a trip
a telephone, they believe she is abandoning them, shut! n~ them out of her life. !This feeling never surfaces to Disneyland to threatemng all-out war. Nothing works.
I have it on ~ood authority that the song "All 1 Do Is
when she is scouring the bathroom or cleaning out the
Dream of You" was written by a woman who wanted
garage.\
.
the telephone .
·'
Eecause I have lots of telephone experience I have a little privacy on:NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
If you want to be elbow-deep in people, pick up a

POLLY'S POINTERS

AMERICAN LEGION
Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post
263, 7 p.m. home of Mrs.
Virginia DeLegal.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, noon Wednesday at
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.
'
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday night at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

MAN·SIZE E~~~t':I

.

Now lloods pay a bollS a1 maturit~

Rutland, Middleport, and
Bradbury. The program will be
conducted from 7 to 8:30 p. m.
Cost will be 25 cents per session
with supplies to.be fUrnished by
the student.
Mrs. Vaughan discussed the
PTA's role in health education
and solicited support of local
ll!lits in securing information
for a VD survey. The Ohio
Congress of Parents and
Teachers working with the
Ohio
Department of Health is
sophomore through senior
years. However, work can be conducting t)le survey to

Need Firm Attachment

CtiH It, ala wily

Tala! stock in America.

Elected to the nominating nounced and units were uked
committee were Mrs. Roy to send at least two ,delegates.
Hannum, Eastern District, and Certificates will be · presen·ted
Mrs. Robert Dugan, Meigs for teacher enrollment and to
Local District, who will serve units having all officers at the
with Mrs. Clarence Norton of conference.
the Southern District, named
Units were. requested to
by the executive committee. amend their by-laws to coinThe .new slate of.officers will be cide with recent slate by-Jaw
presented at the April 6 changes. The family planning
meeting of County Council to service office which opened
be held at Riverview. Mrs. last week in the Meigs County
Harold Lohse, district director, . courthouse was noted.
will install the new officers.
Represented at the council
Mrs . Norton and Mrs. meeting were the units of
Vaughan were appointed to the Bradbury, Middleport, Racine,
budget committee, and Mrs. Salem Center and Syracuse.
Howard Ervin, Mrs. Jack Mrs . Dale Walburn, was acting
Follrod and Mrs. Vaughan will secretary , and closed the
compose new stand4Jg rules. meeting with a prayer entitled
The spring district con- "A Day to Remember. "
ferences to be held on April 29 Refreshments were served by
in Jackson County was an- the host unit.

grades of Salem Center, ~·":··.w~~ · ;;;· ..z:·J,&gt;;,,;:·r:!'&gt;\t\~~~~'!!#.OS~· .... ···· ·- ·-·-~w.;,:~m.:.o.:~•:e: ;mJJC.JJL ,JCJ@.&lt;::"UJU.C.ot:=.;. ;u:e W~

Iron-on Patches

•

--I-- ·"' .,

~
~ ~~..~,~·~

J

'

~nvenient
:rer~s.

Your money gets a chance to pile
up because the amount you

determine community mentioning the PTA's role in
awareness of the diseases, securing bookmobile services
facilities available for treat- in the county.
ment, and information
It was noted that Meigs
programs underway.
County · now has 1,143 PTA
The position of elementary, · members. The deadline for
junior· high and senior high securing memberships is,
schools on VD education is to March 15. Mrs. Vaughan noted
be determined. It w_as noted that she has blanks available
that films are available.
for units which are out. Each
Reports on the matter are to imil was asked to advise Mrs.
be made to Mrs. Vaughan at an Vaughan of the number of
executive committee meeting subscriptions sold to the Ohio
to be held aiiO a.m. on Mardi Parents-Teacher Magazine
23 at the Vaughan home in and the National PTA
Middleport.
Magazine.
Honored were Mrs. William
Downie, Council president
The "right to read" activities
from 1959 to 1962; Mrs. Harqid in the county were noted and it
Sauer, 1962 through 64; and was . announced that · WedMrs.. Robert Wood . Each -nesday night ·a seminar on the
· recalled highlights of her"term art of story telling will be held
of office, with Mrs. Sauer . at the Salisbury school.

..

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Garden
Club, 7:30 Mond~y night, home
of Mrs. H. J. Russell, with Miss
Hallie Zerkle and Mrs. Rita .
Hamm as · co-hostesses.
Program on "The Romance of
Lucy Audubon" by Mrs. Sibley
Slack. Members to take tray
favors for hospitals.
THEODORUS Council 17,
Daughters of America, 7:30
Monday night at the IOOF
Hall, Charter to be draped for
Jessie Sisson. Valentine J)arty
with refreshments of cookies
and coffee.
- ~EROYGARDEN Club,
7:30'f. m, Mopday, home of
Mrs. L. C. Karl' ' With Mrs.
Howard Nolan assisting
hostess. For roll call members
·are to display a valentine
arrangement.
SALEM C~nter PTA, 7:30
Monday at school. Founders'
Day program by third graders
and Mrs. Ruby Vaughan,
Middleport, guest spealier.
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
Monday, 8 p.m. at temple.
IniUation for two candidates,
February birthdays will he
honl)fed.
POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club Directors meeUng,
7jl.m. Monday at the Fanner's
Bank and Savings Co.
. MEIGS COUNT'(, Order of
DeMolay, regular meeting,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at ·Middle"p-ort Maaonic Temple.
MEIGS HOSPITAL Commission annual '!leeting, 7:30
p.m. Monday, at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
TUESDAY
AMATEUR GARDEN Club
regular meeting, 8 p.m.
Wednesdjly, Columbia Gaa Co.
office, Middleport, with "Bring
a LitUe Spice in Your Life" aa
program topic,
EASTERN BAND Boosters,
8 p.m. Tuesday at high school.
Everyone welcome.
SYRACUSE PTA, Tuesday,
7:30p.m.; panel discussion by
teachers, bab~~r_!Provlded.
TUESDAY
WSCS, Wesleyan United
Methndlst Church, Racine,
special meeting, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m." at church annex, ·
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
seta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15
p.m. Tuesday at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room. Cultural program
on drlma to be giv~n by Mrs.
Iris Payne. Ml"s. Dorill Ewing,
Mrs. Annie Chapman, and Mrs.
Donna Nese will be hostesaes,

Hard Work Paid Jones

are you

accepted for competition only
from schools where there is an
active.E''I'A.
The blue ribbon winners in
each local unit will compete at
councillevel and the first place
winners there will compete at
the district level. Poems and
essays are to be sent to Mrs. C.
E. Blakeslee, Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy, for council judging.
Reports were given on art
class in Pomeroy.,' and ones
being organized in Middleport
and Chester. Mrs. Bernard
Fultz . is chairman for the
program at Middleport which
is .scheduled to get underway
Tuesday. Included'- in the
program to be taught by Mrs.
Charles ·Lewis, Meigs High
School art instructor, will be
the first through the sixth

I

?_~«.&lt;:~:&gt;.;:W,$==t»m:&gt;m:&gt;&gt;.:~~~*.~"(.:Wm«&lt;i:&gt;ito •• :~

COU.EGE

Scores

The scholarship, cultural
arts and health education
programs were reviewed, and
past presidents were honored,
by the Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers Thurs-.
day night .at Southern High
SchooL Again this year the council
will award a $200 scholarship
renewableforasecondyear, t.o
a senior at one of the three
Meigs County high schools.
Mrs. Richard Vaughan,
president, reported that information on the scholarships
and how to apply has been
forwarded to each high school.
She alsO noted that all local
units with the exception o{ one
have contributed toward the
scholarship.
March 25 was set as the
deadline for the cultural arts
contest to be concluded in
Meigs County. Entries will be
judged in the areas of art with
categories in graphics, oil,
water color, collages, and
sculpture; music, poetry, and
eassay. No theme will be
carried out this year.
Age categories are primary,
kindergarten through third;
elementary, fourth through
sixth; junior high, seventh
._through ninth., and senior high,

Social Calendar

GIVEMTHE
UNnED

119·94 by Bulls

•••

A 1!eekly feature of Miligs
County Garden Club membe~s.

GREAT DECISIONS 2

Royals Popped

PTA Programs Reviewed by Council

REID' BROS.·

Ohio

Complete Shine
Gloss Is stUI the big look
In make-ups. And that gloss
goes on the lips, cheeks and
eyes for a complete shine.

Mother Wants Children Back

N

A California mother has
launched a campaign to locate
five of her missing children,
which she says were whisked·
away from her four years ago
in Nevada by their father.
Directing letters to all
newspapers in the country,
Mrs. Dorothy Flesher enclosed
the accompanying picture o(
ali her family, and wrote :
"I would very much like to
find my five small children, of
whom I have ~. and
,thQUght that n\aYbe "editors Will
print this open letter to my son
Billy, age 11. The picture was
. taken several years ago, but
they all resemble each other.
If any of these chlldren are
located, I can be contacted at
the addreaa listed below. I
believe they have a stepmother named Guillermina,
who speaks only Spanish. Their
Caucasian father's name is
Rober\ W. Flesher.
Her letter to Billy:
Dear BWy,
ram writing you this letter
because you are the eldest of
my five. By now you are 11

i.-others and sisters Manuel,
Richard, Abbie, Carmellta,
Venida, Maria and Roberta?
They mlaa you, June, Patty,
Lupita and Rafael as I do- We
love you ail very much!
Since I have custody of all of
you, I hope and pray my efforts
will not be In vain, Somewhere,
' somehow I'll find you.
My address is: Dorothy
'f Flesher, 225 East Barnett
,, Street, Ventura, California
~".;,\:~··. " 93001,Phone:, (~) ~- .
-1
·• , ••. "Much love from y~,Mom.

l

years old - four years have
passed and I am so lonely.
I have contacted many
people to help in my search and am sending this letter ali
over the United States and a
few to Mexico In the hope of
finding you!
Your grandfather and
grandmother live In Sand
Point, Idaho.
Iii March of 1967, your father ·
ran away from Nevada with ali
of you -and I am wondering if
you still remember your

MR. W. PQN)Jl!l) '04&amp;

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS.

IOU. f1F /iUI&amp; F!NNIO'"-

WE SV&amp;Gm'111 TIW"H~
COME INAND 6fl' A PRi-

TDO COHPIJ(Atlq Hi~~~

AI'PIIOV!P AUil1 c.QIV.I.IIIIIIP, ·

..
"THEN

'

~I&amp;WA9A8LE

10SKOf'~NPAS

A CASH 9VYER.

'

NOW H~ eEJ.IINP nti

WHEEL OF HIS NEW CAR.
AND IS HE HAPPY!

4 cups shredded cabbage

cup beef broth
"" teaspoon salt
1/16 teaspoon ground red
pepper
% tablespoons shredded
coconut
Mix o n i o n flakes with
water : let stand 10 minutes
to rehydrate. In a medium
skillet, h e a 1 oil. Add re·
hydrated onion flakes ,' tomato and ginger; cook 3 to
5 minutes. Add shredded
cabbage, beef broth, salt and
red pepper. Cover and simmer 12 to 15 minutes or until
cabbage is tender ; stirring
occasionally. Add shredded
coconut. Serve with rice and
meat. Makes ·4 portions.
~~

Legal holidays are known
as bank holidays in Great
Britain.

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System
Oo Frldaya Oar Drive-In Window iB
Open I a.m. to 7 p.m., (Coatinacn•ly).
$%0,001 Maximum lnluraoce
.For EadfDepoliter

NOTICE

ANYWAY YOU. lOOK AT ITI

MY OFFICE WILL BE
CLOSED FROM
FEBRUARY 11, 1972
TO MARCH 9~ 19'12.

BAKER'S

J. J. DAVIS, M.D.

2-HOUR
CLEANING

'

Spicy,RichCongo
Cabbage /)ish

By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Food Editor
'
Cabbage is thought to be
one of the oldest forms of
vegetable grown . It is mentioned as far back as 4,000
years ago. Spices and herbs
a I s o are ancients by our
{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
earthly calendar. Put cabYou will receive a doUar If PoUy uses your favorite bage and some tropical
homemaking idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or &amp;olatloo spices together and you have
a special treat. For examto a prtblem. Write PoUy In care of tills aewspaper.
ple, Africans are noted for
their use of tropical spices
such as cloves, cinnamon,
~~-':'.::.:.::&gt;.~~-e:m·~~·""'W.~~~w.:;w;·;W;::,::.:.
cardamon, ginger, sesame
seeds and thyme. Eating and
SONGFEST SET
cooking what the land offers
Mrs. Roger Dillon and Mr. and
An
old-fashioned
gospel
..
is a way of African life. An
Mrs. Robert Hawk for layette ·
songfest
has
been
planned
for
African example of spicing a
gifts. The hospitalization of
Mrs. Evelyn Wood was -noted Sunday at 7:30 p.m. at the vegetable such as cabbage
Coolville United Metho(list may include seasoning with
and a gift will be sent.
onion flakes, g in g e r and
Arrangements were made Church. Among the featured ground red pepper (from the
for the Circle members to singers will . be the Blaseli New World). Shredded coprepare food for the minister Brothers. The Rev. Roy Rose, conut a d d s richness an,d
and his wife who come in on pastor, invites other area crunch to this different treatFriday nights from the Ken- groups to sing. The public Is ment of an old mealtime
friend.
lucky ChrisUan College. Mrs. welcome.
White Is a Winner
CONGO CABBAGE
Frarices Hysell and Mrs.
(Cabbage
with Coconut)
Madeline Painter prepared the
Elegance and simplicity
food the first week, and Mrs. come together in a new white '~• cup onion flakes
Eleanor Hoover and Mrs. Vada spring coat. It's luxurious in 3 tablespoons water
Hazelton prepared it last cashll)ere, but in any other %teispoons oll
Iabrie white stili steals the I small sliced tomato·
weekend,
shoW.
"'• teaspoon ground «Inger
A special valentine proje&lt;;t
will be carried out this week .
Devotions during the past
few weeks have included ''A
City Man Flnda Salvation," by
Mrs. Painteri "The Lost
Christ" by Mrs. Norma
Russell, and "Prayer" by
Mrs, Tressle Hendricks,
president.
·
Making quills for the needy
and fire victims take up ,most
of the ·day of U1c BradfOrd
Church women who meet there
every Tuesday .

. I

1~:0!1!·

'

.

Is The Place To Get Real Values
IN HOME1FURNISHINGS

�.-

.''

4- Tile Dilly Semtinel, Middleport-Pomeroy: o., Feb. 7,lim
'

~Ugh

Three Rookie&amp;

School

Scores

Signed by Reds

Trade War a Frightening ~rospect

BY RlawtD C. LONGWOR'Ill
and. agreed to limit Its textile exports fo the United Statea. yen to share thedollar'sburdenofsupportinllworldtllde. And 1
BASKETBALL SCORES
Ualtad Preu 1D1eraat14u1
European natiOIIB revalued by smaller •IIIIWIJits and agreed to u.s: Presidential Qlmmi.sllon recommended lllflollllloal on
Unltod ·Press lntirMIIOiial
"the eHmination of all barriers to Jnternati0118l.~.IIIII capilli
Middletown 88 Lima Senior 87 · Seldom hasa criJIB.been resolved so fut. And seldom has that make other trade concessions.
Greenville .59 Tlpp Clly 55
NSO!ution left more questl0111 unanswered.
,
StW, the lssuu were far from seWed. There waa no guarantee movements within 25 yean."
Oaymont 79 St. Clairsville 78
When
Prellident
Nixon
announced
the
RolltJng
dollar
on
Aug.15
In
a
rePx-t·
for
the
Presidentl41
Coancll
on blternatiollll
that a trade war would not Rare later.
Coshocton 66 Mans.lleld
economic polley, Pe.ter G. Pete: son who wu ,.med Seeretary
last, and aatd an Imports Into the Unlted States must pay a 10 per
Madison 59
Lakeland 46 Newcomerstown
cent surd!arge, one Eiaropean banker called it "a bombsheil" · .In trade, Washington, B-Js and Tokyo all see ultngs !him- of Commerce Jan. '!1- said probie1111 for tl)e Unltad Slallll
4.1
own 1\'ay. Each has complaints against the others. Each has a · ""include the emergence of discriminatory tradln8 qreements
Indian Valley Soulh 39 Jewell· which the Coinmon Market "jual mlght dedde to tll'ow back."
More bluntly, Japanese Chamber of Comme~ President Sblgeo 'point.
Sclo 19
.
. abroad, the development by some of ClUJ' partnen ,II. e&amp;pa1
Orrville 68 Garaway 68
Nagano denounced It as "a declaration of (economic) war/'
Washington contends tluit Japan sets high tariffs and Import development P'ograms more aggressive than oun.. .a marked
Rlv..- View 83 Rlagewood 69
. 10 far.
Yet, jual four months later, there were Nb:on and French quotas, raises artiftcial barriers against U.S. farm imports, deterioration in Americall competitiveness aggraVIItad by I
74 Valley Forge 60
Ruddell, the Eastern Euclid
t-lormandy 62 Lakewood 55
discriminates aga!Dst American Investment and undercuts u.s. r&amp;pid rise in U.S. labor costs per unit of output." It II a strong
Iague's outstanc!lng pitcher Baptist Chrlsllan 78 Day1on
·
salesnen abroad by dumping low-priced goods in foreign summer of ills, ·
Christian 6J
1aat year, was IU, had a 2.52
Meanwhile
the
protectionists
of
ali
countries -fiWI)' c( them
Falls 60 .Cuyahoga
· : markets. Turning to Europe, Waahington charges that the
ERA and lltnick out 186 batters Olmsted
Helghls 57
Common Market's Common Agricultural Polley (CAP), which politicians whose constituents fear _that lmporta would de.troy
in lA lmlnga.
Rhodes 65 Brooklyn 6J
President
Georges
Pompidou,
amll1ng In the Azores over what keepa European food prices artificiaDy high, blocks U.S. !arm their jobs -call for restrictions. Thelt fears are ganllne,
Blaterlck posted a 13-10 Cleve. Heights 59 Brush 50
Nixon was to call "the moe! significant monetary agreement In exporta, whUe Ita preferential trade agreements with former
The free traders insist that no liation can el)lOri unlea _ltalllo
~rdanda.1.46ERA at 1bree Falrpor1 52 Beachwood 43
Kirtland 78 Cardinal 43
the
history of the world," Soon after, there was Japanese colonies In Africa shuts Alnerica out of traditional markets imports. The world's economies, they say, are so lnteriwlned In
Riven before he was recalled Cleve. S1. Edward 62 Glenville
Premier Eiaaku Sato Dli the lawn at San Clemente, Calif., talking there.
the "global village" that protectionism by one nation would bring
by the Reda at the end of the
54
.
about
"the
unshakeable
relationship
of
mutual
trust
~nd
InBedford
61
Independence
60
TIJe U.S. problem iB aggravated by mge defense expenditures damage to ali.
··
, _
season. He appeared In two Kens1on 77 Mentor 56
terdependence between... the U.S. and Japan."
The
immediate
crisiB
of
1970-71
is
over.
But
the
is8ue
ill
not
in
both
Europe
and
Asia,
Even
worse,
to
some
labor
unionists,
is
Cincinnati games.
Brecksville 53 Wickliffe 33
In
Brussels,
Washington
and
Tokyo,
businessmen
and
the tendency of Americ8n companies to shill manufacturing to · resolved.
Midvlew 70 Elyria Catholic 61
government
officials
slgbed
with
relief.
Most
agreed
with
Gregor
Zanesville
62
Col.
Marion
Saturday Boxes
low-wage areas abroad to escape mounting U.S. labor costs.
Franklin 43
r.
Purdy, president of the u.s. Chamber of Commerce In Japan, Because of this, many union leaders- traditionally free
Zanesville Rosecrans 77
Hannan Tnce (46)
Newark Catholic 66 that "there will alwaya.be competition, but as for a trade war- traders-are turning protectionist.
Caldwell 4·1-9; Lusher 4-1-9 ;
not in the foreseeable future, ihat is, not for the next three
Ours :1-0-6; Wells 7-1-15; Halley Sheridan 84 Philo 40
"We are no longer competing against foreign countries," says
. OPTOMETRIST
2-1 -5; Koehler 2-0-4. Totals 21-4- Ma~sville 71 New Lexington 70 years," But these same men said the 1!orllf had had a narrow Charles Pillard, president ot the International Brotherhood of
loll
46.
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
Trl -Valley
78 escape, The rules that have governed International trade for 25 Electrical Workers (lBEW). ''Our competitors are divisions of
Coat Grove (73)- Belville 6- Dresden
AT
NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
Crooksville
56
years will no longer do, they aald. A major task of the 197~ will domestic corporations."
1-13; Bloomfleldl-1-11; Wells 1Morgan
63
New
Concord
John
0-2; Easterly 5-J-13; Hall B-4·
POMEROY.
be to revamp these rules-perhaps to change them radically.
The Japanese have added insult to Injury by flooding the
Glenn 57
20; Hall 1-4-6; Gossett 1-0-2;
Is free trade, the postwar Ideal, still desirable, or even
relatively open American market, because European tariffs are
Donohue 1-0-2 and Christensen Miller 65 Albany Alexand..- 62
River
View
83
possible? If so, can it be promoted without ruining mllllona of too high.
1-2-4. Totals 29-15-73.
Lafayette Ridgewood 69 persons whose joba depend on protecUonlam? Is the world
By Quarters:
Skyvue
61 River 60 lot)
BrusseiB sees things differently. The Europeans say the
Hannan Trace .7 18 32 46
80 Guernsey monetary syatem stW doing the job It was created in i944 to do? American dollar crisis is Washington's own fault. Heavy U.S.
Coal Grove
15 34 52 73 Shenandoah
Catholic 56
And for Americans, accustomed to the Idea-now dead- that rnWtary and aid spending, in Vietnam and elsewhere, is the real
Cuyahoga
Falls -46 Newark 43
GALLIPO!,IS (591
U.S. buslneM runs the world, the question loomed: How to deal cause, they say, as is the mammoth U.S.Investment lilroad.
(o1)
Ferguson 5-0-10; Boone 0-0-0; Adena
106
Beallsville
74
with
the hostile world of the 197~.
Price 4-3-11 ; Snowden 8-4-20; Can1on Lincoln 78 Toledo
The Common Market says the barriers protecting Europe's
Noe 5-6-16; Sheets 1-0-2.
small,lnefficient fanners are necessary evils, both for social and
DeVilbls 46
TOTALS 2:1-1:1-59.
The
world
trade
system.IDitll recent ilmes rested largely
Can1on
Lehman
73
Jackson
-46
political reasons. The preferential agreements with the exPORTSMOUTH lnl Massillon 74 Canton Tlmken 68 U.S. pr~ence. To achieve currency stability, foreign colonies, II adds, means a humanitarian spreading of Europe's
Lovonguth 6-10-22; Gentry 5-1· Canton
McKinley 72 Youngs- currencies were pegged to the dollar, 11f)llch was pegged to gold.
11; Hopkins 2-0-4; Williamson
prosperity to the Tlllrd World. And Europeans point to America's
town Rayon 63
·
4-2-8; Daehler6-1-13; Spriggs0- Akron
American
dollars
flowed
out
to
Invest
In
foreign
countries
and
to
South
87
Canton
Aquinas
own protective tariffs and farm subaldlea.
1-1; McGlone 2-0·4. TOTALS 2573
rebulld the shilttered po~ar economies of Europe and Asia. At
ll-63.
"In trade," diplomats !Ike to say, ''we're ali sinners."
Canton South 60 Glenwood 34
By Quarters:
American
urging,
world
tariffs
dropped
stesdil;,·.
America
Tokyo is perhaps most sensitive to trade. Its recent agreement
Canton Hoover 70 OakGallipolis
15 12 16 16-59 Nor1h
wood
62
·
achieved
the
highest
wages
and
costs
in
the
world
and
called
it
Portsmouth
17 19 12 1~3
to limit textile exports to America is expected to cost 400,000
progress.
RHtrves- Portsmouth 59 Perry 66 Marflngton 65
Japanese
textile jobs.
S1ausburg 60 Nor1hwest 38
Gallipolis 44.
Sandy Valley 69 Malvern 57
Jt couldn 'I last. Almost unnoticed by Americana, two powerful
America accuses Japan of blocking majority control by U.S.
Tuslaw
47
East
Canton
41
"North ca. lila (93)- Justus 8- Lake 49 Tuscarawas Valley 48 rivals emerged. One was the European Common Market, six capitllinmanyJapaneseflrms. JapanretortathatAmericanbig
2-18; Crosswhite H-14; Clark Akron
Central Hower 74 Walsh nations-now expanded to l~sed In Brussels, with a population business must not take over Japanese Industry. America already
10-2-22; Stout 5-0-10; Brown 4-0Jewell 44
and total annusl exports greater than either the United States or dominates the Japanese instant coffee lnd~~S~rY-a precedent
8; Smith 1-0-:i; Glassburn 0-0-0;
St. Vlncenl 53 Akron Russia, The other was Japan, with an economy growing so fast- often cited to other Americans who want to Invest there.
Robinette 0-3-3; Weddington 0- Akron
Fireslone 32
1-l. Totals 32-14-78.
Barriers to farm Imports also are high in. Japan, because the
Springfield
Twp. 72 Akron 12 per cent each year:... that some analysts think it will become
Fodorai-Hocklng Wl Kenmore 57
ruling Liberal-Democratic Party depends on farmers for its
the world's richest nation.
Russell 4-0-8; Schloss 1-0-2;
This country's never had a problem so big that
Dover 58 Mansfield Malabar 54
Smith 1·1-3; Dllugherty 1-0-2; Siryker
Signs of competition appeared. Where once the world bought parliamentary majority.
62
Montpelier
60
could be solved so simply, All it takes is education.
Meek 3-3-9; Dunfee 4·0-8;
77 Hilltop 47
Heinz and Coca-Cola, strange new lrunds-Volkswagen and
With the Americans getting tougher, Japan looks toward
Mohorney 1-4-6; Springer 0-1-1 Anlwerp
Which means we need more money for
Edon 65 Fayette 55
and Harris 1-0-2. T'otals lt-9·41. Peltlsvllle
Olivetti,
Honda
and
Sony-began
to
capture
the
American
Europe,
which
is
external
n:ade
organization
(JETRO)
calls
better colleges. For stronger faculties. For many
64 Edgerton 59
By Ou1rters:
market.
"the
most
promlalng
export
market
In
the
future."
But
the
Defiance
76
Rossford
61
more students.
North Galli a 16 23 19 20--78
Heights 75 Garfield
The United Slates, hit by 6 per cent Inflation, foun~ itself being Japanese complain that Europe blocks Japanese llgPt consumer
Fed. Hocking 11 12 6 12-41 Shaker
We s_upport 40private, four-year colleges .
Heights 61
undersold
at
home
and
abroad
by
competition
who
(In
Europe)
goods
and
Insists
on
"escape
clauses"
(the
Europeans
call
them
Parma 70 East Cleve. Shaw 61
now educatmg over 4!;),000 students.
Symmes Valley CUI - Columbia
abolished
tariffs
among
themselves
but
kept
them
against
the
"safeguards")
In trade treaties to keep Japan from over87
Cleve.
Lutheran
Wilson 0-0-0; Roach 5-2-12;
Most of the youngsters we help could
West 56
outside world, or who (In Japan) exported goods produced by whelming European markets.
My..-s 7-5-19; Robinson 8-2-18 ; Sou1h
never get to college on·their own. BeCause most
Amherst 70 Keystone 68 lower-cost labor and ofteli subsidized by the government. The
Taylor 2-0-4; Lafon 1-1-3; Willis Brecksville
- ·53
Wickliffe
33
of
them come from families earning less than
4-2-10; Bonnell 4-0-8; Cron 5-0- Clearvlew 51 Rittman 48
balance
of
payments
deficit
skyrocketed
to
$13
billlon
in
qiearly,
the
old
order
needs
repairing.
Familiar
relations
have
U.S.
10; Dunfee 2-1 -5; Robinson 1-0$!;), 000 a year.
Pleasant 70 Warwood (W. 197l.Six mllllon U.S. workers were unemployed. Foreigners held changed and despite shortterm corrections-like the dollar
2; Quisenberry 1-0-2. Tolals, 40- Mt.
Va.J 68
We can stamp out a lot of igQC&gt;l1!ll~ with
IJ-93 ,
so many d~llars ~t,Jn •I :~ on Fort Knox,,!her~ would ~ IIJ&lt;! . devaluation and the Japanese textile agreement-much remains
·
Paden
"C (I{ '(W, Va.) 71
O"•h
elp
-····
" ..,,:'!.-: ,,. . .. , . ,
SoG!hwtstorn ll)l. - Dillon
Y
:tl
' ~2- - ··· ··• ····· · ··· little gold·to pay the bllh·
:
· ·to be done:
• ·
3-6-11) ~wls 3-3-9; Whitt 1-0-2; AIWoodsneld
"'
Se~d
a
cheek
:ON
nat~'ler
yoo
'
c
an
handle.
.
.
IIane~ 6A We!rlon (W.Va.) 51
Nixon acted with auch lruddennesa that !he Japamise billed his
Already, Japan questionS whether it should maintain its
Walk..- 1-0-2; Wood 2-1-5; and Amhers1
Brunswick 61
To UNCF, Dept. A, 55 East 52nd Street,
Hopkins, 0-1-1. Totals 10-11-ll. Mldvlew 76
Aug. IS announcement the "Nixon Shokku." The moves- ·breakneck growth rate or solve its crushing social problems71 Elyria Catholic 68
8y Quarters:
New York, N.Y. 10022.
Soulh Amherst 80 Keystone 68 . particularly the 10 per cent surc~rge-were so protectionist pollution, overcruwdting and the worst housing of any . major
Symmes Val. 27 18 22 2-3 Teays
Your contributions are tax deductible.
Valley 82 Westfall 62
Southwest..-n 4 3 11 .13-31 Upper Arlington 83 Col. that the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which nation. The United States asks whether it can keep providing a
the United States helped create In 1947 to police fair International nuclear umbrealla over Europe and Japan without the income
DeSales 57
Col. Whelslone . 56 Col. trade, denounced them as illegal.
from Its ollCWomlnant economic position, Protectionist voices
Westland 52
Trade
wars
loomed.
Had
Japan
and
the
Common
Market
rise
again In Congreaa. Other voices suggest that the United
Col. Central 74 Col. Wallerson
56
responded In kind, such ~far probably would have been declared. States should convert to the metric system-used by the rest of
Col. Mllflln 72 Col. Hartley 67
But America's rivals held their fire. Frantic negotiatiollll the world-or spend leaa on space and more on motorcycles.
Wes1 Jefferson 69 Mechanicended In a U.S. dollar devaluation of 8.6 per cent and wltlxlrawal
In Brussels, the Common Mai-ket Is beginning to rationalize its
sburg 62
Ohio
Deaf
75
St.
Rlla
52
of
the
Import
aurcharge,
Japan
revalued
Its
yen
upward
by
8
per
agriculture
and iB talking about modifying the . preferential
CIDCAGO (UPI)- The hot
Whitehall
73
Lancaster
71
(s)
cent-In effect, giving America a new 16 per cent trading edge- agreements when they come up for renewal In 1975.
Qlicago llulla dropped the Fairbanks 60 Dublin 40
Economists urge other major currencies, like the mark and
Clncinnllti Royala with a thud, Granville 92 Heath 67
,.
Franklin
Heights
75
Col.
119-tf, here Sunday .as Chet
Wehrle 59
strokes batk. He finished with
Wilker set a team record and Col.
St. Charles 53 Lucas 47
a six-uilder-Qi for a 279 total
personal career~~ with his Circleville 90 Ham lit on
with six others, including Rod
Township 47
66 point outpouring.
-Funseth,
who started the day
Oientangy
68
Col.
Academy
59
Wilker's previous high for a Centerburg 70 Danville 41
HONOLULU (UPI)-Young Oklahoma State, was reflec- from Jacksonville, Fla., said only one stroke back, and Lee
game was 44 points, 1!hich he Ketlerlng Alter 87 Fort
Grier Jones, the 1968 NCAA ting on his 31'. years on the pro the hole that cost him the Trevino.
Loramie 52
let two years ago against
The weather over the 7,122
Xenia 106 Dayton Colonel golf tiWst, sat with a bottle of tour.
tournament was the 14th In
Cincinnati in overtime.
White 83
yard
oceanside course at the .
soda pop in his hands after
"I can say tba t I really which he scored a bogey five
The win waathe lluUs' eighth St. Henry 99 Bradford 55
In their last. 11 contests and Clinton Massie 70 Waynesville winning the $200,000 Ha1!allan worked hard for 31'. years," he after being IS-under and a shot plush Walalae Country Club
63
Open Sunday in a sudden death told newsmen after pocketing ahead of Jones who was was cloudy and cool with slight
puahed the Royals Into an 18-37 Springfield
North 66 Fairborn playoff over chunky Bob the $40,000 winner's check.
breezes.
playing abead of him.
record.
Park Hills 38
Jones dropped a two'foot putt Murphy's second shot was In
Wilker 1&lt;0red 16 points In 'Springboro 80 Blanchester 72 Murphy.
Jones,
26,
from
Wichita,
for a par on the first playoff the sand trap and he miased his
the Orst ·period, 13 in the Fairborn Baker 62 Greenan 50
Twin
Valley
South
54
BrookKan.,
and
a
graduate
of
bole after ending the 72-hole third. His fourth hit the cup and
llecolld, 14ln the third and 13ln
ville 49
tournament with a 14-under- bounced Qllt.
the fourth. He also established
par 'l/4 -.rith Murplly. Mw-phy Picking up third place money
a new Bulls' record for field
Coli~
had just missed a three-footer waa Charles Coody who fash(10811 In one game -.rith 22,
East
and finished with a bogey on ioned a four'Uilder-par 68 for a
llllrpiSSing the old mark of 20 Syracuse 90 Jass~chusetts Mid. Tenn. 78 Wstrn Ky. 67
Geo. Wash. 48 Northestrn 47
the par-four ISth, which was
held by Bob Love.
85
Virginia Tech 82 Richmond 65 being used as the first playoff 275 total. MartY Fleckman of
Port Arthur, Tex., was right
Nate Archibald was high for Marshall 70 LIU 61
Centenary 85 So. Miss. 81
Rutgers 86 Boston U. 53
·
behind with 276 after carding a
Okla.
City
90 Loyola (La.J 89 hole. ·
Cincinnati with 24 pointlJ.
Brown 78 Columbia 72
Mldwost
The 15th had never given four-under~. Tied at 'l/8 were
Archibald acored u points Lafayette 111 Colgate 85
St. Louis 63 Wichita St. 60
Jones
any trouble during the Bob Ro8burg, John Schlee,
Saturday night as the Royala W. Virginia 84 Navy 81
Marquette79 De Paul61
Notre
Dllme
97
LaSalle
71
1!011 I home game, 133-132, in
St Bona at Det U (ppct ,, ralnl four days. But Murphy, who Bunky Henry," Jim Jamieson
Providence 77 Rhde lslnd 67
Purdue 84 Michigan 74
was seeking his first tour- and Curtis Sifford.
overtime over the Detroit Yale
91 Cornell 87
Ill. 68 Northwestern 59
nament win since the Hartford
Old Arnie Palmer
Plat0118.
.
Penn 86 Dartmouth 66
Kansas St. 69 Missouri 67
Penn
St.
63
Grglwn
(
DC)
62
Open
In
1970,
had
a
bogey
and
Arnold Palmer, almost look·
Archibald aank 23 of 24 free
Ohio U. SO Wstrn Mich . 79
Holy Cross 81 Seton Hall 79
Ohio
St.
79
Wisconsin
69
three
pars
on
that
eventful
lhrowa and added II baskets Princeton
lng
the Arnie of old, trieq to ~t
91 Harvard 66
Indiana
83
Mich.
St.
69
bole.
Jones
had
two
birdies
and
and 11 assists In the game.
on one of his patented charges
Army 73 St. John's (NY) 70
Bwlng Grn 77 Miami (0) 75
Canlslus 88 Manhattan 86
two
pars.
by firing five birdies on h1B first
Nrthrn 11177 Kent St. 65
South
Xavier (OJ 77 Dayton 66
Murphy, a cigar-,smoklng pro nine holes, alter beihg eight
Maryland 77 Duke 58
Iowa St. 84 Kansas 83
MIMesota
53 Iowa 52
Davidson 77 Citadel 70
Toledo 89 Cincinnati 87 ol
Kentucky 85 Vndrbit 80 ot
Akron 92 Cen. Mich. 64
Louisville 92 Drake 75
· Southwest
Georgia 74 Florida 6J
SMU 74 Baylor 70
Tennessee 76 Auburn 67
Everybcxly wants to save money . -That extra ~ % ,payable as a
Arkansas 103 Rice 95
W&amp;M 73 Pitt 68
Unfortunately,
most of us seem
bonus at matunty, applies to all
S. Carolina 62 Clemson 58
TCU 88 Texas 75
to
have
a
rough
time
actually
Bond_s issued.since june I, 1970
Wake Forest 57 Temple 51
Tex. A&amp;M 68 Tex Tech 63
doing
it.
We
start,
then
we
stop.
.
.. wnh a comparable improvement
Virginia 69 N.C. St. 68
Tex IAri.J 90 Ab. Chrstn 86
The
money
never
~iies
up.
·
for
ail older Bonds.
Alabama 77 Miss. St. 71
N. Mex. St. 102 Utah St. 92
ThC: Payroll Savmgs Plan is the
join the Payroll Savings Plan
Murray St. 96 Austin Peay 67 Brg Yn 57 Tex-EI Paso 53 2ot
easy way to start saving; the
~ where you wor~. It's~ great. way
LSU 67 Mississippi 66
Oral Rob 126 Oalethrpe 93
Tulane 77 Denver 69
painless way to keep savmg.
to make today s good mtcnt1ons
Oklahoma 78 COlorado 65

Green Thumb

01!10 HIGH SCHOOL '

CINCINNATI (UPI) ~ The
Clnclanatl Reda announced
today Jobn Jackion, Mike
Jluddell and Ste"' lllateric,
roakle P!teher~ at the 1bree
Rlftn club in the Easte111_
League last season, have
1118ned 1m contracts. •
· The Reda have reached
agreeinent with 18 of 38 players

Notes.

..
Prelude to Spring
ByMRS.ANDREWCROSS
BelldoftbeRiverGardeaCJab
ming. The
·
Sp"'ftniB
t,u,.; co
!
firstfewweelr$ofthenew yearare the
weeks of a gardener's dream. While waiting impatiently for the
msllmail to Iring the first &amp;eel! catalogs, sbe pores ,ovl!l' gardening books, reads the gardening maga$es, l\nd builds up a lot
of knowledge to use 118 soon aa spring brings her the opportunity.
The catalogs come, And what a temptation they are!· Each
glowing picture repre8ellis new possibilities. 'I1iis is the lime for
the~ to ·awak\!11 to realities and recognize the size of the
garden she has planned. She must be strict with herself, ot her
garden will overflow lis boiDidaries and give her additional
pro!llemsofaummercarewhentheweatheriBhotandshewants
to relax.
If you are ambitious, try i!fO\VIJ!g some of your plants either
Indoors or In a ~Ollie. Petunlaa, one of most people's
favorites, can be started the last of February, Most other flower
&amp;eel! may be planted Indoors the middle of March.
The most up-IO&lt;Iate method fof aowlng seeda Indoors 1s to
usee potting soil. It Ia usually available where you buy aeeds,
ThiiiiOII holdll moisture well, prevents damping-off, dlaease, and
ill weed free.
Walt for the plant's true leaves to ...,..nd· betore traOS:

N. W. COMPTON, O.D.

pianting. Transplanting to another pot, to -.give it more room, is

advantageous.
Better gel your tools aharpened and your seeds ready.
Felruilry is always later than you think:
Although the calendar aays, "Spring,''
And birda sing every minute,
It im 't spring unless your heart
Removes th~ IJVlnter in it.

on

HELP

.

to

stat t salting away
some of your ·

.

.

3JH)OMS
NEW~

.FURNITURE
.'349.95
$35;00

Need a
. .,
real estate agen ..
who knOWS
a lot?

specify is automatically set aside
from your paycheck and used to
buy U.S. Savings Bonds.
\
You ac'tually salt away savings,

paycheck after paycheck.

' And now' there'S a bonus
interest rate on all U. S. Savings
Bonds-for E Bonds, 5!-i %
·when held to maturity of 5 years,
10 montho (4% the first year).

l)Qwn

:a.lanc;e On
_ __ .,._

'·MASON
-- -.
~

pay off tomorrow.

...

11.:, "" j
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Projects
Completed

Several projects have lieen
carried out by the Helping
Handa Missionary Circle of the
Bradford Church of ChriBt in
recent weeks.
The circle sent $10 to Peggy
Ruasell to pay on the mortgage
on the orphanage in Mexico,
and gave $20 to the church
benevolence fund . Sunday
school papers have been
collected for the Southeastern
Ohio Mental Health Center at
Athena with Mrs. Albert Roush
to deliver them on Valentine's
Day. A dinner honoring
members for perfect Sunday
school attendance was held
·Saturday night and several
shut-ins of the community have
been remembered with gifts
and visits over the past few
weeks.
,
Plans are being made by the
group to make stuffed animal
pillows for the children at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and a cominlttee has been
appointed to secure the
material and to check with the .
h~pital to find out what month .
the toys are to be delivered.
A contribution of $10 was
made on the cost of a
re!rigerator purchased by the .
adult class. Arrangements
have been made to make new
stage curtains for the church
and a !Jackdrop at the plano.
Read at ond of the meetings
were thank you notes from Mr,
and Mrs. Clifford Smith for a
quill given them as a Christmas gift, and fr!lm Mr. and

... flow IIlli ~. Powtrlul
14 hp lnCIOI' t.lcltM bigger
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We have all sizes in stock. Stop in or write tt-r

· prlu and literature.
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iY.~~-:~m~mr~:m~~~~ir:~~om.t.m~~~m~tt·%Mf.Jft;.'?&amp;J.fi\

DEAR MRS. R, E, 0.-A product Is being advertised
that Is used with ravelfogs from the seams of the garment fabric. I bave not used it but this appears to be aa
Iron-on piece with the sticky side out and the ~avellng~
are applied to lt. Do iDqulre at the notions counter Ia a
variety or department store.-POLLY
DEAR POLLY-One of my Pet Peeves is to open a new
pattern and find most of the pieces so wadded into the
envelope that they are almost beyond use. Also I hate
buttons put on cards with staples that almost require a
·
can opener to get them off.-MRS. B. A. H.
DEAR POLLY-I never throw away a Styrofoam-type
egg carton . but cut off the
tops and use the bottoms
for flats for starting vegetable and flower s e e d s.
· With a pencil point, I runch
a hole in the bottom o each
cup for drainage, fill with
dirt and plant one seed in
. each cup. When the plants
come up there is no sep- ""'
arating to do until ready
for transplanting in the
ground outside.-JACQUELINE
DEAR POLLY-Recently my 7-year-old was going to
spend a few days with her cousin. Not having a small
suitcase, I was looking for a suitable box for h.er clothes
and spotted our picnic basket. This worked perfectly, was
a great substitute for a suitcase and was easy to carry,
too.-MRS. L. S.

· 4' lriou"'aa• 1nd dour.

'.
,•

By POLLY CRAMER

DEAR POLLY-Sandy's problem with iron-on patches
not sticking after a few washings could be caused by not
enough heat being applied to insure a good bond between
the two fabrics. Use a hot iron (no steam I, keep it moving in a small circle over the patch and concentrate on
the edges. I assume she rounds the c~rners as th~ dlreclions say on most packages. If afraid of scorchmg the
garment, use a press cloth over the area with the patch.
I test the bond by trying to lift the edges with a fingernail
and if they are not completely bonded I go over them with
the iron until they are. I find s~ch patches usually outwear the garment-MRS. T. R
DEAR POLLY-If Sandy still finds it impossible to keep
iron-on
patches in place on her son's trousers I suggest
WEDNESDAY
that
she
put a patch on the outside and another. on the
WHITE ROSE Lodge, noon .
inside
and
these will last through many washings-ALICE
Wednesday at the American
Legion Hall, Luncheon with
~~r··"~~;~\ti;J:~:';mm;·:, · ,: ;·~@~(\t{ Po II)'' s, P. rob Iem· ffu.'t&lt;=~mm~~H':I:t""vmur:
new members to be welcomed.
DEAR,POLLY-My husband has som~ almost-new·~:
i¥ part-wool, part-polyester pants with holes in them ;:'
:~ made by ashes _falling. I know how to rewea.ve soft- !0
:1 textured matenals but do not know where to begm 1n.)
;r; with these hard-textured ones.-MRS. R. E. 0 .
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BETrY CANARY

Mother Dials, Clan Gathers
""•,

By BETTY CANARY

done some 'thinking about The Telephone Syndrome as
1t affects m~n. chtldren and women . I'd like to say 1 can
give you some tips on how to be alone with your teletelephone.
phone.
But I'll level with you. Nothing works .
When a woman listens for the dial tone, little kids who
Chainin~
people to bedposts is against the law.
have been engrossed for hours with papers dolls and
Pretendmg you are real!~ calling the reformatory and
roller skates suddenly want cookies.
Babies awaken from naps. Teenagers who have been arrangmg to have them picked up in five minutes only
works once.
·
unavailable for weeks appear.
Waiting to make calls until you are at the supermarket
Fathers wander in and stand mutely before her with
an empty coffee cup or an unironed shirt. Or, they rum- costs money and, besides, they'll soon discover you and
mage through kitchen cupboards looking for an old bottle start_ hanging around o,utside the phone booth.
Gomg to a ne1ghbor s house to make calls while she
opener that came with their army messkit- the one they
makes
calls from your house only means you'll have
haven't seen in 25 years and need right now.
hovering about you.
strangers
The reason they appear is that when mother picks up
I ~ave personally tried ~verything from offering a trip
a telephone, they believe she is abandoning them, shut! n~ them out of her life. !This feeling never surfaces to Disneyland to threatemng all-out war. Nothing works.
I have it on ~ood authority that the song "All 1 Do Is
when she is scouring the bathroom or cleaning out the
Dream of You" was written by a woman who wanted
garage.\
.
the telephone .
·'
Eecause I have lots of telephone experience I have a little privacy on:NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
If you want to be elbow-deep in people, pick up a

POLLY'S POINTERS

AMERICAN LEGION
Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post
263, 7 p.m. home of Mrs.
Virginia DeLegal.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, noon Wednesday at
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.
'
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday night at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

MAN·SIZE E~~~t':I

.

Now lloods pay a bollS a1 maturit~

Rutland, Middleport, and
Bradbury. The program will be
conducted from 7 to 8:30 p. m.
Cost will be 25 cents per session
with supplies to.be fUrnished by
the student.
Mrs. Vaughan discussed the
PTA's role in health education
and solicited support of local
ll!lits in securing information
for a VD survey. The Ohio
Congress of Parents and
Teachers working with the
Ohio
Department of Health is
sophomore through senior
years. However, work can be conducting t)le survey to

Need Firm Attachment

CtiH It, ala wily

Tala! stock in America.

Elected to the nominating nounced and units were uked
committee were Mrs. Roy to send at least two ,delegates.
Hannum, Eastern District, and Certificates will be · presen·ted
Mrs. Robert Dugan, Meigs for teacher enrollment and to
Local District, who will serve units having all officers at the
with Mrs. Clarence Norton of conference.
the Southern District, named
Units were. requested to
by the executive committee. amend their by-laws to coinThe .new slate of.officers will be cide with recent slate by-Jaw
presented at the April 6 changes. The family planning
meeting of County Council to service office which opened
be held at Riverview. Mrs. last week in the Meigs County
Harold Lohse, district director, . courthouse was noted.
will install the new officers.
Represented at the council
Mrs . Norton and Mrs. meeting were the units of
Vaughan were appointed to the Bradbury, Middleport, Racine,
budget committee, and Mrs. Salem Center and Syracuse.
Howard Ervin, Mrs. Jack Mrs . Dale Walburn, was acting
Follrod and Mrs. Vaughan will secretary , and closed the
compose new stand4Jg rules. meeting with a prayer entitled
The spring district con- "A Day to Remember. "
ferences to be held on April 29 Refreshments were served by
in Jackson County was an- the host unit.

grades of Salem Center, ~·":··.w~~ · ;;;· ..z:·J,&gt;;,,;:·r:!'&gt;\t\~~~~'!!#.OS~· .... ···· ·- ·-·-~w.;,:~m.:.o.:~•:e: ;mJJC.JJL ,JCJ@.&lt;::"UJU.C.ot:=.;. ;u:e W~

Iron-on Patches

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~nvenient
:rer~s.

Your money gets a chance to pile
up because the amount you

determine community mentioning the PTA's role in
awareness of the diseases, securing bookmobile services
facilities available for treat- in the county.
ment, and information
It was noted that Meigs
programs underway.
County · now has 1,143 PTA
The position of elementary, · members. The deadline for
junior· high and senior high securing memberships is,
schools on VD education is to March 15. Mrs. Vaughan noted
be determined. It w_as noted that she has blanks available
that films are available.
for units which are out. Each
Reports on the matter are to imil was asked to advise Mrs.
be made to Mrs. Vaughan at an Vaughan of the number of
executive committee meeting subscriptions sold to the Ohio
to be held aiiO a.m. on Mardi Parents-Teacher Magazine
23 at the Vaughan home in and the National PTA
Middleport.
Magazine.
Honored were Mrs. William
Downie, Council president
The "right to read" activities
from 1959 to 1962; Mrs. Harqid in the county were noted and it
Sauer, 1962 through 64; and was . announced that · WedMrs.. Robert Wood . Each -nesday night ·a seminar on the
· recalled highlights of her"term art of story telling will be held
of office, with Mrs. Sauer . at the Salisbury school.

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MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Garden
Club, 7:30 Mond~y night, home
of Mrs. H. J. Russell, with Miss
Hallie Zerkle and Mrs. Rita .
Hamm as · co-hostesses.
Program on "The Romance of
Lucy Audubon" by Mrs. Sibley
Slack. Members to take tray
favors for hospitals.
THEODORUS Council 17,
Daughters of America, 7:30
Monday night at the IOOF
Hall, Charter to be draped for
Jessie Sisson. Valentine J)arty
with refreshments of cookies
and coffee.
- ~EROYGARDEN Club,
7:30'f. m, Mopday, home of
Mrs. L. C. Karl' ' With Mrs.
Howard Nolan assisting
hostess. For roll call members
·are to display a valentine
arrangement.
SALEM C~nter PTA, 7:30
Monday at school. Founders'
Day program by third graders
and Mrs. Ruby Vaughan,
Middleport, guest spealier.
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
Monday, 8 p.m. at temple.
IniUation for two candidates,
February birthdays will he
honl)fed.
POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club Directors meeUng,
7jl.m. Monday at the Fanner's
Bank and Savings Co.
. MEIGS COUNT'(, Order of
DeMolay, regular meeting,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at ·Middle"p-ort Maaonic Temple.
MEIGS HOSPITAL Commission annual '!leeting, 7:30
p.m. Monday, at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
TUESDAY
AMATEUR GARDEN Club
regular meeting, 8 p.m.
Wednesdjly, Columbia Gaa Co.
office, Middleport, with "Bring
a LitUe Spice in Your Life" aa
program topic,
EASTERN BAND Boosters,
8 p.m. Tuesday at high school.
Everyone welcome.
SYRACUSE PTA, Tuesday,
7:30p.m.; panel discussion by
teachers, bab~~r_!Provlded.
TUESDAY
WSCS, Wesleyan United
Methndlst Church, Racine,
special meeting, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m." at church annex, ·
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
seta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15
p.m. Tuesday at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room. Cultural program
on drlma to be giv~n by Mrs.
Iris Payne. Ml"s. Dorill Ewing,
Mrs. Annie Chapman, and Mrs.
Donna Nese will be hostesaes,

Hard Work Paid Jones

are you

accepted for competition only
from schools where there is an
active.E''I'A.
The blue ribbon winners in
each local unit will compete at
councillevel and the first place
winners there will compete at
the district level. Poems and
essays are to be sent to Mrs. C.
E. Blakeslee, Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy, for council judging.
Reports were given on art
class in Pomeroy.,' and ones
being organized in Middleport
and Chester. Mrs. Bernard
Fultz . is chairman for the
program at Middleport which
is .scheduled to get underway
Tuesday. Included'- in the
program to be taught by Mrs.
Charles ·Lewis, Meigs High
School art instructor, will be
the first through the sixth

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COU.EGE

Scores

The scholarship, cultural
arts and health education
programs were reviewed, and
past presidents were honored,
by the Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers Thurs-.
day night .at Southern High
SchooL Again this year the council
will award a $200 scholarship
renewableforasecondyear, t.o
a senior at one of the three
Meigs County high schools.
Mrs. Richard Vaughan,
president, reported that information on the scholarships
and how to apply has been
forwarded to each high school.
She alsO noted that all local
units with the exception o{ one
have contributed toward the
scholarship.
March 25 was set as the
deadline for the cultural arts
contest to be concluded in
Meigs County. Entries will be
judged in the areas of art with
categories in graphics, oil,
water color, collages, and
sculpture; music, poetry, and
eassay. No theme will be
carried out this year.
Age categories are primary,
kindergarten through third;
elementary, fourth through
sixth; junior high, seventh
._through ninth., and senior high,

Social Calendar

GIVEMTHE
UNnED

119·94 by Bulls

•••

A 1!eekly feature of Miligs
County Garden Club membe~s.

GREAT DECISIONS 2

Royals Popped

PTA Programs Reviewed by Council

REID' BROS.·

Ohio

Complete Shine
Gloss Is stUI the big look
In make-ups. And that gloss
goes on the lips, cheeks and
eyes for a complete shine.

Mother Wants Children Back

N

A California mother has
launched a campaign to locate
five of her missing children,
which she says were whisked·
away from her four years ago
in Nevada by their father.
Directing letters to all
newspapers in the country,
Mrs. Dorothy Flesher enclosed
the accompanying picture o(
ali her family, and wrote :
"I would very much like to
find my five small children, of
whom I have ~. and
,thQUght that n\aYbe "editors Will
print this open letter to my son
Billy, age 11. The picture was
. taken several years ago, but
they all resemble each other.
If any of these chlldren are
located, I can be contacted at
the addreaa listed below. I
believe they have a stepmother named Guillermina,
who speaks only Spanish. Their
Caucasian father's name is
Rober\ W. Flesher.
Her letter to Billy:
Dear BWy,
ram writing you this letter
because you are the eldest of
my five. By now you are 11

i.-others and sisters Manuel,
Richard, Abbie, Carmellta,
Venida, Maria and Roberta?
They mlaa you, June, Patty,
Lupita and Rafael as I do- We
love you ail very much!
Since I have custody of all of
you, I hope and pray my efforts
will not be In vain, Somewhere,
' somehow I'll find you.
My address is: Dorothy
'f Flesher, 225 East Barnett
,, Street, Ventura, California
~".;,\:~··. " 93001,Phone:, (~) ~- .
-1
·• , ••. "Much love from y~,Mom.

l

years old - four years have
passed and I am so lonely.
I have contacted many
people to help in my search and am sending this letter ali
over the United States and a
few to Mexico In the hope of
finding you!
Your grandfather and
grandmother live In Sand
Point, Idaho.
Iii March of 1967, your father ·
ran away from Nevada with ali
of you -and I am wondering if
you still remember your

MR. W. PQN)Jl!l) '04&amp;

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS.

IOU. f1F /iUI&amp; F!NNIO'"-

WE SV&amp;Gm'111 TIW"H~
COME INAND 6fl' A PRi-

TDO COHPIJ(Atlq Hi~~~

AI'PIIOV!P AUil1 c.QIV.I.IIIIIIP, ·

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"THEN

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~I&amp;WA9A8LE

10SKOf'~NPAS

A CASH 9VYER.

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NOW H~ eEJ.IINP nti

WHEEL OF HIS NEW CAR.
AND IS HE HAPPY!

4 cups shredded cabbage

cup beef broth
"" teaspoon salt
1/16 teaspoon ground red
pepper
% tablespoons shredded
coconut
Mix o n i o n flakes with
water : let stand 10 minutes
to rehydrate. In a medium
skillet, h e a 1 oil. Add re·
hydrated onion flakes ,' tomato and ginger; cook 3 to
5 minutes. Add shredded
cabbage, beef broth, salt and
red pepper. Cover and simmer 12 to 15 minutes or until
cabbage is tender ; stirring
occasionally. Add shredded
coconut. Serve with rice and
meat. Makes ·4 portions.
~~

Legal holidays are known
as bank holidays in Great
Britain.

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System
Oo Frldaya Oar Drive-In Window iB
Open I a.m. to 7 p.m., (Coatinacn•ly).
$%0,001 Maximum lnluraoce
.For EadfDepoliter

NOTICE

ANYWAY YOU. lOOK AT ITI

MY OFFICE WILL BE
CLOSED FROM
FEBRUARY 11, 1972
TO MARCH 9~ 19'12.

BAKER'S

J. J. DAVIS, M.D.

2-HOUR
CLEANING

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Spicy,RichCongo
Cabbage /)ish

By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Food Editor
'
Cabbage is thought to be
one of the oldest forms of
vegetable grown . It is mentioned as far back as 4,000
years ago. Spices and herbs
a I s o are ancients by our
{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
earthly calendar. Put cabYou will receive a doUar If PoUy uses your favorite bage and some tropical
homemaking idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or &amp;olatloo spices together and you have
a special treat. For examto a prtblem. Write PoUy In care of tills aewspaper.
ple, Africans are noted for
their use of tropical spices
such as cloves, cinnamon,
~~-':'.::.:.::&gt;.~~-e:m·~~·""'W.~~~w.:;w;·;W;::,::.:.
cardamon, ginger, sesame
seeds and thyme. Eating and
SONGFEST SET
cooking what the land offers
Mrs. Roger Dillon and Mr. and
An
old-fashioned
gospel
..
is a way of African life. An
Mrs. Robert Hawk for layette ·
songfest
has
been
planned
for
African example of spicing a
gifts. The hospitalization of
Mrs. Evelyn Wood was -noted Sunday at 7:30 p.m. at the vegetable such as cabbage
Coolville United Metho(list may include seasoning with
and a gift will be sent.
onion flakes, g in g e r and
Arrangements were made Church. Among the featured ground red pepper (from the
for the Circle members to singers will . be the Blaseli New World). Shredded coprepare food for the minister Brothers. The Rev. Roy Rose, conut a d d s richness an,d
and his wife who come in on pastor, invites other area crunch to this different treatFriday nights from the Ken- groups to sing. The public Is ment of an old mealtime
friend.
lucky ChrisUan College. Mrs. welcome.
White Is a Winner
CONGO CABBAGE
Frarices Hysell and Mrs.
(Cabbage
with Coconut)
Madeline Painter prepared the
Elegance and simplicity
food the first week, and Mrs. come together in a new white '~• cup onion flakes
Eleanor Hoover and Mrs. Vada spring coat. It's luxurious in 3 tablespoons water
Hazelton prepared it last cashll)ere, but in any other %teispoons oll
Iabrie white stili steals the I small sliced tomato·
weekend,
shoW.
"'• teaspoon ground «Inger
A special valentine proje&lt;;t
will be carried out this week .
Devotions during the past
few weeks have included ''A
City Man Flnda Salvation," by
Mrs. Painteri "The Lost
Christ" by Mrs. Norma
Russell, and "Prayer" by
Mrs, Tressle Hendricks,
president.
·
Making quills for the needy
and fire victims take up ,most
of the ·day of U1c BradfOrd
Church women who meet there
every Tuesday .

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Is The Place To Get Real Values
IN HOME1FURNISHINGS

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6- The 0..11;· S•mtmel, Middlepori-Pometoy. o.. Feb. 7, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get R"esults!
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Deceased .

Notice Is her·eby g i ven tha t
John M . King , of Route 1.
Rutla nd . Ohio, has been duty

appointed Executor . of the '
Estate of William P. Grueser ,
deceased , tate of Me igs County,
Ohio .
Creditors are requi r ed to f ile
the ir c laims with sai d fiduciary
within fou r months .
Oa te d th is 18th da y of
JanJary 19 72 .
John C. Ba con

Probate Judge
(1)

2d, 31 I 21 7,

of said Coun ty

Jt

NOTICE

OFFICI~L

The Tow nShip Trust ees of
Chester T ownship will rece i "'e
sea ted b ids until 8:00 p .m ..

Februar y 11 , 1972 at which time
bids w i ll be opened , for one
dump truck , as follows : G .V .W .

of

2-4 ,000 lb .

or lar ger ; Proper

Wheelbas e for 7 x 9 dump bed, i
beam fron t axle 7,000 lbs . or
l arger . Frame Rei nforce m ent .
Heavy Duty Br akes .

1971 VOlKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN
S249l
Local 1 owner, new car trade in, 13,000 miles, automatiC
trans .. luggage rack , radio, chrome wheel covers, blue
co lor, blk . vinyl interior.
1970 CHEVEL LE SS396 CPE.
S2295
Green finish , blk., ~iny l roof, green vi ny l interior , new
wide oval tires, 4·speed trans ., power steering, radio. A
sweet hear1 of a buy.
1970 NOVA CHEVVY 114 DOOR
S2195
5,000 miles by loca l owner, p. steering, automatic trans .. 6
cyL engine, P. B., radio, white wall s, beautiful beige fini sh
&amp; blk. inter ior . Like new.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
~PMEROY,

Five Speed , Direc t in f ifth ,

OHIO

Synchr om esh
Transmission .
9.00 x 20 Ten Ply Tires with
Mud and Snow Tread on Rear.
7.00 Rims .
Two West Coas t Mirrors.
Cast Spok e Wheels

Notice

A MIRACLE Revival. de··
liverance lor the whole
man ; First Chu rch of God,
New Haven, W. Va .; George
Oiler, Evangelist, February
Dual Electr ic Windshiel d
~ , 1972, 7: 30 p . m . eac h
Wipers, variab le Speed &amp;
Washers .
evening .
Two Speed Rear Axle, 17,000
2·Htc
_.:....:
lbs . q_r larger .
Heavy Du l y Batter y
PART Dachshund and part
Heavy Du t y Oil Filter.
rabbit hound puppies to give
Fresh Air Heater &amp; Def ros ler .
away . Phone 992·6656.
In cre as ed Capacity Coo lin g
Front Tow Hook
2-6·3fp
Rear Tow Loop .
Heavy Duly Fron t &amp; Rear
HOLSTERING SERVICE .
Spri ng s with Auxil iary Spr in gs . UPcomplete
selection of fa brics
Cus to m Cab
and vinyl to choose from . Pick
Turn Si gna ls w ith Haz ard
up and delivery. Slate r
Switch &amp;. Marker L ights .
Power Steer ing .
Upholstering, Rt . 3, Pomeroy ,
DUMP BED
·
phone 991.3617 .
7 X 9, 19" Sides and 30" Head
2·3·30tp
·~nd Tail Ga te . Hole in Ta ilgat e
f or spreading ma teria ls.
WANT WORK at home ad·
Ha lt Cab Pro lecto r.
7" Hois t or large r.
dresslna and stuffing en ·
Mud Fla ps .
velopesf Rush self-stamped
B ed to be moun ted a nd
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36,
painted .
Albany, Ohi o, 45710.
The Board of =T rustee s
J.6.tfc

____

r eserves the ri ght to r ejec t any
or all bids.
Bidders a re re quested to
submit with t!leir bid tor th e
above equi pment a fu rther bid

for a 1965 International

11oq

Series Tru ck .
llf
WILLIS FROST, Clerk
II I 24, Jt 121 7. Jt
LEGAL NOTICE
DANNY

ELWOOD BOWER S,

whose la st known place of
-residence is 352 East Main
St r eet, Pomeroy , Ohio , is

hereby notified that on the 24th
day of Jllnuary, 1912 ROY A .
ROU SH fil ed his pet ition in the
Probate Cou rt of Meigs County,
Ohio to
adopt RO BERT

EUGENE

BO WERS and lor

chang.e ot name of sa id ch ild to
Robert Eugene Roush ; said
cause is set for hear ing at 10:01'1
a.m . on the 18th dey of Marc ~.
1972.

Roush , Petit ioner
J . B. O'Brien, Afforney
tor Petitioner .
I1I J I , ( 21 7, 14, 21.28 (31 66t
Roy

A.

WIN AT BRIDGE

QUICK EXIT
Connie Dierking of the
Cincinnati Royals accumulated six fouls In one quarter
In a game against Syracuse
In 1959.

FERTILIZER
SEED CORN

To You

WMP0/1390

7

. 85
• 8 72

+A Q JG
o!o K 1063
WEST

EAST
. Ql073
¥AIO

.K J62
¥ K654
• 7

+ 98542

oloJ 954
SOUTII

olo 72
(D)

• A94
• QJ93
+ K 103
o!o AQ8
Both vu lnerable
Wes t North East South

I N.T.
Pass

~N .T .

Pm;s

Pas!i

Pass
Opcn lng lead - · 2
B~

Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Jim : "Playe rs who use the
code word ARCH are apt to
be lucky."
Oswald : " Th e ' A' stand s
for Analyze the lead. The
'R' for Rev iew the biddi ng.
The 'C' for Cou nt your win ·
ner s and losers and the 'II '
stands for How can I make
or defeat thi s contr act depending un whether you are
declarer or defender."
Jim : " Today's hand is typi cal of ones s hown in old a uction brid ge books on play . Of
course . the auction contract
wou ld be one no-trump , but
in a uction the declarer would
still try to make t h ree in
order to score game . You got
c redit for everything yo u
1nade in auQtion .' '

Oswald : " West opens th e
Je uce of s ades. East plays

CARNIVAL
..)VII '71"U

~8

/

. '.

r '

&amp;

Savel

~OMIROY ··

JIC' W, C1rN11 1 M\ .
~-tft·1tl

A Hark-Back to Auction
NORTH

Order Now
~

ON YOUR DIAL

ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT .
overweight ladies, teens and
men interested in a Weight
Watchers ( Rl Cla ss in
Pomeroy write : Weight
Watchers (R), 1863 Sectlpn
Rd .. Cincinnati, Ohio 45237. ·
t0-3.tfc

the queen and . South prob·
ably holds off until the t hird
lead of the suit. This makes
no differe nce, Then So u t h
cas hes four diamonds and
notes that West shows out SAVE up to one half. Bring your
Sick TV to Chuck's TV shop
d Iead ·.,
on .t he sec
on
151 Butternut Ave. , Pom eroy.'
Th
.
,
J tm : ·· e auctiOn wnter
11 ·21·1fc
would Analyze the lead as
fourth best of West's longest
and stron gest suit. He would
note that West held · just one
diamond . Then he would exthat West would have
r.edlaina heart
or club i( he held
five ca rds in one of tho se
suits. Hence , analysis of the
lead a nd the di a mond play
showed that West had sta rted
Friday &amp; Saturday
wit h 4-4-1·1 di st ribution ."
Oswald : " That i s s till
Night, 10 Til2
pretty good reasoning today
. Music By
Therefore, when South pla yed
Red Stewart &amp;
clubs after cashing the diaThe Ambassadors
monds he would cas h his ace
and queen; lead the eight ;
finesse dummy 's 10.1'
~OS COT KOSMETICS and wigs
• for sale. Brown's . Phon e 992(NEWSPAPER ENTUPliSE ASSN .)
51 13.

DANCE

WHISPERING
PINES
NITE Q.UB

The bidt:ling ha s l&gt;t·en:
West
Nor th
East

Found

- --- .
Mobile Homes For Sale ·

'62 FALCON, good condition,
ph one 949-3221,
_ __ __ _ __.:..2:_:·2-61c

TEAFORD

:~,.';"i;~,,~nr;·3ohave"

'" the

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8TII5
Monday thru Saturday
E._
Main,
Pomeroy,
0. ,
L _606
_
_
___;_____.l

110 Methanic Stre~:.

pomeroy, Ohin

.

l SAW HER ARGUING

·Make reservations for your
private · parties, banquets. ,
special occasions.
tdeal for meeting ploce with or without kitchen
privileges.
tndtvtduot Catering
Will seal up to 150 people.

992-3975

Phone

lEW METER NJJO t5
100 EFFICIENT. .

Z-7
VOU'~I.

WWAT AIOUT

JLIST HAVE ·
Tllli INCREASE
WANT TO ·,'

Tlli ""'"
FIUIZE
~

T~AT'S WEIRDl

SSCON!&gt;

Mv· 0~ NATIONAL CRIME
PIUVENriON WEEK...

~NIIWI.L ~

992-5786

'/01 DON'T

1SKf- YOP.!O DRESS IS
f.!EARL'i SHRUNIZ -

I.OOKLIKE ·
YO'. '/0'

WT WE HAS A NICE
DRY ONE -B'/ A
5TRAN6E QUIIIlCIDEf.lCE.

HAit.J'T
SCRATCH IN'!!

\

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
·Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Ra.diator Specialist

BILL NELSON,992·:U57
TOM CROW, 992-2580

SMirH NELSON

MOTORS. INC.
Pomeroy

CALL
,
HILTON WOLFE, 949-3211
DALE DUTTON, 992·2534

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

Ph. 992-2174

ALL KINDS OF
GLASS
For Every Purpose
We specialire in auto glass ·
on the spot installation.
Mirrors - Table Tops - Plate
Glass. Small home repairs .'
screens . storm windows

606 E. Main

yOU APPRECIATE
M'f tiFFORTS TO MAINTAIN
THE. I"'Tii&lt;ORITY OF YOUR
EATER'f! _ __....

WINNIE

AUTO BODY

YOJI) 'THINK
WINNIE'D HAVE: NOR!:
5EN5E 'THAN TO KE:E:P
HIM OUT iV\0 HOURe!

537 High St.

Middleport, Ohio
Complete body repairs
and paintings, glass
installation.
free
loaner
cars
and
es·timates,
also
mechanical
repairs.
Phone 992-3793

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

FURNITURE

FREE ESTIMATE
Point Pleasant &amp; Mason
AUTO GLASS
AI Conard, Mgr.
Phone 304·77J.S710
Route 33
Mason, W. Va.

I HOPE

OOLONIAL

992-2094

repaired.

Stop In and See Our
'Floor Display.

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been O'DELL WH.EEL ollghment
cancelled?
Lost
your
located of Crossroads, Rt. 124.
operator's license? Call m.
Complete front end service,
1966.
June up and brake service.
Wheels balonced etec.
-----,_-.:_6·~15-tfc
Ironically.
AI!
work
Reasonoble
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED · guaranteed.
ra\es. Phone 992·3213.
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 4461·2/.lfc
4782, Ga!lipolis . John Russell,
Cfflner &amp; Operator.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
5·12·1fc
Complete Service
Phone 949·3821
SIG NS , posters, mail boxes and
Racine, Ohio
favorite saying ; hand let.
Crill
Bradford
tered; In your favorite style
,;\c~
s.l.tfc
Oa~id Hooker, [lt. 2. Albany; -~--:--__,_.._.::...:
Oh1o 45710 ( Pagetown) . ·
2.6.30tc SEWING MACHINES .. Repair
service, all mokes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. ·Free
Aufltorlzed
Singer Sale5 and
pipe inspection . Paul SteinService. We Sharpen Scissors. '
metz, phone 742·5864.
3·2'1·tfc
1-26-12tp

SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-11-tfc

-:----.....:....::

---

------

WINNIE~ 'THE 13005 ...
5HE CAN DO ANYTHINc:T 5HE LIKES!

GASOLINE ALLEY

ljOU,

Clovia!
Let me
explain
·.flbout
Chloe!

. ~ISTE~I""',"D~t ~ ~t:&gt;IICE

Ul.l.l

r-----••••••••••-•••••••••••••••••
1
·.
· ·
.
I
I

.

NEE

I

T;on

I:

I
I

I:
I

.

I

1

I

HE~:r~~~cJ!~;~R2D~- 6tc

-H-IG
-H
- .,-S-C_H_O_O_L_ S_E_N_t_ORS . JO:.~r~..~~tl:'a'R~c~~~.re~~:
Enlist now - slay home until
phone 247·2142..
after gradualion . Guaranteed
· H -Jtc
assignmenls to Eu rope. - - - - - - - - Korea. Hawaii, or selected COAL. limestone. EX"celslor
locations in the U.S. .See rour
Sa lt Works, E. Moln St.,
loca l Army rePresentative tor
Pomeroy: Phone 992·3891 .
!acts libo u! the 180. Da y
4.9.tfc
Delayed. Entry Program and
Ihe Army's , new pay ra ise. POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
For more rnfor mal10n call , , Porkvlew Kennels, Phone 992:
593·3022,
!443.
2·7·51c
8-IS.tlc

ACROSS
1. Portrayer
of the
Cowardly

DEXTRA i'
CASH?

\.

being built.

HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heigh.ts.
~~;~. Danny Thompson, 992·
7·18.tfc
--=·===-~
.
-~
SIX ROOM house. 133 Butternut
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Wadsworth Or.jve, Columbus.
Oh.
10, phone 237-4334.
11 -21·tfc

~q

-1': .

·'

_

GET-m ,.."WITIIA

rlan.. Ad
•wAmnn

tJJj

i

SELL YOUR DON'T NEE'DS

II

I·
I

1-

UNOOU8Te0L.V ALL

ARMED.

r

I
1I

- -

---

I
1I

Flash in the Pants
1
1
If you like the elegant
look, but don ·. want to •sttr·
render your Jove of panls.
here's the answer for those
spec ial evenings. Sensation al
t1 k
} ac ·satin pajama·t.vpe out·
fit s All vo u have to add lo
thi s look is a few delicate
flashes of rh i n~ s l ones a t. the
wri st. a nd throa! anrl vou ' re
all sri
I

1I
1
I
I
1
I

00N'T WAIT
MA IL yQuR
AD N0WI

A HAASH PRIIL.\1~- Alii&gt; A :&gt;TWENT Of

CONIICT5, TilE . ·
PR/16011 LADY

'

-------.,.-

MAIL TO:

SCiiOOL FOil.
PQI.IliCAL
DoUeLES,

II
I
1I
I
1I

Phone

•

INURUTE±

I l

-

ltl l .. 1.. ~1-

-~-·

j

...

II

WA'fW.
WITH TH I5.

(AAtwen tomo"ow),
I

Jumble" LYRIC fAYOit

1llf - f waL-lRAIIIfl&gt; lt5CHAII6f5,

1llf ~em~ atAricf

Saturd•y'•

31. Paging
Mr.
Wallach
33. Got you!
36. Skill
3?. Pronoun
U.Set a
wedding
date
4:1. Oil source
44. Mike
ecstatic
45. Priscilla's
beloved
46. Colored

IUTANI MIDLIY

An•w~r: llow daj!! fa I. nwn •pole~- IIOADL Y

1 SfiOULD 'miNK ~OV'D 6ET
BORED JUST SITTIN5 ON A
D06HOUSE ALL DA'I..

io LONGFEI.LOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dlllerent.

LJ9.~~~~--J
WHO COULD 6ET BORE.D fL't'IN6

THE STARSHIP ''ENTERPRISE "?

A CryploiJ'lm Qaotatlon

L Y Z W A L A E Z M X J S R S J 17 Z E K Y D L
ML

AXZQ

LS

VZ. - WEMZQEMTY

YSRRDJQZE
•
Saturday'a Cryptoquole: THE BEST Til ROW m' THE DICE
lS TO THROW THEM AWAY.-5CVTI'ISH P.ROVERB
(() 1!172 KitlliJo'cattP'C8 SyndicR.te,lnc.)

·

· PomOh'll'- 1I
-•11

"( ·------------------------~------~

PEINT

DAlLY CRYPTOQUOTE
- Here's how to work it: '-_;J:U_ _;__ _..J.,.:';;.-7w
i\ X Y D L B A A X R

I
TilE DAILY SVl\n'n.m
I
:a;,J,., .l.l1'111!.L 1

111 Court Sl
tI

TlJIWL, 10 THE
SU!ITE!fRAHeAM

1I
I

Address
C'oty

RfTUI!NS, ~A THE

1
1

Noone

34. Corridor
35. Surrounded
by
38. Detest
39. Watched
4LSymbol
ofwo·
manhood
42. Ancient
times

se. Jovial
&amp;flOUr OF HASSAII'S

1
I

I

"

~A~l!CT!I&gt;

I • Pri(ltl of ittr&lt;~5 must oppeor in ad ' duration
Ad mylt r•moi" vn(horag•d lor
• Sl minim.,., dtoro- .for 10 do)"t
orltu
1
I
•· f • U5«1 0ne Space f O,r ·E.ach Word .
I Wn"t e Your .Ad! PIease Pnn

Unocramble these four Jumblu,
one letter to each equue, to
form four ordinary worda.

U. Smell
2?. Eschew
lB. Put away
:ZB. "Peer

I

I
TO
I
QUALIFY FOR THIS SPECIAL LOW RATE:----....;...,;
II . AdmultO tfer go'od,for,oll!l
"
I
• Ad mullbtplottgbyonfndi't'idYOI
• Concellotionprivi~lwhtnrtl•
not o IMineu
\ uifl 0,_ obtoi.,.d
1
Selling for S7S or under

with
cargo
33. Celebes
ox

JJWJWIDY;-~::::'-!.c: :

composer,

II

ICASH WITH ORDER)

U. Decline
19. Join
2t. Complete
21. Loiter
Zl.
Cr!~i~~;V
U.M
star
:15. Table
scrap
Z6. King
(Sp.)
ZB. Be
· angry
30. Trlfm.
peter of
note
3Z. Heavy

-Bart

I

WORDS

DOWN
1. Glance
ukance
Z. Aetor
Alan
S.Gary
Cooper
film
classic
f, Scottish
explorer
5. Skin
disease of
dOl&amp;
8. Flstlc
name
?• Cutting
remarks
B. Longing
9. Dole out
11. Classified

11

PAlleN, THE G00P COM.\\155o'.Ri FINE!

DAYS

5. "Call
Me-"
lt, Rosalind
-,Met
opera star
IZ. Mrs.
Ralph
Kramden
11. Wellknown
soap
opera
15. Hooray!
18. Tease
~~...... -1?. Under'c
stand
II. Tiny
almond,
e.g.
21. uoliver

I

FAMILY
WANT· ~AD
r

1

IN TJ.I.O..T CAB,TR.ii.C'(;·I

II

WITH A
BARGAIN OFFER

Caii9BS·~t3otc I

NICE 2·Story home with full
basement, 2 lots, new forced
air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
Elementary School. Phone
992-7284 to see.
11 ·7·ffc

l SAW FIVE PEOPL-E

I

I

2-4·6tp _ sy_r_ac_u_se_._O_h io_._ _2--6-3tp

~~-~-

1

s;

1

N~~;~;~i~~~:.N~~~:~~~: I

WitH A MOTORIST. Sl-IT
WHEN WE PU~~EO OVER
10 SEE IF
WE COULD
HELP .. .

Hi;)', flt.RKER . 1WIT

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
IOOPCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
,
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly paymentos low as $6~ .00 for a family w!fh a bose
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 71/• Pet. annual
percen!age rate.

DRY WALL Finisher co n.
lractor, R. I. Dubbeld, phone
742-5825.
H-5fc

BrOker

. .

I~

5.55

240 Lincoln 51.
Midclleporl, O~io
Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete · Home
Maintenance Service the
year around. No matter what
your need. Complete roOf or
spouting repair. Interior or
exterior carpentry. 'Ceiling
tile and Paneling and Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.
Day Number 992-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.
742·3947
992 ·5~03
992·3898 . 742-4761
We are fully insured

'·

INTERIOR and ex terior
WE TAKE LISTINGS ANY·
painting. R. I. Dubbeld, phone
WHERE
IN
MEIGS
1969 DODGE Swinger, 2 doo r
742·5825.
COUNTY.
2-1·51c
ha rdtop. v .8. standard, sti lt
RACINE
under warranty - $975 ;
-----6 ROOMS - 3 bedrooms, bath,
phone 992·6048.
large living and din ing room s. Real Estate For Sale
2.4-6fc
N ea rly new gas furnac e.
1969 FORD F-1 00, Custom, V8 . . Garage. $10,500.00.
3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
COUNTRY HOME
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
360 cu . in ., automatic, will
consider trade. Phon e 992- 10 ACRES- 4 bedroom ran ch
Plains. All new with total
slyle, l'h baths. Hot water
6372.
electric and central air HARRISON'S TV ond .Anfenna
heat. 2 drilled wells . Fou n·
REAJ;lY·MIX CONCRETE de·
conditioning, bath and 'lo fully
2 J.6tc
Service. Phone 992-2522.
dation for 2nd house.
· carpeted, full basement.livered right to your prolect.
6-10-tfc
MIDDLEPORT
Fost and eosy . Free
gara~e in basement. See by - - - -8 ROOMS - 4 bedrooms. bath,
estimates . Phone 992·3284.
apporntment, phone 992-2196
breakfast nook . Forced air
For Sale
or 992·3585. Danny Thompson . BACKHOE AND DOZER wori ' Goegleln Reody.Mix Co..
furnace. Central air. Double
Middleport, Ohio.
,
Fmanclng available.
· Septic tanks Installed. George
garage. $14,500.00.
(8111) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
6·30·tfC .
12-30-tfc
RURAL
4·2S.ttc
Cleaner complete with at tachments, cordwlnder and NICE - 3 bedroom renovated
home. Bath, furna ce . Large
paint spray. Used but in like
new condition. Pay $34.45 . kit chen~ Garage, City water.
,
cash or budg·et plan available . sn .ooo.oo .
SYRACUSE
Phone 992-5641 .
2·1·6fC 4 ROOMS - Full basement, all
___::.
utilities. Leve l lot. Asking I
USED baby bed, playpen, baby
carr ier, car seat. girl 's winte r
I
coa t, size 8, Ca ll 985-4203,
dining roo m . Carpeted I
'-Y
[
Chester.
throughout . Ba se ment, I
2-4 3tp
carport.
MIDDLE PORT
I
I:
1952 FORD tractor. good con·
dition - $650 ; phone 992-6048.
LOTbedrooms.
bath, large
living3 and
dining
2-4-6fc CORNER
rooms , Garage. Near stores.
- - - - -s1o.ooo.oo.
eOI
HAY, mi xed. Phone Albany 698·
RIVER FRONTAGE
3290.
1200 FEET - For boat laun2-J.61p ching , ca mping , and home I
1
sti es. Drilled well.
BUYBEFORETHESPRING
B
TROPICAL
FISH , fancy
RUSH
U
guppies, angels and breeders,
Be llas and suppli es. Phone
992·5443.
12-30-tfc

TODAY'S QUESTION
Instruction
WALNUT STEREO, Modern
West bids tv.:o diamonds over
W
TRAC
TOR
TRA
ILE
R
ainu I Stereo-ra dio co m·
your one spade North and East
·
b'
·pass What do .you do now '
TRAINEES . NEEDED · y ou
malion, 4 speaker sound
can now tram to become an
sys tem, 4 spee&lt;i changer .
Answt:r Tomorrow
ov~ r the road dri ver or city
Balance $68 .70. Use our
drtver . Excellent earnings
budget term s. Call 992-7085.
y Dick Turner
after short training on our _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __:2:_:·2·6lc
lrucks with our dri ver in slructors lo help you . For COLONIAL Maple 'stereo-radio
application and in terv iew ,
AM·FM radio, .t speakers, 4
call 304·344·8843, or wrlle
speed automatic turntable.
· ·IOn, Balan ce $79 .32 . Use our
Sc hoo l sa fe 1y Dl VIS
United s~ste ms, Inc., c-o budge1 terms . Call 992-7085.
Terml n 1 ld 5517 Midi d
2-2-6tc
a
g.,
an --:--------=-=
Dr ive, Chllr leston , Wes t
.
Vi roinia. 25306 . Approved for NEW 1971 z,g .Zag Sewing
v . A. Benefi ls. Placement . Machme In original factory
assista nce available. OVer 700 ca rton . Zig -Zag to make
lransporlation companies
buttonholes, sew on buttons.
have hired ou r graduates .
monograms and make fan cy
designs with just the twis t of a
2_7_2fc
--------sing le·diaL Left in tay·away
and never been used. Will sell
· Help Wanted
for only S47 cash, or credit
terms avai lable. Phone 992RECE PTIONI ST, part time. H 564!.
&amp; R Block. Pomeroy, Ohio. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2:_:
·2·6tc
2-4-3fc

"OK! Hands behind your he~ds! l',m taking up a
,
little o1fice collection!"

S

- - -- - -

SR.

1964 VOLKSWAGEN, 2 door
seda n, good condition - S450 ;
phone 992-6048.
_ __ _ _ _ __.:..2:._-4-6tc

____

.

The
Orchid Room

.EXPERT
Whl!ll Alignment

&amp; PLUMBING 00.

------

Virgil B. ·

·'

&amp;OONSTRUCTION

12' - 14' · 24' - WiDE

Souoh GERMAN Shepherd dog . Black
and tan . If lost, ca ll 992·3906
ass
or conta ct Bob Moore ,
Pass
1•
Pass
1•
Syracuse.
Pass
2 N.T.
Pass
'
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:.2..:
·6·31c Tl RES, wheels, axles . springs
from new mobile hom e. 4 BEDROOM, bath &amp; half,
You, South, hold:
Phone 742·4427 .
utllily room , buil1-in kitchen,
•9ss s 4 • AQ 6 • A3z oloH Employment Wanted
_
_
__
__
2-6·31p
wall
to wall carpet &amp; garage. ·
What do yo u do no w?
HAVE welde r, will travel. Local Located •;, mile north of
A-Just bid three no· trump. welder wants welding jobs 50,000 BTU gas heater with
Eastern Hi~h School. House is
Your partner is showing l8 or Phone 992 527 1.
blower ;
Baer 's
Mkt. ,
almost fintshed and others

P

.
.ALL WEATHER ROOFING

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

-;;:-;:-;-;-::=:----:-_:2~·6· 3fc

SA'/ THAT?

'

,.

OLD · POCKET
knives 60X12, 2-bedroom, all-electric, '
espec ially Case XX . Al so air conditioned, 8x20 H. Porch
and aluminum awning ,
~ve olher .old knives to lrade
aluminum skirting, com 01' sell. Phone 992.2343.
plete ly se tup , Beaut iful
~-=-=-----_.:..1-~18- lfc location. Owner leav ing state .
Phone 949-4892 or 992·5272.
OLD PURNITURE, Round Oak
1. IO.tfc "
tables. · Brass beds. dishe s,
clocks, and -or complete
households . Write M. D.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Call 99H27L
.
12-17-tfc

1965 FORD LTD., wh ite with
bia c ~ vinyl top , power
steenng and power brakes.
Phone 74!.5042.

MAKES 'IE

Business Services

garage, fin ished recreation
WANT ADS
room with bar, lot 150 x 160 on
Haven Hgts., New Ha ve n, W.
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
Va. Sale Pri ce - $18,500.00;
5
P.M.
Day
Befo re
Rent - $lOOper month. Phone
Publication
882-3258 9 a, m. to 5 p. m. or
1220 Washington Blvd.
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
992·3078 after 5:30 p. m.
Belpre, Ohio
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
2-Htc
Will be accepted unlll9 a.m. fo r
FOR THE BEST deal in a new
Day of Publication
or used mobile home, try
REGULATIONS
For Rent
Kanauga Mobile Home Sak!s,
The Publisher reserves the
Kanauga , Ohio.
right to edit or reject any ads 4 ROOMS and bath unfurn ished
12· 17.90tc
house,
1650
Lincoln
Hts.
deemed object ional. The
Phone 992-3874.
publi sher wi II not be
responsible for more than one =-~::::=:-::--~_.:..2:::-6·6fc
incorrect insertion .
2 BEDROOM mobile home, Real Estate For Sale
RATES
furnished, utiliti es paid IT is vac'l&gt;nt; IT ha s 3 nlc.-lot s;
For Want Ad Service
available
now. Phone 992:
IT has bath : IT has tour
5 cents per Word one insertion
7384.
bedrooms ; IT ha s range and
Minimum Charge 75c
Ref.: IT has wide front ;x&gt;rch
_ _ _ __ __ _::2_-4-Jtc
12 cents per . word three
and enclosed tear porc.1; IT
consec utive insertions.
has basement ; IT has storage
18 cents per word six con· I BEDROOM trail er a part.
secutive insertions.
ments, ideal fo r cou pl es . building ; IT is priced to sell ;
IT can be bought today.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
CLELAND REALTY,
ads and ads paid within 10
992-5248 or 992·3436.
HENRY
CLELAND,
days.
2·3-12tc
REAL TOR , Office 992-2259;
CARD OF THANKS
Residence 992-2568, 608 East
&amp; OBITUARY
Main, POMEROY.
$1.50 for 50 word minim um. FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments . Oose to school.
Each additional word 2c.
Phone 992-5434.
BLIND ADS
10. 18.tfc 80 ACRES, 3 bedrooms and
Additional 25c Charge per
bath. deep well and shallow
Advertisement.
well, on s1a te . route. Phone
2 BEDROOM mObil e hom e, 12 x 992·6096.
OFFICE HOURS
60, adults only . Phone 9928: 30a .m. to 5:00p.m. Da ily,
2-J.6tc
5443.
8: 30 a .m. to 12 :00 Noon
Saturday .
1·11 ·tfc
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
-----985·3529.
Notice
1·28·1fC
Auto Sales

ORDER
"FIELD SEED$

That Listens

Wanted To Buy

6 ROOM all·electric, ranch type
home with fireplace, patio &amp;

Now's Time To

The Station

-:::-~-:---::--=--_:2_:·Hfc .

THUNDER

For Sale

LOSE WEIGHT wdh New 1960 INTERNATIONAL panel
Shope Tablels. 10 days suppl; !ruck; 1938 Buick Coupe; 1964
only $1 .49 Nelson Drug .
dr . Ford ·Fairlane ; Arabian
2./.3tp 4mare,
1!2 registered; G. E. 1
7 i:Au tomatic washer ; -4% acres ·
W""'tL-;L--;D~O::-;b-a~
br.-s71 tt
n_g _ i:-n- my
· home with chi dren from ages with trailer; phone 992·9943.
2-Htc
2 to 5, phone 949-4703,

For Rent or Sale

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

340 cu. in . engine or la rger, v .

6 Eng ine .

Po111eroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

Cue No . 20595
of WitHam P . Grueser .

~state

Notice

HE JEST ORAPPED
OFF 10 SLEEP RIGHT
IN TH' MIDDLE OF
HIS PRA'IERS

WHAT IN

I

----~-~-----------~-----------~~·--~----------~--·~----------~·---~ '

'l

�"'

•
'

I

t

... .

r

'

'.\

'''
6- The 0..11;· S•mtmel, Middlepori-Pometoy. o.. Feb. 7, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get R"esults!
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Deceased .

Notice Is her·eby g i ven tha t
John M . King , of Route 1.
Rutla nd . Ohio, has been duty

appointed Executor . of the '
Estate of William P. Grueser ,
deceased , tate of Me igs County,
Ohio .
Creditors are requi r ed to f ile
the ir c laims with sai d fiduciary
within fou r months .
Oa te d th is 18th da y of
JanJary 19 72 .
John C. Ba con

Probate Judge
(1)

2d, 31 I 21 7,

of said Coun ty

Jt

NOTICE

OFFICI~L

The Tow nShip Trust ees of
Chester T ownship will rece i "'e
sea ted b ids until 8:00 p .m ..

Februar y 11 , 1972 at which time
bids w i ll be opened , for one
dump truck , as follows : G .V .W .

of

2-4 ,000 lb .

or lar ger ; Proper

Wheelbas e for 7 x 9 dump bed, i
beam fron t axle 7,000 lbs . or
l arger . Frame Rei nforce m ent .
Heavy Duty Br akes .

1971 VOlKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN
S249l
Local 1 owner, new car trade in, 13,000 miles, automatiC
trans .. luggage rack , radio, chrome wheel covers, blue
co lor, blk . vinyl interior.
1970 CHEVEL LE SS396 CPE.
S2295
Green finish , blk., ~iny l roof, green vi ny l interior , new
wide oval tires, 4·speed trans ., power steering, radio. A
sweet hear1 of a buy.
1970 NOVA CHEVVY 114 DOOR
S2195
5,000 miles by loca l owner, p. steering, automatic trans .. 6
cyL engine, P. B., radio, white wall s, beautiful beige fini sh
&amp; blk. inter ior . Like new.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
~PMEROY,

Five Speed , Direc t in f ifth ,

OHIO

Synchr om esh
Transmission .
9.00 x 20 Ten Ply Tires with
Mud and Snow Tread on Rear.
7.00 Rims .
Two West Coas t Mirrors.
Cast Spok e Wheels

Notice

A MIRACLE Revival. de··
liverance lor the whole
man ; First Chu rch of God,
New Haven, W. Va .; George
Oiler, Evangelist, February
Dual Electr ic Windshiel d
~ , 1972, 7: 30 p . m . eac h
Wipers, variab le Speed &amp;
Washers .
evening .
Two Speed Rear Axle, 17,000
2·Htc
_.:....:
lbs . q_r larger .
Heavy Du l y Batter y
PART Dachshund and part
Heavy Du t y Oil Filter.
rabbit hound puppies to give
Fresh Air Heater &amp; Def ros ler .
away . Phone 992·6656.
In cre as ed Capacity Coo lin g
Front Tow Hook
2-6·3fp
Rear Tow Loop .
Heavy Duly Fron t &amp; Rear
HOLSTERING SERVICE .
Spri ng s with Auxil iary Spr in gs . UPcomplete
selection of fa brics
Cus to m Cab
and vinyl to choose from . Pick
Turn Si gna ls w ith Haz ard
up and delivery. Slate r
Switch &amp;. Marker L ights .
Power Steer ing .
Upholstering, Rt . 3, Pomeroy ,
DUMP BED
·
phone 991.3617 .
7 X 9, 19" Sides and 30" Head
2·3·30tp
·~nd Tail Ga te . Hole in Ta ilgat e
f or spreading ma teria ls.
WANT WORK at home ad·
Ha lt Cab Pro lecto r.
7" Hois t or large r.
dresslna and stuffing en ·
Mud Fla ps .
velopesf Rush self-stamped
B ed to be moun ted a nd
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36,
painted .
Albany, Ohi o, 45710.
The Board of =T rustee s
J.6.tfc

____

r eserves the ri ght to r ejec t any
or all bids.
Bidders a re re quested to
submit with t!leir bid tor th e
above equi pment a fu rther bid

for a 1965 International

11oq

Series Tru ck .
llf
WILLIS FROST, Clerk
II I 24, Jt 121 7. Jt
LEGAL NOTICE
DANNY

ELWOOD BOWER S,

whose la st known place of
-residence is 352 East Main
St r eet, Pomeroy , Ohio , is

hereby notified that on the 24th
day of Jllnuary, 1912 ROY A .
ROU SH fil ed his pet ition in the
Probate Cou rt of Meigs County,
Ohio to
adopt RO BERT

EUGENE

BO WERS and lor

chang.e ot name of sa id ch ild to
Robert Eugene Roush ; said
cause is set for hear ing at 10:01'1
a.m . on the 18th dey of Marc ~.
1972.

Roush , Petit ioner
J . B. O'Brien, Afforney
tor Petitioner .
I1I J I , ( 21 7, 14, 21.28 (31 66t
Roy

A.

WIN AT BRIDGE

QUICK EXIT
Connie Dierking of the
Cincinnati Royals accumulated six fouls In one quarter
In a game against Syracuse
In 1959.

FERTILIZER
SEED CORN

To You

WMP0/1390

7

. 85
• 8 72

+A Q JG
o!o K 1063
WEST

EAST
. Ql073
¥AIO

.K J62
¥ K654
• 7

+ 98542

oloJ 954
SOUTII

olo 72
(D)

• A94
• QJ93
+ K 103
o!o AQ8
Both vu lnerable
Wes t North East South

I N.T.
Pass

~N .T .

Pm;s

Pas!i

Pass
Opcn lng lead - · 2
B~

Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Jim : "Playe rs who use the
code word ARCH are apt to
be lucky."
Oswald : " Th e ' A' stand s
for Analyze the lead. The
'R' for Rev iew the biddi ng.
The 'C' for Cou nt your win ·
ner s and losers and the 'II '
stands for How can I make
or defeat thi s contr act depending un whether you are
declarer or defender."
Jim : " Today's hand is typi cal of ones s hown in old a uction brid ge books on play . Of
course . the auction contract
wou ld be one no-trump , but
in a uction the declarer would
still try to make t h ree in
order to score game . You got
c redit for everything yo u
1nade in auQtion .' '

Oswald : " West opens th e
Je uce of s ades. East plays

CARNIVAL
..)VII '71"U

~8

/

. '.

r '

&amp;

Savel

~OMIROY ··

JIC' W, C1rN11 1 M\ .
~-tft·1tl

A Hark-Back to Auction
NORTH

Order Now
~

ON YOUR DIAL

ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT .
overweight ladies, teens and
men interested in a Weight
Watchers ( Rl Cla ss in
Pomeroy write : Weight
Watchers (R), 1863 Sectlpn
Rd .. Cincinnati, Ohio 45237. ·
t0-3.tfc

the queen and . South prob·
ably holds off until the t hird
lead of the suit. This makes
no differe nce, Then So u t h
cas hes four diamonds and
notes that West shows out SAVE up to one half. Bring your
Sick TV to Chuck's TV shop
d Iead ·.,
on .t he sec
on
151 Butternut Ave. , Pom eroy.'
Th
.
,
J tm : ·· e auctiOn wnter
11 ·21·1fc
would Analyze the lead as
fourth best of West's longest
and stron gest suit. He would
note that West held · just one
diamond . Then he would exthat West would have
r.edlaina heart
or club i( he held
five ca rds in one of tho se
suits. Hence , analysis of the
lead a nd the di a mond play
showed that West had sta rted
Friday &amp; Saturday
wit h 4-4-1·1 di st ribution ."
Oswald : " That i s s till
Night, 10 Til2
pretty good reasoning today
. Music By
Therefore, when South pla yed
Red Stewart &amp;
clubs after cashing the diaThe Ambassadors
monds he would cas h his ace
and queen; lead the eight ;
finesse dummy 's 10.1'
~OS COT KOSMETICS and wigs
• for sale. Brown's . Phon e 992(NEWSPAPER ENTUPliSE ASSN .)
51 13.

DANCE

WHISPERING
PINES
NITE Q.UB

The bidt:ling ha s l&gt;t·en:
West
Nor th
East

Found

- --- .
Mobile Homes For Sale ·

'62 FALCON, good condition,
ph one 949-3221,
_ __ __ _ __.:..2:_:·2-61c

TEAFORD

:~,.';"i;~,,~nr;·3ohave"

'" the

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8TII5
Monday thru Saturday
E._
Main,
Pomeroy,
0. ,
L _606
_
_
___;_____.l

110 Methanic Stre~:.

pomeroy, Ohin

.

l SAW HER ARGUING

·Make reservations for your
private · parties, banquets. ,
special occasions.
tdeal for meeting ploce with or without kitchen
privileges.
tndtvtduot Catering
Will seal up to 150 people.

992-3975

Phone

lEW METER NJJO t5
100 EFFICIENT. .

Z-7
VOU'~I.

WWAT AIOUT

JLIST HAVE ·
Tllli INCREASE
WANT TO ·,'

Tlli ""'"
FIUIZE
~

T~AT'S WEIRDl

SSCON!&gt;

Mv· 0~ NATIONAL CRIME
PIUVENriON WEEK...

~NIIWI.L ~

992-5786

'/01 DON'T

1SKf- YOP.!O DRESS IS
f.!EARL'i SHRUNIZ -

I.OOKLIKE ·
YO'. '/0'

WT WE HAS A NICE
DRY ONE -B'/ A
5TRAN6E QUIIIlCIDEf.lCE.

HAit.J'T
SCRATCH IN'!!

\

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
·Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Ra.diator Specialist

BILL NELSON,992·:U57
TOM CROW, 992-2580

SMirH NELSON

MOTORS. INC.
Pomeroy

CALL
,
HILTON WOLFE, 949-3211
DALE DUTTON, 992·2534

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

Ph. 992-2174

ALL KINDS OF
GLASS
For Every Purpose
We specialire in auto glass ·
on the spot installation.
Mirrors - Table Tops - Plate
Glass. Small home repairs .'
screens . storm windows

606 E. Main

yOU APPRECIATE
M'f tiFFORTS TO MAINTAIN
THE. I"'Tii&lt;ORITY OF YOUR
EATER'f! _ __....

WINNIE

AUTO BODY

YOJI) 'THINK
WINNIE'D HAVE: NOR!:
5EN5E 'THAN TO KE:E:P
HIM OUT iV\0 HOURe!

537 High St.

Middleport, Ohio
Complete body repairs
and paintings, glass
installation.
free
loaner
cars
and
es·timates,
also
mechanical
repairs.
Phone 992-3793

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

FURNITURE

FREE ESTIMATE
Point Pleasant &amp; Mason
AUTO GLASS
AI Conard, Mgr.
Phone 304·77J.S710
Route 33
Mason, W. Va.

I HOPE

OOLONIAL

992-2094

repaired.

Stop In and See Our
'Floor Display.

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been O'DELL WH.EEL ollghment
cancelled?
Lost
your
located of Crossroads, Rt. 124.
operator's license? Call m.
Complete front end service,
1966.
June up and brake service.
Wheels balonced etec.
-----,_-.:_6·~15-tfc
Ironically.
AI!
work
Reasonoble
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED · guaranteed.
ra\es. Phone 992·3213.
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 4461·2/.lfc
4782, Ga!lipolis . John Russell,
Cfflner &amp; Operator.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
5·12·1fc
Complete Service
Phone 949·3821
SIG NS , posters, mail boxes and
Racine, Ohio
favorite saying ; hand let.
Crill
Bradford
tered; In your favorite style
,;\c~
s.l.tfc
Oa~id Hooker, [lt. 2. Albany; -~--:--__,_.._.::...:
Oh1o 45710 ( Pagetown) . ·
2.6.30tc SEWING MACHINES .. Repair
service, all mokes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. ·Free
Aufltorlzed
Singer Sale5 and
pipe inspection . Paul SteinService. We Sharpen Scissors. '
metz, phone 742·5864.
3·2'1·tfc
1-26-12tp

SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-11-tfc

-:----.....:....::

---

------

WINNIE~ 'THE 13005 ...
5HE CAN DO ANYTHINc:T 5HE LIKES!

GASOLINE ALLEY

ljOU,

Clovia!
Let me
explain
·.flbout
Chloe!

. ~ISTE~I""',"D~t ~ ~t:&gt;IICE

Ul.l.l

r-----••••••••••-•••••••••••••••••
1
·.
· ·
.
I
I

.

NEE

I

T;on

I:

I
I

I:
I

.

I

1

I

HE~:r~~~cJ!~;~R2D~- 6tc

-H-IG
-H
- .,-S-C_H_O_O_L_ S_E_N_t_ORS . JO:.~r~..~~tl:'a'R~c~~~.re~~:
Enlist now - slay home until
phone 247·2142..
after gradualion . Guaranteed
· H -Jtc
assignmenls to Eu rope. - - - - - - - - Korea. Hawaii, or selected COAL. limestone. EX"celslor
locations in the U.S. .See rour
Sa lt Works, E. Moln St.,
loca l Army rePresentative tor
Pomeroy: Phone 992·3891 .
!acts libo u! the 180. Da y
4.9.tfc
Delayed. Entry Program and
Ihe Army's , new pay ra ise. POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
For more rnfor mal10n call , , Porkvlew Kennels, Phone 992:
593·3022,
!443.
2·7·51c
8-IS.tlc

ACROSS
1. Portrayer
of the
Cowardly

DEXTRA i'
CASH?

\.

being built.

HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heigh.ts.
~~;~. Danny Thompson, 992·
7·18.tfc
--=·===-~
.
-~
SIX ROOM house. 133 Butternut
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Wadsworth Or.jve, Columbus.
Oh.
10, phone 237-4334.
11 -21·tfc

~q

-1': .

·'

_

GET-m ,.."WITIIA

rlan.. Ad
•wAmnn

tJJj

i

SELL YOUR DON'T NEE'DS

II

I·
I

1-

UNOOU8Te0L.V ALL

ARMED.

r

I
1I

- -

---

I
1I

Flash in the Pants
1
1
If you like the elegant
look, but don ·. want to •sttr·
render your Jove of panls.
here's the answer for those
spec ial evenings. Sensation al
t1 k
} ac ·satin pajama·t.vpe out·
fit s All vo u have to add lo
thi s look is a few delicate
flashes of rh i n~ s l ones a t. the
wri st. a nd throa! anrl vou ' re
all sri
I

1I
1
I
I
1
I

00N'T WAIT
MA IL yQuR
AD N0WI

A HAASH PRIIL.\1~- Alii&gt; A :&gt;TWENT Of

CONIICT5, TilE . ·
PR/16011 LADY

'

-------.,.-

MAIL TO:

SCiiOOL FOil.
PQI.IliCAL
DoUeLES,

II
I
1I
I
1I

Phone

•

INURUTE±

I l

-

ltl l .. 1.. ~1-

-~-·

j

...

II

WA'fW.
WITH TH I5.

(AAtwen tomo"ow),
I

Jumble" LYRIC fAYOit

1llf - f waL-lRAIIIfl&gt; lt5CHAII6f5,

1llf ~em~ atAricf

Saturd•y'•

31. Paging
Mr.
Wallach
33. Got you!
36. Skill
3?. Pronoun
U.Set a
wedding
date
4:1. Oil source
44. Mike
ecstatic
45. Priscilla's
beloved
46. Colored

IUTANI MIDLIY

An•w~r: llow daj!! fa I. nwn •pole~- IIOADL Y

1 SfiOULD 'miNK ~OV'D 6ET
BORED JUST SITTIN5 ON A
D06HOUSE ALL DA'I..

io LONGFEI.LOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dlllerent.

LJ9.~~~~--J
WHO COULD 6ET BORE.D fL't'IN6

THE STARSHIP ''ENTERPRISE "?

A CryploiJ'lm Qaotatlon

L Y Z W A L A E Z M X J S R S J 17 Z E K Y D L
ML

AXZQ

LS

VZ. - WEMZQEMTY

YSRRDJQZE
•
Saturday'a Cryptoquole: THE BEST Til ROW m' THE DICE
lS TO THROW THEM AWAY.-5CVTI'ISH P.ROVERB
(() 1!172 KitlliJo'cattP'C8 SyndicR.te,lnc.)

·

· PomOh'll'- 1I
-•11

"( ·------------------------~------~

PEINT

DAlLY CRYPTOQUOTE
- Here's how to work it: '-_;J:U_ _;__ _..J.,.:';;.-7w
i\ X Y D L B A A X R

I
TilE DAILY SVl\n'n.m
I
:a;,J,., .l.l1'111!.L 1

111 Court Sl
tI

TlJIWL, 10 THE
SU!ITE!fRAHeAM

1I
I

Address
C'oty

RfTUI!NS, ~A THE

1
1

Noone

34. Corridor
35. Surrounded
by
38. Detest
39. Watched
4LSymbol
ofwo·
manhood
42. Ancient
times

se. Jovial
&amp;flOUr OF HASSAII'S

1
I

I

"

~A~l!CT!I&gt;

I • Pri(ltl of ittr&lt;~5 must oppeor in ad ' duration
Ad mylt r•moi" vn(horag•d lor
• Sl minim.,., dtoro- .for 10 do)"t
orltu
1
I
•· f • U5«1 0ne Space f O,r ·E.ach Word .
I Wn"t e Your .Ad! PIease Pnn

Unocramble these four Jumblu,
one letter to each equue, to
form four ordinary worda.

U. Smell
2?. Eschew
lB. Put away
:ZB. "Peer

I

I
TO
I
QUALIFY FOR THIS SPECIAL LOW RATE:----....;...,;
II . AdmultO tfer go'od,for,oll!l
"
I
• Ad mullbtplottgbyonfndi't'idYOI
• Concellotionprivi~lwhtnrtl•
not o IMineu
\ uifl 0,_ obtoi.,.d
1
Selling for S7S or under

with
cargo
33. Celebes
ox

JJWJWIDY;-~::::'-!.c: :

composer,

II

ICASH WITH ORDER)

U. Decline
19. Join
2t. Complete
21. Loiter
Zl.
Cr!~i~~;V
U.M
star
:15. Table
scrap
Z6. King
(Sp.)
ZB. Be
· angry
30. Trlfm.
peter of
note
3Z. Heavy

-Bart

I

WORDS

DOWN
1. Glance
ukance
Z. Aetor
Alan
S.Gary
Cooper
film
classic
f, Scottish
explorer
5. Skin
disease of
dOl&amp;
8. Flstlc
name
?• Cutting
remarks
B. Longing
9. Dole out
11. Classified

11

PAlleN, THE G00P COM.\\155o'.Ri FINE!

DAYS

5. "Call
Me-"
lt, Rosalind
-,Met
opera star
IZ. Mrs.
Ralph
Kramden
11. Wellknown
soap
opera
15. Hooray!
18. Tease
~~...... -1?. Under'c
stand
II. Tiny
almond,
e.g.
21. uoliver

I

FAMILY
WANT· ~AD
r

1

IN TJ.I.O..T CAB,TR.ii.C'(;·I

II

WITH A
BARGAIN OFFER

Caii9BS·~t3otc I

NICE 2·Story home with full
basement, 2 lots, new forced
air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
Elementary School. Phone
992-7284 to see.
11 ·7·ffc

l SAW FIVE PEOPL-E

I

I

2-4·6tp _ sy_r_ac_u_se_._O_h io_._ _2--6-3tp

~~-~-

1

s;

1

N~~;~;~i~~~:.N~~~:~~~: I

WitH A MOTORIST. Sl-IT
WHEN WE PU~~EO OVER
10 SEE IF
WE COULD
HELP .. .

Hi;)', flt.RKER . 1WIT

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
IOOPCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
,
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly paymentos low as $6~ .00 for a family w!fh a bose
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 71/• Pet. annual
percen!age rate.

DRY WALL Finisher co n.
lractor, R. I. Dubbeld, phone
742-5825.
H-5fc

BrOker

. .

I~

5.55

240 Lincoln 51.
Midclleporl, O~io
Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete · Home
Maintenance Service the
year around. No matter what
your need. Complete roOf or
spouting repair. Interior or
exterior carpentry. 'Ceiling
tile and Paneling and Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.
Day Number 992-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.
742·3947
992 ·5~03
992·3898 . 742-4761
We are fully insured

'·

INTERIOR and ex terior
WE TAKE LISTINGS ANY·
painting. R. I. Dubbeld, phone
WHERE
IN
MEIGS
1969 DODGE Swinger, 2 doo r
742·5825.
COUNTY.
2-1·51c
ha rdtop. v .8. standard, sti lt
RACINE
under warranty - $975 ;
-----6 ROOMS - 3 bedrooms, bath,
phone 992·6048.
large living and din ing room s. Real Estate For Sale
2.4-6fc
N ea rly new gas furnac e.
1969 FORD F-1 00, Custom, V8 . . Garage. $10,500.00.
3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
COUNTRY HOME
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
360 cu . in ., automatic, will
consider trade. Phon e 992- 10 ACRES- 4 bedroom ran ch
Plains. All new with total
slyle, l'h baths. Hot water
6372.
electric and central air HARRISON'S TV ond .Anfenna
heat. 2 drilled wells . Fou n·
REAJ;lY·MIX CONCRETE de·
conditioning, bath and 'lo fully
2 J.6tc
Service. Phone 992-2522.
dation for 2nd house.
· carpeted, full basement.livered right to your prolect.
6-10-tfc
MIDDLEPORT
Fost and eosy . Free
gara~e in basement. See by - - - -8 ROOMS - 4 bedrooms. bath,
estimates . Phone 992·3284.
apporntment, phone 992-2196
breakfast nook . Forced air
For Sale
or 992·3585. Danny Thompson . BACKHOE AND DOZER wori ' Goegleln Reody.Mix Co..
furnace. Central air. Double
Middleport, Ohio.
,
Fmanclng available.
· Septic tanks Installed. George
garage. $14,500.00.
(8111) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
6·30·tfC .
12-30-tfc
RURAL
4·2S.ttc
Cleaner complete with at tachments, cordwlnder and NICE - 3 bedroom renovated
home. Bath, furna ce . Large
paint spray. Used but in like
new condition. Pay $34.45 . kit chen~ Garage, City water.
,
cash or budg·et plan available . sn .ooo.oo .
SYRACUSE
Phone 992-5641 .
2·1·6fC 4 ROOMS - Full basement, all
___::.
utilities. Leve l lot. Asking I
USED baby bed, playpen, baby
carr ier, car seat. girl 's winte r
I
coa t, size 8, Ca ll 985-4203,
dining roo m . Carpeted I
'-Y
[
Chester.
throughout . Ba se ment, I
2-4 3tp
carport.
MIDDLE PORT
I
I:
1952 FORD tractor. good con·
dition - $650 ; phone 992-6048.
LOTbedrooms.
bath, large
living3 and
dining
2-4-6fc CORNER
rooms , Garage. Near stores.
- - - - -s1o.ooo.oo.
eOI
HAY, mi xed. Phone Albany 698·
RIVER FRONTAGE
3290.
1200 FEET - For boat laun2-J.61p ching , ca mping , and home I
1
sti es. Drilled well.
BUYBEFORETHESPRING
B
TROPICAL
FISH , fancy
RUSH
U
guppies, angels and breeders,
Be llas and suppli es. Phone
992·5443.
12-30-tfc

TODAY'S QUESTION
Instruction
WALNUT STEREO, Modern
West bids tv.:o diamonds over
W
TRAC
TOR
TRA
ILE
R
ainu I Stereo-ra dio co m·
your one spade North and East
·
b'
·pass What do .you do now '
TRAINEES . NEEDED · y ou
malion, 4 speaker sound
can now tram to become an
sys tem, 4 spee&lt;i changer .
Answt:r Tomorrow
ov~ r the road dri ver or city
Balance $68 .70. Use our
drtver . Excellent earnings
budget term s. Call 992-7085.
y Dick Turner
after short training on our _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __:2:_:·2·6lc
lrucks with our dri ver in slructors lo help you . For COLONIAL Maple 'stereo-radio
application and in terv iew ,
AM·FM radio, .t speakers, 4
call 304·344·8843, or wrlle
speed automatic turntable.
· ·IOn, Balan ce $79 .32 . Use our
Sc hoo l sa fe 1y Dl VIS
United s~ste ms, Inc., c-o budge1 terms . Call 992-7085.
Terml n 1 ld 5517 Midi d
2-2-6tc
a
g.,
an --:--------=-=
Dr ive, Chllr leston , Wes t
.
Vi roinia. 25306 . Approved for NEW 1971 z,g .Zag Sewing
v . A. Benefi ls. Placement . Machme In original factory
assista nce available. OVer 700 ca rton . Zig -Zag to make
lransporlation companies
buttonholes, sew on buttons.
have hired ou r graduates .
monograms and make fan cy
designs with just the twis t of a
2_7_2fc
--------sing le·diaL Left in tay·away
and never been used. Will sell
· Help Wanted
for only S47 cash, or credit
terms avai lable. Phone 992RECE PTIONI ST, part time. H 564!.
&amp; R Block. Pomeroy, Ohio. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2:_:
·2·6tc
2-4-3fc

"OK! Hands behind your he~ds! l',m taking up a
,
little o1fice collection!"

S

- - -- - -

SR.

1964 VOLKSWAGEN, 2 door
seda n, good condition - S450 ;
phone 992-6048.
_ __ _ _ _ __.:..2:._-4-6tc

____

.

The
Orchid Room

.EXPERT
Whl!ll Alignment

&amp; PLUMBING 00.

------

Virgil B. ·

·'

&amp;OONSTRUCTION

12' - 14' · 24' - WiDE

Souoh GERMAN Shepherd dog . Black
and tan . If lost, ca ll 992·3906
ass
or conta ct Bob Moore ,
Pass
1•
Pass
1•
Syracuse.
Pass
2 N.T.
Pass
'
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:.2..:
·6·31c Tl RES, wheels, axles . springs
from new mobile hom e. 4 BEDROOM, bath &amp; half,
You, South, hold:
Phone 742·4427 .
utllily room , buil1-in kitchen,
•9ss s 4 • AQ 6 • A3z oloH Employment Wanted
_
_
__
__
2-6·31p
wall
to wall carpet &amp; garage. ·
What do yo u do no w?
HAVE welde r, will travel. Local Located •;, mile north of
A-Just bid three no· trump. welder wants welding jobs 50,000 BTU gas heater with
Eastern Hi~h School. House is
Your partner is showing l8 or Phone 992 527 1.
blower ;
Baer 's
Mkt. ,
almost fintshed and others

P

.
.ALL WEATHER ROOFING

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

-;;:-;:-;-;-::=:----:-_:2~·6· 3fc

SA'/ THAT?

'

,.

OLD · POCKET
knives 60X12, 2-bedroom, all-electric, '
espec ially Case XX . Al so air conditioned, 8x20 H. Porch
and aluminum awning ,
~ve olher .old knives to lrade
aluminum skirting, com 01' sell. Phone 992.2343.
plete ly se tup , Beaut iful
~-=-=-----_.:..1-~18- lfc location. Owner leav ing state .
Phone 949-4892 or 992·5272.
OLD PURNITURE, Round Oak
1. IO.tfc "
tables. · Brass beds. dishe s,
clocks, and -or complete
households . Write M. D.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Call 99H27L
.
12-17-tfc

1965 FORD LTD., wh ite with
bia c ~ vinyl top , power
steenng and power brakes.
Phone 74!.5042.

MAKES 'IE

Business Services

garage, fin ished recreation
WANT ADS
room with bar, lot 150 x 160 on
Haven Hgts., New Ha ve n, W.
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
Va. Sale Pri ce - $18,500.00;
5
P.M.
Day
Befo re
Rent - $lOOper month. Phone
Publication
882-3258 9 a, m. to 5 p. m. or
1220 Washington Blvd.
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
992·3078 after 5:30 p. m.
Belpre, Ohio
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
2-Htc
Will be accepted unlll9 a.m. fo r
FOR THE BEST deal in a new
Day of Publication
or used mobile home, try
REGULATIONS
For Rent
Kanauga Mobile Home Sak!s,
The Publisher reserves the
Kanauga , Ohio.
right to edit or reject any ads 4 ROOMS and bath unfurn ished
12· 17.90tc
house,
1650
Lincoln
Hts.
deemed object ional. The
Phone 992-3874.
publi sher wi II not be
responsible for more than one =-~::::=:-::--~_.:..2:::-6·6fc
incorrect insertion .
2 BEDROOM mobile home, Real Estate For Sale
RATES
furnished, utiliti es paid IT is vac'l&gt;nt; IT ha s 3 nlc.-lot s;
For Want Ad Service
available
now. Phone 992:
IT has bath : IT has tour
5 cents per Word one insertion
7384.
bedrooms ; IT ha s range and
Minimum Charge 75c
Ref.: IT has wide front ;x&gt;rch
_ _ _ __ __ _::2_-4-Jtc
12 cents per . word three
and enclosed tear porc.1; IT
consec utive insertions.
has basement ; IT has storage
18 cents per word six con· I BEDROOM trail er a part.
secutive insertions.
ments, ideal fo r cou pl es . building ; IT is priced to sell ;
IT can be bought today.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
CLELAND REALTY,
ads and ads paid within 10
992-5248 or 992·3436.
HENRY
CLELAND,
days.
2·3-12tc
REAL TOR , Office 992-2259;
CARD OF THANKS
Residence 992-2568, 608 East
&amp; OBITUARY
Main, POMEROY.
$1.50 for 50 word minim um. FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments . Oose to school.
Each additional word 2c.
Phone 992-5434.
BLIND ADS
10. 18.tfc 80 ACRES, 3 bedrooms and
Additional 25c Charge per
bath. deep well and shallow
Advertisement.
well, on s1a te . route. Phone
2 BEDROOM mObil e hom e, 12 x 992·6096.
OFFICE HOURS
60, adults only . Phone 9928: 30a .m. to 5:00p.m. Da ily,
2-J.6tc
5443.
8: 30 a .m. to 12 :00 Noon
Saturday .
1·11 ·tfc
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
-----985·3529.
Notice
1·28·1fC
Auto Sales

ORDER
"FIELD SEED$

That Listens

Wanted To Buy

6 ROOM all·electric, ranch type
home with fireplace, patio &amp;

Now's Time To

The Station

-:::-~-:---::--=--_:2_:·Hfc .

THUNDER

For Sale

LOSE WEIGHT wdh New 1960 INTERNATIONAL panel
Shope Tablels. 10 days suppl; !ruck; 1938 Buick Coupe; 1964
only $1 .49 Nelson Drug .
dr . Ford ·Fairlane ; Arabian
2./.3tp 4mare,
1!2 registered; G. E. 1
7 i:Au tomatic washer ; -4% acres ·
W""'tL-;L--;D~O::-;b-a~
br.-s71 tt
n_g _ i:-n- my
· home with chi dren from ages with trailer; phone 992·9943.
2-Htc
2 to 5, phone 949-4703,

For Rent or Sale

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

340 cu. in . engine or la rger, v .

6 Eng ine .

Po111eroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

Cue No . 20595
of WitHam P . Grueser .

~state

Notice

HE JEST ORAPPED
OFF 10 SLEEP RIGHT
IN TH' MIDDLE OF
HIS PRA'IERS

WHAT IN

I

----~-~-----------~-----------~~·--~----------~--·~----------~·---~ '

'l

�'··-•
'"

Janie Snider Died Saturday

Art Class &amp;gins Tuesday

Mrs. Janie EIIU~beth Snider,
Funeral services will be held
73, died Saturday at her.Union at 3 p.m. Tuesday at the E\Vlng
Ave. hom.e in ·Pomeroy. The Funeral Home with the Rev.
daughter of the late Mr. and
Mrs. David Stone, she also was
preceded in death by her
husband , Charles Edward
Snider; three children, and a
sister.
Surviving are three sons, ·
Raymond C., of Columbus;
Dale of Pomeroy, and Ralph of
Vinton ; four daughters, Mrs.
Ruth Koenig, Chester ; Mrs.
Beatrice Rairden, Hartford, W.
Va.; Mrs . Janet Reeves,
Pomeroy, and Mrs . Jean
Templeton, Logan, W.Va. ; two
sisters, Mrs. Mary Smith,
White Sulphur Springs, W.Va.,
and Mrs. Katie Walburn,
Pomeroy; 'll grandchildren, 20
great-grandchildren, · and ·
!.
several nieces and ,nephews.

Aa art cl-. will begiD Tuesday Dl&amp;ht at the Mldflleport Elemeotary School.
· Mi-a. Charles .Leirll wllllastruet the clau Ill wbldl
pupils of !be flni through tbe llslb ll'ldes at s.Jem
Ceoter, Rullud, Middleport llld Bradbary are eu,tblo
· toeuroli.Ciaue•willbebeld~ 7to 8:11p.m. Tberew
a dlarge of Z5 ...,II per Jessoa,,llld paplllare to P!'OVIde
mo•U of their OWII supplle1. 1Mn. llenlanl Fultz II
ceneral dlalrmaa of the program.

.. mee.ow~

Custom-Made Drapery Sale

""""WtUl

Inflation
Predicte~
WASHINGTON (UP!) - U.S.
Chamber of Commerce President Archie K. DaVis today
criticized President Nixon's
'1ull employment" budget and
said that continued red-ink
spending by the federal
government insures prolonged
inflation.
In remarks prepared for a
meeting of the Detroit
Economic Club in the Motor
.ctty today, Davis said the
growing size of the federal
bureaucracy and the virtually
unchecked power ol big labor
unions were the real source of
the
nation's
economic
problems.
The administration bas estimated a deficit of $38.8 billion
in the fiscal year ending June
30 and a ~.3 billion deficit for
the following 12 months. But if
the econcBny were running at
lull employment, defined as 4
per cent IDiemployment, the
administration says the
current deficit would shrink to
$8.1 bllllon and disappear
altogether in fiscal 1973.
Davis, a North Carollna
banker, said this lull employment concept means that
"whenever there is a lag in
business, government runs actual deficits but when we reach
lull employment, there are no
surpluses.

GMto Market

of Job 's Daughters at
Pomeroy; a member of Mary
Shrine, White Shrine of
Jerusalem, and was a member
of the board of trustees of the
Meigs County Children's
Home.
Mrs.
Blackburn
was
preceded in death by her first
husband, Harry P. Smith,
operator of the Sugar RWl Mill
in 1965; two sisters, and three
brothers.
Surviving are her husband,
Emmett Blackburn; two
children; Mrs. Harold Ebersbach, Pomeroy, and Theo L.
Smith, Pomeroy, and four
grandchildren, Mrs. Danny
(Sue) Zirkle, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Joy Foster, Chico, Calif.;
Darla Ebersbacb, Marietta,
and James Ebersbacb,
Columbus; three greatgrandchildren, and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services w111 be held
at I p.m. Tuesday~~ the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Robert Card officiating. Burial
wlll be In Beech Grove
Cemetery. Eastern Star services will be held at the fWleral
home at 7:30 tonight. Friends
may call at the fWleral home
any time.

Market Report
GAUJPOLIS, OHIO,
S.l!lnlay, Feb. 5, tm
SALES REPORT OF
Ohio Valley Llvelloek Co.

HOGS - 175 to 23llbs. 25 to
25.75; 23l to 250 lbs. 25.50 to 'll:
Ught 22 to 28; Fat Sows 21 to
:!3.25; Stags 20 Down; Boars 19
to 21; Pigs 5 to 17.50; Shoats 15
to 28.
CATn.E - 28 to 31.50;
Heifers 20 to 34; Baby Beef 33
to 46.50; Fat Cows II to 21.50:
Canners 15.50 to 25.20; Bulls
28.25 to 211.80; Milk Cows 185 to
285.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
54.50; Seconds 53 to 5~;
Medhun 46 to 46.50; Com. &amp;
Hvs. 42.50 to 50.
BABY CALVES .- 25 to 60.
LAMBS - Tops 28.50;
Seconds 25 to '!1.25; Ugh! Wts.
22 to 26.50; Common 20 to 23.56.

Motor Homes

..

SWEA1UNG IN -~elary of Stale Ted W. Brown swore in members of the Meigs County
., , Board of Ele~ns · at Portsmouth during his "traveling office." From left to right are
Secretary B!'QWn,EdwinS. CoU~rt,Mrs. Dorothy M. Johnston, director; James H. Quivey, and
Ernest A. Wingett.

Floyd Carmack
·

SEVEN'n! GRADE CHEERLEADERS - Meigs seventh grade cheerleaders for the
football and basketball squads are, 1-r, Cindy Hindy, Mary Blaettnar, Trudy Roadl, Mary
Boggs and Jayne Hutdllson. Kathy Rupe was absent. Dana Dessinger is their instructor,
888lsted by Cindy Coffman.

Nuclear Confrontation
.Possible after Peking
RIVERSIDE, CaUl. (UPI)11 President Nixon failB to improve U.S. relations with
Communist China during his
Peking visit, the United States
might be focced to use nuclear
weapons in any future confron·
taUon in Southeast Asia; according to a St. Louis
sinologist.
In the event of a major of.

fensive by the Communlsts in
Southeast Asia in the future,
Nixon "cannot possibly return
American troops to Indochina," said Mark Selden of
Washington University.
Selden was one of six experts
on China who discussed U.S.·
China relations during a
conference at the University of
Callfornla at Riverside during

Mrs. Bocock Died Sunday
CHESHIRE - Mrs. Lona !.
Bocock, 66, Cheshire, died
Sunday evening at Holzer
Medical Center. Mrs. Bocock
was born Oct. 16, 1905 in
Millwood, W.Va., the daughter
of the late Ira and Minnie
Newell. Tucker. Besides her
parents, she was preceded in
death by two brothers and a
sister.
Surviving are her husband,
John W.; a daughter, Mrs.
Luther (Marjorie) Brun •
balow, Sarasota, Fla.; two
sons, Jack 0., of Wheelersburg
and Robert L., Huntington, W.
Va.; a brother, Lester Tucker,
Ford City, Pa.; a sister, Mrs.
R. A. (Lola) Higgins, Phoenix,

Ariz.; six grandchildren, and
three great-grandchildren.
Mrs. Bocock was a member
of the Cheshire Methodist
Church.
FW1eral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Cheshire Methodist Church
with the Rev. Chester Lemley
and the Rev. Howard Fuller
officiating. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at
•the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home alter 10 a.m. Tuesday
Wltil 12:30 p.m. Wednesday
when the body will be taken to
the church.
'
In · lieu oi flowers, contributions may be made to the
Cheshire Methodist Church

INWEU..STON
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Russell,
Middleport, have been in
Wellston with their grandchildren while their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hayph,
daughter and son-in-law of Mr.
and Mrs. Russell, have been
touring Rio de Janero. Mr.
Haypb operates a television
sales and repair service shop in
Jackson.

the weekend.
The United States is " on the
brink of total collapse of its
military efforts not .only in
South Vietnam, but in Laos and
Cambodia as well," Selden
said.
"If that occurs, and if a
major offensive develops
against the American position
in those areas, and if Mr. Nixon
proves futile in his attempts to
negotiate a settlement on his
terms by talking to Peking, I
think that the important thing
to understand is that the only
major option available to Mr.
Nixon, strategically and
militarily, remains the nuclear
option."
Both Nixon and his chief
foreign policy advisor, Henry
Kissinger, "have built their
careers around their insistence
on the use of nuclear weapons,
the .use of the ultimate weapon
when other means fall short,"
Selden said . .
BURNED
Pomeroy firemen answered
a call Friday at 3:03p.m. to the
Everett Hutton residence in
Columbia Township, Fire Chief
Henry Werry reported today.
Soot in a chimney caught fire.
There was no damage, Werry
said.

Died Saturday

SPECIAL SAL~ I:
Made-To-Your-Measure Draperies

20% oH
cent off the regular price. Your lovely new draperies will

be tailored to any width - any length with deep headings
and triple tacked pleats. double side and bottom hems.
Hundredsol fabrics and colors. Quality workmanship and
fabrics .

Save 20 per cent on Made to Measure Draperies. Any
length . Any width.
Bring in your measurements !width of rod · end to end ·
desired length from top of rod down.)
We carry Kirsch Traverse Rods for 1ny size or shape
windows and a full line of curt1in rods, illso drapery

hooks. Everything needed for correct and graceful
hanging of draperies.

r;:;-;;;;,;;:.:-;;.-;;-o-:-pT.;~n-;;,~s;:;-J
I
I

I
II

Per Cent Sate and let us make your window
decorating easy.
.

L

We can also furnish custom in1de Bedsproads :Jo
match your draperies at20 per cent Off uvlnas.

-------~-------------

'Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Davis-Warner Ins.

VOL. XXIV NO. 210
' ...

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Tabernacle Evangelist
.
~ Will Speak in Crusade
.. The Rev . James A.
DeWeerd, pastor of the lamed
:cadle Tabernacle in In·
'&lt;iianapolis for live years, has
'been engaged as speaker for
'the
annual
Middleport
~Ev;mgelistic Crusade.
Prayer
groups
in
•preparation lor the annual
crusade begin this week and ·a
counselor training session for
. people working with the
crusade has been set for '7:30
p.m. on Sunday, Feb. 21, at the
Mt. Moriah Baptist Church.
The crusade, opening SWl·
day, Feb. 'll, will continue
· through March 5 with services
' Jh the Middleport Elementary
.ljchool at 7:30 each evening.
:Mra,\Robert Jtullri of Pomeroy·
. Wtll be pianist a!'d the Rev.
Charles Simons, pastor of the

Middleport First Baptist
Church, the song leader.
Churches cooperating in the
annual crusade are the Heath
United Methodist, Church of
the Nazarene, First United
Presbyterian, First Baptist
and the MI. Moriah Baptist.
The local ministers working
with the service indicated they
are pleased to have secured the
Rev. Mr. DeWeerd as speaker.
The Rev. Mr. DeWeerd is
presently involved with uniontype revivals in the field of
inter-church evangelism. ,A
fluent speaker, he has
broadcast daily over radio
station WLW, Cincinnati, and
appeared each week on the
' televilllon program, "Nation's
Family Prayer Period," when
he was pas.tor of the Cadle

ews•• in Briefs

SAVE

II'ZEIIIIH
Fll·fliEIR·
c.JI.E STEREO

'(o Our 1.. 3se·''·
1)\Le . 1yurc•'

svec13
Sale! 10 Sets Only

ORIGINALLY
PRICED

feetlrilg:

• Microiooli
2G1nAm

NOW

Md Zarltlt o.• we
FIBcotrl Changer

First Come/ Fir•t Seroedl

,•FMJAM

: \_\\~\\,. ,HIGHLIGHTS

MEIGS THEATRE

saaoFMradiJ

Tabernacle.
His educational background
includes studies at Marion
College and Taylor University
where he received the A.B. and
D.O. degrees ahd Ball Slate
University where he earned his
M.A. degree.
The Rev. Mr. DeWeerd has
served as a U. S. Army
chaplain when he was awarded
the Silver Star lor gallantry in
action and the Purple Heart
with an Oak Leal cluster.
He is serving as a trustee of
Bethany Children's Home,
Bethany, Ky., and as a
member of the Commission on
Evangelism · of the National
Association of Evangelicals.
He is also the immediate past
chaplain genetal of the
National Society, Sons of the

SAIGON- PRESIDENT NGUYEN Van Thieu, increasingly
annoyed by what he feels are concillatory American statements .
'lin Indochina peace' negotiations told his ambassadors in Paris
JDd Washington Monday to rebuke U. S. representatives - including Secretary of state W'liliam Rogers - for ba ving made
them.
Palace sources aaid today that Thleu gave orders In
. )elephone calls Monday to ambassadors Pham Dang Lam, bead
of the South Vietnamese peace talks delegatidn in Paris; and Bui
'l?Iem, South Vietnamese Ambassador to Washington. They
· quoted Thleu as having ordered Lam to ask the U.S. delegation
head, Ambassador William Porter, not tO make any more public
statements concerning Vietnam, unless cleared through Saigon.
•. COLUMBUS- SfATE PERSONNEL Director Paul A.
Corey said Monday night the federal Wage Board has finally
&amp;greed to reply to Ohio's request for approval of the wage increase for state employes, but it doesn't sound "too promising."
Corey aald a Wage Board aide told him verbally what the reply
.would be, which be did not divulge.
' "What the federal government will put in writing does not
sound too promising, but at least they now admit Ohio still is a
state of the union," Corey said. The Ohio General Assembly late
last year approved a 10 pet. or 38 ·cents per hour wage hike lor all
,80,000 state workers, whichever is more. But since the Wage
Board must approve any pay hike over 5.5 pet., the increase has
not gone into effect.
·

MARYSVILLE, OWO-INMATES at the state Reformatory
for Women here, in the tapll\g of a "gripe seseion" to be televised

ltltW•TM.:UON

..

OlaUncllve Contemponuy •trltd Clblnel

In genull'll alf.llnlthed W•lnut ~raand
Mltcl hardwood tolldt with l)lvotallou'tlred doon .

: Pay ·Hike Un frozen

ALSO BIG SAVINGS ON
MANY OTHER SJEHt:O MODELS

•.

Ingels Furniture
PHONE 992-2635

. OPEN FRI. &amp;SAT. NIGKIS

'

)

Barnoick reported that he
has discussed the upper
parking lot wall with the U. S.

MIIJDWIORT, OHIO

·'

t

Corps of Engineers. Bm:onick
said the Corps isMt authorized
to repair the wall, but will give
advice. Baronick observed that
a bill will be put before
Congress to federally finance
damage caused by 'river
erosion, in .small towns and
villages.
The mayor 's report for
January showing receipts of
$998,60 was accepted.
Webster reported that new
meters for the parking lot will
be installed as soon as weather
permits. The meters will be
increased from ~ cents an hour
to 10 cents. Attending were
Mayor Baronick, Werry ,
Snouffer, Russell, Mees,
council members; Jane
Walton, clerk, and Chief
Webster.

MosUy cloudy and cold with
a chance of light snow tonight
and Wednesday . Lows tonight
zero to 10 above. Highs Wednesday 15 to 20 north and in the
20s south.

"
'•" COLUMBUS (UP!) - Stale examination of changes in
Auditor ·Joseph T. Ferguson
rules and regulations of the
laid today that boards of federal Pay Board as published
i!ducation throughout Ohio In the Federal Register and
'fould pay teacher~ and non- · dated Jan. 27, 1972.
leaching school · employes
Sohool
boards
were
l'etroactive pay Increases for · previously prohibited from
. l!Ie original wagOi)rice free2e making any retroactive pay,
jleriod .of Aug. 15-Nov. 15, 1971. , increases. ·
· FerguBOII said he made the
Ferguson said he was
.3ecislon following a ueU.Iled
(Continued on page 81
.•
k

WASHINGTON (UP!) Rep. Clarence E. Miller, RObio, said . Monday he has
asked President Nixon to
reconsider a proposal to
consolidate the Appalachian
Regional Commission into
rural development revenuesharing.
Miller said he was "disturbed" over the President's proposal and released the contents
of a letter be bad written to
Nixon.

PHONE 992-2156

· TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1972

TEN CENTS

Grandstand Shows
Sign or 1972 Fair
Gra'JIQS(and
attractions
· contracted for the 1972 Meigs
County Fair were announced
Monday night by the Meigs
County Fair Board.
Entertainers contracted in a
REV. DeWEERD
meeting
at the fairgrounds
'
include Kenny Price, !be
Flowers Family (who apAmerican Revolution , and peared last year ), Zeke and
serves the organization Bill, comedians, and a vocal
presently as the vice president duo from Grand Ole Opry.
general, Central District: Also, These performers will appear
he serves as vice president of on Thursday, Aug. 17, while the
the National Association of Blue Ridge Quartet will be
Conference Evangelists of the featured on Saturday, Aug .. l9.
United Methodist Church.
William Downie is in charge
of grandstand events for the
1972 fair .
The board also planned to
hold quarter horse running
races again this year on Aug.
17, and hopes to increase the
purse for the races. J . R.
Kennedy will be in charge of

Miller Opposing
-President's Plan

later this week, complained Monday night Jivlilg in a correctional
f8clllty Is made harder because guards are recruited from rural
llreu. ''nley lmow ltlw to treat animals and grass, but not how
'to treat hwnan beings," one of tlie women commented.
llJty of the institution's 'Jifllnmates were picked for the two'hOlD' taping, which will be dlstllJed down to one bour and will be
initially .'broadcast Wednesday morning on the Phil Donahue
'lllow, a syndicated talk series.

.

clubs, passing and enforcing a
littering ordinance, and conducting a balcony contest.
Serving on the committee
are Mrs. Dorothea Fisher,
Nancy Reed, Doris Ewing and
Mayor Barnoick. Mrs. Velma
Pikkoja was added to the
committee.
Council also discussed using
prisoners to do labor in the
village . Pomeroy Police Chief
Jed Webster said that to use
prisoners an ordinance has to
authorize it.
Council will meet with
members of the Meigs Local
Sc hool
Board
Monday
following the board's regular
meeting.

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

·'

Now enjoy stunning new draperies at a savings of 20 per "

_,.·

Weather

BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
SAIGON -,-TilE VIET CONG ambushed an American truck
"ronvoy carrying supplles to the Central Highlands today. Other
~errillas attacked the allied air base at Pleiku but were halted
'-:8fter the defenders killed five of the attackers before they could
· ~~past the outpost's barred wire fence.
·
The truck convoy, carrying fuel and food from coastal ,supply
dumps inland to the highlands was caught by CommWlist rocket
and mortar fire ln a dayllgbt attack 15 miles east of An Khe and
250 miles north of Saigon.

AT '495

property from Blackwood Marietta this month to discuss
l&lt;~ated on Second St. asked · what plans Pomeroy . has to
permission to park a second . complete its sewer system.
car in front of his garage, . a · Mees will attend a meeting
matter tabled for a later today of the Ohio Valley Health
decision.
Services Foundation Inc., at
CoWlcil got . into a general Wellston in regard to a pilot
discussion on parking of cars program of emergency care
ori sidewalks, that "double proposed in the seven-county
parking" of trucks posed a southeast Ohio region.
continuing problem.
A repor,t of the Cultural and
Following Mayor William
Baronick's suggestion, council Restoration Committee was
appointed William Snouffer to read by Mayor Baronick. The
th e Police and Firemen's committee listed the following
Pension Fund Board • Jim Mees - suggestions to help beautify
to the Firemen's Dependency Pomeroy village; conduct a
Board ' and
. Don Collins to the clean up week, placement of
Pomeroy Planning Com- tra s h cans at strategic
mission.
loca tions, making Mulberry
Baronick announced he will and Butternut one-way, unatteml a meeting of the wanted billboards eliminated,
Buckeye Hills Hocking Valley co ndemnation of certain
Regional Development Corp. in buildings, plantings by garden

The ocellated blenny is a fish
without scales that lives off the
rocky coasts of Europe.

r---------------------------,

''J's••• J.
., B
." f
IMer..,
"
. rte
s. l

Pomeroy council Monday
night passed an .ordinanc{
Wlder emergency measures
and voted 4-1 to advertise for
bids for a · 1972 model police
cruiser.
The ordinance provides for
the resurfacing of State Route
124 from· Nye ·Ave., to
Pomeroy's corporation line on
East Main .st. Pomeroy's cost
will be $500, which is primarily
for the raising of sewers. ·
Voting yes to advertise for
bids for a 4-&lt;loor, air cone•
ditioned police cruiser were
council · members Ralph
Werry, William Snouffer,
Elma Russell and Jim Mees.
Lucien Poulin voted, no objection its air conditioning.
Meeting with council were
Dean Blackwood and Orville
Landers. Landers, who rents

'N()w You Know

NEW HAVEN - Floyd A.
Carmack, 77, New Haven, died
Saturday evening .at the
Veterans Administration
Hospital at Clarksburg.
Mr . Carmack, a retired
electrician, was a superintendent
of
electrical
at
Foote
maintenance
Mineral before his re tirement. He was a veteran
of World War I. Born on Jan.
13, 1895, be was preceded in
death by his wife, Margaret, in
1967.
Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs. James H. Layne, New
Haven, and Mrs. John V.
McGrew, Jr. , Buckhannon;
nine grandchildren; three
brothers,
Clarence,
of
Columbus; James of Toledo,
and George in Florida, and a
sister, Mrs. Glenna Andrews,
North Baltimore, Ohio.
Mr. Carmack Was a member
of the Bend Rotary Club, the
First United Presbyterian
Church in Middleport and the
Masonic Lodge at Niagara
Falls, N.Y.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev, William DeMoss officiating. Burial will be in
Graham Cemetery. Friends
may cail at the funeral borne
from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
MEETING POSTPONED
A regular meeting of the
Eastern Local School District
Board of Education scheduled
· tomorrow night, Tuesday, has
been postponed until TUesday,
Feb. 15.

__

Street Resurfacing Approved

NOW IN PROGRE$51 .

SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
SUITS FILED
Feb. f, 1972
An appeal to participate in
PONTIAC, Mich. (UPI)IN HOSPITAL
Hogs: 200-230, 25.25; No. I,
benefits was filed .in Meigs
General Motors will market
Clifford Jenkinson, who has
County Common Pleas Court
motor homes starting in' early 25.50; 230-240, 25; 240-280, 24.50;
been
ill the past week at his
260-280, 23.75; 196-200, 24.75;
by Mildred P. Long, Mid1973, becoming the first autodleport, against Joseph J. home on' East Second St.,
maker to move into the rapidly 1110-190, 23.75; Sows: 300-400, 21·
22.70; 425-550, 22.50;22.90;
Sommers, administrator, Pomeroy, was admitted to
expanding field.
20.7~1.10; Stock Hogs :
Bureau of Workmen's Com- Veterans Memorial Hospital
Martin J. Caserio, GM vice Boars:
22.75-23.10.
•
pensation, and R. E. Rawlings Saturday evening. His room
president
and
general
Cattle: Choice Steers, 34Sons Company, Middleport. number is 123. Mrs. Robert
manager of the GMC Truck
Thomas Diddle, Racine, Rt. I, Russell and Mrs. Ned Grant of
and Coach Division, said the 34.60; Good Steers, 31.35..13;
filed suit for divorce against Crooksville, who have been
MEET ALL-DAY
new vehicles would have a Choice Heifers, 33-33.60; Good
here with Mr. Jenkinson the
SYRACUSE - The Ladies Maxine Diddle, Rl\ttne, Rt. 1, past week, were joined by Mr.
special frame and an Cows: . 24-25.85; Utility Cows,
aluminum and fiberglasa body. 21.50-23; Canner and Cutter, Auxiliary of the Syracuse Fire charging gross neglect of duty Russell over the. weekend.
The motor homes wlll 18.50·20; Bulls, 29.50-30.50; Dept. will bold an all-&lt;lay and extreme cruelty.
feature an oldsmobile engine Heavy Feeder Steers, 31-36.50, session beginning at .10 a. m.
and front wheel drive trans- Heavy Feeder Calves Steers, Tuesday at the meeting room.
31-42.50; Heavy Feeder Calves A sack lunch will be held at
. mission, be said.
I
Heifers,
28.50-40.
GM, Ford and Chrysler
noon. Each member is to take a Ii
.
1
Veal Calves: Choice, 50- grab box item. Members will
already provide truck dlassls
I
I
. and engines for the motor 55.50; Good, ~5; Medium, .~0; give household hints to answer
borne Industry, but the vehicles Baby Calves by the head, 40-53. roll calL
(Continued from Page 1)
Choice Lambs: 31.80; Good
themselves are built by indeLambs, 'll. 7~29.50.
Miss Lynn, 19, put on a spectacular free skating performance
pendent companies.
- even earning a perfect 6.0 rating from one judge - but it
DRUG ABUSE PROBLEM
WASHINGTON (UP!) wasn't enough to catch frontrunner Beatrix ''Trixi" Schuba of
PROGRAM PLANNED
Veteraas Memorial Hospital
Rep. Chalmers Wylle, R.Ohio Austria, who built an insurmountable lead in the compulsory
A short program will be
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
R-ohlo, said he voted to figures.
presented by the Education
- Willard Taylor,..Franlilin
establish a special office for
Officer when.Racine Lodge 461,
Casto, Daniel Miller, Wllllam
drug abuse because a coorWOMEN TO MEET
F&amp;AM, meets at 7:30 p.m.
Zirkle, Zellah Lawson, Emma
dinated effort by federal
The
Past CoWlcilors Club of
Tuesday at the temple. Ught
agencies Is needed to combat Theodorus Council, Daughters
Johnson, Jess Sellers, Betty
refreshments will be served.
·,rooks.
ihe "devastating growth" of of America, will meet at 7:30p.
All master masons are drug abuse. ·
SUNDAY DISCHARGES m. Thursday at the borne of
welcome. Robert Beegle is
He said the Special Action Erna Jesse, East Main St.,
&amp;race Phillips, Allred Roush. master.
Office for Drug Abuse would Pomeroy.
"Iring a bout the most effective
deployment of federal reCLUBTOMEI!T
sources" agsinst the problem
There
will be a meeting of
of drug abuse.
with Paul Crabtr•
"It has been estimated .that the Tenth District Democratic
there are between 200,000 and Action Club Wednesday, Feb. 9
CALL POINT VIEW : 992 - 2505
at 8p.m . in Shaw's Restaurant
250,000 heroin addicts
Your
· in Lancaster. All loth District
Television Theatre presenls
America," be said.
The NBC coverage of .the
candidates are encouraged to
"USA" at8 p.m., on Ch. 11.
winter Olympics continues,
+++
with one of the weirdest
attend, and all interested
SUIT F1LED
events ot the games tonight:
southeastern
Ohio Demoerats
Channel 4 ·Isn't carrr,lng
The biathlon, which mtxes
CINCINNATI (UP!) -Will- are welcome.
the NBC Monday n ghl
cross-country skting with
lam Yee bas filed suit against
movte, and has • prime-time
rifle-shooting tn a two-wa,y
Bache &amp; Co., a New York City
ftlck of Its own. Tonight:
event. What the connection
"
The
Young
Doctors,"
with
might be escapes me, but
stock firm, for allegedly viola·
Fredric March, 9 p.m.
anyhow, Irs on Chs. 2 &amp; 7 at B
Ung New York Stock Exchall!'e
+++
p.m. Later, several other
Insure Your Valuables
Tonight &amp; T..sctay
policies
and procedures by U·
events, with reruns, 11: 30
February
7-8
quidatlng stock held by Yee's
p.m .• same spots.
MOVIES: "You Can't Run
Don't take chances!
Away from tt," Jack
family.
Walt
Disney's
Insure your home, car.
One ot the greatett shows
Lemmon, 4 ~.m., and" Julius.
THE
LIVING
DESERT
In
his
$640,000
suit
filed
in
on earth (honest) gets .some
boat and all of your
Caesar," with Marlon
!Technlcolorl
exposure tonight, as the
Hamlltop County Common
Branda and some other fine
assets. Whatever your
Academy Award Winnors
famed Budapest circus Is the
actors, 11:30 p.m .• both Ch.
Pleas
Court,
Yee said Bache &amp;
needs, we've got the
The Greatest wildlife
IUblect of a special, with Bitt
10 ,
Co.
told him to stop selling
of
them
olt
t
spectacle
Bixby and Brandon Cruz as
right policies for you.
+++
hosts. B p.m /, Ch . 6.
stock on margin to his family in
"G"
Stop in Today
+++
Watt Disney's
TUESDAY: Don't forget
1968 whlle be wia a Bache
VANISHING PRAIRIE
. The eminent conservative the morning · recap of the
regustered representallve. He
!lochnlcolor)
Otympicut
8:30a.m.,
Chs.
2
novelist John bos Passos has
said the company later
one of his major works come &amp; 7. This wilt run all week at
"G"
Pllont 992·2966
this hour.
llquldated the family's entire
to life . u "Hollywood
SHOW STAR rs 7 P.M.
114 Court St.
Pomeroy
account.

'

William Strausba~h officiating. Bwial will be in
Miles Cenw!~ at Rutland.
Friends may call at the fWleral
home ~Y time.

-Elberfeld$

Elsie Blackburn Died Saturday
Mrs. Elsie D.. Smith Black·
burn, 71, well known Pomeroy
resident of 200 Lasley St., died
Saturday at the Holzer Medical
Center.
A member of the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church, Mrs.
Blackburn was a past
· pr:esident of the Portsmouth
District Methodist Women's ·
Society of · c;hristian Service
and was a conference officer.
She was a past matron of
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
Eastern Star; a past guardian

.

Rex Shenefield, Clarence
the quarter horse racing.
Plans were begun Monday Henderson and Marvin King
night also for a new attraction, will head the event.
It was noted that sand has
a chain saw cutting contest.
been placed on the race track
for the benefitofhorsemen who
use the track for winter
training . Mrs. Gloria . Cross
was introduced as publicity
chalnnan for the
fair. She

succeeds Mrs. Janet Korn.
Board President Wallace
Bradford presided. Others
attending were Mrs. Marvin
King, secretary, and board
members Fred Goegle4J, C. W.
Henderson, Downie, Lauren E.
Hoffman, Shenefield, Benny
Slawter, David Koblentz and
Marvin King.

Miss Bonnie Mitchell of
Stale Library Services,
Columbus, wlll present "The
Art of Story Telling" Wed·
nesday al 7:30 p.m. at
Salisbury Elementary
School. ,
This workshop In the Right
H. E. (Pete) Shields, Letart
to Read Program is lor PTA
Falls, is the new chairman of
residents, Interested
·
the Meigs · County Hospital
· parents, librarians, county
and local superintendents; Commission, succeeding High
county Right to Read council Custer, Pomeroy RD.
Shields, manager of the
members, and principals
Agriculture Stabilization and
and teachers interested In
Conservation
Service in
Improving their story telling
Pomeroy, was elected by the
sklll. The object of the
commission
Monday night at a
meeting is to train and to
meeting in the conference
encourage the establishment
room of Veterans Memorial
of 1story telling centers in the
Hospital.
various areas of the county.
Named vice chairman was
Gretta Suttle is chairman
Russell
Collums of near
and Nellie Vale Is recorder of
Pomeroy and Leo Vaughan of
!he Meigs -County Right to
Pomeroy was reelected
Read advisory commltlee.
secretary. Vaughan has served
26 years in the post.

The commission reviewed
the financial statement of
Veterans Memorial Hospital of
the past year and discussed
future plans at the hospital. It
was noted that there are 101
persons employed at the '
hospital.
Others attending the mee~
were Robert Thompson, R. L.
Jacobs, and George Collins.

Story Telling
Workshop Set

tm

Shields Named
New ·Cha.irman

"As a member of the House
MARCH DAY SET
Public Works Committee, I
The Mother's March in the
have bad the oppor!Wlity to as- March of Dimes fund drive will
sist in the structuring and re- he held Thursday in Chester
view of the Appalachia pro- and Tuppers Plains, Mrs. Vikki
gram and I belleve it repre- Gloeckner, general chairm~n
sents one of the best conceived reports. Mrs. Joan Smith is
and developed P,.ograms for handling the activity in Tupthe people of the 13-state Ap- pers Plains and Mrs. Jim
palachia region," Miller said Louks is the chairman for the
he wrote.
march in Chester.
"This unique federal ..tatelocal partnership to develop
coordinated approaches to
local programs is a shining
example of the 'new
federalism' and the concept
has been emulated in other
Art, music, poetry and kindergarten through the third
dep.-essed areas in the coun- essays are the four categories grade; elementary, children
try," be said.
of the second annual cultural fourth through the sixth
Mil!er co .. porisored legisla- arts contest being conducted grades; junior high, seventh
lion last year passed by Con- by PTA units of Meigs County. through the ninth grades; and
gress whidl extended the life of
Entries selected lor blue senior high, sophomore
One of three Republican · the regional commission ribbons in the local units will through senior years.
.compete on the county level
races scheduled for the May through 1975.
Sections lor competition in
primary elections vanished
"This action (passage of the with the first place winners to the art category are graphics,
Monday afternoon when a bill) demonstrated the strong be exhibited and judged at the oil, water color, collages, and
petition of candidacy was with- support the Appalachia pro- District 16 conference to be sculpture (no pottery). Music
drawn.
gram bas in the Congress and held on April 29 at Jackson. must be an original song
Withdrawing his peUtion at was a clear mandate by the Unit judging of ertries is to be written by an individual
the Meigs County Board of Congress that the program completed in March. No theme student and may be lor any
Elections office Monday \VaS continu,e iii its present form," on entries is being carried out instrument. Poetry and essays
this year.
William· S. Cross, Racine, who Miller said.
may be of any form or style on
Grade
categories
as any subject.
bad filed to seek the party's
He said under Nixon's pro'
nomination
as
county posai, the program no longer established by the Ohio
All PTA unit blue ribbon
treasurer candidate. Cross would receive priority in atten- Congress of Parents and winners in the county will be on
would
have
opposed tion or in allocation of econo- Teachers are as follows : display at the April 6 m~ting
Republican incumbent, mic development funds . .
Primary to include children in of the Meigs County Council of
Howard Frank, for the
nomination. Cross gave no
indication to the board of
elections Monday as to why he
bad withdrawn from the race.
Deadline for candidates to
withdraw is 4 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 12.
, WASHINGTON
(UPl)- country.
emergency situations."
The county board has
In
an
environmental·
The kinris of emergencies
President Nixon baMed today
declared all petitions filed . for
the shooting , poisoning or message to Congress coin- were not fully spelled out.
the May primary elections
trawing of eagles, hawks, ciding ' with issuance of the
Nixon's environmental roesvalid with the exception of that coyotes, falcons and other executive order against killing sage also;
of Glenn Turner, Republican
kinds of predators on federal predators on government
Urged Congress to penalize
centralcommitteecarididatein lands.
owned lands, Nixon also called states, in the form of a 7 per
the Dyesville Precinct. It was
The President issued an lor prompt action to identify cent cut In federal funds, if
declared invalid by the board
executive order to put in force endangered species rather they fail to regulate location of
because Turner had failed to immediately pr.otection- lor · than waiting until they are airiorta and roads. Thl$ would
file his declaration of receipts animals and birds that ran- near extinction.
be part of a pending bill to
and expenses following the
chers and farmers have been
Nixon expressed concern require states to regulate
November, 1969, election when
killing in parts of the West about dwindling population of development around such
he ran lor a township post.
because they attack livestock. some animals and birds- sites.
The law declares thst canReports of mass shooting of · "starting with our national
Called for legislation to
didates, winners or losers, eagles from helicopters and symbol, the bald eagle."
regulate disposal on land of
~ failing to file the declaration
S'1"all planes, lrougbt out in
The executive order protect- · toxic wastes. so pollutants
.are ineligible to run for election congressional hearings last ing eagles and other predators barred fr?m the air and water
to any post lor a period of five . year, created a "torm of in· on public lands specified the will not contaminate under·

•

Twirlers Wdl
Compete Sunday

In Mitld.kport

A National Baion Twirlers
Assn. all-trophy baton contest
will be b~ld SWlday · at the
Meigs JWlior High School in
• Middleport under the sponsorship of Ohio Eta Phi
Parents and Teachers at Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Riverview Elementary SchooL Sorority.
Judging will take place
Four majorette valentine
following that meeting with the queens will be chosen, one
county blue ribbon winners in representing each age group.
each category to be judged at Each will be presented 8x!O
the district conference. Blue color self portraits in addition
ribbon winners of the district to their trophies. The.high point
conference will compete for trophy winner will receive an
state and national honors.
llxl4 color portrait. Providing
Last year Meigs County bad the pictures is the Aries Studio
the work of three students in Middleport.
place on the stale level, with
Doors will be open at 10 a.m.
the work of one j\mior high Sunday with the con~! events
student going into national starting at 12 noon. Food will
competition. Mrs. Charles be sold throughout the day:
L&lt;wis is cultural arts cbair- Anyone wishing to pariicipate
tnan for the Meigs County In the contest may con~ct Miss
Cou ncil of Parents and Gloria Buck, contest director,
Teachers. Each PTA unit has a 992-7326, or Mrs. Linda Riffle at
cultural arts chairman .
992&lt;5072.
.

Cultural Contest Rules Set

Cross Out

•
0'1 P.nmary

Bald.Eagle Protected by Nixon Ord~r

years .

dignation in some' parts of the on ly ex&lt;Tption.&lt; ro uld

l)e

·:for
r

g'ouml WRters through in-

discriminate dumping on land
or in wells.
Asked Congress to pass a law
to require states to regulate
earth runoffs from building
and road construction so
sediment will not pollute
waterways.
Urged enactment of the first
federal "pollution tax," a levy
of up to 15 cents per poiDid on
sulfur oxide emissions from the
smokestacks of power plants,
smelters and other industrial
facilities .
Called for more research to
develop ' 'clean" energy sources, less poisonous pesticides,
quieter airplanes and ways to
combat lead pollution in

ghettos where dlildren eat
flaking paint.
Proposed tax changes to
discourage development of
swampa and other wetlands .
The executive order on
predators reverses a decades
old pollcy under whidl the
government has subsidized
poisoning of coyotes and other
animals whldl prey on Uvestock . .
The government owna vast
amounts of western ra~elandl1
w~c'\it renls to ranchers.
Fixed wing alrcnlt aJao
Wllre uid to h•va been Uled Iii
kiiJlng ell)lea and olhtr winged
prett.tora, u. well u coyote~.

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