<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="17007" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/17007?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T19:18:36+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="50157">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/2fc35e8a20f26633bf671f43778caf3d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>bcbc96fd001bb411aa755fad498f801a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="54269">
                  <text>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.

�-2- The Dally Sentmel t'.bddleport Pomeroy 0 Jan 30 1973

(f

3- The Daily Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy

Th rty fourth P es den Ow ght 0 E se nhowe
rst Adm n st a on Janua y 20 1953 January 20 1957)

l:rsc •I " r DO&lt; t

y 1ru a11 Doctrme

Of the tl1 I) s x 1 n
h ha e scr ed m the
th1rt y sc &lt;I Pr 1l 1l
f the Unite I States
D 11ght D IJSc 11 I&lt; tl Ul) scs S Grant ha1e
been rhc nl) Rept II 1 t s&lt;r c t "full terms
I l ey \1 ere I the tl y t\1 ( h cf I xecut11 cs
t gradu He fr 1 \1 est P 111 ml s gmficantl'
ne1thc1 111111 h d prc 1 I} held 11 y p Inc d ffice
I rue ( rmr I 1l c c II 1dly sa I mer 1 Secrc
tary &gt;f War 1 tier Pres1&lt;lcnt \n Ire J hns n l11 t
ht sclc f nu
llCUpy 1 sp ICC Ill rdcr
t keep the I
I\\ 1 1 M St tnt n , t f
\lth&lt; ugh thct 1 I r y c 1 « s I c m '"Y para!
lei the prcstlct t11l &lt;11«1 &lt;f the r 1 fi1 c star
gene1 tis cltflcr n &lt; tc Ill p rta 11 rc pcct hJSt&lt; r ans
gencrtlly rltc I cnh c 1 I rl) st ccc sit I Pres
dent \1 hde (,r nt shares 1 rh II arrc H trd ng the
sngma CJf tbJ&lt;ct fa h rc

w. -...;,
I!ff"'ZM$·-m
NJ9&gt;".v.o.• .....
:mew.-...

:::....·'·::~::::::::::::::::~:?;~:::w~ &lt;... ~

i

Generation Rap

i

By He1en and Sue Bolte]

~

New Report on Teen Sexuality
(Part 11
Would you beheve that
Over half of all AmeriCan young people ages 13 19 (59 pet of
the boys 45 pet of the g~rls) sre nonv&gt;rgm and of this group 63
pet lost the1r v1rgm1ty before age 16'
Nevertheless sex ranks far down on the hst of most 1r11
portant things m the average teenagers hie
Nearly 40 pet of adolescents (ages 13-19) agree they have
never really gotten to know the1r fathers and 25 pet beheve they
have no real rapport wtth the1r mothers
Two activities rated LEAST tmportant by most Amencan
youth are Getting loaded and hangmg out and Havmg sex
(or makmg-&lt;~ut) wtth a number of different partners
Rated most Important Getting to know myself and
Having fun
While teens gtve much thought to preparmg themselves for
successful hves they aren t vitally concerned about changmg
the system Most have no des1re to combat soc1ety but they also
don t particularly care what adult soctety thmks of THEM
They do NOT mdulge msex to get even wtth parents or revolt
agamst prudery but rather constder sexuahty a normal and
wholesome psrt of life whtch should not be regulated by soc1al
laws ( 11 s better left to mdivtdualchotce they mstst)

+++
If you re uflder 211 chances are these statements won t
surprise you But parents and older adults may feel startled
shook and in many cases reassured when they read
ADOLESCENT SEXUAtiTY IN CONTEMPORARY
AMERICA as complied by Dr Robert C Sorensen The book
sub-lltled Personal Values and Sexual BehaviOr Ages 13-19 IS
the ftrst nallonw1de survey of tts kmd and s ~c heduled for rmd
February publtcallon by World Publishing Company It carnes
an mtrnducllon by the RtghtReverend Paul Moore Jr Bishop of
the EpiScopal DIOcese of New York who wntes m part
Throughout Dr Sorensen s study sex Iron the adolescents
VIew comes through as a combmatwn of love kindness and
mutual enjoyment between persons Abusing or even usmg
another for purely seUish sexual reasons Is d&gt;rare thing among
adolescents The most common vtew was reflected m the
statement Sex IS OK if you love
or It IS ruce to have sex
wtth a frtend
Btshop Moore does not judge teenage attrtudes and behavtor
(revealed m some 200 personal mtervtews and 400 sctenllftcally
researched questionnatres) as more lrllmOral or amoral than
those of adults
Rather he says the conflict seems to center around the
mslltution of mamage wh1ch many feel to be a legal gururuck
Monogamy (outstde as well as mstde mamage ) still holds htgh
respect but the closed mamage of two who no longer love each
other IS deeply resented YoWJg people then are pamfully
fearfully JOylully workmg out thetr own moral codes sttll on the
Judean.ChriSttan eth1c but articulated m codes they feel more
appropnate for thetr own culture
As wtth the Kmsey Report Dr Sorensen s book offers no
judgments or adVIce netther gloriftes nor condemns It sunply
records how teenagers feel and act vta mterVIews wtth what ts
believed to be a true representative samphng of youth
throughout the natwn (See footnote)
Response Analysts Corporalton of Prmceton New Jersey
conducted the survey m late sprmg 1972 making sure that all
types of famthes mevery geographical area were mcluded Each
parttctpant had parental consent (whtch mtght t1p the survey
slightly toward the liberal stde) but no one - not parent or
wattlng mtervtelver ~ could read the lengthy self-administered
wrtlten questtonnatre before tt was sent unsigned to the
research company In the 200 addttional oral mterVIews great
pams were taken to assure pnvacy Thus the probablltty of lymg
or covermg up facts became mm1mal In fact a probabthty
ratmg of 95 pet has been gtven the Sorensen Report by experts m
SOCIOlogy This means that for example if 48 pet of the IJl.
tervlewers were classtfled as VIrgins then if the entire teen
population were surveyed fmdmgs would probably be w thm ftve
percent either way of thts ftgure
Adolescent Sexuality m Cootemporary Amema is the
lint In-depth survey of 13-19-year-&lt;~lds which attempts to relate
youthfuhexual behaVIor to 1ts sexual values As such tt 1s an
impor:ant book one that wtll prOVIde constderable mstght - and
~

Smce they seem to have been about equal m
mtelhgencc-both ranked near the m1ddle of the1r
graduatmg classes-It IS probable that the pohttcal
success of one and the failure of the other stemmed
pnmanly from the1r drastically d1fferent cH1Id
hoods Grants formative years were almost ennrely
devrud of parental support and warmth while
E1senho"er grew up m a home that radtated encour
agement and affection
Dwtght E1Senhov, er s S\1 1ft chmb ro 1nterna
uonal fame durmg World War II sprang from a
t\1 enty five year tour of army duty that found h1m
a rank lo\\ er m 1939 as a naJOr than he had been
m 1918 as a heutenant col ncl &lt;\ more ambmr us
man mtght have left the sen ce or turned 'to alcohol
as G rant d1d but duty not amb1t10n was
Etsenhower s gmdmg star and he spent the long
undiStmgmshed years mastenng hts profesS! m as
few men have
I hus \\hen he was promoted o'er more than
300 scmor officers m 1942 as commandmg general
I uropean Theatre ofOperat1ons and later Supreme
Commander &lt;\lhed Expeditionary Force
~ lSCnho\\er adrmtly blended the sc1ence of modern
11 arfare and the anc•ent art of conc1ilatton to d1rect
hiS arm1cs to a crushmg vtctory 01 er Germany and
Italy
Return ng home to a ttmultum s hero s 11 el
come wh~eh he satd made h m humble because It
"a ea rn ed 10 th e bl&lt;&lt;d of hJS follr "ers
Elscnho11er 'as ardently and pers stently v,ooed
as a preSide lttal candtdate by leaders of both maJor
pollttCll parte
Indeed the EISenhower for Pres dent crusade
11 as gemng s much pubhclty that PreSident 1 ru
man called h s &lt;\rmy Ch1ef of Staff t the Wh te
Hr usc and asked htm pumt blank f he \\as gomg
t&lt; run ~Jr PreSident V. hen E senho\\Cr told the
President that he had no such plans Truman told
h1m he ""s usmg good JUdgment because s tch
a mm c would only tarn sh h s splcn I d career
as a prr fess onal sold cr
Desp tc th s stern "arnmg that a p nd ts n Jl
an ocean and dcsp tc lm
n expressed d ubts
about apr les 1 nal s leiters fitness for h1gh pol111 al
posts EJScnh "er had beco 11 e nfected ' tth
pres dent us -a bafflmg d sease for "htch there
IS

n l kn m n cure-and he conscntc I to srand for

nommat1 n at the Rcpuul can com em n m Ch1cago
m July 1952.
Sen R&lt; !Jert \ I att f Ohw had been the odds
on fa\ortte P" r t l1Scnh&lt; er s e ury and "as
b) the rec rds of b&lt; th 11cn the far better quahhed
of the t\1 o But Ftsenho\1 er had the support of the
t mgh shrc\ d tw J ttme pres dcnttal I&lt; ser Go•

msp1re much controversy - m months ahead
It may shock at t1r11es 1e two thtrds of all adolescents
agree that if two people love each other and are hvmg together
getting marrted 1s just a legal techrucahty w1th whtch they
should not be required to comply But 11 will also reassure-lor
a solid 85 pel of all boys and 92 pet of all gtrls expect some day to
marry and have children
II can be unsellbng 55 pet of all nonVJrgm teenagers report
that netther sex partner used any birth control method m their
first mtercourse and another 14 pet are not sure also ~0 P.Ct
had therr ftrst mtercourse expenence In thell' own or thew sex
partner s home
But tt s good to read that young people mainly want to travel
the roads hewn out by the elders -except wtlh more honesty
openness and Wlderstanding They are NOT tossmg out all
standards but only reshuffling them a btl
In Thursdays GENERATION RAP well offer more
highhghts from the htghly readable Sorensen Report - HELEN
AND SUE

1homas E De11 ey of :'\/c\1 York and there \\as
no sroppmg the \\ e Ltke Ike stampede
Masternumled or mtsmaoaged- tt ts hard to tell
"h1ch-by De11 ey s hard nosed staff Etsenhower
\I as as temperamentally aloof and p&lt;&gt;ltttcally mal
adroit as h1 s Democratic opponent GO\ \dlat
Ste1 en son of Jllmms \\as personable and compe
tent But E1senh0\1 er s contagtous gnn V
for 1tctor} s1gn and h1s glt rrenng hero s halo S\1 ept
htm to an Olel'\1helmng \lctory m41 of the 4S
states g1' mg htm a f&gt;luraltty of 6 5 n11lhon 1otcs
and +P electoral 1otes to Stc1enson s 89
In a prayer prelaccd m lllgural address Prcs1
dent Etsenho"er restated the e1er "tdemng C\ er
deepenmg scope of \mcnca s mamfest dcstmy
by declarmg \\e are called as a people to g11c tes
nmony m the s1ght ot the 11 orld to &lt;ur fanh that
the future shIll belong tr the free I he Pres1lcm
satd that the nccesst ty for umty among the "r rids
free peoples rested o 1 a bas1c Ia\\ of mterdepm
dence and he concluded To produce thts umty
desttn) has la1d upon our C0\11"\Tff tl:t&lt;: tespons•
bthty of the free 11 orld s le td rsh1p
1 he \1onn c Doctnnc h td """ been supersctbl
by the Roose\ cit Coroll1ry and the L mted States
\1 ould soon become the t&lt; ughe st cop on the 11terna
uonal beat
\ s he had promtscd 111 hts campa1gn speeches
Pres1dent I 1 cnh \1 er d1d br ng the Korean ' ar t
an end a t uce hemg Signed July 27 J9)] He
also made a dramat1c appearance be tore the L llltl'&lt;.l
'at onsGeneral \ sse nbly toe all for 111 orld &lt;rgm•
zatwn to de1 clop peaceful uses ot at m1c c 1crgy
In Septem! er 19)) F1senh "er suftcrcd he trt
attack\ hdn acatwmng 11Colorado \1 h1ch nc1p Jet
tared hun for three months \1mdtul of the gap
m the Constitution regardmg prolr ngcd d1 s 1b In~
of the C h1et Execum c and the maladrt1t h tndhng
( f th s dtlemma d nng the C.arficld and the \\ Is n
\dmtm stra tH ns President E1senh 11 er cilrccte I
that ~~ 1cr nm cnt oftic11ls carr} on bu s mess as
usual and that the puhl c he kept full) mf •r nc I
rcgardmg h1s c million
\s soon as he returned to the \\ h1te House
the Pres1dcnt mstructcd \tt} Gcn Herbert Br 11 n
ell to dr tft prop Jsed kg slatu n for a plant J protect
the c untry fully f a Prcs1dcnt \1 ere to bee me
d sabled at 1 tunc " hen tmmed11te execume actt n
\1 as needed
\\hen practical and poltt c tl c nSI&lt;I
eran ns made qmck acttm on such lcg•slatu1n h ghly

I he I 1scnh 1\1 cr I) lltlt1c bu y11g the I rum1n
D &gt;ctrtnc backed cc• n 1111&lt; p ' cr \1 tth hrc p&lt; \1 cr
and the nam R \1 &lt;I m 1m lest de sr II) c&lt; nt nued
"est\\ trd I hL c p 1 &lt;' h 1 I 1 gu1 md the next
prccmct I&lt; be p I eed ' uld I e Vtcln 111 ' htch
dr es not happe 1 t he 111 thL \l1ddle I 1st

••

medtocre basketball team they certamly wtll get tl More years
wtth records of 2-19 3-18 4-18 etc And for the kids sske that
would be a damn shame Let s hope they see the handwnting on
the wall and get w1th a good program for the class of 80 right
now I think they can
ON THE TV DIAL Galltpolts Ironton basketball hve andto
on Ch 5 at 7 45 TV replay Wednesday at 5 (not seen ln Mason
and Me1gs)
TV Honor ,SOCtety ptts high schools from Athens
and St Marys W Va
WHTN TV offers a comedy tr 10
Honeymoon Sutte at ll)lQ, p m
..,.

~.\ , ,

"'~

TUESDAY JAN 30 1973
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 13 15 Trulh or Con seq 6 Sesame Sl 20
Around the Bend 33
6 30 - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Dream of Jeanne 13 Growing
H m Up 33
7 00 - What s My L ne a I ve Got A Secret 13 Elec Co 20
Beat the Clock 4 News 6 10 Untamed World 3 TV Honor
Soc ely 15
7 30- ThiS Is Your Life3 Doclors on Call 4 To Tell the Truth
6 Pr ce s R ghiB 10 Beallhe Clock 13 RFD 20 Zoom 33
8 00 - Tmperalures R s ng 6 13 Maude 6 10 Book Beat 33
Move Baffled 3 4 15 Ohio Th s Week 20
8 30- Hawa I Flve-0 8 10 Bill Moyers Journal 20 33 Move
A Cod N1ghf s Death 6 13
9 00 - Beh nd the Lines 20 33
9 JO - BiackJournal20 33 Move BrdsofPrey 6 o
10 00 - Marcus We by M D 6 13 News 20 NBC Reports 3 4 15
ll 00 - News3 4 6 10 3 15
ll 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Honeymoon Su te 6 13 Movie
The HOtJse Thai Screamed 8 Movie Love and th e
Frenchwoman 10
1 00 - Your Heallh 4 News 13
130 - News4
WEDNESDAY JAN 31 1973
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmllme 0 Engl sh 3
6 20- Farm Reporl 13
6 25- Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Co umbus Today 4 B ble Answers 8 Urban League 10
The Story 13
7 00 - Today 3 4 5 CBS News 8 0 News 6 Fl ntstones 13
7 31l-Sieepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bullw nkle
13 Popeye 10
8 00 Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Lass e 6
8 30- Jack lalanne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Rooms
8 55 - Local News 13
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15 What Every Woman
Wanls to Know 3 Conce nlrallon 6 Capl Kangaroo s
Fr endly Junction 0 Ben Casey 13
9 30 - Elec Co 33 To Tell theTrulh3 Jeopardy6
0 00 - Dinah Shore 3 15 Columbus S1x Calling 6 Joker 5 Wild
8 10 D ck Van Dyke 13
10 30 - Concentration 3 5 Phi Donahue 4 Price s Rights 10
Sp t Second 13
ll 00 - Sale of the Century 3 15 Love American Slyle 6
Gambit 8 tO Password 13
ll 30 - Hollywood Squares 4 13 Love of L fe a 10 •ewltched 6
13 Sesame St 20
"
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Braun s 50 so Club 4
News 13 Contact 8 News 10
12 30 - Sp11Second6 SearchforTomorrow6 10 JWs3 t5
I 00 - News Wealher ~ports 3 All My Children 6 13 Secret
Storm 8 Nolfor Women Only 15 Green Acres 10
I 20 - Fashions In Sew ng 3
I 30 - 30nAMatch3 4 5 LelsMakeaDean613
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 M ke
Douglass 6 Guldin~ Light 10 8
2 30 - Dating Game 13 Doctors3 4 15 Edge of NtghiB o
3 00 - Another World 3 IS General Hospital 6 13 Love
. Splendored Th ng 8 10 RFD 20
3 30 - Return lo Peyton Pace 3 4 15 One Life to Live 6 13
Secrel Storm 8 10 01\io This Week 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame Sf 33 Love
American Sly e 13 Merv Griffin 4 Fl ntstones 6 Mo 1
11 e

4 3G0 1-11 Andy Griffith 15 Pelt coat Junction 3 1 Love Lucy 6
gan s island 8 Daniel Boone 13
5 oo
Mr Rogers 33 Dick Van Dyke 15 Daniel Boon• 6
6onanza
3 4 Hazel 8
~
5 30 - Marshall D lion 15 Elec Co 33 Beverly H llbll les 8
Gomer Pyle USMC 13 HodgeRodge Lodge 20
6 00 - Truth or Conseq 6 News 3 4 8 to 15 Sesame St ' o
Around fhe Bend 33
'
6 JOT - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 I Dream of Jeannie t3 Societies In
rans 111on 33
7 c:&lt;i, cre~s 6 10 What s My Line 8 Truth or Conseq 3 Beat
P~se ";1 ~lf:~~lh~,S!ci~1~ ~~n 13 Know Your Schools 33
1 30 - To Tell the Truth 6 The Judge 10 Pollee Surgeon 3 4
Proleclors 6 Beat the Clock 13 Andy Griffith 15
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Episode Acf on 33
8
~onn:~'/!h~r 38 41J5 A~~~~~-:'1: 6 13 Pilgrim Journey~
8 30 - Madigan 3 4 15 Movie Snatched 6 13
9 ':' - Med cal Centeno Eye to Eye 20 33 College Basketball
9 30 - FlneArlofGooflng0ff20 33
10 00 - SOtJi 33 Nows 20 Cannon 8 Bellevue 3 10 Ow
Marshall 6 tJ Search t5
en
ll OO - News3 4 6 810 1315
t1 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Comedy News 6 13 Movies
Mongo s Back In Town 8 Queen Bee 10
I 00 - News 4 13

gr

tlot ~~'.!fore

•

l

t

Bruins unanimous
No. I in nation
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
UCLA Bruins top this season s
ninth ra~ of the Umfed
Press International Board of
Coaches the same way that
they headed the previous eight
(and preseason) hsts-by
draw!Qg all first-place ballots
cast-- 35 to amass 350 points
On Thursday Coach John
Wooden s cagers tied the all
time NCAA consecutive
wbulmg streak of 60 games set
by the University of San
Francisco In 1955-56 defeating
Loyola (m) 87 73 then sur
passed this mark with an BU3
trtumph at South Bend Ind.
Saturday over Notre Dame for
this season s 16th victory
Asked if he thought his club
could extend their mark past
the 61 consecutive victories
they now have Wooden
replied If we can run It up
higher we ll be happy to but If
we don t they still can't take
the record away from us now
North Carolina State the
only • other major unbeaten
team besides UCLA at IW
held second garnenng all but
two of the 35 second-place
hallots cast and 311 points
North Carolina third last
week dropped decisions to
VIrginia 84-78 and Maryland
94-811 to fall to eighth position
As a result Maryland Long
Beach State Indiana and
MiMesota each moved up one
notch filling the Nos 3-6 spots

respectively
Alabaflla won three games to
011 the seventh spot Marquette
dropped one SJMII to ninth and
Mlasoun moved up one place to
011 out the top 10
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL RESULTS
By United Press International
Includes Games Thru Jan 27
Mid Amencan Conference
Conference Overall

W L W L

Mami
4 I 10 6
To edo
4 2 11 6
Bowling Green
3 2 7 8
Central M ch
3 4 8 9
Kent State
2 3 6 10
Oh o Unlv
2 3 10 6
Western Mlch
1 4 5 11
Ohio Conference
Conference Overall
W L WL
Musklngum
6 t 15 2
5 I 14 4
Otterbein
Wlien berg
5 2 11 3
Capital
4 2 13 3
Marietta
4 2 7 9
Wooster
4 2 13 5
He delberg
4 3 7 7
Mount Unfon
4 3 9 7
01\lo Wesleyan
3 4 5 9
Baldwin Wallace 3 5 5 12
Oberl n
1 5 6 9
Denison
1 6 7 9
Kenyon
0 8 2 15
Big Ten
Conference Over111
WL W L

lnd ana
Purdue
Michigan
Ill nols
Minnesota
Ohio State
M chlgan State
Northwestern
Iowa
Wisconsin

5 0 13 2
4 1 11 4
4 2 t1 5
2 I 5 5

2 2 12 2
2 2

8 6

2
1
I
I

9 6
2 ll
7 7
6 7

4
3
4
5

Olllers

W L

'

Sport Parade

• •«.:ttt

10

Badgers of staying m last place
Ill conference ratings with a l.Q
mark Clyde Turner got 21
pomts for 7th ranked Min
nesota while Ron Behagen
scored 17

Today's

Television Log

Pushover

major thing was winning the
game
The Gophers advancing to 32 controlled the backboards to
post their victory over Wlscon
sin at Madison and assure the

Hiram
10 2
Defiance
13 3
12 4
Steubenville
Wright State
9 3
Akron
10 4
John Carroll
8 4
01\Jo Northern
10 6
C nclnnatl
10 7
Bluffton
9 7
Ashland
7 6
Urbana
10 9
Case Western
6 6
Rio Grande
7 8
7 •
C!lev•lal)ll St~
8 10
Malone
Cedarville
7 9
Dayton
7 9
Findlay
7 9
5 t3
YOtJngstown Slale
By MILTON RICHMAN
Central State
~ 12
UPI Sports Editor
3 10
~ Xavier
Walsh
2 11
Wlmlngton
1 10
NEW YORK (UPI) -Sparky Anderson says he can tell you the
WJberforce
1 13
man who lost the World Series for his Cmcinnatl Reds
This Week 1
You ask him who and he points to hlrDSelf
Ohto College
Sparky Anderson has a way of being extra rough on himself In
Basketball Schedule
By Un1ted Pross fnternotlonol
Ibis case he isn t trying to be a martyr he actually means what
Tuositoy
he says Bot he s still giving blmself the worst of it
Baldwin Wallace al Akron
In some ways the fr~nk ftercely honest Reds manager IS like
Kenyon at Denison
Heidelberg at Otterbein
the late Harry S Truman who kept a sign oo his White House
Oberlin at Wooster
desk saying The buck stops here
Carnegie Mellon af Case West
That s the way it is wlth Sparky Anderson He never passed the WI berforce al Cedarville
Rio Grande at Georgetown
buck That s something you can t say for too many people today
IKy,.)
Sparky Anderson made a brief stopover here to pick up the Ben Cumber! an I Ky ) al Wright Sl
Wednosday
Epstein Good Guy Award at the New York Baseball Wnters
Bowling
Green
at Toledo
dinner and at the function he ran into the guy who killed him
Kent Slate at 01\lo University
three months ago Oakland s Gene Tenace
Miami at Wesl Michigan
It was the first time Anderson had seen Tenace smce the World Dayton at Cincinnati
Phil Textile at Youngstown St
Series
Bluffton at Hanover 1lnd 1
You look good the Reds manager greeted the As receiver
Marietta at Capital
Mt Union at Edinboro St
who hit four homers and batted 348 aJIIliSt his club in the series
(Pa)
I feel good said Tenace a guy who talks a lot at home but Olllo Wesleyan at Wlllenberg
L ncoln IMe l at Central Slate
not much outside
Defiance at Earlham (tnd l
~eatlon Asked
01\lo Northern at Findlay
Later someone asked Anderson whether seeing Tenace again H ram at John Carroll
elicited a rush of fresh thoughts about the World Series Or Malone at Urbana
01\lo Dominican at Walsh
unhappy recollections perhapa•
Taylor ltnd l at Wilmington
No sald the stocky muscular Anderson Nothing like that
Thursday
Once they re over they re over I didn t have any particular Wise Milwaukee at Xavier
Berea I Ky I at Rio Grande
thoughts seeing Tenace
Frldly
No games scheduled
He was tbe one who ruined you wasn t he' a newsman said
Sure he hurt us but that wasn t what cost as the World Ohio State Saturday
at Wisconsin
Series said Anderson
Miami at Bowling Green
West Mich at Kent State
What did then •
Toledo at 01\lo Unlv
Not having Dave Concepcion In the right spot In the fourth Cincinnati
at Houston
game Anderson came right back l should've moved him over Dayton at Loyola (ill )
totheleftmorewhentheybrought (Gonzalo) Marquez in to hit in Xavier at Notre Dame
Cleveland State at Akron
therunth
Oberlin at Baldwin Wal
But I dldn t and he hll one right through the mldtlle II was a Denison at Capital
high routine ground ball hit exactly where our scouts told us Heidelberg at Kenyon
Otterbein at MarleHa
Marquez generally hits the ball Our people Rex Bowen and Ray Wittenberg at Mt Union
Wooster at Musklngum
Sllore had him pegged perfectly
01\Jo
Was at Rochester (N Y )
There was one out and no one on when Marquez got hiS base Anderson
( lnd l at BlufHon
hit We had em beat 2-1 in the ball game and had we played Defiance at Manchester (lnd )
him right there would ve been two out and no one on But then Hanover I lnd ) at Findlay
at Earlham ( lnd )
they got a walk and two singles and Instead of us being even with Wilmington
Allegneny 1Pa l at Case
them at two games aplece they go ahead three games to ooe
Western
Marion lind ) at Cecarville
and that I think was the turning point right there and then
Ashland at Point Park
How He F1gum
01\io Northern at Wright St
How do you figure you rate all the blame though • Anderson Steubenville at Gannon ( Pa )
Marian ( lnd ) at Central State
was asked
Hiram at Betllany IW Va )
1 did it he said I didil't move Concepcion I m the one in Malone
at Rio Grande
01\lo Dom at Youngstown St
charge Who else can you blame•
Urbana at Wilberforce
It is typical of Sparky Anderson that he would see hlmsell Walsh
at Wheeling
solely r~nsible for the Reds defeat It Is also typical of him
that he would have been the 1a.st to take any of the credit had the
Reds beaten the A s That s Sparky Anderson for you
NEW HEAD COACH
The big thing In the Reds camp this spring will be the
LAS VEGAS Nev (UPI) revitalization of Johnny Bench Clncy s two-time MVP who will
Ron Meyer a talent scout fill"
be coming off IIUI"gery for a spot on hlllung
the Dallas Cowboya Monday
John will be on his own from the day he comes down there
was named head football coach
says Anderson Leaving him on his own I ll get as much from at the University of Nevadahim as I wouldi!Istayedon him I don thave to worry about him
Las Vegas
cheating
Meyer at who served fonlx
Will Anderson make allowances for the trouble Bench had with
yean as asalstant coach at hla
hla lung•
illma mater Plirdlle recently
John says he s gollna use it Iii an etcuse, laugbs the Reds
completed hla iecond season
manager I tol!! him lie rould but orlly when both lwtga •topJI6d
with Dallai 811 one of lilt

+++

Pomt Pleasant High School does nj#-have an outstanding
basketball team this year
It d1dn t have a great team lasl\year etthe~t111 lblrt 18')
In fact -smce 11165, lhe Btg Blacks have won 38 games a"dli&gt;st 129
- a"t'erot'&lt;l._tlfatBh tJU!!llnglonous Its disgraceful n
Gallta ~demy High School on the other hand has a very
fine basketball team w1th a 1~1 recond as thiS IS written Tb~y
were a very !me 16-5 last season too
Is there some stattsttcal reason that gtves the Blue Devils
such an edge' Emphatically no The Btg Blacks graduated more
semors last year play about the same number of AAA and AA
opponents and are infertor m no respect at all
+++
Why as a matter of fact Galltpolls itself wandered for 13
FOOTNOTE Whtle the Sorensen survey was \l'ell-eontrolled
as to geographtcallocattons type of young people tnterv1ewed years m the basketball wilderness wtthout a Moses - or even a
ages fmancial religious and famtly backgrounds (thus a Ksreem Abdul Jabbar - to lead them to the Promised Land
I suspect I know the answer and tt doesn t reflect very
relatively small samplmg -a total of some 600 as compared to
favorably
on PI Pleasant You see there sre just two ways to
over 10 000 m the Kinsey Report - mtght be constdered
representative of all Amertcan teens) tt required one develop a really outstanding basketball program
I - Pray a lot that one of the boys m school grows mto a
sttpulatlon which could load tt somewhat toward the hberal stde
superbly-btg superlattvely-coordmated superstar (and none Is
parental permiSSion
on
the hortzon at etther school)
Nearly 40 pet of parents contacted vetoed a sex
2- Start a hardworking 12-rnonth-a year program to teach
questionnaire many on grounds that My child tsn t ready for
kids
the fun and IWldamentals of hasketball starting abuut the
these things yet or II might glve hlrll or her tdeas Therefore
age
of
to
especially In the 13-15 year group we would suspect that the
Thts latter course IS the one Gallipolis chose starting about
more sexually aware teens (as compared to the mnocents )
show up m sbghdy greater proportion than they rrught m the etght years ago S1r11ple artllunetic shows that today s finely
general teen population We somehow question the statement boned athletes were among the f1rst enrollees In this program
PI Pleasant ought to be doing the same but for two dreary
that 37 pet of ALL 13-15-year-&lt;~lds m the Umted States are non
yesrs
1t hasn I been able to There s hope for the future though
Vlrgm though we beheve the other statistics m the book are
Bureaucracy lack of coordinatton and community m
substantially wtthln the ftve percent probability range JI AND S
difference hampered the program Hampered IS perhaps too
WIN AT BRIDGE
rmld a word Try strangled
Desp1te the efforts of two young men who wouldn t gtve up
the hardwood eqwvalent of Ltttle League just didn t jell for two
yesrs These unprud volunteers and the coaches spent more time
West and that the way to trying to get mto the 1!)'11111as1a wangle uniforms clear up m
NORTH
30
develop
the squeeze was to surance coverage and the like than they spent actually teachmg
• 753
use
a
submartne
play
the small fry hasketball
¥K63
tAK64
He won the club lead 10 hts
Thtsyear theprogramgotofftoalatestart as usual There
4AQ4
own hand and put his deuce was some authenllc confuston agam But m the past two weeks a
"EST
EAST (D)
of spades on the table
league ts begmrung to emerge It Is long overdue
4Vod
.QJI09864
East won and tl dtd not
There are coaches who really seem to want to make the
¥J974
¥108
matter what he returned Ac program work Aveteran athlettc figure has JOtned the younger
tJI09 2
t85
tually he led back a spade
4J 10983 .5 2
South won and cashed the menmcoord1118ltngtheprogram And lo' on January 20 league
SOUTH
other htgh spa&lt;le West had play actually got under way
4AK2
thrown two clubs and had to
(Gallipolis fme program wasn I any bed of roses m the first
¥AQ52
chuck
another
The
two
top
couple
of years etther)
• Q 73
.K76
clubs were taken next and
Su maybe there Is hope at that I cannot beheve that any
West had to unguard one of
ty hich
North South vulnerable
hts red Jacks It made no dtf commWJt w
runs such a fine summer base hall program for
West North East South
ference whtch one South Its klds and has a constantly-unprovmg Biddy Football League
34 3NT.
was sure of four trtcks 10 (just watch for results about 1974) can be so goshawfulm supPass 6 N T Pass Pass
that
red smt
portmg a k1ds basketball program
Pass
HEWIP•m
EHT!RPRISE
ASSN
,
!like to see all the area s schools do well m all sports
Open ng lead- • J
because I m a confessed sports nut But I think tl s time that PI
Pleasant realizes thts is just about the last trtp to the well even
Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The
b
dd
ng
has
b._
as
they gaze at the packed gym and spectacular domgs of the
East s three spade opemng
Ea.•t s uth Blue DeVIls
btd was the act of a desper We•l North
ado We hke to preempt but
14
If the commWJtly wants a discombobulated wtcoordmated
prefer somelhmg better than Pass
l +
Pas.s
Pass
16
Pass.
hts collectton of nothtng
On lhts day 1n htstory
You
South
hold
The Almanac
Th1s ltme the desperado s
act did h1111 no good and 4AK54 ¥AQ63 .2 .KQJ07
In 1835 a deranged painter
might well have hurt h1m
What do you do now
By United Press International Rtchard Lawrence fired two
South was forced mto a
A-B1d four spades y •ur fine Today IS Tuesda) Jan 30
sltghtly unsound three no hand has really Improved but the 30th day of 1973 With 335 to shots at Prestdent Andrew
Jackson but m1ssed m the first
trump whtch North ratsed to lhere 1s not hkely to be a l'lllam follow
recorded presidential assassma
stx South would probably unlet~!\ Y ur partner c•n m )\e
The moon IS approachmg Its lton attempt
have reached that same con
TODA Y'S QUESTION
new phase
tract 1! East had passed but
In 1933 Adoll Hitler destmed
He b ds four no t ump and
he m1ght well have not found ~.:onbn es to f ve- no trun p after Th e mormng stars are Venus to become the all-powerful
the way to bt ng It home
you sh ow you wo a~~ What Mars a d Jupiter
dtctator of World War II was
Afte1 the spade 11 eempt do vn do nmo,
The eventng stars are Mer named chancellor of the Ger
and the club lead a blue
cury and Saturn
man Retch
pt nt of the whole hand had
Those
b
1
n
on
t11s
date
are
been !11 n shed to South and
In 1948 lndtan pacifist leader
S.nJ '' lor JACOBY MODERN book under the stgn of Aquartus
he took 11 II a I&gt;anlage
Mohandas Gandhi was assss
At tnc k tw I e saw that to 'W n ol Br dge" 1&lt;/o th ' •••• Franklin Delano Roosevelt stnated by a Hmdu extremist
pope I PO Box 48S Rodo C,_, 32 d
d I f h
he wo tid almost s 11el; "'ed S&lt;al
'" New ~ 0 1 N y OOI9
n prest ~n 0 t e United plWlgtng lnd1a s millions mto
J( vel 1 a sq eeu aga nsl
- - - - - - - - - States was born Jan 30 1882 mournmg

Submarine Play Is Squeeze

Ualted Press IDieruallooal
Purdue added a victory to tts
quest for the Big Ten cham
plonshtp Monday night but
Michigan took a loss at the
hands of Iowa and fell to fifth
place in the standings In a
game that ended In a brawl
The Boilermakers outscored
Northwestern 14-1 Ul the last
!Jtree minutes of the first half
and went on to wst a 76-62
victory to boost their confer
ence performance to 5-l and
stake a finn claim on second
place behind undefeated In
diana which wa.s idle
Iowa defeated Michigan 7~
and Minnesota defeated cellar
dwelling Wisconsin 81-Gf m
other Monday night games
The free for all at Iowa
began With one second left
when Hawkeye center Kevin
Kunnert was fouled as he went
In for a layup Both benches
students and policemen poured
onto the Door The game was
called off '-first time In the
history of the Iowa fieldhouse
that a game was terminated
before the clock ran out
But Iowa had put It away
already Candy LaPrmce hit
six stratght free throws m the
last 85 seconds to Ice the win
and drop Michtgan to 4-3 In the
league Iowa Is out of conten
lion at 2-4
Kwmert set a school record
by pulling down 17 rebounds
during the game erasmg the
mark previously held by
Boston Celtic Don Nelson
Kwmert also led Iowa with 24
points
Michigan Coach JohMy Orr
whose team took '¥1 fouls to 13
for Iowa had no comment He
had to be restramed by an
assistant when an official ruled
LaPrince was fouled durmg
that last minute
Hawkeye Cocah Dick Schultz
smd Kevin got a raw deal In
the whole thing But that s all I
have to say However the
By

numsm

BY PAUL ~BTREE

30 Jll'/3

Purdue, Iowa win

1mprobable Pres1dent E1senhower entered mto a
personal ~greell' cnt w1th Vtce President R1chard
Ntxon sttpulatmg that the V1ce President would
sene as ;\cung Prestdent exerctStng the powers
and dr,m es of the office until the mab1ilty had ended
Late m E1senhowcr s first term two cnses m
Europe and &lt;\s1a threatened to mvohc the Umted
States m armed confhcts The people of Hungary
re' olted agamst thetr Russtan donunated gm ern
ment m October 1956 and \\ere brutally crushed
by the Red \rmy -\ fe\1 days s later Egypt was
tm 1dcd by Bnush Erench and Israeli tr&lt;~&gt;ps m
a dtsputc m cr the Suez!li:anal recently natumail1ed
by I gypt
fhe E1senhrm er \dmm1str ttlon JOmcd Russta
m condcmnmg the Fgypnan 1111 aSJon and 11orkc(l
through the IJ mted :-.ianons tn bnng about a cease
fire fhc Prestdcnt also c&lt; ndemned the bloody sup
pressu n of the llunganan rc\ r It lmt he t&lt; &lt;k no
further acnon 111 the m mer Hrm c1 er the mo out
breaks of '" lc 1cc c ll ml the Premlcnt t&lt; step up
hiS efforts t&lt;! get congrcss10n 1l apprm al of \\hat
has u me to be called the Etscnho\1 cr Docrrme
E1scnh \ler h1d been grenly c&lt; nccrncd 111 1954
by the defc It &gt;f I ranee 111 lndoch na Dunng the
I ruman \dm niStnn• n ml t&lt; hdp hance ret un
tts ' tlu tble p ssesSJo1s m S uthc 1st \sta had been
s &gt;gcncr JUS th It the United States \1 as br mng
nearl y h1lt I the cost&lt; f the \ltr '" tre • ~ the
huge tinanct 1l 11\ est nent }et d ul tful ol the "ts
dom f nul t ry mten enn n Ihe PreSident cun
suited "1th c mgress1&lt; n 11 le ulers \1 h• ad1 sed
agamst und 1te1 1! 1ct n
:'l:e\ crthcless I tsc 1h "'cr and Secret try of St nc
John F&lt; stcr Dulle \1 lnted t p1 t t(eth 111 the p I cy
f c&lt; ntatn ng com lllnJSm h) ec m •mtc ud t J
c untnes facmg C mmumst aggrcs 1on I hus the
t11 o men f&lt; r mlatc I 1he d ct11nc th It bear s
ltsenh &gt;11cr s name mlm \larch l'h 7 ( mgrcss
appr 'cd It at th nzmg the Pre dent t • em ph y
armed Ioree to atd tn y Mtddk I tsl n1t1 111
rcqucstmg assiStance 1g tlllSt trm c I tggrcssl n
fr m Ill} wuntry c nrr lied I ~ Intern ttl 1 II Com

&amp; THINGS

d Jan

CoWboY~~~

Pro Smndings

•

'".

