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16 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 20, 1974

I Mitchell: blue ribbon defendant
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NEW YORK (UP! ) - Public interest at the scene of the
drama wrought by the criminal trial of two former Nixon
cabinet members seems to be practically ... well .. .
inoperative, but there' is no doubt who the protagonist of the
.piece is going to be - John N. Mitchell. The 60-year-&lt;lld
Wall Street lawyer and former attorney general arrived 50
minutes early in a blue limousine for juryiJicking at the
federal building on historic Foley Square Tuesday and was
greeted by two dozen reporters and no public.
The press made so much over Mitchell that nobody
noticed the arrival right behind him by cab of the other
defendant, Maurice H. Stans, 65, the former secretary· of
commerce and presidential campaign fund-raiser. .
At a motion-making session that delayed the start of Jury
picking until noon, Mitchell, in a brown suit, slouched his
frame in a green leather armchair to the left of his counsel,
one finger probing a cheek on his dour face, then hand to
mouth, hand to chin- deprived by court rule of his faithful
pipe.
John P. Diuguid, of the Stans lawyer team, moved to
have the trial held elsewhere because of the pretrial

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publicity up ' ·to last
ork area.'·
, . ThiS included, he said, even "an ornate coloring book"
and a printed assertion that Stans was "smart rich" and
had a "reputation for W1scrupulousness." It was hard to
know," Diuguid said, "bow any literate individual in this
town" could not be influenced by all this.
"I think we'll have to find out by interrogation of the
jury," Federal Judge Lee Parsons Gagliardi told him.
The black-robed judge, presiding in front of an American
flag on a staff topped by a silver eagle, is a dark-haired
hallow-cheeked former crack trial attorney who is a usually
smiling figure on the bench, quick in colloquy. He pronounces his name Galyardy, without sounding the middle
G.

Clalmes Jurors Ue
- The "finding out" by prospective juror questioning is a
process of preliminary examination to test competency for

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200th birthday
(Continued from page 1)
small costs.
It was agreed to secure a
post office box in Pomeroy for
the commission and Gerard
Hilferty will design a letterhead.
Vernon Weber assured the
commission his firm, the

Quality Printing Co. will print
the letterhead free of charge.
Powell was named w head
publicity and Blakeslee will
manage the finances of the new
group. The Pomeroy National
Bank was named the
deposioory for funds for the
first year of operations.
Mrs. Sheets outlined the
phases which a bicentennial ,
observance may include
6eyond
the
traditional
festivals. She stressed that the
commission could help a great
deal with many projects
throughout the county as a
coordinating organization. She
poln ted out several sources of
available financial help, and
stressed that the state observance group is expecting to
have $200,000 to place on a

FREE
COIN

BANK
(SJ Retail Value&gt;

When you deposit
$100.00 in a new
Passbook Savings
Account
or
add to your present
[account.

Meigs Co. Branch

@
The Athens County
Savings &amp; loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

matching basis for observances. This group will
place money on the basis of
merit of a particular project,
she said.
The observances are w be
designed to reach every
citizen, the goal of the bicentennial, and to reflect upon, the
greatness of the nation.

Ohio
(Continued from page 1)
summer. Simon said the
reserve is "comfortable"
enough to be slightly reduced.
Predicts Nixon Veto
Governors of the 20 states
affected will have authority lo
decide where within their
siates the extra fuel goes.
The emergency energy bill
passed by the Senate would roll
back crude oil prices and give
the President broad powers lo
deal with the energy crisis.
But It still faces difficulties in
the House.
Even after that, Simon oold
Republican lawmakers, Nixon
will veoo the btll because
Congress took out parts he
wants and put in parts he
doesn't like.
John Sawhill, deputy
director of the Federal Energy
Office who was with Simon and
the President for 45 minutes on
Tuesday, said any decision on
rationing should be delayed at
least until April 15 to give
current allocation plans a
chance to work.
"I think we·can manage this
situation without rationing,"
he said.
Before receiving his energy
directors, Nixon met with two
leading Arab foreign ministers
-Omar Sakkaf of Saudi Arabia
and Ismail Faluny of Egypt.
Their talks apparently concentrated on getting Syria and
Israel to agree on troop
disengagement and not on
lifting the Arab oil embargo.
But Sakkaf told a news
conference later that ending
the oil boycott on the United
States woold be a "long and
complicated" affair, dousing
bopes of a speedy solution.

Headquarters
.

For
.

Flexsteel

service. It is called "the voir dire." That means "to SPI"'k
the truth ."

This phrase conflicts with an opinion once uttered, i(1 an
interview, by the eminent Judge Harold R. Medina , now
retired from the U.S. Court of Appeals here.

When

State's engineers
High tributes were paid
recenUy to the late Theodore
Beegle of Pomeroy by the
County Engineers Association
of Ohio In Its annual session.
The state association passed
a resolution in the honor of the
late Mr. Beegle who served as
Meigs County Engineer, 10021940 and 1~1973.
The resolution notes:
That Mr. Beegle was born
Nov. 18, 1901 in Racine, Ohio
and died Feb. 19, 1973 at the
age of 71, survived by his wife,
Loretta Meier Beegle, two
daughters, one son, a brother
and sister and seven grandchildren.
He was a member of the
Sacred Heart Church. He
graduated from Tri-State
College,
Angola,
Ind.,
receiVIng his degree in
engineering. He worked in
factories - in order to go w
college, took correspondence
courses and before graduation

MIDDLEPORT, ,0.

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Mrs. Anise Strausbaugh, 82,
formerly of Meigs County, died
~~ Feb. 8 at Ames, Iowa.
''
Mrs. Strausbaugh was the
daughter of the late Ernest and
Mary Bolen and lived in Vinton
and Meigs Counties before she
married Edward Strausbaugh.
Since then she has resided near
Ames, Her husband died in 1970
and she and her son, Ernest,
continued to live on the farm .

By PAMELA REEVES
CHICAGO (UPI) - For the
second time in a decade, officials of the Teamsters Union
have been charged with "defrauding working men" by
mllking the organization's pension fund for more than $1.4
million.
A federal grand jury on
Tuesday indicted seven men
and three corporations on
charges of obtaining the money
through a phony Investment
scheme, then using it for their
own bouses, alrplarie trips and
other personal pleasures.
Tivo of !bose indicted are
trustees of the Central States,
Southeast and Southwest Areas
Pension Fund, one is a fonner
special financial consultant to
the fund. Four of the seven
allegedly have underworld
ties.
In 1964, . former Teamster
President James R. Hoffa and
five co-defendants were convicted of conspiring to defraud
the pension fund out of $1.7
m1·mon . Hoffa served flve
years in prison for that convictlon.
Among those indicted in the
current case are Albert Matheson of Detroit and Jack Sheelz
of Dallas, both trustees of the
pension fund; Allen Dorfman
of Deerfield, Ill., who recently
served a one year prison term
for fraud; Irwin Weiner of
suburban Niles, Ronald DeAngeles of Port Ritchey, Fla.,
Anthony Spllotro of Las Vegas,
Nev., and Joseph Lombardo of

MEIGS THEATRE
NOT OpEN
COMING SOON
Fri., Sat., Sun.
Mon. &amp; Tues.
Feb. 22-26
Waif Disney's

THAT DA~N
CAT

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the dogs too ).
Believing in keeping busy,
Mrs . McLaughlin, besides
caring for her husband and
delivering her paper route,
finds time for crochetingturning out beautiful table
covers- embroidering and
quilting.

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taught school two years.
First elected in 1932 as Meigs
County surveyor, he held post
until1940 when he resigned to
take a position in the surveying
Dept. of Division 10, Ohio
Department of Highways ,
retiring from this post in 1964.
On July 14, 1966 he was appointed county engineer of
Meigs County to fill the
vacancy created by the death
of Paul Christy. He was elected
in 1966 and again in 1972,
serving until his death.
His strong sense of humor
earned him the nickname,
"Grlnny" which he retained
throughout his life in spite of
having had his right leg am·
putated in 1962 and undergoing
open heart surgery. "Grinny"
Beegle was known for his many
interests and hobbies, among
them Civil War' History, little
league football and baseball,
and a man people enjoyed
knowing and working with.

Chicago.
Spilotro was recently tried
and acquitted in Chicago on
charges of murder in the
slaying of crime syndicate loan
shark ~ Foreman.
Weiner, DeAngeles and
Lombardo also reportedly
have connection with underworld figures.
U.S. Attorney James R.
Thompson said Wetner and
DeAngeles took over a plastics
manufacturing site in Deming,
N.M., In 1971 in which the
Teamsters had already invested $4 million.

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VOL. XXV . NO. 218

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They persuaded the trustees
wbo run the pension fund w
invest more funds, then used
the money for themselves and
the other defendants, Thompson said.
"This is an indictment of
individuals for defrauding
working men," he said. "It is
not an indictment of the union
and it is not an indictment of
the pension fund system."
Thompson said, however,
that federal agents are making
"a continuing investigation of
the Teamsters' pension fund."

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Million gallons
of gasoline gone
DOLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
apparently has already lost
nearly one million gallons of
fuel since the Federal Energy
Office ordered on Feb. 9 a two
per cent cutback in the
Buckeye State's oil allocation,
It was learned today.
A spokesman in the admlnis·
!ration of Gov. John J. Gilligan
told UPI ooday that Continental
Oil Co. and Shell Oil Co. had
already. made their shipments
to lither states.
. , ·coJ\thtental shipped out
*lllf,QOO gallpns and Shell
·,:j(jji il®. "Cilii!li!ent.lil d SheD

federal panel found the law
unconstitutional and the siate
supreme court upheld it.
"Whether favorable or unfavorable to females, the sexual
prejudice implicit in the thesis
that women are entitled to an
exemption not accorded men
imparts to tbe jliry a potential
prejudice, be it ever so subtle
or intangible, that is real and
meaningful," the panel said.
Another panel in San Diego
found the Navy's promotional
practices an unconstitutional
discrimination in"1,avor of
women. ·It ordered the male
challenger, Lt. Robert C.
Ballard, now assigned to the ·
Fleet Training Group in San
Diego, kept on for 13 years.
The cases were among a
dozen granted a review following the Court's return from a
four-week recess.

liY·'.I!i" oil crlsos. ,

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ews::frt"'B;iefi

Creates a New "Old

Wo~d"

With

THE TYROLEAN SET

Lorraine fashions festive sleep companions tn
nylon tricot to attract admiring looks, no matter
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where you happen to be. Multi-colored lace
adds a bright sparkle to the robe and a figure conscious
mini gown with its elasticized back. Both in treasur•"
colors of Flame or Royal.

Lingerie Department, 2nd Floor

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

BUY I
Set-of-4
br~id rugs

95

Reg. 89.95
Handsome. long·wearing
rugs that're at home in any
room. A must if you have
Colonial furniture. You get
a 9x12', 30"x54" and two
20"x32" rugs.

I,NGELS FURNITURE
FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
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sat'd

wi!li ~l.lfte · ·omcials before
taitfillt . ·acilons !bat could
seil.~sly aff~t irur way of life
::~.tid ' our economy." said
GiUl&amp;an,

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NOW YOU KNOW
The last direct descendant of
Shakespeare died in 1670. ·

992-2635

trle'ii~ oti! "

:;;~o o! tp~ slates liaroof hit

LANCASTER, Ohio (UP!) An outbreak of influenza has
closed all 'public and nonpublic
schools in this central Ohio
community until at least next
Monday. County health officials
ordered the schools closed after
2,244 students were reported absent Tuesday. About 8,000 students are enrolled in th&lt;! public school system here.

$69

.lid:

I!\. West
. viiilnfu
. ' ' and KeiiiOOk
. ,' y

loRRAINE

UNIT CALLED

RACINE - The Racine ER
squad was called Tuesday at
8:10 p.m. for CUHord Beegle,
64, Racine, RD, who was taken
to
Vet'II'ans
Memorial
Hospital.

~bd:

Tuesday, that Ohio will not lose
any more gasoline than it has
already lost between Feb. 9
and Feb. 19.
The spokesman in the Gilligan administration said:
"We've probably aiready lost
it," meaning the two per cent
cutback.
Some members of Ohio's
congressional delegation and
Gilligan interpreted the FEOs
statements to mean the order
for the two per cent cut had
been rescinded .
Gilligan sai&lt;l Wedneaday he
hlid been intotmed by the FEO
o!fice I"··Clilca(!o that it had
made a. mistake and Ohio
w.quJ&lt;I· no~ Sllffer the two per

ii!dil)it~:'iiPOkl\~.
'
.~;~~itiJ .C!i, of.Oiilli ®s
~~tng. ~;!l!IO. S'ai!Qns or cent l'eilil&lt;iuon.
''lfui·,l :lll!liii:t utge the Feder·
:~a &amp;rtli: t\\'0 BO~Iin pliijJ.Js
al , Ener\1¥ Offi&lt;:e to consult

FLU BUG

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nape

mysterious co one

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HISTORY DOMPILED- Mrs. Agnes Hill, Tuppers Plains, widely known for her work on
the history of Athens and Meigs Counties, right, presents Elizabeth Hilferty, coordinator of the
Meigs Museum, a 186-page history with photographs of Coolville. Mrs. Hill compiled the
history, The book will go into the museum's library.

Cheshire; nine grandchildren,
and 24 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home in Middleport at 2 p.m.
Friday with the Rev. Merlin
Teets officiating. Burial will be
in Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime after
10 a.m . Thursday .

PHONE 992-2156

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1974

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9:30 TO 5 PM

Archie Ellis
dies Wednesday

Pitch and su.lfur were burned
to create suffocating gases
during the Peloponnesian War
between Sparta and Athens in
431 to 404 B. C., sigmfying what
is believed to have been the
introduction O£ gas in warfare.

Area

I tor

THURSDAY

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Now You Know

enttne

Devoted To The Inreretfl Of The

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Mrs. Strausbaugh is also
survived by a daughter,
Emogene Osborn of Musca tine,
Iowa; four grandchildren; a
sister, Mrs. C. E. Stout of
Albany, and a brother, Albert
Bolen of Dexter.
Burial was in Memory
Gardens near Ames. Mrs.
Stout, the sister of Albany,
went to Ames to attend the
funeral and remained there for
a week S visit.

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1ncreasmg cloudiness and
warmer today. Highs upper 40s
and 50s. Rain likely tonight-and
Friday. Becoming winds late
tonight and Friday . Lows
tonight upper 30s to mid 40s.
Highs Friday in the 50s.

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56
greatREEDSVILLE
Mrs. children,
Marteena B. Rockhold, 92, grandchildren and 15 greatReedsville, died Tuesday great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will he held
evening at Camden Clark
Memorial Hospital, Parkers- Friday at 2 p.m. at the Eden
burg, following an extended United Brethren Church with
the Rev. Eldon Blake ofillness.
Mrs. Rockhold was born ficiating. Burial will be in the
here, the daughter of the late church cemetery, Friends may
John and Alice Blake Barber. call at the White Funeral Home
She was also preceded in death in Coolville after noon Thursby her husband, Marcellus day.
Rockhold in 1936. Others
preceding her, a daughter, six
brothers and one sister.
Mrs. Rockhold was a lifelong
resident of Reedsville and
attended the Eden United
CHESHIRE - Archie Ellis,
Brethren Church.
80, died at his home near here
She is survived by two early Wednesday morning. The
Middleport E -R squad an daughters, Mrs. Floyd (Lucy) swered
a call to the residence
Schultz and Mrs. Claude but Mr. Ellis was dead upon the
(Gladys) Smith, both of Reeds- squad's arrival.
Born April B. 1893 in
ville; three sons, Clifford, Cheshire,
Mr. Ellis was
Walter and Harvey, all of preceded in death by his
Reedsville; three sisters, Mrs. parents; a daughter, Ada, a
and four sisters .
Edith Grimm, Belpre; Mrs. grandson,
Surviving are his wife , Ina
Bertha Reed, Empire, Ohio, Wise Ellis; two sons, Charles
and Mrs. Martha Holsinger, W.. of Altamont, Ill., and
Stanley A., Circleville ; two
Reedsville; two brothers, daughters.
Mrs. Ruth Cheadle,
Elbert and Leonard Barber, Point Pleasant. and Mrs. Fred
Searls,
near
both of Reedsville; 18 grand- (Martha)

Supreme Court
•
resumes actton
WASHINGTON ZUPI) The Supreme Court is accepting
more
sex
discrimination cases this term
than ever before.
It has already ruled pregnant
teachers may not be required
wleave their jobs four or five
montha before an expected
birth, and In a few weeks the
court will ·hear arguments on
whether a state may exclude
nonnal pregnancy from cover-·
age under its disability insurance program.
Tuesday the Supreme ·Court
agreed to consider two more
questions in this area of law
dealing with:
-State statutes excluding
women
jury duty unless
. they askfrom
to serve.
-The Navy's practice of
dismissing male lieutmants
who have been passed over
twice for promotion, while at
the same time guaranteeing
women Jleutmants 15 years of
active commissioned service.
These cases will not be heard
until next fall.
, The jury question came up in
Louisiana after a •three-judge

An extensive contract for the town of
Mason water storage project was
presented to council during regular
session last by consultants on the water
soorage problem with council turning the
matter over to the city attorney for advice before taking action.
In other matters, council agreed to
check the breaking up of the pavement on
Adams Street as requested by Howard
Johnson, Jr. and also check the city fire
hydrant situation at various locati?ns in
the town and the littering occurrmg In
the town as requested by Russell Barton.
The financial statement for the two
deparbnents were read with the general
fund balance on February 18 standing at
$1,283.73-bills, $244.05, leaving a balance
of $1,039.68 .. Water department balance
$3,991.88 bills, $:417.87, balance $3574.01.
Payment of bills and approval of
previous minutes were given.
Present for the meeting were Mayor
Ira Atkinson, recorder Kenneth Reynolds
and councibnen Walter Werry, George
VanMeter, Robert Roach and Dayton
Raynes.

W~ther

Mrs. Rockhold died Tuesday

Teamsters in trouble again

Feb. 20·21

BAKER FURNITURE

One of the best Daily Sentinel
carriers b Mrs. Florence
McLaughlin, long-time Middleport
resident.
Her
customers vouch for her.
Mrs. McLaughlin has lived
on Oliver St., with her husband,
Thomas, for the past 28 years.
Mr. McLaughlin is disabled.
A vetern of carrying The
Daily
Sentinel,
Mrs .
McLaughlin has been good for
business. When she began her
route almost three years ago,
she delivered 39 Sunday
editions and 41 daily papers.
She has built her route up to 84
Sundays and 88 daily patrons.
Known for her excellent
service, Mrs. McLaughlin has
learned just where wplace the
newspaper for each customer. ·
One paper is delivered to the
lap of an invalid, for whom
Mrs. McLaughlin also runs
errands as needed.
Carrying in the general area
of Grant, Oliver, Hysell and
Beech Sts., Mrs. McLaughlin
walks her route in about an
hour and 45 minutes. She loves
her people along the route (and

Mrs. Strausbaugh died in Iowa

honor Mr. Beegle

WednesdaY. &amp; Thursday

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"Jurors," said the judge, "lie like hell."

He meant they stretch the truth during voir dire in an
effort to get out of being picked to sit in the jury box.
The ritual of opening federal court is often intoned hereif the clerk at hand is a sidewalktalk native New Yorker-in
a charming admixture of Old English and Brooklynese
something like this :
"Heah ya, heah ya, heah ya! All poisons having business
with the United States District Court for the Southern
District of New York, drawr near, give your attention, and
ye shall be hoid."
Veniremen Qulued
This ..accomplished Tuesday, Judge Gagliardi told 79
prospects seated before him that the jury would be locked
up for the duration of the trial, once sworn in-that is,
sequestered at night-and said he wanted to know if this
would cause them any hardship.
The prospects then were questioned one by one. Since the
prospects took up most of the seats, only 10 places were
available for the press. Tbose 10 were to come out and tell
the rest of the working press what went on. The favored
institutions of communicatlon~elected by the courtincluded something called the New York Law Journal.
The judge, in this case, will ask all the juror questions. He
called up the prospects individually to the bench and
questioned each one, with attorneys from both sides
present.
the 10 informing reporters came out, they reported
this. They also said the questions and answers were in a
tone of voice inaudible to tbem in the back row of the room.
Anyhow, oo the day, 94 were questiooed and 58 excused.
There is no question of an interested public hanging
around the corridor outside the cour1room. No one, press
included, is allowed w loiter there.

Washington's .Birthday sale ads appear today

Good'service her mark

Star of the scene

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ay·uulted Press lnternatloual
DOLUMBUS - GOV. JOHN J. GILLIGAN warned Wed·
nesday he was concerned ovei- the possibility of panic buying of
gasOline in the issuance of false information from the federal
govenunenl. Gilligan said he had been informed the Federal
Energy Office in Chicago admitted it made a )llistake and Ohio
would not suffer tbe 2 per cent reduction in gasoline announced
last week.
"It is a tribute to the common sense of the people of Ohio that
they kept' their heads and're~ to panic," 5aid Gilligan. "The
!Qng-lines bein@ experienced in other states have not formed here
In Ohio and we're confident they won't. But. I again urge the
Federal Engergy Office to consult with state officials before
taking actions that could seriously affect our way of life and our
ecO~my, " he said.
WASIUNGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON hlis decided to
posjpqne a journey \0 Europe in Aprll which he had planned in
C()nn~tion with the 25th anniversary c~lebration of the Norih
Atlaritic Treaty OrganiZation, administration officials said

to&lt;!aY·

. · · Nixon now hopes to reschedule the trip · for sometime in
september or October' officialS disclosed., They said the
President, assessing luttii'e travel, "decided that.this was not he
time" for him to ·lake his EurOpean swing., He had been considermg a twO:week exi:ursion with state visits to six countries Great'Bi-ltain, France, Italy, West 'Gennany, Belgium and the
Netherlands.
NEW YORK
SELECTING OF QUAUFIED juror
prospects proceded entirely In private today in the MitchellStans cabinet scandal trial, with a· federal J.udge feeding the
questions only in the prelience of the lawyers, defendants, and
stenographers . .Queried -as to th\!' priority. of ·plckfn8 a panel
outSide the publiC 'exposure of a oolirtroom, a member of the
defense' legal' staff said the· American Bar Association had
i;ecOmmended such .procedure in cases of unusual publicity
portent.
·The ldea .ls to _keep. the . conten~of the questions out of the
papers and off the. IIi!' so thai .prospective· jorors. cannot figure
how w a!)SWer ·sa as Iii dOdge .duty. .With. prospects being
eUminedJndividuaily .iJi .the·private quarters of Judge Lee-P.
~agllardl after a itial delay of mootlis of paiTytng and stalling
aiKI a }'IQ:1&gt;lcking ctt:ag of a .&lt;lay IU)d a half because of legal
IOgistillS, the judge· said \\'ednesday:
"It is a slow procesS, but we are making progress."
WASHJNGr&lt;:JN - .AFEOE;RAL JUDGE has spurned

claims

by fonner pre8idential aide Dwight L. Chapm tliat star

Watergate witness John W. ~n Ill should be barred from
(Continued on Page 6)

"If the Federal Energy

Office gives us our fair share of
gasoline and if our citizens
continue to remain cairn and
conserve as much gasoline as
possible, lam confident we can ·
avoid the very unpleasant
alternative of gas rationing,"

said Gilligan.
The Sohio spokesman said if
the Feb. 9 order had been
rescinded his company doesn't
know anything a bout it and is
continuing to send the 21,000
gallons a day to the two plants
in Kentucky and West Virginia.
The spokesman emphasized
however, that he did not think
the two per cent curtaUment
would do that much damage to
the Ohio supply.
Gilligan also said he was
concerned over the possibility
of panic buying of gasoline in
the issuance of false information from the federal
goverrunent.
'11 is a tribute .to the common sense of the people of Ohio
that they kept their heads and
refused to panic," said Gilligan . "The long lines being ex·
perienced in other states
haven't formed here in Ohio
and we're confident they
won't."

Hopes
mount for
Patricia
HILLSBOROUGH , Calif.
(UP!) - Hopes for an imminent breakthrough in 'the
Patricia Hearst kidnap case
mounted today as her parents
anxiously waited for word of
their missing daughter.
It ·was learned arly today
that FBI special agent Charles
Bates, head of the San Francisco bureau, would be in Los
Angeles to join a scheduled
news conference there involving U. S. Attorney General
William Saxbe and FBI
direcoor Matthew Kelley.
The
conference
was
scheduled for 9:30 a. m. (12:30
p. m.) EDT in the Beverly
HiltOn hotel in Beverly Hills,
Calif. Adding to the rumors ·of a
possible new development
were reports of a heavy influx
of FBI ·agents inoo the San
Francisco Bay Area in recent
hours. (Overnight report on
Page 2) .

ATLANTA (UP!) - Editor means thari a telephone ,"
John R. "Reg" Murphy of the Fields said.
Atlanta Constitution, Georgia's
At 9:20 p. m., WAGA-TV
largest morning newspaper, received a ca ll from a
apparently was kidnaped "colonel," who claimed, "We
Wednesday night by a group got Reg Murphy." He said he
calling itself the "American ,wa s from the Amerlcan
Revolutionary or Uberation Revolutionary Army or the
Army.''
American Liberation Army,
Aman who identified himself the station spokesman wasn 't
as a "colonel" in that army sure which. Nothing is known
told a Constitution official thut bere about either organization,
the newspaper would hear if such exist.
further from the group.
Shortly afterward, Murphy's
"We have w assume that
.
Reg has been kidnaped," said
Constitution executive editor
Bill Fields this morning.
Murphy, 41l-year-&lt;lld father of
two teen-age daughters, left his
•
•
home around 7:30 p. m. EDT
Wednesday with a man who
claimed he wanted to discuss a
lllness continued tu plague
news story.
Meigs
Local Schools today.
At 9:15 p. m., Jim Minter,
While
attendance in some
managing editor of the Constitution, got a telephone call schools had improved "just a
from a man who said Murphy trifle" over attendance earlier
this week, m some cases abhad been kidnaped.
senteeism
increased. Earlier
He said the Constitution
would hear further from him this week, the highest rate of
by anollier means, "meaning, I absenteeism went to about 30
assume, that it would he other per cent. Today, however, one
school went to 33.5 per cent, the
Pomeroy Elementary School,
where 132 of the total student
body of 394 were absent. The
Salisbury school had 58 out of
181 students absent (32 per
cent) and the Bradbury School
had 40 of 127 absent (31.4 per
cent).
Here is the situation at other
schools in the district:
CHARLESTON, W. Va. Harrisonville 20 of 127, Meigs
(UP!)- Gov. Arch Moore has High School, 222 of 002, Meigs
placed restrictions on the sale Junior High, 87 of 526, Rutlandof gasoline in West Virginia to Elementary 53 of 226, Salem
help eliminate long waiting Center, 23 of 144 and Midlines at service stations and dleport Elementary 52 of 244.
stop panic buying.
Moore issued a two-part
EXCURSION OFFERED .
executive order Wednesday
Earl Ingels, president of
which stipulated no one would
lhe Pomeroy Chamber of
be permitted to buy gasoline
Commerce, · announced that
anywhere in the state unless
be has contracted for the
his fuel gauge showed his tank
excursion bodt, Chaperone,
was three-(!uarters empty or
to run out of Pome~oy on
less . At the same time,
Saturday, May 18, . under
gasoline dealers were ordered
chaml&gt;er sponsorship.
not to fill any gasoline cans or
Tickets for the 11oat trip will
other containers unless they
be plaCed·. on sale Iii local
were certain the fuel would be
buslues' l!ouses In the near
used for non-driving purpOses. future.
The governor said his action,
to be enforced by state police,
was aimed at "easing the
public mind that the gasoline is
there." He said he hoped the
measures would "bring a little
bit of order"" to areas where
hoarding of gasoline was
Mr. and Mrs . Russell Milts,
reported.
Middleport,
left today fur
Moore said he acted under
terms of the 1973 Emergency Pittsburgh where they were
Services Act, which he used called by the unexpected death
earlier this month to activate of their 14-year old grandson ,
the National Guard to deal with George Munns, son of Harry
and Adrienne Mills Munns .
the truckers strike;
.
The youth was found dead
Those emergency provisions
Thursday.
An autopsy will be
also empowered the governor
held
to
detennlne
the·cause 'of
to Institute an odd-even
rationing plan in Monongalia, death. The Mills were joined by
Harrison, Marion, Taylor and their other daughter, Rae Ann
Preston counties where pur- of Cleveland on the trip to
chases were mainly limited to Pittsburgh.
Followmg funeral services in
10 gallons per customer . The
Pittsburgh,
the body will be
governor said that plan
brought
here
for burial in
remained in effect, but the rest
of the state is under no Gravel Hill Cemetery at
rationing system except for the Cheshire. George W'l,~ one of
restrictions he announced seven children of Mr. and Mrs.
Munns.
_Wednesday.

•
Ah sent eeism

contmumg

wife, Virgima, received a call
from aman who said, " lf yJu
want to know about your
husband, call Jim Minter."
More than 14 hours after the

abduction, Fields said, "There
have been no further developments. We are simply waiting.
There has been no contact at
all.''

Asked il Murphy had in-

morning newspaper , writes a
column that appears daily on
the editorial page . Today's
column dealt with the

Mrs . Murphy told UP! this
morning that her husband had
left home at 7:30p. m. with a
man "and he hasn't returned.
''He is missing Wlder s uspi~
cious circumstances, but I

don't know anything else," she
said. "I'm waiting for word
from him."
Neither police nor the FBI in
Atlanta would comment on the

formed anyone on the newspa-

case .

per that he had an appointment
Wednesday night to discuss a
news story, Fields replied:
"Reg meets people every day
and every night and there
would he no reason to tell
anyone ... whether Murphy
knew the man, that 1 don't
know _''
Mrs. Murphy, keeping a vigil
for her husband in the family 's
rambling brick hom e in an old

A spokesman for 'the FBI
External Affairs Division in
Washington sa id he had
nothing so far on the case.
Pressed for comment, he
added : "I'm not able to talk
about it or this organization.
Check back and we may have
something later."
Murphy recently wrote a
column on the dangers of such
kidnapings as that of Patricia
Hearst, daughter of Randolph
A. Hearst, president of the San
Francisco Examiner.
Murphy, who succeeded
Pulitzer Prize winner editor
Eugene Patterson on the

section in northeast Atlanta,

appeared to be holding up very
well. "Reg is a wise person. He
is a strong person. The family
wants to cooperate in ·every
way. n she said.

congressional

election

in

Michigan's 5th District.
Murphy followed in the
Constitution's strong stand
opposing segregation - a
pattern considered liberal for
the South - set by Patterson
and the late publisher Ralph
McGill.
In recent years, however,
Murphy and the Constitution
often had been criticized . by
activists in the Atlanta black
community.

Murphy, a native of Hoschton, Ga ., joined the Constitution in 1961 as a political
editor. He had been the Atlanta
bureau chief for the Macon
Telegraph.
Married to the former
Virginia Rawls, and father of
two daughters, 16 and 12,
Murphy studied history and
politics as a Nieman fellow at
Harvard.

Moore
limits
buying

Grandson found
dead Thursday

""' ••

loi'

He got told!
WASHINGTON iUPI)
Conversation

overheard

Wednesday between an
obviously angered Federal
Energy Office ofllclal and a
government motorpool
driver:

,

Ofllclal: "What du you
mean you can't take me
there?''

Drhrer: ' 'I got no gas."
Official: "Oh."
ASK TOWED
James Barnes Thomas, Jr.,
21, Lincoln Hill, office worker,
and Darla Ne utz ling, 19,
Lincoln Hill, secretary ; Dallas
Blevins, Jr., 25, Middleport,
and Elia Magnusdotter, 23,
Kefiavik, Iceland.

Legion honors five members

Memorial services were
conducted for five members
who died in 1973 when Drew
Webseter Post 39 of the
American Legion of Pomeroy
met
Tuesday evening with
MEET SUNDAY
Commander
George
The SEOAL Sportswriters
and Broadcasters will meet Nesselroad presiding. They
Sunday at 1 p. m. at Jolly were Arthur Wandllng, Alfred
Lanes in Jackson to select all- Elberfeld, Lawrence A. Smith,
league basketball team. Loop Albert Werry and William
coaches are invited to attend to · Baronick.
Thirty-eight members were
aid in making recompresent,.
along with guests,
mendations for the all-league
Roger Davis, Frank Jentsen,
selections .

'

!•

I -

.

'""'

'

'

GIRL SDOUT OOOKIES, ANYONE' - These Meigs
County girl scouts will be among those taking orders next
week for cookies. They are left to right, Paige Smith,
Pomeroy Cadette Troop 52; Trina Gibbs, Middleport Cadette ·
Troop 185; Debbie Morrison, Rutland Junior Troop; and.
Tammy Haley, Rutland Brownie Troop.

Scouts prepare
operation cookie
The annual cookie sale of the
Big Bend Neighborhood girl
scouts will get underway next
week,
·
Scouts will take orders for
cookies from March 1 through
March 10, and then will deliver
the cookies sometime between
April 24 and May 4.
The annual cookie sale is the
largest fund raising activity of

Appreciation is
expressed hy JCs

eighth district commander,

certificate from the National
and John Bramer, eighth Commander for 50 years of
district adjutant.
continual membership in the
New member introduced was American Legion .
Don Laning, and members
Members were invited· to
initiated were Richard Karr, attend the Ladies' meeting,
Rex Cummings, Thomas Feb . 26, to hear the Rev .
Hysell, Donald Laning, Charles William Perrin spea k on
Fry and Ivan L. Wood .
'Americanism'. Past ComThe District Commander manders Nigh t, complete with
presented the post with a, a meal , will be held Feb. 27.
plaque for having achieved its
Oyster stew was served prior
quota before Nov. 11 and Er· to the mee ting by Charles
nest Lallance was presented a Hayes.
·!&gt;

The Meigs County Jaycees
would like to thank all those
people
who
donated
newspapers last Sunday for
their pickup drive.
The Jaycees also apologize to
anyone
who had
old
newspapers on the curb that
were not picked up because of
possible oversight.
Anyone whose p~pers were
missed may have them picked
up by phoning 992-5986 or 992·
7725.

Black Diamond Girl SCoitt
Council with t.he sales
providing funds for improvement and maintenance of
scout camps, some camp ·
administrative and operating
expenses, and troop program
activities.

The selling price of the
cookies baked by the American
Biscuit Co. is $1.00. Chocolate
chip, sandwich cremes, thin
mints, sugared shortbread, ·
and peanut butter patties 'are
the kinds available and·all.Bre
'
family s.tze boxes.
Of ·the $1 for each box; 51 J,&gt;
cents is the cost of the.cookies,
37¥.. cents goes toward. ca10p
development ~nd "· d!Fect -ser"
vice to troops, and 11 cents
goes into the troop trelis\li'Y.
Goal of the Black.: Diamond
Council is 450,000 · pilcJ&lt;ages.
· Mrs. Thomas Smith is coolde
chairman for the Big Bend
Neighborhood and Tuesday
night hosted a troop chairmen'
meeting at which time
literature and order forms
were distributed.

'

�•

3 - ,The Daily Sent mel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0, Feb 21, 1974

Strip mine laws about
to lose teeth in Ohio
send the bill to a subcorruruttee , but he dented tt lets up on
reclamation reqUirements for
coal operators
" It elim.inates double bondstnp mme reclamation law, ts
starting to move m the sta le mg." he satd, expla1010g rrunSenate , apparently wtth en- er s must now excavate certam
couragement from the coal tracts under more than ooe
bond
to
guarantee
indus!!)
The Senale Agnculture, Con- reclamation
As mtroduced last April by
servatiOn and Envtronment
Commtttee held a ftrst heanng Armstrong and Sen Robert T.
Wednesday on legiSlation, dor- Secrest, IJ.Cambrtdge, the bill
mant for 10 months, which would
- Eliminate a requtrement
would reduce penalties for
strtp mme vtolahons, trimh- that a strtp mme operator's
bondtng requtr emenls and license be revoked if he vt&lt;&gt;loosen the requrrements for lates regulations three times
- Reduce the !me and Jail
reclamauon plans
term for mulltple vtolattons of
At the same time
state
strtp nune rules
The
commtttee
opened
Eliminate
a reqwrement
heanngs on a btll reqwmg the
stale to pay land owners for that mme operators draw thetr
any coal they are forbtdden to
CO LUMBUS (UP! ) - LegtSlatton to soften , and to some
cases reverse, strtngent provtstons ill Ohio's two-year-&lt;&gt;ld

mme

because
reclamatiOn law

GffiL GYMNASI'S - Members of the Metgs Marauder gJJ"ls' gymnasttco learn 1"'5" on the
uneven parallel bars durmg a break from practtce Wednesday afternoon Team members are,
bottom bar from left, Becky Thomas, Dtane Rtdgeway, Mal) Blaettner, and top bar, fr om left
Kathy Werry , Debbte McLaughlin and Ltsa Thomas Coach Kenda Chane) ts standtng at the
left

Simon hoping,
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Energy admirustrator Wtlliam E
Sunon hoped today to water
down the ot! troubles of
allocatton.,;tarvedstates, while
two federal JUdges have expressed doubts about the
legality of hiS polictes
A spokesman for Sunon satd
he would ask the Naltonal
Governors Conference executive comnuttee to be patient
and cooperative
Simon, Budget Director Roy
Ash and TransportatiOn Secretary Claude S Brillegar were
to meet all day wtth seven
governors ," tncludtng Maryland's Marvm Mandel, who
sued Sunon Wednesday All but
Mandel are on the Governor's
Conference steenng panel
U S Dtstrtcl Judge Dorsey
Watkins of Baltimore Wednesday ordered Simon to court to
defend Federal Energy Offtce
(FEO ) gasotine allocations,
and Federal Judge William C
Frey in Tucoon, Artz , ruled
agamst Sunon's ban on prtonty
gasoline sales to regular
customers.
Representattves of servtce
station dealers m Washmgton
demanded that tbe FEO allow
them to raiSe pnces lest there
artse a "sertous s1tuahon,"

mcludmg the posstbtlity of a
nationwide

pumpout" that
could leave filling stations dry
11

While governors and gas
TISOT'S VICfORY
APRICA, Italy (UPI) Cristma Tjsot won the Italian
women's spectal slalom IItle
Wednesday after defendtng
champton Claudta Gtordam fell
and dropped out The 19-yearold Ttsol, recently marned to
nattonal skt coach Franco
Arrtgom, clocked an aggregate
85 62 seconds for two runs
KATHY'S CONTRACT
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
Kathy
Kuykendall, the
youngest tenms player ever to
turn professional, Wednesday
became the fourth player to
stgn wtth the Phtladelphta
Freedoms of World Team
Tenms ( WTT) The 17-year-&lt;&gt;ld
MISS Kuykendall was obtamed
m a trade wtth Los Angeles for
the rtghts to Australia's Dtane
Fromholt.z

•••
hoping

Judge Walktns ordered
dealers denounced Stmon's
Simon
to appear m court UJ
pobctes, the emergency energy
btll was delayed at least a week Annapolis Fnday and defend
and posstbly doomed by a the allocalton system The
House committee's refusal to swt sats Sunon vtolated the
expedite the measure passed Emergency Petroleum Act of
by the Senate Tuesday The 1973 by provtding Maryland
Senate verston mcludes a wtth less gasolille than other
rollback of crude otl prtces and states
"The federal allocatton sysprestdential authonty to untem
has not worked ," Mandel
pose rattonmg
satd
"We have been rrusled,
Mandel, former chaii'IIUin of
the Governors Conference , given erroneous mformat10n,
ftred the ftrst shot Wednesday and we must get our fatr share
m an apparent state revolt of gasoline or we face a crtsts
agatnst the allocatiOn syslem tn the commg week ''
Based on the estunate of a 16
when he •ued Sunon and 20 oil
per cent nattonal shortage, the
comparues
Mandel satd Tuesday's re- governor sa1d, Maryland
lease of 2 per cent more fuel to should recetve about 120
the state was far less than tl million gallons of gasolme this
needs Mary land offtcials satd month, while the FEO plan
the state will get only n per provtded only 101 mtlhon
cent of tis promised allocation gallons.

or

Ohto 's

- A subcommittee prepared
ooact, perhaps as early as next
week, on a bill giVIng stnppers
of other mmerals temporary
authortty w mme and sell a
limited amount of coal wtthout
complytng
wtlh
coal
reclamation provtttons
Expe&lt;ted To Agitate
The sudden flurry of acttvtty,
expected to agttate en vtronmentalists, apparently
was prectpttated by the coal
mdustry, whtch has been
trytng to boost production of
Ohto coal to offset fuel shortages
"The Ohio Reclamation Association (ORA) asked for a
hearillg on the bill," satd Sen
Harry L Armstrong, R-Logan,
chamnan of the Agriculture
Commtttee and one of the prmctpal sponsors of the proposal
to soften stnp nune requtrements
The ORA, an association of
coal nune opera tors, opposed
strmgent provtstons 10 the 1972
stnp mme law, contend10g tt
would drtve m10ers out of bust·
ness Since then, the lobby
group has pomted to dec!10mg
coal productton
Armstrong satd he plans to

Gas siphoning is back
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
scarctty of gasotine and weekend closmg of servtce stabons
have revtved the JUvenile
prank of gasotine mphon10g
Police departments
throughout Ohto report an
mcrease m the number of
complatnts about emptted
tanks and Potson Control
Centers are warrung people
about the dangers of
swallowmg gasotine
Offtcers at police headquarters m Cleveland, Toledo, Akron. Youn~stown , Columbus,
Dayton and C10cmnalt stfted
through reports and agreed the
number of stphoning complamts are becommg more
frequent but pomted out no
arrests have been made
"We've had a lot of siphonillg
cases m the last month, but I
couldn't gtve you any specific
figures ," sa ad a Cmcmnati
police o!!tcer "There haven't
been any arrests yet Mostly,
we get calls from people who
work mghts and leave thetr
cars
parked
10
unsuperviSed lots "
May Get Worse
-"It's JUSt a nui.Sance," accordmg to the Columbus Police
Department "And I suppose tt

Hearsts
• •

wattmg,
•

praymg
HILLSBOROUGH, Cahf
(UP! ) -For the mother and
father of Patrtcta Hearst,
IIIStde thetr whtte stucco home
wtth red roses ctimbmg the
walls, today was a dsy of
I
wattmg, bopmg,' praymg
Mostly wattmg
There was no word from the
grandiloquent "Symbtonese
LiberatiOn Army" as to
whether Randolph A Hearst's
$2 nullion free food program
began to meet thetr derna~
for release of the gtrl who
was 20 Wednesday
FBI special agent Charles
Bates satd he believed the
kidnaped grrl was safe and
would he freed unharmed, but
he admitted he had no specifics
to back up that optimism
Bates satd the FBI would
take no action which rrught
endanger Patrtcta's life so long
as she IS held prisoner but he
added thai there would be no
other course but to go after the
kidnapers once she ts free.
The scene outside the Hearst
home was rerrunlscent of the
hysteria surrounding the kidnapmg of the son of Charles
Lindbergh 40 years ago
Reporters In Trees
· A San Simeon in the style of
the late Wtlliam Randolph
Hearst, wtlh turrets and pools
and otl pamtmgs, the childhood
home of Patrtcta Hearst ISO't.
But the news empire founder
never had televtsion cameras
and microphones clustered
before hts front door or
reporters in nests up m the tall
pme trees.
If the abduction were not so
grimly stark, tt might almost
have been a funny occaston.
Peter Cleveland, a reporter
for radio station KGO, was
awakened by a call from his
news editor in New York.
"ThiS IS the ABC tree," he
satd
The edttor blew his stack
demanding to know the identity
of the speaker and Cleveland
blandly replied: ''This ts an

20 areas of

night study
RIO GRANDE - Twenty
evenmg and mght courses
rangmg from Cost Accounting
to Water Safety will be offered
during Spnng ~rter at Rio
Grande College, •~-cording to
Dr
Herman L
Koby,
executive VIce pres~dent
RegtstrattOn for sprmg
quarter ends Tuesday, March
5, classes begin Wednesday,
March 6, and end May 17
The followtng classes will be

offe~:1:ness
Adriimtstrafton
Real Estate Law, 6 30 9 30
p m Thursday

-.

thermore, there lS more,
calctum m the two per cent fat
mtlk product because tt IS
fortified wtth nonfat milk solids
that contam calcturn It also
conta10s more protem per
glass. There is even more
calctum and protem per glass
m the fortifted skim rmlk
products
You have listed the fat
soluble vttamtns. Actually,
vtlamm A IS not very dependent upon fat for absorption.
You must go to a lot of
trouble to elmunate fat from
your dtet. That two per cent fat
m11k you drink has about a
thtrd of tts calories from fat.
Vegetables, mcluding corn
(corn 011), beans and most
others, plus many frutls, toeluding such things as rasphernes all have some fat ill
them II ts a small portion by
weight but ofl&lt;ln a stgniftcant
part of the calortes The
problem then ~limtting the fat

DAJLY SENTINEL CARRIER - Pa tty Hoffman, 14year-&lt;&gt;ld daughter of Mr and Mrs Perry Hoffman , has been
delivenng the Daily Sentinel 10 Mtddleport for two years
Patty IS a freshman at Metgs Htgh School She purchased a
bike from her earn10gs from her roule In addttwn to enJOymg bike nding, Patty loves to swtm Hers ts one of the
lar~er routes, havmg 85 customers Patty has two ststers and
three brothers. Her siSter Frances helps her wtth the route
when she can Patty's father ts employed at Holsum Bakery
m Mtddleport

E •R fund drive

Oral
Bus1ness
Com
mun•cat1on .
S S 50 p m
Monday through Thursda y
Advanced
Bus1ness
Management,
6 9
p m
Tuesday
Cost Account tng 6 30 8 30

p m Mooday and Wednesday
Bus 1ness Law 11 L 6 30 9 p m
Wednesday
Managenal Math, 6 8 p m
Tuesday and Thursday
Busmess Education
Advanced Shorthand 5 5 50
p m Monday through Thurs
daY
Advanced Ec.i'~~.. t•on 11 , 5
5 50 p m Mooday , Wednesday
Fnday
Techntcal Wr 1ttng , s 30 6 50
p m Monday and Wednesday
Health &amp; Physocal Educ;~toon
Onentee n ng. 6 9 P m
Wednesday
Water Satety 7 I0 p m
Wednesday
Nulnt,on. 7 top m Tuesday
Amencan HtV~~,vcal Studtes
(Prelude to Rebelloonl. 79 50
p m Monday
Non Western

Stud 1es

(Development ot Cultures) 6
9 30 p m Tuesday
Pohtocal Science
Prof e s s 1 o n a I Co m
mun1cat10ns,
5 5 50
P m
Monday through Thursday
Psychology
Human
Growth
&amp;
Development, 6 8 30 P m
Monday and Wednesday
Socoal Scoence
Introduction
to
An
thropology, 7 9 30 p m
Tuesday and Thursday
Soe1otogy
Socoology of Educatwn, 6
9 30 P m Mooday
Speech

close to goal
Jne emergency ambulance Kay s Beau t y Sa l on K1ng
Bu dder s Supply Co. LaSalle
fund drtve of the Mtddleport Hote
l "' and R Bar ga tnland ,
Fire Department contmued to Mar k V Supe r mark et Me
soar Wednesday wtth con- Clu r e' s Da1r y Isle Middl eport
Book Store. Mi ddleport Lunch
trtbultons reachmg a total of Roo
m , Oh1 0 Ho tel Oss 1e's
$13,937
Recr ea f1 on Center Dr R R
The department hopes to P1ckens Qua l •ty Pnnt Shop,
Co at s
P: un e r a l
complete the drtve by Feb 24, Rawl1ngs
Home , R H Rawl 1ngs and
one month after the ftrst Sons, Roya l Cr ow n Bott l mg
contrtbulton was recetved
Co
The Sew 1n g Center ,
However, mcluded m the total St if f le r s
Spe ed
Qu e en
Laun drom a t Tw 1n C 1ty Ca b
funds raised to date IS $3,1100 Co
Va l l ey
L u m be r
Co ,
which the department had on V e r no n an d Ber tha B•ng
hand when the drive started as Groce r y Oh 10 Pal le t Co ,
s Grocery
the result of vartous money- D 1ck
D r Milton Maso n , W er ner
making projects. As a result, Ra-i 1o Ser v1ce W es te rn Auto
department offictals satd they Ass o c 1a te St o re , Young s
Su per ma rk e t Bur k e tt Barber
will not complam if the total Sh
o p , Ben F r a nk l1n Store ,
goes over the $15,1100 goal a btl Cr oss Hard ware Th e Shoe
smce therr "on hand" funds
B ox.,
To n ey s
Ca rryout
will be absorbed if tl doesn't
Be c k er s Ba r ber Shop, The
K1 dd •e Sh o p
B lu e Tartan
Merchants and professiOnal W
a lter Cr ook s As hland Ser
people have contributed $3,877 v 1ce St at 1on Hentage House
da
ill age P ha r m ac y
Ruth 's
of the total raised to
te. VBeau
t y Sa l o n
G ilbert and
Additional contributions are Te rr y's Te x a c o Mil l s I n
expected yet from these suran ce Co A l 1ce s Ceram1 cs
sources and those planning to
. respond are asked to do so at
once so that the drtve can be
ped
wrap
up
One Middleport ftrm , the
Imperial Electric Co., con- '
Evangehsltc serVIces wtll be
trlbuted $750 to the drtve while
held
at the Forest Run United
two others gave $500 each.
MethodiSt
Church to MmersContributing $500 were the
vtlle Feb. 27 through March 3
Citizens Na!tonal Bank and the
Guest speakers and dates
Jaymar Coal Co.
they
wtll speak are the Rev
Other
busmes s
a nd
James
Morrtson, Feb 27, the
profesS i onal contrtbutor s t o
date tnclude Jack's Daw~ Bar ,
Rev Btll Sydenstncker, 28th,
Bahr C l othters, Baker Fur
the Rev Howard Shiveley,
n 1ture, Ctty Ice and Fue l ,
March
I, and the Rev Carl
Columbus and Southern Oh1o
E tectnc Co , Dr .J .J Da v 1s,
Htcks, March 2 Ser..Y!.ces will
Downmg Chtlds
Insurance
begm at 7 30 p m mghUy
Agen cy , Dudley Flonst. Er
On Sunday, March 3, there
wm 's G ulf Stat1on H and R
f 1r estone Store, General T1r e
wtll be a hymn smg at 2:30 p
Sa te s. Go bl e
Ford
Inc
m The Rev Rtchard E Jarvts
G o s n ey's Duds and Sud s .
Grover's Studto, Headquarters ts the pastor. Spec1al mustc
R es taurant , Dr
Clyde J
each evenmg The publtc IS
Inge ls. Jer ry 's Beaut y Salon
mvtled
Dutton Drug Store , J1mm1e's

(stphonmg) will get worse if scared and call before any
Ohto starts raltomng gas or symptoms show
Teaspoon Is Enough
selling tt accordmg to license
plate numbers like they do m
" It doesn't take a whale of a
lot of gasolme to harm your
other states "
Anyone caught stphonmg system," he satd "Depending
gasotine can be charged under on the stze of the person, a teaOhio law wtth petty theft
spoon or a couple of ounces
cause
chemtcal
"But if the pnce of gas keeps could
gomg up, tt'll he a grand theft," pneumonta or affect the nerlaughed a Dayton pohce of- vous system."
John Gnegy, a volunteer at
ftcer.
Most of the people caltin~ the Akron PoiSOn Control CenPotson Control Centers to ter, satd most of the telephone
Prmctples of D1scuss1on 6 7
Ohto's major cthes have calls hts agency recetves are
p m Monday through Thurs
swallowed gasoline after about children wbo may have
day·
Advanced Public Speaktng,
stphonmg tt from one farmly swallowed gasotine
s 5 50 p m Monday through
car to another
Little kids wander around
Thursday
The Cleveland agency report- the garage or driveway and
Regtstratton for any of the
evenmg classes may be made
ed the only stgniftcant mcrease ptck up a pop bottle wtth
by contact1ng the Adm i sstons
m gasolille potSOmng cases, gasolme at the bottom and
Off1ce , Rto Grande College R•o
none of which resulted m sen· drmk tl," he satd "Klds wtll
Grande, Ctuo 45674
ous tnjury.
put anythmg m their mouths."
Dr. Frederick Meyerhoefer
Although there IS no specific
•
satd the Cleveland cenlef help- anttdote, Meyerhoefer sa1d
ed five persons durmg 1973 who anyone swalloWing gasolme
swallowed gasolille, but han- should tmmedtately drtnk
Q'I~an 0
dled some 19 cases during a re- vegetable or olive oil to absorb
U.A..L • • •
cent two-week period.
the gas and vorrutmg should
"We've had a significant 10 not be induced
unlisted tree."
crease m cases smce
"Thts IS one of the few
Meanwhile, the directors of
December when the gasotine poiSOns where you do not want the food program were ftna!iz..
shortage became more to make the person vonutn" mg the logisltcs for the grocery
Dr R. E. Boice, prestdent of
wtdespread," Meyerhoefer Meverhoefer caultoned "It distnbution As food donations the Metgs County Heart
said "Most of the calls we get wtll potentially gtve you more and offers from volunteers Association, today named
are from people who are problems."
poured 10, one ofltctal Satd James Soulsby, 117Unlon Ave ,
there would probably be Pomeroy, memortal gifts
enough food "to fill 20,000 chainnan m Meiga County
President Botce satd a
requests" hy Friday.
memortal gtft to the
Food Plcltup Potnta
Secretary of State A. Ludlow association provtdes fr~ends
Kramer of Washington State, and relatives of loved ones an
•
tapped by Hearst to direct the opportunity to "give a gift of
life in memory of those whose
life has ended as a result of
been donated hy concerned heart disease".
Souls by, postmaster m
cttizens
A total of 32 trucks and more Pomeroy, f.Ointed out thar
m most people's diet, not m- diseases which hardly exiSted than 70,000 square feet of memonal gifts are frequently
creasmg tl for the purposes you when she got her master's warehouse space had been given to mark happy occasions
degree
volunteered to handle the food. such as birthdays and anmentioned
Kramer directed a free food ruversartes.
Such advice often runs
Quite frankly, some of the
program
for the needy m the
counter
to
the
unportanl
in"At this time of year", he ·
poor ad"'ce gtven by some nonformation
from
the
AmeriCan
Seattle
area
more
than
three
said, ''we are made parmedtcal, ~ailed experts ts a
public health hazard. Many of Heart Assn. and almost all years ago It was set up to help ticularly aware that heart
these mdtviduals have had reputable scienltsts de~lmg aerospace workers who had disease is a problem of
little or no sctenttftc trammg. wtth heart disease. Much of lost thetr jobs because of a epidemic proportions. More
One prorrunent public ftgure this advice disseminated freely dectine m defense spending than 'D million Americans
responstble for much of this to the public ~p~s done a lot to and i'_lr private aircraft have some form of heart or
blood vessel disease and over a
mtstnformattOn got her undermine the good efforts of production.
orgamzations
m
Peggy Maze, an aide to million will die this year alone
master's degree in the 1930s such
and apparently hasn't profited preventmg people like you Kramer, satd more groceries of heart attack, stroke of
a great deal from the new from having heart disease. I were being ordered while other hypertensive heart disease".
information that has become don't think under these cir- warehouse and distribution
Soulsby urges the public to
available over the past quarter cumstances I can he too harsh points were being selected. establish a living memorial "to
of a century She still gives out when tt mvolves the public's And, she satd, sbe was trying to help us fullill OW' missloo - a
orgaruze the volunteers.
advtce that ftts wtth walkmg health.
reduction in the Incidence of
Send your questions to Dr.
Mrs. Maze said four ptckup premature death and disability
across the toUntry to a rural
school house for one to two Lamb, in care of this pomts m Ute San Francisco from heart disease".
mt!es after a morrung of domg newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551, Bay Area would open Friday
Amemorial gift can be made
farm chores. Thmgs have Radio City Station, New York, and the program would be by sending the name of the
changed a lot smce those rural N. Y. 10019. For a copy of Dr. expanded m the Los Angeles person to be honored, the name
days We have developed a Lamb's booklet on balanced reg10n ''within two weeks."
and address of the sender and
Hearst hopes to feed 100,1100 that of the person to be notified
vast fund of new information diet, send 50 cents to tbe same
on nutrition, and we have address and ask for "Balanced needy Californians to 12 together with the check or
months
money order to James W.
learned a lot abqjtt heart Diet" booklet.

