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10- The Dally Sentinel,MlckDeport·Pomeroy, o .. f't·~. :!2. l!li~

Trial of Seven Opens
.
HARRISBURG, P•. (UPI)-

The beanpole of a man drew his
6-foot-4 fr811le erect before the
jury, thrust both hands Into bls
pants pockets, and with a
slightly sad look on his lean
face began a short and quietspoken opening statement for
the defense.
"I will say fhat I don't like to

Orlna .

ruen·illas Hold Plane
With Joe Kennedy III

say," Ramsey aar~. former
Sitting at a government table
attorney general of the United near blm was a prosecutor who
States, . tqld the nine women had once worked under Clark
and three men of the in the Justice Departinent.
Harrisburg Seven Jury. "The Wllllam S. Lynch, yellowevidence · will show that the haired, chunky and .forceful,
government's charges are opened for the government
false."
Monday before Clark spoke
"It charges a conspiracy. and he too said:
There was no conspiracy-no
"You don't check your Godagreement. You have to draw given common sense at the
on your common sense ... "
courthouse door."

By United Preis IDierutloaal

A band of Arab guerrUias
hijacked a Lufthansa 747
jumbo jet with 188 persons
aboard to tbe war-torn Red Sea
.. state of southern Yemen today.
They set free some of the
passengers but kept the men
aboard, Including Joseph P.
Kennedy 10, and then placed

March 4-5 Is Signup

(ConUnued from page I )
assumed that the press waited
Sign-up ·days for the
until today to splash the story Pomeroy Boys League will be
of Nixon's visit "in order that March 4, Saturday from 9 a.m.
our American frienda might to 12 noon, and Sunday, March
have the opportunity to publish 5, from 1 to 3 p.m. at the
the pictures first in their Pomeroy City Hall.
papers."
There wiU also be a final
· Such treatment of a guest is sign-up for boys on March 12,
highly unusual in papers Sunday, from 1 to 3.p.m., also
which, of course, take their at the Pomeroy City Hall.
cues from the government.
Any boy seven years of age
A.nd the papers rarely print
piCtures
While . Cltou and Nixon...,
Communist revolutionary and
a capitalist lawyer.--talked at.
long, green table m the Great
Hall of the People, a glowing
.
Pat Nixon got close to the
Mrs. Clara B. Welch, 78,
people.
Dextet Route 1, died Monday
lite tasted and -nibbled her afternoon at the Holzer
way through the huge, im- Medical Center. Mrs. Welch
maculate kitchen of the ornate, was a member of the Mount
Vlctorian-&amp;yle Peking Hotel, · Union Baptist Church.
where 110 cooks and chefs were
She Is survived by four
preparlngsomeofthe best food daughters, Mrs. Robert
In Cl!lna. Then she visited the Molden, Dexter Route 1; Mrs.
summer palace used by Esther Richmond, St. Albans,
Cltlna's rulers in the 18th W. Va.; Mrs. Bernice Justis,
century.
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Anunie
PetGoes lolbeZoo
Hysell, Canton; two sons,
From there she went to the Russell of Lake City, Fla., and
zoo and giggled at the antics ol Julian, of Christian Llike, 111.;
two pandas which will he two sisters, Mrs. Esta Welch,
O!ou'sglft to the United states. Gallipolis, and Mrs. Rosie
The Nixons plan to donate two Spears, Proctorville; 23
shaggy musk oxen to the grandchildren, and 14 great·
Peking Zoo - animals long grandchildren.
110ughl by the Cl!lnese.
runeral services will be held
On her llltchen tour, Mrs. at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Mt.
Nixon laughed when she Union Baptist Church with the
reached out to shake han«!S Rev. Jay Stiles officiating.
with one of lh!l Mandarm Burial will be in Vinton
cooks, only .lb find his hand Memorial Gardens. Friends
encruated In sticky dough. He may call at the Martin Funeral
joined the general laughter.
Home In Rutland any time on
Wednesday and until noon on
Thursday.

a ara welch

and not 16 before Aug. 1, 1972,
)UUE ROSE
wi11 be able to participate.
POMEROY - Julle Rose,
There will be a small fee to
(Continued from page I)
daughter
of Mr. aud Mrs.
cover the insurance and cap.
Joho .Rose of Long Bottom, band needed changes. These
This will probably be between
·
bas completed her training changes were made and Mr.
$3 and $4. This fee must be paid
as
a cosmetologist at the Bowen was informed that the
before any boy can practice
Nationwide Beauty situation had improved.
with his team.
Academy In Columbus. Miss
"7. In March, 1971, Mr.
Anyone who is interested in
Rose
attended
the
school
Bowen asked the adsupervising a team is asked to
during
the
Rlllllllltr
between
ministration
for assurance In
call Tom Grueser, Pomeroy.
her
junior
aud
senior
year
at
the permanency of his position
Following the final March 12
Eastern
High
School
and
since
he was considering
sign-up there Will be a meeting
then
returned
to
ber
training
buying property and a· new
of all managers, parents and
,
at
the
academy
foUowlng
home
in Meigs County. He was
anyone else interested in
graduation from Eastern assured by the administration
helping.
last spring. Miss Rose bas that he had sufficient job
accepted
employment at · security to warrant buying the
·~-~;
Kathy's Kut and Kurl Sbop, home."
tpeClJ
one mtle off Route 7 on
David Robinette, speaking
County
Road
8%.
on Bowen's behalf, said he
lven
unc
· feels Bowen has done an outRACINE - Specifications
standing job with all of the
for a new fire truck for the
bands in the Meigs District
village of Racine were sub"considering hardships placed
mitted by fire department
upon him." Robinette said in
members at a recent meeting
his opinion many imof Racine Council.
The annual "send a mouse to provements have been made
Council took no action on college" phase of the annual and Bowen had done a good job
submitting the specifications Meigs County cancer Soccety at all levels.
for bids, Pete Simpson, Lt. of fund drive Is helng observed in
Arthur Miller, a former band
the fire department reported. elementary schools across booster president, also spoke in
An order must be placed for Meigs County this week.
support of Bowen. He said
a fire truck two years in ad·
Brochures and envelopes are "several" parents at a meeting
vance of delivery. Deadline being distributed to the a few years ago had indicated
school
for that they expected to "dictate"
date for dellvery of a new truck elementary
is May 1976.
collection of funds with which to the band director. MiUer
In order to maintain low 'fire to purchase mice for ex- said he told these parents at the
insurance rates for residents of perimental purposes in the lime that it was not the duty of
the district a state law requires cancer program. Mrs. Ullian the boosters to "diciate" but to
the purchase of a new truck Moore, chairman of the do everything possible to help
every 20 years.
project, reports that last year the band.
Simpson also reported that a 21 cents provided a mouse
He also commented that
fund campaign for radio whlle this year the cost is up to Bowen had worked under
equipment for the emergency 57 cents each.
"great hardships" in that he
truck will be started within the
Mrs. Moore stresses that was the first band director for
next few days. Residents who although 57 cents is needed for the new district under conare served by the emergency each mouse, contributions solidation and UU.t students
unit will be notified by letter from children in smaller had been used to having
for contributions. A goal of amounts are readily ac. separate directors in the three
$1500 has been set.
ceptable. Children are given a high schools before consmijll pin decorated with a solidation- Rutland, Pomeroy
mouse replica when they and Middleport.
.
STUDY NEW PLAN
Carl Horky questioned the ·
Representatives of the Meigs return their envelopes although
empty
to
their
reamount
of lime allowed for
Local, Southern Local and
spective
schools.
practicing by band students.
Eastern Local School District,
Bowen, entering Into the
boards of education met with
discussion, said he had been
the county board Monday night
approached
about a year ago
to review the new state school
on the question of adequate
foundation program outlined
time but that it would have
by Robert Bowen, county
been difficult to change
superintendent of schools.
schedules in the middle of the
season. He also reported that
CLUB TO MEET
giving students longer periods
The ·Past Officers Club of
A memorial service for for band during school hours
Racine Chapter OES will meet Helen Anne Hardy, 48, Char· had been discussed but was not
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the don, Ohio, was held at 11:30 considered possible.
Shrine clubhouse. Potluck a.m. today at St. John's
Board President Frank w.
refreshments will be served. Episcopal Cl!urch, 700 High St., Porter pointed out that
Worthington. Mrs. Hardy was students could not be transthe daughter of Ewing T. ported home If rehearsals of
TWO NAMES OMilTED
Boles, director of the Ohio the band were held after school
Unintentionally omitted in Valley Publishing Co.
hours . Another resident
the obituary of Mrs. Anna
Mrs. Hardy worked with the pointed out the problem in
Yeager Monday were names of Geauga ColDlty Chapter of the preparing bands for pertwo surviving step-sons, American Cancer Society formances with the students
William Yeager, of Kent, and several
years
before living many miles away, and
James, of Middleport.
discovering lltte last year that having no transportation, II•
she had the disease. lite died at rehearsals were · held after
3a.m. Saturday at the Cl!ardon school hours.
SING PLANNED
Hospital.
Porter thanked the group of
A hymn sing will be held at
~urvlvlng also are her teachers and parents' who
7:30p.m. Saturday at the old mother, Mrs. Katherine Boles, appeared at the meeUng and
Dexter Church. The public is and a brother, Dr. Ewing promised that no action would
invited.
Thomas Boles, Jr., of :1:300 be taken on the matter until the
Onandaga Drive, Columbus. regular March meeting. The
Funeral services were held board then recessed to go to the
Monday afternoon at St. Luke's office of Meigs County
Episcopal Cl!urch In Cl!ardon. Superintendent Robert Bowen
A private burial service was where state school foundation
held Tuesday at the Walnut provisions were to be
Grove Cemetery In . Worth- discussed.

Teachers

Died MondaY

MEIGS .THEATRE

WDGE TO MEET

Tonight, Feb. 22
I NEVER SANG
FOR MY FATHER
ITedlnic.olorl
Melvin Douglas
Gene HAckman
" GP"

Plus

SUMMER TREE
ITechnicolorl
Jack Warden
Michael Douglas
" GP"
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Wednesday &amp; Thursday
February 23-24
NOT OPEN

CHESTER - A special
meeting of Shade River Lodge
453 will be beltl at 7:30 Thurs.
day e\.enlrig at the hall In
O!ester. Work will be In the
master masons degree. All
master masorui are Invited.
Denver. Well is worshipful
master.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
DISCHARGED - Robert
Turner, Clara RusseU, George
Warner, Margaret Bissell,
Edna Roush, Iris Morris, Dana
Haning.
1

Citizens Bank
SERVICES

*
*
*
*
*
*
* Will Blow

Olecking Accounts

Savings Accounts
Money Orders

Night Banking

Safety Boxes
Auto Loans

Mortgage Loans

Your Mind

S
G.

•
,cations
Co iJ

FtDld Drive in
Meigs Schools

Seroice Held
For Daughter

Of Director

2-HOUR
CLEANING

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E. 2nd

explosives aboard ''to guard
against any eventuality."
Kennedy, the !~year-old son
of the !all! sj!n. Robert F.
Kennedy, boarded tbe plane at
New Delhi after a brief visit to
India as a tourist. He had
accompanied his uncle, Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, on a tour .
of Bangladesh. The senator
returned earlier.
· Egypt's semiofficial MickDe
East News Agency (MENA)
said In a dispatch from ADEN
~at there were five hijackers,
mcludlng a qualllled pUot It
identified as Yousaef Khateeb,
who seized the plane on a l'ligbt
from New Delhi to Athens.
It said ·the hijackers told
officials they had landed In
Yemen to refuel and that they
permitted 52 persons t6 disem-

Oean Up
(Continued from page 1)
project engineer for the
proposed water system meet
with Syracuse council in
regard to the new water
system. Pomeroy village has
driUed a test weU in Syracuse,
and plans are to run the water
line from Syracuse to
Pomeroy, bypassing the
present water plant.
Baronick noted that carter
and Evans, who are working at
the site of the new Jones Boys
location on West Main St.,
asked lor a six inch water tap
Instead of a four Inch as they
plan to install a sprinkler
system. The town will run the
llne to the edge of their
property line for $400 which is
the cost of a four inch water
tap.
A letter was read by Clerk
Jane Walton asking council to
consider repairing Point Lane.
Council agreed to review
needed repairs of all streets in
the village.
Mees reported it has been
suggested that mercury vapor
hghts be placed on the parking
lots. It was noted that approximately nine lights would
be needed. No action was
taken.
In regard to upgrading
village ordinances, Baronick
suggested rather thlm pay a
firm $3,600 for the . work that
possibly coUege students could
do II. No action was taken.
Aletter was read from Major
Gay H. Duke, mayor of Ripley,
W.Va., In regard to upgrading
SR 33. Duke suggested a
meeting be set to discuss the
progress of the road. No action
was taken.
Attending were Baronick,
Mees, Lucine Poulin, Ralph
Werry, Don CoUlns, William
Snouffer, and Elma Russell
council members; Clerk Jan~
Walton, Treasurer Phyllis
Hennesy and Chief Webster.

bark-38 women, 15 children
andoneman. It did not identify
the man but said the hijackers .
warned Yemeni . authorities
from comtnc too .clOBe.
MENA said tbe pemngers
were stlll aboard the plane at 9
a.m. EST.
Motives of the hijackers
remained obacure but broad· ·
casts Indicated they were
Palestinian guerrillas ''lf).th a
grudge agalnst llrael and West
Germany, which baa close ties
with Israel and has supplied It
with ald.

!here's a Full Service
Bank thai can meel all
your money needs. Do
you need a loan, a

checking or savings
account, a safe storage

spot? We're II!

WHEN YOU VISIT. PARK FREE

_(Continued from page 1)
the U. S. command amounced.
On the ground, the &amp;uth VIetnamese reported kiJilng 62
guerrillas in the heaviest single battle this year, whUe suffering
only two wounded of their Oli'n.
In addition, they reported killing 60 more guerrillas In two
other battles In Quang Nam Province 300 miles north of Saigon at
a cost ol 10 of their own wounded and six missing. All three
battles were fought In South Vietnain's Mllltary Region I,
comprJsing the five northernmost jrovlnces. The surge of
Communist attacks that ll\llrked President Nixon's Peking visit
tapered off from more than 50 Monday to 22 today.
PEKING - IN AN UNPRECEDENTED display, the fourpage Peoples' Dally )ll!blished seven photographs of President
Nilon today. The people of Peking queued up to get their copy.
Two of the photos showed Nixon beaming and shaking hands with
Cl!lna's Communist party patriarch, Chalnnan Mao Tse-tung.
Another picture depicts Mao's study, With the chalnnan
sitting back In an armchair near a table piled With books. Nixon
i.s leaning forward and Henry A. Kilsinger; Nixon's national
aecurity affairs adviser, l.s sitting beside the President and
listening raptly, his banda folded. The other pictures show Nixon
with Premier Chou En-lal- the welcome at the airport; a scene
of Nixon reviewing the troope; his lira! meeting With Chou at the
Great HaU of the People; and at the formal banquet Monday
night.

8.UDGET
·SHOP I·

DANCE
Friday &amp; Saturday Night

Whispering Pines

Stretch Panty Hose
One Size Fits All

'tAl DDLEP9RT, OH 10.
Member Fede~~L~!IIIMrr~
'

r- '

"

'

I

•

pair

First Floor Hosle,y Department

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

ANNOUNCE THAT

TER
PORTRAIT STUDIOS, 'Inc.
Studio Hours
At
Our
.
.
. To lntrodlaee

Master Portraits
Color Artistry
We Offer a

GIANT WAU
SIZE .

Nite Cub
10 til 2

By

Music
The RNI McCoys
4p~ . .Band &amp; Female Singer
,from Beverly, Olllo

11x14

5
thru
Saturday, February 26th
11 AM-4 PM and 5 PM-8 PM

_

llriM '• .,....

......

11:

· I'OITaA•r

1~00

Phis 50c Film

DAILY
. Thll .. "" ,; ...... , ....... lai.nil
,..,,,,...., 1ft

. .·

LIYI!I(I C~OII

. VAlUE'·

Wednesday, February 23rd·

••

cartrett, off duty at the tlme, Manager Dick Caldwell ·and
said he never before had shot Cartrett, a student pilot, ,
said he tried to commit suicide at a man In his 10 years on the returned from a flight.
"He motioned lor us to come
because his Wife was l~aving Gast011 County rural police
·out with our han~ up," Car·
blm, crashed two small planes ·.force.
without Injury Tuesday' and
Wensel was charged with trett said. "As I moved oUt; I
wai captured by a pollceman · armed robbery. Other charges took my pistol from my holster
who wu shooting to kiU blm were expected to be filed later, and put it In my back pocket so
and mlased.
and the FBI was notified to he couldn 'I see the bulge."
~ ·He begged me to go ahead Investigate possible air piracy.
Wensel had trouble starting
and kill blm. He Sfld he wished
Dldn't'Want to Live
the plane so he ordered
my aim had been a little bet,
Wensel. told police he didn't caldwell to td1 him what to do,
ter,": s81d Detective L. W. want to live because his wife all the wbUe keeping the rifle
Cartrett, who,' aiming at said she was going to divorce leveled on him.
Wensel's head, had missed his him, Detective Capt. Jim
"He said, 'I'm going to take
first shot and knocked a .22 A)lten said.
my first flying' lesson today,'"
caliber rlfie from Wensel's
Wensel arrived at the airport cartrett said.
h8nds with hls second shot. · a short ·time after airport
Cartrett said Wensel ogt the

Ch

. . Gi'ge
··
.............. The .......
Thtlt cww..n IIi; ••

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

•

•

~4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , _ . . . . . . . . . . lloolt. .

... , JIM ....... :$1."1'1r'llt

• ......,

Chou, in Mellow Mood, Hints U.S.
Newsmen May He Allowed to Stay

plane off the ground on a
bounce and traveled about 300
yards at 25 feet altitude before
he crashed nose fiist in a
roadside field.

plane, which he smashed Into a
PEKING (UP!) - In
thirdaircraltaftera short taxi .
He jumped from the plane and President Nixon 's presence, a
. began chasing the hostages smiling Premier Chou En-lai
who were headed back to the dropped an intriguing but
office, firing one stray shot, ·vague hint Ieday that
American newsmen - who
Car Commandeered
cartrett said.
were
sent ·packing in 1949 .Wensel climbed out of the
"When they were clear, I may be welcome to remain in
wreckage with the rifle and
commandeered a car 1whose hollered at the man with the China after Nixon departs.
Chou dropped the ambiguousoccupants had stopped to try to rifle," Cartrett said. "H~
ly
worded invitation at the start
help. He ordered them back to turned to me, holding the gun
the airport and, with the ad' lev~!. I shot at him ~nd then I of his third work:ng session
ditional hostages, marched shot at him a second time and with Nixon, this one held in the
caJdweU and the others back bit the rifle and knocked it out President's luxurious lakeside
guest house that has been
from the office out to the of his hand."
cartrett said he aimed for dubbed "the Peking White
flightllne, Cartrett said.
House." It was snowing when
Wensel started a second the man's head.

Devoted To 'The lntereata Of Tlae Meigt·Ma&amp;On Area

NO. XXIV
NO. ' 221
er· zmn

POMEROY-M.IDD~EPOiH. ,QI:UO

, . WEDNfSDAY, FEBRUARY 231 1972_

Po~eroy
One. hundred years ago the
American neurologist George
Huntington happened to be the
first scientist to describe a
nervous disorder that makes
older persons progressively
less able to control their limbs.
The ailment became known
.S "Huntington's Disease" or
Huntington's Chorea, one of the
few iUnesses to bear a par·
ticular eponym.
Neurologist
Huntington
made his first presentation on
the disease, through what

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CEN (S

Figures in ·Centennial

circumstances are unknown, at
a meeting of the Meigs County
and
Pomeroy
Medical
Societies in 1872.
A Centennial observance
marking Huntington's first
presentation will he conducted
Sunday evening, March 26, in
Columbus at the Center for
Tomorrow . On other days
biochemistry, pathology and
treatment of this most tragic
disorder will be discussed.
The Sunday eveniitg meeting
is a part of a three day in·

ternational symposium involving approximately 75
persons from other countries
and a similar number of the U.
. S., according to George W.
Paulson,.M. D., arrangements
secretary for the host group,
the Neurological Associates,
Inc., Chatham Lane, Columbus.
Charles E. Blakeslee,
president of the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society
and its membership, have been
invited to attend March 26

historical session.
A historical note of local
interest to be explained ,
perhaps,
after further
research, is how and why Dr.
Huntington made his first
presen!Jltion of Chorea at a
meeting in Meigs County. Dr.
Huntington's personal rec.ords
(he died in 1916) indicate he
made the presen!Jltion at a
joint m,eeting of the Meigs
County and Pomeroy Medical
Societies in Pomeroy in the
year 1872.

~m;;m·IS:l·~~:~~~~:~:;z~:o.:!:~!&amp;:!8~:~:!:~~:!»3!&amp;:~&amp;:~:!:~i::~:~~:~~~:~~s~:;s~:~-:!&amp;

Steps Taken to! Collins Confident

1$; HAPPY.TO

,,.

GASTONIA, N.C. (UP!)-

Roger Dlil~ Wensel, 29, who

Reg. $1 25

'

I

~

Not His Day·to Die, tho1lgh He Tried

Panty Hose .Sale

3

__,.moo

ummit

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Meigs Gals too
Much for Kyger

o•r

'

.

Ington.

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Pomeroy
The girls'basketball team at
Tuesday was 38 degrees under Meigs High &amp;hool continued
Phone 992·5428
partially cloudy skies.
its winning streak by defeating
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •. . Kyger Creek Monday night 44
to 17. .
Big guns for Meigs were Pat
Harris and Sherry King with 14
euch followed by Deb Ohlinger
with 11, Jane Thomas and
Chris Miller 2 each and Ava
Sayre 1.
For Kyger, T. Hall had 6, s.
Hall,
S. Nunn and Saxon 3 each
••• Jllilll
and Gardner 2.
·
'
BY QUARTERS
Meigs
8 14 T/ 44
from
Ky.Cr.
2 8 16 17

BAKER

tcooUDued fl'tUI Pflie 1)
Ge&lt;rge and Marcy · Owens,
saxophone. quartet.
~ Becky Wright, Jo EDen
· Diehl, lnglid Hawley, Melanie
Ha.ckett and Debbte Gamet,
woodwind quintet; Donna
Francis, Lynne Baker,
Elirabelll Blaetlnar, Sharon
·WilsOn, and Barbara Archer,
woodwind quintet; Connie
Grueser, Connie Radford, and
Debbie Triplett, trumpellrio;
Jim McC!pre, PhiUp Ohllnger,
Gary Gureser and, Marty
Seelig, trombon~ quartet;
Connie . Grueser, Connie
Radford, Melanie Hackett,
Melanie Burt, Fred Jones and
Nathan Robinette, brass
sextet; Connie Grueser,
trumpet solo.

News .•• in Briefs

PRlCES ARE RIG8T!

If ' s great to know

10 Combos

·,,

esA1ISIACTIOH IS Of (OUISI OIIAUNrtiD .

Or~1ze-~t ,

ACTIVE IN CRUSADE -Mrs: Robert Kuhn, Pomeroy,
1nd the Rev. Charles Simons, pastor of the Middleport First
Baptist Church, will take active roles In the annual Mid·
dleport Community Crusade whicbaeta under:way Sunday.at
. &lt;· )lie MiddlePort Eleftlentary School. Services will be held
from SUnday through SUnday, March 7with the Heath United
Methodist, Cl!urch of the Nazarene, First . United
Preabyterlan, First Baptist and the MI. Moriah Baptist
Cl!urches joining for the annual services. Mrs. Kuhn will
serve as accompanist and choir director with aU singers to
report to the school at 6:30 each evening prior to tile service.
The Rev. Mr. Simona will serve as song leader.

Jean Will of Pomeroy is
chairman Of a steering group
that acted Tuesday night
formally to organize a Meigs ·
County Chapter of the Hwnane
Society of the United States.
Meeting at the Meigs Inn
with John Inman, Fort Wayne,
Ind., regional HSUS director,
Mrs. Will named other standing commiteees and assisted
Inman in a general discussion
of short and long range goals of
the proposed chapter.
f'ormorethanayearasmall
group of local persons conBY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
cerned about the treatment of
WASHINGTON- AMERICANS' C~ of living rose 0.3 pet. animals - and children In January, with such things as meats and new cars costing have been meeting informally.
more, the Lal&gt;or DePartment reported today.
Last night was the first formal
The department said consumers also paid more last month action to organize.
than In December (or some services, whlle prices dropped for
Inman showed a fihn, "The
fresh vegetables, clothing, used cars and gasoUne. The January Animals are Crying," which
increaae In the Conaumer Price Index, covering a wide range of documented the national
costs of products and services like medical treatment, compared problem HSUS attempts to
with a 0.4pct. rise In December-steepestrisein six months.
meet.
Another meeting is expected
WNDON-'TELEPHONED THREATS touched off a series in two weeks when further
of bomb scares today In London and In Aldershot where an Irish planning will be made for a
Republican Army (IRA) bomb killed seven persons Tuesday more public meeting in a large
including a Roman Catholic army chaplain, Father Gerard place .
Among close, reachable
Weston, who had been sent home from Belfast for his ,own safety.
One bomb scare came at the House of Commons where a goals the new chap~uld be
member noticed a briefcase leaning against the base of a statue interested In are:of the late Uoyd George. An army bomb disposal squad found it • - Sponsorship of "Kindness
was the property of MP Antony Buck and contained only notes Clubs" in .the county's
elementary schools.
for a speech and recorda of Commons Jiroceedlngs.
- Informational programs
Anotber call from a man who said he was a member of the
through
fihns and talks in the
IRA said a bomb would explode In a car parked near ·Charing
Cross. The station was sealed off but that cali also turned out to
be a hoax. Acaller In Aldershot said a bomb had been placed in a
gold colored Olrysler sedan. PoUce sealed off a large area of
central Aldershot, 38 miles southwest of London and pollee
cleared a 400-yard siretch of road near Town HsU. No bomb was
found.

.ews .. in·. Briefi

schools and at public
gatherings.
- Sponsor a survey of the
animal kingdom in Meigs
County, numbers, kinds, etc.
Jeremy McCreary ,
'Gallipolis, interested in a
Gallia County chapter being
formed, joined the talks. ,
Committees named were ,
Fund raising, Dorotha Fisher,
Willie Maude Coates, Betty
Bar on I c k;
program
development, Carol Ohlinger,
Rita Lewis, Dorotha Fisher;
treasurer, Carolyn Smith;
legal consultant, Nonga
Roberts; publicity, Lucy
Amsbary, Myla Woods and
Barbara Belzing, and by-laws,
Chet Tannehill.

4 Divorce
Suits Filed

Four suits for djvorce filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court are by Dorothy M.
Greathouse, Racine, vs. Harry
B. Greathouse, Racine;
Katherine Pauley, Rutland vs.
Kennety Pauley, Rutland;
Roger Deem, Middleport, vs.
Vicki Deem, Pomeroy, and
June M. Murphy, Pomeroy, Rt.
4, vs. Robert A. Murphy,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, each charging
gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty.
Divorce actions dismissed
were by PhylUs Blake vs .
O'Dell Blake and Alma Jane
Pullins vs. Joseph William
Pullins.
ATl'ENTION IN THE PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARIES
In the case of the Twentieth
shifted to four new states today, although most candidates
Mary E. Rager, 30, Mid· Street Bank, Huntington
maintained their pressure on New Hsmpahire and Florida where dleport, suffered minor against Karr Construction
the first ballots will be cast. President Nixon submitted his lacerations in a two car . Company, the court ruled that
declaration of candidacy for re-election and posted a $500 filing collision at 6:55 p.m. Tuesday the plaintiff, Twentieth Street
fee lor Inclusion on the June 8primary ballot In New Mexlco ..Sen. on Rt. 775, one and four tenths Bank, failed to meet the burden
Henry M. Jackson, D-WaSb., was the first Democrat entered in miles south of Rt. 141.
of proof required by law,
the primary.
According to .the Gallia- therefore the court ruled In
Gov. Wllllam G. MUUken signed a law Tuesday to add Meigs Post State Highway favor of the Karr Construction
Michigan to the list of states with primary elections, end Patrol, she was a passenger. In Company.
Alabama Gov. George C; WaUace Indicated he would probably a car driven by Mostala Rafii,
run In the May 16 primary. A PemsylYI!nla "popularity poll" 37, Gallipolis. .
The. patrol said Rsfil was
Veterans Memorial Hospital
tapped Jackson as most Ukely to win the state's April 25
attempting
to
turn
his
car
when
DISCHARGED - Golda
Democratlc-•primaty. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey ran second
followed by Sen. GeorgeS. McGovern, WaUace and Sen. Edmund it stalled i~ the highway, where Wyant, General Hall, Vivian
it was struck by a car driven by Johnson, Norman Smith,
Muskle,
Rose Z. Jeffers, 59, Patriot. Juanita · Frederick, Patricia
COLUMBUS -STATE SEN. OAKLEY C. Collins, R·lronton, . There was moderate damage Powell, Mary Jo Dobbins,
said Tuesday there is 1\o reason lot him to back off irom par· to poth cars. Rafii was cited for Mayme Cus!er, Minnie Wise.
tlclpatlng In Senate action on strip mine control legislation even making an Improper turn.
TAKING RESERVATIONS
A deer was killed In an acthough he 1.1 a strip mine company owner. "There's not a man In
The
Pomeroy auto license
cident on· Rt. 7, three and one
the Jeclllatln who doesn't have a conDict of Interest at times,"
tenths miles north of Rt,3S. The bureau is now reserving
Col1lna Nld. "How about teachers and Insurance men, for. In· animal ran into the path of a license plates f"r 1972. March
stance?''
car operated by Gary A. . 15 is the final day for reserving
CoiUns was accused of confilc;t of Interest durin~! a hearinl! of Borden, 25, Lima. There was plates. Those tnlerested may
(Continued on page 18)
contact Paul Simon.
minor damage to his car.

Chou arrived, the first 1oul meant that reporters could see
weather since Nixon came umor~places " for the five days
Monday.
remaining in Nixon's visit,
Both parties appeared in high · whether they could extend their
spirits and satisfied with the s!Jly.
progress of their dialogue. The
A few American newsmen
Americans took it as a good have been admiited on · a
omen that Nixon for a second temporary basis in the afterday received extraordinary math of the thaw which
coverage in the government- developed when a U:S. ping
controlled press.
pong learn toured china,
Four photographs of the helping open the mainland to
American leMer and his Nixon.
One of the photographs which
delegation were published in
today's edition of the "People's appeared in today's paper
Daily," along with reporting showed Nixon and Chiang
which was straight forward Ching, among others. She Is the
and
factual
without wife of pfrty Chairman Mao
propaganda or embroidery.
Tse·lung. The picture was
Bantering with newsmen as taken at the Peking Opera
he posed for pictures with Tuesday night.
Nixon, Chou dropped his vague
Chou drove to Nixon's buff.
hint.
colored lodging precisely at the
"If the press wants to see appointed hour- 2 p.m. Nixon
any more places," he ·said, met him at the door with a
"they can apply to the Ministry smile and a handshake for talks
of Information. " An official of which the President hopes will
the ministry said applications lead to an all-Asian conference
to find a political settlement to
were ' 'being considered.''
Hint Unclear
the wars of Laos, Cambodia
Chou left unclear whether he and Vietnam.
Talks Recess
After two hours, the !Jllks
recessed briefly for tea, then
reswned.
Nixon asked Chou If the snow
- the first foul weather since
his
arrival Monday- would
The annual canvass or
(Continued on page lb)
business telephone customers
in the Pomeroy . Middleport
area is under way General
Telephone Co. of Ohio an·
nuunced today.
Kenley Krinn, Athens
district commercial manager,
General Telephone Co. of Ohio,
said directory company
The Meigs County board of
representatives will call on commissioners conducted
businessmen to review and routine business , approving
confirm listings for the 1972 one animal claim at their
phone directory being com- regular meeting Tuesday.
piled.
Raymond T. Smith, Pomeroy,
This canvass lasts until Rt. 2, was paid $111.30 for the
March 10. Closing date is April loss of a calf.
7, the deadline for residential
Attending were Com·
customers to make changes in missioners Bob Clark and
the new directory.
Warden Ours and · Clerk
Listed In the book with Martha Chambers. It was
Pomeroy and. Middgeport are announced that a meeting on
Letart Falls, Portland, Racine emergency medical service
and Rutland. The 1972 direc· will he held in the courtroom of
tory is scheduled for delivery the courthouse on Wednesday,
in June .
March I at 7:30p.m.

or

Business Phone
Canvass Opens

Calf Oaim
Made Good

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Sen. "If it is not passed, we will
Oakley. C. Collins, R·lronton, have the same prehistoric
ch'airman of the Senate monster we have had for
Education Committee, said years,'' he said .
Tuesday his committee will
(
hold a special meeting next
week to vote on legislation
separating into two cabinetlevel agencies the Department
of Mental Hygiene and
Correction.
Collins said he anticipated
the measure , which already
has cleared the House, would
have little trouble gaining
approval from his committee.
Collins' remarked followed a
committee hearing on the bUt
during which the chairman of
Gov. John J. Gilligan's Task
Force on Mental Health and
Retardation testified Ohio's
outmoded combination of the
men!Jll health and corrections
agencies has kept many
competent mental health of·
ficials from coming to the s!Jlte
to work.
"Mental health may not have
been a dirty word in Ohio,''
said Victor M. Victoroff; a
psychiatrist and practicing
SPECIAL PROJECI' -Members of the Ladles Auxiliary of the Syracuse Volunteer Fire
physician . "But Ohio was a
Department
are again working each week on their annual Easter project. Members meet one
dirty word in mental health
day a week to create colorful baskets, trimmed by hand, from plastic containers. The bottles
organizations throoghout the
across the front ol the picture demonstrate the steps each basket goes through . This year the
nation. Now I think we are on
organization is taking orders for $1 baskets only - the baskets filled with candy - and orders
the verge of a breakthrough."
Victoroff said clearance of
may be placed by calling Doris Friend, 992-5841; Ada Slack, 992-2806; Elva Dailey, 992-2613;
the bill and separation of the
Agnes White, 992-2481; Janice Lawson, 992-7351, or Marie Rizer, 992-2659. Pictured at
corrections and mental health
Tuesday's work session on the left, from the left, are Mrs. Ada Slack, Mrs. Eleanor Bohram,
functions would result in imand Mrs. Jean Hall. On the right of the table is Mrs. Doris Friend, general chairman. Chocolate
proved patient care.
covered eggs in various flavors may also be ordered by calling the numbers above.

Auto Struck
In Highway

.

..

.\

I

EASTER EGGS PRODUCI'ION LINE - Women of the
Syracuse Fire Department 's Auxiliary are turning out
hundreds of chocolate covered, flavored leggs for the Easter
season. These will be sold and also placed In Eastern baskets
prepared by the auxiliary each year to sell as a money-

~-~--"''

..

making j)roject. From the left at Tu~y'!l work seu1on w1ib
tray~ of eggs are Mrs. Adrieme Hubbard, Mrs. Mlrle R!Jer,
Mrs. Clara Lavender, and Mrs. Mary Pickens and 11-month·
old, Eber: Pickens, Jr ., who attends each work seuion and
finds the project fascinating.
'
.. '

�'.
3- 'l'be IlBlJy
Ui.&amp;.ll-rt•ruu~aVy,
"'-- 9·•Feb. 23, 1972
. Sentinel •,,....._...,

1-'1'111 Oai4' Selltillel, MidcDeport-Pomeroy, 0. Feb. 23 1972

fi)ITORIAL

·

'

.

The Twain Shall Meet
'

Education Needs
An Evener Keel

•

'

A lot of graduating classes have gone forlh inlu tlw
world over the years assured that knowledge is vower.
To those of most r•cent vintage. however. the trad• ·
tiona! commencement send·off may sound less like goO&lt;f
advice than a poor joke.
Knowledge thes~ days is provmg no guara ntee ot
economtc power. In a generally depressed professional
employment market few groups are having 1t worse lhan
the newest corners
Where during the expans10nary '60s btg business
recrutters. zealously outbidding each other for the annual
crop of new brain power were fix tures of the campus
scene, the current corpora tion trend 1s toward cost cut·
tlng through staff tr1mmmg. And graduat es. diplomas in
hands, ma.king their own ways to personnel offtces are
llketr to fmd a waiting list of already well·experienced
appbcants ahead of them
·
. The situation is bad all over but poss1bly worst of all
m the baste professwn~duca tio n Just how bad ts
pointed up in a Wall Street Jout·nal survev of leacher
training across the country which this year , according
to National Educatwn Assoc1atton reckoning. will produce
234,100 qualified new teachers to ftght 11 out for 115.000
openmgs m th~ nation 's schools.
To bring tea•·her supply and demand back mto som e·
thmg resembling balance, the colleges are restricting en.
rollments, raiSing standards, making courses tougher. to
weed out the medtocre. and are encouraging those stu ·
dents not strongly motivated toward educalion to swttch
to other majors.
It is a drastic reversal of a situation which prevatled
for most of the 15 years since the first Soviet Sputnik
shocked Americans into an acute awareness. among othet·
things, of the importance of education. Improvement of
the schools had a high pnority m the dnve to catch up
technologically with the Sovtets.
Helped along by the j:enerai prospenty of the '60s. the
wllllngnes~ of the pubhc to spend on new school plants.
and large mfustons of federal funds. education was some·
thing ol a boom field The trend was new and belter
faciUtles. more and better-tratned teachers for smaller
classes.
Between 1955 and 1970, the number of teachers tn pn·
mary and secondary education Jumped more than 80 per
cent Ifrom 1.286 million to 2.287 million 1 whtle total
school enroUment climbed only some 50 per cent 130 045
million to 46.531 million).
The bloom has been off the boom , of course. for a few
rears, as evtdenced by the taxpayer revolts on new bond
ISSues around the country and occasional school closings
for lack of ca.sh on hand. Most recently there has been
the weU-pubhctzed departure of American teachers.
JObless at home, to positions in Europe and Australta
In many respects the situation of education parallels
that of the aerospace mdustry , likewise a Sputnik-msti·
gated boom that has gone bust wtth even more disastrous
consequences.
It may w~ll get worse before it improves. All signs.
however, pomt to a~ ea~ly reordering of American educatlon, particularly tn ftnancmg The pressure is on in
the ne.ighborhoods and from the White House to exploit
and dtslnbute re~our~es more fairly and effectively.
The present sttuatton can also have its beneficial
efft;ets by ke~pinjl out of the profession those whose educational motivations and abilities are weak and who
would make marginal teachers at best.
But In the Jon~ run we ought also to manage more ef·
fectlvelr and fatrly our human resources. Education is
too baste to the entire national effort to be a boom·and·
bust operation.
(kEW$fiA.fiER ENTER,IIU: ASSN )

'ilW~I~:-N:-A.:-:::r=a:'li=RrniD.i.:G~E;;

!~xpert'

Play Fouls Up

. leads a second club lo dum·
my's king. His plan is to lead
.K62
a low club next and ruff it.
.873
Then
he will enter dummy
+Q2
with the king of trumps and
.AK753
discard two h e a r t s on the
WIST
EAST
last two clubs.
.987
.1092
.KJ6'
A fine ·idea, but East ruffs
+JlOU
+86H3
that club and takes his king
•QJtu
•to
of hearts. Expert South is
down two tricks.
801JTB (D)
.AQIOH3
Why was the losing line the
.AQS
expert adopted superior to
+AK
the winning one? We have
.96
already pointed out that the
North-South vulnerable
finesse was a 50 per cent
play.
West Nortll Eost South
The expert was goin~ to
Paos 2 • · Pass 3 •
make his contract provtded
Paos f .
Pass f N.T.
clubs broke either 3-3 or 4-2.
Po. 5 +
Pass 5 N.T.
A suit will break that well
Paos 6 •
Pass 6 •
some 84 per cent of the time.
Pool Pass
Pass
Thus the losing play had an
Openlnc leocl-t J
84 per cent chance of sue·
cess. It didn't work, but per·
By O.Wald James Jacoby centages work fine in the
long run.
Tbe ordinary bridge player
(NEWSP.APER EHTUPAIS£ ASSN )
has no trouble making six
apadea. He wins the diamond
opening; plays a couple of
rounds of trumps and notes
The bidding has been;
with mild disr•leasure that
East
South
they have fa i e d to break. West North
Pass
111erefore he runs some more
Pass
2t
trumps; enters dull'mY with I t . Dble
Pa ~'
2¥
Pass
the klng of clubs; takes the
Pass 3 •
Pass
beart finesse and claims the Pass
5.
Pass
slam when it works.
'
You, South, hold
This line of play gave him
a SO per cent chance since a 498654 ¥AQ6 tA32 • .1·1
What do you do now?
finesse is an even money
proposition.
A-Bid· fin diamonds. Your
partner
is trying for a slam in
The expert knows a better
spite
of
the r.cl that you hl\'t
Une of play. It doesn't work,
p
a
s
s
e
d
originally. Show that
but It Is a better line. He
your
twoadiamond
call ru.lh
cashes jU5t the ace and queen
sho\\ed
the
ace.
·
of trumps. Then he leads a
TODAV'S QUESTION
low club and ducks it to
Eut's ten. East leads back
Your partner continues to fiVe
a heart and expert South re- hea rts. What do you do now?
fU5es the finesse. Then he
Answer Tomorrow.
NOI111

23

.J

,.

a.

U4Rn:H8tW!&amp;X1
2.
••

BY JACK 01JRIAN

COACH LISTEN!

•

\

Helen Help

Us.

By Helen Hottel

••

A thought for toda~: American playwright Irwin Shaw
said, "There are too many
books I haven't read, too many
places I haven't seen, too many
memories I haven't kept long
enough."

SPEAK FOR YOURSELF, JOHN

Dear Helen :
. I'm a~ost 50 and ~arried. I have a nice !ann and~ good
111C0me. I ve ltnown this young woman a long time. In fact, 1
guess I loved her even before her disastrous marriage which
ended in divorce a year ago.
'
Her children come to the farm and ride in my snowmobile.
We get along great. She Is over here a lot-as a friend. I take
them aU to shows and other outings. But - she is 18 years
younger than me.
Now another man shows up. He is at her house a lot but the
kids dislike him. He doesn't take her places - just ~ats and
watches television at her expense. He pays child support, and 1
don't thtnk he has marriage in mind, as his former wife takes
about half his earnings.
I don't stop by any more, as I don't want to interfere but her
children spend more and more time at my farm.
'
!Jtould I Just drop out of the picture? I hate to hurt the kids
but they will forget. - CALL ME JOHN
'
Dear John:
For Pete's sake: FIGliT for what you want. A woman can
love an older man, but she can't throw herself at him if he insists
on dropping out of the picture.
Leave off the father image andgocourtin',John ! -H.
Dear Helen :
You took "Fighting Mad's" side on church bells not being
noise poUutants. Evidently you haven't lived directly across the
street from a church.
Each Sunday I count some 100 loud clangs, and with a small
baby, they can be a headache. A mile away they sound lovely
BUT when you're within 80 feet of !bose bells, they're just two
pieces of iron jarring your eardrums. - JEAN
Dear Helen:
I am a 71&gt;-yearo()ld man. I got sick and went to the hospital.
My son in another state said he'd move me to his home, so he
came and loaded all my belongings on a truck -then sold them
to a second~d dealer.
'!ben he forged my name on a couple of my social security
checks, saying it was to pay for my room and board -and then
he left me in a convalescent home that is paid for by Medicare.
He got away with about $600 from the sale of my furniture,
plus the checks, and I haven~ seen him since. He even sold three
of my suits and most of my other clothes.
I hate to bring charges against my own son, but how else can
I get my money back? I'll need it to live on when I get out of this
place.- FATHER OF AGOOD CHRISTIAN SON - HE SAYS
Dear Father:
Your son may return the money without a lawsuit if you
remind him that forging a name on government checks can get
him five-tcKen - and proof won't be difficult, with the help of a
lawyer.
Hhe doesn't fork over, then call your local Legal Aid Society.
This cheat doesn'tdeservea father 's protection ! - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
You receive many letters from people near suicide, it seems.
Won't you please tell your readers, Helen, that Suicide
Prevention Centers exist in almost every conmlllnity. They
JX'Ovide 24-hour telephone service and any person may call, any
time, to speak with trained personnel. The number Is in the phone
book. - THE MARIN SUICIDE PREVENTION CENTER
Dear Reeders :
Most larger cities not only have suicide prevention centers,
but other "crisis lines" open to troubled people . If you can't find
the number in the book, Directory Assistance will help you. - H.

The Almanac
By United Press 1ntemalional
Today is Wednesday, Feb. 23,
the 54th day of 1972.
The moon Is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning star is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Pisces.
German composer George
Fredenc Handel was born Feb.
23, lu85.
· On this day in his tory :
In 1847 Gen. zachary Taylor
and U.S. troops defeated Gen.
;;;:::::--.~\. Santa Ana tn the Battle of
Buena Vista, Mexico.
In 1942 a Japanese submarine
fired 25 shells at an oil refinery
near Santa Barbara, Calif., 21!,
monlhs after the sneak attack
on Pearl Harbor.
In 1945, six mt mbers of the
51h Division of the U.S. Marines
planleJ an Anwrican flag at~p
Muunl Sur,bachi on lwo Jima.

\

.'

"'BUT WILL THE

..

qu Drops Wyola Five,

Voice
along
Br'Way
.

.

21,000,000 Americans suffer
from high blood pressure, and
only 50 pct.ltnow they have this
disease which helps set the
stage for heart attack and
stroke. See your doctor to be
sure, and help your Heart Fund
help your heart.

NEW YORK (KFS)- N.Y. Giants' coach
Ale• Webster's oby after ear ugery ... Herb
&amp;!JtaronAipert'sdlvorcesettlementmakesher
a mllllonaira ... The Kurt Jurgens reconciled
for Cltristmal, separated again lor Lent ... The
"Jalna" boob of our youth (marveloiiS!) got
rave Canadian reviews (pnlduced up there) for
their first 'IV epsode; no U. S. deal's been set
yet, but It will, It will!
"1776," a great mUBicaJ, flnaUy quit Bdwy.
after three years and 300 pet. profit; it's still
deligbting folks oo the road ... Ah, Spring!
RingUng Bros. and Banwm &amp; Bailey Circus is
headed for Madlaon Scluare Garden, the one
show everyone latowa will be a smash and a
deligbt every , _ ... Mervyn Leroy and Greer
Garson's .husband, Buddy Fogelson, named
their parlnel'ed yearling ''Fogelroy."
Our friend Mahlln Gabel swears the Bdwy.
theater Is dead: but that's what despairing
mummers dalned In 1930 when half the Bdwy·
theaters were dark and that summer only a
dozen plays hung on; even the Great Jolson
could keep "WUOtterbar" running only 76
perfonnanees - 100 then was conaldered the
. hi!line -today it takes a year for most sellout
musicals to break tveri ... Quo Vadil waiters
are_n't mind readers when without an ord;;r th",Y
deliver. the proper apertif to ~eo RoSSI; he s
the mam man at Martini &amp; Rossi, the vennouth
empire.
Cong. ~~ M~y accuses NBC and ABC
networks of always having been adwcates of
'lV violence; claims $5 pet. of programs 111 both
networks ~tain violence (CBS apparently onlT
declares ·little Wl11'11: 211.3 pet.) ... Variety s
~ain-reporter cabled that the Island of Jbiza's
business has boomed since the Hughes-Irving
headlines.
Bob Eaton, author of the ''other" aDeged
"~ Howard HuabeS" book, Is hoi~ up in
Miami, safely out of headline contention; but
w~t! ... ~ greatG:en ~ermn's .ex. Bob Fosse
(directed 'Cabaret ), directs his googoos at
newahen Hotly Brooks ... Wbere there's a
celelrlty, there's Gloria V~bilt Cooper and
hubby Wyatt; the Pierre s stylish La Foret
politely had to turn down the Coopers' request to
take over that whole chic premises -to toss a
party for OtarUe Otaplin.

CoUeen Farrington, a beauty Jake Lamotta
introduced as his fiancee !Or a few minutes, Is
suing the old bull for the eltpert&amp;e of the party
where they announced It; with Jake's diction,
maybe he meant ''flnancee"? ... Martha Ctmeo
Reed (she and husband Stass were robbed ol
$150,000 of her diamonds after dOling El
Morocco recently) went so whoosh, she and
Brownee McLean jettP.d to Nasaau to tHe
~taUzation shots at Dr. Ivan Popov's
Renaissance Spa.
Oifford Irving's roommate on their front·
paged but Howard-Jiughesless Bahamas ·
weekend, Baroness Nina Van Pallandt, selected
a dubiously apropos piece with which to make
her American singing debut on the Dlcll
Cavettcast: "You've Got a Friend" ... When the
newsless but interesting sequence ended,
bandleader Bobby Rosengarden faded It out on
the strains of "I Could Write a Book" ... cavett
got in another ~ient shot by baldly
establishing that the swinging baroness t.d
enjoyed "everything" about that now so-public
JibidinOU5 weekend.
'!be Copa's Wilson Ptcfl:ett soul11how got
Liza Minnelli up for an unrehearsed and unpaid
' bit; Uza's very hot now -such a planned onenighter could earn her upwards of $15 000 lots of
places ... It •s the regular shows 011
that now
give it class (Mary :I'Yier Moore "Columbo"
etc.); remember when a TV "~I" was
special.? ..
.
Fine composer David Amram (first
resident composer at the N. Y. Plillharmonlc)
plays half a dozen lnstnunents, Including his
head. knocks himself on the skull via mouthin~crophone with the firsrfew bars of the
William Tell Qverture; if he knuekled his noggin
for the whole overture he'd be punchier than
Rocky Graziano pretends he IIi. Talented lad .
'!be Barbra Streisand-RYan O'Neal !Ibn,
"What's Up Doc" has tlie studio certain' it's
another
In Warners' cash register : It's a
straiglit "G" rating, pure escapl!it fiDI; the
title'snotabouthospltalsordoctors-Strel.lllnl
juSt keeps Ieating cBITOta and redundlndnf
"What's Up, boc?" ... Add Jolm Cusavetea to
the neutral enlhnsiasfs who've seen "'lbe
Godfather" already and raaaave about It ...
Cary Grant'sacting days seem over but not his
business acumen: Irish city-planning firm
wants him as officer of its new ''Sbannonside"
city,

rV

shot

DR. LAWRENCE f. LAMB

'

i1J

Dear Reader - There Is
no set rule. It depends on the
recovery a person makes
after a heart attack and the
nature of the dental work.
Many· years ago I did a
study on the risk patients

World's Future
Faith or Suicide?
By DON OAKLEY

iron•c thai at a time when science has within its
new vistas of almost unimaginable energy, and
wtthtn tis grasp the tools to exploit them for mankind's
belJI'ht . more and more people, including some scientists,
are crymg· "Stop the world! We've got to get off this
vrogress kick 1''
·-·
• A compu1er at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
warns that mankind has about 40 to 50 years of "golden
age" left before the trend lines of population growth, industnaltzallon and accompanymg pollution and depletion
of resources converge to a "critical mass" and every·
thmg explodes
• A distingmshed group of British ecologists has issued
a ·• stueprinl for Survival" which calls for immediate
cuts m populallon. reductions of standards of living, the
abandonm ent of much of modern technology and the re·
placement of the great cities by scattered smaller com·
munities.
• An "ecology acllvist" urges a declaration of war on
tec hnology plus World War IJ-type rationing to conserve
our resources.
We ~re , then , to abandon technological growth at the
ve ry lime when that growth promises to give us the
means to solve the problem which an admittedly reckless
usc of technology has created.
This formula , in the words of Yale economist Henry
C. Wallich . "would be lo commit suicide for fear of
remote death."
What does technology promtse? We 'have hardly begun
to tap one source of energy, that of geothermal power
contamed m underground deposits of steam or hot water.
Geothermal energy is at about the stage petroleum was
when it was used just to tight kerosene lamps says
J oseph Barnea, director of the Resources and Transportation Division of the United Nations.
From surl~ce indications alone, he writes in an article
m Scientific American, there appear to be belts of geothermal reservoirs along the western side of the Americas
fr om Alaska all the way down to Chile and alon~ the
"Circle of Fire" of volcanic activity around the rim of
the Pacific .
Two thirds of furkey are believed to have ~eothermal
potent1al. One field in Ethiopia alone could meet the
present electrical needs of all of Africa. Central America
has much more of this potential energy than it can use
and could grow rich by selling electricity Iby means of
long-distance transmission lines) to the energy·hungry
United States '
But surface indications are not all we have to rely on.
Remote sensing earth satellites may eventually be used
to search for ~eothermal deposits, as well as locating
o~e w deposits of minerals and aiding in weather control
and agriculture.
Under development at Los Alamos Scientific Labora.
tory in New Mexico is an electric "subterene" which can
melt holes in solid rock faster, cheaper and .safer than
cnnventtonal dnlling method~ Future models could he
atomtc·oowered. It is not inconceivable that such drills
could . be used to exploit ~eothermal fields spotted by
&gt;atelhte. and to sink shafts for recyclin~ water back Into
the fields .
·
With limitless. pollution-free energy-not only from
steam fields bul from nuclear fission and vast arrays of
solar radiation· collectors in the deserts·-men would
have the ability lo arrest those converl(ing disaster lines:
To clean up pollution, to conserve and recycle ·resources
an~ develop new ones. to raise world livinl( standards.
whtch tn turn would foster pooulation stabilization.
Shall we ~o ahead. or shan we stop everythinp; rich!
nnw·: Shall we have faith in the future . •1r shall we. as
Walllch !"l)s it . commit premature miclde!
It IS
si~ht s

1

had from the standpoint of
their heart while undergoing
a variety of surgical procedures, many of them major operations. 'In•looking ·at
several hundred case~ •.even
an old heart attack did' not
preclude major surgery.
As a rule, it is wen to wait
for at least three months
after initial recovery from a
heart attack before having
any significant surgical proCedlll'es. If you aUow approximately a month and a baH
for initial recovery, we are
talking about postponing surgery for about five months.
Most dental work really
doesn't pose much threat to
the body. Your dentist will
need to know about your
medicines. Some medicines
used to preve~t pain during
dental procedures can cause
some problems in highly sensitive individuals, but allow·
ing the patient to have the
pain sometimes causes just
as much danger.
Another pomt that will
need to be considered is
whether you are on med·
icines to prevent blood clot·
ting Ianticoagulants ) which
are commonly given to
patients after they have had
a heart attack.
Dear Dr. Lamb- I have a
blood P.ressure problem and
it goes up and down. I have
heard this kind is worse than
if it stays up all the time. Is
thiS true? Js my Chance Of

So~ Carolina,
The Roc:teta, 16-4, are tied
lor l9ib with Providence In the
poU, whlle So'utb Carolina IIi
tied for sevenlh·wlth Brigham
Yo1111g.
Clnc1Mati,1", has won five
straight, but the Bearcats will

have to JXill off an Upset to get
their siith In a row tonlibt,
playtns at No. 5 LollllvWe.
In another important auo.
'collegiate game tonight, Bowling Green playa Kenl SUite.
'!be Flashes need a vlctDry to
stay In contention for the MidAmerican Cdnference crown.
In Tuesday night's ·games,
Ohio University defeated U.yola ,(Dl.) 84-76 as Bobcat .for,
ward·Tom Rlceardi SCOI'tld 21

Oakland's Bando.
Signs For $50,000

' '

' , IH•+i'•V:...,).j, f11f'[

ir1j,

I •,

j'

1 '' I

having a stroke or heart attack better than most. I am
taking medicine for It and
my nerves. I am also overweight and on a diet to lose,
and am doing as I am told.
Three heart tracings were
normal. Please let me know
the facts on my condition.
My highest reading has been
185 over 110.
Dear Reader - Individuals
who intermittenUy h a v e
normal or near oormal blood
pressures and other times
have high blood pressure are
usually better off than those
people ll!hO have. sustained
high blood pressure. Lots of
the fluctuations in blood pressure can be related to life
situations and tensions sometimes even the aspect of
having the blood pressure
taken.
The fact that your blood
pressure Is at the level you
state and still fluctuates apparently to considerably lower levels would suggest that
you are less likely to have a
stroke than individuals with
sustained high blood pres. sure. One of the best things
yo~ can do-is to lose excess
wetght, so I am pleased to
hear that you are doing so.
(NEWIPAPER !NTIR'-ISI ASSN .)

points and grabbed 13
febounds.
&lt;Jiio, now 1:U, got acorlng
help fnm Tom Corde with 19
and Dave Ball with 16.
Loyola, playing without
Injured star center Larue
Martin, was paced by Paul
Cohen, wbo took over at center
andhlt 25polnts. Loyola Is 11-12.
Defiance needed three fl-ee
throws In Pie final 10seronds to
edge Findlay 85-l!2 for the
Yellow Jackets' 21st win
agafusl only one loss.
Kenyon · scored 13 straight
points late in the game for a ·
comeback 88-85 victory over

Urbana. It was. Urbana's sixth
loss in 28 starts.
A total of 201 points were
scored at muffton, as the hosts
outscored Anderson (Ind.) 10695. John Brown hit a careerhigh 33 points to .lead Bluffton
and Clair Recker, alreatfy the'
school's single season point
record-holder had 30 points to
boost hili total to 525 with another game remaining.
Wlbnington scored a come
from behind win over
Cedarville, 87-73, while Walsh
closed out Its 4-19 season with a
94-89 victory over Mercyhurst
(Pa.).

