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                  <text>10 _ The Datly Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0. Monday, Feb 25,1974

Virginia Grimm
died Saturday

All silent on Patty Hearst fate
SAN FRANCISCO (UP]) Symbtonese Ltberatton Army
terrortsts today entered thetr
fourth day of stlence on the fate
6f 2(l.year.old hostage Patrtcta
Hearst
':There's been no response
No mdtcatlon of anythmg, '
FBI spectal agent Charles
Bates satd late Sunday 'We
are JUSt havmg to watt aod fmd
out the next development."
Mtss Hearst, daughter of
Randolph A Hearst, prestden t
and edt tor of the San Ft anctsco
Exammer, was alxlucted from

-'

her Berkeley apa rtment safe release
exactly three 1\ccks ago
The taped SLA message had
Adeadlme set by the SLA for warned tha t commumcattons
a response to thetr latest would be broken off and Patty
demand that Hearst personally held mdefmt tely as a "prtsoner
pledge an addthonal $4 rmlhon of war" unless the demand was
to a $2 mt lho~ food gJVeaway met wtthm 4 hours She would
be kept as a hostage for two
program passed Sa turday
Hea r s t sa1d the demand SLA members detamed m San
made m an SLA commumque Quentm pr,tson on murder
Thursday was "far beyond my charges, the tape recetved
fmancta l capabthty" but the Thursday satd
Hea rst Corp , agreed to add the
The two members referred
requested amoun t to th e to , Joseph Remtro, 27, and
People m Need food program Rtchard Ltttle, 26 were to be
contmgent on Miss Hearst's at raagned m Alameda Supenor

Court today on charges of
assassmatmg Oakland School
Supenntendent Marcus Foster
last November
A Ludlow Kramer, th e
Washmgton Secretary of State
m charge of disbursmg free
food as demanded by the
kidnapers, has promtsed that
the chaos orlast dtsbursmg wtll
be remedted
He satd food would henceforth be dehvered m advance
of the Tuesday, Thursday and
Saturday dtstrtbution days at
Ute four t-enters named b) the

SLA
The ftrst day of the handout
on Frtday resulted in mobs that
blocked trafftc, attacked foo d
tru cks and tossed bundles
freely There were ftst fights
and four arrests as 9,000
persons received packages
meant for 20,000
In the ftrst letter followmg
Mtss Hearst's abduction, the
SLA made a food demand that
would have cost nearly $400
mtlhon Hearst responded wtth
a $2 mtllton program that the
SLA satd Thursday had to be
tnpled

Bilked taxidermist identified Williams
ATLANTA (UP! ) - A Mtarm
"f m glad he could pmpmnt
talUderrmst who was bilked out the man," Murphy swd of
of $6,000 m a phony fuel otl deal Becker "I thmk he was one of
proVIded the clue that tden- th e people who led mtifled the alleged ktdnapers of veshgators to the house."
Atlan ta Constttutton Edttor
Becker satd he telephoned
Reg Murphy, tt was dtsclosed the Mtamt FBI when he read
Sunday
that Murphy was lured from
Murphy, who was released his home last Wednesday mght
unharmed Frtday mght after by a man who wanted the
his newspaper paid $700,000 edttor of Georgia's largest
ransom, satd he called W mornmg newspaper to arrange
Charles ·Buddy" Becker to for the donatwn of 300,000
thank htm for the ttp to the ga llons of fuel ml to chart ty
FBI
Becker satd he was ar&gt;Ftve hours after Murphy, 40, proached m Mtamt last
was freed m a motel parkmg December by a man he tdenlot, FBI agents arrested Wtl- ttfted as Wtlliams, who claimed
ham A H Willtams, 33, and his to be a general contractor wtth
wife, Betty Ruth, 26, at thetr 300,000 gallons of fuel otl to sell.
home m suburban Lilburn. The Becker satd he met the man
ransom money was recovered when he mounted a ftsh for him
mtact.
and agreed to buy the fuel otl

15 guns, ammo
stolen Sunday
Ftfteen guns and an undctermmed amount of ammumtton was taken m a
en tertng
brea ktn g and
Saturday mght at Bob Saunders ' Quaker State Servtce
Center
The burglary was dtscovered
at 8 59 a m Sunday by
Galhpohs Ctty Pohceman Joe
Owens. Entry was made by
breaking a large wmdow glass
and gomg through the lube
room Taken were ptstols,
nOes and shotguns, and $50 m
cash A complete mventory ts
bemg taken today
Meanwhtle, Galha County
Shertff's depultes Sunday
mvestlgated the theft of $2,000
worth of bus accessortes taken
from !be Galhpohs Bus Garage
located at Green Elementary
School.
Charles Carter, Rt 2,
Galhpohs, dtscovered the
break-m Agam, entry was

made by breakmg a wmdow
Mtssmg \\ere numerous
wrenches, dnlls, four weldmg
hoses, oxygen and acetylene
gauges, a pamt gun, socket
sets, four ftre extmgutshers,
four wreckmg bars, 20 wmdshteld wtpers, anlt freeze and
other Items
Depuhes also mvesttgated
acts of vandahsm reported by
Faye Cas to of Rt l, Galhpo hs,
and Dr Mel St mon of
Galhpohs
Mrs Casto satd someone
used a shotgun and blasted a
large hole m the alummum
door at her home
Dr S1mon satd someone
threw rocks breakmg glasses
m a home near h1s chmc on
Jackson Ptke
Wtlham Philhps of Cottrell's
Grocery tn Porter satd
someone had abandoned a 1971
Plymouth m front of hts store

~-

MEMBER

fEDERAL

DEPOSIT

INSURANCE

CORPORATION

"because my busmess depends
on boats havmg d1esel otl '
Becker srud the deal was for 23
cents a ga llon and he and a
partner gave the man a check
for $6,000 as a down payment
The taxtdermtsl satd the
man flew back to Atlanta and
called later to say the 011 soon
would be on tts way Becker
satd that's the last he heard
and he wrote the deal off as a
bad busmess venture when
U S and state authonttes sa td
his only recourse was a CIVIl
swt.
The Atlanta FBI conftrmed
that tt had recetved a ttp

Donald Oesterle
'
57. is dead

'
RUTLAND
Funeral
servtces for Donald J
Oesterle, 57, who dted Saturday
at ht s Langsvtlle Route I
restdence as the result of self·
mfhcted gunshot wounds, have
been set for 10 am Thursday
at the Walker Funeral Home
here
At the scene to mvestigate
the etrcumstances were Shenff
Robert C Hartenbach and
Coun ty Coroner R R Ptckens,

Frtday from "a cthzen m
Mtarm" regardmg Wtlhams
Spcctal FBI agent m charge
Leo Conroy sa1d the bureau
had reached " no defmtte
concluston" whether the
Wtlhamses acted alone or were
part of what Murphy's ktd-

napers cla tm ed was the
"Amencan RevolutiOnary
Army " Indtcattons were,
however, that the FBI doubted
the " army" ex is ted and
beheves the ktdnapmg was
"stnctly for money "
Willtams, a sheetrock subcontractor, and hts wife, who
To po otect the pm tty of I he has three small children by a
bt ~e d of Its famo us cows preVIous marriage, were bemg
th e Channel Island of Jersey held under a total of $1 5
allows no olher co llie on the rmlhon bond on ktdnap and
Island
extortion charges

the state wres tbng tourney at m last Saturday's opening
Columbus.
round of the Lancaster
Mtckey Lyons at !OIIbs , 176 Dtstrtct
lb Bill Slack, 188 lb John
Slack, Lehew and Hal~ were
Lehew and heavywetght Mtke seeded I, 2 and 3 respechvely
Haley all advanced to semi- tn thetr respective wei ght
fmal action followmg vtctortes classes, while the other seeded
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~­ Marauder ,
148 lb
AI
McLaughlm was defeated m
hts opemng round battle
The Marauders , as a team,
are far out of the runmng for
the dtstrtct crown, as Belpre
leads wtth 26 pomts, followed
Four Metgs Marauder
wrestlers, wmmng first round
matches, have moved mto next
Sat urda y's Dtstrict Wrestbng
Tournam ent semt-fmals at
Lancaster, wtth posstble
chance&lt; of earmng berths m

BEARY'S WORLD

Alta Eastman

D 0

Mr Oesterle was born Aprtl
2ti, 1916, m Detrmt, Mtch , the
son of the late J ohn and Emma
Thalhammer Oesterle. He was
marned to Mary Jean Wmans
on Sept 3, 1937 Mr Oesterle
was employed as an electrtcal
engmeer wtth General Motors
m Mtchtgan 15 years before
bemg strtcken by tll health He
was th en employed wtth
Vanety Linens Service In
M1ch1gan fo r nme years, and
had restded m Metgs Count)
only about a year
SurvlVlng m addtlton to h1s
wtfe are two daughters, Mrs
Rtchard (Donna Jean ) Helmling of Fayettesvtlle, N C, and
Mrs Glenn (Dowame Sybtl )
Ganzevoort of Wyommg,
•
Mtch , three brothers, Sumner
@ 1974 by NEA In&lt;: ~
and Ralph, both of Chelsea,
Mtch , and Maynard of Skokte,
Ill , and two granddaughters,
Were hop1ng he II graduate from college when anLana Elmuftt, Fayettesvtlle,
other new pro football league comes along to outbid
the NFL , AFL and WFL "
and Tanya Ge nzavoort,
Wyommg, Mtch
Mr Oesterle was a member
of the Lutheran Church.
Veterans Memorial Hospital PROSTITUTION RISING
Offtciatmg at the Tuesday
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
COLUMBUS (UP!) _ In atmormng servtce wtll be the
.
Velva
Amburger,
Syracuse
,
tempt
to halt an increase m
Re v Wtlltam Mtddleworth
Nell
Deweese,
Middleport,
prostttution
in !be ctty, ColumBurtal will be m the Coy Htll
Maqone Sayre, Racine
bus pohcewomen are wallnng
Cemetery at Danvtlle
SATURDAY DISCHARGES along downtown streets and ar- Clara La vendar, Lilhan resting persons who solictt
Moore, Samuel McKmney , them Sgt Charles Edwards
Clara Grueser, Holtis Rupe , said Sunday that durmg the
Tresa Holland, Joseph Wttson ftrst two days of the crackdown
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - by the vtce squad, four men
Mtchael Steven Raymond , were arrested for offermg
Albany; Brenda Osborne, money which was not solicited
New Styles
Mtddleport; Eva McKmney, by the pohcewoman "Once
At
Rutland , Howard Burrts, New ' woman told us she was
Haven; Freddte Weaver, New proposttioned thr•e different
Haven; Ehzabeth Potter , times one day fast week while
Guysvtlle
standing at a bus stop " EdSUNDA
Y
DISCHARGES
wards said
'
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--~~~--

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Your Rugs Are
Worn- Your
Living Room Suite
Is Faded, and
Torn- The
Lamps Are Dingy

And the Stove

MEIGS THEATRE

Won't Cook.

Tomght thru Tuesday
Feb 24·26

"THAT DARN CAT"

SEE BAKER'S IN MIDDLEPORT

$20,000 00 Max1mum Insurance For
Each Depos1tor

M{M8£J(

Is Lumpy-

KENT PROBE
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
federal grand jury mvestigatmg !be 1970 Kent State
shootings wtll resume tts
hearings today after a twoweek recess. According to J.
Stanley Potting•r, head of the
U S Jusllce Department's
Civtl Rights DIVISion, the jury
will determine the number and
tdenhty of the witnesses yet to
testify depending on what was
done dunng the recess. The
JUry has called some 100 witnesses smce the probe began
Dec. 18

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JNSURANCf

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..

died on Sunday
Alta Elnora Eastman, 83,
Harnsonville, dted Sunday at
the Syracuse Nursmg Home
Mrs Eastman was preceded m
death by her parents, Wtlltam
and Samana Story Rice, and
one brother, Homer Rtce
She ts survtved by her
husband, Clarence Eastman;
two ststers, Belva Willard and
Mma Hart, both of Pomeroy,
Rt 2, one brother, W A Rice ,
Reedsville, and 10 meces and
nephews
Funeral servtces wtll be held
Tuesday at I p m at Ewing
Funeral Home with George
Glaze offtciatmg. Burtal wtll be
m Carleton Cemetery Fnends
may call at the funeral home
anytune.

Grace Hewitt
dies in Denver
Mrs Grace E Black Hewntt,
59, formerly of Mtddleport,

died Feb 18 m Denver, Colo.
Mrs Hewttt was born m
Mtddleport, Dec. 23, 1914 She
graduated from !be Mtddleport
Htgh School and a school of
cosmetology m Columbus She
resided In Denver for the past
25 years where she was employed by the Gates Rubber Co
23 years. She was the wife of
Alvm S Hewtlt who dted Nov
9, 197:! m Denver Mrs Hewttt
was a member of the Order of
Eastern Star .
Survtvmg are her mother,
Mrs. Roma Black of Denver; a
mece, Betty Wolfe, Columbus;
four grand-nteces, Dianna,
Manann, Ehzabeth and Jantce
Wolfe, and a grand-nephew,
Thomas John Wolfe, all of
Columbus.
Services were held m Denver
Wednesday with Mr. George
Akkerman officiating. Burtal
was in Chapel Hill Memory
Gardens m Ltttleton, Colo
MISSIONARIES HOME
ALLIANCE, Ohio (UP!) -A
group of 32 American and Canadian missionaries, most
from !be Church of God in
Alli.ance, Ohio, returned safely
to thetr homes late Sunday
after being detamed m Cuba
for 24 hours over the weekend
on a flight home from Jamaica.
Claude Ferguson, 36, Alli.ance,
leader of !be group, satd they
were treated exceptionally
well by the Cubans. The plane
was ordered to land after
straymg mto Cuban air space.
GRIMMER WINS RACE
FALUN, Sweden (UP!)
Gerhard Grimmer of East
Germany won the men's 50
kilometer cross country race in
the world nordic skt Championships Sunday with a time of two
hours, 19 rmnutes, 45.26 minutes.

• •

in Briefs

Middleport to protest C&amp;O pullout

(Continued from page I)
In a vaguely worded statement made public Sunday, the
Umted States and tts Latin Amertcan allies agreed on "a new
dialogue of the Americas" aimed at calmly discussmg the
reg ion's most controversial problems.
GUERNEVILLE, CALIF. - WILLIAM F. KNOWL~D,
newspaper publisher and former Republican U S senator, died
of a self-mflicted gunshot wound to the head, an autopsy showed
Sunday. ''The body was recovered at the water's edge, partially
m the water " Undersheriff Robert Hayes satd after the autopsy.
"The w;.pon a 32-&lt;:aliber automatic pistol, was recovered
by a diver about' two feet under the water, by the body. The
evtdence found as fll'st stated, mdtcated a self-inflicted gunshot
wound " Knowiand, 65, publisher of the Oakland Tribune, died
Saturday as he stood on the muddy dock of his $100,000 redwood
summer home along the Russtan Rtver 75 rmles north of San
FranciSco. No suiCide note was found and there were no clues to
mdtcate what prompted hun to take his life
FORT LAUDERDALE, FLA - A PLANE returrung to the
Umted States With nusslonanes may have been Hymg below Its
asstgned altitude because of cabm pressure problems when it
was forced to land m Cuba by MIG ftghters. Jun
Frazter, Hollywood, Fla , local FAA coordinator for Southeast
Florida said it was his understanding that they had recetved
approv~ from tbe Cuban government to make the flight over
Cuba.
The 32 misstonaries and three plane crew members were
released Sunday and landed at Fort Lauderdale after their
sponsormg agency, Project Partner, Wtchita, Kan., arranged to
pay $6,!150 to the Cuban government through !be SwiSS Embassy
m Havana The payment covered the cost of forcmg the plane
down, mamtenance on the rurcraft, and expenses of caring for Its
passengers and crew, according to the State Department, which
handled the fund transfer for the sponsors

Four wrestlers win 1st rounds

POLL PAROTT

At your service

NEW HAVEN - Mrs
Vlrgmia Roush Grurun, 84,
East Ltverpool, died Saturday
m a convalescent home there
Mrs Grtmm was born Feb 6,
1890 m Mason County, the
daughter of the late Wtlham
and Jane Zerkle Roush Her
husband , George Alto Gnmm,
dted m 1970
Surv1vmg are three sons,
Wtlham of Leetoma, Ohto,
Leonard of Letart, W Va , and
Homer of Anna, Ill ; two
daughter s,
Mrs
Dean
(Rebecca) Talkmgton of East
Ltver pool, and Mrs Alan
(Leoda) Folger, Brunswtck,
Ohto, two ststers, Mrs Walter
Skidmore, East Liverpool, and
Mrs
Lesley Roush of
Steubenvtlle, and 17 grandchtldren
Funeral servtces wtll be held
at 2 p m Wednesday at the
Unton Untied Methodtst
Church, two mtles back of New
Haven, wtth the Rev Robert
Bumgarner of Middleport
offtctahng Frtends may call at
the Foglesong Funeal Home
from 7 to 9 p m Tuesday The
body wtll be taken to the
church where tt wtll hem state
one hour prtor to the servtce.
Burtal wtll be tn Unton
Cemetery.

News.

Ex-aide

(Continued from page 1)
fenses, not crinnnal offenses;
of abuse of power or pertmtting
by Warren 22 1h, Hillsboro 15, power he delegated to be
Ironton 12, Shertdan 12, abused; offenses, as I say, of
Chesapeake 9¥., Fall'land 9, negligence or derelection m
Nelsonvtlle 8, Metgs 7, Glouster seemg that the laws are fatth3 and Wellston 0.
fully executed.
Lyons opened the com"I think he has abused his
peti lion for Meigs by pmnlng trust in a very sertous way.
Dance of Htllsboro, while Slack And tf he himself ts not willmg,
pinned Sbertdan 's Taylor, as he does not seem to be, to
Lehew dectstoned Helgesen of make a fresh start, to own up to
Belpre and Haley pmned these things tn detail rather
Shertdan's VanSickle
than with merely the pro
Saturday, Lyons wtll face forma, almost contemptuous
Hall of Warren m the 101 lb apologies that he's gtven on
semt..flnals, while Slack faces occasion, then I think that
Warren's Beebe, Lehew battles measures need to be taken
Warren's Short and Haley wtthm the system as the
takes on Barber of Nelsonville. Congress ts taking them, to
Marauders who didn't fare hold him to account," he satd
qw te as well in the opemng
round were 108lb Rick George
who was dcctstoned by Fortney
of Warren, 115lb Butch Roush Hall, and Steve Brtckles, at
who was pmned by Spencer of lbs., pmned by Ironton's Scior
Warren, I221b Joe Rosenballffi All are still m the runnmg
who was pmned by White of third place fimshes.
Thts Saturday 's
Sheridan, 129 lb Duane
McLaughlin who was pmned by begins WIth the s:~:;::~
Sanders of Ironton, 135 lb. Jeff followed by the c
Musser dcctStoned by ,Marks of semis and consolatton finals,
Warren, AI McLaughlm who wt th the champiOnship fmals
was dcctstoned by Warren's roundmg out !be day's activity.

Elbertelds In Pomeroy
Shop Weekdays 9:30 to 5 pm

HOW TO
LOOK LIKE
9AM

ATSPM

j

Mtddleport wtll ftle a protes t
wtth the Publtc Utthltes
Commtsston of Ohto agamst
the reported proposal to
dtscontmue servtce by the
Chesapeake and Ohto ratlroad
m southeastern Ohto It was
reported m The Datly Sentmel
Monday that the ra tlroad has
app hed for the rtgh t to
dtscontmue serviCe and that a
pubhc hearmg wtll be held m
Columbus March 4
Meetmg m regular sesswn
Monday mght counctlagreed to
have sohcttor Bernard Fultz
ft ie a protest agamst discontinuance of service

Vtllage offtctals planned to
atlend a pubhc meetmg on
March 6 at the Rutland
E lementary School when th e
modermzatton of State Route
124 m Metgs County wtll be
diScussed The meettng has
been announced In conformance wtth the Ohto
Department of Transporta hon
Achon Plan Deputy Dtrector
Max R Farley has stated that
depa rtmen t of transporta tion
personnel of Dtstnct 10 \\Ill
conduct the meetmg Maps of
the plans for the htghway
changes are posted tn the post
offtces of Mtddleport, Pomeroy

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Elberfelds In Pomeroy

The ord mance reqUires that
residents tea rang down a
bmldmg w1 th a sewer must
secure a permit from Mayor
Zerkle Cost of the permit ts $2
per butldmg, accordmg to the
ord mance, wh tch also reqmrcs
that the butldmg mspector be
nottfted \\hen the butldmg ts
razed and any old sewers
capped so that the ca ppmg can
be mspected
If old sewers are found Incorrectly capped, the restdent
has seven days to correc t the
satuatton
Accord mg to the oi dtnance, a
resident has two month~ In l r~r

down a butldmg and cap the
sewer after securmg a permit
A lhi ee-mon th extensiOn can
be granted by the mayot The
ordmance Is not applicable as
far as ca ppmg old sewers ts
concerned 1f the sewers are to
be used by a replacement
structure However, the sewe1 s
must be used wt thtn a 60-&lt;iay
penod after the bmldmg ts
razed, or be capped Vwlators
of the ord mance ma) be ftned
$25 a day
Tentative plans of offtctals to
mvoke a hcense fee for cm n
operated amusement
machmes m busmess places

•

Fatr tomght and Wednesday
Lows tomght m the teens
except m the 20s tn the southwest portwn Warmer Wednesday wtth htghs tn the 30s m
the north and the 40s m the
south

were revtewed It was fe lt that
a $50 hce nse fee for machmes
wh1eh take a quarter 01 more
mtghl be fatr , 1\tth the fee to
dect ease for machmes takmg
smaller cows All council
members "ere asked to study
the matter and come up wtth
dehmte recommendations for
the new license program
Counc tl dtscussed at length
makmg a contrtbu!ton of $1.000
to the Mtddleport Ftre Dept
toward the purchase of tis ne"
eme r gency ambu l ance
Counctl Prestdent Fred Hoffman moved that the vtllage
make the contrtbutton to the

fund for th e emergency Audttor'sOfftce who told Grate
vehtcle He said he felt the the vtllage canno t legally make
vtllage should parhctpate
any contnbutJOn, so no further
The motton, seconded by action ts expected
Councilman Davtd Jenkms,
However, all vtllage offtctals
was left standmg when the commended the ftre departdtscussiOn became com- ment on 1ts work durmg the
phcated about the legaltty of diSCUSSIOn
The posstbthty of gtvmg the
such a contnbutaon and It was
ftre
department a contr tbuhon
agreed to contact the state
audttor's offtce m regard to the on the new emugency vehtcle
ma tter after a check had been from the revenue sharmg funds
made wtth sohct tor Bernard of the community also was
Fultz who recomme nded discussed However, 1t was
dtsclosed that fed eral revenue
further study.
Followmg the meeting, Clerk shar mg funds cannot be mtxed
- Treasurer Gene Grate called wt th other moneys In other
(Continued on page 8)
Harry Evans of the State

•

at

Now You Know

enttne

Although th ere are apprxmmately 1,600 spectes of
cockroaches known, only 62
spectes occur m North
Arnenca