-

Warriors just Knicks' dessert

NBA Slond111gs
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
AtlantiC DIVISIDR

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
New York Kmcks who rapped
the NaUonal Basketball AB
soc1ation s best team twtce
when they beat Boston m a
horne-and-home sertes had the

w I pel gb
Boston
40 9 816
New York
43 12 762
Buffalo
16 35 314 25
Philadelphia 4 49 075 38
Central DIVISIOn
wlpclgb
Baltimore
32 18 640
Atlanta
29 25 537 5
Houston
20 3t 392 12 '
Cleveland
18 32 360 14
Western Conference

Golden State Warnors for Golden State the victim of thetr
dessert Monday rught
fears New York prevailed as
Dave DeBusschere satd the the Knicks toppled the Warn
Knicks were afratd of a let ors 97-84 wtth DeBusschere
down after the Boston sertes holding RICk Barry to 20 pomts
I guess we tr1ed to go a httle
and were determmed to make

Free-for-all stopped game

Midwest DIVISIOn

wlpctgb
•
Milwaukee
37 t4 725
lly United Press IDiemaliooal
Chicago
31 19 620 5 '
Wtth one second remaining
KC Omaha
25 31 446 14 ,
Detroit
20 31 392 17 m Iowa s 75-611 vtctory over
Pactflc Div1s1on
wlpclgb Mtchtgan Hawkeye center
Kevm Kwtnert was fouled as
Los Angeles 39 11 780
Golden State 32 19 627 7 h he went m for a layup Both
Phoenix
25 27 481 15 benches poured out onto the
Seattle
16 38 m 25
Portland
13 39 250 27 court Students jomed m the
Monday s Relults
fracas that was stopped by
New York 97 Golden St 84
police
and Athlettc Director
IOnly game scheduled)
Tuesday s Games
Bwnp Elliot of Iowa Officials
Golden Sl at Baltimore
called the game wtth one
Philadelphia at Buffalo
second to go
Detro I at Atlanta
Milwaukee at Cleveland
However Sill straight free
Chicago at Los Ange es
throws m the 111181 85 seconds
HOtJslon at Portland
had
teed the game already for
IOnly games scheduled)
Iowa now 2-4 m the Btg Ten
ABA S!and1ngs
and 8-7 overall Michigan
By Un1ted Press lnternatmal which ssw 1ts title hopes wane
East
w f pel g b
Carol na
39 l7 696
Kentucky
35 19 648 3
V rg n a
28 27 ~ 10 '
New York
19 32 373 17 '
Memph s
16 :u 308 21
West
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
wlpctgb
Utah
:u 19 655
Houston Oilers spurnmg more
Indiana
30 22 577 4 ' than a dozen trade offers will
Denver
26 27 491 9
Dallas
19 33 :US 1~ ' make the f1rsl chotce m today s
San Diego
20 :U 357 16 ' National Football League draft
Monday s Results
and are expected to select
Vlrg nla 122 Utah t21
IOnly game scheduled)
Dave Butz of Purdue
Tuesday s Games
Bulz a 6-7 280-pound defenNew York al Memphis
Sive tackle will lend some beef
Vlrg nla at Dallas
Indiana at San D ego
to a line that saw the Oilers wm
IOnly games scheduled)
only one of 14 games last
season the worst record In the
AHL Standmgs
NFL to eam the No I cbotce
By Untted Press International
The Oilers had been olfermg
East
w I I pts gf ga thetr No 1 ptck around the
26 12 12 64 195 128 league for three or four proven
NS
Boslon 26 20 6 58 170 172
Rchslr 22 16 9 53 155 162 starters but dtd not recetve a
Prov
19 19 9 47 156 152 lucrative enough offer They
24 12 :u 175 214 did swmg one majOr deal
~fl'fld 12
12 30 10 34 175 240 Monday by acqwnng veteran
West
wltpfsgf ga center Bill QuTy from the
Clncl
38 13 3 79 242 : ~ Baltimore Colts for a high draft
Hrshy 26 14 10 62 212
Va
25 15 a sa 178 15a chotce
Rchmnd 18 25 7 43 170 163 The Colts also dealt away
Jcksnvl 5 26 7 37 166 ~~) defenstve end Billy Newsome
Bait
7 32 9 23 140
to New Orleans to earn the
Monday s Results
Boston 6 VIrginia 3
second cbotce m the draft and
(Only game scheduled)
sent oft injured running Norm
Tuesday s Games
Bulatch to the Philadelphta
Providence at Jacksonvl le
IOnly game schedu ed)
Eagles for future con
Slderattons
WHA standtngs
'l'IW!EaJPestllildthe\J\11-al!nU
By UOJ!ed Pr•ss lnternollonai sixth slots m the draft gammg
East
the No 6 choice from San
15
Cleve
3~ 1 ~ !, 17~f 1~ Otego with New England
New Eng 29 19 1 59 199 165 )licking fourth and St Lows
NY
24 26 I 49 207 t98 filth
Quebec 22 24 3 47 177 198
21 28 o 42 177 2to Buffalo was seventh
Phil a
Ottawa 19 28 3 41 178 225 followed by Otlcago Denver
w ~es~ pis gf ga Baltimore and New F,:ngland
Win pg 29 21 3 62 195 167 agam on a chotce from Los
Houston 26 18 4 56 168 162 Angeles Minnesota chooses
Mlnri
25 22 3 53 165 167 12th followed by the New York
Los Ang 22 24 4 48 174 175
A berta 21 24 2 44 149 160 Jets Houston again on a choice
Ch cago 16 32 1 33 51 189 from Atlanta Clncmnall
Monday s Resutts
Cleve and 3 New Eng 2
IOnly game scheduled)
Tuesdays Games
Phlladolphla at ottawa
Cleveland at New Eng and
M nnesota af Chicago
New York.. t Alberta
NICKLAUS THIRD
Los Angeles at Houston
IOnly games scheduled)
NEW YORK (UP!) - Jack
Nicklaus golf s all lime
leading money winner jumped
mto third place on thts year s
earrungs list wtth hiS vtctory m
the Bing Crosby Pro-Am at
NI:W YORK (UPI) - The Pebble Beach Calif
United Press Internal onal lop
20 major college basketball Ntcklaus playoff vtctory
teams with f rsl place voles over Ray Floyd and Orville
and won lost records as of Moody worth $36 000 boosted
Saturday n p a r e n t h e s e s
(N nth Week)
his 1973 wlmlngs to $41 675 '"
Team
Po nts only two tournaments Bruce
1 UCLA 1351 116 0)
350
2 N C St 11~ 0)
Jt1 Crampton wmner of two
3 Maryland (14 t)
247 previous tournaments still led
4 Long Beach St 1151)
216 With $60 898
5 lnd ana (13 2)
196
6 Minnesota (12 2)
104
7 Alabama Ill 1l
77
8 No Car (15 31
75 KOTAL DIES
9 Marquette (14 21
66 STEVENS POINT Wis
10 MlssOtJrl (14-2)
50 (UP!) - Eddie Kotal a former
It Houston (13 21
44
12 Providence (12 2)
39 player with the Green Bay
13 Kansas Sl 113 3)
3t Packers and football and
14 St John s N Y I13 2)
24 basketball coach at the Umver
15 SW Louisiana 11411
22
16 Memphis St (14 ll
19 stly of Wisconsm.Stevens
l7 Oregon Sl 111 5)
10 Pomt died Sunday night at his
18 Brigham Young 114 41
8 home In North Hollywood
19 (tiel San Fran ( 14 2)
7
19 lllel So Car 02 5)
7 Calif He was 70

conSiderably slumped to 4-3 m
league play and IJ.Q overall
Kunnert led the Hawkeye
offense agam wtth 24 pomts
His 17 rebounds set a school
rebounding mark whtch was
preVIously held by Don Nelson
now wtth the NBA Boston
Celhcs
It was Kunnert s haskel wtth
3 43 left m the contest that
broke a 58-511 be and put Iowa
ahead to stay M1chlgan was
forcedtoplaycatch-upandfoul
m the closmg mmute before
tensions Oared mto fisttcuffs
In other college basketball
action Monday rughl sixth

College Basketball Results

By Un1ted Press International

Oilers like Butz

l

ranked Minnesota whtpped
Wtsconsln 81 64 seventh
ranked Alabama suffered tts
ftrst Southeast Conference
loss 95-93 at the hands of
unranked Kentucky ninth
ranked Marquette dumped
Xavter 90.01 Southwest
Lou1s1ana routed Houston
Bapltst 123-91 Flor1da State
demolished South Flortda 9553 Loutsvtlle ripped New
Mextco State 91-94 Rutgers
embarrassed Scranton I~
Purdue beat Northwestern 7662 and Tennesee 73 mpped
LSU 71

Cleveland
Green Bay
Oakland Pittsburgh San
Diego on a cho1ce from
Wasbmgton and Buffalo on a
chotce from MlBmt
The teams draft m mverse
order of the1r !mal 1972 stan
dings Drafting begtns at 10
a m EST with 15-minute t1r11e
limit per selectiOn for the l1rsl
two rounds and ltve mmutes
for each of the followmg 15
rounds A total of 442 collegtans
will be ptcked
In a deal late Monday the
Jets seeking to rebuild a
crumbled defense sent one of
the1r two second-round p1cks
and the1r No 3 chotce to New
Orleans for end Rtchard Neal
and cornerback Delles Howell

Easl
Brklyn Col 82 Lehman 61
Rutgers 00 Scranton 58
Lock Haven 60 W lkes 59
Dcknsn 61 Lycom ng 58
Cheyney 96 Ashland 0 80
E Slroudsbg 116 Kutzlwn 64
Marshall85 N C A&amp; T 66
Br dgep rl 79 Kings PI 63
Cafh U 69 Sl Anslm s 57
Morgan St 86 L nco n 85
Loyo a 75 Wash Co 71
South
Kentucky 95 A abama 93
Fla 51 95 Sou Fla 53
LouiSvl 91 New Mex Sl 64
Aust n Peay 92 W Ky 86
SW La 123 Houslon Bap 91
Va Tech 127 Wm&amp;Mary 92
Ala Sl 79 Albany St 69 ~
Jcksnvl Sl a3 N ch s Sf 77
Alcorn A&amp;M as Prarle Vw 84
Murray St 90 Mid Tenn 82
Tennesee 73 LSU 71
Thos More 76 Bella mne 75
E Kentucky 77 Tenn Tech 66
Morehead St 91 E Tenn 74
Geotwn Ky 80 Berea 67
Mdwest
Marquelle 90 Xaver 61
Purdue 76 Nrthwstrn 62

M nn

a

W scons

n 64

Sleubenvl61 Walsh 50
Un on Ky 72 Oak nd Cly 60
Sewanee 64 Centre 60

Iowa 75 M ch gan 6a

Southwest

Ok ahoma 65 La Tech 63
Ark A&amp;M 76 Sou U 61
PLAYERS SIGNED
West
CHICAGO (UP!) - Tommy Saclo St 71 Sou
Ore 50
Egan and Eddie Leon were Cal Poly SLO 69 l'lywrd St 64
among four players s1gned AlA 83 UC Dav1s 81
Monday by the Chicago White Pac Chns 107 Norfhrp 56
Sox
• Ef!llllll a oa\cllar~ llllttlid ,wl
for the Sox last season Uon
an mftelder whom the Sox
obtained from Cleveland m a
PHONE 992 2342
trade for Walt Williams batted
200 m 89 games wtth the In
dians m 1972
Chtcago also signed two
rmnor leaguers Jun Redmon
25 and Dan Neumeter 24
Redmon an mftelder batted
278 last season for the Tucson
club Neumetet a rebel pitch
er saved 17 games for
Knoxville m1972 and had a 267
ERA

'

harder and 11 showed m our
defense he satd Defense ts
the key so that even though
our shootmg was off (38 per
cent ) our defense held them m
check
DeBusschere scored rune of
the Kmcks l1rst 11 pomts and
combmed w1th Wall Frazter to
tally all but two of h1s team s
total as New York grabbed a 21
-15 ftrst.quarter lead The two
accounted for 27 of New York s
first 29 pomts m the game and
wound up on target wtth 27
pomts aptece for the evenmg
Barry was below par in his
scormg He berated himsell for
not shakmg loose for more
pomts The former NBA
scormg champton hack m the
league after takmg the ABA
apart hit for 51 pomts earlier
thts season but IS hampered by
an ankle tnJury
Fingermg a welt under his
nght eye whtch he received
durmg a melee under the
basket m the openmg mmutes
Barry satd that thmgs have
changed smee I was last m the
league There s much more
contact now and tl s no fun
driving for the basket
There was no other action m
the NBA Monday mght

ThiS Weeks SpeCial

VALUE

RATED

USED CARS

'72 CHEV.
NOVA 4 DOOR
V 8 mo o

'2495
Karr &amp; Van landt
You I L1ke Our Quality,
Way of Do ng Business
GMAC FINANCING
992 5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenmgs T1l8 00
Tll5 PM Sat

"1'~:.~·

_,!,:.;lJI' " ~ &lt;&gt;J J"V O

Downing-Childs Agency rnc.'
MIDDLEPORT 0

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS

Me1gs County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

fDrn

low as

•••

of Ga ll1pot1s
ENJOY AN ELEGANT EVENING OF DINING
IN OUR

"500 ROOM"
Now

A~~·;~~nv

Serv10g N1lely Till tO p M

PADDLE WHEEL LOUNGE

....-JEANNE--.
&amp;

AI

_.

JOlN US FOR OUR
COCKTAIL HOUR
230700
Every Fndey

GALI,.IPOLIS, OtUO

,._pi

ta

'Witn pq1owt111 toUt on AB£~V ltlft Mackoy an NIHV ond £8S Coif Clllllt
11101 Fl111lm £C chiCk tolnfofon llotill fo lotunlllmo

....._GINO _

trans

w t res On y 16 000 m1

College Ratings

VISIT THE HOLIDAY INN

au to

P S P B ad o new w s

BUY mDAY! Charge IU

•

�-2- The Dally Sentmel t'.bddleport Pomeroy 0 Jan 30 1973

(f

3- The Daily Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy

Th rty fourth P es den Ow ght 0 E se nhowe
rst Adm n st a on Janua y 20 1953 January 20 1957)

l:rsc •I " r DO&lt; t

y 1ru a11 Doctrme

Of the tl1 I) s x 1 n
h ha e scr ed m the
th1rt y sc &lt;I Pr 1l 1l
f the Unite I States
D 11ght D IJSc 11 I&lt; tl Ul) scs S Grant ha1e
been rhc nl) Rept II 1 t s&lt;r c t "full terms
I l ey \1 ere I the tl y t\1 ( h cf I xecut11 cs
t gradu He fr 1 \1 est P 111 ml s gmficantl'
ne1thc1 111111 h d prc 1 I} held 11 y p Inc d ffice
I rue ( rmr I 1l c c II 1dly sa I mer 1 Secrc
tary &gt;f War 1 tier Pres1&lt;lcnt \n Ire J hns n l11 t
ht sclc f nu
llCUpy 1 sp ICC Ill rdcr
t keep the I
I\\ 1 1 M St tnt n , t f
\lth&lt; ugh thct 1 I r y c 1 « s I c m '"Y para!
lei the prcstlct t11l &lt;11«1 &lt;f the r 1 fi1 c star
gene1 tis cltflcr n &lt; tc Ill p rta 11 rc pcct hJSt&lt; r ans
gencrtlly rltc I cnh c 1 I rl) st ccc sit I Pres
dent \1 hde (,r nt shares 1 rh II arrc H trd ng the
sngma CJf tbJ&lt;ct fa h rc

w. -...;,
I!ff"'ZM$·-m
NJ9&gt;".v.o.• .....
:mew.-...

:::....·'·::~::::::::::::::::~:?;~:::w~ &lt;... ~

i

Generation Rap

i

By He1en and Sue Bolte]

~

New Report on Teen Sexuality
(Part 11
Would you beheve that
Over half of all AmeriCan young people ages 13 19 (59 pet of
the boys 45 pet of the g~rls) sre nonv&gt;rgm and of this group 63
pet lost the1r v1rgm1ty before age 16'
Nevertheless sex ranks far down on the hst of most 1r11
portant things m the average teenagers hie
Nearly 40 pet of adolescents (ages 13-19) agree they have
never really gotten to know the1r fathers and 25 pet beheve they
have no real rapport wtth the1r mothers
Two activities rated LEAST tmportant by most Amencan
youth are Getting loaded and hangmg out and Havmg sex
(or makmg-&lt;~ut) wtth a number of different partners
Rated most Important Getting to know myself and
Having fun
While teens gtve much thought to preparmg themselves for
successful hves they aren t vitally concerned about changmg
the system Most have no des1re to combat soc1ety but they also
don t particularly care what adult soctety thmks of THEM
They do NOT mdulge msex to get even wtth parents or revolt
agamst prudery but rather constder sexuahty a normal and
wholesome psrt of life whtch should not be regulated by soc1al
laws ( 11 s better left to mdivtdualchotce they mstst)

+++
If you re uflder 211 chances are these statements won t
surprise you But parents and older adults may feel startled
shook and in many cases reassured when they read
ADOLESCENT SEXUAtiTY IN CONTEMPORARY
AMERICA as complied by Dr Robert C Sorensen The book
sub-lltled Personal Values and Sexual BehaviOr Ages 13-19 IS
the ftrst nallonw1de survey of tts kmd and s ~c heduled for rmd
February publtcallon by World Publishing Company It carnes
an mtrnducllon by the RtghtReverend Paul Moore Jr Bishop of
the EpiScopal DIOcese of New York who wntes m part
Throughout Dr Sorensen s study sex Iron the adolescents
VIew comes through as a combmatwn of love kindness and
mutual enjoyment between persons Abusing or even usmg
another for purely seUish sexual reasons Is d&gt;rare thing among
adolescents The most common vtew was reflected m the
statement Sex IS OK if you love
or It IS ruce to have sex
wtth a frtend
Btshop Moore does not judge teenage attrtudes and behavtor
(revealed m some 200 personal mtervtews and 400 sctenllftcally
researched questionnatres) as more lrllmOral or amoral than
those of adults
Rather he says the conflict seems to center around the
mslltution of mamage wh1ch many feel to be a legal gururuck
Monogamy (outstde as well as mstde mamage ) still holds htgh
respect but the closed mamage of two who no longer love each
other IS deeply resented YoWJg people then are pamfully
fearfully JOylully workmg out thetr own moral codes sttll on the
Judean.ChriSttan eth1c but articulated m codes they feel more
appropnate for thetr own culture
As wtth the Kmsey Report Dr Sorensen s book offers no
judgments or adVIce netther gloriftes nor condemns It sunply
records how teenagers feel and act vta mterVIews wtth what ts
believed to be a true representative samphng of youth
throughout the natwn (See footnote)
Response Analysts Corporalton of Prmceton New Jersey
conducted the survey m late sprmg 1972 making sure that all
types of famthes mevery geographical area were mcluded Each
parttctpant had parental consent (whtch mtght t1p the survey
slightly toward the liberal stde) but no one - not parent or
wattlng mtervtelver ~ could read the lengthy self-administered
wrtlten questtonnatre before tt was sent unsigned to the
research company In the 200 addttional oral mterVIews great
pams were taken to assure pnvacy Thus the probablltty of lymg
or covermg up facts became mm1mal In fact a probabthty
ratmg of 95 pet has been gtven the Sorensen Report by experts m
SOCIOlogy This means that for example if 48 pet of the IJl.
tervlewers were classtfled as VIrgins then if the entire teen
population were surveyed fmdmgs would probably be w thm ftve
percent either way of thts ftgure
Adolescent Sexuality m Cootemporary Amema is the
lint In-depth survey of 13-19-year-&lt;~lds which attempts to relate
youthfuhexual behaVIor to 1ts sexual values As such tt 1s an
impor:ant book one that wtll prOVIde constderable mstght - and
~

Smce they seem to have been about equal m
mtelhgencc-both ranked near the m1ddle of the1r
graduatmg classes-It IS probable that the pohttcal
success of one and the failure of the other stemmed
pnmanly from the1r drastically d1fferent cH1Id
hoods Grants formative years were almost ennrely
devrud of parental support and warmth while
E1senho"er grew up m a home that radtated encour
agement and affection
Dwtght E1Senhov, er s S\1 1ft chmb ro 1nterna
uonal fame durmg World War II sprang from a
t\1 enty five year tour of army duty that found h1m
a rank lo\\ er m 1939 as a naJOr than he had been
m 1918 as a heutenant col ncl &lt;\ more ambmr us
man mtght have left the sen ce or turned 'to alcohol
as G rant d1d but duty not amb1t10n was
Etsenhower s gmdmg star and he spent the long
undiStmgmshed years mastenng hts profesS! m as
few men have
I hus \\hen he was promoted o'er more than
300 scmor officers m 1942 as commandmg general
I uropean Theatre ofOperat1ons and later Supreme
Commander &lt;\lhed Expeditionary Force
~ lSCnho\\er adrmtly blended the sc1ence of modern
11 arfare and the anc•ent art of conc1ilatton to d1rect
hiS arm1cs to a crushmg vtctory 01 er Germany and
Italy
Return ng home to a ttmultum s hero s 11 el
come wh~eh he satd made h m humble because It
"a ea rn ed 10 th e bl&lt;&lt;d of hJS follr "ers
Elscnho11er 'as ardently and pers stently v,ooed
as a preSide lttal candtdate by leaders of both maJor
pollttCll parte
Indeed the EISenhower for Pres dent crusade
11 as gemng s much pubhclty that PreSident 1 ru
man called h s &lt;\rmy Ch1ef of Staff t the Wh te
Hr usc and asked htm pumt blank f he \\as gomg
t&lt; run ~Jr PreSident V. hen E senho\\Cr told the
President that he had no such plans Truman told
h1m he ""s usmg good JUdgment because s tch
a mm c would only tarn sh h s splcn I d career
as a prr fess onal sold cr
Desp tc th s stern "arnmg that a p nd ts n Jl
an ocean and dcsp tc lm
n expressed d ubts
about apr les 1 nal s leiters fitness for h1gh pol111 al
posts EJScnh "er had beco 11 e nfected ' tth
pres dent us -a bafflmg d sease for "htch there
IS

n l kn m n cure-and he conscntc I to srand for

nommat1 n at the Rcpuul can com em n m Ch1cago
m July 1952.
Sen R&lt; !Jert \ I att f Ohw had been the odds
on fa\ortte P" r t l1Scnh&lt; er s e ury and "as
b) the rec rds of b&lt; th 11cn the far better quahhed
of the t\1 o But Ftsenho\1 er had the support of the
t mgh shrc\ d tw J ttme pres dcnttal I&lt; ser Go•

msp1re much controversy - m months ahead
It may shock at t1r11es 1e two thtrds of all adolescents
agree that if two people love each other and are hvmg together
getting marrted 1s just a legal techrucahty w1th whtch they
should not be required to comply But 11 will also reassure-lor
a solid 85 pel of all boys and 92 pet of all gtrls expect some day to
marry and have children
II can be unsellbng 55 pet of all nonVJrgm teenagers report
that netther sex partner used any birth control method m their
first mtercourse and another 14 pet are not sure also ~0 P.Ct
had therr ftrst mtercourse expenence In thell' own or thew sex
partner s home
But tt s good to read that young people mainly want to travel
the roads hewn out by the elders -except wtlh more honesty
openness and Wlderstanding They are NOT tossmg out all
standards but only reshuffling them a btl
In Thursdays GENERATION RAP well offer more
highhghts from the htghly readable Sorensen Report - HELEN
AND SUE

1homas E De11 ey of :'\/c\1 York and there \\as
no sroppmg the \\ e Ltke Ike stampede
Masternumled or mtsmaoaged- tt ts hard to tell
"h1ch-by De11 ey s hard nosed staff Etsenhower
\I as as temperamentally aloof and p&lt;&gt;ltttcally mal
adroit as h1 s Democratic opponent GO\ \dlat
Ste1 en son of Jllmms \\as personable and compe
tent But E1senh0\1 er s contagtous gnn V
for 1tctor} s1gn and h1s glt rrenng hero s halo S\1 ept
htm to an Olel'\1helmng \lctory m41 of the 4S
states g1' mg htm a f&gt;luraltty of 6 5 n11lhon 1otcs
and +P electoral 1otes to Stc1enson s 89
In a prayer prelaccd m lllgural address Prcs1
dent Etsenho"er restated the e1er "tdemng C\ er
deepenmg scope of \mcnca s mamfest dcstmy
by declarmg \\e are called as a people to g11c tes
nmony m the s1ght ot the 11 orld to &lt;ur fanh that
the future shIll belong tr the free I he Pres1lcm
satd that the nccesst ty for umty among the "r rids
free peoples rested o 1 a bas1c Ia\\ of mterdepm
dence and he concluded To produce thts umty
desttn) has la1d upon our C0\11"\Tff tl:t&lt;: tespons•
bthty of the free 11 orld s le td rsh1p
1 he \1onn c Doctnnc h td """ been supersctbl
by the Roose\ cit Coroll1ry and the L mted States
\1 ould soon become the t&lt; ughe st cop on the 11terna
uonal beat
\ s he had promtscd 111 hts campa1gn speeches
Pres1dent I 1 cnh \1 er d1d br ng the Korean ' ar t
an end a t uce hemg Signed July 27 J9)] He
also made a dramat1c appearance be tore the L llltl'&lt;.l
'at onsGeneral \ sse nbly toe all for 111 orld &lt;rgm•
zatwn to de1 clop peaceful uses ot at m1c c 1crgy
In Septem! er 19)) F1senh "er suftcrcd he trt
attack\ hdn acatwmng 11Colorado \1 h1ch nc1p Jet
tared hun for three months \1mdtul of the gap
m the Constitution regardmg prolr ngcd d1 s 1b In~
of the C h1et Execum c and the maladrt1t h tndhng
( f th s dtlemma d nng the C.arficld and the \\ Is n
\dmtm stra tH ns President E1senh 11 er cilrccte I
that ~~ 1cr nm cnt oftic11ls carr} on bu s mess as
usual and that the puhl c he kept full) mf •r nc I
rcgardmg h1s c million
\s soon as he returned to the \\ h1te House
the Pres1dcnt mstructcd \tt} Gcn Herbert Br 11 n
ell to dr tft prop Jsed kg slatu n for a plant J protect
the c untry fully f a Prcs1dcnt \1 ere to bee me
d sabled at 1 tunc " hen tmmed11te execume actt n
\1 as needed
\\hen practical and poltt c tl c nSI&lt;I
eran ns made qmck acttm on such lcg•slatu1n h ghly

I he I 1scnh 1\1 cr I) lltlt1c bu y11g the I rum1n
D &gt;ctrtnc backed cc• n 1111&lt; p ' cr \1 tth hrc p&lt; \1 cr
and the nam R \1 &lt;I m 1m lest de sr II) c&lt; nt nued
"est\\ trd I hL c p 1 &lt;' h 1 I 1 gu1 md the next
prccmct I&lt; be p I eed ' uld I e Vtcln 111 ' htch
dr es not happe 1 t he 111 thL \l1ddle I 1st

••

medtocre basketball team they certamly wtll get tl More years
wtth records of 2-19 3-18 4-18 etc And for the kids sske that
would be a damn shame Let s hope they see the handwnting on
the wall and get w1th a good program for the class of 80 right
now I think they can
ON THE TV DIAL Galltpolts Ironton basketball hve andto
on Ch 5 at 7 45 TV replay Wednesday at 5 (not seen ln Mason
and Me1gs)
TV Honor ,SOCtety ptts high schools from Athens
and St Marys W Va
WHTN TV offers a comedy tr 10
Honeymoon Sutte at ll)lQ, p m
..,.

~.\ , ,

"'~

TUESDAY JAN 30 1973
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 13 15 Trulh or Con seq 6 Sesame Sl 20
Around the Bend 33
6 30 - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Dream of Jeanne 13 Growing
H m Up 33
7 00 - What s My L ne a I ve Got A Secret 13 Elec Co 20
Beat the Clock 4 News 6 10 Untamed World 3 TV Honor
Soc ely 15
7 30- ThiS Is Your Life3 Doclors on Call 4 To Tell the Truth
6 Pr ce s R ghiB 10 Beallhe Clock 13 RFD 20 Zoom 33
8 00 - Tmperalures R s ng 6 13 Maude 6 10 Book Beat 33
Move Baffled 3 4 15 Ohio Th s Week 20
8 30- Hawa I Flve-0 8 10 Bill Moyers Journal 20 33 Move
A Cod N1ghf s Death 6 13
9 00 - Beh nd the Lines 20 33
9 JO - BiackJournal20 33 Move BrdsofPrey 6 o
10 00 - Marcus We by M D 6 13 News 20 NBC Reports 3 4 15
ll 00 - News3 4 6 10 3 15
ll 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Honeymoon Su te 6 13 Movie
The HOtJse Thai Screamed 8 Movie Love and th e
Frenchwoman 10
1 00 - Your Heallh 4 News 13
130 - News4
WEDNESDAY JAN 31 1973
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmllme 0 Engl sh 3
6 20- Farm Reporl 13
6 25- Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Co umbus Today 4 B ble Answers 8 Urban League 10
The Story 13
7 00 - Today 3 4 5 CBS News 8 0 News 6 Fl ntstones 13
7 31l-Sieepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bullw nkle
13 Popeye 10
8 00 Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Lass e 6
8 30- Jack lalanne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Rooms
8 55 - Local News 13
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15 What Every Woman
Wanls to Know 3 Conce nlrallon 6 Capl Kangaroo s
Fr endly Junction 0 Ben Casey 13
9 30 - Elec Co 33 To Tell theTrulh3 Jeopardy6
0 00 - Dinah Shore 3 15 Columbus S1x Calling 6 Joker 5 Wild
8 10 D ck Van Dyke 13
10 30 - Concentration 3 5 Phi Donahue 4 Price s Rights 10
Sp t Second 13
ll 00 - Sale of the Century 3 15 Love American Slyle 6
Gambit 8 tO Password 13
ll 30 - Hollywood Squares 4 13 Love of L fe a 10 •ewltched 6
13 Sesame St 20
"
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Braun s 50 so Club 4
News 13 Contact 8 News 10
12 30 - Sp11Second6 SearchforTomorrow6 10 JWs3 t5
I 00 - News Wealher ~ports 3 All My Children 6 13 Secret
Storm 8 Nolfor Women Only 15 Green Acres 10
I 20 - Fashions In Sew ng 3
I 30 - 30nAMatch3 4 5 LelsMakeaDean613
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 M ke
Douglass 6 Guldin~ Light 10 8
2 30 - Dating Game 13 Doctors3 4 15 Edge of NtghiB o
3 00 - Another World 3 IS General Hospital 6 13 Love
. Splendored Th ng 8 10 RFD 20
3 30 - Return lo Peyton Pace 3 4 15 One Life to Live 6 13
Secrel Storm 8 10 01\io This Week 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame Sf 33 Love
American Sly e 13 Merv Griffin 4 Fl ntstones 6 Mo 1
11 e

4 3G0 1-11 Andy Griffith 15 Pelt coat Junction 3 1 Love Lucy 6
gan s island 8 Daniel Boone 13
5 oo
Mr Rogers 33 Dick Van Dyke 15 Daniel Boon• 6
6onanza
3 4 Hazel 8
~
5 30 - Marshall D lion 15 Elec Co 33 Beverly H llbll les 8
Gomer Pyle USMC 13 HodgeRodge Lodge 20
6 00 - Truth or Conseq 6 News 3 4 8 to 15 Sesame St ' o
Around fhe Bend 33
'
6 JOT - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 I Dream of Jeannie t3 Societies In
rans 111on 33
7 c:&lt;i, cre~s 6 10 What s My Line 8 Truth or Conseq 3 Beat
P~se ";1 ~lf:~~lh~,S!ci~1~ ~~n 13 Know Your Schools 33
1 30 - To Tell the Truth 6 The Judge 10 Pollee Surgeon 3 4
Proleclors 6 Beat the Clock 13 Andy Griffith 15
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Episode Acf on 33
8
~onn:~'/!h~r 38 41J5 A~~~~~-:'1: 6 13 Pilgrim Journey~
8 30 - Madigan 3 4 15 Movie Snatched 6 13
9 ':' - Med cal Centeno Eye to Eye 20 33 College Basketball
9 30 - FlneArlofGooflng0ff20 33
10 00 - SOtJi 33 Nows 20 Cannon 8 Bellevue 3 10 Ow
Marshall 6 tJ Search t5
en
ll OO - News3 4 6 810 1315
t1 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Comedy News 6 13 Movies
Mongo s Back In Town 8 Queen Bee 10
I 00 - News 4 13

gr

tlot ~~'.!fore

•

l

t

Bruins unanimous
No. I in nation
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
UCLA Bruins top this season s
ninth ra~ of the Umfed
Press International Board of
Coaches the same way that
they headed the previous eight
(and preseason) hsts-by
draw!Qg all first-place ballots
cast-- 35 to amass 350 points
On Thursday Coach John
Wooden s cagers tied the all
time NCAA consecutive
wbulmg streak of 60 games set
by the University of San
Francisco In 1955-56 defeating
Loyola (m) 87 73 then sur
passed this mark with an BU3
trtumph at South Bend Ind.
Saturday over Notre Dame for
this season s 16th victory
Asked if he thought his club
could extend their mark past
the 61 consecutive victories
they now have Wooden
replied If we can run It up
higher we ll be happy to but If
we don t they still can't take
the record away from us now
North Carolina State the
only • other major unbeaten
team besides UCLA at IW
held second garnenng all but
two of the 35 second-place
hallots cast and 311 points
North Carolina third last
week dropped decisions to
VIrginia 84-78 and Maryland
94-811 to fall to eighth position
As a result Maryland Long
Beach State Indiana and
MiMesota each moved up one
notch filling the Nos 3-6 spots

respectively
Alabaflla won three games to
011 the seventh spot Marquette
dropped one SJMII to ninth and
Mlasoun moved up one place to
011 out the top 10
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL RESULTS
By United Press International
Includes Games Thru Jan 27
Mid Amencan Conference
Conference Overall

W L W L

Mami
4 I 10 6
To edo
4 2 11 6
Bowling Green
3 2 7 8
Central M ch
3 4 8 9
Kent State
2 3 6 10
Oh o Unlv
2 3 10 6
Western Mlch
1 4 5 11
Ohio Conference
Conference Overall
W L WL
Musklngum
6 t 15 2
5 I 14 4
Otterbein
Wlien berg
5 2 11 3
Capital
4 2 13 3
Marietta
4 2 7 9
Wooster
4 2 13 5
He delberg
4 3 7 7
Mount Unfon
4 3 9 7
01\lo Wesleyan
3 4 5 9
Baldwin Wallace 3 5 5 12
Oberl n
1 5 6 9
Denison
1 6 7 9
Kenyon
0 8 2 15
Big Ten
Conference Over111
WL W L

lnd ana
Purdue
Michigan
Ill nols
Minnesota
Ohio State
M chlgan State
Northwestern
Iowa
Wisconsin

5 0 13 2
4 1 11 4
4 2 t1 5
2 I 5 5

2 2 12 2
2 2

8 6

2
1
I
I

9 6
2 ll
7 7
6 7

4
3
4
5

Olllers

W L

'

Sport Parade

• •«.:ttt

10

Badgers of staying m last place
Ill conference ratings with a l.Q
mark Clyde Turner got 21
pomts for 7th ranked Min
nesota while Ron Behagen
scored 17

Today's

Television Log

Pushover

major thing was winning the
game
The Gophers advancing to 32 controlled the backboards to
post their victory over Wlscon
sin at Madison and assure the

Hiram
10 2
Defiance
13 3
12 4
Steubenville
Wright State
9 3
Akron
10 4
John Carroll
8 4
01\Jo Northern
10 6
C nclnnatl
10 7
Bluffton
9 7
Ashland
7 6
Urbana
10 9
Case Western
6 6
Rio Grande
7 8
7 •
C!lev•lal)ll St~
8 10
Malone
Cedarville
7 9
Dayton
7 9
Findlay
7 9
5 t3
YOtJngstown Slale
By MILTON RICHMAN
Central State
~ 12
UPI Sports Editor
3 10
~ Xavier
Walsh
2 11
Wlmlngton
1 10
NEW YORK (UPI) -Sparky Anderson says he can tell you the
WJberforce
1 13
man who lost the World Series for his Cmcinnatl Reds
This Week 1
You ask him who and he points to hlrDSelf
Ohto College
Sparky Anderson has a way of being extra rough on himself In
Basketball Schedule
By Un1ted Pross fnternotlonol
Ibis case he isn t trying to be a martyr he actually means what
Tuositoy
he says Bot he s still giving blmself the worst of it
Baldwin Wallace al Akron
In some ways the fr~nk ftercely honest Reds manager IS like
Kenyon at Denison
Heidelberg at Otterbein
the late Harry S Truman who kept a sign oo his White House
Oberlin at Wooster
desk saying The buck stops here
Carnegie Mellon af Case West
That s the way it is wlth Sparky Anderson He never passed the WI berforce al Cedarville
Rio Grande at Georgetown
buck That s something you can t say for too many people today
IKy,.)
Sparky Anderson made a brief stopover here to pick up the Ben Cumber! an I Ky ) al Wright Sl
Wednosday
Epstein Good Guy Award at the New York Baseball Wnters
Bowling
Green
at Toledo
dinner and at the function he ran into the guy who killed him
Kent Slate at 01\lo University
three months ago Oakland s Gene Tenace
Miami at Wesl Michigan
It was the first time Anderson had seen Tenace smce the World Dayton at Cincinnati
Phil Textile at Youngstown St
Series
Bluffton at Hanover 1lnd 1
You look good the Reds manager greeted the As receiver
Marietta at Capital
Mt Union at Edinboro St
who hit four homers and batted 348 aJIIliSt his club in the series
(Pa)
I feel good said Tenace a guy who talks a lot at home but Olllo Wesleyan at Wlllenberg
L ncoln IMe l at Central Slate
not much outside
Defiance at Earlham (tnd l
~eatlon Asked
01\lo Northern at Findlay
Later someone asked Anderson whether seeing Tenace again H ram at John Carroll
elicited a rush of fresh thoughts about the World Series Or Malone at Urbana
01\lo Dominican at Walsh
unhappy recollections perhapa•
Taylor ltnd l at Wilmington
No sald the stocky muscular Anderson Nothing like that
Thursday
Once they re over they re over I didn t have any particular Wise Milwaukee at Xavier
Berea I Ky I at Rio Grande
thoughts seeing Tenace
Frldly
No games scheduled
He was tbe one who ruined you wasn t he' a newsman said
Sure he hurt us but that wasn t what cost as the World Ohio State Saturday
at Wisconsin
Series said Anderson
Miami at Bowling Green
West Mich at Kent State
What did then •
Toledo at 01\lo Unlv
Not having Dave Concepcion In the right spot In the fourth Cincinnati
at Houston
game Anderson came right back l should've moved him over Dayton at Loyola (ill )
totheleftmorewhentheybrought (Gonzalo) Marquez in to hit in Xavier at Notre Dame
Cleveland State at Akron
therunth
Oberlin at Baldwin Wal
But I dldn t and he hll one right through the mldtlle II was a Denison at Capital
high routine ground ball hit exactly where our scouts told us Heidelberg at Kenyon
Otterbein at MarleHa
Marquez generally hits the ball Our people Rex Bowen and Ray Wittenberg at Mt Union
Wooster at Musklngum
Sllore had him pegged perfectly
01\Jo
Was at Rochester (N Y )
There was one out and no one on when Marquez got hiS base Anderson
( lnd l at BlufHon
hit We had em beat 2-1 in the ball game and had we played Defiance at Manchester (lnd )
him right there would ve been two out and no one on But then Hanover I lnd ) at Findlay
at Earlham ( lnd )
they got a walk and two singles and Instead of us being even with Wilmington
Allegneny 1Pa l at Case
them at two games aplece they go ahead three games to ooe
Western
Marion lind ) at Cecarville
and that I think was the turning point right there and then
Ashland at Point Park
How He F1gum
01\io Northern at Wright St
How do you figure you rate all the blame though • Anderson Steubenville at Gannon ( Pa )
Marian ( lnd ) at Central State
was asked
Hiram at Betllany IW Va )
1 did it he said I didil't move Concepcion I m the one in Malone
at Rio Grande
01\lo Dom at Youngstown St
charge Who else can you blame•
Urbana at Wilberforce
It is typical of Sparky Anderson that he would see hlmsell Walsh
at Wheeling
solely r~nsible for the Reds defeat It Is also typical of him
that he would have been the 1a.st to take any of the credit had the
Reds beaten the A s That s Sparky Anderson for you
NEW HEAD COACH
The big thing In the Reds camp this spring will be the
LAS VEGAS Nev (UPI) revitalization of Johnny Bench Clncy s two-time MVP who will
Ron Meyer a talent scout fill"
be coming off IIUI"gery for a spot on hlllung
the Dallas Cowboya Monday
John will be on his own from the day he comes down there
was named head football coach
says Anderson Leaving him on his own I ll get as much from at the University of Nevadahim as I wouldi!Istayedon him I don thave to worry about him
Las Vegas
cheating
Meyer at who served fonlx
Will Anderson make allowances for the trouble Bench had with
yean as asalstant coach at hla
hla lung•
illma mater Plirdlle recently
John says he s gollna use it Iii an etcuse, laugbs the Reds
completed hla iecond season
manager I tol!! him lie rould but orlly when both lwtga •topJI6d
with Dallai 811 one of lilt

+++

Pomt Pleasant High School does nj#-have an outstanding
basketball team this year
It d1dn t have a great team lasl\year etthe~t111 lblrt 18')
In fact -smce 11165, lhe Btg Blacks have won 38 games a"dli&gt;st 129
- a"t'erot'&lt;l._tlfatBh tJU!!llnglonous Its disgraceful n
Gallta ~demy High School on the other hand has a very
fine basketball team w1th a 1~1 recond as thiS IS written Tb~y
were a very !me 16-5 last season too
Is there some stattsttcal reason that gtves the Blue Devils
such an edge' Emphatically no The Btg Blacks graduated more
semors last year play about the same number of AAA and AA
opponents and are infertor m no respect at all
+++
Why as a matter of fact Galltpolls itself wandered for 13
FOOTNOTE Whtle the Sorensen survey was \l'ell-eontrolled
as to geographtcallocattons type of young people tnterv1ewed years m the basketball wilderness wtthout a Moses - or even a
ages fmancial religious and famtly backgrounds (thus a Ksreem Abdul Jabbar - to lead them to the Promised Land
I suspect I know the answer and tt doesn t reflect very
relatively small samplmg -a total of some 600 as compared to
favorably
on PI Pleasant You see there sre just two ways to
over 10 000 m the Kinsey Report - mtght be constdered
representative of all Amertcan teens) tt required one develop a really outstanding basketball program
I - Pray a lot that one of the boys m school grows mto a
sttpulatlon which could load tt somewhat toward the hberal stde
superbly-btg superlattvely-coordmated superstar (and none Is
parental permiSSion
on
the hortzon at etther school)
Nearly 40 pet of parents contacted vetoed a sex
2- Start a hardworking 12-rnonth-a year program to teach
questionnaire many on grounds that My child tsn t ready for
kids
the fun and IWldamentals of hasketball starting abuut the
these things yet or II might glve hlrll or her tdeas Therefore
age
of
to
especially In the 13-15 year group we would suspect that the
Thts latter course IS the one Gallipolis chose starting about
more sexually aware teens (as compared to the mnocents )
show up m sbghdy greater proportion than they rrught m the etght years ago S1r11ple artllunetic shows that today s finely
general teen population We somehow question the statement boned athletes were among the f1rst enrollees In this program
PI Pleasant ought to be doing the same but for two dreary
that 37 pet of ALL 13-15-year-&lt;~lds m the Umted States are non
yesrs
1t hasn I been able to There s hope for the future though
Vlrgm though we beheve the other statistics m the book are
Bureaucracy lack of coordinatton and community m
substantially wtthln the ftve percent probability range JI AND S
difference hampered the program Hampered IS perhaps too
WIN AT BRIDGE
rmld a word Try strangled
Desp1te the efforts of two young men who wouldn t gtve up
the hardwood eqwvalent of Ltttle League just didn t jell for two
yesrs These unprud volunteers and the coaches spent more time
West and that the way to trying to get mto the 1!)'11111as1a wangle uniforms clear up m
NORTH
30
develop
the squeeze was to surance coverage and the like than they spent actually teachmg
• 753
use
a
submartne
play
the small fry hasketball
¥K63
tAK64
He won the club lead 10 hts
Thtsyear theprogramgotofftoalatestart as usual There
4AQ4
own hand and put his deuce was some authenllc confuston agam But m the past two weeks a
"EST
EAST (D)
of spades on the table
league ts begmrung to emerge It Is long overdue
4Vod
.QJI09864
East won and tl dtd not
There are coaches who really seem to want to make the
¥J974
¥108
matter what he returned Ac program work Aveteran athlettc figure has JOtned the younger
tJI09 2
t85
tually he led back a spade
4J 10983 .5 2
South won and cashed the menmcoord1118ltngtheprogram And lo' on January 20 league
SOUTH
other htgh spa&lt;le West had play actually got under way
4AK2
thrown two clubs and had to
(Gallipolis fme program wasn I any bed of roses m the first
¥AQ52
chuck
another
The
two
top
couple
of years etther)
• Q 73
.K76
clubs were taken next and
Su maybe there Is hope at that I cannot beheve that any
West had to unguard one of
ty hich
North South vulnerable
hts red Jacks It made no dtf commWJt w
runs such a fine summer base hall program for
West North East South
ference whtch one South Its klds and has a constantly-unprovmg Biddy Football League
34 3NT.
was sure of four trtcks 10 (just watch for results about 1974) can be so goshawfulm supPass 6 N T Pass Pass
that
red smt
portmg a k1ds basketball program
Pass
HEWIP•m
EHT!RPRISE
ASSN
,
!like to see all the area s schools do well m all sports
Open ng lead- • J
because I m a confessed sports nut But I think tl s time that PI
Pleasant realizes thts is just about the last trtp to the well even
Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The
b
dd
ng
has
b._
as
they gaze at the packed gym and spectacular domgs of the
East s three spade opemng
Ea.•t s uth Blue DeVIls
btd was the act of a desper We•l North
ado We hke to preempt but
14
If the commWJtly wants a discombobulated wtcoordmated
prefer somelhmg better than Pass
l +
Pas.s
Pass
16
Pass.
hts collectton of nothtng
On lhts day 1n htstory
You
South
hold
The Almanac
Th1s ltme the desperado s
act did h1111 no good and 4AK54 ¥AQ63 .2 .KQJ07
In 1835 a deranged painter
might well have hurt h1m
What do you do now
By United Press International Rtchard Lawrence fired two
South was forced mto a
A-B1d four spades y •ur fine Today IS Tuesda) Jan 30
sltghtly unsound three no hand has really Improved but the 30th day of 1973 With 335 to shots at Prestdent Andrew
Jackson but m1ssed m the first
trump whtch North ratsed to lhere 1s not hkely to be a l'lllam follow
recorded presidential assassma
stx South would probably unlet~!\ Y ur partner c•n m )\e
The moon IS approachmg Its lton attempt
have reached that same con
TODA Y'S QUESTION
new phase
tract 1! East had passed but
In 1933 Adoll Hitler destmed
He b ds four no t ump and
he m1ght well have not found ~.:onbn es to f ve- no trun p after Th e mormng stars are Venus to become the all-powerful
the way to bt ng It home
you sh ow you wo a~~ What Mars a d Jupiter
dtctator of World War II was
Afte1 the spade 11 eempt do vn do nmo,
The eventng stars are Mer named chancellor of the Ger
and the club lead a blue
cury and Saturn
man Retch
pt nt of the whole hand had
Those
b
1
n
on
t11s
date
are
been !11 n shed to South and
In 1948 lndtan pacifist leader
S.nJ '' lor JACOBY MODERN book under the stgn of Aquartus
he took 11 II a I&gt;anlage
Mohandas Gandhi was assss
At tnc k tw I e saw that to 'W n ol Br dge" 1&lt;/o th ' •••• Franklin Delano Roosevelt stnated by a Hmdu extremist
pope I PO Box 48S Rodo C,_, 32 d
d I f h
he wo tid almost s 11el; "'ed S&lt;al
'" New ~ 0 1 N y OOI9
n prest ~n 0 t e United plWlgtng lnd1a s millions mto
J( vel 1 a sq eeu aga nsl
- - - - - - - - - States was born Jan 30 1882 mournmg

Submarine Play Is Squeeze

Ualted Press IDieruallooal
Purdue added a victory to tts
quest for the Big Ten cham
plonshtp Monday night but
Michigan took a loss at the
hands of Iowa and fell to fifth
place in the standings In a
game that ended In a brawl
The Boilermakers outscored
Northwestern 14-1 Ul the last
!Jtree minutes of the first half
and went on to wst a 76-62
victory to boost their confer
ence performance to 5-l and
stake a finn claim on second
place behind undefeated In
diana which wa.s idle
Iowa defeated Michigan 7~
and Minnesota defeated cellar
dwelling Wisconsin 81-Gf m
other Monday night games
The free for all at Iowa
began With one second left
when Hawkeye center Kevin
Kunnert was fouled as he went
In for a layup Both benches
students and policemen poured
onto the Door The game was
called off '-first time In the
history of the Iowa fieldhouse
that a game was terminated
before the clock ran out
But Iowa had put It away
already Candy LaPrmce hit
six stratght free throws m the
last 85 seconds to Ice the win
and drop Michtgan to 4-3 In the
league Iowa Is out of conten
lion at 2-4
Kwmert set a school record
by pulling down 17 rebounds
during the game erasmg the
mark previously held by
Boston Celtic Don Nelson
Kwmert also led Iowa with 24
points
Michigan Coach JohMy Orr
whose team took '¥1 fouls to 13
for Iowa had no comment He
had to be restramed by an
assistant when an official ruled
LaPrince was fouled durmg
that last minute
Hawkeye Cocah Dick Schultz
smd Kevin got a raw deal In
the whole thing But that s all I
have to say However the
By

numsm

BY PAUL ~BTREE

30 Jll'/3

Purdue, Iowa win

1mprobable Pres1dent E1senhower entered mto a
personal ~greell' cnt w1th Vtce President R1chard
Ntxon sttpulatmg that the V1ce President would
sene as ;\cung Prestdent exerctStng the powers
and dr,m es of the office until the mab1ilty had ended
Late m E1senhowcr s first term two cnses m
Europe and &lt;\s1a threatened to mvohc the Umted
States m armed confhcts The people of Hungary
re' olted agamst thetr Russtan donunated gm ern
ment m October 1956 and \\ere brutally crushed
by the Red \rmy -\ fe\1 days s later Egypt was
tm 1dcd by Bnush Erench and Israeli tr&lt;~&gt;ps m
a dtsputc m cr the Suez!li:anal recently natumail1ed
by I gypt
fhe E1senhrm er \dmm1str ttlon JOmcd Russta
m condcmnmg the Fgypnan 1111 aSJon and 11orkc(l
through the IJ mted :-.ianons tn bnng about a cease
fire fhc Prestdcnt also c&lt; ndemned the bloody sup
pressu n of the llunganan rc\ r It lmt he t&lt; &lt;k no
further acnon 111 the m mer Hrm c1 er the mo out
breaks of '" lc 1cc c ll ml the Premlcnt t&lt; step up
hiS efforts t&lt;! get congrcss10n 1l apprm al of \\hat
has u me to be called the Etscnho\1 cr Docrrme
E1scnh \ler h1d been grenly c&lt; nccrncd 111 1954
by the defc It &gt;f I ranee 111 lndoch na Dunng the
I ruman \dm niStnn• n ml t&lt; hdp hance ret un
tts ' tlu tble p ssesSJo1s m S uthc 1st \sta had been
s &gt;gcncr JUS th It the United States \1 as br mng
nearl y h1lt I the cost&lt; f the \ltr '" tre • ~ the
huge tinanct 1l 11\ est nent }et d ul tful ol the "ts
dom f nul t ry mten enn n Ihe PreSident cun
suited "1th c mgress1&lt; n 11 le ulers \1 h• ad1 sed
agamst und 1te1 1! 1ct n
:'l:e\ crthcless I tsc 1h "'cr and Secret try of St nc
John F&lt; stcr Dulle \1 lnted t p1 t t(eth 111 the p I cy
f c&lt; ntatn ng com lllnJSm h) ec m •mtc ud t J
c untnes facmg C mmumst aggrcs 1on I hus the
t11 o men f&lt; r mlatc I 1he d ct11nc th It bear s
ltsenh &gt;11cr s name mlm \larch l'h 7 ( mgrcss
appr 'cd It at th nzmg the Pre dent t • em ph y
armed Ioree to atd tn y Mtddk I tsl n1t1 111
rcqucstmg assiStance 1g tlllSt trm c I tggrcssl n
fr m Ill} wuntry c nrr lied I ~ Intern ttl 1 II Com

&amp; THINGS

d Jan

CoWboY~~~

Pro Smndings

•

'".

-

Warriors just Knicks' dessert

NBA Slond111gs
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
AtlantiC DIVISIDR

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
New York Kmcks who rapped
the NaUonal Basketball AB
soc1ation s best team twtce
when they beat Boston m a
horne-and-home sertes had the

w I pel gb
Boston
40 9 816
New York
43 12 762
Buffalo
16 35 314 25
Philadelphia 4 49 075 38
Central DIVISIOn
wlpclgb
Baltimore
32 18 640
Atlanta
29 25 537 5
Houston
20 3t 392 12 '
Cleveland
18 32 360 14
Western Conference

Golden State Warnors for Golden State the victim of thetr
dessert Monday rught
fears New York prevailed as
Dave DeBusschere satd the the Knicks toppled the Warn
Knicks were afratd of a let ors 97-84 wtth DeBusschere
down after the Boston sertes holding RICk Barry to 20 pomts
I guess we tr1ed to go a httle
and were determmed to make

Free-for-all stopped game

Midwest DIVISIOn

wlpctgb
•
Milwaukee
37 t4 725
lly United Press IDiemaliooal
Chicago
31 19 620 5 '
Wtth one second remaining
KC Omaha
25 31 446 14 ,
Detroit
20 31 392 17 m Iowa s 75-611 vtctory over
Pactflc Div1s1on
wlpclgb Mtchtgan Hawkeye center
Kevm Kwtnert was fouled as
Los Angeles 39 11 780
Golden State 32 19 627 7 h he went m for a layup Both
Phoenix
25 27 481 15 benches poured out onto the
Seattle
16 38 m 25
Portland
13 39 250 27 court Students jomed m the
Monday s Relults
fracas that was stopped by
New York 97 Golden St 84
police
and Athlettc Director
IOnly game scheduled)
Tuesday s Games
Bwnp Elliot of Iowa Officials
Golden Sl at Baltimore
called the game wtth one
Philadelphia at Buffalo
second to go
Detro I at Atlanta
Milwaukee at Cleveland
However Sill straight free
Chicago at Los Ange es
throws m the 111181 85 seconds
HOtJslon at Portland
had
teed the game already for
IOnly games scheduled)
Iowa now 2-4 m the Btg Ten
ABA S!and1ngs
and 8-7 overall Michigan
By Un1ted Press lnternatmal which ssw 1ts title hopes wane
East
w f pel g b
Carol na
39 l7 696
Kentucky
35 19 648 3
V rg n a
28 27 ~ 10 '
New York
19 32 373 17 '
Memph s
16 :u 308 21
West
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
wlpctgb
Utah
:u 19 655
Houston Oilers spurnmg more
Indiana
30 22 577 4 ' than a dozen trade offers will
Denver
26 27 491 9
Dallas
19 33 :US 1~ ' make the f1rsl chotce m today s
San Diego
20 :U 357 16 ' National Football League draft
Monday s Results
and are expected to select
Vlrg nla 122 Utah t21
IOnly game scheduled)
Dave Butz of Purdue
Tuesday s Games
Bulz a 6-7 280-pound defenNew York al Memphis
Sive tackle will lend some beef
Vlrg nla at Dallas
Indiana at San D ego
to a line that saw the Oilers wm
IOnly games scheduled)
only one of 14 games last
season the worst record In the
AHL Standmgs
NFL to eam the No I cbotce
By Untted Press International
The Oilers had been olfermg
East
w I I pts gf ga thetr No 1 ptck around the
26 12 12 64 195 128 league for three or four proven
NS
Boslon 26 20 6 58 170 172
Rchslr 22 16 9 53 155 162 starters but dtd not recetve a
Prov
19 19 9 47 156 152 lucrative enough offer They
24 12 :u 175 214 did swmg one majOr deal
~fl'fld 12
12 30 10 34 175 240 Monday by acqwnng veteran
West
wltpfsgf ga center Bill QuTy from the
Clncl
38 13 3 79 242 : ~ Baltimore Colts for a high draft
Hrshy 26 14 10 62 212
Va
25 15 a sa 178 15a chotce
Rchmnd 18 25 7 43 170 163 The Colts also dealt away
Jcksnvl 5 26 7 37 166 ~~) defenstve end Billy Newsome
Bait
7 32 9 23 140
to New Orleans to earn the
Monday s Results
Boston 6 VIrginia 3
second cbotce m the draft and
(Only game scheduled)
sent oft injured running Norm
Tuesday s Games
Bulatch to the Philadelphta
Providence at Jacksonvl le
IOnly game schedu ed)
Eagles for future con
Slderattons
WHA standtngs
'l'IW!EaJPestllildthe\J\11-al!nU
By UOJ!ed Pr•ss lnternollonai sixth slots m the draft gammg
East
the No 6 choice from San
15
Cleve
3~ 1 ~ !, 17~f 1~ Otego with New England
New Eng 29 19 1 59 199 165 )licking fourth and St Lows
NY
24 26 I 49 207 t98 filth
Quebec 22 24 3 47 177 198
21 28 o 42 177 2to Buffalo was seventh
Phil a
Ottawa 19 28 3 41 178 225 followed by Otlcago Denver
w ~es~ pis gf ga Baltimore and New F,:ngland
Win pg 29 21 3 62 195 167 agam on a chotce from Los
Houston 26 18 4 56 168 162 Angeles Minnesota chooses
Mlnri
25 22 3 53 165 167 12th followed by the New York
Los Ang 22 24 4 48 174 175
A berta 21 24 2 44 149 160 Jets Houston again on a choice
Ch cago 16 32 1 33 51 189 from Atlanta Clncmnall
Monday s Resutts
Cleve and 3 New Eng 2
IOnly game scheduled)
Tuesdays Games
Phlladolphla at ottawa
Cleveland at New Eng and
M nnesota af Chicago
New York.. t Alberta
NICKLAUS THIRD
Los Angeles at Houston
IOnly games scheduled)
NEW YORK (UP!) - Jack
Nicklaus golf s all lime
leading money winner jumped
mto third place on thts year s
earrungs list wtth hiS vtctory m
the Bing Crosby Pro-Am at
NI:W YORK (UPI) - The Pebble Beach Calif
United Press Internal onal lop
20 major college basketball Ntcklaus playoff vtctory
teams with f rsl place voles over Ray Floyd and Orville
and won lost records as of Moody worth $36 000 boosted
Saturday n p a r e n t h e s e s
(N nth Week)
his 1973 wlmlngs to $41 675 '"
Team
Po nts only two tournaments Bruce
1 UCLA 1351 116 0)
350
2 N C St 11~ 0)
Jt1 Crampton wmner of two
3 Maryland (14 t)
247 previous tournaments still led
4 Long Beach St 1151)
216 With $60 898
5 lnd ana (13 2)
196
6 Minnesota (12 2)
104
7 Alabama Ill 1l
77
8 No Car (15 31
75 KOTAL DIES
9 Marquette (14 21
66 STEVENS POINT Wis
10 MlssOtJrl (14-2)
50 (UP!) - Eddie Kotal a former
It Houston (13 21
44
12 Providence (12 2)
39 player with the Green Bay
13 Kansas Sl 113 3)
3t Packers and football and
14 St John s N Y I13 2)
24 basketball coach at the Umver
15 SW Louisiana 11411
22
16 Memphis St (14 ll
19 stly of Wisconsm.Stevens
l7 Oregon Sl 111 5)
10 Pomt died Sunday night at his
18 Brigham Young 114 41
8 home In North Hollywood
19 (tiel San Fran ( 14 2)
7
19 lllel So Car 02 5)
7 Calif He was 70

conSiderably slumped to 4-3 m
league play and IJ.Q overall
Kunnert led the Hawkeye
offense agam wtth 24 pomts
His 17 rebounds set a school
rebounding mark whtch was
preVIously held by Don Nelson
now wtth the NBA Boston
Celhcs
It was Kunnert s haskel wtth
3 43 left m the contest that
broke a 58-511 be and put Iowa
ahead to stay M1chlgan was
forcedtoplaycatch-upandfoul
m the closmg mmute before
tensions Oared mto fisttcuffs
In other college basketball
action Monday rughl sixth

College Basketball Results

By Un1ted Press International

Oilers like Butz

l

ranked Minnesota whtpped
Wtsconsln 81 64 seventh
ranked Alabama suffered tts
ftrst Southeast Conference
loss 95-93 at the hands of
unranked Kentucky ninth
ranked Marquette dumped
Xavter 90.01 Southwest
Lou1s1ana routed Houston
Bapltst 123-91 Flor1da State
demolished South Flortda 9553 Loutsvtlle ripped New
Mextco State 91-94 Rutgers
embarrassed Scranton I~
Purdue beat Northwestern 7662 and Tennesee 73 mpped
LSU 71

Cleveland
Green Bay
Oakland Pittsburgh San
Diego on a cho1ce from
Wasbmgton and Buffalo on a
chotce from MlBmt
The teams draft m mverse
order of the1r !mal 1972 stan
dings Drafting begtns at 10
a m EST with 15-minute t1r11e
limit per selectiOn for the l1rsl
two rounds and ltve mmutes
for each of the followmg 15
rounds A total of 442 collegtans
will be ptcked
In a deal late Monday the
Jets seeking to rebuild a
crumbled defense sent one of
the1r two second-round p1cks
and the1r No 3 chotce to New
Orleans for end Rtchard Neal
and cornerback Delles Howell

Easl
Brklyn Col 82 Lehman 61
Rutgers 00 Scranton 58
Lock Haven 60 W lkes 59
Dcknsn 61 Lycom ng 58
Cheyney 96 Ashland 0 80
E Slroudsbg 116 Kutzlwn 64
Marshall85 N C A&amp; T 66
Br dgep rl 79 Kings PI 63
Cafh U 69 Sl Anslm s 57
Morgan St 86 L nco n 85
Loyo a 75 Wash Co 71
South
Kentucky 95 A abama 93
Fla 51 95 Sou Fla 53
LouiSvl 91 New Mex Sl 64
Aust n Peay 92 W Ky 86
SW La 123 Houslon Bap 91
Va Tech 127 Wm&amp;Mary 92
Ala Sl 79 Albany St 69 ~
Jcksnvl Sl a3 N ch s Sf 77
Alcorn A&amp;M as Prarle Vw 84
Murray St 90 Mid Tenn 82
Tennesee 73 LSU 71
Thos More 76 Bella mne 75
E Kentucky 77 Tenn Tech 66
Morehead St 91 E Tenn 74
Geotwn Ky 80 Berea 67
Mdwest
Marquelle 90 Xaver 61
Purdue 76 Nrthwstrn 62

M nn

a

W scons

n 64

Sleubenvl61 Walsh 50
Un on Ky 72 Oak nd Cly 60
Sewanee 64 Centre 60

Iowa 75 M ch gan 6a

Southwest

Ok ahoma 65 La Tech 63
Ark A&amp;M 76 Sou U 61
PLAYERS SIGNED
West
CHICAGO (UP!) - Tommy Saclo St 71 Sou
Ore 50
Egan and Eddie Leon were Cal Poly SLO 69 l'lywrd St 64
among four players s1gned AlA 83 UC Dav1s 81
Monday by the Chicago White Pac Chns 107 Norfhrp 56
Sox
• Ef!llllll a oa\cllar~ llllttlid ,wl
for the Sox last season Uon
an mftelder whom the Sox
obtained from Cleveland m a
PHONE 992 2342
trade for Walt Williams batted
200 m 89 games wtth the In
dians m 1972
Chtcago also signed two
rmnor leaguers Jun Redmon
25 and Dan Neumeter 24
Redmon an mftelder batted
278 last season for the Tucson
club Neumetet a rebel pitch
er saved 17 games for
Knoxville m1972 and had a 267
ERA

'

harder and 11 showed m our
defense he satd Defense ts
the key so that even though
our shootmg was off (38 per
cent ) our defense held them m
check
DeBusschere scored rune of
the Kmcks l1rst 11 pomts and
combmed w1th Wall Frazter to
tally all but two of h1s team s
total as New York grabbed a 21
-15 ftrst.quarter lead The two
accounted for 27 of New York s
first 29 pomts m the game and
wound up on target wtth 27
pomts aptece for the evenmg
Barry was below par in his
scormg He berated himsell for
not shakmg loose for more
pomts The former NBA
scormg champton hack m the
league after takmg the ABA
apart hit for 51 pomts earlier
thts season but IS hampered by
an ankle tnJury
Fingermg a welt under his
nght eye whtch he received
durmg a melee under the
basket m the openmg mmutes
Barry satd that thmgs have
changed smee I was last m the
league There s much more
contact now and tl s no fun
driving for the basket
There was no other action m
the NBA Monday mght

ThiS Weeks SpeCial

VALUE

RATED

USED CARS

'72 CHEV.
NOVA 4 DOOR
V 8 mo o

'2495
Karr &amp; Van landt
You I L1ke Our Quality,
Way of Do ng Business
GMAC FINANCING
992 5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenmgs T1l8 00
Tll5 PM Sat

"1'~:.~·

_,!,:.;lJI' " ~ &lt;&gt;J J"V O

Downing-Childs Agency rnc.'
MIDDLEPORT 0

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS

Me1gs County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

fDrn

low as

•••

of Ga ll1pot1s
ENJOY AN ELEGANT EVENING OF DINING
IN OUR

"500 ROOM"
Now

A~~·;~~nv

Serv10g N1lely Till tO p M

PADDLE WHEEL LOUNGE

....-JEANNE--.
&amp;

AI

_.

JOlN US FOR OUR
COCKTAIL HOUR
230700
Every Fndey

GALI,.IPOLIS, OtUO

,._pi

ta

'Witn pq1owt111 toUt on AB£~V ltlft Mackoy an NIHV ond £8S Coif Clllllt
11101 Fl111lm £C chiCk tolnfofon llotill fo lotunlllmo

....._GINO _

trans

w t res On y 16 000 m1

College Ratings

VISIT THE HOLIDAY INN

au to

P S P B ad o new w s

BUY mDAY! Charge IU

•

�.

f

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 30,1973

G.

Rio faces power u1 eorgetow:n
The liio Grande Redmen
travel to Georgetown, 1\y.,
tonight lor a lon.Jeague game.
Tipoff time is 8 o'clock.
The Kentucky college team
defeated Rio Grande in
December at Lyne Center, 86, 69. The Tigers of Coach Bob
Davis are 16-4 on the season
and 4~ in the KIAe. Ri~&gt;
Grande has a three game
winning
streak
and is un.
'
defeated in · the Mid-Ohio
Conference with a 4~ mark and
the Redmen are 7-9 overall.
Rio Grande, a fanner KIAC
member before entering the
MOC last season, has never

won at Georgetown aga ii\SI the
talented Tigers. The Tigers
have another well-balanced
team. Aga inst Rio Grande in
December, the Tigers had four
men in double figures. Van
Phillips surprised the Redmen
by scoring 2!i points, John
Ow~n had 23, Tom Stewart
collected 15 and John Allen \0.
Rio's Dan &amp;!linger had 30 in a
losing cause and captain Ron
Lambert added 20.
The Redmen were happy to
say goodbye to 1972. Rio began
the t973 part of the schedule at
2-7. Since then, · coach Art
Lanham's crew has won five of

Ohio board says
no .to Washington
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
state Controlling Board defied
the threat of a federal contempt citation Monday and
voted down payment of $7,900
worth of fees for attorneys
whose work resulted in an an itdiscrimination order to firms
involved in state construction
projects.
The board voted 4-3 against
paying three NAACP attorneys
- Irwin W. Barkan and William D. Wells of New York, and
W!Uiam Davis of Columbus.
The three had worked on an
a ppeal filed against the administration of fanner Gov. James
A. Rhodes for alleged failure to
assure equal employment opportunity on projects at Ohio
State University.
The attorneys had' asked for
$18,000, but U.S. District Court
Judge Carl Rubin reduced the
amount to $7,500 plus $400 in
interest accrued since the antidiscrimination order was
issued a year ago by Gov. John
J. Gilligan.
Controlling Board President
Joel Taylor said he had been
advised by tlie off!~ of state
Attorney General William J.
Brown that Rubin threatened
to hold the board in contempt of
court if the payment w~s not
authorized by Feb. 5.
It was the second time in
recent weeks the board voted
nottopay attorneys for work in
litigation involving slate
policy. The board refused to
pay counsel for Samuel Jordon
of
Youngstown,
who
challenged the Democraticwritten legislative apportionment plan to get it into federal court in Cleveland. The
court upheld the plan.
"JaUhouse Lawyers"
On another matter Monday,
the board approved expenditure of an $86,739 federal

grant to initiate law libraries in
all Ohio penal institutions. The
request from the state
Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction was turned
down twice last year because
some board members complained the state should spend
money to rehabilltate inmates,
not make "jailhouse lawyers"
out of them.
In other action, the board approved:
~ $9.6 million for sewage
treatment facilities, including
$4.1 million for Cleveland and
$2.1 million for Ravenna.
- $6.5 million for debt service payments due Feb. 15.
-$65.8 million for the state's
regular monthly· school subsidy
payment for January .
- $377,954 for educational
television transmitting
facilities at Ailiance-Salem,
Portsmouth, Cambridge and
Lima-Bowling Green.
- $368,525 for the stale's
share of the purchase of 90
school buses.
- $222,935 to the attorney
general's office and the Commerce Department for consumer protection programs
through June 30.
- $53,548 for paying retired
judges to help eliminate a
caseload backlog. The amount
is later reimbursed by coun-

ties.
- $736,035 for community
centers for the mentally
retarded in Franklin County.
- $1.4 million for the first
five phases of development of a
statewide transportation action program mandated by the
legislature last year.
- $665,500 for a steam
generating plant to be located
atop the Department of
Transportation building, and to
serve five state buildings in
downtown Columbus.

Dr. J. put Squires out
with late cage heroics
SALT LAKE CITY. (UP!) Virginia's Julius Erving,
nicknamed "Dr. J " by admiring fans and teammates,
fed a dose of potent medicine to
the Squires Monday night t~
the detriment of the Utah
Stars.
Erving, on the heels of a
game-winning layup by teammate Mike Barr, blocked two
. Stars' shots in the final 10
seconds of action to preserve
Barr's go-ahead point and give
the Squires a 122-121 victory
over their hosts in the night's
lone ABA battle.
Barr scored the winning shot
at the 10-Becond mark when he
stole the ball on a cross-court
pass during the Stars' stall as
Utah held the edge, 121-120. .
Then, after a quick Utah
timeout, Erving blocked a
Gerald (;ovan shot. As the
clock ticked olit the final
seconds, Govan controlled the

lip and the Stars' Willie Wise
attempted another shot.
But the unstoppable Dr. J
blocked that one as well to keep
Virginia's one.point lead and
the victory.
Leading scorer for Virginia
was Bernie WIU!ams with 23.
He was followed by five
teammates scoring 15 points or
better each. That was enoilgh
to negate the 35.poinl scoring of
Utah's Zelma Beaty, followed
by a 28 points from swingman
Ron Boone and Wise's 23
counters.
For Utah, leader in the
Western Division, the loss cut
its division lead over Indiana to
4'k games going into the ABA
All.Star game Tuesday in the
Salt Palace.

EPIDEMIC WANING
SACRAMENTO ; Ca lif.
(UPI) - California's London
flu· epidemic, which has taken
at least 383 lives this winter,
appears to be waning.
The State ~partment of
Public Health said Monday
that is looks like the worst is
over for all ,parts of the state.
"But there may still be some
areas that experience outbreaks before the flu season is
over," a spokesman said.
The . 383 qeaths )Oere 124
·higher than normally would be
expected from flu and pneumonia during the period.

BUTCH JS BETIER .
PULLMAN, Wash. (UP!) Butch the VI, Washington State
University's live Cougar mascot, had his anarl back today.
The beast was quieter than a ·
house cat during the weekend
when he collapsed in his cage·
from barbiturate drugging.
Veterinarian Gary Bryaq
analyzed Ule eat's problems
after taking blood tests and
suggeJ!ed that pranksters may
have been trying to kill Butchsince barbiturate overdoses
In 1972, in a bloody milepost
can easily l!e fatal.
But he said the. cougar ap- of the civil strife in Northern
peared to have suffered no Ireland, British troops killed 13
Londonderry demonstrators.
lasting effects.

..

;

·•
\

sev.en outings ' and the two
losses have come on the road,
beth by a _one point margin, 6564 to Wright State and 84-83
against Walsh. The Redmen
are 4-4 and 3-5 on the road.
Capt. Lambert continues to
lead the Redmen in reboundillg
and scoring. Lambert has a
total of 141 rebounds and is
averaging 22.6 points a game.
Sophomore Dale Thompson
leads. in assists with 37. The
best free throw shooter among
regulars is Mike Rouse. The
former all-stater from Jackson
has made 22' of 28 attempts' for
78.5 pet. The Redinen, as a
team, are shooting 72.4 pet.
from the free throw stripe.
Following tonight's game at
Georgetown, Rio returns home
Thursday night to face Becea .
College, also a former KIAC
foe out of Kentucky. Saturday
night Malone visits Lyne
Center for a MOC encounter.
All varsity games at Lyne
Center begin at 8 p.m.

Joe Says: "You'll like
these special values."

DR.LAWRENCEE.LAMB
"

Rx: •Tincture of Time'

JOE SMITH

Boy Has Swollen Breasts

RAY CROMLEY

Meat Manager

necessary to help me absorb many times more · likely to
· · 'l'hatever calcium 1 take in. develop osteoporosis t~an
Dear I&gt;r.' Lam!)-! am a 15· Is it true that ~alcium would women w h.o are gettmg
year·olil boy. Is there a spe· be useless without hor- enough calcmm. Therefore,
cial hormone I can take or manes?
.
taking both fel)l.ale hormones
something I can do to flatten . ()ear Reader- Some worn- and . calcmm 1~ the post·
my chest? The breasts are en. don't need to take fe· menopausal peraod Is a very
By RAY CROMLEY
enlarged and swollen-look· male hormones at the n\eno- sound approach . recom·
ing. I avoided swimming all pause or afterwards because mended by many1doctors 1.o~
WASHINGTON &lt;NEA)
last summer because l was (hey continue to form s'uf· women who h~ve a sigruhPresident Nixon faces a morale problem of consider- embarrassed and I dread ficient female hormones 10 cant decrease m the .amount
able magnitude.
gym class at school. Our the body anyway. The doctor of female hormone m !hear
The unhappiness extends to loyal Republ.ican Nixon
doctor told me. a year ago .can tell tl\as by looking at body. .
· ·
backers in the government.
that thas condatwn would go the soft tissues that make up
I suspect you have been
AS one super-grade official put it (himself a dedicated
away 10 a few months but the linings at the time of ex- very fortunate that you have
more than a few months amination and he may want been treated by a doctor who
Republican supporter for more than a quarter-century),
"You not only must be loyal to Nixon in this administra'
have passed. Wall you help to check it out with some has given you both . female
lion-but personally loyal to (presidential aides) Hal- me'
chemical determinations .
hormones and calcaum to
derman and Erlichman too-and that's too much to ask."
Dear Reader - What yo u
help pr~venl an_y further
need is tincture of time. This Unfortunately many worn- progressaon of your osteo.
There is no doubt Mr. Nixon had a major loyally prob- problem occurs in about one en do not secrete sufficient porosis. These measures
lem his first term as President, having kept so many · out of three boy s at puberty fema le hormones to prevent alone are not always sueholdovers in high places. There was active sabotage of
and is generally . attributed changes in their body alter cessful but they'll · go a long
Nixon programs by high-level employes, both within
to the response to increased the menopause, and it is this way to helpmg many women.
and without the Civil Service. Mr. Nixon logically decided
sex hormones at this period 1atl er group wh0 profa't·. the
(NIWSPAPER IHTERPRIII ASSN.J
a housecleaning was in order.
in life. Some boys will even most from taka·ng female hor ·
But what a disorganized housecleaning it has been . This
develop a small nodule un- manes. Tl)ere are a good
Send your que1tio•• to Dr. Lomb,
is not to question the President's right to remove men . derneath the breast. These many doctors who feel that in , • ., ol thi1 ••••poper, P.o: Box
at will from those high-ranking policy posts which inproblems last from a year to . if these women take female 1551, Rodio Citr. Stotion, New York,
fluence the effectiveness of White House policies. But
18 months so hopefully your hormones it will prevent los- N.Y. 10019. Foro copr ol Dr. Lomb'•
there is a decent way to let men know their resignations
condition will pass as yo u ing calcium from their l&gt;ooilet on the ,...,..,,, Hnd 50
are being accepted, and metnods that add up to a slap
continue to under go body bones. Women who are on ceniJ to the ••me addre11 ond ••k
in the face . As one loyal administration man says I he
changes and mature .
calcium deficient diets are lor "The Menopou•" boolclet.
has been given a promotion in the second term and so
has no personal hangup) , in too many cases, men have
Being excessively fat can
been told they are no longer wanted in ways that have contribute to the problem.
been cold and abrupt, the methods so callous as to dis- When an exceptionally fat
regard the dignity and self-respect of the men involved . boy is noted early in life it
is usually wise to have a
11 must be em phasized that the above statement comes
medical evaluation. But even
from a man who strongly favors the Nixon domestic and
.
foreign objectives and who is held personally in great
without being excephona11 Y
es teem by the President himself.
fat, the enlarged breast problem boys your age expen. The normal approach to departmental reorganization ence is not uncommon and
is to start with extended consultations with those men it does not mean that there
in whom yo u have confidence in the agency concerned . is any hormone problem.
In some cases the Presicl~nt has followed that route You don't need hormones ,
(where t he incumbent agency head had the clout to force
·
consideration of his views ). But in too many instances
you already hav e a 1arge .10•
creased a m o u n t bemg
Reason 3. We are a year-round
this consultation was lacking. The announcements came
poured out in your body that
like bombshells.
is ca using changes that disservice. We do not disappear or
From the start, Mr. Nixon has found it most difficult
tress you.
to attract men and women of the highest caliber in the
go back to some other business
Dear Dr. Lamb - Several
numbers needed to fill the top jobs in government. Why
this has been so i~ not entirely clear. But perhaps the
years ago II am in my 60s )
after Aprill5.
unhappy experiences of some very capable men (who
my aches and pains were
diagnosed as due to ostemet the three tests of loyalty to the President, Republicanism .and ability) has made others leery of taking
oporosis and I was told to
posts.
take female hormunes the
For there is a feeling among even high officials in this
rest of my life . Since then
government that decisions are made by small elite groups
I have had a complete hysand that they and others closely co.ncerned are left in
terectomy . I was interested
the dark until decisions are announced. even when these
in your article that stated
hormones may not be needed
decisions affect their departments and their own work
significantly.
after the normal age of
In some cases men of considerabl e personal prestige
menopause. However, I un·
have come to feel rather like messenger boys or paper
derstand that hormones are
shufflers.
JURY COMPLAINS
When officials are finally given the White House deciSAN FRANCISCO (UP!) sion, they frequently are not given the detailed explanaFour plumbers working for the
tion on why that ac tion was ordered or what th e precise
San Francisco Water Departobjectives are.
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
ment earned more than $35,000
Sometimes a department head is pushing vigorously
along one line in complete sincerity with what he belast year, the city grand jury
lieves complete White House approval, only to wake up
complained Monday.
one day to find that, at White House instruction , someone
The jury noted that the
else has been working along conflicting lines .
plumbers' pay, based on a high
wage scale and overtime, was
higher than that of the
Apple trees are members
57 Court St.
592 -2851
Athens;
departme
nt 's
general
of the rose family .
CINC INNATI (UP!) manager.
Jack NicklauS, fresh lr.om
his victory In the Bing
Crosby open at Pebble Beach
Sunday, flew Into town
Monday to announce a
$125,000 professional tournament at the goll course
bearing his name at Kings
Island Amusement Park.
The tournament, to be
known as the Ohio Kings
Island Open Invltailonal,
will be held Ocl. 4-7 at the
one-year-old course on In·
terstate 71 adjacent to the
amusement park about 20
miles north of here.
By Lawrence Lamb.

Nixon's .Reshuffle
Brutal, Bomblike

M0

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
I

Leaders in Rio Grande's
Intramural Point System were
announced at the college's midyear count. This point system
is based on the number of
different intramural &lt;activities
each member participates plus
the actual level of achievement
gained. There is still a long
way to go until May when the
finalists will be announced in
the three categories - men,
women, and faculty. However,
when the finalists are announced, each winner will be
awarded a "Most Valuable
Intramural Trophy."
In .the men's category,
Richard Preston holds the
lead, having won the archery
shoot and finishing second in
the rifle shoot. Norm Persin
hl.s· grip on second place,
having been on the first place
team in flag football and
finishing second in 'the one-onone basketball tournament.
Ken Sanders has third place
having finished first in the oneon-one basketball tournament
and finishing third in the
billiards tournament.
In the women's category,
Deb LaDuca firmly holds first
place with a total of 265 points.
LaDuca received her points for
a first place finish in tennis,
second place finishes in archery and powder puff football,
and entry points for jarts and
billiards.
Pam Douthitt is in second
place with a tota l of 190 points,
having taken first place in
jarts, third place finishes in
ar chery and powder puff
football, and entry points in the
car rally. In third place is Chic
Penn with 155 points, having
been a member of the first
place team in powder puff
football, finishing second in
jarts, and receiving entry
points in Tennis.
In the faculty category, Dr.
Bruce Curtis is in front with 270
points, far outdistancing Miss
Diane Lewis' second place
total of 12!i points. Dr. Curtis
has two first-place finishes to
his credit, having finished first
in tx&gt;th the billiard tournament
ahd the car rally. ' Curtis
finished second in the
racketball tournament. Miss
Lewis received her points for a
first place finish in the billiards
.. tournament (team &gt;Yith D~.
Curtis) and ·entry points for
powder puff football. Professor
Edward Sofranko is in third
piQ.ce with a total of 100 points,
having received entry points
for the rifle shoot, the
racketball tournament, the
billiards tournament and the
car rally.

a

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Fresh Boston Butts

Fresh, lean .Tender

PORK STEAK

Lean and Tender

CANNED HAM

lb.

· ~~n~:~s
--~

r-----------------------200

I

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN YOU

I

I

BUY

I

1
I
I
I
1

GAINES .

GRAVY TRAIN®

I~

I(~

CUM

~!lb.
g

$279

WITH

COUPON

OFFER EXPIRES

1

SAVE20c

--

"' ON YOUR NEXT PURCHASEOF
•

~l lll( 1/tG IH A C[ MT
ONE COUPON
PER FAMILY
~

2· 9·73

I
I
I.
1

-- POST TOASTIES

tO

2

I

~~:.Z·

BOTH PACKAGES S9c;

L------------------J

59¢ "'"""""'"'""'

• •!111.; qHHh

" •I

0

0
'II I

t

,

l

.

!1

· ' ' "'

~~~)!·!!~IE

79~

Value Buy!

SAVE 90' WilEN YOU BUY A
........ of
INSTANT FOLGER'S
COFFEE CRYSTALS

MR. BEE

POTATO
CHIPS

smtll Pll:l
Willi TillS COIIHII

gge

LSAVE 40'
KING SIZE

'

$ 19
RC COLA

SAVE 34,

,
16 oz.
bots.

•••••••••••••••••

BANQUET FROZEN

GIANT SIZE

TV DINNERS
each 39~

IVo Ry..............
22 oz. bottle

Diet Rite ·Cola

'

ORE-IDA

Shoestring Potatoes·

SCOT LAO

20 oz. bag 39~

PAPER

•

TOWELS~..•·

EDON BRAND

TO·ILET TISSUE •••
BREAD·····~··!..••.•••..•

GLAZED DONUTS
12 pak

lb.

SATURDAY

' j ••

giant size box

39~

'DEL MONTE

PINEAPPLE_.........

lumbo $
rolls
rolls $
for
lvs. $
for

DA'D'S ROOT BEER
pak

9e

16 oz.

bottles

15

oz.$
cans
•

ROME BEAUTY

'
'·

APPLES

lb.

PAK

bag

16ot
bots.

9~e

COTTAGE CHEESE

FAIRMONT ·
NICE 'N LITE.

FAIRMONT

-

30 OZ. CARTON

MILK

Nl
N~l~L

•

ON AlCOHOl

¢

ABUSE AND
AICOHOlOM

US. DEPART~ENT OF Hli!ILTH. EDUCf\TION. AND WELFM: ·Health S!3rvk;es and Mentti lleatlh ~

Herman Grate

TWIN POPS
FAIRMONT'
12 COUNT PACKAGE

w. Va .

'

••

'

'

69e
49~

•

-

'

-

'

16 oz.
bots.

'

Alcohol is a drug. That's right, a drug. Ask your doctor. So if you se.Ve alcohol, be
a good host. Don't be a pu~her. And when you're a guest, don't let good old Harry
tell you how much to drink.
·We have a free booklet about drinking. (Not for or against drinking, but abour
drinking.) It's filled with facts most people don't know. It's interesting. And it could
help you help sorneone else.
Write: Nl.AAA., BOX 2045, ROCKVILLE, M~RYLANO, 20852.

INSTITUJ!

•

GIANT SIZE

SAVE

99$

,h,,-f, 1 ,.,,
•... :~ : .. .,

32 oz. bottle

•

•

•

'
Joy.••••..•.•..•••..•.
.
E
T.l D

~

Muon,

:·;

·,"

20' 0~ LABEL

210 E. 2nd
Pon.erc&gt;YI,
Phone 992·5428

777-5592

,,.

1,

FAVORITE

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

MASON
FURNITURE

11_,

25' XOFF YLABEDL

D

Authorized Dealer

.'·~:,,, ,,;

'

,_,

IIJJO n

SAP'S

you 'v e always
dreamed ·Of at our low
pri ces.

1

i,u'J;

., , "'··,

lb.

MARK V STORE

WITH COUPON

' l-~•

11:0 Jf:0Jv

"

chair

~

Pure Pork
Sausage

CHOPPED
SIRLOIN

a.oz.
$}49 ~
· 13r
.Famlly

(~)I 200 ONE COUPON PER FAMILY • OFFER EXPIRES. 2-23-73 20C
L----- -I----------";""-------..1
'- - - -"
1

Maybe there's more to being a great host than
pushing drinks. Maybe good old Harry is not a
good host Maybe good old Harry is

Now you can buy tha\
comlortable
La·Z-Boy

New! New! Caffein Free

( )1

N

1.29
•

MARK V COUPON

REDEEM THIS COUPON NOW and

'

(Upon .Request)

lb.

r
20~

...nobody remembers what happened at the party?
... Ron and Jean had such a terrible fight?
...Charlie drove into·a tree on the way home?
...everybody felt so lousy the next day?

2-HOUR
.CLEANING

317

Boneless can
~-------------

SLICES

3 lb. $

Home Made

Fresh, Pure Beef

HAM

COOK'S DELIGHT

If good old Harry is such a great host, how come

CHAIRS

lb.

lb.

o.

LA·Z-BOV

5 lb.
Average .

PORK ROAST

No Appointment Necessal}

CLYDE SUSPENDED
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UP!)
- Benny Clyde, a junior forward who was thrown out of
Florida State's 78-73 victory
over Southern Illinois for
punching an opposing player,
was suspended from the Seminoles squad Monday.
Coach Hugh Durham said the
indefinite suspension was
made for " disciplinary
reasons," but refused to
elaborate.

PIC.NIC
HAMS

•

. PHONE: 992-3480

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

304 E. Main 992-3795 PomeroJ, 0.
Open 9 Til 5 Mon. thru Sal

f

-·

. "We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities"

iiiiiiiiiii.iiliiiiiliiii.lilil.liiil•••••••••..

Point system
announced for
Rio programs

SMOKED

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10

DR. PEPPER
Everyday Low

16 oz. bots.

.8

PAK

Pri~e!

�.

f

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 30,1973

G.

Rio faces power u1 eorgetow:n
The liio Grande Redmen
travel to Georgetown, 1\y.,
tonight lor a lon.Jeague game.
Tipoff time is 8 o'clock.
The Kentucky college team
defeated Rio Grande in
December at Lyne Center, 86, 69. The Tigers of Coach Bob
Davis are 16-4 on the season
and 4~ in the KIAe. Ri~&gt;
Grande has a three game
winning
streak
and is un.
'
defeated in · the Mid-Ohio
Conference with a 4~ mark and
the Redmen are 7-9 overall.
Rio Grande, a fanner KIAC
member before entering the
MOC last season, has never

won at Georgetown aga ii\SI the
talented Tigers. The Tigers
have another well-balanced
team. Aga inst Rio Grande in
December, the Tigers had four
men in double figures. Van
Phillips surprised the Redmen
by scoring 2!i points, John
Ow~n had 23, Tom Stewart
collected 15 and John Allen \0.
Rio's Dan &amp;!linger had 30 in a
losing cause and captain Ron
Lambert added 20.
The Redmen were happy to
say goodbye to 1972. Rio began
the t973 part of the schedule at
2-7. Since then, · coach Art
Lanham's crew has won five of

Ohio board says
no .to Washington
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
state Controlling Board defied
the threat of a federal contempt citation Monday and
voted down payment of $7,900
worth of fees for attorneys
whose work resulted in an an itdiscrimination order to firms
involved in state construction
projects.
The board voted 4-3 against
paying three NAACP attorneys
- Irwin W. Barkan and William D. Wells of New York, and
W!Uiam Davis of Columbus.
The three had worked on an
a ppeal filed against the administration of fanner Gov. James
A. Rhodes for alleged failure to
assure equal employment opportunity on projects at Ohio
State University.
The attorneys had' asked for
$18,000, but U.S. District Court
Judge Carl Rubin reduced the
amount to $7,500 plus $400 in
interest accrued since the antidiscrimination order was
issued a year ago by Gov. John
J. Gilligan.
Controlling Board President
Joel Taylor said he had been
advised by tlie off!~ of state
Attorney General William J.
Brown that Rubin threatened
to hold the board in contempt of
court if the payment w~s not
authorized by Feb. 5.
It was the second time in
recent weeks the board voted
nottopay attorneys for work in
litigation involving slate
policy. The board refused to
pay counsel for Samuel Jordon
of
Youngstown,
who
challenged the Democraticwritten legislative apportionment plan to get it into federal court in Cleveland. The
court upheld the plan.
"JaUhouse Lawyers"
On another matter Monday,
the board approved expenditure of an $86,739 federal

grant to initiate law libraries in
all Ohio penal institutions. The
request from the state
Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction was turned
down twice last year because
some board members complained the state should spend
money to rehabilltate inmates,
not make "jailhouse lawyers"
out of them.
In other action, the board approved:
~ $9.6 million for sewage
treatment facilities, including
$4.1 million for Cleveland and
$2.1 million for Ravenna.
- $6.5 million for debt service payments due Feb. 15.
-$65.8 million for the state's
regular monthly· school subsidy
payment for January .
- $377,954 for educational
television transmitting
facilities at Ailiance-Salem,
Portsmouth, Cambridge and
Lima-Bowling Green.
- $368,525 for the stale's
share of the purchase of 90
school buses.
- $222,935 to the attorney
general's office and the Commerce Department for consumer protection programs
through June 30.
- $53,548 for paying retired
judges to help eliminate a
caseload backlog. The amount
is later reimbursed by coun-

ties.
- $736,035 for community
centers for the mentally
retarded in Franklin County.
- $1.4 million for the first
five phases of development of a
statewide transportation action program mandated by the
legislature last year.
- $665,500 for a steam
generating plant to be located
atop the Department of
Transportation building, and to
serve five state buildings in
downtown Columbus.

Dr. J. put Squires out
with late cage heroics
SALT LAKE CITY. (UP!) Virginia's Julius Erving,
nicknamed "Dr. J " by admiring fans and teammates,
fed a dose of potent medicine to
the Squires Monday night t~
the detriment of the Utah
Stars.
Erving, on the heels of a
game-winning layup by teammate Mike Barr, blocked two
. Stars' shots in the final 10
seconds of action to preserve
Barr's go-ahead point and give
the Squires a 122-121 victory
over their hosts in the night's
lone ABA battle.
Barr scored the winning shot
at the 10-Becond mark when he
stole the ball on a cross-court
pass during the Stars' stall as
Utah held the edge, 121-120. .
Then, after a quick Utah
timeout, Erving blocked a
Gerald (;ovan shot. As the
clock ticked olit the final
seconds, Govan controlled the

lip and the Stars' Willie Wise
attempted another shot.
But the unstoppable Dr. J
blocked that one as well to keep
Virginia's one.point lead and
the victory.
Leading scorer for Virginia
was Bernie WIU!ams with 23.
He was followed by five
teammates scoring 15 points or
better each. That was enoilgh
to negate the 35.poinl scoring of
Utah's Zelma Beaty, followed
by a 28 points from swingman
Ron Boone and Wise's 23
counters.
For Utah, leader in the
Western Division, the loss cut
its division lead over Indiana to
4'k games going into the ABA
All.Star game Tuesday in the
Salt Palace.

EPIDEMIC WANING
SACRAMENTO ; Ca lif.
(UPI) - California's London
flu· epidemic, which has taken
at least 383 lives this winter,
appears to be waning.
The State ~partment of
Public Health said Monday
that is looks like the worst is
over for all ,parts of the state.
"But there may still be some
areas that experience outbreaks before the flu season is
over," a spokesman said.
The . 383 qeaths )Oere 124
·higher than normally would be
expected from flu and pneumonia during the period.

BUTCH JS BETIER .
PULLMAN, Wash. (UP!) Butch the VI, Washington State
University's live Cougar mascot, had his anarl back today.
The beast was quieter than a ·
house cat during the weekend
when he collapsed in his cage·
from barbiturate drugging.
Veterinarian Gary Bryaq
analyzed Ule eat's problems
after taking blood tests and
suggeJ!ed that pranksters may
have been trying to kill Butchsince barbiturate overdoses
In 1972, in a bloody milepost
can easily l!e fatal.
But he said the. cougar ap- of the civil strife in Northern
peared to have suffered no Ireland, British troops killed 13
Londonderry demonstrators.
lasting effects.

..

;

·•
\

sev.en outings ' and the two
losses have come on the road,
beth by a _one point margin, 6564 to Wright State and 84-83
against Walsh. The Redmen
are 4-4 and 3-5 on the road.
Capt. Lambert continues to
lead the Redmen in reboundillg
and scoring. Lambert has a
total of 141 rebounds and is
averaging 22.6 points a game.
Sophomore Dale Thompson
leads. in assists with 37. The
best free throw shooter among
regulars is Mike Rouse. The
former all-stater from Jackson
has made 22' of 28 attempts' for
78.5 pet. The Redinen, as a
team, are shooting 72.4 pet.
from the free throw stripe.
Following tonight's game at
Georgetown, Rio returns home
Thursday night to face Becea .
College, also a former KIAC
foe out of Kentucky. Saturday
night Malone visits Lyne
Center for a MOC encounter.
All varsity games at Lyne
Center begin at 8 p.m.

Joe Says: "You'll like
these special values."

DR.LAWRENCEE.LAMB
"

Rx: •Tincture of Time'

JOE SMITH

Boy Has Swollen Breasts

RAY CROMLEY

Meat Manager

necessary to help me absorb many times more · likely to
· · 'l'hatever calcium 1 take in. develop osteoporosis t~an
Dear I&gt;r.' Lam!)-! am a 15· Is it true that ~alcium would women w h.o are gettmg
year·olil boy. Is there a spe· be useless without hor- enough calcmm. Therefore,
cial hormone I can take or manes?
.
taking both fel)l.ale hormones
something I can do to flatten . ()ear Reader- Some worn- and . calcmm 1~ the post·
my chest? The breasts are en. don't need to take fe· menopausal peraod Is a very
By RAY CROMLEY
enlarged and swollen-look· male hormones at the n\eno- sound approach . recom·
ing. I avoided swimming all pause or afterwards because mended by many1doctors 1.o~
WASHINGTON &lt;NEA)
last summer because l was (hey continue to form s'uf· women who h~ve a sigruhPresident Nixon faces a morale problem of consider- embarrassed and I dread ficient female hormones 10 cant decrease m the .amount
able magnitude.
gym class at school. Our the body anyway. The doctor of female hormone m !hear
The unhappiness extends to loyal Republ.ican Nixon
doctor told me. a year ago .can tell tl\as by looking at body. .
· ·
backers in the government.
that thas condatwn would go the soft tissues that make up
I suspect you have been
AS one super-grade official put it (himself a dedicated
away 10 a few months but the linings at the time of ex- very fortunate that you have
more than a few months amination and he may want been treated by a doctor who
Republican supporter for more than a quarter-century),
"You not only must be loyal to Nixon in this administra'
have passed. Wall you help to check it out with some has given you both . female
lion-but personally loyal to (presidential aides) Hal- me'
chemical determinations .
hormones and calcaum to
derman and Erlichman too-and that's too much to ask."
Dear Reader - What yo u
help pr~venl an_y further
need is tincture of time. This Unfortunately many worn- progressaon of your osteo.
There is no doubt Mr. Nixon had a major loyally prob- problem occurs in about one en do not secrete sufficient porosis. These measures
lem his first term as President, having kept so many · out of three boy s at puberty fema le hormones to prevent alone are not always sueholdovers in high places. There was active sabotage of
and is generally . attributed changes in their body alter cessful but they'll · go a long
Nixon programs by high-level employes, both within
to the response to increased the menopause, and it is this way to helpmg many women.
and without the Civil Service. Mr. Nixon logically decided
sex hormones at this period 1atl er group wh0 profa't·. the
(NIWSPAPER IHTERPRIII ASSN.J
a housecleaning was in order.
in life. Some boys will even most from taka·ng female hor ·
But what a disorganized housecleaning it has been . This
develop a small nodule un- manes. Tl)ere are a good
Send your que1tio•• to Dr. Lomb,
is not to question the President's right to remove men . derneath the breast. These many doctors who feel that in , • ., ol thi1 ••••poper, P.o: Box
at will from those high-ranking policy posts which inproblems last from a year to . if these women take female 1551, Rodio Citr. Stotion, New York,
fluence the effectiveness of White House policies. But
18 months so hopefully your hormones it will prevent los- N.Y. 10019. Foro copr ol Dr. Lomb'•
there is a decent way to let men know their resignations
condition will pass as yo u ing calcium from their l&gt;ooilet on the ,...,..,,, Hnd 50
are being accepted, and metnods that add up to a slap
continue to under go body bones. Women who are on ceniJ to the ••me addre11 ond ••k
in the face . As one loyal administration man says I he
changes and mature .
calcium deficient diets are lor "The Menopou•" boolclet.
has been given a promotion in the second term and so
has no personal hangup) , in too many cases, men have
Being excessively fat can
been told they are no longer wanted in ways that have contribute to the problem.
been cold and abrupt, the methods so callous as to dis- When an exceptionally fat
regard the dignity and self-respect of the men involved . boy is noted early in life it
is usually wise to have a
11 must be em phasized that the above statement comes
medical evaluation. But even
from a man who strongly favors the Nixon domestic and
.
foreign objectives and who is held personally in great
without being excephona11 Y
es teem by the President himself.
fat, the enlarged breast problem boys your age expen. The normal approach to departmental reorganization ence is not uncommon and
is to start with extended consultations with those men it does not mean that there
in whom yo u have confidence in the agency concerned . is any hormone problem.
In some cases the Presicl~nt has followed that route You don't need hormones ,
(where t he incumbent agency head had the clout to force
·
consideration of his views ). But in too many instances
you already hav e a 1arge .10•
creased a m o u n t bemg
Reason 3. We are a year-round
this consultation was lacking. The announcements came
poured out in your body that
like bombshells.
is ca using changes that disservice. We do not disappear or
From the start, Mr. Nixon has found it most difficult
tress you.
to attract men and women of the highest caliber in the
go back to some other business
Dear Dr. Lamb - Several
numbers needed to fill the top jobs in government. Why
this has been so i~ not entirely clear. But perhaps the
years ago II am in my 60s )
after Aprill5.
unhappy experiences of some very capable men (who
my aches and pains were
diagnosed as due to ostemet the three tests of loyalty to the President, Republicanism .and ability) has made others leery of taking
oporosis and I was told to
posts.
take female hormunes the
For there is a feeling among even high officials in this
rest of my life . Since then
government that decisions are made by small elite groups
I have had a complete hysand that they and others closely co.ncerned are left in
terectomy . I was interested
the dark until decisions are announced. even when these
in your article that stated
hormones may not be needed
decisions affect their departments and their own work
significantly.
after the normal age of
In some cases men of considerabl e personal prestige
menopause. However, I un·
have come to feel rather like messenger boys or paper
derstand that hormones are
shufflers.
JURY COMPLAINS
When officials are finally given the White House deciSAN FRANCISCO (UP!) sion, they frequently are not given the detailed explanaFour plumbers working for the
tion on why that ac tion was ordered or what th e precise
San Francisco Water Departobjectives are.
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
ment earned more than $35,000
Sometimes a department head is pushing vigorously
along one line in complete sincerity with what he belast year, the city grand jury
lieves complete White House approval, only to wake up
complained Monday.
one day to find that, at White House instruction , someone
The jury noted that the
else has been working along conflicting lines .
plumbers' pay, based on a high
wage scale and overtime, was
higher than that of the
Apple trees are members
57 Court St.
592 -2851
Athens;
departme
nt 's
general
of the rose family .
CINC INNATI (UP!) manager.
Jack NicklauS, fresh lr.om
his victory In the Bing
Crosby open at Pebble Beach
Sunday, flew Into town
Monday to announce a
$125,000 professional tournament at the goll course
bearing his name at Kings
Island Amusement Park.
The tournament, to be
known as the Ohio Kings
Island Open Invltailonal,
will be held Ocl. 4-7 at the
one-year-old course on In·
terstate 71 adjacent to the
amusement park about 20
miles north of here.
By Lawrence Lamb.

Nixon's .Reshuffle
Brutal, Bomblike

M0

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
I

Leaders in Rio Grande's
Intramural Point System were
announced at the college's midyear count. This point system
is based on the number of
different intramural &lt;activities
each member participates plus
the actual level of achievement
gained. There is still a long
way to go until May when the
finalists will be announced in
the three categories - men,
women, and faculty. However,
when the finalists are announced, each winner will be
awarded a "Most Valuable
Intramural Trophy."
In .the men's category,
Richard Preston holds the
lead, having won the archery
shoot and finishing second in
the rifle shoot. Norm Persin
hl.s· grip on second place,
having been on the first place
team in flag football and
finishing second in 'the one-onone basketball tournament.
Ken Sanders has third place
having finished first in the oneon-one basketball tournament
and finishing third in the
billiards tournament.
In the women's category,
Deb LaDuca firmly holds first
place with a total of 265 points.
LaDuca received her points for
a first place finish in tennis,
second place finishes in archery and powder puff football,
and entry points for jarts and
billiards.
Pam Douthitt is in second
place with a tota l of 190 points,
having taken first place in
jarts, third place finishes in
ar chery and powder puff
football, and entry points in the
car rally. In third place is Chic
Penn with 155 points, having
been a member of the first
place team in powder puff
football, finishing second in
jarts, and receiving entry
points in Tennis.
In the faculty category, Dr.
Bruce Curtis is in front with 270
points, far outdistancing Miss
Diane Lewis' second place
total of 12!i points. Dr. Curtis
has two first-place finishes to
his credit, having finished first
in tx&gt;th the billiard tournament
ahd the car rally. ' Curtis
finished second in the
racketball tournament. Miss
Lewis received her points for a
first place finish in the billiards
.. tournament (team &gt;Yith D~.
Curtis) and ·entry points for
powder puff football. Professor
Edward Sofranko is in third
piQ.ce with a total of 100 points,
having received entry points
for the rifle shoot, the
racketball tournament, the
billiards tournament and the
car rally.

a

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Fresh Boston Butts

Fresh, lean .Tender

PORK STEAK

Lean and Tender

CANNED HAM

lb.

· ~~n~:~s
--~

r-----------------------200

I

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN YOU

I

I

BUY

I

1
I
I
I
1

GAINES .

GRAVY TRAIN®

I~

I(~

CUM

~!lb.
g

$279

WITH

COUPON

OFFER EXPIRES

1

SAVE20c

--

"' ON YOUR NEXT PURCHASEOF
•

~l lll( 1/tG IH A C[ MT
ONE COUPON
PER FAMILY
~

2· 9·73

I
I
I.
1

-- POST TOASTIES

tO

2

I

~~:.Z·

BOTH PACKAGES S9c;

L------------------J

59¢ "'"""""'"'""'

• •!111.; qHHh

" •I

0

0
'II I

t

,

l

.

!1

· ' ' "'

~~~)!·!!~IE

79~

Value Buy!

SAVE 90' WilEN YOU BUY A
........ of
INSTANT FOLGER'S
COFFEE CRYSTALS

MR. BEE

POTATO
CHIPS

smtll Pll:l
Willi TillS COIIHII

gge

LSAVE 40'
KING SIZE

'

$ 19
RC COLA

SAVE 34,

,
16 oz.
bots.

•••••••••••••••••

BANQUET FROZEN

GIANT SIZE

TV DINNERS
each 39~

IVo Ry..............
22 oz. bottle

Diet Rite ·Cola

'

ORE-IDA

Shoestring Potatoes·

SCOT LAO

20 oz. bag 39~

PAPER

•

TOWELS~..•·

EDON BRAND

TO·ILET TISSUE •••
BREAD·····~··!..••.•••..•

GLAZED DONUTS
12 pak

lb.

SATURDAY

' j ••

giant size box

39~

'DEL MONTE

PINEAPPLE_.........

lumbo $
rolls
rolls $
for
lvs. $
for

DA'D'S ROOT BEER
pak

9e

16 oz.

bottles

15

oz.$
cans
•

ROME BEAUTY

'
'·

APPLES

lb.

PAK

bag

16ot
bots.

9~e

COTTAGE CHEESE

FAIRMONT ·
NICE 'N LITE.

FAIRMONT

-

30 OZ. CARTON

MILK

Nl
N~l~L

•

ON AlCOHOl

¢

ABUSE AND
AICOHOlOM

US. DEPART~ENT OF Hli!ILTH. EDUCf\TION. AND WELFM: ·Health S!3rvk;es and Mentti lleatlh ~

Herman Grate

TWIN POPS
FAIRMONT'
12 COUNT PACKAGE

w. Va .

'

••

'

'

69e
49~

•

-

'

-

'

16 oz.
bots.

'

Alcohol is a drug. That's right, a drug. Ask your doctor. So if you se.Ve alcohol, be
a good host. Don't be a pu~her. And when you're a guest, don't let good old Harry
tell you how much to drink.
·We have a free booklet about drinking. (Not for or against drinking, but abour
drinking.) It's filled with facts most people don't know. It's interesting. And it could
help you help sorneone else.
Write: Nl.AAA., BOX 2045, ROCKVILLE, M~RYLANO, 20852.

INSTITUJ!

•

GIANT SIZE

SAVE

99$

,h,,-f, 1 ,.,,
•... :~ : .. .,

32 oz. bottle

•

•

•

'
Joy.••••..•.•..•••..•.
.
E
T.l D

~

Muon,

:·;

·,"

20' 0~ LABEL

210 E. 2nd
Pon.erc&gt;YI,
Phone 992·5428

777-5592

,,.

1,

FAVORITE

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

MASON
FURNITURE

11_,

25' XOFF YLABEDL

D

Authorized Dealer

.'·~:,,, ,,;

'

,_,

IIJJO n

SAP'S

you 'v e always
dreamed ·Of at our low
pri ces.

1

i,u'J;

., , "'··,

lb.

MARK V STORE

WITH COUPON

' l-~•

11:0 Jf:0Jv

"

chair

~

Pure Pork
Sausage

CHOPPED
SIRLOIN

a.oz.
$}49 ~
· 13r
.Famlly

(~)I 200 ONE COUPON PER FAMILY • OFFER EXPIRES. 2-23-73 20C
L----- -I----------";""-------..1
'- - - -"
1

Maybe there's more to being a great host than
pushing drinks. Maybe good old Harry is not a
good host Maybe good old Harry is

Now you can buy tha\
comlortable
La·Z-Boy

New! New! Caffein Free

( )1

N

1.29
•

MARK V COUPON

REDEEM THIS COUPON NOW and

'

(Upon .Request)

lb.

r
20~

...nobody remembers what happened at the party?
... Ron and Jean had such a terrible fight?
...Charlie drove into·a tree on the way home?
...everybody felt so lousy the next day?

2-HOUR
.CLEANING

317

Boneless can
~-------------

SLICES

3 lb. $

Home Made

Fresh, Pure Beef

HAM

COOK'S DELIGHT

If good old Harry is such a great host, how come

CHAIRS

lb.

lb.

o.

LA·Z-BOV

5 lb.
Average .

PORK ROAST

No Appointment Necessal}

CLYDE SUSPENDED
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UP!)
- Benny Clyde, a junior forward who was thrown out of
Florida State's 78-73 victory
over Southern Illinois for
punching an opposing player,
was suspended from the Seminoles squad Monday.
Coach Hugh Durham said the
indefinite suspension was
made for " disciplinary
reasons," but refused to
elaborate.

PIC.NIC
HAMS

•

. PHONE: 992-3480

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

304 E. Main 992-3795 PomeroJ, 0.
Open 9 Til 5 Mon. thru Sal

f

-·

. "We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities"

iiiiiiiiiii.iiliiiiiliiii.lilil.liiil•••••••••..

Point system
announced for
Rio programs

SMOKED

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10

DR. PEPPER
Everyday Low

16 oz. bots.

.8

PAK

Pri~e!

�7- 'lbil DeUy Sentinel, Mictdzeport.J'omeroy, 0., Jan. 30, 1973

.

.

Teachers of 3 counties dinf3d at Meigs Inn

WILL OBSERVE BffiTHDAY - Stella Smith, l~ng time
resident of Middleport, now a resident at the Russell Nursing
Home, Albany, will celebrate her 88th birthday on Feb. 12.
Mrs. Smith •. who is a member of the Middleport Church of
Christ was the mother of one son and one daughter who are
both deceased, Francis LaRue and Elizabeth (Sis) LaRue.
Cards may be sent to.her in care oftbe niU'Sing home.

BETTY CANARY

Just Can't Escape
School-Out Guests
B)' BETIY CANARY
if yoll're like me, you were still in the middle of giving
thanks for the kids' return to school after the Christmas
holidays when they all came home again .
If your children are like mine. more came home than
returned to school.
If your childrens' friends are like mine they have par·
ents who go to Mobile. Ala .. or to Cuernavaca to rest up
after having their children home for the Christmas holi·
.days .
·
(For semester break, of course. they send their chil·
dren to my house.)
·
Not that I'm complaining ~ Alter all having young peo!Jle around is entertaining . thought -pr~voking and educa·
tiona!.
Where else could I learn new formulas for ski-wax
every winter and, at the same time , learn new methods
for scraping it off the side of my kitchen stove '
Where else could I experience the never-ending thriil
of readm~ the evenmg newspaper while the pungent odor
of steammg socks wafts from laundry room to living-

room ?
Where else could I be lulled to sleep by "Sweet Baby
James ," and wake up to a floor -splitting "Twelve Dreams
of Doctor Sardonicus? •·
Where else would I find that my new yellow jacket
has gone off to the slopes and. in its place, there is left a
mossy-backed raincoat'
Where else but home could ·I learn to maneuver down
a stairway lined with hockey skates'
Where else could I see a socio·mathematic experiment
in progress. 1Todav's stated problem seems to be: How
long does it take live boys, three girls , and something
that may or may not be a sled dog to eat their way
through $495 worth of groceries ? I
Where else? That's all I'm askin g. Tell me where and
l'ii have a ticket on the next plane .

Social
Calendar
WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
open meeting, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Club
officers to be hostesses.
Program of slides by C. E.
Blakeslee, Meigs County extension agent.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Episcopal Parish House,
Pomeroy, with Mrs. Everett
Hayes as hostess. Mrs. Dwight
Wallace will review "The Fatal
Friendship" by Stanley
Loomis. Roil call will be . a
comment on the program .
ALL HIGH
SCHOOL
students, Southern Local
District, invited to youth
prayer breakfast at Racine
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church, 7:30a.m. Wednesday.
Devotional period and light.
breakfast.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, home of Mrs. Emerson
Jones, 2 p.m. Wednesday instead of at the Episcopal
Parish House as previously
annoUnced.
THURSDAY
CITIZENS CHILDREN'S
Home committee, 1a:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Children's
Home .
LAUREL CLIFF Better
Health Club, 7:30p.m. Thursday at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall. Hobo party with
Mrs. Mabel Tracy as the
hostess. Refreshments wiii be
served.
EMERGENCY Medical
Service meeting for Rutland
area Thursday, 7:30 p.m . at
Martin Funeral Home. Dan
Lloyd and two other
represenlatives of the Ohio
Valley Health Service,;·
1

. Forty-&lt;&gt;ne teachers of Meigs,
Gailia and Vinton Counties, ail
members of Alpha ·omicron
Chapter of Delta Kappa
Gamma, a national honorary
teachers'
society,
met
Saturday at the Meigs Inn for a
luncheon meeting. Mrs. Roberta Wilson,
president, introduced Nellie
Parker who g~ ve the invocation. The program entitled
"Intangibles That Fuse a
Culture" as developed by the
personal growth and services

A thought for the day: In the
depths of the great American
depression, President Franklin
D. Roosevelt said, "I pledge
you, I pledge myself, to a new
deal for the American people."

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

. I

\!i~:~
....... ·J
I

An author, or other own·
er who derives his rights
from the author, may
obtain protection for a lit·
erary. musical. or artistic
work by complying with the
provisions of the U.S. copy·
right law. The law gives the
copyright owner the exclusive right to print. reprint,
publish, copy and sell the
copyrighted work; to revise
or adapt it; and with certain limitations, to perform
and record it, The World
Almanac says.

Where Time Begins
Because the Date Line
curves around Tonga, the
new day dawns on the island
earlier than at any other inhabited place on the globe.
Tongans call their island,
"The place where time be·
' ·

Athens, wiil answer questions
pertaining to the proposed
Rutland instruction class. All
interested persons are urged to
attend.

..-------·
•

t :n p ;v rlgh l ® l fl 7:1
X•·ll' t&lt; l•lll ll •l' t·:nl• ·•·pl'l .'le ,\ :-;~n.

Jeanette Thomas, and Dorothy'
Woodard. The table was
decorated with chrysanthemwns. Favors of a yellow .·
chrysanthemum and perfume
were given to the members.
Maxine Philson gave the
secretary's report and
presenting the treasurer's
report was Esther Maerker.

Thaqk you notes were read
fro101 Mrs. Thomas, Edith
Hoffman, and the family of
'Genevieve Stobart. Mrs.
Wilson thanked the members
who assisted with the
memorial service for Miss
Stobart. ·
Plans were annoWJced for
the -next meeting to be a luncheon at the Coach House in
Wellston on Feb. 17. The
profeSsional affairs committee
with Carolyn Smith as
chairrilan will present "Expressive Dimension of a
Culture.'' There Will be !!PeciaJ
music by a sixth grade quartet
Wlder the direction of Pauline

Middleport
. Personal Notes

.... -

Mrs. Claude R. Sowle, wife of
the president of Ohio
University, will speak at the
Grace Episcopal Parish House
on Feb. 15.
The Episcopal Church
Women will be hostesses for a
luncheon to be served at 12:30
p.m. open to ali area church
women interested in hearing
Mrs. Sowle discuss the topic
"Ohio University -Its Present
and Its Future."
Mrs. Sowle, a lawyer,
combines civic activities
utilizing her professional
training with responsibilities
associated with her husband's
position .
Plans for the public luncheon
meeting were made at a
meeting of the Episcopal
Church Women Thursday
presided over by Mrs: Harry S.
Moore . Ali area women
wishing to attend the Feb. 15
meeting are asked to telephone
their reservations to Mr . Fred
Crow, 992-2562, or Mrs. Ted
Reed, Jr., 992-2370 by Saturday, Feb. 10.

Transfers

gins."

.

Mrs. Sowle to
speak Feb. 15

Meigs
Property
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to
Rex F. cumings, 100 Acres, .28
Acre, Syracuse
Bill Jarrell, Doris K. Jarrell
to Kate Jarrell, 35 34 Acres, 40
Acres, Salem.
James Raymond Stewart to
James Raymond Stewart,
Phillip H. Werry, Karen Sue
Werry , 18.65 Acres, Chester.
Frances M. Yost to Elwyn R.
Yost, Lot 5-4, Middleport.
Carl Fred Goegiein, Frances
Goeglein, Fred B. Goeglein,
Joan W. Goeglein to Clarence
A. King, Martha L. King, E 'k
Lot 3, Lot 4, Salisbury - Rock
Springs Sub.
Roy E. Frecker to Robert
Grueser, Norma Jean Grueser,
5.7 Acres, Chester.
Sam N. Arnold, Ruth E.
Arnold to George Wolfe, Mary
Wolfe, Lots, Syracuse.
Richard A. ~'inlaw, Gertrude
M. Finlaw to Clarence A.
Lambert, Sally J . Lambert,
1.10 Acre, Salisbury.
Paul Sisson, Mildred Sisson
to Richard Blessing, Parcels,
· Rutland.
Albert R. Wolfe, Eva Jane
Wolfe, Edith K. Grimm to Otis
F. Knopp, Edna L. Knopp, 160
Acre Lot 1206, Sutton.

committee composed of
Dorothy Scott, c'hairman,
Margaret Gahm, Nellie
Parker, and Myrtle Fri. Lee
Lee gave a presentation on "A
Story of' Music." - ·
Hostesses for the meeting
were
Nan Moore, chairman
.
Neljie Parker, Jeanne Bowen,
Betsy H~rky, Emily Sprague,

tlil.ll!i

JANE WYMAN
JANE WYMAN LEADS ARTHRITIS CAMPAIGN
Jane Wyman has been named national campaign chairman
for The Arthritis Foundation's 1973 fund-raising drives. The
appoinbnent of the Academy Award-winning actress was
announced by John W. Brean, president of the board of the
Ohio Valley · Chapter, and Ronald J. Keller, executive
director of the chapter, Cincinnati. The Arthritis Foundation
is the voluntary health organization which for 25 years has
spearheaded the fight against arthritis througb programs of
research, patient and community services, and professional
and public health education. Miss Wyman has been ·active in
the foundation's activi'ties many years.

CHRISTENING HELD
The infant daughter ·of Mr.
.and Mrs. Roy Lyons, Patty
Jean, was christened recently
at the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. Godparents
of the infant, Darlene Michaels
and Rick Stewart, and the
grandparents, Mr. arid Mrs .
Seldon Baker, Jr. attended the
christening performed by the .
Rev. Robert Buckley.
ATfEND SEMINAR
The Rev . Robert Buckley,
pastor of the Laurel Ciilf Free
Methodist Church, Lloyd
Wright, treasurer, Mrs. Uoyd
Wright, president of the
Missionary Society, and Mrs.
Iva Powell, second vice
president of the Society, were
in Columbus Saturday for a
missionary seminar.

Mr. and Mrs. Myron Milier
were in Dravosburg, Pa .
Wednesday and Thursday for
the funeral of Mr. Miller's
brother-in-law, Kenneth
Hughes. On SWlday the Millers
visited in Waverly with their
daughter-in-law and son, Mr.
and Mrs. James R. Miller and
their infant daughter, Angela
Lyn.
Mrs. Albert Roush is a
medical patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Her room
number is 143. Both her son and
daughter, Becky and Kenny
Roush, are home with the flu.
Mrs. Eula France of Middleport was admitted to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Monday. Her room number is

SON CHRISTENED
Bryan Matthew Weaver,
infant son of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Weaver, was christened
Sunday evening at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church .
Among those attending the
christening were the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs . .
Lawrence Eblin and Mrs.
Richard Weaver, and the
great-grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ross Norris. The Rev .
Robert Buckley officiated at
the christening.

116.

Mrs. Denver Rice suffered a
fracture of the right arm in a
fall Friday down several steps
at the home of her mother-inlaw, Mrs. Homer Rice, Rutland
St. In addition to the fraclure,
Mrs. Rice suffers from an
injury of the left hand.

We Have The Cutest

JUNIOR
DRESSES
In To.wn and .. ,a Price

you can Afford ...

Pomeroy. Ohio

Membership trophies were
· presented ' to :the American
Leglo'n Auxiliary ~nits of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128 oi
Middleport, Lewis Manley Post
363, Middleport, an!l Racine
Post 602 at the aimual ~id:
win,ter conference held at the
Neil House Motor Hotel in
ColumbuS Friday and Saturday . . '
The three · units · received
recognition for being in the
firs! 100.Wllls in Ohio to reach
quota. Other Wilts In the l!:ighth
Distrlc.t . receiving · trophy
.awards were Vinton Unit 16 ·
Corning 323; Lithopolis 677;
Athens 21, Lancaster, 11, and
Crooksville 222. The three units
receiving the highest. percentage over goal were
Lithopolis, Vinton and Lane

House ·Plant·
SALE .

.

Sm aII Ass.orted Plants
From 29c , ·•·
• Large
Philodendron on Bark ·
Reg. $7.95 Now $4.95

Dudley's Florist :
59 N. Second St.
992·5560
Middleport, 0.

l

;

BIG

:- •80

,.

'GIVE

A public fund drive for Mrs.
Doris Reinhart, Pomeroy, who
wtderwent extensive surgery
at Holzer Medical Center
recep~ly has reached ts78.
The fund drive Ia sponsored
by !he Sacred Heart Church
Cowtcll and contributions are
lo be sent to Mrs. Rose Sisson
• P. o. Boz &amp;12, Pomeroy, o;
droppeq by to her at the New
York Clothing House. Mrs.
Sisson and the Rev. Bernard
Krajcovic are co-chairmen of

Donations to CARE, Radio
Free Europe, and the March of
Dimes were made by the
Junior American Legion
A,uxlllary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, meeting recently at
the hall in Middleport.
The juniors also contributed
M to the Marie Moore perpetual fund and voted to
purchase two copies of the new
Ohio Government Digest, one
for the Middleport Public ·
Ubrary, and the other for the
library at the Meigs ·JWlior
High School.
The District Bjunior party to
be held Thursday at the

Singer Model 177

$58

~~~~~~c!s~~x~~~~J

The ·Fabric Shop
~~.

. THE SINGER STORE

•
~

115 W. Second 992-2284 Pomeroy
t Olfer expires February 3, 1973

PPR OVED StHOER DEALER

'A Tlldel'nlrtt or THE SINGER COMPANY.

If you haven't seen the new Fo~·
you haven't seen what's new for'7J.

MOVIE AT SCHOOL
TUPPERS PLAINS - A full
length movie will be shown at
the elementary school here at
1:30 p.m. Saturday. Proceeds
will go towards the school
library.

•

Fllf!l LTD Brougham l-Door Hardtop

Opuons shown : Po--opera~ Sunroof,
WSW steel-belted l'lldial ply 1ires, rtmole
control riaht-hand mirror, front comerin1
~ps, deluxe bumper fP'OUp, delu•e wh'"l
CO\'ers and

!op and

Ford Motor Company

a good watch
to put on
when you take off
your good watch I

The doser you .look, the better we look.
.

T'IWl unbiased pa!!dsof ~
. experts toolia dose loolr.
at all the'71can.
lestedthem~Jy.

Boued upoo these testS.••
Fonf-«Caroftheb"in
Road Test's compttilloiL

Sea
Hunter .

•32

Fontuo-

A close look shows why restyled Fords (LTD's
and GaiBKie SOO's) won top awards. Motor Trend
said, "The clincher was Ford's stock in trade:
a super~quie( interior, isolation from noise."
Standud luxurleo scored big: 351 V-8, automatic transmission, power steering and brakes

More for '73. A glove box bigger than any of
Ford's standard-size ~ompelitors. Options like
a r:emote control right-hand mirror that's driver
adJ~Iable. Power Mini-vents on 4:-Door Fords.
An tmproved electric rear window defroster. '

POLLY'S POINTERS

p---..
DE~R

:.
l~-

'"IT'S TRUE'' - - -

power ventilation, bodyside moldings, and more:

You'll like the spacious Ford Front Room.
Full-lenath door armrests. Plush carpeting.

New instrument panel ror maximum drinr and
passrnlt('r convenience.

II !'r'er 3 watch was cut out
lor the sporting life , this is it.
It has a long-wearini 17 jewel
movement, water reststant to 1
ijepth ol 666 feet. You can wear it
just about any plm, do anything and
not have to _give it a second thought.

Optlopal be.ltorldeu: Fingertip Speed Conlroi,
SelectAire Conditioner plus Au1oma1ic Temperature Control. AM/FM Stereo Radio wilh Tape
and dual
front arid rear. ·

Side-door

Steel-belled

Steel
G111rd Rails.

radial
pl1 tirn.

1
.
~
For driv_lna ~ of mllld · · . optional s1eel- ,
belted
..
1
. Jd radtal
'd ply·tires. Standard safety 'e
J&gt;aures
tnc u e st e-door Steel Gui.rd Rails, an Energy·.
Abs~rbmg Bum.per System, aqd more, And'
there ~ a.new Optional Anti-thef1 Alarm System .
So much is new we invite your close look.
Road Test calls t~e '7~ F~rd "the finest famil~
c~r 1o be found at rts pnce tn showrooms loday."'

·aEnER
VALUES

..

by BULOVA

'

·FORD;:·
FORD DNISJON,

Ke.ith Goble Ford, Inc~, 461 -Third, Middleport_ 0. ~

Pot'lleroy

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

"
•

'

,BAKER . FURNITURE

(l'llWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

You wW a·ecelve a doll•r If Polly uses your favorite
hol)lemaldag Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
to a problem. Wrlle Polly In care of this newspup~r.

,.....

sup er ·slriPC or super -

lrll il de s1gns Usc 'em

to de corate'

" The Cold Wea the r Can

20~CALLON
Sensaoonal va lue ' Rep lace vovr w or n -out
p 1eces no w t Muff1n·llns . round and square
ca.~e pans . coo kie sheet s and lo a f pan s.

TRASH CAN
S1Urdy pl;~ s l tc , &lt;~11- we ~ tller can IS made

to wtlhstand even e~ t reme temperatur es
and cond •llons Hand some gre~ co lor

Splatter Guards
U lli il ~ ~\&lt;o mmo l

stenmcr . Alurmnurn

•

ONlV

Natural N Ou d

Hang '"e•·

~ l a'n

IICallyor t10 I Il01lta lly 10 pegs
G•anl Sfl~ 16•

J99

69~ e.·.."-..:___·~-::::;~':!~P:••~.:,r5~2~.·~~

i ..~

1~!

•\

' •\ ~ .,.

.r1 '·

,.., ·'

.'.- ~-. " If'' . ·,' -..

1\('av~

8

99~
12 -0z. Beverage

TUMBLERS
N€'N pagoda " sJy le •n lazer blu e
o r avocado fl1 1rac ttv e on any ta bl e.

Trash Can liners

\

duty. 20-gar s•ze 01spenser pack

12-Pc . Se r

·MEtAMINE ·.: •: '•,

DINNERWARE
Slarte r se t I Servtce for 4. Mugs. ce teal bowls .
d H'I ner plates . Ne~ palt ern s ana co lors

WILL
BUY!

LOOK
WHAT

Hea~¥ gauge alummum w•ltl noSl iCk Te!lon llt nter•o rs Baked
ac ryli c e ~t e r ior in c hoic e ol new
k.1lchen co lor s.

panern blend$ wi ll!
mot•f. Buy il
comp lete set or just
e.u a pieces'
~J\V

2· Dr a wer File

14x3Dll 15-ln .

In ma lch•ng woodgr ain files 10 k e.: ~ all yo ur mtpo,rant paper s c hecks. docu men ts in order ... or

f699

lhr ow ·em o ul ... r•ghl m lO lh e ·· round f1le! " All o f
heavy gauge stee l w tth wR inu l ·gr am f1msh and
nandsom e b lack trim.

ClUE
Non·IO UC1

Mf!n ' S a ll COltOJl.

l!i•Hhn S•le

Pla$II C mesh
clean mg pad

BAB-0 Clm!ltr
8•9 14· 0Z SIZe.

Burns 10 hol•rs
Many colors

2far20~

31or,99~ ~:~~~NG

·Packaged

StATIONERtl1 "'"""'·'" ··"·''m'''"'

NOTES
ca• ~ s

f lo•ill dUogns 8
e e~ve' o aes "' pkg

(}'

ano

card s Lovely thcugr.n !or

18 de co ra te d sheets
W1t1'1 10 matt1'1lr1g en ·
~elopes Per tumed 1

all occ as10ns' 1210 14
c;u ds per box .

Chrom•flc 91

~

Stac k&lt;lble hi-M at
~ tyr ene

Corms

2-Color

\ . PENS

20 big sheels ul ·

g•h wrap 2 each ol
10 be.u hlul}y chlferenl des•gnt

Each sheel

£L
45 ::~.,, """''
~

20 ~ 30 -m

A real

. warue pack'

. CtHt

Ttptt

1'1• t SOO-•n CtiiO tlpa,
or '1Jx550·tn .
lfiiiiSi llle

. .

wultrn . more New'

tape

t

Automatie

• rw1tt and il ·
writes blut ·
• Twill again

.,.,

and ltwriles

.FRANKLID-1

RALL's ·BEN

Middleport, 0.

.'
'

. I

CTN Of

:•.·:v

m.~

DEAR POLLY - My young daughter loves to look· at
fam1ly snapshots but there
' was always the problem of
her bending and ruining the
pictures. At a sale I bought
several of those photo
cube blocks, filled them
with · pictures of people in
the family and now she
plays with them as blocks
and can look at the snap
shots when she wants to.
Also they keep in good
shape for anyone else to
look at them.-MRS. M. B.

C~c~t'"~''"'

0

(

~
f:

pEAR POLLY- If your children are wearing and losing
mttt~ns se~ a button on each mitten cuff but be sure it is
the rtght stze to fit the buttonholes on the child's coat . The
child wtli '!!ways know that the mittens are to be buttoned to h1s coat and he knows where to find them
'
-LILLIAN
.. ·

Quiet Is the sound ofa well-made cat ·.

C~RAVELLE ®

as moonmaids "under the

direction of ground control"
· who was Nancy Sallott,
department membership
chairman . Mrs. Kessinger
participated in this.
.
A special presentation "Old
Glory" was given by the. jWlior
auxiliary members attending
with Becky Roush taking part.
The afternoon SPeaker was
Edward T. Beck, Ohio's
representative to Freedoms
the drive which opemid only Casci, Middleport; Mr. and Foundation Teachers' Seminar
Mrs. Ralph Welker, Mr. and
last Friday.
Contributors to the fWld to Mrs. Trell Schoenleb, ·Mr. and held at Valley Forge, Pa. Beck,
date include Mr. and 'Mrs. Mrs. Norbert Neutzling, Mr. introduced by Mrs. Richard P.
Kermit Waltbn, Miss Margaret and Mrs. Roy Mayer, Mrs. Wells,' Americanism chairVadlsh, Dr. Tom Q-ow, Mr. Clarice Erwin, Middleport; man, is a ' teacher at . the
and Mrs. Clarence Massar, Mr. Mrs. D. H. Robeson, Myrtle MUlford High School in the
and Mrs. Roy ·Reuter, Dr. and Walker, Racine; Mrs. Con- social studies department.
Distinguished guests
Mrs. Ray Pickens, Mr. and stance Shields, Mrs. Stella
speaking
were Miss Lori
Mrs. Fred Goeglein, Mr. and Kloes, Mr. and Mrs. Eldon
Mrs. Francis Andrews, Long Walburn, Mrs. Myrtle Durst, Ehresman, department junior
Bottom: Mr. and Mrs. Willard Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Neut- president; Mrs. Raymond H.
Hines, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas . zling,Mr~.'Bernlce Hawk, Mrs. Sloan, national executive .
Young, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Margaret Martin, Middleport; committee woman of Area D
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Andrews, and chairman of, tlie national
Long Bottom; Mr. and Mrs. emergency planning comFrank Fugate, Mr. and Mrs. mittee; Mrs. Melvin Junge,
Robert Roberts, Conrad national chairman of junior
Ohlinger, Mr. and Mrs. James · activities j Mrs. Arthur
Diehl, Mr. and Mrs. Les Price, Hrabak, Area D chairman
Southeastern Ohio Mental Mr. and Mrs. Dan Thompson, commWlicatiOns commlttee ;
Health Center was discussed Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hoce, and Mrs. Lester Nimon, Area
with the girls by Mrs. Charles Mr. and Mrs. Harley Slack, D chairman of national
Kessinger, District 8 president. Mrs. Phyllis Knopp and son, education and scholarship
The Middleport unit will host Mason; Mrs. Eleanor Barham, committee.
Also extending greetings
the District 8 jWJior conference Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. John
were
Galen J. Houser,
to be held at Middleport on Mlll:h, Mr. and Mrs. Mark
April 28. Several 'areas of Grueser; Mr. and Mrs. Paul department commander of the
competition will be entered by Huston, Syracuse; Mr . and Ainerican Legion ; Donald L.
the
local
unit
and Mrs. Herman Grueser of near Gruenbaum, national vice
arrangem~nts were n:ade to
Rock Springs; Mr. and Mrs. commander, Americah
order the necessary materials Charles H. Wise, Waverly; Mr. Legion ; Roger A. Munson,
from the Ohio Deparbnent.
and Mrs. Everett Dalley, Mr. national executive comAs a special fund raising and Mrs. Louis Reibel, Mrs. mitteeman, American Legion;
project, the Wlit planned a Pamel.a O'Laughlin, Athens; J. P. Hone, deparbnent adbake sale to be held on the Mr. and Mrs . George Hob- jutant, American Legion.
Speaker at the banquet
Saturday before Easter. stetler, Mrs. Vona McKnigbt,
Refreshments were served.
Rutland; Mr. •. and Mrs. Fred Saturday evening was Mrs.
' '.
Morrow alld" lJifr. and Mrl! : Maxine· Chilton, .. national·
Harold Lohae. Unless other- president. A ball was held in
wise noted the contributors are her honor following the conference .
Pomeroy residents.
Lloyd Wright gave the
secretary 's report, an·d a
report of finances was given by
Edgar Vanlnwagen, treasurer .
Pearl Jacobs gave devotions.
Shown at the meeting was a
Uses Plastic Wood
movie "A Red Kite" by Harry
Clark . Refreshments were
To FiiJ in Nicks
served. Michael Wright will
have refreshments at the
By POLLY CRAMER
February meeting.
DEAR POLLY- I am answering MRS. C. W. who wants
to repair the nicks and chips on the legs of her organ.
Such places can be filled in with inexpensive plastic wood.
Directions for its use are on the can but a store clerk
PARTY PLANNED
told me it also helps first to drive a small tack in the
A commtu1ity service party
ch1pped
place to hold the plastic wood securely. I also
'for about 60 patients at the
advise addiJ!g t~e desired color of s~in to such a filling
Southeastern Ohio Mental
before workmg 1t mto place. I have just used a plastic
Health Center will be staged wood filler on a dining table leg and it holds fine .Thursday by the Junior
MRS. C. M. E . .
American Legion Auxiliary
ll1ll!:m;w Polly's Problem lZWiili:IM:lli:twunits of District 8. Con.
POLLY- So many people now have candles
tributions of cookies are
m thetr homes and they seem to be the "in" thing.
needed and residents are asked
, My questwn ts what do you do when the melted wax ;~
to leav~ cookies at the Dudley's !i
covers the wick and there is no way to relight ,the ~
Florist Shop in Middleport or
~ candle? I hate to throw such candles away. Hope :,,
with Mrs. Charles· Kessinger,
someone can tell me an easv way to remedy this 1:1
'
.
problem .-B. D.
·
lli
District 8 president. Anyone
interested in attending the
"E'iWP'fiWS1Wr
++*Ht
r=vmrtrtrrJ.
party is to advise Mrs~
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with the cords on
Kessinger so that transelectric irons, toasters, waffle irons, etc . Those on irons
are too short and heavy-duty extension cords have to be
portation .can be arranged.
· added . Those on small appliances used on tables and
countertops are so long that they become a mass of
tan_gles. ~lso, why are they almost always black when
white or tvory would be so much more attractive in the
IN liOSPITAL
kill:hen?- M. K.
Mrs. Bea Usle is a surgical
DEAR POLLY-It is a shame but purse snatching is
patient at the Holzer Medical
more and more a problem. I am an active 'senior citizen
Center. Her room number is
and solved this problem for myself. I bought a small
212.
shoulder bag and, before putting my coat on, I slip this
bag over 111v left shoulder and head (it is easy to slip to
the front when needed ) and then I put my coat on. As
I walk along no one gets ideas about snatching as they
would if I were carrying a big purse. Best of all I feel
safer.- M. S.

"11111-size Sedan of the b"ln
Motor Tl'l.'lll&amp; rompetltlon.

GOESSLER'S
,JEWELRY STORE
Court St

Windows.

•

CARAVELLE®

Rotar1e1apsed
time Indicator.
Unbtelkable
mainsprinJ.
Shock teSIS·
lant. Water·
proof strap.

Mmi~vent

Plans for a witness program
to be held under the direction of
the Rev. Robert Buckley, were
outlined by Robert Barton at a
recent meeting of the Men's
Fellowship of the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
The Rev. Mr. Bucldey and
otto Lohn who attendild a
recent meeting on Key 73 at
Middleport reported on plans
for the project which is aimed
at evangelizing all of North
America .
A breakfast was set for
Saturday morning. Prayer for
Jobn Smith, a patient at the
Holzer Medical Center, was
given by the 22 men attending.

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. James &amp;·
Miller of Waverly are announcing the birth of a seven
pound daughter, Angela Lyn,
born on Jan. 15 at the
O'Bieness Hospital in Athens.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Harold E. KauH and Mr.
and Mrs. Myron , Miller,
Middleport. John P. Kauff,
Nelsonville, and Mr. and Mrs.
L. B. Barnette, Buffalo, W.Va.,
are the mat·ernal greatgrandparents, and Hugh L.
Miller, Grafton, W. Va., is a
paternal great-grandfather.

wh1te Sidewall tires, bumper group,
"':heel coven, rocker panel moldings,

Ylnyl

'i',.,aro la!'''·'

vinyl top.

Ford Ga!axie 500 4-Door Hardtop
Op1ions_ shown : S1eel-bel1cd radial ply

exchJSive Power

.. ..,

•

BEN ,~ f.=RAN~LIIN

tatives were introduced and ·
assistance needed at the
various hospitals was outlined
by the representatives.·
Included were Brecksville,
Chillicothe, Cincinnati,
Cleveland, and Dayton, and the
Sandusky home for soldiers
anlj sailors. The poppy shop
director was present and urged
the units to get their orders in
for poppies.
Featured in lhe afternoon
was a membership skit
"Donna 's .Moon 'Probe" by the
14 district presidents with
seven as. Stardusters and seven

Witness program plann~d

We have a credit plan designed to fit your budget.
We also have aliberat trade-in POlley.
~&lt;'!

homes, state hospitals. privAti'
homes, or veterans hospitals.
The midwinter conference
Friday featured seminars on
the five major areas of
auxiliary work, veterans · affairs, rehabilitation, children
and youth, communitY. service,
junior
activities, . and
Americanism.
Friday night a coffee hour
and get-acquainted session was
held with a sing-along as a
feature. Mrs. Donald G. Miller,
departl!lent president, had
charge of · the Saturday
meeting which opened in
ritualistic form.
Speaker for liie morning
session was William G.
Graughber, chief of social
work service, Chillicothe V.- A.
Hospital. Hospital represen-

Contributions made

This Is such a terrific oppo rtu nity to save, It's almost a gi&lt;Je ·
away! For a limi ted time t we' ll give you at least an 80.00
trade-i n on any machine that sews (no ma tter what make or
cond ition) when you buy the new Golden Touch &amp; Sew• sew·
tng mac hrne. Model 750 with 576 carry ing case. The Golden
Touch &amp; Sew sewing mflch ine llas leat ures like th e exclusive
Sing!!! ' pu sh-button bobbi n that rewinds right in the machine.
There's a full ran ge ol str et~ h and fashio n sti tches plu s the
Smg~ exc lu sive soft -touc h fabric feed system. You can
ct1 ange presser feet easi ly . . they snap on and off.

w..--:

cast'er.
Mrs. Charles Kessinger,.
Eighth District president, MisS
Becky Roush, jtinior disll'ict
president; and Mrs. Albert
Roush, all of the Middleport 128
imit were on hand to receive
the district awards.
Mrs. Kessinger and Mrs.
Roush; Albert Roush of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, and
Mrs. Matiel Brown of Gallipolis
Unit 27 were presented 50-hour
field service pins by Mrs. Lyle
Roush, Ohio Deparbnent field
service director. II was noted
that Albert Roush is the first in
the State of Ohio to receive the
non-affiliated 50 hour service
pin from the Auxiliary.
Field service for which they
were honored includes direct
service to veterans in nursing

Reinhart fund standing at $5 78
,.

A1i!!!OO

SALE STARTS WED., JAN. 31 ·

'

'.

Burson .
Meigs County · members
attending were Jeanne Bowen
.
Ethel Chapamn, Virginia
Covert, Ruth Euler, Theodosia
Frecker, Mildred Hawley,
Mrs. Horky, Martha Husted
.
'
Geneva Joachim; Mrs. Lee,
Mrs. Moore, Geneva Nolan,
Nellie Parker, Margaret
Parsons, Mrs. Philson, Vilma
Pikkoja, Mary Virginia Reibel,
, Beatrice Reinhart, Carolyn
Smith: Mrs. Sprague, Anjla E.

Sizes 3-IS

lOLA'S

Meigs Auxiliaries honored

· Turner, Nellie Vale, Ann
Webs!er, Mrs. Wilson, ~nd
Mrs. Woodard.

�7- 'lbil DeUy Sentinel, Mictdzeport.J'omeroy, 0., Jan. 30, 1973

.

.

Teachers of 3 counties dinf3d at Meigs Inn

WILL OBSERVE BffiTHDAY - Stella Smith, l~ng time
resident of Middleport, now a resident at the Russell Nursing
Home, Albany, will celebrate her 88th birthday on Feb. 12.
Mrs. Smith •. who is a member of the Middleport Church of
Christ was the mother of one son and one daughter who are
both deceased, Francis LaRue and Elizabeth (Sis) LaRue.
Cards may be sent to.her in care oftbe niU'Sing home.

BETTY CANARY

Just Can't Escape
School-Out Guests
B)' BETIY CANARY
if yoll're like me, you were still in the middle of giving
thanks for the kids' return to school after the Christmas
holidays when they all came home again .
If your children are like mine. more came home than
returned to school.
If your childrens' friends are like mine they have par·
ents who go to Mobile. Ala .. or to Cuernavaca to rest up
after having their children home for the Christmas holi·
.days .
·
(For semester break, of course. they send their chil·
dren to my house.)
·
Not that I'm complaining ~ Alter all having young peo!Jle around is entertaining . thought -pr~voking and educa·
tiona!.
Where else could I learn new formulas for ski-wax
every winter and, at the same time , learn new methods
for scraping it off the side of my kitchen stove '
Where else could I experience the never-ending thriil
of readm~ the evenmg newspaper while the pungent odor
of steammg socks wafts from laundry room to living-

room ?
Where else could I be lulled to sleep by "Sweet Baby
James ," and wake up to a floor -splitting "Twelve Dreams
of Doctor Sardonicus? •·
Where else would I find that my new yellow jacket
has gone off to the slopes and. in its place, there is left a
mossy-backed raincoat'
Where else but home could ·I learn to maneuver down
a stairway lined with hockey skates'
Where else could I see a socio·mathematic experiment
in progress. 1Todav's stated problem seems to be: How
long does it take live boys, three girls , and something
that may or may not be a sled dog to eat their way
through $495 worth of groceries ? I
Where else? That's all I'm askin g. Tell me where and
l'ii have a ticket on the next plane .

Social
Calendar
WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
open meeting, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Club
officers to be hostesses.
Program of slides by C. E.
Blakeslee, Meigs County extension agent.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Episcopal Parish House,
Pomeroy, with Mrs. Everett
Hayes as hostess. Mrs. Dwight
Wallace will review "The Fatal
Friendship" by Stanley
Loomis. Roil call will be . a
comment on the program .
ALL HIGH
SCHOOL
students, Southern Local
District, invited to youth
prayer breakfast at Racine
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church, 7:30a.m. Wednesday.
Devotional period and light.
breakfast.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, home of Mrs. Emerson
Jones, 2 p.m. Wednesday instead of at the Episcopal
Parish House as previously
annoUnced.
THURSDAY
CITIZENS CHILDREN'S
Home committee, 1a:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Children's
Home .
LAUREL CLIFF Better
Health Club, 7:30p.m. Thursday at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall. Hobo party with
Mrs. Mabel Tracy as the
hostess. Refreshments wiii be
served.
EMERGENCY Medical
Service meeting for Rutland
area Thursday, 7:30 p.m . at
Martin Funeral Home. Dan
Lloyd and two other
represenlatives of the Ohio
Valley Health Service,;·
1

. Forty-&lt;&gt;ne teachers of Meigs,
Gailia and Vinton Counties, ail
members of Alpha ·omicron
Chapter of Delta Kappa
Gamma, a national honorary
teachers'
society,
met
Saturday at the Meigs Inn for a
luncheon meeting. Mrs. Roberta Wilson,
president, introduced Nellie
Parker who g~ ve the invocation. The program entitled
"Intangibles That Fuse a
Culture" as developed by the
personal growth and services

A thought for the day: In the
depths of the great American
depression, President Franklin
D. Roosevelt said, "I pledge
you, I pledge myself, to a new
deal for the American people."

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

. I

\!i~:~
....... ·J
I

An author, or other own·
er who derives his rights
from the author, may
obtain protection for a lit·
erary. musical. or artistic
work by complying with the
provisions of the U.S. copy·
right law. The law gives the
copyright owner the exclusive right to print. reprint,
publish, copy and sell the
copyrighted work; to revise
or adapt it; and with certain limitations, to perform
and record it, The World
Almanac says.

Where Time Begins
Because the Date Line
curves around Tonga, the
new day dawns on the island
earlier than at any other inhabited place on the globe.
Tongans call their island,
"The place where time be·
' ·

Athens, wiil answer questions
pertaining to the proposed
Rutland instruction class. All
interested persons are urged to
attend.

..-------·
•

t :n p ;v rlgh l ® l fl 7:1
X•·ll' t&lt; l•lll ll •l' t·:nl• ·•·pl'l .'le ,\ :-;~n.

Jeanette Thomas, and Dorothy'
Woodard. The table was
decorated with chrysanthemwns. Favors of a yellow .·
chrysanthemum and perfume
were given to the members.
Maxine Philson gave the
secretary's report and
presenting the treasurer's
report was Esther Maerker.

Thaqk you notes were read
fro101 Mrs. Thomas, Edith
Hoffman, and the family of
'Genevieve Stobart. Mrs.
Wilson thanked the members
who assisted with the
memorial service for Miss
Stobart. ·
Plans were annoWJced for
the -next meeting to be a luncheon at the Coach House in
Wellston on Feb. 17. The
profeSsional affairs committee
with Carolyn Smith as
chairrilan will present "Expressive Dimension of a
Culture.'' There Will be !!PeciaJ
music by a sixth grade quartet
Wlder the direction of Pauline

Middleport
. Personal Notes

.... -

Mrs. Claude R. Sowle, wife of
the president of Ohio
University, will speak at the
Grace Episcopal Parish House
on Feb. 15.
The Episcopal Church
Women will be hostesses for a
luncheon to be served at 12:30
p.m. open to ali area church
women interested in hearing
Mrs. Sowle discuss the topic
"Ohio University -Its Present
and Its Future."
Mrs. Sowle, a lawyer,
combines civic activities
utilizing her professional
training with responsibilities
associated with her husband's
position .
Plans for the public luncheon
meeting were made at a
meeting of the Episcopal
Church Women Thursday
presided over by Mrs: Harry S.
Moore . Ali area women
wishing to attend the Feb. 15
meeting are asked to telephone
their reservations to Mr . Fred
Crow, 992-2562, or Mrs. Ted
Reed, Jr., 992-2370 by Saturday, Feb. 10.

Transfers

gins."

.

Mrs. Sowle to
speak Feb. 15

Meigs
Property
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to
Rex F. cumings, 100 Acres, .28
Acre, Syracuse
Bill Jarrell, Doris K. Jarrell
to Kate Jarrell, 35 34 Acres, 40
Acres, Salem.
James Raymond Stewart to
James Raymond Stewart,
Phillip H. Werry, Karen Sue
Werry , 18.65 Acres, Chester.
Frances M. Yost to Elwyn R.
Yost, Lot 5-4, Middleport.
Carl Fred Goegiein, Frances
Goeglein, Fred B. Goeglein,
Joan W. Goeglein to Clarence
A. King, Martha L. King, E 'k
Lot 3, Lot 4, Salisbury - Rock
Springs Sub.
Roy E. Frecker to Robert
Grueser, Norma Jean Grueser,
5.7 Acres, Chester.
Sam N. Arnold, Ruth E.
Arnold to George Wolfe, Mary
Wolfe, Lots, Syracuse.
Richard A. ~'inlaw, Gertrude
M. Finlaw to Clarence A.
Lambert, Sally J . Lambert,
1.10 Acre, Salisbury.
Paul Sisson, Mildred Sisson
to Richard Blessing, Parcels,
· Rutland.
Albert R. Wolfe, Eva Jane
Wolfe, Edith K. Grimm to Otis
F. Knopp, Edna L. Knopp, 160
Acre Lot 1206, Sutton.

committee composed of
Dorothy Scott, c'hairman,
Margaret Gahm, Nellie
Parker, and Myrtle Fri. Lee
Lee gave a presentation on "A
Story of' Music." - ·
Hostesses for the meeting
were
Nan Moore, chairman
.
Neljie Parker, Jeanne Bowen,
Betsy H~rky, Emily Sprague,

tlil.ll!i

JANE WYMAN
JANE WYMAN LEADS ARTHRITIS CAMPAIGN
Jane Wyman has been named national campaign chairman
for The Arthritis Foundation's 1973 fund-raising drives. The
appoinbnent of the Academy Award-winning actress was
announced by John W. Brean, president of the board of the
Ohio Valley · Chapter, and Ronald J. Keller, executive
director of the chapter, Cincinnati. The Arthritis Foundation
is the voluntary health organization which for 25 years has
spearheaded the fight against arthritis througb programs of
research, patient and community services, and professional
and public health education. Miss Wyman has been ·active in
the foundation's activi'ties many years.

CHRISTENING HELD
The infant daughter ·of Mr.
.and Mrs. Roy Lyons, Patty
Jean, was christened recently
at the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. Godparents
of the infant, Darlene Michaels
and Rick Stewart, and the
grandparents, Mr. arid Mrs .
Seldon Baker, Jr. attended the
christening performed by the .
Rev. Robert Buckley.
ATfEND SEMINAR
The Rev . Robert Buckley,
pastor of the Laurel Ciilf Free
Methodist Church, Lloyd
Wright, treasurer, Mrs. Uoyd
Wright, president of the
Missionary Society, and Mrs.
Iva Powell, second vice
president of the Society, were
in Columbus Saturday for a
missionary seminar.

Mr. and Mrs. Myron Milier
were in Dravosburg, Pa .
Wednesday and Thursday for
the funeral of Mr. Miller's
brother-in-law, Kenneth
Hughes. On SWlday the Millers
visited in Waverly with their
daughter-in-law and son, Mr.
and Mrs. James R. Miller and
their infant daughter, Angela
Lyn.
Mrs. Albert Roush is a
medical patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Her room
number is 143. Both her son and
daughter, Becky and Kenny
Roush, are home with the flu.
Mrs. Eula France of Middleport was admitted to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Monday. Her room number is

SON CHRISTENED
Bryan Matthew Weaver,
infant son of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Weaver, was christened
Sunday evening at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church .
Among those attending the
christening were the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs . .
Lawrence Eblin and Mrs.
Richard Weaver, and the
great-grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ross Norris. The Rev .
Robert Buckley officiated at
the christening.

116.

Mrs. Denver Rice suffered a
fracture of the right arm in a
fall Friday down several steps
at the home of her mother-inlaw, Mrs. Homer Rice, Rutland
St. In addition to the fraclure,
Mrs. Rice suffers from an
injury of the left hand.

We Have The Cutest

JUNIOR
DRESSES
In To.wn and .. ,a Price

you can Afford ...

Pomeroy. Ohio

Membership trophies were
· presented ' to :the American
Leglo'n Auxiliary ~nits of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128 oi
Middleport, Lewis Manley Post
363, Middleport, an!l Racine
Post 602 at the aimual ~id:
win,ter conference held at the
Neil House Motor Hotel in
ColumbuS Friday and Saturday . . '
The three · units · received
recognition for being in the
firs! 100.Wllls in Ohio to reach
quota. Other Wilts In the l!:ighth
Distrlc.t . receiving · trophy
.awards were Vinton Unit 16 ·
Corning 323; Lithopolis 677;
Athens 21, Lancaster, 11, and
Crooksville 222. The three units
receiving the highest. percentage over goal were
Lithopolis, Vinton and Lane

House ·Plant·
SALE .

.

Sm aII Ass.orted Plants
From 29c , ·•·
• Large
Philodendron on Bark ·
Reg. $7.95 Now $4.95

Dudley's Florist :
59 N. Second St.
992·5560
Middleport, 0.

l

;

BIG

:- •80

,.

'GIVE

A public fund drive for Mrs.
Doris Reinhart, Pomeroy, who
wtderwent extensive surgery
at Holzer Medical Center
recep~ly has reached ts78.
The fund drive Ia sponsored
by !he Sacred Heart Church
Cowtcll and contributions are
lo be sent to Mrs. Rose Sisson
• P. o. Boz &amp;12, Pomeroy, o;
droppeq by to her at the New
York Clothing House. Mrs.
Sisson and the Rev. Bernard
Krajcovic are co-chairmen of

Donations to CARE, Radio
Free Europe, and the March of
Dimes were made by the
Junior American Legion
A,uxlllary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, meeting recently at
the hall in Middleport.
The juniors also contributed
M to the Marie Moore perpetual fund and voted to
purchase two copies of the new
Ohio Government Digest, one
for the Middleport Public ·
Ubrary, and the other for the
library at the Meigs ·JWlior
High School.
The District Bjunior party to
be held Thursday at the

Singer Model 177

$58

~~~~~~c!s~~x~~~~J

The ·Fabric Shop
~~.

. THE SINGER STORE

•
~

115 W. Second 992-2284 Pomeroy
t Olfer expires February 3, 1973

PPR OVED StHOER DEALER

'A Tlldel'nlrtt or THE SINGER COMPANY.

If you haven't seen the new Fo~·
you haven't seen what's new for'7J.

MOVIE AT SCHOOL
TUPPERS PLAINS - A full
length movie will be shown at
the elementary school here at
1:30 p.m. Saturday. Proceeds
will go towards the school
library.

•

Fllf!l LTD Brougham l-Door Hardtop

Opuons shown : Po--opera~ Sunroof,
WSW steel-belted l'lldial ply 1ires, rtmole
control riaht-hand mirror, front comerin1
~ps, deluxe bumper fP'OUp, delu•e wh'"l
CO\'ers and

!op and

Ford Motor Company

a good watch
to put on
when you take off
your good watch I

The doser you .look, the better we look.
.

T'IWl unbiased pa!!dsof ~
. experts toolia dose loolr.
at all the'71can.
lestedthem~Jy.

Boued upoo these testS.••
Fonf-«Caroftheb"in
Road Test's compttilloiL

Sea
Hunter .

•32

Fontuo-

A close look shows why restyled Fords (LTD's
and GaiBKie SOO's) won top awards. Motor Trend
said, "The clincher was Ford's stock in trade:
a super~quie( interior, isolation from noise."
Standud luxurleo scored big: 351 V-8, automatic transmission, power steering and brakes

More for '73. A glove box bigger than any of
Ford's standard-size ~ompelitors. Options like
a r:emote control right-hand mirror that's driver
adJ~Iable. Power Mini-vents on 4:-Door Fords.
An tmproved electric rear window defroster. '

POLLY'S POINTERS

p---..
DE~R

:.
l~-

'"IT'S TRUE'' - - -

power ventilation, bodyside moldings, and more:

You'll like the spacious Ford Front Room.
Full-lenath door armrests. Plush carpeting.

New instrument panel ror maximum drinr and
passrnlt('r convenience.

II !'r'er 3 watch was cut out
lor the sporting life , this is it.
It has a long-wearini 17 jewel
movement, water reststant to 1
ijepth ol 666 feet. You can wear it
just about any plm, do anything and
not have to _give it a second thought.

Optlopal be.ltorldeu: Fingertip Speed Conlroi,
SelectAire Conditioner plus Au1oma1ic Temperature Control. AM/FM Stereo Radio wilh Tape
and dual
front arid rear. ·

Side-door

Steel-belled

Steel
G111rd Rails.

radial
pl1 tirn.

1
.
~
For driv_lna ~ of mllld · · . optional s1eel- ,
belted
..
1
. Jd radtal
'd ply·tires. Standard safety 'e
J&gt;aures
tnc u e st e-door Steel Gui.rd Rails, an Energy·.
Abs~rbmg Bum.per System, aqd more, And'
there ~ a.new Optional Anti-thef1 Alarm System .
So much is new we invite your close look.
Road Test calls t~e '7~ F~rd "the finest famil~
c~r 1o be found at rts pnce tn showrooms loday."'

·aEnER
VALUES

..

by BULOVA

'

·FORD;:·
FORD DNISJON,

Ke.ith Goble Ford, Inc~, 461 -Third, Middleport_ 0. ~

Pot'lleroy

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

"
•

'

,BAKER . FURNITURE

(l'llWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

You wW a·ecelve a doll•r If Polly uses your favorite
hol)lemaldag Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
to a problem. Wrlle Polly In care of this newspup~r.

,.....

sup er ·slriPC or super -

lrll il de s1gns Usc 'em

to de corate'

" The Cold Wea the r Can

20~CALLON
Sensaoonal va lue ' Rep lace vovr w or n -out
p 1eces no w t Muff1n·llns . round and square
ca.~e pans . coo kie sheet s and lo a f pan s.

TRASH CAN
S1Urdy pl;~ s l tc , &lt;~11- we ~ tller can IS made

to wtlhstand even e~ t reme temperatur es
and cond •llons Hand some gre~ co lor

Splatter Guards
U lli il ~ ~\&lt;o mmo l

stenmcr . Alurmnurn

•

ONlV

Natural N Ou d

Hang '"e•·

~ l a'n

IICallyor t10 I Il01lta lly 10 pegs
G•anl Sfl~ 16•

J99

69~ e.·.."-..:___·~-::::;~':!~P:••~.:,r5~2~.·~~

i ..~

1~!

•\

' •\ ~ .,.

.r1 '·

,.., ·'

.'.- ~-. " If'' . ·,' -..

1\('av~

8

99~
12 -0z. Beverage

TUMBLERS
N€'N pagoda " sJy le •n lazer blu e
o r avocado fl1 1rac ttv e on any ta bl e.

Trash Can liners

\

duty. 20-gar s•ze 01spenser pack

12-Pc . Se r

·MEtAMINE ·.: •: '•,

DINNERWARE
Slarte r se t I Servtce for 4. Mugs. ce teal bowls .
d H'I ner plates . Ne~ palt ern s ana co lors

WILL
BUY!

LOOK
WHAT

Hea~¥ gauge alummum w•ltl noSl iCk Te!lon llt nter•o rs Baked
ac ryli c e ~t e r ior in c hoic e ol new
k.1lchen co lor s.

panern blend$ wi ll!
mot•f. Buy il
comp lete set or just
e.u a pieces'
~J\V

2· Dr a wer File

14x3Dll 15-ln .

In ma lch•ng woodgr ain files 10 k e.: ~ all yo ur mtpo,rant paper s c hecks. docu men ts in order ... or

f699

lhr ow ·em o ul ... r•ghl m lO lh e ·· round f1le! " All o f
heavy gauge stee l w tth wR inu l ·gr am f1msh and
nandsom e b lack trim.

ClUE
Non·IO UC1

Mf!n ' S a ll COltOJl.

l!i•Hhn S•le

Pla$II C mesh
clean mg pad

BAB-0 Clm!ltr
8•9 14· 0Z SIZe.

Burns 10 hol•rs
Many colors

2far20~

31or,99~ ~:~~~NG

·Packaged

StATIONERtl1 "'"""'·'" ··"·''m'''"'

NOTES
ca• ~ s

f lo•ill dUogns 8
e e~ve' o aes "' pkg

(}'

ano

card s Lovely thcugr.n !or

18 de co ra te d sheets
W1t1'1 10 matt1'1lr1g en ·
~elopes Per tumed 1

all occ as10ns' 1210 14
c;u ds per box .

Chrom•flc 91

~

Stac k&lt;lble hi-M at
~ tyr ene

Corms

2-Color

\ . PENS

20 big sheels ul ·

g•h wrap 2 each ol
10 be.u hlul}y chlferenl des•gnt

Each sheel

£L
45 ::~.,, """''
~

20 ~ 30 -m

A real

. warue pack'

. CtHt

Ttptt

1'1• t SOO-•n CtiiO tlpa,
or '1Jx550·tn .
lfiiiiSi llle

. .

wultrn . more New'

tape

t

Automatie

• rw1tt and il ·
writes blut ·
• Twill again

.,.,

and ltwriles

.FRANKLID-1

RALL's ·BEN

Middleport, 0.

.'
'

. I

CTN Of

:•.·:v

m.~

DEAR POLLY - My young daughter loves to look· at
fam1ly snapshots but there
' was always the problem of
her bending and ruining the
pictures. At a sale I bought
several of those photo
cube blocks, filled them
with · pictures of people in
the family and now she
plays with them as blocks
and can look at the snap
shots when she wants to.
Also they keep in good
shape for anyone else to
look at them.-MRS. M. B.

C~c~t'"~''"'

0

(

~
f:

pEAR POLLY- If your children are wearing and losing
mttt~ns se~ a button on each mitten cuff but be sure it is
the rtght stze to fit the buttonholes on the child's coat . The
child wtli '!!ways know that the mittens are to be buttoned to h1s coat and he knows where to find them
'
-LILLIAN
.. ·

Quiet Is the sound ofa well-made cat ·.

