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.I

.:·1 , T!lf .Suncl. t ~ Tlntt.•:-; - St.•ntim• l .~umi:l). FdJ .t.

,

l!li' ~

Firem.e n receive $2,314

McDonald candidate for Senate
stt·t·r ulg ctn\hcothc area .

("llll .I .J&lt; 'U'I'IIJ·:
&lt;;, :uti lft t' () / l ]lo I ' OIIflflt 'S 1&lt;1 h1
Mt'l)onald , H ~i'-: cwmly l ; ml ttT upt•tah·d 111 lit• · bl;11 k flll.lll •tnd lJU:-i lrlt'S.'-: IIl;l!l f ' IJI'It'l\l ]y ' t,.J] y \\tt/111\lf lillY . tddti!IJIJ;iJ
S{· rvin g Ius serond lPrHJ a s l ;l'l:, tl lOII :Lrllf ht •C&lt;III S!' / )(•
Hu::;:-:.~.vuflt) l'VII llll l::.SlU!!l'l, I'• : 1 \\ t•r kt•d !u &lt;;t•cun· ft ve m •w
candidate h11 Slttll' Sem ttur for J lli!J•ll' HHitt slr lt·s m } 1)7:!-74 fllt
l h t• J7 1h Oh\!J St:n:il••twl thr Clullu· othe - Hos:-; t''Jlllll)
Dt stnn m lhP l l('l!lon .tlH &lt;.t r e:t wh1ch wtll pr uvide hun -

:-; tewart of ttl~ AF L-CIO unam
qf lilt· Mead P&lt;tper Co , 1s il

pnmt-~ry

tw..·r nbcr of

to be held May· 7 The dr eds 11f rtl'W JObs McD•m;drl
17th Sentttonal d tst r~ c l tn- Wa s also Jll SII UII H: JJtaJ Ill
d utles Huss, Ptt k &lt;m&lt;t ~' . Vin- Sf'( unn g
hundrt&gt;ds
11f
ton , Athens. Met gs. J.awrencl ', fh uUS:.IIHIS uf sl_;tll' ;111d ft·dt•r;d
l;allia, llorkt tlg t'Uuntt es Hll&lt;i rrl (J il lt'S for i {IJ!':IS r (IUrtty Ill·
par ts of Jn cksun, F:tyette ;.mll propos&lt;•s to ex tt·ml Ill s pr uH rl

Washington coun tit'S
at)!IJty in c utmt~ ~~(!VCI r111 1t:rlt lo
MeDon&lt;Jld , a Na vy vc let &lt;.t ll ()( the Ohr n I ,eg rsl;_rtun • as a st&lt;t h:
World War Il ls proudes t of hi s sc rwlor
,
reco rd &lt;t S County Comfi e Js fu st V ll't' -IJI e•,uJ pnt of
llll&amp;"iiOner hi g hh~ht ed by llw t11..: Ohio Co unty Cn rn fol'l that l{ oss ('O IJ!ll\' IS IHIP of tnl ssro net s '\ ~-..r~ct;tt t on ;.~r1cl it

rllt'lllhr.r

1,1

lhf'

Crant McDonold 1s a former
township trustee and a former
A ss oc IH il t Jfl of CUUfllU!~ .
McDonrdd ts a HH:!II bcr of the .state dircdor tJf clerks and
H o~.&lt;:~ r y Club 11f Clulh cothc, was trustee!-i. He is also a former
forn u·r ly prestd ent &lt;HH.I dud director t1f the Conservation
for

r'I Jif tll ttl t!•t:

l/11~

Nt-~twrwl

Club and served three years\.s
Pres1dent of the United Fund.
Arn ert can He
taught
vocational

th e
Ll.!g ii Jil and
Veter:tn s nf
F(Jre ign Wrrr::;, adt ve 1ft the

"~ nculture

at Twm school and

coached Junior h1gh basketball

MPthrl(ltst ~.:hun ll cmd pus l at three sc hools. He announces
tn;tslt•r of th e Cl&lt;H ks hur!-: hi~h sc hool basketball games

( ;nmgt·

lo r Sl&lt;!tion WBEX, Chillicothe

li e IJWns &lt;1 2.10 ;H're ((lrrn in
U11JU II towns hip {Jf Hos s co unty

&lt;wd

prudu c!IJg cu rr1 , whertt ;1nd
soybc.-ms and r aJst·s shee p ~md

casters Assoc iation .
The candidate 1s married

cu llle. He also owns a
11pi•r &lt;lied

laumlry

1n

is

immediate

past

president of the Ohw Sports-.

and the later of 10 children. He
tile has II gra ndchildren.

Ctl l n-

GRANT McDANIEL

TH E MOST ECONOMICAL of the Vermeer balers, th1s maclnne IS dcs1gned to mak e 5 fl
\\ide, up to 6ft. diameter bales. Mmimurn tractor reqUirement· 45 hp . It will be seen Feb 7 a l 8
p.m. at the Ga Hia Academy Hi gh School \.,.here coffee and cookies wtll be served. A f:1c tory
representative will show slides and a nswrr quest wns. The session has been arrangt'fl by I,&lt;irry
Mar r. Galli a Ac~demy Vo-Ag instructor. in coopcmtion w1th Wayne Ji viden, Ingels Rd.,locc.d
farmer dea ler. The pubhc 1s welcome.

DA YTON -- Robert H. Ar· and a successful program will
nold, Cleveland . President of assure its a dopti on on a
the

Ohio

Assol' ratwn

-

of

nati onal level nex t year The

the

larg est Ohio Association plans to plan t
bu sin es s orie nted trade at leas t 100,000 trees (seedassocia tion in Ohio w1th 37,093 lings I th1s year w1th a goal of at
members, announced last )east 2,000,000 in 1975 and each
week the Ohio AssociatiOn w11l year thereafter. The trees will
co nduct
a
masstve be planted predominately on
reforesta tion ptlot project m private la nd, but the program
Ohto this spring: in cooperation will not compete with priva te
WIth the Buy Scouts of Amenca nurseries nor be used for
and the Dtviswn of F orests and strictly landscaping purposes.
Preserves of !he Oh1o The prog ram has many goals
Departmen t of Na tur al among them those of be tter
fiC's our ces.

ecology, bea uttficahon, erosron

Oh io Governor J ohn J prevention and tree replerushGil11gan has procla im ed ment.
Februa ry " Let's Gr ee n
Ohi o's ca mpaign thi s Sprmg
Amenca' ' month in honor of is und er the direction or
U1is activity
Realtor Ron Kronenberger of
OhiO is the first state tu Waynesville and the Dayton
Implement this type pro1cct Board ol Realtors. Kronenberger is chairing the new and
specially created "Let's Green
Amenca ' ' Sub-Committee of
the Assoc iation's permanent

" Make

Am e nca

The Na tiOnal
Assocta ti on of Realtors has a
" Le t's Green Ameri ca"
program but currently 1t is on a
much smaller scale; dealing
primari1 y in pri vate land-

SI/B

him
for

aN
your

fam#y

Pa r k Cen tral Hotel Bldg
Ph 446 -4190
Hom e ..J 46 4518

Ga lltpohs
,--"""""\ like I
good fleigflbor,
· ~'' "'" '·

Srar~ ''""

13 therr.

11surnnce Compan ,es
Hom e O' l •ces Bl oom1ngtc n lll uto1s
S tat~ ~um

- -- -- - - - p 7305 -

particular JUrlsdtctwn and the

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT ON 3rd FLOOR

Sl&lt;!te will transporl tl1em from
their nurseries to the sites
It IS anticipated that at leas t
one Scout Umt per BoardCouncil w1ll participate. Each
participating Scout Unit Will
receive a specially designed
banner and the Association will
award a plaque to the Scout
Council with the best parti cipa tion. Interested Scout
officials can oblam del&lt;lils on
how to be involved in the
program by contacting their
local Boa rd of Realtors' "Le i's
Green America" Campaign .
Orders for trees are already
exceeding expectatiOns and it
IS planned to have ail planting
done between March IS and
April 15_

scapmg and the plantmg of
trees and shrubs to tmprove
community '"looks.'"
Both the Boy Scout Troops
and Explorer Scout Posts are
assisting in this project in
conjunction with their S.O.A.R.
ProJec t. They will select
possible planting sites, submit
the sites lor approval by the
DlvlsJ on of Forests and
Preserves, and then plant the
trees ~ under the supervision
of the DivlsiOn - once the sites

are approved. The local Boards
will purchase the trees forplanting on sites within the1r

FAMOUS

Visit Elberfelds furniture department and see the big selection of fine quality Kroehler living room su~es and sofas all at special February sale prices. Early American - Modern . Traditional and Spanish styles - Herculon Nylon - Velvet and Vinyl Covering.

Buy what you need now - You can really save.

ONE NIGHT ONLY

Monday, Feb. 4
5 TO 10 PM
Italian Night at the Meig s lnn.
The little Italian, Dino Lutz will do
h1s thing with !he following menu:
Mea lba lis &amp; Spaghetti
Garlic Bread
Antipasto Salad
Italian Wine
Desse rt

All You Can Eat- •4.25
Child Portions Available

lowered
GALLIPO!.IS - The Ohio
Sl&lt;lte Board of EducatiOn has
adopted a new · minimum
sl&lt;!ndard lor the issuance of an
Ohw Certificate of High School
Equivalence which requires a
mmimum standard score of 35
on each of the five tests and an
average standard score of 45 on
all live tests of General
EducatiOn Development
(G.E .D.I.
The G E. D. tes t center at
Gallia Academy High School
therefore is announcmg that 21
persons who had taken the test
and d1d not meet the old
standards now qualify to
receive their G.E.D. Certificate .
These persons may call the
Gallia Academy High School
Guidance Office (446-32501 if
they wish to obl&lt;!in an ap·
plication to submit to the Ohio
State Board of Education.
There are no fees required for
the form

Make

you r

reservat1on5
ea r ly

and programs lor child abuse
prevention and treatment
programs.

and

D• no

TH I;

MEIGS
INN
'

PH . 992 -3629
POMEROY. 0.

TRUCKS Bt:RNED
PEEBLES , OhiO IUPI1- A
fire at a Soluo bulk plant 1n this
Ada ms County communi ty late
Friday nigh! destroyed two
tru cks parked ins1de a
building Firemen esl!mated
$1 7.000 dama ge was done . They
d1d not determine a cause , but
called in the sU:tte fi re marshal
f rJr ~r· tm(•&lt;;IIJ~;t1rrm .

too small.
Contributions may be Jell at
the
department's
new

immediate response so that the
new ambulance can be ordered

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Chanre of snow north and
rain or snow In the south

in

drive .

'

the drive is aimed primarily at

res1dent,s m the area served by
the squad, it is stressed that
(

Firemen also are hopmg lor

Weather

\

~·~i

Partly cloudy tonight with
LOCAL TEMPS
lows 5 to IS in the north and
Temperature
in downtown
teens and lower 20s in the
south . Tuesday cloudy w1th a Pomeroy Monday at 11 a. m.
chance of snow . Highs in the was 30 degrees under snowy
sktes.
2Qs and the 30s.

•

Devoted To The

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

enttne

lntere.,L~

PHONE 992-2156

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1974

TEN CENTS

{ Rapid development of coal
i!!: mining techniques is asked
M

!

Shop Our
Newly located

~

!

1
MUSIC
I
1
I
1 DEPARTMENT i

!

ON THE

I

L_:~~~~~-~J

Furniture is one of the most thoughtfully-bought products in the
world. Sometimes it's chosen after weeks of shopping, and frequently
with the judgment of more than one member of the family. This
adds considerable meaning to the fact that Kroehler sofas and chairs
go into more homes than any other in the world. Each of them, fr.om
the standpoint of good design, worthy constructi?n: and reasonable price, is_the homeK'R C EHLER
makers mformed way of agreemg thatis the finest.
·

0

SAVE YOUR SALESUPS FOR VALUABLE PREMIUMS

ELBERFELDS IN P E·ROY

I

f

;::! research and development money over the normal Interior

Highways would receive [\

WASHINGTON (UPl) - The Nixon administration proposed a $293 .5 million development
program for Appalachia today in its fiscal 1975·
budget, with an emphasis on subregional projects.
Unlike past years, funds for education, health, mine
area restoration and supplemental grant programs
will be in bloc grants to states, allowing them to
determine in which category to use the money .
Of the $125 million total for such activity, $40
million was set aside for programs designed in
$ubregional development strategies.

area development programs.
At the same time, more
responsibility has been given to
the states to administer the
programs.
The development programs
are
:
Appalachi~Demonstration health proAccording to the budget , an
estimated 1,050 miles of road- jects in which grants are made
way wiU be completed at the for constructing, equipping and
end of fiscal year 1974, as well operating multicounty
as 470 miles of access roads. demonstration health facililles
The funds are administered including hospitals, regional
by the 13-sta te Appalachian diagnostic and treatment
Regional Conunission, a joint centers, in addition to primary
federal-state agency includirig care and child development
representatives of New York, programs.
- Mine area restoration by
Pennsylvania, Ohio, Maryland,
sealing
and filling voids in
West Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia, South Carolina, North abandoned coal mines, exCarolina, Tennessee, tinguishing underground and
The budget includes $160 million for the Appalachian Development Highway System,
the principal activity of earlier
years of the federal program to
help poverty-stricken states in

Alabama,
Mississippi.

Georgia

and

The $293.5 million sought in
the budget was $23 million
more than in this fiscal year.
Although the highway
building program was the
keynote of early federal aid
to the area, the effort has
gradually moved into the lour

The direct subsidy payments
were $3.9 billion in the 1972
crop season and $2.5 billion for
the 1973 crop_,aeason.
The direct payments, in
addition to crop support aid,
include subsidies for con ·
servation and several other
!arm assistance programs.
New Type Program
The sharp decline carne because Congress last year
adopted a new type of support
program for feed graips, wheat
and cotton, effective beginning
this year, under which support

Heart contests rescheduled
be residents of Meigs County.
Any girl wishing to enter any
of the three contests can do so
by contacting, Mrs. Roger
Abbott, East Main St.,
Pomeroy, 992-5641, after 5p. m.
at Mrs. James Soulst.y, Union
Ave., Pomeroy, 992-23n.

eotablishments of lhe county to
hold coins placed lor votes.
The Queen of Hearts condictates must be in high school,
ninth through 12th grades. The
Princess candidates must be in
junior high school, seventh and
eighth grades, and the Junior
Princess contest is open to aU
'
Winners
will be ~nnounced at
fourth, fifth and sixth grade
students. All contestants m\JSl the Spring Festival in March _

The annual "heart contests"
for girls of Meigs County will
be conducted again this year to
help raise funds lor the Heart
Fund drive now underway.
, A Queen of Hearts, a princess of HeariS and a Junior.
Princess of Hearts will be
selected on the basis of a penny
a vote. Each contestant will
· place containers in business

~

.;:;: Department request.
)·.
(!)
The largest item in the addltional funds for OCR was

..

®

~~:!:~~~ •!n~ n~~~;::u~~:~~,!~~ :',~: ~:d7rf:~~ f~~ :~j

rzefsr $160 million in program&amp;=::=::::,~
Fry tO 0 p pOSe
d
d
c
recommen e ongress
Rh O d es ., return

million from the current fiscal
year. It also included expanded
credit for rural development
and electrification, but
proposed a slight cut in rural
housing loans.
With the proposed new
spending total, officials said
only 75\ million would be
needed lor farm commodity
support programs, including
$266 million for direct payment
subsidies in the 1974 crop season. This would be the lowest
subsidy rota! since 1955, when
only $230 million was spent.

WASHINGTON (UPI) With direct federal subsidies to
farmers slashed 119 per cent to
the lowest level since 1955,
President Nixon today sent
Congress an Agriculture
Department budget in which
two-thirds of the money would
go w food stamp;, school
lunches and other aid to the
general public.
Overall, officials said
agriculture spending proposals
for the 1975 fiscal year
beginning July I, are estimated
at $9.2 billion, down $127

i»

:;!;
WASHINGTON (UPII- President Nixon today asked
~~ Congress for an accelerated program to Improve eoal ~~
;:;:.. mining teclwlques and Increase development of coal :&lt;:.•.t
!j; gasification and liquefaction. Included in his fiscal 1975 ~
budget request was $311.6 million in additional energy :~

CINCINNATI ( UPI I - State
Rep. Charles E. rry, R-Springfield , announced today he
would seek the Republican
gubernatorial nom ination in

ferences . " I am not at all align·

ed with Mr. Fry in the announcements today. It's pure
coincldence."
A week. ago Fry announced

he was "offermg" himself as a
ca ndidate lor the gubernatorial
already has announced for the nomination . He spent last week
Republican nomination, from hopscotching around the state
to l&lt;lste public sentiment about
returning to the governor's
his offer to run . He had said he
office.
At the sa me time, m fa ct at a would fil e petitiOns as a cannews conference at the same didate if he found enough
hotel here, state Sen . Stanley J. sentim ent.
Aronoff, R-Cincumati , said he
will seek the office of state
Aronoff , in his news conferattorney general.
ence, said he w1H seek a series
"Thi s is just a pure coincl· of public debates against predence," Aronoff said of the sent attorn ey general William
nearly simultaneous news con- .J Brown .
his attempt to keep former

Gov. James A. Rhodes, who

:;:::;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;::::::::::::.:·:·:·:~!::::::;:::::::;.:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::;:;::::::::::.:·:·:·:·:::·::::::::::::::::::;;::;~;

~~~
WASHINGTON (UP!) - His plans for a balanced budget ~~
.:;; shattered by the energy crisis, Pref!ident Nixon today ~
{ proposed a record $304.4 billion budget that means the nation :!~
;:;; wUI spend almost $10 billion more than It collects next year. ~;;
:;:; Backlog his pledge of "no recessiop" Nixon's blueprint for ;;:
!;~;fiscal 1975 unveiled a strategy to fight unemployment at all 1:~
;!;! costs -even if it meaus "busting the budget" and continued !;!;
;:;;inflation and higher prices.
!;!;
:!:! It was the sixth straight red-ink budget for the Nixon !:!:
';!;presidency. II the proposed figures are correct, the federal ;:;;
outcrop mine fires, and
:~~government will have spent $77 billion more than its revenue ;!;.
reclamation of strip mined
!;!:since he entered the White House in 1969.
;!;
areas.
!::·
Ahout onHhird of the 197S budget dollar will be returned :!;:
-Construt1ion and equip- :;:; to citizens in the form of Social Security and welfare benefits, ::;:
ping vocational education ~i: food stamps, unemployment Insurance and other govern- ·~~
facilities , and operating ;:;;men! payments. Anot~e r quarter - $87.7 billion - Is ear- :;!;
programs in limited cases.
~;; marked lor national defense. It Is the largest defeuse budget :;;;
-Supplemental grant.ffi..aid
.~ ever - but in tenns of percentage of the Gross National '!!!
program to allow areas to take :;: Product it is the smallef!t since the beginning of the Korean ;:;;
advantage of other federal pro- ii War in 19SO.
.
!;!;
grams.
:::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::: ::::::::::;.;.~-:·:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:·:::~·:::::·:~:·:·:::·~:·:·:·:-:::·:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::·:·:=::::;.

Farm subsidies slashed 89%
i

' '\~

Of The Meigs-Mason Area

293.5 million asked for
Appalachia development

.COLUMBUS - AN ESTIMATED $200,800 A YEAR in tax
dollars is spent by Ohio Attorney General William J. Brown on a
public relations program that includes a bi-weekly newspaper
colwnn and a four-page monthly newsletter, it was reported
Saturday. Brown's II-man public relatwns start IS pa1a over
$120,000 BMually, the Cleveland Plain Dealer reported. The
paper said mailing and printiqg costs are in addition to salaries.
The Plain Deter said $55,200 is spent to print the newsletter,
"Report from Atty. Gen . William J. Brown." Brown's name was
mentioned 52 times in the first issue, which also carried a large
picture olthe attorney general, in November. Brown's name was
mentioned 20 times in the January issue .

r·-----._.._..._.. _. ._. . --.. _.1

.I

:P.~;;.:::~:w.-:::::::::·:=:::::·:::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::;::.::::;:::;::;::::;.;.:.:·:·:·:·:·:~:.:::::::::::::::::::·:-:·::::::::~

HOUStON - THE SKYLAB 3 ASTRONAUTS retrieved .
thousands of rare pictures of the sun and Comet Kohoutek
&amp;mday during America's last planned spacewalk for aimost a
decade, and today start packing to come home.
F1ight Commander Gerald P. Carr and scientist Edward G.
Gibson worked for live hours and 19 minutes outside the big
space station that has been their home for almost three months,
while pilot William R. Pogue stayed inside to keep the lab. under
control. The record-setting crew of spacemen ·splashes down at
11:17 am. EDT Friday near San Diego in the Pacific Ocean,
ending another era of U. S. space night.

You're right at f1ome with this
'Cape Cod' Kroehler sofa...

\ - -it'
-

.

r

SPORTS FANS GRIM - Eastern's basketball fans were
solemn during the first hall of their "Eagles" clash with
Fairland Saturday night at Eastern. At the end of the first
quarter the score was 8-6 in favor of Fairland. The second
half was a different story as Eastern, down by 17, came back
to tie the gatne late in the fourth period before losing ~ .

•

at

.

NO. 205

the

headquarters or may be sent to
the d,epartrnentat P. 0. Box I«
in Middleport. Letters have
been sent to business houses
asking their support and while

soon.

portion on Wednesday,
changing to scattered snow
Hurries then lair Thursday .
Highs In the upper 20s and
30s in the north and 40s in the
south. Lows IS to 2S in the
north and 20s or lower 30s In
the south.

LONDON - COAL MINERS VITED by an overwhelming 81
pet. in returns announced today to launch a nationwide strike
expected wturn Brltaln's economic crisis into a disaster. The
Mineworkers' Union said coal workers voted 188,393 to 44,222 to
walk off their jobs next Sunday, escalating their 12-week-&lt;!ld
slowdown into a full-&lt;!Cale walkout.
About 86 pet. of Britain's 269,000 miners took part in the
crucial strike balloting last Thursday and Friday. The votes,
counted by the independent Electoral Reform Society , were
announced by Mineworkers President Joe Gormley at union
headquarters. The ballot authOrized the union's national
executive corrunittee to launch a strike on Sunday , but did not
make it mandaoory.

POMEROY - Five books
were donated to the MeigsJackson-Vinton Counties Bookmobile by Mrs. Owen Watson
on Wednesday, Jan. :ro. They
were Living Books of Moses,
The Living Bible, B11ly
GTaham Crusade,Edition; The
Miracle Book, Oral Roberts ;
The Hiding Place, Come Ten
Boom, and The Four Translation, New Testament.
Also donated by Mrs. Watson
were October 1973, December
1973, and January 1974 issues of
Readers Digest .

authorize grants and contracts
for demonstration programs

firemen will weicome contributions from any source

participate

ByunttedPresslnternattonal
WASHINGTON - SOVIET FOREICN MINISTER Andrei A.
Gromyko has arrived from Cuba for talks with President Nixon
on subjects including arms control, the Middle East and possibly
U.S. relations with Cuba .
The Soviet official landed in the midst of a sleet storm at
nearby Andrews Air Force Base Sunday. As he stepped out of his
plane he asked: "Am I in Antarctica? " He flew here"from
Havana, where Soviet party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev was
making his first visit.

Standards

PROBLEM CENTER
WASHINGTON IUPii
President Nixon has signed
legislation designed to create a
nati onal center to deal with the
problem of ch1ld abuse and
neglect. The center, to be
under the authority of the
Department
of
Health,
Education and Wellare, will

· Therefore no contnbution is

lR

Tri-Co Lihrnry

by DINO

~~~=~:·:·:·:::::«·~::...~::::-=*.::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

._.,,,,~,==;;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:,;,,,,,,,;,,,,,•.:::B==·~'''''''''''''''''''''Z''i''''''''''''''''''''''T

Books donated to

FOODS

activ1ty, headed by Mrs . Grace
Pratt and Mrs. Ruth Powers,
the'
department
feels ,
"Everyone will now pitch in to
make the new vehicle a
reality."
Firemen stressed today they
want the entire public to

·
e
VOL. XXV

'

$8,565.32, over half of the approximate $15,000 needed to
buy an ambulance which will
meet National Highway Safety
Act sl&lt;!ndards.
The drive began in late
January . Going over the
hallway mark with yesterday's

Special February Sale
J(roehler Living Room Suites

Bette r "

C01mmt tee.

The fund drive by the Middleport Volunteer Fire Dept.
for a new ambulance got a
$2,000 plus "shot in the arm"
Sunday from a house-to-house
canvass _conducted in much of
the territory served by the
department.
Plete Kloes, chairman of the
Ways and Means Committee.
said response to the canvass as
well as to the drive has been
"almost unbelievable":
as well as to the drive has been
"almost unbelievable".
Kloes said that $2,314.20 was
raised Sunday even though
several areas remain to be
canvassed this week. The fund
drive - which includes some
$3,000 that the firemen have in
their treasury - now sumds at

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Massive reforestation
•
•
•
proJect set- In spring
Real tors

.'

subsidies are paid only if market priceo drop below "target
support" levels.
Since !arm prices have been
booming and currently are far
above the l&lt;lrgets, officials estimate that feed grain payments will drop from $1.2 bil·
lion on the 1973 crop to zero on
this year's crop.
Wheat payments will also
drop to zero and only a nominal
$4 million, compared with $7.15
million last year, is expected to
be needed in cotton subsidies.
Will Ask Repeal
"Nixon noted he has asked
Congress to adopt a similar
''target" program for rice and
peanuts. He said he also will
ask repeal of a legal provision
providing insurance-type paymeniS to grain and cotton producers if their yields are low ..
This provision conceivably
could add $175 million to
payments cosiS if bad weather
cuts farm yields, officials said.
In addltion, the budget pro·
posal attempted to duck or at
least ease a confrontation with

Congress by suggetmg some
spending-though not as much
as Congress IS expected to
want -on conservation subsidies and grants for local
water and sewer projects.
For conservation payments,

the budget proposed $111.8 million, up $21.8 million this year.
Earlier, the admimstration

BIG GUY WINS - Basketball is more and more a big
man's game with the Fairfield Dragons' 6-6 center, ( 55 )
Hi chard Burns, showing why as he gets possession of the ball
from &amp;-1 Eastern Eagle jumor guard ( 141 Tim Spencer
Saturday night at Eastern High School. Fairfield won the
game 65-6{). Picture by Kate Crow .

Eastern teachers
•

WID

schools under the Natwnal
TUPPE RS PLAINS
Eastern District teachers got a School Lunch Programs.
Local school officials have
$200 per year increase in hase
adopted
the following fanu lypay and payment of full costs
size,
income
scale for use in
of present hosp ltalizal!on insurance, and non-academic determining eligib1hty .
employes were gra nted a 20
Children from families
cent per hour increase by the whose income is at .or below
distmt board of education tha t shown are eligible for
Saturday .
{Continued on Page 2)
The new oa v s(' hP.rllJI P.s
are effective as of J anuary 16

In another actwn Distnct
Supt. John Riebel Sr. announced a free and reduced
price meal policy lor school
children unable to pay the lull
or i r P of me a Is se r ved i n

~tation

closed
hy work stoppage
The Cerlifled 01l Service
Stat10n on Pomeroy's West
Mam St., closed today lor the
third stra1ght day due to the
work stoppage of truckers. A

had sought to eliminate the
program entirely but backed
down after Congress voted $175 s ta tion spokesman did not
million for the current year . know when it will reope n.
For water and sewer grants,
The sl&lt;ltion has exhausted its
the budget proposed $20 gasoline supply and has no
million, a $10 million cut from trucks running because or the
the current year and far below work stoppage. Two trucks of
the $150 million Congress voted the company were shot at
this year.
during the stoppage. Some 25
Certified Oil Service Stations in
Ohio are similarly affected, the
spokesman said.
Buckeye State proposed
nothmg for SE Ohio Hood
CALLED TO STORE
control or investigative work
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
leading up to such projects.
called Sunday to the Pomeroy
Wine Store at 11:11 a. m. for
Of Interest in Ohio, but not Virgil Hudson w))o was taken to
budgeted under the state's Veterans Memorial Hospital .
tol&lt;!l, included a special in·
vestigation of Hood control for
PHONES RIPPED OUT
th• metropolitan region of
The Meigs County Sheriff's
·- tingtin, W. Va . • Ashland, Dept. said today two
Ky . - Portsmouth, Ohio, telephones at the rest stops on
$350,000.
SR 33 North of Pomeroy were
Included in the document ripped out over the weekend .
was $9.7 million ,for operation No leads as to the vandals or
and maintenance of 26 existing the time of the ,incident are
Corps of Engi neers facilities in known The department is
the sl&lt;lte.
mvestlgating

Ohio marked for $46 million
WASHIN GTON (UPII President N1xon asked
Congress today to budget, $46.6
million in water resources

Monday for Ohio in fiscal 1975,
including $35 million in construction Money.
Funds for two navigation
systems on the Ohio R1ver Willow Island locks and dams
and Hannibal locks and dams
- accounted lor over $20
million of the constructiOn
figure. Willow Island was listed
for $10,100,000, and Hannibal
lor $10,110,000.
The rema mder

struction money

of con - .

for

lhe

pay hike

Phone canvass
underway in
Pomeroy area
POMEROY -

Middleport area IS under wa},
General Telephone Co. of Ohio
announced today .
Donald H. Pearch. Pomeroy
customer serVIce supervisor ,
sa id General
Tlephone
Directory Co. representatives
will call on businessmen to
review and confinn listrngs for

the 1974 directory being
compiled. This canvass lasts
until March 15. Closing date is
May 2, the deadli ne for ,
residential customers to make

changes&lt;in the new directory.
Businessmen are reminded
that billing lor yellow page
advertising will be included
with the monthly telephone
statement. "Other invoice-type
solicitations lor yellow page
advertising should be carefully
inspected ,"

•

'

Pear ch

said .

"Some businessmen have
inadvertently paid for space in
a national or international
directory thinking it was for
the local directory."
Listed in the book \\ilh
Pomeroy and Middleport are
the communities of Letart
Falls, Portiand, Racine and
Rutland . The new directory is
scheduled for delivery in July.

I

'

The yearly

canVass of business telephone
customers m the Pomeroy •

r'

�..........

--- ---------- ----~----~~~----~----------~----~
'

d

I

•

Red tape is
big trouble
By United Press lntertlBtlonal
Federal
energy
chief
Wtlham E Stmon, after a late
rught sesston wtth representatives of mdependent truck
drtvers, mdtcated today that
goverrunent red tape could
preven~ an tmmediate solutlon
to their problems
At the same ttme, Sunon satd
he
opposed one of the drt vers'
LESTER ALLMAN
key demands, a rollback of
LESTER B. ALLMAN,
diesel
fuel pnces to May, 1973,
District Supt. of the Virginia
levels
. North Carolina District of
On the highways there were
the Evangelical Methodi st
scatt~ red mCJdents of vwlence
Church, "Ill he the guest
directed
at dnv ers who conspeaker at the Indoor Camp
tmued
I
oiling
thetr n gs
meeting at the Laurel Cliff
Ftve days of violence asFree Methodist Church. The
sociated
wtth the truckers'
Meigs
Area
Holiness
stnk
e
brought
Sunon and about
AssoclBtlon "til sponsor the
40 other fede ral and state of·
meetings which will begin
ftctals to a closed-doo r meeting
Monday ~ and continue
m Washmgton Sunday where
through Feb 10. Services
will be held nightly at 7 30. more than tw o dozen truckers
atred their gnpes Stmon sard
Lee Everleth of Martella will
he had kept Prestdent NIXon
be In charge of special
mformed ·'of all the events of
singing. The public " tn·
the day '
vi ted
" Thts IS an Interage ncy
problem that cuts across the
lnterstate Commerce Commtsston, the Department of TransportatiOn, the Federal Energy
Offtce, ' Sunon sa td after the
second of two sesstons broke up
early thts mornmg
Meetings Continue
The meet mgs contmue
today, and Stmon satd the
participants "will stt down
wtth the rutty gritty " He sa td
Sunday's meetings concerned
mostly "techmcal matters"
NEW YORK (UP! ) - A such as rollbacks, allocations
military spy rmg operated and prtce "pass-throughs;'
IIIStde the Whtte House giVIng
Earlier, he was reported to
highly classlfled dtplomallc have told the truckers 1t would
information to the Joint Chiefs take congressiOnal act10n to
of Staff one year before recent solve a major complaintreports mdtcated, the New speedmg up ICC rule-making.
York Times satd in Sunday's procedures, whtch make it
editions
difficult for trucking frrms to
Times reporter Seymour M get qutck approval to "passHersh quoted "closely mvolved through" higher costs m the
sources" as saying the Wlau- form of rate mcreases
thomed smuggling of Nattonal
As for pnce rollbacks , Stmon
Secunty Counctl documents satd 11 1 am against rolling
went on for 15 months .
back prtces Personally, I am
The report in effect chal- opposed to that because tl's
lenged the explanations of counterproductive to our mteradmmistratton offictals, m- medtate and long term goal of
cludmg Adm. Thomas H. brmgmg on long-term selfMoorer, chall"lllan of the JCS, suf!lctency m thts country,
that the spymg was the random which 1s our only answer."
work of "overzealous"
But he satd later "I dtdn't
military liaison men occurrmg say that the pnces were not
m 1971 and proVIding only gomg to be rolled back. I gave
trivial mformation.
an opmton . that I've stated
The Times satd Moorer's quite often. I'm optlmtsttc
office declmed comment on Its reasonable men are gomg to
report or any report mvolvmg .e:et together on this issue "
charges "made by unidentified
Simon to Attend Hearing
sources "
Sunon satd he would appear
"The spymg mvolved as at a House Ways and Means
many as ftve htgh..-ankmg Commtttee hearmg today, but
officers who regularly recetved that another htgh-level FEO
and delivered over the next 15 ofhctal would meet With the
months (from the fall of 1970) truckers
classifted documents pilfered
PennsylvanlB Gov Milton J
by a Navy yeoman," the Times Shapp, who called the meetmg,
report satd.
smd, "All parties have been
~~A New York T1mes ln·
thoughtful and candtd. Deftmte
vesttgation shows that the specifiC progress has been
spying began wtthin weeks made m several areas 1' He
after Yeoman 1st Class Charles refused to elaborate, and
F. Radford was asstgned m Stmon mdicated the hard
September, 1970, to the bargammg was put off until the
military batson umt set up by late mornmg sessiOn began.
the Defense Department mstde
In addition to the rollback
the Nallonal Securtty CoWlctl. " and ICC procedures. the truckers satd they wanted a prtce
freeze on all oil products, a
pu bhc audtt of oil compames, a
NOT ICE OF
Jomt congress1onal'comrruttee
AP POINTMENT
case No 21,112 study of thetr problems, remoEstate of Lorna D' Owens
val of allocatiOn quotas from
Deceased
Notice 1S hereb y g1ven that
truck stops and a crackdown on
Clyde F1sher ol Middleport
any
hoardmg of diesel fuel by
Me1gS County, Oh10 has been
duly appomted Executor of the major truckmg comparues
Estate of Lorna D
Owens
In other developments m the
decea sed la te of Midd l eport
Me1gs County Oh 10
shutdown
Cred1tors are req u •red to f ile
They'll Get It
their cla1ms Wllh sad f 1dUc 1ary
w1fhm tour mor1th s
- Attorne) General Wttltam
Daled l h1s 30th day of
B Saxbe, m Mechanicsburg,
January 19 74
Ohto, asked governors and
Mannmg D We b ster
Judge pollee departments to take any
Court of Commo n Pl eas. steps necessary to prevent
Proba te DIVIS IOn
Meig s Count y , Oh•o . VIolence by truck drtvers "It
(2J • 4, 11 18 31c
appears that truckers want a

Spy ring
operated
for JCS

NOTICE ON FILING

ANgFA~NPVREA~~~~~NT
l

t

( 1 ) 28 ( 2)

.j

By Ann B Watson
Deputy Clerk
2f ;

Incidents Reported
The Pennsylvama State
Pohce reported 15 rock-throwmg mctdents on the Pennsylvama Turnpike Sunday Most
of the rocks were throw from
overpasses. Several windshtelds were broken, but there
were no mJunes The nwnber
of Pennsylvama Natwnal
Guardsmen on acttve duty was
doubled to more than 2,000 to
~eal wtth the strike
- lndtana State Pollee satd
at least SIX shots were ftred
from a car on the Northern
Indtana toll road, several miles
north of Valparatso, and two
shots struck the cab of a truck .
The driver was not mJured.
In other news of the energy
CTISIS

- The Berrut newspaper An
Nahar Sunday quoted "mformed Arab sources" m
Washmgton as saymg the Arab
ml embargo agamst the Umted
States would be hfted at the
begmnmg of March
Ford Opposes Rationmg
- Vtce Prestdent Gerald R.
Ford srud Sunday he opposes
gasohne rat10mng at thiS tune,
1
'because I remember back m
World War II when we had gas
raltoning, we had all kmd of
cnme, we had
black
marketmg, we had a terrble
fouled up sttuallon from
begmning to end --&lt;!ven when
we were ftghtmg a world war
And it seems to me m the
present atmosphere that 1t
would be even worse. You'd
have the worst aspects of
ratwmng " He was m~
tervtewed on CBS "Face the

Natlon. 11
-The Federal Power CommiSSion approved, 3 to 2, the
highest pnce m tls htslory for
natural gas sold m mterstate
commerce. The comrrusSion
authoriZed a jomt proJect of
seven producers to sell the gas
to Southern Natural Gas, a
ptpeline serVIng Southern states, at a cost of 55 cents per
1,000 cubtc feet. The pnce is 22
per cent more than the
preVIous record of 45 cents set
last May
- A Library of Congress
report released Sunday satd
that netther tax changes nor
nsmg prices are likely to mcrease existing supphes of oil
and gas in the near future.

More t apes ,ask ed

The State of Oh1o , M e tgs ("\.
County Probate Court
To
the
Ancil l ary
Ad
WASHINGTON (UP!) mm 1s tra t or W W A
of the
Prosecutor Leon
• estate to such of the to llowtng Spectal
as are rest dent s o f t he St ate of Jaworski says he IS seeking
OhiO
VIZ
th e SUI'"VIVIOQ
s pouse the next of km , t he more tapes \and docwnents
benef•c•anes und er t h e wil l
from the White House, even
and to the attorney or attorneys
represenl1 ng
any
of
the though President Ntxon satd
aforement•oned p er son s
only last wee k that the
Lenore H Ken t Deceased,
tndtanapoltS ln d•ana No 19 884 prosecutor had been giVen all
You are hereby noltf1ed t hat tl1e information he needs.
the
Inventory
and
Ap
Jaworski said Sunday the
pra1sement of the E sta te of the
aforementtoned. deceased late White House has promised him
of scud County, was filed'" thiS
Court
Said Inventory and an answer today whether the
Appraisement Will be for additional informatiOn will be
hear•ng before th1S Court on the
11th day of February 1974, at handed over "
10 00 o ' clock A M
The Prestdent . srud m his
Any person des1r1ng to file
State
of the Umon message
except•ons the re to must file
them at lea st five days pnor t o Wednesday: "I believe that I
t he date set for heanng
have p•·ovtded all the material
G1~en under my hand and
seal of satd Cou rt. fh ts 25t h day thai he 1Jaworski ) needs to
pf J an uary 19711
1
Manntng D Webs t er
Judge and ex of11cio
Cler k of satd 'Court

confrontatiOn, and they're
go mg to get tl," he satd
- Max Krugman , a Carpentersville, IU , truck driver was
shot m the shoulder when he
stopped his serru-tra tler truck
to check hts ltre pressure on
Interstate 94near New Buffalo,
Mtch HIS unknown assatlant
got out of a car, asked " if he
was workmg today" and when
Krugman satd yes the man
saJd "'Well, you won't be for
long" and shot him, Krugman
told pollee Krugman was m
fall' condition
- Herbert Rtder, a trucker
from Harrtson, Ohm, was shot
m the shoulder at a Kentucky
Turnptke mterchange about 18
mtles southwest of Lowsville
He also suffered face and neck
cuts from flymg glass Rider
satd a second shot was fired at
a truck followmg his, but that
th e drtver was not InJUred
--Ohto Gov. John J Gtlligan
ordered 900 Natwnal Guardsmen acltvated and placed
under direcllon of the Htghway
Patrol. The guardsmen would
be used for groWld patrol,
convoy escort and aenal
survetllance, Gtlltgan satd
--Two tankers were burned
m Peebles, Ohio, causmg
$32,000 in damage Ohio offlctals satd the highway patrol
was providing escorts across
the state to dnvers requestmg
protection

conclude hts mvesttgahons '
But Jaworski satd SWlday
that while he may have eno1•gh
information to "indtct certam
individuals" sometime this
month. he needs more to

'

complete ht~ mvesttgahon
''with care and wtth thoroughness."
He would not tdentify the
addttlonal material he wants
except to s3y, ''there are
documents antl some are also
m the nature of tapes " He did
not pinpoint just when he had
asked for thts information but
said the Whtte House informe\1
him Friday 11 would make a
!mal decision today whether to
furnish it.
Jaworski was mtervtewed on
ABC's "Issues and Answers."
The House of Representatives is to vote this weektentatively Wednesdaywhether to grant the House
Judtctary Committee broad
subpoena powers for tts unpeachment mqutry Vtce
Prest dent Gerald Ford said the
committee has no right to

Pro standings

Local Bowling

NBA Standtngs
By Untied Pr ess lnternat1onal
Ea stern Conference
AtlantiC Otvt s10n
w ·1 pel g b
Boston
37 13 740
New Yor k
33 11 600
61 1
Bu ff a lo
27 29
82 13
Philadelphia
IS 38 283 2J' '
Central DI VIStOO
w
I pctm 9 b
Cap11at
29 23 558
At la nta
24 32 42 9 7
19 38 333 1217
Houston
Cl eve la n d
19 :19 32 8 13
We stern Conf e rence
M1dw est OtVI Ston
w 1 p et g ll
40 13
755
M1 lwaukee
39 18 684
3
Ch cago
36 11 655
5
Delro tt
21 36 36 8 21
K C Omaha
PaCifiC DIVI SIOn
w 1 pet g b
LosA n ge les
3 1 23 574
Gold en StJt e
28 22 560
1
seattle
25 35 417
9
Phoen•K
'12 3:1
407
9
Pnrlli'!n rl
10 33 377 1() 1 7
SundoJV s R es ults
Cap ,ta l 11 2 Bos ton 99
Buff~lo 112 Phdade l pht a 98
Ch •cago 108 Cleve la nd 94
Hou st on 123 A tl anta 112
L os A ngeles 124 Port l and QJ
De tro• I 11 4 Seatt le 100
(On l y games schedu led )
Mond ays Gam es
( No games sc h eduled )

Wedne sday Afternoon L ea gue
J a nuary 2. 1974
Won Lo st
Watd Cro ss Son s
8
0
Te am No 6
6
2
TeamNo4
4
4
11
&lt;1
E ilt S &amp; Son s Soh tO
::. w eet Pea s
2
6
T ea m H tgh Scr•cs
Team 6
!~ 0 Wa1d Cro ss So11 s 741
H 19h T eam Game
Watd
Cr o ss So ns '177 Sweet Peas
269
H 1gh lnd Se r es
Be tt y
W h tt i .Jtch 450 Pearl Rus se ll

391

Htgh lnd Game
Be tty
Wh flatc h 16J Pear l R usse ll

IS.1

January 9, 1974
won Lost
Team 6
I &lt;I
2
Watd Cross Son s
10
6
Te am4
10
6
Ell•s&amp; SonsSoho
10
6
Swee t Peas
4
12
Htg h Team se r es
Team 4,
799 W a1 d Cro ss and Son s 785
T eam H1gh Ga me - T eam 4,
287 Eil tS and Sons Soh10 279
H tg h lnd Ser es - Mary Lou
H oover 450 Be tl y Whll l a l ch
43 I
H gh lnd Game - Mary L ou
H oover 169 Be fly Wh 1tlatch
164

January 16 1974
Won Lo st

T eam 6
"14
6
10
wa,d Cro ss Sons
14
10
E ilt s and Sons Soh o
I0
14
T eam 1
B
!6
Sweet P eas
4
20
T eam 3
Team 4
Htgh Team Sere s
828 Sw ee t Peas 823
Sw eet
H1gh T ea m Game
Pe as 295 T eam 6 294
H1gh lnd
ser .es
Jo y
M 1t c h el l 435 Jane Gar nes 428
H1 gh l nd Gam e
Ja n e
G arne s 155 Mary Hoov er and
Part• Chapman 153
- Nancy J Snyder Sec