Devoted To The lntere&amp;ts Of The Meigs-Mwon Area

VOL XXV NO 221

POMEROY MIOOLEPORl , OHIO

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1974

TENCENTS

PHONE 992 2156

President unmoveable on Watergate
. .,. .· · · · , . . . .
ews•. in Briefsf
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. ···=·=·=·=.·=-:::&lt;·=·=·=···=·
.
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By Umted Press International
WASHINGTON - CONTINUING ITS SEVEN-MONTH
attempt to get Prestdent Ntxon 's tapes, the Senate Watergate
commtttee says they "would prove of urunense, perhaps
declSlve, value m deterrmnmg the extent of malfeasance m the
executtve branch " The commtttee ftled a 4().page brtef m the U
S Court of Appeals Monday, argwng for a reversal of a rulmg by
District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell, who refused to order Ntxon to
yteld the tapes
"The commtttee has recetved confltctmg evtdence as to the
extent of wrongdomg at the pmnacle of gove rnment, much of tl
through testunony authorized by the Prestdent hunself As our
statement demonstrates, there has been sertous, potenttall)
credtble evtdence presented to the C&lt;Jmrmttee tendmg to show
that the Chtef Executtve hunself was engaged m wrongdomg,"
the brtef swd
" . Thts eVIdence, whtch bears dll'ectly on matters m dispute
and appears the best evtdence m that regard, would prove of
urunense, perhaps dectstve value m deterrmnmg the extent of
malfeasance m the executtve branch "
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON and his energy
chtef, William E Sunon, say the Shah of Iran ts wrong m
claunmg Arab otlts secretly entermg the Uruted States . Simon
Monday called the Shah's statement "trresponstble and JUS!
plam ndiculous " Ntxon, at his news conference, carefully
avotded such strong langWlge, but he swd the Shah's mformatwn
is "different from ours."
"We are getttng substanttally less from the 011 producmg
countries m the Middle East than we were gettmg before the
embargo," NIXon swd The Shah satd on televlSlon Sunday (CBS.
TV ) "60 Minutes" that tankers carrymg Arab oU to other parts
of the world have been changmg destmattons and bringmg the
Urnted States "more otlthan any t une m the past "
CINCINNATI - VOTERS IN OHIO'S FIRST Congresstonal
Dtstrtct, thetr ballots vtewed as "Wate rgste yardsttcks," go to
the polls one week from today wtth natwnal pohltcal observers
ready to measure sentunent toward Prestdent Ntxon
Democrat Tom Luken and Republican Wilhs Gradison both
plan a flurry. of rmal week campatgmng m thetr quest for the
CongresSional seat gtven up by Republtcan Wtlltam Keatmg, now
prestdent of the Cincmnatt Enqwrer
COLUMBUS - PROFESSIONAL SANCTIONS were leVIed
against the Southwest Local School Distnct m Hamtlton County
Monday by the Ohto Educatton Assoctallon
The sancttons, destgned to "warn prospecttve teachers about
condthons m the district, " came after negotiations between the
dislrtct school board and teachers broke down Teachers began a
work stoppage m the dispute Frtday and contmued it Monday,
settmg up ptckets at all 11 school bmldings wtthin the district
The Southwest Local Classroom Teachers Assoctatwn charged
that teachers m recent years have been dismtssed for no ar&gt;parent reason, mcludmg two past prestdents of th e teachers'
association
WNDON- SECRETARY OF STATE Henry A Kissmger,
conftdent Syrta ts Wlllmg to begm talks With Israel, called on
Brtltsh leaders today before flymg on to the Middle East for his
fourth peace mtssion to the rcgwn
Kissmger was scheduled to meet thts mormng wtth Brttlsh
Foretgn Secretary Sir Alec Douglas-Home, energy chief Lord
Carrmgton and former Prune Mtn1ster Harold W1lson, leader of
the opposttton Labor party

SUPP·HOSE®
PANTYHOSE

and Rutland and at the off tee of
th e Metgs Cou nty Commasswners fo r v1ewmg and
onentatwn p110r to the
meeting
Mayor John Zerkle pomted
out that Middleport should
make plans to ~ec ure funds
for general street upgrading
so that the community may
grow Personnel of the Gavin
Plant were lost to Athens.
Gallipolis and other comtnunities. the mayor satd
Coun ctl gave the second of
three readmgs to a new ordmance deahng wtlh the razmg
of butldmgs m the commumty

SAN FRANCISCO - THE LACK of communtcatton from the
kidnapers of Patrtcta Hearst ts takmg tts toll on the emotions of
her parents For the ftrst tune smce negottaltons by tape
recording and televtsed news conference got started, the Symbionese Libera !ton Army has gone more than three days without
responding to pubhsher Randolph A Hearst's efforts to wm his
daughter's release
Hearst and his wtfe Catherme, desert bed by thetr children as
"Just dried out, but hopmg," mamlamed !hell' own silence at the
family estate m suburban Hillsborough. They no lifted the press
they would have no further statements "until there ts a major
development "

Gas costlier to
Pomeroy patrons
Columbta Gas of Ohto
customers m Pomeroy wtll
begin paymg more per month
for natural gas begmmng Aprtl
I , 11 was reported today The
adJustment, one and 95 onehundredths cents per 1,000
cubtc feet, reflects an mcrease
m the cost of gas to Columbta
Gas of Ohio from tts suppher It
wtll result m the mcrease of
about 29 cents a month for the
average customer who heats
wtth gas.
Rates of 316 Ohio communtties are bemg adjusted
under ,provtstons of thetr
contracts wttb the utility.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Cloudy Thursday with a
chance of rain or snow north
portion t' rlday and ram In
the south ending on Saturday. Highs In the 40s in the
north and the 50s In the south
on Thursday. Lows In !he
30s. Highs by Saturday In the
30s .and lows In the 20s.

YOUTH DIES
Mtchael Clark, 16-year.old
son of Gene and Evelyn Cook
Clark dted Monday mght at
Chtldren's Hospttal, Columbus.
Funeral a{rangements wtll be
an nounced by Ewing Funeral
Home

Instead Ntxon satd he offered
to meet personally wtth Spec tal
Prosecutor Leon Jaworski or to
answer written questions But
he satd Jaworskt "dtd not want
to proceed that way "
Rebable sources swd the
unpre cedented req ues t for
Ntxon to testtfy came on
"direct mstruchons" from the
gran d Jury which offered to
meet the Prestdent at the
Whtt e House or th e U S
Distnct Court House
In a prevtew of a hrtef hts
la\\yers wtll ft le wtth the House
Judtctary Commtttee, Ntxon
narrowly defmed the ground
for Impeachment as a
"cruntnal offense on th e part of
the prestdent "
Won't Resign
His vtew clashes wtth a study
by the comrmttee's legal staff
that a prestdent can be unpeached for fwlmg to fulfill his
co nstttuhon al duttes and
VIolatmg hts oath of offi ce
" It ts my behef that the
House, after tt conducts tts
( tmpeachment) mquiry, will
not reach that determrnat10n, "
he satd. "I do not expect to be
unpeached "
Ntxon hedged on whether he
wtll cooperate wtth the House
JudiCiary Commtltee's request
Although sc hools of the for Whtte House mformatton
Metgs Local School Dtstrtct He satd he would do nothmg to
were closed Monday, hopefully
to break the back of the near
eptdemtc of apparent flu·
rela led tllnesses among puptls,
absenteetsm across the dtstnct
sttll stood at 26 5 per cent
today
Supt George Hargraves satd
today attendance at six schools
had tmproved Tuesday but that
three had worsened
No tnjurtes were reported
Fnday, when tl was dectded
to close the dtstrtct's schools and no ctlahons were Issued m
Monday, absenteetsm stood at four trafftc acctd ents across
29 8 percent Hardest htl the county Monday
The shertff's Dept satd that
Tuesday was the Pomeroy
Elementary School wt!h 44 8 at 12 15 p m Monday Anthony
absent, or 176 out of 393 E Cardtllo, 17, Rt I, Langsstudents Harnsonvtlle School vtlle, was headed east on SR
had mcreased to a 37 8 ( 46 out 124 in Rutland when he crossed
of 127), and Rutland ha s ratlroad tracks whtch caused
worsened, gomg to 38 9 percent his left front ttre to blo" out.
Cardillo's auto went out of
(88 out of 226)
Some sc hools had tmproved control , crossed to the left stde
over the weekend and the of the road where t! htt an
Monday break For example , embankment, and stopped on
the Bradbury School had 44 the lawn of Mr and Mrs R
students out on Fnday but Pterce Damage was heavy to
today had dropped to 22 absent the auto's nght front fender ,
On Frtday the Sallsbury School front bumper and left and nght
had 81 abse nt whtch today had doors
Juamta J Roush, 47, Rl I,
dropped to 51
Mea nttme, the Sahsbury Shade, was slopped on SR 7
PTA which had earher post- bypass to make a left hand turn
poned a meetmg to honor past onto SR 124 when a followm g
prestdents
and
had auto, dnv en by Alta E
rescheduled tt for thts evemng, Murray , 56, Rt 2, Pomeroy.
dcctded to cancel the meetmg ran in to the rear of the Roush
altogether and not meet un!tl auto , ca usmg moderate
damage to both vehtcles The
March
The death of one Metgs Htgh acctdent occ urred at apScho ol student who had proxtmately 2 20 p m
Della M Cross, 17, of Racme,
become til Saturday was
was drtvmg on SR 124 m
reported
Hargraves satd that he wtll Racine when she stopped for a
be keepmg a watchful eye ca r stopped m front of her
tomorrow on the attendance when a lhtrd car drtven by
record to see whtch way the Constance L. Roush , 17, also of
Racme, ran mto the rear of the
tllness jS movmg
Cross auto Moderate damage
was reported to both vehicles
By HELEN THOMAS
WASHINGTON iUPI)
Prestdent Ntxon aga m Monday
mght took a tough Watergate
stand-narrowly defmmg the
gro unds fot unpeachment and
declarmg · "! do not expect to
be tmpeached "
It was th e Prestdent's ftrst
televised news conference
smce last October He ar&gt;peared confident, bul grun at
times durmg the 411-mmute
news conference, durmg which
he dtscussed hts future m offace, his taxes, the energy
crt sts, and hts party 's
prospects m vtew of
Watergate
The Prestdent reveaied that
he )lad been asked to testtfy
before a federa l grand Jury
mvesttgstmg the Watergate
scandals but swd he had
"respectfully de chned" on
constttuttonal grounds

Illness
showing
tiny drop

Bad tire
put auto
on lawn

JURY CALLED
Metgs County Common Pleas
Court Judge John C Bacon has
ca tied a sesston of the grand
Jury for March 4, 1974 begmmng at 9 a.m

CLOTHING OFFERED
Free Clothmg day wtll be held
at the Salvatton Army Home,
Butternut Ave., Thursday fr om
10 a m until noon. All area
residents are welcome

At12 55pm Monday Roy C.
Chevaher,62, Rl I, Reedsvtlle,
hadparkedhtsautom the Reed.
Brothers Store parkmg lot on
SR 124 when an untdenbfted
car backed mto the left stde of
hts vehtcle Mmor damage was
caused to Chevaher's auto

weaken th e presidency , to
compromtse th e nghts of
Watergate defendants or to
unpatr the spec1al prosecutor's
case In short, he mdicated that
the ktnd of cooperatton the
panel ts seekmg wtll not be
forthcommg wtthout a fight
On the pohttcal front, Ntxon
repeated that he wtll not restgn
even tf the Repubhcans meet
" dtsastrous defeat" m th e
November congressional elccttons "I wa nt my party to

succeed," he explamed, "but
more unportant I want the
prestdency to survive "
'We have a lot of work left to
do, more than three years left
to do It, and I am go mg to stay
here unttl I get tt done "
Recells Trutnan Win
He tssued an tmphctt call to
GOP candtdates to stay m his
camp even tf they have to run
aga tnst Democrats callmg for
Nixon's unpeachment or restgnatto n He satd he wanted

"deservtng " Republtcan
candtdates to wm, and he
recalled that when the GOP
made Prestdent Trllffian the
tssue m 1948 after Sen J
Wtlltam Fulbnght, D-Ark ,
for
Truman's
called
restgnatton, the party "took a
very bad hckmg "
"I think tt will be a very good
year for those candtdates who
stand for the admmtstratton,"
he satd
Ntxon told reporters that he

had no knowledge that his
personal lawyer, Herbert W
Kalmbach Jr , offered an
ambassadorship to J Ftfe
Symmgton Jr , of Lutervtlle,
Md , m exchange for a $100,000
campatgn contrtbutton m 1970
Kalmbach pleaded gutlty
earlter Monday to two VIolabans of elcctton laws, mcludmg
th e offer of the ambassadorship to Symmgton
I Continued on page 8)

He's Superintendent Ohlinger now
Terry Ohhnger, Phtlo, formerly of sc tence degree at Ohw Umverstty m 1966
Pomeroy and Mtddleport and a former and hts Master's Degree m school ademplo) e of the Metgs Loca l School mmtstra!ton from 0 U m 1970
Dtstrtct, has been named superintendent
Ohhnger comments that he has enof the Frankhn Loca l School Dtslrtet ef- JOyed hts past asstgnment m the Frankhn
fecbvc next Aug l
School Dtstnct and ts lookmg forward to
Ohhnger, the son of Mr and Mrs
hts new role He expressed a destre to
Herm an Oh ltn ger 112 Condor St , contmue progress the school system has
Pomeroy, ts the husband of the former been makmg over the past year
Coleen Wtlson of Mtddleport They have
Don Patsley, Frankhn Local Board of
two sons, Jay Wtlson, 5, and Jon Wayne, 2
The Frankhn Local District takes tn Educatton Prestdent, in makmg the anan area of 50 square m1Ies and has an nouncement of Ohlinger's promotton said
enrollmen t of approximately 2,800 the board of educatton feels that Ohlmger
students, kmdergarten through 12 There hold s the personal and professional
are seven bmldmgs m the dtstrtct - four qualtties the board deems tmportant to the
elementa ry , two JUnt or htgh butldmgs and dtstrict
Ohhnger holds professwnal memPhtlo Htgh School
bershtp
m the Ohto Secondary Prmctpals
Formerly a lugh school teacher and
Assn
,
the
Duncan Falls-Phtlo Lions Club,
federal program coordmator m the Metgs
Local Sc hool Dtslrtct, Ohhnger wen t to the ts acttve m the Fellowship of Chrtsban
Franklin Local Distract as ass ista nt Athletes and ts a member of the North
pnncapal and then was named assistant Terrace Church of Chrtst m Zanesvtlle.
The two older brothers of Ohlinger,
prtnctpal at Phtlo Htgh School
A 1962 graduate of Pomeroy Htgh Phtlhp and Wilham, restde m the Pomeroy
Sc hool, Ohlmger recetved ht s bachelor of area

\
)

TERRY OHLINGER

Night watchman needed
Pollee Chtef Jed Webster told
the Pomeroy Chamb er of
th e
Commerce Monday
busmess comm umty badly
needs a mght watchman to cut
down crtme
The veteran offtcer spoke
followmg the noon lun cheon at
the Metgs Inn He sa td ftve
"front door" B&amp;Es have occurred m the past ft ve weeks m
the vtllage
Webster satd he would help
the chamber many way when a
mgh t watchman ts htred He
also satd he beheved tne
merchants want a mght wa tchman on duly. Webster offered
to asstst m mtervtewmg apphcants and sa td he would
"bend over backwards " to
help
The chamber for several
weeks has been accept mg
apphcahons for the [Ob The
salary would depend entirely
upon the local merchants'
collections
Webster satd tl would be
necessary for the watchman to
attend school as requtred by
law He would hav~ne year to
take the reqwred tratrtmg The
watchman would be allowed to
rtde 1n the pollee crutser but
would not be allowed to operate
tt smce he would not be patd by

the vtilage
Earl Ingels, prestdent, mvtted persons mterested 1n the
JOb to place thetr apphcations
wtth Mrs Carolyn Thomas,
secretary The chamber office
IS l&lt;x:ated on the ground floor of
the courthouse
In other busmess, Ingels
announced that the excursiOn
boat, "Chaperone" had been
cha rte red for a four hour
crutse on the Ohto May 18,
ieavmg Pomeroy at 9 a.m
Ttckets are $6 per person or
$10 a couple and may be purchased at the cham ber offtce
Mustc wtll be provtded by
Armand at the organ Refreshments wtll also be avatlabie
There are only 400 ttckets
ava ilable for the cruase
Ingels also reported that he
has been mformed that Mtddleport Mer chants are In terested m a stdewalk sale
dunng Regatta weekend He
has had no response from
Pomeroy merchants Ingels
suggested that tf Pomeroy
merchants wtsh to form a
merchants assocta!ton to call
the chamber office
The chambe r agreed to
support a clean-up campatgn
tmltated by Mrs Margaret
Follrod and wtll dtrecl a letter
.

Drug law abuse char.·u;ed
~·

Robert Alexander, Rt 2,
Albany, has been charged '"
Metgs County Court wtlh three
counts related to vtolatton of
drug laws stemmmg from a
February 8 ratd on hts house by
the Metgs County Shenff's
Dept. whtch resulted 1n the
LOCAL TEMP
conflsca hon of $15,000 worth of
The temperature m down- drugs and manjuana
town Pomeroy at II a m
Alexander ha s been charged
Tuesday was 27 degrees under w1th not bemg a manufacturer,
sunny sktes
w~olesaler, ,practitiOner ,

to Pomeroy Vtllage Counctl 1n
regard to 1ts support.
fngels also satd a theme for
thts year's Regatta ts needed
The board of dtrectors wtll
meet Monday, March 4 at noon
at the Metgs Inn
Ralph Welker, who IS a
State
ca ndtdate
for
Representattve m the May
Pnmary met wtth the
chambe r Welker will be

Mrs. Parker dies
RUTLAND - Mrs Betty
Jean Parker, 45, Salem Sl ,
Rutland, dted Monday at the
Holzer Medical Center
She was born July 11, 1928, in
Rutland, to Roy F and Reva
Smder Snowden She was
marrted to Homer Parker, who
survtves , March 17, 1947
Mrs Parker was a member
of the Rutland Fr iendly
Gardeners and officer of
Reg ton lT Ohio Assoctahon of
Garden Clubs She was an
offtcer m the Leadmg Creek
Conservancy Distrtct, past
officer of Metgs County TB and
Health Assoctalton and was
active m many school and
communtty events
In addthon to her hilllband
and parents, she ts survtved by
one daughter, Mrs. James

Veterans Memorial Hospital
pharmacist or owner of a
ADMISSIONS - Doro thy
pharmacy or other person
Shambhn,
Dexter, Barbara
authonzed to admtmster or
Prat
t,
Syracuse;
Edward
dtspense nar cotic drugs ,
Athens,
Edtth
McCoy,
Batley,
havmg m hts possess1on, w1th
mtent
to
produce Syracuse
DISCHARGES- Roy Tracy,
hallucmattons or tllusions,
Smtih, Ina Massar,
Carroll
martjuana, and possessmg for
Jean
Smtih,
Pearl Hoffman,
sale an hallucmogen
Alexander has been bound James Hemsley, Georgta
over to the grand Jury on the Oller, Delbert Teaford, Steven
charges ftled by Metgs County Ra ymond, Glenna Little,
Shertff Robert C Hartenhach Worley Haley
I

WlOpposed m May Weiker
stated that "if everyone works
together" hts elechon can
become a reahty
Others attendmg Monday's
meeting were John Weeks,
Rtchard Chambers, f\ichard
Poulm, Nor bet Compton, Vtrgil
Teaford, Wendell Hoover,
Ralph Graves, Bob Jacobs,
Jack Kerr, Mrs Thomas,
Beulah Jones and Kahe Crow

(Linda Sue) Carpenter , Reedsville, two brothers, Leland,
Pamesvtlle, and Caroll,
Galltpolis, two ststers, Mrs
Bruce (Joan) May, Rutland,
and Mrs. Charles (Phy IllS )
Stmpkms, Columbus; one
grandson, Jaymes Carpenter,
Reedsville, and several meces
and nephews
She attended the Rutland
Church of Chrtst where servtces will be conducted Thurs·
day at 2 p.m by the Rev. Floyd
E. Grunm Burtal wtll follow m
the Metgs Memory Gardens
Frtends may call anytune
after 1a m Wednesday until12
noon Thursday at !be Walker
Funeral Home, Rutland The
body wtll lie m state at the
church prior to the funeral
RECORD SALES
DAYTON,Ohio (UPI)- The
Dayco Corp
announced
Monday record ftrst.&lt;Juarter
sales of $101 88 millton for !be
ftrst quarter of 1973, a 14 per
cent mcrease over the ftrst
three months of last year Net
proftts, after taxes, were $1.65
mtlhon, up 4 per cent from the
same 1973 ,pertod. Prtmary
earmngs per' share for the ftrst
quarter were 50 cents, compared wt~ 48 cents Ia~ year.

�I .

•

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 25, 1974

Golf's newest star:Thompson

. DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

What causes pericarditis?
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. draw off the excess fluid
DEAR DR. LAMB - I would through a needle inserted into
like to kn ow something about the distended sac. It is like
perica rdi tis, or which ever draining a large blister.
Very rarely the inflamed
carditis affects the outer lining
of the heart? If one has the pericardia} sac can undergo
outer li ning removed ca n one sca rring and in the process
expect a complete recovery or constrict the heart 's ability to
can one expec t to be a semi· beat properly . This is literally
invalid for the rest of one's adhesions of the heart. This
life' What is the life ex- usually occ urs much later or
pectancy of this disease' What with rare cases of pericarditis
caused by tuberculosis. In
ca uses it ?
DEAR READER - The these insta nces the sac can he
outer surface of the heart is stripped away, literally freeing
coated with a thin membrane. the heart of adhesions.
You can't say before the
This same membrane con·
tinues to form a loose fitting operation just how successful it
outer sac . The entire mem- will be. When the pericardium
brane is called the pericardium over the heart muscle is in(meaning around the heart ).
When it is inflamed it is called
pericarditis. The "itis" means
inflammation .
Inflammation ca n have
many causes, including a viral
infection and even chemical
irritation. In many instances By WU.BUR G. LANDREY
the cause of the inflamed UPI Foreign Editor
pericardium is not known. It
WASHINGTON (UPI ) cannot be demonstrated to be Secretary of Stale Henry A.
caused by a virus or a bacteria Kissinger undertook his fourth
in those cases . The term and toughest Middle East
"idiopathic" is used in this mission loday, optimistic that
case, which is a fancy medical he can begin to bring Syria lnlo
term for " I don 't know."
the peace talks with Israel.
In many instances, the
U.S. officials said that
episode of pericarditis ls sell- Kissinger's optimism that he
limited and is not serious. In can b~eak the deadlock came
these cases no surgery is from the fact that he is going to
needed. In such cases the life the Middle East at the specific
expectancy is good. It can request of four Arab heads of
cause chest pain and even state, including President
cause confusion with a heart Hafez Assad of Syria, who met
attack , particularly in in- earlier this month In Algiers.
dividuals in the heart attack
Specifically, U.S. officials
age group. Rarely fluid will appeared optimistic also that
accumulate in the sac, between Syria will turn over to
the membrane part covering Kissinger the list of up to 80
the heart itself and the rest of Israeli prisoners captured in
the sac. lf enough fluid collects the October war--an issue that
it causes pressure on the heart has blocked any troop disenand can interfere with its gagement so far on the Syrian
normal filling mechanism. front.
This can seriously interfere
There was widespread exwith the circulation. In such pectation in diplomatic circles
rare problems the doctor can

named, the heart muscle itself
is usually inflamed . Part of the
success of th e opera lion
depends upon how much of the
heart muscle has also been
damaged with the disease . If
there is little or no damage
then an excellent recovery can
be expected .
Voucan'tsay too much about
the prognosis after surgery
without knowing what th e
cause really is, tuberculosis,
virus, or idiopathic. However, I
would like to reassure you that
in many instances of the
disease there is little or no
importan I damage to the heart
muscl e, and after surgery

there is usually an excellent
recovery with a good outlook
for the future. This is an
example of another opera tion
that was difficult or impossible
not too long ago. Before antibiotics, chest surgery for any
reason was done as a last
resort.