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P &gt; OP
North Galtia 16 2 1438 906
Easlern
16 2 1161 883
Symmes Valley
11 7 1113 904
Southern
9 9 1164 109'1
Hannan Trace 9 9 1031 1048
Kyger Creek 3 15 971 1224
Southwestern 0 18 630 1485
FINAL SVAC
TEAM
W L P · OP
North Gattla 11 1 1044 631
Eastern
10 2 802 620
Symmes Val ley 9 3 934 743
Soul hern
5 1 790 778
Hannan Trace 5 7 69S 721
Kyger Creek 2 10 650 842
Soulhwestern 0 12 414 994
Totals
42 42 S329 S329
FINAL SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W 1.;'. P OP
Norlh Gallia 10 2 556 376
Eastern
10 2 528 432
Symmes Vaney 8 4 567 469
Kyger Creek
6 6 512 538
Southern
5 1 500 518
Hannan Trace J 9 395 510
Southwestern 0 12 376 591
Totals
42 42 34:14 3434
This Week's Games
Friday - Class A Tour·
nament at Meigs High School
- North Gallia vs. Soulhern 7
p.m. Hannan Trace vs. Kvger
Creek 8:15 p.m .
Saturday - Symmes Valley

Tonight's schedule includes
Xavier at Miami, Cleveland
State ·at West!~"' Mi~higan,
Youngstown State at Gannon,
Akron at Central Michigan,
Baldwin-WaUace at Otterbein
and·Marietta at Denison.
Also, Heidelberg entertains
Aquinas (Mich.), case Western
vi~lts
Mount
Union,
Muskingum hosts Wittenberg,
Ohio Northern ·at Ohio
Wesleyan, Steubenville entertains Central State, John
carroU is at Bethany and Ohio
Doolinlcan visits Malone.

Co11"91r8asketboll R.. ulls
By Unit~&lt;! Press lnternollonol
Ohio U. 84 Loyola, 111 . 76
Potsdam 95 OSweQb St. 70
Holy Cross 76 St. Jno.. N.Y 72
Fordham 89 Notre Dame i2
Amhrst 57 Coast Guard 56
Buflalo Sf. 70 Geneseo St.
69
Hartwick 96 Harpur 70
Illinois Tech 60 Chicago S8
Lee Coli. 91 Maryville 78

Big 10
Ruling

Lemoyen 103 Corlland St. 75
No. Mich. 106 UW·MIIw 97
Rchslr Tech 15 Allred 72

FridJJy

Spring Arbor 127 Owosso 91
South Fla . 115 Fla. Tech 96
Western Car. 101 Allen 76
Winona 86 St. Cloud 84
Puget Sound 105 Chapman

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn .
(UPI) - The Big Ten athletic
directors will turn jurors here
Thursday; with the task of
deciding whether to continue
the suspension of University of
Minnesota basketball players
Corky Taylor and Ron
Behagen.
U.s . District Court Judge
Earl Larson ruled"· here
Tuesday that the two players
must be given a full hearing
before the athletic directors by
7 p.m. EST Friday on the
suspension for their part in a
Jan. 25 brawl which broke up
the MinlJI'sota-Ohio State
game. Lars on ruled that tf a
hearing is not held by then, the
players' right to "due process"
will have been violated and th&amp;
court would enjoin the Big Ten
from enforcing the suspensions.
He also temporarily ended a
suspension of the players' right
to practice with the team.
Behagen and Taylor then took
the floor with the Gophers
Tuesday for the first time in
almost a month.
Big Ten Commissioner
. Wayne Duke, who conducted a
two-day investigation of the
melee , and
eventually
suspended the players for the
season , responded by announcing the hearing before
the athletic directors.
Attorneys for the two 6-foot-9
juniors said they were "very
pessimistic about their
chances, although Duke
granted them a change jn the
site of the hearing from
Oticago to Minneapolis .
"There is no way they will
repudiate the decision of their
commissioner," said Ron' Simon, attorney for Taylor.
Simon said much of the same
testimony will be presented at
the hearing that was given
before Larson during an allday preliminary hearing last
Friday.
Both Minnesota Coach Bill
Musselm1111, ,a!!4. PJ\io ~ State
Coach Fred Taylor refused to
c9mment on , T~~sday' s
developments.
Beltllgan said he was "disap.
pointed" with some aspects of
the judge's ruling, but still was
bopeful he would be able to
play again after sitting out five
games. The Gophers are in
first place and plays second
place Michigan Saturday.
In his eight page ruling,
Larson emphasized that the
Big Ten's structure should be
altered ''without delay." He
said the conference has ''no
lonna! constitution," and is
"governed "by precedent and
lonna! resolutions."
Larson added that the
conferenl"e violated its own
rules by falling to hold
hearings and he ruled that the
players may appeal to the Big
Ten faculty Representatives if
the athletic directors vote

13

Scranton 91 tona

89
Wisconsin 66 Purdue 60

Rutgers 89 ~onnec llcut 86
Springfield 82 Am . kltl 80
Maryland 76 Richmond 61
York 74 Juniata 66

Oneida . n.y. 71 Kings, Pa.
70
Texas A&amp;M 101 Baylor 95, ot
VMI 37 Wm .&amp;Mary 3S, of
Wichita St. 95 Drake 71
Citadel 112 Fla. Presby . 90
Indiana 90 lttlnols 71
By UDltedPteu lntel'118tloaal Angeles Dodgers in 0ne of the
Geo. Wash 84 E•st Car . 14
Baseball'ssalarywheelconti- big winter trades, turned In a
Marian 91 Franklin 83
nued to spin in ils inconkfuous .295-23-90 performance last seaTulls 88 Lowell Tech 80
Walsh
94 Mercyhurst 89
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio berson's 16-game wrnnmg
Top-ranked Celina comfashlOJl Tuesday when Sal son. The White sox are hoping
Kenyon
88 Urbana 85
Bando signed with the Oakland that he and BiD Melton, the AL high school baskethaU notes streak Friday night 75-70 on the pleted its first unbeaten
vs. Ironton St. Joe 7 p.m.i Grace Colt. 91 Bethel 86
Athletics for about $50,000 while home run champion with 33 In Jrom around the state:
balanced scoring of Earl Hill regular season with an 88-51 Southwestern vs. Eastern 8:15 Ind. Central 75 H~nover 65
Valparaiso 81 DePauw 61
Hamilton Badin's 5-11 Mark (20), Mare115 Miller )19) and win over Coldwater Friday p.m.
Juan Marichal of the San 1971, will give them the
Prvdnce 81 Assmption 17
Francisco Giants and Dick hardest-hitting 1-2 punch In Alfers lroke the ilchool's single Jeff Jae (18). Tom Brabson night. The Bulldogs 40-2 over
SMU
87 Texas Tech 73
Allen of the Chicago White Sox their history and make them game scorlng record Friday had 25 to lead Barberton, now the past two years, averaged
Texas 92 Ark. 86, 2 ot
bld.for salaries of $120,000.
87.9 points a game this season
TCU 15 Rice 68
contenders in the AL Western night with 39 points In the 11&gt;-1.
Lubbock Chris. 76 Bishop 67
Bando, for whom· Oakland Division.
Rams'
'IU8
victory
over
Fairto
53.4
for
the
opposition.
They
,
Mentor, suffering through a
Oat.
Bap. 119 Letourneau 98
Manager Dick Williams openly . The White Sox announced the fi~d. Xavier University star 1-17 regular season, opens open tournament play Friday
MIT S7 Rochester 10
campaigned as the American signings of infielder Rich Jerry Helmers, who was at the tournament play Wednesday night against Lima Shawnee.
Old Dam. 100 Rndlph·Mcn
95
League's most valuable player Morales and pitcher Stan game, held the old record of 38. night at • Eastlake North
Columbus City League teams
Bait. 82 MI . St.Mary's je
above teammate Vida Blue, Perzanowskl. They have nine 'Allers, who entered the game against West Geauga, S-12, the picked off the five top seeded
Mid-Ohio Statistics
agreed to Ienos ·along with unsigned players.
with an 11.6 average, scored 20 only team Mentor was able to Positions in the tough Central
Wilmington 87 Cedarville 73
As of Feb. 20
reUefpitcher Roland Fingers.
District Tournament which has Standings CConf.l Call games) Bllftn 106 Andrsn, Ind. 95
Elsewhere: Pitcher Blll Sin- of his points In the final beat aU season.
Blue, whose 24-3 record and ger (1047), outfielder Manny quarter, hitting 8 of 11 from the
W L w L Defiance 85 Findlay 82
Bill Sutton, Marietta's prize produced six of the last nine Team
Ky St. 102 Nrthwd, Ind. 19
1.82 earned run average plus a ]r!ota ( .312) and catcher- floor,
sophomore guard, finished the state champions in Class AAA. 1 ~[~~~:nde
~:~
1g
sensational number of low-hit 'lnfielder BiD Sudakis (.193)
Cleveland Heights, which Tigers' regular season with a SouthwasseededNo.lfoUow- Malone
2·4 11 ·14
and· high-strikeout games signed with the Dodgers ... Rod . finished with a 17-1 record and 371lllint perfonnance in a los- ed by Central, Northland, Ohio Dominican
2~5
8·13 Cap Slips Notch
1·6 5·17 .
earned him the AL's MVP and Carew, who batted .307 for ,the the Lake Erie League title, had Ing 70-% effort against North and· defending state Cedarville
NEW YORK (UP!)
Pitcher ot the Year awards, Minnesota Twins in 1971 and is to come from five points behind Newark. Sutton, who scored 28 champion Walnut Ridge. Team Team Field 2~~ Pel.
Capital,
7th a week ago, slipped
remains unsigned. He and club regarded as a possible .400- with 3ll seronds·remalnlng Fri- of his total in the second baH, Walnut Ridge, 14-3, opens Urbana
2004 1057 52.2
owner Charles Flhley are hltter, agreed to tenns ... day night In its 61-69 win over tallied 104 points in his last tourney play Friday night Ohio Dominican IS53 745 47.9 a notch today in the latest
Cit
Malone
1938 882 45.S United Press International
· tG
understood to be about $40,000 Pitchers Stan Williams, Jim Lakewood. l.elchester stovall th'ree games.
agams rove y. .
Cedarville
1516 674 44.4
apart with Blue asklnji $90,000 Bibby: Joe Grzenda and AI scored the Red.sklns' last seven
Findlay,
which
flntshed
the
Rio
Grand.,.x
1634 788 48.3 small college basketball
DeGraff Riverside's 81-70
ratings.
and Finley offering $50,000.
Team Free Throws
Hrabosky and infielder Marty points in the 30-second period, wln over Wapakoneta St. season with a 16-2 record, set a
k
b
g1ng
884
Team
A
M
Pel.
Akrpn remained where it
Marlchal, wh~ always is Martinez signed with the St. indudlng a basket with two Joseph Friday night marked sch. 00I mar Y avera . · Urbana
868 628 12.1
difficult to sign, told the Giants Louis Cardinals ... The Texas seronds left to win the game. the mh coaching victory for pointspergame,wlthahighof Ohio Dominican 496 346 69.7 was, in lOth place. Ashland,
he would head for their Casa Ranger, rejected home run
768 sot 65.2 unrated a week ago, returned
New ·Riegel's Nonn Clouse Pirate mentor Jim carter. 114 against Mansfield Senior. Mat one
Grande, Ariz., sprlng camp "In hitter Frank Howard's latest closed his regular season car- Rlverside finished Its regualr The Trojans open tournament Cedarville
632 394 62.3 to the list in 18th.
.
Rio
Grande.x
491 284 68.0
Eau Claire continues to be
a day or tw 0." He said he request for a multi-year con- eer Saturday night wltlj a rec- season shedule with a 15-3 acllon Saturday afternoon
Team Rebounds
the
top-rated small college
wanted to speak to club owner tract. The Rangers have asked ord-setting 52-points per- mark.
against Lima Senior, which Team
RB Avg.
Horace Stoneham before sign- Howard t9 ll!ke a 20 per cent fonnance in the Blue Jackets'
1206 48.2 team in the country.
No. 1 ranked Indian Valley knocked them out ofit last year Mat one
ing.
pay cut from his $125,000 95-74 win over Fostoria St. South (A) capped its unbeaten in the first game.
g~~;~~minican
~~~~ :~::
Allen, acquired from the U.s earnings in 1971.
Wendelin. The old school mark 111-ll season Saturday night with
Thirdranked (AAA) Cleve- Cedarville
819 37 2
911 43.8
was held by fonner player and a 59-50 victory over Zanesville land East Tech, 17-1, one of the Rio Grande·x
Scoring
coach at New Riegel, Jere Car- Rosecrans. All.()hlo Bob Hug- four semi-finalists last year, Team
(Off) (Dell
rick.
101.6 90.9
gins led the Rebels in scoring opens its tournament play Fri- Urbana
90 6 89.2
Allllnce Soaps Streak
with 24 points, hitting 21 in the day night against Cleveland Malone
Rhodes 8-8
Ohio Dominican
87.4 90.9
Alliance (15-2) snapped Bar- opening haH.
' ·
Cedarville
79.2 91.1
Basketball Tournament
Rio Grande·X
88.6 86.4
Results
x . 21 game lola!.
United Press International
Individual Scoring
Class AAA
Team
FG
FT
TP
Av.
Fremont
Ross 57 Mansfield
COLUMBUS, ohio
Jan. 25 &lt;ltlo State-Minnesota
Un'wood (QD)
Senior 52 lot)
2S4 116 604 28.7 Toledo 1MaC6m~r' 63 ·loledo
1 1
AmericanCMIUbaiWitlJnion i'Ql''' Jll ~ gj.~n ,. t~~,b~iJ~
):,\~w ltit"'~' ·d\ lo ..- 11 t,. ~~ ' ' 1" 1' r
Todd (U)
252 132 636 23.6 DeVti~l ~ s. 43 , ,~, .
(~~L~) of Qhl~ E~~utlve Dl;,, :~con~cet;befo~~ I F\:iday;:' BytllllteCl ~s ln~l'liafroillr' berth. But be' left abruptly after games, was led by Tom O'Mara Piuri&lt;elt (U) 231"160'' 622'23.b .Maumee
77Totedo ~hltmer ~
Maurer (00) 154 87 39S 18.8
~or HeniOn A. Wolman,
ing.
.
Digger Phelps watched as the the season to take over at with 32.
(UJ 202 104 508 18.8
maintaining that "an athletic
'!be judge smd 11 a hearlng Fordham team he molded last Notre Dame. ·
Class AA
The only rated team in action Anderson
Individual
Shooting
Eastwood 64 Evergreen 52
mugging cannot justify an was not conducted by then, the season coasted to victory
Fordham gave its old coach was Maryland and the 11th- Name
·A M Pel. Springfield 73 Otsego 47
academic lynching," said he suspension woul~ be lifted. Big Tuesday nighi. The only prob- some rough treatment Tuesday ranked Terps . got 25 points Ptunkelt (UI
379 2JI 60.7 Napoleon 65 Wauseon 43
124 74 '59.7 Paulding S8 N Bryan 34
was "very happy" with Ten Commissioner· Wayne lem for Phe!ps was that he was night roUing to an 18-p&lt;)int from sophomore Tom Mcmillen Harrison (C)
Un'wood
100)
455
254 55.8
Tuesday's court decision that Duke sche.duled a he~ for watching from the OpJ&gt;Ollite halft~e lead and beating the - 19 of them in the second half Aikman (U)
213 118 55.4
Class A
two. IIUilpertded University of ~~sday Ul Minneapolis.
bench.
Fighting Irish, 89-72. Kenny -to defeat Richmond, 76-61. Anderson (U)
377 202 53.6 Skyvue 48 Caldwell 45
Mlmesota basketball players
. '!be court order was cerPhelps took over at Fordham Charles had 21 points and Tom RichmondstunnedMarylandby
Frontier Local 52 Beallsville SO
Individual
Free
Throws
be given a hearing,
tainly proper and I am very last season and led the club to Sullivan added 19 for the Rams taking a 38-33 lead at the haH Name
A M Avg.
In Minneapolis, U.S. District ~PPY about II," Wolman said. itsmostsuccessfulseasotl-21&gt;-3 now 15-7. Notre Dame, which before the 6-fool-11 McMillen Mc'lln COD)
77 64 83.1
87 71 81.6
Judge Earl R. Larson ruled
Even if we could assllll1e that .:.and an NCAA tournament suffered its 22nd' loss in 28 went to work. Jim O'Brien Watson (C)
SELECTS OHIO STATE
Todd
CUI
162
132 81.5
that Marvin "Corky" Taylor all of the allegations against
CINCINNATI (UP!)- Steve
added 15 points for Maryland, Howe(U)
77 60 77.8
and Ron Behagen, suspended the Minnesota players were
now 19-3.
Slephenson (M) 102 79 77.4 Koegel, an offensive guard on
by the Big Ten Conference for true and outrageous, it Is dear
the Cincinnati Moeller High
Elsewhere, Tom Ricciardi
Individual Rebounds
the rest of the season for their that an athletic mugging
Name
RB
Avg
School footbaU team, will atscored 21 points as Ohio
302 14.4 tend Ohio State.
1111rt in a melee atthe end of the camot Justify an academic By UDltedPress lntematlonal the Denver Rockets to a 121-105 University beat Loyola (lll. ), Un'wood 100)
Anderson(U )
34412.7
lynching. .
The 6.foot-3, 201J..pounder was
Marvin ·Roberts hasn't had victory over the Virginia 84-76, and two free throws by Marzick (MI
290 11.6
''The court decision was not much playing time this season Squires. Roberts hit 17 points in Ernie DiGregorio and a field Plunkett ( U)
237
8.8
one ol the several highly
The Daily Sentinel
185 7.7 recruited players on the thirdon the merits of whether the but he made the most of. what the second haH to break open a goal by Marvin Barnes in the Townsend CMI
DEVOTED TO THE
players did anything right or he got Tuesday night.
INTE~EST OF
ranked Class AAA team.
last 30 seconds helped Proclose game.
MlitGS·MASON A~EA
wrong but that they were
vidence
beat
Assumption,
81·77.
Kogel's brother Vic, played
'
R
oberts,
a
rookie
from
Utah
Byron
Beck
also
had
21
points
CHI!STE~ L. TANNEHILL,
denied the fundamental rights State, scored 21 points to lead for the Rockets while Charlie Terry Benton's 24 points
. Eue.ld.
·
linebacker at Ohio State as a
•alERT HOEFLICH,
to be confronted by their acScott
led
Virginia
with
31.
The
carried
Wichita
Stale
to
a
95-71
sophomore
last fall and was coCIIV Ullor
PLAYER-OF-WEEK
cusers in an open hearing and
Published da•lv except
,Squires managed to hit only victory over Drake and Jobie
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Guard winner of the Buckeyes' top
Saturday by The Ohio Vallev
to
cross-examine
witnesses
38.3 per cent of their shots in Wright and John Ritter com- Earnest Pettis of Western sophomore award.
Publishing Company. 111
Court St., Pomeoro~ . Onto, agairist them.
falling
14 games behind first- bined for 49 points as Indiana Michigan, who scored 56 points
1115769. Business Office Phone
''Those rights sho.uld he givplace Kentucky in the Ameri· beat JUinois, 90-71.
H2·21S6, Editorial Phone 992
in the Broncos' twQ games last
en to any student at any Wli' Wisconsin
'
21S7.
can BasketbaU Association's
Elsewhere,
week,
has been selected the
Stcond class postage paid at
versity whenever a substantial
Eastern Division:
Pomtroy, Ohio.
stopped Purdue, 66-60, Holy Mid-American Conference
right at that iristitution Is placN1tionat advtrtis.ing
Lawrence L. Baughman,
In the only other ABA game Cross upset St. John's (N.Y.), Player of-the-week.
rtprtsentative Bottinelli - ed in Jeopardy," Wolman said. Bessie M. Baughman to James
Tuesday night, George Thomp·
Gallagher, Inc ., 12 East •2nd
Pettis, a 6-foot-3 senior from
''The two players should be A. Rlchmond, Suzanne Rlch- son scored 32 points and Bob 76-72, Virginia Military
St., New York City , New York .
defeated
WiD
lam
&amp;
Mary,
37-35
Chicago,
scored 53 points,
Subscription rates : De .
given· due process of law,"
mond,
110
sq.
rd.,
100
Acre
U.t,
Verga
hit
30
as
the
Piitsburgh
llvertd by carrier where
in overtime, Texas A&amp;M edged matching his career high, in
Ohio State basketball coach Salisbury.
awalleble 50 cents per week ;
Condors downed the Dallas Baylor, 101-95, in overtime, Western's 75-74 win over
By Motor Route where carrier
Fred· Taylor said he would
Lucille Smith, Elrna K. · Chaparrals, 112-105, at Tucson, Southern Methodist beat Texas
service not available: One
Bowling Green including the
have
no
comment
on
the
court
Reuter to Columbia Gas of Ariz. J)Onnie Freeman led the Tech, 87-73, Texas downed winning basket !n the closing
month SUS. 81 moll in Oh10
and W . Va ., Ont yur SlA.OO.
decision until after Thursday's Ohio, ,Inc., Right of way, Chaps with 36.
Six months S7 .25. Thrte
Arkansas, 92-U, in overtime seconds, and tallied 23 in the
hearing. OSU Athletic Director Cheste~ .
months s.c.so . Subscription
and Texas Christian stopped Broncos' 75-69 loss to Kent
price includes Sunday Times.
Ed Weaver also declltied
Jacob M. Bush, Carole
Sentinel
Rice, 71Hl8.
State .
comment.
Suzanne Bush to Columbia Gas
Trans. Corp., Right of way, Col11111bia.
lebanon.
George A. Radekin, Wanetta
Rodney Pierce, Dora Pierce Radekln to Buckeye Rural
to Col11111bia Gas Trans. Corp., Elec. Coop Inc., Right of way,
Right of way, Olive.
Columbia.
G. A. Radekin, Wanetta G.
ea.
Ora M. Bacon, J~lm C. Bacon
Radekin to Buckeye Rural to Clarence Hayman, VIrginia
Elec., Rlght of way, Columbia. Hayman, Lots, Antiquity.
Panama
James Ray, Marilyn Ray to
David C. MIUer, dec. to
Washable Finish, 12"x12"
Buckeye Rural Elec.; Rlght of Eleanor L. MIUer, Cert. for
way, Columbia. ,
, trans., Middleport.
Mayfair
Frank Westfall, Hilah
Great Bend Gr.ange•No. 2294
Washable Finish, 12"x12"
Westfall to Buckeye Rural to Great Bend Comm. Assn. of
Elec. Coop, Inc., Right of way, Great Bend, Parcel, Lebanon.
I

5-l:l Star Sets Record

MOC Stats

ll:

Hearing Ordered
In Gopher Battle

Hold Off Surgery After Heart Attack
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb - I am a
man of middle age. Recently,
I had a heart attack. How
long must I ")VIIi! to have my
teeth repairedi'
.

II)' lhllted Preu llderaatloul
Toledo,. which this week
jumped Into UPI'a top 20
ba. . .baJJ rallilp, gets a Iough
test tonlsht at seventb-ranked

84~ 76

SJI AC Standings

(~PI)

Ohio Tourney
Cage Results

· .
Fordh.am Tops ND' 'EX· Coach

Roberts Sparks Utah Win

Property

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MASON

�'.
3- 'l'be IlBlJy
Ui.&amp;.ll-rt•ruu~aVy,
"'-- 9·•Feb. 23, 1972
. Sentinel •,,....._...,

1-'1'111 Oai4' Selltillel, MidcDeport-Pomeroy, 0. Feb. 23 1972

fi)ITORIAL

·

'

.

The Twain Shall Meet
'

Education Needs
An Evener Keel

•

'

A lot of graduating classes have gone forlh inlu tlw
world over the years assured that knowledge is vower.
To those of most r•cent vintage. however. the trad• ·
tiona! commencement send·off may sound less like goO&lt;f
advice than a poor joke.
Knowledge thes~ days is provmg no guara ntee ot
economtc power. In a generally depressed professional
employment market few groups are having 1t worse lhan
the newest corners
Where during the expans10nary '60s btg business
recrutters. zealously outbidding each other for the annual
crop of new brain power were fix tures of the campus
scene, the current corpora tion trend 1s toward cost cut·
tlng through staff tr1mmmg. And graduat es. diplomas in
hands, ma.king their own ways to personnel offtces are
llketr to fmd a waiting list of already well·experienced
appbcants ahead of them
·
. The situation is bad all over but poss1bly worst of all
m the baste professwn~duca tio n Just how bad ts
pointed up in a Wall Street Jout·nal survev of leacher
training across the country which this year , according
to National Educatwn Assoc1atton reckoning. will produce
234,100 qualified new teachers to ftght 11 out for 115.000
openmgs m th~ nation 's schools.
To bring tea•·her supply and demand back mto som e·
thmg resembling balance, the colleges are restricting en.
rollments, raiSing standards, making courses tougher. to
weed out the medtocre. and are encouraging those stu ·
dents not strongly motivated toward educalion to swttch
to other majors.
It is a drastic reversal of a situation which prevatled
for most of the 15 years since the first Soviet Sputnik
shocked Americans into an acute awareness. among othet·
things, of the importance of education. Improvement of
the schools had a high pnority m the dnve to catch up
technologically with the Sovtets.
Helped along by the j:enerai prospenty of the '60s. the
wllllngnes~ of the pubhc to spend on new school plants.
and large mfustons of federal funds. education was some·
thing ol a boom field The trend was new and belter
faciUtles. more and better-tratned teachers for smaller
classes.
Between 1955 and 1970, the number of teachers tn pn·
mary and secondary education Jumped more than 80 per
cent Ifrom 1.286 million to 2.287 million 1 whtle total
school enroUment climbed only some 50 per cent 130 045
million to 46.531 million).
The bloom has been off the boom , of course. for a few
rears, as evtdenced by the taxpayer revolts on new bond
ISSues around the country and occasional school closings
for lack of ca.sh on hand. Most recently there has been
the weU-pubhctzed departure of American teachers.
JObless at home, to positions in Europe and Australta
In many respects the situation of education parallels
that of the aerospace mdustry , likewise a Sputnik-msti·
gated boom that has gone bust wtth even more disastrous
consequences.
It may w~ll get worse before it improves. All signs.
however, pomt to a~ ea~ly reordering of American educatlon, particularly tn ftnancmg The pressure is on in
the ne.ighborhoods and from the White House to exploit
and dtslnbute re~our~es more fairly and effectively.
The present sttuatton can also have its beneficial
efft;ets by ke~pinjl out of the profession those whose educational motivations and abilities are weak and who
would make marginal teachers at best.
But In the Jon~ run we ought also to manage more ef·
fectlvelr and fatrly our human resources. Education is
too baste to the entire national effort to be a boom·and·
bust operation.
(kEW$fiA.fiER ENTER,IIU: ASSN )

'ilW~I~:-N:-A.:-:::r=a:'li=RrniD.i.:G~E;;

!~xpert'

Play Fouls Up

. leads a second club lo dum·
my's king. His plan is to lead
.K62
a low club next and ruff it.
.873
Then
he will enter dummy
+Q2
with the king of trumps and
.AK753
discard two h e a r t s on the
WIST
EAST
last two clubs.
.987
.1092
.KJ6'
A fine ·idea, but East ruffs
+JlOU
+86H3
that club and takes his king
•QJtu
•to
of hearts. Expert South is
down two tricks.
801JTB (D)
.AQIOH3
Why was the losing line the
.AQS
expert adopted superior to
+AK
the winning one? We have
.96
already pointed out that the
North-South vulnerable
finesse was a 50 per cent
play.
West Nortll Eost South
The expert was goin~ to
Paos 2 • · Pass 3 •
make his contract provtded
Paos f .
Pass f N.T.
clubs broke either 3-3 or 4-2.
Po. 5 +
Pass 5 N.T.
A suit will break that well
Paos 6 •
Pass 6 •
some 84 per cent of the time.
Pool Pass
Pass
Thus the losing play had an
Openlnc leocl-t J
84 per cent chance of sue·
cess. It didn't work, but per·
By O.Wald James Jacoby centages work fine in the
long run.
Tbe ordinary bridge player
(NEWSP.APER EHTUPAIS£ ASSN )
has no trouble making six
apadea. He wins the diamond
opening; plays a couple of
rounds of trumps and notes
The bidding has been;
with mild disr•leasure that
East
South
they have fa i e d to break. West North
Pass
111erefore he runs some more
Pass
2t
trumps; enters dull'mY with I t . Dble
Pa ~'
2¥
Pass
the klng of clubs; takes the
Pass 3 •
Pass
beart finesse and claims the Pass
5.
Pass
slam when it works.
'
You, South, hold
This line of play gave him
a SO per cent chance since a 498654 ¥AQ6 tA32 • .1·1
What do you do now?
finesse is an even money
proposition.
A-Bid· fin diamonds. Your
partner
is trying for a slam in
The expert knows a better
spite
of
the r.cl that you hl\'t
Une of play. It doesn't work,
p
a
s
s
e
d
originally. Show that
but It Is a better line. He
your
twoadiamond
call ru.lh
cashes jU5t the ace and queen
sho\\ed
the
ace.
·
of trumps. Then he leads a
TODAV'S QUESTION
low club and ducks it to
Eut's ten. East leads back
Your partner continues to fiVe
a heart and expert South re- hea rts. What do you do now?
fU5es the finesse. Then he
Answer Tomorrow.
NOI111

23

.J

,.

a.

U4Rn:H8tW!&amp;X1
2.
••

BY JACK 01JRIAN

COACH LISTEN!

•

\

Helen Help

Us.

By Helen Hottel

••

A thought for toda~: American playwright Irwin Shaw
said, "There are too many
books I haven't read, too many
places I haven't seen, too many
memories I haven't kept long
enough."

SPEAK FOR YOURSELF, JOHN

Dear Helen :
. I'm a~ost 50 and ~arried. I have a nice !ann and~ good
111C0me. I ve ltnown this young woman a long time. In fact, 1
guess I loved her even before her disastrous marriage which
ended in divorce a year ago.
'
Her children come to the farm and ride in my snowmobile.
We get along great. She Is over here a lot-as a friend. I take
them aU to shows and other outings. But - she is 18 years
younger than me.
Now another man shows up. He is at her house a lot but the
kids dislike him. He doesn't take her places - just ~ats and
watches television at her expense. He pays child support, and 1
don't thtnk he has marriage in mind, as his former wife takes
about half his earnings.
I don't stop by any more, as I don't want to interfere but her
children spend more and more time at my farm.
'
!Jtould I Just drop out of the picture? I hate to hurt the kids
but they will forget. - CALL ME JOHN
'
Dear John:
For Pete's sake: FIGliT for what you want. A woman can
love an older man, but she can't throw herself at him if he insists
on dropping out of the picture.
Leave off the father image andgocourtin',John ! -H.
Dear Helen :
You took "Fighting Mad's" side on church bells not being
noise poUutants. Evidently you haven't lived directly across the
street from a church.
Each Sunday I count some 100 loud clangs, and with a small
baby, they can be a headache. A mile away they sound lovely
BUT when you're within 80 feet of !bose bells, they're just two
pieces of iron jarring your eardrums. - JEAN
Dear Helen:
I am a 71&gt;-yearo()ld man. I got sick and went to the hospital.
My son in another state said he'd move me to his home, so he
came and loaded all my belongings on a truck -then sold them
to a second~d dealer.
'!ben he forged my name on a couple of my social security
checks, saying it was to pay for my room and board -and then
he left me in a convalescent home that is paid for by Medicare.
He got away with about $600 from the sale of my furniture,
plus the checks, and I haven~ seen him since. He even sold three
of my suits and most of my other clothes.
I hate to bring charges against my own son, but how else can
I get my money back? I'll need it to live on when I get out of this
place.- FATHER OF AGOOD CHRISTIAN SON - HE SAYS
Dear Father:
Your son may return the money without a lawsuit if you
remind him that forging a name on government checks can get
him five-tcKen - and proof won't be difficult, with the help of a
lawyer.
Hhe doesn't fork over, then call your local Legal Aid Society.
This cheat doesn'tdeservea father 's protection ! - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
You receive many letters from people near suicide, it seems.
Won't you please tell your readers, Helen, that Suicide
Prevention Centers exist in almost every conmlllnity. They
JX'Ovide 24-hour telephone service and any person may call, any
time, to speak with trained personnel. The number Is in the phone
book. - THE MARIN SUICIDE PREVENTION CENTER
Dear Reeders :
Most larger cities not only have suicide prevention centers,
but other "crisis lines" open to troubled people . If you can't find
the number in the book, Directory Assistance will help you. - H.

The Almanac
By United Press 1ntemalional
Today is Wednesday, Feb. 23,
the 54th day of 1972.
The moon Is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning star is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Pisces.
German composer George
Fredenc Handel was born Feb.
23, lu85.
· On this day in his tory :
In 1847 Gen. zachary Taylor
and U.S. troops defeated Gen.
;;;:::::--.~\. Santa Ana tn the Battle of
Buena Vista, Mexico.
In 1942 a Japanese submarine
fired 25 shells at an oil refinery
near Santa Barbara, Calif., 21!,
monlhs after the sneak attack
on Pearl Harbor.
In 1945, six mt mbers of the
51h Division of the U.S. Marines
planleJ an Anwrican flag at~p
Muunl Sur,bachi on lwo Jima.

\

.'

"'BUT WILL THE

..

qu Drops Wyola Five,

Voice
along
Br'Way
.

.

21,000,000 Americans suffer
from high blood pressure, and
only 50 pct.ltnow they have this
disease which helps set the
stage for heart attack and
stroke. See your doctor to be
sure, and help your Heart Fund
help your heart.

NEW YORK (KFS)- N.Y. Giants' coach
Ale• Webster's oby after ear ugery ... Herb
&amp;!JtaronAipert'sdlvorcesettlementmakesher
a mllllonaira ... The Kurt Jurgens reconciled
for Cltristmal, separated again lor Lent ... The
"Jalna" boob of our youth (marveloiiS!) got
rave Canadian reviews (pnlduced up there) for
their first 'IV epsode; no U. S. deal's been set
yet, but It will, It will!
"1776," a great mUBicaJ, flnaUy quit Bdwy.
after three years and 300 pet. profit; it's still
deligbting folks oo the road ... Ah, Spring!
RingUng Bros. and Banwm &amp; Bailey Circus is
headed for Madlaon Scluare Garden, the one
show everyone latowa will be a smash and a
deligbt every , _ ... Mervyn Leroy and Greer
Garson's .husband, Buddy Fogelson, named
their parlnel'ed yearling ''Fogelroy."
Our friend Mahlln Gabel swears the Bdwy.
theater Is dead: but that's what despairing
mummers dalned In 1930 when half the Bdwy·
theaters were dark and that summer only a
dozen plays hung on; even the Great Jolson
could keep "WUOtterbar" running only 76
perfonnanees - 100 then was conaldered the
. hi!line -today it takes a year for most sellout
musicals to break tveri ... Quo Vadil waiters
are_n't mind readers when without an ord;;r th",Y
deliver. the proper apertif to ~eo RoSSI; he s
the mam man at Martini &amp; Rossi, the vennouth
empire.
Cong. ~~ M~y accuses NBC and ABC
networks of always having been adwcates of
'lV violence; claims $5 pet. of programs 111 both
networks ~tain violence (CBS apparently onlT
declares ·little Wl11'11: 211.3 pet.) ... Variety s
~ain-reporter cabled that the Island of Jbiza's
business has boomed since the Hughes-Irving
headlines.
Bob Eaton, author of the ''other" aDeged
"~ Howard HuabeS" book, Is hoi~ up in
Miami, safely out of headline contention; but
w~t! ... ~ greatG:en ~ermn's .ex. Bob Fosse
(directed 'Cabaret ), directs his googoos at
newahen Hotly Brooks ... Wbere there's a
celelrlty, there's Gloria V~bilt Cooper and
hubby Wyatt; the Pierre s stylish La Foret
politely had to turn down the Coopers' request to
take over that whole chic premises -to toss a
party for OtarUe Otaplin.

CoUeen Farrington, a beauty Jake Lamotta
introduced as his fiancee !Or a few minutes, Is
suing the old bull for the eltpert&amp;e of the party
where they announced It; with Jake's diction,
maybe he meant ''flnancee"? ... Martha Ctmeo
Reed (she and husband Stass were robbed ol
$150,000 of her diamonds after dOling El
Morocco recently) went so whoosh, she and
Brownee McLean jettP.d to Nasaau to tHe
~taUzation shots at Dr. Ivan Popov's
Renaissance Spa.
Oifford Irving's roommate on their front·
paged but Howard-Jiughesless Bahamas ·
weekend, Baroness Nina Van Pallandt, selected
a dubiously apropos piece with which to make
her American singing debut on the Dlcll
Cavettcast: "You've Got a Friend" ... When the
newsless but interesting sequence ended,
bandleader Bobby Rosengarden faded It out on
the strains of "I Could Write a Book" ... cavett
got in another ~ient shot by baldly
establishing that the swinging baroness t.d
enjoyed "everything" about that now so-public
JibidinOU5 weekend.
'!be Copa's Wilson Ptcfl:ett soul11how got
Liza Minnelli up for an unrehearsed and unpaid
' bit; Uza's very hot now -such a planned onenighter could earn her upwards of $15 000 lots of
places ... It •s the regular shows 011
that now
give it class (Mary :I'Yier Moore "Columbo"
etc.); remember when a TV "~I" was
special.? ..
.
Fine composer David Amram (first
resident composer at the N. Y. Plillharmonlc)
plays half a dozen lnstnunents, Including his
head. knocks himself on the skull via mouthin~crophone with the firsrfew bars of the
William Tell Qverture; if he knuekled his noggin
for the whole overture he'd be punchier than
Rocky Graziano pretends he IIi. Talented lad .
'!be Barbra Streisand-RYan O'Neal !Ibn,
"What's Up Doc" has tlie studio certain' it's
another
In Warners' cash register : It's a
straiglit "G" rating, pure escapl!it fiDI; the
title'snotabouthospltalsordoctors-Strel.lllnl
juSt keeps Ieating cBITOta and redundlndnf
"What's Up, boc?" ... Add Jolm Cusavetea to
the neutral enlhnsiasfs who've seen "'lbe
Godfather" already and raaaave about It ...
Cary Grant'sacting days seem over but not his
business acumen: Irish city-planning firm
wants him as officer of its new ''Sbannonside"
city,

rV

shot

DR. LAWRENCE f. LAMB

'

i1J

Dear Reader - There Is
no set rule. It depends on the
recovery a person makes
after a heart attack and the
nature of the dental work.
Many· years ago I did a
study on the risk patients

World's Future
Faith or Suicide?
By DON OAKLEY

iron•c thai at a time when science has within its
new vistas of almost unimaginable energy, and
wtthtn tis grasp the tools to exploit them for mankind's
belJI'ht . more and more people, including some scientists,
are crymg· "Stop the world! We've got to get off this
vrogress kick 1''
·-·
• A compu1er at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
warns that mankind has about 40 to 50 years of "golden
age" left before the trend lines of population growth, industnaltzallon and accompanymg pollution and depletion
of resources converge to a "critical mass" and every·
thmg explodes
• A distingmshed group of British ecologists has issued
a ·• stueprinl for Survival" which calls for immediate
cuts m populallon. reductions of standards of living, the
abandonm ent of much of modern technology and the re·
placement of the great cities by scattered smaller com·
munities.
• An "ecology acllvist" urges a declaration of war on
tec hnology plus World War IJ-type rationing to conserve
our resources.
We ~re , then , to abandon technological growth at the
ve ry lime when that growth promises to give us the
means to solve the problem which an admittedly reckless
usc of technology has created.
This formula , in the words of Yale economist Henry
C. Wallich . "would be lo commit suicide for fear of
remote death."
What does technology promtse? We 'have hardly begun
to tap one source of energy, that of geothermal power
contamed m underground deposits of steam or hot water.
Geothermal energy is at about the stage petroleum was
when it was used just to tight kerosene lamps says
J oseph Barnea, director of the Resources and Transportation Division of the United Nations.
From surl~ce indications alone, he writes in an article
m Scientific American, there appear to be belts of geothermal reservoirs along the western side of the Americas
fr om Alaska all the way down to Chile and alon~ the
"Circle of Fire" of volcanic activity around the rim of
the Pacific .
Two thirds of furkey are believed to have ~eothermal
potent1al. One field in Ethiopia alone could meet the
present electrical needs of all of Africa. Central America
has much more of this potential energy than it can use
and could grow rich by selling electricity Iby means of
long-distance transmission lines) to the energy·hungry
United States '
But surface indications are not all we have to rely on.
Remote sensing earth satellites may eventually be used
to search for ~eothermal deposits, as well as locating
o~e w deposits of minerals and aiding in weather control
and agriculture.
Under development at Los Alamos Scientific Labora.
tory in New Mexico is an electric "subterene" which can
melt holes in solid rock faster, cheaper and .safer than
cnnventtonal dnlling method~ Future models could he
atomtc·oowered. It is not inconceivable that such drills
could . be used to exploit ~eothermal fields spotted by
&gt;atelhte. and to sink shafts for recyclin~ water back Into
the fields .
·
With limitless. pollution-free energy-not only from
steam fields bul from nuclear fission and vast arrays of
solar radiation· collectors in the deserts·-men would
have the ability lo arrest those converl(ing disaster lines:
To clean up pollution, to conserve and recycle ·resources
an~ develop new ones. to raise world livinl( standards.
whtch tn turn would foster pooulation stabilization.
Shall we ~o ahead. or shan we stop everythinp; rich!
nnw·: Shall we have faith in the future . •1r shall we. as
Walllch !"l)s it . commit premature miclde!
It IS
si~ht s

1

had from the standpoint of
their heart while undergoing
a variety of surgical procedures, many of them major operations. 'In•looking ·at
several hundred case~ •.even
an old heart attack did' not
preclude major surgery.
As a rule, it is wen to wait
for at least three months
after initial recovery from a
heart attack before having
any significant surgical proCedlll'es. If you aUow approximately a month and a baH
for initial recovery, we are
talking about postponing surgery for about five months.
Most dental work really
doesn't pose much threat to
the body. Your dentist will
need to know about your
medicines. Some medicines
used to preve~t pain during
dental procedures can cause
some problems in highly sensitive individuals, but allow·
ing the patient to have the
pain sometimes causes just
as much danger.
Another pomt that will
need to be considered is
whether you are on med·
icines to prevent blood clot·
ting Ianticoagulants ) which
are commonly given to
patients after they have had
a heart attack.
Dear Dr. Lamb- I have a
blood P.ressure problem and
it goes up and down. I have
heard this kind is worse than
if it stays up all the time. Is
thiS true? Js my Chance Of

So~ Carolina,
The Roc:teta, 16-4, are tied
lor l9ib with Providence In the
poU, whlle So'utb Carolina IIi
tied for sevenlh·wlth Brigham
Yo1111g.
Clnc1Mati,1", has won five
straight, but the Bearcats will

have to JXill off an Upset to get
their siith In a row tonlibt,
playtns at No. 5 LollllvWe.
In another important auo.
'collegiate game tonight, Bowling Green playa Kenl SUite.
'!be Flashes need a vlctDry to
stay In contention for the MidAmerican Cdnference crown.
In Tuesday night's ·games,
Ohio University defeated U.yola ,(Dl.) 84-76 as Bobcat .for,
ward·Tom Rlceardi SCOI'tld 21

Oakland's Bando.
Signs For $50,000

' '

' , IH•+i'•V:...,).j, f11f'[

ir1j,

I •,

j'

1 '' I

having a stroke or heart attack better than most. I am
taking medicine for It and
my nerves. I am also overweight and on a diet to lose,
and am doing as I am told.
Three heart tracings were
normal. Please let me know
the facts on my condition.
My highest reading has been
185 over 110.
Dear Reader - Individuals
who intermittenUy h a v e
normal or near oormal blood
pressures and other times
have high blood pressure are
usually better off than those
people ll!hO have. sustained
high blood pressure. Lots of
the fluctuations in blood pressure can be related to life
situations and tensions sometimes even the aspect of
having the blood pressure
taken.
The fact that your blood
pressure Is at the level you
state and still fluctuates apparently to considerably lower levels would suggest that
you are less likely to have a
stroke than individuals with
sustained high blood pres. sure. One of the best things
yo~ can do-is to lose excess
wetght, so I am pleased to
hear that you are doing so.
(NEWIPAPER !NTIR'-ISI ASSN .)

points and grabbed 13
febounds.
&lt;Jiio, now 1:U, got acorlng
help fnm Tom Corde with 19
and Dave Ball with 16.
Loyola, playing without
Injured star center Larue
Martin, was paced by Paul
Cohen, wbo took over at center
andhlt 25polnts. Loyola Is 11-12.
Defiance needed three fl-ee
throws In Pie final 10seronds to
edge Findlay 85-l!2 for the
Yellow Jackets' 21st win
agafusl only one loss.
Kenyon · scored 13 straight
points late in the game for a ·
comeback 88-85 victory over

Urbana. It was. Urbana's sixth
loss in 28 starts.
A total of 201 points were
scored at muffton, as the hosts
outscored Anderson (Ind.) 10695. John Brown hit a careerhigh 33 points to .lead Bluffton
and Clair Recker, alreatfy the'
school's single season point
record-holder had 30 points to
boost hili total to 525 with another game remaining.
Wlbnington scored a come
from behind win over
Cedarville, 87-73, while Walsh
closed out Its 4-19 season with a
94-89 victory over Mercyhurst
(Pa.).

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P &gt; OP
North Galtia 16 2 1438 906
Easlern
16 2 1161 883
Symmes Valley
11 7 1113 904
Southern
9 9 1164 109'1
Hannan Trace 9 9 1031 1048
Kyger Creek 3 15 971 1224
Southwestern 0 18 630 1485
FINAL SVAC
TEAM
W L P · OP
North Gattla 11 1 1044 631
Eastern
10 2 802 620
Symmes Val ley 9 3 934 743
Soul hern
5 1 790 778
Hannan Trace 5 7 69S 721
Kyger Creek 2 10 650 842
Soulhwestern 0 12 414 994
Totals
42 42 S329 S329
FINAL SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W 1.;'. P OP
Norlh Gallia 10 2 556 376
Eastern
10 2 528 432
Symmes Vaney 8 4 567 469
Kyger Creek
6 6 512 538
Southern
5 1 500 518
Hannan Trace J 9 395 510
Southwestern 0 12 376 591
Totals
42 42 34:14 3434
This Week's Games
Friday - Class A Tour·
nament at Meigs High School
- North Gallia vs. Soulhern 7
p.m. Hannan Trace vs. Kvger
Creek 8:15 p.m .
Saturday - Symmes Valley

Tonight's schedule includes
Xavier at Miami, Cleveland
State ·at West!~"' Mi~higan,
Youngstown State at Gannon,
Akron at Central Michigan,
Baldwin-WaUace at Otterbein
and·Marietta at Denison.
Also, Heidelberg entertains
Aquinas (Mich.), case Western
vi~lts
Mount
Union,
Muskingum hosts Wittenberg,
Ohio Northern ·at Ohio
Wesleyan, Steubenville entertains Central State, John
carroU is at Bethany and Ohio
Doolinlcan visits Malone.

Co11"91r8asketboll R.. ulls
By Unit~&lt;! Press lnternollonol
Ohio U. 84 Loyola, 111 . 76
Potsdam 95 OSweQb St. 70
Holy Cross 76 St. Jno.. N.Y 72
Fordham 89 Notre Dame i2
Amhrst 57 Coast Guard 56
Buflalo Sf. 70 Geneseo St.
69
Hartwick 96 Harpur 70
Illinois Tech 60 Chicago S8
Lee Coli. 91 Maryville 78

Big 10
Ruling

Lemoyen 103 Corlland St. 75
No. Mich. 106 UW·MIIw 97
Rchslr Tech 15 Allred 72

FridJJy

Spring Arbor 127 Owosso 91
South Fla . 115 Fla. Tech 96
Western Car. 101 Allen 76
Winona 86 St. Cloud 84
Puget Sound 105 Chapman

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn .
(UPI) - The Big Ten athletic
directors will turn jurors here
Thursday; with the task of
deciding whether to continue
the suspension of University of
Minnesota basketball players
Corky Taylor and Ron
Behagen.
U.s . District Court Judge
Earl Larson ruled"· here
Tuesday that the two players
must be given a full hearing
before the athletic directors by
7 p.m. EST Friday on the
suspension for their part in a
Jan. 25 brawl which broke up
the MinlJI'sota-Ohio State
game. Lars on ruled that tf a
hearing is not held by then, the
players' right to "due process"
will have been violated and th&amp;
court would enjoin the Big Ten
from enforcing the suspensions.
He also temporarily ended a
suspension of the players' right
to practice with the team.
Behagen and Taylor then took
the floor with the Gophers
Tuesday for the first time in
almost a month.
Big Ten Commissioner
. Wayne Duke, who conducted a
two-day investigation of the
melee , and
eventually
suspended the players for the
season , responded by announcing the hearing before
the athletic directors.
Attorneys for the two 6-foot-9
juniors said they were "very
pessimistic about their
chances, although Duke
granted them a change jn the
site of the hearing from
Oticago to Minneapolis .
"There is no way they will
repudiate the decision of their
commissioner," said Ron' Simon, attorney for Taylor.
Simon said much of the same
testimony will be presented at
the hearing that was given
before Larson during an allday preliminary hearing last
Friday.
Both Minnesota Coach Bill
Musselm1111, ,a!!4. PJ\io ~ State
Coach Fred Taylor refused to
c9mment on , T~~sday' s
developments.
Beltllgan said he was "disap.
pointed" with some aspects of
the judge's ruling, but still was
bopeful he would be able to
play again after sitting out five
games. The Gophers are in
first place and plays second
place Michigan Saturday.
In his eight page ruling,
Larson emphasized that the
Big Ten's structure should be
altered ''without delay." He
said the conference has ''no
lonna! constitution," and is
"governed "by precedent and
lonna! resolutions."
Larson added that the
conferenl"e violated its own
rules by falling to hold
hearings and he ruled that the
players may appeal to the Big
Ten faculty Representatives if
the athletic directors vote

13

Scranton 91 tona

89
Wisconsin 66 Purdue 60

Rutgers 89 ~onnec llcut 86
Springfield 82 Am . kltl 80
Maryland 76 Richmond 61
York 74 Juniata 66

Oneida . n.y. 71 Kings, Pa.
70
Texas A&amp;M 101 Baylor 95, ot
VMI 37 Wm .&amp;Mary 3S, of
Wichita St. 95 Drake 71
Citadel 112 Fla. Presby . 90
Indiana 90 lttlnols 71
By UDltedPteu lntel'118tloaal Angeles Dodgers in 0ne of the
Geo. Wash 84 E•st Car . 14
Baseball'ssalarywheelconti- big winter trades, turned In a
Marian 91 Franklin 83
nued to spin in ils inconkfuous .295-23-90 performance last seaTulls 88 Lowell Tech 80
Walsh
94 Mercyhurst 89
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio berson's 16-game wrnnmg
Top-ranked Celina comfashlOJl Tuesday when Sal son. The White sox are hoping
Kenyon
88 Urbana 85
Bando signed with the Oakland that he and BiD Melton, the AL high school baskethaU notes streak Friday night 75-70 on the pleted its first unbeaten
vs. Ironton St. Joe 7 p.m.i Grace Colt. 91 Bethel 86
Athletics for about $50,000 while home run champion with 33 In Jrom around the state:
balanced scoring of Earl Hill regular season with an 88-51 Southwestern vs. Eastern 8:15 Ind. Central 75 H~nover 65
Valparaiso 81 DePauw 61
Hamilton Badin's 5-11 Mark (20), Mare115 Miller )19) and win over Coldwater Friday p.m.
Juan Marichal of the San 1971, will give them the
Prvdnce 81 Assmption 17
Francisco Giants and Dick hardest-hitting 1-2 punch In Alfers lroke the ilchool's single Jeff Jae (18). Tom Brabson night. The Bulldogs 40-2 over
SMU
87 Texas Tech 73
Allen of the Chicago White Sox their history and make them game scorlng record Friday had 25 to lead Barberton, now the past two years, averaged
Texas 92 Ark. 86, 2 ot
bld.for salaries of $120,000.
87.9 points a game this season
TCU 15 Rice 68
contenders in the AL Western night with 39 points In the 11&gt;-1.
Lubbock Chris. 76 Bishop 67
Bando, for whom· Oakland Division.
Rams'
'IU8
victory
over
Fairto
53.4
for
the
opposition.
They
,
Mentor, suffering through a
Oat.
Bap. 119 Letourneau 98
Manager Dick Williams openly . The White Sox announced the fi~d. Xavier University star 1-17 regular season, opens open tournament play Friday
MIT S7 Rochester 10
campaigned as the American signings of infielder Rich Jerry Helmers, who was at the tournament play Wednesday night against Lima Shawnee.
Old Dam. 100 Rndlph·Mcn
95
League's most valuable player Morales and pitcher Stan game, held the old record of 38. night at • Eastlake North
Columbus City League teams
Bait. 82 MI . St.Mary's je
above teammate Vida Blue, Perzanowskl. They have nine 'Allers, who entered the game against West Geauga, S-12, the picked off the five top seeded
Mid-Ohio Statistics
agreed to Ienos ·along with unsigned players.
with an 11.6 average, scored 20 only team Mentor was able to Positions in the tough Central
Wilmington 87 Cedarville 73
As of Feb. 20
reUefpitcher Roland Fingers.
District Tournament which has Standings CConf.l Call games) Bllftn 106 Andrsn, Ind. 95
Elsewhere: Pitcher Blll Sin- of his points In the final beat aU season.
Blue, whose 24-3 record and ger (1047), outfielder Manny quarter, hitting 8 of 11 from the
W L w L Defiance 85 Findlay 82
Bill Sutton, Marietta's prize produced six of the last nine Team
Ky St. 102 Nrthwd, Ind. 19
1.82 earned run average plus a ]r!ota ( .312) and catcher- floor,
sophomore guard, finished the state champions in Class AAA. 1 ~[~~~:nde
~:~
1g
sensational number of low-hit 'lnfielder BiD Sudakis (.193)
Cleveland Heights, which Tigers' regular season with a SouthwasseededNo.lfoUow- Malone
2·4 11 ·14
and· high-strikeout games signed with the Dodgers ... Rod . finished with a 17-1 record and 371lllint perfonnance in a los- ed by Central, Northland, Ohio Dominican
2~5
8·13 Cap Slips Notch
1·6 5·17 .
earned him the AL's MVP and Carew, who batted .307 for ,the the Lake Erie League title, had Ing 70-% effort against North and· defending state Cedarville
NEW YORK (UP!)
Pitcher ot the Year awards, Minnesota Twins in 1971 and is to come from five points behind Newark. Sutton, who scored 28 champion Walnut Ridge. Team Team Field 2~~ Pel.
Capital,
7th a week ago, slipped
remains unsigned. He and club regarded as a possible .400- with 3ll seronds·remalnlng Fri- of his total in the second baH, Walnut Ridge, 14-3, opens Urbana
2004 1057 52.2
owner Charles Flhley are hltter, agreed to tenns ... day night In its 61-69 win over tallied 104 points in his last tourney play Friday night Ohio Dominican IS53 745 47.9 a notch today in the latest
Cit
Malone
1938 882 45.S United Press International
· tG
understood to be about $40,000 Pitchers Stan Williams, Jim Lakewood. l.elchester stovall th'ree games.
agams rove y. .
Cedarville
1516 674 44.4
apart with Blue asklnji $90,000 Bibby: Joe Grzenda and AI scored the Red.sklns' last seven
Findlay,
which
flntshed
the
Rio
Grand.,.x
1634 788 48.3 small college basketball
DeGraff Riverside's 81-70
ratings.
and Finley offering $50,000.
Team Free Throws
Hrabosky and infielder Marty points in the 30-second period, wln over Wapakoneta St. season with a 16-2 record, set a
k
b
g1ng
884
Team
A
M
Pel.
Akrpn remained where it
Marlchal, wh~ always is Martinez signed with the St. indudlng a basket with two Joseph Friday night marked sch. 00I mar Y avera . · Urbana
868 628 12.1
difficult to sign, told the Giants Louis Cardinals ... The Texas seronds left to win the game. the mh coaching victory for pointspergame,wlthahighof Ohio Dominican 496 346 69.7 was, in lOth place. Ashland,
he would head for their Casa Ranger, rejected home run
768 sot 65.2 unrated a week ago, returned
New ·Riegel's Nonn Clouse Pirate mentor Jim carter. 114 against Mansfield Senior. Mat one
Grande, Ariz., sprlng camp "In hitter Frank Howard's latest closed his regular season car- Rlverside finished Its regualr The Trojans open tournament Cedarville
632 394 62.3 to the list in 18th.
.
Rio
Grande.x
491 284 68.0
Eau Claire continues to be
a day or tw 0." He said he request for a multi-year con- eer Saturday night wltlj a rec- season shedule with a 15-3 acllon Saturday afternoon
Team Rebounds
the
top-rated small college
wanted to speak to club owner tract. The Rangers have asked ord-setting 52-points per- mark.
against Lima Senior, which Team
RB Avg.
Horace Stoneham before sign- Howard t9 ll!ke a 20 per cent fonnance in the Blue Jackets'
1206 48.2 team in the country.
No. 1 ranked Indian Valley knocked them out ofit last year Mat one
ing.
pay cut from his $125,000 95-74 win over Fostoria St. South (A) capped its unbeaten in the first game.
g~~;~~minican
~~~~ :~::
Allen, acquired from the U.s earnings in 1971.
Wendelin. The old school mark 111-ll season Saturday night with
Thirdranked (AAA) Cleve- Cedarville
819 37 2
911 43.8
was held by fonner player and a 59-50 victory over Zanesville land East Tech, 17-1, one of the Rio Grande·x
Scoring
coach at New Riegel, Jere Car- Rosecrans. All.()hlo Bob Hug- four semi-finalists last year, Team
(Off) (Dell
rick.
101.6 90.9
gins led the Rebels in scoring opens its tournament play Fri- Urbana
90 6 89.2
Allllnce Soaps Streak
with 24 points, hitting 21 in the day night against Cleveland Malone
Rhodes 8-8
Ohio Dominican
87.4 90.9
Alliance (15-2) snapped Bar- opening haH.
' ·
Cedarville
79.2 91.1
Basketball Tournament
Rio Grande·X
88.6 86.4
Results
x . 21 game lola!.
United Press International
Individual Scoring
Class AAA
Team
FG
FT
TP
Av.
Fremont
Ross 57 Mansfield
COLUMBUS, ohio
Jan. 25 &lt;ltlo State-Minnesota
Un'wood (QD)
Senior 52 lot)
2S4 116 604 28.7 Toledo 1MaC6m~r' 63 ·loledo
1 1
AmericanCMIUbaiWitlJnion i'Ql''' Jll ~ gj.~n ,. t~~,b~iJ~
):,\~w ltit"'~' ·d\ lo ..- 11 t,. ~~ ' ' 1" 1' r
Todd (U)
252 132 636 23.6 DeVti~l ~ s. 43 , ,~, .
(~~L~) of Qhl~ E~~utlve Dl;,, :~con~cet;befo~~ I F\:iday;:' BytllllteCl ~s ln~l'liafroillr' berth. But be' left abruptly after games, was led by Tom O'Mara Piuri&lt;elt (U) 231"160'' 622'23.b .Maumee
77Totedo ~hltmer ~
Maurer (00) 154 87 39S 18.8
~or HeniOn A. Wolman,
ing.
.
Digger Phelps watched as the the season to take over at with 32.
(UJ 202 104 508 18.8
maintaining that "an athletic
'!be judge smd 11 a hearlng Fordham team he molded last Notre Dame. ·
Class AA
The only rated team in action Anderson
Individual
Shooting
Eastwood 64 Evergreen 52
mugging cannot justify an was not conducted by then, the season coasted to victory
Fordham gave its old coach was Maryland and the 11th- Name
·A M Pel. Springfield 73 Otsego 47
academic lynching," said he suspension woul~ be lifted. Big Tuesday nighi. The only prob- some rough treatment Tuesday ranked Terps . got 25 points Ptunkelt (UI
379 2JI 60.7 Napoleon 65 Wauseon 43
124 74 '59.7 Paulding S8 N Bryan 34
was "very happy" with Ten Commissioner· Wayne lem for Phe!ps was that he was night roUing to an 18-p&lt;)int from sophomore Tom Mcmillen Harrison (C)
Un'wood
100)
455
254 55.8
Tuesday's court decision that Duke sche.duled a he~ for watching from the OpJ&gt;Ollite halft~e lead and beating the - 19 of them in the second half Aikman (U)
213 118 55.4
Class A
two. IIUilpertded University of ~~sday Ul Minneapolis.
bench.
Fighting Irish, 89-72. Kenny -to defeat Richmond, 76-61. Anderson (U)
377 202 53.6 Skyvue 48 Caldwell 45
Mlmesota basketball players
. '!be court order was cerPhelps took over at Fordham Charles had 21 points and Tom RichmondstunnedMarylandby
Frontier Local 52 Beallsville SO
Individual
Free
Throws
be given a hearing,
tainly proper and I am very last season and led the club to Sullivan added 19 for the Rams taking a 38-33 lead at the haH Name
A M Avg.
In Minneapolis, U.S. District ~PPY about II," Wolman said. itsmostsuccessfulseasotl-21&gt;-3 now 15-7. Notre Dame, which before the 6-fool-11 McMillen Mc'lln COD)
77 64 83.1
87 71 81.6
Judge Earl R. Larson ruled
Even if we could assllll1e that .:.and an NCAA tournament suffered its 22nd' loss in 28 went to work. Jim O'Brien Watson (C)
SELECTS OHIO STATE
Todd
CUI
162
132 81.5
that Marvin "Corky" Taylor all of the allegations against
CINCINNATI (UP!)- Steve
added 15 points for Maryland, Howe(U)
77 60 77.8
and Ron Behagen, suspended the Minnesota players were
now 19-3.
Slephenson (M) 102 79 77.4 Koegel, an offensive guard on
by the Big Ten Conference for true and outrageous, it Is dear
the Cincinnati Moeller High
Elsewhere, Tom Ricciardi
Individual Rebounds
the rest of the season for their that an athletic mugging
Name
RB
Avg
School footbaU team, will atscored 21 points as Ohio
302 14.4 tend Ohio State.
1111rt in a melee atthe end of the camot Justify an academic By UDltedPress lntematlonal the Denver Rockets to a 121-105 University beat Loyola (lll. ), Un'wood 100)
Anderson(U )
34412.7
lynching. .
The 6.foot-3, 201J..pounder was
Marvin ·Roberts hasn't had victory over the Virginia 84-76, and two free throws by Marzick (MI
290 11.6
''The court decision was not much playing time this season Squires. Roberts hit 17 points in Ernie DiGregorio and a field Plunkett ( U)
237
8.8
one ol the several highly
The Daily Sentinel
185 7.7 recruited players on the thirdon the merits of whether the but he made the most of. what the second haH to break open a goal by Marvin Barnes in the Townsend CMI
DEVOTED TO THE
players did anything right or he got Tuesday night.
INTE~EST OF
ranked Class AAA team.
last 30 seconds helped Proclose game.
MlitGS·MASON A~EA
wrong but that they were
vidence
beat
Assumption,
81·77.
Kogel's brother Vic, played
'
R
oberts,
a
rookie
from
Utah
Byron
Beck
also
had
21
points
CHI!STE~ L. TANNEHILL,
denied the fundamental rights State, scored 21 points to lead for the Rockets while Charlie Terry Benton's 24 points
. Eue.ld.
·
linebacker at Ohio State as a
•alERT HOEFLICH,
to be confronted by their acScott
led
Virginia
with
31.
The
carried
Wichita
Stale
to
a
95-71
sophomore
last fall and was coCIIV Ullor
PLAYER-OF-WEEK
cusers in an open hearing and
Published da•lv except
,Squires managed to hit only victory over Drake and Jobie
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Guard winner of the Buckeyes' top
Saturday by The Ohio Vallev
to
cross-examine
witnesses
38.3 per cent of their shots in Wright and John Ritter com- Earnest Pettis of Western sophomore award.
Publishing Company. 111
Court St., Pomeoro~ . Onto, agairist them.
falling
14 games behind first- bined for 49 points as Indiana Michigan, who scored 56 points
1115769. Business Office Phone
''Those rights sho.uld he givplace Kentucky in the Ameri· beat JUinois, 90-71.
H2·21S6, Editorial Phone 992
in the Broncos' twQ games last
en to any student at any Wli' Wisconsin
'
21S7.
can BasketbaU Association's
Elsewhere,
week,
has been selected the
Stcond class postage paid at
versity whenever a substantial
Eastern Division:
Pomtroy, Ohio.
stopped Purdue, 66-60, Holy Mid-American Conference
right at that iristitution Is placN1tionat advtrtis.ing
Lawrence L. Baughman,
In the only other ABA game Cross upset St. John's (N.Y.), Player of-the-week.
rtprtsentative Bottinelli - ed in Jeopardy," Wolman said. Bessie M. Baughman to James
Tuesday night, George Thomp·
Gallagher, Inc ., 12 East •2nd
Pettis, a 6-foot-3 senior from
''The two players should be A. Rlchmond, Suzanne Rlch- son scored 32 points and Bob 76-72, Virginia Military
St., New York City , New York .
defeated
WiD
lam
&amp;
Mary,
37-35
Chicago,
scored 53 points,
Subscription rates : De .
given· due process of law,"
mond,
110
sq.
rd.,
100
Acre
U.t,
Verga
hit
30
as
the
Piitsburgh
llvertd by carrier where
in overtime, Texas A&amp;M edged matching his career high, in
Ohio State basketball coach Salisbury.
awalleble 50 cents per week ;
Condors downed the Dallas Baylor, 101-95, in overtime, Western's 75-74 win over
By Motor Route where carrier
Fred· Taylor said he would
Lucille Smith, Elrna K. · Chaparrals, 112-105, at Tucson, Southern Methodist beat Texas
service not available: One
Bowling Green including the
have
no
comment
on
the
court
Reuter to Columbia Gas of Ariz. J)Onnie Freeman led the Tech, 87-73, Texas downed winning basket !n the closing
month SUS. 81 moll in Oh10
and W . Va ., Ont yur SlA.OO.
decision until after Thursday's Ohio, ,Inc., Right of way, Chaps with 36.
Six months S7 .25. Thrte
Arkansas, 92-U, in overtime seconds, and tallied 23 in the
hearing. OSU Athletic Director Cheste~ .
months s.c.so . Subscription
and Texas Christian stopped Broncos' 75-69 loss to Kent
price includes Sunday Times.
Ed Weaver also declltied
Jacob M. Bush, Carole
Sentinel
Rice, 71Hl8.
State .
comment.
Suzanne Bush to Columbia Gas
Trans. Corp., Right of way, Col11111bia.
lebanon.
George A. Radekin, Wanetta
Rodney Pierce, Dora Pierce Radekln to Buckeye Rural
to Col11111bia Gas Trans. Corp., Elec. Coop Inc., Right of way,
Right of way, Olive.
Columbia.
G. A. Radekin, Wanetta G.
ea.
Ora M. Bacon, J~lm C. Bacon
Radekin to Buckeye Rural to Clarence Hayman, VIrginia
Elec., Rlght of way, Columbia. Hayman, Lots, Antiquity.
Panama
James Ray, Marilyn Ray to
David C. MIUer, dec. to
Washable Finish, 12"x12"
Buckeye Rural Elec.; Rlght of Eleanor L. MIUer, Cert. for
way, Columbia. ,
, trans., Middleport.
Mayfair
Frank Westfall, Hilah
Great Bend Gr.ange•No. 2294
Washable Finish, 12"x12"
Westfall to Buckeye Rural to Great Bend Comm. Assn. of
Elec. Coop, Inc., Right of way, Great Bend, Parcel, Lebanon.
I