RUMANE SOCIETY OFFICERS, BOARD MEMBERS
- Members of the Mason County Humane Society Board of
Directors and offtcers attending Frtday everung's Charter
Ntghl Dinner at the Moose Home pose here wtth Mrs.
Dorothy Ftsher, prestdent of the Metgs County Chapter
Pictured are front row, from left, Rtta Crabtree, Conme

College Scores

By Un1fed Press lntcr nat1onal
Sa turday
Tuesday Allernoon L eu gue
East
J a nu ary 22, 1974
Won Lost
Assump t.o n 101 Le Moy ne 81
B looms bg St 99 M ll r sv l 58
Ro y a l Cr own Bottl1ng
8
0
Bos ton Col i 74 Fo r dham 64
T eam N o 1
6
'2
Brown 84 Da rtm ou th 67
N ew York Clothmg House
6
2
B llo Sf 107 N ew Palt z 84
Team No 2
2
6 c w P os t 7l Kmgs Pt 56
Fores l Run Blo ck
2
6 Ch yny St 86 Mansfld St 66
Fr en dly Ta v er n
0
8 Coas t Gua rd 65 Bowdo.n 48
Roya l
Co lgat e 76 Buffalo 69
T eam H1gh Game
Connc c ll cut 93 Ma •ne 7 1
Crown Bott l mg , 572
T eam
D avs&amp; E ikn s 77 Bluefld St 63
H1Qh Ser es Royal Crown
Delaware 101 Buc kn el l 73
Bo fll•ng 15 10
ln d H tg h Game - Mar l ene
Drexel 57 Johns Hopk1ns 55
Eltz tow n 73 Susquehanna 63
Wilson 246 Norma Ams bary
Fat rmont St 81 Conco rd 66
19 8
ln d Htgh Ser •es Be ll y
F rammgham 60 John s ton 59
F r n kln&amp;Mr shll 83 Mrav1an 66
Sm 1t h 557 Ma rlen e Wil son 549
Gan non 89 N K y St 73
Ge neva 70 Westminster 65
Geotwn 63 Penn Sf 58
Wedn es day Early B1rd
Ge tty sburg 81 Leh 1gh 70
Leagu e
Gle nv l 72 Wheelmg 71
January 23 1974
G rove Cty 73 Crn g 1e M l ln 57
Won L os t
lnd Pa 86 Ed1nboro 76
36
4
B en Tom Co rp
Jr sy Cty St 67 Monmou th 62
H el en's BN uty Sho o
34
6
L y c mng 76 Ph lla T eK 68
Ber tha s G ro ce r y
18
22
Mass 76 N1agara 64
Raw l mg s Au t o Paris
12
213
Roush'S La ndm g
10
30 Mer cyhrsf 76 Al l 1ance 61
10
30 Mntcl r St 7&lt;1 G ram b ing 69
St ewar t Hardw ar e
M Harvey 91 W Va Tech 81
T eam H1gh Gam e Ben
Pen n 73 Columb ia 36
Tom Corp 802 Team H1gh
Pnn ce ton 92 Cor nell 56
Se nes - Ben Tom Corp 2319
lnd H1gh Game - Marlen e R IU 7 1 Sou t h F la 62
Rut g ers 86 Nav y 85
Wilson 199 Mall:me Dugan and
St Bon 64 Detro1t 61
Jan Jenkms 181
St Jn o N Y 14 Ar my 50
l nd H 1g h Se r te s - Marlene
St Jos Pa 68 Fatrf l d 59
Wilson and BettyWh•tlat ch 504
St MI ChaelS 88 Am Inti 79
Mary V oss ~9 7
Sa lem 51 78 Bstn St 70
Sc ranton 57 Wagn e r 55
Seton Hall 75 Holy Cross 64
W edn es day E a rly
Trn s ylvn1a 68 Bellarmne 60
Mued L ea gue
Trenton St 72 Bloom fld 7 1
January n 1974
Un1 on 70 Hami!ton 48
Won Lo s!
Z1de s Sport Sho p
28
12 West Chester 62 Kutztwn 57
West L tb 59 W Va St 55
Regatta In
18
12
Yo un g's Market
24
16 West Vt r 75 Villanova 68
w va W s lyn 107 Waynsbg 91
N e l son 's Dr ugs
18
21
Wilkes 82 Ups ala 72
Ten th Frame r s
16
24
South
Sm 1th Nel son Moto r s
6
34
Alabam a 73 Auburn 64
H1g h Ga me - Men
Russ
A la Sf 110 A l bny Sf 88
Ca r s on
216
Ch u c k
AI ern A&amp;M 112 Prar 1e Vw 70
W tnebrenner 213
Belmont Abbey 54 H tg h PI 52
Worn en
Be tty Sm 1th 246
Cmpbl l Co li 62 At ChriS 60
Maxtne Dugan 239
De l St 68 N C Central 67
T ea m Z1de's Sport Shop 750
East T enn 56 Tenn Tech 55
H1g h Ser ,es Men
B ill
EI 1Z C1ly 8&lt;1 Fayelhd St 83
Porler 575 Wil lar d Boyer 555
Furma n 72 East Ca rol tna 70
Women M ax me Dug an 570
Geo Wash 77 Jacksonville 69
Carolyn Bachner 569
Ga Tec h 73 Georg 1a St 61
T eam Youngs Markel 1 14 4
Jck snvl St 73 Lvngstn 65
Maryland 104 Duke 83
MemphtS Sf 65 No Tex St 62
Early Sunday M1xed
M1 SS1SS1pp1 77 L SU 63
January 27 , 1974
M1SS Coli 93 T roy St 85
Won Lo st
Morehead St 91 Estrn K y 83
Tom s Carry Ou l
32
16
M organ St 94 s c St 73
F nendly Ta¥ern
32
\6
Mt St Marys 81 Loyola 67
Pu lltn s Excavalmg
26
22
N o Ca r 6 1 Clemson 60
Sw1ShE:r ~ L ohse Pha r macy
20
28 No Car St 105 V 1rg n •a 93
Eagles Club
19
29 N W La 82 Delta St 60
Roseberry Pennzo li
15
33 O ld Dom 94 Ga Sthrn 80
Fi1tt 68 W1ll1am &amp; Mary 62
Team H1gh Ser•e s - Pu l l1n s
Presbytenan 80 Ersk.tne 69
Excavat1ng 2010, Tom's Ca rry
Sou U 107 MISS Val 51 79
Out 2007
Team H1gh Game - Tom' s Syracu se 82 Amer 1can U 63
Ten nessee 84 Georg1a 70
Ca r ry Out 731
Pullms E x
Te nn St 9 1 Morehse 76
cavat.ng 711
lnd H 1gh Se n es - Jr Phelp s Vande r b II 58 Flor•da 52
5614, Mar l ene W1lson 54() Bil l Wash&amp;Lee 111 Bowte St 65
Wake Forest 64 Va Tech 58
Boyl es 558 , Son 1a Wayland 50 5
M1dwest
lnd
1-t1gh Game Jr
A l b1on 82 Hope 75
Phelsp 225 Jr Ph elp s 21J
Ma r l ene Wilson 205
Ju l1 a Akron 79 Yngstwn St 70
A ndrsn , lnd 72 Bl ufftn 71
Boy le s 185
Ashland 80 Pt Park 79
Agstn a Il l 81 Centra l Ia 51
Bldwn WI Ice 99 Oberlin 69
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Berea 82 Unton, Kym 72
Jan 26, 1974
Bradley 79 N MM St 60
Saturday Jun•or League
Standmgs
Cap1tal 64 Dentson 59
Name
Cl ar•on 56 Calif Pa 50
Cre ighton 67 Duquesne 61
Bowlmg Ston es
9
Dayton 76 VMI 60
Gvtter Dus t er s
Hot Sho ts
De Pauw 99 Wabash 88
8
Drake 68 Tulsa 65
Apaches
8
Eastern Ill 95 Ou•ncv 72
Alley Cats
2
H1gh lnd •v•dual Game
Greg Cundiff 245
Second H1gh lnd Game
D1ck Owen 156
H1gh Sert es - Greg Cu nd •ff
5 19
Second H1gh Senes
Ron
Cas c t 421
Team Htgh Game
Hot
Shots 715
Team
Htgh
Se r tes
Apa ches 2061

.,

'

E M 1c h 72 Cl ev eS ! 67
Evansvl 74 ValparaiSO 73
Ferr. s St 89 Hil lsda l e 77
He 1de lb erg 72 Ke nyon 52
l ndtana 65 Iowa 50
l ndtana St 87 Centenary 78
Iowa St 78 Oklahoma St 75
K a ns a s St 57 Co lor ado 56
Ke arn ey 117 Central Mo 114
K y St 80 Cent St , 0 68
Marquett e 70 DePaul 57
Marymount 71 Mo Sthrn 66
M c Neese St 73 Murray St 65
M ercy 56 Wayne St 54
M1Ch1gan 107 IllinO IS 77
M1ch 1ga n Sl 76 Purdue 74
M1nneso ta 64 Wt sc ons •n 63
N eb Om 91 Empona, K an s 85
No Oa k 56 So Oak St 50
N D St 80 Agstna, S D 79
NW Mo 78 NE MISSOUri 62
Nrthw strn 68 OhtO St 6 1
No tre Dam e 95 Davtdson 84
Ohto U 95 Kent St 65
Oklahoma 98 M tssoun 92
Otterbe•n 73 Mart etta 62
Sl J os l nd 70 Bull e r 64
51 LOUI S 71 W 1Ch1 ta Sf 70
Sou thern 111 67 Ill St 69
Southwest Mo 93 Lmcoln 85
Tol edo 53 Bwlng Grn 52
Wayne St 92 SW Mmn St 71
Wm Jewell 86 Cent Meth 71
W 1s G e 73 No 11 1 55
Wtttenbrg 86 Mt un.on 63
Southwest
Baylor 71 Texa s A&amp;M 62
Centra l Ok l a 59 SW Okla 58
D a llas Bapt 70 Ok la Bapt 68
Dil la rd 96 Tulane 85
E Cent Ok l a 81 SE Okla 74
Hrdn Smmns 81 Tex Ar t 61
Houston 10 2 Lamar 81
Howa rd Payne 78 Sui Ross 73
Kansa s St 57 Colorado 56
LOUtSVI 99 West Tex St 73
M•dwstrn 77 Waylnd Col i 53
R •ce 73 Southern Meth 69
So uthern Colo 71Ft Hay s 65
sw Te)(as 78 East Tex St 61
5 F Aus tm 66 S~ous St 65
Texas 96 Arkansas 81
Texas A&amp; I 87 Trlln St 54
Tex E P 59 N E La 39
Texas Luth 87 L eTou rneau 77
Tex Tech 82 Texas Chns 64
washbrn 89 No Colorado 71.
West
An zona 98 Ar•zona Sl 90 •
Bkrsfld St 76 Nrthrdge Sf 75
BY U 78 Wyommg 75
Cal Poly SLO 53 F llr t n St 52
ChiCO St 71 Sacmnto St 67
For t Lewts 79 Adams St 76
F resno Pac 8J Cal Luth 67
I-ta wall 63 Portland Sf 52
Idaho 77 Montana St 67
Id aho St 88 No AriZ 61
L ng Bch St 98 Oral Rbrts 89
Los Ang Sf 90 Pac 1f1c 69
Mont 89 Gonzaga 54
Pa c Luth 67 Whttwrth 68
Sf Mry's 87 Sta Clra 73
San Fran 73 Seattle 57
S F St 73 Humbldl Sf 66
S J St 61 F resno Sf 60
Snfa Brbra 76 San D 1ego U 73
Sonoma Sf 88 Haywrd St 79
Sou Utah 91 Colo Mtnes 76
UCLA 65 Southern Cal 54
Utah St 121 So MISS 84

, NEW COACH
MASSILLON, Ohio (UP!) Masstllon Htgh School officia!B
Saturday nained Charles Shuff,
head football coach at Fremont
Ross Htgh School, to replace
Bob Commlngs as head coach
at Massillon. Shuff had a ~232 record at Fremont Ross from
1968 through 1973. There were
46 applicants for the coachmg
JOb at Massillon

Cedarville 71-69
Dean Fausnaugh's layup

wtth two seconds remaining

followmg a stea l by Dan
Bollinger gave Coach Art
Lanham's Rio Grande College
Redmen a thrilling 71-69 MidOhto Conference victory over
the host Cedarville Yellow
Jackets Saturday night.
The score was tied 69-all
when Bollinger picked off a
Yellow Jacket pass. Bollinger,
who tallied 20 pomts m the
game, passed off to Fausnaugh
after the steal on a fast oreak
and that was the ball game
The victory evened Rio's
season mark at 9-9. Inside the
MOC, Rio upped its mark to 9- .
9. Instde the MOC, Rio upped
Its mark to 4-2. Cedarville
dropped to 8-10 on the year and
3-4 m the league play.
After the Jackets jumped off
to a quick 111-2 lead, Rio came
back to take a 37-34 .halftime
lead.
During the hectiC second
half, netther team managed
more than a three point spread
m the seesaw hattie.
Bestdes Bollinger's 20 pomts,
Ron Lambert popped m 26 to
lead all scorers. For the losers,
Steve Young was high with 23.

•
/

_. _ '

FAMJLY .SIZE INCOME SCALE
FOR FREE OR REDUCED PRICE LUNCHES

c
A -·-

FamUy Size :
Parents, Children
&amp; Others

B

Income Scale
For
FREE MEALS

Revised lncomo
Scale for
Reduced Price
Lunches
$3,830
5,040
6,250
7,440
8,540
9,640
10,640
11,640
12,550
13,440
14,330
15,220

~ ~---------1 2,740

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10

3,600
4,460
5,310
6,100
6,890
7,600
8,310
8,960
9,600
10,240
10,880

II

12
Each Additional
Family Member

The

Eastern
(Continued from page I)
meals free or at reduced
prtces. In addltun , famtlies not
meetmg thts crtterta but wtlh
other unusual expenses due to
unusually high medical expenses, shelter costs m excess
of 30 percent of mcome, spec tal
education expenses due to the
mental or physical condition of
a chtld, and disaster or
casualty losses may app\y
They may apply by fillmg m
the application forms sent
home with a letter to parents .
In the operation of child
feeding programs, no child will
be discriminated against
because of his race, sex, color,
or nat10nal ongln Local
Supermtendent John D Riebel,
Sr., will review applications
and detemfine eligibility. If a
parent IS dtssahsfied With the
ruling of the offtcial, he may
make a request either orally or
m wrttmg to Robert Bowen,
County Supermtendent, whose
address is Box 684, Pomeroy,
Ohto 45769, for a hearmg to
appeal the dectsion.

il

GRABS REBOUND - Orton Blanchard ( 22) leaps htgh mto the air to grab a rebound for
Met~s durmg Frtday's SEOAL encounter agamst Gallipolis m the Larry R. Morrtson gym at
Rock Sprmgs Marauder on left if freshman Chtp Brauer ( 44) GAHS won, 74-52 (Steve Wilson
photo )

Toledo edges Bowling Green
By United Press lnternattonal
Toledo edged Bowling Green

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO 'ME
INTEJ\ESTOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESI'ER L TANNEHILL,

""'

..

ROBER.THOEFUCII,
City E41tor
P\lbllahed dilly ucept Saturday by The
Ohio Valley Pub&amp;hlng D:lm~ny , ll1
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio, 56769 Bus1nesa
Ofllce Phone m-21~ Editorial Phone m
2157
Serond clasa postage paid al Pomeroy,
Ohio

National adver11111ng representattve
Botlinelli-&lt;lallagher ,Inc , 12 Eut 42Zid St .
New York, New York

SUbscrtptioo rates Delivered b)' carrieswhere avallabJe 60 ceni.R per week, By

Motor Route where earner serv1ce not
ava tlable One month

t:1 00 By mail III

Ohto and W Va , One Yeu-, $18 Sb
months , 59 50, Three months, 16
Elsewhere $22 00 year, sis: month! Ill 50,
thret:! mm ths, 16 50 Sllbscrlption pnce

mcludts SUnday Times-Sentlnel

FOSTER CARE
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Some
35 delinquent youths will be
transferred to foster care programs from the Zanesville
Youth camp which IS -being
phased out if the state coniroling Board approves the move
today, the Ohw Youth CommisSion announced Saturday. Wil·
liam J. Ensign, director of the
OYC, satd plans call for the
phasmg qut to begin with the
next month

Sa turday mght to mamtrun a
share of the Mtd-Amertcan

Vikings rally,
nip SW, 53-51

890

640

Symmes Valley Jumped Into
a qwck 14-2 lea d, then fell
behmd but rallted late m the
four th quarter to down Southwest&lt;rn, 53-51 m a rugged
Sou the rn Valley Ath le ttc
Conference tilt Saturday mght
at Waterloo
The Vtkmgs, usmg a fas t
break, ]un!ped mto the lead as
Paul Jones hit ftve stratgh t
layups
Coach
Ket th
Car ter 's
Highlanders came back to cut
the lead to 14-13 at the end of
the first pertod SW wtth 18
pomts m the second stanza led
31-26 at the half
Symmes Valley outscored
the Htghlanders 27-20 to take
the vtctory m the second ha lf
Gettin g double figures were the
wmners' Jaye Myers wtlh 12
pomts. Jones wtlh 13 markers
and Rod Bennett wtth 11
Four players had double

figures for the Htghlanders
Kevm Walker, &amp;-! Jumor, led
the way wtth 12 pomts Terry
Ca rter, 6-0 jumor had II pomts
and 15 rebounds, Lloyd Wood,
6-2 center, and Larry Frasher,
semor guard, flmshed wtth 10
pomts each
Southwestern htt 19 of 39 fteld
goal attempts for 48 pet. and 13
for 20 at the chanty strtpe
Sy mme s Va lley won the
prehmmary
lilt,
38-30
Brammer led the wmners wtth
19 pomts whtle Crouse had 12
pmnts for Southwesl&lt;rn SW
hosts unbeaten Hannan Trace
Tuesday
So u t hweste rn (5 1) - Walker
52 12 Woo d 5 () 10 Cro u se 2 2
6 F ra sh er 4 2 10 Ca rt er 2 7 11
Total s 19 1J 51
Symmes Vall ey (SJJ - Jay e
Myers 6 0 12
Jones 6 1 13 ,
Qu ese nberry 2 2 6 Myers 1 2
4 Burc h am 3 1 7 Totals 23 -7·
53
Reserv es - Sy mmes Va l ley
38 Southw es tern 30

Noone
else
•

Fisher optimistic ahou\

cang1veus
what you can.

'74 business prospects

(Join Us. Please~

PT PLEASANT - Tom K.
Fisher, president of Ftsher
Stores, Inc which operates ftve
Shoppers Mart Stores m West
Vtrgima and southeastern Ohio
expects a slight business slump
caused by key raw materials
shortages, but thmks the
country wtll adJust.
He was one of 12 buyers
selected for interview recently
Rio htt 32 of 77 field goal by Housewares Magazme at
recent
Transworld
att.empts for 41 pet. The the
IIOOmen sank seven of 16 free Housewares and Vanety Event
throw attempts for 48.8 pet. Rio at the Amphitheatre In
had 48 rebounds. Bollinger Chicago.
Housewares Magazme was
TOM FISHER
picked off 19, Lambert 11. The
probing buyers thoughts on
winners had 15 turnovers.
Fisher's predtction was a
Cedarville hit 21 of 64 field possible shortages of plastic
slight
business slowdown, but
raw
matertals,
paper
and
goal attempts for 32.8 pet. The
that
the
country will adapt to
Jackets had a btg ntght at the cardboard •terns and wrappmg
,
chartty line, sinking T/ of 32 paper products. The arttcle the shortages.
"Whtle there are shortages
attempts for 84.3 pet. Cedar- appeared, wtth a ptcture of
ville collected 43 rebounds FISher, m the January edition and price mcreases m most
plastic lines, our ftrm Will not
of the magazine
Young had 11.
compromiSe quality for price,"
The Rio Jayvees roared to
Ftsher satd Fisher also stated
their ninth win in II starts by
he looks for an Increase in
tai&amp;tg the preliminary game, SCOTT TO BE RELEASED
~I.
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UP!) volume m his chain of stores
Wednesday, Rio plays at - Charlie Scott, the Phoenix due to the consumer bemg
Ohio Dominican. Saturday, the Suns' high&lt;ICOrmg guard who more pnce aware
"Our busmess," said Fisher,
Redmen return home to meet suffered a fractured arm
second place Malone m a key Friday night, will be released "was bmlt on a more value for
Moe clash. Malone is 5-l in from Centinela Valley Com- your doUar philosophy and
that's what we will continue to
loop play. Urbana tops the loop munity Hospital this week.
The thtrd-year NBA pro offer our customers - shortwith a &amp;-1 mark.
underwent an operation Satur- ages, price increa9e.S or not "
R 1o
G RA N o e
!711
day in which a metal plate was
FausnaUgh 3 1 7 . Swmehart 3
mserted into his left forearm.
0 6 Albanese 1 1 3, Stewart 2
Presbyterian Leader Dtes
He is out for this season.
o 4 , Lambert 11 A 26 , Noe 21
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
~~~~· nger 10 o 20 TOTALS
Scott's doctors told him the
Rev. Dr. Lawrence W. McceDARVILLE em - Potter ' double break will take about 18 Master Jr., chief executive of
2 o ' · Young 8 7 23, Brook 1 o months to heal completely
2, Myers 6 7 19 , Watson 2 11
·
the Synod of the Covenant,
15 , Thatche r 2 2 6 TOTALS 21 ·
He was hurt In the Suns' United Presbyterian Oturch of
27·"
inst the Los Angeles
Ha'llflme score
R 10 37 game pga
the USA, died here Saturday of
Cedar v•lle 34
LakerS at the Forum.
a heart attack. He was 44.

Rio knocked off

conduct a "ftshtug expedttton"
for Whtte House mfonnatwn
Jaworskt satd that •f the
committee trtes to subpoena
informalton from htm , he
would be "hound by the rule of
law" to refuse to furmsh tt,
smce grand jury information is
secret. But be satd that if U.S.
Distrtct Court Judge John J.
Sinca ordered hun to turn over
information to the committee,
he would cooperate He satd
the commtttee also could
subpoena the same mformatlon directly from the
White House.
Jaworski also said
-He and hts mvestigators
·~are aware of no basts for a
perjury charge" against
former prestdenttal atde John
Dean.
- His office has about fin·
ished a study en whether a
president can be mdicted.
While he would not state the
oonclust~n of the study flatly,
he satd, "the hypothetical
answer probably IS ... that
there IS a great questmn, a
very, very strong question as to
whether or not a sttting
prestdent 1s indictable "

Pullin, co-treasurer; M8rgaret Lambert, Gloria Roush,
Carol Handley Second row, Alice Marte Icard, prestdent ,
Dr. William Johnston, Duane Plants and Mrs Ftsher. Back
row, Paul Roach, Paul Matthews, Orvtlle Strow and Haskle
White, vtce president.

Nobody else tn th e wor ld can g1ve us
what you can A p1nt of your blood
And you r g1ft has never been more Impo rtant Bec ause blood from healthy donors
who freely donate th e1 r
blood , 1s 10 limes less likely
to cause mfect1o us hepa- ./-.~~
t1t1 s 1n the rec 1p1ent than IS
blood from many commerCial sources Thmk about
that
The need ts urgent
and contin uou s
Help us Jo111 us
Today

The American

Red Cross.
The Good

Neighbor.

Conference lead whtle Wittenberg gamed some room at
the top of the Ohio Conference
Toledo held Bowlmg Green
scoreless from 1.16 on to edge
the Falcons 53-52 even though
BG coach
Pat
Haley
questiOned why offtctals dtda't
call a foul when one of his
players requtred first atd tit
front of his bench after the ball
was stolen.
Haley clauned Jeff Montgomery was htt m the face
when Toledo's Bob Conroy
stole the ball wtlh 30 seconds
left. Conroy drove down for a
layup
Hit In Mouth
" It was the most unbehevable call I've ever seen," said
Haley "Montgomery had the
red mouth to show he was htt m
the face "
Toledo ts tied for the league
lead wtth Ohto Umverstty
whtch rolled to a 96-65 wm over
Kent State Both Toledo and
OU have league records of !&gt;-2,
while Bowlmg Green, whtch
had had a ptece of the lead
Saturday, fell to !&gt;-3.
In another MAC lltle, Mtanu
defeated Western Mtchtgan...l!&gt;64
Ohw State, wtth a shaken
hneup, lost tts fifth Btg Ten
game, droppmg a 68-61
deciSion to Northwestern The
Wtldcats' Wtlhe Wtlhams came
off the bench to score 22 pomts
m the wm
Ohto State wtll be at Mtnnesota tomght Earher thts year
the Buckeyes edged the Gophers for thetr only Btg Ten
wm
Other games tomght fmd
Bowhng Green at Oral
Roberts, Dayton at Western
Kentucky and Walsh at
CedarVIlle .
Tigers w~ ~aln
Wit-tenberg, ranked lith
among the small colleges,
breezed past Mount Union to
surge mto an 8-llead on top of
the Ohto Conference
The Tigers got help from
Wooster whtch upset Muskmgum 65-60 and Otterbem, which
surpnsed Marietta 13-62
Meanwhile Capttal rolled to a
64-59 wm over Denison
Capttal and Muskingum are
tted for second m the OC with
records of &amp;-2 and Manetta IS
now 5-2
In other games , Day to n
downed VMI 76-60, Akron defeated Youngstown State 79-70,
Wrtght State edged Franklm
(Ind ) 16-45, Ashland squeezed
past Pomt Park (Pa .) 80-79,
Earlham (Ind.) defeated Wilmington 69·58, Defiance
blasted Manchester (Ind.) 11291.
Allegheny defeated Case
Western 73-69, Eastern Mtchi·
gan beat Cleveland State 72r67,
Baldwm-WaUace beat Oberlm
99-$, Hetdelberg rolled over
Kenyon 72-52, Rochester
(N Y ) handed Ohio Wesleyan
a 76-67 defeat, Rto Grande
edged Cedarvtlle 71-69, Kentucky State defeated Central
State 8().jj8, Htram downed
Bethany (W Va ) 81-70 and
Tiffm stopped Northwood
(Mtch ) Institute 96-M.

Tornados even Waterford series

ABA Stand•ng s
By Un 1ted Press lnter nal to n a l
East
w I pet 9 b
New Yor k
35 22 6!4
Ke ntu cky
32 71 604
Carolma
35 24 593
360 13
VtrQtn ta
I ll 37
I :J 4}
Memphi S
236 21
We st
w I pet g b
Utah
36 19 65 5
Sa n An ton to
J() 77 526
7
l nd1ana
'19 27 5 18 1 1
Denv er
'14 27
47 1 10
San D 1ego
24 35 1107 14
Sund ay's Re sult s
K en tu cky I 12 N ew Yo rk 99
San D ego 10 7 V r gmul 10 4
Sa n Anton•o 108 Caro ltna 95
lnd1ana 111 Denv er 102
(O nl y games sc hedul ed)
Mond ay~ Game s
v r g1n1a a t Ul ah
(On l y game sc hedu led)

RACINE - The Southern
Tornados, needmg a wm badly
afl&lt;r bemg ebnmated from the
SVAC race by Not th Galha
Fnday , 1eg rouped mmus team
leader Bob Mtller her e
Saturday, trtppmg Waterford.
53-40
The wm evened the season
senes with Ute Wildca t.&lt;; who
topped the Tornados m the
season opener at Waterford ,
49-47 m overtime
Sout hern, playmg wtthout 1ts
highest pomt producer and
!loot ge neral, se nt or Bob Mtliet
who IS lost until at least the
post season tournament w1th a
badly spramed ankle, "come
out and put the defense to
Waterford" , accordtng to head
coach Carl Wulfe
!"he Tornados , displaytng
what Wolfe called an outstandm g team effort, 1umped

Amer~can

Ho c k ey
league Standmg s
By Un1fcd Pr ess Inte rnational
Norlh
w t f pts gf ga
New Haven 30 15 7 67 202 157
Prov 1dence 29 21 6 64 747 1!7
Roc hester 26 14 10 62 198 169
Nova 5co t ,a
24 19 10 58 176 147
Boston
16 31 7 39 165 2 11
Spr1ng!t eld 12 24 12 36 151 19 3
South
w 1 t pt s gl ga
Hershev
28 14 9 65 217 157
Ba l ltmor e V 18 5 59 179 159
C m c mn all 26 113 6 58 175 160
Ja ckso nv li e
19 79 5 43 155 210
V 1rg1n1a
15 28 8 38 143 192
R1 c hmond 13 J3 .5 31 140 21 9
Sunday ' s Resull s
Balt 1more 2 Jacksonv il l e 7
N ew Ha~en 3 V1rg tn1 a 1
Cmc tn naf • 2 No va Sc ot•a 2
Prov •dence 6 Roches ter ~
IOnly games sc h ed ul ed )
Today 's Games
( N o ga m es sche d uled )
tnt ernalt onal Hock ey
League 5tandmgs
By Un1t ed Pr ess lnter nattonal
Nort h
w 1 t pt s gf ga
Mu ske g on 3 1 19 5 67 18 9 160
Sa gmaw
25 26 2 52 215 700
To l edo
23 28 1 47 1n 195
F l 1nf
19 3 1 3 41 168 2() 1
Port Hu r on 17 J l 2 36 1 ~ 5 174
South
w I t pt s gt ga
De s Mo•n es3 0 17 4 64 21 3 1!3
Col u mbu s 'lB 26 2 58 213 210
Dayton
27 25 3 57 193 176
Fort Wayn e 27 24 0 54 173 188
Sunday ' s Result s
Dayton 3 Fori Wayn e 1
Des Motnes 6 F l tnt 4
Co l um b us 11 Tol edo 2
Sag 1naw 5 Musk eg on oi
(O n l y games schedu l ed)
Todav 's Games
( No ga m es schedu l ed I
NH L Sland•ng s
By Un•ted Press Int ernational
East
w
I t pi s gf ga
34
9 6 7 4 217 132
Boston
Montr eal 30
N YR a ng r s25
Tor onto
2&lt;1
Buff a l o
Detro1t
NY l s lndr s
Va n co uv er

12 6 66 174 131
151 161186 15 4
17 10 58 188 15 1

72
19
13
12

23
6 50 1611
15
7 45 169
23 13 39 11 9
29
8 32 132
W es t
w 1 t pt s gf
Ph Ia
J l 11 7 69 17 2
Ch c a go
24 11 1&lt;1 62 16 8
22 20
7 5 1 140
St LOU tS
At l anta
19 23 9 47 131
LosAng
18 24
B 4 4 136
M mneso t a 15 23 12 42 152
Pt ttS burgh 1&lt;1 31
5 33 137
Ca l 1forn 1a 10 36
7 'J7 135
Sunday's R es ults
Montrea l 4 Detro1t I
Tor on to 3 Buffalo 3
M1nn 5 NY Rangers 5
Ca l1f 4 NY I s land ers 2
Boston 5 P tltsbu rg h 4
Ch 1ca go 3 Sf LOUIS ()
P h1l a 2 At lanta 2
!Only games schedu l ed)
Monday' s Games
{ No game s sc heduled )

17 1
209
157
188
ga
100
105
13 1
\48
15.8
176
185
224

Dragons hold
Eagles_65 to 60
The Fatrland Htgh School
baske tball bus broke down on
the way to Easte rn Saturday
mght, and as far as Eagle fans
are concerned, 1t should have
gone back to Lawrence County
The game, startmg almost
an hour late , saw the Drag ons
move out to a 17 pomt lead at
one pomt 10 the tlurd quarter,
before the VISitors had to hold
off an Eagle rally to stop the
btrds, 6:&gt;-60
Easl&lt;rn. dow n 33-16 early 10
the thtrd fr ame, ca me back
behmd the mstdc e((ort.s of
semor ce nter Steve Dtll and a
15-foot baselme JUmper by
JUmor forv.ard Ttm Spencer to
knot the score at 5~-54 v.~th just
3 22 renlBmtng 10 the game
In the 11 mmutes and 14
seconds tt took the Eagles to
ove rcome that 17 pmnt deftctl,
Dtll had poured 10 14 pomts
whtle sc mor guard Steve
Goebel threw m 8 and Spencer
and semor J ohn Sheets added 6
each
The Dragons , however,
qmckly countered w1th slx
pomts, all commg off the hands
of 6-4 semor guard Max Bragg,
to mov e out to a 60-54 lead and
put the game out of reach.
The contest started slowly ,
with the ftrst quarl&lt;r endmg a t
8-6 lfl favor of Fairland
Th e second quarter sa w
Bragg htt for 12 pmnts as the
Dragons mcreased the lead to
13 at the half, 29-IG
Bragg led all scorers on the
mght, pumpmg m II fteld goa ls
and G foul shots for 28 pomts,
whtle gettmg help from Terry
Walls wtth 11
Dtll paced the Eagles wtth 18
pmnl•. followed by Goebe l wtth
14 and Sheets wtth 13 Jumor
guard Greg Batley dtd a good
JOb commg off the bench
durmg the lhtrd and fourth
penod rally to htt 8 pmnt.s
The Eag les lost the game at
the foul !me, as the Dragons
canned 15 of 27 attempts
Eastern connec ted on 10 of 16.
Fauland, whtch won the ftrst
encounter between the two
teams, 57-50, IS now 8-5 on the
year. Eastern, the only class A
team on the Dragon schedule,
ts now 6-9 on the year.
The Eagles now turn their
attention to a date Tuesday
evemng m Racme, when the
btrds meet the Southern

Tornados
Southern won the fir s t
me eltng be twee n the tw o
squads, 52-50 m overtime
In Saturday's prehmmar} ,
the Green Nestl mgs of Duane
Wolfe defeated Fatrland 39-35
tn a rugged battle
The NesUmgs moved out to a
12-10 first quarter lead before
falling behmd , 29-27 at mtermtsston A 14 pomt thtrd
quarter , whtle holdtn g the
Dragons to Just 6pomts, put the
NesUmgs m front by 4 gomg
mto the !mal frame
Mtke Harns led the Nestling
attack wtth 14 pomts, whtle
Randy Blake added 10
Jamte
Shankland
led
Fatrland wtth II pmnts
Sconng by Quart ers
Eas t ern
6 10 74 20 - 60
Fa 1rland
8 21 16 20 - 65
Fa rlan d ~ Burns 4 () B,
lj ra gg 11 o 28 Hamlin 11 J
Ward 3 3 9 Wa ll s oi 3 II
Ar
nold 2 0 4 F 1schcr o 2 2
Ea s ter n
Dil l 8 2 18
Spen ce r J 1 7 Sheet s 53 13
Bau m o 0 0
Goebel 6 2 14
Ba1 1e y 3 2 B
Reserves by qu a rl er s
N es tltn gs
12 3 14 10- 39
F a1r l and
10 9 6 10- 35
Fa 1rland
Sh a n klan d 4 3
11 Hay es 4 2 10 . Sm 1t h 2 2 6
St1llner 1 2 4 Barn ett 2 0 o1
Nc st l1ngs Blake 4 2 10
Nel so n 1 0 2 E •ch.n ge r 1 2 4
Bowen 1 2 4
Harr1 s 7 0 14
Good 2 1 5 Cond e o 0 0

22 chanty slnpe chances for 55 Southern came back m the
pet , whtle Southern could stnk thtrd quarter to move out to a
just Ii of 22 at the foul hne for three pomt nlBrgm , 21-18 after
50 pet The Tornados htl on 21 three quarters
Danmng
Brown
and
of 56 field goal atl&lt;mpts for 37 5
MtkeRoberts led the FWlnel
pet
attack,
htlting for 14 and 12
So uthern pulled tn 47
pmnts
respectively
Wagner
rebounds , wtth Sayre leadmg
le
d
the
Waterford
offe
nse,
llJe way w1th 13 Warner was
U1rowmg m s1x potnt.s
next m hne w1th his 11 caroms
Sconng by Quart ers
The Tornados, 10-5 on the wa t erfo
rd
8 7 10 15- 40
I () 17 12 14 - 53
yea r, 7-2 10 the SVAC, now will Sou tn ern
Sout h er n Cu rf man 2 0 4
concentra te on the Eastern Sayre
7 1 16 The 1ss 1 1 3 Ord
Eagles who tnvade Racme 1 1 s wa r n erS 6 16 Nea se 4 o
Tuesda ) ntght So uthe r n 853 ~mps on 0 1 1 To t a l s '21 11
W aterford Shaad 3 0 6
lopped the Eagles , 52-50
Sampson 1 51
tng 3 I 7
ear her m the year 1n over time M cFer r en 6 oi 16 DK am
ond 0 2
In Saturday's ftrst ga me, the 2 Arnold I 0 2 Total s 14 11 40
Funnel Clouds defeated the
R ese rv es by Quarter s
Wa te rf ord
6 8 4 8- 26
W!ldktttens 33-26
South e r n
8 5 S 12 33
The Funnel Clouds took an 8South ern Shu ltz 1 1 4
6 fu sl quarter lead, but trat led Brown 6 2 I~ G Dunn n g 1 1 3
s 4 4 12
by one at mtermisswn, 14-U Robert
wat e rfo rd Dowler 0 4 ~
Huldmg the Wtldktltens to 1ust Curry 1 0 2 Rou sh '104
1ngham 2 0 4 Shaad 1 0 2
four th1rd perwd po1nts , Cunn
Wag n er 3 0 6 Kerns I 2 4

Take it

from me,

PAUL HARVEY
it's time to heat up!
Americans, you can live in warm comfort
all winter long with Heil Central Otl or
Gas System . It's thP h~st you can buy. II
11 wasn't. I wouldn't tell you so !

D=Drnorn

See Your HeiiDealer
ted By City Ice &amp; Fu

No Energy Crisis.

• •

When You Pedal Your Own

HUFFY BIKE
New
Shipment
ALL SIZES

AND

TUESDAY NIGHT IS
FAMILY FUN NIGHT
AT BURGER. CHEF!

SPEEDS

WE HAVE

Try

Special Family Meal Prices

Moore's

4 p.m. to closing
FOR ADULTS
Btg Shet•
French Fnes
Turnover &amp;
Large Dnnk

Only

First!

FOR KIDS
Funburger' "
French Fnes.
Small Dnnk
&amp; Lollipop

l&amp;o¢

wash~OWash

St 77
Mont 76 Mon T Tech 69
w New Mex 74 W Col o 63
Wes t mon t 60 Wh• llt er 71
Wh1tmn 56 Col i of lde~l"o 48
W ilmette 80 LeW IS&amp; ( la r k 68
Sunday R es ulfs
La Sa l l e 78 Temple 54
Frostbg 80 M er cy hst 77
' Roger Wms @9 Cu rr y 58
Lehman 79 Yesh •v a 63
St neh l l 68 F rl gh Dcknsn 53

out to a 10-8 ftrst quarter lead,
mcreasmg tt to a 27-15 count at
mtermisslOn Southern moved
ahead by 14 pomts 39-25 at the
end of three penod.s.
"It was the best team ball
we've played all year, " sa td
Wolfe. who added that semor
guard Randy Warner "played
a heck of a game "
Warner took control of
Southern's offense, scon ng 16
pmnts and pulhng down II
rebounds He got strong
scormg help from semor forward Pete Sayre with lG and
)Untor guard Mtlch Nease wh o
chtpped 10 8
The Wtldca ts, unable to ge t
the ball ms1de aga mst th~
sticky Southern defense, were
led by Dave McFerren wtth 16
pomts He was the only Wtldcat
10 double figur es
Waterford connected on 12 of

w

•

&lt;

u

1503 EASTERN AYE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

BICYCLE PARTS
AND TIRfS

�..........

--- ---------- ----~----~~~----~----------~----~
'

d

I

•

Red tape is
big trouble
By United Press lntertlBtlonal
Federal
energy
chief
Wtlham E Stmon, after a late
rught sesston wtth representatives of mdependent truck
drtvers, mdtcated today that
goverrunent red tape could
preven~ an tmmediate solutlon
to their problems
At the same ttme, Sunon satd
he
opposed one of the drt vers'
LESTER ALLMAN
key demands, a rollback of
LESTER B. ALLMAN,
diesel
fuel pnces to May, 1973,
District Supt. of the Virginia
levels
. North Carolina District of
On the highways there were
the Evangelical Methodi st
scatt~ red mCJdents of vwlence
Church, "Ill he the guest
directed
at dnv ers who conspeaker at the Indoor Camp
tmued
I
oiling
thetr n gs
meeting at the Laurel Cliff
Ftve days of violence asFree Methodist Church. The
sociated
wtth the truckers'
Meigs
Area
Holiness
stnk
e
brought
Sunon and about
AssoclBtlon "til sponsor the
40 other fede ral and state of·
meetings which will begin
ftctals to a closed-doo r meeting
Monday ~ and continue
m Washmgton Sunday where
through Feb 10. Services
will be held nightly at 7 30. more than tw o dozen truckers
atred their gnpes Stmon sard
Lee Everleth of Martella will
he had kept Prestdent NIXon
be In charge of special
mformed ·'of all the events of
singing. The public " tn·
the day '
vi ted
" Thts IS an Interage ncy
problem that cuts across the
lnterstate Commerce Commtsston, the Department of TransportatiOn, the Federal Energy
Offtce, ' Sunon sa td after the
second of two sesstons broke up
early thts mornmg
Meetings Continue
The meet mgs contmue
today, and Stmon satd the
participants "will stt down
wtth the rutty gritty " He sa td
Sunday's meetings concerned
mostly "techmcal matters"
NEW YORK (UP! ) - A such as rollbacks, allocations
military spy rmg operated and prtce "pass-throughs;'
IIIStde the Whtte House giVIng
Earlier, he was reported to
highly classlfled dtplomallc have told the truckers 1t would
information to the Joint Chiefs take congressiOnal act10n to
of Staff one year before recent solve a major complaintreports mdtcated, the New speedmg up ICC rule-making.
York Times satd in Sunday's procedures, whtch make it
editions
difficult for trucking frrms to
Times reporter Seymour M get qutck approval to "passHersh quoted "closely mvolved through" higher costs m the
sources" as saying the Wlau- form of rate mcreases
thomed smuggling of Nattonal
As for pnce rollbacks , Stmon
Secunty Counctl documents satd 11 1 am against rolling
went on for 15 months .
back prtces Personally, I am
The report in effect chal- opposed to that because tl's
lenged the explanations of counterproductive to our mteradmmistratton offictals, m- medtate and long term goal of
cludmg Adm. Thomas H. brmgmg on long-term selfMoorer, chall"lllan of the JCS, suf!lctency m thts country,
that the spymg was the random which 1s our only answer."
work of "overzealous"
But he satd later "I dtdn't
military liaison men occurrmg say that the pnces were not
m 1971 and proVIding only gomg to be rolled back. I gave
trivial mformation.
an opmton . that I've stated
The Times satd Moorer's quite often. I'm optlmtsttc
office declmed comment on Its reasonable men are gomg to
report or any report mvolvmg .e:et together on this issue "
charges "made by unidentified
Simon to Attend Hearing
sources "
Sunon satd he would appear
"The spymg mvolved as at a House Ways and Means
many as ftve htgh..-ankmg Commtttee hearmg today, but
officers who regularly recetved that another htgh-level FEO
and delivered over the next 15 ofhctal would meet With the
months (from the fall of 1970) truckers
classifted documents pilfered
PennsylvanlB Gov Milton J
by a Navy yeoman," the Times Shapp, who called the meetmg,
report satd.
smd, "All parties have been
~~A New York T1mes ln·
thoughtful and candtd. Deftmte
vesttgation shows that the specifiC progress has been
spying began wtthin weeks made m several areas 1' He
after Yeoman 1st Class Charles refused to elaborate, and
F. Radford was asstgned m Stmon mdicated the hard
September, 1970, to the bargammg was put off until the
military batson umt set up by late mornmg sessiOn began.
the Defense Department mstde
In addition to the rollback
the Nallonal Securtty CoWlctl. " and ICC procedures. the truckers satd they wanted a prtce
freeze on all oil products, a
pu bhc audtt of oil compames, a
NOT ICE OF
Jomt congress1onal'comrruttee
AP POINTMENT
case No 21,112 study of thetr problems, remoEstate of Lorna D' Owens
val of allocatiOn quotas from
Deceased
Notice 1S hereb y g1ven that
truck stops and a crackdown on
Clyde F1sher ol Middleport
any
hoardmg of diesel fuel by
Me1gS County, Oh10 has been
duly appomted Executor of the major truckmg comparues
Estate of Lorna D
Owens
In other developments m the
decea sed la te of Midd l eport
Me1gs County Oh 10
shutdown
Cred1tors are req u •red to f ile
They'll Get It
their cla1ms Wllh sad f 1dUc 1ary
w1fhm tour mor1th s
- Attorne) General Wttltam
Daled l h1s 30th day of
B Saxbe, m Mechanicsburg,
January 19 74
Ohto, asked governors and
Mannmg D We b ster
Judge pollee departments to take any
Court of Commo n Pl eas. steps necessary to prevent
Proba te DIVIS IOn
Meig s Count y , Oh•o . VIolence by truck drtvers "It
(2J • 4, 11 18 31c
appears that truckers want a

Spy ring
operated
for JCS

NOTICE ON FILING

ANgFA~NPVREA~~~~~NT
l

t

( 1 ) 28 ( 2)

.j

By Ann B Watson
Deputy Clerk
2f ;

Incidents Reported
The Pennsylvama State
Pohce reported 15 rock-throwmg mctdents on the Pennsylvama Turnpike Sunday Most
of the rocks were throw from
overpasses. Several windshtelds were broken, but there
were no mJunes The nwnber
of Pennsylvama Natwnal
Guardsmen on acttve duty was
doubled to more than 2,000 to
~eal wtth the strike
- lndtana State Pollee satd
at least SIX shots were ftred
from a car on the Northern
Indtana toll road, several miles
north of Valparatso, and two
shots struck the cab of a truck .
The driver was not mJured.
In other news of the energy
CTISIS

- The Berrut newspaper An
Nahar Sunday quoted "mformed Arab sources" m
Washmgton as saymg the Arab
ml embargo agamst the Umted
States would be hfted at the
begmnmg of March
Ford Opposes Rationmg
- Vtce Prestdent Gerald R.
Ford srud Sunday he opposes
gasohne rat10mng at thiS tune,
1
'because I remember back m
World War II when we had gas
raltoning, we had all kmd of
cnme, we had
black
marketmg, we had a terrble
fouled up sttuallon from
begmning to end --&lt;!ven when
we were ftghtmg a world war
And it seems to me m the
present atmosphere that 1t
would be even worse. You'd
have the worst aspects of
ratwmng " He was m~
tervtewed on CBS "Face the

Natlon. 11
-The Federal Power CommiSSion approved, 3 to 2, the
highest pnce m tls htslory for
natural gas sold m mterstate
commerce. The comrrusSion
authoriZed a jomt proJect of
seven producers to sell the gas
to Southern Natural Gas, a
ptpeline serVIng Southern states, at a cost of 55 cents per
1,000 cubtc feet. The pnce is 22
per cent more than the
preVIous record of 45 cents set
last May
- A Library of Congress
report released Sunday satd
that netther tax changes nor
nsmg prices are likely to mcrease existing supphes of oil
and gas in the near future.

More t apes ,ask ed

The State of Oh1o , M e tgs ("\.
County Probate Court
To
the
Ancil l ary
Ad
WASHINGTON (UP!) mm 1s tra t or W W A
of the
Prosecutor Leon
• estate to such of the to llowtng Spectal
as are rest dent s o f t he St ate of Jaworski says he IS seeking
OhiO
VIZ
th e SUI'"VIVIOQ
s pouse the next of km , t he more tapes \and docwnents
benef•c•anes und er t h e wil l
from the White House, even
and to the attorney or attorneys
represenl1 ng
any
of
the though President Ntxon satd
aforement•oned p er son s
only last wee k that the
Lenore H Ken t Deceased,
tndtanapoltS ln d•ana No 19 884 prosecutor had been giVen all
You are hereby noltf1ed t hat tl1e information he needs.
the
Inventory
and
Ap
Jaworski said Sunday the
pra1sement of the E sta te of the
aforementtoned. deceased late White House has promised him
of scud County, was filed'" thiS
Court
Said Inventory and an answer today whether the
Appraisement Will be for additional informatiOn will be
hear•ng before th1S Court on the
11th day of February 1974, at handed over "
10 00 o ' clock A M
The Prestdent . srud m his
Any person des1r1ng to file
State
of the Umon message
except•ons the re to must file
them at lea st five days pnor t o Wednesday: "I believe that I
t he date set for heanng
have p•·ovtded all the material
G1~en under my hand and
seal of satd Cou rt. fh ts 25t h day thai he 1Jaworski ) needs to
pf J an uary 19711
1
Manntng D Webs t er
Judge and ex of11cio
Cler k of satd 'Court

confrontatiOn, and they're
go mg to get tl," he satd
- Max Krugman , a Carpentersville, IU , truck driver was
shot m the shoulder when he
stopped his serru-tra tler truck
to check hts ltre pressure on
Interstate 94near New Buffalo,
Mtch HIS unknown assatlant
got out of a car, asked " if he
was workmg today" and when
Krugman satd yes the man
saJd "'Well, you won't be for
long" and shot him, Krugman
told pollee Krugman was m
fall' condition
- Herbert Rtder, a trucker
from Harrtson, Ohm, was shot
m the shoulder at a Kentucky
Turnptke mterchange about 18
mtles southwest of Lowsville
He also suffered face and neck
cuts from flymg glass Rider
satd a second shot was fired at
a truck followmg his, but that
th e drtver was not InJUred
--Ohto Gov. John J Gtlligan
ordered 900 Natwnal Guardsmen acltvated and placed
under direcllon of the Htghway
Patrol. The guardsmen would
be used for groWld patrol,
convoy escort and aenal
survetllance, Gtlltgan satd
--Two tankers were burned
m Peebles, Ohio, causmg
$32,000 in damage Ohio offlctals satd the highway patrol
was providing escorts across
the state to dnvers requestmg
protection

conclude hts mvesttgahons '
But Jaworski satd SWlday
that while he may have eno1•gh
information to "indtct certam
individuals" sometime this
month. he needs more to

'

complete ht~ mvesttgahon
''with care and wtth thoroughness."
He would not tdentify the
addttlonal material he wants
except to s3y, ''there are
documents antl some are also
m the nature of tapes " He did
not pinpoint just when he had
asked for thts information but
said the Whtte House informe\1
him Friday 11 would make a
!mal decision today whether to
furnish it.
Jaworski was mtervtewed on
ABC's "Issues and Answers."
The House of Representatives is to vote this weektentatively Wednesdaywhether to grant the House
Judtctary Committee broad
subpoena powers for tts unpeachment mqutry Vtce
Prest dent Gerald Ford said the
committee has no right to

Pro standings

Local Bowling

NBA Standtngs
By Untied Pr ess lnternat1onal
Ea stern Conference
AtlantiC Otvt s10n
w ·1 pel g b
Boston
37 13 740
New Yor k
33 11 600
61 1
Bu ff a lo
27 29
82 13
Philadelphia
IS 38 283 2J' '
Central DI VIStOO
w
I pctm 9 b
Cap11at
29 23 558
At la nta
24 32 42 9 7
19 38 333 1217
Houston
Cl eve la n d
19 :19 32 8 13
We stern Conf e rence
M1dw est OtVI Ston
w 1 p et g ll
40 13
755
M1 lwaukee
39 18 684
3
Ch cago
36 11 655
5
Delro tt
21 36 36 8 21
K C Omaha
PaCifiC DIVI SIOn
w 1 pet g b
LosA n ge les
3 1 23 574
Gold en StJt e
28 22 560
1
seattle
25 35 417
9
Phoen•K
'12 3:1
407
9
Pnrlli'!n rl
10 33 377 1() 1 7
SundoJV s R es ults
Cap ,ta l 11 2 Bos ton 99
Buff~lo 112 Phdade l pht a 98
Ch •cago 108 Cleve la nd 94
Hou st on 123 A tl anta 112
L os A ngeles 124 Port l and QJ
De tro• I 11 4 Seatt le 100
(On l y games schedu led )
Mond ays Gam es
( No games sc h eduled )

Wedne sday Afternoon L ea gue
J a nuary 2. 1974
Won Lo st
Watd Cro ss Son s
8
0
Te am No 6
6
2
TeamNo4
4
4
11
&lt;1
E ilt S &amp; Son s Soh tO
::. w eet Pea s
2
6
T ea m H tgh Scr•cs
Team 6
!~ 0 Wa1d Cro ss So11 s 741
H 19h T eam Game
Watd
Cr o ss So ns '177 Sweet Peas
269
H 1gh lnd Se r es
Be tt y
W h tt i .Jtch 450 Pearl Rus se ll

391

Htgh lnd Game
Be tty
Wh flatc h 16J Pear l R usse ll

IS.1

January 9, 1974
won Lost
Team 6
I &lt;I
2
Watd Cross Son s
10
6
Te am4
10
6
Ell•s&amp; SonsSoho
10
6
Swee t Peas
4
12
Htg h Team se r es
Team 4,
799 W a1 d Cro ss and Son s 785
T eam H1gh Ga me - T eam 4,
287 Eil tS and Sons Soh10 279
H tg h lnd Ser es - Mary Lou
H oover 450 Be tl y Whll l a l ch
43 I
H gh lnd Game - Mary L ou
H oover 169 Be fly Wh 1tlatch
164

January 16 1974
Won Lo st

T eam 6
"14
6
10
wa,d Cro ss Sons
14
10
E ilt s and Sons Soh o
I0
14
T eam 1
B
!6
Sweet P eas
4
20
T eam 3
Team 4
Htgh Team Sere s
828 Sw ee t Peas 823
Sw eet
H1gh T ea m Game
Pe as 295 T eam 6 294
H1gh lnd
ser .es
Jo y
M 1t c h el l 435 Jane Gar nes 428
H1 gh l nd Gam e
Ja n e
G arne s 155 Mary Hoov er and
Part• Chapman 153
- Nancy J Snyder Sec

RUMANE SOCIETY OFFICERS, BOARD MEMBERS
- Members of the Mason County Humane Society Board of
Directors and offtcers attending Frtday everung's Charter
Ntghl Dinner at the Moose Home pose here wtth Mrs.
Dorothy Ftsher, prestdent of the Metgs County Chapter
Pictured are front row, from left, Rtta Crabtree, Conme

College Scores

By Un1fed Press lntcr nat1onal
Sa turday
Tuesday Allernoon L eu gue
East
J a nu ary 22, 1974
Won Lost
Assump t.o n 101 Le Moy ne 81
B looms bg St 99 M ll r sv l 58
Ro y a l Cr own Bottl1ng
8
0
Bos ton Col i 74 Fo r dham 64
T eam N o 1
6
'2
Brown 84 Da rtm ou th 67
N ew York Clothmg House
6
2
B llo Sf 107 N ew Palt z 84
Team No 2
2
6 c w P os t 7l Kmgs Pt 56
Fores l Run Blo ck
2
6 Ch yny St 86 Mansfld St 66
Fr en dly Ta v er n
0
8 Coas t Gua rd 65 Bowdo.n 48
Roya l
Co lgat e 76 Buffalo 69
T eam H1gh Game
Connc c ll cut 93 Ma •ne 7 1
Crown Bott l mg , 572
T eam
D avs&amp; E ikn s 77 Bluefld St 63
H1Qh Ser es Royal Crown
Delaware 101 Buc kn el l 73
Bo fll•ng 15 10
ln d H tg h Game - Mar l ene
Drexel 57 Johns Hopk1ns 55
Eltz tow n 73 Susquehanna 63
Wilson 246 Norma Ams bary
Fat rmont St 81 Conco rd 66
19 8
ln d Htgh Ser •es Be ll y
F rammgham 60 John s ton 59
F r n kln&amp;Mr shll 83 Mrav1an 66
Sm 1t h 557 Ma rlen e Wil son 549
Gan non 89 N K y St 73
Ge neva 70 Westminster 65
Geotwn 63 Penn Sf 58
Wedn es day Early B1rd
Ge tty sburg 81 Leh 1gh 70
Leagu e
Gle nv l 72 Wheelmg 71
January 23 1974
G rove Cty 73 Crn g 1e M l ln 57
Won L os t
lnd Pa 86 Ed1nboro 76
36
4
B en Tom Co rp
Jr sy Cty St 67 Monmou th 62
H el en's BN uty Sho o
34
6
L y c mng 76 Ph lla T eK 68
Ber tha s G ro ce r y
18
22
Mass 76 N1agara 64
Raw l mg s Au t o Paris
12
213
Roush'S La ndm g
10
30 Mer cyhrsf 76 Al l 1ance 61
10
30 Mntcl r St 7&lt;1 G ram b ing 69
St ewar t Hardw ar e
M Harvey 91 W Va Tech 81
T eam H1gh Gam e Ben
Pen n 73 Columb ia 36
Tom Corp 802 Team H1gh
Pnn ce ton 92 Cor nell 56
Se nes - Ben Tom Corp 2319
lnd H1gh Game - Marlen e R IU 7 1 Sou t h F la 62
Rut g ers 86 Nav y 85
Wilson 199 Mall:me Dugan and
St Bon 64 Detro1t 61
Jan Jenkms 181
St Jn o N Y 14 Ar my 50
l nd H 1g h Se r te s - Marlene
St Jos Pa 68 Fatrf l d 59
Wilson and BettyWh•tlat ch 504
St MI ChaelS 88 Am Inti 79
Mary V oss ~9 7
Sa lem 51 78 Bstn St 70
Sc ranton 57 Wagn e r 55
Seton Hall 75 Holy Cross 64
W edn es day E a rly
Trn s ylvn1a 68 Bellarmne 60
Mued L ea gue
Trenton St 72 Bloom fld 7 1
January n 1974
Un1 on 70 Hami!ton 48
Won Lo s!
Z1de s Sport Sho p
28
12 West Chester 62 Kutztwn 57
West L tb 59 W Va St 55
Regatta In
18
12
Yo un g's Market
24
16 West Vt r 75 Villanova 68
w va W s lyn 107 Waynsbg 91
N e l son 's Dr ugs
18
21
Wilkes 82 Ups ala 72
Ten th Frame r s
16
24
South
Sm 1th Nel son Moto r s
6
34
Alabam a 73 Auburn 64
H1g h Ga me - Men
Russ
A la Sf 110 A l bny Sf 88
Ca r s on
216
Ch u c k
AI ern A&amp;M 112 Prar 1e Vw 70
W tnebrenner 213
Belmont Abbey 54 H tg h PI 52
Worn en
Be tty Sm 1th 246
Cmpbl l Co li 62 At ChriS 60
Maxtne Dugan 239
De l St 68 N C Central 67
T ea m Z1de's Sport Shop 750
East T enn 56 Tenn Tech 55
H1g h Ser ,es Men
B ill
EI 1Z C1ly 8&lt;1 Fayelhd St 83
Porler 575 Wil lar d Boyer 555
Furma n 72 East Ca rol tna 70
Women M ax me Dug an 570
Geo Wash 77 Jacksonville 69
Carolyn Bachner 569
Ga Tec h 73 Georg 1a St 61
T eam Youngs Markel 1 14 4
Jck snvl St 73 Lvngstn 65
Maryland 104 Duke 83
MemphtS Sf 65 No Tex St 62
Early Sunday M1xed
M1 SS1SS1pp1 77 L SU 63
January 27 , 1974
M1SS Coli 93 T roy St 85
Won Lo st
Morehead St 91 Estrn K y 83
Tom s Carry Ou l
32
16
M organ St 94 s c St 73
F nendly Ta¥ern
32
\6
Mt St Marys 81 Loyola 67
Pu lltn s Excavalmg
26
22
N o Ca r 6 1 Clemson 60
Sw1ShE:r ~ L ohse Pha r macy
20
28 No Car St 105 V 1rg n •a 93
Eagles Club
19
29 N W La 82 Delta St 60
Roseberry Pennzo li
15
33 O ld Dom 94 Ga Sthrn 80
Fi1tt 68 W1ll1am &amp; Mary 62
Team H1gh Ser•e s - Pu l l1n s
Presbytenan 80 Ersk.tne 69
Excavat1ng 2010, Tom's Ca rry
Sou U 107 MISS Val 51 79
Out 2007
Team H1gh Game - Tom' s Syracu se 82 Amer 1can U 63
Ten nessee 84 Georg1a 70
Ca r ry Out 731
Pullms E x
Te nn St 9 1 Morehse 76
cavat.ng 711
lnd H 1gh Se n es - Jr Phelp s Vande r b II 58 Flor•da 52
5614, Mar l ene W1lson 54() Bil l Wash&amp;Lee 111 Bowte St 65
Wake Forest 64 Va Tech 58
Boyl es 558 , Son 1a Wayland 50 5
M1dwest
lnd
1-t1gh Game Jr
A l b1on 82 Hope 75
Phelsp 225 Jr Ph elp s 21J
Ma r l ene Wilson 205
Ju l1 a Akron 79 Yngstwn St 70
A ndrsn , lnd 72 Bl ufftn 71
Boy le s 185
Ashland 80 Pt Park 79
Agstn a Il l 81 Centra l Ia 51
Bldwn WI Ice 99 Oberlin 69
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Berea 82 Unton, Kym 72
Jan 26, 1974
Bradley 79 N MM St 60
Saturday Jun•or League
Standmgs
Cap1tal 64 Dentson 59
Name
Cl ar•on 56 Calif Pa 50
Cre ighton 67 Duquesne 61
Bowlmg Ston es
9
Dayton 76 VMI 60
Gvtter Dus t er s
Hot Sho ts
De Pauw 99 Wabash 88
8
Drake 68 Tulsa 65
Apaches
8
Eastern Ill 95 Ou•ncv 72
Alley Cats
2
H1gh lnd •v•dual Game
Greg Cundiff 245
Second H1gh lnd Game
D1ck Owen 156
H1gh Sert es - Greg Cu nd •ff
5 19
Second H1gh Senes
Ron
Cas c t 421
Team Htgh Game
Hot
Shots 715
Team
Htgh
Se r tes
Apa ches 2061

.,

'

E M 1c h 72 Cl ev eS ! 67
Evansvl 74 ValparaiSO 73
Ferr. s St 89 Hil lsda l e 77
He 1de lb erg 72 Ke nyon 52
l ndtana 65 Iowa 50
l ndtana St 87 Centenary 78
Iowa St 78 Oklahoma St 75
K a ns a s St 57 Co lor ado 56
Ke arn ey 117 Central Mo 114
K y St 80 Cent St , 0 68
Marquett e 70 DePaul 57
Marymount 71 Mo Sthrn 66
M c Neese St 73 Murray St 65
M ercy 56 Wayne St 54
M1Ch1gan 107 IllinO IS 77
M1ch 1ga n Sl 76 Purdue 74
M1nneso ta 64 Wt sc ons •n 63
N eb Om 91 Empona, K an s 85
No Oa k 56 So Oak St 50
N D St 80 Agstna, S D 79
NW Mo 78 NE MISSOUri 62
Nrthw strn 68 OhtO St 6 1
No tre Dam e 95 Davtdson 84
Ohto U 95 Kent St 65
Oklahoma 98 M tssoun 92
Otterbe•n 73 Mart etta 62
Sl J os l nd 70 Bull e r 64
51 LOUI S 71 W 1Ch1 ta Sf 70
Sou thern 111 67 Ill St 69
Southwest Mo 93 Lmcoln 85
Tol edo 53 Bwlng Grn 52
Wayne St 92 SW Mmn St 71
Wm Jewell 86 Cent Meth 71
W 1s G e 73 No 11 1 55
Wtttenbrg 86 Mt un.on 63
Southwest
Baylor 71 Texa s A&amp;M 62
Centra l Ok l a 59 SW Okla 58
D a llas Bapt 70 Ok la Bapt 68
Dil la rd 96 Tulane 85
E Cent Ok l a 81 SE Okla 74
Hrdn Smmns 81 Tex Ar t 61
Houston 10 2 Lamar 81
Howa rd Payne 78 Sui Ross 73
Kansa s St 57 Colorado 56
LOUtSVI 99 West Tex St 73
M•dwstrn 77 Waylnd Col i 53
R •ce 73 Southern Meth 69
So uthern Colo 71Ft Hay s 65
sw Te)(as 78 East Tex St 61
5 F Aus tm 66 S~ous St 65
Texas 96 Arkansas 81
Texas A&amp; I 87 Trlln St 54
Tex E P 59 N E La 39
Texas Luth 87 L eTou rneau 77
Tex Tech 82 Texas Chns 64
washbrn 89 No Colorado 71.
West
An zona 98 Ar•zona Sl 90 •
Bkrsfld St 76 Nrthrdge Sf 75
BY U 78 Wyommg 75
Cal Poly SLO 53 F llr t n St 52
ChiCO St 71 Sacmnto St 67
For t Lewts 79 Adams St 76
F resno Pac 8J Cal Luth 67
I-ta wall 63 Portland Sf 52
Idaho 77 Montana St 67
Id aho St 88 No AriZ 61
L ng Bch St 98 Oral Rbrts 89
Los Ang Sf 90 Pac 1f1c 69
Mont 89 Gonzaga 54
Pa c Luth 67 Whttwrth 68
Sf Mry's 87 Sta Clra 73
San Fran 73 Seattle 57
S F St 73 Humbldl Sf 66
S J St 61 F resno Sf 60
Snfa Brbra 76 San D 1ego U 73
Sonoma Sf 88 Haywrd St 79
Sou Utah 91 Colo Mtnes 76
UCLA 65 Southern Cal 54
Utah St 121 So MISS 84

, NEW COACH
MASSILLON, Ohio (UP!) Masstllon Htgh School officia!B
Saturday nained Charles Shuff,
head football coach at Fremont
Ross Htgh School, to replace
Bob Commlngs as head coach
at Massillon. Shuff had a ~232 record at Fremont Ross from
1968 through 1973. There were
46 applicants for the coachmg
JOb at Massillon

Cedarville 71-69
Dean Fausnaugh's layup

wtth two seconds remaining

followmg a stea l by Dan
Bollinger gave Coach Art
Lanham's Rio Grande College
Redmen a thrilling 71-69 MidOhto Conference victory over
the host Cedarville Yellow
Jackets Saturday night.
The score was tied 69-all
when Bollinger picked off a
Yellow Jacket pass. Bollinger,
who tallied 20 pomts m the
game, passed off to Fausnaugh
after the steal on a fast oreak
and that was the ball game
The victory evened Rio's
season mark at 9-9. Inside the
MOC, Rio upped its mark to 9- .
9. Instde the MOC, Rio upped
Its mark to 4-2. Cedarville
dropped to 8-10 on the year and
3-4 m the league play.
After the Jackets jumped off
to a quick 111-2 lead, Rio came
back to take a 37-34 .halftime
lead.
During the hectiC second
half, netther team managed
more than a three point spread
m the seesaw hattie.
Bestdes Bollinger's 20 pomts,
Ron Lambert popped m 26 to
lead all scorers. For the losers,
Steve Young was high with 23.

•
/

_. _ '

FAMJLY .SIZE INCOME SCALE
FOR FREE OR REDUCED PRICE LUNCHES

c
A -·-

FamUy Size :
Parents, Children
&amp; Others

B

Income Scale
For
FREE MEALS

Revised lncomo
Scale for
Reduced Price
Lunches
$3,830
5,040
6,250
7,440
8,540
9,640
10,640
11,640
12,550
13,440
14,330
15,220

~ ~---------1 2,740

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10

3,600
4,460
5,310
6,100
6,890
7,600
8,310
8,960
9,600
10,240
10,880

II

12
Each Additional
Family Member

The

Eastern
(Continued from page I)
meals free or at reduced
prtces. In addltun , famtlies not
meetmg thts crtterta but wtlh
other unusual expenses due to
unusually high medical expenses, shelter costs m excess
of 30 percent of mcome, spec tal
education expenses due to the
mental or physical condition of
a chtld, and disaster or
casualty losses may app\y
They may apply by fillmg m
the application forms sent
home with a letter to parents .
In the operation of child
feeding programs, no child will
be discriminated against
because of his race, sex, color,
or nat10nal ongln Local
Supermtendent John D Riebel,
Sr., will review applications
and detemfine eligibility. If a
parent IS dtssahsfied With the
ruling of the offtcial, he may
make a request either orally or
m wrttmg to Robert Bowen,
County Supermtendent, whose
address is Box 684, Pomeroy,
Ohto 45769, for a hearmg to
appeal the dectsion.

il

GRABS REBOUND - Orton Blanchard ( 22) leaps htgh mto the air to grab a rebound for
Met~s durmg Frtday's SEOAL encounter agamst Gallipolis m the Larry R. Morrtson gym at
Rock Sprmgs Marauder on left if freshman Chtp Brauer ( 44) GAHS won, 74-52 (Steve Wilson
photo )

Toledo edges Bowling Green
By United Press lnternattonal
Toledo edged Bowling Green

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO 'ME
INTEJ\ESTOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESI'ER L TANNEHILL,

""'

..

ROBER.THOEFUCII,
City E41tor
P\lbllahed dilly ucept Saturday by The
Ohio Valley Pub&amp;hlng D:lm~ny , ll1
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio, 56769 Bus1nesa
Ofllce Phone m-21~ Editorial Phone m
2157
Serond clasa postage paid al Pomeroy,
Ohio

National adver11111ng representattve
Botlinelli-&lt;lallagher ,Inc , 12 Eut 42Zid St .
New York, New York

SUbscrtptioo rates Delivered b)' carrieswhere avallabJe 60 ceni.R per week, By

Motor Route where earner serv1ce not
ava tlable One month

t:1 00 By mail III

Ohto and W Va , One Yeu-, $18 Sb
months , 59 50, Three months, 16
Elsewhere $22 00 year, sis: month! Ill 50,
thret:! mm ths, 16 50 Sllbscrlption pnce

mcludts SUnday Times-Sentlnel

FOSTER CARE
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Some
35 delinquent youths will be
transferred to foster care programs from the Zanesville
Youth camp which IS -being
phased out if the state coniroling Board approves the move
today, the Ohw Youth CommisSion announced Saturday. Wil·
liam J. Ensign, director of the
OYC, satd plans call for the
phasmg qut to begin with the
next month

Sa turday mght to mamtrun a
share of the Mtd-Amertcan

Vikings rally,
nip SW, 53-51

890

640

Symmes Valley Jumped Into
a qwck 14-2 lea d, then fell
behmd but rallted late m the
four th quarter to down Southwest&lt;rn, 53-51 m a rugged
Sou the rn Valley Ath le ttc
Conference tilt Saturday mght
at Waterloo
The Vtkmgs, usmg a fas t
break, ]un!ped mto the lead as
Paul Jones hit ftve stratgh t
layups
Coach
Ket th
Car ter 's
Highlanders came back to cut
the lead to 14-13 at the end of
the first pertod SW wtth 18
pomts m the second stanza led
31-26 at the half
Symmes Valley outscored
the Htghlanders 27-20 to take
the vtctory m the second ha lf
Gettin g double figures were the
wmners' Jaye Myers wtlh 12
pomts. Jones wtlh 13 markers
and Rod Bennett wtth 11
Four players had double

figures for the Htghlanders
Kevm Walker, &amp;-! Jumor, led
the way wtth 12 pomts Terry
Ca rter, 6-0 jumor had II pomts
and 15 rebounds, Lloyd Wood,
6-2 center, and Larry Frasher,
semor guard, flmshed wtth 10
pomts each
Southwestern htt 19 of 39 fteld
goal attempts for 48 pet. and 13
for 20 at the chanty strtpe
Sy mme s Va lley won the
prehmmary
lilt,
38-30
Brammer led the wmners wtth
19 pomts whtle Crouse had 12
pmnts for Southwesl&lt;rn SW
hosts unbeaten Hannan Trace
Tuesday
So u t hweste rn (5 1) - Walker
52 12 Woo d 5 () 10 Cro u se 2 2
6 F ra sh er 4 2 10 Ca rt er 2 7 11
Total s 19 1J 51
Symmes Vall ey (SJJ - Jay e
Myers 6 0 12
Jones 6 1 13 ,
Qu ese nberry 2 2 6 Myers 1 2
4 Burc h am 3 1 7 Totals 23 -7·
53
Reserv es - Sy mmes Va l ley
38 Southw es tern 30

Noone
else
•

Fisher optimistic ahou\

cang1veus
what you can.

'74 business prospects

(Join Us. Please~

PT PLEASANT - Tom K.
Fisher, president of Ftsher
Stores, Inc which operates ftve
Shoppers Mart Stores m West
Vtrgima and southeastern Ohio
expects a slight business slump
caused by key raw materials
shortages, but thmks the
country wtll adJust.
He was one of 12 buyers
selected for interview recently
Rio htt 32 of 77 field goal by Housewares Magazme at
recent
Transworld
att.empts for 41 pet. The the
IIOOmen sank seven of 16 free Housewares and Vanety Event
throw attempts for 48.8 pet. Rio at the Amphitheatre In
had 48 rebounds. Bollinger Chicago.
Housewares Magazme was
TOM FISHER
picked off 19, Lambert 11. The
probing buyers thoughts on
winners had 15 turnovers.
Fisher's predtction was a
Cedarville hit 21 of 64 field possible shortages of plastic
slight
business slowdown, but
raw
matertals,
paper
and
goal attempts for 32.8 pet. The
that
the
country will adapt to
Jackets had a btg ntght at the cardboard •terns and wrappmg
,
chartty line, sinking T/ of 32 paper products. The arttcle the shortages.
"Whtle there are shortages
attempts for 84.3 pet. Cedar- appeared, wtth a ptcture of
ville collected 43 rebounds FISher, m the January edition and price mcreases m most
plastic lines, our ftrm Will not
of the magazine
Young had 11.
compromiSe quality for price,"
The Rio Jayvees roared to
Ftsher satd Fisher also stated
their ninth win in II starts by
he looks for an Increase in
tai&amp;tg the preliminary game, SCOTT TO BE RELEASED
~I.
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UP!) volume m his chain of stores
Wednesday, Rio plays at - Charlie Scott, the Phoenix due to the consumer bemg
Ohio Dominican. Saturday, the Suns' high&lt;ICOrmg guard who more pnce aware
"Our busmess," said Fisher,
Redmen return home to meet suffered a fractured arm
second place Malone m a key Friday night, will be released "was bmlt on a more value for
Moe clash. Malone is 5-l in from Centinela Valley Com- your doUar philosophy and
that's what we will continue to
loop play. Urbana tops the loop munity Hospital this week.
The thtrd-year NBA pro offer our customers - shortwith a &amp;-1 mark.
underwent an operation Satur- ages, price increa9e.S or not "
R 1o
G RA N o e
!711
day in which a metal plate was
FausnaUgh 3 1 7 . Swmehart 3
mserted into his left forearm.
0 6 Albanese 1 1 3, Stewart 2
Presbyterian Leader Dtes
He is out for this season.
o 4 , Lambert 11 A 26 , Noe 21
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
~~~~· nger 10 o 20 TOTALS
Scott's doctors told him the
Rev. Dr. Lawrence W. McceDARVILLE em - Potter ' double break will take about 18 Master Jr., chief executive of
2 o ' · Young 8 7 23, Brook 1 o months to heal completely
2, Myers 6 7 19 , Watson 2 11
·
the Synod of the Covenant,
15 , Thatche r 2 2 6 TOTALS 21 ·
He was hurt In the Suns' United Presbyterian Oturch of
27·"
inst the Los Angeles
Ha'llflme score
R 10 37 game pga
the USA, died here Saturday of
Cedar v•lle 34
LakerS at the Forum.
a heart attack. He was 44.

Rio knocked off

conduct a "ftshtug expedttton"
for Whtte House mfonnatwn
Jaworskt satd that •f the
committee trtes to subpoena
informalton from htm , he
would be "hound by the rule of
law" to refuse to furmsh tt,
smce grand jury information is
secret. But be satd that if U.S.
Distrtct Court Judge John J.
Sinca ordered hun to turn over
information to the committee,
he would cooperate He satd
the commtttee also could
subpoena the same mformatlon directly from the
White House.
Jaworski also said
-He and hts mvestigators
·~are aware of no basts for a
perjury charge" against
former prestdenttal atde John
Dean.
- His office has about fin·
ished a study en whether a
president can be mdicted.
While he would not state the
oonclust~n of the study flatly,
he satd, "the hypothetical
answer probably IS ... that
there IS a great questmn, a
very, very strong question as to
whether or not a sttting
prestdent 1s indictable "

Pullin, co-treasurer; M8rgaret Lambert, Gloria Roush,
Carol Handley Second row, Alice Marte Icard, prestdent ,
Dr. William Johnston, Duane Plants and Mrs Ftsher. Back
row, Paul Roach, Paul Matthews, Orvtlle Strow and Haskle
White, vtce president.

Nobody else tn th e wor ld can g1ve us
what you can A p1nt of your blood
And you r g1ft has never been more Impo rtant Bec ause blood from healthy donors
who freely donate th e1 r
blood , 1s 10 limes less likely
to cause mfect1o us hepa- ./-.~~
t1t1 s 1n the rec 1p1ent than IS
blood from many commerCial sources Thmk about
that
The need ts urgent
and contin uou s
Help us Jo111 us
Today

The American

Red Cross.
The Good

Neighbor.

Conference lead whtle Wittenberg gamed some room at
the top of the Ohio Conference
Toledo held Bowlmg Green
scoreless from 1.16 on to edge
the Falcons 53-52 even though
BG coach
Pat
Haley
questiOned why offtctals dtda't
call a foul when one of his
players requtred first atd tit
front of his bench after the ball
was stolen.
Haley clauned Jeff Montgomery was htt m the face
when Toledo's Bob Conroy
stole the ball wtlh 30 seconds
left. Conroy drove down for a
layup
Hit In Mouth
" It was the most unbehevable call I've ever seen," said
Haley "Montgomery had the
red mouth to show he was htt m
the face "
Toledo ts tied for the league
lead wtth Ohto Umverstty
whtch rolled to a 96-65 wm over
Kent State Both Toledo and
OU have league records of !&gt;-2,
while Bowlmg Green, whtch
had had a ptece of the lead
Saturday, fell to !&gt;-3.
In another MAC lltle, Mtanu
defeated Western Mtchtgan...l!&gt;64
Ohw State, wtth a shaken
hneup, lost tts fifth Btg Ten
game, droppmg a 68-61
deciSion to Northwestern The
Wtldcats' Wtlhe Wtlhams came
off the bench to score 22 pomts
m the wm
Ohto State wtll be at Mtnnesota tomght Earher thts year
the Buckeyes edged the Gophers for thetr only Btg Ten
wm
Other games tomght fmd
Bowhng Green at Oral
Roberts, Dayton at Western
Kentucky and Walsh at
CedarVIlle .
Tigers w~ ~aln
Wit-tenberg, ranked lith
among the small colleges,
breezed past Mount Union to
surge mto an 8-llead on top of
the Ohto Conference
The Tigers got help from
Wooster whtch upset Muskmgum 65-60 and Otterbem, which
surpnsed Marietta 13-62
Meanwhile Capttal rolled to a
64-59 wm over Denison
Capttal and Muskingum are
tted for second m the OC with
records of &amp;-2 and Manetta IS
now 5-2
In other games , Day to n
downed VMI 76-60, Akron defeated Youngstown State 79-70,
Wrtght State edged Franklm
(Ind ) 16-45, Ashland squeezed
past Pomt Park (Pa .) 80-79,
Earlham (Ind.) defeated Wilmington 69·58, Defiance
blasted Manchester (Ind.) 11291.
Allegheny defeated Case
Western 73-69, Eastern Mtchi·
gan beat Cleveland State 72r67,
Baldwm-WaUace beat Oberlm
99-$, Hetdelberg rolled over
Kenyon 72-52, Rochester
(N Y ) handed Ohio Wesleyan
a 76-67 defeat, Rto Grande
edged Cedarvtlle 71-69, Kentucky State defeated Central
State 8().jj8, Htram downed
Bethany (W Va ) 81-70 and
Tiffm stopped Northwood
(Mtch ) Institute 96-M.

Tornados even Waterford series

ABA Stand•ng s
By Un 1ted Press lnter nal to n a l
East
w I pet 9 b
New Yor k
35 22 6!4
Ke ntu cky
32 71 604
Carolma
35 24 593
360 13
VtrQtn ta
I ll 37
I :J 4}
Memphi S
236 21
We st
w I pet g b
Utah
36 19 65 5
Sa n An ton to
J() 77 526
7
l nd1ana
'19 27 5 18 1 1
Denv er
'14 27
47 1 10
San D 1ego
24 35 1107 14
Sund ay's Re sult s
K en tu cky I 12 N ew Yo rk 99
San D ego 10 7 V r gmul 10 4
Sa n Anton•o 108 Caro ltna 95
lnd1ana 111 Denv er 102
(O nl y games sc hedul ed)
Mond ay~ Game s
v r g1n1a a t Ul ah
(On l y game sc hedu led)

RACINE - The Southern
Tornados, needmg a wm badly
afl&lt;r bemg ebnmated from the
SVAC race by Not th Galha
Fnday , 1eg rouped mmus team
leader Bob Mtller her e
Saturday, trtppmg Waterford.
53-40
The wm evened the season
senes with Ute Wildca t.&lt;; who
topped the Tornados m the
season opener at Waterford ,
49-47 m overtime
Sout hern, playmg wtthout 1ts
highest pomt producer and
!loot ge neral, se nt or Bob Mtliet
who IS lost until at least the
post season tournament w1th a
badly spramed ankle, "come
out and put the defense to
Waterford" , accordtng to head
coach Carl Wulfe
!"he Tornados , displaytng
what Wolfe called an outstandm g team effort, 1umped

Amer~can

Ho c k ey
league Standmg s
By Un1fcd Pr ess Inte rnational
Norlh
w t f pts gf ga
New Haven 30 15 7 67 202 157
Prov 1dence 29 21 6 64 747 1!7
Roc hester 26 14 10 62 198 169
Nova 5co t ,a
24 19 10 58 176 147
Boston
16 31 7 39 165 2 11
Spr1ng!t eld 12 24 12 36 151 19 3
South
w 1 t pt s gl ga
Hershev
28 14 9 65 217 157
Ba l ltmor e V 18 5 59 179 159
C m c mn all 26 113 6 58 175 160
Ja ckso nv li e
19 79 5 43 155 210
V 1rg1n1a
15 28 8 38 143 192
R1 c hmond 13 J3 .5 31 140 21 9
Sunday ' s Resull s
Balt 1more 2 Jacksonv il l e 7
N ew Ha~en 3 V1rg tn1 a 1
Cmc tn naf • 2 No va Sc ot•a 2
Prov •dence 6 Roches ter ~
IOnly games sc h ed ul ed )
Today 's Games
( N o ga m es sche d uled )
tnt ernalt onal Hock ey
League 5tandmgs
By Un1t ed Pr ess lnter nattonal
Nort h
w 1 t pt s gf ga
Mu ske g on 3 1 19 5 67 18 9 160
Sa gmaw
25 26 2 52 215 700
To l edo
23 28 1 47 1n 195
F l 1nf
19 3 1 3 41 168 2() 1
Port Hu r on 17 J l 2 36 1 ~ 5 174
South
w I t pt s gt ga
De s Mo•n es3 0 17 4 64 21 3 1!3
Col u mbu s 'lB 26 2 58 213 210
Dayton
27 25 3 57 193 176
Fort Wayn e 27 24 0 54 173 188
Sunday ' s Result s
Dayton 3 Fori Wayn e 1
Des Motnes 6 F l tnt 4
Co l um b us 11 Tol edo 2
Sag 1naw 5 Musk eg on oi
(O n l y games schedu l ed)
Todav 's Games
( No ga m es schedu l ed I
NH L Sland•ng s
By Un•ted Press Int ernational
East
w
I t pi s gf ga
34
9 6 7 4 217 132
Boston
Montr eal 30
N YR a ng r s25
Tor onto
2&lt;1
Buff a l o
Detro1t
NY l s lndr s
Va n co uv er

12 6 66 174 131
151 161186 15 4
17 10 58 188 15 1

72
19
13
12

23
6 50 1611
15
7 45 169
23 13 39 11 9
29
8 32 132
W es t
w 1 t pt s gf
Ph Ia
J l 11 7 69 17 2
Ch c a go
24 11 1&lt;1 62 16 8
22 20
7 5 1 140
St LOU tS
At l anta
19 23 9 47 131
LosAng
18 24
B 4 4 136
M mneso t a 15 23 12 42 152
Pt ttS burgh 1&lt;1 31
5 33 137
Ca l 1forn 1a 10 36
7 'J7 135
Sunday's R es ults
Montrea l 4 Detro1t I
Tor on to 3 Buffalo 3
M1nn 5 NY Rangers 5
Ca l1f 4 NY I s land ers 2
Boston 5 P tltsbu rg h 4
Ch 1ca go 3 Sf LOUIS ()
P h1l a 2 At lanta 2
!Only games schedu l ed)
Monday' s Games
{ No game s sc heduled )

17 1
209
157
188
ga
100
105
13 1
\48
15.8
176
185
224

Dragons hold
Eagles_65 to 60
The Fatrland Htgh School
baske tball bus broke down on
the way to Easte rn Saturday
mght, and as far as Eagle fans
are concerned, 1t should have
gone back to Lawrence County
The game, startmg almost
an hour late , saw the Drag ons
move out to a 17 pomt lead at
one pomt 10 the tlurd quarter,
before the VISitors had to hold
off an Eagle rally to stop the
btrds, 6:&gt;-60
Easl&lt;rn. dow n 33-16 early 10
the thtrd fr ame, ca me back
behmd the mstdc e((ort.s of
semor ce nter Steve Dtll and a
15-foot baselme JUmper by
JUmor forv.ard Ttm Spencer to
knot the score at 5~-54 v.~th just
3 22 renlBmtng 10 the game
In the 11 mmutes and 14
seconds tt took the Eagles to
ove rcome that 17 pmnt deftctl,
Dtll had poured 10 14 pomts
whtle sc mor guard Steve
Goebel threw m 8 and Spencer
and semor J ohn Sheets added 6
each
The Dragons , however,
qmckly countered w1th slx
pomts, all commg off the hands
of 6-4 semor guard Max Bragg,
to mov e out to a 60-54 lead and
put the game out of reach.
The contest started slowly ,
with the ftrst quarl&lt;r endmg a t
8-6 lfl favor of Fairland
Th e second quarter sa w
Bragg htt for 12 pmnts as the
Dragons mcreased the lead to
13 at the half, 29-IG
Bragg led all scorers on the
mght, pumpmg m II fteld goa ls
and G foul shots for 28 pomts,
whtle gettmg help from Terry
Walls wtth 11
Dtll paced the Eagles wtth 18
pmnl•. followed by Goebe l wtth
14 and Sheets wtth 13 Jumor
guard Greg Batley dtd a good
JOb commg off the bench
durmg the lhtrd and fourth
penod rally to htt 8 pmnt.s
The Eag les lost the game at
the foul !me, as the Dragons
canned 15 of 27 attempts
Eastern connec ted on 10 of 16.
Fauland, whtch won the ftrst
encounter between the two
teams, 57-50, IS now 8-5 on the
year. Eastern, the only class A
team on the Dragon schedule,
ts now 6-9 on the year.
The Eagles now turn their
attention to a date Tuesday
evemng m Racme, when the
btrds meet the Southern

Tornados
Southern won the fir s t
me eltng be twee n the tw o
squads, 52-50 m overtime
In Saturday's prehmmar} ,
the Green Nestl mgs of Duane
Wolfe defeated Fatrland 39-35
tn a rugged battle
The NesUmgs moved out to a
12-10 first quarter lead before
falling behmd , 29-27 at mtermtsston A 14 pomt thtrd
quarter , whtle holdtn g the
Dragons to Just 6pomts, put the
NesUmgs m front by 4 gomg
mto the !mal frame
Mtke Harns led the Nestling
attack wtth 14 pomts, whtle
Randy Blake added 10
Jamte
Shankland
led
Fatrland wtth II pmnts
Sconng by Quart ers
Eas t ern
6 10 74 20 - 60
Fa 1rland
8 21 16 20 - 65
Fa rlan d ~ Burns 4 () B,
lj ra gg 11 o 28 Hamlin 11 J
Ward 3 3 9 Wa ll s oi 3 II
Ar
nold 2 0 4 F 1schcr o 2 2
Ea s ter n
Dil l 8 2 18
Spen ce r J 1 7 Sheet s 53 13
Bau m o 0 0
Goebel 6 2 14
Ba1 1e y 3 2 B
Reserves by qu a rl er s
N es tltn gs
12 3 14 10- 39
F a1r l and
10 9 6 10- 35
Fa 1rland
Sh a n klan d 4 3
11 Hay es 4 2 10 . Sm 1t h 2 2 6
St1llner 1 2 4 Barn ett 2 0 o1
Nc st l1ngs Blake 4 2 10
Nel so n 1 0 2 E •ch.n ge r 1 2 4
Bowen 1 2 4
Harr1 s 7 0 14
Good 2 1 5 Cond e o 0 0

22 chanty slnpe chances for 55 Southern came back m the
pet , whtle Southern could stnk thtrd quarter to move out to a
just Ii of 22 at the foul hne for three pomt nlBrgm , 21-18 after
50 pet The Tornados htl on 21 three quarters
Danmng
Brown
and
of 56 field goal atl&lt;mpts for 37 5
MtkeRoberts led the FWlnel
pet
attack,
htlting for 14 and 12
So uthern pulled tn 47
pmnts
respectively
Wagner
rebounds , wtth Sayre leadmg
le
d
the
Waterford
offe
nse,
llJe way w1th 13 Warner was
U1rowmg m s1x potnt.s
next m hne w1th his 11 caroms
Sconng by Quart ers
The Tornados, 10-5 on the wa t erfo
rd
8 7 10 15- 40
I () 17 12 14 - 53
yea r, 7-2 10 the SVAC, now will Sou tn ern
Sout h er n Cu rf man 2 0 4
concentra te on the Eastern Sayre
7 1 16 The 1ss 1 1 3 Ord
Eagles who tnvade Racme 1 1 s wa r n erS 6 16 Nea se 4 o
Tuesda ) ntght So uthe r n 853 ~mps on 0 1 1 To t a l s '21 11
W aterford Shaad 3 0 6
lopped the Eagles , 52-50
Sampson 1 51
tng 3 I 7
ear her m the year 1n over time M cFer r en 6 oi 16 DK am
ond 0 2
In Saturday's ftrst ga me, the 2 Arnold I 0 2 Total s 14 11 40
Funnel Clouds defeated the
R ese rv es by Quarter s
Wa te rf ord
6 8 4 8- 26
W!ldktttens 33-26
South e r n
8 5 S 12 33
The Funnel Clouds took an 8South ern Shu ltz 1 1 4
6 fu sl quarter lead, but trat led Brown 6 2 I~ G Dunn n g 1 1 3
s 4 4 12
by one at mtermisswn, 14-U Robert
wat e rfo rd Dowler 0 4 ~
Huldmg the Wtldktltens to 1ust Curry 1 0 2 Rou sh '104
1ngham 2 0 4 Shaad 1 0 2
four th1rd perwd po1nts , Cunn
Wag n er 3 0 6 Kerns I 2 4

Take it

from me,

PAUL HARVEY
it's time to heat up!
Americans, you can live in warm comfort
all winter long with Heil Central Otl or
Gas System . It's thP h~st you can buy. II
11 wasn't. I wouldn't tell you so !