Send your questions to Dr.
Lamb, In care ol this newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551, Radio
City Station, New York, N. Y.
10019. For a copy of Dr. Lamb's
hooklet on losing weight, send
50 cents to the same address
and ask for " Losing Weight"
booklet.

HAK off again
that if Kissinger succeeds in
breaking the deadlock, the
Arab oil embargo against the
United States will be lifted, too.
Kissinger's first stop was to
he London, where he will hold
talks Tuesday with British
Foreign Secretary Sir Alec
Douglas-Home about oil and
about his mission before flying
on to meet Assad in Damascus.
Kissinger's mission is expected,
lo last at least a week.
Mter Damascus, he is expected to go lo Jerusalem, and
if he gets the list, he will
transmit it to the Israeli
government there. The optimism that he will get the list
was heightened by a report in
the semi-official Egyptian
newspaper, AI Abram, that he
will.
Israel has insisted that Syria
release the names and allow
the International Red' Cross to
visit the prisoners before
beginning any talks on disengagement of troops.

From Jerusalem, U.S. officials said Kissinger would
probably fly to Cairo. There he
and President Anwar Sadat of
Egypt may officially resume
the diplomatic relations broken
in 1967 after the Middle East
war before last.
Kissinger and Sadat agreed
on the resumption of relations
on a previous Kissinger trip
and they have already exchanged ambassadors.
U.S. officials said Kissinger
did not expect lo negotiate the
actual disengagement on this
trip. What he hopes, they said,
is to get an agreement to start
nego t i a tin g
th e
disengagement.
After returning 1 from a
Western Hemisphere conference in Mexico City on
Saturday, Kissinger briefed
President Nixon in Washington
on SUnday and then lunched
with Egyptian
Foreign
Minister Ismail Fahmi before
seeing Fahmi off for home.

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
(UPI ) - The' pro golf tour's
newest star, 27-year-old Leonard Thompson, has time to
think ahout the money today$52,000.
. The hulking North Carolinian
won the country's second
riches t tournament, the
$260,000 Jackie Gleason Inverrary Golf Classic, Sunday
by a single stroke and said, "I
never thought about the
money." It was his first
tour nament victory after
turning pro four years ago,
although he managed to earn
$91,000 last year.
Thompson looked like he was
scrambling in the final two
rounds over the watery, 7,128yard Inverrary course. But his
SUnday shooting netted him a
68-278, 10 strokes under par.

By United Pre•• International
What's wrong with UCLA?
Nothing at all.
The Bruins, who've won nine
national titles in a row, proved
that their lost weekend in
Oregon was just a temporary
aberration.
They clobbered Washinglon
99-65 Saturday night after
blasting Washington Stale 93-88
Friday night. That ran their
lastest winning streak to two
straight.
John Wooden, the UCLA
coach, tried to be cautious. "I
may be getting senile bull was

WASffiNGTON (UP!) - The
House of Representatives is
about to learn just how far
President Nixon will cooperate
in what ooe member calis its
gi'and inquest"
Rep. Edward Hutchinson,
the ranking Republican
member of the House
Judiciary Committe, said
SUnday his panel is ready to
send the White House a list of
confidential
tapes
and
documents it wants to begin its
14

votes by a two-thirds majority without going all the way they signed a "temporary
to do so. That day is closer than around Mrica.
agreement" which Nixon has
many anti-Castroites realize
Appears a Standoff
asserted will be converted into
but farther away than many Strategically, it appears to a workable treaty by the end of
pro-Castroites may believe . he a standoff, especially in the 1974. It is difficult to see how.
Havana-Washington reconcili- nuclear age. That may very
When the ''temporary" ofation will be forced by events well be one reason 'why Russia fensive deal was signed,
and not a desire for reconcilia- and the United States finally Russia had more misslies but
tion.
decided to stop trying only to the United States had more
ABigCiue
"persuade' their clients 1o nuclear warheads . This was
Meanwhile, the While House settle their differences and because the United States in
and the Kremlin have bigger finally took a direct hand in the 1968 mastered the art of putting
results of detente may be, they fish to fry and both are anxious negotiations.
multiple-headed warheads on
hope for the best. Brezhnevt- 1o gef on with-it.
One aspect of Soviet policy each missile, with each warpresumably shares their hope U.S. officials acknowledge puzzles many u.S. officials. head Independently targeted.
Will Catch Up
although his objectives are that the outcome of the in- Russia last September, for the
different in mnny respects.
lernational peace effort In the first time, urged her Arab Now, the Russians also have
Reconciliation of objectives Middle East could provide a friends to use their oil as a succeeded in mastering the
is what Soviet-American big clue as to the ability of the "political weapon" in their mystery of the MIRV (Multiple
detente is all about. How to do two nuclear superi&gt;Owers lo struggle against Israel. They Independent-Targeted Reit without incinerating the cooperate in defusing an issue have urged this a couple of entry Vehicle) . While she is
northern hemisphere is what that could lead to a wider times since. Was this because several years behind the
diplomacy in the nuclear age is holocaust.
Russia recognized in 1971, United Stales In technique,
all about.
The Soviet Union for years when the major oil compnnies Russia undoubtedly will catch
Watch Polley Shlfto
has armed the Arabs to · the let the Arabs break the solid up and any treaty based on
Nixon and Kissinger intend teeth, supported thetr aspira- price front, that it was a whole present realities would be very
to continue dealing with the lions and joined in their new ballgame and she had 4isadvantageous to the
Russians on a basis of good damnation of "Zionist Israel". better advise her friends how Americans by the end of tile
faith . They will assume, unless The United States has taken to use their new.found power? decade. It is impossible to
strong evidence develops lo the Israel's side, selling arms at Or was it merely a device by detect the number of warheads
contrary, that the factors that cut-ra~ prices on easy terms, the Kremlin to give her friends on a missile without on-llite
impelled the Kremlin to seek supporting Tel Aviv's argu- a bit more bargaining power inspection, which Russia has
an era of improved relations ments when they came close to which Russia could control? always resisted. This has
And why, after this anti- resulted in a deadlock in the
are still operative In the for- conforming to United Nations
mulation of Soviet policy. They ukases, and permitting deduc- Western maneuver, did SALT II talks. Negotiations
watch closely, of course, for lion from income taxes of Moscow join with the United haveresurnedthismonth,after
any indications of policy shifts contributions to the United States in setting up the Geneva a lengthy recess, in an effort to
in Moscow that could imperil Jewish Appeal.
Peace Conference and lean on break this deadlock.
U.S. Interests. So far they
The Russian objective In the Egyptians and others to
Russia and the United states
apparently have sighted trying lo extend its hegemony attend?
each has enough nuclear
nothing conclusive, although to the Middle East has been
The answers will not become firepower to destroy the other
there ~s been some puzzle- said since the time of Peter the clear until the whole Middle several times over. Why then
men! about the Kremlin's true Great to stem from the desire East drama is played out- If it this continued struggle to see
objectives in the Middle East. for warm water ports. The ever is.
· that the other does not get an
Soviet leaders approach Soviet Union now has those In
LimltatlonofWeapans
advantage ? Because, apthetr dealings with the United Somalia, along with the use of · An issue that dwarfs even the parently, the nuclear equation
States in much the same spirit ports in Yemen as well as some Middle East in its potential has escalted from ihe-strategic
of cautious reciprocity. Mediterranean ports.
significance concerns the Sovi- 1o the political.
Moscow's real objective at et-American efforts to agree on
Brezhnev, explaining to the
Cubans earlier this month his this point In the 20th Century limitation nnd reduction of
country's attitude toward probably is the same as that of nuclear strategic weapons.
detente, said Moscow Intends the United States -to exercise
So far SALT 11, the official
lo pursue "oor principled 1\ne the dominant political, name for the second round of
"In relations with the United ' economic and strategic role at :Strategic Arms .Limitations
states provided that "the other a vital crossroads of sea lanes Talks, has made little progress
Elmer V. Windon, 81, a mall
side reciprocates''.
in an area where lie the most of since it began 1n Novemcarrier
in Pomeroy for 20
Soviet Foreign Minister An- theworld'sprovenoilreserves. ber, 1972. At the Summit in
years, died Friday evening at
drei Gromyko accompanied - Argiiinents that Russia goi May, 1972 Nixon and Brezhnev the Veterans Adrnlnisb'atlon
Brezhnev to Cuba early in the better of the agreement for signed a rtreaty limiting Hospital in Dayton. A veteran
February and then paid a initial Israeli withdrawal be- ' defensive ballistic nuclear of World War I, he served in
relatively brief vialt to Wa- . cause it will enable Egypt to weapons, the s~Ued ABM's.
shington, where he conferred open the Suez Canal - thus Each side is limited to 200 of France . ,He was preceded in death by
with both Nixon and Kissinger. ·vastly shortening the distance these , and at two widely
two
brothers, Emmett arul
This naturally sparked Soviet naval vessels must separated sites. The theory is
Eber.
Sl!fViVing is one . son,
speculatlon that Moscow was b'avelto get~ the Persian Gulf that such an arrangement
AHred
Burl Windon, Wehe
trying to get .Havall8 I!Jld smce they wtll not have lo sail couldn't provide much If any
'Washmgton to kiss and m8ke-att1he way around Asia from defense and thus would Terrace, Pom~roy ; two
up. Such speculation was not Vladiso9tok - are not per- discouarge either side on- nephews, Philip Windon, of
indulged in by those who know suasive. The advantage for the dertaking a "first strike" with Carroll, and Paul Windon of
the depth nnd bitterness of United States is almost as Its offensive weapons since it Magadore ; and a niece, Mrs.
Nixon's feelings about Cuba. great. Vessels of the 6th U. S. would be defenseless' against Lois Drake, Zanesville.
Funeral services will 'be held
. The United States will grudg- Fleet can go through tile canal retaliation.
at
t ' p.m. Tuesday at the
mgly agree to readmit. Cuba lo to the Persi!UI Gulf and also to
At the 1972 Summit, the two
the status of diplomatic equal- tile n.ew base Washinglon ·is sides were unable to come up Protestant Chapel at the
Ity only when the Organization bulldmg on Diego Garcia with a real treaty on offensive hospital. Burial will be in the
of American States (OAS) Island in the Indian Ocean nuclear strategic weapons. So · Veterans Admi nistration
National Cemtery at Dayton.
~
l'

Elmer Windon
died on Friday

'

1,.

never confident that we would
win the NCAA. 1 said we had as
good a chance as anyone--and
we have.
"Every game from now on is
sudden death as far as we are
concerned."
Keith Wilkes, playing his
final home game for UCLA,
scored 31 points in the triumph
over Washington. "I think
we're over our slump," Wilkes
said, ''the other two national
titles don't mean anything to
me at this point. There's only
one goal. That's to win this
year."

House to get Nixon word

More than one
way to support
a family

I

By Denny Fobes
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Nor th Gallia Pirates proved
that their rece nt surge in SVAC
basketball circles is no fluke,
as the lads of Jim Foster
derailed the Eastern Eagles,
72-62 here Saturday night in the
semi-finals of the Meigs Sectional Basketball Tournament.
The Pirates will meet the
Southern Tornados Saturday at
7:30 to decide who will adva nce
lo the Chillicothe Distri ct.
North Gallia, currently one
of the hottes t teams in the area,
used the scoring of guards Tim
Stout and Greg James, and the
leaping ability of James and
forwa rd Sterling Logan to
outduel the Eagles 19-10 in the
third quar ter enroute to that

There's nothing wrong with UCLA

FAMILY LIB

J

aglesplucked·

Littler and Roy Pace, who led
the third roWJd along with
Thompson and Tommy Aaron,
tied at 282. Aaron &amp;kied to a 75
in the final rotmd for a 285 total.
Thompson said he p~ with
single-mindedness to get the
ball into the cup without
thinking about winning or
money. Mter a spectacular GOya rd chip for a tap In par at 17,
all Thompson had to do lo win
was play safe on 18. He
kn ocked his drive behind a
tree.
From there, he snaked a low
four-iron between trees and on
1o the back .side of the green
from where he two putted for
par and victory . He said his
wife, Le~. was more excited
than he when he telephoned her
at their home in Lumberton,•
N.C.

sectional win.

Critical tests facing detente

Editor's Note : This Is the
third of eight dispatches dealing with major world decisions
during 1974.
_By STEWART HENSLEY
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
durability of the Soviet-American detente, proclaimed not
quite two years ago at the
Moscow Summit Conference, is
being tested on several critical
fronts.
The Middle East, the oil
crisis and the effort to agree on
limitation and reduction of
nuclear weapons are the three
problems that preoccupy U.S.
officials at present--although
there are ple.nty of others
which plague relations between
Moscow
and
Washington.
President Nixon's planned
visit to Moscow in June may
result in considerable progress
and clarification--and It may
not. It will be easier to make a
judgment on that after Seeretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger completes his
preparatory trip to the Soviet
capital late next month. Meanwhile, opinions vary.
Divert Attention
Nixon's critics contend that
his Moscow visit will prove to
be cosmetic rather than substantive, designed to divert
public attention from his
domestic difficulties . They
note that plans for the 1974
Nixon visit to Moscow were announced with considerable fanfare during the Son Clemente
meeting he held last June with
Soviet Communist party boss
Leonid I. Brezhnev. If Nixon
failed to make the trip, they
argue, the world would asswne
that the era of accommodation
between the two nuclear giants
had ended.
Nixon's associates and aides
contend, however , that
progress is being made on a
number of issues and the
Nixon-Brezhnev ' summit this
year will be very productive.
They believe the necessity to
meet a deadline generates a
momentum that helps progress
toward solutions.
While high officials here may
not be sure what , final

Chirklnian, told Trevino at the'
17th green they could show his
putt on television if he would
hold up 20 seconds for a
commercial to end.
Trevino was only one shot
back of Thompson at the time.
He joked with Scott a moment,
then missed his 21)-foot try for a
birdie, leaving it 10 inches
short. Without hothering to set
up, he tl)en missed the 10-inch
putt and took a bogey 5 on the
hole. Obviously upset, Trevino
then proceeded to bogey the
final hole, winding up three
strokes behind Thompson.
Tied at 281 with Trevino in
fourth place were Andy North
with a closing 68, and Jack
Nicklaus and young Lanny
Wadkins with the best rounds
of the day- 7-under-par 65s.
First round leader Gene

His round included seven
birdies and three hogeys.
Seven-year pro Hale Irwin of
Kirkwood, Mo., missing a 11&gt;foot biFdle. try on the final hole
which coul&lt;t· have thrown him
into a playoff with Thompson,
finished with a second place 68
- 279 worth $29,640.
Getting a third place $18,640
all by hlmseH was 53-year-old
Julius Boros with a 67- 280
finish in his first regular tour
event of the year.
Defending champion Lee
Trevino carded a closing round
69 for a 281 total and set off a
rhubarb Involving two veteran
CBS televiaion sportscasters,
director Frank Chirkinian and
announcer Ray Scott. Trevino
claimed the pair cost him the
lournament when Scott, relaying a joking comment from

J

impeachment investigation.
"It has not been sent yet, but
I think It will be sent this
week," Hutchinson told TV
interviewers (CBS ''Face the
Nation" ).
Nixon reportedly has told
congressional confidants he
will "fight like hell" against
impeachment. Many think he
will withhold at least some
While House materials--dting
exerutive privilege.
Hutchinson said he thinks
Nixon has some right to fend
off unreasonable demands, but
that the HOIIB&lt;'--IIcting as a
kind of constitutional "grand
inquisitor"--also has full right
to all relevant evidence.
"The President has a right to
protect himself In his official
capacity, and his. branch of
government fr~m improper
demands on the part of either
of the other two branches," he
said.
"But of course here is this
constitutional power of impeachment, which is a grand
Inquest of the nation.
"And so in that role the
House of Representatives, as
the grand inquisitor, certainly
does have a right, I believe, to
relevant Information touching
upon possible impeachable actions of the President."
Up to this point, the House
panel has been preoccupied
with organizing for its work,
obtaining full House approval
for sweeping subpoena powers
and considering what is an
impeachable offense.
Hutchinson said he thought
the Presldent'.s own lawyers
should be permitted to crossexamine witnesses once the
Judiciary Committee gets rolling on its investigation. But he
said that issue had not been
decided upon by the commiltee.
CLUB TO MEET
MASON - There will be a
meeting of Jim's Camper
Softball Club for all old
members and any new
member that wants to sign to
play this summer at Bob's
Recreation Center in Mason at
2 p.m. Sunday, March 2. For
more infonnation call 773-8503.
2 BROTHERS WIN
LAKE PLACJb, N.Y. (UPI)
- Austria's Manfred Schmid

and his brother, Rudolph,
finished one-two Sunday In the
first International men's
singles luge eompetltion ever
held in the United states.
Manfred was clocked in 2:59.57
and Rudolph In 3:00.48.

The D1i1J Senliirel

Both Washington State coach
George Raveling and Washing:
ton coach Marv Harshman
picked the Bruins in the March
9th rematch with Southern
California in the L.A. Sports
Arena after they lost to the two
teams last weekend.
Raveling said, "UCLA is still
the best team in the nation."
Harshman: "I would have 1o
put my money on UCLA in a
game between those two."
And you'd have to put your
money on UCLA to repeat as
national champions, too.
Southern California, which is
ranked ninth and is now tied
with the Bruins for the ~acific
Eight lead, beat Washmgton
7~ and Washinglon state 11&amp;59 over the weekend.
It's now taken for granted
that the March 9th battle
between the two teams will
decide the Pacific Eight crown
and a trip to the NCAA tournament.
Roo's 30-Ft. Jumper
UCLA and USC play California and Stanford this weekend In preparation for that
showdown which is the regular
season finale for both clubs.
Elsewhere among the top 10
over the weekend, only Vanderbil\ and Pittsburgh were in
the Joss column. Eighth-ranked
Pittsburgh had its 22-game
winning streak snapped by
PeiUI State 66-64 and the fifthrated Commodores fell prey lo
neighboring Tennessee, 59-53.
Top-ranked North Carolina
State survived a minor scare lo
down Clemson 30-75; No. 2
Notre Dame drubbed West
Virginia 108-80.
No. 6 Maryland edged Duke
~1; No. 7 Marquette put
away Detroit 61-53, and No. 10
Indiana solidified its one'i!ame
lead over Michigan In the Big
Ten race by defeating Min-

nesota 73-55.
"I guess it was going to
happen sometime," said Pitt
coach Buzz Ridl. "Time and
the odds were against us. It's
electrifying for it to end this
way, though. This will now be a
test of our mental toughness."
W. Va. Routed
Penn State coach John Bach
said, " In 24 years of coaching I
can't remember a game that
has meant more to me personally." Ron Brown's J6.foot
jumper at the buzzer gave
Penn State the victory, which
wasn 't that surprising because
the Pittsburgh schedule wasn't
too difficult.
North Carolina State, getting
15 of its final22 points from AllAmerica David Thompson, had
lo come from behind lo put
down stubhorn Clemson.
Notre Dame, in its third
national TV appearan~ of the
season, routed West Virginia
behind a season-high 41 points
by freshman Adrian Dantley.
Vanderbilt, which had lost
only once previously this
season, ran into a hot hand on
its home court by Tennessee
freshman Ernie Grunfeld,
whose 23 points helped drop the
Commodores into a first place
ti e with Alabama in the
Southeastern Conference race.
The 11th-rated Crimson Tide
beat Kentucky 94-71.
In other games, Arizona
moved Into a first place tie with
New Mexico in the topsyturvy
Western Athletic Conference
by handing 18th-rated Utah its
second straight loss, 122-92;
New Mexico topped Wyoming
78-67; Long Beach State buried
Santa Barbara 98-61, and
Creighlon lost a 61-liO dedsion'
lo Hawaii.
In a Sunday game, South
Carolina, ranked 16th, turned
back Duquesne 67-57.

Answers prepared
By United Press International

Bob Gibson, never noted for
his fondness of sport&gt;nn;iters,
came prepared to the St. Lonis
Cardinals' training camp this
spring.
Gibson, the 38-year old
veteran righthanded ace of the
Cardinals' staff, reported to
camp Sunday, worked out
briefly and then left a sign on
his locker designed to answer
any questions the writers
might ask him :
" In case I'm not here, " the
sign said, "knee feels bad.
Weather doesn't matter. Arm
doesn't feel too good yet. None
of your damn business."
The ready-made answers
were in, in order, reference to
(I and 2) his recent knee
surgery, (3) how much he'll be
able to affect where the Cardinals might finish (4) his
recent divorce .
Sidelined 55 days last year
because of surgery to his knee,
Gibson, a two-time Cy Young
Award winner and five-time 21).
game Winner, wound up 12-10
for his 14th season and musl be
considered a question mark
this season.
Elsewhere around the

camps, Fritz Peterson, the
Yankees ' enigmatic leftbander, agreed to terms with
the club Sunday for a substantial cut. "It was a bigger
cut than I expected," said
Peterson, who last year at this
time was experiencing marital
problems with his former
teammate Mike Kekich. "I
dido 't go lo arbitration because
I don't want any publicity or
problems."

The Cin~innati Reds, hampered by a series of injuries to
their executives, have only two
players left unsigned outfielder Pete Rose, the
National League's Most
Valuable Player, and rubberarmed relief pitcher Pedro
Borbon.
Borbon is still In the
Dominican Republic after
pitching winter ball, while
Rose has not apparently had
time to get together with Reds'
general
manager
Bob
Howsam, who has himself been
bothe!!ed by a painful case of
leg cramps. "Our only difficulty so far has been getting
together to talk," said Howsam
of the Rose situation. "Pete has
had a busy winter."

Ros~, Borbon unsigned
TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) - Th~
Cincinnati Reds began spring
training over the weekend with
two players left unsigned outfielder Pete Rose, the National League's Most Valuable
Player, and rubber-anned relief pitcher Pedro Borbun.
Borbon is still:in-the Dominican- RePullli~
,.- 'after pitChin
- _g
winter ball, whl!e Rose has not
apparently had time to get
.together with Reds' General
Manager Bob Howsam, who
has himself been bothered by a
painful case of leg cramps.
' 'Our only difficulty so far
has been getting together to
talk," said HoWl18111 of the Rose
situatl!l'l. "Pete has had a buay

•

•

winter."
Rose will be competing today
and Tuesday in the SUperstars
Olympics at Rotonda, Fla.
Two other early casualties of
the Reds' camp were
Howsam's ·wife, Janet, who
underwent surgery during the
winter and was stricken with a
painful case of the shingles
after arriving at the training
base, and the wife of Dick.
Wagner,
another
club
esec)ltive, who is limping
around with a broken toe.
Reds Manager Sparky Ander,son's Bnival was delayed a
day when his father was hospitalized after suffering a heart
attack In California.
\

\

Stout hit 14 of 17 free throws
to go with six fi eld goals for a
game high 26 points, joined by
James with 13 points, while
James and Logan combined to
block 7 Eastern field goal attempts and control the
defensive backboards.
The Eagles, mea nwhile,
were led by a balanced scoring
attack, paced by senior for-

BLANCHARD TOUGH ON BOARDS - Meigs' Orrian Blanchard (22) leaps high into the
air for a rebound with Gallia's Mike Sickles (31) during Saturday's Class AA Sectional Tournament game at Coal Grove. Blanchard picked off nine reboWJds for the Marauders, Sickles 14
for Gallia. On right are Bill Myers (42) and Mike Daveport (40) .

