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12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0,. March 13, 1973

News . . . in Briefs

Charles Fields of Hartford
is dead
' .
HARTFORD - Charles E.
tPete) Fields, 81, Hartf&lt;ird,
died this morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Mr . Fields
was born Aprill3, 1891 at Hart·
ford, the son of the late Charles
C. and Mary Rings Fields. He
was also preceded in death by a
daughter, Helen Conn.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight
March 13
FUNNY GIRL

CTechnicolorl
Barbara Streisand, Omar
Sharif, Kay Medfork, Anne
Francis, Walter Pidgeon .

Colorcartoons

iPGI

Show starts 7 p.m .

Wednesday &amp; Thursday
March 14 &amp; lS
NOT OPEN

SurvivOrs include his wife,
Maggie; seven sOns , ..1 oe, of
Pomeroy; Tommy, Letart RD;
George and James, Hartford;
Andrew, New Haven ; Ben.
jamin, Elyria, and John, Fl.
Worth, Texas; a daughter,
Mary Fields, Bay City, Mich.,
30 grandchildren ; 13 greatgrandchildren: three brothers,
Albert, Robert and Douglas, all
of Detroit; two sisters, Mrs.
Alice Kearns and Mrs. Grace
Cunningham, both of Detroit.
Mr. Fields was a coal miner.
Funeral services will be announced by Foglesong Funeral
Home.

/o

tContinued from page 1)
positions with more weapons ·and ammuniction," Ralph
Erickson, special assistant to Attorney General -Richard
Kleindienst said Monday in Washington.

Maggie

BUENOS AIRES-THE MIUTARY government declared a
candidate handpicked by exiled former President Juan D. Peron
the winner Monday night of the first presidential race in 10 years.
It said it accepted the outcome. But the apparent winner,
onetime dentist Hector J. Campora; told a cheering crowd early
today that he would not serve "even one day" until Peron returns .
from his Madrid exile.
An announcement by President Gen. Alejandro Lanusse,
head of the military government that has ruled for seven years,
said military commanders consider Campara, 63, the winner.
His announcement touched off wild street demonstrations among
followers of the exiled Peron, whose party was allowed to take
part in politics legally for the first time since his overthrow 17
years ago.

Ebenezer St. , who was ill. She
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted .

Enforcement chief fired

It is easy to. open a savings aq:ount
with us, as we accept any amount. So
. don't put off any longer starting a
regular savings program. It is one of
the best ways we know to achieve
your particular goal in the future.

TO szo,OOO.OO
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGSS To7 P.M.

WhEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

.

PITH8URGH

flc

litbens 14aliona'

nk

....C. CINCINNATI

COLUMBUS (UPI)
the Sonitrol Security Systems
Richard Guggenheim, director of Anderson, Ind., which
of the state Department of recently gave Laws a franchise
Liquor Control, today fired for a large part of Ohio.
COURT GOT $2,531
Donald Laws, lhe deparl·
"You are in about as clear a
Receipts
of Mayor John
ment's enforcement chief, case of conflict of interests as
Zerkle for the month of
after it was revealed he had possible," Guggenheim said he
February
totaled $2,530.94,
gone into business with a firm told Laws. "There is nothing
according to a report approved
that sells burglar alarms to for you to do but resign."
by Middleport Village Council
~ ~I asked for his resignation,''
slate 'liquor stores.
Monday night. Of the total
Scripps • Howard News· Guggenheim told Scripps$2,374.94
was in fines and fees ·
The concert choir of Kenpapers identified the firm as Howard (Columbus) bureau
chief Haskell Short. "What else tucky Christian College, while $156 was in merchant
could we do in a clear cut case Grayson, will present a police collections.
program of sacred music at
like this?"
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the ,
Meigs Junior High School in
Middleport as a part of its 1973
SHRINETTES TO MEET
spring
tour, March 18 through
HYMN SING SET
The
Shrinettes will meet at 8
SAIGON (UPI)
A
The Meigs County Youth March 26 in Ken lucky, Illinois, p.m. Thursday at the home of
Hungarian sergeant for the
Rally will sponsor a Hymn Sing Indiana and Ohio .
Mrs: Henry Ewing, Mulberry
International Commission for
Sunday at the Bradford Church The concert choir is under Ave .. Pomeroy.
Control and Supervision has
of Christ to start at 2:30 p.m. the direcion of Professor Benic
defected to Australia, South
There will be an offering taken Hampton, Jr, Included in this
Vietnamese military sources to raise money for the forth: year's presentation are such
said today. Two V!el Cong · coming youth revival which selections as " The Lord's
prisoners of war app~rently will be held April 6-8 with Prayer 11 , " God of Our
tried lo defect today 10 ~lld David M. Lucas and The Fathers, " and "Savior , Like a
melees, but only one made 11 to Watchmen featured. They are Shepherd Lead Us" .
freedom.
.
from Kentu~.ky . Christian The choir is being sponsored
The Hungar1an ~as lden- College. The public is invited to by the Meigs County Men's
tified as Sgt. Georghlu Wollner. S d ,
t
Fellowship.
,
The South V1etnamese
sa1'd he un ay s even .
'
was placed board a plane out of
Saigon en route to Sydney
BOOKS ON MOVE
Monday after appealing for
UMPIRES TO MEET
Total circula lion for the
political
asylum.
The
A meeting of the Ohio
Pomeroy
and Middleport
Australians confirmed the Kanauwha River Athletic Of·
defection and said he had been ficials Assn. will be held Thurs· Libraries and the bookmobile
allowed to immigrate to day at 7 p.m. at the National for January and Fehruary
exceeded 18,000 in Meigs
Australia .
Guard Armory near Point
County. The total circulation at
Pleasant, Luther Tucker of
the three locations in January
Mason announced today. This
was 10,021 while in February
is the first meeting of baseball
the circulation figure wa s
officials. All persons interested
8,399. Magazine donations lor
in joining are asked to attend.
the period were Mrs. Tom Rue,
Mrs. Roscoe Wise, Mrs. Dan
White, Mrs. H. E. Cooper, Mrs.
Orin
Smith and Mrs. Ted Scott.
RECALL CRITICIZED
SOUTH LEBANON, Ohio
(UPI) - Corwin S. Fred,presi·
dent of Fred Mushroom Co.,
Holzer Hospital News
believes the Food and Drug
Births
Administration overdid it with
{March 9, 10, Ill
a recall of every can of food his
Mrs. Steven Durham, son,
company ever produced. The Jackson; Mrs. Kenneth
action, he said, was "ar- Maynard, daughter, Jackson;
bitrary, autocratic, Mrs . George
Starcher,
devastating
and
un- daughter, M1nersville; Mrs.
reasonable," and "could cost Carlos
Swisher,
son,
us our good name with the Gallipolis ; Mrs. Harold
American public."
Lambert, daughter, Langsville, and Mrs. Ralph Williams,
son, Gallipolis.
REVIVAL GOING
Arevival is in progress at the
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church, Rt. 143, each evening
SCHOOL SET
at 7:30 p.m. The Rev. O'Dell
Sunday School services will
Manley is the speaker. The be held at the Plants Church
public is invited.
Sunday at 10 a.m.

Hungarian Sgt•
defects south

ACCOUNTS INSURED

'

"HOLDING COURT" during her 12-day visit to Ethiopia Britain's Princess Anne sits under a spreading
tree ' In fiondar. She Is chatting with student nurses at
· the site nf the Bath of KinJ( Fasitidas. a. 17th century
ro.val jJlayspnl.

Concert choir
in Middleport
at Junior High

new accounts

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Clarence
Haning, Albany; Oma Brown,
Point Pleasant; Mary Little,
Athens; Maggie Rosenkranz,
Pomeroy, and Walter Harris,
Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Catherine
Young, Jeffrey Counts,
Rebecca Rhodes, Ollie
Buchanan, Grant Hickman,
Wayne Harrison, Myrna Wears
and Hazel Moore.
IN HOLZER
Vernon Belvlns, Pomeroy, is
a surgical patient at Holzer
Medical Center. Cards may be
sent to room 304.

types of guns, rules of goo~
gunmanship, proper home and
field handling of gunds, proper.
sight picture, breath an~
lfigger control, correct fir~~
positions, and is climaxed ~tb
eompetltlve match shootmg:
The course is open to all bo~
and glfls age seven throt~gh 15
and Is free of charge·:
Diplomas, medals and othe(.
awards will be given.
..
The first class will be held at
the Junior High building .in
Middleport on Tuesday, Marcli:
20. All interested persons,
regBrdless of age, are invited.
Those wishing additional tn,
formation may call 992-5986 or
99:hl082.

.

.. .

..

A suit for divorce has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court · by Kenneth H,"
Romine, Rutland, Rt. I,
against Avery Sue Romine,
De1ter, charging gross neglect
of duty and extreme truelty.
Also filed was a notice of
appeal by Charles L. Neuman,
Box 417, Syracuse, agal!lBt the
Imperial Eleclfic Co., Akron;
William Garnes, administrator
of the Bureau of Employment
Services, Columbus, and the
Board of Review of the Bureau
of Employment Services,
Columbus, for !he right to
participate in the unem·
ployment compensation lund
as provided by the laws of
Ohio. The plainUff claims he
quit his employment with
Imperial Electric on Aug. 2S,
1972, necessitated by his em·
ployer's refusal to correct
hazardous working conditions
which adversely affected the
plaintiff's health.

Men are happy
,) .1n Hanes.I

Revaluation slated
in Gallia shortly

s

SAVE •92°

0

OFF REG. PRICE

The Golde n TOUCH &amp; SEW• mac h1 ne w r C ~t car ry.no ~ R s e . The world 's most
ingenrously destgned sewrng machine ' Wtlh the ex" '" "" ' ,?' " ~ e.I' ~ us h ·
button , front drop-in bo bbi n lhat rewinds nght 1n_the mach tne. "' "', t O t ~.
.
capabi lities .·.. full ran ge of stretch and fash1on st1tches. Sr, ft-,ouch .a bnc
feed system for sheer onrl kni t lah ric s 750 576
11 s W &lt;, · ~ond

The Fabric Shop
We have a credit plan designed to fit your budget.

992 •2284 ·

Pomeroy

We also have a liberallrade-in policy.
·A Trade ma tk ol rHE SING F.R COMPANY

Property will now be valued on
the basis of 35 pet. of market
value instead of 40 pet. of the
true value. The revaluation
must be completed by June I,
1975.
Gallipolis Chrysler
Plymouth was awarded the bid
for a new sheriff's cruiser at a
cost of $3,675. Other bidders
were Norris Dodge, $3,895 and
Martin Ford, $3,993.22.
Ashland Oil was aw~rded a
conlfact :o furnish the county
highway department with
bituminous materials. Ashland
Oil ' and Chevron Asphalt
Auto· Sal es
Company will furnish all other
1968 GMC t. ton pic!(. up tru ck, materia.Js.
series . rsoo, V:8, standard Horace Keys was employed
t ~an s m tSSton, w•de .~d, ~~ w , as bee inspector at $3 per hour
I t res. e)(ccl lenl cond tfton w tfh
.
.
.
no ru•' · Phone 985·3509 , Tom plus mne cents per male. H1s
Haymdn, Lonq Aottom, Ohio. salary Is not to exceed $25(1 per
J 13 61p
year.

j
1

·!

Reinforced neckband
keeps its shape.
Hanes is America's
JV·"f&lt;lvorite T-shirt-size-fast,
highly absorbent, and it's
cut long to stay tucked in.
Small, medium, large,
extra large.
r;·

Nothing to b.md !
,,,,'
Hanes Boxer Shorts are -~
pre-shrunk and give in i
the stretches. Two styles
In solid colors or stripes. '

!

·3 for •3.39 ·

BOB PICKE'IT, EMPLOYE of Mr. Eddy, the county
bookmobile, loads books which were overdue and returned
by Salisbury School students who have started a club for
students who secure from any source 10 or more overdue
books.

RETURN BOOK CLUB- Studenls of the Sr lis bury Elementary School have formed a Mr.
Eddy Return Book Club. To become members,.students must see that at least 10 overdue books
are returned from any source. The unit has some 10,000 books which are overdue. Turning
overdue booka over to Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja, bookmobile supervisor, Tuesday afternoon were
these Salisbury atudents, front row, left to right, Terry Hysell, Mark Friend, Chuck Reitmire,
Billy Browning 1Tinn Hooper, and Mark Burson; back row, I to 4, Elizabeth Blevins, Gary
BaBham and Tommy Hooper. Visits by Mr. Eddy, the popular bookmobile, will be discontinued
in three months due to the lack of federal funds appropriated.

ftf;';;;;:::,::, ,r;;=''''''B;i;~;) ·a.ndren
J'~

By United Press International.
COLUMBUS - DON W. MON1GOMERY! A business
executive from Celina, was elected president of the Ohio
Chamber of Commerce at its aMual business meeting here
lodly. MmlgOIJli!!'Y, .cbalrman and pn:stdent· ·of· !he· OeUna
Financial iiiSUrance Group, will serve a two-year terril, succeeding Avery C. Hand Jr. of Mansfield.
Hand, who is president of the First National Bank of Mansfield,
takes over as board chairman of the OCC from D. Bruce Mans·
field, president of Ohio Edison Co., Akron. Other newly elected
officers included Walter C. Mercer, president of the Ohio
National Bank, Colwnbus, as treasurer; Brady F. Black, editor
and vice president of tbe Cincinnati Enquirer, as first vice
!l'esident; John H. Weaver, president of Fyrepel Products, Inc.,
Newark, as vice president; and John P. Williamson, president of
Toledo Edison Co., also as vice president.

MONTGOMERY, ALA. -GOV. GEORGE WALLACE'S
office said Tuesday the first acupuncture trealfnent has caused
"no noticeable difference" in the governo,r's crippled and painful
condition. But Billy Joe Camp, Wallace's news secretary, said
further acupuncture treatments are planned for Wallace, par·
ttally paralyzed ~Y the bullets of an assassin in Maryland last
year.
AMERICAN WARPLANES, INCWDING Bi2 BOMBERS,
carried out lflOre raids Tuesday in Cambodia as officials
reported fighting over an area ranging from ~ear Pllnom Penh to
·the historic ruins of Angkor Wat.
· ,
· 1n neighboring South Vietnwn, authorities said Communists
violated the truce there 118 times during the 24-hno,r period en·
dingat6 a.m. today. AS usual, U.S. authorities did not say where
American warplanes struck or how many planes took part in the
raids, but field reports reaching Phnom Penh said some U. S. jet
fighters hit Communist positions along Highway 2.

3 for •3.39

may use
hospital
COLUMBUS - State Senator
Harry L. Armstrong ( RLogan) and State Representative Claire M. Ball, Jr. (R·
Athens J said today the Division
of Mental Health of the Ohio
Department of Mental Health
and Men tal Retardation is
studying the feasibility of
converting Nelsonville
Tuberculosis Hospital into a
residential care facility for
emotionally disturbed children
between the ages of 6 and 18.
The Division is working on a
plan to submit to the director.
Tentatively, its pr9posal calls
for conversion of the present
facility into the major center
for children's services in
Southeastern Ohio with an
emphasis on lfea tment and
education. The present 100
beds would be reduced to about
50, with the remaining space
made into classrooms and
actlvi ty areas.
Community based special
education programs are tentativ~ly planned in Marietta,
Steli!,enville, Portsmouth,
Zanesville, Dover, Athens and
Ironton . Discussion is now
being held with the Department of Education to establish
a cooperative agreement
whereby the department will
fund up to 58 classes
throughout the state, seven in
the above mentioned cities.

Reed confirmed
• •
on commiSSion
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio
Senate
Tuesday
unanimously confirmed Gov.
John J. Gilligan's appointment
of Wa.ren S. Earhart,
Lawrence County, as a
member of the state Personnel
Board of Review through Feb.
12, 1979, and of Theodore T.
Reed Jr. of Pomeroy as a
member of the Ohio
Development Financing
Commission through Dec. 31,
1979.
The Senate also unanimously
confirmed:
-Michael F. Adler and M.
Bartlett Cochran as trustees of
Montgomery County Com-

munity College through Oct. 12,
1977.
- Margaret M. Ryan and
Noel Wical as u·ustees of
Lakeland Community College
through Oct. 12, 1977.
- Fae A. Deck, Fulton
County, as a trustee for Four
County Technical Institute, for
a term ending June 10, 1974.
-Jack T. Lytle, Licking
Counly,asa trustee for Licking
County Technical Institute, for
a term ending Sept. 30, 1975.
- R. J. Molter, Sandusky
County, as a trustee for Penta
County Technical . Institute
through Aug. 7, 1974.

.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
I

~~

\
I

TE~

CENTS

WASHINGTON - President
Nixon asked Congress today to
restore the death penalty for
wartime treason, sabotage and
espionage and for federal
crimes such as hijacking and
kidnaping in which a death
results.
He also called for harsh, new
mandatory penalties for
narcotics violations. The
President said tllis would
sharply reduce the discretion
of courts which he said had
often become "an escape hatch
for those who are responsible
for the menace of drugs."
The President called for
penalties ranging up to life in
prison without the possibility of
parole for narcotics crimes. He
also recommended that judges
be required to deny bail to
persons accused of drug violations if their release would
endanger public safety.
Senate Republican leader
Hugh Scott of Pe11nsylvania
told newsmen at the White
House TUesday that Nixon's
death penalty bill was
"carefully tailored within
narrow limits so as not to run
counter to the present Snpreme
Court decision."
He said it would authorize
executions for "certain wartime offenses ... offenses under
the various assassination acts
.. . hijacking in interstate
commerce, kidnaping in interstate commerce, crimes
committed
on
federal
territory."
The High Court ruled last
yew; that f"!leral and alate
~apltal punishment laws were
'

..-.·.;·
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Property tax driving Ohio
farmers out of business

~i;~;;~=~~;~~=:~~~~:::~:::~~:~~~

Swank made the comment In response to a Franldln
County court ruling wblch upheld the constltutlonaUty of
the present tax system but said It should be changed or It
would drive farmers out of business.
"Unless legislative action Is taken to provide voters till!
opportunity to amend the Ohio CODitllutlon soon, green
space around our cities will continue to disappear and food
costs will continue to rise,'' said Swank. "The Franldln
County judge Is right, state property lax laws are driving.
fa~mers out of business and we haven'tseen the end of the
lhmg yet," said Swauk.

I
~

1
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~
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;:;:;:~;::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::!:::::~:=:::::-~::::*=::::::::-~::::t:::;'i~:::.~

unconstitutional because they
did not make a clear distinction
between cases in w.hich death
would be the penalty and cases
calling for lesser punishment.
"Contrary to the views of
some social theorists, I am
convinced that the death
penalty can he an effective
deterrent against specific
crimes," Nixon said in his
radio speech.
"The potential criminal wiU
know ·that if his intended
victinns die, he may also die,"
the President said.
·
Nixon said his proposals to
increase penalties for narcotics violations was "tough
legislation, but we must settle
for nothing less." '
"The time has come for softheaded judges and probation
o!!icen to llbow u lnucb
con&lt;;l!rn for the righiB of ill'

nocent victims of crinne as they
do for the rights of convicted
crinninals," the President said.
The President's plan would
establish
a
two-tier
in
which
foltrial
lowing conviction for a
possible capital crime, a
separate hearing would be held
for· a defendant to cietennine
whether death, should be the
penalty .
The death penalty would be
mandatory if the jury determined that the crinne was
aggravated by creation of
grave risk to the national
security or to the life of another
person, or by the killing of
another person, or by other
aggravating factors and was
not reduced by a mitigating
factor.

...\'lle..._lh 181\lence wciilld.ba
(Continued 0/1 p.ge 12)

Eastern buying 3
new school buses

The Eastern Local School
District Board of Education
voted to purchase three new
school buses and accepted the
resignations of two teachers in
a regular session Tuesday
night.
Advertisement lor bids on 66passenger, 60-passenger and
411-passenger buses will be
placed this week. Bids will be
accepted U11til noon April 10.
The board accepted the
resignation of Mike Morgan, a
teacher at the high school, and
Olive Osborne, first grade
teacher at Riverview, both
effective at the end of the
current school year. Mrs.
Osborne was commended for
her long service of some 38
years teaching.
The board employed Patrick
Christy of The Plains as a high
school Math teacher beginning
Monday. He will repace Vickie
Cutright who resigned
~:;:;:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::~:::;:;:;:;:!:!:!: recen Uy, effective March 16.
The Art class of Mrs. Donna
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Chadwell was authorized to go
Chance of showers Friday. • on a field trip to Columbus in
Lows In the 408 highs In the
observance of Youth Art Month
lOs. Fair Saturday and
in Ohio.
SundaySoHighs In 60s and low
A drainage problem at the
.•.~-~ ••~~~•••...,~:.,~•••••,••,.••••. ,w.:·:«·:·:·:· Chester Elemetnary school
,.,.~,..,,,,.,,,.,"""m'·'····· ···•·•··.w. ····· .. . playground was discussed and
LOCAL TEMPS
will be studied further by board
Temperature in downtown members. The board approved
Pomeroy Wednesday at 11 a. ·the financial exchange of funds
m. was 76 degrees under between the Eastern and Meigs
cloudy skies.
Local Districts as the result of

a territorial mixup several
months ago.
Approximately a dozen high
·school teachers met with the
board to disucss changes in
curricula and graduation
requirements effective next
year. It is understood that the
high school has been holding to
some requirements not
necessary for graduation; it is
the plan to drop these
requirements so as to compare
with those recommended by
the Ohio Department of
Education.
Attending the meeting were
Supt. John Riebel, Principal
Charles Swogger, Clerk C. 0.
Newland, and board members
I. 0. McCoy, Roger Epple , Oris
Smith, Howard Caldwell , Jr .,
and Clyde Kuhn.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Clarence
Potts, Pomeroy; Charles
Perry, Middleport ; Kenneth
Barnell, Middleport; Dorothy
Wright,
Rutland;
Ann
Williams, Minersville; Alma
Frazier, Middleport, and Nellie
Watkins, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Mary
Lavender ,' Flossie Hysell,
Herman Caudill , William
Hatfield, Jessie Shumaker,
Ava Greenlees, Mary Nessel·
road, Myrtle Darst, Carolyn
Adams and Steven Bailey.

COBA AWARD -Edson Roush of Racine (right) receives tile COBA "800" Club Superior
Production award from COBA Dislfict Manager, Harold Bennett, Gallipolis. The event took
place recently at Columbus, Ohio during the Twenty-Seventh Annual Meeting of the Cenlfal
Ohio Breeding Association. COBA honors all dairymen whose herds are on test and are at least
75 pet. sired by COBA Select Sires bulls and have averaged 600 pounds or more of butterfat
during the past year. Roush's herd of 26 Guernseys is over 75 pet. COBA sired and qualifies for
the award with a 657 pound butterfat average.

Father, son to deliver organ
Two former Pomeroy
residents have a major role in
the delivery of an organ to the
United Church · of Christ's
Mission · in San Pedro Sula,
·Hondoras.
They are the Rev. Ralph L.
Kuether, pastor of Trinity
Church in Pomeroy from 1936
to 1946 (then the Federated
Church) and the Rev. Ralph D.
Kuether, a son, who wa~ born
in Pomeroy .

Participants
in
the
celebration-dedication service
included the Rev. Ralph L.
Kuether, pastor of the United
Church of Christ in Osseo,
Wise., the Rev. John
Palmquist, pastor of the Mt.
Carmel Lutheran Church in
Northeast Minneapolis, from
whom the organ was pur·

A service of celebration and
dedication of the purrhase of
the org•n was held Sunday at
a stopped school bus, $15 and
18-years-&lt;Jid.
St. John's United Church of
Others fined by Major Zerkle costs.
Christ in Minneapolis where
Forfeiti~g bonds were Roy L. ,
were
Glosco
Ferrell,
the Rev. Ralph D. Kuether
Chillicothe, $8.70 costs, and Rayburn, 29, Wadsworth, $220, . serves as "minister to
ordered 'to pay parking meter driving while Intoxicated and ministers". Money for the gift
violation tickets; Roscoe driving left of center; John of the organ came from
Edwards, 46. West Columbia,' Knapp; 45, West Columbia, churches
and
people
$15and costs, intoxication; Coy $200, DWI, and $50 for illegal throughout the mid-West inE. Nitz, 34, Middleport, $15 and license; Roger L. Rawland, 22, eluding
members
and
costs ,' intvxication; Joey Stockport, $24, intoxication, organizations of Trinity
Powell, 24, Middleport, $25 and and Richard · G. Mann, 20, Church in Pomeroy now
costs. intoxication; Thomas Canton, $25, posted on a stop pastured by the Rev. Bill
l'tJeCloud, Middleport, passing sign violation.
Perrin .

chased, and the Rev. Ralph D.
Kuether, pastor of St. John's
church in Minneapolis.
Delivery of the organ and
some memorial video-tape
equipment will be made by the
two Kuether lamilies who will
drive it, in a van, the 4,000
miles to the Central American
mission.

Property transfer art to
be explained Friday
'

SAN FRANCISCO- THE WORW'S first museum of erotic
art opens next weekend -its walls covered by 2,000 depictioDI
of sexual activity. "People think erotic art means a bunch · of
Three Cheshire young men
dirty pictures; they don't understand the quality of art that arrested Monday night after
makes up thi~ collection," said The Rev. Ted Mcllvenna, whose allegedly taking part in the
Genesis Church owns the museum.
. beat!~ of a Middleport 110rvice
The art works, collected by sexual psychologists Eberhard station atten&lt;lant, were fined In
and Pllyllis Kronhausen, range from the "only unbroken record the court of Middleport Mayor
of Japanese erotic art" to etchings by Picasso and li\hographs by · John Zerkle Tueaday night.
DaH.
All three, charged with
assault and battery, disturbing
'
PINE~. S. D. -THE GOVERNMENT strengthened
the peace, and fightjng, were
Ita bJocklde 111!1 Jndl.- Vow1od to CCIItinue their armed oc- finad $75 and costs each. They
cur-llan u lhe two lldll matched will tDday lor control .of are ·David M. Stump, Louie
!Continued on page IZ)
J.ou~n. and George Curry, all

,

PHONE 992-2156

'

Cheshire ,young men fined

.I

entine

Death asked for
hardest crimes

COLUMBUS- ASTATE GOVERNMENT survey mailed to
129 000 Ohio businessmen has drawn more than 14,000 replies in
10 days, 01-. David C. Sweet, director of the slate Department of
Economic and Community Development, said Tuesday. Sweet
said he was hoping for at least a 2S pet. response - about 32,000
replies - before final computations to determine attitudes and
needs of state businessmen are made next !"Onth.
The 5-by..ft inch card sent to businessmen asks them to rate
various factors affecting their business and invites them to voice
"concerns" about slate laws and regulations. Although
responses on the first 14,000 cards have not been formaUy
tabulated Sweet said some Indicate concern about the state
Income t~. lack of vocational training schools,_ financial
assistance for small businesses, a need for overseas dlslflbutors
and better communication with state government.

3 for •3.39

Cloudy tonight, chance of
showers and thundershowers
eading east portion tonight.
Lows upper 40s and low 50s. ·.
Cloudy Thursday, chance of
showers and thundershowers .
extreme south. Highs in low
70s .

'

WASHINGTON- THE UNITED Mine Workers Unionwhose members depend upon coal production for their livelihood
- told COngress today that strip mining should be outlawed
where the land can not be restored. "We cannot allow the corporate interests in their zeal for profits to deslfoy our ecological
balance, destroy our land and create panic among those who
labor to produce the wealth of our country," .said UMWA
President Miller.
Miller's comments were presented to the Senate Interior and
Insular Affairs Committee which began liB second day of
hearings on proposed' strip mining laws.

Reinforced straps make this
Hanes undershirt very durable, yet you pay no more!
Highly absorbent combed
cotton. Full-cut to stay
lucked in. S,M-L-XL

Gallia
County
Comffilssaoners Monday appropriated $35,000 to the real
estate assessment fund for the
real estate revaluation which
will be undertaken in the
county in the near future.
County Auditor Morton L.
Dickey was advised on Jan. 8 to
reappraise and reassesS all
real estate in the county by the
Ohio Board of Tax Appeals.
Cole-Layer and Trumble of
Dayton has been employed to
·conduct the revaluation .

at y

Weather

•

.~led To The Interest&amp; OfTheMei~.,-Mwon Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1973

VOL XXIV NO. 232

Jl'e

MEN'S AND. BOYS'..D~PARTMEKT; lST -FLOOR "

1

•

The largest of several
species of tree frogs native to
North America .is the barking
lfee . frog, which reaches a
length of three inches.

filed in court

ELBERFELDS IN POMER-OY

The •reat
1ng
achine
le
-..;:., ....
J

Now You Know

Divorce action

Underwear for men and boys

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

...... __ .. .

A preview J:l'esentation of a
Meigs County. Jaycee Youth
Involvement Program in
Shooter Safety Education was
held recently at the Meigs
Junior High School in Mid·
die port.
Chairman Barry McCoy
reported applications com'
pleted for the seven lesson
course to young people · from
Pomeroy, Middleport,
Rutland, Racine and Letart.
The seven lessons will be of an
hour and a half duration each,
from 7 to 8:30p.m.
A welcome and history was
given by Meigs County Jaycee
President Vincent Knight and
the course was outlined by
McCoy. A question and answer
session followed. A gun \lisplay
was shown by Tom Stewart,
Ralph Stewart and Wendell
Jeffers of the Rutland Gun
Club. Various types of guns,
including a rare Olympic
match .rifle, were shown and
explained.
The program is designed to
cover the basics of safe gun
handling and marksmanship.
It covers familiarization of all

See' the .complete selection of Hanes

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

'

plan explained ..·:

WASHINGTON - THREE YOUNG Washington men were
arrested Monday on charges of shooting Sen. John C. Stennis six
weeks ago after robbing him outside his fashionable home. They
were being arraigned today,
The three men, all from the predominantly black and lower
class northeast section of the city, were identified by police as
Derrick Holloway, 18, Tyrone I. Marshall, 19, and John S.
Marshall, 21. The Marshalls, police said, are brothers. They were
held in the District of Columbia police lockup under $100,000 bond
on charges of violating the federal law against attempting to
assassinate a congressman and on charges of armed robbery.
The federal Jaw was passed in 1968 after the murder of Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy.

Rosenkranz,

.
.
'

.

'

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R squad
answered a call at 10:48 p.m.
for

Shooter safety·

'

Everyone In the Meigs Area
interested in the legal fine
points of transferring property
is invited to participate in the
workshop to be held Friday,
March 16, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.
m. at the Meigs Inn.
c. E!. Blakeslee, County
Extension Agent, said Dr. John
E . Moore, extension farm
management specialist, Ohio
. State University, and William'
P. Smith, Area Extension
Agent, Farm Management, of
the Jackson office, will be the

'

"experts" present. Two local
lawyers, Attorneys Bernard ·
Fultz and Fred Crow, are
assisting on specific problems.
While the workshop is
designed primarily I~ fann
families, it has value for
everyone .
Advanced regislfation is not
needed. However, If persons
desire to participate in lhe
Dutch Treat buffet, II would be
helpful to have their names in.
the County Extension Offlc:e by
Thursday,

�•
3- The Dail,y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 14, tm

..
~ '

2- The Dally Sentmei,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0, March 14,1973

EDITORIAL

BRUCE

Immunity? Maybe
Best to Stand Pat

Life Is What You
Make It, Friends

Some members of the JOUrnalism professton are begm
nmg to have second thoughts about the w1sdom of leglslahon glVmg reporters 1mmumty from bemg forced to reveal the1r news sources m a court of law
Congress 1s cunently cons1dermg such leg1siallon In
fact, no less than 34 'sh1eld" bills have been mtroduced
m the House and Senate th1s sessiOn
Wh1le many of the legislators - and all newsmen who
have teshf1ed on the matter - favor blanket or absolute
1mmumty, senllment seems to be stronger for a law that
would spell out a quahfled or hm1ted 1mmumty to protect
1eporters from ofhc1al 'f1shmg exped11lons" or the kmd
of legal harassment wh1ch has sent a number of them to
JBll m recent months
Yet mmdful of the proverb1al camel wh1ch f1rst stuck
lis nose mto the tent, then took over the tent, some ob
servers are askmg whether there can really be such a
thmg as a httle bit of government leg1slallon m the area
of freedom of the press
· The more the newsmen are subject to leglslallve con
trol, the more that will become regulatory control," Rog.
er C Cramton, ass1slant attorney general m the Justice
Department, told a House Jud1c1ary subcommittee
"Step by step," he warned 'once you start down that
road, what starts out as a priVIlege or favor to the news
med1a ends up With some spec1es of regulatiOn "
Newsmen may v1ew Wlth a jaundiced eye such sol!ct·
tude for themselves on the part of a government off1c1al
Much the same warmng, however, has been voiced by at
least one respected member of the fratermty Vermont C
Royster, former editor of the Wall Street Journal
The very word 1mmumty" leaves a bad taste m the
mouths of many people, even though the law has always
accorded such 1mmumty to doctors, lawyers and clergy·
men
But lo compare reporters w1th these professiOns 1s to
get onto shaky groun~. says Royster Phys1c1ans, attor·
neys and p11ests don t wnte newspaper stories on the
baSIS of what the1r chents tell them
Even the 1dea of hmlted Immunity may be a dub1ous
one To have any useful apphcallon, such a law would
have to d1fferenhate between those who are bona fide jour
nallsts and those who are not
But how 1s th1s d1stmchon to be made and by whom'
As of now, a Journahst is anyone who says he 1s, and th1s
may not be the worst kmd of sltuahon we could have
For once we let the law decide WHO may wnte, we wlll
have taken a very long step toward leltmg the law dec1de
WHAT they may wnte
Others w1ll argue that the current wave of pressure
agamst newsmen const1tutes a clear and present danger
to freedom of the press m Amenca, and to the people's
' "r1ght to know "
Nevertheless, the wtsest course may be to rely on tra·
d1t10n rather than on new statutes on mcreasmg pubhc
understanding of the role and the needs of a free press m
a free soc1ety rather than on a law or laws wh1ch would
attempt to cover every conceivable c1rcumstance
Both freedom of the press and the professiOn of JOUrnal
1sm have, after all, nourished for nearly 200 years under
the F1rst Amendment And while thiS 'blanket' may have
had some wornsome holes punched m 11 lately, and while
It may seem a httle threadbare and short m places tt st1ll
serves

WIN AT BRIDGE

A Tourney Winning Ploy
14

NORTH

• QJ7
.KQ7
tAKQ98
.4 3
WEST

EAST

.3
.J954 3
tJlO
.QJI092

.954
.A1086
t763 2
··15

SOUTH (D)

.2

.AK10862
• 54

.AK86

I.

North-South vulnerable

West

North

East South

Pass

2t
4NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

6.

3•
5'
Pass

Open '"R lead- • Q
By Oswald &amp; James Jacob•
A rubber bndge player
' would have no problem with
today's hand He would wm
the club lead and say to h1m
sell, If trumps break 2-2,
I wllltry to make seven, but
1f they don 't break I w11J JUSt
d r a w trumps concede a
tr1ck to the ace of heart s
and take the small slam ·
That 1s emmently con ect
lll rubber bndge but duph
cate IS a d1fferent matter
When Phylhs 1Mrs Stanley J
Smith of Detrmt played tt tn
the m1xed pairs at the Ha
wauan 1eg10nal , she won the
club lead. played hat ace of
spades led a second spade
to dummy s queen and slop
ped to thmk about seven
She hnally dectded to nsk

the play of a diamond fi om
dummy on the theory that 1!
E a s l I who held the last
11 ump 1 were vo1d of dia·
moods he would almost sure
ly have doubled SIX spades
to get a dtamond lead so she
called fot dummy 's ace of
diamonds
West dropped the 10 Phyl
hs thought a wh1le longer
and led the kmg of dla·
moods West's Jack dropped
and there we 1 e no more
problems She pulled the last
trump . discarded a heart
and two clubs on the dta
monds and claimed seven
The extra tnck turned out
to be worth two mal c h
pomts only, but she had
taken virtually no nsk and
the top score helped Phylbs
and her partner, J1m Zorn
merman of Cleveland, wm
the event m a photo finiSh
(Hf:W5PAt'U

The
We!iit

2t
Pass

f:NTUPIUSE

b1ddm~

ASSN'

has been

North

Pass
Pass

Elst
1•

Pass
Pass

South

Dble
Dble

You South hold
.AK54 .AQ63 t2 .KQ107
What do you lead'J

A-The deuce of diamunds
Yuu1 h1gh urds Will keep. Sla•l
to exhaust the enemy trump)j

fODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of passmg ove r Wt:st s
t .... o di8monds your pa1 h1e1 has
btd two hearts What do \OU do
now 1

Hv llltUt:l' HIOSSAT

I N66D

SOME

STAMPS·
OfYi&gt;S,I..

Us.

Hy Helen Hottel

••

c

A thought for the day
Prestdent Harry Truman said,
"The respons1b1hty of the great
state 1s to serve and not to
dommate the world."

DON'T L.ET Mli
INrERRUPT, H0N ·
I ~T \'olj\,NT 'TO
BORROW \&gt;OOR
SCISSORS·
O....D·· YA

130rANY
CARBON
!=~&gt;.PER?

•
•

fu&gt;;::::»-s;.o::::;:-:-..=:::-:-:·:·: • • •

~ Voic(~

.
,,

1'011~1IKhl 11) l't71
:-..;, \\ t&lt;Jilllfl r I nlo q11 lt&lt;t \t&lt; !&lt; ll

• :::·:·::::·:::::·:~:=:· • ~=--··:- !:".:~:::::-::::...-.::::-: -;@:::'X:·'&gt;.·· ::::.. . :::·,:·:·· :·:.·:· ·.·:·:·:&gt;=.-...;•• : •
0

·-:· •• ·-:-:;;;.~

along Br'Way i

S1lver Redstem), ll! coining money selling
BY JACK O'BRIAN
temtor1es for FranceSCQ Ros1's "Re: Lucky
NO 'CRY Otrr' FOR
Luc1ano " The nick isn't even f10ished and
AUTHOR, AUTHOR!
NEW YORK (KFS) - Tennessee W1U1ams Red's collected more than 1ts total cost.
One of Cong. Mar10 B1agg1's b1g financial
can't take F1rst N1ght reviews any longer. Went
to his "Cry Out" opening, bags with hun, backers SBld about the very theatr1cal (he
packed, and dashed to Key West before the last means hammy) N. Y mayoral candidate, "The
only thing we have to worry about ll! tf he gets
act flmshed; we beat hun by ten nunutes .
"When and if the show closes," Tenn. said, a mov1e offer."
U.S. Attorney Whitney North Seymour may
"then I will f1rst read them " He won't have
have
a deciding vo1ce In the Democratic
long to walt.
Frank Costello's w1ll should be three to hve mayoral prunaries . . london's taking away
mllhon, he was a b1g gambler .. But there's the from Las Vegas scads of blg bettors who get
quesbon of where his real cash lies: once m the free plane fares to the Nevada wheels and dice :
Stork Club a group of us (Winchell, Runyon, the London odds are better ... The recent rash of
Sherman B1l110gsley) were dll!cuSSing the resort~aslnos behind the Iron curtain have !be
diff1culty mmakmg money Costello, at the next same big bettors scared. afrmd they're aU busttable, leaned over and hoarse-whll!pered, "It out (meaning crooked).
Tito Rodriguez, fine Latin musician whose
am'! dlfflcult to make money - the tough thing
foneral jammed Madison Ave. at 81st St., kept
IS tO hide 1\ I"
his grim secret from fans, even most of his
"Cr~es &amp; Whispers," lngmar Bergman's
fam1ly:
he had leukemia three years but no
much-lauded prize-headed film, was offered
around to all the big f1lm distributors for a audience suspected Some news reports said he
$300,000advance. They all looked and shrugged, and Japanese wife Toby were estranged but
on the bas1s of Bergman's last few flicks wh1ch they weren't. Toby prepared herself for the
were treated with respect- but lost money here 10eVItable by studying and gettmg a real estate
.. Bergman's agent Paul Kohner fmally ped- license 10 Florida.
Richard Burton 1s the film industry's
dled U S. nghts for $70,000 to a distributor of
motorcycle mov1es. It Wlll make more profit biggest tipper. Chaplin's the smallest ... Jack
than that 10 the one small Manhattan theater Benny's very good ... Washmgton hotels now
where 1t's showmg . It's been doing so much feature a "No Smoking" floor. Imagine pols in
busmess here m N. Y , the Swedes sold off the smokeless rooms' . "AU m the Famlly" is too
remiunmg world r~ghts for fantastic advances predictable. It needs a new minority to maul,
The U S flim-flammers missed out on one fast . N Y. prices are wlld but In Conakry,
aspect they should have not1ced its press Guinea, a bottle of SCQtch costs $50 ... Eva Gabor
agent, Erme Anderson, a veteran Yankee whimpers that Zsa Zsa was Mama Gay Bore's
1mmersed m the wh1rl of forelgll f1lms, 1s favorite; that she even preferred Magda to Eva.
Awww 1
1
\,.H.J u.t.. t.. \
.. '
1· 1
111 \'n\ Yorkt:r magmme
to prmt the scnpt and then coaxed magazme
ed1tors to see the picture - which started great
Cyma Rubin, who produced "No, No,
word-&lt;If-mouth mterest; the dlstr1bs countered
N(Ulette" and was all but voted the toughest
only w1th the grosses of past Bergman fiscal·
producer of any season by her Equity employes,
flops They blew many mllhons on their figures
says
she !l"efers Mlam1 Beach to New York versus the1r showbiZ 1gnorance
1ns1sts Mwnians don't push and shove the way
The unexpected death ol Wally Cox
N'Yawkers do She should know the beachers
mightn't have happened if he'd known
1
romething the coroners dll!COvered: he'd had • '&lt; '"'''ll: " I tlll.th• Ne~ Yorkers Ruby
Keeler left "No, No" for one reason: she didn't
hardemng of the arter1es for possibly 20 years
hke the way Cyma pushed ,,. Paul Anka claims
So get •1 &lt;heekup! . Aforenoted Frank Costello
his "D1ans" record is the "second most
once told Anthony Qumn he wanted the actor to
popular ' of all t1me. Bing Crosby's "Wh1te
piHv h1m m ,, ftlm ·Not one of those fag ac·
Chmtmas" 1s the champ and we'll make a
tu1 ' · tl•r old undPrllorld prosciutto said
friendly ~uess "Rudolph the Rednosed Rein·
~ """'"' forc1~n head of M(;M Red SilverstPm
deer" beat "Dwna" b~ more than a Yuletide
\\ld 1 1 ~ hclll !;:VIl' Yo hltC, ht: ~ 1\uvnou u0\1. i:a&amp;
nostnl
•

f

•

•I'

Forty.eigbt Meigs
Marauders turned out Tuesday
in Middleport municipal park
for their first turns m the
batting cage to open defense of
their district Class AA
baaeball title.
• Head Coach Don Wolfe, one
of lhl.s area's bona flde masters
of the hard ball sport, couldn't
muster up much cheer about
his prime problems, nsmely:
(I) Replacing his enhre
infield except Lou McKinney at
third base.
(2) Rebuilding his pitching
stall except for sometimes spot

BY PAUL CRABTREE

From 11161 to 1971, wh1le
motor veh1cle deaths In·
creased 44 per cent, the
number of deaths mvolvmg
bicycles rose 70 per cent,
The World Almanac notes
Urban bicycle fatahties mcreased 88 per cent wh1le
m rural areas the gam was
54 per cent Durmg th1s pe·
r1od, b1cycle sales and
usage went up more than
tOO per cent

The Almanac
BARBS
By United Press Internallonal
By PHIL PASTORET
Today IS Wednesday, March
14, the 73rd day of 1973 w1th 292
to follow
The moon 1s between 1ts f1rst
quarter and full phase
The mormng stars are Venus
Mars Jup1ter and Mercury '
'
The evemng stans Saturn
Laugh and the world
Those born on !hll! date are
laughs
with you cry, and
under the s1gn of P1sces.
guy has an even
the
other
German-Amencan sc1enllst
sob
story
~==.:..i
better
Albert Emstem was born
March 14, 1879
On th1s day m h1story
In 1743, the f1rst town
meetmg in Amenca was held m
Boston
In IBI2, the us government
authomed the 1ssue of the f1rst
war bonds, floated to buy
mthtary eqWpment for USe
agamst the British.
In 1947, m1htary and naval
bases m the Phli1pp10es were
leased to the Umted §!ales for
99 years
In 1964, Jack Ruby was found
gUilty of k1llmg assassm Lee
Harvey Oswald, slayer of
Pres1dent John F Kennedy
Ruby was sentenced to death
but the conv1cllon was over·
turned and he d1ed while
awa1tmg a new tnal

Mara~ders rebuilding

w

&amp; THINBS

WASHINGTON 1N~~AI
Too Dependent : He or Sbe?
Mtlhons ol Ame11cans Will not develop the sustauung Dear Helen
sptn! they seem now to lack unhl they diScover sa!tsfac
I Hm m lovew1th a man and I don't know whether I'm a fool
t10n and lake pnde m domg even I he most roullmzed tasks
or not
well
He has been borrow1ng money and promising to pay me
The quick 1esponse lrom many may be that such re
wards a1 e Impossible Well 1"11 JUst be arb1trary and say back, but he never does. Last tune It was $200- against his ln·
that "such responses a1 e dead wrong
come tax refund. But the refund came and went- right past me
Admittedly, m pe1 formmg monotonous, repehhve work
There's another problem. I live at home with my mother and
or gomg through the unchangmg parts of your dally llfe baby, though I'm 26. Mainly because It's cheaper and less lonely
cycle, saltsfacllon may not come up and str1ke you m the
for aU of us and we get along well. But he said I'm '1oo depen·
face You have to want It to be there
You have to lea1n to take pnde m perlormmg well even dent" just because I call home when I'm gomg to be out late, to
the dullest and smallest tasks Obv1ously they are not m· check on the baby and keep Mom from worrying. He says a
vested with exc1tement To gtve them any tmge of that woman my age should have an apartment of my own
reqUires a c1 eatlve act on your pari That attitude of
I was used once before Am I letting love blind me again? creallveness nurtures the seeds of..real freedom, wh1ch,
DOUBTFUL
paradoxically. all too few of us eve1 fmd m restless efforts
to escape the routmes of hfe and work
In a play wntten by the able Lllhan Hellman, called Dear Doubtful.
Probably.
The Autumn Garden." an aging man whose llfe has been
largely wasted 1s bemoanmg the fact that his · b1g
A man who calls his girl "too dependent" while he depends
moment' never came A fmnd rephes
on her hand-outs, ll! the same kind of scrounger wlio would move
The1e a1e no btg moments unless you have a pile ol mto the apartment he !Mll!ted she rent - as a non118Ying guest
small moments to build upon '
Take your money (what's left) and run' -H
or course we all want b1g moments. exc1tement. adven·
+++
ture And 11 1s perfectly plam that some tasks m hfe have
Dear
Helen
a bmlt-m exc1tement that others seem wholly to lack Yet
I hear about the centerlolds for Playboy and Cosmopolitan.
the respondmg fnend m Hellman's play held the key It
1s an llluSton that excitement IS contmuous for anyone
Well, by gosh, I got an amb1tlon: I'm gomg to apply as a model
The great moments even for the most f01 lunate folk have for theflrstcenterfold in "Harvest Years." -FOXY GRANDPA
a deep foundatiOn m drudgmg routme
In years gone by, the celebrated dancer, Fred Asta1re
Dear Foxy
blazed across the movie screen agam and agam m dances
Get 'em Tiger! - H
marked by dazzhng Imagma!Ive fla1r But behmd eve1y
+++
captlvallng dance Ia) 100 hoUl s of agomzmg, pamfully
1epet1t1ve pracllce
Dear Helen.
Great artiSts really have the llfe, don't they' They dash
My wife-to-be wants a double rmg ceremony, but I don't go
about the world, performmg 10 vaned settmgs to aud1
for wedding rmgs Please tell me what a wedding ring does for a
ences wh1ch often reward them w1th thunderous ovattons
man - AGAINST
Still behmd the VISible glamor hes that same 1ron routme Pracllce prachce, practice One great p1amst no11
Dear Agamst:
long dead, once said
Well, (suppo~ly) 11 stops crrculallon.- H
'If I miss one day of p1 act1ce I know It If I miSs two
days, my coach knows It If I miSs three the aud1ence
+++
knows '
Dear Helen
Now, for most of us , there 1s mdeed exc1tement and
Women claun they are discrunmated agamst. What about
some adventure oulstde the realm of work whlch may not
the
divorce
courts' I know a few mce guys who thought they
have an mherent h1gh quot1ent of those thmg! It 1s ob
should spilt the uramum m10e: SHE got the uranium, and HE got
vwusly sens1ble and carl be mtensely rewa1dmg to pursue
the shaft!
these outstde actlVlttes-cultural recreallonal whatever
-w1th full VIgor They are not JUSt compensall(m and off.
In one case, the woman won the house and made a nice
set for 1outlmzed work, but a kmd of cappmg of the human
prof1t, then skipped the slate with two chlldren and a boyfr1end.
spmt, a seekmg after the best which we should be domg
But she shll demands and gets a b1g wad of chlld support from
anyway
her
ex-husband - which means he is supporting the boyfnend.
Still these pursutts wtll not have thetr fullest meamng
I know another guy who puts out nearly half his salary to
tf we look upon them as the only reward, If we ms1st on
support
his kids, even though his former wife draws down a good
v1ewmg the long stretches of evident monotony on the JOb
or m runnmg the house as a vast empty dese1 t
salary he~self He can't afford to get roamed agam, but she can,
To accept the repetitive routmes IS to accept hie as 11
because he's stuck w1th chlld support untU the chlldren are 21,
truly IS and thus to find the begmnmgs of makmg the
whether she takes a new husband or not.
most of tl Little thmgs, pallently and thoroughly done
Let's hope the Equal Rights Amendment will stop some of
may produce v1stbly sallsfymg results Somellmes they
th1s mequ1ly 1 - CONCERNED FOR MY FRIENDS
may not. as on many assembly hnes
But you still have to want to help achieve a good result
Dear CFMF
and summon the constant hope that 11 w111 be good 1f you
do your hm1ted l"Outme pail well The1e ts no Jreedom 10
Poss1bly that's why some of the anti-NOW gals are aga1nst
the escape of not canng Thet e ts only a demal ol llfe and
ERA -H
.a defeat for oneself
'

They'll Do It

50M' Pti&gt;.PER
CL.IPS· AND

BIO~SA1

•

All right, Bob Brunner, you big tall slob, take that! And that'
And !hall
I mentioned a few days back that the anchorman for Channel
Three's Charleston operations had hmruUated me In a test on
baseball and TV trlVla, g1vmg me a quiZ on which I hlt no better
than 400.
So I dreamed up a super qwz for him, dlabollcal and un.
feehng In my search for vengeance. Well, that's not really true:
Because of hill tender years and obv1ous speCialty in baseball, I
kept all my questions on that topic, and confined them to the post·
World War U years These were the questions:
1 -Which of the elght major-league expansion teams s10ce
1960 has the best over~ll record (conced10g that only the Mets
ever won a pennant or World Series)'
2-The longest All.star game in history was settled by two
solo home runs by National League third basemen, In 11167. Name
them

Pro Standings

. .. ,

NBA Standings
By United Press lntern~tlonat
Eastern Conference
Atl.ntlc Divtsion
w. t. pet. g.b.
Boston
59 13 .819
New York
55 22 .714 6'h
Buffalo
21 51 292 38
Philadelphia 9 66 120 51'12
Central DIVISIOn
w. I pet. g.b.
Baltimore
46 26 639
Atlanta
42 32 568 5
Houston
29 44 397 1r
Cleveland
26 46 361 20
Western Conference
Midwest DivtSton
w. I pet. g.b.
Milwaukee
52 22 703
Chicago
48 26 649 4
Detroit
33 39 4.58 1B
KC-Omaha
34 42 447 19
Paciftc Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
LosAngeles 54 19 740
Golden Slate 44 29 603 10
Phoenix
33 41 446 21'12
Seallle
24 51 320 33
Portland
17 57 230 38
Tuesday's Results
Las Angetes121 Buffalo 112
New York 115 Phoenix 111
Cleveland 115 Allanla 107
Baltimore 103 KC-Omaha 99
Chicago 104 Seattle 89
Golden St. 109 Portland 101
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
Baltimore at Boston
Phoenix at Philadelphia
LD$ Angeles at Detroit
(Only games scheduled)

3 -What major league p1tchmg star tied the World Series
record for most WlDS in a series one year, and tied the record for
most World Ser1es losses the followmg year'
4 - Who ll! the only player m the Braves orgamzation who
played for them only the Ialit year they were 10 Boston, all the
years they were m Milwaukee, and only the hrst year they were
10 Atlanta'
5- What major league manager of the present era could be
called the ''George Blanda" of baseball, because his majoc·
league career spanned four decades, and he performed at only
two positions - p1tcher and outfielder, during his 22-year

career?
6 - Who was the good-hit, no.f1eld hrst baseman of the
Pirates who bore the not-too-affectionate mckname of "Dr.
Strangeglove'"
7 -What player set the record for most home rum hit by a
shortstop one year, and set the record for best f1elding per·
cenlage by a shortstop the followmg year'
8 -Only three teams since 1950 have had four players who
hit 20ormorehome runsm a s10gle season. Forget the years and
the players JUst name the teams.
9 -Only one maJor league ump1re achve 10 1972 ever played
longer than one season m the majors hunself Name him.
10- Who was the llrst player to lead a mass exodus to the
Mex~can League m the post-war era, creating panic among
Amer1can owners who were fearful of losmg their top draw10g
cards'

+++

Here are the answers, and Brunner's performance.
1-Califorma Angens, with .477 (the Mets are only 415) 2Rlchle (Dicit) Allen and Tony Perez, 1967 3- Lew Burdette,
Milwaukee Braves, 1957 and 1956. 4- Eddie Matthews, now back
with Braves as manager. 5- Ted W11liams, active 19311-60, who
p1tched two innings for the Red Sox m 1940 6- D1clt Stuart. 7Ernie Banks of the Cuba, 1958 and 1959 8 - The 1953 Dodgers
(Hodges, Smder, Furillo and Campanella), the 11169 Reds (May,'
Bench, Tolan and Perez), and the 1972 Astros (May, Rader,•
Wynn and Cedeno). 9- Ken Burkhart (f1ve seasons a pitcher'
Wlth the Cards and Reds 10-DaMy Gardella
Brunner took the test and got only f1ve questions right -but
still better than the four I managed on his super~IZ. 1 think 1t's
enough to cut hun down a little, though. And remember each.
rught, if you watch the Channel3 news, you're looking at a man'
with a head full oi purest triVIa
I

'I

'~

•

~1 1

~ J

&lt;'..,

++++

~I

1

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,~

!"

j~

ON THE TV DIAL "Earthk~epmg," the ,ne)l' 7oung people's"
ecology spec1al, beglDS 1ts run on WOUB·TV at 7 30.

