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8- The Dajly Sentinel;Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 8,1973

No cause·· for
· alarm-Morgan
- .. n,;re's n~ cause for alarm

certifying water used by in-

here. 'City water meets all
requir eme nts of th e Ohio
Department of Health," said
City Manager D. Kenneth
Morga n thi.s morning in
reference to a report in Sunday's Times-Sentinel.
.
The United States Environm ental
Prote ction
AgencY,, Chicago, Ill., granted
the Gallipolis system a
provisional approval recently :
Morgan said this.has nothing to
do with the water itself, but the
number of samples required by
the agency.
"The Ohio State Department
of Health requires four samples a month, and !hat's what
we're doing/ ' Morgan continued. Local samples are
tested at Nelson~ ilte .
"Any more samples that
than would require a loca I
laboratory for testing," continued Morgan. The Chicago
agency is asking for eight to I~
samples a month.
The EPA classifications are
part of an ongoing inspection
program by the agency
designed to assist the U. S.
Food and Drug Administration
with its responsibility for

terstate carriers.

" It's tlme again to wave

good-by to al l our clever
friend s who sav ed th ei r
va cations for winter".

How about those do-ityour se lf jobs you'v,e been
putt i ng off 'til winter?

Well. winter is here and lhe
" FRIENDLY ONES" at
the Pomeroy Cement Block

Company have everything
you,neep to get started on it
this weekend . Come i11
today ... {your wile will be

glad you didL ..

In Gallipolis' case, this involves only the Delta Queen, a
river passenger boat which
receives --:.ater supplies from
the city during stopovers here
in the summer IJ)Onths.
This will be terminated in the
future according to Morgan.
" It would not be feasible to
build a new lab here for
sampling purposes just to
provide water to the Delta
Queen," Morgan added.
"Maybe we'll need one later
on, but not right now."
In conclusion, Morgan said
that in his term of office during
the past five years, GallipoliJ
water has not only met all
health requirements, but has,
in most cases, exceeded them.

Coal stove, is
blamed in fire
An overheated coal stove
was believed to have caused a
fire in a workshop at the home
of the late Herman Bailey on
Fisher St. in Middleport at 2:34
a. m. Sunday .
Fire Chief Bob Byer said the
blaze was out of control when
the Middleport Fire Dept.
arrived . Threatened, but not
damaged, by the blaze was the
garage at the home. Property
losses had not been determined
today, Byer said .

News

• • • .in .Brief .· Da Nang base bo~bed by frien'dlies •·

(COntinued from Page I)

SAIGON (UPI) - Five U.S.
park employes and garbage1ruck drivers were on strike in this warplanes apparently trying to
northeastern Ohio city today; a!ong with teachers who"Went out strike Corrununist troop posion strike Saturday night in a .wag~ dispute with the city. Picket. tions dumped nearly nine tons
lines were set up by the city workers, me'!lbers of.the American of bombs by mistake on the big
Federation of State, CountY and MUnicipal Employes. They allied air base at Da Nang
sought @7.5 pet. wage ilierease recently granted the police and today, injuring nine Americans
and blowing up three
firemen, bul the city olfered only a 5.5pet. raise.
The strike has idled 45 workers in the city of 32,1100. Safety petroleum tanks.
A U.S. command spokesman
service director Blaise Sparma said every effort would be made
said
34 bombs weighing 500
to remove snow from streets if it snowed, but he said he didn't
pounds each were unloaded
know what method would be used.
from
.a formation composed of
Meanwhile, the board of education· went to Stark County
Common Pleas Court to try te obtain a court order te get the an air force, two marine and
striking teachers back to work. The teachers walked off the job two navy jet fighter-bombers
last Wednesday in a pay dispute, shutting down the city's 14 flying above a heavy overcaSt
over the huge base 370 miles
schools.
north of Saigon. He termed the

Sniper war

Kissinger
(Continued from Page 1)
reached.
Hanoi contends there is only
one - Vietnam, that the
Demilitarized Zone ( ~MZ)
dividing the North and South is
only temporary and that
Communist troops should
remain in the South until a
cease-fire is accomplished.
The United States wants
some reference in the text of an
accord that two Vietnams
exist. South Vietnam's posture
is even more firm. Saigon
wants the DMZ recognized as a
frontier between the two
countries and all of Hanoi's
troops removed from South
Vietnamese territory. Hanoi
has never admitted the
presence of its troops in the
South.
·

Carmel News,

By the Day

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES: George
Nowlin, Southside; Mrs.
Clarence Matheny, Nitro;
Charles Lee, Gallipolis Ferry;
Charles Willet, Gallipolis
Ferry; Harold Whittington,
Leon; Nancy McDade, Evans;
Wayne Love, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. William Burke and son,
Gallipolis, 0.; Mrs. Michael
Pollock, Gallipolis; Mrs .
Doneld Hornbeck, son,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Danny
Cornell, Glenwood; Bonnie
Higginbotham, Gallipolis, 0.;
Thomas Glofelty •.,Jr., Leon;
David ·Dunn; Gallipolis ferry;
Roy Mayes, Point Pleasant;
James Heaton, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Levi Caruthers, Cheshire, 0. ,
and Mrs. Paul Bocook, Mason.

(COntinued from Page 1)
sprawled between the dens. .
"Power to the People!" one
of the snipers yelled just after
one of the trio was gunned
down.
Officer~ 50 yards from the
blockhouses in the neighboring
Rault Center ,- where five
persons died in a fire less than
two months ago, fired armorpiercing bullets at the snipers'
fortresse~.

.,

~·~Flying

Banana 11 Marine

helicopter gunships circled the
hotel, blasting away at the
concrete dens.
The snipers were sealed off
with no way to escape. Police
barred their way in staircases
below, helicopters pinned them
from above.
"We do not intend to risk the
lives of any more policemen or
firemen," said Police Superintendent Clarence "Giarrusso.
"Our greatest ally is time."
One of the rooftop hideaways
of the snipers was partially
blasted away: Pieces of concrete chipped away littered the
ground below. There were
bullet holes in the battleship
gray doors of the snipers'
blockhouses.
The helicopters, also called
"Jolly Greim Giants" by fliers
of the craft similar to those
used in Vietnam, flew sorties
before and after dawn over the
rooftop, firing into the snipers'
lairs and taking return fire .
The ordeal began on a
peaceful Sunday when fires
were started throughout the
hotel. The gunmen then fired at
policemen, firemen· and hotel
guests. The snipers held a
black maid for a moment, but
set her free, saying, "We only
want to kill whites."
During the night, one of the
helicopters edged te within 10
feet and blasted away at the
blockhouses. One of the snipers
retreated inte the stairwell and
traded gunfire with police
below. Three officers were
wounded. The sniper then
returned te his rooftop refuge.
The first person wounded in
the long battle was a fireman,
who was scaling a ladder te
fight one of the fires started by
the terrorists. He was shot in
the arm.
"This black fellow came out
on the bali:ony about two
stories above the fire and shot
him," said Michael Knapp, 37,
of New York City,~ guest in the
hotel. "That's ·all I saw. I
turned and ran like hell. I've
never been so scared in all my

Mr. and Mrs. Allan Griswald
of Vienna, W.Va., and Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Griswald and
family of Oklahoma visited Mr.
and Mrs . Allan Taylor
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Multi
and
family
of
New
Philadelphia and Miss Dixie
Circle of Cleveland, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Harden and
family of Morning Star, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Circle and
family of Racine R. D. and Carl
Circle and daughter, Patrece
of Oak Grove visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Circle, Verba·
and Wavie Circle during the
past week.
Rev. and Mrs. Richard
Young and family of Sidney
and Mr. and Mrs. ·Robert
Watson and family of Kent
ACSTOMEET
The Meigs Chapter of the were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
American Cancer Society will Edson Roush for the holiday
meetat7 :30p. m. Thursday at week.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson
the chapter office on Coal St.,
and
daughter, Toni of Racine
Middleport.
and Mr. and Mrs. Shelby
FATHER DIES
Pickens ~nd family of
Mr . and Mrs . L. F. Syracuse spent Sunday with
St., Mr . and Mrs. Allan Taylor.
Schoenleb , Lasley
Pomeroy, were called to
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle
Marysville due to the death of and daughter, Cheryl, and Mr.
his father , John Schoenleb.
and Mrs. James Circle of New
Haven and Mrs. Laura Circle
of Dorcas were recent guests of
Mrs. Mary Circle.
New Year's Day guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert See, Bob
Bill , Becky and Ralph Lee
were Mr. and Mrs. James
Ingram Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Tom
O'Neil and son, Mrs. Jame~
Ingram Jr. and daughters, all life."
of Columbus.

bombing a ''regrettable mis- ,
take" but could not say what
caused ihe error. The planes, .
he ·said, · all dropped tjleir
bombs at the same time i n a
corner of the base.
UP! correspondent KeMeth
F. Englade reported from Da
Nang that two u.s. soldiers,
two American civilians and a·
South Vietnamese civiiian
guard were wounded by the
bomllB themselves. Four U.S.
airmen and another American
civilian were hurt running for

co~.

air war over North
Vietnam entered its lotlT month
with 124 fighter-bombers and

Market Report

Veteran&amp; Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Lucinda WoHe, Pomeroy;
Ollie Tyree, Middleport;
Debora Phillips, Pomeroy;
Arlie West, Por-tland; Joseph
Moodispaugh, Elmer Napper,
Middleport, and William
Barrett, Langsville.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Gilda Baxter, Alice MuJllns,
Sh_e rry Neutzling, William
Morris, Ralph Swan, Salem
Yates, Bob Miller, Tammy
Samos, Leroy Terrill, Clarence
McClaskey, Evelyn Motter,
Constance Shields, Virginia
Roush, Ethel Jeffers, George
Batey, Diana Gilmore and
Timmy Barrett.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Paul Van Meter, Middleport;
Dixie Baldwin, Racine; Johnny
McDertnott, Letart, W. Va.;
Betty Hayes, Syracuse; Bertha·
Robinson, Racine; Louise
Johnson, Middleport; Callie
Matheney, Ewington, and
Harriet Lauderrnllt, Mason.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Edna Roush, Coy Roush,
Joseph Bradbury and cOra
Christy.

SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Steers: Choice, 38.60-39.50;
Good to Choice, 37-38.50;
Standard to Good , 35-36.50.
Heifers: Choice, 36.80-37.90;
Good to Choice, 35.50-36.50;
Standard . Good, 34 .2()-35.50.
Cows: Commercial Cows,
28.50-29.85; Utility, 26-28.35;
Canners and Cutters, 21.
Bulls: Commercial, 34-35.85.
Stockers and Feeders : Steer
Calves, 45-49.50; Heifers, 3643.75; Yearlings, 38.60 down.
Veal Calves: Choice, 61.50;
Good, 55.50.
Lambs: 31.
Hogs: 2Jlll.230, 31.25; No. I
3l;50; 23().240, 31; Sows, 25.4().
26.35. Boars, 23.50.

Boosters to meet
RACINE - The Southern
Athletic Boosters will meet at
7:30 p. m. Tuesday at the high
school here.
Officers for 1973 will be
elected. Nominated at the last
meeting were Ronnie Salser,
Herb White and Billy Hill for
president; Beverly Cndner for
secretary, Grace Huffman,
Martha Dudding and Sandra
Hill for· treasurer, and Betty
Theiss and Dorothy Salser for
recorder . All persons interested in the athletic
program are asked to attend .

SON IS BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Siley
are announcing the birth of an
eight pound, 12-ounce son,
Richard Harmon, at Marietta
Memorial Hospital. Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Harold
Ebersbach
of
Pomeroy; paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Siley 'of Marietta ; Mrs.·
Nellie Siley of Marietta is a
great-grandmother, and
of
Emmett
Blackburn
Pomeroy is a greatgrandfather.

QUEEN DAMAGED
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Damage was estimated at
$2,300 In the fire on the Delta
Queen at Public Landing here
Sunday . Firemen said the
blaze, attributed to a short
.circuit, started in the woodwork .on the top deck hallway
and spread through ~e ceiling.

pb011t 45 B5Zs hitti.~g ~low the

country's201hParalleh~the 24

,,

.

Save All Yolir
Saleslips From

the
•

t

''

(
.
I

GJJirds ofaftather
What .do lll e~ bi1·ds have in common ? T he owl from
the wide-awake b~ n k und the ea gle
from E Pluribus Unum.

-

Th e re · ~

a n eagle on everv dollnl\ isn't there? And
the wide-awake bun k is fnm ous for all things having
,to do with money , So t here's a· nnt urnl attra ction.
·That's why the wide-awake owl a nd t he eag-le stick

together so often in

savin~s .

checking, auto

loan s, personal loans, home loa ns .'. .
C ome to t hink of it, how nbout you ? Wouldn't &gt;'ou
like to kee)&gt; company with fi ne feathe r ed fri ends

at our wide-awake bank?

The witle-owake bank
makes itollsoeos11,
c::;:;---..Y.i·
-·'

.

'

MEIGS THEATRE

'.

Tonight &amp; Tuesday
January 8-9
'

POMEROY,
. .
. OHIO
·

'

Membe r of Feder al Reser ve Syste m

On Fridays Our Ori·V&amp;· In Window is Open 9 a .m. to ·7 p.m. ·
{Continuously). .
S20,000 Maximum In surance for Each Deposi tor

BEN.
(Technicolofl
Lee Harco:urt Montgomery

Joseph Campanella
Arthur O'Conne.ll
Rosemary Murphy

IG I
Cartoons :

How-Do-Dee- Doody
Special Helper
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

VAN METER IN U.S.
CAPE CHARLES, Va. AIR
FORCE STATION - U. S. Air
Fore~ ·sergeant Leonard
(Lennie) Van Meter, son of Mr.
and Ma's. Leonard E;. Van .
Meter, 104· Locust St.,
Pomeroy, 'has arrived for duty
here fro!ll Germany. Sergeant
Van Meter, ~ space tracking
controJ_ specialist, is a 1968
graduait of Pomeroy High
School and entered the Air
Force in June 1969.

I
.

,.

I'

PATENTED SPRINGS
The famous Flexsteel springs are made of arched bands of finest
blue steel and a strapped platform top to fOrm a singie unit that
suports in restful ease -like floating on air. FLEXSTEfl SPRINGS ARE
SO DURABLE THEY WILl PROVIDE LASTING COMFORT!

CONSTRUCTION

•'

Frames are · of finest, kiln-dried hardwood, double-dowelled and
corner-blocked for added strength . Upholstering is expert and
tailoring carefully detailed.

CLEANLINESS
flexsteel is easily kept factory-fresh and clean. No cambric bottom~
to gather dust and allergens.
'

SATISFACTION
flexsteel furniture is not only a smart addition to your home but
also a wise investment that will .give years of. faultless se!Vice..

FURNITURE
.. SALE

MIDDLfPORT, 0.

,_,I
~

Hargraves as its. representative te receive and expend'
feder81 funds according to
approved · programs and
•provisions of the law.
The ·. board approved . the
purchase of bond for the clerk
and of liability insurance for
board members.
Appointed were John Bel!ver
as director of transportation
effective Dec. 18, 1972 to May
31 of this year and John Scragg
as assistant bus mechanic at a
salary of $2.75 per hour. effective Jan. I until May 31, and
Joe Shavorinsky as a full-time
maintenance man effective
Jan. 15 to May 31.

-

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

First findings of an economic Impact ~nalysis related to the
power complex at Cheshire and Salem Center will be revealed to
the . Buckeye HIIIB-Hocl&lt;ing Valley Regional DevelOJiment
District In Its regular quarterly meeting of the district's counctl
at 1:30 p.m. on Jan. 16 In the courtroom of the Meigs County
courthouae in Pomeroy. The public Ia invited.
The major Item on the agenda of the council will be a progress
report on 'lllrly findings and recommendations of the analysis of
the economic Impact of the new deep coal mines and power plant
that are being located in the Meigs, GaiJla, and Vinton counties
are~ of south111tem Ohio. The raport will . be given by
r.presentatlves·oi Hammer, Greene, ,Siler Aaoc., and Stlnley
Consultants, the consultant firms employed · to complete the
111alysla aeveral months ago by Buckeye Hllis • Hocking Valley
Regional Development District and the Neighboring Ohio Valley
Regional Development District.
The economic Impact
analysis was Initiated at the Gen. James M. Gavin Plant in
request af the several major Gallia County and the related
ll!deral agencies which com- deep coal mine facilities in
'Rrise the federal regional Meigs and Vlnten counties.
cb.uncll aerving the five midThe early recorrunendations
western states, including Ohio, te be discussed at the Jan. 16
that are a part of the Chicago meeting will focus on water,
Federal Regio~. The goal of the sewer, and highway needs in
analysis is te provide hard the several county area that is
recommendations regarding being Impacted by the AEP's
federal, slate and local actions developments. This 16th ·public
that are needed to take full meeting will provide the first
advantage of the private in- major opportunity for the
vestments being made by the general public te be brought up
American Electric Power Co. te date on the progress of the
and its subsidiaries in the new impact analysis.

•

Effective Jan. 1, 1973, the
board estahlished a $2.25 base
salary for all custodians, plus
$2 per shift additional for night
shifts. This is the first step to
equalize base the rate of pay,
Board President Frank W.
Porter said. The l!llse rate will
be given further consideration
and a review of the salary
schedule for all non-eertified
. be made,' the
personnel Will
boar~ said.
The following salary adjustments were approved:
maintenance man, $2.40 per
hour; head custodian at the
school, $2.75 per hour, and
substitute custodian rate, $2
per hour, all effective Jan. I.

Hargraves asked the board which time Don Mullen, vice
to consider the possibility of · president, presided.
leasing a small Xerox copy - Mullen asked about school
lllilchine for $411 a month with inspection forms. The forms
1333 sbeets of paper included will be sent to each member for
each month, plus maintenance. . study before the next regular
The · board look no action meeting it was noted.
pending further study.
Clerk Lee McComas ·read a
letter from Eleanor Thomas,
The board approved the director of the Meigs County
appointment of the following Council of Aging expressing
substitute cooks; Virginia the thanks of the senior citizens
W~ars, Annie Moon, Addalou for the help the board has given
Lewis, Sylvia Neece, Eva in the use of Pomeroy Junior
Milltron, Ella Mae Southern, High School.
Attending were Porter,
Madeline Painter, Katherine
Mu!len,
Virgil King, Joe Sayre,
Powell and Freda Davis.
Porter presided at the Carol Pierce, board memmeeting until he bad to leave to bers; Hargraves and Mcattend another meeting at Comas.

Weather

at y

By Ualted Presa Iaternatlonal
MASSD..WN, OHIO - TEACHERS ENDED their strike in
this northeastern Ohio community today, but city employes still
refused to work.
· Teachers - faced with a court-ordered back-to-work injunction - voted Monday night te accept a previOIISly negotiated
· pay raise and return te classrooms. They had been on strike
since last Wednesday.
Some 48 city employes - Including street workers, park
· employes, garbage truck drivers and paint and electrical shop
workers - have not worked since Saturday night fn a pay raise
dispute.
.
The teachers strike ended as the Massillon Educationrepresenting more than 300 of the city's 351 teachers - voted
unanimously to return te wo1l.

FINE FURNITURE BEGINS ON THE INSIDE

.:

.

•

Pages

°

..

Special Services, $325.
and added the following to the
graduate of Marietta College.
Supplies, $14!,300.
• sullBtitute teachers' list, as
· Following recommendations
Materials
for
Maintenance,
approved by the county board :
made by Supt. George
Mark Muncy, Spanish;
Hargraves,' the board ap- $32,600.
EqQipment
Replacement,
Richard Russell, Biology; Alan
proved the foiloiving general
Briar( Black, elementary;
fund appropriations for 1973: $54,1100. •
Balance January 1, 1973, ., Contract and Open 'Order Annice Jacoby, Art, English,
Service, $96,100,
Spanish, Social Studies; Alida
$153,308.03.
Fixed Charges, $291,316.67, Ciardeltl, 'elementary;
Anticipated Income,
Contingent, $10,1100.
Elizabeth Hltferty, elemen$2,104,956.96.
Total,
Capital Outlay, $22,000.
tary; Rose Ann Jenkins,
$2,258,264.99. '
Total Estimated
Ex- elementary, and Eleanor
Anticipated ExpenditUres
penditures, $2,144,093.13.
Blaellnar , elementary, and'
Administration, $59,132.
Estimated Balance January hired Patricia O'Conner, a
Instruction, $1,257,364.38.
· graduate
of
Marshall
Coordinate Activities, $3,500. I, 1974, $114,171.116.
The board approved a University, as French and ·
Auxiliary Agencies (Transresolution commending Carol English teacher effective Jan.
portation), $99,106.08.
, Operation of School Plant, Pierce and Hiram sl8wter on 22 the -emalnder of the school
their many years of service at year.
$69,365.
the lime of tHeir retirement
The board designated Mr.
Maintenance, $16,964.

Yellow

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en tine

Devoted To Tlullnlere~~ OfTiulMeigJ-MtuOn Area
T~ESDAY,

,.

JANUARY 9, 1973

PHONE 992-2156

oom covers ta

•

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EN

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Findings of
•
area Impact
sw-vey due

.5,1

·Elberfelds
In Pomeroy

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Piggy banks ·were named,
not for their shape, but for
"pygg," a type of clay used In
the Middle Ages to make many
h011sehold items.

her horne several years; nvo
sons, Alfred K., Cupertino,
Calif., and Russell G. ,'
Coolville;· a sister, Mrs. Rilla
Walden, Coolville; five
grandchildren, six great- ·
grandchildren and several
nieces and nephews
Mrs. Daugherty was a
member of the Coolville United
Methodist Church .
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p. m. TUesday at the White
Funeral Home here with the
Rev. Roy W. Rose officiating.
Burial will be in Coolville.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime .

,.

.

Now You Know

VOL. XXIV NO. 186

Local Bowling

NEW OAPSE CHIEF
Wednesday Afternoon
COLUMBUS (UPI)
League
Lawrence DeCresce was
Dec. 77, 1977
Standings
named during t11e weekend Team
w. L.
executive director of the Ohio Gaul 's Shake Haven
82 .54
·
t'
f
Pub!'
Sch
1
Lodwick's
Mkt.
75 61
AssOCla !On
00
lC
Ridenour's T.V .
72 64
Employes, succeeding local · R. c. Cola
64 72
attorney Peter J . Gee.
. Riggs U;ed Cars
1&gt;3 74
Good's Pennzoil
44 92
High Ind. game - first,
BOOSTERS TO MEET
Marlene Wilson 168; second,
TUPPERS PLAINS - Band . Florine Ginther 159 .
'II be d'
ed h
High series - llrsl, Marlene
camp WI
ascuss w en ·Wilson 435; second, Florine
the Eastern High School Band Ginther 433.
Boosters meet at 7:30 p. m. - Team high game
Lodwick's Mkt. 327.
Tuesday at the high school. All
Team high series
Ladband parents are asked to. be wick's Mkt. 901 .
present.
LODGE TO MEET
CLOSES WEDNESDAY
RACINE - Racine Lodge
SUNBURY, Ohio (UPI) - 461, F&amp;AM, will meet in
Entries close Wednesday for regular session at 7:30 p. m.
the March 18 spring mixed sale Tuesday. Refreshments will be
of thoroughbreds sponsored by served. All master masons are
the Ohio Breeders' Sales co. invited.
The sale will be held at the Ohio
Thoroughbred Center here.

The re,11ignation of Carl Wolfe
· as head basketball coach of
Meigs High School was accepted and the annual appropriallon budget for 1973
totaling $2,104,956.96 was
approved by the Meigs Local
Board of Education . Monday
night.,
Wolfe's resignation as head
haskelbiill coach is effective at
the conclusion of the 1972-73
basketiSall seasoq. Woife' has
held the post as head basketball coach since the Meigs
Local Disltil:t was formed.
Before that he was head
basketball coach at Middleport
High School. A former Racine
High School star, he is a

Mrs. Daugherty dies .in Athens
COOLVILLE - Mrs. Vera 0.
Daughterly, 87, of 104
Maplewood Drive, Athens,
formerly of Coolville, died
Saturday evening at the
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
in Athens following an extended illness.
Mrs. Daughterly was born in
Athens, the daughter of the late
Milroy and Hanna Russell
Green. Besides her parents,
she was preceded In death In
1940 by her husband, Ross E.,
and two sisters.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. Ira (Mae) Burnfield,
Athens, with whom she made

·.

• I

e .reszgns

Someho~, the CQI~Fa~d
said, the .aircraft veer~ Off

.

said

HAVE

WDGETOMEET
A special meeting of Middleport LOdge 383, F&amp;AM, will
be held at 7:30 Tuesday night at
the temple. Work will be in the
FC degree. All master masons
are invited.

.

hours ending at dawn today.
u.s. command spokesmen said . course and ended up over Da
"numerous" trucks were de- Nang Instead of the COmmunist .
stroyed near the port of .Vinh, target they thought they were
137~iles north of the Dernllita- heading for 62 miles away. ·
rized Zone (DMZ) and "seve·
Thel.,.dpilotgavethesignal
ral" others were hi! near Dong and ordered all planes to dump
Hoi,38rnllesnorthoftheDMZ. their bombs.
·
Atleastoneofthebombsthat
The U.S. command said It
fell on the Da Nang facility hit had little information on the
a huge petrolewn storage tank, incident late today, eight hours ·
teuchlng ,off an explosiQn that after the attack. gpokesmen
spread . fires to two oUier said a full-acale investigation
nearby tanks, military sources was urider way, but a spokesreported.
... man ruled out mechanical
The erroneous bombing error.
teuched off rumors the base
In South Vietnam, U.S.
had been attacked by 'Soviet- commanders switched till! bulk
built · MIG jets from North of B52 attacks from thi! nortral
Vietnam'. whose nearest Iron- thern front to the Cen
tier is lOOmlles away. But none Hil!hlands, spokesmen said.
of Hanoi's MIGs have ever Fourteen of 19 waves of the
been known to attack ·huge planes struck north an&lt;l
anywhere In South Vietnam. A w-e-~t of Kontum Province
few reconnaissance. flights capital, 260 ,miles north" of
ha.ve been reported, hut never Saigon. The other five · hit
confirmed, over the years.
elsewhere · throughout South
Initial reports
the five Vietnam.
planes were cruising above a . COmmunist troops launched
2,SIJO.Iootsolid cloud cover on a 77 attacks throughout South
S(H!alled "Sky Spot" mission, a Vietnam in the 24-bour period
strategic bombing attack guld- that ended at dawn today; the
edonly byradar,radio beacons lowest number In six days, the
and a "little black box" Saigon command said.

. JUS TRANilP.MNT
Mrs. Sharorl 'ii'liye Smith of
Pomeroy, underwent a cornea
transplant Saturday at
University -Hospital
in
Columbus. She is confined te
Room 233, Means Building,
where cards may be sent.

SORORITY TO MEET
The Xi Gamma Mu will meet
Thursday at the home of Rosie
Sisson at 7:45 p.m. Ann Rupe is
co-hostess and Mildred Karr
and Velma Rue , are cochairmen of the program.

compute~.

::us:~;,. T.¥*:~.-v~~~~ - .. ~~s:: . l:.er.*

PARIS (UP!)- Peace talks
between Henry Kissinger and
Le Due Tho resumed today in
the same atmosphere of public
gloom that marked the opening
of the latest round of secret
talks Monday.

ROBERT CLAIUI:
Robert Clark, Harrisonville, farmer, was elected
.president of the Meigs
County Board of Com·
mlnlollf.l 1 ,r&gt;loldlf. He
succeeds Cliarles R. Karr,
Sr., who bas sei'Ved as
pres~ent of the board for the
. past five ilbd a baH years.
Mr. Clark woa reelection to
the
comminioa
last
November. He is a
republican.

GOES INTO DITCH
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's department i.nvestigated a minor accident
Monday at 9:40 a.m. at the
junction of U. S. Route 33 and
SR 681 in which there were no
personal injuries. Robert Dale
Blankenahlp, Albany, Rt, 2,
traveling north on 33 'attempted
to make a left turn onto 681
when he hit loose gravel, lost
control, and went off the highway to the right into a ditch.
There was damage to the front
end of the car. No citation was
issued.

Today's scenario was
precisely the reverse of
Monday's. Just as Tho refused
te greet Kissinger on Monday,
so Kissinger refused to greet
Tho today.
The negotiators met at a
place of the Americans' choosing-an exclusive golf club in
suburban Saint-Non-la-Bretche
-where Kissinger and his
party arrived first and went
directly inside.
A few minutes later, at 9:58
a.m., Le Due Tho and his party
arrived
In limousines.
Kissinger did not come to the
door to
greet them,
reclprocatillll the communllta'
gesture Monday. Tho and his
pr1rty Weltt lllslde alone.
·During the last round of
secret talks in December,
Kissinger and . \1Jo put on
smiles for walling newsmen
and photographers, · shook
hands while strolling together

' outside their various meeting
places, and saw one another on
and off at the beginning and
end of each session. Interpretations of the facial
expressions of the negotiators
was the basis for many reports
of optimism or pessiffiism at
the talks.
But on Monday and again
today, there was no public
show of optimism or good
spirits. French newspapers
used a broad range . of
meteorological adjectives,

from "cold," and "cool," to
. "frigid" and "glacial," 11
. describe the atmosphere of the
opening session.
Thirty minutes after the toplevel ~ began, technical
experts from both sides began
a meeting at Gil-sur-Yvette,
another Paris suburb.
The American delegation

Clear south, partly cloudy
with a chance of snow flurries
norih today, tonight and
Wednesday. High today near 20
north 25 south . Low tonight 10
te 15. High Wednesday in the
low to mid 30s.

TEN CENTS ,

s
chief was George Aldrich, a
State Department legal expert,
who also headed the U.S. side
at a similar three-hour meeling
Monday .
In line with the news
blackout on the negotiations,
no spokesmen would give any
hints about the progress or lack
of It in the negotiations.

Rue· M0 t ors awar
·
ded b'd
I

The bid from Tom Rue
Motors of Middleport for a
sheriff's cruiser to ·cost $3,224
was accepted by the Meigs
County Commissioners in
,
81&amp;1!; PRQBED
opeeia\,-"lr\ lcrciay. . .; ·
Sheriff Robert C. HarOthers submitting bids were,
ten bach's Dept. is In- Pomeroy Motor Company,
_vestlgatlng a breaking and $3,400, and Keith Goble Ford,
entering at the mine site at $3,569 .
Salem Center that occurred · In other business the comsome time early today. Details mission hired James Roush of
of the incident were not Racine as compliance officer
available at noon.
and building ~pector who will

work parttime out of the
commissioner's office and part
time out of the health depart·
ment. The appointment i~
retroactive to Jan. 1.
Re~nll!ii · to ~- 't!li!u _
County Board of Mental
Retardation were Bill Perrin
and Dorothy Yeauger. Attending were Charles R. Karr,
Robert Clark, and Warden
Ours, commissioners, and
Martha Chambers, clerk.

'

Town employees win pay increases
BY BOB HOEFLICH
A $331,1164 budget for 1973
providing pay Increases for
full-time employes was approved after a long review by
Middleport Village Council
Monday night.
The chief problem was not
whether or not te grant the
raise, but rather, a fair way of
doing it.
For the most part, full time
employes were given an approximate 10 cent an hour
increase,
while
street
department employees ·were
granted a minimum wage of $2

and the 10 cent Increase was
given to employes now earning
more than the $2 minimum .
Supervisors on salary were
given flat increases and
overtime of an additional 10
cent on the hour was approved.

Along with the budget,
council passed an ordinance
providing for the increases
which will be on the paychecks
af employes on Jan. 15.' The
breakdown of the 1973 appropriations includes :

Given higher increases were
police department officers
who, it was agreed, have been
the lowest paid of all vUlage
employes. They were increased to$2.10an hour with an
automatic increase to $2.15 an
hour after completing their
schooling.

General fund - council,
$576; mayor $8,550 including·all
expenses of the office; clerk,
$7,200 including expenses for
the office; solicitor, $500;
buildings, $15,1100; street lights,
$1,000; hydrants, $2,160;
miscellaneous, $15,000; contingencies, $11,900; tra~fers,

Promotion was ·success

BY KATIE CROW
)?omeroy's Chamber of
Commerce annual Christmas
promotion was termed ·a
"success" by President Jack
Kerr at a noon luncheon
meeting of the chamber
COLUMBUS - TWO OHIOANS RECEIVED the Governor's Monday at the Meigs -Inn.
Award for Community Action Monday for contributions to their
Kerr said $2,409 was received
corrununlties. Receiving the awarda were John A. Kruse, Piqua, by merchants against exfor reporting a posalble air pollution sour'ce at the Miami Melli! penditures . tobiling $2,338.13,
. Finishers Co., Piqua, and ErnestJ. Bohn, Cleveland, for his work leaving a balance of $70.87.
in hoilsing for senior citizens.
Kerr also reported that
contributions to the lighting
WASHINGTON- PRESID~ NIXON celebrates his 60th fund totaled $414 and that the
blrtlxfay today In a mellow mood and advises others on reaching new lights purchased from
lhis milestOne: 'ever slow down, slay mentally alert and keep Galllpolis Chamber had been
interested in life."
·
paid for.
"The worst thing Is when a miln or woman gives up," said
Kerr complimented Carolyn
Nixon. ''Then he's old before his time. An individual makes a 'fliomas, secretary, for doing
terrible error when he sloW!! down his interests or his brain." an excellent job during the
Nixon believes being president is a healthy occupation. "I've Christmas promotion plus her
never been of the opinion that the burdens of the office cause a work in securing· new memtreakdOwn In health,'' he said. "Boredom is more likely to cause , bers. There are presently 38
health and erriotional problems."
·
·
· . members.
"And," he added, "Yo1rnever get bored In the presidency."
Kerr reported ther~ is apThe President phlloso(ihlzed about growing old In an interview proximately $8011 in the general
Monday .in his hidl!away office in the Executive Office Bldg; fund. Susie Jeffers has been
next door te the White Houae. Under P\'H"I ground rules, the hired through the COmmunity ·
conversation was restricted to the subject of his birthday.
Action Program to assist Mrs.
Thomas, ·the secretary. Miss
COLUMBUS- mE omD·ENVIRONMENTAL Protection .. Jeffers works 28 hours per
Agency today failed to apProve the aewage handling plans for a week.
sports collaeurn to be cntructed In Summit COunty by Nick
Chamber members· ap·
'Miletl. Mlleti, owner of the Cleveland lndla111, the Cleveland proved payment of $150 for
Cavaliers of ·the National Basketball AsaoclaUon and the brochures f«ir the Big Bend
Cleveland CruSaders of the World Hockey Aaoclation, has Regatta. Thanks was extended
·
:(Continued on Page 8)
te Pometoy Mayor William

Baronick and council members
for offering free parking nvo
weeks before Chrlsttnas.
Following
a
recommendation by Ralph Graves,
the chamber voted to donate
$25 to the Wahama High School
band for its !tip te Washington.
Fred Crow suggested that
instead of collecting $12.50 for

memberships for the balance
of the 1972 year that they only
charge the regular $25 fee for
Ure balance of '72 and the year
1973. No action was taken on
the suggestion. However, tile
membership committee
agreed to meet and present at

$10,1100; total, $71,886.
Safety fund -chief of pollee,
$5,520; other police, $16,140;
retirem.ent, $2,166; gasoline,
$2,500; ~cellaneous, $1,500;
radio, $700; cruiser, $4,1100;
tela! $32,526.
Cemetery fund ....::. er.1ployes,
$5,050; clerk, '762; sexton,
$693; public retirement, $650;
materials and supplies, $300;
maintenance of equipment,
$100; office expense, $50; tools
and
equipment,
$4QO;
miscellaneous, $75 ; total ,
$8,080.
Fire equipment fund salaries,
$500;
public
retirement, $15 ; equipment
and . buildings, $2,500; convention, $150; equipment

~

arrests

.