BOXED IN - Gallia 's Mike Berridge (15) is boxed in by
Meigs' Chip Brauer (44 ) and Orrian Blanchard (22) during
this second half action shot of the Gallia-Meigs Class AA
Sectional Tournament game at Coal Grove Saturday night.
Gallia won, 78-66. (Steve Wilson photos).

ward John Sheets with 17
points, junior forward Tim
Spencer with 15 and jun ior
guard Greg Bailey with 14.
James , hitting for 8 first
period points, gave the Pirates
a ~ lead early in the opening
period on an 18 footer before
Sheets responded with a pair of
free throws to knot the score at
2-2.
The Pirates then took a lead
they held until ea rly in the
second period, as Stout hit a

The third period saw the
Pirates hit 7 of 7charity tosses,
one of the determining fac tors
in the game.
North Gallia connected 22 of
30 times at the line, while
Eastern could can just 16 of 25
attemp ts.
A 3Moot bomb at the third
quar te r buzzer by Pirate
· forward Dave Robinette broke
the Eagle wingspan, giving the
Pirates a 54-43 lead as the
spirited North Gallians ran and

free throw and senior forwar d

jumped into their

Keith Weddington cashed in a
la yup to give the Pira tes a 5-2
lead.
A Steve Goebel fr ee throw
and a Steve Dill 8 footer
brought the Eagles back to a:;.
5 tie, befo re North Gallia
spurted to take its largest lead
of the first half, 13-8.
The Eagles came back to
knotthecount at 17-17 after one
period.
The second quarter saw
Eastern hold the upper hand
most of the way, leading by as
much as five points at 28-23,
before Nor th Gall ia again
spurted, taking a 35-32 halftime
lead.

break huddle.
Easte rn could come no closer
than within 9 points in the final
period, that coming at the 61-52
mark with just over three
minutes to play on a Bailey 12
footer.
The squads were almos t even
in every department, with the
Pirates haulin g in 40 rebounds
to the Eagles' 38. James and
Ca mden led North Gallia
boardwork with 10 each, while
Robinette grabbed 8.
Spencer grabbed 12 missed
shots, while Dill garn ered 11
and Sheets 9 to account for 32 of
the birds' 38 bounds.
Eas tern committed just 9
turnovers while North Gallla
was guilty of mistakes 11
times.

Devils oust
Meigs ~8 66
•

Gallipolis advanced to the semifinals of the
Class AA Coal Grove Sectional basketball tournament by turning back Meigs 78-66 Saturday night.
The lads of Coach Jim Osborne, now 16-3
overall, will meet Rock Hill (8-10) at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday in their next tournament outing. Coach
Roger Brauer's Marauders completed their 1973-74
camapaign with a 3-15 season record .

The Blue Devils led all the
way in Saturday's tournament Gil Price. Lonnie Coats added
opener. Tom Valentine, Jim four.
Niday and Mike Sickles put the
With 6:38 remaining in the
Gallians ahead 6-0 during the game, Gallipolis built up its
first 1:30 of action . Dan Dod- biggest lead of the night, 65-46.
son's lon g jumper (5 :59 ) broke Both coaches began sub the ice for Meigs in the initial stituting freely at this point.
canto.
The Marauders outscored
GAHS built up a 12-2 ad- GAHS 20-13 during the final
vantage before the Marauders 5:55 of action. Chip Brauer's
finally found the range. It was five points led Meigs during the
19-14 after one period. Gil ' final period. Price and Singer
Price had six, Tom Valentine each had four lo lead Gallia .
seven and Mike Sickles four
Gallipolis connected on 30 of
points for GAHS in the first 55 field goal attempts for 54 .5
stanza. GAHS canned eight of pet. GAHS converted 18 of 29
13 field goal attempts. Dan free throws for 62.1 pet. The
Dodson popped in six and Gallians had 21 personals, 50
Lonnie Coats four for the rebounds and 17 turnovers.
Marauders, who hit five of q7 Price hauled down 19 caroms
r. om the field in the opening for the winners. Sickles added
stanza.
14.
GAHS erupted with 2J points
Meigs hit 27 of 72 field goal
in the second canto, limiting attempts for 37.5 pet. The
TIM BAUM, No. 25, of Eastern High is getting a sliot off
Meigs to 14. That gave the Blue Marauders were 12 of 23 from
STERLING LOGAN, 6-1 senior forward of the North Gallia Pirates, wasn't able to get a
over the high-stretched hand of North Gallia defender Ralph
Devils
a 42-28 halftime ad- tile foul circles for 52.1 pet.
good defensive position on Eastern's John Sheets in the action above. At left (25) is Tim Baum
Smith of North Ga llia in action at the Larry Morrison
vantage.
of Eastern and (41 ) Randy Blake of Eastern. Eastern lost the game, 72-62, knocking them off
Meigs had 25 personals, . 29
Gymnasium at Meigs High School Saturday night. The
Gil
Price
led
the
Gallians
'
rebounds and only eight turnthe tournament trail.
victory in this semi-final match put the Gallians in the secsecond period surge with 13 overs. Orri an Blan chard
tional fina ls next Saturday night against Southern High of
points. Jim Singer added six. hauled in nine rebounds for the
· ·The Gallians hit eight of 16 losers.
Meigs County, also Rock Springs.
from the field in the period.
Price led all scorers with 27
Lonnie Coats tallied six and points. Singer finished with 16
Or r ian Blanchard, f
I 3
G AH S BLUE DEVILS (78 1
0· 1
5
9
I
2
Dan Dodson four for the and Sickles 12.
FG· A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Dan Dodson, c
10 28
4· 4
I
1 24
PLAYER- Po s.
3
TRAFFIC FATALS
Meigs hit five of 18
Marauders.
For Meigs, Dodson turned in
14
1 12
3
2· 3
Steve Pr ice, g
5· 11
1- 2
4
ike Sickl es, f
4· 8
I
9
2
OOLUMBUS (UP! )- Traffic M
from
the
field
in this period.
o.
0
2
0
1
0
I· 3
Lonnie Coats, g
5-12
one of his best efforts of the
M ike Berr idge, f
4· 5
5
3
2 14
accidents on Ohio roadways Tom Valentine, f
I
4
9
3
3 4
3· 4
Te r ry Quai ls. g
4
2 5
0 0
2
3
0
The third period saw both year with 24 points. Lonnie
2
0· · 1
5
0
5
Chip Brauer. c
I· 2
1 4
3· 4
2
3
0
5
claimed nine lives during the Gary Snowden, f
teams
exchange bucket-for- Coats added 14.
19
· 4 27
3
10 14
7- 8
Mi ck Davenpor t, f
1- 2
0 1
I
2
1
2
weekend period beginning at 6 Gi l Price, c
bucket.
GAHS
outscored Meigs
1
I
0
3
1· 3
Te rr y Cr emeans, f
o. 3 0
1 1
0· I
1
0
0
Ji m Wa rr en. c
p.m. Friday and ending at mid- Jim Ni day. g
4
7
2
3- 7
2
o. 0 0 0 0 2 18-16 to take a 60-44 advantage
2· 10
I· 2
Greg Brown ing, 1
o. 0
1
0
0
o. 2
0
Char les Ma r shal , f
I
0· 0
night Sunday, the state High- Pa ul Taylor, f
0· 0
0
0
0
into the last period . Jim
5 16
3
4
2· 3
Steve Wal burn , g
7-10
1- I
2
1
1
Jim
Singer
,
g
I
0· 1
way Patrol reported loday.
Singer's
six points led Gallia 's
I
0
0
0
TOTAL
S
0· 0
0· 0
21 ·12
12·23
25
29
8
Ken ny Wil l. g
Two persons wer e killed Br ent Sa unders, f
o. 0 0
1
0
0
Scor e by qua rter s:
0· 0
third period assault. Dan
0
0
0- 0
0
0
Gall ipolis
0· 0
19 23 18 18 - 78
Friday night, fi ve Saturday David Owen s, f
Dodson tallied 10 of Meigs 16
78
17
21
50
Jo.ss
18·29
Me ig s
/4 /4 16 22 - 66
TALS
TO
and two Sunday with two
markers
in this period, mostly
M E IGS M ARAUDERS (66)
Offici a ls - Larry Tee ter and Ma r vin Turn er , Chilli cothe
double fa talities recorded, the PL AYER- Po s.
FG-A FT.A PF RB TO TP
Chapter
from the top of the foul circle
.1
?
0
1 4
0 2
3
Patrol said.
Bi I I Myers, f
on long jumpers, over the
outstretched handa of Galli• 's

quarter-

Neither team was sizzling

from the fl oor, with the Pirates
canning 25 of 62 field goal attempts for 40 pet. , while the
Eagles sank 2J of 66 for 35 pet.
A pleased Foster, followin g
the game, could say just, " It
was our best team effort of the
year ."

While the Pirates prepare for
their battle with the Tornados
on Saturday, the Eagles have
completed their 1973-74 season
with a 10-10 mark, 9-9 on the
regular season, and 9-3 in the
SV AC, good fo r a second place
finish behind loop champion
Hannan Trace.
North Gallia had ended the
SV AC season tied for third with
Southern at 7-5.
Scoring by quarters:
Easter.n
17 15 10 2~2
North Gallia 17 18 19 18-72
EASTERN - Sheets 1&gt;-7-17,
Baum 0-0-0, Dill4-1-9, Goebel 01-1, Spencer ~15, Bailey 6-214, Weber 0-0-0, Hollon 0-0-0,
Atherton 0-0-0, Blake 2-0-4,
Harris 0-2-2.
tlORTH GALLIA - Weddinglon t-().2, Robinette of-0.8,
Camden 3-1-7, Stout 6-14-26,
James 5-3-13, Smith 2-4-8,
Logan of-0.8.

cars ars insured
with us than with
anv othsr company
Find out whv now I

GAHS-Meigs box score. ..

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553 AUIItl St.
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Ho me Oftotl: l lu mlnllon . Il ion"''

Take it

Meigs Maraud er junior
center Dan Dodson was named
Sunday to the All-SEOAL
basketball first team in voting
by members of the Sportswriters and Broadcasters
Association, meeting at Jolly
Lanes in Jackson.
Dodson was the league's
sco rer,
eighth
leading
averagi ng 17,3 points per
game. His largest point tota l in
a single game was 32 points,
setting a school scoring record
.for a single contest.
The 6-3 junior, one of just two
underclassmen named lo the
first team, joined Gallipolis'
Gil Price and Jim Niday,
Waverly's John Shoemaker,
Athens' Mark Mace, Logan's
Jim Pierce and Ironton 's Dave
Rann.
Niday is the only other junior
to be named. Shoemaker, Price
and Mace were unanimous
choices.
Waverly's Shoemaker was
named over Gallipolis' Gil
Price as the Most Valuable
Player.
Shoemake r, a 6-2 senior ,
averaged 27.3 poinIs per league

game, while Price was far and
away the leag ue's top
re bounder, averaging 18.3
reboWld! per contest.
Prlte, lui year's MVP, led

the Blue Devils to their first
SEOAL title In '15 years.
Howe ver, Gallipolis came
right back in the Coach of the
Year balloting, with likeable
menlor Jim Osborne capturing
the la urels.
For Osborne it was his third
consecutive Coach of the Year
award, being named Coach of
the Year last year and sharing
the honor with Waverly's C. D.
Hawhee in 1972.
Second team honorees were
Athens senior Dan Skinner,
Gallipolis· Mike Sickles,
Jackson's Mike !&gt;lcDonald and
Paul White, Logan 's Don
Young and Waverly's Doug
Tracy.
Honorable mention went to
Athens' Arnie Chonko, with
Tom Valentine of Gallipolis,
Kenny Green of Iron ton, Ar t
DeSiepehen of Jackson, Jeff
Campbell of Logan and Tony
Swindler of Waverly. Wellston
nominated no one, Meigs only
Dodson for the all-league
squad.
In other action, on a motiop.
by Denny Fobes of the Daily
Sentinel and seconded by Bill
Gray of radio station WJEH,
Gallipolis, 'th e' mininum
number of free throws attempted needed to qualify for
the Foul Shooting Award was

set at 42. Previously, a player
had to make 42 free throws to
qualify for the award.
In a motion by Harold Roach
of Logan, vice-president of the
association , the release time of
the All-SEOAL bas ketball

from me,

awa rds was changed to 12 noon
loday.
Previously, the association
had wailed un til after sectional
tournament play was completed before announcing the
results.

PAUL HARVEY

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2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 25, 1974

Golf's newest star:Thompson

. DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

What causes pericarditis?
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. draw off the excess fluid
DEAR DR. LAMB - I would through a needle inserted into
like to kn ow something about the distended sac. It is like
perica rdi tis, or which ever draining a large blister.
Very rarely the inflamed
carditis affects the outer lining
of the heart? If one has the pericardia} sac can undergo
outer li ning removed ca n one sca rring and in the process
expect a complete recovery or constrict the heart 's ability to
can one expec t to be a semi· beat properly . This is literally
invalid for the rest of one's adhesions of the heart. This
life' What is the life ex- usually occ urs much later or
pectancy of this disease' What with rare cases of pericarditis
caused by tuberculosis. In
ca uses it ?
DEAR READER - The these insta nces the sac can he
outer surface of the heart is stripped away, literally freeing
coated with a thin membrane. the heart of adhesions.
You can't say before the
This same membrane con·
tinues to form a loose fitting operation just how successful it
outer sac . The entire mem- will be. When the pericardium
brane is called the pericardium over the heart muscle is in(meaning around the heart ).
When it is inflamed it is called
pericarditis. The "itis" means
inflammation .
Inflammation ca n have
many causes, including a viral
infection and even chemical
irritation. In many instances By WU.BUR G. LANDREY
the cause of the inflamed UPI Foreign Editor
pericardium is not known. It
WASHINGTON (UPI ) cannot be demonstrated to be Secretary of Stale Henry A.
caused by a virus or a bacteria Kissinger undertook his fourth
in those cases . The term and toughest Middle East
"idiopathic" is used in this mission loday, optimistic that
case, which is a fancy medical he can begin to bring Syria lnlo
term for " I don 't know."
the peace talks with Israel.
In many instances, the
U.S. officials said that
episode of pericarditis ls sell- Kissinger's optimism that he
limited and is not serious. In can b~eak the deadlock came
these cases no surgery is from the fact that he is going to
needed. In such cases the life the Middle East at the specific
expectancy is good. It can request of four Arab heads of
cause chest pain and even state, including President
cause confusion with a heart Hafez Assad of Syria, who met
attack , particularly in in- earlier this month In Algiers.
dividuals in the heart attack
Specifically, U.S. officials
age group. Rarely fluid will appeared optimistic also that
accumulate in the sac, between Syria will turn over to
the membrane part covering Kissinger the list of up to 80
the heart itself and the rest of Israeli prisoners captured in
the sac. lf enough fluid collects the October war--an issue that
it causes pressure on the heart has blocked any troop disenand can interfere with its gagement so far on the Syrian
normal filling mechanism. front.
This can seriously interfere
There was widespread exwith the circulation. In such pectation in diplomatic circles
rare problems the doctor can

named, the heart muscle itself
is usually inflamed . Part of the
success of th e opera lion
depends upon how much of the
heart muscle has also been
damaged with the disease . If
there is little or no damage
then an excellent recovery can
be expected .
Voucan'tsay too much about
the prognosis after surgery
without knowing what th e
cause really is, tuberculosis,
virus, or idiopathic. However, I
would like to reassure you that
in many instances of the
disease there is little or no
importan I damage to the heart
muscl e, and after surgery

there is usually an excellent
recovery with a good outlook
for the future. This is an
example of another opera tion
that was difficult or impossible
not too long ago. Before antibiotics, chest surgery for any
reason was done as a last
resort.

Send your questions to Dr.
Lamb, In care ol this newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551, Radio
City Station, New York, N. Y.
10019. For a copy of Dr. Lamb's
hooklet on losing weight, send
50 cents to the same address
and ask for " Losing Weight"
booklet.

HAK off again
that if Kissinger succeeds in
breaking the deadlock, the
Arab oil embargo against the
United States will be lifted, too.
Kissinger's first stop was to
he London, where he will hold
talks Tuesday with British
Foreign Secretary Sir Alec
Douglas-Home about oil and
about his mission before flying
on to meet Assad in Damascus.
Kissinger's mission is expected,
lo last at least a week.
Mter Damascus, he is expected to go lo Jerusalem, and
if he gets the list, he will
transmit it to the Israeli
government there. The optimism that he will get the list
was heightened by a report in
the semi-official Egyptian
newspaper, AI Abram, that he
will.
Israel has insisted that Syria
release the names and allow
the International Red' Cross to
visit the prisoners before
beginning any talks on disengagement of troops.

From Jerusalem, U.S. officials said Kissinger would
probably fly to Cairo. There he
and President Anwar Sadat of
Egypt may officially resume
the diplomatic relations broken
in 1967 after the Middle East
war before last.
Kissinger and Sadat agreed
on the resumption of relations
on a previous Kissinger trip
and they have already exchanged ambassadors.
U.S. officials said Kissinger
did not expect lo negotiate the
actual disengagement on this
trip. What he hopes, they said,
is to get an agreement to start
nego t i a tin g
th e
disengagement.
After returning 1 from a
Western Hemisphere conference in Mexico City on
Saturday, Kissinger briefed
President Nixon in Washington
on SUnday and then lunched
with Egyptian
Foreign
Minister Ismail Fahmi before
seeing Fahmi off for home.

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
(UPI ) - The' pro golf tour's
newest star, 27-year-old Leonard Thompson, has time to
think ahout the money today$52,000.
. The hulking North Carolinian
won the country's second
riches t tournament, the
$260,000 Jackie Gleason Inverrary Golf Classic, Sunday
by a single stroke and said, "I
never thought about the
money." It was his first
tour nament victory after
turning pro four years ago,
although he managed to earn
$91,000 last year.
Thompson looked like he was
scrambling in the final two
rounds over the watery, 7,128yard Inverrary course. But his
SUnday shooting netted him a
68-278, 10 strokes under par.

By United Pre•• International
What's wrong with UCLA?
Nothing at all.
The Bruins, who've won nine
national titles in a row, proved
that their lost weekend in
Oregon was just a temporary
aberration.
They clobbered Washinglon
99-65 Saturday night after
blasting Washington Stale 93-88
Friday night. That ran their
lastest winning streak to two
straight.
John Wooden, the UCLA
coach, tried to be cautious. "I
may be getting senile bull was

WASffiNGTON (UP!) - The
House of Representatives is
about to learn just how far
President Nixon will cooperate
in what ooe member calis its
gi'and inquest"
Rep. Edward Hutchinson,
the ranking Republican
member of the House
Judiciary Committe, said
SUnday his panel is ready to
send the White House a list of
confidential
tapes
and
documents it wants to begin its
14

votes by a two-thirds majority without going all the way they signed a "temporary
to do so. That day is closer than around Mrica.
agreement" which Nixon has
many anti-Castroites realize
Appears a Standoff
asserted will be converted into
but farther away than many Strategically, it appears to a workable treaty by the end of
pro-Castroites may believe . he a standoff, especially in the 1974. It is difficult to see how.
Havana-Washington reconcili- nuclear age. That may very
When the ''temporary" ofation will be forced by events well be one reason 'why Russia fensive deal was signed,
and not a desire for reconcilia- and the United States finally Russia had more misslies but
tion.
decided to stop trying only to the United States had more
ABigCiue
"persuade' their clients 1o nuclear warheads . This was
Meanwhile, the While House settle their differences and because the United States in
and the Kremlin have bigger finally took a direct hand in the 1968 mastered the art of putting
results of detente may be, they fish to fry and both are anxious negotiations.
multiple-headed warheads on
hope for the best. Brezhnevt- 1o gef on with-it.
One aspect of Soviet policy each missile, with each warpresumably shares their hope U.S. officials acknowledge puzzles many u.S. officials. head Independently targeted.
Will Catch Up
although his objectives are that the outcome of the in- Russia last September, for the
different in mnny respects.
lernational peace effort In the first time, urged her Arab Now, the Russians also have
Reconciliation of objectives Middle East could provide a friends to use their oil as a succeeded in mastering the
is what Soviet-American big clue as to the ability of the "political weapon" in their mystery of the MIRV (Multiple
detente is all about. How to do two nuclear superi&gt;Owers lo struggle against Israel. They Independent-Targeted Reit without incinerating the cooperate in defusing an issue have urged this a couple of entry Vehicle) . While she is
northern hemisphere is what that could lead to a wider times since. Was this because several years behind the
diplomacy in the nuclear age is holocaust.
Russia recognized in 1971, United Stales In technique,
all about.
The Soviet Union for years when the major oil compnnies Russia undoubtedly will catch
Watch Polley Shlfto
has armed the Arabs to · the let the Arabs break the solid up and any treaty based on
Nixon and Kissinger intend teeth, supported thetr aspira- price front, that it was a whole present realities would be very
to continue dealing with the lions and joined in their new ballgame and she had 4isadvantageous to the
Russians on a basis of good damnation of "Zionist Israel". better advise her friends how Americans by the end of tile
faith . They will assume, unless The United States has taken to use their new.found power? decade. It is impossible to
strong evidence develops lo the Israel's side, selling arms at Or was it merely a device by detect the number of warheads
contrary, that the factors that cut-ra~ prices on easy terms, the Kremlin to give her friends on a missile without on-llite
impelled the Kremlin to seek supporting Tel Aviv's argu- a bit more bargaining power inspection, which Russia has
an era of improved relations ments when they came close to which Russia could control? always resisted. This has
And why, after this anti- resulted in a deadlock in the
are still operative In the for- conforming to United Nations
mulation of Soviet policy. They ukases, and permitting deduc- Western maneuver, did SALT II talks. Negotiations
watch closely, of course, for lion from income taxes of Moscow join with the United haveresurnedthismonth,after
any indications of policy shifts contributions to the United States in setting up the Geneva a lengthy recess, in an effort to
in Moscow that could imperil Jewish Appeal.
Peace Conference and lean on break this deadlock.
U.S. Interests. So far they
The Russian objective In the Egyptians and others to
Russia and the United states
apparently have sighted trying lo extend its hegemony attend?
each has enough nuclear
nothing conclusive, although to the Middle East has been
The answers will not become firepower to destroy the other
there ~s been some puzzle- said since the time of Peter the clear until the whole Middle several times over. Why then
men! about the Kremlin's true Great to stem from the desire East drama is played out- If it this continued struggle to see
objectives in the Middle East. for warm water ports. The ever is.
· that the other does not get an
Soviet leaders approach Soviet Union now has those In
LimltatlonofWeapans
advantage ? Because, apthetr dealings with the United Somalia, along with the use of · An issue that dwarfs even the parently, the nuclear equation
States in much the same spirit ports in Yemen as well as some Middle East in its potential has escalted from ihe-strategic
of cautious reciprocity. Mediterranean ports.
significance concerns the Sovi- 1o the political.
Moscow's real objective at et-American efforts to agree on
Brezhnev, explaining to the
Cubans earlier this month his this point In the 20th Century limitation nnd reduction of
country's attitude toward probably is the same as that of nuclear strategic weapons.
detente, said Moscow Intends the United States -to exercise
So far SALT 11, the official
lo pursue "oor principled 1\ne the dominant political, name for the second round of
"In relations with the United ' economic and strategic role at :Strategic Arms .Limitations
states provided that "the other a vital crossroads of sea lanes Talks, has made little progress
Elmer V. Windon, 81, a mall
side reciprocates''.
in an area where lie the most of since it began 1n Novemcarrier
in Pomeroy for 20
Soviet Foreign Minister An- theworld'sprovenoilreserves. ber, 1972. At the Summit in
years, died Friday evening at
drei Gromyko accompanied - Argiiinents that Russia goi May, 1972 Nixon and Brezhnev the Veterans Adrnlnisb'atlon
Brezhnev to Cuba early in the better of the agreement for signed a rtreaty limiting Hospital in Dayton. A veteran
February and then paid a initial Israeli withdrawal be- ' defensive ballistic nuclear of World War I, he served in
relatively brief vialt to Wa- . cause it will enable Egypt to weapons, the s~Ued ABM's.
shington, where he conferred open the Suez Canal - thus Each side is limited to 200 of France . ,He was preceded in death by
with both Nixon and Kissinger. ·vastly shortening the distance these , and at two widely
two
brothers, Emmett arul
This naturally sparked Soviet naval vessels must separated sites. The theory is
Eber.
Sl!fViVing is one . son,
speculatlon that Moscow was b'avelto get~ the Persian Gulf that such an arrangement
AHred
Burl Windon, Wehe
trying to get .Havall8 I!Jld smce they wtll not have lo sail couldn't provide much If any
'Washmgton to kiss and m8ke-att1he way around Asia from defense and thus would Terrace, Pom~roy ; two
up. Such speculation was not Vladiso9tok - are not per- discouarge either side on- nephews, Philip Windon, of
indulged in by those who know suasive. The advantage for the dertaking a "first strike" with Carroll, and Paul Windon of
the depth nnd bitterness of United States is almost as Its offensive weapons since it Magadore ; and a niece, Mrs.
Nixon's feelings about Cuba. great. Vessels of the 6th U. S. would be defenseless' against Lois Drake, Zanesville.
Funeral services will 'be held
. The United States will grudg- Fleet can go through tile canal retaliation.
at
t ' p.m. Tuesday at the
mgly agree to readmit. Cuba lo to the Persi!UI Gulf and also to
At the 1972 Summit, the two
the status of diplomatic equal- tile n.ew base Washinglon ·is sides were unable to come up Protestant Chapel at the
Ity only when the Organization bulldmg on Diego Garcia with a real treaty on offensive hospital. Burial will be in the
of American States (OAS) Island in the Indian Ocean nuclear strategic weapons. So · Veterans Admi nistration
National Cemtery at Dayton.
~
l'

Elmer Windon
died on Friday

'

1,.

never confident that we would
win the NCAA. 1 said we had as
good a chance as anyone--and
we have.
"Every game from now on is
sudden death as far as we are
concerned."
Keith Wilkes, playing his
final home game for UCLA,
scored 31 points in the triumph
over Washington. "I think
we're over our slump," Wilkes
said, ''the other two national
titles don't mean anything to
me at this point. There's only
one goal. That's to win this
year."