••
"

Television Log
WEDNESDAY MARCH 14,1973
,
6 00 - Trulh or Conseq 6 News 3 4 B. 10. 15. Sesame Sf 20
Around the Bend 33
6 30 - News 3. 4, 6. B. 10, 15 I Dream of Jeannie 13, Zoom 33
7 00 - News 6, 10 , What's My Line 8, Trulh or Conseq 3 Beat
lhe Clock 4 Anylhtng You Can Do 13 Know Your Schools 33 '
Elec Co 20 Fabulous Seven 15
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6, The Judge 10 Pollee Surgeon 3, 4
Beal the Clock 13 Andy Griffith 15 Earlhkeeptng 20,
Eptsode Aclton 33 George Kirby B
8 00 - Adam 12 3 4, 15 Paul Lynde 6, 13 , Sonny &amp; Cher B. 10
America '73 20 33
•
8 JO - Mov1e 'Mr lns1de Mr Outs1de '3,.4 15 , ' Class of '63° 6 :

13

'

9 00 - Medical Center B, 10, Eye to Eye 20. 33
9 30 -

San Franc1sco M1x 20, 33

·•

10 00 - Soul 33 , News 20 . Cannon 8 10 Owen Marshall

6,

Search 3, 4, IS

11 00 - News3, 4 6 B,lO, 13,15
Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 , Comedy News 6, 13
"Waterhole No 31' 8, "The Great Sioux Massacre" 10

11 30 1 00 -

~

~

•

Mov1es ~

..
-:

..•

News 4 , 13

-

THURSDAY, MARCH 15,1973

"

6 00 - Sunnse Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10

~

6 15 - Farmhme 10 Paul Harvey 13

6 30 -

13

Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8, Amenca•s;•

Problems 10. Patlerns for L1vmg 13
•'
6· 45 - Corncob Reporl 3
4
6 55 - Take F1ve for Ltfe 15
~
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10 , News 6, Popeye 10. -·
Rocky Bullwtnkle 13
j
7 30 - Romper Room 6, Sleepy Jeffers 8, Rocky &amp; Bullwtnkle~
13
.
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10, Sesame Sl 33. New Zoo Revnue 13 .l
Lassie 6

• I'\'

B 30 - Jack LaLanne 13 , New Zoo Revue 6, Romper Room B •
9 00 - Concenlralton 6, Paul Dtxon 4, Phil Donahue 15, Capt
Kangaroo 8, Friendly Junction 10, AM 3, Dr Kildare 13
,
9 30 - Jeopardy 6· To Tell the Trulh 3
~
10 00 - Dick Van Dyke 13, Dinah Shore 3, 15. Columbus Six \
Calling 6. Joker's Wild a, 10
•
~
10 30- Concentration 3, 15, Price Is Right B, 10, Phtl Donahue 4"
Spilt Second 13
• ~
11 00 - Sate otthe Century 3 IS Gambit B, 10, Love American~
Style 6 Password 13. Elec Co 20
•
'/
11 30 - Bewitched 13, Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15, Search ~~·,
Tomorrow 8. 10 Sesame Sf 20
·~
12 OG-Password 13. News 10, Jeopardy 3, 15, Jackte Ubllnger.a 1
I 00 - All My Children 6, 13 News 3. Green Acres 10, Welch'
Your Chtld 20, 33, Secret Slorm 8, Not For Women Only 15 ~
I 30 - 3 On A Match 3. 4, 15, Let's Make a Deal 6, 13, As the•
World Turns B. 10.
2 00 - Days of Our Lives3, 4, 15, Gutdlng LlghiB, '10 , Newlywed
Game 13. Mike Dougass 6
'
2 30 - Doctoro3,4,15, EdgeofNight8.10 DallngGame13 . . ~
3 00- Another World 3, 4, 15: General Hospital 6, 13. Love•$
Splendored Thing B, 10, Behind the Lines 20
''
'
3 30- Return of Peyton Place 3, 4, 15, One Life to Live~ 13 ~~
Secret Storm 10. Merv Griffin B, Eye to Eye20
' '
4 00 - Mister Cartoon 3, Merv Griffin 4, Fllntstones 6, Love
~merlcan Style 13 , Somerset 15, Sesame St 20, 33 , Movie
Has Anybody Seen My Gal" 10
4 30- Petticoat Junction 3. Andy Grlftin 15, 1 Love Lucy 6, ~
'
Daniel Boone13. Gilligan's island B, Dick Van Oykels , •
5 00 - Dame! Boone 6, Bonanza 3, 4, Mr Rogers 20 33 Andy'
Griffith 15
'
'
,
1
5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15, Elec Co 33 . Gomer Pyle USMC13
Beverly Hlllb(llles 8, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
• '
6 OO-News3,4, 8, 15. News6,B, 10, TruthorCo~&amp;eq 6
1
6 30 - NBC News 3 4, 15. ABC News 6, I Dream of Jeannie 13, 1
DeStgntng Women 33, CBS News B 10
·
''
7 00 - What's My Lme B, Big Red Jubilee 15, News 6.' 10. t!eal:
the Clock 4, Elec Co 20 Course of Our Time~ JJ: ' Truth or~
Conseq 3. Let's Make A Deal 13
'
7 30 - 1'11 See You In Court 4, Hollywood Squares J. To Tell Xhe
Tru 1h6, Wild Ktngdom 10, Lassie B. Beat the Clock 13, Zoom
io, Flip Wtlson 3, 4, 15, Mod Squad 6, 13. Advocates 20 33 ~
National Geographic B, 10
'
'
8 00 - Flip Wtlson 3, 4, 15. Mod Squad 6, 13, The Wattons B 10 l

starter and rehever, Bill
Chaney, the strong and hefty
senior righthander just off
bnlliant turns on the gr1dlron
and basketball floor
Gone from the 1972 squad
that f10ll!hed strong with a 9-7
record and losmg in the
tournaments at the regional
level (to Steubenville) are
catcher Roger Dixon, centerflelder Rick Ash, shortstop
Steve Dunfee, seconil baseman
Tommy Cooke and p1tchers
Chester W1gal and Eddie
Young.
They w11l be replaced,

ABA Standings
By United Press tnlernatlonal
East
w I pet. g b
53 24 68B
Carolina
Kentucky
51 27 654 2'h
VIrginia
3B 36 514 131h
29 47 382 23'h
New York
Memphis
22 56 2B2 31'h
West
w I pet. g b.
Utah
SO 25 667
Indiana
4.5 30 .600 5
Denver
42 34 553 81/2
Dallas
2• 49 329 25
San Diego
25 51 329 25'12
Tuesday's Results
Kentucky 139 Memphis 103
Utah 131 O.llao 118
Dtnver 114 San Diego 96
&lt;Only Qames scheduled)

r----------··

1 Our Interest Is
1
I

Greater For You

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I 6% i

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1 2 Year Certificates I
I
Of Deposit
I
I
I
I' percent per year on 21
1vear Certificates of I
1Deposit. s 10,000.00 I
1Mmimum. Interest I
I payable Quarterly. 1
I
I
I M• Branch I
I
I -@IllS
I
I
I
I
1
1

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II

Tht Athtns County
Slvlngs &amp; Loon Co.
2M StcOOid St.
Pomoroy, Ohio
All Accounts Insured To
$20,000 00 by FSLIC

II r''·"
I . ~
I ~ :-.&lt;!,

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·----------1

Wictne•day's Games
San Diego at New York
Vtrgtnla at Dallas
Utah al lndtana
(Only games scheduled I
NHL Standings
By United Press InternatiOnal
East
w. t. t. pis gf ga
Mntrel 46 9 14 106 284 155
NY Rgrs
44 17 7 95 269 175
Boston 44 20 5 93 288 210
Detroit 34 23 11 79 226 2()1
Buffalo 33 24 12 7B 229 189
Toronto 23 35 9 55 2()5 225
Vncuvr lB 43 B 44 200 305
NY lsldrs
9 58 5 23 147 321
West
wltptsglga
Chlcag 3B 23 8 84 250 199
Phlla 33 26 10 76 254 227
Mlnn 33 27 9 75 228 202
St.Lous 30 29 to 70 204 214
Los Ang 28 31 11 67 206 221
Pttsbgh 27 35 7 61 222 230
Atlanta 24 32 13 61 174 200
Calli 11 43 15 37 168 290
Tuesday's Re5ults
Boston 3 NY lstonders 0
Sl LouiS 2 Buffalo o
Mlnn 2 Los Ang 2, tie
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games

Mootreal at Detroit
Philadelphia al Toronto
NY Rangers at Chtcago

Vancouver at Callforn1a

Advocates 20, 33
9 00 - Kung Fu 6, 13

'

' ~.

An American Family 2(), 33: Iroo side 3 4 '
15, Movie "Trapeze" 8, Applause 10
' ·;;;
10 00 - Dean Martin 3, 4, 15: Streets of San Fr.1nclsco 6, 13, l'l
News 20. World Press 33
"'
11 30 ·- John~y Ca~~n 3. 4, 15, TV Tlme16. 13. Movie "Holiday
for Lovers 10 Murdor~ 1n the Rue Morgue" a
I 00 - News 13 Roller Derby 4
? 00 - News 4

Walton top vote-getter

NEW YORK (UPI)- Three
returnees from last year's
squad, led by top vo~etter
Bill Walton of UCLA, highlight
the 19'12-73 Umted Press Inter-

Pittsburgh at Los Angeles
51 Louis at Atlanta
!Only games scheduled)
AHL Standings
By United Press tnternallonel
East
w. I. I. pts gl ga
N5
3B 14 15 91 276 16B
Boston 31 25 11 73 227 224
Rchslr 30 28 10 70 21B 244
Prov 25 28 14 64 221l 22B
Sprgfld 17 35 16 50 244 302
N.H. 15 34 19 49 229 293
Weot
w t. I. pis gl ga
Clnct 49 17 4 102 310 191
Hrshy 35 20 11 81 277 205
Va
30 20 16 76 224 200
Rchmnd
26 31 10 62 227 241
Jcksnvl 23 3B B 54 237 28B
Ball
13 42 10 36 17B 283
Tuesday's Results
Boston BJacksonville 6
R1chmond 2 Springfield 1
Vtrgmla 2 Rochesler 0

mark from field

season.
The 7-1 Chamberlain, In his
14th NBA season, started off
the week with a .712 shooting
mark and an 18.5 rebound
average He hit 10 of his 12
shots aga!Mt Buffalo Tuesday
mght and collected 23 rebounds
as the Los Angeles Lakers
defeated the Braves, 121·112, to
clinch the Pacific Division
title.
Chamberlain also led the
Lakers In scoring with 25
points. Jerry West tallied 23 for
Los Angeles and Jim McMillian added 23 Bob Kauff·
man of Buffalo netted a gamehigh 28 points.
Wilt, who owns more than 28
NBA records, scoced 18 points
and grabbed 12 rebounds m the
first half.
In other action, New York
downed Phoenix, 115-111;
Cleveland supised Atlanta,
115-107, Baltunore beat Kansas
Clty.Qmaha, 103-99; Chicago
clipped Seattle, 10f.89, and
Golden State whipped Portland, 109-101.
Wlllls Reed and Walt Frazier
scored 28 points each as New
York subdued a stubborn
Phoenix team that rallied from

a J6-po10t def1C1! only to lose 111
the final two nunutes Charlie
Scott led the Suns w1th 33 pomts
before fouling out at the sevenmmute mark of the fourth
quarter
The
defeat
mathematically eliminated
Phoenix from the playoffs.
Two foul shots by Lenny
Wllkens with 7·24 remaining
gave Cleveland command in
the game with Atlanta. Bobby
Smith and Jlnuny Cleamons
scored 21 of the Cava' 36 po10ts
In the fmal per1od to help beat
the Hawks Austm Carr led
Cleveland with 28 points and
Pete Mara vlch 's 31 topped
Atlanta marksmen.
Nate Archibald, the NBA's
leading scorer, hit for 42 points,
but It wasn't enough as
Baltimore's balanced attack
beat KC()maha Phil Chenier
led the Bullets Wlth 24 pomts
and Mike Riordan had 21, Including the six of the last eight
Ballln!ore points In the game.
Chicago rece1ved little opportunity for foul shooting,
getting only five tries, but the
Bulls dominated field goal
producllon, 51-3'1, In routing
Seattle. Jim King, hitting six of
his first seven shots, led
Ctlcago with 20 points. Spencer
Haywood of the Somes had 31.
Golden State clinched second
place in the Pacific DiVISion
and a berth In the playoffs as
Rick Barry riddled Portland
for 34 pomts and Nate Thur·
mond took down 21 rebounds.
Geoff Petrie led the losing
mazers w1th 33 points

national All-America team
Walton, a 6.foot-11 senior,
)oms IHl senior Ed Ratleff of
long Beach State and 6-1
senior Dwight Lamar of Southwestern
Lou1s1ana
as
holdovers from last year's All·
America team. Roundmg out
the first f1ve are 6-4 sophomore
David Thompson of North
Carolina State and 6-5 senior
Doug Collins of Illin01s State.
Walton, the player most
respons1ble for the Brums
gomg undefeated 10 regular
season play for a second
stra1ght year, missed by only
one point of be1ng a unarumous
chmce for the team The b1g
redhead got 389 pomts out of a
possible 390 m ballotmg con·
dueled of 195 sports wr1ters and
sportscasters from across the
nation.
Voters were asked to select a
first and a second team with
two pomts be10g awarded to a
player named to the frrst unit
and one point g1ven for second
team menllon
Ke1th Wilkes of UCLA heads
the second team and is j01ned
by Tom McMlllen of Maryland,
Jim Brewer of Minnesota,
Ernie
D1Gregono
of
ProVIdence and Kev10 Joyce of
South Carolina.
The thrrd team consll!ts of
Allan Hornyak of Ob10 State,
Tom Burleson of North Caroli·
na State, Bill Schaeffer of St.

John's (NY ), Ron Behagen of
Mmnesota and Marvm Barnes
of Providence
Walton, the top pro prospect
m college crrcles even though
he still has a year of ehglblhty
remammg, averaged 19 8
points and 17 rebounds per
game thll! year whlle leadmg
the BrulDS through a 26-0
campa1gn.
Ratleff was the sparkplug for
long Beach State for the
second success1ve year and
helped get the 49ers mto the
NCAA tournament A fine
playmaker
and
sobd
rebounder, he scored at a 23 3
clip while splitting h1s time
between forward and guard
Lamar, the nation's leadmg
scorer a year ago, slipped a b1t
th1s season but st1U managed to
average JUS! under 30 po10ts a
game whlle leadmg the CaJuns
to an NCAA tournament berth.
Thompson, a qwck callike
guard w1th moves remmll!cent
of Jerry West, was the main
reason the Wolfpack went
undefeated 10 27 regular season
games He averaged better
than 25 po10ts a game and was
VIrtually unstoppable m oneand -one situations
Collins, who starred for the
U S Olymp1c team at Mumch
Ialit summer, scored 26 po10ts a
game and earned h1gh praiSe
from opposmg players for his
!me all-around play.

Mo Sou 70 Fa1rmount 63

Wtno(la St 70 Grnd Canyn 64

WHA Standtngs
By Umled Press lnternattonal
East
w t I pis gt ga
New Eng 39 26 2 BO 270 223
Cleve
3B 28 2 78 254 213
Phtla
33 37 0 66 261 284
NY
31 37 2 64 276 297
Quebec 29 35 5 63 246 278
Otlawa 29 37 4 62 243 278
Wesl
wltptsgfga
Wtnlpg 41 26 3 85 260 216
Houslon 35 30 4 74 253 237
Mmn
34 32 3 71 221 232
Los Ang 33 33 5 71 237 231
AI berta 31 35 2 64 235 233
Chtcago 25 42 2 52 227 261
Tuesday's Results
·Oitawa 3 Los Angeles 1
Phtladelphta 4 Houston 3
Alberta 4 Cleveland 2
New Eng 4 Chtcago 3, ol
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games

Cleveland at Alberla

Houston at New York
New England at Wmmpeg

!Only games scheduled)

CAPTAIN NAMED
LAKE PARK, Fla (UP!) JackBurke,Jr.,PGA Player of
the Year In 1956, bas been
named capt am of th1s year's
US Ryder Cup team, 1t was
announced Tuesday by Wilham
Clark, pres1dent of the ProfesSIOnal Golfers Assoc~allon of
Amer1ca
The mternahonal matches,
which origmated m 1927, w1ll
be held thll! year at Muirf1eld,
Scotland, Sept. 20-22 Bernard
Hunt, veteran Ryder Cup
compehtor, has been named to
captam the British team.

No way,
says Leo
IIY JOE CARNICEW
UPI Sports Writer
I..w Durocher, the volatile
manager of the Houston
Astros, has drawn more than
his share of fmes dunng a
stormy career and he drew
another
Tuesday from
National League Pres1dent
Chub Feeney for interfermg
w1th a Players ASSOClBtion
meet10g Monday The only
difference th1s time Is that
Durocher claims he won't pay
the $250
The lnc1dent for wh1ch
Durocher was fmed occurred
Monday m Pompano Beach,
Fla , when• the 66-year old
manager mterrupted a
meeting between Players'
Assoc1a!lon Execullve
DU"eCtor Marvm Miller and the
Astros Durocher clauned the
meeting was extending Into
scheduled practice tune.
Durocher, extremely upset
about the f10e, SBld, "1! really
did surpriSe me to get a Wli'C
Without a call. Chub's never
failed to give me a call to explam a S•tuatlon. I didn't hear a
word from him. If I was wrong
I would pay the $250 Never
once have I argued a fine if I'm
wrong. This time I know I'm
not wrong.
"I understand Mr. Miller has
asked for an apology from the
Houston ballclub," Durocher
sa1d "There's no way he'll get
an apology from me. I would
res~gn f1rst as manager of the
Houston baseball club and 1
would take Mr. Feeney to

court

!I

,

• Tr1ctor lire~ relrtlded1

o Tlrotllqul4-flllodl

' ' • Tire ulu 1 aervlce for
every truck, ttaclor, and

We're As Clase As

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MIIOI·MASON ARIA
CHISTIR L. TANNIHILL,

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ROIIRT HOIPLICH,

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POMEROY, OHIO

THE MONTERREY

COLOR TV

111E CHAMPS - The fifth grade basketball liQUid at Syracuse Elementary were the
winners of the flfth.Qxth grade tourney of Southern Local School D1stnct Team members are
front, l.r, Larry Cundiff, ScOtt Nease, John Williams, Dennll! Michael and Bob Roush; back
row, Jack Duffy, James Patterson, Bob Holstem, Steve Norton, Rick F1agg, John Dav1s and
William Baer, coach.

H&amp;R Firestone

ON

USED CARS

992-2101

1111.
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WEATIIER

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Sllurdoy br Tho Ohio Voller
Publilhlng Compony , 111
Court $t , Pomeroy, Oh 10
45769 Bu1lnt11 Office Phoni
99! !156, Edltorlol Phone •n
2157
Second cion postogo pold tt
Pomtroy, Ohio

VALUES

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HO'ITER!

National ldYtrllslng
rtprnentatlvt
Batlintlll

GolloQhtr, Inc , 12 Etst •!nd
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. . . .~. . . . . .~. . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,Ls-•n_,_,n_•_'~·------------1

HISS NOMINATED
lNDlANAPOUS, Ind. (UPI)
- Mike Hiss, Rookie of the
Year m the 1972 Indianapolll!
50Q.mUe auto race, was nonunated to drive one of two cars
entered Tuesday for th1s year's
race by Don Gerhardt of
Fresno, Calif
Hiss finished seventh In last
year's race and also was sixth
at Pocono and second at On·
tarlo In two other USAC 5()()..
mUers He will have his choice
of two machines powered by
Drake.Qffenhauser ent!lJles.

BEST

Thl Dlllr Sltlllntl

• Flat• repaired promptl)'l
e1 ub"' vRIVtl replaced!

Rook1e third baseman Jerry
Terrell had two smgles and
drove m two runs off Denny
McLain as the Mmnesota
Twms beat the Atlanta Braves,
5·0, and Charlie Spikes'
sacrif1ce fly and a two-run
single by Jack Brohamer hfted
the Cleveland lnd1ans to a 3.()
victory over the Califorrua
Angels in a ramshortened
game. Cy Young Award winner
Gaylord Perry pitached five
scoreless mmngs for the Indians
Back-to-back homers by Wll·
lie Montanez and Mike Sclunidt
helped the Philadelphia Phils
beat the Kansas City Royals, 62, and lou Brock had two
smgles and a double m the St.
lou1s Card10als' 6-0 lnumph
over the Baltunore Or10les
Pmch·hltter Ed Armbr1ster
smgled home Dave Concepcwn
Wlth two out 10 the loth mnmg
to g1ve !be Cincmnati Reds a 54 v1ctory over the Pittsburgh
Pirates and Cesar Cedeno hit a
two-run homer to carry the
Astros to a 4-3 v1ctory over the
Boston Red Sox
Des1gnsted pmch.JU!ter Or·
lando Cepeda had two hits and
three RB!s for Boston.

Spec Richardson, general
manager of the Astros, said he
talked with Miller by phone
Tuesday and eonf1nned that
Miller requested an apology
from the Houston club
Richardson said, however,
that "38 ballplayers have said
PRICE
they d1dn't want to meet with
QUALITY'
Marvm Miller That's a hell of
SERVICE
a blow to him. That's never
happened before to him I think
Miller's P!'ltle Ia hurt. 1 thin'&lt;
Durocher is the only manllger
HANDSOME .
in baseball who would do this
SPANISH STYLING
and I think he was r1ght."
Several Astro players were
FROM
questioned about the 10cident
but declined to be named. All of GENERAL ELECTRIC
them conf1rmed their wishes
not to attend the meeting and
suggested Miller could have
come to Cocoa to arrange a
much more convenient
meetmg. The main objection to
the meeting by the players was
that the timing meant getting
up at 5 a.m. to leave Cocoa at
8:30a.m in order to arrive in
Pompano at 10:30 a.m
Elsewhere In the tramlng
camps, Dick Allen, the highest
salaned player in baseball
Early
Americanhistory, made his 1m debut for
$489.95
Ctlcago as the White Sox lost to
• Wide Screen (23"
the New York Yankees, 2-1
diagonal, 295 sq mches)
Allen had a single and
• AFC . Automabc Fme
grounded into a double play
-Tunmg Control
with two on in the e~ghtb.
• Many Other Quahty
Homer Wins Game
Features
Pinch-hitter Joe Ferguson's
grand-slam homer with two out
In the ninth gave the Los
Angeles Dodgers a 5-2 victory
over the New York Mets and
the Chicago Cubs beat the
Oakland A's, 7-5, with
Ferguson Jenkms pitchmg
three scoreless mnings for the 992-2238
Middleport
Cubs.

Alexander Graham Bell's
patent for the telephone No 174,465, ISsued on March
7, 1876 - often has been
called the most valuable
single patent in history

1

J

probably, unless an unheralded base, and Floyd Burney, left ' R1chards and Pr1ce, the latter
sophomore from the reserve f1elder, are returmng from three show10g promll!e on the
squad, or a fast developmg 1972 Chuck Eastman and Paul reserve squad of last year
jumoc oc semor holdover from Sm1th, who rode the vars1ty which was undefeated (4~) .
Three other boys looking for
last year beats them out, by: bench last year, are back for
another
fling.
a
chance
to show the1r sluff are
Chuck Faulk and Mike
"We'll be looking hard for the brothers B1ll and Don
Richards, both pitchersomebody
who can get the ball Vaughan and John Dillard, not
infielders; Steve Pnce,
shortstop, Mike Nesselroad, over the plate not too good to out last year
A report on the reserve
second base; M1ck Ash, out. hit," sa1d Coach Wolfe.
One bnght spot ll! the return squad of freshmen and moslly
f1elder; Rick Stobart, firstof
Burney whose four home sophomores will be avallable
baseman and catcher, and
Cotfe9e Baskelball Result•
By Un1led Press International
runs last year 1gnited 1m- soon
Dave Wolfe, outfielder
NAtA Tournament
TheMarauac•o open the1r IllThe only semor of the above portant game winning rallies.
At Kansas C•tr
The pitching staff, at th1s game schedule Tuesday, April UW Green Bay 77 Da las Bap
ll! Faulk.
66
Regulars Robb1e Eason, f1rst stage, could be Chaney, Faulk, 3, at Ironton
Sam Housloo 88 Warlburg 62
Quntptac 79 Quachtla Bap 66
So Car Sf S2 Haslmgs 71
Md ·E Shore 114 E Monl 107
Xavter 81 Mam165

Wilt has .712
By United Press International
Wllt Chamberlam will add
his Uth rebound10g title to a
new category m the National
Basketball Association record
booka.flnt player lo achieve a
.700 field-goal percentage for a

COLUMBUS (UP!)- Tom
Kozelko, Toledo's 6-11 senior
center and forward, loday
was named Mid-American
Conference player of the
year for the second consecutive year.
Kozelko scored a total of
1,561 points In three varsity
seasons at Toledo for a ZO.S
points per game average.
His 21.5 average this year
was second best In the
cooferenee.

SECOND PLACE WINNERS - The mth grade squad at Syracuse Elementary took
second place honors in the recent Southern Local District tourney. Squad members are, front,
1-r, Steve Taylor, Mark Dav1s, T1m Imboden, Mark Demnsey, and B11l Roush, second roll,
Doug Huston, Ken Koehler, Randy Arnold, Rick Taylor, Jon Houdashelt. Randy Brmky and
Will1am Baer, roacfi

KEITH 'GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

lrd Ave.

Middleport

•

�•
3- The Dail,y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 14, tm

..
~ '

2- The Dally Sentmei,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0, March 14,1973

EDITORIAL

BRUCE

Immunity? Maybe
Best to Stand Pat

Life Is What You
Make It, Friends

Some members of the JOUrnalism professton are begm
nmg to have second thoughts about the w1sdom of leglslahon glVmg reporters 1mmumty from bemg forced to reveal the1r news sources m a court of law
Congress 1s cunently cons1dermg such leg1siallon In
fact, no less than 34 'sh1eld" bills have been mtroduced
m the House and Senate th1s sessiOn
Wh1le many of the legislators - and all newsmen who
have teshf1ed on the matter - favor blanket or absolute
1mmumty, senllment seems to be stronger for a law that
would spell out a quahfled or hm1ted 1mmumty to protect
1eporters from ofhc1al 'f1shmg exped11lons" or the kmd
of legal harassment wh1ch has sent a number of them to
JBll m recent months
Yet mmdful of the proverb1al camel wh1ch f1rst stuck
lis nose mto the tent, then took over the tent, some ob
servers are askmg whether there can really be such a
thmg as a httle bit of government leg1slallon m the area
of freedom of the press
· The more the newsmen are subject to leglslallve con
trol, the more that will become regulatory control," Rog.
er C Cramton, ass1slant attorney general m the Justice
Department, told a House Jud1c1ary subcommittee
"Step by step," he warned 'once you start down that
road, what starts out as a priVIlege or favor to the news
med1a ends up With some spec1es of regulatiOn "
Newsmen may v1ew Wlth a jaundiced eye such sol!ct·
tude for themselves on the part of a government off1c1al
Much the same warmng, however, has been voiced by at
least one respected member of the fratermty Vermont C
Royster, former editor of the Wall Street Journal
The very word 1mmumty" leaves a bad taste m the
mouths of many people, even though the law has always
accorded such 1mmumty to doctors, lawyers and clergy·
men
But lo compare reporters w1th these professiOns 1s to
get onto shaky groun~. says Royster Phys1c1ans, attor·
neys and p11ests don t wnte newspaper stories on the
baSIS of what the1r chents tell them
Even the 1dea of hmlted Immunity may be a dub1ous
one To have any useful apphcallon, such a law would
have to d1fferenhate between those who are bona fide jour
nallsts and those who are not
But how 1s th1s d1stmchon to be made and by whom'
As of now, a Journahst is anyone who says he 1s, and th1s
may not be the worst kmd of sltuahon we could have
For once we let the law decide WHO may wnte, we wlll
have taken a very long step toward leltmg the law dec1de
WHAT they may wnte
Others w1ll argue that the current wave of pressure
agamst newsmen const1tutes a clear and present danger
to freedom of the press m Amenca, and to the people's
' "r1ght to know "
Nevertheless, the wtsest course may be to rely on tra·
d1t10n rather than on new statutes on mcreasmg pubhc
understanding of the role and the needs of a free press m
a free soc1ety rather than on a law or laws wh1ch would
attempt to cover every conceivable c1rcumstance
Both freedom of the press and the professiOn of JOUrnal
1sm have, after all, nourished for nearly 200 years under
the F1rst Amendment And while thiS 'blanket' may have
had some wornsome holes punched m 11 lately, and while
It may seem a httle threadbare and short m places tt st1ll
serves

WIN AT BRIDGE

A Tourney Winning Ploy
14

NORTH

• QJ7
.KQ7
tAKQ98
.4 3
WEST

EAST

.3
.J954 3
tJlO
.QJI092

.954
.A1086
t763 2
··15

SOUTH (D)

.2

.AK10862
• 54

.AK86

I.

North-South vulnerable

West

North

East South

Pass

2t
4NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

6.

3•
5'
Pass

Open '"R lead- • Q
By Oswald &amp; James Jacob•
A rubber bndge player
' would have no problem with
today's hand He would wm
the club lead and say to h1m
sell, If trumps break 2-2,
I wllltry to make seven, but
1f they don 't break I w11J JUSt
d r a w trumps concede a
tr1ck to the ace of heart s
and take the small slam ·
That 1s emmently con ect
lll rubber bndge but duph
cate IS a d1fferent matter
When Phylhs 1Mrs Stanley J
Smith of Detrmt played tt tn
the m1xed pairs at the Ha
wauan 1eg10nal , she won the
club lead. played hat ace of
spades led a second spade
to dummy s queen and slop
ped to thmk about seven
She hnally dectded to nsk

the play of a diamond fi om
dummy on the theory that 1!
E a s l I who held the last
11 ump 1 were vo1d of dia·
moods he would almost sure
ly have doubled SIX spades
to get a dtamond lead so she
called fot dummy 's ace of
diamonds
West dropped the 10 Phyl
hs thought a wh1le longer
and led the kmg of dla·
moods West's Jack dropped
and there we 1 e no more
problems She pulled the last
trump . discarded a heart
and two clubs on the dta
monds and claimed seven
The extra tnck turned out
to be worth two mal c h
pomts only, but she had
taken virtually no nsk and
the top score helped Phylbs
and her partner, J1m Zorn
merman of Cleveland, wm
the event m a photo finiSh
(Hf:W5PAt'U

The
We!iit

2t
Pass

f:NTUPIUSE

b1ddm~

ASSN'

has been

North

Pass
Pass

Elst
1•

Pass
Pass

South

Dble
Dble

You South hold
.AK54 .AQ63 t2 .KQ107
What do you lead'J

A-The deuce of diamunds
Yuu1 h1gh urds Will keep. Sla•l
to exhaust the enemy trump)j

fODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of passmg ove r Wt:st s
t .... o di8monds your pa1 h1e1 has
btd two hearts What do \OU do
now 1

Hv llltUt:l' HIOSSAT

I N66D

SOME

STAMPS·
OfYi&gt;S,I..

Us.

Hy Helen Hottel

••

c

A thought for the day
Prestdent Harry Truman said,
"The respons1b1hty of the great
state 1s to serve and not to
dommate the world."

DON'T L.ET Mli
INrERRUPT, H0N ·
I ~T \'olj\,NT 'TO
BORROW \&gt;OOR
SCISSORS·
O....D·· YA

130rANY
CARBON
!=~&gt;.PER?

•
•

fu&gt;;::::»-s;.o::::;:-:-..=:::-:-:·:·: • • •

~ Voic(~

.
,,

1'011~1IKhl 11) l't71
:-..;, \\ t&lt;Jilllfl r I nlo q11 lt&lt;t \t&lt; !&lt; ll

• :::·:·::::·:::::·:~:=:· • ~=--··:- !:".:~:::::-::::...-.::::-: -;@:::'X:·'&gt;.·· ::::.. . :::·,:·:·· :·:.·:· ·.·:·:·:&gt;=.-...;•• : •
0

·-:· •• ·-:-:;;;.~

along Br'Way i

S1lver Redstem), ll! coining money selling
BY JACK O'BRIAN
temtor1es for FranceSCQ Ros1's "Re: Lucky
NO 'CRY Otrr' FOR
Luc1ano " The nick isn't even f10ished and
AUTHOR, AUTHOR!
NEW YORK (KFS) - Tennessee W1U1ams Red's collected more than 1ts total cost.
One of Cong. Mar10 B1agg1's b1g financial
can't take F1rst N1ght reviews any longer. Went
to his "Cry Out" opening, bags with hun, backers SBld about the very theatr1cal (he
packed, and dashed to Key West before the last means hammy) N. Y mayoral candidate, "The
only thing we have to worry about ll! tf he gets
act flmshed; we beat hun by ten nunutes .
"When and if the show closes," Tenn. said, a mov1e offer."
U.S. Attorney Whitney North Seymour may
"then I will f1rst read them " He won't have
have
a deciding vo1ce In the Democratic
long to walt.
Frank Costello's w1ll should be three to hve mayoral prunaries . . london's taking away
mllhon, he was a b1g gambler .. But there's the from Las Vegas scads of blg bettors who get
quesbon of where his real cash lies: once m the free plane fares to the Nevada wheels and dice :
Stork Club a group of us (Winchell, Runyon, the London odds are better ... The recent rash of
Sherman B1l110gsley) were dll!cuSSing the resort~aslnos behind the Iron curtain have !be
diff1culty mmakmg money Costello, at the next same big bettors scared. afrmd they're aU busttable, leaned over and hoarse-whll!pered, "It out (meaning crooked).
Tito Rodriguez, fine Latin musician whose
am'! dlfflcult to make money - the tough thing
foneral jammed Madison Ave. at 81st St., kept
IS tO hide 1\ I"
his grim secret from fans, even most of his
"Cr~es &amp; Whispers," lngmar Bergman's
fam1ly:
he had leukemia three years but no
much-lauded prize-headed film, was offered
around to all the big f1lm distributors for a audience suspected Some news reports said he
$300,000advance. They all looked and shrugged, and Japanese wife Toby were estranged but
on the bas1s of Bergman's last few flicks wh1ch they weren't. Toby prepared herself for the
were treated with respect- but lost money here 10eVItable by studying and gettmg a real estate
.. Bergman's agent Paul Kohner fmally ped- license 10 Florida.
Richard Burton 1s the film industry's
dled U S. nghts for $70,000 to a distributor of
motorcycle mov1es. It Wlll make more profit biggest tipper. Chaplin's the smallest ... Jack
than that 10 the one small Manhattan theater Benny's very good ... Washmgton hotels now
where 1t's showmg . It's been doing so much feature a "No Smoking" floor. Imagine pols in
busmess here m N. Y , the Swedes sold off the smokeless rooms' . "AU m the Famlly" is too
remiunmg world r~ghts for fantastic advances predictable. It needs a new minority to maul,
The U S flim-flammers missed out on one fast . N Y. prices are wlld but In Conakry,
aspect they should have not1ced its press Guinea, a bottle of SCQtch costs $50 ... Eva Gabor
agent, Erme Anderson, a veteran Yankee whimpers that Zsa Zsa was Mama Gay Bore's
1mmersed m the wh1rl of forelgll f1lms, 1s favorite; that she even preferred Magda to Eva.
Awww 1
1
\,.H.J u.t.. t.. \
.. '
1· 1
111 \'n\ Yorkt:r magmme
to prmt the scnpt and then coaxed magazme
ed1tors to see the picture - which started great
Cyma Rubin, who produced "No, No,
word-&lt;If-mouth mterest; the dlstr1bs countered
N(Ulette" and was all but voted the toughest
only w1th the grosses of past Bergman fiscal·
producer of any season by her Equity employes,
flops They blew many mllhons on their figures
says
she !l"efers Mlam1 Beach to New York versus the1r showbiZ 1gnorance
1ns1sts Mwnians don't push and shove the way
The unexpected death ol Wally Cox
N'Yawkers do She should know the beachers
mightn't have happened if he'd known
1
romething the coroners dll!COvered: he'd had • '&lt; '"'''ll: " I tlll.th• Ne~ Yorkers Ruby
Keeler left "No, No" for one reason: she didn't
hardemng of the arter1es for possibly 20 years
hke the way Cyma pushed ,,. Paul Anka claims
So get •1 &lt;heekup! . Aforenoted Frank Costello
his "D1ans" record is the "second most
once told Anthony Qumn he wanted the actor to
popular ' of all t1me. Bing Crosby's "Wh1te
piHv h1m m ,, ftlm ·Not one of those fag ac·
Chmtmas" 1s the champ and we'll make a
tu1 ' · tl•r old undPrllorld prosciutto said
friendly ~uess "Rudolph the Rednosed Rein·
~ """'"' forc1~n head of M(;M Red SilverstPm
deer" beat "Dwna" b~ more than a Yuletide
\\ld 1 1 ~ hclll !;:VIl' Yo hltC, ht: ~ 1\uvnou u0\1. i:a&amp;
nostnl
•

f

•

•I'

Forty.eigbt Meigs
Marauders turned out Tuesday
in Middleport municipal park
for their first turns m the
batting cage to open defense of
their district Class AA
baaeball title.
• Head Coach Don Wolfe, one
of lhl.s area's bona flde masters
of the hard ball sport, couldn't
muster up much cheer about
his prime problems, nsmely:
(I) Replacing his enhre
infield except Lou McKinney at
third base.
(2) Rebuilding his pitching
stall except for sometimes spot

BY PAUL CRABTREE

From 11161 to 1971, wh1le
motor veh1cle deaths In·
creased 44 per cent, the
number of deaths mvolvmg
bicycles rose 70 per cent,
The World Almanac notes
Urban bicycle fatahties mcreased 88 per cent wh1le
m rural areas the gam was
54 per cent Durmg th1s pe·
r1od, b1cycle sales and
usage went up more than
tOO per cent

The Almanac
BARBS
By United Press Internallonal
By PHIL PASTORET
Today IS Wednesday, March
14, the 73rd day of 1973 w1th 292
to follow
The moon 1s between 1ts f1rst
quarter and full phase
The mormng stars are Venus
Mars Jup1ter and Mercury '
'
The evemng stans Saturn
Laugh and the world
Those born on !hll! date are
laughs
with you cry, and
under the s1gn of P1sces.
guy has an even
the
other
German-Amencan sc1enllst
sob
story
~==.:..i
better
Albert Emstem was born
March 14, 1879
On th1s day m h1story
In 1743, the f1rst town
meetmg in Amenca was held m
Boston
In IBI2, the us government
authomed the 1ssue of the f1rst
war bonds, floated to buy
mthtary eqWpment for USe
agamst the British.
In 1947, m1htary and naval
bases m the Phli1pp10es were
leased to the Umted §!ales for
99 years
In 1964, Jack Ruby was found
gUilty of k1llmg assassm Lee
Harvey Oswald, slayer of
Pres1dent John F Kennedy
Ruby was sentenced to death
but the conv1cllon was over·
turned and he d1ed while
awa1tmg a new tnal

Mara~ders rebuilding

w

&amp; THINBS

WASHINGTON 1N~~AI
Too Dependent : He or Sbe?
Mtlhons ol Ame11cans Will not develop the sustauung Dear Helen
sptn! they seem now to lack unhl they diScover sa!tsfac
I Hm m lovew1th a man and I don't know whether I'm a fool
t10n and lake pnde m domg even I he most roullmzed tasks
or not
well
He has been borrow1ng money and promising to pay me
The quick 1esponse lrom many may be that such re
wards a1 e Impossible Well 1"11 JUst be arb1trary and say back, but he never does. Last tune It was $200- against his ln·
that "such responses a1 e dead wrong
come tax refund. But the refund came and went- right past me
Admittedly, m pe1 formmg monotonous, repehhve work
There's another problem. I live at home with my mother and
or gomg through the unchangmg parts of your dally llfe baby, though I'm 26. Mainly because It's cheaper and less lonely
cycle, saltsfacllon may not come up and str1ke you m the
for aU of us and we get along well. But he said I'm '1oo depen·
face You have to want It to be there
You have to lea1n to take pnde m perlormmg well even dent" just because I call home when I'm gomg to be out late, to
the dullest and smallest tasks Obv1ously they are not m· check on the baby and keep Mom from worrying. He says a
vested with exc1tement To gtve them any tmge of that woman my age should have an apartment of my own
reqUires a c1 eatlve act on your pari That attitude of
I was used once before Am I letting love blind me again? creallveness nurtures the seeds of..real freedom, wh1ch,
DOUBTFUL
paradoxically. all too few of us eve1 fmd m restless efforts
to escape the routmes of hfe and work
In a play wntten by the able Lllhan Hellman, called Dear Doubtful.
Probably.
The Autumn Garden." an aging man whose llfe has been
largely wasted 1s bemoanmg the fact that his · b1g
A man who calls his girl "too dependent" while he depends
moment' never came A fmnd rephes
on her hand-outs, ll! the same kind of scrounger wlio would move
The1e a1e no btg moments unless you have a pile ol mto the apartment he !Mll!ted she rent - as a non118Ying guest
small moments to build upon '
Take your money (what's left) and run' -H
or course we all want b1g moments. exc1tement. adven·
+++
ture And 11 1s perfectly plam that some tasks m hfe have
Dear
Helen
a bmlt-m exc1tement that others seem wholly to lack Yet
I hear about the centerlolds for Playboy and Cosmopolitan.
the respondmg fnend m Hellman's play held the key It
1s an llluSton that excitement IS contmuous for anyone
Well, by gosh, I got an amb1tlon: I'm gomg to apply as a model
The great moments even for the most f01 lunate folk have for theflrstcenterfold in "Harvest Years." -FOXY GRANDPA
a deep foundatiOn m drudgmg routme
In years gone by, the celebrated dancer, Fred Asta1re
Dear Foxy
blazed across the movie screen agam and agam m dances
Get 'em Tiger! - H
marked by dazzhng Imagma!Ive fla1r But behmd eve1y
+++
captlvallng dance Ia) 100 hoUl s of agomzmg, pamfully
1epet1t1ve pracllce
Dear Helen.
Great artiSts really have the llfe, don't they' They dash
My wife-to-be wants a double rmg ceremony, but I don't go
about the world, performmg 10 vaned settmgs to aud1
for wedding rmgs Please tell me what a wedding ring does for a
ences wh1ch often reward them w1th thunderous ovattons
man - AGAINST
Still behmd the VISible glamor hes that same 1ron routme Pracllce prachce, practice One great p1amst no11
Dear Agamst:
long dead, once said
Well, (suppo~ly) 11 stops crrculallon.- H
'If I miss one day of p1 act1ce I know It If I miSs two
days, my coach knows It If I miSs three the aud1ence
+++
knows '
Dear Helen
Now, for most of us , there 1s mdeed exc1tement and
Women claun they are discrunmated agamst. What about
some adventure oulstde the realm of work whlch may not
the
divorce
courts' I know a few mce guys who thought they
have an mherent h1gh quot1ent of those thmg! It 1s ob
should spilt the uramum m10e: SHE got the uranium, and HE got
vwusly sens1ble and carl be mtensely rewa1dmg to pursue
the shaft!
these outstde actlVlttes-cultural recreallonal whatever
-w1th full VIgor They are not JUSt compensall(m and off.
In one case, the woman won the house and made a nice
set for 1outlmzed work, but a kmd of cappmg of the human
prof1t, then skipped the slate with two chlldren and a boyfr1end.
spmt, a seekmg after the best which we should be domg
But she shll demands and gets a b1g wad of chlld support from
anyway
her
ex-husband - which means he is supporting the boyfnend.
Still these pursutts wtll not have thetr fullest meamng
I know another guy who puts out nearly half his salary to
tf we look upon them as the only reward, If we ms1st on
support
his kids, even though his former wife draws down a good
v1ewmg the long stretches of evident monotony on the JOb
or m runnmg the house as a vast empty dese1 t
salary he~self He can't afford to get roamed agam, but she can,
To accept the repetitive routmes IS to accept hie as 11
because he's stuck w1th chlld support untU the chlldren are 21,
truly IS and thus to find the begmnmgs of makmg the
whether she takes a new husband or not.
most of tl Little thmgs, pallently and thoroughly done
Let's hope the Equal Rights Amendment will stop some of
may produce v1stbly sallsfymg results Somellmes they
th1s mequ1ly 1 - CONCERNED FOR MY FRIENDS
may not. as on many assembly hnes
But you still have to want to help achieve a good result
Dear CFMF
and summon the constant hope that 11 w111 be good 1f you
do your hm1ted l"Outme pail well The1e ts no Jreedom 10
Poss1bly that's why some of the anti-NOW gals are aga1nst
the escape of not canng Thet e ts only a demal ol llfe and
ERA -H
.a defeat for oneself
'

They'll Do It

50M' Pti&gt;.PER
CL.IPS· AND

BIO~SA1

•

All right, Bob Brunner, you big tall slob, take that! And that'
And !hall
I mentioned a few days back that the anchorman for Channel
Three's Charleston operations had hmruUated me In a test on
baseball and TV trlVla, g1vmg me a quiZ on which I hlt no better
than 400.
So I dreamed up a super qwz for him, dlabollcal and un.
feehng In my search for vengeance. Well, that's not really true:
Because of hill tender years and obv1ous speCialty in baseball, I
kept all my questions on that topic, and confined them to the post·
World War U years These were the questions:
1 -Which of the elght major-league expansion teams s10ce
1960 has the best over~ll record (conced10g that only the Mets
ever won a pennant or World Series)'
2-The longest All.star game in history was settled by two
solo home runs by National League third basemen, In 11167. Name
them

Pro Standings

. .. ,

NBA Standings
By United Press lntern~tlonat
Eastern Conference
Atl.ntlc Divtsion
w. t. pet. g.b.
Boston
59 13 .819
New York
55 22 .714 6'h
Buffalo
21 51 292 38
Philadelphia 9 66 120 51'12
Central DIVISIOn
w. I pet. g.b.
Baltimore
46 26 639
Atlanta
42 32 568 5
Houston
29 44 397 1r
Cleveland
26 46 361 20
Western Conference
Midwest DivtSton
w. I pet. g.b.
Milwaukee
52 22 703
Chicago
48 26 649 4
Detroit
33 39 4.58 1B
KC-Omaha
34 42 447 19
Paciftc Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
LosAngeles 54 19 740
Golden Slate 44 29 603 10
Phoenix
33 41 446 21'12
Seallle
24 51 320 33
Portland
17 57 230 38
Tuesday's Results
Las Angetes121 Buffalo 112
New York 115 Phoenix 111
Cleveland 115 Allanla 107
Baltimore 103 KC-Omaha 99
Chicago 104 Seattle 89
Golden St. 109 Portland 101
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
Baltimore at Boston
Phoenix at Philadelphia
LD$ Angeles at Detroit
(Only games scheduled)

3 -What major league p1tchmg star tied the World Series
record for most WlDS in a series one year, and tied the record for
most World Ser1es losses the followmg year'
4 - Who ll! the only player m the Braves orgamzation who
played for them only the Ialit year they were 10 Boston, all the
years they were m Milwaukee, and only the hrst year they were
10 Atlanta'
5- What major league manager of the present era could be
called the ''George Blanda" of baseball, because his majoc·
league career spanned four decades, and he performed at only
two positions - p1tcher and outfielder, during his 22-year

career?
6 - Who was the good-hit, no.f1eld hrst baseman of the
Pirates who bore the not-too-affectionate mckname of "Dr.
Strangeglove'"
7 -What player set the record for most home rum hit by a
shortstop one year, and set the record for best f1elding per·
cenlage by a shortstop the followmg year'
8 -Only three teams since 1950 have had four players who
hit 20ormorehome runsm a s10gle season. Forget the years and
the players JUst name the teams.
9 -Only one maJor league ump1re achve 10 1972 ever played
longer than one season m the majors hunself Name him.
10- Who was the llrst player to lead a mass exodus to the
Mex~can League m the post-war era, creating panic among
Amer1can owners who were fearful of losmg their top draw10g
cards'

+++

Here are the answers, and Brunner's performance.
1-Califorma Angens, with .477 (the Mets are only 415) 2Rlchle (Dicit) Allen and Tony Perez, 1967 3- Lew Burdette,
Milwaukee Braves, 1957 and 1956. 4- Eddie Matthews, now back
with Braves as manager. 5- Ted W11liams, active 19311-60, who
p1tched two innings for the Red Sox m 1940 6- D1clt Stuart. 7Ernie Banks of the Cuba, 1958 and 1959 8 - The 1953 Dodgers
(Hodges, Smder, Furillo and Campanella), the 11169 Reds (May,'
Bench, Tolan and Perez), and the 1972 Astros (May, Rader,•
Wynn and Cedeno). 9- Ken Burkhart (f1ve seasons a pitcher'
Wlth the Cards and Reds 10-DaMy Gardella
Brunner took the test and got only f1ve questions right -but
still better than the four I managed on his super~IZ. 1 think 1t's
enough to cut hun down a little, though. And remember each.
rught, if you watch the Channel3 news, you're looking at a man'
with a head full oi purest triVIa
I

'I

'~

•

~1 1

~ J

&lt;'..,

++++

~I

1

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,~

!"

j~

ON THE TV DIAL "Earthk~epmg," the ,ne)l' 7oung people's"
ecology spec1al, beglDS 1ts run on WOUB·TV at 7 30.

••
"

Television Log
WEDNESDAY MARCH 14,1973
,
6 00 - Trulh or Conseq 6 News 3 4 B. 10. 15. Sesame Sf 20
Around the Bend 33
6 30 - News 3. 4, 6. B. 10, 15 I Dream of Jeannie 13, Zoom 33
7 00 - News 6, 10 , What's My Line 8, Trulh or Conseq 3 Beat
lhe Clock 4 Anylhtng You Can Do 13 Know Your Schools 33 '
Elec Co 20 Fabulous Seven 15
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6, The Judge 10 Pollee Surgeon 3, 4
Beal the Clock 13 Andy Griffith 15 Earlhkeeptng 20,
Eptsode Aclton 33 George Kirby B
8 00 - Adam 12 3 4, 15 Paul Lynde 6, 13 , Sonny &amp; Cher B. 10
America '73 20 33
•
8 JO - Mov1e 'Mr lns1de Mr Outs1de '3,.4 15 , ' Class of '63° 6 :

13

'

9 00 - Medical Center B, 10, Eye to Eye 20. 33
9 30 -

San Franc1sco M1x 20, 33

·•

10 00 - Soul 33 , News 20 . Cannon 8 10 Owen Marshall

6,

Search 3, 4, IS

11 00 - News3, 4 6 B,lO, 13,15
Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 , Comedy News 6, 13
"Waterhole No 31' 8, "The Great Sioux Massacre" 10

11 30 1 00 -

~

~

•

Mov1es ~

..
-:

..•

News 4 , 13

-

THURSDAY, MARCH 15,1973

"

6 00 - Sunnse Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10

~

6 15 - Farmhme 10 Paul Harvey 13

6 30 -

13

Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8, Amenca•s;•

Problems 10. Patlerns for L1vmg 13
•'
6· 45 - Corncob Reporl 3
4
6 55 - Take F1ve for Ltfe 15
~
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10 , News 6, Popeye 10. -·
Rocky Bullwtnkle 13
j
7 30 - Romper Room 6, Sleepy Jeffers 8, Rocky &amp; Bullwtnkle~
13
.
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10, Sesame Sl 33. New Zoo Revnue 13 .l
Lassie 6

• I'\'

B 30 - Jack LaLanne 13 , New Zoo Revue 6, Romper Room B •
9 00 - Concenlralton 6, Paul Dtxon 4, Phil Donahue 15, Capt
Kangaroo 8, Friendly Junction 10, AM 3, Dr Kildare 13
,
9 30 - Jeopardy 6· To Tell the Trulh 3
~
10 00 - Dick Van Dyke 13, Dinah Shore 3, 15. Columbus Six \
Calling 6. Joker's Wild a, 10
•
~
10 30- Concentration 3, 15, Price Is Right B, 10, Phtl Donahue 4"
Spilt Second 13
• ~
11 00 - Sate otthe Century 3 IS Gambit B, 10, Love American~
Style 6 Password 13. Elec Co 20
•
'/
11 30 - Bewitched 13, Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15, Search ~~·,
Tomorrow 8. 10 Sesame Sf 20
·~
12 OG-Password 13. News 10, Jeopardy 3, 15, Jackte Ubllnger.a 1
I 00 - All My Children 6, 13 News 3. Green Acres 10, Welch'
Your Chtld 20, 33, Secret Slorm 8, Not For Women Only 15 ~
I 30 - 3 On A Match 3. 4, 15, Let's Make a Deal 6, 13, As the•
World Turns B. 10.
2 00 - Days of Our Lives3, 4, 15, Gutdlng LlghiB, '10 , Newlywed
Game 13. Mike Dougass 6
'
2 30 - Doctoro3,4,15, EdgeofNight8.10 DallngGame13 . . ~
3 00- Another World 3, 4, 15: General Hospital 6, 13. Love•$
Splendored Thing B, 10, Behind the Lines 20
''
'
3 30- Return of Peyton Place 3, 4, 15, One Life to Live~ 13 ~~
Secret Storm 10. Merv Griffin B, Eye to Eye20
' '
4 00 - Mister Cartoon 3, Merv Griffin 4, Fllntstones 6, Love
~merlcan Style 13 , Somerset 15, Sesame St 20, 33 , Movie
Has Anybody Seen My Gal" 10
4 30- Petticoat Junction 3. Andy Grlftin 15, 1 Love Lucy 6, ~
'
Daniel Boone13. Gilligan's island B, Dick Van Oykels , •
5 00 - Dame! Boone 6, Bonanza 3, 4, Mr Rogers 20 33 Andy'
Griffith 15
'
'
,
1
5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15, Elec Co 33 . Gomer Pyle USMC13
Beverly Hlllb(llles 8, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
• '
6 OO-News3,4, 8, 15. News6,B, 10, TruthorCo~&amp;eq 6
1
6 30 - NBC News 3 4, 15. ABC News 6, I Dream of Jeannie 13, 1
DeStgntng Women 33, CBS News B 10
·
''
7 00 - What's My Lme B, Big Red Jubilee 15, News 6.' 10. t!eal:
the Clock 4, Elec Co 20 Course of Our Time~ JJ: ' Truth or~
Conseq 3. Let's Make A Deal 13
'
7 30 - 1'11 See You In Court 4, Hollywood Squares J. To Tell Xhe
Tru 1h6, Wild Ktngdom 10, Lassie B. Beat the Clock 13, Zoom
io, Flip Wtlson 3, 4, 15, Mod Squad 6, 13. Advocates 20 33 ~
National Geographic B, 10
'
'
8 00 - Flip Wtlson 3, 4, 15. Mod Squad 6, 13, The Wattons B 10 l

starter and rehever, Bill
Chaney, the strong and hefty
senior righthander just off
bnlliant turns on the gr1dlron
and basketball floor
Gone from the 1972 squad
that f10ll!hed strong with a 9-7
record and losmg in the
tournaments at the regional
level (to Steubenville) are
catcher Roger Dixon, centerflelder Rick Ash, shortstop
Steve Dunfee, seconil baseman
Tommy Cooke and p1tchers
Chester W1gal and Eddie
Young.
They w11l be replaced,

ABA Standings
By United Press tnlernatlonal
East
w I pet. g b
53 24 68B
Carolina
Kentucky
51 27 654 2'h
VIrginia
3B 36 514 131h
29 47 382 23'h
New York
Memphis
22 56 2B2 31'h
West
w I pet. g b.
Utah
SO 25 667
Indiana
4.5 30 .600 5
Denver
42 34 553 81/2
Dallas
2• 49 329 25
San Diego
25 51 329 25'12
Tuesday's Results
Kentucky 139 Memphis 103
Utah 131 O.llao 118
Dtnver 114 San Diego 96
&lt;Only Qames scheduled)

r----------··

1 Our Interest Is
1
I

Greater For You

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I 6% i

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1 2 Year Certificates I
I
Of Deposit
I
I
I
I' percent per year on 21
1vear Certificates of I
1Deposit. s 10,000.00 I
1Mmimum. Interest I
I payable Quarterly. 1
I
I
I M• Branch I
I
I -@IllS
I
I
I
I
1
1

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II

Tht Athtns County
Slvlngs &amp; Loon Co.
2M StcOOid St.
Pomoroy, Ohio
All Accounts Insured To
$20,000 00 by FSLIC

II r''·"
I . ~
I ~ :-.&lt;!,

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·----------1

Wictne•day's Games
San Diego at New York
Vtrgtnla at Dallas
Utah al lndtana
(Only games scheduled I
NHL Standings
By United Press InternatiOnal
East
w. t. t. pis gf ga
Mntrel 46 9 14 106 284 155
NY Rgrs
44 17 7 95 269 175
Boston 44 20 5 93 288 210
Detroit 34 23 11 79 226 2()1
Buffalo 33 24 12 7B 229 189
Toronto 23 35 9 55 2()5 225
Vncuvr lB 43 B 44 200 305
NY lsldrs
9 58 5 23 147 321
West
wltptsglga
Chlcag 3B 23 8 84 250 199
Phlla 33 26 10 76 254 227
Mlnn 33 27 9 75 228 202
St.Lous 30 29 to 70 204 214
Los Ang 28 31 11 67 206 221
Pttsbgh 27 35 7 61 222 230
Atlanta 24 32 13 61 174 200
Calli 11 43 15 37 168 290
Tuesday's Re5ults
Boston 3 NY lstonders 0
Sl LouiS 2 Buffalo o
Mlnn 2 Los Ang 2, tie
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games

Mootreal at Detroit
Philadelphia al Toronto
NY Rangers at Chtcago

Vancouver at Callforn1a

Advocates 20, 33
9 00 - Kung Fu 6, 13

'

' ~.

An American Family 2(), 33: Iroo side 3 4 '
15, Movie "Trapeze" 8, Applause 10
' ·;;;
10 00 - Dean Martin 3, 4, 15: Streets of San Fr.1nclsco 6, 13, l'l
News 20. World Press 33
"'
11 30 ·- John~y Ca~~n 3. 4, 15, TV Tlme16. 13. Movie "Holiday
for Lovers 10 Murdor~ 1n the Rue Morgue" a
I 00 - News 13 Roller Derby 4
? 00 - News 4

Walton top vote-getter

NEW YORK (UPI)- Three
returnees from last year's
squad, led by top vo~etter
Bill Walton of UCLA, highlight
the 19'12-73 Umted Press Inter-

Pittsburgh at Los Angeles
51 Louis at Atlanta
!Only games scheduled)
AHL Standings
By United Press tnternallonel
East
w. I. I. pts gl ga
N5
3B 14 15 91 276 16B
Boston 31 25 11 73 227 224
Rchslr 30 28 10 70 21B 244
Prov 25 28 14 64 221l 22B
Sprgfld 17 35 16 50 244 302
N.H. 15 34 19 49 229 293
Weot
w t. I. pis gl ga
Clnct 49 17 4 102 310 191
Hrshy 35 20 11 81 277 205
Va
30 20 16 76 224 200
Rchmnd
26 31 10 62 227 241
Jcksnvl 23 3B B 54 237 28B
Ball
13 42 10 36 17B 283
Tuesday's Results
Boston BJacksonville 6
R1chmond 2 Springfield 1
Vtrgmla 2 Rochesler 0

mark from field

season.
The 7-1 Chamberlain, In his
14th NBA season, started off
the week with a .712 shooting
mark and an 18.5 rebound
average He hit 10 of his 12
shots aga!Mt Buffalo Tuesday
mght and collected 23 rebounds
as the Los Angeles Lakers
defeated the Braves, 121·112, to
clinch the Pacific Division
title.
Chamberlain also led the
Lakers In scoring with 25
points. Jerry West tallied 23 for
Los Angeles and Jim McMillian added 23 Bob Kauff·
man of Buffalo netted a gamehigh 28 points.
Wilt, who owns more than 28
NBA records, scoced 18 points
and grabbed 12 rebounds m the
first half.
In other action, New York
downed Phoenix, 115-111;
Cleveland supised Atlanta,
115-107, Baltunore beat Kansas
Clty.Qmaha, 103-99; Chicago
clipped Seattle, 10f.89, and
Golden State whipped Portland, 109-101.
Wlllls Reed and Walt Frazier
scored 28 points each as New
York subdued a stubborn
Phoenix team that rallied from

a J6-po10t def1C1! only to lose 111
the final two nunutes Charlie
Scott led the Suns w1th 33 pomts
before fouling out at the sevenmmute mark of the fourth
quarter
The
defeat
mathematically eliminated
Phoenix from the playoffs.
Two foul shots by Lenny
Wllkens with 7·24 remaining
gave Cleveland command in
the game with Atlanta. Bobby
Smith and Jlnuny Cleamons
scored 21 of the Cava' 36 po10ts
In the fmal per1od to help beat
the Hawks Austm Carr led
Cleveland with 28 points and
Pete Mara vlch 's 31 topped
Atlanta marksmen.
Nate Archibald, the NBA's
leading scorer, hit for 42 points,
but It wasn't enough as
Baltimore's balanced attack
beat KC()maha Phil Chenier
led the Bullets Wlth 24 pomts
and Mike Riordan had 21, Including the six of the last eight
Ballln!ore points In the game.
Chicago rece1ved little opportunity for foul shooting,
getting only five tries, but the
Bulls dominated field goal
producllon, 51-3'1, In routing
Seattle. Jim King, hitting six of
his first seven shots, led
Ctlcago with 20 points. Spencer
Haywood of the Somes had 31.
Golden State clinched second
place in the Pacific DiVISion
and a berth In the playoffs as
Rick Barry riddled Portland
for 34 pomts and Nate Thur·
mond took down 21 rebounds.
Geoff Petrie led the losing
mazers w1th 33 points

national All-America team
Walton, a 6.foot-11 senior,
)oms IHl senior Ed Ratleff of
long Beach State and 6-1
senior Dwight Lamar of Southwestern
Lou1s1ana
as
holdovers from last year's All·
America team. Roundmg out
the first f1ve are 6-4 sophomore
David Thompson of North
Carolina State and 6-5 senior
Doug Collins of Illin01s State.
Walton, the player most
respons1ble for the Brums
gomg undefeated 10 regular
season play for a second
stra1ght year, missed by only
one point of be1ng a unarumous
chmce for the team The b1g
redhead got 389 pomts out of a
possible 390 m ballotmg con·
dueled of 195 sports wr1ters and
sportscasters from across the
nation.
Voters were asked to select a
first and a second team with
two pomts be10g awarded to a
player named to the frrst unit
and one point g1ven for second
team menllon
Ke1th Wilkes of UCLA heads
the second team and is j01ned
by Tom McMlllen of Maryland,
Jim Brewer of Minnesota,
Ernie
D1Gregono
of
ProVIdence and Kev10 Joyce of
South Carolina.
The thrrd team consll!ts of
Allan Hornyak of Ob10 State,
Tom Burleson of North Caroli·
na State, Bill Schaeffer of St.

John's (NY ), Ron Behagen of
Mmnesota and Marvm Barnes
of Providence
Walton, the top pro prospect
m college crrcles even though
he still has a year of ehglblhty
remammg, averaged 19 8
points and 17 rebounds per
game thll! year whlle leadmg
the BrulDS through a 26-0
campa1gn.
Ratleff was the sparkplug for
long Beach State for the
second success1ve year and
helped get the 49ers mto the
NCAA tournament A fine
playmaker
and
sobd
rebounder, he scored at a 23 3
clip while splitting h1s time
between forward and guard
Lamar, the nation's leadmg
scorer a year ago, slipped a b1t
th1s season but st1U managed to
average JUS! under 30 po10ts a
game whlle leadmg the CaJuns
to an NCAA tournament berth.
Thompson, a qwck callike
guard w1th moves remmll!cent
of Jerry West, was the main
reason the Wolfpack went
undefeated 10 27 regular season
games He averaged better
than 25 po10ts a game and was
VIrtually unstoppable m oneand -one situations
Collins, who starred for the
U S Olymp1c team at Mumch
Ialit summer, scored 26 po10ts a
game and earned h1gh praiSe
from opposmg players for his
!me all-around play.

Mo Sou 70 Fa1rmount 63

Wtno(la St 70 Grnd Canyn 64

WHA Standtngs
By Umled Press lnternattonal
East
w t I pis gt ga
New Eng 39 26 2 BO 270 223
Cleve
3B 28 2 78 254 213
Phtla
33 37 0 66 261 284
NY
31 37 2 64 276 297
Quebec 29 35 5 63 246 278
Otlawa 29 37 4 62 243 278
Wesl
wltptsgfga
Wtnlpg 41 26 3 85 260 216
Houslon 35 30 4 74 253 237
Mmn
34 32 3 71 221 232
Los Ang 33 33 5 71 237 231
AI berta 31 35 2 64 235 233
Chtcago 25 42 2 52 227 261
Tuesday's Results
·Oitawa 3 Los Angeles 1
Phtladelphta 4 Houston 3
Alberta 4 Cleveland 2
New Eng 4 Chtcago 3, ol
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games

Cleveland at Alberla

Houston at New York
New England at Wmmpeg

!Only games scheduled)

CAPTAIN NAMED
LAKE PARK, Fla (UP!) JackBurke,Jr.,PGA Player of
the Year In 1956, bas been
named capt am of th1s year's
US Ryder Cup team, 1t was
announced Tuesday by Wilham
Clark, pres1dent of the ProfesSIOnal Golfers Assoc~allon of
Amer1ca
The mternahonal matches,
which origmated m 1927, w1ll
be held thll! year at Muirf1eld,
Scotland, Sept. 20-22 Bernard
Hunt, veteran Ryder Cup
compehtor, has been named to
captam the British team.

No way,
says Leo
IIY JOE CARNICEW
UPI Sports Writer
I..w Durocher, the volatile
manager of the Houston
Astros, has drawn more than
his share of fmes dunng a
stormy career and he drew
another
Tuesday from
National League Pres1dent
Chub Feeney for interfermg
w1th a Players ASSOClBtion
meet10g Monday The only
difference th1s time Is that
Durocher claims he won't pay
the $250
The lnc1dent for wh1ch
Durocher was fmed occurred
Monday m Pompano Beach,
Fla , when• the 66-year old
manager mterrupted a
meeting between Players'
Assoc1a!lon Execullve
DU"eCtor Marvm Miller and the
Astros Durocher clauned the
meeting was extending Into
scheduled practice tune.
Durocher, extremely upset
about the f10e, SBld, "1! really
did surpriSe me to get a Wli'C
Without a call. Chub's never
failed to give me a call to explam a S•tuatlon. I didn't hear a
word from him. If I was wrong
I would pay the $250 Never
once have I argued a fine if I'm
wrong. This time I know I'm
not wrong.
"I understand Mr. Miller has
asked for an apology from the
Houston ballclub," Durocher
sa1d "There's no way he'll get
an apology from me. I would
res~gn f1rst as manager of the
Houston baseball club and 1
would take Mr. Feeney to

court

!I

,

• Tr1ctor lire~ relrtlded1

o Tlrotllqul4-flllodl

' ' • Tire ulu 1 aervlce for
every truck, ttaclor, and

We're As Clase As

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MIIOI·MASON ARIA
CHISTIR L. TANNIHILL,

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ROIIRT HOIPLICH,

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POMEROY, OHIO

THE MONTERREY

COLOR TV

111E CHAMPS - The fifth grade basketball liQUid at Syracuse Elementary were the
winners of the flfth.Qxth grade tourney of Southern Local School D1stnct Team members are
front, l.r, Larry Cundiff, ScOtt Nease, John Williams, Dennll! Michael and Bob Roush; back
row, Jack Duffy, James Patterson, Bob Holstem, Steve Norton, Rick F1agg, John Dav1s and
William Baer, coach.

H&amp;R Firestone

ON

USED CARS

992-2101

1111.
Juhnt.hh" ......... 7Millr

......,.

WEATIIER

cu, ldllor

WARMER •••

Publlohtd dlllr ucopl
Sllurdoy br Tho Ohio Voller
Publilhlng Compony , 111
Court $t , Pomeroy, Oh 10
45769 Bu1lnt11 Office Phoni
99! !156, Edltorlol Phone •n
2157
Second cion postogo pold tt
Pomtroy, Ohio

VALUES

)

HO'ITER!

National ldYtrllslng
rtprnentatlvt
Batlintlll

GolloQhtr, Inc , 12 Etst •!nd
Sl . Ntw York Clly, Ntw YorSubscr,ptlon rates• De
llvtrtd by carrier whtrt
IVallabll SO C:tntt per Wttk
ly Motor Routt whtrt cerrle:
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month 11 15 ly mall In Oh,o
lnd W VI • Ont year 114 DO

Six months 11 25 Thrtt
months u 50 Subscription
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HISS NOMINATED
lNDlANAPOUS, Ind. (UPI)
- Mike Hiss, Rookie of the
Year m the 1972 Indianapolll!
50Q.mUe auto race, was nonunated to drive one of two cars
entered Tuesday for th1s year's
race by Don Gerhardt of
Fresno, Calif
Hiss finished seventh In last
year's race and also was sixth
at Pocono and second at On·
tarlo In two other USAC 5()()..
mUers He will have his choice
of two machines powered by
Drake.Qffenhauser ent!lJles.

BEST

Thl Dlllr Sltlllntl

• Flat• repaired promptl)'l
e1 ub"' vRIVtl replaced!

Rook1e third baseman Jerry
Terrell had two smgles and
drove m two runs off Denny
McLain as the Mmnesota
Twms beat the Atlanta Braves,
5·0, and Charlie Spikes'
sacrif1ce fly and a two-run
single by Jack Brohamer hfted
the Cleveland lnd1ans to a 3.()
victory over the Califorrua
Angels in a ramshortened
game. Cy Young Award winner
Gaylord Perry pitached five
scoreless mmngs for the Indians
Back-to-back homers by Wll·
lie Montanez and Mike Sclunidt
helped the Philadelphia Phils
beat the Kansas City Royals, 62, and lou Brock had two
smgles and a double m the St.
lou1s Card10als' 6-0 lnumph
over the Baltunore Or10les
Pmch·hltter Ed Armbr1ster
smgled home Dave Concepcwn
Wlth two out 10 the loth mnmg
to g1ve !be Cincmnati Reds a 54 v1ctory over the Pittsburgh
Pirates and Cesar Cedeno hit a
two-run homer to carry the
Astros to a 4-3 v1ctory over the
Boston Red Sox
Des1gnsted pmch.JU!ter Or·
lando Cepeda had two hits and
three RB!s for Boston.

Spec Richardson, general
manager of the Astros, said he
talked with Miller by phone
Tuesday and eonf1nned that
Miller requested an apology
from the Houston club
Richardson said, however,
that "38 ballplayers have said
PRICE
they d1dn't want to meet with
QUALITY'
Marvm Miller That's a hell of
SERVICE
a blow to him. That's never
happened before to him I think
Miller's P!'ltle Ia hurt. 1 thin'&lt;
Durocher is the only manllger
HANDSOME .
in baseball who would do this
SPANISH STYLING
and I think he was r1ght."
Several Astro players were
FROM
questioned about the 10cident
but declined to be named. All of GENERAL ELECTRIC
them conf1rmed their wishes
not to attend the meeting and
suggested Miller could have
come to Cocoa to arrange a
much more convenient
meetmg. The main objection to
the meeting by the players was
that the timing meant getting
up at 5 a.m. to leave Cocoa at
8:30a.m in order to arrive in
Pompano at 10:30 a.m
Elsewhere In the tramlng
camps, Dick Allen, the highest
salaned player in baseball
Early
Americanhistory, made his 1m debut for
$489.95
Ctlcago as the White Sox lost to
• Wide Screen (23"
the New York Yankees, 2-1
diagonal, 295 sq mches)
Allen had a single and
• AFC . Automabc Fme
grounded into a double play
-Tunmg Control
with two on in the e~ghtb.
• Many Other Quahty
Homer Wins Game
Features
Pinch-hitter Joe Ferguson's
grand-slam homer with two out
In the ninth gave the Los
Angeles Dodgers a 5-2 victory
over the New York Mets and
the Chicago Cubs beat the
Oakland A's, 7-5, with
Ferguson Jenkms pitchmg
three scoreless mnings for the 992-2238
Middleport
Cubs.

Alexander Graham Bell's
patent for the telephone No 174,465, ISsued on March
7, 1876 - often has been
called the most valuable
single patent in history

1

J

probably, unless an unheralded base, and Floyd Burney, left ' R1chards and Pr1ce, the latter
sophomore from the reserve f1elder, are returmng from three show10g promll!e on the
squad, or a fast developmg 1972 Chuck Eastman and Paul reserve squad of last year
jumoc oc semor holdover from Sm1th, who rode the vars1ty which was undefeated (4~) .
Three other boys looking for
last year beats them out, by: bench last year, are back for
another
fling.
a
chance
to show the1r sluff are
Chuck Faulk and Mike
"We'll be looking hard for the brothers B1ll and Don
Richards, both pitchersomebody
who can get the ball Vaughan and John Dillard, not
infielders; Steve Pnce,
shortstop, Mike Nesselroad, over the plate not too good to out last year
A report on the reserve
second base; M1ck Ash, out. hit," sa1d Coach Wolfe.
One bnght spot ll! the return squad of freshmen and moslly
f1elder; Rick Stobart, firstof
Burney whose four home sophomores will be avallable
baseman and catcher, and
Cotfe9e Baskelball Result•
By Un1led Press International
runs last year 1gnited 1m- soon
Dave Wolfe, outfielder
NAtA Tournament
TheMarauac•o open the1r IllThe only semor of the above portant game winning rallies.
At Kansas C•tr
The pitching staff, at th1s game schedule Tuesday, April UW Green Bay 77 Da las Bap
ll! Faulk.
66
Regulars Robb1e Eason, f1rst stage, could be Chaney, Faulk, 3, at Ironton
Sam Housloo 88 Warlburg 62
Quntptac 79 Quachtla Bap 66
So Car Sf S2 Haslmgs 71
Md ·E Shore 114 E Monl 107
Xavter 81 Mam165

Wilt has .712
By United Press International
Wllt Chamberlam will add
his Uth rebound10g title to a
new category m the National
Basketball Association record
booka.flnt player lo achieve a
.700 field-goal percentage for a

COLUMBUS (UP!)- Tom
Kozelko, Toledo's 6-11 senior
center and forward, loday
was named Mid-American
Conference player of the
year for the second consecutive year.
Kozelko scored a total of
1,561 points In three varsity
seasons at Toledo for a ZO.S
points per game average.
His 21.5 average this year
was second best In the
cooferenee.

SECOND PLACE WINNERS - The mth grade squad at Syracuse Elementary took
second place honors in the recent Southern Local District tourney. Squad members are, front,
1-r, Steve Taylor, Mark Dav1s, T1m Imboden, Mark Demnsey, and B11l Roush, second roll,
Doug Huston, Ken Koehler, Randy Arnold, Rick Taylor, Jon Houdashelt. Randy Brmky and
Will1am Baer, roacfi

KEITH 'GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

lrd Ave.

Middleport

•

�4- The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 14, 1973

•
committee
vote

ERA up for key
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
House State Goverrunent Committee Is to vote today on a
proposed " equal nghts"
amendment to the U. S. ConstitutiOn.
Rep Michael Del Bane, 1).
Hubbard, comm1ttee chairman, sa1d he antiCipates about
14 votes in favor of the amendment, which needs 12 to be released to the House Rules Committee for schedulmg for a
floor vote.
The controversial amendment has been the subject of
pubhc attention m the committee for lour weeks.
The Senate Tuesday receiVed
from the House a bill designed
to reduce willful destruction of
deVIces mstalled for public
safety.
The measure, sponsored by
Rep. C. J. McLin, D-Dayton,
sailed through the House without a vote ·Of opposition.
It forb1ds purposely destroymg or removing such items as
fire extmgu1shers, hoses and
alarms ; hfe preservers, safety
buoys; first a1d kits ; railroad'
grade crossmg signs, signals or
gales, and other safety
deviCes
Penalty Set
Penalty for removmg or

'

tampering with such devices
would be punishable by a
maximum $1,000 fine and SIX
months m jail.
The House also passed
unanimously and sent to the
Senate a bill desig ned to
lighten procedures for highway
construction contracting and to
speed work on highway
proJects.
The Senate gave unanimous
approval lo legislation setting
a firm date for submitting a
question or Issue ta a county
board of elections for placement on a primary or general
election ballot.
The measure was des1gned to
write mto law the secretary of
state's requirement that issues
be s11,bmitted at least 7o days in
advance of the election to allow
time for printing and advertising the ballot and distributing 1t to absent voters.
However, 1t was changed on
the floor to make tlje deadline
60 days before the election.
Sen. Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron,
proposed the change and it was
accepted on a 21-9 vote.
Unable to Comply
Ocasek said school districts
would be unable to comply with
lhe 75-day reqwrement m the
fall because county budget
off1ces do not certify school
budgets before Sept. t - some

992-3984

Luigi's

60 days before the November
election.
School districts would be unable to deternune the need for
bond issues or operating levies
until then, Ocasek argued.
But Sen. Robert J. Corts, R·
Elyria, reswnded that "any
school board that's doing 1ts
job would know 7&gt; days In ad·
vane~ what its needs are. "
Henry W. Eckhart, chall'lllan
of the Public Utilities Commls·
s1on of Ohio told a sess10n of
the House Fmance Committee
his agency needs a 40 per cent
hike in 118 budget for the coming fiscal period because of
mcreasmg responsibilities m
belping ubhties solve an "en·
ergy crisiS.''
"The commtss10n has many
other important responSibilities over and above rate
cases," Eckhart said, "such as
consumer complaints, safety
regulation, and the adequacy
of the supply of energy,
primarily relating to natural
gas and electricity."
The chairman noted legisla·
lion has been offered in the

BANNER WITHDRAWS
PI'ITSBURGH (UP!) - Jim
Banner, track coach at the
University of Pittsburgh, has
withdrawn as head coach of the
AA U squad which IS scheduled
to meet the touring Soviet
Union team.
Banner, named earlier this
month as coach of the
American team, submitted his
resignation after the NCAA
notified Pitt that the meet had
not been sanctioned under
NCAA rules.

Finals. Satur day at 7· 30 p
m.
AI Steubenville
Friday, Columbus Ready
(19-3) vs Well sv ill e (18 4), 7 30

P m.
Friday, Bex ley (17 4) vs
Steubenville Catholr c 121 -1).
9·30 p. m.
Finals. Saturday at 7 30 p.m.
At Dayton
Friday, Wyom rng (21 2) vs
Bellefontaine (15 6) , 7 30 p m
Fr1day 1 Dayton Jefferson
117-SI vs Ga llipoli s (19-3). 9 30
p.m
F inal s. Saturday at 9. 30 p.m.
CLASSA
At Canton
Fr1da y, Lora1n Cleannew
(21 1) vs Hanoverton Un1fed
(17-5). s p m
•
Frrday . Morral Ridgedale
118-41 vs Sebring 121 -1J. 8:30 p .

m

PIZZAS ·&amp; SUBS
-----------------------Drawing For Grand Opening
Prizes Thurs., Mar. 15-9 PM
Flrst- 4' Portable Home Bar See 1t in our window.
Second- 10 large Single Item P1zzas.
Thtrd-Wild Man' s Dream . Giant Pizza with Everythmg
Appro• . ll lbs .
Fourti&gt;-l Sub Sandwiches
Reg1ster f~ee when you 11is1t us . No purchase necnsary .
r ' winners names wi ll be posted All prizes will be awarded

March 15.

LUIGI'S PIZZA
116 E. MAIN
POMEROY
PHONE 992-3984

Todar's

House to require the colllllllssion to compile data on future
energy needs.
He has asked for. a budget of
$7.8 million for the next tw()year penod, compared with
$5.4 miUion the comm1ss1on is
now operating with.
Rep Alan E. Norris, R-Westerville, introduced a bill to
establish a system of monetary
rewards for tipsters in cases of
drug abuse. The same bill
cleared the House last year but
was stalled In the Senate.
Both chambers were to reconvene today at 1:30 p.m.

By United Press International
Pa1rmgs for this week ' s
RegiOnal Ohro High School
Basketball
Tournament
gam es
CLASSAAA
At Canton
Fnda y, Allian ce ( 15 71 vs
Akron Central Hower 116·61. S
p m
Friday. Toledo Sf John (16.
51 vs Youngstown Card1nal
Mooney (14 8) , 8 30 p.m
Frnal s, Saturday at 7 30 p m
AI Columbus
Friday, Miami Trace 116-6).
vs Col umbus South 119-2). S p
Friday. Findlay (16 6) vs
Newar k 120-2) , 8 30 p. m .
Fina ls Saturday at 7· 30 p m.
At Dayton ,
Wednesda y, Hamilton Tall
(20 2) vs Cmcmnatr Elder 06·
4). 7 30 p. m .
Wednesday. Kelling Aller
120-21 vs. Sprrnglleld South (19
31, 9 30 p. m.
F rnal s, Saturday at 1 p m
At Cleveland
Fri day, Cleveland East Tech
( 19-2) vs. Barberton 123-0l. S p
m
Frrday, Cleve land JFK (18
31 vs El yrra (1 9 3), 8 30 p m
Final s, Satur day al 7 30 p.
m
CLASSAA
AI Copley
Friday (Manchester 23-0) vs
Youngstown Nbrth \15 -6), S
p.m
Friday, Elyria Catholrc 122·
1) vs Leav ittsburg La Brae 120
2) , 8 30 p m
At Bow long Green
Friday . Rosslord (20-21 vs
Delphos Sf John ( IS 7), s p m.
Friday , Genoa (20-0) vs
Huron (22 0), 8 30 o.m.

m
Frnals, Saturday at 7 30 p m
At Bowling Green
Wedn esday , Upper Scioto
Valley 120 4) vs Mansf ield Sf
Peter's 121 4). 7 30 p. m
Thursday. Holgate 18-141 vs
Wapakoneta Sl Joseph 124 OJ.
7 30 p m
Fm als, Saturday at 2 p m
AI Athens
F r iday, Indian Valley South
123-01 vs. Portsmouth Notre
Dame (19-4). 7 30 p. m .
Friday, Strasburg (19 3) vs
Chesapeake \15 -7). 9 30 p m
Fonals, Saturday at 7.30 p

m
"
AI Dayton
Thursd ay. Marion Pleasant
122-01 vs. West Liberty Salem
(17-SJ. 7 30 p m .
Thursday. Sf Bernard ( 18 6)
vs Franklin Monroe 121-3),
9 30 p m
F rnals , Saturday at 7: 30 p.

m•

Final Rio cage stats

•

Sport Parade

Bartram

By MILTON RICHMAN

UPI

~ports

Editor

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (UPI) - Everybody's for Hank
Aaron. Nobody wants him to fail. Nobody expects he will.
He has abnost as many people pulling for him to make It as
Charles Lindbergh had 46 years ago.
Everybody wants to see Hank Aaron break Babe
Ruth's record, everybody's rooting for him to get those 42 more
homers that will give him the magic 715 he needs to pass Ruth
and automatically make him the foremost home-run hitter of all
time.
Some regard Hank Aaron's chances of doing this as a fait
accompli. They're talking and carrying on as if it's merely some
kind of snap as if Atlanta's easy-to-like but tough-to-pitch-to 39year-old slugger practically has done it already.
The Braves' public relations department has put out a special
guide on Hank Aaron alone for press, radio and tv in anticipation
of the great day. The guide is a line p1ece of work listing
significant dates and details pertaining to both Aaron's and
Ruth's careers, and the Braves come right out and say this could
be the first lime ever such a press guide was devoted to only one
player.
They're Probably Right
They're probably right.
What happens now if Hank Aaron doesn't break the record?
'Nobody ever thinks much about that. Sometumes, though, Hank
Aaroo does.
"Get me r~ght," he says, "I feel I can do 11, but naturally
there's always that chance I won 'I. I know that. What happens if I
don't? Nothmg. It's that simple. But I'm gonna give it all I can,
and if I don't, I don't, that's all. l say this, too. I think I can do 1t,
and I feel! will do 11, but if it turns out the other way around, I
don't think anyone will ever get as close."
ThiS is Hank Aaron 's 2oth season with the Braves and SIX times
he has hit more than 42 homers in one season, the last tune being
two years back when he had 47. Last year he managed 341n 129
games and when he thinks in terms of breaking Ruth's record, he
doesn 'I think of doing it this year.
"I don't feell'mgonna be able to play as many games as! used
to," he says. "I just don't think I could break the record this year
unless maybe the club suddenly began wmning a whole Iotta
games by big scores."
Pressure Bound to Bulld
Much has been made about the pressure bound to bu1ld up on
Aaron the closer he gets to Ruth's record. Eddie Mathews, the
Braves' manager, doesn 't f1gure that will be such a big factor.
"I know the pressure's going to build up and people are gomg to
dr1ve him crazy, but Hank's going to be able to handle 11 well,"
says Mathews.
Eddie Mathews knows Hank Aaron well, but he doesn't know
him that well.
Pressure 1s pressure, and although some human bemgs
w1thstand it better than others, nobody is unperv1ous to 11. The
pressure bothered Roger Maris when he hit 61 homers 12 years
ago; Ruth even felt 11 when he hit his 60 in 1927 and he wasn't
chasmg anyone.
You look at Hank Aaron today and he looks the way he should
look, completely relaxed, maybe a few pounds over and a little
fuller in the face.
"I know," Ill! says, smiling, "my face looks fuller but that's
because my hair is longer than it used to be. I guess I'm about~
pounds over, which isn't really that much. Playing in Atlanta,
you're gonna melt away a Iotta pounds."
OneYearataTime
·•·
Hank Aaron has made up his mind he's going to play two more
years, and he's going to do It in nice easy stages, one year at the
lime. He has his own personal time-table and has penciled in
Babe Ruth'&amp; record for sometime next year. He's m no hurry at
ali.
"I'll be satisfied if I hit 30-35home rWls this year," he says.
And here's a little bit of irony : Aaron, at 38, hit 34 homers last

Hart
Lambert
Rouse

::~

Bo ll 1nger

~·.

Thompson

FausnauQh
Steward
Rose
Clark
Wade
Pol1ng

Others

26 9oo.2121 266 438 3so-m

Totals

,
TP
"
Avt, \'
296 12.5 , .
135 56 l
568 21 ,D ~
284 10 7 '
~8 14. t "
185 7.4
110 5.0
28 1.3 . ,
sa 2.9 -:
16 2.0 ''·
11
1.3 ·,;
83 5.0
29
~ no

au '"

Reds drop Pirates 5-4 ..
yielded three more runs in the , ,
fifth.' Ed Sprague, Clay Carroll
and Dave Tomlin held the fl. ":
rates on one hit the rest of the '
way .
Meanwhile, Reda Manager '
Sparky Anderson already is
concerned aliouf pitcher Gary ·'
Nolan, who has arm soreness "
and "he hasn 'I even tried to
throw hard yet."

BRADENTON, Fla. (UPI)Pinch hitter Ed Armbrister
singled m the wmnlng run with
two out in the lOth mning Tuesday to lift the Cincinnati Reds
over the Pittsburgh Pirates 5-I
in exhibition ~lay.
The Reds got two unearned
runs in the first inning and
scored twice more in the fourth
on Gene Locklear's two-run
homer. The four runs came off
Steve Blass, who worked five
Innings, longest of any Pirate
pitcher this spring.
Ross Grimsley started for
the Reds, giving up one run in
the third innmg. Tol!l Hall

utah has more than 80 ,
natural bridges formed by ·
erosion of w1nd and water
upon sandstone, including .
278 -foot -long Rainbow ,
Bridge, which is a national :
monum ent.

"

------------------------------------1
year. Ruth hit the same number when he was 38. The following '·
year, the Babe's home run production tailed off to a total of 22, ~
and if Aaron comes up with those 30he's talking about this year, .:
he'd need seven more homers to break the record next year.
In that correspondmg year, Babe Ruth managed only six more
home runs before he qwt m May. Imagine, if you can, Hank '.
Aaron needmg those seven at the end but getting only Ruth's ;
same

o- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 14, 1973

·.~~~

"'

1971·73 RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
BASKETBALL STATISTICS FT A
'
G
FG-A A TO
24 120·297 62
62 56 ·7~
24 52·145 15 27 11 -18
26 227445 39 111113-lSl
26 124 275 22
43 36 47
26 170-430 29
41
28-51
25
77-178 56 67 Jt -40
22 46 106 18 20 18·29
21
11 38
3 15
6-9
21
23 63 14 23 12-22
8
6-15 I
1
4-S
8
4-9 0
4
3-6
16 - 30 80 10
12 23-33
10 34 1
3
7-9

PLAYER

,,

~

SlX?

That would come right down to baseball's biggest anticlimax
ever, the granddaddy of all asterisks

"IT'S TRUE" - - -

'

.,

Mason County.

By Alma Marshall

NEW HAVEN - Watch for the Ding-a-Dong G1rls, the
famoua Calendar Girls, Soni\Y-Oler, BWllly and Mare, Kiddie
Olorus in tbe ~owboat ReVUe sponsored by the New Haven
Woman's Club to be held 801Re time in April:
You have aeen the Gold Diggers, and according to the
director, New Haven has 801Rething better than that to offer.
Have you !leellthe Silver Swingers? They will appear in New
Haven 10me lbne in April. Watch for the date!
Y011 have seen Oulrlle McCarthy and Mortimer Sneard but have you met Cbuckie? If not, be sure to attend the Show Boat
Revue. Watch for the date!
A new band is being organized and its dtrector is Rick
PoweR, 10n of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Powell, They will make their
debut 100n.
MISS SANDRA FOWLER'S book of poems entitled, "In the
~ape of Sun," has been p-esented to the New Haven Public
Ubrary. This American poet and writer has won the distinction
of being the first IIOJI·Israell author to have a book of poems
publllhed by Shalom Publications.
Walter Bar.felay of ~alom Publications said in the title
"Sill" Ia used as a metaphor for life. Hence in the "shape of SWl"
simply means in the shape of life.
Miss Fowler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Okey Fowler of West
Colwnbla, has received many awards for her literary skill.
MRS. VIVIAN BOSTON HAS made a 1973 pledge of 12
volwnes to the New Haven Public Library in memory of the late
Oarence E. Sayre. Two of the boOks received are "The Winda of
War" by Herman Wouk and "The Word" by Irving Wallace.
At the time of his death, Mr. Sayre was a resident of Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Sayre were former residents of Letart, W.Va . He
wu born at Clarksburg, W. Va. and was one of the first
graduates of West Virginia Wesleyan College. Another contribution was made to the New Haven Public Library. Debra
White p-esented a painting entitled, "Prairie Child."
MASON -Andy Hume of Mason was honored recently on his
99th birthday by the Adult Class of HarUord Baptist Church at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Wagenhals In New Haven. Mr.
and Mrs. Lee Gibbs of HarUord presented the honoree and his
wUe, with a cake inscribed with 98th birthday.
A dessert course was served to Mr. and Mrs. Hume, Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Gibba, Miss Maxine Kearns, Mrs. D. A. Smith, A. K.
McQung, George Johnson and host and hostess, Mr. and Mrs.
1ragenhals. Mr. and Mrs. Hume have been members of HarUord
Baptist Cllurch 50 years.
( MASON - Many friends and relatives of Mr. and Mrs.
I;)elmar Alexander were here to attend the wedding of their son,
8rllce Alexander and Miss Sharon Rickard, daughter of Mr. and
~- Paul Rickard on Saturday, March 10, at New Haven United
fllelhodlst Olurch oo Saturday. Guests at the Alexander home
!'ere Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Heyman and IJeth, Tiffin, Ohio; Mr.
'"d Mrs. Clyde Thompson, Mrs. Wayne Thompson and
llalll!hters, Miss Elleen Thomp1100, all of McConnellsville, Ohio.
\ MRS. JAMES LOYD, Kevin and Greg, of Columbus, visited
over the weekend with her pacenls, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Mc-

79

ARE

'

BAKER

.

•

•

•

•• j

l

'

•

I

FURNtniRE

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

USDA CHOICE
U.S. Government I

~

239

171 oz. box

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart,
You, WE LIKE"
R1ght reserved to hm1t quantiltes
•'

We Gl~rtN, Accept Fed. Food Slam~ s

Prices Effective Mar. 14-21
Monday Thru Friday
,,
'L

.;-.

'·.
'·
•.n.

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to g

N

,,,
.~~•:0.'

...

.~.

' ,.,,,
&lt;-'
'I:·
;

CLOSED SUNDAYS
lh'clnf ·~aod -M.-rkii

-

...·

gge

DIAL SOAP
I

Regular
Size Bar

490
DILLS ••••• ••• 1:.
2
9
TISSUES •••••••• ~~.
HEINZ KOSHER

MAYONNAISE.).69e
3
9
0
MARGAR IN E••• :.ly. .
NU·MAID BOWL .

---r

Fresh

.

Meaty

$
lb.

lb.

You See Tbem Advertised......r=""""~
Get New Items Herel

- Bundl Cakes by Betty Crocker and Snack and
Cakes
~IDit 's Skillet DIIIDers
-Kraft Homespun Suppers
- Weight-Watchers Items
~~lep-8aver For Total Floor Care

MADE

lb. 105
•

Fairmont

MICHIGAN

POTATOES

BUTTER·
MILK

1olb. 79~
YELLOW

GOLDEN

CARROTS

ONIONS

2 bchs. 25$ 3

lb.

4"9$

DOUBLEKNIT FABRICS

$ 99

Big SL Patrick's Day selection of 60 inch wide
textured plain and fan cy polyester doublekrut
fabr 1cs B1g assortment of colors. Regular
values io $3.99 a yard. Save now during this Big
St. Patr1ck's Day Sale

..

..

,•:

YARD
:·

POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT
WE ARE HERE TO
SERVE YOU

YOUR FRIENDLY
DEPT. STORES

THIS THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY, MARCH 15-16-17
. .

·:

.

.

•.

'•

,•'•

·:

STURDY WEATHER PROOF
ALUMINUM v~~~~~l
FOLDING PATIO

ST PATRICK'S DAY .)Mu:':
lADIES' SPRING
FASHION PANT

COATS

·.':

FURNITURE

A great selection of new
spring pants coats for
this St. Patrick's Day
Sale. Coats in SIZeS 10 to .::: Sturdy tubular a lummum
frames , multi color vinyl
18. Save now.
weather proof webbing,
fold lor easy storrng

lland knoWI\ as the "Swinging Squires" was one of e~ght winning
for state competition in the
Southern Division Stage Band contest at Morris Harvey College.
', The band, composed of 18 musicians, is directed by Gerald
lltewart, fonnerly of Ma111n. In appi'Oiimately three weeks the
folnl Pleasant Hll!h School group will participate in competition
'In Huntington lor the state title.
' A total of 138 points was required to qualify for superior
I
Fating and the Point Pleasant High School group scored 150
points out of a possible :100. Judges for tbe event were Robert
Hamrick, brass instructor; Alderson Broaddus College; Ernest
'l!aiiUne, brass instructor at Ohio University ; Farrell Coy, wood
·wind instructor of Shepherd College, and Robert Lowden,
p-ofesslonal stage band arranger.

I

Property
Transfers
·American 011 Co. to Amoco
Oil Co., change of name,
Meigs.
Elvin Eugene Thompson,
Eileen Thompson to Lee 0.
Wood Ill, Teresa Wood, .&gt;I
acre, Rutland.
Alfred Gans to Sybil Ebers·
bach, parcels, Pomeroy .
Sybil Ebersbach to Alfred
Gans,
Clarence
Gans,
Margaret Gans, parcels,
Pomeroy.
Owen Smith, Hazel Smith to
Eric Har~ U acre, Bedford.
Wllllam Thomas Soulsby,
JWle Rose Soulsby to Edna E.
Carman, one-third · acre,
Salisbury.
Theodore Willford, Bonnie
Willford to ;'VIncent C. Davis,
VIrginia M. Davis, 65 acres,
Lebanon.
Mont Vance, Joyce Ann
Vance to Jack Vance, Dorothy
Vance, 2.381 acres, Scipio.
Pearl Jacobs to • Arnold
Grate, Mildred Grate, parcels,
Rutland.
Edna E. Carman to Steve H.
EbUn, Wanda EbHn, one-third
acre, Salisbury.
.
Fred B. Geogleln, Joan w.
Geogleln, Carl Fred Goeglein,
Frances Goeglein to F. B.
Goegleln Co., .83 acre,
Salisbury.
Fred B. Goeglein, Joan W.
Goeglein, Carl Fred Goegleln,
Frances Goeglein to H. B.
Goegleb1 Co., lots,_Rocksprings
SUb., Salisbury.
Joseph R. Tardif, Diane
Tardif to Robert D.
Pockllnglon Sr., Judith K.
Pockllilgton, a acre~, Rutland.
~oaeph R Tanllf, Diane
Tanllf tol } Robert D.
Peeklla1ton , Sr., 1 acre,

R~::S.,i,

R. flrdlf, Diane
Tardif 1D ~lie., ..-ells,

'
I'

HAM SALAD
HOME

~

200 ct

5 lb. 239

ROAST

_qt.

NORTHERN FACIAL

BACON ENDS

PORK SHOUlDER

6 FOR•1

...•'

.allll[lOrlor rating and qualifying

BOLD
Family Size

NEW HAVEN The
Woman's Missionary Society.9{
the New Haven First Church of
God held their March meeting
m the Missionary Building with
Rena Johnson, Luc1lle Powell
and Orpha F1elds as hostesses
with the president, Orpha
Fields, pres1dmg. v
The members sang "Blessed
Be the Name", Rena Johnson
read scripture taken from I
Cormlhians 8:1-7, and Eleanor
Davis led the prayer. Roll call
was answered by nammg " A
Good, Good Neighbor", and
Roberta Maynard read a
poem, "Young Neighbors. "
Stewardship Director Becky
Reed received the Penny-aDay calendars.
Hand cream was distributed
to sell as a money-making
project.
Members were urged to
attend the State WMS Con-

PlAIN &amp;'FANCY POLYESTER

60 INCH TEXTUR

Daniel.
; PT. PLEASANT - The Point Pleasant High School Stage

USDA
CHOICE ·

Regular 1.09
Family Size

·:::

•'

'•

News Notes I

Meigs

CASCADE

Three host to ·
church group

~~Grate, Mildred OrMI

FFLER 'S ST P

MEN'S FANCY SHORT SLEEVE

Dress &amp; Sport Shirts

,•

. .
- STIFFLER'S ST. PATRICK'S DAY -lML~: --:,:

:·

STIFFLER'S ST. PATRICK DAY SALE
TOWN AND COUNTRY

MEN'S-BOY'S YOUTHS BETTER

LATEX WALL PAINT

GYM OXFORDS
$ 99

2 Gal. For

Reg S3 99 va lu e, drr pless
Latex wa ll pa int in 10 best
colors and whlte The newest
of patn l w1th th tck creamy
co nstsfency
th at
makes
pa lntmg easter

$500

...
'•

'

'•'

,•

HANDBAGS
See these f i ne quality
leather lik e vrnyl hand
bags In new Spring shades
In a large var iety of styles
and shapes. Save now at
Stiffl er's

PAIR

.

-STIFFLER 'S ST PATRICK 'S DAY SALE -

STIFFLER'S ST PATRICK'S DAY SALE -

20x40 ASSORTED FANCY

DELUXE PLASTIC DISH

EACH

STIFFLER'S ST. PATRICKS DAY SALE
NEW SPRING lEATHER liKE VINYl

•'

2

Shamrock Spec1al! Men's,
boy's, youths red or gold gym
oxfords. Long wearing. Lace
to the toe style. Save now!

:··
·: :·

:·

'•"

$299
TO

$8QQ ·

STIFF,LER'S ST. PATRICK'S DAY SALE
MENS MAVERICK BRAND

TERRY BATH TOWELS.,. DRAINER AND MAT FLARE LEG JEANS

:
·
2$ 00

Spec1al asso rlment of
h1gh quality cotton terry
hath towels 10 assorted
fan cy patterns and
colors. 20 x 40 size. Save
Now.

MAR INA

. •'•
100 SQUARE FEET

JUCD
W ED R I N Q

Give
the gilt

ollove
A perfect K~epeake diamond
backed by our writlen guaranl ee
of perfect qu11ity, fine white color
and correct modern cui. Come m
today to see our excilmg collcriLon

of KeepHke Dlamond R~nge.

JS~.~.~~~

(Upol:l Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

•,

13xl8 BROADLOO
CARPET CAR

long (I 00 sq. ft.) lobbacco or plant bed
covers.

$ 00

Men 's

13 "

MATS
x
size
18 ''

American Made
Children Sport

SNEAKERS.
Am er 1can

made

.: chtldren and g1rls' sport

broadloom carpet. .' sneaker s for summer .
Assorted car mat sets.
Reg
S1.99
value .
Moulded sole
Two m a package .

SET

~ p~~:

STIFFLER'S. ST PATRICK'S DAY SALE -

9x12 ROOM SIZE
VINYL FELT BASE

RU'GS

'lxl2 room size fdt base
1·ugs w1th vinyl fortified
fuHsh m colorful pat·

fACH

Ladies' Amencan made
: moulded sole canvas
:sport sneakers .
Washable.

::

$159

PAIR

COTTON TERRY BATH

TOWELS
Special! 22x44 lrregnlar
fancy floral cotton terry
hath towels

ll•rns.

$ 00

SNEAKERS

OXFORDS

'S ST. PATRICK 'S DAY SALE 22x44 INCH ASSORTED FANCY

$100
EACH

Values To 59'
Big Asst.

AM ER CAN MADE
lADIES' SPORT

GYM

$100

$5~.~

.. .

American Made
Mens-Boys-Youths

M en's, boys and youth's
gym o&gt;cfords '" low cut
lace to toe In black and
whrte RE!!l . S2.99 Value.

Maverick

stores

..

::

fa mous

Brand flare leg jeans Budget
pri ced Size 29 to 42 Stock up
now at your favonte Stiffler

•'

:·.

:
COVERS
3 yards wide by 33\1 feet

$1299
EACH

Another Shamrock Special
from Stiffler's. A deluxe
plastic d1sh drainer and mal
in assorted colo.,, Shop early
and save.

FOR

TOBACCO BED

Uti. 2M •
PoJMroy
l'llalll992·5411
to IIdia Vlnlnl, · Wanda . ._ _ _ _ _ _ - - - - - - -

:

:· :

Used Buffalo coats of the
Wmnlpeg pollee department
wind up in church. The fur
coats are donated to St.
Andrew's Church on the Red
River to re-upholster the
kneeling benches.

2•HOUR
CLEA
. - NI.NG

$ 99

Men'sperm press short sleeve
dress and · sport shirts in
woven and kmt fabrics. Sizes
14 to m~o and S, M, L, XL.
Save now.

ON SPRING BREAKS
NEW HAVEN- Miss Angie
Fields of New Haven and
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
David Fields, Jr., spent the
past week at Ft. Lauderdale,
Fla., and toured Walt Disney
World. Miss Fields, a junior at
Marshall University, was on
spring break. Miss Marilyn
Gibbs, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William C. Gibbs of New
Haven, spent her spring break
from Marshall University with
her parents. She also is a junior
at Marshall.

Vlmng, lots, Rutland Village.
Harry Joe Denison, Kathryn
Denison to Reed Gandee, lots,
Middleport.
Gary R. Dill, Mildred S. Dill
to Gary Griffith, Juanita
Griffith, parcels, Chester.
Gary Griffith, Juanita M.
Griffith to Gary Griffith,
Juanita M. Griffith, parcels,
Chester.
lola A. Bartrwn to Richard
'Fetty, Glenna Fetty, 2 acres,
Rutland.
Minnie M. Foil to Roosevelt
Branham, Polly Branham,
parcel, Scipio.
Geneva Yates, dec., to David ,
Robert fates, Morgan A.
Yates, cert. of trans., Mid·
dleporl, Olive.
Lester F. McKenzie, Frances
McKenzie to Roy Allen Sayre,
Emileen E. Sayre, .46 acre,
Sutton .

CK'S DAY

TOWEL ENDS
One large group of
famous Cannon Towel

ends 1n asst sizes and
colors Shop early and

save.
I

�4- The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 14, 1973

•
committee
vote

ERA up for key
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
House State Goverrunent Committee Is to vote today on a
proposed " equal nghts"
amendment to the U. S. ConstitutiOn.
Rep Michael Del Bane, 1).
Hubbard, comm1ttee chairman, sa1d he antiCipates about
14 votes in favor of the amendment, which needs 12 to be released to the House Rules Committee for schedulmg for a
floor vote.
The controversial amendment has been the subject of
pubhc attention m the committee for lour weeks.
The Senate Tuesday receiVed
from the House a bill designed
to reduce willful destruction of
deVIces mstalled for public
safety.
The measure, sponsored by
Rep. C. J. McLin, D-Dayton,
sailed through the House without a vote ·Of opposition.
It forb1ds purposely destroymg or removing such items as
fire extmgu1shers, hoses and
alarms ; hfe preservers, safety
buoys; first a1d kits ; railroad'
grade crossmg signs, signals or
gales, and other safety
deviCes
Penalty Set
Penalty for removmg or

'

tampering with such devices
would be punishable by a
maximum $1,000 fine and SIX
months m jail.
The House also passed
unanimously and sent to the
Senate a bill desig ned to
lighten procedures for highway
construction contracting and to
speed work on highway
proJects.
The Senate gave unanimous
approval lo legislation setting
a firm date for submitting a
question or Issue ta a county
board of elections for placement on a primary or general
election ballot.
The measure was des1gned to
write mto law the secretary of
state's requirement that issues
be s11,bmitted at least 7o days in
advance of the election to allow
time for printing and advertising the ballot and distributing 1t to absent voters.
However, 1t was changed on
the floor to make tlje deadline
60 days before the election.
Sen. Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron,
proposed the change and it was
accepted on a 21-9 vote.
Unable to Comply
Ocasek said school districts
would be unable to comply with
lhe 75-day reqwrement m the
fall because county budget
off1ces do not certify school
budgets before Sept. t - some

992-3984

Luigi's

60 days before the November
election.
School districts would be unable to deternune the need for
bond issues or operating levies
until then, Ocasek argued.
But Sen. Robert J. Corts, R·
Elyria, reswnded that "any
school board that's doing 1ts
job would know 7&gt; days In ad·
vane~ what its needs are. "
Henry W. Eckhart, chall'lllan
of the Public Utilities Commls·
s1on of Ohio told a sess10n of
the House Fmance Committee
his agency needs a 40 per cent
hike in 118 budget for the coming fiscal period because of
mcreasmg responsibilities m
belping ubhties solve an "en·
ergy crisiS.''
"The commtss10n has many
other important responSibilities over and above rate
cases," Eckhart said, "such as
consumer complaints, safety
regulation, and the adequacy
of the supply of energy,
primarily relating to natural
gas and electricity."
The chairman noted legisla·
lion has been offered in the

BANNER WITHDRAWS
PI'ITSBURGH (UP!) - Jim
Banner, track coach at the
University of Pittsburgh, has
withdrawn as head coach of the
AA U squad which IS scheduled
to meet the touring Soviet
Union team.
Banner, named earlier this
month as coach of the
American team, submitted his
resignation after the NCAA
notified Pitt that the meet had
not been sanctioned under
NCAA rules.

Finals. Satur day at 7· 30 p
m.
AI Steubenville
Friday, Columbus Ready
(19-3) vs Well sv ill e (18 4), 7 30

P m.
Friday, Bex ley (17 4) vs
Steubenville Catholr c 121 -1).
9·30 p. m.
Finals. Saturday at 7 30 p.m.
At Dayton
Friday, Wyom rng (21 2) vs
Bellefontaine (15 6) , 7 30 p m
Fr1day 1 Dayton Jefferson
117-SI vs Ga llipoli s (19-3). 9 30
p.m
F inal s. Saturday at 9. 30 p.m.
CLASSA
At Canton
Fr1da y, Lora1n Cleannew
(21 1) vs Hanoverton Un1fed
(17-5). s p m
•
Frrday . Morral Ridgedale
118-41 vs Sebring 121 -1J. 8:30 p .

m

PIZZAS ·&amp; SUBS
-----------------------Drawing For Grand Opening
Prizes Thurs., Mar. 15-9 PM
Flrst- 4' Portable Home Bar See 1t in our window.
Second- 10 large Single Item P1zzas.
Thtrd-Wild Man' s Dream . Giant Pizza with Everythmg
Appro• . ll lbs .
Fourti&gt;-l Sub Sandwiches
Reg1ster f~ee when you 11is1t us . No purchase necnsary .
r ' winners names wi ll be posted All prizes will be awarded

March 15.

LUIGI'S PIZZA
116 E. MAIN
POMEROY
PHONE 992-3984

Todar's

House to require the colllllllssion to compile data on future
energy needs.
He has asked for. a budget of
$7.8 million for the next tw()year penod, compared with
$5.4 miUion the comm1ss1on is
now operating with.
Rep Alan E. Norris, R-Westerville, introduced a bill to
establish a system of monetary
rewards for tipsters in cases of
drug abuse. The same bill
cleared the House last year but
was stalled In the Senate.
Both chambers were to reconvene today at 1:30 p.m.

By United Press International
Pa1rmgs for this week ' s
RegiOnal Ohro High School
Basketball
Tournament
gam es
CLASSAAA
At Canton
Fnda y, Allian ce ( 15 71 vs
Akron Central Hower 116·61. S
p m
Friday. Toledo Sf John (16.
51 vs Youngstown Card1nal
Mooney (14 8) , 8 30 p.m
Frnal s, Saturday at 7 30 p m
AI Columbus
Friday, Miami Trace 116-6).
vs Col umbus South 119-2). S p
Friday. Findlay (16 6) vs
Newar k 120-2) , 8 30 p. m .
Fina ls Saturday at 7· 30 p m.
At Dayton ,
Wednesda y, Hamilton Tall
(20 2) vs Cmcmnatr Elder 06·
4). 7 30 p. m .
Wednesday. Kelling Aller
120-21 vs. Sprrnglleld South (19
31, 9 30 p. m.
F rnal s, Saturday at 1 p m
At Cleveland
Fri day, Cleveland East Tech
( 19-2) vs. Barberton 123-0l. S p
m
Frrday, Cleve land JFK (18
31 vs El yrra (1 9 3), 8 30 p m
Final s, Satur day al 7 30 p.
m
CLASSAA
AI Copley
Friday (Manchester 23-0) vs
Youngstown Nbrth \15 -6), S
p.m
Friday, Elyria Catholrc 122·
1) vs Leav ittsburg La Brae 120
2) , 8 30 p m
At Bow long Green
Friday . Rosslord (20-21 vs
Delphos Sf John ( IS 7), s p m.
Friday , Genoa (20-0) vs
Huron (22 0), 8 30 o.m.

m
Frnals, Saturday at 7 30 p m
At Bowling Green
Wedn esday , Upper Scioto
Valley 120 4) vs Mansf ield Sf
Peter's 121 4). 7 30 p. m
Thursday. Holgate 18-141 vs
Wapakoneta Sl Joseph 124 OJ.
7 30 p m
Fm als, Saturday at 2 p m
AI Athens
F r iday, Indian Valley South
123-01 vs. Portsmouth Notre
Dame (19-4). 7 30 p. m .
Friday, Strasburg (19 3) vs
Chesapeake \15 -7). 9 30 p m
Fonals, Saturday at 7.30 p

m
"
AI Dayton
Thursd ay. Marion Pleasant
122-01 vs. West Liberty Salem
(17-SJ. 7 30 p m .
Thursday. Sf Bernard ( 18 6)
vs Franklin Monroe 121-3),
9 30 p m
F rnals , Saturday at 7: 30 p.

m•

Final Rio cage stats

•

Sport Parade

Bartram

By MILTON RICHMAN

UPI

~ports

Editor

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (UPI) - Everybody's for Hank
Aaron. Nobody wants him to fail. Nobody expects he will.
He has abnost as many people pulling for him to make It as
Charles Lindbergh had 46 years ago.
Everybody wants to see Hank Aaron break Babe
Ruth's record, everybody's rooting for him to get those 42 more
homers that will give him the magic 715 he needs to pass Ruth
and automatically make him the foremost home-run hitter of all
time.
Some regard Hank Aaron's chances of doing this as a fait
accompli. They're talking and carrying on as if it's merely some
kind of snap as if Atlanta's easy-to-like but tough-to-pitch-to 39year-old slugger practically has done it already.
The Braves' public relations department has put out a special
guide on Hank Aaron alone for press, radio and tv in anticipation
of the great day. The guide is a line p1ece of work listing
significant dates and details pertaining to both Aaron's and
Ruth's careers, and the Braves come right out and say this could
be the first lime ever such a press guide was devoted to only one
player.
They're Probably Right
They're probably right.
What happens now if Hank Aaron doesn't break the record?
'Nobody ever thinks much about that. Sometumes, though, Hank
Aaroo does.
"Get me r~ght," he says, "I feel I can do 11, but naturally
there's always that chance I won 'I. I know that. What happens if I
don't? Nothmg. It's that simple. But I'm gonna give it all I can,
and if I don't, I don't, that's all. l say this, too. I think I can do 1t,
and I feel! will do 11, but if it turns out the other way around, I
don't think anyone will ever get as close."
ThiS is Hank Aaron 's 2oth season with the Braves and SIX times
he has hit more than 42 homers in one season, the last tune being
two years back when he had 47. Last year he managed 341n 129
games and when he thinks in terms of breaking Ruth's record, he
doesn 'I think of doing it this year.
"I don't feell'mgonna be able to play as many games as! used
to," he says. "I just don't think I could break the record this year
unless maybe the club suddenly began wmning a whole Iotta
games by big scores."
Pressure Bound to Bulld
Much has been made about the pressure bound to bu1ld up on
Aaron the closer he gets to Ruth's record. Eddie Mathews, the
Braves' manager, doesn 't f1gure that will be such a big factor.
"I know the pressure's going to build up and people are gomg to
dr1ve him crazy, but Hank's going to be able to handle 11 well,"
says Mathews.
Eddie Mathews knows Hank Aaron well, but he doesn't know
him that well.
Pressure 1s pressure, and although some human bemgs
w1thstand it better than others, nobody is unperv1ous to 11. The
pressure bothered Roger Maris when he hit 61 homers 12 years
ago; Ruth even felt 11 when he hit his 60 in 1927 and he wasn't
chasmg anyone.
You look at Hank Aaron today and he looks the way he should
look, completely relaxed, maybe a few pounds over and a little
fuller in the face.
"I know," Ill! says, smiling, "my face looks fuller but that's
because my hair is longer than it used to be. I guess I'm about~
pounds over, which isn't really that much. Playing in Atlanta,
you're gonna melt away a Iotta pounds."
OneYearataTime
·•·
Hank Aaron has made up his mind he's going to play two more
years, and he's going to do It in nice easy stages, one year at the
lime. He has his own personal time-table and has penciled in
Babe Ruth'&amp; record for sometime next year. He's m no hurry at
ali.
"I'll be satisfied if I hit 30-35home rWls this year," he says.
And here's a little bit of irony : Aaron, at 38, hit 34 homers last

Hart
Lambert
Rouse

::~

Bo ll 1nger

~·.

Thompson

FausnauQh
Steward
Rose
Clark
Wade
Pol1ng

Others

26 9oo.2121 266 438 3so-m

Totals

,
TP
"
Avt, \'
296 12.5 , .
135 56 l
568 21 ,D ~
284 10 7 '
~8 14. t "
185 7.4
110 5.0
28 1.3 . ,
sa 2.9 -:
16 2.0 ''·
11
1.3 ·,;
83 5.0
29
~ no

au '"

Reds drop Pirates 5-4 ..
yielded three more runs in the , ,
fifth.' Ed Sprague, Clay Carroll
and Dave Tomlin held the fl. ":
rates on one hit the rest of the '
way .
Meanwhile, Reda Manager '
Sparky Anderson already is
concerned aliouf pitcher Gary ·'
Nolan, who has arm soreness "
and "he hasn 'I even tried to
throw hard yet."

BRADENTON, Fla. (UPI)Pinch hitter Ed Armbrister
singled m the wmnlng run with
two out in the lOth mning Tuesday to lift the Cincinnati Reds
over the Pittsburgh Pirates 5-I
in exhibition ~lay.
The Reds got two unearned
runs in the first inning and
scored twice more in the fourth
on Gene Locklear's two-run
homer. The four runs came off
Steve Blass, who worked five
Innings, longest of any Pirate
pitcher this spring.
Ross Grimsley started for
the Reds, giving up one run in
the third innmg. Tol!l Hall

utah has more than 80 ,
natural bridges formed by ·
erosion of w1nd and water
upon sandstone, including .
278 -foot -long Rainbow ,
Bridge, which is a national :
monum ent.

"

------------------------------------1
year. Ruth hit the same number when he was 38. The following '·
year, the Babe's home run production tailed off to a total of 22, ~
and if Aaron comes up with those 30he's talking about this year, .:
he'd need seven more homers to break the record next year.
In that correspondmg year, Babe Ruth managed only six more
home runs before he qwt m May. Imagine, if you can, Hank '.
Aaron needmg those seven at the end but getting only Ruth's ;
same

o- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 14, 1973

·.~~~

"'

1971·73 RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
BASKETBALL STATISTICS FT A
'
G
FG-A A TO
24 120·297 62
62 56 ·7~
24 52·145 15 27 11 -18
26 227445 39 111113-lSl
26 124 275 22
43 36 47
26 170-430 29
41
28-51
25
77-178 56 67 Jt -40
22 46 106 18 20 18·29
21
11 38
3 15
6-9
21
23 63 14 23 12-22
8
6-15 I
1
4-S
8
4-9 0
4
3-6
16 - 30 80 10
12 23-33
10 34 1
3
7-9

PLAYER

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That would come right down to baseball's biggest anticlimax
ever, the granddaddy of all asterisks

"IT'S TRUE" - - -

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Mason County.

By Alma Marshall

NEW HAVEN - Watch for the Ding-a-Dong G1rls, the
famoua Calendar Girls, Soni\Y-Oler, BWllly and Mare, Kiddie
Olorus in tbe ~owboat ReVUe sponsored by the New Haven
Woman's Club to be held 801Re time in April:
You have aeen the Gold Diggers, and according to the
director, New Haven has 801Rething better than that to offer.
Have you !leellthe Silver Swingers? They will appear in New
Haven 10me lbne in April. Watch for the date!
Y011 have seen Oulrlle McCarthy and Mortimer Sneard but have you met Cbuckie? If not, be sure to attend the Show Boat
Revue. Watch for the date!
A new band is being organized and its dtrector is Rick
PoweR, 10n of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Powell, They will make their
debut 100n.
MISS SANDRA FOWLER'S book of poems entitled, "In the
~ape of Sun," has been p-esented to the New Haven Public
Ubrary. This American poet and writer has won the distinction
of being the first IIOJI·Israell author to have a book of poems
publllhed by Shalom Publications.
Walter Bar.felay of ~alom Publications said in the title
"Sill" Ia used as a metaphor for life. Hence in the "shape of SWl"
simply means in the shape of life.
Miss Fowler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Okey Fowler of West
Colwnbla, has received many awards for her literary skill.
MRS. VIVIAN BOSTON HAS made a 1973 pledge of 12
volwnes to the New Haven Public Library in memory of the late
Oarence E. Sayre. Two of the boOks received are "The Winda of
War" by Herman Wouk and "The Word" by Irving Wallace.
At the time of his death, Mr. Sayre was a resident of Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Sayre were former residents of Letart, W.Va . He
wu born at Clarksburg, W. Va. and was one of the first
graduates of West Virginia Wesleyan College. Another contribution was made to the New Haven Public Library. Debra
White p-esented a painting entitled, "Prairie Child."
MASON -Andy Hume of Mason was honored recently on his
99th birthday by the Adult Class of HarUord Baptist Church at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Wagenhals In New Haven. Mr.
and Mrs. Lee Gibbs of HarUord presented the honoree and his
wUe, with a cake inscribed with 98th birthday.
A dessert course was served to Mr. and Mrs. Hume, Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Gibba, Miss Maxine Kearns, Mrs. D. A. Smith, A. K.
McQung, George Johnson and host and hostess, Mr. and Mrs.
1ragenhals. Mr. and Mrs. Hume have been members of HarUord
Baptist Cllurch 50 years.
( MASON - Many friends and relatives of Mr. and Mrs.
I;)elmar Alexander were here to attend the wedding of their son,
8rllce Alexander and Miss Sharon Rickard, daughter of Mr. and
~- Paul Rickard on Saturday, March 10, at New Haven United
fllelhodlst Olurch oo Saturday. Guests at the Alexander home
!'ere Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Heyman and IJeth, Tiffin, Ohio; Mr.
'"d Mrs. Clyde Thompson, Mrs. Wayne Thompson and
llalll!hters, Miss Elleen Thomp1100, all of McConnellsville, Ohio.
\ MRS. JAMES LOYD, Kevin and Greg, of Columbus, visited
over the weekend with her pacenls, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Mc-

79

ARE

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BAKER

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FURNtniRE

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

USDA CHOICE
U.S. Government I

~

239

171 oz. box

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart,
You, WE LIKE"
R1ght reserved to hm1t quantiltes
•'

We Gl~rtN, Accept Fed. Food Slam~ s

Prices Effective Mar. 14-21
Monday Thru Friday
,,
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.;-.

'·.
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•.n.

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to g

N

,,,
.~~•:0.'

...

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&lt;-'
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;

CLOSED SUNDAYS
lh'clnf ·~aod -M.-rkii

-

...·

gge

DIAL SOAP
I

Regular
Size Bar

490
DILLS ••••• ••• 1:.
2
9
TISSUES •••••••• ~~.
HEINZ KOSHER

MAYONNAISE.).69e
3
9
0
MARGAR IN E••• :.ly. .
NU·MAID BOWL .

---r

Fresh

.

Meaty

$
lb.

lb.

You See Tbem Advertised......r=""""~
Get New Items Herel

- Bundl Cakes by Betty Crocker and Snack and
Cakes
~IDit 's Skillet DIIIDers
-Kraft Homespun Suppers
- Weight-Watchers Items
~~lep-8aver For Total Floor Care

MADE

lb. 105
•

Fairmont

MICHIGAN

POTATOES

BUTTER·
MILK

1olb. 79~
YELLOW

GOLDEN

CARROTS

ONIONS

2 bchs. 25$ 3

lb.

4"9$

DOUBLEKNIT FABRICS

$ 99

Big SL Patrick's Day selection of 60 inch wide
textured plain and fan cy polyester doublekrut
fabr 1cs B1g assortment of colors. Regular
values io $3.99 a yard. Save now during this Big
St. Patr1ck's Day Sale

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YARD
:·

POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT
WE ARE HERE TO
SERVE YOU

YOUR FRIENDLY
DEPT. STORES

THIS THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY, MARCH 15-16-17
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STURDY WEATHER PROOF
ALUMINUM v~~~~~l
FOLDING PATIO

ST PATRICK'S DAY .)Mu:':
lADIES' SPRING
FASHION PANT

COATS

·.':

FURNITURE

A great selection of new
spring pants coats for
this St. Patrick's Day
Sale. Coats in SIZeS 10 to .::: Sturdy tubular a lummum
frames , multi color vinyl
18. Save now.
weather proof webbing,
fold lor easy storrng

lland knoWI\ as the "Swinging Squires" was one of e~ght winning
for state competition in the
Southern Division Stage Band contest at Morris Harvey College.
', The band, composed of 18 musicians, is directed by Gerald
lltewart, fonnerly of Ma111n. In appi'Oiimately three weeks the
folnl Pleasant Hll!h School group will participate in competition
'In Huntington lor the state title.
' A total of 138 points was required to qualify for superior
I
Fating and the Point Pleasant High School group scored 150
points out of a possible :100. Judges for tbe event were Robert
Hamrick, brass instructor; Alderson Broaddus College; Ernest
'l!aiiUne, brass instructor at Ohio University ; Farrell Coy, wood
·wind instructor of Shepherd College, and Robert Lowden,
p-ofesslonal stage band arranger.

I

Property
Transfers
·American 011 Co. to Amoco
Oil Co., change of name,
Meigs.
Elvin Eugene Thompson,
Eileen Thompson to Lee 0.
Wood Ill, Teresa Wood, .&gt;I
acre, Rutland.
Alfred Gans to Sybil Ebers·
bach, parcels, Pomeroy .
Sybil Ebersbach to Alfred
Gans,
Clarence
Gans,
Margaret Gans, parcels,
Pomeroy.
Owen Smith, Hazel Smith to
Eric Har~ U acre, Bedford.
Wllllam Thomas Soulsby,
JWle Rose Soulsby to Edna E.
Carman, one-third · acre,
Salisbury.
Theodore Willford, Bonnie
Willford to ;'VIncent C. Davis,
VIrginia M. Davis, 65 acres,
Lebanon.
Mont Vance, Joyce Ann
Vance to Jack Vance, Dorothy
Vance, 2.381 acres, Scipio.
Pearl Jacobs to • Arnold
Grate, Mildred Grate, parcels,
Rutland.
Edna E. Carman to Steve H.
EbUn, Wanda EbHn, one-third
acre, Salisbury.
.
Fred B. Geogleln, Joan w.
Geogleln, Carl Fred Goeglein,
Frances Goeglein to F. B.
Goegleln Co., .83 acre,
Salisbury.
Fred B. Goeglein, Joan W.
Goeglein, Carl Fred Goegleln,
Frances Goeglein to H. B.
Goegleb1 Co., lots,_Rocksprings
SUb., Salisbury.
Joseph R. Tardif, Diane
Tardif to Robert D.
Pockllnglon Sr., Judith K.
Pockllilgton, a acre~, Rutland.
~oaeph R Tanllf, Diane
Tanllf tol } Robert D.
Peeklla1ton , Sr., 1 acre,

R~::S.,i,

R. flrdlf, Diane
Tardif 1D ~lie., ..-ells,

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HAM SALAD
HOME

~

200 ct

5 lb. 239

ROAST

_qt.

NORTHERN FACIAL

BACON ENDS

PORK SHOUlDER

6 FOR•1

...•'

.allll[lOrlor rating and qualifying

BOLD
Family Size

NEW HAVEN The
Woman's Missionary Society.9{
the New Haven First Church of
God held their March meeting
m the Missionary Building with
Rena Johnson, Luc1lle Powell
and Orpha F1elds as hostesses
with the president, Orpha
Fields, pres1dmg. v
The members sang "Blessed
Be the Name", Rena Johnson
read scripture taken from I
Cormlhians 8:1-7, and Eleanor
Davis led the prayer. Roll call
was answered by nammg " A
Good, Good Neighbor", and
Roberta Maynard read a
poem, "Young Neighbors. "
Stewardship Director Becky
Reed received the Penny-aDay calendars.
Hand cream was distributed
to sell as a money-making
project.
Members were urged to
attend the State WMS Con-

PlAIN &amp;'FANCY POLYESTER

60 INCH TEXTUR

Daniel.
; PT. PLEASANT - The Point Pleasant High School Stage

USDA
CHOICE ·

Regular 1.09
Family Size

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News Notes I

Meigs

CASCADE

Three host to ·
church group

~~Grate, Mildred OrMI

FFLER 'S ST P

MEN'S FANCY SHORT SLEEVE

Dress &amp; Sport Shirts

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- STIFFLER'S ST. PATRICK'S DAY -lML~: --:,:

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STIFFLER'S ST. PATRICK DAY SALE
TOWN AND COUNTRY

MEN'S-BOY'S YOUTHS BETTER

LATEX WALL PAINT

GYM OXFORDS
$ 99

2 Gal. For

Reg S3 99 va lu e, drr pless
Latex wa ll pa int in 10 best
colors and whlte The newest
of patn l w1th th tck creamy
co nstsfency
th at
makes
pa lntmg easter

$500

...
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HANDBAGS
See these f i ne quality
leather lik e vrnyl hand
bags In new Spring shades
In a large var iety of styles
and shapes. Save now at
Stiffl er's

PAIR

.

-STIFFLER 'S ST PATRICK 'S DAY SALE -

STIFFLER'S ST PATRICK'S DAY SALE -

20x40 ASSORTED FANCY

DELUXE PLASTIC DISH

EACH

STIFFLER'S ST. PATRICKS DAY SALE
NEW SPRING lEATHER liKE VINYl

•'

2

Shamrock Spec1al! Men's,
boy's, youths red or gold gym
oxfords. Long wearing. Lace
to the toe style. Save now!

:··
·: :·

:·

'•"

$299
TO

$8QQ ·

STIFF,LER'S ST. PATRICK'S DAY SALE
MENS MAVERICK BRAND

TERRY BATH TOWELS.,. DRAINER AND MAT FLARE LEG JEANS

:
·
2$ 00

Spec1al asso rlment of
h1gh quality cotton terry
hath towels 10 assorted
fan cy patterns and
colors. 20 x 40 size. Save
Now.

MAR INA

. •'•
100 SQUARE FEET

JUCD
W ED R I N Q

Give
the gilt

ollove
A perfect K~epeake diamond
backed by our writlen guaranl ee
of perfect qu11ity, fine white color
and correct modern cui. Come m
today to see our excilmg collcriLon

of KeepHke Dlamond R~nge.

JS~.~.~~~

(Upol:l Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

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13xl8 BROADLOO
CARPET CAR

long (I 00 sq. ft.) lobbacco or plant bed
covers.

$ 00

Men 's

13 "

MATS
x
size
18 ''

American Made
Children Sport

SNEAKERS.
Am er 1can

made

.: chtldren and g1rls' sport

broadloom carpet. .' sneaker s for summer .
Assorted car mat sets.
Reg
S1.99
value .
Moulded sole
Two m a package .

SET

~ p~~:

STIFFLER'S. ST PATRICK'S DAY SALE -

9x12 ROOM SIZE
VINYL FELT BASE

RU'GS

'lxl2 room size fdt base
1·ugs w1th vinyl fortified
fuHsh m colorful pat·

fACH

Ladies' Amencan made
: moulded sole canvas
:sport sneakers .
Washable.

::

$159

PAIR

COTTON TERRY BATH

TOWELS
Special! 22x44 lrregnlar
fancy floral cotton terry
hath towels

ll•rns.

$ 00

SNEAKERS

OXFORDS

'S ST. PATRICK 'S DAY SALE 22x44 INCH ASSORTED FANCY

$100
EACH

Values To 59'
Big Asst.

AM ER CAN MADE
lADIES' SPORT

GYM

$100

$5~.~

.. .

American Made
Mens-Boys-Youths

M en's, boys and youth's
gym o&gt;cfords '" low cut
lace to toe In black and
whrte RE!!l . S2.99 Value.

Maverick

stores

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fa mous

Brand flare leg jeans Budget
pri ced Size 29 to 42 Stock up
now at your favonte Stiffler

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:
COVERS
3 yards wide by 33\1 feet

$1299
EACH

Another Shamrock Special
from Stiffler's. A deluxe
plastic d1sh drainer and mal
in assorted colo.,, Shop early
and save.

FOR

TOBACCO BED

Uti. 2M •
PoJMroy
l'llalll992·5411
to IIdia Vlnlnl, · Wanda . ._ _ _ _ _ _ - - - - - - -

:

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Used Buffalo coats of the
Wmnlpeg pollee department
wind up in church. The fur
coats are donated to St.
Andrew's Church on the Red
River to re-upholster the
kneeling benches.

2•HOUR
CLEA
. - NI.NG

$ 99

Men'sperm press short sleeve
dress and · sport shirts in
woven and kmt fabrics. Sizes
14 to m~o and S, M, L, XL.
Save now.

ON SPRING BREAKS
NEW HAVEN- Miss Angie
Fields of New Haven and
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
David Fields, Jr., spent the
past week at Ft. Lauderdale,
Fla., and toured Walt Disney
World. Miss Fields, a junior at
Marshall University, was on
spring break. Miss Marilyn
Gibbs, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William C. Gibbs of New
Haven, spent her spring break
from Marshall University with
her parents. She also is a junior
at Marshall.

Vlmng, lots, Rutland Village.
Harry Joe Denison, Kathryn
Denison to Reed Gandee, lots,
Middleport.
Gary R. Dill, Mildred S. Dill
to Gary Griffith, Juanita
Griffith, parcels, Chester.
Gary Griffith, Juanita M.
Griffith to Gary Griffith,
Juanita M. Griffith, parcels,
Chester.
lola A. Bartrwn to Richard
'Fetty, Glenna Fetty, 2 acres,
Rutland.
Minnie M. Foil to Roosevelt
Branham, Polly Branham,
parcel, Scipio.
Geneva Yates, dec., to David ,
Robert fates, Morgan A.
Yates, cert. of trans., Mid·
dleporl, Olive.
Lester F. McKenzie, Frances
McKenzie to Roy Allen Sayre,
Emileen E. Sayre, .46 acre,
Sutton .

CK'S DAY

TOWEL ENDS
One large group of
famous Cannon Towel

ends 1n asst sizes and
colors Shop early and

save.
I

�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., March 14,1973 ·

Work-Study plan is explained
in the near future . RefreshHow parents can help .their their wcirk in the program.
relations.
At the request of the parents, ments were served and nw·
children participate sue- . Juniors and seniors who are
ceufillly in the . work..,tudy taking part in the program are another meeting will be called sery ·services were provided by
program being carried out in given counseling on banking, to further discuss the program students.
the Meigs High School were . budgeting, shopping, ways· of
ouUined by Mrs. Mary Bacon, . saving· money, job procedures
aupervis... ,ata recent meeting and how to be more in. of parents.
dependent. They are required
Mrs. Bacon urged parents to to bank a p!H'tion of their in- .
give full support to their come earned through on-the- .
students involved in the job training activities.
' pnlf!ram. She' asked them to · At present there are 19
encourage the student to attend juniors and seniors of Meigs
classes and to see that the Hig~ School taking part in. the
student, if involved in an out.&lt;(- program. Some are employed ·
school wor~ program, ·reports at the local hospital, in the deep
to work consistently and mining program, ·in the
punctually.
restaurant business or other
"Before the student can be endeavors. or course, there is
in the Book of Revelation.
successful, he will need your always need for more
This concert is sponsored by e n c 0.u r 8 g e me n t a n d businesses participating in the
the Meigs Men's Fellowship of · recolinition of his potentials program, Mrs. Bacon points
MeigsCounty,andissupported and abilities," Mrs. Bacon out. Any interested in doing so
by the Churches or Christ. reported.
are asked to contact Mrs.
There is no admission charge.
At Meigs High School, Mrs. Bacon at the Meigs County
The concert will begin BaCOI! has some 52 students Superintendent of Schools
promptly al7:30and the public enrolled in the work... tudy office, Pomeroy, 992-3883.
is invited.
program. Students in their
Mrs. Bacon explained how
freshman and sophomore the work-study progra111
years perform in-service operates and the objectives of
duties at the school to learn the program. Such areas as
proper work procedures. work habits, health habits,
During their junior year, they attitudes and habits, personal
spend one-hall of the day in appearance, personality
academic activities at the development, manipulation
school and one-half day skills and punctuality and
engaging in work activities in attendance are covered in the
the community or the school. course, she said.
Power·Cieans All Carpet Naps ... and Adjusts Automatically
During the senior year, the
Objectives of the 'work ... tudy
Roto-MatiC'has an extra motor of its own to
students involved in the program are sell realization,
spin that big brush deep down into the nap
·program spend all but one-half human relationship, economic
where the carpet·destroying dirt and grit are!
day a week at their jobs. The efficiency, civil responsibility,
other half day is spent at the independent living, pride and
school. All students are self respect · and family
credited toward graduation for
All steel

This EUREKA
2% Peak Hp. Cleaner .
Now With Brand New

Fortress is Our God," "My
Faith Looks Up to Thee," "My
Song in the Night," and "The
Lord's Prayer."
There will be light spiritual
numbers such as, "Deep
River," and "Every Time 1
Feel the Spirit." Some of the
most numbers will be, "Savior

Like a Shepherd Lead Us," a
melodic rendition of the old
hymn; "Lord Triumphant,"
which depicts the final victory
of Christ and the Church, and
finally, a powerful sketch of the
"Visions of Saint John" which
will vividly portray the visions
or the Apostle John on the Isle
of Patmos which are recorded

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Washington
1 Report
1
I
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By Clarence
Miller

I
I

The Administration's FY
1974 budget reflects a new
approach to funding education.
To say that some of the
recommended changes in aid
to education are controversial
is an understatement. In this
report, we'll generally review
the new budget for education.
Under the first of the four
major provisions comprising
the education budget, some 30
categorical programs
(primarily in the areas of
elementary and secondary
education) would be consolida·
ted Into one proposed special
education revenue-sharing
package. The President has
requested $2.8 billion for this
purpose.
In addition to the elementary
and secondary education
programs, President Nixon
also )\'ants to transfer from
caleifl/r\cal grants to special
educ4tion revenue-sharing
such programs · as federal
impact aid; education for the
handicapped, vocational and
adult education and the basic
school lunch program.
Major cutS have been in the
Impact aid program. The
school impact aid program,
which involves the allocation of
federal dollars to supplement
school districts in which the
parents of students are employed by the federal government, has long been an area of
controversy . As I stated on a
number or occasions during
recent speaking engagements
throughout the lOth District,
the program has enabled some
of the wealthiest local units of
government to reap millions of
dollars in federal school-aid
while other less-affluent areas
-such as Southeastern Ohio have virtually been ignored.
A second provision of FY 74
education budget reflects a

1
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shift in student financial aid.
The President has requested
some $948 million for basic
educational opportunity grants
which provide a maximum nf
$1,400 to each student, less
whatever he and his family
may reasonably be expected to
contribute to his education.
This is the first year in which
funding for this type of grant
(created by the Education Act
Amendments of 1972) has been
requested.
No new funding is included in
the budget for national direct
student loans, but an estimated
$150 million is expected to be
available in the form of loan
repayments to make new loans
under this program.
. The work-study program will
be continued with funding at
$250 million and the guaranteed student loan progran. will
be expanded.
A third major provision of
the budget establishes a
National Institute of Education
with funding of $118 million to
focus research on educational
problems. Emphasis will be
placed on learning for the
disadvantaged, career
education, educational
technology and experimental
schools, and the institute will
disseminate research results
and information to local
communities to help them
meet their own needs.
Another shift in the
educational programs is
reflected by funding Head
Start programs through the
Office of Child Development in
HEW, rather than through the
Office of Economic Opportunity. The Head Start
budget reflects a $14 million
increase in FY 7t
These are some of the major
prov1s1ons of the Ad·
ministration 's requests to

WELLSTON - Using a fifth
end man, the 20th Annual
Wellston Rotary Minstrel show
played to near-capacity audiences totalling 1,7IMI persons at
the Wellston high school
auditorium Friday and
Saturday nights. The "fifth"
end man was Rotarian Carl
Zimmerman who, playing a
drunk, added to the general
hilarity.
Only the 1969 show with 1,744
paid, and the 1972 show with
1,171 paid exceed.ed the 1973
edition which also marked
Wellston's centennial and
Rotary 's 50th year in Wellston.
Zimmerman, Interlocutor
Charles Gaskill and End Men
LeRoy Hutchison, Joe Oths,
Jim Fox and Larry Kibler used
a big bag of gags and jokes to
keep the audience laughing .
Soloists in addition to the end
men were Gail Evans, Larry
Potter, Opal Bennett and Sue
Johnson, and Lee Ann Hut- ·
chison sang a duet with' her'
father . Sandra Nodruff
directed "Me and My Shadow"
with a cast of Jeff Henry, Mike
McKinniss, Tom Downard,
Phil Dickerson, Scott Hamer
and Dave Swonger. ·Connie
Wolfe opened the •l 1o1v with a
••

pre-curtain tap dance.
Other featured segments
were : "Ailey Oop" with Jerry
Ghearing, Dave Scharfenberger, Mary Combs and
Curt Hamer, and Rev. John
Taylor and Rev. Robert Davis
in a Laurel and Hardy skit.
"Wellston, Lively Wellston "
featured Eric Dahlberg,
Gordon Morrow, Don Souders,
Charles Milliken, Jim Swonger
and Stan McKinniss . John
Derrow and Ken Dittman were

SYRACUSE - Students of
the Syracuse Elementary
School named to the honor roil
for the fourth six weeks
grading period, earning a "B"
or above in all subjects (those
in all capital letters receiving
all A) are:
FIRST GRADE - Brian

CHIDES STATE OFFICIAL
OOLUMBUS (UP!)- Joyce
Kady, director of the Ohio
Public
Interest Action Group,
THIS RED BARON KITE flew mighty low, and even
Snoopy couldn't have kept tbe kite from snagging in electric accused Attorney Gen.eral Willines .. But a caU to Columbus and Southern Ohio ·Electric liam J. Brown Monday of dragging his feet in the area of
Company brought a line crew to the rescue, and the Red
consumer protection. She
Baron will fly again. However, after this his pilot will always
warned Brown's failure to take
make sure he flies in the wide open spaces.
legal action on cases prepared
by the stale consumer protection division "could give businesses carte blanche to do as
they
please."
COLUMBUS - Pink Panther ail classrooms have also been
cartoon kite safety booklets sent to the schools in the
have been sent to ail 4th company's annual education FIRST DEFENSE SET
graders in Columbus and program to keep kids safe and
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UP!)
Southern Ohio Electric their kites in the ait.
- Romero Anaya, world
In the cartoon booklets the bantamweight champion, will
Company's service area including the River District to Pink Panther explains the make his first title defense
spread the word about safe kite rules of safe kite flying:
against fellow Mexican Rogebo
-Always fly your kite far Lara at the Forum here April
flying technique. Posters for
away from trees, utility lines, 28, promoter Don Fraser anradio and TV antennas, streets no\Diced Tuesday.
Congress for educational and highways .
Anaya won the !Ill-pound
purposes. While they represent
- Always use dry string, championship from Panama's
an overall increase of $247 wood and paper to make your
Enrique Pinder on a third
million for education, which is kite - no wire or any other
round knockout Jan. 19, in
one of the highest priority metal.
Panama.
areas in our nation today, they
- Always fly your kite on
also alter the past approach to days when there is no rain.
solving educational funding
- Always call the electric
problems.
company office nearest you if
your kite gets snagged in a
WILL SUIT
utility line. Don't pull the string
or climb poles.

Kite safety explained

Our Prices

SPRING SHOE FASHIONS
FOR THE.
FAMILY
Off on the right f eet!
Fa m il i es w ho shoe -vp
here a re aski ng for
comfort. style. va lue. We
don 't think that's asking

lor too much. Come see!

~

..;•
..
...-.
'

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

.Carpet Attachment I

Your Purse

Come in and we'll
prove lt.

lOlA'S

~~Squirt, "

a seeing-eye canine,
provided liquid hilarity in two
appearances onstage.

Main at Sycamore, Pomerov

IN OUR

Serving Nilely TitllO P.M.

A~~·;~~ng

PADDLE WHEEL LOUNGE

Appearing
WeekLy
8:30P.M. ,
.Tit
1:30 A.M.

Appearing
Friday
&amp;
Saturday
9:00 P.M.
Til
2 A.M.

t

,. '

. '•

GUARANTEE:"
'A&amp;P offen cw vn,ondi!i onol moncy ·buck
gvorantec . NO lllC:IIIcr whot i1 i\, no muttCr
who
il, .A&amp;P
.

f

l

)

•'I
'

..·'
l

FOR TRUE COOKIE LOVERS

j

COOK lOOKS

CAP'N
JOHN

FABULOUS "15"

Main S:reet
POMEROY, OHIO

1Pkl·

lb.

dust ba1s

ONLY

furekl
Modoi126D·A
V.C.M.A. Rating .88 H.P.

•11995

Cleanlnc
film

Braunschweiger

SEE ROTO-MATIC'DEMONSTRATED AT OUR STORE

Ingels

.·:t 8·."l b, '" .

Furniture
992-2635 OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

?o.aeal Cef.eng ~!~i

:·•'

'Fuah,~ u~ ·

.Any"H.s~
. ·ll•'"'
· Ptece .lb.

59 ~
~vvo~

.

d tu.:f 1. ,

,, ,

3 $100
....
3 $100

.
TOIIIIIIoe&amp; •••
8 99¢
Na,.donaM9~~..
thpallll9""' . lb.&amp;
SUGAR .

•

Superior

J ~CUJ

,,

.

PiMeapp~

VINE RIPE

.

larg&amp;

lb.

CALIFORNIA

bo

NEW CROP CALIFORNIA

TOTEM

199~ TRASH
BAGS

10
Count

No.
Cans

Chef-Boy-Ar-dee

PIZZA

oz. 49t

Morton's
MEAT BALL

15
S1ze

With Cheese

NESTLE'S

QUIK

2

STEW

lb.79¢

NESTLES'

CHOC.

Can

BETSY ROSS

$1
3
1.5 Cnt.
Pkgs.

PAN
ROLLS

24oz.
Can

Reg. 3Bc

12

DiiPS

oz.49e

NABISCO

OREO

15 oz.
Pkg.

COOKIES
ICE
CREAM

sge

Pkg .

49e
' ''

Dutch Holland

1ft gal.

59~

'h Gal.

69~ ' ..
,'
.'
•'

~·4t~t"'

GIAPI 46oOL
DRINK
ca1

SUPERIOR

SLAB BACON
lb.

PRODUCE
SPECIAL
Solid Crisp

HEAD
tEnUCE

FROZEN

WIENERS
. 12 oz.
Pkg.

MORTONS

Excedrin •
DEODORANT
Mennen "E"
. STICK MARGARINE
Blue Bonnet • •
.INSTANT COFFEE
Nescafe·
I

CRISCO
3

lb.

79~

Can
c:U:n

Good at Rutland
Dept. Store
Expirel: 1-17·73

CLOSE-UP
TOOlHPASTE

•

Kleenex·Towelsr
MAGIC
Spray Sizing •
KRAFT
Mayonnaise • •
INSTANT COFFEE
Tasters Choice

I

I

79~

79~

ASSORTED

FOR FAST RELIEF
I

SUPERIOR

WATER
40-oz.
CONDITIONER box

~

I

•

•

l-Ib.

33~

~;:·

$1 87

•Pill·

00

Woolite Liquid ............ ~-.:.· 69c
Wishbone Dressing ~~~~[~N..... 'o::; 39c
Bisquick Biscuit Mix ....... •,::.· 69c
Keebler Fudge Sticks .. M~;.·$1.00

And Get One FREE!

59~

.

\

1

WITH
THIS
COUPON

Good Thru Saturday, March 17th.
At All A&amp;P WEO's- Col. Div.

~~~

Good at Rutland

18-oz.
pkr.

Chapman'$
SHOES

7-os.

I

I

·.

6

. 29~ head

~~-

J

size disposable

CAMPBELL'S

SOUP

1.0..
pq,

llb.89c

tl

Takes super.

I

I

I

Many New Style~ Now-More To Come

lb•.

lb,

I

I

.~;i

7·piece deluxe
tool set

lb,•, , -

I

lb•.

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MAR. 17

VEGETABLE

Turbot FiUets • •
7t
Whiting Fillets
'7ftc
Fish Sticks ~~~~
'7ftc
.flFr1e. dCl ams
Cod Portions c~~~~~~N ::.5198
Fried Perch HEA~~w~~m
Fried Fish Cakes Hft,\~N 7t
Tuna Noodlect1Mg~eN~'::'7t

3·- .

!·Wlnp

Round

Middleport, Ohio
Open Daily 9 ~o 9

.''

$

Bottom

Prieto &amp;God Thru S.turtlov, Morch t 7th lo

3-l.lf Qt,., Wj batks
3·Broasl Qtrt1. wjbatks
3-PIIp. Glblols

•. I
'

Includes

$t
,~1''
f.OA~:

Sliced

Now

'

'
l

.·...
,

By Piece

"500 ROOM"

1f on odverti\cd \ pc cl r~l i\ ever \old out o ~ k the I
Manager lo r a Roin chcck. It .-:n tit l e ~ yov to the
'ame ilem at the \arne \peciol price the follow·
ing week . Or if you wi\h wo' l! 9ive yo~ o &lt;o m·
parable item at the \ orne ~pecial price .

1

MILK
of Gallipolis

RAINCHECK:

J

Allen, Jane Amberger, Randy
Armes, Gina Boggs, Tony
Deem, Rusty Flagg, Debra
Michael.
SECOND GRADE - Rick
Chancey, Todd Cundiff, Teresa
Harden.
THIRD GRADE - Brian
Armes, Brian Ash, Ann
Williams, Robert Brown,
DENISE DEEM, Eric Upscomb, Meiodi Cunfidd.
FOURTH GRADE - Eric
Harris, Steve Hayes, Teresa
Holstein, Donna Hubbard,
Mary Beth Slavin.
FIFTH· .GRADE - · Tonia
Ash, Meg l\mberger, Carrie
Guinther, Rosemary Hubbard,
JACK DUFFY . .
SIXTH GRADE - MARK
DEMPSEY and Dawn Sorden.

BUTTER

ENJOY AN ELEGANT EVENING OF DINING

Alw9y~ do whol i ~ honcU a nd foir for every
cuUomer.

TOOL-PAK••

BROUGHTON

VISIT THE HOLIDAY INN ..•

construction.
Built to last.

Carries its own
tools in handy

Honor roll is announced

in a quickie pants~own skit.
Abarbershop skit showed off
Henrietta Scharfenberger, Jim
Woods, Dr. Paul Essman, Carl ·
Zimmerman and Bob Staggs.
Mrs. Bennett's solo was interrupted by a Canadian
Mountie played by John Taylor
and a 11 horse" composed of
Rev. Bob Davis and School
Superintendent Ralph McCormick, with Zimmerman
bringing up the "rear."
Don Souders and his dog

. ..

.'

MOTOR DRIVEN

·

20th Wellston minstrel
was big weekend smash

i:

·; .
::
:·,

ROTO·MATIC®

Kentucky Christian College Choir in Middleport tonight
Tonight at 7:30 at. the Meigs
Junior High School in Middleport an inspirational
musical program will be offered this area when the
Kentucky Christian College
Choir of Grayson presents a
concert under the direction of
Benic Hampton. Classic
favorites include "A Mighty

11

49

8 01 .
tJar

$219·

Rhodes Frozen Bread DoughS :;;;. 99c
Pillsbury Frosting ~~~:._~o ... .t~·S3c
Rescue Soap Pads ........ ,.\' "45c
Sunsweet Prune Juice ..... . 't:· 65c

Stwe
20e
.

This
C,upon

~~fli l~ On l·lb. Pkg. lttf or All Meet

¢ ,

With
Thi•
,Coupon

Good Thru Saturday, March. 17th.
At All A&amp;P WEO •-Col, Div.
UMIT 9NI C.OIIIf'CIN

With
This
Coupon
Good Thru Satur.day, March t 7th.
i
At All A&amp;P WEO's-Col. Div.

OaeM~~

1

ONE COUPON!QJ•~~~l: ~~ ~

Good Thru Saturday, March 17th.
At Ail A&amp;P WEO's-Col.
MIT ONE COUPON

· -r=~

Good Thru SaturdaX, M1rch 17th.
Ail A&amp;P WEO s-Col
ONE CO,IPot

�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., March 14,1973 ·

Work-Study plan is explained
in the near future . RefreshHow parents can help .their their wcirk in the program.
relations.
At the request of the parents, ments were served and nw·
children participate sue- . Juniors and seniors who are
ceufillly in the . work..,tudy taking part in the program are another meeting will be called sery ·services were provided by
program being carried out in given counseling on banking, to further discuss the program students.
the Meigs High School were . budgeting, shopping, ways· of
ouUined by Mrs. Mary Bacon, . saving· money, job procedures
aupervis... ,ata recent meeting and how to be more in. of parents.
dependent. They are required
Mrs. Bacon urged parents to to bank a p!H'tion of their in- .
give full support to their come earned through on-the- .
students involved in the job training activities.
' pnlf!ram. She' asked them to · At present there are 19
encourage the student to attend juniors and seniors of Meigs
classes and to see that the Hig~ School taking part in. the
student, if involved in an out.&lt;(- program. Some are employed ·
school wor~ program, ·reports at the local hospital, in the deep
to work consistently and mining program, ·in the
punctually.
restaurant business or other
"Before the student can be endeavors. or course, there is
in the Book of Revelation.
successful, he will need your always need for more
This concert is sponsored by e n c 0.u r 8 g e me n t a n d businesses participating in the
the Meigs Men's Fellowship of · recolinition of his potentials program, Mrs. Bacon points
MeigsCounty,andissupported and abilities," Mrs. Bacon out. Any interested in doing so
by the Churches or Christ. reported.
are asked to contact Mrs.
There is no admission charge.
At Meigs High School, Mrs. Bacon at the Meigs County
The concert will begin BaCOI! has some 52 students Superintendent of Schools
promptly al7:30and the public enrolled in the work... tudy office, Pomeroy, 992-3883.
is invited.
program. Students in their
Mrs. Bacon explained how
freshman and sophomore the work-study progra111
years perform in-service operates and the objectives of
duties at the school to learn the program. Such areas as
proper work procedures. work habits, health habits,
During their junior year, they attitudes and habits, personal
spend one-hall of the day in appearance, personality
academic activities at the development, manipulation
school and one-half day skills and punctuality and
engaging in work activities in attendance are covered in the
the community or the school. course, she said.
Power·Cieans All Carpet Naps ... and Adjusts Automatically
During the senior year, the
Objectives of the 'work ... tudy
Roto-MatiC'has an extra motor of its own to
students involved in the program are sell realization,
spin that big brush deep down into the nap
·program spend all but one-half human relationship, economic
where the carpet·destroying dirt and grit are!
day a week at their jobs. The efficiency, civil responsibility,
other half day is spent at the independent living, pride and
school. All students are self respect · and family
credited toward graduation for
All steel

This EUREKA
2% Peak Hp. Cleaner .
Now With Brand New

Fortress is Our God," "My
Faith Looks Up to Thee," "My
Song in the Night," and "The
Lord's Prayer."
There will be light spiritual
numbers such as, "Deep
River," and "Every Time 1
Feel the Spirit." Some of the
most numbers will be, "Savior

Like a Shepherd Lead Us," a
melodic rendition of the old
hymn; "Lord Triumphant,"
which depicts the final victory
of Christ and the Church, and
finally, a powerful sketch of the
"Visions of Saint John" which
will vividly portray the visions
or the Apostle John on the Isle
of Patmos which are recorded

~-------------------------1

Washington
1 Report
1
I
I

By Clarence
Miller

I
I

The Administration's FY
1974 budget reflects a new
approach to funding education.
To say that some of the
recommended changes in aid
to education are controversial
is an understatement. In this
report, we'll generally review
the new budget for education.
Under the first of the four
major provisions comprising
the education budget, some 30
categorical programs
(primarily in the areas of
elementary and secondary
education) would be consolida·
ted Into one proposed special
education revenue-sharing
package. The President has
requested $2.8 billion for this
purpose.
In addition to the elementary
and secondary education
programs, President Nixon
also )\'ants to transfer from
caleifl/r\cal grants to special
educ4tion revenue-sharing
such programs · as federal
impact aid; education for the
handicapped, vocational and
adult education and the basic
school lunch program.
Major cutS have been in the
Impact aid program. The
school impact aid program,
which involves the allocation of
federal dollars to supplement
school districts in which the
parents of students are employed by the federal government, has long been an area of
controversy . As I stated on a
number or occasions during
recent speaking engagements
throughout the lOth District,
the program has enabled some
of the wealthiest local units of
government to reap millions of
dollars in federal school-aid
while other less-affluent areas
-such as Southeastern Ohio have virtually been ignored.
A second provision of FY 74
education budget reflects a

1
I
I

1
I
'

shift in student financial aid.
The President has requested
some $948 million for basic
educational opportunity grants
which provide a maximum nf
$1,400 to each student, less
whatever he and his family
may reasonably be expected to
contribute to his education.
This is the first year in which
funding for this type of grant
(created by the Education Act
Amendments of 1972) has been
requested.
No new funding is included in
the budget for national direct
student loans, but an estimated
$150 million is expected to be
available in the form of loan
repayments to make new loans
under this program.
. The work-study program will
be continued with funding at
$250 million and the guaranteed student loan progran. will
be expanded.
A third major provision of
the budget establishes a
National Institute of Education
with funding of $118 million to
focus research on educational
problems. Emphasis will be
placed on learning for the
disadvantaged, career
education, educational
technology and experimental
schools, and the institute will
disseminate research results
and information to local
communities to help them
meet their own needs.
Another shift in the
educational programs is
reflected by funding Head
Start programs through the
Office of Child Development in
HEW, rather than through the
Office of Economic Opportunity. The Head Start
budget reflects a $14 million
increase in FY 7t
These are some of the major
prov1s1ons of the Ad·
ministration 's requests to

WELLSTON - Using a fifth
end man, the 20th Annual
Wellston Rotary Minstrel show
played to near-capacity audiences totalling 1,7IMI persons at
the Wellston high school
auditorium Friday and
Saturday nights. The "fifth"
end man was Rotarian Carl
Zimmerman who, playing a
drunk, added to the general
hilarity.
Only the 1969 show with 1,744
paid, and the 1972 show with
1,171 paid exceed.ed the 1973
edition which also marked
Wellston's centennial and
Rotary 's 50th year in Wellston.
Zimmerman, Interlocutor
Charles Gaskill and End Men
LeRoy Hutchison, Joe Oths,
Jim Fox and Larry Kibler used
a big bag of gags and jokes to
keep the audience laughing .
Soloists in addition to the end
men were Gail Evans, Larry
Potter, Opal Bennett and Sue
Johnson, and Lee Ann Hut- ·
chison sang a duet with' her'
father . Sandra Nodruff
directed "Me and My Shadow"
with a cast of Jeff Henry, Mike
McKinniss, Tom Downard,
Phil Dickerson, Scott Hamer
and Dave Swonger. ·Connie
Wolfe opened the •l 1o1v with a
••

pre-curtain tap dance.
Other featured segments
were : "Ailey Oop" with Jerry
Ghearing, Dave Scharfenberger, Mary Combs and
Curt Hamer, and Rev. John
Taylor and Rev. Robert Davis
in a Laurel and Hardy skit.
"Wellston, Lively Wellston "
featured Eric Dahlberg,
Gordon Morrow, Don Souders,
Charles Milliken, Jim Swonger
and Stan McKinniss . John
Derrow and Ken Dittman were

SYRACUSE - Students of
the Syracuse Elementary
School named to the honor roil
for the fourth six weeks
grading period, earning a "B"
or above in all subjects (those
in all capital letters receiving
all A) are:
FIRST GRADE - Brian

CHIDES STATE OFFICIAL
OOLUMBUS (UP!)- Joyce
Kady, director of the Ohio
Public
Interest Action Group,
THIS RED BARON KITE flew mighty low, and even
Snoopy couldn't have kept tbe kite from snagging in electric accused Attorney Gen.eral Willines .. But a caU to Columbus and Southern Ohio ·Electric liam J. Brown Monday of dragging his feet in the area of
Company brought a line crew to the rescue, and the Red
consumer protection. She
Baron will fly again. However, after this his pilot will always
warned Brown's failure to take
make sure he flies in the wide open spaces.
legal action on cases prepared
by the stale consumer protection division "could give businesses carte blanche to do as
they
please."
COLUMBUS - Pink Panther ail classrooms have also been
cartoon kite safety booklets sent to the schools in the
have been sent to ail 4th company's annual education FIRST DEFENSE SET
graders in Columbus and program to keep kids safe and
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UP!)
Southern Ohio Electric their kites in the ait.
- Romero Anaya, world
In the cartoon booklets the bantamweight champion, will
Company's service area including the River District to Pink Panther explains the make his first title defense
spread the word about safe kite rules of safe kite flying:
against fellow Mexican Rogebo
-Always fly your kite far Lara at the Forum here April
flying technique. Posters for
away from trees, utility lines, 28, promoter Don Fraser anradio and TV antennas, streets no\Diced Tuesday.
Congress for educational and highways .
Anaya won the !Ill-pound
purposes. While they represent
- Always use dry string, championship from Panama's
an overall increase of $247 wood and paper to make your
Enrique Pinder on a third
million for education, which is kite - no wire or any other
round knockout Jan. 19, in
one of the highest priority metal.
Panama.
areas in our nation today, they
- Always fly your kite on
also alter the past approach to days when there is no rain.
solving educational funding
- Always call the electric
problems.
company office nearest you if
your kite gets snagged in a
WILL SUIT
utility line. Don't pull the string
or climb poles.

Kite safety explained

Our Prices

SPRING SHOE FASHIONS
FOR THE.
FAMILY
Off on the right f eet!
Fa m il i es w ho shoe -vp
here a re aski ng for
comfort. style. va lue. We
don 't think that's asking

lor too much. Come see!

~

..;•
..
...-.
'

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

.Carpet Attachment I

Your Purse

Come in and we'll
prove lt.

lOlA'S

~~Squirt, "

a seeing-eye canine,
provided liquid hilarity in two
appearances onstage.

Main at Sycamore, Pomerov

IN OUR

Serving Nilely TitllO P.M.

A~~·;~~ng

PADDLE WHEEL LOUNGE

Appearing
WeekLy
8:30P.M. ,
.Tit
1:30 A.M.

Appearing
Friday
&amp;
Saturday
9:00 P.M.
Til
2 A.M.

t

,. '

. '•

GUARANTEE:"
'A&amp;P offen cw vn,ondi!i onol moncy ·buck
gvorantec . NO lllC:IIIcr whot i1 i\, no muttCr
who
il, .A&amp;P
.

f

l

)

•'I
'

..·'
l

FOR TRUE COOKIE LOVERS

j

COOK lOOKS

CAP'N
JOHN

FABULOUS "15"

Main S:reet
POMEROY, OHIO

1Pkl·

lb.

dust ba1s

ONLY

furekl
Modoi126D·A
V.C.M.A. Rating .88 H.P.

•11995

Cleanlnc
film

Braunschweiger

SEE ROTO-MATIC'DEMONSTRATED AT OUR STORE

Ingels

.·:t 8·."l b, '" .

Furniture
992-2635 OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

?o.aeal Cef.eng ~!~i

:·•'

'Fuah,~ u~ ·

.Any"H.s~
. ·ll•'"'
· Ptece .lb.

59 ~
~vvo~

.

d tu.:f 1. ,

,, ,

3 $100
....
3 $100

.
TOIIIIIIoe&amp; •••
8 99¢
Na,.donaM9~~..
thpallll9""' . lb.&amp;
SUGAR .

•

Superior

J ~CUJ

,,

.

PiMeapp~

VINE RIPE

.

larg&amp;

lb.

CALIFORNIA

bo

NEW CROP CALIFORNIA

TOTEM

199~ TRASH
BAGS

10
Count

No.
Cans

Chef-Boy-Ar-dee

PIZZA

oz. 49t

Morton's
MEAT BALL

15
S1ze

With Cheese

NESTLE'S

QUIK

2

STEW

lb.79¢

NESTLES'

CHOC.

Can

BETSY ROSS

$1
3
1.5 Cnt.
Pkgs.

PAN
ROLLS

24oz.
Can

Reg. 3Bc

12

DiiPS

oz.49e

NABISCO

OREO

15 oz.
Pkg.

COOKIES
ICE
CREAM

sge

Pkg .

49e
' ''

Dutch Holland

1ft gal.

59~

'h Gal.

69~ ' ..
,'
.'
•'

~·4t~t"'

GIAPI 46oOL
DRINK
ca1

SUPERIOR

SLAB BACON
lb.

PRODUCE
SPECIAL
Solid Crisp

HEAD
tEnUCE

FROZEN

WIENERS
. 12 oz.
Pkg.

MORTONS

Excedrin •
DEODORANT
Mennen "E"
. STICK MARGARINE
Blue Bonnet • •
.INSTANT COFFEE
Nescafe·
I

CRISCO
3

lb.

79~

Can
c:U:n

Good at Rutland
Dept. Store
Expirel: 1-17·73

CLOSE-UP
TOOlHPASTE

•

Kleenex·Towelsr
MAGIC
Spray Sizing •
KRAFT
Mayonnaise • •
INSTANT COFFEE
Tasters Choice

I

I

79~

79~

ASSORTED

FOR FAST RELIEF
I

SUPERIOR

WATER
40-oz.
CONDITIONER box

~

I

•

•

l-Ib.

33~

~;:·

$1 87

•Pill·

00

Woolite Liquid ............ ~-.:.· 69c
Wishbone Dressing ~~~~[~N..... 'o::; 39c
Bisquick Biscuit Mix ....... •,::.· 69c
Keebler Fudge Sticks .. M~;.·$1.00

And Get One FREE!

59~

.

\

1

WITH
THIS
COUPON

Good Thru Saturday, March 17th.
At All A&amp;P WEO's- Col. Div.

~~~

Good at Rutland

18-oz.
pkr.

Chapman'$
SHOES

7-os.

I

I

·.

6

. 29~ head

~~-

J

size disposable

CAMPBELL'S

SOUP

1.0..
pq,

llb.89c

tl

Takes super.

I

I

I

Many New Style~ Now-More To Come

lb•.

lb,

I

I

.~;i

7·piece deluxe
tool set

lb,•, , -

I

lb•.

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MAR. 17

VEGETABLE

Turbot FiUets • •
7t
Whiting Fillets
'7ftc
Fish Sticks ~~~~
'7ftc
.flFr1e. dCl ams
Cod Portions c~~~~~~N ::.5198
Fried Perch HEA~~w~~m
Fried Fish Cakes Hft,\~N 7t
Tuna Noodlect1Mg~eN~'::'7t

3·- .

!·Wlnp

Round

Middleport, Ohio
Open Daily 9 ~o 9

.''

$

Bottom

Prieto &amp;God Thru S.turtlov, Morch t 7th lo

3-l.lf Qt,., Wj batks
3·Broasl Qtrt1. wjbatks
3-PIIp. Glblols

•. I
'

Includes

$t
,~1''
f.OA~:

Sliced

Now

'

'
l

.·...
,

By Piece

"500 ROOM"

1f on odverti\cd \ pc cl r~l i\ ever \old out o ~ k the I
Manager lo r a Roin chcck. It .-:n tit l e ~ yov to the
'ame ilem at the \arne \peciol price the follow·
ing week . Or if you wi\h wo' l! 9ive yo~ o &lt;o m·
parable item at the \ orne ~pecial price .

1

MILK
of Gallipolis

RAINCHECK:

J

Allen, Jane Amberger, Randy
Armes, Gina Boggs, Tony
Deem, Rusty Flagg, Debra
Michael.
SECOND GRADE - Rick
Chancey, Todd Cundiff, Teresa
Harden.
THIRD GRADE - Brian
Armes, Brian Ash, Ann
Williams, Robert Brown,
DENISE DEEM, Eric Upscomb, Meiodi Cunfidd.
FOURTH GRADE - Eric
Harris, Steve Hayes, Teresa
Holstein, Donna Hubbard,
Mary Beth Slavin.
FIFTH· .GRADE - · Tonia
Ash, Meg l\mberger, Carrie
Guinther, Rosemary Hubbard,
JACK DUFFY . .
SIXTH GRADE - MARK
DEMPSEY and Dawn Sorden.

BUTTER

ENJOY AN ELEGANT EVENING OF DINING

Alw9y~ do whol i ~ honcU a nd foir for every
cuUomer.

TOOL-PAK••

BROUGHTON

VISIT THE HOLIDAY INN ..•

construction.
Built to last.

Carries its own
tools in handy

Honor roll is announced

in a quickie pants~own skit.
Abarbershop skit showed off
Henrietta Scharfenberger, Jim
Woods, Dr. Paul Essman, Carl ·
Zimmerman and Bob Staggs.
Mrs. Bennett's solo was interrupted by a Canadian
Mountie played by John Taylor
and a 11 horse" composed of
Rev. Bob Davis and School
Superintendent Ralph McCormick, with Zimmerman
bringing up the "rear."
Don Souders and his dog

. ..

.'

MOTOR DRIVEN

·

20th Wellston minstrel
was big weekend smash

i:

·; .
::
:·,

ROTO·MATIC®

Kentucky Christian College Choir in Middleport tonight
Tonight at 7:30 at. the Meigs
Junior High School in Middleport an inspirational
musical program will be offered this area when the
Kentucky Christian College
Choir of Grayson presents a
concert under the direction of
Benic Hampton. Classic
favorites include "A Mighty

11

49

8 01 .
tJar

$219·

Rhodes Frozen Bread DoughS :;;;. 99c
Pillsbury Frosting ~~~:._~o ... .t~·S3c
Rescue Soap Pads ........ ,.\' "45c
Sunsweet Prune Juice ..... . 't:· 65c

Stwe
20e
.

This
C,upon

~~fli l~ On l·lb. Pkg. lttf or All Meet

¢ ,

With
Thi•
,Coupon

Good Thru Saturday, March. 17th.
At All A&amp;P WEO •-Col, Div.
UMIT 9NI C.OIIIf'CIN

With
This
Coupon
Good Thru Satur.day, March t 7th.
i
At All A&amp;P WEO's-Col. Div.

OaeM~~

1

ONE COUPON!QJ•~~~l: ~~ ~

Good Thru Saturday, March 17th.
At Ail A&amp;P WEO's-Col.
MIT ONE COUPON

· -r=~

Good Thru SaturdaX, M1rch 17th.
Ail A&amp;P WEO s-Col
ONE CO,IPot

�'

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 14, 1973

..
March Sunday in Pomeroy and Middleport

Misses Seho, Styer first
'

.

.

.

Next Sunday afternoon from
noon until6p. m. there wlll be a
door·to-door .March Against

to enter Southern Pageant
BELPRE - A beautiful
college coed from Pomeroy,
Ohio and an attractive high
school senior from Waterford,
Ohio are the first two entrant.
in the Mlss S9uthern Ohio
Scholarship Pageant. The
girls, Leanne SebO, a freshman
at Ohio University, and Diana
Styer, a senior at Waterford
High School, completed official
entry blanks and initial en·
trance committee interviews
last week. The girls are the
first two of an anticipated 20
contestanls, 10 of whom will
compete in the finals of the
Mlss Southern Ohio Pageant to
be held here Saturday evening,
May 5.
Leanne Sebo is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs.· John Sebo of
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. A
19'12 graduate of Meigs High
School, she is a physical
therapy major at Ohio
University. Leanne is a Past
jlonored Queen of Job's
Daughters; was the 1972 Big
Bend Regatta Queen, and is a
member of the Ohio University
Swim Team. The 5'7" brown·
eyed coed enjoys sewing and
playing the plano.
Diana Styer Is the daughter
of Mrs. Barbra Von Moegen of
Waterford. She is a talented
arllst who has studied painting
through the . Famous Arllst

P-T-0 asking for outside flag

OTIS FULLER

Scout program
strengthened

in MGM area
LEANNESEBO
School.
Diana
was
Homecoming Queen this past
year at Walerford High and
seco'nd runner-up in last year's
Washington County Fair Queen
Contest.
She is a member of the
National Honor SQCiety and
serves on student council.
Diana plans to attend Rio
Grande College in Gallia
County this fall where she
expects to study art.

Social Calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • Middleport
Uons Club, noon Wednesday
Meigs Inn. John Reece, Ohi~
Power Co. oublic relations
coordinator, speaker.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, slated
conclave, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
FIRST OF Pomeroy community lenten services, 8 p.m.
Wednesday at Trinity Church.
Tile Rev . Eddie Bullington
9p!eaking; the Rev. Bill Perr~,
presiding. Public Invited.
QUARTERLY LUNCHEON
Club, 12 noon, home of Mrs.
Ben Neutzllng Wednesday.
AMATEUR GARDEN Club
8 p.m., Wednesday, home

oi

Mrs. Guy Reynolds, Mid·
dleport.
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
p.m. at the American Legion
Hall, Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Club, Wednesday, home of
Mrs. Robert Fisher. Mrs.
Emerson Jones reviewing "In
My Father's. House" by Gay
Telese and Mrs. Charles
GaaklU reviewing "Nader the People's Lawyer," by
Robert Buckhorn. Roll call will
be comments on the books.
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, I : 15 p.m. Thurs·
day home of Mrs. Wllmetta
Leifheit.
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens Thursday, 7:30p.m. at
Harrlsoovllle School.
REVIVAL starting March 14
through March 18wlth the Rev.
Autum Scott, Portsmouth,
speaking. The Rev. Arthur
Lowe, Mansfield speaking
March 111-25. Special singing
each evening and the Spencer
Family will be present March
17-)8. Bill campbell, pastor,
Invites the public .
MENTAL HEALTH . ser.
vices, Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. eath week at Veterans
Mer~~,orlai Hospital. Phone 992·
2104, extension 28.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Women, Thursday, 12:30 p.m.
luncheoo. Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja,
&amp;peaker.
ST. PATRICK's Day card
Party, Sacred Heart catholic
Church, 7:30p.m. Thursday in
the church basement.
EVANGELINE CHAPTER
172, OES, annual inspection,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at Mid·
dleport Masonic Temple .
Sarah Secoy, BarUett, deputy
grand matron of district 25,
inspecting officer.
:SOUTHERN LOCAL District
Education Assn. meeting, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at high school In
Racine. Election of officers,
program by Portland leachers
ancfrefre&amp;hments by Southern
Junior High teachers.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes
meeUng at 8 p. m. Thursday,
bCIIle ol Mrs. Henry Ewing,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
MUGS COt'NTY

Musewar Dystrophy in Mid- . cam paign · chairman for
dlcpurt and Pomeroy.
Middleport, and Fire Chief
Mayor John W. Zerkle, Charles Leg.ar, campaign
chairman In Pomeroy, said the
uMarch" is to raise money
needed to help support patient
services in Middleport and
Pomeroy and the international
Ami Boso to pay for reserving research program of the
the skating rink.
Muscular
Dystrophy
The P-T.O paid for three new
Associations of America.
softballs and four whiffle balls.
Notices will be sent home, and·
lol:oney contributed will
if enough parents are in· defray
the
costs
of
terested, the P-T.(), will order wheelchairs, braces, hospital
Portland T-6hirts.
beds, and other orthopedic
It was announced that pupils'
devices prescribed
by
art work is on display at the
Racine Home National Bank.

DIANA STYER
Miss Styer , 5'4", enjoys

horseback riding and swim·
min g.
Official entry blanks for the
Miss Southern Ohio Pageant
are available from its sponsor,
the Belpre Area Chamber of
Commerce by writing, Box 8,
Belpre, Ohio or calling 42:18934 . The pagea nt , which
guarantees a minimum of $500
in scholarship prizes, is open to
unmarried girls between the
ages of 18 and 28. The franchise
area for ihe Miss Smuthern
Ohio Pageant includes the
followin g seven counties:
Athens, Gallia, Jackson,
Lawrence, Meigs, Vinton and
Washington. Deadline for
pageant entries is April 7, 1973.

Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
Committee meeting, 8 p. m.
Thursday at St. Paul Lutheran
Church. Guest speaker.
DEMOCRATIC Party
Thursday, 7:30p. m. Episcopal
Parish House. All Democrats
urged to attend.
SENIOR CITIZENS of
Harrisonville Thursday at 7 p.
m. at Harrisonville School.
Everyone welcome to attend.
MUSIC WORKSHOP
Ohio Valley Chapte.r of
Thursday at Coffee House, 211 "Adopt-A-Child Today" will
E. Secorld St:·, Pomeroy, with " meet Friday, Mar . 16, at 8p. m.
blue grass, folk, country, blues in Waverly at St. Mary 's
and pop performers. Bring meeting hail (old church part),
instruments. No admission.
407 S. Market St. with area
WILLING WORKERS Class, representatives Denny and
7:30p. m. Thursday, home of
Donna Pariseau the hosts.
Mrs. Eldon Weeks .
Pike County Children 's
Services Ex. Secretary Gail
FRIDAY
Horvath, and caseworker
REVIVAL this week at
Diane Morgan will be resource
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church on Rt. 143,7:30 nightly. persons. For more information
about adoption phone the
Rev. O'Dell Manley, pastor, is
the speaker. Everyone Pariseau's at 947-4210. The
public is inviled.
welcome.
The February meeting in
TffiRD FRIDAY Club, 7:30 Gallipolis has as resource
p.m. Friday, home of !l!rs.
persons Jerry Evans Miller,
Mabel Wolfe, 260 Wes t Main
Pomeroy.
' Exec . Secretary of Gailia
County Children's Services,
SATURDAY
and Thoma s Moulton of
HARRISONVILLE
Lodge Children 's Service Board .
411 F&amp;AM annual inspection Availability of adoptable
Saturday, 7:30 p. m. Ben children in" that area, foster
Philson, Inspection officer. All care problems, how an agency
master masons are invited.
views the problems of adoption
CHICKEN BARBECUE , and agency and legal steps in
Saturday, serving starting at the adoption process were
11 a . m. at Legion Park behind discussed.
Middleport Post Office by
Topics fo r discussion on the
Middleport Fire Department. state level were : ALSO
Phone 992-5958 for carry-out (Adoption Usting Service of
orders.
Ohio), a new confidential
ST. PATRICK's Dance, 9 to agency regis try for adoptable
midnight, Saturday, Southern children, prospective parents
High School gymnasium. sponsored by the ACT State
Music by Stage Coach ; queen Organization, and a proposal
and king to be crowned.
on the right of every child to
PRODUCTS
Party, have a home of its own subSaturday, 7:30 p. m. at St. milled to the State Board of
Paul's United Methodist Citizens Advisory Committee
Church in Tuppers Plains. for Children's Services.
Public Invited.
Included in the proposal was
a suggested periodic review of
SUNDAY
each child's program under
HYMN l!ING, Sunday, 2:30 p. foster care and under court
m. at Meigs Junior High Sch care. This proposal was
ol in Middleport sponsored by presented Jan. 31 in Columbus.
Meigs County Youth Rally.
Two ACT State Board
Offering for coming youth members, Donna Pariseau,
revival April 6·8. Public Waverly, and Martha Grim
welcome.
Wellston, area members or
SUNDAY SCHOOL services ACT State Board, helped shape
at Plants Church at 10 a. m.
that proposal.

Adoption
•
meetmg
Friday

Service to the existing Scout
units, and a planned expansion
of the Scouting program to
'serve those boys looking for·
ward to joining in the M-G·M
area is being strengthened by
lhe parttime assistance of Otis
0. Fuller, National Director of
Rural Relationships for the
Boy Scouts of America .
Richard Roy, District
Chairman of the M·G·M
District of the Tri..Slale Area
Council, Boy Scouts of
America, said Fuller will be
working with him and District
Executive Roger Samples to
build a sound district
organization that will support
the unit programs in the threecounty area .
Fuller has been active in
Scouting since 1924 and
professionally since 1944. He
brings with him a wealth of
rural Scouting to complement
his work in the M-G·M coun·
ties . Fuller's parttime
assistance is one of the many
services provided by the
National Scouting organization
through the request of the local
Tri..State Area Council, Boy
Scouts of America.

PORTLAND - The Portland
P-T.0 Wednesday evening with
President Mrs. Shirley
Johnson presiding opened
with the pledge to the flag
followed by the reading of the
minutes by ibe secretary, Mrs.
Merle Evans . Mrs. Grace
Furbee gave the' treasurer's
report.
The Racine Legion Auxiliary
is donating a flag to be used in
classrooms and a letter has
been Written to Cong. Miller
requesting a flag for outside.
A variety s)low and soup
supper were planned for
Friday evening, April 6. Each
child in school will be given an
opportunity to participate in
the program.
It was agreed to · purchase
deep fryer baskets for tile
kitchen and to reserve the
skating rink at Chester for one
night in April for the Portland
school children. Teachers will
donate their room count money
for the remainder of the year
and $5 each was donated by
Mrs. Iva Lawrence and Mrs.

physicians for local m~
dystrophy patients. In ad·
·dillon, cootributlons will go to
the support of over 100
research grants at hospitals
and universities tile world over
and the Institute for Muscle
Disease In New York City,
whkh is the only research
facility. in the world devoted ·
solely to the study of the
muscle and its metabollsll.
Scientists f()(' the first lime
recently have bef!n · able, to
_regenerate muscle tlssue In a
. laboratory animal, a great
breakthrough.

Local Bowling
Wednesday Early Mixed
March 14, 1973
Zide's Sport Shop

ACQUAINTED

Pis

74
64
52
32
22
20

Oiler' s Sohio

Tenth Framers

Sm1th-Nel son Motors

Young's Market

Nelson's Drugs

SPECIAL

High Ind . Game - Men: Jr.
Phelps 244. Charles Smith 226.

NO CHARGE

Wom en: Carolyn Bachner 183,

Isabelle Couch I83.
High Series- Jr. Phel ps 577
and Charles Smith 573 . Isabelle
Couch 467 and· Carolyn
Team High Game - Zide's
Sport Shop 695.
Tea m High Series -

Oiler's

REGARDLESS OF MAKE OR MODEL
FREE SERVICE PROVIDED
II Clean Earmold and
Replace Tubing
21 lnspecl Aid and
Clean Contacts ·

il Inspect and
Clean C•••
4) Audio Check Aid

Ask About Our BaHerv Club--25 pet. Off
·
Also Rechargable Cells

-------------------------'
ACOUSTICON

336 S. High St.

221·5831
WILL BE IN

GALLIPOLIS
BLUE FOUNTAIN MOTEL
(Cor. S. Rt. 7 &amp; U.S. JSl
FRt .. MARCH 16
9:00 a.m. lo 7:00p.m.

Columbus, 0 . ·

Mrs. Ogdin host
ofgarden club

POMEROY
MEIGS INN
SAT.·MARCH 17
' :ooa.m. lo6 :00p.m.

.. 1

ACBU&amp;E

115 W. Main

Open Mon.· Thurs. 9 a .m . to 7 p m days 9 a.m . to 8: 30 p.m .
- -

a.vs

9

a.m. to 8 p.m.- Satur-

20
Cnt.

Wieners
Fresh and Lean

$1 ~~

Center Cut .- USDA Choice

Cf.tUCK
ROAST
First Cut

PORK .

I

$}39

Old Fashion

GROUND

AII Meat Sliced

.. ¢
99

lb.

.

99~.

HEAD
CHEESE

fb.

BOLOGNA 21b.$1·38
Pee Wee Size

EGGS
.

. 3 c~oz:

89

¢.

Midway
Market
W.
St.
Pomeroy

I

JUST CALL 992-2156 ·
'

,,

.

...

•

.

.

We blk tQ YCIJI

95~ ·

Uqlted Nations and its work
holds the key to peace.
Mrs. Nan Moore reported on
the World Day of Prayer
service held at the Enterprise
Church . . She noted that 16
women from the church at.
!ended and that 13 women
at !ended the Lenten breakfast
held at Trinity Church.
Mrs. Beulah Hayes, Mrs. c.
E. Young, Mrs . James
Brewington, and Mrs. John
Compton served refreshments
·

GENERAL'S
BEST
4 PLY GRABBERS
Verr dttp tr11d tlre for long mil•••
D1111 h'td d'.. r1 n.
Faur pll11 of Polrtlttr eord .
Dl•tlndlvt 3-tlniiJ whl,...tll.

Ba.r zst.s WZt-t-

da
hetU
1J meet tU1i ry =~~:.t t::t a~~i'::ri!reco~~
The annual meeting of the based on deception, the peace

Business sessions were held
at the conclusion of the com·
. bined meeting with Mrs.
Roberta Wilson presiding at
the meeting of Alpha Omicron.
Attending from Meigs
County were Mrs. Dorothy
Woodard, Mrs. Wilson, Mrs.
Nellie Vale, Mrs. Anna
Elizabeth Turner, Miss Rosalie
Story, Miss Lucille Smith, Miss
Mary Virginia Reibel, Mrs.
Vilm~ Pikkoja, Mrs. Maxine
Philson, Mrs . Margaret
Parsons, Mrs. Nellie Parker,
Mrs. Geneva Nolan, Mrs. Nan
Moore, Mrs. Martha Husted,
Betsy Horky, Miss Mildred
Hawley, Mrs. Theodosia
Frecker, Mrs. Ruth Euler and
Mrs . Ethel Chapman.

Billy Hill, and Albert Hill.
Others presenting gifts were
Mrs. Alleyne Reese, Mrs. Alice
Wolfe, Mrs. Erma Hill, Unda
H11i, Mrs. Mary Roush, Mrs.
Charolett Wamsley, Mrs .
Marilyn Trussell, Mrs.
Roberta Ridenour, Mrs .
Sandra Kearns, Mrs. Ma~l
Shields, Mrs. Donna Hili, Mrs.
Jan Norris, Mrs. Debbie
Roush, Mrs. Emma Jane
McClintock, Mrs . Ann Wiles,
Mrs. Mary Sioler, Mrs. Helen
Johnson, Mrs. Jane Wagner,
Mrs. Betty Roush, Mrs. Unda
Hill, Mrs. Peggy Wolfe, Mrs.
Jackie Wagner, Mrs . Lois Bell.

Sa

Rio
Grande
Baptist
Association will be held
Saturday at the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church. The Rev .
Robert Kohn is president and
will give the devotions to open
th.e meeting at 10 a.m.
Theme of the aU-day session
will be "Jesus Christ is Lord."
The morning session will include group meetings conducted by William Hickman,
chairman of the Division of
Church Program and Outreach
of the Ohio Bapllst Convention,
for the men ; Mrs. Charles
Searles, president of the
Women's Division, and the
Rev , Ron Nicholas, pastor of
the Salem Baptist Church, and
the Rev. David Sedziol,
department of youth work of
the Ohio Bapllst Convention,
for the youth.
Following a luncheon in the
church basement, the af·
ternoon program will begin at
1:30 p.m. with a sing aild share
time. Special music will be by
Dannie Thompson, Pomeroy,
and the Rev. Edward Fischer
interim pastor of the Racin~
Church will speak.

.

cannot be kept by force but by
understanding, and women's
rights, men's rights, and
human rights. It concluded
with the statement that the

E78 x 14

Whitewall
PARTY GIVEN
The fifth birthday an·
niversary of Becky Van Meter
was observed with a party
recently. A Snoopy theme was
carried out in the cupcake
decorations, and ice cream and
Kool-Ade were served. Guests
were Melanie Van Meter, Mrs .
Donna lhle , Kathy and
Melissa, Mrs. Barbara 'Dugan
and Dixie, Mrs. Ida Mae Clark
andApril, and Mrs . Betty Bell.

Plus $2.22 F. E. T.
Per Tire.

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Meigs Band Booslers
will meet Monday, March 19, at
7:30 p. m. at Meigs High
. School.

SALES
992-7161
Middleport. 0.

_Bl)lLll~G? ... , .

rob·.l ·' "H

'

Uniforms bought
by Rutland PTA

Birthda part

WE HAVE A

gtVen VISitors

COMPLETE SELECTION

FRAMING
LUMBER

Check Our Price Before You Buy!

'like a·permn.

WMP0/1390

WIIIIOI "'"' l) . 79

ON'YOUR DIAL

.

'

' PARTY HELD
The Girls in Action of the
SoUtbern Baptist Chapel- In
Pomeroy held a slumber party
recently at the home of Mr. and
Mrs . Gene Coleman at
Rutland. Attending were Kim
Bashan, Kim Patterson, Jean
McClure, Jean Coleman, Susan
Sprague, Shirley Coleman the
advisor, and Marylu Mills.'The
girls worked on their GA .
projects and refreshme~ts .
were served. This week they
will visit Mrs. E. M. Wooc. a
patient at the Arcadia Nursing Home at Coolville.

HAM SAlAD
AND
CHEESE
SPREAD
Phone Us
Your OrderI.

MASON, W. VA.

$

10 lb. FROZEN TURKEY
S lb. CHUCK ROAST
3 lb. ROUND STEAK
3 lb. GROUND BEEF
2 lb. SI,ICED BACON
4 lb. ROUND STEAK

lb. CHUCK ROAST
lb. GROUND BEEF
3 lb, STEW MEAT
2- FRESH CHICKENS
4
4

FROZEN TURKEYS'10

up

sr

992-3502
WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

'

.

$

l'

REM{)DELING ?' ' ' ' . ,;, "
REPAIRING?

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

Manning D . Webster ,
Judge
Court of Common Pleas ,
.
Probate Division
· -~ .~-:!· •

lmiAI Pltcl
WITK THIS COUPON

A clock a~ picture purDanny Hall •. three year old. chased as a memorial to Miss
Bess Sanbor~. longtime active
son ilf Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hall mem ber of the .Heath
underwent surgery Tuesday at Methodist church, were
the Holzer Medical Center.
displayed at a meeting of the
Mrs. Theodosia Frecker United Methodist Women
entered the Holzer Medical Monday night at the church.
Cenler . Sunday as ·a surgical Both iteC!Il! will be hung in the
patient.
church social room.
Mrs. Janice DeBord,
A piano prelude by Mrs. L.
Tammie and Vicky, Mrs. May W.. McComas opened the
Haning and Chris, ac· meeting with Mrs. Jack
companied thelr mother • Mrs. Bechtle giving devotions using
Goldie Wyant to Columbus · scripture from Exodus 24 and
where she left via plane for two meditations;· "Forty Days
Fort Hood, Texas, for an in- ilf Lent" by George Cornell,
definite visit with another and "Constant Lent" by Mabel
daughter, Mrs. Harold (Judy) Long.
Gilliam and family · Mrs .
The program preapred by
Wyant has just recently Mrs. John Krawsczyn was
returned from Cleveland presented by Mrs. McComas.
where she visited for two The topic was "Peace with
weeks with her daughter • Mrs. Justice" and dealt with issues
Stanley (Juanita) Beal.
which were described as information every citizen should
know. The report commented
,llt'
'11 on the failure of the United
States to keep peace with other
nations, the arms race, the gap ·
between the rich and the poor,

PUBLIC NOTICES

121 28, 131 '· ... 31

SPECIALTIES

'frail Bologna, Ring Garlic
Dologlla, Ring Uver Prlddlng,
liard Salomi, Coeked Salomi,
Leeira Boloina; Braunsel!weiger,
Old t'aabion FraU., Beef, Pork,
Chicken Uver, Htlck Peppei'GIII. .

I

.

·

~~'

. RUTLAND - The pur.
chase of 14 uniforms for the
elementary basketball team at
a cost of approximately $200
was approved at Monday
night's meeting of the Rutland
PTA.
Mrs. Violet Grale presided at
the meeting which opened with
11
11
the pledge to the flag and
'-"
'-"
•
devotions by the Rev.
•
•
Lawrence Sullivan of the
Danville Wesleyan Church.
WEST COLUMBIA - A
Mrs. Marvel Quillen and
birthday party was held
Mrs . Irene Kennedy were
Sunday at the Chat and Chew in
appointed by the president to
West Columbia, honoring Mrs.
the nominating committee and
Pauline Miller and Miss Pearl
elected from the floor to serve
Haskins of Pittsburgh, Pa.
Music was furnished by on the committee were Mrs.
George Stewart . and the Rose Patterson and Mrs .
mavericks. Atlending were Sharon Back.
The sixth grade of Eric Hart
Mr. and Mr.. George Payne,
~
won the attenqance banner.
Mr. and Mrs. John Bumgard·
..
ner, Mr. and Mrs. Clovis The sixth graders also
Doerfer, Mr, and Mrs. J. presented a Founder's Day
'
program and taking part were
Campbell and his brother of
Your Right to Know
Beverly
Grate, Michael Ed·
Hlmtington, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
and be Informed of the func - Murray, Mr. and Mrs. Mark wards, Jane Coleman, Gary
t ions of your government are
Priddy and Donny Richmond.
embodied in publ ic noti ces . In ' Haley, Mr. and Mrs. Jay
PH. 773·5554
that self -government c:harges
Marshall,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Carse!
all citizens to be ·in formed ;
thi s newspaper urges ev ery Stone, Mr. and Mrs. Don
citizen to r ead and study these
notices. we strongly advise McCarty, Mr. and Mrs. Eric
those citizens, seek ing furth er (!oeghl, Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Information , to eKerclse their
right of access to publi c Russell, Mrs. Harold Hager,
re cords and public m eetings. Miss Bonnie Turner, Philip
Hall, Andy Stone, Billy
Doerfer, Billy Ray Ohlinger,
NOTICE OF
Clarence · Pearson, Randy
.
APPOINTMIONT
Case No. 20870
(221) 4lb. CHUCK ROAST
Esta te of Hild a_ Marie. Koblentz ~!bright, ' Mrs. Bea Russell,
3 lb. SLICED PORK SHOULDER
Deceased .
Miss Fran Cline, Don Kapp,
lib.
ROUND STEAK
Not ice is hereby given that
3
lb.
GllOUND
B,EEF
Bulky
Stone,
Teddy
Martin,
David J . Koblentz of Route 3
lib. SLICED BACON
Pomeroy , Oh io, has been dulY Waiter Smith, Pittsburgh, Pa.,
appointed as Admin ist rator of
the E sta te of Hi lda Marie Mlss Loil Miller, Mlss Lelody
KDblentz , de cease d, l ate of Russell, Jack Roush, Ray Van
(2l!2)3 lb. GROUND BEEF
Meigs County, Ohio .
2 lb. BULK SAUSAGE
Crectltror s are r eq uired to fil e Meter, Leroy Simpkins, Robert
2
lb. ALL MEAT WIENERS
the ir claims with said fi duciary
., rh Pnllll ra.~ngc.
Rickard, Harold Rickard, Jack
with in four months.
.D ated t h is 24th day of Camp and Kenneth Payne.
2 lb. ROU~D STEAK .
HOMEMADE
February 1973 .
'lib. ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT
.

AT SIMON'S

Hardy Azaleas. Holly. Spreaders. Pyracan lha. Yews and Evergreens in gallon cans . .

Ph . 992-2565 or 992 ·2582

Frid

Pomeroy

French City

NOW!

Main

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

•

Redbud ,

Twenty-four members answered roil call by naming a
favorite houseplant, Devotions
including. the first section of
"J onathan Livingston Sea
Gull" by Richard Fox was read
aloud by Mrs. Howard Knight.
A note was read from Mrs.
Fannie Bell Brown · thanking
the club for a recent sunshine
visit and a book, "The Hidden
Place."
Mrs. Dean won the door
prize, and secret pal gifts were
exchanged.
Arrangements - were on
exhibit and were judged · by
Mrs. Horace Karr and Mrs.
Paul Baer who awarded four
blue and one red ribbon for
arrangemenls,andonebiuefor
specimens.
-,
Mrs. Anderson, Mrs. J. M.
Gaur and her daughter, Vicki,
served a dessert course during
a concluding social hour.

Mrs. Pat Hill is honored

HERE
Al~o Pink Dogwood, Magnolias.
Arbor· Vilae and Junipers, ( B&amp;B).

~:~.

'
VG
/unche.
O
n
D

Housewarming held

Any
Hearing·Aid

Ba chner 456.

Sohio 1959.

16 h Birthday
was a sur,lwi&lt;'
..,e

GET

POMEROY LANES

Winter Whimsey r~~]o;;;~;~~~~~~ Memorials displayed
. Personal Notes
.
•S p,...
.
.
th
0 0ar
..m.. . em e ·.
t
' a

Projects planned.

IN SORORITY
Mtso Jo Ellen 'Diehl, .
daugbter of Mr. and Mrs.
.
Several fund raising projects and If ~ntmeans anything, we Ja.mes A. Diehl of Mulberry
were planned during a meellng must hve a life of love and Heights ,. Pomeroy, was .
.
I
of the Happy Harvesters Class sna.ring. She concluded with· a recently Initialed Into the
of Trinity Chur~h )i'r)day night. poem, "He Walked In the ' . Gamma Kappa Chapter of
Mrs . Genevieve Meinhart Garden," and an article en· Sigma Sigma Sigma Sorority
on the campus of Marietta
CHESTER
" Winter
and Mrs. Ella Smith were titled ''When They Nailed Hijll
Whimsey" was the program
·college in Martella.
appointed co-chalfmen for a to the Tree what Would You
Miss Dlebl graduated last - topic at a recent meeting of the
dinner of the Gallia County Have Done."
spring from Meigs Hlgb . Chester Garden Club at the
Eight and Forty to be served at
It was noted that Mrs. Louis School where she par·
home of Mrs. Gordon An·
Trinity Church in Pomeroy on Re.ibel remains m.A card was
April 5. Mrs. carrie Neutzllng signed for her and another for licipaled In band· and choir derson.
and was ·a cheerleader and a
Mrs. Robert Wood · enlarged
and Mrs. Rose Ginther were James Fugate. Members sang member of the National · on the topic using two
named co-chairl)len for a "Happy Birthday" to Mrs.
Honor Society. Presently, a(ranging demonstrations,
luncheon to ~ served on Neutzllng and Mrs. Gladys she is a · freshman at "Blowin' in the Wind'; with
March 31 for the Meigs County . Cuckler. Games \j'eril played
Marietta College and a pussy wnlow, greenery, and
Retired Teachers.
with prizes going to Mrs. Edith ·member of the College d~p purple crocus in a shallow
Mrs. Stella Kloos reported Lanning, Mrs . Ginther, Mrs. ' Singers.
black container for the flrs't
that she has a new supply of all· CarJie Meinhart, and Mrs. Ella
arrangement, and moss,
purpose cards and turned In $9 Smith.
~;w~m:::::::::::::::::::::8:::8:8:::: spring greenery, crocus and a
for the sale.
Mrs. Ada Holter was hostess ·
small deer figurine in the
The meeting was conducted for a table which carried out
second.
by Mrs. Neutzllng, who opened the birthday motif. Tall holders
t
Mrs. Dale Kautz gave an
It with a prayer from the year- with large candles were used at
illustrated talk on the forbook. "Lent and Its Purpose" either side of a dried
mation of cold bed's and ar·
was the theme of devotions arrangement of fantail .willow,
I"
tificially liea ted beds for a head
given by . Mrs. Ginther. She leaves off a rubber plant, and
WNG BOTTOM- Mr. afld · start on spring planting. Quizes
read a pOem "Let Me Keep Texas allum in a green bowl. Mrs. Paul Hauber . of Long were led by Mrs. Ivan Walker
Lent," regarding renewal of Open face sandwicbes, mints, Bottom honored their son, · and Mrs. Richard Barton and
Christian devotion, and self. hDiilemade angel food cake, Douglas, on his 16th birthday won by Mrs. Earl Dean and
examination. Mrs. Ginther coffee and tea were served. with a surprise party.
Mrs. Ada Holter.
reminded the members that we Mrs. Reibel was a contributing
The evening was enjoyed by
are created by God out of love, hosless.
playing games and listening to
records. Doug received many
1'\...
.
nice gifts.
Refreshments of cake, ice
cream, sandwiches, patato
Miss Ruth Becker, slate
chips and punch was served to
president
of Delta Kappa
EAST . LETART A stressed that the church exists Iris Pigott, Connie Dailey,
hDIIsewarming for Mr. and as a community of faith Steve Holter, Mike Larkins, Gamma, was guest speaker at
Mrs. Roy Pearson, who have responding to God's love to Gale Osborne, Sarah and Jo a meeting of the Alpha
moved Into a new home at help women undersland the Ellen Wells , Vida Weber , Omicron Chater, "the Beta
Dorcas, was held recently by breadth of the church's Denise and Scott Hauber, Mrs. Alpha Chapter, and the Delta
members of the Women's responsibility and fellowship. Ruth Larkins and Debbie Epsilon Chapter Saturday at
Rio Grande College.
Dailey.
Society of Christian Service of
A special offering for bir·
Miss Mabel Conley of Oak
Phillip and Debbie Griffin
the East Letart United thdays of $18.51 was taken.
Hill
introduced the state
brought a gift but didn't stay
Methodist Church. A gift was
Attending, besides those
president and on behalf of the
for the party.
presented to the Pearsons.
named were Mr.;. Margaret
Late· callers atterufu.g were three chaplers presented a gift
A potluck dinner was served Gloeckner, Mrs . Marlene
to the 15 members and five' Fisher, Mrs. Dorothy Johnson, Bob Goff, Rick Carson, Vera to her. Mistress of ceremonies
guests preceding a meeting of Mrs . Mabel Shields, Mrs . Weber, Willard Pigott, Violet for a luncheon held in the
the WSCS. Mrs . Barbara Margaret Roush, Joyce White, Smith and Orva Jean Holter. college cafeteria was Mrs.
Zelma Northcutt of Beta
Dugan presided and a study of Mrs. Focle Hayman, Mrs. Euia
Alpha
. Mrs. Carrie Dale, Rio
the life of Andrew was held Wolfe, Mrs. Sue Ann Beegle,
Grande led in group singing of
with Mrs. Betty Shiveley Mrs . Clara Mae Sargent, Sally
sorority
songs and Mrs.
giving prayer. Mrs, Hazel Fox Savage, Mrs. Doris Adams,
Mildred Wickline gave the
had the secretary's report, and Mrs. Bertha Robinson, Mrs.
invocation.
It was reported that drapes for Ferne B. Hayman and Robin
a room at the Children's Home Savage.
WILKESVILLE - The
have been provided. A thank
Wilkesville Garden Club met at
you nole was read from Mr.
the horne of Mrs. Anna Ogdln
and Mrs. Ralph Harvey for the
SONISBORN
, on March Gat 7:30p. m. with 12
drapes.
RACINE - Mrs . Pat Hili
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Reuter of members and three guests
A service of celebration
present, and Mrs. Nelson, . was honored recently with a
during which time the WSCS ·Pomeroy Roule 2 are anpresident, presided over the bridal shower at the home of
wiU lake the new name of nouncing the birth of a son ,
business meeting.
Mrs. Albert Hill, Racine .
United Methodist Women was Terry Ray, born on Feb. 15, at
Readings
were
given
by
Mrs.
Hosting the shower were Mrs.
tentatively set for May. It was the Holzer Medical Center. The
gem Ruth Ann Hill Racine. Hosting
decided to save Alcoa Infant weighed seven pounds Jane B~lea .•OI) Ohio's
1 Grate on ., the shower ~ere Mrs. Ruth
stones,
l))'·~rt?•Efflc
aluminum foil end flaps to be and 10 ounces. Mr. and Mrs.
how to start"'iiums, and by Ann Hill and Mrs. Judy
redeemed for funds to send a Reuter have a daughter, Mrs . Katherine Bowles on Roberts.
handicapped child to summer Rhonda Sue, 11. Grandparents
Games were played with
are Mrs. Della Riffle, Route 2, - "trees".
camp .
The
club
voted
to
order
trees
prizes
going to Mrs. Dorothy
Mrs. Lucy Donahue had the Pomeroy ; Mrs. Clair Karr,
to plant on Arbor Day and Badgley, Mrs. Sue Ann Beegle,
program on the theme "Uving Huron, and Dr. and Mrs. R. C.
planned
to send flowers to and Mrs. Gladys Shields. Afler
and Acting in Love." It Reuler, Canton. Mrs. Nora
Reuter of Pomeroy is a great· Annita Maddy at Holzer the gifts were opened by Mr.
Medtcal .Center.
and Mrs. Hili, ice cream, cake,
grandmother.
Mrs. Anna Ogdln showed coffee and punch were served
HYMN IS READ
attractive colored sUdes of her to those named and Mrs .
Mrs. Jean Blazewlcz read
MEMBER HONORED
trip to Greece and Turkey Eileen Buck, Mrs. Marlene
the hymn, "There is a Green
A surprise birthday party including interesting and Fisher, Mrs. Romona Yonker,
Hill Far Away" at a meeting of was held Friday night at a educational comments about Missy Yonker, Leslie Roberts,
the United Methodist Women of meeting of Mary Shrine 37, · them. Also enjoyed were her Mrs. Doris Wilt, Mrs . Unda
the
Enterprise
United While Shrine of Jersualem, paintings.
Hubbard and Donna Marie,
Methodist Church held honoring Mrs. Pearl Reynolds.
Refreshments were served Mrs. Sadie Trussell, Mrs. Doris
recently at the home of Mrs . She was presented with gifts as by the hostess . The next Hensler, Mrs. Inez Hill, Mrs.
Eldon Weeks. Her name was well as. a decorated birthday meeting will be at the home of Grace
Huffman ,
Mrs.
unintentionally omitted from · cake . .Officers for the 197:1-74 Mrs.Effic Grate.
Margaret West, Mrs. Mary
an account of the meeting in year were elected and will be
Hilland and Carissa, Mrs .
Tuesday's ed!Uon of The Daily installed in open installation on
There's nothing more
Ubby Wilford, Mrs. Maxine
1
Sentinel.
April 13.
· ·
f:pen.sive ~';!" /';. ~.~~!'Rose, Judi Roberts, Mrs. Clara
Mae Sargent, Mrs. Ruth Ann
Hill, Mrs. Kathi Hill, Andrea
Hill, Mrs. Etta Mae Hill, Mrs.
Ora Hill, Jay Hill, Robert Hill,

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 14, 1913

LB.

�'

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 14, 1973

..
March Sunday in Pomeroy and Middleport

Misses Seho, Styer first
'

.

.

.

Next Sunday afternoon from
noon until6p. m. there wlll be a
door·to-door .March Against

to enter Southern Pageant
BELPRE - A beautiful
college coed from Pomeroy,
Ohio and an attractive high
school senior from Waterford,
Ohio are the first two entrant.
in the Mlss S9uthern Ohio
Scholarship Pageant. The
girls, Leanne SebO, a freshman
at Ohio University, and Diana
Styer, a senior at Waterford
High School, completed official
entry blanks and initial en·
trance committee interviews
last week. The girls are the
first two of an anticipated 20
contestanls, 10 of whom will
compete in the finals of the
Mlss Southern Ohio Pageant to
be held here Saturday evening,
May 5.
Leanne Sebo is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs.· John Sebo of
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. A
19'12 graduate of Meigs High
School, she is a physical
therapy major at Ohio
University. Leanne is a Past
jlonored Queen of Job's
Daughters; was the 1972 Big
Bend Regatta Queen, and is a
member of the Ohio University
Swim Team. The 5'7" brown·
eyed coed enjoys sewing and
playing the plano.
Diana Styer Is the daughter
of Mrs. Barbra Von Moegen of
Waterford. She is a talented
arllst who has studied painting
through the . Famous Arllst

P-T-0 asking for outside flag

OTIS FULLER

Scout program
strengthened

in MGM area
LEANNESEBO
School.
Diana
was
Homecoming Queen this past
year at Walerford High and
seco'nd runner-up in last year's
Washington County Fair Queen
Contest.
She is a member of the
National Honor SQCiety and
serves on student council.
Diana plans to attend Rio
Grande College in Gallia
County this fall where she
expects to study art.

Social Calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • Middleport
Uons Club, noon Wednesday
Meigs Inn. John Reece, Ohi~
Power Co. oublic relations
coordinator, speaker.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, slated
conclave, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
FIRST OF Pomeroy community lenten services, 8 p.m.
Wednesday at Trinity Church.
Tile Rev . Eddie Bullington
9p!eaking; the Rev. Bill Perr~,
presiding. Public Invited.
QUARTERLY LUNCHEON
Club, 12 noon, home of Mrs.
Ben Neutzllng Wednesday.
AMATEUR GARDEN Club
8 p.m., Wednesday, home

oi

Mrs. Guy Reynolds, Mid·
dleport.
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
p.m. at the American Legion
Hall, Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Club, Wednesday, home of
Mrs. Robert Fisher. Mrs.
Emerson Jones reviewing "In
My Father's. House" by Gay
Telese and Mrs. Charles
GaaklU reviewing "Nader the People's Lawyer," by
Robert Buckhorn. Roll call will
be comments on the books.
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, I : 15 p.m. Thurs·
day home of Mrs. Wllmetta
Leifheit.
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens Thursday, 7:30p.m. at
Harrlsoovllle School.
REVIVAL starting March 14
through March 18wlth the Rev.
Autum Scott, Portsmouth,
speaking. The Rev. Arthur
Lowe, Mansfield speaking
March 111-25. Special singing
each evening and the Spencer
Family will be present March
17-)8. Bill campbell, pastor,
Invites the public .
MENTAL HEALTH . ser.
vices, Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. eath week at Veterans
Mer~~,orlai Hospital. Phone 992·
2104, extension 28.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Women, Thursday, 12:30 p.m.
luncheoo. Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja,
&amp;peaker.
ST. PATRICK's Day card
Party, Sacred Heart catholic
Church, 7:30p.m. Thursday in
the church basement.
EVANGELINE CHAPTER
172, OES, annual inspection,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at Mid·
dleport Masonic Temple .
Sarah Secoy, BarUett, deputy
grand matron of district 25,
inspecting officer.
:SOUTHERN LOCAL District
Education Assn. meeting, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at high school In
Racine. Election of officers,
program by Portland leachers
ancfrefre&amp;hments by Southern
Junior High teachers.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes
meeUng at 8 p. m. Thursday,
bCIIle ol Mrs. Henry Ewing,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
MUGS COt'NTY

Musewar Dystrophy in Mid- . cam paign · chairman for
dlcpurt and Pomeroy.
Middleport, and Fire Chief
Mayor John W. Zerkle, Charles Leg.ar, campaign
chairman In Pomeroy, said the
uMarch" is to raise money
needed to help support patient
services in Middleport and
Pomeroy and the international
Ami Boso to pay for reserving research program of the
the skating rink.
Muscular
Dystrophy
The P-T.O paid for three new
Associations of America.
softballs and four whiffle balls.
Notices will be sent home, and·
lol:oney contributed will
if enough parents are in· defray
the
costs
of
terested, the P-T.(), will order wheelchairs, braces, hospital
Portland T-6hirts.
beds, and other orthopedic
It was announced that pupils'
devices prescribed
by
art work is on display at the
Racine Home National Bank.

DIANA STYER
Miss Styer , 5'4", enjoys

horseback riding and swim·
min g.
Official entry blanks for the
Miss Southern Ohio Pageant
are available from its sponsor,
the Belpre Area Chamber of
Commerce by writing, Box 8,
Belpre, Ohio or calling 42:18934 . The pagea nt , which
guarantees a minimum of $500
in scholarship prizes, is open to
unmarried girls between the
ages of 18 and 28. The franchise
area for ihe Miss Smuthern
Ohio Pageant includes the
followin g seven counties:
Athens, Gallia, Jackson,
Lawrence, Meigs, Vinton and
Washington. Deadline for
pageant entries is April 7, 1973.

Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
Committee meeting, 8 p. m.
Thursday at St. Paul Lutheran
Church. Guest speaker.
DEMOCRATIC Party
Thursday, 7:30p. m. Episcopal
Parish House. All Democrats
urged to attend.
SENIOR CITIZENS of
Harrisonville Thursday at 7 p.
m. at Harrisonville School.
Everyone welcome to attend.
MUSIC WORKSHOP
Ohio Valley Chapte.r of
Thursday at Coffee House, 211 "Adopt-A-Child Today" will
E. Secorld St:·, Pomeroy, with " meet Friday, Mar . 16, at 8p. m.
blue grass, folk, country, blues in Waverly at St. Mary 's
and pop performers. Bring meeting hail (old church part),
instruments. No admission.
407 S. Market St. with area
WILLING WORKERS Class, representatives Denny and
7:30p. m. Thursday, home of
Donna Pariseau the hosts.
Mrs. Eldon Weeks .
Pike County Children 's
Services Ex. Secretary Gail
FRIDAY
Horvath, and caseworker
REVIVAL this week at
Diane Morgan will be resource
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church on Rt. 143,7:30 nightly. persons. For more information
about adoption phone the
Rev. O'Dell Manley, pastor, is
the speaker. Everyone Pariseau's at 947-4210. The
public is inviled.
welcome.
The February meeting in
TffiRD FRIDAY Club, 7:30 Gallipolis has as resource
p.m. Friday, home of !l!rs.
persons Jerry Evans Miller,
Mabel Wolfe, 260 Wes t Main
Pomeroy.
' Exec . Secretary of Gailia
County Children's Services,
SATURDAY
and Thoma s Moulton of
HARRISONVILLE
Lodge Children 's Service Board .
411 F&amp;AM annual inspection Availability of adoptable
Saturday, 7:30 p. m. Ben children in" that area, foster
Philson, Inspection officer. All care problems, how an agency
master masons are invited.
views the problems of adoption
CHICKEN BARBECUE , and agency and legal steps in
Saturday, serving starting at the adoption process were
11 a . m. at Legion Park behind discussed.
Middleport Post Office by
Topics fo r discussion on the
Middleport Fire Department. state level were : ALSO
Phone 992-5958 for carry-out (Adoption Usting Service of
orders.
Ohio), a new confidential
ST. PATRICK's Dance, 9 to agency regis try for adoptable
midnight, Saturday, Southern children, prospective parents
High School gymnasium. sponsored by the ACT State
Music by Stage Coach ; queen Organization, and a proposal
and king to be crowned.
on the right of every child to
PRODUCTS
Party, have a home of its own subSaturday, 7:30 p. m. at St. milled to the State Board of
Paul's United Methodist Citizens Advisory Committee
Church in Tuppers Plains. for Children's Services.
Public Invited.
Included in the proposal was
a suggested periodic review of
SUNDAY
each child's program under
HYMN l!ING, Sunday, 2:30 p. foster care and under court
m. at Meigs Junior High Sch care. This proposal was
ol in Middleport sponsored by presented Jan. 31 in Columbus.
Meigs County Youth Rally.
Two ACT State Board
Offering for coming youth members, Donna Pariseau,
revival April 6·8. Public Waverly, and Martha Grim
welcome.
Wellston, area members or
SUNDAY SCHOOL services ACT State Board, helped shape
at Plants Church at 10 a. m.
that proposal.

Adoption
•
meetmg
Friday

Service to the existing Scout
units, and a planned expansion
of the Scouting program to
'serve those boys looking for·
ward to joining in the M-G·M
area is being strengthened by
lhe parttime assistance of Otis
0. Fuller, National Director of
Rural Relationships for the
Boy Scouts of America .
Richard Roy, District
Chairman of the M·G·M
District of the Tri..Slale Area
Council, Boy Scouts of
America, said Fuller will be
working with him and District
Executive Roger Samples to
build a sound district
organization that will support
the unit programs in the threecounty area .
Fuller has been active in
Scouting since 1924 and
professionally since 1944. He
brings with him a wealth of
rural Scouting to complement
his work in the M-G·M coun·
ties . Fuller's parttime
assistance is one of the many
services provided by the
National Scouting organization
through the request of the local
Tri..State Area Council, Boy
Scouts of America.

PORTLAND - The Portland
P-T.0 Wednesday evening with
President Mrs. Shirley
Johnson presiding opened
with the pledge to the flag
followed by the reading of the
minutes by ibe secretary, Mrs.
Merle Evans . Mrs. Grace
Furbee gave the' treasurer's
report.
The Racine Legion Auxiliary
is donating a flag to be used in
classrooms and a letter has
been Written to Cong. Miller
requesting a flag for outside.
A variety s)low and soup
supper were planned for
Friday evening, April 6. Each
child in school will be given an
opportunity to participate in
the program.
It was agreed to · purchase
deep fryer baskets for tile
kitchen and to reserve the
skating rink at Chester for one
night in April for the Portland
school children. Teachers will
donate their room count money
for the remainder of the year
and $5 each was donated by
Mrs. Iva Lawrence and Mrs.

physicians for local m~
dystrophy patients. In ad·
·dillon, cootributlons will go to
the support of over 100
research grants at hospitals
and universities tile world over
and the Institute for Muscle
Disease In New York City,
whkh is the only research
facility. in the world devoted ·
solely to the study of the
muscle and its metabollsll.
Scientists f()(' the first lime
recently have bef!n · able, to
_regenerate muscle tlssue In a
. laboratory animal, a great
breakthrough.

Local Bowling
Wednesday Early Mixed
March 14, 1973
Zide's Sport Shop

ACQUAINTED

Pis

74
64
52
32
22
20

Oiler' s Sohio

Tenth Framers

Sm1th-Nel son Motors

Young's Market

Nelson's Drugs

SPECIAL

High Ind . Game - Men: Jr.
Phelps 244. Charles Smith 226.

NO CHARGE

Wom en: Carolyn Bachner 183,

Isabelle Couch I83.
High Series- Jr. Phel ps 577
and Charles Smith 573 . Isabelle
Couch 467 and· Carolyn
Team High Game - Zide's
Sport Shop 695.
Tea m High Series -

Oiler's

REGARDLESS OF MAKE OR MODEL
FREE SERVICE PROVIDED
II Clean Earmold and
Replace Tubing
21 lnspecl Aid and
Clean Contacts ·

il Inspect and
Clean C•••
4) Audio Check Aid

Ask About Our BaHerv Club--25 pet. Off
·
Also Rechargable Cells

-------------------------'
ACOUSTICON

336 S. High St.

221·5831
WILL BE IN

GALLIPOLIS
BLUE FOUNTAIN MOTEL
(Cor. S. Rt. 7 &amp; U.S. JSl
FRt .. MARCH 16
9:00 a.m. lo 7:00p.m.

Columbus, 0 . ·

Mrs. Ogdin host
ofgarden club

POMEROY
MEIGS INN
SAT.·MARCH 17
' :ooa.m. lo6 :00p.m.

.. 1

ACBU&amp;E

115 W. Main

Open Mon.· Thurs. 9 a .m . to 7 p m days 9 a.m . to 8: 30 p.m .
- -

a.vs

9

a.m. to 8 p.m.- Satur-

20
Cnt.

Wieners
Fresh and Lean

$1 ~~

Center Cut .- USDA Choice

Cf.tUCK
ROAST
First Cut

PORK .

I

$}39

Old Fashion

GROUND

AII Meat Sliced

.. ¢
99

lb.

.

99~.

HEAD
CHEESE

fb.

BOLOGNA 21b.$1·38
Pee Wee Size

EGGS
.

. 3 c~oz:

89

¢.

Midway
Market
W.
St.
Pomeroy

I

JUST CALL 992-2156 ·
'

,,

.

...

•

.

.

We blk tQ YCIJI

95~ ·

Uqlted Nations and its work
holds the key to peace.
Mrs. Nan Moore reported on
the World Day of Prayer
service held at the Enterprise
Church . . She noted that 16
women from the church at.
!ended and that 13 women
at !ended the Lenten breakfast
held at Trinity Church.
Mrs. Beulah Hayes, Mrs. c.
E. Young, Mrs . James
Brewington, and Mrs. John
Compton served refreshments
·

GENERAL'S
BEST
4 PLY GRABBERS
Verr dttp tr11d tlre for long mil•••
D1111 h'td d'.. r1 n.
Faur pll11 of Polrtlttr eord .
Dl•tlndlvt 3-tlniiJ whl,...tll.

Ba.r zst.s WZt-t-

da
hetU
1J meet tU1i ry =~~:.t t::t a~~i'::ri!reco~~
The annual meeting of the based on deception, the peace

Business sessions were held
at the conclusion of the com·
. bined meeting with Mrs.
Roberta Wilson presiding at
the meeting of Alpha Omicron.
Attending from Meigs
County were Mrs. Dorothy
Woodard, Mrs. Wilson, Mrs.
Nellie Vale, Mrs. Anna
Elizabeth Turner, Miss Rosalie
Story, Miss Lucille Smith, Miss
Mary Virginia Reibel, Mrs.
Vilm~ Pikkoja, Mrs. Maxine
Philson, Mrs . Margaret
Parsons, Mrs. Nellie Parker,
Mrs. Geneva Nolan, Mrs. Nan
Moore, Mrs. Martha Husted,
Betsy Horky, Miss Mildred
Hawley, Mrs. Theodosia
Frecker, Mrs. Ruth Euler and
Mrs . Ethel Chapman.

Billy Hill, and Albert Hill.
Others presenting gifts were
Mrs. Alleyne Reese, Mrs. Alice
Wolfe, Mrs. Erma Hill, Unda
H11i, Mrs. Mary Roush, Mrs.
Charolett Wamsley, Mrs .
Marilyn Trussell, Mrs.
Roberta Ridenour, Mrs .
Sandra Kearns, Mrs. Ma~l
Shields, Mrs. Donna Hili, Mrs.
Jan Norris, Mrs. Debbie
Roush, Mrs. Emma Jane
McClintock, Mrs . Ann Wiles,
Mrs. Mary Sioler, Mrs. Helen
Johnson, Mrs. Jane Wagner,
Mrs. Betty Roush, Mrs. Unda
Hill, Mrs. Peggy Wolfe, Mrs.
Jackie Wagner, Mrs . Lois Bell.

Sa

Rio
Grande
Baptist
Association will be held
Saturday at the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church. The Rev .
Robert Kohn is president and
will give the devotions to open
th.e meeting at 10 a.m.
Theme of the aU-day session
will be "Jesus Christ is Lord."
The morning session will include group meetings conducted by William Hickman,
chairman of the Division of
Church Program and Outreach
of the Ohio Bapllst Convention,
for the men ; Mrs. Charles
Searles, president of the
Women's Division, and the
Rev , Ron Nicholas, pastor of
the Salem Baptist Church, and
the Rev. David Sedziol,
department of youth work of
the Ohio Bapllst Convention,
for the youth.
Following a luncheon in the
church basement, the af·
ternoon program will begin at
1:30 p.m. with a sing aild share
time. Special music will be by
Dannie Thompson, Pomeroy,
and the Rev. Edward Fischer
interim pastor of the Racin~
Church will speak.

.

cannot be kept by force but by
understanding, and women's
rights, men's rights, and
human rights. It concluded
with the statement that the

E78 x 14

Whitewall
PARTY GIVEN
The fifth birthday an·
niversary of Becky Van Meter
was observed with a party
recently. A Snoopy theme was
carried out in the cupcake
decorations, and ice cream and
Kool-Ade were served. Guests
were Melanie Van Meter, Mrs .
Donna lhle , Kathy and
Melissa, Mrs. Barbara 'Dugan
and Dixie, Mrs. Ida Mae Clark
andApril, and Mrs . Betty Bell.

Plus $2.22 F. E. T.
Per Tire.

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Meigs Band Booslers
will meet Monday, March 19, at
7:30 p. m. at Meigs High
. School.

SALES
992-7161
Middleport. 0.

_Bl)lLll~G? ... , .

rob·.l ·' "H

'

Uniforms bought
by Rutland PTA

Birthda part

WE HAVE A

gtVen VISitors

COMPLETE SELECTION

FRAMING
LUMBER

Check Our Price Before You Buy!

'like a·permn.

WMP0/1390

WIIIIOI "'"' l) . 79

ON'YOUR DIAL

.

'

' PARTY HELD
The Girls in Action of the
SoUtbern Baptist Chapel- In
Pomeroy held a slumber party
recently at the home of Mr. and
Mrs . Gene Coleman at
Rutland. Attending were Kim
Bashan, Kim Patterson, Jean
McClure, Jean Coleman, Susan
Sprague, Shirley Coleman the
advisor, and Marylu Mills.'The
girls worked on their GA .
projects and refreshme~ts .
were served. This week they
will visit Mrs. E. M. Wooc. a
patient at the Arcadia Nursing Home at Coolville.

HAM SAlAD
AND
CHEESE
SPREAD
Phone Us
Your OrderI.

MASON, W. VA.

$

10 lb. FROZEN TURKEY
S lb. CHUCK ROAST
3 lb. ROUND STEAK
3 lb. GROUND BEEF
2 lb. SI,ICED BACON
4 lb. ROUND STEAK

lb. CHUCK ROAST
lb. GROUND BEEF
3 lb, STEW MEAT
2- FRESH CHICKENS
4
4

FROZEN TURKEYS'10

up

sr

992-3502
WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

'

.

$

l'

REM{)DELING ?' ' ' ' . ,;, "
REPAIRING?

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

Manning D . Webster ,
Judge
Court of Common Pleas ,
.
Probate Division
· -~ .~-:!· •

lmiAI Pltcl
WITK THIS COUPON

A clock a~ picture purDanny Hall •. three year old. chased as a memorial to Miss
Bess Sanbor~. longtime active
son ilf Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hall mem ber of the .Heath
underwent surgery Tuesday at Methodist church, were
the Holzer Medical Center.
displayed at a meeting of the
Mrs. Theodosia Frecker United Methodist Women
entered the Holzer Medical Monday night at the church.
Cenler . Sunday as ·a surgical Both iteC!Il! will be hung in the
patient.
church social room.
Mrs. Janice DeBord,
A piano prelude by Mrs. L.
Tammie and Vicky, Mrs. May W.. McComas opened the
Haning and Chris, ac· meeting with Mrs. Jack
companied thelr mother • Mrs. Bechtle giving devotions using
Goldie Wyant to Columbus · scripture from Exodus 24 and
where she left via plane for two meditations;· "Forty Days
Fort Hood, Texas, for an in- ilf Lent" by George Cornell,
definite visit with another and "Constant Lent" by Mabel
daughter, Mrs. Harold (Judy) Long.
Gilliam and family · Mrs .
The program preapred by
Wyant has just recently Mrs. John Krawsczyn was
returned from Cleveland presented by Mrs. McComas.
where she visited for two The topic was "Peace with
weeks with her daughter • Mrs. Justice" and dealt with issues
Stanley (Juanita) Beal.
which were described as information every citizen should
know. The report commented
,llt'
'11 on the failure of the United
States to keep peace with other
nations, the arms race, the gap ·
between the rich and the poor,

PUBLIC NOTICES

121 28, 131 '· ... 31

SPECIALTIES

'frail Bologna, Ring Garlic
Dologlla, Ring Uver Prlddlng,
liard Salomi, Coeked Salomi,
Leeira Boloina; Braunsel!weiger,
Old t'aabion FraU., Beef, Pork,
Chicken Uver, Htlck Peppei'GIII. .

I

.

·

~~'

. RUTLAND - The pur.
chase of 14 uniforms for the
elementary basketball team at
a cost of approximately $200
was approved at Monday
night's meeting of the Rutland
PTA.
Mrs. Violet Grale presided at
the meeting which opened with
11
11
the pledge to the flag and
'-"
'-"
•
devotions by the Rev.
•
•
Lawrence Sullivan of the
Danville Wesleyan Church.
WEST COLUMBIA - A
Mrs. Marvel Quillen and
birthday party was held
Mrs . Irene Kennedy were
Sunday at the Chat and Chew in
appointed by the president to
West Columbia, honoring Mrs.
the nominating committee and
Pauline Miller and Miss Pearl
elected from the floor to serve
Haskins of Pittsburgh, Pa.
Music was furnished by on the committee were Mrs.
George Stewart . and the Rose Patterson and Mrs .
mavericks. Atlending were Sharon Back.
The sixth grade of Eric Hart
Mr. and Mr.. George Payne,
~
won the attenqance banner.
Mr. and Mrs. John Bumgard·
..
ner, Mr. and Mrs. Clovis The sixth graders also
Doerfer, Mr, and Mrs. J. presented a Founder's Day
'
program and taking part were
Campbell and his brother of
Your Right to Know
Beverly
Grate, Michael Ed·
Hlmtington, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
and be Informed of the func - Murray, Mr. and Mrs. Mark wards, Jane Coleman, Gary
t ions of your government are
Priddy and Donny Richmond.
embodied in publ ic noti ces . In ' Haley, Mr. and Mrs. Jay
PH. 773·5554
that self -government c:harges
Marshall,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Carse!
all citizens to be ·in formed ;
thi s newspaper urges ev ery Stone, Mr. and Mrs. Don
citizen to r ead and study these
notices. we strongly advise McCarty, Mr. and Mrs. Eric
those citizens, seek ing furth er (!oeghl, Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Information , to eKerclse their
right of access to publi c Russell, Mrs. Harold Hager,
re cords and public m eetings. Miss Bonnie Turner, Philip
Hall, Andy Stone, Billy
Doerfer, Billy Ray Ohlinger,
NOTICE OF
Clarence · Pearson, Randy
.
APPOINTMIONT
Case No. 20870
(221) 4lb. CHUCK ROAST
Esta te of Hild a_ Marie. Koblentz ~!bright, ' Mrs. Bea Russell,
3 lb. SLICED PORK SHOULDER
Deceased .
Miss Fran Cline, Don Kapp,
lib.
ROUND STEAK
Not ice is hereby given that
3
lb.
GllOUND
B,EEF
Bulky
Stone,
Teddy
Martin,
David J . Koblentz of Route 3
lib. SLICED BACON
Pomeroy , Oh io, has been dulY Waiter Smith, Pittsburgh, Pa.,
appointed as Admin ist rator of
the E sta te of Hi lda Marie Mlss Loil Miller, Mlss Lelody
KDblentz , de cease d, l ate of Russell, Jack Roush, Ray Van
(2l!2)3 lb. GROUND BEEF
Meigs County, Ohio .
2 lb. BULK SAUSAGE
Crectltror s are r eq uired to fil e Meter, Leroy Simpkins, Robert
2
lb. ALL MEAT WIENERS
the ir claims with said fi duciary
., rh Pnllll ra.~ngc.
Rickard, Harold Rickard, Jack
with in four months.
.D ated t h is 24th day of Camp and Kenneth Payne.
2 lb. ROU~D STEAK .
HOMEMADE
February 1973 .
'lib. ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT
.

AT SIMON'S

Hardy Azaleas. Holly. Spreaders. Pyracan lha. Yews and Evergreens in gallon cans . .

Ph . 992-2565 or 992 ·2582

Frid

Pomeroy

French City

NOW!

Main

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

•

Redbud ,

Twenty-four members answered roil call by naming a
favorite houseplant, Devotions
including. the first section of
"J onathan Livingston Sea
Gull" by Richard Fox was read
aloud by Mrs. Howard Knight.
A note was read from Mrs.
Fannie Bell Brown · thanking
the club for a recent sunshine
visit and a book, "The Hidden
Place."
Mrs. Dean won the door
prize, and secret pal gifts were
exchanged.
Arrangements - were on
exhibit and were judged · by
Mrs. Horace Karr and Mrs.
Paul Baer who awarded four
blue and one red ribbon for
arrangemenls,andonebiuefor
specimens.
-,
Mrs. Anderson, Mrs. J. M.
Gaur and her daughter, Vicki,
served a dessert course during
a concluding social hour.

Mrs. Pat Hill is honored

HERE
Al~o Pink Dogwood, Magnolias.
Arbor· Vilae and Junipers, ( B&amp;B).

~:~.

'
VG
/unche.
O
n
D

Housewarming held

Any
Hearing·Aid

Ba chner 456.

Sohio 1959.

16 h Birthday
was a sur,lwi&lt;'
..,e

GET

POMEROY LANES

Winter Whimsey r~~]o;;;~;~~~~~~ Memorials displayed
. Personal Notes
.
•S p,...
.
.
th
0 0ar
..m.. . em e ·.
t
' a

Projects planned.

IN SORORITY
Mtso Jo Ellen 'Diehl, .
daugbter of Mr. and Mrs.
.
Several fund raising projects and If ~ntmeans anything, we Ja.mes A. Diehl of Mulberry
were planned during a meellng must hve a life of love and Heights ,. Pomeroy, was .
.
I
of the Happy Harvesters Class sna.ring. She concluded with· a recently Initialed Into the
of Trinity Chur~h )i'r)day night. poem, "He Walked In the ' . Gamma Kappa Chapter of
Mrs . Genevieve Meinhart Garden," and an article en· Sigma Sigma Sigma Sorority
on the campus of Marietta
CHESTER
" Winter
and Mrs. Ella Smith were titled ''When They Nailed Hijll
Whimsey" was the program
·college in Martella.
appointed co-chalfmen for a to the Tree what Would You
Miss Dlebl graduated last - topic at a recent meeting of the
dinner of the Gallia County Have Done."
spring from Meigs Hlgb . Chester Garden Club at the
Eight and Forty to be served at
It was noted that Mrs. Louis School where she par·
home of Mrs. Gordon An·
Trinity Church in Pomeroy on Re.ibel remains m.A card was
April 5. Mrs. carrie Neutzllng signed for her and another for licipaled In band· and choir derson.
and was ·a cheerleader and a
Mrs. Robert Wood · enlarged
and Mrs. Rose Ginther were James Fugate. Members sang member of the National · on the topic using two
named co-chairl)len for a "Happy Birthday" to Mrs.
Honor Society. Presently, a(ranging demonstrations,
luncheon to ~ served on Neutzllng and Mrs. Gladys she is a · freshman at "Blowin' in the Wind'; with
March 31 for the Meigs County . Cuckler. Games \j'eril played
Marietta College and a pussy wnlow, greenery, and
Retired Teachers.
with prizes going to Mrs. Edith ·member of the College d~p purple crocus in a shallow
Mrs. Stella Kloos reported Lanning, Mrs . Ginther, Mrs. ' Singers.
black container for the flrs't
that she has a new supply of all· CarJie Meinhart, and Mrs. Ella
arrangement, and moss,
purpose cards and turned In $9 Smith.
~;w~m:::::::::::::::::::::8:::8:8:::: spring greenery, crocus and a
for the sale.
Mrs. Ada Holter was hostess ·
small deer figurine in the
The meeting was conducted for a table which carried out
second.
by Mrs. Neutzllng, who opened the birthday motif. Tall holders
t
Mrs. Dale Kautz gave an
It with a prayer from the year- with large candles were used at
illustrated talk on the forbook. "Lent and Its Purpose" either side of a dried
mation of cold bed's and ar·
was the theme of devotions arrangement of fantail .willow,
I"
tificially liea ted beds for a head
given by . Mrs. Ginther. She leaves off a rubber plant, and
WNG BOTTOM- Mr. afld · start on spring planting. Quizes
read a pOem "Let Me Keep Texas allum in a green bowl. Mrs. Paul Hauber . of Long were led by Mrs. Ivan Walker
Lent," regarding renewal of Open face sandwicbes, mints, Bottom honored their son, · and Mrs. Richard Barton and
Christian devotion, and self. hDiilemade angel food cake, Douglas, on his 16th birthday won by Mrs. Earl Dean and
examination. Mrs. Ginther coffee and tea were served. with a surprise party.
Mrs. Ada Holter.
reminded the members that we Mrs. Reibel was a contributing
The evening was enjoyed by
are created by God out of love, hosless.
playing games and listening to
records. Doug received many
1'\...
.
nice gifts.
Refreshments of cake, ice
cream, sandwiches, patato
Miss Ruth Becker, slate
chips and punch was served to
president
of Delta Kappa
EAST . LETART A stressed that the church exists Iris Pigott, Connie Dailey,
hDIIsewarming for Mr. and as a community of faith Steve Holter, Mike Larkins, Gamma, was guest speaker at
Mrs. Roy Pearson, who have responding to God's love to Gale Osborne, Sarah and Jo a meeting of the Alpha
moved Into a new home at help women undersland the Ellen Wells , Vida Weber , Omicron Chater, "the Beta
Dorcas, was held recently by breadth of the church's Denise and Scott Hauber, Mrs. Alpha Chapter, and the Delta
members of the Women's responsibility and fellowship. Ruth Larkins and Debbie Epsilon Chapter Saturday at
Rio Grande College.
Dailey.
Society of Christian Service of
A special offering for bir·
Miss Mabel Conley of Oak
Phillip and Debbie Griffin
the East Letart United thdays of $18.51 was taken.
Hill
introduced the state
brought a gift but didn't stay
Methodist Church. A gift was
Attending, besides those
president and on behalf of the
for the party.
presented to the Pearsons.
named were Mr.;. Margaret
Late· callers atterufu.g were three chaplers presented a gift
A potluck dinner was served Gloeckner, Mrs . Marlene
to the 15 members and five' Fisher, Mrs. Dorothy Johnson, Bob Goff, Rick Carson, Vera to her. Mistress of ceremonies
guests preceding a meeting of Mrs . Mabel Shields, Mrs . Weber, Willard Pigott, Violet for a luncheon held in the
the WSCS. Mrs . Barbara Margaret Roush, Joyce White, Smith and Orva Jean Holter. college cafeteria was Mrs.
Zelma Northcutt of Beta
Dugan presided and a study of Mrs. Focle Hayman, Mrs. Euia
Alpha
. Mrs. Carrie Dale, Rio
the life of Andrew was held Wolfe, Mrs. Sue Ann Beegle,
Grande led in group singing of
with Mrs. Betty Shiveley Mrs . Clara Mae Sargent, Sally
sorority
songs and Mrs.
giving prayer. Mrs, Hazel Fox Savage, Mrs. Doris Adams,
Mildred Wickline gave the
had the secretary's report, and Mrs. Bertha Robinson, Mrs.
invocation.
It was reported that drapes for Ferne B. Hayman and Robin
a room at the Children's Home Savage.
WILKESVILLE - The
have been provided. A thank
Wilkesville Garden Club met at
you nole was read from Mr.
the horne of Mrs. Anna Ogdln
and Mrs. Ralph Harvey for the
SONISBORN
, on March Gat 7:30p. m. with 12
drapes.
RACINE - Mrs . Pat Hili
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Reuter of members and three guests
A service of celebration
present, and Mrs. Nelson, . was honored recently with a
during which time the WSCS ·Pomeroy Roule 2 are anpresident, presided over the bridal shower at the home of
wiU lake the new name of nouncing the birth of a son ,
business meeting.
Mrs. Albert Hill, Racine .
United Methodist Women was Terry Ray, born on Feb. 15, at
Readings
were
given
by
Mrs.
Hosting the shower were Mrs.
tentatively set for May. It was the Holzer Medical Center. The
gem Ruth Ann Hill Racine. Hosting
decided to save Alcoa Infant weighed seven pounds Jane B~lea .•OI) Ohio's
1 Grate on ., the shower ~ere Mrs. Ruth
stones,
l))'·~rt?•Efflc
aluminum foil end flaps to be and 10 ounces. Mr. and Mrs.
how to start"'iiums, and by Ann Hill and Mrs. Judy
redeemed for funds to send a Reuter have a daughter, Mrs . Katherine Bowles on Roberts.
handicapped child to summer Rhonda Sue, 11. Grandparents
Games were played with
are Mrs. Della Riffle, Route 2, - "trees".
camp .
The
club
voted
to
order
trees
prizes
going to Mrs. Dorothy
Mrs. Lucy Donahue had the Pomeroy ; Mrs. Clair Karr,
to plant on Arbor Day and Badgley, Mrs. Sue Ann Beegle,
program on the theme "Uving Huron, and Dr. and Mrs. R. C.
planned
to send flowers to and Mrs. Gladys Shields. Afler
and Acting in Love." It Reuler, Canton. Mrs. Nora
Reuter of Pomeroy is a great· Annita Maddy at Holzer the gifts were opened by Mr.
Medtcal .Center.
and Mrs. Hili, ice cream, cake,
grandmother.
Mrs. Anna Ogdln showed coffee and punch were served
HYMN IS READ
attractive colored sUdes of her to those named and Mrs .
Mrs. Jean Blazewlcz read
MEMBER HONORED
trip to Greece and Turkey Eileen Buck, Mrs. Marlene
the hymn, "There is a Green
A surprise birthday party including interesting and Fisher, Mrs. Romona Yonker,
Hill Far Away" at a meeting of was held Friday night at a educational comments about Missy Yonker, Leslie Roberts,
the United Methodist Women of meeting of Mary Shrine 37, · them. Also enjoyed were her Mrs. Doris Wilt, Mrs . Unda
the
Enterprise
United While Shrine of Jersualem, paintings.
Hubbard and Donna Marie,
Methodist Church held honoring Mrs. Pearl Reynolds.
Refreshments were served Mrs. Sadie Trussell, Mrs. Doris
recently at the home of Mrs . She was presented with gifts as by the hostess . The next Hensler, Mrs. Inez Hill, Mrs.
Eldon Weeks. Her name was well as. a decorated birthday meeting will be at the home of Grace
Huffman ,
Mrs.
unintentionally omitted from · cake . .Officers for the 197:1-74 Mrs.Effic Grate.
Margaret West, Mrs. Mary
an account of the meeting in year were elected and will be
Hilland and Carissa, Mrs .
Tuesday's ed!Uon of The Daily installed in open installation on
There's nothing more
Ubby Wilford, Mrs. Maxine
1
Sentinel.
April 13.
· ·
f:pen.sive ~';!" /';. ~.~~!'Rose, Judi Roberts, Mrs. Clara
Mae Sargent, Mrs. Ruth Ann
Hill, Mrs. Kathi Hill, Andrea
Hill, Mrs. Etta Mae Hill, Mrs.
Ora Hill, Jay Hill, Robert Hill,

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 14, 1913

LB.

�I

_s;;ifn;jCf:;;;i"fieds Get Action!'Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!··
. .

'

Will be acf•pttd until t a.m . fOr

NOTICE OF SALE
OF LEADING CREEK
CONSERVANCY
DISTR ICT BONDS

Dly ot.PubiiCIIIOn

RI!GUL-' TIONS

nte

2SiaS
Of
QUALITY

•

Publllhtr reservn t he

~de e med

fhrr•

• • th e pur chase of bonds of the
• Dls tr let In t he aggregate
,"" amount of S2, 12 1,000 authoriZt d

.- by r esolution adopted Marc h 13,

•. 1973.

Th e bonds are Issued for the
purpose of paying costs of

constr ucting a water suppl y,
di str ibut ion and treatment
system .
The bonds are not general
oblig a tion ~ of the District but
will be payable. together with
add itional parity bonds which
mav her eafter be i ssued.
pur suant to the resolution
author iz ing the bonds, solely
from revenues derived from
fees. rates and charges for thl
use of the waterworks system
after provision for the payment
of cost s and expenses of
operation and maintenance
: thereof .

&amp; OltTUAlY
11.50 for 50 word rlllnlm~m.

Each addltlonll word 2c .
ILIND -'OS
Addhlonot 25c Chtrge · per
Advrrtlsement.

Pomeroy .Motor Co.

OF,.C.E NOU•S
1:30 t .m. to 5:00 p.m. Dally

I : JO

a.m .

Sllurdav.

to

12 : 00

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.·
POMEROY, OHIO

Noor

Wanted To Buy

USED parts lor Fraizer Garden
Tractor: phone 915·3907,
Garth Smith. Long Bottom,
Cillo.
PUREBRED SALE - Sixth
3-1 ..31p
Annual W. Va . Polled
Hereford Spring Show and USED boat trailer with 12"
Sale, March 24, 1973 at wheels. Phone 992·6256 altar 5
Jackson Mills State 4· H p. m.
. The bonds Shill be doted the
Camp. Selling 34 bulls and 18
3.&amp;.6tc
• date ot their dtllver{' shall be In
' tht dlmomlnatlari a Sl.OOO each
heifers . For . Information - - - - - - - - - • or may be Issued In fully
write. Jim West!all, Rl. 2, Box OLIJ furniture, ol k tables,
, registered form In thl dt·
115, Spencer, W. va: or call organa, dllhn , clocks, brass
· nominatiOn of 1100 or any
927·210•.
beds or complate households.
multiple thereof , as requested
3·12·5te Write M. 0 . Miller, Rt. 4,
: by the purchaser, shall draw
Pomeroy, Cillo. Phone m.
Interest payable annually on the
1 fir st day of
January of each
6271.
• year commencing on the first WILL MOW lawns In SyracuH :
1-7·t1t
contacl Floyd Diddle or
' day of January next succeeding
brothers or call 992·58•1 after
: the date of the bonds at the rate
A LAWN roller lor 1 Gravely
of live per centum (5 pet .) per
5 p.m.
Tractor: call Ray Williams,
annum . Anyone desiring to do
3·1 ...31p
992·6688.
so may present a bid for said
bonds based upon their bearing I WILL not be responsible lor
3-IHip
a different rate of Interest, but
any debts contracted b{. CLEAN topper , 45c lb. ;
not In eMcess of tight per ctn ·
anyone other than mysel .
tum (8 pet.) per annum ,
Radiators, dean, 2Bc lb. :
Signed : James Edward
pro\llded that where 1 frac·
Brass, 18c lb.; Batteries, 70c;
tlonat Interest rate Is bid suctt
Mnllron, Rt. 2, l'&lt;aclne, Cillo.
Ginseng
S60 lb.: M. A. Hall.
• fraction shall be one -quarter of
3·1... 31p
Reedsville. 378·6249.
• one perctnt or a multiple
' tttereof . Spill r1t1 bids will not
3·9·11C
: be con sidered . Each bid shell be REDUCE excess fluids with -Fluldex,
Lose
weight
with
for the purchase of said bonds It
Dfk· A· Diel capsules at Help Wanted
' not tess than the par value
Nelson Drugs.
thereof .
Said bonds mature on
. 3·1 ...31p MIDDLE·AGED lady to tare
lor an elderly lady: live In : no
January 1 in each of tht years
laundry: good home and
• as follows :
SKIN
disorders?
Try
Toco' Yr. Ami.
Yr. Ami.
wages:
In Letart Falls, Cillo;
Derm Vitamin E Cream, 1260
. 1971 $21 ,000
1989 $37,000
phone 446·WO, Gallipolis.
I
U
per
lube
at
Nelson
Drugs.
. 1978 22,000
1990 39,000
3·13·3tc
3·1•·11P
1979 23,000
1991
.. 1,000
1~80
24,000
1992 43,000
CAR HOP, Apply In person,
i 1981 25,000
1993 ... ooo
Crow's Steak House.
·- 1912 27,000
1994 48,000 KOSCOT KOSMETICS AND
,.. 1983 28,000
1995 50,000
3·8·61C
WIGS. SP'EClALS MONTH·
• 198&lt; 29,000
1996 53,000
BROWN'S
INOE ·
'(
• 1985 31 ,000
1997 55,000
~E.NDENT OISTRIBU · Wanted
: 1986 32.000
1998 58,000
MIDDLEPORT.
TOR,
1987 34,000
1999 61,000
DEAD Stock horses. cattle,
PHONE 992·5113.
1988 36,000
2000 U,OOO
hogs, sheap. Raasonable
~-23· t1C
charge. Call 24.1·5514.
2·28·301C
' Yr. Ami.
' HOOD'S AQUARIUMS: fish
I 2001
167,000
and supplies: new location,
2002 71 ,000
Ash Street, Middleport near For
: 2003 7.. ,000
. 2004 78.000
park: phone 992-5«3.
'• 200S 82.000
H ·lfc 'fRAILER, Brown's Trailer
' 2006 86.000
Park; phone 992-332•.
90,000
: 2007
2·13·1fc
.._ _ _..,
• 2008 95,000
• 20119 · n.ooo
.
' I
''• · 3 ANI5 4 "ricxii.'f furnished and
. 2010 104,000
• 2011 110.000
p~~~n~~~4 . apartments.
'· 2012 115,000
' 2013 1nooo
4·12·1fc
'
Bonds maturing an and afler
• January 1, 1915 , are subject to
2 BEDROOM mobile home:
• red!mpt lon an and after
completely furnished : call
' January 1, 1984, et their par
992·2&gt;141 after 5:30 p.m.
~ value plu~ accrued Interest tD
H ·t1c
• the dat e flud tor redemption .
Furnace Controls
The bonds are payable at the
-UN-F""
u· -:R.-N-IS_H
_E
- 0- --3 - r-oom
Offlcr of the Farmers Home
HUMIDIFIER$
! Adm lnlstrallon, 17 East State
'rf,orlmenl, &gt;1011 Spring Ave.,
• Street, Athens, Ohio, without
orneroy.
J.2·t1t
Hot Water Heaters'
• deduction for us services 11 the

Notice

------

Rent

''HElL"

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

---ONE AND two bedroom mobile

Plumbint
Electrical Work

: District 's paying agent, and are
, Issued under the a"thorltyof tht
• Contervancv Olstrlct Laws of
• Ohio (R.tvlatd Coda Sections

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

; 6101.01 ot soq .J

• Said bids will bt promptly
• considered , end said bonds will
· be sold at not lesa than per and
accrued
lnltrtst to
the
highest bidder offerinG the
11\West lnttrtsl rata 11
992-2448
hereinafter defined . The lowest
Pomeroy,
Interest rete will be determined
....
by calculat ing the tot1l Interest
to thl stated maturity at the
rate
bid
and
deducting REVIVAL still In progrm 11
thtrefrom the premium bid . If
the Rutland Community
t ach or two or mort bids Is fhe
Church at 7:30 p.m. each

o..

hlghesl bid offering tho lownt

lnteresl rete, the bonds will be

awarded on such ant of said
highest bids as Is chosen by lot .

Ail bids must be accompanied
by a bond or check drawn on
and certified by 1 s~iv1nt bank
Cwhlch ban-. must be ont other
than the bidder, If the bidder Ia

Svstem

FOR RENT

GRAY MANOR
APARTMENTS

cylinder,

ne

w:

maMX 3828
ex:tras,

h
P one

-

·

like

J.P.Ifc

series 1500, V·l , standard
tr•nsmlsslon, wide bed, new

• xcell~t condition with
res, •
~·
no rust. Phone 985·3509, Tom
Hayman, Long Bottom, Cillo.
_________J._I3·"P.

Ohio,

whose

IP·

For sale
BUILDINGiolslorsaleaiRock
Springs, Ollio. Close to Meigs
High School with Tuppers
1

This machine is a dr.essmaker

model. Pay balance of $38.50
or pay balance of S6 per ·
month. Call 992-5331 .
2·23.1fc
•

BUY YOUR

FERTILIZER
Now and Getthe Early

DISCOUNT
Bag. Bulk and Liquid Fer.
tilizer, all available now.
Take delivery now from our
area warehouse at Pomeroy .

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy

Hoine &amp; Auto

been

AUTOMOBILE . Insurance
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992·
2'166.
6-15-t!c

-========:....

Sale

------

-:: :.=:=::::=====-#

3·8·61P

HOUSE by owner; 3 or 4
bedrooms, large rec. room ,

large patio, modern kitchen.
fully carpeted ; call 992·524
unlll3 p.m. or 992-3.136 aller 3
p.m.; No Sunday Calls.
3·14·61c

----145 ACRE Farm ; house ,

9
rooms and bath ; large bern
and other oulbulldlngs: two
oil wells : own gas well :
$25,000: call985·3857, Chester.
Ohio.

tl

Phone : 992-3163

Till P.M.
or 992-5844.
After 6 p.m. '

with or without new 12 ft.
factory stake body, 390
englnt, long whtal b111,
power

brakes,

dellverv or to tontul the
volldlly of th e bonds or the
power to lnue them or lht levv
or colletllon ol lht usoasments
for their payment .
THE FARMERS HOME
ADMINISTRATION (FHA) OF
THE
U,NITEO
STATES
DEPARTMENT
OF
A G, R I C U ~ T U R E
HAS
AGREED TO ENTER INTO A
~OAN
AGREEMENT WITH
THE ISSUER., PURSUANT TO
WHICH FH" Wll~ PUR ·
CHASE SAID $2,121,000 OF
'BONOS
PAROFAT
AN PER
IN ·
TERE5T AT
RATE
FIVE
,CENTUM Cl PCT .) PER AN ·
.NUM .
' The bonds will bt delivered on
'or about May t, 1973 . 11 the
'su tt ulful bidder desires
dellverv at' a plate outside lho
•State ol Oh lo, lhe bidder aha.ll

'

~ "U " "IA,Ioot . , flll . •'l

----For

· - -- - -

___ ___

__ ___

..

.

WELL , TO E'ACH
HIS OWN

'•

ITS ~L.Y
NO DIFFERENT

ANt?

1HAN CHEWING
GUM ...

POMEROY
' HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094

606 E. Main

Pomeroy

1

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

the lar.gest
:~!1~,;~r Heater
Radiator to
Core.
Nathan Biggs • · '
R1dlo_t,or Sptcltllsf _

SM11H ·NELSON .
MOTORs: .I".
C. ._
992'·217•
Pomeroy

FURNITURE
Stop In and see Our
Floor Display.

HOW OO AH GlT
TO TH' "HORSE
AAJ' BROQI...I" ?

I HAPPEN TO
&amp;GOING

THAioJKS. '/0'
ENGLISHMEN

®

THERE-

IS M IGHT~

HOPSPIT TUBLE.-

READY · MIX
CONCRETE .
hoe work,
delivered right to your
tanks, dlt·
proiect. Fast and easy. Free
soli, fill
estimates. Phone 992·3284.
: B&amp;K Ex·
Goegleln Ready · Mix Co..
cavallng . Phone 992·S367,
Middleport, Ohio.
Dick Katr, Jr .
6·30·1fC
9·1·t1C
_S
_E_P_T-IC__
T_A-:
N-:
K:S -=c:L::
IiA
:-N:::ED -~E us ·FOR; Awnings, storm·
REASONABLE rates . Ph. 446· · doors and windows, carports,
4782, Gallipolis. John Ru~ell,
marquees, aluminum siding
Owner &amp; Operolor.
'
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
5·12-Hc

--:--:-::-:-:-::::---:--::C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phore 949·3821
Racln10. Ohio
Crill Bradford

representative.

For

I HOPE YA I::NJOYEO
THA"T so.LAMI AN I

free~

ONION SANc:&gt;WIC'Il
VA HAD FER
L.UNCHJ

e ~ llmates,

phone ChariH
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.'
Johnson and Son. Inc.
J.2.f1c

__

, •·
5·1·tfC
....:....:.._----,-

EXCAVATING, dozer. loader
and backhoe work: sepllc
tanks Installed ; dump lrueks
and lo·boys lor hire : will haul
fill dirt, top soli, limestone
and gravel: call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992·7089:
night phone 992·3525 or 992·
5232 .
2·1l·lfc

Real Estate For Slile

I FIND A PlACf:
. TO PARK !

Real Estate For Sale

HOUSE In lorg Bottom, phone
985·352'1.
6·ll·t1C

Virgil B.

CLELAND
REALTY

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

•oa E. Moln

.JUMP OUT AND

CHE.CK THE 8U~
TE.RMINAL WHILE

O' DELL WHEEL allgn; ;lent
located at Crossroads, Rl. 12•.
complete fronl end service,
tune up and brake servlca:
Wheels balanced elet·
Ir onIcally .
All
work
Reasonable
guaranleed .
rates . Phone 992·3213 or 7•2·
3232.
2·18·t1t

110 Mechank Street
Pomeroy~ Ohio

Pomeroy

•
33 ACRES
Rutland Rl. 1 - 12 a cres
NEW LISTING
under fence. 12 acres
RIVER FRONTAGE - 4
,tillable. Bal . light woods. bedrooms, 2 balhs, gas fur·
Some buildings. 3 bedroom nace , lull basement. Front and
home, new bath, new kit· back porches. Asking $11,000.011
chen. new F.A. furnace . BUT LET'S TALK.
Panel ing . Enclosed pallo.
MIODLEPORT
Cellar. $1 4.500.00.
4
BEDROOMS
Nice
COLONIAL
aluminum sldlna . Fenced
Pomeroy, Close to shopping.
yard,
basement,
stoker
kllchen,
4 furnace. Asking orly $7,500.00.
Beautiful
bedrooms ,
2
baths,
P ... RK IT HERE
basem ent. Por ches. Gas
TRAILER SPOT - $2500.011
F.A. heat. Carpeted. GOOD and 97 ocraa with gas well. All
COND'ITION. $17,500.00.
minerals. $16,500.011 for all.
RACINE
NEW HOME
Beautiful 2 story home. All
3 BEDROOMS - Nice kllthen,
new kitchen, 5 bedrooms. 1'/2 dining, utility room , Chester
baths, hardwood floors ,
Townsh ip. $16,000.00 or we'll
basement. Garage and other
negollale.
bu ildings . Beaullful lot.
NEAR TOWN
$17,000 00
4 BEDROOMS - Nearly an
ID ACRES
acre of land. Full basement.
Moslly level. Jusl off Rt. 33.
Qak floors. Sl2.000.00. Maybe
Buildings. Home has 3 less.
bedrooms, bath, dining R.,
POMEROY
new F.A. furnace and hot
4 BEDROOMS - Nice modern
water tank . Good blacktop
kitchen . Full basemen! with
rood . 58,900.00.
shower, lull bath up. A lovely
MIDDLEPORT
home lor only $11 ,500.00.
Large 5 bedroom home.
YOU SAIO IT
Close to shopping . Nlee i LARGE BRICJ: - 7 rooms,
kitchen, dining R., l'h baths.
bath, large basement, large
front porch , garage lor several
2 glassed porches. Garage
and carport. In good c_on.
cars. 2 acres of land. Reduced
dillon. $12,800.00.
. .. to 118.000.00.
RENTALS&amp; STORAGE
Pomeroy - Several lots. Out
WE HAVE THE PROPERTY,
of floods . On paved street.
WOULD LIKE TO MEET
All
utilities . Sewage .
SOMEONE WITH
THE
58,200.00.
MONEY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
HELEN L. TEAFORD
BROKER
GORDON B. TEAFORD
992·2259
.
ASSOCIATES
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
If no answer 992·2568
992·3325
or 985-4209
992·3615

I

AT .104 W. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

Dodge Station Wagon, will
3·13·&gt;11C
pass Inspection, S250; phone
992 7523
HOUSE ond21rallar lots: phone
·
·
3.13.o11c
992·5693.
3·13,&gt;11c
1962 CHEVY II; phone992·3850.
3·13·31C SMALL private apartment:
men only :
complalely
sel)l!rate
from
house;
utilities
1966 OLOS Toronado ; lull
furnished
:
call
992·3811
bepower ; alr·condllloned; low
tween•p .m. ond5p.m.or 992·
mileage; phone 992·5367.
3134 otter 6 p.rp .
J.1J.5tc
3·13·61p
--'---·---IN.CHEVROLET
'door
V8
. '•
• . •
oulomallc; phone 992·3992.
Sale
3·13·31&lt; MODERN
WALNUT style
stereo·radlo,
AM·FM radio, 4
1970 FORD Falrlane 500; tor
speaker sound avstem, 4
more Information call 742·
speed automallc cNnger.
4676 or see Rolland Searles,
Boloneo $68,33. Use our
Rulland, 0 .
;pay expense of dellnry at Juch
budget
!arms. Call 992·708.!.
3·13·3fp .
.other pUtce .
3·8·61c 3 YEAR OLD mare : very genlle
, The rloht Is reserved tO relect
with children : leaving state,
bids.
EARLY AMERICAN stereo·
must sell : phone 985·35&gt;49
~E ... DING CREEK
BuSin~ Opportunities
radio, AM..fM radio, • speed
CONSERVANCY
alter 3:30 p.m.
DISTRICT OWN your own business: • to 6
automatic i:hanger, 4 speaker
3·13·31c
hours dolly: smolllnvestmenl
sound system. Balance $79.56.
By : Jttk W. CriSp, buys necusary . Inventory ;
Use our budget terms. Call &gt;1011 BALES mixed hay, 60c a •
Prl lldtnt
call
1·61•·NH397.
992·1085.
bale . phone 843-2963.
Tel. No. IUA-,.2 ·5551
·101c
3·11
741-4211
3·&amp;.6fc
,
,
,
_
Arnold Grate
Rutland
3·13·31c
..
,_
_,
C3 J 14, 21 , II,· 3t
U-------~~~~--~~~

.,

992-2550'

Big Bend Bargains

standard, low mileage, excellent condition, 6 new tires, HOUSE off Rl. 554, SSO a month:
phone 992-5693.
new muffler : $1,395; '63

Ul hi, OM

'IOU DONT SMOKE
UK£; scw.E OF
1HE MEN.