Soulsby IS

Ch

•

memorials

ab
t
•
F at an d VItamin sorp IOn ~f~~:m~ ~~~ .:r~lr~:~
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - Our
famtly has been drinkmg two
per cent low fat milk for
someltme now. I jtave just been
oold that calctum from milk
cannot be absorbed without the
cream Also, fat IS equally
necessary for absorption of
vttarn10s A, D, E and K
Does thts mean we whould
use regular rmlk mstead of low
fat mtlk m order to get the most
beneftts from tt •
DEAR READER - You
didn't gel that mtStn!ormation
from a phystctan or a reputable
qualified nutrttiorust. II IS a
good example of a lot of tocorrect propaganda put out by
a handful of unqualified, selfappointed health experts,
without medical credentials
and wtthout a good standmg
wtlhtn ctrcles of sound
nutritton
You do not need the fat m the
mtlk to absorb the calctum
That ill' pure hokulb. Fur-

.~

I

COLUMBUS (UP!) - There
never was any doubt as far as
the Untied Press Internaltonal
Board of Coaches was concerned that canton McKinley, Manchester and Mansfteld St.
Peter's were the best !ugh
school basketball learns m the
state
The coaches voted the three
powerhouse; to the No I spots
m thetr respective classtftcacations etght weeks ago and
never wavered for an instant,
mak10g thetr chotces offtctal
today in the final ratings of the
year
Both McKinley m AAA and
Manchester in AA finished wtth
18-0 records, whtle St. Peters m
A had an 18-1 mark, dropillg an
early season game to Sandusky
St. Marys
It marks the ftrst time since
the three classes went mto effect m the 197().71 season that
the leaders have remained the
same throughout the etghl
weeks of voting
McKmley coached by
veteran Bob Rupert, was the
blg winner among three
champtons. wtndmg up wtth a
309-209 margin over runnerup
Kettering Alter m the !mal
voting, with third place
Sprmgfleld North just one
more porn! off the pace.
Manchester, however, had a
stiff battle wtth Wellsvllle, espeCially the last two weeks,
and only edged out the Tigers
m the ftnal 'rally by a :!M-249
count although getting 15 of the
29 first place votes.
Manchester, coached by
Bernie Conley, IS paced by 6-11,
240-pound Mike Phillips' ~
pomt per game average and
has gone undefeated m tts last
38 stratght regular season

offering

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
e

.UPI's regul~r season titles

reclamation plans to prvent
landsltdes, flooding and accumulation ol aCid nune water
- Remove a prov1s1on
forbtdding a nune operator w
unknowmgl, strip land outstde
the tract for which he IS
licensed
-Raise from one-half to
three-fourths the amount of
bond recoverable by the mme
operator after the chief ol
reclamation approves all backftlling and grading

~io

Pro Standings
..

Canton McKinley, Manchester,
Mansfield St. Peter's claim

'

Sentinel , Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0. Feb 21. 197•

Picture needed

COLUMBUS - State !WIS
totaling $559,012 to assist 53
school dlstrtcts m the purchase
of 113 school buses were
released Feb. 19 upon the
recommendation
of
Supermtendent of Public Instruction Martin W. Essex by
the State Controllmg Board.
"State asststance m the
purchase of school buses is a
VItal factor m encouragmg
school districts to acquire sale,
efficient and dependable
transportalton
vehicles,"
Essex explamed. Included
were two buses for the
Southern Local District at an
approved cost of $19,888, the
state's share being $13,464.

of local couple
RACINE - Mrs June
Ashley, Racine Route 2 IS
seekmg the help of M~tgs
Countians, particularly m the
Reedsvtlle area , to locate a
photograph of the late Manley
Wtlson Reed and hiS wife, the
, former Nancy Chevalier. The
photograph ts needed by a
resident of Utah who ts comptling a geneology and needs
only the ptcture to complet.! tl.
The Utah restdent wtll be
glad to work out any plan for
getting the photo of the couple
copied, Mrs. Ashley satd
Anyone knowmg of such a
photo ts asked to contact Mrs "
Ashley, at 247-2344
"

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TOmE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTEJl L. TANNEHILL,
ERe. Ed.

ROBERT IIOEFLIOI,
Ot,!'.Mtw
Pllblilbecl daily aw:ept SltUrday by The

Soulsby, Postmaster,
Pomeroy. Information and
forms for making memorial
gifts may be obtailied by
calting 992-2377.
The gifts are acknowledged
with a dignified card naming
tbe donor and the person for
whom the donatton Is made.
The amount is held confidential
and a receipt for the contribution which 118 fully tax
dedultible, ts sent to the donor

•

,

By Denny Fobes
The Class A Metgs Secttonal
Tournament, or "the SVAC
mmus two" begms tomght at
the Larry R. Momson Gymnasium m Rock Spnngs, as the
Eastern Eagles take on the
Southwestern Htghlanders
This mtltal battle, whtch
begms at 7'30 p m , will be
followed by the SouthernKyger Creek clash Frtday
everung, wtth the EasternSouthwestern wmner facmg
North GallUI Saturday mgbt.
The championship game, to
determme who goes on to the
Chilltcothe Dtstrtct March 8,
wtll be played Saturday, March
2.
In tomght 's contest, the
Eagles of BtU Phillips, second
place finiShers m the SV AC
behind Hannan Trace, wtll be
going for their third stratght
VICtory over the Ketth carter
Htghlanders
Eastern took regular season
deciSIOnS of 114-60 and 54-33
from Southwestern, wtth the
latter marked by a four-corner
offense, slow-down game by
the Highlanders.
The deltberate offense
enabled Southwestern to stay
wtthin three pomts of the
Eagles at halfttme, 21-18,
before the birds went to fourcorners of thetr own m the third

RETREADS
$}050
EXDIANGE
CASINGS
13" 14" 15"

MOUNTED
FREE

quarter to outscore Southwestern IIH enroute to that 21
poml trtwnph.
That same de!tberate offense
on the part of the Htghlanders
IS expected to show up agam
tomght, and carter Will most
ltkely~ o With Uoyd Wood tn
the pivot, with Kevm Walker
and Larry Frasher or Phil
Lewts 10 the corners and Mtke
Crouse and Terry Carter at the
guards
Phtlhps, meanwhtle, wtll
counter wtth a lineup that
consists of Steve Dtll, 6-3
semor, m the ptvot, wtth 6-1
semor John Sheets and 6-2
semor Ttm Baurn at the forwards, and 8-0 senior Steve
Goebel and 5-10 Juntor Greg
Batley at the guards.
Eastern, although the second
seeded team behind Southern,
ts constdered the favonte m the
ftve learn tourney. The Eagles
own a 7-1 record agamst the
other four Meigs Sectional
teams, with the lone loss a 52-50
over tune dectston to Southern.
Tickets for tomght's game
are $1 50 per person, with no
reserved seals, and confetti or
any types of banners or noise
makers are prohtbtted
Eastern wtll be the home
learn for the opener, and
Donald Wolfe of Metgs Htgh
School wtll be the offiCial
scorer, with John Mora, also of
Metgs, the offtctal timer.

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCORES

( 15-3) ,

wh1ch had 1ts 15 game wmmng

stt eak sndpped by Rtvenhtle
Fttday mgltt, slipped from
SIXth to etg!ttlt Mid S&lt;JUlh
Central rmd f1 .mklm Mom uc

rounded uul the top len

Final UPI cage poll
M

COLUMBU S (U PI J Th e
f mal 1974 Unt te d Pr ess In
t ernat1onat Otlto H1gh Sc hool
Board of Coa ches bask etb a ll
ratmgs w1th f r st pla ce vot es
anrt
won lo s t r e cords
1n

Seco mJ t en

Class AAA

Team

Pomts
24 ( 18 0)

1 Can M c Kml ey

2 Kellertng Alter 2 ( 17 OJ
3 Sprmg North 2 ( 18 OJ
4 Boardman 1 ( 17 I)
5 Dayton Dunba r (15 21
6 Ham Jiton Taft ( 15 2)
7 Mtddletown I ( 15 2l

309
259

258
207
116

105
96

2 Cl ev t' l.:tnd L unt

Second Ten

E l der 41

178
4 Sebr 11t g 'l 1 17 11
176
5 Con t1 nen t&lt;t l 2 ( 19 l l
11 2
6 Co rtlan d M a p lew ood 'l ( 19
1)
94
1 S•dn ey Leh m nn 2 f 17 1 )
93
8 M&lt;HtonPi eilsa nl ( 15 ) I
sn
9 South Cent r al 1 (16/J
82
10 Fra nklin M onroe I 17 3 )
62
Second ten 11 '~ tdgemo nt
5! , 12 R tve r d ale c:n 40 I!
(t te )
W1ndharn
an d
Monroevill e 37 eac h
Hi 51
B ernard ( 1) 29 16 G ar aw ay
26 , 17 Hann~nTra c e ( IIIS 18
Da l ton 14 19 ( h e) Co l umbu s
Sl Ch ar les il nd r os to n il St
We nd elln 13 e.1 ch
Oth er s w th t en or mC'Ire
po mts Zan eS v il le Ro secra ns
Ca nal Wtn c hestc r ( 1 ) , Gr an
V il l e
L o w e ll v tllt
M .1 r 1on
Ca l ho i! ( au d f\ uc k L• y e W es t ( 1I

13

Chillicothe 23 14 Ot e l Ftnd tay
and Lora 1n Admtral K1ng 19
each 16 Canton Lmcol n 12 17
Akron
Kenmore
11
Westlake 9 19 Celin a B
Cmcmnatt Roger Ba con 6

18
20

Team
Po1nls
l Manchester 14 ( 16 0 )
25&lt;1
2 Wetl s vtll e 9 (17 OJ
249
J Loveland 2 ( 17 OJ
161
4 West Ho l mes I ( 17 1I
106
S (lte) Cols Mohawk (l ll3) 87
5 ft1el Lt c kmg Vall ey ( 17 1 I

87
7
8
9.
10

715

3 Lor a m Clcar v tew 'I ( 1n ? I

II To ledo Scott

12 C1nC1nnat

ov Uqlted Press International

{ Ky ) 75

Cmctnnatl 68 Xav1er 56
Tiffin 61 Oh10 Domln tcan 60
Bowtmo Green 68 west M1ch •

63
Urbana 99 Rto Grande 97
John Carroll 90 Case west
Res 77
North Carolina 83 M tam• 69
Defiance 97 Goshen Clnd l 72

Cent Michigan 71 Toledo 69

Malone lOS Waynesburg f Pa l

84

Cent State 79 No Kentucky so
Fmdtay 81 Earlham {lnd ) 73
Bluffton 110 Man chester (lnd)

96

\o

t•

1'onight's games ,

:
Oi

..

U~7

..,

CLASS AAA

...

Teays Vall ey ( 16 2)
7ll
Canton L eh man ( 13 51
77
GallipOliS IllS 31
70
Spnngftel d Shawnee ( 14 2 I

. ...,.,. ·:·.·=·:-:::::.·:::·:;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::·:::::·.·,:::·:· . ·:·&gt;: .: :-:· ·.·:·:·:···: .. •..·.:.,.;

'

*&gt;=·:~·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·· ·~·

·::

~

Coal Grove Class AA :l:'
~[Sectional team records ~;~

Logan vs

Athens , 7 30 p

m

CLASS A
(AI Nelsonvtlle York)
Crooksvt l le vs

pm

SALES
992-7161

Middleport, 0.

~

MEIGS MARAUDERS
Me•gs 49 South Po.nt 55
Me1gs 69 Ja c kson 82
Me1gs 45 Waverly 60
Me1gs SO Att1ens 60
Me1g s 53 Gatl1pohs 69
Me1gs 65 Pt Pleasant 55
Me1g s 59 South Pomt 78
Me1gs 62 Ironton 65
Me,gs 93 Wellston 51
Meigs 62 Logan 89
Me1gs 51 Jackson 61
Metg s 49 PI Pleasan t 61
Me1gs .:11 Waverly 1!0
Me1gs 73 Att1ens 83
Me1gs 52 Galltpolls 74
Metgs 61 Ironton 77
Metg s Wel lston , ppnd
Me tgs 72 Logan 65
TOTALS lOIS
1164
Won 3 Lost 14
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS
GAHS 56 Athens 45
GAHS 70 Wellston 36
GAH S 53 Ironton 55
GAHS 68 Me1gS 53
GAH S 73 Chesape a k e .t8
GAH 5 55 Logan 49
GAHS 64 Jackson 51
GAHS 64 Waverly 58
GAHS 57 Athens 51
GAHS 53 South Pomt 52
GAHS 87 Wellston 32
GAHS llO Wheelersburg 62
GAH:, 60 Ironton 56
GAHS 7ll MetgS 52
GAHS 79 Logan 58
GAHS ll1 Portsmouth 44
GAHS 72 Jackson 58
GAH S 60 Waverly 50
TOTALS 1126
910
Won 1S Lost 3

57

Trimble , 7 30

CAt Metgs)
Easrern v• Southwllttrn . 7 JO

p

m

{At Chllltcothe)
Parnt Valley vs Huntlnglfon ,
1 JO p m
CAt Portsmouth)
Ports mou t h N D vs
South
Webster 7 JO p m

64

Pomt 71 Chillicothe 68
Pomt 60 Oa~ H•ll 69
Pomt 79 Meigs 58
Point 66 Coal Grove 55
Point 81 Rock HIll 53
Po.nt 58 Fairland 61
Pomt 52 Galltpolts 53
Pomt 56 Chesapeake 48
Pom t 67 Ironton St Joe

South Po1n t 57 Oak Hill 39
South Point 65 Coat Grov e 68
South Po1nt 63 Rock Hil l 53
TOTALS
1199
992
Won 13 Lost s
CHESAPEAKE PANTHERS
Chesapeake 69 Symm es Valley

By Umted Press lnlernaltonal
East
w 1 1 pts gf ga
New England
32 25 2 M 216 201
To r onto c 31 27 4 66 243 2 18
Oueb tc
Cleve ln d

30 17 3 63 22 1 208
27 26 5 59 184 192

16 33 2 5~ 189
25 'l7 3 53 182
W est
w I 1 pis
gt
Houst on 35 IS S 75 233
M1nneso t 31 7b 1 63 23 3
Wtn n1 p eg 27 29 5 59 198
Edmontn 29 29 0 58 200
Van couvr :13 :h 0 .16 216
Los A n g s2 1 311 0 42 173
W ednesday s Results
Houston 7 Jersey 2
E dmonton 4 W tnn tp eg 1
Los A ng 4 New En g lilnd 2
CO nly ga m es sc hedul ed)
Thursday's Games
V.1 n couver at ( hiCcl QO
(Only ga me sc heduled )

Jerse y
Ch1 c a go

228
192

ga
156
203
215
208
231
23 5

N H L Slandmgs
Rv Un1fed Pre ss tnternalionalq
E .1 st
w I t
gt
ga
1:\oston
40 9 7 87 25 &lt;1 153
Mon t r e l 33 16 ' 73 204 156
NY Rn g r s
28 16 12 68 211 171
Toronto 27 19 II 65 207 165

ets

ga
118

11 15 75
26 9 55
27 10 52
28 B 50
26 ld 50
33 6 40
.&lt;11
7 ~9

192
162
145
156
178
160
15 1

110

Chesap ea ke 7 1 Oa k Hdl 57
C hesap eak e 60 Hu nlt ngt o n
Vm son 64
II 7S
TOTALS 108 2
Won 10 lost 8

,

Pistons take
Lakers by two

gf
195

67

Pack rips Duke·

By United Press Intentallonal
"State's the best team we've Mary land (6) bombed DuBeing No I m the nation played and (Davtd) Thompson quesne 98-72, Ptttsburgh (8)
' apparently agrees wtth David may he the best player 10 the downed Temple 5&amp;49 and South
Thompson and the North nation," satd McGeachy, Carolina ( 16) overpowered
carolma State Wolfpack
whose club has also lost to Vtrgtnia Tech 8Z.71
The Pack, playmg tis first second-ranked Notre Dame.
Bobby Jones had a careergame smce takmg over the No
"Davtd was particularly high 29 pomts to lead North
I slot from UCLA tlus week, qmck and sharp and seemed to carolma past Mtarru, the Tar
crushed Duke 113-87 Wed· be motivated," said Wolfpack Heels' 19th wm m 22 games,
nesday night beh10d an Coach Norman Sloan "We're and Len Elmore had 26 poillts
awesome 40-pomt perfurrrianec playmg better all the hme and and 17 rebounds and John
by Thompson
the No I ranking may have Lucas htt 27 pomts as
Thompson, a 6-foot-4 jwnor, motivated us."
Maryland beat Duquesne
htt 19 pomts m the ftrst half and
Thompson hit 16 of his 24
Billy Kmght and Lew Hill
exploded for 21 more m the shots, was 8-for-10 from the scored 12 pomts each as Pttt
second as N.C State boosted tts foul line and pulled down 14 overcame slowdown tactics to
NBA Standmgs
By Un1led Pres s International
record to 21-1 Tom Burleson, rebounds.
heal Temple and run tts wmEas l l'rn Confer enc e
the
7-4,
center,
added
17
pumts
In other games 10volving rung streak to 22 games while
Afl.llltiC Ot'oiiStOn
w 1 pel g b
Duke
Coach
Net
II
McGeachy
ranked
clubs, North carolma Brtan Winters htt 20 of his 21
Oos ton
.t 2 17 71 2
was awestruck uflerward
( 4) ripped Miarru of Ohto B:Hi9, pomts 10 the ftrst half to lead
New Yor k
38 25 603 6
Bu ff a lo
34 3'l 5 15 111 1
South carolma past Vtrgtnta
Pht l a
19 43 306 141 ~
Tech and mto solid contention
Ce ntr al Dlltt slon
w I pel g b
for
an NCAA at-large btd
Capt l a l
36 26 581
Elsewhere, Lloyd Batts had
A tla nta
18 37 tl JI
91 ~
Ho uston
24 .&lt;1 0 375 13
21 pomts as Cmctnnati, also
Clev ela nd
21 .15
318 17
lookmg or a post.,;eason berth,
W est ern Cont~renc e
MidW eS t DIVI SIOn
downed
Xavter 68-56 and
w I pel g b
Syracuse raced past Ntagara
Mtlwau kee
d6 17 730
Ch tc a g o
ti S 21 682
21 ,
~ to nm tts record to 17.0.
42 22 656
41,
Detro 1
In other games, Penn Stale
KC 011Hih il
25 41 379 221 -.
Pa c tfl C DIVI SIOII
rolled
past West Vrrgmta 83-03,
w 1 pel g b
Gold enS i at e
33 27 550 By United Press lnterna1imrnl
St Bonaventure eased by
Los A ng
32 30 5 16 2
Theenttrcl'acific
DtvtSton
of
als
plus
one
technical
as
five
Camstus 85-82, Seton Hall
Sea t tl e
29 :u
41"'
1
P hoe nno;
25 38 4{) 3
91 ~
the National Basketball 1\J;- players fouled o~l of the downed Fordham 72-64, Boston
Port l and
21 42 333 IJ 1 1
soctation ts no rnatch for the brutsmg Piston-Laker contest College crushed Dartmouth 94Wedn esday's Results
Deirott Pistons
However, the 76 infractions fell 62, LaSalle blasted Vtllanova
Capttal 116 Portland 10 1
H ou ston 115 P hil a 91!
The
Pistons,
wtlh
burly
Bob
far short of the NBA regulation 104-66, Vtrgmta beat Clemson
Oelro tt 112 Lo s Ang llO
game record of 97 called in 81-08, Wake Forest whipped St
K c om aha 116 G Sta te 97
Lamer scormg 16 of his 29 One
M tl wau kee 11 0 At la nta 9.&lt;1
pomts 10 the final quarter, beat yl953km ad Sgame between New Francis (Pa.) 93-69, Davidson
(O nl y ga mes sc heduled)
Lak
or an yracuse.
defeated Appalachian State 65Thu r sd.w ' s Games
NPw Yor k v s Bulfa to
the Los Ange1es
ers 11Z.I10
Elsewhere in the NBA, 58, Rtchmond topped East
a t T or onto
Wedne~y night to run th_eir cap1tal beat Portland 11&amp;-101 carolma 76-08, Tulane edged
(O nly g a me ~c h e duled)
season record agamst Pactft~ .
.'
Division foes to a gaudy 21_2 It \ Houston whipJ?ed Phtladelphta Georgta Tech 71-70 and
WHA Standings
was Detroit's 20th straight ~15-98 and Milwaukee topped Bowlmg Green shaded Western

Ch es ap eak e 79 Iro nton St Joe
61
Buff a lo 75 26 6 56
Chesapeak e 53 Oak H dl ll 5
Chesap e.1k e 5 1 Coa l G r o v e 51 De tr o it 19 JO 8 46
Chesapea k e ~fJ So tJII1 Potn l 5A NY ls ln d r s
15 27 II till
Chesap ecl k e67 r~ o c k H1II 6J (o t !
V.1n c ov r 16 n
9 ... ,
Ch es apea k e 70 1 clt r l ;:m d 16
W est
Ch es ap eak e 61 H unlm gton St
w I I pis
Joe 76
35 17 9 79
Ch esap eak e B&lt;t I ronto n St Joe Ph il.l

ROCK HILL R EDM E N
Ro c k Hil l 30 Ashland Holy
Fam•ly 46
Rock Htll 9&lt;1 Sym m es V a l l ey 72
Ro c k Hil l 69 Fa 1rl and Bl
Rock Hill 54 C he s &lt;t p et~ k e 56
Rock Hdl 60 Ironto n St Jo e &lt;18
Rock Htll 53 Oak Hill 55 (Of)
Rock Hill 70 Coa l Gove 82
Rock Hill 53 So ut h Po m t 01
Rock Hill 63 G r ~ e n 'i-1
Rock Hill 66 Ca tl etl sbu r g 64
(ot)
Rock H1ll 59 ra1rl and 56
Ro c k Htll 63 Cll esap e ilk e 67 (ot)
Rock Hil l 81 Ironto n St J oe .1 8
Rock H1ll 86 Sym m es Valley 58
Ro c k H1ll 59 OiJ k Htll 66
Rock Htll 56 Coa l Grove 93
Roc k Htll SJ Sou th Po m t 63
Ro c t&lt; H1ll 30 Cl&lt;ty 71
116]
TOTALS
1098
Won 8, L os t 10

45

South
South
South
South
South
South
South
South
South

66
Ch esa peiikc ~ !.! Coo l Grov (' 5J
Chesap ea k e 16 P o r t smou t h
Ea st 72
Ch esapea k e 4 4 Sou t h Potn t 66
Ch es apea k e ) 6 l ~oc k H1 1! ) 4
Chesap eak e 59 Fa tr l an d 38
Chesap eak e 48 Gal l p o i 1S 7J
Chesape a k e 61 Sym m es Va ll ey

IRONTON TI G EI~S
Ironto n 57 Co a l G r ove 71
Ironton 58 Lo~ a n 67
Ironton 54 A th en s 76
I ronton 55 Gall tpol tS 5:!
I ronton 68 Wel lslon 33
I ronton 56 ASh l and v6
I ronton 65 Po r l sm outh 7R
Ironton 65 M e.g s 6'/
I ronton 66 Wav er l y 83
Ironton 64 Jac k son 74
I ronton 69 Loq an 75
I ronton SO A IIHms ,19
I ronton 56 Gall poi 1S 60
Ironton 63 W ell ston 35
I ront on 77 M etqs 61
Ironton 6tl w av er ly 7U
Ironton 80 Ja(kson 67
Iront on 38 Por t ~mo u t h 67
TOTALS
11 06
1204
Won 1 Lost 11

SOUTH POINT POINTERS
South Po1nt 97 Northwest 52
South Potnt 55 Metgs .49
South Po1n1 65 Portsmouth 70
South Pomt 70 F cmland 52
South Po tnl 66 Chesap eake 44
South Pomt 88 Ironton St Joe

Ch1cago
St LOUI S
All u nta
Los A11 g
M mnest
Ptt sbrg h
Ca llforn1

30
~3

21
21
18
17
11

182
Hid

190
235

135 181
160 219

156
175

180
20&lt;
204
259

Wednesday ' s Re sults
To ro n to 4 Buffa l o ~
Oos ton 5 M 1nt1esota 5
Ph Ia 3 De troit 1
ChiCI1gO 3 C. Wi tl 0
S l LOUI S 1 P1t ts I
fOrt t y gam es sc heduled }
Thursday's Games
Va ncouver at Montreal
NY Rang er s at La s Ang
A tl u nta u t Buffalo
COnly g am es sc hedutedJ

triumph over a Pacific
Divtslon team and upped the
Ptstons' mark against the
Lakers this season to 4-1 as Loo
Angeles lost Its seventh
straight road game and sufferedtL~seventh los.• in the last
eight contests
Detroit, which reduced tis
magtc number for makmg the
playoffs for Ute ftrst time in six
years to 11, trailed 81-80 going
mto lhe fmulquarter before the
6-foot-11, 250-pound Lanier took
charge, httltng on six of his
next etght shots Wt11ie Norwood added 21 pumts and John
Mr-llgelt htt 17 to help the
Pistons
Jun Prtce, playmg for the
injured Jerry West, canned 31
pomts for the !.akers, who lost
a chance to gam on Pacific
Dlviston-leading Golden State,
which bowed to Ka1188S CityOmaha 116-97.
Referees Don Murphy and
Paul Mthallk called 76 personN ew Ha\len 31 19 9 71 231
Nova Scolta
26 23 10 62 200
Boston
17 34 8 42 181
Sprmgfleld Ill 29 13 41 176
South
w I I pis gf
Hershey
31 19 IJ 71 247
Balt i mOre 32 19 6 70 232
Cincinnati 31 20 6 68 204
Vrrginia
19 31 6 46 164
Jacksonv•lle
19 35 1 .45 180
Richmond 16 Jd 1 39 167
Wec:tnesday•s Results
Roc hester S Hershey 4
Nova Scotia 7 New Haven
Providence 7 Cmc l nnatl 2
Only oames scheduled
Thursday's Games
No games scheduled

A't~lla:n:ta~ll:().94:·------:::~68-03::.• • • •
•

GOODfiEAR

192

177
232
238

ga

• Flats rcpat red or replaced promptly • Tube valves
rcplacecll • Tucs hquld· fJlledl • T1re s ales &amp; serv1ce
for every truck , tra ctor, and auto on your farm!

190
177
180
216

255

241

5

Meigs Tire Center
OHIO

POMEROY

INTERNATIONAL HOCKEY
LEAGUE STANDINGS
By United Press tnternat1onal
North
Mu sk eg on
Sa gtnaw
Tol ed o
F ltnl
Port H uron

'

w I 1 piS gf ga
36 20 S 77 215 ISO

29 28 2 60 238 219
2.&lt;\ 33 I .&lt;\9 195 229
23 33 3 49 200 224

?2 12 3 47 170 191
South

w

1

FRI • SAT.

1 pis gf ga

Des Moines 36 20 4 76 256
Columbus
31 29 2 6.t 231
Dayton
27 30 4 58 207
F= ort Wayne 28 32 0 56 199
Wednesday's Results
Des Mo tnes "' Dllylon 0
Columbu s tl Sag tnaw 2
F ort Wa yne 7 Flint S
Thursday ' s Games
No games scheduled

197
227

200

FEB. 22 &amp;23

234

AMERICAN HOCKEY

LEAGUE STANDINGS
By Umled Press International
North
w I t pis gl 91
Ro ch ester 33 16 10 76 239 199
Prov•d enc e 31 22 7 71 272 196

Tournament HUFFY·
scores

VANYL-ITE LATEX INTERIOR
PAINT

®

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL SCORES
By United Press International

CLASS AAA
(AI Strulbersl
Warren WR. 86 Youngstown
South 52
Young WW 52 Young s Chan e y

49

'

&lt;At Canton I
Marllngton 53 AAII1ance 50
Oakwood 55 North Canton
Hoover 43

CLASS AA
(AI Canton)
Manchester 58 Rittman 31
Coventry 61 Doylestown 50
CLASS A
(At R1verv1ewl
Zanesv 1lle Rose crans 66 Zane
Tra ce 48
(AI Dover)
St rasburg SO tnd1an Val le y
North 42

CLASS AAA

(AI RIO Grande)

~

m

F.:t st I ( 17

1)

8 warr en W es t R es ( 16 21 81
9 CmCI La Salle 2 ( 15 2)
71
10 Canton South ( 17 1l
65
63

1 I Ak t o n So ul It

46
11
G £&gt; noa
(2J
1-1
1l
Wa ve rly JS 11 Buc k e yf' So ut h
32 15 lou SV II Ie A QUi nas 22
16
Ci te
MM e m on t
8a r
n es vdle .:t11d Lf x: r1gton 17 each
19 Ot e l As t1t ub ul.:t Ha r bo r an d
Nortllw e st P. rn fC i ilr k J 15 eac t1
O th er s w th t en or m ore
p otnl s
Tw tn sbu ro
Ch am
ber l m R tv cr V c w attd W lia rd
CLA SS 1\
Team
P oults
1 MiJn S 51 Pet t&gt;r s Y ( 10 I )

par e ntheses

Kent State 85 Akron 7(1
Gannon (Pa ) 90 Youngstown
77
Wr 1ght State 99 Bellarmme

...,

0100 v.Uey Publ.i!hinl: Company, 111
Court St I Pomeroy ' Ohio, H'Tii 8ulinetl
ornce Phone m-2151 Editorial Phone m

Second da.sa postap ~kt •t PorMroy 1
Olllo
N•llonal ad'ltrt!.lna repruent.Un
Bottinelli..C.U.g.heor, Inc 1 llEut Q,d St.,
New Yort , New YFk
&amp;.it.cripdon rates DtliVft't!ld by carrilr
whert avallable 60 centa pet week, By
Motor Roo.te wbert earrter aenl~ not
available One month, 12.80 By mail ill
Ohio and w Ya , One Year, $11, Si:1
months, t9 $0 , Tbrtt months $8
Elsewhere moo yar. m mM1ha t:IUD
lbret! m cnth.s , t&amp; 50 Qlt.rlpti.oo price
lnchtdes &amp;lnday nmta..sentilllel

COUGARS SIGN 2
CHICAGO (UP!) - The
Chtcago Cougars announced
Wednesday they have acqwred
defenseman Jin1 Watson and
wmger Don Gordon plus "future considerations" [rom the
Los Angeles Sharks in exchange for wmgman Bobby
Whitlock. The World Hockey
Assocatton club said tt expected both players would be
avatlable for Thursday mght's
garr.e against Vancouver m
Chtcago.

tourney play

Pastry Sh o p J oe's Carry OJt

2 school buses

seventh
Manon Pledsa nl

CLASS AA

'A' teams begin

£

gets $13,46/. for

Stdncv Lclu n.m c~ l~ o t li mbed 1n
the n;hngs, gumg f 1om tenth to

Sprmgheld Shawnee
Lora10 Clearvtew followed
St Peter's and Lutl1eran East
m Class A, the Cltppers
fimshmg two potnts m front of
No 4 Sebring, 178-176, and
Continental took the fifth spot
at 112
Cortland Maplewood moved
mto sixth 10 the fum I week and

~

Evangelistic
series planned

Southern Local

games
St Peters' !mal 238-225 margm over No 2 Cleveland. Lutheran East in Class A represented the Spartans' smallest
spread of the year, ha vtng led
by as many as 91 pomts durmg
the season
McKmley, whtch has never
won the state tournament
although maktng many trtps to
the senu-fmals, rfcetved 24 of
the 32 ftrst place votes available and was mentioned on all
but one of the coaches' ballots
Boardman, 17-1 on the year,
clauned the fourth spot m AM
wtth 207 points and Dayton
Dunbar (15-2) rounded out the
ftrst five with 116 The next ftve
spots went to Hamtlton Taft
( 15-2), Mtddletown (15-21,
Warren Western Reserve (162), Cmcmnati LaSalle (15-2)
and Canton South (17-1)
Loveland filltshed a distant
thtrd ill AA with tts 17-0 record
and 161 pomts, wtth West Holmes fourth at 106. Columbus
Mohawk and Ltcktng Valley
shared the fifth posttton,
followed by Teays Valley,
Canton Lehman, Gal!tpo!IS and

ABA St,lndmg s
By Un1t ed Pr es s International
Ea st
w I pel q b
New Yo r k
41 23
641
K entu ck y
37 25 597
3
Ca r o l•n a
40 29 580 31 1
VtrQI!lt a
'll J Y 350 16
M c mpht s
15 49 234 26
We st
w 1 pel g b
U tah
1d 20 68 9
l nd la(l a
33 32 508 111!7
S ;;~n An to n to
3~ 33
.&lt;\ Y'l 12 111
Den v er
19 33 d68 14
Siln O tego
'lB 37 431 16R
W ed n es day's Result s
Caro l •n•l ll8 V1 r g tn 1a 111
Oe1w E'r 12J Ke ntu cky 11 7
New Y ork 11 7 Memp t11 s I OJ
Sa n IJ1 ego 1('19 U tah 97
(On ly g v m e" sc h ed ult d 1
Thur sday's Gam es
OC' n ver a t M empht S
U tah at Sa n Antoni O
[O tily g am es sch edul ed)

1Af Adm1ral Ktngl
St
Edward 75 Med ina
Elyna 75 Avon Lake 55

62

CLASS AA

HUFFY MOWERS
NOW IN STOCK

(At Elvr•al
Elyria Cath 44 lndep~ndencze
43 (al l
Wellmgton 63 Columbta 51

45

REGUlAR

~.58

GAL

ON 'SALE
2 DAYS
ONLY

Ebersbach ,Hardware
"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"
POMEROY
110 W. MAIN

CLASS A
CAt Menter)
A shtabula St John 67 K 1rtland
66 fo tl
Bor r om eo 51 Fa 1rport Harbor

NEW
IMPROVED
VANYL ITE - an
ouf
standtng lateJI pau'ff made witt'! a nl!!!w Acrytlc
Vlrwt Latex P o lym e r
ADAPTABLE for all
t,-p~s of mter 1or wall s and
Ctlltnos- ECONOM I CAL
- one coat covers mosr
surfaces. use tap water tor
lhtnn1n9 EASY TO
APPL V - by brush roller
or
spray
·DRIES
RAPIDLY in lh1rty
minute' 1eav1ng no un
p ten&amp;nt OdOr C LEAN
EASILY wasl'1 equ1p
mtnt in werm, soapy water
SUPERIOR
WASHABILITY - d trt and
finger prtnts wash off
easily becauu the new
Vanyt tie has unsurpassed
water r e!olstance

773-SS8J

trourt • am , toa : Mf p •· o.tty Ma
1 11 m. tot p m. FrkUy &amp; S.turd•\'

W ...._

son, • ••·

'

�•

3 - ,The Daily Sent mel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0, Feb 21, 1974

Strip mine laws about
to lose teeth in Ohio
send the bill to a subcorruruttee , but he dented tt lets up on
reclamation reqUirements for
coal operators
" It elim.inates double bondstnp mme reclamation law, ts
starting to move m the sta le mg." he satd, expla1010g rrunSenate , apparently wtth en- er s must now excavate certam
couragement from the coal tracts under more than ooe
bond
to
guarantee
indus!!)
The Senale Agnculture, Con- reclamation
As mtroduced last April by
servatiOn and Envtronment
Commtttee held a ftrst heanng Armstrong and Sen Robert T.
Wednesday on legiSlation, dor- Secrest, IJ.Cambrtdge, the bill
mant for 10 months, which would
- Eliminate a requtrement
would reduce penalties for
strtp mme vtolahons, trimh- that a strtp mme operator's
bondtng requtr emenls and license be revoked if he vt&lt;&gt;loosen the requrrements for lates regulations three times
- Reduce the !me and Jail
reclamauon plans
term for mulltple vtolattons of
At the same time
state
strtp nune rules
The
commtttee
opened
Eliminate
a reqwrement
heanngs on a btll reqwmg the
stale to pay land owners for that mme operators draw thetr
any coal they are forbtdden to
CO LUMBUS (UP! ) - LegtSlatton to soften , and to some
cases reverse, strtngent provtstons ill Ohio's two-year-&lt;&gt;ld

mme

because
reclamatiOn law

GffiL GYMNASI'S - Members of the Metgs Marauder gJJ"ls' gymnasttco learn 1"'5" on the
uneven parallel bars durmg a break from practtce Wednesday afternoon Team members are,
bottom bar from left, Becky Thomas, Dtane Rtdgeway, Mal) Blaettner, and top bar, fr om left
Kathy Werry , Debbte McLaughlin and Ltsa Thomas Coach Kenda Chane) ts standtng at the
left

Simon hoping,
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Energy admirustrator Wtlliam E
Sunon hoped today to water
down the ot! troubles of
allocatton.,;tarvedstates, while
two federal JUdges have expressed doubts about the
legality of hiS polictes
A spokesman for Sunon satd
he would ask the Naltonal
Governors Conference executive comnuttee to be patient
and cooperative
Simon, Budget Director Roy
Ash and TransportatiOn Secretary Claude S Brillegar were
to meet all day wtth seven
governors ," tncludtng Maryland's Marvm Mandel, who
sued Sunon Wednesday All but
Mandel are on the Governor's
Conference steenng panel
U S Dtstrtcl Judge Dorsey
Watkins of Baltimore Wednesday ordered Simon to court to
defend Federal Energy Offtce
(FEO ) gasotine allocations,
and Federal Judge William C
Frey in Tucoon, Artz , ruled
agamst Sunon's ban on prtonty
gasoline sales to regular
customers.
Representattves of servtce
station dealers m Washmgton
demanded that tbe FEO allow
them to raiSe pnces lest there
artse a "sertous s1tuahon,"

mcludmg the posstbtlity of a
nationwide

pumpout" that
could leave filling stations dry
11

While governors and gas
TISOT'S VICfORY
APRICA, Italy (UPI) Cristma Tjsot won the Italian
women's spectal slalom IItle
Wednesday after defendtng
champton Claudta Gtordam fell
and dropped out The 19-yearold Ttsol, recently marned to
nattonal skt coach Franco
Arrtgom, clocked an aggregate
85 62 seconds for two runs
KATHY'S CONTRACT
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
Kathy
Kuykendall, the
youngest tenms player ever to
turn professional, Wednesday
became the fourth player to
stgn wtth the Phtladelphta
Freedoms of World Team
Tenms ( WTT) The 17-year-&lt;&gt;ld
MISS Kuykendall was obtamed
m a trade wtth Los Angeles for
the rtghts to Australia's Dtane
Fromholt.z

•••
hoping

Judge Walktns ordered
dealers denounced Stmon's
Simon
to appear m court UJ
pobctes, the emergency energy
btll was delayed at least a week Annapolis Fnday and defend
and posstbly doomed by a the allocalton system The
House committee's refusal to swt sats Sunon vtolated the
expedite the measure passed Emergency Petroleum Act of
by the Senate Tuesday The 1973 by provtding Maryland
Senate verston mcludes a wtth less gasolille than other
rollback of crude otl prtces and states
"The federal allocatton sysprestdential authonty to untem
has not worked ," Mandel
pose rattonmg
satd
"We have been rrusled,
Mandel, former chaii'IIUin of
the Governors Conference , given erroneous mformat10n,
ftred the ftrst shot Wednesday and we must get our fatr share
m an apparent state revolt of gasoline or we face a crtsts
agatnst the allocatiOn syslem tn the commg week ''
Based on the estunate of a 16
when he •ued Sunon and 20 oil
per cent nattonal shortage, the
comparues
Mandel satd Tuesday's re- governor sa1d, Maryland
lease of 2 per cent more fuel to should recetve about 120
the state was far less than tl million gallons of gasolme this
needs Mary land offtcials satd month, while the FEO plan
the state will get only n per provtded only 101 mtlhon
cent of tis promised allocation gallons.

or

Ohto 's

- A subcommittee prepared
ooact, perhaps as early as next
week, on a bill giVIng stnppers
of other mmerals temporary
authortty w mme and sell a
limited amount of coal wtthout
complytng
wtlh
coal
reclamation provtttons
Expe&lt;ted To Agitate
The sudden flurry of acttvtty,
expected to agttate en vtronmentalists, apparently
was prectpttated by the coal
mdustry, whtch has been
trytng to boost production of
Ohto coal to offset fuel shortages
"The Ohio Reclamation Association (ORA) asked for a
hearillg on the bill," satd Sen
Harry L Armstrong, R-Logan,
chamnan of the Agriculture
Commtttee and one of the prmctpal sponsors of the proposal
to soften stnp nune requtrements
The ORA, an association of
coal nune opera tors, opposed
strmgent provtstons 10 the 1972
stnp mme law, contend10g tt
would drtve m10ers out of bust·
ness Since then, the lobby
group has pomted to dec!10mg
coal productton
Armstrong satd he plans to

Gas siphoning is back
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
scarctty of gasotine and weekend closmg of servtce stabons
have revtved the JUvenile
prank of gasotine mphon10g
Police departments
throughout Ohto report an
mcrease m the number of
complatnts about emptted
tanks and Potson Control
Centers are warrung people
about the dangers of
swallowmg gasotine
Offtcers at police headquarters m Cleveland, Toledo, Akron. Youn~stown , Columbus,
Dayton and C10cmnalt stfted
through reports and agreed the
number of stphoning complamts are becommg more
frequent but pomted out no
arrests have been made
"We've had a lot of siphonillg
cases m the last month, but I
couldn't gtve you any specific
figures ," sa ad a Cmcmnati
police o!!tcer "There haven't
been any arrests yet Mostly,
we get calls from people who
work mghts and leave thetr
cars
parked
10
unsuperviSed lots "
May Get Worse
-"It's JUSt a nui.Sance," accordmg to the Columbus Police
Department "And I suppose tt

Hearsts
• •

wattmg,
•

praymg
HILLSBOROUGH, Cahf
(UP! ) -For the mother and
father of Patrtcta Hearst,
IIIStde thetr whtte stucco home
wtth red roses ctimbmg the
walls, today was a dsy of
I
wattmg, bopmg,' praymg
Mostly wattmg
There was no word from the
grandiloquent "Symbtonese
LiberatiOn Army" as to
whether Randolph A Hearst's
$2 nullion free food program
began to meet thetr derna~
for release of the gtrl who
was 20 Wednesday
FBI special agent Charles
Bates satd he believed the
kidnaped grrl was safe and
would he freed unharmed, but
he admitted he had no specifics
to back up that optimism
Bates satd the FBI would
take no action which rrught
endanger Patrtcta's life so long
as she IS held prisoner but he
added thai there would be no
other course but to go after the
kidnapers once she ts free.
The scene outside the Hearst
home was rerrunlscent of the
hysteria surrounding the kidnapmg of the son of Charles
Lindbergh 40 years ago
Reporters In Trees
· A San Simeon in the style of
the late Wtlliam Randolph
Hearst, wtlh turrets and pools
and otl pamtmgs, the childhood
home of Patrtcta Hearst ISO't.
But the news empire founder
never had televtsion cameras
and microphones clustered
before hts front door or
reporters in nests up m the tall
pme trees.
If the abduction were not so
grimly stark, tt might almost
have been a funny occaston.
Peter Cleveland, a reporter
for radio station KGO, was
awakened by a call from his
news editor in New York.
"ThiS IS the ABC tree," he
satd
The edttor blew his stack
demanding to know the identity
of the speaker and Cleveland
blandly replied: ''This ts an

20 areas of

night study
RIO GRANDE - Twenty
evenmg and mght courses
rangmg from Cost Accounting
to Water Safety will be offered
during Spnng ~rter at Rio
Grande College, •~-cording to
Dr
Herman L
Koby,
executive VIce pres~dent
RegtstrattOn for sprmg
quarter ends Tuesday, March
5, classes begin Wednesday,
March 6, and end May 17
The followtng classes will be

offe~:1:ness
Adriimtstrafton
Real Estate Law, 6 30 9 30
p m Thursday

-.

thermore, there lS more,
calctum m the two per cent fat
mtlk product because tt IS
fortified wtth nonfat milk solids
that contam calcturn It also
conta10s more protem per
glass. There is even more
calctum and protem per glass
m the fortifted skim rmlk
products
You have listed the fat
soluble vttamtns. Actually,
vtlamm A IS not very dependent upon fat for absorption.
You must go to a lot of
trouble to elmunate fat from
your dtet. That two per cent fat
m11k you drink has about a
thtrd of tts calories from fat.
Vegetables, mcluding corn
(corn 011), beans and most
others, plus many frutls, toeluding such things as rasphernes all have some fat ill
them II ts a small portion by
weight but ofl&lt;ln a stgniftcant
part of the calortes The
problem then ~limtting the fat

DAJLY SENTINEL CARRIER - Pa tty Hoffman, 14year-&lt;&gt;ld daughter of Mr and Mrs Perry Hoffman , has been
delivenng the Daily Sentinel 10 Mtddleport for two years
Patty IS a freshman at Metgs Htgh School She purchased a
bike from her earn10gs from her roule In addttwn to enJOymg bike nding, Patty loves to swtm Hers ts one of the
lar~er routes, havmg 85 customers Patty has two ststers and
three brothers. Her siSter Frances helps her wtth the route
when she can Patty's father ts employed at Holsum Bakery
m Mtddleport

E •R fund drive

Oral
Bus1ness
Com
mun•cat1on .
S S 50 p m
Monday through Thursda y
Advanced
Bus1ness
Management,
6 9
p m
Tuesday
Cost Account tng 6 30 8 30

p m Mooday and Wednesday
Bus 1ness Law 11 L 6 30 9 p m
Wednesday
Managenal Math, 6 8 p m
Tuesday and Thursday
Busmess Education
Advanced Shorthand 5 5 50
p m Monday through Thurs
daY
Advanced Ec.i'~~.. t•on 11 , 5
5 50 p m Mooday , Wednesday
Fnday
Techntcal Wr 1ttng , s 30 6 50
p m Monday and Wednesday
Health &amp; Physocal Educ;~toon
Onentee n ng. 6 9 P m
Wednesday
Water Satety 7 I0 p m
Wednesday
Nulnt,on. 7 top m Tuesday
Amencan HtV~~,vcal Studtes
(Prelude to Rebelloonl. 79 50
p m Monday
Non Western

Stud 1es

(Development ot Cultures) 6
9 30 p m Tuesday
Pohtocal Science
Prof e s s 1 o n a I Co m
mun1cat10ns,
5 5 50
P m
Monday through Thursday
Psychology
Human
Growth
&amp;
Development, 6 8 30 P m
Monday and Wednesday
Socoal Scoence
Introduction
to
An
thropology, 7 9 30 p m
Tuesday and Thursday
Soe1otogy
Socoology of Educatwn, 6
9 30 P m Mooday
Speech

close to goal
Jne emergency ambulance Kay s Beau t y Sa l on K1ng
Bu dder s Supply Co. LaSalle
fund drtve of the Mtddleport Hote
l "' and R Bar ga tnland ,
Fire Department contmued to Mar k V Supe r mark et Me
soar Wednesday wtth con- Clu r e' s Da1r y Isle Middl eport
Book Store. Mi ddleport Lunch
trtbultons reachmg a total of Roo
m , Oh1 0 Ho tel Oss 1e's
$13,937
Recr ea f1 on Center Dr R R
The department hopes to P1ckens Qua l •ty Pnnt Shop,
Co at s
P: un e r a l
complete the drtve by Feb 24, Rawl1ngs
Home , R H Rawl 1ngs and
one month after the ftrst Sons, Roya l Cr ow n Bott l mg
contrtbulton was recetved
Co
The Sew 1n g Center ,
However, mcluded m the total St if f le r s
Spe ed
Qu e en
Laun drom a t Tw 1n C 1ty Ca b
funds raised to date IS $3,1100 Co
Va l l ey
L u m be r
Co ,
which the department had on V e r no n an d Ber tha B•ng
hand when the drive started as Groce r y Oh 10 Pal le t Co ,
s Grocery
the result of vartous money- D 1ck
D r Milton Maso n , W er ner
making projects. As a result, Ra-i 1o Ser v1ce W es te rn Auto
department offictals satd they Ass o c 1a te St o re , Young s
Su per ma rk e t Bur k e tt Barber
will not complam if the total Sh
o p , Ben F r a nk l1n Store ,
goes over the $15,1100 goal a btl Cr oss Hard ware Th e Shoe
smce therr "on hand" funds
B ox.,
To n ey s
Ca rryout
will be absorbed if tl doesn't
Be c k er s Ba r ber Shop, The
K1 dd •e Sh o p
B lu e Tartan
Merchants and professiOnal W
a lter Cr ook s As hland Ser
people have contributed $3,877 v 1ce St at 1on Hentage House
da
ill age P ha r m ac y
Ruth 's
of the total raised to
te. VBeau
t y Sa l o n
G ilbert and
Additional contributions are Te rr y's Te x a c o Mil l s I n
expected yet from these suran ce Co A l 1ce s Ceram1 cs
sources and those planning to
. respond are asked to do so at
once so that the drtve can be
ped
wrap
up
One Middleport ftrm , the
Imperial Electric Co., con- '
Evangehsltc serVIces wtll be
trlbuted $750 to the drtve while
held
at the Forest Run United
two others gave $500 each.
MethodiSt
Church to MmersContributing $500 were the
vtlle Feb. 27 through March 3
Citizens Na!tonal Bank and the
Guest speakers and dates
Jaymar Coal Co.
they
wtll speak are the Rev
Other
busmes s
a nd
James
Morrtson, Feb 27, the
profesS i onal contrtbutor s t o
date tnclude Jack's Daw~ Bar ,
Rev Btll Sydenstncker, 28th,
Bahr C l othters, Baker Fur
the Rev Howard Shiveley,
n 1ture, Ctty Ice and Fue l ,
March
I, and the Rev Carl
Columbus and Southern Oh1o
E tectnc Co , Dr .J .J Da v 1s,
Htcks, March 2 Ser..Y!.ces will
Downmg Chtlds
Insurance
begm at 7 30 p m mghUy
Agen cy , Dudley Flonst. Er
On Sunday, March 3, there
wm 's G ulf Stat1on H and R
f 1r estone Store, General T1r e
wtll be a hymn smg at 2:30 p
Sa te s. Go bl e
Ford
Inc
m The Rev Rtchard E Jarvts
G o s n ey's Duds and Sud s .
Grover's Studto, Headquarters ts the pastor. Spec1al mustc
R es taurant , Dr
Clyde J
each evenmg The publtc IS
Inge ls. Jer ry 's Beaut y Salon
mvtled
Dutton Drug Store , J1mm1e's

(stphonmg) will get worse if scared and call before any
Ohto starts raltomng gas or symptoms show
Teaspoon Is Enough
selling tt accordmg to license
plate numbers like they do m
" It doesn't take a whale of a
lot of gasolme to harm your
other states "
Anyone caught stphonmg system," he satd "Depending
gasotine can be charged under on the stze of the person, a teaOhio law wtth petty theft
spoon or a couple of ounces
cause
chemtcal
"But if the pnce of gas keeps could
gomg up, tt'll he a grand theft," pneumonta or affect the nerlaughed a Dayton pohce of- vous system."
John Gnegy, a volunteer at
ftcer.
Most of the people caltin~ the Akron PoiSOn Control CenPotson Control Centers to ter, satd most of the telephone
Prmctples of D1scuss1on 6 7
Ohto's major cthes have calls hts agency recetves are
p m Monday through Thurs
swallowed gasoline after about children wbo may have
day·
Advanced Public Speaktng,
stphonmg tt from one farmly swallowed gasotine
s 5 50 p m Monday through
car to another
Little kids wander around
Thursday
The Cleveland agency report- the garage or driveway and
Regtstratton for any of the
evenmg classes may be made
ed the only stgniftcant mcrease ptck up a pop bottle wtth
by contact1ng the Adm i sstons
m gasolille potSOmng cases, gasolme at the bottom and
Off1ce , Rto Grande College R•o
none of which resulted m sen· drmk tl," he satd "Klds wtll
Grande, Ctuo 45674
ous tnjury.
put anythmg m their mouths."
Dr. Frederick Meyerhoefer
Although there IS no specific
•
satd the Cleveland cenlef help- anttdote, Meyerhoefer sa1d
ed five persons durmg 1973 who anyone swalloWing gasolme
swallowed gasolille, but han- should tmmedtately drtnk
Q'I~an 0
dled some 19 cases during a re- vegetable or olive oil to absorb
U.A..L • • •
cent two-week period.
the gas and vorrutmg should
"We've had a significant 10 not be induced
unlisted tree."
crease m cases smce
"Thts IS one of the few
Meanwhile, the directors of
December when the gasotine poiSOns where you do not want the food program were ftna!iz..
shortage became more to make the person vonutn" mg the logisltcs for the grocery
Dr R. E. Boice, prestdent of
wtdespread," Meyerhoefer Meverhoefer caultoned "It distnbution As food donations the Metgs County Heart
said "Most of the calls we get wtll potentially gtve you more and offers from volunteers Association, today named
are from people who are problems."
poured 10, one ofltctal Satd James Soulsby, 117Unlon Ave ,
there would probably be Pomeroy, memortal gifts
enough food "to fill 20,000 chainnan m Meiga County
President Botce satd a
requests" hy Friday.
memortal gtft to the
Food Plcltup Potnta
Secretary of State A. Ludlow association provtdes fr~ends
Kramer of Washington State, and relatives of loved ones an
•
tapped by Hearst to direct the opportunity to "give a gift of
life in memory of those whose
life has ended as a result of
been donated hy concerned heart disease".
Souls by, postmaster m
cttizens
A total of 32 trucks and more Pomeroy, f.Ointed out thar
m most people's diet, not m- diseases which hardly exiSted than 70,000 square feet of memonal gifts are frequently
creasmg tl for the purposes you when she got her master's warehouse space had been given to mark happy occasions
degree
volunteered to handle the food. such as birthdays and anmentioned
Kramer directed a free food ruversartes.
Such advice often runs
Quite frankly, some of the
program
for the needy m the
counter
to
the
unportanl
in"At this time of year", he ·
poor ad"'ce gtven by some nonformation
from
the
AmeriCan
Seattle
area
more
than
three
said, ''we are made parmedtcal, ~ailed experts ts a
public health hazard. Many of Heart Assn. and almost all years ago It was set up to help ticularly aware that heart
these mdtviduals have had reputable scienltsts de~lmg aerospace workers who had disease is a problem of
little or no sctenttftc trammg. wtth heart disease. Much of lost thetr jobs because of a epidemic proportions. More
One prorrunent public ftgure this advice disseminated freely dectine m defense spending than 'D million Americans
responstble for much of this to the public ~p~s done a lot to and i'_lr private aircraft have some form of heart or
blood vessel disease and over a
mtstnformattOn got her undermine the good efforts of production.
orgamzations
m
Peggy Maze, an aide to million will die this year alone
master's degree in the 1930s such
and apparently hasn't profited preventmg people like you Kramer, satd more groceries of heart attack, stroke of
a great deal from the new from having heart disease. I were being ordered while other hypertensive heart disease".
information that has become don't think under these cir- warehouse and distribution
Soulsby urges the public to
available over the past quarter cumstances I can he too harsh points were being selected. establish a living memorial "to
of a century She still gives out when tt mvolves the public's And, she satd, sbe was trying to help us fullill OW' missloo - a
orgaruze the volunteers.
advtce that ftts wtth walkmg health.
reduction in the Incidence of
Send your questions to Dr.
Mrs. Maze said four ptckup premature death and disability
across the toUntry to a rural
school house for one to two Lamb, in care of this pomts m Ute San Francisco from heart disease".
mt!es after a morrung of domg newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551, Bay Area would open Friday
Amemorial gift can be made
farm chores. Thmgs have Radio City Station, New York, and the program would be by sending the name of the
changed a lot smce those rural N. Y. 10019. For a copy of Dr. expanded m the Los Angeles person to be honored, the name
days We have developed a Lamb's booklet on balanced reg10n ''within two weeks."
and address of the sender and
Hearst hopes to feed 100,1100 that of the person to be notified
vast fund of new information diet, send 50 cents to tbe same
on nutrition, and we have address and ask for "Balanced needy Californians to 12 together with the check or
months
money order to James W.
learned a lot abqjtt heart Diet" booklet.