House to get Nixon word

More than one
way to support
a family

I

By Denny Fobes
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Nor th Gallia Pirates proved
that their rece nt surge in SVAC
basketball circles is no fluke,
as the lads of Jim Foster
derailed the Eastern Eagles,
72-62 here Saturday night in the
semi-finals of the Meigs Sectional Basketball Tournament.
The Pirates will meet the
Southern Tornados Saturday at
7:30 to decide who will adva nce
lo the Chillicothe Distri ct.
North Gallia, currently one
of the hottes t teams in the area,
used the scoring of guards Tim
Stout and Greg James, and the
leaping ability of James and
forwa rd Sterling Logan to
outduel the Eagles 19-10 in the
third quar ter enroute to that

There's nothing wrong with UCLA

FAMILY LIB

J

aglesplucked·

Littler and Roy Pace, who led
the third roWJd along with
Thompson and Tommy Aaron,
tied at 282. Aaron &amp;kied to a 75
in the final rotmd for a 285 total.
Thompson said he p~ with
single-mindedness to get the
ball into the cup without
thinking about winning or
money. Mter a spectacular GOya rd chip for a tap In par at 17,
all Thompson had to do lo win
was play safe on 18. He
kn ocked his drive behind a
tree.
From there, he snaked a low
four-iron between trees and on
1o the back .side of the green
from where he two putted for
par and victory . He said his
wife, Le~. was more excited
than he when he telephoned her
at their home in Lumberton,•
N.C.

sectional win.

Critical tests facing detente

Editor's Note : This Is the
third of eight dispatches dealing with major world decisions
during 1974.
_By STEWART HENSLEY
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
durability of the Soviet-American detente, proclaimed not
quite two years ago at the
Moscow Summit Conference, is
being tested on several critical
fronts.
The Middle East, the oil
crisis and the effort to agree on
limitation and reduction of
nuclear weapons are the three
problems that preoccupy U.S.
officials at present--although
there are ple.nty of others
which plague relations between
Moscow
and
Washington.
President Nixon's planned
visit to Moscow in June may
result in considerable progress
and clarification--and It may
not. It will be easier to make a
judgment on that after Seeretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger completes his
preparatory trip to the Soviet
capital late next month. Meanwhile, opinions vary.
Divert Attention
Nixon's critics contend that
his Moscow visit will prove to
be cosmetic rather than substantive, designed to divert
public attention from his
domestic difficulties . They
note that plans for the 1974
Nixon visit to Moscow were announced with considerable fanfare during the Son Clemente
meeting he held last June with
Soviet Communist party boss
Leonid I. Brezhnev. If Nixon
failed to make the trip, they
argue, the world would asswne
that the era of accommodation
between the two nuclear giants
had ended.
Nixon's associates and aides
contend, however , that
progress is being made on a
number of issues and the
Nixon-Brezhnev ' summit this
year will be very productive.
They believe the necessity to
meet a deadline generates a
momentum that helps progress
toward solutions.
While high officials here may
not be sure what , final

Chirklnian, told Trevino at the'
17th green they could show his
putt on television if he would
hold up 20 seconds for a
commercial to end.
Trevino was only one shot
back of Thompson at the time.
He joked with Scott a moment,
then missed his 21)-foot try for a
birdie, leaving it 10 inches
short. Without hothering to set
up, he tl)en missed the 10-inch
putt and took a bogey 5 on the
hole. Obviously upset, Trevino
then proceeded to bogey the
final hole, winding up three
strokes behind Thompson.
Tied at 281 with Trevino in
fourth place were Andy North
with a closing 68, and Jack
Nicklaus and young Lanny
Wadkins with the best rounds
of the day- 7-under-par 65s.
First round leader Gene

His round included seven
birdies and three hogeys.
Seven-year pro Hale Irwin of
Kirkwood, Mo., missing a 11&gt;foot biFdle. try on the final hole
which coul&lt;t· have thrown him
into a playoff with Thompson,
finished with a second place 68
- 279 worth $29,640.
Getting a third place $18,640
all by hlmseH was 53-year-old
Julius Boros with a 67- 280
finish in his first regular tour
event of the year.
Defending champion Lee
Trevino carded a closing round
69 for a 281 total and set off a
rhubarb Involving two veteran
CBS televiaion sportscasters,
director Frank Chirkinian and
announcer Ray Scott. Trevino
claimed the pair cost him the
lournament when Scott, relaying a joking comment from

J

impeachment investigation.
"It has not been sent yet, but
I think It will be sent this
week," Hutchinson told TV
interviewers (CBS ''Face the
Nation" ).
Nixon reportedly has told
congressional confidants he
will "fight like hell" against
impeachment. Many think he
will withhold at least some
While House materials--dting
exerutive privilege.
Hutchinson said he thinks
Nixon has some right to fend
off unreasonable demands, but
that the HOIIB&lt;'--IIcting as a
kind of constitutional "grand
inquisitor"--also has full right
to all relevant evidence.
"The President has a right to
protect himself In his official
capacity, and his. branch of
government fr~m improper
demands on the part of either
of the other two branches," he
said.
"But of course here is this
constitutional power of impeachment, which is a grand
Inquest of the nation.
"And so in that role the
House of Representatives, as
the grand inquisitor, certainly
does have a right, I believe, to
relevant Information touching
upon possible impeachable actions of the President."
Up to this point, the House
panel has been preoccupied
with organizing for its work,
obtaining full House approval
for sweeping subpoena powers
and considering what is an
impeachable offense.
Hutchinson said he thought
the Presldent'.s own lawyers
should be permitted to crossexamine witnesses once the
Judiciary Committee gets rolling on its investigation. But he
said that issue had not been
decided upon by the commiltee.
CLUB TO MEET
MASON - There will be a
meeting of Jim's Camper
Softball Club for all old
members and any new
member that wants to sign to
play this summer at Bob's
Recreation Center in Mason at
2 p.m. Sunday, March 2. For
more infonnation call 773-8503.
2 BROTHERS WIN
LAKE PLACJb, N.Y. (UPI)
- Austria's Manfred Schmid

and his brother, Rudolph,
finished one-two Sunday In the
first International men's
singles luge eompetltion ever
held in the United states.
Manfred was clocked in 2:59.57
and Rudolph In 3:00.48.

The D1i1J Senliirel

Both Washington State coach
George Raveling and Washing:
ton coach Marv Harshman
picked the Bruins in the March
9th rematch with Southern
California in the L.A. Sports
Arena after they lost to the two
teams last weekend.
Raveling said, "UCLA is still
the best team in the nation."
Harshman: "I would have 1o
put my money on UCLA in a
game between those two."
And you'd have to put your
money on UCLA to repeat as
national champions, too.
Southern California, which is
ranked ninth and is now tied
with the Bruins for the ~acific
Eight lead, beat Washmgton
7~ and Washinglon state 11&amp;59 over the weekend.
It's now taken for granted
that the March 9th battle
between the two teams will
decide the Pacific Eight crown
and a trip to the NCAA tournament.
Roo's 30-Ft. Jumper
UCLA and USC play California and Stanford this weekend In preparation for that
showdown which is the regular
season finale for both clubs.
Elsewhere among the top 10
over the weekend, only Vanderbil\ and Pittsburgh were in
the Joss column. Eighth-ranked
Pittsburgh had its 22-game
winning streak snapped by
PeiUI State 66-64 and the fifthrated Commodores fell prey lo
neighboring Tennessee, 59-53.
Top-ranked North Carolina
State survived a minor scare lo
down Clemson 30-75; No. 2
Notre Dame drubbed West
Virginia 108-80.
No. 6 Maryland edged Duke
~1; No. 7 Marquette put
away Detroit 61-53, and No. 10
Indiana solidified its one'i!ame
lead over Michigan In the Big
Ten race by defeating Min-

nesota 73-55.
"I guess it was going to
happen sometime," said Pitt
coach Buzz Ridl. "Time and
the odds were against us. It's
electrifying for it to end this
way, though. This will now be a
test of our mental toughness."
W. Va. Routed
Penn State coach John Bach
said, " In 24 years of coaching I
can't remember a game that
has meant more to me personally." Ron Brown's J6.foot
jumper at the buzzer gave
Penn State the victory, which
wasn 't that surprising because
the Pittsburgh schedule wasn't
too difficult.
North Carolina State, getting
15 of its final22 points from AllAmerica David Thompson, had
lo come from behind lo put
down stubhorn Clemson.
Notre Dame, in its third
national TV appearan~ of the
season, routed West Virginia
behind a season-high 41 points
by freshman Adrian Dantley.
Vanderbilt, which had lost
only once previously this
season, ran into a hot hand on
its home court by Tennessee
freshman Ernie Grunfeld,
whose 23 points helped drop the
Commodores into a first place
ti e with Alabama in the
Southeastern Conference race.
The 11th-rated Crimson Tide
beat Kentucky 94-71.
In other games, Arizona
moved Into a first place tie with
New Mexico in the topsyturvy
Western Athletic Conference
by handing 18th-rated Utah its
second straight loss, 122-92;
New Mexico topped Wyoming
78-67; Long Beach State buried
Santa Barbara 98-61, and
Creighlon lost a 61-liO dedsion'
lo Hawaii.
In a Sunday game, South
Carolina, ranked 16th, turned
back Duquesne 67-57.

Answers prepared
By United Press International

Bob Gibson, never noted for
his fondness of sport&gt;nn;iters,
came prepared to the St. Lonis
Cardinals' training camp this
spring.
Gibson, the 38-year old
veteran righthanded ace of the
Cardinals' staff, reported to
camp Sunday, worked out
briefly and then left a sign on
his locker designed to answer
any questions the writers
might ask him :
" In case I'm not here, " the
sign said, "knee feels bad.
Weather doesn't matter. Arm
doesn't feel too good yet. None
of your damn business."
The ready-made answers
were in, in order, reference to
(I and 2) his recent knee
surgery, (3) how much he'll be
able to affect where the Cardinals might finish (4) his
recent divorce .
Sidelined 55 days last year
because of surgery to his knee,
Gibson, a two-time Cy Young
Award winner and five-time 21).
game Winner, wound up 12-10
for his 14th season and musl be
considered a question mark
this season.
Elsewhere around the

camps, Fritz Peterson, the
Yankees ' enigmatic leftbander, agreed to terms with
the club Sunday for a substantial cut. "It was a bigger
cut than I expected," said
Peterson, who last year at this
time was experiencing marital
problems with his former
teammate Mike Kekich. "I
dido 't go lo arbitration because
I don't want any publicity or
problems."

The Cin~innati Reds, hampered by a series of injuries to
their executives, have only two
players left unsigned outfielder Pete Rose, the
National League's Most
Valuable Player, and rubberarmed relief pitcher Pedro
Borbon.
Borbon is still In the
Dominican Republic after
pitching winter ball, while
Rose has not apparently had
time to get together with Reds'
general
manager
Bob
Howsam, who has himself been
bothe!!ed by a painful case of
leg cramps. "Our only difficulty so far has been getting
together to talk," said Howsam
of the Rose situation. "Pete has
had a busy winter."

Ros~, Borbon unsigned
TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) - Th~
Cincinnati Reds began spring
training over the weekend with
two players left unsigned outfielder Pete Rose, the National League's Most Valuable
Player, and rubber-anned relief pitcher Pedro Borbun.
Borbon is still:in-the Dominican- RePullli~
,.- 'after pitChin
- _g
winter ball, whl!e Rose has not
apparently had time to get
.together with Reds' General
Manager Bob Howsam, who
has himself been bothered by a
painful case of leg cramps.
' 'Our only difficulty so far
has been getting together to
talk," said HoWl18111 of the Rose
situatl!l'l. "Pete has had a buay

•

•

winter."
Rose will be competing today
and Tuesday in the SUperstars
Olympics at Rotonda, Fla.
Two other early casualties of
the Reds' camp were
Howsam's ·wife, Janet, who
underwent surgery during the
winter and was stricken with a
painful case of the shingles
after arriving at the training
base, and the wife of Dick.
Wagner,
another
club
esec)ltive, who is limping
around with a broken toe.
Reds Manager Sparky Ander,son's Bnival was delayed a
day when his father was hospitalized after suffering a heart
attack In California.
\

\

Stout hit 14 of 17 free throws
to go with six fi eld goals for a
game high 26 points, joined by
James with 13 points, while
James and Logan combined to
block 7 Eastern field goal attempts and control the
defensive backboards.
The Eagles, mea nwhile,
were led by a balanced scoring
attack, paced by senior for-

BLANCHARD TOUGH ON BOARDS - Meigs' Orrian Blanchard (22) leaps high into the
air for a rebound with Gallia's Mike Sickles (31) during Saturday's Class AA Sectional Tournament game at Coal Grove. Blanchard picked off nine reboWJds for the Marauders, Sickles 14
for Gallia. On right are Bill Myers (42) and Mike Daveport (40) .

BOXED IN - Gallia 's Mike Berridge (15) is boxed in by
Meigs' Chip Brauer (44 ) and Orrian Blanchard (22) during
this second half action shot of the Gallia-Meigs Class AA
Sectional Tournament game at Coal Grove Saturday night.
Gallia won, 78-66. (Steve Wilson photos).

ward John Sheets with 17
points, junior forward Tim
Spencer with 15 and jun ior
guard Greg Bailey with 14.
James , hitting for 8 first
period points, gave the Pirates
a ~ lead early in the opening
period on an 18 footer before
Sheets responded with a pair of
free throws to knot the score at
2-2.
The Pirates then took a lead
they held until ea rly in the
second period, as Stout hit a

The third period saw the
Pirates hit 7 of 7charity tosses,
one of the determining fac tors
in the game.
North Gallia connected 22 of
30 times at the line, while
Eastern could can just 16 of 25
attemp ts.
A 3Moot bomb at the third
quar te r buzzer by Pirate
· forward Dave Robinette broke
the Eagle wingspan, giving the
Pirates a 54-43 lead as the
spirited North Gallians ran and

free throw and senior forwar d

jumped into their

Keith Weddington cashed in a
la yup to give the Pira tes a 5-2
lead.
A Steve Goebel fr ee throw
and a Steve Dill 8 footer
brought the Eagles back to a:;.
5 tie, befo re North Gallia
spurted to take its largest lead
of the first half, 13-8.
The Eagles came back to
knotthecount at 17-17 after one
period.
The second quarter saw
Eastern hold the upper hand
most of the way, leading by as
much as five points at 28-23,
before Nor th Gall ia again
spurted, taking a 35-32 halftime
lead.

break huddle.
Easte rn could come no closer
than within 9 points in the final
period, that coming at the 61-52
mark with just over three
minutes to play on a Bailey 12
footer.
The squads were almos t even
in every department, with the
Pirates haulin g in 40 rebounds
to the Eagles' 38. James and
Ca mden led North Gallia
boardwork with 10 each, while
Robinette grabbed 8.
Spencer grabbed 12 missed
shots, while Dill garn ered 11
and Sheets 9 to account for 32 of
the birds' 38 bounds.
Eas tern committed just 9
turnovers while North Gallla
was guilty of mistakes 11
times.

Devils oust
Meigs ~8 66
•

Gallipolis advanced to the semifinals of the
Class AA Coal Grove Sectional basketball tournament by turning back Meigs 78-66 Saturday night.
The lads of Coach Jim Osborne, now 16-3
overall, will meet Rock Hill (8-10) at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday in their next tournament outing. Coach
Roger Brauer's Marauders completed their 1973-74
camapaign with a 3-15 season record .

The Blue Devils led all the
way in Saturday's tournament Gil Price. Lonnie Coats added
opener. Tom Valentine, Jim four.
Niday and Mike Sickles put the
With 6:38 remaining in the
Gallians ahead 6-0 during the game, Gallipolis built up its
first 1:30 of action . Dan Dod- biggest lead of the night, 65-46.
son's lon g jumper (5 :59 ) broke Both coaches began sub the ice for Meigs in the initial stituting freely at this point.
canto.
The Marauders outscored
GAHS built up a 12-2 ad- GAHS 20-13 during the final
vantage before the Marauders 5:55 of action. Chip Brauer's
finally found the range. It was five points led Meigs during the
19-14 after one period. Gil ' final period. Price and Singer
Price had six, Tom Valentine each had four lo lead Gallia .
seven and Mike Sickles four
Gallipolis connected on 30 of
points for GAHS in the first 55 field goal attempts for 54 .5
stanza. GAHS canned eight of pet. GAHS converted 18 of 29
13 field goal attempts. Dan free throws for 62.1 pet. The
Dodson popped in six and Gallians had 21 personals, 50
Lonnie Coats four for the rebounds and 17 turnovers.
Marauders, who hit five of q7 Price hauled down 19 caroms
r. om the field in the opening for the winners. Sickles added
stanza.
14.
GAHS erupted with 2J points
Meigs hit 27 of 72 field goal
in the second canto, limiting attempts for 37.5 pet. The
TIM BAUM, No. 25, of Eastern High is getting a sliot off
Meigs to 14. That gave the Blue Marauders were 12 of 23 from
STERLING LOGAN, 6-1 senior forward of the North Gallia Pirates, wasn't able to get a
over the high-stretched hand of North Gallia defender Ralph
Devils
a 42-28 halftime ad- tile foul circles for 52.1 pet.
good defensive position on Eastern's John Sheets in the action above. At left (25) is Tim Baum
Smith of North Ga llia in action at the Larry Morrison
vantage.
of Eastern and (41 ) Randy Blake of Eastern. Eastern lost the game, 72-62, knocking them off
Meigs had 25 personals, . 29
Gymnasium at Meigs High School Saturday night. The
Gil
Price
led
the
Gallians
'
rebounds and only eight turnthe tournament trail.
victory in this semi-final match put the Gallians in the secsecond period surge with 13 overs. Orri an Blan chard
tional fina ls next Saturday night against Southern High of
points. Jim Singer added six. hauled in nine rebounds for the
· ·The Gallians hit eight of 16 losers.
Meigs County, also Rock Springs.
from the field in the period.
Price led all scorers with 27
Lonnie Coats tallied six and points. Singer finished with 16
Or r ian Blanchard, f
I 3
G AH S BLUE DEVILS (78 1
0· 1
5
9
I
2
Dan Dodson four for the and Sickles 12.
FG· A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Dan Dodson, c
10 28
4· 4
I
1 24
PLAYER- Po s.
3
TRAFFIC FATALS
Meigs hit five of 18
Marauders.
For Meigs, Dodson turned in
14
1 12
3
2· 3
Steve Pr ice, g
5· 11
1- 2
4
ike Sickl es, f
4· 8
I
9
2
OOLUMBUS (UP! )- Traffic M
from
the
field
in this period.
o.
0
2
0
1
0
I· 3
Lonnie Coats, g
5-12
one of his best efforts of the
M ike Berr idge, f
4· 5
5
3
2 14
accidents on Ohio roadways Tom Valentine, f
I
4
9
3
3 4
3· 4
Te r ry Quai ls. g
4
2 5
0 0
2
3
0
The third period saw both year with 24 points. Lonnie
2
0· · 1
5
0
5
Chip Brauer. c
I· 2
1 4
3· 4
2
3
0
5
claimed nine lives during the Gary Snowden, f
teams
exchange bucket-for- Coats added 14.
19
· 4 27
3
10 14
7- 8
Mi ck Davenpor t, f
1- 2
0 1
I
2
1
2
weekend period beginning at 6 Gi l Price, c
bucket.
GAHS
outscored Meigs
1
I
0
3
1· 3
Te rr y Cr emeans, f
o. 3 0
1 1
0· I
1
0
0
Ji m Wa rr en. c
p.m. Friday and ending at mid- Jim Ni day. g
4
7
2
3- 7
2
o. 0 0 0 0 2 18-16 to take a 60-44 advantage
2· 10
I· 2
Greg Brown ing, 1
o. 0
1
0
0
o. 2
0
Char les Ma r shal , f
I
0· 0
night Sunday, the state High- Pa ul Taylor, f
0· 0
0
0
0
into the last period . Jim
5 16
3
4
2· 3
Steve Wal burn , g
7-10
1- I
2
1
1
Jim
Singer
,
g
I
0· 1
way Patrol reported loday.
Singer's
six points led Gallia 's
I
0
0
0
TOTAL
S
0· 0
0· 0
21 ·12
12·23
25
29
8
Ken ny Wil l. g
Two persons wer e killed Br ent Sa unders, f
o. 0 0
1
0
0
Scor e by qua rter s:
0· 0
third period assault. Dan
0
0
0- 0
0
0
Gall ipolis
0· 0
19 23 18 18 - 78
Friday night, fi ve Saturday David Owen s, f
Dodson tallied 10 of Meigs 16
78
17
21
50
Jo.ss
18·29
Me ig s
/4 /4 16 22 - 66
TALS
TO
and two Sunday with two
markers
in this period, mostly
M E IGS M ARAUDERS (66)
Offici a ls - Larry Tee ter and Ma r vin Turn er , Chilli cothe
double fa talities recorded, the PL AYER- Po s.
FG-A FT.A PF RB TO TP
Chapter
from the top of the foul circle
.1
?
0
1 4
0 2
3
Patrol said.
Bi I I Myers, f
on long jumpers, over the
outstretched handa of Galli• 's

quarter-

Neither team was sizzling

from the fl oor, with the Pirates
canning 25 of 62 field goal attempts for 40 pet. , while the
Eagles sank 2J of 66 for 35 pet.
A pleased Foster, followin g
the game, could say just, " It
was our best team effort of the
year ."