THA~ KS, ANNIE! THIS SUIT Of ARMOR'S
SO Hf AVY, I COULDN'T Mf&lt;KE IT UP

BY Ml'SflF!

~

J

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
!.Bombay
Zora.

·Total Discount Selling

DICK TRACY

AND VOUR
TEAR GAS
aEJI.R , TOO.

audience
(3 wds.)
2'1. "Apostle
to the
Gentiles"
28. Scoffing
remarks
Zl. Wee bit
SO. Eques-

AMANDA PANDA

AF~IENDL'/
5QUIRR-E.L.

CUMBWUP
IN THE

TR~f ... ;~~-

Furniture . .. . Living Room Suites. Dinette
Sets. Tilt-Back Chairs, Love Seats, Pillows.
Pictures. Rugs, .all sizes; Clothing, ·Shoes,
Jewelry, Sjlverware. 8- Track Tape1, Tape
Players. Cookware. Pa,int. Pan &amp; Roller Sets,
Power Saws, Power Drills, Electric Clocks
and Lots of Other Goodies.

WAID HA YMAt4-BOB CUMMINGS

-.

...AND JoKINGL'I

Unocramblelheoe fiXIr Jumbles,

ene letter to oa&lt;h oquare, to

DROPPED THR£~
ACORNS ON

ME!

form four ordinary word1.

tJ
I I

Yesterday's A111wer

21. That's It !
30. One of the
(2 wds. ) .
Aleutians
22. Viva El
31. Climb
Cordobes! 32. Wotch
23. Thrice ·
over
(mus.)
33. Vogue
:U. Ninny
34. Sullt
241. Time in·
35. Parched
tervening
36. Angered
28. Bishop's
38. African
~eaddress .
beast

"

IJARUG

11/UCHAN!

I
I I

. GEDDUR •

II

III
I to

Now arronre the clr&lt;led totten
form the surprloe anower, aa
I
:==·=~·~:::=~~~~~~·~·u~r~re~•:leol:,by the above etrtoon.

_

._I

V" ~

..:..::l'lil=..
-==-=•=.::•=•=•==-:___----~1

Yellertla1~•

D r I I J.

(~wen t.-orrowJ

1•""'1.,, IIOOK ANNOY MOSQUI aLITHI

trian's ·

e-,
t'

r-&lt;1 I

A Better Buy
Shop Us For ...

able
( 2 wds.'l
6. Feed a
Cache
Type of
ftre
flu
7. Measure
Gusto
8. Snakes
13. Great per·
9. Dele's
former
opposite
(2wds.)
10. Admired
15. Vietperson
14. Speak to
namese
holiday
privately
(2wds.)
. 16. Likes
(2 wds.l
11. Actress
11, Ditch(var.)
Arlene
18. Business
lB. - cord
trans18. Last
acllon
''reina" of
11. Whit
Spain
15. Greatly
21. Man's
pleased,
nickname

as an

CATCH •••

RIGHT HERE!

JltlJJMJ13~;~*••UJ....,,_ :

4. Adage
5. Fashion·

astrian

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

power

proving opinion will be lur. steering, r91111h tires, air·
nlshed bv the District to the condllfontd, •7,300 miles:
sueceulul blddor without IX· Harold Brewer. Long Bottom,
pen so ond will bo Jlrlnttd on the phona 915. 355•.
bonds at the eipenst of the
Di strict . Complete transcript of
3-.t-tfc
proceed ings ana the printed
bonds will be furnished bV the
uAVERICK
Iinde
Dlstrltt, together with ter · 1970 ''""'
• 6 cy
r
tlflcatrs showing no nt igallon
pend ing or thrtlttned at the
time of th e delivery , to enloin

GIT OUT

. OF THAT DADBUR!\1
BED A.!\1' HANG UP THEM
DADBURN CLOTHES

ALL WEAlHER ·
ROOANG AND
CONSTRUCTION '
'-·

PHONE~

MATERIALS CO.
773·5554
MMon, W. Va.

ELNA and While Sewing
Machines ... service on all
makes. Reasonable rates .
The Sewing Center, Mid·
dleporl, Ohio.
11·16·11c

Real

_,

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

oP.,naTII5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E.,Maln, Pomaroy, 0.

.

y~rs·

Buill to Your 'Specs'
Delivered lo Job Site

..

------

"

· ' r r ' ·· 1 r.

"•.

~~==::::::;====:;-;::==::::::;:;;=;;==]-;:==~=:=:====l
ASK US ABOUT
Hava your home buiH by
EXPERT
PRE·FABRICATED
custom lulldtrs. Our.
e•rpenters hiVe 20
:'Wheel Alignment
experienet
In bulldong
\\000 TRUSSES
homes In Mtlgs County.
'5.55

larger.
992.2789.
Plain water. Size h acre and
2-25·301p : . . - -·- ..,.----- -..,
STEREO 8 lradt. Must sell at
once. 1973 8 track stereo In
lovely walnut console. Take
over paymenls of $7.55 per
month•or pay $101 .50. Call 992·
5331.
2·23.flc
On Most American Car_s
1972 ZIG·ZAG Sewing Machine.

WHY WAIT

..

JU6HAID !!

Busm·ess Servi
,' .'ces

9._
POMEROY
ALUMINUM Car top boats, 10,
6illl Jack W. Carsey,Mgr. WILL trim or cut trees, clean
12 and 13 II. Klngobury Rd .. L _ _ _.:_PI1.:_0.:_n.:_e_992
:.::..:·2:.:1:8..1' -- ' out basements, attics, etc.
Phone 949·3221.
Co. Rd . 18. Phone 992·6256
J·ll -301c
alter 5 p. m.
42" KELVINATOR Electric
3-8·301c
Range, $1011, 1ikenew: contact PAINTING , Masonry work :
Ray Laudermllt, Mason, W. tree estimate; call 773-5580.
Va ., or phone 773·5613J. J. 1c
3·7·30ip
1 6
NEW SOFA BEDS, Your choice
while they last 549.95.
Dozers, large
Pomeroy Recovery, 622 E. ONE 3 year old registered EXCAVATING.
and
small;
Backhoes
and
Main Sl.
Suffolk ram ; $50 ; phone 949· Loaders on track and llres: .
3·8·6fp 3073.
Dump trucks - Lo· boy
3·ll ·61c Servi ce: Septic tanks In ·
NEW FOAM to 1111 rour old - - - - - - -- slalled ;
George (Bill)
cushions, standard s ze suite. BRIGHT green hay 1 never been Pullins: phone 992·2478.
only $9.95.
Pomeroy wei; phone 992 . 3658 .
__ _ _ __ _ _ _2_ ·9·11C'
Recovery. 622 E. Main St.
J.9·61c
3-8·301p
HARRISON'S TV Service and
KNAPP
Shoes.
7
styles
on
sale
Service Calls: phone 992·2522.
UPHOLSTERY 'material s,
in March; Bob Hysell, 992·
2·9·1fc
regularly $3.95 only S1.95.
5324.
.
.
- -Also remnanls . Pomeroy
J.9.1fc SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Recovery, 622 E. Main St.
service, all makes. 992·2284.
3·8·301P - -- - - -- - The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
CORN : ph ore 985·4211.
UPHOLSTERY material s; :
3·9·121c Aulhorlzed Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Nylon prints, cotton prints,
3·29, tfc
velvets of all kinds . Pomeroy MAYTAG washer. one glider.
Minnesota Sewing Machine ; :.:-:-'-::.. --=--=-'"'·"""'
· .: :--.,.-= = ...
Recovery, 622 E. Main St.
phone 949-3718.
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
3·8·301p
.
3·12·31p SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·
UPHOLSTER your own fur ·
ED, REPAIRED.STEWART,
MILLER
SANITATION,
nllure. Foam cushions: any r
OHIO.
PHONE
662·3035.
size. Colton, burlap, swivel
1Q.,..t1c
beses, zipper, webbing. welt.
Bill's Army-Navy
,
.
.
.
-Pomeroy Recovery. 622 E.
Surplus and
Main St.
BEAT the rush! Gel your
Store
Department
lawnmower and IIIIer luned·
3-8·301~
up now ; Small Engine Repair
Shop on Third St .. Mason. W.
85
North
Court
St.
'COAL, Llmeslore, Excelsior
Va
.
Athens, Ohio
Salt Works, E. Main St. ,
J.6.JOic
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891.
·
4·12·1fC
Hours: 9 to 5:30 daily exeept
Estate For
Monday &amp; Friday to 9 p.m.
SINGER automatic sewing
2
NEW
3 bedroom homes: 1 with
This Sunday 12 noon to 5:30
machine; like new In walnut
basement, 1 without ; 2 car
far your convenience.
cabinet. Makes design sill.
garages, 1 acre lots : located
ches, •lg·zag•. bultonholes,
at Rock Springs behind Meigs
Sleeping bags, regularly
blind hems, overcasts, etc ..
Co. Fairground. Will trade or
S85. Call · Ravenswood. 273·
$9.95,
now
$7.95
:
Electrical
help finance: also 5 good
9S21 or 273·9893.
tools "'low as 510.95 ; Wright
building lots .walt( and
·
1·ll·tfe
tools 10 pd. off: Llneoln
disposal Installed: Charles H.
Welders S92.50: Cordurov &amp;
Cornell, AlheiiS 593·7034 or
(2) PAINT DAMAGE. 1972 Zig·
Denim Jeans $4.91 &amp; 15.95: 8
593·5667 or 992-7613.
Zag Sewing Machines. Still fn
track tapes · hit tunes, S2.91;
2·11-ltc
original cartons . No at.
specials on clolhlng and
tacflments needed a$ our
·House- FOR~SAI.E: 1i• Brlcksnoes.
controls are bulll·ln. Sews
: sJreet. Pomeroy, Cillo: brick
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
house , 3 bedrooms, excellent
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
loc~tlon, dose to school and
monograms, and blind hem For Sale or Trade
city; contact Lou Osborne or'
stitch. Full cash price $38.50 1972 FORD Gran Torino, 2 dr. call 992·5898.
or budget plan available.
HT, low mileage, In new
11·26·t1c ·
Eleclro Hygiene Co. Phone
condition and loaded with
992-7755.
extras, A-c. AT, PS. PB, AM· 3 BEDROOM home. living room
3·1Hic
FM radio, plus; phone 742· and dining room carpeted . ·
31 S.4.
New foreed a ir furnace .
(3) VACUUM cleaners new 1972
3·11 ·61C
Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, phone
model. Complete with ell
992·2071.
cleaning tools. Small paint
3·6·12tc
damage In shipping. Will take Mobile Homes For Sale
$27 cash or budget plan REDUCED pri ces on 1972 FOR SALE by owner, 3
available. Phone 992·7755,
mobile homes in stock; check
bedroom home, total electric,
Eleclro Hygiene Co.
with us before you buy : West
full
size basement, 1112 belhs,
3·1Htc
Breeze Mobile Home Sales,
extra 75 x 1011 lot whlth loins
Athens, phone 59J.6736.
property. Excellent condition.
J.6·121c
MIXED
hay
;
phone
949·3839
or
Pri ced LOW. New Haven, ca II
949·588.c.
882·2762. .
3·14·31C O.:ASH paid lor all makes and
3·1J.6tc
models of mobile homes .
35 ACRES ; lots or buy what you
Phone area code 614·423-9531. 60 ACRE farm 1'/2 mile from
want: on Chesler water:
4·13.1fc
Rutland on New Lima Rd.,lor
more
Information eontact
phone
992·524
1111
3
p.m.
or
992·3.136 alter 3 p.m.
f
Rolland
Searles alter 5 p. m.
3·1Htc

2 Furnlshld Apt.1 with new
furniture, with or without
utilities. Both hove 1 or 2
bedrooms. No Pel$.

eo;::~;octedlngs lor thlllssuo 1969 FORD R•nger lion F·350:

Cleveland,

- - - -- -

I EHiclency Apt. with new
furniture, 111 utilities paid.

Revenue -

hovo bean ltktn under tho
supervision of Squire, sondors
a. oompuy. Bond Attorneys,

1970 YAMAHA 175, $250; phone
742·6834.
3·2·t1C

Middleport, o.

sueh bonds In aeeordonee with 1968 GMC 'h·lon pltkup lruek,

Waterworks

-=::::=======-""1

r

Auto Sales

bidder will rece ive and PlY for

Bids shtll be sealed tnd
endorstd " Bid lor Leading
Crook Conservancy Dlstrlet

ONE bedroom apartments:
ldaal lor couples: phone 992·
524 or 992·3.136.
3·1Htc

For Sale

\

thol , 11 lhe bid Is occepled. the

the terms and provll iOnS Of thiS
notice, .or rorfelt tht same as
liquidated damages in the event
Slid condition Is 1101 fulfilled .

homaa In Middleport, adults
only. Phone 992-5592.
3·11·11C

evening with Rev . Amos
Tllllt, Rebersburg. Pa .• the
speaker.
Everyone
Is
welcome. .
J.ll·•lc

o bonk) poyable to tho District, 1972 HONDA 500 motorcycle, 4
In the amount of one per cent of
the par amount of the bonds
herein offered, upon condition

Polleroy
Motor Co.

1t11 CHEVROLET
$3495
Caprice Sport Sedan, less than 15,0011 miles &amp; spotless
Imide &amp; oul. 5 new white·WIII tires tramlerred from 7J
new cor. Comlortron air, &gt;1011 v.a engine, power steering &amp;
disc frl. brakes, automatic trans., power windows &amp; door
locks. green vinyl roof with med. green In color, radio &amp; R.
seat speaker . . . Sharp.
1970 REBEL
$1495
American Motors St. Wagon, only 31,500 miles by original
local owner, good tires. grn. spotless vinyl inter ior, dark
green finish , 6 cyl. engine, std. trans.
1970 PONTIAC
.
,
$2395
Flrebird ESprit. Local 1 owner car, 350 V.8 envlne, P.
&amp;leering &amp; automatic trans., AM.FM radio, like new while
Jettered !Ires, dark brown finish , bucket seat &amp; blk . vinyl
trim . A sharp one. Raally loaded.

right to tdlt o..-eiect any 1d1
obl•l'tlanal. The
.publisher will nat be responsible
•,
Seal ed bids wil l be receivtd ~ or ·,.,ore than one Incorrect
'. by th e und ers igned , President Insertion.
:.- of
t he
Le ad tna
Cree k .
RUES
: Conser 'llan cy District , here in
.. For want Ad service
- referred to 115 the Distri ct , at 5 cents per Word ont inllrtlar.
· the of.f ice of the Leading Creek
Minimum ChlrQt7SC
.
Con se r v anc y Dis tr ict , St1t e
12 cent~' per word
_ Route 12.tl tMaln St., Rutland, cQnsecutlve Insertion s.
·- Ohio 45775, until ten o'cloc k . \1 cents ptr word six con
• "' a.m ., E a stern Standard Time In secutivt Insertions.
·~ Otllo, on the 5th day of April,
2.5 Per Crrit Discount on pall
::_ 11'73, at wh ich t im e the bids will eds and ads paid wlttUn to da,vs
, .. be publ icly opened and read, for
CARD OF TH-'NKS ,

~~

BARNEY

.

Fn.und
WANT Awi."
FOUND In Hart1ord, shaggy
INI'O.MATION
DEAD ~ INIS •
white poodl e wear ing red
.S P.M. DIV BofOrt Publltallon :
collar. Phone 882·2592.
Monday Oeadtlne ·t e.m.
3·12·31C
can cella,tlon - Correct ion• ·

.

r

I{ I

POSiUon
34. Greek
letter
31. Stage fan
38. Tint
40. Accustom
· 41. Beneath
. 42. Toned

down, as
a color
DOWN
1. Beyond
Arthur of
tennis
3. Publie
disorder

z.

CAPTAIN EASY

3 ·15

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply sllnda for another. In Ibis sample A II
used for the three L'a, X for the two 0'•, etc. Sln1le letten,
apostrophc8, the lenllh and formation of the words ·are Ill
hints. Each day the code letters are dUferent.
~

1 HATE THE WORLD! I
1-l ATE EVERif'80W AND
EVEMAING IN TilE WHOLE

STUPID WORlD· WIDE WORLD!!
'2?

CaYPTOQUOTIS
NMB
WB

USDSDOSUL NM£Z NS PLSQ
•
USLW BZ LPZQXJL GZLWSX 'Q BT

DBZQXJL ?- YGZ

MPOOXUQ

Yeslerdty't Cl'J'Jito\Dete: THE SWEETEST OF ALL
SOUNDS IS THAT OF Till VOICE OF THE WOMAN WE
I.OVE.-JEAN DE LA BRUYERE
(f) 1171 Ki11r .,eaturM Srncliute, htc:.)
I

�I

_s;;ifn;jCf:;;;i"fieds Get Action!'Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!··
. .

'

Will be acf•pttd until t a.m . fOr

NOTICE OF SALE
OF LEADING CREEK
CONSERVANCY
DISTR ICT BONDS

Dly ot.PubiiCIIIOn

RI!GUL-' TIONS

nte

2SiaS
Of
QUALITY

•

Publllhtr reservn t he

~de e med

fhrr•

• • th e pur chase of bonds of the
• Dls tr let In t he aggregate
,"" amount of S2, 12 1,000 authoriZt d

.- by r esolution adopted Marc h 13,

•. 1973.

Th e bonds are Issued for the
purpose of paying costs of

constr ucting a water suppl y,
di str ibut ion and treatment
system .
The bonds are not general
oblig a tion ~ of the District but
will be payable. together with
add itional parity bonds which
mav her eafter be i ssued.
pur suant to the resolution
author iz ing the bonds, solely
from revenues derived from
fees. rates and charges for thl
use of the waterworks system
after provision for the payment
of cost s and expenses of
operation and maintenance
: thereof .

&amp; OltTUAlY
11.50 for 50 word rlllnlm~m.

Each addltlonll word 2c .
ILIND -'OS
Addhlonot 25c Chtrge · per
Advrrtlsement.

Pomeroy .Motor Co.

OF,.C.E NOU•S
1:30 t .m. to 5:00 p.m. Dally

I : JO

a.m .

Sllurdav.

to

12 : 00

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.·
POMEROY, OHIO

Noor

Wanted To Buy

USED parts lor Fraizer Garden
Tractor: phone 915·3907,
Garth Smith. Long Bottom,
Cillo.
PUREBRED SALE - Sixth
3-1 ..31p
Annual W. Va . Polled
Hereford Spring Show and USED boat trailer with 12"
Sale, March 24, 1973 at wheels. Phone 992·6256 altar 5
Jackson Mills State 4· H p. m.
. The bonds Shill be doted the
Camp. Selling 34 bulls and 18
3.&amp;.6tc
• date ot their dtllver{' shall be In
' tht dlmomlnatlari a Sl.OOO each
heifers . For . Information - - - - - - - - - • or may be Issued In fully
write. Jim West!all, Rl. 2, Box OLIJ furniture, ol k tables,
, registered form In thl dt·
115, Spencer, W. va: or call organa, dllhn , clocks, brass
· nominatiOn of 1100 or any
927·210•.
beds or complate households.
multiple thereof , as requested
3·12·5te Write M. 0 . Miller, Rt. 4,
: by the purchaser, shall draw
Pomeroy, Cillo. Phone m.
Interest payable annually on the
1 fir st day of
January of each
6271.
• year commencing on the first WILL MOW lawns In SyracuH :
1-7·t1t
contacl Floyd Diddle or
' day of January next succeeding
brothers or call 992·58•1 after
: the date of the bonds at the rate
A LAWN roller lor 1 Gravely
of live per centum (5 pet .) per
5 p.m.
Tractor: call Ray Williams,
annum . Anyone desiring to do
3·1 ...31p
992·6688.
so may present a bid for said
bonds based upon their bearing I WILL not be responsible lor
3-IHip
a different rate of Interest, but
any debts contracted b{. CLEAN topper , 45c lb. ;
not In eMcess of tight per ctn ·
anyone other than mysel .
tum (8 pet.) per annum ,
Radiators, dean, 2Bc lb. :
Signed : James Edward
pro\llded that where 1 frac·
Brass, 18c lb.; Batteries, 70c;
tlonat Interest rate Is bid suctt
Mnllron, Rt. 2, l'&lt;aclne, Cillo.
Ginseng
S60 lb.: M. A. Hall.
• fraction shall be one -quarter of
3·1... 31p
Reedsville. 378·6249.
• one perctnt or a multiple
' tttereof . Spill r1t1 bids will not
3·9·11C
: be con sidered . Each bid shell be REDUCE excess fluids with -Fluldex,
Lose
weight
with
for the purchase of said bonds It
Dfk· A· Diel capsules at Help Wanted
' not tess than the par value
Nelson Drugs.
thereof .
Said bonds mature on
. 3·1 ...31p MIDDLE·AGED lady to tare
lor an elderly lady: live In : no
January 1 in each of tht years
laundry: good home and
• as follows :
SKIN
disorders?
Try
Toco' Yr. Ami.
Yr. Ami.
wages:
In Letart Falls, Cillo;
Derm Vitamin E Cream, 1260
. 1971 $21 ,000
1989 $37,000
phone 446·WO, Gallipolis.
I
U
per
lube
at
Nelson
Drugs.
. 1978 22,000
1990 39,000
3·13·3tc
3·1•·11P
1979 23,000
1991
.. 1,000
1~80
24,000
1992 43,000
CAR HOP, Apply In person,
i 1981 25,000
1993 ... ooo
Crow's Steak House.
·- 1912 27,000
1994 48,000 KOSCOT KOSMETICS AND
,.. 1983 28,000
1995 50,000
3·8·61C
WIGS. SP'EClALS MONTH·
• 198&lt; 29,000
1996 53,000
BROWN'S
INOE ·
'(
• 1985 31 ,000
1997 55,000
~E.NDENT OISTRIBU · Wanted
: 1986 32.000
1998 58,000
MIDDLEPORT.
TOR,
1987 34,000
1999 61,000
DEAD Stock horses. cattle,
PHONE 992·5113.
1988 36,000
2000 U,OOO
hogs, sheap. Raasonable
~-23· t1C
charge. Call 24.1·5514.
2·28·301C
' Yr. Ami.
' HOOD'S AQUARIUMS: fish
I 2001
167,000
and supplies: new location,
2002 71 ,000
Ash Street, Middleport near For
: 2003 7.. ,000
. 2004 78.000
park: phone 992-5«3.
'• 200S 82.000
H ·lfc 'fRAILER, Brown's Trailer
' 2006 86.000
Park; phone 992-332•.
90,000
: 2007
2·13·1fc
.._ _ _..,
• 2008 95,000
• 20119 · n.ooo
.
' I
''• · 3 ANI5 4 "ricxii.'f furnished and
. 2010 104,000
• 2011 110.000
p~~~n~~~4 . apartments.
'· 2012 115,000
' 2013 1nooo
4·12·1fc
'
Bonds maturing an and afler
• January 1, 1915 , are subject to
2 BEDROOM mobile home:
• red!mpt lon an and after
completely furnished : call
' January 1, 1984, et their par
992·2&gt;141 after 5:30 p.m.
~ value plu~ accrued Interest tD
H ·t1c
• the dat e flud tor redemption .
Furnace Controls
The bonds are payable at the
-UN-F""
u· -:R.-N-IS_H
_E
- 0- --3 - r-oom
Offlcr of the Farmers Home
HUMIDIFIER$
! Adm lnlstrallon, 17 East State
'rf,orlmenl, &gt;1011 Spring Ave.,
• Street, Athens, Ohio, without
orneroy.
J.2·t1t
Hot Water Heaters'
• deduction for us services 11 the

Notice

------

Rent

''HElL"

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

---ONE AND two bedroom mobile

Plumbint
Electrical Work

: District 's paying agent, and are
, Issued under the a"thorltyof tht
• Contervancv Olstrlct Laws of
• Ohio (R.tvlatd Coda Sections

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

; 6101.01 ot soq .J

• Said bids will bt promptly
• considered , end said bonds will
· be sold at not lesa than per and
accrued
lnltrtst to
the
highest bidder offerinG the
11\West lnttrtsl rata 11
992-2448
hereinafter defined . The lowest
Pomeroy,
Interest rete will be determined
....
by calculat ing the tot1l Interest
to thl stated maturity at the
rate
bid
and
deducting REVIVAL still In progrm 11
thtrefrom the premium bid . If
the Rutland Community
t ach or two or mort bids Is fhe
Church at 7:30 p.m. each

o..

hlghesl bid offering tho lownt

lnteresl rete, the bonds will be

awarded on such ant of said
highest bids as Is chosen by lot .

Ail bids must be accompanied
by a bond or check drawn on
and certified by 1 s~iv1nt bank
Cwhlch ban-. must be ont other
than the bidder, If the bidder Ia

Svstem

FOR RENT

GRAY MANOR
APARTMENTS

cylinder,

ne

w:

maMX 3828
ex:tras,

h
P one

-

·

like

J.P.Ifc

series 1500, V·l , standard
tr•nsmlsslon, wide bed, new

• xcell~t condition with
res, •
~·
no rust. Phone 985·3509, Tom
Hayman, Long Bottom, Cillo.
_________J._I3·"P.

Ohio,

whose

IP·

For sale
BUILDINGiolslorsaleaiRock
Springs, Ollio. Close to Meigs
High School with Tuppers
1

This machine is a dr.essmaker

model. Pay balance of $38.50
or pay balance of S6 per ·
month. Call 992-5331 .
2·23.1fc
•

BUY YOUR

FERTILIZER
Now and Getthe Early

DISCOUNT
Bag. Bulk and Liquid Fer.
tilizer, all available now.
Take delivery now from our
area warehouse at Pomeroy .

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy

Hoine &amp; Auto

been

AUTOMOBILE . Insurance
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992·
2'166.
6-15-t!c

-========:....

Sale

------

-:: :.=:=::::=====-#

3·8·61P

HOUSE by owner; 3 or 4
bedrooms, large rec. room ,

large patio, modern kitchen.
fully carpeted ; call 992·524
unlll3 p.m. or 992-3.136 aller 3
p.m.; No Sunday Calls.
3·14·61c

----145 ACRE Farm ; house ,

9
rooms and bath ; large bern
and other oulbulldlngs: two
oil wells : own gas well :
$25,000: call985·3857, Chester.
Ohio.

tl

Phone : 992-3163

Till P.M.
or 992-5844.
After 6 p.m. '

with or without new 12 ft.
factory stake body, 390
englnt, long whtal b111,
power

brakes,

dellverv or to tontul the
volldlly of th e bonds or the
power to lnue them or lht levv
or colletllon ol lht usoasments
for their payment .
THE FARMERS HOME
ADMINISTRATION (FHA) OF
THE
U,NITEO
STATES
DEPARTMENT
OF
A G, R I C U ~ T U R E
HAS
AGREED TO ENTER INTO A
~OAN
AGREEMENT WITH
THE ISSUER., PURSUANT TO
WHICH FH" Wll~ PUR ·
CHASE SAID $2,121,000 OF
'BONOS
PAROFAT
AN PER
IN ·
TERE5T AT
RATE
FIVE
,CENTUM Cl PCT .) PER AN ·
.NUM .
' The bonds will bt delivered on
'or about May t, 1973 . 11 the
'su tt ulful bidder desires
dellverv at' a plate outside lho
•State ol Oh lo, lhe bidder aha.ll

'

~ "U " "IA,Ioot . , flll . •'l

----For

· - -- - -

___ ___

__ ___

..

.

WELL , TO E'ACH
HIS OWN

'•

ITS ~L.Y
NO DIFFERENT

ANt?

1HAN CHEWING
GUM ...

POMEROY
' HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094

606 E. Main

Pomeroy

1

OFFICE SUPPLIES
and

the lar.gest
:~!1~,;~r Heater
Radiator to
Core.
Nathan Biggs • · '
R1dlo_t,or Sptcltllsf _

SM11H ·NELSON .
MOTORs: .I".
C. ._
992'·217•
Pomeroy

FURNITURE
Stop In and see Our
Floor Display.

HOW OO AH GlT
TO TH' "HORSE
AAJ' BROQI...I" ?

I HAPPEN TO
&amp;GOING

THAioJKS. '/0'
ENGLISHMEN

®

THERE-

IS M IGHT~

HOPSPIT TUBLE.-

READY · MIX
CONCRETE .
hoe work,
delivered right to your
tanks, dlt·
proiect. Fast and easy. Free
soli, fill
estimates. Phone 992·3284.
: B&amp;K Ex·
Goegleln Ready · Mix Co..
cavallng . Phone 992·S367,
Middleport, Ohio.
Dick Katr, Jr .
6·30·1fC
9·1·t1C
_S
_E_P_T-IC__
T_A-:
N-:
K:S -=c:L::
IiA
:-N:::ED -~E us ·FOR; Awnings, storm·
REASONABLE rates . Ph. 446· · doors and windows, carports,
4782, Gallipolis. John Ru~ell,
marquees, aluminum siding
Owner &amp; Operolor.
'
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
5·12-Hc

--:--:-::-:-:-::::---:--::C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phore 949·3821
Racln10. Ohio
Crill Bradford

representative.

For

I HOPE YA I::NJOYEO
THA"T so.LAMI AN I

free~

ONION SANc:&gt;WIC'Il
VA HAD FER
L.UNCHJ

e ~ llmates,

phone ChariH
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.'
Johnson and Son. Inc.
J.2.f1c

__

, •·
5·1·tfC
....:....:.._----,-

EXCAVATING, dozer. loader
and backhoe work: sepllc
tanks Installed ; dump lrueks
and lo·boys lor hire : will haul
fill dirt, top soli, limestone
and gravel: call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992·7089:
night phone 992·3525 or 992·
5232 .
2·1l·lfc

Real Estate For Slile

I FIND A PlACf:
. TO PARK !

Real Estate For Sale

HOUSE In lorg Bottom, phone
985·352'1.
6·ll·t1C

Virgil B.

CLELAND
REALTY

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

•oa E. Moln

.JUMP OUT AND

CHE.CK THE 8U~
TE.RMINAL WHILE

O' DELL WHEEL allgn; ;lent
located at Crossroads, Rl. 12•.
complete fronl end service,
tune up and brake servlca:
Wheels balanced elet·
Ir onIcally .
All
work
Reasonable
guaranleed .
rates . Phone 992·3213 or 7•2·
3232.
2·18·t1t

110 Mechank Street
Pomeroy~ Ohio

Pomeroy

•
33 ACRES
Rutland Rl. 1 - 12 a cres
NEW LISTING
under fence. 12 acres
RIVER FRONTAGE - 4
,tillable. Bal . light woods. bedrooms, 2 balhs, gas fur·
Some buildings. 3 bedroom nace , lull basement. Front and
home, new bath, new kit· back porches. Asking $11,000.011
chen. new F.A. furnace . BUT LET'S TALK.
Panel ing . Enclosed pallo.
MIODLEPORT
Cellar. $1 4.500.00.
4
BEDROOMS
Nice
COLONIAL
aluminum sldlna . Fenced
Pomeroy, Close to shopping.
yard,
basement,
stoker
kllchen,
4 furnace. Asking orly $7,500.00.
Beautiful
bedrooms ,
2
baths,
P ... RK IT HERE
basem ent. Por ches. Gas
TRAILER SPOT - $2500.011
F.A. heat. Carpeted. GOOD and 97 ocraa with gas well. All
COND'ITION. $17,500.00.
minerals. $16,500.011 for all.
RACINE
NEW HOME
Beautiful 2 story home. All
3 BEDROOMS - Nice kllthen,
new kitchen, 5 bedrooms. 1'/2 dining, utility room , Chester
baths, hardwood floors ,
Townsh ip. $16,000.00 or we'll
basement. Garage and other
negollale.
bu ildings . Beaullful lot.
NEAR TOWN
$17,000 00
4 BEDROOMS - Nearly an
ID ACRES
acre of land. Full basement.
Moslly level. Jusl off Rt. 33.
Qak floors. Sl2.000.00. Maybe
Buildings. Home has 3 less.
bedrooms, bath, dining R.,
POMEROY
new F.A. furnace and hot
4 BEDROOMS - Nice modern
water tank . Good blacktop
kitchen . Full basemen! with
rood . 58,900.00.
shower, lull bath up. A lovely
MIDDLEPORT
home lor only $11 ,500.00.
Large 5 bedroom home.
YOU SAIO IT
Close to shopping . Nlee i LARGE BRICJ: - 7 rooms,
kitchen, dining R., l'h baths.
bath, large basement, large
front porch , garage lor several
2 glassed porches. Garage
and carport. In good c_on.
cars. 2 acres of land. Reduced
dillon. $12,800.00.
. .. to 118.000.00.
RENTALS&amp; STORAGE
Pomeroy - Several lots. Out
WE HAVE THE PROPERTY,
of floods . On paved street.
WOULD LIKE TO MEET
All
utilities . Sewage .
SOMEONE WITH
THE
58,200.00.
MONEY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
HELEN L. TEAFORD
BROKER
GORDON B. TEAFORD
992·2259
.
ASSOCIATES
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
If no answer 992·2568
992·3325
or 985-4209
992·3615

I

AT .104 W. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

Dodge Station Wagon, will
3·13·&gt;11C
pass Inspection, S250; phone
992 7523
HOUSE ond21rallar lots: phone
·
·
3.13.o11c
992·5693.
3·13,&gt;11c
1962 CHEVY II; phone992·3850.
3·13·31C SMALL private apartment:
men only :
complalely
sel)l!rate
from
house;
utilities
1966 OLOS Toronado ; lull
furnished
:
call
992·3811
bepower ; alr·condllloned; low
tween•p .m. ond5p.m.or 992·
mileage; phone 992·5367.
3134 otter 6 p.rp .
J.1J.5tc
3·13·61p
--'---·---IN.CHEVROLET
'door
V8
. '•
• . •
oulomallc; phone 992·3992.
Sale
3·13·31&lt; MODERN
WALNUT style
stereo·radlo,
AM·FM radio, 4
1970 FORD Falrlane 500; tor
speaker sound avstem, 4
more Information call 742·
speed automallc cNnger.
4676 or see Rolland Searles,
Boloneo $68,33. Use our
Rulland, 0 .
;pay expense of dellnry at Juch
budget
!arms. Call 992·708.!.
3·13·3fp .
.other pUtce .
3·8·61c 3 YEAR OLD mare : very genlle
, The rloht Is reserved tO relect
with children : leaving state,
bids.
EARLY AMERICAN stereo·
must sell : phone 985·35&gt;49
~E ... DING CREEK
BuSin~ Opportunities
radio, AM..fM radio, • speed
CONSERVANCY
alter 3:30 p.m.
DISTRICT OWN your own business: • to 6
automatic i:hanger, 4 speaker
3·13·31c
hours dolly: smolllnvestmenl
sound system. Balance $79.56.
By : Jttk W. CriSp, buys necusary . Inventory ;
Use our budget terms. Call &gt;1011 BALES mixed hay, 60c a •
Prl lldtnt
call
1·61•·NH397.
992·1085.
bale . phone 843-2963.
Tel. No. IUA-,.2 ·5551
·101c
3·11
741-4211
3·&amp;.6fc
,
,
,
_
Arnold Grate
Rutland
3·13·31c
..
,_
_,
C3 J 14, 21 , II,· 3t
U-------~~~~--~~~

.,

992-2550'

Big Bend Bargains

standard, low mileage, excellent condition, 6 new tires, HOUSE off Rl. 554, SSO a month:
phone 992-5693.
new muffler : $1,395; '63

Ul hi, OM

'IOU DONT SMOKE
UK£; scw.E OF
1HE MEN.

THA~ KS, ANNIE! THIS SUIT Of ARMOR'S
SO Hf AVY, I COULDN'T Mf&lt;KE IT UP

BY Ml'SflF!

~

J

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
!.Bombay
Zora.

·Total Discount Selling

DICK TRACY

AND VOUR
TEAR GAS
aEJI.R , TOO.

audience
(3 wds.)
2'1. "Apostle
to the
Gentiles"
28. Scoffing
remarks
Zl. Wee bit
SO. Eques-

AMANDA PANDA

AF~IENDL'/
5QUIRR-E.L.

CUMBWUP
IN THE

TR~f ... ;~~-

Furniture . .. . Living Room Suites. Dinette
Sets. Tilt-Back Chairs, Love Seats, Pillows.
Pictures. Rugs, .all sizes; Clothing, ·Shoes,
Jewelry, Sjlverware. 8- Track Tape1, Tape
Players. Cookware. Pa,int. Pan &amp; Roller Sets,
Power Saws, Power Drills, Electric Clocks
and Lots of Other Goodies.

WAID HA YMAt4-BOB CUMMINGS

-.

...AND JoKINGL'I

Unocramblelheoe fiXIr Jumbles,

ene letter to oa&lt;h oquare, to

DROPPED THR£~
ACORNS ON

ME!

form four ordinary word1.

tJ
I I

Yesterday's A111wer

21. That's It !
30. One of the
(2 wds. ) .
Aleutians
22. Viva El
31. Climb
Cordobes! 32. Wotch
23. Thrice ·
over
(mus.)
33. Vogue
:U. Ninny
34. Sullt
241. Time in·
35. Parched
tervening
36. Angered
28. Bishop's
38. African
~eaddress .
beast

"

IJARUG

11/UCHAN!

I
I I

. GEDDUR •

II

III
I to

Now arronre the clr&lt;led totten
form the surprloe anower, aa
I
:==·=~·~:::=~~~~~~·~·u~r~re~•:leol:,by the above etrtoon.

_

._I

V" ~

..:..::l'lil=..
-==-=•=.::•=•=•==-:___----~1

Yellertla1~•

D r I I J.

(~wen t.-orrowJ

1•""'1.,, IIOOK ANNOY MOSQUI aLITHI

trian's ·

e-,
t'

r-&lt;1 I

A Better Buy
Shop Us For ...

able
( 2 wds.'l
6. Feed a
Cache
Type of
ftre
flu
7. Measure
Gusto
8. Snakes
13. Great per·
9. Dele's
former
opposite
(2wds.)
10. Admired
15. Vietperson
14. Speak to
namese
holiday
privately
(2wds.)
. 16. Likes
(2 wds.l
11. Actress
11, Ditch(var.)
Arlene
18. Business
lB. - cord
trans18. Last
acllon
''reina" of
11. Whit
Spain
15. Greatly
21. Man's
pleased,
nickname

as an

CATCH •••

RIGHT HERE!

JltlJJMJ13~;~*••UJ....,,_ :

4. Adage
5. Fashion·

astrian

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

power

proving opinion will be lur. steering, r91111h tires, air·
nlshed bv the District to the condllfontd, •7,300 miles:
sueceulul blddor without IX· Harold Brewer. Long Bottom,
pen so ond will bo Jlrlnttd on the phona 915. 355•.
bonds at the eipenst of the
Di strict . Complete transcript of
3-.t-tfc
proceed ings ana the printed
bonds will be furnished bV the
uAVERICK
Iinde
Dlstrltt, together with ter · 1970 ''""'
• 6 cy
r
tlflcatrs showing no nt igallon
pend ing or thrtlttned at the
time of th e delivery , to enloin

GIT OUT

. OF THAT DADBUR!\1
BED A.!\1' HANG UP THEM
DADBURN CLOTHES

ALL WEAlHER ·
ROOANG AND
CONSTRUCTION '
'-·

PHONE~

MATERIALS CO.
773·5554
MMon, W. Va.

ELNA and While Sewing
Machines ... service on all
makes. Reasonable rates .
The Sewing Center, Mid·
dleporl, Ohio.
11·16·11c

Real

_,

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

oP.,naTII5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E.,Maln, Pomaroy, 0.

.

y~rs·

Buill to Your 'Specs'
Delivered lo Job Site

..

------

"

· ' r r ' ·· 1 r.

"•.

~~==::::::;====:;-;::==::::::;:;;=;;==]-;:==~=:=:====l
ASK US ABOUT
Hava your home buiH by
EXPERT
PRE·FABRICATED
custom lulldtrs. Our.
e•rpenters hiVe 20
:'Wheel Alignment
experienet
In bulldong
\\000 TRUSSES
homes In Mtlgs County.
'5.55

larger.
992.2789.
Plain water. Size h acre and
2-25·301p : . . - -·- ..,.----- -..,
STEREO 8 lradt. Must sell at
once. 1973 8 track stereo In
lovely walnut console. Take
over paymenls of $7.55 per
month•or pay $101 .50. Call 992·
5331.
2·23.flc
On Most American Car_s
1972 ZIG·ZAG Sewing Machine.

WHY WAIT

..

JU6HAID !!

Busm·ess Servi
,' .'ces

9._
POMEROY
ALUMINUM Car top boats, 10,
6illl Jack W. Carsey,Mgr. WILL trim or cut trees, clean
12 and 13 II. Klngobury Rd .. L _ _ _.:_PI1.:_0.:_n.:_e_992
:.::..:·2:.:1:8..1' -- ' out basements, attics, etc.
Phone 949·3221.
Co. Rd . 18. Phone 992·6256
J·ll -301c
alter 5 p. m.
42" KELVINATOR Electric
3-8·301c
Range, $1011, 1ikenew: contact PAINTING , Masonry work :
Ray Laudermllt, Mason, W. tree estimate; call 773-5580.
Va ., or phone 773·5613J. J. 1c
3·7·30ip
1 6
NEW SOFA BEDS, Your choice
while they last 549.95.
Dozers, large
Pomeroy Recovery, 622 E. ONE 3 year old registered EXCAVATING.
and
small;
Backhoes
and
Main Sl.
Suffolk ram ; $50 ; phone 949· Loaders on track and llres: .
3·8·6fp 3073.
Dump trucks - Lo· boy
3·ll ·61c Servi ce: Septic tanks In ·
NEW FOAM to 1111 rour old - - - - - - -- slalled ;
George (Bill)
cushions, standard s ze suite. BRIGHT green hay 1 never been Pullins: phone 992·2478.
only $9.95.
Pomeroy wei; phone 992 . 3658 .
__ _ _ __ _ _ _2_ ·9·11C'
Recovery. 622 E. Main St.
J.9·61c
3-8·301p
HARRISON'S TV Service and
KNAPP
Shoes.
7
styles
on
sale
Service Calls: phone 992·2522.
UPHOLSTERY 'material s,
in March; Bob Hysell, 992·
2·9·1fc
regularly $3.95 only S1.95.
5324.
.
.
- -Also remnanls . Pomeroy
J.9.1fc SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Recovery, 622 E. Main St.
service, all makes. 992·2284.
3·8·301P - -- - - -- - The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
CORN : ph ore 985·4211.
UPHOLSTERY material s; :
3·9·121c Aulhorlzed Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Nylon prints, cotton prints,
3·29, tfc
velvets of all kinds . Pomeroy MAYTAG washer. one glider.
Minnesota Sewing Machine ; :.:-:-'-::.. --=--=-'"'·"""'
· .: :--.,.-= = ...
Recovery, 622 E. Main St.
phone 949-3718.
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
3·8·301p
.
3·12·31p SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·
UPHOLSTER your own fur ·
ED, REPAIRED.STEWART,
MILLER
SANITATION,
nllure. Foam cushions: any r
OHIO.
PHONE
662·3035.
size. Colton, burlap, swivel
1Q.,..t1c
beses, zipper, webbing. welt.
Bill's Army-Navy
,
.
.
.
-Pomeroy Recovery. 622 E.
Surplus and
Main St.
BEAT the rush! Gel your
Store
Department
lawnmower and IIIIer luned·
3-8·301~
up now ; Small Engine Repair
Shop on Third St .. Mason. W.
85
North
Court
St.
'COAL, Llmeslore, Excelsior
Va
.
Athens, Ohio
Salt Works, E. Main St. ,
J.6.JOic
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891.
·
4·12·1fC
Hours: 9 to 5:30 daily exeept
Estate For
Monday &amp; Friday to 9 p.m.
SINGER automatic sewing
2
NEW
3 bedroom homes: 1 with
This Sunday 12 noon to 5:30
machine; like new In walnut
basement, 1 without ; 2 car
far your convenience.
cabinet. Makes design sill.
garages, 1 acre lots : located
ches, •lg·zag•. bultonholes,
at Rock Springs behind Meigs
Sleeping bags, regularly
blind hems, overcasts, etc ..
Co. Fairground. Will trade or
S85. Call · Ravenswood. 273·
$9.95,
now
$7.95
:
Electrical
help finance: also 5 good
9S21 or 273·9893.
tools "'low as 510.95 ; Wright
building lots .walt( and
·
1·ll·tfe
tools 10 pd. off: Llneoln
disposal Installed: Charles H.
Welders S92.50: Cordurov &amp;
Cornell, AlheiiS 593·7034 or
(2) PAINT DAMAGE. 1972 Zig·
Denim Jeans $4.91 &amp; 15.95: 8
593·5667 or 992-7613.
Zag Sewing Machines. Still fn
track tapes · hit tunes, S2.91;
2·11-ltc
original cartons . No at.
specials on clolhlng and
tacflments needed a$ our
·House- FOR~SAI.E: 1i• Brlcksnoes.
controls are bulll·ln. Sews
: sJreet. Pomeroy, Cillo: brick
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
house , 3 bedrooms, excellent
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
loc~tlon, dose to school and
monograms, and blind hem For Sale or Trade
city; contact Lou Osborne or'
stitch. Full cash price $38.50 1972 FORD Gran Torino, 2 dr. call 992·5898.
or budget plan available.
HT, low mileage, In new
11·26·t1c ·
Eleclro Hygiene Co. Phone
condition and loaded with
992-7755.
extras, A-c. AT, PS. PB, AM· 3 BEDROOM home. living room
3·1Hic
FM radio, plus; phone 742· and dining room carpeted . ·
31 S.4.
New foreed a ir furnace .
(3) VACUUM cleaners new 1972
3·11 ·61C
Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, phone
model. Complete with ell
992·2071.
cleaning tools. Small paint
3·6·12tc
damage In shipping. Will take Mobile Homes For Sale
$27 cash or budget plan REDUCED pri ces on 1972 FOR SALE by owner, 3
available. Phone 992·7755,
mobile homes in stock; check
bedroom home, total electric,
Eleclro Hygiene Co.
with us before you buy : West
full
size basement, 1112 belhs,
3·1Htc
Breeze Mobile Home Sales,
extra 75 x 1011 lot whlth loins
Athens, phone 59J.6736.
property. Excellent condition.
J.6·121c
MIXED
hay
;
phone
949·3839
or
Pri ced LOW. New Haven, ca II
949·588.c.
882·2762. .
3·14·31C O.:ASH paid lor all makes and
3·1J.6tc
models of mobile homes .
35 ACRES ; lots or buy what you
Phone area code 614·423-9531. 60 ACRE farm 1'/2 mile from
want: on Chesler water:
4·13.1fc
Rutland on New Lima Rd.,lor
more
Information eontact
phone
992·524
1111
3
p.m.
or
992·3.136 alter 3 p.m.
f
Rolland
Searles alter 5 p. m.
3·1Htc

2 Furnlshld Apt.1 with new
furniture, with or without
utilities. Both hove 1 or 2
bedrooms. No Pel$.

eo;::~;octedlngs lor thlllssuo 1969 FORD R•nger lion F·350:

Cleveland,

- - - -- -

I EHiclency Apt. with new
furniture, 111 utilities paid.

Revenue -

hovo bean ltktn under tho
supervision of Squire, sondors
a. oompuy. Bond Attorneys,

1970 YAMAHA 175, $250; phone
742·6834.
3·2·t1C

Middleport, o.

sueh bonds In aeeordonee with 1968 GMC 'h·lon pltkup lruek,

Waterworks

-=::::=======-""1

r

Auto Sales

bidder will rece ive and PlY for

Bids shtll be sealed tnd
endorstd " Bid lor Leading
Crook Conservancy Dlstrlet

ONE bedroom apartments:
ldaal lor couples: phone 992·
524 or 992·3.136.
3·1Htc

For Sale

\

thol , 11 lhe bid Is occepled. the

the terms and provll iOnS Of thiS
notice, .or rorfelt tht same as
liquidated damages in the event
Slid condition Is 1101 fulfilled .

homaa In Middleport, adults
only. Phone 992-5592.
3·11·11C

evening with Rev . Amos
Tllllt, Rebersburg. Pa .• the
speaker.
Everyone
Is
welcome. .
J.ll·•lc

o bonk) poyable to tho District, 1972 HONDA 500 motorcycle, 4
In the amount of one per cent of
the par amount of the bonds
herein offered, upon condition

Polleroy
Motor Co.

1t11 CHEVROLET
$3495
Caprice Sport Sedan, less than 15,0011 miles &amp; spotless
Imide &amp; oul. 5 new white·WIII tires tramlerred from 7J
new cor. Comlortron air, &gt;1011 v.a engine, power steering &amp;
disc frl. brakes, automatic trans., power windows &amp; door
locks. green vinyl roof with med. green In color, radio &amp; R.
seat speaker . . . Sharp.
1970 REBEL
$1495
American Motors St. Wagon, only 31,500 miles by original
local owner, good tires. grn. spotless vinyl inter ior, dark
green finish , 6 cyl. engine, std. trans.
1970 PONTIAC
.
,
$2395
Flrebird ESprit. Local 1 owner car, 350 V.8 envlne, P.
&amp;leering &amp; automatic trans., AM.FM radio, like new while
Jettered !Ires, dark brown finish , bucket seat &amp; blk . vinyl
trim . A sharp one. Raally loaded.

right to tdlt o..-eiect any 1d1
obl•l'tlanal. The
.publisher will nat be responsible
•,
Seal ed bids wil l be receivtd ~ or ·,.,ore than one Incorrect
'. by th e und ers igned , President Insertion.
:.- of
t he
Le ad tna
Cree k .
RUES
: Conser 'llan cy District , here in
.. For want Ad service
- referred to 115 the Distri ct , at 5 cents per Word ont inllrtlar.
· the of.f ice of the Leading Creek
Minimum ChlrQt7SC
.
Con se r v anc y Dis tr ict , St1t e
12 cent~' per word
_ Route 12.tl tMaln St., Rutland, cQnsecutlve Insertion s.
·- Ohio 45775, until ten o'cloc k . \1 cents ptr word six con
• "' a.m ., E a stern Standard Time In secutivt Insertions.
·~ Otllo, on the 5th day of April,
2.5 Per Crrit Discount on pall
::_ 11'73, at wh ich t im e the bids will eds and ads paid wlttUn to da,vs
, .. be publ icly opened and read, for
CARD OF TH-'NKS ,

~~

BARNEY

.

Fn.und
WANT Awi."
FOUND In Hart1ord, shaggy
INI'O.MATION
DEAD ~ INIS •
white poodl e wear ing red
.S P.M. DIV BofOrt Publltallon :
collar. Phone 882·2592.
Monday Oeadtlne ·t e.m.
3·12·31C
can cella,tlon - Correct ion• ·

.

r

I{ I

POSiUon
34. Greek
letter
31. Stage fan
38. Tint
40. Accustom
· 41. Beneath
. 42. Toned

down, as
a color
DOWN
1. Beyond
Arthur of
tennis
3. Publie
disorder

z.

CAPTAIN EASY

3 ·15

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply sllnda for another. In Ibis sample A II
used for the three L'a, X for the two 0'•, etc. Sln1le letten,
apostrophc8, the lenllh and formation of the words ·are Ill
hints. Each day the code letters are dUferent.
~

1 HATE THE WORLD! I
1-l ATE EVERif'80W AND
EVEMAING IN TilE WHOLE

STUPID WORlD· WIDE WORLD!!
'2?

CaYPTOQUOTIS
NMB
WB

USDSDOSUL NM£Z NS PLSQ
•
USLW BZ LPZQXJL GZLWSX 'Q BT

DBZQXJL ?- YGZ

MPOOXUQ

Yeslerdty't Cl'J'Jito\Dete: THE SWEETEST OF ALL
SOUNDS IS THAT OF Till VOICE OF THE WOMAN WE
I.OVE.-JEAN DE LA BRUYERE
(f) 1171 Ki11r .,eaturM Srncliute, htc:.)
I

�•

•

12 ~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .; March 14, 1973

::~:~:::-.:::::::~::;.:!2::::;::::::::::~::::::~~:::::::::::::::::

WALK~UT September
needed for 2 TEACHERS
IRONTON, Ohio (UPI) Teachers at the Dawson·
Bryant Sehoul District
peewee teams; one pony walked
MLT class
off the job

Manag~rs

POW~

gaunt,· cheerful

today

teams in the age 9 through 12
level.
'
The league will hold its
second meeting of 1973 next
Monday evening at 7 in Mid·
dleport town hall . Several
iniportant matters are to be
reviewed, including a prop 0sal
to begin scheduled play earlier
than in the past. Everyone
interested in the summer
recreation program is invited.
Persons
interested
in
managing a team are urged to
Holzer Medical Center
DISCHARGED - Paula telephone May at 992·2788.
Thomas, Judy Young, Dakota
Laudermilt, Jasper Wilson,
Ollie Hensley, Randle Peoples,
Mary Blevins, Wanda Malone, .
Geraldine Hale, Carrie Taylor,
Eurana Thomas, Lois Roberts,
Lemma Niday, Raymond
Mullen, Jon Miller, Nora
Knotts, Doris Johnson,
Katherin HyseU, Unda Fyffe,
Robert Fleming,
Ryan Fox, Myrtle Erwin, Youngstown, president ol Ohio
William Cantrell, Jason Retired Teachers' Association,
Barricks and Ralph AUbright. will be the guest speaker,
BIRTHS - Mrs. Jay March 31, for the Meigs
Osborne, Oak Hill, a daughter ; Retired Teachers luncheon
Mrs. Glenn Young, Bidwell, a meeting.
daughter; Mrs. Roy Sprague,
Mr. Fleming, an interesting
Gallipolis, a daughter; Mrs . and witty speaker, will bring a
Floyd Clary, Proctorville, a wealth of information pertinent
daughter, and Mrs. Melvin to slalf and national activities,
Massie, Thunnan, a son.
inclu·ding
impending
legislature pertaining to
pensions, taxes, and related
subjects.
The meeting, originally set
for March 17 , has been
Tonight &amp; Thursday
rescheduled
for March 31,
March 14 &amp; 15
12:30 at the Trinity Church,
NOT OPEN
Pomeroy. Reserva'.ions for the
F rlday &amp; Saturday
luncheon may be made with
March 16 &amp; 17
Mrs. Anna Hilldore, Syracuse,
ULZANA'S RAID
or Lucille Smith, Chester, on or
(Technicolor)
Burt Lancaster, Bruce
before Tuesday, March 27.
Tony May, president of the
Middleport Boys' League
Assn ., said today .managers
still are needed for two peewee
and one pony baseball team.
The peewee teams are for
boys age six through eight.
Pony players are aged 13
through 15. Milford Hysell has
been signed to manage the
Mets. one of Middleport's four

when oegotiatioos '•over
unresolved grievance&amp;"
broke down with the Board of
Education. 1
The wal"f.&gt;ut Idled 83
teachers an~ gave some
2,000 student~ an unexpected
vacation. Th~ir action closed
classes In the district's high
school and four elementary
schools . .

Annual spring

meeting held
President of
ORTA to speak at HM Center

here March 31

MEIGS THEATRE

Da\llson. Richard Jaeckel.

Joaquin Martinez.
!GPl

THE INCREDIBLE TWO
HEADED TRANSPLANT

Holzer Medical Center today
was host for the annual spring
meeting of the business
education teachers of the
southern six counties of the
Southeastern District of Ohio,
which include Gallia, Jackson,
Lawrence, Meigs, Scioto, and

Pike Counties.
The teachers were greeted in
the French Five Hundred
Room of the Center by Mrs.
Aven D. Lusk, chairman of the
business teachers of this
section. Mrs. Lusk is coor·
dinator of cooperative office
education at Gallia Academy
High School. Robert J. Fan·
ning, vice president of
professional service at the
center, gave a brief summary
of the organizational structure
of the hospital and clinic before
the teachers were taken on
guided tours of.the offices and
facilities of the complex.
Arrangements for the
meeting were made by Mrs.
Rosie Ward, secretary of the
executive vice-president, Hugh
P. Kirkel and Mr. Fanning.

!Technicolor)

Bruce Oern,

Pat

Priest,

Casey Kasen .
!GPl
Show starts at 7 p.m.

MARRIAGE LICENSE
Ronnie Vance, 21, Albany,
Rt. 2, and Nancy Joan Dixon,
18, Albany, Rt. 2.

Vur
'Wide-cJlwake
'Wide-r9pen Voor
Policy
More than a word . More tllnn ou r smiles. Our ti me.
The widl!-nwake bank ha s ti me f o1' you and the eoge rness
to Bc r ve yo u best.

ASit'DIVORCE
Four suits for divorce were
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Tuesday. They
were by Brenda K. Jeffers,
Middleport, vs. John R. Jef.
fers, Pomeroy; Pleasant A.
Ellis, Middleport, vs. Alice V.
Ellis, Flat Rock, North
Carolina, each charging gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty; Brenda S. Fry,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, vs. Ronald L.
Fry , same address, extreme
cruelty, and Charles E. Baxter,
Pomeroy, vs. Irene Baxter,
Williamstown, W. Va., gross
neglect of duty.

IS

filled

Dr. Herman L. Koby, Dean
of Rio Grande College, today
announced that no more ap·
plications can be accepted for
the next Medical ' Laboratory
Technicians (MLT) class,
which will begin in September, .
1973.
The MLT progr~ is of two
years duration, and is operated
cooperatively by Rio Grande
College and the Holzer Medical
Center of Gallipolis. A person
completing the program is
awarded the Associate ·of
Science degree by the college
and, following a registry
examination, is registered a
Medical Laboratory
Technician by the American
Society
of
Clinical
Pathologists.
All members of the first
graduating class recently
passed
the
registry
examination with average
scores of 120 compared with
national average of 112 out of a
possible 200 points. Ninety.
three points were required to
pass the examination.
Ken Myers,' chairman of the
Division of Natural Sciences
and college director of the
program, indicated that the
large number of highly
qualified applicants has forced
early closure of applications.

Commissioners
will consider
,
helpzng museum
A request for financial help
was made by members of the
Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society of the Meigs
County Commissioners
Tuesday morning.
C. E. Blakeslee, speaking for
the group, asked the com·
missioners to "try to help with
expenses in the amount of
$5,000." No action was taken,
although the commissioners
agreed to consider the request.
Attending were Charles R.
Karr, Robert Clark, Warden

men

BEE TIME SET
The annual Meigs County
Spelling Bee to be held at the
Salisbury Elementary School
Thursday night will start at
7:30 p.m., rather than at 8,
Mrs . Greta Suttle , county
school supervisor who is
chairman of the event, an·
nounces . Fourteen finalists
from as many schools will be
competing for the county title.

The wide-tttl!ttke brmk
mnke.s itttl/..1'()

including 10 in Laos.
Flynn was followed off the
plane by Navy Lt. Cmdr. John ·
R. McCain III, the son of
retired Adm. John s. McCain,
who was commander in chief of
the Pacific forces at th~ height
of the Vielham war.
The younger McCain, 36,
walked fNm 'the plane with a
noticeable limp and graying
hair. He paused for about 15
seconds to chat with his
father 's successor, Adm. Noel
Gayler, and then limped to the
bus where he climbed on
unassisted.

performed

magnificently . They wel'e first
class soldiers, they were first

Market Report

class citizens."
The release leaves 147 known
U. S. POWs still in Indochina,

SERVICE SET
HARTFORD - Funeral
services for -Charles E. (Pete)
Fields, 81, who died Monday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
will be held at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Foglesong Funeral
Home. Officiating will be Tom
Clarke and Richard MctCleery.
Burial will be in Hartfnrd Hill
Cemetery. Friends may· call at
the funeral home . any time
alter. 2 pm. today.
ITEMS STOLEN
Items valued at $160 were
taken some time between
March 7 and 14 from a 1965
Comet parked on the Claude
Miller property in Chteshire.
Bill Jones of Middleport
Tuesday night reported the
theft of two tires and w'heels, a
set of mag rims, a custom
steering wheel and ge;ar shift
knob to the Gallia County
sherUf's department.

PLATES COMING
License plates will g&lt;l on sale
Friday at Simon's Pic k·A·Pair,
Pomeroy, between th" hours of
9:30 a.m. and 4::Jo p.m .,
Monday through Friday and
from 9 a.m. until · noon on
Saturday.
·

GALLIPOLIS , OHIO
Saturday, March 10,1973
Sales Report of
Ohio VaUey Livestock Co.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 36 to
37; 220 to 250 lbs. 37.50 to 38.85;
Light 28 to 34.50; Fat Sows 30 to
34.50; Stags 26 Down; Boars 27
to 30; Pigs 15 to 28; Shoats 2fi to
38.50.
CATTLE -Steers 38 to 47;
Heifers 34.50 to 45 ; Baby Beef
45 to 66.50; Fat Cows 31 to 35;
Canners 21 to 34 ; Bulls 36 to
41.50; Milk Cows 225 to 505.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
68.10; Secoods 60 to 66.75;
Medium 55 to 61.50; Com. &amp;
Hvs. 52 to 64; Culls 50 Down .
BABY CALVES-33 to 97.50.
PT. PLEASANT
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
Saturday, March 10, 1973
HOGS - 175 to 220 38 to ~9.25;
Heavies 33 to 38; Li~hts 27 to
34; Fat Sows 32 to 35; Boars 27
to 29.50; Pigs 10 to 24.
CAlTLE - Steers 33 to 36;
Heifers 31 to 37; Fat Cows 32 to
35; Canners 29 to 32; Bulls 29 to
47.50; Stock Cows and Calves
350 to 470 ; Stock Steers 55 to 60;
Stock Heifers 44 to 49.50; Stock
Steer Calves 55 to 62.50; Stock
Heifer Calves 47 to 52.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
74.50; Seconds 73.25; Medium
67.50 to 69.75; Common &amp;
Heavies 6&gt;.75 to 67.&gt;0; Culls 60
to 65.
LAMBS - 32:50.

Ours, commissioners, and

Most ~ the men appeared to
be in good p)lysical condition
although thin and pale. The two
exceptions were McCain, who
was shot down on Oct. 26, 1967,
and Air Force Capt. Hubert C.
Walker, 31, of Tulsa, Okla.
Walker, moving vety slowly
under his own power, was
escorted off the plane by a

General Tel's
Albany phone
job underway
ALBANY - Construction of
a major cable addition south·
west of Albany is under way,
General Telephone Co. of Ohio
announced today. Kenley R.
Krinn, Athens district com·
mercial manager, said the new
facilities will upgrade present
services and provide for future
growth in the area .
"This $49,600 project, to be
completed by year-end, also
will rearrange existing
facilities for more · efficient
utilization of cables and lines
serving the southwe.sl portion
of !~exchange," Krinn added.
Where possible the new cable
will be buried . The use of
buried cable enhances the
landscape and reduces service
outages due to severe weather
conditions and automobile
mishaps, he said. The Albany
exchange serves
1,204
telephones in a 90.8 square mile
area of Athens, Meigs and
Vinton counties.

News

.,
0

medic.
The senior man on board the
third Cl41, Air Force Col.
David W. Winn, ch011e to step
off his plane in the ' Olght
coveralls worn by American
pllbts instead of the blue outfits
given the other POWs by the
North VIetnamese.
"You brought us holne with
honor and we hope to serve you
well," Winn said. "To' borrow
from Keats, freedom is happiness and happiness 'Is
freedom. That Is all we need to

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Pleasant Valley H01pltal
DISCHARGES: Harold
Bush, Sr., Gallipolis Ferry;
Steven Crllow, Leon; Mrs.
Larry
Hensley,
Point
Pleasant: Mrs. Paul Rawlins,
infant, Leon; Mrs. James
Ferguson, Point Pleasant;
Harry Stamper, Sr., Lesage;
Angela Whittington, Buffalo;
Mrs. Vernon Arnold, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Rand Utchfleld, Point
Pleasant; Patricia Frum,
Gordon
Kiscart,
Point
Pleasant; Howard Bumgard·
ner, New Haven; Kenneth
McMillan, Point Pleasant, and
Mrs. Vivian Blatt, Lakin.

vation.

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One of the prisoners had his
wile waiting here for him.
Roberta Stafford, wife of Navy
Cmdr. Hugh A. Stafford, 38,
flew· to Clark from Hong Kong
where she lives to be on band
for her husband's arrival. Air
Force officials said Mrs.
Stafford chose to greet her
husband privately in the base
hospital rather than greet him
on the flight line.

(Continued from page 1)
Wounded .Knee, a tiny hamlet on this Oglala Sioux reservation.
The two s1des agreed to another'parley today to seek a peaceful
solution, but government spokesmen left no doubt they intend to
settle the matter one way or another.
The govenunent strengthened the blockade of the village by
moving in 15 armored personnel carriers and increasing manpower at roadblocks to 300. WhUe terming the occupallan an
"insurrection," a govenunent spokesman said there were no
immediate plans to move in on the Indians. Members of the
American Indian Movement (AIM) vowed Tuesday not to lay
down arms or quit their J~y occupation of this armed encampment unW the _government l'ellpOIIded· fllwrlbly to
demands to replace the elected Indian officlals on the reser.

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Death

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
T~~

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Shop Weekdays 9:30 to 5 PM. Open Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 9 PM

prohibited if the jury iound the
existence of one or more
mitigating factors such as
youth of the defendant, mental
incapacity or the commission
of the crime under duress.
If his proposal becomes law,
the _President said, "the only
question considered , germane
in a murder case, for example,
would be whether the defendant knew whether he was
pulling the trigger of a gun. "
"Questions such as the
existence of a mental disease
or defect or whether the
defendant requires treatment
or deserves imprisonment
would be reserved for consideration at the time of sen-

HAND INJURED
The Pomeroy E·R squad was
called to the Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes at 4:38p.m. Tuesday for
Chris
Hooker who suffered a
etl.\'11.
hand injury when he caught it tencing ."
~···
The President proposed a
in an air conditioner. He was
series
of tough, new penalties
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital , treated and released. for narcotics criminals, par·
ticularly for pushers of heroin
and morphine.
Drug-pushing offenses would
POMEROY, OHIO
DEMS TO MEET
be
divided into two categories
The regular
monthly
meeting of the Democratic -those involving four ounces
.
Member or Fed eral Rese rve System
On Fndays Our Drive-In Window is Open 9 a.m\ lo 7 p.m.
party wiU be held Thursday at or less of the drug and those
(Continuously),
'
7:30 p.m. at the Episcopal involving a greater amount.
no.ooo Mu:imum Insurance tor Each Depositor
"For second offenders who
Parish House, Pomeroy. All
democrats are w:ged to attend. are convicted of trafficking in
more than four ounces, I am
proposing a mandatory sent·
ence of life Imprisonment
without parole," Nixon said.
"For those with a prior
felony narcotic conviction who
are convicted of trafficking in
less than four ounces, my
proposed legislation provides a
mandatory prison term of 10
years to' life imprisonment."
Punislunent for first offenders would be less - five to 15
years for trafficking in less
COMPLETELY tNSTALLEO
than four ounces and 10 years
WAL L f O WALL
.
to life for pushing larger
Wilh Hea• y 'Foam Rubber Pad
amounts.
, "These are very harsh
ALL
Includes : 12'x15' living Rm
measures, to be applied within
9'x12 ' Bedroom
FOR
vety rigid guidelines and
3'xl2' Hall
ONLY
providing only a minimum of
Quality 50 1 nylon carpeting with heavy 'foam rubber pad. expert' lack less
sentencing discretion to judInstallation . Choice ol color s. All w ork guaranteed. 'see Wendell Gra te for
ges," Nixon said. "But circum·
·
this buy. or free estimate on any carpet installation.
stances
warrant
such

Farmers Bank &amp;

" Our

(Continued from page I)

All ba nks are big on money-so nre we. But we're j ust
us big on se rvice. If our te llers can't answe r n question,

fee l free to consult uny of our officers. Our co s y-goi n~r
office r!! nrc ready with fmnnciul counsel. to help you make
hi ~· dec isions Ol' plan for ·you1· future. We huve t he time to
let you take your t ime. We know how much it matters.
So wh ether }rou bonk wit h us or not, we welcome your
questions. Our doo rs are ulwnys open. The w idc·~pe n .
wide-awake bank always make~ you feel ~·o u 'vc come to
t he r ight pl ace. And you have!

•

CLARK
AIR
BAli!!:,
Philippines (UPI) - A guant
but cheerful JOB Ameriican
prisoners of war regained ~ 1eir
freedom today, with the seplor.
ranking prisoner in North
Vietnam declaring the t'l. S.
POWs
' 'perform e d
magnificently ... they •were
first cl;lss soldiers."
"I would like to say I've been
in better places but I have
never been with · better
people," Air Force Col. John P.
Flynn, 50, the senior rEJnking
man held in the North, s aid as
he stepped off his fmedom
flight.

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CARPET SPECIAL

2 ROOMS AND HALL

RUTLAND FURNITURE

PH./42·4211

provisions."

WENDELL GRATE

•

"The courts are frequently .
little more than an escape
hatch for those who are
responsible for the menace of
drugs.'' Nixon said .

1

Comi,ng back strong into Fashion is the two-piece Suit Dress. Shop our Second Floor Ready·To·
Wear Department .now for these exceptional values. All of 100% polyester double knit in your
choice of Navy, Rose, Blue.Sizes 1~ to 20 and J4lh to 24%.

Pree

. Only .•14,91
Customer Parking on Second Stleet and At Our Mechanic Stieet Warehouse

ELBERFELDS IN POME.ROY

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12 ~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .; March 14, 1973

::~:~:::-.:::::::~::;.:!2::::;::::::::::~::::::~~:::::::::::::::::

WALK~UT September
needed for 2 TEACHERS
IRONTON, Ohio (UPI) Teachers at the Dawson·
Bryant Sehoul District
peewee teams; one pony walked
MLT class
off the job

Manag~rs

POW~

gaunt,· cheerful

today

teams in the age 9 through 12
level.
'
The league will hold its
second meeting of 1973 next
Monday evening at 7 in Mid·
dleport town hall . Several
iniportant matters are to be
reviewed, including a prop 0sal
to begin scheduled play earlier
than in the past. Everyone
interested in the summer
recreation program is invited.
Persons
interested
in
managing a team are urged to
Holzer Medical Center
DISCHARGED - Paula telephone May at 992·2788.
Thomas, Judy Young, Dakota
Laudermilt, Jasper Wilson,
Ollie Hensley, Randle Peoples,
Mary Blevins, Wanda Malone, .
Geraldine Hale, Carrie Taylor,
Eurana Thomas, Lois Roberts,
Lemma Niday, Raymond
Mullen, Jon Miller, Nora
Knotts, Doris Johnson,
Katherin HyseU, Unda Fyffe,
Robert Fleming,
Ryan Fox, Myrtle Erwin, Youngstown, president ol Ohio
William Cantrell, Jason Retired Teachers' Association,
Barricks and Ralph AUbright. will be the guest speaker,
BIRTHS - Mrs. Jay March 31, for the Meigs
Osborne, Oak Hill, a daughter ; Retired Teachers luncheon
Mrs. Glenn Young, Bidwell, a meeting.
daughter; Mrs. Roy Sprague,
Mr. Fleming, an interesting
Gallipolis, a daughter; Mrs . and witty speaker, will bring a
Floyd Clary, Proctorville, a wealth of information pertinent
daughter, and Mrs. Melvin to slalf and national activities,
Massie, Thunnan, a son.
inclu·ding
impending
legislature pertaining to
pensions, taxes, and related
subjects.
The meeting, originally set
for March 17 , has been
Tonight &amp; Thursday
rescheduled
for March 31,
March 14 &amp; 15
12:30 at the Trinity Church,
NOT OPEN
Pomeroy. Reserva'.ions for the
F rlday &amp; Saturday
luncheon may be made with
March 16 &amp; 17
Mrs. Anna Hilldore, Syracuse,
ULZANA'S RAID
or Lucille Smith, Chester, on or
(Technicolor)
Burt Lancaster, Bruce
before Tuesday, March 27.
Tony May, president of the
Middleport Boys' League
Assn ., said today .managers
still are needed for two peewee
and one pony baseball team.
The peewee teams are for
boys age six through eight.
Pony players are aged 13
through 15. Milford Hysell has
been signed to manage the
Mets. one of Middleport's four

when oegotiatioos '•over
unresolved grievance&amp;"
broke down with the Board of
Education. 1
The wal"f.&gt;ut Idled 83
teachers an~ gave some
2,000 student~ an unexpected
vacation. Th~ir action closed
classes In the district's high
school and four elementary
schools . .

Annual spring

meeting held
President of
ORTA to speak at HM Center

here March 31

MEIGS THEATRE

Da\llson. Richard Jaeckel.

Joaquin Martinez.
!GPl

THE INCREDIBLE TWO
HEADED TRANSPLANT

Holzer Medical Center today
was host for the annual spring
meeting of the business
education teachers of the
southern six counties of the
Southeastern District of Ohio,
which include Gallia, Jackson,
Lawrence, Meigs, Scioto, and

Pike Counties.
The teachers were greeted in
the French Five Hundred
Room of the Center by Mrs.
Aven D. Lusk, chairman of the
business teachers of this
section. Mrs. Lusk is coor·
dinator of cooperative office
education at Gallia Academy
High School. Robert J. Fan·
ning, vice president of
professional service at the
center, gave a brief summary
of the organizational structure
of the hospital and clinic before
the teachers were taken on
guided tours of.the offices and
facilities of the complex.
Arrangements for the
meeting were made by Mrs.
Rosie Ward, secretary of the
executive vice-president, Hugh
P. Kirkel and Mr. Fanning.

!Technicolor)

Bruce Oern,

Pat

Priest,

Casey Kasen .
!GPl
Show starts at 7 p.m.

MARRIAGE LICENSE
Ronnie Vance, 21, Albany,
Rt. 2, and Nancy Joan Dixon,
18, Albany, Rt. 2.

Vur
'Wide-cJlwake
'Wide-r9pen Voor
Policy
More than a word . More tllnn ou r smiles. Our ti me.
The widl!-nwake bank ha s ti me f o1' you and the eoge rness
to Bc r ve yo u best.

ASit'DIVORCE
Four suits for divorce were
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Tuesday. They
were by Brenda K. Jeffers,
Middleport, vs. John R. Jef.
fers, Pomeroy; Pleasant A.
Ellis, Middleport, vs. Alice V.
Ellis, Flat Rock, North
Carolina, each charging gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty; Brenda S. Fry,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, vs. Ronald L.
Fry , same address, extreme
cruelty, and Charles E. Baxter,
Pomeroy, vs. Irene Baxter,
Williamstown, W. Va., gross
neglect of duty.

IS

filled

Dr. Herman L. Koby, Dean
of Rio Grande College, today
announced that no more ap·
plications can be accepted for
the next Medical ' Laboratory
Technicians (MLT) class,
which will begin in September, .
1973.
The MLT progr~ is of two
years duration, and is operated
cooperatively by Rio Grande
College and the Holzer Medical
Center of Gallipolis. A person
completing the program is
awarded the Associate ·of
Science degree by the college
and, following a registry
examination, is registered a
Medical Laboratory
Technician by the American
Society
of
Clinical
Pathologists.
All members of the first
graduating class recently
passed
the
registry
examination with average
scores of 120 compared with
national average of 112 out of a
possible 200 points. Ninety.
three points were required to
pass the examination.
Ken Myers,' chairman of the
Division of Natural Sciences
and college director of the
program, indicated that the
large number of highly
qualified applicants has forced
early closure of applications.

Commissioners
will consider
,
helpzng museum
A request for financial help
was made by members of the
Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society of the Meigs
County Commissioners
Tuesday morning.
C. E. Blakeslee, speaking for
the group, asked the com·
missioners to "try to help with
expenses in the amount of
$5,000." No action was taken,
although the commissioners
agreed to consider the request.
Attending were Charles R.
Karr, Robert Clark, Warden

men

BEE TIME SET
The annual Meigs County
Spelling Bee to be held at the
Salisbury Elementary School
Thursday night will start at
7:30 p.m., rather than at 8,
Mrs . Greta Suttle , county
school supervisor who is
chairman of the event, an·
nounces . Fourteen finalists
from as many schools will be
competing for the county title.

The wide-tttl!ttke brmk
mnke.s itttl/..1'()

including 10 in Laos.
Flynn was followed off the
plane by Navy Lt. Cmdr. John ·
R. McCain III, the son of
retired Adm. John s. McCain,
who was commander in chief of
the Pacific forces at th~ height
of the Vielham war.
The younger McCain, 36,
walked fNm 'the plane with a
noticeable limp and graying
hair. He paused for about 15
seconds to chat with his
father 's successor, Adm. Noel
Gayler, and then limped to the
bus where he climbed on
unassisted.

performed

magnificently . They wel'e first
class soldiers, they were first

Market Report

class citizens."
The release leaves 147 known
U. S. POWs still in Indochina,

SERVICE SET
HARTFORD - Funeral
services for -Charles E. (Pete)
Fields, 81, who died Monday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
will be held at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Foglesong Funeral
Home. Officiating will be Tom
Clarke and Richard MctCleery.
Burial will be in Hartfnrd Hill
Cemetery. Friends may· call at
the funeral home . any time
alter. 2 pm. today.
ITEMS STOLEN
Items valued at $160 were
taken some time between
March 7 and 14 from a 1965
Comet parked on the Claude
Miller property in Chteshire.
Bill Jones of Middleport
Tuesday night reported the
theft of two tires and w'heels, a
set of mag rims, a custom
steering wheel and ge;ar shift
knob to the Gallia County
sherUf's department.

PLATES COMING
License plates will g&lt;l on sale
Friday at Simon's Pic k·A·Pair,
Pomeroy, between th" hours of
9:30 a.m. and 4::Jo p.m .,
Monday through Friday and
from 9 a.m. until · noon on
Saturday.
·

GALLIPOLIS , OHIO
Saturday, March 10,1973
Sales Report of
Ohio VaUey Livestock Co.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 36 to
37; 220 to 250 lbs. 37.50 to 38.85;
Light 28 to 34.50; Fat Sows 30 to
34.50; Stags 26 Down; Boars 27
to 30; Pigs 15 to 28; Shoats 2fi to
38.50.
CATTLE -Steers 38 to 47;
Heifers 34.50 to 45 ; Baby Beef
45 to 66.50; Fat Cows 31 to 35;
Canners 21 to 34 ; Bulls 36 to
41.50; Milk Cows 225 to 505.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
68.10; Secoods 60 to 66.75;
Medium 55 to 61.50; Com. &amp;
Hvs. 52 to 64; Culls 50 Down .
BABY CALVES-33 to 97.50.
PT. PLEASANT
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
Saturday, March 10, 1973
HOGS - 175 to 220 38 to ~9.25;
Heavies 33 to 38; Li~hts 27 to
34; Fat Sows 32 to 35; Boars 27
to 29.50; Pigs 10 to 24.
CAlTLE - Steers 33 to 36;
Heifers 31 to 37; Fat Cows 32 to
35; Canners 29 to 32; Bulls 29 to
47.50; Stock Cows and Calves
350 to 470 ; Stock Steers 55 to 60;
Stock Heifers 44 to 49.50; Stock
Steer Calves 55 to 62.50; Stock
Heifer Calves 47 to 52.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
74.50; Seconds 73.25; Medium
67.50 to 69.75; Common &amp;
Heavies 6&gt;.75 to 67.&gt;0; Culls 60
to 65.
LAMBS - 32:50.

Ours, commissioners, and

Most ~ the men appeared to
be in good p)lysical condition
although thin and pale. The two
exceptions were McCain, who
was shot down on Oct. 26, 1967,
and Air Force Capt. Hubert C.
Walker, 31, of Tulsa, Okla.
Walker, moving vety slowly
under his own power, was
escorted off the plane by a

General Tel's
Albany phone
job underway
ALBANY - Construction of
a major cable addition south·
west of Albany is under way,
General Telephone Co. of Ohio
announced today. Kenley R.
Krinn, Athens district com·
mercial manager, said the new
facilities will upgrade present
services and provide for future
growth in the area .
"This $49,600 project, to be
completed by year-end, also
will rearrange existing
facilities for more · efficient
utilization of cables and lines
serving the southwe.sl portion
of !~exchange," Krinn added.
Where possible the new cable
will be buried . The use of
buried cable enhances the
landscape and reduces service
outages due to severe weather
conditions and automobile
mishaps, he said. The Albany
exchange serves
1,204
telephones in a 90.8 square mile
area of Athens, Meigs and
Vinton counties.

News

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medic.
The senior man on board the
third Cl41, Air Force Col.
David W. Winn, ch011e to step
off his plane in the ' Olght
coveralls worn by American
pllbts instead of the blue outfits
given the other POWs by the
North VIetnamese.
"You brought us holne with
honor and we hope to serve you
well," Winn said. "To' borrow
from Keats, freedom is happiness and happiness 'Is
freedom. That Is all we need to

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Pleasant Valley H01pltal
DISCHARGES: Harold
Bush, Sr., Gallipolis Ferry;
Steven Crllow, Leon; Mrs.
Larry
Hensley,
Point
Pleasant: Mrs. Paul Rawlins,
infant, Leon; Mrs. James
Ferguson, Point Pleasant;
Harry Stamper, Sr., Lesage;
Angela Whittington, Buffalo;
Mrs. Vernon Arnold, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Rand Utchfleld, Point
Pleasant; Patricia Frum,
Gordon
Kiscart,
Point
Pleasant; Howard Bumgard·
ner, New Haven; Kenneth
McMillan, Point Pleasant, and
Mrs. Vivian Blatt, Lakin.

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One of the prisoners had his
wile waiting here for him.
Roberta Stafford, wife of Navy
Cmdr. Hugh A. Stafford, 38,
flew· to Clark from Hong Kong
where she lives to be on band
for her husband's arrival. Air
Force officials said Mrs.
Stafford chose to greet her
husband privately in the base
hospital rather than greet him
on the flight line.

(Continued from page 1)
Wounded .Knee, a tiny hamlet on this Oglala Sioux reservation.
The two s1des agreed to another'parley today to seek a peaceful
solution, but government spokesmen left no doubt they intend to
settle the matter one way or another.
The govenunent strengthened the blockade of the village by
moving in 15 armored personnel carriers and increasing manpower at roadblocks to 300. WhUe terming the occupallan an
"insurrection," a govenunent spokesman said there were no
immediate plans to move in on the Indians. Members of the
American Indian Movement (AIM) vowed Tuesday not to lay
down arms or quit their J~y occupation of this armed encampment unW the _government l'ellpOIIded· fllwrlbly to
demands to replace the elected Indian officlals on the reser.

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Death

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
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Shop Weekdays 9:30 to 5 PM. Open Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 9 PM

prohibited if the jury iound the
existence of one or more
mitigating factors such as
youth of the defendant, mental
incapacity or the commission
of the crime under duress.
If his proposal becomes law,
the _President said, "the only
question considered , germane
in a murder case, for example,
would be whether the defendant knew whether he was
pulling the trigger of a gun. "
"Questions such as the
existence of a mental disease
or defect or whether the
defendant requires treatment
or deserves imprisonment
would be reserved for consideration at the time of sen-

HAND INJURED
The Pomeroy E·R squad was
called to the Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes at 4:38p.m. Tuesday for
Chris
Hooker who suffered a
etl.\'11.
hand injury when he caught it tencing ."
~···
The President proposed a
in an air conditioner. He was
series
of tough, new penalties
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital , treated and released. for narcotics criminals, par·
ticularly for pushers of heroin
and morphine.
Drug-pushing offenses would
POMEROY, OHIO
DEMS TO MEET
be
divided into two categories
The regular
monthly
meeting of the Democratic -those involving four ounces
.
Member or Fed eral Rese rve System
On Fndays Our Drive-In Window is Open 9 a.m\ lo 7 p.m.
party wiU be held Thursday at or less of the drug and those
(Continuously),
'
7:30 p.m. at the Episcopal involving a greater amount.
no.ooo Mu:imum Insurance tor Each Depositor
"For second offenders who
Parish House, Pomeroy. All
democrats are w:ged to attend. are convicted of trafficking in
more than four ounces, I am
proposing a mandatory sent·
ence of life Imprisonment
without parole," Nixon said.
"For those with a prior
felony narcotic conviction who
are convicted of trafficking in
less than four ounces, my
proposed legislation provides a
mandatory prison term of 10
years to' life imprisonment."
Punislunent for first offenders would be less - five to 15
years for trafficking in less
COMPLETELY tNSTALLEO
than four ounces and 10 years
WAL L f O WALL
.
to life for pushing larger
Wilh Hea• y 'Foam Rubber Pad
amounts.
, "These are very harsh
ALL
Includes : 12'x15' living Rm
measures, to be applied within
9'x12 ' Bedroom
FOR
vety rigid guidelines and
3'xl2' Hall
ONLY
providing only a minimum of
Quality 50 1 nylon carpeting with heavy 'foam rubber pad. expert' lack less
sentencing discretion to judInstallation . Choice ol color s. All w ork guaranteed. 'see Wendell Gra te for
ges," Nixon said. "But circum·
·
this buy. or free estimate on any carpet installation.
stances
warrant
such

Farmers Bank &amp;

" Our

(Continued from page I)

All ba nks are big on money-so nre we. But we're j ust
us big on se rvice. If our te llers can't answe r n question,

fee l free to consult uny of our officers. Our co s y-goi n~r
office r!! nrc ready with fmnnciul counsel. to help you make
hi ~· dec isions Ol' plan for ·you1· future. We huve t he time to
let you take your t ime. We know how much it matters.
So wh ether }rou bonk wit h us or not, we welcome your
questions. Our doo rs are ulwnys open. The w idc·~pe n .
wide-awake bank always make~ you feel ~·o u 'vc come to
t he r ight pl ace. And you have!

•

CLARK
AIR
BAli!!:,
Philippines (UPI) - A guant
but cheerful JOB Ameriican
prisoners of war regained ~ 1eir
freedom today, with the seplor.
ranking prisoner in North
Vietnam declaring the t'l. S.
POWs
' 'perform e d
magnificently ... they •were
first cl;lss soldiers."
"I would like to say I've been
in better places but I have
never been with · better
people," Air Force Col. John P.
Flynn, 50, the senior rEJnking
man held in the North, s aid as
he stepped off his fmedom
flight.

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CARPET SPECIAL

2 ROOMS AND HALL

RUTLAND FURNITURE

PH./42·4211

provisions."

WENDELL GRATE

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"The courts are frequently .
little more than an escape
hatch for those who are
responsible for the menace of
drugs.'' Nixon said .

1

Comi,ng back strong into Fashion is the two-piece Suit Dress. Shop our Second Floor Ready·To·
Wear Department .now for these exceptional values. All of 100% polyester double knit in your
choice of Navy, Rose, Blue.Sizes 1~ to 20 and J4lh to 24%.

Pree

. Only .•14,91
Customer Parking on Second Stleet and At Our Mechanic Stieet Warehouse

ELBERFELDS IN POME.ROY

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five years her husband was
held captive.
"I feel we (America) had to
go (to Vietnam) because it was
necessary," she said. "Someone had to do it. We did the best

job we could and now it's up to·
the Vietnamese people.
"I don't think the cease-fire
agreement cotlld have come
a0 y earlier. We were fighting
people who were much ·more
patient than us. The · war
couldn't have ended any sooner

for us.''

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should have."
Her husband, . Air Force
Capt. Thomas N. Moe, 29,
Columbus, was shot down over
North Vietnam on Jan. 16, 1968.
Hearrivedat Clark Air Bas.e in
the Philippines Wednesday
alter being released by Hanoi.
Mrs. Moe, who expects to be
reunited with her husband at
Wright-Patterson AFB 'near
Dayton, in several days, said
she maintained her feeling that
America's involvement in the
war was correct throughout the

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a&gt;LUMBUS (UPI) -"I'm a
mlUtacy wife and Jnllltacy
wives can't expect peacbes and
cream all the tlme," Mrs.
Chris Moe said Wednesday,
explalqlng she accepted her
· rusbanil's flveyear captivity in
North lVhitnam without bit-terness.
"There are gOOd times and
there
. .are bad timi!B," the pert
29-year-old .said. "There has
been a lot of bloodshed, tears
and sorrow, but it (the Vietnam
war) carne out the way it

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Mrs. Moe said the reunion
with her husband will end her
strange status of "not being a
wife and not being a widow."
She and her daughter Connie,
51&gt;, who has never seen her
father, talked briefly with Moe
on the telephpne Wednesday.
"He said he had lost 30
pounds - down from 185 to 155
- and also had a kidney in•
fection, " Mrs. Moe said. "The
dnctors at -Clark are treating
him but I don't think it's anytlling serious."

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1:10

VOL XX~ NO. 233

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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burger; back,Meldo CondiH,lUcky Chancey, C. T. Chapman
and Krystal Winebrenner. The paintings were judged
Monday by Bill Mayer. The winners will go into county
competition.

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·FOURTH, FIFTH AND SIXTH GRADE Blue Ribbon
Wtnhers In the painting division of the cultw-al arts competition at Syracuse Elementary were, 1..-, Dennis Michael,

Scott Nease, Doug Houston, Kim Winebrenner, Paula Barnett, Carrie Guinther, Jody Grueser, and Darlene Priddy.
Students will compete in county competition. The paintings
were judged Monday by Bill Mayer.

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By United Press International
TERRORIST HAND GRENADES EXPLODED Inside a
crowded Bnddhist pagoda near Saigon early today, killing 17
worshipers and wounding 81 others in the worst such incident
since Jhe Jan. 28 cease.fire. South Vietnamese military
spokesmen said the blasts ripped through a pagoda in the
Mekong Delta hamlet of Soai Xiem, 85 miles southwest of Saigon,
during reillgious ceremony. The victims included 81 civilians,
three militiamen, tbree policemen and a monk, a spokesman
said.
In another reported Communist attack, South Vietnamese
paratroopers were hit by more than 1,600 rounds of artillery,
mortar and rocket shells on the Quang Tri northern front.
Spokesmen said three troops were killed and !Owounded.
The command reported that since the cease-fire, 319
civilians · have IHlen killed, 1,925 wounded and 987 abducted.
Several hundred of those kidnaped were taken from a hamlet in
the Central Highlands last month. Aspokesman said government
figw-es showed tHe Communists had violated the cease-fire 7,154
times as .of noon today. He said 13,757 Communist troops had
been slain and gave South Vietnamese losses as 2,668 killed,
12,729 wounded and 696 missing.

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TEN CENTS

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"He said he still didn't believe it (his release) wa~. true
and wondered if I did," she
related. "I said I really
couldn't believe it either and
we agreed we'd finally believe
it when we see each other."
They had been married two
years when Moe was taken
prisoner.

•

THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 1973

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Devoted To The Interests OJ The Meigs-Mason Area

PAINTING BLUE RIBBON WINNERS - First, second
and tllird grade winners In tile painting division of the
cultural arts competition at Syracuse Elementary were,
Cundiff, Richard Cook and Jane Am·
. row, 1..-,

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She said her husbl.nd never
mentioned his captivity during
their Hi-minute phone con-

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She said she will commemorate the reunion with her busband by i&gt;resenting his wedding ring to him. Moe did not
wear the ring on missions and
it was sent to Mrs. Moe by
military officials shortly alter
her husband was shot down.
Mrs . Moe said she has been
wearing a POW bracelet with
. her husband's name on it and
saidsheprohablywouldkeepit
until the fate of Americans
listed as "missing" in Vietnam
is known.

0

WOUNDED KNEE, S. D. - FOOD, FUEL and medicine
"!ere in short supply todsy in this tiny hamlet on th~ sprawling
Pine Ridge Indian reserilation, which militant Indians have
occupied for more than two weeks.
A near-bUzzard cooled off the armed confrontation between
the 200 Indians occupying Wounded Knee, and federal officials,
who relsxed a blockage of 300 U. S. marshals and Indian police
ringing the tiny Oglala Sioux village.
Federal agents appeared eager to take control of the village
away from the militant American Indian Movement (AIM)
leaders whdhave occupied the village since 16 days ago. "U they
weren't Indians we'd have JJ10Ved in already," an FBI agent said
early today. "If they were something like the KKK (Ku Klux
Klan), we'dhavemovedin a longtime ago."

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a&gt;LlJ!oiBUS -: AN ~LTERNATIVE TO Gov. John J.
Gilllgan's;higher education l_egisls4ve prograrn W$5 proposed
Wednesday bY House Republicans, w~o recommended boosting
instructional grants but not increasing lees at Ohio's statesupported colleges and universities. House Minority Leader

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!C.IIaaed oa Pqe 1!)

By BARNJ:;Y SEIBERT
SAIGON (UP! ) -: With a
blare of Oriental fanfare from
a borrowed brass band, the
U.S. Army in Vietnam
(USARV) furled the battle
Hags of America's longest war
and quietly closed its In·
dochina operations today.
A crowd of about 300, most of
them Army officers in khaki
uniforms, attended the 20minute ceremony that ended
almost eight years of a command that once controlled
thousands of Gls throughout

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Grand
'1110

the country.
In keeping with the
precedent -setting nature of
!,he American withdrawal from
the conHict, the ceremony
broke ivlth Army ttadition of
outdoor reviews and was hetd
in a theater flanking the U.S.
Military Assistance Command .
Vietnam ( MACV)
headquarters near Tan Son
Nhut Air Base.
It leaves the 6,800 U.S. troops
still in Vietnam under MACV
command. Under terms of the
Vietnam truce, they must
leave by March 28.
The only military trappings
today were the band,.borrowed
from the South Vietnamese Air
Force, a sparse 211-man guard
of honor of American soldiers
outside the theater and a color
guard in chromed helmets on
the stage .
The stage was flanked with
the ·nags of the countries that
joined America in the Vietnam
· conHict. They included those of
the long-departed Filipinos and
Thais and those of Australia .
and New Zealand, whose new
goverrunimts have virtually
repudiated their countries' role
in the Indochina fighting.
\Vhen Maj. Gen. Morgan G.
Roseborough, its last commander, personally furled the
Army's blue battle flag with
the command's red, blue and

0

Master to
VI• si"t here
Dr. Dale E. Fox, an orthopaedic surgeon of Cincinnati, and Grand Master of
Masons in Ohio, will make his
official visitation to the Twelfth
Masonic District on March 29,
1973.
His reception will be hosted
by the 12th Masonic District
Association in the Rio Grande
College Cafeteria at 7 p.m. All
area masons and their ladies
are cordially invited. Tickets
for the occasion may be purchased ($3 ) from any of lhe
lodges in the district, from
Daryl Alban at Oak Hill,
Willard Copley at Thurman, or
Ben Philson at Racine. All
reservations must be in by
March 24.
Dr . Fox began his Masonic
career in June, 1950 with
Lafayette Lodge No . 81,
F .&amp;A.M. at Cincinnati, serving
as its Worshipful Master in
1959. He served as District
Deputy Grand Master in the
First District in 1964~5 . and
was elected Grand Master last
October.

More than 700 attend rally

WORKERS OF THE PIKE Electric Co., South Carolina,
are working in downtown Pomeroy rebuilding power lines of
the Ohio Power Co. The rebuilt lines will provide higher
voltage and Improved service.

Dick Wiley dies
Lawrence R. (Dick) Wiley,
70, Middleport, died Wednesday evening at Holzer
Medical Center .
Mr. Wiley was born Dec. 6,
1902, at Lithrop, Ohio, the son
of the late William . and Minnie
Smith Wiley. He was also
pre~eded in death by two
brothers.
He is sw-vived by his wife,
Thelma B. Hooper Wiley; two
sons, Larry L. Wiley, New
Haven, and David R. Wiley,
Parkersburg; a sister, Mrs. 0.
B. (Naomi) O'Brian , Indianpolls, Ind.; an adopted
sister, Mrs. Kathryn Young,
Ontario, Calif.; one brother,
Wayne, New Lexington; a
grandson, Arthur; one granddaughter, Jennifer, and
several nieces and nephews .

Vehicular tax
receipts are up
Retail sales tax receipts and
sales tax receipts on motor
vehicles were both up about 35
per cent for the month of
February, according to Mrs.
Gertrude Donahey , state
treasurer.

GAHS cage fans, 700 auend rally

BLUE RIBBON WINNERS in the essay division of the . .
cultural arts competition were, 1-r, Rebecca Dempsey, first
It was limed just right,
place fifth grade, and Brenda Jell, first place sixth grade.
believe it or not.
Their essays will be placed in county competition.
Seconds after Clyde Porter
ignited a bon fire on Memorial
Field Wednesday night, down
came tbe rain which had been
forecast all day by the
Afund frive on behalf of Mrs. and Mrs. George Hackett, Jr .,
Doris Reinhart, Pomeroy, has and Mr . and Mrs. James weatherman (60 percent
chances they said ).
bjlen completed with a total Clatworthy, Middleport.
Thus, the gigantic pep rally
Mrs. Rose Sisson and the
collection of $1,993.54.
Latest contributors to the Rev. · Father Bernard Krac- held in honor of Coach Jim
fund are Gilbert Zwilling, Mr. jovic have headed the drive on Osborne's Dayton-bound Blue
and Mrs . Tom Abels, Mr. and behalf of the sponsors, the Devils was moved to the
Mrs. Paul Darnell, Mr. and Sacred Heart Church Council. Washington Grade School gym:
Frankly, ·· there has been
Mrs. Homer Gordon, the Loyal
nothing to matc.h such an
Berea~s Class of the Midoutburs t by Blue Devil
dleport Church of Christ, Mr.
basketball fans in the history of
'EXTENDED OUTLOOK
.A chance of showers each the sport at GAHS.
With Charles Rowe·~ GAliS
day. Lows Saturday and
Sunday In the :Ws. And from pep band the tl)e Blue Devil
Fair tonight with lows in the
the upper :Ws tc mid 40s cheerleaders leading the way,
low to mid 40s. Becoming
Monday. Highs in the upper more than too fans filled the
mostly cloudy and cooler
40s to mid 50s Saturday and Washington School auditorium
Friday with a chance of oc·
for the 35-minute rally.
casiona! rain in the extreme . mid 50s to mid &amp;Os Sunday
Actually it resembled a huge
and Monday.
south In the· afternoon. Highs
political rally, with posters and
from the upper -50s to mid 60s.
signs wagging ev.erywhere in

Reinhart fund totals $1,994

Weather .

the crowd.
After nearly 15 minutes of
chanting, in walked the 1973
Southeastern Ohio Class AA
District champion Blue Devils.
Standing ovation !
The cheerleaders called on
members of the coaching staff
and four players for remarks.
Coach Jim "Oz" Osborne
expressed his appreciation for
the support shown by local
fans . He said, "We hope to
show the big city boys that we
here in the country also know
how to play th.e game of
basketball."
Commenting on the "Wizard
.of Oz" signs on display all over
town, Osborne added, "I appreciate thi~. but it's these
boys (pointing to members of
the team seated behind him on
the .gym floor) whose picture
should be on those posters.
They are the ones who have ·
sacrificed many hoilrs of their

..

·,.
.

.

Mr. Wiley was a member of
the Middlepor t Church "of
Christ where he was a Sunday
School teacher and sang in the
choir . He was a . talented
musician having played guitar
in several local hands.
A member of ljliddlepo~t
Lodge 363 F~]'ytsin ce \9'\A, .be
was a retired telegraph
operator for the New York
Central Railroad.
Funeral services \fill be held
Saturday at 2 p. ~- at the
Middleport Church of Christ
with the Rev. Raullin Moyer
officiating. Burial will be in
Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Rawlings Coats Funeral Home
Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
and until 12:30 p. m. on
Saturday when the body will be
taken to the church . Masonic
services will he held at the
funeral home Friday at 7;30 p.

m.

Miller to
expand
•
semces

Retail sales tax receipts for
February, this year, totaled
$55,552.19 compared to receipts
of $41,213.21 for February,.l972.
Cong ressman Clar ence
Receipts for the month last Miller today announced a new
year for motor vehicle sales expanded policy of periodic.
tax totaled $16,920.98 compared uopen Door Sessions" for the
to receipts of $22,859.58 for this residents of Ohio lOth District.
year.
Acknowledgin g an everincreasing
vo lum e
of
correspond ence with area
residents Mill er moved to
provide additional services to
constituent concerns by
scheduling on a re gul ar
monthly basis, "Open Door
Sessions" for each of the
Southeastern Ohio counties he
free time dw-ing the past four represents. The sessions will
years to get us where we are be conducted by the
Congressman's distri ct staff
today. "
Also making remarks were and in Meigs County will be
Asst . Coach Ken Turner, held in the Common Pleas
reserve coach Ed Pauley, Court room, Court House, from
freshman Coach Buddy Moore 9·11 a. m. on the second
and seventh gr~de Coach Don Tuesday of each month .
These sessions will serve as a
Maurer.
supplement
to the frequently
Players addressing the rally
were Mark Kiesling, Gil Price, conducted sessions the
Congressman personally holds
Topper Orr and Kev Sheets.
Members of the team were when he is back iri the district.
paraded through town after the Miller indicated that the polic)'
rally in a decorated truck with of these new, regularly
the Victory ·Bell ringing loud scheduled open door sessions
will remain in effect as long uti
and clear.
The Blue Devils will leave for . the volume of constituent
Dayton this evening. Friday, inquiries is such that the need ,
GAHS will play Jefferson Twp. exists.
The Congressman invites all
at 9;3Qp.m. in the Uqiversity of
Dayton Arena in ·a· semifinal area residents who hav e
game of the Ohio Class AA problems relat ive to the
Federal Gover~ment to take ,
Regional Tournamen).
More than 1,500 local fans this opportunity to bring their •
have pw-chased tickets for the concerns to the attention of his
district representatives during :.
contest.
these sessions.

Rain fails to dampen spirit of

•

'

yellow sword crest, USARV
was reduced to fewer than 4,501i
men.
USARV traced its orwns to
Feb. 8, 1942, when the U.S.
Army Provisional Support
Group was activated in Vietnam. It went through a series
of name changes until it
became U.S. Army Vietnam in
July, 1965.
"Those who have served and
those who serve today in this
(Continued on page 12)

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