D=Drnorn

See Your HeiiDealer
ted By City Ice &amp; Fu

No Energy Crisis.

• •

When You Pedal Your Own

HUFFY BIKE
New
Shipment
ALL SIZES

AND

TUESDAY NIGHT IS
FAMILY FUN NIGHT
AT BURGER. CHEF!

SPEEDS

WE HAVE

Try

Special Family Meal Prices

Moore's

4 p.m. to closing
FOR ADULTS
Btg Shet•
French Fnes
Turnover &amp;
Large Dnnk

Only

First!

FOR KIDS
Funburger' "
French Fnes.
Small Dnnk
&amp; Lollipop

l&amp;o¢

wash~OWash

St 77
Mont 76 Mon T Tech 69
w New Mex 74 W Col o 63
Wes t mon t 60 Wh• llt er 71
Wh1tmn 56 Col i of lde~l"o 48
W ilmette 80 LeW IS&amp; ( la r k 68
Sunday R es ulfs
La Sa l l e 78 Temple 54
Frostbg 80 M er cy hst 77
' Roger Wms @9 Cu rr y 58
Lehman 79 Yesh •v a 63
St neh l l 68 F rl gh Dcknsn 53

out to a 10-8 ftrst quarter lead,
mcreasmg tt to a 27-15 count at
mtermisslOn Southern moved
ahead by 14 pomts 39-25 at the
end of three penod.s.
"It was the best team ball
we've played all year, " sa td
Wolfe. who added that semor
guard Randy Warner "played
a heck of a game "
Warner took control of
Southern's offense, scon ng 16
pmnts and pulhng down II
rebounds He got strong
scormg help from semor forward Pete Sayre with lG and
)Untor guard Mtlch Nease wh o
chtpped 10 8
The Wtldca ts, unable to ge t
the ball ms1de aga mst th~
sticky Southern defense, were
led by Dave McFerren wtth 16
pomts He was the only Wtldcat
10 double figur es
Waterford connected on 12 of

w

•

&lt;

u

1503 EASTERN AYE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

BICYCLE PARTS
AND TIRfS

�'

.

~·

•-

,.,~

VfJ""J

..,..,~,,u,c,, ,nauwe)JVI ~·rUJut!roy, U., t''eD. 4,'1974

.,.. ~

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 4, 1974 ·

Leafs, Buffalo tie, 3-3 ~"-~]Bullets in
Sport Parade .i~ 1
' 12. 99 Wln
.

By.U!ifted Press Internalional
As much as it is scoffed at by
traditionalists who support the
"win or else" philosophy, there
are times when a tie serves a
useful purpos~.
Such was the case Sunday
night when the Toronto Maple
Leafs rallied on a third-period
goal by Rick Kehoe to gain a 33 standoff at Buffalo. ThiS
enabled Toronto to maintain an
eight-point advantage over the
Sabres in their duel for fourth
place in the National Hockey
League's East DivisiOn.
Fourth place, of course, is the
final position that earns a
playoff berth.
" It was good for us, " Toronto
Coach Red Kelly said . "It hurts
them a little more than our
club. We didn't lose anything ."
Downstate from Buffalo, Rod

Gilbert became the leading
point-getter in Ranger history
as he registered two goals and
an assist as New York settled
for a 5-S tie against the
Minnesota North Stars . Gilbert,
a 12-year veteran · of the
Rangers , has accumulated 731
points, eclipsing .the record of
729 set by Andy Bathgate.
In other NHL action Sunday,
Montreal beat Detroit, 4-1,
Boston edged Pittsburgh, 5-4,
Atlanta and Philadelphia tied,
2-2, Chicago shut out St. Louis,
3-0, and California beat thhe
New York Islanders, 5-4 .
Buffalo overcame a 1.{) deficit
to go ahead 3-1 on goals by
Rick Martin, Craig Ramsay
and Gil Perreault. But Errol
Thompson got one back for the
Leafs late m the second period
and Kehoe then got the

equalizer ~t 8:24 of the linal
period .
Danny Grant and Jude
Drouin each registered a pair
of goals for Minnesota, which
first blew a 3-1 lead in the
second period and then rallied
for the tie after falling behind
!&gt;-3. Dennis Hextall produced
the tying goal with five minutes
to play.
Murray Wilson scored two
goals to lilt Montreal over
Detroit in a nationally televiSed
game. The Red Wings managed
to hold the Canadiens to two
goals for two periods but
Montreal broke it open in the
\ast period on goals by Wilson
and Pierre Bouchard.
Ken Hodge registered the
fourth hat trick of hiS career
and Boston needed every one to
stave off the pesky Pengums.

The victory enabled the first-*
place Bruins to maintain their \1;
ii~
eight-point lead over Montre.tl
By MILTON RICHMAN
·~~
in the East.
.:~
UPI Suorls Edllllr
::1
Rick Mad,eish scored one ·
NEW YORK (UP!) - You ask how things are going with the
goal and then assisted on
another by Gary Dornhoe!er world champion Oakland Athletics?
Not so good, says Sal Banda. Not so good at all.
midway through the final
Charlie Finley may have to pack his lWJCh because practically
period to enable Philadelphia to
salvage a tie at Atlanta. Larry all his players are talking about going to the arbitrator's table
Romanchych and Tom Lyslak with him, and from the tone of thelf voices, they mean it. The
way they're talking, the A's figure to lead both leagues in arscored the Flames' goals.
bitration.
That's for openers.
Tony Esposito was called
Then there's all this conjecture whether Finley will sell the ball
upon to stop only 17 St. Louis
shots in registering his sixth club or hold on to it, and if he keeps it, the question which
shutout. Doug Jarrett, Cliff automatically arises is who has a strong enough constitution to
Koroll and Chico Maki scored be his manager?
"We'reunsettledj&gt;ecauS. we don't know who'll be leading us,"
for Chicago.
Joey Johnston's two goals, his said Banda during a brief.stopover here alter he and his partner,
21st and 22nd, led California Oakland Raider running back Marv Hubbard, knocked that little
over the Islanders before only white hall all over the lot in the American Airlines Golf Class;, in
2,437 spectators, the smallest San Juan, P.R.
SltuaUon Not Healthy
crowd of the season.
"It's not a healthy situation," put in the A's' conscientious
captain-third baseman. ''Not knowing who the manager is going
to be leaves usupin the air. We have no idea who it'll be."
Dick Williams, who has made it pretty plain it won't be him,
said it could be Sal Bando because he's one member of the A's not
in CharUe Finley's doghouse.
bands, selling silver coins enSal Banda passes though.
graved with his picture for *10
"!was flattered that Dick thought enough of me to say what he
each.
did, but I'm really not interested in managing now," said Bando.
"The coins cost me $7.50 "I feel I've got a nwnber of good playing years left yet. Yes, I
each and I sell them for $10," would like to manage some day. I'd welcome the challenge but
said Riggs, stuffing a $20 bill that's down the road sometime in the future . At present my only
into his pocket at the cocktail aim is to help tbe Oakland A's win another championship, I think
party and giving· a man two of our chances of winning this year are as good as they were last
the coins. ''That'sa profit of 25 year. The only thing we have going against us Is we don't have a
per cent. I'll hustle anything." manager."
Riggs also insisted his "tenSal Banda will make an exceUenl manager some day. He's
nis gimmick" was not warping intelligent, intensely competitive and knows the game. He also
the perspectives of sport or knows how to get along with people and in this day and age that
society.
frequently becomes a manager's primary asset.
"I look at myself and what
H given his choice, SAl Banda would like to see Dick Williams
I'm doing in the perspective of return as manager. Reggie Jackson, the A's player rep, said the
show business," he said. 11I'ffi same thing not long ago and claimed to be speaking on behalf of
an entertainer. People pay to the whole club.
see a movie star. People pay
ANice Gesture
money to see me."
"I thought It was a nice gesture hy Reggie, but be doesn't speak
for the whole team,'' said Banda evenly, without trying to make a
mountain out of a molehill. "Reggie was simply saying what he
felt. That's him. It was nice of him to ask Dick to come back. I
feel the same way. I'd like to see him come back. At the same
time, neither Reggie nor I represent the entire club because all
the A's might not want Dick back."
Oddly or not, the one thing about the A's' World Series victory
over the Mets which stiH sticks in Sal Sando's mind is tbe controversy over Finley's treabnent of Mike Andrews.
"It took all the excitement and color away," said Bando.
since their game ended 36
Since the series oakland's chunky third baseman has spoken to
seconds early in a much- Finley only once and that was two weeks ago when they talked
publicized brawl on Jan. 25, contract.
1972.
"We didn't even come close," says Bando.
This year, neither team is in
Gene Tenace, Joe Rudi, Catfish Hunter, Vida Blue, Ken
the title race, none of the Holtzman, Rollie Fingers and Jackson also are dissatisfied with
Gophers and few Buckeyes the tenns Finley has offered them.
involved in the 1972 ruckus will
"It is my opinion they'll all be going to arbitration," Bando
be in the match tonight.
said. "'111at includes me as weU."

DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) - In
the latest chapter of "Bobby
Riggs Keeps hiS Tennis Gimmick Rolling along," we find
our hero being chauffered to
courlside on a fork.Jilt truck
and wearing a construction
worker's hardhat to challenge
baseball star Pete Rose.
Riggs explains the hardhat is
needed because he considers
Rose a ruffian, recalling that
Rose showed little respect for
Bud Harrelson on the basehall
diamond last year.
And among other costumes
that Riggs digs out of his trunk
for the match is a hasehall
caU:her's gear-mask, chest
protector and shin guards-"in
order to make Mr. Rose feel
right at home. "
But of course, Rose didn't
feel •t home here Saturday
ni ~,~·.. He proved to be no Billie
jean King.
While Riggs clowned and
casually hit spinning drop
shots and lobs, Rose ran about
the court the way he runs the
basepaths - with gritty
determination-but not enough
tennis sklll to stop Riggs.
In all, seven games were
played and Riggs won five.
Rose's two victories came late
in the makh when Riggs had
turned his side of the court into
an obstacle course by dragging
six folding chairs onto it. Many
of Pete's points came on
rebounds off the chairs.
Rose, competitor that he is,
had insisted that Riggs begin

by playing him "straight
regular" tennis. Riggs accommodated and promptly beat
Rose three straight games.
Riggs then opened his trick
bag and pulled out a dress, a
raincoat, a heavy fur coat and
the baseball garb to wear while
playing. He also toted a beach
umbrella and a briefcase at
times. Riggs sidestepped the
chairs to beat Rose in two of
the final four games played for
laugha.
Rose, who has only been
playing tennis two months,
chased down nearly every shot
but returned most of them
directly to Riggs.
"Do !look as silly as I feel?"
a panting Rose asked a
spectator after lunging for a
spinning shot.
Asked alter the match to
evaluate Rose's tennis skilla
after only two months of
training, Riggs replied in
women's lib jargon.
"You've come a long way,
bsby," he told Rose. "But
you've got a long way to go."
Riggs maintained that his
popularity "bubble" was far
from bursting and as far as this
midwestern city is concerned, ·
he's right.
Only small crowds had turned out for seven previous sessions of,a pro tennis tourney,
but the Riggs-Rose exhibition
at Saturday night's session
attracted a sell-&lt;&gt;ut crowd of
4,000.
After the Riggs-Rose match,

about half the crowd walked
out while a regular tourney
match was beginning. It angered some of the players.
"This is a disgrace for tennis," complained Boro Jovanovic of .Yugoslavia. "People
don't come out to see us all
week, then they come out for
something like this."
But of course Riggs is more
of a household word than Jovanovic.
Acting nothing like the
''male chauvinist" he touts
publicly to be, Riggs sought out
women to flatter and kiss at a
pre.game cocktail party.
He also hustled their hus-

Big 10 race
tightens up

CHICAGO
(liP()
Michigan State, behind Undsay Hairston and tw&lt;Kirne Big
Ten scortng champion Mike
Robinson, has turned the
conference race into a fourteam scramble .
And the Spartans, S-2, are
right in tbe thick of it alter
Saturday's 76-74 win over
previously unbeaten Purdue in
East Lansing, Mich., on "the
most important shot" of Robinson's career.
The Spartan guard dropped
The Meigs Marauder wrest- third places, while sophomore
in a W.footer with four seconds ling team, with five 'grapplers Butch Roush won fourth place
left to give Michigan State the taking third place and one in his division.
• win. Purdue, &amp;-1, dropped into placing fourth, finished fourth
Roush, McLaughlin, Slack
a first place tie with Michigann in the eight. team field at the and Lehew went down to their
which crushed Dlinois 101-77.
Ironton Invitational Wrestling early round defeats at the
Defending champion In- Tournament Saturday.
hands of their respective
The Marauders, racking up weight class tourney chamdiana, an 85-50 victor over
Iowa, was third at !&gt;-1, just 43 points, finished behind pions.
percentage points ahead of champion Chillicothe which
Roush, in the 115 lb. weight
Michigan State.
garnered 1501&gt; points, Lan- class, was pinned byDePugh of
Wisconsin, which has been caster with 97, and Ironton with Chillicothe who went on to take
nationally ranked most of the 65.
the 115 lb. crown, while
season, fell ·to 3-3 in a ~ , BubOursville's 401&gt; led the McLaughlin was decisioned by
overtime loss to MinneSota ana 'lower
division,
with Lancaster's Clark, the 148 lb.
probably out of the title race. Chesapeake in sixth at 40, King; Slack der •ioned by
:f}w
Northwestern upset Ohio State Fairland with 32 and l.Algan Ellwood of Lancasc·'"· the 178
611-61 in the other game.
221'..
lb. champ, and ·Lehew pinned
Hairston, Michigan State's
Senior co-captains Joe by Ironton's Terry Parker who
big center, was just as heroic Rosenbaum
and
AI won the 188 lb. title.
Rosenbawn was decisioned
as Robinson in the Spartans' McLaughlin, seniors Bill Slack
fourth straight victory. He led and John Lehew, and junior by Lancaster's Hershberger
the scoring with 26 points, Mike Haley captured the Meigs who went on to lose in the
grabbed 23 rebounds and with O'Lw'
championship match of the 122
1:20 remaining and the score
It
~~"o·
lb. weight class.
Other Marauders wrestling
tied, he blocked a layup attempt by Purdue's Frank
were 108 lb. Rick George who
Kendrick. MSU then ran down
lost his initial makh in a
· 1on to Moore of Logan.
the clock and Hairston By Unite~ Press International deelS
screened Robinson for the Riverview 81 Ridgewood 69 George did not move on to the
N!otlewcomers t own 6,1 consolation round because
-·winning shot.
Michigan dealt llinois its Tuscarawas Valley 51
Moore lost his next match.
6
81 5
worst defeat at its Assembly 'JJ.~n~P~W~r 1 9 ~W~~~:,n 6~
Jeff Musser, in the 135 lb.
Hall since it was built in 1963. Evergreen 68 North Central 54 class, pinned his first op59 Ottawa H"IS 43
Dlinl Coa ch Harv Schmidt Pettisville
Antwerp 56 Aversville 3.t
ponent, then got decisioned
moaned, "We're shellshocked. Defiance 99 Feirview 60
twice in a row, while Charlie
•
HAllen East 68
We wont
or don 't P)aY h ard Continental
Wintersville 59 zanesville 53 Whittington, at 141 lbs., was
any more. We did things the Philo 63 Maysville 59
pinned and then declsloned.
West Muskingum 76 New Lex.
first half I COuldn't believe."
55
Steve Brickles, in the 158 lb.
Michigan Coach Johnny Orr New concord JG 54 crook&lt;vllle class, was declsioned by
was just as surprised at his ~'ort Frye 72 Meadowbrook 11 Barboursville's Walker but
Wolves, who were not among Woodsfield 82 McMechen (W wrestled no more because
Chris Braun, age 9'h
Walker lost his next bout, while
Westbrook Elementary School pre-season title favorites. ~~~a~t~· -ffnltehall 58
"We've certainly done things Warwood !W . va I 80 . senior Terry Pickens, at 170
Mt. Pro8pect,lllinois.
no one expected us to do," be Beallsville
Parkersburg65 {W.Va.) Cath. 47 lb S., ha d to forfeit his
. makh
said.
Warren Local 45
because of a shoulder injliry
All live Wolverines scored in Painesville
Cleveland Harvey.
Calholicppd
Latin
suffered l'n his Initial hattie
.
double figures as they hiked Cleveland Heights 60
with Hann of Barboursville.
their record to 14-3 overall.
Lyndhurst Brush 52
The Marauders' next action
Thirteenth-ranked Indiana 5E6uclid 81 Parma Valley Forge
will be Saturday night against
was even more impressive, ~~aker Hgts . 67 Garfield Hgts . Wahama in the Larry R.
rolling to its sixth straight win Lakewood 58 Parma Nor- Morrison Gymnasium
alter piling up a 4&amp;-20 haHtime ~~~~~ra~~ Shaw 58 Parma 64 beginning at 7 p.m.
lead and extending It to 7:h!O 1ott
How the Marauders fared midway in the second half.
Buckeye 66 Cleve. Lutheran
101 _ forfel't.
.
.
I
II
I
t'
t
WeSI
58
WISconsm e V c 1111 O · Firelands 73 Columbia 56
108- George dec. by Moore
Dennis Shaffer's 36-point per.. South Amherst eo Highla'nd 61
. I dl
. Allen Park ChriStian 46 Baptist (Logan), 3-2.
formance, IDC U ng 12 10 Cnrlsl. 42
115- Roush won by forfeit;
overtime and the Gophers' Bratenaht 67 Grand River 29 pinned by DePugh (Chll. )·,
free thr
shoo- Dayton Roth · 55 Cleve. Glenphenome:.,
•..,
ow
ville ••
decisloned Steffens (Logan),
ling. Pete GUcud dropped in Cleveland HolyL~!&lt;"emC~t6.'011 c 51 1().1; dec. by Weaver (Lan.), 7two free throws to win It with · solon 55 Bedford Sl
o.
onesecondleltintheovertlme. Olmsted Falls 93 Cuyahoga
122-Rosenbatundecisioned
. In the only game tonight, ~~~~~~~~~?. 67 Wickliffe 58
Foster (Bar.), 12-2; dec. by
Ohio State plays Minnesota in strongsville 63 Brunswick 55 Hershberger (Lan.), 5 ;0;
Buy U. S. Savings Bonds
Minneapolis-the first time the Cleveland ~~~~~c~J~"~;Ine 55 rlecisloned Richardson (I), 1e.
No .. ll• ""' 1'':0 5' •', 1nl • " '"' ' '"'" ~ . ~~ '" motoJ&lt;I! ,
nf '• yt oto lU m •Mho
; !he
..,
oro
twoteamshavemetatthatsite tlyroo cainollc 78 ldvlew 55 , . declSI·'oned Denny (Fall'·), '
Brookside 69 Lorain Catholic 63
~
•·
; ,~'"t:!~h1o~Y,,"';.~~~ ~~n~··,•;,-;;-:h ~· ','; ·~ :,";;,~;, ~~'
"'"or colln&lt;n•"• ,,., .. on.d
'"' ""''b.
Walsh Jesuit 60 Akron Hoban
(ott
••·'• "'"' uotll r "'''"'~"''"
Grand valley 65 Southington 60
59
.
129 - forfeit.
New Phila . 66 Mans. Mad•Son
Ash . Edgewood 56 Pvmatuning
Val.
4•
65
135 - ?)'lusser pinned Mills
s G•••'""'"' oooo "' "" '"
• '-•
' •I. ...........
. ,,,.,o,,,.,,, "" . ' • •~ ,•·.
Ashtabula
55
Painesville
Newcomerstown 61 Tu sky
• , lltoo••"'•"' o• '"' ·,. ,.,, , o•c. .,. o•, • C
(Bar.);
dec: by Fritz (Lan.), 9Riverside 4S
., Valley 51

~ -~~

JJWJV ~ oif

U,J,

I ; dec. by Wells (Chil.), 3-1.

141 - Whittington pinned by
Burleigb (Lan.); dec. by
Frantz (!), 4-3.
148 - McLaughlin pinned
Miller (Fair); dec. by Clark
(Lan), 7-2; pinned Travis
(Logan); decisioned Venson
(1), 9-4.

158 - Brickles dec,, by
Walker (Bar.), 5-4.
170 - Pickens lost to Hann
(Bar.) by default.
178 - Slack decisioned Allen
(I), 10-4; dec . by Ellwood
(Lan), 7-2; pinned Nibert
(Bar.); decisioned Byers
(Logan), 1.a.
188 - Lehew pinned by
Parker (!); decisioned Kazee
(Logan), 6-2; pinned Combs .
(Ch~).

Ohio College
results

---Remember

,--------

Valentine's Day
THURS~

By Sending Her
A Beautiful

Hvy - Haley pinned Noble
(Bar); dec. by Proehl (Chll),
3-2; pinned Adwns (l.Algan);
pmned Combs (Ches) . ·
Final Team Standings
Chillicothe
1501'.
Lancaster
97
Ironton
65
Meigs
43
Barboursville
401&gt;
Chesapeake
40
32
Fairland
Logan
221&gt;

FEB. 14th

~er

Arrangement
From '600
Order Early

Dudley's
59 N. Second St.

r

If your U.S. Savings Bonds are
lost, stolen, or destroyed, it
doesn't matter. Because all you
have to do is report' the loss, and
you'll be issued
a new one. It's
another one of ,
the reasons
'lake
why you can't
stock

to safe, sure

t;

savmg.
0 at

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0

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OPTOMETRIST

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OI=FICE HOURS Y:&gt;u TO 12, 2 .TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS. ) - EAST COURT ST.
POMEROY.
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Bx"l.O

Tuppers Plains

A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

Society News
By Mrs. Evelyn Brlckles
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Kramer , Mrs. Mae Coleman of
Columbus, Rev . and Mrs.
Robert Wyatt of Parkersburg
and Mrs. Sandra Massar of

Alternative plan explored
By Mrs. Judith A. McDonnell

Walk-In Garden Club
This erratic and unseasonable weather we've been havmg
makes me wonder what the tulips, daffodils , crocus and
hyacinths must be feeling (no doubt some very uncertain
surges). My lovely hybrid samon hyacinth has already popped
through to 11&gt;-inch above ground level. I'm wondering if this
could be disastrous.
Therefore I have decided upon an alternative plan for enjoying my favorite flowers of the year: forcing them in
terrariums. I've found that other plants like terrariums next best
to being outside, and usually c&lt;H&gt;xist happily if not flouriSh
within the terrarium envirorunent. All you need do is emulate
outdoor weather conditions and know the bulb's needs.
The bulb, being a self-eontained unit, has only one real need
to start development - that need is water. But to absorb the
water the bulb must first sprout its roots. For this I put a sufficient amount of drainage material, a mixture of sand and
mediwn size gravel, in the glass container to be used , to the level
of about the height of the bulb. The roots will develop in this area.
The height of the glass container should be determined by
type of bulbs used (daffodils are much taller than crocus). Set
bulbs on top of drainage material and cover with soil to the tip leaving the bulb just slightly visible above soil line. Then water
the soil lightly and cover, place in a totally dark area that stays
around 50 degree. Here it will remain during the period of time
while the roots develop - for crocus and grape hyacinths, about 8
weeks. The larger bulbed tulips and hyacinths take about 12
weeks.
You might need to check tbe container once or twice for
water and possibly to give a little fresh air. When the bottom of
the container is covered with root tips it is time for a low light
area around 65 degrees. Here it stays for 10 days or until green
top growth shows. Then remove cover and place in an area where
plants will get several hours morning sunlight, turning every so
often so that growth will be erect.
About10 days more to a blooming terrarium, now you may
replace the lid and move terrariwn to a good indirect light
source. This will be your own piece of springtime to enjoy for
approximately six weeks. - Happy flower sniffing!

Eastern were visiting Mrs.

Josephine Babcock, who is 1ll.
Mrs . Eugene Underwood
entered Holzer Medi~al Center
in Gallipolis where she was to

-

:,rHIS SENIOR CITIZENS chorus directed by Mrs. Carrie
Neutzling and accompanied by Mrs. Hazel Thompson
presented "old favorites" at the first anniversary ob-.
servance of the Meigs&gt;County Retired Senior Volunteer
Program at the Meigs Inn Thursday afternoon.

There IS much to
be thankful for

are the same pictures by atBy Goldie Clendenin
PORTLAND - As I look tis ts of the Rennaisance period
back over 1973 my mind just that make the stories come
can't quite grasp all the hap- alive.
All the things one man did in
penings of that 365 days, good
and bad. So much has hmdered three years, the teaching by
and hurt, perhaps we should the sea, on the mountain
wherever the people followed
h.oid onto the good.
Just this week I had reason to him . Some beheved in him ;
remember our past and many were skeptical, but he
present blessing the year has went on performing miracles,
brought to me, transportation healing the sick and diseased ;
to get from here to there, most ones with physical, mental and
anywhere I want or need to go. spiritual problems. He was a
Came my appointment with universal friend of suffering
Dr. Kemp at Gallipolis on a humanity . His primary
recent Monday; there were no mission was the redemption of
frantic phone calls over the the souls of the people, and he
neighborhood trying to find showed compassion for the sinsomeone with a car, able and sick world .
People in all walks of hie
willing to make the 110 mile
trip that day for what I could were drawn to him and some of
afford to pay because early last the best and one of the worst
year through the Sr. Citizen chose to follow Him, when he
Center HCare Lme", I learned uttered the simple summons,
of
transportation
in "Follow Me".
cooperation with the CAP
On the Mount, a h11l m
service furmshed Sr . Citizens .
Refreshments
of
cake,
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Barry
Galilee,
He opened w1th the
Many
questions
that
came
up
Theiss, the former Carol punch, coffee, mints and nuts
Beatitudes,
descri bed the
Michael, was honored recently were served . Presenting gifts that year were answered by the
dignity
and
duties of his
with a bridal shower at the to Mrs. Theiss were those Center and CAP, A neighbor of
Asbury United Methodist named above and Melanie mine, Hazel McKelvey, works disciples, and explained how
Waldnig, Brenda Hayes, Lou in the office and 1s always the New Law completed and
Church.
perfected the Old. He spoke uf
Hostesses were Mrs. Theiss' . Ferrell, Valarie and Dorothy friendly and helpful. Another
th8general duties of Christians
mother, Mrs. Gloria Michael, Johnson, Nancy Crow, Debbie neighbor, Letha Proffitt, keeps
her mother-in-law, Mrs. Betty Cundiff, Connie Hill, Linda an account of appointment to one another , and gave
Commandments rega rding the
Theiss, and Brenda Wolfe, Jill Alley, Ernestine Fischer, dates,&lt;~nd checks with us to let
Warner, and Trina Ferrell. Hazel Michael, Susie Fischer, us know she'll be by at a cer- nature and sa nctity of
marriage ; de scri bed th e
Games were played with prizes Mary Lou Wolfe, Mary Porter, tain time.
of life and the folly of
vanities
She doesn't stop at getting us
going to Dorotha Salser and Anita King, Frances Wilcoxen,
gathering riches on earth, and
Nancy Joachim with Beverly Elma Louks, Jeannie Allen, there and back, but helps us in
condemned
religious hypocrisy
and
out
of
the
car.
When
Hart winning the door prize. Janice Usle, Sally Sauvage,
and
taught
the people the
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Webb, needful escorts us to
Beth Theiss, Eleanor Robson, restaurants when wo need to beautiful "Lord's Prayer".
!I
The Sermon on the Mount
Evelyn Lucke, Sarah Roush, eat at certain times for tests, to
stands
alone as the grand
Debbie Michael, and Nora find rest rooms and get our
charter
for the kingdom of
prescriptions filled; stays with
Pearson.
heaven. And the people were
Sending gifts were Jill us until we are home again .
astonished,
for He spoke not as
Midst all the problems the
Hourtashelt, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
and Pharisees, but
the
Scribes
Theiss, Shelly and Tara Wolfe, old year brought us I can never
Roger Theiss, Martha Dud- begin to count the blessings it as one with devine authority.
A man, Simon, a Pharisee
ding, Diana King, Christy brought to me .
MONDAY
asked
Jesus to dinner so he and
When we are older, and
MEIGS County Agricultural Michael, Robin Sauvage ,
his
friends
could study him
feeling sort o' helpless with our
Society, regular meeting 8 p.m. Cheryl Larkins, Usa Allen,
families far away, the going more closely. There was no
at secretary's office on Rhonda West, Rodney Neigier,
John T. Fischer, Clarence and another mile of the way of way to investigate in those
fairgrounds.
these employees who are doing days. The ruler's word was
RACINE Memorial VFW Susie Hill, Mary Congo, Cathy
- their job well gives us a warm usually law anyway. Simon did
Post 8065, 8 p.m. Spaghetti and Kathleen Franci.s, Becky
not offer him any of the plain
Kouns, Jane, Sam and Paula feeling of security.
supper.
.
courtesies
given a prominent
And this is one ole hillbilly
OAPSE Meeting for all cooks Lyons, Mary Chancey, Margie
guest, like kissmg, washing his
In the faculty dining room of Manuel, Nancy Aeiker, Emma gal that's ever thankful for feet, putting oil on his head.
blessings
received
and
helps
Meigs High School, 7 p.m. All Salser, Betty and Cric~et
Carpenter, Martha Moore, one to know that all is not right But during the dinner , a
urged to attend.
Esther Sylvester, Dorothy and with the world, but God loves woman of doubtful reputation
MEIGS County Board of Cecil Roseberry, Pauline Rill, us, worthy or not, and will be entered the room weeping, and
Mental Retardation, 7:30p.m. Joy Bentley, Phyllis Cross, just as near us as we allow Him weeping knelt beside Jesus.
in the office of Crow, Crow and Chris Spears, Jean Kloes, to be. We are going to need to Her tears fell on his feet and
Porter.
Barbara and Mark Theiss, remember this for future she dried them with her hair RACINE CHAPTER 134, Gerald, Roger and Dennis reference so we may have kissed and sprinkled them with
oinbnent.
OES, 8 p.m., Masonic Temple. Michael, and Hilda Frecker of peace in our hearts.
Scornfully, Sunon thought if
Worthy matron to have an Willowick.
I'VE BEEN READING a Qig
instrucUon session following
old Bible - so heavy I can not this man was Jesus he would
the business meeting. Past
hold it; just lay it on a table in not allow a sinful woman to
Ironto! me. When I used to look touch him. Jesus, reading . his
Officers Club meets Fb. 14 at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ben
at pictures in Granny Wells' mind, spoke of love and
Bible and hear the stories read, forgiveness, and that a lack of
Philson.
TUESDAY
I never thought I'd be reading lo~ . even in those whose lives,
when
a
great- outwardly are sinless, is an
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Friend them
obstacle to gaining eternal life.
hosted a prayer breakfast for grandmother myself.
On through his short journey
Pictures in Granny's Bible
p.m., at, the Colwnbus and men of the Laurel Cliff Free
here
He goes, .raising Jarius'
Southern Ohio Electric Co. Methodist Church Saturday were mostly black and white
Karen Stanley and Sandi morning. Assisting Mrs. except for the maps (don't daughter frqm the dead,
Sargent to have cultural Friend in serving were Belinda know why ) but I always liked speaking of the :~o"Good
program; Kathy King and Friend and Mrs. Kathy Pullins. to' look at them. She told me, Samaritan " , blessing children,
11
here is where Christ was the Rich Young Ruler, chasing
Linda Sauvage to be hostesses.
Attending were Gerald
money changers from the
POMEaOY Chapter 186, Pullins, George Folmer, the born, or preached, or was temple, and we leave Him at
OES, meeting 7:45 p.m. Rev. Robert Buc~ley, Steve killed" .
Now here in beautiful colors the Last Supper.
Obligation night to be ob- Eblin, Jim Gilmore, Pearl
served. Delinquent dues Jacobs, James Lewis, Edward
Van lnwagen, Richard Friend,
requested.
Ricky,
Mar~ in, and Mark
71u ~-Akr ~
WEDNESDAY
Friend.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge 363, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
Y-lkit'~
at the Masonic Temple. All Wylie Oppo1es Raise
.
master masons welcome.
WASHINGTON (UPI)- U.S.
PACKAGE
POLICY:
Refreshments will be served. Rep. Chalmers Wylie, R~lo,
COVERAGE
TOTAL
WEDNESDAY
plans to introduce a resolution
MIDDLEPORT Literary rejecting the proposal for a
Our
complete
comprehensive
Club, home of Mrs. Marion congressional pay increase
· homeowners' policy covers loss due to
French, 2 p.m. Mrs. Everett which President Nixon was
Hayes to review "Biackl:orry npected to recommend today.
fire, theft; storm damage, more. One
Winter" by Margaret Meade.
'!be Increase was npected to
premium .
Roll call will ·be a childhood be 7.5 per cent and would beincident in the Ufe of a famous come effective 30 days alter it
Is submitted to Congress unless
w~.
992-2143.
POI'.iEROY Lodge 164, either chamber rejects it. _
Pomeroy, ·
Wylie is one of several con102 W. Main
F&amp;AM, ~tated meeting, 7:30
992-7428
p.m. w...k in third ~egree; all gressmen opposing a pay increase
now.
Master Masons invited.

Shower given recent
bride in Syracuse

Birthdays of senior
citizens celebrated
Twenty-two birthdays and
one golden wedding an·
niversary were celebrated at
the January party of the Senior
Citizens attended by about 150
persons.
Mrs . Stella Grueser, 83, or·
Middleport, received the orchid corsage since she was the
oldest in the group of those
observing birthdays . Glenn
and Anna Cline of Carpenter
were honored on their 50th
wedding anniversary.
Others having birthdays
w'l!re Ada Slack, Syracuse ;
Bonnie Miller, Harriet Warner,
Naomi Bentley and Pauline
Buck, Rutland; Ullie Starcher,
Minersville ; Noah Haskins,
Ruth Euler, Glenn Lambert
and Karl Owens, Middleport;
Rose Genheimer, Forest Run ;
Jewell Curtis, Gladys Cuckler,
Eva Dessauer and Helena
Howell, Pomeroy; Orpha West,
Portland; Ethel Grueser, Rock
Springs; Ethel Guthrie,
Coolville; Sybil Dorst, Sumner,
Mary Circle, Racine, and Edna
Clark, Hemlock Grove.
A welcome was extended by
Clarence Struble on behalf of
the Meigs County Council for
the Aged, and the Rev. Robert

Hawk, Ullie Starcher, Nora
Curtis, Gladys Morgan, Lelah
Weatherby, Ruth Circle, Stella
Grueser, Leah Nease, Clara
Thomas, LaVera Pierson ,
Jessie Houchins, Virginia
Owens, Christina O'Donnell.
and Laura Byers.
Entertainment was provided
by the Senior Citizens Chorus
directed by Mrs. Carrie Neutzting with Hazel Thomson at the
piano.

Utensils worth
$100 provided

The Women's Auxiliary of
the Middleport Fire Depart.
men t through a housewares
party recently has provided
approximately $100 worth of
utensils for the kikhen at the
new headquarters.
Approximately 30 members
of the Auxiliary and guests
attended the party. Mixing
bowls, freezer containers,
cannisters, hot and cold mats,
and dish drainers were among
the items secured through
premiums on orders taken at
Bumgarner gave the in~ the meeting . A vote of thanks
vocation . Homemade ice has been extended by the
cream , cake and coffee were Auxiliary to those who supported the project.
served.
Cakes for the party were
baked by Teresa Byer, Loretta
Beegle, Edna Clark, Bernice

u.:.•.m ... ::e::m: •.:.:::::=::~
t Pomeroy
I'1.;
Personal Notes

''·

I

Former resident
has had surgery

Mrs. Robert Springer, the
former Janice Zirkle or Mid·
dleport, underwent major
·
surgery last week at a hospital
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Grimm at Lake Zurick, Ill. She expects
spent the weekend in Columbus to be discharged Wednesday
with .Mr. and Mrs. Robert and cards may be sent to her at
985 Hartwood Lane, Lake
Grimm and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb Zurick, Ill. 60047.
have returned home after
Mr. and Mrs. Springer and
spending the past week in children will be moving on
Columbus with their son, Dr . March 1 to Kansas City, Mo. He
James Webb, and family.
is employed with All .State
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer Insurance .
and daughter, Kimberly Lynn,
of Colwnbus were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
ON DEAN'S LIST
Hoeflich and Jayne.
Robyn
Mills, daughter of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Eber Lewis of
Mason were weekend visitors and Mrs. Robert Mills, was on
of friends and relatives in the dean 's list for the past
quarter at Ohio University.
Pomeroy and Middleport.

Carr, Juli Whitehead, Teresa
Edwards, Jane Smith, Rachel
Hunter, Nola Young, Cindy
Dill, Cindy Rikhie, Barbara
Douglas, Susie Goebel, Janet
Ambrose and T~~y FiU:h.
Mrs. Mabel Hetzer recently
visited Mrs. Amy Arnott at
Belpre.
Recent visitors of Mrs. Helen
Archer were Mr. and Mrs.
Chuck Sovels and son of
Parkersburg, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Clark and .sons of
Belpre, Mr. and Mrs. Skip
Smales and Mrs . Richard
Boring, local.
Mrs. Hazel Balderson of
Vienna, W. Va. , spent the
weekend at the WilliamsBalderson home.
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Meredith of
Beverly visited with relatives
here Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhart
and Gary visited recently with
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Buckley at
Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson
attended the wedding and
shower for their granddaughter, Dee Congrove and
Gary McNerney, at Zanesville.

undergo surgery.
Mrs. Effie Watson returned
home from Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was taken
after fracturing her ankle and
suffering bruises in a fall at her
home . She
is
slowly
recovering.
Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
Nichols quietly celebrated
their 67th wedding anniversary
Saturday , Jan. 26 . He
presented her with a lovely
bouquet of red roses.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Falls and of Albany were Sunday visitors
daughter of Hockmgport were of Mr. and Mrs . Lincoln
Sunday afternoon guests of Mr. Russell.
and Mrs. Marvm Walker.
Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce
Mr. and Mrs . Dinsmore of Columbus visited Mr. and
Boyles attended the funeral of Mrs. Howard Russell.
a friend Saturday Mrs. Mabel
Mr . and Mrs. Daniel Worley
McKindry at MI. Zwn, W. Va . of Beckley were weekend
Mr. and Mrs. William Corns VISitors of Mr. and Mrs.
of Canal Winchester spent a Charley Smith.
recently .weekend with his
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth and Mrs. Charley Smith were
Griffith.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley T.
Miss Judy Perry, Mrs . · Johnson, local, Mr. and Mrs.
Jennie
Whiteside
and Daniel Worley of Beckley, W.
daughter, Mrs. June Mollen- Va ., and Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
deck of Parkersburg spent Knapp, Kail, Charles and
Sunday with Mrs.
Bessie Kevin celebrated birthdays of
Webster.
Charles and Kevin Knapp.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roberts
Mrs. Howard Thoma visited
of Vienna, W.Va., were Sunday Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs.
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Lincoln Russell and Mr. and
Mrs. James Reeves.
Griffith.
Mrs. Win Blake spent a
recent evening with her
daughter, Mrs. Way Clark.
The Adult class of the United
Methodist church met at the
home .of Mrs . Ethel Stout on
Monday evemng.
Mrs . Velma Newell was a
Sunday dinner guest of her
grandson, Mr. and Mrs. John
Newell and family of Keno.
Mrs. Esta White of Keno was
also a dinner guest of the John

Wolfpen

New

Spring Shoes

Arriving
Daily.

heritage house

!!I!!!III!!;:M:i:d:d:le:p:o~rt;';O;h:io;.,.

·-----· ------·

Newell family.

A REPEAT SPECIAL!

GUARANTEED A WINNER!

100% solid state
~lfi'N

ClltlOMAtOlORll"

Breakfast given
Methodist men

Beo:~~T~ ':or~:;:P7~~

LIMIT:
1 per person
1 per family

INSURANCE

GROUPS
Up to 4 pho tograp hed at

S1 00 extra per pe rson

PHOTOGRAPHER WILL BE AT:
TOWN HAL•.
NEW. HAVEN, W.VA.

llu n~o

r,o~,,n•

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6

HOURS: 1. 8 p.m.

BQNUS: FREE 8xl0 COLOR PORTRAIJ OF GRANDPARENTS

f

I

I

N W COMPTON Q D

in Jlnaerica.
rr··

beat ~onds
when 1t comes

l
I
I

L!!~S~~--~~~~!".!J

Uiu:h

School scores

Notes . ...

By STEVE KRAUSE
the bigest margin of VfClory
It was a simple game, really. this year for Los Angeles,
The Capital Bullets did every- topping the 137-109 margin
thing right and the Boston against Portland earlier.
Celucs did everything wrong.
Jerry Sloan hit on 11 ol 4 14
That, according to Celtics' shots and equaled his season
Coach Tom Heinsobn, is why high of 25 points ·as the Bulls '
the Bullets beat the Celtics, 112- ran their current winning
99, on national television streak to eight games by
Sunday.
beating Cleveland. It was also
"The Bullets were physical the eighth consecutive game in
with us," Heinsohn said, "but which the Bulls' defense has
we weren't physical with them. held its opponents under 100
We let them get the shots- they points.
Bob McAdoo scored 28 points
didn't let us ·get the shots. How
are you supposed to win like 'and Jim McMillian added 20 to
that?"
pace Buffalo over Philadelphia
Boston kept the pressure on at Toronto and Calvin Murphy
in the first half, although it scored 23 points and added a
only led by four at the half. The career high 15 assists to lead
Celtics had built up leads of Houston over Atlanta. The
nine points twice, only to have victory broil_e a live-game
them erased by the shooting of losing streak.
Phil Chenier, who had 15 points
Bob Lanier and John Mengelt
in the half and a game-high 29. combined for 45 points to lilt
In the second half, the game Detroit over the SuperSonics.
turned completely in Capital's Lanier hit for 23 of his gamefavor. The Bullets quickly high 25 points In the first hall
wiped out JlQSton 's four-point to contribute to the Pistons' 13lead on baskets by Elvin Hayes point halftime lead of 61-411.
and Mike Riordan. WiU! 8:41 Mengelt came off the bench
left in the third quarter, Kevin and scored 16 of his 22 points In
·porter started a binge by the second half.
hitting on a 2tl-foot jwnper to
give Capital the lead for the
first time at 59..SS. Shortly
thereafter, Porter and Hayes
collected nine points between
them to lead the Bullets to an
11.{) streak to break the game
open.
The Bullets then stopped By United Pren International
Boston's fast break by sending Ashland 80 Point Park (Pa.) 79
a man to midcourt to intercept Defian c e 112 Manchester
Ond.l 91
them before the break could Miami 75 West . Michigan 6-4
Wr ight 5t. 46 Franklin (Ind . ) -45
form.
Ohio Univ . 95 Kent State 65
In other NBA games Sunday, Northwestern 68 Ohio State 61
Los Angeles ripped Portland, Heidelberg 72 Kenyon 52
Anderson (Ind.} 72 Bufflton 71
124-91, Buffalo downed Philadel- Rochester 76 Ohio Wes . 67
Dayton 76 VM I 60
phia, 112-98, Chicago defeated Earlham
( lnd .l 69 Wilmington
Cleveland, 1011-94, Houston 58
'
in 96 North wood tnst
stopped Atlanta, 123-112, and Tiff
(Mich.) 88
Detroit dwnped Seattle, 114-100. Ric Grande 71 Cedarville 69
Akron 79 Youngstown State 70
Reserve guard Jim Price Wittenberg
86 Mount Union 63
came off the bench to score 24 Otterbein 73 Marietta 62
64 Denison 59
points and Happy Hairston Capital
Toledo 53 Bowling Green 52
added 23 as the Lakers Baldwin ·Wallace 99 Oberlfn 89
East Mich . 72 Cleveland State
continued to dominate Portland, 67
routing the Trail Blazers for Allegheny 73 Case Western 69
the 11th time without a defeat Wooster 65 Muskingum 60
Kentucky St . so Central St 68
at home. The Lakers increased
their Pacific Division lead to a
...
full game over idle Golden
1
State and the point spread was

Grapplers finish in first division

By Mrs. L. Balderson
A slumber and pizza party
was held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Smith for their
daughter, Teresa, on Friday
evenng following the basketball game. Guests were Teresa

Green Thumb

·-

f,

Bobby Riggs topples Pete Rose

Reedsville News, Notes

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114 W. ,2nd

Ph~ 992-2284

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..,..,~,,u,c,, ,nauwe)JVI ~·rUJut!roy, U., t''eD. 4,'1974

.,.. ~

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 4, 1974 ·

Leafs, Buffalo tie, 3-3 ~"-~]Bullets in
Sport Parade .i~ 1
' 12. 99 Wln
.