While the Pirates prepare for
their battle with the Tornados
on Saturday, the Eagles have
completed their 1973-74 season
with a 10-10 mark, 9-9 on the
regular season, and 9-3 in the
SV AC, good fo r a second place
finish behind loop champion
Hannan Trace.
North Gallia had ended the
SV AC season tied for third with
Southern at 7-5.
Scoring by quarters:
Easter.n
17 15 10 2~2
North Gallia 17 18 19 18-72
EASTERN - Sheets 1&gt;-7-17,
Baum 0-0-0, Dill4-1-9, Goebel 01-1, Spencer ~15, Bailey 6-214, Weber 0-0-0, Hollon 0-0-0,
Atherton 0-0-0, Blake 2-0-4,
Harris 0-2-2.
tlORTH GALLIA - Weddinglon t-().2, Robinette of-0.8,
Camden 3-1-7, Stout 6-14-26,
James 5-3-13, Smith 2-4-8,
Logan of-0.8.

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anv othsr company
Find out whv now I

GAHS-Meigs box score. ..

~ IR

Stephtn C. Stee
553 AUIItl St.
!Gravel Hill)

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Middleport, Ohio . ·

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( ":"'p111J

Ho me Oftotl: l lu mlnllon . Il ion"''

Take it

Meigs Maraud er junior
center Dan Dodson was named
Sunday to the All-SEOAL
basketball first team in voting
by members of the Sportswriters and Broadcasters
Association, meeting at Jolly
Lanes in Jackson.
Dodson was the league's
sco rer,
eighth
leading
averagi ng 17,3 points per
game. His largest point tota l in
a single game was 32 points,
setting a school scoring record
.for a single contest.
The 6-3 junior, one of just two
underclassmen named lo the
first team, joined Gallipolis'
Gil Price and Jim Niday,
Waverly's John Shoemaker,
Athens' Mark Mace, Logan's
Jim Pierce and Ironton 's Dave
Rann.
Niday is the only other junior
to be named. Shoemaker, Price
and Mace were unanimous
choices.
Waverly's Shoemaker was
named over Gallipolis' Gil
Price as the Most Valuable
Player.
Shoemake r, a 6-2 senior ,
averaged 27.3 poinIs per league

game, while Price was far and
away the leag ue's top
re bounder, averaging 18.3
reboWld! per contest.
Prlte, lui year's MVP, led

the Blue Devils to their first
SEOAL title In '15 years.
Howe ver, Gallipolis came
right back in the Coach of the
Year balloting, with likeable
menlor Jim Osborne capturing
the la urels.
For Osborne it was his third
consecutive Coach of the Year
award, being named Coach of
the Year last year and sharing
the honor with Waverly's C. D.
Hawhee in 1972.
Second team honorees were
Athens senior Dan Skinner,
Gallipolis· Mike Sickles,
Jackson's Mike !&gt;lcDonald and
Paul White, Logan 's Don
Young and Waverly's Doug
Tracy.
Honorable mention went to
Athens' Arnie Chonko, with
Tom Valentine of Gallipolis,
Kenny Green of Iron ton, Ar t
DeSiepehen of Jackson, Jeff
Campbell of Logan and Tony
Swindler of Waverly. Wellston
nominated no one, Meigs only
Dodson for the all-league
squad.
In other action, on a motiop.
by Denny Fobes of the Daily
Sentinel and seconded by Bill
Gray of radio station WJEH,
Gallipolis, 'th e' mininum
number of free throws attempted needed to qualify for
the Foul Shooting Award was

set at 42. Previously, a player
had to make 42 free throws to
qualify for the award.
In a motion by Harold Roach
of Logan, vice-president of the
association , the release time of
the All-SEOAL bas ketball

from me,

awa rds was changed to 12 noon
loday.
Previously, the association
had wailed un til after sectional
tournament play was completed before announcing the
results.

PAUL HARVEY

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0

FOR KIDS
""'

$}15

Funburger'"j
French Fries,,
Small Dnnk
&amp; Lollipop

60'
Only

Q=OrnD~
See Your Heil Dealer

1503 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'

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STATE FARM
.... ....'

..

Dodson on all-league's first tea:rp

ttJ

Distributed By ·
City Ice &amp; Fuel
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. 25 , 1974

"FRENCH CIT-YBRAND"

111

lur h oi\

8¥2"

the

X

MULTI-COLOR TWEED

lllh"

ROOM SIZE RUGS

IO'S FABULOUS DISCOUNTERS!

.88

$

137 PINE ST., GALLIPOLIS, 0.

INDOOR-OUTDOOR OR
INDOOR ONLY

EACH

700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY, 0.
STORE HOURS:
9:00 TO 9:00 DAILY
12:00 TO 8:00 SUNDAY
PRICES GOOD TODAY .
THRU SUNDAY, MARCH 3r~

•

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'

~- ;_, __ _.--

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49e

REG. 89(

LB.
REG. $1.79
"LAUNDRY SPECIAL"

"SCOT PRIDE"

$119

MAGIC BLEACH

(VANILLA ONLY)
GAUON

aae

"FRENCH CITY BRAND" .

FRESH, LEAN

CARTON

"FRENal CITY BRAND"

1
1
---------·
---1
1

"FRENCH CITY BRAND"

GALLON

10·COUNT

$119 CONTACT COLD CAPSULES
CHUCK ROAST.~...............
LB.
ARM ROAST.....................
LB.
PKG.
s 09
s 09
ENGLISH ROAST............... . ~. CHUCK STEAK..................
LB.
AYDS
s 3'9
s 39
GROUND CHUCK.............. La STEW BEEF.....................
LB.
REDUCING PLAN CANDY
"FRENal CITY BRANU' IIONEliSS

ICE MILK

LUSTROWARE
PAPER TOWEL HOLDER

LEAN, BONELESS

•2.77
''FLORIDA"
6 NEW VAR.IHIES
"PURINA" CAT FOOD

CHOICE MORSEL

·,
'

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6 ~;~'1

OR

YOUR · -·
"CALIFORNIA"

CHOICE

BROCCOLI ••.••••••.H;~o. 49e
CRISP
SOLID

REG. $2.05

(P INK OR WHITE)

YELLOW ONIONS.~~B~39e

5-LB.
BAG

RIGHT TO

SEVEN DAYS
A WEEK

24 OZ.

WINTER CLOTHING

MOUTH WASH

COTTAGE CHEESE

MEN'S

ALL MUST GO!

6 9e

"ALL STAR"

CABBAGE

SHOP ''THE JONES BOYS"

LIMIT QUANTITIES

GRAPEFRUITS

"GREAT FOR SLICING OR COOKING"

WE RESERVE THE

BOX

BLUE CHAMBRAY
WESTERN .JACKETS
•MADE IN USA

eMEN'S ei.ADIES eCHILDRENS

.99

.OUTERWEAR •APPAREL .SPORTSWEAR
eSLEEPWEAR eSHOES

c

1 2 PRICE

B1l

BOYS SIZES 8 TO 16

•7••

12-0Z.
CARTONS
#

%"
2 QT. COLORED
TEFLON COATED

CAKE PAN

FRY' PAN ·

• Avocado • Poppy • Gold

$} 99

99

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SISAL. ~ . ROPE

COLORFUL COVERED

TEA KETTLE

f50~

'

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REG. 7'1

9 VOLT

FAMOUS BRAND' SHEETS

EVEREADY

eSOLID.COLOR DENIM. LOOK eCALICO PRINT

'

~PATCHWORK PRINT .GINGHAM CHECK

TRANSISTOR
BAnERY

eMIX OR MATCH!

72"xl04" ·or TWIN ·ATTED .......................... ~ 2 99 EA.

~~

Sl''Xl04" or FULL .FITT£D .......... ,................'3 99 EA.

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MATatiNG PILLOW CASES ..........................

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\1 ,. '' '

. 25 , 1974

"FRENCH CIT-YBRAND"

111

lur h oi\

8¥2"

the

X

MULTI-COLOR TWEED

lllh"

ROOM SIZE RUGS

IO'S FABULOUS DISCOUNTERS!

.88

$

137 PINE ST., GALLIPOLIS, 0.

INDOOR-OUTDOOR OR
INDOOR ONLY

EACH

700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY, 0.
STORE HOURS:
9:00 TO 9:00 DAILY
12:00 TO 8:00 SUNDAY
PRICES GOOD TODAY .
THRU SUNDAY, MARCH 3r~

•

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'

~- ;_, __ _.--

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49e

REG. 89(

LB.
REG. $1.79
"LAUNDRY SPECIAL"

"SCOT PRIDE"

$119

MAGIC BLEACH

(VANILLA ONLY)
GAUON

aae

"FRENCH CITY BRAND" .

FRESH, LEAN

CARTON

"FRENal CITY BRAND"

1
1
---------·
---1
1

"FRENCH CITY BRAND"

GALLON

10·COUNT

$119 CONTACT COLD CAPSULES
CHUCK ROAST.~...............
LB.
ARM ROAST.....................
LB.
PKG.
s 09
s 09
ENGLISH ROAST............... . ~. CHUCK STEAK..................
LB.
AYDS
s 3'9
s 39
GROUND CHUCK.............. La STEW BEEF.....................
LB.
REDUCING PLAN CANDY
"FRENal CITY BRANU' IIONEliSS

ICE MILK

LUSTROWARE
PAPER TOWEL HOLDER

LEAN, BONELESS

•2.77
''FLORIDA"
6 NEW VAR.IHIES
"PURINA" CAT FOOD

CHOICE MORSEL

·,
'

'

ORANGES

6 ~;~'1

OR

YOUR · -·
"CALIFORNIA"

CHOICE

BROCCOLI ••.••••••.H;~o. 49e
CRISP
SOLID

REG. $2.05

(P INK OR WHITE)

YELLOW ONIONS.~~B~39e

5-LB.
BAG

RIGHT TO

SEVEN DAYS
A WEEK

24 OZ.

WINTER CLOTHING

MOUTH WASH

COTTAGE CHEESE

MEN'S

ALL MUST GO!

6 9e

"ALL STAR"

CABBAGE

SHOP ''THE JONES BOYS"

LIMIT QUANTITIES

GRAPEFRUITS

"GREAT FOR SLICING OR COOKING"

WE RESERVE THE

BOX

BLUE CHAMBRAY
WESTERN .JACKETS
•MADE IN USA

eMEN'S ei.ADIES eCHILDRENS

.99

.OUTERWEAR •APPAREL .SPORTSWEAR
eSLEEPWEAR eSHOES

c

1 2 PRICE

B1l

BOYS SIZES 8 TO 16

•7••

12-0Z.
CARTONS
#

%"
2 QT. COLORED
TEFLON COATED

CAKE PAN

FRY' PAN ·

• Avocado • Poppy • Gold

$} 99

99

.

-&lt;

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SISAL. ~ . ROPE

COLORFUL COVERED

TEA KETTLE

f50~

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REG. 7'1

9 VOLT

FAMOUS BRAND' SHEETS

EVEREADY

eSOLID.COLOR DENIM. LOOK eCALICO PRINT

'

~PATCHWORK PRINT .GINGHAM CHECK

TRANSISTOR
BAnERY

eMIX OR MATCH!

72"xl04" ·or TWIN ·ATTED .......................... ~ 2 99 EA.

~~

Sl''Xl04" or FULL .FITT£D .......... ,................'3 99 EA.

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MATatiNG PILLOW CASES ..........................

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7- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleoort-Pomerov. 0 .. Feb. 25, 1974

6 - The Da1Iy Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Feb 25, 1974

College Scores

Pro Standings
NHL Standing s

ABA -Sta nd•ngs
By United Press lnternaf• o oal

Bv Un1ted Pre ss tnt ernat1onal

East
w I
41 24

pel

g .b

636

-

39 25

609

Caro l rna

42 29

Vrrgm ti'l
M e mph rS

2 1 42

592
333
258

2
21 7

N ew Yor k
Kentu c ky

17

49

191 }
25

East
I t piS gf
ga
Bo ston
41 10
7 89 267 158
Montr el 35 16 6 78 216 164
N Y Rngrs
Jl 16 11 74 223 179
Toro nto 27 20 12 6f, 113 172

w

We s t

Utah
lndrana
San An tonto

w

I

44
35
33

23
33
33

pet
657
515
500

g b

Den ver
30 35 462
San O tego
28 36 42 4
Sunday's Re sults
ln drana 107 v.rglnra 102
Denver 103 Utah 91

w

Phil.:t

!Only ga m es schedu l ed 1
Monday 's Games
l No games schedu l ed)

N 8A St an dtng s

By Un•tec:t Press lnternattonal
E&lt;~ s f e rn

Conference

Atlant•c DI'JISIOM
Boston
New Y or k
Buffalo
Phllad el phra

w I
44 17
40 16
35 33
19 46

Ca p 1lal
A tla nta

37 26
28 39

569
418

H ouston

25

1l

379

10
12 1 ,

Cleve land

23

47

329

16, ,

pet
7:21
606
5 15
292
Central 01VISIOM
w I p et

W estern Conference

M1dw es l D1 \1 1S10 n
w
1 pet
Milwaukee
48 17 738
Ch 1cago
~6 22
676
D et r o 1t
~~ 23
657
KC Omaha
26 42 382
PaCifiC DIVI SIOn
w I pet
G St ate
35 27 565
Lo s Ang
35 30 538
Sea f!l e
30 38 44 1
Ph oen 1x
25 4 1 37 9
Porf l an d
21 44
323
Sunday's Results
At l anta 96 Boston 11\, af t
M1lw 100 KC Omaha 93 , aft
Cap •tal 94 Detro•t 84
Cle\leland 101 PhoeniX 97
Ho uston 133 Portland 115
Los Ang 100 Ch 1cago 90
Seatfle 115 Phd a 105
{O nly game s sche d uled)
Monday 's Gam es
{ No ga mes sc h eduled,

••

Bu ll alo 26 16
7
Defr01 f '1 1 30
8
NY lsl ndrs
15 28 14
Vancovr 17 33 9
W Ps l

gb

6' 1
12 1 ~
27
g b

g b

3' ,
5
231 ,
g b
11 7
8
12
151 7

Sf/

so

44
43

t 1 pts
35 14
9 79

189
194

196

24 1

1)8 186
166 227

gf
198

ga
114

Ch 1cago 31 12 15 77 197 115
51 LOUIS 73 28
9 55 167 164
A tlant a n 'l7 11 55 154 182
Lo s Ang 21 29 10 52 166 192
M1n n est 18 17 14 50 18 1 209
Pttsbrgll 18 34
6 42 166 2 12
Ca llfo rn 1 11 42
7 29 154 263
Sunday 's Resutrs
Buff.:t lo 3 Boston 2 aft
Montrea l J St LOU IS 2
L os A ng 3 To r o nto 3
Der r o• t 5 NY ts l ndrs 3
NY Rangers 3 Phila 7
P i i! Sburg h 4 Ch 1cago 2
&lt;Only games scheduled)
Monday ' s Games
( No games sc hedul ed )
WHA Stand1ngs
By Um te d Pr ess lnt ern.ilh o na l
East
w I I pis. gf ga
New England
33 ~6 2 68 219 203
Toronto
32 26 4 68 248 222

3 1 28 3 65 232
282756 1192
26 29 3 55 188
26 34 2 54 193
W es l
w 1 t pts gl
Ho u ston 37 18 5 79 2&lt;15
M1nnesot 33 26 1 67 241
W1nn1peg 29 28 5 63 205
Ed montn JO 30 0 60 207
Vancouv r 23 36 0 46 224
LosAng
21 39 0 42 176
Sunday ' s R esult s
M1nn 2 Cl eve L a ft
W• nn 1peg 3 Ch 1cago 1
Houston 7 Vancouver 1
Toronto 2 New En g 0
Qu ebec 7 Jer sey 4
Ed monton 5 Los Ang 3
Monday 's Game s
(No games scheduled l
Quebec
Cl e\l el n d
Ch 1ca go
Je rs e y

11B

Saturday Junior League
PIS
Gutter Dusters
16
Bowling Stones
14
Hot Shots
121; 2
Apaches
11
Alley Cats
9 1h
High lndi V1 dUal Game Greg Cund•lf 17 6, Ron easel
162
H1gh Senes - Greg Cund1ff
459, Ron Ca sc i 404
Team H1gh Game Hot
Shot s 751, Team High Series Alley Cats 20 39

MASON BOWLING CENTER
Tuesday Industrial
February 19, 1974

Ph

38

B •lls
Burton ' s Sunoco
Flesh er's TeKaco
Mason Agg r egates
Coca Colli
R lggs Used Cars
Ohio Electri c

36

34
34

31

22

Farmers
Team H 1gh Slo' •es

l1

14
14
•ons

College Basketball Resu lt s
By Un1l ed Pr ess tnt er n at1onat
Ea st
Am h er st 86 Clark. 69
Barr 1ngton 57 Nyack. 55
Bosto n U 8 1 Vermont 7.J
Bo wdOin 63 NO rW tCI"' 58
Bridgewa t er 65 MC'SS1a1'1 6'1
cney n e y 76 sn,ppen sbu r g 66
Clarkson 95 Alf r ed 92
Co l by 79 Worcester Po l y 75
Co l gate 96 Rochester 66
Dartmouth 73 Cornell 60
Dow l 1ng 8 1 Ma r 1sr 63
Dr exel 72 Albnght 67
E1senhower 90 Hough t on Bl
Fa1 rf 1e ld 86 Marsh.:t ll 63
Fo r dham 64 Gcorqe town 6'1
F redon 1a St 58 Oneon ta 46
G a nnon 103 Ashland 74
Geneva 80 WPstrn1nst er 76
Getty sbu r g HI Buckne l l 64
Hartford 11 Tnn1ty 68
Harvard 64 Co lumb 1a 57
Hav er ford 72 Drew 64
Hawthorne 117 Thomas 9&lt;~
Lafa y elt e 9 1 Del a wa re 62
LaSal l e 82 Rutge r s 76
LeMoyne 79 lona 74
Mercyhursr 93 Wal!&gt;h 71
Navy 57 Army 41
Pace 99 Yesh1va 62
Penn 90 Yale 79
Penn St 66 P 1tt sburqh 64
Po mt Park. f/9 Clar1on 90
Prm ceton 70 Brown 49
Queens 83 Brook l yn 60
R 1d er 71 L eh1Qh 65
Sw art h more 76 Morav1an 60
Syracuse SOC Wasn 79
Th1e l 7 1 John Ca r roll 68
Tufts 101 Ha milton 83
Un•on 7 1 B1 n ghampton 52
W 1ll1ams 72 Wesleyan 62
York. 10 5 Cathed r a l 90

197
101

South
A la bama 94 Kentucky 71
2l5 Cum ber la nd 80 Berea 78
Dav idSO n 67 Cmc 1nnat1 62
ga E Ca r 78 T h e C 1t a d el 66
159 F Iorence sr 82 D el t a St 69
209 F lorida 77 M ISS ISSIPPI 6 1
219 Fu r man 7 1 Jacksonvil l e 61
216 Leno1r Rhyne 75 Catawba 73
250 LOU ISia n a St 64 GeQfQid 79
240 Maryland 64 Du ke 61
M ISS Sl 67 Aub urn 60
P emb ro k e 85 Franc 1s Mano n 43
R1chmond 86 W•lllam &amp; Mary

BI
T ennessee 59 Vanderbil t 53
Towson 51 101 Sal1sbur y 97
V 1r g 1n1a Tech 75 Mercer 65
Wak.e Forest 106 Appa lachian

60
M1dw es t
Akron 103 Brockport Sl 64
Belo it 71 L awrence 5!1
Brad l ey 94 M emphi S St 81
Calvm 87 Ad nan 70
Coe 84 R 1pon 75
Dayton 86 Xav •er 55
Evan sv ill e 109 Wa b ash 10 1
Grand Val l ey 92 Oak l and 75
I l linOI S 91 Iowa 84
lnd 1ana 73 M mn eso l a 55
K.;~laroazoo 61 Aqu,na s 44
Kansas St 90 Oklahoma 67
LOUISVI ll e 93 St LOUIS 85
Malone 106 Cedarv tll e 65
Marquette 61 Detr0 1t 53
MiChigan I l l P urdu e 84
MISSOU ri 72 Co loradO 68
Nebra ska 7 1 Okla hom a St 63
Not r e Dam e 108 W Va 80
Oh 10U 79 C M i ch 78
Tol edp 81 M1am1 (Oh iO ) 68
Whitewat er 63 P Ja ttl ev 111 e 62
Wllm•ngton 81 Urbana 79
W1scons ,n 68 Ohio s t 56
W1ttenberg 72 Man etta 51