•

•

mlscellsneous, $1,200; plant .
maintenance and equlpmeiit,
~.1100 ; sewer improvement,
$11,628; office expense, $1,1100;
tela!, $32,000.
Water fund- office salaries,
$4,000; employes, $12,000 ;
public retirement, $1,600;
office expenses, $1,000;
maintenance • supplies, Improvement,
$3,830;
miscellaneous, $4,1100; water
purchase, $12,1100; equipment,
$2,1100; total, $40,430.
'
Water mortgage revenue
bonds - interest payments,
$36,570.
Sewer mortgage revenue
(Continued on page 2)

Lukens breaks
Firemen out
269 times election law

The
Middleport Fire
Department answered 269 calls.
(COntinued on page 2)
in 1972, according to the aMual
report of Middleport Fire Chief
'
Bob E. Byer. Of the total, 219
were first aid calls and 50 were
for fire deparlment assislance.
Of the 219 first aid calls, 124
Forty arrests were made by car under control, failure to were in town and 95 were out of
the
Middleport
Pollee yield right of way, assured town; 25 were for accidents
Department In December. clear distance, running a step involving motor vehicles. Four
Disturbing the peace and sign and assured clear were false alarms.
Of the fire calls, 36 were in
driving while Intoxicated were distance.
the principal offenses.
The police cruiser was tewn. Losses, however were
According to the monthly driven 4,4'10 miles during the not extremely high on the 50
report of Chief of Police J. J . month and parking meter fire calls. They totaled $9,570
Cremeans, nine persOns were collections tetaled $585 not including $3,555 losses on
$3,2~9
on
arrested on yharges of including a $300 contribution· residences;
businesses;
$1,965
on
contents
disturbing the peace and eight from the Middleport Chamber
were arrested for drunken of Commerce for free parking and $775 on motor vehicles with
driving. Seven were retained permitted at the meters prior $25 In miscellaneous losses.
Fire department vehicles
for intoxication.
·
te Christmas.
traveled a total of 4,680.7 miles
Other offenses for which
·
during
1972and 361.7 manhours
arrests were made· Included
were spent on the ciass, an
.
a"""ull..and baitery, three;
average
of 10 men per call. The
speedlflg, two; no -operator's
CLUB TOM MEET . /
license, and one each for · The Rutland Gun· Club Will department answered ·three
failure te pay old fine; a"""ult hold a business meeting at its mutual aid calls and was caJled
with a deadly weapon, verbal quarters at 7 p.m. Friday. All three limes lor truck usage
assault, parking in a no members are asked to be which did not Involve actual
lire calls.
parking zone, failure te have present.

Police make

maintenance, $3,155 ; total
$6,320.
Plannln~ commission fund miscellaneous, $500; labor,
$500; total, $1,1100.
Swimming pool fund ·employes,
$4,000;
incidentals, $1,50tl; chemicals,
$600; electricity, $500; pool
maintenance, $1,750; insurance, $250; total, $8,600.
Bond retirement fund bonds, $8,1100; Interest, $3,225;
miscellaneous, $350; total,
$11,575.
Sanitary sewer fund - clerk,
$4,700; employes, $4,500;
supervision, $2,772; public
r-etirement, $1,200 ;

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The heing delinquent in filing his
secretary of States office today report and we will put him on
said State Sen. Donald Lukens, our delinquent Jist. He will be
R-Middletown, considered a unable to run for offlee during
leading candidate for the the next five years unless he
Republican · ·Gubernatorial gets a court order that says
nomination in 1974, is forbidden otherwise .
to run for any public office for
"There is nothing adfive years because he violated ministratively that we can do
a law ordering prompt filing of for him," Marsh continued.
campaign finances.
·"We always go to great lengths
, James R. Marsh, elections te make sure that nobody is
counsel to Secretary of State disqualified who does not
Ted Brown, said only a deserve it. Ted Brown does not
reversal by a court of law could like to disqualify people for no
allow Lukens to be a candidate good reason."
in' any election within the next.
Mrs. Margaret Cox, deputy
five. years.
· .
Marsh said Lukens filed a director of the Butler County
report of receipts and ex- Board of Elections, said
penditures for his state aenate Lukens' report stated he had
race with the Buller County not spent anything personally
board of Elections Jan. 3. · in whining his firsi full term by
Under state eleCtion. law the defeating Democrat William
·deadline for the report was last D. Meyer.
"The board tried to aet in
Dec. 22.
"Therefore, according to touch with Lukens before the
statute, he is disqualified from deadline to remind him that
running for public office lor the ' reports were due," said Mrs.
next five years," Marsh said. Cox. "We do this to all can''The Butler County. Board o( didates. However, we were not
Elections cerllfled' Lukens as able to contact him."
•
•
I,
~

�.'

••

. .-

'

3- •The Dally Sentiliel, Mlddleport.PQmeroy, 0., Jan. 9, 1973
2- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-PomeroY,, 0 , Jan. 9, 1973

--------------------------~
Letters of opllllon are welcomed. They sboakl be len
I

Meek Stroth heads state hoard

I

than 300 words long (or be subject to reducdoo by the '
editor) and must be signed with the alpee's address.
Names may be withheld upoa publica!~. However, on
request, names wm be dlaelooed. Letters sbould be In good
1
taste, addressiDg Issues, nol peraooaUtlea, .
•
1

I

(Lorain County) $950,000.
-Voted to exapnd the board
of education of the Gallia
County Jomt Vocational School
DIStriCt from seven to rune
members to allow representation for the Vmton County Local School Ds1tnct, wh1ch recently was mcluded m the district.
- Granted an elementary
school charter to Bethlehem
Elementary School near
Coshocton, a residential school
funded by the House of Jacob

BY JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sporta Wiiter
./
Doug Collins, a 6-foot-4
senior guard who's rated
anlllJlS the blue-chip prospects
for this spring's draft, hit 21
points and had nine assists
Monday night, as Illinois State
won over Morehead Slate, 10791. ColOns, who had a pool'
shooting night, hitting only ~
of-21 shots, helped Roger
Powell and Rick Whitlow
collect 56 points between them,
In the first game of a
doubleheader at the Nassau
Coliseum.
Powell, a freshman, h1t 30
points and Whitlow, a
sophomore, had 26. They hit 48
of their 56 points during a 69pomt second-half blitz.
In the second game, another
highly rated pro guard pros.
peel, Dwight lmnar, scored 32
points as Southwestern
Louisiana rallied from a 19polnt halftime deficit to beat
Cincinnati, 107-91, in overtime.
Meanwhile in Dallas, fifthranked and unbeaten Missouri
won their game over Southern
Methodist, 74-73, as John
Brown, who had 35 points and
17 rebounds, tapped in a
rebound when llle game apparently was long over.
Gives SMU a Lead
Freslunan Ira Terrell had
given SMU a 73-72lead when he
scored with four seconds left
and fans spilled out onto the
court as the buzzer went off.
But Pat MaJette and Psul
Galvin, two mg Eight officials,
cleared the court, ruling that
Missouri h~d called time out
with two seconds left.
The clock was reset but
scorer Bill Durrett failed to
reset the buzzer. Steve Blind
took an inbound pass at midcourt, dribbled once and threw
up a 4MQOt shot tiiat missed.
But no buzzer went off. Brown
grabbed the rebound and put It
in to give Missouri its 12th
victory without a loss.
camJXIS poUce had to escort
the offiCials from' .the fleldhouse 45 minutes after the
game ended.
"The clock never went off,"
MaJette said, "and that's what
has to be official."
In other games Monday
night, two top teams were
upset as Florida tripped up No.
9 Vanderbllt, 811-72, and
VIrginia Tech crushed South
' Carolina, 81 ~.
Florida State, with Reggie
Royals hitting 24 points,

froze~

Promoti"on

Back to school

Pay increases

.

• • I

•

j

'-'

'-'

'

Television·
[6g
,
.
·
·
:
'
.

No-T rump, a ~Picture' Bid

3.

a

-Meigs

Property
Transfers

trounced Georgetown (D.C. ),
101-70, and Martinez Derunon 's
16 points canied Iowa State to
a 73-$ triumph overOklahoma
Slate in Big Eight actl!lrl.
' Elsewhere, Campy Rusaell
scored . 17 ,POints and three
others players hit 1&amp; each w
power Michigan to a 71-59 Big
Ten victory over Iowa, and
Mooae Leonal'd, Roy Simpson
and Russ Hunt cambined for 54

College BKB Resulls
By Uniled Press lnlernational
E'ast
Ill. St. 107 Morehed St. 91
Duquesne B4 St Bonnie 60
' " NEW YORK (UP!) - It's
Westmin~ter B2 Wash&amp;Jeff 52
really too bad the Atlantic
Jrsy Cty Sl 51 Gissbro 42
•
Utka 104 Ham1llon 82
Coast Conference has to begm
Rhode Is 91 Verrnonl 62
its basketball season this week
Nrlheastrn 97 Boston U 87
For at le81lt three of Its
S W La 94 Cmcmnal1 8B
M Hrvy 105 Aldrsn-Brdds B9
teams, Maryland, North
Shphrd B3 Glenvil 81, ot
Carolina
State and Nortil
Harvard 77 Bstn Coli. 67
Carolina have been enjoymg
South
MadiSon 67 Slheaslrn 46
the ngors of outside comAndrews led a last-minute Fla St 101 Geotwn D C. 70
petition Immensely, while
92 Old Dominion 82
rally that enabled Kentucky to AlA
Va Tech 81 So Car 68
gradually moving up in the
defeat MISSissippi State, 90-111, Florida BO Vanderbilt 72 •
ratings of the Umted Press
Vldsla Sf 86 Vrgn lslnds 53
in an SEC game.
International
Board of
Berry B2 Ga. Coli. 77
Elsewhere, Duquesne beat Og llhrpe 64 Mercer 60
Coaches.
,
St. Bonaventure; ~. Georgia Kenl\icky 90 MISs St 81
In
the
latest
UP!
ratings,
led
Tech topped Rice, &amp;U5, Oral Mississippi 6Q Tenn 52
unammously as usual by
Rndiph-Macn 91 G Mason 81
Roberts crushed Brandeis, 123- S E La 6J West Fla 49
UCLA, the TerrapUlS, Wolf95, New Mexico drubbed St. LSU-N 0 91 Tenn-Chat 79
pack and Tarheels: upholdmg
51 119 Wm Jewll BB
Louis, 87-jl7, Baylor defeated Mrray
the basketball-rich tradition of
Furman 112 Niagara 77
Tulane, 84-79, and Utah State Armstrng 70 Bucknll 67
turned back Texas Tech, 84-76. Georgia Tech 69 Rice 65
South Ala 83 Fairfield 72
SVAC standings_
M1dwest
M1ch1gan 71 Iowa 59
SVAC STANDINGS
Illinois 76 Wisconsin 74
Team
W L P DP r
Iowa St. 73 Okla'. St. 59
Hannan Trace 9 1 661 470
Cent Mich. 73 Wstrn Ill. 70
Eastern
5 2 412 "370
DePaul B6 Westmont 69
Symmes Valley 4 3 534 528
Kyger Creek
3 7 629 725
by at least one player and no Stubnvl37 Cent. Sf 30
No
ill
74
Western
M1ch
71
Southern
2 6 396 476
more than three can he picked
Southwest
Southwestern 2 6 453 563
by any team.
0 Roberts 123 Brandeis 95
North Gallla
2 7 425 463
SVAC ONLY
The West SCIU!Id Will be an- Hrdn-Simmns 75 Pan Am. 72
H Payne 62 S W. Tex. 51 59
Team
W L P OP
nounced Wednelday.
S W Tex 96 Tex Wesleyn 75
Hannan Trace 5 1 360 290
The West has won the past Crps Chrsl1 BB Tenn St 84, ot
Eastern
5 1 348 196
F.Austm 104 Anglo Sf 73
Symmes Valley 4 1 391 333
two All-Star games, but th~ S
Tex A&amp; I 69 McMurry 60
• Kyger Creek
2 4 390 451
East still holds a 14-3 lead in S Hous Sl 86 Sui Ross 67
North Gall Ia
2 4 317 339
Southern
2 4 313 356
the classic, which will he Missouri 74 SMU 73
St
Mry's
Tex.
9B
Tex.
Lulh
59
Southwestern
0
5 251 l06
teleVISed live and in color by Lamar 126 NW Okla St 85
Totals
20 20 2371 2371
ABC-TV.
E Tex. St 76 Tarltn 71
SVAC RESERVES
New Mex B7 St Louis 67
Team
W L P OP
Wstrn N M 87 Colo Mines 78
North Gall Ia
S 1 251 192
Cent Okla 57 Estrn N M. 43
Hannan Trace 4 2 225 212
West
Southern
4 2 259 200
Utah 51 B4 Tex Tech 76
Eastern
4 2 153 188
Symmes Valley 2 3 181 191
Stanford 76 Wash 55
Kyger Creek
1 5 259 315
Nevada-L.V 64 Colo 62
Southwestern 0 5 127 247
Cal1l 59 Wash St 53
Totals
20 20 1555 1555
Lmfld 64 Whtwrth 63
Fnday's Schedule: North
Puget Snd 79 Portland 76

ACC teams r~ high

points as Funnan beat Niagara, 82-77.
Big Ten Vletory
Nick Weatherspoon's 24
points led Dllnois to a 76-74 B1g
Ten victory over W1sconain and
Dean Hudson's 16 points and
eight rebounds camed MissiSsippi to a 8Q.4i2 triumph over
Tennessee in a Southeastern
Conference game. Eric Long's
14 points boosted California to

NEW YORK (UPI) - Dave
DeBusschere of the New York
Knlcks and Pete Maravich of
the Atlanta Hawka will he in
the starting lineup for the East
for the first time in their
careers Jan. 23 when the1r
division battles the West in the
23rd
annual
National
Basketball Association All-Star
game at Chicago Stadium.
DeBusschere, a :J2i'ear-()ld
veteran whOhas played in six
previous AD-Star games, will
start at one forward position
for the East squad while
Marav1ch, in only his third

.

'

BIRDS LOST MONEY

BALTIMOR&amp; (UPI) - The
American League's Baltimore
Orioles said Monday they lost
$430,301 in the fiscal year ending last Oct. 31.
Executive Vice PreSident J.
Frank Cashen S81d the loss was
trunmed to $214,582 by a tax
refund.
He blamed saggmg attendance, 899,950, compared to
1,023,037 m 1971- and the
team's failure to qualify for the
playoffs.

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS 11\ASON AREA
CHESTER l

TANNEHILL ,

Euc Eo

ROBERT HOEFLICH,
Crtv Edrtor
Publrshtd dftdy except
Satur d.e~y by The Ohio Valley
PuO irSh t n~
'ompanv , 111
C. our! St, .-meroy , Oh10
4~769

Bvslnns Olfrce P '1 one

NBA season, will' be at one of
the gullrd pOSitions
Rounding out the East
starting five as selected by a
panel of sportawr1ters and
broadcasters are forward John
Havlicek of Boston, guard Walt
Frazier of New York and
center Dave Cowens of Boston.
Havlicek was named to the
team for the eighth straight

ANAHEIM, Calif. (UPI) Billy Kibner, cross his heart
and hope to die, says he never
picka on any one enemy player,
and whether this Redskin
speaks with forked tongue or
not could decide the winner of
Sunday's Super Bowl game
between Washington and
Miami
The reason it's so important
whether Kilmer really IS bemg
honest has to do w1th the fact
that the only new starter m the
Dolphins' lineup is the left
cornerback, Uoyd Mumphord,
filling in for the mjured Tim
Foley.
Football people figure Mum·
/ 111 \ ')t!:)•

•h 'J

,

CajuM nip 1

992 2156 Edrtorral Phon e 992

1111

Second class postage pilrd at

Pl)m~rov.

Ot'lro

N at ro f'lal adverll)lng
repr@'sentatrvl!' 8otllnell r
GtJIIagher , Inc , 12 East 4lna
t, t , New York Ct ty New York

Subscr rptron

l +vered

by

rates

carrter

Bearcats by
94-88 tally
•

De

where

a . . atlable so cents per week .

year.
Others named by the panel to
the squad were forward Lou
Hudson of Atlanta, center Wes
Unseld of Baltimore and guard
Lenny Wilkens of Cleveland.
The eight coaches m the
NBA's Eastern Conference will
select SIX additiOnal players for
the l!:ast squad. Each club m
the NBA must be represented

Kilmer never picks on
any one enemy player

United Press lnternatlooal
Thirteenth·ranked South·
e,. Motor Raute wtrere carrrer
scr..,. 1ce not avat!Jblt Onr
western
l.ou1S18ll8 turned the
month 11 15 By marl ,, OhtO
and W va One vur S14 oo
tables on Cincinnati in the
s,. months S7 25
Three
second
half to quell any
months ,,. 50 Subscrrption
prr ce rnc ludes Sunday Ttmes
thoughts of an upset the
Senti ne l
Bearcats were harbormg
Monday night.
• • • • • • • • • • • • - The Ragin' Cajuns, down 4627 at halftime, raged back to
outscore Cincinnati 20-4 m the
first seven minutes of the second half. The game went into
overtime at 82-82 when Cincinnati's Uoyd Batts led a desperate rally,
Two free throws by Batts,
who finished with 29 points,
gave Cincinnati an early lead
In overtime, before Dwight lamar rallied the cajuns, scoring
six points in the final 80 seconds.
lamar finished w1th a game-

•

a 59-53 victory over
Washington State and Stanford, w1th Rich Kelly scoring 24
points, roared off to a 24-2lead
and beat Washl'!l!ton, 7&amp;.55, m
Pacific Eight Conference
actiom.
Harvard downed Boston College, 77.f&gt;7, and Northeastern
topped Boston UniverSity, 9787, m the Beanpot Tournament
and Roome Lyons and Jun

Announce East All-Star roster

By

phord would be the perfect
p1dgeon for Kilmer to p1ck on
but Klbner insiSts, "I don't go
mto a game thinking I'm going
to try to p1ck on a certam
player. l JUSt try and see how
the game's going before I
decide where to throw."
He's Looking Forward
Mumphord not only ISn't
worried about facmg Kibner,
he says he's looking forward to
1!.
"!like the way he throws the
bali," Mumphord says. "He
doesn't have the zip that
quarterbacks llke Joe Namath
and Terry Bradshaw have."
Kilmer, though, brushed off
Mumphord's derogatory comments. "He'll probably be so
f1red up that maybe 1t'd be
better if l stayed away from

Culbertson
will attend

W. V'rrginia

him.tl
The Redskin quarterback,
whose basic offense is handing
off 25 times a game to larry
Brown, has confidence in his
throwing ability.
"I don't have any doubts," he
said. "It gives me an edge if
opposition aoesn 't think I can
throw well.''
The Redskins, practicing at
Anaheim Stadium (the home of
the baseball Angels near
DISneyland), and the Dolphins,
training at a municipal f1eld
called Blair Field m Long
Beach where the Rams practice, w1ll get down to serious
workouts today.
Plcture-Taldng Sessions
The tWo clUbs mainly concentrated on picture-taking
sessions Monday, which were
open to the public. Only a few
hundred fans showed up for the
Dolphins' session but about
3,1100 were at Anaheun Stadium
to see the Redskms and Allen,
who IS still popular here from
his Ram days. When a good
number of the fans invaded the
field, the Redskin session was
cut short.
Starting today, practice sessions w1ll be closed to the press
and the public and even a little
old 1 lady in tennis shoes
couldn't crack the workouts.
Dolphins' Coach Don Shula
said, "last week our practices
were closed at Biscayne
College but somehow a little
old lady got past every one and
there she was right outside the
fence watching our offense. l
tried to shoo her away but she
JUSt went halfway down the
field and stood there. She was
still there when we fmished."
One quipster asked Shula,
"Did you. notice whether she
was wearing tennis shoes or

Ken Culbertson, 6·2, 210
pound fullback and linebacker
for the Logan Chieftains, has
s1gned a letter of mtent at West
Virginia Umversity.
Culbertson,
the Most
Valuable Player m the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League m 1972, rushed lor over
1,000 yards while collecting
nearly 25 tackles a game on
defense. He was a member of
the SEOAL's All league team,
All Central Ohio team and
received honorable mention,
All Ohio.
Culbertson, a 3.2 student m
his four years of high school,
plans to enter pre-med clasSes
at WVU.
cleats?"

Gall1a at Eastern ,

vrosh s•Bnd;ngs
S'Eo .J',
"'
"
SEOAL FROSH
Team
W L P OP
Jackson
6 1 367 160
Gallipolis
5 1 301 131
Logan
3 2 1B4 160
Me1gs
3 3 206 203
Ironton
3 3 194 225·
Athens
2 3 174 168
Waverly
2 4 255 209
Wellston
0 6 133 358
Totals
24 24 1BI5 IB15
Monday's Results·
Jackson 45 Gall1pol1s 40
Ironton 34 Waverly 33
Me1gs 47 Wellston 10
Athens-Logan. to be played
Jan. 13
Thursday's Games .

Gall1poi1S at Waverly

&gt;,

This Wi!"~k's SpepoJ

69 FORD
XL OOUPE
A1r Conditioning.
Sharp!

Hannan

Trace at Kyger Creek, Han
nan , W Va , at Southern
Saturday 's
Games:
Chesapeake at Symmes

$1795

Valley, Southern at Hannar
Trace , Hannan, W Va at

Southwestern

karr

uall Coach of the Year.
Allen Will be presented the
Vmce Lombardi Memonal
Award at the club's annual
har1quet

~

ALLEN SELEctED
' w~ltrnolb-N' (UPlJ- For
the second year 'ln.., row,
Washmgton Redskin Coach
George Allen was selected
Monday by the Washmgton
Touchdown Club as Pro Foot-

&amp;

Van Zandt

· You II L1ke uur l.luallty
Way ol Doing Busmess "
GMAC FINANCING
992-534~
.Pomeroy,
Open Even~ngs 'Til8.oo :
1i I s P M Sot"

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PHONE 992 2342

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Ironton at Jackson

Meigs at Logan
Athens at Wellston

I

the Ace:rmade the biggest
gams among to~ 10 teams
while other clubs felt the first
sting of upset.
'
Maryland moved into the No
2spot as Marquette survived a
pa1r of narrow victories
agamst sub-par competition
and N.C. State advanced from
fifth to fourth as Minnesota fell
to seventh after losmg its first
game of the year, ~2, to
Iowa.
North Carollna, not expected
to be that much of a threat m
the ACC after losmg Dennis
Wuyc1k, Bill Chamberlain and
Bob McAdoo from last year's
title club, upped 1ts record to 12
-1 last week with easy wms
over Furman and Nebraska
and moved up from mnth to
sixth.
Long Beach State, also
falling victim to upset (~I to
San Jose State) dropped from
sixth to e1ghth while Vanderbilt
and Providence completed the
top 10.

INSURANCE • BONDS
,· ,., MUJUAL fUNDS ..,. ,
Me~

County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

I COOPER'S ANSWER TO WINTER.TRACTION I

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • - high 32 points for the Cajuns,
now ~I. Cincmnati slipped to 7-

4.

IT'S THAT TIME OF YEAR
STOCK UPON

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Mine technology class

set at Mason Voc-Tech

~

'

'f

j)~J
..~~.
••• ~.. uuurc,:

Housing subsidy

'