C~RAVELLE ®

as moonmaids "under the

direction of ground control"
· who was Nancy Sallott,
department membership
chairman . Mrs. Kessinger
participated in this.
.
A special presentation "Old
Glory" was given by the. jWlior
auxiliary members attending
with Becky Roush taking part.
The afternoon SPeaker was
Edward T. Beck, Ohio's
representative to Freedoms
the drive which opemid only Casci, Middleport; Mr. and Foundation Teachers' Seminar
Mrs. Ralph Welker, Mr. and
last Friday.
Contributors to the fWld to Mrs. Trell Schoenleb, ·Mr. and held at Valley Forge, Pa. Beck,
date include Mr. and 'Mrs. Mrs. Norbert Neutzling, Mr. introduced by Mrs. Richard P.
Kermit Waltbn, Miss Margaret and Mrs. Roy Mayer, Mrs. Wells,' Americanism chairVadlsh, Dr. Tom Q-ow, Mr. Clarice Erwin, Middleport; man, is a ' teacher at . the
and Mrs. Clarence Massar, Mr. Mrs. D. H. Robeson, Myrtle MUlford High School in the
and Mrs. Roy ·Reuter, Dr. and Walker, Racine; Mrs. Con- social studies department.
Distinguished guests
Mrs. Ray Pickens, Mr. and stance Shields, Mrs. Stella
speaking
were Miss Lori
Mrs. Fred Goeglein, Mr. and Kloes, Mr. and Mrs. Eldon
Mrs. Francis Andrews, Long Walburn, Mrs. Myrtle Durst, Ehresman, department junior
Bottom: Mr. and Mrs. Willard Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Neut- president; Mrs. Raymond H.
Hines, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas . zling,Mr~.'Bernlce Hawk, Mrs. Sloan, national executive .
Young, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Margaret Martin, Middleport; committee woman of Area D
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Andrews, and chairman of, tlie national
Long Bottom; Mr. and Mrs. emergency planning comFrank Fugate, Mr. and Mrs. mittee; Mrs. Melvin Junge,
Robert Roberts, Conrad national chairman of junior
Ohlinger, Mr. and Mrs. James · activities j Mrs. Arthur
Diehl, Mr. and Mrs. Les Price, Hrabak, Area D chairman
Southeastern Ohio Mental Mr. and Mrs. Dan Thompson, commWlicatiOns commlttee ;
Health Center was discussed Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hoce, and Mrs. Lester Nimon, Area
with the girls by Mrs. Charles Mr. and Mrs. Harley Slack, D chairman of national
Kessinger, District 8 president. Mrs. Phyllis Knopp and son, education and scholarship
The Middleport unit will host Mason; Mrs. Eleanor Barham, committee.
Also extending greetings
the District 8 jWJior conference Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. John
were
Galen J. Houser,
to be held at Middleport on Mlll:h, Mr. and Mrs. Mark
April 28. Several 'areas of Grueser; Mr. and Mrs. Paul department commander of the
competition will be entered by Huston, Syracuse; Mr . and Ainerican Legion ; Donald L.
the
local
unit
and Mrs. Herman Grueser of near Gruenbaum, national vice
arrangem~nts were n:ade to
Rock Springs; Mr. and Mrs. commander, Americah
order the necessary materials Charles H. Wise, Waverly; Mr. Legion ; Roger A. Munson,
from the Ohio Deparbnent.
and Mrs. Everett Dalley, Mr. national executive comAs a special fund raising and Mrs. Louis Reibel, Mrs. mitteeman, American Legion;
project, the Wlit planned a Pamel.a O'Laughlin, Athens; J. P. Hone, deparbnent adbake sale to be held on the Mr. and Mrs . George Hob- jutant, American Legion.
Speaker at the banquet
Saturday before Easter. stetler, Mrs. Vona McKnigbt,
Refreshments were served.
Rutland; Mr. •. and Mrs. Fred Saturday evening was Mrs.
' '.
Morrow alld" lJifr. and Mrl! : Maxine· Chilton, .. national·
Harold Lohae. Unless other- president. A ball was held in
wise noted the contributors are her honor following the conference .
Pomeroy residents.
Lloyd Wright gave the
secretary 's report, an·d a
report of finances was given by
Edgar Vanlnwagen, treasurer .
Pearl Jacobs gave devotions.
Shown at the meeting was a
Uses Plastic Wood
movie "A Red Kite" by Harry
Clark . Refreshments were
To FiiJ in Nicks
served. Michael Wright will
have refreshments at the
By POLLY CRAMER
February meeting.
DEAR POLLY- I am answering MRS. C. W. who wants
to repair the nicks and chips on the legs of her organ.
Such places can be filled in with inexpensive plastic wood.
Directions for its use are on the can but a store clerk
PARTY PLANNED
told me it also helps first to drive a small tack in the
A commtu1ity service party
ch1pped
place to hold the plastic wood securely. I also
'for about 60 patients at the
advise addiJ!g t~e desired color of s~in to such a filling
Southeastern Ohio Mental
before workmg 1t mto place. I have just used a plastic
Health Center will be staged wood filler on a dining table leg and it holds fine .Thursday by the Junior
MRS. C. M. E . .
American Legion Auxiliary
ll1ll!:m;w Polly's Problem lZWiili:IM:lli:twunits of District 8. Con.
POLLY- So many people now have candles
tributions of cookies are
m thetr homes and they seem to be the "in" thing.
needed and residents are asked
, My questwn ts what do you do when the melted wax ;~
to leav~ cookies at the Dudley's !i
covers the wick and there is no way to relight ,the ~
Florist Shop in Middleport or
~ candle? I hate to throw such candles away. Hope :,,
with Mrs. Charles· Kessinger,
someone can tell me an easv way to remedy this 1:1
'
.
problem .-B. D.
·
lli
District 8 president. Anyone
interested in attending the
"E'iWP'fiWS1Wr
++*Ht
r=vmrtrtrrJ.
party is to advise Mrs~
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with the cords on
Kessinger so that transelectric irons, toasters, waffle irons, etc . Those on irons
are too short and heavy-duty extension cords have to be
portation .can be arranged.
· added . Those on small appliances used on tables and
countertops are so long that they become a mass of
tan_gles. ~lso, why are they almost always black when
white or tvory would be so much more attractive in the
IN liOSPITAL
kill:hen?- M. K.
Mrs. Bea Usle is a surgical
DEAR POLLY-It is a shame but purse snatching is
patient at the Holzer Medical
more and more a problem. I am an active 'senior citizen
Center. Her room number is
and solved this problem for myself. I bought a small
212.
shoulder bag and, before putting my coat on, I slip this
bag over 111v left shoulder and head (it is easy to slip to
the front when needed ) and then I put my coat on. As
I walk along no one gets ideas about snatching as they
would if I were carrying a big purse. Best of all I feel
safer.- M. S.

"11111-size Sedan of the b"ln
Motor Tl'l.'lll&amp; rompetltlon.

GOESSLER'S
,JEWELRY STORE
Court St

Windows.

•

CARAVELLE®

Rotar1e1apsed
time Indicator.
Unbtelkable
mainsprinJ.
Shock teSIS·
lant. Water·
proof strap.

Mmi~vent

Plans for a witness program
to be held under the direction of
the Rev. Robert Buckley, were
outlined by Robert Barton at a
recent meeting of the Men's
Fellowship of the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
The Rev. Mr. Bucldey and
otto Lohn who attendild a
recent meeting on Key 73 at
Middleport reported on plans
for the project which is aimed
at evangelizing all of North
America .
A breakfast was set for
Saturday morning. Prayer for
Jobn Smith, a patient at the
Holzer Medical Center, was
given by the 22 men attending.

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. James &amp;·
Miller of Waverly are announcing the birth of a seven
pound daughter, Angela Lyn,
born on Jan. 15 at the
O'Bieness Hospital in Athens.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Harold E. KauH and Mr.
and Mrs. Myron , Miller,
Middleport. John P. Kauff,
Nelsonville, and Mr. and Mrs.
L. B. Barnette, Buffalo, W.Va.,
are the mat·ernal greatgrandparents, and Hugh L.
Miller, Grafton, W. Va., is a
paternal great-grandfather.

wh1te Sidewall tires, bumper group,
"':heel coven, rocker panel moldings,

Ylnyl

'i',.,aro la!'''·'

vinyl top.

Ford Ga!axie 500 4-Door Hardtop
Op1ions_ shown : S1eel-bel1cd radial ply

exchJSive Power

.. ..,

•

BEN ,~ f.=RAN~LIIN

tatives were introduced and ·
assistance needed at the
various hospitals was outlined
by the representatives.·
Included were Brecksville,
Chillicothe, Cincinnati,
Cleveland, and Dayton, and the
Sandusky home for soldiers
anlj sailors. The poppy shop
director was present and urged
the units to get their orders in
for poppies.
Featured in lhe afternoon
was a membership skit
"Donna 's .Moon 'Probe" by the
14 district presidents with
seven as. Stardusters and seven

Witness program plann~d

We have a credit plan designed to fit your budget.
We also have aliberat trade-in POlley.
~&lt;'!

homes, state hospitals. privAti'
homes, or veterans hospitals.
The midwinter conference
Friday featured seminars on
the five major areas of
auxiliary work, veterans · affairs, rehabilitation, children
and youth, communitY. service,
junior
activities, . and
Americanism.
Friday night a coffee hour
and get-acquainted session was
held with a sing-along as a
feature. Mrs. Donald G. Miller,
departl!lent president, had
charge of · the Saturday
meeting which opened in
ritualistic form.
Speaker for liie morning
session was William G.
Graughber, chief of social
work service, Chillicothe V.- A.
Hospital. Hospital represen-

Contributions made

This Is such a terrific oppo rtu nity to save, It's almost a gi&lt;Je ·
away! For a limi ted time t we' ll give you at least an 80.00
trade-i n on any machine that sews (no ma tter what make or
cond ition) when you buy the new Golden Touch &amp; Sew• sew·
tng mac hrne. Model 750 with 576 carry ing case. The Golden
Touch &amp; Sew sewing mflch ine llas leat ures like th e exclusive
Sing!!! ' pu sh-button bobbi n that rewinds right in the machine.
There's a full ran ge ol str et~ h and fashio n sti tches plu s the
Smg~ exc lu sive soft -touc h fabric feed system. You can
ct1 ange presser feet easi ly . . they snap on and off.

w..--:

cast'er.
Mrs. Charles Kessinger,.
Eighth District president, MisS
Becky Roush, jtinior disll'ict
president; and Mrs. Albert
Roush, all of the Middleport 128
imit were on hand to receive
the district awards.
Mrs. Kessinger and Mrs.
Roush; Albert Roush of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, and
Mrs. Matiel Brown of Gallipolis
Unit 27 were presented 50-hour
field service pins by Mrs. Lyle
Roush, Ohio Deparbnent field
service director. II was noted
that Albert Roush is the first in
the State of Ohio to receive the
non-affiliated 50 hour service
pin from the Auxiliary.
Field service for which they
were honored includes direct
service to veterans in nursing

Reinhart fund standing at $5 78
,.

A1i!!!OO

SALE STARTS WED., JAN. 31 ·

'

'.

Burson .
Meigs County · members
attending were Jeanne Bowen
.
Ethel Chapamn, Virginia
Covert, Ruth Euler, Theodosia
Frecker, Mildred Hawley,
Mrs. Horky, Martha Husted
.
'
Geneva Joachim; Mrs. Lee,
Mrs. Moore, Geneva Nolan,
Nellie Parker, Margaret
Parsons, Mrs. Philson, Vilma
Pikkoja, Mary Virginia Reibel,
, Beatrice Reinhart, Carolyn
Smith: Mrs. Sprague, Anjla E.

Sizes 3-IS

lOLA'S

Meigs Auxiliaries honored

· Turner, Nellie Vale, Ann
Webs!er, Mrs. Wilson, ~nd
Mrs. Woodard.

�.. i I

' I

Sentinel Classifieds Get Actio~!: Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
wli,;i'{ AQS
INFORMATION
j&gt;EADLINES ,

Notice
.

S P .M . D l!ly Bef or e Publlca"t ion .

MOnda y Deadlin e 9 a .m.

· Cance llat ion - Corre ctions
Wil l be l!ccepted un tl1 9 a .m . for
Da y of.Public ati on

REGULATIONS

For Sale

OP EN from 12 fo 4 p.m.; Cliff's
Shoe Repair; closed Mon·
days.
GIVE your fee t

The Publisher r-eser ves tne·
"ig ht to ed it or · r e ject a n y ads

a trea t; try

a

pai r of Kl1app Shoes ; cal l Bob
H yse ll , 992-532.4.
dee m ed o b le t tl ona l.
Th e,
123 tf
pub lis her wil l not be respons ible: - - - - - - - - - · - · c

'for more tha n one in correc t

inser ti on.

EFFE CTIVE Feb. 1, there will
no longer be Citizens Journal
~ F o r Wan t Ad SerV Ice
delivery on Lincoln Hill ; Jean
S cents per Wor&lt;f olie Inser tion
Craig, 992-3278, Middleport.
Minl m u rn Charg e 7Sc
1-30-6tp
12 cents' per wor d three
RATES

con:r.ccutl ve inser t ions .

.

16 cen ts per word s ix con -

·secuti ve insertions.

25 Per Cerit Di sc ount on pa !d
ads an d ads paid within 10 days.
·

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

'

Sl. SO for SO word minimvm .
Eac h add it ional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Add ition al 2Sc Cha rg e per
Adv ertisem ent .
OFFIC.E HOURS

8:30 a.m. to 5:00p.m. Da ily ,
8:30 a.m. to 12.00 Noon
Sa turday.
·

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of my
husband. Cec il Evans, who
passed awa y 2 years ago
January 30, 1971 . Sad ly
missed by wi fe , Dorothy and
tam ily.'
1-30-ltp

"HEll"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING .
Furnace·Controls
•
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448
Pomeroy,

Card of .Thanks

OF

1-28-Jtc

o.

QUALITY
•

1971 CHEVROLET
53500
Ca pr i~e Sport Sedan. Less than 15,000 miles &amp; spotless
inside &amp; out. 5 new white-wall tir.es transferred from '73
new ca r. Comfortron air, 400 V-8 engine, wi th power disc
front brakes, steering &amp; automatic, power windows &amp; door
locks. Dark green vinyl roof with medium green in col or.
Rad io &amp; rear spea ker. S-H-A-R-P.
1970 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
$249$
Sport Seda n, local 1 owner car, beautiful turquoise finish
with spotl ess matching interior trim , black vlnyl -t~p,
fa ctory air, V-8 engine, turbo hydramatic, power stee nng
and brakes, radio , good w-w tires, delu xe t) umper guards,
ni ce and clean.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEH EVES. 1:00 P.M.
i'PMEROY, OHIO

EFFECTIVE February 1, 1973
bi ll s for the Syracuse Home
Utiliti es and Board of Public
Affa irs will be collected at the
new Syracuse City Building ;
office hours 12 noon to .4:30
p.m.
1-29-3tc

LEGAL NOTICE

DeOtant charges .Nixon

has abandoned farmers

Local Bowling

BARBS

Thursday Night
Industrial League
January 25, 197J"
Standing,
Team
W.
K&amp;C Jewelers
26
Landmark
22
Team No. A
18
Midwest Steel
14
Mllhooe Soh lo
10

L.
6
10
14
18

22

An old-timer · is a fellow ·
who can re l·all when it ·was
fun watchin g the TV test
pattern .

' '
F o rtun e- t ell in~

is the
one thing Swiss banks
won't do for you.

SINGER automati c sewing
machine; like new In walnut
cabinet. Makes design stil·
ches, zig -zags, buttonholes,
blind hems, over casts, etc.,
$85. Call Ravenswood, 273·
9S11 or 173-9893.
1·11-tfc

REMODELING

The last car on a freight
train , the caboose , gets its
name from " kabuys ," which
originally meant the cook 's
quarters on a ship. Freight
trainmen sometimes cook in
t h e i r "cabooses," so lhe
·change from ship to train is
not far-fetched.

We talk

WHIRLPOOL refrigerator , 13
cubic foot si ze, frostfree, si x
months · old ; rea son for
sell ing, have sold my hom e;
also bed clothing, dishes and
other items ; Hatt ie L.
Nesse lroad, Route 33, Dar. win.
1·28·3tp

Notice

Notice

- -- - - -

or

KITCHEN &amp; SON

- ----:--:c----:----:--;-

WE WISH to ex pr ess our si n·
cere thanks to the Elmwood
safe and last w1lh
Nurs ing Home, the doctors PARASOL Bou tique Beauty REDUCE
GoBese
Tablets and E-Vap
and nurses at Holzer Medi cal
"
water
pills
." Nelson Drug.
Salon
near
Skate-A-Way
Center. the Mar lin Funeral
1-29·21p
Rol
ler
Rin
k
ann
oun
ces
Home , the Rev. Bill Carter,
Fro.stlng
Specials
Jan
.
23
thru
al so the friends and neighbors
Feb. 3; short hair, reg. $·15, TAX Servi ce, Federal and State
for floral offerings, during the
now
Sl2.50; long hair, reg.
Income Taxes; dally exce pt
illness and death of Mr s.
517.50, now 514.50; also Mr .
Sunday, 9 a .m. to 5 p.m.,
Hazel A. Davis.
Richard Kern s will be
ev e nings by appointment ;
The Family
working Friday and Satur Mrs. Steven 1Wanda I Eblin,
1·30-ltp
day ; call 985-4141 for apRt . 2. Pomeroy !Laurel Cliff
- - -- -pointment ;
wat ch
tor
Rd . off Rt . 7 By-Passl ; phone
February permanent special .
992-2272.
Operators - Richa rd and
1·3-30-tc
Sandra Ker ns.
------1-23· 10tc HOOD'S AQUARIUM S; tish
NOTICE ON FILING
and supplies ; new location,
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
Ash Street, Midd leport near
The State of Ottlo, Meig s
park; phone 992·5443.
KOSCOT KOSMET ICS &amp; WIG S.
County. Probate Court
1·7-tfc
To th e Exe cut r ix of the
SPECIAL S MONTHLY .
esta te ; to such .of the following
PHONE HELEN JANE
as are residents of th e Sta te of
BROWN, MIDDLEPOR T, STARTING January 29, 1973 all
Oh io, viz : - fhe surv iving
ha ircuts in Racine will raise
OHIO
992-511 3.
spou se. the next of kin, th e
12-3-tfc
to
$2 .00 .
benef iciar ies under the will ;
1-28-3tc
and to th e attorn ey or attorn eys
represe nting an y of the
afor ement ion ed person s :
Frederick William Ohlinger,
Decea sed. Mld,_dle port, Ohio,
S&amp;lisbury Town ship, No . 20828 ..
You are hereby not ified that
Ap the Inv entor y and
pra isemen t of th e esta te of the
afore mention ed, decea sed, lale
of sil ld County , was filed In this
Court . Sa id Inv ent or y and
Appr a ise men t will be fo r
hearing befor e this Court on the
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The not be able to negotiate a peace
8th day 'of February , 1973, at
10 :00 o'c lock A.M .
Nixon administration has settlemenV' with American
Any person deSi ring to fil e ''cast its lot with traders and farmers if federal officials
exce pt ions thereto must file
th em at least f! ve days pr ior to processors and other mid- stand firm in massive cutbacks
th eGive
date
. and dlemen at the e..,ense
of both in farm and rural assistlince,
n set
und tor
er hearing
my hand
..,..
seal of said Court, this 27th day thefarmerandtheconsumer,'' DeChant said, keynoting the
1
of Jan ua ry 1973.
Manning o . Webster Nationa Farmers Union Ohio Farmers Union conJudg e and ex -off icio Cler k . President Tony DeChimt vention here Saturday.
••
of sai d Court
President Nixon would not
charged · here during the
By Ann B. Watson weekend.
have ordered termination of
Deput y. Cl erk
(1) 30 (2 ) 6, 21
emergency
crop loans, and end
"Even Henry Kissinger will
to the Rural Environmental
Action Program and other cut·
backs "if the administration
was really a friend of the
Superior
6 26
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
High Ind ividual Game - Bill farmer as it led (him) to
Early Sunday Mixed
Willford 223.
believe before the elections,"
League
Second High Ind. Game Jan . 28, 1973
DeChant said.
Ray Roa ch 222.
Standings
DeChant warned that recent
'1igh Seri es - Bill Willford
w. L.
Team
630.
decision to release 15 million
Team No.3
28 12
Second High Series - Dale acres from the Grain Set Aside
27 13
Farmers Bank
Mark V
24 16 Davis 554.
Team High Game - Land· Program will "bwt the wheat
Eagles Club
16 24
Raclne FoodMkl .
13 27 mark 887.
market." He said he has proTeam High Ser ies K&amp;C
Tom's Carry Out
12 28
posed "a simple step" to enHigh Indiv idual Game - Jr . Jewelers 2514.
sure
that farmers won 't suffer
Phelps 239; Marlene Wilson
175.
disasterow losses of the reSecond High Ind. Game Morning Glories
lease of the additional acreage
Dick Dugan 207 ; Lois Burt 169.
January 16, 1973
causes wheat prices to fall.
High Series - Jr. Phelps 592 ;
Standings
Betty Smith 473.
Team
Pts.
" I asked the administration
Second High Series - Dick Gibbs Groce ry
12 to raise the loan rates on wheat
Dugan 56~ ; Marl ene Wil son Newll Sun oco
10
466.
Di ck's Grovery 1
8 to $2 per bushel and on corn to
Tea m High Game - Team G.&amp;J . Auto Parts
6 $1.35 per bushel," he said.
No. 3 652.
Excelsior 011 Co. I
6 "These I propose are well beTeam High Series - Tom 's Spencer's Market
6
Carr y Out 1908.
low the current market level
High Individual Game
Margaret Follrod 196.
therefore would not cost anySecond High Ind. Game thing or hinder reasonable
Early Sunday Mixed
Margaret Follrod 190.
League
High Series - Margaret market Ouctuatiohs."
Jan. 21 , 1973
Follrod 540.
Fluctuations in farm product
Standings
Second High Seri es supply and price seem to hurt
Team
W. L. Carolyn Tea ford 470.
Ma rk V
24 8
Team High Series - Gibbs everyone but the middlemen,
Team No. 3
20 12 Grocery 2263.
Farmers Bank
19 13
Team High Game - Gibbs he said.
Eagles Club
16 16 Grocery 820.
"The only people who like
Racine Food Mkt.
13 19
them are the big traders and
Tom 's Carry Out
4 28
processors who have the
High Individual Game Paul Taylor 202; Julia Boyles
capital to play off the ups
175.
against the downs and come
Second High Ind. Game Mile Saver
out ahead, and who all too often
Larry Dugan 201 ; Jul ia Boyles
The Pa nama Canal opened
159.
seem to have inside inHigh Series - Larry Dugan its locks to global shipping formation to cash in ilhead of
on August 15, 1914. The bi g
577; Ju lia Boyles 484.
Second High Series - Bill ditch linking the Atlantic to time," DeChant said.
Boyl es 546; Marlene Wilson the Pacific sliced 8,000 miles
420 .
I
of! the New Yor k-San Fran.
Team High Game
Far- cisco sea trip.
mers Bank 660.
FarTeam High Series
mers Bank 1883.
Tall End

By PHIL PASTORET
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes .
Wed. Afternoon League
It's a long jump . from toJan. 24, 1973
day' s two-house family back
Standings
Team
W. L. to the two-fQmily house.
Ga ul's Shake Haven
25 7
Lodwick's Mkt.
20 12
' 0 '
Watches don't ten the
Ridenour's T.V.
17 15
time: they tell you how
Good's Penn zoll
12 20
R. C. Cola
12 20
long till how long"
Rl g ~s Used Cars
10 22
after.
Ftogh Ind. ga me - Russell
Pearl 328; Lorraine lsub.) 312.
' ' '
High series - Lorra ine 41 4;
Betti Whitlatch 388.
Team High . game
Ridenour's T.V. 328 . •
Team High series
Ridenour's T.V. 873.

1970 TRAVEL ER 11 ft. truck
camper ; selfcontalned unl~ .
Will sell or trade for farm
equi pment ; Al so 3 rail cycle
tra iler, $75; for informationca ll 1-614-992-7260.
1··25· 12tp

TWO hand knitted afghans; one
white, leaf des ign , fr inged
ends; one green , gold,
tangerine and white ripple
desi~n ; $35 ea ch; Opal ·
Harns, Reedsville. 0 .; phone
378·6258.
1·28-6tc

to you

like a person.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

STARTING THIS WEEK
AT

WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

KENMORE gas dryer. $40;
phone 99:!-2683.
1·28-3tc

Thurs., Fri. &amp;Sat . Nights
From 10til2

CHARLIE LILLY &amp;
THE EARTHQUAKES

1972 ZI G-ZAG Sewing Machine
left in layaw~ y . Beautiful
pastel color, full size mu1..1e1.
All buil t-i n to buttonhole, do
stretch sewing and fancy
sti tching . Pa y just $48. 75 cash
or terms available. Trade-ins
accepted. Phone 992-7755.
l-24-61c

With big Gene Dunn
on Lead Guita,r ·

Wanted To Do

-=------ -

INTERIOR and Exterior ELECTROLU X Vac uum
painting. Al so repair work. L. Cleaner complefe with at Nice, phone 247-2308 evenings. tachments, cordwinder and
1-25-5tp paint spray. Used but in like
new condition. Pa y S34.45
cash or budget plan available.
Help Wanted
Phone 992-7755.
1-24-61c
YOUNG agressi ve Life In - - -- - , - - -- suran ce Comp any with WALNUT stereo-rad io com unl imited opportunities ha s a bination, 4 speed In term ixed
need for two agents in the changer, 4 speaker sound
Pomeroy area . Previou s
d
t 1
1
selling exper ience beneficial sys1em, ua 1vo ume con ro s.
Bal an ce $69.47. Use ou r
but not required . Will con - budg et terms . Call 992-7085. '
sider on e part-t ime . Will
l-2s-6tc
train . Stock Option Plan. Call ·- - - - - , - - - - Collect 614-267-9175 and ask BEAUTIFUL Coloni al mapl e
for Mr. Bauer.
s tere o. AM-FM radi o, 4
1·25-6tc speakers. 4 speed automat ic
GIRL wanied for IIV'al office changer, separate control s.
••
Balance 579.70 . Use our
Kn
owledg
e
of
b
wor
k.
bookk eeping and offic e
udge t terms. ca 11 992. 7085 .
1·25-6tc
machines helpful. Reply to -:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,
Bo x 729-N, ·C·O The Daily r
Sent inel. Pomeroy, Ohio.
1-26-12tp

! SL8CKS I

'

Wanted To Buy
20 OR 30 ME Dl UM round locust
fence posts, 10ft. long ; phone
992-5654, or see Wa lter McDaniel.
1-28-3tp
OLD furnitu re, oak tables.
organs , dishes, clocks, brass
. beds or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy. Ohio. Phone 9926271.
1-7-tfc

AND JEANS
Our Special:
Buy '2 Pairs, 1
PA IR FREE. The
best buy in the
cirea. Have slacks
&amp; jeans for the
whole lamily .

~

POMEROY
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

HOMECLEAN ING products;
phone 992-2579 or 247-2193.
1-5-30tp
3 ROOM house and bath ; partly - - - - - -- - furnished ; ideal for 2 wor kers DUE to divorce, 1972 8 tra ck
who want to share expenses; stereo console ; must se ll at
phon e 992-7126.
once; nice wa lnut finish . Th is
1·28-3tp set sold much higher, mu st let
- - - - - - - -go for $89.60 or $7.47 a month.
FURNISHED 4 rooms and Try it in your home. Call 992·
bath ; on highway edge of 5331.
Mason ; phone 77J.!j!e.
1·16-tlc
1-J0-10tp - , . . . - - - - - - - -- - - - - - JU ST taken in , delu xe zig-zag
UNFURNI S HED 3-room. sewing
mac hine.
Th is
apartm ent, adults only. No mac hine
darns,
e mpets , -408 Spring Ave ., broid eries . ove rca sts , but Pomeroy .
tonholes. Pay balance $36.50
1-7-tlc or payments can be arranged.
- - - - -- - -Cal1992-5331.
3 AND 4 ROOM furn ished and
1-16-tfc
unfurni shed apartments. - -- - - - - - Phooe 992·5434.
4· 12-ttc

For Rent

ONE two bedroom and one
three bedroom house; phone
992-2780 or 992-3432.
1·21 -tfc

::---

-

-

-

-

TRAILER , Brown 's Tr a iler
Park, Minersville. Phone 9923324.
1·25-tfc

Wanted To Rent
WOULD ~IKE to rent a 3 or 4
bedroom modern hom e; have
referen ces ; preferably Meigs
Coynfy; phone 992·3062.
1·14-lstc

Pets For Sale

For Sale .
Aluminum
Sheets
36"x23"x.009

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20~
8 for $1.00

The
Daily Sentinel

WEIMARANER puppies, AKC
reg istered ; phone 742-6834,
St.
Pomeroy
Rutland, 0 .
1-28-tfc ' - -- -----...:..-

Court

JUST ARRIVED, direct from .For Rent or Sale
Florida, troplc..l· fish by the
HOME, 3 bedrooms, 2
hundreds, at Showalter's Wet NEW
baths,
wall -to-wall carpeting ,
Pet, Chester, Ohio.
1·10·19tp . full basemenh call Sidney
Bowles, Wilkesville, Oltlo 669. - - -- - - -- 4426.
PARKVIEW Kennels going out
1-28-6tc
of ·business . Big price
reduction on all dogs ..All AK·
C. ·592 Broadway &amp; As h Mobile Homes For Sale
Streets, Middleport, Ohio.
12-13-ff c CASH paid for all makes and
mo~ e ls of mobi le homes .
TO MAKE room for new
Phone area code 61H2J.9531.
shipment arriving Feb. 1st; r;::::;::::;:::========4·=1=3·1'tfc
Topi cal fi sh drast icall y t
11
reduced at ShQWalter's Wet
• Air Conditioners.
Pet, Chester, Oltlo.
··Awnings
1-25-6tc
:· Underpinni_n g

Complel~ mQblle hQm &lt; i
· ,• ervl ce - plus glganfll '
GOOD mixed hay ; phone 669· display of mobile homes
4777.
~I ways avail abl e· at ...
1 26 61
- ---. P .
MILLER

For Sale

MALE , English po inter, 6 MO•·I •LE
. HOMES
months old, S150; registered ·
...
with American Field ; call 742· · 1220 Wuhington Blvd.
56~5 after 5 p.m.
423-7571
BELPRE, 0 .
1-28-6tp "' - -- - ,.-----U

- -- - --

.,

BARNEY
1 THif,I K THE

MAW .. YE OUGHT
TO SEE LEETLE
TATER IN HIS
TREE HOUSE

Business SerVices.·

COA~. Limestone, Exce ls!or
Salt Works. E. . Main St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
4·12-lfc

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

I I I I

.

"'· .

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan . 30,1973

I I

TATER!! UP IN· A

S IMMER DOW N.
MAW .. HE'S ON TH'

TREE
HOUSE!! :I .
.

Ut&lt;E !£&gt;ME
I'EIJICILWJ !

Lf"E
WH.O.T 1

SPI'6HE1Tl SA\!(E
1Jf£ts ·so~J~CllltNG .

IJ\CIVIO&lt;JE!

GROU(I)D FLOOR

r-.,..,.;.' .

•

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

CONSTRUCTION

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

HOME BUILDING
&amp;

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

BOB SLOAN

&amp;

Stop In and See Our
Display .

, FI~or

Have your home buill by
Custom Builders. Our
carpenters have 20 years
experience in building
homes in Meigs County.

If I HAVE

To Go
Take Me To

rr ONL'r' HA&lt;;
IZ3,0CI? Mll..SS

M'l SE.NIORI1Y
FINALI..'t PAID

SMrrli NELSON .

FURNITURE

C. L. KITCHEN
992-5653

From the ·targest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Sma llest Heater Core .
• Na-than Biggs ·
Radiator Speci11is.

NO ...ANt) WITH Vo'UR
H5~P I CAN KSSP li
T~AT WAV l

MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy

OFF!

BECAUSE WITH A CAST
ON1 NO ONE W I~ ~ EXPeCT
ME TO Si&lt;t,.!

C\\1 IT.

99f.2174'

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

•s.ss

On Most America~ Car.,s,

ALL WEATHER
ROOFrNG AND
CONSTRUCTION

- GUARANTEE D-.Phone 992-2094

PomeroY..Home &amp; Auto

PHONE: 992-2550

You

I'M LEAVING 11-IEM
11:J 11-IE MUSE:UM
WHEN I DIE!!- IT 'S
COMPLETE -E-.«:EPT

· Open 8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

FOR-~Oef- THIS

ONE-

SEWING MACHINES . Repair BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
service, all makes. 992-2284.
(Bill ) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Mobile Homes For Sale
4-25-flc
Authori zed Sing er Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. - - - - -- .
· 3-29-tfc ELNA and Wh ite Sewing
1971 SYLVAN 12 x 60apartment
Machines ... service on all
duplex; each Ynit has one
ma kes . Reason a bl e rates .
bedroom. living room and S EE US FOR : Awnings. storm
Th e Sewing Ce nter , Mid·
doors and windows. carports,
dining room combination ;
dleport, Ohio.
marquees, alum inum siding
kitchen and bath ; 57,000 cash
11-16-tfc
and railing . A. Jacob, sales
or take over payments of $115
per month; phone 593-8949
re pr ese ntativ e. For fr ee READY -MIX
CONCRETE
after 6 p. m.
es timates, phone Char les
r
ight
to your
de
live
red
Li sle , Syra cuse, V. V. project. Fast and easy
l-28-6tc
. Free
Johnson and Son, Inc.
tes
.
Phon
e
992-3284.
es
tima
3·2-lfc Goegle ln Read y-Mix Co ..
:---:---::-=-,-:-:-:-::-=--=-Auto Sales
Middleport. Ohio.
G&amp;E APPLIANCE Repair :
6-30-tfc
1965 DODGE 1h ton pi ckup, Repair of all laundry
slant siK engine, excellent equipm ent, refr ige rat ion
r un ning condit ion . $450; equipment and hou se wiring. SEPTIC TANKS CLiiANED
REA SONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
phone 992-6602.
Ca ll 614 -992-6050.
4782, Ga llipol is, John Russell,
1-30-6tc
12-31 -30tp
Owner
&amp; Operator .
---=-=-~::-:5·12-tlc
197 0 BARRACUDA. po we r OiL AND GAS Ser vice, new and
s teer ing, power brak es,
used fu rnaces, new alum inum
stereo, etc.; $1,400 ; phone 992- siding and remodeling, 24 C. BRAD FORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
2720 or 992-3589.
hour servi ce ; phone 843-2833.
Phone 949-3821
1-30-6tc
1-25-30tp
Rac ine. Ohio
Cr
ltt Bradford
1971 CAMARO. 4-speed, V-8, AUTOMOBILE insu rance been
5·1-tfc
buc ket seats . Reasonabl e . ca ncell ed?
Lost
your ·'="'=:-:--- , - , - - , - Call after 5 p.m. 992-7201.
operator's license? Call 992· ..DOZER and back hoe work.
1·28-6tp 2966.
ponds and septic tanks, dil6-15-tfc ching serv ice; top soli , fill
''• TO N .Pi cku p truck, '57 .-------~
- -· dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K ExChev role t ; co nt ac t Elden SEPTI C TAN KS AROBIC ca vat ing . Ph one 992-5367,
Walburn , 992-2805.
SEWAGE SY STEMS CLEAN · Dick Ka rr , Jr.
ED, REPAIRED . MILL ER
•
1-26-ffc
9-1-tlc
SANITAT ION, STEWART,
-----CUS TOM Hom e Building ,
OHIO. PHONE 662-3035.
10-4-tf c compl ete remodell ng . and
Real Estate For Sale
carpentry; fr ee es timate; call
992-7646.
HOU SE BY OWNER ; 3 or 4 Real Estate For 5ale
1-28-6tp
bedrooms, large rec. room,
large patio, modern kitchen, 5 ROOM house and batlf on Rt.
f, '
fully carpeted ; call 992-5248 143; phone 949-3116.
Real
Estate
FOr.,.
Sale
until 3 p.m. or 992-3436 after 3
1-28-3tc
p.m.; No Sunday Cal ls.
1-21· 12tc
4 BEDROM home, 2 baths, gas
HOuSE in Long Bottom, phone
furnace, full ba sement, river
rCLELAN~
965-3529 .
fr ontag e, Sy racuse, Ohio.
REALTY
1
6· 11-tfc
Phon e 992·2360.
601E.Maln
J
t-25 -tfc
·,. Pomeroy """"""
HOUSE and lots on Wright
Stree t. Pomeroy ; phon e 742· HOU SE FOR SALE, 114 Brick
5930.
APPROX. 1 ACRE
Stree t, Pomeroy, Ohio ; brick
1-24-12tc
house, J bedrooms, excell ent Just off Rt. 7 - 3 bedroom
location, close to school and
mobil e home set up ready to
city ; contact Lou Osborne or ' move inte&gt;. Extended li ving
call 992-5898.
room. Bought new in 1965.
11 -26-tfc All for $6.900.00.
30 ACRES FENCED
.. COMF ORTABLE , 2 story
Just off Rt. 681 - Lots of
home, double oven gas range,
work done on the house. 4
freezer - refr igerator com bedrooms, bath, porches .
bination, Lennox forced a ir
Other buildings. As king just
furnace, full basement , bath 51 2,900.00. Make an offer .
&amp; 1/2, attached garage, extra
THIS HOME HAS
lot, near Pomeroy Elemen·
26
ft
.
li ving R. 2 bedrooms,
110 Mechanic Street
tary School ; phone 992-7384 or
bath
,
nice
ki tchen , dining R.,
992-7133.
Pomeroy, Ohio
carpeted throughout. Large
1-28-61c
ca rport . · Is In ex t:ellent
IN WILKE SVILLE . Large old· condition . $1 2,500.00.
HARRISONVILLE
WHY BE CRAMPED
fashioned fi ve bedroom hom e
2 BEDROOMS, nice bath,
We
have a bea ut iful older
up
sta
irs
porch;
with
larg e living, level lot on hard
home, 2 story frame. 4 large
fireplace,
ca
rpef
in
liv
ing
a
nd
road near store . $4500.00.
dining room, 30 x 18 B.R., 1'1&gt; baths. Lovely new
COUNTRY LOCATION •
basement, central heat; 1 iklfchen. Car peted . 11/c acre
ONE ACRE - All utiliti es
acre; room to park several gr ound. Large building
available on good gravel
mobil e homes; close to new 40x70. All for you . JUST
road. $2500.00.
minlng operations. Bargain at $21,500.00.
NEASE SETTLEMENT
$17,500. Wiseman Agency,
IF YOU ADMIRE
.94 OF AN ACRE e- 3 large
Gallipolis, Ohio ; office phone folks wh o are oroud of their
bedroom s. nice bath, and
446·3643, home phone 446-4500. home...
MAYBE
YOU
ut ility·. Large modern kit1·26-6tc should hav e one . CALL
chen with dining ar ea . --~---TODAY.
Dri lled well. $12,500.00.
1'12 STORY ·2 bedroom brick
HENRY E. CLELAND
house In Middleport. · Car10 ACRES
BROKER
peted, paneled. Kitchen and
ON LEADING CREE K 3
ASSOCIATES
dining room tiled. Complete
Old house with dug well ,
(
TO SERVE YOU
with drapes, $6,500. Call 992barn on blacktop road .
992-2259
3465.
$5,000.00.
If no answer
1-26·7tc
LEii'EL LOT
992-25641
or 985·4209
IN TOWN - 4 rooms with
water, ga s, and electri c.
$2,000.00.
'
NEW LISTING
MAGNIFICANT OLDER
HOME - 3 bedroom s with
close ts, den in attic. Full
basement finished Into living
quarters . 2 baths, 3 car
garage . Nearly 2 acres ,
Appointment please.
HOBSON
LARGE BATH - Ni ce
kitchen, larg e liv ing , 3
bedroom s, gas furnace ,
base ment and ga rage .
(Sale Held in Heated Bldg.) r
$9500.00.
LETART
3 BEDROOMS - Li ving and
kltc~ en , back ~orch and
Household items, glassware, box
ce ll ar on Rt. 338. Garden.

- - - -- - -

Who~ t he luckLJ
winner thic; week?

1. .•

JUST PUMP IT IN THAT CLOSET, AMD TAKE
OFF! I' VE GOT TO Gf.T THI S ROBE IN TO

PD:JR.,STUPID MF?S. SCRIBBLE'S ROOM !

.lUST IN CASE Tlif'( NEFO PROOF THAT
THf:\f t:IIR061?AIN SCRI86LE 15 1 ~E ~

~ ~[!!f. ~- ~,!M;i ~

ACROSS
I. French
pri est's

Litle
·"I"" .

L----~=....._, ~~:.l:!:!::.:::__ __J

..

month
10. Protuber·
anee
New
Orlea ns
12. Large

"Minor''
13. Wise man

14. A Caesa r
15. Sweet roll
16. Stetson
17. Physician
19. Georgia
20. Dregs
21. Toward
sheller
22. Ivan,

tal
"affai rs"

(2 wd s.l
~- Gree k

letter
5. Revolve
6. Guido's
note
7. Premari-

tal
"affair"

(2 wd s.)
8. Inter·
twined
9. Grow
one's

"chop-

pers"

Yesterday's Answer
11. Cruises
25. Beef on
• the
15. Bock or
pilsner
hoof
18. Memorize 28. Filla be
19. Eagle's
tied
claw
· 29. Called
22. Mexican
31. Don't
delicacies
alter
23. Masticate 34. Genera·
24. Washingtion
35. - whiz
ton &lt;ity

PAPlL

II
IMANCEP

I

01

for one

23. LummoK
24. Himalayan wild
goat
25. Toots 26. Egyptian
deity
21. Bowling

•

JIUObi..o AGENT MAKII fLAUNT SI,HON
1 ntertlly'•

,

\ Auwert "The boat'• baclr!"-" SnlN,.

item

30. Corvin e
cry
3l.Stitch
32. Macaw
33. Salt of

HELLC,
LINVS

1

1M TR!{ING1D ORGANIZE

A TEHiMONiAL DINNER
FOR CHARLIE B ~OIJN ...

oleic acid

35. Suffix for
kilo
36. Corporation deal
37. Feminine
suffix
38. Possession

39. Watched

1· 30

DAILY ' CRYPTO(}UOTE - · Here's

how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW
One letter si mply slanus for another. In this sa mple A is
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, elc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words ate all
hints. Eaoh day Ut e cod~ letters
different.

'

At Dell's Dollar Saver '. :
·

UnoenmblelhesefwrJumbler,
one letter 14 each oqu..., 14
fona four ordlnar:r words.

3. Premari -

11 . Un iv. in

DICK TRACY

DOWN
I. Floating
2. Musical
Co un t

5. Jewish

STARTING AT 7:30 P.M.

Auctioneers
Not Responsible for accidents .

o1JWJWJ]j'[b[£®/kJ llll•wi'J ..J,...

by THOMAS JOSEPH

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 31

305.N. SECOND ST, MIDDLEPORT
Bradford
Auction C~• ..
.

FLWJlo ~TH~~

FL.\11~ £.A~.w;!

AUCTION SALE

TREES
120 ACRES - 5 cleared with
a 4 bedroom home, 2 li ving
rooms, 3 porches. Nice
double cella r with large
room over.
BUSINESS BUILDING
MIDDLEPORT - 4 rooms,
new bath, new gas forced air
furnace. Build ing Is 44x114.
Good location . $18,000.00.
LEJ US KNOW WHAT YOU
WANT IN REAL ESTATE,
YOUR FUTURE DEPENDS
ON IT. IF YOU . ARE A
BELl EVER, THEN YOU' LL
BUY NOW.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWiNGS
992-3325

Mlij~,100! ~'l.L 6E

M~'%LF,~

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

springs &amp; mattresses, Tappan gas
range, pictures, picture frames, new
coffee tables, lamps, chairs, desks, 2
televisions, antique novelties &amp; many,
many more items - too numerous to
mention.

.•

I AL!JJ/&gt;.'1;; FCf'tt\PI

Virgil B.

ss.ooo.oo.

"

WOliLD'100 BE INTERE&lt;;TED
IN· COMIN6. 1
t----,
,,---=-,;:::::::1

•re

CRYPTOQUOTES

:

P QJ

i·

U R C VVJ U P · U JJG ZL L C X·PQ X U

I J PPJB . P Q C F

VC BW JU P

Z L Q C E E XFJ UU.- Q JF BM

'

LBN X P

PQZBJ CN

,__=

Yesterday's Cryploquote: MOVIES: ONCE HELD A MIR·
ROR UP TO LIFE - NOW IT HOLDS UP A KE)'HO I,E. ARNOLD GLASOW
I ii) 107:1 1\ iul! F~·u l llri •il :-;)'h ll k-a1t·. l ne.;

~------------------~·"
r

P QJ

I

l

�.. i I

' I

Sentinel Classifieds Get Actio~!: Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
wli,;i'{ AQS
INFORMATION
j&gt;EADLINES ,

Notice
.

S P .M . D l!ly Bef or e Publlca"t ion .

MOnda y Deadlin e 9 a .m.

· Cance llat ion - Corre ctions
Wil l be l!ccepted un tl1 9 a .m . for
Da y of.Public ati on

REGULATIONS

For Sale

OP EN from 12 fo 4 p.m.; Cliff's
Shoe Repair; closed Mon·
days.
GIVE your fee t

The Publisher r-eser ves tne·
"ig ht to ed it or · r e ject a n y ads

a trea t; try

a

pai r of Kl1app Shoes ; cal l Bob
H yse ll , 992-532.4.
dee m ed o b le t tl ona l.
Th e,
123 tf
pub lis her wil l not be respons ible: - - - - - - - - - · - · c

'for more tha n one in correc t

inser ti on.

EFFE CTIVE Feb. 1, there will
no longer be Citizens Journal
~ F o r Wan t Ad SerV Ice
delivery on Lincoln Hill ; Jean
S cents per Wor&lt;f olie Inser tion
Craig, 992-3278, Middleport.
Minl m u rn Charg e 7Sc
1-30-6tp
12 cents' per wor d three
RATES

con:r.ccutl ve inser t ions .

.

16 cen ts per word s ix con -

·secuti ve insertions.

25 Per Cerit Di sc ount on pa !d
ads an d ads paid within 10 days.
·

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

'

Sl. SO for SO word minimvm .
Eac h add it ional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Add ition al 2Sc Cha rg e per
Adv ertisem ent .
OFFIC.E HOURS

8:30 a.m. to 5:00p.m. Da ily ,
8:30 a.m. to 12.00 Noon
Sa turday.
·

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of my
husband. Cec il Evans, who
passed awa y 2 years ago
January 30, 1971 . Sad ly
missed by wi fe , Dorothy and
tam ily.'
1-30-ltp

"HEll"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING .
Furnace·Controls
•
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448
Pomeroy,

Card of .Thanks

OF

1-28-Jtc

o.

QUALITY
•

1971 CHEVROLET
53500
Ca pr i~e Sport Sedan. Less than 15,000 miles &amp; spotless
inside &amp; out. 5 new white-wall tir.es transferred from '73
new ca r. Comfortron air, 400 V-8 engine, wi th power disc
front brakes, steering &amp; automatic, power windows &amp; door
locks. Dark green vinyl roof with medium green in col or.
Rad io &amp; rear spea ker. S-H-A-R-P.
1970 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
$249$
Sport Seda n, local 1 owner car, beautiful turquoise finish
with spotl ess matching interior trim , black vlnyl -t~p,
fa ctory air, V-8 engine, turbo hydramatic, power stee nng
and brakes, radio , good w-w tires, delu xe t) umper guards,
ni ce and clean.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEH EVES. 1:00 P.M.
i'PMEROY, OHIO

EFFECTIVE February 1, 1973
bi ll s for the Syracuse Home
Utiliti es and Board of Public
Affa irs will be collected at the
new Syracuse City Building ;
office hours 12 noon to .4:30
p.m.
1-29-3tc

LEGAL NOTICE

DeOtant charges .Nixon

has abandoned farmers

Local Bowling

BARBS

Thursday Night
Industrial League
January 25, 197J"
Standing,
Team
W.
K&amp;C Jewelers
26
Landmark
22
Team No. A
18
Midwest Steel
14
Mllhooe Soh lo
10

L.
6
10
14
18

22

An old-timer · is a fellow ·
who can re l·all when it ·was
fun watchin g the TV test
pattern .

' '
F o rtun e- t ell in~

is the
one thing Swiss banks
won't do for you.

SINGER automati c sewing
machine; like new In walnut
cabinet. Makes design stil·
ches, zig -zags, buttonholes,
blind hems, over casts, etc.,
$85. Call Ravenswood, 273·
9S11 or 173-9893.
1·11-tfc

REMODELING

The last car on a freight
train , the caboose , gets its
name from " kabuys ," which
originally meant the cook 's
quarters on a ship. Freight
trainmen sometimes cook in
t h e i r "cabooses," so lhe
·change from ship to train is
not far-fetched.

We talk

WHIRLPOOL refrigerator , 13
cubic foot si ze, frostfree, si x
months · old ; rea son for
sell ing, have sold my hom e;
also bed clothing, dishes and
other items ; Hatt ie L.
Nesse lroad, Route 33, Dar. win.
1·28·3tp

Notice

Notice

- -- - - -

or

KITCHEN &amp; SON

- ----:--:c----:----:--;-

WE WISH to ex pr ess our si n·
cere thanks to the Elmwood
safe and last w1lh
Nurs ing Home, the doctors PARASOL Bou tique Beauty REDUCE
GoBese
Tablets and E-Vap
and nurses at Holzer Medi cal
"
water
pills
." Nelson Drug.
Salon
near
Skate-A-Way
Center. the Mar lin Funeral
1-29·21p
Rol
ler
Rin
k
ann
oun
ces
Home , the Rev. Bill Carter,
Fro.stlng
Specials
Jan
.
23
thru
al so the friends and neighbors
Feb. 3; short hair, reg. $·15, TAX Servi ce, Federal and State
for floral offerings, during the
now
Sl2.50; long hair, reg.
Income Taxes; dally exce pt
illness and death of Mr s.
517.50, now 514.50; also Mr .
Sunday, 9 a .m. to 5 p.m.,
Hazel A. Davis.
Richard Kern s will be
ev e nings by appointment ;
The Family
working Friday and Satur Mrs. Steven 1Wanda I Eblin,
1·30-ltp
day ; call 985-4141 for apRt . 2. Pomeroy !Laurel Cliff
- - -- -pointment ;
wat ch
tor
Rd . off Rt . 7 By-Passl ; phone
February permanent special .
992-2272.
Operators - Richa rd and
1·3-30-tc
Sandra Ker ns.
------1-23· 10tc HOOD'S AQUARIUM S; tish
NOTICE ON FILING
and supplies ; new location,
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
Ash Street, Midd leport near
The State of Ottlo, Meig s
park; phone 992·5443.
KOSCOT KOSMET ICS &amp; WIG S.
County. Probate Court
1·7-tfc
To th e Exe cut r ix of the
SPECIAL S MONTHLY .
esta te ; to such .of the following
PHONE HELEN JANE
as are residents of th e Sta te of
BROWN, MIDDLEPOR T, STARTING January 29, 1973 all
Oh io, viz : - fhe surv iving
ha ircuts in Racine will raise
OHIO
992-511 3.
spou se. the next of kin, th e
12-3-tfc
to
$2 .00 .
benef iciar ies under the will ;
1-28-3tc
and to th e attorn ey or attorn eys
represe nting an y of the
afor ement ion ed person s :
Frederick William Ohlinger,
Decea sed. Mld,_dle port, Ohio,
S&amp;lisbury Town ship, No . 20828 ..
You are hereby not ified that
Ap the Inv entor y and
pra isemen t of th e esta te of the
afore mention ed, decea sed, lale
of sil ld County , was filed In this
Court . Sa id Inv ent or y and
Appr a ise men t will be fo r
hearing befor e this Court on the
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The not be able to negotiate a peace
8th day 'of February , 1973, at
10 :00 o'c lock A.M .
Nixon administration has settlemenV' with American
Any person deSi ring to fil e ''cast its lot with traders and farmers if federal officials
exce pt ions thereto must file
th em at least f! ve days pr ior to processors and other mid- stand firm in massive cutbacks
th eGive
date
. and dlemen at the e..,ense
of both in farm and rural assistlince,
n set
und tor
er hearing
my hand
..,..
seal of said Court, this 27th day thefarmerandtheconsumer,'' DeChant said, keynoting the
1
of Jan ua ry 1973.
Manning o . Webster Nationa Farmers Union Ohio Farmers Union conJudg e and ex -off icio Cler k . President Tony DeChimt vention here Saturday.
••
of sai d Court
President Nixon would not
charged · here during the
By Ann B. Watson weekend.
have ordered termination of
Deput y. Cl erk
(1) 30 (2 ) 6, 21
emergency
crop loans, and end
"Even Henry Kissinger will
to the Rural Environmental
Action Program and other cut·
backs "if the administration
was really a friend of the
Superior
6 26
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
High Ind ividual Game - Bill farmer as it led (him) to
Early Sunday Mixed
Willford 223.
believe before the elections,"
League
Second High Ind. Game Jan . 28, 1973
DeChant said.
Ray Roa ch 222.
Standings
DeChant warned that recent
'1igh Seri es - Bill Willford
w. L.
Team
630.
decision to release 15 million
Team No.3
28 12
Second High Series - Dale acres from the Grain Set Aside
27 13
Farmers Bank
Mark V
24 16 Davis 554.
Team High Game - Land· Program will "bwt the wheat
Eagles Club
16 24
Raclne FoodMkl .
13 27 mark 887.
market." He said he has proTeam High Ser ies K&amp;C
Tom's Carry Out
12 28
posed "a simple step" to enHigh Indiv idual Game - Jr . Jewelers 2514.
sure
that farmers won 't suffer
Phelps 239; Marlene Wilson
175.
disasterow losses of the reSecond High Ind. Game Morning Glories
lease of the additional acreage
Dick Dugan 207 ; Lois Burt 169.
January 16, 1973
causes wheat prices to fall.
High Series - Jr. Phelps 592 ;
Standings
Betty Smith 473.
Team
Pts.
" I asked the administration
Second High Series - Dick Gibbs Groce ry
12 to raise the loan rates on wheat
Dugan 56~ ; Marl ene Wil son Newll Sun oco
10
466.
Di ck's Grovery 1
8 to $2 per bushel and on corn to
Tea m High Game - Team G.&amp;J . Auto Parts
6 $1.35 per bushel," he said.
No. 3 652.
Excelsior 011 Co. I
6 "These I propose are well beTeam High Series - Tom 's Spencer's Market
6
Carr y Out 1908.
low the current market level
High Individual Game
Margaret Follrod 196.
therefore would not cost anySecond High Ind. Game thing or hinder reasonable
Early Sunday Mixed
Margaret Follrod 190.
League
High Series - Margaret market Ouctuatiohs."
Jan. 21 , 1973
Follrod 540.
Fluctuations in farm product
Standings
Second High Seri es supply and price seem to hurt
Team
W. L. Carolyn Tea ford 470.
Ma rk V
24 8
Team High Series - Gibbs everyone but the middlemen,
Team No. 3
20 12 Grocery 2263.
Farmers Bank
19 13
Team High Game - Gibbs he said.
Eagles Club
16 16 Grocery 820.
"The only people who like
Racine Food Mkt.
13 19
them are the big traders and
Tom 's Carry Out
4 28
processors who have the
High Individual Game Paul Taylor 202; Julia Boyles
capital to play off the ups
175.
against the downs and come
Second High Ind. Game Mile Saver
out ahead, and who all too often
Larry Dugan 201 ; Jul ia Boyles
The Pa nama Canal opened
159.
seem to have inside inHigh Series - Larry Dugan its locks to global shipping formation to cash in ilhead of
on August 15, 1914. The bi g
577; Ju lia Boyles 484.
Second High Series - Bill ditch linking the Atlantic to time," DeChant said.
Boyl es 546; Marlene Wilson the Pacific sliced 8,000 miles
420 .
I
of! the New Yor k-San Fran.
Team High Game
Far- cisco sea trip.
mers Bank 660.
FarTeam High Series
mers Bank 1883.
Tall End

By PHIL PASTORET
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes .
Wed. Afternoon League
It's a long jump . from toJan. 24, 1973
day' s two-house family back
Standings
Team
W. L. to the two-fQmily house.
Ga ul's Shake Haven
25 7
Lodwick's Mkt.
20 12
' 0 '
Watches don't ten the
Ridenour's T.V.
17 15
time: they tell you how
Good's Penn zoll
12 20
R. C. Cola
12 20
long till how long"
Rl g ~s Used Cars
10 22
after.
Ftogh Ind. ga me - Russell
Pearl 328; Lorraine lsub.) 312.
' ' '
High series - Lorra ine 41 4;
Betti Whitlatch 388.
Team High . game
Ridenour's T.V. 328 . •
Team High series
Ridenour's T.V. 873.

1970 TRAVEL ER 11 ft. truck
camper ; selfcontalned unl~ .
Will sell or trade for farm
equi pment ; Al so 3 rail cycle
tra iler, $75; for informationca ll 1-614-992-7260.
1··25· 12tp

TWO hand knitted afghans; one
white, leaf des ign , fr inged
ends; one green , gold,
tangerine and white ripple
desi~n ; $35 ea ch; Opal ·
Harns, Reedsville. 0 .; phone
378·6258.
1·28-6tc

to you

like a person.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

STARTING THIS WEEK
AT

WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

KENMORE gas dryer. $40;
phone 99:!-2683.
1·28-3tc

Thurs., Fri. &amp;Sat . Nights
From 10til2

CHARLIE LILLY &amp;
THE EARTHQUAKES

1972 ZI G-ZAG Sewing Machine
left in layaw~ y . Beautiful
pastel color, full size mu1..1e1.
All buil t-i n to buttonhole, do
stretch sewing and fancy
sti tching . Pa y just $48. 75 cash
or terms available. Trade-ins
accepted. Phone 992-7755.
l-24-61c

With big Gene Dunn
on Lead Guita,r ·

Wanted To Do

-=------ -

INTERIOR and Exterior ELECTROLU X Vac uum
painting. Al so repair work. L. Cleaner complefe with at Nice, phone 247-2308 evenings. tachments, cordwinder and
1-25-5tp paint spray. Used but in like
new condition. Pa y S34.45
cash or budget plan available.
Help Wanted
Phone 992-7755.
1-24-61c
YOUNG agressi ve Life In - - -- - , - - -- suran ce Comp any with WALNUT stereo-rad io com unl imited opportunities ha s a bination, 4 speed In term ixed
need for two agents in the changer, 4 speaker sound
Pomeroy area . Previou s
d
t 1
1
selling exper ience beneficial sys1em, ua 1vo ume con ro s.
Bal an ce $69.47. Use ou r
but not required . Will con - budg et terms . Call 992-7085. '
sider on e part-t ime . Will
l-2s-6tc
train . Stock Option Plan. Call ·- - - - - , - - - - Collect 614-267-9175 and ask BEAUTIFUL Coloni al mapl e
for Mr. Bauer.
s tere o. AM-FM radi o, 4
1·25-6tc speakers. 4 speed automat ic
GIRL wanied for IIV'al office changer, separate control s.
••
Balance 579.70 . Use our
Kn
owledg
e
of
b
wor
k.
bookk eeping and offic e
udge t terms. ca 11 992. 7085 .
1·25-6tc
machines helpful. Reply to -:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,
Bo x 729-N, ·C·O The Daily r
Sent inel. Pomeroy, Ohio.
1-26-12tp

! SL8CKS I

'

Wanted To Buy
20 OR 30 ME Dl UM round locust
fence posts, 10ft. long ; phone
992-5654, or see Wa lter McDaniel.
1-28-3tp
OLD furnitu re, oak tables.
organs , dishes, clocks, brass
. beds or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy. Ohio. Phone 9926271.
1-7-tfc

AND JEANS
Our Special:
Buy '2 Pairs, 1
PA IR FREE. The
best buy in the
cirea. Have slacks
&amp; jeans for the
whole lamily .

~

POMEROY
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

HOMECLEAN ING products;
phone 992-2579 or 247-2193.
1-5-30tp
3 ROOM house and bath ; partly - - - - - -- - furnished ; ideal for 2 wor kers DUE to divorce, 1972 8 tra ck
who want to share expenses; stereo console ; must se ll at
phon e 992-7126.
once; nice wa lnut finish . Th is
1·28-3tp set sold much higher, mu st let
- - - - - - - -go for $89.60 or $7.47 a month.
FURNISHED 4 rooms and Try it in your home. Call 992·
bath ; on highway edge of 5331.
Mason ; phone 77J.!j!e.
1·16-tlc
1-J0-10tp - , . . . - - - - - - - -- - - - - - JU ST taken in , delu xe zig-zag
UNFURNI S HED 3-room. sewing
mac hine.
Th is
apartm ent, adults only. No mac hine
darns,
e mpets , -408 Spring Ave ., broid eries . ove rca sts , but Pomeroy .
tonholes. Pay balance $36.50
1-7-tlc or payments can be arranged.
- - - - -- - -Cal1992-5331.
3 AND 4 ROOM furn ished and
1-16-tfc
unfurni shed apartments. - -- - - - - - Phooe 992·5434.
4· 12-ttc

For Rent

ONE two bedroom and one
three bedroom house; phone
992-2780 or 992-3432.
1·21 -tfc

::---

-

-

-

-

TRAILER , Brown 's Tr a iler
Park, Minersville. Phone 9923324.
1·25-tfc

Wanted To Rent
WOULD ~IKE to rent a 3 or 4
bedroom modern hom e; have
referen ces ; preferably Meigs
Coynfy; phone 992·3062.
1·14-lstc

Pets For Sale

For Sale .
Aluminum
Sheets
36"x23"x.009

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20~
8 for $1.00

The
Daily Sentinel

WEIMARANER puppies, AKC
reg istered ; phone 742-6834,
St.
Pomeroy
Rutland, 0 .
1-28-tfc ' - -- -----...:..-

Court

JUST ARRIVED, direct from .For Rent or Sale
Florida, troplc..l· fish by the
HOME, 3 bedrooms, 2
hundreds, at Showalter's Wet NEW
baths,
wall -to-wall carpeting ,
Pet, Chester, Ohio.
1·10·19tp . full basemenh call Sidney
Bowles, Wilkesville, Oltlo 669. - - -- - - -- 4426.
PARKVIEW Kennels going out
1-28-6tc
of ·business . Big price
reduction on all dogs ..All AK·
C. ·592 Broadway &amp; As h Mobile Homes For Sale
Streets, Middleport, Ohio.
12-13-ff c CASH paid for all makes and
mo~ e ls of mobi le homes .
TO MAKE room for new
Phone area code 61H2J.9531.
shipment arriving Feb. 1st; r;::::;::::;:::========4·=1=3·1'tfc
Topi cal fi sh drast icall y t
11
reduced at ShQWalter's Wet
• Air Conditioners.
Pet, Chester, Oltlo.
··Awnings
1-25-6tc
:· Underpinni_n g

Complel~ mQblle hQm &lt; i
· ,• ervl ce - plus glganfll '
GOOD mixed hay ; phone 669· display of mobile homes
4777.
~I ways avail abl e· at ...
1 26 61
- ---. P .
MILLER

For Sale

MALE , English po inter, 6 MO•·I •LE
. HOMES
months old, S150; registered ·
...
with American Field ; call 742· · 1220 Wuhington Blvd.
56~5 after 5 p.m.
423-7571
BELPRE, 0 .
1-28-6tp "' - -- - ,.-----U

- -- - --

.,

BARNEY
1 THif,I K THE

MAW .. YE OUGHT
TO SEE LEETLE
TATER IN HIS
TREE HOUSE

Business SerVices.·

COA~. Limestone, Exce ls!or
Salt Works. E. . Main St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
4·12-lfc

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

I I I I

.

"'· .

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan . 30,1973

I I

TATER!! UP IN· A

S IMMER DOW N.
MAW .. HE'S ON TH'

TREE
HOUSE!! :I .
.

Ut&lt;E !£&gt;ME
I'EIJICILWJ !

Lf"E
WH.O.T 1

SPI'6HE1Tl SA\!(E
1Jf£ts ·so~J~CllltNG .

IJ\CIVIO&lt;JE!

GROU(I)D FLOOR

r-.,..,.;.' .

•

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

CONSTRUCTION

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

HOME BUILDING
&amp;

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

BOB SLOAN

&amp;

Stop In and See Our
Display .

, FI~or

Have your home buill by
Custom Builders. Our
carpenters have 20 years
experience in building
homes in Meigs County.

If I HAVE

To Go
Take Me To

rr ONL'r' HA&lt;;
IZ3,0CI? Mll..SS

M'l SE.NIORI1Y
FINALI..'t PAID

SMrrli NELSON .

FURNITURE

C. L. KITCHEN
992-5653

From the ·targest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Sma llest Heater Core .
• Na-than Biggs ·
Radiator Speci11is.

NO ...ANt) WITH Vo'UR
H5~P I CAN KSSP li
T~AT WAV l

MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy

OFF!

BECAUSE WITH A CAST
ON1 NO ONE W I~ ~ EXPeCT
ME TO Si&lt;t,.!

C\\1 IT.

99f.2174'

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

•s.ss

On Most America~ Car.,s,

ALL WEATHER
ROOFrNG AND
CONSTRUCTION

- GUARANTEE D-.Phone 992-2094

PomeroY..Home &amp; Auto

PHONE: 992-2550

You

I'M LEAVING 11-IEM
11:J 11-IE MUSE:UM
WHEN I DIE!!- IT 'S
COMPLETE -E-.«:EPT

· Open 8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

FOR-~Oef- THIS

ONE-

SEWING MACHINES . Repair BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
service, all makes. 992-2284.
(Bill ) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Mobile Homes For Sale
4-25-flc
Authori zed Sing er Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. - - - - -- .
· 3-29-tfc ELNA and Wh ite Sewing
1971 SYLVAN 12 x 60apartment
Machines ... service on all
duplex; each Ynit has one
ma kes . Reason a bl e rates .
bedroom. living room and S EE US FOR : Awnings. storm
Th e Sewing Ce nter , Mid·
doors and windows. carports,
dining room combination ;
dleport, Ohio.
marquees, alum inum siding
kitchen and bath ; 57,000 cash
11-16-tfc
and railing . A. Jacob, sales
or take over payments of $115
per month; phone 593-8949
re pr ese ntativ e. For fr ee READY -MIX
CONCRETE
after 6 p. m.
es timates, phone Char les
r
ight
to your
de
live
red
Li sle , Syra cuse, V. V. project. Fast and easy
l-28-6tc
. Free
Johnson and Son, Inc.
tes
.
Phon
e
992-3284.
es
tima
3·2-lfc Goegle ln Read y-Mix Co ..
:---:---::-=-,-:-:-:-::-=--=-Auto Sales
Middleport. Ohio.
G&amp;E APPLIANCE Repair :
6-30-tfc
1965 DODGE 1h ton pi ckup, Repair of all laundry
slant siK engine, excellent equipm ent, refr ige rat ion
r un ning condit ion . $450; equipment and hou se wiring. SEPTIC TANKS CLiiANED
REA SONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
phone 992-6602.
Ca ll 614 -992-6050.
4782, Ga llipol is, John Russell,
1-30-6tc
12-31 -30tp
Owner
&amp; Operator .
---=-=-~::-:5·12-tlc
197 0 BARRACUDA. po we r OiL AND GAS Ser vice, new and
s teer ing, power brak es,
used fu rnaces, new alum inum
stereo, etc.; $1,400 ; phone 992- siding and remodeling, 24 C. BRAD FORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
2720 or 992-3589.
hour servi ce ; phone 843-2833.
Phone 949-3821
1-30-6tc
1-25-30tp
Rac ine. Ohio
Cr
ltt Bradford
1971 CAMARO. 4-speed, V-8, AUTOMOBILE insu rance been
5·1-tfc
buc ket seats . Reasonabl e . ca ncell ed?
Lost
your ·'="'=:-:--- , - , - - , - Call after 5 p.m. 992-7201.
operator's license? Call 992· ..DOZER and back hoe work.
1·28-6tp 2966.
ponds and septic tanks, dil6-15-tfc ching serv ice; top soli , fill
''• TO N .Pi cku p truck, '57 .-------~
- -· dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K ExChev role t ; co nt ac t Elden SEPTI C TAN KS AROBIC ca vat ing . Ph one 992-5367,
Walburn , 992-2805.
SEWAGE SY STEMS CLEAN · Dick Ka rr , Jr.
ED, REPAIRED . MILL ER
•
1-26-ffc
9-1-tlc
SANITAT ION, STEWART,
-----CUS TOM Hom e Building ,
OHIO. PHONE 662-3035.
10-4-tf c compl ete remodell ng . and
Real Estate For Sale
carpentry; fr ee es timate; call
992-7646.
HOU SE BY OWNER ; 3 or 4 Real Estate For 5ale
1-28-6tp
bedrooms, large rec. room,
large patio, modern kitchen, 5 ROOM house and batlf on Rt.
f, '
fully carpeted ; call 992-5248 143; phone 949-3116.
Real
Estate
FOr.,.
Sale
until 3 p.m. or 992-3436 after 3
1-28-3tc
p.m.; No Sunday Cal ls.
1-21· 12tc
4 BEDROM home, 2 baths, gas
HOuSE in Long Bottom, phone
furnace, full ba sement, river
rCLELAN~
965-3529 .
fr ontag e, Sy racuse, Ohio.
REALTY
1
6· 11-tfc
Phon e 992·2360.
601E.Maln
J
t-25 -tfc
·,. Pomeroy """"""
HOUSE and lots on Wright
Stree t. Pomeroy ; phon e 742· HOU SE FOR SALE, 114 Brick
5930.
APPROX. 1 ACRE
Stree t, Pomeroy, Ohio ; brick
1-24-12tc
house, J bedrooms, excell ent Just off Rt. 7 - 3 bedroom
location, close to school and
mobil e home set up ready to
city ; contact Lou Osborne or ' move inte&gt;. Extended li ving
call 992-5898.
room. Bought new in 1965.
11 -26-tfc All for $6.900.00.
30 ACRES FENCED
.. COMF ORTABLE , 2 story
Just off Rt. 681 - Lots of
home, double oven gas range,
work done on the house. 4
freezer - refr igerator com bedrooms, bath, porches .
bination, Lennox forced a ir
Other buildings. As king just
furnace, full basement , bath 51 2,900.00. Make an offer .
&amp; 1/2, attached garage, extra
THIS HOME HAS
lot, near Pomeroy Elemen·
26
ft
.
li ving R. 2 bedrooms,
110 Mechanic Street
tary School ; phone 992-7384 or
bath
,
nice
ki tchen , dining R.,
992-7133.
Pomeroy, Ohio
carpeted throughout. Large
1-28-61c
ca rport . · Is In ex t:ellent
IN WILKE SVILLE . Large old· condition . $1 2,500.00.
HARRISONVILLE
WHY BE CRAMPED
fashioned fi ve bedroom hom e
2 BEDROOMS, nice bath,
We
have a bea ut iful older
up
sta
irs
porch;
with
larg e living, level lot on hard
home, 2 story frame. 4 large
fireplace,
ca
rpef
in
liv
ing
a
nd
road near store . $4500.00.
dining room, 30 x 18 B.R., 1'1&gt; baths. Lovely new
COUNTRY LOCATION •
basement, central heat; 1 iklfchen. Car peted . 11/c acre
ONE ACRE - All utiliti es
acre; room to park several gr ound. Large building
available on good gravel
mobil e homes; close to new 40x70. All for you . JUST
road. $2500.00.
minlng operations. Bargain at $21,500.00.
NEASE SETTLEMENT
$17,500. Wiseman Agency,
IF YOU ADMIRE
.94 OF AN ACRE e- 3 large
Gallipolis, Ohio ; office phone folks wh o are oroud of their
bedroom s. nice bath, and
446·3643, home phone 446-4500. home...
MAYBE
YOU
ut ility·. Large modern kit1·26-6tc should hav e one . CALL
chen with dining ar ea . --~---TODAY.
Dri lled well. $12,500.00.
1'12 STORY ·2 bedroom brick
HENRY E. CLELAND
house In Middleport. · Car10 ACRES
BROKER
peted, paneled. Kitchen and
ON LEADING CREE K 3
ASSOCIATES
dining room tiled. Complete
Old house with dug well ,
(
TO SERVE YOU
with drapes, $6,500. Call 992barn on blacktop road .
992-2259
3465.
$5,000.00.
If no answer
1-26·7tc
LEii'EL LOT
992-25641
or 985·4209
IN TOWN - 4 rooms with
water, ga s, and electri c.
$2,000.00.
'
NEW LISTING
MAGNIFICANT OLDER
HOME - 3 bedroom s with
close ts, den in attic. Full
basement finished Into living
quarters . 2 baths, 3 car
garage . Nearly 2 acres ,
Appointment please.
HOBSON
LARGE BATH - Ni ce
kitchen, larg e liv ing , 3
bedroom s, gas furnace ,
base ment and ga rage .
(Sale Held in Heated Bldg.) r
$9500.00.
LETART
3 BEDROOMS - Li ving and
kltc~ en , back ~orch and
Household items, glassware, box
ce ll ar on Rt. 338. Garden.

- - - -- - -

Who~ t he luckLJ
winner thic; week?

1. .•

JUST PUMP IT IN THAT CLOSET, AMD TAKE
OFF! I' VE GOT TO Gf.T THI S ROBE IN TO

PD:JR.,STUPID MF?S. SCRIBBLE'S ROOM !

.lUST IN CASE Tlif'( NEFO PROOF THAT
THf:\f t:IIR061?AIN SCRI86LE 15 1 ~E ~

~ ~[!!f. ~- ~,!M;i ~

ACROSS
I. French
pri est's

Litle
·"I"" .

L----~=....._, ~~:.l:!:!::.:::__ __J

..

month
10. Protuber·
anee
New
Orlea ns
12. Large

"Minor''
13. Wise man

14. A Caesa r
15. Sweet roll
16. Stetson
17. Physician
19. Georgia
20. Dregs
21. Toward
sheller
22. Ivan,

tal
"affai rs"

(2 wd s.l
~- Gree k

letter
5. Revolve
6. Guido's
note
7. Premari-

tal
"affair"

(2 wd s.)
8. Inter·
twined
9. Grow
one's

"chop-

pers"

Yesterday's Answer
11. Cruises
25. Beef on
• the
15. Bock or
pilsner
hoof
18. Memorize 28. Filla be
19. Eagle's
tied
claw
· 29. Called
22. Mexican
31. Don't
delicacies
alter
23. Masticate 34. Genera·
24. Washingtion
35. - whiz
ton &lt;ity

PAPlL

II
IMANCEP

I

01

for one

23. LummoK
24. Himalayan wild
goat
25. Toots 26. Egyptian
deity
21. Bowling

•

JIUObi..o AGENT MAKII fLAUNT SI,HON
1 ntertlly'•

,

\ Auwert "The boat'• baclr!"-" SnlN,.

item

30. Corvin e
cry
3l.Stitch
32. Macaw
33. Salt of

HELLC,
LINVS

1

1M TR!{ING1D ORGANIZE

A TEHiMONiAL DINNER
FOR CHARLIE B ~OIJN ...

oleic acid

35. Suffix for
kilo
36. Corporation deal
37. Feminine
suffix
38. Possession

39. Watched

1· 30

DAILY ' CRYPTO(}UOTE - · Here's

how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW
One letter si mply slanus for another. In this sa mple A is
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, elc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words ate all
hints. Eaoh day Ut e cod~ letters
different.

'

At Dell's Dollar Saver '. :
·

UnoenmblelhesefwrJumbler,
one letter 14 each oqu..., 14
fona four ordlnar:r words.

3. Premari -

11 . Un iv. in

DICK TRACY

DOWN
I. Floating
2. Musical
Co un t

5. Jewish

STARTING AT 7:30 P.M.

Auctioneers
Not Responsible for accidents .

o1JWJWJ]j'[b[£®/kJ llll•wi'J ..J,...

by THOMAS JOSEPH

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 31

305.N. SECOND ST, MIDDLEPORT
Bradford
Auction C~• ..
.

FLWJlo ~TH~~

FL.\11~ £.A~.w;!

AUCTION SALE

TREES
120 ACRES - 5 cleared with
a 4 bedroom home, 2 li ving
rooms, 3 porches. Nice
double cella r with large
room over.
BUSINESS BUILDING
MIDDLEPORT - 4 rooms,
new bath, new gas forced air
furnace. Build ing Is 44x114.
Good location . $18,000.00.
LEJ US KNOW WHAT YOU
WANT IN REAL ESTATE,
YOUR FUTURE DEPENDS
ON IT. IF YOU . ARE A
BELl EVER, THEN YOU' LL
BUY NOW.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWiNGS
992-3325

Mlij~,100! ~'l.L 6E

M~'%LF,~

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

springs &amp; mattresses, Tappan gas
range, pictures, picture frames, new
coffee tables, lamps, chairs, desks, 2
televisions, antique novelties &amp; many,
many more items - too numerous to
mention.

.•

I AL!JJ/&gt;.'1;; FCf'tt\PI

Virgil B.

ss.ooo.oo.

"

WOliLD'100 BE INTERE&lt;;TED
IN· COMIN6. 1
t----,
,,---=-,;:::::::1

•re

CRYPTOQUOTES

:

P QJ

i·

U R C VVJ U P · U JJG ZL L C X·PQ X U

I J PPJB . P Q C F

VC BW JU P

Z L Q C E E XFJ UU.- Q JF BM

'

LBN X P

PQZBJ CN

,__=

Yesterday's Cryploquote: MOVIES: ONCE HELD A MIR·
ROR UP TO LIFE - NOW IT HOLDS UP A KE)'HO I,E. ARNOLD GLASOW
I ii) 107:1 1\ iul! F~·u l llri •il :-;)'h ll k-a1t·. l ne.;

~------------------~·"
r

P QJ

I

l

�•• •
0

~~W'8T !Tii'" lf'"W

10 - The Daily Sentinel, MidcDeport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 30,1973

Complete POW lists
demanded 'from Hanoi
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Through diplomatic channels
and in public statements, the
United States is pressuring
Hanoi to release a list of
American prisoners of war
held in Laos and to account for
56 other "known" POWs not
included on the official Communist roster .
If the captives in Laos and
the other 56 prisoners were
acknowledged, defense officials believe, more than 100
names might be added tD the
official listing of 555living and
55 dead POWs given to U. S.
diplomats at the cease-fire
signing in Paris Saturday. The
Pentagon expects to receive
the missing list "soon."
Friedham also said a
painstaking analysis of the
Communist list had turned up
the omission of 56 names of
servicemen the Pentagon
definitely considers POWs
because of information put out
earlier by the Communists
themselves or received
through intelligence channels.
Some of these men appeared
in
POW
propaganda
photographs and movies from
Hanoi or were mentioned in
news dispatches filed by
correspondents in the North
Vietnamese capt tal. The
Pentagon did not identify for
newsmen the 56 men
Friedheim referred ID. At least
16 of them, however, have been
previously identified officially
!H' unofficially by defense officials.
Two of them- Navy Lt. (jg)
Walter 0. Estes II of Williamston, Mich., and Navy Lt. (jg)
James E . Teague of
Harrisburg , Ark. - were
among 14 the Pentagon
described a year ago in a
booklet entitled "Hanoi
Refuses tD Disclose the Fate of
These Men."
The ,mystery of the 56
unacknowledged men was just

one kind of discrepancy with
which "Project Homecoming"
POW experts have been wrestling in a gold curtained command post at the Pentagon,
Frif,dheim said.
Another, he said, was the
puzzling fact that the total of
the living and dead supplied by
the communists, plus the 1,269
names of missing or captured
U. S. servicemen the Pentagon
says they did not list, adds up
to 10 more men than the total
number the United States
believed had disappeared in
South Asia.
"I can't reconcile that for
you," Friedheim said.
Besides Estes and Teague,
other "known" POWs never
acknowledged include :
- Navy Lt . Cmdr. Milton J

- Navy Lt. Cmdr . Randolph

W. Ford, shot down June 11 ,
1968, in Ha Tanh Provin ce,

Norlh Vietnam . Ford reported

on his rescue radio his arm was
broken and warned a rescue
helicopter away because of

Norlh Vietnamese troops in 1)1e

area . The Pentagon says Hanoi

radio " announced capture of a
pilot at a time and place whith
correlated with Ford's loss."
Classified intell igence sources
report Ford died in captivity
nine days after he was shot

down.

- Navy Lt. James Patterson , shot down May 19, 1967

in Hal Duong Prov ince, North
Vietnam , who maintain ed
radio contact for 2112 days and

North Vietnam . Defense of.
ficial s say Radio Har oi an nounced th e capture of two
pilot s at the ti me ar\d place of
Monroe 's loss.

- Air Force Maj . Joseph C.

Morrison. shot down Nov. 25,

over

1968,

Quang

Binh

Province , North Vietnam .
Rescue pilots contacted him on
th e ground twi ce and he.
reported he was uninjured. His
parachute was sighted half a
mile from a North Vietnamese
encampment.

-

Air Force Maj . Sam

Oewayne
Franc i s.co ,
Morr ison ' s
copilot,
who
maintained radio contact with
rescue forces fOr only half an
hour after he landed .

- Air Force Capt . Arthur L.
Warren, shot down Dec. 5, 1966,
In Yen Bai Province, North
Vietnam , who was in touch
with rescue forces for two
hours after he landed .

- Air Force Capt. Frederick

M. Mellor, a reconnaissance

1966, and reported captured
that day in lhe Dec . 16 edition

of the new spa per Vietnam
Courier . A foreign wire service
report on Oec. 17 carried a
conf l1cfing report that Waters

was killed the day he ejected,
but a Bulgarian newspaper,

Naroda Armiya, quoted the

captain in an article Jan. 21,
1967, and included a picture of
his Air Force 10 card .

- Air Force Lt. Ronald
Dodge, shot down May 17, 1967,

over Hanoi. He appeared In a

lull page photograph printed In

Paris Match magazine the next
September . The pi cture was

taken by a Dutch photographer
in Hanoi. He also later ap.
peared in a movie the U. S.
gove~nment obtained from

Hano1.

- An Air Force pilot shot
reported that he had a broken
leg. The other man in Pat. down March 22, 1968, in North
terson 's plane, Cmdr, Eugene
B.
MacDaniel ,
is
an

Vietnam near the Laotian
bor"d er, whose family has
requested
his
identity
withheld. Pentagon sources

acknowledged POW.
- Air Force Capt. William
R. Andrews. who ejected Oct. say this pilot was sighted twice
5, 1966, and landed In Nghia Lo in a POW camp near Hanoi by
Province, North Vietnam. He other American POWs who
r eported he was uninjured, but
that North V1etnamese forces
were approaching . Later he
r ad ioed he was wounded and
losing consciousness .

- Air Force Capt. John M.
Brucher, who eiecled Feb. 8,

tree
himself.
Rescue
heli copters the next day saw
his parBchute hanging In the

Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Jan. 31 &amp; Feb. 1
NOT OPEN

acknowledg ed as a POW in

Vietnam, who reported landing
without serious injury but lost
radio contact as rescue forces
were arriv i ng.
- Air Force Capt. Samuel E.
Waters, shot down Dec. 13,

who was seen by other pilots to
ej ect and land safely in a
populated area. One other pilot
reported Vescelius " standing
on the ground, apparent ly in
good condition, surrounded by
North Vietnamese for ces."

parachute lines and unable to

YOU' Ll LIKE
MY MOTHER
(Technicolorl
Patty Duke,
Richard
Thomas, Rosemary Murphy,
Sian Barbara Allen.
(GPl
Show Starts 7 p.m.

been

over Haiphong Sept. 21. 1967,

suspended In midair by his

January 30

si nce

pilot shot down Aug. 12, 1965, in
Ngh ia Lo Province , North

reported landlng in a tree

TONIGHT

has

Vescelius, San Diego, Ca lif. , a

reconnaissance pilot shot down

1969, over Quang
Binh
Province in North Vietnam and

MEIGS THEATRE

who

tree empty .

- Air For~e Ma j. Elwin R.
Capling , who successfully
ejected over Quang Binh

Province Norlh Vietnam, Sept.
19, 1968 . He reported his leg

broken

on

landing

and

requested help, bul North
Vietnamese troops in the area

prevented rescue.
- Navy Lt. Cmdr. Vincent
D. Monroe, downed May 18,
1968, in Nghe An Province,
North Vietnam . Rescue rad10
signals were received from
Monroe and a cr ew member

have since been released by the
North Vietnamese.

Ghetto
(Continued from· page I)
Michael G. oakes, the boys'
basketball coach was quoted as
saying: "Both Gene an~ Pierre
would talk about the dangers of
Chicago, where they once
lived. They would talk about
the gangs, but I don 'I think
their friends really knew what
they were talking about."
Both boys were on . the
football, basketball, and track
teams. Gene, a senior, was up
for a scholarship to college.
Police today were trying to
determine if the youths were
shot for resisting a holdup at

, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. and
the 57th
Gullstreet
stationIUinois
or by Central
one of
the city's many street gangs.
Mrs. Louvern Roby, Lyles'
mother, said seven years ago,
Gene A. Robinson, Sr., moved
his wife and Gene Jr . to Union
Pier-nearly an ail-white
resort town about 70 miles
from Chicago.
Three years later, Robinson,
Mrs. Lyles' brother, asked if
she w~uld allow Pierre to come
live with them and attend
school.
"The South Side had gotten
pretty rotten," Mrs. Roby said.
"The schools w~re bad and the
gangs were getting up .
"It was hard tD send him
away. But Gene was living
comfortable and I knew Pierre
would get a g~ education."
The boys became inseparable, Mrs. Roby said, good
students, and had no police
record or known gang connections.
"There was no question
about it, they were going to be
successful," 'said
Ron
Morrison
,
principal
of
the
Banking has come a long way
junior and senior high school at
New Buffalo. ''They had a lot tD
since the horse and buggy.
look forward to."
But. one thing ~t our bank has

We've come
a_long way •••

never changed . That's old-lash·
ioned, courteous ser:nce. Why

The Daily Sentinel

not bank where the customer is

DEVOTEDTOTHE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS · MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL.

treated as more than just a com-

Euc. Ed .

puter numbe~. Bank with us.

WHE~

ROBERT HOEFLICH,

YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

,1\k

PITTSBURGH ·

liibens ~alioNl'
-c.CIHCINNATI ·

....

MIDDLEPoRT, OHIO
Member Federal Depdlll In&amp;uraace Corporalloa

City Editor
Published daily ucepl
Saturday bv The Ohio Valley
Pub li sh ing Company , 111
Court St., Pomerov . Ohio .
45769 . Business Office Phone
992 2156, Ed itor ial Phone 992 2157 .
S&amp;cond class postage paid at
Pornerov , Oh io
.
Nat i onal adve r l l s 1ng
representative
Bottinelli ·
Gallagher , In c., 12 East 42nd
St. , New York Cify, New York .
Sub,sc ripliOr1 rates : De ·
livered by carr ier where
available SO cents per week..,
By Motor Route where carr ier
servic e not ava1l1blt : Ont
mon th 11 75 Bv ma il in Otllo
enq W. V a • One year SU .OO
Silt months $1 .25 . Thrte
months u .so . Subscr iptlon
pr ice includes Sundey Times

lSenfine,l.

News • • . in Briefs

Prisoner·

(Continued from page I)
friend and assistant Horace Busby on Jan. 19 to draw up a
statement for Johnson to make when the agreement was signed.

ha~

WASHINGTON - W. A. "TONY" BOYLE, the deposed
president of the United Mine Workers Union, has had his pension
slashed from $50,000 to $16,000 a year . The union's executive
board also cut the salaries of eight top staff people by about 40
pet.
"We're not going to retire on full salary while coal miners get
$1~a month," ~id Arnold Miller, new UMW president. "We're
not going tD ride around in Cadillac ljjnousin~s or receive special
medical benefits." Boyle is facing a federal prison term for
making illegal contributions of union funds tD ·political candidates.

in office

CINCINNATI (UP!) Ronnie Plummer, 22, broke out
of the .HamiltDn County Courthouse where he was scheduled
to go on trial today on an armed robbery ·charge and ran
into an office equipment
company where he grabbed an
employe and held him as a
BERKELEY, CALIF. (Ufl) - UFE IS short - especially hostage at knifepoint.
Police said Plummer was
for the rho prime meson. Researchers from Lawrence Berkeley
being
taken from the Hamilton
Laboratory and Stanford Unear Accelerator Center announced
Monday that they have confirmed the existence of the sub- Coimty workhouse to the courtnuclear particle that exists for only a millionth of a billionth of a house and broke away when
the van stopped to unload
second.
Physicist George Yost of Berkeley said the elusive particle prisoners.
He raced about a half block
was created in the head-on collision of a laser beam and a burst
down
the street and Into the
of electrons moving near the speed of light. Yost said physicians
have been trying to confirm the rho prime meson's existence for Elgin Office Equipment Co.
several years in an effort to resolve certain theoretical dif- where he pulled the knife on
Vaughan Daggett, 22, a
ferences in explaining how light and matter interact.
mechanic, and held him
NICOSIA - A SOVIET-BUILT EGYPTIAN airliner hostage on the third floor.
Plummer's wife, Jackie, 20,
carrying 38 persons crashed Monday night into the side of a
mountain in northern Cyprus. A spokesman for Egyptairlines Cincinnati, was brought to the
building and Capt. Howard
said everyone aboard was killed.
The dead, he said, included the Dyushin 18 Turboprop's crew Espelage asked her to talk to
of seven and 31 passengers - 15 British citizens, eight her husband.
Americans, two Swedes, two Egyptians and a Frenchman, a
"I encourage you to go up
there
and tell him to give this
Canadian, an Irishman and a Jordanian.
up before he gets into more
trouble," Espelage said.
Twice he asked for coffee
and police complied both
times.

Speech seminar slated

at Rio Grande Feb. 10
Rio Grande College will host
a seminar in high school
speech activities Saturday,
Feb. 10, for high schools with a
100 mile radius of the college.
The day-long seminar will
feature classes on oral interpretation, extemporaneous
speaking, library research,
and the high school debate
topic of the year. There will
also be an instructional debate
demonstration in the afternoon , and guests are invited
to attend the Rio Grande ·
Cedarville baskethall games,
both J. V. and Varsity_ that
evening.
Developed by John Graham,
ass,ociate professor of speech

Peace

and coordinated by Juanita
Dailey, student chairman for
forensic activities, the seminar
is free to high school teachers
and students. Their only cost
will be for lunch which will be
available in the Rio Grande
College cafeteria.
High schools within a 100
mile radius of Rio Grande are
located in Ohio, West Virginia
and Kentucky, and are all
invited to attend the seminar
where both faculty members
and community leaders will
act as discussion leaders.
Letters of invitation have
been mailed, however, should
any high school have been
missed, they can attend by
writing Juanita Dailey, student
chairman for forensic activities, Rio Grande College,
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674 by Feb.
5stating the number wishing to
attend from that school.
The seminar will start at 9
a.m. and end with a general
assembly at 4 p.m. Students
and teachers wishing to remain
and attend the basketball
games at 5:45 p.m. and 8 p.m.
as the guests of Rio Grande
College, are welcome.

(Continued from Page I)
Vietnam.
"We are dealing with a
number of units in a very large
country that are in the process
of standing down," Ziegler
said. "We, of course, have
stood down totally. We expect
the agreement to be adhered
to."
The Saigon command U&gt;day
reported continued fighting in
the country, accusing the
DIVORCES GRANTED
Communists of more than 700
Four divorces have been
ground attacks and shellings granted in Meigs County
since the cease-fire took effect. Common Pleas Court, all on
A command spokesman said grounds of gross neglect of
eight battles in the latest duty and extreme cruelty.
reporting period claimed 185 They were to Betty Ferguson
men killed on both sides.
from Jerry Ferguson, Bette V.
The Defense Department Golden from John C. Golden,
said Monday in Washington James Morton from Betty
that U.S. warplanes-including Morton and Carla J. Saiser
852 bombers-bombed both from Larry Saiser.
Cambodia and Laos Sunday
and continued the bombing in
Laos. The raids were flown
MORE IN SCHOOL
against Corrununist positions,
James Adams, principal at
but Pentagon sources said Southern High School in
North Vietnamese units 'll'ere Racine, said absenteeism in
not among the targets. The the district today stood at eight
sources said the raids were percent of the enrollment. He
requested by the Cambodian said absenteeism dropped
and Laotian governments.
from 13pct. Monday to8 today.
Cambodian President Lon
Nol declared a unilateral
cease.fire in his country at 7
THREE FINED
a.m. Monday but half an hour
Three defendants were fined
later, intensified Communist in Syracuse May!H' !Jerman
guerrilla activity was reported London's court Monday night,
and the Cambodian command all for speeding. They were
said CommlUlist Khmer Rouge Susan Kay Thabet, Mason, $5
troops today stepped up offen- and costs, and Alva B. Clark,
sive operations around the Syracuse, and Marvin T. Hill,
besieged provincial capital of Racine, $10 and costs each.' All
Kompong Thorn, 102 miles were cited by Police Chief
north of Phnom Penh.
Milton Varian.
In Vientiane, a government
spokesman following today's
weekly Laotian peace talkswhich have been held without
progress since last fall-!~Bid
the Communists for the first
time proposed private peace
talks and agreed to con5ider a
compromise on military and
political issues. In past meetings, the Pathet Lao (Laotian
Communists) have staunchly
refused to separate political
and military questions.
The spokesman said Brig.
Gen. Bounphleng VenMoore's Service Ceilter
vongnoth, acting chairman of
Expertly Install:
the government delegation,
took the Pathet Lao proposal
SHOCKS
under consideration and said
BRAKES
would respond by noon
Wednesday . ''I hope the '
MUFFLERS
meeting will take place,'' the
spokesman said. "If It does, we
TAIL PIPES
will certainly discuss a. ceasefire."

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Highs In tl!e 50s Thursday
and from lhe uuper 30s to
mid 4os Friday aad Saturday. Lows Ia the upper 20s
and 30s Thursday, dropping
io the leeDS and 21s Saturday. Chance of rain Thunday.

hostage
~

..

en.

Veto
(Continued from P!tge I)
ceUing.
Nixon, throlll!h bis offlclali!,
has defended bis refusal 10
spend all Congress votect for
sewage treatment planta, farm
JI'Ograms and housli!K fbr the
poor on the !!rounds that he is
charged with protecting the
nation from !nfiatlon.
· But Ervin, at the ~ .of :
hearings of bis Senate iubc&lt;m- :
mlttee on the separation of :·
powers, argued that· bY ,lJn. :
pounding and deciding which :
funds to· spend and wblch to:
withhold, Nixon was "ible to.:
modify, reshape, or hUnuy :
completely laws passed by the ·
legislative branch, thereby :
making a legislative policy-a :
power reserved exclll!ively to :
the Congress.
"&amp;lch an illegal exercise of ·
tile power of his office violates :
clear constitutional .
provisions," he said.

· ; · ··t·.:.~~8:::::::::».:!:

FIRE DOUSED
The Pomeroy Fire Dept.
answered a call to. the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Young,
Jr., Easl Main st'., at 1:05 a.m.
Tuesday. Abox of clothing had
caught fire. The box ~as
thrown out of the window into
the yard before the department
arrived.
;

W~HINGTON (UP!) -

Sen. John c. Stennis, 0-Mlss.,
was Critically wounded in a
holdup In front of his
Washington home Tuesday
night. He Uhdel'!'enl six'hours,
31 minutes of surgery early
today.
•
The 71-~~ld Stemls, one
.of the moat powel'f\11 and m011t
respected senators, managed
to stagger Into the house after
being held up and shot at 7:40
p.m . .EST by "at least two"
men described by police as
young Negroes,
Rushed to Walter Reed Army
hospital, he was taken 'ro
surgery at 8:45 p.m. and the
operation was not completed
lUlti13::1» a.m. today.
Afterward, a hospital
spokesman said Stennis'
condition was "very serious"
in Army terms, which he said

SERVICE SET
Funeral services for Eddie
Lou Howery, 61, who died
&amp;mday night, will be held at 2
p.m. Thursday at the Bigony
Funeral Home in Albany. The
Rev. Cecil Cox will officiate.
lllirial will be in the School Lot
SERVICES SET
Cemetery at Carpenter,
Funeral services
for ·
Friends may call at the funeral
Raymond
F.
Rubenstahl,
~2.
home after 3 p.m. Wednesday.
Gallipolis, will be held 2 p.m.
Wednesday at Mlller's Home
111IS THURSDAY
for
Funerals with Rev .
The Meigs County PTA
Council will meet at 7:30p.m. Everette Delaney officiating.
Thursday, Feb. 1, at the Burial will be in Pine Street
Syracuse Grade School rather Cemetery. Friends may call at
than Thursday, Feb. 8, as was the funeral home after 2 p.m.
today.
announced earlier.

VOL XXV NO. 202

SEEKS DIVORCE
Virgil E. Blaker, Rt. 2, 1
Patriot, Mo)lday charged gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty In a petition for divorce
filed against Hazel Blaker,
same addres~ . They were
married June II, 1953 and have
three children.

ne ·

WASHINGTON - 111E WATERGATE BUGGING trial
ended with a jury finding two former campaign aides to
Presldent Nixon guilty of political spying but lt will be up to
Congress to bring out the full stocy.
'
DeUberatlng only 90rninutes, a jury of eight women and four
men brought the lfl.day~ld trial tD an end Tuesday by finding
James C. McCord Jr. and G. Gordon I.Jddy guilty of all charges
brought against them In the raid against the Democratic
National Committee's Watergate headquarters June 17. Five
other men earlier pleaded guilty.

Vetenns Memorlll Hol(lllal
DISCHARGED - Betty
Hawley, Thelma Louise
Johnson, LouiBe Bartels, Mark
.WllllamB, Martina Rockhold,
Cora Salaer, Avery Romine.

.

One person died and two
others were seriously burned
when fire swept a five-room
wooden dwelling located on
Twp. Road 27 in Salem Twp. at
2 a.m. today,
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. said neighbors
reported hearing an explosion
and saw ·fire coming from the
house. The Rutland Fire Dept.
"ias called.

from Bruce Davis, Rutland
Police Chief, who was at the
scene, that the body of
Ferguson had been found. It
was taken to the Martin
Funeral Home pending
notification of relatives. He
was the son of Thomas
Ferguson, 829 South 18th St.,
Columbus, Ohio.
At 9:01 a .m. today the Johanna Jarboe was taken to
sheriff's Dept. learned by radio Holzer Medical Center by

Richard Craig Jarboe, 23,
and Johanna Ann Jarboe, 26,
managed to get out of the
burning structure. Jarboe told
firemen a man named William
Ferguson, 23, was still in the
house. Due to the intense heat,
firemen were unable to get
inside.

..

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
PROFESSIONAL TONE-UP
e CYLINDER

Includes Ports
and Labor

Is your cor acting up? Has lht
winter been hord on your outu?
Now's the time to hovtolunt-up. Wt
can have your ur running smoothly
In no lime. Save monty at Moore's.

416

MOORE'S

Senic:e Center

acna

Pomeroy

PH. 992-2148

t
program cu
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Appalachian Regional
Development Program has
been allocated only $305.5
million In the federal budget
for fiscall974, a cut of more
than $28 million from fiscal
197a.
Largestcutcameinfunds for
mine area restoration, which
dropped from $21.2 million last
year to $2 miUion in fiscal year
1974.
The program is for 13 states,
including all of West Virginia
and parts of Kentucky, Ohio,
Virginia, North Carolina, South
Carolina, Pennsylvania, New
York ; Maryland, Alabama,
Mississippi, Georgia and
Tennessee.

,,..11,.._

Cuts also were made in
demonstration health projects
(from $49.3 million to $45
m!Uion) ; vocational education
facilities ($26 million to $23
million); supplements to
federal grant-in-aid programs
($43.5 million tD $34 million);
research and local development district programs ($11.9
million to $8.5 million) and
housing programs ($4.5 million
to $2.3 million).
The Appalachian highway
system, however, got a boost
from $179.6 million to $189
million. That program is
funded through contract
authority available in the fiscal
year preceding the year of
authority.

Water board in
·'tough. er moo.d

SYRAC.USE ·- Maxine
Varian has been hired as clerk
for the Syracuse Board of
Public Affairs, President Betty
Hayes announced today. ·
Mrs. Varian
begin her
r":"' .
duties Thursday by COllj!Cting
board of supervisors are water bills from noon tD 4:30
Thereon Johnson, Racine daily except Saturday at the
Route 2, chairman; David new municipal building.
Koblentz, Pomeroy Route 3, Collections wlll be made from
·vice chairman; Roy Miller, the first through the lOth of
Pomeroy ROute 3, secretary • each month. If the lOth falls on
treasurer; Harold Carnahan, a Saturday or Sunday,
Racine Route 1, and Rex collections wlll be made the
Shenefield, Langsville Route 1. following Monday.
District conservationist is
Other rules In regard to \he
David Parry and Paul Evans water system set down by the
and Reid Young are part-time board were:
technicians. Mrs. Wilma
Agfl!ed that upon violation of
,Sargent Is dlatrict secrelary. any of the rules, service would
be discontinued and apSf.: r ......, ......
plic11t1ons cance)led upon:
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
misrepreseri!iltion In the aplfllbl lD lbe mid lo upper plication as to property for
401. Low1 1D lite low to mid fixtures lo be supplied or use to
Sll.
Little
or· no . be made of water; resale oipredpllallol..
giving away of water, waste or
I
i!!i .; $ . !~ · misulle of water, ·tampering

518 coonorators
S&amp; WCD seroina
--e
There are 518 cooperators
using the conservation land use
planning services of the Meigs
SoU and Water Conservation
Distric~ acc&lt;H'dlng to the '1972
annual rep&lt;H't of the district.
The district completed 10
conservation plans and 41 new
cooperaton were approved by
supervlsura. There were 113
land owners assisted with farm
practices, ~2 farm ponds
completed; 1,500 feet
of.
'
diversions; 602 acres of
pasture and hay ' land
management;
acres of
pasturund liay land plamlng;
.39 acrea of trees planted; . 471
acrea of land · under the conoervat1011 ~ping system and
192
under brush control.
Servlng on the district's

Nixon made that clear today
in his annual economic message to Congress. He said 1973
"can be a great year" for the
economy if ooly the 110vernmentdoesn't spend toomt!Cb of

al
h
•
Ap·p ac 1an

MEXICO ClrY - AN EARTHQUAKE rocked central
Mexico from coast to coast Tuesday·, heavily damaging mountain towns and villages In at least. three states. Authorities
reported at leaort !Operaonsdead and nearly 1501njured.
"It shook !Ike hell," said a mlUllclpal official in Colima, in
the heart of the stricken area. "Considering how strong it was,
we were lucky." President Luis Echeverria ordered medical
crews, !ool!'ilid emergency relief teams Into the damaged areas.
..
.
:• j I t
SMf;:.AN'JONIO, TEX. - DOCTORS KNEW Lyndon B.
JOhlutoil bad a bad heart and needed a coronary bypass operation
long .before he died. But they revealed Tuesday they could not
rilk the llll'let'Y becaUBe the former president also had a disease
In hill lntelltlnee.
.
Basldes the Intestinal aliment- "eltenslve diverticulosis of
the colon" or an Inflamed lower Intestine - the doctors also said
Johnlon'a heart was already too weak to withstand surgery, The
ltatement, lulled lrom Brooke Army Medical Center by four
dodonwhoeumlned.Johnson,sald the heart attack he suffered
1aat Ap1l during a visit tD Charlottesvme, Va., "left the heart
'JDUICle NVerely damaged."

Lid Shadows
Eye Openers
Eyeshadow' Crayon
Compacts
Spray ·colognes
Spray Bath Powder
Cheek ·stick
Nail Polish

124 W. Main

TEN CENTS

Man dies in blast, fire

SAIGON - FIGHTING AND CASUALTIES in Vietnam's
four.OOy~ld cease-fire dropped off for the third consecutive day
today in what could be the prelude to 1ota1 peace, although a
Saigon mllltacy spokesman said the decrease was insignificant.
Reported Communist attacks across the counlry dropped
from 4:111 the first day of the cease-fire, to 311 Tuesday and 209
today. In one incident, a U. S. Army advlaer suffered slight
wounds Thesday In both arms when Communist&amp; fired on bis
helicopter in the ~ang Ngai coastal province north of Saigon.
But the U.S. command said he returned tD duty after treatment.

Martin ambulance. She suf·
fered burns over 50 percent of
her body . Jarboe was taken tD
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Pomeroy ER squad and
immediately transferred to
Holzer by Ewing ambulance.
· At the sce,ne in addition tD
Sheriff Hartenbach was Dr. R.
R. Pickens, Meigs County
Coronor. The incident is still
under investigation.

EXTENSIVE INTERIOR . REMODELING and
redecorating has been underway f&lt;H' approximately p year at
Meigs General Hospital in anticipation of reopening the
hospital which closed in 1970.

will

'the taxpayers money·
It was the same theme Nixon
stressed in his budget message
two days ago. Congress, not the
Wh!te House, will be the culprit
if a new · r~und of ~Dati~n
forces a tax mcrease, e sa1 .
Just three weeks after mtroducing a new _format . of
~olun tary wag~-pnce gmdelines, the Presodent also ad·
vised the country to ~repare
for the end of economtc. controis. He dod not mention a
specific dale for the total phase
out of controls, however·
In a lengthyd re~~rt 1~1
a c com P a"' e
'x_o n s
message , the Council of
Economic Advisors forecast
another healthy year of
economic growth with a

modest decline in employment
but little change in the overall
rate of inflation. Food prices
should decline in the months
ahead, however, the council
said.
·
The current "vigorous expansion" that is boosting the
economy closer tD capacity and
lowering unemployment could
become too much of a good
thing, according to Nixon.
"The problem, as far as can
now be foreseen, will be tD
prevent this expansion · from
becoming an inflationary
boom. That is why I put
restraining federal expenditures at the U&gt;p Of the list
of economic policies for 1973,"·
Nixon said.
·

Medicare would
cost lots more

Certification of
hospital ·d emanded
Afljlr months of. reported- letter It was closed "as a
rem6deting and redecorating polltical m~ve to get rid of
in anticipation of reopening the competition." ,
old Meigs General Hospital In
"We've had several In·
Pomeroy, certifica lion still has spec lions by the Industrial
not been received from the Commission of which Mr. R.
Ohio Dept. of Health.
Yokom Is director and they
Delmar A. Canaday, former have encouraged us to make
Democratic
Mayor
of some changes, which we have
Pomeroy, as administrator of made," Canaday wrote.
Meigs General Hospital, Inc. ,
In closing, Canaday's letter
has sent a letter to Dr. John W. said :
Cashman, director of health in
"In 1970, It was our lUI•
Ohio, asking him to explain derstanding with Mr. J.
why the certification has been Gilligan who is now Governor
denied.
ot the State of Ohio that H he
In this letter to Dr . Cashman, was elected we would ha~ hiS
Canaday states:
full cooperation. He was very
"It is our belief that you have successful in bis campaign f&lt;H'
responsibility here in Meigs govern!H' and was elected. We
County as Director of Health of put forth a lot of effort on his
the State of Ohio tD see that the behalf.
people of Meigs County have
"It is our belief, Dr. Cashthe proper health care which at man, that you are prejudiced
this time, they do not have ." and are against the reopening
He adds that the hospital of this medlcalfacllity, In your
should be reopened even if only being hes(tant in having the
forthebenefitofseniorcltizens · Meigs General Hospital cerwhom, he says, cannot pay the tilled, I would like
exroom rates charged at the new planation why you have this
medical center in Gallipolis. attitude. Pleaae let me hear
The letter further claima: from you In regard to this
"This facility, the Meigs matter at your earliest coo- '
General Hospital, operated venlence."
effectively and efficiently for
Canaday Indicated Tuesday ·
23 years. Our private rooms the hOISpltal Is Incorporated
were $35, semi-private rooms,- with approzlmately
12
$30 and wards were $26."
members on Ita board. Their
The hospital was closed In names have not been made
1970. Canaday charges in his public.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
- Require patients to pay the
admu;istration wants Cougress first $85 of their doctor bills and
to make major changes in the 23 per cent of the remainder
Medicare program that could instead of the current $60 and
end up costing the 23.1 million 20 per cent. Out -of-pocket
aged
and
disabled charges to a patient with a $500
beneficiaries more than $1 doctDr bill would Increase from
billion annually.
$148 to $188.7~.
The aged already shell out an
The administration also will
estimated $4.7billlon a year for ask Congress to save the
out-of-pocket health expenses, federal government $75 million
including hospital and doctor . a year by eliminating federal
bilis, drugs and other services. matching payments under
Administration Medicare Medicaid for dental care for
legislative · proposals men- adults.
tioned in budget documents
sent tD Congress this week
t
•

~~~~c:~~a:yt::Wa:o:~

with meters, meter seal,
service, or valves, or per- hospital doct!H' bills by an
milling such tampering by estimated $516 million for the
others; connection, cross- half year period beginning next
connection, or permitting same Jan. 1, the proposed effective
of any separate water supply to date for the changes.
premises which reeelve water
Over a one-year period the
from the municipality; non- charges would surpass $1
payment of bills, after three billion.
months of non-payment water
11 is unlikely Congress will
wlll be turned off without approve such sweeping
notice ; each permanent trailer changes in one of the last
and house must have separate decade's major pieces of social
water \aps; camper trallers for legislation. But if the
summer months must pay legislation were approved It
monthly water bill.
.would:
.· Also, anyone tampering
-Require hospitalized Medi·
with water lines !H' curb boxes, care patients to pay the .first
property owners letting others .day's charge for room ·and
tap on, wlll be prosecuted and boar~ and 10 per cent of the
water service will be dlscon- daily charges for all services
tinued until tap fee and fine is thereafter, Instead of the
paid or c!H'rection is made.
current $72 initial payment
Residen~ who wish to have with no further charges until
water turned off or, on are to the 61s~ day. For patients
contact any member of the hospitalized 13 days, t~ coat
board. Other ·board members· could increase from $12' to a
are !'at Patterson and Robert . minimum of $158.40, depending
Chapman.
. on geographical d,lfferences.

an·

FOUr IDJU;t'ed
Three
persons
were
hospitalized following a single
car accident at 2:30a.m. today
on county road 5 in Salisbury
Twp., just northwest of SR 7,
the sheriff's Dept. reported.
Harold J . Brock, 22,
Wheeling, and Joseph Sheller,
23, Glendale, W. Va., are in
Holzer Medical Center, and
Larry Clymer , 32, Woodsfield,
W. Va ., is in Veterans
'Memorial Hospital where the
driver , Bryan Ward, 38,
Wheeling, was · treated and

k
ID wrec
t

released .
Ward, traveling north,
apparently went to sleep, failed
tD round a curve, went off the
road on the right to hit a tree.
The victims were trapped in
the vehicle approximately one
hour. Middleport and Mason E·
R crews answered the call. The
accident is still under in·
vestigation.
The depar.tment also investigated two other accident&amp;
Tuesday. AI 4:30 p.m. on SR
124, four and three tenths of a

Special tax big winner
.PT. PLEASANT - Mason allowance for uncollected
County's Special School levy taxes and shtlnkage Is appasse4 Tuesday by a majority
of 82.1 percent with 3,722 total
vo~s .
.
The total to be raised by the
special levies after making due

proximately $3,712,17~ ;
Hartf&lt;H'd, which is precinct
No. 19, led in favoring passage.
Ninety:,seven percent, 46 to 1,
, approved it.

mile east of Racine, Keith
Gordon Bradford, 16, Racine,
Rt. 2, was travellng west on
124. Bradford said, blinded by
the sun, "his car went off the
road on the right, skidded ~
feet, slid 40 feet across the
highway to go off the road on
the left over an embankment,
spun around, and went another
30 feet backwards. There was
heavy damage to the car, but
no Injuries or arrest. .
At 6 p.m. Tuesday on county
road 31 In lebanon Twp.,
Deborah M. Wolfe, 19, Port- ·
land, Rt. I, was traveling west
when she met an oncoming
pickup truck in· a curve. Sbe
swerved to the right to avoid
hlttinR the truck heldon, lOIII
control, want acr1118 the highway on the ,left and up an
tmbankmenl, The driver was
not Injured. Then was mlnll'
damqe to lhe ~. No citation
wu ilaued.
'I

.

•

/
'•'

BriefS~·

'

Tune Into A TUNE-UP Here, Soon

DRIVING•••

PHONE 992-2156

Nixon ignores inflation, jobs

ABSENTEEISM DOWN
Absenteeism In the student
body of the Meigs Local School .
District dropped to 20.6 pet.
'l'uesday compared to 211 per
cent Monday, Supt. George E.
Hargraves reported. On
Mon~r.• 1111 otudenta &gt;Nete
ab8en't, 6o7 g~ Tuesday. ~lfilli~
teachem were absent Tuesday
compared to 20 on Monday.

And many other items you'll like.

1

enttne

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1973

that President Nixon has said John B. Connally would make a
good Republican presidential candidate In 1976. ~otln,s high
Republlcan sources, the Times said Nixon in a conversation with
a visitor to the White House ''was understood to have indicated"
he preferrlld Connally, a Democrat, over VIce President Spiro T.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - InAgnew.
Dation and unemploy~ent
The sources said Agnew associates believe Connally, heve taken a rback seat to
secretary of the treasury In Nixon's first cabinet, will be·brought excessive federal spending at
back lft!q !he cabinet u secretary of state In a White Houae move the top of ~dent Nlxon'ollst
to put bliiltn the forefront fot the GO!' llOminstion ahead bf the · " of"l!l!Uirarnlc ptbblmtr: --&gt;··vice Jl'esldent the Times said. .
.

IREVLON

$17 95

•

NEW YORK - THE NEW YORK TIMES. reported today

On the 1st. floor-a complete .line of nationally kn'own Revlon including

TRDUBLE·FREE'

OHIO

By Uolted Press loteruatlooal
WASHINGTON - THE WHITE HOUSE says President
Nixon has not changed his campaign pooitlon that he will
''never" grant amnesty to Vietnam War draft dodgers and
deserters.Rl!nald L. Ziegler, Nixon's pcess secretary, was asked
Tuesday what was Nixon's position in light of the Vietnam ceasefire.
"Our position has not changed," Ziegler said. The statement
contrasted with a position Nixon took on a television interview In
January, 1972. At that time, Nixon said he expected he would be
"very liberal In regarda to amnesty."

MAKE-UP AND BEAUTY COSMETICS

I=DR

POMEROY-MIDDL~PORT,

ews .. in

REliLON

••

Hospital spokesman, said at a remained during the long
dawn briefing for reporters operation. She left at 4:30a.m.
after stennis' operation: "He Is EST.
John HamptDn Stennla, the
conscious, and he is resting
Senator's
son, who Is a member
comfortably. His vital signs
of the Miulsalppt legislature,
remain stable."
Oew
to Washington with bis
Garland said the senator
wife
_from their home In
regained consciousness 10
minutes after the operation. Jackson, Miss.
Garland said when Stennis was
Washington Pollee Chief
able to leave the Intensive care
unit, he would be taken to the Jerry Wilson and L. Palrlck
presidential suite at the• Gray, acting director of the
FBI, tallied with Mrs. Stennis
hospital.
Garland said Stennis' heart, while her II1Sband was In
lungs ·and spine were not surgery. The FBI entered the
damaged by the major bullet , investigation immediately bewound.
cause It Is a federal as well u
local
offel18e to · 8t!Siult a
Was there extensive internal
bleedlug? "The amount of member of Congress.
Stennla wu elected to the
bleeding indicated is no more
than you would expect from Senate In 1947. He became
wounds of this type."
ehalrman of the Armed Ser·
Mrs. Stennis went to the vices Committee four yean
hospital after the shooting and ago.

~:W,'?-~I:QQ''''··· · .:::~~

You should see the fine selection.

Face Powder
Lipstick
Eyeliner and Brow Pencil
Brush on Mascara
Cleansing Cream
Super Moisture Lotion
Hi and Dri Deodorant
Medicated Make-Up

remained conscious until the wife to call the pOlice and the
surgery was performed to hospltal. He was admitted tD
repair the extensive internal Walter Reed about 8:115 p.m.
damage l:&amp;Used by tlie bullet
Two ambulance attendants
that entered the left chest.
who 'accompanied Stennis on
After the shooting, he the ride to the hospital said
managed to stagger 10 feet they heard the senator
along a sidewalk, walk up four describe his assailants as two
concrete steps, walk along 20 men of 18 or 19. A police infeet more of sidewalk leading vestigator said Stennis ''was
tD his door$1ep, then climb set upon by at least two subthree steps to the small landing jects."
to the front door.
Senators and others exSen. Henry M. Jackson, D- pressed dismay anq outrage at
Wash., a fellow member of the the attack 81\d Sen. Charles M.
Armed Services Committee, . Mathias, R-M&lt;!., said be would
said Mrs. Stennis heard what' renew his efforts tD · push
sounded like "two pops" and through Congress a comher husband subsequently prehensivebill 'lo attack urban
staggered in.
crime.
One report said Mrs. Stennis
Mathias said the Stennis
'had !Poked out the window shooting l'jas "a tragic
after the sounds and saw two example of our failure to make
young men fleeing.
the nation's streets safe."
Stennis, police said, told his
Garland, the Walter Reed

e

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

Open Every Weekday 9:30 to 5 p.m. Friday and Saturday 9: 30 to 9 p.m.

I

watch, hiS Phi Beta Kap"' key,
·and a quarter,
President Nixon, who received critical support from
stennis of his VIetnam policies
during the grl!alest heat of
congressional !lebate on them, \
telephoned Mrs. Coy Stennis to
express what the White House
said was bis "deep concern."
Nixon said the FBI would
"assist In every way", In the
investigation, the White House
said.
'
Secretary of State W1lllam P.
Rogers visited the hospital,
along with a number of Senate
colleagues of Stennis. His
fellow Mississippian, Sen.
James 0. Eastland, emerged
from the hospital after the
operation saying "We all feel a
bit more hopeful than we did
(earlier)."
Stennis was said to have

at y

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
.

Include hear,t rate, blood '
pressure and respiration,
Garland, a hospital information officer, was asked If there
were permanent injuril!!!.
''None are apparent, as far
as permanent lnJtlrY is concerned."
The shooting took place,
pollee said, in front of stennis'
homP as he alighted from bis
car after driving from bis
The other bullet shattered office.
His home Is located on
against a bone in his upper left
leg but did not break a bone. It Qnnberland st. N.W., between
Wisconsin and Connecticut
was removed.
After the operation, a Aves., not far from the District
spokesman at the hospital, of Columbia border near Chevy
Maj . Frank Garland, was Olase, Md.
Investigators said Stennis
asked If Stennis would recover.
told them he offered no
He said:
"The progn011ls is guarded ... resistance but was shot
He is conscious and he's anyway after handing over bis
resting comfortably. His vital billfold, containing credit
signs remain stable." These cards, along with a gold pocket

was equivalent to' 8 prognosis
of critical at m011t. hOspitals.
One of two bullets that felled
Stennis, chairman of the
Senate Armed Services ·
Committee, entered bis chest
and ranged downward through ·
-the stomach andanlntealine. lt
lodged in the lower back. That
buUet was not removed during
the operation.

•

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Charles Kidwell, 48, 478
Kathy St., Gallipolis, was
taken to the Holzer Medical
Center Monday as a medical
patient by the Gallia ColUlty
Volunteer Emergency Squad.

INFANT DIES
The MidcDeport E·R squad
answered a call to the Bill
New burley quota Miller home, 225 Broadway St.,
at 8:17 am. Tuesday for the
may be asked for Millers' infant son, Timothy,
who was dead of the squad's
Farmers may apply for new
arrival. Timothy would have
burley tDbacco quotas at the
been one-year old U&gt;morrow.
Meigs ASCS office until Feb.
15, 1973.
Holzer Medical Ceoler
To be eligible, the applicant
(Discharges)
must receive more than 50 pet.
Christopher Higginbotham,
of his income from sale of John Barnitz, Maddie Campagricultural products from the bell, Minnie Tedrow, Terry
farm. Also he must have had Norris, Charlotte Phillips,
experience raising burley Minnie Wllson, Jeffery Tilley,
tobacco in two of the past five Angelia Donahue, Donald
years. Applications may be Graham , Leslie Treadway,
secured from the Meigs ASCS Ernest Weber, Rebecca
office, Box 391, Pomeroy. Waugh, Helen Sweeney, Opal
Applications will be reviewed Ross, James Robert Pridtly,
and allocated without regard to Jr., Darrel Porter, Clyde
race, color, creed, sex or Porter, Timothy Parsons, Lois
national origin.
Osborne, Margaret Murray
and Richard McClure.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Ffancis Baker,
MidcDeport,
a daughter; Mr.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES: Mrs. James and Mrs. William Young,
Riffle, Leon; Ruth Hope, Gallipolis, a son; Mr. and Mrs·.
Gallipolis, 0.; Jack Hancock, Edward Booth, Gallipolis, a
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Timothy son and Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Hammack, daughter, Mason; Barrick, Gallipolis, a son.
Susan
Murphy,
Point
Pleasant ; Vivian Blatt, Lakin;
LOCAL TEMPS
Harold Higginbotham,
The temperature in downGallipolis; Jimmie Thornton, town Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Jr ., and Merdia Stover, Apple TUesday was 26 degrees under
Grove.
partially sunny skies.

tennis· s ot an

I

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="734">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11134">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="54271">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="54270">
              <text>January 30, 1973</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1774">
      <name>howery</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="79">
      <name>miller</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6191">
      <name>rubenstahl</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