MIAMI (UP!) - Spring training officially has started, or if you
want to put it another way, baseball already IS beginning to feel
the f~rst pmch of the energy criSIS
Sixteen major league clubs are using Flor1da for sprmg
trammg and the situation regarding those cars lining up for gas
here is the same as 1tis throughout most of the country
Bad.
Few, if any, are exempt from that long, tune-consummg wail
m !me.
It doesn't matter who you are. If you want gas, you wait.
Jun Palmer, the Baltimore Orioles' p1tchmg ace, was talking
about the gas shortage at lunch. Grant Jackson, also coming off a
good year, one m wh1ch he was ~ and had a 1.98 ERA, was
listemng.
Baltimore Celebrity
The other day in Baltunore, before commg down here, I waited
45 mmutes m line and that wasn't so bad except when I got to the
pump, the lady running the statwn told me there was no more
gas," said Palmer.
"A fnend of mme happened to know this lady about an hour
later and she filled me up. From the way she talked though, I
could tell she thought I was Marty Domres. She sa1d 'just keep
throwing those touchdown passes."
" 'Wa1t a minute,' I said, "my name is Jim Palmer. I play for
the Orioles, not the Colts, and we won more games in one week
than they did all year."'
Jim Palmer, the American League's Cy Young winner, MVP
runnerup and top-Balaried pitcher at $130,000, laughed tellmg the
story.
''Shows you how well known I am in Baltimore,'' he said.
Grant Jackson laughed too.
Remembers Martin
"Don't feel bad," he smd. "Before I signed with the Phillies in
1962, I never heard of any baseball players either. Where I came
from , Fostoria, Ohio, I never paid any attenlwn to baseball. I
used to love football. Jun Brown was my hero.
"I think Tony Taylor was the first baseball player who ever
stuck m my mind and that was because I met hun and liked him
when I first JOined the Phillies. But I never heard of fellows like
Warren Spahn or Duke Snider before I got into baseball."
"Four guys come to my mind when you ask me about my first
recollecllon of ballplayers," said Palmer, forgetting the gas
crunch temporarily.
"The first one 1s Billy Martin. I remember commg home from
school one day and watching him make that great catch against
the Dodgers on TV back in the "50's. I used to love the Yankees,
so the guys I remember best are the ones who used to beat them
Billy Pierce, Herb Score and Virgil Trucks."
"Virgil who•" asked Jackson.
"VIrgil Trucks," sa1d Pabner. "He p1tched two no-hitters once
m the same season. I think, he gave the Yankees a lot of trouble.
You know, being from New York, I used to be slightly prejudiced.
I always thought Clete Boyer was the best third baseman and
Sam Huff was the best linebacker ."
Bald Baseman
-"Huff was the best linebacker, wasn't he •" put in Jackson.
"He could've been," said Palmer, "but one of the thmgs I
remember is how this best friend of mine kept telling me how
Brooks Robinson was a much better third baseman than Clete
Boyer. This was in Scottsdale, Arizona, after my fam1ly moved
there . The Orioles used to train there and the only one my friend
bilked about all the time WliS Brooks Robinson. He said Brooks
was the best there was. I said 'Brooks who? ' That's the truth. I
never heard of him before. Then when I saw him for the f~rsl
time, I thought to myself who's this guy with no hair• How can he
be the best third baseman in baseball?"
In due time, Jim Palmer found out he was.
To this day , there are few things Brooks Robinson can 't do with
a glove.
One of them though is get gasolme.
POMEROY LANES

Southwe st
Ar •zona 122 U t ah 9'1
A r kansas en Bay lor 62
E T es St 88 Ange lo St 80
Houston 105 Centenary 89
Ok la C1 ty 94 Ga Te ch 71
SMU 96 T C U 60
SW t Texas 87 T exas A&amp; I 75
Su i Ross 91 Tarle ton 74
Tex as 88 Tex a s A&amp;M 81
Te x Lut hn 91 St Mary 'S 71
Texas Tech 85 R1ce 54
Tul sa 87 N Texa s 51 75
West
Ida St 75 Montana St 72
Mon ta n a 58 Bo1se St 56
Nev Las Vega s 85 Stt l 75
N ew M ex 1co 78 Wyom1ng 67
N Ar 1zona 63 Gonzaga 59
Oregon 72 Stanford 71
Oregon St 77 Ca l1f 73
S Cal 86 Wash Sf 57
UC L A f/9 Washmgton 65
Webe r Sf 77 Idaho 55

Teafor d

467 ,

Isabe ll e

Couch

464

Wedn esday Early B1rd
L ea gue
February 20, 1974
Won Lost
Helen 's Beauty Shop
60
12
Ben Tom Corp
58
14
Rawlmgs Auto Parts
28
44
Rou sh's L a nd1ng
24
48
Bertha s Grocery
24
.sa
Stewart H ardwa r e
22
50
Team H1gh Game - Helen's
Beau ty Shop 807
Team H1gt1 Se nes - Helen' s
Beauty Shop 2363
lnd H1gh Game - Max1ne
Dugan 199, Betty Wh i tlatch 193
lnd H 1gh Ser 1es - Max1ne
Dugan 555, Ftoss1e Maxson 5 13

SEOAL Standings
· All GAMES
T EAM
W l P
Sat urd ay Oh1o H1gh Schoo l
Ba sk e tball Scor-e s
By Un1fcd P ress lnt c rnaflo na t
Clas s AAA
{AtCo lumbu s l
Reyno l ds burg 75 Grove c 1t y 59
Wes terv 11f e 'i7 Grovepor t 56
70 w 1 1
Co l s Ea s tmoor
a nu
R1dge 68
Delawa r e 56 H1 l l1ard 35
1 A t To l cdol
Tot Cent r al 6&lt;1 Tol st Joh n ' s
57

Tot
59

Woodwa r d 70 To l

Rogers

(A t canton I

C an~on Glenwood 5 1 Jackson 38

AT JE GETS TITLE
HERENVEEN , The Netherlands 1UP!) - At)e KeulenDeelst ra of Holland, a 35-yearold mother, won the women's
world allround speedskatlng
lltle Sunday for the fourth time
m five years. Mrs. KeulenDeelstra won three of the four
contested events. Shella Young
of Detrmt won the other race
Oh1o College
Bask etbal l Re sults
By Un1t ed Pr ess InternatiOnal
Sunday
Lo yola { Ill J 94 Cl eve lan d Stat e
13
Saturdoily
W1scon s•n 68 01110 Stat e 56
Oh •o Un1 ver s1ty 79 Cen tra l
M1Ch 1g an 78 (otl
Western M1 Ch1 gan 85 Ke nt
State 50
Tol edo 81 M1am1 68
DavidSon 67 C1nc .nnat • 62
Dayton 86 Xav1er 55
Steu ben vil l e 53 Youngstown
State 50
A kron 103 Brockport ( N Y l 84
Gannon ( P a l 103 Ash land 74
Fa1rmo n t St
(W
Va ) 103
Cen t r al St 67
Wng llt Sta te 90 Rose H ulman
( lnd l 77
Bluffton 77 Goshen ( l n d l 75
Hanov er ( l nd l 87 Oettance 72
Tho mas More (Ky) 87 Fmd lay
70
'
Case Rese rv e...ll Bethany (W
Va 64
H1ram 94 Ca rneg1 e Mellon
( Pa l so
Th 1el (Pal 71 John Carroll 68
Malone 106 Cedarvill e 65
R to Grande 95 OhiO Dom 1ni ca n

16
15
14
14

3
A
5
5

12
11
10
10

1104
1303
121 1
1277
7 134 1

OP
976
1080
994
1057
1199

7 1209 1101
970
9 1142 1153
Rock Hoi I
8 10 1098 1.163
Iron ton
7c.:\l 1105 120 4
Jackson
5
11 14 1223
Me1gs
J 15 lOBI 1242
We ll s ton
1 15 624 J IBS
Saturday's results
GaH1p011s 78 Me1gs 66
Waverlv 6 5 Portsmou th W es t

B 1074

1'\

S?
Greenf1e ld 6A We ll ston 33
Wednesday 's games
Iro nton vs Sou th Pomt, a t
Coal Grove
Northwest vs Whe e l ersburg,
a t Lucas .n ll e
Thursday's games:
W ave rl y \IS Mmford , a t
L ucasv ille
Ga ll1 polls \IS Rock H d l at
Coal Grove

Fndav 's game s

Ch 1ll 1cothe vs Logan, a t R10
G r a nde
Sa turday 's games
Por tsmouth vs M1am1 Tr ace
Mar1etta wmner, a t R1o
Fmals of Class AA Sec
f 1onal s F o ur w mners advance
to R1o G r ande 01 slnct

TWO NEW RECORDS
VIITEL, France (UP!)
Em1le Puttemens of Belgian
bettered world records in two
events Sunday. Puttemen ran
&gt;,000 meters in 13 minutes, 30.8
seconds to eclipse the old
13:34.2 set by MlfUZ Yifter of
Ethop•a and en route to this
clocking hit a best of 13.05.2 for
three mlles. The old three-mile
mark
of 13:07.2 was
established by American
distance runner Tracy Smith.
for the fourth tune in five
years Mrs. KeulenDeelstra
won three of the four contested
events. Sheila Young of Detroit
won the other race.

Girls tip-off at 6
p.m. Wednesday

· The girls' basketball season
m Me1gs and Gallia Counhes
comes down to the w1re th1s
week as the Meigs Girls Invitational Basketball Tournament gets tmder way m the
Larry R Mornson Gymnasiwn.
The five-team tourney begms
Wednesday evemng at 6 when
the Eastern Eagles meet the
Southern Tornados.
The winner of that battle
then fa ces th e ru gged

Gallipolis Blue Angels at 6 p.m.
Fnday, followed by the MeigsKyger Creek clash at 7 p.m.
The losers of the two Friday
games wlll then meet a week
from today at 4 p.m. in the
consolatiOn game, w1th the
wmners of Friday's contests
meeting in the champwnsh1p
game at 6 p.m.
Adm1ss1on 1s 75 cents for
adults and 50 ce nts for
students.

Rio Grande College will face
Defiance College in an opemng
round NAJA Distnct 22
Tournament game at Defiance
Monday, March 4.
Th1s was assured followmg
the Redmen's 95-84 Mid.QhiO
Conference tnumph over
VISiting Ohio Dommican at
Lyne Center Saturday night
Coach Art Lanham's crew
OHIO DOMINICAN (841 wtll carry a 13-11 season mark
O ledal1 s, 3 1 7, Yu skewtch 5 (l
mto the post-season event. Rio 10 Gardner 7 9 23, Ess man 5
lo LlJm 4 19 , V1cko r y 011 .
fimshed th1rd m MOC play w1th uHopkin
S 3 0 6 , Krau tt er 3 3 9,
a 6-4 conference mark
Ehrber 0 2 2 , Rauch 2 1 s:
Defiance w1ll carry a 19-5 TtJmbdson 1 0 2 TOTALS 3318 84
season mark into the tourRIO GRANDE
{ 9SI
ese 1 24, Ha r t 511 1;
nament. In the other Distr1c t 22 Alban
Bollin ge r 50 10, L am bert 15 9
contest, Malone 21-&lt;i, w1ll host 39 , St ew a rt 3 0 6 . Noe 2 59 ,
Fausnaugh I I 3 . Sm• l h 1 0 2;
Central State , 13-1 3 The Sanders
2 3 7 , Rob1nso n 2 0 4
champ10nsh1p game w1ll be TOTAL S 37 -2 1-95
Scor e at half
played Wednesday, March 6, at
R10 47 00 29
the school which has the best
season mark after the playoffs
Wmner of the District 22
tournament will advance to
Kansas City, Mo , for the NAJA
tourney, slated March 11-16.
In Saturday's contest, Rio
bmlt up a comforable 47-29
DRY
halftime lead and coasted to an
easy win over the v1s1ting
CLEANING
• Panthers
Ron Lambert's 39 pomts led
Rw Grande . That f1gure tied
(ON REQUEST)
Lyne Center's single-game
h1gh effort by one individual.
Mark Todd had 39 in the 1971
Thanksgivmg Holiday Tournamenl.
The Panthers were led by
Chm Essman's 10 points and
14 rebounds
SE RVICE ON
Rio h1t 37 of 79 field goal

2 HR.

•

1 DAY

SHIRT
FINISHING

BROWN'S VICTORY
ADELAIDE, Austraha
(UPI) - Warwick Brown of
Australia scored a 3.5 second
beat over England's Peter
Gethen Sunday ln the fmal
event of the _8-race $150,000
Peter Stuyvesant motor racing
series. Gethen was the overall
champion Wlth 41 points in the
series.

DEVOE'

·

--~ .......

B

14
T eram No 1
26
16
Team No 2
24
New York Clothing Hou se
18
22
F nendly Tavern
10
30
Forest Run Block
10
30
Team H ig h Game - Team
No 2 47 7
T eam High Ser1es - Royal
Crown Bollling Co 131A
lnd H1gh Game - CarQiyn
Teaford 187 , Mary Voss 175 "
!nd H 1g h Series - Carolyn

Carolina Lumber and Supply
312 6th ST. PHONE 657-1160
· - - - -- ---

!

POINT PLEASANT

by 10, Out at 5

Robinson's
DRY CLEANING
LAUNDRY
992-5428 Pomeroy

N. W. COMPTON. 0. D.

-

OPTOMmiST

OI=FICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT c,T., ·
POMEROY.

•

us

Auxiliariesgiven recognition

Notes . ...
A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members

A time for gardeners

•

By Mrs. Dick Foley
Rutland Garden Club
Yes, spring is almost here. The groundhog has come out to
warn us of coming cold weather that will freeze and chill any
plant that tries to get a head start on others.
Now is the time for starting to force branches of early
shrubs. This is clean-up month. Make aJ:ood clean job of pruning
all swruner flowermg plants such as roses , altheas and crape
myrtle. This is a good time for dormant spraying of roses. Prune
about the rruddle of the month.
A!J soon as your plants are prnduclng their second or th1rd
pair ofleaves is a good time to put them ln individual con tamers.
Don't at any time let them dry out; keep moist at all times, but
not wet.
Garlic is corrung into use again. Some people put 1t around in
lheir flower beds "" aphids don't like it. Onions do the same
lhing.
Now IS the lime to check house plants for mealy bugs and
spider mites.
Gardening gives us a zest for living.
Many people have trouble with their seedlings damping off.
' Dampmg off is a fungus disease at soil surface that causes seed' lings to lie over and die. To control, use a sterile or pasteurized
· starting medium, or drench the soU with a special liquid soil
• drench fungicide . Provide seedlings with gond light and rur
circulation.
Pyrex casseroles and plastic refr1gerator dishes with lids are
; perfect for sowing tiny dust size seeds like those of petunias, wax
' begonias and lobelia,
WHAT'S IN A SEED? Seeds are such fascmatmg things.
There are dust-like seeds, seeds as big as coconuts and all sizes
between. There are black seeds, white seeds, and a vast assortment of colors. They may be round, oblong, three-Bided, thin, fat,
iimooth, rough. Some have soft shells, others are hard, some are
: ~elicately carved. We find them enclosed in hulls, pods, scales,
• surrounded by pulp or exposed nakedly to the elements.
! Good seeds have one tiling m common - life . This is evident
: when we plant the seed. Vie can ptant a stone or a grain of ~nd in
: exactly the same way we plant a seed . These cannot grow
• because they do not conblin the spark of life.
• • Every viable seed, even the tiniest, has already w1thin 11, a
', miniature plant.
:
Follow bulbs with annuals. Spring bulbs, such as showy "Red
, Emperor" tulips in a narrow•bed along a fence or side of the
: qouse, may be followed by small flowering annuals. Sow seed or
• ..,t out seedlings of such shallow rooting kinds as dwarf
, inarigolds, ageratum, lobelia, annual phlox, portulaca, sweet
' li!yssum, nasturtiums, California poppies and nemesia.
Agarden is many things to many people. Who is to say that a
_tangle of daisies and black-eyed susans along a sunny highway is
·less a garden than a carefully tended formal plot? Or that a
=scraggle of marigolda nursed by a child is less magic than a
: sprlng hill-Bide of trilliwn and unfolding ferns? The beauty of a
: garden is in the eye of the bebolder.
:
But the gardener is something else agaln. He is both the
• dreamer who thumbs tllrough catalogs in January, and the
~ begrimed builder who labors on a retaining wall in August.
Surely, gardeners come close to being the most selfless and
imaginative of human beings. Their monuments are temporary
~nd their successes die with the seasons. Yet they start each new
year w1th bope and aspiration. Never is this more apparent than
during their annual bouts with cataloga.
' Let's feed the birds. The starlings like a piece of suet. Some
pf the birds are seed eaters; some are meat eaters. The starlings
·have a beak that goes deep after grubs in our yards. Moles will
inJlabit a lawn where grubs are, then mice get in the burrows and
eat the small bulbs which we planted in the fall to make early
flowers.
I am looking for the first robin .
1 have been looking at seed cabllogues until I am excited
~bout the babny days of spring. Use the best seed, always. Poor
seed: a poor garden.
If you will buy a magazine "Family Circle," at Kroger or
A.&amp;P. store you will find a packet of tomato seeds. So get your
free seeds and plant them early.

..

Mrs. Harry Davis, Mrs . County Council w1th Mrs
Catherine Welsh and M1ss Robert Riley, department first
Cheryl Lehew, of the American vice president, giVIng the
Legion Auxiliary , Drew response. District presidents,
Webster Post 39, and Mrs. department officers, and past
Allen Hampton of Lewis departme nt officers were
Manley Post 263 Auxiliary, mtroduced.
were in Colwnbus over the
Greetings were given by
weekend for the midwinter M1ss Wendy Spoerl, departconference of the Department ment Jwuor pres1dent; Mrs.
of Ohw, America n Legion Donald Miller, national
Auxiliary, held at the Ne1l executive committee woman ,
House.
Mrs. Melvm Junge, natwnal
They were JOined by Debra communications chamnan ;
Lehew and Charlotte Lehew of Mrs Arthur Hrabak, Area D
Columbus,
both
jumor educahon and sc holarship
members of Umt 39, Pomeroy. cha1rman; Mrs . Raymond
On Fnday evening the group Sloan,
ce ntral diVISIOn
attended a mock meeting of legislation chairman ; and Mrs
~~ Everybody's Umt 00" conJames Warner, Sp1r1t of '76
ducted by the department
Saturday afternoon a sk1t
president, Mrs. George Sallot,
and the department secretary,
MISS Ann Eschelman A SOCial
hour was held followmg the
tramlng session.
Al the Saturday morning
meeting conducted by Mrs.
Sallot, awards were presented
mcludmg f1ve )uniOr pins and
four senior pins for members of
the Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Amencan Legwn Aux1liary,
for field service. Mrs. Lowell
Roush, director of field service, presented the pins to Mrs .
DaviS for the Middleport un1t
members. Illness prevented
attendance to the midwinter
conference by the Middleport
Auxiliary members
The mvocallon was g1ven by
Mrs. Glen Horton, department
chap lam; the pledge of
allegiance was led by Mrs.
Charles Williams, and Mrs.
V1rgil Courtney led m the
national anthem. Welcome was
ex tended by Mrs. Leroy Green,
president of the Franklin

Nobody else in the world can give
us what you can.A pint of your blood.
And your gift has never been
more important. Because
blood from healthy donors,
who freely donate their
blood, is 10 times less
likely to cause
infectious
hepatitis
in the
recipient than
is blood
from many ,,
commercial ·sources. Think
about that.
The need is urgen.t, and
continuous.
Help us. Join us. Today.

enl!tlcd "Wonderful World of
Charlie Brown" was presented
m costume by the 14 d!str1cl
presidents . There was also a
cavalcade of flags by the
departmen t Juniors under the
d1rechon of Mrs. Rober t
Parker.
Cheryl
Lehew
represented the Eighth DistriCt
and earned the Umt 39 banner
Mrs. Parker enterblmed w1th a
pizza party for the Juniors
followmg their part on the
program
Greetmgs were ex tended by
Dav1d Cropper, department
command er, and Roger
Mun son, natwnal exec utive
committeemen. M1ss Myrna
H1xon repor ted on the 1973
Freedom Foundation teachers'

senunar held at Valley Forge,
Pa
Saturday evening a reception
was held honormg Mrs. Nile
Fuller, nahonal vice president
of central division, followed by
a banquet.
On Sunday morning, Mrs.
DaviS and Cheryl Lehew attended the American Legwn
Aux1liary hospitBI volunteer
onentBtwn conducted by Mrs.
Raymond Sloan, and the
Auxiliary
field service
onenlatwn conducted by Mrs.
Lowell Roush.
The Auxliiary members
were
accompanied
to
Columbus by Harry Davis who
was the weekend guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Lehew.

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

Dessert as an entree ?