Soulsby IS

Ch

•

memorials

ab
t
•
F at an d VItamin sorp IOn ~f~~:m~ ~~~ .:r~lr~:~
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - Our
famtly has been drinkmg two
per cent low fat milk for
someltme now. I jtave just been
oold that calctum from milk
cannot be absorbed without the
cream Also, fat IS equally
necessary for absorption of
vttarn10s A, D, E and K
Does thts mean we whould
use regular rmlk mstead of low
fat mtlk m order to get the most
beneftts from tt •
DEAR READER - You
didn't gel that mtStn!ormation
from a phystctan or a reputable
qualified nutrttiorust. II IS a
good example of a lot of tocorrect propaganda put out by
a handful of unqualified, selfappointed health experts,
without medical credentials
and wtthout a good standmg
wtlhtn ctrcles of sound
nutritton
You do not need the fat m the
mtlk to absorb the calctum
That ill' pure hokulb. Fur-

.~

I

COLUMBUS (UP!) - There
never was any doubt as far as
the Untied Press Internaltonal
Board of Coaches was concerned that canton McKinley, Manchester and Mansfteld St.
Peter's were the best !ugh
school basketball learns m the
state
The coaches voted the three
powerhouse; to the No I spots
m thetr respective classtftcacations etght weeks ago and
never wavered for an instant,
mak10g thetr chotces offtctal
today in the final ratings of the
year
Both McKinley m AAA and
Manchester in AA finished wtth
18-0 records, whtle St. Peters m
A had an 18-1 mark, dropillg an
early season game to Sandusky
St. Marys
It marks the ftrst time since
the three classes went mto effect m the 197().71 season that
the leaders have remained the
same throughout the etghl
weeks of voting
McKmley coached by
veteran Bob Rupert, was the
blg winner among three
champtons. wtndmg up wtth a
309-209 margin over runnerup
Kettering Alter m the !mal
voting, with third place
Sprmgfleld North just one
more porn! off the pace.
Manchester, however, had a
stiff battle wtth Wellsvllle, espeCially the last two weeks,
and only edged out the Tigers
m the ftnal 'rally by a :!M-249
count although getting 15 of the
29 first place votes.
Manchester, coached by
Bernie Conley, IS paced by 6-11,
240-pound Mike Phillips' ~
pomt per game average and
has gone undefeated m tts last
38 stratght regular season

offering

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
e

.UPI's regul~r season titles

reclamation plans to prvent
landsltdes, flooding and accumulation ol aCid nune water
- Remove a prov1s1on
forbtdding a nune operator w
unknowmgl, strip land outstde
the tract for which he IS
licensed
-Raise from one-half to
three-fourths the amount of
bond recoverable by the mme
operator after the chief ol
reclamation approves all backftlling and grading

~io

Pro Standings
..

Canton McKinley, Manchester,
Mansfield St. Peter's claim

'

Sentinel , Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0. Feb 21. 197•

Picture needed

COLUMBUS - State !WIS
totaling $559,012 to assist 53
school dlstrtcts m the purchase
of 113 school buses were
released Feb. 19 upon the
recommendation
of
Supermtendent of Public Instruction Martin W. Essex by
the State Controllmg Board.
"State asststance m the
purchase of school buses is a
VItal factor m encouragmg
school districts to acquire sale,
efficient and dependable
transportalton
vehicles,"
Essex explamed. Included
were two buses for the
Southern Local District at an
approved cost of $19,888, the
state's share being $13,464.

of local couple
RACINE - Mrs June
Ashley, Racine Route 2 IS
seekmg the help of M~tgs
Countians, particularly m the
Reedsvtlle area , to locate a
photograph of the late Manley
Wtlson Reed and hiS wife, the
, former Nancy Chevalier. The
photograph ts needed by a
resident of Utah who ts comptling a geneology and needs
only the ptcture to complet.! tl.
The Utah restdent wtll be
glad to work out any plan for
getting the photo of the couple
copied, Mrs. Ashley satd
Anyone knowmg of such a
photo ts asked to contact Mrs "
Ashley, at 247-2344
"

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TOmE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTEJl L. TANNEHILL,
ERe. Ed.

ROBERT IIOEFLIOI,
Ot,!'.Mtw
Pllblilbecl daily aw:ept SltUrday by The

Soulsby, Postmaster,
Pomeroy. Information and
forms for making memorial
gifts may be obtailied by
calting 992-2377.
The gifts are acknowledged
with a dignified card naming
tbe donor and the person for
whom the donatton Is made.
The amount is held confidential
and a receipt for the contribution which 118 fully tax
dedultible, ts sent to the donor

•

,

By Denny Fobes
The Class A Metgs Secttonal
Tournament, or "the SVAC
mmus two" begms tomght at
the Larry R. Momson Gymnasium m Rock Spnngs, as the
Eastern Eagles take on the
Southwestern Htghlanders
This mtltal battle, whtch
begms at 7'30 p m , will be
followed by the SouthernKyger Creek clash Frtday
everung, wtth the EasternSouthwestern wmner facmg
North GallUI Saturday mgbt.
The championship game, to
determme who goes on to the
Chilltcothe Dtstrtct March 8,
wtll be played Saturday, March
2.
In tomght 's contest, the
Eagles of BtU Phillips, second
place finiShers m the SV AC
behind Hannan Trace, wtll be
going for their third stratght
VICtory over the Ketth carter
Htghlanders
Eastern took regular season
deciSIOnS of 114-60 and 54-33
from Southwestern, wtth the
latter marked by a four-corner
offense, slow-down game by
the Highlanders.
The deltberate offense
enabled Southwestern to stay
wtthin three pomts of the
Eagles at halfttme, 21-18,
before the birds went to fourcorners of thetr own m the third

RETREADS
$}050
EXDIANGE
CASINGS
13" 14" 15"

MOUNTED
FREE

quarter to outscore Southwestern IIH enroute to that 21
poml trtwnph.
That same de!tberate offense
on the part of the Htghlanders
IS expected to show up agam
tomght, and carter Will most
ltkely~ o With Uoyd Wood tn
the pivot, with Kevm Walker
and Larry Frasher or Phil
Lewts 10 the corners and Mtke
Crouse and Terry Carter at the
guards
Phtlhps, meanwhtle, wtll
counter wtth a lineup that
consists of Steve Dtll, 6-3
semor, m the ptvot, wtth 6-1
semor John Sheets and 6-2
semor Ttm Baurn at the forwards, and 8-0 senior Steve
Goebel and 5-10 Juntor Greg
Batley at the guards.
Eastern, although the second
seeded team behind Southern,
ts constdered the favonte m the
ftve learn tourney. The Eagles
own a 7-1 record agamst the
other four Meigs Sectional
teams, with the lone loss a 52-50
over tune dectston to Southern.
Tickets for tomght's game
are $1 50 per person, with no
reserved seals, and confetti or
any types of banners or noise
makers are prohtbtted
Eastern wtll be the home
learn for the opener, and
Donald Wolfe of Metgs Htgh
School wtll be the offiCial
scorer, with John Mora, also of
Metgs, the offtctal timer.

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCORES

( 15-3) ,

wh1ch had 1ts 15 game wmmng

stt eak sndpped by Rtvenhtle
Fttday mgltt, slipped from
SIXth to etg!ttlt Mid S&lt;JUlh
Central rmd f1 .mklm Mom uc

rounded uul the top len

Final UPI cage poll
M

COLUMBU S (U PI J Th e
f mal 1974 Unt te d Pr ess In
t ernat1onat Otlto H1gh Sc hool
Board of Coa ches bask etb a ll
ratmgs w1th f r st pla ce vot es
anrt
won lo s t r e cords
1n

Seco mJ t en

Class AAA

Team

Pomts
24 ( 18 0)

1 Can M c Kml ey

2 Kellertng Alter 2 ( 17 OJ
3 Sprmg North 2 ( 18 OJ
4 Boardman 1 ( 17 I)
5 Dayton Dunba r (15 21
6 Ham Jiton Taft ( 15 2)
7 Mtddletown I ( 15 2l

309
259

258
207
116

105
96

2 Cl ev t' l.:tnd L unt

Second Ten

E l der 41

178
4 Sebr 11t g 'l 1 17 11
176
5 Con t1 nen t&lt;t l 2 ( 19 l l
11 2
6 Co rtlan d M a p lew ood 'l ( 19
1)
94
1 S•dn ey Leh m nn 2 f 17 1 )
93
8 M&lt;HtonPi eilsa nl ( 15 ) I
sn
9 South Cent r al 1 (16/J
82
10 Fra nklin M onroe I 17 3 )
62
Second ten 11 '~ tdgemo nt
5! , 12 R tve r d ale c:n 40 I!
(t te )
W1ndharn
an d
Monroevill e 37 eac h
Hi 51
B ernard ( 1) 29 16 G ar aw ay
26 , 17 Hann~nTra c e ( IIIS 18
Da l ton 14 19 ( h e) Co l umbu s
Sl Ch ar les il nd r os to n il St
We nd elln 13 e.1 ch
Oth er s w th t en or mC'Ire
po mts Zan eS v il le Ro secra ns
Ca nal Wtn c hestc r ( 1 ) , Gr an
V il l e
L o w e ll v tllt
M .1 r 1on
Ca l ho i! ( au d f\ uc k L• y e W es t ( 1I

13

Chillicothe 23 14 Ot e l Ftnd tay
and Lora 1n Admtral K1ng 19
each 16 Canton Lmcol n 12 17
Akron
Kenmore
11
Westlake 9 19 Celin a B
Cmcmnatt Roger Ba con 6

18
20

Team
Po1nls
l Manchester 14 ( 16 0 )
25&lt;1
2 Wetl s vtll e 9 (17 OJ
249
J Loveland 2 ( 17 OJ
161
4 West Ho l mes I ( 17 1I
106
S (lte) Cols Mohawk (l ll3) 87
5 ft1el Lt c kmg Vall ey ( 17 1 I

87
7
8
9.
10

715

3 Lor a m Clcar v tew 'I ( 1n ? I

II To ledo Scott

12 C1nC1nnat

ov Uqlted Press International

{ Ky ) 75

Cmctnnatl 68 Xav1er 56
Tiffin 61 Oh10 Domln tcan 60
Bowtmo Green 68 west M1ch •

63
Urbana 99 Rto Grande 97
John Carroll 90 Case west
Res 77
North Carolina 83 M tam• 69
Defiance 97 Goshen Clnd l 72

Cent Michigan 71 Toledo 69

Malone lOS Waynesburg f Pa l

84

Cent State 79 No Kentucky so
Fmdtay 81 Earlham {lnd ) 73
Bluffton 110 Man chester (lnd)

96

\o

t•

1'onight's games ,

:
Oi

..

U~7

..,

CLASS AAA

...

Teays Vall ey ( 16 2)
7ll
Canton L eh man ( 13 51
77
GallipOliS IllS 31
70
Spnngftel d Shawnee ( 14 2 I

. ...,.,. ·:·.·=·:-:::::.·:::·:;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::·:::::·.·,:::·:· . ·:·&gt;: .: :-:· ·.·:·:·:···: .. •..·.:.,.;

'

*&gt;=·:~·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·· ·~·

·::

~

Coal Grove Class AA :l:'
~[Sectional team records ~;~

Logan vs

Athens , 7 30 p

m

CLASS A
(AI Nelsonvtlle York)
Crooksvt l le vs

pm

SALES
992-7161

Middleport, 0.

~

MEIGS MARAUDERS
Me•gs 49 South Po.nt 55
Me1gs 69 Ja c kson 82
Me1gs 45 Waverly 60
Me1gs SO Att1ens 60
Me1g s 53 Gatl1pohs 69
Me1gs 65 Pt Pleasant 55
Me1g s 59 South Pomt 78
Me1gs 62 Ironton 65
Me,gs 93 Wellston 51
Meigs 62 Logan 89
Me1gs 51 Jackson 61
Metg s 49 PI Pleasan t 61
Me1gs .:11 Waverly 1!0
Me1gs 73 Att1ens 83
Me1gs 52 Galltpolls 74
Metgs 61 Ironton 77
Metg s Wel lston , ppnd
Me tgs 72 Logan 65
TOTALS lOIS
1164
Won 3 Lost 14
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS
GAHS 56 Athens 45
GAHS 70 Wellston 36
GAH S 53 Ironton 55
GAHS 68 Me1gS 53
GAH S 73 Chesape a k e .t8
GAH 5 55 Logan 49
GAHS 64 Jackson 51
GAHS 64 Waverly 58
GAHS 57 Athens 51
GAHS 53 South Pomt 52
GAHS 87 Wellston 32
GAHS llO Wheelersburg 62
GAH:, 60 Ironton 56
GAHS 7ll MetgS 52
GAHS 79 Logan 58
GAHS ll1 Portsmouth 44
GAHS 72 Jackson 58
GAH S 60 Waverly 50
TOTALS 1126
910
Won 1S Lost 3

57

Trimble , 7 30

CAt Metgs)
Easrern v• Southwllttrn . 7 JO

p

m

{At Chllltcothe)
Parnt Valley vs Huntlnglfon ,
1 JO p m
CAt Portsmouth)
Ports mou t h N D vs
South
Webster 7 JO p m

64

Pomt 71 Chillicothe 68
Pomt 60 Oa~ H•ll 69
Pomt 79 Meigs 58
Point 66 Coal Grove 55
Point 81 Rock HIll 53
Po.nt 58 Fairland 61
Pomt 52 Galltpolts 53
Pomt 56 Chesapeake 48
Pom t 67 Ironton St Joe

South Po1n t 57 Oak Hill 39
South Point 65 Coat Grov e 68
South Po1nt 63 Rock Hil l 53
TOTALS
1199
992
Won 13 Lost s
CHESAPEAKE PANTHERS
Chesapeake 69 Symm es Valley

By Umted Press lnlernaltonal
East
w 1 1 pts gf ga
New England
32 25 2 M 216 201
To r onto c 31 27 4 66 243 2 18
Oueb tc
Cleve ln d

30 17 3 63 22 1 208
27 26 5 59 184 192

16 33 2 5~ 189
25 'l7 3 53 182
W est
w I 1 pis
gt
Houst on 35 IS S 75 233
M1nneso t 31 7b 1 63 23 3
Wtn n1 p eg 27 29 5 59 198
Edmontn 29 29 0 58 200
Van couvr :13 :h 0 .16 216
Los A n g s2 1 311 0 42 173
W ednesday s Results
Houston 7 Jersey 2
E dmonton 4 W tnn tp eg 1
Los A ng 4 New En g lilnd 2
CO nly ga m es sc hedul ed)
Thursday's Games
V.1 n couver at ( hiCcl QO
(Only ga me sc heduled )

Jerse y
Ch1 c a go

228
192

ga
156
203
215
208
231
23 5

N H L Slandmgs
Rv Un1fed Pre ss tnternalionalq
E .1 st
w I t
gt
ga
1:\oston
40 9 7 87 25 &lt;1 153
Mon t r e l 33 16 ' 73 204 156
NY Rn g r s
28 16 12 68 211 171
Toronto 27 19 II 65 207 165

ets

ga
118

11 15 75
26 9 55
27 10 52
28 B 50
26 ld 50
33 6 40
.&lt;11
7 ~9

192
162
145
156
178
160
15 1

110

Chesap ea ke 7 1 Oa k Hdl 57
C hesap eak e 60 Hu nlt ngt o n
Vm son 64
II 7S
TOTALS 108 2
Won 10 lost 8

,

Pistons take
Lakers by two

gf
195

67

Pack rips Duke·

By United Press Intentallonal
"State's the best team we've Mary land (6) bombed DuBeing No I m the nation played and (Davtd) Thompson quesne 98-72, Ptttsburgh (8)
' apparently agrees wtth David may he the best player 10 the downed Temple 5&amp;49 and South
Thompson and the North nation," satd McGeachy, Carolina ( 16) overpowered
carolma State Wolfpack
whose club has also lost to Vtrgtnia Tech 8Z.71
The Pack, playmg tis first second-ranked Notre Dame.
Bobby Jones had a careergame smce takmg over the No
"Davtd was particularly high 29 pomts to lead North
I slot from UCLA tlus week, qmck and sharp and seemed to carolma past Mtarru, the Tar
crushed Duke 113-87 Wed· be motivated," said Wolfpack Heels' 19th wm m 22 games,
nesday night beh10d an Coach Norman Sloan "We're and Len Elmore had 26 poillts
awesome 40-pomt perfurrrianec playmg better all the hme and and 17 rebounds and John
by Thompson
the No I ranking may have Lucas htt 27 pomts as
Thompson, a 6-foot-4 jwnor, motivated us."
Maryland beat Duquesne
htt 19 pomts m the ftrst half and
Thompson hit 16 of his 24
Billy Kmght and Lew Hill
exploded for 21 more m the shots, was 8-for-10 from the scored 12 pomts each as Pttt
second as N.C State boosted tts foul line and pulled down 14 overcame slowdown tactics to
NBA Standmgs
By Un1led Pres s International
record to 21-1 Tom Burleson, rebounds.
heal Temple and run tts wmEas l l'rn Confer enc e
the
7-4,
center,
added
17
pumts
In other games 10volving rung streak to 22 games while
Afl.llltiC Ot'oiiStOn
w 1 pel g b
Duke
Coach
Net
II
McGeachy
ranked
clubs, North carolma Brtan Winters htt 20 of his 21
Oos ton
.t 2 17 71 2
was awestruck uflerward
( 4) ripped Miarru of Ohto B:Hi9, pomts 10 the ftrst half to lead
New Yor k
38 25 603 6
Bu ff a lo
34 3'l 5 15 111 1
South carolma past Vtrgtnta
Pht l a
19 43 306 141 ~
Tech and mto solid contention
Ce ntr al Dlltt slon
w I pel g b
for
an NCAA at-large btd
Capt l a l
36 26 581
Elsewhere, Lloyd Batts had
A tla nta
18 37 tl JI
91 ~
Ho uston
24 .&lt;1 0 375 13
21 pomts as Cmctnnati, also
Clev ela nd
21 .15
318 17
lookmg or a post.,;eason berth,
W est ern Cont~renc e
MidW eS t DIVI SIOn
downed
Xavter 68-56 and
w I pel g b
Syracuse raced past Ntagara
Mtlwau kee
d6 17 730
Ch tc a g o
ti S 21 682
21 ,
~ to nm tts record to 17.0.
42 22 656
41,
Detro 1
In other games, Penn Stale
KC 011Hih il
25 41 379 221 -.
Pa c tfl C DIVI SIOII
rolled
past West Vrrgmta 83-03,
w 1 pel g b
Gold enS i at e
33 27 550 By United Press lnterna1imrnl
St Bonaventure eased by
Los A ng
32 30 5 16 2
Theenttrcl'acific
DtvtSton
of
als
plus
one
technical
as
five
Camstus 85-82, Seton Hall
Sea t tl e
29 :u
41"'
1
P hoe nno;
25 38 4{) 3
91 ~
the National Basketball 1\J;- players fouled o~l of the downed Fordham 72-64, Boston
Port l and
21 42 333 IJ 1 1
soctation ts no rnatch for the brutsmg Piston-Laker contest College crushed Dartmouth 94Wedn esday's Results
Deirott Pistons
However, the 76 infractions fell 62, LaSalle blasted Vtllanova
Capttal 116 Portland 10 1
H ou ston 115 P hil a 91!
The
Pistons,
wtlh
burly
Bob
far short of the NBA regulation 104-66, Vtrgmta beat Clemson
Oelro tt 112 Lo s Ang llO
game record of 97 called in 81-08, Wake Forest whipped St
K c om aha 116 G Sta te 97
Lamer scormg 16 of his 29 One
M tl wau kee 11 0 At la nta 9.&lt;1
pomts 10 the final quarter, beat yl953km ad Sgame between New Francis (Pa.) 93-69, Davidson
(O nl y ga mes sc heduled)
Lak
or an yracuse.
defeated Appalachian State 65Thu r sd.w ' s Games
NPw Yor k v s Bulfa to
the Los Ange1es
ers 11Z.I10
Elsewhere in the NBA, 58, Rtchmond topped East
a t T or onto
Wedne~y night to run th_eir cap1tal beat Portland 11&amp;-101 carolma 76-08, Tulane edged
(O nly g a me ~c h e duled)
season record agamst Pactft~ .
.'
Division foes to a gaudy 21_2 It \ Houston whipJ?ed Phtladelphta Georgta Tech 71-70 and
WHA Standings
was Detroit's 20th straight ~15-98 and Milwaukee topped Bowlmg Green shaded Western

Ch es ap eak e 79 Iro nton St Joe
61
Buff a lo 75 26 6 56
Chesapeak e 53 Oak H dl ll 5
Chesap e.1k e 5 1 Coa l G r o v e 51 De tr o it 19 JO 8 46
Chesapea k e ~fJ So tJII1 Potn l 5A NY ls ln d r s
15 27 II till
Chesap ecl k e67 r~ o c k H1II 6J (o t !
V.1n c ov r 16 n
9 ... ,
Ch es apea k e 70 1 clt r l ;:m d 16
W est
Ch es ap eak e 61 H unlm gton St
w I I pis
Joe 76
35 17 9 79
Ch esap eak e B&lt;t I ronto n St Joe Ph il.l

ROCK HILL R EDM E N
Ro c k Hil l 30 Ashland Holy
Fam•ly 46
Rock Htll 9&lt;1 Sym m es V a l l ey 72
Ro c k Hil l 69 Fa 1rl and Bl
Rock Hill 54 C he s &lt;t p et~ k e 56
Rock Hdl 60 Ironto n St Jo e &lt;18
Rock Htll 53 Oak Hill 55 (Of)
Rock Hill 70 Coa l Gove 82
Rock Hill 53 So ut h Po m t 01
Rock Hill 63 G r ~ e n 'i-1
Rock Hill 66 Ca tl etl sbu r g 64
(ot)
Rock H1ll 59 ra1rl and 56
Ro c k Htll 63 Cll esap e ilk e 67 (ot)
Rock Hil l 81 Ironto n St J oe .1 8
Rock H1ll 86 Sym m es Valley 58
Ro c k H1ll 59 OiJ k Htll 66
Rock Htll 56 Coa l Grove 93
Roc k Htll SJ Sou th Po m t 63
Ro c t&lt; H1ll 30 Cl&lt;ty 71
116]
TOTALS
1098
Won 8, L os t 10

45

South
South
South
South
South
South
South
South
South

66
Ch esa peiikc ~ !.! Coo l Grov (' 5J
Chesap ea k e 16 P o r t smou t h
Ea st 72
Ch esapea k e 4 4 Sou t h Potn t 66
Ch es apea k e ) 6 l ~oc k H1 1! ) 4
Chesap eak e 59 Fa tr l an d 38
Chesap eak e 48 Gal l p o i 1S 7J
Chesape a k e 61 Sym m es Va ll ey

IRONTON TI G EI~S
Ironto n 57 Co a l G r ove 71
Ironton 58 Lo~ a n 67
Ironton 54 A th en s 76
I ronton 55 Gall tpol tS 5:!
I ronton 68 Wel lslon 33
I ronton 56 ASh l and v6
I ronton 65 Po r l sm outh 7R
Ironton 65 M e.g s 6'/
I ronton 66 Wav er l y 83
Ironton 64 Jac k son 74
I ronton 69 Loq an 75
I ronton SO A IIHms ,19
I ronton 56 Gall poi 1S 60
Ironton 63 W ell ston 35
I ront on 77 M etqs 61
Ironton 6tl w av er ly 7U
Ironton 80 Ja(kson 67
Iront on 38 Por t ~mo u t h 67
TOTALS
11 06
1204
Won 1 Lost 11

SOUTH POINT POINTERS
South Po1nt 97 Northwest 52
South Potnt 55 Metgs .49
South Po1n1 65 Portsmouth 70
South Pomt 70 F cmland 52
South Po tnl 66 Chesap eake 44
South Pomt 88 Ironton St Joe

Ch1cago
St LOUI S
All u nta
Los A11 g
M mnest
Ptt sbrg h
Ca llforn1

30
~3

21
21
18
17
11

182
Hid

190
235

135 181
160 219

156
175

180
20&lt;
204
259

Wednesday ' s Re sults
To ro n to 4 Buffa l o ~
Oos ton 5 M 1nt1esota 5
Ph Ia 3 De troit 1
ChiCI1gO 3 C. Wi tl 0
S l LOUI S 1 P1t ts I
fOrt t y gam es sc heduled }
Thursday's Games
Va ncouver at Montreal
NY Rang er s at La s Ang
A tl u nta u t Buffalo
COnly g am es sc hedutedJ

triumph over a Pacific
Divtslon team and upped the
Ptstons' mark against the
Lakers this season to 4-1 as Loo
Angeles lost Its seventh
straight road game and sufferedtL~seventh los.• in the last
eight contests
Detroit, which reduced tis
magtc number for makmg the
playoffs for Ute ftrst time in six
years to 11, trailed 81-80 going
mto lhe fmulquarter before the
6-foot-11, 250-pound Lanier took
charge, httltng on six of his
next etght shots Wt11ie Norwood added 21 pumts and John
Mr-llgelt htt 17 to help the
Pistons
Jun Prtce, playmg for the
injured Jerry West, canned 31
pomts for the !.akers, who lost
a chance to gam on Pacific
Dlviston-leading Golden State,
which bowed to Ka1188S CityOmaha 116-97.
Referees Don Murphy and
Paul Mthallk called 76 personN ew Ha\len 31 19 9 71 231
Nova Scolta
26 23 10 62 200
Boston
17 34 8 42 181
Sprmgfleld Ill 29 13 41 176
South
w I I pis gf
Hershey
31 19 IJ 71 247
Balt i mOre 32 19 6 70 232
Cincinnati 31 20 6 68 204
Vrrginia
19 31 6 46 164
Jacksonv•lle
19 35 1 .45 180
Richmond 16 Jd 1 39 167
Wec:tnesday•s Results
Roc hester S Hershey 4
Nova Scotia 7 New Haven
Providence 7 Cmc l nnatl 2
Only oames scheduled
Thursday's Games
No games scheduled

A't~lla:n:ta~ll:().94:·------:::~68-03::.• • • •
•

GOODfiEAR

192

177
232
238

ga

• Flats rcpat red or replaced promptly • Tube valves
rcplacecll • Tucs hquld· fJlledl • T1re s ales &amp; serv1ce
for every truck , tra ctor, and auto on your farm!

190
177
180
216

255

241

5

Meigs Tire Center
OHIO

POMEROY

INTERNATIONAL HOCKEY
LEAGUE STANDINGS
By United Press tnternat1onal
North
Mu sk eg on
Sa gtnaw
Tol ed o
F ltnl
Port H uron

'

w I 1 piS gf ga
36 20 S 77 215 ISO

29 28 2 60 238 219
2.&lt;\ 33 I .&lt;\9 195 229
23 33 3 49 200 224

?2 12 3 47 170 191
South

w

1

FRI • SAT.

1 pis gf ga

Des Moines 36 20 4 76 256
Columbus
31 29 2 6.t 231
Dayton
27 30 4 58 207
F= ort Wayne 28 32 0 56 199
Wednesday's Results
Des Mo tnes "' Dllylon 0
Columbu s tl Sag tnaw 2
F ort Wa yne 7 Flint S
Thursday ' s Games
No games scheduled

197
227

200

FEB. 22 &amp;23

234

AMERICAN HOCKEY

LEAGUE STANDINGS
By Umled Press International
North
w I t pis gl 91
Ro ch ester 33 16 10 76 239 199
Prov•d enc e 31 22 7 71 272 196

Tournament HUFFY·
scores

VANYL-ITE LATEX INTERIOR
PAINT

®

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL SCORES
By United Press International

CLASS AAA
(AI Strulbersl
Warren WR. 86 Youngstown
South 52
Young WW 52 Young s Chan e y

49

'

&lt;At Canton I
Marllngton 53 AAII1ance 50
Oakwood 55 North Canton
Hoover 43

CLASS AA
(AI Canton)
Manchester 58 Rittman 31
Coventry 61 Doylestown 50
CLASS A
(At R1verv1ewl
Zanesv 1lle Rose crans 66 Zane
Tra ce 48
(AI Dover)
St rasburg SO tnd1an Val le y
North 42

CLASS AAA

(AI RIO Grande)

~

m

F.:t st I ( 17

1)

8 warr en W es t R es ( 16 21 81
9 CmCI La Salle 2 ( 15 2)
71
10 Canton South ( 17 1l
65
63

1 I Ak t o n So ul It

46
11
G £&gt; noa
(2J
1-1
1l
Wa ve rly JS 11 Buc k e yf' So ut h
32 15 lou SV II Ie A QUi nas 22
16
Ci te
MM e m on t
8a r
n es vdle .:t11d Lf x: r1gton 17 each
19 Ot e l As t1t ub ul.:t Ha r bo r an d
Nortllw e st P. rn fC i ilr k J 15 eac t1
O th er s w th t en or m ore
p otnl s
Tw tn sbu ro
Ch am
ber l m R tv cr V c w attd W lia rd
CLA SS 1\
Team
P oults
1 MiJn S 51 Pet t&gt;r s Y ( 10 I )

par e ntheses

Kent State 85 Akron 7(1
Gannon (Pa ) 90 Youngstown
77
Wr 1ght State 99 Bellarmme

...,

0100 v.Uey Publ.i!hinl: Company, 111
Court St I Pomeroy ' Ohio, H'Tii 8ulinetl
ornce Phone m-2151 Editorial Phone m

Second da.sa postap ~kt •t PorMroy 1
Olllo
N•llonal ad'ltrt!.lna repruent.Un
Bottinelli..C.U.g.heor, Inc 1 llEut Q,d St.,
New Yort , New YFk
&amp;.it.cripdon rates DtliVft't!ld by carrilr
whert avallable 60 centa pet week, By
Motor Roo.te wbert earrter aenl~ not
available One month, 12.80 By mail ill
Ohio and w Ya , One Year, $11, Si:1
months, t9 $0 , Tbrtt months $8
Elsewhere moo yar. m mM1ha t:IUD
lbret! m cnth.s , t&amp; 50 Qlt.rlpti.oo price
lnchtdes &amp;lnday nmta..sentilllel

COUGARS SIGN 2
CHICAGO (UP!) - The
Chtcago Cougars announced
Wednesday they have acqwred
defenseman Jin1 Watson and
wmger Don Gordon plus "future considerations" [rom the
Los Angeles Sharks in exchange for wmgman Bobby
Whitlock. The World Hockey
Assocatton club said tt expected both players would be
avatlable for Thursday mght's
garr.e against Vancouver m
Chtcago.

tourney play

Pastry Sh o p J oe's Carry OJt

2 school buses

seventh
Manon Pledsa nl

CLASS AA

'A' teams begin

£

gets $13,46/. for

Stdncv Lclu n.m c~ l~ o t li mbed 1n
the n;hngs, gumg f 1om tenth to

Sprmgheld Shawnee
Lora10 Clearvtew followed
St Peter's and Lutl1eran East
m Class A, the Cltppers
fimshmg two potnts m front of
No 4 Sebring, 178-176, and
Continental took the fifth spot
at 112
Cortland Maplewood moved
mto sixth 10 the fum I week and

~

Evangelistic
series planned

Southern Local

games
St Peters' !mal 238-225 margm over No 2 Cleveland. Lutheran East in Class A represented the Spartans' smallest
spread of the year, ha vtng led
by as many as 91 pomts durmg
the season
McKmley, whtch has never
won the state tournament
although maktng many trtps to
the senu-fmals, rfcetved 24 of
the 32 ftrst place votes available and was mentioned on all
but one of the coaches' ballots
Boardman, 17-1 on the year,
clauned the fourth spot m AM
wtth 207 points and Dayton
Dunbar (15-2) rounded out the
ftrst five with 116 The next ftve
spots went to Hamtlton Taft
( 15-2), Mtddletown (15-21,
Warren Western Reserve (162), Cmcmnati LaSalle (15-2)
and Canton South (17-1)
Loveland filltshed a distant
thtrd ill AA with tts 17-0 record
and 161 pomts, wtth West Holmes fourth at 106. Columbus
Mohawk and Ltcktng Valley
shared the fifth posttton,
followed by Teays Valley,
Canton Lehman, Gal!tpo!IS and

ABA St,lndmg s
By Un1t ed Pr es s International
Ea st
w I pel q b
New Yo r k
41 23
641
K entu ck y
37 25 597
3
Ca r o l•n a
40 29 580 31 1
VtrQI!lt a
'll J Y 350 16
M c mpht s
15 49 234 26
We st
w 1 pel g b
U tah
1d 20 68 9
l nd la(l a
33 32 508 111!7
S ;;~n An to n to
3~ 33
.&lt;\ Y'l 12 111
Den v er
19 33 d68 14
Siln O tego
'lB 37 431 16R
W ed n es day's Result s
Caro l •n•l ll8 V1 r g tn 1a 111
Oe1w E'r 12J Ke ntu cky 11 7
New Y ork 11 7 Memp t11 s I OJ
Sa n IJ1 ego 1('19 U tah 97
(On ly g v m e" sc h ed ult d 1
Thur sday's Gam es
OC' n ver a t M empht S
U tah at Sa n Antoni O
[O tily g am es sch edul ed)

1Af Adm1ral Ktngl
St
Edward 75 Med ina
Elyna 75 Avon Lake 55

62

CLASS AA

HUFFY MOWERS
NOW IN STOCK

(At Elvr•al
Elyria Cath 44 lndep~ndencze
43 (al l
Wellmgton 63 Columbta 51

45

REGUlAR

~.58

GAL

ON 'SALE
2 DAYS
ONLY

Ebersbach ,Hardware
"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"
POMEROY
110 W. MAIN

CLASS A
CAt Menter)
A shtabula St John 67 K 1rtland
66 fo tl
Bor r om eo 51 Fa 1rport Harbor

NEW
IMPROVED
VANYL ITE - an
ouf
standtng lateJI pau'ff made witt'! a nl!!!w Acrytlc
Vlrwt Latex P o lym e r
ADAPTABLE for all
t,-p~s of mter 1or wall s and
Ctlltnos- ECONOM I CAL
- one coat covers mosr
surfaces. use tap water tor
lhtnn1n9 EASY TO
APPL V - by brush roller
or
spray
·DRIES
RAPIDLY in lh1rty
minute' 1eav1ng no un
p ten&amp;nt OdOr C LEAN
EASILY wasl'1 equ1p
mtnt in werm, soapy water
SUPERIOR
WASHABILITY - d trt and
finger prtnts wash off
easily becauu the new
Vanyt tie has unsurpassed
water r e!olstance

773-SS8J

trourt • am , toa : Mf p •· o.tty Ma
1 11 m. tot p m. FrkUy &amp; S.turd•\'

W ...._

son, • ••·

'

�'

•
.-!

4- The D~ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb.

Final Marauder statistics
Followinq are the final statistics for the 1973-74 r eg ular
sett~on ot !he Ml'iQs Marauder basketball team .

~t.wer

PTS
11 5
149
141
.70
109
34
162
Lonnie Co.:1fo.
6J 174
36
36· 55
.65
43
33
108
Ste ve Price
40 126
31
28 - 43
.65
]6
35
· · :J erry· cnmw·i1n 'S··· Ts·····tS" ··~""""JT '"~-.... ,'5._..."23 · ·-·-· :·6:s .. ·-· · 49 · 'l6
45
TNry Quo~ l h
B1ll Myer '&gt;
Diln Dodson

!

FG-A

A7 1]9
66 I &lt;IS
103 730

Orrion Blanch,'lrd\6
lhip Br,lver
18Perk Aull
B·
GrL-.g Browning
6
Steve Wi'llburn
6
M ickAsh
1
Mike Wily
1
JimAnderson
7
Mit ch M e.1dows 1
Charlie M.1rs h.1 11 0
Mike Magn o! ttl 0
Mi &lt;: kt&gt; y Davenport

I

Pel .

.33
.45
.44

JB
58

.42
.Jl

31

26

1?

.SO

17
6

.11
.17
17

6

11
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0
1
2 -5

. 18

.'JO
.00
.40

TOTALS
195-1059 .17
OPPONENTS 463-986
.46

II -A . Y

71 - 41
17 35
41 - 58

14- 27
18- 28

68
61

75
35

9

.44

11

19

&lt;1
5- 9
3- 8
0- 0
7- 11
2- 2
0- 0
0- 0
1-- 4

.75

7

3

.55
.37

13

6

2
4
10

1
I

5

6
0
0

II

4J.

Pesky Miami of Ohio chai·
lenged nalionallv fourth ran ked Nnrth ca~lina Wednes day n1gh t but couldn 't
quite duplicate !heir upset
vic tory of last season over tile
pe renially powerful Tar Heels.
All -America ca ndidate
Hobby .Jones pi cked the Miami
defense apar t \Vith a ca rCcr
hig h 29 poi nts to lead North
Carolina to an 83~9 victory
over the Redskins. Miami won
the Mid-American Conference
title last year but is now only
JI.IJ on the season .
Guard Plul Lumpkin led Mi·
ami with 21 points while Walter
Davis added 16 poinls tot

Jones' game hi gh of 29 lor the
Tar Heels, now 19·3 lor the
season.
ln Mid-Arncrican Conferen ce
games, Bowling Green nudged
out Toledo for second place in
th e league standings witlt a win
over Western Michigan. The
Rockets were nipped by
Ccnlral Michigan.
Bowling Gr een downed
Western Michigan, 68-63,
behind an outstanding first hall
scoring performance by Jeff
Montgomery, wh o hit 21 of his
2J game-high poinls before the
interm ission.
Bowling Green, now 15·9
overall and 7-4 in the loop,
moved one-half game ahead of

hers, left to right, are Rob Barber, Brian Conde, Randy
Blake, Dana Fick, Dan Good, Phil llowen, (Coach Wolfe),
Steve Nelsen, Jl'fl Holter, Dave H"'mum, Don Eichinger,
Mike ilarris and Tom Reed . Mike Larkins was absenl.

Luigi's Pizza
POMEROY, OHIO

PHONE 992-3984
Starting Friday, Feb. 22

•

Through Thursday, Feb. 28
YOU GET THE JRD ITEM ON A
PIZZA FOR .

ONLY A NICKEL

in the conferenci!.
Western Michi gan, t2-ll , "''d
H, was paced by freshman
Culler's 15 points.
Toledo failed to suswin a
seven-point halftime ad vanwge in a 71~9 loss to
Central Michigan.
The Rockets , 16-7 overall,
lost the game with only [our
seconds remaining when
James McElroy hit a layup to
give CMU the win. CMU
evened its season nk1rk in the
conference at 5-S and is 13-10 in
season play.
Independent cross-town
riv als Xavi·e r and the
University of CinciiiDali met at
the Cincinnati Gardens with
the Bearcats emerging a s
winners, GB-56.
Cincimk1ti, looking lor a
post-se;.1son tournament bhl,
upped Uteir season mark to 1115. Lloyd Batts led the ilearc"ls
wilit 21 points.
Xavier, 7·14 for the seasorr,
was paced by Mike Plunkett's
23 tallies.
Kent State University
dumped Akron University, 8570, in the 72nd meeting of lhe
two tea ms on a ba.•ketbatl
court.
The Golden F'lashes upped
their season record to 9-11 with
Ute victory while Akron is now
T ole(to, 6-4

15-6.

In olhet· games Wednesday
night, Gannon (Pa.) slipped by

Job saver.
0

A six degree turndown. The Federal Energy Ollice has requested
that we set our home heat thermostats six degrees lower than last win ter. This will save natural gas and money.
But more than that, such gus conservation is
needed to help provide naturul gas [or industry
this winter and so avoid unemployment and
business closings. In many cases, gas is the
essential energy source lor industrial users;
without it production stops and employment
suffers.
That's why it's so vilal to conserve naturu! gas
in your home.
You can conserve gas by keeping your thermostat set six degrees lower. Al so seal off 11laccs
whete wnrm air can escape by"caulking around
windows and applying weatherstripping and
adequate attic insulation. In short, treat natural
gas like a precious naturnl resource. Because
that's whal it is.
Save energy and money . .. and jobs.

~.

Waynesburg (Pa.), 105-84;
Central Swtc beat Northern
Kentucky, 79-58; Findlay
dumpl'!l EarUtum (Ind.), 81-73;
and Bluffton outgunned
Manchester (Ind.), 110..96.

WASHINGTON (UP I) -- I've had this one big hang~1p all my
life.

I don 't like gmts.
'!'hut goes lor all ~uns. Hilles, shotguns, hand guns, you name, I
don't like litem.
My big trouble, or so Utey tell me, is that I'm a city boy, not a
country boy, and that's why it's difficult for me to wtderstand the
nccrssity for P''opie owning guns.
&amp;If-protection is one of the rea•ons, I'm told. A man has a
right to protec t I lis home and ramily. ha sn't he?
And what about hwtting, which provides so much sport ·for
millions tlu·oughout the land 7
Queen of Weapons
Sport. Now there's something I can underslund, can't I, particularly being in the line I'm in? Did I have any idea at all what a
rifle means to an owner'!
"A t·ille, or any gwt for that matter, is a very fundamental
possession," a man from Kentucky explained to me.
•'Go back to the days of the Crusades when fine weapons were
invented. You remember the Exculihur of King Arthur, ",e
sword he was so proud of, don't you? Well, in much the same
way, we're proud of our rifles. A rifle is considered the queen of
all weapons."
-·To me a rille is a gun, and when I think about guns and all the
people gelling killed by them, the first thing that runs through
my mind is the so-called Saturday Night Special.
These cheap, pol metal Saturday Night Specials are popping
up every place in the country and they're responsible for the
deaths of people not only in the big cities likes Atlanta, San
Francisco and New York, but also in the smaller ones like
Columbus, Ohio, Providenl-e, R. 1., and Omaha, Neb.
Some people still keep trying to sell me on the idea not all guns
are bad. They say I have this blind spot about them, this
prejudice.
VIsits NRA
Okay then, where do I go to gel un-prejudiced?
Funny I sho~ld ask, they say because there's a place right here
in Wa,hington where I can find out ail about the constructive side
of guns.
11te place is called the National Uifle Association of America
(NRA), and if you want to know any conceivable thing about
firearms, this is the place to go.
I paid these people a visit and never was treated better
anywhe1·e in the world.
The first thing I nolkt.-d was a sign on the front of the building
which said:
"'l'he right of the peuple to keep and bear arms shall not be
in£riuged."
il
Safety Program
Inside, Ute NRA's executive vice president, Maxwell Evans
Rich, a friendly, distinguished looking man who ts a retired
Army general and reminded me vaguely of the late Douglas
MacArthur, told me he was from a little town ou.tside Salt Lake
Citf and one of the first things he was exposed to growing up was
a bee-bee gmt and then a single sbot .22 caliber rifle.
'You've got anywhere from 17 to 20 million people In the United
States who take out a hunting license each year," he said. "To
deprive them of this would be unfair.It's their hobby, their sport
and source or food to some extent.
"'l1tey wlk about us being lite 'powerful gun lobby,"' he went
on; "It disturbs rne because of the things we do and don't get the
t·eeognition . We started a Hunter Safety Program In 1972 and
about seven million have gone through the course. We also work
with the fish nnd game &lt;'Oiliiiiissions throughtout tbe U.S. in the
cib:rervaliun of wildlife."
What about those Saturday Night Specials lhough, the guns
that are so easy to get everywhere and are causing so much
terror and tragedy all over American, I asked the general.

1
0
0
5

.25

215-157
238-lSI

.60

265

4
0

o

1
3

5

669

lOOS
338 1164

265 235
31 1 292

277 -· IOOS

666

.67

228

2

112

296 -

1 16 4

Baltimore Coils, and Mark
Kellar, national collegiate
rushing champion from
Northern Illinois University,
said Fire owner Tom Origer
made them offers they couldn't
refuse.
They were among 18 players
signed by the WFL Chicago
franchise Wednesday. Ten of
the 18 had either been signed or
selected as draftees by NFL
clubs.
Hayden, a former Ohio State
star tailback who was the
Minnesota Vikings' first choice
in the 1970 drall and who
played two years with St.
Louis, said his contract calls
for "better pay" than he ever
got with the Cardinals, excluding bonuses or playoff shares.
Robimon, the Colts' third
NFL draft pick, said Origer's
offer was "mnch better than
Baltimore's:"
Kellar, cpicked sixth by
Minnesota, said the Vikings
~ ·t.Umed me orr'' on two counts.
"First, they told me they
picked me because all the
better running backs had been
taken," he said, "and then
their offer didn't even a)&gt;proach what I got from the
Chicago Fire," he said.
..,Also signing on as Firemen
were Jeff Stanceil, running
back once with the Atlanta
Falcons; linebacker Keith
Best, formerly of the Kansas
City Chiefs, quarterback
Johnny Walton, once with the

ts not somethmg to be hoarded
but something to be used ."

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1973-74 HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL

..

"•

Pel.

I

.fJ44

1485

15
15

l

l

.8ll
.833

1195
1126

14

4

1238

ll

.778

5

.722 11

II
II
II

1

.611

11
10
10
9
8
6

9
9
9

5

11
10
12
12
12
12

4

ll

6
5

l

OP
104
778
Alhens
8 5 806 685
Logan
7 7 973 891
Ironton
7 7 889 865
Jackson
4 9 809 870
Me1gs
2 11 784 915
Wel lston
0 11 406 814
(RESERVE)
Team
W L P OP
Jackson
12 I 616 542
Ironton
9 s 103 631
Athens
8 5 584 5ll

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

L

I
I
I
I
7

Pts.

OP
1016
1020
910
1078

1075
1280

611

10 13
1132
1198
1083

1232
11 17

.611
.611

1005

.588
.588

1001
909
950
1052
1059

1017

1004
1108
1154
901
1105
886
11 29
1089
lOS I
1041
1068
1005
864

.SOD
..:171

.400
3S9
.315
.33l
.333
.294
.294
.235
.116
.116
.111

W l
P
13 I 919
12 2 996

Jackson
Eastern
Ironton

922 Fed. Hocking
1141 Pl. Plea sa nt
1077 Athens
115S Trimble
1105 Meigs
1344 Soulhern
llS I Belpre
116&lt;1

L09an
Gallipolis

7

Waverly
Meigs

6 8 550
4 9 548

Wellston

Wohama

I 104 629
1 1 515 533

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6 4 401

385

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Fed. Hocking

2 8 337

375

W. Lo ca l
0 10 322 448
OFF ENS IV ELY
Pts. IG) Avg.
Team
1485 (lS) 82.5
H. Trace
1280 ( 18) II. I
Logan
12l8 ( 18) 68.8
Waverly
1232 (18) 68.4
Nels· York
1154 (II) 61.9
N.Gallia
1195 (18) 66.4
V. County
1087 117l 63.9
S. Valley
1068 (II) 62.8
K. Creek
1129 118) 62.1
W. Local
1126 ( 18) 62.6
Gallipolis
1122 (IS) 62.3
Alexander

'2

99

1047 ( 17) 61.6
1108 ( 18) 61.6
1105 ( 18) 61.4

1089 I 18) 60.5
901 (15 ) 60 .1

lOll 117l 59.8

1075 ( 18) 59.7

1005 I II) 59.I
1004 (17) 59.1
1005 118) 55.S
886 ( 16) 55.4

the 52-year-&lt;tld Dark Wednesday , minutes after Charlie
Finley had introduced him at a
news conference as the new
manager (12th in 14 years) of
the World Champion Oakla nd
A's.
Dark, who has known both
the joys and agonies of big
league baseball in a career that
spans nearly 30 years, was
finding it hard to pick the right
words, standing up there in the
glare of television cameras an J
countless microphones.
"Obviously, I've had my
personal probleiT1.'3," he went
on as Finley, who can be very
charming when he chooses, put
a fatherly arm around the man
he fired as manager seven
years ago. 11 But I've gotten
myself straightened out and I
believe I can be a better
manager than I ever was."
Dark, a religious man ,
divorced his first wife four
years ago and then remarried.
He had other personal
problems as well but held up
while working on the front half
of a five-year contract as
manager and general manager
of the Cleveland Indians .
But 21h years ago, the Indians, going nowhere, fired
Dark and he went home to
Miami. He's been trying to get
a big league job ever since, not
because he needed money, but
just to be in the game .
When Finley and Dick Williams, who led the A's to World
Championships the last two
years, became embroiled in a
cross-country argument over
whether Williams would serve
out his remai~ng two years

said by way of explanation .
Neither Finley nor Dark
cared much to talk about what
happened in 1967 when Charlie
fired Alvin over a player
dispute during a flight. Reportedly , Dark stuck up lor his
pla ye rs and that angered
Finley, sinl'€ he thought his
mana ger' s first allegiance was
to the man who makes out his
paycheck.
'I'm not going to comment on

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Ohio

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FOOTBALL SWEATSHIRTS

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"'••

Foreman and Abbott
Middleport,

•229
s 1"

Team
Nels-York
V. County

.,39

'100

always were fri endly ~nd
cordial to one another, " Finley

Scor e at half ·
Urbana ·17 Rio J/ .

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Hannan Trace 17 1 1485 1016
Southern
10 0 1064 1011
North Ga llia
9 9 1238 1113
Eastern
9 9 1108 1053
S11mmes Valley 6 12 1148 1404
Kyger Creek
4, J.1 1122 1248
Sou thwe stern
3 14 864 1108
FINALSVAC
TEAM
W L P OP
Hannan Tra ce
12 0 942 641
Eastern
9 3 786 686
North Gall ia
7 5 819 752
Sou thern
7 5 726 703
Sym mes Valley
5 1 176 920
Kyger Creek
I 11 720 08B
Sou thwe stern
I 11 602 781
SVAC FINAL RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
North Gall ia
9 3 545 396
Hannan Tra ce
9 3 527 410
Eastern
9 J 498 392
Southern
B 4 477 41 2
Symmes Valley
4 8 451 522
Kyger Creek
2 10 384 537
Southwestern
1 11 292 505
This week's games :
Tonight:
Southwestern vs . Easrern.
Class A Tournament at Meigs
High School.
Friday - Southern vs Kyger
CreeK Class A Tournament at
Meig s High Sc hool and Hannan
Trace vs . Fairland at Cla ss A
Tournament at Ir onton H igh
Sch ool .
Saturday - Winner or SW Easlern game plays North
Galtia at Meig s

516
586

0 11 lOI 618

Vinton Co.
Nels-York
Alexander
Bel pre

Aikman , 4

Williams' job.
"Even though we had our
differences in 1967 (the year
Finley fired Dark while the A's
were based in Kansas City) we

whaJ happened seven years
ago," Finley bristled, "and I'm
sure Mr. Oark doesn't care to
either. What both of us are
interested in now is the ptesent ·
and the future. I think I hired a
great baseball strategist and
I'm sure he'll take us all the
way this year."
Finl.ey was asked if he would
. meddle into Dark 's work and
he bristled again. "For a team
to be successful," said the As
owner, "the manager and the
general manager have to work
together, Since I'm the general
manager of this club as well as
the owner, I expect to.. be
talking quite often with my
manager. And I would hope he
would call me when he feels the
need. That's only normal, isn't
it ?"

Well ston v s. Jackson. Meigs or
Athens

{SEOA L sta nding s final
except for makeup or other
deci sion on postponed Wellston
games)

Team

URBANA (991 -

5 I:J . Conley , 8-5 21; Kerr . 7 1
15 ; Johnson , 6 7 19; Craw ford ,
2 2 6; Stoner, 50 10; Haughn , .t
2 10 .
Brautigam,
2 1 5
TOTALS 38 -23 -99 .
RIO GRANDE 197)
Albanese. I I 3 ; Ha rt. 4 0 8 :
Boll inger. 8 3- 19 , Lamber l. 10
•I 24 ; Stewart , 3-2 8 ; No e , 3 6
12; Fausnaugh , 5-2 12 ; San
ders , 4-3 11. TOTALS JB -2 1-,1 .

OAKLAND (UP!) - It's
been an agonizing 21h years for
Alvin Dark, a time to sit back
and reflect and hopefully
collect himself.
"I think I am a better man
today than I ever was," said

(Reserve Final)

•
••
•
..•

Box score of the varsity
game:

914 ( 18) 50.8
14
1164 Miller
864 ( 17) 50.8
l
14
1108 Southwestern
611 (1 5) 40.7
2
16
914
1152 Wel lston
OEFENSIVEL Y
I
14 067
611 11 21
Team
Pts. I G) Avg .
OVERALL SCORING
910 I 18) 50 .5
FG FT Pis I Gl Avg. Gallipolis
NAME , TEAM
909 1111 5l .5
2ll 61 523 ( 181 2fJ . l Alhens
Mar k Swain, Hannan Trace
1001 118) 55 .6
( 18) 26.6 Belpre
193 92
478
John Shoemaker , Waverly
950 Ill) 55.9
141 68 l62 I Ill 21.3 Southern
Mark Mace , Athens
101 3 118) 56.l
156 46 158 (II) 11.1 Trimble
Tim Seevers, Trimble
1016 ( 18) 56..:1
159 60 ll8 ( 181 21.0 H. Trace
Dan Bise, Fed . Hocking
1020 118) 56.1
llO II 331 1111 19.5 V. Counly
Tim Stout, N. Gallia
1) 28 (18) 57 .1
142 66 350 118) 19.4 Waverly
Dave Rann, Ironton
Eastern
1052 ( 18) 58 .4
18.6
136 62 l34 1181
Gil Price , Gallipolis
1083 ( 181 60.2 ·
Ill 69 331 118) 18.4 ·Alexander
Dave Pritchard, Nels-York
1105 118) 61.4
( 181 18.1 Fed. Hocking
144 31 325
Jim Pierce, Logan
Pl. Pleasant
922 (151 61.5
SEOAL SCOR lNG«
N.
Gall
ia
1059
( 171 62 .3
(G)
Avg.
NAME, TEAM
FG FT Pis
1132 ( 18) 62.9
114)
21.3 Log an
John Shoemaker, Waverly
154 7&lt;1
382
1147 { 18) 63 .7
(Ill 20.l Ironton
Mark Mace, Athens
110 4&lt;1
764
1158 (18) 64 .0
19.8 Miller
Dave Rann , Ironton
Ill
55
277
I 141
W.
Loca
l
1158
(18) 64.3
114)
18.9
Gil Price , Gallipolis
113 39
265
Southwestern
1108 ( 17) 65.2
17.7
I 121
Danny Dodson , M eigs
90 32
212
Nels-York
1198 118) 66.6
17 . I
1131
Mike McDpnald , Jackson
94 34
222
1077 116) 67 .3
I 14)
16 .5 Wahama
J1m P1erce, Logan
100 31
231
Jackson
1151 ( 17) 67.7
15
.1
Paul While. Jackson
89 26 204 I Ill
1164 Ill) 68.5
Milch Wright. Logan
77 ll
185 I 141 13.2 K. Creek
Meig s
116.4 (17) 68 .5
TRI-VALLEY SCORING(FtNAL)
1121 11 5) 14.7
NAME, TEAM
FG FT Pis (G) Avg. Wellston
S.
Valley
ll44 (II) 19.1
22.1
Dan Bise, Fed. Hocking
89 43
221
1101
UPCOMING SCHEDULE
18.0
Steve Thomas, Alexander
75 30 180 ( 10)
FRIDAY
Keith Nice, Vinton Co .
76
16
168
1101 16.8
Dave Pritchard, Nel s-York
65
35
163
1101 16.5 Ravenswood at Pt. Plea sanl
110) 15.6 Poca at Wahama
Harold CaudilL Vinton Co .
62
32 156
TUESOAY(Feb.26)
( 101 15.4
Vi c Knick , Warren local
62
30
154
Ripley
at Point Pleasant
14.8
Randy Offen berger , Warren L.
58 32
148
1101
THURSDAY (Feb. 28)
110) ll.8
Greg Smathers, Nel s-York
64
10
138
(9 1
ll.l Pt. Pleasant at Wahama
Dave Moore , Warren Local
51
1H
120
FRIDAY (March 1l
13. 1
Max- Pitts, Nels-York
51
2fJ
13 1 110)
Winfield a t Point Pleasant
SVAC SCORING
FG FT Pis. ( Gl Avg. 11:30 p.m .)
NAME . TEAM
135 45
ll5 I 12) 26.l William stown at Wahama
Mark Swa in , Hannan Trace
Final regular season games
91 44 238 ( 12) 19.8
Steve Dill, Eastern
S4 49 211 I II) 19.1 except for any makeup games
Tim Sto ut , North Gallia
59 45 163 (9)
18 .1 of postponed Well ston games
Bob Miller, Southern
so 29 1S9 (II) II .2 (v s. Jack son. M eigs Athens) in
Jaye Myers. S. Valley
SEOAL .
8l 22 IS8 Ill) 11.1
Pete Sayre, Southern
NOTE - Final SEOAL
Clay Hudson, Kyger Creek
II 45 181 (II) 11.0
19 40 19S ( 12) 16.5 stati sti ca l leaders will be
John Lusher , Hannan Trace
Norm Curfman, Southern
65
41 Ill (II) 1S .S released later pending decision
61
35 169 Ill) 15.4 on any makeup games of
Greg James, North Gal1ia

Team
Gallipolis
Waverly

"Your 1'hom JUeAn Store"

W

II

I
6
6

SEOAL STANDINGS
(VARSITY)

heritage house
•

.I
--

·•

•'·
''

'

•

•

lt.
Rio hit 21 of 28 free throw
attempts for 75 pet . The
Redmen con nected on 38 of 84
field goal attempts lor 46 pet.
Rio picked of! 35 rebounds.
Jimmy Noe garnered nine
caroms.
in Wednesday's preliminary
game, the Rio JV 's downed
Urbana 79-74 to complete their
season with a 11-4 mark .

and asked to be considered for

~I Alvin Dark new manager
of world champion A's

R

Hannan Tr ace
Vinlon County
Gallipol is
Waverly
Trimbl e
Logan
Nelsonville -York
Alexander
Belpr e
Athens
Sout hern
East er n
North Ga ll i a
Point Pleasant
Ironton
Wahama
Warren Local
Federal Hocking
Symmes Valley
Jackson
Kyger Creek
Meigs
Southwes tern
M iller
Well ston

a

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tuning for afine-tuned picture
automatically. DynaColor n85" chassis.

I SEO cl!ge stats
OVERALL STANDINGS

New

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TEAM

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There you are, ready to go.

game's scoring with a free night.
Urbana placed six men in
throw with three seconds left.
The victory left Urbana with double ligures. Conley led the
a 13-lJ season mark. The Blue visitors' attack with 21 poinls.
Knighls finished second in the Johnson added 19.
Rio Grande had five men in
MOC ' with an &amp;-2 mark. Rio
dropped to 12·11 on the year. double figures. Lambert led
Inside the MOC, Rio dropped to the way with 24 points.
5-4. The Redmen complete Bollinger added 19. Jimmy Noe
league play against Ohio and Dean Fausnaugh each had
Dominican at home Saturday 12. Ken Sanders finished with

(Includes games through Feb. 14

WIGLETS &amp;FALLS

'

STEREO

spread 194-91) before
'likt• t\llllt· (~ lilyup witl1 ~2
Hiu
·
~
ll
t~r r Lan rbert cut it bilt·k
s t'l'l'lld s It'l l ~;1\'t' \'i sitin g
h1
tlftP , - !l4l:9a.
with 1:36
ttrbana a ~t9.9i \\'ill onr host
Hill (iramll' in cr Mid.Ohio n •111&lt;1itlill!-:.
J ohnsun's rllarity toss at the Clmh•n•nct• b:t skrtbitll ~ame n1
L,. nt' Ct•n ter Wt•dnt•sd:-ty mg lr t. ! ::t2 111; 1 r~ ~ m;1de it 95-93. Dale
.Tht• Blut' Kni~h l'\ lnt 47-:li :-r1 C' nmford's fre~ throw upped
halrtin)t' . Rio caut-:ht firt' with Urbana's lead to three, 96-93
4::!2 n •nwining in tht' ).!a!IH' . Wi ll i 1:05 showing on the clock.
Lambert 's goa l I :351
Sl'urin~ t-i~ht stntight points
rediH
'(•d it to &lt;me a~ain, 96-95 .
within a two-minute span to
Then
nrr11c Conley 's layup with
de.adlock tht&gt; game at 91 -;d \ tm
a ~0..11 by Dan Bollingrr with 22 s t• c onrl ~ left which put the
~~ll lll' uut of reach fur Rio .
~ : 48 remaining
Glenn Johnson 's frre Ur ruw J.;n nlu:rt scored aga in with six
12:41\ and Mtke Con ley's goal S t'C U!lLIS \d t to make it 98-97 ,
the
\ 1: JO) gave the vtsitors a thr e£&gt; - Crawford romp leted
pt )irr!

..

·---------...1

with Oakland or sign wilit the
Yankees, Dark called Finley

99-97

MEIGS THEATRE

with deluxe Rollabout Stand

•MBIAGAS

Gas is precious, pure energy , • , usc It wi!iely,

'.
I--------~-----------

Youngs town , YU-77 ; Wri ght
State bombed Bellal'lnine
(Ky.), 99-75, Ti!lin nipped Ohio
Dominican fil-60; Urbana
oulscor-&lt;.'1 ltio Grande, 99-97;
.lohn Carroll got by Case
Western Reserve, 90-77;
Defiance lroum:cd Goshen
(Ind.), 97-72:. Malone ripped

CH ICAGO &lt;UPI) - The
C.'hicago Fire has signed up at
least three players for this
year's maiden World Football
League season by lopping
offers from National Football
League teams.
Leo Hayden of the St. Louis
Caniinals, Glenn Hobinson a
Utird round draft choke of the

e
I

.64
100

54
10
15
II

Oticago Fires ink 18
A thought for the day :
American politican Wendell
e
nes
ay
Willkie
said, ." Our sovereignly
d
more players W d

Miami gives Tar Heels struggle
Ry UnHed Prrss International

46

51
.6.4

Scurinq by Quarters :
M ciqs
Oppont.'nl s

SV AC: RESEHVE CHAMPS - The Eastern Eogle
Rescrvrs, co:tched hy Duane Wolfe, finished U1e season with
a 12-1i overall record, 9-3 in the SVAC, which earned them a
t.hrN'· \I;'ay tie for the league reserve champion ship. Mem-

c l . . REB . PF ..
.5 1
97
42
.-49
162
51

Los Angeles Rams ; wide -LEADING SCORER
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Walter
receiver Bruce·· Jan kowski, a
former Chief, and Todd Lockett of Ohio University continues to maintain a !1ig lead In
Snyder, a former Falcon .
Rounding out the package the -Mid-American Conference
were Chuck Burgoon, Viking scoring race with a 23 points
dra!t pick; Don Wesley, per game average.
Miami's Phil Lumpkin is
dra!ted by the Cleveland
B~o\Vns; .a aro.ld Simpson, .second with a 17.8 mark, .
Green Bay draft pick, and the followed by James McElroy
and Dan Roundfield of Central
following newcomers:
Jim Anderson of Northwes, Michigan, 15.4 and 16.0
tern; Mike Rogowski gf ffiinois respectively, and Mike Parker,
Benedictine; Mike Mannott of Toledo (i5:3).
Weber Slate ; Mike Heinrich,
Allan Kustok and John Gann of
Illinois; Alex Davis of Purdue
and Garyion Dunlap of Eureka
College.
Origer said the WFL 's
TONIGHT
FEB. 21
Philadelphia franchise may be
NOT
OPEN
moved to Mexico City and that
Friday
thru
Tuesday
an announcement would be
Feb.
22-26
made in Philadelphia in the
alf Disney's
next few days.
"T HAT DARN CAT"

OHIO

FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

�'

•
.-!

4- The D~ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb.

Final Marauder statistics
Followinq are the final statistics for the 1973-74 r eg ular
sett~on ot !he Ml'iQs Marauder basketball team .

~t.wer

PTS
11 5
149
141
.70
109
34
162
Lonnie Co.:1fo.
6J 174
36
36· 55
.65
43
33
108
Ste ve Price
40 126
31
28 - 43
.65
]6
35
· · :J erry· cnmw·i1n 'S··· Ts·····tS" ··~""""JT '"~-.... ,'5._..."23 · ·-·-· :·6:s .. ·-· · 49 · 'l6
45
TNry Quo~ l h
B1ll Myer '&gt;
Diln Dodson

!

FG-A

A7 1]9
66 I &lt;IS
103 730

Orrion Blanch,'lrd\6
lhip Br,lver
18Perk Aull
B·
GrL-.g Browning
6
Steve Wi'llburn
6
M ickAsh
1
Mike Wily
1
JimAnderson
7
Mit ch M e.1dows 1
Charlie M.1rs h.1 11 0
Mike Magn o! ttl 0
Mi &lt;: kt&gt; y Davenport

I

Pel .

.33
.45
.44

JB
58

.42
.Jl

31

26

1?

.SO

17
6

.11
.17
17

6

11
'J
0
1
2 -5

. 18

.'JO
.00
.40

TOTALS
195-1059 .17
OPPONENTS 463-986
.46

II -A . Y

71 - 41
17 35
41 - 58

14- 27
18- 28

68
61

75
35

9

.44

11

19

&lt;1
5- 9
3- 8
0- 0
7- 11
2- 2
0- 0
0- 0
1-- 4

.75

7

3

.55
.37

13

6

2
4
10

1
I

5

6
0
0

II

4J.

Pesky Miami of Ohio chai·
lenged nalionallv fourth ran ked Nnrth ca~lina Wednes day n1gh t but couldn 't
quite duplicate !heir upset
vic tory of last season over tile
pe renially powerful Tar Heels.
All -America ca ndidate
Hobby .Jones pi cked the Miami
defense apar t \Vith a ca rCcr
hig h 29 poi nts to lead North
Carolina to an 83~9 victory
over the Redskins. Miami won
the Mid-American Conference
title last year but is now only
JI.IJ on the season .
Guard Plul Lumpkin led Mi·
ami with 21 points while Walter
Davis added 16 poinls tot

Jones' game hi gh of 29 lor the
Tar Heels, now 19·3 lor the
season.
ln Mid-Arncrican Conferen ce
games, Bowling Green nudged
out Toledo for second place in
th e league standings witlt a win
over Western Michigan. The
Rockets were nipped by
Ccnlral Michigan.
Bowling Gr een downed
Western Michigan, 68-63,
behind an outstanding first hall
scoring performance by Jeff
Montgomery, wh o hit 21 of his
2J game-high poinls before the
interm ission.
Bowling Green, now 15·9
overall and 7-4 in the loop,
moved one-half game ahead of

hers, left to right, are Rob Barber, Brian Conde, Randy
Blake, Dana Fick, Dan Good, Phil llowen, (Coach Wolfe),
Steve Nelsen, Jl'fl Holter, Dave H"'mum, Don Eichinger,
Mike ilarris and Tom Reed . Mike Larkins was absenl.

Luigi's Pizza
POMEROY, OHIO

PHONE 992-3984
Starting Friday, Feb. 22

•

Through Thursday, Feb. 28
YOU GET THE JRD ITEM ON A
PIZZA FOR .

ONLY A NICKEL

in the conferenci!.
Western Michi gan, t2-ll , "''d
H, was paced by freshman
Culler's 15 points.
Toledo failed to suswin a
seven-point halftime ad vanwge in a 71~9 loss to
Central Michigan.
The Rockets , 16-7 overall,
lost the game with only [our
seconds remaining when
James McElroy hit a layup to
give CMU the win. CMU
evened its season nk1rk in the
conference at 5-S and is 13-10 in
season play.
Independent cross-town
riv als Xavi·e r and the
University of CinciiiDali met at
the Cincinnati Gardens with
the Bearcats emerging a s
winners, GB-56.
Cincimk1ti, looking lor a
post-se;.1son tournament bhl,
upped Uteir season mark to 1115. Lloyd Batts led the ilearc"ls
wilit 21 points.
Xavier, 7·14 for the seasorr,
was paced by Mike Plunkett's
23 tallies.
Kent State University
dumped Akron University, 8570, in the 72nd meeting of lhe
two tea ms on a ba.•ketbatl
court.
The Golden F'lashes upped
their season record to 9-11 with
Ute victory while Akron is now
T ole(to, 6-4

15-6.

In olhet· games Wednesday
night, Gannon (Pa.) slipped by

Job saver.
0

A six degree turndown. The Federal Energy Ollice has requested
that we set our home heat thermostats six degrees lower than last win ter. This will save natural gas and money.
But more than that, such gus conservation is
needed to help provide naturul gas [or industry
this winter and so avoid unemployment and
business closings. In many cases, gas is the
essential energy source lor industrial users;
without it production stops and employment
suffers.
That's why it's so vilal to conserve naturu! gas
in your home.
You can conserve gas by keeping your thermostat set six degrees lower. Al so seal off 11laccs
whete wnrm air can escape by"caulking around
windows and applying weatherstripping and
adequate attic insulation. In short, treat natural
gas like a precious naturnl resource. Because
that's whal it is.
Save energy and money . .. and jobs.

~.

Waynesburg (Pa.), 105-84;
Central Swtc beat Northern
Kentucky, 79-58; Findlay
dumpl'!l EarUtum (Ind.), 81-73;
and Bluffton outgunned
Manchester (Ind.), 110..96.

WASHINGTON (UP I) -- I've had this one big hang~1p all my
life.

I don 't like gmts.
'!'hut goes lor all ~uns. Hilles, shotguns, hand guns, you name, I
don't like litem.
My big trouble, or so Utey tell me, is that I'm a city boy, not a
country boy, and that's why it's difficult for me to wtderstand the
nccrssity for P''opie owning guns.
&amp;If-protection is one of the rea•ons, I'm told. A man has a
right to protec t I lis home and ramily. ha sn't he?
And what about hwtting, which provides so much sport ·for
millions tlu·oughout the land 7
Queen of Weapons
Sport. Now there's something I can underslund, can't I, particularly being in the line I'm in? Did I have any idea at all what a
rifle means to an owner'!
"A t·ille, or any gwt for that matter, is a very fundamental
possession," a man from Kentucky explained to me.
•'Go back to the days of the Crusades when fine weapons were
invented. You remember the Exculihur of King Arthur, ",e
sword he was so proud of, don't you? Well, in much the same
way, we're proud of our rifles. A rifle is considered the queen of
all weapons."
-·To me a rille is a gun, and when I think about guns and all the
people gelling killed by them, the first thing that runs through
my mind is the so-called Saturday Night Special.
These cheap, pol metal Saturday Night Specials are popping
up every place in the country and they're responsible for the
deaths of people not only in the big cities likes Atlanta, San
Francisco and New York, but also in the smaller ones like
Columbus, Ohio, Providenl-e, R. 1., and Omaha, Neb.
Some people still keep trying to sell me on the idea not all guns
are bad. They say I have this blind spot about them, this
prejudice.
VIsits NRA
Okay then, where do I go to gel un-prejudiced?
Funny I sho~ld ask, they say because there's a place right here
in Wa,hington where I can find out ail about the constructive side
of guns.
11te place is called the National Uifle Association of America
(NRA), and if you want to know any conceivable thing about
firearms, this is the place to go.
I paid these people a visit and never was treated better
anywhe1·e in the world.
The first thing I nolkt.-d was a sign on the front of the building
which said:
"'l'he right of the peuple to keep and bear arms shall not be
in£riuged."
il
Safety Program
Inside, Ute NRA's executive vice president, Maxwell Evans
Rich, a friendly, distinguished looking man who ts a retired
Army general and reminded me vaguely of the late Douglas
MacArthur, told me he was from a little town ou.tside Salt Lake
Citf and one of the first things he was exposed to growing up was
a bee-bee gmt and then a single sbot .22 caliber rifle.
'You've got anywhere from 17 to 20 million people In the United
States who take out a hunting license each year," he said. "To
deprive them of this would be unfair.It's their hobby, their sport
and source or food to some extent.
"'l1tey wlk about us being lite 'powerful gun lobby,"' he went
on; "It disturbs rne because of the things we do and don't get the
t·eeognition . We started a Hunter Safety Program In 1972 and
about seven million have gone through the course. We also work
with the fish nnd game &lt;'Oiliiiiissions throughtout tbe U.S. in the
cib:rervaliun of wildlife."
What about those Saturday Night Specials lhough, the guns
that are so easy to get everywhere and are causing so much
terror and tragedy all over American, I asked the general.

1
0
0
5

.25

215-157
238-lSI

.60

265

4
0

o

1
3

5

669

lOOS
338 1164

265 235
31 1 292

277 -· IOOS

666

.67

228

2

112

296 -

1 16 4

Baltimore Coils, and Mark
Kellar, national collegiate
rushing champion from
Northern Illinois University,
said Fire owner Tom Origer
made them offers they couldn't
refuse.
They were among 18 players
signed by the WFL Chicago
franchise Wednesday. Ten of
the 18 had either been signed or
selected as draftees by NFL
clubs.
Hayden, a former Ohio State
star tailback who was the
Minnesota Vikings' first choice
in the 1970 drall and who
played two years with St.
Louis, said his contract calls
for "better pay" than he ever
got with the Cardinals, excluding bonuses or playoff shares.
Robimon, the Colts' third
NFL draft pick, said Origer's
offer was "mnch better than
Baltimore's:"
Kellar, cpicked sixth by
Minnesota, said the Vikings
~ ·t.Umed me orr'' on two counts.
"First, they told me they
picked me because all the
better running backs had been
taken," he said, "and then
their offer didn't even a)&gt;proach what I got from the
Chicago Fire," he said.
..,Also signing on as Firemen
were Jeff Stanceil, running
back once with the Atlanta
Falcons; linebacker Keith
Best, formerly of the Kansas
City Chiefs, quarterback
Johnny Walton, once with the

ts not somethmg to be hoarded
but something to be used ."

(Technicolor}
A wild. wacky, way -out
chase led by the world's first
Siamese Secret Agent .
Show starts 1 p.m .

ZENiltt
COLOR TV

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MASON FURNITURE
HERMAN GRATE
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,,

VALUES
ON
WINTER
.MERCHAN Dl SE

1973-74 HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL

..

"•

Pel.

I

.fJ44

1485

15
15

l

l

.8ll
.833

1195
1126

14

4

1238

ll

.778

5

.722 11

II
II
II

1

.611

11
10
10
9
8
6

9
9
9

5

11
10
12
12
12
12

4

ll

6
5

l

OP
104
778
Alhens
8 5 806 685
Logan
7 7 973 891
Ironton
7 7 889 865
Jackson
4 9 809 870
Me1gs
2 11 784 915
Wel lston
0 11 406 814
(RESERVE)
Team
W L P OP
Jackson
12 I 616 542
Ironton
9 s 103 631
Athens
8 5 584 5ll

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

L

I
I
I
I
7

Pts.

OP
1016
1020
910
1078

1075
1280

611

10 13
1132
1198
1083

1232
11 17

.611
.611

1005

.588
.588

1001
909
950
1052
1059

1017

1004
1108
1154
901
1105
886
11 29
1089
lOS I
1041
1068
1005
864

.SOD
..:171

.400
3S9
.315
.33l
.333
.294
.294
.235
.116
.116
.111

W l
P
13 I 919
12 2 996

Jackson
Eastern
Ironton

922 Fed. Hocking
1141 Pl. Plea sa nt
1077 Athens
115S Trimble
1105 Meigs
1344 Soulhern
llS I Belpre
116&lt;1

L09an
Gallipolis

7

Waverly
Meigs

6 8 550
4 9 548

Wellston

Wohama

I 104 629
1 1 515 533

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W. Lo ca l
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OFF ENS IV ELY
Pts. IG) Avg.
Team
1485 (lS) 82.5
H. Trace
1280 ( 18) II. I
Logan
12l8 ( 18) 68.8
Waverly
1232 (18) 68.4
Nels· York
1154 (II) 61.9
N.Gallia
1195 (18) 66.4
V. County
1087 117l 63.9
S. Valley
1068 (II) 62.8
K. Creek
1129 118) 62.1
W. Local
1126 ( 18) 62.6
Gallipolis
1122 (IS) 62.3
Alexander

'2

99

1047 ( 17) 61.6
1108 ( 18) 61.6
1105 ( 18) 61.4

1089 I 18) 60.5
901 (15 ) 60 .1

lOll 117l 59.8

1075 ( 18) 59.7

1005 I II) 59.I
1004 (17) 59.1
1005 118) 55.S
886 ( 16) 55.4

the 52-year-&lt;tld Dark Wednesday , minutes after Charlie
Finley had introduced him at a
news conference as the new
manager (12th in 14 years) of
the World Champion Oakla nd
A's.
Dark, who has known both
the joys and agonies of big
league baseball in a career that
spans nearly 30 years, was
finding it hard to pick the right
words, standing up there in the
glare of television cameras an J
countless microphones.
"Obviously, I've had my
personal probleiT1.'3," he went
on as Finley, who can be very
charming when he chooses, put
a fatherly arm around the man
he fired as manager seven
years ago. 11 But I've gotten
myself straightened out and I
believe I can be a better
manager than I ever was."
Dark, a religious man ,
divorced his first wife four
years ago and then remarried.
He had other personal
problems as well but held up
while working on the front half
of a five-year contract as
manager and general manager
of the Cleveland Indians .
But 21h years ago, the Indians, going nowhere, fired
Dark and he went home to
Miami. He's been trying to get
a big league job ever since, not
because he needed money, but
just to be in the game .
When Finley and Dick Williams, who led the A's to World
Championships the last two
years, became embroiled in a
cross-country argument over
whether Williams would serve
out his remai~ng two years

said by way of explanation .
Neither Finley nor Dark
cared much to talk about what
happened in 1967 when Charlie
fired Alvin over a player
dispute during a flight. Reportedly , Dark stuck up lor his
pla ye rs and that angered
Finley, sinl'€ he thought his
mana ger' s first allegiance was
to the man who makes out his
paycheck.
'I'm not going to comment on

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Ohio

W
9

FOOTBALL SWEATSHIRTS

"

"'••

Foreman and Abbott
Middleport,

•229
s 1"

Team
Nels-York
V. County

.,39

'100

always were fri endly ~nd
cordial to one another, " Finley

Scor e at half ·
Urbana ·17 Rio J/ .

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Hannan Trace 17 1 1485 1016
Southern
10 0 1064 1011
North Ga llia
9 9 1238 1113
Eastern
9 9 1108 1053
S11mmes Valley 6 12 1148 1404
Kyger Creek
4, J.1 1122 1248
Sou thwe stern
3 14 864 1108
FINALSVAC
TEAM
W L P OP
Hannan Tra ce
12 0 942 641
Eastern
9 3 786 686
North Gall ia
7 5 819 752
Sou thern
7 5 726 703
Sym mes Valley
5 1 176 920
Kyger Creek
I 11 720 08B
Sou thwe stern
I 11 602 781
SVAC FINAL RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
North Gall ia
9 3 545 396
Hannan Tra ce
9 3 527 410
Eastern
9 J 498 392
Southern
B 4 477 41 2
Symmes Valley
4 8 451 522
Kyger Creek
2 10 384 537
Southwestern
1 11 292 505
This week's games :
Tonight:
Southwestern vs . Easrern.
Class A Tournament at Meigs
High School.
Friday - Southern vs Kyger
CreeK Class A Tournament at
Meig s High Sc hool and Hannan
Trace vs . Fairland at Cla ss A
Tournament at Ir onton H igh
Sch ool .
Saturday - Winner or SW Easlern game plays North
Galtia at Meig s

516
586

0 11 lOI 618

Vinton Co.
Nels-York
Alexander
Bel pre

Aikman , 4

Williams' job.
"Even though we had our
differences in 1967 (the year
Finley fired Dark while the A's
were based in Kansas City) we

whaJ happened seven years
ago," Finley bristled, "and I'm
sure Mr. Oark doesn't care to
either. What both of us are
interested in now is the ptesent ·
and the future. I think I hired a
great baseball strategist and
I'm sure he'll take us all the
way this year."
Finl.ey was asked if he would
. meddle into Dark 's work and
he bristled again. "For a team
to be successful," said the As
owner, "the manager and the
general manager have to work
together, Since I'm the general
manager of this club as well as
the owner, I expect to.. be
talking quite often with my
manager. And I would hope he
would call me when he feels the
need. That's only normal, isn't
it ?"

Well ston v s. Jackson. Meigs or
Athens

{SEOA L sta nding s final
except for makeup or other
deci sion on postponed Wellston
games)

Team

URBANA (991 -

5 I:J . Conley , 8-5 21; Kerr . 7 1
15 ; Johnson , 6 7 19; Craw ford ,
2 2 6; Stoner, 50 10; Haughn , .t
2 10 .
Brautigam,
2 1 5
TOTALS 38 -23 -99 .
RIO GRANDE 197)
Albanese. I I 3 ; Ha rt. 4 0 8 :
Boll inger. 8 3- 19 , Lamber l. 10
•I 24 ; Stewart , 3-2 8 ; No e , 3 6
12; Fausnaugh , 5-2 12 ; San
ders , 4-3 11. TOTALS JB -2 1-,1 .

OAKLAND (UP!) - It's
been an agonizing 21h years for
Alvin Dark, a time to sit back
and reflect and hopefully
collect himself.
"I think I am a better man
today than I ever was," said

(Reserve Final)

•
••
•
..•

Box score of the varsity
game:

914 ( 18) 50.8
14
1164 Miller
864 ( 17) 50.8
l
14
1108 Southwestern
611 (1 5) 40.7
2
16
914
1152 Wel lston
OEFENSIVEL Y
I
14 067
611 11 21
Team
Pts. I G) Avg .
OVERALL SCORING
910 I 18) 50 .5
FG FT Pis I Gl Avg. Gallipolis
NAME , TEAM
909 1111 5l .5
2ll 61 523 ( 181 2fJ . l Alhens
Mar k Swain, Hannan Trace
1001 118) 55 .6
( 18) 26.6 Belpre
193 92
478
John Shoemaker , Waverly
950 Ill) 55.9
141 68 l62 I Ill 21.3 Southern
Mark Mace , Athens
101 3 118) 56.l
156 46 158 (II) 11.1 Trimble
Tim Seevers, Trimble
1016 ( 18) 56..:1
159 60 ll8 ( 181 21.0 H. Trace
Dan Bise, Fed . Hocking
1020 118) 56.1
llO II 331 1111 19.5 V. Counly
Tim Stout, N. Gallia
1) 28 (18) 57 .1
142 66 350 118) 19.4 Waverly
Dave Rann, Ironton
Eastern
1052 ( 18) 58 .4
18.6
136 62 l34 1181
Gil Price , Gallipolis
1083 ( 181 60.2 ·
Ill 69 331 118) 18.4 ·Alexander
Dave Pritchard, Nels-York
1105 118) 61.4
( 181 18.1 Fed. Hocking
144 31 325
Jim Pierce, Logan
Pl. Pleasant
922 (151 61.5
SEOAL SCOR lNG«
N.
Gall
ia
1059
( 171 62 .3
(G)
Avg.
NAME, TEAM
FG FT Pis
1132 ( 18) 62.9
114)
21.3 Log an
John Shoemaker, Waverly
154 7&lt;1
382
1147 { 18) 63 .7
(Ill 20.l Ironton
Mark Mace, Athens
110 4&lt;1
764
1158 (18) 64 .0
19.8 Miller
Dave Rann , Ironton
Ill
55
277
I 141
W.
Loca
l
1158
(18) 64.3
114)
18.9
Gil Price , Gallipolis
113 39
265
Southwestern
1108 ( 17) 65.2
17.7
I 121
Danny Dodson , M eigs
90 32
212
Nels-York
1198 118) 66.6
17 . I
1131
Mike McDpnald , Jackson
94 34
222
1077 116) 67 .3
I 14)
16 .5 Wahama
J1m P1erce, Logan
100 31
231
Jackson
1151 ( 17) 67.7
15
.1
Paul While. Jackson
89 26 204 I Ill
1164 Ill) 68.5
Milch Wright. Logan
77 ll
185 I 141 13.2 K. Creek
Meig s
116.4 (17) 68 .5
TRI-VALLEY SCORING(FtNAL)
1121 11 5) 14.7
NAME, TEAM
FG FT Pis (G) Avg. Wellston
S.
Valley
ll44 (II) 19.1
22.1
Dan Bise, Fed. Hocking
89 43
221
1101
UPCOMING SCHEDULE
18.0
Steve Thomas, Alexander
75 30 180 ( 10)
FRIDAY
Keith Nice, Vinton Co .
76
16
168
1101 16.8
Dave Pritchard, Nel s-York
65
35
163
1101 16.5 Ravenswood at Pt. Plea sanl
110) 15.6 Poca at Wahama
Harold CaudilL Vinton Co .
62
32 156
TUESOAY(Feb.26)
( 101 15.4
Vi c Knick , Warren local
62
30
154
Ripley
at Point Pleasant
14.8
Randy Offen berger , Warren L.
58 32
148
1101
THURSDAY (Feb. 28)
110) ll.8
Greg Smathers, Nel s-York
64
10
138
(9 1
ll.l Pt. Pleasant at Wahama
Dave Moore , Warren Local
51
1H
120
FRIDAY (March 1l
13. 1
Max- Pitts, Nels-York
51
2fJ
13 1 110)
Winfield a t Point Pleasant
SVAC SCORING
FG FT Pis. ( Gl Avg. 11:30 p.m .)
NAME . TEAM
135 45
ll5 I 12) 26.l William stown at Wahama
Mark Swa in , Hannan Trace
Final regular season games
91 44 238 ( 12) 19.8
Steve Dill, Eastern
S4 49 211 I II) 19.1 except for any makeup games
Tim Sto ut , North Gallia
59 45 163 (9)
18 .1 of postponed Well ston games
Bob Miller, Southern
so 29 1S9 (II) II .2 (v s. Jack son. M eigs Athens) in
Jaye Myers. S. Valley
SEOAL .
8l 22 IS8 Ill) 11.1
Pete Sayre, Southern
NOTE - Final SEOAL
Clay Hudson, Kyger Creek
II 45 181 (II) 11.0
19 40 19S ( 12) 16.5 stati sti ca l leaders will be
John Lusher , Hannan Trace
Norm Curfman, Southern
65
41 Ill (II) 1S .S released later pending decision
61
35 169 Ill) 15.4 on any makeup games of
Greg James, North Gal1ia

Team
Gallipolis
Waverly

"Your 1'hom JUeAn Store"

W

II

I
6
6

SEOAL STANDINGS
(VARSITY)

heritage house
•

.I
--

·•

•'·
''

'

•

•

lt.
Rio hit 21 of 28 free throw
attempts for 75 pet . The
Redmen con nected on 38 of 84
field goal attempts lor 46 pet.
Rio picked of! 35 rebounds.
Jimmy Noe garnered nine
caroms.
in Wednesday's preliminary
game, the Rio JV 's downed
Urbana 79-74 to complete their
season with a 11-4 mark .

and asked to be considered for

~I Alvin Dark new manager
of world champion A's

R

Hannan Tr ace
Vinlon County
Gallipol is
Waverly
Trimbl e
Logan
Nelsonville -York
Alexander
Belpr e
Athens
Sout hern
East er n
North Ga ll i a
Point Pleasant
Ironton
Wahama
Warren Local
Federal Hocking
Symmes Valley
Jackson
Kyger Creek
Meigs
Southwes tern
M iller
Well ston

a

"..

tuning for afine-tuned picture
automatically. DynaColor n85" chassis.

I SEO cl!ge stats
OVERALL STANDINGS

New

PhilcomaticTM Set-and-Forget

!~~~~~r®Jj~~~~~~~Y?M?'~~-~·~~--~-~~~·~~~:~x~.~~

TEAM

ARRIVALS

For a carefree summer en joy yourself
swimmi ng knowing you won't have to set your
hair. You'll be ready to go almost at a
moment's notice. Just slip on your 100 pel.
human hair wiglet or a permanent curl fall.
There you are, ready to go.

game's scoring with a free night.
Urbana placed six men in
throw with three seconds left.
The victory left Urbana with double ligures. Conley led the
a 13-lJ season mark. The Blue visitors' attack with 21 poinls.
Knighls finished second in the Johnson added 19.
Rio Grande had five men in
MOC ' with an &amp;-2 mark. Rio
dropped to 12·11 on the year. double figures. Lambert led
Inside the MOC, Rio dropped to the way with 24 points.
5-4. The Redmen complete Bollinger added 19. Jimmy Noe
league play against Ohio and Dean Fausnaugh each had
Dominican at home Saturday 12. Ken Sanders finished with

(Includes games through Feb. 14

WIGLETS &amp;FALLS

'

STEREO

spread 194-91) before
'likt• t\llllt· (~ lilyup witl1 ~2
Hiu
·
~
ll
t~r r Lan rbert cut it bilt·k
s t'l'l'lld s It'l l ~;1\'t' \'i sitin g
h1
tlftP , - !l4l:9a.
with 1:36
ttrbana a ~t9.9i \\'ill onr host
Hill (iramll' in cr Mid.Ohio n •111&lt;1itlill!-:.
J ohnsun's rllarity toss at the Clmh•n•nct• b:t skrtbitll ~ame n1
L,. nt' Ct•n ter Wt•dnt•sd:-ty mg lr t. ! ::t2 111; 1 r~ ~ m;1de it 95-93. Dale
.Tht• Blut' Kni~h l'\ lnt 47-:li :-r1 C' nmford's fre~ throw upped
halrtin)t' . Rio caut-:ht firt' with Urbana's lead to three, 96-93
4::!2 n •nwining in tht' ).!a!IH' . Wi ll i 1:05 showing on the clock.
Lambert 's goa l I :351
Sl'urin~ t-i~ht stntight points
rediH
'(•d it to &lt;me a~ain, 96-95 .
within a two-minute span to
Then
nrr11c Conley 's layup with
de.adlock tht&gt; game at 91 -;d \ tm
a ~0..11 by Dan Bollingrr with 22 s t• c onrl ~ left which put the
~~ll lll' uut of reach fur Rio .
~ : 48 remaining
Glenn Johnson 's frre Ur ruw J.;n nlu:rt scored aga in with six
12:41\ and Mtke Con ley's goal S t'C U!lLIS \d t to make it 98-97 ,
the
\ 1: JO) gave the vtsitors a thr e£&gt; - Crawford romp leted
pt )irr!

..

·---------...1

with Oakland or sign wilit the
Yankees, Dark called Finley

99-97

MEIGS THEATRE

with deluxe Rollabout Stand

•MBIAGAS

Gas is precious, pure energy , • , usc It wi!iely,

'.
I--------~-----------

Youngs town , YU-77 ; Wri ght
State bombed Bellal'lnine
(Ky.), 99-75, Ti!lin nipped Ohio
Dominican fil-60; Urbana
oulscor-&lt;.'1 ltio Grande, 99-97;
.lohn Carroll got by Case
Western Reserve, 90-77;
Defiance lroum:cd Goshen
(Ind.), 97-72:. Malone ripped

CH ICAGO &lt;UPI) - The
C.'hicago Fire has signed up at
least three players for this
year's maiden World Football
League season by lopping
offers from National Football
League teams.
Leo Hayden of the St. Louis
Caniinals, Glenn Hobinson a
Utird round draft choke of the

e
I

.64
100

54
10
15
II

Oticago Fires ink 18
A thought for the day :
American politican Wendell
e
nes
ay
Willkie
said, ." Our sovereignly
d
more players W d

Miami gives Tar Heels struggle
Ry UnHed Prrss International

46

51
.6.4

Scurinq by Quarters :
M ciqs
Oppont.'nl s

SV AC: RESEHVE CHAMPS - The Eastern Eogle
Rescrvrs, co:tched hy Duane Wolfe, finished U1e season with
a 12-1i overall record, 9-3 in the SVAC, which earned them a
t.hrN'· \I;'ay tie for the league reserve champion ship. Mem-

c l . . REB . PF ..
.5 1
97
42
.-49
162
51

Los Angeles Rams ; wide -LEADING SCORER
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Walter
receiver Bruce·· Jan kowski, a
former Chief, and Todd Lockett of Ohio University continues to maintain a !1ig lead In
Snyder, a former Falcon .
Rounding out the package the -Mid-American Conference
were Chuck Burgoon, Viking scoring race with a 23 points
dra!t pick; Don Wesley, per game average.
Miami's Phil Lumpkin is
dra!ted by the Cleveland
B~o\Vns; .a aro.ld Simpson, .second with a 17.8 mark, .
Green Bay draft pick, and the followed by James McElroy
and Dan Roundfield of Central
following newcomers:
Jim Anderson of Northwes, Michigan, 15.4 and 16.0
tern; Mike Rogowski gf ffiinois respectively, and Mike Parker,
Benedictine; Mike Mannott of Toledo (i5:3).
Weber Slate ; Mike Heinrich,
Allan Kustok and John Gann of
Illinois; Alex Davis of Purdue
and Garyion Dunlap of Eureka
College.
Origer said the WFL 's
TONIGHT
FEB. 21
Philadelphia franchise may be
NOT
OPEN
moved to Mexico City and that
Friday
thru
Tuesday
an announcement would be
Feb.
22-26
made in Philadelphia in the
alf Disney's
next few days.
"T HAT DARN CAT"

OHIO

FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

�II

r •

•
)

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pome~oy, 0., Feb . 21, 1974

Impeachment rnavJ .
cover wide areas

News ... ·in Briefs

!Continued from page I)
j'
testifying ag;~inst him at ilis upcoming jierjury trial. The ruling
by U. S. Distriet ./udgc Ge rhard A. Gesell Wednesday - with an

unexplained " qmtlification" -- apparently cleared the way for

Dean to wke.lhe sl;~nd as the key prosecution witness against his
former Whitt• Hom;e colleague.

WASIUNGTON (UPI ) - A
Hou8e impeachment inquiry
staff Said today it had concluded that President Nixon
could be impeached for non-

grave step for the nation."
" It is lo be predicated only
upon condit ions ser iously incompatible with either the

criminal acts, including abuse

constitutional £arm a nd princi-

that impeachment was " a

of the poweJs of the ples of ou r governmen t or the
Presidency.
proper performance of ti1e
In a !50-page report to the 38 constitutional duties of the
members of the House Judici- presidential office," the report
,_
ary Committee, the staff, said.
organized to study possible
The report said, "The duty of
impeachable offenses, stressed a Presiden t to prese rve,
protect and defend ti1e Constitution to the best of his

Rio proposal
again tabled

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Chance of snow Saturday

Once again the Ohio Board of
Regents has "tabled" a
proposal by Rio Grande
College lo set up a "community
college" along with the private
college operation .
The regents said they wanted
more information and alternative plans before reaching a
decision on the matter . The
Regents will meet again on
March 15.
Financing plans for th e
community college include a
tax levy in four southeastern
Ohio counties - Jackson ,
Gallla, Meigs and Vinton.
Meeting Friday in Cincinnati, the regents approved a
resolution urging the trustees
of Ohio University and the
Scioto Technical College to
work with supports of both
Institutions to develop plans for
a new state general and
technical college in Portsmouth.

abili ty includes the duty not to
a buse his powers or transgress
their limits , not to violate the
r ights o£ c itizens, s uch as those

granted by the Bill of Rights
and not to act in derogation of
Constitution ."
In saying a President could
be impeached for acts other

for Britain's na tion tll elections today, prodaiming confidence he
would win another five years in office.

than criminal offenses , the

report cited as impeachable
conduct'' undermining the in-

tegrity of the offie€, disregard
of constitutional du ties and
oa th of office, a rrogation of

power, abLLSe of the government proeess, udverse impact
gm~' ern­

on the system of tile

ment. ''
"Clearly, ti•ese effects can
be brought about in ways not
an tic ipated by criminal law, "

FIRST IN AF
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Lt.
(j.g.) Barbara Allen, 25, of
Long Beach, Calif., will
become the U.S. military's
first woman flyer Friday.

the report said.
The report appeared to llold
the President responsible for
the cond uct of his subordinates, although the staff did
not spell out whethe1· it felt he
was responsible for acts not
specifically au thorized by him.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Donald Ni cholson , Naomi
Parsons, Frank . Porter, Sr.,
Rana Hale, Gil bert Ray,
Carolyn Rou sh, Virginia
Roush, Robert VanMete-r,
Mary Jeanne Walker, Maria
Watkins , Tonya Woodard,
James Yates.
1Births)
Mr .

8

For . 27.50

Give Her Diamonds
Caravelle® by Bulova.
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her timely too. For a mere $25.50. Gi'le her a prettily sculp ·
tured, precision-made, 17 jewel watch , highlighted with twin
dlamon... The Sweet Briar " G". Caravella by Bulova. An
expensive watch at an Inexpensive price .

Goessler's Jewelry Store
Pomeroy

Court St.

and

Mrs .

Herman

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Everett
Hutton, Albany; Hollis Rupe,
Cheshire ; Leah Nease, Minersville; Mary Hackney, Racine ;
Crystal Jacob , Rutland ;
Lorena Ault, Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Cla ri ce
Carson,
Eld a
Carsey.
Raymond Har tley , Mary
Lambert, Virgil Yarbroup,h,
James Allen, Eric Walk er,
Donna Smith, Opal Cummins,
Vickie Lynn Smith, William
Morri s,
Samuel
Arf'hi e
McKinney , Orley Rife .

FRI. &amp; SAT.
FEB. 22·23
SINGLE

KNITS
VALUES
TO NOW

$

149

13.98

YD.

lest luysl from Our Stock!

Boa rd to an inde~nd e nt arbi tration tribunal.

DETftOIT -- THE NAT ION 'S AUTOMAKERS appear ready
to ra ise pr ices once again on 1974-mudel cars , despite the opposi tion of the government's to p price controller and an ea rlier

pledge to hold the line until Se ptember. Director John T. Dunlop
of the Cost of Living Council said Wednesday he did not believe
there cou ld be justification for any new increases and indicated
lhe industry &lt;•ugltt tu stick tu 1ts anti-inflation pledge made in
December.
A c;enera I Motors s pokesma n, however, said the nation's No.
J au to company stands by an earlier statement that it may have

$2.98

PT . PLEASANT - Tickets
are on sale for Saturday's
Lincoln Day Dinner scheduled
for 6:30p.m. in the Moose Hall.
The Honorable Edgar (Hike)
Heiskell, West Virginia
Secretary of State, will be the
keynote spea ker. Several other
state and county digoitaries
also are expected.
GOP ca ndidates seeking
election on the County level
also will be introduced, among
them, Basil Robertson and
Virgil Siders, Jr., candidates

RACINE
Graveside
services for Richard (Dick)
Hayman , 61, formerly of
Racine , will be held at 11 a.m.
Saturday at the Greenwood
Ce)Tietery with the Rev. Robert
Bumgarner officiating.
Mr. Hayman, who died on
Feb. 4 at Huntingdon Valley,
Pa., was born here Oct. 12, 1912
and graduated from Racine
High School in 1930. He played
piano with the orchestra of the
late Professor James T. Lewis

when he was in high school. He
graduated from Lehigh
University at Bethlehem, Pa.,
in 1935, a member of its Alpha
Sigma Phi Fraternity. He was
a member of Racine Lodge.461,
F&amp;AM, which will conduct
Masonic rites at the grave
Saturday.
Mr. Hayman was employed
as a senio~ consultant for Betz
Laboratories
Inc .,
in
Philadelphia at the time of his
death. He had been employed
with the company since his
graduation from Lehigh.
In lieu of flowers, friends are
asked by the family to ' contribute to the American Cancer
Society or the Heart Fund.
Surviving are his wife, the
former June Sausbury of
Middleport; four cousins, two
nieces and a nephew. The
Rawlings-&lt;:oals Funeral Home
is in charge of graveside

HORTON KILLED
ST.
CATHERINES, Ont.
for County Commissioner ; L.
W. Getty, County Clerk ; 1 UPi) - Veteran hock ey
Howard Schultz, Circuit Clerk, defenseman Tim Horton of the
and
Charles
" Put ty" Uuffa lo Sabres was killed early
Musgrave , for Justice of PeHce toliuy in a one..car crash en
in Lewis District. All t!re inM route from Toronto to Buffalo
un the QE freeway.
cumbents except Siders .
Ralph Shannon, "The WHyne
Co unty Whippoorwill " will
provide entertainment . 'J

irk~ts

may

he purchased f 1 11 1n
Committee members or :1i !he
door for $2.50 each.

services.

Washington's Birthday.·

Two ask divor't'( '

FRI. &amp; SAT.
FEB.

ALL REMAINING

SALE SHOES
AND BOOTS

l2-23

ONE
GROUP

96e

;\
\{e3\

price . 71
ChoVVer/

All Other Ladies' Sale Shoes
Miss America, Connies, Stride Rite, Dress
Shoes, Sports and Clogs. Fashion Boots included .

NOW

FBI digging

set hy Paek 24·9

into mystery
of the tapes
LOS ANGELES ( UPI )- The
FBI is investigating the
possible alteration of White
House documents, which
reportedly had material cut off
with a scissors before being
given to the special Watergate
prosEcution, the Los Angeles
Times reported today.
The FBI was . asked to investigate by the special
prosecutor, Leon Jaworski, the
Times said.
" It could not be learned
how
many
precisely
documents have been tampered with or the areas of
Jaworski 's overall Watergate
inquiry to which they relate,"
the newspaper said in a report
from its Washington bureau.
The Times said the FBI

OLD FRIENDS
COLUMBUS (UI'l)- · l'.':o pital
University and ou i_TIJc in
College have me l 10~ li1nrs in
basketball, with Cllp ilold illg a
59-46 margin.

POMEROY I OHIO

._

Two Numbers
to choose

$}92

$399

GAMES &amp; JIGSAW PUZZLES FOR
THESE LONG WINTER NIGHTS.

DIET-RITE
COLA ..

FITS MOST CARS

Reg. 15.99

16 OZ. BOTS.

8 PAK

16 OZ. BOTS.
8 PAK

Fcir
Most liars

The Fabric Shop

ROUND
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RUBBERMAID FLOOR MATS
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PR.

SLAB BACON

99~LB.

z..wn .. tz. ...o.:..J

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Ph. 992-2284

Everyday Low Pri~e
VALLEY BELL

MILK
GAL

$}.49

Carpenter's Grocery

'O PEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 9
APPf10\IED ltNIJIEII DEALER

T-BONE
STEAK

$1.49
$1.39LB.

S697

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PHONE
200-202 East Main St.
992 -~498
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY

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MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPIN'G CENTER
:

89~

DAD'S ROOT BEER

Reg. 116.95

FRONT
FOR CARS

Use Our Convenient Lay-A-Way Plan.

.,

•

''

-

1 Social 1Audttzons set for
1Cale. ndar11974 'T~cumseh!'
::t&lt;

SALEM ST.
.•

Class donates to firemen

. ..

.

"'

RUTLAND; OHIO

Mrs. Herman K inc~id, Ed
A $50 donation to the Mid- Wilson, Mrs.
Lawren ce Eva ns, Mrs. Dorothy Roach,
dleport Fire Department on the . Stewart, Mrs . Farie Cole, Mrs. Mrs . Nora Rice and Raymond
new emergency vehicle was Coleen Van Meter, Mr . and Baker.
made by the Homebuilders
Class at a meeting Tuesday
night at the Middleport Church
of Christ.
Russell Wilson presided at
the meeting which opened with
prayer by Lawrence Stewart.
Officers' reports were ~ i ven .
and refreshments were served

by Mrs. Lois McElhinny .
Others attending were Mrs.

ITEMS REDUCED
ALL OVER THE STORE

Health club has meetin:g
Mrs. Georgia Diehl read
"Where There is Love," Mrs.
Della Curtis, "'_.ove is Magic,"

SALE ENDS SATURDAY, FEB.

and Mrs. Mildred Bowen,
"Friendship is a Go ld en

23

Chain."

Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Doris Buckley, Mrs. Joan Ciw·k, Mrs.
Della Curtis, Mrs. Iva Powell ,
Mrs. Bertha Parker ami Mrs.
Ruby Frick, members, and two
guests, Sharon Cla rk and
Sharon Buckley .

BAHR CLOTHIERS
All Sales Cash
No Approvals
N. Second St., Middleporl,

o.

No lay -A-Ways
All Sales
Final

George Ingels ·ooes It Again. • •

By George, we're

having a really BIG

~~
The MANCHESTEft • Model E912M
Early Am eric an styled cabinet in genuine
Maple veneers and selecl hardwood solids,
BliC IU S i'IB Of decoraliVB front.

w~Wltt 'Bi1ti~.

CHOP ;t ..,
.__. DISHWASHING TIME
b)Jb~

Auxiliary meets
Several projects were
discussed at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Ladies
Auxiliary of the . Middleport
Pentecostal Church at the
home of Mrs. Michael Zirkle,
Eront St., Middleport.
Quilting was discussed and
Tuesdays were designated as a
day for quilling at the church.
Plans for a rummage sale in
March were made with ·the
time to be announced later.
Prayer by Alice Priddy
opened the meeting and
scripture verses on the study
topic of the heart were read.
Linda Knittel presided at the
business meeting.
Others attending were Joyce
Sauters, Cherry Sauters, Tony
Knittel, May Mason, Unda
Acree, Jean Cunningham,
Betty Rope, Dora Hawley,
Mandie Eastman, Pamela
Zirkle, Michele Zirkle arid
Sherry Cunningham.
The March 12 meeting will be
at the home of Mrs. Acree, Rt.
4, Pomeroy.
PARTY HELD
Mr. and Mrs. Tect Bailey and
family, Patriot, hosted a
' dinner party honoring Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence Theiss on their
lOth wedding anniversary,
Feb. 16, Centering the dinner
table was a decorated cake
topped with a miniature bride
and groom. Gifts and cards
were presented to the couple.
Others attending were the Rev.
and
Mrs.
Lawrence
Glue~ncamp , Nicki Dawn Van
Meter, Portland ; Mr . and Mrs.
Otis Bailey and daughter ,
Racine .

I

•

CHILLICOTHE - Open will also be held in Cincinnati
THURSDAY
auditions for the 1974 season of Feb. 28 and March I at the
SOUTHERN
Athleti c the
outdoor
drama regional Southeastern Theatre
Boosters meet Thursday at
"TECUMSEH! " will be held Conference auditions, in
7:30p.m. at the high school.
Saturday, Feb. 23, in the Mount Chapel Hill, N. C. March 23 at
Logan room of the Holiday Inn the Institute of Outdoor Drama
MARDI GRAS dinner, on business route 23 north of auditions, and in New York
Sacred Heart Church, cream Chillicothe.
City in April for professional
baked chicken . Serving from 5
Beginning at 8 a.m., the members of Actors' Equity.
to 7 p.m. Public invited.
. auditions will run until 5 p.m.
HAPPY HUSTLER Class of Saturday and will be continued
\
the
Racine
Wesleyan on Sunday if necessary to
Methodist Church Vegetable accommodate the expected
and bean soup sale, 75 cents a tUrnout .
Readings on love and
quart all day Thursday. Take
Acting
positions
are friendship to carry out the St.
own container· Orders may be available for 70 men and 20 Valentine's Day theme were
placed by calling 949-4382 or women at $45 to $125 per week. given by members at the
94!hl361.
Persons auditioning should Thursday meeting of the
WEEKEND Revial, 7:30 memorize a one minu te Laurel Cliff Better-Health Club
p.m. Friday through Sunday selection from a contemporary held at the home of Mrs.
with Rev. Bernard Thrash, play and be prepared to Amber Luhn .
Parkersburg, as evangelist ; demonstrate coordination and
Mrs . Mabel Tracy read
special singing each evening physical movement.
scripture from I Corinthians
"TECUMSEH'" rehearsals with the Lord's Prayer being
with the Choralaires of
Parkersburg on hand Satur- will begin June 1, and the given in unison . Readings by
day. Public invited.
drama will run from June 22, Mrs . Donna Gilmore were
14
MIDDLEPORT Child through August 31.
What are Valentines ?" and
Conservation League, 7:30
"TECUMSEH!"
auditons "The Legend of the Valentine ."
p.m., Columbus and Southern
Ohio Eleclric Co. Joe Struble to
be the speaker.
ROCK Springs Better Health
Club, 1:15 p.m., home of Mrs.
William Radford. Program by
Mrs . Barbara Offutt, and
contest by Mrs . G. J. Morgan.
LOYAL Women's Class,
Middleport Church of Christ,
potluck dinner at the church,
5:30
p.m. Time change
,Don't Be A
by
WRAP
necessitated
program at Meigs Junior High
Dumb Bunny!
School.
' CHURCH Women United of
Meigs County, planned session
Sew your Easter Outfit
with Mrs. Campbell Harper,
president,! p.m. at the Chester
now. Double knit prints
United Methodist Church, for
with matching solids .
the World Day of Prayer observanc~. March I.
BEEF Vegetable and Bean
Gray Cotton Prints
Soup
Sale, 2 p.m. at United
Kettle Cloth &amp; Sharkskin
with Matching Dotted Swiss
Wesleyan Methodist Church
and "Little People" Prints
annex in Racine. Soup 75 cents
a quart. Bring containers.
WILLING Workers Class,
7:30 p.m., social room, Enterprise United Methodist
Church . Mrs. Ruby Frick,
hostess.
DEFENSIVE Driving
Course, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Meigs Junior High School
auditorium, Middleport.
Sponsored by Middleport
Business and Professional
Women's Club. Public invited.
Sew,
P.S.:
Kwik
TWIN CITY Shrine Club 7: 30
McCall
p.m.
at shrine club house in
Simplicity &amp;
Bastille
Day,
celebrated
on
Racine. Refreshments. All
Patterns.
July 14, is the French holishriners
invited.
day equivalent to United
FRIDAY
States' Fourth of July .
DONATIONS to be solicited
in Syracuse Village this week
and possibly next week by
members of the auxiliary of the
Syracuse Fire Dept., for annual Easter project of making
candy Easter eggs.
SPRING CARNIVAL, 6:30
SALE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY.
p.m. at Harrisonville School
Open 7 days a week- We gladly accept USDA
Gym sponsored by PTO. There
food stamps.
will be child and adult door
prize. Prince and Princess and
King and Queen to be named. A
variety of games. Adults 25
cents, students 10 cents.
SATURDAY
SPECIAL MEETING,
Racine Lodge 46.1, F&amp;AM II
16 OZ. BOTS.
a.m. at Greenwood Cemetery
for Masonic graveside rites of
~itchenAid
8 PAK
, Richard Hayman.

Shock Absorbers

---:-:cr--------

:~ ~::.:.:.~~:~:!:::~:.:.:.:.:.:.::~-:.:&amp;..:::::::

her work and told about the trip
which is planned to Oregon in
July by the Ohio Baptist Youth
to the world conference to be
held there.
Coffee and cake were served
by Mrs. Owen. Others · attending were Mrs. Charles
White, Mrs. Abvilda Werner,
Mrs. Clara Mae Darst, Mrs.
Helen Bodimer, Mrs. Katie
Anthony ; and Judy Owen, a
guest.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
The Love Joy Circle meeting
at the home of Mrs. Harold
Hubbard planned a visit to the
Elmwood Nursing Home
March 19.
Mrs. Paul Smart opened the
meeting with prayer and
devotions were given by Mrs.
Mil ton Hood who used scripture from Hebrew 10: 23 and 24,
and an article taken from
Reader's Digest.
A letter from Mrs. Maude
Betz was read reporting on the
condition of Mrs . Lucinda
Daines. Cards were signed for
Mrs. Daines and Mrs. Dana
Hamm. It was noted that
Debra
Dickerson
was
remembered on her birthday.
The scholarship money is
now payable, it was reported.
Mrs. Smart thanked those who
assisted with the fellowship tea
earlier this month.
Attending the meeting
besides those named were Mrs.
Martha King, Mrs. Tony
Fowler, Mrs. James Brewer.
Mrs. Ted Riley , Mrs. Ethel
Hughes, Mrs. Dale Walburn,
Mrs. Allen Hughes and Michl
King and Mary Beth Brewer,
guests.
DORCAS CIRCLE
Birthday remembrances for
shut-ins were planned at the
Dorcas Circle meeting held at
the home of Mrs . Elizabeth
Slavin. Prayer by Mrs. Leora
Sigman, chairwoman, opened
the meeting with several
thank-you notes being read.
Miss Rhoda Hall gave the
program titled "School for
Bush Preachers", Mrs .
Isabelle Winebrenner will host
the March meeting at the home
of Mrs. Manning Kloes. Others
attending the meeting were
Mrs. Harry Houdashelt, Miss
Freddie Houdashelt, Mrs .
Elizabeth Searles, Mrs. Fred
Hoffman, Mrs. Charles Edwards, Mrs. John Fultz and
Mrs. Eloise Wilson.