By.U!ifted Press Internalional
As much as it is scoffed at by
traditionalists who support the
"win or else" philosophy, there
are times when a tie serves a
useful purpos~.
Such was the case Sunday
night when the Toronto Maple
Leafs rallied on a third-period
goal by Rick Kehoe to gain a 33 standoff at Buffalo. ThiS
enabled Toronto to maintain an
eight-point advantage over the
Sabres in their duel for fourth
place in the National Hockey
League's East DivisiOn.
Fourth place, of course, is the
final position that earns a
playoff berth.
" It was good for us, " Toronto
Coach Red Kelly said . "It hurts
them a little more than our
club. We didn't lose anything ."
Downstate from Buffalo, Rod

Gilbert became the leading
point-getter in Ranger history
as he registered two goals and
an assist as New York settled
for a 5-S tie against the
Minnesota North Stars . Gilbert,
a 12-year veteran · of the
Rangers , has accumulated 731
points, eclipsing .the record of
729 set by Andy Bathgate.
In other NHL action Sunday,
Montreal beat Detroit, 4-1,
Boston edged Pittsburgh, 5-4,
Atlanta and Philadelphia tied,
2-2, Chicago shut out St. Louis,
3-0, and California beat thhe
New York Islanders, 5-4 .
Buffalo overcame a 1.{) deficit
to go ahead 3-1 on goals by
Rick Martin, Craig Ramsay
and Gil Perreault. But Errol
Thompson got one back for the
Leafs late m the second period
and Kehoe then got the

equalizer ~t 8:24 of the linal
period .
Danny Grant and Jude
Drouin each registered a pair
of goals for Minnesota, which
first blew a 3-1 lead in the
second period and then rallied
for the tie after falling behind
!&gt;-3. Dennis Hextall produced
the tying goal with five minutes
to play.
Murray Wilson scored two
goals to lilt Montreal over
Detroit in a nationally televiSed
game. The Red Wings managed
to hold the Canadiens to two
goals for two periods but
Montreal broke it open in the
\ast period on goals by Wilson
and Pierre Bouchard.
Ken Hodge registered the
fourth hat trick of hiS career
and Boston needed every one to
stave off the pesky Pengums.

The victory enabled the first-*
place Bruins to maintain their \1;
ii~
eight-point lead over Montre.tl
By MILTON RICHMAN
·~~
in the East.
.:~
UPI Suorls Edllllr
::1
Rick Mad,eish scored one ·
NEW YORK (UP!) - You ask how things are going with the
goal and then assisted on
another by Gary Dornhoe!er world champion Oakland Athletics?
Not so good, says Sal Banda. Not so good at all.
midway through the final
Charlie Finley may have to pack his lWJCh because practically
period to enable Philadelphia to
salvage a tie at Atlanta. Larry all his players are talking about going to the arbitrator's table
Romanchych and Tom Lyslak with him, and from the tone of thelf voices, they mean it. The
way they're talking, the A's figure to lead both leagues in arscored the Flames' goals.
bitration.
That's for openers.
Tony Esposito was called
Then there's all this conjecture whether Finley will sell the ball
upon to stop only 17 St. Louis
shots in registering his sixth club or hold on to it, and if he keeps it, the question which
shutout. Doug Jarrett, Cliff automatically arises is who has a strong enough constitution to
Koroll and Chico Maki scored be his manager?
"We'reunsettledj&gt;ecauS. we don't know who'll be leading us,"
for Chicago.
Joey Johnston's two goals, his said Banda during a brief.stopover here alter he and his partner,
21st and 22nd, led California Oakland Raider running back Marv Hubbard, knocked that little
over the Islanders before only white hall all over the lot in the American Airlines Golf Class;, in
2,437 spectators, the smallest San Juan, P.R.
SltuaUon Not Healthy
crowd of the season.
"It's not a healthy situation," put in the A's' conscientious
captain-third baseman. ''Not knowing who the manager is going
to be leaves usupin the air. We have no idea who it'll be."
Dick Williams, who has made it pretty plain it won't be him,
said it could be Sal Bando because he's one member of the A's not
in CharUe Finley's doghouse.
bands, selling silver coins enSal Banda passes though.
graved with his picture for *10
"!was flattered that Dick thought enough of me to say what he
each.
did, but I'm really not interested in managing now," said Bando.
"The coins cost me $7.50 "I feel I've got a nwnber of good playing years left yet. Yes, I
each and I sell them for $10," would like to manage some day. I'd welcome the challenge but
said Riggs, stuffing a $20 bill that's down the road sometime in the future . At present my only
into his pocket at the cocktail aim is to help tbe Oakland A's win another championship, I think
party and giving· a man two of our chances of winning this year are as good as they were last
the coins. ''That'sa profit of 25 year. The only thing we have going against us Is we don't have a
per cent. I'll hustle anything." manager."
Riggs also insisted his "tenSal Banda will make an exceUenl manager some day. He's
nis gimmick" was not warping intelligent, intensely competitive and knows the game. He also
the perspectives of sport or knows how to get along with people and in this day and age that
society.
frequently becomes a manager's primary asset.
"I look at myself and what
H given his choice, SAl Banda would like to see Dick Williams
I'm doing in the perspective of return as manager. Reggie Jackson, the A's player rep, said the
show business," he said. 11I'ffi same thing not long ago and claimed to be speaking on behalf of
an entertainer. People pay to the whole club.
see a movie star. People pay
ANice Gesture
money to see me."
"I thought It was a nice gesture hy Reggie, but be doesn't speak
for the whole team,'' said Banda evenly, without trying to make a
mountain out of a molehill. "Reggie was simply saying what he
felt. That's him. It was nice of him to ask Dick to come back. I
feel the same way. I'd like to see him come back. At the same
time, neither Reggie nor I represent the entire club because all
the A's might not want Dick back."
Oddly or not, the one thing about the A's' World Series victory
over the Mets which stiH sticks in Sal Sando's mind is tbe controversy over Finley's treabnent of Mike Andrews.
"It took all the excitement and color away," said Bando.
since their game ended 36
Since the series oakland's chunky third baseman has spoken to
seconds early in a much- Finley only once and that was two weeks ago when they talked
publicized brawl on Jan. 25, contract.
1972.
"We didn't even come close," says Bando.
This year, neither team is in
Gene Tenace, Joe Rudi, Catfish Hunter, Vida Blue, Ken
the title race, none of the Holtzman, Rollie Fingers and Jackson also are dissatisfied with
Gophers and few Buckeyes the tenns Finley has offered them.
involved in the 1972 ruckus will
"It is my opinion they'll all be going to arbitration," Bando
be in the match tonight.
said. "'111at includes me as weU."

DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) - In
the latest chapter of "Bobby
Riggs Keeps hiS Tennis Gimmick Rolling along," we find
our hero being chauffered to
courlside on a fork.Jilt truck
and wearing a construction
worker's hardhat to challenge
baseball star Pete Rose.
Riggs explains the hardhat is
needed because he considers
Rose a ruffian, recalling that
Rose showed little respect for
Bud Harrelson on the basehall
diamond last year.
And among other costumes
that Riggs digs out of his trunk
for the match is a hasehall
caU:her's gear-mask, chest
protector and shin guards-"in
order to make Mr. Rose feel
right at home. "
But of course, Rose didn't
feel •t home here Saturday
ni ~,~·.. He proved to be no Billie
jean King.
While Riggs clowned and
casually hit spinning drop
shots and lobs, Rose ran about
the court the way he runs the
basepaths - with gritty
determination-but not enough
tennis sklll to stop Riggs.
In all, seven games were
played and Riggs won five.
Rose's two victories came late
in the makh when Riggs had
turned his side of the court into
an obstacle course by dragging
six folding chairs onto it. Many
of Pete's points came on
rebounds off the chairs.
Rose, competitor that he is,
had insisted that Riggs begin

by playing him "straight
regular" tennis. Riggs accommodated and promptly beat
Rose three straight games.
Riggs then opened his trick
bag and pulled out a dress, a
raincoat, a heavy fur coat and
the baseball garb to wear while
playing. He also toted a beach
umbrella and a briefcase at
times. Riggs sidestepped the
chairs to beat Rose in two of
the final four games played for
laugha.
Rose, who has only been
playing tennis two months,
chased down nearly every shot
but returned most of them
directly to Riggs.
"Do !look as silly as I feel?"
a panting Rose asked a
spectator after lunging for a
spinning shot.
Asked alter the match to
evaluate Rose's tennis skilla
after only two months of
training, Riggs replied in
women's lib jargon.
"You've come a long way,
bsby," he told Rose. "But
you've got a long way to go."
Riggs maintained that his
popularity "bubble" was far
from bursting and as far as this
midwestern city is concerned, ·
he's right.
Only small crowds had turned out for seven previous sessions of,a pro tennis tourney,
but the Riggs-Rose exhibition
at Saturday night's session
attracted a sell-&lt;&gt;ut crowd of
4,000.
After the Riggs-Rose match,

about half the crowd walked
out while a regular tourney
match was beginning. It angered some of the players.
"This is a disgrace for tennis," complained Boro Jovanovic of .Yugoslavia. "People
don't come out to see us all
week, then they come out for
something like this."
But of course Riggs is more
of a household word than Jovanovic.
Acting nothing like the
''male chauvinist" he touts
publicly to be, Riggs sought out
women to flatter and kiss at a
pre.game cocktail party.
He also hustled their hus-

Big 10 race
tightens up

CHICAGO
(liP()
Michigan State, behind Undsay Hairston and tw&lt;Kirne Big
Ten scortng champion Mike
Robinson, has turned the
conference race into a fourteam scramble .
And the Spartans, S-2, are
right in tbe thick of it alter
Saturday's 76-74 win over
previously unbeaten Purdue in
East Lansing, Mich., on "the
most important shot" of Robinson's career.
The Spartan guard dropped
The Meigs Marauder wrest- third places, while sophomore
in a W.footer with four seconds ling team, with five 'grapplers Butch Roush won fourth place
left to give Michigan State the taking third place and one in his division.
• win. Purdue, &amp;-1, dropped into placing fourth, finished fourth
Roush, McLaughlin, Slack
a first place tie with Michigann in the eight. team field at the and Lehew went down to their
which crushed Dlinois 101-77.
Ironton Invitational Wrestling early round defeats at the
Defending champion In- Tournament Saturday.
hands of their respective
The Marauders, racking up weight class tourney chamdiana, an 85-50 victor over
Iowa, was third at !&gt;-1, just 43 points, finished behind pions.
percentage points ahead of champion Chillicothe which
Roush, in the 115 lb. weight
Michigan State.
garnered 1501&gt; points, Lan- class, was pinned byDePugh of
Wisconsin, which has been caster with 97, and Ironton with Chillicothe who went on to take
nationally ranked most of the 65.
the 115 lb. crown, while
season, fell ·to 3-3 in a ~ , BubOursville's 401&gt; led the McLaughlin was decisioned by
overtime loss to MinneSota ana 'lower
division,
with Lancaster's Clark, the 148 lb.
probably out of the title race. Chesapeake in sixth at 40, King; Slack der •ioned by
:f}w
Northwestern upset Ohio State Fairland with 32 and l.Algan Ellwood of Lancasc·'"· the 178
611-61 in the other game.
221'..
lb. champ, and ·Lehew pinned
Hairston, Michigan State's
Senior co-captains Joe by Ironton's Terry Parker who
big center, was just as heroic Rosenbaum
and
AI won the 188 lb. title.
Rosenbawn was decisioned
as Robinson in the Spartans' McLaughlin, seniors Bill Slack
fourth straight victory. He led and John Lehew, and junior by Lancaster's Hershberger
the scoring with 26 points, Mike Haley captured the Meigs who went on to lose in the
grabbed 23 rebounds and with O'Lw'
championship match of the 122
1:20 remaining and the score
It
~~"o·
lb. weight class.
Other Marauders wrestling
tied, he blocked a layup attempt by Purdue's Frank
were 108 lb. Rick George who
Kendrick. MSU then ran down
lost his initial makh in a
· 1on to Moore of Logan.
the clock and Hairston By Unite~ Press International deelS
screened Robinson for the Riverview 81 Ridgewood 69 George did not move on to the
N!otlewcomers t own 6,1 consolation round because
-·winning shot.
Michigan dealt llinois its Tuscarawas Valley 51
Moore lost his next match.
6
81 5
worst defeat at its Assembly 'JJ.~n~P~W~r 1 9 ~W~~~:,n 6~
Jeff Musser, in the 135 lb.
Hall since it was built in 1963. Evergreen 68 North Central 54 class, pinned his first op59 Ottawa H"IS 43
Dlinl Coa ch Harv Schmidt Pettisville
Antwerp 56 Aversville 3.t
ponent, then got decisioned
moaned, "We're shellshocked. Defiance 99 Feirview 60
twice in a row, while Charlie
•
HAllen East 68
We wont
or don 't P)aY h ard Continental
Wintersville 59 zanesville 53 Whittington, at 141 lbs., was
any more. We did things the Philo 63 Maysville 59
pinned and then declsloned.
West Muskingum 76 New Lex.
first half I COuldn't believe."
55
Steve Brickles, in the 158 lb.
Michigan Coach Johnny Orr New concord JG 54 crook&lt;vllle class, was declsioned by
was just as surprised at his ~'ort Frye 72 Meadowbrook 11 Barboursville's Walker but
Wolves, who were not among Woodsfield 82 McMechen (W wrestled no more because
Chris Braun, age 9'h
Walker lost his next bout, while
Westbrook Elementary School pre-season title favorites. ~~~a~t~· -ffnltehall 58
"We've certainly done things Warwood !W . va I 80 . senior Terry Pickens, at 170
Mt. Pro8pect,lllinois.
no one expected us to do," be Beallsville
Parkersburg65 {W.Va.) Cath. 47 lb S., ha d to forfeit his
. makh
said.
Warren Local 45
because of a shoulder injliry
All live Wolverines scored in Painesville
Cleveland Harvey.
Calholicppd
Latin
suffered l'n his Initial hattie
.
double figures as they hiked Cleveland Heights 60
with Hann of Barboursville.
their record to 14-3 overall.
Lyndhurst Brush 52
The Marauders' next action
Thirteenth-ranked Indiana 5E6uclid 81 Parma Valley Forge
will be Saturday night against
was even more impressive, ~~aker Hgts . 67 Garfield Hgts . Wahama in the Larry R.
rolling to its sixth straight win Lakewood 58 Parma Nor- Morrison Gymnasium
alter piling up a 4&amp;-20 haHtime ~~~~~ra~~ Shaw 58 Parma 64 beginning at 7 p.m.
lead and extending It to 7:h!O 1ott
How the Marauders fared midway in the second half.
Buckeye 66 Cleve. Lutheran
101 _ forfel't.
.
.
I
II
I
t'
t
WeSI
58
WISconsm e V c 1111 O · Firelands 73 Columbia 56
108- George dec. by Moore
Dennis Shaffer's 36-point per.. South Amherst eo Highla'nd 61
. I dl
. Allen Park ChriStian 46 Baptist (Logan), 3-2.
formance, IDC U ng 12 10 Cnrlsl. 42
115- Roush won by forfeit;
overtime and the Gophers' Bratenaht 67 Grand River 29 pinned by DePugh (Chll. )·,
free thr
shoo- Dayton Roth · 55 Cleve. Glenphenome:.,
•..,
ow
ville ••
decisloned Steffens (Logan),
ling. Pete GUcud dropped in Cleveland HolyL~!&lt;"emC~t6.'011 c 51 1().1; dec. by Weaver (Lan.), 7two free throws to win It with · solon 55 Bedford Sl
o.
onesecondleltintheovertlme. Olmsted Falls 93 Cuyahoga
122-Rosenbatundecisioned
. In the only game tonight, ~~~~~~~~~?. 67 Wickliffe 58
Foster (Bar.), 12-2; dec. by
Ohio State plays Minnesota in strongsville 63 Brunswick 55 Hershberger (Lan.), 5 ;0;
Buy U. S. Savings Bonds
Minneapolis-the first time the Cleveland ~~~~~c~J~"~;Ine 55 rlecisloned Richardson (I), 1e.
No .. ll• ""' 1'':0 5' •', 1nl • " '"' ' '"'" ~ . ~~ '" motoJ&lt;I! ,
nf '• yt oto lU m •Mho
; !he
..,
oro
twoteamshavemetatthatsite tlyroo cainollc 78 ldvlew 55 , . declSI·'oned Denny (Fall'·), '
Brookside 69 Lorain Catholic 63
~
•·
; ,~'"t:!~h1o~Y,,"';.~~~ ~~n~··,•;,-;;-:h ~· ','; ·~ :,";;,~;, ~~'
"'"or colln&lt;n•"• ,,., .. on.d
'"' ""''b.
Walsh Jesuit 60 Akron Hoban
(ott
••·'• "'"' uotll r "'''"'~"''"
Grand valley 65 Southington 60
59
.
129 - forfeit.
New Phila . 66 Mans. Mad•Son
Ash . Edgewood 56 Pvmatuning
Val.
4•
65
135 - ?)'lusser pinned Mills
s G•••'""'"' oooo "' "" '"
• '-•
' •I. ...........
. ,,,.,o,,,.,,, "" . ' • •~ ,•·.
Ashtabula
55
Painesville
Newcomerstown 61 Tu sky
• , lltoo••"'•"' o• '"' ·,. ,.,, , o•c. .,. o•, • C
(Bar.);
dec: by Fritz (Lan.), 9Riverside 4S
., Valley 51

~ -~~

JJWJV ~ oif

U,J,

I ; dec. by Wells (Chil.), 3-1.

141 - Whittington pinned by
Burleigb (Lan.); dec. by
Frantz (!), 4-3.
148 - McLaughlin pinned
Miller (Fair); dec. by Clark
(Lan), 7-2; pinned Travis
(Logan); decisioned Venson
(1), 9-4.

158 - Brickles dec,, by
Walker (Bar.), 5-4.
170 - Pickens lost to Hann
(Bar.) by default.
178 - Slack decisioned Allen
(I), 10-4; dec . by Ellwood
(Lan), 7-2; pinned Nibert
(Bar.); decisioned Byers
(Logan), 1.a.
188 - Lehew pinned by
Parker (!); decisioned Kazee
(Logan), 6-2; pinned Combs .
(Ch~).

Ohio College
results

---Remember

,--------

Valentine's Day
THURS~

By Sending Her
A Beautiful

Hvy - Haley pinned Noble
(Bar); dec. by Proehl (Chll),
3-2; pinned Adwns (l.Algan);
pmned Combs (Ches) . ·
Final Team Standings
Chillicothe
1501'.
Lancaster
97
Ironton
65
Meigs
43
Barboursville
401&gt;
Chesapeake
40
32
Fairland
Logan
221&gt;

FEB. 14th

~er

Arrangement
From '600
Order Early

Dudley's
59 N. Second St.

r

If your U.S. Savings Bonds are
lost, stolen, or destroyed, it
doesn't matter. Because all you
have to do is report' the loss, and
you'll be issued
a new one. It's
another one of ,
the reasons
'lake
why you can't
stock

to safe, sure

t;

savmg.
0 at

o~

h

0

~

'

• ., .,

..

~ 1&gt;1 ~,

• ·

l
l

•

__ _ .

OPTOMETRIST

,

o

o'

OI=FICE HOURS Y:&gt;u TO 12, 2 .TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS. ) - EAST COURT ST.
POMEROY.
. .. . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .

Bx"l.O

Tuppers Plains

A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

Society News
By Mrs. Evelyn Brlckles
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Kramer , Mrs. Mae Coleman of
Columbus, Rev . and Mrs.
Robert Wyatt of Parkersburg
and Mrs. Sandra Massar of

Alternative plan explored
By Mrs. Judith A. McDonnell

Walk-In Garden Club
This erratic and unseasonable weather we've been havmg
makes me wonder what the tulips, daffodils , crocus and
hyacinths must be feeling (no doubt some very uncertain
surges). My lovely hybrid samon hyacinth has already popped
through to 11&gt;-inch above ground level. I'm wondering if this
could be disastrous.
Therefore I have decided upon an alternative plan for enjoying my favorite flowers of the year: forcing them in
terrariums. I've found that other plants like terrariums next best
to being outside, and usually c&lt;H&gt;xist happily if not flouriSh
within the terrarium envirorunent. All you need do is emulate
outdoor weather conditions and know the bulb's needs.
The bulb, being a self-eontained unit, has only one real need
to start development - that need is water. But to absorb the
water the bulb must first sprout its roots. For this I put a sufficient amount of drainage material, a mixture of sand and
mediwn size gravel, in the glass container to be used , to the level
of about the height of the bulb. The roots will develop in this area.
The height of the glass container should be determined by
type of bulbs used (daffodils are much taller than crocus). Set
bulbs on top of drainage material and cover with soil to the tip leaving the bulb just slightly visible above soil line. Then water
the soil lightly and cover, place in a totally dark area that stays
around 50 degree. Here it will remain during the period of time
while the roots develop - for crocus and grape hyacinths, about 8
weeks. The larger bulbed tulips and hyacinths take about 12
weeks.
You might need to check tbe container once or twice for
water and possibly to give a little fresh air. When the bottom of
the container is covered with root tips it is time for a low light
area around 65 degrees. Here it stays for 10 days or until green
top growth shows. Then remove cover and place in an area where
plants will get several hours morning sunlight, turning every so
often so that growth will be erect.
About10 days more to a blooming terrarium, now you may
replace the lid and move terrariwn to a good indirect light
source. This will be your own piece of springtime to enjoy for
approximately six weeks. - Happy flower sniffing!

Eastern were visiting Mrs.

Josephine Babcock, who is 1ll.
Mrs . Eugene Underwood
entered Holzer Medi~al Center
in Gallipolis where she was to

-

:,rHIS SENIOR CITIZENS chorus directed by Mrs. Carrie
Neutzling and accompanied by Mrs. Hazel Thompson
presented "old favorites" at the first anniversary ob-.
servance of the Meigs&gt;County Retired Senior Volunteer
Program at the Meigs Inn Thursday afternoon.

There IS much to
be thankful for

are the same pictures by atBy Goldie Clendenin
PORTLAND - As I look tis ts of the Rennaisance period
back over 1973 my mind just that make the stories come
can't quite grasp all the hap- alive.
All the things one man did in
penings of that 365 days, good
and bad. So much has hmdered three years, the teaching by
and hurt, perhaps we should the sea, on the mountain
wherever the people followed
h.oid onto the good.
Just this week I had reason to him . Some beheved in him ;
remember our past and many were skeptical, but he
present blessing the year has went on performing miracles,
brought to me, transportation healing the sick and diseased ;
to get from here to there, most ones with physical, mental and
anywhere I want or need to go. spiritual problems. He was a
Came my appointment with universal friend of suffering
Dr. Kemp at Gallipolis on a humanity . His primary
recent Monday; there were no mission was the redemption of
frantic phone calls over the the souls of the people, and he
neighborhood trying to find showed compassion for the sinsomeone with a car, able and sick world .
People in all walks of hie
willing to make the 110 mile
trip that day for what I could were drawn to him and some of
afford to pay because early last the best and one of the worst
year through the Sr. Citizen chose to follow Him, when he
Center HCare Lme", I learned uttered the simple summons,
of
transportation
in "Follow Me".
cooperation with the CAP
On the Mount, a h11l m
service furmshed Sr . Citizens .
Refreshments
of
cake,
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Barry
Galilee,
He opened w1th the
Many
questions
that
came
up
Theiss, the former Carol punch, coffee, mints and nuts
Beatitudes,
descri bed the
Michael, was honored recently were served . Presenting gifts that year were answered by the
dignity
and
duties of his
with a bridal shower at the to Mrs. Theiss were those Center and CAP, A neighbor of
Asbury United Methodist named above and Melanie mine, Hazel McKelvey, works disciples, and explained how
Waldnig, Brenda Hayes, Lou in the office and 1s always the New Law completed and
Church.
perfected the Old. He spoke uf
Hostesses were Mrs. Theiss' . Ferrell, Valarie and Dorothy friendly and helpful. Another
th8general duties of Christians
mother, Mrs. Gloria Michael, Johnson, Nancy Crow, Debbie neighbor, Letha Proffitt, keeps
her mother-in-law, Mrs. Betty Cundiff, Connie Hill, Linda an account of appointment to one another , and gave
Commandments rega rding the
Theiss, and Brenda Wolfe, Jill Alley, Ernestine Fischer, dates,&lt;~nd checks with us to let
Warner, and Trina Ferrell. Hazel Michael, Susie Fischer, us know she'll be by at a cer- nature and sa nctity of
marriage ; de scri bed th e
Games were played with prizes Mary Lou Wolfe, Mary Porter, tain time.
of life and the folly of
vanities
She doesn't stop at getting us
going to Dorotha Salser and Anita King, Frances Wilcoxen,
gathering riches on earth, and
Nancy Joachim with Beverly Elma Louks, Jeannie Allen, there and back, but helps us in
condemned
religious hypocrisy
and
out
of
the
car.
When
Hart winning the door prize. Janice Usle, Sally Sauvage,
and
taught
the people the
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Webb, needful escorts us to
Beth Theiss, Eleanor Robson, restaurants when wo need to beautiful "Lord's Prayer".
!I
The Sermon on the Mount
Evelyn Lucke, Sarah Roush, eat at certain times for tests, to
stands
alone as the grand
Debbie Michael, and Nora find rest rooms and get our
charter
for the kingdom of
prescriptions filled; stays with
Pearson.
heaven. And the people were
Sending gifts were Jill us until we are home again .
astonished,
for He spoke not as
Midst all the problems the
Hourtashelt, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
and Pharisees, but
the
Scribes
Theiss, Shelly and Tara Wolfe, old year brought us I can never
Roger Theiss, Martha Dud- begin to count the blessings it as one with devine authority.
A man, Simon, a Pharisee
ding, Diana King, Christy brought to me .
MONDAY
asked
Jesus to dinner so he and
When we are older, and
MEIGS County Agricultural Michael, Robin Sauvage ,
his
friends
could study him
feeling sort o' helpless with our
Society, regular meeting 8 p.m. Cheryl Larkins, Usa Allen,
families far away, the going more closely. There was no
at secretary's office on Rhonda West, Rodney Neigier,
John T. Fischer, Clarence and another mile of the way of way to investigate in those
fairgrounds.
these employees who are doing days. The ruler's word was
RACINE Memorial VFW Susie Hill, Mary Congo, Cathy
- their job well gives us a warm usually law anyway. Simon did
Post 8065, 8 p.m. Spaghetti and Kathleen Franci.s, Becky
not offer him any of the plain
Kouns, Jane, Sam and Paula feeling of security.
supper.
.
courtesies
given a prominent
And this is one ole hillbilly
OAPSE Meeting for all cooks Lyons, Mary Chancey, Margie
guest, like kissmg, washing his
In the faculty dining room of Manuel, Nancy Aeiker, Emma gal that's ever thankful for feet, putting oil on his head.
blessings
received
and
helps
Meigs High School, 7 p.m. All Salser, Betty and Cric~et
Carpenter, Martha Moore, one to know that all is not right But during the dinner , a
urged to attend.
Esther Sylvester, Dorothy and with the world, but God loves woman of doubtful reputation
MEIGS County Board of Cecil Roseberry, Pauline Rill, us, worthy or not, and will be entered the room weeping, and
Mental Retardation, 7:30p.m. Joy Bentley, Phyllis Cross, just as near us as we allow Him weeping knelt beside Jesus.
in the office of Crow, Crow and Chris Spears, Jean Kloes, to be. We are going to need to Her tears fell on his feet and
Porter.
Barbara and Mark Theiss, remember this for future she dried them with her hair RACINE CHAPTER 134, Gerald, Roger and Dennis reference so we may have kissed and sprinkled them with
oinbnent.
OES, 8 p.m., Masonic Temple. Michael, and Hilda Frecker of peace in our hearts.
Scornfully, Sunon thought if
Worthy matron to have an Willowick.
I'VE BEEN READING a Qig
instrucUon session following
old Bible - so heavy I can not this man was Jesus he would
the business meeting. Past
hold it; just lay it on a table in not allow a sinful woman to
Ironto! me. When I used to look touch him. Jesus, reading . his
Officers Club meets Fb. 14 at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ben
at pictures in Granny Wells' mind, spoke of love and
Bible and hear the stories read, forgiveness, and that a lack of
Philson.
TUESDAY
I never thought I'd be reading lo~ . even in those whose lives,
when
a
great- outwardly are sinless, is an
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Friend them
obstacle to gaining eternal life.
hosted a prayer breakfast for grandmother myself.
On through his short journey
Pictures in Granny's Bible
p.m., at, the Colwnbus and men of the Laurel Cliff Free
here
He goes, .raising Jarius'
Southern Ohio Electric Co. Methodist Church Saturday were mostly black and white
Karen Stanley and Sandi morning. Assisting Mrs. except for the maps (don't daughter frqm the dead,
Sargent to have cultural Friend in serving were Belinda know why ) but I always liked speaking of the :~o"Good
program; Kathy King and Friend and Mrs. Kathy Pullins. to' look at them. She told me, Samaritan " , blessing children,
11
here is where Christ was the Rich Young Ruler, chasing
Linda Sauvage to be hostesses.
Attending were Gerald
money changers from the
POMEaOY Chapter 186, Pullins, George Folmer, the born, or preached, or was temple, and we leave Him at
OES, meeting 7:45 p.m. Rev. Robert Buc~ley, Steve killed" .
Now here in beautiful colors the Last Supper.
Obligation night to be ob- Eblin, Jim Gilmore, Pearl
served. Delinquent dues Jacobs, James Lewis, Edward
Van lnwagen, Richard Friend,
requested.
Ricky,
Mar~ in, and Mark
71u ~-Akr ~
WEDNESDAY
Friend.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge 363, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
Y-lkit'~
at the Masonic Temple. All Wylie Oppo1es Raise
.
master masons welcome.
WASHINGTON (UPI)- U.S.
PACKAGE
POLICY:
Refreshments will be served. Rep. Chalmers Wylie, R~lo,
COVERAGE
TOTAL
WEDNESDAY
plans to introduce a resolution
MIDDLEPORT Literary rejecting the proposal for a
Our
complete
comprehensive
Club, home of Mrs. Marion congressional pay increase
· homeowners' policy covers loss due to
French, 2 p.m. Mrs. Everett which President Nixon was
Hayes to review "Biackl:orry npected to recommend today.
fire, theft; storm damage, more. One
Winter" by Margaret Meade.
'!be Increase was npected to
premium .
Roll call will ·be a childhood be 7.5 per cent and would beincident in the Ufe of a famous come effective 30 days alter it
Is submitted to Congress unless
w~.
992-2143.
POI'.iEROY Lodge 164, either chamber rejects it. _
Pomeroy, ·
Wylie is one of several con102 W. Main
F&amp;AM, ~tated meeting, 7:30
992-7428
p.m. w...k in third ~egree; all gressmen opposing a pay increase
now.
Master Masons invited.

Shower given recent
bride in Syracuse

Birthdays of senior
citizens celebrated
Twenty-two birthdays and
one golden wedding an·
niversary were celebrated at
the January party of the Senior
Citizens attended by about 150
persons.
Mrs . Stella Grueser, 83, or·
Middleport, received the orchid corsage since she was the
oldest in the group of those
observing birthdays . Glenn
and Anna Cline of Carpenter
were honored on their 50th
wedding anniversary.
Others having birthdays
w'l!re Ada Slack, Syracuse ;
Bonnie Miller, Harriet Warner,
Naomi Bentley and Pauline
Buck, Rutland; Ullie Starcher,
Minersville ; Noah Haskins,
Ruth Euler, Glenn Lambert
and Karl Owens, Middleport;
Rose Genheimer, Forest Run ;
Jewell Curtis, Gladys Cuckler,
Eva Dessauer and Helena
Howell, Pomeroy; Orpha West,
Portland; Ethel Grueser, Rock
Springs; Ethel Guthrie,
Coolville; Sybil Dorst, Sumner,
Mary Circle, Racine, and Edna
Clark, Hemlock Grove.
A welcome was extended by
Clarence Struble on behalf of
the Meigs County Council for
the Aged, and the Rev. Robert

Hawk, Ullie Starcher, Nora
Curtis, Gladys Morgan, Lelah
Weatherby, Ruth Circle, Stella
Grueser, Leah Nease, Clara
Thomas, LaVera Pierson ,
Jessie Houchins, Virginia
Owens, Christina O'Donnell.
and Laura Byers.
Entertainment was provided
by the Senior Citizens Chorus
directed by Mrs. Carrie Neutzting with Hazel Thomson at the
piano.

Utensils worth
$100 provided

The Women's Auxiliary of
the Middleport Fire Depart.
men t through a housewares
party recently has provided
approximately $100 worth of
utensils for the kikhen at the
new headquarters.
Approximately 30 members
of the Auxiliary and guests
attended the party. Mixing
bowls, freezer containers,
cannisters, hot and cold mats,
and dish drainers were among
the items secured through
premiums on orders taken at
Bumgarner gave the in~ the meeting . A vote of thanks
vocation . Homemade ice has been extended by the
cream , cake and coffee were Auxiliary to those who supported the project.
served.
Cakes for the party were
baked by Teresa Byer, Loretta
Beegle, Edna Clark, Bernice

u.:.•.m ... ::e::m: •.:.:::::=::~
t Pomeroy
I'1.;
Personal Notes

''·

I

Former resident
has had surgery

Mrs. Robert Springer, the
former Janice Zirkle or Mid·
dleport, underwent major
·
surgery last week at a hospital
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Grimm at Lake Zurick, Ill. She expects
spent the weekend in Columbus to be discharged Wednesday
with .Mr. and Mrs. Robert and cards may be sent to her at
985 Hartwood Lane, Lake
Grimm and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb Zurick, Ill. 60047.
have returned home after
Mr. and Mrs. Springer and
spending the past week in children will be moving on
Columbus with their son, Dr . March 1 to Kansas City, Mo. He
James Webb, and family.
is employed with All .State
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer Insurance .
and daughter, Kimberly Lynn,
of Colwnbus were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
ON DEAN'S LIST
Hoeflich and Jayne.
Robyn
Mills, daughter of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Eber Lewis of
Mason were weekend visitors and Mrs. Robert Mills, was on
of friends and relatives in the dean 's list for the past
quarter at Ohio University.
Pomeroy and Middleport.

Carr, Juli Whitehead, Teresa
Edwards, Jane Smith, Rachel
Hunter, Nola Young, Cindy
Dill, Cindy Rikhie, Barbara
Douglas, Susie Goebel, Janet
Ambrose and T~~y FiU:h.
Mrs. Mabel Hetzer recently
visited Mrs. Amy Arnott at
Belpre.
Recent visitors of Mrs. Helen
Archer were Mr. and Mrs.
Chuck Sovels and son of
Parkersburg, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Clark and .sons of
Belpre, Mr. and Mrs. Skip
Smales and Mrs . Richard
Boring, local.
Mrs. Hazel Balderson of
Vienna, W. Va. , spent the
weekend at the WilliamsBalderson home.
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Meredith of
Beverly visited with relatives
here Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhart
and Gary visited recently with
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Buckley at
Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson
attended the wedding and
shower for their granddaughter, Dee Congrove and
Gary McNerney, at Zanesville.

undergo surgery.
Mrs. Effie Watson returned
home from Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was taken
after fracturing her ankle and
suffering bruises in a fall at her
home . She
is
slowly
recovering.
Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
Nichols quietly celebrated
their 67th wedding anniversary
Saturday , Jan. 26 . He
presented her with a lovely
bouquet of red roses.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Falls and of Albany were Sunday visitors
daughter of Hockmgport were of Mr. and Mrs . Lincoln
Sunday afternoon guests of Mr. Russell.
and Mrs. Marvm Walker.
Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce
Mr. and Mrs . Dinsmore of Columbus visited Mr. and
Boyles attended the funeral of Mrs. Howard Russell.
a friend Saturday Mrs. Mabel
Mr . and Mrs. Daniel Worley
McKindry at MI. Zwn, W. Va . of Beckley were weekend
Mr. and Mrs. William Corns VISitors of Mr. and Mrs.
of Canal Winchester spent a Charley Smith.
recently .weekend with his
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth and Mrs. Charley Smith were
Griffith.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley T.
Miss Judy Perry, Mrs . · Johnson, local, Mr. and Mrs.
Jennie
Whiteside
and Daniel Worley of Beckley, W.
daughter, Mrs. June Mollen- Va ., and Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
deck of Parkersburg spent Knapp, Kail, Charles and
Sunday with Mrs.
Bessie Kevin celebrated birthdays of
Webster.
Charles and Kevin Knapp.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roberts
Mrs. Howard Thoma visited
of Vienna, W.Va., were Sunday Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs.
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Lincoln Russell and Mr. and
Mrs. James Reeves.
Griffith.
Mrs. Win Blake spent a
recent evening with her
daughter, Mrs. Way Clark.
The Adult class of the United
Methodist church met at the
home .of Mrs . Ethel Stout on
Monday evemng.
Mrs . Velma Newell was a
Sunday dinner guest of her
grandson, Mr. and Mrs. John
Newell and family of Keno.
Mrs. Esta White of Keno was
also a dinner guest of the John

Wolfpen

New

Spring Shoes

Arriving
Daily.

heritage house

!!I!!!III!!;:M:i:d:d:le:p:o~rt;';O;h:io;.,.

·-----· ------·

Newell family.

A REPEAT SPECIAL!

GUARANTEED A WINNER!

100% solid state
~lfi'N

ClltlOMAtOlORll"

Breakfast given
Methodist men

Beo:~~T~ ':or~:;:P7~~

LIMIT:
1 per person
1 per family

INSURANCE

GROUPS
Up to 4 pho tograp hed at

S1 00 extra per pe rson

PHOTOGRAPHER WILL BE AT:
TOWN HAL•.
NEW. HAVEN, W.VA.

llu n~o

r,o~,,n•

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6

HOURS: 1. 8 p.m.

BQNUS: FREE 8xl0 COLOR PORTRAIJ OF GRANDPARENTS

f

I

I

N W COMPTON Q D

in Jlnaerica.
rr··

beat ~onds
when 1t comes

l
I
I

L!!~S~~--~~~~!".!J

Uiu:h

School scores

Notes . ...

By STEVE KRAUSE
the bigest margin of VfClory
It was a simple game, really. this year for Los Angeles,
The Capital Bullets did every- topping the 137-109 margin
thing right and the Boston against Portland earlier.
Celucs did everything wrong.
Jerry Sloan hit on 11 ol 4 14
That, according to Celtics' shots and equaled his season
Coach Tom Heinsobn, is why high of 25 points ·as the Bulls '
the Bullets beat the Celtics, 112- ran their current winning
99, on national television streak to eight games by
Sunday.
beating Cleveland. It was also
"The Bullets were physical the eighth consecutive game in
with us," Heinsohn said, "but which the Bulls' defense has
we weren't physical with them. held its opponents under 100
We let them get the shots- they points.
Bob McAdoo scored 28 points
didn't let us ·get the shots. How
are you supposed to win like 'and Jim McMillian added 20 to
that?"
pace Buffalo over Philadelphia
Boston kept the pressure on at Toronto and Calvin Murphy
in the first half, although it scored 23 points and added a
only led by four at the half. The career high 15 assists to lead
Celtics had built up leads of Houston over Atlanta. The
nine points twice, only to have victory broil_e a live-game
them erased by the shooting of losing streak.
Phil Chenier, who had 15 points
Bob Lanier and John Mengelt
in the half and a game-high 29. combined for 45 points to lilt
In the second half, the game Detroit over the SuperSonics.
turned completely in Capital's Lanier hit for 23 of his gamefavor. The Bullets quickly high 25 points In the first hall
wiped out JlQSton 's four-point to contribute to the Pistons' 13lead on baskets by Elvin Hayes point halftime lead of 61-411.
and Mike Riordan. WiU! 8:41 Mengelt came off the bench
left in the third quarter, Kevin and scored 16 of his 22 points In
·porter started a binge by the second half.
hitting on a 2tl-foot jwnper to
give Capital the lead for the
first time at 59..SS. Shortly
thereafter, Porter and Hayes
collected nine points between
them to lead the Bullets to an
11.{) streak to break the game
open.
The Bullets then stopped By United Pren International
Boston's fast break by sending Ashland 80 Point Park (Pa.) 79
a man to midcourt to intercept Defian c e 112 Manchester
Ond.l 91
them before the break could Miami 75 West . Michigan 6-4
Wr ight 5t. 46 Franklin (Ind . ) -45
form.
Ohio Univ . 95 Kent State 65
In other NBA games Sunday, Northwestern 68 Ohio State 61
Los Angeles ripped Portland, Heidelberg 72 Kenyon 52
Anderson (Ind.} 72 Bufflton 71
124-91, Buffalo downed Philadel- Rochester 76 Ohio Wes . 67
Dayton 76 VM I 60
phia, 112-98, Chicago defeated Earlham
( lnd .l 69 Wilmington
Cleveland, 1011-94, Houston 58
'
in 96 North wood tnst
stopped Atlanta, 123-112, and Tiff
(Mich.) 88
Detroit dwnped Seattle, 114-100. Ric Grande 71 Cedarville 69
Akron 79 Youngstown State 70
Reserve guard Jim Price Wittenberg
86 Mount Union 63
came off the bench to score 24 Otterbein 73 Marietta 62
64 Denison 59
points and Happy Hairston Capital
Toledo 53 Bowling Green 52
added 23 as the Lakers Baldwin ·Wallace 99 Oberlfn 89
East Mich . 72 Cleveland State
continued to dominate Portland, 67
routing the Trail Blazers for Allegheny 73 Case Western 69
the 11th time without a defeat Wooster 65 Muskingum 60
Kentucky St . so Central St 68
at home. The Lakers increased
their Pacific Division lead to a
...
full game over idle Golden
1
State and the point spread was

Grapplers finish in first division

By Mrs. L. Balderson
A slumber and pizza party
was held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Smith for their
daughter, Teresa, on Friday
evenng following the basketball game. Guests were Teresa

Green Thumb

·-

f,

Bobby Riggs topples Pete Rose

Reedsville News, Notes

uiti£ C. WARNER INS. AGENCY

I .

L

Carrying case or cabinet e•lra

STYUSJ'
stretch-stitch
sewing machine
• Bu tlt -m s tt tc h c~
3 st1ctch, bl1nd,
fash1on ,
zig·zag
• Self- threadmg

take-u p lever
• Snap -on

presser feet

Push-button
selector
dial

reverse
control
We ha ve a Cred it Plan des1gned to

fl[

your budget.

We &lt;11 ISo have a libe ral trade-m policy .

"'A Tr ade mark of TH E SIN GE R COMPANY

The Fcibric Shop
114 W. ,2nd

Ph~ 992-2284

P~MEROY, 6HIO

INGELS
FURNITURE
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
992-2635
MIDII.EPORT

�-.
•
6- The Dally Sentmel,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Feb 4,1974

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!