. I f:~
~1' ' SOCia
:-.·
*'
~~~ Ca Iend ar~
..,

:;:;

;~

;?.

MONDAy
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce at noon at Meigs
Inn.
OHIO AssociatiOn of Public
School Employes, Chapter 17,
7.30p.m. at Meigs Junior High
cafeteria.
RACINE Emergency Squad

will hold a ~pecial mlaeetinfg at 8
p m. to d1scuss P ns or a
rummage sale: ·All husbands
and WIVes are lfiV!ted.
TIJESDA Y
J
_HARRISONVILLE Senior
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs.
C!hzens will meet at 7' 30 p.m. Rose Carr was appointed
at the Harrisonville School. Ice chairwoman of Easter prOJect.&lt;;
cream and pie will be served. to be carried out by the Rose
Everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic Garden Club at Tuppers
,.3 F d A M
Plams, durmg a meeting held
Lodge ~
' . an . ., annua1 · a t th e horne of Mrs. Ul a Swan .
mspec ti on, 7:30 p.m. a t the
M 1 M
ded 1
Ml.ddleport Masomc Temp1e. th rs. na assar pres1 a
e sessiOn . w1th Mrs.
Leota
. 'ted
All Master Masons mvt
.
·
Massar g1vmg devotions, The
MIDDLEPORT • Pomeroy 12 members present answered
Area Branch, AmeriCan
.
.
ty roll call by nammg a favonte
. t·wn of Umvers1
Assocta
. H' h palnollc song. For the
Women ' 7..30 p.m., Melgs
lg
M Le
Bb k
School library. Speaker, Judy program, rs . ona a coc
. board to read an arllcle on houseplanls,
McDon ald . Execu tIve
meet preceding the meeting. Insects and how to control
RACINE American Legion them. Mrs. ~ema Stout gave
Auxiliary,
A potluck dinner was hJlld Walburn were appointed to the
7,30 p.m at the hall the secretary s report, and the
Thursday night at the Mid· committee to secure supplies Leora Young m charge of
dleport Church of Christ by the for the layettes which the refreshmenls.
Loyal Women's Class. Guesls women will make for an
PAST Matrons, Pomeroy
for the dinner were Mr. and African Mission project. Chapter, OES, 7:30p.m at the
Mrs. George Glaze, Clint and Several members were home of Mrs. Thomas Young,
reported ill.
l'rey, and Wilbur Theobald.
W. Main St. All past matrons
Program was by Mrs. invited.
The dinner committee was
DEXTER - A d1sp!ay of
composed of Miss Mildred Martha Childs who used the
PANCAKE SUPPER, Grace pictures pamted by Mrs . Anna
Hawley, Mrs. Beulah Roush, "Women of the Bible" theme Episcopal Church, servmg to Ogdln was a feature of the
and Mrs. Margaret Lallance. and spoke on Marian, the first begin at 6 p.m. Public supper recent meeting of the Star
MISS Frances Roush presided woman singer and sister of with no charge but donations to Garden Club at the Ogdm
at the brief business session Moses.
be accepted for the Bishop 's home.
Attending the dinner besides Fund for World Relief.
following the dinner. She
Members also exc hanged
diBtributed new yearbooks, and those named were Mrs. Wilbur
WEDNESDAY
valentine gifts during the
noted the World Day of Prayer Theobald, Mrs. Alice Robeson,
POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT meeting presided over by Mrs.
service to be held at the Mrs . Ida Childs, Mrs . Lions Club, Wednesday noon 1 Grace Tw-ner. Devotions were
Chester United Methodist Margaret Jones, Mrs. Helen Meigs Inn. Business meeting. given by the hostess with
Reynolds, Mrs. Carrie Smith,
Church at 2 p.m. Friday.
OHIO VALLEY Com- members joinmg in the creed
Miss
Nina
Russell,
Mrs.
Mary
mandery 24, Kmghls Templar, and collect. Response to roll
Quilting will be continued
each Wednesday at the church. Bailey, Mrs. Lula Mae Ashley, stated conclave, Wednesday, call was 11 nammg plants now 111
7:30 p.m., Pomeroy Masonic bloom. ''
.Miss Hawlty and Mrs. Mabel and Mrs. Pearl Reynolds .
Temple. Special preparation to
New fruits and vegetables,
be made for mspecl!on on the many varieties and therr
March 23.
·care was discussed by Miss
AMERICAN
Legion Hazel Henson . Mrs. Nellie
topic
was
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett Nelson 's
"Achimimes."
She
told
of
the
Post 128, 6:30 p.m. potluck
A dona lion of $50 to the· Winebrennej and Mrs. Freda dinner with legionneires as varieties available; the many
Middleport firemen for the Hood served a dessert course
colors, and the way to keep the
' emergency vehicle fund was to those named and Mrs. guests. Meeting at 7:30 p.m.
' made by the Busy Bee Class of EJecta Souders, Mrs. Ruth
· the Middleport First Baptist Johnson, Kathryn Werner,
....
1111111
' Church meehng Thursday Mrs . Nelle Werner, Mrs. Eva
7l.4 JN..--""'1 JW.
, nightatthehomeofMrs. Lettie Hartley, Mrs. Wilma Par' Roush.
malee, Mrs. Elizabeth Gard·
' The class song opened the ner, Mrs. Elizabeth •Slaven,
~ 1leJtg,..,.IIMMT
: meeting conducted by Mrs. Mrs . Fred Edwards, Mrs.
Rosemary Lyons, president. Gwinnle White, M("s. Edith
PACKAGE PdLICY:
' She also gave devotions using a Sauer, Mrs. Jessie Houdashelt,
TQTAL COVERAGE
• meditation from the Secret and Mrs. Ehtel Hughes.
, Place, and one from a church
Our
complete
comprehensive
, bulletin
entitled
"The
homeowners ~ policy covers loss due to
Masterpiece." New yearbooks
were distributed. Members
fire, theft, storm damage, more. One
BOOSTERS
TO
MEET
answered roll call w1th Bible
premium.
RACINE - The Southern
1 verses.
Mrs. Beulah White had the Local Band Boosters will meet
: program using a quiz on the Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m. at the
992-2143
: disciples of Jesus wilh Mrs. high school ln Racine. Plans
for
band
banquet
will
be
made.
Pomeroy,
102 W. Main
' Cora Pullen and Mrs. Leora
All
members
are
asked
to
992-7428
• Sigman wjnnlng the prizes.
please
attend.
~ Mrs. Roush, Mrs. Isabelle

what dessert they plan to eat
before ordenng the mam
course. This Austnan rice
pudding calls for apples, eggs
and Sw1ss cheese. Even Mary
Jane would find it bard to
reslsl.
AUSTRIAN RICE PUDDING
1 cup regular rlce
y, cup butter or margarine
1 quart milk
y, cup sugar
1 tablespoon vanilla
I cup grated Austrian Swiss

cheese
4 eggs
2 apples, peeled, cored
and sliced
¥• cup sugar
1teaopoon cbmamon
In a saucepan, cOmbln.e rice,
butter, milk and sugar. Slmmer over low heat until rice Is
tender, about 20 to 25 minutes.
Stir occasionally during
cooking. Add nnllla and
cheese and stir until cheese is
melted. Cool. Beat in eggs, one
at a time. Pour mixture into a
greased 9-inch square baking
pan. Top with apples and
sprinkle w1th sugar mixed with
treasurer's report was g1ven cinnamon.Bakeinapreheated
by Mrs. Grace Stout.
J51klegree oven for 3D minutes.
Serve
warm or cold with
Blue ribbons were awarded
to M M I G 'ff'th M
cream, if desired. Makes 6 to 8
rs
ere n 1 ' rs servings.
Stout, and Mrs. Swan for their
valentine arrangements Mrs
Helen Dorst won the travelmg
prizes.
A dessert course was served
BASEBALL MEETING
by the hostess to those named
The Syracuse • Minersville
and Mrs. DorOthy Stout, Mrs. Baseball Assn. will meet
Ethel Arbaugh, Mrs. Maude Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the new
Gray, and three guests, Mrs. municipal
building
In
Dor1s Koemg, Mrs . Elizabeth Syracuse. There will be an
Lyons, and MISS Soma Carr. election of officers. Since It Is
The March 20 meeting will be necessary that the association
at the home of Mrs. Rose Carr . learn the number of boys who
will be participating ln the
program this summer, all
mterested parents are urged to
attend .

pro1eCt
• chazrwoman
•
d
name

Monsoon Arens
While Southeast As1a is the
m o s t important monsoon
area, others include northern
Australia and the Gulf Coast
of the Umted States

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
Today 1s "Th1rsday" tomorrow's pay day.
Stop making cracks about
Amtrak - pretty soon it'll be
the only way to go.

$50 given to vehicle fund

l~lol.,ltllfo\-oto\IIWI""

W~IIflllll

INSURANCI

The w1fe saved seven cents
on a can of coffee w1th a
coupon - and spent $18 on a
purse to carry more coupons.
If you haven't read the
most recent best·seller don't lose any sleep about it.

If

'

.

NEW
"Steam Oeaning

Methoo"
Wo will como to yow and completely ciNn oil

ybur c..-pet tty IIIII llomethod.

Cal 992·2635
.Ingels Fumiture
Middleport

'

•

pve
a little
•

g1vea
you.

GRADUATE:
IF YOU'RE
WONDERING •••

be a big

ender.
•
Jve

You have a tough choice PICking
a career w1 th a good future- with
free tratn lng - fro m one of over
140 JObs Dectd~ng where to
go free durtng your 30 days
pa 1d vacat1on the ftrst year.
Knowmg that all your medical/ dental expenses are
taken care of, and that
your food, housing and
clothing are free Tak-

responslblflty Im-

mediately after trainIng 1n one of many
locations arollnd the

world . Yes, It's a

tough choice. You 'fl
love every m1nute of It

FIND YOURSELF IN
EUNITED STATES
A1R FORCE.

The American

•

}

•

CLEANING

Get ,your carpet
cleaned now by the

UHd. Roln ore ru-llle.

DALE C. WARNER INS. AGENCY ·

'

CARPET

tall Ingots
ond ""
"''' ••·
plolo
whr 11Nm
clelnl,.
Is
more lllltfoctorr. No _ ,

LODGE TO MEET
CHESTER - Shade River
Masonic Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
will hold its annual inspection
at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the
temple inChester.Work will be
m the master mason degree.
Refreshments will be served
and all master masons are
mvited.

Ing

In New Method

IIIW

Ogdin paintings displayed

plan Ls year after year.
The traveling prize donated
by Mrs Ogdin was awarded to
Mrs. Maggie Chaney. Commenls on planting a garden for
continuous bloom were given m
February tips for gardening.
Refreshments were served
durmg a soc1al hour

someone else. An opportunity
will pop up suddently.
LIBRA !Sept. ~t. :13) This
IS a good day for you to iron out
agreements with others that
wlll In some manner unprove
conditions that affect your
work.
SCORPIO (Oct. Z4-Nov. 22)
You're vecy creative today m
both the aestheti~ and pracllcal senses. This will reflect
favorable on your household
budget.
SAGIITARWS (Nov. :13-Dec.
21) There Is a cerblin glow
about you that you may not be
aware of but others will. It will
contribute to your popularity.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Your greatest pleasure today
will be through something
you 'II share in collectively with
your fam1ly . It comes unexpectedly.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Something can now be done
about a good idea you've been
toymg with. Don't wait too long
to get things started.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marcb 20)
Conditwns that relate to your
finances look very promising
today . Seize upon a situation
where another offers you
somethmg out of the ordinary .
YOUR
BIRTHDAY:
February 25, 1974- Important
contacts will be developed this
year, brmging with them
special advantages that will
advance your self-Interests. A
long trip you've been thinking
about may become a reality.

CLUB TO MEET
The Meigs County Ridmg
Club w1ll meet at 7·30 p.m.
Tuesday at the home of Eskey
Hill.

Austrian nee pudding includes apples and Swiss cheese.

By Aileen Claire
NEA Food Editor
When A. A. M1lne had Mary
Jane cry with all her m1ght and
main about "rice pudding
again," it's obvious she hadn't
sampled any of the tempting
nee puddmgs one enJoys in
Vienna. Austrians have a way
with rice puddmg that makes
even casual dessert eaters
thinkmg of seconds. In fact,
Austrians like th eir desserts so
much that 'they often thmk of

ARIES (Mar. 21-Aprll 19) For
best results today deal strictly
in accord with your highest
ideals regardless of how others
may act toward you.
TAURUS (Aprll 20-May 20) A
financial transaction you'll be
involved m must be handled
with finesse so that it doesn't
appear you want more than
your share .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Be
prepared to compromise today
and make concessions. Gond
intent on your behalf w11l
assure like treatment from
another.
CANCER (June 21· July 22)
You will wm the admiratiOn
and respect of others once they
see your arms are unselfish and
compassionate.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Act upon
any insplrallon that will benefit
one close to your heart if you
feel strongly about 11. Thmking
is not enough.
VIRGO I Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Expect some favorable activity regardmg a fmanc1al
interest you're mvolved m with

Holzer Medical Center
(Births)
Feb. 22 - a son to Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Clarkson, Oak Hill.
Feb 23 - A son, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Stover, Thurman.
Feb. 24 - A daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Waugh,
Northup ; a son, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Butts, Wellston; a
daughter, Mr and Mrs. Ralph
Hall, Middleport.

.x 1e: z m 1'!' ·x~.:::::::::~-::::::::~~

Women give dinner

(Join Us. Please.)

I)

In

'

\

Devoe
Ceiling WhHo -1
Flat Latex Paint
• easy apphcatron
• no solvent odors
• easy clea nup w1th water
• good hidmg and sheen
umform11y

Green Thumb

attempls for 4~ pet. At th~
foul c•rcles, RIO was 21 of 31 for
67 7 pet Rio had 37 rebounM.
Lambert pulled down 10.
Ohw h1l 33 of 84 fi eld goal
attempts for 39 pet and 18 of 28
free throws for 64 I pet The
VISi tors had 49 rebounds.
Dommican hmshed the year
w1th a 2-22 mark.
Box score :

W11mm g ton 81 Urbana 79
Mercvhur s t (Pal 93 Watst1 71
Oh1o conferenc e Tournament
North DIVISIOn
Oh10 Northern 65 Oberl1n 54
South DIVI SIOn
W1ttenberg 72 Manetta 51

Won Lost

1

Ga 1t1pOI1 s
W averly
Whee ler sburg
So uth Po in t
Logan
Portsm outh
Athens
Chesapeake

Rio whips OD
•
for 13th wzn

84

POMEROY LANES
Tuesday Allernoon League
February 19, 1974

32

(At Chagnn Fall s )
Warrensv tll e 54 Ch agr m Fal ls
51
Woodridge 93 o rang e 90
(AfEiyna l
Lor a 1n Ca thol1c 68 Brookstd e 63
C lover l eaf 70 E l yr 1a West 65
(AI Napol eon!
van We t 69 Bry an 58
h
dl
(AI Nort woo
Pe rry sburg 79 Otsego 53
Ross f ord 111 Swa nton 48
Class A
(A IGrov eporll
New A l bany 53 F a1rbanks 46
Cols Whrle 73 L1ckmg Hgts 70
(A tMt Vernon)
Hig hland 81 Ea~ t Knox 13
Fre d e r1 ck. tow n 6 1 Newark.
Ca tll 46
( At Lanca ste r-)

7
Mas ilion 6 9 C an I on L mco I n 6
cAt Copley)
Tallmadge 52 R 1vera 65
I A t Elida)
F.n d lay 55 Def•an ce 5 1
Berne Un1on 7B
Ama nda
(A I A shl an d )
Cl ea r cr ee k 66
(AtManonJ
b
Ashland 6 1 Ti ff in Co 1um lan 36
Pleasan t 79 Cardmgton 60
Mansf1e td Sr 78 Gal 1on 56
(At ctev elandl
M t G •l ead 52 Cols Academy 34
Cl eve E T ech 73
(At Dayton)
10 ( )
Arca n um 73 R uSSia 61
Cl eve Max H ayes
ot
BGreenv1ew 68 Tw1n Va l ley
Cl eve J Marsha ll 74
Cleveland Rllod es 57
Soutll 68
Cleveland John Adams 54
Wapakoneta Sr
Jose ph 79
Maple Heigh tS 46
L ima P err y 67
Cleve l and ca t hol iC Lat.n 70
M1am•sburg 73 Car r oll 00
Garf 1eld His 67
M 1am 1 Valley 112 M•ddle tn
(At Eucli d I
Ch r 1S t1an 65
Cleveland East 67 Eucl1d 62
!At Bryan )
Cl eve
G l env 111e 55 Cleve
Fayette 75 Edgerlon 60
Coll i nwood 51
,. Pett,svil l e 57 Montpe l 1e r 55
(At Ea st l ake )
( At Oeltan ce)
w 1noughby South 67 Lak.e Ayresville 70 Spencer Sharpl es
Cat h ol 1c 62
52
Eas tlak e North 55 Pensv l e
L 1berty Center 69 Northwood 56
R 1vers 1de _.., 3
{At Van W e rt )
C l ass AA
An tw er p 58 Del pho s Je ff erso n
45
( A t Col umbU S)
Colum bu!'. Watterson 57 London
Lmcolnv 1ew 113 Ot110 C1ty 53
(A!Ottawal
46
Co lu mbus Mohawk. 92 w
Pa tr n:k. Henry !17 L e 1pS1 c 74
Je ff erson 7 6
Mil l er C1 ty 61 Ka l1da 64
(AtMedma)
( AtM a nonJ
O lentan gy
60
Col u mbus
Keystone 78 Black R•ver 40
DeSales 55
Lu ther.:tn
Eas t
68
So uth
Buckeye Va l ley 44 Day ton
Amherst 56
Un 1on 43
( At R1v er- v 1ewJ
(At Newark)
tnd Val So uth 49
L•ckmg Valley 78 Fa 1r t 1eld
Newcomer sto wn 46 foi l
un 1on 70
( AtS m1thv1 l l e l
Hea tn 72 Reeme l m 45
Da lton 71 Smllh\llll e SOl
(At Grove C1fYl
(Oth ers )
Teays Va ll ey 57 M 1fftm 51
Lock land 106 Fayetfev1 l le 36
Dublm 67 Logan E lm 57
Zanesv il le 71 Wll eellng (W
( At Fr emont)
Va ) 62
Fostor 1a 78 Oak. Harbor 35
Macon Eastern 77 Fe l 1c 1ty 49
(At Canton)
G l en Este 73 C1nc Co untry Day
Tr1way 60 Tuslaw 48
56
(
Fa 1r less 60 canton Cent cat h
R1ver Loca l 74 Morgan 72 ot }
Vmton County 61 Belpre 39
55
(AtNapofco nl
P1ke Eastern 50 Port smo ut ll
Archbold 72 De ll a 60
Clay 54
(At Sa l em)
A r l 1nglon 63 North Ba lt 1mor e
Wcs t b r anct1
54
Cam pb ell
55
M emona t 44
Van Bu r en 69 L •b er t y Ben ton 50
Mme r va 63 F1e ld Loca l 55
(At Manetta )
Mays\ldle 74 M eadowb ro ok 63

27 11 , Bills 2470, Coca Cola 2399.Team H1gl1 Game - Burtons
920, Burtons, 918, Bill s 903
tnd1V1dual H1gh Ser1es John Grate 58 3, Roger Riebel
562, Harold Carson 562
IndiVIdual H 1gh Game Howard S1sk. 222, Bob Roush
220, Doug Mtller 218

Royal Crown Bottling Co

~~ ··

i

' '

.

'.

Red Cross.
TheCood
Neighbor.

..

�..

'

..' .

~

.'
7- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleoort-Pomerov. 0 .. Feb. 25, 1974

6 - The Da1Iy Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Feb 25, 1974

College Scores

Pro Standings
NHL Standing s

ABA -Sta nd•ngs
By United Press lnternaf• o oal

Bv Un1ted Pre ss tnt ernat1onal

East
w I
41 24

pel

g .b

636

-

39 25

609

Caro l rna

42 29

Vrrgm ti'l
M e mph rS

2 1 42

592
333
258

2
21 7

N ew Yor k
Kentu c ky

17

49

191 }
25

East
I t piS gf
ga
Bo ston
41 10
7 89 267 158
Montr el 35 16 6 78 216 164
N Y Rngrs
Jl 16 11 74 223 179
Toro nto 27 20 12 6f, 113 172

w

We s t

Utah
lndrana
San An tonto

w

I

44
35
33

23
33
33

pet
657
515
500

g b

Den ver
30 35 462
San O tego
28 36 42 4
Sunday's Re sults
ln drana 107 v.rglnra 102
Denver 103 Utah 91

w

Phil.:t

!Only ga m es schedu l ed 1
Monday 's Games
l No games schedu l ed)

N 8A St an dtng s

By Un•tec:t Press lnternattonal
E&lt;~ s f e rn

Conference

Atlant•c DI'JISIOM
Boston
New Y or k
Buffalo
Phllad el phra

w I
44 17
40 16
35 33
19 46

Ca p 1lal
A tla nta

37 26
28 39

569
418

H ouston

25

1l

379

10
12 1 ,

Cleve land

23

47

329

16, ,

pet
7:21
606
5 15
292
Central 01VISIOM
w I p et

W estern Conference

M1dw es l D1 \1 1S10 n
w
1 pet
Milwaukee
48 17 738
Ch 1cago
~6 22
676
D et r o 1t
~~ 23
657
KC Omaha
26 42 382
PaCifiC DIVI SIOn
w I pet
G St ate
35 27 565
Lo s Ang
35 30 538
Sea f!l e
30 38 44 1
Ph oen 1x
25 4 1 37 9
Porf l an d
21 44
323
Sunday's Results
At l anta 96 Boston 11\, af t
M1lw 100 KC Omaha 93 , aft
Cap •tal 94 Detro•t 84
Cle\leland 101 PhoeniX 97
Ho uston 133 Portland 115
Los Ang 100 Ch 1cago 90
Seatfle 115 Phd a 105
{O nly game s sche d uled)
Monday 's Gam es
{ No ga mes sc h eduled,

••

Bu ll alo 26 16
7
Defr01 f '1 1 30
8
NY lsl ndrs
15 28 14
Vancovr 17 33 9
W Ps l

gb

6' 1
12 1 ~
27
g b

g b

3' ,
5
231 ,
g b
11 7
8
12
151 7

Sf/

so

44
43

t 1 pts
35 14
9 79

189
194

196

24 1

1)8 186
166 227

gf
198

ga
114

Ch 1cago 31 12 15 77 197 115
51 LOUIS 73 28
9 55 167 164
A tlant a n 'l7 11 55 154 182
Lo s Ang 21 29 10 52 166 192
M1n n est 18 17 14 50 18 1 209
Pttsbrgll 18 34
6 42 166 2 12
Ca llfo rn 1 11 42
7 29 154 263
Sunday 's Resutrs
Buff.:t lo 3 Boston 2 aft
Montrea l J St LOU IS 2
L os A ng 3 To r o nto 3
Der r o• t 5 NY ts l ndrs 3
NY Rangers 3 Phila 7
P i i! Sburg h 4 Ch 1cago 2
&lt;Only games scheduled)
Monday ' s Games
( No games sc hedul ed )
WHA Stand1ngs
By Um te d Pr ess lnt ern.ilh o na l
East
w I I pis. gf ga
New England
33 ~6 2 68 219 203
Toronto
32 26 4 68 248 222

3 1 28 3 65 232
282756 1192
26 29 3 55 188
26 34 2 54 193
W es l
w 1 t pts gl
Ho u ston 37 18 5 79 2&lt;15
M1nnesot 33 26 1 67 241
W1nn1peg 29 28 5 63 205
Ed montn JO 30 0 60 207
Vancouv r 23 36 0 46 224
LosAng
21 39 0 42 176
Sunday ' s R esult s
M1nn 2 Cl eve L a ft
W• nn 1peg 3 Ch 1cago 1
Houston 7 Vancouver 1
Toronto 2 New En g 0
Qu ebec 7 Jer sey 4
Ed monton 5 Los Ang 3
Monday 's Game s
(No games scheduled l
Quebec
Cl e\l el n d
Ch 1ca go
Je rs e y

11B

Saturday Junior League
PIS
Gutter Dusters
16
Bowling Stones
14
Hot Shots
121; 2
Apaches
11
Alley Cats
9 1h
High lndi V1 dUal Game Greg Cund•lf 17 6, Ron easel
162
H1gh Senes - Greg Cund1ff
459, Ron Ca sc i 404
Team H1gh Game Hot
Shot s 751, Team High Series Alley Cats 20 39

MASON BOWLING CENTER
Tuesday Industrial
February 19, 1974

Ph

38

B •lls
Burton ' s Sunoco
Flesh er's TeKaco
Mason Agg r egates
Coca Colli
R lggs Used Cars
Ohio Electri c

36

34
34

31

22

Farmers
Team H 1gh Slo' •es

l1

14
14
•ons

College Basketball Resu lt s
By Un1l ed Pr ess tnt er n at1onat
Ea st
Am h er st 86 Clark. 69
Barr 1ngton 57 Nyack. 55
Bosto n U 8 1 Vermont 7.J
Bo wdOin 63 NO rW tCI"' 58
Bridgewa t er 65 MC'SS1a1'1 6'1
cney n e y 76 sn,ppen sbu r g 66
Clarkson 95 Alf r ed 92
Co l by 79 Worcester Po l y 75
Co l gate 96 Rochester 66
Dartmouth 73 Cornell 60
Dow l 1ng 8 1 Ma r 1sr 63
Dr exel 72 Albnght 67
E1senhower 90 Hough t on Bl
Fa1 rf 1e ld 86 Marsh.:t ll 63
Fo r dham 64 Gcorqe town 6'1
F redon 1a St 58 Oneon ta 46
G a nnon 103 Ashland 74
Geneva 80 WPstrn1nst er 76
Getty sbu r g HI Buckne l l 64
Hartford 11 Tnn1ty 68
Harvard 64 Co lumb 1a 57
Hav er ford 72 Drew 64
Hawthorne 117 Thomas 9&lt;~
Lafa y elt e 9 1 Del a wa re 62
LaSal l e 82 Rutge r s 76
LeMoyne 79 lona 74
Mercyhursr 93 Wal!&gt;h 71
Navy 57 Army 41
Pace 99 Yesh1va 62
Penn 90 Yale 79
Penn St 66 P 1tt sburqh 64
Po mt Park. f/9 Clar1on 90
Prm ceton 70 Brown 49
Queens 83 Brook l yn 60
R 1d er 71 L eh1Qh 65
Sw art h more 76 Morav1an 60
Syracuse SOC Wasn 79
Th1e l 7 1 John Ca r roll 68
Tufts 101 Ha milton 83
Un•on 7 1 B1 n ghampton 52
W 1ll1ams 72 Wesleyan 62
York. 10 5 Cathed r a l 90

197
101

South
A la bama 94 Kentucky 71
2l5 Cum ber la nd 80 Berea 78
Dav idSO n 67 Cmc 1nnat1 62
ga E Ca r 78 T h e C 1t a d el 66
159 F Iorence sr 82 D el t a St 69
209 F lorida 77 M ISS ISSIPPI 6 1
219 Fu r man 7 1 Jacksonvil l e 61
216 Leno1r Rhyne 75 Catawba 73
250 LOU ISia n a St 64 GeQfQid 79
240 Maryland 64 Du ke 61
M ISS Sl 67 Aub urn 60
P emb ro k e 85 Franc 1s Mano n 43
R1chmond 86 W•lllam &amp; