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                  <text>····., -:-

.

-

Hundreds ·of families in doubt

AMANDA ; PANDA
INSECf~ f-IAV~-A

. VARIETY OF SHAPt:S
AND 'WE16HTt5!

tN~TANC€,

FoR

WASHINGTON (UP!) Hundreds of American
families remained in doubt
tOOay about the fate of their
loved ones missing in
Southeast Asia.
Communist lists, provid~ in
Paris Saturday when a Vietnam cease-fire was signed, and
made public over the weekend
by the Defense [)epartment,
identified 555 U.S. servicemen
a8 captives and 55 as POWs
who had died in captivity.
This left unaccounted for
1,315 of the 1,925 Americans
who had been listed by the
Pentagon as imprisoned or
missing. For as many as 100 of
the men on the list of POWS
still alive, defense officials say,
freedom might come late this
week.
The National League of

. · COMf'ARE.

&amp;UTJEgFUES

~ul THEY AU.. t;HA~£
~Mt

CoMMON .TRAIJ5 •••

Families of
American
Prisoners and Missing in
Southeast Asia, the largest
organization of families 'of
POWs and missing, said in a
statement · its members "hope
and pray" there will be a
subsequent list. The statement
said "some of our worst fears
have now nfliterialized"
because there was no list of the
men captured in Laos, because
some known prisoners had
been declared dead, or because
na_mes were missing from the
lists.
Expect Full Accounting '
But league officers con·
eluded they did "not want to
sound pessimistic" because
they expected "as full and
complete an accounting as
possible."
A.discrepancy in the total

SIX!
VOL. XXV NO. 200

•

..

SAIGON (UPI) - Supervision · of the shaky Vietnam
truce bogged down before it
even got started today when
three planeloads ·of Hanoi and
Viet Cong officials staged sitins in their aircraft, refusing to
deplane until the Saigon government recognized them as
residents of South Vietnam.
While the sit-in delayed start
of truce supervision efforts, the
war itself raged on and the
Soigon Command reported 42d
separate battles and at least
371 battlefield deaths during
the first 22 hours of the cease·
f1re.
The first planeload of Viet
Cong, who consider themselves
citizens of South Vietnam,

•

EXACKlY

#I.JOf! ~
I

P.ICH LIFE·
TIME· [R;~

OURL.l'L
DEAL? '

Picture by Sam Nichols

m.

Derailed B&amp;O car blocked
State Route 2 on Sunday
J.

..

.

Railroad traffic
to resume at 6

CAPTAIN EASY
WHO WA'? IT~, ..THAT .DIMWIT

GECU~ITY. CHit;:f, 5TR'ONGFOOli/.,.;;,;.•
AT McKE:5 INDUS&gt;TRif!!S ~

- -:;;.r&lt;IP

WASHJNGTON(UPI)-Herelshowthefederaldollar
would be spent under the $268.7 billion budget sent to
:;~ Congress today by President Nil:on:
~
Hwnan resources (including education, health, Social
~ Security, wellare - 47 cents up 2 cents from the curreni
., budget).
!~~
National defense_ 30 cents (down 2 cents).
···

:,I..

;c:·.~r,:._

PT. PLEASANT - A ninecar derailment of a Baltimore
and Ohio Railroad freight train
at Salt Creek in Mason County
late Sunday afternoon blocked
one lane of State Route 2 and
tied up ,railroad traffic several
hours .
Work crews with special
equipment came from Grafton,
Parkersburg and Wheeling to
.the ~ce ne this morning. R. E.
Enderle , B&amp;O official of
Grafton, said the track should
be clear about 6 p. m. today.
Cause of the accident
· remained unknown. Extent of
damages had not been
determined. There were no
reports of injuries.
Train No. 104 ,was' enroute
from Hunting((ln to Parkersburg with 38 cars when the
incident occurred at ap·
proximately 4 p. m. The
engineer was W. R. Akers.
One boxcar blocked the high·
way . Most of the others, in·

Weather
Snow flurries, windy and
cold today, local ac·
cumulations of 1 to 3 inches
· additional northeast! Clearing
south and west tonight. U&gt;w 10
to 15. sunny south Tuesduy.
Highs In the upper 2tls north to
the mid 30s south.

eluding two tank cars, tilted
toward the hillside. Telephone
lines were damaged and fo r a
time there was con~ern that
high-powered electric cables
were exposed.
Officers from the Mason
County Sheriff's office, 'state
police, members of Civil
Defense and others were on the
scene in minutes to assist with
traffic and•other duties .
Police today ~redited the
local Civil Defense group with
an outstanding job in .the
emergency. Civil Defense
volunteers headed by Richard
Grinstead were on the scene all
night providing emergency
power for lights, etc.1 with
emergency generators
stationed in the CD vehicle.
These same volunteers also
assisted by directing traffic
since a fairly long stretch of the
highway was blocked with' the
rail car, and telephone poles
and lines..
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Marilyn Harper, Alice
Russell, John Ginther, Charles
Stanley, John Wilson, Paul
Washington, Darin _Drenner ,
Jasori Drenner and Lena
Hubbard.
SUNDAY DISCHARGE
cynthia Faulk .

..

SAIGON (UP!) -Despite a
cease-fire agreement, the Viet·
·nam War raged on today with
Saigon reporting 426 separate
battles and at least 371 hat·
tlefield deaths during the first
22 hours of a technical peace.
The number of clashes,
Saigon said, was higher than at
any time during the war itself.
No American casualties
were reported among the dead

::~

line on tax m" creases

;:;;
!!!(
····
!!!!
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - President Nixon today unveiled a
.. $268.7 billion "common sense" 'budget that included a sharp

:,·.

Other federal programs_ 6cents (down !cent).

!~

HERE IS WHERE TilE FEDERAL DOLLAR

!,:!,..

;:;:

:.!,:.~: come from under the Nixon budget:

·~·~

~;l&gt;&gt;

l,
~

::,
;.,
.•.1
::::

ld

·~~
~:

-~: .!,:
:&lt;·

cents).
Excise tax - 6 cents (down 1 cent).
Borrowing (deficitfinancing - 5cents) (down 5cents).
Tariffs, estate and gilt taxes, user charges and other
·
-'"'
m1sce11aneous govenuuent
rece1pts - 4 cents 1down 1
cent).

·&gt;·
l~~
::::
;:;:
·~=
'~o•
3&lt;

~x·,·~;

&gt;,'..,

:

wou

Individual income taxes -42 cents (up 4cents).
Corporate Income Tlll&lt;es - 14 cents (unchanged).
Soclallnsurancetaxes and contributions- 29 cents (up

3

•

,=.'.·.!,=.''.:.

::;~

for
The budget for the 1974 fiscal year-beginning July 1cut deeply
into "New Frontier" and "Great Society " programs of the past
two Democratic administrations, and aboljshed the Office of
Economic Opportunity, spearhead of the government's antipoverty effort.
There also were major cutbacks for farm programs and
housing, a modest increase for defense and the first increase in
space flight spending in seven years. .
In addition, the President urged a legislative spending ceiling
at $268.7 billion, and said if Congress violated his budget
guidelines; it could cause renewed inflation, higher taxes -or
both. Congress refused to impose a similar spending curb last

•

.,n~r

President's Problem
Nixon estimated that the government would spend $12.7 billion
more than it collects in the coming fiscal year. This is about Mil
the projected $24.8 billion deficit for fiscal 1973 .which Nixon
defended a year ago as "strong but necessary medicine" to
stimulate a sluggish economy.
But the economy is booming now, and the President's problem
is to avoid a new round of higher prices kicked off by a heavy
dose of federal spending.
With a fillger pointed squarely at Capitol Hill, Nixon said: "I
· will do everything in my power to avert the need for a tax increase, but I cannot do it alone. The cooperation of the Congress
in controlling spending is absolutely essential."
TEN CENTS "!do not believe the American people want higher taxes any
more than they want inflation," Nixon said. "I am proposing to
avoid
both higher taxes and inflation by holding spending in 1974
.i:!:?-"«=3:::::::-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-.::::::::::::!:~~;
and l975tono more than revenues would be at full employment."
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
White House Staff Cut
Highs Wednesday In the
The President unveiled no major new programs and indicated
30s and low 40s, lows In the that spending requests outside the budget would win approval
20s. Thursday and Friday only at the expense of an existing P,.ogam of equal.value.
highs In the 40s and low 50s,
As an example of his approach, Nixon pared 2,654 workers
and lows In the 30s and low from the White House payroll. Of these, 1,935 were employes of
40s. A chance of showers OEO, flagship of Lyndon Baines Johnson's "Great Society."
Wednesday and Thursday.
Johnson's war on poverty was not the only program in the area
of human resources to feel the President's knife of austerity.
Other casualties included:
-Nixon's own program for a $2,400 assistance stipend for
families bel9w the poverty leveL
- The "Depressed Areas" programs begun in the fi rst days of
the Kennedy administration.
- Funds for public libraries.
- Regional medical facilities and local mental health pro(Continued on page 8)
Adecrease in the natural gas
rate in Pomeroy only was
announced today by Columbia
Gas of Ohio, Inc.
The Meigs Marauder
Beginning March I, residents
Furthermore, a tie for third
of the community will pay two basketball team could give its place in league standings is at
and thirty-seven hundredths coach his biggest win ever stake. Athens, atG-3, and Meigs
cents less per thousand cubic Tuesday night at Meigs High at 5-4, could be knotted up at 6-4
feet for natural gas, or about 36 SchooL
in third place on a Meigs win .
In
the
six
years
Carl
Wolfe
cents a month to the average
Both clubs are 8-S overall.
customer who heats his home has coached the Marauders the first meeting of the
since
they
began
campaigning
with natural gas.
teams at Athens in December
The adjustment reflects in the Southeastern Ohio produced a 58·44 win for
refunds to Columbia Gas of League - the standings be· Athens. But that was before the
Ohio from suppliers, which are tween Meigs and Athens show: Marauders' Bill Chaney, 6-2
passed back to customers Cc.ach Charles McAfee 11 , center, and Mike Sayre, 6-0
through provisions of the fuel Coach Carl Wolfe, 0. Tuesday fqrward, began clicking.
cost clause in the community's . night at 7:30 the 12th game will
Mark Mace, a 6-2 junior
contract with the company. start. AMeigs victory could be forward, is leading the Athens
When a refund has been sweet for Wolfe, who has club with a 2!J.point per game
completely passed hack to resigned effective the end of average. The reserve game
customers after a year, the the cage season.
begins at 6 p.m. rate returns to the level it
would have been without the
refund.
The rate adjusttnent will
apply in 307 Ohio communities,
among which is Pomeroy.
CARPENTER - Eddie U&gt;u a number 'of yea rs at the
TWO CALLS MADE
The Pomeroy emergency Howery, 61 , widely known C9lumbia School in the Car·
squad answered a call at 6:35 teacher, farmer, and former U. penter area, and in more
a. m. Sunday to 6 Cave St. for · S. Army Intelligence officer, recent years at Southern Hig h
Elmer Bush. He was taken to died Sunday night at Veterans School in Racine where he
Veterans Memorial Hospital Memorial Hospital. He had taught French.
He is survived by_his wife,
and admitted as a medical been in failing health several
Pearl; four children, Holly,
patient. At 11 :14 p. m. , the years.
Mr
.
Howery
was
a
Helena
, Clara Shirley and
squad was called to Carpenter
for Eddie Lou Howery, who Lieutenant Colonel durin g Willa Deap; five step-children ;
was ill. He was taken to World War II and following the his mother, Mrs. Clara
Veterans Memorial Hospital war worked in the Pentagon. Howery, and a brother, Verlin,
where he died a short time He was a farmer . His family both of Carpenter. His father,
operated a store in Carpenter Shirley, preceded him in death.
later.
many years. He received his
The body is at the Bigony
master and Ph. D degrees at Funeral Home in Albany where
Ohio State University. He funeral arrangements are
tau~~~ school in Meigs County being made.

·:;::~;:::;;;;:~:;:;:::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::=====:::::::::::::::::!!!::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::;:;:;:;:;:;::~:::::::~

PHONE 992-2156

eventually won the battle of
wills after sta~inl( a 22-hour
sit-in that began after their
South Vietnamese C47 transport plane landed at Saigon's
Tan Son Nhut air base Sunday
afternoon. Saigon officials
today let the nine men off the
plane without making them fill
out immigration forms but
warned its decision did not
"constitute a precedent with
regard to other such
delegates."

by the plane to Tan Son Nhut
also refused to deplane in a
similar inunigration dispute.
The North Vietnamese and
Viet Cong officers, joined by
South Vietnamese and U.S.
officials, are part of a military
group that will work with the
International Commission for
Control and Supervision
(!CCS) -a four-nation body set
up under terms of the Vietnam
peace treaty to police a South
Vietnam cease-fire.

Today, two U.S . Air Force
C130 Hercules transport planes
became the first American
aircraft flown Into Hanoi since
1954, _but the 90 North Viet·
namese officers brought back

The ICCS, whose members
ar~ Canada, Poland, Hungary
and Indonesia , and the military
group both held meetings today
but details of their sessions
were not disclosed.

or wounded. The United States
still has 27,000 servicemen in
South Vietnam, but under the
terms of the peace treaty
signed Saturday in Paris, they
will leave within 60 days.
Military authorities said 200
Communist troops died in a
battle in the Central High)ands
about 215 miles north of Saigon
and another 153 Communists
died In a series of clashes
around six Central Coast
hamlets. Authorities said 16
South Vietnamese troops were
killed.
Among the Dead
Among the dead were two
South Korean troops, killed
Two
vehicles
were · when Communists shelled a
demolished but their drivers patrol attempting to remove a
apparently escaped serious roadblock about 240 miles
injury in an accident at the
intersection of Beech and Ash
Sts. in Middleport at 6:40p. m.
Sunday.
Middleport police said a
pickup truck driven by Steven
Spaulding, CoshoctQn, pulled
into the path' of a car driven by
Ricky Stobart, Middleport. By United Press International
"You walt and wait and wait
Spaulding was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for this moment. Then it comes
by the Middleport E·R squad, and the first feeling is that it's
treated for Injuries, and unreal."
Mrs. Virgi~ia Nix of Pepper
released. Stobart was treated
for minor injuries at the office
Air Force Major Hayden J.
of Dr. J. J. Davis .
Lockhart,
Springfield, Ohio,
Saturday night at 6:55 p. m.
the Middleport E·R squad and a graduate of Pt .
answered a call for the Pleasant Higb School, Is
Pomeroy squad on East Main . listed as one of the Vlelnam
St. where Mrs. Mae Hubbard, prisoners of war. Major
Syrcause, had taken ill. She Lockhart was one ollhe first
was removed· to Veterans Americans taken prisoner
Memorial Hospital. Middleport around 1965. His parents are
answered the 1 call because former residents of Pt.
·PomeroY's squad was at an Pleasant.
accident in the Cook's Gap Hill Pike, Ohio, must have shared'
area .
those feelings with countless
At 4:20 p. m. Sunday the other American families who
Middleport Fire Departtnent were notified durjpg the week·
extinguished a brush fire on end by the Pentagon that th~ir
McElhinny Hill in the Leading . sons and hUllbands would be
Creek area.

Vehicles
wrecked

~'.~ would permit holding

"

f~! agrl~~=~:::~~==~~~:t ~~=!~;!:=~~~~g, ~;~b~~~;~ ~~:;:~::~\~!~~n~i: ~~:~~; :.~;~;;eases

. l:i.
:

371 Battle dead
in 22-hour peace

A~' NOW,
1-PW'OOI.JT

. ..

£

Truce shaking

Life oif$.110

USTI*CAI.J
w:x.JLD FEED
DWELl.tf.J' ELVES 'IO'FO'A
TO W\IE A FULL Y'AR!!

~

en tine

MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 1973

A _ Da~ in .t he ·.
iT FIGGE.RS!."- A

~r,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;::;::::~;:::::;~:::::''':;;::~==~=~-~j Sharp spending cutback

•

~ 1913 "' ... '"· .....

·:.

et propose

Devoted To The lnteresL' Of The Meigs-Mason Area

'WALKING
'" STICI(. ·

SINGLE~

is working through diplomatic
channels and expects to
receive a list from Laos.
Because of this possibilityand because of discrepancies
between the exisiting Communist list and previous Pentagon
records-Pehtag~
officials
said 110 change will be made in
the old Defense Departtnent
listings of missing or captured
until the POWS are released,
all possible graves in Southeast
Asialiave been located, and the
returned prisioners are in·
terrogated to see what they can
tell about the fate of those
missing . This could take
months or even years to be
completed, officials said.
Families were notified by
military teams in person or by
telephone throughout the
(COntinued on Page S)

at y

LEGS~
'{ou't,L. A,lWA'/S FtNP

.

number listed as captured or
missing and the Communist
lisf was not unexpected,
considering that most of the
men dlsappeared under th(
extreme conditions of combat:
But the news was partiClilarly
hard for families which had
been led to believe their servicemen were alive or who
learned their servicemen had
died in prison.
The Pentagon said flatly that
"the list is incomplete," and
that more names are expecled
to be provided from Hanoi.
Department spokesman
Jerry W. Friedheim said all the
men listed were POWS in
North or South Vietnam and
that a promised list of
prisioners in Laos had not been
provided &amp;aturday.
But he said the United States

•

IF '{OU C.OUNT-11-\EIR.

I.JOW
MUCH IT COSTS

u

....-ommon sense

..

'

~

north of Saigon. 'l)ley died one
hour after the cease-fire came
into effect at 8 a.m. Sunday, (7
p.m. Saturday EST ). ·
Even as pagoda gongs and
church bells pealed In Saigon to
greet the truce; the war went
on with the South and North
accusing each other side of
violating the truce.
(In Hong Kong, the official
North Vietnamese news
agency said its ·own troops
were observing the cease.fire
while
South · Vietnam
"brazenly" violated it with
bombing, strafing and ground
attacks. It did not list the
number of violations but said
they occurred in at least five
provinces).
(Continued on page 8)

For the POW's family:

Gas rate
reduced

Big game Tuesday

Eddie Lou Howery, 61,
of Carpenter is dead

First, it seems unreal Absenteeism high
returning home from Southeast
Asian prisoner..,f-war camps.
" It wasn't a great surprise to
me," Mrs. Nix said Saturday
night after receiving the longawaited telephone call saying
her husband was on the POW
list supplied by North Vietnam.
"I knew -all along he was a
prisoner. I just wish they could
give me some idea as to when
he will be released."
Mrs. Nix, who teaches school
in Warrensville Heights near
Cleveland, was married for
only two months when her bus.'
band, Air Force Maj. Glenn
Cowan Nix, was shot down over
North Vietnam in 1966.
Since then she has boilght a
new home and .says "I'm
anxious for Gle!UI to see our
house ."
At least 13 other servicemen
from Ohio were listed as

.

'

POW's who are still alive who
will be home soon.
But the release of the lists
also brought grief.
The family of Navy Lt.
Cmdr. James J. Connell of New
Carlisle learned he had died in
captivity · Jan. 14, 1971, after
being a prisoner since July
1966.
And by a United Press Inter·
national count, at least 21 Ohio
·POW's or servicemen missing
in action were not accounted
for on the lists, leaving their
families still uncertain about
their fate.
Those besides Nix who will
be released Include:
Air Force Capt. Edward J.
Mechenbler of Dayton ; Marine
Lt. Col. Harlan Chapman 'of
Elyria; Navy Lt. Cmdr. Brad·
ley E. Smith of Lake Milton ;
(Continued on pa'ge 8)•

Absenteeism in the Meigs
Local School district today was
26 •pet. of the student body,
Di strict
Supt.
George
Hargraves said.
Due to snow and ice, school
buses did not run up Lincoln
Hill Rose Hill or the golf
'
course
hill.
However,
Hargarves said the number of
students involved in the three
buses not running would not
have been enough to raise the
percentage of absenteeism
from the 21.1 pet. of Friday to
Monday's 26. Also 20 teachers
were abseni. Substitutes were
in some posts and in others"
student teachers were filling
in .
In the Eastern district, an
increase in absenteeism was
also noted Monday. Last week
about 11 or 12 pet. of the

students was out. Monday 15
pel. of the Chesler Grade
school students were absent
while at the high school, ab·
senteeism was running about
17 pet. John Riebel, superin·
tendent, said all buses
operaied Monday morning.
Three teachers were absent
today.
At Tuppers Plains absenteeism was under 10 pet.,
and under 9 pet. at Riverview.
Classes were underway in
the Southern Local Scliool
District Monday. Absenteeism
in the high school Monday was
running about 10 pet. However,
classes throughout the district
were being dismissed Monday
afternoon for the first ParentTeacher Conferences to be held from 1 to 3:15p.m.

�..
'
3-The Dally Sent111ei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 29, 1973

2- The Dally Sentmel, M1ddle~rt-Pomeroy , 0 , Jan. 29, 1973

Helen Help

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

Mother Wants a Trial Marriage
Dear Helen
Am I an unnatural mother' I told my daughter last mght that
I'd rather she lived wtth her boyfriend for a year before they
made the final deciSIOn on marriage. She was shocked-not so
much at the 1dea, but at the fact that her parent suggested 1!
You see, the1r relat10nshtp1s not smooth. They don't have the
same goals she's amb1hous, he's a dreamer; she's not a mur::er,
he's the soctal type, both are very stubborn, and neither are
really that mature , though they're in thetr 20s
A year together would show them whether 1t's permanent II'
JUst romance that dtes wtth reality. Sure, breaking up is stiB
pamful but not as bad as divorce It's eas1er to acknowledge a
miStake when you haven't pledged those "till death do us part"
vows I'd guess 1t m1ght also he eas1er to adjust to each other if
you dtdn't feel trapped
I realize that many of my generation are appalled at "livetogethers," and of course I DO believe in marriage, but am I
ternble to suggest Utey make a trtal run first' After all, 1 know
there 's already sexual mvolvement - tl's the menial conflict
they should stra1ghten out before they marry. - SHOCKING
MOTHER

Dear Mother
I don't think tt's "unnatural" to hope your daughter wtll be
sure before she leaps into mamage But wouldn't boUt of you and
she be happier about thiS experunental arrangement tf tt had
some sort of legal status?
Seems to me tr1al hve-ms need more structure . order m
commitment than they personally have, not only to please the
elders but because most everyone operates better w1th certain
ground rules
ThiS ts why I still like the tdea of short term contract
mamages w1th easy-renewed prtvtleges or uncomplicated
dissolvement 1f the partms so choose After all, business partners
stgn contracts and pre-marriage 1s a senous busmess Why
should it be conduetect entirely on faith ?- H

+++

Dear Helen:
I wanted to take my fr1end to the movtes last night and she
refused to see the p1cture I chose because she sa1d the lead10g
man was a known homosexual and "He has no rtght playmg a
great lover (of women)." Then she went on about how hom06
should only play "gay" roles and there ought to be a law . .
I suggested that she's seen several known heterosexuals play
faggoty parts but she sa1d "That's dtfferenl, though they really
shouldn't because people get tdeas that they might be queer"
What do you say' - LEE
Dear Lee:
I say: your lady friend has some pretty queer ideas '
Ask her if she beheves or expects ALL actors to be what they
portray (murderers, thieves, spies, etc) and tf so, why aren't
most of them m Jail? - H.

.

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':=$W:!::~§.:::~~·:·:~$:W::WX.:t'~~

•

Thirty-lhtrd President
S Truman
(Second AdminiStration January 20, 1949-January 20, 1953)

DEWEY DEFEATS TRUMAN
Hat ry S rruman prolul&gt;ly '"" th e le.ISt ambttlous of .dl the U.S Pres1dents and the undefined
"S" m h1 s name could "el l h.lVc stood for "Spunk "
After finng Secret.try of Commerce Henry Wallace shortly hdo rc the 1948 prcs1dent1al election,
desp1tc the f&lt;lct that W.tlbce's su pport appeared to
be importan t to Iu s b1d tor re-clec tmn, Truman
wrote lm mothet , "Well, I had to fire Henry today,
and of course I h.ttcd to do It
Ch.trlte Ross (press
secret.~ry) said I'd shown I'd rather be right than
President, and I tnld hnn I'd r.1thcr be any thmg
than Prcs1dcnt. "
Truman was never happ1c1 than \1 hen makmg
tough decisions-THE BUCKS lOPS HERE read
the sign on hi s desk-.tnd he made one of ht s
toughest ones when he dectded to wm a term m
his ow n nght.
H e began by easmg '\rmy ChiCf of Staff Dwtght
Etsenhower out of that post and out of the natl!m.ll
spotlight He let it be known th at he cxpccaed to
be the Democratic nom1n ce for Prcstdent Ill 1948,
and he charged Sam Ray burn and Alben Barkley
Wtth handlmg the deta1ls at the Philadelphi a convention Truman won easily on the first ballot, and
Barkley got second place by Simply ask mg Truman's
permission to run for 1t

•

Television Log

Political pundits, public opmion polls and the
media were nearly unanimous in predicting
Truman's defeat.
The campa1gns of Truman and Dewey we re
almost d1ametric~lly different Newspapers described Dewey's campaign as "opulent," Truman's
as "threadbare." Dewey's pace was le1surely, his
mood aloof, wh1le Truman came on fast and folksy.
He "gave 'em hell" at.every "whistle-stop, " proudly
introducmg hts wtfe Bess as "the boss" and hts onl y
daughter Margaret as "my baby and the boss' boss" ,
Truman outdrew Dewey from start tn fimsh ,
and he also outpoll ed htm Nov. 2, 13,almng a plurality
of more than two mtllion popular votes ami 303
elector111 vote~ to Dewey's 189
En route from Independence to Washmgton,
where a crowd of 7 50,000 gave him a hero's welcome, P~estdel),t Truman stopped off at St Louis
long enough to pose for one of the most unusual
political photographs ever made a gnnnmg Truman
holdmg aloft a copy of the C htcago Tribune bearing
the banner headline DEWEY DEFE \ TS
TRUMAN.
The heart of ht s maugural address was h" fourpoint fore1gn policy program support of the Umted
Nat 1ons, contmuanon of the Marshall Plan, formanon of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and
the Ac t for International Development
In his first State of the Umon message of hiS
second term, Truman centered his atte ntton on
domes t1c affairs, termmg them a "m ust" program
to gtve every tnd1v1dual "a fair deal." Included in
the sweeping proposals were e ll il rights laws, price
control legtslatton, a seventy-five-cents-an-hour
mimmum wage law, repeal of the Taft-Hartley '\ct
and an extensiOn of Soc1al Secunry.
But the President was to find the Democratcontrolled 81 st Congress as reea lcttrant as the
Repu bhcan-controlled 80th, the result bemg continued support of hts foretgn polic1es but httle co nstructive actton on hts domestic program.
There were major setbacks m foretgn relatmns,
too, notably the loss of mamland China to the Commumsts, an mtens1ficat10n of the "cold war" with
Ru ssia and the outbreak of the Korean war in June,
1950 It was the bmer cntictsm of h.s decismn to
send Amen can sold1ers to fight m Korea-Truman
later called 1t " the most difficult dectston" of hts
Prcstdency-that plummeted the ~restdent's populanry ratmg to a rock bottom figure of 23% m a
November, 1951, Gallup Poll.
Harry S Truman's permanent mche m the presidential pantheon will be determmed largely by the
final evaluation of h1s unrelentmg efforts to preve nt
Commun1st domination of postwar F"urope and
As ta. Hi s success m Asia was limited but, under
the Marshall Plan, Amencan dollars and technology
ra1sed rampart after rampart agamst the flow of RusSian power into the devastated nations of Europe

1,400 fans see winners

gain 4-0 record with 6
players in dOuble digits

of Arabta" 6, 13, Here's Lucy 8, tO , B1rth &amp; Death of a Star"

20
9 30 - Dorls Day 10, 8, Book Beat20
10 00 - News 20. Bill Cosby 8, 10, An Amencan Fam1ly 33
11 · 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, IS.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 , Alan Kmg lnsfde Las Vegas 61, 13,
Movies "Unsi nkable Molly Brown" _B: "The Gun Hawk 10
1·00 - Focus On Columbus 4: News 13
1 30 - News 4

RIO GRANDE - Coach Art, Lanham's Rio
Grande College Redmen hit 12 cif 14 free throw attempts in the final 4:43 of play at Lyne Center
Saturday night enroute to an 85-78 Mid-Ohio Conference basketball triumph over defending
champion Urbana.
The vietory beforl) 1,400 fans strengthened Rio's
hold on undisputed first place in the conference. The
Redmen are now 4-0 in loop play. Rio upped its
season tnark to 7-9.
•
Dr. John Stanley's Blue Knights, 10-9 overall,
dropped to 2-2 in conference play.
,

TUESDAY, JAN. 30, 1973

6 00 - Sunnse Semtnar 4, Sacred Heart 10

6 15- Farm Report 13; Farmllme 10
,
6 25 - Paul Har~
6 30 - Columbus
ay 4; Btble Answers 8, Concern &amp; Com
ment 10. Fall~ or Today 13
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
6·55- Ta kP. FIVP fnr l1 fP li;i
7·00 - Today 3. 4, 15, CBS News8, IQ , Flmtstones 13
7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers a, Romper Room 6, Rocky &amp; Bullwmkle
13. Popeye 10
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13. Sesame 51 33.

Urbana held the upper hand
durmg the ftrst seven minutes
of play. Rio got Its first lead of
the mghtat 11;-14. After a seesaw battle, Rio led 37-35 at
halftime.
Urbana was able to knot the
counlat37-all at the slart of the
second half, but the VISitors
never regained the lead.
Bob Montgomery's jumper
from the wlng cut Rio's lead to
67-65 wtth five minutes
remaining. At this point, Rio
began slowing II down, forcing
Ute Kmghts to come out after
Ute ball.
Capt. Ron Lambert's two
chanty tosses upped R1o 's lead
to 6~ wlth 4:43 remaming.
Dale Thompson's bucket made
it 71-60 at the four minute
mark.
After a Blue Knight time out,
Bob Haughn's goal reduced
Rio's lead to 71-87. Steve
Bartram's two chanty lllsses
upped Rto's lead to four once
again.
Montgomery and M1ke
Rouse traded goals, then
Bartram hit two more charity
lllsses at the I: 48 mark to glve
Rio a 77-89 advantage.
Dave Poling's free throw
wlth 1:34 left gave Rio 11.!
biggest lead of the mghl, 711-89.
Bill" klkm'ilh 's' ~Ufl'e~ \pliln t
P!IIY.out Rlo'~Je,d"t9 78-72 wlth
1:11 remaining. II was Aikman's only points of Ute game
- he entered the contest With a
18-plus sconng average.
Dale Thompson hit two foul

LaSS ie 6

8·30 - Jack LaLanne 13 Romper Room a. New Zoo Revue 6
,· 00 - Paul Do xon 4, Phil Donahue 15, Concentration 6,
Fnendly Junct• on 10, Ben Casey 13, Capt Kangaroo B. AM
3

9·30 - ToTelltheTruth3 , Jeopardy6
,
10.00 - D1nah Shore 3, 15. Columbus Six Call•ng 6, Jokers W1ld
B. 10, D1ck Van Dyke 13
10 30 - Concentration 3, 15: Phil Donohue 4 Price Is R•ght B, 10,
Soltt Second t3

11 00 - Sale of the C~ntury 3, 15, Love American Style 6,
Gambit B. 10. Password 13, Elec. Co 20
11 30 - Hollywood Squares3, 4, 15, Love at L1le B. 10, Bew•tched
6, 13 , Sesame St. 20
12 00 - Jack•e Obl•nger 8. Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's 50-50
Club 4. .Password 6. News 10, 13
12 25- NBC News 3, 15
1 00 - News 3, All My Children 6, 13, Green Acres 10 Not for
Women Only 15, Secret Storm B
1 20- Fashion In Sewmg 3
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3. 4, 15. Let's Make A Deal 6, 13, As
The World Turns 8, 10
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15. Newlywed Game 13, Mike
Douglass 6, Gu•dlng Light 8, 10
2 30- Doctors3, 4, 15. Datmg Game 13, Edge of NighlB 10
3 00- Another World 3, 4, 15 . General Hospital 6, 13 , World
Press 20, Love Splendored Thmg B, 10
3 30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15 , One Life lo L1ve 6. 13:
Secret Storm 10. Magg •e &amp; The Beaul!lul Mach1ne 20 Merv
Grlffm 8
4· 00 - Mister Cartoon 3, Love American Style 13; Fl!nlslones 6,
Merv Griffin 4, Somerset 15 , Sesame St. 20. 33 Movie
"Drums Across the River " 10

30 - Petticoat Junction 3, I Love Lucy 6, G •ll• ~an's Island 8,
Andy Griffllh 15 , Dan•el Boone 13.
5 00 - Daniel Boone 6, Mr Rogers 20, 33, Dick Van Dyke 15.
4

Bonanza 3. 4.

30 - Elec Co 33 , Gomer Pyle 13 , Marshall Dillon 13,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Beverly Hil lbillies B.
5 55 - Earl Nlghtmgale 15
6 00- News 3, 4, B. 10. 13, 15, Truth or Con seq 6, Sesame St 20,
Around the Bend 33
5

6· 30 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15, I Dream of Jeannie 13, Growing

Hom Up 33
•
00 - Whafs My Lme 8, I' ve Got A Secret 13 , Elec Co 20,
Beat the Clock 4, News 6, 10. Untamed Wo•ld 13: TV Honor
Society 15
7 30- ThiS Is Your L•fe3 , Doctors on Call4 , To Tell the Truth
6. Price Is Right B. 10; Beat the Clock 13, RF D 20, Zoom 33
B 00 - Tmperatures R!Sing·6i 13, Maf!~~ ~~10.f ,\Wpk ~·~~ .
MO~e "Balltedf!'3,'4, 151 Ohio This week 0
1
B 30- Hawa l&lt;f1•&gt;!e 0 8, 10 , Bill Moyer's Jo ~Mtlw, 33, Movie•
"A Cold N1ghf s Dealh" 6, 13
9 00 - Behind lhe Lines 20. 33.
9 30- Black Journal20. 33 , Movie "Birds of Prey" B. 10
10 00- MarcusWelby MD 6, 13, News20, NBC Reports 3, 4,15
1

\ 'l

'

YOUR OLD _BAnERY
IS WORTH •8.00
WHEN YOU TRADE IT IN
ON A NEW DELCO
ENERGIZER I

I

NORTH
.A643
¥K4
+ K97
"'AK52
WFST (0)
EAST
.KQ9
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¥QJ1093
¥75
tQJ
t!086 53
... QJ7
... 10864
SOUTH
• 8752
¥A862
+A42
West

1¥

Delco Energi zers will give you the big burst
ot startmg power your car needs on cold
mornings A top-of-the-line Energtzer, for
example, delivers up to 3750 peak watts of
starting power in the f1r st few seconds of
starting even at zero degrees
Best of all, you can check th e crankmg
power an En erg 1zer can deltver because the
Peak Watts Rating ts molded right into the

0

Pass
Pass
Pas;;

North
Dble

East South
Pass I •

2•
4•

Pass
Pass

3•
Pass

Opemng lead-¥ Q
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald " How about some
submarme plays thts week'"
J1m " I guess you mean
where you lead a low card m
order to lose an early tnck."
Oswald "Today's subma·
rme play IS used so that
South can draw two rounds
of trumps and st11l keep con·
trot of the trump suit "
Jim "In spite of hts 14
h1gh card pomts , We s t
doesn 't have much of an
openmg btd. North elects to
double rather than b1d one

Today's
Almanac

By United Press International
Today is Monday, Jan. 29, \he
29th day of 1973 wiUt 336 to
follow.
The moon IS approachmg its
new
phase •
C:ai.Q...
The mormng stars are Venus,
Energizers are vacuum -sealed too, so you
Mars
and Jupiter
get all the power you pay for . Stop in and get
The evemng stars are Merthe Energizer that's right for your car
cury
and Saturn.
and right for your budget .
Those born on Utts date are
under the s1gn of Aquarms.
Enghsh-Amencan freedom
crusader Thomas Pa10e was
,, born Jan. 29, 1737
On Ut1s day in history·
In 1801, Kansas became the
34th state.
'
FRANK MILLS
In 1900, etght baseball teams
Mills Ashland Ser.
were organized as the Amencan League. They were Buffalo,
Chtcago, Cleveland, Detrott,
lndtanapolis, Kansas City, Mtlwaukee and Mmneapolis.
Ph. 992-7260
Ph. 992-2126
In 1936, Ty Cobb, Walter
Cor. Locust &amp; Beech
Middleport
Pomeroy
•
Johnson, Chnsty Mathewson,
308 E . Main
Babe Ruth and Honus Wagner
became the ftrst ftve men
elecled to the baseball Hall of
' -. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . .- .. . . . . . . .. -. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fame.

Delco

RECEIVE YOUR •8.00 TRAQE-IN

AT DEALERS LISTED BELOW:

Mills Ashland Service·

Pomeroy Motor Co.

5ponsored by G&amp;J A ut 0 Par t s Co.

1. '.

(~

II

·: ' ' • ,

"If

1-o.

t [\

Spot for the Submarine Play

"'9 3

ROGER DILLARD
Pomeroy Motor Co.

&gt; ('

WIN AT BRIDGE ,

Both vulnerable

A
Cure
For
The
mon
Cold!

~"!

e men atten

10

MONDAY, JAN. 29, 1973 ' '
5 oo - Take Five 5; Bonanza 3, 4, Dan 1eiBoone 6, HazelS, Mr
Rogers 20, 33, Dick Van Dyke 15
5 30 - Elec Co 33 , Gomer Pyle 13, Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ,
Marshall D11lon 15, Beverly Hillbillies 8
6 oo - News3, 4, 8, 10; TruthorConseq 6. Ne'Ns 13, 15, Around
the Bend 33, Sesame St. 20
,
6::i6-AiiC News 6, cBS "News 8, 10, lnslqht 33; I Dream of
Jeannie 13, News J, 4, 15
1 00 - Truth or Conseq 3. Beat the Clock 4; News 6, 10, Circus
13 , What's My L•ne 8: Saint 15 , Electric Co 20. Read Your
Way Up 33
1 30 - To Tell the Truth 6, Young Dr Kildare 80 Hollywood
Squares 4: Traff•c Court 10, Hodgepodge Lodge 20, EP,Isode
Action 33, Bobby Goldsboro 3, Movie "Cannibal Atlack" 13
7·45 - Ep.sode Acl•on 33
8 00 - Rowan &amp; Marlin's Laugh-In 3, 4, 15, Rookies 6: Gun·
, smoke 8, 10: College Basketball33 : H~lfet z Cancer! 20
'
·9 00 - Movie "Diary of A Mad Housewofe" 3, 4. 15; I Lawrence

no trump a n d eventually 11 00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 13, 15
South plays a four-spade 11 30- Johnny Carson 3. 4, 15. Honeymoon Suite 6, 13, Movie
contract. "
" The House That Screamed " B: Movie " Love and the
Frenchwoman'' 10
Oswald "A look at dum·
00 - Your Health 4, News 13
my shows South that he must 1130
- News4
lose two trumps and a dtamond He also must retam
trump control and be able'
to ruff two of h1s hearts m
dummy He doesn 't mmd
being overruffed by a man
w1th three trumps but he
can't afford an overruff by
a man with only two "
BY PAUL CRABTREE
Jtm "And, of course the
hand wtll collapse tf anyone
Thoughts while clean10g ll[l the car on a rath~r mild weekend
holds four trumps against afternoon, and makmg still one more attempt to remove that
h1m H1s play IS to win the "JAY" bumper st1cker:
heart lead m dummy and
I could kill the people at ABC who scheduled Shirley Booth's
submarme a low trump."
Oswald "After this start new show opposite CBS' lineup of smash-tnt comedies MISS
he wins whatever smt is re· Booth IS a cpable actress, but in !hat time slol,she's doomed ... I
turned , plays dummy's ace don't believe one-half of the Buckeye Rllllal Development
of trumps and now proceeds Council's report on growth patterns resulting from Ute Gavin
to c r o s s r u f f hearts and
clubs He loses another plant. They pretended the West Vtrgima side of the mer duln't
trump and a dtamond in the extst.
Pine needles are pure hell to get out of the carpeting they put
cool of the evenmg but
makes h1s 10 tr1cks along the in car floorboards ... Why did Paul Simon's creative talents
way. "
apparently dry up when he and Artte Garfunki;l split? He was the
(NEWSPAPER. ENTERPRISE ASSN )
most polished and socially-trenchant of the Now Generntion
wr1ters .. "Wait Till Your Father Gets Home" may not be the
most low-keyed cartoon show of all tune, but 11 comes close. Very
The b1ddmg has been
calm Sunday evening fare. right tune, fonnat and all ... Haven't
West North
East South heard Smedical report on JohMy Bench for several weeks. Js
14
that good or bad ' Gond, I hope .
Pass
1t
Pass
How on earth dtd the makers of this car ever expect anyone
You, South, hold
.AK54 ¥AQ63 t2 4KQJ07 to reach the lower level of the wmdshield instde, to clean it?
Parade Magazme IS comparmg the Osmond Brothers and the
What do you do now?
A-Reshain your impulse to Jackson Five to the Beatles. No way: they're entertainers, whtle
jump in no-trump or even to the Beatles were mnovators, changing the whole world of pop
jump at all and just bid one music ..
heart Your second best ~all is
I certamly wtsh I knew a household hint on how to remove
ODIC spade.
crayons
which have melted on the backrest behind the back seat
TODAY'S QUESTION
You do b1d one heart and of this car . Wonder if the Feels would let Pomeroy use its
your partner h1ds one spade revenue-sharing money on a complete renovation of Its riverWhat do you do now?
front? It could be a real showplace, but right now II•isn't-tO
Answer tomorrow
say the least ... ~as it just four years ago I wondered how many
Send S1 for JACOBY MODERN book variety shows we could take on TV? Now justa couple are left.
fo: "Wm at Bridge," (c/o tb11 newt· And Westerns? Only "Gunsmoke" remains. Now the question Is
peper), P0. Bor 419, Rod•o C1ly how many situation comedies with "relevance" we can tolerate.
Station, Ntw York, NY 10019.
Which one of the kids dectded the rear-6eal ashtray was an
ideal place to deposit bubblei!wll' ll's full of the stuff ..1They've
revived two ancient old TV shows, "Young Dr. Kildare," and
"You Asked for It " Why not two of m_y very early faVorites "I
Remember Mama," and "Down You Go"P ... My dad went to
some~g called a "nonnal schOol" once, and I never did kn~
SHOEMAKER OUT
what tt was. Is a "commumty college" the 5a111e thing? 1 ought to
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
find out.
1 •••
Jockey Bill Shoemaker, who
I never thought windshield wtpers were so ugly that car '
suffered a fracture of the
makers had to hide them, so you can't see what shape they're In
~nd joint of his right thumb
... I'll bet the word '"pressure" Is used at least 1,000,000 ~s !n vi
In a spill In Ute final race
describing the situation ·facing whoever replaces Roberto' ' 1
Friday at Santa Anita Park,
at .
was released Sunday frOm Clemente in rtght field for the Pirates ... The midday
the
new
Gallipolis
~ollday
Inn
could
teach
le&amp;89na
In
~llqll
~M
,I
California Hospital Medical
good. lllallJI~s. ~ sa delight In these days of sullen, ,desultory' ,
Center.
service ... I m not especially fond of &amp;tnday-mlll'ilinll JllOVies bjit ,
The 10jury will ·keep Shoe- those on WBNS refiect increasmgly good lute and quality ... •· ·
·
maker sidelined for about
Who jatnmed this half-e~ten lolllpop under the front sea~?, ' .\j
eight weeks, according to a
'
+++
~ IV f.t
hospital spokesman-moat of
ON TME TV DIAL: "Birth and Death of, a Sblr" (tile ' ' ,
the rest of the 75-day Santa
heavenly
kind) Is subject of a special, WOUB-TV at 9 •. Alan ,:
Anita meeUng, which endi
King has a special at 11:30, WHTN-TV ... and there's' Ma~- ,:,
~ru 7.
North Carolina A&amp;T basketball on WMUL-TV at 8.
'' 1

NBA Slandi!I!IS
By United Press lnlornallonal
E•stern Conference
Atlantic Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
Boston
~ 9 .816
•;,
New York
~2 12 .77B
Buffalo
16 35 314 25
Philadelphia ~ 49 .075 38
&lt;;entral Division
w. I. pel. g.b.
Baltimore
32 IB 6~
Atlanta
29 25 .537 5
Houston
20 31 .392 12112
Cleveland
1B 32 .360 14
Western Conference
Mtdwest Division
'
w. I. pel. g.b.
Milwaukee
11 14 .725
Chicago
31 19 .620 5112
KC-omaha
25 31 .4-46 Wh
Detroit
20 31 .392 17
Pacific Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
Los Angeles 39 11 .780
Golden State 32 18 .6.10 7
Phoenix
25 27 .481 15
Seattle
16 38 .296 25
Portland
13 39 .250 27
Sunday's Results
New York 96 Boston 93
Buffalo 101 Philadelphia 96
Chicago 110 Detroit 105
Balli more 102 Cleveland 93
Houston 116 Atlanta 108
Los Angeles 130 Sea lite 94
IOnly games scheduled)
Monday's Games

Golden State at New York
(Only game scheduled)
. ABA Slaodlngs
By United Press lnlernatlnal
East
w. I. pel. g.b.
39 17 .696
Carolina
Kentucky
35 19 .64B 3
Virginia
27 27 .500 11
New York
19 32 .373 17'12
Memphis
16 36 .308 21
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
Utah
36 18 607
Indiana
30 22 577 5
Denver
26 27 .491 9'1'
Dallas
19 33 365 15
San Diego
20 36 357 17
Sunday's Results

Memphis 127 Indiana 126
Denver 106 New York 77
Kentucky 11l Carolina 103
Dallas 128 San Diego 109
(Only games scheduled)
Monday's Games
VIrginia at Utah
(Only game scheduled)

I'

,

''

ho-

•

Coach Wayne White's
Symmes Valley VIkings took
wer sole possesaion of first
place 10 the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference Saturday
night wlth a ~I victory over
Hannan Trace.
The loss snapped a 13-game
wlnnlng streak for the Wlldcats
of Coach Paul DUion.
The Vikings are 8-1 m the
league and 8-4 overall while
Hannan Trace dropped to 8-2ln
league competition and 13-2
overall.
Three Wildcat players were
hampered by the flu. John
Lusher, 6-0 junior forward;
Mark Swain, 5-10 sophomore
and Terry Shaffer, 6-1 senior,
all were suffering from the flu.
Symmes Valley jumped Into
a 21-12 lead it the end of the
first period and were not
serioualy threatened unUI the
closing minutes of the third
period when the score was
knotted at 39-39.
Phil Robinson, 1;-10 sharpshooting guard, led the game

Nicklaus hanks $36,000 Crosby lnoney
' PEBBLE BEACH, Calif . television.
(UPI)-UOrvilleMoodyfeels
That forced a playoff with
a little down today over what Nicklaus and Ray Floyd,
happened to him m the windup another guy who hasn 't won
of the Crosby National Pro- much In the last four years,
Am, he can take solace In the • and guess who won it on the
fact that Jack Nicklaus feels first hole.
SQrry for him, too.
Nicklaus today Is wingmg his
Moody, a man who hasn't way home to Ohto-10 anwon anything worth men- nounce a new golf tournament
tioning in four years, or since for the fall schedule-w1th
he took the U.S. Open and the $36,000 of Bmg Crosby's money
World Series of Golf in 1989, while Moody is heading home
had the Crosby all but wrapped to Texas with only $16,650, the
up &amp;tnday until the final hole same amount Floyd won.
when be missed a little two-foot
N1cklaus and Floyd, playmg
putt with thousands watching ahead of Moody, fmished with
over hiS shoulder at Pebble one-under-par 71s, Jack
Beach and millions more on keeping himself alive With a

scorers wtth 21 points. Jamie
Lafon, the league's top point.
maker had 12 points whUe Jene
Myers scored 10 points.
Mike Caldwell, 6-6 senior
forward, led the Wildcats with
16 points. Swain and Rodney
Dunfee ltere the only others In
•double figures with 12 and 10
poinl.! respectively.
Symmes Valley saf!k 25 of 56

floor attempts for 44 pel. and
~x of 16 free throws. Hannan
Trace managed to hit 22 of 69
field goal attempts for 31.9 pet.
and seven of 17 charity tosses.
The Wtldcats managed to
grab only 35 rebounds. Don
Wells was the top rebounder
wlth 13.
The Vikings also took the
reset ve game, 57-41. Jones led
the winners with 14 points. Jeff
Wells topped Hannan Trace
wiUt 13
By United Press International
Hannan Trace will host
East
Kyger
Creek Tuesday.
Rutge~s 83 Columbia 7~
Army 67 Manhattan 60
Symmes Valley will play
Temple 19 Holy Cross 65
Fairland
Friday.
RIU 92 Fordham 79
HANNAN TRACE (51) Prov 87 Jcksnvl 84
Caldwell 7-1 ·15; Wells 31·7;
Conn. 104 Vermont 74
' Lusher 1·2,.; Dunfee 5-0 10;
Buffalo 98 Brown 87
Swain 6-0-12; Shafter 0·2·2 and
Cheyney 75 Shppnsba 42
Halley 0.1 ·1. Totals 22-7-51.
Wagner 60 Hofstra 62
DoWling 55 Marls! 42
SYMMES VALLEY (56) Corn 2 2·6, Jene Myers &gt;-U·IU;
Falrmnt 78 A/drsn·Brdds 56
Jaye Myers, 3· 1-7; Robinson 10.
Shepherd 69 Wheeling 48
1-21and Lafon 5-2-12. Toto Is 25Bluelld St. Btl W.Va. Tech 81
6-56.
WVa. St. 75 Concord 65
By Quarters:
M Harvey 90 salem 71
Hannan Trace 12 27 39 51
West Lib. Btl W.Va. Wslyn 60
Symmes Valley 21 31 44 56
Gannon 116 Buffalo St. 80
Albright 60 Moravian 56
Leb Val. 85 Swarthmore 72
Phlla Tex. 88 Susquhnna 58
Lagrange 75 West Ga. 73
Kings 88 lona 63
Catawba 75 High Pl. 60
Lycoming 91 Del. Val. 75
Pmbrke 51 72 All, Chris. 53
Pitt 63 Penn State 53
N C. A&amp; T-Ashvl79 Wrs Hll 7~
Clarion 60 Ind.-Po . 51
W. Car . 19 Grdnr Wbb 60
Gettys~70 Wstmnslr 60
Methdst 96 Lynchba 88
Waynes l17 Geneva 95
Aubrn 81 Vanderblll77
Villanva 9 St. Jos 12
So. Car. 86 Illinois 76
CW Post 53 Stny Brook 51
Ab. Chris 82 Ark. 51 70
Canlslus 78 Bos. Coli. 5I
Chattanooga 110 No. Ky . 72
Allghny 83 Crngle-MIIn 61
Va. Union 72 Wash&amp;Lee 70
Dicklnsn 76 Havrfr~ 57
Murray st. 99 w. Kr. 80
Wilkes U Juniata 67
•
Mldwes
PI Park 93 Behrend 53
UCLA 82 Notre [)jme 63
Kings 88 lona 63
Minn. 93 Mich. St. 78
Queens 74 Kings Pl. 71
Ohio
State 79 Purdue 73
FDU 56 St. Francis 54
Marquette 73 LOyola 54
Kings 82 Southhmpton 78
Indiana 79 Michigan 73
J.Jay 106 Stcktn St. 100
Kansas 9o Iowa 51 78
South
Ohio U 116 Bwlng Grn 60
Ma,y)and u No.Car 88
Augstna 84 Wheaton 67
Alabama 72 Tenn. 56
Eau Claire 61 Oshksh 59
N.C. St. 98 Furman 73
MI. Union 74 CAptl70
Ga. Sou. 102 Samford 93
Miami 68 Kent 56
So.Car.St. 54 Wolford 51
·Ohio St. 79 Purdue73
Georgia Tech 88 Duke 86
Heldlba 78 Denlsn 6&lt;
Rlchmnd 65 Citadel 63
Akron 65 lfoungstwn 69
Kentucky 86 LSlJ 71
Mllllkn 117 C.rltlge 64
Ga. St. 57 Fill. ~u. 54
l:astero Ill. 79 Qulnc\167
E. Carolina 69 VMI 43
Nlll'th Pk. 75 No. Central ~
Fla. 97 Old Doml~iot1 84
St. Fr~n . 74 COI'Icrdll M
W.Va. 61 ~.Wash. 60
Goal*i 69 Ind. Tech o59
Svnnh St 95 Albny &amp;1. ~

College Scores

clutch, 20-foot par putt on the
16th. Floyd headed to the press
room to tell newsmen of his
round while Ntcklaus siood
aro!Dld on the 18th green to
watch Moody
Then, it happened.
All Moody had to do to win
the tournament was make that
short putt, but he d1dn'l. So he
had to head for the 15th hole
with Nicklaus and Floyd to
decide Ute winner.
Moody put hiS second shot 15
feet from the pin on the parfour
hole, while Nicklaus got IIlStde
of hun and was only 12 or so
feet away. Floyd was in trouble
when hiS ·shot landed among

Hall's 25 leads Lancers to
.64-51 victory over Eastern
STEWART - Dan Hall
popped in 25 pomts and Jun
Schloss and Ron Springer
accounted for another 23 as
they led the Federal Hocking
Lancers past Eastern here
Saturday mght 64-51 in a nonleague game . It was the
Eagles' Sixth loss 10 12 starts.
The fii'st quarter was close,
endmg at 16-16. By halftune the
Lancers led 27-23, then broke tl
open the thU"d period to take a
18-pomt lead at 51-35.
High men for Eastern were
Steve Dill with 18 points and

WHA Slandtngs
By United Press lnlernatlonat
Eost
w. I. t. pis gf ga
New Eng 29 lB l 59 197 162
Cleve
29 lB l 59 114 132
NY
2~ 26 1 49 207 19B
Quebec 22 24 3 47 111 198
Philo
21 28 0 42 111 210
ottawa 19 28 3 41 17B 225
West
w. I. t. pis gf ga
Wlnlpg 29 21 3 62 195 167
Houston 26 18 4 56 188 162
71. '
, (""'
Mlnn
25 22 3 53 165 167
RIO GRANOE ' (151 - LosAng 22 24 4 48 174 175
Bartram 6-6&lt;•11 ;• Hart s.o. 10, Alberta 21 2~ 2 44 149 160
Thompson 3-5 11; Rouse 8 0 16, Chicago 16 32 1 33 151 189
Before more than 3,000
Lambert 3 5 11 , Poling 2·2·6,
Sunday's Rosulls
scream10g fans, Coach Carroll
Los Angeles 9 New York 2
Bollinger 6·0.12, Rose 0·2·2.
Stewart 0.0·0. Totals 33-19-15.
Winnipeg 5 ottawa 4
Hawhee 's Waverly Tigers
Score at hill : "
Houston 4 Chicago 3
fought
off a last-minute rally
Rio 37 Urbana 35.
Alberta 4 Philadelphia 2
by VISiting Portsmouth West to
down the Senators, 67-63, in the
new Tiger fteldhouse Saturday
night.

·Vikings knock
HT, 56-51

&amp; THIN6S

•

shots at the I. 04 mark, and
another with 42 seconds
remaining and tt was all over
for the defendmg champs.
Haughn's goal ~~ the buzzer
made the flll81 tally read 85-78.
Rio placed six men in double
ftgures, led bf Steve Bartram's
17points. Mike Rouse added 16,
Dan Bollinger 12, Dale
Thompson and Ron Lambert
11, and Doug Hart 10.
The Rj!dtnen hit 46 pet. from
the field, Urbana hlt42 pet. Rio
was 19 of 26 at the foul cll'cies,
the Kntghts were four of seven.
Rio plck&amp;! off 46 rebounds,
Urbana won that batUe with 56.
The Knights had 15 turnovers,
Riohadll
,
For Ute losers, Tim Gomes, a
!Hi freshman, pumped ln 26
po10ts. Ron Culp added 17 and
Bob Montgomery 16.
Rio will play a non-league tilt
at Georgetown Tuesday . The
Redmen return home Thursday for a non-league batUe
wtth Berea. Saturday, Rio will
host Malone College tn a
conference hatUe .
Box score of Saturday's
league triumph:
URBANA (71) - Aikman H
3, Goines 13 0.26, Culpl 8-1-17,
Crawford 3·0·6, Johnson 1·0-2.
Montgomery 8-0 16. Mead 0-2·
2. Haughn 3·0.6 TOTALS 37-4·

Pro Standings

ea

Tim Spencer w1th 16. Dill and
Tim Baum each pulled down
stx of the Eagles 33 rebounds.
They shot 37 pel. from the floor
and the charity line
Dan Hall's 25 pomts was Ute
dazzler for Federal Hocking on
eight held goals and nme free
throws. The Lancers h1t 56 pet.
of thetr free throws.
Coach Mark Smith's squad is
now 9-4 overall with a secure
hold on second place m the TtlValley league standings.
Bill Phillips' team now has a
8-2 record m the SVAC They

will lake on the BQbcal.! or
Kyger Creek on Fr1day
EASTERN - Spencer 3-1-7;
Duvall2-1-5; Dtll 8-2-18; Sheets
11-3-16; Atherton 0.2-2; McCoy 10.2; Bawn 0.1-1. Totals 22-7-51
FEDERAL HOCKING Schloss 5-2-12; Sllllth 1-2-4;
Sprtnger f&gt;.l-11; Daugherty 3-17; Hall 8-9-25 ; Hastings 0.2-2;
Meek 0.1-1; Jarvts 0.2·2. Totals
22-2().6.4 ,

Eastern
12 23 35 51
Federal Hockmg
I
12 27 51 61
Reserve Score: Eastern, 26,
Federal Hockmg, 40

Waverly posts

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL SCORES
By United
International
Saturday
Cleve Eas1Tech81 Cleve JFK

fr•••

73

Cleve. East 75 Cleve. Collin·
wood 72
Parma Valley Forge 64 Garfield Hghts 59
Brookside B4 Amherst 65
North Ridgeville 54 Wellington
53
Elyr10 70 Sandusky 32
Cleve John Adams 78
Lakewood St Ed. 55
Midpark 70 Rocky River 39
Cuyahoga Heights 64 Columbia
63
Cleve. CC 63 Bedford Chane! 57
Aurora 36 Garrettsville 35
Cleve. St Ignatius 74 Cleve.
Holy Name 60
Euclid 11 Brush 59
Parma Normandy 63 Cleve
Heights 46
Lakewood 45 Parma 41
Mansfield Senior 56 Marion
Hard1ng so
North Olmsted 74 Berea 55
Newbury 60 Chardon 56
, Twinsburg 100 Ravenna 45
Hawken School 65 Richmond
Hgts 63 12 of)
Painesville Riverside 69 Lake
Catholic 58
University School 67 Gilmour
Academy 56
Orrvll(e 78 Highland 56
Lucas 56 New London 54
Zanesvllle 72 Wheeling (W
· Va l 68
Llnsly (W Va l Institute 57
Mingo 53
Cadiz 80 Warwood (W Va ) 71
Wheeling Central 78 Bellaire
St John 55
Buckeye South 95 McMechen
Bishop Donahue (W Va 87
Claymont SO Coshocton 32
Riverview 45 West Holmes 42
Indian Valley South 46
Strasburg 45
Trl Valley 62 Philo 51
Fairless 71 Louisville 60
Akron Buchtel 69 Canton
McKinley 57
Canton Lehman 52 Glenwood 53
Western Reserve Academy 76
Canton Tlmken 67
Akron G!lrlleld 63 Alliance 52
Minerva 12 Carrollton 5~
Perry 6~ New Philadelphia 46
Jackson 54 Oakwood 53
North Canton Hoover 57
Marllngton 53
51 Thomas Aquinas 72 Wooster
65

Tuslaw 53 Tuscarawas Valley
41
sandy Valley 59 Lake ~7
Doylestown 64 Northwest 63
Brunnerdale 11 Carrollton St.
Edwards"
Akron St VIncent 62 Akron
East 61
Akron Ellett 76 K~nt Roosevell
74
.
North Central 80 Tlnora 52
Fayette 11 Montpelier 70
Fairview 11 Stryker 7$
Ll berty Canter 60 Holgate $8
Paulding ,!1 Ayenvlll- ss
bella 80 evergreen ,. (2 ot)
O.flanct 81 ctlina 76 •
Wpo&lt;iland (Ind.) a~ Anlwttp tz

•~•

,....,. I

on the year.
Kelly Shy led the losers wtUt
22 pomts B1U Maloy paced
Waverly wtth 22 markers
Shoemaker had 17.
Waverly hit 25 of 62 f1eld goal
attempts for 40 pel. and ~SSnk 17
of 22 free throws The Tigers
had 33 rebounds, led by Ed
Thompson's mne snags
West htl 22 of 59 from the
fteld for 37 pel., and Ute
Senators were 19 of 33 from Ute
foul hne. The losers had 30
rebounds. Shy pulled down IS
Tuesday, action reswnes m
the Southeastern Ohto League
Galhpohs is at Ironton,
Jackson at Waverly, Athens at
Metgs and Wellston at Logan.
Box score of the WaverlyWest tilt
PORTSMOUTH WEST 1631
- Arnette 6·0.12. Elmont 6·1
13; Shy 5-12-22; Sparks 4-614,
Payne I 02, TOTALS 22-19-63.
WAVERLY (67) - Maloy 9·
4-22: Oyer Q.Q.O, Thompson 6-4·
16, Shoemaker 5-7-17, Salyers
5 2·12, TOTALS 25-17-67.
By Quarters:
SEOAL ALL GAMES
West
13 17 12 21-63
TEAM
W L P OP Waverly
13 17 24 13-67
Waverly
12 0 906 648
Reserves - Waverly 50 West
Gallipolis
11 1 812 566 48
Fed-Hacking
9 4 729 752
Chesapeake
B 4 119 663
South Point
9 5 1000 B11 Ohio College Basketball Scores
Meigs
B 5, 805 794 By United Press International
Athens
8 5 730 668
saturday
Portsmouth
9 6 102B 1027 Dayton 82 DePaul (Ill ) 74
Logan
1 6 B47 BlO Ohio State 79 Purdue 73
Ironton
3 9 693 712 Ohio Unlv 86 Bowling Green 60
Jackson
2 ll 644 850 MI. Union 74 Cap1tal 70
Wellston
0 12 604 1019 Mlam I 68 Kent 56
Saturday's Results:
Heidelberg 7B Den ison 64
Waverly 67 Ports West 63
Akron 65 Youngstown 69
Fed Hocking 64 Eastern 51
Marleta 67 Baldwin Waf 65
Tuesday's Games:
Wooster 66 Kenyon 62
Gallipolis at Ironton
Toledo 70 West. Michigan 52
Athens at Meigs
Defiance ll1 Taylor !Ind.) B2
Jackson at Waverly
Wlttenbera 58 Ohio Notthern 43
Wellston at Logan
Rio Grande 85 Urbana 78
tedarvllle 70 Walsh 64 (ot)
Cintinnatl 110 Wm &amp;Mary 68
)
Hiram 79 Case Western 75
TAYLOR RELEASED
Oberlin
92 Thiel (Pa.l 54
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio Cleveland
St. 98 Marian lind )
State Umverslty basketball
73
coach Fred Taylor was St VIn centi Pa ) 91 Ashland 90
released Sunday afte~ spendmg 10 days ln Riverside
TRAII'(ING TRYOUTS
Hospttal for an undisclosed
CLEVELAND
(UP!) - The
ailment.
Taylor was admitted to the Cleveland Browns have 10vited
hospttal' Jan. 19, suffering three members of the Youngschest pains. His physicians town Hardhats football team to
said they determined the pams traimng camp tryouts at
were not related to a heart Htram College next summer
Tapped from the Midwest
ailment, but did not reveal
Football
League club were Bill
what caused the problem.
He is expecled to return to Portz of Geneva, Dave
his coaching duties in about a Richards of Akron and Frank
Dreier of Lancaster.
week.

The score was tied 12 limes
and the lead exchanged hands
141unes durmg the first half of
play.
Ohio's top-ranked Class AA
squad, after be10g held to a 1313 ftrsl period lie, and 30-30
halftime deadlock, erupted for
24 points m Ute third peruxl.
Waverly held a seemmgly
comforts hie 10 pomt lead with
four minutes remammg, but
lost the services of Mike Oyer,
Ed Thompson and Dave
Salyers via personals.
The Senators outscored the
Tigers 10-4 in the final minut~
of play, pulling wilhln two, 6563. John Shoemak~r was fouled
on purpose with seven seconds
left. The lanky junior guard htt
both ends of a one-and-one
sttualton to assure the Tigers
their 12th straight win agamst
no setbacks.
THe Senators dropped to 10-2

ThiS Week's
Oh1o Co liege
Basketball Schedule
By United Press lnternatoonal
Monday
Xav 1er at Marquette

(C1ncmnat1 Gardens)

situat10n.''

Ashland at Cheyney St IPa )
Wal sh at Steubenville
Tuesday
Baldwon Wallace at Akron

Nicklaus goes to Buffalo,
N.Y., tonight alter a stop m
Cincmnati to announce the
Ohto --Kmgs Island Tournament lor Oct 1-4, to receiVe
the Dunlop Athlete of the Year
award .

Kenyon at Denison

Heidel berg at otterbein

Oberlin af Wooster

Carnegie Mellon at Case West.
W1lberforc:e at Cedarville
R10 Grande at Georgetown

IKy )
Cumberlan IKy) at Wnght St
Wednesday

Knicks
led by
Frazier

Bowling Green at Toledo
Kent State at Ohio Un1vers1ty

Miami at Wesl Michigan
Dayton at C1nc1nnat1
Ph1l Text1le at Youngstown St
Bl uffton at Hanover lind I
Manella al Cap1tal
Mt Unoon at Ed•nboro St
IPa)
Oh•o Wesleyan at Wittenberg
Lmcoln (Mo.) at Central State
Defiance at Earlham (lnd )
Oh•o Northern at Fondlay
Hiram at John Carroll

By GARY KALE
UP! Sports Writer
"It'll be just one challenge
after another and we can't
afford to let down," acknowlC!Iges Walt Frazter
The New York Kmcks,
commg off back-to-hack week~nd victories .over. the-Boston
Celtlcs, tangle with the Rick
Barry-led Golden State Warriors tomghl, a tesm wtth the
ftflh best wlnnmg percentage
m the National Basketball Assoctation.
Frazier scored four points m
one second as New York edged
Boston, lll-108, Saturday night
and netted 12 points 10 the f10al
periOd Sunday as the Knicks
beat the Celbcs, 116-93 The twm
triumph was registered after
Boston won 10 straight games.
Boston, rallymg from a 17pomt def1clt early m the th1rd
quarter, closed to within one
po10t wtth less than a half
mmute remainmg as John
Havlicek Wielded a hot-banded
12 pomts m the last pertnd But
Don Chaney fouled Dean
Meminger !With eight secondi
left and the sub guard sank
both shots for the flll8l New
York winn10g margm.
Frazier led New York with 23
pomts, two less than Havlicek's
gam~igh 25.
In other Sunday action,
Clucago topped Detroit, 110105, Ballunore beat Cleveland,
102-93 , Buffalo defeated
Philadelphia, 101-96, Houston
clipped Atlanta, 116-108, and
Los Angeles trounced Seattle,
130-94.
Norm Van Lter scored 29
pomts and Chel Walker added
24 for the Bulls as they Widened
their Midwest Division margm
to 912 games over third.place
Kansas City-Omaha. Dave
Bmg netted 32 pomts for
Detroit before fouling out wtth
1:28 to play.
Baltimore won' tts 21st game
\II the last 'll as Elvm Hayes
scored 17 second-half po101.!
agamst Cleveland. He finished
With 2!1. Baltimore held a slim
5W3 halftime lead and went
ahead for good at 88-84 on Mike
Riordan's 12-foot jumper.

Malone at Urbana
Ohio Dom1 mcan at Wal sh

Taylor lind I at W1lmmgton
Thursday
W1sc M ilwaukee at Xav1er

Berea I Ky ) al R1o Grande
Friday
No games scheduled
Saturday
Oh•o State at WisconSin
M•aml at Bowling Green
West Moch at Kent State
Tol edo at Ohio Unlv
Cmclnnat1 at Houston

Dayton at Loyola 1111 )

Xav1er at Notre Dame

Cleveland Stale at Akron
Oberlm at Baldwm-Wal
Denison at Cap1tal
Heodelberg at Kenyon
Olterbem at Manetta
Wittenberg at Mt Union
Wooster at Musklngum
Ohio Wes at Rochester (N Y I
Anderson !Ind.) at Bluffton
Defiance at Manchester (lnd )
Hanover ( lnd ) at Fmdlay
Wilmington at Earlham ( lnd )
Allegneny ( Pa I at Case
Western

Manon ( lnd ) at Cecarville
Ashland at Point Par k
Ohio Northern at Wnght St
Steubenv ille al Gannon IPa )
Man an ( lnd ) at Central State
Hiram at Bethany (W. Va )
Malone at R1o Grande
Oh10 Dom at Youngstown St.
Urbana at Wilberforce
Walsh at Wheeling

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AT NOON

Palmer, who didn't win a
title last year, and Casper, who
hasn't won since the 1971
Ka1ser, were among the
casualties here. Palmer once
agam fa1led to make birdie
putts, at least six easy ones in
the second round, and f10ished
at 297, 15 strokes off the pace,
while Casper, who had a fourstroke lead after two-rounds,
wound up at 21rl
Dave Marr fmished fourth
285 and won $9,460, whtle Rod
Funseth and Lee Elder won
$6,930 for IIDlshmg at 28ti.
Casper and Iverson were al287
while Butch Baird, Lee Trevloo, HoWle Johnson and Gibby
Gilbert f1mshed at 288.

the spectators ringing the
green.
Floyd p1tched up but hts shot
only got as far as the edge of
the green. Moody was next and
his try for a birdie putt wound
up a couple of feet short Floyd
tr1ed agam and thts tune he ran
his shot past the pm by several
feet and was out of it
Now 1t was Ntcklaus' turn
He stood over Ute putt, the way
he does over most putts, hoed
up and let the club fly. The ball
fell in and it was all over.
As for Moody, Jack sa1d
"I stood on the 18th green
and watched Orville putt out,
and while I was a little excited
about getting another chance, I
felt sorry for Orvtlle. He hasn 'I
won anythmg m four years, but
the tournament ts over 72 holes
and you have to make all the
putts. I missed some easy ones
myself but Orville's mtss on 18
looks b1gger becall'le of Ute

THURS.) ~ EAST COURT ST.

4th&amp; Locust

992-5248

Middleport. 0-

!

,..

'1 .

�..
'
3-The Dally Sent111ei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 29, 1973

2- The Dally Sentmel, M1ddle~rt-Pomeroy , 0 , Jan. 29, 1973

Helen Help

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

Mother Wants a Trial Marriage
Dear Helen
Am I an unnatural mother' I told my daughter last mght that
I'd rather she lived wtth her boyfriend for a year before they
made the final deciSIOn on marriage. She was shocked-not so
much at the 1dea, but at the fact that her parent suggested 1!
You see, the1r relat10nshtp1s not smooth. They don't have the
same goals she's amb1hous, he's a dreamer; she's not a mur::er,
he's the soctal type, both are very stubborn, and neither are
really that mature , though they're in thetr 20s
A year together would show them whether 1t's permanent II'
JUst romance that dtes wtth reality. Sure, breaking up is stiB
pamful but not as bad as divorce It's eas1er to acknowledge a
miStake when you haven't pledged those "till death do us part"
vows I'd guess 1t m1ght also he eas1er to adjust to each other if
you dtdn't feel trapped
I realize that many of my generation are appalled at "livetogethers," and of course I DO believe in marriage, but am I
ternble to suggest Utey make a trtal run first' After all, 1 know
there 's already sexual mvolvement - tl's the menial conflict
they should stra1ghten out before they marry. - SHOCKING
MOTHER

Dear Mother
I don't think tt's "unnatural" to hope your daughter wtll be
sure before she leaps into mamage But wouldn't boUt of you and
she be happier about thiS experunental arrangement tf tt had
some sort of legal status?
Seems to me tr1al hve-ms need more structure . order m
commitment than they personally have, not only to please the
elders but because most everyone operates better w1th certain
ground rules
ThiS ts why I still like the tdea of short term contract
mamages w1th easy-renewed prtvtleges or uncomplicated
dissolvement 1f the partms so choose After all, business partners
stgn contracts and pre-marriage 1s a senous busmess Why
should it be conduetect entirely on faith ?- H

+++

Dear Helen:
I wanted to take my fr1end to the movtes last night and she
refused to see the p1cture I chose because she sa1d the lead10g
man was a known homosexual and "He has no rtght playmg a
great lover (of women)." Then she went on about how hom06
should only play "gay" roles and there ought to be a law . .
I suggested that she's seen several known heterosexuals play
faggoty parts but she sa1d "That's dtfferenl, though they really
shouldn't because people get tdeas that they might be queer"
What do you say' - LEE
Dear Lee:
I say: your lady friend has some pretty queer ideas '
Ask her if she beheves or expects ALL actors to be what they
portray (murderers, thieves, spies, etc) and tf so, why aren't
most of them m Jail? - H.

.

'

':=$W:!::~§.:::~~·:·:~$:W::WX.:t'~~

•

Thirty-lhtrd President
S Truman
(Second AdminiStration January 20, 1949-January 20, 1953)

DEWEY DEFEATS TRUMAN
Hat ry S rruman prolul&gt;ly '"" th e le.ISt ambttlous of .dl the U.S Pres1dents and the undefined
"S" m h1 s name could "el l h.lVc stood for "Spunk "
After finng Secret.try of Commerce Henry Wallace shortly hdo rc the 1948 prcs1dent1al election,
desp1tc the f&lt;lct that W.tlbce's su pport appeared to
be importan t to Iu s b1d tor re-clec tmn, Truman
wrote lm mothet , "Well, I had to fire Henry today,
and of course I h.ttcd to do It
Ch.trlte Ross (press
secret.~ry) said I'd shown I'd rather be right than
President, and I tnld hnn I'd r.1thcr be any thmg
than Prcs1dcnt. "
Truman was never happ1c1 than \1 hen makmg
tough decisions-THE BUCKS lOPS HERE read
the sign on hi s desk-.tnd he made one of ht s
toughest ones when he dectded to wm a term m
his ow n nght.
H e began by easmg '\rmy ChiCf of Staff Dwtght
Etsenhower out of that post and out of the natl!m.ll
spotlight He let it be known th at he cxpccaed to
be the Democratic nom1n ce for Prcstdent Ill 1948,
and he charged Sam Ray burn and Alben Barkley
Wtth handlmg the deta1ls at the Philadelphi a convention Truman won easily on the first ballot, and
Barkley got second place by Simply ask mg Truman's
permission to run for 1t

•

Television Log

Political pundits, public opmion polls and the
media were nearly unanimous in predicting
Truman's defeat.
The campa1gns of Truman and Dewey we re
almost d1ametric~lly different Newspapers described Dewey's campaign as "opulent," Truman's
as "threadbare." Dewey's pace was le1surely, his
mood aloof, wh1le Truman came on fast and folksy.
He "gave 'em hell" at.every "whistle-stop, " proudly
introducmg hts wtfe Bess as "the boss" and hts onl y
daughter Margaret as "my baby and the boss' boss" ,
Truman outdrew Dewey from start tn fimsh ,
and he also outpoll ed htm Nov. 2, 13,almng a plurality
of more than two mtllion popular votes ami 303
elector111 vote~ to Dewey's 189
En route from Independence to Washmgton,
where a crowd of 7 50,000 gave him a hero's welcome, P~estdel),t Truman stopped off at St Louis
long enough to pose for one of the most unusual
political photographs ever made a gnnnmg Truman
holdmg aloft a copy of the C htcago Tribune bearing
the banner headline DEWEY DEFE \ TS
TRUMAN.
The heart of ht s maugural address was h" fourpoint fore1gn policy program support of the Umted
Nat 1ons, contmuanon of the Marshall Plan, formanon of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and
the Ac t for International Development
In his first State of the Umon message of hiS
second term, Truman centered his atte ntton on
domes t1c affairs, termmg them a "m ust" program
to gtve every tnd1v1dual "a fair deal." Included in
the sweeping proposals were e ll il rights laws, price
control legtslatton, a seventy-five-cents-an-hour
mimmum wage law, repeal of the Taft-Hartley '\ct
and an extensiOn of Soc1al Secunry.
But the President was to find the Democratcontrolled 81 st Congress as reea lcttrant as the
Repu bhcan-controlled 80th, the result bemg continued support of hts foretgn polic1es but httle co nstructive actton on hts domestic program.
There were major setbacks m foretgn relatmns,
too, notably the loss of mamland China to the Commumsts, an mtens1ficat10n of the "cold war" with
Ru ssia and the outbreak of the Korean war in June,
1950 It was the bmer cntictsm of h.s decismn to
send Amen can sold1ers to fight m Korea-Truman
later called 1t " the most difficult dectston" of hts
Prcstdency-that plummeted the ~restdent's populanry ratmg to a rock bottom figure of 23% m a
November, 1951, Gallup Poll.
Harry S Truman's permanent mche m the presidential pantheon will be determmed largely by the
final evaluation of h1s unrelentmg efforts to preve nt
Commun1st domination of postwar F"urope and
As ta. Hi s success m Asia was limited but, under
the Marshall Plan, Amencan dollars and technology
ra1sed rampart after rampart agamst the flow of RusSian power into the devastated nations of Europe

1,400 fans see winners

gain 4-0 record with 6
players in dOuble digits

of Arabta" 6, 13, Here's Lucy 8, tO , B1rth &amp; Death of a Star"

20
9 30 - Dorls Day 10, 8, Book Beat20
10 00 - News 20. Bill Cosby 8, 10, An Amencan Fam1ly 33
11 · 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, IS.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 , Alan Kmg lnsfde Las Vegas 61, 13,
Movies "Unsi nkable Molly Brown" _B: "The Gun Hawk 10
1·00 - Focus On Columbus 4: News 13
1 30 - News 4

RIO GRANDE - Coach Art, Lanham's Rio
Grande College Redmen hit 12 cif 14 free throw attempts in the final 4:43 of play at Lyne Center
Saturday night enroute to an 85-78 Mid-Ohio Conference basketball triumph over defending
champion Urbana.
The vietory beforl) 1,400 fans strengthened Rio's
hold on undisputed first place in the conference. The
Redmen are now 4-0 in loop play. Rio upped its
season tnark to 7-9.
•
Dr. John Stanley's Blue Knights, 10-9 overall,
dropped to 2-2 in conference play.
,

TUESDAY, JAN. 30, 1973

6 00 - Sunnse Semtnar 4, Sacred Heart 10

6 15- Farm Report 13; Farmllme 10
,
6 25 - Paul Har~
6 30 - Columbus
ay 4; Btble Answers 8, Concern &amp; Com
ment 10. Fall~ or Today 13
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
6·55- Ta kP. FIVP fnr l1 fP li;i
7·00 - Today 3. 4, 15, CBS News8, IQ , Flmtstones 13
7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers a, Romper Room 6, Rocky &amp; Bullwmkle
13. Popeye 10
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13. Sesame 51 33.

Urbana held the upper hand
durmg the ftrst seven minutes
of play. Rio got Its first lead of
the mghtat 11;-14. After a seesaw battle, Rio led 37-35 at
halftime.
Urbana was able to knot the
counlat37-all at the slart of the
second half, but the VISitors
never regained the lead.
Bob Montgomery's jumper
from the wlng cut Rio's lead to
67-65 wtth five minutes
remaining. At this point, Rio
began slowing II down, forcing
Ute Kmghts to come out after
Ute ball.
Capt. Ron Lambert's two
chanty tosses upped R1o 's lead
to 6~ wlth 4:43 remaming.
Dale Thompson's bucket made
it 71-60 at the four minute
mark.
After a Blue Knight time out,
Bob Haughn's goal reduced
Rio's lead to 71-87. Steve
Bartram's two chanty lllsses
upped Rto's lead to four once
again.
Montgomery and M1ke
Rouse traded goals, then
Bartram hit two more charity
lllsses at the I: 48 mark to glve
Rio a 77-89 advantage.
Dave Poling's free throw
wlth 1:34 left gave Rio 11.!
biggest lead of the mghl, 711-89.
Bill" klkm'ilh 's' ~Ufl'e~ \pliln t
P!IIY.out Rlo'~Je,d"t9 78-72 wlth
1:11 remaining. II was Aikman's only points of Ute game
- he entered the contest With a
18-plus sconng average.
Dale Thompson hit two foul

LaSS ie 6

8·30 - Jack LaLanne 13 Romper Room a. New Zoo Revue 6
,· 00 - Paul Do xon 4, Phil Donahue 15, Concentration 6,
Fnendly Junct• on 10, Ben Casey 13, Capt Kangaroo B. AM
3

9·30 - ToTelltheTruth3 , Jeopardy6
,
10.00 - D1nah Shore 3, 15. Columbus Six Call•ng 6, Jokers W1ld
B. 10, D1ck Van Dyke 13
10 30 - Concentration 3, 15: Phil Donohue 4 Price Is R•ght B, 10,
Soltt Second t3

11 00 - Sale of the C~ntury 3, 15, Love American Style 6,
Gambit B. 10. Password 13, Elec. Co 20
11 30 - Hollywood Squares3, 4, 15, Love at L1le B. 10, Bew•tched
6, 13 , Sesame St. 20
12 00 - Jack•e Obl•nger 8. Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's 50-50
Club 4. .Password 6. News 10, 13
12 25- NBC News 3, 15
1 00 - News 3, All My Children 6, 13, Green Acres 10 Not for
Women Only 15, Secret Storm B
1 20- Fashion In Sewmg 3
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3. 4, 15. Let's Make A Deal 6, 13, As
The World Turns 8, 10
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15. Newlywed Game 13, Mike
Douglass 6, Gu•dlng Light 8, 10
2 30- Doctors3, 4, 15. Datmg Game 13, Edge of NighlB 10
3 00- Another World 3, 4, 15 . General Hospital 6, 13 , World
Press 20, Love Splendored Thmg B, 10
3 30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15 , One Life lo L1ve 6. 13:
Secret Storm 10. Magg •e &amp; The Beaul!lul Mach1ne 20 Merv
Grlffm 8
4· 00 - Mister Cartoon 3, Love American Style 13; Fl!nlslones 6,
Merv Griffin 4, Somerset 15 , Sesame St. 20. 33 Movie
"Drums Across the River " 10

30 - Petticoat Junction 3, I Love Lucy 6, G •ll• ~an's Island 8,
Andy Griffllh 15 , Dan•el Boone 13.
5 00 - Daniel Boone 6, Mr Rogers 20, 33, Dick Van Dyke 15.
4

Bonanza 3. 4.

30 - Elec Co 33 , Gomer Pyle 13 , Marshall Dillon 13,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Beverly Hil lbillies B.
5 55 - Earl Nlghtmgale 15
6 00- News 3, 4, B. 10. 13, 15, Truth or Con seq 6, Sesame St 20,
Around the Bend 33
5

6· 30 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15, I Dream of Jeannie 13, Growing

Hom Up 33
•
00 - Whafs My Lme 8, I' ve Got A Secret 13 , Elec Co 20,
Beat the Clock 4, News 6, 10. Untamed Wo•ld 13: TV Honor
Society 15
7 30- ThiS Is Your L•fe3 , Doctors on Call4 , To Tell the Truth
6. Price Is Right B. 10; Beat the Clock 13, RF D 20, Zoom 33
B 00 - Tmperatures R!Sing·6i 13, Maf!~~ ~~10.f ,\Wpk ~·~~ .
MO~e "Balltedf!'3,'4, 151 Ohio This week 0
1
B 30- Hawa l&lt;f1•&gt;!e 0 8, 10 , Bill Moyer's Jo ~Mtlw, 33, Movie•
"A Cold N1ghf s Dealh" 6, 13
9 00 - Behind lhe Lines 20. 33.
9 30- Black Journal20. 33 , Movie "Birds of Prey" B. 10
10 00- MarcusWelby MD 6, 13, News20, NBC Reports 3, 4,15
1

\ 'l

'

YOUR OLD _BAnERY
IS WORTH •8.00
WHEN YOU TRADE IT IN
ON A NEW DELCO
ENERGIZER I

I

NORTH
.A643
¥K4
+ K97
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WFST (0)
EAST
.KQ9
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¥75
tQJ
t!086 53
... QJ7
... 10864
SOUTH
• 8752
¥A862
+A42
West

1¥

Delco Energi zers will give you the big burst
ot startmg power your car needs on cold
mornings A top-of-the-line Energtzer, for
example, delivers up to 3750 peak watts of
starting power in the f1r st few seconds of
starting even at zero degrees
Best of all, you can check th e crankmg
power an En erg 1zer can deltver because the
Peak Watts Rating ts molded right into the

0

Pass
Pass
Pas;;

North
Dble

East South
Pass I •

2•
4•

Pass
Pass

3•
Pass

Opemng lead-¥ Q
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald " How about some
submarme plays thts week'"
J1m " I guess you mean
where you lead a low card m
order to lose an early tnck."
Oswald "Today's subma·
rme play IS used so that
South can draw two rounds
of trumps and st11l keep con·
trot of the trump suit "
Jim "In spite of hts 14
h1gh card pomts , We s t
doesn 't have much of an
openmg btd. North elects to
double rather than b1d one

Today's
Almanac

By United Press International
Today is Monday, Jan. 29, \he
29th day of 1973 wiUt 336 to
follow.
The moon IS approachmg its
new
phase •
C:ai.Q...
The mormng stars are Venus,
Energizers are vacuum -sealed too, so you
Mars
and Jupiter
get all the power you pay for . Stop in and get
The evemng stars are Merthe Energizer that's right for your car
cury
and Saturn.
and right for your budget .
Those born on Utts date are
under the s1gn of Aquarms.
Enghsh-Amencan freedom
crusader Thomas Pa10e was
,, born Jan. 29, 1737
On Ut1s day in history·
In 1801, Kansas became the
34th state.
'
FRANK MILLS
In 1900, etght baseball teams
Mills Ashland Ser.
were organized as the Amencan League. They were Buffalo,
Chtcago, Cleveland, Detrott,
lndtanapolis, Kansas City, Mtlwaukee and Mmneapolis.
Ph. 992-7260
Ph. 992-2126
In 1936, Ty Cobb, Walter
Cor. Locust &amp; Beech
Middleport
Pomeroy
•
Johnson, Chnsty Mathewson,
308 E . Main
Babe Ruth and Honus Wagner
became the ftrst ftve men
elecled to the baseball Hall of
' -. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . .- .. . . . . . . .. -. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fame.

Delco

RECEIVE YOUR •8.00 TRAQE-IN

AT DEALERS LISTED BELOW:

Mills Ashland Service·

Pomeroy Motor Co.

5ponsored by G&amp;J A ut 0 Par t s Co.

1. '.

(~

II

·: ' ' • ,

"If

1-o.

t [\

Spot for the Submarine Play

"'9 3

ROGER DILLARD
Pomeroy Motor Co.

&gt; ('

WIN AT BRIDGE ,

Both vulnerable

A
Cure
For
The
mon
Cold!

~"!

e men atten

10

MONDAY, JAN. 29, 1973 ' '
5 oo - Take Five 5; Bonanza 3, 4, Dan 1eiBoone 6, HazelS, Mr
Rogers 20, 33, Dick Van Dyke 15
5 30 - Elec Co 33 , Gomer Pyle 13, Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ,
Marshall D11lon 15, Beverly Hillbillies 8
6 oo - News3, 4, 8, 10; TruthorConseq 6. Ne'Ns 13, 15, Around
the Bend 33, Sesame St. 20
,
6::i6-AiiC News 6, cBS "News 8, 10, lnslqht 33; I Dream of
Jeannie 13, News J, 4, 15
1 00 - Truth or Conseq 3. Beat the Clock 4; News 6, 10, Circus
13 , What's My L•ne 8: Saint 15 , Electric Co 20. Read Your
Way Up 33
1 30 - To Tell the Truth 6, Young Dr Kildare 80 Hollywood
Squares 4: Traff•c Court 10, Hodgepodge Lodge 20, EP,Isode
Action 33, Bobby Goldsboro 3, Movie "Cannibal Atlack" 13
7·45 - Ep.sode Acl•on 33
8 00 - Rowan &amp; Marlin's Laugh-In 3, 4, 15, Rookies 6: Gun·
, smoke 8, 10: College Basketball33 : H~lfet z Cancer! 20
'
·9 00 - Movie "Diary of A Mad Housewofe" 3, 4. 15; I Lawrence

no trump a n d eventually 11 00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 13, 15
South plays a four-spade 11 30- Johnny Carson 3. 4, 15. Honeymoon Suite 6, 13, Movie
contract. "
" The House That Screamed " B: Movie " Love and the
Frenchwoman'' 10
Oswald "A look at dum·
00 - Your Health 4, News 13
my shows South that he must 1130
- News4
lose two trumps and a dtamond He also must retam
trump control and be able'
to ruff two of h1s hearts m
dummy He doesn 't mmd
being overruffed by a man
w1th three trumps but he
can't afford an overruff by
a man with only two "
BY PAUL CRABTREE
Jtm "And, of course the
hand wtll collapse tf anyone
Thoughts while clean10g ll[l the car on a rath~r mild weekend
holds four trumps against afternoon, and makmg still one more attempt to remove that
h1m H1s play IS to win the "JAY" bumper st1cker:
heart lead m dummy and
I could kill the people at ABC who scheduled Shirley Booth's
submarme a low trump."
Oswald "After this start new show opposite CBS' lineup of smash-tnt comedies MISS
he wins whatever smt is re· Booth IS a cpable actress, but in !hat time slol,she's doomed ... I
turned , plays dummy's ace don't believe one-half of the Buckeye Rllllal Development
of trumps and now proceeds Council's report on growth patterns resulting from Ute Gavin
to c r o s s r u f f hearts and
clubs He loses another plant. They pretended the West Vtrgima side of the mer duln't
trump and a dtamond in the extst.
Pine needles are pure hell to get out of the carpeting they put
cool of the evenmg but
makes h1s 10 tr1cks along the in car floorboards ... Why did Paul Simon's creative talents
way. "
apparently dry up when he and Artte Garfunki;l split? He was the
(NEWSPAPER. ENTERPRISE ASSN )
most polished and socially-trenchant of the Now Generntion
wr1ters .. "Wait Till Your Father Gets Home" may not be the
most low-keyed cartoon show of all tune, but 11 comes close. Very
The b1ddmg has been
calm Sunday evening fare. right tune, fonnat and all ... Haven't
West North
East South heard Smedical report on JohMy Bench for several weeks. Js
14
that good or bad ' Gond, I hope .
Pass
1t
Pass
How on earth dtd the makers of this car ever expect anyone
You, South, hold
.AK54 ¥AQ63 t2 4KQJ07 to reach the lower level of the wmdshield instde, to clean it?
Parade Magazme IS comparmg the Osmond Brothers and the
What do you do now?
A-Reshain your impulse to Jackson Five to the Beatles. No way: they're entertainers, whtle
jump in no-trump or even to the Beatles were mnovators, changing the whole world of pop
jump at all and just bid one music ..
heart Your second best ~all is
I certamly wtsh I knew a household hint on how to remove
ODIC spade.
crayons
which have melted on the backrest behind the back seat
TODAY'S QUESTION
You do b1d one heart and of this car . Wonder if the Feels would let Pomeroy use its
your partner h1ds one spade revenue-sharing money on a complete renovation of Its riverWhat do you do now?
front? It could be a real showplace, but right now II•isn't-tO
Answer tomorrow
say the least ... ~as it just four years ago I wondered how many
Send S1 for JACOBY MODERN book variety shows we could take on TV? Now justa couple are left.
fo: "Wm at Bridge," (c/o tb11 newt· And Westerns? Only "Gunsmoke" remains. Now the question Is
peper), P0. Bor 419, Rod•o C1ly how many situation comedies with "relevance" we can tolerate.
Station, Ntw York, NY 10019.
Which one of the kids dectded the rear-6eal ashtray was an
ideal place to deposit bubblei!wll' ll's full of the stuff ..1They've
revived two ancient old TV shows, "Young Dr. Kildare," and
"You Asked for It " Why not two of m_y very early faVorites "I
Remember Mama," and "Down You Go"P ... My dad went to
some~g called a "nonnal schOol" once, and I never did kn~
SHOEMAKER OUT
what tt was. Is a "commumty college" the 5a111e thing? 1 ought to
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
find out.
1 •••
Jockey Bill Shoemaker, who
I never thought windshield wtpers were so ugly that car '
suffered a fracture of the
makers had to hide them, so you can't see what shape they're In
~nd joint of his right thumb
... I'll bet the word '"pressure" Is used at least 1,000,000 ~s !n vi
In a spill In Ute final race
describing the situation ·facing whoever replaces Roberto' ' 1
Friday at Santa Anita Park,
at .
was released Sunday frOm Clemente in rtght field for the Pirates ... The midday
the
new
Gallipolis
~ollday
Inn
could
teach
le&amp;89na
In
~llqll
~M
,I
California Hospital Medical
good. lllallJI~s. ~ sa delight In these days of sullen, ,desultory' ,
Center.
service ... I m not especially fond of &amp;tnday-mlll'ilinll JllOVies bjit ,
The 10jury will ·keep Shoe- those on WBNS refiect increasmgly good lute and quality ... •· ·
·
maker sidelined for about
Who jatnmed this half-e~ten lolllpop under the front sea~?, ' .\j
eight weeks, according to a
'
+++
~ IV f.t
hospital spokesman-moat of
ON TME TV DIAL: "Birth and Death of, a Sblr" (tile ' ' ,
the rest of the 75-day Santa
heavenly
kind) Is subject of a special, WOUB-TV at 9 •. Alan ,:
Anita meeUng, which endi
King has a special at 11:30, WHTN-TV ... and there's' Ma~- ,:,
~ru 7.
North Carolina A&amp;T basketball on WMUL-TV at 8.
'' 1

NBA Slandi!I!IS
By United Press lnlornallonal
E•stern Conference
Atlantic Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
Boston
~ 9 .816
•;,
New York
~2 12 .77B
Buffalo
16 35 314 25
Philadelphia ~ 49 .075 38
&lt;;entral Division
w. I. pel. g.b.
Baltimore
32 IB 6~
Atlanta
29 25 .537 5
Houston
20 31 .392 12112
Cleveland
1B 32 .360 14
Western Conference
Mtdwest Division
'
w. I. pel. g.b.
Milwaukee
11 14 .725
Chicago
31 19 .620 5112
KC-omaha
25 31 .4-46 Wh
Detroit
20 31 .392 17
Pacific Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
Los Angeles 39 11 .780
Golden State 32 18 .6.10 7
Phoenix
25 27 .481 15
Seattle
16 38 .296 25
Portland
13 39 .250 27
Sunday's Results
New York 96 Boston 93
Buffalo 101 Philadelphia 96
Chicago 110 Detroit 105
Balli more 102 Cleveland 93
Houston 116 Atlanta 108
Los Angeles 130 Sea lite 94
IOnly games scheduled)
Monday's Games

Golden State at New York
(Only game scheduled)
. ABA Slaodlngs
By United Press lnlernatlnal
East
w. I. pel. g.b.
39 17 .696
Carolina
Kentucky
35 19 .64B 3
Virginia
27 27 .500 11
New York
19 32 .373 17'12
Memphis
16 36 .308 21
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
Utah
36 18 607
Indiana
30 22 577 5
Denver
26 27 .491 9'1'
Dallas
19 33 365 15
San Diego
20 36 357 17
Sunday's Results

Memphis 127 Indiana 126
Denver 106 New York 77
Kentucky 11l Carolina 103
Dallas 128 San Diego 109
(Only games scheduled)
Monday's Games
VIrginia at Utah
(Only game scheduled)

I'

,

''

ho-

•

Coach Wayne White's
Symmes Valley VIkings took
wer sole possesaion of first
place 10 the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference Saturday
night wlth a ~I victory over
Hannan Trace.
The loss snapped a 13-game
wlnnlng streak for the Wlldcats
of Coach Paul DUion.
The Vikings are 8-1 m the
league and 8-4 overall while
Hannan Trace dropped to 8-2ln
league competition and 13-2
overall.
Three Wildcat players were
hampered by the flu. John
Lusher, 6-0 junior forward;
Mark Swain, 5-10 sophomore
and Terry Shaffer, 6-1 senior,
all were suffering from the flu.
Symmes Valley jumped Into
a 21-12 lead it the end of the
first period and were not
serioualy threatened unUI the
closing minutes of the third
period when the score was
knotted at 39-39.
Phil Robinson, 1;-10 sharpshooting guard, led the game

Nicklaus hanks $36,000 Crosby lnoney
' PEBBLE BEACH, Calif . television.
(UPI)-UOrvilleMoodyfeels
That forced a playoff with
a little down today over what Nicklaus and Ray Floyd,
happened to him m the windup another guy who hasn 't won
of the Crosby National Pro- much In the last four years,
Am, he can take solace In the • and guess who won it on the
fact that Jack Nicklaus feels first hole.
SQrry for him, too.
Nicklaus today Is wingmg his
Moody, a man who hasn't way home to Ohto-10 anwon anything worth men- nounce a new golf tournament
tioning in four years, or since for the fall schedule-w1th
he took the U.S. Open and the $36,000 of Bmg Crosby's money
World Series of Golf in 1989, while Moody is heading home
had the Crosby all but wrapped to Texas with only $16,650, the
up &amp;tnday until the final hole same amount Floyd won.
when be missed a little two-foot
N1cklaus and Floyd, playmg
putt with thousands watching ahead of Moody, fmished with
over hiS shoulder at Pebble one-under-par 71s, Jack
Beach and millions more on keeping himself alive With a

scorers wtth 21 points. Jamie
Lafon, the league's top point.
maker had 12 points whUe Jene
Myers scored 10 points.
Mike Caldwell, 6-6 senior
forward, led the Wildcats with
16 points. Swain and Rodney
Dunfee ltere the only others In
•double figures with 12 and 10
poinl.! respectively.
Symmes Valley saf!k 25 of 56

floor attempts for 44 pel. and
~x of 16 free throws. Hannan
Trace managed to hit 22 of 69
field goal attempts for 31.9 pet.
and seven of 17 charity tosses.
The Wtldcats managed to
grab only 35 rebounds. Don
Wells was the top rebounder
wlth 13.
The Vikings also took the
reset ve game, 57-41. Jones led
the winners with 14 points. Jeff
Wells topped Hannan Trace
wiUt 13
By United Press International
Hannan Trace will host
East
Kyger
Creek Tuesday.
Rutge~s 83 Columbia 7~
Army 67 Manhattan 60
Symmes Valley will play
Temple 19 Holy Cross 65
Fairland
Friday.
RIU 92 Fordham 79
HANNAN TRACE (51) Prov 87 Jcksnvl 84
Caldwell 7-1 ·15; Wells 31·7;
Conn. 104 Vermont 74
' Lusher 1·2,.; Dunfee 5-0 10;
Buffalo 98 Brown 87
Swain 6-0-12; Shafter 0·2·2 and
Cheyney 75 Shppnsba 42
Halley 0.1 ·1. Totals 22-7-51.
Wagner 60 Hofstra 62
DoWling 55 Marls! 42
SYMMES VALLEY (56) Corn 2 2·6, Jene Myers &gt;-U·IU;
Falrmnt 78 A/drsn·Brdds 56
Jaye Myers, 3· 1-7; Robinson 10.
Shepherd 69 Wheeling 48
1-21and Lafon 5-2-12. Toto Is 25Bluelld St. Btl W.Va. Tech 81
6-56.
WVa. St. 75 Concord 65
By Quarters:
M Harvey 90 salem 71
Hannan Trace 12 27 39 51
West Lib. Btl W.Va. Wslyn 60
Symmes Valley 21 31 44 56
Gannon 116 Buffalo St. 80
Albright 60 Moravian 56
Leb Val. 85 Swarthmore 72
Phlla Tex. 88 Susquhnna 58
Lagrange 75 West Ga. 73
Kings 88 lona 63
Catawba 75 High Pl. 60
Lycoming 91 Del. Val. 75
Pmbrke 51 72 All, Chris. 53
Pitt 63 Penn State 53
N C. A&amp; T-Ashvl79 Wrs Hll 7~
Clarion 60 Ind.-Po . 51
W. Car . 19 Grdnr Wbb 60
Gettys~70 Wstmnslr 60
Methdst 96 Lynchba 88
Waynes l17 Geneva 95
Aubrn 81 Vanderblll77
Villanva 9 St. Jos 12
So. Car. 86 Illinois 76
CW Post 53 Stny Brook 51
Ab. Chris 82 Ark. 51 70
Canlslus 78 Bos. Coli. 5I
Chattanooga 110 No. Ky . 72
Allghny 83 Crngle-MIIn 61
Va. Union 72 Wash&amp;Lee 70
Dicklnsn 76 Havrfr~ 57
Murray st. 99 w. Kr. 80
Wilkes U Juniata 67
•
Mldwes
PI Park 93 Behrend 53
UCLA 82 Notre [)jme 63
Kings 88 lona 63
Minn. 93 Mich. St. 78
Queens 74 Kings Pl. 71
Ohio
State 79 Purdue 73
FDU 56 St. Francis 54
Marquette 73 LOyola 54
Kings 82 Southhmpton 78
Indiana 79 Michigan 73
J.Jay 106 Stcktn St. 100
Kansas 9o Iowa 51 78
South
Ohio U 116 Bwlng Grn 60
Ma,y)and u No.Car 88
Augstna 84 Wheaton 67
Alabama 72 Tenn. 56
Eau Claire 61 Oshksh 59
N.C. St. 98 Furman 73
MI. Union 74 CAptl70
Ga. Sou. 102 Samford 93
Miami 68 Kent 56
So.Car.St. 54 Wolford 51
·Ohio St. 79 Purdue73
Georgia Tech 88 Duke 86
Heldlba 78 Denlsn 6&lt;
Rlchmnd 65 Citadel 63
Akron 65 lfoungstwn 69
Kentucky 86 LSlJ 71
Mllllkn 117 C.rltlge 64
Ga. St. 57 Fill. ~u. 54
l:astero Ill. 79 Qulnc\167
E. Carolina 69 VMI 43
Nlll'th Pk. 75 No. Central ~
Fla. 97 Old Doml~iot1 84
St. Fr~n . 74 COI'Icrdll M
W.Va. 61 ~.Wash. 60
Goal*i 69 Ind. Tech o59
Svnnh St 95 Albny &amp;1. ~

College Scores

clutch, 20-foot par putt on the
16th. Floyd headed to the press
room to tell newsmen of his
round while Ntcklaus siood
aro!Dld on the 18th green to
watch Moody
Then, it happened.
All Moody had to do to win
the tournament was make that
short putt, but he d1dn'l. So he
had to head for the 15th hole
with Nicklaus and Floyd to
decide Ute winner.
Moody put hiS second shot 15
feet from the pin on the parfour
hole, while Nicklaus got IIlStde
of hun and was only 12 or so
feet away. Floyd was in trouble
when hiS ·shot landed among

Hall's 25 leads Lancers to
.64-51 victory over Eastern
STEWART - Dan Hall
popped in 25 pomts and Jun
Schloss and Ron Springer
accounted for another 23 as
they led the Federal Hocking
Lancers past Eastern here
Saturday mght 64-51 in a nonleague game . It was the
Eagles' Sixth loss 10 12 starts.
The fii'st quarter was close,
endmg at 16-16. By halftune the
Lancers led 27-23, then broke tl
open the thU"d period to take a
18-pomt lead at 51-35.
High men for Eastern were
Steve Dill with 18 points and

WHA Slandtngs
By United Press lnlernatlonat
Eost
w. I. t. pis gf ga
New Eng 29 lB l 59 197 162
Cleve
29 lB l 59 114 132
NY
2~ 26 1 49 207 19B
Quebec 22 24 3 47 111 198
Philo
21 28 0 42 111 210
ottawa 19 28 3 41 17B 225
West
w. I. t. pis gf ga
Wlnlpg 29 21 3 62 195 167
Houston 26 18 4 56 188 162
71. '
, (""'
Mlnn
25 22 3 53 165 167
RIO GRANOE ' (151 - LosAng 22 24 4 48 174 175
Bartram 6-6&lt;•11 ;• Hart s.o. 10, Alberta 21 2~ 2 44 149 160
Thompson 3-5 11; Rouse 8 0 16, Chicago 16 32 1 33 151 189
Before more than 3,000
Lambert 3 5 11 , Poling 2·2·6,
Sunday's Rosulls
scream10g fans, Coach Carroll
Los Angeles 9 New York 2
Bollinger 6·0.12, Rose 0·2·2.
Stewart 0.0·0. Totals 33-19-15.
Winnipeg 5 ottawa 4
Hawhee 's Waverly Tigers
Score at hill : "
Houston 4 Chicago 3
fought
off a last-minute rally
Rio 37 Urbana 35.
Alberta 4 Philadelphia 2
by VISiting Portsmouth West to
down the Senators, 67-63, in the
new Tiger fteldhouse Saturday
night.

·Vikings knock
HT, 56-51

&amp; THIN6S

•

shots at the I. 04 mark, and
another with 42 seconds
remaining and tt was all over
for the defendmg champs.
Haughn's goal ~~ the buzzer
made the flll81 tally read 85-78.
Rio placed six men in double
ftgures, led bf Steve Bartram's
17points. Mike Rouse added 16,
Dan Bollinger 12, Dale
Thompson and Ron Lambert
11, and Doug Hart 10.
The Rj!dtnen hit 46 pet. from
the field, Urbana hlt42 pet. Rio
was 19 of 26 at the foul cll'cies,
the Kntghts were four of seven.
Rio plck&amp;! off 46 rebounds,
Urbana won that batUe with 56.
The Knights had 15 turnovers,
Riohadll
,
For Ute losers, Tim Gomes, a
!Hi freshman, pumped ln 26
po10ts. Ron Culp added 17 and
Bob Montgomery 16.
Rio will play a non-league tilt
at Georgetown Tuesday . The
Redmen return home Thursday for a non-league batUe
wtth Berea. Saturday, Rio will
host Malone College tn a
conference hatUe .
Box score of Saturday's
league triumph:
URBANA (71) - Aikman H
3, Goines 13 0.26, Culpl 8-1-17,
Crawford 3·0·6, Johnson 1·0-2.
Montgomery 8-0 16. Mead 0-2·
2. Haughn 3·0.6 TOTALS 37-4·

Pro Standings

ea

Tim Spencer w1th 16. Dill and
Tim Baum each pulled down
stx of the Eagles 33 rebounds.
They shot 37 pel. from the floor
and the charity line
Dan Hall's 25 pomts was Ute
dazzler for Federal Hocking on
eight held goals and nme free
throws. The Lancers h1t 56 pet.
of thetr free throws.
Coach Mark Smith's squad is
now 9-4 overall with a secure
hold on second place m the TtlValley league standings.
Bill Phillips' team now has a
8-2 record m the SVAC They

will lake on the BQbcal.! or
Kyger Creek on Fr1day
EASTERN - Spencer 3-1-7;
Duvall2-1-5; Dtll 8-2-18; Sheets
11-3-16; Atherton 0.2-2; McCoy 10.2; Bawn 0.1-1. Totals 22-7-51
FEDERAL HOCKING Schloss 5-2-12; Sllllth 1-2-4;
Sprtnger f&gt;.l-11; Daugherty 3-17; Hall 8-9-25 ; Hastings 0.2-2;
Meek 0.1-1; Jarvts 0.2·2. Totals
22-2().6.4 ,

Eastern
12 23 35 51
Federal Hockmg
I
12 27 51 61
Reserve Score: Eastern, 26,
Federal Hockmg, 40

Waverly posts

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL SCORES
By United
International
Saturday
Cleve Eas1Tech81 Cleve JFK

fr•••

73

Cleve. East 75 Cleve. Collin·
wood 72
Parma Valley Forge 64 Garfield Hghts 59
Brookside B4 Amherst 65
North Ridgeville 54 Wellington
53
Elyr10 70 Sandusky 32
Cleve John Adams 78
Lakewood St Ed. 55
Midpark 70 Rocky River 39
Cuyahoga Heights 64 Columbia
63
Cleve. CC 63 Bedford Chane! 57
Aurora 36 Garrettsville 35
Cleve. St Ignatius 74 Cleve.
Holy Name 60
Euclid 11 Brush 59
Parma Normandy 63 Cleve
Heights 46
Lakewood 45 Parma 41
Mansfield Senior 56 Marion
Hard1ng so
North Olmsted 74 Berea 55
Newbury 60 Chardon 56
, Twinsburg 100 Ravenna 45
Hawken School 65 Richmond
Hgts 63 12 of)
Painesville Riverside 69 Lake
Catholic 58
University School 67 Gilmour
Academy 56
Orrvll(e 78 Highland 56
Lucas 56 New London 54
Zanesvllle 72 Wheeling (W
· Va l 68
Llnsly (W Va l Institute 57
Mingo 53
Cadiz 80 Warwood (W Va ) 71
Wheeling Central 78 Bellaire
St John 55
Buckeye South 95 McMechen
Bishop Donahue (W Va 87
Claymont SO Coshocton 32
Riverview 45 West Holmes 42
Indian Valley South 46
Strasburg 45
Trl Valley 62 Philo 51
Fairless 71 Louisville 60
Akron Buchtel 69 Canton
McKinley 57
Canton Lehman 52 Glenwood 53
Western Reserve Academy 76
Canton Tlmken 67
Akron G!lrlleld 63 Alliance 52
Minerva 12 Carrollton 5~
Perry 6~ New Philadelphia 46
Jackson 54 Oakwood 53
North Canton Hoover 57
Marllngton 53
51 Thomas Aquinas 72 Wooster
65

Tuslaw 53 Tuscarawas Valley
41
sandy Valley 59 Lake ~7
Doylestown 64 Northwest 63
Brunnerdale 11 Carrollton St.
Edwards"
Akron St VIncent 62 Akron
East 61
Akron Ellett 76 K~nt Roosevell
74
.
North Central 80 Tlnora 52
Fayette 11 Montpelier 70
Fairview 11 Stryker 7$
Ll berty Canter 60 Holgate $8
Paulding ,!1 Ayenvlll- ss
bella 80 evergreen ,. (2 ot)
O.flanct 81 ctlina 76 •
Wpo&lt;iland (Ind.) a~ Anlwttp tz

•~•

,....,. I

on the year.
Kelly Shy led the losers wtUt
22 pomts B1U Maloy paced
Waverly wtth 22 markers
Shoemaker had 17.
Waverly hit 25 of 62 f1eld goal
attempts for 40 pel. and ~SSnk 17
of 22 free throws The Tigers
had 33 rebounds, led by Ed
Thompson's mne snags
West htl 22 of 59 from the
fteld for 37 pel., and Ute
Senators were 19 of 33 from Ute
foul hne. The losers had 30
rebounds. Shy pulled down IS
Tuesday, action reswnes m
the Southeastern Ohto League
Galhpohs is at Ironton,
Jackson at Waverly, Athens at
Metgs and Wellston at Logan.
Box score of the WaverlyWest tilt
PORTSMOUTH WEST 1631
- Arnette 6·0.12. Elmont 6·1
13; Shy 5-12-22; Sparks 4-614,
Payne I 02, TOTALS 22-19-63.
WAVERLY (67) - Maloy 9·
4-22: Oyer Q.Q.O, Thompson 6-4·
16, Shoemaker 5-7-17, Salyers
5 2·12, TOTALS 25-17-67.
By Quarters:
SEOAL ALL GAMES
West
13 17 12 21-63
TEAM
W L P OP Waverly
13 17 24 13-67
Waverly
12 0 906 648
Reserves - Waverly 50 West
Gallipolis
11 1 812 566 48
Fed-Hacking
9 4 729 752
Chesapeake
B 4 119 663
South Point
9 5 1000 B11 Ohio College Basketball Scores
Meigs
B 5, 805 794 By United Press International
Athens
8 5 730 668
saturday
Portsmouth
9 6 102B 1027 Dayton 82 DePaul (Ill ) 74
Logan
1 6 B47 BlO Ohio State 79 Purdue 73
Ironton
3 9 693 712 Ohio Unlv 86 Bowling Green 60
Jackson
2 ll 644 850 MI. Union 74 Cap1tal 70
Wellston
0 12 604 1019 Mlam I 68 Kent 56
Saturday's Results:
Heidelberg 7B Den ison 64
Waverly 67 Ports West 63
Akron 65 Youngstown 69
Fed Hocking 64 Eastern 51
Marleta 67 Baldwin Waf 65
Tuesday's Games:
Wooster 66 Kenyon 62
Gallipolis at Ironton
Toledo 70 West. Michigan 52
Athens at Meigs
Defiance ll1 Taylor !Ind.) B2
Jackson at Waverly
Wlttenbera 58 Ohio Notthern 43
Wellston at Logan
Rio Grande 85 Urbana 78
tedarvllle 70 Walsh 64 (ot)
Cintinnatl 110 Wm &amp;Mary 68
)
Hiram 79 Case Western 75
TAYLOR RELEASED
Oberlin
92 Thiel (Pa.l 54
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio Cleveland
St. 98 Marian lind )
State Umverslty basketball
73
coach Fred Taylor was St VIn centi Pa ) 91 Ashland 90
released Sunday afte~ spendmg 10 days ln Riverside
TRAII'(ING TRYOUTS
Hospttal for an undisclosed
CLEVELAND
(UP!) - The
ailment.
Taylor was admitted to the Cleveland Browns have 10vited
hospttal' Jan. 19, suffering three members of the Youngschest pains. His physicians town Hardhats football team to
said they determined the pams traimng camp tryouts at
were not related to a heart Htram College next summer
Tapped from the Midwest
ailment, but did not reveal
Football
League club were Bill
what caused the problem.
He is expecled to return to Portz of Geneva, Dave
his coaching duties in about a Richards of Akron and Frank
Dreier of Lancaster.
week.

The score was tied 12 limes
and the lead exchanged hands
141unes durmg the first half of
play.
Ohio's top-ranked Class AA
squad, after be10g held to a 1313 ftrsl period lie, and 30-30
halftime deadlock, erupted for
24 points m Ute third peruxl.
Waverly held a seemmgly
comforts hie 10 pomt lead with
four minutes remammg, but
lost the services of Mike Oyer,
Ed Thompson and Dave
Salyers via personals.
The Senators outscored the
Tigers 10-4 in the final minut~
of play, pulling wilhln two, 6563. John Shoemak~r was fouled
on purpose with seven seconds
left. The lanky junior guard htt
both ends of a one-and-one
sttualton to assure the Tigers
their 12th straight win agamst
no setbacks.
THe Senators dropped to 10-2

ThiS Week's
Oh1o Co liege
Basketball Schedule
By United Press lnternatoonal
Monday
Xav 1er at Marquette

(C1ncmnat1 Gardens)

situat10n.''

Ashland at Cheyney St IPa )
Wal sh at Steubenville
Tuesday
Baldwon Wallace at Akron

Nicklaus goes to Buffalo,
N.Y., tonight alter a stop m
Cincmnati to announce the
Ohto --Kmgs Island Tournament lor Oct 1-4, to receiVe
the Dunlop Athlete of the Year
award .

Kenyon at Denison

Heidel berg at otterbein

Oberlin af Wooster

Carnegie Mellon at Case West.
W1lberforc:e at Cedarville
R10 Grande at Georgetown

IKy )
Cumberlan IKy) at Wnght St
Wednesday

Knicks
led by
Frazier

Bowling Green at Toledo
Kent State at Ohio Un1vers1ty

Miami at Wesl Michigan
Dayton at C1nc1nnat1
Ph1l Text1le at Youngstown St
Bl uffton at Hanover lind I
Manella al Cap1tal
Mt Unoon at Ed•nboro St
IPa)
Oh•o Wesleyan at Wittenberg
Lmcoln (Mo.) at Central State
Defiance at Earlham (lnd )
Oh•o Northern at Fondlay
Hiram at John Carroll

By GARY KALE
UP! Sports Writer
"It'll be just one challenge
after another and we can't
afford to let down," acknowlC!Iges Walt Frazter
The New York Kmcks,
commg off back-to-hack week~nd victories .over. the-Boston
Celtlcs, tangle with the Rick
Barry-led Golden State Warriors tomghl, a tesm wtth the
ftflh best wlnnmg percentage
m the National Basketball Assoctation.
Frazier scored four points m
one second as New York edged
Boston, lll-108, Saturday night
and netted 12 points 10 the f10al
periOd Sunday as the Knicks
beat the Celbcs, 116-93 The twm
triumph was registered after
Boston won 10 straight games.
Boston, rallymg from a 17pomt def1clt early m the th1rd
quarter, closed to within one
po10t wtth less than a half
mmute remainmg as John
Havlicek Wielded a hot-banded
12 pomts m the last pertnd But
Don Chaney fouled Dean
Meminger !With eight secondi
left and the sub guard sank
both shots for the flll8l New
York winn10g margm.
Frazier led New York with 23
pomts, two less than Havlicek's
gam~igh 25.
In other Sunday action,
Clucago topped Detroit, 110105, Ballunore beat Cleveland,
102-93 , Buffalo defeated
Philadelphia, 101-96, Houston
clipped Atlanta, 116-108, and
Los Angeles trounced Seattle,
130-94.
Norm Van Lter scored 29
pomts and Chel Walker added
24 for the Bulls as they Widened
their Midwest Division margm
to 912 games over third.place
Kansas City-Omaha. Dave
Bmg netted 32 pomts for
Detroit before fouling out wtth
1:28 to play.
Baltimore won' tts 21st game
\II the last 'll as Elvm Hayes
scored 17 second-half po101.!
agamst Cleveland. He finished
With 2!1. Baltimore held a slim
5W3 halftime lead and went
ahead for good at 88-84 on Mike
Riordan's 12-foot jumper.

Malone at Urbana
Ohio Dom1 mcan at Wal sh

Taylor lind I at W1lmmgton
Thursday
W1sc M ilwaukee at Xav1er

Berea I Ky ) al R1o Grande
Friday
No games scheduled
Saturday
Oh•o State at WisconSin
M•aml at Bowling Green
West Moch at Kent State
Tol edo at Ohio Unlv
Cmclnnat1 at Houston

Dayton at Loyola 1111 )

Xav1er at Notre Dame

Cleveland Stale at Akron
Oberlm at Baldwm-Wal
Denison at Cap1tal
Heodelberg at Kenyon
Olterbem at Manetta
Wittenberg at Mt Union
Wooster at Musklngum
Ohio Wes at Rochester (N Y I
Anderson !Ind.) at Bluffton
Defiance at Manchester (lnd )
Hanover ( lnd ) at Fmdlay
Wilmington at Earlham ( lnd )
Allegneny ( Pa I at Case
Western

Manon ( lnd ) at Cecarville
Ashland at Point Par k
Ohio Northern at Wnght St
Steubenv ille al Gannon IPa )
Man an ( lnd ) at Central State
Hiram at Bethany (W. Va )
Malone at R1o Grande
Oh10 Dom at Youngstown St.
Urbana at Wilberforce
Walsh at Wheeling

Your
Insurance

Agent

Polley IS
tattored to needs.

Whether you want auto, life
or homeowners insur ance,
we w1l l design a pol1cy to f1 t
your Indivi dual requ 1re
ments
Discuss your
specific needs w1th us

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114 Court Sf
Pomeroy

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OPTOMETRIST

OFFICE HbURS ~:30 T·o 12, 2 TO s (CLOSE
AT NOON

Palmer, who didn't win a
title last year, and Casper, who
hasn't won since the 1971
Ka1ser, were among the
casualties here. Palmer once
agam fa1led to make birdie
putts, at least six easy ones in
the second round, and f10ished
at 297, 15 strokes off the pace,
while Casper, who had a fourstroke lead after two-rounds,
wound up at 21rl
Dave Marr fmished fourth
285 and won $9,460, whtle Rod
Funseth and Lee Elder won
$6,930 for IIDlshmg at 28ti.
Casper and Iverson were al287
while Butch Baird, Lee Trevloo, HoWle Johnson and Gibby
Gilbert f1mshed at 288.

the spectators ringing the
green.
Floyd p1tched up but hts shot
only got as far as the edge of
the green. Moody was next and
his try for a birdie putt wound
up a couple of feet short Floyd
tr1ed agam and thts tune he ran
his shot past the pm by several
feet and was out of it
Now 1t was Ntcklaus' turn
He stood over Ute putt, the way
he does over most putts, hoed
up and let the club fly. The ball
fell in and it was all over.
As for Moody, Jack sa1d
"I stood on the 18th green
and watched Orville putt out,
and while I was a little excited
about getting another chance, I
felt sorry for Orvtlle. He hasn 'I
won anythmg m four years, but
the tournament ts over 72 holes
and you have to make all the
putts. I missed some easy ones
myself but Orville's mtss on 18
looks b1gger becall'le of Ute

THURS.) ~ EAST COURT ST.

4th&amp; Locust

992-5248

Middleport. 0-

!

,..

'1 .

�..,

.. ..-

-

'

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-POOJeroy, 0. , Jan. 29, 1973

•

1";:.,-.;-;•.:;:;::o;;;:;•,•;•;•.:~;o;&gt;;'-;:;•;.;.;o;o;o•o;o;o0.-~;:;:&gt;:.0...N.'Ato.w.._.:.•,•..!oX•'I'o"h~'.'o'l'6"b".JU~.'......_.,,,
• • • ' -'' 0 • o •• • • no o"t'o • ·~o:-".O:o; ·'· ,y.v.«W~•,-,•;.y. o'i!l..... i!ifo'o'.-.-o-.VNO"i"N~

'.o;; .&lt;;:•.•.•

x:

~

Today's

American ·families overjoyed, or stricken

~

.

i
;,

I

Sport Pa~llde

'j'

' The O,.Uy Sen~inel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 29, 1973
5,_

Gift
sent
to
·
.
missionary
in
Africa
.

'

' ~
'
'·A birthday.gift of $25 will be

.
-'~ sent !0 Mia Arlene Spurlock, a

They said he had appel!red in silanti, Mich., whose son wu
Stack said he learned later
By H.J. HEILER
news of their kin, not on the list · anything." .
of those coming home, would. In Memphis, Tenn., Clay the list was not complete and ptcture.s released by North reported alive, summe!l·up the
United Press International
A knock at the door or a surface.
Stacks did not know what to that his son, missing since his Vietnamese shortly after )te gratitude of those famllies ~
helicopter· was shot down in wasshotdownNovember,1967. were the recipients Iof gi!C!JI
Won't Give Up
believe.
?~ strident jangling of the teleBy MILTON RICHMAN
"We hope there'll be a news.
~ phone this weekend were
"I'm not going to give up,''
"A survival officer came to 1968, was still unaccounted for.
UPI Sports ~ltor
"Praise the Lord," she sa14.
~ omens of joy or tragedy for said Henry Fors, Puyallup, my door at 2:30 this morning
Mr . and Mrs. Walter Estes,, supplementary 'list coming,"
NEW YORK (UPI)- Billy Martin never goes along with the familie.s of prisoners of war or Wash, when told his missing and said our son was not on the Williamston, Mich., were per- Estes said. "But we don't know
of those missing in action.
son, Gary, was not listed as a list,'' Clay said Sunday. "He plexed because the name of if there is such a thing
tide, he always swims against it .
·
For some the calls from the prisoner. "I'd like proof of led us to believe the list was their son, Navy U . Walter coming."
Now guess what?
Mrs. Virginia Werner, YpEstes Jr., was 'not on the list.
Pentagon or visits by military death-a gravesite,dog tags or final."
He's doing the same thing again.
Mr. Edy Educator's sche~
'
Every?OOy you talk with says how wonderful it is that baseball, teams meant their relatives
for the week of Jan. :jO-Fel!. ~.
or at least the American League, finally has come to its senses imprisoned in North Vit;tnain ~liiii?'?t::::t?li:t:::}::~::::!:l:!i::~:!i~!ii~Mlilill*i!ilittMl:l®.l~1lii~i!lli!!!M!llilil:llM!~il~!l~illilM;~l:l:l~!:l;!:itmm:l:!:~lli!lli;l!t'!'llilt!!i'ii!!tl:l:l;l::;::r::::::::i:iii!ii in Meigs County:
were safe and accounted for.
and is Changing a little bit.
,
1 TUESDAY, School Lot, 2.
For others it was a tragic end
They're talking about the "designated hitter" for the pitcher
2:15; Carpenter, 2:30-2:16;
)
which the American League will begin using five weeks from to doubt.
.. .
·•·•···· Snowville, 3:15-3:30; DarWin,
Some ·famllie.s, however, renow in spring training and carry over into the regular season
4-4:15; Dick's Grocery, 4:~;
only 11 hours before the end of said Mrs. Nolde. "It's difficult worked for.''
ONAWAY, Mich. (UPI)
mainetl in the limbo of unthereafter.
Nolde
was
a
22-year
Army
Morgan's,
5:15-5:45; R9Ck
the
war.
He
died
when
an
arbut
we
aU
believed
in
what
he
Billy Martin doesn 't see what's so wonderful about the new certainty -not really knowing U. Col. Wtlllam Nolde was
veteran.
He
served
\OUrS
in
tillery round slammed into his 'was doing.''
Springs, 6·6: 30; Falrv!ew
rule. As a matter of fact, it has him stopped. Martin, who handles whether their sons, husbands, dedicated to the U.S. war effort
Korea,
Italy,
Gennany
and
the
Hgts., 7-7:30; Bob's GuU, S.
bunker
in
An
Loc,
the
capital
of
Mrs.
Kenneth
Olson,
a
sister
the Detroit Tigers and has a good head, doesn't get stopped too brothers or fathers were still in Vietnam. He believed the
Far
East.
8:20.
'
peace settlement
was Binh Long province. He was of the slain soldier, said her
alive.
often.
A
native
of
Menominee,
senior
American
adviser
there.
lrother
wrote
recently
doubted
WEDNESDAY,
McGhee
You OUght to Hear Him
In Salina, Kan ., Mrs. Kath- prematiD'e. He wanted to come
"
Mich.,
he
lived
in
Mount
Nolde's wife, Joyce, and five the wisdom of signing a ceaseLane, 4:40-5:15; Rutland
Nor is he in the habit of ducking comment on any subject, but ieen Johnson had dif- borne-but not too quickly.
'
""
Pleasant from IOOZ.1966 and Christian Church, 6:30-7:-lli;
Nolde, 43, of Mount Pleasant, children, ranging in age from fire agreement at this time.
you ought to hear him when someone asks him about the
ficuity
in
restraining
was
a profesSor in the ROTC Cook-Gap Hill, 7:3~:15.
"I had written him that I
designated hitter.
·
her tears when notified that Mich., was the last American 13 to 19, had all gathered here
program at Central Michigan
THURSDAY, Pomeroy Ele.,
Someone did ask him here Sunday night. Martin immediately her husband, Army Maj. Bruce to die before the Vietnam Saturday-the day of the couldn't wait for him to come
University.
ceasefire-.at the home of a home, she said.
!).11 :30; Pomeroy Eje., 12-2:30;
insisted nobody really has defined the rule intelligently enough Jolmson was not on the official ceasefire took effect.
"He
was
dedicated
to
his
friend,
130
miles
away
from
the
He
wrote
back,
"I
can't
walt
Middleport Uli., 3-3:30; Laurel
"I'm not bitter,'' Mrs. Nolde
for all managers to understand it.
list of those scheduled to come
country,"
said
Frank
Demski,
Cliff, 4-4:30; Old Chester Rd.,
said. ''He believed In what he family home in Mount either, but I dO hope we don't
"At' first I was told the designated hitter cannot be used home within 60 days.
37,
a
close
friend
of
Nolde.
"He
Pleasant.
That's
where
they
rush
into
signing
things
too
5-5:45;
Flatwoods, &amp;-6:b6;
defensively, and then I was told he can he," said Martin. "Now 1
"I think perhaps I almost was doing."
believed
more
In
the
people
quickly-that we don't give up
The U.S. command said learned of. his death.
Enterprise, 7:15-8.
can't find anyone who's really sure. Until the rule is defined for feel too stunned to know what
involved in the war-the South ' FRIDAY, Chester }i:le., !).
"It's
different
for
all
of
us,''
,
everything
that
we
have
Nolde
was
killed
Saturdayme, I can't comment on it . How can I say whether I like it or to feel," she said, "other than
Vietnamese-than the war it- 11 :30; Eastern School, 12-1:30;
not?"
to be terribly sad that a name
-A~N'•'•~•'•'W''•W'•'~•••'•'
........
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...,,.,.,,, ,•,•,•,y,•,&gt;?.•,•,"),•,•.-;.V,~•o"o'N•'•'o"•'•'•'•Y»'.'.•.•~v,.y;Q;&gt;.~o!'.•~-.;,y,v.'.
•.&lt;.-.-.•,•o'i'l'&gt;'4.o
self."
''
Long Bottom, 2:30-3:30;
Martin, who has an ideal designated hitter on his club in big we loved wasn't there.
Ted Cook, a chemistry Reedsville, 4-5; Keno, 6-6:30;
I;Jer Slllllliest Day
Frank Howard, says he really can't comment one way or
professor at CMU, got a letter Bashan, 7-7 :30; Baer's, 7:411another, and then he goes right ahead and does.
Mrs. John Pitchford, Laguna
from Nolde two weeks ago. 8:15.
"The thing I don't like about it is that the American League is Niguel, Calif., notified by
"We tehd to think only in terms
using it and the National Lague isn't," he says. "I'm not allowed phone that her husband, an Air
Princess
Anne's
equestrian
Guards
officer,
of
what this war has cost us,
BY JACK O'BRIAN
to use it against the National League in spring training. That's Force Colonel, would be
Mark
Phillips,
her
rrrrreally-big
romance,
will
the
United States," the letter
LIKE BURNING YOUR BRITCHES
ridiculous. How am I going to experiment•"
coming home, said with
do a two-year hitch in Germany suddenly. It's said. "But by comparison to MUST WEAR BELTS
BEHIND YOU
Use it In AL Games
delight, ''this Is the greatest,
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Legts.
NEW YORK (KFS) - New French coffin just a two-hour jet from London .. . The most- what it has ' cost so many
Simply by using it in spring exhibition games with other my sunniest day."
publicized porno-film currently (made for Vietnamese, our price pales.'' lation calling for a maximum
American League clubs, he was told.
But her elation was tern· nail's named I.a Vie au Bleu Jeans. In a denim
$25,000)
is charging $7.50 a ducat out of N.Y. ...
Nolde expected to come $50 fine for motorists who riill
"I stUI say it's ridiculous," said Martin, whose Tigers took the pered by the knowledge that pocket ... Star-erashed Ann-Margret's due for
MGM's opening its "Soylent Green" film ap- home within six months. He to wear seat belts while drlvtnS
Oakland A's all the way to the final game in the American otherswerenotasluckyasshe. further facial surgery ... Leo Duiocher's will he
propriately on St. Patrick's Day ... The Jan . had been appninted to attend will be introduced tn the GenLeague playoffs last fall.
.
"I feel so happy until I think the next controversial memoir ... White House
thaw here wasn't popular with anyone but classes at the Army War eral Assembly within 30 days
Billy Martin isn 'I backward about any other subject, either. of some of the other girls whose aide Sam Kenny (for LBJ and JFK) retired and
people:
cabs didn't like folks walking. more, College.
state Highway Safety Director
What about Warren Spahn being voted into the Hall of Fame? husbands are not coming was hired by Henry Ford in Fla ... The TV actor
"He was a great man and Eugene P. O'Grady anJames Franciscuses expect their third ... Legal movie houses lost folks who wouldn 't.he cooped
HJ'm very happy for him/' says Martin.
back," she said.
up
on
nice
evenings,
stores
weren't
selling
still
is," Mrs. Nolde said. nounced.
How abOut the move to vote in the late Roberto Clemente
Things were sad in the VIP Melvin Belli's the new lawyer for oiiman
O'Grady said a study revealwithout the customary five-year wait?
Burlington, Vt., home of the Michael Davis in hassles over the will of his late winter clothes and bosses generally noticed "Maybe this will shake up a
workers
left
for
lunch
earlier
(but
they
stayed
few
people.''
ed
mandatory use of seat belts
"Rightly so," says the Tigers manager, who with the mous- family of Marine Maj. Donald wife, Helen Bonfils, Bdwy . show-angel
During his last visit to would cut the state's yearly
tache he's wearing now, looks like Mark Spitz. "The time is right G. Cook, who had believed for ("Sleuth" was her last) of publishing and Sels out later) ... O'Henry's in the Village is doing its
bit
to
dramatize
the
contention
Greenwich
Michigan
In June, he told Mrs. traffic death toll by 20 per cent.
for something like that. The people love Clemente,and there isn't six years he was alive and a Floto Circus millions .. . Tennessee Williams
"That would mean 400 llveil
wants to write a screen scriptfor Andy Warhol's Village is safer than elsewhere in Manhattan: Nolde that tf something went
any question about him deserving to be in the Hall of Fame.lf the prisoner.
saved
in Ohio last year," said
it's
launching
a
guided
after~inner
"Walk
in
wrong
to
go
ahead
with
plans
writers decide to vote him in without the wait, I don't think the
Cook was shot down and smut factory ... Newlyweds Patty Duke and
they had made.
O'Grady.
practice would be abused in the future."
captured in South Vietnam John Astin discotekked at the new Genesis spot. the Village" next month.
Bette
Davis
in
public
appearances·bans
the
"That
means
he
will
be
The-cops-robbers set say Carlo Gambino's
_
What About Ford?
New Year's Eve, 1964. In
What about his old Yankee buddy, Whitey Ford, missing out October, 1971, Mrs. Cook was underthugs are congratulahng the Boss of glowing eulogies thst sould so terminal: "I've buried in Arlington Cemetery,
being elected by 30 votes?
told by the Marine Corps that a ·Bosses for muscle-minding the return of the only been in this business 41 years," she insi~ts, just like he Wanted," Mrs.
"II made me feel a little dejected,'' Martin says. "I see no
Viet Cong defector had $350,000 in sacred gems from Brooklyn's Regina "and I still have nine to go. Usually it's on the Nolde said.
reason why he shouldn't have made it on the first ballot. The positively identified her Pacis Church. His courtly comment: "I refuse 50th anniversary everyone thinks you're ready INMATE CAPTURED
over and give up."
same with Bob Lemon. Those two were super pitchers. Whitey husband in May, 1970, as being to answer on the grounds it might make me a to roll
Pia Lindstrom's pals say she won't return to
LOUISVD..LE, Ky. (UPI) saint."
was one of the best pitchers I've ever seen, and one of the best alive.
her CBS-newshenning job. And won't return Ohio Penitentiary escapee AnHarold Gary, a superior actor, is uncompetitors.
But this weekend "we
anywhere fdr· fdtlr months •,';:o'rll~ 'disgraceful drewL. Wagst~ •.34, ~amilton,
derstudying
both leads (for Jack Alhe!'tson a~q headache for cops _ the rilo!i!liacked ·''juice Ohio, was ca».tyred here Satw'·
"He had a great 1!1t~i\9 everythinU~Jiii I rtf{e~per onil.day: . ;simply receiv,il•word that his
we were playing the White Sox in a crucial series. A guy with a name had been listed along Sam Levine) in Neil Simon's "Sunshine Boys" joints" (peddle juice officially but cater to day in the J\il'klng lot of Standi·
real flat nose, the same as Hank Bauer's, leaned over the dugout, with some others," she said. smash; betimes, he has a speaking off-stage
homos and lesbos and weirdos generally who ford Field airport.
and hollered to Bauer, 'Hey, Hank, remember me? We were in "Alongside his name was the role (via loudspeakers) ... Mini Conglomerate :
buy and sell narcotics v.1 the license-less
Sentenced to the prison in
ON YOUR DIAL
word 'dead •and then the date : actor Joe Coscia of the new Joanne Woodward
the Marines the same time and landed in Okinawa together.'
premises) added another juicerie on E. 53rd st. !968 for the slaying of a
"Hank couldn't remember, but Whitey, sitting there in the August, 1967."
flick lunched at Donaghy Steak House and then the police intend to dry up instanter ... He Hamilton youth, Wagster
"
dugout, looked at this guy's flat nose and at Hank's, and said,
Some families clung to the went to the "Pippin" matinee to check on the
'Say, what did those Japanese over there fight you with, hope that perhaps someday costumes in "Pippin"; he designed 'em ... doesn 't look Chinese : headwaiter at the new ,es_c_;aped:,__la_st_M_a.:.y_.- - - - - - - - - - - - - shovels?"'
Showbiz these days :· John Stevens, waiter at Tai's Hunan Yuan on 62nd - 3rd is Eddie
Schoenfield .. . Quentin Forge of "The Godl•o U S Co'"""""'
01&gt;
restrictions, many doctors O'Neal's Baloon took leave to star in a "Jesus
father"
is
making
offers
to
Jill
Haworth
she's
••• Doun.. o•t 01 '"' ' "" "'' "" ' " · ~'"' • 'i C•·••'
pay less attention to diet It Christ Superstar" road troupe.
probably
refusing
..
.
City
Hall
optimists
think
is usually necessary to use
Egyplisn-born European businessman
medicine anyway to obtain Fernand Legros bought a $25,000 Rolls-Royce, Mayor Jawn Lindsay wants a crack at Jake
any satisfactory reduction
Javits' U.S. Senate seat. About as much chance
m the uric acid level. The then went to Paris Cartier's for a Rolls-replica as when he thought he could become President.
diet is important in restrict· gold and jeweled key to the platinum lizzieMeir Kahane of the Jewish militant gang
mg total calorie intake for fOr the same price ... He:s the lad suing Clifford
those who are obese. Exces· Irving for $100,000,000 and his publishers over that isn't popular with most Jews in Israel or
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. Vinci, Ben Franklin and sively rich foods or dietary descriptions of his exotic ltfe style in Irving's America lost hts once:noisy ally : the Joe
bmges are to be avoided.
Colombo crime family . Which thinks Kahand
Dear Dr. Lamb-l've been Alexander the Great.
\1\it+h 0,ArH~ Jo&lt;-~ ~
The
old purine free diet that second-last book, "Fake" ... Singer Louise
The
elevated
uric
acid
can
merely "brings heat" as the Colombo dopes did
having trouble with go ut lor
was
commonly
used
in
gout
O'Brien
makes
a
smart
big
living
without
fansome years but m the past form deposits in the various omitted meat, foul and fish fare . For proof, she just bought a new $100,000 ... It's onlv money: Sammy Davis is tooling
G 01 r' vvi+-J... Cl
only my hands and wrists JOints and gradually produce and was based on obtaining
about in a fJS,OOO Stutz Bearcat. Aregular John
were involved. This I as t gouty arthritis. It can also protein from milk, eggs ,· home in the Poconos ... UN Sec. Gen'l Waldheim Held Jr .... Only live U.S. audience bigger thsn
week it got to my bi~ toe. r0 r m crystals in a joint cheese and ve get a b I e must be doing something right: the Russians
v1
CJ
My problem is what 1s the (often the great toe) 'lind sources.
just officially bombed his short tenure as the Super Bowl on TV: the average Sun.
1
ca
use
an
acute
inflamma·
churchgoers, 80 mUlion strong.
diet to follow to avoid get·
For a person who wants ''ineffective."
ting it. I've asked my doctor tory reaction . The I a r g e,
\Ni fh ct
fl
C-1
and he told me to keep away swollen, red painful toe is to use a diet in gout I would
from anchovies and caviar. so tender that the patient recommend a diet relatively
I never eat the stuff. but I usually can't stand to have low in protein but it still
01
' Nt'+h ""
must be adequate. Because
do (!rink orange j u i ce in the bed sheets over it.
great quantittes and eat
Medical treatment is given of the frequent association
RATES 0.' TAXATION FOR 1972 '
Go11/oj
vinegar dill pick I e s and lor two purposes : to relieve of fatty deposits in the arfresh tomatoes almost every an acute episode, and on a teries of gout patients, one
In purtlua!ace of !aw, I, Hm11ud E. f'rauk Trea!lurcr of Meig11 County, Ohio,
day. Please tell me what ;s long.term hasis to prevent should use fortified s kIm
do hereby gave notace that the num ber of M1lls levied on each dollar of propei-ty
01
good and what is not good the gradual precipitation of milk, egg white s, un·
shown on the , ~nera! Ta x Duplicate of Rcnl Estnte, Public Utility and PeJ•son.
ul
Property
w1thm
saad
County
for
the
yenr
1972
is
nM
follows·
for a gout diet.
·
unc a c i d s a It s into the creamed cottage cheese and
C1
Dear Reader -G out is bones and joints which &gt;.vllt vegetable proteins such as
characterized by too much gradually cause arthritic de· beans, while using meat, ·
uric acid in the body. Uric formities . Some pahents poultry and fish sparingly.
ib ib
acid is an end product qf don't realize this and think No one with gout should go
~
~
some proteins . It is elimi- if they are f r e e of pain on a crash reducing diet hethey're
doing
fine
and
don't
cause
this
sometimes
causes
nated 111 the urine and this
is where •it gets its name. need the medicine, but the an acute attack.
The body manufactures uric medicines that are given are
Other individuals will have
1·
acid and is the main source necessary to help prevent trouble with drinking alcofor it.
arthritic deformities .
i .hoi in any form, and even
BEDFO RD
severe
emotional
stress
can
Individuals
wtth
hi
g
h
_NeigK
Local S.D.• --·-·o:-c...:4c:3:::
0.....c
1 ,.5,:0:_:3'-'1 5~
.50
Because much of the uric
1;vels of uric acid are often
70 ---"'·5"-.3~.65~1~.0~022_2139~
a gouty attack. Vine.
CHESTER
·ac1d is formed by the body cause
Jacqui Johnson, age 8
'
dill pickles and fresh
Eastern L.S D. -------- 4.30 2.50 26.50
.53 .65 1.00 .2 3,5.50
%tght people such as irrespective of the dietary gar
tomatoes
are
fine
.
Westbrook
Elementary
2
50
31.50
School
Meig-s
L.S.D.
--------·4.:10
.53
.65
1.00
.2
40.50
.c ewton, Leonardo da
Mt. Prospect, lllinois. ; ' , :
COLUMBIA·

1i1~.i:

. lllisalonary in Africa; by the
Loyal Women's Class ·of the
Middleport Chur~h of Chl'lst.
'
MeeUng Thursday nlg~t at
· the church, Mrs. Oacar Roush
read · a letter from Miss
'Spurlock describing her work
in translating · the New

.,

,

·•
')

'_J

I;

.

..

..
•

''
!•

I

·'

. RUTLAND - .Conserving
environment was the topic of a
meeting of the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners WedneSday night at ~ pome of
.Mrs. Fred Williamson.
J lit
Members reponded to roll
call by naming what they want ·
specifically to preserve In their
environment. Jl'lrs. How.ard
Birchfield commented on
proper selection of pesticides,
dust guns and sprayers to
handle 'garden Insects while not

,.

m
. oice along Br'Way _

We talk to you
like a person.

e

a

Gout Diet Can
Be .Helpful

/~\
~

dOU '""

I'

&gt;P nO • IOd Hi hii&lt;&lt;U"f0

"&lt;00~f•010'~ihTO o

fol). c_,oufo/ 6uyo..
bond.

buy o..
Go;IJ br.Ay

Yo

bo

br

o

..

!"I' I O ~oO &gt;IoiO"'' "'

~.

b1 J~e. ~
bond.

~r c..oC~t

Yo

fe-+-

o.r.d

The Frigidaire Laundry Center
It fits in just two feet,
runs on conventional
household current.

27.00

Euatcrn L.S.D. --··· -··

4.30 1.60

?.6.50

Enstem L.S.D.
·-------·-

4.30 2.00

2"6,.";G0:.__ _.:£:3!..~~5~
•
t':QO
• .:.~~5'C"
.
3 .00

OLIVE

---

ORA NGE·~-

--~--

- - -- --·-- ·--- -- ·

RUTLAND
·--- ....
Meigs L.S D. --- - ------- 4.30 2.50
Rutlsnd V&gt;llage .. _____ _ 4.30 1.40

--·

Meigs L.S.D. ... . ....... 4.30 1.60
S'AL!SBURY

.53

.65 1.00

.53 .65 1.00 .2 39.60
· - -- - - -- - - - -

31.50

-- ~omeroy Village ------- 4.80 .20
SCIPIO
- - -- - - - - -·

L.S.D.

---~=c.:.-: · 4 .3ll...:_~~~-- 3} 50

SUTTON
·
. Southern L.S.D. -······· 4.30 2.00
Racine Village · -· · ------ 4.30 ' .70

Regular Heal or w1th th e No Heat-Air Fluff se tting. lri one compact package, the fa bric cate you need.

Syrac u~~e Vtllage ·-----· 4.30

.70

Sutton·M"llll LQCai ··c·· 4.30 2.00

•389

34.50

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

:~: ·~ l·~ ·~ :~·~

s .7o
31.50 7.70 .63 :66

Meig,

.2'

31.50
.53 .65 1.00 • .2 40.60
31 .60 9.00 .53 .65 1.00 .2 48.40

~1fj~~P~;~~~iliaii:·::::: !:~Z 1.~ ~l g~

thorough wash1ng w1th I he three washing actions of the
e~cluslve one piece AgHub. Ones without hot spots
thanks to patented Flowing Htlat. Two cyc le washer tor
regul ar and delicate fabrics, two cyc le drYer to dry w1th

BAKER

.2 36.00
-.5~- .G6
- -1.00- --

Southern L.S. D. ------- 4.30 2.50

iilii:E~, ---

Washes and dries family-size loads, solely and dependably Yet il's only 24" wtde to 111just at&gt;ou t anywhere,
a bathroom, kitchen, even a hallway . And 1t runs on
convenltonal1 20 volt holJSehold current on a separate
15 amp branch c1rcut t wtlh 3-prong outlet Yet it deli vers

.63

.65

1:00

....

·t.oo

:2 45:90
.2 40 60

----·-·--- ·-----....c......

27.00
53 65
27.00 8.00 :53 :66
27.00 10.110 .53 .65
81.60
.53 .66

1 00 2 35 GO
1:00 :2 42.20
1.00 .2 44:50
l.~" .2 4o:oo

Real eet.te t.lxe~ whjch h11.ve not been paid n~ the clo.s'e of e11.ch collection
carry a penalty of t en per cent .. Taxu may be paid at the office of the county
trepsurer or by mulj. Pleaije bnnlf your las ~ tax receipt und If you poy by mail

FURNITURE

b~ sure to locflte r1mr property by taxing di&amp;trir.t tmd enclose sb 1mped aeJr Kd· ~le!l!led envelope-. ~lway~e examine your tax re.-.:eipt to see th ~tt It covers aJI

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

• ) O~r property. Off1ce Hours 9:00A.M. .to 4:00 P.Zd. diily e:&lt;cept &amp;turda when
off1ce clo~es ILt Noon. Tu Books will ~en Decem be~ 15, 1972, to Jan. 20,Yl978.
HOWARD £. FRANK. Meigs County Treasurer

Mode!LCT3· 120

'·i

~a st~m

L.S D. -------- - 4 30 2 oo 26 50
.53 65 1.00 2 35,00
out ern L.S.D.••• -- --~--_c
4.,30'--!2"'.o~
o -"27.~.o~o_ _,:'·5~:J.....:'.6~6....:c
L0~0~.2'.._1i3~
5 .~50
LETART
·-

1

.

'

18ke
in

I

Published As A Public Service By The Dltl!Y Setlllntl

•

J

'

'~

If you'd like to have a nest.egg.,,: i
~tashed ~way for so~~thing special:
m your life, why not JOin the 1 , , :
Payroll Savings Plan? And now thaf
U.S. Savings Bonds
, '·
mature in less
than six years,
they'll be ready
when you are.
The Payroll Sav.' s1Qck
ing~ P~n. PUts
Ameri~:
saVIng m every.
. ~· .
..
body's reach.

Middleport
Personal Notes

Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Simpkins, Charla, Chuck and
Melissa of Columbus were
Sunday guests of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Snowden of
Rutland. They brought a cake
for the birthday anniversary
observance of Mr. Snowden .
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Walburn,
in Waverly Friday night for the
·Waverly-Meigs game, visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Hand there. The Hands are
former Middleport residents.
Their son, Robin, plays on the
reserve team for Waverly, and
the Walburns' son, Steve, plays
on the Meigs reserve team.
Mrs. Martha Childs has
returned from Birmingham,
Ala. where she visited her sonblg~~~ jlp' ic. :i;;J,,;!~~\ll~J·~~~:~·gjl._te~ 1 h~· and
fikeslee, lflitl! 'COunty ex- MrS. oe folll,\\l!~f, ,l!.na ~htldren
tension agent. ·
for two weeks. She went to
Alabama with Mr. and Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY Btll Childs who were enroute to
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Florida for a vacation.
Episcopal Parish House,
Mrs. Albert Roush Is a
Pomeroy, with Mrs. Everett medical patient at the
Hayes as hD!Itess. Mrs. Dwight Vete1·ans Memorial Hospital.
Wallace will review "The Fatal
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds was a
Friendship" by Stanley business visitor in Colwnbus
Loomis. Roll call wtll he a Saturday. On Sunday she
comment on the program.
visited in Leon, W. Va. witll
Miss Edna Burdette.
I
Mr. and Mrs. 'Alan Wallace
THEME NOTED
"Born In the Blaze" is the and daughter, Alison, of Ashtheme of the youth revival to be ville were weekend guests of
held at the Middleport United his parents, Mr. · and Mrs.
Pentecostal Church on South Dwight Wallace and daughter,
Third St., beginning Tuesday Nancy. They also visited Mr.
and conUnuing through Sunday and Mrs. Bruce Wallace and
nightly at 7:30p. m. Ilapa Bird son.
will be the evangelist. Pastor of
the church is William Knittel.
SALE DAYS SET
The public is invited.
Mary Shrine 37, White Shrine
of Jerusalem will hold a
rummage sale Friday and
IN HOSPITAL
Saturday, Feb. 2 and 3, in the
RACINE - Margaret Ann
Middleport Masonic Temple,
J,ohnson of Racine was
from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. Articles
returned to Veterans Memorial
for the sale are to be left at the
HO!Ipltal Friday.
Temple Thursday afternoon .

Grace Pratt, and Mrs.
Margaret I.allance, dinner for
bereaved families ; Miss
Frances Roush and Mrs. Rose
Reynolds, flowers:
Reported ill were Mrs. Essie
Montgomeroy·and Mrs. Floyd
Boyer, at home, and Mrs.
Donna Russell, a patient at
University
Hospital
in
Columbus. The birthday anniversary ol Mrs. Genevieve
Farmer on Jan. 27 was noted
and members signed a card for
her.
Named hostesses for the
February meeting were Mrs.
Lohse, Mrs. Margaret Jones,
Mrs. Marie Postelwaite, and
Mrs. Lula Mae Lynch. Mrs.
Martha Ohilds will have the
program. Mrs. Roush, in
welcoming the Loyal Pal
members, recalled several
whose relatives had been in the
Loyal Women's Class, among
them the late Mrs. Minerva
Childers, mother of Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds, and Mrs. Nina
Bland.
Mrs. William Reynolds gave.

100% CofiOfl

KITCHEN
TOWELS

Bring Your Walls 10 Ll'e!

Pretty pr1nts m
. c olorful Piltterns
on bnght ·whlle
towels F~~nge
lr1m's 15•25-m
s•ze

.I

28xS,2-INCH
Framed PICTURES
• R&amp;eh Walnut-Finlth Frames

• Lovely Landseapu

Ch oose lrom our
decorators collec tion ot be aut1fu l
landscape pam!lngs
Per fect accen ts lor
llvrng room den
bed roo m

Clopaque

... \-· WINDOW
1
; SHADES

I

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lnilll
·!~
1\~-{1\ft\; 0

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Lmoo embossed

room· dar~enmg

plJU\11

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shade WashaOi e'
On adjUStab le
sleet rolle• 37 1 ~
•n b~ 6 ·11 long

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SIT-ON
HAMPERS

Change the " looks' or
all you r chai rs w1th
reve rsrble wash able
cotton pads w1tl-i
com fo rlmg loa m
cores . Cho 1ce ol
colo rs patlerns

Heavy ·duty. yet ~~~~hi­
weigh t tmer polyeth ylene Attrac!ive
wtcker des•gn mser t
1 5 VlX I2x l 9 1,~ In

lndoor-Ouldoor

53 on list for honors
RACINE - Fifty-three
Racine Elementary School
students were listed on the
honor roll for the third six
weeks grading period. Making
a "B" or above in all their
subjects were :
Grade 6, Bryan Grindstaff,
Brice Hart, Seth Hill, Brent
Patterson, Marie Pickens.
Grade~. Carmen Carpenter,
Tammy j;leland, Kim Dugan,
Amy Fisher, Pam Harden,
To~bljjlf¥o.n 1 Me·ll\l~t 4&gt;.¢.
Kntg~\i.!ltlod'roy Manue,J,..Jolqt ,,
Pape, Kent Varney, Cindy
Warden, Karen
Wines,
Jonathan Rees.
Grade 4, Peggy Bush, James
Gheen, Eric Hill, Bob Bill Lee,
Carl Norris, Mary Beth Obiu,
Mark Simpson, Paula Wolfe.
Grade 3, Derek Badgley,
Kim Bickers, Cindy Cross, Kim
Follrod, Patrick Johnson,
Allen Pape, Jay Reese, Clifford

RUG RUNNERS

Roseberry, Melinda Salmons,
Rita Slater, Kent Wolfe.
Grade 2, Kathy Bake(,
Rebecca Lee, Lori Maynard,
Clair Morris, David Parsons,
Terry Patterson, David
Salmons, Kimberly Salser,
Tonja Salser, Lori Warden,
Melaine Weese, Alan Shuler.
Grade I, James Bush,
Rebecca Johnson , Laren
Wolfe.

r:·;,~-' 11 SHI~R'f-M n r

CARPET
Colorfu l way 10 prolec1 fl oors and
ca rpeling 2 ma tcl11ng mat s of carpetmg
matr!r lals srrged aU around

N' '"'l. l cll .-.!1 ·tl 1• 1r rd

~'{lrl ! t-1/lld t. lrll~

, .. ir:·

2\P'~

r! I '1 (1 111 r :; r

FINISHING

1

~!.~~.: i~~~~:K ~~·.~ \i'•;~~~~,; !!Rre·wh"r~

h , , , ~ 1'-

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tmrl ~nl' '
\; 1' 1.. on

your Dollars have more ••cents"!

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5

BIG 9 BA

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Special family meal prices 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.

For Adults

For Kids

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Turnover and
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Sooial Notes

w·:

1.00 .2 35.60

MONDAY
MEIGS Local Band Boosters
Monday, 8 p.m. in band room
.at high school.
LETART FALLS United
Methodist Church WSCS and
Day of Prayer and SeH-Denial
IJ'Ogr&amp;m,Mooclay, 7:30p.m. at
the church. Mrs. Nora Cross is '
president of the local
IIIIOCiation, and there will be a
program of readings and
mlllical nwnbers.
Add Tuesday
BEND 0' THE RIVER
Garden Club meeting will be
beld Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Bert Grimm.
Mrs. Wllaon Carpenter will
bave the (rOgram.
WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD Garde11 Club,
~n meeUng, Columbus and
-$outhern Ohio Electric Co.,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Club
officers to be hostesses .

SALE STARTS
WED., JAN. 31

"

and Mrs. Homer Parker since
the last meeting.
· Gardening tips for January
by Mrs. Robert Snowden included .planning spring gar·
dens, rearranging houseplants
and adding new ones, fleaning
up the garden plot on a nice ·
day, planting tulip bulbs but
being sure to mulch well now,
and transplanting trees.
A book review by Mrs.
Marvel Quillen was entitled
"Must They Die ." The
traveling prize donated by
Mrs. Snowden was won by Mrs. the program using "Love" as
Larry Edwards. Refreshments her theme. The prayer was by
were served to 11 members Miss Mildred Hawley, and
attending :
Mrs. Roush read scripture
from John 21. Two poems,
"Where There is Love" and
"The Magic of Love" by Helen
TWO PROJECTS SET
Two lund raising projects Steiner R1ce were read by Mrs.
have been planned by the Reynolds. Mrs . Lohse gave
Catholic Women's Club of the "Lord, Help Us to Love
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Others" ' and there was · a
On Monday and Tuesday, Feb. closing prayer by Peter
5 and 6, a rummage sale will be Marshall.
Refreshments were served
held in the church basement
• by the officers, Mrs. Roush,
and on Feb . 10, a jitney supper
Mrs. Helen Reynolds, Mrs. Ida
will be held there.
Childs, and Mrs. I.allance.

Long Bottom

Ise:;

27 60

Social
Calendar

disrupting or damaging environmental balance.
Mrs. Birchfield also reported
the Region 11 tree 8aie in April.
Distribution pf spruce trees,
three and four years old, which
have already been ordered by
clubs and other organizations
in Region 1'1, will he handled by
the Rutland club.
A communication from Mrs.
Edward Miztcko, Athens, was
read regarding the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs'
sltde
contest.
Flower
arrangements were taken to
the I.angsvtlle Post Office and
to several shut-ins bf the
community by Mrs. Joe Bolin

MARKET PROFIT $97.
A flea market and soup
supper at the Pomeroy
Elementary School Saturday
by the Pomeroy PTA brought
in $97 towards the spurchase of
a
special
elementary
typewriter for the school to be
given by the PTA in memory of
Larry Morrison, assistant
superintendent of the· Meigs
Local School District. Contributions
toward
the ·
typewriter by those who were
Mr. and Mrs. Robert White, unable to support the fund
Keno, vlaited Mary Pierce.
raising project may be sent to
Mr. and Mrs. Hank Holter the school or Mrs.,Earl Thoma,
visited Mrs. Hanson Holter of Wolfe Drive, Pomeroy, the .
Forest Run.
PTA president.
Tom Drake of Reynoldsburg
wu an overnight guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Dave Smith.
Mr. and' Mrs. Harold Osborn,
Keno, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Rolland Stethem.
Grace ~wan was an overnight . - t o! Mr. and Mrs.
. Wayne· Prince.
Vera Weber ·and Donna
We Are The Only Store
~uber visited their parents,
Mr.• and Mrs. Fred LarkinS.

J:c'j."l J:
10 7 rooa;;YQ"n

1.50

Testament into the' African
dtalecjs and thanking the
.group for pest as,sistance.
Chrtst!Jlps . projects were
reported with Mrs. Eleanor
Lohse noting that 29 members
had been reiJlemhered with
fruit,cookles,cardaorflowers.
Thank-you notes were read
from Mrs. Jeanette Thomas for

IN&lt;:pLUMBUS
The Rev. and Mrs. Robert
Buckley and Mr. and Mrs.
Uoyd Wright of the Laurel Cllif
Free Methodist Church were In
Colwnbus Saturday for an
Interdenominational meeting
or\ missions.

Ff

. •••••• 4.30

.
a remembrance, the Mountain
.Mission School at Grundy, Va.,
and the Mount Healthy
Christian Home in Cincinnati
for contributions. ·
· Mrs. Roush, presiding,
welcomed into the group the
members 'of the former Loyal
Pals Class of the church.
Appointed to committees were
Miss Mildred Hawley, Mrs.
.

Environment 'theme of meeting

~1

.Family of last VICtim not bitter

,'

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I hey re gre al.rlt- around '

SHAMPOOS,
CREMER
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B1g brg values 1n lovely bea uty •le ms
Choose regular creme r1nse or with
lemon emerald sh ampoo or sha mpoo
w1th egg and bubble ba ths In 3 II!fl y
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women's S:· IO

Ballerlnu
Men 't 10-13

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So rt sole p l u~h - shppers Padded

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ls· oo~ooo©/A\Vmoo ~~

·

. Ell Larkllla, who has been a
patlenl · at a Parkersburg
HIIIPllll, hal returned home.
Mr. and Mrs. David Smith
and Dee Dee welt vlaltlng A.
S, 'Kibble of' Reedlvllle. '
Mr. and Mrs. Donel Larklna
vtilted Mr. and Mrs. VirgO
Wllllllley, Olesblre.
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For all ycur paraphernalia ,, pur1e or ,
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Mi~dleport, Ohio·

- l

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.. ..-

-

'

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-POOJeroy, 0. , Jan. 29, 1973

•

1";:.,-.;-;•.:;:;::o;;;:;•,•;•;•.:~;o;&gt;;'-;:;•;.;.;o;o;o•o;o;o0.-~;:;:&gt;:.0...N.'Ato.w.._.:.•,•..!oX•'I'o"h~'.'o'l'6"b".JU~.'......_.,,,
• • • ' -'' 0 • o •• • • no o"t'o • ·~o:-".O:o; ·'· ,y.v.«W~•,-,•;.y. o'i!l..... i!ifo'o'.-.-o-.VNO"i"N~

'.o;; .&lt;;:•.•.•

x:

~

Today's

American ·families overjoyed, or stricken

~

.

i
;,

I

Sport Pa~llde

'j'

' The O,.Uy Sen~inel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 29, 1973
5,_

Gift
sent
to
·
.
missionary
in
Africa
.

'

' ~
'
'·A birthday.gift of $25 will be

.
-'~ sent !0 Mia Arlene Spurlock, a

They said he had appel!red in silanti, Mich., whose son wu
Stack said he learned later
By H.J. HEILER
news of their kin, not on the list · anything." .
of those coming home, would. In Memphis, Tenn., Clay the list was not complete and ptcture.s released by North reported alive, summe!l·up the
United Press International
A knock at the door or a surface.
Stacks did not know what to that his son, missing since his Vietnamese shortly after )te gratitude of those famllies ~
helicopter· was shot down in wasshotdownNovember,1967. were the recipients Iof gi!C!JI
Won't Give Up
believe.
?~ strident jangling of the teleBy MILTON RICHMAN
"We hope there'll be a news.
~ phone this weekend were
"I'm not going to give up,''
"A survival officer came to 1968, was still unaccounted for.
UPI Sports ~ltor
"Praise the Lord," she sa14.
~ omens of joy or tragedy for said Henry Fors, Puyallup, my door at 2:30 this morning
Mr . and Mrs. Walter Estes,, supplementary 'list coming,"
NEW YORK (UPI)- Billy Martin never goes along with the familie.s of prisoners of war or Wash, when told his missing and said our son was not on the Williamston, Mich., were per- Estes said. "But we don't know
of those missing in action.
son, Gary, was not listed as a list,'' Clay said Sunday. "He plexed because the name of if there is such a thing
tide, he always swims against it .
·
For some the calls from the prisoner. "I'd like proof of led us to believe the list was their son, Navy U . Walter coming."
Now guess what?
Mrs. Virginia Werner, YpEstes Jr., was 'not on the list.
Pentagon or visits by military death-a gravesite,dog tags or final."
He's doing the same thing again.
Mr. Edy Educator's sche~
'
Every?OOy you talk with says how wonderful it is that baseball, teams meant their relatives
for the week of Jan. :jO-Fel!. ~.
or at least the American League, finally has come to its senses imprisoned in North Vit;tnain ~liiii?'?t::::t?li:t:::}::~::::!:l:!i::~:!i~!ii~Mlilill*i!ilittMl:l®.l~1lii~i!lli!!!M!llilil:llM!~il~!l~illilM;~l:l:l~!:l;!:itmm:l:!:~lli!lli;l!t'!'llilt!!i'ii!!tl:l:l;l::;::r::::::::i:iii!ii in Meigs County:
were safe and accounted for.
and is Changing a little bit.
,
1 TUESDAY, School Lot, 2.
For others it was a tragic end
They're talking about the "designated hitter" for the pitcher
2:15; Carpenter, 2:30-2:16;
)
which the American League will begin using five weeks from to doubt.
.. .
·•·•···· Snowville, 3:15-3:30; DarWin,
Some ·famllie.s, however, renow in spring training and carry over into the regular season
4-4:15; Dick's Grocery, 4:~;
only 11 hours before the end of said Mrs. Nolde. "It's difficult worked for.''
ONAWAY, Mich. (UPI)
mainetl in the limbo of unthereafter.
Nolde
was
a
22-year
Army
Morgan's,
5:15-5:45; R9Ck
the
war.
He
died
when
an
arbut
we
aU
believed
in
what
he
Billy Martin doesn 't see what's so wonderful about the new certainty -not really knowing U. Col. Wtlllam Nolde was
veteran.
He
served
\OUrS
in
tillery round slammed into his 'was doing.''
Springs, 6·6: 30; Falrv!ew
rule. As a matter of fact, it has him stopped. Martin, who handles whether their sons, husbands, dedicated to the U.S. war effort
Korea,
Italy,
Gennany
and
the
Hgts., 7-7:30; Bob's GuU, S.
bunker
in
An
Loc,
the
capital
of
Mrs.
Kenneth
Olson,
a
sister
the Detroit Tigers and has a good head, doesn't get stopped too brothers or fathers were still in Vietnam. He believed the
Far
East.
8:20.
'
peace settlement
was Binh Long province. He was of the slain soldier, said her
alive.
often.
A
native
of
Menominee,
senior
American
adviser
there.
lrother
wrote
recently
doubted
WEDNESDAY,
McGhee
You OUght to Hear Him
In Salina, Kan ., Mrs. Kath- prematiD'e. He wanted to come
"
Mich.,
he
lived
in
Mount
Nolde's wife, Joyce, and five the wisdom of signing a ceaseLane, 4:40-5:15; Rutland
Nor is he in the habit of ducking comment on any subject, but ieen Johnson had dif- borne-but not too quickly.
'
""
Pleasant from IOOZ.1966 and Christian Church, 6:30-7:-lli;
Nolde, 43, of Mount Pleasant, children, ranging in age from fire agreement at this time.
you ought to hear him when someone asks him about the
ficuity
in
restraining
was
a profesSor in the ROTC Cook-Gap Hill, 7:3~:15.
"I had written him that I
designated hitter.
·
her tears when notified that Mich., was the last American 13 to 19, had all gathered here
program at Central Michigan
THURSDAY, Pomeroy Ele.,
Someone did ask him here Sunday night. Martin immediately her husband, Army Maj. Bruce to die before the Vietnam Saturday-the day of the couldn't wait for him to come
University.
ceasefire-.at the home of a home, she said.
!).11 :30; Pomeroy Eje., 12-2:30;
insisted nobody really has defined the rule intelligently enough Jolmson was not on the official ceasefire took effect.
"He
was
dedicated
to
his
friend,
130
miles
away
from
the
He
wrote
back,
"I
can't
walt
Middleport Uli., 3-3:30; Laurel
"I'm not bitter,'' Mrs. Nolde
for all managers to understand it.
list of those scheduled to come
country,"
said
Frank
Demski,
Cliff, 4-4:30; Old Chester Rd.,
said. ''He believed In what he family home in Mount either, but I dO hope we don't
"At' first I was told the designated hitter cannot be used home within 60 days.
37,
a
close
friend
of
Nolde.
"He
Pleasant.
That's
where
they
rush
into
signing
things
too
5-5:45;
Flatwoods, &amp;-6:b6;
defensively, and then I was told he can he," said Martin. "Now 1
"I think perhaps I almost was doing."
believed
more
In
the
people
quickly-that we don't give up
The U.S. command said learned of. his death.
Enterprise, 7:15-8.
can't find anyone who's really sure. Until the rule is defined for feel too stunned to know what
involved in the war-the South ' FRIDAY, Chester }i:le., !).
"It's
different
for
all
of
us,''
,
everything
that
we
have
Nolde
was
killed
Saturdayme, I can't comment on it . How can I say whether I like it or to feel," she said, "other than
Vietnamese-than the war it- 11 :30; Eastern School, 12-1:30;
not?"
to be terribly sad that a name
-A~N'•'•~•'•'W''•W'•'~•••'•'
........
,W•,•,•,•~-~A=•,"W''•~--·~-·o''•'-b~
...,,.,.,,, ,•,•,•,y,•,&gt;?.•,•,"),•,•.-;.V,~•o"o'N•'•'o"•'•'•'•Y»'.'.•.•~v,.y;Q;&gt;.~o!'.•~-.;,y,v.'.
•.&lt;.-.-.•,•o'i'l'&gt;'4.o
self."
''
Long Bottom, 2:30-3:30;
Martin, who has an ideal designated hitter on his club in big we loved wasn't there.
Ted Cook, a chemistry Reedsville, 4-5; Keno, 6-6:30;
I;Jer Slllllliest Day
Frank Howard, says he really can't comment one way or
professor at CMU, got a letter Bashan, 7-7 :30; Baer's, 7:411another, and then he goes right ahead and does.
Mrs. John Pitchford, Laguna
from Nolde two weeks ago. 8:15.
"The thing I don't like about it is that the American League is Niguel, Calif., notified by
"We tehd to think only in terms
using it and the National Lague isn't," he says. "I'm not allowed phone that her husband, an Air
Princess
Anne's
equestrian
Guards
officer,
of
what this war has cost us,
BY JACK O'BRIAN
to use it against the National League in spring training. That's Force Colonel, would be
Mark
Phillips,
her
rrrrreally-big
romance,
will
the
United States," the letter
LIKE BURNING YOUR BRITCHES
ridiculous. How am I going to experiment•"
coming home, said with
do a two-year hitch in Germany suddenly. It's said. "But by comparison to MUST WEAR BELTS
BEHIND YOU
Use it In AL Games
delight, ''this Is the greatest,
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Legts.
NEW YORK (KFS) - New French coffin just a two-hour jet from London .. . The most- what it has ' cost so many
Simply by using it in spring exhibition games with other my sunniest day."
publicized porno-film currently (made for Vietnamese, our price pales.'' lation calling for a maximum
American League clubs, he was told.
But her elation was tern· nail's named I.a Vie au Bleu Jeans. In a denim
$25,000)
is charging $7.50 a ducat out of N.Y. ...
Nolde expected to come $50 fine for motorists who riill
"I stUI say it's ridiculous," said Martin, whose Tigers took the pered by the knowledge that pocket ... Star-erashed Ann-Margret's due for
MGM's opening its "Soylent Green" film ap- home within six months. He to wear seat belts while drlvtnS
Oakland A's all the way to the final game in the American otherswerenotasluckyasshe. further facial surgery ... Leo Duiocher's will he
propriately on St. Patrick's Day ... The Jan . had been appninted to attend will be introduced tn the GenLeague playoffs last fall.
.
"I feel so happy until I think the next controversial memoir ... White House
thaw here wasn't popular with anyone but classes at the Army War eral Assembly within 30 days
Billy Martin isn 'I backward about any other subject, either. of some of the other girls whose aide Sam Kenny (for LBJ and JFK) retired and
people:
cabs didn't like folks walking. more, College.
state Highway Safety Director
What about Warren Spahn being voted into the Hall of Fame? husbands are not coming was hired by Henry Ford in Fla ... The TV actor
"He was a great man and Eugene P. O'Grady anJames Franciscuses expect their third ... Legal movie houses lost folks who wouldn 't.he cooped
HJ'm very happy for him/' says Martin.
back," she said.
up
on
nice
evenings,
stores
weren't
selling
still
is," Mrs. Nolde said. nounced.
How abOut the move to vote in the late Roberto Clemente
Things were sad in the VIP Melvin Belli's the new lawyer for oiiman
O'Grady said a study revealwithout the customary five-year wait?
Burlington, Vt., home of the Michael Davis in hassles over the will of his late winter clothes and bosses generally noticed "Maybe this will shake up a
workers
left
for
lunch
earlier
(but
they
stayed
few
people.''
ed
mandatory use of seat belts
"Rightly so," says the Tigers manager, who with the mous- family of Marine Maj. Donald wife, Helen Bonfils, Bdwy . show-angel
During his last visit to would cut the state's yearly
tache he's wearing now, looks like Mark Spitz. "The time is right G. Cook, who had believed for ("Sleuth" was her last) of publishing and Sels out later) ... O'Henry's in the Village is doing its
bit
to
dramatize
the
contention
Greenwich
Michigan
In June, he told Mrs. traffic death toll by 20 per cent.
for something like that. The people love Clemente,and there isn't six years he was alive and a Floto Circus millions .. . Tennessee Williams
"That would mean 400 llveil
wants to write a screen scriptfor Andy Warhol's Village is safer than elsewhere in Manhattan: Nolde that tf something went
any question about him deserving to be in the Hall of Fame.lf the prisoner.
saved
in Ohio last year," said
it's
launching
a
guided
after~inner
"Walk
in
wrong
to
go
ahead
with
plans
writers decide to vote him in without the wait, I don't think the
Cook was shot down and smut factory ... Newlyweds Patty Duke and
they had made.
O'Grady.
practice would be abused in the future."
captured in South Vietnam John Astin discotekked at the new Genesis spot. the Village" next month.
Bette
Davis
in
public
appearances·bans
the
"That
means
he
will
be
The-cops-robbers set say Carlo Gambino's
_
What About Ford?
New Year's Eve, 1964. In
What about his old Yankee buddy, Whitey Ford, missing out October, 1971, Mrs. Cook was underthugs are congratulahng the Boss of glowing eulogies thst sould so terminal: "I've buried in Arlington Cemetery,
being elected by 30 votes?
told by the Marine Corps that a ·Bosses for muscle-minding the return of the only been in this business 41 years," she insi~ts, just like he Wanted," Mrs.
"II made me feel a little dejected,'' Martin says. "I see no
Viet Cong defector had $350,000 in sacred gems from Brooklyn's Regina "and I still have nine to go. Usually it's on the Nolde said.
reason why he shouldn't have made it on the first ballot. The positively identified her Pacis Church. His courtly comment: "I refuse 50th anniversary everyone thinks you're ready INMATE CAPTURED
over and give up."
same with Bob Lemon. Those two were super pitchers. Whitey husband in May, 1970, as being to answer on the grounds it might make me a to roll
Pia Lindstrom's pals say she won't return to
LOUISVD..LE, Ky. (UPI) saint."
was one of the best pitchers I've ever seen, and one of the best alive.
her CBS-newshenning job. And won't return Ohio Penitentiary escapee AnHarold Gary, a superior actor, is uncompetitors.
But this weekend "we
anywhere fdr· fdtlr months •,';:o'rll~ 'disgraceful drewL. Wagst~ •.34, ~amilton,
derstudying
both leads (for Jack Alhe!'tson a~q headache for cops _ the rilo!i!liacked ·''juice Ohio, was ca».tyred here Satw'·
"He had a great 1!1t~i\9 everythinU~Jiii I rtf{e~per onil.day: . ;simply receiv,il•word that his
we were playing the White Sox in a crucial series. A guy with a name had been listed along Sam Levine) in Neil Simon's "Sunshine Boys" joints" (peddle juice officially but cater to day in the J\il'klng lot of Standi·
real flat nose, the same as Hank Bauer's, leaned over the dugout, with some others," she said. smash; betimes, he has a speaking off-stage
homos and lesbos and weirdos generally who ford Field airport.
and hollered to Bauer, 'Hey, Hank, remember me? We were in "Alongside his name was the role (via loudspeakers) ... Mini Conglomerate :
buy and sell narcotics v.1 the license-less
Sentenced to the prison in
ON YOUR DIAL
word 'dead •and then the date : actor Joe Coscia of the new Joanne Woodward
the Marines the same time and landed in Okinawa together.'
premises) added another juicerie on E. 53rd st. !968 for the slaying of a
"Hank couldn't remember, but Whitey, sitting there in the August, 1967."
flick lunched at Donaghy Steak House and then the police intend to dry up instanter ... He Hamilton youth, Wagster
"
dugout, looked at this guy's flat nose and at Hank's, and said,
Some families clung to the went to the "Pippin" matinee to check on the
'Say, what did those Japanese over there fight you with, hope that perhaps someday costumes in "Pippin"; he designed 'em ... doesn 't look Chinese : headwaiter at the new ,es_c_;aped:,__la_st_M_a.:.y_.- - - - - - - - - - - - - shovels?"'
Showbiz these days :· John Stevens, waiter at Tai's Hunan Yuan on 62nd - 3rd is Eddie
Schoenfield .. . Quentin Forge of "The Godl•o U S Co'"""""'
01&gt;
restrictions, many doctors O'Neal's Baloon took leave to star in a "Jesus
father"
is
making
offers
to
Jill
Haworth
she's
••• Doun.. o•t 01 '"' ' "" "'' "" ' " · ~'"' • 'i C•·••'
pay less attention to diet It Christ Superstar" road troupe.
probably
refusing
..
.
City
Hall
optimists
think
is usually necessary to use
Egyplisn-born European businessman
medicine anyway to obtain Fernand Legros bought a $25,000 Rolls-Royce, Mayor Jawn Lindsay wants a crack at Jake
any satisfactory reduction
Javits' U.S. Senate seat. About as much chance
m the uric acid level. The then went to Paris Cartier's for a Rolls-replica as when he thought he could become President.
diet is important in restrict· gold and jeweled key to the platinum lizzieMeir Kahane of the Jewish militant gang
mg total calorie intake for fOr the same price ... He:s the lad suing Clifford
those who are obese. Exces· Irving for $100,000,000 and his publishers over that isn't popular with most Jews in Israel or
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. Vinci, Ben Franklin and sively rich foods or dietary descriptions of his exotic ltfe style in Irving's America lost hts once:noisy ally : the Joe
bmges are to be avoided.
Colombo crime family . Which thinks Kahand
Dear Dr. Lamb-l've been Alexander the Great.
\1\it+h 0,ArH~ Jo&lt;-~ ~
The
old purine free diet that second-last book, "Fake" ... Singer Louise
The
elevated
uric
acid
can
merely "brings heat" as the Colombo dopes did
having trouble with go ut lor
was
commonly
used
in
gout
O'Brien
makes
a
smart
big
living
without
fansome years but m the past form deposits in the various omitted meat, foul and fish fare . For proof, she just bought a new $100,000 ... It's onlv money: Sammy Davis is tooling
G 01 r' vvi+-J... Cl
only my hands and wrists JOints and gradually produce and was based on obtaining
about in a fJS,OOO Stutz Bearcat. Aregular John
were involved. This I as t gouty arthritis. It can also protein from milk, eggs ,· home in the Poconos ... UN Sec. Gen'l Waldheim Held Jr .... Only live U.S. audience bigger thsn
week it got to my bi~ toe. r0 r m crystals in a joint cheese and ve get a b I e must be doing something right: the Russians
v1
CJ
My problem is what 1s the (often the great toe) 'lind sources.
just officially bombed his short tenure as the Super Bowl on TV: the average Sun.
1
ca
use
an
acute
inflamma·
churchgoers, 80 mUlion strong.
diet to follow to avoid get·
For a person who wants ''ineffective."
ting it. I've asked my doctor tory reaction . The I a r g e,
\Ni fh ct
fl
C-1
and he told me to keep away swollen, red painful toe is to use a diet in gout I would
from anchovies and caviar. so tender that the patient recommend a diet relatively
I never eat the stuff. but I usually can't stand to have low in protein but it still
01
' Nt'+h ""
must be adequate. Because
do (!rink orange j u i ce in the bed sheets over it.
great quantittes and eat
Medical treatment is given of the frequent association
RATES 0.' TAXATION FOR 1972 '
Go11/oj
vinegar dill pick I e s and lor two purposes : to relieve of fatty deposits in the arfresh tomatoes almost every an acute episode, and on a teries of gout patients, one
In purtlua!ace of !aw, I, Hm11ud E. f'rauk Trea!lurcr of Meig11 County, Ohio,
day. Please tell me what ;s long.term hasis to prevent should use fortified s kIm
do hereby gave notace that the num ber of M1lls levied on each dollar of propei-ty
01
good and what is not good the gradual precipitation of milk, egg white s, un·
shown on the , ~nera! Ta x Duplicate of Rcnl Estnte, Public Utility and PeJ•son.
ul
Property
w1thm
saad
County
for
the
yenr
1972
is
nM
follows·
for a gout diet.
·
unc a c i d s a It s into the creamed cottage cheese and
C1
Dear Reader -G out is bones and joints which &gt;.vllt vegetable proteins such as
characterized by too much gradually cause arthritic de· beans, while using meat, ·
uric acid in the body. Uric formities . Some pahents poultry and fish sparingly.
ib ib
acid is an end product qf don't realize this and think No one with gout should go
~
~
some proteins . It is elimi- if they are f r e e of pain on a crash reducing diet hethey're
doing
fine
and
don't
cause
this
sometimes
causes
nated 111 the urine and this
is where •it gets its name. need the medicine, but the an acute attack.
The body manufactures uric medicines that are given are
Other individuals will have
1·
acid and is the main source necessary to help prevent trouble with drinking alcofor it.
arthritic deformities .
i .hoi in any form, and even
BEDFO RD
severe
emotional
stress
can
Individuals
wtth
hi
g
h
_NeigK
Local S.D.• --·-·o:-c...:4c:3:::
0.....c
1 ,.5,:0:_:3'-'1 5~
.50
Because much of the uric
1;vels of uric acid are often
70 ---"'·5"-.3~.65~1~.0~022_2139~
a gouty attack. Vine.
CHESTER
·ac1d is formed by the body cause
Jacqui Johnson, age 8
'
dill pickles and fresh
Eastern L.S D. -------- 4.30 2.50 26.50
.53 .65 1.00 .2 3,5.50
%tght people such as irrespective of the dietary gar
tomatoes
are
fine
.
Westbrook
Elementary
2
50
31.50
School
Meig-s
L.S.D.
--------·4.:10
.53
.65
1.00
.2
40.50
.c ewton, Leonardo da
Mt. Prospect, lllinois. ; ' , :
COLUMBIA·

1i1~.i:

. lllisalonary in Africa; by the
Loyal Women's Class ·of the
Middleport Chur~h of Chl'lst.
'
MeeUng Thursday nlg~t at
· the church, Mrs. Oacar Roush
read · a letter from Miss
'Spurlock describing her work
in translating · the New

.,

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')

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I;

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..

..
•

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·'

. RUTLAND - .Conserving
environment was the topic of a
meeting of the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners WedneSday night at ~ pome of
.Mrs. Fred Williamson.
J lit
Members reponded to roll
call by naming what they want ·
specifically to preserve In their
environment. Jl'lrs. How.ard
Birchfield commented on
proper selection of pesticides,
dust guns and sprayers to
handle 'garden Insects while not

,.

m
. oice along Br'Way _

We talk to you
like a person.

e

a

Gout Diet Can
Be .Helpful

/~\
~

dOU '""

I'

&gt;P nO • IOd Hi hii&lt;&lt;U"f0

"&lt;00~f•010'~ihTO o

fol). c_,oufo/ 6uyo..
bond.

buy o..
Go;IJ br.Ay

Yo

bo

br

o

..

!"I' I O ~oO &gt;IoiO"'' "'

~.

b1 J~e. ~
bond.

~r c..oC~t

Yo

fe-+-

o.r.d

The Frigidaire Laundry Center
It fits in just two feet,
runs on conventional
household current.

27.00

Euatcrn L.S.D. --··· -··

4.30 1.60

?.6.50

Enstem L.S.D.
·-------·-

4.30 2.00

2"6,.";G0:.__ _.:£:3!..~~5~
•
t':QO
• .:.~~5'C"
.
3 .00

OLIVE

---

ORA NGE·~-

--~--

- - -- --·-- ·--- -- ·

RUTLAND
·--- ....
Meigs L.S D. --- - ------- 4.30 2.50
Rutlsnd V&gt;llage .. _____ _ 4.30 1.40

--·

Meigs L.S.D. ... . ....... 4.30 1.60
S'AL!SBURY

.53

.65 1.00

.53 .65 1.00 .2 39.60
· - -- - - -- - - - -

31.50

-- ~omeroy Village ------- 4.80 .20
SCIPIO
- - -- - - - - -·

L.S.D.

---~=c.:.-: · 4 .3ll...:_~~~-- 3} 50

SUTTON
·
. Southern L.S.D. -······· 4.30 2.00
Racine Village · -· · ------ 4.30 ' .70

Regular Heal or w1th th e No Heat-Air Fluff se tting. lri one compact package, the fa bric cate you need.

Syrac u~~e Vtllage ·-----· 4.30

.70

Sutton·M"llll LQCai ··c·· 4.30 2.00

•389

34.50

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

:~: ·~ l·~ ·~ :~·~

s .7o
31.50 7.70 .63 :66

Meig,

.2'

31.50
.53 .65 1.00 • .2 40.60
31 .60 9.00 .53 .65 1.00 .2 48.40

~1fj~~P~;~~~iliaii:·::::: !:~Z 1.~ ~l g~

thorough wash1ng w1th I he three washing actions of the
e~cluslve one piece AgHub. Ones without hot spots
thanks to patented Flowing Htlat. Two cyc le washer tor
regul ar and delicate fabrics, two cyc le drYer to dry w1th

BAKER

.2 36.00
-.5~- .G6
- -1.00- --

Southern L.S. D. ------- 4.30 2.50

iilii:E~, ---

Washes and dries family-size loads, solely and dependably Yet il's only 24" wtde to 111just at&gt;ou t anywhere,
a bathroom, kitchen, even a hallway . And 1t runs on
convenltonal1 20 volt holJSehold current on a separate
15 amp branch c1rcut t wtlh 3-prong outlet Yet it deli vers

.63

.65

1:00

....

·t.oo

:2 45:90
.2 40 60

----·-·--- ·-----....c......

27.00
53 65
27.00 8.00 :53 :66
27.00 10.110 .53 .65
81.60
.53 .66

1 00 2 35 GO
1:00 :2 42.20
1.00 .2 44:50
l.~" .2 4o:oo

Real eet.te t.lxe~ whjch h11.ve not been paid n~ the clo.s'e of e11.ch collection
carry a penalty of t en per cent .. Taxu may be paid at the office of the county
trepsurer or by mulj. Pleaije bnnlf your las ~ tax receipt und If you poy by mail

FURNITURE

b~ sure to locflte r1mr property by taxing di&amp;trir.t tmd enclose sb 1mped aeJr Kd· ~le!l!led envelope-. ~lway~e examine your tax re.-.:eipt to see th ~tt It covers aJI

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

• ) O~r property. Off1ce Hours 9:00A.M. .to 4:00 P.Zd. diily e:&lt;cept &amp;turda when
off1ce clo~es ILt Noon. Tu Books will ~en Decem be~ 15, 1972, to Jan. 20,Yl978.
HOWARD £. FRANK. Meigs County Treasurer

Mode!LCT3· 120

'·i

~a st~m

L.S D. -------- - 4 30 2 oo 26 50
.53 65 1.00 2 35,00
out ern L.S.D.••• -- --~--_c
4.,30'--!2"'.o~
o -"27.~.o~o_ _,:'·5~:J.....:'.6~6....:c
L0~0~.2'.._1i3~
5 .~50
LETART
·-

1

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18ke
in

I

Published As A Public Service By The Dltl!Y Setlllntl

•

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If you'd like to have a nest.egg.,,: i
~tashed ~way for so~~thing special:
m your life, why not JOin the 1 , , :
Payroll Savings Plan? And now thaf
U.S. Savings Bonds
, '·
mature in less
than six years,
they'll be ready
when you are.
The Payroll Sav.' s1Qck
ing~ P~n. PUts
Ameri~:
saVIng m every.
. ~· .
..
body's reach.

Middleport
Personal Notes

Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Simpkins, Charla, Chuck and
Melissa of Columbus were
Sunday guests of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Snowden of
Rutland. They brought a cake
for the birthday anniversary
observance of Mr. Snowden .
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Walburn,
in Waverly Friday night for the
·Waverly-Meigs game, visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Hand there. The Hands are
former Middleport residents.
Their son, Robin, plays on the
reserve team for Waverly, and
the Walburns' son, Steve, plays
on the Meigs reserve team.
Mrs. Martha Childs has
returned from Birmingham,
Ala. where she visited her sonblg~~~ jlp' ic. :i;;J,,;!~~\ll~J·~~~:~·gjl._te~ 1 h~· and
fikeslee, lflitl! 'COunty ex- MrS. oe folll,\\l!~f, ,l!.na ~htldren
tension agent. ·
for two weeks. She went to
Alabama with Mr. and Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY Btll Childs who were enroute to
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Florida for a vacation.
Episcopal Parish House,
Mrs. Albert Roush Is a
Pomeroy, with Mrs. Everett medical patient at the
Hayes as hD!Itess. Mrs. Dwight Vete1·ans Memorial Hospital.
Wallace will review "The Fatal
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds was a
Friendship" by Stanley business visitor in Colwnbus
Loomis. Roll call wtll he a Saturday. On Sunday she
comment on the program.
visited in Leon, W. Va. witll
Miss Edna Burdette.
I
Mr. and Mrs. 'Alan Wallace
THEME NOTED
"Born In the Blaze" is the and daughter, Alison, of Ashtheme of the youth revival to be ville were weekend guests of
held at the Middleport United his parents, Mr. · and Mrs.
Pentecostal Church on South Dwight Wallace and daughter,
Third St., beginning Tuesday Nancy. They also visited Mr.
and conUnuing through Sunday and Mrs. Bruce Wallace and
nightly at 7:30p. m. Ilapa Bird son.
will be the evangelist. Pastor of
the church is William Knittel.
SALE DAYS SET
The public is invited.
Mary Shrine 37, White Shrine
of Jerusalem will hold a
rummage sale Friday and
IN HOSPITAL
Saturday, Feb. 2 and 3, in the
RACINE - Margaret Ann
Middleport Masonic Temple,
J,ohnson of Racine was
from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. Articles
returned to Veterans Memorial
for the sale are to be left at the
HO!Ipltal Friday.
Temple Thursday afternoon .

Grace Pratt, and Mrs.
Margaret I.allance, dinner for
bereaved families ; Miss
Frances Roush and Mrs. Rose
Reynolds, flowers:
Reported ill were Mrs. Essie
Montgomeroy·and Mrs. Floyd
Boyer, at home, and Mrs.
Donna Russell, a patient at
University
Hospital
in
Columbus. The birthday anniversary ol Mrs. Genevieve
Farmer on Jan. 27 was noted
and members signed a card for
her.
Named hostesses for the
February meeting were Mrs.
Lohse, Mrs. Margaret Jones,
Mrs. Marie Postelwaite, and
Mrs. Lula Mae Lynch. Mrs.
Martha Ohilds will have the
program. Mrs. Roush, in
welcoming the Loyal Pal
members, recalled several
whose relatives had been in the
Loyal Women's Class, among
them the late Mrs. Minerva
Childers, mother of Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds, and Mrs. Nina
Bland.
Mrs. William Reynolds gave.

100% CofiOfl

KITCHEN
TOWELS

Bring Your Walls 10 Ll'e!

Pretty pr1nts m
. c olorful Piltterns
on bnght ·whlle
towels F~~nge
lr1m's 15•25-m
s•ze

.I

28xS,2-INCH
Framed PICTURES
• R&amp;eh Walnut-Finlth Frames

• Lovely Landseapu

Ch oose lrom our
decorators collec tion ot be aut1fu l
landscape pam!lngs
Per fect accen ts lor
llvrng room den
bed roo m

Clopaque

... \-· WINDOW
1
; SHADES

I

,t

lnilll
·!~
1\~-{1\ft\; 0

~I

Lmoo embossed

room· dar~enmg

plJU\11

un

o~alft(.

_ __

.~~

'

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.

shade WashaOi e'
On adjUStab le
sleet rolle• 37 1 ~
•n b~ 6 ·11 long

\__®

I

40 -QI Size

SIT-ON
HAMPERS

Change the " looks' or
all you r chai rs w1th
reve rsrble wash able
cotton pads w1tl-i
com fo rlmg loa m
cores . Cho 1ce ol
colo rs patlerns

Heavy ·duty. yet ~~~~hi­
weigh t tmer polyeth ylene Attrac!ive
wtcker des•gn mser t
1 5 VlX I2x l 9 1,~ In

lndoor-Ouldoor

53 on list for honors
RACINE - Fifty-three
Racine Elementary School
students were listed on the
honor roll for the third six
weeks grading period. Making
a "B" or above in all their
subjects were :
Grade 6, Bryan Grindstaff,
Brice Hart, Seth Hill, Brent
Patterson, Marie Pickens.
Grade~. Carmen Carpenter,
Tammy j;leland, Kim Dugan,
Amy Fisher, Pam Harden,
To~bljjlf¥o.n 1 Me·ll\l~t 4&gt;.¢.
Kntg~\i.!ltlod'roy Manue,J,..Jolqt ,,
Pape, Kent Varney, Cindy
Warden, Karen
Wines,
Jonathan Rees.
Grade 4, Peggy Bush, James
Gheen, Eric Hill, Bob Bill Lee,
Carl Norris, Mary Beth Obiu,
Mark Simpson, Paula Wolfe.
Grade 3, Derek Badgley,
Kim Bickers, Cindy Cross, Kim
Follrod, Patrick Johnson,
Allen Pape, Jay Reese, Clifford

RUG RUNNERS

Roseberry, Melinda Salmons,
Rita Slater, Kent Wolfe.
Grade 2, Kathy Bake(,
Rebecca Lee, Lori Maynard,
Clair Morris, David Parsons,
Terry Patterson, David
Salmons, Kimberly Salser,
Tonja Salser, Lori Warden,
Melaine Weese, Alan Shuler.
Grade I, James Bush,
Rebecca Johnson , Laren
Wolfe.

r:·;,~-' 11 SHI~R'f-M n r

CARPET
Colorfu l way 10 prolec1 fl oors and
ca rpeling 2 ma tcl11ng mat s of carpetmg
matr!r lals srrged aU around

N' '"'l. l cll .-.!1 ·tl 1• 1r rd

~'{lrl ! t-1/lld t. lrll~

, .. ir:·

2\P'~

r! I '1 (1 111 r :; r

FINISHING

1

~!.~~.: i~~~~:K ~~·.~ \i'•;~~~~,; !!Rre·wh"r~

h , , , ~ 1'-

•·

tmrl ~nl' '
\; 1' 1.. on

your Dollars have more ••cents"!

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5

BIG 9 BA

Use Our Free Parking Lol

Cleaners

S!

Big Values in Every Department!

216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

'

Pro -Cialtn "

Jr. Boys' J.8
Gl r/s ' fi · BYI, 9 · 11

KNEE-HfS
Special family meal prices 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.

For Adults

For Kids

Big Shet•
French Fries
Turnover and
Large Soft Drink

H$mburger
French Fries
Small Soft Drink
and Lollipop

Only

Only

•1

5~

CHEF®

Sooial Notes

w·:

1.00 .2 35.60

MONDAY
MEIGS Local Band Boosters
Monday, 8 p.m. in band room
.at high school.
LETART FALLS United
Methodist Church WSCS and
Day of Prayer and SeH-Denial
IJ'Ogr&amp;m,Mooclay, 7:30p.m. at
the church. Mrs. Nora Cross is '
president of the local
IIIIOCiation, and there will be a
program of readings and
mlllical nwnbers.
Add Tuesday
BEND 0' THE RIVER
Garden Club meeting will be
beld Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Bert Grimm.
Mrs. Wllaon Carpenter will
bave the (rOgram.
WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD Garde11 Club,
~n meeUng, Columbus and
-$outhern Ohio Electric Co.,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Club
officers to be hostesses .

SALE STARTS
WED., JAN. 31

"

and Mrs. Homer Parker since
the last meeting.
· Gardening tips for January
by Mrs. Robert Snowden included .planning spring gar·
dens, rearranging houseplants
and adding new ones, fleaning
up the garden plot on a nice ·
day, planting tulip bulbs but
being sure to mulch well now,
and transplanting trees.
A book review by Mrs.
Marvel Quillen was entitled
"Must They Die ." The
traveling prize donated by
Mrs. Snowden was won by Mrs. the program using "Love" as
Larry Edwards. Refreshments her theme. The prayer was by
were served to 11 members Miss Mildred Hawley, and
attending :
Mrs. Roush read scripture
from John 21. Two poems,
"Where There is Love" and
"The Magic of Love" by Helen
TWO PROJECTS SET
Two lund raising projects Steiner R1ce were read by Mrs.
have been planned by the Reynolds. Mrs . Lohse gave
Catholic Women's Club of the "Lord, Help Us to Love
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Others" ' and there was · a
On Monday and Tuesday, Feb. closing prayer by Peter
5 and 6, a rummage sale will be Marshall.
Refreshments were served
held in the church basement
• by the officers, Mrs. Roush,
and on Feb . 10, a jitney supper
Mrs. Helen Reynolds, Mrs. Ida
will be held there.
Childs, and Mrs. I.allance.

Long Bottom

Ise:;

27 60

Social
Calendar

disrupting or damaging environmental balance.
Mrs. Birchfield also reported
the Region 11 tree 8aie in April.
Distribution pf spruce trees,
three and four years old, which
have already been ordered by
clubs and other organizations
in Region 1'1, will he handled by
the Rutland club.
A communication from Mrs.
Edward Miztcko, Athens, was
read regarding the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs'
sltde
contest.
Flower
arrangements were taken to
the I.angsvtlle Post Office and
to several shut-ins bf the
community by Mrs. Joe Bolin

MARKET PROFIT $97.
A flea market and soup
supper at the Pomeroy
Elementary School Saturday
by the Pomeroy PTA brought
in $97 towards the spurchase of
a
special
elementary
typewriter for the school to be
given by the PTA in memory of
Larry Morrison, assistant
superintendent of the· Meigs
Local School District. Contributions
toward
the ·
typewriter by those who were
Mr. and Mrs. Robert White, unable to support the fund
Keno, vlaited Mary Pierce.
raising project may be sent to
Mr. and Mrs. Hank Holter the school or Mrs.,Earl Thoma,
visited Mrs. Hanson Holter of Wolfe Drive, Pomeroy, the .
Forest Run.
PTA president.
Tom Drake of Reynoldsburg
wu an overnight guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Dave Smith.
Mr. and' Mrs. Harold Osborn,
Keno, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Rolland Stethem.
Grace ~wan was an overnight . - t o! Mr. and Mrs.
. Wayne· Prince.
Vera Weber ·and Donna
We Are The Only Store
~uber visited their parents,
Mr.• and Mrs. Fred LarkinS.

J:c'j."l J:
10 7 rooa;;YQ"n

1.50

Testament into the' African
dtalecjs and thanking the
.group for pest as,sistance.
Chrtst!Jlps . projects were
reported with Mrs. Eleanor
Lohse noting that 29 members
had been reiJlemhered with
fruit,cookles,cardaorflowers.
Thank-you notes were read
from Mrs. Jeanette Thomas for

IN&lt;:pLUMBUS
The Rev. and Mrs. Robert
Buckley and Mr. and Mrs.
Uoyd Wright of the Laurel Cllif
Free Methodist Church were In
Colwnbus Saturday for an
Interdenominational meeting
or\ missions.

Ff

. •••••• 4.30

.
a remembrance, the Mountain
.Mission School at Grundy, Va.,
and the Mount Healthy
Christian Home in Cincinnati
for contributions. ·
· Mrs. Roush, presiding,
welcomed into the group the
members 'of the former Loyal
Pals Class of the church.
Appointed to committees were
Miss Mildred Hawley, Mrs.
.

Environment 'theme of meeting

~1

.Family of last VICtim not bitter

,'

1503 EASTERN AVENUE . '·

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Ac•yl• c and nylon 11b-kmtter ry Str etch,
and stay-up' New sp1cy co lors

NO-IRON SLACKS
Carn pl ete l~

washable pol~este r and colton
pant s Full boxer w,115t for great li t
!tared
legs for gre&lt;H style' Great colors too .
I hey re gre al.rlt- around '

SHAMPOOS,
CREMER
and BUBBLE BATHS
B1g brg values 1n lovely bea uty •le ms
Choose regular creme r1nse or with
lemon emerald sh ampoo or sha mpoo
w1th egg and bubble ba ths In 3 II!fl y
lragrances

women's S:· IO

Ballerlnu
Men 't 10-13

Aerylle
Soeks

So rt sole p l u~h - shppers Padded

•nsole lor e•lla

com ton
tor

t ra ~~!l

Ha na ~

Colors

H1-bulk ac •vt.c
an d stre tch nylon
W1d ~ select10n o!
c olors

Hair BRUSHES

HAIR BANDS

P {o lt~ ss•onal lf.!as .ng

Hold ha11 w!thoul

i lor

~ty l mg

bru5hcs

•

Little M•J••tr·

•
•

' Tulnlng ·hnts
t OO•occ non double
crotch R•b·k n1t
culls

·------·
and

99t

pull1ng or damagmg '
&amp; CI •He rent styles

'
•

•
•
••

YOUR PHARMACI·SJ

ls· oo~ooo©/A\Vmoo ~~

·

. Ell Larkllla, who has been a
patlenl · at a Parkersburg
HIIIPllll, hal returned home.
Mr. and Mrs. David Smith
and Dee Dee welt vlaltlng A.
S, 'Kibble of' Reedlvllle. '
Mr. and Mrs. Donel Larklna
vtilted Mr. and Mrs. VirgO
Wllllllley, Olesblre.
-VIIIellkllltli

Providing Complete and

Sensa tion al pr~cel

Smooth, co mfy
a c etate sa t 1n .
FanC~

etasl1c

wa•st, le gs 5- 10

sh..r llnu-Hl' I
Perl e&lt;;! wdh pant1,

1C1'11f Skill 5 100"•
nylon One s•ze hts
1

8'/J-1'

Curlfy-

CIIIOI

B•ll•

300 sanitary soft
cotton balls 100 s

ol usesI

CllftiiiiC ....
For all ycur paraphernalia ,, pur1e or ,
orawer 1

Bttth R1ft1n
Med•um large, JUmbo
or boul!•nt Silts, 6 to

1D rcll ers m pkg

Accurate Records of

.

¥our

Exp~nse

on'

Prescription Medici,ne.

BEN-¥-FRANKLID-1

RALL' s·

Mi~dleport, Ohio·

- l

�.' BARNEY
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 29, 1973

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action!; Sentinel Classifieds Get Res·ults~/
Pollieny
Motor ·co.

2 SIGNS

OF
QUALITY

-------

Relail$5447, NOW$4200

Spring green finish, whUe vinyl top. power windows, door

locks &amp; seat, till st. wheel, 400 CID engine, turbo
hydramatlc. p. steering &amp; disc brakes, Positraction
custom equipment, F&amp;R bumper guards. Premium tires,

stereo tape &amp; radio, factory air, It's loaded, new car title.

1972 CHEVROLET

ches, zig-zags, buttonholes,
blind hems, overcasts, etc .,

$3995

frOnt &amp; rear guards. radio &amp; rear speaker. white-wall
tires . Nice and clean . Retail $4860 . Priced to move.

BE YOUR

Pomeroy llotor Co.

=-:::----:--:---:-----:-

WANTA liS.

INFORMATION
I'EADLINES .
,5 P .M. Day Before Publica'tion ·
M~nday Deadline 9 a.m .
Cancell,at ion - Corrections ·
Will be ace'epted unt il9 ~Lm . for
. Day oi..Pvbl lcation
REGUL'ATIONS

Stivers ville
News Notes
· Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hilton
are vacationing In Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Durst and
Tom, local, and Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin Hood, Danny, Timmy
and Judy, Middleport, were
recent guests at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Durst,
Scotty and Jason, of The
Plains.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Roush
have moved into the property
they purchased from Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Brewer, Reedsville.
Mrs. Louise Gluesencamp is
recuperating at home after
at
undergoing
surgery
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va.
Mrs . Helen Smith, Mrs.
Edgar Brewer, Mr. ana Mrs.
Harold Brewer visited Mr. and
Mrs. A. C. Brewer and David
on Sunday.
Mios - l:.e~bl- ·Bir~h ~ent . a
wtth Mr. and
r cent aFt..rnoon
1"1•
Mrs. Harold Roush of Portland.
Mrs. Mae Van Meter and
Ruby and Mr. Bob Ours were
Thursday evening callers of
Mr. ana Mrs. Paul Evans and
son.
Mr. William Middleswart
has retw-ned home from a
recent hospitalization at
Veterans Memorial.
Mr. and Mrs. Foster Wells,
Long Bottom, have moved into
the residence owned by Mr.
anti Mrs. Larry Fitch, Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
Hawthorne
shopped
in
Pomeroy Tuesday afternoon.
r Mr. Rudy Durst entered
Holzer Medical Center Wednesday
suffering
from
pneumonia.
Mrs . Anne Cozart spent
Tuesday afternoon with Mrs.
Mike Evans and son, Ryan.
Mr. J . W. Lawson is assisting
his son, Dale, af his place of
business near Long Bottom.
Mrs. Carol Cornell and
daughter, Mrs . Odessa Weddle
and family, Miss Maxine
Powell and Mr. and Mrs. David
Bryant were callers at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. William
Bryant and family this past
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Mac Van Meter
and Missy, Pomeroy, spent
Saturday with Mrs. Ada Van
Meter.
Mr. an~ Mrs. Jim Middleswart and family visited
Sunday · afternoon with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Bush, Spiller.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cozart
and family, Columbus, were
weekend guests recently of her
moiher, Mrs. Goldie Clendenin.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Abels,
Bashan, visited her sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Louis De Luz Sunday
evening. .
Mrs. Elva Dailey, SyracuSe,
called on her pat-'ents, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Autherson, Wed·
nesday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs, Louis De Luz
were In Parkersburg, W. Vii.
on business TueSday.
Mrs. Maxine Durst and Tom,
Mr. ilnd Mrs. Richard Abels,
Mr. and Mrs. Louis De Luz, s.
W. Durst, Stanley Fletcher,
Paul Evans and Paul Dean,
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Ritchie, Jr., Carol Carter, Mr. and
Mrs. Woodrow Downie, Harold
Weill, Ralph Johnson, Mrs,
Roy DonOIIiw were recent
gilt.tl.t at Mr. and Mrs. E. H.

~

.. .

c.penter.

fiUbllsher w ill not be responsible(
'1or more than o~ incorrect
Insertion .
·
RATES
, For Wa'M Ad Service
,
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
.
12 ·centS' per word three
consecutive Insertions.
18 cents per word six con ..
'secutive Insertions. ·
25 Per Cer1t Discount on palo,
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS . '
&amp; OBITUARY
S1.50 for SO word rtlinimpm .·
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Addit ional 25c Charge .- per
Atlvertlsem ent .
.
OFFIC,E HOURS
8:3 0a .m . to 5:00p.m . Dally,
8 :3 0 a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

Notice
STARTING January 29, 1973 all
haircuts In Racine will raise
fo $2.00.
1-28-Jtc

, Plumbing
Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
99'2-2448

Pomeroy, 0.
PARASOL Boutique Beauty
Salon near Skate-A-Way
Roller Rink announces
Frosting Specials Jan . 23 thru
Feb . 3; short hair, reg. $15,
now $12.50; long hair, reg.
517.50, now $14.50; also Mr.
Richard Kerns will be
working Friday and Saturday ; call 985-4141 for ap-

' HOME&amp; AUTO

HOME BUILDING

606 E. Main

I

1HEV SAID MV COOK!~

992-2094

&amp;

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

REMODELING

-GUARANTEED-

and

P!lo.nl!992~2094

OpenBTiiS
Monday lhru Saturday
6~ E. r.1a!•,_P_
o"!eroy, o.

992-5653

~LlLD NoME !IE. AS
FAMOl-15 AS A
HISfORICAl. FIGURE .

YEP... EAT,
DRINK ANb 8e
MERRV...

'

I
' I

. FURNITURE Our

BOB SLOAN
&amp;
C. L. KITCHEN

Pomeroy_ Home &amp; Auto

!

.
Stop In

and Se~
Floor Display.

.

'!liE

~'{

WA'(-

1·26-Jic

Have your home buill by
Custom Bu'ilders. Our

TON pickup truck, '57

carpenters hilve 20 · ·year~
experience ·in building

Chevrolet;

cOntact

Walburn, 992-2805.

Elden

1-26-lfc

GOOD mixed .hay ; phone 669-

Real Estate For Sale
COMFORTABLE,

2

furnace, full basement, bath

1-26-61p

&amp;. 112, att11:::hed garage, extra
lot, near Pomeroy Elemen-

MOTOR~

IT'LL ONL'l' TAKE

ALL WEATHER
ROOFING AND
CONSTRUCTION

SM_
Oli_N_ELSON
Ph. 991-2174

KsY.~·
••• ~ HBlE! '

homes in Meigs County.

From the lar~est
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core.
' Nathan Biggs ·
Radiator Specialist _

0 tory

home, double oven gas range,
freezer • refrigerator combination, Lennox forced air

If I HAI),E ~
To Go
Take Me To

INC.,

A r:EW
MINUTES-

TO 'IOU IT'S A

DO'!OUTHINK I REVEALED MY
SURGICAL SECRETS 10 SOME
'fOUNG WHIPPER-

FEW MINUTES.
TO ME IT MA'l'
SEHALFA

SNAPPER?-!

LIFETIME!!

WASN'T BORN
YESTERDAY!.'

PHONE: . 992-2550

·Pomeroy

'------------~ J L-----------~

MALE. English pointer, 6 tary School; phone 992-7384 or G&amp;E APPLIANCE Repair: SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Repair of all laundry
doors and windows, carports ,
months old, $150; registered 992-7133.
Septic tanks Installed. George
marquees, aluminum siding
with American Field; call742·
equipment, refrigeration
( Billl Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
1-28-6tc
equipment and house wiring. and railing. A.. Jacob, sa les
5635 after 5 p.m.
4-25-lfc
Call 614·992-6050.
representative , For free
1·28·61 P 5 ROOM house and bath on Rt.
estlmoles, phone Charles ELNA and While Sewing
12-31 -30tp
_1._72_A_C_R_E_I-ot_;_p_h-on-e-74-2--36.56. 143; phone 949-3716.
Good Career
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V. Machines .. service on an
1·28-3tc OIL AND GAS Service, new and
1-28-2tp
Johnson and Son , Inc.
Opportunity
makes . Reasonable rates.
3-2-llc
used furnaces, new alUminum
The Sew ing Center, Mid·
WHIRLPOOL refrigerator, 13 HOUSE BY OWNER ; 3 or 4 siding and remodeling, 24 -~R-E7A_D_Y--M
dleport, Ohio.
-IX---C-O_N_C_R-ETE
bedrooms, large rec. room,
. cubic foot size, frostfree, six
hour service; phone 843-2833.
11 -16-lfc
large patio, modern kitchen,
months old; reason for
1-25-Jotp' delivered right to your
CONTACT
project. Fast and easy. Free
selling, have sold my home; fu ll y carpeted; call 992-5248
estimates, Phone 992-3284.
also bed clothing, dishes and until3 p.m. or 992-3436 after 3
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co. ,
other items; Hallie L. p.m .; No Sunday Calls.
cancelled?
Lost
your
1-.21 -12tc
Mlddleporl, Ohio.
Nesselroad, Route 33. Daroperator's license? Call 9926-30-llc
win .
2966.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
1·28-3tp IN WILKESVILLE. Large old·
The Ohio Department of
6-15-tfc SEPTIC TANKS CL&amp;ANED
fashioned five bedroom home
Natural Resources, th~ough tht
upstairs
porch ; --,-- -- ----=
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446- Division
KENMORE gas dryer, $40; with
of
F"arks · and
fireplace, carpet in living and SEPT IC TANKS AROBIC
4782, Galllpoll5. John Ru5sell , Recreation. pursuant to and In
phone 992-2683.
· accordance with the!rovlslons
1-28-Jtc dining room, 30 x 18
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN- · Owner &amp; Operator.
For Rent
basement, central heat; 1
5-12-tlc ot Sections 1501.09 an 1501.10 of
ED. REPAIRED. MILLER
3 ROOM house and bath; partly
acre; room to park several
the Ohio Revised Code ,
SANITATION, STEWART,
furnished; Ideal for 2 workers ·coAL, LimeStone, Exceisio·r mobi le homes ; close to new
proposes to lease for the
C.
BRADFORD,
Auctioneer
OHIO.
PHONE
662-3035,
Salt Works, E. Main St., mining operations. Bargain at
.operation of a boat r~ntaf and
who want to share expenses;
Complete Service
10-4-tfc
Pomeroy . ~hone 992-3891.
miscellaneous retruhment
phone 992-7126.
$17,500. Wiseman Agency,
Phone 949-3821
concession at FOrked R:un Stete&lt;·12-Ift Gallipolis, Ohio; office phone
1-28-Jtp
Racine , Ohio
Park, Meigs County, Ohio.
Crill Bradford
446-3643, home phone 446-4500. Real Estate For Sale
Offic ial bid proposals will be
1-26-6tc·
2 BEDROOM mobile home on 1972 ZIG-ZAG Sewing Mach ine
5-1-ttc rece ive d In the Office of
left in layaway. Beautiful
old Rl. 33, adults only ; phone
Managemen t and Budget until
-----992-6294 or 992-6385 alter 8 pastel color , full size modeL HOUSE in Long Bottom , phone
OOZE
R
and baCK n~ wur11., 2:00 p.m .• February 5, 1973.
Bids wi II be publicly opened
All buill-in to buttonhole, do 985·3529.
p.m.
ponds and septic tanks. dll· thereafter
by the Deputy
stretch sewing and fancy
t-17-lOtc
6-11 -lfc
chlng service ; top sol i. fill Director or his authorized
stitching. Pay just $48.75 cash
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex· agent. The rloht Is reserved to
or terms available. Trade- ins
cavallng.
Phone 992-5367, reject any and all bids .
UNFUI&lt;N 'ISHED 3-room
HOUSE and lois on Wright
accepted. Phone 992-7755.
The lease Will be for a term ol
Dick
Karr.
Jr.
apartment, adults only. No
Street,
Pomeroy
;
phone
7421·24-6lc
lour
years and ten months, from
9-1-lfc
pels, 408 Spring Ave .. - - - - - 5930.
March 1, 1973 to O~cember 31,
Pomeroy .
-~----1-24-1
2tc
1971 ,
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
1-7-lfc
CUSTOM Home Building,
The Divis ion of Parks and
Cleaner complete with at -:. -:. - - ...,,
complete remodeling and RecrtaHon "''II' furnish dockS,
tachments, cordwfnder and 4 BEOROM home, 2 baths, gas'
110 :Mechanic Street
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and paint spray. Used but In like furnace, full basement, river
carpentry 1 free_estlmale; call one bulldlnR approxlmltelv' 32
feet by 20 feet. 1S rowboats with
unfurnished ... apartments . ' new condition. Pay 53&lt;.45
992-7646.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
frontage, Syracuse , Ohio,
oars , and one refrigerated Ice
Phone 992-5434.
1-28-6tp
cash or budget plan available.
Phone 992-2360.
house . The concessionaire will
4-12-lfc
Phone 992-7755.
futnlsh all other equfpmtnt.
1-25-lfc
HARRISONViLLE
--------,---1-24-6lc
SEWING MACHINES. Repair merchancl ise . materials,
2 BEDROOMS, nice bath,
ONE two bedroom ··and one----,, - - - - service, all makes. 992-2284. utilities, and labor necessary to
HOUSE FOR SALE. 114 Brick large living, level lot on hard
three bedroom house ; phone
the concession to apThe Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. operat~
1970 TRAVELER 11 fl . truck
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick . road near store . 54500.00.
proved standards.
992-2780 or 992-3432.
1
Authorized
Singer
Sales
and
camper; self.conta ined unit.
house, 3 bedrooms , excellent
Fht:~uests tor bid proposal
1-21 -tfc Will sell or trade for farm
COUNTRY LOCATION
Service.
We
Sharpen
Scissors.
forms shou ld be. made to the
location, close to school and
ONE ACR'E - All utilities
3-29-llc Office of Management and
equipment; Also 3 ra il cycle
city; contact lou Osborne or 1
available on good gravel --.,------TRAILER , Brown's Trailer
Budget, 1930 Belcher Drive,
trailer, $75; for Information
call 992-5898.
Columbus.
Oh io
43224 .
road.
$2500.00.
Park, Minersville. Phone 992·
call 1-614-992-7260.
11-26-lfc
Teiephlne , (Aree code 61-4) .469 ·
3324.
1-25- 121p
NEASE SETTLEMENT
5096.
1-25-tfc
.94 OF AN ACRE - 3 large
WILLIAM B. NYE
bedrooms. nice bath, and
WALNUT stereo-radio comDirector
utility . Large modern kitbination, 4 speed intermixed
NOTICE OF
(11 B, 15, 22. 29, 4t
chen with dining area .
changer, 4 speaker sound
CLELANDAPPOINTMENT
Wanted To Rent
Drilled
well.
$12,500.00.
system , dual volume controls.
Cue
No.
20839
REALn
Ba l ance $69.-47. Use our
Estate ol Bessie M . McKni;ht
10 ACRES
WOULD LIKE to rent a 3 or 4
101 E . Mlln
Deceased .
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
ON
LEADING
CREEK
bedroom modern home; have
Pomeroy
Noltca Is herebv given that
1-25-61c
references; preferably Meigs
Old house with dug well , William
D. McKnight, of R. 0 .
County; phone 992-3062.
barn on blacktop road . 1, Middleport , Ohio, has been
APPROX. 1ACRE
1·14-181c BEAUTIFUL Colonial maple
$5,000.00.
duly appointed Administrator of
stereo, AM-FM radio, 4 Just olf Rt. 7 - 3 bedroom
the Estate of Bessie M .
LEVEL LOT
speakers, 4 speed automatic mobile home set up ready to
McKnight, deceased, late of
IN
TDWN
4
rooms
with
changer, . separate controls.
Meigs County , Oh io.
Get
your carpet
Pets For Sale
move Into. Extended living
water, gas, and electric.
Creditors are required to file
Balance $79.70 . Use our room
.
Bought
new
in
1965.
$2,000.00.
their claims with said fiduc iary
cleaned now bt.·tlle ...
WEIMARANER !'Upples, AKC
budget· terms. Call 992-7085. All for $6.900.00.
NEW LISTING
within tour months .
registered; phone 742-6834,
1·25·6lc
Dated thIs lOth clay of
JDACRES FENCED
MAGNIFICANT OLDER
Rutland, 0 .
NEW
January
1973.
Just
off
Rt.
681
Lots
of
HOME - 3 bedrooms with
1-28-tfc
Manning
D.
Webster
work done on the house. 4
closets, den In attic. Full
Judge
"Steam Cleaning
bedr~oms,
bath,
porches.
basementflnlshed Into-living
(1) 15, 22, 29, Jt
JUST ARRIVED, direct from
Other bui ldings. Asking just
quarters. 2 baths, 3 car
Florida, tropica l fish by the
$12,900.00. Make an offer .
garage. Nearly 2 acres .
hundr.eds, at Showalter's Wet
THIS HOME HAS
Appointment please.
Pel, Chester, Ohio.
NOTICE OF
Wo wilt come to your home
26 fl. living R. 2 bedrooms.
APPOINTMENT
HOBSON
l-10-19lp
CUI
No.
20,14t
and
completely clean . oil
bath, nice kitchen , dining R.,
LARGE BATH - Nice
Estate o+ Henry L. Johnson
your
.carpot
by this better
carpeted
throughout.
Large
kitchen,
large
living,
3
PARKVIEW Kennels going out
Buy 2 Pairs, 1
Deceased.
new
-method.
,
carport.
Is
in
excellent
of business. Big price
bedrooms
,
gas
furnace
,
PAIR FREE . The
Notice is hereby given that
condition.
$12.500.00.
reduction on all dogs. All AK·
basement and garage. Marlor le Manuel of Syracuse,
best buy in the
Cal( Ingels and we will exC. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash
area . Have slacks
Meigs County , Ohio, ,has been
WHY BE CRAMPED
$9500.00.
&amp; jeans for the
duly appointed Administratr ix
Streets. Middleport, Ohio.
plalh why steam cltoning Is
We have a beautiful older
LETART
whole family ,
the Estate of Henry L. . more s~tislactory. No soop
12-13-ffc
home, 2 ~lory frame. 4 large
3 BEDROOMS - Living and of
Johnson , deceased. late of
B.R. , 1'1• baths. Lovely new
kitchen, back porch and Syracuse. Meigs County , Oh io. . usod. Rates are reosonoblt.
TO MAKE room lor new
kitchen. Carpeted. 1'1• acre
Creditors are ret:~ulred to file
cellar on Rt. 338. Garden.
POMEROY
shipment arriving Feb. lsi ;
their claims with said fudlclary
ground ..A L~rge building
$5,0(!0.00.
Jack W. Cllrsey, Mgr.
within fOur months .
Topi cal fish drastically
40x70. All for you . JUST
TREES
Dated this 19th clay of
Phone 992-2111
reduced at Showalter's Wet
$21.500.00. "-120 ACRES - 5 cleared with Januar;y
1973.
Pet, (:hester, Ohio.
IF YOU ADMI.I'IE
a 4 bedroom home, ~ living
Manning 0 . Webster
lngeb Fum~ure
HOMECLEANING products; folks who are oroud ot their
Probate Judge of said County
rooms, 3 porch&amp;s. Nice
1-25-6tc
phone 992"2579 or 247-2193.
home...
MAYBE
YOU
double cellar with large (11 22. 29 (21 s, Jtc
Middleport
1-5-JOip should have one : CALL
room over.
.
TODAY.
BUSINESS BUILDING
Mobile Homes For Sale
DUE to divorce, 1972 8 track
HENRY E. CLELAND
MIDOLEPORT - 4 room5,
stereo console; must sell at
BROKER
new bafh, new gas forced air
CASH paid for all makes and' once
; niCe walnut finish . This
l ASSOCIATES
lurnaie. Building Is 44x114.
models of mobile homes.
set sold much higher, must let
TO
SERVE
YOU
PhoneI area code 614-423-9531 . go
Good location. 518,000.00.
for $89.60 or $7.47 a month .
992-2259
4·13-lfc
LET US KNOW WHAT YOU
•
Try It in your home. Call 992·
If no answer
WANT IN REAL ESTATE,
5331.
992-2568 or 985-4209
1965, 10x50, . 2 bedroom mobile
YOUR FUTURE DEPENOS
1·16-lfc
home : new carport, awning ; - - - - -- ON , IT. IF YOU ARE A
new lurnace, hot water tank ; J.UST taken in, deluxe zig -zag 1'/2 STORY 2 bedroom brick
BELIEVER, THEN YOU'LL
house In Middleport. Car- BUY NOW.
good condition; phone 992sew1ng
machine . ihl s
7142. .
machine
darns,
em - .- _.peted, paneled. Kitchen and
HELEN L. TEAFORD.
1-24-Stc
broideries. overcasts, but - ~lillning room tiled. Complete
ASSOCIATE
with drapes, $6,500. Call 992·
tonholes . Pay balance 536.50
NO
SUNDAY
SHOWINGS
1971 LIBERTY trailer , 3 or payments can be arranged , 3465.
992-3325
1-26-71c
Call 992-5331.
bedrooms. IV• •baths, all new
(Sale Held in Heated -Bldg.)
1
-16-tfc
furniture. lust fully carpeted
two weeks ago ; lived In four
··-·
months; phone 992-2715.
lig C~pacltr
1·23-61p
Maytag

LEGAL NOTICE·

374-827-9

------

----------------~
.~

SUW::Tl-11~ ID

COmH MV
I.!OTH~r&lt;IS
COMI~V~IH

COME WllH ME, HIO--·
~riD

SHOW ME WHER E.

1HE LOOT!

f 23-lotc
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS.
SPECIALS MONTHLY .
PHONE HELEN JANE
BROWN, MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO 992-5113. ·
12·3·tfc

ACROSS
1. Ge rman
city
6. ,, __ in
Paris "
II. Direction
on ship

12. Sel of
beliefs
13. Wed ding

Method"

---,---,---

EFFECTiVE February 1, 1973
bills for the Syracuse Home
Util ities and Board of Public
Affairs will be collected atthe
new Syracuse City Building ;
office hours 12 noon to 4:30
p.m .
1·29·31c

attendant
(3 wds.l

I BEG YOUR
PAROON-

TAX Serv1ce, Federal and State
Income Ta xes; dally except

Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m..
evenings by appointment ;
Mrs. Steven (Wanda) Eblin,
Rl. 2, Pomeroy (Laurel Clrff
Rd. olf Rt. 7 By-Pass) ; phone
992-2272.
1-3-30-lc

(2 wds.l
27. Young
deer
28.-- Sea,
arm of tlw

AUCTION SALE -.

- -- - - -

HOOD'S AQUARIUMS ; fish

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 31

and supplies ; new location,

Ash . Street, Middleport near
•
park ; phone 992-5443.
1-7-lfc

.- - - - - -

STARTING AT 7:30 P.M.

Wanted To Do

..

------

INTERIOR and Exterior
painting . Also repair work. L.
Ni ce, pl'lone 247-2308 even ings.

1-25-5tp

For Sale

1963 NEW Moon. 10 x 50, air
conditioner; porch and tanks,
Help Wanted
S2.400; phone 773-5975.
1-23-6tc
YOUNG agressive Life In ·

:W"x23'1 JC,009

Aluminum
Sheets

----'---

with

unlimited opportunities has a
need for two agents in the

··Air Conditioners

Previous

··Awnings
selling experience beneficial
· but not required . Will con····Underpinning
sider one ~art , tlme . Will '
train. Stock Option Plan . Cali
Collect 614-267-9175 and ask .:omplele mQblle hQme·
~erv. lce ~ plus gigantic'
tor Mr. Bauer.
1·25-61c &lt;lispl'y ·of mobile homes
-::-;-----.,.,:--~--~41ways avallable.at
GIRL waniOd for local office
"ILL~R .
. li
work .
Knowledge
of f
""
bookkeeping and office
MOBILE HOME
. ·1220 Wosllirigton BlVd.$
Senl!nel, Pomeroy, Ohio.
· . 423-7J21
BE LI'A&amp;, o. 1-26· 121~
.

l
r'

Bo~ch~~sN,hel~!~\~ep~all~

'

. A.utomatlcs
2 speed optration .
Choice of 'Miter
temps .
Auto . 1 ·
water
level '
control.
Lint
Filter or Power
Fin , Agllator. ·
•Ptrma-Prtll

Moyteg

,USED OFFSET PLATES
. HAVE
MANY.USES

HeloOf Heat

Dryers
S~.trround' clothes
with ·gentle/ eve·n j
heat. No hot spots,
no overt;tr\'lng . ,
Fine Mesh Lint ·
Filter. -

2(1

, far Sl.OO

Jh
e. .
RUTLAND
FURNiTURE
R~:~~~=" ..·. i,
IDa'lu
Se
t'
I
IIJ
nme
Wo Spoctollltln

J

MAYTAIJ

.·

Court I5t

PomWOVJ

.

741-4211

,.

.

• Arnold Grati

'

..

lind '

Household Items, glassware, box
springs &amp; mattresses, Tappan gas
range~ pictures, picture frames, ne·w
coffe~ tables, lamps, chairs, desks, 2
teleVISions, antique novelties &amp; many
many more Items - too numerous t~
mention.

At

~II'$

Dollar Saver

305 N~ SEOONQ ST1 MIOOLEPORT.·
aractfonl Auctloo eo.

....... ..............--_...
Auctlanetrs
.
Not ~esponilbl• for liccldtnta.
~
•'

r
~~~

i

Unscramble theae foor Jumblet,
one leiter lA&gt; each square, lA&gt;
form four ordinary wordo.

7. South
Seas ·

canoe

TENGA .

R. Wres t
9. Templ e-

figure
10. Knowl edge

17. "-

!1. Protected
2~: Wedd in.L:

-

feelin~-:s

6. Yearn

ants

-Smith
20. Niche

Call 992-2635

c11~J.OOIDI!JB;-IJ..J ~==~ -t..c

4. Shaver
5. E xpress- r
ing

attend-

mort al ,

~

(C 1978 Klnr Feature• Srndlcate,lnc. )

21.- Fein.
Irish
movement
14. Moocher's
22. Melody
tran sporlation 23. Vapid
24. Helot
(2 wd s. )
26. "The
16. Golf
strokeKing
shot
of

15. Foot lev&lt;r
16. Blues im-

(t.\.t t.~&lt;J

....

REDUCE safe and fast with
GoBese Tablets and E-Vap
"water pills,'' Nelson Drug.
1-29-21p

Yeoterday's CrypiA&gt;quote: WHEN YOU GET TOO BIG A
MAJORITY, 'YOU'RE' IMMEDIATELY IN TROUBLE.-SAM
RAYBURN

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

CLEANING

Richard and

loc, T.M. lot. Ll.t ,_._Off.

"MY BOYG " WENT WtlH

CARPET

Sandra Kerns .·

area .

'I•

1-26-31p

Financial
Assistance
Available

.

992-3318.

years old, ti'le shape; phone

4777 .

.-

hardtop; vinyl Interior. One

PORTABLE Zenith stereo, 2

IN MIDDLEPORT, 0.

-·-.

owner, good condition . Phone

-------

DEALERSHIP AVAILABLE

.

oP.M.'OstAmerican. Cars- .

I

1-26-31p

992-7009.

I

LEGAL NOTICE

pointment ;
watch
for
February permanent special.

Pomeroy

EXPERT ,
. 'Wheel- Alignment
'5.55
L

pOMEROY

KITCHEN &amp;SON
CONSTRUCTION

-..,.._-

.HQt W:lter · H~Citi!rs

Company

..

brakes, factory air, 4 door

sell one or both ; phone 992-

2082.

l:~

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS

surance

gold,

~~

Virgil B.

HEATING &amp;
OOOLING

Operators -

green,

TWO lots in Middleport; will

---..,----

"HEll"

one

tanQerlne and while ripple
deo1gn; $35 each ; Opal
Harris, Reedsville. 0 .; phone
378-6258.
1-28-61c

SERVICE STATION

GIVE your feel a treat; try a
pair of Knapp Shoes: call Bob
The Publisher reserves the
Hysell. 992-5324.
right to edit or relect any ads
1-23-tfc deemed objett ional . The;

- - - -- -

ends;

••

Busffiess· Services -

'·'

TWO hand knitted afghans; one 1968 MERCURY Monterey,
while, leaf design, fringed
power. steering,
power

OWN
BUSINESS
MAN

OPEN EVES. 1.00 P.M.
· f'j)MI!ROY, ct!IO

OPEN from 12 fo 4 p.m.; Cliff's
Shoe Repair; closed Mon days.
1-28-31c

;

1971 CAMARO. 4-speed, V-8,
S85. Call ·Ravenswood, 273bucket seats. Reasonable.
9521 or 273-9893.
Call after 5 p.m. 992-7201.
1-11-tfc
1-28-6lp

Caprice 4·door, new car title &amp; balance of warranty,
covert with brown vinyl roof, tinted glass, factory air ,

Notice

For Rent or Sale

1971 SYLVAN 12 i&lt; 60 apartment
20 OR 30 MEDIUM round locust duplex; each unit has one
fence posts. 10 fl. long ; phone bedroom, living room and NEW HOME, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, wall-to-wall carpeting,
992-.5654, or see Walter Mc- dining room combination;
full basement, call Sidney
Daniel.
kitchen and bath; $7,000 cash
Bowles. Wilkesville. Ohio 669·
1-28-Jtp or
take over payments of S115 4426.
per month ; phone · 593-8949
1-28-61c
OLD furniture, oak tables , · after 6 p.m.
1-28-61c
organs. dishes, clocks, brass
beds or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller. Rl. 4,
Auto Sales
Pomeroy , Ohio. Phone 992· For Sale
6271.
196:! FORD Fairlai,• 500, V-8, 4
1-7-lfc Sl NG E R automatic sewing door, automatic, $275. Phone
machine ; like new in waln~t . 992-7374.
cabinet. Makes design stit1-11 -ffc
Business Opportunities

'

1972 CHEV. MONTE CARLO

Mobile Homes For Sale

Wanted To Buy

THAT
.DONE IT!!!

TE-1\Ct\ f1ER 'THE

VIlLI!£ a' II DIME: '

Swing"

. Cinders"
18. Flat·

30.cadabra
31. High
school

botto m~d

boat
19. Planted

dance

Medller·
ranean
29. Con·
tribute
36. Placed
side by
side
35. altendants
Wedding
~0. Varnish
ingredient
41. Apportion
42.Set
right
43. Destitute

32. Rammed
earlh
building
material
33. Germanic
deity
34. Forward
36. "Brown
October
"
37. Island
(Fr.)
38. Annular
die
39. Pen

.

KREA.M:

I I

10

I I

I tJ

I
I I

POSHIN
[- 11

Now
the elrcltd !etten
I
I
form the ourprioe .,.,..., •
"';::~...1=-;=~~:;:~~=·~~··~llltlted 'the above cartoon.
•

uranp

lA&gt;

b)'

. . r~Jiiii=-=..=-=·=•:.:::-=...==--.....JI "K x xx x J"

(Antwen t01110m.w)

Jumbleo: CLOAK LIOAL IUUIILY fiCKLE

S.l....t.J'•

""'""' Mi,Jhl png hit nec·I-·A COLLAR

.

'
I'vE BEEN
THINKIN6 ABOUT
50METI-IIN6 ..

CH,ARLIE BROWN HAS REAWI
BE EN A DEDICATED BASEBALL
MANAGER .. HE'S DED ICATED HIS
WHOLE LIFE TO OUR TEAM ...

"'

DOWN
I. Noah's
youngest
son
2. Arab ga rment

3. Wahine's
garland I· H

DAILY CRYI'TO(!UOTE- He1·e's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is L 0 N G.F ELL 0 W
One letter simply slands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two D's, etc, Single letters,
aposlrophes. the lenglh and formation of lhe words are all
hints. Each day the ·codc letters are different. ·

CRYPTOQUOTES
FSBMZX :
1,~

S JTZ

RMWZ -JS K

YZ RQ
ML

P Z 1 Y S R··Z . - ll E ~· S R Q

D FMEESE
YSRQX

U R D XS Kj

AC

AC
D

flOW ABOUT A
TE5TIMONIAL 5NACK ?.

�.' BARNEY
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 29, 1973

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action!; Sentinel Classifieds Get Res·ults~/
Pollieny
Motor ·co.

2 SIGNS

OF
QUALITY

-------

Relail$5447, NOW$4200

Spring green finish, whUe vinyl top. power windows, door

locks &amp; seat, till st. wheel, 400 CID engine, turbo
hydramatlc. p. steering &amp; disc brakes, Positraction
custom equipment, F&amp;R bumper guards. Premium tires,

stereo tape &amp; radio, factory air, It's loaded, new car title.

1972 CHEVROLET

ches, zig-zags, buttonholes,
blind hems, overcasts, etc .,

$3995

frOnt &amp; rear guards. radio &amp; rear speaker. white-wall
tires . Nice and clean . Retail $4860 . Priced to move.

BE YOUR

Pomeroy llotor Co.

=-:::----:--:---:-----:-

WANTA liS.

INFORMATION
I'EADLINES .
,5 P .M. Day Before Publica'tion ·
M~nday Deadline 9 a.m .
Cancell,at ion - Corrections ·
Will be ace'epted unt il9 ~Lm . for
. Day oi..Pvbl lcation
REGUL'ATIONS

Stivers ville
News Notes
· Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hilton
are vacationing In Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Durst and
Tom, local, and Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin Hood, Danny, Timmy
and Judy, Middleport, were
recent guests at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Durst,
Scotty and Jason, of The
Plains.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Roush
have moved into the property
they purchased from Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Brewer, Reedsville.
Mrs. Louise Gluesencamp is
recuperating at home after
at
undergoing
surgery
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va.
Mrs . Helen Smith, Mrs.
Edgar Brewer, Mr. ana Mrs.
Harold Brewer visited Mr. and
Mrs. A. C. Brewer and David
on Sunday.
Mios - l:.e~bl- ·Bir~h ~ent . a
wtth Mr. and
r cent aFt..rnoon
1"1•
Mrs. Harold Roush of Portland.
Mrs. Mae Van Meter and
Ruby and Mr. Bob Ours were
Thursday evening callers of
Mr. ana Mrs. Paul Evans and
son.
Mr. William Middleswart
has retw-ned home from a
recent hospitalization at
Veterans Memorial.
Mr. and Mrs. Foster Wells,
Long Bottom, have moved into
the residence owned by Mr.
anti Mrs. Larry Fitch, Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
Hawthorne
shopped
in
Pomeroy Tuesday afternoon.
r Mr. Rudy Durst entered
Holzer Medical Center Wednesday
suffering
from
pneumonia.
Mrs . Anne Cozart spent
Tuesday afternoon with Mrs.
Mike Evans and son, Ryan.
Mr. J . W. Lawson is assisting
his son, Dale, af his place of
business near Long Bottom.
Mrs. Carol Cornell and
daughter, Mrs . Odessa Weddle
and family, Miss Maxine
Powell and Mr. and Mrs. David
Bryant were callers at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. William
Bryant and family this past
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Mac Van Meter
and Missy, Pomeroy, spent
Saturday with Mrs. Ada Van
Meter.
Mr. an~ Mrs. Jim Middleswart and family visited
Sunday · afternoon with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Bush, Spiller.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cozart
and family, Columbus, were
weekend guests recently of her
moiher, Mrs. Goldie Clendenin.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Abels,
Bashan, visited her sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Louis De Luz Sunday
evening. .
Mrs. Elva Dailey, SyracuSe,
called on her pat-'ents, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Autherson, Wed·
nesday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs, Louis De Luz
were In Parkersburg, W. Vii.
on business TueSday.
Mrs. Maxine Durst and Tom,
Mr. ilnd Mrs. Richard Abels,
Mr. and Mrs. Louis De Luz, s.
W. Durst, Stanley Fletcher,
Paul Evans and Paul Dean,
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Ritchie, Jr., Carol Carter, Mr. and
Mrs. Woodrow Downie, Harold
Weill, Ralph Johnson, Mrs,
Roy DonOIIiw were recent
gilt.tl.t at Mr. and Mrs. E. H.

~

.. .

c.penter.

fiUbllsher w ill not be responsible(
'1or more than o~ incorrect
Insertion .
·
RATES
, For Wa'M Ad Service
,
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
.
12 ·centS' per word three
consecutive Insertions.
18 cents per word six con ..
'secutive Insertions. ·
25 Per Cer1t Discount on palo,
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS . '
&amp; OBITUARY
S1.50 for SO word rtlinimpm .·
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Addit ional 25c Charge .- per
Atlvertlsem ent .
.
OFFIC,E HOURS
8:3 0a .m . to 5:00p.m . Dally,
8 :3 0 a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

Notice
STARTING January 29, 1973 all
haircuts In Racine will raise
fo $2.00.
1-28-Jtc

, Plumbing
Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
99'2-2448

Pomeroy, 0.
PARASOL Boutique Beauty
Salon near Skate-A-Way
Roller Rink announces
Frosting Specials Jan . 23 thru
Feb . 3; short hair, reg. $15,
now $12.50; long hair, reg.
517.50, now $14.50; also Mr.
Richard Kerns will be
working Friday and Saturday ; call 985-4141 for ap-

' HOME&amp; AUTO

HOME BUILDING

606 E. Main

I

1HEV SAID MV COOK!~

992-2094

&amp;

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

REMODELING

-GUARANTEED-

and

P!lo.nl!992~2094

OpenBTiiS
Monday lhru Saturday
6~ E. r.1a!•,_P_
o"!eroy, o.

992-5653

~LlLD NoME !IE. AS
FAMOl-15 AS A
HISfORICAl. FIGURE .

YEP... EAT,
DRINK ANb 8e
MERRV...

'

I
' I

. FURNITURE Our

BOB SLOAN
&amp;
C. L. KITCHEN

Pomeroy_ Home &amp; Auto

!

.
Stop In

and Se~
Floor Display.

.

'!liE

~'{

WA'(-

1·26-Jic

Have your home buill by
Custom Bu'ilders. Our

TON pickup truck, '57

carpenters hilve 20 · ·year~
experience ·in building

Chevrolet;

cOntact

Walburn, 992-2805.

Elden

1-26-lfc

GOOD mixed .hay ; phone 669-

Real Estate For Sale
COMFORTABLE,

2

furnace, full basement, bath

1-26-61p

&amp;. 112, att11:::hed garage, extra
lot, near Pomeroy Elemen-

MOTOR~

IT'LL ONL'l' TAKE

ALL WEATHER
ROOFING AND
CONSTRUCTION

SM_
Oli_N_ELSON
Ph. 991-2174

KsY.~·
••• ~ HBlE! '

homes in Meigs County.

From the lar~est
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core.
' Nathan Biggs ·
Radiator Specialist _

0 tory

home, double oven gas range,
freezer • refrigerator combination, Lennox forced air

If I HAI),E ~
To Go
Take Me To

INC.,

A r:EW
MINUTES-

TO 'IOU IT'S A

DO'!OUTHINK I REVEALED MY
SURGICAL SECRETS 10 SOME
'fOUNG WHIPPER-

FEW MINUTES.
TO ME IT MA'l'
SEHALFA

SNAPPER?-!

LIFETIME!!

WASN'T BORN
YESTERDAY!.'

PHONE: . 992-2550

·Pomeroy

'------------~ J L-----------~

MALE. English pointer, 6 tary School; phone 992-7384 or G&amp;E APPLIANCE Repair: SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Repair of all laundry
doors and windows, carports ,
months old, $150; registered 992-7133.
Septic tanks Installed. George
marquees, aluminum siding
with American Field; call742·
equipment, refrigeration
( Billl Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
1-28-6tc
equipment and house wiring. and railing. A.. Jacob, sa les
5635 after 5 p.m.
4-25-lfc
Call 614·992-6050.
representative , For free
1·28·61 P 5 ROOM house and bath on Rt.
estlmoles, phone Charles ELNA and While Sewing
12-31 -30tp
_1._72_A_C_R_E_I-ot_;_p_h-on-e-74-2--36.56. 143; phone 949-3716.
Good Career
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V. Machines .. service on an
1·28-3tc OIL AND GAS Service, new and
1-28-2tp
Johnson and Son , Inc.
Opportunity
makes . Reasonable rates.
3-2-llc
used furnaces, new alUminum
The Sew ing Center, Mid·
WHIRLPOOL refrigerator, 13 HOUSE BY OWNER ; 3 or 4 siding and remodeling, 24 -~R-E7A_D_Y--M
dleport, Ohio.
-IX---C-O_N_C_R-ETE
bedrooms, large rec. room,
. cubic foot size, frostfree, six
hour service; phone 843-2833.
11 -16-lfc
large patio, modern kitchen,
months old; reason for
1-25-Jotp' delivered right to your
CONTACT
project. Fast and easy. Free
selling, have sold my home; fu ll y carpeted; call 992-5248
estimates, Phone 992-3284.
also bed clothing, dishes and until3 p.m. or 992-3436 after 3
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co. ,
other items; Hallie L. p.m .; No Sunday Calls.
cancelled?
Lost
your
1-.21 -12tc
Mlddleporl, Ohio.
Nesselroad, Route 33. Daroperator's license? Call 9926-30-llc
win .
2966.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
1·28-3tp IN WILKESVILLE. Large old·
The Ohio Department of
6-15-tfc SEPTIC TANKS CL&amp;ANED
fashioned five bedroom home
Natural Resources, th~ough tht
upstairs
porch ; --,-- -- ----=
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446- Division
KENMORE gas dryer, $40; with
of
F"arks · and
fireplace, carpet in living and SEPT IC TANKS AROBIC
4782, Galllpoll5. John Ru5sell , Recreation. pursuant to and In
phone 992-2683.
· accordance with the!rovlslons
1-28-Jtc dining room, 30 x 18
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN- · Owner &amp; Operator.
For Rent
basement, central heat; 1
5-12-tlc ot Sections 1501.09 an 1501.10 of
ED. REPAIRED. MILLER
3 ROOM house and bath; partly
acre; room to park several
the Ohio Revised Code ,
SANITATION, STEWART,
furnished; Ideal for 2 workers ·coAL, LimeStone, Exceisio·r mobi le homes ; close to new
proposes to lease for the
C.
BRADFORD,
Auctioneer
OHIO.
PHONE
662-3035,
Salt Works, E. Main St., mining operations. Bargain at
.operation of a boat r~ntaf and
who want to share expenses;
Complete Service
10-4-tfc
Pomeroy . ~hone 992-3891.
miscellaneous retruhment
phone 992-7126.
$17,500. Wiseman Agency,
Phone 949-3821
concession at FOrked R:un Stete&lt;·12-Ift Gallipolis, Ohio; office phone
1-28-Jtp
Racine , Ohio
Park, Meigs County, Ohio.
Crill Bradford
446-3643, home phone 446-4500. Real Estate For Sale
Offic ial bid proposals will be
1-26-6tc·
2 BEDROOM mobile home on 1972 ZIG-ZAG Sewing Mach ine
5-1-ttc rece ive d In the Office of
left in layaway. Beautiful
old Rl. 33, adults only ; phone
Managemen t and Budget until
-----992-6294 or 992-6385 alter 8 pastel color , full size modeL HOUSE in Long Bottom , phone
OOZE
R
and baCK n~ wur11., 2:00 p.m .• February 5, 1973.
Bids wi II be publicly opened
All buill-in to buttonhole, do 985·3529.
p.m.
ponds and septic tanks. dll· thereafter
by the Deputy
stretch sewing and fancy
t-17-lOtc
6-11 -lfc
chlng service ; top sol i. fill Director or his authorized
stitching. Pay just $48.75 cash
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex· agent. The rloht Is reserved to
or terms available. Trade- ins
cavallng.
Phone 992-5367, reject any and all bids .
UNFUI&lt;N 'ISHED 3-room
HOUSE and lois on Wright
accepted. Phone 992-7755.
The lease Will be for a term ol
Dick
Karr.
Jr.
apartment, adults only. No
Street,
Pomeroy
;
phone
7421·24-6lc
lour
years and ten months, from
9-1-lfc
pels, 408 Spring Ave .. - - - - - 5930.
March 1, 1973 to O~cember 31,
Pomeroy .
-~----1-24-1
2tc
1971 ,
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
1-7-lfc
CUSTOM Home Building,
The Divis ion of Parks and
Cleaner complete with at -:. -:. - - ...,,
complete remodeling and RecrtaHon "''II' furnish dockS,
tachments, cordwfnder and 4 BEOROM home, 2 baths, gas'
110 :Mechanic Street
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and paint spray. Used but In like furnace, full basement, river
carpentry 1 free_estlmale; call one bulldlnR approxlmltelv' 32
feet by 20 feet. 1S rowboats with
unfurnished ... apartments . ' new condition. Pay 53&lt;.45
992-7646.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
frontage, Syracuse , Ohio,
oars , and one refrigerated Ice
Phone 992-5434.
1-28-6tp
cash or budget plan available.
Phone 992-2360.
house . The concessionaire will
4-12-lfc
Phone 992-7755.
futnlsh all other equfpmtnt.
1-25-lfc
HARRISONViLLE
--------,---1-24-6lc
SEWING MACHINES. Repair merchancl ise . materials,
2 BEDROOMS, nice bath,
ONE two bedroom ··and one----,, - - - - service, all makes. 992-2284. utilities, and labor necessary to
HOUSE FOR SALE. 114 Brick large living, level lot on hard
three bedroom house ; phone
the concession to apThe Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. operat~
1970 TRAVELER 11 fl . truck
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick . road near store . 54500.00.
proved standards.
992-2780 or 992-3432.
1
Authorized
Singer
Sales
and
camper; self.conta ined unit.
house, 3 bedrooms , excellent
Fht:~uests tor bid proposal
1-21 -tfc Will sell or trade for farm
COUNTRY LOCATION
Service.
We
Sharpen
Scissors.
forms shou ld be. made to the
location, close to school and
ONE ACR'E - All utilities
3-29-llc Office of Management and
equipment; Also 3 ra il cycle
city; contact lou Osborne or 1
available on good gravel --.,------TRAILER , Brown's Trailer
Budget, 1930 Belcher Drive,
trailer, $75; for Information
call 992-5898.
Columbus.
Oh io
43224 .
road.
$2500.00.
Park, Minersville. Phone 992·
call 1-614-992-7260.
11-26-lfc
Teiephlne , (Aree code 61-4) .469 ·
3324.
1-25- 121p
NEASE SETTLEMENT
5096.
1-25-tfc
.94 OF AN ACRE - 3 large
WILLIAM B. NYE
bedrooms. nice bath, and
WALNUT stereo-radio comDirector
utility . Large modern kitbination, 4 speed intermixed
NOTICE OF
(11 B, 15, 22. 29, 4t
chen with dining area .
changer, 4 speaker sound
CLELANDAPPOINTMENT
Wanted To Rent
Drilled
well.
$12,500.00.
system , dual volume controls.
Cue
No.
20839
REALn
Ba l ance $69.-47. Use our
Estate ol Bessie M . McKni;ht
10 ACRES
WOULD LIKE to rent a 3 or 4
101 E . Mlln
Deceased .
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
ON
LEADING
CREEK
bedroom modern home; have
Pomeroy
Noltca Is herebv given that
1-25-61c
references; preferably Meigs
Old house with dug well , William
D. McKnight, of R. 0 .
County; phone 992-3062.
barn on blacktop road . 1, Middleport , Ohio, has been
APPROX. 1ACRE
1·14-181c BEAUTIFUL Colonial maple
$5,000.00.
duly appointed Administrator of
stereo, AM-FM radio, 4 Just olf Rt. 7 - 3 bedroom
the Estate of Bessie M .
LEVEL LOT
speakers, 4 speed automatic mobile home set up ready to
McKnight, deceased, late of
IN
TDWN
4
rooms
with
changer, . separate controls.
Meigs County , Oh io.
Get
your carpet
Pets For Sale
move Into. Extended living
water, gas, and electric.
Creditors are required to file
Balance $79.70 . Use our room
.
Bought
new
in
1965.
$2,000.00.
their claims with said fiduc iary
cleaned now bt.·tlle ...
WEIMARANER !'Upples, AKC
budget· terms. Call 992-7085. All for $6.900.00.
NEW LISTING
within tour months .
registered; phone 742-6834,
1·25·6lc
Dated thIs lOth clay of
JDACRES FENCED
MAGNIFICANT OLDER
Rutland, 0 .
NEW
January
1973.
Just
off
Rt.
681
Lots
of
HOME - 3 bedrooms with
1-28-tfc
Manning
D.
Webster
work done on the house. 4
closets, den In attic. Full
Judge
"Steam Cleaning
bedr~oms,
bath,
porches.
basementflnlshed Into-living
(1) 15, 22, 29, Jt
JUST ARRIVED, direct from
Other bui ldings. Asking just
quarters. 2 baths, 3 car
Florida, tropica l fish by the
$12,900.00. Make an offer .
garage. Nearly 2 acres .
hundr.eds, at Showalter's Wet
THIS HOME HAS
Appointment please.
Pel, Chester, Ohio.
NOTICE OF
Wo wilt come to your home
26 fl. living R. 2 bedrooms.
APPOINTMENT
HOBSON
l-10-19lp
CUI
No.
20,14t
and
completely clean . oil
bath, nice kitchen , dining R.,
LARGE BATH - Nice
Estate o+ Henry L. Johnson
your
.carpot
by this better
carpeted
throughout.
Large
kitchen,
large
living,
3
PARKVIEW Kennels going out
Buy 2 Pairs, 1
Deceased.
new
-method.
,
carport.
Is
in
excellent
of business. Big price
bedrooms
,
gas
furnace
,
PAIR FREE . The
Notice is hereby given that
condition.
$12.500.00.
reduction on all dogs. All AK·
basement and garage. Marlor le Manuel of Syracuse,
best buy in the
Cal( Ingels and we will exC. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash
area . Have slacks
Meigs County , Ohio, ,has been
WHY BE CRAMPED
$9500.00.
&amp; jeans for the
duly appointed Administratr ix
Streets. Middleport, Ohio.
plalh why steam cltoning Is
We have a beautiful older
LETART
whole family ,
the Estate of Henry L. . more s~tislactory. No soop
12-13-ffc
home, 2 ~lory frame. 4 large
3 BEDROOMS - Living and of
Johnson , deceased. late of
B.R. , 1'1• baths. Lovely new
kitchen, back porch and Syracuse. Meigs County , Oh io. . usod. Rates are reosonoblt.
TO MAKE room lor new
kitchen. Carpeted. 1'1• acre
Creditors are ret:~ulred to file
cellar on Rt. 338. Garden.
POMEROY
shipment arriving Feb. lsi ;
their claims with said fudlclary
ground ..A L~rge building
$5,0(!0.00.
Jack W. Cllrsey, Mgr.
within fOur months .
Topi cal fish drastically
40x70. All for you . JUST
TREES
Dated this 19th clay of
Phone 992-2111
reduced at Showalter's Wet
$21.500.00. "-120 ACRES - 5 cleared with Januar;y
1973.
Pet, (:hester, Ohio.
IF YOU ADMI.I'IE
a 4 bedroom home, ~ living
Manning 0 . Webster
lngeb Fum~ure
HOMECLEANING products; folks who are oroud ot their
Probate Judge of said County
rooms, 3 porch&amp;s. Nice
1-25-6tc
phone 992"2579 or 247-2193.
home...
MAYBE
YOU
double cellar with large (11 22. 29 (21 s, Jtc
Middleport
1-5-JOip should have one : CALL
room over.
.
TODAY.
BUSINESS BUILDING
Mobile Homes For Sale
DUE to divorce, 1972 8 track
HENRY E. CLELAND
MIDOLEPORT - 4 room5,
stereo console; must sell at
BROKER
new bafh, new gas forced air
CASH paid for all makes and' once
; niCe walnut finish . This
l ASSOCIATES
lurnaie. Building Is 44x114.
models of mobile homes.
set sold much higher, must let
TO
SERVE
YOU
PhoneI area code 614-423-9531 . go
Good location. 518,000.00.
for $89.60 or $7.47 a month .
992-2259
4·13-lfc
LET US KNOW WHAT YOU
•
Try It in your home. Call 992·
If no answer
WANT IN REAL ESTATE,
5331.
992-2568 or 985-4209
1965, 10x50, . 2 bedroom mobile
YOUR FUTURE DEPENOS
1·16-lfc
home : new carport, awning ; - - - - -- ON , IT. IF YOU ARE A
new lurnace, hot water tank ; J.UST taken in, deluxe zig -zag 1'/2 STORY 2 bedroom brick
BELIEVER, THEN YOU'LL
house In Middleport. Car- BUY NOW.
good condition; phone 992sew1ng
machine . ihl s
7142. .
machine
darns,
em - .- _.peted, paneled. Kitchen and
HELEN L. TEAFORD.
1-24-Stc
broideries. overcasts, but - ~lillning room tiled. Complete
ASSOCIATE
with drapes, $6,500. Call 992·
tonholes . Pay balance 536.50
NO
SUNDAY
SHOWINGS
1971 LIBERTY trailer , 3 or payments can be arranged , 3465.
992-3325
1-26-71c
Call 992-5331.
bedrooms. IV• •baths, all new
(Sale Held in Heated -Bldg.)
1
-16-tfc
furniture. lust fully carpeted
two weeks ago ; lived In four
··-·
months; phone 992-2715.
lig C~pacltr
1·23-61p
Maytag

LEGAL NOTICE·

374-827-9

------

----------------~
.~

SUW::Tl-11~ ID

COmH MV
I.!OTH~r&lt;IS
COMI~V~IH

COME WllH ME, HIO--·
~riD

SHOW ME WHER E.

1HE LOOT!

f 23-lotc
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS.
SPECIALS MONTHLY .
PHONE HELEN JANE
BROWN, MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO 992-5113. ·
12·3·tfc

ACROSS
1. Ge rman
city
6. ,, __ in
Paris "
II. Direction
on ship

12. Sel of
beliefs
13. Wed ding

Method"

---,---,---

EFFECTiVE February 1, 1973
bills for the Syracuse Home
Util ities and Board of Public
Affairs will be collected atthe
new Syracuse City Building ;
office hours 12 noon to 4:30
p.m .
1·29·31c

attendant
(3 wds.l

I BEG YOUR
PAROON-

TAX Serv1ce, Federal and State
Income Ta xes; dally except

Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m..
evenings by appointment ;
Mrs. Steven (Wanda) Eblin,
Rl. 2, Pomeroy (Laurel Clrff
Rd. olf Rt. 7 By-Pass) ; phone
992-2272.
1-3-30-lc

(2 wds.l
27. Young
deer
28.-- Sea,
arm of tlw

AUCTION SALE -.

- -- - - -

HOOD'S AQUARIUMS ; fish

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 31

and supplies ; new location,

Ash . Street, Middleport near
•
park ; phone 992-5443.
1-7-lfc

.- - - - - -

STARTING AT 7:30 P.M.

Wanted To Do

..

------

INTERIOR and Exterior
painting . Also repair work. L.
Ni ce, pl'lone 247-2308 even ings.

1-25-5tp

For Sale

1963 NEW Moon. 10 x 50, air
conditioner; porch and tanks,
Help Wanted
S2.400; phone 773-5975.
1-23-6tc
YOUNG agressive Life In ·

:W"x23'1 JC,009

Aluminum
Sheets

----'---

with

unlimited opportunities has a
need for two agents in the

··Air Conditioners

Previous

··Awnings
selling experience beneficial
· but not required . Will con····Underpinning
sider one ~art , tlme . Will '
train. Stock Option Plan . Cali
Collect 614-267-9175 and ask .:omplele mQblle hQme·
~erv. lce ~ plus gigantic'
tor Mr. Bauer.
1·25-61c &lt;lispl'y ·of mobile homes
-::-;-----.,.,:--~--~41ways avallable.at
GIRL waniOd for local office
"ILL~R .
. li
work .
Knowledge
of f
""
bookkeeping and office
MOBILE HOME
. ·1220 Wosllirigton BlVd.$
Senl!nel, Pomeroy, Ohio.
· . 423-7J21
BE LI'A&amp;, o. 1-26· 121~
.

l
r'

Bo~ch~~sN,hel~!~\~ep~all~

'

. A.utomatlcs
2 speed optration .
Choice of 'Miter
temps .
Auto . 1 ·
water
level '
control.
Lint
Filter or Power
Fin , Agllator. ·
•Ptrma-Prtll

Moyteg

,USED OFFSET PLATES
. HAVE
MANY.USES

HeloOf Heat

Dryers
S~.trround' clothes
with ·gentle/ eve·n j
heat. No hot spots,
no overt;tr\'lng . ,
Fine Mesh Lint ·
Filter. -

2(1

, far Sl.OO

Jh
e. .
RUTLAND
FURNiTURE
R~:~~~=" ..·. i,
IDa'lu
Se
t'
I
IIJ
nme
Wo Spoctollltln

J

MAYTAIJ

.·

Court I5t

PomWOVJ

.

741-4211

,.

.

• Arnold Grati

'

..

lind '

Household Items, glassware, box
springs &amp; mattresses, Tappan gas
range~ pictures, picture frames, ne·w
coffe~ tables, lamps, chairs, desks, 2
teleVISions, antique novelties &amp; many
many more Items - too numerous t~
mention.

At

~II'$

Dollar Saver

305 N~ SEOONQ ST1 MIOOLEPORT.·
aractfonl Auctloo eo.

....... ..............--_...
Auctlanetrs
.
Not ~esponilbl• for liccldtnta.
~
•'

r
~~~

i

Unscramble theae foor Jumblet,
one leiter lA&gt; each square, lA&gt;
form four ordinary wordo.

7. South
Seas ·

canoe

TENGA .

R. Wres t
9. Templ e-

figure
10. Knowl edge

17. "-

!1. Protected
2~: Wedd in.L:

-

feelin~-:s

6. Yearn

ants

-Smith
20. Niche

Call 992-2635

c11~J.OOIDI!JB;-IJ..J ~==~ -t..c

4. Shaver
5. E xpress- r
ing

attend-

mort al ,

~

(C 1978 Klnr Feature• Srndlcate,lnc. )

21.- Fein.
Irish
movement
14. Moocher's
22. Melody
tran sporlation 23. Vapid
24. Helot
(2 wd s. )
26. "The
16. Golf
strokeKing
shot
of

15. Foot lev&lt;r
16. Blues im-

(t.\.t t.~&lt;J

....

REDUCE safe and fast with
GoBese Tablets and E-Vap
"water pills,'' Nelson Drug.
1-29-21p

Yeoterday's CrypiA&gt;quote: WHEN YOU GET TOO BIG A
MAJORITY, 'YOU'RE' IMMEDIATELY IN TROUBLE.-SAM
RAYBURN

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

CLEANING

Richard and

loc, T.M. lot. Ll.t ,_._Off.

"MY BOYG " WENT WtlH

CARPET

Sandra Kerns .·

area .

'I•

1-26-31p

Financial
Assistance
Available

.

992-3318.

years old, ti'le shape; phone

4777 .

.-

hardtop; vinyl Interior. One

PORTABLE Zenith stereo, 2

IN MIDDLEPORT, 0.

-·-.

owner, good condition . Phone

-------

DEALERSHIP AVAILABLE

.

oP.M.'OstAmerican. Cars- .

I

1-26-31p

992-7009.

I

LEGAL NOTICE

pointment ;
watch
for
February permanent special.

Pomeroy

EXPERT ,
. 'Wheel- Alignment
'5.55
L

pOMEROY

KITCHEN &amp;SON
CONSTRUCTION

-..,.._-

.HQt W:lter · H~Citi!rs

Company

..

brakes, factory air, 4 door

sell one or both ; phone 992-

2082.

l:~

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS

surance

gold,

~~

Virgil B.

HEATING &amp;
OOOLING

Operators -

green,

TWO lots in Middleport; will

---..,----

"HEll"

one

tanQerlne and while ripple
deo1gn; $35 each ; Opal
Harris, Reedsville. 0 .; phone
378-6258.
1-28-61c

SERVICE STATION

GIVE your feel a treat; try a
pair of Knapp Shoes: call Bob
The Publisher reserves the
Hysell. 992-5324.
right to edit or relect any ads
1-23-tfc deemed objett ional . The;

- - - -- -

ends;

••

Busffiess· Services -

'·'

TWO hand knitted afghans; one 1968 MERCURY Monterey,
while, leaf design, fringed
power. steering,
power

OWN
BUSINESS
MAN

OPEN EVES. 1.00 P.M.
· f'j)MI!ROY, ct!IO

OPEN from 12 fo 4 p.m.; Cliff's
Shoe Repair; closed Mon days.
1-28-31c

;

1971 CAMARO. 4-speed, V-8,
S85. Call ·Ravenswood, 273bucket seats. Reasonable.
9521 or 273-9893.
Call after 5 p.m. 992-7201.
1-11-tfc
1-28-6lp

Caprice 4·door, new car title &amp; balance of warranty,
covert with brown vinyl roof, tinted glass, factory air ,

Notice

For Rent or Sale

1971 SYLVAN 12 i&lt; 60 apartment
20 OR 30 MEDIUM round locust duplex; each unit has one
fence posts. 10 fl. long ; phone bedroom, living room and NEW HOME, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, wall-to-wall carpeting,
992-.5654, or see Walter Mc- dining room combination;
full basement, call Sidney
Daniel.
kitchen and bath; $7,000 cash
Bowles. Wilkesville. Ohio 669·
1-28-Jtp or
take over payments of S115 4426.
per month ; phone · 593-8949
1-28-61c
OLD furniture, oak tables , · after 6 p.m.
1-28-61c
organs. dishes, clocks, brass
beds or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller. Rl. 4,
Auto Sales
Pomeroy , Ohio. Phone 992· For Sale
6271.
196:! FORD Fairlai,• 500, V-8, 4
1-7-lfc Sl NG E R automatic sewing door, automatic, $275. Phone
machine ; like new in waln~t . 992-7374.
cabinet. Makes design stit1-11 -ffc
Business Opportunities

'

1972 CHEV. MONTE CARLO

Mobile Homes For Sale

Wanted To Buy

THAT
.DONE IT!!!

TE-1\Ct\ f1ER 'THE

VIlLI!£ a' II DIME: '

Swing"

. Cinders"
18. Flat·

30.cadabra
31. High
school

botto m~d

boat
19. Planted

dance

Medller·
ranean
29. Con·
tribute
36. Placed
side by
side
35. altendants
Wedding
~0. Varnish
ingredient
41. Apportion
42.Set
right
43. Destitute

32. Rammed
earlh
building
material
33. Germanic
deity
34. Forward
36. "Brown
October
"
37. Island
(Fr.)
38. Annular
die
39. Pen

.

KREA.M:

I I

10

I I

I tJ

I
I I

POSHIN
[- 11

Now
the elrcltd !etten
I
I
form the ourprioe .,.,..., •
"';::~...1=-;=~~:;:~~=·~~··~llltlted 'the above cartoon.
•

uranp

lA&gt;

b)'

. . r~Jiiii=-=..=-=·=•:.:::-=...==--.....JI "K x xx x J"

(Antwen t01110m.w)

Jumbleo: CLOAK LIOAL IUUIILY fiCKLE

S.l....t.J'•

""'""' Mi,Jhl png hit nec·I-·A COLLAR

.

'
I'vE BEEN
THINKIN6 ABOUT
50METI-IIN6 ..

CH,ARLIE BROWN HAS REAWI
BE EN A DEDICATED BASEBALL
MANAGER .. HE'S DED ICATED HIS
WHOLE LIFE TO OUR TEAM ...

"'

DOWN
I. Noah's
youngest
son
2. Arab ga rment

3. Wahine's
garland I· H

DAILY CRYI'TO(!UOTE- He1·e's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is L 0 N G.F ELL 0 W
One letter simply slands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two D's, etc, Single letters,
aposlrophes. the lenglh and formation of lhe words are all
hints. Each day the ·codc letters are different. ·

CRYPTOQUOTES
FSBMZX :
1,~

S JTZ

RMWZ -JS K

YZ RQ
ML

P Z 1 Y S R··Z . - ll E ~· S R Q

D FMEESE
YSRQX

U R D XS Kj

AC

AC
D

flOW ABOUT A
TE5TIMONIAL 5NACK ?.

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 29,1973

Property damage
heavy in wrecks

1Continued

from page I)

grams.
-No new funds for the National Defense Education Aci, the
college stndent loan program begun under the administration of
Nixon's poltlcal mentor, Dwight D. Eisenhower.
- The Public Service Employment program, begun near the
end. of Nixon's first term under heavy pressure from the
Democratic Congress.
Uses Firm Language
Nixo11 contioued the current freeze on home purchase subsidies
for the poor and on aid for new sewage and other water quality
projects in !lis proposed budget. He sharply curtailed food
programs for the poor and the eld!irly, and said he would penalize
states that mistakenly pay out any federal welfa.!'S fund~- to
ineligible persons ;
~
Perhaps expecting an outcry from Congress on these cutbacks
and program cancellalions, Nixon used firm language. ''There is
... no room for the postponement of the reductions and terminations proposed in this budget:"
Nixon also abolished the White House consumer affairs and
science and technology offices, and cut back the staff of other
executive office departments.
The administration claimed these cutbacks, plus other
economies and spending deferrals, will keep s)ie~ding in the
current fiscal year ending June 30 at $249.8 billion, just under the
President's highly publicized $250 billion goal.
Fiscal 1975 Proposal
Here is how the new budget estimates compare with those of
the current fiscal year: (billions of dollars):
1973 1974
$225.0 $256.0
Iii come
$249.8 $28S. 7
OUtlays
·$24,8 -$12.7
Deficit
In a departure from custom, Nixon also laid down a detailed
budget proposalfor fiscal1975, two years ahead, with spending of
$288 billion. The figures were not final but served as "a warning
and a challenge" to those who would tinker with the Republicans'
long range bndget strategy.
The biggest slice of the budget pie, $126 billion or 47 per cent, is

Sheriff Robert C. Har- vestigation.
tenbach's Dept. investigated
Both the Newlun and Wood
two accidents ·Saturday, one vehicles were demolished .
Sunday and the breaking and There was medium damage to
entering earlier. or an uniX'- Bearhs
cupied house in Shotgun
Sunday at 5:50a.m. in Sutton
Hollow.
, Twp. on SR 124, Kenneth S.
Saturday at.2:45 p.m. on SR Brown, Columbus, was
124 in Lebanon Twp. , Judith D. traveling east when a tire went
Adams, 32, Reedsville, RD, flat, Brown lost control, the car
was driving east when her car going off the road to the left,
skidded across the highway back across the highway lo the
into a ditch. The driver said she right into a field and turning
was unfamiliar with the high- over several times.
way. There were no injuries
The driver was not imand only medium damage to mediately treated. The car was
the car. No citation was issued. demolished. No citation was
At 10:45 .p.m. Saturday in issued.
front of the Chester post office,
The department investigated
John R. Newlun, 21, Long a breaking and entering of an
Bottom Rt. I, driving nor· unoccupied house in Shotgun
thwest on Rt. '248 at an ap- '· Hollow belonging to Mary
parent high rate of speed, lost Romine. Entrance was gained
' control. The car .skidded ·67 through a front door. Nothing
fee t, going off the highway to had been taken. The incident is
the right; skidded ·an ad- believed to have occurred beditional29 feet and hit a parked tween Jan. 21 and 26.
car owned by Robert Wood, Rt.
I, Long Bottom.
Meeting caUed
The impact drove Wood's
vehicle 21 feet into a parked in Rutland area
car ow ned by James Bearhs,
Pomero y, Rt.. 3. Bearhs'
RUTLAND - There will be
vehicle in turn struck the front an emergency medical service
of Gaul's Market..
meeting for the Rutland area earmarked for "human resources" programs, such as
Newlun was taken to Holzer Thursday, Feb. I, at 7:30p.m. education, health and Social Security.
Hospital by privale car, at the Martin Funeral Home
National defense, which just three years ago claimed the
treated and released. The here.
largest share of the budget, gets $81 billion or 30 per cent. The 6
accident is still under inDan Lloyd and two other per cent boost included no new weapons programs and was
representatives of the Ohio almost entirely due to inflation and higher payroll costs of
Valley Health Services, manning the coming allvolunteer army.
Athens, will answer questions
Sufficient Strength
Nevertheless, the military budget "assures us of sufficient
pertaining to the proposed
Rutland instruction class. All strength to preserve our security and to continue as a major
interested persons are urged to force for peace," Nixon said.
Even without funds for manned exploration of the moon, Nixon
attend.
requested $3.1 billion for space programs, a $74 million increase
over
1973. The Skylab Earth-orbitiog laboratory, a U.S.-Soviet
INVITED TO PRAY
All high school students of linkup in Earth orbit, and two unmanned flights to Mars were
.
the Southern Local School major items.
Crop SUPPOrt, .a~rlcultural research, rural housi!U! and conDistrict are invited to a youth servation
programs all were trimmed. Funds for food to school
prayer breakfast at the Racine
Wesleyan United Methodist children and old folks will level off after four years of big inChurch at 7:30 a.m. Wed- creases.
Although the federal deficit is expected to shrink in 1974, the
nesday. There will be a short
figures
indicate the government will have run $84-biUion in the
devotional period and a light
red under Nixon's first four budgets.
breakfast will be served.
1

•

Cambodia calls
off offensives

CRUSADERS COMING
MASON - The Gospel
•
Crusaders from Clarksburg,
"An expert is a man who
W. Va., will make an apmakes mistakes quietly" ...
pearance at the Mason First
Baptist Church at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday . The group made an
PHNOM PENH (UP!) - countries to ~ase all military
earlier visit to the area last Airraid sirens blared across activity and withdraw their
You have le ss chance of
summer. The public is invited. the Cambodian capital for five troops and arms from Cammaking a mistake when
minutes early today to mark bodia and Laos, no time limit
you're fixi ng things around
the house. if you call on the
the start of a unilateral was set for the withdrawals
DIVORCE GRANTED
knowledge and experience
"suspension of offensive and no provision for a formal
of our ' "FRIENDLY
Patricia Tolley has been operations" against Com- ceasefire was arranged in
ONES"
first.
OUR
granted a divorce from Dennis munist forces by government either country.
REASON FOR BE lNG IN
Tolley.
BUSINESS IS TO SE RVE
troops.
Nol ordered all field troops to
YOU I. ..
The decision to halt start observing a cease-fire
hostilities by President Lon Nol exactly 24 hours after a ceaseCLUB TO MEET
went into force at 7 am. (7 fire went into effect in South
The Middleport Literary
p.m. Sunday EST).
Vietnam.
Club will meet Wednesday at 2 .
Communist shelling operaHe called this a goodwill
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
tions were reported continuing gesture designed to allow
Emerson Jones, Grant St.,
throughout the country, but North Vietnamese troops to
, Middleport, instead of in the
military sources said the ac- withdraw "quickly and
Parish House as was antion appeared at its lowest peacefully" from Cambodia.
nounced.
point in about four months.
.
FINED $50
Three military policemen
were wounded e'arly today In Meigs County court
when a grenade exploded in the Friday Lawrence Boyd,
compound of a special security Middleport, who was found
squad assigned to guard U.S. guilty by Judge Frank W.
Embassy staff members. Porter on charges of
Police said a man hurled the harassment, was lined $50 and
costs.
grenade and ran away.
The compound Is located
Wh~· pny bills in person when ~·ou can send a 'videabout 100 yards ·from the}4
awa ke check to do vour wo rk? You c ~n also te ll
residence of u.s. Ambassador
wheJ'e your money 's. gone from the ea::Jy-to-underEmory C. Swank.
!" tand reco rd s pl·ov id ed with ou r check ing accounts.
Lon Nol said that desplte the
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
And \\'ilh a ~ hecki ng acco unt f 1·o m Olll' wide-awake
cease-fire,
the
government
rePentagon
.has Identified the folbank. yon ca n ~e nd money on its way , en~i l y.
tained the right to "defensive" lowtng pr1so?ers of war as beoperations and to recover mg fr?m Ohio:
territory lost to Communists.
I . Air Force Capt. Edward J.
Lon Nol made the cease-fire Mechenb1er, Dayton.
........,..
announcement at a joint .2. Air Force Maj. G. Cowan
session of the National Nu, Pepper Pike.
,..
Assembly.
3. Marine ~· Col. Harlan
"It's a briUlant propaganda Chapman, Elyria.
move " one Western diplomat
4. Navy Lt. Cmdr. Bradley E.
said. '
Smith, Lake Milton.
5. Air Force Capt. Thomas N.
"Militarily, it won't mean
lt1
Moe,
Columbus.
much since the government
hasn 'I had the capability of 6. Air Force Lt. Col. Alan
mrti'l~l·
t(ISI!
c::::;::--.._.:·
launching any offensive opera- Lurie, Cleveland. .
7. Army S-Sgt. Bill A. Baird,
tions for some monfhs," he
said, "but now any military Wooster.
activity on the part of Cam- 8. Navy Lt. Robert Wideman,
bodian Communists or the Rocky River.
,, FUll
9. Air Force Maj. Paul K.
North Vietnamese will look like
POMEROY, OHIO
SERVICE
Robinson
Jr., Galion.
bad faith in the eyes of the
MNK
'
.
10. Air Force Maj . Hayden J.
world."
Member of Federal Reserve System
Lockhart,
Springfield.
Although the Vietnam peace
On Friday s Our Drive -In Window is Open 9 a .m. to 7 p. m.
11. Air Force Capt. Burton
I Continuously) .
·
agreement caUed on foreign
W.
Campbell, An\herst.
S'2D,OOOMa Ki mum Insurance for Each Depositor

_Push money around, ·
any way you want

(Continued from page I )
Air Force Capt. Thomas N,
Moe of Columbus; · Air Force
By United Press International
·
Lt. Col. Alan Lurie of CleveHICKAM AFB HAWAU - VICE PRESIDENT Spiro Agnew
land; Army S.Sgt. Bill A. Baird arrived in Guam ~day enrou'te to a series of "very important"
of Wooster; Navy Lt. Robert toplevel Southeast Asian discussions Sunday amid speculation he
Wideman of Rocky River; Air might play a role in welcoming returning American prisoners of
Force Maj. Paul K. Robinson war. Agnew arrived Sunday aboard Air Force Two. After lo.wJr. of Galion.
key greeting ceremonies he met for about an hour wtth
Also, Air Force Maj. Hayden America's commander in chief ofthe Pacific, Adm. Noel Gayler,
J. Lockhart of Springfield; Air and later with Pacific Air Force Commander Gen. Lucius Clay.
Force Capt. Burton W. CampANavy sauce acknowledged privately it was "possible and
bell of Amherst; Air Force quite feasible" that Agnew might play a role in welcoming the
Maj. William J . Baugh of _ returning POWs. The source" noted the trip closely aligned with
Piqua; Air Force Lt. Col. Wil- the first scheduled POW contingent release. Although Agnew's
liam J. Breckner Jr. of Colum- itinerary was not given out, sources said the trip would last a~out
bus, and Air Force Maj. t&gt;aul a week, perhaps more. The ·first POW release is expected to
Kari of Spencer.
come within 15 days of Saturday's cease-fire.
Families of the POW's expressed relief at knowing offiWASHINGTON - CLERGYMEN AROUND the nation,
cially for the first time they primarily but not exclusively Roman Catholic, attacked the
were alive.
Supreme cOurt's abortion decision from their pulpits Sunday.
"We figured his nan\e would One of the strongest reactions came from Msgr. William F.
he on the list (but) it's been so McDonough of the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in
long since we heard from him it Washington, D. C., who compared the court decision with King
is a very great relief," said Herod's order to slaughter all children under two years old in
Mrs. Harlan Chapman .
BeUilehem at the time of Christ's birth .
whose son has heen a POW
"The hand that is lifted against the unborn child in abortion
since Nov. 5, 1966, when his is the hand of a murderer," McDonough said, "and the decision
plane was shot down.
of the seven judges of the Supreme Court is much like King
"Even with the fact that · Herod, in the days of Christ, who in frenzy seeking out to kiU
we've been getting mail from Christ, killed the innocent children under two years of age."
Alan, it was a great relief,"
commented Mrs. Louis C.
FREEZING RAIN AND SNOW TURNED ROADS to ice in
Lurie of University Heights, most parts of Ohio today, causing a rash of accidents. There was
whose son has been a POW for a 12-vehicle accident on an expressway in Cincinnati Sunday and
seven years.
the U. S. Weather Service issued a traveler's advisory for the
Lurie's wife now lives in Ap- Cleveland area, which was expected to get 1-3 more inches of
ple Valley, Calif., where she wind-whipped snow today.
said Sunda~. "We've.'had onr
The U.S. Weather Service also issued a high water watch for
hopes up and down over the the southern shores of Lake Erie Sunday night. Strong winds
last few years like a yo-yo."
combined with high-water levels on the lake to provide a danger
"Our son was just an infant for persons along the entire southern shore of the lake. Weather
when Alan left and when he statements said the state should remain in a deep freeze today
heard he was coming home at and tonight, with temperatures remaining in the 20's until
last, he said, 'I wonder what nightfall when they are expected to plummet to 111-15 above zero.
daddy looks like&lt;'"
Lurie was listed as missing
PLEASANTVILLE, N. Y. - TEN PERSONS, including a
for three years before Mrs. 106-year-old woman, died early today when fire swept through a
Lurie received word he was a nursing home. State police said the 10 were among 16 patients in
prisoner.
the Streets Sheltered Care Home in Pleasantville, about
The good news for Mrs. Paul seven miles west of Atlantic City.
Robinson, mother of the capMrs. Minor Pierce, the home's night attendant, said she had
tured Air Force major, came completed her rounds when she saw flames shooting out of the
on her birthday. "All I can say linen closet shortly after midnight. Flames spread rapidly
is I am very happy," she said through the 16-room home, she said. Mrs. Pierce said there were
from her home in Galion.
16persons in the building at the time. "We got six out," she said.
She said the patients ranged in age from 22 to 106 years.

371 Battle
(Continued from page I )
Members of a four-nation
peace-keeping force are
assembling in Saigon but so
far, they have not taken up,
positions in the country, where
they will attempt to stop the
shooting.
Unllaleral Truce in Force
In Phnom Penh, the Cambodian government put into
force its unilateral truce at 7
a.m. today (7 p.m. Sunday
EST) but said it reserved the
right to regain lost territory
and engage Communist forces
in 11defensive" action.
There was no sign of a truce
in Laos, \\'here officials said
the two sides might agree on a
cease-fire by mid-February.
IJI the South Vietnam action,
officials in Saigon said Communists captured 66 hamlets in
11 provinces around Saigon
within the first hours after the
truce came into force .
Communists also attacked 29 . ,
other hamlets, the officials
said, but were pushed back by
government forces. ..
On the last day before the
cease-fire came into force,
official and unofficial tabulations showed 1,282 deaths
among Communist and
government forces.'

Commg
• horne

·-···..

7hl'

0.~

irk-mMh thed'!l"£? rtrrOJII!!
it (1// so

Farmers Bank &amp;

Co.

MEIGS THEATRE

YOU MUST

Tonight &amp; Tuesday
January 29, 30

Come in and see

YOU'LL LIKE
MY MOTHER

Our New
Sportswear

(Tec~nicolnr)
Patty Duke, Richard
Thomas, Rosemary Murphy,
Sian Barbara Allen .

Show Starts 7 p.m.

(GP)

Families

First feeling

Common sense

IOLA'Si
h'

l0

(Continued from page I)
weekend: Mr. and Mrs. Walter
E~tes of WilliainstO!l, Mich.,
. werq.puzzled because the iwne
of their son, Navy Lt. Walter
Estes Jr., was not on the lists.
They said he had appeared in
pictures released by North
Vietnam shortly after he was
shot down Nov. 19, 1967.
They Are Hoping .
"We hope there'll be a
supplementary list coming,"
Estes said . "Btl! we don't know
if there is such a thing
coming."
The Indochina communists
have a 6(k)ay period, which
started Saturday when the
cease-fire went into effect, to
complete the release.
Through intelligence sour. ces, U.S. officials said, they
know that at least six ainnen
were taken alive in Laos. An
additional 311 Americans are
missing in Laos, which has
been the scene of U.s. bombing
campaigns for years. The
Coffilllunisfs claim they hold no
Americans in Cambodia.
Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-DI.,
warned that if Hanoi refuses tO
provide a full accounting of
Americans held prisoner in
. Indochina, "masSive resistance" will arise in Congress to
proposals for reconstruction
aid to North Vietnam. He said
any future aid will depend
.' largely on the Communists
adhering to "both the spirit and
letter" of. the negotiated settlement.
The State Department also
listed 26 captured American
civilians who are still alive and
13 who had !lied in Communist
prison camps.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES: Neal Jef·
fers, Dexter, 0 .; Richard
Jones, Point Pleasant ; Norman Searls, Buffalo; Mrs.
Andrew Byus, Point Pleasant;
ORLANDO, FLA.- AT LEAST 18 PERSONS were injured Harry Bass, Point Pleasant;
and 300 were left homeless Sunday when six tornadoes r81]1paged Mrs. Taylor Gilkerson, Leon;
through Central Florida. One of the twisters struck an apartment David Forshee, Mrs. Joseph
Paugh, Dan Fowler, Phihnore
complex in West Orlando.
"It's a miracle that no one was killed," said Orlando Police Hudnall, Everett Bissell, Point
Chief Robert Chewning after the twister demolished the large Pleasant ; Nancy Walker,
· apartment complex in Orlando's Washington Shores district. The Gallipolis Ferry; Samuel
entire top of the two-story apartment building was torn off and Anderson, Hartford; Mrs. Burl
Bartrum, Catlettsburg, Ky.;
dozens of rooms were smashed.
Mrs. Gary Waugh, son; BufLOCAL TEMPS
falo; Charles Turner, Point
Q- Whot will be the pole
The temperature in downPleasant; Elsie Ingrich,
star for earthlings about
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. 2,000
Gallipolis ; · Henrietta
!tears from now?
Monday was 28 degrees with
MacLennan, Point Pleasant.
A- Alpha Ce phei.
snow falling.

Anderson. "If !be Joint Chiefs
of Stair are correct in their
estimate, the North Vietnamese will$.''

Anderson, the Pulitzer Prize- and a diplomatic debacle,"
winning author of the said Anderson. ','We could have
nationally syndicated column signed it (the peace accord)
"Washington Merry-Go- Oct. 31; the truck we could
Rou"'&lt;&lt;," said that the UPited have signed Oct. 31 is very
States delayed the current little different from the one we
peace accord three months and · signed Saturday."
. renewed bombing of the North
He said Pentagon estimalel
Vle!!lamese in a final effort to last fall said thst Thieu would
punish the Colnmu~ists and !aU within weeks If the United
bolster President Thieu.
States · did not give hlm
"massive artillery and air
41
•
We've obtained a very support."
tenuous peace - a peace with
He said" that resumption of
' dishonor - a military setback• the bombing in December was
a final effort to strike some
blows against the North and
"buy another year for
President Thleu."
"Thai was the reason for the
three months delay, !J!e only
take them home to Union Pier. reason," he said.
Robinson, who died Monday,
Anderson said that more
had been shot three times. recent military intelligence
Lyles had been shot twice.
reports, made in preparation
Police said it appeared both for.the truce agreement signed
had been shot by the same .25 last weekend, say that the
caliber revolver. Their Communists are planning to
baggage was untouched and expand the power bases they
their wallets had not been now hold in South Vietnam, and
disturbed.
ultimately take over the
(Contioued on page IO)
government.

·years ago because they didn't
want the boys growing up in
Chicago's South Side ghetto.
This weekend, the boys paid
a visit to their old neighborhood to attend a surprise
birthday party for a girl friend.
Today, Gene is dead and Pierre
Is in crlticni condition-both
shot in the head Sunday night
as they waited for a train to

•

e

at y

• ,

'

By United Press tuteruatloall
SAIGON -VICE PRESIDENT SPIRO T. Agnew arrived in
Saigon today on the first leg of a Southeast Asian trip and said the
United States recognizes the government of President Nguyen
Van Thleu as the only legitimate government in South Vietnam.
"We recognize the government of the Republic of Vietnam as
the sole legitimate government of South Vietnam," Agnew 9aid.
"We do not recognize the right of any foreign troops to remain on
Sou~h Vietnamese soil." Tbe issues of withdrawal of North
VIetnamese troops from South Vietnam and the refusal of the
Provlslonal Revolutionary Government (Viet Cong) to recognize
Thleu's government are two main disputes between Saigon and
the Conimunists.

WA$HINGTON - THE WAGERGATE BUGGING lriSl
moves toward a conclusion today; with some facts stlli not
brought out by lestlmony and both defendants stlli claiming they
did nothing wrong. U.S. District Court scheduled summations by
defense attorneys and Prosecutor Earl L. Silbert today. Judge
John J. Slrlca said he then Would Issue a 90-minule charge to the
jury, allowing the jurors to start their deliberallo11.!1.
The case recessed for the day Monday after Silbert issued a
55-minute condemnation of the defendants, G. Gordon Liddy,
former White House counsel and Nixon re-election campslgn
official, and James W. McCord Jr., who served the re-election
committee as security chief.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•

enttne

if person wants the property
pro-rated it should be done
when the deed is issued and an
indication made who is
responsible for the tax

Veto in question

ews•. in Briefsl

·cartlartt

OPEN HOUSE - Open boUBe in observance of the 50th
anniversary of the Athens County Savings &amp; Loan will be
observed at the Pomeroy Branch West Second St., Sunday
from 2 to 4 p.m. Earl Ingels, assistant vice president,
assistant to the president and Pomeroy Branch manager is
shown with oqe of two bicycles that will be given away the
first day of .sprinj!. Visitors to the Pomeroy office may
register anytime for the bicycles. There is no age limit. Other
gifts will be awarded throughout 1973. Members of the board
of directors and staff of Athens will assist Ingels Sunday as
host. The loan company nas had a $10 million growth in 10
years, Ingels said. Refreshments will be served Sunday, and
favors given.

a

mt~~:mi.W:"X@:~"(.:"&lt;'I'.'~:::::~/~Roc::oo·: "~=~~~

Stop .in the busy Men's Department,
·, 1st Aoor.
Select the style ·and size that's
right fQr you.

Meigs County Auditor Gordon Caldwell said
today persons eligible for benefits under the Ohio
Homestead Act may obtain applications for relief
from property taxes at his office in the courthouse
beginning Monday, Feb. 5.
The Homestead Act applies to persons who are
65 or will be 65 this year. It allows a reduction in the
property tax, but does not apply to those who own
trailers, Caldwell said.
· The applications will not be mailed to anyone.
They must be called for at the auditor's office.
Brown and white copies must be returned in person
to Caldwell so he can personally check the ap. plication against an old tax statement from the
treasurer's office.

If, due to illness, a person is
unable to bring in the completed forms, they must be sent
to Caldwell by registered mail.
Persons filling out the applications must answer all
questions, including total
earnings of husband and wife
in 1972, Caldwell said. An ill
person may have someone else
obtain the forms.
If applicants do not understal)d the applications, they
must take i: to someone who
does, Caldwell added. Caldwell
also noted that all applications
will be audited this year.
He said residents filing under
the Homestead Act must file
their applica lions by the first
Monday in June. None will be
Devoted To The Interests OJ The Meigs-Mason Area
accepted after that date.
Caldwell or the County
Treasurer, Howard Frank will
VOL XXV NO. 201
POMEROY-MIDDL~PORT,
OHIO
TUESDAY,
JANUARY
30,
1973
PHONE
992-2156
TEN
CENTS
not pro-rate taxes on split
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' ' - - - ; __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:..,__...::__ _:_.:..:_.:..:_:....::..._ _ _ _ _-'--..:....:.::.:.:..:...:.:.:...::.:.::.:__ _ _ _ ___:_::..:,_:.:::::,::.::. transfer of property, however,

Nobody paid much attention
CHICAGO (UP!) -Gene E.
Robinson and Pierre F. Lyles
always talked about the dangers of their hometown, but
few of their new-found friends
at New Buffalo High School
pald attention.
The boys parents had moved
the 16-year-old black cousins to
Union Pier, Mich., several

NEW BUILDING- ConstrucUon of a new warehouse, preparation and kitchen facility is
underway for Craw's Steak House in Pomeroy at 224 West Main Street, two lots above the steak
house. The kitchen will be equipped with the most modern facilities. Above, 1-r, are Denver
Hayes of Hayes Construction, Parkersburg; Wllile Alirnan, and Bob Workman.

aa rugged aa the men.
. who w•ar them

Homestead
Act forms ·
here Feb. 5

.

Ghetto life got th~m

I I

..

A- An unbranded cow

classified documents, but that
an unidentified source · has
· informed him of their contents.
"The Joint Chiefs of Staff, in
their secret ~tlmates, have
declared that they expect a
breakdown in the ceasefire and the ultimate
Communist take-over · of
South
Vietnam,'" , said

\

nDuEk

SALE SET
The Xi Gamma Mu Sorority
will sponsor a rummage sale
Friday in the social rooms of
the Trinity Church from 9:30
a.m. to 4 p.m. Members are to
bring rummage items to the
church T~sday evening.

O to--1 wfiose owner is unknown.
.._iiPo!ijimiieriioiooioyio,....

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UP!)
- Columnist Jack Anderson
said Monday night the Penlagon has sec.ret intelligence
reports forecasting an end to
the Vietnam cease-fire in a
military coup that will topple
the Thieu regime within a year.
Anderson, addressing
Florida State University
students, said he will publish
the contents of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff estimates "pretty
BOOn." He said he has not
personally read the two

.

.

CARHARn BROWN DUCK

The Pentagon also released
the names of 55 American
servicemen who North Vietnam said died in P.risoner of
war camps in Soutlieast Asia.
They .included: •
I. Navy Lt.. Cmdr. James J.
Connell, New Carlisle.

Q- What i s a maveric k?

.

Just Received Another Big Shipment

12. Air Force Maj. William J.
Baugh, Piqua.
13. Air Force Lt. Col. William
J. Breckner, Jr., Columbus.
14. Air Force Maj. Paul Kari,
Spencer.

The Rev. Stan ten Smith,
Pomeroy Route 3, is a patient
at Riverside Hospital, Room
6018, Columbus. He is pastor of
the Enterprise· R~k Springs Flalwoods United Methodist
Charge. He underwent knee
surgery.

.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Qh"10

IN HOSPITAL

Secret reports ·say
Thleu will tumble

AUSTIN, TEX.-Presldent Nixon telephoned former Pres.
Lyndon B. Johnson before Johnson dled and told him. of the
VIetnam ~Ire agreement, Johnson's widow said Monday.
Lady BlrdJohnsonsaldsomaliYfrlends hadaaid&gt;theywere sorr.y.'
her husband did not live to hi!ar Nixon:S televised announcement
one week ago of the peace'agreement, that she wanted to let them
lmow he did not die without knowing the long war was coming to
an end.
.
r
,
·' "I think his friends should be told that fate was kind," Mrs.
Johnson said. "Lyndon did know thai peace had come." Johnson
died Monday, Jan. 22, and Ntxonrs a1IIIOUIICell1elt &lt;;arne the next
diy. But Mrs, Johnson said her h111bam had asked hia longtime
'
• · (COI!Unued on page 10)

·,

WASHINGTON (UP!) Senate Democrats today
opened a campaign to gain veto
power over refusal . by
President Nixon to 'spend
money appropriated by
Concrua. Ad!i;llnlatration
spokesmen 1111id It was a case of
the Presldent using common
sense to avoid spending thst
could. result in tax increases.
Heading hearings by a
Senate
Judiciary
subcommittee is Sen. Sam J.
Ervin, D-N .C., chief s(ionsor of
the bill to give Congress
authority to reverse · a
(residential refusal to spend an
appropriated sum.
Top aides to the President,
just prior to opening of the
hearings, strongly defended
Nixon's action in impounding
several billion dollars of funds
in the current fiscal year.
Treasury Secretary George
P. Shultz accused Congress of
''not doing lts job" in helping
bold down inflation, and said
Nixon had to do it. John D.
Ehrliclunan, head of Nixon's
Domestic Council, sald, "We
have a problem of expenditures. If you don't solve lt,
you've got to raise people's

taxes."

Some kind
of mistake
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) -:The potato chip, one of
America's gifts to haute cuisine, was all a mistake.
While nutritionists might describe lt as an Indian's
revenge chlp· makers and
seUers l;,.k back with fond
affection at the chef who
goofed -and founded a billion
dolla'r industry-U! 1853.
"The potato chip was invent·
ed by mistake," says Larry
Burch of Cleveland; tlhio,
executive vlce president of
Potato Chip Institute International.
"An Indian-lin American
Indian- was a chef in
Saratoga, N.Y., in 1853 when he
had an order for French friessliced thin. He sliced them too
thin and they came out crunchy, and for the next 40 or 50
years, they wer~ known as
Saratoga chips."
·
·
Commercial production
began ln the early 19oos, when
anyone with a big kettle of fat
. and a sharp knife made
siuatoga chips and delivered
thetn by bicycle.
)'iow there are allout 450
manufacturers in the United
States. More than 100 big fl1TllS
belong to the institute, which
opened lts annual foW'o(!ay
n'leetlng Monday .
·

Ehrllchman recalled that
both the House and Senate
agreed separately last fall thst
a spending limit was needed
but could not agree between
themSelves on a final bill.
"The President took the
poslUon, 'we're facing either
highertaxesorinflation,sol'm
going to step into the vacuum
here,"' Ehrllchlnan said.
" ... We've got to use eommon
sense In spending federal
. dollars. It's not a question of a

monarchy or arrogated
poweL.-.He's got to use
prudence. He ~an ' t just take a
shovel and ladle these dollars
out.' I

Shultz was interviewed today
on the NBC.TV ~oday Show
and Ehrlichman on the CBS-TV
Morning News program.
Sliultz said ; "Congress is not
doing its job when members of
Congress vote and agree that
they should not spend over $250
billion. and proceed to appropriate $261 billion ... "
It is Niaon's refusal to spend
an estimated $12 billion appropriated by the last Congress
year that triggered the Ervin
effort to provide for congressional veto power within 80
days. of an impoundment.,

Now that a Vietnam ceasefire has been signed, the issue
is the sharpest dispute between
the Capitol and the White
House.
The issue arose in another
form, too, at a meeting today ol
the Senate Democratic Polley
Commit\ee, which considered
~ resolution calling upon Congress to i!npose a spending
ceiling upon itseH.
Nixon, in his budget, asked
Congress Monday to bind itseH
not to appropriate any more
than the $268.7 billion he had
budgeted.
The White House has argued
that impoundments would not
be necessary if Congress would
adhere to a rigid spending
(Continued on page 10)

VIOLATIONS CHARGED

Peace broken
By United Press International was addressed. It said North

Hanoi Radio said today the
North Vietnamese Foreign
Ministry has .protested "U.S.
and ~igon government"
violations of the twoo(!ay-old
cease-fire in South Vietnam.
The broadcast followed
Washington claims of strict
U.S. adherence to the treaty.
· "Immediately after the
cease -fire went into effect (at
7 pm. EST Saturday), the
Saigon government still
launched military operations
into areas controlled by
liberation forces," Hanoi
Radio said.
The broadcast, monitored in
Saigon,did not say to whom the
protest, delivered Monday,

VIetnam and the Vlet Cong
"categorically carry out seriously the treaty" and said the
Hanoi Foreign Ministry
"strongly denounces and
severely condemns these actions by the U.S. and Saigon

governments.''
Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler told reporters Monday
at the F1orida White House that
the United States is strictly
adhering to the Vietnam ceasefire and expects the other
signatories-South and North
Vietnam and the Viet Cong-to
do the same. He also said the
administration is not surprised
that fighting is still going on in
(Continued on page 10)

Eastern district gets
$250,000 issue again
.

A $250,0110 buDding program other improvements.
Meantime, the county board
bond issue will face Eastern
of
elections reported no sign of
Local School District voters on
polltlcalactivity in Pomeroy or
May 8.
The Meigs County Board of Middleport where pririlaries
Elections said Monday the 2.7 will be held to name party
mill issue will be voted upon on candidates for council posts
May 8in conjunction wlth sta~ and to seats on the boards of
. issues which will take voters of public affairs.
the dlstrlcl t.o the polls,
The deadline for filing 'is 4
although nonnally there would p.m. -on Feb. 7. The county
be noprlmaty ele~tio11.!1 ootside board of elections office is open
of village in May.
from 1 to 4 p.m. Monday
through Friday for the , conVoters of the district turned venience of candidates.
dowrl a similar proposal
In Pomeroy, . the terms of
·several months a110. At that · four council members expire
tiine,anewaddltion to the high this x~ar. They are Mrs. Ehna
-sch~I was proposed as were Russell, ' Don Coilins, Ralpp

Werry and Lucien Poulin. In
Middleport, the terms of Mrs.
Jeane Morgan, Lawrence
Stewart, David Ohlinger and
Dick Vaughan expire.
In .Pomeroy, nominations
will be made for two members
of the board of public affairs.
Filling .the posts now are
· Charles Legar and Bob HyseU.
In Middleport, the term of
James Brewington expires this
year.'
1
Pomeroy wlll · nominate
candidates
for
vlllage
treasurer. The term of Mrs.
Phyllis Hennessy will expire
this year.

Cost of
food at
new h,t g·h

·
·
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
cost of a typical family food
market basket rose $8 to a
record-high annual rate of
$1,338 in December.
The Agriculture Department
released its monthly report on
food prices today, and in·
dicated the increase would
have been even more~
supermarkets had not shaved
their margins to partially
offset soaring farm prices.
The report showed retail beef
prices rose 2.3 cents a pound
from November to average
over $1.14'h per pound. The
increase would have been 8
cents, bringing retail prices to
new record levels, if supermarkets had not narrowed
their previously-wide margins.
The report said higher retail
(rices for eggs and lettuce,
which rose 12.7 per cent and 7.9
per cent respectively, were the
biggest contributors to the
overall 0.6 per cent increase in
retail food prices in December,
Along with the smaller percentage gains for beef and for
p.ork -which hit a new
record-the egg and lettuce
hikes more than offset lower
prices for oranges, grapefruit
and other·fresh fruits.
The de(lartment recently discontinued publication of its
official figures on cost cornponents in a typical family
IIU\l'ket basket; and gave only
percentage changes in its
report today. But independent
calculations based on departmen! statistics showed:
_The annual-l'ate cost of a
market basket for a typical
family of four was $1,338 in
December compared with
$1,330 in November and $1,274
in December, 1971. ,
-The $8 increase ·over
November came because returns to farmers for marketbasket ingredients went from
$528 in November to $551 in
December, a $23 increase, but
farm-toorefail, margins taken
by processors and retailers declined $15. The farm-toconsumer cost of handling food
dropped from an annual rate of
$802 in November to $787 for
December.
-Compared with a · year
earlier, the DeCember market ·
basket . cost consumers $64
more on an 81Ulual basis. This
was made up ,of a $59 gain for
farmers and a fl increase for
(rOcessors and retailers.

payment.
According to Section 5719.01
of the Ohio Code whoever owns
th_e property on Jan . I taxes fall
as a lien against the owner.
When property is sold the party
owning it must make
arrangement to pay the taxes
for the balance of the year.

'.

Critics
object to
meat axe
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
administration's critics in Congress indicate they will put up
a major fight against cuts of
more than fl billion in social
programs in President Nixon's
proposed new budget while
de'fense expenditures rise.
Responding to the $268.7
blllion fiscal 1974 budget
·proposal which the President
sent Congress Monday, two
Democratic senators used the
term ''meat axe" in describing
reductions in health programs
which the budget contains.

~11.!'.4wllf4,~.l~·~ . o.

Mw., chainnan of the Senate
·Health subcommittee, said,
"Instead of strengthening our .
health care system to prepare
for national health insurance,
this budget cuts back on
federal pro.grams to train
doctors, dentists and nurses, to
modernize our hospitals and to
bring quality I?ed~~l care to
every commuruty.
Sen. Warren G. Magnuson,
DWash., chairman of the
Senat~ Labor-Health,
Educ~t10n, Welfare . approp~1atl?.ns subcommittee
promised a long and hard look
at these dismaying (rOposals."
Both Kennedy and Magnuson
referred to what they called
''meat~e" cuts in health
programs.
Rep. !llarles Vanik, [).()hio,
described lt as "~ budget of
snh~idies for specl8111lterests.
It IS a budget that canCj!~
!"'ograms for the. people. ~his
IS a budget whic~ !"'oVIdes
~:4 million ~o~ airline subs1di~s but ~liminates a $50
million f~g progr.am for
hungry children dunng the
swnmer."
Americans for Democratic
Action said the budget proposal
showed that the President
intends to dismantle "great
federal social programs" in the
fields of poverty, education,
health, housing and manpower.
It said, "Only defense is
spared ." Defense spending in·
creases $4.7 billion under the
proposal.
The proposed budget
dismantles · the Office of
Economic opportunity. It ends
programs for depressed areas,
public service employment,
regional medical facilities and
local mental health.

Office changes

d

ays o

fb

usiness

Effective Feb . 7, the
Pomeroy office of the OhiQ
Bureau of Employment' Services and the Ohio Bureau of
Unemployme~t Compellsation
will he open Wednesdays and
Thursdays .from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. Instead of Mondays and
Tuesdays..
All persons not able to be .in
the office on Wednesdays and
Th1,1rsdays may vlslt the
Gallipolis office·at (43 Second
Ave., Monday through Friday
from 8 a.m. to 5 J).m.

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