BOYS

IN THE COURT OF

COMMON PLEAS

2 SIGNS
OF

MEIGS COUNTY OH IO

ROBERTA C 0 BRIEN

100' 2 Court Street
Pomeroy 01110 4S769

QUALITY

PLAINTIFF

vs

VIVIAN MORGAN

ET AL

DEFENDANTS

1970CHEVROLET BEL AIR

NO 15 47 1

BY PUBLICATION
To
Bcrn •ce Molden w11ose
last k nown address •s Bu c k e ye
La ke On o and whose exact
addre ss .s unknown and ca nnot
W1th rea sonable d• 1g en ce b t:l

..

\

11
OR OLDER
BE A
PAPER

CARRIER.

DELIVER
The
Daily
Sentinel
Th1s could be your
golden opportun1ty to
learn
bus1 ness
methods. save money
for clothing or college,
wm pnzes These and
many other benef1ts
are
ava1l able
to
deserv1ng
Sent1nel
carriers
For years, The Sen
tmel has helped young
people develop the
attnbutes and talents
wh1ch spell success m
adult l1fe

ascerta ned
To Conn e K Dut ch er who se
aad r ess 1S unknown and ca nnot
w1th r eason able d11igence be
asce rta n ed
To Herme tta Ann N1emeyer
who se exact name 1S unknown
and whose acMress 1s unknown
and can n ot w dh r eason abl e
dil 1gcnce be ascer tam ed
To Th e unkno wn he r s and
dev1see s of Nan n1e Hobb s
dec eased
To Th e unknown her&lt;. ancl
dev1 sees of Char es Ho tb s
deceased and
To T he unknown he1rs and
dev 1sees of N e\la Gilmore
deceased
You are her&lt;' bY not 11 ed H1a t
you have been nam ed defen
dant s 1n &lt;1 leoa l acl 10n ent.t led
Roberta C 0 Br1en pta1nl II vs
V 1v1an Morgan et al defen
dant s Th 1S act 1on has been
ass 1gned Case No 15 471 1n the
Common Pleas Cour t of Me gs
Co unty Oh10 Pom eroy Oh o
45769
The ob ect of the compla nt s
to part1t 1on and qu e t lllle to
real es tate s tuat ed 1n Rulland
TownShip Me1gs Count y Oh o
wh1ch 1S descnbed as fo l lows
S1tuated 1n Rutland Town
Sh ip
Meq;JS County
Oh10
Sect1on 4
Beg 1nn 1ng north 3300 fee t
from t he sou ..heast corner of
sa1d 5ec tlon J thence w est 1709
feet to cen ter of publi c road
then ce along center of sad road
north 17 degrees 05 we st 687 5
then ce east 191 4 to east I ne of
sa1d Sec t1on No 4 then ce south
650
to pla ce of beg1nn1ng
conta n ng 27 acres more or
tess
Except1ng and reserv1ng
three fourth s of coal oil qa s
an d other m1nerat s under l y1ng
the above descr1bed pr em1ses
W1fh r1ght to m1ne re mov e and
operate th e same
Also beg1nmng north 3300
and west 2121 from southeast
corner of Sect1on A thence west
1335 s th en ce north 650 then ce
eas t 1312 th ence south 23 deg
30 ea st 120 !h en ce south 2 deg
20 east 78
thence south 9
degrees 15 wes t 14 5
then ce
sout h 2 deg 30 west 327 t o th e
place of beg nn1ng conta1n ng
20 04 acres more or less
Excepting 1 53 acres sold off
1eav1ng 18 51 acres more or less
Also th e follow1ng desc nbed
real estale begmn1ng 172 rods
12 11nks west of the nortl1ea st
corner of Sec 3 Town 6 Range
14 th ence we s t 35 rods 13 l1nk s
thence soutli 80 rod s th ence
east 94 rod s 5 l 1nks to publi c
road !hence m a northwesterly
d1rec110n along the center of
road to the pl ace of beg nn1ng
conta1n ng 31 &lt; acres more or
tess
A l so beg1nnmg 95 ro ds 8l 1nks
north 511 ro ds and 23 l mks we st
of the southeast corner ot the
northeast quarter Sec t on 3
Town 6 Range 14 tll ence west
21 rod s 8 Inks t lien ce north 2
deg west 22 rods 14 lmk s
th ence east 22 rods 3 l 1nks
thenc e south 22 rod s 14 lmks to
place of beg.nn ng conta1n 1ng 3
acres more or tess
Except1ng from above par
eels' and reservmg on e half of
coa l o 1 gas and other m1nerat s
underlytng the above descr1b ed
prem1ses w1th th e ngh t to mme
remove and operate for the
same
You are requ.red to answer
the Complamt w1th n 28 days
after the last publ1cat1on of H11s
noltce wh1ch w il l be publ iShed
once each week for stx con
secut1ve weeks
The last
ouhl1cat on will be made on
March 4 1974 and the 28 days
for answer w11 1 start on that
date
In case of your failure to
answer or olherw1 se respond as
requ1red by the Oh 10 Rules ol
C1vll Procedure 1vdgm ent by
default w111 be r end ered agamst
you fo r rei ef demanded m the
com palmi

A route m1ght be open
m your ne1ghborhoo/j,
to fmd out

Call
992-2156

•
OR All OUT
AND MAIL
lHE COUPON

BELOW

I

------------,
I
CIRCULATION u&lt;PT
THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 COURT ST
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

FOR BIDS
B1ds are requested unt1l 12 00
Noon on February 11th 1974
from interested persons for sa te
to the Lead1ng Creek Con
servancy D 1str1ct a 1974 J/4 Ton
Pick Up Truck
w1th
the
fottowtng spec1f1C8t1ons
133 Inch Wheel Base Fenders
1ns1de of bed t! foot bed 302
cub1C
tnch
Eng1ne
or
equtvalent
automat c tran s
m1SS1on Pos1 trak dlfferenttal
or equivalent one color pamt 2
outside m1rrors
West Coast
type oil, temp gas and am
meter gauges, rear
step
bum per 7 50 X 16 t~res w1th
spa""e t1re and wheel heavy
duty spnngs heavy dui 1 ~ h ....,-k
absorbers
and
overload
sprmgs
Successful b1dder w II be
requtred to del ver truck by not
later than stxty days from date
of notif1 ca t1on of acceptance of
bidS
All b1ds should be placed 1n a
sealed enve lope addressed to
Leading Creek Conservancy
Dtstrtct Rutland, Oh10 and
marked on tile outs1de Sealed
B1d to be opened 12 00 Noon on
February l1 1974

(1) 21

I

I
I
I
I~-------N~AM~E-----1

LEA[')ING CREEK
CONSERVANCY
DISTRICT
Rutland Oh o
28 (2) A 3tc

Lost
A CHILDS pet dog answers to
the name of Cindy
Brown
and tan small female Pa rt
beagle and part bassett Lost
mile out of Chester Phone
985 3356
1 4 5tc

Bugn~ Opportun~res

I
I
I

ADDRESS

I
I
I

CITY

I
I

ZIP CODE

I

1------------l

a

1969 CHEVELLE HT CPE

Wanted to own and operate
candy &amp; confection vendmg
route Metgs County and
su.-roundmg area Pleasant
busmess ti1gh proftt afems
Can start part t1me Age or
expenence not Important .
Requtre s car and S1 , 19S to
S3 750 cash Investment For
deta1ls wnte and tnclude
your phone number
Department BVV
3938 Meadowbrook Rd

Sl Louts Park. MN 155426

51695

St d V 8 eng 1n e automat1 c tr ans P sleermg fac t ory a tr
buc k e t seals A sharp cl ean car tha t anyone w olJid love
dark green f1n1 sh r ad1 0

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Wanted To Buy

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$2 00 lor 50 word m 1n
1mum Each add1I10nal word

3C

BLIND ADS

Add1 ! anal 1St Charg e per
Advert1semen t
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m to S 00 p m Da ty
8 30 a m
to 12 00 Noon
Sat.urdav

Not tee
WILL do tree t nmm1 ng work.
and wil l sel l f1 rewood Pllone
1149 3910 or 949 3916
2 1 61C
GRAD U A TION Present? 16
days 1n Europe !Ro m e Par' s
London
S witZerland
Naples)
J une 14 July 9
Tea chers as chaperones S750
Dead l n e March 1 J ohn
Ba il ey 98 5 4248
2 I 4t p
FREE home demonstra ti ons of
th e Com pa c t no t a va cuum
clea ner but a new dea 1n a
home care appl ian ce 25 yr
guarantee Ca ll 446 0447 for
appt
1 30 61p
WI L L G IV E away lumber for
complete removal of a large
bulldmg Phone 985 3631
2 3 3tp

Nottce
NCOME Ta)( ::,erVI Cf' 9 am to
S p m Dally ex ce pt Sunday
even1ngs by appo1ntment
only Co Rd 22 off Rt 7
byp ass Phon e Wan da Eblin
99 2 2272
1 2 JOtc

Lost

INTER IOR
and
extertor
patnttng by hour or con tract
10 years exper1ence Call Carl
Nelson 992 5083
1 30 6tp

TRA IL ER space for ren t 1n
Rae me Ca l l 997 7838 or 992
2429
2 3 3t c

12 X 60 TRAILER W1th pull out
set up n P1negrove w111
f1n ance
D
Richardson
General Del 1very Mann w
Va 25635 or phone (304) 583
6507
2 3 3tc
1957 WESTWOOD mob 1 e home
etectr1c furnace excellent
condtt on Phone 992 5867 or
992 JOOS
1 29 5tp

Wanted To Buy
OLD turn 1ture oak tab le s
c locks 1rP be xE-s brass beds
d 1shes
or
complete
households
Wrtfe M
D
M1ller Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohto
call 992 6271
5 13 tfc

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

1964 AND OLDER sdver CO inS
Will pay 22c for d 1mes sse for
quarters S1 10 for halves
S3 50 fo r dollars Pl ease quote
the k1nds of c01ns you !lave
and send repltes to Jack1e
Wamsley Rl 4 Pataskala
Ohto
2 l 6tc
CA SH patd for all makes arid
models or mobile homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tic
Call 992 7003
1 31 61c

RIVERSIDE A uto Wre c k1fi9
Wtll pay S5 for all l unk cars
Phone (304) 882 524.4 or. 773
5890
~
1 27 26tc

For Rent or Sale
CON COR 0 Travel Trailer n1ce
for couple Call 992 7479
1 31 tic

LAFF. A. DAY

HANDMADE
77 S2

Cal l

2 I 3tc

8 F IR ST CALF Holstein he 1fe r s
w1ll se ll one or all Phone 949
3777
1 31 6tc
10

HAMMER mil l l1ke new
w1th overhead PIP € and
bagg ng at tachment and
hammer m ill belt Call 949
217 5
2 1 3tp

STEREO RADIO am fm
8
track tape comb1nat 1on 4 way
s peaker
sound
system
Balance $102 66 or use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
1 11 tfc
SALT FOR ICE AND SNO\.
Rock salt tor townsh1ps
towns and busmesses tn
bulks and bags for 1ce and
snow Excelstor Salt Works
Phone 992 3891
111ltfc

OR
3 bedroom
11om e
tlasement a1umn1um Si ding
storm wmdows and door s
for ce d a1r fu r nace fen ced
yard Phone 992 3791
2 3 lie

NEW 3 bedroom hom e P :.&gt; bath
garage basem ent on Gravel
Hill M 1ddleport Natural gas
a lr eady m
Phon e Dal e
Dutton 992 3369 even1ngs
991 25)4
I 17 ffc

a.ELAN
608 E
REALTY
MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
115

ACRES -

Clost

•&gt;

Rut l and
2 s tory hou se
Large barn
Corn cr1b

$10 900 00
t;, ACRE GROUND -

1971

Mobile home
12x60 L1 ke
new In new addtt1on W il l
se ll separa t ely $6 500 00

POMEROY -

Excellent

estab l1 shed bustness wtth
real es ta te No phone tn
tormat1on on th 1s one please
1 apartment ove r for ad
dtt10nal tn come

SYRACUSE - Lovely 2 yr
o ld home 3 B R [double
close t s) K1tch en has many
cab.nets &amp; rang e Dtn1ng
area Uttllly R Oak floor s
some carpeted All drapes
Carport Storage About 14
acre $19 900 00

MANY PROPER TIES TO
CHOOSE FROM ANSWER
TO YOUR REAL ESTATE
PROBLEMS CAN
BE
FOUND HERE
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259

II no answer 992 2568

Auto Sales
1972 NOVA 4 door automat1c
s~l v 8, factory air con
ditTon ng 24 000 actual miles
P11one 992 7084
2 3 3tp

Wanted

Pets For Sale

~ -- -

lit~!

NEW

FOOD STORE
All kinds of food
store employees cashiers,
carryouts,
stock
men, bakery help,
experienced meat
cutter, etc.
Apply in person
at

Powell's
Super Valu
W. Second St.
Pomeroy,

o.. 45769

-----------

For Sale

UPHOLS TERY fabncs by the
yard 54 mcl1es Wtde as low as
s 95 p~r yard Velvets as low
~ 3 J IC
as S3 .45
11 .. ~u .... ..
&lt;=~lues
S9 95 we also have
/'"f"l
GROCERY ouslness for sale
herculon
co tton
prmts
Bulldmg for sate or lease
v nyts remnants by the yard
Phone 773 56 18 from 8 30 p m
or by the p tece Pomeroy
to 10 p m for appomtment
Recovery 622 E Matn St
3 20 tfc
Pomeroy Phone 992 75S4
1 29 26tC
SINGER sewmg machmes 1972
model m beauttful walnut
cabmet Makes des1gn slit FOA M to ftll your old couch and
chair cushions as low as
ches, z1g zag
buttonholes
S10 95 Upholstery books only
blmd hems etc Ltke new
soc
4 mch covered foam
Only $89 95 Call Ravenswood
mattresses for standard size
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
bed ,
S29 95
Pome.-oy
12 7 tfc
Recovery 622 E Main Street
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
AM FM radto stereo f u 11 .:e ck
1 29 26tc
tape comb mat ton 4 speaker
sound
system
Balance
FOR SALI::. Large fevel lot tm
$101 52 or terms ava1table
New Ltma Road Rutland All
Phone 992 3965
util 1t1e S ava1lable Phone 742
1 28 tfc

EAGLE go carr WITh 4 horse
IJvo, ,_.., '-" t'"hUiu:· &lt;'lAO '"17ll0

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

Trails West 15

5 55 - Earl Ntghttngale 15

6 30 - NBC News 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Room 212 13 ABC

News 6
7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3 What s My Ltne 8 Elec Co 20 Beat
the Clock 4 News 10 6 C1rcus 13 Wild Ktngdom 15 Readmg
for the Classroom Teacher 33
7 30 - Bobby Goldsboro3 Buck Owen s
Lock Stock &amp; Barr el
20 Munlctpal Court 10 Wacky World of Jonathan Wmter s 15
ep1sode Achon 33 1fo Tell the Truth 6 Beat t he Clock 13
Hollywood Squa r es 4
8 00 - Rook1es 13 Theatre In Amenca 20 Nat tona l Geogra ph1 c
6 Magt ctan 3 15 14 little Merma1d
10 The Queen of

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 T1IS
Monday lh.-u Saturday
606 E Maw , Pomeroy 0

a

8 30 - Dr Seuss Cartoon 8 10
9 00 - Mov1es 'i&lt;aletdoscope 4 3 15 ' The Btg Bou n ce
College Basketball 4 M1tz1 Gaynor 8 10

10 00 -

PRICEi
C ON S TRU CT I ON
Roof1ng
spout ng
k 1lchens
a nd bathrooms Complete
remodel ing Phon e 742 6273
12 3 tt c

WILKIN SO N Small Eng ne
Sales Repatr on all smal
engmes
ella n
s aws
prec 1s on g ro und 399 W M am
St re et Pho ne 992 3092
1 17 26 tc

Real Estate For Sale
SPACIOU S b1 Leve l and sp l (t
l evel hom es are now under
construct iOn on c tt y water
and sewer
Many deluxe
features m cl ud1ng a1r con
di11onmg
Best f n anc mg
av ail abl e Other type homes
1n d11fer enl areas on F H
Adm f nancmg w th no down
payment Ca l l ct&gt; lt &amp;et (837
6540) or wr1te to MEIG S
DEVE LO PMEN T P 0 Box
33 Midd leport Oh o 45760
1 9 tfc
NEW 3 bedroom hom e good
water 6 acres 3 outbu ldtnq s
and ce ll ar Off Metgs County
I on Will am Smtih Road 31"
m11es from Sa l em Cent er
1 27 26 1p

-------- -

6 00 ~ Sunnse Semtnar 4 1 Sacred H ear t 10
6 15 ~ Concern and Comment 10
6 20 6 25 6 30 Rev
6 356 25 6 45 7 00-

7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle 13 New Zoo Reyu e 6

a 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Jeff's Collte 6

8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13

Vtnpl B T1 afnrrl Sr.
Bruk 'I
11 0 Mrc h.11ltc ':&gt;lrn·l
Pullleroy, Ohtn ·15769

SMALL INVESTMENT - Wtll
buy t h1 s n1 ce 2 bedroom home
Has bath
G:as
furnace
basement and large lot Only

$6500 00
COUNTRY

HOME -

Paul Otxon 4 Fnendly Juncfton 10 A M J Phil
Donahue 15 Abbott and Costello 8 Wild Wild West 6 Mov1e

'Bus Stop' 13

9 30 - ToTelltheTruth 3 Secret StormS
9 55 ~ Chuck Wh1te Reports 10
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3 15 Company 6 Joker s W1ld 8 10
10 30 - Jeopardy 3, 4 15 $10,000 Pyram td 8 10
11 00 - GambttS, 10, Password1 3 W1zardofOddsJ 4 15 Mt ke

Douglas 6

11 30- Hollywood Squares 3 4, 15 Love of L 1fe 8 10 Brady
Bunch 13
l1 55 - CBS News 8 Dan I mel s World 10
12 00- Bob Braun 's 50 50 Club 4 Password ~ Jackpofl 3 15
News 8, 10 13
12 30 - Split Second 6 Search For Tomorrow 8 10 Baffle 3 15
12 45 - · Electnc. Company 33
12 55- News 3, 15

1 00 - News J All My Chtldren 6,•13 Nol For Women Only 15

Concentratton 8 Secret Storm 10
1 30 - JOn A Match 3 4 15 The World Turns 8 10 Lets Make

A Deal 6, 13

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates , Ph 446
4782 Gall 1pOI1 S John Russell
Owner and Opera tor
5 12 tfc

YOUR FUTURE - $500 00 a
month tncom e 4 un1t apart
ment building 10 Mtddleport on
good st reet out of htgh wa ter
All
furnt shed
fo r
only

$35 000 00
IN THE COUNTRY -

0ne

acre of wild and wooly land

$180000
Y&lt;l UR ESTATE BY
INV e&gt; l tN G IN ONE OF THE
ABOVE PROPERTIE S .:.u~
SALES STAFF IS ALIVE
DROP IN AND SEE 1ST
HAND
SMALL FARMS NEEDED
QUICK
BU lL~'&gt;

VACUUM Cleaners new 1974
Model
Complete w1th all
clean tng tools Small pamt
damage In sh1ppmg W 1ll take
$27 cash qr budget plan
TELEVI SION Talent to par
ava1lable ~hone 992' 298.4
flc1pate
m
weekly
TV
1 28 tfc
program
No prev1ous ex
pertenc.e necessary Back
ground 10 mterv1ew1ng help SIN GER Automattc Z1g Zag
Sew1ng Mach10es 1n sewmg
ful Sen1or c1tlzens mv1ted to
table Makes buttonholes
apply Auditions to be held
sews on buttons blmd 11ems
Wed
Feb 6 at 6 p m 1n
etc Top notch cond1hon Pay
WOUB TV Studios Athen's
$5 1 or terms available Phone
Oh10 45701 Th1 S 1S a non
992 2984
pay1ng POSitiOn
1 28 tfc
2 3 3tc

a

2 30 - Edge of N1ght
10 G1rl tn My l 1f ~ 6 13 Doctors 3 4 15
3 OO - AnotherWorld3.4, 15 General Hosp1tal6 13 Book Beat
20 Prt ce IS R1ght 8 10
3 30 - -one L1fe to Ltve 6 13 Phil Donahue 4 M atch Game 8
10 How To Surv1ve A Marnage J, 15 Woman 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Love Amencan Style 13 Somerset 15
Sesame St JJ , Speed Ra cer 6 Sese-me Street 20 Lucy Show
Movte I Davy 10

AROBIC

SYSTEMS

a

SE PTIC
TANK S c lea ned
Modern San1fa 110n 992 3954 or
992 73 49
10 23 t fc

WIN AT BRIDGE

Complex club systems gum game

AUTO MOBILE In surance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator s l1 cense Call 992
7428
6 15 tfc

'Q 10 8 2

..

'

....;

What really burns me, my husband pa1d her off' He believed
her story about JUSt carrymg the eggs m from the store 1 Even
when I've told hun so often what a double·BsheiS
What do I do about h1m, and them ~- EGGED ON

!)on Oakley
Converting the heat to light

·.,

You do bad three spades and

EAST
.QI062

'IJS

'114

Answer Tomorrow

+KQI08

+J764

... AI0852

... KQ9

clubs

Us. • •

By Helen Hottel

It was fun while 1t laste&lt;l, the 'game ol 'pin the tall on the 01!
donkey "

Members of the U S Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on
Investigations took turns 1n a senes of sesswns last week gn lhng
represcnlahves of seven maJor 011 comparues as the comrmttee
began hea rmgs mt o the fuel cn s1s and - to use one commentator's phrase- the mdustr; 's 'Oil-gotten gams '
Sen Abraham A R1b1coff , for one, accuse&lt;l the executive\; of
usmg the present conditiOns of fn ght and pamc to squeeze out
the small mdependent dealers and some of your own fran
ch1sers"

The C&lt;Jnnecllcut Democrat charged them not only "'th
miSleading the people and the government about the fue l
Situation but of 'cheatmg the Amencan pubhc' by means of tax
breaks and other tax law prov1s10ns such as the depletiOn
allowance
The tune has come to translate all this heat mto a httle hght
What the oil compames are domg 1f they are domg It , IS either
legal or Illegal If 1t IS illegal, the solution would seem to be
relatively sunple
If 1t IS legal but undesirable, th en 1t would seem to be the
course of wisdom to leave off cash gatmg those who are disadvantaged by the laws and begm lookmg to Ihose "ho framed the
laws 1n the first place
If the 011 mdustry IS enjoymg unwarranted benefits from the
tax faws, then change the laws If the dep1et10n allowance IS a
bad thmg, then let' s gel nd of 1t entirely or reVIse 1t so that 1t
serves the purpose for ?thlch 1l was mtended-encouragmg the
development of new petrolewn sources
"The facts are,' srudSen Henry M Jackson, D·Wash, as he
opened the hearmgs, 'we do not have the facts"
Well, get the fa cts, gentlemen and then brmg them before
the Amencan publn:
The mornmg star IS Venus
The Alman~c
The evemng stars are Mer
By Unlled Press International cury , Mars, Jupiter and Saturn
Today 1s Monday, Feb 4, the
Those born on this date are
35th day of 1974 w1th 330 to under the s1gn of Aquanus
Famed American transatlanfollow
The moon 1s approachmg 1ts tic flyer Charles A Lmdbergh
was born Feb 4, 1902
full phase

-----

~~--~~~~~~~4 Jo-Green Acr es 3 Gilligan s I sla nd 13 6 Hazel a- Bonan za
15 Jackpot• 4
5 00 - Mr Roger s 33 20 M erv Gnff1 n 4 Andy Gnff11-R 8
Mt ss ton lm poss 1ble6 Bonanza 3 Gomer Pyl e U SM C 13
5 30 - Bever l y Htllb1 l ll es 8 El ec Co 33 Hogans Heroes 13
Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Tra 1l s We st 15
5 55 - Earl N1ghttn ga le 15
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 Sesome Street 20 ABC New s 13
Truth or Consequ en ces 6 Lil 1as Yoga and You 33
6 30 - NBC News J 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 Your
Future Is Now 33 Room 222 13
7 00 - Marco Sportltte 33 Beat The Clock 4 N ew s 10 6
E lectr1c Co 20 Truth or Conseq uences 3 What s My Lme 8
Oustry s Tra tl1 3 H1gh School TV Honor Soc tety 15
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 RFD 20 Hol l y woo d Squares 3
Johnny Mann s Stand U p and Cheer 4 New Pn ce I s R1ght 8
10 Beat The Clock 13 La sste 15 Readtng For th e Cl ass room
Teac her 33
8 00 - Maude 8 10 Bil l M oyer s Journal 33 Adam 12 3 4 15
Happy Days 6 13 Mov 1e 20
8 30 - Hawatt F1ve 0 8 10
9 00 - Evenmg at Pops 33 H a ll of Fa me 3 A 15 M ov 1e Can
Ellen Be Sa ved' 6 13 T BA 33
9 30 ~ Haw ktn s B 10
10 00 - Marcus W elby M D 6 13 News 20 NB C News Report 3
4 15 Wa shington Stratght Ta lk 33
10 30 - Day at Ntght 33
11 00 - News 3 4 6 8, 101315 J anak 1JJ
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Chant of S1le nce 6 13 M ov1 es
The Badlander s • 8
Rhap sody 10
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 News 13
2 00 - News 4

Dear Egged
Another m the contmumg sertes, "Smce we're netghbors
let's be FRIENDS "
'
What do you&lt;lo "a bout him - and them ' " Look to yourself
fnend Maybe they 're askmg the same questwn about YOU' __:
H

Are Parents Cop-Outs?

Helen
I m shocked that the ma)onty of pareniB m your PareniB
Survey said they'd refer their unmamed daughters to Planned
Parenthood or thelr family doctors lor the p11l 1f they suspected
they were gomg to have mtercourse w1th the1r boyfriends
I was one of the under-15 percent who sa1d I'd ground her
mdehmtely or send her away until she came to her senses No
ch1ld of nune w1ll ever have pre-man tal sex, not while she's shU
hvmg under my roof ' - FIRM DAD
Dear Dad
Fnend you're bucking for membership m the premature
grandparents' club'
Please recall the quest1on was, 'If you sb ongl) suspected
your teenage daughter was havmg sex w1th her boyfnend and
~ou knew you couldn't change her mmd, what would do '"
The maJonty of our readers were reahsllc - they'd rather
play 11 safe, even though they are also sorr) - H

+++
Dear Helen
I've read your strmg of letters about rotten neighbors, but
they don't hold a candle to mme
She accused me of "eggmg" her house W1th eggs near a
dollar a dozen, who would be so dumb' I can'teven afford 'em for
breakfast
Yesterday I caught her and her son outs1de w1th a carlon of
eggs So 1 turned the hose on them She rushed me, pulled my
ha1r and hit me m the eye
I called her a couple of names which was very restrame&lt;l of
me Her son called me a lot worse, so I slappe&lt;l hun Meanwhile,
the eggs broke all over my driveway, and they wouldn't even
clean them up They had the nerve to tackle my husband when he
came home and ask lor' damages" (another carton of eggs and
cleanmg bills lor their wet jackets)

JJWJWID1brn;;~ ~-~ -tJ 9"""
Unsc rambl e thrse four Jumbles.
one lctl('r to each square, to
form four ordanary wordR.

~.'Md'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
!I. CROSS

DOWN

1 Fello~
5 Authentl

1 Incline
2 Affection
ate term

cate

11 Wh et
stone
12 Memento

of a brawl

1. Sesa me
8 Empow

15 Wire

9 Arranged

(abbr I

West

17. Storage
box
18 Mask
aperture
20 Strtp of
wood
21 Colorado
Indian
22 Henry

Mta.o..a.eport Pomeroy -

SHOP THE
RUTLAND
BARGAIN CENTER

Special
Used Furniture
Buys ...
10 P1ece Walnut
Otmng Room Sutfe

t&lt;mg SIZe Bedroom
~a cCj etf

1 &amp; 2 Ptece
L1v1ng Room Suates

Rutland Furniture

35

26 W01d

so hum
ble
"

w1th fall
or bag
28 Just
about

proverb

1al milk

23 Deed

document

~·-ever

38 Ind1an
cymbals
39. Network

IV ' char

acter

23. D ernck

26. D1latc
27 Israeli
dance

28. Nothmg
29. Arab
ch1eftam

30 Complete

Gordon
Mac 35 Naught)
36. Actor
Von
Sydow
37. Nervous
laugh
39 Undulate
40. Involve
41 Czech
34

nver

42. Property
43. Cummer

bund,
for
one

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

I [) I I
TUSH/A

I I
W1TEB
V'" ~

One letter simply stands for

another

In thiS sample A ts

used for the three L 1 S, X for the two 0 s etc Smgle letters,

tJ

!

WHERE THE CJ1.AP IN
FIWNT OFTEN OOES

apostrophes the length and formation of the words are all
day lh&lt;&gt; code letters are different

hmts Each

CRYPTOQUOTES
EH

TL

MLX

NFQXH

VQDHC
XPII PWMT X P W X
FG QG QM GLJH TWMVHC Ll

1

YQXXHM - CWKRP

I

PNt 61 SIIIIPRISUNSW!ft hill

rn xxr J
K

(An1wf'rl tumurrow~

J"mhl•• GULLY FATAL SUBDUE REBUKE
Sa turd11y •

I An11w~r1 A holp1tal begrnner - A BABY

w

ILCVQDH

Now arrange the mcled letters
~ ~
to form the surprise answer, u
~::::!t:,.~::'J:::===h~::'LJ===-~·~uuesled by the above cartoon.

EWKTL

1HHTG
YIIQMV

HJHCGLM

Yesterday's Cryploquote. THE MAN WHO ESCAPES W1TH
CLEAN HANDS FROM THE MANAGEMENT OF THE
'WORLD'S AFFAIRS ESCAPES THROUGH A MIRACLEPLATO

North

East

Pass

IN T

Pass

Pass
Pass

3'
Pass

Pass
Pass

+K
WHO I&lt;NOW!S WHAT FOREI~N
AGENTS MAY 8E L.Uilt&lt;ING

TilE BORN WSEH

YEAH I I 11-&lt;0UGHT
5HE. VJA&amp; 511JDVIN(7
'TO BE AN
ACTRE~e.•

[.:()IJ'T~ME'q

MAYBE HE-R -..\Of..A

I

THINK5 5 HE CAN

l.llROIJit&gt;, stR, rrt,;
JU&lt;;f m.\1--l.lleU:-

AAYniEROLE
OFA8PY 1

:r

1-1

A.IJC' Till':&gt;

F€8LI~
1~\.JI&lt;ITI/

TI:RRI Btl;

.
"

•'

ALLEY OOP

J1m "It IS qmte likely that
some standard·Amencan
b1dders would m•ss the heart
game but at least they would
all get mto the heart contract
while club b1dders would be
left m spades Of course, we
can show hands where club
---oidders reach ~ood games
that standard bidders m1ss
No b1ddmg system 1s per·

Mtke

feet "
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

..
' .

,

-

"

MAYTAG

Red Carpet
Serv1ce
I

Arnold Grate

song

vartety
25 Short

three"

Rutland, 0

RUTlAND FURNITURE

operahc

shaped
20 L1kc the

24 L ettu ce

!~THE WOODPILE i

WMPO

(2 Good Ones)
1-S1de by Side
$150
1-2 Door
(Top &amp; Bottom) $125

19 Crescen!

31. Picture
32 Solve
33 Bnng to
bear '

10 New Jer
sey ctly
16 Boundary

WITH A ?CIEIIJTIFI C PLVM LIKETHESE FOSSIL.? UP FO~ GR'AB!S ·-

92.1 FM

Surround
clothes
w1th Qentle even
heat No hoi spots
no overdrylng F1ne
Mesh L,int Ftlter
We Spec1ahze ~n

m a senes

l6 Mouse
genus

... 74

STIREO

REFRIGERATORS

Ye11terday's Answer

ered

Both vulnerable

Oswald "One of the mod·
ern developments IS the use
of an art•f•c•a\,forcmg one·
club b1d
We have
Neapolitan, Roman, PreciSion, Orange, Blue Team and
what-have·you c lubs
galore "
J1m "It may well be that a
forcmg -club conventiOn
g1ves an expert w1th a devel·
oped partnership an advantage The people who try to
sell the1r club systems to the
public cla1m that 1t IS
s1mpler than standard Amer·
1can Noth1ng could be
farther from the truth"
Oswald "Today's hand 1!·
lustrates one weakness of
forcmg·club systems The
b1ddmg m the box IS standard Amencan "
J1m "The b1ddmg m all
normal club systems would
start w1th the same one
spade opemng atl\1 would
end nght there "
Oswald "The 4·2 spa de
break does not keep South
from makmg four hearts
w1th an overtrick It holds
the one spade dec lare rs to

Dryers

Ergo

6.

cnt
14. Cahf
county

'IAK963
+J

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

B1g Capacity
Maytag
Automatics
7 speed operat1on
Ch01ce of water
temps Auto water
leve l control Lmt
F11ter or Power Ftn
Agitator •
Perm a-Press
Maytag
Halo of Heat

5 Sagacaous

SOUTH 101

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Dave or

amsh

4 F avorit e

.AK854

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURHY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

Su1te by

3 Old worn

13 Cumpon

INFORMATION ABOUT:

GOOD USED

Phone 992 9932

+A 95 2
... J63
WEST
.J3

Opemng lead -

FERTILtlER available now.
hau11ng on reQular schedule
Chester
Agr1ccr
Sen1ce
Center 985 3831
2 J Jtp

6ldl

TODAY S QUESTION
your partner btds four
Wha( do you do now?

• 97

Used Refrigerators, S2S up

742-4211

&lt;

NORTH

SEWING MA CHINE S Repat r
serv tce al l makes 992 2284
The Fabri C Shop Pom eroy
Autt1or1Zed Smger Sa les and
ServIce We Sharpen Sc 1ssors
3 29 tfc

2 1 tfc

POMERO:Y LANDMARK
9. _ Jack W Carsey, Mgr

Newlywed Game 6 13

Gut ding L.tght 8 10

3083

PAINT DAMAGE 1974 Z1g ~ag
SEWING MACHINES St ill 1n
or.g1nai car tons
No at
tachments needed as our
controls l!lre bu1lt In Sews.
W1lh 1 or 2 needles makes
buttonholes sew on buttons ,
monograms and blmd hem
stitch Full cash pnce S38 50
or budget plan ava1lable
Phone 992 2984
1 28 tic

Days of Our L1ves 3, 4, 15

2 00 -

CLEANED
REPA I R£;0
MILLER
SA NI TAT I ON
STEWART OHIO PH 66 2
303S
10 A tfc

New

modern 3 bedroom a ll electnc
home Jlh baths dtntng 2
lam ly room s and double
garage tn full basement Large
lot No down payment wtt h
excellent credtt $27 500 00

·:':::·::::: ::::::;.:;:;:.;,:.;,:;:;:;::::::,:···:

9 00 -

LARGE so ld 2 sto-;:y~ id;;:home
n Tuppers Pla1ns 8 rooms
and bath Family room w1th
natura l f1rep1a ce K1tchen
w1th gas rang e Ca rp et and
pane111ng
wrap
around FOR your new nom e or com
porch
good garden area
plete remodelmg Contact
stor age shed cel lar one acre
Greg Roush
Roush Con
wttl1 la rge trees and shrub
Struchen Phone 992 5039
bery For ced a1r furnace 011
2 3 li e
furnac e or LP gas heat Only
S16 SOO Phone 949 3195
WI LL tnm or cut t ree s and
2 1 6t p
shrubbery
A l so clean out
basements atttcs etc Call
949 3221 or 742 4441
DESIRABLE two bedroom
2 2 26tc
house m M ddleport ready to
occupy Call 992 5310
1 31 26tc FOR e1ectr 1cctl ptumbmg and
remodelmg work Call 843
234 1 for FREE EST IM ATES
1 11 26tc

TEAFORD

Farm Report 13
Paul Harvey 13
Btble Answers 6 News 6 Ftve Mtnu tes to Ltve By 4
Cleophus Rob1nson 13
Columbus Today .4
Columbu s Today 4
Farmt1me 10 Morn1ng Report 3
Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8, 10 P1 xanne 6 0 ck Van

Dyke 15

READY MIX
CONCRETE
del1vered r1ght to your
pro1ect Fast and ea::.y Fre e
est l m ates Phone 992 3284
Goe g le 1n R ea dy M1x Co
Middleport Oh o
6 30 lfc

SE WAGE

8

TUESDAY FEB 5,1974

DOZER work l and clear ng by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w 1th over
20 years expenence PulltnS
Exc avatmg Pomeroy Ohto
Phone 992 2478
12 19 ff c

TANKS

a

11 00 - News3 4 6
10 15, 13 Janak1JJ
11 30- Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Mov1es The La st Chal leng e
A PnzeofGold 10 Who Killed Lamb'6 13
1 00 ~ Tomorrow 3 4 News 13
200 - News4

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display

SEPTIC

Paul Nuchtms 33 News 20 Country Mu stc Ht t Parade 8

10

OFFICE SUPPLIES

EXCAVAT IN G dozer loader
and ba c khoe work
sept 1c
t anks mstall ed dump tru cks
and lo boys fo r ht r e will llaul
fil l d1rt top soil ltm estone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n 1ght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
., 2 11 tfc

6 13

9 30 - Book Beat 20

992-2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

BI SS ELL Construc tiOn room
add tlons and remode l ng
ProfeS SIOnal floor sand1 ng
and f101 Shtng old and new
Referenres availabl e Pllone
949 383 3
1 ?S 26 t c

a

Spades 33

FURNITURE

- -4- - ------------

Hogans Heroes 13

6 00 - News 3 4, 8 10, 15 Sesame St 20 ABC News 13 Per son
l1fy &amp; Behavtoral Development 33 Truth or Consequences 6

-G UARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094 ,

C BRADFORD Auc t 1on ee r
Complete Ser \11 Ce
Phone 949 3821
Ra c me Oh1o
Cr1tt Bradford
s 1 tf c

Andy

4

•

5 30- Beverly Htllblll1es8 Elec Co 33 Hodgepodge Lodge 20

On Most American Cars

D I LE S H ea nng Ad Cent er
Att1ens serv 1ces all ma ke s
Hear1ng
tes ts
by
ap
po1ntrT' en t
Re n tal
plan
available Phone S92 6238
I 211 12tp

=~

·::

MONDAY, FEB 4, 1974
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20 JJ Bonanza 3 M erv Gr tff tn
Grtff1fh 8 Miss1on Impossible 6 Gomer Pyl e 13

and

ponds and sept1c tanks d 1t
ch1ng serv1ce top sotl ftll
d1rt
1 mestone
B&amp;K Ex
cavatmg Phone 992 53 67 or
992 3861
9 1 tf c

------

POSITIONS OPEN

Built to Your 'Specs
Delivered to Job S1te

DOZER and back hoe work

DIRECT Sales D I StributorS
wanted for v1tamms and
organ 1c products Part or full EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
1970
442
OLDSMOBILE
t1me For mterv1ew wnte
Mam St. Pomeroy All kinds
automat1c, W 30 Good con
Mary Engle RR 1 Box 19,
of salt water pellets, water
d 1tlon Phone 1192 7519
Un1on Oh1o 4S322
nuggets block salt and own
2 3 6tc
1 16 16tp
Ohio R1ver Salt Phone 992 - - - - -- - 3891
6 5 tfc 1966 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass for
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS
sale 8 c yl1nder power brakes
We have the product on hand
and
power
steer 1ng
and we del 1ver to you per BEA UTIFUL walnut stereo
automatfc transm1SS10n Will
sonally Helen Jane Brown
radio tape combmat1on AM
sell reasonable Phone 992
992 511 3
F M rad10 8 track tape deck
2386
12 30 tfc
Balance Sl14 56 or terms
2 I 4tc
ava 1lable Call 992 3965
NE ED woman to liv e n and
2 4 ftc
1969 FORD PICkup Explorer
lake mother s pla ce of 2
Phone 992 36.40
Chi ldr en tn a new respectable
Walnut stereo
1 27 121c
hom e You may also have 1 BEAUTIFUL
rad10 am fm
tape com
ch 1 d of your own Phone 992
blnalton 8 track ta pe deck
2536
Balance S103 49 or terms 1968 CHEVROLET MaltbV
I
1 a tfc
automat 1c 307 Fa~r cond1t1on
avatlable Call 992 3965
S750 Ca ll 992 7637
1 21 tfc
------ - - - - - -1-27- 12tc
1
!1 ACR 1::: or acre lots ror sa 1e
C1ty water available 1n
s prmg
Located on Sta te
Route 14 3 Phone 992 3640
1 27 12tc AKC Toy Poodle Pupp 1es
S7S 00 Stamese K1ttens $15
Phone 1 256 6247
ONE 2 year old black 7 8
1 10 26tc
Tennessee Walker for sate
Phone 992 3640
1 27 12tc

WANTED!

. . .c:s/S"z:.... ,.
MATERIALS CO
Mason, W Va
773 5554

Rea I Estate For Sale
2

WOOD TRUSSF.S

..

Television Log

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

992

1940 CHRY SLER
1946 Ford
Tractor W1lh equ pment and
attachments 1973 Hoover
Data mat1 c Power Dnve
Phone 985 4132
2 1 61&lt;

An Equal Opportun1ty
Employer

ri8'"""'
Thts ';"hat you re lookmg for.,

quilt

PAPER CARRIER

GRILL cook carhop and k1t
chen help wanted Apply m
person Crow s Stea k Hou se
1 27 tfc

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992-7089
N1ght 992-3525
or 992 5232

For Sale

WANTED

POMEROY, 0.

Mobile Homes For Sale

LA RGE unfurniSh ed 3rd floor
apl for rent n downtown
Pom eroy 6 rooms and bat h
Call 1192 27 89
1 17 tf c

'"

sta lied

:=~·=·=···:···=·=....·=-=· ;-&gt; ::..;::&amp;:!::8!:·~";:!:0::0":0!·'

'

ASK US ABOUT
PRE· FABRICATED

Wat er Lines and Power
Ltnes All work done by the
loot or contract Also dozer
work and sept1c tanks

BEDROOM house tr all er
extra n1 ce ya r d Located 1n
Sllade
Availab l e
1m
m ed a! el y
Phon e 69f:J 1283
2 1 6tp

Pom eroy

Ph 992 2174

DITCHING SERVICE

19 73 MOBILE home 3 bedroom
bath
and 11 washer and
dryer Ca ll 992 3S09
2 3 31c

Help Wanted

lHE
DAILY SENTINEL

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

All work guaranteed

'

YOU1,...,.., , OV\t N k1tchen S1n k
LIGHT haulmg Call 992 37 16
wtlh fauce ts $50 ga s range
1 31 8tp
540 refr gerator S40 A ll m
good cond1t1on See at 256 So
Fourth Ave M iddleport
W IL L babystt 1n my hOme by
2 2 lfc
hour day or we ek No n1ghts
Phone 992 7102
1 30 6tc FORD rear mounted mow er
Ser1es 501 bought new last
year extra stckle never used
$500 7 month old He1fer calf
Hereford Ho lste1 n m1xed
1175 1 man sawmill w1th Allis
Cha lm ers power un1! good
cond1f10n S21S 2 row corn
p l anter
John Deere 290
needs new boxes $75 Call
after 5 p m 843 2064
2 3 ltc

WANTED IN
POMEROY
PHONE 992-2156

0

Area's Most
Reasonable Pnces

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

EXPER IEN CED pam ler
m
tenor and ex t er1or Ca ll Don
van Meter Phone 985 3951
2 3 26 t p

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radtafor to the
sma llest H ea ter Core
Nathan B1ggs
Rad1ator Specialist

Painting A Specialty

3 YEAR OLD horse for sa l e or
trade for good used Cam per
Top Phon e 742 38&lt;1 2
2 4 6t c

LOST 1n M1d dl e por t near
Th ompsons !rail er co urt
S1am eseca t be1gebody dark
pomt s reward Ca ll 992 3371
F ran c 1s Bear hs or K 1m Neal 3 AND 4 ROOM furn 1shed and
unfurnished
apartments
2 1 61c
Phone 99 2 5434
4 12 tfc
MALE c at black W1fh Wh 1fe
stomacn be tween Bashan &amp;
Racme area on Coun ly Road PRIVATE m ee tmg room for
any organ1Zat10n phone 992
28 had on black flea collar 1
)975
year old P hone 949 4609
3 11 tfc
1 1 6t c

FABR I C SAL E large selecton
polyester double kn1ls 1n
coord nated colors S2 79 and
up Carotma Fabncs Route 7
one half mtle north of Ches t er
OhiO
Henry and Mary
Hunter owners 9 am ttll 7
p m
Feb Ath to Thur sday BABY SITTER wanted 1n my
home must have own trans.
9lh
portatton 5 or 6 days a week
2 J 6tp
Phone 992 2550 or 742 6551
I 30 ti C

TRAIN WITH
FULL PAY

Lmcoln Hill Pomeroy

SLE EPING room over wme
store n Pomeroy Refe r ence
requ1red Ca ll 992 5293
1 10 ttc

Employment Wanted

Rad

Ph . 992 ·5271

For Sale or Trade

For Rent

EXPERIENCED

Gene's
Body Shop

N O 1 copper 65c rad1ators
31c red brass 35c batter1es
$1 20 M A Hall Reed sville
01110 Phone 378 6249
1 17 lfc

3

WANT 405
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P ~\ Day Before Publ 1ca t or
Monday Dead I me 9 am
Ca nc ellal10n - CorrectiOnS
Wi l l be accept ed unl1l 9 a m for
Day Of PJJbi1Cat10n
REGULATIONS
The Publisher r ese rv es the
r 1ght to edt or re 1ec1 an y ads
d ee med
ObleCIIona l
The
publi Sher w1l l not be re spon
Sible for more than one n
correc t nsert1on
RATES
For Want Ad Serv1ce
S ce nts per Word one m set"t1on
M m1 mum Charge S l 00
14 cents per word th ree
conseculive nsert1on s
26 cen ts per word s x con
secut1ve m se rt10ns
25 Per Cen t D ISC Ount on pa1d
ad s and ads pa1d W1lhm 10
day s

Business Services

TRAILER
Browns Trailer
Park Minersvil le Phone 99'1
3324
1 77 tt c

OPEN EVES 8· 00 PM
POMEROY. OHIO

-

RESPONSIBLE
PERSON

11295

D oor V
en g 1ne 318 CI O rwtom atlc tran s power
stee nng rad o good tt res spotl ess nt enor b l ue ttnt sh
Now only S1295
.l

1 HIVE Of bees

I

AGE

1970PLYMOUTHFURYIII

tmm ed1al e
open ngs
for
spec at tram 1ng 1n Mechan1 ca1
Electronics
Av1at1on and
Cter 1cal f1 eld s 1n the u S Navy
Pay starts at $326 per month
from ftrst day - We furn1sli
quarters food and cl ol1'11ng
Sc hool guarantees before you
Stgn up
BE SOMEONE SPECIAL
IN THE NEW NAVY
For more mfo ca ll or v1sd your
Nav y man at
___
22 1 Col umbus Road ""'
Larry E Spenc er
Athens 0 4S701
Cl erks ot Cou rt
Vernon E Harrtson
Common Pleas Court
Telephone 614 593 3566
Me1gs County OhiO
Toll Free BOO 282 12t!8
(1) 28 ( 2) 4 11 18 25 (3) 4 6tc
ADVERTISEMENT

Sm5

St d V 8 eng 1n e std tr a i'I Smi SS ton all good f1 res clean
1n t er1or b l ue lin1s h ri!d1o fu ll SI Ze ca r bu t wI t deltver
good m deilge 1 locil l own er

NOTICE FOR SERVICE

GIRLS

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Feb 4,1974

I,

The b1ddmg has been
North East
Weot

4
SOulli

1+

Pass

u

Pass

1•

Pass

3'

Pass

?

You, South hold
• A K 7 6. A K 7 6 t 2 + K 10 4
3

Rutland

L---------------------~ c

WHAR'S 'lORE

APERN,MAW?

•
What do you do now'

.

A-Bid three spades There is
some slight chance that thl!!r.f'
may be a slam

TATERS
WEARIN'IT,
PAW-·

ALL HIS DIAPERS
ARE OUT ON
TH' LINE

]I
WELL IF ~OU SUBTRACT
~ l NG lOUIS THE fouRTEENTH
f~OM KIN6 LOVI5 THE 5tXTEENTH

liO\.I GET K 6 L.OVI.; TI-lE SECOND

~ATS 1 l TH006HT THAT WAS
A PRETT~ GOOD ANS~ER

�-.
•
6- The Dally Sentmel,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Feb 4,1974

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!

BOYS

IN THE COURT OF

COMMON PLEAS

2 SIGNS
OF

MEIGS COUNTY OH IO

ROBERTA C 0 BRIEN

100' 2 Court Street
Pomeroy 01110 4S769

QUALITY

PLAINTIFF

vs

VIVIAN MORGAN

ET AL

DEFENDANTS

1970CHEVROLET BEL AIR

NO 15 47 1

BY PUBLICATION
To
Bcrn •ce Molden w11ose
last k nown address •s Bu c k e ye
La ke On o and whose exact
addre ss .s unknown and ca nnot
W1th rea sonable d• 1g en ce b t:l

..

\

11
OR OLDER
BE A
PAPER

CARRIER.

DELIVER
The
Daily
Sentinel
Th1s could be your
golden opportun1ty to
learn
bus1 ness
methods. save money
for clothing or college,
wm pnzes These and
many other benef1ts
are
ava1l able
to
deserv1ng
Sent1nel
carriers
For years, The Sen
tmel has helped young
people develop the
attnbutes and talents
wh1ch spell success m
adult l1fe

ascerta ned
To Conn e K Dut ch er who se
aad r ess 1S unknown and ca nnot
w1th r eason able d11igence be
asce rta n ed
To Herme tta Ann N1emeyer
who se exact name 1S unknown
and whose acMress 1s unknown
and can n ot w dh r eason abl e
dil 1gcnce be ascer tam ed
To Th e unkno wn he r s and
dev1see s of Nan n1e Hobb s
dec eased
To Th e unknown her&lt;. ancl
dev1 sees of Char es Ho tb s
deceased and
To T he unknown he1rs and
dev 1sees of N e\la Gilmore
deceased
You are her&lt;' bY not 11 ed H1a t
you have been nam ed defen
dant s 1n &lt;1 leoa l acl 10n ent.t led
Roberta C 0 Br1en pta1nl II vs
V 1v1an Morgan et al defen
dant s Th 1S act 1on has been
ass 1gned Case No 15 471 1n the
Common Pleas Cour t of Me gs
Co unty Oh10 Pom eroy Oh o
45769
The ob ect of the compla nt s
to part1t 1on and qu e t lllle to
real es tate s tuat ed 1n Rulland
TownShip Me1gs Count y Oh o
wh1ch 1S descnbed as fo l lows
S1tuated 1n Rutland Town
Sh ip
Meq;JS County
Oh10
Sect1on 4
Beg 1nn 1ng north 3300 fee t
from t he sou ..heast corner of
sa1d 5ec tlon J thence w est 1709
feet to cen ter of publi c road
then ce along center of sad road
north 17 degrees 05 we st 687 5
then ce east 191 4 to east I ne of
sa1d Sec t1on No 4 then ce south
650
to pla ce of beg1nn1ng
conta n ng 27 acres more or
tess
Except1ng and reserv1ng
three fourth s of coal oil qa s
an d other m1nerat s under l y1ng
the above descr1bed pr em1ses
W1fh r1ght to m1ne re mov e and
operate th e same
Also beg1nmng north 3300
and west 2121 from southeast
corner of Sect1on A thence west
1335 s th en ce north 650 then ce
eas t 1312 th ence south 23 deg
30 ea st 120 !h en ce south 2 deg
20 east 78
thence south 9
degrees 15 wes t 14 5
then ce
sout h 2 deg 30 west 327 t o th e
place of beg nn1ng conta1n ng
20 04 acres more or less
Excepting 1 53 acres sold off
1eav1ng 18 51 acres more or less
Also th e follow1ng desc nbed
real estale begmn1ng 172 rods
12 11nks west of the nortl1ea st
corner of Sec 3 Town 6 Range
14 th ence we s t 35 rods 13 l1nk s
thence soutli 80 rod s th ence
east 94 rod s 5 l 1nks to publi c
road !hence m a northwesterly
d1rec110n along the center of
road to the pl ace of beg nn1ng
conta1n ng 31 &lt; acres more or
tess
A l so beg1nnmg 95 ro ds 8l 1nks
north 511 ro ds and 23 l mks we st
of the southeast corner ot the
northeast quarter Sec t on 3
Town 6 Range 14 tll ence west
21 rod s 8 Inks t lien ce north 2
deg west 22 rods 14 lmk s
th ence east 22 rods 3 l 1nks
thenc e south 22 rod s 14 lmks to
place of beg.nn ng conta1n 1ng 3
acres more or tess
Except1ng from above par
eels' and reservmg on e half of
coa l o 1 gas and other m1nerat s
underlytng the above descr1b ed
prem1ses w1th th e ngh t to mme
remove and operate for the
same
You are requ.red to answer
the Complamt w1th n 28 days
after the last publ1cat1on of H11s
noltce wh1ch w il l be publ iShed
once each week for stx con
secut1ve weeks
The last
ouhl1cat on will be made on
March 4 1974 and the 28 days
for answer w11 1 start on that
date
In case of your failure to
answer or olherw1 se respond as
requ1red by the Oh 10 Rules ol
C1vll Procedure 1vdgm ent by
default w111 be r end ered agamst
you fo r rei ef demanded m the
com palmi

A route m1ght be open
m your ne1ghborhoo/j,
to fmd out

Call
992-2156

•
OR All OUT
AND MAIL
lHE COUPON

BELOW

I

------------,
I
CIRCULATION u&lt;PT
THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 COURT ST
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

FOR BIDS
B1ds are requested unt1l 12 00
Noon on February 11th 1974
from interested persons for sa te
to the Lead1ng Creek Con
servancy D 1str1ct a 1974 J/4 Ton
Pick Up Truck
w1th
the
fottowtng spec1f1C8t1ons
133 Inch Wheel Base Fenders
1ns1de of bed t! foot bed 302
cub1C
tnch
Eng1ne
or
equtvalent
automat c tran s
m1SS1on Pos1 trak dlfferenttal
or equivalent one color pamt 2
outside m1rrors
West Coast
type oil, temp gas and am
meter gauges, rear
step
bum per 7 50 X 16 t~res w1th
spa""e t1re and wheel heavy
duty spnngs heavy dui 1 ~ h ....,-k
absorbers
and
overload
sprmgs
Successful b1dder w II be
requtred to del ver truck by not
later than stxty days from date
of notif1 ca t1on of acceptance of
bidS
All b1ds should be placed 1n a
sealed enve lope addressed to
Leading Creek Conservancy
Dtstrtct Rutland, Oh10 and
marked on tile outs1de Sealed
B1d to be opened 12 00 Noon on
February l1 1974

(1) 21

I

I
I
I
I~-------N~AM~E-----1

LEA[')ING CREEK
CONSERVANCY
DISTRICT
Rutland Oh o
28 (2) A 3tc

Lost
A CHILDS pet dog answers to
the name of Cindy
Brown
and tan small female Pa rt
beagle and part bassett Lost
mile out of Chester Phone
985 3356
1 4 5tc

Bugn~ Opportun~res

I
I
I

ADDRESS

I
I
I

CITY

I
I

ZIP CODE

I

1------------l

a

1969 CHEVELLE HT CPE

Wanted to own and operate
candy &amp; confection vendmg
route Metgs County and
su.-roundmg area Pleasant
busmess ti1gh proftt afems
Can start part t1me Age or
expenence not Important .
Requtre s car and S1 , 19S to
S3 750 cash Investment For
deta1ls wnte and tnclude
your phone number
Department BVV
3938 Meadowbrook Rd

Sl Louts Park. MN 155426

51695

St d V 8 eng 1n e automat1 c tr ans P sleermg fac t ory a tr
buc k e t seals A sharp cl ean car tha t anyone w olJid love
dark green f1n1 sh r ad1 0

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Wanted To Buy

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$2 00 lor 50 word m 1n
1mum Each add1I10nal word

3C

BLIND ADS

Add1 ! anal 1St Charg e per
Advert1semen t
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m to S 00 p m Da ty
8 30 a m
to 12 00 Noon
Sat.urdav

Not tee
WILL do tree t nmm1 ng work.
and wil l sel l f1 rewood Pllone
1149 3910 or 949 3916
2 1 61C
GRAD U A TION Present? 16
days 1n Europe !Ro m e Par' s
London
S witZerland
Naples)
J une 14 July 9
Tea chers as chaperones S750
Dead l n e March 1 J ohn
Ba il ey 98 5 4248
2 I 4t p
FREE home demonstra ti ons of
th e Com pa c t no t a va cuum
clea ner but a new dea 1n a
home care appl ian ce 25 yr
guarantee Ca ll 446 0447 for
appt
1 30 61p
WI L L G IV E away lumber for
complete removal of a large
bulldmg Phone 985 3631
2 3 3tp

Nottce
NCOME Ta)( ::,erVI Cf' 9 am to
S p m Dally ex ce pt Sunday
even1ngs by appo1ntment
only Co Rd 22 off Rt 7
byp ass Phon e Wan da Eblin
99 2 2272
1 2 JOtc

Lost

INTER IOR
and
extertor
patnttng by hour or con tract
10 years exper1ence Call Carl
Nelson 992 5083
1 30 6tp

TRA IL ER space for ren t 1n
Rae me Ca l l 997 7838 or 992
2429
2 3 3t c

12 X 60 TRAILER W1th pull out
set up n P1negrove w111
f1n ance
D
Richardson
General Del 1very Mann w
Va 25635 or phone (304) 583
6507
2 3 3tc
1957 WESTWOOD mob 1 e home
etectr1c furnace excellent
condtt on Phone 992 5867 or
992 JOOS
1 29 5tp

Wanted To Buy
OLD turn 1ture oak tab le s
c locks 1rP be xE-s brass beds
d 1shes
or
complete
households
Wrtfe M
D
M1ller Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohto
call 992 6271
5 13 tfc

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

1964 AND OLDER sdver CO inS
Will pay 22c for d 1mes sse for
quarters S1 10 for halves
S3 50 fo r dollars Pl ease quote
the k1nds of c01ns you !lave
and send repltes to Jack1e
Wamsley Rl 4 Pataskala
Ohto
2 l 6tc
CA SH patd for all makes arid
models or mobile homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tic
Call 992 7003
1 31 61c

RIVERSIDE A uto Wre c k1fi9
Wtll pay S5 for all l unk cars
Phone (304) 882 524.4 or. 773
5890
~
1 27 26tc

For Rent or Sale
CON COR 0 Travel Trailer n1ce
for couple Call 992 7479
1 31 tic

LAFF. A. DAY

HANDMADE
77 S2

Cal l

2 I 3tc

8 F IR ST CALF Holstein he 1fe r s
w1ll se ll one or all Phone 949
3777
1 31 6tc
10

HAMMER mil l l1ke new
w1th overhead PIP € and
bagg ng at tachment and
hammer m ill belt Call 949
217 5
2 1 3tp

STEREO RADIO am fm
8
track tape comb1nat 1on 4 way
s peaker
sound
system
Balance $102 66 or use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
1 11 tfc
SALT FOR ICE AND SNO\.
Rock salt tor townsh1ps
towns and busmesses tn
bulks and bags for 1ce and
snow Excelstor Salt Works
Phone 992 3891
111ltfc

OR
3 bedroom
11om e
tlasement a1umn1um Si ding
storm wmdows and door s
for ce d a1r fu r nace fen ced
yard Phone 992 3791
2 3 lie

NEW 3 bedroom hom e P :.&gt; bath
garage basem ent on Gravel
Hill M 1ddleport Natural gas
a lr eady m
Phon e Dal e
Dutton 992 3369 even1ngs
991 25)4
I 17 ffc

a.ELAN
608 E
REALTY
MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
115

ACRES -

Clost

•&gt;

Rut l and
2 s tory hou se
Large barn
Corn cr1b

$10 900 00
t;, ACRE GROUND -

1971

Mobile home
12x60 L1 ke
new In new addtt1on W il l
se ll separa t ely $6 500 00

POMEROY -

Excellent

estab l1 shed bustness wtth
real es ta te No phone tn
tormat1on on th 1s one please
1 apartment ove r for ad
dtt10nal tn come

SYRACUSE - Lovely 2 yr
o ld home 3 B R [double
close t s) K1tch en has many
cab.nets &amp; rang e Dtn1ng
area Uttllly R Oak floor s
some carpeted All drapes
Carport Storage About 14
acre $19 900 00

MANY PROPER TIES TO
CHOOSE FROM ANSWER
TO YOUR REAL ESTATE
PROBLEMS CAN
BE
FOUND HERE
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259

II no answer 992 2568

Auto Sales
1972 NOVA 4 door automat1c
s~l v 8, factory air con
ditTon ng 24 000 actual miles
P11one 992 7084
2 3 3tp

Wanted

Pets For Sale

~ -- -

lit~!

NEW

FOOD STORE
All kinds of food
store employees cashiers,
carryouts,
stock
men, bakery help,
experienced meat
cutter, etc.
Apply in person
at

Powell's
Super Valu
W. Second St.
Pomeroy,

o.. 45769

-----------

For Sale

UPHOLS TERY fabncs by the
yard 54 mcl1es Wtde as low as
s 95 p~r yard Velvets as low
~ 3 J IC
as S3 .45
11 .. ~u .... ..
&lt;=~lues
S9 95 we also have
/'"f"l
GROCERY ouslness for sale
herculon
co tton
prmts
Bulldmg for sate or lease
v nyts remnants by the yard
Phone 773 56 18 from 8 30 p m
or by the p tece Pomeroy
to 10 p m for appomtment
Recovery 622 E Matn St
3 20 tfc
Pomeroy Phone 992 75S4
1 29 26tC
SINGER sewmg machmes 1972
model m beauttful walnut
cabmet Makes des1gn slit FOA M to ftll your old couch and
chair cushions as low as
ches, z1g zag
buttonholes
S10 95 Upholstery books only
blmd hems etc Ltke new
soc
4 mch covered foam
Only $89 95 Call Ravenswood
mattresses for standard size
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
bed ,
S29 95
Pome.-oy
12 7 tfc
Recovery 622 E Main Street
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
AM FM radto stereo f u 11 .:e ck
1 29 26tc
tape comb mat ton 4 speaker
sound
system
Balance
FOR SALI::. Large fevel lot tm
$101 52 or terms ava1table
New Ltma Road Rutland All
Phone 992 3965
util 1t1e S ava1lable Phone 742
1 28 tfc

EAGLE go carr WITh 4 horse
IJvo, ,_.., '-" t'"hUiu:· &lt;'lAO '"17ll0

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

Trails West 15

5 55 - Earl Ntghttngale 15

6 30 - NBC News 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Room 212 13 ABC

News 6
7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3 What s My Ltne 8 Elec Co 20 Beat
the Clock 4 News 10 6 C1rcus 13 Wild Ktngdom 15 Readmg
for the Classroom Teacher 33
7 30 - Bobby Goldsboro3 Buck Owen s
Lock Stock &amp; Barr el
20 Munlctpal Court 10 Wacky World of Jonathan Wmter s 15
ep1sode Achon 33 1fo Tell the Truth 6 Beat t he Clock 13
Hollywood Squa r es 4
8 00 - Rook1es 13 Theatre In Amenca 20 Nat tona l Geogra ph1 c
6 Magt ctan 3 15 14 little Merma1d
10 The Queen of

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 T1IS
Monday lh.-u Saturday
606 E Maw , Pomeroy 0

a

8 30 - Dr Seuss Cartoon 8 10
9 00 - Mov1es 'i&lt;aletdoscope 4 3 15 ' The Btg Bou n ce
College Basketball 4 M1tz1 Gaynor 8 10

10 00 -

PRICEi
C ON S TRU CT I ON
Roof1ng
spout ng
k 1lchens
a nd bathrooms Complete
remodel ing Phon e 742 6273
12 3 tt c

WILKIN SO N Small Eng ne
Sales Repatr on all smal
engmes
ella n
s aws
prec 1s on g ro und 399 W M am
St re et Pho ne 992 3092
1 17 26 tc

Real Estate For Sale
SPACIOU S b1 Leve l and sp l (t
l evel hom es are now under
construct iOn on c tt y water
and sewer
Many deluxe
features m cl ud1ng a1r con
di11onmg
Best f n anc mg
av ail abl e Other type homes
1n d11fer enl areas on F H
Adm f nancmg w th no down
payment Ca l l ct&gt; lt &amp;et (837
6540) or wr1te to MEIG S
DEVE LO PMEN T P 0 Box
33 Midd leport Oh o 45760
1 9 tfc
NEW 3 bedroom hom e good
water 6 acres 3 outbu ldtnq s
and ce ll ar Off Metgs County
I on Will am Smtih Road 31"
m11es from Sa l em Cent er
1 27 26 1p

-------- -

6 00 ~ Sunnse Semtnar 4 1 Sacred H ear t 10
6 15 ~ Concern and Comment 10
6 20 6 25 6 30 Rev
6 356 25 6 45 7 00-

7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle 13 New Zoo Reyu e 6

a 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Jeff's Collte 6

8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13

Vtnpl B T1 afnrrl Sr.
Bruk 'I
11 0 Mrc h.11ltc ':&gt;lrn·l
Pullleroy, Ohtn ·15769

SMALL INVESTMENT - Wtll
buy t h1 s n1 ce 2 bedroom home
Has bath
G:as
furnace
basement and large lot Only

$6500 00
COUNTRY

HOME -

Paul Otxon 4 Fnendly Juncfton 10 A M J Phil
Donahue 15 Abbott and Costello 8 Wild Wild West 6 Mov1e

'Bus Stop' 13

9 30 - ToTelltheTruth 3 Secret StormS
9 55 ~ Chuck Wh1te Reports 10
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3 15 Company 6 Joker s W1ld 8 10
10 30 - Jeopardy 3, 4 15 $10,000 Pyram td 8 10
11 00 - GambttS, 10, Password1 3 W1zardofOddsJ 4 15 Mt ke

Douglas 6

11 30- Hollywood Squares 3 4, 15 Love of L 1fe 8 10 Brady
Bunch 13
l1 55 - CBS News 8 Dan I mel s World 10
12 00- Bob Braun 's 50 50 Club 4 Password ~ Jackpofl 3 15
News 8, 10 13
12 30 - Split Second 6 Search For Tomorrow 8 10 Baffle 3 15
12 45 - · Electnc. Company 33
12 55- News 3, 15

1 00 - News J All My Chtldren 6,•13 Nol For Women Only 15

Concentratton 8 Secret Storm 10
1 30 - JOn A Match 3 4 15 The World Turns 8 10 Lets Make

A Deal 6, 13

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates , Ph 446
4782 Gall 1pOI1 S John Russell
Owner and Opera tor
5 12 tfc

YOUR FUTURE - $500 00 a
month tncom e 4 un1t apart
ment building 10 Mtddleport on
good st reet out of htgh wa ter
All
furnt shed
fo r
only

$35 000 00
IN THE COUNTRY -

0ne

acre of wild and wooly land

$180000
Y&lt;l UR ESTATE BY
INV e&gt; l tN G IN ONE OF THE
ABOVE PROPERTIE S .:.u~
SALES STAFF IS ALIVE
DROP IN AND SEE 1ST
HAND
SMALL FARMS NEEDED
QUICK
BU lL~'&gt;

VACUUM Cleaners new 1974
Model
Complete w1th all
clean tng tools Small pamt
damage In sh1ppmg W 1ll take
$27 cash qr budget plan
TELEVI SION Talent to par
ava1lable ~hone 992' 298.4
flc1pate
m
weekly
TV
1 28 tfc
program
No prev1ous ex
pertenc.e necessary Back
ground 10 mterv1ew1ng help SIN GER Automattc Z1g Zag
Sew1ng Mach10es 1n sewmg
ful Sen1or c1tlzens mv1ted to
table Makes buttonholes
apply Auditions to be held
sews on buttons blmd 11ems
Wed
Feb 6 at 6 p m 1n
etc Top notch cond1hon Pay
WOUB TV Studios Athen's
$5 1 or terms available Phone
Oh10 45701 Th1 S 1S a non
992 2984
pay1ng POSitiOn
1 28 tfc
2 3 3tc

a

2 30 - Edge of N1ght
10 G1rl tn My l 1f ~ 6 13 Doctors 3 4 15
3 OO - AnotherWorld3.4, 15 General Hosp1tal6 13 Book Beat
20 Prt ce IS R1ght 8 10
3 30 - -one L1fe to Ltve 6 13 Phil Donahue 4 M atch Game 8
10 How To Surv1ve A Marnage J, 15 Woman 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Love Amencan Style 13 Somerset 15
Sesame St JJ , Speed Ra cer 6 Sese-me Street 20 Lucy Show
Movte I Davy 10

AROBIC

SYSTEMS

a

SE PTIC
TANK S c lea ned
Modern San1fa 110n 992 3954 or
992 73 49
10 23 t fc

WIN AT BRIDGE

Complex club systems gum game

AUTO MOBILE In surance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator s l1 cense Call 992
7428
6 15 tfc

'Q 10 8 2

..

'

....;

What really burns me, my husband pa1d her off' He believed
her story about JUSt carrymg the eggs m from the store 1 Even
when I've told hun so often what a double·BsheiS
What do I do about h1m, and them ~- EGGED ON

!)on Oakley
Converting the heat to light

·.,

You do bad three spades and

EAST
.QI062

'IJS

'114

Answer Tomorrow

+KQI08

+J764

... AI0852

... KQ9

clubs

Us. • •

By Helen Hottel

It was fun while 1t laste&lt;l, the 'game ol 'pin the tall on the 01!
donkey "

Members of the U S Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on
Investigations took turns 1n a senes of sesswns last week gn lhng
represcnlahves of seven maJor 011 comparues as the comrmttee
began hea rmgs mt o the fuel cn s1s and - to use one commentator's phrase- the mdustr; 's 'Oil-gotten gams '
Sen Abraham A R1b1coff , for one, accuse&lt;l the executive\; of
usmg the present conditiOns of fn ght and pamc to squeeze out
the small mdependent dealers and some of your own fran
ch1sers"

The C&lt;Jnnecllcut Democrat charged them not only "'th
miSleading the people and the government about the fue l
Situation but of 'cheatmg the Amencan pubhc' by means of tax
breaks and other tax law prov1s10ns such as the depletiOn
allowance
The tune has come to translate all this heat mto a httle hght
What the oil compames are domg 1f they are domg It , IS either
legal or Illegal If 1t IS illegal, the solution would seem to be
relatively sunple
If 1t IS legal but undesirable, th en 1t would seem to be the
course of wisdom to leave off cash gatmg those who are disadvantaged by the laws and begm lookmg to Ihose "ho framed the
laws 1n the first place
If the 011 mdustry IS enjoymg unwarranted benefits from the
tax faws, then change the laws If the dep1et10n allowance IS a
bad thmg, then let' s gel nd of 1t entirely or reVIse 1t so that 1t
serves the purpose for ?thlch 1l was mtended-encouragmg the
development of new petrolewn sources
"The facts are,' srudSen Henry M Jackson, D·Wash, as he
opened the hearmgs, 'we do not have the facts"
Well, get the fa cts, gentlemen and then brmg them before
the Amencan publn:
The mornmg star IS Venus
The Alman~c
The evemng stars are Mer
By Unlled Press International cury , Mars, Jupiter and Saturn
Today 1s Monday, Feb 4, the
Those born on this date are
35th day of 1974 w1th 330 to under the s1gn of Aquanus
Famed American transatlanfollow
The moon 1s approachmg 1ts tic flyer Charles A Lmdbergh
was born Feb 4, 1902
full phase

-----

~~--~~~~~~~4 Jo-Green Acr es 3 Gilligan s I sla nd 13 6 Hazel a- Bonan za
15 Jackpot• 4
5 00 - Mr Roger s 33 20 M erv Gnff1 n 4 Andy Gnff11-R 8
Mt ss ton lm poss 1ble6 Bonanza 3 Gomer Pyl e U SM C 13
5 30 - Bever l y Htllb1 l ll es 8 El ec Co 33 Hogans Heroes 13
Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Tra 1l s We st 15
5 55 - Earl N1ghttn ga le 15
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 Sesome Street 20 ABC New s 13
Truth or Consequ en ces 6 Lil 1as Yoga and You 33
6 30 - NBC News J 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 Your
Future Is Now 33 Room 222 13
7 00 - Marco Sportltte 33 Beat The Clock 4 N ew s 10 6
E lectr1c Co 20 Truth or Conseq uences 3 What s My Lme 8
Oustry s Tra tl1 3 H1gh School TV Honor Soc tety 15
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 RFD 20 Hol l y woo d Squares 3
Johnny Mann s Stand U p and Cheer 4 New Pn ce I s R1ght 8
10 Beat The Clock 13 La sste 15 Readtng For th e Cl ass room
Teac her 33
8 00 - Maude 8 10 Bil l M oyer s Journal 33 Adam 12 3 4 15
Happy Days 6 13 Mov 1e 20
8 30 - Hawatt F1ve 0 8 10
9 00 - Evenmg at Pops 33 H a ll of Fa me 3 A 15 M ov 1e Can
Ellen Be Sa ved' 6 13 T BA 33
9 30 ~ Haw ktn s B 10
10 00 - Marcus W elby M D 6 13 News 20 NB C News Report 3
4 15 Wa shington Stratght Ta lk 33
10 30 - Day at Ntght 33
11 00 - News 3 4 6 8, 101315 J anak 1JJ
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Chant of S1le nce 6 13 M ov1 es
The Badlander s • 8
Rhap sody 10
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 News 13
2 00 - News 4

Dear Egged
Another m the contmumg sertes, "Smce we're netghbors
let's be FRIENDS "
'
What do you&lt;lo "a bout him - and them ' " Look to yourself
fnend Maybe they 're askmg the same questwn about YOU' __:
H

Are Parents Cop-Outs?

Helen
I m shocked that the ma)onty of pareniB m your PareniB
Survey said they'd refer their unmamed daughters to Planned
Parenthood or thelr family doctors lor the p11l 1f they suspected
they were gomg to have mtercourse w1th the1r boyfriends
I was one of the under-15 percent who sa1d I'd ground her
mdehmtely or send her away until she came to her senses No
ch1ld of nune w1ll ever have pre-man tal sex, not while she's shU
hvmg under my roof ' - FIRM DAD
Dear Dad
Fnend you're bucking for membership m the premature
grandparents' club'
Please recall the quest1on was, 'If you sb ongl) suspected
your teenage daughter was havmg sex w1th her boyfnend and
~ou knew you couldn't change her mmd, what would do '"
The maJonty of our readers were reahsllc - they'd rather
play 11 safe, even though they are also sorr) - H

+++
Dear Helen
I've read your strmg of letters about rotten neighbors, but
they don't hold a candle to mme
She accused me of "eggmg" her house W1th eggs near a
dollar a dozen, who would be so dumb' I can'teven afford 'em for
breakfast
Yesterday I caught her and her son outs1de w1th a carlon of
eggs So 1 turned the hose on them She rushed me, pulled my
ha1r and hit me m the eye
I called her a couple of names which was very restrame&lt;l of
me Her son called me a lot worse, so I slappe&lt;l hun Meanwhile,
the eggs broke all over my driveway, and they wouldn't even
clean them up They had the nerve to tackle my husband when he
came home and ask lor' damages" (another carton of eggs and
cleanmg bills lor their wet jackets)

JJWJWID1brn;;~ ~-~ -tJ 9"""
Unsc rambl e thrse four Jumbles.
one lctl('r to each square, to
form four ordanary wordR.

~.'Md'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
!I. CROSS

DOWN

1 Fello~
5 Authentl

1 Incline
2 Affection
ate term

cate

11 Wh et
stone
12 Memento

of a brawl

1. Sesa me
8 Empow

15 Wire

9 Arranged

(abbr I

West

17. Storage
box
18 Mask
aperture
20 Strtp of
wood
21 Colorado
Indian
22 Henry

Mta.o..a.eport Pomeroy -

SHOP THE
RUTLAND
BARGAIN CENTER

Special
Used Furniture
Buys ...
10 P1ece Walnut
Otmng Room Sutfe

t&lt;mg SIZe Bedroom
~a cCj etf

1 &amp; 2 Ptece
L1v1ng Room Suates

Rutland Furniture

35

26 W01d

so hum
ble
"

w1th fall
or bag
28 Just
about

proverb

1al milk

23 Deed

document

~·-ever

38 Ind1an
cymbals
39. Network

IV ' char

acter

23. D ernck

26. D1latc
27 Israeli
dance

28. Nothmg
29. Arab
ch1eftam

30 Complete

Gordon
Mac 35 Naught)
36. Actor
Von
Sydow
37. Nervous
laugh
39 Undulate
40. Involve
41 Czech
34

nver

42. Property
43. Cummer

bund,
for
one

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

I [) I I
TUSH/A

I I
W1TEB
V'" ~

One letter simply stands for

another

In thiS sample A ts

used for the three L 1 S, X for the two 0 s etc Smgle letters,

tJ

!

WHERE THE CJ1.AP IN
FIWNT OFTEN OOES

apostrophes the length and formation of the words are all
day lh&lt;&gt; code letters are different

hmts Each

CRYPTOQUOTES
EH

TL

MLX

NFQXH

VQDHC
XPII PWMT X P W X
FG QG QM GLJH TWMVHC Ll

1

YQXXHM - CWKRP

I

PNt 61 SIIIIPRISUNSW!ft hill

rn xxr J
K

(An1wf'rl tumurrow~

J"mhl•• GULLY FATAL SUBDUE REBUKE
Sa turd11y •

I An11w~r1 A holp1tal begrnner - A BABY

w

ILCVQDH

Now arrange the mcled letters
~ ~
to form the surprise answer, u
~::::!t:,.~::'J:::===h~::'LJ===-~·~uuesled by the above cartoon.

EWKTL

1HHTG
YIIQMV

HJHCGLM

Yesterday's Cryploquote. THE MAN WHO ESCAPES W1TH
CLEAN HANDS FROM THE MANAGEMENT OF THE
'WORLD'S AFFAIRS ESCAPES THROUGH A MIRACLEPLATO

North

East

Pass

IN T

Pass

Pass
Pass

3'
Pass

Pass
Pass

+K
WHO I&lt;NOW!S WHAT FOREI~N
AGENTS MAY 8E L.Uilt&lt;ING

TilE BORN WSEH

YEAH I I 11-&lt;0UGHT
5HE. VJA&amp; 511JDVIN(7
'TO BE AN
ACTRE~e.•

[.:()IJ'T~ME'q

MAYBE HE-R -..\Of..A

I

THINK5 5 HE CAN

l.llROIJit&gt;, stR, rrt,;
JU&lt;;f m.\1--l.lleU:-

AAYniEROLE
OFA8PY 1

:r

1-1

A.IJC' Till':&gt;

F€8LI~
1~\.JI&lt;ITI/

TI:RRI Btl;

.
"

•'

ALLEY OOP

J1m "It IS qmte likely that
some standard·Amencan
b1dders would m•ss the heart
game but at least they would
all get mto the heart contract
while club b1dders would be
left m spades Of course, we
can show hands where club
---oidders reach ~ood games
that standard bidders m1ss
No b1ddmg system 1s per·

Mtke

feet "
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

..
' .

,

-

"

MAYTAG

Red Carpet
Serv1ce
I

Arnold Grate

song

vartety
25 Short

three"

Rutland, 0

RUTlAND FURNITURE

operahc

shaped
20 L1kc the

24 L ettu ce

!~THE WOODPILE i

WMPO

(2 Good Ones)
1-S1de by Side
$150
1-2 Door
(Top &amp; Bottom) $125

19 Crescen!

31. Picture
32 Solve
33 Bnng to
bear '

10 New Jer
sey ctly
16 Boundary

WITH A ?CIEIIJTIFI C PLVM LIKETHESE FOSSIL.? UP FO~ GR'AB!S ·-

92.1 FM

Surround
clothes
w1th Qentle even
heat No hoi spots
no overdrylng F1ne
Mesh L,int Ftlter
We Spec1ahze ~n

m a senes

l6 Mouse
genus

... 74

STIREO

REFRIGERATORS

Ye11terday's Answer

ered

Both vulnerable

Oswald "One of the mod·
ern developments IS the use
of an art•f•c•a\,forcmg one·
club b1d
We have
Neapolitan, Roman, PreciSion, Orange, Blue Team and
what-have·you c lubs
galore "
J1m "It may well be that a
forcmg -club conventiOn
g1ves an expert w1th a devel·
oped partnership an advantage The people who try to
sell the1r club systems to the
public cla1m that 1t IS
s1mpler than standard Amer·
1can Noth1ng could be
farther from the truth"
Oswald "Today's hand 1!·
lustrates one weakness of
forcmg·club systems The
b1ddmg m the box IS standard Amencan "
J1m "The b1ddmg m all
normal club systems would
start w1th the same one
spade opemng atl\1 would
end nght there "
Oswald "The 4·2 spa de
break does not keep South
from makmg four hearts
w1th an overtrick It holds
the one spade dec lare rs to

Dryers

Ergo

6.

cnt
14. Cahf
county

'IAK963
+J

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

B1g Capacity
Maytag
Automatics
7 speed operat1on
Ch01ce of water
temps Auto water
leve l control Lmt
F11ter or Power Ftn
Agitator •
Perm a-Press
Maytag
Halo of Heat

5 Sagacaous

SOUTH 101

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Dave or

amsh

4 F avorit e

.AK854

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURHY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

Su1te by

3 Old worn

13 Cumpon

INFORMATION ABOUT:

GOOD USED

Phone 992 9932

+A 95 2
... J63
WEST
.J3

Opemng lead -

FERTILtlER available now.
hau11ng on reQular schedule
Chester
Agr1ccr
Sen1ce
Center 985 3831
2 J Jtp

6ldl

TODAY S QUESTION
your partner btds four
Wha( do you do now?

• 97

Used Refrigerators, S2S up

742-4211

&lt;

NORTH

SEWING MA CHINE S Repat r
serv tce al l makes 992 2284
The Fabri C Shop Pom eroy
Autt1or1Zed Smger Sa les and
ServIce We Sharpen Sc 1ssors
3 29 tfc

2 1 tfc

POMERO:Y LANDMARK
9. _ Jack W Carsey, Mgr

Newlywed Game 6 13

Gut ding L.tght 8 10

3083

PAINT DAMAGE 1974 Z1g ~ag
SEWING MACHINES St ill 1n
or.g1nai car tons
No at
tachments needed as our
controls l!lre bu1lt In Sews.
W1lh 1 or 2 needles makes
buttonholes sew on buttons ,
monograms and blmd hem
stitch Full cash pnce S38 50
or budget plan ava1lable
Phone 992 2984
1 28 tic

Days of Our L1ves 3, 4, 15

2 00 -

CLEANED
REPA I R£;0
MILLER
SA NI TAT I ON
STEWART OHIO PH 66 2
303S
10 A tfc

New

modern 3 bedroom a ll electnc
home Jlh baths dtntng 2
lam ly room s and double
garage tn full basement Large
lot No down payment wtt h
excellent credtt $27 500 00

·:':::·::::: ::::::;.:;:;:.;,:.;,:;:;:;::::::,:···:

9 00 -

LARGE so ld 2 sto-;:y~ id;;:home
n Tuppers Pla1ns 8 rooms
and bath Family room w1th
natura l f1rep1a ce K1tchen
w1th gas rang e Ca rp et and
pane111ng
wrap
around FOR your new nom e or com
porch
good garden area
plete remodelmg Contact
stor age shed cel lar one acre
Greg Roush
Roush Con
wttl1 la rge trees and shrub
Struchen Phone 992 5039
bery For ced a1r furnace 011
2 3 li e
furnac e or LP gas heat Only
S16 SOO Phone 949 3195
WI LL tnm or cut t ree s and
2 1 6t p
shrubbery
A l so clean out
basements atttcs etc Call
949 3221 or 742 4441
DESIRABLE two bedroom
2 2 26tc
house m M ddleport ready to
occupy Call 992 5310
1 31 26tc FOR e1ectr 1cctl ptumbmg and
remodelmg work Call 843
234 1 for FREE EST IM ATES
1 11 26tc

TEAFORD

Farm Report 13
Paul Harvey 13
Btble Answers 6 News 6 Ftve Mtnu tes to Ltve By 4
Cleophus Rob1nson 13
Columbus Today .4
Columbu s Today 4
Farmt1me 10 Morn1ng Report 3
Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8, 10 P1 xanne 6 0 ck Van

Dyke 15

READY MIX
CONCRETE
del1vered r1ght to your
pro1ect Fast and ea::.y Fre e
est l m ates Phone 992 3284
Goe g le 1n R ea dy M1x Co
Middleport Oh o
6 30 lfc

SE WAGE

8

TUESDAY FEB 5,1974

DOZER work l and clear ng by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w 1th over
20 years expenence PulltnS
Exc avatmg Pomeroy Ohto
Phone 992 2478
12 19 ff c

TANKS

a

11 00 - News3 4 6
10 15, 13 Janak1JJ
11 30- Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Mov1es The La st Chal leng e
A PnzeofGold 10 Who Killed Lamb'6 13
1 00 ~ Tomorrow 3 4 News 13
200 - News4

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display

SEPTIC

Paul Nuchtms 33 News 20 Country Mu stc Ht t Parade 8

10

OFFICE SUPPLIES

EXCAVAT IN G dozer loader
and ba c khoe work
sept 1c
t anks mstall ed dump tru cks
and lo boys fo r ht r e will llaul
fil l d1rt top soil ltm estone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n 1ght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
., 2 11 tfc

6 13

9 30 - Book Beat 20

992-2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

BI SS ELL Construc tiOn room
add tlons and remode l ng
ProfeS SIOnal floor sand1 ng
and f101 Shtng old and new
Referenres availabl e Pllone
949 383 3
1 ?S 26 t c

a

Spades 33

FURNITURE

- -4- - ------------

Hogans Heroes 13

6 00 - News 3 4, 8 10, 15 Sesame St 20 ABC News 13 Per son
l1fy &amp; Behavtoral Development 33 Truth or Consequences 6

-G UARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094 ,

C BRADFORD Auc t 1on ee r
Complete Ser \11 Ce
Phone 949 3821
Ra c me Oh1o
Cr1tt Bradford
s 1 tf c

Andy

4

•

5 30- Beverly Htllblll1es8 Elec Co 33 Hodgepodge Lodge 20

On Most American Cars

D I LE S H ea nng Ad Cent er
Att1ens serv 1ces all ma ke s
Hear1ng
tes ts
by
ap
po1ntrT' en t
Re n tal
plan
available Phone S92 6238
I 211 12tp

=~

·::

MONDAY, FEB 4, 1974
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20 JJ Bonanza 3 M erv Gr tff tn
Grtff1fh 8 Miss1on Impossible 6 Gomer Pyl e 13

and

ponds and sept1c tanks d 1t
ch1ng serv1ce top sotl ftll
d1rt
1 mestone
B&amp;K Ex
cavatmg Phone 992 53 67 or
992 3861
9 1 tf c

------

POSITIONS OPEN

Built to Your 'Specs
Delivered to Job S1te

DOZER and back hoe work

DIRECT Sales D I StributorS
wanted for v1tamms and
organ 1c products Part or full EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
1970
442
OLDSMOBILE
t1me For mterv1ew wnte
Mam St. Pomeroy All kinds
automat1c, W 30 Good con
Mary Engle RR 1 Box 19,
of salt water pellets, water
d 1tlon Phone 1192 7519
Un1on Oh1o 4S322
nuggets block salt and own
2 3 6tc
1 16 16tp
Ohio R1ver Salt Phone 992 - - - - -- - 3891
6 5 tfc 1966 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass for
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS
sale 8 c yl1nder power brakes
We have the product on hand
and
power
steer 1ng
and we del 1ver to you per BEA UTIFUL walnut stereo
automatfc transm1SS10n Will
sonally Helen Jane Brown
radio tape combmat1on AM
sell reasonable Phone 992
992 511 3
F M rad10 8 track tape deck
2386
12 30 tfc
Balance Sl14 56 or terms
2 I 4tc
ava 1lable Call 992 3965
NE ED woman to liv e n and
2 4 ftc
1969 FORD PICkup Explorer
lake mother s pla ce of 2
Phone 992 36.40
Chi ldr en tn a new respectable
Walnut stereo
1 27 121c
hom e You may also have 1 BEAUTIFUL
rad10 am fm
tape com
ch 1 d of your own Phone 992
blnalton 8 track ta pe deck
2536
Balance S103 49 or terms 1968 CHEVROLET MaltbV
I
1 a tfc
automat 1c 307 Fa~r cond1t1on
avatlable Call 992 3965
S750 Ca ll 992 7637
1 21 tfc
------ - - - - - -1-27- 12tc
1
!1 ACR 1::: or acre lots ror sa 1e
C1ty water available 1n
s prmg
Located on Sta te
Route 14 3 Phone 992 3640
1 27 12tc AKC Toy Poodle Pupp 1es
S7S 00 Stamese K1ttens $15
Phone 1 256 6247
ONE 2 year old black 7 8
1 10 26tc
Tennessee Walker for sate
Phone 992 3640
1 27 12tc

WANTED!

. . .c:s/S"z:.... ,.
MATERIALS CO
Mason, W Va
773 5554

Rea I Estate For Sale
2

WOOD TRUSSF.S

..

Television Log

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

992

1940 CHRY SLER
1946 Ford
Tractor W1lh equ pment and
attachments 1973 Hoover
Data mat1 c Power Dnve
Phone 985 4132
2 1 61&lt;

An Equal Opportun1ty
Employer

ri8'"""'
Thts ';"hat you re lookmg for.,

quilt

PAPER CARRIER

GRILL cook carhop and k1t
chen help wanted Apply m
person Crow s Stea k Hou se
1 27 tfc

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992-7089
N1ght 992-3525
or 992 5232

For Sale

WANTED

POMEROY, 0.

Mobile Homes For Sale

LA RGE unfurniSh ed 3rd floor
apl for rent n downtown
Pom eroy 6 rooms and bat h
Call 1192 27 89
1 17 tf c

'"

sta lied

:=~·=·=···:···=·=....·=-=· ;-&gt; ::..;::&amp;:!::8!:·~";:!:0::0":0!·'

'

ASK US ABOUT
PRE· FABRICATED

Wat er Lines and Power
Ltnes All work done by the
loot or contract Also dozer
work and sept1c tanks

BEDROOM house tr all er
extra n1 ce ya r d Located 1n
Sllade
Availab l e
1m
m ed a! el y
Phon e 69f:J 1283
2 1 6tp

Pom eroy

Ph 992 2174

DITCHING SERVICE

19 73 MOBILE home 3 bedroom
bath
and 11 washer and
dryer Ca ll 992 3S09
2 3 31c

Help Wanted

lHE
DAILY SENTINEL

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

All work guaranteed

'

YOU1,...,.., , OV\t N k1tchen S1n k
LIGHT haulmg Call 992 37 16
wtlh fauce ts $50 ga s range
1 31 8tp
540 refr gerator S40 A ll m
good cond1t1on See at 256 So
Fourth Ave M iddleport
W IL L babystt 1n my hOme by
2 2 lfc
hour day or we ek No n1ghts
Phone 992 7102
1 30 6tc FORD rear mounted mow er
Ser1es 501 bought new last
year extra stckle never used
$500 7 month old He1fer calf
Hereford Ho lste1 n m1xed
1175 1 man sawmill w1th Allis
Cha lm ers power un1! good
cond1f10n S21S 2 row corn
p l anter
John Deere 290
needs new boxes $75 Call
after 5 p m 843 2064
2 3 ltc

WANTED IN
POMEROY
PHONE 992-2156

0

Area's Most
Reasonable Pnces

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

EXPER IEN CED pam ler
m
tenor and ex t er1or Ca ll Don
van Meter Phone 985 3951
2 3 26 t p

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radtafor to the
sma llest H ea ter Core
Nathan B1ggs
Rad1ator Specialist

Painting A Specialty

3 YEAR OLD horse for sa l e or
trade for good used Cam per
Top Phon e 742 38&lt;1 2
2 4 6t c

LOST 1n M1d dl e por t near
Th ompsons !rail er co urt
S1am eseca t be1gebody dark
pomt s reward Ca ll 992 3371
F ran c 1s Bear hs or K 1m Neal 3 AND 4 ROOM furn 1shed and
unfurnished
apartments
2 1 61c
Phone 99 2 5434
4 12 tfc
MALE c at black W1fh Wh 1fe
stomacn be tween Bashan &amp;
Racme area on Coun ly Road PRIVATE m ee tmg room for
any organ1Zat10n phone 992
28 had on black flea collar 1
)975
year old P hone 949 4609
3 11 tfc
1 1 6t c

FABR I C SAL E large selecton
polyester double kn1ls 1n
coord nated colors S2 79 and
up Carotma Fabncs Route 7
one half mtle north of Ches t er
OhiO
Henry and Mary
Hunter owners 9 am ttll 7
p m
Feb Ath to Thur sday BABY SITTER wanted 1n my
home must have own trans.
9lh
portatton 5 or 6 days a week
2 J 6tp
Phone 992 2550 or 742 6551
I 30 ti C

TRAIN WITH
FULL PAY

Lmcoln Hill Pomeroy

SLE EPING room over wme
store n Pomeroy Refe r ence
requ1red Ca ll 992 5293
1 10 ttc

Employment Wanted

Rad

Ph . 992 ·5271

For Sale or Trade

For Rent

EXPERIENCED

Gene's
Body Shop

N O 1 copper 65c rad1ators
31c red brass 35c batter1es
$1 20 M A Hall Reed sville
01110 Phone 378 6249
1 17 lfc

3

WANT 405
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P ~\ Day Before Publ 1ca t or
Monday Dead I me 9 am
Ca nc ellal10n - CorrectiOnS
Wi l l be accept ed unl1l 9 a m for
Day Of PJJbi1Cat10n
REGULATIONS
The Publisher r ese rv es the
r 1ght to edt or re 1ec1 an y ads
d ee med
ObleCIIona l
The
publi Sher w1l l not be re spon
Sible for more than one n
correc t nsert1on
RATES
For Want Ad Serv1ce
S ce nts per Word one m set"t1on
M m1 mum Charge S l 00
14 cents per word th ree
conseculive nsert1on s
26 cen ts per word s x con
secut1ve m se rt10ns
25 Per Cen t D ISC Ount on pa1d
ad s and ads pa1d W1lhm 10
day s

Business Services

TRAILER
Browns Trailer
Park Minersvil le Phone 99'1
3324
1 77 tt c

OPEN EVES 8· 00 PM
POMEROY. OHIO

-

RESPONSIBLE
PERSON

11295

D oor V
en g 1ne 318 CI O rwtom atlc tran s power
stee nng rad o good tt res spotl ess nt enor b l ue ttnt sh
Now only S1295
.l

1 HIVE Of bees

I

AGE

1970PLYMOUTHFURYIII

tmm ed1al e
open ngs
for
spec at tram 1ng 1n Mechan1 ca1
Electronics
Av1at1on and
Cter 1cal f1 eld s 1n the u S Navy
Pay starts at $326 per month
from ftrst day - We furn1sli
quarters food and cl ol1'11ng
Sc hool guarantees before you
Stgn up
BE SOMEONE SPECIAL
IN THE NEW NAVY
For more mfo ca ll or v1sd your
Nav y man at
___
22 1 Col umbus Road ""'
Larry E Spenc er
Athens 0 4S701
Cl erks ot Cou rt
Vernon E Harrtson
Common Pleas Court
Telephone 614 593 3566
Me1gs County OhiO
Toll Free BOO 282 12t!8
(1) 28 ( 2) 4 11 18 25 (3) 4 6tc
ADVERTISEMENT

Sm5

St d V 8 eng 1n e std tr a i'I Smi SS ton all good f1 res clean
1n t er1or b l ue lin1s h ri!d1o fu ll SI Ze ca r bu t wI t deltver
good m deilge 1 locil l own er

NOTICE FOR SERVICE

GIRLS

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Feb 4,1974

I,

The b1ddmg has been
North East
Weot

4
SOulli

1+

Pass

u

Pass

1•

Pass

3'

Pass

?

You, South hold
• A K 7 6. A K 7 6 t 2 + K 10 4
3

Rutland

L---------------------~ c

WHAR'S 'lORE

APERN,MAW?

•
What do you do now'

.

A-Bid three spades There is
some slight chance that thl!!r.f'
may be a slam

TATERS
WEARIN'IT,
PAW-·

ALL HIS DIAPERS
ARE OUT ON
TH' LINE

]I
WELL IF ~OU SUBTRACT
~ l NG lOUIS THE fouRTEENTH
f~OM KIN6 LOVI5 THE 5tXTEENTH

liO\.I GET K 6 L.OVI.; TI-lE SECOND

~ATS 1 l TH006HT THAT WAS
A PRETT~ GOOD ANS~ER

�''
'

'

'

8_ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 4· 19 74

Guard called out
by Gov. Gilligan
Gov, John J. Gilligan Sunday
ordered 900 national guardsmen activated in an attempt
to halt the violence of an independent truck drivers' work
stoppage which threatens to
&lt;lisrupt the state's economy.
Gilligan said the guardsmen
would aid the state Highway
Patrol with convoy escorts,
aeril)} surveillance and ground
patrol. The guardsmen were
activated following a request
from federal authorities
Saturday
asking
state
executives to do whatever
necessary to curtail violence
during the trucker 's strike over
high diesel fuel prices and low
freight rates.
"The actions of a new lawbreakers have created an atmosphere of fear among truckers who want to drive their rigs
in Ohio " Gilligan said. "By
activat~ units of the National
Guard and placing them under
U1e direction of the Highway
Patrol, we hope to convince
truckers that it is safe to operate in Ohio."
Lt. w. A. Sternad of the
Highway Pati-o! reported early

" Most

of

us

think of
.. . after

w~ather -s tripping

we see the mercury dip ping

Don ' t you thm k this is a
good tim e to check your
doors, wi ndows and home
for proper insula t1on ? If
you

f ind

t hat

yo u

need

weather str ippi ng come in
nnd falk lo fhe "FR I EN DLY O NE S". (WE'LL
H ELP YOU GET FIXED

UP, TI GHTER THAN A

DRUM ! I

today no incidents of violence
had occurred in the state late
Sundsy night and up to the
early morning hours.
"We have had many requests
fr om drivers for eScorts and
very few incidents all day Sund
dsy - the last one coming at
3:30p.m. EDT when a trucker
reported sniper fire on Interstate 71 in Morrow County,"
Sternad said.
The first four dsys of the
work stoppage, which began
Thursday and has gathered
momentum almost daily, has
resulted in lay offs for some
6 1100 workers in Ohio, halted
g~soline deliveries in some
areas and sharply curtailed
food deliveries.
Industry spokesman in Ohio
predict massive layoffs should
the strike continue through
next week, with auw and steel
plants based in northern
portions of the state hardest h1t
because of a material shortage.
General Motors Corp. officials have indicated 20 plants
in the state may close because
of the truckers' strike, The GM
plant in Defiance announced
Saturday it would layoff 365
workers beginning today.
Also beginning today, four
General Electric facilities in
northern Ohio will shut down
because of a material shortage.
Food deliveries in the state
have been sharply curtailed by
the strike. Fisher-Fazio Inc. of
Cleveland reported making
light deliveries to its 63 stores
in northeastern Ohio Saturday
after making no deliveries
Friday.
Deliveries by Fred W. Albricht Grocery Co. in Akron
have been cut by 40 per cent,
according to company officials. The firm supplies 50
hospitals, 300 schools, 300
supermarkets and numerous
restaurants and factory
cafeterias .
While announcing the mobilzation of the National Guard,
Gilligan said there were some
indications the violence of the
strike was ending. He cited
Highway Patrol reports Saturdsy which showed fewer incidents of rock throwing and
shooting and an increase in
truck traffic Sunday.
"However, we realize that
many truckers have been intimidated into refusing to operate their rigs," Gilligan said.
"By providing the additional
protection of national guardsmen, we hope they will realize
that it is safe to driy&lt;c ill_Qhi~

YOUR FULL SERVICE BANK
~----

and will return to work, thus
averting the serious economi c
consequences the truck stoppage threatens to bring.
"In additiorr, we urge local
law enforcement authorities to
use all of their resources to
prevent violence, and encourage them to contact state
officials if they feel they need
assistance from the guard or
the patrol," Gilligan said.
The 900 guardsmen activated
were to report by 8 p.m. Sundsy to National Guard armoories in northern Ohio, including Defiance, Napoleon,
Toledo, Cl eve l a nd,
Youngstown , Warren and
Akron-Canton, according to Lt.
Col. Joseph McCann, assistant
adjutant generaL
McCanh said other units may
be ordered out later in the week
if deemed necessa ry to
maintain order on the state's
roadways .
Gilligan also urged federal
authorities to contin)le their efforts to find solutions which
would end tbe strike .
"I urge the President to respond inunediately by examining the demands of the striking
truckers and determining
which of these demands are
legitimate, and what can be
done to provide relief.
"The states have already
done everything within their
power to ease the economic
plight of the independent
truckers. But the grievances
and problems of these truckers
must be discussed and resolved
at the national level," Gilligan
said.

Market Report
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Feb. 2,1974
SALES REPORT OF
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
STOCKER CATTLE
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 50.25
to 62.40; 300 to 400 lbs. 48 to 08 ;
400 to 500 lbs. 45.75 to 51.50; 500
to 600 lbs. 42.50 to 48 ; 600 to 700
lbs. 41.75 to 45.25; 700 lbs . and
Over 36.50 to 40.
'
HEIFER CALVES - 25C to
300 lbs. 55 .75 to 62; 300 to 400
Ibs. 52 to 56 ; 400 to 500 lbs. 47.50
to 50.50; 500 to 600 lbs. 42 to
48.75 ; 500 to 600 lbs. 42 to 48.75;
600 to 700 lbs. 41.10 to 46.50; 700
lbs. and Over 34.50 to 36.75.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULU! (By
The Head)- Stock Cows 210 to
340· Stock Cows and Calves 348
to 445; Stock Bulls 280 to 370;
Baby Calves 34 to 72.50; (By
The Poundl - Canners &amp;
Cutters Cows 28.75 to 34 .30;
Holstein Cows 30.40 to 34.80;
Commercial Bulls ( 1,1100 lbs.
and Over I - 38 to 41.40,
LAMBS- Tops 90 lbs. to 110
36.50to 40.50; Seconds 75lbs . to
80 30 to 36.85; Ughts 40 lbs. to
65 34.50 to 37; Stock Ewes By
the Head 2 to 22.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
lbs. to 250 64 to 71.50; Medium
200 lbs. to 300 60 to 66.50; Culls
48.50 to 62.25.
SHOATS - 14 to 29.
NOW YOU KNOW
The volwne of mail in the
United States is almost 90
billion pieces annually - just
under half the world's total.

An

important part
of service

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Henry Werry, Pomeroy;
Mary Scott, Pomeroy; Jessie
White, Pomeroy; Robert
Freeman, Cheshire; Belinda
Fitch, Cheshire. ·
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Arnold Wilson , Charles Guy,
Ros s
Morris ,
War ren
Sali sb ur y, Harley Johnson,
James Hawk, William Chafin,
Bertha Smith, Robert White,
Er ic
Walker,
Barbara
Buchanan.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Stella Stahl, Pomeroy; Carl
Greenleaf, Pomeroy; Virgil
Hudson , Pomeroy ; Joseph
Bowland, Middlepor t; Linda
Reeves, Pomeroy; Rosemary
Wamsley, Marietta.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Norma Lehew .

The Mason County Fair was another
PT . PLEASANT _ Lawrence Gerlach
Jr ., 46 , prominent farmer , and prime interest,. He was inst~wnental in
businessman, died Sunday morrung m the acquiring land to locate the f8ll'grounds m
Baltimore Cancer Research Center, the TNT area and was co-chairman of the
fair's beef cattle division until his illness
Baltimore, Md.
Mr. Gerlach, who re sided at 1101 forced his retirement.
He was a member of the Point Pleasant·
Meadowbrook Drive, had been battlmg h1s
Mason
County Chamber of Commerce , the
illness several years.
_.
Farm
Bureau,
and Odd Fellows LOOge.
Associated with his father and brother m
He graduated from Point Pleasant
management of the Quality ManufacHigh
School in 1948 and Mountain State
turing Company since 1948, he ~
Business
College in 1947.
operated the Gerlach Stock Farro smce
Born Nov , 8, 1927 in Point Pleasant, he
1952.
.
'
was
a son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Showing a great interest in Republican
Gerlach
Sr., 2420 Mount Vernon Ave., who
politics and Mason County in general, Mr.
Gerlach served one six-year term on the survive.
In addition to his parents, he is surMason County Court, four years as Its
vived
by his wife , the forrner Mabel Gibbs;
president. He was widely recognized in
LAWRENCE GERlACH, JR.
one
son,
John David Gerlach, a student at
farm groups and perhaps was best known
for his association with persons mterested Point Pleasant High School; three p.m. Wednesday in the Wilcox~n Funeral
daughters, Mary Susan, at home ; Carol Home with Tom Clark and Richard Mc·
in Hereford and Charolais cattle.
While on the County Court he was Goff, and Linda Goff, both of Charleston; Cleery officiating. lnterment will follow in
particularly effective in advancing three grandchildren ; one brother, Oscar Suncrest Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home
projects to benefit the county's 4-H'ers. He Gerlach ol Terra Alta , and a sister, Mary
after
4 p.m. Tuesday. Those desiring may
Ellen
Wischner
,
of
Cleveland.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
was steadily pushing for unprovm g the 4-H
Funeral
services
will
be
held
at
1:30
make
a contribution to tbe Cancer Fund.
Discharges : Mrs . Carroll Camp Site at Southside.
Church, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
Harold Fisher, Letart; Mrs .
Arb in Roush, Mason; William
Phelps, Point Pleasant; Ida
Richard Homer (Dick I Middleport; three cousins, two
Putney, Point Pleasant; John
Leona Hensley and Ada David Smith .
nieces and a nephew.
Brown, Point Pleasant ; Don Bissell received word of the
Mrs. Virgil Bogard visited Hayman , 61, formerly of
Me~orial services will be
Racine, died Monday morning
Fowler, Point Pleasant; Mrs . death of their cousin , Ollie Mr. and Mrs. Fred Larkins.
held
at Huntingdon Valley
Mary Ellen Andrew, Pills- at his home in Huntingdon
Jasper Eden, Letart; Mrs . Assel, in Missouri.
after which time the ashes will
Conrad
Berkley,
Point
Steve Goebel, Tuppers burg , visited Mr. and Mrs. Valley, Pa.
Mr. Hayman was born Oct. be returned to Meigs County
Pleasant· Lori Manion, Crown Plains, and David Wise, Francis Andrew ana Mr. and
12 1912 in Racine; the son of for graveside services at the
City , 0 .; Vickie Donohue, Point Cheshire, were overnight Mrs, Larry Collins.
'
'
Greenwood Cemetery' Racine,
Pleasant; Grant Roush, New guests of Mike Larkins.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Walls and the late Ralph H. and Margaret
with the Rawlings-Coats
(Maggie)
Weldon
Hayman
.
He
Haven; Mrs. William Jones,
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bogard son, Canal Winchester, visited
Funeral
Home in charge. Time
was a member of the Ratine
Point Pleasant; Judy Young, of Medina visited Mr. and Mrs. Ernestine Hayman.
Point Pleasant; Mrs. James Sammie Rairden .
Mr . and Mrs.
Virgil United Methodist Church and of the services will be announced. The Rev. Robert
Pashk1 , Jackson , 0.; Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Bissell of Wamsley , Betty Louden and Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM.
Survi vlng are his wife, June Bwngardner will officiate.
George Payne, West Colum- Colwnbus, visited Mr. and Jea n Ann and Melissa of
bia; Mrs. Larry Bradley and Mrs. Joe BisselL
Cheshire, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Sansbury Hayman, formerly of
daughter, Gallipolis, 0 .; Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs , Howard Young Kalibough, Belpre, and Mr.
Michael Cremeans and son, of Paden City, W. Va., recently and Mrs . Dwight . Logan,
CALLED TWICE
Middleport, 0 .
spent several days with Mr. Pomeroy, were visitors of Mr.
The Middleport E-R squad
·MRS. NEU!ON DIES
and Mrs. Garth Smith. They all and Mrs. Dorsel Larkins.
was called Sunday at 10:28 p.
Holzer Medical Center
RUTLAND
Blanche
Jared Spencer spent an m. to Middleport Hill for Mrs .
went to Lancaster to visit Mr.
Births
Nelson,
82,
Dexter,
Rt.
1, died
and Mrs. Paul Osborn and evening with the Larry Collins Jimmy King who was taken to
Feb. 1 - Mr . and Mrs.
family .
'
Osborn.
Veterans Memorial HospitaL early Sunday evening at Kimes
Robert McCarley, Vinton, son; Edith
Convaleacent Home, Athens,
Arva Jean Holter and Violet
Mr. and Mrs. Harlis Frank
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Blaine, were visiting Mr. and Mrs. Smith. were dinner guests of Today at 6:47a.m, they were Funeral arrangements will be
called to North Second Ave. for
Gallipolis Ferry, son; Mr . and
Phyllis Larkins.
Lawrence Boyd who was taken announced by Walker Funeral
Mrs. Gary Lee Sargent,
Home in Rutland.
- Violet Smith to Holzer Medical Center.
Henderson, son; Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar Eberts, Hamden, son.
Feb. 2- Mr. and Mrs. Nick
Blanton, Gallipolis, daughter;
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Kimbler,
Jr ., Jackson, son; Mr. and
Mrs. William Fyffe, Wellston, Jack Pickens, who was
seriously injured in an accident
daughter .
SHOP WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5 PM
Feb. 3 - Mr . and Mrs . at Graham Station is reported
Marlin Escue, Pt. Pleasant, as slightly improved. His wife,
Ruth and Mrs. Harry Pickens
daughter.
visited him on Sunda y at the
Mt. Carmel Medical Ce nter in
Coiwnbus . His room is No. 756.
The Rev. and Mrs. Clarence
McL1oud who were patients at
Pleasant Valley Hospital have
returned to their home in
Mason.
Mrs. James Lloyd and sons
of
Nashport, Ohio, Mr. and
Meigs Cointy farmers who
Mrs.
Stan Saunders and family
wish to apply for a new burley
of
Colwnbus,
Mr. and Mrs.
tobacco allotment must do so
Curtis McDaniel, Mason, went
by Feb. 15.
To be eligible for a new to Pt. Pleasant, Saturday
allolment the applicant must evening where the birthday of
own a farm and receive 50 Denise McDaniel wa s obpercent or more of his income served. Denise is the daughter
from products sold from the of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Mcfarm and have had experience Daniel.
Recent guests of Mrs. Clara
in raiSing burley tobacco. For
Smith
were her daughter and
cigar tobacco, the applicant
husband
and grandchildren,
must own or operate the farm
and have had experience in Corporal and Mrs. Andy
raising cigar leaf tobacco. If Galford, Brian and Greg, of
the applicant has a burley Madison, W. Va. On Monday,
allotment he is not eligible for a Mr, and Mrs. Charles Moore of
permanent cigar leaf allot- Huntington, visited her sister,
Mrs. Clara Smith, and her
ment.
Requests must be fileq at the brother, Grover Roush, at
Meigs
Agriculture Mason.
Mr. and Mrs. Vaught Smith Stabilization and Conservation
of Gallipolis visited on Sunday
Office in the Masonic Temple with Mrs. J . E. (Dolly) Roush
building, Pomeroy. Tobacco
applicants are accepted at Mason.
regardless of race, color,
religion, sex or national origin.

News, Notes

News Notes

ADMIRAL

,.

M\M ~E R

FEOfRAl

I

~_!!O~IT

--

~~

r

SPECtAL VALUE!
THE JOPLIN Model C1897P
(18" Dla. Meas.)

- - - -- --

INSURANCE

CORPORA T ION

BAKER

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Visiting in the Russell Roush
home over the weekend were
Mike Rhodes, Mrt. and Mrs.
Dana Lewis, Mrs. Walter
McDade, Mrs. Gladys Shields,
Cookie Weddle, Debbie Weddle
and Jltnmy Riffle.
Mr, and Mrs. Herbert Sayre ,
Mr. and Mrs. David Sayre
returned home Friday after a
week's visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Dean Sayre at Middletown, Pa.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs .
Herbert Sayre over the

Marriage License
Wayne Evans Well, 21, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, Air Force, and Unda
Kay Anderson , 21, Logan,
student.

MEIGS THEATRE
Mon .- Tues.- Wed.Thurs .

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Feb- 4-5-6-7
NOT OPEN

NO. 206

Now You Know

enttne
Devoled To

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~

ln14?reaiJ

Of~

No president of the Un ited
States has been an only child.

Meiga-M(JII()n Area

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1974

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

•

conomy staggerzng
Uulled Press International
a strike by independent
truckdrivers protesting high
fuel prices threatened a crippling blow at the nation's
e.:onomy today,
There were numerous
reports of food shortsges and of
housewives raiding supermarkets for necessities that 9oon
may be in short supply, Scores
of plants were shutdown because their production and

distribution facilities are serviced by trucks, throwing
thousands out of work.
As the mllitant independents
sought to keep all truck traffic
off the highways, there were
increasing reports of violence.
In Pennsylvania, Gov. Milton
J. Shapp declared a state of
emergency. He said it was
prompted by violence which
"er.dangered the safety, bealth
and weUare of a substattial

number of citizens."
millions of dollars, perhaps
In Washington, officials were hundreds of millions within one supermarkets of America,"
Butz told a convention of the
meeting in lengthy sessions to week.
United
Fruit and Vegetable
consider
the
truckers'
"The real loss will be for Association.
demands.
consumers, indeed for the
Reports of frenzied buying of
In New Orleans, Agriculture families of truckers themgroceries
and the closing down
Secretary Earl Butz predicted selves, that aren't able to find
of
food
suppllers
cropped up in
the truckers' strike would cost the products they normally
most
parts
of
the
country.
the American economy tens of expect on the shelves of the
The nation's largest chicken
processor, Holly Farms Inc.,
Wilkesboro, N.C., stopped
operations indefinitely at three
plants causing the layoff of
3, 700 employees.
-,.it119118lli!J'I!!.~~'1$W:!::::~,_;.m':::::':::&gt;.::::::: : .... ~;;.w;:::::::::~:::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::;:.
At a Kroger store In Cincin!lll ti weekend sales were
almost doubled . The manager
Mrs. Charles (Dollie 1Hayes, at the Holzer Medical Center, said the normal purchase of
Oak
St., Pomeroy, Monday and Charles II, who is em- $12,000 worth of foodstuffs had
By Uolled Presalnternallonal
filed
petitions
of candidacy for ployed with Bell Laboratory in jumped to more than $22,1100.
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON has been giving
Stockyard
owners
in
White House staffers pep talks, assuring them he will be Ule Republican nomination for Colwnbus.
county
auditor.
Mrs.
Hayes
is
the
second
to
Amarillo
and
Fort
Worth,
exonerated In the Watergate scandal, according to an aide. The
Mrs. Hayes was employed as file for the Republican Tex., said no cattle had been
aide said Nixon himseU appears more confident he can ward off
deputy
auditor while Perry nomination to the auditor's shipped in four days while the
demands for his resignation or Impeachment, despite a recent
Gallup Poll showing only a 26 pet. approval of Nixon's perform- Riggs and Gordon Caldwell post. Howard Frank, in- Interstate Producers Livestock
held the office over a period of cumbent treasurer, filed Association said all 48 of Its
ance,
15
years.
earlier.
buying points in Illinois, Iowa
Another Gallup Poll made public Monday showed that if
Presently employed at the
The Meigs County Board and Missow-i have been closed
given a choice, a plurality of voters would prefer VIce President
G.!rald Ford to Nixon in the White House for the remaining years Meigs Inn, Mrs, Hayes is the of Elections also announced "until we are able to make sure
Ward the names of six additional that livestock can be moved to
of Nixon's terrn. The President was moving on several fronts to Pomeroy , Fourth
on
the Democrats who have filed for slaughtering plants."
spur a momentum of his administration and project the image of representative
Republican
Central
Comcentral committee posts of
The truckers' strike caused
a man who is planning a busy year ahead. He diacussed with
mittee.
She
serves
as
executive
shutdowns
of widely different
their
party.
They
are
Robert
Soviet Foreign MiniSter Andrei Gromyko his plans to return to
Moscow for a summit meeting with Communist party leader secreq.ry of the Meigs County Burton, Pomeroy Fourth ; consumer products ranging
'·... . - ... • ~ ..... 'I{ &gt;# ..
Leonid I. Brezhnev this year, probably in JWle. Other White Tuberculosis and Health Martha Husted, Rock Springs; from roof bolts to glass
• •. ,'F. •
~­
•
Association,
Plants
in
Illinois,
products,
Winston
E.
Varney,
Portland;
House officials have passed the word that Nixon plans to do a lot
'
..... ··' ' '
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Hayes
have
two
West
Virginia
and
many
inSteven H. Eblin, Pomeroy
of traveling abroad with Ew-ope and Japan in the picture in
BOULDER'S PATH- Alarge boulder, approximately 12 feet in belghl, fell off this hlU on
children, a daughter, Mary Precinct; David M. Brickles, dustrial slates announced
April ,
SR 338 just north of Antiquity at "The Narrows" Sunday a.m., landing just off the side of the
Sue, registered nurse in the Bedford West, and Audrey
(Continued on page 10)
road. The flattened bushes show the path the boulder took during its descent from the cliff
SAN FRANCISCO - MAYOR JOSEPH L. AUOTO'S wife, obstetrics department nursery Young, Pomeroy First.
above.
mysteriously missing since Jan. 20, telepho~ed home late
Monday, said she was safe and promised a family reunion. The
call to the worried California gubernatorial candidate came only
a few hours after ber disappearance from the swank resort at
Pabn Springs was made public,
OUtside of saying that "the family will be reunited" today,
Mayor Alioto's office declined to give further details or say
where the call originated, Mrs, Alioto, 58, the former Angeline
By BOB MIIJ.ER
on to shippers the increased consin.
The most serious effects on some of its production and largest processor of chickens,
Genaro of Dallas, was last seen at a resort cottage where she had United Press Internatloual
cost of their fuel.
National Guardsmen were on food supplies were reported in reported additional layoffs.
suspended operations ingone with her son, Lawrence, and his wife, Ann, to join the mayor
Violence connected with the
The proposal came as talks duty in Ohio, Pennsylvania and the Midwest, where 15 meat
In
Wilkesboro,
N.C.,
Holly
definitely
at three plants,
at a campaign appearance.
independent truckers' strike continued Into tbe wee hours of Michigan, and were placed on plants have been closed, Farms Inc ., the nation's
putting 3, 7110 persons out of
expanded Monday in a number the morning in Washington standby alert in Kentucky. In among them operations of two
work .
WASHINGTON- SOVIET FOREIGN MINISTER Andrei of states. Plant closings and today between government re- Tennessee, state troopers were of the largest national packers .
- In Alton, Ill., about 2,500
Gromyko so far has not discussed U. S. relations with Cuba layoffs spread, while many presentatives and owner- ordered to work 12-llour shifts
Seven Plants Closed
persons were laid off when the
during his visit here despite Soviet public demands tbe Western areas reported fears of short- drivers in an effort to resolve with no days off until the
One of those, Armour &amp; Co.,
Owens-Illinois
Glass Co., was
political and economic blockade of Cuba be ended, according to ages of meat and other the deadlock over the truckers' violence suboides.
closed five of its seven plants in
shut
down
indefinitely.
State Department officials. Secretary of State Henry A. perishable foods.
demands.
The work stoppages threaten the area and curtsiled operaI Missouri Beef Packers
Kissinger, scheduled to confer with Gromyko a second time
The key demand of the inThe meeting broke up at 3 severe economic dislocations lions in the two others. Wilson
closed two plants.
today, told newsmen Cuba was not discussed during their 2'h· dependent truckers, who began a.m. without resolution and a in many parts of the country. &amp; Co. Inc., closed its Cherokee,
Mines FaceSbutdown
hour meeting Monday, Other officials said they discussed their strike last Thw-sday, has new session was set for noon.
Gov. Shapp said 50,000 Iowa, plant.
West
Virginia Coal
Ew-opean problems and the Middle East.
been a rollback in fuel prices.
'As long as we're meeting, workers had already been laid
Hog and cattle receipts were
Association
officials said
"There were 'several other subje.:ts," Kissinger said when But they also are aaking higher we're optimistic,'' said Gov. off in PenMylvanla, and that also down sharply in many
major underground mines face
asked why Cuba had not been discussed, Gromyko came here speed limits, more generous Mllton J. Shapp of Pennsyl- the number could rise as high major American livestock
a
shutdown because of lack of
Plans
to
conduct
tractor
late .Sunday from Havana, where he had accompanied Soviet fuel allocations, and per- vania, who initiated tbe talks. aa 400,000 unless the strike is markets.
suppliesranging from fuel to
pulling events in the afternoon
Conununist party chief Leonid A. Brezhnev on an official visit. mission to pass along to
Vfoleocefo Reported ·,
settled this week.
Deliveries of other foodstuffs and evening of the first day of roof bolts.
As Gromyko met with Kissinger and later President Nixon, the shippers increaaed coats.
Incidents of shootings, tire
The strike put at least 20,1100 also were affected, with reBy.this weekend, significant
Soviet and Cuban governments released a joint communique
The Nixon administration slashings and other violence Americans out of work Monday ceipts of produce in Eastern the 1974 Meigs County Fair food shortages are expected to
demanding the Western political and economic blocl!ade of Cuba
propoaed to Congress Monday were reported Monday in alone and choked supplies of terminals declining. Buyers were completed Monday night
be ended and that the U. S. naval base atGuantanamo be closed. a joint resolution to speed Alabama, California, Connec- meat and proquce from coast were bidding up prices of when the Meigs County Fair • (Continued on page 10)
financial relief to the in- ticut, Delaware, Illinois, In-- to coast.
potato futures in commodity Board met at the Rock Springs
i
NEW YORK - A GROUP OF GUNMEN burst into a Black dependent truck operators in diana , Iowa, Kentucky,
Food prices, particularly markets,
· fairgrounds.
The tractor e.vents will be
MOIIem moaque in Brooklyn Monday night and opened fire. Four an effort to halt tbe work Maryland, Massachusetts, Mi· meats, had already been rising
Both American Motors and beld in cooperation with the
stoppages.
The
resolution,
The
persons including the sect leader and two of the attackers, were
chigan, Minnesota, Missouri, steadily before tbe strike, and Chrysler shut down some
ldll~ the shootout. The gunmen fatally shot the leader of the New York Times said today, Ohio, Pennsylvania , South the stoppages are expected to plants, and 18id off workers at Soulheasiern Ohio Tractor
sect Identified as Bilal Abullilh Ralunan. Members of the Yasin would permit truckers to pass Carolina, Tennessee and Wls- increase the price pressures.
others, General Motors slowed Pulling Assn. Also discussed
was securing grandstand
M~ue returned the fire and killed two of the intruders, police
entertainment
for the evening
said. A fourth person was also sialn.
hours
of
the
annual
five day
Assistant Police Chief James T, Sullivan said the apparent
fair,
target of the attack was Rahman, minister of tbe mosque, who
Delmar A. Canaday, former
The board went on record as
died at' the scene. Another victim was Ahmed Mohammad, who
Pomeroy
mayor, said today ,
highly commending C. E.
died in the emergency room at Brooklyn Jewish Hospital. Early
Two new members began
A tentative offer of land for to Mrs, Jeanette Thomas , board authorized moving the
that
contrary
to his earlier
Blakeslee, Meigs County
reports had apparently mistakenly named him as leader of the
their duties, and a propoSed the new school and workshop
adult
activities
group
from
the
announcement
he
will not file
Agricultural Agent who has
sect, Another man was wounded and·llsted in critical condition. location for the new school and which has been offered by a director of the achool. FWlds
for the new achool and com- Rutland building to the former served as an ex-officio member petitions of candidacy in the
1be two slain attackers were unidentified,
sheltered workshop was group was discussed. Nothing
munity workshop w_ill come Waddell Grocery building on or the fair board many years. Democrat primary for 92nd
discussed by the Meigs County definite, however, has been from a $250,000 bond issue Uncoln St. in Middleport, The
district representative to the
WASIDNGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON'S chief defense
Board of Retardation Monday finalized on the location. The approved by Meigs County move, however, Is subject to Blakeslee, who has stepped Ohio House of Representatives.
lawyer says tapes and other "evidence" support Nixon's version
night at the courthouse in offer being discussed is from a voters last fall and from the approval of State Mental down frotn the board, has inA Democrat, Canaday said
dicated that he will assiSt in the
of when he first learned oflhe Watergate coverup, not that of
Pomeroy.
group which prefers to remain matching state funds ,
Retardation
officials
and
that
!)is change in plans was
future fairs if he Is needed.
former aide John W. Dean IU. But Special Prosecutor Leon
Beginning new terms of anonym!l"S, but the land is
subject
to
fire
and
building
brought
about by the illness of
The board discussed the
Blakeslee, who has· been . the
Jawonki, wfio has el&lt;Amined much of the same material as the
office on the board
which
1-.
i~
";
r
.,
!1crth I , .,;1(1 , : ..-. ' .
being
offered
free.
The
board
is,
inspections.
adult activities program which
'
agricultural agent here for Ill•'
White House, has said be has seen no basis for a charge of per· supervises the program
for the · stiil open to suggestions_ on is currently being carried out
·(! .... "
·p0or lc·ad(•".:;hip" '
The Rev. Bill Perrin was
jury aga!Dst Dean.
·
retarded of Meigs County were. available land for the ach.ool. in the Rutland Elementary named new secretary. Ed past 33 years, will be honored the Democratic Party in Meigs
with an open house from I :30 to
Since the public ha~ not seen the tapes nor the docwnents in Judge Manning Webs!.!• of the
A minimum of five acres is School building under the Kennedy, chairman, presided. 4:30p.m. Sunday at the Meigs County. He did, however,
question, It was left to guess which side tbe evidence supports. As juvenile and probate cow-ts
required. The board prefers it direction of John Krawaczyn. Others attending were Iris
extend thanks to stale chairof last weekend, when Jaworski declared that prosecutors "are
and Richard Chambers, be centrally located in the Plans are being made for the Carr, Grace Weber, Rick High' School. Presiding over man, William -Lavelle , for
Monday night's meeting was
aware of no basis for a perjury charge" again•t Dean, Jaworski Middleport, a• executive of the county . Anyone ,havi ng
adult 'retarded group to make •Crow, Mrs, Thomas, Judge Fair Board Prfl\ident Wallace assistance offered to hil)l in his ,
,
Continued on Page 10
,
Pomeroy National Bank.
· suggestions may pll!sent them pottery to be sold locally. The Webster a.ld Chambers.
intended1landidacy. '
Bradford.

Mrs. Hayes asks
ews.. in Briefsl· for nomination

..

,

,,

~

·.-

Truckers' strike spreading
Tractor
pulling
planned

CanadJJy will

U:

Easy Wearing New Tent
Shape in Misses Sizes by.
JUST ARRIVED

not file for

Location of school considered

_

DEVON SPORTSWEAR FOR SPRING
Ready-To-Wear Department, Second Floor

Main Store and Warehouse Open Week Days 9:30to 5
OPEN FRIDAYS AND SATURDAYS 9: 30 to 9 P. M.

'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

\
·I

VOL XXV

following a long discussion as to responsibility of the gym,
Ralph Werry agreed to meet with Hargraves to determine a
solution to the problem.
Council has had on order for six months a new police cruiser
from Pomeroy Motor Company. It was agreed last night that
Mrs. Jane Walton, clerk, and Webster make a contact by phone
with General Motors in regard to the delay.
Representatives of the Disabled American Veterans met
with council in regard to public use of a lot on Butternut Ave.,
owned hy the DAY. The lot is 75x100 feet and adjoins Sixth St.
The lot is being abused by village equipment according to
Marvin Kelly, spokesman. Kelly asked that the lot be returned
to its original condition as it is needed for parking space for
members of the DAV.
Council agreed to survey the area and report on its findings
at the nex t meeting. A resolution was approved granting the
clerk to renew notes at the Pomeroy National Bank and The
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
Permission was granted the United Methodist Church at
Enterprise to hold a bake sale Saturday in front of the New York
Clothing House, the Pomeroy Little League to hold Tag Day
May 4 or 11, the Heart Fund to canvass the business establishments Feb. 18 through 23 and house to house on Feb. 24.
Attending were Mayor Dale Smith, Werry, William
Snouffer, Harry Davis and Globakar, councilmen, Mrs. Walton
and Wehater.

•

j

weekend were Mr . and Mrs.

Brice Sayre and baby of
Jackson,Mr.andMrs. No~an
Styer of Waterford, Mr. and
Mrs. Styer also visited the
latter's brother, Paul Sayre,
Saturday.
Debbie Weddle, Cindy
Roush, Cookie ~eddie, Sharon
Roush and Jeff Miller spent
Saturday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Lewis at Clifton.

"deplorable". He stated that he and other residents of that area
have offered on numerous occasions to donate ground to
alleviate the situation.
McKenzie said he and other residents were willing to do
anything they could to help,
Council agreed to make every effort to improve road conditions. Phil Ulohakar, councilman, will inspect the road and
will have gra vel placed on it tmlil repairs can be made, weather
permitting.
Also meeting with COWlcil was Don Griffin of Scientific
Sanitation Inc. in regard to next year's lease for picking up trash
in Pomeroy,
Earlier, Griffin reported that monthly rates would have to
be increased from $2.50 to $3. Council took no action at that time.
Monday night council agreed to prepare an agreement for
Griffin and the other two haulers in Pomeroy and send to them
for approvaL Council will consider the 5&lt;kent increase .
It was suggested that Griffin charge by the bag, or container. Griffin said this was difficult for the drivers to do. Griffin
will meet again with council at the next regular meeting.
A letter having been read from George Hargraves, Meigs
Local School District superil)tendenl, at the last meeting of
council in regard to use of tbe gym at Pomeroy Junior High
School, the issue came up again Monday night. Chief Jed
Webster had said earlier he would not be responsible for the
gym, nor would his department.

Weather

due by Feb. 15

Fairview

because if those under consideration now to fill it weren't interested enough to.run in May tbey won't be interested enough to
devote the time necessary to cope with the ever expandif\1!
problems that wiU be facing , our village in the upcommg
months. " (Signed) Jim Mees. ·"O.S. I believe my past accomplishments as a councilman should be considered enough
proof as to my devotion to the town of Pomeroy , Just ask the
people who elected me and I believe they will agree."
Council, after hearing the letter read, felt that the
resignation of Mees had been submitted and accepted and
should stand.
Council in other business named L. F . Schoenleb as the third
cemetery trustee to fill the vacancy created by the recent death
of Allred Elberfeld. Other cemetery trustees are Roy Mayer and
Jack SeidenabeL
Council approved the third and final reading of the annual
appropriation ordinance for 1974 and the third reading of an
ordinance that will increase tbe natural gas rate.
Meeting with council were James O'Brien, attorney, and
Lester Zinunennan. O'Brien, who spoke on behaU of Zimmerman, asked and got council's permission for Zinunerman to
cross the sidewalk in lront of his property , the late John Sauvage
property on Butternut Ave., in order that be may build a garage.
Also meeting with council were several residents of
Pleasant Ridge whose spokesman was Don McKenzie.
McKenzie said road conditions on Pleasant Ridge were

Light snow spreading over
the state this afternoon
changing to rain south late
tonight. Slowly · rising temperatures tonight. High
Wednesday in the mid 30s
northwest to the mid 40s
southeast.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

New allotments

Contemporary portable features hand·
some roll-around stanq, Walnut
grained finish on durable polystyrene
cabinet. Wide-Angle 172 sq. 1n. p1cture
tube, Super Span VHF/UHF tuners
and AdmiraUnstalli.PiaYh .. -,.

$20,000.00 Maximum Insurance For
Each Depositor

By KATIE CROW
Lou Osborne and John Manley are new members of
Pomeroy ColUlci! today. Both were appointed Monday night by
the COWICi! to fill vacancies arising from recent resigua lions.
Osborne, operator of the Sears Catalog Store iri Pomeroy
fills the vacancy created by the resignation of Elma RusselL
Mrs. Russell resigned due to ill bealth.
Manley, a member of Pomeroy's Fire Dept. and first aid
squad, and past chief of the E-R unit fills the vacancy created hy
the resignation of Jim Mees. Manley will serve the balance of
Mees' terrn, two years.
Mees wbo resigned the first of January due to the fact he
was employed out of the area, submitted a letter to council
Monday which said:
"Recently I submitted my resignation as a member of your
councll, this was done with the belief that I would not be living in
the area and it would not be fair to the people of Pomeroy for me
to remain a member.
Since that letter was submitted and accepted by you, the
situation has changed considerably and I will still be a resident
of Pomeroy. I still have a portion of my term left to serve and it
is my hope that you will reappoint me to serve it.
I realize there are many people in this town who are more
quallfied to serve in my post, but I falled to see them come
forward to file an election petition in the May primary . For th is
very reason I feel I. should be given my council seat hack,

Mason Area

When you choose us to be your
bank for checlcing account and
savings account service, you
are establishing a valuable
connection for use when opportunities or emergencies arise,

POMEROY, OHIO

Osborne, Manley appointed to ·council

Long Bottom Social Notes Richard Hayman died on Monday

is helping to ease
money squeezes
on our customers.

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

Lawrence Gerlach Jr. is dead

'

,.

seat in How;;e

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