CollinS paces "Illinois State
over MOrehead quintet 107-91

· - &amp; TH./1#6 S

- Allowed the Montgomery and Sh~wnee Local SchoolA m
County Join~ Vocational School Allen County
1
BY' PAUL CRABTREE
An option to jom the district
DIStrict a four month extensiOn
I
of a $1,486,:149 construction is to he extended the Bluffton
Everyone mthe Tr1-County can be proud that Wahama's fine
I
contract, because origlnill bids Exempted V1llage Schools, the
I White Falcon band has been selected to march in President
were above funds available, local diStricts of Allen East,
I Nixon's Inauguration Parade, but let me offer Uiem four words of
necessitating new plans and Perry and Spencervflle m Allen
I
important, very unsolicited, advice:
'
...J...I.
County and the Ada Exempted
I veryPray
new bifletting
for warm weather.
I
- Dissolved the Neil A. Arm- .Schools m Hardin County
Back in 1961, when today's White Falcon seniors were m first
- Approved a request from
strong joint Vocational School
Says
rights
are
denied
• grade, there occurr"ed for me In Washington an event that I tend
District and established a new the North Portsge Jomt VocaJan.8,1973 to think of as the Disaster of Pennsylvama Avenue.
unit with the same name which tional School DIStriCt to change
John F. Kennedy was all set to he inaugurated, and
now mchides the W~pakoneta its name to the Maplewood Dear Sir:
Congressman
K. Hechler had gotten an invitation from the top
On October 9, 1972, Meigs Local Chapter No. 17 of the Ohio
City Schools in Augla1ze Area Vocatwnal School AssoCiation of Public School Employees rep~ntmg a majority brass for the St. Marys' Band to be in the parade. As Ken's aideCounty, plus the Ehda, Bath DIStrict.
of non--teachmg employees in the Me1gal Local school district, de-camp, I helped to make arrangements, and at noon on
requested in writmg to the board of education that they be January 19, everything looked copacetic.
Then It snowed.
recoguiZed for the purpose of negotiations. The chapter waited
Washington traffic in the snow is about like doing cloSe-order
patiently for two months and was never notified of the board's
drill in water skis. Much of the population 111 QKifllnally from
position on this issue.
~
On December 11, the chapter president, Mrs. Alice Globokar, Down South, where that cold, slippery white' stuff politely stays
and OAPSE f1eld representative, Fred Haynes appeared at the away, and they just leave their. cars wherever they slide,
HOUSTON (UP!) - The national housmg acts.
vention.
regular meeting of the board of education and agam requested awaiting a warmer envirorunent.
Alter taking four hours for the usual forty-minute drive to
Nixon administratiOn has or"We need a realignment of
Pallnan made his statement recognition. The board refused to recogruze the employees for
dered a temporary halt Iii federal, state,localand pnvate to newsmen when asked about the purpose of negotiations and stated they would not enter into my hotne In Silver Sprmgs, Md., I slept a little after the news' agreement w1th the non--teaching ~mployees. casters on TV told round after round of horror stories about·
funds for federal housmg responsibility m meeting our the rumored hold before Rom- any contractual
subSidies and redevelopment national housmg goals and ney made the actual announThe reasons for such refusal are not justified and are ex· the big storm, how the Army was movi!'ll in to clear the streets,
grants, George Romney, community development cement
tremely nusleadmg. The statement made br hoard president, and denying that JFK had asked ELSenhower to stay on a few
secretary of Housmg and needs," he sa1d. "Sound poll"My committee will try to Frank Porter, that the board does not have the legal right to more days until the weather unproved.
Then! got up at some ungodly hour like 4:30a.m. and went to
Urban Development (HUD), cies and programs should be get the order rescinded," he ba~gain is not true. Bylaw, boards of education may enter into
sa1d Monday.
based on encouragmg and S81d. "I don't know ofanything wntten agreements with employee orgaruzations. The board the railroad station to meet the band. It wasn't there.
The train was late, too, of course.~ mauy,n amveo, ana tne
The outgomg secretary of maximiZing private effort" we can do except fight. And position seems to be that they must be forced to bargain by
ever-resourceful
Hechler had finagled a room where they stayed
HUD told the National Associ&amp;•
He said the President has , fight we will because we've got leg1slatwn to that effect. The law pennltting but not mandating
tion of Home Builders (NAHB) also ordered a stop to com- to, and I think we're gomg to collective bargaming is followed by a major~ty of school boards warm and reaf"ably comfortable to about 11 a.m , when they
convention th~ hold went mto mitments for water and sewer win."
m this area and across the entire state. Those boards which have had to move to their stagmg area, which was a good half-mile
effect Friday night and w1ll grants, open space grants and
granted negotiation rights have taken a step forward and have from even the start of the parade route .It was piled heavily with
snow removed from the Capitol and the route of march.
remam effective for an mdefl- public facility loans until those
enriched the process of education.
Well, history records that JFK got illaugurated, all right. It
mte penod while a bas1c
The Me1gs Local board of education has not yet recognized
programs are put mto a speCial
doesn't
record that it was cold •nough to freeze the bells of St.
review and reform of the revenue sharing program.
the 20th century and the changes necessary for progress.
federal housmg system 1s
Rep Wright Palman, d·Tex.,
The statem~nt that the Meigs Local board IS a "temporary" Marys. The poor band stood m that staging area for about three
(Continued
from
page
I)
undertaken by the President cha~rman of the house bankmg
hoard IS rather confusmg. They have been duly elected by the hours, before they even started toward the reviewing stand, two
and Congress.
and Currency Committee, sa1d the next meetmg 1ts recom- voters of the school distnct to serve a defmite term of office but miles away.
(Me,! copped out. l watched the ceremony and hustled back
Romney said HUD would a congressional light IS likely if mendatiOn.
seem to be wanting to pass the buck to future board members by
Crow also suggested tha the not making the necessary deciSions as directed by the votes of to the Old House Off1ce Building, where thoughtful secretaries
keep all commm1llnents al- NIXon carnes out the freeze.
prep&amp;red hot coffee and other restorative beverages for those
chamber
could sponsor an th1s commuruty
ready made.
He also attended the con·
·
evemng meeting once every
"All applications wh1ch have
Although wages for non-teachnr~ employees are the lowest in who'd been outside.)
It was after dark when I showed up at a downtown
two
to
three
months,
w1th
received feas1b1lity approval,
the area and fringe benefits are non-existent for all employes,
speakers, for example, from other ISsues are of great unportance to employees m the area of Washmgton restaurant, where the Congressman was treating the
or m the case of pubhc housmg,
the new mme or the Gavm workmg conditions and equal opportunity. Recognition to band to a pre-train dinner, It looked like a French first-aid
a prelunmary loan contract
plant
•
approval, will proceed to
negot1ate these items will not cost the board of education one station after Waterloo.
Most
of
the
St.
Marys
bandsmen
had made it the whole route,
Members
agreed
that
the
Miss Nancy Large, student
completion," he sa1d.
cent.
"In additiOn, those proJects at Bliss College, returned to suggestiOn should be followed
The real issue seems to be that the board refuses to recognize despite cold thatfroze valves on trumpets and turned drumheads
which are necessary to meet Columbus Sunday after through and a list of speakers the1r employees as havmg the same constitutional rights as those brittle as the Dead Sea scrolls. They were being rubbed, chafed,
statutory or other spec1f1c spendmg the holidays here be made.
employees of priVate industry and they place no priority on the and coffeed back to warmth, health and sanity.
About five of them were missing, though. The Army turned
Bob Jacobs reported that the welfare of these dedicated employees and their vital role in the
program comm1llnents will be w1th her grandmother, Mrs
up with 2 of them, who'd passed out along the way and had been
approved m the commg Etollla Cassell, and uncle and tickets used for the Chnst- care of our children.
picked
up by relief teams. Two were discovered at George
months/' he sa1d
aunt, Mr and Mrs. C. T. mas promotion cost $1 60 per
Mrs. Allee Globokar ,President
Washmgton Uruversity Htspltal, not really badly off, as it
roll rather than $2 55 as was
Romney sa1d only subsidized Cassell, Middleport
Fred Haynes, F1eld Rep.
developed.
And the fmal straggler wandered in all by herself.
housmg and redevelopment
Mrs. Etmlla Cassell and M1ss ongmaliy reported
I was never so glad to see a train leave Washington in my life
In a rev1ew of 1972, 11 was
programs will be affected, Large v1s1ted m Cadiz w1th the
as
I
bade
farewell to the St. Marys Band through chattering teeth
These will include those pro- former 's son, Riley. Mr. and recalled the chamber has been
later that evening.
grams providing mterest Mrs C. T Cassell entertamed very active 1t promoted the
So have fun, White Falcons, and l hope Mr.
subs1d1es and rent supplements w1th a birthday dmner mme and power plant by
Nixon has about 60-degree weather waiting for you. Believe
for low cost housmg authomed honoring their mece. Attendmg sponsonng a dmner and havmg_
it helps
.......... ....... ' ' '
m sections 235 and 236 of the were Mrs EWilll\ Cll~~ll , the 19p.,olf!~\ats as, Rl!est ,~peak,ers;
provement of the service on the mel
•
Vf u ,
0 ~ r t•-1 .,-lt . .
, --""
IContmued l•om page 1)
1t
sponsored
the
annual
B1g
hosts'
children,
Thomas,
bonds - interest payments, street and, for pla&lt;:I:Jl)ent of a
,.
~I
Manlee and' Beth, . Marcy Bend Regatta, the annual $24,360
lire hydrant close by. However
Chr1slmas
p1
omotion
and
1s
Owens, and Susie Andrews
WIN AT BRIDGE
Street maintenance funds - they were told that costs of
now offermg serv1ces through superVISIOn, $5,130; employes, preparmg all of the mTUESDAY, JAN. 9, 1973
the chamber's off1ce located on $7,500; pubhc retirement, formation needed to apply for 6 00- News 3, 4, 8, 10. IS , Truth or Conseq 6. Sesame St 20.
Around the Bend 33
the ground floor of the court- $1,265; equipment mam- such lunds would be too great
6
30News 3, 4, 6, B, 10, 15, I Dream of Jeannie 13. Growing
house
to make 1t profitable to the
the ace, kmg or queen
tenance,
$3,000;
miscellaneous,
Him
Up 33
•
NORTH
9
SON IS BORN
A speaker will attend the $200, street repairs by con- Village.
With
any
other
d1stnbutwm
7
00
What's
My
Lme
8,
I've
Got A Secret B: Film 15. Electric
• A872
Mr. and Mrs. James Batey of next meeting on Jan. 22 to
Co 20, Beat The Clock 4
1asked
the
hand
may
still
wmd
up
The
Brewers
also
¥K 3
tract, $6,105; eqmpment,
7 30 - This is Your Life 3; Doctors on Call 4. To Tell The Truth
m no-trump but the wmning Middleport, operators of the speak on land use.
• J 106 4
that a ditch near their home
6: Price Is Right B. 10. Beat The Clock 13, RFD 20, Zoon 33
$10,000;
gasoline,
$5,000
,
player
will
start
w1th
a
suit
French City Fabnc Shop m
-' A95
It
was
announced
that
the
8
00
- Temperotures Rising 6, 13. Ohio This Week 20, Age on
be
cleaned
out
as
dralruige
Is
matenals, $5,000; buildings,
b1d because such hands show Galhpohs, are announcmg the
An•lety
33
WEST
EAST
Ohw
Festival
Assn.
meeting
Inadequate and water from it
too much promise m the
$1,500;
traffic
lights,
$250;
B
30
Hawaii
Five 0 B, 10 , Bill Moyer's Journal 20. 33. Movie
.QJ109
.653
birth of a son, Stephen James, w11i be held m Columbus on
right smt
Is washing away tbelr
"The Devll's Daughter" 6, 13
total,
$44,950
¥J 97
¥Ql062
When we watched ' th1s on Dec 28 at the Holzer Sunday, Jan 21, begmmng at
9 00 - Bold Ones3, 4, 15; Behind !he Lines 20.
driveway. Harold Chue,
tK8
t73
Meter deposit fund - $2,500.
hand
played,
South
took
9 30 - Black Journal20, 33; Movie "Hunter" B, 10
Med1cai
Center
The
mfant
4 Q873
.J1064
10 a m to 2 p m Members who
maintenance supervisor, 10·00 - MarcusWeibyM D. 6.13 . A.menca3, 4,1S, News20
Revenue Sharing fund
about
seven
seconds
to
make
we1ghed
seven
pounds,
12
SOUTH (D)
said there Is too much work 11 00 - News3, 4, 8, 10, 13, 15
four no-trump after opemng ounces Mr. and Mrs Batey can are urged to attend the $11,067
.K4
- JohnnyCarson3, 15 , Jack Paar6, 13, Vlrglnian8 , Movie
meetmg .
w1th
one
no-trump
on hand for _his department 11 30
Council Petitioned
"Blue Denim', lQ
,
¥A854
have another son, Shawn, age
Kerr mtroduced Jan Lefne
to clean out the ditch In the
No one nollced that s1x
1 00 - Your Health 4, News 13. ·
t AQ952
Mr
and
Mrs.
James
Brewer,
1 30 - News 4
d1amonds could have been three. Grandparents are Mr. who represented B11i and Lee's Vme St. residents, agam ap- near future.
.K2
and
Mrs
.
George
Batey,
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 10, 1973
made
JUSt
as
eas1ly
We
at
Monday's
noon
luncheon
BQih vulnerable
Mayor John Zerkle urged the
peared Lefore council and
6 00 - Sunnse Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10
don
't
say
that
a
d1amond
Chester,
Dr
and
Mrs.
J
J.
Others attending were Bill requested unprovefnents to the Brewers to meet w1th the
West North East South
6:15 - Farmtime 10
opener would have led to DaviS, Middleport. The greatIN.T
Grueser,
Fred
Morrow,
Jack
6·
20 - Farm Report 13.
Board
of
Public
AffairS
to
water service on Vme St. They
that contract All we know IS grandparents are Mrs. Rox1e
6
25 - Paul Harvey 13.
Pass
3 N T Pass Pass
Carsey, R1chard Cliambers, said that they were unable to diScuss their problems about
that 1f South had opened a
6.
30
- Columbus Today 4, News, Weather, Sports 6: Bible
Pass
d1amond there would have 01ler, Mrs. H. E Bush, Joseph Vrrg1lTeaford,N. W Compton, get any water through a garden water. The board IS to meet
Answers 8, Urban League Presents 10, The Story 13.
Openmg lead- • Q
been a chance of reachmg J Dav1s, Sr., Middleport; and Bob Jacobs, C. E Blakeslee,
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
th1s evemng and the Brewers
6 55- Take F1ve for Life 15
the slam
Mrs Glove! Sp~res, Peebles. Tom Cassell, DenniS Keney, hose during a recent fire on the md1cated they would attend.
street
to
f1ght
the
fire.
7. 00 - Today 3, 4, 15, News 6, 8. to. Fllntstones iJ
By Oswuld &amp; James Jacoby
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
Earl Ingels, Crow, Kerr, Mrs. They suggested that officials
Council approved the report
7 30 - Romper_Room 6. Sleepy Jeffers B, Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
The opemng no-tr ump 1s a
13. Popeye 10
.
Thomas, Graves, Beulah Jones check mto federal funds which of Mayor Zerkle showing
" picture" bid It pictures
8.00Capt.
Kangaroo
B,
10;
New
Zoo
Revue13,
Sesame
St
.
33,
and Kat1e Crow
Lassie 6
m1ght be available for im- receipts of $1,868.70 in fines an'!I
yo ur d1stnbut10n and high
The bzddmg has been
B
30Jack La La nne 13, Romper Room 8; New Zoo Revue 6.
fees
during
December
and
card strength so closely that
8· 55- Local News 13
on most occaswns partner Wesl Norlh East South
receipts of $162 ip merchant
9 00 - Paul Dl•on4, Phil Donahue 15, AM 3, Concentration6 ;
Dble
knows if the combined hands
MEET
SATURDAY
pollee
collections
for
a
total
of
Captain KangarooS; Friendly Junction 10, Ben Casey 13
Pass
4
t
Pass
4¥
are m the part score, game
9:30
- To Tell The Truth 3, Jeopardy6, Hazel&amp;
CANTON,Ohlo
(UPl)The
TOO
EXPENSIVE
?
$2,030.70
for
the
month.
Pass
01 slam ran~e and can con- Pa55 5 "'
9:55
- Chuck White Repcrls 10
Pro Football Hall of Fame's 27CONCORD, N. H. (UPI) You, South 1 hold
Floyd G. Browne and 10 00- Dinah Shore 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4; Columbus Six Calling
trol the b1ddmg accordmgly
Gov. Meldrim Thomson was Associates was employed to
6, Joker's Wild B, 10; Dick Van Dyke13.
The picture conveyed by •2 ¥AQ9875 • A3Z -'KQ7 member Board of Electors w1ll
10
30Concentration 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4, Price Is Right 8, 10;
meet
Saturday
m
Newport
given
a
new
car
when
he
took
What
do
you
do
now'
survey the community on the
the Jacoby no-trump IS alSpill
Seconds 13
office but he thinks It may be efficiency of the sewage 11 00 - Saleofthe
most exactly the same picA- We really don't know and Beach, Calif, to narrow a liSt
Century 3. 15. Love American Style 6; Gambit
'
ture Oswald Jacoby decided your guess may be 1s good as of 15 finalists down to those
too expensive to use every day. disposal system. Chase said
B, 10; Password 13. Elec Co 20
•
to show some 40 years ago uuu. Fur the record, our guess who w1ll be enshrmed m the
The governor of New Hamp. the Ohio Deparllnent of Health 11 30 - Hollywood SquaresJ, 4, 15, Bewitched 6, 13; Love of Life
B, 10: s..ame St 20.
It IS 16-18 h1gh card pomts, would be to pass
shire is suppUed a Uncoln was requested the survey. The 12.00 - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's SO-SO Club 4, Local News 10,
Hall
here
July
28
o
4-3-3-3, 4-4-3 2, or 5-3-3-2 dlsTODAY'S QUESTION
13; Contact 8, Password 6
The announcement of the
trlbuhon and the doubleton
George A Easlman, dec. to Continental limousine at a survey will cost $3,000 or less; 12 30
Instead of b1ddmg four dm- 3 W's Game 3, 15; Spill Second 6; Search For Tomorrow
1f there IS one must mclude monds, your partner JUmps to 1973 class will be made early Eima M. Epple, Velma Stout, yearly lease price of $1,5011. 1! costs go higher the village
8, 10
one of the four top honors
f1ved1amonds In response to next month. At present, 74 Elsie- Phillips, Charles A. ThOOISOn, who began his tenn will be so advised before any
12 55 - NBC News 3, 15
1 00 - News. Weathar, Sports 3, All My Children 6, 13 , Green
Forty years ago we were your double. What do you do former pros ate members of
w1th
a
promise
to
keep
further work on the survey IS
Easllnan, Frank A. Easllnan,
·
Acres 10. French Chef 33; It's Your Bet 8, Watch Your Child
more conservative. The dou- now ·~
goverrnnent frugal, said Mon- done. The survey w1ll take four
the Hall of Fame.
15
Homer
A.
Eastman,
Theresa
bleton had to mclude e1the1
1 20- Lucille Rivers 3
Easllnan, Cert. for trans, day he may do most of the months to complete. Chase
1 30 -3 On AMatch 3, 4. 15 : The World Turns 8, 10; Let's Make
driving In his personal car.
said it must be filed with the
Bedford.
A Deal 6, 13 ·
"I
wasn't
going
to
get
a
clii'
health
departm!nt
by
May,
2
00
- Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Wmme Ba1ley, Vma Bailey to
Douglass
6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
at
all,
but
it
was
too
good
·a
1973
Winnie Bailey, Vina Bailey,
2·30Doctors
3, 4, 15 , Dallng Game13 ; Edgeol NightS 10
David Ohlinger was comone and two-tenths acres, 160 bargaln to pass up," be saki.
J:OO - Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hosp)tal 6, 1J; Love
''They told me the car c011t mended for hiS work as
Splendored Thing 8, 10; RFD 20.
acre lot No. 1164, Ohve
J
30Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15, One Life to Live 6, 13 1
$10,000.
But
I
may
be
using
my
president of council for the past
Mabel McAtee, Mack
Secret
Storm B. 10; Ohio This Week 20
McAtee, Kenneth E Wolfe, car m011t of the time because year by Mayor Zerkle and was 4•00 - Mister Cartoon 3. S!&gt;mer$et 15, F'llntstones 6; Love
Al)lerican Style 13, Merv Griffin 4, Sesame St. 33, Gilligan's
Mary Wolfe, Harry Welch, that Lincoln uses too much reelected for·1973. Plans were
island 8. Movie "Destry" 10
gas."
made to move meters on North 4:30- Merv Griffin 8, Andy Griffith 15, Daniel Boone 13 ,
Hazel Welch, Emery F.
Petticoat Junction 3; I Love Lucy 6
Second Ave., from the bl!!lk to
Brooks, Jane Brooks to Eber
5
00
- Mister Rogers 33, 20; Daniel Boone 6: Ponderosa 3 ~ Mark V down the strell m
E Ours, Parcels, Lebanon.
Dick Van Dyke 15.
' '
PT PLEASANT - Mason be in excess of $10,000, we want state agenc1es, the coal mmmg
Gertrude Lemaster
order to provide more parkmg 5·30 - Dragnat8; Elec. Co. 33, Gomer Pyle13; Marshall Dillon 1
County• Vocational Center to be one of the f~rst vocatwnal mdustry is becoming one of the Aumiller, Jess Aumiller to
Q-What ts the sow ce of spaces with meters in the
15; Hodgepodge Lodge 20
the
mscrtptton on the Ltb·
6:00News, Weather, Sports 3, ~. 8, 10, I~; Truth or Conseq. 61
D~rector Ed Sommer an- centers to offer th1s program,"
safest industries
.
- Earl C. Aumiller Warren G erty Bell•
space available. ,
Sesame
St 20; Around The Bend 33.
·
,
nounced Monday an adult . he slated "Job opportunities
"As soon as final approvals Aumlller
47 32
Acres
Chase reported that Thomas - 6 30- NBC News 3, 4: News B, 10, Sesame St. 20; Around the - ~
·
A-The
Bible's
Book
ot
evening course in General have never been as great as are received and all funding_ Lebanon '
Bend 33.
' LeVItiCUS. chapter 25, verse Powell will attend a sewer
1 ,
7
00
Truth
or
Conseq.
3;
Beat
The
Clock
~;
News
6, 101/Whal's , 1
Mine Technology w1ll be g1ven they are now There are three arrangements have been
Robert F. Tubb, Florence 10 ~
plant operators school In
My Line 8. Anything You Can Do 13; Elec Co 20, Know Your :
at the Mason County major coal mimng firms m made, we will he a~le to set a Tubb to E. Roy Johnsoq,
Schools
33, Fabulous 7, 15.
Colwnbus
for
nine
Mondays
1
Q-What tree sheds tts
Vocational Center
eastern OhiO, the newest of startmg date for th1s program Delilah Johnson 13 Acres
7
30Episode:
Action
33;
To
Tell
The
Truth
6: Tho Judge1ol '
over
a
period
of
the
next
18
·
leaves latest tn the fall?
Lassie15; BeotTheCiock 13; Pollee SurgeonJ; Protecfurs&amp;· 1
'Sommer sa1d bec~use the these as close a~ Me1gs to help prepare local people for Pomeroy.
'
'
weeks begmmng Jan. 22 to
Hodgepodge Lodge 20
' '
A-Usually the oak.
deep
m1ne
coal
in- County "
Martha Gilmore, dec'd., to
B00 - Carol Burnell B, 10, Pout Lynde6, 13, Adom-12 3, 4,'15, )
a new h1gh pa'yi_ng vocat_10n
become a plant operator.
Sonny&amp;Cher8,10;Leonordg ToKnowHowToSee20 33 ~ 1
dustry • Is growing m
Sommer Indicated the coal Someone has to fill these JObs Leonard Gilmore Cert of Lots (lnt ), Pomeroy
Attending the meetmg
How To See 20, 33
'
'
Southeastern Oh1o and West mmmg industry's statistics and we have an obligation to Trans, Salisbury. '
Albert Van Cooney, Mane were Mayor Zerkle, Clerk· 8 30- Banacek 3. 4, IS; Movie "Trouble Carnes to Town" 6 ' 13 • l
Vtrgm1a, he hopes the 100-hour show that Its manpower needs help . provide lhe necessary
Handful of· Ashes 33
,
' ' '
West Ohio Annual Con- VanCooney to James L. Treasurer Gene Grate, council
9:00-~icai
Centers,
101'Eyefu
Eye20,
33.
classroom mstruction w1ll start are estimated to be 10,000 men background trammg to help get fe,;nce of the Umted MethodiSt .walker, Lillian L. Walker, 2~ members Mrs. Jeane Morgan,
9:30- Tho Milcl Bunch 20, 33.
Jan. 22.
per year, and growing. He our people better prepared for Church to Columbia Twp Acres, 2 ~cres, Salisbury
' Ohlinger, Fred Hoffman, 10·00- Search 3, 4, 15, Julie Andrews 6, 13; Cannon 8, 10; Soul
33, News 20
'!With the annual wage for pmnted out that through the employment: After all, that'~ Trus., Parcel, Columbia
'carlos Silva, Ruth Sliva to William Walters and Clarence 11:00- News3.4,6,8,10, 13, 15.
of
labor, what educatiOn IS all about,
the lowest paying JOb m the cooperallon
Ernest Grimm; Vashli M .§usan J . Konzilman, 68.7421 Stewart, Chief of ,Police J. J. 11:30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Jack P.ror Toni)e 6, 13; Virginian
coal mming mdustry figured to man~gement and federal and he concluded
8; Movie "Siege of Fort Bismarck" 10.
Cremeans, aqd Chase.
Gnmm to Corabelle Russell, Acres. Scipio.
t 00 - News 4, 13
)
/,
•
~
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Cmcmnati attorney John R.
Meckstroth was chosen
preSident of the state Board of
Education at the group's f~rst
meetmg of 1973 here Monday
W1lham H. Cossler of•
Youngstown, v1ce president of
the Youngstown BUlldmg
Ma!er1al and Fuel Co. and a
past president of the Mahoning
Valley Builders' Association,
was chosen v1ce pres1dent
The board members - elected m November - drew lots to
determine the lengths of their
terms
Servmg siX year terms Will
be W11liam Baker of Madison,
Wallace Black of Zanesville,
Roy McKinley of Coshocton,
David Rittenhouse of Toledo,
Anthony Russo of Mayf1eld
He1ghts, Cecil Sims of Piqua,
Robert W1ll1ams of Xenia and
Martha W1se of Elyna
Servmg four year terms w1ll
be Cossler, Thaddeus Garrett
Jr of Akron, Susan George of
Canton, W1lham Judd of
Cmcmnati, Mildred Madison of
Cleveland, Wayne Shaffer of
Bryan, Frances Voke of
Columbus and Paul Walker of
Bexley.
Two year terms w1ll be served by Meckstroth, Everett
Jung of Hamilton, Robert
Lyons Sr of Dayton, Ward
M1ller of Portsmouth, Gene
NorriS of Berea, Thomas Russo
of Maple He1ghts and Robert
Walker of Adena.
The board adopted an ID·
terun report to the General
Assembly on progress made
toward completiOn of a
statewide plan for the
educatiOn and habilitation of
Ohio's handicapped children
The legislature enacted a law
mandatmg the board to approve a plan for the education
of handicapped youth by July 1
There are more than 320,000
handicapped school children m
Ohio.
In other action, the board .
- Approved two requests
from school distncts to issue
bonds for construction of
classroom facll1hes - Western
Local Schools (P1ke County)
$100,000, and Sheffleld§\'effleld Lake Q\~r...'S!;hools

• H

The game was part of a doubleheader event at Nassau
Coliseum in Uniondale, N.Y.
In the only other Ohio college
game of the nigbt, steubenville
downed Central state 37-30 at
Wilberforce.
The victorious Barons played
a slowdown gam~ in which the
first score was not posted unW
lour minutes into the game.
steubenville led at halftime 1413,

...
Q

•FILE CABINETS
e FILE FOLDERS
e INDEX CARDS
elf!DEX ~ARD BINDERS
e LEGAL PADS

+

e METAL DESK TRAYS

.

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COME TO

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about' 12 dollars.

0

0.

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
United Press International top
20 major college basketball
teams with first place voles and
won-lost records as of Sunday
in parentheses · (Sixth Weeki
Team
Poonn
1 UCLA (34) (10 0)
340
2. Maryland (9 0)
, 285
3 Marquette (10.0)
• ,.. 261
~ No Cor Sl. (9-0) ' .., ' 253
S. Missouri 111-01 ' , ' · 169
6 North Car. (12-1)
)31
7. Minnesota (9-1)
124
B Long Beach St (11 -1)
94
9. Vanderblll (10-1)
3B
10. Providence {8 1)
· 35
11 San FrM. {10 1)
22
12. St. John's (8 2)
21
13 SW Louisiana (7-1)
20
14. Kon,as 51 19·21
19
IB
15 Houston (10-21
16 Indiana (B 21
12
11
17 Alabama (7-1)
18 Louisville {10-1)
10
19 South
Pennsylvania
98
20
Cor 19-31{7-2)

••
••
I
I

College Ratings

iFILE STORAGE BOXES

~~~

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you ·
should come to us ·
for income tax help.

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3- •The Dally Sentiliel, Mlddleport.PQmeroy, 0., Jan. 9, 1973
2- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-PomeroY,, 0 , Jan. 9, 1973

--------------------------~
Letters of opllllon are welcomed. They sboakl be len
I

Meek Stroth heads state hoard

I

than 300 words long (or be subject to reducdoo by the '
editor) and must be signed with the alpee's address.
Names may be withheld upoa publica!~. However, on
request, names wm be dlaelooed. Letters sbould be In good
1
taste, addressiDg Issues, nol peraooaUtlea, .
•
1

I

(Lorain County) $950,000.
-Voted to exapnd the board
of education of the Gallia
County Jomt Vocational School
DIStriCt from seven to rune
members to allow representation for the Vmton County Local School Ds1tnct, wh1ch recently was mcluded m the district.
- Granted an elementary
school charter to Bethlehem
Elementary School near
Coshocton, a residential school
funded by the House of Jacob

BY JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sporta Wiiter
./
Doug Collins, a 6-foot-4
senior guard who's rated
anlllJlS the blue-chip prospects
for this spring's draft, hit 21
points and had nine assists
Monday night, as Illinois State
won over Morehead Slate, 10791. ColOns, who had a pool'
shooting night, hitting only ~
of-21 shots, helped Roger
Powell and Rick Whitlow
collect 56 points between them,
In the first game of a
doubleheader at the Nassau
Coliseum.
Powell, a freshman, h1t 30
points and Whitlow, a
sophomore, had 26. They hit 48
of their 56 points during a 69pomt second-half blitz.
In the second game, another
highly rated pro guard pros.
peel, Dwight lmnar, scored 32
points as Southwestern
Louisiana rallied from a 19polnt halftime deficit to beat
Cincinnati, 107-91, in overtime.
Meanwhile in Dallas, fifthranked and unbeaten Missouri
won their game over Southern
Methodist, 74-73, as John
Brown, who had 35 points and
17 rebounds, tapped in a
rebound when llle game apparently was long over.
Gives SMU a Lead
Freslunan Ira Terrell had
given SMU a 73-72lead when he
scored with four seconds left
and fans spilled out onto the
court as the buzzer went off.
But Pat MaJette and Psul
Galvin, two mg Eight officials,
cleared the court, ruling that
Missouri h~d called time out
with two seconds left.
The clock was reset but
scorer Bill Durrett failed to
reset the buzzer. Steve Blind
took an inbound pass at midcourt, dribbled once and threw
up a 4MQOt shot tiiat missed.
But no buzzer went off. Brown
grabbed the rebound and put It
in to give Missouri its 12th
victory without a loss.
camJXIS poUce had to escort
the offiCials from' .the fleldhouse 45 minutes after the
game ended.
"The clock never went off,"
MaJette said, "and that's what
has to be official."
In other games Monday
night, two top teams were
upset as Florida tripped up No.
9 Vanderbllt, 811-72, and
VIrginia Tech crushed South
' Carolina, 81 ~.
Florida State, with Reggie
Royals hitting 24 points,

froze~

Promoti"on

Back to school

Pay increases

.

• • I

•

j

'-'

'-'

'

Television·
[6g
,
.
·
·
:
'
.

No-T rump, a ~Picture' Bid

3.

a

-Meigs

Property
Transfers

trounced Georgetown (D.C. ),
101-70, and Martinez Derunon 's
16 points canied Iowa State to
a 73-$ triumph overOklahoma
Slate in Big Eight actl!lrl.
' Elsewhere, Campy Rusaell
scored . 17 ,POints and three
others players hit 1&amp; each w
power Michigan to a 71-59 Big
Ten victory over Iowa, and
Mooae Leonal'd, Roy Simpson
and Russ Hunt cambined for 54

College BKB Resulls
By Uniled Press lnlernational
E'ast
Ill. St. 107 Morehed St. 91
Duquesne B4 St Bonnie 60
' " NEW YORK (UP!) - It's
Westmin~ter B2 Wash&amp;Jeff 52
really too bad the Atlantic
Jrsy Cty Sl 51 Gissbro 42
•
Utka 104 Ham1llon 82
Coast Conference has to begm
Rhode Is 91 Verrnonl 62
its basketball season this week
Nrlheastrn 97 Boston U 87
For at le81lt three of Its
S W La 94 Cmcmnal1 8B
M Hrvy 105 Aldrsn-Brdds B9
teams, Maryland, North
Shphrd B3 Glenvil 81, ot
Carolina
State and Nortil
Harvard 77 Bstn Coli. 67
Carolina have been enjoymg
South
MadiSon 67 Slheaslrn 46
the ngors of outside comAndrews led a last-minute Fla St 101 Geotwn D C. 70
petition Immensely, while
92 Old Dominion 82
rally that enabled Kentucky to AlA
Va Tech 81 So Car 68
gradually moving up in the
defeat MISSissippi State, 90-111, Florida BO Vanderbilt 72 •
ratings of the Umted Press
Vldsla Sf 86 Vrgn lslnds 53
in an SEC game.
International
Board of
Berry B2 Ga. Coli. 77
Elsewhere, Duquesne beat Og llhrpe 64 Mercer 60
Coaches.
,
St. Bonaventure; ~. Georgia Kenl\icky 90 MISs St 81
In
the
latest
UP!
ratings,
led
Tech topped Rice, &amp;U5, Oral Mississippi 6Q Tenn 52
unammously as usual by
Rndiph-Macn 91 G Mason 81
Roberts crushed Brandeis, 123- S E La 6J West Fla 49
UCLA, the TerrapUlS, Wolf95, New Mexico drubbed St. LSU-N 0 91 Tenn-Chat 79
pack and Tarheels: upholdmg
51 119 Wm Jewll BB
Louis, 87-jl7, Baylor defeated Mrray
the basketball-rich tradition of
Furman 112 Niagara 77
Tulane, 84-79, and Utah State Armstrng 70 Bucknll 67
turned back Texas Tech, 84-76. Georgia Tech 69 Rice 65
South Ala 83 Fairfield 72
SVAC standings_
M1dwest
M1ch1gan 71 Iowa 59
SVAC STANDINGS
Illinois 76 Wisconsin 74
Team
W L P DP r
Iowa St. 73 Okla'. St. 59
Hannan Trace 9 1 661 470
Cent Mich. 73 Wstrn Ill. 70
Eastern
5 2 412 "370
DePaul B6 Westmont 69
Symmes Valley 4 3 534 528
Kyger Creek
3 7 629 725
by at least one player and no Stubnvl37 Cent. Sf 30
No
ill
74
Western
M1ch
71
Southern
2 6 396 476
more than three can he picked
Southwest
Southwestern 2 6 453 563
by any team.
0 Roberts 123 Brandeis 95
North Gallla
2 7 425 463
SVAC ONLY
The West SCIU!Id Will be an- Hrdn-Simmns 75 Pan Am. 72
H Payne 62 S W. Tex. 51 59
Team
W L P OP
nounced Wednelday.
S W Tex 96 Tex Wesleyn 75
Hannan Trace 5 1 360 290
The West has won the past Crps Chrsl1 BB Tenn St 84, ot
Eastern
5 1 348 196
F.Austm 104 Anglo Sf 73
Symmes Valley 4 1 391 333
two All-Star games, but th~ S
Tex A&amp; I 69 McMurry 60
• Kyger Creek
2 4 390 451
East still holds a 14-3 lead in S Hous Sl 86 Sui Ross 67
North Gall Ia
2 4 317 339
Southern
2 4 313 356
the classic, which will he Missouri 74 SMU 73
St
Mry's
Tex.
9B
Tex.
Lulh
59
Southwestern
0
5 251 l06
teleVISed live and in color by Lamar 126 NW Okla St 85
Totals
20 20 2371 2371
ABC-TV.
E Tex. St 76 Tarltn 71
SVAC RESERVES
New Mex B7 St Louis 67
Team
W L P OP
Wstrn N M 87 Colo Mines 78
North Gall Ia
S 1 251 192
Cent Okla 57 Estrn N M. 43
Hannan Trace 4 2 225 212
West
Southern
4 2 259 200
Utah 51 B4 Tex Tech 76
Eastern
4 2 153 188
Symmes Valley 2 3 181 191
Stanford 76 Wash 55
Kyger Creek
1 5 259 315
Nevada-L.V 64 Colo 62
Southwestern 0 5 127 247
Cal1l 59 Wash St 53
Totals
20 20 1555 1555
Lmfld 64 Whtwrth 63
Fnday's Schedule: North
Puget Snd 79 Portland 76

ACC teams r~ high

points as Funnan beat Niagara, 82-77.
Big Ten Vletory
Nick Weatherspoon's 24
points led Dllnois to a 76-74 B1g
Ten victory over W1sconain and
Dean Hudson's 16 points and
eight rebounds camed MissiSsippi to a 8Q.4i2 triumph over
Tennessee in a Southeastern
Conference game. Eric Long's
14 points boosted California to

NEW YORK (UPI) - Dave
DeBusschere of the New York
Knlcks and Pete Maravich of
the Atlanta Hawka will he in
the starting lineup for the East
for the first time in their
careers Jan. 23 when the1r
division battles the West in the
23rd
annual
National
Basketball Association All-Star
game at Chicago Stadium.
DeBusschere, a :J2i'ear-()ld
veteran whOhas played in six
previous AD-Star games, will
start at one forward position
for the East squad while
Marav1ch, in only his third

.

'

BIRDS LOST MONEY

BALTIMOR&amp; (UPI) - The
American League's Baltimore
Orioles said Monday they lost
$430,301 in the fiscal year ending last Oct. 31.
Executive Vice PreSident J.
Frank Cashen S81d the loss was
trunmed to $214,582 by a tax
refund.
He blamed saggmg attendance, 899,950, compared to
1,023,037 m 1971- and the
team's failure to qualify for the
playoffs.

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS 11\ASON AREA
CHESTER l

TANNEHILL ,

Euc Eo

ROBERT HOEFLICH,
Crtv Edrtor
Publrshtd dftdy except
Satur d.e~y by The Ohio Valley
PuO irSh t n~
'ompanv , 111
C. our! St, .-meroy , Oh10
4~769

Bvslnns Olfrce P '1 one

NBA season, will' be at one of
the gullrd pOSitions
Rounding out the East
starting five as selected by a
panel of sportawr1ters and
broadcasters are forward John
Havlicek of Boston, guard Walt
Frazier of New York and
center Dave Cowens of Boston.
Havlicek was named to the
team for the eighth straight

ANAHEIM, Calif. (UPI) Billy Kibner, cross his heart
and hope to die, says he never
picka on any one enemy player,
and whether this Redskin
speaks with forked tongue or
not could decide the winner of
Sunday's Super Bowl game
between Washington and
Miami
The reason it's so important
whether Kilmer really IS bemg
honest has to do w1th the fact
that the only new starter m the
Dolphins' lineup is the left
cornerback, Uoyd Mumphord,
filling in for the mjured Tim
Foley.
Football people figure Mum·
/ 111 \ ')t!:)•

•h 'J

,

CajuM nip 1

992 2156 Edrtorral Phon e 992

1111

Second class postage pilrd at

Pl)m~rov.

Ot'lro

N at ro f'lal adverll)lng
repr@'sentatrvl!' 8otllnell r
GtJIIagher , Inc , 12 East 4lna
t, t , New York Ct ty New York

Subscr rptron

l +vered

by

rates

carrter

Bearcats by
94-88 tally
•

De

where

a . . atlable so cents per week .

year.
Others named by the panel to
the squad were forward Lou
Hudson of Atlanta, center Wes
Unseld of Baltimore and guard
Lenny Wilkens of Cleveland.
The eight coaches m the
NBA's Eastern Conference will
select SIX additiOnal players for
the l!:ast squad. Each club m
the NBA must be represented

Kilmer never picks on
any one enemy player

United Press lnternatlooal
Thirteenth·ranked South·
e,. Motor Raute wtrere carrrer
scr..,. 1ce not avat!Jblt Onr
western
l.ou1S18ll8 turned the
month 11 15 By marl ,, OhtO
and W va One vur S14 oo
tables on Cincinnati in the
s,. months S7 25
Three
second
half to quell any
months ,,. 50 Subscrrption
prr ce rnc ludes Sunday Ttmes
thoughts of an upset the
Senti ne l
Bearcats were harbormg
Monday night.
• • • • • • • • • • • • - The Ragin' Cajuns, down 4627 at halftime, raged back to
outscore Cincinnati 20-4 m the
first seven minutes of the second half. The game went into
overtime at 82-82 when Cincinnati's Uoyd Batts led a desperate rally,
Two free throws by Batts,
who finished with 29 points,
gave Cincinnati an early lead
In overtime, before Dwight lamar rallied the cajuns, scoring
six points in the final 80 seconds.
lamar finished w1th a game-

•

a 59-53 victory over
Washington State and Stanford, w1th Rich Kelly scoring 24
points, roared off to a 24-2lead
and beat Washl'!l!ton, 7&amp;.55, m
Pacific Eight Conference
actiom.
Harvard downed Boston College, 77.f&gt;7, and Northeastern
topped Boston UniverSity, 9787, m the Beanpot Tournament
and Roome Lyons and Jun

Announce East All-Star roster

By

phord would be the perfect
p1dgeon for Kilmer to p1ck on
but Klbner insiSts, "I don't go
mto a game thinking I'm going
to try to p1ck on a certam
player. l JUSt try and see how
the game's going before I
decide where to throw."
He's Looking Forward
Mumphord not only ISn't
worried about facmg Kibner,
he says he's looking forward to
1!.
"!like the way he throws the
bali," Mumphord says. "He
doesn't have the zip that
quarterbacks llke Joe Namath
and Terry Bradshaw have."
Kilmer, though, brushed off
Mumphord's derogatory comments. "He'll probably be so
f1red up that maybe 1t'd be
better if l stayed away from

Culbertson
will attend

W. V'rrginia

him.tl
The Redskin quarterback,
whose basic offense is handing
off 25 times a game to larry
Brown, has confidence in his
throwing ability.
"I don't have any doubts," he
said. "It gives me an edge if
opposition aoesn 't think I can
throw well.''
The Redskins, practicing at
Anaheim Stadium (the home of
the baseball Angels near
DISneyland), and the Dolphins,
training at a municipal f1eld
called Blair Field m Long
Beach where the Rams practice, w1ll get down to serious
workouts today.
Plcture-Taldng Sessions
The tWo clUbs mainly concentrated on picture-taking
sessions Monday, which were
open to the public. Only a few
hundred fans showed up for the
Dolphins' session but about
3,1100 were at Anaheun Stadium
to see the Redskms and Allen,
who IS still popular here from
his Ram days. When a good
number of the fans invaded the
field, the Redskin session was
cut short.
Starting today, practice sessions w1ll be closed to the press
and the public and even a little
old 1 lady in tennis shoes
couldn't crack the workouts.
Dolphins' Coach Don Shula
said, "last week our practices
were closed at Biscayne
College but somehow a little
old lady got past every one and
there she was right outside the
fence watching our offense. l
tried to shoo her away but she
JUSt went halfway down the
field and stood there. She was
still there when we fmished."
One quipster asked Shula,
"Did you. notice whether she
was wearing tennis shoes or

Ken Culbertson, 6·2, 210
pound fullback and linebacker
for the Logan Chieftains, has
s1gned a letter of mtent at West
Virginia Umversity.
Culbertson,
the Most
Valuable Player m the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League m 1972, rushed lor over
1,000 yards while collecting
nearly 25 tackles a game on
defense. He was a member of
the SEOAL's All league team,
All Central Ohio team and
received honorable mention,
All Ohio.
Culbertson, a 3.2 student m
his four years of high school,
plans to enter pre-med clasSes
at WVU.
cleats?"

Gall1a at Eastern ,

vrosh s•Bnd;ngs
S'Eo .J',
"'
"
SEOAL FROSH
Team
W L P OP
Jackson
6 1 367 160
Gallipolis
5 1 301 131
Logan
3 2 1B4 160
Me1gs
3 3 206 203
Ironton
3 3 194 225·
Athens
2 3 174 168
Waverly
2 4 255 209
Wellston
0 6 133 358
Totals
24 24 1BI5 IB15
Monday's Results·
Jackson 45 Gall1pol1s 40
Ironton 34 Waverly 33
Me1gs 47 Wellston 10
Athens-Logan. to be played
Jan. 13
Thursday's Games .

Gall1poi1S at Waverly

&gt;,

This Wi!"~k's SpepoJ

69 FORD
XL OOUPE
A1r Conditioning.
Sharp!

Hannan

Trace at Kyger Creek, Han
nan , W Va , at Southern
Saturday 's
Games:
Chesapeake at Symmes

$1795

Valley, Southern at Hannar
Trace , Hannan, W Va at

Southwestern

karr

uall Coach of the Year.
Allen Will be presented the
Vmce Lombardi Memonal
Award at the club's annual
har1quet

~

ALLEN SELEctED
' w~ltrnolb-N' (UPlJ- For
the second year 'ln.., row,
Washmgton Redskin Coach
George Allen was selected
Monday by the Washmgton
Touchdown Club as Pro Foot-

&amp;

Van Zandt

· You II L1ke uur l.luallty
Way ol Doing Busmess "
GMAC FINANCING
992-534~
.Pomeroy,
Open Even~ngs 'Til8.oo :
1i I s P M Sot"

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PHONE 992 2342

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Ironton at Jackson

Meigs at Logan
Athens at Wellston

I

the Ace:rmade the biggest
gams among to~ 10 teams
while other clubs felt the first
sting of upset.
'
Maryland moved into the No
2spot as Marquette survived a
pa1r of narrow victories
agamst sub-par competition
and N.C. State advanced from
fifth to fourth as Minnesota fell
to seventh after losmg its first
game of the year, ~2, to
Iowa.
North Carollna, not expected
to be that much of a threat m
the ACC after losmg Dennis
Wuyc1k, Bill Chamberlain and
Bob McAdoo from last year's
title club, upped 1ts record to 12
-1 last week with easy wms
over Furman and Nebraska
and moved up from mnth to
sixth.
Long Beach State, also
falling victim to upset (~I to
San Jose State) dropped from
sixth to e1ghth while Vanderbilt
and Providence completed the
top 10.

INSURANCE • BONDS
,· ,., MUJUAL fUNDS ..,. ,
Me~

County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

I COOPER'S ANSWER TO WINTER.TRACTION I

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • - high 32 points for the Cajuns,
now ~I. Cincmnati slipped to 7-

4.

IT'S THAT TIME OF YEAR
STOCK UPON

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Mine technology class

set at Mason Voc-Tech

~

'

'f

j)~J
..~~.
••• ~.. uuurc,:

Housing subsidy

'

CollinS paces "Illinois State
over MOrehead quintet 107-91

· - &amp; TH./1#6 S

- Allowed the Montgomery and Sh~wnee Local SchoolA m
County Join~ Vocational School Allen County
1
BY' PAUL CRABTREE
An option to jom the district
DIStrict a four month extensiOn
I
of a $1,486,:149 construction is to he extended the Bluffton
Everyone mthe Tr1-County can be proud that Wahama's fine
I
contract, because origlnill bids Exempted V1llage Schools, the
I White Falcon band has been selected to march in President
were above funds available, local diStricts of Allen East,
I Nixon's Inauguration Parade, but let me offer Uiem four words of
necessitating new plans and Perry and Spencervflle m Allen
I
important, very unsolicited, advice:
'
...J...I.
County and the Ada Exempted
I veryPray
new bifletting
for warm weather.
I
- Dissolved the Neil A. Arm- .Schools m Hardin County
Back in 1961, when today's White Falcon seniors were m first
- Approved a request from
strong joint Vocational School
Says
rights
are
denied
• grade, there occurr"ed for me In Washington an event that I tend
District and established a new the North Portsge Jomt VocaJan.8,1973 to think of as the Disaster of Pennsylvama Avenue.
unit with the same name which tional School DIStriCt to change
John F. Kennedy was all set to he inaugurated, and
now mchides the W~pakoneta its name to the Maplewood Dear Sir:
Congressman
K. Hechler had gotten an invitation from the top
On October 9, 1972, Meigs Local Chapter No. 17 of the Ohio
City Schools in Augla1ze Area Vocatwnal School AssoCiation of Public School Employees rep~ntmg a majority brass for the St. Marys' Band to be in the parade. As Ken's aideCounty, plus the Ehda, Bath DIStrict.
of non--teachmg employees in the Me1gal Local school district, de-camp, I helped to make arrangements, and at noon on
requested in writmg to the board of education that they be January 19, everything looked copacetic.
Then It snowed.
recoguiZed for the purpose of negotiations. The chapter waited
Washington traffic in the snow is about like doing cloSe-order
patiently for two months and was never notified of the board's
drill in water skis. Much of the population 111 QKifllnally from
position on this issue.
~
On December 11, the chapter president, Mrs. Alice Globokar, Down South, where that cold, slippery white' stuff politely stays
and OAPSE f1eld representative, Fred Haynes appeared at the away, and they just leave their. cars wherever they slide,
HOUSTON (UP!) - The national housmg acts.
vention.
regular meeting of the board of education and agam requested awaiting a warmer envirorunent.
Alter taking four hours for the usual forty-minute drive to
Nixon administratiOn has or"We need a realignment of
Pallnan made his statement recognition. The board refused to recogruze the employees for
dered a temporary halt Iii federal, state,localand pnvate to newsmen when asked about the purpose of negotiations and stated they would not enter into my hotne In Silver Sprmgs, Md., I slept a little after the news' agreement w1th the non--teaching ~mployees. casters on TV told round after round of horror stories about·
funds for federal housmg responsibility m meeting our the rumored hold before Rom- any contractual
subSidies and redevelopment national housmg goals and ney made the actual announThe reasons for such refusal are not justified and are ex· the big storm, how the Army was movi!'ll in to clear the streets,
grants, George Romney, community development cement
tremely nusleadmg. The statement made br hoard president, and denying that JFK had asked ELSenhower to stay on a few
secretary of Housmg and needs," he sa1d. "Sound poll"My committee will try to Frank Porter, that the board does not have the legal right to more days until the weather unproved.
Then! got up at some ungodly hour like 4:30a.m. and went to
Urban Development (HUD), cies and programs should be get the order rescinded," he ba~gain is not true. Bylaw, boards of education may enter into
sa1d Monday.
based on encouragmg and S81d. "I don't know ofanything wntten agreements with employee orgaruzations. The board the railroad station to meet the band. It wasn't there.
The train was late, too, of course.~ mauy,n amveo, ana tne
The outgomg secretary of maximiZing private effort" we can do except fight. And position seems to be that they must be forced to bargain by
ever-resourceful
Hechler had finagled a room where they stayed
HUD told the National Associ&amp;•
He said the President has , fight we will because we've got leg1slatwn to that effect. The law pennltting but not mandating
tion of Home Builders (NAHB) also ordered a stop to com- to, and I think we're gomg to collective bargaming is followed by a major~ty of school boards warm and reaf"ably comfortable to about 11 a.m , when they
convention th~ hold went mto mitments for water and sewer win."
m this area and across the entire state. Those boards which have had to move to their stagmg area, which was a good half-mile
effect Friday night and w1ll grants, open space grants and
granted negotiation rights have taken a step forward and have from even the start of the parade route .It was piled heavily with
snow removed from the Capitol and the route of march.
remam effective for an mdefl- public facility loans until those
enriched the process of education.
Well, history records that JFK got illaugurated, all right. It
mte penod while a bas1c
The Me1gs Local board of education has not yet recognized
programs are put mto a speCial
doesn't
record that it was cold •nough to freeze the bells of St.
review and reform of the revenue sharing program.
the 20th century and the changes necessary for progress.
federal housmg system 1s
Rep Wright Palman, d·Tex.,
The statem~nt that the Meigs Local board IS a "temporary" Marys. The poor band stood m that staging area for about three
(Continued
from
page
I)
undertaken by the President cha~rman of the house bankmg
hoard IS rather confusmg. They have been duly elected by the hours, before they even started toward the reviewing stand, two
and Congress.
and Currency Committee, sa1d the next meetmg 1ts recom- voters of the school distnct to serve a defmite term of office but miles away.
(Me,! copped out. l watched the ceremony and hustled back
Romney said HUD would a congressional light IS likely if mendatiOn.
seem to be wanting to pass the buck to future board members by
Crow also suggested tha the not making the necessary deciSions as directed by the votes of to the Old House Off1ce Building, where thoughtful secretaries
keep all commm1llnents al- NIXon carnes out the freeze.
prep&amp;red hot coffee and other restorative beverages for those
chamber
could sponsor an th1s commuruty
ready made.
He also attended the con·
·
evemng meeting once every
"All applications wh1ch have
Although wages for non-teachnr~ employees are the lowest in who'd been outside.)
It was after dark when I showed up at a downtown
two
to
three
months,
w1th
received feas1b1lity approval,
the area and fringe benefits are non-existent for all employes,
speakers, for example, from other ISsues are of great unportance to employees m the area of Washmgton restaurant, where the Congressman was treating the
or m the case of pubhc housmg,
the new mme or the Gavm workmg conditions and equal opportunity. Recognition to band to a pre-train dinner, It looked like a French first-aid
a prelunmary loan contract
plant
•
approval, will proceed to
negot1ate these items will not cost the board of education one station after Waterloo.
Most
of
the
St.
Marys
bandsmen
had made it the whole route,
Members
agreed
that
the
Miss Nancy Large, student
completion," he sa1d.
cent.
"In additiOn, those proJects at Bliss College, returned to suggestiOn should be followed
The real issue seems to be that the board refuses to recognize despite cold thatfroze valves on trumpets and turned drumheads
which are necessary to meet Columbus Sunday after through and a list of speakers the1r employees as havmg the same constitutional rights as those brittle as the Dead Sea scrolls. They were being rubbed, chafed,
statutory or other spec1f1c spendmg the holidays here be made.
employees of priVate industry and they place no priority on the and coffeed back to warmth, health and sanity.
About five of them were missing, though. The Army turned
Bob Jacobs reported that the welfare of these dedicated employees and their vital role in the
program comm1llnents will be w1th her grandmother, Mrs
up with 2 of them, who'd passed out along the way and had been
approved m the commg Etollla Cassell, and uncle and tickets used for the Chnst- care of our children.
picked
up by relief teams. Two were discovered at George
months/' he sa1d
aunt, Mr and Mrs. C. T. mas promotion cost $1 60 per
Mrs. Allee Globokar ,President
Washmgton Uruversity Htspltal, not really badly off, as it
roll rather than $2 55 as was
Romney sa1d only subsidized Cassell, Middleport
Fred Haynes, F1eld Rep.
developed.
And the fmal straggler wandered in all by herself.
housmg and redevelopment
Mrs. Etmlla Cassell and M1ss ongmaliy reported
I was never so glad to see a train leave Washington in my life
In a rev1ew of 1972, 11 was
programs will be affected, Large v1s1ted m Cadiz w1th the
as
I
bade
farewell to the St. Marys Band through chattering teeth
These will include those pro- former 's son, Riley. Mr. and recalled the chamber has been
later that evening.
grams providing mterest Mrs C. T Cassell entertamed very active 1t promoted the
So have fun, White Falcons, and l hope Mr.
subs1d1es and rent supplements w1th a birthday dmner mme and power plant by
Nixon has about 60-degree weather waiting for you. Believe
for low cost housmg authomed honoring their mece. Attendmg sponsonng a dmner and havmg_
it helps
.......... ....... ' ' '
m sections 235 and 236 of the were Mrs EWilll\ Cll~~ll , the 19p.,olf!~\ats as, Rl!est ,~peak,ers;
provement of the service on the mel
•
Vf u ,
0 ~ r t•-1 .,-lt . .
, --""
IContmued l•om page 1)
1t
sponsored
the
annual
B1g
hosts'
children,
Thomas,
bonds - interest payments, street and, for pla&lt;:I:Jl)ent of a
,.
~I
Manlee and' Beth, . Marcy Bend Regatta, the annual $24,360
lire hydrant close by. However
Chr1slmas
p1
omotion
and
1s
Owens, and Susie Andrews
WIN AT BRIDGE
Street maintenance funds - they were told that costs of
now offermg serv1ces through superVISIOn, $5,130; employes, preparmg all of the mTUESDAY, JAN. 9, 1973
the chamber's off1ce located on $7,500; pubhc retirement, formation needed to apply for 6 00- News 3, 4, 8, 10. IS , Truth or Conseq 6. Sesame St 20.
Around the Bend 33
the ground floor of the court- $1,265; equipment mam- such lunds would be too great
6
30News 3, 4, 6, B, 10, 15, I Dream of Jeannie 13. Growing
house
to make 1t profitable to the
the ace, kmg or queen
tenance,
$3,000;
miscellaneous,
Him
Up 33
•
NORTH
9
SON IS BORN
A speaker will attend the $200, street repairs by con- Village.
With
any
other
d1stnbutwm
7
00
What's
My
Lme
8,
I've
Got A Secret B: Film 15. Electric
• A872
Mr. and Mrs. James Batey of next meeting on Jan. 22 to
Co 20, Beat The Clock 4
1asked
the
hand
may
still
wmd
up
The
Brewers
also
¥K 3
tract, $6,105; eqmpment,
7 30 - This is Your Life 3; Doctors on Call 4. To Tell The Truth
m no-trump but the wmning Middleport, operators of the speak on land use.
• J 106 4
that a ditch near their home
6: Price Is Right B. 10. Beat The Clock 13, RFD 20, Zoon 33
$10,000;
gasoline,
$5,000
,
player
will
start
w1th
a
suit
French City Fabnc Shop m
-' A95
It
was
announced
that
the
8
00
- Temperotures Rising 6, 13. Ohio This Week 20, Age on
be
cleaned
out
as
dralruige
Is
matenals, $5,000; buildings,
b1d because such hands show Galhpohs, are announcmg the
An•lety
33
WEST
EAST
Ohw
Festival
Assn.
meeting
Inadequate and water from it
too much promise m the
$1,500;
traffic
lights,
$250;
B
30
Hawaii
Five 0 B, 10 , Bill Moyer's Journal 20. 33. Movie
.QJ109
.653
birth of a son, Stephen James, w11i be held m Columbus on
right smt
Is washing away tbelr
"The Devll's Daughter" 6, 13
total,
$44,950
¥J 97
¥Ql062
When we watched ' th1s on Dec 28 at the Holzer Sunday, Jan 21, begmmng at
9 00 - Bold Ones3, 4, 15; Behind !he Lines 20.
driveway. Harold Chue,
tK8
t73
Meter deposit fund - $2,500.
hand
played,
South
took
9 30 - Black Journal20, 33; Movie "Hunter" B, 10
Med1cai
Center
The
mfant
4 Q873
.J1064
10 a m to 2 p m Members who
maintenance supervisor, 10·00 - MarcusWeibyM D. 6.13 . A.menca3, 4,1S, News20
Revenue Sharing fund
about
seven
seconds
to
make
we1ghed
seven
pounds,
12
SOUTH (D)
said there Is too much work 11 00 - News3, 4, 8, 10, 13, 15
four no-trump after opemng ounces Mr. and Mrs Batey can are urged to attend the $11,067
.K4
- JohnnyCarson3, 15 , Jack Paar6, 13, Vlrglnian8 , Movie
meetmg .
w1th
one
no-trump
on hand for _his department 11 30
Council Petitioned
"Blue Denim', lQ
,
¥A854
have another son, Shawn, age
Kerr mtroduced Jan Lefne
to clean out the ditch In the
No one nollced that s1x
1 00 - Your Health 4, News 13. ·
t AQ952
Mr
and
Mrs.
James
Brewer,
1 30 - News 4
d1amonds could have been three. Grandparents are Mr. who represented B11i and Lee's Vme St. residents, agam ap- near future.
.K2
and
Mrs
.
George
Batey,
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 10, 1973
made
JUSt
as
eas1ly
We
at
Monday's
noon
luncheon
BQih vulnerable
Mayor John Zerkle urged the
peared Lefore council and
6 00 - Sunnse Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10
don
't
say
that
a
d1amond
Chester,
Dr
and
Mrs.
J
J.
Others attending were Bill requested unprovefnents to the Brewers to meet w1th the
West North East South
6:15 - Farmtime 10
opener would have led to DaviS, Middleport. The greatIN.T
Grueser,
Fred
Morrow,
Jack
6·
20 - Farm Report 13.
Board
of
Public
AffairS
to
water service on Vme St. They
that contract All we know IS grandparents are Mrs. Rox1e
6
25 - Paul Harvey 13.
Pass
3 N T Pass Pass
Carsey, R1chard Cliambers, said that they were unable to diScuss their problems about
that 1f South had opened a
6.
30
- Columbus Today 4, News, Weather, Sports 6: Bible
Pass
d1amond there would have 01ler, Mrs. H. E Bush, Joseph Vrrg1lTeaford,N. W Compton, get any water through a garden water. The board IS to meet
Answers 8, Urban League Presents 10, The Story 13.
Openmg lead- • Q
been a chance of reachmg J Dav1s, Sr., Middleport; and Bob Jacobs, C. E Blakeslee,
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
th1s evemng and the Brewers
6 55- Take F1ve for Life 15
the slam
Mrs Glove! Sp~res, Peebles. Tom Cassell, DenniS Keney, hose during a recent fire on the md1cated they would attend.
street
to
f1ght
the
fire.
7. 00 - Today 3, 4, 15, News 6, 8. to. Fllntstones iJ
By Oswuld &amp; James Jacoby
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
Earl Ingels, Crow, Kerr, Mrs. They suggested that officials
Council approved the report
7 30 - Romper_Room 6. Sleepy Jeffers B, Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
The opemng no-tr ump 1s a
13. Popeye 10
.
Thomas, Graves, Beulah Jones check mto federal funds which of Mayor Zerkle showing
" picture" bid It pictures
8.00Capt.
Kangaroo
B,
10;
New
Zoo
Revue13,
Sesame
St
.
33,
and Kat1e Crow
Lassie 6
m1ght be available for im- receipts of $1,868.70 in fines an'!I
yo ur d1stnbut10n and high
The bzddmg has been
B
30Jack La La nne 13, Romper Room 8; New Zoo Revue 6.
fees
during
December
and
card strength so closely that
8· 55- Local News 13
on most occaswns partner Wesl Norlh East South
receipts of $162 ip merchant
9 00 - Paul Dl•on4, Phil Donahue 15, AM 3, Concentration6 ;
Dble
knows if the combined hands
MEET
SATURDAY
pollee
collections
for
a
total
of
Captain KangarooS; Friendly Junction 10, Ben Casey 13
Pass
4
t
Pass
4¥
are m the part score, game
9:30
- To Tell The Truth 3, Jeopardy6, Hazel&amp;
CANTON,Ohlo
(UPl)The
TOO
EXPENSIVE
?
$2,030.70
for
the
month.
Pass
01 slam ran~e and can con- Pa55 5 "'
9:55
- Chuck White Repcrls 10
Pro Football Hall of Fame's 27CONCORD, N. H. (UPI) You, South 1 hold
Floyd G. Browne and 10 00- Dinah Shore 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4; Columbus Six Calling
trol the b1ddmg accordmgly
Gov. Meldrim Thomson was Associates was employed to
6, Joker's Wild B, 10; Dick Van Dyke13.
The picture conveyed by •2 ¥AQ9875 • A3Z -'KQ7 member Board of Electors w1ll
10
30Concentration 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4, Price Is Right 8, 10;
meet
Saturday
m
Newport
given
a
new
car
when
he
took
What
do
you
do
now'
survey the community on the
the Jacoby no-trump IS alSpill
Seconds 13
office but he thinks It may be efficiency of the sewage 11 00 - Saleofthe
most exactly the same picA- We really don't know and Beach, Calif, to narrow a liSt
Century 3. 15. Love American Style 6; Gambit
'
ture Oswald Jacoby decided your guess may be 1s good as of 15 finalists down to those
too expensive to use every day. disposal system. Chase said
B, 10; Password 13. Elec Co 20
•
to show some 40 years ago uuu. Fur the record, our guess who w1ll be enshrmed m the
The governor of New Hamp. the Ohio Deparllnent of Health 11 30 - Hollywood SquaresJ, 4, 15, Bewitched 6, 13; Love of Life
B, 10: s..ame St 20.
It IS 16-18 h1gh card pomts, would be to pass
shire is suppUed a Uncoln was requested the survey. The 12.00 - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's SO-SO Club 4, Local News 10,
Hall
here
July
28
o
4-3-3-3, 4-4-3 2, or 5-3-3-2 dlsTODAY'S QUESTION
13; Contact 8, Password 6
The announcement of the
trlbuhon and the doubleton
George A Easlman, dec. to Continental limousine at a survey will cost $3,000 or less; 12 30
Instead of b1ddmg four dm- 3 W's Game 3, 15; Spill Second 6; Search For Tomorrow
1f there IS one must mclude monds, your partner JUmps to 1973 class will be made early Eima M. Epple, Velma Stout, yearly lease price of $1,5011. 1! costs go higher the village
8, 10
one of the four top honors
f1ved1amonds In response to next month. At present, 74 Elsie- Phillips, Charles A. ThOOISOn, who began his tenn will be so advised before any
12 55 - NBC News 3, 15
1 00 - News. Weathar, Sports 3, All My Children 6, 13 , Green
Forty years ago we were your double. What do you do former pros ate members of
w1th
a
promise
to
keep
further work on the survey IS
Easllnan, Frank A. Easllnan,
·
Acres 10. French Chef 33; It's Your Bet 8, Watch Your Child
more conservative. The dou- now ·~
goverrnnent frugal, said Mon- done. The survey w1ll take four
the Hall of Fame.
15
Homer
A.
Eastman,
Theresa
bleton had to mclude e1the1
1 20- Lucille Rivers 3
Easllnan, Cert. for trans, day he may do most of the months to complete. Chase
1 30 -3 On AMatch 3, 4. 15 : The World Turns 8, 10; Let's Make
driving In his personal car.
said it must be filed with the
Bedford.
A Deal 6, 13 ·
"I
wasn't
going
to
get
a
clii'
health
departm!nt
by
May,
2
00
- Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Wmme Ba1ley, Vma Bailey to
Douglass
6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
at
all,
but
it
was
too
good
·a
1973
Winnie Bailey, Vina Bailey,
2·30Doctors
3, 4, 15 , Dallng Game13 ; Edgeol NightS 10
David Ohlinger was comone and two-tenths acres, 160 bargaln to pass up," be saki.
J:OO - Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hosp)tal 6, 1J; Love
''They told me the car c011t mended for hiS work as
Splendored Thing 8, 10; RFD 20.
acre lot No. 1164, Ohve
J
30Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15, One Life to Live 6, 13 1
$10,000.
But
I
may
be
using
my
president of council for the past
Mabel McAtee, Mack
Secret
Storm B. 10; Ohio This Week 20
McAtee, Kenneth E Wolfe, car m011t of the time because year by Mayor Zerkle and was 4•00 - Mister Cartoon 3. S!&gt;mer$et 15, F'llntstones 6; Love
Al)lerican Style 13, Merv Griffin 4, Sesame St. 33, Gilligan's
Mary Wolfe, Harry Welch, that Lincoln uses too much reelected for·1973. Plans were
island 8. Movie "Destry" 10
gas."
made to move meters on North 4:30- Merv Griffin 8, Andy Griffith 15, Daniel Boone 13 ,
Hazel Welch, Emery F.
Petticoat Junction 3; I Love Lucy 6
Second Ave., from the bl!!lk to
Brooks, Jane Brooks to Eber
5
00
- Mister Rogers 33, 20; Daniel Boone 6: Ponderosa 3 ~ Mark V down the strell m
E Ours, Parcels, Lebanon.
Dick Van Dyke 15.
' '
PT PLEASANT - Mason be in excess of $10,000, we want state agenc1es, the coal mmmg
Gertrude Lemaster
order to provide more parkmg 5·30 - Dragnat8; Elec. Co. 33, Gomer Pyle13; Marshall Dillon 1
County• Vocational Center to be one of the f~rst vocatwnal mdustry is becoming one of the Aumiller, Jess Aumiller to
Q-What ts the sow ce of spaces with meters in the
15; Hodgepodge Lodge 20
the
mscrtptton on the Ltb·
6:00News, Weather, Sports 3, ~. 8, 10, I~; Truth or Conseq. 61
D~rector Ed Sommer an- centers to offer th1s program,"
safest industries
.
- Earl C. Aumiller Warren G erty Bell•
space available. ,
Sesame
St 20; Around The Bend 33.
·
,
nounced Monday an adult . he slated "Job opportunities
"As soon as final approvals Aumlller
47 32
Acres
Chase reported that Thomas - 6 30- NBC News 3, 4: News B, 10, Sesame St. 20; Around the - ~
·
A-The
Bible's
Book
ot
evening course in General have never been as great as are received and all funding_ Lebanon '
Bend 33.
' LeVItiCUS. chapter 25, verse Powell will attend a sewer
1 ,
7
00
Truth
or
Conseq.
3;
Beat
The
Clock
~;
News
6, 101/Whal's , 1
Mine Technology w1ll be g1ven they are now There are three arrangements have been
Robert F. Tubb, Florence 10 ~
plant operators school In
My Line 8. Anything You Can Do 13; Elec Co 20, Know Your :
at the Mason County major coal mimng firms m made, we will he a~le to set a Tubb to E. Roy Johnsoq,
Schools
33, Fabulous 7, 15.
Colwnbus
for
nine
Mondays
1
Q-What tree sheds tts
Vocational Center
eastern OhiO, the newest of startmg date for th1s program Delilah Johnson 13 Acres
7
30Episode:
Action
33;
To
Tell
The
Truth
6: Tho Judge1ol '
over
a
period
of
the
next
18
·
leaves latest tn the fall?
Lassie15; BeotTheCiock 13; Pollee SurgeonJ; Protecfurs&amp;· 1
'Sommer sa1d bec~use the these as close a~ Me1gs to help prepare local people for Pomeroy.
'
'
weeks begmmng Jan. 22 to
Hodgepodge Lodge 20
' '
A-Usually the oak.
deep
m1ne
coal
in- County "
Martha Gilmore, dec'd., to
B00 - Carol Burnell B, 10, Pout Lynde6, 13, Adom-12 3, 4,'15, )
a new h1gh pa'yi_ng vocat_10n
become a plant operator.
Sonny&amp;Cher8,10;Leonordg ToKnowHowToSee20 33 ~ 1
dustry • Is growing m
Sommer Indicated the coal Someone has to fill these JObs Leonard Gilmore Cert of Lots (lnt ), Pomeroy
Attending the meetmg
How To See 20, 33
'
'
Southeastern Oh1o and West mmmg industry's statistics and we have an obligation to Trans, Salisbury. '
Albert Van Cooney, Mane were Mayor Zerkle, Clerk· 8 30- Banacek 3. 4, IS; Movie "Trouble Carnes to Town" 6 ' 13 • l
Vtrgm1a, he hopes the 100-hour show that Its manpower needs help . provide lhe necessary
Handful of· Ashes 33
,
' ' '
West Ohio Annual Con- VanCooney to James L. Treasurer Gene Grate, council
9:00-~icai
Centers,
101'Eyefu
Eye20,
33.
classroom mstruction w1ll start are estimated to be 10,000 men background trammg to help get fe,;nce of the Umted MethodiSt .walker, Lillian L. Walker, 2~ members Mrs. Jeane Morgan,
9:30- Tho Milcl Bunch 20, 33.
Jan. 22.
per year, and growing. He our people better prepared for Church to Columbia Twp Acres, 2 ~cres, Salisbury
' Ohlinger, Fred Hoffman, 10·00- Search 3, 4, 15, Julie Andrews 6, 13; Cannon 8, 10; Soul
33, News 20
'!With the annual wage for pmnted out that through the employment: After all, that'~ Trus., Parcel, Columbia
'carlos Silva, Ruth Sliva to William Walters and Clarence 11:00- News3.4,6,8,10, 13, 15.
of
labor, what educatiOn IS all about,
the lowest paying JOb m the cooperallon
Ernest Grimm; Vashli M .§usan J . Konzilman, 68.7421 Stewart, Chief of ,Police J. J. 11:30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Jack P.ror Toni)e 6, 13; Virginian
coal mming mdustry figured to man~gement and federal and he concluded
8; Movie "Siege of Fort Bismarck" 10.
Cremeans, aqd Chase.
Gnmm to Corabelle Russell, Acres. Scipio.
t 00 - News 4, 13
)
/,
•
~
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Cmcmnati attorney John R.
Meckstroth was chosen
preSident of the state Board of
Education at the group's f~rst
meetmg of 1973 here Monday
W1lham H. Cossler of•
Youngstown, v1ce president of
the Youngstown BUlldmg
Ma!er1al and Fuel Co. and a
past president of the Mahoning
Valley Builders' Association,
was chosen v1ce pres1dent
The board members - elected m November - drew lots to
determine the lengths of their
terms
Servmg siX year terms Will
be W11liam Baker of Madison,
Wallace Black of Zanesville,
Roy McKinley of Coshocton,
David Rittenhouse of Toledo,
Anthony Russo of Mayf1eld
He1ghts, Cecil Sims of Piqua,
Robert W1ll1ams of Xenia and
Martha W1se of Elyna
Servmg four year terms w1ll
be Cossler, Thaddeus Garrett
Jr of Akron, Susan George of
Canton, W1lham Judd of
Cmcmnati, Mildred Madison of
Cleveland, Wayne Shaffer of
Bryan, Frances Voke of
Columbus and Paul Walker of
Bexley.
Two year terms w1ll be served by Meckstroth, Everett
Jung of Hamilton, Robert
Lyons Sr of Dayton, Ward
M1ller of Portsmouth, Gene
NorriS of Berea, Thomas Russo
of Maple He1ghts and Robert
Walker of Adena.
The board adopted an ID·
terun report to the General
Assembly on progress made
toward completiOn of a
statewide plan for the
educatiOn and habilitation of
Ohio's handicapped children
The legislature enacted a law
mandatmg the board to approve a plan for the education
of handicapped youth by July 1
There are more than 320,000
handicapped school children m
Ohio.
In other action, the board .
- Approved two requests
from school distncts to issue
bonds for construction of
classroom facll1hes - Western
Local Schools (P1ke County)
$100,000, and Sheffleld§\'effleld Lake Q\~r...'S!;hools

• H

The game was part of a doubleheader event at Nassau
Coliseum in Uniondale, N.Y.
In the only other Ohio college
game of the nigbt, steubenville
downed Central state 37-30 at
Wilberforce.
The victorious Barons played
a slowdown gam~ in which the
first score was not posted unW
lour minutes into the game.
steubenville led at halftime 1413,

...
Q

•FILE CABINETS
e FILE FOLDERS
e INDEX CARDS
elf!DEX ~ARD BINDERS
e LEGAL PADS

+

e METAL DESK TRAYS

.

Just to Mention a Few.

COME TO

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO

,_.-..;.·----·1111!'-----m-e•r•y•,_,_.._.
992 2094

Po

- Reason 11. Our average fee for
over seven' and a half million
customers last year was only
about' 12 dollars.

0

0.

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
United Press International top
20 major college basketball
teams with first place voles and
won-lost records as of Sunday
in parentheses · (Sixth Weeki
Team
Poonn
1 UCLA (34) (10 0)
340
2. Maryland (9 0)
, 285
3 Marquette (10.0)
• ,.. 261
~ No Cor Sl. (9-0) ' .., ' 253
S. Missouri 111-01 ' , ' · 169
6 North Car. (12-1)
)31
7. Minnesota (9-1)
124
B Long Beach St (11 -1)
94
9. Vanderblll (10-1)
3B
10. Providence {8 1)
· 35
11 San FrM. {10 1)
22
12. St. John's (8 2)
21
13 SW Louisiana (7-1)
20
14. Kon,as 51 19·21
19
IB
15 Houston (10-21
16 Indiana (B 21
12
11
17 Alabama (7-1)
18 Louisville {10-1)
10
19 South
Pennsylvania
98
20
Cor 19-31{7-2)

••
••
I
I

College Ratings

iFILE STORAGE BOXES

~~~

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you ·
should come to us ·
for income tax help.

with 4Ply Dynacor• Rayon Cord

:

• 4 ply Dynaco~ rayon cord body to 'Cooper's deSignation. No industry•WidO •
give you a strong, yet S-M-D·D·T·H •tandards oxtst for pre[[]IUIR tu~:;,
riding tire.
•• l%z inch POWERSYN tread to give
you maximum traction and long
f
• • mileaKe.
Over 7800 biting edges to give you
full time starting power and sure,
safe winter stops.
•
Precisian tread moldlnR: to receive
metal safety studs to l[ive you up to
200% greater startinR: power and
50% ~~:reater stopping power com·
POMEROY
.•
pared to conventionals. (If all four
tke~ are studded.)
~erms Available
' .'

I

D=OirnlBLOCM
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

304 E. Main , 992-3795

Pomeroy

,Open 9 Til 5 Mon. Thru Sat

I

Cooper Qual"fI J I•

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1

C0SlS N0 More. •

MOORE'S

1
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·~···.,; ·········
'
'

�-

·'

. -.

4- ·i'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Jan. 9,1973

'l

Pomeroy ...
Personal Notes
Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Schoenleb
and Mrs. Lon Custer have
returned to their Pomeroy
,homes following a visit in
Florida with Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Fisher at Titusville ,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Fisher and
Mr . and Mrs. Edgar Vale at
Sanford.
Holiday guests at the home of
Mr. and 'il!rd: "trank Dbrst,
Long Bottom were their
daughters and their families,
Mr. and Mrs. Gene (Polly)
Ferrell and sons, Robert and
Shawn, Jeffersonville; Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene (Donna ) Story
and sons, Clair and Justin,
Marysville; Patty Jo Dorst,
Parkersburg, W. Va. and her
fiance, Marvin Massey, Little
Hoc~lng . Other visitors were
Mrs. Dorst's mother, Mrs.
Ethel Stout, Tuppers Pl.ains;
Mr. _and Mrs. Ralph Dorst,
Akron ; Mr. and Mrs. James
Burnette, Akron, and their son,
Dan Burnette, home on leave
from the Naval Air Force
Base, Imperial Beach, Calif.
Home from a holiday
vacation in Arizona are Mr.
and Mr. and Mrs. Don H.
Mlller . The couple visited Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Van Cooney in
Mesa. They were Christmas
·dtimer guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Estol Davis in Case Grande,
Ariz. and while in Arizona
visited other friends . The
Millers resided there several
years ago. ·

Eighth District president of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
and .'Y[Ison Carr, head of the
Forty :l\!ld E1ght.
A stea1t dinner precedtid the
mee1ing with ' •Commander
Waddell calling the meeting to
order.
Albert Roush, commander of
-the Fifth Division, reported
that Meigs County posts need
84 to reach quota and he urged
that Jeg'ionnaires get their dues
paid.
A!tending besid•s Mrs.
Kessinger and Roush of Post
128, were Frank Vaughan and
Kenneth Harris of Post 39,
Pomeroy; and Frank Willford
and Virgil Walker, Of Racine
Post 602.

Moore on job
Bill Moore, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Moore, Pomeroy,
completed a year's training in
medical technology at St.
Rit:a's Hospital, Lima, and
Monday began employment at
University Hospital
in
Columbus.
Moore, a 1967 graduate of
Pomeroy High School and a
1971 graduate of Ohio Northern , will continue his
education at Ohio State
University_ His wife, Michelle,
and son, Sean Allen, age 3, plan
to move soon to Colwnbus.
Mrs. Moore is employed at the
Allen County Day Care Center
for the Mentally Retarded. She
is also a 1971 graduate of Ohio
Northern with a degree in
psychology.

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Hill of Racine entertained New Year's Eve with
a six o'clock dinner party.
Guests were their children and
their families, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hill, Jay and Pat, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Hill, Billy, Jr.,
Pam, Tim, Jeff, and Chris of
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Waid
Foster, Cheryl, John, Dean and
Eric of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill
--spent Chr-istmas Day with the
Billy -HIU-~ami\~l OU Racine.
Other .:uests were -Mr. and
Mrs. Foster and family of
Colwnbus. Mrs. Foster and
children spent the week here.
with her parents.

A nd
tfe

.
SertJtCe

In New Lexington Sunday to
attend the funeral services for
Mrs. Earl Shumaker (Anna
Crary) were Mr. and Mrs.
Reed Crary, Mr. and Mrs.
Pearl Mora, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Wildermuth, Mrs. Pete
Nibert, Mrs. Bob Wamsley,
Mrs. Ben Buck, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Kesterson, and Mr. and
Mrs. Gail Buck.
The services were conducted
at the Roberts Funeral Home
by the Rev. Evelyn Beard, a
. former . pastor of Mrs.
Shumaker's church and a
personal friend . Among the
many floral tributes was a
basket of white carnations
from her Pomeroy High School
Class of 1934. Burial was in the
Rehoboth Cemetery.

TUESDAY
SOUTHERN Local Chapter
.
. . of Pub!'
453, Oh10 Assoc1at1on
IC
School Employes, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Southern High
School. All members asked to
attend.
SPECIAL meeting, Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;:AM, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday. Work in FC

~e;i::

all Master Masons

Officers of the Middleport
First Baptist Church · for 1973
. were installed Sunday' liy the
Rev. Charles Simons, pastor.
Installed were Mrs. Marjorie
. Walburn, clerk w1th Mrs. Sue
Imboden, assistant clerk ; Miss
Freddie Houdashe1t, -treasurer,
Mrs. Kathleen Anthony,
assistant; Mrs. Dorothy Anthony, organist, Mrs. Janice
Gibbs, assistant: Danny

Thoinp'son, · Church school
'superintendent, -David Darst,
assistant; Mrs. Sarah Flower,
church school secretary and
treasury,
Judy
Owen,
assis tan t ; Mrs. Ka thleen
Anthony, missions treasurer,
Mrs_ Lettie Roush, l\\'"istant.
New members of the various
boards installed were Mrs.
Clara Mae Darst, Mrs. Alwilda
Werner, Board of Ch~istian

Educa'tion; · Lacey Barton,
- David Jenkins, Harold E.
·aubbard, Board _of Deacons ; ·,
Mrs: Louise Thompson, Ted
Riley and Don Wilson, Board of
Trustees; Mrs. Edith Sauer,
.Mrs. Nelle. Werner, Board of
-Deaconesses; Mrs . Nadine
Barton, Milton Hood and Mrs.
Martha King, financial board.
Installed as ushers were
Gerald Anthony, Mike Hoffman ,-Ted ·Riley, Joe Anthony,
Willis Anthony, David Jenkins, .
Marc Fultz, David Darst, Greg
Hayes1John Pat Riley, Harold
E. Hubbard , Jack Kauff,
Emerson Evans of Gallipolis Edison Baker, Gene Kauff, and
an all-out effort wilt be
made to raise the needed money (from the
Friends of Scouting, ScoutTHE STORE
ers and parents of Scouts
who live in Gallia, Mason and
WITH MORE
Meigs Counties. The result will
be more boys coming under the
More Quality!
influence of scouting through
More Friendly
-the organization of ne'w cub
Service!
packs, scout troops and exMore Values !
'
plorer posts, and such special
activities as conservation,
ecology, and an awareness of
POMEROY, OHIO
the dangers of the use of drugs.

DISCUSSION on band camp
when Eastern High School · Quality Scouting for boys,
Band Boosters meets at 7:30 ages 8 through 18, in Gallia,
p.m. tonight at high schooL All Mason and Meigs Counties is
band parents, please ~ttend _ costly, but the dividends ar~
SOUTHERN Athletic 700 sc'llUts in a practical
Boosters 7:30 tonight, high program
of
character
school, Racine. Election of development, citizenship
officers; all interested urged to training and mental and
physical fitness. An estimated
attend.
RACINE Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, 5,500 additional boys .are
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m. uninvolved, but it is known that
Tuesday. Refreshments, all many of them would be scouts
Master Masons invited.
· . if offered the opportunity.
WEDNESDAY
Richard Roy, district
SOUTHERN Local School chairman for GaUi.a, Mason
Board, 8:30p.m. Wednesday at and Meigs Counties, said
high school, Racine.
Monday the cost to bring
WHITE Rose Lodge, I :30 Scouting to boys in the trip.m. Wednesday at · the county area is shared by the
American Legion Hall, Mid- local Tri:.State Area Council,
dleport.
the sponsor_ing organization,
POMEROY Baptist Church, the unit and the boy. The
p~otluck fellowship supper, Council is able to do Its share
W nesday followed by annual only through receiving inb siness meeting with election dlvidual contributions and
of officers.
united fund support.
POMEROY - Middleport
The council has prepared an _
Uons Club, noon Wednesday .at operating budget of $154,204 to
tte Meigs Inn . Special serve •the units and their
recognition for service. All members in the rota! council
Uons requested to attend.
area covering 10 counPOMEROY Chapter 80, ties . The cost to · mainRoyal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m. lain Scouting in Gallia,
Wednesday at the Pomeroy Mason and Meigs Counties for
Masonic Temple. Attendance 1973 will be $15,800. This inurged.
eludes the salary and related
MIDDLEPORT Ama-teur · expenses of a full time District
Gardeners, '8 p.m. Wednesday Executive who lives in the trial the home of Mrs. Selwyn county area, and the necessary
Smith. Mrs. Joe Bolin will give supporting services such as
a demonstration on making from-the Scout Executive, the
corn husk roses. Members are Scout Service Center , and
to take corn husks if they have Camp
Kiashuta
and
Arrowhead.
th em.
THURSDAY
This past year only $7,700
OHIO VALLEY Commandry was raised in the tri-county
24, Knights Templar, special area. Under the leadership of
meeting to confer the Red
Cross and muitkorders of the
Knight Templ.ar organizations,
DAUGHTER BORN
7:30 p. m. Thursday. RefreshA seven pound daughter was
ments will be served.
born on Jan. 6 to Mr. and Mrs.
XI GAMMA Mu Thursday, Wilson Wolfe. of Urbana, Ill. ,
7:45p.m., home of Mrs. Rosie former res idents of Meigs
Sisson, Pomeroy, ·with Ann County. The baby has been
Rupe as co-hostess. Mildred named Wendy Ann. Mr. and
Karr and Velma Rue are co- Mrs. Wolfe have two sons,
Joseph and Daniel. Grandchairman of the program.
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453 parentsare Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
F&amp;AM Thursday, 7: 30p.m. at Tucker and Mr. ahd Mrs.
hall in Chester. Work in Master Manchester Wolfe, Racine.
Mason Degree·. Refreshments
will be served. All Master
Masons invited to attend.
FRIDAY
ROCK Springs Grange, 7:30
MARY SHRINE 3'1 , White
p.m. Thursday at the hall.
Shrine of Jerusalem, IOOF
PAST Councilor's Club, hall, Friday, 8 p.m. PoUuck
Theodorus Counctl17, D. of A., r efr es hment s following
home of Mrs. Eva Robson, mee ting.
Fisher St., Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
MiSSIONARY Society, Chapter, Daughters of the
Pomeroy Baptist Church, 7:30 American Revolution, 2 p.m.
Thursday night at the church. Friday at the home of Mrs.
AMERICAN Cancer Society, James Brewington . Co7:30p.m. Thursday at Coal St. hostesses, Mrs. David Miller
office in Middleport.
and Miss Frieda Faehnle.

.

.

"

We,.would like to ·
announce , our
opening at Portland , the forrner
Deem's
Grovery .

New liication
. At

We take this opportunity to thank all
our former customers in the Long
Bottom area . Hope to serve you better
in our new location .
---- ~
_

r

Still Have
LOW

Discount P~ces
. Ps

i

SALE . 139

.

Touch &amp; Sew• sewing m&lt;lt:hine. This truly superb zig-zag
sewing machine offers a ful l range of Slretch and fashion
stitches . Exclusive Si!Jg~ push-button, front drop -in bobbin . Many other fe atures .-Model 758 .
1
Reg . $299.95 Ca rry ing cas~ extra

SALE 269

..

'

N.ESCAFE'

1
1

io Qz.

Jar

I
I
1
1

$} 09
·

Good Onlr al Mark v

DEPARTMENT STOR£

Per CuStomer

lor

PT. PLEASANT- MASON· SILVER BRIDG~ PLAZA
.,-

value! -~

10 oz.
Bonus'
Jar

$}49

Umil

Scot Lad

I Per
..FamUy

Superiors
Fresh
Braunschweiger

S1 .l7

·-----

•

· ··

$1.29

lb.

SLICED
-BACON
2 ~~i 1.99

MARK V STORE
EXPIRES SATURDAY

Orapg,e - Green
....----· or Red
Enamel Finish

ALL WOOD-REGULAR $1.00 VALUE

lb. 55~

ENGLISH WALNUTS

.SCOT LAD SOUP

ROLLING PIN

Dlicken Noodle, Vegetable, Mushroom, etc.

so~

The Good Diamond Brand Walnuts

AND
cans

FinED COLORED

A HUGE COMPLETE SELECTION HAS ARRIVED!

MAnRESS
COVERS

ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS

for

•

AI Shopper's Marl - You get the lowest price

•

FOOD BUYS
' .,.

SCOT LAD

.Our Scot Lad Brand

and- a huge se lection. Roses, lilacs, carnations,

marigolds, mum s, petunias, daisies, tulips , lilie
ol the Valley, baby's breaths, cabbage roses,
aclually 60 dillerent lypes, plus greenery. Very
life like!

Hb.

EVERYDAY
LOW
PRICE!

bxs

ICE MILK

1.

1!~

Gal.
Carton

49¢
•

JERZEE MILK
49c VALUE

Metal Blade

large Fork-Spoon

They're $1.00 Values

STURDY
SNOW
SHOVEL
$222

Poly Plastic

ALL OCCASION

SALAD
SET

GREETING
CARDS
·s7~aox

All Impact Plastic!

1•

59~

4

$}

3

2 lb.
bag

pak

~~~~=iners $}.00

·MARS CANDY BARS
3 Musketeers, Mars and Milky Way

All Brands

• can

ursize
'

CHEWING .

PR.

gal.49~
crt.

liz

Fairmont
'

$2.88

14 oz.
box

99

Choc. Milk

bars

ICE CREAM

Nice n' Ute

lf2 gal.

-,

crt.

Diet Rite Cola

tn subtle movemen t across its cabochon. A beau·
tiful birt hc1ay or ann tversary gift I hat gives con-

stan t plea sure Mane only by Un io n Carbide
Corporation. L1nde Stars-Of-The-Month are avail ·
able here in ftne JCwelry for
J;lll lf)w..:umly

m~n

Apr Shell Wl tl le

SALT ANQ PEPPER
DISPENSER

Reg. 99c Value

M,,,. rcrnGrcCI• Sept t Co rnllower l3tue

I Cl) ' 1-'l,,rn Purule Juri(• ' S.llrlhlll Prrrlo.

Milr I'&lt;LUC 8tue

and women .

' CANNON
PANTY
HOSE
.

Ju t; C rttt·t R('• l
•Au~ Mtrll Gr!JI!II

Oc. l I Al ~tiCi! Pm~

Newe~t, Push. Button

NtN Ll.'nlt:ll Y'= ltuw

Orr / B&lt;thHIIId B lue

. From

, Style - Modern

....

'

Yellow-Blue-Green-Red

so~ .

THE SINGER STORE
iiS W. Second·
992-2284
Pqmeroy
We also have a liberal trade-I n policy.

Court St.

Pomeroy

') -

•

··.

l
I

4
/

Boz. '$1
crts.

Throw-Away .

Diet
Root Beer &amp;Cola
.

_Jipttles

-

DR. _PEPPER
Everyday Low Price!

'

Fruit and 16 oz.
Nut Cereal box

A •,

4

.
RC ·COLA

E~ch

8·

PAK

-, ...~... ,''\~~:· :::
I ·

........
.:.; .., ....
:;·...........
••

'

'I

.
.'

I

1.00

28 oz.
~ottles

Wfth _sJ.o·o Purcna se.
No Limil on Quanlity
-

16.oz. bots.

, 2' 6-~

We have a credil plan designed to Iii your budget

9~

16 oz.
bots.

._,j

Salt+-.-;
~

Regular $1.39 .Value

.

Shasta

Makes Breakfast ANatural

YOGURT

Lln.dE.
Stars-of-the-Month

New! SUPER GRANOLA

~

9 Uves- Beef, Tuna, Uver &amp;Dlicken

'

Nice n' Ute

TOBACCO

DRY CAT ·FOOD

BE~r~~:frs

FORMERLY SOLD FOR ' 59c

Juicy Fruit, Doublemint &amp; Spearmint

All Varieties At This Low Price

6l~ ·

4 Day Suf!_~r __saving Sale!

•

Rich's Whipped Topping

RntD • FULl BED SIZE

L1n 11~ Slars 1n twt:l ve birth stone colors. Each
With a mag&gt; cal Si&lt;-raye&lt;J Star thai re flectS ligh t

WRIGLEY'S GUM

FRENCH
FRIES

All Flavors

for

bottle

ORE IDA

Cream Pies

ALPO DOG" FOOD

MENS
SHOE
TREES
$1.00
VALUE!

16 oz.
can

24 ounce

6 pak

BANQUET

ORANGE
JUICE

Low Price Economy Buy

79~

Carton

For PancakeS, Waffles &amp;Cooking

Eskimo Pies

ICE CREAM
112 Gal.

, (1 ,,;:,

NORTH STAR

SEALTEST

SCOT LAD

large
cans

Large
Size

FROZEN

9·ALTift£H;C·RACKER5-

NEW SPRING &gt;TY'i:»'t"S! WASH~\:MI: .., . ~
.. ..It II

BOiog~a

Sliced

Freeze-Orl•d Coffee

e mergencies ,

decorative :-:

SUPERIORS

Smoked Pork Chops

Stands · 9" tall. All
metal base with metal
lop on chimney. tj~rldv

SHOP THE STORE NEAREST YOU I

Superiors Fresh .Beef

PORK CHOPS
MIXED
9 to ·11 CHOPS
I~ 1. 9

Limit 1_CouPon

KEROSENE
LAMP

.

.GROUN·D
CHUCK

Family Pack

with
coupon

I
L-----~~~

A DISCOUNT

'OR

r---~---------- -

I

Say '

·cHOPPED SIRLOIN

MIDDLtPORT, 0.

-

1
1

If Just To.

SALE!

The Fabric -shop

'

-

w-- -=r___:- .
Stop In, ,, - ~

l

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992·3480 ·
Sts. "We Reserve iugl)t To Limit Quantities"

r.nrnl~r Mill and

OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 PM

.

Reg . $109.95
Carrying case extra. ·
IJY1111' stretch-stitch sewing machi ne . Straight, zig-zag
and-st retch-stitch patterns. Bli ndstitch pattern . Model 4t3.
1
Reg. $149,95 Ca rrying case ext ra.

-

.···

The New Idea ih Gifts.. ··

SUPER M~~KET • Open D~ily 9 to 10
· Sun. 10 to 10
.

SAVE 50c ON EACH ONE

Fuhlon Mete• sewing
machine . Straight.
z ig -zag andreverse
stitches. Model 252.
Base included .

Brand Meat$

FORMERLY AT LONG BOTTOM

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

18~SET

t

.

BROWN'S STOP ·'N SHOP

-~

FULL BED SIZE
Elastic Corners - 4 Colors

-

\

lOLA'S

By "N EVCO"
BIG SIZE -

.

Sup~riors

..

Scout drive is planned

·
Savings
,
to sing about whatever
your bUdget!

.. ,.

_f.

Jari _9, 1973

Ke-nneth Im~oden .
the new officers as well l\11
·
.
The Rev. Mr. Simon,s-gave a those who remain in office with .
.
'
cha~ge pr Christian service to ·~ ontinuing terms.

District 8-honored
American Legion Posts 'of·
Dis.trict 8 will lead the parade
at the Department conventlon
to be held _in July at Toledo, It
-was . ann01111ced at the mid'
winter conference held Sunday
at the"Wellston Post 371.
District posts earned the
privilege of leading the parade
by being the first quo.t.a district
in the State of Qhio in membership. It was reported that
membership is 101.15 pet. of
quota . All four LAP awards, as
well as the Little Brown Jug
award came to District 8.
Robert Waddeli, commander, requested that all
legion ~osts in the district have
their colors at the convention
as all 30 posts will be
•represented in the parade.
Dean Scholl of Bremen Post
20 received the endorsement of
the Eighth District for
Department Second Commander. James Wagonseller of
Lancaster Post 11, received
endorsement for national
commander in 1974. It was
requested that all Legion posts
make cash contributions to the
campaign funds of the two
candidates.
Announced at the meeting
was orientation for Buckeye
Boys State on May 6 in Athens.
The spring district conference
was annoenced for March 18 at
Athens, and the state midwinter conference was announced for Jan. 29 at the Ohio
State Fairgrounds.
Speaker for ' the conference
was Charles Green , past
department commander .
Greetings were extended by
Mrs. Charles Kessinger,

'

-

c

16 oz.
hots.

.•,

,.

�-

·'

. -.

4- ·i'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Jan. 9,1973

'l

Pomeroy ...
Personal Notes
Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Schoenleb
and Mrs. Lon Custer have
returned to their Pomeroy
,homes following a visit in
Florida with Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Fisher at Titusville ,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Fisher and
Mr . and Mrs. Edgar Vale at
Sanford.
Holiday guests at the home of
Mr. and 'il!rd: "trank Dbrst,
Long Bottom were their
daughters and their families,
Mr. and Mrs. Gene (Polly)
Ferrell and sons, Robert and
Shawn, Jeffersonville; Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene (Donna ) Story
and sons, Clair and Justin,
Marysville; Patty Jo Dorst,
Parkersburg, W. Va. and her
fiance, Marvin Massey, Little
Hoc~lng . Other visitors were
Mrs. Dorst's mother, Mrs.
Ethel Stout, Tuppers Pl.ains;
Mr. _and Mrs. Ralph Dorst,
Akron ; Mr. and Mrs. James
Burnette, Akron, and their son,
Dan Burnette, home on leave
from the Naval Air Force
Base, Imperial Beach, Calif.
Home from a holiday
vacation in Arizona are Mr.
and Mr. and Mrs. Don H.
Mlller . The couple visited Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Van Cooney in
Mesa. They were Christmas
·dtimer guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Estol Davis in Case Grande,
Ariz. and while in Arizona
visited other friends . The
Millers resided there several
years ago. ·

Eighth District president of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
and .'Y[Ison Carr, head of the
Forty :l\!ld E1ght.
A stea1t dinner precedtid the
mee1ing with ' •Commander
Waddell calling the meeting to
order.
Albert Roush, commander of
-the Fifth Division, reported
that Meigs County posts need
84 to reach quota and he urged
that Jeg'ionnaires get their dues
paid.
A!tending besid•s Mrs.
Kessinger and Roush of Post
128, were Frank Vaughan and
Kenneth Harris of Post 39,
Pomeroy; and Frank Willford
and Virgil Walker, Of Racine
Post 602.

Moore on job
Bill Moore, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Moore, Pomeroy,
completed a year's training in
medical technology at St.
Rit:a's Hospital, Lima, and
Monday began employment at
University Hospital
in
Columbus.
Moore, a 1967 graduate of
Pomeroy High School and a
1971 graduate of Ohio Northern , will continue his
education at Ohio State
University_ His wife, Michelle,
and son, Sean Allen, age 3, plan
to move soon to Colwnbus.
Mrs. Moore is employed at the
Allen County Day Care Center
for the Mentally Retarded. She
is also a 1971 graduate of Ohio
Northern with a degree in
psychology.

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Hill of Racine entertained New Year's Eve with
a six o'clock dinner party.
Guests were their children and
their families, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hill, Jay and Pat, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Hill, Billy, Jr.,
Pam, Tim, Jeff, and Chris of
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Waid
Foster, Cheryl, John, Dean and
Eric of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill
--spent Chr-istmas Day with the
Billy -HIU-~ami\~l OU Racine.
Other .:uests were -Mr. and
Mrs. Foster and family of
Colwnbus. Mrs. Foster and
children spent the week here.
with her parents.

A nd
tfe

.
SertJtCe

In New Lexington Sunday to
attend the funeral services for
Mrs. Earl Shumaker (Anna
Crary) were Mr. and Mrs.
Reed Crary, Mr. and Mrs.
Pearl Mora, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Wildermuth, Mrs. Pete
Nibert, Mrs. Bob Wamsley,
Mrs. Ben Buck, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Kesterson, and Mr. and
Mrs. Gail Buck.
The services were conducted
at the Roberts Funeral Home
by the Rev. Evelyn Beard, a
. former . pastor of Mrs.
Shumaker's church and a
personal friend . Among the
many floral tributes was a
basket of white carnations
from her Pomeroy High School
Class of 1934. Burial was in the
Rehoboth Cemetery.

TUESDAY
SOUTHERN Local Chapter
.
. . of Pub!'
453, Oh10 Assoc1at1on
IC
School Employes, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Southern High
School. All members asked to
attend.
SPECIAL meeting, Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;:AM, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday. Work in FC

~e;i::

all Master Masons

Officers of the Middleport
First Baptist Church · for 1973
. were installed Sunday' liy the
Rev. Charles Simons, pastor.
Installed were Mrs. Marjorie
. Walburn, clerk w1th Mrs. Sue
Imboden, assistant clerk ; Miss
Freddie Houdashe1t, -treasurer,
Mrs. Kathleen Anthony,
assistant; Mrs. Dorothy Anthony, organist, Mrs. Janice
Gibbs, assistant: Danny

Thoinp'son, · Church school
'superintendent, -David Darst,
assistant; Mrs. Sarah Flower,
church school secretary and
treasury,
Judy
Owen,
assis tan t ; Mrs. Ka thleen
Anthony, missions treasurer,
Mrs_ Lettie Roush, l\\'"istant.
New members of the various
boards installed were Mrs.
Clara Mae Darst, Mrs. Alwilda
Werner, Board of Ch~istian

Educa'tion; · Lacey Barton,
- David Jenkins, Harold E.
·aubbard, Board _of Deacons ; ·,
Mrs: Louise Thompson, Ted
Riley and Don Wilson, Board of
Trustees; Mrs. Edith Sauer,
.Mrs. Nelle. Werner, Board of
-Deaconesses; Mrs . Nadine
Barton, Milton Hood and Mrs.
Martha King, financial board.
Installed as ushers were
Gerald Anthony, Mike Hoffman ,-Ted ·Riley, Joe Anthony,
Willis Anthony, David Jenkins, .
Marc Fultz, David Darst, Greg
Hayes1John Pat Riley, Harold
E. Hubbard , Jack Kauff,
Emerson Evans of Gallipolis Edison Baker, Gene Kauff, and
an all-out effort wilt be
made to raise the needed money (from the
Friends of Scouting, ScoutTHE STORE
ers and parents of Scouts
who live in Gallia, Mason and
WITH MORE
Meigs Counties. The result will
be more boys coming under the
More Quality!
influence of scouting through
More Friendly
-the organization of ne'w cub
Service!
packs, scout troops and exMore Values !
'
plorer posts, and such special
activities as conservation,
ecology, and an awareness of
POMEROY, OHIO
the dangers of the use of drugs.

DISCUSSION on band camp
when Eastern High School · Quality Scouting for boys,
Band Boosters meets at 7:30 ages 8 through 18, in Gallia,
p.m. tonight at high schooL All Mason and Meigs Counties is
band parents, please ~ttend _ costly, but the dividends ar~
SOUTHERN Athletic 700 sc'llUts in a practical
Boosters 7:30 tonight, high program
of
character
school, Racine. Election of development, citizenship
officers; all interested urged to training and mental and
physical fitness. An estimated
attend.
RACINE Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, 5,500 additional boys .are
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m. uninvolved, but it is known that
Tuesday. Refreshments, all many of them would be scouts
Master Masons invited.
· . if offered the opportunity.
WEDNESDAY
Richard Roy, district
SOUTHERN Local School chairman for GaUi.a, Mason
Board, 8:30p.m. Wednesday at and Meigs Counties, said
high school, Racine.
Monday the cost to bring
WHITE Rose Lodge, I :30 Scouting to boys in the trip.m. Wednesday at · the county area is shared by the
American Legion Hall, Mid- local Tri:.State Area Council,
dleport.
the sponsor_ing organization,
POMEROY Baptist Church, the unit and the boy. The
p~otluck fellowship supper, Council is able to do Its share
W nesday followed by annual only through receiving inb siness meeting with election dlvidual contributions and
of officers.
united fund support.
POMEROY - Middleport
The council has prepared an _
Uons Club, noon Wednesday .at operating budget of $154,204 to
tte Meigs Inn . Special serve •the units and their
recognition for service. All members in the rota! council
Uons requested to attend.
area covering 10 counPOMEROY Chapter 80, ties . The cost to · mainRoyal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m. lain Scouting in Gallia,
Wednesday at the Pomeroy Mason and Meigs Counties for
Masonic Temple. Attendance 1973 will be $15,800. This inurged.
eludes the salary and related
MIDDLEPORT Ama-teur · expenses of a full time District
Gardeners, '8 p.m. Wednesday Executive who lives in the trial the home of Mrs. Selwyn county area, and the necessary
Smith. Mrs. Joe Bolin will give supporting services such as
a demonstration on making from-the Scout Executive, the
corn husk roses. Members are Scout Service Center , and
to take corn husks if they have Camp
Kiashuta
and
Arrowhead.
th em.
THURSDAY
This past year only $7,700
OHIO VALLEY Commandry was raised in the tri-county
24, Knights Templar, special area. Under the leadership of
meeting to confer the Red
Cross and muitkorders of the
Knight Templ.ar organizations,
DAUGHTER BORN
7:30 p. m. Thursday. RefreshA seven pound daughter was
ments will be served.
born on Jan. 6 to Mr. and Mrs.
XI GAMMA Mu Thursday, Wilson Wolfe. of Urbana, Ill. ,
7:45p.m., home of Mrs. Rosie former res idents of Meigs
Sisson, Pomeroy, ·with Ann County. The baby has been
Rupe as co-hostess. Mildred named Wendy Ann. Mr. and
Karr and Velma Rue are co- Mrs. Wolfe have two sons,
Joseph and Daniel. Grandchairman of the program.
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453 parentsare Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
F&amp;AM Thursday, 7: 30p.m. at Tucker and Mr. ahd Mrs.
hall in Chester. Work in Master Manchester Wolfe, Racine.
Mason Degree·. Refreshments
will be served. All Master
Masons invited to attend.
FRIDAY
ROCK Springs Grange, 7:30
MARY SHRINE 3'1 , White
p.m. Thursday at the hall.
Shrine of Jerusalem, IOOF
PAST Councilor's Club, hall, Friday, 8 p.m. PoUuck
Theodorus Counctl17, D. of A., r efr es hment s following
home of Mrs. Eva Robson, mee ting.
Fisher St., Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
MiSSIONARY Society, Chapter, Daughters of the
Pomeroy Baptist Church, 7:30 American Revolution, 2 p.m.
Thursday night at the church. Friday at the home of Mrs.
AMERICAN Cancer Society, James Brewington . Co7:30p.m. Thursday at Coal St. hostesses, Mrs. David Miller
office in Middleport.
and Miss Frieda Faehnle.

.

.

"

We,.would like to ·
announce , our
opening at Portland , the forrner
Deem's
Grovery .

New liication
. At

We take this opportunity to thank all
our former customers in the Long
Bottom area . Hope to serve you better
in our new location .
---- ~
_

r

Still Have
LOW

Discount P~ces
. Ps

i

SALE . 139

.

Touch &amp; Sew• sewing m&lt;lt:hine. This truly superb zig-zag
sewing machine offers a ful l range of Slretch and fashion
stitches . Exclusive Si!Jg~ push-button, front drop -in bobbin . Many other fe atures .-Model 758 .
1
Reg . $299.95 Ca rry ing cas~ extra

SALE 269

..

'

N.ESCAFE'

1
1

io Qz.

Jar

I
I
1
1

$} 09
·

Good Onlr al Mark v

DEPARTMENT STOR£

Per CuStomer

lor

PT. PLEASANT- MASON· SILVER BRIDG~ PLAZA
.,-

value! -~

10 oz.
Bonus'
Jar

$}49

Umil

Scot Lad

I Per
..FamUy

Superiors
Fresh
Braunschweiger

S1 .l7

·-----

•

· ··

$1.29

lb.

SLICED
-BACON
2 ~~i 1.99

MARK V STORE
EXPIRES SATURDAY

Orapg,e - Green
....----· or Red
Enamel Finish

ALL WOOD-REGULAR $1.00 VALUE

lb. 55~

ENGLISH WALNUTS

.SCOT LAD SOUP

ROLLING PIN

Dlicken Noodle, Vegetable, Mushroom, etc.

so~

The Good Diamond Brand Walnuts

AND
cans

FinED COLORED

A HUGE COMPLETE SELECTION HAS ARRIVED!

MAnRESS
COVERS

ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS

for

•

AI Shopper's Marl - You get the lowest price

•

FOOD BUYS
' .,.

SCOT LAD

.Our Scot Lad Brand

and- a huge se lection. Roses, lilacs, carnations,

marigolds, mum s, petunias, daisies, tulips , lilie
ol the Valley, baby's breaths, cabbage roses,
aclually 60 dillerent lypes, plus greenery. Very
life like!

Hb.

EVERYDAY
LOW
PRICE!

bxs

ICE MILK

1.

1!~

Gal.
Carton

49¢
•

JERZEE MILK
49c VALUE

Metal Blade

large Fork-Spoon

They're $1.00 Values

STURDY
SNOW
SHOVEL
$222

Poly Plastic

ALL OCCASION

SALAD
SET

GREETING
CARDS
·s7~aox

All Impact Plastic!

1•

59~

4

$}

3

2 lb.
bag

pak

~~~~=iners $}.00

·MARS CANDY BARS
3 Musketeers, Mars and Milky Way

All Brands

• can

ursize
'

CHEWING .

PR.

gal.49~
crt.

liz

Fairmont
'

$2.88

14 oz.
box

99

Choc. Milk

bars

ICE CREAM

Nice n' Ute

lf2 gal.

-,

crt.

Diet Rite Cola

tn subtle movemen t across its cabochon. A beau·
tiful birt hc1ay or ann tversary gift I hat gives con-

stan t plea sure Mane only by Un io n Carbide
Corporation. L1nde Stars-Of-The-Month are avail ·
able here in ftne JCwelry for
J;lll lf)w..:umly

m~n

Apr Shell Wl tl le

SALT ANQ PEPPER
DISPENSER

Reg. 99c Value

M,,,. rcrnGrcCI• Sept t Co rnllower l3tue

I Cl) ' 1-'l,,rn Purule Juri(• ' S.llrlhlll Prrrlo.

Milr I'&lt;LUC 8tue

and women .

' CANNON
PANTY
HOSE
.

Ju t; C rttt·t R('• l
•Au~ Mtrll Gr!JI!II

Oc. l I Al ~tiCi! Pm~

Newe~t, Push. Button

NtN Ll.'nlt:ll Y'= ltuw

Orr / B&lt;thHIIId B lue

. From

, Style - Modern

....

'

Yellow-Blue-Green-Red

so~ .

THE SINGER STORE
iiS W. Second·
992-2284
Pqmeroy
We also have a liberal trade-I n policy.

Court St.

Pomeroy

') -

•

··.

l
I

4
/

Boz. '$1
crts.

Throw-Away .

Diet
Root Beer &amp;Cola
.

_Jipttles

-

DR. _PEPPER
Everyday Low Price!

'

Fruit and 16 oz.
Nut Cereal box

A •,

4

.
RC ·COLA

E~ch

8·

PAK

-, ...~... ,''\~~:· :::
I ·

........
.:.; .., ....
:;·...........
••

'

'I

.
.'

I

1.00

28 oz.
~ottles

Wfth _sJ.o·o Purcna se.
No Limil on Quanlity
-

16.oz. bots.

, 2' 6-~

We have a credil plan designed to Iii your budget

9~

16 oz.
bots.

._,j

Salt+-.-;
~

Regular $1.39 .Value

.

Shasta

Makes Breakfast ANatural

YOGURT

Lln.dE.
Stars-of-the-Month

New! SUPER GRANOLA

~

9 Uves- Beef, Tuna, Uver &amp;Dlicken

'

Nice n' Ute

TOBACCO

DRY CAT ·FOOD

BE~r~~:frs

FORMERLY SOLD FOR ' 59c

Juicy Fruit, Doublemint &amp; Spearmint

All Varieties At This Low Price

6l~ ·

4 Day Suf!_~r __saving Sale!

•

Rich's Whipped Topping

RntD • FULl BED SIZE

L1n 11~ Slars 1n twt:l ve birth stone colors. Each
With a mag&gt; cal Si&lt;-raye&lt;J Star thai re flectS ligh t

WRIGLEY'S GUM

FRENCH
FRIES

All Flavors

for

bottle

ORE IDA

Cream Pies

ALPO DOG" FOOD

MENS
SHOE
TREES
$1.00
VALUE!

16 oz.
can

24 ounce

6 pak

BANQUET

ORANGE
JUICE

Low Price Economy Buy

79~

Carton

For PancakeS, Waffles &amp;Cooking

Eskimo Pies

ICE CREAM
112 Gal.

, (1 ,,;:,

NORTH STAR

SEALTEST

SCOT LAD

large
cans

Large
Size

FROZEN

9·ALTift£H;C·RACKER5-

NEW SPRING &gt;TY'i:»'t"S! WASH~\:MI: .., . ~
.. ..It II

BOiog~a

Sliced

Freeze-Orl•d Coffee

e mergencies ,

decorative :-:

SUPERIORS

Smoked Pork Chops

Stands · 9" tall. All
metal base with metal
lop on chimney. tj~rldv

SHOP THE STORE NEAREST YOU I

Superiors Fresh .Beef

PORK CHOPS
MIXED
9 to ·11 CHOPS
I~ 1. 9

Limit 1_CouPon

KEROSENE
LAMP

.

.GROUN·D
CHUCK

Family Pack

with
coupon

I
L-----~~~

A DISCOUNT

'OR

r---~---------- -

I

Say '

·cHOPPED SIRLOIN

MIDDLtPORT, 0.

-

1
1

If Just To.

SALE!

The Fabric -shop

'

-

w-- -=r___:- .
Stop In, ,, - ~

l

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992·3480 ·
Sts. "We Reserve iugl)t To Limit Quantities"

r.nrnl~r Mill and

OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 PM

.

Reg . $109.95
Carrying case extra. ·
IJY1111' stretch-stitch sewing machi ne . Straight, zig-zag
and-st retch-stitch patterns. Bli ndstitch pattern . Model 4t3.
1
Reg. $149,95 Ca rrying case ext ra.

-

.···

The New Idea ih Gifts.. ··

SUPER M~~KET • Open D~ily 9 to 10
· Sun. 10 to 10
.

SAVE 50c ON EACH ONE

Fuhlon Mete• sewing
machine . Straight.
z ig -zag andreverse
stitches. Model 252.
Base included .

Brand Meat$

FORMERLY AT LONG BOTTOM

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

18~SET

t

.

BROWN'S STOP ·'N SHOP

-~

FULL BED SIZE
Elastic Corners - 4 Colors

-

\

lOLA'S

By "N EVCO"
BIG SIZE -

.

Sup~riors

..

Scout drive is planned

·
Savings
,
to sing about whatever
your bUdget!

.. ,.

_f.

Jari _9, 1973

Ke-nneth Im~oden .
the new officers as well l\11
·
.
The Rev. Mr. Simon,s-gave a those who remain in office with .
.
'
cha~ge pr Christian service to ·~ ontinuing terms.

District 8-honored
American Legion Posts 'of·
Dis.trict 8 will lead the parade
at the Department conventlon
to be held _in July at Toledo, It
-was . ann01111ced at the mid'
winter conference held Sunday
at the"Wellston Post 371.
District posts earned the
privilege of leading the parade
by being the first quo.t.a district
in the State of Qhio in membership. It was reported that
membership is 101.15 pet. of
quota . All four LAP awards, as
well as the Little Brown Jug
award came to District 8.
Robert Waddeli, commander, requested that all
legion ~osts in the district have
their colors at the convention
as all 30 posts will be
•represented in the parade.
Dean Scholl of Bremen Post
20 received the endorsement of
the Eighth District for
Department Second Commander. James Wagonseller of
Lancaster Post 11, received
endorsement for national
commander in 1974. It was
requested that all Legion posts
make cash contributions to the
campaign funds of the two
candidates.
Announced at the meeting
was orientation for Buckeye
Boys State on May 6 in Athens.
The spring district conference
was annoenced for March 18 at
Athens, and the state midwinter conference was announced for Jan. 29 at the Ohio
State Fairgrounds.
Speaker for ' the conference
was Charles Green , past
department commander .
Greetings were extended by
Mrs. Charles Kessinger,

'

-

c

16 oz.
hots.

.•,

,.

�••

6- The D;ily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, U., Jan. 9, 197;1

..

.

.

·

·

· •

BARNEY

.£entinel tlassifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get
Results!
.
'

.

. ;:~::-».:.-:::::::::::::::.&lt;::::::.-=:::=x=:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::.;:::::::::::::!:::}.::~'!~···· t:-.::::-.:~

Generation Rap
By He1en and Sue Bott~l

.. - - ·

t_·,~ _r@)'At
_--_, _ 2a S~GNL,ITYs
(JI"'

01

The Case of the Talkative Mom

Rap:
My twin sister is 13, which makes me the sameexcept that
I'm a boy. We got into some pretty bad trouble - I'm too embarrassed to tell you what, but my mother caught us. We told her
we were sorry and wouldn't do it again .
Trouble is, she told her friends and they discuss it in front of
me, lik'e I'm a bug or something. After a month, this is still a
topic of conversation whenever there's a crowd around, and I feel
like going through-the floor. She never talks it over when we're
alone.
Isn't ooe punishment enough (I got spanked ), and should she
lei out.iders in on personal problems - especially when I have to
sit there and-take it?- EMBARRASSED IN CHICAGO
E.I.C. :
Yes, one punishment is enough; and, no, your mother
shouldn 'I let outsiders in on personal problems.
Ask her how SHE would feel if your Dad discussed her shortcomings with their friends. - SUE

.

'

I
_

'

Ponieroy
Motor Co.

.

-

.

Help Wanted

"100 MUCH

Enlist now - stay home until

lOOPfiOLES

,.

'

fOf&lt;

1/J lHE

Bill O F RIGI\TS

Business· Services

HI GH SCHOOL SENIORS.

~OOKI"&lt;,

-o
TIIJIE..

I

_,
&gt;

&gt;

after graduation. Gua~anteed

1968CHEVELLE
;'

'

'11-\~Y 'Sf-ei.JD ,..,:-'~---;;--;--:---,-----'&lt;-- ,. ...

SI69S

Malibu sport coupe, air conditioned, 307 engine, power
stee ring , power brakes, reO finish with black vinyl top and
black vinyl inter ior , radio, g·oad white-wall tires.

1968 CAMARO HT CPE.

$1545

6 .cyl. engine, automatic trans ., radio, good w-w tires , blk .
. vinyl top and red fini sh, blk . bucket seats.

, 1972 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

S399S

4-door, new car title &amp; balance of warranty, covert color
with blk . vinyl roof , tinted glass, factor y air, front &amp; rear
gua rds, radio &amp; rear speaker, white-wall tires. Nice and
clean . Retail $4860. Priced to move.

.

.. .

Pomeroy Motor Co.

assiQnments . to Europe,
Hawaii. Korea · or sel'ected , ,

EXPERT.

If I HAVE
To Go
Take Me To

' locations in the US. See your
local, Army representallve for

facts aboul · the 180-Day
Delayed · Entry Program and
the Army's new pay raiSe .
For more- information call

..

'Wheel Alignment
Bulldozer Radiator to

Heater Core.
Nalhan Biggs
R_adi_a_I&lt;Jr Specia!isl__

Small~st

RiDGE ROAD
EROY, 0 .

- - -- - -

eat Cuttirig"
Courteous Service

DICK

For Rent
FURNISHED apartmenl;
phone 992-2780 or 992-3432.
1-5-tfc

SMITH_NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph_. 991-2114
Pomeroy

VAUGHAN
Phone These Numbers Only

992-3814

992-3314
You

UNFURNISHED

-~

'5.55 .

From the largest

THE .SHOP

collecl SS G. Clark 593-3022 .
1-7-6tc

.

3-room

on · M~si America!' Car_s_ .

- GUARANTEED ·
Phone 992-2094

'

I

pets,

408

Sprin'g

Ave .•

WHAT Do VOiJ THINK
OF; MODeRN vou-rn,

I

I

...

Pomeroy_Home &amp; Auto

PRESit&gt;ENT
8~00MER.

Open8Til5
Monday lhru Soturdoy

- --

'!.

TO BE TI'!UmFU~, .I .
DON'T TRUST ANVONI:
UNDEFt 30

FIR'51 ~ NE.ED 'lOUR
NAME, A.DI'REGG AND
PHONE NUMBER .

~
- R...

I NEVER REALIZED
HOW MUCH WAS
INVOLVED,
DETECTIVE:

~ r--___;.---,r--·--'

. WHEN I

SlOPPED
101\SK

DIRECTIONS
10 11-l£:0 .

HAZ,ARD ...

Cl

I( f'J'-'~-1

~

606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
.
.

.

DOZER and back hoe work.
POMEROY
ponds and septic tanks, ditching service; top soil, fill
OPEN EVE$.1:00 P.M.
H0.9JECLEANING products;
Pomeroy.
dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex·
· 1'Pio\E~D\', OHIO
phone 992-2S79 or 247-2193. '
HOME &amp; AUTO
1-7-tfc
cavating.
Phone 992-S367,
1-S-30tp
-----Ofck Karr, Jr .
992-2094
TRAILER by week o~ month,
Notice
9-1-tfc 606 E. Main Pomeroy
1970COPPERTONE
Kelvinator
WANT
All_S
all
utllllies
paid
;
in
Danville
+++
dishwasher; phone 247-2082.
INFORMATION
close to new mine; phone 742TAX Service, Federat and Statt.
Dear Emb:
!)EADLINES
l-9-61c SEE US FOR: Awnings, storm
5980.
Taxes;
daily
except
Incom
e
OFFICE SUPPLIES
S P .M . D!!!y Before Publication.
doors and winctows, carports,
l-7'6tp
It Isn't right or just, but parents (spouses too! ) often stoop to
Sunday,
9
a.m.
to
5
p.m.,
Mqnday Deadline 9 a.m .
marquees,
aluminum
siding
ONE
complete
set
Kent
Drums,
evenfngs by appointment ; - - -- - " ricocheted criticism." They'll put family' members on a public
and Cancellaffon - Correctlons
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
gold sparkle with stool and
Mrs. Sleven (Wanda) Eblin, MODERN 6 room house, full
Will be accepted until9 e.m . tor
spot by discussing their personal f,ailures, perhaps because it's
representat
i
ve.
For
free
·
sock
cymbal;
Two
Zildjlan
Dey ot Publ ica tion
Rt. 2. PomerOY' I Laurel Cliff · basement, garage, out ·
FURNITURE
Cymbals, 20" x 22''; phone es II mates, phone Charles
REGULATIONS
reference s
easier to talk ABOUT someone in his presence than fAce him
Rd. off Rt. 7 By-Pass); phone building :
before
S
p.m.
992-2172
or
after
The Publisher reserves the
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V. Stop In and See Our
required; phone 992-2310 after
992-2272.
alone when they aren't quite sure what to say or how he 'll react,
r igh t to edlt or retect any ads
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5 p.m. 992-7298.
5 p.m. or 992-3425.
1-3-30-lc
deemed
Obiet tl onal .
The
3-2-lfc .Floor Display,
one to one.
1-9-6tc
12-31 -lfc
-publisher wilt not be responsible -:-:-.,.,-.,---HOOD'S
AQUARIUMS
;
fj_sh
Tell your mother you-c~n't take being dissected like a bug. tor more than on-e incorreCI
CONCRETE f-..
and supplies; new locatlUn, 3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and STEREO 8 track repossessed, BACKHOE AND DOZER work. READY -MIX
insertion .
There's a chance she is so into the habit of bouncing her opinions
Septic
tanks
Installed.
George
delivered
r
ight
to your
looks
like
new,
4
speaker,
Ash Street. Middleporl near
RATES
unfurnished
apartments .
(Bill)
Pullins.
Phone
992-2478.
protect.
Fasl
and
easy.
Free
audio
system
fn
walnut
off friends (to hit her mark) that she doesn't realize how unfair
park ; phone 992-5443.
· For want Ad Service
Phone 992-5434.
4-25-lfc
estimates.
Phone
992-3284.
console, take over payments
5 ce nts per Word one insertion
1-7-tfc
4-12-lfc
this practice is. - HELEN
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co ..
M,inlmum Charge 75c
$1.50 per week or pay balance
:-:-----::---12 cents' per word three WILL DO bookkeeping and
+++.
E
LNA
and
White
Sewing
Middleporl, Ohio ..
of
198.80.
Call
992-5331.
6 ROOM furnished house,
cor,secut ive insertions.
;
Machines
...
service
on
ail
6-JO-tfc
1-9-6tc
clerical
work
in
my
home
;
Helen and Sue:
Ebenezer St .. adults only, S65
18 cents per word six con.
makes
.
Reasonable
rates,
phone
742-6085.
a month; phone 992-7784.
My daughter told me that her best friend had a legal abortion ·secutlve insertions .
DELUXE zig zag sewing The Sewing Cenler, Mid · SEPTIC TANKS CLEANEO
l-7-6tc
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
1-9·3tc 1972
without her parents' knowledge . This girl's mother thinks her 13- ads and ads r:&gt;a id with in 10 days. - -- - - - REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
machine . This machine dleporl, Ohio.
darns, embroideries, over .
4782. Gallipolis, John Russell.
CARD OF THANKS '
11 -16-tfc
INTERNATIONAL Songwriters :-:-:-:~-:----­
year~ld angel can do no wrong. She's pretty smug about it, and
MODERN
furni
shed
apart
&amp; OBITUARY
ONner &amp; Operator .
casls.
buttonholes
all
without
Club
;
recording,
publishin~ .
ment; phone 992-3686.
not above comparing HER daughter, and HER exceptional
$1.50 for so word minimum .
attachments
.
Pay
balance
of G&amp;E APPLIANCE Repair :
S-12-lfc
free
member
ship
;
write
1-9-3tc $39.20 or pay S5 per month . Repair of all laundry
Each additional word 2c. ·
upbringing, to lesser creatures. Not that I mind.
I.S.C.,
Rt
.
I,
Box
21
0,
Mid- - -- -BLIND ADS
equipment,
refr i geration
992-5331.
.
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
dleport, Ohio 45760.
To be fair, I must admit the girl is·a lovely person. She just
Addi t ional 2Sc Ch'arge per
'I'
DOUBLE,
2
bedroom,
fur·
equipment
and
house
wiring
.
1-9-6tc
Complete Service
1-7-6tp
nished; on Fourlh &amp; College
Call 614-992-6050.
made a mistake. However, don't you think her mother should Advertisement.
Phone 9ol9-3821
OFFICE HOURS
Streets, Syracuse. phone 992· REGISTERED Angus bulls;
12-31 -30tp
Racln_l!, Ohio
8: 30a .m. to 5 :00p .m . Da i ly ,
know? Am I being a true friend by keeping this ~ ecret? 2749.
Critt Bradford
8 : 30 a.m . to 12 :00 Noon
call
alter
5
p.m.,
Bill
Witte,
FRIEND OF THE FAMILY
12-29-ttc "992-2789.
Sa turday .
BUILDING or remod~ling irom
s.J.tfc
a
closet
to
a
house;
ca
ll
Er-~-------l-5-6tc
Notice
nest Deeter 949-3832.
SEPTIC ' TANKS AROBIC
Friend :
Employment Wanted
HAY MAN'S Auction - a ~ooo
1-J-6tc
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEANEARLY American stereo.radlo
Here's what I think :
place to go each Fnday
LADY
·lo
do
housework
by
the
ED. REPAIRED. MILLER
combination,
AM-FM
radio.
4 - - - - - --'--evening, 7 p.m. al Laurel Cliff
. I. The mother should know ONLY il her daughter wants her
day in Pomeroy or Chester
STEWART,
speaker sound system, 4 AUTOMOBILE insurance been • SANITATION,
o~ old Rt. 7. I mile west of
area
;
phone
985-3574.
cancelled?
Lost
your
OHIO.
PHONE
662-3035.
speed
automatic
changer
.
to know!
Rock Springs Fairground.
l-7-3tc
Balance $79 .57. Use our
10·4-ttc
operator's license? Call 9922. A true friend k~ps a secret, especially when telling it
10-10-lfc
budgel terms. Call 992-7085.
~66.
~~----------would hurt several people and help no one. - SUE
1·4·6lc
6-15-tfc PAPER Hanging and pa inting;
Furnace Controls
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS.
Pets For Sale
Arthur Musser , phone 742·
SPECIALS MONTHLY .
HUMIDiFIERS
5223.
MOQERN Walnul slyle sfereoPHONE
HELEN
JANE
Dear Friend :
PARKVIEW Kennels going oul
radio, AM· FM radio . 4
12-12-JOtp
BROWN . MIDDLEPORT,
Hot Water Heaters
of
business
.
Big
price
speaker
sound system, 4 Real Estate For Sale .
Sue and I think alike on this one.
OHIO 992-5113.
reduction on all dogs. All AKPlumbing
speed .automatic changer .
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
12-3-lfc
In shooting down a smug mother's halo, you could ruin two
C.
· 592 Broadway &amp; Ash
Balance 567.32. Use our HOUSE. 5 rooms &amp; bath on Rt. service, all makes. 992·2284.
Electrical
Work
mother -daughter relationships: Your girl lriend might never BUSINESS Opportunity for
Streets, Middleport. Ohio.
budgel terms. Call 992-7085.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
124 with Jlh acres of land ;
12-13-tlc "-~
1·4·61c
m~n and .women. Inquir e by
trust you with another secret I - HELEN
Authori zed Singer Sales and
phone 992-3908.
wnllng: R. D. 2, Box 73
· 1-3-6tc Service. We Sharpen ScfS!ors.
+++
Ra cine, Ohfo.
'
3-~·tfC
RED IRISH Seller puppies. WEIMARANER puppies: 1 - - - - - - - - Dear Rap:
litter AKC ; I litter 'I• NEW 6 room hou se and bath, 1;, :;-.- - - - - - - - l-5-12lp
registered. make excellent
Weimaraner and 'I• bird dog.
Iama(l)lost 17 and I haven't reached puberty yet. For a boy
pets. Call 992-5072.
mile Easl of Rutland; Sidney Real Estate For Sale
FREE puppies to give away;
Phone 614-742-6834.
Hayman.
,
l-7-3tc
in gym classes this is murder. The guys tease and laugh at me.
992-2448
phone 992-6083 .
l-4-5tc
.
1-3-6tp THREE bedroom house, full
l-4-6tp
I'm beginning to think something's w~ong, although the doc\Qr
Pomer;oy, 0 .
AKC loy poodle puppies, S7S,
------,~~~~·~
-~
• ·basement~ x 12~ ;ln•New
\'
$85; Siamese kittens. S10; HOUSE or trailer on land HOUSE ..;n . Mli;tdli;por ;· 2 '' Have~ / }~~882_.2.40. ·'
says, "Just wa1t."
··
· ····~ -·
1
• ·i!r ·
~ ' ~ .
phone 1-256-6247.
bedroom;: cMli9-3832 or 843' '
l-9-6lo
contract witH 1 few acres of
I have never been on a date because I wouldn't know what ti)
Wanted To Do
2607.
1-7-10tc
ground; phone 949·2782 an s
do and, besides, the guys might have spread th.e word around.
1-3-6tc
B &amp; S CARPI:'NTER Work ,
ask lor Mrs. Walker.
r emodeling , paneling and
l-9-6tc
I've always been afraid to talk to my Dad as he's the athletic
interior decorating ; phon e Auto Sales .
HOUSE FOR SALE, -114 Brick
type and he might be ashamed of me. I'm at the end ol my line.
446-9487 "
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio ; brlc~
C.
B.
RADIOS,
antennas.
also
CHEVROLET Impala, 283,
Why can't l grow up? - UTTLE BOY BLUES
1-J.6tp 1967
house, 3 bedrooms, excellent
police
scanners
;
Calley's
V-8, automat ic, power
- -- - - location, cloje to school and
Y BLUES
Radio Shop. Box 21 B. Long
steering, good condit ion ,
ci
ty ; contact ·Lou Osborne or
Boltom,
Ohio.
Wanteli To Buy
price S650; Elmer F. Bailey,
call
992-5898.
1-3-6lc
OLD furniture, oak tabl es. Darwin, 992-5530.
L.B.B.:
110 Mechanic St.
11 -26-lfc
1· 7· 3tp
organs, dishes, clocks. brass _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Pomeroy,
Ohio4S769
Does it occur to you how -left~ut a father feels when a boy
1955 CHEVROLET newly HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
beds
or
complete
households.
TON
Ford,
dual
wheels.
1970 1
overhauled engine ; Jim
won't share his worries with him? Don't Close him off when he's
W~ lte M. 0 . Miller, Rt. 4,
985-35~ .
NEW LISTING
ON
YOUR
DIAL
Chadwell . Reedsville, Ohio ;
p
Ohl
Ph
long
wheel
base,
power
6·11-tfc
992
the one who can reassure you best. You might discover late
0
1
OR
3 ACRES - In the
omeroy.
one
· brakes. 12'12 ft . bed. less than
·
66,7-3652.
6271
.
counlry.
Two good houses or
puber!Y runs In the family and your Dad, ioo, had a gym
miles, clean as new ;
1-7-Jtc
l-7-lfc 23,000
mobile
home
slles. On a
phone
985-3554,
Harold
problem. - HELEN
corner acre. All for $1200.00.
Brewer , Long Bottom .
Limestone, Excetsior
NEW LISTING
1-7-tlc COAL,
c.~:o·m;~;==~=:::====~======~==~========='='='"''~~=~&gt;.:~======:::::&lt;====~======&lt;&lt;=====$:=::::=================&gt;-~==&lt;:X=&lt;==========:::======:&gt;.======&lt;=:&gt;.======&lt;======:::=:::=:::::*
Salt Works. E. Main St ,
VACANT
- Building lol in
·
Pomeroy
on
Rt. J3. Asking
'68 G.T.O. 400, 4 bbl .. 4 speed, " Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
REALTY
4-12-lfc
Cragar Chrome Reverse s, 4
Only 51500.00.
601 E. Main
new tires. G60, tack, air
NEW LISTING
\... • Pomeroy
shocks and 4 other tires and Moone r1omes For Sale
3
ACRES
- Small barn. 6
'
'·
BY JACK O'BRIAN
.
rims ; good shape ; call 992·
room house, two baths, 3
2635.
PERRY TWINKLES WHEREVER
Perry though it was five years ago when he
CASH paid for all m~kes and
HARRISONVILLE
bedrooms, all with closets. 3
l-9-6tp models of mobile homes
HE GOFS-PART 2
astounded show business and the advertising
2 Story frame, 4 bedrooms,
porches , basement and
Poles
Phone area code 614-423-9531 : Mlh,
dining
area,
drilled well. Want $10,500.00.
NEW YORK (KF'S) _ MORE PERRY
world wi~ his decision to haul back from the
4-13-tfc
RECENTLY RENOVATED . .
Maximum
NEW LISTING
COMO AT 60 : President Eisenhower once sent
huge workload he'd carried since 1943 when he
Level lot about lf2 acre,
4 BEDROOMS - 1'12 baths,
Buy
For
Youl
for Perry and they had a long conversation.
left the Ted Weems orchestra - rather the Ted
carport, 2 storage bldgs.
wa·ll to wall carpeting,
Diameter
· ·Air Conditioners
$14.900.00.
modern klichen, gas fur·
Como's a good liatener and an easy talker and
Weems gang disbanded lor Ted to go into the
LITTLE
UPKEEP
nace. Full basemll!nt, front"
•Awnings
10"
on
he told us It was mostly about golf, children,
Coast Guard to leal\ its entertainment unit Cu1tam
SYRACUSE - BRICK - 4
porch and garage . Like io
• Underpinning
little things far from the geopolitical pressures
and became an almost instantanequs star.
Station Wagon
B.R., dining R., NEW bath
have 512,500.
·
largest End
Auto. trans., P.S., 351 -V-8
and ulilit.y R., NEW plumNEW LISTING •
of the Presidency. Ike had sent Perry a huge
Perry zoomed quickly from a "sustaining
Complete mQblle hQme
engine. 4 new tires, (snow
bing &amp; F.A. gas furnace. 2
RUTLAND ·- 2 bedroom
picture of himself and Perry, which still hangs
show" on CBS radio ("sustaining" means no
'
:service
-- plus gigantlc1
tires on r ear), 35,000 actual
large level lots, EX·
paneled
home. Nice bath,
'display of mobile homes
on Perry'sofflce wal). Perry is laughing, but the
sponsor) to the Copacabana, where he was
miles, excellent condition .
CELLENT NEIGH utility,
and
kitchen. Wall to
'
;always available-at ...
President's expresSion is an open-mouthed
discovered.for his long series of Chesterfield BORHOOD.
wall carpeting and nice level
DELIVERED
RUTLAND
lot.' Need $12,000.00.
incredulous smile. It wasn't until Ike's death
sponsored programs, three a week, shifting to
MILLE.R
HERE IS AN, EXCELLENT
BUILDING LOTS
TO
that Perry would tell us what the unusual
three simulcasts - radio and TV - shows a
BUY
I
story
frame.
3
T.P.
WATER - 1 acre
MOBILE HOMES
Presidential chortle was about.
week and on to his famed hour-long Sat. night
B.R., large bath, utility,
rolling land In the country
Ph. 992-2176
Pomeroy
1220 Washington Blvd.
dining R. paneling and other.
Seems the White House photographer had
series for Kraft product. and the (9p of all the
near Rt. 7 at;~d close to town.
...
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.
out
cellar.
THE
MEAGER
8ACRES
snapped the photo just as Perry whispered to
ratings.
·
For Sale
SUM OF $9,200.00.
ON HARD ROAD - A little
Ike that he'd been told the General's golf clubs
Kraft flew a contingent of coaxers to
MUCH WORK OONE HERE
btl of privacy on new
1959 'MOUNTAINEER Ca.;,per,
were "Ladies Longs." Ike laughed and said that
Perry's Florida home five years ago to try to
Within
sight
of
lhe
Gavin
proposed
water
l ine.
On Old Rt. 33
excellent condition, $1,000; Real Estate For Sale
$4,500.00.
stack:
3
B.R
..
NEW
bath.
he wished Perry and he both were in the Army
convince him to stay on TV . He was their ideal
ca
ll
992-2789.
2 STORY home, full basement, NEW F.A. turnace, NEW
Phone 992-2689
S6SOO.OO
batm &amp; If,, extra lot and at. paneling, ulillly R. large
1·3·6fc
- so that he could quiz Perry to find out who'd
"image" for the homey products Kraft sells.
Pomeroy, Ohio
RUTLAND
- 3 bedrooms,
!ached garage ; available
-=-=--=-=-~--­
betrayed this to(H!go secret. Perry never
But they learned something we'd known about
Red
.
R.
Out
cellar
and
modern
balh
and kitchen.
CLOSE OUT on 1972 full size
now ; may be had with basic
Front porch. nice lol, out of
rumbled that his informant was Ike's press
Perry for decades - that once he's made up his lielp Wanted
zig-zag sewi ng mach ines. For
furniture; near Pomeroy slorage, large lot . THIS YOU
high water.
sewing
stretch
fabrics ,
Elementary School ; phone MUST SEE. 19,800.00.
secretary, Jim Hagerty. And again the pictures
Italianatemind it's fixed for good. He explained
WE HAVE MANY OTHER
MEN 18-24: LEARN CON - mak ing buttonholes, fancy
993-7384
or
992-7133.
brokeintheworld'snewspapersandforthefirst
to us : "What can I do that isn't being done on
STRUCT IOtj. SKILLS FOR de~gn s, ~ tc . ['alnt slightly
PROPERTIES WH[C ~ - J-OOK AT LAST Y_EAR,_
1-7-6tc
COMBAT ENGINEERING blemished._C_hoice of carrying
lime Perry learned that Presidenls, too, had
every other show? The guest list. are the same
CONSIDER GOOD BUYS,
WOUL~~T YOU LIKE TO
JOB
IN
EUROPE.
Today's
case
or
sewmg
stand.
$49.80
CONTACT
US
TODAY.
IF
MAKE
MORE IN '73. COME
press agents.
·
and you can see these stars on every talk show
2 BEDROOM home , tolal
Army
wil
l
train
competent
cash
or
te~m s available.
WE
DON'T
HAVE
IT,
WE
IN
AND
SEE OUR OFroom,
storm
electric,
utility
at .,
•• a pop."
Overthe de ca de s we've learned why Perry
.....,
young men in the combat
Phone 992-7755.
WILL GET &gt;IT.
FERINGS, THEN INVEST
windows,
double
garage,
engi neer ing
fi eld .
And
J.J:6tc
seldom if ever turned up ar the gaudy wellOnce his decision was believed, the big
HENRY E. CLELAND
FOR YOUR FUTURE.
(Insulated an paneled), r•ved
guarantee a job in Europe . - -- - ------...&amp;
J.
3 ASSOCIATES TO SELL
driveway,
city
water,
lo
100
x
trumpeted theatrical benefits wherein the
playpens in Las Vegas bid high for his services:
You 'll assist or engage in the 1 SET wagonwheel bunl&lt;l(beds ;
416; extra lot and building. YOUR PROPERTY.
HELEN L. TEAFORO,
charities concerned have high-pre&amp;.ure press
the International, now the Hilton, olfered a construction
and
main.
Sauvage Fox double barrel 12
Close
to
school;
Donald
992·2259
ASSOCIATE
temince of roads. bridging, gauge shotgun , Model B
agents and most of the stars contributing their
$125,000 a week for six weeks annually in two
Headley. Rl. 681, Tuppers
If no answer
NO SUN,OAY SHOWINGS
shelt er s, and · structures .
\lentllated rfb single trigger;
Plains, Ohio.
talents have their own aggressiv.e tub·
engagemenls. '\'hat totaled $750,000 a year. Theceare lots of benefits, loo. bolh excellent condition;
98S·4209 or 992-2568
992-332S
l-5-6tp
thumpers. Instead, Perry did benefits for poor
Harrah's at Lake Tahoe offered about the same.
Li ke 30 days paid vacalion a phone 985-3530.
J.7·Jtp
parishes, such as one that needed stained-glass
It's all comfortably more than a million a year. year. If you'd like to learn
lltetime skills while you live - - - - -- - - ROOM
house with
bath and
basement.
Buill-In
kit- ]~----~---~~~~----------...
windows in the small edifice. A more showbizPerry won't' play that favorite showbiz and work in Europe, Today's NEW Hosp ital bed, S:?!Xl; 1 8 full
chen
cabinets,
double
sink,
2
oriented acquaintance" chided Perry for such
cliche - listing his f~vorite singers; or singer. Arm y wants to join yoU . Call brand new wtleelchalr, never
porches;
145
Butternut
Ave.,
collect SS G. Clark, 593-3022. been. used, $100; phone 992·
small artistic potate&gt;eB when he might be in the
He makes no bones about the fact he imitated
Pomeroy, phone 992-7110.
I-J-6tc S7J6, John Bigelpw, ~45 Park
1·5-6tc
headlines helping feed the poor . The Como ex,Bing Crosby in his early singing career-even - - - - -- - - 51., Middleport.
1-1-Jtc FURNISHED 3 room , house,
planation was, as usual, simple' ".Stained-glass
made a refreshingly telling point of it on a TV TEXAS REFINER¥ CORP.
offers
opportunity
for
hiRh
------~-­
balh, furnace, on corner lolln
windows are food for old ladies," he said.
special years ago - .and liats only one other
income PLUS cash bonuses
Syracuse
; prfce $3,900 phone
When Perry broke his leg duripg an un!rom whom he has learned : :•I thought Cantor
convention trips and fringe
992·2360.
benefits to mature man In
scheduled scenery~ifl .-t his NBC-TV special
Rosenblatt was somettung special. I listened to
1·5-tfc
Now you can buy thai
Pomeroy area. Regardless of
taping, he bad to give up JJis treasured golflng
his records and studied tus intonations IJefore I experience.
.
comfortable
La·Z·Boy
air mall 1. 1.
8 ROOM house and bath, nice
ON PANTS &amp; JEANS
and fishing. Reluctantly, he began watching TV
did 'Kol Nidre' 'On the air,"' he said.
Pate, Pres .. Texas Refinery
chair
you've
alway•
large lot, natural gas. built-In
Corp., Box 711, Fort Worth,
dreamed of at our low
, 11011p operas. Aatounded, be discovered he likes
Perry's reputation for decency extends not
cabinets
in
.kitchen,
close
to
Texas 76101.
prices.
ra~lo station In Bradbury,
'em. One in particular, "Somerset," became his , only to personal but public incident.. He can't
.lluy i
Phone 992-2602.
·
,.
. sland rndeness. 0 ne young smger
.
-- - ··7-41p
top favorite and this delighled his'crotchety old
cursed at her --:--::-:-.
Pairs
]2·2l·20tp
TV writer, Goodman Ace, who also watches the ,. mother during a rehearsal; she never wa:. LADJ ES - Rteasant sales
· Autllorized Dealer
l PAIR FREE
·
I
work . Hours to .suit yoUr
same' show and· suspected Perry was putting
as ked ba Ck 011 the sh ow agalll. A rna e singing
household S&gt;hedu'le. Earn The best bur in the area.
111• STORY2 ·bedroom brick
Have slacks &amp; leans for lht
him 011 about his interest. Goody held daily
star screamed at the orchestra for a mistake·. $2.50 up, based on sales. Wr~e
house In Middleport. Car'·
whole
family.
Save
Onepeted,
paneled. Kitchen and
telephonic debrielings with Perry. Perry even
Off!· Acomedian did an offensive joke about the
~~nsta~oSxho~g~ r ~!f~~'; - Thir~ . · . ·
dining room tiled. Complete·
made penon-:to-person phone ,calls to perPresident. He was paid off and not a_llowed to
Products. Inc .. Winona , 9._
with drapes. $6,500. Call 992·
POMENOV
Hermon Grote
fonners to tell .them he enjoyed the shows.
perf~rm: "I won't do it and I won 't let anyone
Minnesota S5987 .
3&gt;16S.
Ail Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
111-5592
~son, w. Vo.
1-9-Jtc
nre cash ~egillter tinkles merrUy along for else step on any~ne's dignity, " ~erry explained.
·
Phone 992-2181
apartment, adults only. No

~====
-=:_:----..,--l!.:..i..·
· · ==
· ==-··-~~~

I

I

~

For Sale

.----,-~---

-WE 'M)I.I'T
e&gt;l".. ABLE
TOTHINKO'

TIME FO' US TO
HITTH'OLE

FU5T, HAVE )ORE
NIGHTL'{ BOY-0'
WAP.M MILK - AH
MEANS GLASS -

HUH.

NOTHIN'

'CEPT

WHAT'S IN

'THAT60l(-

'

I

----~--

------

PLAIT, 'lOU ARE IN 11-IE LAND OF .....BUT
1HE ENTIRE NA110N RESENTED
TA ' TillS 5MO&lt;\R ,BUT ~ITILE. COULD BE
MADE 11-lE LAUGI-flf.JGSTOCK OF Ll ... DONE.'THEN AOOUT A YEAR N30t
11-IE I'.ORLD; ll-IANKe 10.SCORE5
A FILM OF YOUR&amp; WAS SHOWN 1
OF FILM5 DEPICTING USM
"PRINCE OF TAANSYLVAN /A"....

THANSYLVANIA. WE HAVE BEEN

"HElL"

~PERSlTTIOUS IDIOT.S

BESEIGED BY VAMPI
ANDMON:&gt;TER5 ......

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

------

-

We.talk to you

Virgil B..
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

like a person.

WMP0/1390

I

1

,Voice along Br'Way 1

Jt~

-:--~----

o-9

~-'6ttl
ACROSS
1. Usurp
command
6. Drain
11. Sea duck
12. Gnaw
13. Flourish.;
(st.) (3

OHIO ·
PALLET CO.

Meigs
Equipment Co.

,

\

'

\

'

wd.)
..
7. Work unit

B. "The
Caine
Mutiny"
author
9, Miss
Ferber
10. Remainder
14.. Future
18. Actress,
Mary 19. Poker
term
ZO. Austra·
lian bird
%1. Girl's
name
!2. Follower
alan Ism

U111CR111hle these C011rJumblef!o
""" letter to each ~quare, to
for•• four ordlnorr word1.
Yesterday's Aru1wer ,.,
24. 35. Roman
Moines
emperor
35. Medieval
37. Dessert
shield
wine
2&amp;. Cal 38. "The
nip
Gloomy
ZB. BridgeDean"
crossing
39. Ado1escharge
cent
32. Auda41. Egyptian
dous
earth god
33. Wound
42. "Ode34. - Wes·
Nlghtln·
leyan Uni-

gale"

versity

(2 wds.)

I YONIS
(J

·cHAIRS

WELL, LOOI&lt;.l we KNOW
611CINI ~ 1\N i,;LANP 11-J
THI! MA I'Z~HALL GFI:OIJP,
WHBFI:I! THe H·&amp;OM&amp;
WA,; T~~TBP l

AND IF 'I'OU
~ND TH I~

TAfTOO IS

~ELOW.&lt; OR

50UTH OF

HER BIKINI !

T/II&lt;E HER HEAC'
A$ "NOitTH" ANO

1!&gt;07( THE COMPMS
CLOCKWISE--

I
r J II]

JICI:EN
[ 'l

I

III

HOW O!'t7 THAi FT
M16HT 55 ~~E!

clrell!d letters
I NowformorrUlrelhe
the aurprloe IDiwer, u
to

b)'

(A.wen tomorrow)

Y,......,.., Ju ...let&gt; ALlUM

SORRY PRISON TIPTOE

ANwer1 TlaU eompo•er had Americ11 riglar
llim! -- "SO.U.S.A."

.

PIANUTS

(2·wds.)
·z.some·
thing
· quite
funny
(colloq.)
3. Vorce
t . lndlan
wel&amp;ht

m

WHAT 00 ~0\J 00
WITH TWO FRIENDS
WHOARE HAVING
A M15UNDei&lt;5TAN~NG'

5TRAIG~ToN THEM OUT! S~OIU '5~
WHERE T~E~'VE G:lNE IJRONG !!
YELL 'EM TO SHAPE VP !!!

~ ­

M
;

-,
,.

. DAILY CRVPTOQUOTE- Here's how 'to work It: r - - r - - -- - r - - - ,
AXYDLIAAXII.
I~ THAI GOOD
II

I

f~'f'CKOLOG'&lt;'?

L 0 N G Jl Ill L L. 0 W

CUPTOQUOTBS

UZDEWP
DEZD

1•1

the obove cartoon.
I.~=)=]~~~~-~~-~O-~·=une==·tJ..t
PriUI I IISUIISWIUn
I Dr
Tl X)

One letter limply slln.ds for another. In thia sample A Is
used f9r tbe. three· L's, X for tbe two O's, etc. .Sinele lelten,
aporuopbe•, the lenfllh and formaUon of tbe words are all
hlnts. Each day the code letten are dllferent:
'

I 1'. I

ISAMOUF

1. 11 And
Away -.-"

LA·z~aov~

MASON
FURNITURE

~lJJJMIDUJ];u..J-"'J -ttl,_

(hyph.

·

- ·~

-----------

thing
cloying
6. Vigorous
contest

15. Suffix de"'(;:ijj;FjE£i:WrrrwHi!;\~
noting
J•
WITH HIS
origin
16. Rearward
17. Krazy 18. Thespian
:-'='II.;,....,Uoc--e-.;_-t ZO.lsolate
23. An Arab
land
Z'l. Magnum
opus
29. Toward
30. Even
chance
ihyph.
wd.)
31. European
river
33. Scion
36. Quantity
(abbr.)
37. Oppose
40. As Jackie
Gleason is
called
(3 wds.)
U . Venti·
Iated
44.Ravlhe
IS. Dunce
46, Consumed
DOWN

' ''\,,,. ',.,, '
.;"'._
' \ .~ ''\
~ ~~ ,Y_

I'

(@ 1973,Klnr Features Syndicate, lne.)

5. Sorne-

wds.)

DICK TRACY

c illl~. m• '"'" T"' ''' U! '''

YealerdWa Cryptoquole: BLESSED ARE THEY WHO CAN
GIVE WITHOUT REMEMBERING AND TAKE WITHOUT
FORGETTING.-BIBESCO
.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

'1970 FORD

$7.00 Per Ton

!R;&lt;;HCCfFEE'

rCLELAN~,

"

WANTED .
CHIPWOOD

\1]4f.,TS
11-\AT?

SXWJ

DFNW
FQ

FJ

XQW

BWZP •ZQV

l&gt; E W ' X D E W P . - K S Q WRY

S0 M 0 R P 0

li:

IN 5TR!CT MEDICAL TERMS,
!T'5 CALLED "BUTT!N6 IN " !

�••

6- The D;ily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, U., Jan. 9, 197;1

..

.

.

·

·

· •

BARNEY

.£entinel tlassifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get
Results!
.
'

.

. ;:~::-».:.-:::::::::::::::.&lt;::::::.-=:::=x=:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::.;:::::::::::::!:::}.::~'!~···· t:-.::::-.:~

Generation Rap
By He1en and Sue Bott~l

.. - - ·

t_·,~ _r@)'At
_--_, _ 2a S~GNL,ITYs
(JI"'

01

The Case of the Talkative Mom

Rap:
My twin sister is 13, which makes me the sameexcept that
I'm a boy. We got into some pretty bad trouble - I'm too embarrassed to tell you what, but my mother caught us. We told her
we were sorry and wouldn't do it again .
Trouble is, she told her friends and they discuss it in front of
me, lik'e I'm a bug or something. After a month, this is still a
topic of conversation whenever there's a crowd around, and I feel
like going through-the floor. She never talks it over when we're
alone.
Isn't ooe punishment enough (I got spanked ), and should she
lei out.iders in on personal problems - especially when I have to
sit there and-take it?- EMBARRASSED IN CHICAGO
E.I.C. :
Yes, one punishment is enough; and, no, your mother
shouldn 'I let outsiders in on personal problems.
Ask her how SHE would feel if your Dad discussed her shortcomings with their friends. - SUE

.

'

I
_

'

Ponieroy
Motor Co.

.

-

.

Help Wanted

"100 MUCH

Enlist now - stay home until

lOOPfiOLES

,.

'

fOf&lt;

1/J lHE

Bill O F RIGI\TS

Business· Services

HI GH SCHOOL SENIORS.

~OOKI"&lt;,

-o
TIIJIE..

I

_,
&gt;

&gt;

after graduation. Gua~anteed

1968CHEVELLE
;'

'

'11-\~Y 'Sf-ei.JD ,..,:-'~---;;--;--:---,-----'&lt;-- ,. ...

SI69S

Malibu sport coupe, air conditioned, 307 engine, power
stee ring , power brakes, reO finish with black vinyl top and
black vinyl inter ior , radio, g·oad white-wall tires.

1968 CAMARO HT CPE.

$1545

6 .cyl. engine, automatic trans ., radio, good w-w tires , blk .
. vinyl top and red fini sh, blk . bucket seats.

, 1972 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

S399S

4-door, new car title &amp; balance of warranty, covert color
with blk . vinyl roof , tinted glass, factor y air, front &amp; rear
gua rds, radio &amp; rear speaker, white-wall tires. Nice and
clean . Retail $4860. Priced to move.

.

.. .

Pomeroy Motor Co.

assiQnments . to Europe,
Hawaii. Korea · or sel'ected , ,

EXPERT.

If I HAVE
To Go
Take Me To

' locations in the US. See your
local, Army representallve for

facts aboul · the 180-Day
Delayed · Entry Program and
the Army's new pay raiSe .
For more- information call

..

'Wheel Alignment
Bulldozer Radiator to

Heater Core.
Nalhan Biggs
R_adi_a_I&lt;Jr Specia!isl__

Small~st

RiDGE ROAD
EROY, 0 .

- - -- - -

eat Cuttirig"
Courteous Service

DICK

For Rent
FURNISHED apartmenl;
phone 992-2780 or 992-3432.
1-5-tfc

SMITH_NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph_. 991-2114
Pomeroy

VAUGHAN
Phone These Numbers Only

992-3814

992-3314
You

UNFURNISHED

-~

'5.55 .

From the largest

THE .SHOP

collecl SS G. Clark 593-3022 .
1-7-6tc

.

3-room

on · M~si America!' Car_s_ .