HERCULES REGULAR

BARRELS OF YARN
BIG8 OZ. SKEINS - - - , - - , - - - - - - JUST 1.99
PLASTIC STORM WINDOWS
4 Pieces , each 36x72-in .
69c
RENT A CAR PET SHAMPOOd
Sl.OO a Day with purcha se of Blue Lustre

to 12.98
Yard

Visits to rest homes were
planned during meetings of the
circles .of. the ·B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society of the
Middleport · First Baptist
Church Tuesday night.
ELECfA CIRCLE
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Richard Owen, the EJecta
Circle- set a visit to the
Syracuse Rest Home for March
17. The circle also voted to
contribute $10 to the Middleport firemen on the
emergency vehicle and
completed bandages to fill the
White Cross quota for overseas
missions.
It was reported that the
children at the Meigs County
Children's Home with birthdays have been remembered
and that valentine remembrances were sent lo the shutins.
Mrs. Beulah White opened
the meeting by readin g
devotions titled " Time"
prepared by Mrs. Texanna
WelL The love gift dedication
was by Mrs. Janet Lewis who
read "The Great Man" and had
a prayer.
Barbara Anthony, a member
of the Ohio State Youth Board
of the Ohio Baptist Convention,
and a representative of the
Board from the Rio Grande
Baptist Association outlined

79~

Seat Covers

from .

Circles meet

•

with a new

SUPER SPECIALS

Front
&amp; Rear

!Jl'il!illll!illll'gj)S:;Iil··~...~::::::::::~:~'!::::~~

RC
COLA

Reg . 2, 99 Re11 . 4.99

Garbage Cans

YD.

104 E. MAIN

· -COLORED VINYL

SUPER SPECIALS
10 Gallon

Chap.man's Shoes

Friday &amp;Saturday at Moore's

TENNIS CLINIC
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio High School Athletic Association's 1974 Tennis Coaches
Clinic will be held Sunday in
the Buckeye Building on the
Ohio State ~·airgrounds here.
The 16th annual clinic runs
£rom 10·a.m. to :1:30 p.m.
investigation 11 Was thwarted
for a time by White House
HARA HOME
DAYTON, Ohio (UP I) - The officials who refused to provide
Dayton Gems of the Interna- the agency with some of the
tional Hockey League have logs it wanted to examine.'' An
signed a new multi-year agree- administration official was
ment to play their home games quoted as saying that has
chooged, and "the FBI now has
in the Hara Arena.
The Gems have played their been given all the logs it wants
games at Hara for the past ten to see."
years.

Watch This Paper For The Ad

Wide Selection of 45"
Values

now on sale

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 21. 197~

J1urial rites for Mr. Hayman here

Two persons l1ave fil ed For
to seek price relief before September. And Kenneth C. Merrill, divorce and two fiual divorce
controller of Ford's North American Automotive ~t1ons, decrees have been nl!lde in
was even more blunt . ' 'The company's cost increases for wages,
Meigs County Common Pleas
materia ls and frei ght a re some 50 per cen t higher than we had'
Court.
expected when we made our pricing commitment to the Cost of
Filing for divorce were
Living Council ," Mer rill said .
Patrick Allen Hill, Racine,
against Penny Lee Hill, Gages
LOS ANGELES - JOHN EHRLICHMAN'S LAWYER says
Lake , Ill., on the grounds of
he expects President Ni xon will be compelled to testify on behalf
gross neglect of duty and exof his former aides at their trial for burglary . Nixon is currently
treme cruelty, and David W.
fighting an w1precedented subpoena issued for him to appear as
Kuhn, Pomeroy, against Diana
a witness for the defense in the trial of Ehrlichman, G. Gordon .
L.
Kuhn, Ashville, also on the
Liddy and Dav id Young for the Ellsberg burglary. Superior
grounds
of gross neglect of
Court Judge Gordon Ringer Wednesday postponed for a month a
pretrial hea ring - at which Nixon was to be called as a witness duty and extreme cruelty .
Granted divorces were Carol S.
- because of the lega l struggle over U1e subpoena.
Erwin Woodland, lawyer for Young, said "there will be a Domigan, Rt 1, Middleport,
serious disabili ty on the defense if we cannot obtain evidence from Charles N. Domigan, Rt.
from tiw man who gave these people their legal authority." If I, Middleport, and Sherry L.
Nixon defeats the subpoena, the defense could ask for dismissal Williams, Rt. 1, Reedsville,
of charges 011 the grounds the defendants were denied their from Mickie V. Williams, Ft.
constitutional rights to have favorabl e witnesses brought into Leonard Wood, Mo.
cou rt, the result apparently desired by the Nixon administration.
THREE ASSISTED
The
Middleport E-R sqUI!d
WASHINGTON - ADVENTURER THOMAS L. GATCH,
attempting the world's first manned transatlantic balloon flight, answered two calls Wednesday
sailed toward an expected landing in tbe Sahara Desert today, and one early today. Wedabout 1,000 miles north of ea rlier predictions. Land trackers had nesday at 1:43 p.m. it lranspreviously expec ted Gatch to land in Dakar, Senegal, but later ported Mrs. Larry Lee, 34, Rutsaid unpredictable winds blew him toward the Spanish Sahara. land, a medical patient, to
Holzer Medical Center and at 6
It was the second major change in predictions where Gatch,
ridin g at about 35,000 fee t inside a sealed spherical vehicle p.m. Robert Butler, 30, a
hanging below nin e helium-filled balloons, is expected tQ land. medical patient, was taken
When he liftert off from Harrisburg, Pa: , Monday, he hoped to from the LaSalle Hotel to
land in Europe but hi gh altitude winds of up to 166 miles an hour Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 2:14a.m. today it was called
blew him i11slead toward Africa.
to the Waffle Shop for Joseph
I
McDaniel, also a medical
patient, who was taken to
Blue, Gold event
Veterans Memorial il&lt;'' IJilid.

COMING SOON I

POLYESTER
. KNITS

PIECE
GOODS

Three polls just released showed the Conserva tives leading
Harold Wilson's op)JOSlli on Laborites by small margins with the
little Liberal party making inroads against both . On Britain's
troubled labor fr ont, all three trairunen unions agreed Wednesday to wke a pay dispute with the sUite-run British Railways

BIG 9 SALE

60"

to
SS.98 yd.

by newly released pulls, weut into the fina l week of campaigning

The Blue and Gold Banquet
fo r Cub Scout Pack 249 of
Pomeroy will be held at 6 p.m.
Sat urda y at til€ Pomeroy.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Elementary Sc hool. Meat and
Discharges - Mrs. Bobby beverage will be furnished by
Kinniard, Southside; Mr . and the pack, with each family to
Mrs. Jr. Tucker, Grimms take a dish for a potluck supper
Landing; Pamela Powell, and their ow n ta ble service.
Ashton ; John Roush, Letart;
Awards will be presented to
Cynthia Smith, Henderson ; cub scouts and a short program
Brian Keith Sayre, Arbuckle, will be offered . All cub scouts
and Russell Slayton, Vinton , 0. of the pack and their families
are invited tu attend this
meeting, a hi ghlight of the cub
scout year.

FABRIC SPECIALS!

~~gv values

sou ally.

I .ON DON - PlUME MINISTE R EDWARD HEATH, buoyed

Sprague, a daughter, Bidwell;
Mr. and Mrs. George Thacker,
a daughter, Ew ington ; Mr . and
Mrs. Carl Blankenship, a
daughter, Point Pleasant; Mr.
and Mrs. James May nard, a
son, Mason.

,,

scheduled to go tu trial April 1 on tt four-count indictment
char15 ing lfw t IlL· lit'tl to the Waterga te grand jury about his
knowledge of the ;ICtivilies of political saboteur Donald H.
Scgretti . The "tJUHiifi cat ion" is believed to be Dean cannot
testify as to any )pg;il a&lt;lv ice ll&lt;&gt;alll gave the defendant per-

power vested e lsewher e by the

and rain on Monday. Highs
mid 30s to mid 40s north and
central and 40s south. Lows
In the 20s and low 30s.

Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges, Feb. 20)
Mary Austin , Tracie Bevard,
Ralpl1 Chenault, Oma Cole,
Nora Cur tis, Michael Dabney,
Michael Dailey, Henry Davis,
Janet Duffy, Frank Fairchild ,
Verneda Hardin , Ruth Hood,
Frances Kingery Stella Mohr,

Chap in, uHcc President Nixon's appointments secreta ry , is

Dinner tabs

Dishwasher

-----------------------------~O'ltllljf
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Walnut veneers and select hardwood
solids, e~~:c lu ~ ive ol decorative lronl.

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now selling at less than
1960 prices.

The BARLETTA • Model £913 DEIP

Anniversary Bonus: 12 20-oz. boxes of
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Mediterranean styled cabinet in genuine Dark •
Oak or Flecan veneers and selecl h8rdwood
solids, eKculsive of decorative front.

$199
Many Other
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A BIG SUPPLY 0~ CASCADE

�II

r •

•
)

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pome~oy, 0., Feb . 21, 1974

Impeachment rnavJ .
cover wide areas

News ... ·in Briefs

!Continued from page I)
j'
testifying ag;~inst him at ilis upcoming jierjury trial. The ruling
by U. S. Distriet ./udgc Ge rhard A. Gesell Wednesday - with an

unexplained " qmtlification" -- apparently cleared the way for

Dean to wke.lhe sl;~nd as the key prosecution witness against his
former Whitt• Hom;e colleague.

WASIUNGTON (UPI ) - A
Hou8e impeachment inquiry
staff Said today it had concluded that President Nixon
could be impeached for non-

grave step for the nation."
" It is lo be predicated only
upon condit ions ser iously incompatible with either the

criminal acts, including abuse

constitutional £arm a nd princi-

that impeachment was " a

of the poweJs of the ples of ou r governmen t or the
Presidency.
proper performance of ti1e
In a !50-page report to the 38 constitutional duties of the
members of the House Judici- presidential office," the report
,_
ary Committee, the staff, said.
organized to study possible
The report said, "The duty of
impeachable offenses, stressed a Presiden t to prese rve,
protect and defend ti1e Constitution to the best of his

Rio proposal
again tabled

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Chance of snow Saturday

Once again the Ohio Board of
Regents has "tabled" a
proposal by Rio Grande
College lo set up a "community
college" along with the private
college operation .
The regents said they wanted
more information and alternative plans before reaching a
decision on the matter . The
Regents will meet again on
March 15.
Financing plans for th e
community college include a
tax levy in four southeastern
Ohio counties - Jackson ,
Gallla, Meigs and Vinton.
Meeting Friday in Cincinnati, the regents approved a
resolution urging the trustees
of Ohio University and the
Scioto Technical College to
work with supports of both
Institutions to develop plans for
a new state general and
technical college in Portsmouth.

abili ty includes the duty not to
a buse his powers or transgress
their limits , not to violate the
r ights o£ c itizens, s uch as those

granted by the Bill of Rights
and not to act in derogation of
Constitution ."
In saying a President could
be impeached for acts other

for Britain's na tion tll elections today, prodaiming confidence he
would win another five years in office.

than criminal offenses , the

report cited as impeachable
conduct'' undermining the in-

tegrity of the offie€, disregard
of constitutional du ties and
oa th of office, a rrogation of

power, abLLSe of the government proeess, udverse impact
gm~' ern­

on the system of tile

ment. ''
"Clearly, ti•ese effects can
be brought about in ways not
an tic ipated by criminal law, "

FIRST IN AF
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Lt.
(j.g.) Barbara Allen, 25, of
Long Beach, Calif., will
become the U.S. military's
first woman flyer Friday.

the report said.
The report appeared to llold
the President responsible for
the cond uct of his subordinates, although the staff did
not spell out whethe1· it felt he
was responsible for acts not
specifically au thorized by him.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Donald Ni cholson , Naomi
Parsons, Frank . Porter, Sr.,
Rana Hale, Gil bert Ray,
Carolyn Rou sh, Virginia
Roush, Robert VanMete-r,
Mary Jeanne Walker, Maria
Watkins , Tonya Woodard,
James Yates.
1Births)
Mr .

8

For . 27.50

Give Her Diamonds
Caravelle® by Bulova.
If diamonds are a girl's best lriend , befriend her. And keep
her timely too. For a mere $25.50. Gi'le her a prettily sculp ·
tured, precision-made, 17 jewel watch , highlighted with twin
dlamon... The Sweet Briar " G". Caravella by Bulova. An
expensive watch at an Inexpensive price .

Goessler's Jewelry Store
Pomeroy

Court St.

and

Mrs .

Herman

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Everett
Hutton, Albany; Hollis Rupe,
Cheshire ; Leah Nease, Minersville; Mary Hackney, Racine ;
Crystal Jacob , Rutland ;
Lorena Ault, Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Cla ri ce
Carson,
Eld a
Carsey.
Raymond Har tley , Mary
Lambert, Virgil Yarbroup,h,
James Allen, Eric Walk er,
Donna Smith, Opal Cummins,
Vickie Lynn Smith, William
Morri s,
Samuel
Arf'hi e
McKinney , Orley Rife .

FRI. &amp; SAT.
FEB. 22·23
SINGLE

KNITS
VALUES
TO NOW

$

149

13.98

YD.

lest luysl from Our Stock!

Boa rd to an inde~nd e nt arbi tration tribunal.

DETftOIT -- THE NAT ION 'S AUTOMAKERS appear ready
to ra ise pr ices once again on 1974-mudel cars , despite the opposi tion of the government's to p price controller and an ea rlier

pledge to hold the line until Se ptember. Director John T. Dunlop
of the Cost of Living Council said Wednesday he did not believe
there cou ld be justification for any new increases and indicated
lhe industry &lt;•ugltt tu stick tu 1ts anti-inflation pledge made in
December.
A c;enera I Motors s pokesma n, however, said the nation's No.
J au to company stands by an earlier statement that it may have

$2.98

PT . PLEASANT - Tickets
are on sale for Saturday's
Lincoln Day Dinner scheduled
for 6:30p.m. in the Moose Hall.
The Honorable Edgar (Hike)
Heiskell, West Virginia
Secretary of State, will be the
keynote spea ker. Several other
state and county digoitaries
also are expected.
GOP ca ndidates seeking
election on the County level
also will be introduced, among
them, Basil Robertson and
Virgil Siders, Jr., candidates

RACINE
Graveside
services for Richard (Dick)
Hayman , 61, formerly of
Racine , will be held at 11 a.m.
Saturday at the Greenwood
Ce)Tietery with the Rev. Robert
Bumgarner officiating.
Mr. Hayman, who died on
Feb. 4 at Huntingdon Valley,
Pa., was born here Oct. 12, 1912
and graduated from Racine
High School in 1930. He played
piano with the orchestra of the
late Professor James T. Lewis

when he was in high school. He
graduated from Lehigh
University at Bethlehem, Pa.,
in 1935, a member of its Alpha
Sigma Phi Fraternity. He was
a member of Racine Lodge.461,
F&amp;AM, which will conduct
Masonic rites at the grave
Saturday.
Mr. Hayman was employed
as a senio~ consultant for Betz
Laboratories
Inc .,
in
Philadelphia at the time of his
death. He had been employed
with the company since his
graduation from Lehigh.
In lieu of flowers, friends are
asked by the family to ' contribute to the American Cancer
Society or the Heart Fund.
Surviving are his wife, the
former June Sausbury of
Middleport; four cousins, two
nieces and a nephew. The
Rawlings-&lt;:oals Funeral Home
is in charge of graveside

HORTON KILLED
ST.
CATHERINES, Ont.
for County Commissioner ; L.
W. Getty, County Clerk ; 1 UPi) - Veteran hock ey
Howard Schultz, Circuit Clerk, defenseman Tim Horton of the
and
Charles
" Put ty" Uuffa lo Sabres was killed early
Musgrave , for Justice of PeHce toliuy in a one..car crash en
in Lewis District. All t!re inM route from Toronto to Buffalo
un the QE freeway.
cumbents except Siders .
Ralph Shannon, "The WHyne
Co unty Whippoorwill " will
provide entertainment . 'J

irk~ts

may

he purchased f 1 11 1n
Committee members or :1i !he
door for $2.50 each.

services.

Washington's Birthday.·

Two ask divor't'( '

FRI. &amp; SAT.
FEB.

ALL REMAINING

SALE SHOES
AND BOOTS

l2-23

ONE
GROUP

96e

;\
\{e3\

price . 71
ChoVVer/

All Other Ladies' Sale Shoes
Miss America, Connies, Stride Rite, Dress
Shoes, Sports and Clogs. Fashion Boots included .

NOW

FBI digging

set hy Paek 24·9

into mystery
of the tapes
LOS ANGELES ( UPI )- The
FBI is investigating the
possible alteration of White
House documents, which
reportedly had material cut off
with a scissors before being
given to the special Watergate
prosEcution, the Los Angeles
Times reported today.
The FBI was . asked to investigate by the special
prosecutor, Leon Jaworski, the
Times said.
" It could not be learned
how
many
precisely
documents have been tampered with or the areas of
Jaworski 's overall Watergate
inquiry to which they relate,"
the newspaper said in a report
from its Washington bureau.
The Times said the FBI

OLD FRIENDS
COLUMBUS (UI'l)- · l'.':o pital
University and ou i_TIJc in
College have me l 10~ li1nrs in
basketball, with Cllp ilold illg a
59-46 margin.

POMEROY I OHIO

._

Two Numbers
to choose

$}92

$399

GAMES &amp; JIGSAW PUZZLES FOR
THESE LONG WINTER NIGHTS.

DIET-RITE
COLA ..

FITS MOST CARS

Reg. 15.99

16 OZ. BOTS.

8 PAK

16 OZ. BOTS.
8 PAK

Fcir
Most liars

The Fabric Shop

ROUND
STEAK

RUBBERMAID FLOOR MATS
. ' REG. '9.97

PR.

SLAB BACON

99~LB.

z..wn .. tz. ...o.:..J

115W.2nd

Ph. 992-2284

Everyday Low Pri~e
VALLEY BELL

MILK
GAL

$}.49

Carpenter's Grocery

'O PEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 9
APPf10\IED ltNIJIEII DEALER

T-BONE
STEAK

$1.49
$1.39LB.

S697

BEN~F'RANKUIW
PHONE
200-202 East Main St.
992 -~498
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY

89e

WE SELL USDA CHOICE MEATS

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPIN'G CENTER
:

89~

DAD'S ROOT BEER

Reg. 116.95

FRONT
FOR CARS

Use Our Convenient Lay-A-Way Plan.

.,

•

''

-

1 Social 1Audttzons set for
1Cale. ndar11974 'T~cumseh!'
::t&lt;

SALEM ST.
.•

Class donates to firemen

. ..

.

"'

RUTLAND; OHIO

Mrs. Herman K inc~id, Ed
A $50 donation to the Mid- Wilson, Mrs.
Lawren ce Eva ns, Mrs. Dorothy Roach,
dleport Fire Department on the . Stewart, Mrs . Farie Cole, Mrs. Mrs . Nora Rice and Raymond
new emergency vehicle was Coleen Van Meter, Mr . and Baker.
made by the Homebuilders
Class at a meeting Tuesday
night at the Middleport Church
of Christ.
Russell Wilson presided at
the meeting which opened with
prayer by Lawrence Stewart.
Officers' reports were ~ i ven .
and refreshments were served

by Mrs. Lois McElhinny .
Others attending were Mrs.

ITEMS REDUCED
ALL OVER THE STORE

Health club has meetin:g
Mrs. Georgia Diehl read
"Where There is Love," Mrs.
Della Curtis, "'_.ove is Magic,"

SALE ENDS SATURDAY, FEB.

and Mrs. Mildred Bowen,
"Friendship is a Go ld en

23

Chain."

Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Doris Buckley, Mrs. Joan Ciw·k, Mrs.
Della Curtis, Mrs. Iva Powell ,
Mrs. Bertha Parker ami Mrs.
Ruby Frick, members, and two
guests, Sharon Cla rk and
Sharon Buckley .

BAHR CLOTHIERS
All Sales Cash
No Approvals
N. Second St., Middleporl,

o.

No lay -A-Ways
All Sales
Final

George Ingels ·ooes It Again. • •

By George, we're

having a really BIG

~~
The MANCHESTEft • Model E912M
Early Am eric an styled cabinet in genuine
Maple veneers and selecl hardwood solids,
BliC IU S i'IB Of decoraliVB front.

w~Wltt 'Bi1ti~.

CHOP ;t ..,
.__. DISHWASHING TIME
b)Jb~

Auxiliary meets
Several projects were
discussed at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Ladies
Auxiliary of the . Middleport
Pentecostal Church at the
home of Mrs. Michael Zirkle,
Eront St., Middleport.
Quilting was discussed and
Tuesdays were designated as a
day for quilling at the church.
Plans for a rummage sale in
March were made with ·the
time to be announced later.
Prayer by Alice Priddy
opened the meeting and
scripture verses on the study
topic of the heart were read.
Linda Knittel presided at the
business meeting.
Others attending were Joyce
Sauters, Cherry Sauters, Tony
Knittel, May Mason, Unda
Acree, Jean Cunningham,
Betty Rope, Dora Hawley,
Mandie Eastman, Pamela
Zirkle, Michele Zirkle arid
Sherry Cunningham.
The March 12 meeting will be
at the home of Mrs. Acree, Rt.
4, Pomeroy.
PARTY HELD
Mr. and Mrs. Tect Bailey and
family, Patriot, hosted a
' dinner party honoring Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence Theiss on their
lOth wedding anniversary,
Feb. 16, Centering the dinner
table was a decorated cake
topped with a miniature bride
and groom. Gifts and cards
were presented to the couple.
Others attending were the Rev.
and
Mrs.
Lawrence
Glue~ncamp , Nicki Dawn Van
Meter, Portland ; Mr . and Mrs.
Otis Bailey and daughter ,
Racine .

I

•

CHILLICOTHE - Open will also be held in Cincinnati
THURSDAY
auditions for the 1974 season of Feb. 28 and March I at the
SOUTHERN
Athleti c the
outdoor
drama regional Southeastern Theatre
Boosters meet Thursday at
"TECUMSEH! " will be held Conference auditions, in
7:30p.m. at the high school.
Saturday, Feb. 23, in the Mount Chapel Hill, N. C. March 23 at
Logan room of the Holiday Inn the Institute of Outdoor Drama
MARDI GRAS dinner, on business route 23 north of auditions, and in New York
Sacred Heart Church, cream Chillicothe.
City in April for professional
baked chicken . Serving from 5
Beginning at 8 a.m., the members of Actors' Equity.
to 7 p.m. Public invited.
. auditions will run until 5 p.m.
HAPPY HUSTLER Class of Saturday and will be continued
\
the
Racine
Wesleyan on Sunday if necessary to
Methodist Church Vegetable accommodate the expected
and bean soup sale, 75 cents a tUrnout .
Readings on love and
quart all day Thursday. Take
Acting
positions
are friendship to carry out the St.
own container· Orders may be available for 70 men and 20 Valentine's Day theme were
placed by calling 949-4382 or women at $45 to $125 per week. given by members at the
94!hl361.
Persons auditioning should Thursday meeting of the
WEEKEND Revial, 7:30 memorize a one minu te Laurel Cliff Better-Health Club
p.m. Friday through Sunday selection from a contemporary held at the home of Mrs.
with Rev. Bernard Thrash, play and be prepared to Amber Luhn .
Parkersburg, as evangelist ; demonstrate coordination and
Mrs . Mabel Tracy read
special singing each evening physical movement.
scripture from I Corinthians
"TECUMSEH'" rehearsals with the Lord's Prayer being
with the Choralaires of
Parkersburg on hand Satur- will begin June 1, and the given in unison . Readings by
day. Public invited.
drama will run from June 22, Mrs . Donna Gilmore were
14
MIDDLEPORT Child through August 31.
What are Valentines ?" and
Conservation League, 7:30
"TECUMSEH!"
auditons "The Legend of the Valentine ."
p.m., Columbus and Southern
Ohio Eleclric Co. Joe Struble to
be the speaker.
ROCK Springs Better Health
Club, 1:15 p.m., home of Mrs.
William Radford. Program by
Mrs . Barbara Offutt, and
contest by Mrs . G. J. Morgan.
LOYAL Women's Class,
Middleport Church of Christ,
potluck dinner at the church,
5:30
p.m. Time change
,Don't Be A
by
WRAP
necessitated
program at Meigs Junior High
Dumb Bunny!
School.
' CHURCH Women United of
Meigs County, planned session
Sew your Easter Outfit
with Mrs. Campbell Harper,
president,! p.m. at the Chester
now. Double knit prints
United Methodist Church, for
with matching solids .
the World Day of Prayer observanc~. March I.
BEEF Vegetable and Bean
Gray Cotton Prints
Soup
Sale, 2 p.m. at United
Kettle Cloth &amp; Sharkskin
with Matching Dotted Swiss
Wesleyan Methodist Church
and "Little People" Prints
annex in Racine. Soup 75 cents
a quart. Bring containers.
WILLING Workers Class,
7:30 p.m., social room, Enterprise United Methodist
Church . Mrs. Ruby Frick,
hostess.
DEFENSIVE Driving
Course, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Meigs Junior High School
auditorium, Middleport.
Sponsored by Middleport
Business and Professional
Women's Club. Public invited.
Sew,
P.S.:
Kwik
TWIN CITY Shrine Club 7: 30
McCall
p.m.
at shrine club house in
Simplicity &amp;
Bastille
Day,
celebrated
on
Racine. Refreshments. All
Patterns.
July 14, is the French holishriners
invited.
day equivalent to United
FRIDAY
States' Fourth of July .
DONATIONS to be solicited
in Syracuse Village this week
and possibly next week by
members of the auxiliary of the
Syracuse Fire Dept., for annual Easter project of making
candy Easter eggs.
SPRING CARNIVAL, 6:30
SALE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY.
p.m. at Harrisonville School
Open 7 days a week- We gladly accept USDA
Gym sponsored by PTO. There
food stamps.
will be child and adult door
prize. Prince and Princess and
King and Queen to be named. A
variety of games. Adults 25
cents, students 10 cents.
SATURDAY
SPECIAL MEETING,
Racine Lodge 46.1, F&amp;AM II
16 OZ. BOTS.
a.m. at Greenwood Cemetery
for Masonic graveside rites of
~itchenAid
8 PAK
, Richard Hayman.

Shock Absorbers

---:-:cr--------

:~ ~::.:.:.~~:~:!:::~:.:.:.:.:.:.::~-:.:&amp;..:::::::

her work and told about the trip
which is planned to Oregon in
July by the Ohio Baptist Youth
to the world conference to be
held there.
Coffee and cake were served
by Mrs. Owen. Others · attending were Mrs. Charles
White, Mrs. Abvilda Werner,
Mrs. Clara Mae Darst, Mrs.
Helen Bodimer, Mrs. Katie
Anthony ; and Judy Owen, a
guest.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
The Love Joy Circle meeting
at the home of Mrs. Harold
Hubbard planned a visit to the
Elmwood Nursing Home
March 19.
Mrs. Paul Smart opened the
meeting with prayer and
devotions were given by Mrs.
Mil ton Hood who used scripture from Hebrew 10: 23 and 24,
and an article taken from
Reader's Digest.
A letter from Mrs. Maude
Betz was read reporting on the
condition of Mrs . Lucinda
Daines. Cards were signed for
Mrs. Daines and Mrs. Dana
Hamm. It was noted that
Debra
Dickerson
was
remembered on her birthday.
The scholarship money is
now payable, it was reported.
Mrs. Smart thanked those who
assisted with the fellowship tea
earlier this month.
Attending the meeting
besides those named were Mrs.
Martha King, Mrs. Tony
Fowler, Mrs. James Brewer.
Mrs. Ted Riley , Mrs. Ethel
Hughes, Mrs. Dale Walburn,
Mrs. Allen Hughes and Michl
King and Mary Beth Brewer,
guests.
DORCAS CIRCLE
Birthday remembrances for
shut-ins were planned at the
Dorcas Circle meeting held at
the home of Mrs . Elizabeth
Slavin. Prayer by Mrs. Leora
Sigman, chairwoman, opened
the meeting with several
thank-you notes being read.
Miss Rhoda Hall gave the
program titled "School for
Bush Preachers", Mrs .
Isabelle Winebrenner will host
the March meeting at the home
of Mrs. Manning Kloes. Others
attending the meeting were
Mrs. Harry Houdashelt, Miss
Freddie Houdashelt, Mrs .
Elizabeth Searles, Mrs. Fred
Hoffman, Mrs. Charles Edwards, Mrs. John Fultz and
Mrs. Eloise Wilson.

HERCULES REGULAR

BARRELS OF YARN
BIG8 OZ. SKEINS - - - , - - , - - - - - - JUST 1.99
PLASTIC STORM WINDOWS
4 Pieces , each 36x72-in .
69c
RENT A CAR PET SHAMPOOd
Sl.OO a Day with purcha se of Blue Lustre

to 12.98
Yard

Visits to rest homes were
planned during meetings of the
circles .of. the ·B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society of the
Middleport · First Baptist
Church Tuesday night.
ELECfA CIRCLE
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Richard Owen, the EJecta
Circle- set a visit to the
Syracuse Rest Home for March
17. The circle also voted to
contribute $10 to the Middleport firemen on the
emergency vehicle and
completed bandages to fill the
White Cross quota for overseas
missions.
It was reported that the
children at the Meigs County
Children's Home with birthdays have been remembered
and that valentine remembrances were sent lo the shutins.
Mrs. Beulah White opened
the meeting by readin g
devotions titled " Time"
prepared by Mrs. Texanna
WelL The love gift dedication
was by Mrs. Janet Lewis who
read "The Great Man" and had
a prayer.
Barbara Anthony, a member
of the Ohio State Youth Board
of the Ohio Baptist Convention,
and a representative of the
Board from the Rio Grande
Baptist Association outlined

79~

Seat Covers

from .

Circles meet

•

with a new

SUPER SPECIALS

Front
&amp; Rear

!Jl'il!illll!illll'gj)S:;Iil··~...~::::::::::~:~'!::::~~

RC
COLA

Reg . 2, 99 Re11 . 4.99

Garbage Cans

YD.

104 E. MAIN

· -COLORED VINYL

SUPER SPECIALS
10 Gallon

Chap.man's Shoes

Friday &amp;Saturday at Moore's

TENNIS CLINIC
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio High School Athletic Association's 1974 Tennis Coaches
Clinic will be held Sunday in
the Buckeye Building on the
Ohio State ~·airgrounds here.
The 16th annual clinic runs
£rom 10·a.m. to :1:30 p.m.
investigation 11 Was thwarted
for a time by White House
HARA HOME
DAYTON, Ohio (UP I) - The officials who refused to provide
Dayton Gems of the Interna- the agency with some of the
tional Hockey League have logs it wanted to examine.'' An
signed a new multi-year agree- administration official was
ment to play their home games quoted as saying that has
chooged, and "the FBI now has
in the Hara Arena.
The Gems have played their been given all the logs it wants
games at Hara for the past ten to see."
years.

Watch This Paper For The Ad

Wide Selection of 45"
Values

now on sale

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 21. 197~

J1urial rites for Mr. Hayman here

Two persons l1ave fil ed For
to seek price relief before September. And Kenneth C. Merrill, divorce and two fiual divorce
controller of Ford's North American Automotive ~t1ons, decrees have been nl!lde in
was even more blunt . ' 'The company's cost increases for wages,
Meigs County Common Pleas
materia ls and frei ght a re some 50 per cen t higher than we had'
Court.
expected when we made our pricing commitment to the Cost of
Filing for divorce were
Living Council ," Mer rill said .
Patrick Allen Hill, Racine,
against Penny Lee Hill, Gages
LOS ANGELES - JOHN EHRLICHMAN'S LAWYER says
Lake , Ill., on the grounds of
he expects President Ni xon will be compelled to testify on behalf
gross neglect of duty and exof his former aides at their trial for burglary . Nixon is currently
treme cruelty, and David W.
fighting an w1precedented subpoena issued for him to appear as
Kuhn, Pomeroy, against Diana
a witness for the defense in the trial of Ehrlichman, G. Gordon .
L.
Kuhn, Ashville, also on the
Liddy and Dav id Young for the Ellsberg burglary. Superior
grounds
of gross neglect of
Court Judge Gordon Ringer Wednesday postponed for a month a
pretrial hea ring - at which Nixon was to be called as a witness duty and extreme cruelty .
Granted divorces were Carol S.
- because of the lega l struggle over U1e subpoena.
Erwin Woodland, lawyer for Young, said "there will be a Domigan, Rt 1, Middleport,
serious disabili ty on the defense if we cannot obtain evidence from Charles N. Domigan, Rt.
from tiw man who gave these people their legal authority." If I, Middleport, and Sherry L.
Nixon defeats the subpoena, the defense could ask for dismissal Williams, Rt. 1, Reedsville,
of charges 011 the grounds the defendants were denied their from Mickie V. Williams, Ft.
constitutional rights to have favorabl e witnesses brought into Leonard Wood, Mo.
cou rt, the result apparently desired by the Nixon administration.
THREE ASSISTED
The
Middleport E-R sqUI!d
WASHINGTON - ADVENTURER THOMAS L. GATCH,
attempting the world's first manned transatlantic balloon flight, answered two calls Wednesday
sailed toward an expected landing in tbe Sahara Desert today, and one early today. Wedabout 1,000 miles north of ea rlier predictions. Land trackers had nesday at 1:43 p.m. it lranspreviously expec ted Gatch to land in Dakar, Senegal, but later ported Mrs. Larry Lee, 34, Rutsaid unpredictable winds blew him toward the Spanish Sahara. land, a medical patient, to
Holzer Medical Center and at 6
It was the second major change in predictions where Gatch,
ridin g at about 35,000 fee t inside a sealed spherical vehicle p.m. Robert Butler, 30, a
hanging below nin e helium-filled balloons, is expected tQ land. medical patient, was taken
When he liftert off from Harrisburg, Pa: , Monday, he hoped to from the LaSalle Hotel to
land in Europe but hi gh altitude winds of up to 166 miles an hour Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 2:14a.m. today it was called
blew him i11slead toward Africa.
to the Waffle Shop for Joseph
I
McDaniel, also a medical
patient, who was taken to
Blue, Gold event
Veterans Memorial il&lt;'' IJilid.

COMING SOON I

POLYESTER
. KNITS

PIECE
GOODS

Three polls just released showed the Conserva tives leading
Harold Wilson's op)JOSlli on Laborites by small margins with the
little Liberal party making inroads against both . On Britain's
troubled labor fr ont, all three trairunen unions agreed Wednesday to wke a pay dispute with the sUite-run British Railways

BIG 9 SALE

60"

to
SS.98 yd.

by newly released pulls, weut into the fina l week of campaigning

The Blue and Gold Banquet
fo r Cub Scout Pack 249 of
Pomeroy will be held at 6 p.m.
Sat urda y at til€ Pomeroy.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Elementary Sc hool. Meat and
Discharges - Mrs. Bobby beverage will be furnished by
Kinniard, Southside; Mr . and the pack, with each family to
Mrs. Jr. Tucker, Grimms take a dish for a potluck supper
Landing; Pamela Powell, and their ow n ta ble service.
Ashton ; John Roush, Letart;
Awards will be presented to
Cynthia Smith, Henderson ; cub scouts and a short program
Brian Keith Sayre, Arbuckle, will be offered . All cub scouts
and Russell Slayton, Vinton , 0. of the pack and their families
are invited tu attend this
meeting, a hi ghlight of the cub
scout year.

FABRIC SPECIALS!

~~gv values

sou ally.

I .ON DON - PlUME MINISTE R EDWARD HEATH, buoyed

Sprague, a daughter, Bidwell;
Mr. and Mrs. George Thacker,
a daughter, Ew ington ; Mr . and
Mrs. Carl Blankenship, a
daughter, Point Pleasant; Mr.
and Mrs. James May nard, a
son, Mason.

,,

scheduled to go tu trial April 1 on tt four-count indictment
char15 ing lfw t IlL· lit'tl to the Waterga te grand jury about his
knowledge of the ;ICtivilies of political saboteur Donald H.
Scgretti . The "tJUHiifi cat ion" is believed to be Dean cannot
testify as to any )pg;il a&lt;lv ice ll&lt;&gt;alll gave the defendant per-

power vested e lsewher e by the

and rain on Monday. Highs
mid 30s to mid 40s north and
central and 40s south. Lows
In the 20s and low 30s.

Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges, Feb. 20)
Mary Austin , Tracie Bevard,
Ralpl1 Chenault, Oma Cole,
Nora Cur tis, Michael Dabney,
Michael Dailey, Henry Davis,
Janet Duffy, Frank Fairchild ,
Verneda Hardin , Ruth Hood,
Frances Kingery Stella Mohr,

Chap in, uHcc President Nixon's appointments secreta ry , is

Dinner tabs

Dishwasher

-----------------------------~O'ltllljf
The BENTON • Model E811W
Contemporary styled cabinet in gem.Jine
Walnut veneers and select hardwood
solids, e~~:c lu ~ ive ol decorative lronl.

America's Finest Dishwashers
now selling at less than
1960 prices.

The BARLETTA • Model £913 DEIP

Anniversary Bonus: 12 20-oz. boxes of
Cascade dishwasher detergent FREE with
any KitchenAid dishwasher.
(Offer ends March 31 .) ·

As Low As

Mediterranean styled cabinet in genuine Dark •
Oak or Flecan veneers and selecl h8rdwood
solids, eKculsive of decorative front.

$199
Many Other
Unadvertised
Special~

Will Be On Sale!
A BIG SUPPLY 0~ CASCADE

�\

•

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middlcpmt -1-'omeroy , 0 .. Feb. 21, 19H

Miss Southern Ohio pageant planned ,
BELPRE - Preliminary
plans fur the 1974 Miss Southern Ohio Pugeant were unnounced today by William
McAfee, director of tl1e ~vent,
which is sponsored by the
Belpre Area ' Chamber of
Commerce.
The pageant, slated for
Saturday, March 30, will be
staged allhe Lawton Building ,
at the rear of Belpre High
School. A preliminary pagenl,
depending on the number of
entries, will lake place
Saturday, Marc)l 23 in the
Lawton Buildin{
This will mark tile second
year of sponsorship !or the
Belpre Ci1amber, " which
initiated tl1e pageant last year
in a devolopmenlal effort for

R:

the community and as &lt;I ser-

vice to the talented youn g
ladies in Southeastern Ohio
who would not otherwise have
an upportuni ty to compete in a

Miss America styled pagea~l.
McAfee explained the Miss
Southern Ohio Pageant area
includes the coun ties of Athens,
GalliH, Meigs. Monroe and

Washington .
He said young ladies between

the ages of 18 and 28 on or
before Sept. 1 are elibible to
enter and should obtain an
official entry blank fur U1e
pagea nt by contactin g the
Belpt·e Ar ea Chamber of
Commerce at 12:!-8934 or by
writing to P. 0. Box 8, Belpre,
before March 2U.
Wirmer

or the Mi ss Southern

Ohio Contest will enter the

Belpre in particular : it,
provides an excellent opportunity for area young ladies
to. gain added poise through
t&gt;ublic appearances and to gain
adrled maturity tl)rough a
professional pageant program
as the one in Belpre will be,"
McAfee explained .
"Most important, this event
will provide any opportunity
for the winning girl to seek
scholarship awards at the Miss
Ohio Pageant in addllon to the
scholai ship prize guaranteed

the winner of the Miss SouUlern

Ohio event,"

h~

added.

The director said various

cotumittee chairmen already
are working to make this
Miss America competiti on will yC&gt;tr's pageant bigger and
be · de termin ed (or pa r· better than last year's. "This
ticipation in the Atlan tic City , will be a community project,
and the Belpre Area Chamber
N. J . fes tivities.
"Tho pagea nt will foc us of Commerce is certain that all
attention un the Southr.astern · sectors of the community will
Ol1io ar ea in ge neral and participate to assure ils sue·

Miss Ohio P;.w;eant, where the
state 's r eprese ntative to the

Garden club meets
Judy McDonnel was hostess
fur the Walk-In-Garden Club
February session. The meeting
was opened with the club
prayer and salute to the flag .
The minutes were approved

and an invitation to attend an
open meeting of the Winding
Trail Garden Club March 20
was read. Russell and Etta
Cullums attended the centennial meeting at the
fairgrounds and Mr . Cullums
will represent Bedford Twp. on
the committee.

Roll call was reciting a

'

jolly Bunch has meeting
The birthday of Mrs .
Beatrice Robson was observed
at the Tuesday meeting of the
Jolly Bunch Sewing Club at the
horne of Mrs. Evelyn Grueser.
The club presented Mrs .
Robson with a bouquet of roses.
Ice cream, cookies and coffee
were served by Mrs. Grueser
and Mrs. Freda Miteh from a

homemade val e ntine .
Devotions were given by Edoa
Lee using a topic rrom "The
01ris tian Herald .''

Flower
and
garden
magazines were used in study
and comment on ll)elop to AllAmerican nowers. A contest,
conducted by Mildred Zeigler
was won by Rosalie Story .
Flower arrangements carrying out the valentine motif
were made by Mrs. OJIIums
and Edna Lee using live red
amaryllis.
The members enjoyed

valentine verse . A valentine

viewing plants and lerrariwns

card was signed by the
members to be sent to Mrs.
Maggie Chaney who is in a rest
home in Albany. Mrs . Belva

and refreshments of cherry
pie , ice cream punch, nuts and
candy. Mildred Zeigler will
host the March meeting.

arrangement. A $10 .donation
was made to the Middleport
firemen for the emergency
vehicle.
Members sewed during the
afternoon and enjoyed games
conducted by Mrs. Grace
Johnson. Others attending
were Mrs. Ethel Hughes, Mrs.
Alma Miller, Mrs. Helen

World Day of Prayer set

New program opens

·.

Values to $21

Values to S17

was named missionary of the

monUt, located in Sierre Leone,
West Africa. The group signed
a round-robin card for her
birthday, Feb. 19, and will
remember her daily in prayer.
The group reported 23 sick
and shut-in calls.
A communication from
Global Missions asking an
increase of $1.30 on pledges to
missions was read and accepted.
Programs were distributed
by June Stearns for tbe World
Day of Prayer, March I, at the
home of · Genevieve Guthrie.
Service will begin at 8 p. m.
This will also be the next
regular meeting of the group.
A report was given on rest
home patients.
The program, "God Loves
Us - Do I Believe That?"
consisted of hymns, scripture,
prayer,

four

FINAL REDUCTIONS
Women's
and Children's

'1.00

SHOES

•2.00

Values to $20

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

served

BErn OHLINGER
Pomeroy

Main St.

•
•
•
•

Ole Kerm Has Chopped Prices Again!
BY GEORGE, WE'VE •••

Final
Clearance

Merchandise
Regrouped for
This Sak.
Many New
Items Added

Why Not

Men's Long Sleeve

Adjus1able for children or adults
Folds to fit closets, car trunks, elevators!
Fully equipped
Great for camping, vacationing, apartment living!

DRESS &amp; SPORT

SHIRTS
Y2 PRICE

COMPLIMENTS OF OUR STORE AND REXALL . . . MAKERS OF
SUPER PLENAMINS, AMERICA"S lARGEST SELLING MULTI-VITAMIN
MULTI· MINERAL PRODUCT!

Start An

Deposit the following entry blank in
our store. Anyone may enter. No
purchase necessary, need not be.
present to win. Drawing will be March
9, 1974 at J o'clock. Clip entry blank
and enter today.
_,

Aquarium

....

........................................ . ,
,

Regular $5.98 to $8.98

NOW $2.99 to $4.49
Odd Lot Men's
,~

CASUAL JEANS
Values to $11.98 •4.00

Odd Lot
STRAIGHT LEG

ODD lOT
MEN'S

JEANS
VALUES
TO 17.98

•300

SWEATERS
VALUES
TO 112.98

SIZES
27-32 ONLY

Mens Suits &amp; Sport Coats 1/ 2 Price. Sizes are broken. Sport
Coat Reg. $49.50 to $75.00.
Sale Price $24.75 to $37.50

SEE OUR SPECIAL
~U~UARIUM

KIT
10 gal
tank

Suits$70.00 to $110.0 0 - - - - Sale Price $35.00 to $55.00
Name
Address

Mens Long Sleeve Knit Shirts 112 Price. Reg. $4.98to
$9.98
Sale Price $2.49 to $4.99

Phone

,_,

___________________ _
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy . Offer expir,es : 3-9-74

MODERN SUPPLY
992 ·2164
Pomeroy. o.
THE STORE WITH "ALL KIN DS OF
STUFF" - FOR ,PETS, STABLE S, LARGE &amp;
SMALL ANIMALS. LAWN ~ AND GA,RD ENS .
399 W. Main St.

are

Mens Short Sleeve Knit Shirts 'h Price. Reg. $6.98to
Sale Price S3.49to $4.99
$9.98.

Boys Long Sleeve . Sport Shirts '12 Price. Both knits &amp;
dacron &amp; cotton . Reg. $3.98to$6.98. Sale Price S1.99to $3.49

.0,0, D.IIJ 1:11 o.m.

~

II:N ,,.,;

......., ••• • · 12 r 31olldl~f,,m .

PRESCRIPTIONS

PH. 912·2955

Friendly Service

[

'

New York Clot'h ing Ho.,se
KERM'S KORNER

'Camelot' ~et for
Capital Music Hall
WHEELING, W. Va. - The
wondrous
delights
and
romantic adventures of King
Arthur and his knights is the
subject of John Raitt
Productions' presentation of
"Camelot," the lavish musical
hit by Alan Jay Lerner and
Frederick Loewe. This musical
comedy by the creators of
"My Fair Lady" wlil be
presented at the Capitol Music
Hall in Wheeling, Sunday, .
March 3 at 6 p.m.
John Raitt (King Arthur)
will star as the medieval king
who gathered the most
stalward knights of ancient
England about his fabled
Round Table, but In the book
that Lerner fashioned from T.
H. White's best...,lling novel,
"The Once and Future King,"
he will be very much occupied
with his sprigbUy and beautiful
Queen Guenevere, to be portrayed by Jolene Fodor. This
Round Table harbors a very
famous triangle, at the third
corner of which stands that
most noble of knigbts and
dashing of men, Sir Lancelot,
played by William Covington,
whose song, "II Ever I Would
Leave You" thrilled many a
heart during its long tenure
high on the hit parade lists.
Christopher !\~,witt will
direct "Camelot" and marshall all the musical elements
of the production. The settings
of the higbways and byways,
jousting fields and throne ,
rooms of the towered Camelot
where the crested knights
cavorted will be designed by
Donald Padgett, while the
will he created by
Moss.
Richard
Naltk01wski will be In charge of

METS SIGN MILNER
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla .
(UPII - The New York Mets
Wednesday signc'&lt;l first base-

Ke/lers host birthday dinner

choreography and the musiaal
accompaniment will be
provided by the "Camelot"
Orchestra ander the direction
of Boyd Staplin .
Tickets are $7.50, $7, $6.50
and $6. Reservations may be
made by calling the Capitol
Music hall box office, 304-2335511.

Birthday anniversaries of
Mrs. Roger Keller and Mrs.
Floyd Weber were observed at
the Keller home, Route 7,
Pomeroy , w1th a dinner
Saturday .evening .
A decorated cake, baked by
Mrs. Gle n Stout, was served
during th e evening . Piano
music with Randy Keller
recording the entertainiJlent,
ope ning of gills , and visiting
were enjoyed.
During the evening, Mr. and

LOSE UGLY FAT
t iny tablet and eouy to lak e .
MONA DEX witl help curb your

VETERANS

de sire for ctce ss food . Eat le ss

weigh l e s~ Contain s no
dangeroUs drug s and will not

make
you
n e rvcu s .
No
!&gt; lrenuous elCerci s e. Change
your lite . . . st.ut today .
MONAOEX cost $3 .00 tor la 20
day s upply . l a rge e conomy
s 11e
is
$5. 00 .
Al so
try
AQUATABS : they work g entl y
to help you lose wat er -bloat

with those mentloned above ,

were Mr . and Mrs. Ralph
Keller', Deanna and David
Williams, Columbus, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Orr, Long Bottom,
Mrs . Phil Meinhart, Miss

MEIGS COUNTY

Star.t losing w e ight .t oday o r
money back . MONADEX i s a

Mrs. Don Williams, Columbus,
received word of the birth of a
son to Mr. and Mrs. JetTy man-outfi el der John Milner,
Grubba, also or Columbus . . who led the dub in homers last
Mrs. Grubba is the former season. But the Mets failc'&lt;i to
reach an agreement with Tern
Debbie Williams.
Enjoying the hospitality uf Seaver, who supposedly wants
Mr. and Mrs. Keller, along " $160,000 pact.

you have NOT received your
February 1 veterans check, please call
this office
PHONE 992-2820
W. W. AMBERGER
If

AQUATABS - a " wat er pill "
that works Sl .DO. Both
guaranteed
nd
ld by :
Swi sher &amp;

Erma Smith, Pomeroy; the
Keller children , Randy,
Rodney and Russell.

2E.

VETERANS SERVICE OFFICER

a in ,

•

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••lllillilillirlll

Alka-Seltzcr

ALKA-SELTZER

CONTAC

25's
Regular 79c Each

20 Capsules
Reg . $2.95

RACINE - Approximately
60 young people attended a
"youth happening" Sunday at
the Racine United Methodist
Church. The Rev. Joe Blslnnan
and a group of young peqJle
from Ohio University played,
sang, and led group singing,
and also witnessed and
tesUfied as to what the Lord
has done with their lives.
' At the prayer breakfast held
at the Racine church Wed·
rresday morning, the Rev.
Robert Bumgarner of the
Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, and the
Meigs Parish Ministry coordinator, gave devotions on the
!(,pic of "Being Who We Are".
' DevoUons and group singing
were led by the Rev. Howard
Slllveley, The breakfast of
s,Crambled eggs, blueberry
muffins, toast, and orange
j;nce was served by Mrs.
James. Rees, Sr., Mrs. Robert
Hill and Mrs. Howard Shiveley.
Attending were Bill Shiveley,
Gene Shiveley, Mike Warner,
David Theiss, Randy Warner,
Rhonda
West,
Mollv
ll'isher, and Connie Roush.
A prayer breakfast will he
lleld again next Wednesday
With a change In program.
· The next area event will be
tbe A!hens District Youth
Rally March 10 at the Heath
United Methodist Church,
Mlddle~ort.
·

ALKA-SELTZER
Ma-Settzer . "~&lt; PLUS
PLUS.0...,
~. COLD
""1!t~;:t,::) TABLETS

VICKS
NYQUIL

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••• ,

...

&lt;:!

-if~

CQ O Q I I UOO

~ifog; 36's
;::;;:\""
;;;,"' -:v:;::f
$1 .69 Value

.

NESTLE

'

Nightime
Colds
Medicine
6 oz .
$1.69 Value

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

COLGATE

. .
BABY
SHAMPOO

!lental Cream

16 oz.

Super Size

$1.42 Value

TIDE
49 oz.

69

POMEROY:

48 oz .
$1.33 Value

ewith
coupon

' '

Good only at Nelson's
Expires Feb. 25 . '974

.-

••

ALADDIN
Worthall

'\*·~·
•'!!..:z·

THERMOS

PIANTIRI

'

VAPORIZER
A-850
3 Year Guarantee
510.50 Value

~J~t.G~

No. 3730 Pint
Rustoroof
Polypropylene Jackel
$2.25

I

$777

PLANTERS
PEANUTS
oz. Cocktail12 oz. Dry- Roasted
Can
59~ Jar
79c Value
91c Value

,,•

...
·-·
........
·-·..................
--

Glamorene

SPRAY
'N VAC
No· Scrub

Rug Cleaner

$1.89 Value

•149

A bridal shower honoring
~Sandra Smith, brid~lect
of Charles William King, was
lleld recently at the home of
Mrs. Anita Dean, Pomeroy. Coltustesses for the shower were
Mrs. Sue King and Mrs .
Virginia Dean.
. Games were played with
pri%es being won by Mrs. Ardis
Waggoner, Mrs. Yvonne Young
and Mrs. Virginia Dean.
Deccrations of the home and
the gift table earned out the
valenUne moUf as did the
refreshments of cake, small
candy hearts, Ice cream and

6

,

79~

I

CRICKET

Shower fetes
Smith

The guest list included Mrs.
Helen Dais, Mrs. Kathryn Hall,
Mrs. Clara Sayre, Mrs. Mary
Lou Houdashelt, Mrs. Avis
Hartley, Mrs. Kenneth
Martins, Mrs. Paluma
.Goodwin, Mrs. Lela Hall, Mrs.
Mary Paynter, Mrs. Alpha
Bailey, Mrs. Clair Waggoner,
Mrs. Yvonne Young, Mrs.
J:aneth Beal, Mrs. Delores
King, Mrs. Neva King, Mrs.
Grace White, Mrs. Ruby
Burnside, Mrs. Sadie Carl,
Mrs. · Mabel Brlckles, Mrs.
t;ouJse Harrison, Mrs. Eva
JPng, Mrs. Ruth Spaun, Mrs.
ijazel Arnold, Brenda Roush,
Mrs . Eugene Smith, Mrs.
Sli"beth Murray, Mrs.
Raymond Smith, M{s. Mary
'llrglnla Hlisled, and Mrs.
Mary J. Brown.

IVORY
LIQUID

Giant Size

Wort hall
'

HEATING PAD

Disposable
Lighter
by Gillette
$1.49 Value

No. 1811
100 pel. Wetproof, 3-way Switch
2 year Guarantee
$5.95 Value

¢

77

'333

IJ.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:,.._..;;,____,.________ Reg .

GAET

WINTER TAN •I

$1

Sylvania Sun Lamp Reg.~~~.::
Sylvania Sun Lamp Bulb $7.77

" ' ·" " ·' I H ... Wlt&lt;!U " OY OKIN

'

Prince
Matchabelli
WIND SONG
CHACHET

HAND &amp;
BODY LOTION
SPECIAL OFFER
$4 .00 Value

GREAT-4iAdow OLD SPICE
CREAM EYE SHADOWS

b~~

coffee.

Mens Long Sleeve Knit Dress Shirts 'h Price. Reg. $7.98 to
$12.98
Sale PriceS3.99toS6.49

Start your way to aquarium fun with a stitrter
kit that includes tank. fi'lter. pump. heater ...
all the accessories.

-------------------· ----

Odd lot mens &amp; Boys Winter Outerwear '12 Price. Sizes
broken .
,

9- The Daily Sentinel, MldcDeport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 21, 1974

attend
meeting

Marguerite's
SHOES

refreslunents during the social
gelatin and greeting cards
were sold following the
meeting.

1 GROUP LADIES'

Values to 510.00

discussion.

hour and napkins, vanilla,

Values to $20

FASHION
BOOTS

interesting

hostesSes

and

"

CHILDREN'S
SHOES

Genevieve Gutbrie led the
disciiSSion session.
The

MEN'S
SHOES

1 LOT

monologues and a questionnaire which led to an interesting

1 LOT

I TABLE (Val. to $15)

Washington's Birthday Closeouts - Fri. and Sat.

Spending More Time At Home?

"

The meeting opened with the
singing of "My Faith Looks Up
to Thee" followed by prayer by
Emma Lou Finch.
Mrs . Constance Dieterich

CELEBRATI

,...---.::...

LOT

LADIES
SHOES

'•

GAS SHORTAGE?

1

LADIES
SHOES

i '(J,

.

Want Ad

1 LOT

VISIT US DURING THE
.

G£T YOORMAH WITH A

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

Alfred women have m.eet

ALFRED - The Alfred
United
Methodist Women held
0
their regular meeting Feb. 12
at the horne of Clara Foilrod
and Nina Robinson, with 14
members and tbree guests
The theme for World Day or reconciliation to which present. Visitors were Ella
Church Women United in
Meigs County will l'elebrate Prayer in 1974 is "Make Us Christian wome n in other Yost, Martha Elliott and
World Day of Prayer Friday, Builders of Peace." The countries contribute. A team of Charlotte Van Meter.
March I, at 2 p.m. at the worship matcr'L:Ils h:1ve been Asian women· has recently
Chesler United Methodis t prepared by the women uf visited the war-torn countries
Japan who, hav ing ex- uf Southeast Asia lo discover
Chur ch.
BREAKFAST SET
Mrs . Campbell Harper, perienced the cos t of World the needs £rom the women war
The
traditional Lenten
victims
themselves.
Other
president, reports that the War II, have work ed very hard
and quiet hour of
breakfast
local organization joins Church in succeeding years in the fw1ds will enable a team of
Women United in thouSllnds of peace movement in their own women in the Caribbean area Trinity Church, Pomeroy, will
local communities in every country. Under the auspices of to work in helping women be held al7:45 a.m. Wednesday
state in prayers for "peace Church Women United in a where they are to improve morning in the church social
building". This 88th World Day program called Christian their social, economic and room. Women of Trinity
or Prayer is observed by Causeways, a group of women religious life. Contributions Church will be hostesses for the
women in 168 lands.
from many parts of the United from this fund will rebuild a breakfast and devotional
The story of World Day of States traveled to Asia in early training center where church period. All women of area
Prayer began in 1887 with a 1974. They explored the women in Eastern Nigeria are churches are invited to attend.
small group of women who questions u! justice and peace working on rehabilitation tasks Reservations are to be made
believed that the mission work with women of six Asian as a result of the Biafra- with Mrs. Phillip Meinhart,
992-2383 on or before Feb. 25.
for which they were respon- countries. Together these Nigeria conflict.
sible needed their support in women will climax their efforts
prayer as much as in giving . as U1ey worship witll Japanese
Today, tltis annual event on U1e women in Japan on World Day
first Friday of March has of Prayer.
~eveloped
into a truly
World Day of Prayer in the
RUTLAND - A new health Center all day Wednesday to
ecumenical and international United States is the most
was started Wed- work on a quill and to make
program
celebration and is significant in widely observed ecumenical
that its roots are based in celebration sponsored by nesday at the Rutland Center Easter baskets for an Easter
thousands or local com- Church Women United . of the Senior Citizens Silver . bazaar April 5 and 6. At that
munities.
Protestant, Orthodox and Circle Club located in the time also there will be a
World D.oyuf Prayer is under Roman Catholic women, former Pomeroy National rummage and bake sale.
Working during the day on
the auspices of International motivated by their unity in Bank, Rutland Branch,
building.
the
bazaar project were Mrs.
Committee composed of a Christ, this year will mobilize
Mrs. Barbara Van Meter, Edith Williamson, Mrs. Marcia
liaison officer from each around their intention to be
R.N.,
working as a volunteer, Denr1il;on, Mrs. Melva Turner,
country that has a national "builders of peace" by
took
the
blood pressure of 33 Mrs. Elvira Barr, Mrs. Ethel
committee . Church Women channeling their energies into
senior
citizens
. A similar Chapman, Mrs. Muriel Foley,
United is the appointed ad- effective acts of reconciliation
service is offered every third Mrs. Nannie Radcliff, Mrs.
rninistrator of the work of the in lheir local communities.
International Committee
World Day uf Prayer Wednesday at the Pomeroy Adria Wilcox, Mrs. Jessica
which has also designated provides an occasion for Senior Citizens Center where Molden, Ms. Pauline Buck,
Church Women United as the participation in a nationwide Mrs. Pearl Leifheit, R.N., taks Mrs. Harriet Warner, Miss
Mae Weber and Mrs. Elizabeth
official sp&lt;Mlsor of World Day or offering which goes into a fund blood pressures.
Senior
citizens
met
at
the
Kennedy.
Prayer in the United States. called Intercontinental Mission
The International Committee - "'"process by which church
chooses the theme and ap- Women United fulfills its goals
points a group of women from a of justice and peace through
different part of the world each approved ag encies. The
year to write the worship primary focus this year is a
materials relevant to the contribution to an international
emphasis.
fund for rehabilitation and

,.,

~ta~bl:e~~::!.w~ith~a~he==a~rt~::~~:.. .~M~r~s-...~~~. .::::::::::::::::::"1 ~

Willard gave each mem ber a

cess."

Hackett, Mrs. Nora Mills, Mrs. ·
Edith Jividen, Mrs. Marjorie ·
Milhoan, Mrs. Margaret Belle
Weber, Mrs . Mary Jean
Harrison, Mrs. Gertrude
Miller, Mrs. Peggy Kerns and ~
Jody CUster.
·

SI.OO Value

Stick Deodorant

SOc CASH REFUND
OFFER
$1.25 Value

66e

CACHET
Matchai:Jelli
As lndiv

ROMAN BRIO
TRAVEL KIT
Aller Shave
Shave Cream
Deodorant
Handsome Case
$7.50 Value

.,. .

SPRAYER
with Free
Cachet Perfum

$1.25 Value

•'

�\

•

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middlcpmt -1-'omeroy , 0 .. Feb. 21, 19H

Miss Southern Ohio pageant planned ,
BELPRE - Preliminary
plans fur the 1974 Miss Southern Ohio Pugeant were unnounced today by William
McAfee, director of tl1e ~vent,
which is sponsored by the
Belpre Area ' Chamber of
Commerce.
The pageant, slated for
Saturday, March 30, will be
staged allhe Lawton Building ,
at the rear of Belpre High
School. A preliminary pagenl,
depending on the number of
entries, will lake place
Saturday, Marc)l 23 in the
Lawton Buildin{
This will mark tile second
year of sponsorship !or the
Belpre Ci1amber, " which
initiated tl1e pageant last year
in a devolopmenlal effort for

R:

the community and as &lt;I ser-

vice to the talented youn g
ladies in Southeastern Ohio
who would not otherwise have
an upportuni ty to compete in a

Miss America styled pagea~l.
McAfee explained the Miss
Southern Ohio Pageant area
includes the coun ties of Athens,
GalliH, Meigs. Monroe and

Washington .
He said young ladies between

the ages of 18 and 28 on or
before Sept. 1 are elibible to
enter and should obtain an
official entry blank fur U1e
pagea nt by contactin g the
Belpt·e Ar ea Chamber of
Commerce at 12:!-8934 or by
writing to P. 0. Box 8, Belpre,
before March 2U.
Wirmer

or the Mi ss Southern

Ohio Contest will enter the

Belpre in particular : it,
provides an excellent opportunity for area young ladies
to. gain added poise through
t&gt;ublic appearances and to gain
adrled maturity tl)rough a
professional pageant program
as the one in Belpre will be,"
McAfee explained .
"Most important, this event
will provide any opportunity
for the winning girl to seek
scholarship awards at the Miss
Ohio Pageant in addllon to the
scholai ship prize guaranteed

the winner of the Miss SouUlern

Ohio event,"

h~

added.

The director said various

cotumittee chairmen already
are working to make this
Miss America competiti on will yC&gt;tr's pageant bigger and
be · de termin ed (or pa r· better than last year's. "This
ticipation in the Atlan tic City , will be a community project,
and the Belpre Area Chamber
N. J . fes tivities.
"Tho pagea nt will foc us of Commerce is certain that all
attention un the Southr.astern · sectors of the community will
Ol1io ar ea in ge neral and participate to assure ils sue·

Miss Ohio P;.w;eant, where the
state 's r eprese ntative to the

Garden club meets
Judy McDonnel was hostess
fur the Walk-In-Garden Club
February session. The meeting
was opened with the club
prayer and salute to the flag .
The minutes were approved

and an invitation to attend an
open meeting of the Winding
Trail Garden Club March 20
was read. Russell and Etta
Cullums attended the centennial meeting at the
fairgrounds and Mr . Cullums
will represent Bedford Twp. on
the committee.

Roll call was reciting a

'

jolly Bunch has meeting
The birthday of Mrs .
Beatrice Robson was observed
at the Tuesday meeting of the
Jolly Bunch Sewing Club at the
horne of Mrs. Evelyn Grueser.
The club presented Mrs .
Robson with a bouquet of roses.
Ice cream, cookies and coffee
were served by Mrs. Grueser
and Mrs. Freda Miteh from a

homemade val e ntine .
Devotions were given by Edoa
Lee using a topic rrom "The
01ris tian Herald .''

Flower
and
garden
magazines were used in study
and comment on ll)elop to AllAmerican nowers. A contest,
conducted by Mildred Zeigler
was won by Rosalie Story .
Flower arrangements carrying out the valentine motif
were made by Mrs. OJIIums
and Edna Lee using live red
amaryllis.
The members enjoyed

valentine verse . A valentine

viewing plants and lerrariwns

card was signed by the
members to be sent to Mrs.
Maggie Chaney who is in a rest
home in Albany. Mrs . Belva

and refreshments of cherry
pie , ice cream punch, nuts and
candy. Mildred Zeigler will
host the March meeting.

arrangement. A $10 .donation
was made to the Middleport
firemen for the emergency
vehicle.
Members sewed during the
afternoon and enjoyed games
conducted by Mrs. Grace
Johnson. Others attending
were Mrs. Ethel Hughes, Mrs.
Alma Miller, Mrs. Helen

World Day of Prayer set

New program opens

·.

Values to $21

Values to S17

was named missionary of the

monUt, located in Sierre Leone,
West Africa. The group signed
a round-robin card for her
birthday, Feb. 19, and will
remember her daily in prayer.
The group reported 23 sick
and shut-in calls.
A communication from
Global Missions asking an
increase of $1.30 on pledges to
missions was read and accepted.
Programs were distributed
by June Stearns for tbe World
Day of Prayer, March I, at the
home of · Genevieve Guthrie.
Service will begin at 8 p. m.
This will also be the next
regular meeting of the group.
A report was given on rest
home patients.
The program, "God Loves
Us - Do I Believe That?"
consisted of hymns, scripture,
prayer,

four

FINAL REDUCTIONS
Women's
and Children's

'1.00

SHOES

•2.00

Values to $20

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

served

BErn OHLINGER
Pomeroy

Main St.

•
•
•
•

Ole Kerm Has Chopped Prices Again!
BY GEORGE, WE'VE •••

Final
Clearance

Merchandise
Regrouped for
This Sak.
Many New
Items Added

Why Not

Men's Long Sleeve

Adjus1able for children or adults
Folds to fit closets, car trunks, elevators!
Fully equipped
Great for camping, vacationing, apartment living!

DRESS &amp; SPORT

SHIRTS
Y2 PRICE

COMPLIMENTS OF OUR STORE AND REXALL . . . MAKERS OF
SUPER PLENAMINS, AMERICA"S lARGEST SELLING MULTI-VITAMIN
MULTI· MINERAL PRODUCT!

Start An

Deposit the following entry blank in
our store. Anyone may enter. No
purchase necessary, need not be.
present to win. Drawing will be March
9, 1974 at J o'clock. Clip entry blank
and enter today.
_,

Aquarium

....

........................................ . ,
,

Regular $5.98 to $8.98

NOW $2.99 to $4.49
Odd Lot Men's
,~

CASUAL JEANS
Values to $11.98 •4.00

Odd Lot
STRAIGHT LEG

ODD lOT
MEN'S

JEANS
VALUES
TO 17.98

•300

SWEATERS
VALUES
TO 112.98

SIZES
27-32 ONLY

Mens Suits &amp; Sport Coats 1/ 2 Price. Sizes are broken. Sport
Coat Reg. $49.50 to $75.00.
Sale Price $24.75 to $37.50

SEE OUR SPECIAL
~U~UARIUM

KIT
10 gal
tank

Suits$70.00 to $110.0 0 - - - - Sale Price $35.00 to $55.00
Name
Address

Mens Long Sleeve Knit Shirts 112 Price. Reg. $4.98to
$9.98
Sale Price $2.49 to $4.99

Phone

,_,

___________________ _
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy . Offer expir,es : 3-9-74

MODERN SUPPLY
992 ·2164
Pomeroy. o.
THE STORE WITH "ALL KIN DS OF
STUFF" - FOR ,PETS, STABLE S, LARGE &amp;
SMALL ANIMALS. LAWN ~ AND GA,RD ENS .
399 W. Main St.

are

Mens Short Sleeve Knit Shirts 'h Price. Reg. $6.98to
Sale Price S3.49to $4.99
$9.98.

Boys Long Sleeve . Sport Shirts '12 Price. Both knits &amp;
dacron &amp; cotton . Reg. $3.98to$6.98. Sale Price S1.99to $3.49

.0,0, D.IIJ 1:11 o.m.

~

II:N ,,.,;

......., ••• • · 12 r 31olldl~f,,m .

PRESCRIPTIONS

PH. 912·2955

Friendly Service

[

'

New York Clot'h ing Ho.,se
KERM'S KORNER

'Camelot' ~et for
Capital Music Hall
WHEELING, W. Va. - The
wondrous
delights
and
romantic adventures of King
Arthur and his knights is the
subject of John Raitt
Productions' presentation of
"Camelot," the lavish musical
hit by Alan Jay Lerner and
Frederick Loewe. This musical
comedy by the creators of
"My Fair Lady" wlil be
presented at the Capitol Music
Hall in Wheeling, Sunday, .
March 3 at 6 p.m.
John Raitt (King Arthur)
will star as the medieval king
who gathered the most
stalward knights of ancient
England about his fabled
Round Table, but In the book
that Lerner fashioned from T.
H. White's best...,lling novel,
"The Once and Future King,"
he will be very much occupied
with his sprigbUy and beautiful
Queen Guenevere, to be portrayed by Jolene Fodor. This
Round Table harbors a very
famous triangle, at the third
corner of which stands that
most noble of knigbts and
dashing of men, Sir Lancelot,
played by William Covington,
whose song, "II Ever I Would
Leave You" thrilled many a
heart during its long tenure
high on the hit parade lists.
Christopher !\~,witt will
direct "Camelot" and marshall all the musical elements
of the production. The settings
of the higbways and byways,
jousting fields and throne ,
rooms of the towered Camelot
where the crested knights
cavorted will be designed by
Donald Padgett, while the
will he created by
Moss.
Richard
Naltk01wski will be In charge of

METS SIGN MILNER
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla .
(UPII - The New York Mets
Wednesday signc'&lt;l first base-

Ke/lers host birthday dinner

choreography and the musiaal
accompaniment will be
provided by the "Camelot"
Orchestra ander the direction
of Boyd Staplin .
Tickets are $7.50, $7, $6.50
and $6. Reservations may be
made by calling the Capitol
Music hall box office, 304-2335511.

Birthday anniversaries of
Mrs. Roger Keller and Mrs.
Floyd Weber were observed at
the Keller home, Route 7,
Pomeroy , w1th a dinner
Saturday .evening .
A decorated cake, baked by
Mrs. Gle n Stout, was served
during th e evening . Piano
music with Randy Keller
recording the entertainiJlent,
ope ning of gills , and visiting
were enjoyed.
During the evening, Mr. and

LOSE UGLY FAT
t iny tablet and eouy to lak e .
MONA DEX witl help curb your

VETERANS

de sire for ctce ss food . Eat le ss

weigh l e s~ Contain s no
dangeroUs drug s and will not

make
you
n e rvcu s .
No
!&gt; lrenuous elCerci s e. Change
your lite . . . st.ut today .
MONAOEX cost $3 .00 tor la 20
day s upply . l a rge e conomy
s 11e
is
$5. 00 .
Al so
try
AQUATABS : they work g entl y
to help you lose wat er -bloat

with those mentloned above ,

were Mr . and Mrs. Ralph
Keller', Deanna and David
Williams, Columbus, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Orr, Long Bottom,
Mrs . Phil Meinhart, Miss

MEIGS COUNTY

Star.t losing w e ight .t oday o r
money back . MONADEX i s a

Mrs. Don Williams, Columbus,
received word of the birth of a
son to Mr. and Mrs. JetTy man-outfi el der John Milner,
Grubba, also or Columbus . . who led the dub in homers last
Mrs. Grubba is the former season. But the Mets failc'&lt;i to
reach an agreement with Tern
Debbie Williams.
Enjoying the hospitality uf Seaver, who supposedly wants
Mr. and Mrs. Keller, along " $160,000 pact.

you have NOT received your
February 1 veterans check, please call
this office
PHONE 992-2820
W. W. AMBERGER
If

AQUATABS - a " wat er pill "
that works Sl .DO. Both
guaranteed
nd
ld by :
Swi sher &amp;

Erma Smith, Pomeroy; the
Keller children , Randy,
Rodney and Russell.

2E.

VETERANS SERVICE OFFICER

a in ,

•

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••lllillilillirlll

Alka-Seltzcr

ALKA-SELTZER

CONTAC

25's
Regular 79c Each

20 Capsules
Reg . $2.95

RACINE - Approximately
60 young people attended a
"youth happening" Sunday at
the Racine United Methodist
Church. The Rev. Joe Blslnnan
and a group of young peqJle
from Ohio University played,
sang, and led group singing,
and also witnessed and
tesUfied as to what the Lord
has done with their lives.
' At the prayer breakfast held
at the Racine church Wed·
rresday morning, the Rev.
Robert Bumgarner of the
Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, and the
Meigs Parish Ministry coordinator, gave devotions on the
!(,pic of "Being Who We Are".
' DevoUons and group singing
were led by the Rev. Howard
Slllveley, The breakfast of
s,Crambled eggs, blueberry
muffins, toast, and orange
j;nce was served by Mrs.
James. Rees, Sr., Mrs. Robert
Hill and Mrs. Howard Shiveley.
Attending were Bill Shiveley,
Gene Shiveley, Mike Warner,
David Theiss, Randy Warner,
Rhonda
West,
Mollv
ll'isher, and Connie Roush.
A prayer breakfast will he
lleld again next Wednesday
With a change In program.
· The next area event will be
tbe A!hens District Youth
Rally March 10 at the Heath
United Methodist Church,
Mlddle~ort.
·

ALKA-SELTZER
Ma-Settzer . "~&lt; PLUS
PLUS.0...,
~. COLD
""1!t~;:t,::) TABLETS

VICKS
NYQUIL

·~·

COLD TABLETS ~~·u.
••• ,

...

&lt;:!

-if~

CQ O Q I I UOO

~ifog; 36's
;::;;:\""
;;;,"' -:v:;::f
$1 .69 Value

.

NESTLE

'

Nightime
Colds
Medicine
6 oz .
$1.69 Value

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

COLGATE

. .
BABY
SHAMPOO

!lental Cream

16 oz.

Super Size

$1.42 Value

TIDE
49 oz.

69

POMEROY:

48 oz .
$1.33 Value

ewith
coupon

' '

Good only at Nelson's
Expires Feb. 25 . '974

.-

••

ALADDIN
Worthall

'\*·~·
•'!!..:z·

THERMOS

PIANTIRI

'

VAPORIZER
A-850
3 Year Guarantee
510.50 Value

~J~t.G~

No. 3730 Pint
Rustoroof
Polypropylene Jackel
$2.25

I

$777

PLANTERS
PEANUTS
oz. Cocktail12 oz. Dry- Roasted
Can
59~ Jar
79c Value
91c Value

,,•

...
·-·
........
·-·..................
--

Glamorene

SPRAY
'N VAC
No· Scrub

Rug Cleaner

$1.89 Value

•149

A bridal shower honoring
~Sandra Smith, brid~lect
of Charles William King, was
lleld recently at the home of
Mrs. Anita Dean, Pomeroy. Coltustesses for the shower were
Mrs. Sue King and Mrs .
Virginia Dean.
. Games were played with
pri%es being won by Mrs. Ardis
Waggoner, Mrs. Yvonne Young
and Mrs. Virginia Dean.
Deccrations of the home and
the gift table earned out the
valenUne moUf as did the
refreshments of cake, small
candy hearts, Ice cream and

6

,

79~

I

CRICKET

Shower fetes
Smith

The guest list included Mrs.
Helen Dais, Mrs. Kathryn Hall,
Mrs. Clara Sayre, Mrs. Mary
Lou Houdashelt, Mrs. Avis
Hartley, Mrs. Kenneth
Martins, Mrs. Paluma
.Goodwin, Mrs. Lela Hall, Mrs.
Mary Paynter, Mrs. Alpha
Bailey, Mrs. Clair Waggoner,
Mrs. Yvonne Young, Mrs.
J:aneth Beal, Mrs. Delores
King, Mrs. Neva King, Mrs.
Grace White, Mrs. Ruby
Burnside, Mrs. Sadie Carl,
Mrs. · Mabel Brlckles, Mrs.
t;ouJse Harrison, Mrs. Eva
JPng, Mrs. Ruth Spaun, Mrs.
ijazel Arnold, Brenda Roush,
Mrs . Eugene Smith, Mrs.
Sli"beth Murray, Mrs.
Raymond Smith, M{s. Mary
'llrglnla Hlisled, and Mrs.
Mary J. Brown.

IVORY
LIQUID

Giant Size

Wort hall
'

HEATING PAD

Disposable
Lighter
by Gillette
$1.49 Value

No. 1811
100 pel. Wetproof, 3-way Switch
2 year Guarantee
$5.95 Value

¢

77

'333

IJ.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:,.._..;;,____,.________ Reg .

GAET

WINTER TAN •I

$1

Sylvania Sun Lamp Reg.~~~.::
Sylvania Sun Lamp Bulb $7.77

" ' ·" " ·' I H ... Wlt&lt;!U " OY OKIN

'

Prince
Matchabelli
WIND SONG
CHACHET

HAND &amp;
BODY LOTION
SPECIAL OFFER
$4 .00 Value

GREAT-4iAdow OLD SPICE
CREAM EYE SHADOWS

b~~

coffee.

Mens Long Sleeve Knit Dress Shirts 'h Price. Reg. $7.98 to
$12.98
Sale PriceS3.99toS6.49

Start your way to aquarium fun with a stitrter
kit that includes tank. fi'lter. pump. heater ...
all the accessories.

-------------------· ----

Odd lot mens &amp; Boys Winter Outerwear '12 Price. Sizes
broken .
,

9- The Daily Sentinel, MldcDeport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 21, 1974

attend
meeting

Marguerite's
SHOES

refreslunents during the social
gelatin and greeting cards
were sold following the
meeting.

1 GROUP LADIES'

Values to 510.00

discussion.

hour and napkins, vanilla,

Values to $20

FASHION
BOOTS

interesting

hostesSes

and

"

CHILDREN'S
SHOES

Genevieve Gutbrie led the
disciiSSion session.
The

MEN'S
SHOES

1 LOT

monologues and a questionnaire which led to an interesting

1 LOT

I TABLE (Val. to $15)

Washington's Birthday Closeouts - Fri. and Sat.

Spending More Time At Home?

"

The meeting opened with the
singing of "My Faith Looks Up
to Thee" followed by prayer by
Emma Lou Finch.
Mrs . Constance Dieterich

CELEBRATI

,...---.::...

LOT

LADIES
SHOES

'•

GAS SHORTAGE?

1

LADIES
SHOES

i '(J,

.

Want Ad

1 LOT

VISIT US DURING THE
.

G£T YOORMAH WITH A

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

Alfred women have m.eet

ALFRED - The Alfred
United
Methodist Women held
0
their regular meeting Feb. 12
at the horne of Clara Foilrod
and Nina Robinson, with 14
members and tbree guests
The theme for World Day or reconciliation to which present. Visitors were Ella
Church Women United in
Meigs County will l'elebrate Prayer in 1974 is "Make Us Christian wome n in other Yost, Martha Elliott and
World Day of Prayer Friday, Builders of Peace." The countries contribute. A team of Charlotte Van Meter.
March I, at 2 p.m. at the worship matcr'L:Ils h:1ve been Asian women· has recently
Chesler United Methodis t prepared by the women uf visited the war-torn countries
Japan who, hav ing ex- uf Southeast Asia lo discover
Chur ch.
BREAKFAST SET
Mrs . Campbell Harper, perienced the cos t of World the needs £rom the women war
The
traditional Lenten
victims
themselves.
Other
president, reports that the War II, have work ed very hard
and quiet hour of
breakfast
local organization joins Church in succeeding years in the fw1ds will enable a team of
Women United in thouSllnds of peace movement in their own women in the Caribbean area Trinity Church, Pomeroy, will
local communities in every country. Under the auspices of to work in helping women be held al7:45 a.m. Wednesday
state in prayers for "peace Church Women United in a where they are to improve morning in the church social
building". This 88th World Day program called Christian their social, economic and room. Women of Trinity
or Prayer is observed by Causeways, a group of women religious life. Contributions Church will be hostesses for the
women in 168 lands.
from many parts of the United from this fund will rebuild a breakfast and devotional
The story of World Day of States traveled to Asia in early training center where church period. All women of area
Prayer began in 1887 with a 1974. They explored the women in Eastern Nigeria are churches are invited to attend.
small group of women who questions u! justice and peace working on rehabilitation tasks Reservations are to be made
believed that the mission work with women of six Asian as a result of the Biafra- with Mrs. Phillip Meinhart,
992-2383 on or before Feb. 25.
for which they were respon- countries. Together these Nigeria conflict.
sible needed their support in women will climax their efforts
prayer as much as in giving . as U1ey worship witll Japanese
Today, tltis annual event on U1e women in Japan on World Day
first Friday of March has of Prayer.
~eveloped
into a truly
World Day of Prayer in the
RUTLAND - A new health Center all day Wednesday to
ecumenical and international United States is the most
was started Wed- work on a quill and to make
program
celebration and is significant in widely observed ecumenical
that its roots are based in celebration sponsored by nesday at the Rutland Center Easter baskets for an Easter
thousands or local com- Church Women United . of the Senior Citizens Silver . bazaar April 5 and 6. At that
munities.
Protestant, Orthodox and Circle Club located in the time also there will be a
World D.oyuf Prayer is under Roman Catholic women, former Pomeroy National rummage and bake sale.
Working during the day on
the auspices of International motivated by their unity in Bank, Rutland Branch,
building.
the
bazaar project were Mrs.
Committee composed of a Christ, this year will mobilize
Mrs. Barbara Van Meter, Edith Williamson, Mrs. Marcia
liaison officer from each around their intention to be
R.N.,
working as a volunteer, Denr1il;on, Mrs. Melva Turner,
country that has a national "builders of peace" by
took
the
blood pressure of 33 Mrs. Elvira Barr, Mrs. Ethel
committee . Church Women channeling their energies into
senior
citizens
. A similar Chapman, Mrs. Muriel Foley,
United is the appointed ad- effective acts of reconciliation
service is offered every third Mrs. Nannie Radcliff, Mrs.
rninistrator of the work of the in lheir local communities.
International Committee
World Day uf Prayer Wednesday at the Pomeroy Adria Wilcox, Mrs. Jessica
which has also designated provides an occasion for Senior Citizens Center where Molden, Ms. Pauline Buck,
Church Women United as the participation in a nationwide Mrs. Pearl Leifheit, R.N., taks Mrs. Harriet Warner, Miss
Mae Weber and Mrs. Elizabeth
official sp&lt;Mlsor of World Day or offering which goes into a fund blood pressures.
Senior
citizens
met
at
the
Kennedy.
Prayer in the United States. called Intercontinental Mission
The International Committee - "'"process by which church
chooses the theme and ap- Women United fulfills its goals
points a group of women from a of justice and peace through
different part of the world each approved ag encies. The
year to write the worship primary focus this year is a
materials relevant to the contribution to an international
emphasis.
fund for rehabilitation and

,.,

~ta~bl:e~~::!.w~ith~a~he==a~rt~::~~:.. .~M~r~s-...~~~. .::::::::::::::::::"1 ~

Willard gave each mem ber a

cess."

Hackett, Mrs. Nora Mills, Mrs. ·
Edith Jividen, Mrs. Marjorie ·
Milhoan, Mrs. Margaret Belle
Weber, Mrs . Mary Jean
Harrison, Mrs. Gertrude
Miller, Mrs. Peggy Kerns and ~
Jody CUster.
·

SI.OO Value

Stick Deodorant

SOc CASH REFUND
OFFER
$1.25 Value

66e

CACHET
Matchai:Jelli
As lndiv

ROMAN BRIO
TRAVEL KIT
Aller Shave
Shave Cream
Deodorant
Handsome Case
$7.50 Value

.,. .

SPRAYER
with Free
Cachet Perfum

$1.25 Value

•'

�•
10 - 1he Da 1ly Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0' Feb 2t 1974

Local Bowling
Thursday Afternoon
Feb 1 1974
Won Lost

Te am "

30

10

Pu l ns E x c a\lal ng
24
I&amp;
ll:'am 1
15
'Z S
Roya l Crown
29
H gh Team Seres
Pu l ns
Ex c avat ng 6 7 Team J 600
H g T eam Game
Team 4
56 1 Pull ns Ex c ava t ng 569
lnd H gh Seres
Be y

Sn th 462 Do 11a McF a r and
Bec ky Du 1fee 4.:10
nd H gh Gam e
Sue See g
179 Be tty Sm th 165

Thursday Afte r noon L eague
Feb 14 1974

Tean

Won lost
3
26
19

J

Put n s Exc a va t ng
Te a m 1
Roy a l Crown
Team H gh Sere s
1523 Team
1.:199
T ea n H gh Game

C rown

1'

n

29
3

17

Te am 4
Roya

Pu ll ns E x cavat n g

547 T e a n l 538
nd H gh Ser es
W I 5o 1 488

Mar ene

B ecky Dunfee 412

nd

H gh Gam e
Mar enc
W !so
76 Debb e Haw ey 172

Tu e sday A Her noo n league
Feb s 19 74
Team Stand ngs

w

R o y a l Cro wn B I

Team

Te am 7
N ew Yor k Clo th House
endly T a v e n

J:"

For es t Run Boc k

B

L
6

6

8

"
10l 14
B 16
B 16
Fo es

Team H gh Gil n e
Run Boc k 500
Fo es
Tea n H g t Ser es
Run 0 ock 13 16
Karyn
lnd H g l Game
Oav s 214 Mar ene W son 184
Karyn
lnd H gh Se r es
Dav s
Mar lene
W lson
PC~nd o a Co I ns
462 lsabe fe
Couc l'l 456
Wednesdav Ear y B rd
League
Feb 6 1914
Team Stand ngs

w

L

50
6
Be n Tom Corp
44
12
He e 1 s Beauty Shop
20 36
Raw ng s Auto Pts
Ber tha s Grocery
20 36
Stewa rt Hdw
20 36
14 &lt;1 2
Roush s Land ng
Team H g Game
He len s
Beau ty Shop 819
Team
H gh
Ser es
Raw ngs Au to Pa rts 2284
lnd H gh Gam('
Floss e
Max son 2 5 and 212
lnd H gh Ser es
Floss e
Max son 578 Mary Voss 46 1

Tu es day After noon League
Feb 12 1974
Team Stand ng s

w

Roya l Crown Bolt ng
"
Team 1
2'
Team 2
'
NV Clo th ng Ho use
12
0
F r end ty Tavern
Forest Run Block
8
Team H gh Game Team

8
14
20
,
l4

d60

Team H gh Ser es
Roy a
Crown Boll ng IJIS
nd H gh Game
Be y
Sm th 190 and 167
nd H gh Seres
Bet y
Smtih 5 6 No r ma Amsbary
d68

W('dnesday Early Btrd
Feb ll 1974
Tea m Standmgs

w

WANT ADS
INFORMATIO N
DEADLINES
5 P M Day Be fore Pub ! ca l o
Monday Dead ! ne 9 a m
Can c e Ia on - Co r e e l ons
w 1 be accepted un 1 9 a m to r
Day of Putt cat on
REGULATIONS
The Pub! sh e r re s erves the
r ght to ed t or re ec t any ads
deem e d ob e ct ona
The
pub! sher w 1 not be respon
s ble lor more tha n one n
corre c t nsert on
RATES
For Want Ad Ser~ t ce
5 ce n ts per wo r d one nser t on
M n mum Charge S1 00
4 cent s jte
word lh ee
c onse cut ve ns er t ons
26 cents per wo d s x con
s.e c ut ve n se Ions
25 Per Cent D scount on pad
ad s and ads pa d w Ill n 10
day s
CARD OF TH ANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 00 fo r 50 word m n
mum Each add t ana wo d
3c
BLIND ADS
Add 1 ona l 25t Charge pe r
Advert semen!
OFFI CE HOURS
8 JO a m to 5 00 p m Da y
8 30 am
to 12 00 Noon
Saturd a y

WH TE TO Y pood e rna e os t
n Rull and Rewa d Co ar
w th s ver be s Phon e 712
36

2 1B 6 c

L
6

Ben Tom Corp
58
He len s Beau y Shop
52 12
22 42
Raw I ngs Auto Parts
Roush s Land ng
20 44
20 44
Bertha s Groc ery
Ste wa r t Hardware
20 44
Team H gh Game
Ben
Tom Corp 806
Team H gh Seres
He len s
Beau ty Shop 2337
lnd H gh Game
Mary
Voss 186 J enny Wh Ita ch 18 4
lnd H gh Se res
Mary
Voss 549 Mar ene W son 507

SPR NG
FABR CS
New
s h pment tust a r r ved W de
se eel on coord nated coors
one lo po lyester ersey kn t
S2 29 per yd
Caro l na
Fabr cs Rou t e 7 Chester
Oil o 9 am to 7 p n Monday
hrough Saturday Henry and
Ma r y Hunte owne s
2 17 6t p
Ar~tN OUNC IN G

new hours lo r
ncome t ax s e v ce Open on Y
on Monday Wednesday an d
Frday
9
am
to
5
p m
Eve n ngs by app
wanda Eb l n Co Rd 22 off
Rou e 7 bypass Phone 992
22 72
2 a JOtc

cury Mars and Saturn

Those born on thiS date are
under the Sign of P1sces
Amer~can educator Allee
Freeman Palmer was born
Feb 21 1855
On this day tn hiStory
In 1878 the New Haven
Conn telephone company published the f1rst du-ectory of 1ts

CLEVELAND ( UP!) - Mrs
Ruth Meyers 29 Bay VIllage
has accepted a $250 000 out-of
court settlement m the death of
her husband m an acctdent
while at work May 20 1971
Mrs Ruth C Meyers had
ongmally asked for $725 000 m
the death of her electr1c1an
husband DenniS Jr 30
Mrs Meyers had charged
that the defendant Bwldmg
Systems Housmg Corp the
general contractor m the c"On
struct10n of an apartment m
nearby North Olmsted was
gutlty of safety code v10lat10ns
which caused her husband to
fall mne stones down an un
covered elevator shaft
According to the complamt
Meyers was descending a lad
der m the shaft when it shpped
and he fell to his death

Monument was dedicated - 37
years after the start of con
strucbon
In 196~ Black Mushm leader
Malcolm X was fatally shot
at a rally m New York Ctty
In 1971 80 persons were
killed when tornadoes swept
MISSISSippi a nd Alabama

Union leaders face
fines, jail terms
MOUNDSVILLE W Va
UP!) - F1ve off1cers of a
Umted Mme Workers unwn
local fa ced the threat of fmes
and a s1x month jail term 1f
they failed to report for work
today at a Consolidation Coal
Co mme
U S D1str1ct Court Judge
Robert E Maxwell durmg a
heanng a t Elkms Tuesday
suspended fmes and sentences
after the officials sa1d they
would end a walkout whtch has
Idled e1ght mmes m West
V1rgm1a s Northern Panhandle
a nd Eastern Oh10
The strike or.gmated at the
Ireland mme of Consol m a
diSpute over the company s
a lleged refusal to honor a
mmer s absentee shp
Maxwell Imposed a $400
penalty
on
Local
1110

INFORMATION ABOUT
JOB OPPOl&lt;TUNlTIES
SOCfAL SECURITY
CO NSUMER PROTECTION

STEREO
92.1 FM
WMPO
~lclclleport- Pomeroy

0

y

however on the baSis of a $100
fme for four days durmg wh1ch

h1s temporary restramm g
order of Feb 12 was 1gnored
The Judge held the tJ¥W local
m contempt of court excludmg
the mternat1onal and diStrict
level and warned that an
additional $100 fme would be
mnposed slartmg today for
each doy the strike continued
Officers of the local were
tdentifled as David M1ller
acting president and mme
committeeman
Richard
Lancaster
recording
secretary and mine com
m1tteeman Joe Romanek
f111Bnc1al secretary and DaVId
Cam treasurer all of MoundsVIlle and Henry Roberts of
Wheeling
mme
com

nutteeman
Maxwell sa1d all five would
be turned over to U S marshals to carry out the or1gmal
SIX month jail terms 1f they
failed to show up for work
Consol s Shomaker and
McElroy mmes and the Wmd

sor nnne of Amencan Electrtc
Power Co also were Idled m
West Vlrglnla In Ohio the
strike affected the Nos 3 5
and 6 of North American Coal
Co and the Allison mme of
Y&amp;O Coal Co
At least 3,000 nunel'l were off
the JOb at the height of the
walkout

OF

QUAliTY

2 21 3tc

AUCTI O N Saturday Febr. ua Y
23 d 10 30 a m Jus to
e m nd you to a e r d 1 e sal e
of hou sehold furn s h ng s of
Mr and Mrs E d M er a
Le tart Fa s 6 m es I om
Rae ne Oh o on S Rt 338
Th e sa e was Sun da y pape r
Thank you C C Bradf o d
Auc onee r
2 21 II
SH OOT NG M A TCH
Corn
Ho ow Gun Club turn Irs
r gh t af e M es Ce me t ery
Ru and
Fa c tory
I ok e d
gun s on ly Su day Fe bruary
2J I p m
2 21 ] IC
SHO OT NG Match Rae ne Gun
C ub Sunday F eb 24
p m
Ass o ted meats
Fa c ory
c hok ed guns on ly
2 20 3 c
TURN spare t me nto mon e y
0 sp lay new sp ng ewe t y
for Sa r ah Coven r y No
dcpos nece ssa r y o no ex
pe r enc(' necess ary Cat ?92
27 17 betwee n 10 am and 3
pm
2 20 3tc
NEED Ea ser s ewng done"
W ldo sewng nmyhome n
Cheste Ca l 985 3824 week
days
2 20 4t c
LL buy
chand se a t Po l y s Auc: t on
House Add son Phon e 992
3509
2 20 7t c
Sa es

Th u sday

7

7 Add son Oh o

2 20 2tc
SPEC IAL COTTON
FABR CS 96 CEN T S PER
YARD
POLYESTER
DO UB LE KN T S S2 88 PER
YARD NEW CRAFT TEMS
NOVELTY FABR C SHO P
230 WEST BLVD BELPRE
OH 0
7 17 6t c

~ PR IN G

GUN SHOOT Rae
fac tor y choked
Frday 7 pm

e Gun Club
guns on y
2 19 12

Widow accepts
out-of-court
settlement

2 SIGNS

SHOOTING M ATCH F orked
R u Spo t !'. mil r c ub
con
Sunday fa c tory c ho ke d qun s

W

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today 1s Thursday Feb 21
the ~2nd da y of 1974 w1th 313 to
follow
The m oon 1s approachmg 1ls
ne w phase
The mornmg stars are Venus
and Jup1ter
kind It hsted :;o su~cnbers
The evemng stars are Mer
In 1885
the Washmgton

AND
GREAT WUNIRY

No!tee

l

8

Bt1siness Services

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!

c

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1972 CHEVROLET BELAIR
S249S
4 door local1 owner car w th le s s t han 15 000 m les betge
f nts h black v ny! top good wh 1te wall t res standard v.a
e ng ne automat c power steenng &amp; brakes rad 1o
s potl es s nte r or Want a sharpe a t the r gh t pr ce
Stop n
1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill
4 Dr Sed blue t n s h au to P S P B
n ce fan ly car at the r gh t pr ce

S I29S

8 cyl

rad to A

196 7 CHEVELLE
5995
6 c yl nder automat c transm ss on good ttres
c lea n nte n or be1ge t n sh radto &amp; heater real econom y
&amp; a popular model
4 door

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

Pets For Sale

For Rent or Sale

AKC Toy Pood e pupp es $75 CONCORD Tra ve l Tra ler n ce
s am ese k tens S15 Phone 1 fo r coupe Ca t 997 7479
1 3 1 tfc
256 6347
2 21 26t c
1972 12x50 MOBILE Home
Phon e 992 5592
2 20 fc

Help Wanted

SOMEONE
to
do
I gh t
housework and ve ri wh le
husband wo r ks sh ft s Phone
992 2653
PRE SP R NG SA LE at Berry
2 21 3tc
M 1 er Mob le Homes 705
Farson Str ee t Be lpre Oh o
EX PER ENCED man to repa r
phone 423 95J1 Buy now
vend ng mach nes
ABC
take de ve ry n spr ng - ta ke
En terpr ze s Mason W Va
advan tage of w nter t me
773 5543
pr ces on some ou t stand ng
2 21 lfc
used Mobles Homes
197 1 - 2 bedroom - 60 x 12
Pr ncess was $6 495 00 sa te
NE ED LADY to he p w th
pr ce S5 295 00 (t h s mob le
s pr ng hou sec ean ng Phone
home new cost sa 000 00)
992 2677
2 21 61p 1971 - 6Sxl2 Cha mp on super
sale pr ce only $4 995 00
BABYS TT ER n Harr sonv le 1971 - 60x 12 Buddy c lass c
was S5 49 5 00 now only
area 5 o r 6 days a week
u 795 00
Phone 742 6551 or 992 2551)
- two 60x12 Cham p on
2 19 ti C 97
were S4 49 5 00 now on y
$3 995 00
KOSCOT KOSMET CS &amp; WIG S
We hav e the product on hand 97 - 60x 12 Elcona Custom
new pr ce i7 295 00 sa te pr ce
and we del ver to you per
S5 795 00
sona y He len Jane Bro wn
974
th ree Det ro ters - up to
99251 13
$1 ooo oo off
12 30 li e

Mobtle Homes For Sale

WE HA VE many o ther s zes
and var et es of Mob le
Homes on sa e Ou r pr ces
nc ude your de ver y and
~XPERIENCEO
pa nter
n
complete se t up don t wa 1
ter or and exter or Cal Don
sho p now you 1 be g lad you
Van Meter Phone 985 3951
d d
2 3 29tp
2 15 12 tc

Employment Wanted

PUBLIC NOTICE

To the De fe ndan ts George M
w seman Mary W sema n
H ram
W seman
Howard
Wtseman
Holts Ernest ne
W seman
Frankl n Emery
w se man Char ey W seman
A c:e W sema n G C W se man
and o the unknow n he rs
dev sees
eg atees
ad
m n st rator s executors and
ass gns of eac:h of the fol ow ng
George M W seman Deceased
H ram w se man Decea se d
Howard W se m an Deceased
Hall s Ernst ne
W seman
Deceased Frank n Emery
w seman Deceased Char ey
W sema n
Deceased
A ce
w sem an Deceased and G C
w sema n Deceased a
of
whose re s dences a re unknown
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
Oh o Power Company
an Oh tt Corporalton
Pta nt 11
vs
George M Wtseman
et a t
Defendants
No IS 480
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
P ant ff has brought th s
act on nam ng you as De fen
dants n tile a bove named co urt
by f ling Is Com pia nt on the 5th
day of Februar y 1974
The ob ect of th e Com pia nt s
to part ton the fo tow ng
descr bed real esta te
A 1 that certa n ve n of coal
loc a l y and var ous ly known as
Number F our Four A Clar ton
or Ltmestone Coal under y ng
tile tract of land here nafter
desc r bed tog e ther w lh the
r gilt to m ne and remove the
sa td c oa
by undergro1.1nd
m m ng proces ses &lt;str p m nmg
not nc luded a nd the r ght and
pr v ege of m nmg remov ng
and transport ng underg ro und
and under the s urface of the
tract of land here nailer
de s cr bed coa l from other
lands now owned or hereafter
acqu red by Oh o Power
Com pany
ts successors or
ass gns
Sa d tract ot land be ng
s t uated n the County of Me gs
n the State of Ohto and n the
Townsh p of Salem conta nlng
49 50 acres more or less and
bounded as follows
On the No r th by land s now or
former ly owned by Wm R
Nelson et al On the East by
land s now or formerly owned by
Evere tt M chae on the South
by lands now or formerly owned
by Truman P Brewer Merle S
Dav s On th Wes t by la nds now
or formerly owned by Merle s
Dav

s

For Sale or Trade
Wanted

2 HOG S to se or rade for beef
Phone 667 3031
2 20 4tp MAR R ED c oupe wants to rent
farm or country hom e by
Apr 1 Call co ll ect 488 5342
2 19 61c

Wanted To Buy
USED Gravely tra ctor and
attachments Phon e 9A9 381
2 21 61p

EXPERIENCED
Radlntri
From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad1ator to the
smallest Hea te r Core
Nathan Boggs
Radtator Spectahst

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph 992 2174

...., Gene's
Body Shop

NO 1 copper 70c rad ators
l2c red bra ss 35c batte r es
S1 20 M A Hall Reedsv li e
Oh o Phone 378 6249
1 27 tfc
RIVERSIDE Auto Wreckng
w I pay S5 to r a I tunk cars
Phone (30.4) 882 5244 or 773
5890
I 27 26tc
CAS H pad for all makes and
models of mobile home~ Ph ..
area code (6 14 } 446 1425
2 7 26tc

- GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

WOOD TRUSSES

C'"/S)

Ltncoln Htll Pome roy 0

Pamting A Specialty
All work guaranteed

For sale

SLEEP ING room over w ne
"Sto re n Pomeroy ReferencP
required Ca 1 992 5293
1 10 tfc
ROOMING HOU SE turn s hed
co n struc t on
workers
we co m e Phon e 773 5975
New Haven W Va
2 15 rtc
3 AND 4 ROOM turn shed and
unfurn shed
apartment s
Phone 992 5434
4 12 tf c
PRIVATE meet ng room for
any organtzat on phone 992
3975
3 11 tf c
3 BEDROOM mob le hom l!s
bath and • w th washer antJ
dryer Phon e 992 3509
2 20 3t c

SAL T FOR CE AND SNO\
Rock sa t for townsh ps
towns and busme sses In
bulks a nd bags for tce and
s now Excels tor Salt Works
Pllone 992 389 1
11 11 tfc

GOOD USED
REFRIGERATORS
(2 Good Ones)

1-S1de by Stde
5150
1-2 Door
(Top &amp; Bottom) $125
POMEROY LANDMARK

9'.. _ Jack W Carsey
&amp;lttl Phon• 992 9932

Mgr

HOUSE
unfurntshed
3
bedroom ltv ng room k I UPHOLSTERY fabr cs by lh e
chen and laundry room One
yard 54 nches w de a s low as
tu r n shed apartment 3 room s
Sl 95 per yard Velvets as low
and bath Phone 992 2780 or
as S3 45 Imported velvets
992 3432
$9 95 we also have nylon
2 20 li e
h e r c ulo n
cotto n pr nts
~ nyls remnants by the yard
or by th e p ece Pome roy
Recovery 622 E Man St
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
FOUR Keystone m ag wh ee ls
1 29 26tc
with new ttres f ts Chevy
S80
two Keystone mag FOAM to f II your olct couch and
whee s w th new Goodyear
cha r c us h ons as ow as
wh te letter tires f Is Ford
SIO 95 Upholstery books only
$50 Phon e 992 7881
50c 4 nch co vered foam
2 21 21p
mattresses for standard s tze
bed
S29 95
Pom ero y
Recovery 622 E Man Street
969 HALf TON Chevro let
Pomeroy Phon e 992 7554
p ck up Also 2 sorrel mares
1 29 26tc
well broken Te le phone (6141
949 3193
2 21 3tc

For Sale

SMAL L FA RM gas wei
742 6261

Phone
2 21 6tc

m the Area

It's

DTIRE CENTER
Mason W VI

Water Ltnes and Power
L111es All work dono by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and septtc tanks tn
stallod

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

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

•

992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

FURNITURE

MATERIALS CO
773 5554
Mason W Va

For Rent

DITQIING SERVICE

and

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Real Estate For 5ale

DE S IR ABLE two bedroom
house n M ddl eport read y to
occup y Ca I 992 ·S310
1 31 26tc

0

Feb 21 1974

Stop In and See Our
Floor Dtsplay
BISSELL. Construct on room
add to n s and rem ode ng
Profess anal floor sandmg
and fin s h ng o d and new
References a vat able Phone
949 383J
1 25 26tc
C BRAOFORU P.UC u
Complete Serv ce
Phone 94'9 3821
Ra e ne Oh o
Cr tt Bradford

t:

5 1 tfc

EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work septic
tanks nstalled dump trucks
and lo boys for h re w II haul
fl
d rt top so I limestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
night phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
.-21ltfc
DOZER work land clearing by
the acre hourly or conlract
farm ponds roads etc La~e
dozer and operator w th o~er
20 years exper ence Pull ns
E xca vat ng Pomeroy Oh io
Phone 992 2478
12 19 tfc
NE GLI=Rs-FOR - BUtLDING
HOU SES We II draw pr nts
or
bu ld
to
your
spec f ca t ons
Ne gler s
Butlding Supply Rae ne
Oh o Ca ll 9d9 360.:1
2 5 26tc
AUl OMOBI~L- :E::-~1-n_s_u_r_a._nce been
cancelled'
Lost
your
operator s li c ense Cal 992
7428
6 15 tfc
SEWING MACHINES Repa r
serv ce all makes 992 2284
The Fabnc Shop Pomeroy
Author zed Singer Sales and
Service We Sharpen Sc tssors
3 29 tfc
PRICE CONSTRUCTION
Roolmg s pouting kitchens
and bathrooms Comp let e
r e model ng Phone 742 6273
12 3 ttc

THURSDAY FEB 21 1974
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 Sesame St 20 ABC news 13 Truth or
Consequences 6 L lta s Yoga and You 33
6 30 - NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 Your
Future Is Now 33 Room 222 13
7 00 - Truth or Con seq 3 Bea t the Clock 4 What s My lme 8
Elec Co 20 Let s Make A Deal 13 News 10 6 Spor ts Desk
15 Av taf ton Weather 33
7 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 W ld Ktngdom 10 Beat the Clock
13 Look ng Ahea d 33 To Tell the Tru 1 h 6 Ozzte s Gtrls 8
Johnn y Manns Sta nd Up &amp; Cheer IS Zoom 20 Read ng F or
th~ Classroom Teacher 33 Dealers Cho tce 4
B 00 - Wa ltons 8 10 Advocates 20 33 Chopper One 6 13 F l p
W Json 3 4 15
8 30 - F rehouse 6 13
9 00
Kung F v 6 13 Ironside 3 4 15 Movies Gl Blues 8
Porgy and Bess 10 Bl ack Journal 20 Con i I cts of Harry S
Truman 33
9 30 - El ot Norton Rev1ews 33
10 00
News 20 Mus c Coontry USA 3 4 15 Streets of Sa n
Franc sco 6 13 Who Is Ma n? 33
10 30 - Day At N ght 33
11 00 - News3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Janak 33
11 30
Jo hnny Ca rson 3 4 15 Dtck Cavett 6 13 Mev es
Waterhole No 3 8
Born Yes t erday 10
1 00 - Tomor row 3 4 News 13
2 00 - News 4
FRIDAY FEB 22 1974 '
6 00 - Sunr se Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Folk L terature 3 Milestones o f Progress 10
6 15 - Farm Report 13
6 30 - B1ble Answers 8 Blue R dge Quartet 13 News 6 F ve
M nutes to Ltv e By 4
6 30
Col umbus Today 4
6 45
Farmt•me 10 Morn ng Report 3
7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 P xa nne 6 0 1ck Van
Dyke 13
7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullw nkle 13 New Zoo Revue 6
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 10 Sesa me St 33 New Zoo Revue 13
J effs Coli e 6
B 25 - Jac k La La nne lJ
B 30
Brady Bunch 6
B 55
News 13
9 00 - Paul Otxon 4 Ph I Donahue 15 Fnendly Jun ton 10
AM 3 Abbott &amp; Costello 8 Wil d W1ld West 6 Mov oe
Modesty Blase 13
9 30 - To Te ll the Truth 3 Tattletales 8
9 55 - Chuck Wh fe Reports 10
10 00 - Dmah Shore 3 15 Jokers W ld B 10 Company 6
10 30 $10 000 Pyram d 8 10 Jeopardy 3 4 15
11 00 - GambtB 10 Password13 Wllardof0dds3 4 15 M1ke
Douglass 6
11 30 - Hollywood Squares3 4 15 Brady Bunch 13 Lo ve of L fe
8 10 Sesame St 33
11 55 - CBS News 8 Dan I m el s World 10
12 00 - Ja ckpot 3 15 Password 6 Bob Brauns 50 50 Club 4
Nows 8 10 13
12 JO - Baffle 3 15 Spht Second 6 Search for Tomorrow 8 10
12 45 - Electnc Company 33
12 55 - NBC News 3 15
1 00 - News3 All My Children 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
Concentrat on B SPcret Storm 10
1 3~3 On A Matc h 3 4 15 Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As the
World Turns 8 10
2 00 - Days of Our Ltves 3 4 15 Ne wl ywed Game 6 13
Gu d ng L ght B 10
2 30 - Doctors 3 4 15 Edge ot Night 8 10 Girl n My L fe 6 13
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hasp tal 6 13 Pr tce s
R1ght B 10 Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20
3 30 - One Ltfe to Ltve 6 13 Phil Donahue 4 Match Game 8
10 Oh1o Thts Week 20 How To Surv ve A Marnage3 15
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset I S Sesame St 20 33 Speed
Racer 6 Love Amer. can Style 13 Lucy Show 8 Mev e
Take Care ot My L11tle G rl 10
4 30 Green Acres 3 Gilligan s Is le 13 6 Bonanza 15 Haze l S
Jackpot 4
5 00 - Bonanza 3 Merv Gr tf n 4 Mtsslon Impossible 6 Andy
Gr ff th B Mr Rogers 20 33 Gomer Pyle USMC 13
5 30 - Beverly Hillb lites 8 E lecfrtc Company 33 Hogans
Heroes 13 Trail s West 15 Hodgepodge Lodge 20

OUR 80ARD1NG HOUSE

REAO'r MIA
CONCRETE
del v e red right to your
project Fast and easy Free
es timates Phone 992 3284
Goeg en Ready Mix Co
Middleport Oh o
6 30 tfc

5 ROOM home 2 bedroom 1 •
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
bath workshop gas forced REASONABLE rates Ph 446
a r furnace garage Lot 100
4782 Gallipoli s John Russell
If x 100 ft Phone 992 3022 or
Owner and Operator
992 3298
5 121fc
2 20 6tp
S EPTIC TANKS
AROBIC
F IVE room house and bath
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
attached carport forced atr
CLEANED
REPAIRED
furnace hardwood floors
MILLER SAN ITATION
k tchen cabtnets large air
STEWART OHIO PH 662
condtt oner N ce yard with
3035
metal storage bu1ldmg m rear
10 4 tfc
yard Located n Syracuse on
Route 124 Call 593 6904 after SEPTIC
TANKS c leaned
6 3D p m Priced $15 000
Modern Sanltatton 992 3954 or
2 20 3tc
992 7349
---10 23 tfc
6 ROOM home wtth bath c ty
wa te r coal furnace and 3 'BACKHOE Serv ce CHARLES
a cres Pllone 992 3944
R HATFIELD
Route 1
2 20 3tp
Rut land Oh 10 45775 phone
7d2 6092 Water 1 nes footers
HOU SE for sale c lose to
and trenches 24 hours 7
Pomeroy
Phone 992 S248
days a week
before 3 p m 992 3436 after 3
2 7 26tp
pm
2 20 6t c BLOCK S bored and all repa rs
on sma ll engines W lklnson
2 ACRE lots for sale Tuppers
Small Eng ne Sales 399 w
Plains waler Call 992 S248
Ma n St Phone 992 3092
before 3 992 3-436 after 3 p m
2 6 26tc
2 20 6tc
WILL tr m or cut trees and
"' PACIOU S b Level and spill
shrubbery Also clean our
lev e l homes are now under
base ments attics etc Call
949 3221 or 742 4441
construct on on clty water
and sewer Many delu xe
2 2 26tc
features nclud ng a r con
dltloning
Best rtnan c ng
eva lab e Other type homes
m different areas on F H
AtJm fman c ng wi th no tJown
payment Call colle&lt;t (837
6540) or wrte to MEIGS
DEVELOPMENT P 0 Box
33 Mtddteport Ohio 45760
I 9 tfc

---------

-------- ---Real Estate For Sale

1AJCRS uous£-....

1bose

'HOO

What Is A' Columns

BRE:• D FR&lt;

1 ¥00

~

Dear Group
Were not undersupplied w1th What Is As' far from 1t
They pour m
But we don t want to overdo the1 efo• e many good letters
rematn m our files - HELEN

by THOMAS JOSEPH

At:ROSS

Dear Readers
How about tt ' Do you want a regular montl1ly What Is A'
(or other essay type) column' Send us you1 vote I[ enough of
you show m terest well get sometlung gomg - SUE
Meanwhile here s a good one
Rap
I m not very poetic but do you have to be to kiiow
What Is a Broken Heart'
A broken heart IS when you wmt for the telephone to nng and
you know 1t won t
It s when you realize everythmg he ever smd wasn t true
It s the ru ght you go r1dmg aro und and see hmn but ) ou don t
speak a nd then you cry because HE d1dn t speak to you
'
It s when you see h1m wtth somebody e lse
It s the tunes you practtcally 1un out of class lo bump mlo
him but he s never around
It s when he says I Ube over tomght but he doesn t come
Its when you h ear h1s favonte song the one he sang to you
It s the mght you go to the ball game hopmg you 11 see him
but he 1sn t there
It s the hours you suffe1 through class till lunch and then he
doesn t speak
Its the dance yo u go to knowmg all the time yes he 11 be
there - but w1th HER
But most of all a broken heart 1s whe n you know you ve
lost him - ONE OF MANY BROKEN HEARTED GIRlS

6

7

7
8
8
9
9
10

l

News 3 4 8 10 15 13 Truth or Conseque nces 6 Sesame
Street 20 Ad le rtan Counse l ng Tec hn toues 33
30 - NBC New s 3 4 15 ABC New s 6 CB S Ne ws 8 10 Roon
222 13
00
Truth or Coneq 3 Beat the Cl oc k 4 Ne ws 6 10 What s
My L ne 8 W ld K'"gdom 13 Elec Co 20 I Sp y 15 Av at on
Weather 33
30 - Porter Wagoner J Hollywood Squares 4 New Tr e a s ure
Hunt 10 To Tell t he Tru th 6 Conce n1rat10n 8 Wa ll Stree1
Wee k 20 33 Beat t he Cock 13
00 - Was hmg ton Rev ew 20 33 Sanford &amp; Son 3 4 15 Brady
Bunch 6 3 D r ly Sa lly 8 lO
30 - Lotsa Lu ck J 4 15 Stx. Mtll o• De lla Man 6 13
Was h ng ton Connect on 20 Good Ttmes 8 10 Campu s Sce1 e
33
00 - Masterpiece Theater 33 G r l W th Somethmg E&gt;ctra 3 4
5 Stage Center 20 GE Theater 8 10 Btcen te nn a l Lectu re
Sen es 20
Jo- Odd Coup le 13 Ozz e s G r ls 6 Br an Ke th 3 4 15
00 - Ne ws 20 Toma 6 13 Rel tg ou s Am e n c n 33 Denn
Ma rt n 3 4 15
30 - Day At N ght 33
00 - News Weather Spor ts 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Jana k 33
30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Goodn ight My Love 6 Mov es
The Abom nable Dr Ph1bes 8 Two on a Gut! lot n e 10
Von Ryans Express 13
00 - M dn ght Spec •a I 3 4 Don K1rshner s Ro c k Con ce rt 6
Goodntght My Love 13
5 - M.ov e Dr Re nault s Secre t 10
30
News 13 4

m
12

)

STEREO
Walnut AM FM
Red•o 8 track tape com
binatlor:J Balance S110 73 or
ter ms ava table Pllone 992
3965
., 214tfC

Vrrqr i B

T,.~lr·•r!

fi r , J •(
I I

\r

'

,· ....,,. ·( 'Lll'·l' ) 'r" I

flotnt•nJ'r' Ohro :·.,:t' 1
CITY CONV
IENC'E 3
bedrooms bath modorn k t
chen hot water heat storm
w ndows and garage
OUTRT 7 -2 bodrooms bath
large ltvmg
T P
water
garage and other bu1ldmgs
One acre
RANCH TYPE HOME - 3
bedrooms bath n1ce k tchen
nat gas furnace CUy water
and garage
BUSINESS BUILDING - With
over 3 2 a cres Can be useful to
builders equipment overhauls
truckers
storage
or
churcl'l or sc hool Chatn link
fence Above all floods
316 ACRES In Ol1ve
Townshtp Wtld and wooly at
$125 00 per acre
24 ACRES - In Pomeroy Good
for houstng or small farm
ARE YOU TIRED OF LIVING
IN YOUR OLD HOUSE&gt; GO
MODERN AND LET US SELL
IT WITH LITTLE WORRY TO
YOU NO SALE NO CHARGE

BABY FARM-17acres lUSt
oil Rt 33 close 1n 2 year old
home 3 BR colored bath w
shower Lovely kitchen w
range &amp; ref Utility Barn
garage &amp; storage All new
fe nce $22 500 110
BUY OF THE YEAR - Just
3 yrs old 3 BR colorod bath
Utility modern kitchen and
d'"lng Carpetod Carport
About V;~ acre $16 000 00
A BARGAIN 2 story
frame 2 BR new bath
furnace &amp; hot water Jank
Some carpeting paneling &amp;
l1le Basoment $6 500110
BETWEEN POMEROY &amp;
MIDDLEPORT on new Rt 7
1 h acre 2 wells &amp; electric
Approvod for septic tank
Ideal for mobile or home
$4 500 110
DELAY
MAY
MEAN
DISAPPOINTMENT
SEE
THESE UNUSUAL OF
FERS TODAY
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
9922259
If no answer 992 2U8

-

Ben

'*'

Adhem
13 Ch ld s
playth ng
14 Etsenhow

4 George
Sanders
played
h1m
5 rwofold
6 Porker
7 More

cr was
one
16 K nde r
oth ers have too -

1 thought 1 m1ght share 1t w1th you and Rap

1eaders
A b1rd Without a son g to s mg a forsak en work of art a voice
that no one seems to hear - thiS ts a broken heart Crymg tn a
lonely room an echo los t m space a llvmg thmg that hves to feel
the touc h of one embrace
The we1ght of d1sappomtment
engulfed m doubts and fears a steady beat of tenderness
dampened by b1tter tears a broken heart IS true love los t an
empty wmter m ght the essence of a reason why that s vo1d of •11
delight Fam t fa1th dim hope a faded dream a diSillUSIOned
sm1le dwellmg m a vast expa nse where nothing seems worth
while So I ve descnbed a broken heart my verse IS nearly e n
ded but bear tn mmd If g1ven t1me 1\ can and WILL be mended
- NEWARK GIRL

gartner
17 F ddle s
nnceslor
18 Q 1 tt ng
lime
19 Com1c
strtp ex

eccentric
8 J1lted
rejected

Yesterdays \nsy.er
9 Unste dy
11 Spoor

26 Surm

15 Spool
18 Soft
soape d
21 Speaks
gl hly
Z2 Perpe tual
23 Mtss Fahray
24 lmple ment

lO

~9

32
33
35

ment
%4 Dilator}
25

Flower
extract

26 Jo hn
Bar
addict

~WJWID'lb)]® 1kJ
4otaw&amp;IJ -.1
,-.
hv
"'"! nnn
! U Nlit A II N O l 0

I FE

27 Look
after
28 Terr a 31 Three
(lt )

32 ltahan

port

34 Involve

fo rm four ordtnary words

36 Sally
of
the

fans
37 Flightless
bird

DAILY CRYPTO!!UOTE -

0

10

Is

apostrophes, the length and format wn of the wm dli are nil

I 0 U

tX )

hmts Each day the code letters are different

CRYPTOQUOTES
Now arrange the circled !ellen

I~==~~==~==~~~~~~';"~l~l•;•:ted~~bytheabovec~oon
1

~ .. - -...

1

to form the surpriH answer WI

t r r r xxJ rn HIM
(Aiuwerot

JumLI" UPPER
v~••nday

11

IAm

wit'

work It

One letter simply stands for another In this sample J1 Is
used for the three L s X for the two 0 s etc Single letters

ITYU&gt;EN 1

YAH(RLIJ]

Here's how to
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFEI LOW

FEVER

MUFFLE

lomorrow~

CASKET

TCG

DAYATON

HTT!GS

I U G

TO!

AC

KTHNI

U MWA I
lAVt;
VM C

GMYU

BGMII

VAPUI

VMFG

PTTS

- WGC

LHMCFEAC
Yesterday 1 Cryptoquote MUCH BEND1NG BREAKS 111Jo~
BOW MUCH UNBENDING THE MIND -BACON

I o]K IIInp for a 1 hologr 1pl ( r APERTURE

(@ 1974 Kine Feature•IJyndleate Inc )

21

+r

JTI'LE G

East

THE GREATEST!

• 98 3
• 2
.Q9 75
.KJ8
+ KQ10r.2
+98543
... K
... Q985
SL UTH IDI
. \ K654
• A2
A7
... A 106 3

~E

BOUGI-!TALL !-tiS
KNIVES t-tERE

+

East West vulnera ble

West

North

East

Pass
Pass

2•
Pass

Pass
Pas.c;

Open ng lead- +K

You

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

1€ver

seem

When H ele n Sobel proba
bly th e greatest woman
br~dge player f1rst playe d at
the CavendiSh Club she was
young very attractive and
couldn t have looked less hke
a bridge player
Playmg at four spades she
drew trumps la1d down the
ace of clubs to drop East s
kmg a nd proceeded to wmd
up los m g two clubs and one
heart
Her partner 3 self s tyle d
expert sa 1d You playe d the
clubs wrong but you were
lucky
About a month la ter she
made a s 1m1Iar successful
P,!ay a nd drew the remark
Y ou 11 never lea rn Will

to

qet
cold
Joe II

Wh4'

1 ~110.11 'IJHIJ 'PJ PE

THE GAL5 HERE 5EEM TO
V EW ME AS A THREAT

\0 ASK

I OONT THINK

/aJ.(}IS

w..-,

I&gt;J.JP

IIJA9J T

~~~~E~ I fW:l
~~~~

THEY 77i!I./ST ME I

EVEN

-rne

~TIOl

1 1)),16
WI~ TO

you?

/&gt;('"_,K I

•''

rect o ne She needed two c lub
tnc ks and the play of the ace
msure d thiS res ult agamst
apverse d1str~but10n
She would be s ure of two
club tr~cks agamst 3 2 break
11 was the 4 1 bre aks that
nllght bother he r
Suppose that an honor
f:llled to drop She would con
tmue by leading toward dum
m y s Jack If West held the
kin g and queen he could only
score two tncks
Suppose East held them
West would show out The
Jack would force one of the
top honors Later on the th~rd
club would be led from dum
m y and Helen s 10 would be

ALLEY OOP
NO McGClON

THAP.S 50

II\UQ4 GOODN ESS THAR_

T'S A K LL N ME. ' ' AH JEST
MAO TO GIT N EA R SOME.
ROT TENN ESS OR MAH Ll L
M ND WOU LD SNAP"

come a wmner
SHES GOTTO
TH' SCHOOL MA RM
GlUE US A HA F DAY

21
North

East

l_'llss

u

Pass

Pass

4•

Pass

WeAt

1•

I&lt; ETCH UP ON HER

~OW

D HE EVER HE,.\R
OF OLLIE 6EJMA 1

OFf, AUNT LOWEEZY

l

Ppss
Pass '
You South hold
4\A K 7 6 • A K 7 6 + 3 2 .K 10 3
What do you do now?
A -Just bid four spades II

\'

there Is a slam somewhere your
parlner will bl4 agalo

I
I

t

clamatton
20 Ogle
21 In1,;olvmg
pumsh

• 10643

West

l t

Barter
She
docs n t
l 1vc here
mymore
Conve e ~
I uropt an
t\cr
Su cor

• Q J 10 7
... J742

"'

teycorn

correct tl was lhe only cor

TEAFORD

prey
DOWN
I Hmd
2 Romes
rtver
Ill Walk

I OUIStana

Helens play was not only
GROCERY bus ness for sale
Building for sale or lease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appomtment
3 20 tfc

gu ns
40 Hunters

11 Umv

Unscramble these four JumbleR,
one letter to each squ are to
6 OO -

39 Tobog

10 Cash box

+++
And another on the same subject
Dear Rap
I found th1s m a box of old le tters belongong to my aunt Smce
I ve JUS! experienced somethmg Similar - and I know many

38 Adams

I Wound
5 M mien
eflort

++1

2
NORTII

By Roger Bollen

Hoople

f3RE tJ,X 1\ '"" {HAT
DU "1P 7 A ~() I CAN
t.. S~ Tt-t£' £FTO t:f?

Dear Rap
Why don t you prmt a What Is A column once a month' We
rea lly like them and a lot o! us cut them out for our sc rap brooks
Is 1\ that you don t get enough peop le s cndmg them ' - 1 HE
GROUP

WIN AT BRIDGE

Sobel made only correct play

w1th Ma1ar

CIIUM WlLl S 1:-'l VT.f\IG5
SHOULD 8C S4FC.
t:.VOUG
1'.
'-([

10
11
11

NEW 3 bedroom hom e 11 2 bath DOZER antJ back hoe work
ponds and septic tanks tJ t
garage basement on Grave
ch tng serv ce top so I ftH
H II M ddleport Natural ga s
d rt limestone
B&amp;K Ex
already n
Phone Dale
cavatmg Phone 992 5367 or
Dutton 992 3369 even ngs
992 386 1
992 2534
9 1 tfc
1 17 tfc
NEW 3 bedroom home good
water 6 acres 3 outbutldmas
and cellar Off Meigs County
I on W lltam S m th Road 3 1
m ties from Salem Cen ter
1 27 261p

The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy

Television Log

OFFICE SUPPliES

Bu1lt to Your Specs
Oeltvered to Job S1te

Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
Main St Pomeroy All kinds
of salt water pellets water
nuggets block satt and own
UNFURNISHED apartmen t 2
Oh o River Salt Phone 992
bedrooms e ectrlc heat
3891
Hartford W Va Phone 773
5975
2 21 ffc AM FM stereo rad lo 8 track
tape player 4 speaker s~und
S¥Stem Balance S109 32 or
TRA LER 1 bedroom n ce for
term$ Call 992 3965
couple Phone 992 7479
2 19 tfc
2 5 tfc
TWIN
NEEDLE SEWING
MACHINES 1974 model In
2 BEDROOM mobile home all
walnut stand All features
ut llttes pa td No pets Robert
built n to make fancy designs
H 11 Rac•ne Phone 9.t9 3811
antJ do stretch sewing Also
2 21 121p
buttonholes blind hems etc
S43 35 cash or terms avallabe
FURNISHED apartments on
Phone 992 2653
Rt JJ tn Mason One 3 room
2 19 tfc
apartment shower kitchen
cabin suitable for 2 Old people VACUUM CLEANERS El ectro
or 2 workers utilities fur
Hygiene New Demonstrators
niShed and garden if wanted
t'las
all cleaning lttachmtnla
One 2 room apartment
plus the new Electro Suds for.
bedroom and k tchen batl'l
s ham poomg carpet Only
shower and kitchen Both are
S27 50
cash
or
terms
good apartments Reynolds
avcWa b e Phone 992 21iS3
Apartments Phone 773 5147
2 19 tfc
2 19 6tp

For Rent

On Most Amen can Cars

Ph 992 5271

FA IRLY good s mall used chan
saw Phone Y49 2225
'l QO 6tc

OLD furniture oak tabl es
cloc ks ce boxes brass beds
d tshes desks or complete
households Wrlte M D
MIter Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohto
call 992 1760
5 13 tfc

•5.55

Pomeroy

NOTICE OF
BOLEN S Husky 1250 w th 48
APPOINTMENT
nch mower and blade Ex
Case No 11146
ce le nt cond t10n Phone 949
quIts
and
!ewe
ry
ANT
QUE
Estate of
Laufla
Young
S9S3
Al so nterest ed n furn lure
Deceas ed
2 20 6tc
a nd d shes Call 99 2 52 62
Not ce s hereby g ven that J
even ng s or morn ng s
B 0 Bnen of Pom e roy Oh o
197 4 HONDA x 1 350 On or off
2 20 tfc
has been duly appo nted ad
the road bike Low m leage
m n s tr a tor of the Estate of
Sl ooo Ca Harry C Roush
Laura Young deceased ate of 2 PO NT t'l tch scraper bade
Mason 773 52J8
and set of cu lt valors to ftt
Me gs County Oh o
2 20 3tc
Intern atonal Super C tra ctor
Cred tors are requ red to f le
2 or 3ft p c kup d sk 6 or 7 ft
thetr cla tms w th sad ftduc ary
THREE year o ld palommo
Phon • 992 7190
w th n to ur mon th s
horse Phone 742 3884
2 20 3tp
Dated til s 16th day of
2 20 3tc
February 1974
RECYCLE your newspapers at YOUNGSTOWN k tchen Stnk
Sl 40 per 100 pound Your
MANNING D WEBSTER
w th faucets Good con dtt on
corrugated pasteboard at
Probate Judge
S50 See at 256 So Fourth
$1 40 per 100 pound and your
of sad Coun t y
Ave M ddleport
B M ca rds at 6c per pound We
12 l 28 (3 7 Jt c
2 18 tfc
w II also buy your scrap ron
cast •ron sheet tron copper FOR SA LE Large eve ! tot on
brass auto rad ators auto
New Ltma Road Rutland All
batter es Our feet of tra ters
uttl t es ava lab e Phone 742
w II serv tce and ndustry n
NOTICE OF
3083
your area Conserve recycle
APPOINTMENT
2 I tfc
and sell your waste mater a ts
Case No 21 111
to the Rosenberg Recyc l ng
Estate of Phtllp w Me tnhart
Company m Athens Oh to We SINGE !tewlng machines 19 72
Dec eased
model rn beaut ful walnut
c lose eac h Friday at noon for
Not ce s hereby g ven that
cabmet Makes des gn st t
balance of week so be aware
Genev eve B Me nhart of 207
ches z g zag buttonholes
when you get tt all together
Spr ng Avenue Pomeroy Ohto
blind hems etc L ke new
that the Rosenberg Re cycl nQ
h as been du ly a ppo nt ed
Only S89 95 Call Ravenswood
Co m Athens •s the better
E xec utr x of th e Estate of
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
place for you
Ph I p W Me nhart deceased
12 1 tf c
late of Pomeroy Me gs County
2 19 lfc
Oh o
Cred tors are requ red to ftle BICYCLES Ill any condt t on
HAY Pllone 992 7306
Also b cyc le parts Contact
the r cia m s w th sa id I duclary
2 17 261C
Lar ry Wyatt (housetra ler)
w th n four months
Dated th ts 15th day of on Locust St ree t Rut an d
9 WEE K old bla c k poodle pup
Februa ry 1974
2 19 Stp
phone 992 5096
---2 17 5tp
Man ng 0 Webster CA SH pad for at makes and
Judge
modes of mob e homes
Co \Jrt of Common Pleas
Phone area code 614 423 9531
Probate D VISion
4 13 tfc
Me gs County Ohto
For the Lowest
( 2) 21 28 (3) 7 Jtc
' TON or 2 ton truck flatbed
1.4 or 16 ft La te ftfl es or
T1re Pr1ces
s ,;t es Phone 9911106
2 17 5tp

Sa d parcel bemg descr bed
PUBLIC NOTICE
as follow s
Sea led b ds wtll be rece ved
Beg nn ng at a pont n the by lh e Oh o Va ley Hea lth
north I ne of Fr act on 4 Serv ces Found a t on
nc
1
Townsh p 8 Range IS Oh o Blue L ne Dr ve Athens OhiO
Com pany s Purchase wh ch 45701 a t 12 00 noon Thursday
sa d pont tS one hundred and March 7 19 74 for lurntshmg two
thtr ty one rod s east of th e (2) fully eq uipped ambulances
northwest co rner of sa d as spec tf ed The buyer a lso
Fract on th e nce east s xty one requ res an alternate btd to
rods and ten links then ce south provtde four (4 ) add t ona t
one hundred and th rty two rods tdentlcally equtpped
am
to the south line of said Frac
bu ances at the unit price satd
fton thence West s txty one rods alternate to be exeretsed w thm
and ten links thence north one 180 days
hundred and th rty two rods to
Spectftcatlons may be ob
the place of beg inn ng con ta ned at the off ce of D Ken
ta n ng r fly a cres more or less n e th
Morgan
0 rector
save a nd except therefrom one
Southeast Oh o Emergency
ha lf acre ymg n the northeast Med ca Serv ce P 0 Box 805
corner of said tract east of the 415 v nton P ke Ga 1 pols Oh tc
road leadmg from Parkers Run 45631
to the old Dexte r Church a nd
The r ght ts reserved tore ect
c on ta n ng after satd excep t on
any or a ll btds
fo r ty n ne and one ha lf acres
Reference Deeds Vol 239
D Ke nneth Morgan
Page 757 Vo 94 Page 2li6 Vo l
Protect Dtrector
61 Page 67 Vol 59 !'age 572
Southeast OhiO
and VoJ 19 Page 43 3 Deed
Emergency Med cal
Records Metgs County Ohio
Se rv ce
The prayer of the Complaint
Is to partition the real estate (?l 5 21 2tc
&amp;bove Clescr bed or tf t cannot
be part twned to order tha t It be
sold
You are re quired to answer
NOTICE OF
the Complamt with n twenty
APPOINTMENT
e tght day s after the last
Case No 21 154
publ cat on of t hts notice whtch
w1
be publtshed onc e each Estate of Carne Elfie Wood
Deceased
week for s x consecut ve weeks
Not ce Is hereby g ven that
and the last publ cat on wtll be
Syb I
Eb.ersbach
of
166
made on the 21st day of March
Mulberry Avenue Pomeroy
19 74
In case of your fa lure to Oh o ha s been duly appointee!
answer or otherwise res pond as EKecutrhl': of the Estate of
permitted by the OhtO Rules of Carne Elf•e Wood deceased
C vll Procedure w t h n the t me tate of Columbia Townsh p
stated judgment b y defau t w II Metgs County Oh o
be rendered aga nsf you tor the
Cred tors are requ r e d to file
re t e f demanded n the Com
thetr c ia ms w th sad f duclar)'
w th n four months
p a nt
Dated this 11th day of
LARRY E SPENCER February 1974
Clerk of the
Mann ng Webster Judqe
Common Plea s Cour t
Me igs County Oh o
Cou rt of Common Pleas
Pomeroy Oh o
Probate 0 vlston
(2) 14 21 28 Jtc
( ? ) 7 lA 21 26 (J) 7 lA 21 7tc

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

11 -

�•
10 - 1he Da 1ly Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0' Feb 2t 1974

Local Bowling
Thursday Afternoon
Feb 1 1974
Won Lost

Te am "

30

10

Pu l ns E x c a\lal ng
24
I&amp;
ll:'am 1
15
'Z S
Roya l Crown
29
H gh Team Seres
Pu l ns
Ex c avat ng 6 7 Team J 600
H g T eam Game
Team 4
56 1 Pull ns Ex c ava t ng 569
lnd H gh Seres
Be y

Sn th 462 Do 11a McF a r and
Bec ky Du 1fee 4.:10
nd H gh Gam e
Sue See g
179 Be tty Sm th 165

Thursday Afte r noon L eague
Feb 14 1974

Tean

Won lost
3
26
19

J

Put n s Exc a va t ng
Te a m 1
Roy a l Crown
Team H gh Sere s
1523 Team
1.:199
T ea n H gh Game

C rown

1'

n

29
3

17

Te am 4
Roya

Pu ll ns E x cavat n g

547 T e a n l 538
nd H gh Ser es
W I 5o 1 488

Mar ene

B ecky Dunfee 412

nd

H gh Gam e
Mar enc
W !so
76 Debb e Haw ey 172

Tu e sday A Her noo n league
Feb s 19 74
Team Stand ngs

w

R o y a l Cro wn B I

Team

Te am 7
N ew Yor k Clo th House
endly T a v e n

J:"

For es t Run Boc k

B

L
6

6

8

"
10l 14
B 16
B 16
Fo es

Team H gh Gil n e
Run Boc k 500
Fo es
Tea n H g t Ser es
Run 0 ock 13 16
Karyn
lnd H g l Game
Oav s 214 Mar ene W son 184
Karyn
lnd H gh Se r es
Dav s
Mar lene
W lson
PC~nd o a Co I ns
462 lsabe fe
Couc l'l 456
Wednesdav Ear y B rd
League
Feb 6 1914
Team Stand ngs

w

L

50
6
Be n Tom Corp
44
12
He e 1 s Beauty Shop
20 36
Raw ng s Auto Pts
Ber tha s Grocery
20 36
Stewa rt Hdw
20 36
14 &lt;1 2
Roush s Land ng
Team H g Game
He len s
Beau ty Shop 819
Team
H gh
Ser es
Raw ngs Au to Pa rts 2284
lnd H gh Gam('
Floss e
Max son 2 5 and 212
lnd H gh Ser es
Floss e
Max son 578 Mary Voss 46 1

Tu es day After noon League
Feb 12 1974
Team Stand ng s

w

Roya l Crown Bolt ng
"
Team 1
2'
Team 2
'
NV Clo th ng Ho use
12
0
F r end ty Tavern
Forest Run Block
8
Team H gh Game Team

8
14
20
,
l4

d60

Team H gh Ser es
Roy a
Crown Boll ng IJIS
nd H gh Game
Be y
Sm th 190 and 167
nd H gh Seres
Bet y
Smtih 5 6 No r ma Amsbary
d68

W('dnesday Early Btrd
Feb ll 1974
Tea m Standmgs

w

WANT ADS
INFORMATIO N
DEADLINES
5 P M Day Be fore Pub ! ca l o
Monday Dead ! ne 9 a m
Can c e Ia on - Co r e e l ons
w 1 be accepted un 1 9 a m to r
Day of Putt cat on
REGULATIONS
The Pub! sh e r re s erves the
r ght to ed t or re ec t any ads
deem e d ob e ct ona
The
pub! sher w 1 not be respon
s ble lor more tha n one n
corre c t nsert on
RATES
For Want Ad Ser~ t ce
5 ce n ts per wo r d one nser t on
M n mum Charge S1 00
4 cent s jte
word lh ee
c onse cut ve ns er t ons
26 cents per wo d s x con
s.e c ut ve n se Ions
25 Per Cent D scount on pad
ad s and ads pa d w Ill n 10
day s
CARD OF TH ANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 00 fo r 50 word m n
mum Each add t ana wo d
3c
BLIND ADS
Add 1 ona l 25t Charge pe r
Advert semen!
OFFI CE HOURS
8 JO a m to 5 00 p m Da y
8 30 am
to 12 00 Noon
Saturd a y

WH TE TO Y pood e rna e os t
n Rull and Rewa d Co ar
w th s ver be s Phon e 712
36

2 1B 6 c

L
6

Ben Tom Corp
58
He len s Beau y Shop
52 12
22 42
Raw I ngs Auto Parts
Roush s Land ng
20 44
20 44
Bertha s Groc ery
Ste wa r t Hardware
20 44
Team H gh Game
Ben
Tom Corp 806
Team H gh Seres
He len s
Beau ty Shop 2337
lnd H gh Game
Mary
Voss 186 J enny Wh Ita ch 18 4
lnd H gh Se res
Mary
Voss 549 Mar ene W son 507

SPR NG
FABR CS
New
s h pment tust a r r ved W de
se eel on coord nated coors
one lo po lyester ersey kn t
S2 29 per yd
Caro l na
Fabr cs Rou t e 7 Chester
Oil o 9 am to 7 p n Monday
hrough Saturday Henry and
Ma r y Hunte owne s
2 17 6t p
Ar~tN OUNC IN G

new hours lo r
ncome t ax s e v ce Open on Y
on Monday Wednesday an d
Frday
9
am
to
5
p m
Eve n ngs by app
wanda Eb l n Co Rd 22 off
Rou e 7 bypass Phone 992
22 72
2 a JOtc

cury Mars and Saturn

Those born on thiS date are
under the Sign of P1sces
Amer~can educator Allee
Freeman Palmer was born
Feb 21 1855
On this day tn hiStory
In 1878 the New Haven
Conn telephone company published the f1rst du-ectory of 1ts

CLEVELAND ( UP!) - Mrs
Ruth Meyers 29 Bay VIllage
has accepted a $250 000 out-of
court settlement m the death of
her husband m an acctdent
while at work May 20 1971
Mrs Ruth C Meyers had
ongmally asked for $725 000 m
the death of her electr1c1an
husband DenniS Jr 30
Mrs Meyers had charged
that the defendant Bwldmg
Systems Housmg Corp the
general contractor m the c"On
struct10n of an apartment m
nearby North Olmsted was
gutlty of safety code v10lat10ns
which caused her husband to
fall mne stones down an un
covered elevator shaft
According to the complamt
Meyers was descending a lad
der m the shaft when it shpped
and he fell to his death

Monument was dedicated - 37
years after the start of con
strucbon
In 196~ Black Mushm leader
Malcolm X was fatally shot
at a rally m New York Ctty
In 1971 80 persons were
killed when tornadoes swept
MISSISSippi a nd Alabama

Union leaders face
fines, jail terms
MOUNDSVILLE W Va
UP!) - F1ve off1cers of a
Umted Mme Workers unwn
local fa ced the threat of fmes
and a s1x month jail term 1f
they failed to report for work
today at a Consolidation Coal
Co mme
U S D1str1ct Court Judge
Robert E Maxwell durmg a
heanng a t Elkms Tuesday
suspended fmes and sentences
after the officials sa1d they
would end a walkout whtch has
Idled e1ght mmes m West
V1rgm1a s Northern Panhandle
a nd Eastern Oh10
The strike or.gmated at the
Ireland mme of Consol m a
diSpute over the company s
a lleged refusal to honor a
mmer s absentee shp
Maxwell Imposed a $400
penalty
on
Local
1110

INFORMATION ABOUT
JOB OPPOl&lt;TUNlTIES
SOCfAL SECURITY
CO NSUMER PROTECTION

STEREO
92.1 FM
WMPO
~lclclleport- Pomeroy

0

y

however on the baSis of a $100
fme for four days durmg wh1ch

h1s temporary restramm g
order of Feb 12 was 1gnored
The Judge held the tJ¥W local
m contempt of court excludmg
the mternat1onal and diStrict
level and warned that an
additional $100 fme would be
mnposed slartmg today for
each doy the strike continued
Officers of the local were
tdentifled as David M1ller
acting president and mme
committeeman
Richard
Lancaster
recording
secretary and mine com
m1tteeman Joe Romanek
f111Bnc1al secretary and DaVId
Cam treasurer all of MoundsVIlle and Henry Roberts of
Wheeling
mme
com

nutteeman
Maxwell sa1d all five would
be turned over to U S marshals to carry out the or1gmal
SIX month jail terms 1f they
failed to show up for work
Consol s Shomaker and
McElroy mmes and the Wmd

sor nnne of Amencan Electrtc
Power Co also were Idled m
West Vlrglnla In Ohio the
strike affected the Nos 3 5
and 6 of North American Coal
Co and the Allison mme of
Y&amp;O Coal Co
At least 3,000 nunel'l were off
the JOb at the height of the
walkout

OF

QUAliTY

2 21 3tc

AUCTI O N Saturday Febr. ua Y
23 d 10 30 a m Jus to
e m nd you to a e r d 1 e sal e
of hou sehold furn s h ng s of
Mr and Mrs E d M er a
Le tart Fa s 6 m es I om
Rae ne Oh o on S Rt 338
Th e sa e was Sun da y pape r
Thank you C C Bradf o d
Auc onee r
2 21 II
SH OOT NG M A TCH
Corn
Ho ow Gun Club turn Irs
r gh t af e M es Ce me t ery
Ru and
Fa c tory
I ok e d
gun s on ly Su day Fe bruary
2J I p m
2 21 ] IC
SHO OT NG Match Rae ne Gun
C ub Sunday F eb 24
p m
Ass o ted meats
Fa c ory
c hok ed guns on ly
2 20 3 c
TURN spare t me nto mon e y
0 sp lay new sp ng ewe t y
for Sa r ah Coven r y No
dcpos nece ssa r y o no ex
pe r enc(' necess ary Cat ?92
27 17 betwee n 10 am and 3
pm
2 20 3tc
NEED Ea ser s ewng done"
W ldo sewng nmyhome n
Cheste Ca l 985 3824 week
days
2 20 4t c
LL buy
chand se a t Po l y s Auc: t on
House Add son Phon e 992
3509
2 20 7t c
Sa es

Th u sday

7

7 Add son Oh o

2 20 2tc
SPEC IAL COTTON
FABR CS 96 CEN T S PER
YARD
POLYESTER
DO UB LE KN T S S2 88 PER
YARD NEW CRAFT TEMS
NOVELTY FABR C SHO P
230 WEST BLVD BELPRE
OH 0
7 17 6t c

~ PR IN G

GUN SHOOT Rae
fac tor y choked
Frday 7 pm

e Gun Club
guns on y
2 19 12

Widow accepts
out-of-court
settlement

2 SIGNS

SHOOTING M ATCH F orked
R u Spo t !'. mil r c ub
con
Sunday fa c tory c ho ke d qun s

W

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today 1s Thursday Feb 21
the ~2nd da y of 1974 w1th 313 to
follow
The m oon 1s approachmg 1ls
ne w phase
The mornmg stars are Venus
and Jup1ter
kind It hsted :;o su~cnbers
The evemng stars are Mer
In 1885
the Washmgton

AND
GREAT WUNIRY

No!tee

l

8

Bt1siness Services

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!

c

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1972 CHEVROLET BELAIR
S249S
4 door local1 owner car w th le s s t han 15 000 m les betge
f nts h black v ny! top good wh 1te wall t res standard v.a
e ng ne automat c power steenng &amp; brakes rad 1o
s potl es s nte r or Want a sharpe a t the r gh t pr ce
Stop n
1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill
4 Dr Sed blue t n s h au to P S P B
n ce fan ly car at the r gh t pr ce

S I29S

8 cyl

rad to A

196 7 CHEVELLE
5995
6 c yl nder automat c transm ss on good ttres
c lea n nte n or be1ge t n sh radto &amp; heater real econom y
&amp; a popular model
4 door

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

Pets For Sale

For Rent or Sale

AKC Toy Pood e pupp es $75 CONCORD Tra ve l Tra ler n ce
s am ese k tens S15 Phone 1 fo r coupe Ca t 997 7479
1 3 1 tfc
256 6347
2 21 26t c
1972 12x50 MOBILE Home
Phon e 992 5592
2 20 fc

Help Wanted

SOMEONE
to
do
I gh t
housework and ve ri wh le
husband wo r ks sh ft s Phone
992 2653
PRE SP R NG SA LE at Berry
2 21 3tc
M 1 er Mob le Homes 705
Farson Str ee t Be lpre Oh o
EX PER ENCED man to repa r
phone 423 95J1 Buy now
vend ng mach nes
ABC
take de ve ry n spr ng - ta ke
En terpr ze s Mason W Va
advan tage of w nter t me
773 5543
pr ces on some ou t stand ng
2 21 lfc
used Mobles Homes
197 1 - 2 bedroom - 60 x 12
Pr ncess was $6 495 00 sa te
NE ED LADY to he p w th
pr ce S5 295 00 (t h s mob le
s pr ng hou sec ean ng Phone
home new cost sa 000 00)
992 2677
2 21 61p 1971 - 6Sxl2 Cha mp on super
sale pr ce only $4 995 00
BABYS TT ER n Harr sonv le 1971 - 60x 12 Buddy c lass c
was S5 49 5 00 now only
area 5 o r 6 days a week
u 795 00
Phone 742 6551 or 992 2551)
- two 60x12 Cham p on
2 19 ti C 97
were S4 49 5 00 now on y
$3 995 00
KOSCOT KOSMET CS &amp; WIG S
We hav e the product on hand 97 - 60x 12 Elcona Custom
new pr ce i7 295 00 sa te pr ce
and we del ver to you per
S5 795 00
sona y He len Jane Bro wn
974
th ree Det ro ters - up to
99251 13
$1 ooo oo off
12 30 li e

Mobtle Homes For Sale

WE HA VE many o ther s zes
and var et es of Mob le
Homes on sa e Ou r pr ces
nc ude your de ver y and
~XPERIENCEO
pa nter
n
complete se t up don t wa 1
ter or and exter or Cal Don
sho p now you 1 be g lad you
Van Meter Phone 985 3951
d d
2 3 29tp
2 15 12 tc

Employment Wanted

PUBLIC NOTICE

To the De fe ndan ts George M
w seman Mary W sema n
H ram
W seman
Howard
Wtseman
Holts Ernest ne
W seman
Frankl n Emery
w se man Char ey W seman
A c:e W sema n G C W se man
and o the unknow n he rs
dev sees
eg atees
ad
m n st rator s executors and
ass gns of eac:h of the fol ow ng
George M W seman Deceased
H ram w se man Decea se d
Howard W se m an Deceased
Hall s Ernst ne
W seman
Deceased Frank n Emery
w seman Deceased Char ey
W sema n
Deceased
A ce
w sem an Deceased and G C
w sema n Deceased a
of
whose re s dences a re unknown
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
Oh o Power Company
an Oh tt Corporalton
Pta nt 11
vs
George M Wtseman
et a t
Defendants
No IS 480
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
P ant ff has brought th s
act on nam ng you as De fen
dants n tile a bove named co urt
by f ling Is Com pia nt on the 5th
day of Februar y 1974
The ob ect of th e Com pia nt s
to part ton the fo tow ng
descr bed real esta te
A 1 that certa n ve n of coal
loc a l y and var ous ly known as
Number F our Four A Clar ton
or Ltmestone Coal under y ng
tile tract of land here nafter
desc r bed tog e ther w lh the
r gilt to m ne and remove the
sa td c oa
by undergro1.1nd
m m ng proces ses &lt;str p m nmg
not nc luded a nd the r ght and
pr v ege of m nmg remov ng
and transport ng underg ro und
and under the s urface of the
tract of land here nailer
de s cr bed coa l from other
lands now owned or hereafter
acqu red by Oh o Power
Com pany
ts successors or
ass gns
Sa d tract ot land be ng
s t uated n the County of Me gs
n the State of Ohto and n the
Townsh p of Salem conta nlng
49 50 acres more or less and
bounded as follows
On the No r th by land s now or
former ly owned by Wm R
Nelson et al On the East by
land s now or formerly owned by
Evere tt M chae on the South
by lands now or formerly owned
by Truman P Brewer Merle S
Dav s On th Wes t by la nds now
or formerly owned by Merle s
Dav

s

For Sale or Trade
Wanted

2 HOG S to se or rade for beef
Phone 667 3031
2 20 4tp MAR R ED c oupe wants to rent
farm or country hom e by
Apr 1 Call co ll ect 488 5342
2 19 61c

Wanted To Buy
USED Gravely tra ctor and
attachments Phon e 9A9 381
2 21 61p

EXPERIENCED
Radlntri
From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad1ator to the
smallest Hea te r Core
Nathan Boggs
Radtator Spectahst

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph 992 2174

...., Gene's
Body Shop

NO 1 copper 70c rad ators
l2c red bra ss 35c batte r es
S1 20 M A Hall Reedsv li e
Oh o Phone 378 6249
1 27 tfc
RIVERSIDE Auto Wreckng
w I pay S5 to r a I tunk cars
Phone (30.4) 882 5244 or 773
5890
I 27 26tc
CAS H pad for all makes and
models of mobile home~ Ph ..
area code (6 14 } 446 1425
2 7 26tc

- GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

WOOD TRUSSES

C'"/S)

Ltncoln Htll Pome roy 0

Pamting A Specialty
All work guaranteed

For sale

SLEEP ING room over w ne
"Sto re n Pomeroy ReferencP
required Ca 1 992 5293
1 10 tfc
ROOMING HOU SE turn s hed
co n struc t on
workers
we co m e Phon e 773 5975
New Haven W Va
2 15 rtc
3 AND 4 ROOM turn shed and
unfurn shed
apartment s
Phone 992 5434
4 12 tf c
PRIVATE meet ng room for
any organtzat on phone 992
3975
3 11 tf c
3 BEDROOM mob le hom l!s
bath and • w th washer antJ
dryer Phon e 992 3509
2 20 3t c

SAL T FOR CE AND SNO\
Rock sa t for townsh ps
towns and busme sses In
bulks a nd bags for tce and
s now Excels tor Salt Works
Pllone 992 389 1
11 11 tfc

GOOD USED
REFRIGERATORS
(2 Good Ones)

1-S1de by Stde
5150
1-2 Door
(Top &amp; Bottom) $125
POMEROY LANDMARK

9'.. _ Jack W Carsey
&amp;lttl Phon• 992 9932

Mgr

HOUSE
unfurntshed
3
bedroom ltv ng room k I UPHOLSTERY fabr cs by lh e
chen and laundry room One
yard 54 nches w de a s low as
tu r n shed apartment 3 room s
Sl 95 per yard Velvets as low
and bath Phone 992 2780 or
as S3 45 Imported velvets
992 3432
$9 95 we also have nylon
2 20 li e
h e r c ulo n
cotto n pr nts
~ nyls remnants by the yard
or by th e p ece Pome roy
Recovery 622 E Man St
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
FOUR Keystone m ag wh ee ls
1 29 26tc
with new ttres f ts Chevy
S80
two Keystone mag FOAM to f II your olct couch and
whee s w th new Goodyear
cha r c us h ons as ow as
wh te letter tires f Is Ford
SIO 95 Upholstery books only
$50 Phon e 992 7881
50c 4 nch co vered foam
2 21 21p
mattresses for standard s tze
bed
S29 95
Pom ero y
Recovery 622 E Man Street
969 HALf TON Chevro let
Pomeroy Phon e 992 7554
p ck up Also 2 sorrel mares
1 29 26tc
well broken Te le phone (6141
949 3193
2 21 3tc

For Sale

SMAL L FA RM gas wei
742 6261

Phone
2 21 6tc

m the Area

It's

DTIRE CENTER
Mason W VI

Water Ltnes and Power
L111es All work dono by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and septtc tanks tn
stallod

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

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

•

992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

FURNITURE

MATERIALS CO
773 5554
Mason W Va

For Rent

DITQIING SERVICE

and

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Real Estate For 5ale

DE S IR ABLE two bedroom
house n M ddl eport read y to
occup y Ca I 992 ·S310
1 31 26tc

0

Feb 21 1974

Stop In and See Our
Floor Dtsplay
BISSELL. Construct on room
add to n s and rem ode ng
Profess anal floor sandmg
and fin s h ng o d and new
References a vat able Phone
949 383J
1 25 26tc
C BRAOFORU P.UC u
Complete Serv ce
Phone 94'9 3821
Ra e ne Oh o
Cr tt Bradford

t:

5 1 tfc

EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work septic
tanks nstalled dump trucks
and lo boys for h re w II haul
fl
d rt top so I limestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
night phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
.-21ltfc
DOZER work land clearing by
the acre hourly or conlract
farm ponds roads etc La~e
dozer and operator w th o~er
20 years exper ence Pull ns
E xca vat ng Pomeroy Oh io
Phone 992 2478
12 19 tfc
NE GLI=Rs-FOR - BUtLDING
HOU SES We II draw pr nts
or
bu ld
to
your
spec f ca t ons
Ne gler s
Butlding Supply Rae ne
Oh o Ca ll 9d9 360.:1
2 5 26tc
AUl OMOBI~L- :E::-~1-n_s_u_r_a._nce been
cancelled'
Lost
your
operator s li c ense Cal 992
7428
6 15 tfc
SEWING MACHINES Repa r
serv ce all makes 992 2284
The Fabnc Shop Pomeroy
Author zed Singer Sales and
Service We Sharpen Sc tssors
3 29 tfc
PRICE CONSTRUCTION
Roolmg s pouting kitchens
and bathrooms Comp let e
r e model ng Phone 742 6273
12 3 ttc

THURSDAY FEB 21 1974
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 Sesame St 20 ABC news 13 Truth or
Consequences 6 L lta s Yoga and You 33
6 30 - NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 Your
Future Is Now 33 Room 222 13
7 00 - Truth or Con seq 3 Bea t the Clock 4 What s My lme 8
Elec Co 20 Let s Make A Deal 13 News 10 6 Spor ts Desk
15 Av taf ton Weather 33
7 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 W ld Ktngdom 10 Beat the Clock
13 Look ng Ahea d 33 To Tell the Tru 1 h 6 Ozzte s Gtrls 8
Johnn y Manns Sta nd Up &amp; Cheer IS Zoom 20 Read ng F or
th~ Classroom Teacher 33 Dealers Cho tce 4
B 00 - Wa ltons 8 10 Advocates 20 33 Chopper One 6 13 F l p
W Json 3 4 15
8 30 - F rehouse 6 13
9 00
Kung F v 6 13 Ironside 3 4 15 Movies Gl Blues 8
Porgy and Bess 10 Bl ack Journal 20 Con i I cts of Harry S
Truman 33
9 30 - El ot Norton Rev1ews 33
10 00
News 20 Mus c Coontry USA 3 4 15 Streets of Sa n
Franc sco 6 13 Who Is Ma n? 33
10 30 - Day At N ght 33
11 00 - News3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Janak 33
11 30
Jo hnny Ca rson 3 4 15 Dtck Cavett 6 13 Mev es
Waterhole No 3 8
Born Yes t erday 10
1 00 - Tomor row 3 4 News 13
2 00 - News 4
FRIDAY FEB 22 1974 '
6 00 - Sunr se Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Folk L terature 3 Milestones o f Progress 10
6 15 - Farm Report 13
6 30 - B1ble Answers 8 Blue R dge Quartet 13 News 6 F ve
M nutes to Ltv e By 4
6 30
Col umbus Today 4
6 45
Farmt•me 10 Morn ng Report 3
7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 P xa nne 6 0 1ck Van
Dyke 13
7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullw nkle 13 New Zoo Revue 6
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 10 Sesa me St 33 New Zoo Revue 13
J effs Coli e 6
B 25 - Jac k La La nne lJ
B 30
Brady Bunch 6
B 55
News 13
9 00 - Paul Otxon 4 Ph I Donahue 15 Fnendly Jun ton 10
AM 3 Abbott &amp; Costello 8 Wil d W1ld West 6 Mov oe
Modesty Blase 13
9 30 - To Te ll the Truth 3 Tattletales 8
9 55 - Chuck Wh fe Reports 10
10 00 - Dmah Shore 3 15 Jokers W ld B 10 Company 6
10 30 $10 000 Pyram d 8 10 Jeopardy 3 4 15
11 00 - GambtB 10 Password13 Wllardof0dds3 4 15 M1ke
Douglass 6
11 30 - Hollywood Squares3 4 15 Brady Bunch 13 Lo ve of L fe
8 10 Sesame St 33
11 55 - CBS News 8 Dan I m el s World 10
12 00 - Ja ckpot 3 15 Password 6 Bob Brauns 50 50 Club 4
Nows 8 10 13
12 JO - Baffle 3 15 Spht Second 6 Search for Tomorrow 8 10
12 45 - Electnc Company 33
12 55 - NBC News 3 15
1 00 - News3 All My Children 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
Concentrat on B SPcret Storm 10
1 3~3 On A Matc h 3 4 15 Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As the
World Turns 8 10
2 00 - Days of Our Ltves 3 4 15 Ne wl ywed Game 6 13
Gu d ng L ght B 10
2 30 - Doctors 3 4 15 Edge ot Night 8 10 Girl n My L fe 6 13
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hasp tal 6 13 Pr tce s
R1ght B 10 Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20
3 30 - One Ltfe to Ltve 6 13 Phil Donahue 4 Match Game 8
10 Oh1o Thts Week 20 How To Surv ve A Marnage3 15
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset I S Sesame St 20 33 Speed
Racer 6 Love Amer. can Style 13 Lucy Show 8 Mev e
Take Care ot My L11tle G rl 10
4 30 Green Acres 3 Gilligan s Is le 13 6 Bonanza 15 Haze l S
Jackpot 4
5 00 - Bonanza 3 Merv Gr tf n 4 Mtsslon Impossible 6 Andy
Gr ff th B Mr Rogers 20 33 Gomer Pyle USMC 13
5 30 - Beverly Hillb lites 8 E lecfrtc Company 33 Hogans
Heroes 13 Trail s West 15 Hodgepodge Lodge 20

OUR 80ARD1NG HOUSE

REAO'r MIA
CONCRETE
del v e red right to your
project Fast and easy Free
es timates Phone 992 3284
Goeg en Ready Mix Co
Middleport Oh o
6 30 tfc

5 ROOM home 2 bedroom 1 •
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
bath workshop gas forced REASONABLE rates Ph 446
a r furnace garage Lot 100
4782 Gallipoli s John Russell
If x 100 ft Phone 992 3022 or
Owner and Operator
992 3298
5 121fc
2 20 6tp
S EPTIC TANKS
AROBIC
F IVE room house and bath
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
attached carport forced atr
CLEANED
REPAIRED
furnace hardwood floors
MILLER SAN ITATION
k tchen cabtnets large air
STEWART OHIO PH 662
condtt oner N ce yard with
3035
metal storage bu1ldmg m rear
10 4 tfc
yard Located n Syracuse on
Route 124 Call 593 6904 after SEPTIC
TANKS c leaned
6 3D p m Priced $15 000
Modern Sanltatton 992 3954 or
2 20 3tc
992 7349
---10 23 tfc
6 ROOM home wtth bath c ty
wa te r coal furnace and 3 'BACKHOE Serv ce CHARLES
a cres Pllone 992 3944
R HATFIELD
Route 1
2 20 3tp
Rut land Oh 10 45775 phone
7d2 6092 Water 1 nes footers
HOU SE for sale c lose to
and trenches 24 hours 7
Pomeroy
Phone 992 S248
days a week
before 3 p m 992 3436 after 3
2 7 26tp
pm
2 20 6t c BLOCK S bored and all repa rs
on sma ll engines W lklnson
2 ACRE lots for sale Tuppers
Small Eng ne Sales 399 w
Plains waler Call 992 S248
Ma n St Phone 992 3092
before 3 992 3-436 after 3 p m
2 6 26tc
2 20 6tc
WILL tr m or cut trees and
"' PACIOU S b Level and spill
shrubbery Also clean our
lev e l homes are now under
base ments attics etc Call
949 3221 or 742 4441
construct on on clty water
and sewer Many delu xe
2 2 26tc
features nclud ng a r con
dltloning
Best rtnan c ng
eva lab e Other type homes
m different areas on F H
AtJm fman c ng wi th no tJown
payment Call colle&lt;t (837
6540) or wrte to MEIGS
DEVELOPMENT P 0 Box
33 Mtddteport Ohio 45760
I 9 tfc

---------

-------- ---Real Estate For Sale

1AJCRS uous£-....

1bose

'HOO

What Is A' Columns

BRE:• D FR&lt;

1 ¥00

~

Dear Group
Were not undersupplied w1th What Is As' far from 1t
They pour m
But we don t want to overdo the1 efo• e many good letters
rematn m our files - HELEN

by THOMAS JOSEPH

At:ROSS

Dear Readers
How about tt ' Do you want a regular montl1ly What Is A'
(or other essay type) column' Send us you1 vote I[ enough of
you show m terest well get sometlung gomg - SUE
Meanwhile here s a good one
Rap
I m not very poetic but do you have to be to kiiow
What Is a Broken Heart'
A broken heart IS when you wmt for the telephone to nng and
you know 1t won t
It s when you realize everythmg he ever smd wasn t true
It s the ru ght you go r1dmg aro und and see hmn but ) ou don t
speak a nd then you cry because HE d1dn t speak to you
'
It s when you see h1m wtth somebody e lse
It s the tunes you practtcally 1un out of class lo bump mlo
him but he s never around
It s when he says I Ube over tomght but he doesn t come
Its when you h ear h1s favonte song the one he sang to you
It s the mght you go to the ball game hopmg you 11 see him
but he 1sn t there
It s the hours you suffe1 through class till lunch and then he
doesn t speak
Its the dance yo u go to knowmg all the time yes he 11 be
there - but w1th HER
But most of all a broken heart 1s whe n you know you ve
lost him - ONE OF MANY BROKEN HEARTED GIRlS

6

7

7
8
8
9
9
10

l

News 3 4 8 10 15 13 Truth or Conseque nces 6 Sesame
Street 20 Ad le rtan Counse l ng Tec hn toues 33
30 - NBC New s 3 4 15 ABC New s 6 CB S Ne ws 8 10 Roon
222 13
00
Truth or Coneq 3 Beat the Cl oc k 4 Ne ws 6 10 What s
My L ne 8 W ld K'"gdom 13 Elec Co 20 I Sp y 15 Av at on
Weather 33
30 - Porter Wagoner J Hollywood Squares 4 New Tr e a s ure
Hunt 10 To Tell t he Tru th 6 Conce n1rat10n 8 Wa ll Stree1
Wee k 20 33 Beat t he Cock 13
00 - Was hmg ton Rev ew 20 33 Sanford &amp; Son 3 4 15 Brady
Bunch 6 3 D r ly Sa lly 8 lO
30 - Lotsa Lu ck J 4 15 Stx. Mtll o• De lla Man 6 13
Was h ng ton Connect on 20 Good Ttmes 8 10 Campu s Sce1 e
33
00 - Masterpiece Theater 33 G r l W th Somethmg E&gt;ctra 3 4
5 Stage Center 20 GE Theater 8 10 Btcen te nn a l Lectu re
Sen es 20
Jo- Odd Coup le 13 Ozz e s G r ls 6 Br an Ke th 3 4 15
00 - Ne ws 20 Toma 6 13 Rel tg ou s Am e n c n 33 Denn
Ma rt n 3 4 15
30 - Day At N ght 33
00 - News Weather Spor ts 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Jana k 33
30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Goodn ight My Love 6 Mov es
The Abom nable Dr Ph1bes 8 Two on a Gut! lot n e 10
Von Ryans Express 13
00 - M dn ght Spec •a I 3 4 Don K1rshner s Ro c k Con ce rt 6
Goodntght My Love 13
5 - M.ov e Dr Re nault s Secre t 10
30
News 13 4

m
12

)

STEREO
Walnut AM FM
Red•o 8 track tape com
binatlor:J Balance S110 73 or
ter ms ava table Pllone 992
3965
., 214tfC

Vrrqr i B

T,.~lr·•r!

fi r , J •(
I I

\r

'

,· ....,,. ·( 'Lll'·l' ) 'r" I

flotnt•nJ'r' Ohro :·.,:t' 1
CITY CONV
IENC'E 3
bedrooms bath modorn k t
chen hot water heat storm
w ndows and garage
OUTRT 7 -2 bodrooms bath
large ltvmg
T P
water
garage and other bu1ldmgs
One acre
RANCH TYPE HOME - 3
bedrooms bath n1ce k tchen
nat gas furnace CUy water
and garage
BUSINESS BUILDING - With
over 3 2 a cres Can be useful to
builders equipment overhauls
truckers
storage
or
churcl'l or sc hool Chatn link
fence Above all floods
316 ACRES In Ol1ve
Townshtp Wtld and wooly at
$125 00 per acre
24 ACRES - In Pomeroy Good
for houstng or small farm
ARE YOU TIRED OF LIVING
IN YOUR OLD HOUSE&gt; GO
MODERN AND LET US SELL
IT WITH LITTLE WORRY TO
YOU NO SALE NO CHARGE

BABY FARM-17acres lUSt
oil Rt 33 close 1n 2 year old
home 3 BR colored bath w
shower Lovely kitchen w
range &amp; ref Utility Barn
garage &amp; storage All new
fe nce $22 500 110
BUY OF THE YEAR - Just
3 yrs old 3 BR colorod bath
Utility modern kitchen and
d'"lng Carpetod Carport
About V;~ acre $16 000 00
A BARGAIN 2 story
frame 2 BR new bath
furnace &amp; hot water Jank
Some carpeting paneling &amp;
l1le Basoment $6 500110
BETWEEN POMEROY &amp;
MIDDLEPORT on new Rt 7
1 h acre 2 wells &amp; electric
Approvod for septic tank
Ideal for mobile or home
$4 500 110
DELAY
MAY
MEAN
DISAPPOINTMENT
SEE
THESE UNUSUAL OF
FERS TODAY
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
9922259
If no answer 992 2U8

-

Ben

'*'

Adhem
13 Ch ld s
playth ng
14 Etsenhow

4 George
Sanders
played
h1m
5 rwofold
6 Porker
7 More

cr was
one
16 K nde r
oth ers have too -

1 thought 1 m1ght share 1t w1th you and Rap

1eaders
A b1rd Without a son g to s mg a forsak en work of art a voice
that no one seems to hear - thiS ts a broken heart Crymg tn a
lonely room an echo los t m space a llvmg thmg that hves to feel
the touc h of one embrace
The we1ght of d1sappomtment
engulfed m doubts and fears a steady beat of tenderness
dampened by b1tter tears a broken heart IS true love los t an
empty wmter m ght the essence of a reason why that s vo1d of •11
delight Fam t fa1th dim hope a faded dream a diSillUSIOned
sm1le dwellmg m a vast expa nse where nothing seems worth
while So I ve descnbed a broken heart my verse IS nearly e n
ded but bear tn mmd If g1ven t1me 1\ can and WILL be mended
- NEWARK GIRL

gartner
17 F ddle s
nnceslor
18 Q 1 tt ng
lime
19 Com1c
strtp ex

eccentric
8 J1lted
rejected

Yesterdays \nsy.er
9 Unste dy
11 Spoor

26 Surm

15 Spool
18 Soft
soape d
21 Speaks
gl hly
Z2 Perpe tual
23 Mtss Fahray
24 lmple ment

lO

~9

32
33
35

ment
%4 Dilator}
25

Flower
extract

26 Jo hn
Bar
addict

~WJWID'lb)]® 1kJ
4otaw&amp;IJ -.1
,-.
hv
"'"! nnn
! U Nlit A II N O l 0

I FE

27 Look
after
28 Terr a 31 Three
(lt )

32 ltahan

port

34 Involve

fo rm four ordtnary words

36 Sally
of
the

fans
37 Flightless
bird

DAILY CRYPTO!!UOTE -

0

10

Is

apostrophes, the length and format wn of the wm dli are nil

I 0 U

tX )

hmts Each day the code letters are different

CRYPTOQUOTES
Now arrange the circled !ellen

I~==~~==~==~~~~~~';"~l~l•;•:ted~~bytheabovec~oon
1

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to form the surpriH answer WI

t r r r xxJ rn HIM
(Aiuwerot

JumLI" UPPER
v~••nday

11

IAm

wit'

work It

One letter simply stands for another In this sample J1 Is
used for the three L s X for the two 0 s etc Single letters

ITYU&gt;EN 1

YAH(RLIJ]

Here's how to
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFEI LOW

FEVER

MUFFLE

lomorrow~

CASKET

TCG

DAYATON

HTT!GS

I U G

TO!

AC

KTHNI

U MWA I
lAVt;
VM C

GMYU

BGMII

VAPUI

VMFG

PTTS

- WGC

LHMCFEAC
Yesterday 1 Cryptoquote MUCH BEND1NG BREAKS 111Jo~
BOW MUCH UNBENDING THE MIND -BACON

I o]K IIInp for a 1 hologr 1pl ( r APERTURE

(@ 1974 Kine Feature•IJyndleate Inc )

21

+r

JTI'LE G

East

THE GREATEST!

• 98 3
• 2
.Q9 75
.KJ8
+ KQ10r.2
+98543
... K
... Q985
SL UTH IDI
. \ K654
• A2
A7
... A 106 3

~E

BOUGI-!TALL !-tiS
KNIVES t-tERE

+

East West vulnera ble

West

North

East

Pass
Pass

2•
Pass

Pass
Pas.c;

Open ng lead- +K

You

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

1€ver

seem

When H ele n Sobel proba
bly th e greatest woman
br~dge player f1rst playe d at
the CavendiSh Club she was
young very attractive and
couldn t have looked less hke
a bridge player
Playmg at four spades she
drew trumps la1d down the
ace of clubs to drop East s
kmg a nd proceeded to wmd
up los m g two clubs and one
heart
Her partner 3 self s tyle d
expert sa 1d You playe d the
clubs wrong but you were
lucky
About a month la ter she
made a s 1m1Iar successful
P,!ay a nd drew the remark
Y ou 11 never lea rn Will

to

qet
cold
Joe II

Wh4'

1 ~110.11 'IJHIJ 'PJ PE

THE GAL5 HERE 5EEM TO
V EW ME AS A THREAT

\0 ASK

I OONT THINK

/aJ.(}IS

w..-,

I&gt;J.JP

IIJA9J T

~~~~E~ I fW:l
~~~~

THEY 77i!I./ST ME I

EVEN

-rne

~TIOl

1 1)),16
WI~ TO

you?

/&gt;('"_,K I

•''

rect o ne She needed two c lub
tnc ks and the play of the ace
msure d thiS res ult agamst
apverse d1str~but10n
She would be s ure of two
club tr~cks agamst 3 2 break
11 was the 4 1 bre aks that
nllght bother he r
Suppose that an honor
f:llled to drop She would con
tmue by leading toward dum
m y s Jack If West held the
kin g and queen he could only
score two tncks
Suppose East held them
West would show out The
Jack would force one of the
top honors Later on the th~rd
club would be led from dum
m y and Helen s 10 would be

ALLEY OOP
NO McGClON

THAP.S 50

II\UQ4 GOODN ESS THAR_

T'S A K LL N ME. ' ' AH JEST
MAO TO GIT N EA R SOME.
ROT TENN ESS OR MAH Ll L
M ND WOU LD SNAP"

come a wmner
SHES GOTTO
TH' SCHOOL MA RM
GlUE US A HA F DAY

21
North

East

l_'llss

u

Pass

Pass

4•

Pass

WeAt

1•

I&lt; ETCH UP ON HER

~OW

D HE EVER HE,.\R
OF OLLIE 6EJMA 1

OFf, AUNT LOWEEZY

l

Ppss
Pass '
You South hold
4\A K 7 6 • A K 7 6 + 3 2 .K 10 3
What do you do now?
A -Just bid four spades II

\'

there Is a slam somewhere your
parlner will bl4 agalo

I
I

t

clamatton
20 Ogle
21 In1,;olvmg
pumsh

• 10643

West

l t

Barter
She
docs n t
l 1vc here
mymore
Conve e ~
I uropt an
t\cr
Su cor

• Q J 10 7
... J742

"'

teycorn

correct tl was lhe only cor

TEAFORD

prey
DOWN
I Hmd
2 Romes
rtver
Ill Walk

I OUIStana

Helens play was not only
GROCERY bus ness for sale
Building for sale or lease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appomtment
3 20 tfc

gu ns
40 Hunters

11 Umv

Unscramble these four JumbleR,
one letter to each squ are to
6 OO -

39 Tobog

10 Cash box

+++
And another on the same subject
Dear Rap
I found th1s m a box of old le tters belongong to my aunt Smce
I ve JUS! experienced somethmg Similar - and I know many

38 Adams

I Wound
5 M mien
eflort

++1

2
NORTII

By Roger Bollen

Hoople

f3RE tJ,X 1\ '"" {HAT
DU "1P 7 A ~() I CAN
t.. S~ Tt-t£' £FTO t:f?

Dear Rap
Why don t you prmt a What Is A column once a month' We
rea lly like them and a lot o! us cut them out for our sc rap brooks
Is 1\ that you don t get enough peop le s cndmg them ' - 1 HE
GROUP

WIN AT BRIDGE

Sobel made only correct play

w1th Ma1ar

CIIUM WlLl S 1:-'l VT.f\IG5
SHOULD 8C S4FC.
t:.VOUG
1'.
'-([

10
11
11

NEW 3 bedroom hom e 11 2 bath DOZER antJ back hoe work
ponds and septic tanks tJ t
garage basement on Grave
ch tng serv ce top so I ftH
H II M ddleport Natural ga s
d rt limestone
B&amp;K Ex
already n
Phone Dale
cavatmg Phone 992 5367 or
Dutton 992 3369 even ngs
992 386 1
992 2534
9 1 tfc
1 17 tfc
NEW 3 bedroom home good
water 6 acres 3 outbutldmas
and cellar Off Meigs County
I on W lltam S m th Road 3 1
m ties from Salem Cen ter
1 27 261p

The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy

Television Log

OFFICE SUPPliES

Bu1lt to Your Specs
Oeltvered to Job S1te

Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
Main St Pomeroy All kinds
of salt water pellets water
nuggets block satt and own
UNFURNISHED apartmen t 2
Oh o River Salt Phone 992
bedrooms e ectrlc heat
3891
Hartford W Va Phone 773
5975
2 21 ffc AM FM stereo rad lo 8 track
tape player 4 speaker s~und
S¥Stem Balance S109 32 or
TRA LER 1 bedroom n ce for
term$ Call 992 3965
couple Phone 992 7479
2 19 tfc
2 5 tfc
TWIN
NEEDLE SEWING
MACHINES 1974 model In
2 BEDROOM mobile home all
walnut stand All features
ut llttes pa td No pets Robert
built n to make fancy designs
H 11 Rac•ne Phone 9.t9 3811
antJ do stretch sewing Also
2 21 121p
buttonholes blind hems etc
S43 35 cash or terms avallabe
FURNISHED apartments on
Phone 992 2653
Rt JJ tn Mason One 3 room
2 19 tfc
apartment shower kitchen
cabin suitable for 2 Old people VACUUM CLEANERS El ectro
or 2 workers utilities fur
Hygiene New Demonstrators
niShed and garden if wanted
t'las
all cleaning lttachmtnla
One 2 room apartment
plus the new Electro Suds for.
bedroom and k tchen batl'l
s ham poomg carpet Only
shower and kitchen Both are
S27 50
cash
or
terms
good apartments Reynolds
avcWa b e Phone 992 21iS3
Apartments Phone 773 5147
2 19 tfc
2 19 6tp

For Rent

On Most Amen can Cars

Ph 992 5271

FA IRLY good s mall used chan
saw Phone Y49 2225
'l QO 6tc

OLD furniture oak tabl es
cloc ks ce boxes brass beds
d tshes desks or complete
households Wrlte M D
MIter Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohto
call 992 1760
5 13 tfc

•5.55

Pomeroy

NOTICE OF
BOLEN S Husky 1250 w th 48
APPOINTMENT
nch mower and blade Ex
Case No 11146
ce le nt cond t10n Phone 949
quIts
and
!ewe
ry
ANT
QUE
Estate of
Laufla
Young
S9S3
Al so nterest ed n furn lure
Deceas ed
2 20 6tc
a nd d shes Call 99 2 52 62
Not ce s hereby g ven that J
even ng s or morn ng s
B 0 Bnen of Pom e roy Oh o
197 4 HONDA x 1 350 On or off
2 20 tfc
has been duly appo nted ad
the road bike Low m leage
m n s tr a tor of the Estate of
Sl ooo Ca Harry C Roush
Laura Young deceased ate of 2 PO NT t'l tch scraper bade
Mason 773 52J8
and set of cu lt valors to ftt
Me gs County Oh o
2 20 3tc
Intern atonal Super C tra ctor
Cred tors are requ red to f le
2 or 3ft p c kup d sk 6 or 7 ft
thetr cla tms w th sad ftduc ary
THREE year o ld palommo
Phon • 992 7190
w th n to ur mon th s
horse Phone 742 3884
2 20 3tp
Dated til s 16th day of
2 20 3tc
February 1974
RECYCLE your newspapers at YOUNGSTOWN k tchen Stnk
Sl 40 per 100 pound Your
MANNING D WEBSTER
w th faucets Good con dtt on
corrugated pasteboard at
Probate Judge
S50 See at 256 So Fourth
$1 40 per 100 pound and your
of sad Coun t y
Ave M ddleport
B M ca rds at 6c per pound We
12 l 28 (3 7 Jt c
2 18 tfc
w II also buy your scrap ron
cast •ron sheet tron copper FOR SA LE Large eve ! tot on
brass auto rad ators auto
New Ltma Road Rutland All
batter es Our feet of tra ters
uttl t es ava lab e Phone 742
w II serv tce and ndustry n
NOTICE OF
3083
your area Conserve recycle
APPOINTMENT
2 I tfc
and sell your waste mater a ts
Case No 21 111
to the Rosenberg Recyc l ng
Estate of Phtllp w Me tnhart
Company m Athens Oh to We SINGE !tewlng machines 19 72
Dec eased
model rn beaut ful walnut
c lose eac h Friday at noon for
Not ce s hereby g ven that
cabmet Makes des gn st t
balance of week so be aware
Genev eve B Me nhart of 207
ches z g zag buttonholes
when you get tt all together
Spr ng Avenue Pomeroy Ohto
blind hems etc L ke new
that the Rosenberg Re cycl nQ
h as been du ly a ppo nt ed
Only S89 95 Call Ravenswood
Co m Athens •s the better
E xec utr x of th e Estate of
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
place for you
Ph I p W Me nhart deceased
12 1 tf c
late of Pomeroy Me gs County
2 19 lfc
Oh o
Cred tors are requ red to ftle BICYCLES Ill any condt t on
HAY Pllone 992 7306
Also b cyc le parts Contact
the r cia m s w th sa id I duclary
2 17 261C
Lar ry Wyatt (housetra ler)
w th n four months
Dated th ts 15th day of on Locust St ree t Rut an d
9 WEE K old bla c k poodle pup
Februa ry 1974
2 19 Stp
phone 992 5096
---2 17 5tp
Man ng 0 Webster CA SH pad for at makes and
Judge
modes of mob e homes
Co \Jrt of Common Pleas
Phone area code 614 423 9531
Probate D VISion
4 13 tfc
Me gs County Ohto
For the Lowest
( 2) 21 28 (3) 7 Jtc
' TON or 2 ton truck flatbed
1.4 or 16 ft La te ftfl es or
T1re Pr1ces
s ,;t es Phone 9911106
2 17 5tp

Sa d parcel bemg descr bed
PUBLIC NOTICE
as follow s
Sea led b ds wtll be rece ved
Beg nn ng at a pont n the by lh e Oh o Va ley Hea lth
north I ne of Fr act on 4 Serv ces Found a t on
nc
1
Townsh p 8 Range IS Oh o Blue L ne Dr ve Athens OhiO
Com pany s Purchase wh ch 45701 a t 12 00 noon Thursday
sa d pont tS one hundred and March 7 19 74 for lurntshmg two
thtr ty one rod s east of th e (2) fully eq uipped ambulances
northwest co rner of sa d as spec tf ed The buyer a lso
Fract on th e nce east s xty one requ res an alternate btd to
rods and ten links then ce south provtde four (4 ) add t ona t
one hundred and th rty two rods tdentlcally equtpped
am
to the south line of said Frac
bu ances at the unit price satd
fton thence West s txty one rods alternate to be exeretsed w thm
and ten links thence north one 180 days
hundred and th rty two rods to
Spectftcatlons may be ob
the place of beg inn ng con ta ned at the off ce of D Ken
ta n ng r fly a cres more or less n e th
Morgan
0 rector
save a nd except therefrom one
Southeast Oh o Emergency
ha lf acre ymg n the northeast Med ca Serv ce P 0 Box 805
corner of said tract east of the 415 v nton P ke Ga 1 pols Oh tc
road leadmg from Parkers Run 45631
to the old Dexte r Church a nd
The r ght ts reserved tore ect
c on ta n ng after satd excep t on
any or a ll btds
fo r ty n ne and one ha lf acres
Reference Deeds Vol 239
D Ke nneth Morgan
Page 757 Vo 94 Page 2li6 Vo l
Protect Dtrector
61 Page 67 Vol 59 !'age 572
Southeast OhiO
and VoJ 19 Page 43 3 Deed
Emergency Med cal
Records Metgs County Ohio
Se rv ce
The prayer of the Complaint
Is to partition the real estate (?l 5 21 2tc
&amp;bove Clescr bed or tf t cannot
be part twned to order tha t It be
sold
You are re quired to answer
NOTICE OF
the Complamt with n twenty
APPOINTMENT
e tght day s after the last
Case No 21 154
publ cat on of t hts notice whtch
w1
be publtshed onc e each Estate of Carne Elfie Wood
Deceased
week for s x consecut ve weeks
Not ce Is hereby g ven that
and the last publ cat on wtll be
Syb I
Eb.ersbach
of
166
made on the 21st day of March
Mulberry Avenue Pomeroy
19 74
In case of your fa lure to Oh o ha s been duly appointee!
answer or otherwise res pond as EKecutrhl': of the Estate of
permitted by the OhtO Rules of Carne Elf•e Wood deceased
C vll Procedure w t h n the t me tate of Columbia Townsh p
stated judgment b y defau t w II Metgs County Oh o
be rendered aga nsf you tor the
Cred tors are requ r e d to file
re t e f demanded n the Com
thetr c ia ms w th sad f duclar)'
w th n four months
p a nt
Dated this 11th day of
LARRY E SPENCER February 1974
Clerk of the
Mann ng Webster Judqe
Common Plea s Cour t
Me igs County Oh o
Cou rt of Common Pleas
Pomeroy Oh o
Probate 0 vlston
(2) 14 21 28 Jtc
( ? ) 7 lA 21 26 (J) 7 lA 21 7tc

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

11 -

�.'
•

Guerrilla army demanding $750,000

ELBERFELD$ I P
ER Y
Washington' Birthdav Sale

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22nd
9:30 AM TO 9:00 PM

WOMEN'S SPRING COATS
Save dun ng t h1s sa le on a new Spr ing Coa t .
M1 sses . Jun1ors and Wom ens sizes 38 to 46 In cluded
Big selec ti on of Pant Coats, al l weath er Coa l s
and reg ular le ngt h Coat s.

Womens Cardigan Sweaters
Choose fro m t wo styl es in 100 per cent orion
acr y l1 c Wm t uk . Sizes 34 to 40 Wh1t e only

SALE •5.99
Boys Long Sleeve

SAVE 20% NOW

SPORT SHIRTS
Sizes 8 to 18. All perm anent press . So lid colors
and pa tt ern s.

W;1Shi11 f,!lm1 's Rirtlulay Sale

SPRING DRESSES
R EG. -42 .98
REG. 29 .50
R EG. 28.98
REG. 26 .98
RE G. 24 .98
REG. 22 .98
REG. 20 .98
REG .. 18.98
REG. 16 .98
REG. 14.98
REG. 13.98

SALE 30 .00
SALE 20.00
SALE 19.00
SALE 18.00
SALE 17.00
SALE 16.00
SALE 15.00
SALE . 13 .00
SALE 12.00
SALE 11.00
SALE 10.00

DRE SS E S
DRESSES
DR ESSES
DR ESSES
DRE SS ES
DRESSE S
DR E SSE S
DRESSES
DRESSES
DRESSES
DRESSES

Wa.~ h irr{(lon 's

TO
TO
TO
TO
TO

42 .00
19.98
11.98
7. 98
4.4 9

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

5.00
3.00
2.00
1.00
SOc

B irthday Sale
Womens

Regular $1.00

SPORT
SOCKS
1

S1zes 7 9 17, a nd 9 11 Ma ny
colors m select ion Reg 89c

PANTY HOSE

pr

6 pairs $4.00

Sale

3 pairs $1.25

DRESS SLACKS
A new sel ection Includes our entire stock . Solid
color s, plaids and stripes. Excell ent styl e
selection .
Regul ar sizes 29 to 42 and extra larg e sizes 46 to
50.

Mens and Boys $2.50 and $3.00

Four-in-hand ties and the popular ready
tied ties. Solid colors and a big selection
of neat patterns. Also included in this
two day sale - Prep ties for the teen age
boy and ties for younger boys.

SALE PRICES
Wa.~hington 's

•3.88
Music Departm11nt - lsi Floor

Birthd11y Sale

BOYS DRESS AND SOiOOL SLACKS
Includes our ent1 re stoc k of boys dress and school slacks .
S1zes 8 to 18 in slims and reg ulars Solid co lors plaid s
chec ks. All fa mous brands

SALE PRICES

--------------------COOK BOOKS
SALE 39e

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

Reg . 69,

SmaiL medi um. large and extra large sizes .
Zipper #ont - 2 slash pockets - 100 per cent nylon .
Ideal for Spring and Summer wear . Solid color s.

(Small lot)

Notions Department, First Floor

Washington 's Birthday Sale

YOUR CHOICE SALE

Same Jacket Boys Sizes 8 to 18
Reqular $4.95

SALE PRICE '3.88

now.
- .

Reg
Reg.14.o~~~~i!!f)~~j~~ir~i~&lt;
with,

Choldrens

BLUE DENIM
.
.
~ '

'

JACKEtS
Discontihued -fragr anccis
fa mous maker s.

.

SALE Y2

JrJil$hillgtori 's lJirthday Sale

'5.88

WiiSI_Iin{(ton 's

JACKE·TS
Our en t1re stock of do ubl e-woven nylon
all pop ular lengths. Big selectron of 1l.Oior$,·

SALE .Yi

'\ \'
I

11 only 98c 5 cell Flashlights

9.P5 't,ivilarfly Plaques · · - · · - -

&lt;:lock
.
BatQmeter-Chaln and Anchor · · ·

us&lt;

SALE 5.19
SALE 3,59
SALE 2.89
SALE 2.1Jpr.

Si1~24 ,,; ·

ENSEMBLES~- .

MAGIC CHEF RANGES
5elect'

your favorite color. Special features
duril)g this two day sale and really save.

ELECTRIC RANGES

ALL FIRST
. QUALITY
"

(SMALL LOT)
SALE ·1.00

..

· · .. : ~r•UJ - :Gotd - • - . ·- . - - _
-~~;~~ ~" Will\. Automagi~ t;:ooking
. · ....rves1 'Gold - - - - - - . - - .
~ . 2~8,00 311"-wlll\ Oven Window-Whito . .
Reg: 278.oo 'Jf' Wl!ite. - . . . - - . _ _ . . .

SALE 61lc·
REG. 1.19 WASH CLOTHS - - - - - SALE 15c

2•1.00 ·

Sale 304.00
Sale 270.00 ·
Salo 191.00
Sale 224.00

GAS RANGES
Rl!lt. 396:00 36" Oi!luxe Continuous Clean Oven

. · i'l~oeado-white.gold · · - - · - · - · - - Sole ~18.00

Linens Department. First Floor

Washington's Birthday Sale

CURTAINS
AND
-DRAP·ERI·E'S
-~ · .

Big assortment of discontinued style$,
colors and fabrics .

·SALE 1h PRICE

Home Furnishings, First Floor

R"".l\vocildo-Wbite-Gold
382.00 30" Deluxe Continuous Clean Oven
- . . . - - . - . . . Sale 306.00
RO!I. 323.00 36" with Clock and Timor

COppertone- White - - · · - - · ·

Sale 261.00

m.oo .30" will1

Clock and Timer
-· - · - - - , . · . . 5alo 249.00
Reg . :!)f.oo.":io•• wllli Oven Light and Window
Lighf · - - - - . . · - · - - - .
Reg,

·

, ~lbetfeldcs.

Mechanic .Street. Warehouse·
·op,n:every day 9:3o A.M. to s P.M; _----"·
'Friday and Sciturday 9:30A.M. to 9 P.M.
~

'

~ 01111!1"\ 111:1!1
Sl t\
\l 111 pin ' 11d
r&gt;t,.1 ut pin t il t. ' d h1•, \\1ft·,
\ ' II !' lr ll \, It
ht t ,J\l\ 1. t~t· l tili'

at the &lt;: :litH' IIII I• ' .1 ~ Ll ll'
of Prt lrH1. 1 Il l'&lt;~! st HI
S: m FtarWl:-il'o hy tlw S\111 ·

pl. i( i'

•ltildl t'l l

Itt

1 11

( Hid I I IJ1 s I[

I"

lru11l

,1

\\ttl k t&gt;•il

.!bdtH'IInn

LJ,\1\ ese

L tbl· r a ll tHI 1\ 1 111~

~ l ro..

Lut

He

~a t d, h u\~ ('VPr

thc~t

lit•

.,,,~ s

i\ l ut pi I)

rtl\lt h

quokd l;y

I' t c;

SjHtkt",((ldll

I f;r ull h

t: ll t'LIIll"\,1!1Ct.•s p 1 t•v~·nh d !h is

10.. lH'! Il g

l11

l111~

h• ll

Ht•g

l 'lll filll, lgt• d

d. tl~· -;'

d"\• 1 ijl\1 11'[\ \
Slit' \\,l ilts \ 11

'

!old t h f' I \\ n g 1 oll [ IS tlon't \I()\ k
m r oncer t :-ll ~li l
dt1rl t stldl t'

1111 t ll~ ' l i !!11 111 4dtl !l i lt t'\TI \'-

the s&lt;.~ mc

111!11 )~

goals

the s;uul'

1n

,md

dDJl I .,, JJ k

\\d)

Tlwv w.m t

FRID}IY, FEB RU ARY 22, 19/ 4

pt! 'iSil dt

Ill I 1\1] ]
l\11!' .ll\d

!Itt

I

111 rn,tk&lt;•

11 , t •• •r

I' \

IJt d111 11 (I\
ll 'q lll ~h fil l lill'
\1

J![

fllilll !

I

t!J\,11 h

•

!f N WFS

~

'

COLUMB US 1U l' ll ,\ g~: nll
snafu m the Fcdc1 ,11 I\ 111 '1 ~ '
Offl l'C muJ &lt;.t p JW i l'lil 1'( 1\ llllllllll ·
c atiOn piublc tns liu:; lPlt r))l Jt l
w1lh nearly 600,0011 g.d llll ~&gt; \,•.:::-;
gn sol! tl C' tills 11 101 1th

.

d ose

~ l4 gasohrll'

s l.!li t)tt o.. 1111

threedcry s, l!JJ uf tiiL'IIllll r lll itl

111 ~~

•

dra wmgs, paintmgs and sculptures . Students buil t their o~&lt;n
fra mes, stretched and pruned the canva s and crea ted
on gma l works. !J&gt;okmg at the work are, 1-r, Chu ck Allensworth , Jay R1dgway, Betty Jones, Kevin Camp and Slavin

t;,ro..:nl\11&lt; It tllll r llllt l to otlti r
·.t. tl•"·
~~1

~I a ll Sdid •I b.ts ,llr l',l\l) th Vl'l !t d 1!1\1 !IIIli f.! dlur1 s t l11 s
lltt Jt illl t ull l itlt 11LII Oil r·o th\ 1'1 h d !J. IIO!l l'·dlt,ns St111&lt;Lu d
il1l ol f )hit t ' ,lid 11 ildd ~ li1) 1pt• d
l HI 0110 )t:ill!,I I'-: l1 till\ ( llll11 to
\\' l'st V IIT,llJJ .l
\ c; lil;!lid 'IJ] { '11 S r lltl II IlUI
111h rwu•1 J~' tl' l i' J't\ llw hi!

~ IO N

I r;o~·ll : l\ ~.

•

.,

.'•
•

WASHINGTON - SEN. FRANK CHURCH, D-Idaho, has
released M previously secret documents which he says show tha t
national security decisions of lhe 1950s helped cause the current
world oil crisis. "The decisions reflected m this record were
taken in secrecy, debated in secrecy and never exposed to pubhc
debate," Church said Thursday
"Yet those deciSions helped seal the bas1c structure of International oil for 25 years. Today we are Iivm g with the con. sequences." Church's Senate foreign re1ah ons subcomm ittee
completed lhe fi rst phase of an mvest1gat10n mto mternationa l ml
operations Thursday.
He said the documents supported testimony that the Truman
and Eisenhower admimstrations quashed Justice Department
attempts to break up price-boostm g Jll,. rna tional mt' cartels
because that confhcted Wltll. the fore1gn ;)l)hry goa l of contaut1ng
0
(Continu ed '"' page 10)

-

( . uv

oll.1

Gl' tll,.;t•

L

Wa ll :ul', JliU!II islng lod&lt;r} to
lu·lp .d l Alalmmic~11s. ··,,tt.ulr
!lw
1\ml'n~ · .• ll
d l't'am ,''
a unm1111 1 d h1s t an tl irl ;n ; ftH
.111 unpt'i't t•tl!'lllt•rl thi rd tt•r m
.1~
l11

,.;onnru r, a stl' p p iu t~ stmu·
1111111111g !111' I'H·sul ent

: 1 ~a m 111 1'171;

mme 1ts appraised value
Caldw ell urged the publi c
agat ns t bla m1ng an y loca l
off1 c1al or appraisal fir m on the
h1gh lax rates whtch w1ll be
forthcom mg In Meigs Coun ty
The Board of Tax Appeals ,
retired rath er than resigned wh1ch interpreted the la w, a nd
from the county post wh1ch he the State Su prem e Cour l ,
whiCh upheld the boa rd, 1s
had held a number of years
The former auditor said, re spons!bW, Ca ldwell said
Under the new la w, a cou11 ty
however, that he ,resigned in
protest to state laws The code a uditor must appra ase land on
pr ovided that the county the bas1s of sa les and all uf the
audi tor shall be the assessor of property m one sectiOn must be
rea l property However , the appra1sed at that ra te , even 1£
legislature ha s enacted mto one piece se lts al a h1gh pnce ,
law reqUlrmg the sale value of Caldwell sa id
" Why shou ld ne ighbor s
property 111 a locality deter-

Class told how to
survive on roads
Approximately 20 res1dents
attend ed a th ree hour
De fens1ve Drivin g School
conducted at the Me1gs Jumor
Hi gh Sc hool ca fete ri a 1n
Middlepor t Thursday mght
Speakers were from the OhiO
Department of Highway Safety
and the OhiO State Patrol. The
school was sponsored by the
Midd leport Busine ss and
ProfessiOnal Women's C:ut
Lms Caul, district director of
the BPW , expla ined the three
hour program wh1ch 1s known
as
WR AP
(Women' s
Respon slbili ty for Acc ident
Prevention ).
Ralph J . Sandine, Youngstown, District 11 representa tive of the Ohio Department
of Highway Sa fety, sa1d most
fata l acc1dents occur from
Fnday at 6 p.m to Sunday at 6
p.m. He urged dr1vers to lhmk
of h1ghway conditions, the
mechanical functions of their
autos, traffic, weather, and
their personal alertness and
li me schedule in helping to
prevent accid ents. He urged

dr ivers to recogmze hazards
and to avotd headon colhswns
even 1f at mea ns dnvmg an a uto
m a l!eld or off the h1 ghwa y lie
su g~ es ted drivers use seat
bell•
Harry Bens on , Ba rtow ,
Distr1ct 8, ODHS representative, spok• on the governor's
safety slogan program and the
presenta tiOn of award s to
wm ners m Athens on Ma y 9.
OSP
Sgt
David
. Proffitt reviewed the history of
the Ga llia -Me igs Post and
commented on the 999 accidents mves logated by the pos t
in 1973
Mrs
Alwilda Werne r,
president of the sponsormg
group , spoke on the BPW
sponsorship, and Mrs Mary
M3rtin, member and cha irman
of Thursday mght's prog ram,
ga ve the welcome .
Li ght re fre shm ents we re
served a) the do.se of the
program. Committee members
of Mrs. 1Martm were Freddie
Houdas helt, Linda Stobart and
Grace Pra tt

su Hcr be&lt;·ause ouc pl'rsun rs
able to Sl' ll at a hi gh pri(t ., ,.
Caldncll IJUCs lum cd.

He said the new l t· ~; J s l ;r tlon ~,...,
''perfect examp le t1f ] ru ,d
govet nme nt gui ng dt J\\ n t I u•
dr[l in ''
Cd ldwel l said tha t due lo h1 s
difference on th e ruHi tt&gt;r \\ Ill!
the Boa rrl of Tax Appe;rls, IH·
rcsrgned fr om thp aur!1tn1 's
pos t
" I drd not wa nt to feel g uil ty
rn dmng th1s to the fJCop lc r1f
Meigs CoUl l ty who Ira ve IH'l'f1 •,n
good t o me ," Ca ltlv.ell s.t ld
Ca ltl well sald th,tt 11 ,dso h;-1s
bee n mdr ca ted by. sr111 11' Jll'l sons tha t he had 1es lgrH ·d rl tH'
to health re&lt;lsons Cr.drlwell .
hov. eve1, st&lt;J tcd thcd till S 1:-. n(jt
true
The form er aud 1l01 •,;-url till
county. w11l fee l the mue. J s~' 111
\ Contmu ed on p a~e 101
a

'·

' J'oda" \\ t: \WkomL' lh L'
Jlii'Vllll ing illll hllh' uf our
pt·uph· ~\or kmg tu~ t·f ht • J ft1
lH ing &lt;t htlU t ctnHiitruus u(
p 1n gre~s
an d
pnJS)Jt'rLr} , ' W:JI I:H'P ":llll in

pt ' i:ltl' ,

pr ~· J• arPtl
~ 'I IIJJl l t•f !

4'1 t·i

t 1111

'I he
sta ml iug
hi s fl:u al} zt•d l 1 ' ~S in

rt' lll:l l ks.

W~ JI ,H 1' ,

a spt• ci,1lly ht nlt podium , rl id

uot IIH' IIIInll Ius tmp('S of
\\ IIHIIng

th t•

Dem on a til'

Jlll' 'i Hif'lltJ&lt;J J /lllltllfHi li i! IJ

h1 . , fH l ' jliHnl

Ill

t~; xt

.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:···::·:·:·:···:·:·:-:···:::-··:····:·--·-:·····:·····:

,

'

Need s need
to he told
' l lu ~'"'~ t rl11al tll mg a farlilt'! lrJ us ! do tu hel p assure
lnnr -; 4•)f dd CtJU.Jle fuel fot
;!Pt 1&lt;

ul tm ,Jl )ll o&lt;J.Ul:Uun IS tell

In·, d1...,t1 J\1utu r how much he

Unlt", s

111 l'lh

a

local

rlL str lilntoi ur deale! know s
wli dt Ill s fa rm c ustom ers
1 t•q uHI' tlwt th!itrtbu tor canno t
~~ke

llw nPcessa ry s teps to get

uwugil fue l for them ," a Meigs
( 'u!J tll'
i\gi J c u l tura l

StdiJdJzdlwll ct m.l Conservation

:-;pukrsman said today
lnf orrn 1ng lht.~ d1s tn butor
bt·~..:nn 1 es e\ en mm c important
1f d f;u 11 1 ~r mtends to mcrea se

.Se1 VICt'

h1 s 11 1.. 1cagP Lons1derab ly, or 1f
ht· wctnl!'i to expa nd livestock,

oth er fa rm
l.or·a l dealers will
IWt'd lh 1s rnfo rma t wn to
rrqu es 1rtd(h lwml l fuel for thei r
p&lt;!1111tv,

01

IIJWI;I IIons

:; upp iH •J s

' 1\grl t:ll ltu ra l
lT l'P I VIII g

p1 10rtty

rn oducers
aiJOCa tiOnS

L'tl to certify tOan
o 11 go trr )!, fuel ~..:onse rv a t JO n
prtl~ ~~·;ulr nn ttle u opera tions.
The U11 1h·d S~1tes Departmen t
of -\gJ H ultu re, m coopera tiOn
w1t h th e Federal E nergy OffiCe
and
tlre
E nv1ronrnenta l
Pr otr&lt;..lto n
Age ncy, has
ii PvPiupl'd a ( tHlSl' J va t10n leaf·
ld t\\orllli:i ille 111 ect rly March,
tlu" IP.!flct 111l'i udes an energy
rncln &lt;I IJcr nt 111 cer llflca tion that
thcr e 1s dll ongo in g consP r v;•llu n prog ram a nd that
p11onty fue l wt ll be used fo r
:1gncultural production,'' the
wil l be

I U JUU

Schools
to close
Monday
Due to 1llness of epidermc
proportion whach continues to
plague students , the Me1gs
Local School Distrocl will be
closed Monday, Supt George
Har graves sa1d today
Absenteeism each day th1s
week has generally mcreased
unt1l today when 1t hat a new
hog h Overall, among all of the
sc hools of the distn cl, absenteetsm Fnday was at 29 8
pe rc ent compared to 23 8
percen t Thursda y Generally,
a 25 perce nt a bse nteeism
fi gure IS cons1dered the ' pomt
when schools should be closed .
The Me1gs County De partment of Hea lth today approved
the Monday closing. It was felt
lhat, perhaps, a long weekend
might give s tudents an opportumty to recuperate Strep
throa t and mfl uenza are a big
fa ctor tn the wave of illness
Today, ttoe Salisbury School
had 45.5 percent or ll' student
bodya bsent (81out ofl78); the
Pomero}' elementary sc hool
had 42.5 percent absent ( 167 out
of 393) and the Bradbury
School had an absenteeism
ra te of 34.9 percen t ( 44 out of
126 )
At th e hi gh sc hoo l th1 s
mormh g, 2110 of the 952 students
were absent ( 29 4 percent) .
In a nn oun cmg the Mor1day
closmg, Hargraves said there
deflmtely will be classes m all
schoo ls of the d1s tn ct on
Tuesday.
W11h the approval. of the
hea lth department on thP
Monday closm g, the day's lo;s
of classes can be consideJ ed
offi cially as one of the f1vo
ca la mr ty days d 1 s tn c~ ai e
permatted each school year.

ASCS sa1d
HE LP

OFFE RED

.I :HnPs P. Housh , Metgs
SI·:OI- MS A Ill Ell
'I IH• Pl)l! IU 11y 1·;-H squd d \\.-IS County /\udJtiJr, scud Thursday
I. IJ Muu1e of th e Ohio
t :J!l f'd 'I hut S(.Lty at.! ~ 1 1 f' Ill to
Depart1
nent of Taxation w11l be
.r ss ts t lhP SI 'U IO: MS H ll ll Jp
m
hts
oF
fl t'e every Monday ,
\d1Kil broke down on 1Lo.; \~ay to
f
eb,
25
,
through Apnl 8 lo
Jlo l zl'~t-dl c:t! CcnlPJ Willi a
Hr;1 te rnlly
putlcllt
Tlrl' ass 1st per ~on s ncedmg help
\'dth theu Sta te Income tax.
J'lJIIH II !) Stjlliid l l &lt;ill::i fJ UI ted .l
II1s h11Ur s \\111 be fro m 9 to 12
M 1~ C: rmd ~ll lo ll ol7..( 1
~ nd 1 to 4

DEFENSIVE DRIVING - Takm g ma jor roles m a
three-hour defen:m e dravmg class ;H Ill(' ~kt~~s .Jumor H1gh
School cafeterta 'T hursd&lt;-.~ mght \\t'! C, 1 (&lt;J r, J\lrc t\I Wilda
Werner , pre~ 1 rh-ni of t111· Mtddh ·pr•r I Jiu:-lm•so;;; Hnd.

.r

I : X II :N DI·:n OIJTLOOK
(nu l Sund ay thro ugh
' ) II P:o~ l l:l}. ( hall&lt;"C of snow
amrlh and rain (I f snow
sn ut\Jt• rn SC('tions tm Mon1lav ll 1ghs 111 Uu: :ws except
lo\HT &lt;lOs 111 the south . Lows
Ill tlll' {t ' PII'- (II \U\\ C r 20s

tllf• ' I "'~" t't llllu l .n1d \\mil d

'

F or'me r Meigs Co unty
Auditor Gordon Caldwell acted
today to end apparent pu blic
confusion as to his recent
resignation
Caldwell said some people
appa rently believe that he

: ··.-.;.;;.:.:·.·:·:-:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::::::;.

4 lllllll ll ll !o ri i Vt ' l l !lt;ll :l lllllU/1t

TJu ec 1\I UJOI Oi l \.'DIII pHIII I'S
sa1d Thursday thq 1Md er ti JL'I
l'\C !I
shi pped out of Ol11u nJ r dll "~'d
l l' ~fl \' ~·dllll'i 'l' h q lll Slitl! IJIIIIS
to shr p mto !he si;Ht' iiOO,Utlll
.Hid 1hl' 11'! u1 ~ ~, lt s , d l11t ;1 \ 101 t uf
gallon s of fu el as tlw r Psult ol .1
!t1t l f(l Oh11r n.l ~ JW\il•t altHPd
Feb. 9 directive by cner gy t ~;u
'I ht• Sun 0 1l ('o .dso f.lll~1 l tu
W1lham S1rnon that Olr to s
al\(•r 1t s :t\101 alwn lo Ohm, bu t
Februar y gasulme t:~lltJ{'a l hm
111rl' lwr:m " ~' 11:, dJSt! JbU ltoll
was to be cut 2 per cent
•} o.. !t I ll IJJiJtlt • ,dtt' l [1 \]IJll :,
In another ferlt• ~&lt;d nnn (H JII~ t-'
t11 ff111111 Sun Oil c.;, ud 11 11 1
n cn t on Frh 19, Stn mn s.t !d tlu •
•, II •,Jd IIH 1 !'d &lt;,J'd '• ll]Jplh ·~ l o
~ per &lt;ent gdsult nc redur l1m1
q])ll'l 'i [.lt t '~ I t\ ( IIIH ]ll) Wlt/l th t•
mul been rcscmclcll &lt;.rYrd OIJi tJ
'iJ)I l'\f t1f jJi p l l'IJ 11 dltt'('[j\('
would be out that fud 1111 llw
F'cb ~- 1 9 petiOd o11l y.
Shell Otl smd 11 dtd nul r t' . •,• ·. .. ··-:·:·. -:-·::: '. ;.:.·-:.:::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:
lCl\oC tJ)p J'eiJ . 19 I l l dC'J I I' SI !lidW.\ 1 1..\l'l·: B,\t 1\

.

llOC KY II UPP, left , os congratulated by Bob Spurlock,
V04'&lt;tttuna l!nsti udm at Southern Hagh School , for takmg f1rst
pl.tcl! honors m the d1stnct and m the top three of Oh10 m
ptoduf'tron hort iculture. Rocky, son of Mr and Mrs Arnold
ll11Jlp, Hacine, Ht 2, was named lop wmner followmg d1stfl ct
&lt;.: Pll·rtlon of md Jvldual FF A award w1nners made Fe b. 13 a l
\l•·xanrler Ii 1gh School, Alban y, by a comnuttee of
\••wat wmli i\g n culturc mstructors and State FF A officers
J· or lns d1&lt;&gt;ti 1ct wm he wall be recogmzed at a d1stn ct
h.rnq uet l{ocky a nd h1s parents were m Columbus WedrH· stby whe1 e he was mtet vwwed by a pane) of agnculture
mstrtl t tm s li e w11l be notified m Apnl whe ther he placet.l
11 1st, s~•Jmcl or th1rd 1n the state . Rock y has been a member
t f Suurn'l·In's FF A fur four yea ts.

..:·.· ·

;
shorts
()hio
.'"

'

Coppe;1ill\e-A~ocado

.. ,AI)Nays
ple"ty of Free Parking.
. .

Mu1 pllv Sd!d he w.t ~ t11ld I J~
till' i\1\A t h:tl h1s ,tbdut tn m V.:tl '.
Ol lgl ll dll y plctn rwd I t! t.tkl•

( '1 t1f H·d
0 11 scud tod~lV anotln 1 !tJ tdllp I!I
the FI':O ts fuiCII I ~! til!' f1r 111 !11

WASHINGTON- JOHN EHRUCHMAN ORDERED both
Adm. Robert 0 . Welander and Yeoman Charles Radfo rd put
throogh brutal interrogatio n and lie detector tests dlll'mg the 1971
White House investigation of m11itary spymg, and ultuna tely
asked Welander to admit he was responsible, according to Senate
testimony.
Welander, chief of the now-defunct Pentago n liaison office to
the National Secunty Council, refused to take the blame He
accused Radford, then his enlisted ass1sta nt, of revea lmg the spy
oporation directed aga inst Henry K1ssmger and General
Alexander Ha1g, lhen President Nixon's lop natiOna l secunty
assistants, to shift the focus of the mvestiga tlon away from a leak
of documents to colwnrust Jack Anderson
Welander's prepared sworn statement to lhe Senate Armed
Se1 vices Committee, released Thursday, showed so many direct
conflicts with teshmony given by Radford Wednesday that Sen.
Harold Hughes, D-lowa, a committee member, said it wa s obVious one of them conun1tted perjury .

Sale 328.00
sa~

dl -;(

.11 1.11 0\llld I i ll

lit

A spukesnwn f111

MEXICO - SECRETARY OF STATE HENRY A Kissmger
called a closed-&lt;loor meetin g with Latin Amer ica n foreign
ministers today to se t up " a modern framework" fo r solving
problems facmg the Western Hemisphere
The secretary of state scheduled the prtvate mormng session
after unveiling a 1 'new agenda for the Amen cas " at the opening
of a three-day conference w1 th 24 Latin American foreign
mirusters. "The lime has come to infu se lhe Western Hem•sphre
relationship w11h a new spmt," the secretary sa1d T~ ursday 111 a
14-page speech at the opening of the 11atelolco Confe rence,
named after the Mexican Fore ign Mirustry buildmg.

AT ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE ON
MEcHANIC STREET

.

1pl1rH d :u1 d lw ttt.'l

~pn

t tll'd!l l f.i •d,

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

By United Press lnternallonal
WASHINGTON - THE CONSTITUTION SAYS a president
"shall take care to see lhat the laws be faithfu lly executed " But
what if he fa ils to "takecare" ? Ca n he be impeached, tried by the
Senate and thrown from office for such negligence'
A staff report which answers the questiOn with a resounding
"yes" appea rs to have driven a pa rtisan wedge through the
House Judiciary Conun1ttee as it inquires into whether grounds
exist for President Nixon to be impeached
Setting that dispute aside, the committee is seekmg today to
agree on leakproof procedures for safe&amp;'lla rding ev idence it
hopes to secure from Nixon. Whi te House lawyer James St. Clair
says he is reluctant to furrush docwnents w11hout assurances
lhey will remain secret.

Jfashingtun's Birthday Sale

1!~ 4118,00 36' ' Deluxe Harvest Gold
. , ~lllf!IOII.S· Clean. Oven - . . . .
·-R~: 3U.Ojq~" . will\ Automagic Cooking
, ,\'!lllite·CQp~rtone.Harvest Gold . . .
...Reg, .'J84f.OO 311'! ~h. ~~~tom,gic- Cooking

h!'!l t·1

be hPid 111 tl w fuiHII ' , ' Murpl1\

•'

R'eg. i6.35 Baby Jumper - - - . - - - . . - - Sale us
Rl!!l. 22.50 Molded Plastic Dressing Table - . 5ale 12.00
RJ!9. 7.98 Joh~ny Jump Up Baby Exerciset; . - . Sale 4.91

'

lt! •\1•• 1

ews.. in Briefs( Caldwell reaffirms h e
resigned, not retired

. ;,,

. .
~----------------------­

Our best selling pattern in Famous Cannon Royal Family
· Feather lite no-iron 130 mu slin.
·
'.;hoOse pink . blue, gold, avocado or la ve nder

' ! i lfllj'l'l'

pllllllll!lll!lllll~~;:::::::;::::~.-;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-:::::::::·:·::r:-::=::-::::::::::~-::::.-::::::::::::

SALEf JUVENILE PRODUCTS

NQ..IRON SHEETS

go\'t i !IIILUII
r cs 1 ~: n ,md tlldl ' fr t' t' el~· t l HillS

1 I !P l l

1 GROUP .lh PRICE

Washington ~s Birthday Sale

.

POM EROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
_______

ART SHOW - One of the annual art shows at Wahama
High School is on display this week in the lobby of Wa hama
High School. Ja ck SlaVIn, Art teacher at Wahama, sa id the
work on display has been done on lhe1r own by students from
the freshman through the .s emor class. On diSplay are pencil

----------------------·
Sale! Special Group Table Lamps

Sale 8.9$
Sale 6.95
Sale
Sale 5.-9.S

d!l!

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1

- - - - --PHONE 992 2156

"'

Sale - 1.77

3.49 Picture Plaques • - - - - - · -

Ht\Oitl ll ll!l &lt;t

enttn e

'•

\

Washing-tun's Birthday Sale
Sa~

\4•d
uff11 J,d ,
l ' h't

11 1.11 tilt\ h• 'll t'\ •' tlw \i!H 'I11';111

•

,1\' \ .

Sale SOc
Sale 29t

14 only S9c 2 cell Flasl\li!!l\ls

Il lill .til

smd

Murph) scml the An w rHdll

Revolut aonury Am Hcs ( ontend
they have representatives m
tlw m;IJOI' Anwr ican Cities ;.m d
are· determtned to rC' Iurn the
Alm•n can government to the
Alnc l l l'&lt;J n people
"The Amen ca n Hevolutwnary Army tells me Uldt they
tnl end in thl' future to en g&lt;.~ ge
m
guer n ll[l
wai fdi C
throughout the country They
don't mtencl to engage Ul
bloodshed at !hiS tune "
Murphy Urges Calm
One of the group 's dema nds,

·\

•1.00

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du('l Lon "

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t •

49 .U~Shipsli.'lpe

.

db-

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Separate switches for front beam and blinker .

R£G. 2:50 H:DiNO TOWEI.S - -

.

uf

-I

Washington 's Birthday Sale

-R£'G. 3.50 BATH TOWELS - - - -

t, I\ ISl'

.

fURNITURE DEPARTMENT • 3rd FLOOR

BATH

tht•

., .'

5ale on bicycles- Friday and saturday

Washin!:ton 's Birthday Sale

-~~--:i;(j;:t~r,:·,·-!lo&gt;,;o;:;;;.;~~;,H;..;•...:,;,.o.~..,..,·~·'""·"'-·~ ·-·-·-··-'-·;...&lt;"'"..:...~

' l ll: tl ':-.

J&lt;.;

ft•dcla l

HAND LANTERNS

Beddmg Department, First Floor

Big solE!Oti!i.n'o.ll:;t~.l~rf&lt;iff!o;J.~(il}~•' :!i/tr.~~~ ri id~\- ;

I l'ltdSt ,

SCI I\1(' 11 1lll): .I III JU l lJ,J I

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includes our entire stock .

Housewares Department, First Floor

QUEEN SIZE - . - FULl., SIZE . . . . .
REG. 3:49 TWIN SIZE REG. 2.79 pr. PILLOWCASES -

du

to

...,_

Sale! Just 9
•2.49 FLASttiNG POWER HEAD

SALE •15.95

ReG. '-49
REG. 4.39

mte nd

Washington's Birthday Sale

STAINLESS FLATWARE

Canister Sets Memo Board - Letter Holder
Spice Rack - -

"They

tl l i HII\1'11 I l UI ' !ltd lu ,\Jill pi!\ '-.

!Jbct ,JI

~{

SPECIAL SALE PRICES

Washington 's Birthday Sale

Reg . 21.50
R~. 14.00
Reg . 6.50
R~. 12 .00

.. AI

~ Giant goof

model s . All are Amertcan made . Excellent quality . Sale

SALE PRICES

50 per cent polyester, 50 per cent cotton in navy
blue · charcoal - spruce green-tan and darwollve,
·Pants in sizes 29 to 44 waist. Matching long
sleeve shirts in sizes 14112 to 17112 ne~;k'. ·stack' up

VOL. XXV NO. 219

_.:..:~:.__;_:_::_:_::_::_:__

w1th coaster brake - 3 speed bikes and the popular 10 speed

Housewares Department, First Floor

]'.; ! , I! I'!

Tkvoted To Tlw Interests Of The Meil{s·Mnson Aren

20 tnch - 24 tnch - 26 inch and 27 1nch bicycles. Standard bikes

Housewares Department, First Floor

LEE "TECH TWILL"
WORk UNIFORMS

Birthday Sale

SALEI BICYCLES

99~

1~ &lt;1

at y

Washington's Birthday Sale

IMPERIAL WOODENWARE

•4.88

said, should bt• in ftvr -, 1\1-, 211and 50-dollar de n o m l lliJt l t i i\~,
packaged m plaslH' bags. nnd 1t
should not be new currency or
have a ny pa rti cula r Sl'QlU' n Cl'
to the serial numbers
" I w1ll be asked to open the
plastic bags and count lhcrn , m
rase th ere 1s anylhmg afoot. "
Mlll'phy sa id
The editor smd the Arnen can
Rcvolutwnar}• Armies, whic h
the FBI and loca l authontles
sa!d they have no knowledge
of, •· feels thai the Amencan
news medm have been too

•115.00

3 FOR •1.00

Washington's Birthday Sale

Ra ulS um lns lrudhms
T hl' ransom money, Murph v

Washington's Birthday Sale

Reg . $22 .95 50 piece service for eight by Oneida .

PRICES

group
Pu blic offers of donahons
bega n fl oodm g th e Constttu twn, Georgta's largest
mormng newspaper, soon after
Murphy 's tape 1ecordmg w~1s
broadcast on televtsion and
radio stations Thursda y mght.
" We took the ll' names and
satd we mtght gel back to them
af some sml !l.f program for
donatwns 1s set up .'' saiCI a
swttchbo.1 rd opera tor
Murphy, 40-year-old father of
tw o teen-age daughters who
was abducted afte r leavmg
home Wednesday mght, smd he
was bemg treated courteously
and was m no unmed mte
danger · unless law enforc e-

mcnt agen cu-.~ s stlould try to
fi nd out where I am 01 where I
am gotng to bl' tran sported "

Operates on batter ies or direct current in fold
together case . Powerful 4 inch dynamic speakers
· circular veneer tuning dial - continuous tone
and balance controls.
2 Only to Sell

Mens $5.95 Unlined

NYLON JACKETS

nl'v. s pa pe r

•

•43.00
$149.95 PANASONIC AM-FM
FM STEREO PORTABLE RADIO
WITH 8 TRACK TAPE PLAYER

Square cake di sh · oblong bake dish · loaf dish
pi e plate - quart measuring cup .
Valueslo$1.49

Brand New Selection!

('ox

PANASONIC AM-FM
TABLE RADIOS

PYREX COOKWARE SALE

•1.89

pow e1 ful

Sale $52.95

Wa.~hington's

Reg. $1.00 and $1.95

Washingto11 's Birthda y Sale

'

ATLANTA \UP! I - Atlanta
Constitution ofhc1 ab awa1ted
mstructions today on how to
deliver $700,000 in ransom to a
self-styled guemlla army that
kidnaped edit or Reg Murph) m
a strike against the "leftist,
liber al" news med ia.
Murphy sa1d m a ta pe
recorded message Thursday
rught that h1s captors, the
"Amen ca n Revolutionary Armies," would relay the mstruchons in a " random " telephone
ca ll to " somebody in th e
Atlanta metropolita n area "
The ransom wlll be pai n as
soon as the mstruct10ns are
received, accordmg to Wi lham
Fields, executive editor of the
Constitution, owned b~ tl1e

Walnut gra i n cabin et lighted d1al. AM -FM Bands wtth AF C
for t he FM . Large s1ze speake r .

Selected from stock. Napkins - Ta'blecovers
Pl at es - Cups.
.

Wasltingto11 's Bir,thday Sale

B1g selection of woven or kn1t shi rts a nd blouses m sizes 30 to
38 and 40 to 46 .

Wa shington 's Birthday Sale

VEGA-DYNA-FLEX TIP PENS

Boys si zes 20 to 28 - Men s sizes 30 to 44. White solid colors. Reversibles. All in the popular new
widths .

WOMEN'S SHIRTS AND BLOUSES

A'h excellent AM Portabl e Radio Small size Includes ba tter y, earph one and wdst strap Solid color l1ght grey.

MEN'S NECKTIES

SPORT BELTS

Wa.,hinf,!Um ', Birthday Sale

TRANSISTOR RADIOS

HALLMARK PARTY ITEMS

For Thi s Special Sale!
Mens Double Knit

Wa shington '.~

Wash ington '.•
Hirthday s ., le

Sale

4.95 SHIRTS
5.95 SHIRTS

RCA $6.95

famous make

SALE 1.50
SALE 2.00
SALE 2.50

SALE PR-ICES

Smal l group broken s1zes Wrnter Coa ts, Dresses, Sports
we.:rr G1rls 3 to 6x, 7 to 14, Preteen Sizes. Mtsses and Jun 1or
Srze s All reduced for ftnal cl earance

20.98
12 .98
8.98
4. 98
1.98

3.98

Birthday Sa le

Women's and Girls Apparel
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

.
SHIRTS

Wa.•hin{(ton 's Birthda y Sale

Wll., hin!(IOII 's Rirtlrd11y Sale

M1sses. J unior s. Ha l f S1 zes. Se lecte d from our
r egul ar stoc k

0

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23rd
9:30 AM TO 9:00

Waslringhm 's Birthday Sale

Wi! ., hill!.(fo" 's Hirthday Salt!

' 0

Veterans Memorial Hospita l
ADM ITTED
Be rtha
Schreaber, Mason, W Va ,
Carroll Smith, Cottageville, W.
Va
DISCHARGE D - Harold
Tn plc tt, Opa l Oh lin ge r ,
Charles Kess mger, Freda
Durham , Ha zel Spence r ,
Ma rvm Darst, Hattie Armes,
Robert Pul h ns

Professwnal Women's Club, Sfl'?nsorin g ~roup ; Mrs. Mary
Mdi tin , club member and .chairman· of the class ; Harry
Benson, D1stroct 8 re presentative of the Ohio Deparlment of
Ii1ghway Safety, a nd Ralph J. Sandine, District 11
rrp!'r"&gt;cntatlve o f t he ODHS
I I

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