5-l:l Star Sets Record

MOC Stats

ll:

Hearing Ordered
In Gopher Battle

Hold Off Surgery After Heart Attack
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb - I am a
man of middle age. Recently,
I had a heart attack. How
long must I ")VIIi! to have my
teeth repairedi'
.

II)' lhllted Preu llderaatloul
Toledo,. which this week
jumped Into UPI'a top 20
ba. . .baJJ rallilp, gets a Iough
test tonlsht at seventb-ranked

84~ 76

SJI AC Standings

(~PI)

Ohio Tourney
Cage Results

· .
Fordh.am Tops ND' 'EX· Coach

Roberts Sparks Utah Win

Property

Transfers

NEW SHIPMENT!

CELOTEX

Ceiling Tile

BERRY'S WORlD

Tires For Large Car Owners

.White, 12"x24"

Priced Right To Sell

Champion

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NYLON

SPARK P
Snap .on.
Seat eove·~s

Nyton &lt;&gt;ver foam, blue,

gold, green, red, charcoal.

Firestone
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HIGH LIVING ·EXPENSES?
.

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36 month guarantee. No

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825x14

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tubeless plus

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lineal J~ ·
foot

Accoustica I Tile, 12"X12"

Fed. l:x . Tax

CUT THEM DOWN WITH

12 Volt

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tire .

ex change nee.

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It

to..~~ ~

"I'll be dern'tl! The crowd out nHr 'tlte rood tltctt you
thouuht !as gathtrin' to go into IOII'n ta mMf tile .
candit111tes IS tht ct~rtdit111tes!"

Certified .Gas Stations

H&amp;R FIRESTONE

992-9981

538 W. Main
Pomeroy,~.
We Honor BankAme~icard and ,Master Charge,

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700 E. Main

992·2101
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We Deliver

MASON

�5- The Daily Sentlnei,Middl.eport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 23, 1972

Pro St.ndinp
NIASta......
.
lyUNitll,_ ...........l
EolltniCenleo.t MI
Atllnllc Dlvlllln
W. L. Pd. Gl
• Boston
45 23 .U2 ... ,
Now York
41 24 .631 2'h
Phill!ltlphla 25 41 .319 19
Buffalo
1t At .216 25
Central Dl':llioll
W. L Pd. Gl
a.ltlmore ·28 36 .431
Atl.anto
.24 40 .1!75 4
Cln~lnDIII
20 ~ .313 8
Cleveland
19 47 :211 10

'

~
. . .·
~ ', .. ·.•.•

LB.

w:::r.r.;• ..ce

IDtvltiotl
·
: L. Pd. Gl
MllwaukM 52 15 ',776
Chicago
47 20 .701 5
Phootrilx
41 26
11
Detroit
23 42 .354 28
·
Pi!=Hic Dlvjslon
· .
·
W. L Pd. Gl
LosAngeles sc 10 .w ...
Golcltn St.
40 25 .615 14'hl
Seattle
~ 26 .61)6 15
Hou.ston
25 l9 .391 29
Portland
15 S3 .221 41
Tuesday's Rosulll .
Boston 114 Phoenix 103
Now York 122 Portl..,d 105
Buffalo 99 Beltlmort 91
Chicago 119 Phlledtlphta 88
Detroit 135 Leis Ang. 134 ot
Golden State ·120 Seettle 104
!Onlygamosschtdultdl
WtdntMiay's Goo11111
Portland at Cincinnati
Phoenix at Atlinla
Boston at Cltveland
Milwaukee at Baltimore
LO$ Angeles vs. Houston
·
.At Waco, Texas
Detroit at Seattle
(Onlygamesscheduled)

.m.

SVAC AND GALUA COUNTY CAGE ~PIONS Coach Jim Foster's North Gallia Pirates, rated ninth in last
week's UP! Class A poll, won the 49th Annual Gallia County
Tournament Saturday night at the Paul R. Lyne Center at
Rio Grande College. The Pirates also captured the 1971-72
Southern Valley Athletic Conference Crown. North Gallia

was toJHM!eded Sunday In the Class A Sectional Tournament
at Meigs High School. Team members are, first row, left to
right, Pat Stout, Danny Miller, Harvey Brown, Jackle Smith
and T. J . Robinson. Second row, left to right, Keith Weddington, Gary Crosswhite, Don Justus, Arthur Clark, Larry'
Justus, John Eggleton, Dave Robinette, Coach Jim Foster
and reserve coach John Blake.

By GARY KALE
UPI Sports Writer
Loa Angeles' Big Three of
Jerry West, Gail Goodrich and
WUt Cliamherlain helplesaly
watched Bob Lanier score the
Big One that beat the Lakers,
135-134, In overtime Tuesday
night.
With
three
seconds
remaining In the five-minute
extra session and Detroit
tralllng by one point, Lanier
avenged the Pistons' previous
three losses to Loa Angeles this
season by sinking a short jump
shot to win the game.
west scored 'S1 points, oot
missed a jump shot with two
seconds to go In regulation
time that would have lroken a
121..all tie. Goo&amp;ich netted 32,
oot missed a jumper at the
buzzer ending the game.

Chamberlain tallied 30, but
missed all his foul shot~ on a 3for-2 situation with 13 seconds
to go In overtime.
Lanier finished with 31 points
and Dave Bing of Detroit went
over the 10,000 point mark with
a 33-polnt effort.
In other NBA action, New
York routed Portland 122-105,
Chicago beat PhUadelJitia, 11988, Boston tripped Phoenix,
114-103,
Buffalo
edged
Balllmore, 99-98, and Golden
State mauled Seattle, ll»-104.
Jerry Lucas scored 21 points
In the Knicks' victory over the
Trail Blazers after being held
to four points In the first baH.
Walt Frazier led New York
with 29 points, Including connections on lklf·9 field goal
attempts In the second baH.
Sidney Wicks and Geoff Petrie

shared Bl~zer scoring honors
with 21 points apiece.
The 76ers, now 19~ games
behind flrst1)lace Boston In the
Atlantic . Division, trailed
Chicago by 30 points going Into
the fourth quarter. Fred Carter
led Philadelphia with 13 points.
Bob Love of the Bulls scored
almost three limes as many
polnts-,14.
John Havlicek reached a
personal high of 16 assists ad
the Celtlca remained three
games ahead of New York In
the race for the division crown.
Havlicek scored ?:1 points to
help Boston end Phoenix's
winning atrlng at nine games.
Connie Hawkins paced the
Suns with 30 points.
Bob Kauffman stole an In
bounds-pass with eight seconds

left and drove In for the win·
ning basket that avenged a onepoint loss In the final seconds to
Baltimore three weeliB ago.
Buffalo ,held the Bullets to 18
points In the final quarter. Kauffman's 26 points were
high for the game. Archie
Clark led Baltimore with 23.
Golden State gained a baHgame lead over third-place
Seattle In the battle for the
other playoff berth In the
Pacific Division as Cazzie
Rassell scored 18 of his 26
points In the second baH. Jim
McDanieli scored his first
points for the Sonlca since
jumping to the NBA when he
tallied on a three-point play
with two minutes to play. Len .
NHL Slondlngs
Wilkens had a Seattle blgh of 26
By
United
Press Internatlonol
!Xlints.
Eul

Fighter Stewart Gray
·.
Dies of Head Injuries
W!NNIPEG,Canads (UPI)Boxer Stewart Gray died late
Tuesday night of head Injuries
received Monday in a light
heavyweight match against
Canadian champion AI Sparks.
Gray's manager, Irv Ungerman, who also manages George
Chuvalo, immediately an·
nounced the Chuvalo-Muhammad Ali heavyweight fight
scheduled for March 13 in
Vancouver would be postponed
indefinitely.
Gray, 27, was knocked
unconscious early in the seventh round of the Monday night
bout. He was rushed, to
Winnipeg General Hospital
where he brieRy regained con-

.'sciousness.
Doctors performed a two·
hour operation to relieve brain
pressure , but Gray never
regained consciousness after
the surgery.
Gray, a native of Nova
Scotia , was the third-ranked

light heavyweight in Canada
and the second-ranked middleweight at the time of his death.
Upon hearing of Gray's
death, Chuvalo, a close friend,
said "I won't fight on the 13th.
I haven't set any date. I'm just
going to think about it for
awhile .
Ungerman, who also manages
Gray's brother, Clyde, said his
own future now was uncertain .
"Do I try to buck life and
reality or do I stay with
boxing ?" he said. "I don 't
know the answer at this lime. I
know my problem is small
when I think of the widow of
the boxer. Afj far as the Ali·
Chuvalo fight in Vancouver, it's
off indefinitely."
·
Sparks ~as unavailable for
comment.
Gray is survived by his wile,
Carmella, a four-year old son
and infant daughter.
Funeral arrangements are
incomplete .
·

FABRIC BUYS!

MAC .PlayQff 1\nticipated 5trr
COLUMBUS (UP!) - If a
three-way tie should result In
the Mid-American Conferente
at the end of the season, the
title may be decided by a
playoff, according to MAC
publicity director James
Carfield.
Toledo is 6-2 in the league,
Ohio U. is 5-2 and Kent State 53.
"There are a lot of
possibilities in the remaining

Team
Ratlne Food Market
Eagle's Club
Tom's Carry Out
Forest Run Block
Farmers Bank

Roseberry's Pennzoil

Early Wednesday
Mixed League
Feb. 9, m2
Standings

Name
Smith· Nelson Motors
Oiler's Sohio
Zlde's Sport Shop
Young's Market
Nelson's Drug

High Individual Game

45 inches Wide

Val. to 2.98 yd.

,,'
'·•.

Many Other
Specials. Come

•

and Browse! !

•~
~

•l'

yd.

'

'•
•'

L: THE FABRI~ SH~P'

:l

SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
MtCALL'S&amp; SIMPLICITY ~.ATTERNS

115 'If. Second

992·2284

Pomeroy.O.

Cage Ratings

Pis.
41
34
32

23
22
16

High lndlviduol Game
Paul Taylor 211.
High Ind. Game - Linda
Winebrenner 212.
High Series - Paul Taylor
542.
High Series Linda
Winebrenner 552 .
Team High Gam e - Tom's
Carry Out 707.
Team High Series - Tom's
Carry Out 2091.

Tenth Framers

1 GROUP

Small College

Local Bowling
Early Sunday
Mixed League
Feb. 13,1972
Standings

·
•
games and we are 'making
plans in the event there Is a
two-way or three-way tie,"
Carfield said.
There has never been a
three-way tie in the MAC's 25yesr history.
"If this happens, the playoffs
would determine who would
get a berth in the first round
Mid-east NCAA regionals,"
Carfield said.

Pis.
42
31
30
28
24
i3

NEW YORK (UPI)- The
United Press International top
20 small college basketball
feams with flrsl plate votes
and won-lost records as of Feb.
20 In parentheses: (Twelfth
week)
·
Team
Points
1. Eau Clalr(241 (19·1) 307
2. TennesseeSI(4) (16-1) 258
3. Stephen F. Austin (22·2)208
4. Louisiana Tech (1) (20·3)201
5. Easfern Michigan (21 (20-41
i52

6.

1.

8.
9.
10.
11 .
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.

CheneySfate(19·2l
124
71
Bentler !23·11
Capita (17.2)
76
Evansville (19·5)
49
Akron (21·3)
47
Fairmont State !21-3) 46
Alabama Stale (11·21 ~
Sam Houston Sf. (19·4) 26
Kentucky Stale (18·5) 24
SacredHear1!22-2)
23
Western Wash. (20·21 22
Fla .Southern (1) (19·3) 20
Ashland (18-41
19
Assumption (15·4)
13
North Car. A&amp; T
5

FRENCH CITY

20 ·ct. WIENERS
FRESH

KRAFTS

Wednesday Late
Mixed League
Feb. 16, 1972
Standings

,
FOR

PURE GRAPE JELLY

MORTON
HOUSE

00

l9 11 )0 88

26 25 9 61
24 27 11 S9
16 3T 5 31
11 35 14 36
West
W. L. T. Pis
Chicago
38 14 1 83
Minnesota
32 19 9 73
eelltornla
18 29 14 so
St. Louis
20 32 9 4'1
Philadelphia
18 30 11 47
Pittsburgh
18 33 9 45
Leis Angeles
16 39 7 39
"TuesdiY'I R11ulll
Detroit 15 Toronto 4
New York 7 Montreal 3
Boston 4 Vancouver 3
(Onlygamesscheduled)
Wtdnllday's G1m11
Philadelphia at New York
Pittsburgh at Toronto
Buffalo at Chicago
Boston at Calllornla
St. Louisa I Los Angeles
!Onlygamesscheduled)

~BEEF STEW

Toronto
Vancouver "'
Buffalo

AHL Slondlngs
By Unlltd lnttrlllllonol
E11t
W. L. T. Pis
Bostn
33 17 9 75
Nova Scotia
31 16 12 74
Sorlngfleld
23 22 13 59
llrovldence
21 27 9 51
Rochester
19 32 7 45
West
W. L. T. Pis
Cleveland
27 22 8 62
Baltimore
26 21 10 62
Hershey
24 20 10 58
Cincinnati
23 24 12 58
Richmond
22 26 10 54
Tidewater
14 36 a '36
fuesclay's Rosulll
Cleveland 6 Beltlmore 2
Hershey 3 Cincinnati 3
Tidewater 3 Rochester 2
IOnlygamtsseheduled)
Wtclnndoy's Goomes
Boston at Horslley
Cltvtland 11 R~chtsllr
IOnlygamesscheduled)

24 Ol
CAN

ARMOURS ,

ILl

151fz oz. can

·GOLDEN RIPE

WITH!

TOPPS
'

CANNED POP

·

Team
Pis.
Casseii·Carsey
36
Morrow-Moore
36
O..en-Holter
3~
Rosenbaum .Meadows
28
Fultz.Bentley
28
Blakeslee·Hoyt
6
High SO!'ies - RosenbaumMeadows 1878; Blakeslee-Hoyt
1819; O..en ·Holter 1716.
High Game - Rosenbaum·
Meadows 684; Blakeslee-Hoyt
675 ; Fullz·Benlley 633. ·
High Series - Men,, D.
Meadows 570; D. Rosenbaum
524; D. Owen 500.
High ~;
Series
- S.
O..en
B. Women
Fultz 431;
J.
Bentley 422.
High Game - Men, D.
Meadows 209( D. Rosenbaum
205; A. Hoyt 705.
High Game - Women, B.
Fultz
164; S.J .O..en
Bentley
Hoyt i5$;
155..155; . v. .

18 oz.

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•

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ALL
FLAVORS

.00

12 FOR ·

I.G.A:

CAMPBELLS

INSTANT
POTATOES

TOMATO
SOUP

16 oz.

•I

' 47~

12 oz. can

2 Dt. H.T. Auto. trans.,
P.S. Dark blue

BANOUET

with black interior

One Owner, Like New

KEITH GOIU fORD'
s .
. . U EDCAR LOT
,
1..;3~r.:d~A~v:e·~.;.-~992::·:2~of7~.__

CREAM
PIES ,

·4

,9~

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PEANUT
BUTTER
18 oz.
20 oz. bag

VEGETABLES 3·

for

..::::::.J
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9 cans

POLY BAG

·

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No. 1 cans

PLANTERS

. \ /'

FOR

LB.

RI.NG LIVER PUDDING

BEEF
CUB·E
STEAK

33 14 12 78

High Ind. Game - Betty
Smith 198.
High Series Chuck

High Series- Patty Carson
507.
Team High Game - Young's
Market 712 .
Team High Series - Zlde's
Sport Shop 2027.

PKG.
3 lb. or more

FRENCH CITY

Chuck Winebrenner 222 .

Winebrenner 567.

.

.

W. L. T. Pis
~
8 9 97

Boston

·

$)29

LEAN GROUND BEEF
.
ABA Standings
By Unltld Presslnternatloolil
East
W. L. Pet. GB '
Kentucky
51 12 .810 "' :
38 27 .515 14
VIrginia
29 J5 .453 22'12
New York
26 38 .406 25'12
Florldle~s
25 l9 .391 26'12
Carolina
Pittsburgh 23 41 .35'1 28'h
West
W. L. Pd. GB
Uta~,
~ 20 .688 ...
Indiana
36 27 .571 71h
Dallas
31 36 .45314'h
Denver
26 37 .413 17'h
Memphis
23 40 .36.l 20'h
.
Tuesdoy's Resulll
Pittsburgh 112 Dallas 105
Denver 121 Vlrglnla105 .
!Onlygamesschedultdl
Wtdnndoy's Goomes
Florldlana vs. Carolina
At Charlotte
Memphis vs. VIrginia
AI Norfolk
Indiana at New York
Kentucky at Uth
(Onlygemesscheduled)

Lakers Lose 135-134 to Lanier

LB.

.29
LB~

�5- The Daily Sentlnei,Middl.eport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 23, 1972

Pro St.ndinp
NIASta......
.
lyUNitll,_ ...........l
EolltniCenleo.t MI
Atllnllc Dlvlllln
W. L. Pd. Gl
• Boston
45 23 .U2 ... ,
Now York
41 24 .631 2'h
Phill!ltlphla 25 41 .319 19
Buffalo
1t At .216 25
Central Dl':llioll
W. L Pd. Gl
a.ltlmore ·28 36 .431
Atl.anto
.24 40 .1!75 4
Cln~lnDIII
20 ~ .313 8
Cleveland
19 47 :211 10

'

~
. . .·
~ ', .. ·.•.•

LB.

w:::r.r.;• ..ce

IDtvltiotl
·
: L. Pd. Gl
MllwaukM 52 15 ',776
Chicago
47 20 .701 5
Phootrilx
41 26
11
Detroit
23 42 .354 28
·
Pi!=Hic Dlvjslon
· .
·
W. L Pd. Gl
LosAngeles sc 10 .w ...
Golcltn St.
40 25 .615 14'hl
Seattle
~ 26 .61)6 15
Hou.ston
25 l9 .391 29
Portland
15 S3 .221 41
Tuesday's Rosulll .
Boston 114 Phoenix 103
Now York 122 Portl..,d 105
Buffalo 99 Beltlmort 91
Chicago 119 Phlledtlphta 88
Detroit 135 Leis Ang. 134 ot
Golden State ·120 Seettle 104
!Onlygamosschtdultdl
WtdntMiay's Goo11111
Portland at Cincinnati
Phoenix at Atlinla
Boston at Cltveland
Milwaukee at Baltimore
LO$ Angeles vs. Houston
·
.At Waco, Texas
Detroit at Seattle
(Onlygamesscheduled)

.m.

SVAC AND GALUA COUNTY CAGE ~PIONS Coach Jim Foster's North Gallia Pirates, rated ninth in last
week's UP! Class A poll, won the 49th Annual Gallia County
Tournament Saturday night at the Paul R. Lyne Center at
Rio Grande College. The Pirates also captured the 1971-72
Southern Valley Athletic Conference Crown. North Gallia

was toJHM!eded Sunday In the Class A Sectional Tournament
at Meigs High School. Team members are, first row, left to
right, Pat Stout, Danny Miller, Harvey Brown, Jackle Smith
and T. J . Robinson. Second row, left to right, Keith Weddington, Gary Crosswhite, Don Justus, Arthur Clark, Larry'
Justus, John Eggleton, Dave Robinette, Coach Jim Foster
and reserve coach John Blake.

By GARY KALE
UPI Sports Writer
Loa Angeles' Big Three of
Jerry West, Gail Goodrich and
WUt Cliamherlain helplesaly
watched Bob Lanier score the
Big One that beat the Lakers,
135-134, In overtime Tuesday
night.
With
three
seconds
remaining In the five-minute
extra session and Detroit
tralllng by one point, Lanier
avenged the Pistons' previous
three losses to Loa Angeles this
season by sinking a short jump
shot to win the game.
west scored 'S1 points, oot
missed a jump shot with two
seconds to go In regulation
time that would have lroken a
121..all tie. Goo&amp;ich netted 32,
oot missed a jumper at the
buzzer ending the game.

Chamberlain tallied 30, but
missed all his foul shot~ on a 3for-2 situation with 13 seconds
to go In overtime.
Lanier finished with 31 points
and Dave Bing of Detroit went
over the 10,000 point mark with
a 33-polnt effort.
In other NBA action, New
York routed Portland 122-105,
Chicago beat PhUadelJitia, 11988, Boston tripped Phoenix,
114-103,
Buffalo
edged
Balllmore, 99-98, and Golden
State mauled Seattle, ll»-104.
Jerry Lucas scored 21 points
In the Knicks' victory over the
Trail Blazers after being held
to four points In the first baH.
Walt Frazier led New York
with 29 points, Including connections on lklf·9 field goal
attempts In the second baH.
Sidney Wicks and Geoff Petrie

shared Bl~zer scoring honors
with 21 points apiece.
The 76ers, now 19~ games
behind flrst1)lace Boston In the
Atlantic . Division, trailed
Chicago by 30 points going Into
the fourth quarter. Fred Carter
led Philadelphia with 13 points.
Bob Love of the Bulls scored
almost three limes as many
polnts-,14.
John Havlicek reached a
personal high of 16 assists ad
the Celtlca remained three
games ahead of New York In
the race for the division crown.
Havlicek scored ?:1 points to
help Boston end Phoenix's
winning atrlng at nine games.
Connie Hawkins paced the
Suns with 30 points.
Bob Kauffman stole an In
bounds-pass with eight seconds

left and drove In for the win·
ning basket that avenged a onepoint loss In the final seconds to
Baltimore three weeliB ago.
Buffalo ,held the Bullets to 18
points In the final quarter. Kauffman's 26 points were
high for the game. Archie
Clark led Baltimore with 23.
Golden State gained a baHgame lead over third-place
Seattle In the battle for the
other playoff berth In the
Pacific Division as Cazzie
Rassell scored 18 of his 26
points In the second baH. Jim
McDanieli scored his first
points for the Sonlca since
jumping to the NBA when he
tallied on a three-point play
with two minutes to play. Len .
NHL Slondlngs
Wilkens had a Seattle blgh of 26
By
United
Press Internatlonol
!Xlints.
Eul

Fighter Stewart Gray
·.
Dies of Head Injuries
W!NNIPEG,Canads (UPI)Boxer Stewart Gray died late
Tuesday night of head Injuries
received Monday in a light
heavyweight match against
Canadian champion AI Sparks.
Gray's manager, Irv Ungerman, who also manages George
Chuvalo, immediately an·
nounced the Chuvalo-Muhammad Ali heavyweight fight
scheduled for March 13 in
Vancouver would be postponed
indefinitely.
Gray, 27, was knocked
unconscious early in the seventh round of the Monday night
bout. He was rushed, to
Winnipeg General Hospital
where he brieRy regained con-

.'sciousness.
Doctors performed a two·
hour operation to relieve brain
pressure , but Gray never
regained consciousness after
the surgery.
Gray, a native of Nova
Scotia , was the third-ranked

light heavyweight in Canada
and the second-ranked middleweight at the time of his death.
Upon hearing of Gray's
death, Chuvalo, a close friend,
said "I won't fight on the 13th.
I haven't set any date. I'm just
going to think about it for
awhile .
Ungerman, who also manages
Gray's brother, Clyde, said his
own future now was uncertain .
"Do I try to buck life and
reality or do I stay with
boxing ?" he said. "I don 't
know the answer at this lime. I
know my problem is small
when I think of the widow of
the boxer. Afj far as the Ali·
Chuvalo fight in Vancouver, it's
off indefinitely."
·
Sparks ~as unavailable for
comment.
Gray is survived by his wile,
Carmella, a four-year old son
and infant daughter.
Funeral arrangements are
incomplete .
·

FABRIC BUYS!

MAC .PlayQff 1\nticipated 5trr
COLUMBUS (UP!) - If a
three-way tie should result In
the Mid-American Conferente
at the end of the season, the
title may be decided by a
playoff, according to MAC
publicity director James
Carfield.
Toledo is 6-2 in the league,
Ohio U. is 5-2 and Kent State 53.
"There are a lot of
possibilities in the remaining

Team
Ratlne Food Market
Eagle's Club
Tom's Carry Out
Forest Run Block
Farmers Bank

Roseberry's Pennzoil

Early Wednesday
Mixed League
Feb. 9, m2
Standings

Name
Smith· Nelson Motors
Oiler's Sohio
Zlde's Sport Shop
Young's Market
Nelson's Drug

High Individual Game

45 inches Wide

Val. to 2.98 yd.

,,'
'·•.

Many Other
Specials. Come

•

and Browse! !

•~
~

•l'

yd.

'

'•
•'

L: THE FABRI~ SH~P'

:l

SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
MtCALL'S&amp; SIMPLICITY ~.ATTERNS

115 'If. Second

992·2284

Pomeroy.O.

Cage Ratings

Pis.
41
34
32

23
22
16

High lndlviduol Game
Paul Taylor 211.
High Ind. Game - Linda
Winebrenner 212.
High Series - Paul Taylor
542.
High Series Linda
Winebrenner 552 .
Team High Gam e - Tom's
Carry Out 707.
Team High Series - Tom's
Carry Out 2091.

Tenth Framers

1 GROUP

Small College

Local Bowling
Early Sunday
Mixed League
Feb. 13,1972
Standings

·
•
games and we are 'making
plans in the event there Is a
two-way or three-way tie,"
Carfield said.
There has never been a
three-way tie in the MAC's 25yesr history.
"If this happens, the playoffs
would determine who would
get a berth in the first round
Mid-east NCAA regionals,"
Carfield said.

Pis.
42
31
30
28
24
i3

NEW YORK (UPI)- The
United Press International top
20 small college basketball
feams with flrsl plate votes
and won-lost records as of Feb.
20 In parentheses: (Twelfth
week)
·
Team
Points
1. Eau Clalr(241 (19·1) 307
2. TennesseeSI(4) (16-1) 258
3. Stephen F. Austin (22·2)208
4. Louisiana Tech (1) (20·3)201
5. Easfern Michigan (21 (20-41
i52

6.

1.

8.
9.
10.
11 .
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.

CheneySfate(19·2l
124
71
Bentler !23·11
Capita (17.2)
76
Evansville (19·5)
49
Akron (21·3)
47
Fairmont State !21-3) 46
Alabama Stale (11·21 ~
Sam Houston Sf. (19·4) 26
Kentucky Stale (18·5) 24
SacredHear1!22-2)
23
Western Wash. (20·21 22
Fla .Southern (1) (19·3) 20
Ashland (18-41
19
Assumption (15·4)
13
North Car. A&amp; T
5

FRENCH CITY

20 ·ct. WIENERS
FRESH

KRAFTS

Wednesday Late
Mixed League
Feb. 16, 1972
Standings

,
FOR

PURE GRAPE JELLY

MORTON
HOUSE

00

l9 11 )0 88

26 25 9 61
24 27 11 S9
16 3T 5 31
11 35 14 36
West
W. L. T. Pis
Chicago
38 14 1 83
Minnesota
32 19 9 73
eelltornla
18 29 14 so
St. Louis
20 32 9 4'1
Philadelphia
18 30 11 47
Pittsburgh
18 33 9 45
Leis Angeles
16 39 7 39
"TuesdiY'I R11ulll
Detroit 15 Toronto 4
New York 7 Montreal 3
Boston 4 Vancouver 3
(Onlygamesscheduled)
Wtdnllday's G1m11
Philadelphia at New York
Pittsburgh at Toronto
Buffalo at Chicago
Boston at Calllornla
St. Louisa I Los Angeles
!Onlygamesscheduled)

~BEEF STEW

Toronto
Vancouver "'
Buffalo

AHL Slondlngs
By Unlltd lnttrlllllonol
E11t
W. L. T. Pis
Bostn
33 17 9 75
Nova Scotia
31 16 12 74
Sorlngfleld
23 22 13 59
llrovldence
21 27 9 51
Rochester
19 32 7 45
West
W. L. T. Pis
Cleveland
27 22 8 62
Baltimore
26 21 10 62
Hershey
24 20 10 58
Cincinnati
23 24 12 58
Richmond
22 26 10 54
Tidewater
14 36 a '36
fuesclay's Rosulll
Cleveland 6 Beltlmore 2
Hershey 3 Cincinnati 3
Tidewater 3 Rochester 2
IOnlygamtsseheduled)
Wtclnndoy's Goomes
Boston at Horslley
Cltvtland 11 R~chtsllr
IOnlygamesscheduled)

24 Ol
CAN

ARMOURS ,

ILl

151fz oz. can

·GOLDEN RIPE

WITH!

TOPPS
'

CANNED POP

·

Team
Pis.
Casseii·Carsey
36
Morrow-Moore
36
O..en-Holter
3~
Rosenbaum .Meadows
28
Fultz.Bentley
28
Blakeslee·Hoyt
6
High SO!'ies - RosenbaumMeadows 1878; Blakeslee-Hoyt
1819; O..en ·Holter 1716.
High Game - Rosenbaum·
Meadows 684; Blakeslee-Hoyt
675 ; Fullz·Benlley 633. ·
High Series - Men,, D.
Meadows 570; D. Rosenbaum
524; D. Owen 500.
High ~;
Series
- S.
O..en
B. Women
Fultz 431;
J.
Bentley 422.
High Game - Men, D.
Meadows 209( D. Rosenbaum
205; A. Hoyt 705.
High Game - Women, B.
Fultz
164; S.J .O..en
Bentley
Hoyt i5$;
155..155; . v. .

18 oz.

SUPER SPECIAL
•

71 CAMARO SS

ALL
FLAVORS

.00

12 FOR ·

I.G.A:

CAMPBELLS

INSTANT
POTATOES

TOMATO
SOUP

16 oz.

•I

' 47~

12 oz. can

2 Dt. H.T. Auto. trans.,
P.S. Dark blue

BANOUET

with black interior

One Owner, Like New

KEITH GOIU fORD'
s .
. . U EDCAR LOT
,
1..;3~r.:d~A~v:e·~.;.-~992::·:2~of7~.__

CREAM
PIES ,

·4

,9~

'

PEANUT
BUTTER
18 oz.
20 oz. bag

VEGETABLES 3·

for

..::::::.J
,

9 cans

POLY BAG

·

I

No. 1 cans

PLANTERS

. \ /'

FOR

LB.

RI.NG LIVER PUDDING

BEEF
CUB·E
STEAK

33 14 12 78

High Ind. Game - Betty
Smith 198.
High Series Chuck

High Series- Patty Carson
507.
Team High Game - Young's
Market 712 .
Team High Series - Zlde's
Sport Shop 2027.

PKG.
3 lb. or more

FRENCH CITY

Chuck Winebrenner 222 .

Winebrenner 567.

.

.

W. L. T. Pis
~
8 9 97

Boston

·

$)29

LEAN GROUND BEEF
.
ABA Standings
By Unltld Presslnternatloolil
East
W. L. Pet. GB '
Kentucky
51 12 .810 "' :
38 27 .515 14
VIrginia
29 J5 .453 22'12
New York
26 38 .406 25'12
Florldle~s
25 l9 .391 26'12
Carolina
Pittsburgh 23 41 .35'1 28'h
West
W. L. Pd. GB
Uta~,
~ 20 .688 ...
Indiana
36 27 .571 71h
Dallas
31 36 .45314'h
Denver
26 37 .413 17'h
Memphis
23 40 .36.l 20'h
.
Tuesdoy's Resulll
Pittsburgh 112 Dallas 105
Denver 121 Vlrglnla105 .
!Onlygamesschedultdl
Wtdnndoy's Goomes
Florldlana vs. Carolina
At Charlotte
Memphis vs. VIrginia
AI Norfolk
Indiana at New York
Kentucky at Uth
(Onlygemesscheduled)

Lakers Lose 135-134 to Lanier

LB.

.29
LB~

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6_- The Daily Sent.lnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0.. Feb. 23,1972

J

'

7-The DaUySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Feb. 23,1972

Gilligan · Criticizes Nixon's New Jobs' Policy
WASIUNGTON (UP!) Gov. John J. Gilligan said
today at the National Gover- •
nors Conference that President
Nixon apparently_ believes
creating jobs with federal
funds Is permissable "but only
if done in a suitably
backhanded manner."
"lie announced this month
that the go\fernrnent was prepared to· finance construction
of a space shuttle, a gravitydefying ferryboat that will
purportedly cost a mere $6
billion," Gilligan said in

remarks to be delivered here.
"I think that considering the
history of cost esti1nates lor
space and defense projects, we
should approach that $6 billlon
estimate with considerable
caution," he said.
"More . importantly, the
50,000 jobs the administration
says this exotic piece of hardware will provide is only a tiny
drop In the bucket when you
consider that it takes abbut a
million jobs just to reduce
unemployment by one percentage point," GUligan said.

~~'''mSW*'*~·-1'

. ·~ ::;.•

three years because of
federal policies, "polic.es
Initiated by the same man who
Is exhorting welfare recipients
to go out and lind a job."
The governor said, however,
the_jobs are not there and "only
a concerted national effort at
job creation can eliminate the
economic stagnation that has
left five million unemployed

-~

~uer m~tjng

On motion of Richard
and seconded by Fred Samsel,
it was voted to change the
Public Utility Tax from 3 to 2
perc e n t . Add i tiona I
information was obtained by
Mayor Harless and Attorney
Shaw concerning the new bill.
The first reading of the
ordinance was then read.
Street paving was discussed
and Recorder Gibbs reported
in his recent meeting with
Attorney Shaw the following
information is required: ( I)
Baltimore
, , &amp; Ohio Railroad's
,
.
obligatiOn, concernmg F1rst
Street; (2) Property owners, if
any, of small part of·land along
B and 0 Railroad between
Adams Street and .Roush
Street, and (3), Investigate
property on 4th where Town of
Mason does not own street.
Mayor Harless and Attorney
Shaw will attend the March 6

SORRY, NO CAKE THIS TIME

I.
1

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j.

·

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•
.,

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MRS. LANDON SMITH, Mason, discussed a unit on ietter
writing when the Mason Homemakers met on Tuesday evening
at the home of Mrs. lloyd WUliams at Clifton. Mrs. Dorothy
Cartwright was in charge of the devotionals.
The president, Mrs. Smith, appointed Mrs. Cecil Smith and
Mrs. Matilda to serve on the telephone committee and Mrs.
!loy&lt;\ Willi&amp;ma, in charge of sending flowers to ill club members.
The next scheduled meeting will be held at the home of Mrs.
George Carson.
Mrs. Williams served refreshments to Mrs. Alburtice Young,
Mrs. Evelyn stewart, Mrs. George Hudson, Mrs. Lawrence
Roush, Mrs. Dorothy Cartwright, Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs. George
Carson, Mrs. Laurene Lewis, Mrs. J. Marshall, Mrs. MatUda
~o~le, Mrs. John Roach, 'Mrs. Landon Smith and Mrs. Elmer
lf:Bnllteter and' a guest, Mrs. Wilma Blake.

THE SUNSHINE CLASS of Mason United Methodist Church
voted to give $7~ for the improvement of the walls at the church
at a recent meeting at the home of Miss. Hilda and Miss Lorena
Wimelss ~ Masonch.Theurchgroup discuased wall p~~Deling as a way of
provmg the
.
Miss Lorena Weiss presented the devotionals which consisted of a reading entitled, "Growing Day by Day", and closed
with the Lord's Prayer.
The hostesses Misses Hilda and Lorena Weiss served
refreshments to the following: Mrs. Reuben Stewart, Mrs.
RuaseU Capehart, Mrs. William Zerkle, Mrs. Ray Pro!fitt, Mrs_.
Parker Hinzman, MrS. Murl Megee, Mrs. Eber Roush, Mrs.
George Carson, Mrs. William Fry, Mrs. RuaseU Barton, Mrs.
Matilda Noble, Mrs. Mary Berry and Mrs. Clarence Baier.
PERFECT ATTENDANCE PINS were presented recently at
Bread Run Lutheran Church on Sunday morning to Eddie and
Agnes Edwards and daughters, Charlotte and Susan for II years
perfect attendance. Mr. Jack Ord, &amp;lperlntendent made the
presentations to the Edwards family and to David Kearns, three
year pin, and Donnie and Sheilia Kearns received four year pins.·

Special Care Needed for
Bare-Rooted Woody Plants
COLUMBUS - Landowners
who expect to handle the
several million bare-rooted
woody plants that will be set
out in Ohio this spring should
use special care in handling
them. This caution was expressed by Robert E. Quilllam,
Ohio state conservationist for
the U. S. Soil Conservation
Service (SCS) .
Past experience indicates
that poor field planting
procedure can offset the
professional care a quality
seedling received froJil. Qle
nursery, he said.
It is important that tree and

shrub seedlings be kept in a
dormant condition from the
time the seedlings are lilted
from the nursery bed until they
are again placed in the ground
at their permanent field
growing site. During this time
period, the seedling roots
should be kept moist and the
entire plant kept cold but not
below freezing.
It is very essential, too, that
the bare·rooted seedling be
properly placed in the ground,
Quiiiiam said. Main roots
should have room enough at
the bottom of the planting hole ;
branch roots and the line root
hairs should be carefully but

firmly packed with soil to
exclude ali air pockets from
the hole, he stated.
Grass sod and weeds offer
stiff competition to newly
plan ted woody seedlings.
Scalping a spot 12 to 18 inches
in diameter, or spraying with
an
approved herbicide
sometimes spells the difference between · success or
failure.
The planter who handles the
seedling stock carefully will be
rewarded with a high survival
rate and with plants better able
to stand the harsh first season ·
field environment, Quiliam
stated.

management practices in their
"Pick-Your.()wn" operation.
Other matters to be considered
include "Effective Pesticide
Application," "Current
Chemical Weed Control
Techniques" and "Cultivar
Performance." '
The Short Course will begin
at 9:30a.m. and will conclude

Stealing always Criminal
By LOUIS CASSELS
United Press International
Stealing has been regarded
as a crime by every human
society in history .
Long before Moses came
down from Mount Sinai, "Thou
Shalt Not Steal" was
recognized among Jews and
other ancient peoples as a

of God and Man
basic law of human relationships.
This universal proscription
against taking another's
property by force or stealth has
prevailed not only in capitalist
societies built on the concept of
private property, but also in
Socialist societies built on the
concept of commJ!!Ial ownership. In the latter, a distinction
always is drawn between
means of production which are
to be held in common and
personal possessions which
may legitimately belong to
p~~rticular individuals.
So it is alarming to find many
educated people of our time
prep~~red to rationalize theftto minimize its wrongness or
even to justify it as a moraUy
commendable act.
Their Word
"Ripping off" Is their word
lor stealing. Like aU euphemisms, it is intended to
disguise the reality of an act
which doesn't sound so good
under its right name.
According to a cod~ which
has gained wide acceptance
_among college students and

other young people (most of
whom · profellll to be more
morally sensitive than their
"materialistic" elders), It is ali
right· to rip off (i.e., steal)
property, provided It belongs to
· some large impersonal organization such as a supermarket,
department store, public utility
or government agency, or to an
individual who Is either (I) rich
enough to afford the loss or (2)
covered by insurance.
Yippie leader Abbie Hoffman
has carried the rationalization
one step further by arguing,in a
recent book that stealing Is a
positive and meritorious
contribution
to
social ·
revolution because it "undermlnes capitalist struc- ·
tures."

Behind all these ratlonalizalions lies an assumption which
one youth voiced in these
words: '
"I'm not hurting anyone. I
only steal from stores or other ·
places that can afford the loss.
lneedthlsstuffmorethanthey
do."
lndlvldaals' Stili Pay
But this is naive selfdeception. Property losses by
corporation&amp; or public agenCies
ultimately cost money to individuals who are consumers,
stockbolders and taxpayers.
Even if the losses are Insured, .
the ultimate cost Is borne by
not necessarily wealthy individuals who pay higher insurance premiUms as a result.
To steal' from an "impersonal" organizatton is simply an
indirect way of stealing from

the Washington window

, Wallace Ca1npaign Remains-Mysterious
By RAYMOND LAIIR
major parties.
,
WASHINGTON (UPI )A theory commonly held by
There is endless speculation In anti-Wallace Democrats sees
. Washington about the motives him in ·the Democratic presand impact· of Gov. George C. idential primaries to shoulder
Wallace's campaign lor 1 the his way into the early press and
· · presidency.
television publicity. Thus he
Nothing In public opirlion ·would get an early start, then
polls Indicates that he can he could follow the American
come any closer to winning the Independent party route he
Wlllte House than he did In 19118 . used four years ago.
when he palled 13 per cent ol
tile vole and carried five
There is also ·specUlation
IOUthern ltates with 45 e1ec- ' among the most suspicious
toral votes. His real go:ll Is to Democrats, who admit thily
_ influence the pollcies of both have not a gram of evidence to

!

support It, that Wallace's
camp~~ign is part of a secret
deal to help re-elect President
Nixon.
·
Slated to compete in several
state primaries, Wallace
already is rated the probable
WiMer in the Florids primary
March 14. The credentials of
any Wallace delegate to the
Democratic National Convention are almost certain to
be challenged.
No ' one could ever prove
which major party candidate
was helped or hurt the most In
I

various states by the Wallace
vote in 1968.
Republican leaders hold conflicting Ideas about whether
the Wallace campaign could
help or hurt Nixon's chances
for reelection.
One school of Re[Nbllcans
believes that Wallace feels he
has loSt ground in the south to
Nixon since 11188. Southern
Republicans addicted to I'Oielinted glasaes see the Jtresident
· sweeping or almost sweeping
!he 11 DIKie states nut

November. Those states cast a
total of 130 electoral votes,
almost baH of the 270 needed bythe winner.
But other Republicans 'fear
that Wallace Intends to avoid
· the third party route be UBed In
1988 and to throw his weight
aro1111d only in the Democratic
party. U he followed this
pattern, be would DOt drain
sway dlacontented white backlash votes. in . northern Industrial states from a Uberal
Democraic preillr;lenti~J
nominee.

Pictures of children, happy
and sad, good and bad
'plastered the walls of th~
Middleport Elementary School
. a~dltoriurn for the Monday
mght PTA meeting which
featured a Program by the
kindergarten cbUdren.
To the acc~mpanlment of
their teacher, Miss Mary
Francis, fir~t at the piano and
then on the guitar, the children
presented three songs wbjch
they describe~ as "things
which make us happy.'' Their
selections included "Happiness
il!," "Putf, the Magic Dragon ,"
and "This Land is Your Land."
In observance of Founder's
Day, corsages were presented

auo

:::s;un!y,~=~0~:~

Council
to diacuss the
street p~~vmg project.
.
A proposed Route 2 routing
was discussed and Councilman
Jones reported Councll needs
to send. a letter to State Ro.ad
Commissioner Blll Rltch1e,
with copies to Governor Arch
Moo_re _aod . ~t~te Road
Engmeermg DIVISIOn. Mayor
Harless was requested to
prepare the letters.
The Town Budget was
reported by Recorder Gibbs
from each department and all
items of ...the • budget
were &gt;.·~.-.,.•.•::::::-:=:-:-x,:;;$&lt;.::::&gt;.w.w~:':l.:X:·
n
reported m line with !he .
excephon of _th~ Pollee
PT. PLEAS,\NT
Department wh1ch had
LIVESTOCK So\LES CO.
exceeded the budget. I! was
PT. PLEASANT, W. -V~.
suggested by Counc1l to
consider a new sch~ule for the - Silturday,
.. Feb. 11;
. 1972
HOGS - 17~ to 220 25.70 to
Police Deparlment m order to
26.90;
Heavies 22 to 24; Lights
reduce the hours the police
18 to 22; Fat Sows 21 to 24;
cruiser has to be on road.
Boars 19 to 20; Pigs 10 to I~;
Stock Shoats 19 to 21.
CA'M'LE - Receipts 30.75 to
33; Heifers 21 to 28; Fat Cows
22 to 24.80; Canners 20.50 to
21.90; Bulls 25.90 to 28.10; Milk
Cows 231 to 295; Stock .Cows
and Calves 231 to 295; Stock
Heifers 29 to 37; Stock Steer
Calves 33 to 41.50; Stock Heifer
Calves 28 to 38.
VEAL CALVES - Seconds
48; Medium 43.8li to 4~.25;
Common &amp; Heavies 33 to 41.~0 ;
Culls 41.8li to 47.75.
at .4 p.m. A special luncheon
has been arranged. Preregistration Is encouraged, but
_A,PPOIDtme~~t Confirmed
if you decide at the "last
BOISE, Idsho (UPI)-Tbe
minute" to attend, you may appointment of Jack· Hemingregiater at the door. Meigs way, son of the late author
area interested !ll'rsons may fi:mest _Heminglfa;v, to the
secure registration blanks Idaho Filth and Gap~e Commisfrom the County Extension sion was oonfirmed Monday by
Office.
the state Senate.

Strawberry Short Course
In Wooster on March 7th
The Strawberry Short Course
to be held March 7 at the Ohio
Agricultural Research and
Development Center,
Auditorium Building Conference Room, Wooster, Ohio,
.,-ill give producers and home
owners the opportunity to learn
more about strawberry
growing. Plan to attend the
1972 Strawberry Short CourSt .
Speakers will cover timely and
·important information of
particular interest and value to
. Ohio producers.
Highlights of the program
will includ.e presentations by
Dr. E. L. Denisen, international authority from
Iowa State University on
Mechanical Harvesting for the
Strawberry Industry and on
Plant Quality and Yields. Dr.
Gene Varney of Rutgers
University will present latest
information \lealing with
Verticiilium Wilt and other
Diseases. In addition Charles
Thompson
of
Bristol,
Wisconsin and his wife will
review their production and

said.

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ason
OUllCl
opiCS
A M
C

Mason Town Council voted to
change the Public Utility Tax,
~
.
discussed Proposed New Rt. 2
~~
By Ahna Marshall
routing and street paving and
heard a request on the Town
The Rev. W. H. Perrin, pastor of Trinity Church in Pomeroy, Budget at Monday night's
spoke to the Mason Mothers Club last Wednesday evening at the agenda of Mason Town Council
home of Mrs. Nolan Swackhamer in Mason. He gave a very in- meeting at the Town HalL
Attending were Mayor Roy
fonnative talk about his book, "look Who's Killing God ."
Mrs. Richard Fowler, president of Mason Mother's Club, Hariiss Recorder Gary Gibbs
presided during a brief business meeting and welcomed a new and c~uncibnen Joe Jones
Fred Samsel Richard Baue;
member, Mrs. Roger Hysell.
and Wate; Department
Guests were Mrs. L. E. Piersall, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Eddie Secretary Lottie Jenks..
I.Jsh, Mrs. Charles Kitchen, Mrs. Ralph Ross and Mrs. Ray
Ma or Harless discussed a
Proffitt, ali of Mason.
· · 0f th e c ouncil to a
recenty VISit
Members attending were Mrs. Gene Weaver, Mrs. Phyllis City
and Town Conference he
Knopp, Mrs. Larry Noble, Mrs. Joseph Lish, Mrs. John Lewis, attended in Charleston. The
Mrs. John Karschnik, Mrs . Gary Gibbs, Mrs. Richard Fowler, representatives met with the
Mrs. Charles Yeager,,Mrs. Robert Stewart, Mrs. Edward Ryan, Senate and Speaker of the
Mrs. Homer Noble, Mrs. Roger Hysell and hostesses, Mrs. House.
.
Swackhamer, Mrs. Mary Berry and Mrs. Sammy Hoffman.
Prosecuting Attorney Mike
Shaw advised Council the gross .
MRS. HELEN FELL, Pomeroy, was surprised with a birth- sales tax ordinance would have
day dinner on Saturday at the home of Mrs. J. R. Marshall in to be revised to a rate of 2
New Haven. Dinner guests in addition to the guest of honor were percent instead of 3 percent.
Mrs. Edith Davis, Mrs. Marie Leifheit and Mrs. Edith Welsh, all
of Pomeroy. Others present were Mr. and Mrs. Philip Smith,
Stephanie and Patti Jo all of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. J . R.
Marshall.

Kindergarteners Give·Program

bludgeon."
,
o\IIAcal
Level"'
.
.
Not So Optimistic
On revenue sharlDg, Gilligan
llullnC "by and llrge ... has
said he still backs the plan of to be solved at the Jocal ltevel,"
Rep. W'llbur Mills, D Ark., he said.
"I do not favor a con.
chalnnan of the House Ways
and Means Committee. '
stitutioJial amtudment on it,"
But he sald Democratic gov- he said.
ernors at .a caucus earlier in
On other topics, Gllllgan:
the week received a report
- Called for cootdlnatkln befrom Rep. James c. Connan, tween the nortbellta'n
~Uf., that was "something · congressional delegation and
~_:;ZiW!!l'li:li E!! :I El!i.K: l':l
lesa than rosily optimistic" . the Greater Cleveland Growth
.
about
lull passage of the legis- Association to obtain · Federal
SCHOOL BEGINS SOON
.
Aviation Admlnlslration funds
The 4-H club' of Muon lation.
·
"While
general
revenue
for
the proposed Cleveland
P,ualy acain are sponsoring
sharing Is not the complete jetport. The jetpdrt, he said,
8 nos Obedience Sehool at
answer, this bill Is one of the would allow for unlimited
tbe
Mason
County must viable current attempts expansion. "we collld, If
=tr:~nds, beginning to solve our crucial fiscal necessary, roof over Lake
problems," Gilligan .said. "No Erie," he said.
'
one
deVICe
Is
going
to
solve
all
.
Asked
the
Ohio
delegation
w:.:
to f:30 p.m. Anyone In-: the fiscal problems confronting to support legisl8tlon to make
lerested In- attending the us, but at least this.bill would the Buffalo-Erie-Clevelandclass Is asked to pick up an be one tool in the whole Toledo-Ollcagc~ run a penna"
application blank at the package of fiscal im- nent part of the Amtrak network. . ~
M~son , County Extension provements needed."
On Tuesday Gilligan held a
- Sought full cooperatiOn of
Office In the Courthouse
news
conference
at
which
be
the
delegatiOn for funding of .
Annex, Viand Street, Point
Pleasant, or caD &amp;75-3710 to commented thalschool busing the Cincinnati Environmental
was being UBed as a "polltlcal Health Center.
have one mailed.
Registration fee for f.
H'ers is $3, and for all others
is $8. Class sp~~ce Is limited,
so call before March Z.
.,....,.,., .. .. ~
wu.·
"'

men and women to pore Over er~ . and he urged the federal
the want ad8."
gc~vemment to create pu):Jlic
The: 8111Wer to the employ- aervice jobs that would take
ment problem; Gilligan said, able-bodied persons off reUel.
"lies not In the manufact~n of
"Unless and untU the federal
Buck Rogers gadgets or the government can UIIUi'e those
crt:atlon of a relatively lew on welfare or any Wll!mployed
temporary high-priced jobs." person there Is a Job lor them,
He cited Ohio projects to em- Mr. Nixon's 'work.fare'
ploy weHare recipients and to proposals are not ju.lt an empty
lind jobless Vietnam War vet- promise, but a cruel hoax," he

Routing, Paving, Budget

1-~.- Maso~..~u~ty·· Ne. ws Notes I~
..

p~~st

"The President, who has already vetoed two bills to ~te
poblic service, jobs, Is apparently beginning to feel that
' job creation with federal funds
Ia penniasable - but only If
done In a suitably backhanded
manner, and through private
·
.
industry."
GUligan said mUlioris of jobs
have been eliminated over the

another human being-and
doubly reprehensible lor being
cloaked with hypocrisy.
A thiells a thief-even If he
comes from a mlddlMlass
home and 'has a college
education that enables him to
think up glib justifications for
stealing. Facing this fact may
not stop well-bred young
thieves from stealing, but It
might at least stop them from
lying to themselves, which Is.
the worst kind of falsehood
there Ia.

Locai. Bowling
Senior L01gue
Feb. 12, 1972

Standings
Team
PJn Busters

Pis.
11
10'12
10'12
9
9

· Royal Crowns

Gutter Dusters
The Pros
Born Losers
Strikers
4
· High Individual Game Melanie Burt 214.
· Second High Ind. Game Russ oavls 183.
High Series - Rich Bailey
~~cond High Series Mealnle Burt m .
Team High Game - Pin
Busters 831.
Team High Series - Gutter
Dusters 2369.
Pomeroy National Bank
Junior League
Feb. 12, 1972
Standings
Name
Pis.
Chiefs
11
Rams
11
Thundering Herd
9
Bengals
8

s

Z,odiac 1 S

Strike Outs
7
High Individual Game
Steve Bachner 169.
Second High Ind. Game Bob Powers 150.
High Series - Steve Bachner
428.
Second High Series - Bob
Powers 376.
Tepm High Game - Zodiac's

913.

Team High Series - Rams

2623.

Bant•m L01gue
Feb. 2,1972
Standings

Team
Pis.
Red Barons
9
Pin Busters
7
Zodiac's
6
Mustangs
5
Bell Breekers
s
Sneeky Snakes
~
High lnd,lvldual Game
Todd Smith 16~.
Second High Ind. Game Lanny Longstreth 140. .
High Series ~ Todd Smith

2~5 .

Second High Series - Ronnie
Case! 236.
Team High Game
Pin
Busters 807.
Team High Series
Busters 1~2 .
eveeybody cal1ll hlin."Allie.''

Plr

Gallipolis; A. D. Lewis,
Huntington; Athens MQ!ns,
ATD Fra~rnliy, Hio .Grande;
Boster's AU-Stars, Beach
Athletic 'Club and Superior
Drugs; Huntington.
Deadline for entering the
tournament Is March 20.
Trophies Will be awarded tw
teams and outstanding liidlvidua\ players. .
For further info.rmatlon,
CQntact Gerald Ramsey, Rio
Grande College, or Frank
Beach, Box 332, Bidwell.

By AILEI,;N CLMRE
NEA Food Editor
·
Mushroo ms ma ke a differ·
ent and simp le dish to prepare as an accom paniment
for chicken. fis h or meat.

o.;o ..... . . . . .. . . . "· •••••••• ••••• .••• ·:·:

BETTY CANARY

.

Books You 'II Want to Miss

,.

a

a

,•=
',·=',·

Miss Erna Jesse was hostess
for the ThurS\Iay night meeting
of the Magnolia Club.
The Lord's Prayer in unison
opened the meeting presided
over by Mrs. Ethel Stewart.
Devotions by Mrs. Georgia
Watson were from the 7th
chapter of Eccl., eighth verse.
Mrs. Ella Smith was named to
have devotions for the March
meeling with Mrs. Edna Reibel
to be the hostess. It was
decided that four prizes will be
awarded at each meeting.
The program consisted of
"The :Vacuum Cleaner Conversation" by Miss Jesse;
"The Nine Be-Attitudes" by
Mrs. Stewart; "Sunshine and
Smiles" by-Mrs. Reibel; "The
Beauty of Sound" and "Thank
You, God, for Little Things" by
'¥r'S, · Margaret Rose;· comlhen~ .. on the Ill~ of George

. ,Say, ,Jqf •Zfmple, MJie
McGuire was faced wttli' '!lie
same decision Jim thanes bad
to niake. It Isn't likely to
happen" ·that way because
there's a big difference Ill tbelr
abilities, but '111111 would AI
McGuire's feeling ·bs If his son,
Allie, twddenly came to 111m
and told "111m he wu quitting
school to slgn with a
profe~~~~lonal club the same way
his lea!nmate, Jim Cltones,
did?
"The enviroruqent Is different," AI McGuire says. "I bave
graas in !root of my holise. I
have a mother with 110111e
money. She's Allie's gandmother .1pei'!IOnally thlnll: Allie
would go a lltUe stronger to ·
stay fu school because of his
environment. I think. I'm not
sure. Whatever decision he'd
make would be okay with me,
though."
No sooner bad the Nets
announced the algnlng of Jim
Cbones when all the oilier
coaches began cluck-ducking.
They called the episode "regrettable." That was lhe
mildest · thing they cailed lt.
They an said a player"mal!Pa a
big ml.stake leaving lchool the
way Olones did.
Allladlvldaal Cue
· "They're probably right in 99
per cent of the CUll," AI
McGuire concedes. ''lbl.s was
an indl~dual cue, however. It
was a C81Je of need, great need.
Everything was done aboveboard. It wun't done In a
closet. Another thing, we eK·
pect Jinun:t to continue his
schooling. He's in school
today."
Jim Chonea, the oldest of six
children, watched his father
die of cancer when he was a
freshman at M$-quette and
has been watching his mother
work in the kitchen of a Racine,
Wis., restaurant. With rumon
of a mergr between the NBA
and ABA and of a COIIUIIOn
dra(t conlinuollllly arollld him,
Cbones constantly wu teued
by the question of should be or
shouldn't he?
"It waa like· Raquel Welch
standing around In a night.
gown, "McGuire sa,a. "Sooner'
or.later the boy had to stand up
and at leu! salt ber what h..

Pomeroy ...
'

Personal Notes
Ernie Haggy has returned
from Germany and has his
discharge from the U. S. Army.
He and his wife, Brenda, are
temporarily residing with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. James
Gilmore, Laurel Cliff. They
spent the weekend in Alton
with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Darst and family . Deanne
Darst returne\1 home with
them for a week's viait.
Mr. and Mrs . Cltffo,rd
Jacobs, Mrs' James Gilmore
and Pearl Jacobs attended the
funeral of 'the Rev. E. E.
Jacobs of Galion Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise of
Beverly were Sunday guests of
'the Rev. and Mrs. Cecil Wise
and daughter. They attended
services at' the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Jacobs
and Terri of Springfield spent
the weekend here with Mrs.
Clifford Ebersbach and Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs.
Mrs. Bertha Parker is In
Columbus assistlitg in the care
of her daughter, Mrs.
Geraldine Ferguson, who Is ill.
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs were Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Jacobs and
family, Southshore, Ky.
Miss PollY. Karr and Tom
Matthews came from Sandusky over the weekend to take
, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Karr to
Columbus. Mr. Karr is having
a medical checkup at
University Hospital.
Home on leave with his
pa~ents, Mr. and Mrs. lloyd
Wright is Airman Bennie
Wright of Colorado.

llll

Washington by Mrs. Gladys
Cuckler; "The Crucified" by
Bertrurn Smith ; "Abe Lincoln" by Mrs. Smith ; "On
W'mgs of Prayer'' by Mrs.
Ellen Couch ;."Friendship is a
Blessing" by Mrs. Georgia
Watson, and " May I
Remember" by Iris Kelton.
Prizes went to Mrs. Stewart,
Mrs. Cuckler ;·'l!rs. Watson and
Mrs. Kelton. Miss Jesse served
cake, salad and coffee.

INSTANT PLEASURE AND
~SAVINGS

FOR IIISTAIIT
COFFEE DRINKERS!

Buddy Gifts
Distributed

CAI.IFOIIIIIA

Betl Roast

I

I

I

lb,$109

Swiss Steak

I

,lb.$119

I

,,

don't • the AliA. I'D!' Ill an
NBA. 1111111.''

,lb.

I

89' · Box Of Chicken

, lb.

I

Sliced Bacon

I

I

~:7~

CENTER SUCID

WHY PAY MOREl

011 , _

79'

lb.2fc Ham Steaks~ • ... '119

I

Enjoy its great taste and you'll dj&amp;over
another delightful fact . . . instant savings.

EIITO'all

2-oz. JAR

6·0L JAR

tO-oz. J~R

100% BRAZILIAN

INSTANT COFFEE

There's no better instant at any price.
That's why we uncOnditionally guarantee you'lllove it
or you get your money back.
We call that "INSTANT SATISFACTION"!

Lenten Seafood· Buys!

.

Ocean Perch Fillets ~=
• Hb.
pkr. 69c
Fish Sticks C:: ·. • • • • Uk&gt;s. 49c
Turbot Fillets • • • • • • 11t. 69c
Alaskan Crab Meat %: . • :::: $149
Fried Haddock Fillets • • , lb. 99c
Fresh
Smelts . . . •.:.·:::lli'i:m:s'b·cl491:r!~
-ICB:IE:IIEIICVALUAILE COUPON
pkJ•

PARTY ON BffiTHDA Y
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
William Maynard entertained
with a birthday party honoring
their daughters, Kimberly, age
seven, and Marty, age three.
Present were Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Adams and Lori, Mr.
and Mrs. Dennis Evans and
Becky, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Brinager, Tim, Camellia and
Tyrone, Lori Maynard,
William Bradley Maynard .
Alter opening their many gifts,
refreshments of cake, ice
cream, potato chips, heartshaped cookies and punch were
served.

SAVE 25
·

Breaded

WITH THIS COUPON ON

(

YOUR PtJRCHAS£ OF A
2·1b. PKG. CAP'N JOHN

~~o=~

Good thru Sllurd•r.

Portions

F~bruary 26th, At all

A&amp;P and .Y.P't A·Mart's Stot11s.

I)EL MONTE BRAND SALE!!
YELLOW CLING, SLICED OR HALVES

S P EC IAL!

Peaches

WHOU KiRN[L, VACUUM PACK

Pear, Halves

Golden Corn

1
oo
12·0I.s
1
oo
3
5

29·~~~1
00
3

SING SCHEDULED
The Youth Fellowship will
hold a hymn sing at the
S~iversvllle
Community
Church atl:30p.m. Sunday. A
revival will begin at the church
at 7:30 p.m. Sunday evening.

16·o•.s
cans

cans

cans

ANN PAGE

JA.NE PAAK£R
I

Chocolate Brownies

pk ••

DRT

Sail Detergent

•

' Ill-...
pkc.

59c "
59c

PAPER
TOWELS

I)
l

.

'

...

..... . ·:::

Fresh Donuts • 3:Ml5100

PIE

JANE PARKER

Hot Cross Buns

ggc

100% BRAiiLIAN EIGHT O'ClOCK

Bean Coffee • 3 ~ 5199
.

.

Ji\PiE PARKER

pH~

. 3jumboa·gc
· ro"s

CHERRY
:~~::

ANGEL SOFT

...

Buttermilk Bread 3~79'

SMUCKER'S FROZEN

Chili Sauce

FURNITURE
Mason,W. Va.
,,
'

I

SUI'£111011

And that's the secret behind one
memorable moment of instant pleasure.

MASON

"I thlntbe'elwo ,._.any.
From produclllc, I m,an.
That'l by NBA llarid de. I

Pork Steaks

pkp.

I

BUTI mLE

Orou1d Clluck

535.00 Down
Salal)te On
Convenient
Terms.

About Jim Chonu' future
With the )11'01, be S&amp;Ji:

lb.69' Chipped Meats 3S-ol. 5 1 00

I

so sujie~'b la its speci'alblend of'

.NEW .
FURNITURE
'349.95

honelll ooes.

I

The thing that m~kes Eight O'Clock Instant Coffee .
: "
..
fine Brazilian Coffees.
too•:;. Brazilian Coffees. Nothing else.

Buddy gilts were dlatributed
when the Busy Bee Class met
Thursday night at the Middleport First Baptist Church
with Mrs . Beulah · White
presiding.
Thank you notes were read
from Mr . and Mrs. Delbert
, Becker for
a · floral
arrrangement and card sent on
their wedding anniversary. A
thank you note was read from
Miss Jerry Pullen thanking the
class 'for providing refreshments for the church youth
during January. Members
named women of the Bible in
response to roll ~aU, and Mrs.
White used a meditation
"Expectation Corner" lo open
the meeting.
Mrs. Lillian McGhee had
charge -of a program of
humorous reading. The ,
Washington's birthday theme
was carried out in the table
decorations for refreshments
served by Mrs. Lettie Roush,
Mrs. Isabelle Winebrenner,
Mrs . Nora Jordan.

3 ROOMS

AI McGuire not only hal a
way with kids, be lllo· 1111 a
way with words. Hll wordll are

Fresh Picnics

ROUND lONE SHOULDEJI

3-111. -

There are instants and there are instants .
and they're not all the same.

• •

" SUPER-RIGHT" 6 V1rlttlt1

SEMI·BONELESS

A&amp;,. FROZEN

name waa."

porti ons.

we care-----------

'I

\

with punch and coffee by Mrs.
Doss, Mrs. Richard Vaughan
and Mrs. Marshall McMillion.
The refreshments were
. provided by the kindergarten
.parents.

Serving them a I ways im - nade and served hqt .
presses . Sauteed mushroom s
arc a meal in themselves MUSHROOM MARINADE
when served on toast or with
1 lb. fresh mushrooms or
a g r een \'egetabie . Try a
2 cans (6 to 8 ounces each)
Mushroom Marinade, a sau·
sllced mushrooms,
teed di sh w1th a bitcy mari ·drained
~y;~~ rrs-' ..•.•....,.•,~...~o».X&gt;··;·;o;:o:&lt;;•;o;;•·o;;o·o;o;:•;•:o;•;•;o.:-;o~;·;·;o;o;o;o;o.;·~·--·:..;•;o;..:•;•;•;•;o;•;:;:;:;•;•:•::;•;•;;::;:;:;::·:::o.;•,-:;.};.;-:···:--·····:·:·:·:·:·:·:···:···:··,.;.&gt;:·:o:•..'"o)"..:O:O:O:.:.r..:.:o;'.o:o:v.:n;o;o:·z~·=·=-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:..,·.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·;.·.·;::.·.;.:····
..,;..;..,.~-.;;r;
..o:xr. .QoQ._ ---~~&gt;.·.«-.·....:-:-:-.. ..........:-.......-.-:-;.......:-:-.. ..... . :-.•.•.•.•.•... ········"
·"· .... ·'· ·'·'•'·.... ·'· ······· ..... .. -~·· ...... ~- ~- ~'l'••• ..............~._.....,...,:-.':. •.o;o-....
4 tablespoons olive or
sa lad oil
l~ 2 teaspoons
lemon juice
•1., tenspoon minced garlic
1 tablespoon chopped
parsley
By BETTY CANARY
solution for ail tras habies. as they are calfed in the recyI teaspoon salt
cling trade.
'I• teaspoon ground
I find that I am in possession of a lot of answers lo
There is. however , a rumor thai gove rnm ent economists
b i a~ k pepper
things
you'veto always
were afraid
ask. wanted to know about books but are busier than ever with a plan on how we ca n convert
'.1• teaspoon oregano leaves
'
money into nothing.
Yes, Virginia, there really is a Howard Hughes.
We are breathlessly awaiting the arrival of a copy of
Rinse, pat dry and slice
No, I haven't seen a copy of "The Sensuous Baby ."
"How to Weave Watchbands fr om Rope Hc nrnants" to
:::
mushroms and set aside. In
we understand,
.·.·
A book advertised as containing " Shocking Inside Info" add to our library. This,
· is expanded
1 · · 1 fro
dm
d
·::: a large skill et heat olive or
1 h t
is
book that recaps everything Time m~azine has an article in popu ar ow- o magazrne aCn&lt; IS lnCen e
as a sequel to " How to Personalize Your otlage heese
salad oil . Add mushrooms
printed in the past three years about Henry issinger.
Cartons." Try as the-y mi ght, today' s authors cannot hope
along wit h lemon juice and
"A novel written with immemorial magic ... " is a to reach the heights of those wonderful writers of yes1er:;: mi nced garlic. Saute 4 mindirect steal from an ancient Egyptian papyrus and just year. They have good ideas but not great ideas. I am
::;: utes. stirring occasionally.
as interesting.
referring, of course, to that classiC. ·.· How .t,o Use the
:;;: 13 lcnd in chopped parsley,
Yes, Howard, there really is a McGraw-Hill.
Thrust Bearings of Your Old Sherm an rank
::: sa lt, pepfkr and ore g ano
leaves. Se rve hot. Makes 4

Miss jesse Magnolia Hostess

For Marquette Mentor
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)-AI McGuire cuts through aU the
pollution. He hits you like a
lreath of fresh air.
He has this special lltUe
thing gobig for him. It's called
the truth, and with him It
seems bullt-ln. He tells the
truth no matter what.
Now :You take the best player
he has, for example. You'd
better make ~hat the best
player he had. The kid's name
Is .TlDI Chones. He's in his
junior . year at Marquette
University In Milwaukee and
you probably noticed where the
New York Nets of the ·ABA
signed him for $1.5 million the
other day. Tbts wasn't the
usual wallp~~per type money
you bear of In so many of these
basketball deals. Jim Cbones
got must of his in hard cold
cash.
.
By taking him the way they
did, the Nets yanked the very
guts out of AI McGuire's team,
which has won 22 straight
without being beaten and ranks
-second in the entire nation.
He Didn't Holler
Some other coach would've
hollered biOQ&lt;Iy murder. McGuire dldn 't holler at all. He
had promised he'd help Cbones
make aU the money he could
and he stuck to his promise.
Some other coach would've
told 8 kid who signed that way
he had wrecked the team when
he finally got him alone In his
private office. Maybe he'd also
tell him what a terrible ingrate
he was. McGuire dldn~t do that
at ali. What he actually Said to
6-11, 21-year-old Jim Cbones
when they were alone was
simply this :
"I congratulate you, Jinuny.
I think you'll have a nice Ufe.
Sometime I hope you '11 help us
with recruiting."
"Anytime," said Jlm
Cbones.
There lsn 'I a coach who ever
Uved who dldn 't feel that he
was different, in some way at
least, from all the other .
coaches.
AI McGuire actually Is.
·. For~ thing, he takes care
of his kids but he doesn't wear
that· on biB ale eve. He takes
care of himself, too. He'd be
the first to tell you that.
Another thing, he lsn 't afraid o1
lDiin8 hla job. He doe1111't bave
to be. He's 10 good at what he
does the pros are ltandlng In
line lo bite him.
Now It lUll 10 happens AI
MCGuire's own son playa .
basketball lor Marquette alao.
He's II, he's a junior llld

William Swisher. Mrs. Kloes
reported on by-law revisions to
be voted on at the March
meeting.
The Founder's Day cake was
inscribed ''1972" and served

Classic Mushrooms · ~ -

l!l:!f :
·=:=::·:·

~~&amp;~:::::~:,:~,~:::~~=~~,w.J:~£~£i4&amp;i&amp;:~~tg~f,k~JI.{.~~~~.~~~\i~.~,~~:s::::~:~::,:~:;;,;,:,:.~,.:,:,:,:,:, .:,:.:,:;:, , :,:, ,:, :,:,:.~,:,::, , :,: , :~.,: , :,:,:,:,:,: ::m&lt;:: :&gt;:=:=:=~= ~&lt;=:&lt;: :Jl

Truth Seems Built-In
IU~

was announced.
Elected, to ·a nominating
committee which will report at
the March meeting were Mrs.
Jean Thomas, Mrs. Raymond
Cu.nninRham, and Mrs .

Plans for an anniversary illness and thanked the club lor ~~
celebration of the Third Friday remembrances. Mrs. Wolle ~
Club were made when the . was repartee! ill. Mrs. Ben
group met Friday night at the Ncutzling presided at the
· home of Mrs. Dale Smith.
meeting and hostess gifts were
The celebration will he held nresented to Mrs . Smith.
at the March meeting and will Games were played with prizes
begin with a dinner at Craw's going to Miss Sybil Ebersbach,
Steak House followed by a Mrs. Phil Meinhart, Mrs .
social hour at the home of Mrs. Neutzling, and Mrs. Bertha
Mabel Wolle.
Ebersbach . Refreshments
Mrs. Carrie Meinhart was were served by Mrs. Smith.
welcomed back following

Today's Sport Parade

I!Y IWLTON

to Mrs. George Childs and Mrs.
Manning Kloes, the only past
Presidents attending. Corsages
in the yellow and blue colors of
the PTA were delivered to
other past presidents residing
in town but unable to attend
in_cluding Mrs. M. L. French,
Mrs . David Entsminger, Mrs.
Karl Owen , Mrs. Paul Smart,
Mrs. Willis Anthony, Mrs. John
Vroman, Mrs. Leland Brown.
.Mrs. Stanley . Doss. presided
.at the meeting which opened
with the kindergarten Jeading
il) the pledge of allegiance. The
Rev. Charles Simons had
· devotions. The session on the
art of story teUing to be hel&lt;l
tonight at the Salisbury school ,

Women 'sClub To Celebrate

Plans Announced
Ror
Cage Tourney
Plans were announced
Tuesday for the First Annual
Southern Ohio Sportsmen
Basketball Tournament, to be
'held at the Paul R. Lyne
Center, Rio Grande College, on
March 22, 23, 24, and 25.
The single elimination event
will consist of 16 independent
area basketball squads. Seven
teams have already entered
the tournament.
Entry fee Is $35 a team.
Teams entered thus far are
Quaker State Service Center,

i~mii~Iil~:i~~~mim~r:~l~~~~~~il~@l~~~l~~:1mm~~~lm~~m~m:~1~;;;;;;~;;;m;~~~;~;~~~;~~~~~=~~~~;~;~~~~ili~~~l~;~~~~~~m~~J.N~~~~ .

ANN PAGE

Egg Noodles
OUR OWN

•

3 l -Ib.

pkp.

5100

1

Tea .BagsI

I

, 100 bar• 89c

�'\

•
I '

·'

6_- The Daily Sent.lnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0.. Feb. 23,1972

J

'

7-The DaUySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Feb. 23,1972

Gilligan · Criticizes Nixon's New Jobs' Policy
WASIUNGTON (UP!) Gov. John J. Gilligan said
today at the National Gover- •
nors Conference that President
Nixon apparently_ believes
creating jobs with federal
funds Is permissable "but only
if done in a suitably
backhanded manner."
"lie announced this month
that the go\fernrnent was prepared to· finance construction
of a space shuttle, a gravitydefying ferryboat that will
purportedly cost a mere $6
billion," Gilligan said in

remarks to be delivered here.
"I think that considering the
history of cost esti1nates lor
space and defense projects, we
should approach that $6 billlon
estimate with considerable
caution," he said.
"More . importantly, the
50,000 jobs the administration
says this exotic piece of hardware will provide is only a tiny
drop In the bucket when you
consider that it takes abbut a
million jobs just to reduce
unemployment by one percentage point," GUligan said.

~~'''mSW*'*~·-1'

. ·~ ::;.•

three years because of
federal policies, "polic.es
Initiated by the same man who
Is exhorting welfare recipients
to go out and lind a job."
The governor said, however,
the_jobs are not there and "only
a concerted national effort at
job creation can eliminate the
economic stagnation that has
left five million unemployed

-~

~uer m~tjng

On motion of Richard
and seconded by Fred Samsel,
it was voted to change the
Public Utility Tax from 3 to 2
perc e n t . Add i tiona I
information was obtained by
Mayor Harless and Attorney
Shaw concerning the new bill.
The first reading of the
ordinance was then read.
Street paving was discussed
and Recorder Gibbs reported
in his recent meeting with
Attorney Shaw the following
information is required: ( I)
Baltimore
, , &amp; Ohio Railroad's
,
.
obligatiOn, concernmg F1rst
Street; (2) Property owners, if
any, of small part of·land along
B and 0 Railroad between
Adams Street and .Roush
Street, and (3), Investigate
property on 4th where Town of
Mason does not own street.
Mayor Harless and Attorney
Shaw will attend the March 6

SORRY, NO CAKE THIS TIME

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MRS. LANDON SMITH, Mason, discussed a unit on ietter
writing when the Mason Homemakers met on Tuesday evening
at the home of Mrs. lloyd WUliams at Clifton. Mrs. Dorothy
Cartwright was in charge of the devotionals.
The president, Mrs. Smith, appointed Mrs. Cecil Smith and
Mrs. Matilda to serve on the telephone committee and Mrs.
!loy&lt;\ Willi&amp;ma, in charge of sending flowers to ill club members.
The next scheduled meeting will be held at the home of Mrs.
George Carson.
Mrs. Williams served refreshments to Mrs. Alburtice Young,
Mrs. Evelyn stewart, Mrs. George Hudson, Mrs. Lawrence
Roush, Mrs. Dorothy Cartwright, Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs. George
Carson, Mrs. Laurene Lewis, Mrs. J. Marshall, Mrs. MatUda
~o~le, Mrs. John Roach, 'Mrs. Landon Smith and Mrs. Elmer
lf:Bnllteter and' a guest, Mrs. Wilma Blake.

THE SUNSHINE CLASS of Mason United Methodist Church
voted to give $7~ for the improvement of the walls at the church
at a recent meeting at the home of Miss. Hilda and Miss Lorena
Wimelss ~ Masonch.Theurchgroup discuased wall p~~Deling as a way of
provmg the
.
Miss Lorena Weiss presented the devotionals which consisted of a reading entitled, "Growing Day by Day", and closed
with the Lord's Prayer.
The hostesses Misses Hilda and Lorena Weiss served
refreshments to the following: Mrs. Reuben Stewart, Mrs.
RuaseU Capehart, Mrs. William Zerkle, Mrs. Ray Pro!fitt, Mrs_.
Parker Hinzman, MrS. Murl Megee, Mrs. Eber Roush, Mrs.
George Carson, Mrs. William Fry, Mrs. RuaseU Barton, Mrs.
Matilda Noble, Mrs. Mary Berry and Mrs. Clarence Baier.
PERFECT ATTENDANCE PINS were presented recently at
Bread Run Lutheran Church on Sunday morning to Eddie and
Agnes Edwards and daughters, Charlotte and Susan for II years
perfect attendance. Mr. Jack Ord, &amp;lperlntendent made the
presentations to the Edwards family and to David Kearns, three
year pin, and Donnie and Sheilia Kearns received four year pins.·

Special Care Needed for
Bare-Rooted Woody Plants
COLUMBUS - Landowners
who expect to handle the
several million bare-rooted
woody plants that will be set
out in Ohio this spring should
use special care in handling
them. This caution was expressed by Robert E. Quilllam,
Ohio state conservationist for
the U. S. Soil Conservation
Service (SCS) .
Past experience indicates
that poor field planting
procedure can offset the
professional care a quality
seedling received froJil. Qle
nursery, he said.
It is important that tree and

shrub seedlings be kept in a
dormant condition from the
time the seedlings are lilted
from the nursery bed until they
are again placed in the ground
at their permanent field
growing site. During this time
period, the seedling roots
should be kept moist and the
entire plant kept cold but not
below freezing.
It is very essential, too, that
the bare·rooted seedling be
properly placed in the ground,
Quiiiiam said. Main roots
should have room enough at
the bottom of the planting hole ;
branch roots and the line root
hairs should be carefully but

firmly packed with soil to
exclude ali air pockets from
the hole, he stated.
Grass sod and weeds offer
stiff competition to newly
plan ted woody seedlings.
Scalping a spot 12 to 18 inches
in diameter, or spraying with
an
approved herbicide
sometimes spells the difference between · success or
failure.
The planter who handles the
seedling stock carefully will be
rewarded with a high survival
rate and with plants better able
to stand the harsh first season ·
field environment, Quiliam
stated.

management practices in their
"Pick-Your.()wn" operation.
Other matters to be considered
include "Effective Pesticide
Application," "Current
Chemical Weed Control
Techniques" and "Cultivar
Performance." '
The Short Course will begin
at 9:30a.m. and will conclude

Stealing always Criminal
By LOUIS CASSELS
United Press International
Stealing has been regarded
as a crime by every human
society in history .
Long before Moses came
down from Mount Sinai, "Thou
Shalt Not Steal" was
recognized among Jews and
other ancient peoples as a

of God and Man
basic law of human relationships.
This universal proscription
against taking another's
property by force or stealth has
prevailed not only in capitalist
societies built on the concept of
private property, but also in
Socialist societies built on the
concept of commJ!!Ial ownership. In the latter, a distinction
always is drawn between
means of production which are
to be held in common and
personal possessions which
may legitimately belong to
p~~rticular individuals.
So it is alarming to find many
educated people of our time
prep~~red to rationalize theftto minimize its wrongness or
even to justify it as a moraUy
commendable act.
Their Word
"Ripping off" Is their word
lor stealing. Like aU euphemisms, it is intended to
disguise the reality of an act
which doesn't sound so good
under its right name.
According to a cod~ which
has gained wide acceptance
_among college students and

other young people (most of
whom · profellll to be more
morally sensitive than their
"materialistic" elders), It is ali
right· to rip off (i.e., steal)
property, provided It belongs to
· some large impersonal organization such as a supermarket,
department store, public utility
or government agency, or to an
individual who Is either (I) rich
enough to afford the loss or (2)
covered by insurance.
Yippie leader Abbie Hoffman
has carried the rationalization
one step further by arguing,in a
recent book that stealing Is a
positive and meritorious
contribution
to
social ·
revolution because it "undermlnes capitalist struc- ·
tures."

Behind all these ratlonalizalions lies an assumption which
one youth voiced in these
words: '
"I'm not hurting anyone. I
only steal from stores or other ·
places that can afford the loss.
lneedthlsstuffmorethanthey
do."
lndlvldaals' Stili Pay
But this is naive selfdeception. Property losses by
corporation&amp; or public agenCies
ultimately cost money to individuals who are consumers,
stockbolders and taxpayers.
Even if the losses are Insured, .
the ultimate cost Is borne by
not necessarily wealthy individuals who pay higher insurance premiUms as a result.
To steal' from an "impersonal" organizatton is simply an
indirect way of stealing from

the Washington window

, Wallace Ca1npaign Remains-Mysterious
By RAYMOND LAIIR
major parties.
,
WASHINGTON (UPI )A theory commonly held by
There is endless speculation In anti-Wallace Democrats sees
. Washington about the motives him in ·the Democratic presand impact· of Gov. George C. idential primaries to shoulder
Wallace's campaign lor 1 the his way into the early press and
· · presidency.
television publicity. Thus he
Nothing In public opirlion ·would get an early start, then
polls Indicates that he can he could follow the American
come any closer to winning the Independent party route he
Wlllte House than he did In 19118 . used four years ago.
when he palled 13 per cent ol
tile vole and carried five
There is also ·specUlation
IOUthern ltates with 45 e1ec- ' among the most suspicious
toral votes. His real go:ll Is to Democrats, who admit thily
_ influence the pollcies of both have not a gram of evidence to

!

support It, that Wallace's
camp~~ign is part of a secret
deal to help re-elect President
Nixon.
·
Slated to compete in several
state primaries, Wallace
already is rated the probable
WiMer in the Florids primary
March 14. The credentials of
any Wallace delegate to the
Democratic National Convention are almost certain to
be challenged.
No ' one could ever prove
which major party candidate
was helped or hurt the most In
I

various states by the Wallace
vote in 1968.
Republican leaders hold conflicting Ideas about whether
the Wallace campaign could
help or hurt Nixon's chances
for reelection.
One school of Re[Nbllcans
believes that Wallace feels he
has loSt ground in the south to
Nixon since 11188. Southern
Republicans addicted to I'Oielinted glasaes see the Jtresident
· sweeping or almost sweeping
!he 11 DIKie states nut

November. Those states cast a
total of 130 electoral votes,
almost baH of the 270 needed bythe winner.
But other Republicans 'fear
that Wallace Intends to avoid
· the third party route be UBed In
1988 and to throw his weight
aro1111d only in the Democratic
party. U he followed this
pattern, be would DOt drain
sway dlacontented white backlash votes. in . northern Industrial states from a Uberal
Democraic preillr;lenti~J
nominee.

Pictures of children, happy
and sad, good and bad
'plastered the walls of th~
Middleport Elementary School
. a~dltoriurn for the Monday
mght PTA meeting which
featured a Program by the
kindergarten cbUdren.
To the acc~mpanlment of
their teacher, Miss Mary
Francis, fir~t at the piano and
then on the guitar, the children
presented three songs wbjch
they describe~ as "things
which make us happy.'' Their
selections included "Happiness
il!," "Putf, the Magic Dragon ,"
and "This Land is Your Land."
In observance of Founder's
Day, corsages were presented

auo

:::s;un!y,~=~0~:~

Council
to diacuss the
street p~~vmg project.
.
A proposed Route 2 routing
was discussed and Councilman
Jones reported Councll needs
to send. a letter to State Ro.ad
Commissioner Blll Rltch1e,
with copies to Governor Arch
Moo_re _aod . ~t~te Road
Engmeermg DIVISIOn. Mayor
Harless was requested to
prepare the letters.
The Town Budget was
reported by Recorder Gibbs
from each department and all
items of ...the • budget
were &gt;.·~.-.,.•.•::::::-:=:-:-x,:;;$&lt;.::::&gt;.w.w~:':l.:X:·
n
reported m line with !he .
excephon of _th~ Pollee
PT. PLEAS,\NT
Department wh1ch had
LIVESTOCK So\LES CO.
exceeded the budget. I! was
PT. PLEASANT, W. -V~.
suggested by Counc1l to
consider a new sch~ule for the - Silturday,
.. Feb. 11;
. 1972
HOGS - 17~ to 220 25.70 to
Police Deparlment m order to
26.90;
Heavies 22 to 24; Lights
reduce the hours the police
18 to 22; Fat Sows 21 to 24;
cruiser has to be on road.
Boars 19 to 20; Pigs 10 to I~;
Stock Shoats 19 to 21.
CA'M'LE - Receipts 30.75 to
33; Heifers 21 to 28; Fat Cows
22 to 24.80; Canners 20.50 to
21.90; Bulls 25.90 to 28.10; Milk
Cows 231 to 295; Stock .Cows
and Calves 231 to 295; Stock
Heifers 29 to 37; Stock Steer
Calves 33 to 41.50; Stock Heifer
Calves 28 to 38.
VEAL CALVES - Seconds
48; Medium 43.8li to 4~.25;
Common &amp; Heavies 33 to 41.~0 ;
Culls 41.8li to 47.75.
at .4 p.m. A special luncheon
has been arranged. Preregistration Is encouraged, but
_A,PPOIDtme~~t Confirmed
if you decide at the "last
BOISE, Idsho (UPI)-Tbe
minute" to attend, you may appointment of Jack· Hemingregiater at the door. Meigs way, son of the late author
area interested !ll'rsons may fi:mest _Heminglfa;v, to the
secure registration blanks Idaho Filth and Gap~e Commisfrom the County Extension sion was oonfirmed Monday by
Office.
the state Senate.

Strawberry Short Course
In Wooster on March 7th
The Strawberry Short Course
to be held March 7 at the Ohio
Agricultural Research and
Development Center,
Auditorium Building Conference Room, Wooster, Ohio,
.,-ill give producers and home
owners the opportunity to learn
more about strawberry
growing. Plan to attend the
1972 Strawberry Short CourSt .
Speakers will cover timely and
·important information of
particular interest and value to
. Ohio producers.
Highlights of the program
will includ.e presentations by
Dr. E. L. Denisen, international authority from
Iowa State University on
Mechanical Harvesting for the
Strawberry Industry and on
Plant Quality and Yields. Dr.
Gene Varney of Rutgers
University will present latest
information \lealing with
Verticiilium Wilt and other
Diseases. In addition Charles
Thompson
of
Bristol,
Wisconsin and his wife will
review their production and

said.

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ason
OUllCl
opiCS
A M
C

Mason Town Council voted to
change the Public Utility Tax,
~
.
discussed Proposed New Rt. 2
~~
By Ahna Marshall
routing and street paving and
heard a request on the Town
The Rev. W. H. Perrin, pastor of Trinity Church in Pomeroy, Budget at Monday night's
spoke to the Mason Mothers Club last Wednesday evening at the agenda of Mason Town Council
home of Mrs. Nolan Swackhamer in Mason. He gave a very in- meeting at the Town HalL
Attending were Mayor Roy
fonnative talk about his book, "look Who's Killing God ."
Mrs. Richard Fowler, president of Mason Mother's Club, Hariiss Recorder Gary Gibbs
presided during a brief business meeting and welcomed a new and c~uncibnen Joe Jones
Fred Samsel Richard Baue;
member, Mrs. Roger Hysell.
and Wate; Department
Guests were Mrs. L. E. Piersall, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Eddie Secretary Lottie Jenks..
I.Jsh, Mrs. Charles Kitchen, Mrs. Ralph Ross and Mrs. Ray
Ma or Harless discussed a
Proffitt, ali of Mason.
· · 0f th e c ouncil to a
recenty VISit
Members attending were Mrs. Gene Weaver, Mrs. Phyllis City
and Town Conference he
Knopp, Mrs. Larry Noble, Mrs. Joseph Lish, Mrs. John Lewis, attended in Charleston. The
Mrs. John Karschnik, Mrs . Gary Gibbs, Mrs. Richard Fowler, representatives met with the
Mrs. Charles Yeager,,Mrs. Robert Stewart, Mrs. Edward Ryan, Senate and Speaker of the
Mrs. Homer Noble, Mrs. Roger Hysell and hostesses, Mrs. House.
.
Swackhamer, Mrs. Mary Berry and Mrs. Sammy Hoffman.
Prosecuting Attorney Mike
Shaw advised Council the gross .
MRS. HELEN FELL, Pomeroy, was surprised with a birth- sales tax ordinance would have
day dinner on Saturday at the home of Mrs. J. R. Marshall in to be revised to a rate of 2
New Haven. Dinner guests in addition to the guest of honor were percent instead of 3 percent.
Mrs. Edith Davis, Mrs. Marie Leifheit and Mrs. Edith Welsh, all
of Pomeroy. Others present were Mr. and Mrs. Philip Smith,
Stephanie and Patti Jo all of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. J . R.
Marshall.

Kindergarteners Give·Program

bludgeon."
,
o\IIAcal
Level"'
.
.
Not So Optimistic
On revenue sharlDg, Gilligan
llullnC "by and llrge ... has
said he still backs the plan of to be solved at the Jocal ltevel,"
Rep. W'llbur Mills, D Ark., he said.
"I do not favor a con.
chalnnan of the House Ways
and Means Committee. '
stitutioJial amtudment on it,"
But he sald Democratic gov- he said.
ernors at .a caucus earlier in
On other topics, Gllllgan:
the week received a report
- Called for cootdlnatkln befrom Rep. James c. Connan, tween the nortbellta'n
~Uf., that was "something · congressional delegation and
~_:;ZiW!!l'li:li E!! :I El!i.K: l':l
lesa than rosily optimistic" . the Greater Cleveland Growth
.
about
lull passage of the legis- Association to obtain · Federal
SCHOOL BEGINS SOON
.
Aviation Admlnlslration funds
The 4-H club' of Muon lation.
·
"While
general
revenue
for
the proposed Cleveland
P,ualy acain are sponsoring
sharing Is not the complete jetport. The jetpdrt, he said,
8 nos Obedience Sehool at
answer, this bill Is one of the would allow for unlimited
tbe
Mason
County must viable current attempts expansion. "we collld, If
=tr:~nds, beginning to solve our crucial fiscal necessary, roof over Lake
problems," Gilligan .said. "No Erie," he said.
'
one
deVICe
Is
going
to
solve
all
.
Asked
the
Ohio
delegation
w:.:
to f:30 p.m. Anyone In-: the fiscal problems confronting to support legisl8tlon to make
lerested In- attending the us, but at least this.bill would the Buffalo-Erie-Clevelandclass Is asked to pick up an be one tool in the whole Toledo-Ollcagc~ run a penna"
application blank at the package of fiscal im- nent part of the Amtrak network. . ~
M~son , County Extension provements needed."
On Tuesday Gilligan held a
- Sought full cooperatiOn of
Office In the Courthouse
news
conference
at
which
be
the
delegatiOn for funding of .
Annex, Viand Street, Point
Pleasant, or caD &amp;75-3710 to commented thalschool busing the Cincinnati Environmental
was being UBed as a "polltlcal Health Center.
have one mailed.
Registration fee for f.
H'ers is $3, and for all others
is $8. Class sp~~ce Is limited,
so call before March Z.
.,....,.,., .. .. ~
wu.·
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men and women to pore Over er~ . and he urged the federal
the want ad8."
gc~vemment to create pu):Jlic
The: 8111Wer to the employ- aervice jobs that would take
ment problem; Gilligan said, able-bodied persons off reUel.
"lies not In the manufact~n of
"Unless and untU the federal
Buck Rogers gadgets or the government can UIIUi'e those
crt:atlon of a relatively lew on welfare or any Wll!mployed
temporary high-priced jobs." person there Is a Job lor them,
He cited Ohio projects to em- Mr. Nixon's 'work.fare'
ploy weHare recipients and to proposals are not ju.lt an empty
lind jobless Vietnam War vet- promise, but a cruel hoax," he

Routing, Paving, Budget

1-~.- Maso~..~u~ty·· Ne. ws Notes I~
..

p~~st

"The President, who has already vetoed two bills to ~te
poblic service, jobs, Is apparently beginning to feel that
' job creation with federal funds
Ia penniasable - but only If
done In a suitably backhanded
manner, and through private
·
.
industry."
GUligan said mUlioris of jobs
have been eliminated over the

another human being-and
doubly reprehensible lor being
cloaked with hypocrisy.
A thiells a thief-even If he
comes from a mlddlMlass
home and 'has a college
education that enables him to
think up glib justifications for
stealing. Facing this fact may
not stop well-bred young
thieves from stealing, but It
might at least stop them from
lying to themselves, which Is.
the worst kind of falsehood
there Ia.

Locai. Bowling
Senior L01gue
Feb. 12, 1972

Standings
Team
PJn Busters

Pis.
11
10'12
10'12
9
9

· Royal Crowns

Gutter Dusters
The Pros
Born Losers
Strikers
4
· High Individual Game Melanie Burt 214.
· Second High Ind. Game Russ oavls 183.
High Series - Rich Bailey
~~cond High Series Mealnle Burt m .
Team High Game - Pin
Busters 831.
Team High Series - Gutter
Dusters 2369.
Pomeroy National Bank
Junior League
Feb. 12, 1972
Standings
Name
Pis.
Chiefs
11
Rams
11
Thundering Herd
9
Bengals
8

s

Z,odiac 1 S

Strike Outs
7
High Individual Game
Steve Bachner 169.
Second High Ind. Game Bob Powers 150.
High Series - Steve Bachner
428.
Second High Series - Bob
Powers 376.
Tepm High Game - Zodiac's

913.

Team High Series - Rams

2623.

Bant•m L01gue
Feb. 2,1972
Standings

Team
Pis.
Red Barons
9
Pin Busters
7
Zodiac's
6
Mustangs
5
Bell Breekers
s
Sneeky Snakes
~
High lnd,lvldual Game
Todd Smith 16~.
Second High Ind. Game Lanny Longstreth 140. .
High Series ~ Todd Smith

2~5 .

Second High Series - Ronnie
Case! 236.
Team High Game
Pin
Busters 807.
Team High Series
Busters 1~2 .
eveeybody cal1ll hlin."Allie.''

Plr

Gallipolis; A. D. Lewis,
Huntington; Athens MQ!ns,
ATD Fra~rnliy, Hio .Grande;
Boster's AU-Stars, Beach
Athletic 'Club and Superior
Drugs; Huntington.
Deadline for entering the
tournament Is March 20.
Trophies Will be awarded tw
teams and outstanding liidlvidua\ players. .
For further info.rmatlon,
CQntact Gerald Ramsey, Rio
Grande College, or Frank
Beach, Box 332, Bidwell.

By AILEI,;N CLMRE
NEA Food Editor
·
Mushroo ms ma ke a differ·
ent and simp le dish to prepare as an accom paniment
for chicken. fis h or meat.

o.;o ..... . . . . .. . . . "· •••••••• ••••• .••• ·:·:

BETTY CANARY

.

Books You 'II Want to Miss

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Miss Erna Jesse was hostess
for the ThurS\Iay night meeting
of the Magnolia Club.
The Lord's Prayer in unison
opened the meeting presided
over by Mrs. Ethel Stewart.
Devotions by Mrs. Georgia
Watson were from the 7th
chapter of Eccl., eighth verse.
Mrs. Ella Smith was named to
have devotions for the March
meeling with Mrs. Edna Reibel
to be the hostess. It was
decided that four prizes will be
awarded at each meeting.
The program consisted of
"The :Vacuum Cleaner Conversation" by Miss Jesse;
"The Nine Be-Attitudes" by
Mrs. Stewart; "Sunshine and
Smiles" by-Mrs. Reibel; "The
Beauty of Sound" and "Thank
You, God, for Little Things" by
'¥r'S, · Margaret Rose;· comlhen~ .. on the Ill~ of George

. ,Say, ,Jqf •Zfmple, MJie
McGuire was faced wttli' '!lie
same decision Jim thanes bad
to niake. It Isn't likely to
happen" ·that way because
there's a big difference Ill tbelr
abilities, but '111111 would AI
McGuire's feeling ·bs If his son,
Allie, twddenly came to 111m
and told "111m he wu quitting
school to slgn with a
profe~~~~lonal club the same way
his lea!nmate, Jim Cltones,
did?
"The enviroruqent Is different," AI McGuire says. "I bave
graas in !root of my holise. I
have a mother with 110111e
money. She's Allie's gandmother .1pei'!IOnally thlnll: Allie
would go a lltUe stronger to ·
stay fu school because of his
environment. I think. I'm not
sure. Whatever decision he'd
make would be okay with me,
though."
No sooner bad the Nets
announced the algnlng of Jim
Cbones when all the oilier
coaches began cluck-ducking.
They called the episode "regrettable." That was lhe
mildest · thing they cailed lt.
They an said a player"mal!Pa a
big ml.stake leaving lchool the
way Olones did.
Allladlvldaal Cue
· "They're probably right in 99
per cent of the CUll," AI
McGuire concedes. ''lbl.s was
an indl~dual cue, however. It
was a C81Je of need, great need.
Everything was done aboveboard. It wun't done In a
closet. Another thing, we eK·
pect Jinun:t to continue his
schooling. He's in school
today."
Jim Chonea, the oldest of six
children, watched his father
die of cancer when he was a
freshman at M$-quette and
has been watching his mother
work in the kitchen of a Racine,
Wis., restaurant. With rumon
of a mergr between the NBA
and ABA and of a COIIUIIOn
dra(t conlinuollllly arollld him,
Cbones constantly wu teued
by the question of should be or
shouldn't he?
"It waa like· Raquel Welch
standing around In a night.
gown, "McGuire sa,a. "Sooner'
or.later the boy had to stand up
and at leu! salt ber what h..

Pomeroy ...
'

Personal Notes
Ernie Haggy has returned
from Germany and has his
discharge from the U. S. Army.
He and his wife, Brenda, are
temporarily residing with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. James
Gilmore, Laurel Cliff. They
spent the weekend in Alton
with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Darst and family . Deanne
Darst returne\1 home with
them for a week's viait.
Mr. and Mrs . Cltffo,rd
Jacobs, Mrs' James Gilmore
and Pearl Jacobs attended the
funeral of 'the Rev. E. E.
Jacobs of Galion Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise of
Beverly were Sunday guests of
'the Rev. and Mrs. Cecil Wise
and daughter. They attended
services at' the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Jacobs
and Terri of Springfield spent
the weekend here with Mrs.
Clifford Ebersbach and Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs.
Mrs. Bertha Parker is In
Columbus assistlitg in the care
of her daughter, Mrs.
Geraldine Ferguson, who Is ill.
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs were Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Jacobs and
family, Southshore, Ky.
Miss PollY. Karr and Tom
Matthews came from Sandusky over the weekend to take
, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Karr to
Columbus. Mr. Karr is having
a medical checkup at
University Hospital.
Home on leave with his
pa~ents, Mr. and Mrs. lloyd
Wright is Airman Bennie
Wright of Colorado.

llll

Washington by Mrs. Gladys
Cuckler; "The Crucified" by
Bertrurn Smith ; "Abe Lincoln" by Mrs. Smith ; "On
W'mgs of Prayer'' by Mrs.
Ellen Couch ;."Friendship is a
Blessing" by Mrs. Georgia
Watson, and " May I
Remember" by Iris Kelton.
Prizes went to Mrs. Stewart,
Mrs. Cuckler ;·'l!rs. Watson and
Mrs. Kelton. Miss Jesse served
cake, salad and coffee.

INSTANT PLEASURE AND
~SAVINGS

FOR IIISTAIIT
COFFEE DRINKERS!

Buddy Gifts
Distributed

CAI.IFOIIIIIA

Betl Roast

I

I

I

lb,$109

Swiss Steak

I

,lb.$119

I

,,

don't • the AliA. I'D!' Ill an
NBA. 1111111.''

,lb.

I

89' · Box Of Chicken

, lb.

I

Sliced Bacon

I

I

~:7~

CENTER SUCID

WHY PAY MOREl

011 , _

79'

lb.2fc Ham Steaks~ • ... '119

I

Enjoy its great taste and you'll dj&amp;over
another delightful fact . . . instant savings.

EIITO'all

2-oz. JAR

6·0L JAR

tO-oz. J~R

100% BRAZILIAN

INSTANT COFFEE

There's no better instant at any price.
That's why we uncOnditionally guarantee you'lllove it
or you get your money back.
We call that "INSTANT SATISFACTION"!

Lenten Seafood· Buys!

.

Ocean Perch Fillets ~=
• Hb.
pkr. 69c
Fish Sticks C:: ·. • • • • Uk&gt;s. 49c
Turbot Fillets • • • • • • 11t. 69c
Alaskan Crab Meat %: . • :::: $149
Fried Haddock Fillets • • , lb. 99c
Fresh
Smelts . . . •.:.·:::lli'i:m:s'b·cl491:r!~
-ICB:IE:IIEIICVALUAILE COUPON
pkJ•

PARTY ON BffiTHDA Y
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
William Maynard entertained
with a birthday party honoring
their daughters, Kimberly, age
seven, and Marty, age three.
Present were Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Adams and Lori, Mr.
and Mrs. Dennis Evans and
Becky, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Brinager, Tim, Camellia and
Tyrone, Lori Maynard,
William Bradley Maynard .
Alter opening their many gifts,
refreshments of cake, ice
cream, potato chips, heartshaped cookies and punch were
served.

SAVE 25
·

Breaded

WITH THIS COUPON ON

(

YOUR PtJRCHAS£ OF A
2·1b. PKG. CAP'N JOHN

~~o=~

Good thru Sllurd•r.

Portions

F~bruary 26th, At all

A&amp;P and .Y.P't A·Mart's Stot11s.

I)EL MONTE BRAND SALE!!
YELLOW CLING, SLICED OR HALVES

S P EC IAL!

Peaches

WHOU KiRN[L, VACUUM PACK

Pear, Halves

Golden Corn

1
oo
12·0I.s
1
oo
3
5

29·~~~1
00
3

SING SCHEDULED
The Youth Fellowship will
hold a hymn sing at the
S~iversvllle
Community
Church atl:30p.m. Sunday. A
revival will begin at the church
at 7:30 p.m. Sunday evening.

16·o•.s
cans

cans

cans

ANN PAGE

JA.NE PAAK£R
I

Chocolate Brownies

pk ••

DRT

Sail Detergent

•

' Ill-...
pkc.

59c "
59c

PAPER
TOWELS

I)
l

.

'

...

..... . ·:::

Fresh Donuts • 3:Ml5100

PIE

JANE PARKER

Hot Cross Buns

ggc

100% BRAiiLIAN EIGHT O'ClOCK

Bean Coffee • 3 ~ 5199
.

.

Ji\PiE PARKER

pH~

. 3jumboa·gc
· ro"s

CHERRY
:~~::

ANGEL SOFT

...

Buttermilk Bread 3~79'

SMUCKER'S FROZEN

Chili Sauce

FURNITURE
Mason,W. Va.
,,
'

I

SUI'£111011

And that's the secret behind one
memorable moment of instant pleasure.

MASON

"I thlntbe'elwo ,._.any.
From produclllc, I m,an.
That'l by NBA llarid de. I

Pork Steaks

pkp.

I

BUTI mLE

Orou1d Clluck

535.00 Down
Salal)te On
Convenient
Terms.

About Jim Chonu' future
With the )11'01, be S&amp;Ji:

lb.69' Chipped Meats 3S-ol. 5 1 00

I

so sujie~'b la its speci'alblend of'

.NEW .
FURNITURE
'349.95

honelll ooes.

I

The thing that m~kes Eight O'Clock Instant Coffee .
: "
..
fine Brazilian Coffees.
too•:;. Brazilian Coffees. Nothing else.

Buddy gilts were dlatributed
when the Busy Bee Class met
Thursday night at the Middleport First Baptist Church
with Mrs . Beulah · White
presiding.
Thank you notes were read
from Mr . and Mrs. Delbert
, Becker for
a · floral
arrrangement and card sent on
their wedding anniversary. A
thank you note was read from
Miss Jerry Pullen thanking the
class 'for providing refreshments for the church youth
during January. Members
named women of the Bible in
response to roll ~aU, and Mrs.
White used a meditation
"Expectation Corner" lo open
the meeting.
Mrs. Lillian McGhee had
charge -of a program of
humorous reading. The ,
Washington's birthday theme
was carried out in the table
decorations for refreshments
served by Mrs. Lettie Roush,
Mrs. Isabelle Winebrenner,
Mrs . Nora Jordan.

3 ROOMS

AI McGuire not only hal a
way with kids, be lllo· 1111 a
way with words. Hll wordll are

Fresh Picnics

ROUND lONE SHOULDEJI

3-111. -

There are instants and there are instants .
and they're not all the same.

• •

" SUPER-RIGHT" 6 V1rlttlt1

SEMI·BONELESS

A&amp;,. FROZEN

name waa."

porti ons.

we care-----------

'I

\

with punch and coffee by Mrs.
Doss, Mrs. Richard Vaughan
and Mrs. Marshall McMillion.
The refreshments were
. provided by the kindergarten
.parents.

Serving them a I ways im - nade and served hqt .
presses . Sauteed mushroom s
arc a meal in themselves MUSHROOM MARINADE
when served on toast or with
1 lb. fresh mushrooms or
a g r een \'egetabie . Try a
2 cans (6 to 8 ounces each)
Mushroom Marinade, a sau·
sllced mushrooms,
teed di sh w1th a bitcy mari ·drained
~y;~~ rrs-' ..•.•....,.•,~...~o».X&gt;··;·;o;:o:&lt;;•;o;;•·o;;o·o;o;:•;•:o;•;•;o.:-;o~;·;·;o;o;o;o;o.;·~·--·:..;•;o;..:•;•;•;•;o;•;:;:;:;•;•:•::;•;•;;::;:;:;::·:::o.;•,-:;.};.;-:···:--·····:·:·:·:·:·:·:···:···:··,.;.&gt;:·:o:•..'"o)"..:O:O:O:.:.r..:.:o;'.o:o:v.:n;o;o:·z~·=·=-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:..,·.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·;.·.·;::.·.;.:····
..,;..;..,.~-.;;r;
..o:xr. .QoQ._ ---~~&gt;.·.«-.·....:-:-:-.. ..........:-.......-.-:-;.......:-:-.. ..... . :-.•.•.•.•.•... ········"
·"· .... ·'· ·'·'•'·.... ·'· ······· ..... .. -~·· ...... ~- ~- ~'l'••• ..............~._.....,...,:-.':. •.o;o-....
4 tablespoons olive or
sa lad oil
l~ 2 teaspoons
lemon juice
•1., tenspoon minced garlic
1 tablespoon chopped
parsley
By BETTY CANARY
solution for ail tras habies. as they are calfed in the recyI teaspoon salt
cling trade.
'I• teaspoon ground
I find that I am in possession of a lot of answers lo
There is. however , a rumor thai gove rnm ent economists
b i a~ k pepper
things
you'veto always
were afraid
ask. wanted to know about books but are busier than ever with a plan on how we ca n convert
'.1• teaspoon oregano leaves
'
money into nothing.
Yes, Virginia, there really is a Howard Hughes.
We are breathlessly awaiting the arrival of a copy of
Rinse, pat dry and slice
No, I haven't seen a copy of "The Sensuous Baby ."
"How to Weave Watchbands fr om Rope Hc nrnants" to
:::
mushroms and set aside. In
we understand,
.·.·
A book advertised as containing " Shocking Inside Info" add to our library. This,
· is expanded
1 · · 1 fro
dm
d
·::: a large skill et heat olive or
1 h t
is
book that recaps everything Time m~azine has an article in popu ar ow- o magazrne aCn&lt; IS lnCen e
as a sequel to " How to Personalize Your otlage heese
salad oil . Add mushrooms
printed in the past three years about Henry issinger.
Cartons." Try as the-y mi ght, today' s authors cannot hope
along wit h lemon juice and
"A novel written with immemorial magic ... " is a to reach the heights of those wonderful writers of yes1er:;: mi nced garlic. Saute 4 mindirect steal from an ancient Egyptian papyrus and just year. They have good ideas but not great ideas. I am
::;: utes. stirring occasionally.
as interesting.
referring, of course, to that classiC. ·.· How .t,o Use the
:;;: 13 lcnd in chopped parsley,
Yes, Howard, there really is a McGraw-Hill.
Thrust Bearings of Your Old Sherm an rank
::: sa lt, pepfkr and ore g ano
leaves. Se rve hot. Makes 4

Miss jesse Magnolia Hostess

For Marquette Mentor
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)-AI McGuire cuts through aU the
pollution. He hits you like a
lreath of fresh air.
He has this special lltUe
thing gobig for him. It's called
the truth, and with him It
seems bullt-ln. He tells the
truth no matter what.
Now :You take the best player
he has, for example. You'd
better make ~hat the best
player he had. The kid's name
Is .TlDI Chones. He's in his
junior . year at Marquette
University In Milwaukee and
you probably noticed where the
New York Nets of the ·ABA
signed him for $1.5 million the
other day. Tbts wasn't the
usual wallp~~per type money
you bear of In so many of these
basketball deals. Jim Cbones
got must of his in hard cold
cash.
.
By taking him the way they
did, the Nets yanked the very
guts out of AI McGuire's team,
which has won 22 straight
without being beaten and ranks
-second in the entire nation.
He Didn't Holler
Some other coach would've
hollered biOQ&lt;Iy murder. McGuire dldn 't holler at all. He
had promised he'd help Cbones
make aU the money he could
and he stuck to his promise.
Some other coach would've
told 8 kid who signed that way
he had wrecked the team when
he finally got him alone In his
private office. Maybe he'd also
tell him what a terrible ingrate
he was. McGuire dldn~t do that
at ali. What he actually Said to
6-11, 21-year-old Jim Cbones
when they were alone was
simply this :
"I congratulate you, Jinuny.
I think you'll have a nice Ufe.
Sometime I hope you '11 help us
with recruiting."
"Anytime," said Jlm
Cbones.
There lsn 'I a coach who ever
Uved who dldn 't feel that he
was different, in some way at
least, from all the other .
coaches.
AI McGuire actually Is.
·. For~ thing, he takes care
of his kids but he doesn't wear
that· on biB ale eve. He takes
care of himself, too. He'd be
the first to tell you that.
Another thing, he lsn 't afraid o1
lDiin8 hla job. He doe1111't bave
to be. He's 10 good at what he
does the pros are ltandlng In
line lo bite him.
Now It lUll 10 happens AI
MCGuire's own son playa .
basketball lor Marquette alao.
He's II, he's a junior llld

William Swisher. Mrs. Kloes
reported on by-law revisions to
be voted on at the March
meeting.
The Founder's Day cake was
inscribed ''1972" and served

Classic Mushrooms · ~ -

l!l:!f :
·=:=::·:·

~~&amp;~:::::~:,:~,~:::~~=~~,w.J:~£~£i4&amp;i&amp;:~~tg~f,k~JI.{.~~~~.~~~\i~.~,~~:s::::~:~::,:~:;;,;,:,:.~,.:,:,:,:,:, .:,:.:,:;:, , :,:, ,:, :,:,:.~,:,::, , :,: , :~.,: , :,:,:,:,:,: ::m&lt;:: :&gt;:=:=:=~= ~&lt;=:&lt;: :Jl

Truth Seems Built-In
IU~

was announced.
Elected, to ·a nominating
committee which will report at
the March meeting were Mrs.
Jean Thomas, Mrs. Raymond
Cu.nninRham, and Mrs .

Plans for an anniversary illness and thanked the club lor ~~
celebration of the Third Friday remembrances. Mrs. Wolle ~
Club were made when the . was repartee! ill. Mrs. Ben
group met Friday night at the Ncutzling presided at the
· home of Mrs. Dale Smith.
meeting and hostess gifts were
The celebration will he held nresented to Mrs . Smith.
at the March meeting and will Games were played with prizes
begin with a dinner at Craw's going to Miss Sybil Ebersbach,
Steak House followed by a Mrs. Phil Meinhart, Mrs .
social hour at the home of Mrs. Neutzling, and Mrs. Bertha
Mabel Wolle.
Ebersbach . Refreshments
Mrs. Carrie Meinhart was were served by Mrs. Smith.
welcomed back following

Today's Sport Parade

I!Y IWLTON

to Mrs. George Childs and Mrs.
Manning Kloes, the only past
Presidents attending. Corsages
in the yellow and blue colors of
the PTA were delivered to
other past presidents residing
in town but unable to attend
in_cluding Mrs. M. L. French,
Mrs . David Entsminger, Mrs.
Karl Owen , Mrs. Paul Smart,
Mrs. Willis Anthony, Mrs. John
Vroman, Mrs. Leland Brown.
.Mrs. Stanley . Doss. presided
.at the meeting which opened
with the kindergarten Jeading
il) the pledge of allegiance. The
Rev. Charles Simons had
· devotions. The session on the
art of story teUing to be hel&lt;l
tonight at the Salisbury school ,

Women 'sClub To Celebrate

Plans Announced
Ror
Cage Tourney
Plans were announced
Tuesday for the First Annual
Southern Ohio Sportsmen
Basketball Tournament, to be
'held at the Paul R. Lyne
Center, Rio Grande College, on
March 22, 23, 24, and 25.
The single elimination event
will consist of 16 independent
area basketball squads. Seven
teams have already entered
the tournament.
Entry fee Is $35 a team.
Teams entered thus far are
Quaker State Service Center,

i~mii~Iil~:i~~~mim~r:~l~~~~~~il~@l~~~l~~:1mm~~~lm~~m~m:~1~;;;;;;~;;;m;~~~;~;~~~;~~~~~=~~~~;~;~~~~ili~~~l~;~~~~~~m~~J.N~~~~ .

ANN PAGE

Egg Noodles
OUR OWN

•

3 l -Ib.

pkp.

5100

1

Tea .BagsI

I

, 100 bar• 89c

�,.

•

+
8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 .. Feb, 23, 1972

lfouse-to~House Heart Fund .Canvass Comes SundaJl

POLLY'S POINTERS
Stretch Blue Jeans

By Using Pants Creasers
By POLLY CRAMER

DEAR POLLY- 1 want to tell Nancy that the only way
I know to stretch denim blue jeans would be to use
those adj ustable.pants creasers tha t are inserted in each
leg. Extend them to stretch the jeans as much as possible. When a woven fabri c has shrunk I do not believe
there is a way to PERMANE NTLY stretch it so the
above would have_ to ~ repeated each time they are
washed. Nanc y mtght msert 1n each s1de seam a strip
of colorful braid such as is popular now. Rip each seam
open and apply the bra id with top stitching.-GLADYS
c:;:.tc.'iik'HiW&gt; :,;~
DEAR POLLY - Our soapstone fir eplace hearth ~
has holes made by ste pping on it with slender heels. ~
!WIMIIlllli'-Wf&gt;t

.

Polly's Problem

~-h~~:;:::~:~::I::~:~~=:~~:::~:.:::~::,:~:IJ

DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with plastic pails or
buckets with thin, rolled plastic edges that look deceivin~ly sturdy. In this top edge are two holes for the metal
balls to fit in and lhey should be expected to hold a
paillul of water but they wear out in no time and the
pail is a total loss. Usually the plastic tears down the
Side diagonally so the bucket is not useful for anything.
- DONNA
DEAR POLLY - When
you lose the eye to a hook
atld eye and have no time
to sew it back on, use a
safety pin as a substitute.
Pin it from the wrong side
of the material with only
e:~ough showing on the outside to form an eye. You
can also use a safety pin
from the wrong side to hold
•On buttons With shanks.MRS. J. B.
DEAR POLLY -To keep men's pants from wearing
out at the cuff sew a small button inside the cuff so it
will strike the shoe instead of having the pants cuff rub
against it-DOROTHY
(HIWS,.APER INTIIIPRISE ,\SSN. )

You wHI receive a dollar II Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, PoUy's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly Ia care of tbls newspaper.

ShoWe'r Planned
A card shower will be held
Friday in observance of the
89th birthday anniversary of
Mrs. Martha McElroy, Minersville Route L
Mr3 . McElroy 's sons,
Dayton, Eugene, Kermit and
Virgil all reside at home with
her. Her daughter, Mrs. Henry
(Mae ) Spencer, lives nearby.
Mrs. McElroy has 12 grandchildren,
33
greatgrandchildren, and four greatgreat-grandchildren. She is
known by many as "Matma."

. 9- 'lbe DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 23,1972

Workshop
Set Up

An arts and crafts workshop
project will begin at the Meigs
Community Class for Retarded
Children on March 8.
Meeting Tuesday with
parents of the children to ex·
plain the planned activity for
the workshop were th e
teachers, Mrs . Carol Hudson
and Mrs. Jeanette Crooks, and
the project chairman, Mrs.
Eul ah Francis, Middleport.
The children will begin with an
Easter project' using the
materials
donated
by
In 1879 Franklin Woolworth residents,
opened his first "live-cent"
Hudson seal is not derived
store in Utica, N. Y. Sales for from the seal, but is tbe fur
the first week averaged $2.50 a of the muskrat plucked and
dyed to resemble seal.
day.

A house-to-house canvass for
the heart fund will be conducted Sunday by membera of
the Middleport Business and
Professional Women and
volunteers .
Plans for Heart Sunday were
announced by Mrs. Harold
Sargent , civic participation
chairman, at Monday night's
meeting of the Club at the

Columbia Gas Co. of Ohio office . Village hall wiD be. as
headquarters for the volunteer
workers.
During the meeting, the club
voted to contribute to the
Cancer Crusade special event
to be held In April at Meigs
High School. A thank r.oit note
was read from Mrs. Kathryn

Jiysell for a gift of mom;y sent
to the Meigs County Children's
Home. Also read was a note of
appreciation f111m Mrs. Beulah
Strauss for a hospital .
remembranre.
The Seventh Legislative
Conference to be held in

Washington , D. c., March 1-4
was announced by Mr5. Grace
!'rail, president. Mrs. Mary
Kunzelman, finance committee member, announced a
spring rummage sale.
Guest speaker at the meetiilg
was Mrs. VIlma Pikkoja ,

~.,~~«~w;~~~;·'*• ···w~, Attend Roush-Hart Vows .
-~
I aIen dar ' ...'attended
.RACINEthe_wedding
A large crowd sons; Mr. and Mrs. Michael
~:i
0
c
I
a
of Linley Fi~her and four chil~ren; Mr'
::~
~ Hart and Mildred Roush at the an~ Mrs. Donald Fisher and

s' c

::::
WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
7:30 Wednesday at home of
Mrs . Karl Grueser ; each
member to take a bird feeder
she has made.
SOUP SUPPER Wednesday
beginning at 4:30 at Racine
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church. Sandwiches, bean and
vegetable soup will be ~&gt;erv_ ed.
POMEROY , WCTU, 2 p.m.
Wednesday, Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
OHIO VALLEY Commandery 24, Knights Templar,
7:30 p.m. Masonic Temple,
Wednesday . Potluck dinner at
6:30p.m. for Sir Knights, their
ladies and families.
SOUP SUPPER, beginning
4:30 p.m., Wednesday , at
Racine Wesleyan United
Methodist Church. Menu, soup,
pie, sandwiches, coffee.
FEENEY-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, post everlastinc
ceremony in memory of
departed members. Members
or immediate families invited.
Business meeting 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments following the
ceremony.
AMERICAN LEGION
Auxiliary, Feeney-Benne!!
Post
126,
7:30
p.m .
Americanism program to be
presented by the Junior
Auxiliary members whose
meeting on Tuesday night has
been cancelled.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT · Pomeroy
Lions Club, special Ladies
Night observance, 6:30p.m. at
~e Pomeroy United Methodist
Church. Entertainment to
follow the meeting.
RIVERVIEW GARDEN
CLUB will meet Thursday
evening, Feb. 24, at the
Willlams-Balderson. home,
with Mrs. Donald Putman as
co-hostess. Members are to
bring coupons. An auction sale
will be held.
·

THURSDAY
:,:: First !laptist Church, Sunday, daughter,allofAkron ; Mr.and
COMBINED MEETING , Feb., 20 at 4:30p.m.
Mrs. David Roush and
Among those from out of daughter; T.Sgt. and Mrs.
Southeastern Ohio Guernsey town were Mr. and Mrs. John Steven Jacobs, Terri and
Breeders Assn., and Meigs Fisher and son Kenneth ; Mr. Jeffrey; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Dairy Unit, Thursday, 7' 30 and Mrs . Jack Fisher and three Roush and Nancy, of Coiump.m. at Southern High School
.
bus; Mr. and Mrs. Oris Roush
cafeteria , Racine. Selection ""~"'of Salem Center ; Mr. and Mrs.
Meigs Dairy Princess.
I"""&lt;
Harold Sargent of Middleport;
WYAL WOMEN'S Class of
Mr. and Mrs. James Laird of
Middleport Church of Christ, ~~New Albany ; eric and Mrs.
7' 30 p.m., Thursday, home of
Dale Hart and daughter of St.
Mrs. Oscar Roush.
··
I
N
WOMEN'S ASSN. at Mid- ~
Q
Meade, Md.
dleport
First
United
Mr, and Mrs. John Lyons and
Presbytercan Church, 7:30
p.m. Thursday. Mrs. Richard Eddie returned Monday from a
Karr, devotional:t; Mrs. Walter visit in Pontiac, Mich. with Mr.
Waddell, program book and Mrs. Tom Lyons.
Steve Haggy has returned
review, "Oak Lane Story,"
Members take a toy for from Vietnam and will spend
Veterans Memorial Hospital. time here with his wife, the
Mrs . Marshall Roush of
Hostesses, Mrs. Karl Owens, fanner Brenda Russell, and Letart Falls entertained
Mrs . Harry Moore, Miss other relatives .
Saturday night with a surprise
Phyllit; Joachim, Mrs. Lorna
party honoring her husband on
Owens,
FRIDAY
his birthday anniversary.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
YOUTH REVIVAL, Friday
Mrs. Roush served a buffet
7:30 p.m. Thur!lday, home of through Sunday, 7:30 each luncheon and gifts were
Mr. and Mrs. Amos Leonard. evening; 10:30 a .m. Sunday, presented to Marshall. Guests
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 7:30 Rutland Church of Nazarene at the party were Mr. and Mrs.
Thursday, Columbus and featuring Rev. Lawrence Marvin Hill, Mr. and Mrs.
Southern Ohio Electric Co. MacAilen, Elyria, evangelist, Michael Hill, Mr. and Mrs.
Members to take bottle caps who will use magic and ven- Cecil Roseberry, Mr. and Mrs.
for redemption.
triloquism .
Robert Spurlock, Miss Donna
SATURDAY
Cross, Miss Jan Hill, Art Hill, ·
PAST OFFICERS, Racine
HYMN
SING,
Saturday,
7:30
Racine, R. D., and Mr. and
Chapter OES, 7:30p.m. Thursday at Shrine Clubhouse. p.m. Old Dexter Church, public Mrs . Mickey Winebrenner ,
Invited.
Columbus.
Potluck refreshments.
SPECIAL MEETING, Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
Thursday, 7:30p.m. at hall in
Chester . Work in Master
Masons Degree. All Master
Masons invited, Denver Well,
You too
worshipful master, reports.
call
step ahea.d
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
thitopring
when you choose from
Pack 245, Blue and gold
our men's fabulous shoe oelecbanquet, 6 p.m. Thursday at
tiono. Supple leathers in omooth
the American Legion Hall.
or
· grained textures in all the
Scouts, leaders, families and
popular
Invited guesta to attend.

Middleport
perS(&gt;na teS _

representative to the White
House Conferenc;e on Agmg
held in Washington, o: C. in
December. In her talk, Mrs.
Pikkoja pointed out that the
purpose of the conference was
to define the role of senior
citizens in society and to implement a program with
usefulness as the objective. She
stressed that the purpose is not
to entertain senior citizens but

95TH IS FRIDAY
Mrs. Mary Diehl, Pomeroy
Route 4, will observe her 95th
birthday Friday, Feb. 25. Mrs.
Diehl
attends
church
regularly. She has two
daughters, Mrs. Stella Atkins
and Miss Ruby Diehl and
reared Felix Alkire. Mr. and
Mrs. Alkire make their home
with Mrs. Diehl in the
Harrisonville area.

\

SUNDAY
SENIOR CITIZENS, Sunday,
2 p.m. Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, Third and
Main. All interested persons
urged to attend.

CLASS MEETS
RACINE - The Booster
Sunday School Clasr-orure
Baptist Church met ,at the
church Friday evening, -Feb.
iB. Mrs. Marie Roy presented a
patriotic program. A letter of
thanks from Rev. Kulln for the
gift of money sent to GSI was
read, as also was a lett&amp; from
Elizabeth Walters, Supt. of
Murrow Indian Orphanage,
thanking for the gifts sent by
the class.
Potluck refreshments were
served.

·COLEMAN COOLER

World 's finest in sulation, un ¥reokable line rs, reinforced
rust proof base, handle for easy carrying , a nd fast action
drain .

NEW

·AUTOMATIC

• COmpact! 31 ~" ~ 29 ~" x

Pl.AUIS
llOIIS MMKET

SOA~

RIGHT
R ~E R VEO

TO

M RllllMD

LIM IT
QUANTIT I ES

IIOTWID DEPT. STORE

Vegetable
Soup

3

pak

18 oz.

AUTOMATIC
DOUBlE-RINSE

Complttt with Sl'rvt·k Top Co'ltr

EVEREADY

No.1
cans

CYCLE!

Middleport, Ohio

Boy-ar-dee

LIQUID

lb.

•

LASHLIG

".With '

c
99
i

22 Ol.
bottle

SPAGHETTI
C
&amp;
MEAT
BAUS
W'rth Coupon
1

Good At Big 3 Markets

. Expires 2·26-72

23 Ol.

15ot.
cans

'

I

$27.99

·88¢

'

HECK'S REG. $7.99

y · · · · ···

-

HECK'S
REG.

.

~gal. 59~

Assorted Flavors

SPIN REEL
s l oo n le ~ ~

HECK'S REG. $6.99

sass

SPORTS DEPT.
.

HECK'S REG. $11 .88

··~- - -· ..

li l t ~ hi wOIIj hl, P~ "' l' ! u l ' """' h j,9 ht wolh ~ ~bte &lt;'l lubl•
lrr". b ull:l ll"'lo-&lt; 1&lt;&gt; • ond M)rt lm nl\h 1n g &gt; ~!leoor l o~\1~

( oHitrll•d • pnly~rhylo,.. co1e rUtlh o•ll. &lt;.1 ' "0\f. "'" ''
' """ " " '' .., ,,h,tund &gt; l~mpoo&lt;ol uo o u l,.m o l Ha1 •o•y
g" p hund l~ " " d pv\h bvtlo n ,., ,,, h

..

·.··- ...._

.

FISHING
HOOKS

· ····~ · ' ~·.- ·

ANGLER

6 FT. SPINNING ROD

ion made with
r ugged ,
long l a st i ng
ma rine

Two-piece fibergla ss rod , with
fi xed ree l sea t.

$2.66

HECK'S REG. $2.77

HECK'S
REG.

SPORTS DEPT.

$3.99

APRIL SHOWERS

21/•

DUSTING POWDER

oz.

OLD SPICE
STICK

DEODORANT

•

fY&amp;td/,rt

84'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

20 .~69~

HAIR SPRAY

•ro;,.

13

e REG. e EXTRA HOLD
e' UNSCENTED • LEMON

$J88

drill cloth . A" orled colors.

s oz.

HECK'S
REG.

'"' "''&lt;&gt;"""'

HECK'S REG.

10

r·- ·""" ""' ..... , ••••

BALSAM

99'

oz.

MAN POWER

DEODORANT

3 OZ. ESQUIRE

SHOE POLISH
BLACK OR
BROWN

SUPER DRY

HECK'S
REG.

$1.28

noxzema
,.·.·/'\"' ··;.p:'.&gt;~·~.

99'

COSMETIC

57'

'

COSMETIC DEPT.
HoOZ.

JERGENS.
LOTION

HECK 'S
REG.

HECK'S REG.
DEPT.

8 oz.

WELLA

HECK'S
REG.
SPORTS DEPT.

5

96(

......
noxzema

$ $4.99

SPUTS
DEPT.

NOXZEMA

$1.07

COSMETIC
DEPT.

HECK'SREG.

oz.

IAIIttlTStZI

COSMETIC DEPT.

ALKA-SEL TZER

PLUS

HAIR COIDITIONER.

36's

oREOULAR

e EXTRA IODY

HECK'S REG. 99'

HECK'S REG. $1.58

COSMIT/C 111'1.

FRIED
CHICKEN.
..

2 '1''
\.j

iAiia.-'seiiier,

PLUS

.-··.... , "''"
., ...' . ... . .
COlD TA8lETS

HECK'$ REG.

M orton

BOAT CUSHION
A durable , cus h-

$199

SPOil TS DEPT.

SIZE 1THROUGH 14
100 COUNT

KENT

HECK'S
REG.

oz.
WHITE RAIN

.......

SPORTS DEPT.

. \'

No. 5501

$4-99

h eo ~y

du ty bo ll beorr ng oc
\!eel, ha rd d-H omed
line rol le r g 1.1 rd l.' . Spo o l hood on d ree l
bod" ore o nodi1ed a lumrnu m

SPORTS
DEPT.

:...
'!
.'

POTATOES

For
parties:
long auto . trips. lightweight, sturdy,
trinle insulated .. . . reinforced handle

BERKEY

pi noan a nd
lion . Botl i ~

COMMANDER
LANTERN

4

COLEMAN
JUG
cam~ing : b~oting, picnic~.

1moot h po wu , M oc hr 11ed helr c o l b ro ~ •

$1.39

'

6 Pak

SPORTS
DEPT.

All me tal g eo r1 p r o vrde lo n g lrle ond

HECK'S
REG.

. 'f

BANANAS·

PEA-CHES

Whe n 0 camper i~ a lo ng way from ho me and a lit ho t\ between hrm
and a good nigh t's ~ le e p i ~ a slee ping bo g, he • n o w~ hf! co n coun t on
on M&amp;H. It'~ the sleeping bog camper ~ t on t r u~ t

wi th IrKed reel 1c ot

EVEREADY

~·

TEEN QUEEN

M&amp;HSLEEPING BAG

$599

..

lb. box

,.

HECK'S REG .

A lig ht -werg h' ~ pinn rng reel w1th mterno l bod re leo le ,
odiu~t o b lc ~ m oo th d r1c drag. 1toi r.len sr ee l bail, lrar d
ch rom e lrne rol ler, and p o sit rve onh · u~ve r se . Carr o
IIOfl ·re m to nt thro ugho ut The ro d 11 o no d rzed alum .

·f~·'

BaHeries

11b.p~ 59~

Aunt Jane's

HAMBURG
-DILL PICKLES .

$2200

LANTERN
BATTERY
rtORTS DEPT.
HECK'S REG. $13.99
~ ~ ~ t'l~--------~----------------------------------1
.....;....~•5

SPORTS DEPT.

Chef

JO-Y

Depend ab le qua lity Z eb~ o model _202
r ee l wit h 5' 3 " l i g ht o ct to n t wo p• e ce
Zebco 2020 rod a nd ab ra sion resistan t
pre mi um Ze bco mo no line.

EVEREADY

sticks

~r

TENT

SPORTS
DEPT.

'

1 lb.

S' X 7' NYLON

'

SPORTS DEPT.

SPIN

BAKER FURNITUR·E

MARGARINE

ALSO .

.BERKEY SPINNING ROD &amp;REEL

CLEAR

PEANUT
BUnER

HECK'S REG. $49 .99

$7.99

• Automati c doubiiH inse cvcle

PUSH-UP

$]999
No. 481

ROD&amp; REEL

TO $7.99

• Portable! Roll s on caster s
t No special plumbing! Hook
up to sink

ICE CREAM

Campbell's

n"'"''

ZEBCO 1245

HECK'S REG.

16%"

I

M

Ouf&lt;IPM d

SPORTS DEPT.

T

CHOCOLATE MILK

WAIO CROSS SONS

lo"U"0" ' "''lio n!

HECK ' S REG . $18.88

min.!

Other Models from '169.95

Blue Bonnet

•

~to ke~ .

o Fast' Washes 24-lbs. in 30

Superior Brand

PLANTERS

~/'"'""""

SPORTS DEPT.

Nice •nr Ute

AT RACINE

Se wn -in fl oo r , larg e nyl o n scree n
door. Awn ing leis down f o become
~ t erm d oor . Lorge 18" x2 4" ny lo n
$C ree n rea r window ha s ou tside ro ll
up sto rm fl aps. Complete w ith alu minum a wn i ng po le s, spr i n g ou t ~ i de
a lu minu m frame r o pe~ a nd !. tee l

lc"'"

'"'q

Official size, nylon wound .

Pt Pleasant Store Only '

Whole Kernel

• • • n l ~• &lt;~ d

' I' " " e Od • m P • • !J"" '~&lt;.l bo" ""~' • '&gt; •lc ,l . •• '•~ '"• unl1 •e
'"'~ • Pt•n l•
lo 1 ~ 1 l.oor lolln lp Qt nrlr . f~ , '" " ' ''"" '" n'' "'· ~ "
''"• ' ''" lu•• • II,.,&lt;) &lt;h o c•n~oJ rudoa l od~ r d brc\1 'P"'~ "'•~• n d
1
!Jud I ~"'"' '~ p• I ~ UI' ~" " • N o" w or 0\ "0 " "'"' "" 1lo r l 1p oul •
( ""'" '' •n fo lt ro nlou rrd lkum lot on h¢1

BASKETBALL

ll

CORN

lo bo• qi&lt;Ht

RED-WHITE-BLUE

CHuCK ROAST 69~
Del Monte

,.,,!,.,,,,.,,,l&gt;if.

SPORTS DEPT.

RAIN
SUIT

E.

~c•ghr ,

l&gt;uv""ll · '""" """ •nc ulriP d &lt;o ''"""loon I" ~ ' ' "' ~&lt;&gt;'- Hr ni ~ t u ~d
"'"'""" ' '" " '~ ~ r .,,,,, ,J ''" "' ' ~ " tlr el .., • .,, s ~ .. .,~ le n\ &lt;01' •o•
, , l o 1 ~ • p0 ,.,,,... ,.,d , '""'I ' ''"" ' ' ~ · ~g . l ,IIM tmp•ey,o rod

HECK'S REG. $11.99

BLADE CUT

SAU

I t I 1 hg hr

9' X-9' UMBRELLA TENT

$1]99

MAIN STREET
POMEROY

CHUCK ROAST

NATIONAL

ZEBC0909
SPINCAST REEL

$

-

Chapman's
SHOES

OPEN DAILY l 0:00 TO .9:00 --SUNDAY 1TO 7-PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY, FEB. 27, WHILE

lm 1•n vu lh

Husband
Honored

FOR SPRING '72

tO find- ~seful roles aild jobs
with individual worth, as , the
objective.
Mrs. Pikkoja was presented
with a gift by Mrs. Satgent.
The traveling prize doi!Bted by
Mrs. William Kennedy was
won by Mrs. James Conkle.

$1.28

GLEEM TOOTHPASTE
HECK'S
REG.

79• COSMETIC DE,,

.'

HECK'S REG.

$1 ,3J
SHITS DEPT.

'•

'

�,.

•

+
8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 .. Feb, 23, 1972

lfouse-to~House Heart Fund .Canvass Comes SundaJl

POLLY'S POINTERS
Stretch Blue Jeans

By Using Pants Creasers
By POLLY CRAMER

DEAR POLLY- 1 want to tell Nancy that the only way
I know to stretch denim blue jeans would be to use
those adj ustable.pants creasers tha t are inserted in each
leg. Extend them to stretch the jeans as much as possible. When a woven fabri c has shrunk I do not believe
there is a way to PERMANE NTLY stretch it so the
above would have_ to ~ repeated each time they are
washed. Nanc y mtght msert 1n each s1de seam a strip
of colorful braid such as is popular now. Rip each seam
open and apply the bra id with top stitching.-GLADYS
c:;:.tc.'iik'HiW&gt; :,;~
DEAR POLLY - Our soapstone fir eplace hearth ~
has holes made by ste pping on it with slender heels. ~
!WIMIIlllli'-Wf&gt;t

.

Polly's Problem

~-h~~:;:::~:~::I::~:~~=:~~:::~:.:::~::,:~:IJ

DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with plastic pails or
buckets with thin, rolled plastic edges that look deceivin~ly sturdy. In this top edge are two holes for the metal
balls to fit in and lhey should be expected to hold a
paillul of water but they wear out in no time and the
pail is a total loss. Usually the plastic tears down the
Side diagonally so the bucket is not useful for anything.
- DONNA
DEAR POLLY - When
you lose the eye to a hook
atld eye and have no time
to sew it back on, use a
safety pin as a substitute.
Pin it from the wrong side
of the material with only
e:~ough showing on the outside to form an eye. You
can also use a safety pin
from the wrong side to hold
•On buttons With shanks.MRS. J. B.
DEAR POLLY -To keep men's pants from wearing
out at the cuff sew a small button inside the cuff so it
will strike the shoe instead of having the pants cuff rub
against it-DOROTHY
(HIWS,.APER INTIIIPRISE ,\SSN. )

You wHI receive a dollar II Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, PoUy's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly Ia care of tbls newspaper.

ShoWe'r Planned
A card shower will be held
Friday in observance of the
89th birthday anniversary of
Mrs. Martha McElroy, Minersville Route L
Mr3 . McElroy 's sons,
Dayton, Eugene, Kermit and
Virgil all reside at home with
her. Her daughter, Mrs. Henry
(Mae ) Spencer, lives nearby.
Mrs. McElroy has 12 grandchildren,
33
greatgrandchildren, and four greatgreat-grandchildren. She is
known by many as "Matma."

. 9- 'lbe DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 23,1972

Workshop
Set Up

An arts and crafts workshop
project will begin at the Meigs
Community Class for Retarded
Children on March 8.
Meeting Tuesday with
parents of the children to ex·
plain the planned activity for
the workshop were th e
teachers, Mrs . Carol Hudson
and Mrs. Jeanette Crooks, and
the project chairman, Mrs.
Eul ah Francis, Middleport.
The children will begin with an
Easter project' using the
materials
donated
by
In 1879 Franklin Woolworth residents,
opened his first "live-cent"
Hudson seal is not derived
store in Utica, N. Y. Sales for from the seal, but is tbe fur
the first week averaged $2.50 a of the muskrat plucked and
dyed to resemble seal.
day.

A house-to-house canvass for
the heart fund will be conducted Sunday by membera of
the Middleport Business and
Professional Women and
volunteers .
Plans for Heart Sunday were
announced by Mrs. Harold
Sargent , civic participation
chairman, at Monday night's
meeting of the Club at the

Columbia Gas Co. of Ohio office . Village hall wiD be. as
headquarters for the volunteer
workers.
During the meeting, the club
voted to contribute to the
Cancer Crusade special event
to be held In April at Meigs
High School. A thank r.oit note
was read from Mrs. Kathryn

Jiysell for a gift of mom;y sent
to the Meigs County Children's
Home. Also read was a note of
appreciation f111m Mrs. Beulah
Strauss for a hospital .
remembranre.
The Seventh Legislative
Conference to be held in

Washington , D. c., March 1-4
was announced by Mr5. Grace
!'rail, president. Mrs. Mary
Kunzelman, finance committee member, announced a
spring rummage sale.
Guest speaker at the meetiilg
was Mrs. VIlma Pikkoja ,

~.,~~«~w;~~~;·'*• ···w~, Attend Roush-Hart Vows .
-~
I aIen dar ' ...'attended
.RACINEthe_wedding
A large crowd sons; Mr. and Mrs. Michael
~:i
0
c
I
a
of Linley Fi~her and four chil~ren; Mr'
::~
~ Hart and Mildred Roush at the an~ Mrs. Donald Fisher and

s' c

::::
WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
7:30 Wednesday at home of
Mrs . Karl Grueser ; each
member to take a bird feeder
she has made.
SOUP SUPPER Wednesday
beginning at 4:30 at Racine
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church. Sandwiches, bean and
vegetable soup will be ~&gt;erv_ ed.
POMEROY , WCTU, 2 p.m.
Wednesday, Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
OHIO VALLEY Commandery 24, Knights Templar,
7:30 p.m. Masonic Temple,
Wednesday . Potluck dinner at
6:30p.m. for Sir Knights, their
ladies and families.
SOUP SUPPER, beginning
4:30 p.m., Wednesday , at
Racine Wesleyan United
Methodist Church. Menu, soup,
pie, sandwiches, coffee.
FEENEY-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, post everlastinc
ceremony in memory of
departed members. Members
or immediate families invited.
Business meeting 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments following the
ceremony.
AMERICAN LEGION
Auxiliary, Feeney-Benne!!
Post
126,
7:30
p.m .
Americanism program to be
presented by the Junior
Auxiliary members whose
meeting on Tuesday night has
been cancelled.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT · Pomeroy
Lions Club, special Ladies
Night observance, 6:30p.m. at
~e Pomeroy United Methodist
Church. Entertainment to
follow the meeting.
RIVERVIEW GARDEN
CLUB will meet Thursday
evening, Feb. 24, at the
Willlams-Balderson. home,
with Mrs. Donald Putman as
co-hostess. Members are to
bring coupons. An auction sale
will be held.
·

THURSDAY
:,:: First !laptist Church, Sunday, daughter,allofAkron ; Mr.and
COMBINED MEETING , Feb., 20 at 4:30p.m.
Mrs. David Roush and
Among those from out of daughter; T.Sgt. and Mrs.
Southeastern Ohio Guernsey town were Mr. and Mrs. John Steven Jacobs, Terri and
Breeders Assn., and Meigs Fisher and son Kenneth ; Mr. Jeffrey; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Dairy Unit, Thursday, 7' 30 and Mrs . Jack Fisher and three Roush and Nancy, of Coiump.m. at Southern High School
.
bus; Mr. and Mrs. Oris Roush
cafeteria , Racine. Selection ""~"'of Salem Center ; Mr. and Mrs.
Meigs Dairy Princess.
I"""&lt;
Harold Sargent of Middleport;
WYAL WOMEN'S Class of
Mr. and Mrs. James Laird of
Middleport Church of Christ, ~~New Albany ; eric and Mrs.
7' 30 p.m., Thursday, home of
Dale Hart and daughter of St.
Mrs. Oscar Roush.
··
I
N
WOMEN'S ASSN. at Mid- ~
Q
Meade, Md.
dleport
First
United
Mr, and Mrs. John Lyons and
Presbytercan Church, 7:30
p.m. Thursday. Mrs. Richard Eddie returned Monday from a
Karr, devotional:t; Mrs. Walter visit in Pontiac, Mich. with Mr.
Waddell, program book and Mrs. Tom Lyons.
Steve Haggy has returned
review, "Oak Lane Story,"
Members take a toy for from Vietnam and will spend
Veterans Memorial Hospital. time here with his wife, the
Mrs . Marshall Roush of
Hostesses, Mrs. Karl Owens, fanner Brenda Russell, and Letart Falls entertained
Mrs . Harry Moore, Miss other relatives .
Saturday night with a surprise
Phyllit; Joachim, Mrs. Lorna
party honoring her husband on
Owens,
FRIDAY
his birthday anniversary.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
YOUTH REVIVAL, Friday
Mrs. Roush served a buffet
7:30 p.m. Thur!lday, home of through Sunday, 7:30 each luncheon and gifts were
Mr. and Mrs. Amos Leonard. evening; 10:30 a .m. Sunday, presented to Marshall. Guests
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 7:30 Rutland Church of Nazarene at the party were Mr. and Mrs.
Thursday, Columbus and featuring Rev. Lawrence Marvin Hill, Mr. and Mrs.
Southern Ohio Electric Co. MacAilen, Elyria, evangelist, Michael Hill, Mr. and Mrs.
Members to take bottle caps who will use magic and ven- Cecil Roseberry, Mr. and Mrs.
for redemption.
triloquism .
Robert Spurlock, Miss Donna
SATURDAY
Cross, Miss Jan Hill, Art Hill, ·
PAST OFFICERS, Racine
HYMN
SING,
Saturday,
7:30
Racine, R. D., and Mr. and
Chapter OES, 7:30p.m. Thursday at Shrine Clubhouse. p.m. Old Dexter Church, public Mrs . Mickey Winebrenner ,
Invited.
Columbus.
Potluck refreshments.
SPECIAL MEETING, Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
Thursday, 7:30p.m. at hall in
Chester . Work in Master
Masons Degree. All Master
Masons invited, Denver Well,
You too
worshipful master, reports.
call
step ahea.d
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
thitopring
when you choose from
Pack 245, Blue and gold
our men's fabulous shoe oelecbanquet, 6 p.m. Thursday at
tiono. Supple leathers in omooth
the American Legion Hall.
or
· grained textures in all the
Scouts, leaders, families and
popular
Invited guesta to attend.

Middleport
perS(&gt;na teS _

representative to the White
House Conferenc;e on Agmg
held in Washington, o: C. in
December. In her talk, Mrs.
Pikkoja pointed out that the
purpose of the conference was
to define the role of senior
citizens in society and to implement a program with
usefulness as the objective. She
stressed that the purpose is not
to entertain senior citizens but

95TH IS FRIDAY
Mrs. Mary Diehl, Pomeroy
Route 4, will observe her 95th
birthday Friday, Feb. 25. Mrs.
Diehl
attends
church
regularly. She has two
daughters, Mrs. Stella Atkins
and Miss Ruby Diehl and
reared Felix Alkire. Mr. and
Mrs. Alkire make their home
with Mrs. Diehl in the
Harrisonville area.

\

SUNDAY
SENIOR CITIZENS, Sunday,
2 p.m. Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, Third and
Main. All interested persons
urged to attend.

CLASS MEETS
RACINE - The Booster
Sunday School Clasr-orure
Baptist Church met ,at the
church Friday evening, -Feb.
iB. Mrs. Marie Roy presented a
patriotic program. A letter of
thanks from Rev. Kulln for the
gift of money sent to GSI was
read, as also was a lett&amp; from
Elizabeth Walters, Supt. of
Murrow Indian Orphanage,
thanking for the gifts sent by
the class.
Potluck refreshments were
served.

·COLEMAN COOLER

World 's finest in sulation, un ¥reokable line rs, reinforced
rust proof base, handle for easy carrying , a nd fast action
drain .

NEW

·AUTOMATIC

• COmpact! 31 ~" ~ 29 ~" x

Pl.AUIS
llOIIS MMKET

SOA~

RIGHT
R ~E R VEO

TO

M RllllMD

LIM IT
QUANTIT I ES

IIOTWID DEPT. STORE

Vegetable
Soup

3

pak

18 oz.

AUTOMATIC
DOUBlE-RINSE

Complttt with Sl'rvt·k Top Co'ltr

EVEREADY

No.1
cans

CYCLE!

Middleport, Ohio

Boy-ar-dee

LIQUID

lb.

•

LASHLIG

".With '

c
99
i

22 Ol.
bottle

SPAGHETTI
C
&amp;
MEAT
BAUS
W'rth Coupon
1

Good At Big 3 Markets

. Expires 2·26-72

23 Ol.

15ot.
cans

'

I

$27.99

·88¢

'

HECK'S REG. $7.99

y · · · · ···

-

HECK'S
REG.

.

~gal. 59~

Assorted Flavors

SPIN REEL
s l oo n le ~ ~

HECK'S REG. $6.99

sass

SPORTS DEPT.
.

HECK'S REG. $11 .88

··~- - -· ..

li l t ~ hi wOIIj hl, P~ "' l' ! u l ' """' h j,9 ht wolh ~ ~bte &lt;'l lubl•
lrr". b ull:l ll"'lo-&lt; 1&lt;&gt; • ond M)rt lm nl\h 1n g &gt; ~!leoor l o~\1~

( oHitrll•d • pnly~rhylo,.. co1e rUtlh o•ll. &lt;.1 ' "0\f. "'" ''
' """ " " '' .., ,,h,tund &gt; l~mpoo&lt;ol uo o u l,.m o l Ha1 •o•y
g" p hund l~ " " d pv\h bvtlo n ,., ,,, h

..

·.··- ...._

.

FISHING
HOOKS

· ····~ · ' ~·.- ·

ANGLER

6 FT. SPINNING ROD

ion made with
r ugged ,
long l a st i ng
ma rine

Two-piece fibergla ss rod , with
fi xed ree l sea t.

$2.66

HECK'S REG. $2.77

HECK'S
REG.

SPORTS DEPT.

$3.99

APRIL SHOWERS

21/•

DUSTING POWDER

oz.

OLD SPICE
STICK

DEODORANT

•

fY&amp;td/,rt

84'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

20 .~69~

HAIR SPRAY

•ro;,.

13

e REG. e EXTRA HOLD
e' UNSCENTED • LEMON

$J88

drill cloth . A" orled colors.

s oz.

HECK'S
REG.

'"' "''&lt;&gt;"""'

HECK'S REG.

10

r·- ·""" ""' ..... , ••••

BALSAM

99'

oz.

MAN POWER

DEODORANT

3 OZ. ESQUIRE

SHOE POLISH
BLACK OR
BROWN

SUPER DRY

HECK'S
REG.

$1.28

noxzema
,.·.·/'\"' ··;.p:'.&gt;~·~.

99'

COSMETIC

57'

'

COSMETIC DEPT.
HoOZ.

JERGENS.
LOTION

HECK 'S
REG.

HECK'S REG.
DEPT.

8 oz.

WELLA

HECK'S
REG.
SPORTS DEPT.

5

96(

......
noxzema

$ $4.99

SPUTS
DEPT.

NOXZEMA

$1.07

COSMETIC
DEPT.

HECK'SREG.

oz.

IAIIttlTStZI

COSMETIC DEPT.

ALKA-SEL TZER

PLUS

HAIR COIDITIONER.

36's

oREOULAR

e EXTRA IODY

HECK'S REG. 99'

HECK'S REG. $1.58

COSMIT/C 111'1.

FRIED
CHICKEN.
..

2 '1''
\.j

iAiia.-'seiiier,

PLUS

.-··.... , "''"
., ...' . ... . .
COlD TA8lETS

HECK'$ REG.

M orton

BOAT CUSHION
A durable , cus h-

$199

SPOil TS DEPT.

SIZE 1THROUGH 14
100 COUNT

KENT

HECK'S
REG.

oz.
WHITE RAIN

.......

SPORTS DEPT.

. \'

No. 5501

$4-99

h eo ~y

du ty bo ll beorr ng oc
\!eel, ha rd d-H omed
line rol le r g 1.1 rd l.' . Spo o l hood on d ree l
bod" ore o nodi1ed a lumrnu m

SPORTS
DEPT.

:...
'!
.'

POTATOES

For
parties:
long auto . trips. lightweight, sturdy,
trinle insulated .. . . reinforced handle

BERKEY

pi noan a nd
lion . Botl i ~

COMMANDER
LANTERN

4

COLEMAN
JUG
cam~ing : b~oting, picnic~.

1moot h po wu , M oc hr 11ed helr c o l b ro ~ •

$1.39

'

6 Pak

SPORTS
DEPT.

All me tal g eo r1 p r o vrde lo n g lrle ond

HECK'S
REG.

. 'f

BANANAS·

PEA-CHES

Whe n 0 camper i~ a lo ng way from ho me and a lit ho t\ between hrm
and a good nigh t's ~ le e p i ~ a slee ping bo g, he • n o w~ hf! co n coun t on
on M&amp;H. It'~ the sleeping bog camper ~ t on t r u~ t

wi th IrKed reel 1c ot

EVEREADY

~·

TEEN QUEEN

M&amp;HSLEEPING BAG

$599

..

lb. box

,.

HECK'S REG .

A lig ht -werg h' ~ pinn rng reel w1th mterno l bod re leo le ,
odiu~t o b lc ~ m oo th d r1c drag. 1toi r.len sr ee l bail, lrar d
ch rom e lrne rol ler, and p o sit rve onh · u~ve r se . Carr o
IIOfl ·re m to nt thro ugho ut The ro d 11 o no d rzed alum .

·f~·'

BaHeries

11b.p~ 59~

Aunt Jane's

HAMBURG
-DILL PICKLES .

$2200

LANTERN
BATTERY
rtORTS DEPT.
HECK'S REG. $13.99
~ ~ ~ t'l~--------~----------------------------------1
.....;....~•5

SPORTS DEPT.

Chef

JO-Y

Depend ab le qua lity Z eb~ o model _202
r ee l wit h 5' 3 " l i g ht o ct to n t wo p• e ce
Zebco 2020 rod a nd ab ra sion resistan t
pre mi um Ze bco mo no line.

EVEREADY

sticks

~r

TENT

SPORTS
DEPT.

'

1 lb.

S' X 7' NYLON

'

SPORTS DEPT.

SPIN

BAKER FURNITUR·E

MARGARINE

ALSO .

.BERKEY SPINNING ROD &amp;REEL

CLEAR

PEANUT
BUnER

HECK'S REG. $49 .99

$7.99

• Automati c doubiiH inse cvcle

PUSH-UP

$]999
No. 481

ROD&amp; REEL

TO $7.99

• Portable! Roll s on caster s
t No special plumbing! Hook
up to sink

ICE CREAM

Campbell's

n"'"''

ZEBCO 1245

HECK'S REG.

16%"

I

M

Ouf&lt;IPM d

SPORTS DEPT.

T

CHOCOLATE MILK

WAIO CROSS SONS

lo"U"0" ' "''lio n!

HECK ' S REG . $18.88

min.!

Other Models from '169.95

Blue Bonnet

•

~to ke~ .

o Fast' Washes 24-lbs. in 30

Superior Brand

PLANTERS

~/'"'""""

SPORTS DEPT.

Nice •nr Ute

AT RACINE

Se wn -in fl oo r , larg e nyl o n scree n
door. Awn ing leis down f o become
~ t erm d oor . Lorge 18" x2 4" ny lo n
$C ree n rea r window ha s ou tside ro ll
up sto rm fl aps. Complete w ith alu minum a wn i ng po le s, spr i n g ou t ~ i de
a lu minu m frame r o pe~ a nd !. tee l

lc"'"

'"'q

Official size, nylon wound .

Pt Pleasant Store Only '

Whole Kernel

• • • n l ~• &lt;~ d

' I' " " e Od • m P • • !J"" '~&lt;.l bo" ""~' • '&gt; •lc ,l . •• '•~ '"• unl1 •e
'"'~ • Pt•n l•
lo 1 ~ 1 l.oor lolln lp Qt nrlr . f~ , '" " ' ''"" '" n'' "'· ~ "
''"• ' ''" lu•• • II,.,&lt;) &lt;h o c•n~oJ rudoa l od~ r d brc\1 'P"'~ "'•~• n d
1
!Jud I ~"'"' '~ p• I ~ UI' ~" " • N o" w or 0\ "0 " "'"' "" 1lo r l 1p oul •
( ""'" '' •n fo lt ro nlou rrd lkum lot on h¢1

BASKETBALL

ll

CORN

lo bo• qi&lt;Ht

RED-WHITE-BLUE

CHuCK ROAST 69~
Del Monte

,.,,!,.,,,,.,,,l&gt;if.

SPORTS DEPT.

RAIN
SUIT

E.

~c•ghr ,

l&gt;uv""ll · '""" """ •nc ulriP d &lt;o ''"""loon I" ~ ' ' "' ~&lt;&gt;'- Hr ni ~ t u ~d
"'"'""" ' '" " '~ ~ r .,,,,, ,J ''" "' ' ~ " tlr el .., • .,, s ~ .. .,~ le n\ &lt;01' •o•
, , l o 1 ~ • p0 ,.,,,... ,.,d , '""'I ' ''"" ' ' ~ · ~g . l ,IIM tmp•ey,o rod

HECK'S REG. $11.99

BLADE CUT

SAU

I t I 1 hg hr

9' X-9' UMBRELLA TENT

$1]99

MAIN STREET
POMEROY

CHUCK ROAST

NATIONAL

ZEBC0909
SPINCAST REEL

$

-

Chapman's
SHOES

OPEN DAILY l 0:00 TO .9:00 --SUNDAY 1TO 7-PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY, FEB. 27, WHILE

lm 1•n vu lh

Husband
Honored

FOR SPRING '72

tO find- ~seful roles aild jobs
with individual worth, as , the
objective.
Mrs. Pikkoja was presented
with a gift by Mrs. Satgent.
The traveling prize doi!Bted by
Mrs. William Kennedy was
won by Mrs. James Conkle.

$1.28

GLEEM TOOTHPASTE
HECK'S
REG.

79• COSMETIC DE,,

.'

HECK'S REG.

$1 ,3J
SHITS DEPT.

'•

'

�OfiiDAILY
10 TO 9

OPII DAILY

10 TO 9

OPIIIAI.Y

OPaiAI.Y
10TO 9

tO TOt

SUNDAY, FEB. 27, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

PRICES II
PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY,FEB. 27, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST ·
·~--....

BRA AND B.IKINI .
SET

J

Co mfortable ny ·
lon stretch ladies'
bra and bikini set.
Choose from blue ,
pink, mint , and
moue .

LADIES'

1 s~

LADIES'

DENIM JEANS

Modern flare leg denim jeans with sheik
slylin.g of ll y front and bel t loo ps . A¥o ilable In Navy only and sizes 8 to 16.

SO·FT. STEEL TAPE
'

$ 00

and groove . Avai lab le in bl ock,
bl ue, gold and green .

All fi rst quality ladies nyl on me~h hose.
Make your ~e l ection fr o m beig e a nd
d nno mon and ~ize A 8 a nd C.

.. ..

LADIES'

PACKED 2 PAIR
IN PACKAGE

'·

(
30

ClOTHING
DEI'T.

..

DRAPES

72" X 108" OR

FIBERGLASS AXE

TWIN FITTED

WITH SHEATH

$2

99

JEANS
Oren the little lodv in these
long we aring cotto n, denim
jeans. Availab le in assorted
stripes a nd fancy jacquard
prints , wit~ four pocket
styling . Sizes: 7 to 14.

$'' 1 ~6·7~-:,~

Cl OTNINCDEPT.
famous DICKIE " Shape/
set" gar ments neve r need
ironin g and a re mode of
"soil re leme" f abr ic ~ . Twill
patterned fa bric. He mmed

Mens Novelty

SWEAT
SHIRTS
S·M·L

Hecks Reg. s2.99

I

·~

~

j

HECK'S
REG.
$4.17

.

'·'·"'-·--

. .

6 PIECE

.PEGBOARD
WITH HOOKS

NEST-OF-SAWS

""'

·•,•

13 PIECE

MATCHING PILLOWCASES 87' PAIR ,

DRILL SET

8" ADJUSTABLE
-WRENCH

PANTS
SIZES lt TO •• WAIST
30 TO 3. IISEAM

INFANTS'

CRAWLERS

HARDWARE
DEPT.

:$ 233

PLIERS

$200

SLEEPERS

HECK'S REG.
'
$2.70 '

IYAHO•A

wets. She is comp letely sa fe
fo r yo ur young one .

AS SEEN ON TV

$122

)

'

HARDWARE DEPT.

I

PINT FLEXIBLE
PUM'
OILER

3 PIECE

CHISEL SET ·
PLASTIC HORSE .
WITH SADDLE

;1E.~6

TOY DEPT.

..

;,~:,;-

COMBINATION

·~

WRENCH SET

. $200
HECK' S REG. $2.78

HAIDWA/11 DEPT.

•

8'' SLIP J~INT PLIERS
$100

NARDWAIE DEPT•

FIBERGLASS

CLAW HAMMER
S]OO

. S]OO ·
HECK'S)EG.
$3.80

68(

::,~

HA/IDWA/11 DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 84•

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

HAIIDWAII DEPT.

HECK'S •

TOY DEPT.

.... ,..,

5 PIECE

$100

Power- packed , Balloon Po w ~
ered lor t he wilde st sou nd
ever. 6 styles.

CHOICE

TOY DEI'T.

MITRE BOX WITH SAW

HECK'S REG. $2 .99

7 BLADE HOLE SAW

ggc

HECK'S REG. 84'

" ' ----

·~

Si&gt;es, 12, 18 o nd 24 Months.

RAUYRACERS

SET
HECK'S REG. $1 . 12

. . ~*F'·

$1 00

1
' "

.

··~·w··

SET

ClOTNI/It /JI,,

Ba by Poll y doll drinks and

HECK'S REG.
. $1.28

HARDWARE
DEfT. ·

$200

HAIIDWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. '2.99

ClOTb'IN' DEI'T.

8" LINESMEN

INFANTS'

Dura ble Perma nent Press boys' or girl s'
sleepers with com fo rtable snap crotch.
Ava ilab le in solids a nd fon(y p rinh .

Not Exactly As Shown

PLAY TELEPHONE .

77(

SJ oo
.,..,;..'

'~

$100

HARDWA/11 DEPT.

'

PLAY SUPER MARKET

HACKSAW

v

$299

PLASTIC

HARDWAIE DEPT.

SCREWDRIVER

ALL PURPOSE SHEAR

2 STYLE

$200

6 PC. RUBBER GRIP

SOLDERING IRON

$100

SIZES S·M·L·IL

BABY POLLY DOLLS

SET

. .,

, . ,/I,A/IDW~RE DEPT. ,

t---~

HECK' S REG. TO $4 .5

Pl Pleasant Store Only

NUT DRIVER

'

HARDWAREDEI'T.

On~

6 PIECE

.s.oo

"

ClOTHING DEPT.

$ 33
CLOTHING
DEPT.

Pt. Pleasant Store

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

.....

SHIRTS
I

5.

$300 '

2FT.x4FT.

35 % Cotton . Colors: Charcool , Forest Green, lincoln
Green and Air Force Bl ue .

•.- /

HARDWAllE
DEPT.

14" PIPE WRENCH

cu ff s. 65% Polye~ t er and

Short Sleeve

S

Reg. 18.29 .

Pl Pleasant Store Only

S]OO

FULL FITTED

...

'700

HARDWARE DEPT.

HAIDWAIIE DEI'T.

81"x 108"0R

Full sing le width . Burlington Fabri c. So l·
id Colors. A quality drape in beautiful
decorator co lo rs.

,,.

REPAIR KIT

Reg. 112.25

$2»0

.

s1 s1

. -· ·· ~ -· -

HOBBY &amp; HOME

ClOTHING DEPT.

FIBERGLASS

COTTON DENIM

10" PIPE WRENCH

HECK'S REG . $4 .88

WHITE BLEACHED MUSLIN

HECK'S REG . $1 .99 EACH

HA/IDWA/11 DEI'T.

STANLEY
No. 21.003X

· QUICK FIX KIT

$100

SCREWDRIVER

DAN RIVER SHEETS

Foa m filled and extra plu mp.

No. 90-065X

$10.66

HARDWARE DEI'T.

LOUNGE PILLOWS

PUNCH AND
CHISEL SET

~-- ~-· ·

SPEED REDUCER

S]99

HECK'S REG.

EARLY AMERICAN

GIRLS'

..-,.,,-)

Stanley

HECK'S
REG.
$4.20

AND

ClOTHINfi DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

.;t'l:'

.,

5 PIECE

HARDWARE DEPT.

Fa ncy ladies' jersey bo dy sh irts in as. sorted prints. Co mfo rtable sna p crotch
and placke t fro nt. Sizes: 5-M·l.

HECK 'S REG. 77'

63" ............
84" ............ $J99

~

BODY SHIRT

PKCi.
of 2

CIOTHIN&amp;DEPT.

I·I '

Thi s spacious footl ocker is 31" long,
15 34" wide, and 12 Y2'' deep. Com·
plete wi th removable 3" troy, heavy
stay hinges , 2 hand les, and tongue

48

Pr.

I'

FOOTLOCKER

NYLON

HOSE

'

METAL

One size fits all .

BONA

19 PIECE SOCKET SET

6%" DIAGONAL PLIERS

$100

$

. HECK'S
REG.

HARDWARE DEPT.

$2.72
HARDWAllE
DEPT•.

HARDWARE DEPT.

TDYDEPT.

. I

'

'
f.

•

I

I .
L

.

'

..

'
I

r .

•

�,,

•

13- The Dlllly Serdlnel, Mlddeport.funeroy, 0., Feb. 23,1972

OPIIDAI.Y
10 TO 9

OPIIDAILY
10 TO 9

..

.~mmittee. Told Ohio Nursing Home Si~uation Begs for Tragedy .

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, FEB. 27, WHILE QUANTITIES.LAST
KODAKDUAL8

KODAK SUPER 8
MOVIE CAMERA.
..
eJ~:posu r e

This Kodak superB mo vie offer s Cds

MOVIE 'PROJECtOR ..

Control on

Feolures 400-foot, super 8 or Bmm film
capacity, three projection spee&lt;!s- for .word, reverse, and still, and fully automatic
film threading .;mto take-up reel.

exlro -fos l lens , power or manual zoom control and reflex view·

ing. The f/ 1.9 lens makes possible qual ity movies even unde r
adverse lighting condi tion s. E~etro smooth zooming is made possi ble with the powe r zoom control. Ref lex view ing means you see
just what is being recorded on the film.

HECK'S
REG.
$89.96

s

MAN'S SHAVER

JEWElRY DEPT.

M-30

FRY PAN
Con trolled temperature prevents burning -

ELECTRIC

G. E.

TOOTHBRUSH

Can

HECK'S REG. $99.96

HECK'S REG.

JEWEliY DEPT.

e Fea ture~ up &amp; down or bo(~ &amp; forth motions. e Co rd ·
less powe r floodl e rin~e 1 for ea1y cl eaning • 6 perso11o l
bru~hes in assorted pastel co lors • Color styled in beige
&amp; white .

eliminates need to " pot ·wotch".

$2177

ino.

GENERAL ELECTRIC

G.E.

$

SUNBEAM
IA $1&amp;,\(1( SH A~ H -- Creo r · 1lo~ l od
l~oPf'" deUgn """ lho dun I ilul heodr o r
~n ""111• lor 'ru;t oho.,o ~ . l ono hn·, 11&lt;11 •
,.;,~up lo n11 hoor on l&lt;&gt; &lt;t ond nod Sr•
l''""ion l&gt;onod •urgr&lt;ol &gt;leol t.ludo• w l
lhe IDughnl wh r..,t" P!&gt;dded 9"P Pu1h
llu!t on head '" ' "" ~ P"'"'" ' u "i tr &lt;lroo·

JEWEll YDEPT• .

$2~.18 '

-

MIXmE

Opener

[' g
I

$12.88

MIST CONDITIONER

HAIR SETTER

Gives 3 setti ng c-hoices - conditioned se t ,
water mist set, and regular set. 20 ro llers in
the most popular sizes. Po cked wi th 6 oz. bottle of Custom Ca re Conditi oner and 2 oz. con

of KHAC.

plated

'

cord.

$299
Heck's Reg.

$9.96

Pt Pleasant Store

Pt Pleasant Store

On~

G.E.

lHOUR

2-SLICE TOASTER

CASSEnE
C-60

$100

PRESSURE PAN

Reg. 32.96

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG.

On~

40x40

KODACOLOR FILM

BEADED SCREEN

~···

Heck's Reg.
111.88

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

PINESOL
12

WOOLITE

RUG CLEANER

FESCO PLASTIC

CAKE PLATE &amp;COVER
Not Clear as Shown

87~
Pt. Pleasant Store Only

HECK'S
REG.
~·;,:." .
'-1 ••·' •·
\...

SHES

$122

• ASSORTED COLORS

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S
REG .
48'

$1.97

' 1.39

.....,,

NOUSEWAI1E
DEPT.

PHOTO ALBUM

HECK'S
REG,

44(

HECK'S
REG.

$2.99

HECK'S REG. 59 '

$1.18

RENUZIT

SPRAY

SOFT
STARCH

I

MOP&amp; BROOM
COMBINATION

$122
FOR BOTH
HECK'S
REG.

$1.80

88(

SHAVER
s 66

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
'The Store With AHeart,
You; WE LIKE" .
Right reserved to limit quantities
.

'

1

Pt 'Pleasant Store On~

We Gladly.Accept Fed. Food Stamps ·

Prices EHectlve Feb. 23·29

Monday Thru .FridliY
9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

HECK'S
DETERGENT

4

qlt

$100

WASTEBASKETS
STYLES INCLUDE:
eCLUB
e SPADE

•

FESCO PLASTIC

32 GALLON

TRASH CAN

CHOICE

49'
•

HECK'S
REG.

$1.18

HECK'S REG. $5.99

Heck's Reg. 44'

Pt. Pleasant Store

NOUSEWAIIE
DEPT.

CLOSED SUNDAYS

!

eDIAMOND

HECK'S
REG.
EACH

H~ART

••

Always Has

so.A

.u

BEEf RIBS

ROUND STEAK

iiOUUWARE

""·

FACI.AL TISSUES

4:~~·$1.00
JOY

LIQUID
DOERGENT

32. OUNCE
KING SIZE

59~

!FruIt. c·o ckta i 1.~~~~~~ .....~~·~~39C
!~peanut Bu1·fPlANTER'S
.sMdbTH 18 Qz
e
er................. JAR 59 .
!M'
.
'
.
I
KRAFT
QUART , . 9CL
i· . ~yonna se........................ JAR ·
IM argar1ne
. . • .......
PARKAY SOFT
';
1-tt 39C
,...;.............. PKG.. .
.

)

1

HOOD
· ALL PURPOSE

: ----------------~
FAIRMONT NICE 'N' LITE

Bakery Special!

CHOCOLATE
'MILK

BETSY ROSS

4

5·3

•

FLOUR
10 8~ 99~
With '5.00 or
More Purchase

'

DEL MONTE

FRENCH CITY

lb. '79e

OHIO VALLEY

FRESH AND

SLICED
BACON

MEATY

lb.69e

W.K. or C.S. CORN

BEETS

G~EEN

wee lb. 1o~

·MIX OR MATCH

5$

UMA BEANS
BEANS

303
CANS

OHIO

. GOLDEN

POTATOES 'CARROTS
I

R:·.29~

'

.10 I~ · 49~
''

'

\

SPARE
RIBS.
lb. 65~ .

New ·Cabbage

Mix or Match Specials

~AN ROLLS.
' •
l

\

•

SMOKED
SAUSAGE

'

_ _ ).1

lb.

...

'

.

U. S. Government Inspected

'

H

%.Gal.
Carton

'CHOICE
USDA CHOICE

HUDSON

.

'

•'

FOR

.

USDA

FRAGRANCES

3

Phon·e Us
Your OrderI

..

e ASSORTED

PLASTIC SWEATER BOX

Federal Credit Union

at the Ravenswood
High School Cafeteria

Sunbeam
Ladies

AIR
FRESHENER

PLASTIC SHOE BOX

The

Pt Pleasant Store On~

RENUZIT

A. life·time ol m!!moril!lt ton b~ kept
wfely in thete d ~..r oble olbumt . Album
ho s 10 poge1. Anorfed Colort.

News, Notes

NOTICE

741.
742

Heck's Reg. 18.99

HOUSEWAIIE
DEPT.

News, Event

Phebe.

Hecl'o hg. $8.49

Pt. Pleasant Store On~

HOUSEWARE DEPARTMENT

'

OL

Heck's Reg. 11.05

Heck's Reg.

JEWElRY
DEPT.

Wolfpen

======~~==~~~~~~--~--------~~~

$5~!

19.88

Carpenter

992 3502

Wall Clocks

HECK'S REG.
$1.69

ftOBINSON;S.
CLEANERS

~

OR TIGER

99

$

$ 88

·(Upon ReiiuailJ ,_

:!:

18,88

SPARTUS
PUSSY CAT

STYLING DRYER

MOVIE FILM

Heck's Reg.

Pt Pleasant Store On~

HIS 'N HERS

KODAK
SUPER 8

KODAK INSTAMATtC
ex 126-20

TRI-POD

JEWElRY
DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

'5''

'1.49

$12.96

$21.96

Pt Pleasant Store

HECK'S
REG.

2~UR
CLEANING ~

'
'

__M!R_RO 4-QUART

K-320

1

On~

RECORDING TAPE

Handsome styling on this toaster will co mp liment any kitchen decor. Temperature dial al lows you to select th e darkness of your toa st.

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r

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Pt Pleasant Store Only

JEWElRY DEPT.
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CANISTER VACUUM
CLEANER

Fingertip
ejector.

EC-15

TB5/7

.,

beaters.
beater

,.

.. • .. '

G. E.

c ontrol.

Oetac~able

$988
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3-Speed

Chrome

Heck's Reg. •
$11.96

SCOOP
CHAIRS

- - - HAMILTON BCH
c:;;::J
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81197
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'
Their patients !ll'e poor, Many t1on offlclala, in remarks pre- ciiiUes participaUng in federal all nursing homes and related related facilities. .
difference and arbitrariness." homes. An aceompan:rblg
-Annual Usting by state a"And yet, fur reaaona !mown amendmmt -sd ~
ol them are on welfare," he pared to bedeliftred tociJy ~ medical e•'ll•ance programs,. care facilities.
- Facilities be given money gendes of all sprinkler and a- only Ill ~ from his 'allen! Insured loans 14! provide fllr
added. •')~spy are In 1111811 fore the IUbcGmmlttee, c.Ued Uiey said. " tn IICIItcely &amp;de.
minority' have emanated no the. n~ ufety egulpo
wwna or tisrat areas without · for the federal110vermnent to quate for maintaining quality Ill inllall the systems, esllmat- lann IYJ(ems.
·
adequate lire protection.
"play 8 stronser role" in fire levels of patient .care and pro- ed to C08t $fOO per bed for an , - .Initlation by health rlotll, fires or any civil dis- ment.
11880ciationsofpeerrevlewand turbances of greater con- , _ _ _ _ _ _. . . .
"The result Is a situation prevention.
vide no allowance for the in- average nun1ng home.
- Installation of manually self-policing.
sequence than an oceaslooal
begging for catastrophe,"
ONHA Pre'lldent Cecil L. stallatlon of often eXpensive
Doors Slammed
citizen outburst at city anmcil
Gllllgan said. "The lire In Mltd!ell and executive director !'Ire detective and p~enUve actuated fire alann systems.
- AD heaJth and care facility
On Tuesday, the ·mayor of meetings...," lowry said.
Lincoln Heights could be Gary G. Shepherd said a rna- equipment."
•
Another witness Tuesday,
repeated in communities jorlty ol the nursing homes In
Unlesa the 110vemment Is officials be trained in Uncoln Heights, where the dlsastrous fll'e occurred, testified Rep. William J. Keating, Rthroughout Ohio and mry the country are · subatandard prepared w set new standards. emergency JX'Oced'!!'es.
1ederal.
red !Jipe had .iied• ihe . (liLt, said "almOst everYfhlng
statecat aily tllne." · · ~ ~ -rrorn .cillre iifetY standpOint. backed 1lY irla eruorce1miiit
' .
.
'
The governor iald the Green
··
and establlih a means for
- Annual and unlfonn In- hands of officials trying roup- lnsldetheGree!iNurslng .Home
was Oammable."
Nurslilg Home blaze occurred
.Scarcely Adequate
.obtaining money oo llnplement spections for care faeUitles, grade facilities.
"Time after lil!le we have . Keating, who is from CtnclnIn the middle of a state attempt
''Ibe conditions are Inherent · those standards, they ~ld, with facilities required to
ro make the nursing home ro a government program that ''the public may expect more submit a certificate showing at l!nocked at the doors of Capiro! !lllli, said he plans ro offer legiisduatry meet Ita respon- does not place sufficient em- . fatal fires."
least annual Inspection of Hill to have. the doors slammed lslatlon Ill close a loophole
In our faces and lllld that this Is which · presently exempta In· 210 E. 2nd
slbllltles under state and PIBBII an blah standards of
Tbey recommended:
heating eqllipm«&lt;t.
Pomeroy
federal181111.
protection," they llid.
- Automatic sprinkler sys- Nationwide study of fire not the responsibility of this termedlate care facilities from
.
Phonlitn-5421
Gilligan said the state hail
Relmb~t rates to fa- tern protection be required In problems In nursing homes and committee, this is not the de- safety standards of eltended
piU'Iment that handles It, and care and skilled nursing
decertified 23 homes· for
welfare payments under
always
coming
away testified
empty- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
handed with
no help,"
Medicaid, .cut off 29 inMayor James E. lowry.
termediate facilities receivin"
shown lllid a resume was given .
lDwry said one-third of the
Social Seclll'lty paymen\s and
The Women 's Activities
8,500
. residents of Lincoln
issued warnings ro 121 ~t or
Committee reported on
RKE
Heights, a black conununity,
286 other homes w correct
projects, held a silent auction,
are on welfare.
safety dellclencies. or face
and asked me!llbers w bring
Even if an 10 persons had
slmllar action.
Ravenswood, W.Va.
used eyeglasses to next Mr. Ray Russell and Tena been rescued from the blaze,
'"'bey know we mean bus!Mr. · and Mrs . Harold meetingasaspeclalprojectfor Rae of Lexipgron, Ky., were he said, the city lacked an
ness," the governor said.
Gillogly, Vicky and )3ruce, March.
Saturday visitors of Mr. and
WIU HOLD THEIR A~NUAL MEETING
. Lumped Together
were in Columbus and visited Eldon Starkey, 65, a former Mrs . Lincoln Russell. On ambulance to transport them
Glliigim recOunted for the his sister, Mrs . Bernice resident of this area, passed Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Franklin to a hospital. The city fire
department consists of two
subcommittee bow the General McKnight and family. .
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26,
away in Lancaster this past Russell of Middleport, Mr. and trucks, one substandard and
Assembly rejected several
Mrs. Ray Ash, Gahanna, was week. Survivors include his Mrs. Clinton Gilkey and family
bills he sought wget passed w in the commm~ity and called w wife, Marjorie, Lancaster, of Albany, Mr. Guy Russell and the other "totally Inoperable at
At 5 P.M.
time.''
aid the elderly.
see her father, 'Rob Turner, three·daughters, Mrs. Eleanor Terry Lynn, and Mr. and Mrs. thisLincoln
Heights, he said, is
"Instead of looking at and who Is confined to Veterans Brookhart, Albany; Mrs. Joan Dale Russell and family of
"a
commm~lty
which is lacking
meeting the
problems Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy, Nelson, Carpenter, and Mrs. Columbus all helped celebrate
because
of
poverty,
together ana identify them as where he is doing satlsfacwrily Garnet Moore, Canton; and a their mother's birthday.
discrimination,
bigotry
and
welfare",-Gilligan said.
following surgery.
son, John Starkey, Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Knapp bureacratic inaction, In·
He said the state and federal
Guests of Mrs. Murl and a step-daughter, Mrs . and family of Columbus were
governments must provide the Galaway were Mr. and Mrs. Roberta Starr, Lancaster, 13 Tuesdayvisitorsofhisbrother,
Income supplementation John Woodrum and children, grandchildren and one great- Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp and
necessary to enable older Albany, and Mrs. Thad Dye, grandchild. A brother, H. E. family and while here attended
people to remain self- local.
Starkey, local, and a sister, the funeral of Mr. Cecil Bo)in.
sustaining, and also provide
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rice and 'Mrs. Jessie Jewell, Columbus.
Mrs. Lena Kllllpp was a
services outside institutions, son, Rick and friend, Colum- Services were in Lancaster Sunday overnight guest of Mr.
within easy access of the bus, spent Sunday with Mrs. with the Rev. Cecil Fox of- and Mrs. Doyle Knapp and
people they are expected to Ri~'s parents, Mr. and Mrs. flciatlng. Those from this area family .
serve.
William Culwell and other who attended were Mr. and
Mrs. Ethel Hatfield of
For
10 lb. Chudt Roast
&lt;llio Nursing Home Associa- relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Raymond 'Nelson and Middleport visited with her
The
(9) 10 lb. Ground Beef
Dwaine Jordan, Bryan and Sara, Mrs. Susie Booth, Mrs. T. daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Freezer
Keith, were also Sunday dinner L, Brookhart and Barbara, and Richard Jeffers and family.
5 lb. Round Steak
guests at the Culwell home.
Mr. ·and Mrs. Earl Starkey. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl' Starkey, Mrs . Roy Wiseman, Mrs . Hemlock Grove were Sunday
lb. Stew Meat
Columbia Grange, were In Beulah Jones, and Mrs. Donald visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Columbus on Saturday where Jones accompanied Mr. and Sargent.
10) 5 lb. Chudt Roast
they attended the State Grange Mrs. Starkey.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith
CALL POINTVIEW : 992·2505
5 lb. Ground Beef
Legislative Conference which
of Kanauga were Friday
was held at Imperial House
evening visitors of Mr. and
4 lb. Round Steal!
"Merlin," the children's
" Vibrations, " !he new West.
Mrs. Charley Smith.
3 lb. Sliced Slab Bacon
series on Ch. 11 at 6:30p.m.,
musical series las I week on
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. WhitMr. and Mrs. Lee Roush and.
Is likeable and lnformallve.
Ch. 11, you can see It lonlght tington and granddaughter , HYLTON LEADS
family of Logan were Sunday
Tonl?~tu~ t:l~~~~~~~~lfry
:~~iik;~·lt~.y~'c~~ ~~ Kristin, visited his brother and DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. alter~oon visitors of Mrs.
S lb. Sliced Pork Shoulder'
plan lo have my daughter
lhe second show of the slster~n-law; Mr. and Mrs: (UPI)~ames Hylron of In- Helen Johnson.
S lb. Sliced Fresh Side
~~~~:ti~~ watch lt. She's
season, featuring VIctor Leonard W~ittlngton ·and man, S.C., has grabbed the Mrs. Eugene Haning and
S lb. Bulk Sausage
~~:~~h~fdebu~n~ .:~g1~,~~~~v~~~~ ~ru~:l, family at Baltimore, Ohio; and lead In the Nascar Winston Cup Ronald visited recenUy with
S lb. Sljced Slab Bacon
r~~~~~~::~~~~~~~r· .al -lh•i same hOIW· Dn'Ch. 11 ..his,brotherAn..Jaw- and slater,~. GrJI!ld.,N.at!Pn!!l po.lnis..sb!!l&lt;!· Mrs.· Jaelt"·Eiam ·and family.
5 lb. Pork •Chops-+++
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Marshall and ings.
2 lb. Wieners
go In
MOVIES: Channel 6 ollerSI family, Lancaster. '
Hylton, who drove a Ford w
rt
"Yuma" at 8 p.m. and
(11)
same pro~r:~.
" Foreign Exchange" with
Columbia Grange No. 2435 a fifth-place fmisb in Sunday's
Choice
+++
Sebasllan Cabol at 9:30
held their February meeting on Daytona 500,, jumped ~om
".The Judge/' as noted
"Underwaler
wiiithl Friday evening. The lecturer, sevenUi place m the standings or~:~~~".\~· n~t0i:::)~n~~"j~
.
•
before,
Is
bacl&lt;
on
Ch.
10,
and
ban
D&amp;il&lt;•y.
Bertha·
Crt
'
ppen
used
famous
w
the
lead
with
a
rota!
of
595
but
•
the Old Testament, but is
weight
· Approx. 20-30· ·
tonl.ght's episode at 7·30 p m
looks worthwhile. · · ·
' Is .Protoabl)• "Teiohoi~S!'I men born In February, as the points, replacing Richard mentioned 28 times in the
•
+++
theme for her program. Films Petty, who fell w sixth place New Testament, according
· Cut &amp; Wrapped for Freezer lb.
.If you missed th~ debut of
taken at Mom~t Vernon were after dropping out of the 500. 1o Encyclopaedia Britannic~ . . .-~~~~~-------------------~,;,;,.-~

WASHINGTON (UPI) Gov. Jolm J. GlUipn told a
Houle Gcrl• DDidlt ~
subcommittee today ' the
riuniDc bGme PblltiCII in 'auo
Is ''begbsg for catalitropbe"
, andthati repeat of the Llnooln
Hellhbl lire of Jan, II could
hapPen IDYibne, anywhere.
The, governor ipoke in re.
markS prep11 ed for the second
,-daY· of hearlnp inl9 the·GreenNur*sg Home blaze which
9lallned 10 lives. lie
acknoWI~ that it was .a
tragedy, but said It was also
evidence o! a far greater
tragedy.
'"lbat of a society which
catea 10 little for Its ·elderly
· cltlzeill that It llbunll! them off
and pull them in storage," he
i said. "A IIOciety that chooses oo
, commit Ita elderly oo slow
. death in inltltutiona · rather
: than help them live out their
:lives In Independence and
:·dignity."
r Gllllgan said there are 450
:nursh]g homes In Ohio .similar
; Ill the one that burned in Jan' uary', Most ol them are old
[houses, he said, converted over
ta period of 25 years lnw nursf!ng born~.
.
t He satd these pre-1958
lhomes, all with 30 patients or
''less, were grandfathered~n
[lDlder the state bullding code.
f"They have been allowed since
\then to continue operaUng
1without having Ill meet stanrdarda applled to other nursing
fhomea," he said.
''Beglag lor Catallroplle"
l Gilligan noted that the
:Justlflcatlon for this was the
:tack of other facilities and the
;expense of either renovating
;the homes or lnstalll!lg devices
;Ill pro!ect agalnat lire.
! "These homes are poor.

bch.

15~

�,,

•

13- The Dlllly Serdlnel, Mlddeport.funeroy, 0., Feb. 23,1972

OPIIDAI.Y
10 TO 9

OPIIDAILY
10 TO 9

..

.~mmittee. Told Ohio Nursing Home Si~uation Begs for Tragedy .

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, FEB. 27, WHILE QUANTITIES.LAST
KODAKDUAL8

KODAK SUPER 8
MOVIE CAMERA.
..
eJ~:posu r e

This Kodak superB mo vie offer s Cds

MOVIE 'PROJECtOR ..

Control on

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film threading .;mto take-up reel.

exlro -fos l lens , power or manual zoom control and reflex view·

ing. The f/ 1.9 lens makes possible qual ity movies even unde r
adverse lighting condi tion s. E~etro smooth zooming is made possi ble with the powe r zoom control. Ref lex view ing means you see
just what is being recorded on the film.

HECK'S
REG.
$89.96

s

MAN'S SHAVER

JEWElRY DEPT.

M-30

FRY PAN
Con trolled temperature prevents burning -

ELECTRIC

G. E.

TOOTHBRUSH

Can

HECK'S REG. $99.96

HECK'S REG.

JEWEliY DEPT.

e Fea ture~ up &amp; down or bo(~ &amp; forth motions. e Co rd ·
less powe r floodl e rin~e 1 for ea1y cl eaning • 6 perso11o l
bru~hes in assorted pastel co lors • Color styled in beige
&amp; white .

eliminates need to " pot ·wotch".

$2177

ino.

GENERAL ELECTRIC

G.E.

$

SUNBEAM
IA $1&amp;,\(1( SH A~ H -- Creo r · 1lo~ l od
l~oPf'" deUgn """ lho dun I ilul heodr o r
~n ""111• lor 'ru;t oho.,o ~ . l ono hn·, 11&lt;11 •
,.;,~up lo n11 hoor on l&lt;&gt; &lt;t ond nod Sr•
l''""ion l&gt;onod •urgr&lt;ol &gt;leol t.ludo• w l
lhe IDughnl wh r..,t" P!&gt;dded 9"P Pu1h
llu!t on head '" ' "" ~ P"'"'" ' u "i tr &lt;lroo·

JEWEll YDEPT• .

$2~.18 '

-

MIXmE

Opener

[' g
I

$12.88

MIST CONDITIONER

HAIR SETTER

Gives 3 setti ng c-hoices - conditioned se t ,
water mist set, and regular set. 20 ro llers in
the most popular sizes. Po cked wi th 6 oz. bottle of Custom Ca re Conditi oner and 2 oz. con

of KHAC.

plated

'

cord.

$299
Heck's Reg.

$9.96

Pt Pleasant Store

Pt Pleasant Store

On~

G.E.

lHOUR

2-SLICE TOASTER

CASSEnE
C-60

$100

PRESSURE PAN

Reg. 32.96

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG.

On~

40x40

KODACOLOR FILM

BEADED SCREEN

~···

Heck's Reg.
111.88

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

PINESOL
12

WOOLITE

RUG CLEANER

FESCO PLASTIC

CAKE PLATE &amp;COVER
Not Clear as Shown

87~
Pt. Pleasant Store Only

HECK'S
REG.
~·;,:." .
'-1 ••·' •·
\...

SHES

$122

• ASSORTED COLORS

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S
REG .
48'

$1.97

' 1.39

.....,,

NOUSEWAI1E
DEPT.

PHOTO ALBUM

HECK'S
REG,

44(

HECK'S
REG.

$2.99

HECK'S REG. 59 '

$1.18

RENUZIT

SPRAY

SOFT
STARCH

I

MOP&amp; BROOM
COMBINATION

$122
FOR BOTH
HECK'S
REG.

$1.80

88(

SHAVER
s 66

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
'The Store With AHeart,
You; WE LIKE" .
Right reserved to limit quantities
.

'

1

Pt 'Pleasant Store On~

We Gladly.Accept Fed. Food Stamps ·

Prices EHectlve Feb. 23·29

Monday Thru .FridliY
9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

HECK'S
DETERGENT

4

qlt

$100

WASTEBASKETS
STYLES INCLUDE:
eCLUB
e SPADE

•

FESCO PLASTIC

32 GALLON

TRASH CAN

CHOICE

49'
•

HECK'S
REG.

$1.18

HECK'S REG. $5.99

Heck's Reg. 44'

Pt. Pleasant Store

NOUSEWAIIE
DEPT.

CLOSED SUNDAYS

!

eDIAMOND

HECK'S
REG.
EACH

H~ART

••

Always Has

so.A

.u

BEEf RIBS

ROUND STEAK

iiOUUWARE

""·

FACI.AL TISSUES

4:~~·$1.00
JOY

LIQUID
DOERGENT

32. OUNCE
KING SIZE

59~

!FruIt. c·o ckta i 1.~~~~~~ .....~~·~~39C
!~peanut Bu1·fPlANTER'S
.sMdbTH 18 Qz
e
er................. JAR 59 .
!M'
.
'
.
I
KRAFT
QUART , . 9CL
i· . ~yonna se........................ JAR ·
IM argar1ne
. . • .......
PARKAY SOFT
';
1-tt 39C
,...;.............. PKG.. .
.

)

1

HOOD
· ALL PURPOSE

: ----------------~
FAIRMONT NICE 'N' LITE

Bakery Special!

CHOCOLATE
'MILK

BETSY ROSS

4

5·3

•

FLOUR
10 8~ 99~
With '5.00 or
More Purchase

'

DEL MONTE

FRENCH CITY

lb. '79e

OHIO VALLEY

FRESH AND

SLICED
BACON

MEATY

lb.69e

W.K. or C.S. CORN

BEETS

G~EEN

wee lb. 1o~

·MIX OR MATCH

5$

UMA BEANS
BEANS

303
CANS

OHIO

. GOLDEN

POTATOES 'CARROTS
I

R:·.29~

'

.10 I~ · 49~
''

'

\

SPARE
RIBS.
lb. 65~ .

New ·Cabbage

Mix or Match Specials

~AN ROLLS.
' •
l

\

•

SMOKED
SAUSAGE

'

_ _ ).1

lb.

...

'

.

U. S. Government Inspected

'

H

%.Gal.
Carton

'CHOICE
USDA CHOICE

HUDSON

.

'

•'

FOR

.

USDA

FRAGRANCES

3

Phon·e Us
Your OrderI

..

e ASSORTED

PLASTIC SWEATER BOX

Federal Credit Union

at the Ravenswood
High School Cafeteria

Sunbeam
Ladies

AIR
FRESHENER

PLASTIC SHOE BOX

The

Pt Pleasant Store On~

RENUZIT

A. life·time ol m!!moril!lt ton b~ kept
wfely in thete d ~..r oble olbumt . Album
ho s 10 poge1. Anorfed Colort.

News, Notes

NOTICE

741.
742

Heck's Reg. 18.99

HOUSEWAIIE
DEPT.

News, Event

Phebe.

Hecl'o hg. $8.49

Pt. Pleasant Store On~

HOUSEWARE DEPARTMENT

'

OL

Heck's Reg. 11.05

Heck's Reg.

JEWElRY
DEPT.

Wolfpen

======~~==~~~~~~--~--------~~~

$5~!

19.88

Carpenter

992 3502

Wall Clocks

HECK'S REG.
$1.69

ftOBINSON;S.
CLEANERS

~

OR TIGER

99

$

$ 88

·(Upon ReiiuailJ ,_

:!:

18,88

SPARTUS
PUSSY CAT

STYLING DRYER

MOVIE FILM

Heck's Reg.

Pt Pleasant Store On~

HIS 'N HERS

KODAK
SUPER 8

KODAK INSTAMATtC
ex 126-20

TRI-POD

JEWElRY
DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

'5''

'1.49

$12.96

$21.96

Pt Pleasant Store

HECK'S
REG.

2~UR
CLEANING ~

'
'

__M!R_RO 4-QUART

K-320

1

On~

RECORDING TAPE

Handsome styling on this toaster will co mp liment any kitchen decor. Temperature dial al lows you to select th e darkness of your toa st.

120 voll&gt;, 60 cycle&gt; AC.

Heck's

r

4.44

1

HECK'S REG.

Pt Pleasant Store Only

JEWElRY DEPT.
CLAIROL

CANISTER VACUUM
CLEANER

Fingertip
ejector.

EC-15

TB5/7

.,

beaters.
beater

,.

.. • .. '

G. E.

c ontrol.

Oetac~able

$988
HECK'S REG.

3-Speed

Chrome

Heck's Reg. •
$11.96

SCOOP
CHAIRS

- - - HAMILTON BCH
c:;;::J
3-SPEED·

81197
SK-16

.

.

'
Their patients !ll'e poor, Many t1on offlclala, in remarks pre- ciiiUes participaUng in federal all nursing homes and related related facilities. .
difference and arbitrariness." homes. An aceompan:rblg
-Annual Usting by state a"And yet, fur reaaona !mown amendmmt -sd ~
ol them are on welfare," he pared to bedeliftred tociJy ~ medical e•'ll•ance programs,. care facilities.
- Facilities be given money gendes of all sprinkler and a- only Ill ~ from his 'allen! Insured loans 14! provide fllr
added. •')~spy are In 1111811 fore the IUbcGmmlttee, c.Ued Uiey said. " tn IICIItcely &amp;de.
minority' have emanated no the. n~ ufety egulpo
wwna or tisrat areas without · for the federal110vermnent to quate for maintaining quality Ill inllall the systems, esllmat- lann IYJ(ems.
·
adequate lire protection.
"play 8 stronser role" in fire levels of patient .care and pro- ed to C08t $fOO per bed for an , - .Initlation by health rlotll, fires or any civil dis- ment.
11880ciationsofpeerrevlewand turbances of greater con- , _ _ _ _ _ _. . . .
"The result Is a situation prevention.
vide no allowance for the in- average nun1ng home.
- Installation of manually self-policing.
sequence than an oceaslooal
begging for catastrophe,"
ONHA Pre'lldent Cecil L. stallatlon of often eXpensive
Doors Slammed
citizen outburst at city anmcil
Gllllgan said. "The lire In Mltd!ell and executive director !'Ire detective and p~enUve actuated fire alann systems.
- AD heaJth and care facility
On Tuesday, the ·mayor of meetings...," lowry said.
Lincoln Heights could be Gary G. Shepherd said a rna- equipment."
•
Another witness Tuesday,
repeated in communities jorlty ol the nursing homes In
Unlesa the 110vemment Is officials be trained in Uncoln Heights, where the dlsastrous fll'e occurred, testified Rep. William J. Keating, Rthroughout Ohio and mry the country are · subatandard prepared w set new standards. emergency JX'Oced'!!'es.
1ederal.
red !Jipe had .iied• ihe . (liLt, said "almOst everYfhlng
statecat aily tllne." · · ~ ~ -rrorn .cillre iifetY standpOint. backed 1lY irla eruorce1miiit
' .
.
'
The governor iald the Green
··
and establlih a means for
- Annual and unlfonn In- hands of officials trying roup- lnsldetheGree!iNurslng .Home
was Oammable."
Nurslilg Home blaze occurred
.Scarcely Adequate
.obtaining money oo llnplement spections for care faeUitles, grade facilities.
"Time after lil!le we have . Keating, who is from CtnclnIn the middle of a state attempt
''Ibe conditions are Inherent · those standards, they ~ld, with facilities required to
ro make the nursing home ro a government program that ''the public may expect more submit a certificate showing at l!nocked at the doors of Capiro! !lllli, said he plans ro offer legiisduatry meet Ita respon- does not place sufficient em- . fatal fires."
least annual Inspection of Hill to have. the doors slammed lslatlon Ill close a loophole
In our faces and lllld that this Is which · presently exempta In· 210 E. 2nd
slbllltles under state and PIBBII an blah standards of
Tbey recommended:
heating eqllipm«&lt;t.
Pomeroy
federal181111.
protection," they llid.
- Automatic sprinkler sys- Nationwide study of fire not the responsibility of this termedlate care facilities from
.
Phonlitn-5421
Gilligan said the state hail
Relmb~t rates to fa- tern protection be required In problems In nursing homes and committee, this is not the de- safety standards of eltended
piU'Iment that handles It, and care and skilled nursing
decertified 23 homes· for
welfare payments under
always
coming
away testified
empty- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
handed with
no help,"
Medicaid, .cut off 29 inMayor James E. lowry.
termediate facilities receivin"
shown lllid a resume was given .
lDwry said one-third of the
Social Seclll'lty paymen\s and
The Women 's Activities
8,500
. residents of Lincoln
issued warnings ro 121 ~t or
Committee reported on
RKE
Heights, a black conununity,
286 other homes w correct
projects, held a silent auction,
are on welfare.
safety dellclencies. or face
and asked me!llbers w bring
Even if an 10 persons had
slmllar action.
Ravenswood, W.Va.
used eyeglasses to next Mr. Ray Russell and Tena been rescued from the blaze,
'"'bey know we mean bus!Mr. · and Mrs . Harold meetingasaspeclalprojectfor Rae of Lexipgron, Ky., were he said, the city lacked an
ness," the governor said.
Gillogly, Vicky and )3ruce, March.
Saturday visitors of Mr. and
WIU HOLD THEIR A~NUAL MEETING
. Lumped Together
were in Columbus and visited Eldon Starkey, 65, a former Mrs . Lincoln Russell. On ambulance to transport them
Glliigim recOunted for the his sister, Mrs . Bernice resident of this area, passed Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Franklin to a hospital. The city fire
department consists of two
subcommittee bow the General McKnight and family. .
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26,
away in Lancaster this past Russell of Middleport, Mr. and trucks, one substandard and
Assembly rejected several
Mrs. Ray Ash, Gahanna, was week. Survivors include his Mrs. Clinton Gilkey and family
bills he sought wget passed w in the commm~ity and called w wife, Marjorie, Lancaster, of Albany, Mr. Guy Russell and the other "totally Inoperable at
At 5 P.M.
time.''
aid the elderly.
see her father, 'Rob Turner, three·daughters, Mrs. Eleanor Terry Lynn, and Mr. and Mrs. thisLincoln
Heights, he said, is
"Instead of looking at and who Is confined to Veterans Brookhart, Albany; Mrs. Joan Dale Russell and family of
"a
commm~lty
which is lacking
meeting the
problems Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy, Nelson, Carpenter, and Mrs. Columbus all helped celebrate
because
of
poverty,
together ana identify them as where he is doing satlsfacwrily Garnet Moore, Canton; and a their mother's birthday.
discrimination,
bigotry
and
welfare",-Gilligan said.
following surgery.
son, John Starkey, Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Knapp bureacratic inaction, In·
He said the state and federal
Guests of Mrs. Murl and a step-daughter, Mrs . and family of Columbus were
governments must provide the Galaway were Mr. and Mrs. Roberta Starr, Lancaster, 13 Tuesdayvisitorsofhisbrother,
Income supplementation John Woodrum and children, grandchildren and one great- Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp and
necessary to enable older Albany, and Mrs. Thad Dye, grandchild. A brother, H. E. family and while here attended
people to remain self- local.
Starkey, local, and a sister, the funeral of Mr. Cecil Bo)in.
sustaining, and also provide
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rice and 'Mrs. Jessie Jewell, Columbus.
Mrs. Lena Kllllpp was a
services outside institutions, son, Rick and friend, Colum- Services were in Lancaster Sunday overnight guest of Mr.
within easy access of the bus, spent Sunday with Mrs. with the Rev. Cecil Fox of- and Mrs. Doyle Knapp and
people they are expected to Ri~'s parents, Mr. and Mrs. flciatlng. Those from this area family .
serve.
William Culwell and other who attended were Mr. and
Mrs. Ethel Hatfield of
For
10 lb. Chudt Roast
&lt;llio Nursing Home Associa- relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Raymond 'Nelson and Middleport visited with her
The
(9) 10 lb. Ground Beef
Dwaine Jordan, Bryan and Sara, Mrs. Susie Booth, Mrs. T. daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Freezer
Keith, were also Sunday dinner L, Brookhart and Barbara, and Richard Jeffers and family.
5 lb. Round Steak
guests at the Culwell home.
Mr. ·and Mrs. Earl Starkey. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl' Starkey, Mrs . Roy Wiseman, Mrs . Hemlock Grove were Sunday
lb. Stew Meat
Columbia Grange, were In Beulah Jones, and Mrs. Donald visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Columbus on Saturday where Jones accompanied Mr. and Sargent.
10) 5 lb. Chudt Roast
they attended the State Grange Mrs. Starkey.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith
CALL POINTVIEW : 992·2505
5 lb. Ground Beef
Legislative Conference which
of Kanauga were Friday
was held at Imperial House
evening visitors of Mr. and
4 lb. Round Steal!
"Merlin," the children's
" Vibrations, " !he new West.
Mrs. Charley Smith.
3 lb. Sliced Slab Bacon
series on Ch. 11 at 6:30p.m.,
musical series las I week on
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. WhitMr. and Mrs. Lee Roush and.
Is likeable and lnformallve.
Ch. 11, you can see It lonlght tington and granddaughter , HYLTON LEADS
family of Logan were Sunday
Tonl?~tu~ t:l~~~~~~~~lfry
:~~iik;~·lt~.y~'c~~ ~~ Kristin, visited his brother and DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. alter~oon visitors of Mrs.
S lb. Sliced Pork Shoulder'
plan lo have my daughter
lhe second show of the slster~n-law; Mr. and Mrs: (UPI)~ames Hylron of In- Helen Johnson.
S lb. Sliced Fresh Side
~~~~:ti~~ watch lt. She's
season, featuring VIctor Leonard W~ittlngton ·and man, S.C., has grabbed the Mrs. Eugene Haning and
S lb. Bulk Sausage
~~:~~h~fdebu~n~ .:~g1~,~~~~v~~~~ ~ru~:l, family at Baltimore, Ohio; and lead In the Nascar Winston Cup Ronald visited recenUy with
S lb. Sljced Slab Bacon
r~~~~~~::~~~~~~~r· .al -lh•i same hOIW· Dn'Ch. 11 ..his,brotherAn..Jaw- and slater,~. GrJI!ld.,N.at!Pn!!l po.lnis..sb!!l&lt;!· Mrs.· Jaelt"·Eiam ·and family.
5 lb. Pork •Chops-+++
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Marshall and ings.
2 lb. Wieners
go In
MOVIES: Channel 6 ollerSI family, Lancaster. '
Hylton, who drove a Ford w
rt
"Yuma" at 8 p.m. and
(11)
same pro~r:~.
" Foreign Exchange" with
Columbia Grange No. 2435 a fifth-place fmisb in Sunday's
Choice
+++
Sebasllan Cabol at 9:30
held their February meeting on Daytona 500,, jumped ~om
".The Judge/' as noted
"Underwaler
wiiithl Friday evening. The lecturer, sevenUi place m the standings or~:~~~".\~· n~t0i:::)~n~~"j~
.
•
before,
Is
bacl&lt;
on
Ch.
10,
and
ban
D&amp;il&lt;•y.
Bertha·
Crt
'
ppen
used
famous
w
the
lead
with
a
rota!
of
595
but
•
the Old Testament, but is
weight
· Approx. 20-30· ·
tonl.ght's episode at 7·30 p m
looks worthwhile. · · ·
' Is .Protoabl)• "Teiohoi~S!'I men born In February, as the points, replacing Richard mentioned 28 times in the
•
+++
theme for her program. Films Petty, who fell w sixth place New Testament, according
· Cut &amp; Wrapped for Freezer lb.
.If you missed th~ debut of
taken at Mom~t Vernon were after dropping out of the 500. 1o Encyclopaedia Britannic~ . . .-~~~~~-------------------~,;,;,.-~

WASHINGTON (UPI) Gov. Jolm J. GlUipn told a
Houle Gcrl• DDidlt ~
subcommittee today ' the
riuniDc bGme PblltiCII in 'auo
Is ''begbsg for catalitropbe"
, andthati repeat of the Llnooln
Hellhbl lire of Jan, II could
hapPen IDYibne, anywhere.
The, governor ipoke in re.
markS prep11 ed for the second
,-daY· of hearlnp inl9 the·GreenNur*sg Home blaze which
9lallned 10 lives. lie
acknoWI~ that it was .a
tragedy, but said It was also
evidence o! a far greater
tragedy.
'"lbat of a society which
catea 10 little for Its ·elderly
· cltlzeill that It llbunll! them off
and pull them in storage," he
i said. "A IIOciety that chooses oo
, commit Ita elderly oo slow
. death in inltltutiona · rather
: than help them live out their
:lives In Independence and
:·dignity."
r Gllllgan said there are 450
:nursh]g homes In Ohio .similar
; Ill the one that burned in Jan' uary', Most ol them are old
[houses, he said, converted over
ta period of 25 years lnw nursf!ng born~.
.
t He satd these pre-1958
lhomes, all with 30 patients or
''less, were grandfathered~n
[lDlder the state bullding code.
f"They have been allowed since
\then to continue operaUng
1without having Ill meet stanrdarda applled to other nursing
fhomea," he said.
''Beglag lor Catallroplle"
l Gilligan noted that the
:Justlflcatlon for this was the
:tack of other facilities and the
;expense of either renovating
;the homes or lnstalll!lg devices
;Ill pro!ect agalnat lire.
! "These homes are poor.

bch.

15~

�rn r
•

s;;~;;c;;,;ifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get B~sultst
WANT ADS
INFORMATION

Card of Thanks

251115

D~ADLINES
WE WISH to express our ' sins P.M.
Day
Belore cere thanks to relatives.
Publication
neighbors and friends for
Monday Deadlln• 9 a.m.
their kindness and sympathy
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
extended to us in the great
Will be accepted unlll9 a.m . for, loss of our dear husband,
Day of Publication,
'
daddy, pap -paw, son and
REGULATIONS
brother, Clayton Roush .
The Publisher reserves the . Special thanks to those
1967 CHEV. EL CAMINO ·
$1"5
right to edit or re ject any ads
sending many floral ofv.a
eng
ine,
au1o.
tranS
.,
p.
steering,
radio,
good
w-w
tires,
deemed objectional. The
ferings, food and cards; Dr .
red finish. A nice one. Cove:r for body.
publisher will not be
McGowan, The New Haven
responsi ble for more than one .
Emergency Squad, the staff
Incorrect ihsertlon.
of
Ve terans
Memorial
RATES
19~7 C:HEVROLET IMP/I !--A
_.
$1295_,
HosRit«! Including the Ladles .
For Want Ad Service
2 Dr . Hl'. Cpe. tocaf owner, sharp interior, fact . air, good
Auxiliary ; ~oglesong Funeral
5 cents per Word qne, Insertion
Home and all thote who
w-w tir~ . radio &amp; heater, gold 'finish. ·
Minimum Charge 1Sc
·, h•lped in any way.
1"2 ce'nts per word three
Wile,
Genevieve,
consecutive insertions.
$395
daughters, Ruth, Ruby &amp;
1964 FORD GALAX IE 500
18 cents per word six cOn·
June, grandchildren, greatH.T. Coupe, V-8 motor. auto. trans ., p. steering and
Secuti11e Insertions.
grandchildren, dad, brothers
brakes.
15 Per Cent Discount on paid. and sisters.
·
ads and ads paid within 10
2-23-ltc
days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for SO word minimum. · Notice
· OPI!M I!YI!S. 1:00 P.M.
Each additional word 1c.
,~IROY, OHIO
BLIND ADS
DO
bookkeeping,
lax
Add itional 25c Charge per WILL
service~ in the privacy of my
Advertisement.
home. Evelyn C. Young,
OFFICE HOURS
Notice
phone 949-3141. Racine.
Wanted To Buy
8:30a.m. to S: 00 p.m . Dally,
2-21 -121c
8:30 a.m . to 12 :00 Noon
SHOOTING Match, Saturday, OLD FURNITURE, Round Dak
Saturday.
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
Feb. 26, at the Racine Planing
clocks, and-or complete
Mill
at
6
p.m.
Factory
choke
YARD AND rummage sate, all
households. Wi'lle M. D.
guns
only.
Assorted
meat.
Now's Time To
week, starts Tuesday. 9 a.m.
Miller,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Sponsored
by
the
Syracuse
to 6 p.m. Used furniture,
Call
99'1·6271.
·.
Fire Dept.
antiques, assortment of Avon
ORDER
---lJ-11-Ik
2-23-31c
_______:
bottles, 50011. of 2x4. 2x6, 2x8,
two guitars, dishes, etc. 341
"FIELD SEEDS
GUN SHOOT, also rifle matches
Park St., Middleport.
Notice
- open sites only, Forked
2-21 -Sic
Run Sporlsman Club, Sunday,
FERTILIZER
Feb. 21, 12 noon .
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT
2-23-3tc
overweighf! ladies, teens and
SEED CORN
u'PHOLSTERlNG SERVIC~.
men lnteresfed In a Weight
complete selection ol fabrics GUN SHOOT, Sunday, Feb. 27, 1 Watchers
Order Now &amp; Sa vel
(Rl Class in
and vinyltochoose tram. Pick p.m. Factory choked guns
Pomeroy
write:
Weight
up and delivery . Slater
only.
Second
place
shooters
Watchers
(
R),
1863
Sed ion
Upholsfering, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
get
tree
shot
in
next
mafch.
Rd.,
Cincinnati.
Ohio
4S231.
phone 992-3611.
Assorted meats. Racine Gun
10-3-tfc
1-3-30fp
Club.
SAVE up toone hall. Bring your
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
151 Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy.

Of
QUALITY

Pomeroy Motor Co.

~::!c:eight

with New Shape
$U9 at Nelson Drugs.
·
. Tablets, 10 days supply
2-21-ltp
only ·

For Rent
NEW, 12x60, lwo bedroom
mobile home across from

Bradbury School. Call 9925308 or see Charles Lewis, 2nd .
house south from Bradbury
School. Pels weltQme. .
2-21-lfc .

------'---------,-----

Help Wanted
RE~PONSIBLE person to work
and manage route. Pick -up

L---------------------! Carriers For
MASON
and
HARTFORD
The Dai~ Sentinel

____

------

New Haven Social Events ·

Pl'A MEETING
The New Haven Elementary
Parent Teachers Association
met on Feb. 17 at the school.
The president, John Wolfe,
called the meeting to order.
Devotions were led by Robert
A . Goldsberry_ He read from
the book of I John followed with
a prayer.
Regular reports were given
and approved . Mr. Wolfe
discussed ways the monies in
excess of the budget could be
spent, Crushed stone for the
playground and some . desks
were among suggestions. The
assistant supt. of schools,
Charles Chambers, told the
group that these items should
be furnished by the board of
education. Nli decision was
made on the spending of these

monies.

..,

It was announced that the
officers of the PTA for the 197273 school year would be elected
at the April meeting and In·
stalled at the May meeting.
The program for the evening
was the randldates running for
election to the Mason County
Board of Education. AU candidates attended except
Theodore Stevens. They
started alphabetically and
each spoke on the topic of his
own choosing. A question and
answer period · followed .
Candidates attending were
Robert G. Adkins, Bill Brady,
Charles Eshenaur, Rob~t A.
Goldsberry, Bill Howard,
Richard L. Lewis, Robert Lee
Neal. Also attending the
meeting ws.s Asst. Supt. of
Schools, Charles Chambers.
The room count was won by
Mrs. Gibbs' room. Refresh·
ments were served by the
homeroom mothers of Mrs.
carolyn Hesson's room.
Cherokee Homemakers
The Cherokee Homemakers
Club met at the home of Mrs.
Willa Scites on Feb. 16 for their
regular monthly meeting. An
all day workshop was held to
learn how to crochet beads.
The meeting was called io
order ·by the president, Mrs.
Ann Bird . Devotions were led
by Mrs. Ollie Browning, which
consisted of a poem "Molding
in Clay" and scripture lesson,
Isaiah 4~:9-12 .
The secretary report was
given and approved . The
treasurer report showed a
balance of $38.31. Those
present discussed selling .
vanilla as a money-making
project.
Mrs. Ollie
Browning
presented the lesson for the
day " A Unit on Letter ·
Writing." Mrs. Grace Sayre
gave a report on International
Relations. She also read a
letter from a friend, Doris Ann
Musser, wife of Rev. Harvey
Musser, now living in Ceres
Golas, Brazil.
Mrs. Scites served lunch to.
those present : Mrs . Jean
Grinstead, Mrs. Ann Bird, Mrs.
June Litchfield, Mrs. Attarah
Mrs .
Ollie
Dewhurst ,
Browning, Mrs. Grace Sayre,
Mrs. Thelma Luckeydoo, Mrs.
Sally Smith! Mrs. Nellle Casto,
guests, Kim casta, and Stacey
Con.
Birthday Party
Mrs. Jean Petry of Haven
Heights was feted with a
surprise birthday part;: . on •
. Saturday evening, Jan. ~· at

the home of Mrs. Maryanna
Blackhurst Gorrell of Howard
Street, New. Haven Heights.
The party began at 7:4~ with
arrival of the guest of honor
and a buffet supper was served
shortly thereafter.
Mrs. Petry was presented
wl th gifts from her family and
friends and a dozen long
stemmed American Beauty
red roses from her husband,
Bob. A huge beautliully
decorated birthday cake was
presented to Mrs. Petry by
Mrs. Jean Yoho, who made the
cake.
Th~ in attendance In ad·
dition to the guest of honor
were Miss Pani Petry, Miss
Robin Petry, Mr. Chuck Petry,
Mrs. Undli Clark, Miss VIcky
and Miss Tammy Yoho, Mr.
Robert Petry, Mr. Jim
Meadows,
Miss Terrie
Blackhurst, Mrs. Yoho and
Mrs. Gorrell, IXH1ostesses.
Heart FUnd
The youth from the four
churches in New Haven
collected for the Heart Fund on
Heart Sunday, Feb. 20,
beginning at 1:30 p.m. Churches taking part were St. Paul
Uitheran, New Haven Church
o!-· ·God, Bachtel United
Methodist, New Haven United
Methodist. The youth gathered
at the New Haven United
Methodist before going out and
returned to the church where
they were served cookies and
hot chocolate by members of
the Nehacllma Garden Club,
sponsors of the collecUon.
The youth collected $245.38.
Those helping were Brent
Layne, Dwaln Russell, Timmy
Thompson,
Mary
Jan
Bumgarner, Christine Hoff.
man, Linda Roush, David
Rose, Eric Bumgardner, Brent
Hart, Sheryl Roush, Beth Ann
Layne, Amanda Miller, Joe
Thompson, Jeff Roush, Linda
Bumgardner, Jayne Hart,
Edward Scyoe, David Knight,
Dale Ward, Jennie James, Lisa
Davis, Harold Rose, Tom
Thompson, AI Sprouse, Scot
Roush, Randy Thorne, Brent
Holbrook, Marty Holbrook,
carol Randolph, carol Rottgen, Jeanenne Wallis, Judy
Needs, Mary Lou Brabham,
Yvonne Grinstead, Anna
Parsons, Troy Smith, Drivers,
Mr . and Mrs: Kenneth
Holbrook, Mrs. Catherine
Goodwin, Miss Mary Jewell,
club members, Mrs. David
Fields, Jr., Mrs. James N.
Roush, Mrs. Don Bumgardner,
Mrs. Phil Batey and Mrs. C. M.
Adams, Jr.

DANCE

Friday &amp; Saturday Night

Whispering Pines
Nite Cub

10 til 2
Music By
The Rut McCoys ·
4pc. Band &amp;Female Singer
from Beverly, Ohio

Ph. 614-992·2156
MAN OR . WOMAN - lor
general office work. Typing,
reports, limited bookkeeping.
Must furnish references .

WRITE your reply to Box Q,
c-o Daily Sentinel. Pomeroy,
Ohio.

2-23-31c

-----

BABYSITTER - 4 p.m. to 1:30
a.m. Apply at 90S Brownell
Ave., Apt. 9, Middleport
before 3:30 p.m.
2-23-3tp

11 -21 -tfc

Employment Wanted

WANT WORK at home . all- EXPERIENCED painter.
dressing and stuffing en - Interior and exterior. Call
velopes1 Rush self-sta"'ped
envelope fa F. Uribe, Box 36, Don VanMeter 985-39Sl.
2-16-12tp
Albany, Ohio, •1.1110.
'
1-6-ffc· HAVE welder, will travel. Local
welder wants welding lobs.
KOSCOT KOSMETICS. They're Phone 992-5211.
Great : over 10 specials this _________
2-_20-6tc
month . Please call 992-S113
for any lnJormation, Brown's.

,

2-8-tfc

Fairview
Notes
News, Events ByNews
MRS. HERBERT ROUSH
Apple Grove

For Rent
FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school...
Phone 992-S434.
10-18-tfc
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Racine area . Phone 992.6329.

STAND THAR !!

MAKE A WISH AN'

Bu'siness Services

PUll TH' DADflURI\I
WISHOONE!!

:================.===;r.~~~~~~~iit~·l'
FOUR NEW HoMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEpORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. F:INANCII.IGAVAILABLE
...
A 3 bedroom ·$16.900.00 home can be purchased with a
monfhly paym.ent as low as ~s.oo for a family With a base
salary of $S,OOO.OO and three children. 1'1• Pct. 'nnual
percentage rate.
. '

and
delivery.
A. B.C.
Cleaners, Mason, W. Va .
2-8-lfc

WANTED!

~:127/oc~JJeEST

CALL
BILL NELSON,992-36l7
HILTON WOLFE, 949-3211
TOM CROW, 992-2510
DALE DUTTON, m -2534

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
-Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMI11f NELSON
MOlORS. INC.
.Ph. 992-2174

992-2094_
606 E. Main Pomeroy

'AU WEATHER ROOFING

''

&amp; CONSTRUCTION &amp;

PWMBING CO. · .. '
240 Lincoln St.
Middleport, Oh!o
Dbo Anfhony Plumblllf
We have ·a complete Home
Maintenance Service the year
around. No matter what your
need. Complete roof or
spouting repair. Inferior or
exterior carpentry. Ceiling
tile and Paneling and Siding.
Complete
Plumbing_ &amp;
Heating.
:•
Day.Number 192-2550
•
We have 24 hr. emergency :,:·
service.

and

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
'Floor Display.

•
· - 1~£ Pe~CfN1AGE OF

WAAT DO VOU
TJ.jl1&gt;41&lt; ·OF A QUOTA

BLACKS ON ~E. COLLEGES'

-

FOil. ENROLLiNG

AT~LETiC

TEAM$

GUY WE FOUIIID CHAINEf:!
STA8E!oet&gt;, 8EA1EN AND
ENCA6ED 1111 CEMENT?

~.

2· ·~;
~

i'The

•
..•
'
-.'''

'

Orchid Room
Make reservl!dl~ns for ~our

NOW 1-iE'LL&amp;.ALLRIGHT. HE.
NEEDS ALL TI--IOSt:, Pl"&lt;to.JTS 10

private parties, .. banquets. '

992-3975

•

i

1,.,

~~ (•

•

.' .

0

•*

!

Ci .,.,

I'-'

0

1

.,. - ...

·, ...

i

· -· :'
992-5786 . ~

G} • " '

•Mlfr

.-!'~-"

•

READY-MIX CONCRETE delivered rlghf to your project.
For Sale
Fast and easy. Free
'
estimates . Phone 992-3284.
POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy,
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
Park view Kennels, Phone 992Middleport, Ohio.
S443.
6-30-tlc,
~ ..'f...
8-l S-IIc
. I
5
o;-1
O'DELL WHEE-L allghment
FARMALL H Drag Disc, plows
located
af
Crossroads,
Rt.
124.
-GUARANTEED·_
:
- SSSO; tent camper - $2SO;
Complete front end service,
Phone 992-2094
,:
phone 647-3336.
t
up and brake service.
2-20-1 p tune
Wheels balanced electrooically .
All
work Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto :~~
SHOWALTER'S Wei Pet Shop,
guaranteed . Reasonable
Open 8Til S
,&lt;
Chester, Ohio. Phone 985-3356.
rates. Phone 992-3213.
Mondaythru Saturday
... ,.~
Tropical fish IS cents and up
1·21-lfc
606 E. Mlin, Pomeroy,O.
;'I'!
through February .
, '.
2-22-7tc C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer L....:..:..:._:;,__:::~_.:.____.
--·
·.•''•i
Complete Service
· ALLSIDE Builders &amp; Con - -.:.'
12 IN. 2 bollom Ford plows like
Phone 949-3821
struction Co. We specialize In · &gt;~
new . Riding horses, mostly
Racine, Ohio
aluminum. vinyl and steel.;c;
Tennessee walkers. Some
Crill Bradford
siding; fiberglas, brick and --·
registered. Phone Racine 949S-l-Ife stone; complete line of ~··
3193.
residenlial and commercial . - .~
2-23-3tp AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
roofing;
remodeling , : .
cancelled?
Lost
your
build.ing, suspended ceilings,- ~- ·
1970 MAGIC Chef Coppertone
intenor and exterior pain- , ,~
operator 5 license? CaiJ.992·
gas stove, like new. Phone
ling ; complete line of
2964.
241-2082 afler 7 p.m.
Masonry work _ All work
6-IS-Ifc
2-23-6tc
guaranteed to customer · . ~
--------DRY WALL flnfsher contractor.
satisfaction. We are fully : •
R. I. Dubbeid, phone 742-S82S.
insured for your protection. 32 '
TROPICAL FISH, fancy
2-21-5fc
N. Second, ph. 992-3918.
.,
guppi'i!'s, angels and breeders,
2-IS-30tc·
Bellas and supplies. Phone
INTER lOR &amp; exterior painting.
9112-5443 . .
R. I. Dubbeld, phone 742-~s , SEWif:IG ,_MA,HINt;S. Repair ·&gt;1
12-30-lfc
2-21-5tc serv!te&gt; a11 makes. . 992-22.84".- -'
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.•
buy new furniture? Have
Authorized Singer Sales and'
Mobile ttomes For Sa!~ Why
that
old
made
new
by
Sylvia's
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors. ;60Xl2~ ·2-bedroom, a11-elet.i, ,.;;,
Upholstering
Shop,
Mrs.
3-29-tfc
air conditioned, 8x20 lt. Porch Woodrow T. Zwilling, Prop.,
_S_E_P_T-IC-ta-n-ks--,cl,-ea_n_ed-:-.~MIIIer'-:
and aluminum awning, Syracuse, Ohio.
aluminum skirting, com Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph. '
"2-10-JOtp
pletely setup. Beautiful
662-303S.
If
location. Owner leaving sfafe. BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
2-12- c
Phone 949-4892 or 991-5212. · Septic tanks installed. George
1-10-tfc (Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
--~~==='-----.,
-4..25-lfc

!
EXPERT
.''•
Wheel
. . Alignment .....

.

PLEASE CHARISE
THIS DELECTABLE
REPAST TO M'l
ACCOUNT!

5.55

l CAN UNDERSTAND HOW YOU

'

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l

YE$,l'MAFR41D~EY

MIGHT

~EGIN

10

G0051P. PERHAPS WE
5H6uLD KeEP OUR

\O.J'D WANT TO
eE SEEN IN!

RElATION&amp;~IP

ON

A BUSINESS
LEVEL!

-----1

GASOLINE AILEY

been t' hi5
office! Ain't
~0

~~[;0

TAl-IDE LEO
S:::~~N&lt;TZ!

}i;s THt TERRIFIED PUSHY SQUIRMS TO
£SCilPE THE RllD!A.ltT GLOW fROM TH&amp;

HOT EXACTLY, P05HY 1
YOO'RE ABOOT TO

-·-

. i.J,';; .• '

MACHIN£, !!IS CONTORTED WlTVR£S
TURK 1\ .BRILL!IIlti GREEN!

BE PIIOCI:SSI!D BY

THE INVISIBLE
TATIOO MACHINE!

tAt""~.. ~-

DICit TRACY
OUR II.PPRAISI!R WIU.III!
WMORAOW. ~AVE VOUFI
DEED II.ND TITL! READY.

I ..

MIGHT WORK-,;.r.:;.~-1

Virgil B.

Teaford, Sr.

Sale.

15. Diet
spre1d
16. Lady's
hair
adorn·
ment
11. The IUIIlJ Y..tenlaJ'• A•••
18. Post·
Christmas 32.-Watchful
U. David's
•events
chief
ZL Purple
IH!aweed
ollieer
35. Sine
U. SlciUan
quacity
36. Scottish
U. TaiteZ5. Drool
river
zs. French· 37. Norse
Belgian
aky god
river
38. 31. Clty In
. Buddhism
Florida
39. Poem

-"A~E

THAT

VE~Y

I

JlJID Wltl! WHAT
YOU~ liTTLE
SCHEME~

ASQJT

R'IUICUlOU5!

• '

COIM\15SAR! WHAT THE
Df~L IS WNG ott~

t1 y tH NAI ARNOI-0 ,,.,d BOB LUi

Unacnmble these rour Jumbles,
one letter to each ~quare, to
rorm four ordinary words.

I
I I rJ

C'..\11
1\f.~T..\L

Af;t;NC\'

I TUSEG

ISIEMUS]
I [

II

1
THE'/ COt-JT!':AC.T TO
oiYE: YOU A
COMFOP:TABLE !&lt;:IDE.

III

x

Now arran1e the circled letters

"l
io form the aurpriiH! answer, ""
!::::!:=~"-~~~~~A~:::__:•~u1nested b7 the above cartoon.

V

=-

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=..:. .:..:::UISWII=·~I

A&lt;rw
SS.-Par-

PERHAPS BECAU5E H~
~ PtJlJI6 WH ICHWILL

~&amp;lOOID~® lkJ *'-""' ..-J ,_..

NUHRGY±

z,,

1

1

4. " Frlseo"
5. Aetor
Luther
6. Greek
letter
t. Cut
,. Large
Umbers
vase
10. Give a
8. Man's
darn
nickname
IL Incrld
10_Abandon
Ber-•n
...one's
movie
ideals
18. Frots
(slang)
movement 1., Entl;..1'- See 11
•
"
Across
ment
11. High
1'- "The
priest
Untouch·
lt. Univ. in
ables"
Loirlslana
stalwart
U. Theater
accommo.
dations
Z8. Eagle's
claw
In a pain·
ful way
lt. Seaealle
so. See 11

ACllOSS
L Farewell,
In Oahu
6. EopUan
king, for
abort

LEGAL NOTICE
.

l

rr:r

rxxxun
(An1n'1'er1 tom ot rowj

mlliana
U.Seell
Aeross
fO. Ocean
sound
.u. Wuo
buttillikJ
U.Some
0. Expiate

. ,,........, EVENT CHOIR LETHAL HECTIC
Ye11enl•r'•
.
.
.
An1wen Thu 1how1 1}rorn_,e- A CONTRACT

DOWN

1. Ninny
I. Drinlt, as
acat
I. Have debts

Aluminum
Sheets

WHI{ DOES A
I'ER50N OWN
A 006?

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here'e how to work. it:
~
Ia

AXYDLBAAXR
LDNGFILLOW
One letter oimplJ stands for another. In thls sample A Is
uSed for the three L's, X for the two O's, ete. Single letters,
- apoatrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code )etten are dUferent.
·
·

20

l:aYPTOQUO'I'ES

-The
WMP0/1390 - Daily Sentinel

G

FCDI

JUOSDSil

LRUMS
LCER

JRSSHM

KGfYE ,

RGM

GDS
GY

~

GBOGYEGFS
LRU

ON YOUR DIAL

LCER

GCY'E .- UFBSY

AS

UOSD

UYS

YllMR

Yeaterday'a Cryptoquote: CALL IT WHAT YOU WILL, IN·
CENT!VES ARE WHAT GET PEOPLE T(l WORK HARDER.
-N}KJTA IS' KHRUSHCHEV
(el!\72 KinCl FtatuJ"I'

i

I' ll_ ,

• 0 -

HE LOST MARY~

Ideal for meeting place wlfh or without kitchen
privileges.
Individual Caferlng
Will seat up fo ISO people.
Phone

0

GIVE HIM SECLIR.IT'I SINCE

_____

Station

RULED Hl6 DEATH
A 6UICIOE I

REMEMBER 11-lE

1 •

aifton
Personals

n;E JUD&lt;OE JUGT .

~1&lt;1, /11.+10 ~

2-16-lfc
- -- - - - - - 1 BEDROOM trail~r apartments, Ideal lor couples .
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
Mrs: Mary Donohue and son
ByMRS.HEaBERTROUSH
992-S248
or 992-3436.
·
Mr. Brice Hart of Racine David have the flu.
2-22-6tc
spent ...~~r!.aY._I!_Ight with . Miss Evelyn Lawson, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Hittlrlgbottom 4 ROOM house with bath, 2 car
Keith nayman.
garage, nice yard , good
Mr. and Mrs_ George and three children of Man·
·
location. For appointment
Donohew and family of sfield, 0. spent the week end
call 992-2502.
Columbus spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Charles
2-22-6tc
with hla parents Mr. end Mrs. Lawson and family _
.Mr. and Mrs. Howard 1968 TEMPEST, 2 door
Roy Donohew and Greg.
- 65~7 .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Casper Robinson of Flatwoods, W.Va. automatic. Phone 992
2-18-tfc
and gr~ndchlldren BWy and were dinner guests of Mrs.
Brian Dye of Columbus spent Bertha Robinson Sunday, Mr. 1961 OPEL Wagon, 1964 Ford, 4
door automatlc. Phone 992the week end with Mrs. Dolly and Mrs. Pete Shields, Mrs.
Wolfe, and Mr. end Mrs. Dallas Doris Sayre called on Mrs. 6541.
2-18-tfc
SIGNS,' posfers, mall boxes and
HliJ and fanilly and visited Mr. Robinson Sunday afternoon.
favorite saying; hand letPaul Sayre and Danny Sayre TEMPO mobile home, SOxlO,
and Mrs. Carl Jr. Wolfe and
tered; In your favorite style.
excellent condition. Phone
David Hooker, Rf. 2, Albany,
of Columbus were over week
children at Gallipolis Rte.
241-2161.
Ohio
45110 ( PagetoYlnl.
Mrs. Erwin Gloecker Is end guests of Mr. and Mrs.
2-20-6tc
2-6-30tc
-----vlaltlng her daughter Mr. and Herbert Sayre.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles GOOD mixed hay . 'Phone
Mrs. Larry Badgely and
Wilkesville 649-4171.
children at Fairfax, Va. and Lawson called on Mr. and Mrs.
___:
1-10-6tc
asslstlng In their care while Diamond Lawson Friday at
they are nu victims.
Mt. Moriah.
The Golden Rule Sunday
Sunday guests of Mrs. Kale
School class of the Letart Falla Rowe and Ada were Mrs.
Methodlst met at the home of Anna Wines, Jackie and Karen,
Mrs. Grace Huffman at Ra.clne Neal Baker, Mrs. Linda
Thursday eveolng. Attending Cleland 'Vince and Ryan of
were·Mrs. Lots BeU, Mrs. Nora Racine.
fross, Mrs. Erma Hlll, Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs . Richard
Margie Roush, MrS. Inez Hlll, Sargent of Columbus spent the
Mrs. Shirley Dugan and Mrs. week end with the formers
Rita Hlll.
parents Mr. and Mrs. Jack
NICE -2:story nome w11n tull :
Marvin Hlll of Columbus Sargent at Racine.
basement~ 2 lots, new forced
NOTICE OF
air
furnace. Near Pomeroy.
visited his uncle St. Clair Hlll
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush
APPOINTMENT
'•;
El,menfary School . Phone ,
Case No. 20124;Saturday.
and family were dinner guests
992-7384 to see.
Estate of Paul Zirkle Deceased ~ . '
Mr. end Mrs. Harold Grinun of Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis at
11-1-ttc
Notice Is hereby gl vtn that·}
2-23-61c
Norm~ Zirkle of Pomeroy, , •;
of Columbus visited Mrs. Lois Clifton Sunday.
Ohio, rias been duly 11ppolnted .., .
BeU and St. Clair Hlll Wed·
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Wilford
aS Adm inistratrht Of the Estata .. ~
of Paul Zirkle, d~ceased, tate ot ~L'­
nesday enroute home after a and daughter Alica of Racine,
Real Estate For Sale
Melgs County, Ohio.
: _. .~
vacation In Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Creditors are required to file ·:
SIX ROOM house, 133 Butlernut
their claims with said flduclaql,\ ·
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mc· Clifton, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2131 ·
within four months .
:
Wadsworth
Drive,
Columbus,
Dade of Troy, 0. spent the Russell of Middleport were
Broker
Dated
this
11th
day
ot.·!
Ohio, phone 231-4334.
110 Mechanic Sf.
February 1972.
~\:'
week end with Mrs. Gladys recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
11-21 -tfc
Pomeroy,
0.,
45769
John
c
.
Bacot....,.
.~
2-23-6tc
Shields and other relatives, RusseU Roush and family.
Judge- •
~-=~--:--:-:----,­
(2)
16,
23
(3)
1,
3t
.
NEED ACREAGE
and visited Mrs. McDade's
Mr _ and Mrs. Steve Hagey, ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe 30 ACRE farm, 3 bedroom WE
home, electric .heal, vinyl ANYWHERE IN MEIGS
mother Mrs. Edna Roush, a Mr . and Mrs. Ronald R1J¥0ll
model. Complete with all 1 siding,
TP&amp;C water' district, 3 COUNTY.
cleaning attachments and miles south
patient at Veterans Memorial spent the week end with
RUTLAND
of Tuppers Plains
uses paper bags. Slightly used on County Road
LEGAL NOTICE
Hospital, and aunt Mrs. Early relatives in !Uinois.
28
118,000;
3
BEDROOM5-Bath.
nice
IN THE MATTER OF SET, but cleans and looks like new. phone 641-3336.
· kitchen. Large lot near
Roush who Is' also a patient at
TLEMENT OF . ACcOUNTS ' ,
Will sell lor $37 .2S cash or _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2-_
20-1tp
schools. Only $6,000.00.
PROBATE COURT , MEIGt~•
terms available. Phone 992Veterans Memorial Hospital.
COUNTY, OHIO
'"&lt;'
LAND
CONTRACT
.5641.
Mrs. Facie Hayman and son
Accounts
and
vouchers
of
thi1.
!1
2-23-61c LEVEL lot, 180' frontage , $1500.00 OOWN-SS3.42 a following named flduc tarr~..,.~
Keith attended the · Band
month
.
6
rooms,
good
well.
located on Main Street ,
have been flied In the Prob&amp;ll!('.j
called home due to the
Mason; excellent opporfunity spring, and oufbulldings. 3 court, Meigs County, Ohio, tor ·- ,
Concert at Southern Local High
hospltallzation of their mother
for business. White Realty, acres.
approval and settlement :
1
Scbool Sunday afternoon, and
CASE NO . 16,068 The Third i
call Vera Eblen, Associate
Mrs. EUzabeth Sharpnack. She
POMEROY
'
baby silted for Mr. and Mrs.
Account of Lester J . Taytor;- -:t
Realtor 991-3020.
2 BEDROOMS-Bath,
is a patient at Veterans
Guardian of the Person anp
2-20-6tc natural oak floors. One floor
Robert Hart while they at- Memorial Hospital.'
Estate of Pear lie c . Stansbur'fl,r ;
plan. Basement, front porch.
tended the Roush·Hart wedan Incompetent Person ,
36" X23" X .009
Mrs . Roger Manuel and
TOTAL electric, 3 bedroom All utilities. Only $6500.00.
CASE NO . 18,152 Fltt6 '-:
ding at Racine Baptist Church. daughter, Angela Michelle of
ranch style home with garage
Current Account of Rodne~ 1
TUPP.E
RS
PLAINS
Mrs. Eileen Roush and Mrs. Dorcas were dinner guests of
and patio; wall to wall carpel 2 BEDROOMS-Modern
Downing, as Trustee under th f\1~
Trust created by the Will o.11.:n
over hardwood floors; buill-in kitchen and bath. Plains
· Ferne B. Hayman were Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush
John 8. Downing, Deceastd. :r-·..-.
kitchen; air conditioned ; on
Gallipolis vlsliors Friday, Mrs. Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Jim
. 4 acres tor future
CASE NO. 20, ISS 'First ancj,."!
corner lot ISO' x 160'; located water
Final
Account ot Jeule Bar. t
building.
Only
$10,500.00.
Hayman COOIU!ted her doctor Connolly, Shelly and Brian of
in Lyons sub-division below
nhart, Executor of the Last Will
NEW
HOUSE
Wahama High School. May be
at Holzer Medical Center.
Testament ot Chutes H.
Syra·-use caUed on the Roush's
NEW
LISTING-3 end
seen
after
S
.p.m.
week
days
Bernhart,
Deceased .
Mr: and Mrs. Don Findley
USED OFFSET PLATES
bedrooms, nice bath with
-and
all
day
Saturday
a~d
CASE
NO.
20,•23 First and
Miss Stella Randolph was and two CbUdren, of Columbus, Sunday afternoon.
HAVE
shower. Natural . gas furFino!
ACCount
of Wlllialt),r,
Sunday:
John
Lyons
•
MANY USES
returned to her home after Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Stone and
nace. Large closets In Wayne Glb_bons, Executor of thi'"'
Property .
Estate of Esther E. GibbontZ
2-20-6tc . bedrooms . Carport. Lot
being a patient at Holzer two children of Leon, w. Va.
Decealld .
•-;.
4
7lx291. Price $20,000.00.
The
Medical Center.
Unit~~
exceptions
an
fllect:
spent the week end with Mr.
HOUSE in Long.. &amp;nom, phone
SPLIT-LEVEL
thtreto, Slid accounts will be'
Mrs. Elmer VanMeter has and Mrs. Leo Taylor at Racine.
985-3529.
4 BEDROOMS-Modern all for hearing before llld Court on '
1-28-lfc electric,
returned home after' spending
8 for $1.00
1'1:1
baths . lht 23rd doy of Morch, 1972 at
Miss P~ Buck spent the
That
Listens
which tlmt otld accounts wlli be
Basement. · ~ acres near
several weeks In Florida where week end with her parents Mr.
conslderfd and continued from
3
BEDROOM
ranch
fyp•
honie:
Middleport.
$21,500.00.
doy to day unfll finally dltposld
she visited relatives.
and Mrs. Roy Buck and visited
_ Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
of.
.
To
You
Mr. · Bill Williams and her grandmother Mrs. Early
Plains. Ali . new with total NOT SATISFI,ED WITH
Any
perton
lnttrestld
m&amp;y
'
I
electric and central air -YOUR PRESENT HOME, flit. wrltfltn txcepttona to tald
daughter, Judy, visited on RoUBh at Veterens Memorial
--·
conditioning, bath and 'i• fully
accounts or to matters Ptr Sunday lh Nitro, W. Va. with H9'Pital.
cMpeted, full basemenf .- CALL US AND ,LIST NOW. talnlno to lht txtcullon of the
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Dudding.
garall" in basement. See by NO CHARGE IF NO SALE . . fruit, not Ina thon flvt doys
Mrs. Kathryn Spires, Mrs.
prior to tht date Ht for hearing ,
appointment, phone 992-21~
Mrs. John Roach -and family Evelyn Baker, Ml8a MarabeUe
111 .Court St.
·
JOHN C. BACON I
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
or 992-3585. Daony Thompson.
.
PROBATE
JUDGE
visited on Monday with Mrs. Shal'pnack · end . Bud SharpASSOCIATE
Pomeroy, Ohio
Financing available.
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
.•.
Amelia Roach a! Hartford .
tt2·2371 (2) 23, 11
.
naclt, Ill of Columbus were .
12-30-tfc ttl-3125

~or

t'M 8EGINNIN6 1t:l
'lliiNK 'llif!RE'S 60/oNa
CORRIJPTlON IN 1liE
COI.RIS, SGT. 8I.OT'IER.

992-5803 ~ 742-3'147
• 992-3898 ~ 742-4761
. We are fully Insured.

special occasions.

OFFIC.l SUPPLIES

.• ;

___

j,c'~· --~

\

~~- ., ~ ic ft ' r . ~£ ··

1

'1'00 JIJ5T IXlNT UNOE~N~
,t&lt;:URI11{, CAARLIE 6ROWN

�rn r
•

s;;~;;c;;,;ifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get B~sultst
WANT ADS
INFORMATION

Card of Thanks

251115

D~ADLINES
WE WISH to express our ' sins P.M.
Day
Belore cere thanks to relatives.
Publication
neighbors and friends for
Monday Deadlln• 9 a.m.
their kindness and sympathy
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
extended to us in the great
Will be accepted unlll9 a.m . for, loss of our dear husband,
Day of Publication,
'
daddy, pap -paw, son and
REGULATIONS
brother, Clayton Roush .
The Publisher reserves the . Special thanks to those
1967 CHEV. EL CAMINO ·
$1"5
right to edit or re ject any ads
sending many floral ofv.a
eng
ine,
au1o.
tranS
.,
p.
steering,
radio,
good
w-w
tires,
deemed objectional. The
ferings, food and cards; Dr .
red finish. A nice one. Cove:r for body.
publisher will not be
McGowan, The New Haven
responsi ble for more than one .
Emergency Squad, the staff
Incorrect ihsertlon.
of
Ve terans
Memorial
RATES
19~7 C:HEVROLET IMP/I !--A
_.
$1295_,
HosRit«! Including the Ladles .
For Want Ad Service
2 Dr . Hl'. Cpe. tocaf owner, sharp interior, fact . air, good
Auxiliary ; ~oglesong Funeral
5 cents per Word qne, Insertion
Home and all thote who
w-w tir~ . radio &amp; heater, gold 'finish. ·
Minimum Charge 1Sc
·, h•lped in any way.
1"2 ce'nts per word three
Wile,
Genevieve,
consecutive insertions.
$395
daughters, Ruth, Ruby &amp;
1964 FORD GALAX IE 500
18 cents per word six cOn·
June, grandchildren, greatH.T. Coupe, V-8 motor. auto. trans ., p. steering and
Secuti11e Insertions.
grandchildren, dad, brothers
brakes.
15 Per Cent Discount on paid. and sisters.
·
ads and ads paid within 10
2-23-ltc
days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for SO word minimum. · Notice
· OPI!M I!YI!S. 1:00 P.M.
Each additional word 1c.
,~IROY, OHIO
BLIND ADS
DO
bookkeeping,
lax
Add itional 25c Charge per WILL
service~ in the privacy of my
Advertisement.
home. Evelyn C. Young,
OFFICE HOURS
Notice
phone 949-3141. Racine.
Wanted To Buy
8:30a.m. to S: 00 p.m . Dally,
2-21 -121c
8:30 a.m . to 12 :00 Noon
SHOOTING Match, Saturday, OLD FURNITURE, Round Dak
Saturday.
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
Feb. 26, at the Racine Planing
clocks, and-or complete
Mill
at
6
p.m.
Factory
choke
YARD AND rummage sate, all
households. Wi'lle M. D.
guns
only.
Assorted
meat.
Now's Time To
week, starts Tuesday. 9 a.m.
Miller,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Sponsored
by
the
Syracuse
to 6 p.m. Used furniture,
Call
99'1·6271.
·.
Fire Dept.
antiques, assortment of Avon
ORDER
---lJ-11-Ik
2-23-31c
_______:
bottles, 50011. of 2x4. 2x6, 2x8,
two guitars, dishes, etc. 341
"FIELD SEEDS
GUN SHOOT, also rifle matches
Park St., Middleport.
Notice
- open sites only, Forked
2-21 -Sic
Run Sporlsman Club, Sunday,
FERTILIZER
Feb. 21, 12 noon .
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT
2-23-3tc
overweighf! ladies, teens and
SEED CORN
u'PHOLSTERlNG SERVIC~.
men lnteresfed In a Weight
complete selection ol fabrics GUN SHOOT, Sunday, Feb. 27, 1 Watchers
Order Now &amp; Sa vel
(Rl Class in
and vinyltochoose tram. Pick p.m. Factory choked guns
Pomeroy
write:
Weight
up and delivery . Slater
only.
Second
place
shooters
Watchers
(
R),
1863
Sed ion
Upholsfering, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
get
tree
shot
in
next
mafch.
Rd.,
Cincinnati.
Ohio
4S231.
phone 992-3611.
Assorted meats. Racine Gun
10-3-tfc
1-3-30fp
Club.
SAVE up toone hall. Bring your
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
151 Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy.

Of
QUALITY

Pomeroy Motor Co.

~::!c:eight

with New Shape
$U9 at Nelson Drugs.
·
. Tablets, 10 days supply
2-21-ltp
only ·

For Rent
NEW, 12x60, lwo bedroom
mobile home across from

Bradbury School. Call 9925308 or see Charles Lewis, 2nd .
house south from Bradbury
School. Pels weltQme. .
2-21-lfc .

------'---------,-----

Help Wanted
RE~PONSIBLE person to work
and manage route. Pick -up

L---------------------! Carriers For
MASON
and
HARTFORD
The Dai~ Sentinel

____

------

New Haven Social Events ·

Pl'A MEETING
The New Haven Elementary
Parent Teachers Association
met on Feb. 17 at the school.
The president, John Wolfe,
called the meeting to order.
Devotions were led by Robert
A . Goldsberry_ He read from
the book of I John followed with
a prayer.
Regular reports were given
and approved . Mr. Wolfe
discussed ways the monies in
excess of the budget could be
spent, Crushed stone for the
playground and some . desks
were among suggestions. The
assistant supt. of schools,
Charles Chambers, told the
group that these items should
be furnished by the board of
education. Nli decision was
made on the spending of these

monies.

..,

It was announced that the
officers of the PTA for the 197273 school year would be elected
at the April meeting and In·
stalled at the May meeting.
The program for the evening
was the randldates running for
election to the Mason County
Board of Education. AU candidates attended except
Theodore Stevens. They
started alphabetically and
each spoke on the topic of his
own choosing. A question and
answer period · followed .
Candidates attending were
Robert G. Adkins, Bill Brady,
Charles Eshenaur, Rob~t A.
Goldsberry, Bill Howard,
Richard L. Lewis, Robert Lee
Neal. Also attending the
meeting ws.s Asst. Supt. of
Schools, Charles Chambers.
The room count was won by
Mrs. Gibbs' room. Refresh·
ments were served by the
homeroom mothers of Mrs.
carolyn Hesson's room.
Cherokee Homemakers
The Cherokee Homemakers
Club met at the home of Mrs.
Willa Scites on Feb. 16 for their
regular monthly meeting. An
all day workshop was held to
learn how to crochet beads.
The meeting was called io
order ·by the president, Mrs.
Ann Bird . Devotions were led
by Mrs. Ollie Browning, which
consisted of a poem "Molding
in Clay" and scripture lesson,
Isaiah 4~:9-12 .
The secretary report was
given and approved . The
treasurer report showed a
balance of $38.31. Those
present discussed selling .
vanilla as a money-making
project.
Mrs. Ollie
Browning
presented the lesson for the
day " A Unit on Letter ·
Writing." Mrs. Grace Sayre
gave a report on International
Relations. She also read a
letter from a friend, Doris Ann
Musser, wife of Rev. Harvey
Musser, now living in Ceres
Golas, Brazil.
Mrs. Scites served lunch to.
those present : Mrs . Jean
Grinstead, Mrs. Ann Bird, Mrs.
June Litchfield, Mrs. Attarah
Mrs .
Ollie
Dewhurst ,
Browning, Mrs. Grace Sayre,
Mrs. Thelma Luckeydoo, Mrs.
Sally Smith! Mrs. Nellle Casto,
guests, Kim casta, and Stacey
Con.
Birthday Party
Mrs. Jean Petry of Haven
Heights was feted with a
surprise birthday part;: . on •
. Saturday evening, Jan. ~· at

the home of Mrs. Maryanna
Blackhurst Gorrell of Howard
Street, New. Haven Heights.
The party began at 7:4~ with
arrival of the guest of honor
and a buffet supper was served
shortly thereafter.
Mrs. Petry was presented
wl th gifts from her family and
friends and a dozen long
stemmed American Beauty
red roses from her husband,
Bob. A huge beautliully
decorated birthday cake was
presented to Mrs. Petry by
Mrs. Jean Yoho, who made the
cake.
Th~ in attendance In ad·
dition to the guest of honor
were Miss Pani Petry, Miss
Robin Petry, Mr. Chuck Petry,
Mrs. Undli Clark, Miss VIcky
and Miss Tammy Yoho, Mr.
Robert Petry, Mr. Jim
Meadows,
Miss Terrie
Blackhurst, Mrs. Yoho and
Mrs. Gorrell, IXH1ostesses.
Heart FUnd
The youth from the four
churches in New Haven
collected for the Heart Fund on
Heart Sunday, Feb. 20,
beginning at 1:30 p.m. Churches taking part were St. Paul
Uitheran, New Haven Church
o!-· ·God, Bachtel United
Methodist, New Haven United
Methodist. The youth gathered
at the New Haven United
Methodist before going out and
returned to the church where
they were served cookies and
hot chocolate by members of
the Nehacllma Garden Club,
sponsors of the collecUon.
The youth collected $245.38.
Those helping were Brent
Layne, Dwaln Russell, Timmy
Thompson,
Mary
Jan
Bumgarner, Christine Hoff.
man, Linda Roush, David
Rose, Eric Bumgardner, Brent
Hart, Sheryl Roush, Beth Ann
Layne, Amanda Miller, Joe
Thompson, Jeff Roush, Linda
Bumgardner, Jayne Hart,
Edward Scyoe, David Knight,
Dale Ward, Jennie James, Lisa
Davis, Harold Rose, Tom
Thompson, AI Sprouse, Scot
Roush, Randy Thorne, Brent
Holbrook, Marty Holbrook,
carol Randolph, carol Rottgen, Jeanenne Wallis, Judy
Needs, Mary Lou Brabham,
Yvonne Grinstead, Anna
Parsons, Troy Smith, Drivers,
Mr . and Mrs: Kenneth
Holbrook, Mrs. Catherine
Goodwin, Miss Mary Jewell,
club members, Mrs. David
Fields, Jr., Mrs. James N.
Roush, Mrs. Don Bumgardner,
Mrs. Phil Batey and Mrs. C. M.
Adams, Jr.

DANCE

Friday &amp; Saturday Night

Whispering Pines
Nite Cub

10 til 2
Music By
The Rut McCoys ·
4pc. Band &amp;Female Singer
from Beverly, Ohio

Ph. 614-992·2156
MAN OR . WOMAN - lor
general office work. Typing,
reports, limited bookkeeping.
Must furnish references .

WRITE your reply to Box Q,
c-o Daily Sentinel. Pomeroy,
Ohio.

2-23-31c

-----

BABYSITTER - 4 p.m. to 1:30
a.m. Apply at 90S Brownell
Ave., Apt. 9, Middleport
before 3:30 p.m.
2-23-3tp

11 -21 -tfc

Employment Wanted

WANT WORK at home . all- EXPERIENCED painter.
dressing and stuffing en - Interior and exterior. Call
velopes1 Rush self-sta"'ped
envelope fa F. Uribe, Box 36, Don VanMeter 985-39Sl.
2-16-12tp
Albany, Ohio, •1.1110.
'
1-6-ffc· HAVE welder, will travel. Local
welder wants welding lobs.
KOSCOT KOSMETICS. They're Phone 992-5211.
Great : over 10 specials this _________
2-_20-6tc
month . Please call 992-S113
for any lnJormation, Brown's.

,

2-8-tfc

Fairview
Notes
News, Events ByNews
MRS. HERBERT ROUSH
Apple Grove

For Rent
FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school...
Phone 992-S434.
10-18-tfc
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Racine area . Phone 992.6329.

STAND THAR !!

MAKE A WISH AN'

Bu'siness Services

PUll TH' DADflURI\I
WISHOONE!!

:================.===;r.~~~~~~~iit~·l'
FOUR NEW HoMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEpORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. F:INANCII.IGAVAILABLE
...
A 3 bedroom ·$16.900.00 home can be purchased with a
monfhly paym.ent as low as ~s.oo for a family With a base
salary of $S,OOO.OO and three children. 1'1• Pct. 'nnual
percentage rate.
. '

and
delivery.
A. B.C.
Cleaners, Mason, W. Va .
2-8-lfc

WANTED!

~:127/oc~JJeEST

CALL
BILL NELSON,992-36l7
HILTON WOLFE, 949-3211
TOM CROW, 992-2510
DALE DUTTON, m -2534

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
-Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMI11f NELSON
MOlORS. INC.
.Ph. 992-2174

992-2094_
606 E. Main Pomeroy

'AU WEATHER ROOFING

''

&amp; CONSTRUCTION &amp;

PWMBING CO. · .. '
240 Lincoln St.
Middleport, Oh!o
Dbo Anfhony Plumblllf
We have ·a complete Home
Maintenance Service the year
around. No matter what your
need. Complete roof or
spouting repair. Inferior or
exterior carpentry. Ceiling
tile and Paneling and Siding.
Complete
Plumbing_ &amp;
Heating.
:•
Day.Number 192-2550
•
We have 24 hr. emergency :,:·
service.

and

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
'Floor Display.

•
· - 1~£ Pe~CfN1AGE OF

WAAT DO VOU
TJ.jl1&gt;41&lt; ·OF A QUOTA

BLACKS ON ~E. COLLEGES'

-

FOil. ENROLLiNG

AT~LETiC

TEAM$

GUY WE FOUIIID CHAINEf:!
STA8E!oet&gt;, 8EA1EN AND
ENCA6ED 1111 CEMENT?

~.

2· ·~;
~

i'The

•
..•
'
-.'''

'

Orchid Room
Make reservl!dl~ns for ~our

NOW 1-iE'LL&amp;.ALLRIGHT. HE.
NEEDS ALL TI--IOSt:, Pl"&lt;to.JTS 10

private parties, .. banquets. '

992-3975

•

i

1,.,

~~ (•

•

.' .

0

•*

!

Ci .,.,

I'-'

0

1

.,. - ...

·, ...

i

· -· :'
992-5786 . ~

G} • " '

•Mlfr

.-!'~-"

•

READY-MIX CONCRETE delivered rlghf to your project.
For Sale
Fast and easy. Free
'
estimates . Phone 992-3284.
POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy,
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
Park view Kennels, Phone 992Middleport, Ohio.
S443.
6-30-tlc,
~ ..'f...
8-l S-IIc
. I
5
o;-1
O'DELL WHEE-L allghment
FARMALL H Drag Disc, plows
located
af
Crossroads,
Rt.
124.
-GUARANTEED·_
:
- SSSO; tent camper - $2SO;
Complete front end service,
Phone 992-2094
,:
phone 647-3336.
t
up and brake service.
2-20-1 p tune
Wheels balanced electrooically .
All
work Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto :~~
SHOWALTER'S Wei Pet Shop,
guaranteed . Reasonable
Open 8Til S
,&lt;
Chester, Ohio. Phone 985-3356.
rates. Phone 992-3213.
Mondaythru Saturday
... ,.~
Tropical fish IS cents and up
1·21-lfc
606 E. Mlin, Pomeroy,O.
;'I'!
through February .
, '.
2-22-7tc C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer L....:..:..:._:;,__:::~_.:.____.
--·
·.•''•i
Complete Service
· ALLSIDE Builders &amp; Con - -.:.'
12 IN. 2 bollom Ford plows like
Phone 949-3821
struction Co. We specialize In · &gt;~
new . Riding horses, mostly
Racine, Ohio
aluminum. vinyl and steel.;c;
Tennessee walkers. Some
Crill Bradford
siding; fiberglas, brick and --·
registered. Phone Racine 949S-l-Ife stone; complete line of ~··
3193.
residenlial and commercial . - .~
2-23-3tp AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
roofing;
remodeling , : .
cancelled?
Lost
your
build.ing, suspended ceilings,- ~- ·
1970 MAGIC Chef Coppertone
intenor and exterior pain- , ,~
operator 5 license? CaiJ.992·
gas stove, like new. Phone
ling ; complete line of
2964.
241-2082 afler 7 p.m.
Masonry work _ All work
6-IS-Ifc
2-23-6tc
guaranteed to customer · . ~
--------DRY WALL flnfsher contractor.
satisfaction. We are fully : •
R. I. Dubbeid, phone 742-S82S.
insured for your protection. 32 '
TROPICAL FISH, fancy
2-21-5fc
N. Second, ph. 992-3918.
.,
guppi'i!'s, angels and breeders,
2-IS-30tc·
Bellas and supplies. Phone
INTER lOR &amp; exterior painting.
9112-5443 . .
R. I. Dubbeld, phone 742-~s , SEWif:IG ,_MA,HINt;S. Repair ·&gt;1
12-30-lfc
2-21-5tc serv!te&gt; a11 makes. . 992-22.84".- -'
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.•
buy new furniture? Have
Authorized Singer Sales and'
Mobile ttomes For Sa!~ Why
that
old
made
new
by
Sylvia's
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors. ;60Xl2~ ·2-bedroom, a11-elet.i, ,.;;,
Upholstering
Shop,
Mrs.
3-29-tfc
air conditioned, 8x20 lt. Porch Woodrow T. Zwilling, Prop.,
_S_E_P_T-IC-ta-n-ks--,cl,-ea_n_ed-:-.~MIIIer'-:
and aluminum awning, Syracuse, Ohio.
aluminum skirting, com Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph. '
"2-10-JOtp
pletely setup. Beautiful
662-303S.
If
location. Owner leaving sfafe. BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
2-12- c
Phone 949-4892 or 991-5212. · Septic tanks installed. George
1-10-tfc (Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
--~~==='-----.,
-4..25-lfc

!
EXPERT
.''•
Wheel
. . Alignment .....

.

PLEASE CHARISE
THIS DELECTABLE
REPAST TO M'l
ACCOUNT!

5.55

l CAN UNDERSTAND HOW YOU

'

MIS&amp; WI NKLE.~I SIBN'T o-----"'1).1E KIND OF CAR

l

YE$,l'MAFR41D~EY

MIGHT

~EGIN

10

G0051P. PERHAPS WE
5H6uLD KeEP OUR

\O.J'D WANT TO
eE SEEN IN!

RElATION&amp;~IP

ON

A BUSINESS
LEVEL!

-----1

GASOLINE AILEY

been t' hi5
office! Ain't
~0

~~[;0

TAl-IDE LEO
S:::~~N&lt;TZ!

}i;s THt TERRIFIED PUSHY SQUIRMS TO
£SCilPE THE RllD!A.ltT GLOW fROM TH&amp;

HOT EXACTLY, P05HY 1
YOO'RE ABOOT TO

-·-

. i.J,';; .• '

MACHIN£, !!IS CONTORTED WlTVR£S
TURK 1\ .BRILL!IIlti GREEN!

BE PIIOCI:SSI!D BY

THE INVISIBLE
TATIOO MACHINE!

tAt""~.. ~-

DICit TRACY
OUR II.PPRAISI!R WIU.III!
WMORAOW. ~AVE VOUFI
DEED II.ND TITL! READY.

I ..

MIGHT WORK-,;.r.:;.~-1

Virgil B.

Teaford, Sr.

Sale.

15. Diet
spre1d
16. Lady's
hair
adorn·
ment
11. The IUIIlJ Y..tenlaJ'• A•••
18. Post·
Christmas 32.-Watchful
U. David's
•events
chief
ZL Purple
IH!aweed
ollieer
35. Sine
U. SlciUan
quacity
36. Scottish
U. TaiteZ5. Drool
river
zs. French· 37. Norse
Belgian
aky god
river
38. 31. Clty In
. Buddhism
Florida
39. Poem

-"A~E

THAT

VE~Y

I

JlJID Wltl! WHAT
YOU~ liTTLE
SCHEME~

ASQJT

R'IUICUlOU5!

• '

COIM\15SAR! WHAT THE
Df~L IS WNG ott~

t1 y tH NAI ARNOI-0 ,,.,d BOB LUi

Unacnmble these rour Jumbles,
one letter to each ~quare, to
rorm four ordinary words.

I
I I rJ

C'..\11
1\f.~T..\L

Af;t;NC\'

I TUSEG

ISIEMUS]
I [

II

1
THE'/ COt-JT!':AC.T TO
oiYE: YOU A
COMFOP:TABLE !&lt;:IDE.

III

x

Now arran1e the circled letters

"l
io form the aurpriiH! answer, ""
!::::!:=~"-~~~~~A~:::__:•~u1nested b7 the above cartoon.

V

=-

1L...!,.=--..
=..:. .:..:::UISWII=·~I

A&lt;rw
SS.-Par-

PERHAPS BECAU5E H~
~ PtJlJI6 WH ICHWILL

~&amp;lOOID~® lkJ *'-""' ..-J ,_..

NUHRGY±

z,,

1

1

4. " Frlseo"
5. Aetor
Luther
6. Greek
letter
t. Cut
,. Large
Umbers
vase
10. Give a
8. Man's
darn
nickname
IL Incrld
10_Abandon
Ber-•n
...one's
movie
ideals
18. Frots
(slang)
movement 1., Entl;..1'- See 11
•
"
Across
ment
11. High
1'- "The
priest
Untouch·
lt. Univ. in
ables"
Loirlslana
stalwart
U. Theater
accommo.
dations
Z8. Eagle's
claw
In a pain·
ful way
lt. Seaealle
so. See 11

ACllOSS
L Farewell,
In Oahu
6. EopUan
king, for
abort

LEGAL NOTICE
.

l

rr:r

rxxxun
(An1n'1'er1 tom ot rowj

mlliana
U.Seell
Aeross
fO. Ocean
sound
.u. Wuo
buttillikJ
U.Some
0. Expiate

. ,,........, EVENT CHOIR LETHAL HECTIC
Ye11enl•r'•
.
.
.
An1wen Thu 1how1 1}rorn_,e- A CONTRACT

DOWN

1. Ninny
I. Drinlt, as
acat
I. Have debts

Aluminum
Sheets

WHI{ DOES A
I'ER50N OWN
A 006?

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here'e how to work. it:
~
Ia

AXYDLBAAXR
LDNGFILLOW
One letter oimplJ stands for another. In thls sample A Is
uSed for the three L's, X for the two O's, ete. Single letters,
- apoatrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code )etten are dUferent.
·
·

20

l:aYPTOQUO'I'ES

-The
WMP0/1390 - Daily Sentinel

G

FCDI

JUOSDSil

LRUMS
LCER

JRSSHM

KGfYE ,

RGM

GDS
GY

~

GBOGYEGFS
LRU

ON YOUR DIAL

LCER

GCY'E .- UFBSY

AS

UOSD

UYS

YllMR

Yeaterday'a Cryptoquote: CALL IT WHAT YOU WILL, IN·
CENT!VES ARE WHAT GET PEOPLE T(l WORK HARDER.
-N}KJTA IS' KHRUSHCHEV
(el!\72 KinCl FtatuJ"I'

i

I' ll_ ,

• 0 -

HE LOST MARY~

Ideal for meeting place wlfh or without kitchen
privileges.
Individual Caferlng
Will seat up fo ISO people.
Phone

0

GIVE HIM SECLIR.IT'I SINCE

_____

Station

RULED Hl6 DEATH
A 6UICIOE I

REMEMBER 11-lE

1 •

aifton
Personals

n;E JUD&lt;OE JUGT .

~1&lt;1, /11.+10 ~

2-16-lfc
- -- - - - - - 1 BEDROOM trail~r apartments, Ideal lor couples .
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
Mrs: Mary Donohue and son
ByMRS.HEaBERTROUSH
992-S248
or 992-3436.
·
Mr. Brice Hart of Racine David have the flu.
2-22-6tc
spent ...~~r!.aY._I!_Ight with . Miss Evelyn Lawson, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Hittlrlgbottom 4 ROOM house with bath, 2 car
Keith nayman.
garage, nice yard , good
Mr. and Mrs_ George and three children of Man·
·
location. For appointment
Donohew and family of sfield, 0. spent the week end
call 992-2502.
Columbus spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Charles
2-22-6tc
with hla parents Mr. end Mrs. Lawson and family _
.Mr. and Mrs. Howard 1968 TEMPEST, 2 door
Roy Donohew and Greg.
- 65~7 .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Casper Robinson of Flatwoods, W.Va. automatic. Phone 992
2-18-tfc
and gr~ndchlldren BWy and were dinner guests of Mrs.
Brian Dye of Columbus spent Bertha Robinson Sunday, Mr. 1961 OPEL Wagon, 1964 Ford, 4
door automatlc. Phone 992the week end with Mrs. Dolly and Mrs. Pete Shields, Mrs.
Wolfe, and Mr. end Mrs. Dallas Doris Sayre called on Mrs. 6541.
2-18-tfc
SIGNS,' posfers, mall boxes and
HliJ and fanilly and visited Mr. Robinson Sunday afternoon.
favorite saying; hand letPaul Sayre and Danny Sayre TEMPO mobile home, SOxlO,
and Mrs. Carl Jr. Wolfe and
tered; In your favorite style.
excellent condition. Phone
David Hooker, Rf. 2, Albany,
of Columbus were over week
children at Gallipolis Rte.
241-2161.
Ohio
45110 ( PagetoYlnl.
Mrs. Erwin Gloecker Is end guests of Mr. and Mrs.
2-20-6tc
2-6-30tc
-----vlaltlng her daughter Mr. and Herbert Sayre.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles GOOD mixed hay . 'Phone
Mrs. Larry Badgely and
Wilkesville 649-4171.
children at Fairfax, Va. and Lawson called on Mr. and Mrs.
___:
1-10-6tc
asslstlng In their care while Diamond Lawson Friday at
they are nu victims.
Mt. Moriah.
The Golden Rule Sunday
Sunday guests of Mrs. Kale
School class of the Letart Falla Rowe and Ada were Mrs.
Methodlst met at the home of Anna Wines, Jackie and Karen,
Mrs. Grace Huffman at Ra.clne Neal Baker, Mrs. Linda
Thursday eveolng. Attending Cleland 'Vince and Ryan of
were·Mrs. Lots BeU, Mrs. Nora Racine.
fross, Mrs. Erma Hlll, Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs . Richard
Margie Roush, MrS. Inez Hlll, Sargent of Columbus spent the
Mrs. Shirley Dugan and Mrs. week end with the formers
Rita Hlll.
parents Mr. and Mrs. Jack
NICE -2:story nome w11n tull :
Marvin Hlll of Columbus Sargent at Racine.
basement~ 2 lots, new forced
NOTICE OF
air
furnace. Near Pomeroy.
visited his uncle St. Clair Hlll
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush
APPOINTMENT
'•;
El,menfary School . Phone ,
Case No. 20124;Saturday.
and family were dinner guests
992-7384 to see.
Estate of Paul Zirkle Deceased ~ . '
Mr. end Mrs. Harold Grinun of Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis at
11-1-ttc
Notice Is hereby gl vtn that·}
2-23-61c
Norm~ Zirkle of Pomeroy, , •;
of Columbus visited Mrs. Lois Clifton Sunday.
Ohio, rias been duly 11ppolnted .., .
BeU and St. Clair Hlll Wed·
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Wilford
aS Adm inistratrht Of the Estata .. ~
of Paul Zirkle, d~ceased, tate ot ~L'­
nesday enroute home after a and daughter Alica of Racine,
Real Estate For Sale
Melgs County, Ohio.
: _. .~
vacation In Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Creditors are required to file ·:
SIX ROOM house, 133 Butlernut
their claims with said flduclaql,\ ·
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mc· Clifton, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2131 ·
within four months .
:
Wadsworth
Drive,
Columbus,
Dade of Troy, 0. spent the Russell of Middleport were
Broker
Dated
this
11th
day
ot.·!
Ohio, phone 231-4334.
110 Mechanic Sf.
February 1972.
~\:'
week end with Mrs. Gladys recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
11-21 -tfc
Pomeroy,
0.,
45769
John
c
.
Bacot....,.
.~
2-23-6tc
Shields and other relatives, RusseU Roush and family.
Judge- •
~-=~--:--:-:----,­
(2)
16,
23
(3)
1,
3t
.
NEED ACREAGE
and visited Mrs. McDade's
Mr _ and Mrs. Steve Hagey, ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe 30 ACRE farm, 3 bedroom WE
home, electric .heal, vinyl ANYWHERE IN MEIGS
mother Mrs. Edna Roush, a Mr . and Mrs. Ronald R1J¥0ll
model. Complete with all 1 siding,
TP&amp;C water' district, 3 COUNTY.
cleaning attachments and miles south
patient at Veterans Memorial spent the week end with
RUTLAND
of Tuppers Plains
uses paper bags. Slightly used on County Road
LEGAL NOTICE
Hospital, and aunt Mrs. Early relatives in !Uinois.
28
118,000;
3
BEDROOM5-Bath.
nice
IN THE MATTER OF SET, but cleans and looks like new. phone 641-3336.
· kitchen. Large lot near
Roush who Is' also a patient at
TLEMENT OF . ACcOUNTS ' ,
Will sell lor $37 .2S cash or _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2-_
20-1tp
schools. Only $6,000.00.
PROBATE COURT , MEIGt~•
terms available. Phone 992Veterans Memorial Hospital.
COUNTY, OHIO
'"&lt;'
LAND
CONTRACT
.5641.
Mrs. Facie Hayman and son
Accounts
and
vouchers
of
thi1.
!1
2-23-61c LEVEL lot, 180' frontage , $1500.00 OOWN-SS3.42 a following named flduc tarr~..,.~
Keith attended the · Band
month
.
6
rooms,
good
well.
located on Main Street ,
have been flied In the Prob&amp;ll!('.j
called home due to the
Mason; excellent opporfunity spring, and oufbulldings. 3 court, Meigs County, Ohio, tor ·- ,
Concert at Southern Local High
hospltallzation of their mother
for business. White Realty, acres.
approval and settlement :
1
Scbool Sunday afternoon, and
CASE NO . 16,068 The Third i
call Vera Eblen, Associate
Mrs. EUzabeth Sharpnack. She
POMEROY
'
baby silted for Mr. and Mrs.
Account of Lester J . Taytor;- -:t
Realtor 991-3020.
2 BEDROOMS-Bath,
is a patient at Veterans
Guardian of the Person anp
2-20-6tc natural oak floors. One floor
Robert Hart while they at- Memorial Hospital.'
Estate of Pear lie c . Stansbur'fl,r ;
plan. Basement, front porch.
tended the Roush·Hart wedan Incompetent Person ,
36" X23" X .009
Mrs . Roger Manuel and
TOTAL electric, 3 bedroom All utilities. Only $6500.00.
CASE NO . 18,152 Fltt6 '-:
ding at Racine Baptist Church. daughter, Angela Michelle of
ranch style home with garage
Current Account of Rodne~ 1
TUPP.E
RS
PLAINS
Mrs. Eileen Roush and Mrs. Dorcas were dinner guests of
and patio; wall to wall carpel 2 BEDROOMS-Modern
Downing, as Trustee under th f\1~
Trust created by the Will o.11.:n
over hardwood floors; buill-in kitchen and bath. Plains
· Ferne B. Hayman were Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush
John 8. Downing, Deceastd. :r-·..-.
kitchen; air conditioned ; on
Gallipolis vlsliors Friday, Mrs. Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Jim
. 4 acres tor future
CASE NO. 20, ISS 'First ancj,."!
corner lot ISO' x 160'; located water
Final
Account ot Jeule Bar. t
building.
Only
$10,500.00.
Hayman COOIU!ted her doctor Connolly, Shelly and Brian of
in Lyons sub-division below
nhart, Executor of the Last Will
NEW
HOUSE
Wahama High School. May be
at Holzer Medical Center.
Testament ot Chutes H.
Syra·-use caUed on the Roush's
NEW
LISTING-3 end
seen
after
S
.p.m.
week
days
Bernhart,
Deceased .
Mr: and Mrs. Don Findley
USED OFFSET PLATES
bedrooms, nice bath with
-and
all
day
Saturday
a~d
CASE
NO.
20,•23 First and
Miss Stella Randolph was and two CbUdren, of Columbus, Sunday afternoon.
HAVE
shower. Natural . gas furFino!
ACCount
of Wlllialt),r,
Sunday:
John
Lyons
•
MANY USES
returned to her home after Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Stone and
nace. Large closets In Wayne Glb_bons, Executor of thi'"'
Property .
Estate of Esther E. GibbontZ
2-20-6tc . bedrooms . Carport. Lot
being a patient at Holzer two children of Leon, w. Va.
Decealld .
•-;.
4
7lx291. Price $20,000.00.
The
Medical Center.
Unit~~
exceptions
an
fllect:
spent the week end with Mr.
HOUSE in Long.. &amp;nom, phone
SPLIT-LEVEL
thtreto, Slid accounts will be'
Mrs. Elmer VanMeter has and Mrs. Leo Taylor at Racine.
985-3529.
4 BEDROOMS-Modern all for hearing before llld Court on '
1-28-lfc electric,
returned home after' spending
8 for $1.00
1'1:1
baths . lht 23rd doy of Morch, 1972 at
Miss P~ Buck spent the
That
Listens
which tlmt otld accounts wlli be
Basement. · ~ acres near
several weeks In Florida where week end with her parents Mr.
conslderfd and continued from
3
BEDROOM
ranch
fyp•
honie:
Middleport.
$21,500.00.
doy to day unfll finally dltposld
she visited relatives.
and Mrs. Roy Buck and visited
_ Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
of.
.
To
You
Mr. · Bill Williams and her grandmother Mrs. Early
Plains. Ali . new with total NOT SATISFI,ED WITH
Any
perton
lnttrestld
m&amp;y
'
I
electric and central air -YOUR PRESENT HOME, flit. wrltfltn txcepttona to tald
daughter, Judy, visited on RoUBh at Veterens Memorial
--·
conditioning, bath and 'i• fully
accounts or to matters Ptr Sunday lh Nitro, W. Va. with H9'Pital.
cMpeted, full basemenf .- CALL US AND ,LIST NOW. talnlno to lht txtcullon of the
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Dudding.
garall" in basement. See by NO CHARGE IF NO SALE . . fruit, not Ina thon flvt doys
Mrs. Kathryn Spires, Mrs.
prior to tht date Ht for hearing ,
appointment, phone 992-21~
Mrs. John Roach -and family Evelyn Baker, Ml8a MarabeUe
111 .Court St.
·
JOHN C. BACON I
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
or 992-3585. Daony Thompson.
.
PROBATE
JUDGE
visited on Monday with Mrs. Shal'pnack · end . Bud SharpASSOCIATE
Pomeroy, Ohio
Financing available.
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
.•.
Amelia Roach a! Hartford .
tt2·2371 (2) 23, 11
.
naclt, Ill of Columbus were .
12-30-tfc ttl-3125

~or

t'M 8EGINNIN6 1t:l
'lliiNK 'llif!RE'S 60/oNa
CORRIJPTlON IN 1liE
COI.RIS, SGT. 8I.OT'IER.

992-5803 ~ 742-3'147
• 992-3898 ~ 742-4761
. We are fully Insured.

special occasions.

OFFIC.l SUPPLIES

.• ;

___

j,c'~· --~

\

~~- ., ~ ic ft ' r . ~£ ··

1

'1'00 JIJ5T IXlNT UNOE~N~
,t&lt;:URI11{, CAARLIE 6ROWN

�.'
••

\

'·
--~· Mtddleport-Pomer;oy,
0., Feb. 23, 1972
•

ha ndled fairly, " he admitted .
According to young Tannehill, the request for t~e
Pandas was necessarily forwarded through the ti. S. State
Department. The Cincinnati
Zoo had offered to trade
animals native · to America,
and rare in China , for the
Pandas.
Earlier this week it was
announced in Peking President
Nixon offered two San Francisco Musk Oxen 'to ilie -thlnese
people . . Two Pandas . we re
offered in return .
·
Maruska said his zoo has "a
· large area suitable for the
pandas" and was confident
" we could provide th e
specialized diet they need." He
said no new facilities would be
needed .
He said the zoo ivants both
the an imals. "Absolutely,"

Reported
·
way, $167.10, $;.33, $2,522.01;
utility fund , no receipts ,
$858.54 , $14,;21.27 ; water
improvement, no receipts, no
expendi tures , $1;.61; water
. $9 , 132 .99 , $12,643,..,,
"'
opera tmg,
$4,049.52 ; guaranty meter,
$100, $87, $3,763.N; parking
meter fund, $1,251.50, no exo penditures, $10,327.40; sanitary
sewer construction,
no
receipts, no expenditures,
$5.58. Total receipts, disbursements, arta the balance in the
active fund respectively were,
$21,073 .17,
$32,396. 00 ,
$74,9;3. 88.
Receipts, disbursements and
clerk's balance respectively in
the inactive fund include,
special street repair bond
retirement, no receipts, no
expenditures, $1,878.63; bond
retirement, no receipts, no
expenditures , $12,819.48;
cemetery improvement , no
receipts, no expenditures, $4;;
sewer repair and improvement
fund , no receipts, no expenditures, $334.26. Receipts,
disbursements, and balances
In all funds respectively totaled
$21,07 3.77'
$32 ,3 96.00,
$90,031.25.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursday
February 23-24
NOT OPEN

Friday thru Tuesday
February 25-29
WILLARD .
(Technicolor)

Bruce Davison
Sondra Locke
" GP "

Fe.,.turette:
Vagabond loafers
J Stooges

Kissin' Plant

Molecular
Sky's The Limit
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

BUYS
:iiPlrJly In Stock

Bend Area

Furniture

·-----------...11
MIDDLEPORT

~'f,,
I}

GBC Quarter

r.

The 1972 Spring Quarter will
begin on March 16 at Gallipolis
Business
College.
All
prospective students, who have
not already enrolled, are urged
to con tact the business college
office now for information and
r eg istration forms.
Enrollments will be accepted
in the order received until all
classes are filled .
Gallipolis Business College,_
located at 36 Locust Street,
Gallipolis, offers one- and twoyear courses in General Office,
Secretarial, Jr. Accounting,
Business Administration, and
Execu live Secretarial. All
courses are approved for
veterans who want to take
advantage of their GI Bill
Benefits.
Classes are conducted daily ,
Monday th rough Friday, from
8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Credits
earned at GBC are transferable to several four-year
colleges. The Business College
is approved by the State Board
of School and College
Registration .

Ida Laudennilk
Died Tuesday
Mrs. Ida Mae Laudermilk,
77, Manchester , Ohio, former!•·

of Meigs County, died Tuesday
at the Adams County Hospital
in West Union .
The daughter of the late
Frank and Lillian Bass
Bumgardner, Mrs. Laudermilk
is survived by her husband,
Robert of Man chester ; a
daughter, Mrs. Ullian Napper,
Minersville; two grandchildren , Betty Spires of
Fairpoint, Ohio, ·and Lawrence
A. Napper of Manchester, and
four great-grandchildren ,
Matthew, Clinton, Tilden and
Robin Napper, Manchester.
Mrs. Laudermilk was a
member of the Forest Run
United Methodist Church and
its WSCS.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. Friday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with burial in
Beech Grove Cemetery. The
Rev. Forrest Donley will officiate . Friends ma y call at the
funeral home any time .
TWO FINED
Two defendants were fined
by Syracuse Mayor Herman
London Monda y night. Marshall Milton Varian said Ruth
s. Stearns, Racin~ Rl. I, was
fined $5 and costs for using an
expired operator's license, and
William S. Cross, Racine, $15
and costs for speeding.

~

it'Sjor keeps

1 •
f

Maruskasaid ."Theyshouldbe
kept in a pair. "
.
He said the chances of
producing offspring from the
pair should be "excellent."
The reason why the Rllliian·
owned and British-&lt;Jwned
pandas would not mat~ was
bee~ use they were brought up
from babies away from oilter
pandas and became man·
orientated."
Maruska _!&lt;!id he . nev~r
received a reply from Chou. He

::

WASHINGtON (UP!) Coiumnlst.Jack Anderion llilld
Tuesday the United Siatea
risked niiClur war with lie
Soviet Unl011 dUnn~ the lncll*·
Pakistan war list December
while Pri!iident Nixon '"lied to
, Congret!i•1 and the . Ameri~
people about it.
"Theorilysl!bstilutefortrll(h
is a lie,". Aildetson . told the
National tre5s Club:" That
~n'! i! pn:tly word \!1 use with
. ·
. · '

·ZOO

~L·

did -not menyon

· 1~&amp;-{i~~n~P.nt~e 'tag . you are
·, ;.. ' ~nuntf bt.llne qual ity and
"t · · ~ .... .. , ~ ...
f''
• '· ; :· ' I-IISiing satisfact io n. The
' ' eli~emeill diamondls
· fla'wi~s . ,6f sup~rb color. and
·
preci~e modern cut.

BA N QUET'!"£ 1350
WEDO ING RING I Z!I

VENI UU. I HlO
AlSO I UO TO t1 75
W ED DI"' G A lNG 50

Private T

thelaskforcewasthe~onlyif than many ruspected at ·the ;:

needed tO evacuate Amer(cans.

time·.

·

·:
'·
Anderson said the task force
He said the United SUites had ·;
was given secret orders to "be reliable Intelligence lhlit the ·.
·Anderson said a task force of on the lookout for possible Chinese . ambassador. · to :
the U. s . 7th Fleet was sent into action."
Rawalpindi told PaklsUinl .·
the Bay of Bengal on a war
Andersoo, who published President Yabya Kahn on Dec. ·
footing, facing a superior what he said were secret White 11 thai China would attack :
Soviet fleet, while Nixon was House documents on u.
ihdia withlri 72 holl!'s. There .
telling the American people policy in the war, said a war also were reports of -;.
that the United States .was involving the United Slates; "menacing " Chinese troop ::
neutral in the conmci ·and that' Russia and China was closer movements along the borde_r. ;:
. .

.

Woodland

..

Car Goes Off State Royte 24

Questions

he

J-l..ll"ed

.

'

MEIGS HIGH SCI:IOOL students tapped for membersllip
In the National !Ionor Society Wednesday during a National
Honor Society Assembly were, ftrst row, 1-r, Diana King,
Edie Mees, Susie Card, Pam Burson, Becky Wright, Julie
Hutchison, Lynne Baker and Donna Francis; second row,

Shelia Hawk, Regina McGuii;e, Patti Well, Opal Berry,
Marge Rigg_s, Andrea Dewhurst, Linda Atkinson, Karen Hale
and Karen Cadle; third row, Beth Fultz, 'Jim Schmoll, John
Kauff, Dallas Weber, Bill Vaughan, Mirot Sayre,' Roger
PearchandDaveGerard; fourthrow,Jim Boggs, Tom Crisp
and Roger Dixon.

Elberfelds

Two Defendants
Forfeit Bonds ·
Two defendants forfeited
bonds and three others were
fined in the court of Middleport
Mayor John Zerkle Tul!ldAy
night. Forfeiting bonds were ll.
L. Lingafelter, 47, Spencer, W.
Va., $200, posted for driving
while intoxicated, and P~ggy
L. Welch, 18, RuUand, $30,
petty larceny .
Fined were Gerald B. Arnold, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
disturbing the peace, and $25
and costs, intoxication; ·Carol
M. Burton, Middleport, $15 and
costs, assault and battery, and
Jerry R. Brammer, 28, Bid·
well, $!; and costs, speeding.

I~

Pomeroy

(Conllliied from page 1)
wipe ou'ta fjslt Thursday tO the
Great W.U of China, bulit
centuriee
iri an unauccesaful e([etl to keep · out foreign
iilvadti's. , 1 · ·
''Tht, lteither is suppose~ to
turn I~ tonlflht," Chou
replied ~.1'bllt lathe forecast;1! ·
!10th appeared to ·lie
in higl) ipltlt.l.
Mrs. Nllbll, meanwhile, 111sumlng the, ,role of · htr
huahand1nmtilssa1or to China's 800 ll)llliGn people, ignared
the lino'l\' and Sllliiely trotted
along yellow, dusty roads oil a
tour of .a commune west ~~
CIRCULATION NOT£0
Pelling Where 41,000 peasants
Books circulated from llvi and·lanb.
Pomeroy ar.rl Middleport
l&gt;at'IVIBits
libraries and the Meigs BookThen Bht W.ited a pig farm,
mobile during December a primaty sdlool, the medical
to taled 11,153 volumes. clinic, a hot house and a
Oonating magazines were Mrs. general itore aHI was told that
Orin Smith, Mrs. Clara Karr, the ''revolutionary line'' of •
Mrs. Tom Rue , Mrs. Charles ComrJ!unllt party Chairllian
Swatzel and Miss Ruby .Piehl. Mao Tsi til!lg was a factot ill
~----lllllilllllliU-iiliii?..
. mlklng,._tht fields abundallt.
Luxurious Pools Mrs. Niloi! also Will to visit
._._. _-~ndividually 1tyled! the Ptklnl gllll8 factory: In the
.
, . , ~· ;;;; . even~, 11\e NllOns planned to
-~·J · ij '· '· .·; I attend a· gylnll88tic eJhibiUon
; ::;- . . .__ ·.
.. _- :. ;,;,.
at capltallladium.
• · ..
.. -- · · .- No slgrilflcance was attached
to the ~e of site for the
third- of. the Nixon-Chou
workilll •on•.
Nelth.. the Olinese nor the
Amei'lcail delegation would
give .lhi llilbtest clue about
De1ignod In 1teel ond concreto for
what aereements had ~n
bequty, 'lrength ond durab ility. Low
reachtd and what issues 'flre
Co1t-fa•r Jernu. Coli today lor
simply set : aside as befn8
Cilirr.DICI • , , no Obli90li01't.
beyond reeolutlon In this eight·
day gooclfrill tour.
The All)er!CIIn party Will
dleei'ed lit' tlie show of wamlth
it was flOW i'tl:llvlng after the
formal alld eomewhat frolty
receptioil Nixon received Monday mol'ning.
·
UP!
diplomatic
correspondent Stewart Hensley sold' the Chinese affahll!ty
and g~llhitbtr could be an
'
ome11 tf IIIC a1itln the talka or
667-3855
merely 1 reflection of thiJ
fol!"try\ traditional courtesy
Coohile, Ohio
\
its gueatl.
.
.

.aco

China when he went there
during a worldwide tour in
1879.

Roger Hornsby

Pool Co..

VOL. XXIV

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 222

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i~,

Mostly cloudy tonigh t,
chance of a brief periOC: of light
rain or snow extreme south .
Low tonight lower 30s extreme
south. Friday cloudy with a
chan~e of rain or snow south.
High in the 30s.

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

v~l$1ti

ODT Bill .Pressed In Ohio
JIRI!fllllli!:!&amp;&lt;mcl~:m!&lt;~.WJ»-::-m.

m. eeu ::: .. , &gt;. ...

..

ews •• in Briefi
By United Press International

SAN JOSE, CALlF. - ANGELA DAVIS was freed on
$102,500 ball Wednesday night and driven past cheering su[&gt;porters by defense attorneys who said, "We're ready, we've been
ready," for the start of her trial Monday.
"Right on;" shouted about 50 admirers as the 28-year-old
fonner UCLA instructor, jailed .16 months on murder, kidnap and
conspiracy charges, was whisked by car from the Palo Alto
· facility to an undisclosed location. The bail money was i&gt;ut up by
Roger McMee, a former in the Fresno area who said· he was
impressed by Miss Davis and the struggle she represented,
according to a spokesman from her defense committee.
PARKERSBURG, -W. VA. -THE BODY OF a young
creWiilan, killed along with hls father in the explosioil of a barge
here lasi month, was recovered late WeClnesday when salvage
(cOntinued on page 5)

future, " he said.
The new department would
incorporate the present
Department of Highways, the
Department of Highway
Safety, the Division Of Aviation
in the Department of Commerce, all activities in the
Department of Public Works
relating to conatruction and

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan said today a
bill sponsored by his administration to create an Ohio IJe.
partment of Transportation
was "as important as any this
administration has sponsored"
and was needed to "correct an
. incredibly chaotic condition."
The bill was to he introduced
today into the House of Represe~tatives by a bi-partisan
group of legislators. The chief
sponsors are Reps. Gordon
Scherer, R-Clnclnnati and
David Headley, D-Barberton.
· "This urgently needed
legislation will correct an
Incredibly chaotic condition by
bringing all modes of transportation in Ohla-land, air,
rail and water -under asingle
state agency; permittlrig us to
plan a balanced system for the

wlll

who serve, or will be serving earning the Derl Leaders
Cub Scout or Webelo Dens: Training Award, Scouters Key
9:30 a.m. to noon, Un-- or Scouters Training Award.
derstanding the Role of the Den - All Scouters of M-G-M
Chief.
District of the Boy Scouts of
I :30- 3:30, Ideas to improve America are urged to attend.
Den Meetings.
Any interested person or
Boy Scout Leader Training persons are invited to stop in
- This is training for all and get in on the fun , because
scoutmasters, committee Scouting is really fun with a
members and interested purpose.
parents in the necessary skills
Training Instructors are,
to provide a quality troop Pow-Wow, Crafts, Mrs. Donna·
program for boys.
Misner; Games and Skits, Mrs.
9:30a.m. • noon, The Patrol Julia Kirby and Mrs. Doris
Method and Training Patrol Nolan ; Pack Administration, ·
Leaders.
Harland Ne)l'some and Lyle
1:30 - 4 p.m., Troop ad- Dunsmoor ; Webelos Den
vancemenl and boy behavior. Operation, Carl Cameron.
The three training groups
will be joined for lunch and
Boy Scout Leader Training,
participate in the Scout dinner Patrol Method, Tom Cassell;
program. This is a part of the Training Patrol Leaders, Tom
training to assist the leaders Metcalf; The Advancement
with planning unit recognition Plan, Ken Morris, and Boy
dinner programs.
Behavior, Risden Miller.
Training certificates will be
There will be baby sitting
awarded to all who complete service available at the school.
all sessions or complete any of Cub Scout leaders are asked to
the individ~al sessions. This bring homemade games for the
training willbe applied toward Midway.

..

.,

Heart Sunday
be obsei'Ved -ln Meigs County SUnday
with a house-to-house campaign for donations to tbe
Heart Fund.
Chairmen for the various
areas are : Racine : Renee
Burke, chairman; with Donna
Cross, Debra West and Janie
Rees, helpers ; Portland:
Loretta Middleswart; Dorcas,
Mrs. Robert Beegle; AHred,
Marlene Winebrenner;
Harrisonville, Mrs . Robert
Jewell; Rock Springs, Mrs.
Harold Blackston; Reedsville,
Mrs. Donald Putnam, chairman ; with Mrs . Lyle
Balderson, Mrs. Frank Bise
and Mrs. Gene. Wilson , as
helpers.
Laurel Cliff, · Mrs. James
Gilmore; Dexter, Mrs. Paul
Anderson ; Rutland, Mrs.
Homer Parker; Lower Letart,
Mrs. Debbie Roush; Pomeroy
Business Section, Mrs. Phyllis
Hennessy, Mrs . Rose Sisson
and Mrs. Kate Welch;
Pomeroy residential , Mrs .
Ver~ · Crow,· chairman, on
behalf of Xi Gamma My
Chapter. of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority; Middleport, entire
drive by Middleport Business
and Professional Women 's
Club; Forest Run, Mrs. Dale
Warner- and Mrs. Faye
Hamilton.
Helpers are still needed in
Syracuse, Bradbury, Darwin,
Langsville, Minersville, Apple
Grove and Upper Letart.
,Anyone in these areas willing

... ,.., '

• : "'~

.11,

I

vestigating transportation
safety activities and functions
of the Department of Transportation.
"Safety Is of vital concern to
us all," Gilligan said. "With
this new agency we are going
to give Ohioans the most complete safety program possible,
a total transportation safety.
"Safety will be incorporated
at the initial plannirig stages
for all modes," he said.
The governor said the
preservation of the en·
vironment wlll be a major
priority with the new department.
"In the past, the absence of
environmental planning and a
distressing lack of sensitivity
to help with the drive is asked
(Continued on paee 5)
to contact Ralpll-W""¥-after. - , . - .......
5:30 p. m. today at 992-5480.
Heart sunday headquarters
for county solicitors will be the ·
Pomeroy village hall between 3
5
and p. m.

..!•·

..

t ;".

I
H
l')

2 '\
!0

~l

ji,

tl

il 2:l / &lt;1
jq

shirt has woven-in tou(fhness that won't wear out
won't wash out .Lee Dungarees and lined Denim' •
Jackets are Tough ·Tailored, too. All are backed by
~h~ fam.ous Lee guarant~ . So, if you think a rarment '
1sn t domg the job for you, we'll ·
·
free. Perfonnanoo i11 wha t Lee
Charlie ~ller.

'

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'\--·~ "'.·""
'

Response
Is Good

Auto Burns,
Driver Hurt

Mr. and Mrs. Will Cundiff,
co-chairmen of the annual
Meigs County American Red
Cross fund drive, expressed
CHESHIRE - Alex L. optimism today at the
Halley, 20, Cheshire RD, was prospects of a successful drive
admitted to Pleasant Valley this year.
Contributions so far from
Hospital with injuries as the
result of a one-car mishap business houses have been
Wednesday evening on U. S. 35 "more than generous" said the
in which his vehicle caught fire Cundiffs.
Businesses which have
and burned. Damage was
contributed $10 or more to the
estimated at $1,600.
Hospital at~endants said drive so far include the
Halley is in "good'·' condition Pomeroy National Bank, the
and is teing treated for con- Citizens National Bank,
cussion and abrasions over his Middleport; the Jaymar Coal
Co., the Rutland Furniture Co.,
body.
Deputy sheriff Bob Huffman Racine Home-National Bank,
investigated the accident Crow, Crow and Porter, the
which occurred at 5:05 p.m. Pomeroy Cement Block Co.,
about 21h miles south of the the Pomeroy Junk Co. and
intersection of State Route 2 Swisher and Lohse Drug Store,
Pomeroy.
and U.S. 35.
Beginning Wednesday,
Halley told Huffman he was
March
I, Red Cross volunteer
going south when his car
started to slide, and started workers will start a house-toburning in the area around the ' house canvass across the
motor . Point Pleasant's county to raise funds for the
Volunteer firemen were chapter's work in Meigs
summoned. When they reached County. A bloodmobile of the
the scene the Inside upholstery Red Cross will be at the
was burning. Halley was Pomeroy elementary school
rushed to the local hospital in a Monday from noon to 6 p.m.
Walk-in donors are welcome
Crow-Hussell ambulance .
for the visit.

SOUTHERN
HIGH
SCHOOL
VARSITY
Cl:IEERLEADERS, front to back, are Jean Sloter, Judi
Roberl3, Teresa Gooch, Lee Nease and Pam Hill.·They will
be out front Friday at 7 p.m. at Meigs High In the opening
game of the "A" SecUonal basketball tournament against the
big and hot-6hooUng North GaUia Pirates.

Band Instructor
Resigns Position
RACINE - The resignation
of Mrs. Connie · Romine was
accepted by the Southern Local
School Board in a recent
special session.
Superintendent Ralph Sayre
said today Mrs . Romine,
district band instructor, and
her husband will be going to
Salt Lake City so that Mr.
Romine can further his
education. Her resignation is
effective May 31 or this year.
Hired to replace Mrs .
Romine was Robert Thomas
Phillips for the 1972-73 school
year.
In other business the board
approved a resolution to
participate in the new foundation program established by
the legislature in December of
last year. The foundati on
program requires all districts
to carry a 22.5 mill levy on
property in order to obtain full

state aid. It will be necessary
for Southern Local to vote an
additional 5 mills in order to
qualify under the foundation
program. The issue will be
voted on in the May 2 primary
election.
A breakdown of various
funds submitted by the Slate
Department of Education,
Division of School Finance,
was presented to board
members for the fiscal year
1972 by Sayre.
The board also adopted the
new minimum salary schedule
set up by the legislature las t
session.
Attending were Charles
Pyl.:S, Denny Hill, David
Nease, Junior Salser and
Clarence Lawrence, board
members; Sayre, Jim Adams,
Principal, and Nancy Carnahan, clerk.

School Levies on May 2 Ballot
School tax levies, required if
new State School Foundation
Program standards are met,
will be placed before Meigs
Coun tians in aU three local
school districts at the May 2
primary elections.
A new state foundation
program was established by
House Bill 47S, passed by the

Ohio
Legi slature
last
December. In order to obtain
full funding under this new
program, every school district
must have a total of 22'h mills
of local property tax voted for
:;chool operations.
Monday evening the three
Meigs County local boards, the
county board of education, and

the coun ty superintendent
discussed the new foundation
program.
Since the joint meeting all
three local boards have
adopted resolutions to place
levies before voters of their
districts at the May 2
primaries. In each district the
amount of the levy will be the
•

amount required to reach the
22'h mills needed to obtain full
fundin g. .
This represents an increase
of 3'h mills in the Eastern ·
Local District and an increase
of five mills in the Southern
Local and Meigs Local School
Districts.

Special Music on Crusade Programs

'
Complete selection ,pf Lee Work Clothes
and western wearDungarees, Jackets, Work Uniforms, Overalls . Carpenters
arid Painters overalls, work caps, ~oot Cut Riders . . Big
selection of sizes. You'll like the quality and long wear of Lee
Work and Western Wear.

Special musical numbers
will be presented each evening
a: the annual Middeport
Community Evangelistic
Crusade which begins Sunday
evening at the Middleport
Elementary School.

Mr. Douglas Lang of the Prinlless Coat and Suit Company will be on the ·
second floor Friday and Saturday .
MIDDLEPORT MAYOR JOHN ZERKLE Wednesday
afternoon signed a special proclamation in commemoration
of1February's being Boy Scout month. The procamation was
i:reated by MUford Hysell, Webelosleader. Pictured with the

mayor are, front row', from the left, Mark Hood, Tony Scott,
John Byer anrl Ray Stewart; back row from the Ml, Mrs. Ula
Ji'rancis, den leader; Ivan U!ne, Tom Kelly\ Randy Batey
and Mrs: Tom Kelly, ali assistant d~n mother . The group
represents Pack 24S Cub Scouts.
1

Mrs. Robert Kuhn, Pomeroy,
is in charge of the musical
portion of the crusade which
will conclude on Sund~y,
March 5.

Special numbers · will be
presented each evening by a
crusade choir formed from the
participatin g churches .
Members of this group,
directed and accompanied by
Mrs. Kuhn, wi.ll meet at the
school al6:30 p. m. each evenig
preceding the service beginning Sunday.
Making spe~ial appearances
wilh musical selections during
t11e weekhmR services will be

the Goseplaires of Rutland on
Sunday, Feb. 27 ; the Racine
Baptist Church quartet on
Monday, Feb . 28; the
Syracuse Men's Chorus 011
Tuesday , Feb. 29; Mrs. Arnold
Richards of the Mt. Moriah
Baptist Church on Wednesday,
March 1; the Gospelaires Trio,
Gallipolis, on Thursday, March
2; the Jackson Four from the
Jackson Baptist Church on
Friday; March 3: the King

Family of the Carleton Community Church on Saturday,
March 4, and Mrs. Lennie
Haptenstall; Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church,
and Mrs. Beulah White of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church, on Sunday evening,
March 5.
The public Is invited lo attend the services to be held at
7:30 ~arh evening.

.
'

.

Heart Sunday
Campaign Set

ileap Big Pow Wow at KC
High School on Saturday ·

""'"

... U I
4
I

operation of canals and bridge
inspection and railroad grade
crossing which are presently
,under the Public Utilities
Commission.
The new department will
also include a state Transportation Safety Board which
would have ~ responsibility
of monitoring and in-

Where professional pertorm•nct countt

'

::;:

•

1

t

·. :

~: •~~~~:;:!;::::~~'!:~~~~mm:: : : ~: : :•:;:;:;: : : ::::~:=:~: : : : : : : : : : ~::~~

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1972

. Chlrtlt Keller, ewner, hone breedinc f•rm,

Elberfelds In Pomer~y

·1

Devoted To The lnteresu Of The Meigs-Mruon Area

'The Real Pros demand Lee
bind, chare or pull up. The colton chambray work

PEKING (UPit - Pal NW.n dooued a hal as a
concession to Nonh ChiDa's wluter weather today but
appeared rested aud jaunty wbea she toured the Great
Wall with her husband. "I thought It was even more
spectacular than I had read about," Mrs. Nixon said after
., she viewed lloe andent harrier near Peklug. "It's so
:i'i graceful ...wlndlug up the mountaiD like a dragon's hack."
~
She said she would like to ''play hookey" from ber
~ dudes as Flnt Lady to talr.e lu more of the aucient won·

~
w

Ulysses S. Grant became the

;
!·1

stitched seams. Exclusiyc U-shnpcd crotch CDn' t

Wall Spectacular for .Pat . ·

x

first ex-U.S: president to visit

I'IJI:IIIU,OIIf

when performance counts you con trust the
J\lme Lee. Our Lee Bib Overalls give pros like
Charlie all the performance they demand.
'Ihey're made of sturdy denim with strong triple-

:~~-::::~::~-::::::~:::::::::!::::.-&amp;:M.t.:&gt;.*..~~=~~m;~:*m~:;:!~;;r.;;r.:-s~&amp;.:..

lleverl to be building upon an
agreement already reached to
expand and continue ChineseAmerican contacts as the first
thaw in the frozen relationship
between the two powers.
Walls Unwanted
A formal communique is·
expected to be issued at the
conclusion of the Nixon-Chou
talks. The two are scheduled
for another meeting Friday,
followed by a formal banquet
by Nixon for his hosts in
response to one for him and
Mrs. Nixon Monday night.
Nixon's first public comment
on his visit came when he
(Continued on page S)

WP.ather

I

MHI former Major Leaa:ue st.r. Wt·um you're a
pro, performance is more than just a word . And

conference at 5:15 p.m. (4:15 leaders have been together for
a.m. EST ) at the Great Hall more than :lA hours- More than
of The People in the center of half of the lime devoted to
Peking. Since Nixon's arrival official talks.
Nixon and Chou were be·
four days ago, the two world

By United Press lnlernalional

Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. at Kyger Creek High
School, a three level Boy Scout
training course will- be conducted by the Tri-State Area
Council, according to ·Tom
Gruble,
acting
M-G-M
executive. Here is how it will
work :
Cub Scout Pow Wow Training for all adults who
work with .or assist with the
Cub Scout program, .leaders,
committeemen and parents, 9
a.m. -8:30a.m., Registration .
9:30 a.m .. 12 noon, Crafts
(for the Den Leaders and other
ladies); Pack Administration
(for the Cubmaster, committee
members and all other men ).
12:15 - 1:15, Lunch (all
requested to bring a bag lunch). A Scout type dinner
program will be held for
everyone.
I :30- 3:30 p.m., Games and
S~its (for Den Leaders and
Mothers) Webelos Den
Operations (for all men ).
Den Chief Training - This
training is for ali Boy Scouts

Summit
.'

PEKING (UP!) - President
Nixon and Premier Chou Enlai closeted themselves today
in a prolonged private summit
session, fUrther exploring ways
of opening the wall of hostility
between the United States and
.China ov.er the past 22. years.
Their meeting, lasting well
into the evening and including
an informal dinner, came a few
hours after Nixon declared
from atop the famed Great
Wall of China that he hoped his
China visit would.bridge walls
of any kind that "divide the
peoples of the world."
The President and the
premier began their long

Now You Know

Weather .

News • • • in Briefs t

Prolonged

Between Nixon and Chou

s.

but "we have access to most
North and Soutl\ · American
CAP~i; ~tDY
(UP!)• ~ bullineuman who says he may lOth anniversary of the launch Slayton, ·
I
The ceremony took Jjlace on
animals," he said.
John H. , leon Jr. recalle\1 . try again for political .office of the first American Into orbit.
Accompanying him were his freshly cut gMilll between the:~
Tu~ ~ hlsbi.storlc orbit after two unsuccessfull tries
of the eatll\ 10 Ytlll'B ago nearly for the U.S. Senate from Ohio, wife, Annie; daughter, Mrs. round blockhouse and .the•:
took hlr!! ,,by SUI'firise. The looked .around at the aban- Lynn Power, and Mercury as- concrete pad from which he;:
launch· ~arne on the 11th doned gantry and said man's tronauts Alan B. Shepard, Ii·· blasted off on the nose of 8 fiery·~
·
schedu)td time. ·
progress in space since his Gordon Cooper and Donald K. Atlas.
"We'd h•d . 10 scrub1 three-orbit voyage has been
previouil to that," Glenn, a ''truly ~g almost starnative of New Concord, Ohio, Uing.11
said as he )ootfid around at the
"It's hard to believe that we
A Racine man was
Adams was taken to:.
have
come
from
that
to
the
hospitalized following a single Veterans Memorial Hospital:;
.l ! •
site of bif pioneer launch . •
"In fad we had a regular fantastic Apollo lunar landings car accident early today on SR by private car. He suffered aO: :
routine set up fpr sa-ubs. It that we have today," Glenn 124 four tenths of a mile west of injury to his head and arm.::
There was heavy damage to :
Southeastern Ohio woodland went quite norma)ly. Like this: told a crowd of 3,000 Space Racine.
You
(!Ot
up
vary
early
...
put
workers
commemorating
the
. The Meigs County Sheriff's the car. No citation was issued;,
owners who anticipate making
on
the
ai!VI[ lllit, drove over to
Dept. said Bobby Joe Adams,
:;
timber sales in the near future
Pad
14,
weilt
up
In
the
eleilator,
·:;
Racine
Rt.
1,
was
traveling
will find answers to many of
BANQUET DELA YEO &lt;
southeast on 124 at 3 a.m. when
their questions by attending a lay on YePr ·.hack awhile up
The
annual father-son '·
his car went off the highway on
Timber Marketing Clinic at there in t!)t ~apu1ile .
.
Cloudy,
not
as
cold
tonight,
"Then • (optratlons officer)
the right, striking a utility pole. banquet of Pomeroy Lodge 164;::
McArthur, Ohio on March 2.
with
rain
likely
central
and
Meigs County timber Walt Williams woDld _call 'np south. Low tonight upper 20s to The driver stated that he went F&amp;AM, scheduled for Thurs.::
day night has been postponed ~;
growers are invited to atlend. over the-in"rcom and he'd say middle 30s. Cloudy Thursday, to sleep .
until
March .
Program :
The clinic, which will start at it's broke, or the weather's bad chance of showers or rain
and we ·mbbed.
arrangements
required
.:
2 p.m. in the McAr-thur
central
and
south.
High
mid
40s
LOCAL Tf!;MPS
"I'd ~ (wife.) Annie and
resetting of the eveht the exact :
Methodist Church, is designed
extreme south .
The temperature in down- date of which will be an- ;
she
S&amp;y;,
,'yeah,
1
know,
1
to help landowners with the
town Pomeroy at II a .m. nounced later. John C. Bacon, :
following three general areas already know.'"
Wednesday
was 33 degrees worshipful master, announced ·;
Mission NOI Scrubbed
PLEASANT VALLEY
of making timber sales. (I) use
the postponement.
·
When Ftb. 20, 1962 came aNames of patients admitted under cloudy skies.
of proper selling practices, (2)
temporarily
understanding of timber long, ~~did not go accord· have been
'
ing
to
the·
well-rehearsed
roudiscontinued
for
publication.
values, and (3) becoming more
DISCHARGES : Mrs. Otis
familiar with existing tit'nber tine. The _. milsion was not
~.u~. ·
.
· Bailey, Leon; Russell Leonard,
markets.
(Continued from page I)
:
ThiS
tl:t~11
was
getting
serPoint Pleasant· Mrs. Hattie
Since the program will last
the Senate Urban and Highway Affairs Committee, which is :
until8 p.m., a reservation and ious," Glti,ID _Iaid. "A!Jd yo~ Phillips, Crown 'city, 0.; Mrs. ·
$2.50 for the evening meal is initllli !ea~on ,was to ~ James Winterod , Gallipolis working on the bill. Mrs. Evelyn Stebbins of the Citiiena for ;
requested by February 25:Mail ba_ck With: ., Now look, walt .a Ferry ; Eva Billups, Mason ; Clean Air and Water said, "It is patently apparent that the :
Point hierarchy of the Republican party (of the Senate) sold out to strip· ;
reservations and checks to the mmute, lets not carry this William Turner
Vinton County Extension thing too fw: .if ie're not care- Pleasant· Mrs Atfi.ed Scar- mine interests," referring to the delegation of the bill to the ::
f"!: this thjlog's liable to ligh~; berry, Thurma~. 0., and Mrs. committee on which CoUins was a member rather than the ·
Service, McArthur, Ohio.
SO thej'e ~was m orbit., .. David Fetty Point Pleasant
Environmental Affairs Committee.
This clinic is under the
The
alll]i'k.es.
did not ~
'
·
direction of the Extension and
there he li!id. pile of the first
Soil Conservation Services in
things he _f9WJd in space was a
Gallia and Vinton Counties.
toy .11)01140· .
Forestry Specialists, Bill
"When I-cot uito orbit, I wiS
Cowen and Bob Touse from ready to take some pictures. I
Ohio State University will pulled the Velcro container·
conduct the lecture and that held all the cameras and
Shop every week day including Thursday from 9:30a.m. to S p.m. and
discussion.
the first thing that came flOat·
Frtdays and Saturdays 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Some time in the future you ing out was a little mouse, a
as a landowner may either little fol~·OUH -with a UIU ainitiate or be offered the op- bout a f,1 ~. 'and a half tied dOwn
Be sure to visit all three shopping floors for special sole prices and to seethe new arrivals In
portunity to make a timber so it wouJcfn•t get loose.
tvtry _department. In the Infants Department girls ready-to-wear . womons rttdv-to-wtar.
Curtain and Drapery Department - new yacuum,cleoners. new Furniture on lhtlrd floor.
sale . This doesn't happen often
"Som~y had put that in
Towels, sheets, handbags, mens and boys slacks, shirts, socks. Ntw Housewares items to ·
during your lifetime and there and i'rn not sure it was
make your home more liveable. Take time to loOk around end'" olllloat's now.
consequently most people do ever Uited tO the launch equi!&gt;not have the necessary ex- ment" ''
perience in selling Umber. This
;, .tiD&amp;.iac, startling"
clinic is aimed at helping make
Glenn, ·. now 50 and a
Hmber sales . pr_ofilable sales.

_-§·:·

:. Ali!&lt;(~q[ ilherls~ed moments
&lt;!,..~-, ~e;i6revt r symbolized by
y9ut_ 4mif~ engagement ring
' • · 171 ~·· ~epsake is in

the President, but it's true."
H~ used the term pumerous
times in his speech in reierence
· to Nixon.
·

eat ~

D
R
'
al
'
·
s
h
k
'
.
~~e::!: ~::a~:t:sp:::. ·v E
,.o itin_.,·e
v .. ay .a
_ e ·. . oc er

said the

Opens March 16 To

-~):~j~~h-:You know
~· r

.

Zoo Claiming Pandas Nixon Lied-a bout

was made with the assistance
of John Tannehill , a Cincinnati
youth who was a member of the
U.S. table tennis team that was
invited into the Communist
nation last year.
Maruska said he will ask the
White House to turn over the
animals to the zoo here.
The pandas, he said, "are the
most sought after animals in
the world by zoos."
"I don 't kpow how it can be

• 't!

•

I

I

.

'

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