- GUARANTEED ·
Phone 992-2094

'

I

pets,

408

Sprin'g

Ave .•

WHAT Do VOiJ THINK
OF; MODeRN vou-rn,

I

I

...

Pomeroy_Home &amp; Auto

PRESit&gt;ENT
8~00MER.

Open8Til5
Monday lhru Soturdoy

- --

'!.

TO BE TI'!UmFU~, .I .
DON'T TRUST ANVONI:
UNDEFt 30

FIR'51 ~ NE.ED 'lOUR
NAME, A.DI'REGG AND
PHONE NUMBER .

~
- R...

I NEVER REALIZED
HOW MUCH WAS
INVOLVED,
DETECTIVE:

~ r--___;.---,r--·--'

. WHEN I

SlOPPED
101\SK

DIRECTIONS
10 11-l£:0 .

HAZ,ARD ...

Cl

I( f'J'-'~-1

~

606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
.
.

.

DOZER and back hoe work.
POMEROY
ponds and septic tanks, ditching service; top soil, fill
OPEN EVE$.1:00 P.M.
H0.9JECLEANING products;
Pomeroy.
dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex·
· 1'Pio\E~D\', OHIO
phone 992-2S79 or 247-2193. '
HOME &amp; AUTO
1-7-tfc
cavating.
Phone 992-S367,
1-S-30tp
-----Ofck Karr, Jr .
992-2094
TRAILER by week o~ month,
Notice
9-1-tfc 606 E. Main Pomeroy
1970COPPERTONE
Kelvinator
WANT
All_S
all
utllllies
paid
;
in
Danville
+++
dishwasher; phone 247-2082.
INFORMATION
close to new mine; phone 742TAX Service, Federat and Statt.
Dear Emb:
!)EADLINES
l-9-61c SEE US FOR: Awnings, storm
5980.
Taxes;
daily
except
Incom
e
OFFICE SUPPLIES
S P .M . D!!!y Before Publication.
doors and winctows, carports,
l-7'6tp
It Isn't right or just, but parents (spouses too! ) often stoop to
Sunday,
9
a.m.
to
5
p.m.,
Mqnday Deadline 9 a.m .
marquees,
aluminum
siding
ONE
complete
set
Kent
Drums,
evenfngs by appointment ; - - -- - " ricocheted criticism." They'll put family' members on a public
and Cancellaffon - Correctlons
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
gold sparkle with stool and
Mrs. Sleven (Wanda) Eblin, MODERN 6 room house, full
Will be accepted until9 e.m . tor
spot by discussing their personal f,ailures, perhaps because it's
representat
i
ve.
For
free
·
sock
cymbal;
Two
Zildjlan
Dey ot Publ ica tion
Rt. 2. PomerOY' I Laurel Cliff · basement, garage, out ·
FURNITURE
Cymbals, 20" x 22''; phone es II mates, phone Charles
REGULATIONS
reference s
easier to talk ABOUT someone in his presence than fAce him
Rd. off Rt. 7 By-Pass); phone building :
before
S
p.m.
992-2172
or
after
The Publisher reserves the
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V. Stop In and See Our
required; phone 992-2310 after
992-2272.
alone when they aren't quite sure what to say or how he 'll react,
r igh t to edlt or retect any ads
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5 p.m. 992-7298.
5 p.m. or 992-3425.
1-3-30-lc
deemed
Obiet tl onal .
The
3-2-lfc .Floor Display,
one to one.
1-9-6tc
12-31 -lfc
-publisher wilt not be responsible -:-:-.,.,-.,---HOOD'S
AQUARIUMS
;
fj_sh
Tell your mother you-c~n't take being dissected like a bug. tor more than on-e incorreCI
CONCRETE f-..
and supplies; new locatlUn, 3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and STEREO 8 track repossessed, BACKHOE AND DOZER work. READY -MIX
insertion .
There's a chance she is so into the habit of bouncing her opinions
Septic
tanks
Installed.
George
delivered
r
ight
to your
looks
like
new,
4
speaker,
Ash Street. Middleporl near
RATES
unfurnished
apartments .
(Bill)
Pullins.
Phone
992-2478.
protect.
Fasl
and
easy.
Free
audio
system
fn
walnut
off friends (to hit her mark) that she doesn't realize how unfair
park ; phone 992-5443.
· For want Ad Service
Phone 992-5434.
4-25-lfc
estimates.
Phone
992-3284.
console, take over payments
5 ce nts per Word one insertion
1-7-tfc
4-12-lfc
this practice is. - HELEN
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co ..
M,inlmum Charge 75c
$1.50 per week or pay balance
:-:-----::---12 cents' per word three WILL DO bookkeeping and
+++.
E
LNA
and
White
Sewing
Middleporl, Ohio ..
of
198.80.
Call
992-5331.
6 ROOM furnished house,
cor,secut ive insertions.
;
Machines
...
service
on
ail
6-JO-tfc
1-9-6tc
clerical
work
in
my
home
;
Helen and Sue:
Ebenezer St .. adults only, S65
18 cents per word six con.
makes
.
Reasonable
rates,
phone
742-6085.
a month; phone 992-7784.
My daughter told me that her best friend had a legal abortion ·secutlve insertions .
DELUXE zig zag sewing The Sewing Cenler, Mid · SEPTIC TANKS CLEANEO
l-7-6tc
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
1-9·3tc 1972
without her parents' knowledge . This girl's mother thinks her 13- ads and ads r:&gt;a id with in 10 days. - -- - - - REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
machine . This machine dleporl, Ohio.
darns, embroideries, over .
4782. Gallipolis, John Russell.
CARD OF THANKS '
11 -16-tfc
INTERNATIONAL Songwriters :-:-:-:~-:----­
year~ld angel can do no wrong. She's pretty smug about it, and
MODERN
furni
shed
apart
&amp; OBITUARY
ONner &amp; Operator .
casls.
buttonholes
all
without
Club
;
recording,
publishin~ .
ment; phone 992-3686.
not above comparing HER daughter, and HER exceptional
$1.50 for so word minimum .
attachments
.
Pay
balance
of G&amp;E APPLIANCE Repair :
S-12-lfc
free
member
ship
;
write
1-9-3tc $39.20 or pay S5 per month . Repair of all laundry
Each additional word 2c. ·
upbringing, to lesser creatures. Not that I mind.
I.S.C.,
Rt
.
I,
Box
21
0,
Mid- - -- -BLIND ADS
equipment,
refr i geration
992-5331.
.
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
dleport, Ohio 45760.
To be fair, I must admit the girl is·a lovely person. She just
Addi t ional 2Sc Ch'arge per
'I'
DOUBLE,
2
bedroom,
fur·
equipment
and
house
wiring
.
1-9-6tc
Complete Service
1-7-6tp
nished; on Fourlh &amp; College
Call 614-992-6050.
made a mistake. However, don't you think her mother should Advertisement.
Phone 9ol9-3821
OFFICE HOURS
Streets, Syracuse. phone 992· REGISTERED Angus bulls;
12-31 -30tp
Racln_l!, Ohio
8: 30a .m. to 5 :00p .m . Da i ly ,
know? Am I being a true friend by keeping this ~ ecret? 2749.
Critt Bradford
8 : 30 a.m . to 12 :00 Noon
call
alter
5
p.m.,
Bill
Witte,
FRIEND OF THE FAMILY
12-29-ttc "992-2789.
Sa turday .
BUILDING or remod~ling irom
s.J.tfc
a
closet
to
a
house;
ca
ll
Er-~-------l-5-6tc
Notice
nest Deeter 949-3832.
SEPTIC ' TANKS AROBIC
Friend :
Employment Wanted
HAY MAN'S Auction - a ~ooo
1-J-6tc
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEANEARLY American stereo.radlo
Here's what I think :
place to go each Fnday
LADY
·lo
do
housework
by
the
ED. REPAIRED. MILLER
combination,
AM-FM
radio.
4 - - - - - --'--evening, 7 p.m. al Laurel Cliff
. I. The mother should know ONLY il her daughter wants her
day in Pomeroy or Chester
STEWART,
speaker sound system, 4 AUTOMOBILE insurance been • SANITATION,
o~ old Rt. 7. I mile west of
area
;
phone
985-3574.
cancelled?
Lost
your
OHIO.
PHONE
662-3035.
speed
automatic
changer
.
to know!
Rock Springs Fairground.
l-7-3tc
Balance $79 .57. Use our
10·4-ttc
operator's license? Call 9922. A true friend k~ps a secret, especially when telling it
10-10-lfc
budgel terms. Call 992-7085.
~66.
~~----------would hurt several people and help no one. - SUE
1·4·6lc
6-15-tfc PAPER Hanging and pa inting;
Furnace Controls
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS.
Pets For Sale
Arthur Musser , phone 742·
SPECIALS MONTHLY .
HUMIDiFIERS
5223.
MOQERN Walnul slyle sfereoPHONE
HELEN
JANE
Dear Friend :
PARKVIEW Kennels going oul
radio, AM· FM radio . 4
12-12-JOtp
BROWN . MIDDLEPORT,
Hot Water Heaters
of
business
.
Big
price
speaker
sound system, 4 Real Estate For Sale .
Sue and I think alike on this one.
OHIO 992-5113.
reduction on all dogs. All AKPlumbing
speed .automatic changer .
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
12-3-lfc
In shooting down a smug mother's halo, you could ruin two
C.
· 592 Broadway &amp; Ash
Balance 567.32. Use our HOUSE. 5 rooms &amp; bath on Rt. service, all makes. 992·2284.
Electrical
Work
mother -daughter relationships: Your girl lriend might never BUSINESS Opportunity for
Streets, Middleport. Ohio.
budgel terms. Call 992-7085.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
124 with Jlh acres of land ;
12-13-tlc "-~
1·4·61c
m~n and .women. Inquir e by
trust you with another secret I - HELEN
Authori zed Singer Sales and
phone 992-3908.
wnllng: R. D. 2, Box 73
· 1-3-6tc Service. We Sharpen ScfS!ors.
+++
Ra cine, Ohfo.
'
3-~·tfC
RED IRISH Seller puppies. WEIMARANER puppies: 1 - - - - - - - - Dear Rap:
litter AKC ; I litter 'I• NEW 6 room hou se and bath, 1;, :;-.- - - - - - - - l-5-12lp
registered. make excellent
Weimaraner and 'I• bird dog.
Iama(l)lost 17 and I haven't reached puberty yet. For a boy
pets. Call 992-5072.
mile Easl of Rutland; Sidney Real Estate For Sale
FREE puppies to give away;
Phone 614-742-6834.
Hayman.
,
l-7-3tc
in gym classes this is murder. The guys tease and laugh at me.
992-2448
phone 992-6083 .
l-4-5tc
.
1-3-6tp THREE bedroom house, full
l-4-6tp
I'm beginning to think something's w~ong, although the doc\Qr
Pomer;oy, 0 .
AKC loy poodle puppies, S7S,
------,~~~~·~
-~
• ·basement~ x 12~ ;ln•New
\'
$85; Siamese kittens. S10; HOUSE or trailer on land HOUSE ..;n . Mli;tdli;por ;· 2 '' Have~ / }~~882_.2.40. ·'
says, "Just wa1t."
··
· ····~ -·
1
• ·i!r ·
~ ' ~ .
phone 1-256-6247.
bedroom;: cMli9-3832 or 843' '
l-9-6lo
contract witH 1 few acres of
I have never been on a date because I wouldn't know what ti)
Wanted To Do
2607.
1-7-10tc
ground; phone 949·2782 an s
do and, besides, the guys might have spread th.e word around.
1-3-6tc
B &amp; S CARPI:'NTER Work ,
ask lor Mrs. Walker.
r emodeling , paneling and
l-9-6tc
I've always been afraid to talk to my Dad as he's the athletic
interior decorating ; phon e Auto Sales .
HOUSE FOR SALE, -114 Brick
type and he might be ashamed of me. I'm at the end ol my line.
446-9487 "
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio ; brlc~
C.
B.
RADIOS,
antennas.
also
CHEVROLET Impala, 283,
Why can't l grow up? - UTTLE BOY BLUES
1-J.6tp 1967
house, 3 bedrooms, excellent
police
scanners
;
Calley's
V-8, automat ic, power
- -- - - location, cloje to school and
Y BLUES
Radio Shop. Box 21 B. Long
steering, good condit ion ,
ci
ty ; contact ·Lou Osborne or
Boltom,
Ohio.
Wanteli To Buy
price S650; Elmer F. Bailey,
call
992-5898.
1-3-6lc
OLD furniture, oak tabl es. Darwin, 992-5530.
L.B.B.:
110 Mechanic St.
11 -26-lfc
1· 7· 3tp
organs, dishes, clocks. brass _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Pomeroy,
Ohio4S769
Does it occur to you how -left~ut a father feels when a boy
1955 CHEVROLET newly HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
beds
or
complete
households.
TON
Ford,
dual
wheels.
1970 1
overhauled engine ; Jim
won't share his worries with him? Don't Close him off when he's
W~ lte M. 0 . Miller, Rt. 4,
985-35~ .
NEW LISTING
ON
YOUR
DIAL
Chadwell . Reedsville, Ohio ;
p
Ohl
Ph
long
wheel
base,
power
6·11-tfc
992
the one who can reassure you best. You might discover late
0
1
OR
3 ACRES - In the
omeroy.
one
· brakes. 12'12 ft . bed. less than
·
66,7-3652.
6271
.
counlry.
Two good houses or
puber!Y runs In the family and your Dad, ioo, had a gym
miles, clean as new ;
1-7-Jtc
l-7-lfc 23,000
mobile
home
slles. On a
phone
985-3554,
Harold
problem. - HELEN
corner acre. All for $1200.00.
Brewer , Long Bottom .
Limestone, Excetsior
NEW LISTING
1-7-tlc COAL,
c.~:o·m;~;==~=:::====~======~==~========='='='"''~~=~&gt;.:~======:::::&lt;====~======&lt;&lt;=====$:=::::=================&gt;-~==&lt;:X=&lt;==========:::======:&gt;.======&lt;=:&gt;.======&lt;======:::=:::=:::::*
Salt Works. E. Main St ,
VACANT
- Building lol in
·
Pomeroy
on
Rt. J3. Asking
'68 G.T.O. 400, 4 bbl .. 4 speed, " Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
REALTY
4-12-lfc
Cragar Chrome Reverse s, 4
Only 51500.00.
601 E. Main
new tires. G60, tack, air
NEW LISTING
\... • Pomeroy
shocks and 4 other tires and Moone r1omes For Sale
3
ACRES
- Small barn. 6
'
'·
BY JACK O'BRIAN
.
rims ; good shape ; call 992·
room house, two baths, 3
2635.
PERRY TWINKLES WHEREVER
Perry though it was five years ago when he
CASH paid for all m~kes and
HARRISONVILLE
bedrooms, all with closets. 3
l-9-6tp models of mobile homes
HE GOFS-PART 2
astounded show business and the advertising
2 Story frame, 4 bedrooms,
porches , basement and
Poles
Phone area code 614-423-9531 : Mlh,
dining
area,
drilled well. Want $10,500.00.
NEW YORK (KF'S) _ MORE PERRY
world wi~ his decision to haul back from the
4-13-tfc
RECENTLY RENOVATED . .
Maximum
NEW LISTING
COMO AT 60 : President Eisenhower once sent
huge workload he'd carried since 1943 when he
Level lot about lf2 acre,
4 BEDROOMS - 1'12 baths,
Buy
For
Youl
for Perry and they had a long conversation.
left the Ted Weems orchestra - rather the Ted
carport, 2 storage bldgs.
wa·ll to wall carpeting,
Diameter
· ·Air Conditioners
$14.900.00.
modern klichen, gas fur·
Como's a good liatener and an easy talker and
Weems gang disbanded lor Ted to go into the
LITTLE
UPKEEP
nace. Full basemll!nt, front"
•Awnings
10"
on
he told us It was mostly about golf, children,
Coast Guard to leal\ its entertainment unit Cu1tam
SYRACUSE - BRICK - 4
porch and garage . Like io
• Underpinning
little things far from the geopolitical pressures
and became an almost instantanequs star.
Station Wagon
B.R., dining R., NEW bath
have 512,500.
·
largest End
Auto. trans., P.S., 351 -V-8
and ulilit.y R., NEW plumNEW LISTING •
of the Presidency. Ike had sent Perry a huge
Perry zoomed quickly from a "sustaining
Complete mQblle hQme
engine. 4 new tires, (snow
bing &amp; F.A. gas furnace. 2
RUTLAND ·- 2 bedroom
picture of himself and Perry, which still hangs
show" on CBS radio ("sustaining" means no
'
:service
-- plus gigantlc1
tires on r ear), 35,000 actual
large level lots, EX·
paneled
home. Nice bath,
'display of mobile homes
on Perry'sofflce wal). Perry is laughing, but the
sponsor) to the Copacabana, where he was
miles, excellent condition .
CELLENT NEIGH utility,
and
kitchen. Wall to
'
;always available-at ...
President's expresSion is an open-mouthed
discovered.for his long series of Chesterfield BORHOOD.
wall carpeting and nice level
DELIVERED
RUTLAND
lot.' Need $12,000.00.
incredulous smile. It wasn't until Ike's death
sponsored programs, three a week, shifting to
MILLE.R
HERE IS AN, EXCELLENT
BUILDING LOTS
TO
that Perry would tell us what the unusual
three simulcasts - radio and TV - shows a
BUY
I
story
frame.
3
T.P.
WATER - 1 acre
MOBILE HOMES
Presidential chortle was about.
week and on to his famed hour-long Sat. night
B.R., large bath, utility,
rolling land In the country
Ph. 992-2176
Pomeroy
1220 Washington Blvd.
dining R. paneling and other.
Seems the White House photographer had
series for Kraft product. and the (9p of all the
near Rt. 7 at;~d close to town.
...
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.
out
cellar.
THE
MEAGER
8ACRES
snapped the photo just as Perry whispered to
ratings.
·
For Sale
SUM OF $9,200.00.
ON HARD ROAD - A little
Ike that he'd been told the General's golf clubs
Kraft flew a contingent of coaxers to
MUCH WORK OONE HERE
btl of privacy on new
1959 'MOUNTAINEER Ca.;,per,
were "Ladies Longs." Ike laughed and said that
Perry's Florida home five years ago to try to
Within
sight
of
lhe
Gavin
proposed
water
l ine.
On Old Rt. 33
excellent condition, $1,000; Real Estate For Sale
$4,500.00.
stack:
3
B.R
..
NEW
bath.
he wished Perry and he both were in the Army
convince him to stay on TV . He was their ideal
ca
ll
992-2789.
2 STORY home, full basement, NEW F.A. turnace, NEW
Phone 992-2689
S6SOO.OO
batm &amp; If,, extra lot and at. paneling, ulillly R. large
1·3·6fc
- so that he could quiz Perry to find out who'd
"image" for the homey products Kraft sells.
Pomeroy, Ohio
RUTLAND
- 3 bedrooms,
!ached garage ; available
-=-=--=-=-~--­
betrayed this to(H!go secret. Perry never
But they learned something we'd known about
Red
.
R.
Out
cellar
and
modern
balh
and kitchen.
CLOSE OUT on 1972 full size
now ; may be had with basic
Front porch. nice lol, out of
rumbled that his informant was Ike's press
Perry for decades - that once he's made up his lielp Wanted
zig-zag sewi ng mach ines. For
furniture; near Pomeroy slorage, large lot . THIS YOU
high water.
sewing
stretch
fabrics ,
Elementary School ; phone MUST SEE. 19,800.00.
secretary, Jim Hagerty. And again the pictures
Italianatemind it's fixed for good. He explained
WE HAVE MANY OTHER
MEN 18-24: LEARN CON - mak ing buttonholes, fancy
993-7384
or
992-7133.
brokeintheworld'snewspapersandforthefirst
to us : "What can I do that isn't being done on
STRUCT IOtj. SKILLS FOR de~gn s, ~ tc . ['alnt slightly
PROPERTIES WH[C ~ - J-OOK AT LAST Y_EAR,_
1-7-6tc
COMBAT ENGINEERING blemished._C_hoice of carrying
lime Perry learned that Presidenls, too, had
every other show? The guest list. are the same
CONSIDER GOOD BUYS,
WOUL~~T YOU LIKE TO
JOB
IN
EUROPE.
Today's
case
or
sewmg
stand.
$49.80
CONTACT
US
TODAY.
IF
MAKE
MORE IN '73. COME
press agents.
·
and you can see these stars on every talk show
2 BEDROOM home , tolal
Army
wil
l
train
competent
cash
or
te~m s available.
WE
DON'T
HAVE
IT,
WE
IN
AND
SEE OUR OFroom,
storm
electric,
utility
at .,
•• a pop."
Overthe de ca de s we've learned why Perry
.....,
young men in the combat
Phone 992-7755.
WILL GET &gt;IT.
FERINGS, THEN INVEST
windows,
double
garage,
engi neer ing
fi eld .
And
J.J:6tc
seldom if ever turned up ar the gaudy wellOnce his decision was believed, the big
HENRY E. CLELAND
FOR YOUR FUTURE.
(Insulated an paneled), r•ved
guarantee a job in Europe . - -- - ------...&amp;
J.
3 ASSOCIATES TO SELL
driveway,
city
water,
lo
100
x
trumpeted theatrical benefits wherein the
playpens in Las Vegas bid high for his services:
You 'll assist or engage in the 1 SET wagonwheel bunl&lt;l(beds ;
416; extra lot and building. YOUR PROPERTY.
HELEN L. TEAFORO,
charities concerned have high-pre&amp;.ure press
the International, now the Hilton, olfered a construction
and
main.
Sauvage Fox double barrel 12
Close
to
school;
Donald
992·2259
ASSOCIATE
temince of roads. bridging, gauge shotgun , Model B
agents and most of the stars contributing their
$125,000 a week for six weeks annually in two
Headley. Rl. 681, Tuppers
If no answer
NO SUN,OAY SHOWINGS
shelt er s, and · structures .
\lentllated rfb single trigger;
Plains, Ohio.
talents have their own aggressiv.e tub·
engagemenls. '\'hat totaled $750,000 a year. Theceare lots of benefits, loo. bolh excellent condition;
98S·4209 or 992-2568
992-332S
l-5-6tp
thumpers. Instead, Perry did benefits for poor
Harrah's at Lake Tahoe offered about the same.
Li ke 30 days paid vacalion a phone 985-3530.
J.7·Jtp
parishes, such as one that needed stained-glass
It's all comfortably more than a million a year. year. If you'd like to learn
lltetime skills while you live - - - - -- - - ROOM
house with
bath and
basement.
Buill-In
kit- ]~----~---~~~~----------...
windows in the small edifice. A more showbizPerry won't' play that favorite showbiz and work in Europe, Today's NEW Hosp ital bed, S:?!Xl; 1 8 full
chen
cabinets,
double
sink,
2
oriented acquaintance" chided Perry for such
cliche - listing his f~vorite singers; or singer. Arm y wants to join yoU . Call brand new wtleelchalr, never
porches;
145
Butternut
Ave.,
collect SS G. Clark, 593-3022. been. used, $100; phone 992·
small artistic potate&gt;eB when he might be in the
He makes no bones about the fact he imitated
Pomeroy, phone 992-7110.
I-J-6tc S7J6, John Bigelpw, ~45 Park
1·5-6tc
headlines helping feed the poor . The Como ex,Bing Crosby in his early singing career-even - - - - -- - - 51., Middleport.
1-1-Jtc FURNISHED 3 room , house,
planation was, as usual, simple' ".Stained-glass
made a refreshingly telling point of it on a TV TEXAS REFINER¥ CORP.
offers
opportunity
for
hiRh
------~-­
balh, furnace, on corner lolln
windows are food for old ladies," he said.
special years ago - .and liats only one other
income PLUS cash bonuses
Syracuse
; prfce $3,900 phone
When Perry broke his leg duripg an un!rom whom he has learned : :•I thought Cantor
convention trips and fringe
992·2360.
benefits to mature man In
scheduled scenery~ifl .-t his NBC-TV special
Rosenblatt was somettung special. I listened to
1·5-tfc
Now you can buy thai
Pomeroy area. Regardless of
taping, he bad to give up JJis treasured golflng
his records and studied tus intonations IJefore I experience.
.
comfortable
La·Z·Boy
air mall 1. 1.
8 ROOM house and bath, nice
ON PANTS &amp; JEANS
and fishing. Reluctantly, he began watching TV
did 'Kol Nidre' 'On the air,"' he said.
Pate, Pres .. Texas Refinery
chair
you've
alway•
large lot, natural gas. built-In
Corp., Box 711, Fort Worth,
dreamed of at our low
, 11011p operas. Aatounded, be discovered he likes
Perry's reputation for decency extends not
cabinets
in
.kitchen,
close
to
Texas 76101.
prices.
ra~lo station In Bradbury,
'em. One in particular, "Somerset," became his , only to personal but public incident.. He can't
.lluy i
Phone 992-2602.
·
,.
. sland rndeness. 0 ne young smger
.
-- - ··7-41p
top favorite and this delighled his'crotchety old
cursed at her --:--::-:-.
Pairs
]2·2l·20tp
TV writer, Goodman Ace, who also watches the ,. mother during a rehearsal; she never wa:. LADJ ES - Rteasant sales
· Autllorized Dealer
l PAIR FREE
·
I
work . Hours to .suit yoUr
same' show and· suspected Perry was putting
as ked ba Ck 011 the sh ow agalll. A rna e singing
household S&gt;hedu'le. Earn The best bur in the area.
111• STORY2 ·bedroom brick
Have slacks &amp; leans for lht
him 011 about his interest. Goody held daily
star screamed at the orchestra for a mistake·. $2.50 up, based on sales. Wr~e
house In Middleport. Car'·
whole
family.
Save
Onepeted,
paneled. Kitchen and
telephonic debrielings with Perry. Perry even
Off!· Acomedian did an offensive joke about the
~~nsta~oSxho~g~ r ~!f~~'; - Thir~ . · . ·
dining room tiled. Complete·
made penon-:to-person phone ,calls to perPresident. He was paid off and not a_llowed to
Products. Inc .. Winona , 9._
with drapes. $6,500. Call 992·
POMENOV
Hermon Grote
fonners to tell .them he enjoyed the shows.
perf~rm: "I won't do it and I won 't let anyone
Minnesota S5987 .
3&gt;16S.
Ail Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
111-5592
~son, w. Vo.
1-9-Jtc
nre cash ~egillter tinkles merrUy along for else step on any~ne's dignity, " ~erry explained.
·
Phone 992-2181
apartment, adults only. No

~====
-=:_:----..,--l!.:..i..·
· · ==
· ==-··-~~~

I

I

~

For Sale

.----,-~---

-WE 'M)I.I'T
e&gt;l".. ABLE
TOTHINKO'

TIME FO' US TO
HITTH'OLE

FU5T, HAVE )ORE
NIGHTL'{ BOY-0'
WAP.M MILK - AH
MEANS GLASS -

HUH.

NOTHIN'

'CEPT

WHAT'S IN

'THAT60l(-

'

I

----~--

------

PLAIT, 'lOU ARE IN 11-IE LAND OF .....BUT
1HE ENTIRE NA110N RESENTED
TA ' TillS 5MO&lt;\R ,BUT ~ITILE. COULD BE
MADE 11-lE LAUGI-flf.JGSTOCK OF Ll ... DONE.'THEN AOOUT A YEAR N30t
11-IE I'.ORLD; ll-IANKe 10.SCORE5
A FILM OF YOUR&amp; WAS SHOWN 1
OF FILM5 DEPICTING USM
"PRINCE OF TAANSYLVAN /A"....

THANSYLVANIA. WE HAVE BEEN

"HElL"

~PERSlTTIOUS IDIOT.S

BESEIGED BY VAMPI
ANDMON:&gt;TER5 ......

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

------

-

We.talk to you

Virgil B..
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

like a person.

WMP0/1390

I

1

,Voice along Br'Way 1

Jt~

-:--~----

o-9

~-'6ttl
ACROSS
1. Usurp
command
6. Drain
11. Sea duck
12. Gnaw
13. Flourish.;
(st.) (3

OHIO ·
PALLET CO.

Meigs
Equipment Co.

,

\

'

\

'

wd.)
..
7. Work unit

B. "The
Caine
Mutiny"
author
9, Miss
Ferber
10. Remainder
14.. Future
18. Actress,
Mary 19. Poker
term
ZO. Austra·
lian bird
%1. Girl's
name
!2. Follower
alan Ism

U111CR111hle these C011rJumblef!o
""" letter to each ~quare, to
for•• four ordlnorr word1.
Yesterday's Aru1wer ,.,
24. 35. Roman
Moines
emperor
35. Medieval
37. Dessert
shield
wine
2&amp;. Cal 38. "The
nip
Gloomy
ZB. BridgeDean"
crossing
39. Ado1escharge
cent
32. Auda41. Egyptian
dous
earth god
33. Wound
42. "Ode34. - Wes·
Nlghtln·
leyan Uni-

gale"

versity

(2 wds.)

I YONIS
(J

·cHAIRS

WELL, LOOI&lt;.l we KNOW
611CINI ~ 1\N i,;LANP 11-J
THI! MA I'Z~HALL GFI:OIJP,
WHBFI:I! THe H·&amp;OM&amp;
WA,; T~~TBP l

AND IF 'I'OU
~ND TH I~

TAfTOO IS

~ELOW.&lt; OR

50UTH OF

HER BIKINI !

T/II&lt;E HER HEAC'
A$ "NOitTH" ANO

1!&gt;07( THE COMPMS
CLOCKWISE--

I
r J II]

JICI:EN
[ 'l

I

III

HOW O!'t7 THAi FT
M16HT 55 ~~E!

clrell!d letters
I NowformorrUlrelhe
the aurprloe IDiwer, u
to

b)'

(A.wen tomorrow)

Y,......,.., Ju ...let&gt; ALlUM

SORRY PRISON TIPTOE

ANwer1 TlaU eompo•er had Americ11 riglar
llim! -- "SO.U.S.A."

.

PIANUTS

(2·wds.)
·z.some·
thing
· quite
funny
(colloq.)
3. Vorce
t . lndlan
wel&amp;ht

m

WHAT 00 ~0\J 00
WITH TWO FRIENDS
WHOARE HAVING
A M15UNDei&lt;5TAN~NG'

5TRAIG~ToN THEM OUT! S~OIU '5~
WHERE T~E~'VE G:lNE IJRONG !!
YELL 'EM TO SHAPE VP !!!

~ ­

M
;

-,
,.

. DAILY CRVPTOQUOTE- Here's how 'to work It: r - - r - - -- - r - - - ,
AXYDLIAAXII.
I~ THAI GOOD
II

I

f~'f'CKOLOG'&lt;'?

L 0 N G Jl Ill L L. 0 W

CUPTOQUOTBS

UZDEWP
DEZD

1•1

the obove cartoon.
I.~=)=]~~~~-~~-~O-~·=une==·tJ..t
PriUI I IISUIISWIUn
I Dr
Tl X)

One letter limply slln.ds for another. In thia sample A Is
used f9r tbe. three· L's, X for tbe two O's, etc. .Sinele lelten,
aporuopbe•, the lenfllh and formaUon of tbe words are all
hlnts. Each day the code letten are dllferent:
'

I 1'. I

ISAMOUF

1. 11 And
Away -.-"

LA·z~aov~

MASON
FURNITURE

~lJJJMIDUJ];u..J-"'J -ttl,_

(hyph.

·

- ·~

-----------

thing
cloying
6. Vigorous
contest

15. Suffix de"'(;:ijj;FjE£i:WrrrwHi!;\~
noting
J•
WITH HIS
origin
16. Rearward
17. Krazy 18. Thespian
:-'='II.;,....,Uoc--e-.;_-t ZO.lsolate
23. An Arab
land
Z'l. Magnum
opus
29. Toward
30. Even
chance
ihyph.
wd.)
31. European
river
33. Scion
36. Quantity
(abbr.)
37. Oppose
40. As Jackie
Gleason is
called
(3 wds.)
U . Venti·
Iated
44.Ravlhe
IS. Dunce
46, Consumed
DOWN

' ''\,,,. ',.,, '
.;"'._
' \ .~ ''\
~ ~~ ,Y_

I'

(@ 1973,Klnr Features Syndicate, lne.)

5. Sorne-

wds.)

DICK TRACY

c illl~. m• '"'" T"' ''' U! '''

YealerdWa Cryptoquole: BLESSED ARE THEY WHO CAN
GIVE WITHOUT REMEMBERING AND TAKE WITHOUT
FORGETTING.-BIBESCO
.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

'1970 FORD

$7.00 Per Ton

!R;&lt;;HCCfFEE'

rCLELAN~,

"

WANTED .
CHIPWOOD

\1]4f.,TS
11-\AT?

SXWJ

DFNW
FQ

FJ

XQW

BWZP •ZQV

l&gt; E W ' X D E W P . - K S Q WRY

S0 M 0 R P 0

li:

IN 5TR!CT MEDICAL TERMS,
!T'5 CALLED "BUTT!N6 IN " !

�'.

.

.

.

(.¢.:!8!:!~:;~:?.:;?;::~:::::::::::;;-.;:~-:::::;:::•:&gt;:?.;.;::;:;

Foods stand. near $200,000
All MiddlepOfl Village lunds
- active and inactive - as of
Dec. 31, totaled $198,089.06
according to the monthly
report of Village Clerk •
Treasurer Gene Grate. The
general fund stood at $50,441.
Receipts and disbursements,
and the balance in each fund
respectively as of Dec. 31,
follow:
· ·
.
General, $11,831.25, $6,172.22,
$50,441.22; cemetery, $1,255.83,
$481.62, $1,42.\.70; fire eqUipment, $1,660; $1,7Sl.20, $44.7S;

.MEIGS THEATRE

I

.

'

8- '•'heDaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 9,1973

swlnuning pOQJ, no receipts,
$6.6S, $3,857 .56; planning
commission, no receipts, $5.30,
$324.71; street maintenance,
$3,1Sl.74, $3,335.76, $1,929.87.
Sanitary sewer, $4,0S5.41,
$2,918.02; $25,903.28; water,
$6,71S.S9, $7,433.44, $25,253.93;
water meter deposit, $138,
$118.21, $6,389.02; sanitary

sewer escrow, $848.42, no
disburse~nenls, $60,S20.28; fire
house construction, $3,980,
$13,907.70, $11.99; federal
government revenue sharing
fund, $3,689, no disbursements,
$3,689.
Receipts for December
totaled $37,325.04 while expenditures totaled $36,103.12.

Snipert ?) missing
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) While the hear! of the city
returned to normal today the
pollee chief said he is convinced that a second .member
of a sniper team that killed six
persons escaped. Tbe people
were quiet and calm but still
afraid.
·
·
A search of every one of the
300 roolllll in the Howard
Johnson Hotel produced no
trace of a second sniper. Police
lifted roadblocks that had
closed off a 511-sqwire.block
area of tbe city.
It was a cold, cloudy and
windy winter day as the people
returned to work all over town.

But traffic was lighter than
usual for rush hour on lllyola
Boulevard, which runs in front
of the Uhstory hotel that was
the scene of tbe bloody fighting
Sunday and Monday.
"People are afraid to use the
street this morning," said a
cab driver who noted the
lighter-than-usua11 tralflc.
Police Superintendent Clarence Giarrusso said he
believed there was a second
sniper and that he was either a
''super brain" or police
negligence allowed him to
escape. The sniper or
snipers began firing 'from
atop the hotel, which is
across the street from City Hall
and only four blocks from the
city's famed French Quarter,
Sunday morning after seltihg
fire to a number of rooms.
Seven persons were kiDed including a black sniper and
three white police-and at
least 20 others were wounded in
the ensuing gunfire that lasted
more than 24 hours, police said.
T\le dead also included a
Virginia couple on their second
honeymoon and the hotel's
assistant manager.
"I've never seen anything so
well planned," said Russell
Duke, 42, field superintendent
for the city Department of
Safety Permits. "TheY (terrorists) had to have help from
the inside to escape. I think
they could have worn one of the
wounded individual's clothes a jacket pUiied off a fireman or
a poli~eman who was treated
and his clothes left at the
scene. They could have walked
out undetected this way.
"There had to be at least two
snipers," Duke said. "They
talk about ricochets, but
ricochets don't shout back."

LOSS: $3.5 MILLION
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
state executive director of
lhe U, S. Agrlcullural,
Stablllzallon and Con·
servatlon Service here said
today Ohio farmers would
lose $3.5 mUllan ln,J973 with
the discontinuance of the
federal
Rural
Environmental Assl$tance
program. (REAP)
"Thai's
what . was
alloeated for Ohio and that's
what was cui back," said
Dwight Harris,
It had been reported
earlier the state would ~ose
$71 mllllon, but State •
Agriculture Director Gene
Abercrombie said that figure
applies to aU federal subsidy
programs In Ohio.

.

.

.

\. .

highest monthly advarice since a 2.S pet. jump In JaJDI~, 1951.
WASlllNGTON (UP!)- Wholesale prices made the biggest
•
The sharp rise resuliA!d almost entirely from big jWIIplin
one-month increase since 1951 in December as prices &lt;If. farm
prices
.
prO&lt;!ucts recorded the sfuirPes\ rise for any month since 1947, the
. for food and other farm prodllCts..
government said today.
·
1be fatm pru&lt;lai:IIIDdex alooe wellt liP U jlei.ID
The 1.8 pet. increase in December closed out 1972 with a 6.5 pet.
ber, largest iocmu~e sinee a slmllar advtiiiCe in 1\lln!ll, 1N7.
increase in wholesale' prices for the year -more than twice
Product prices skyrocketed by 18.7 pel. in Ill of IJ'It.
President Nixon's goal of a 2 to 3 pet. inflation rate. That far
The BLS said the jumpa in food and fann product prices
exceeded the 3.S pet. rate of infillllon in the latest 12 months
resulted
mainly (rom "an unusual weather pattern In the fall of
reported for conswner prices.
The Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics said the . 1972, and also because of grain shortages resulting from the U. S.
1.8 pet. rise in the Wholesale Price Index last month was the wheat deal with the Soviet Union."

Deeem:

..,

·•

·

Lee Johnson Died on Monday
-

News • . . in Briefs (Continued from page I)
proposed construction of the coliseum in Richland Township.
The EPA said the sewage treatment proposals were "&lt;;onceptually acceptable" llit stopped short of outright approval.
EPA director Ira Whitman said~I approval would be granted
only wben more specific plans we/(·submltted and approved.

RACINE - Lee S. Johnson, of the Nease Settlement
72, Racine Route I, died community, Mr. Johnson was a
Tonight, January 9
Monday at the home of a son, member of the Antiquity
&gt;::~::::::::::m:::::::::::::::::~::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::&gt;::::~.:::&amp;:
Carroll
W. Johnson in Mid· Baptist Church.
BEN
(Technicolor)
dleport.
Surviving are his wife,
Lee Harcourt Montgomery
The Middleport E-R unit Margaret Reiber Johnson; two
Joseph Campanella
WASHINGTON-THE SEARCH for a jury In the political
answered
a call to the Johnson daughters, Mrs. Charles
Arthur O'Connell
home just alter II a.m. He was (Kate) McNickle, Racine, and espionage trial of the "Watergate Seven" continues today with 114
Rosemary Murphy
(G)
dead upon the squad's arrival. Mrs. Betty Howell, Pomeroy; pel'liOns- including three employes of super-6ecret Intelligence
Cartoons:
Mr. Johnson was the son or' three sons, Stanley, .Racine; agencles-stillin!he runnlng.No jurors were Chosen during five
How- [)Q. Dee· Doody
the late Martin and Belle Willis Carroll, of Middleport; artd hours of preliminar:• screening as the trial opened Monday, llit
Special Helper
Kirk Edward Williams, age Johnson. He was preceded in Fred of Delaware, ·ohio; a some ISS were excuses, most for personal reasons.
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
20, of 410Nace Ave., Columbus, death also by two sisters and sister, Mrs. Gladys Barr,
Three others were dismissed when they said they had firm
formerly of Meigs County, was two brothers. A retired farmer Beaver Falls, Pa.; two opinions about the case and two more for .unamounced causes.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
killed Monday in an autO acbrothers, Eugene of Racine, Chief Judge John J. Sirice and attorneys for the prosecution and
January 10-11
cident.
and Carl of Beaver Falls; 13 · defense today were ezpected to continue intensive questimlng of
NOT OPEN
Survivors include his wife,
grandchildren, and 10 great- the survivors of the 249 prospective jurors who originally jammed a lruge federal district courtroom here.
Charlotte R.; a son, Kirk
grandchildren.
Edward, Jr.; his father,
Funeral services will be held
Robert, in Maryland; his
BmER COLD .TODAY FROM A BLUSTERY January
at I p.m. Wednesday at the
mother, Sheila, Columbus; two
Ewing Funeral Home with the storm covered most of the nation's interior. A!least 75,000 homes
brothers, Craig and Mark,
Rev. Freeland Norris of- and buslneases in the Atlantl' metropolitan area were without
Columbus; three sisters, Julie,
ficiating. Burial will be in the power, while eight persons died in weatber related accidents.
Nancy and Leigh Anne,' all of
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The Gilmore Cemetery. Friends Emergency crews from KenbJcky, Mississippi ·and Alabama
Columbus; his paternal Ohio Manufactuerers' may call at the funeral home belped Georgia Power Co. repairmen try to restore power as the
worst Georgia storm of the decade moved into Its third day.
grandfather, Charles E. Association, in its 1973 business any time.
. Williams , Columbus, and outlook, said today business
Ice-laden trees fell acrOBS streets already dangerously
coated with ice. Residents were warned not to drive except in
maternal grandparents, Mr. conditions this year in the state
emergencies. Most schools and businesses In the Atlanta area
and Mrs. George Starrett, should ,be better than in 1972.
were closed. The sttrm dumped 8 Inches of snow in parts of
Portsmouth.
The OMA said a majority of
Bank On Wheets With
North Carolina, TeMessee and VIrginia. South CarWna,
. Friends may call ·at the its members participating in
Mississippi and Alabama were pelted with freezing rain.
residence
of
his
mother-in-law
the annual survey plan to hire
The Greatest of Ease
at 750 S. Front St., Columbus, more personnel or hold
WASHINGTON - ·JOSEPH E. COLE of Cleveland, an inafter noon on Wednesday. existing employment levels.
Funeral services will be held Most also said IIIey would
Mr . and Mrs. Blaine dustrialist who supported Hubert H. Humphrey for the
Friday at 10 a.m. at the 0. R increase or continue current Milhoan, Elaine, Tony and presidency in 1968 and 1972, was chosen Monday as finance
Woodyard Co., Chapel at 255 E. investment levels, add new Mikel, attended the gathering chairman of the Democratic National Conunlttee.
Cole, 58, board chairman of Cole National Corp. which
State St., Columbus, witii the plants and equipment and of sisters and brothers of the
Rev . William Snider of- continue to introduce rnew and Smith family. A 20 pound markets a variety of consumer eroducts, will have the day-to.
ficiating . Burial will be at the improved products this year. turkey with aU the goodies that day responsibility for raising money for debtiJ)agued party.
He was ~hainnan of Citizens for Humphrey-Muskie In 1968
Greenwood Cemetery at
The survey showed more goes with it was enjoyed.
and
contributed an estimated $3110,000 In grants and loans to
Racine.
than 70 per cent believed
Mr. and Mrs. Erroll Conroy
federal wage-price controls and Alice Dodson visited a few Humphrey's unsuccessful bid for renomination last year.
were effective in holding down days over Christmas in Akron.
PARIS- THE AMERICAN-BORN Duchess of Windsor 75
"inflation and had been
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Mc' '
especially helpful in improving Cain and children of Marietta fell and broke her hip In her Parts apartment last Thursday, bee
market conditions in 19'12. This were Sunday evening dinner pel'liOnal secreta~ said today. "She is In the American Hospital
will improve even more in 1973, guests of his parents, Mr. and in Paris," the secretary. "She had an operation which was very
successful and oow lhe Ia dointl nicely."
they said, even though a Mrs. Dana M~P,atn:
~ sc;ated for banking. ~ehind
Billy Bahr called on his
the steering wheel of your car. It's
The Carleton Sunday School majority said they believed the
controls
shonld
be
removed
parents,
Mr. and Mrs. M. L.
Superintendent Ralph Carl
easy as ABC to use our drive-in
this
year,
either
in
the
second
Bahr
Sunday.
presented pir,s for perfect
or third quarter.
banking window ... and it's fast.
Mrs. Glenna Milhoan was a
attendance to Floyd, Edith,
Christmas dinner guest of Mr.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
Drive up to the window and see.
Junior and Diana Ross, nine
and Mrs. Dwight Milhoan.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The years, and Scott Harrison,
WELLSTON - The Meigs Wellston with 14.
Many Services Available
Eastern Athletic Boosters will seven years.
Others present in addition to Eighth Grade basketball squad
The seventh grade squad
GRANGE TO MEET
the family were Mr. and Mrs. downed Wellston 55 to 42
meet this evening at 8 p.m. at
AMN Richard Dean, who isC:
won its first .11ame, 29 to 23.
the high school. AU members stationed\ at Sheppard Air Ohio Valley Grange 2612.will Under Daines, Mr. and Mrs. Monday night here. Meigs Meigs led at the hall 11 to 10.
RCH
meet at the hall at 7:30 p.m. Gary Moore of COQlville, and
are urged to attend.
Force Base, Texas, arrived
Thursday. Refreshments will Billy's aunt and uncle from scored 14 straight points late In Hitting for Meigs were Greg
home on the 21st to spend two be served.
the fourth quarter to break a Witte with 14, Chuck Follrod 8,
' Athens .
....C..~INICIN~IA,TI
weeks with his parents, Mt.
J8.38 tie. The hall-time score Kelly Winebrenner 6, ·and
William and Hazel Rose of was Wellston 22, Meigs 19.
and Mrs. John Dean and his
Keven McLaughlin 1.
MIDDLEPORT
DANCE SET
Columbus visited with her
brother,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Marriage
Uceuse
For
Meigs,
Greg
Browning
The Meigs B Team will play
OHIO
RACINE - Seniors of
mother,
Mrs.
Glenna
and
W,iller
Dean.
He
also
visited
Richard Wayne Rowe, 33,
pumped in 24, Steve Randolph Kyger Creek Wednesday at
Southern High School here will
Bernard Milhoan Thursday. 9, Allen Stewart 8, Mark
MISs
Cindy
llluch
at
Owosso,
Racine,
Rt.
2,
and
Ada
Frances
Meigs Junior High In Midsponsor a dance from 10 p.m. to
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Mrs.
Clara
Milhoan
visited
Michigan.
and
his
grandSellers, 38, Racine, Rt. 2.
Haggerty and Dale Browning 6 dleport and Meigs A Team will
midnight Friday at the high
with Mrs. Mary Shafer each and Tom Walters 2.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Kenneth
play Logan Thu•sday at
school. Music will be by
Thursday. Mary is Improving
Markins,
Racine.
LOCAL
TEMPS
Jay RoysiA!r was high for Middleport.
"Guthrie".
day. ·
Mr. and 'Mrs . Patrick Temperature in downtown in health each
. '
Miss Elaine Milhoan gave a
Pomeroy
Tuesday
at
11
a.m.
.OCIOC~IOC:Xl-Cot;:H~~C:XIOQ&lt;~~:::&gt;c:IIOI::ICIOC:XIOC:X:I&gt;c=OC~IOC:XIO~::IC~ Williams and children of was 23 degrees under sunny . party for her senior calss
ll
McArthur, Mr. and Mrs.
EXTENPED OUTLOOK
Sunday evening.
, Ronald McNally, Mr. and Mrs. skies.
High temperatures Ia tbe
Veteraus Memorial Hospital
-Gleooa S. Milhoan
Lester Arnold of Columbus
2011, Iowa 5to 15.·A ebance of
ADMITTED
Henry
visited their mother, Mrs . several others.
anow Thunday or Friday.
Johnson,
Syracuse;
William
· Hazel Arnold and Walter.
. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Young
Middleswart, Portland·
Miss Denise Hendricks is a and Wesley entertained
Charles
Tennant, Mason;'
patient at O'Bleness Hospital Christmas Eve with a bulle!
LAWS ~RCE END
.
GETS GAME BAU.
in Athens.
dinner. Attending were M(
BURLINGTON, Iowa (UP!) Margaret Keefer, Point
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Paynter and Mrs. Homer Bailey, Mr.
WASIUNGTON (UP!)- The - Iowa's liquor laws rather Pleasant; Charles Carroll,
ofCarpenterentertainedwitha and Mrs. Frank Douglas, Mr. Pentagon
press
corps than sheer endurance forced Long Bottom; G. W. Cundiff,
A
Christmas party at their home . and Mrs. Wayne Beal, Denise presented outgoing Defense an end early Sunday to the Syracuse; Archie McKinney,
At14!nding were Mr. and Mrs. and Karla, Roger Dixon, Mr. Secretary Melvin R. Laird state's first dance marathon Rutland; Imogene .walker,
John Dean and Richard, Mr. and Mrs. John Perdas and Monday with the game ball for since the 193011, with four New.. Haven; Blyde Theisa '
and Mrs. John Walter Dean, Mary andMr.and Mrs. Russell his four years ih the top cooples ending In a tie for first Racme; Eulah Frances '
' .
Middleport; Jean Burson
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Waggoner Well of Chester.
. pl.lce.
Defense Department post.
Shade,
and Judy Elkins,'
of HarrisonviDe, Mr. and Mrs. Visiting over Christmas with
Officials of the marathon,
The football was enscrlbed
John Gillogy, Mark and David Mr. and Mrs. VIrgil King and "Laird 194, Press 0" in which wa~ held here to benefit Chester.
DISCHARGED - Bonnie
of Albany, Mr. and Mrs. Garold · family were Mary Lou King, recognitio~ of l!t• 194 news the March of Dimes, called a
Gilkey, Tammy, Cindy and home fr~m Mt. Vernon conferences . Laird has beld halt to the dane~ shortly Riffle, John Russell, Pamela
. Rick, of Athens, Mr. and Mrs. Nazarene College, and Miss and, as one newsman said, after Illfdnigbt ·Sunday since Landaker, Jeannie Wells
. Ralph Well of Guysville.- A Judy King from Kankakee, "quarterbacked
so liquor laws require the closing Janice Capehart, Connie
Cluistrnas buffet luncheon was Dlinois.
professionally that neither Bob of all establishments serving Earl'Werner, Gary Galey and
Charles Belzlng.
enjoyed by all. Agift exchange Mrs. Goldie Wyant has Grelse nor Billy Kilmer would liquor at 1 a.m. Sunday.
took place later in the evening. returned home from Veterans atand a chance In the Super
After 30 hours of near conMr. and Mrs. John Pernas Memorial Hospital and is Bowl against him".
tinuous dancing, four couples
PLEASANT VALLEY
and Mary spent several days improving.
Greise and Kilmer are remained on their feet and
'··· Buift like this ...
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Holbert
with Mr. . and Mrs. Henry Spell!ling Christmas at the respectively the Miami Dol· moving-the requirement for
..-,.
Crawford,
Apple Grove; Mrs.
Perdas and Scott at Ports- home of her parents, Mr. and phins and Washington Red- victory-and officials
instead
of
!his
1
mouth.
Mrs. Kenneth Markins of skins quarterbacks appearing multiplied the first prize of a B!lly Joe Harrison, daughiA!r
The Carleton Church Racine were Mr. and Mrs. In next Sunday's Super Bowl trophy and $100 cash by four Gallipolis Ferry; Shaw~
'"'""it-bathrOtlm
.....,.,. riUrt.,w -ottl~t~• .
11M
5-Yu.r N&amp;tirOftWille
mobllt hotne Sift ltmt IIIII •t~t In
members went caroling John Dean and AMN Richard VII. Laird retires as defense and declared an to be winners. Cunningham, Point Plea5ant·
IIIII •t ,..,.,.,., )'OU
ldtQIHrt
Protectkln Pll•
Usa Holley, Ashton.
'
_...,. .
recently. They visited severai dean of Sheppard Air Force secretary J~. 20.
The marathon raised $1,000.
*""'' ~II'T!Otlllarocl"'"''"l
!.:t
::: ...
'lll'loily·lile. Wn, •lid ll• r '""''' .,,.
..... "::":.......":.:-....
... -~-:.::
shut-ins !llld . presented each Base, Texas, Mr. and Mr~.
IO«&lt;1 '"lftlltlldtMi y O• ' ' l~f umt
...
--;;--....;
::.;,
ioll't It ~~ M &lt;11111111 I lOOt bpoch
with a potted plant. Some of John W. Dean and Mr. and
lavtM:Irr """ llot5-•n ltll floor IQMt. •
those
visited were Mrs. Guy Mrs. Robert Rfed, Rodney.and
l....,. ,..IIIII I lll'l'litp •• .,..,. f1M
,.,... ~tiM · 'I $oottCI W.n'*llll
Sargent, Mrs. Webber Wood, David of Pataskala. VIsiting
Atl.,lt • plut 0.1'( f l f M'l11f11 Dlt)'lt lltJ,
Mrs. · Mae Damron, Mr. after Cluistnuis were Mr. and
tomt&lt;l CJ(Itl uo to 110 """ "'" •nd 1
No Hfll e rr~~&gt; It!&lt; '""'I· 11""'"1 v...
1Richard Heilman, Mrs. Jennie Mrs. · Junior Smalley, Judy
ll\illt'll "''" Clff III IIDI, . . . . .will
a.,...
hrtlp1 flO 11011 CIOtllel ~ lfito•
Hollie, Mrs. ~lly Byers and Kay, Susan, Dale and Hobie of
P'Oit!•H
Wierton, W. Va., and Mr. and
Mrs. · Walter Terrell of
bothm to build In mare hllr
Pataskala.
· ·'
Charles and Susan King
. spent Christmas with Mr. and
.
Mrs. E!Jdie ,King, Joey, Mike
and Totilmy, HarrlsonviDe.
Mr. and Mrs. Rowland Dais
'
had as Christmas Eve guests
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean,
Richard, John Walter and
Anita, Mr. .and Mrs. Virgil
210 E· 2"d
Pomeroy KingandlamliyandMrs.Neva'
:
.'
Phone "2·5428 •
,
I
.
King.
•

CITIZENS
NATIONAL
BANK

Kingsbury

.

NewS, Notes

ONE OF THE MANY FINE FRIGIDAIRE APPUANCES.

·Skinpy
.

Miru.
,Ftts
almo5t

Kiser'

... anywhere

...

......

=
_
_
---............ ___ _

can~~

"'·---.---·

r--------..
2-HOUR .

I

BAKER .fURNITURE

. CLEANING

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
.CLEANERS

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

with the Joint Chief• of Staff .
Asked at a news conference
after the closed brieting whether the President had given him
anyqplanationorjustification
· wbelfhe ordered tbe contingency plan put into effect; Moorer
fsaid, "None. . Tlie restriction
that had been placed on
bombing (north of the 20th
ParaUei) was simply lifted."
Moorer, 'equipped ·with
charts and aerial photographs,
spent the day briefing House

Now You Know

VISIT ....ELBERFELDS
.

WAREHOUSE

ON· MECHANIC STR·EET
IN

POMEROY ~
, I

r

. miD\ary conunittees on the
bombing strategy in an effort
to stifle mounting complaints
from congressmen that they
were not being" kept informed
about the status of the war.
Harrington said it was "very
painfully obvious" that' M&lt;»:
rer's assigrunent was to cover
the "ill-concealed scorn'' the
administration holds for Congress. He said he' personally
was not satisfied with the
briefing because of Miiorer•s·

limited role in the decisions
that led to the resumption of
the .bombing.
But Chairman F. Edward
Hebert, ·O.La., and Rep.·Sam
Stratton, O.N.Y., said tbey
were impressed with Moorer's
three-hour briefing, and his
•, contention that the bombing
was a major military success.
"We don't have to know ·
why," Hebert said, when asked
about Moorer's lack of information about ·the reasons

The Irish potato is indigenous of South America.

at y

,!,,

"'

fpr the bombing. "·I t was a

question of what· was done."
Hebert said, ".We · brought
'em to the conference table by
bombing IIJid we brought 'em
baGk by bombing. If bombing ;s
necessary, bomb. n
Moorer said the military
justification for the strikes ·was
to deny Hanoi •the capacity to
resume !and ~rfare against
the south. . ·
But at- the same time,
Defense Secretary-designate

Elliot L. Richardson was
· telling tbe Semite Armed
Services Conunittee-that Sllfi!h
Vietnam was now capable of
defending itself without help.
from U.S. forces in South
Vietnam.
Richardson agreed with the
assessment of tbe man be will
replace, Melvin R.' Laird, that
the Vietnamization program
has advanced to the extent that
South Vietnam can handle its
. own "in 'Country security"

entitle

Devoted To The .fnlereats ()(TheMeil{s-Mason Area

VOL XXIV . NO. 187

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

without the presence' of U.S. •
forces.
Senaiors struggling to firid
an explanation for the holiday
bombing &lt;:harged that the
administration was concealing
details of pollcymaking and·
bomb damage from the American people.
"The conscience of this
nation hss reached the breaking point," ·sen. Harold
Hughes,
D·lowa,
told
Richardson.

Weather

•

I

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1973

PHONE 992·2156

Cloudy with a chance of snow
flurries northeast today,
tonight and Thursday and a
chance of snow west Thursday.
High today around 20. Low
t9night 10 to IS. High Thursday
ln the mid to upper 20s.

TEN CENTS

Progress in
deep secret

1\.eno Hidgc

liibens ,aiional

I
""'" ........

Michael Harrington O.Mass
said Moorer testlfl~ be w~"
not consulted by tbe White
House either in October wben
the bombing was hatted', or in
December, when it was
resumed.
·
Harrington said Moorer told
the committee a contingency
plan was drawn up for massive
852 strikes against the heartland of North Vietnam and was
placed into effect on presideDtial order without consultation

Manufacturers
high on 1973
Ohio business

Junior ~11 teams win 2 ·

I

WASHINGTON (UP!)~ The
. nation's highest ranking milltary ~ has told a .House
COilllnlttee lie was not consuited before the United States
lau_nched the heaviest bombing
strikes of the Indochina war
agalnsl tbe North Vietnamese
heartland Dec. 17.
Adm. Thomas H. Moorer,
,chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
. Staff, appeared Tuesday
pe!ore the House Armed
Services Committee. Rep.

K,irk Williams,

age 20, killed

.

Joint Chiefs' chief igno~ant of B52s· bombing

.

Things whol~sale in giant increase .
.

•

..

I

.

.
••

•

~~t..
•

r;:

,;

~ ·~ t ..... _ _,_·
..

.

J

PROUD UNCLE AND COUSIN -Ivan Woods and his
son, Keith, are uncle and first cousin respectively of Ron
McDole, defonsl~e o~d for tbe Wllhlnlton RadskiruJ
profesaionatto11tbtl'll"tealil'lh!t '!till play Sunday in Super
Bowl Vll in Lol Angeles against tho Miami Dolphins. Keith ill
holding an autographed pic of his cousin. Gridder McDole is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bert McDole of Toledo and Mrs.
McDole is Ivan Wooda' stater. McDole was born at Chester
near Pomeroy and lived there unW about age 5. Understandably, McDole is Keith's idol. Keith is a sophomore at
Eastern High School and Is a member of tbe reserve football
team where he playa defensive safety. Ron McDole is in his
12th year of pro football. Ivan Woods Is a lineman lor the Ohio
Power Comj,any and resides In Cheater with his wife and four
chll~n. McDole's
mother was born and raised in the
'

PARIS (UP!)- Pea~e negotiators Henry A. Kissinger and
· le Due Tho of North Vietnam met for the third time this week
today. Both Kissinger and Tho smiled and looked relaxed, but
there was nq iridication they had made progress toward ending
the VIetnam war.
•
.The two sides started their meeting at 3 p. m. in a French
Communist party villa in Glfsur-Yvette, 13 miles south of Paris.
For the first time since the new round of bargaining started
Monday, the two Communist negotiators smiled broadly and
waved cbeerfully to newsmen as the.ir cars arrived at the heavily
guarded villa. Kissinger also dropped his previous grim look, and
MEMBERS OF THE BOARD of directors of the Citizens
(retiring board chairman), Mrs. Rose Reynolds; standing,
wore a broad smile.
National
Bank
in
Middleport
elected
Tuesday
are,
frr
nt,
I
to
Harold E. Hubbard, new president; Jay Hall, Jr., a new
Neither side has been willing
As in tbe past two days the
r •. PaulS. Smart, chairman; Dale Dutton, Rodney Downing
director; Bernard Fultz, vice president of the bank, and
negotiators did not meet at the to characterize the two previJames F. Arnold.
doorsteps to shake hands . ous meetings this week during
Kissinger and his aides opened which Kissirwer and Tho
the dOQr and walked inside the talked for 10\'z 'hours. But the
red-roofed, white-washed man- North Vietnamese Communist
sion without any formal wel- party newspaper Nban Dan
come.
said T\lll&amp;day, "There ill no sign
allowing one to state that the
Harold E. Hubbard was
talks might be fruitful. On the named new president of the
(Continued on page 16)
Citizens National Bank in
Middlepo.rt Tuesday.
Hubbard, an employe of the
bank the past 34 years,
replaces Paul M. Smart in the
position . Mr. Smart resigned . ·
Persons interesled in
as of Jan. I after 44 years
becoming emergency medical
service. However , he was
technicians (EMT) for emSheriff Robert c . Har- named chairman of the bank's
ployment with the Southeast tenbach's Dept. reported that board of directors Tuesday.
Ohio Emergency Medical four trailers were broken into Mr. Hubbard has been the
Service
(SEOEMS)
in at the Meigs mines . sites bank's vice president.
Pomeroy are Invited to attend Monday night or early
Stockholders met following ·
an organizational meeting for Tuesday.
the bank's closing Tuesday
the Pomeroy unit at the
All entries to the trailers afternoon and elected directors
Pomeroy Elementary School were made .by prying open including · Smart, Hubbard,
auditorium on W.ednesday. doors.
Rodney Downing, Bernard
Jan. 10 at 7:30 P· m.
One trailer owned by Power Fultz, Mrs. Rose Reynolds,
Donald
Diener,
ad- Constructors Co. IOI'ated on James F. Arnold, Dale Dutton
ministrator of Veterans county road one, Columbia and Jay Hall, Jr. Hall is a new
Memorial Hospital and Township, along the belt line, director. He is the son of Mr.
coordinator for the Pomeroy had between $600 and $1,000 and Mrs. Jay Hall, Sr; , and is
unit of the EMS has called the worth of tools taken.
owner of the Jaymar Coal Co.,
meeting so that all persons
Tbe Buchtel Steel Co. trailer Cheshire. He is married to the
interested in serving as fuU or at Mine No. 1 had two sets of former Marlene Lathey and
part-time EMTs for SEOEMS work clothing taken, the the couple . has four children,
may understand ground rules Williamson Shaft and Slope Mrs. SheUy Haskins and Terry,
for the G().hour training course. Co., Athens, at Mine No. 1 had Penny and Jack, at home.
The 3S4-page "Emergency dynamite, dynamite caps and
Besides advancing Hubbard
Victim Care" te1t to be used in ·powder taken, and the Han:a to the president's post and
tr~ining ~ill be distributed at . Engineering co. and the naming Smart chairman of the
.)
.
thiS
Genera1 An ay
1 tl cs• tra1er
'I on board, the directors elected
J meeting.
h St bl .
HAROLE E. HUBBARD, LEFT, was elected president of the Citizens National Bank in
osep
ru e, . ~tructor_ township road IS had three attorney-at-law Bernard Fultz
Middleport Tuesd.ay. Congratulating him is Pa!JI S. Smart, center, who retired as president the
fo~ the Pomeroy trallllllg class, pairs of boots, a raincoat, and a as vice president; Manning
· hrst of the year and Tuesday was elected chairman of tbe board of directors. Rodney Downing,
w1U attend an~ arrange for the set of keys to a carryall taken. Kioes , cashier and manager of
nght, retired as chairman of the board at the end of 1972 but will continue as a director.
ciaSl! , to begm on or about • The incidents are under the installment loan departinvestigation.
January 12·
ment; Gene Grate, assistant
vice president; Mrs . Lois
McElhinny, assistant cashier
and head bookkeeper, and
Mrs . Carolyn Thomas , Athens Savings &amp; Loan, Ohio Tire Center, Pomeroy Mo~r
Edward Durst as assistant
, cashier and assistant manager secretary for the Pomeroy Valley Publishing co., Company, Legar Monument
· ·
of the in~llment loan Chamber of Commerce, an- Columbia Gas of Ohio, Athens Works , General ')'elephone
nounced today that there are Messenger, Krogers, W.M.- Company, Stiffler's Moore's
along with other organizations, the Pomeroy Junior High department.
'
now 40 members of the p ..
0 , G. &amp; J . Auto p ar ts Co., Craw's .Sl!ak House.'
agencies and institutions.
School building.
As chairman of the board of
chamber for the 1972-73 year. Elberfelds.
·
RSVP offers the volunteer
She said that if the funding is directors, Mr. Smart succeeds
Members to date are Key Montgomery Ward , Nelreimbursement for out-of- forthcoming,the operation of a Rodney Downing who had
Realty,
Walter Grueser, son's . Drugs,
Teaford
pocket expenses such as meals, senior citizens center could resigned as chairma as of the
transportation to and from the probably· begiri about April 1. first of this year. He has 32 Pomeroy National Bank, Realty, Dr. R. E. Boice, M.D. ,
volunteer station, along with a She noted that for this program years service with the bank Columbus &amp; Southern Elec. The Meigs Inn, Cleland Realty,
$S,OOO accident Insurance approximately $7,000 would and is continuing on the board Co., Goessler's Jewelry, Davis- Sears Roebuck Co., Bill &amp; Lee's
Warner Insurance, Fanbers Music Shop, Swisher &amp; Lohse
policy · which covers the have to be raised ·locally in of directors.
Four defendants have been
volunteer to and from his order to secure state funds.
Mr .. Smart indicated that the Bank, ·Ben Franklin Store, Drugs, Economy Savings &amp;
· station,anddurlnganyactivity
A report on the December bank has had an "excellent Pon:&gt;eroy. Fabnc Shop, Land- Loan, Karr &amp; VanZandt Motor fined and two others forfeited
bonds in the court of Mid·
necessitated by his volunteer meeting with the Meigs County year." During 1972, a new mark, Ohio :ow~r Comp~ny, .Sales, C. E. Blakeslee, New
dleport Mayor John Zerkle.
service.
Commissioners was given. At · exterior ' was puiced on the Veterans Memonal Hospital, York Clothing House, Mei~s
Fined ·were James D.
Mrs. Thomas explained that that time a request was made upper portion of the bank
Walton, 37, Middleport, $10and
although the senior volunteers for the Meigs County Council structure and a new drivecosts,
resisting arrest; Harry
are not paid salaries, II'Ofking on Aging ,to share in th~ through banking facility was
R. Butcher, Pomeroy, $100and
in the volunteer capacity adds General Revenue Sharing completed.
costs and three days in jail,
to their personal joy and funds. The following week, the
Meigs County Court receipts fund, ·I5,Si3.56 ; ~umane driving whiler intoxicated;'
satisfaction . in the sen!je that . Commissioners vot~d. Mrs. 'ti,!:i"~''"~'""''"'''&lt;-'N•'•"•"·'"'''""'''e•&gt; in 1972 were $46,593.85 ac- society' $75.
Thomas L. Shaffer, 20,
they are contributing services Thomas reported, to allocate ,..•.•x·""'"»&gt;:=~····"···~'·''·····•·:·.·:·:·:·.·
cording to Bet\Y Hobstetter, For the year, 1,460 criminal Pomeroy, $150 and costs, three
which are real and imp()rtant. $4,600 toward the senior
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
deputy clerk. Receipts in cases were heard and 262 civil days in jail, driving while ir•.·
At a meeting of the Meigs ·citizens program, She also
Moderating temperatures December were $.3,6S8.40. ·
cases.
toxicated; and Jerry Stollll&gt;-·t,
County Council on Aging reported that permission has with highs in the %Os Fri4ay
Disbursements for the year
In December, disbursements 21, Middleport, $10 and costs,
Tuesday, . Mrs. Thomas, been given by the Meigs Local and 31s Sunday. Low• in the 1972 were as follows: fines to ,were,.fines to state, $1,552.20;
intoxication . Forfeiting bonds
reporting on the RSVP School District Board
teens. A chance ol snow state, $15,837.08; fees to sheriff, · fees to sheriff, $72; fines and
were James'A. Higgenbotham,
program, also disclosed steps Education to 'use the foi'J!l(!r Uurrles northeast Friday $1,168; fines and costs to costs to county : general fund,
39, Rim's Landing, W. · Va.,
being taken to secilre funding Junior High Building •' in- and Sa~Urday.
county:
general
fund, $1,213.92; law library . luna, $200, ~riving while intoxicated,
for a senior citizens center Pomeroy ·for a senior citizens • ·
$18,SI5.66; law library fund, $534; ~uto license and gas fund, and Lawrence C. ·Reubln, 24,
proba~ly to be established in center.
· ·
ow.:;::~:,~:~~:w..~ $7,484.53; auto license and gas $286,28.
Miami, Fla:, $30, Intoxication.

H ub
. bard

PomeroyEMT
·· class to meet

.

'· Chester area.

Jl"'l!~l!t':'&lt;''f?iio:::sol?,:e::·=:···:m-'•:•'.W.V~
•'•'"" -,, ,o,ro~,o, ,•,•,•.•,v.o;.o;.or.•;Q
·~:::ISlW~':ISl"
~" '
~-~···•~·
&gt;;&lt;;,~QQ?.~

this evening

heads;Citizens' Bank

4 Trailers
are robbed

ew.s.. in .Briefi ,·
By United Press Inlemalional
NEW YORK - A UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR who visited
Hanoi recently says the North Vietnamese have an ambivalent
attibJde towards American prisoners - decrying them as
"criminals" and "pirates" in public but showing no vengeance
against them personally. Telford Taylor, writing in The New
York Times today, also said he visited a POW camp bombed by
U.S. planes but found the damage "unimpressive" and said the
small group of prisoners selected for them to see by the Communists appeared in good health.
·
Taylor, a law professor at Columbia University and former
chief U. S. prosecutor at'the Nuernberg war trials, .visited North
VIetnam during the Christmas holidays with an antiwar group
that included folk singer Joan Baez. The press of North Vietnam,
Tylor said, called the captured U.S. fliers ''war criminals" and
"air pirates" and described with great pride the capturing of the
Americans.
·
But he said, there was" no attempt to rouse the populace
against tbe airmen as individuals and he said he heard of n,o
incidents of attempted lynching or assaults of the prisoners as
(Continued on page 16)

.l.onte
d
Program·director W a
Funding of a Meigs County
Retired Senior Volunteer
Program through·_ ACTION In
Washington, D. C. is expected
to be announced this month,
and applications are currently
being accepted for a program
dlrector.
'
·
Mrs. Elejlnor Thomas,
project director for the Meigs
County Council on Aging, asks
that applications for the
position of RsVP director be
submitted to Mrs. C. J. Struble,
Council president, 401 W. Main
S!., Pomeroy.
Qualifications needed in·
elude an ability to work with
the aging, some work leading
. to a college degree or the
eql,llvalent In experience, and
· experience In the supervision
ol groups, . committees and
ltidividuals.
, The program director must
be·available for full time work,
hive 1 driver's license and an
automobile available. Also to
be ' hired, once 'funding Is
"

'

confirmed will be a secretarybookkeeper .. and a . part-time
aide. Mrs. Thomas stresses
that this is an equal opportunity opening.
Salary and other information
on the program will be an·
nounced once the RSVJ' grant
is officially made to ·Meigs
County.
TheRetiredSeniorVolunteer
Program offers people over 60
years of age a recognized role
In the community and · a
meaningfUl llfe In retirement
ttirough volunteer service,
Mrs. Thomas explain$. Each
RSVP program Is planned,
organized and operated 0~ the
local level and there is no
educational requirement for
partiCipation. ·
. Volunteers 1 serve
in
organized approved programa
in schools, hospitals, courts,
libraries, day c&amp;re centers,
. schools for. t)le retarded,
villitation programs, nursing
homes and beaith departments

C of C memberships at 40

Four fined by

Mayor Zerkle .

Court's '72 receipts in

of

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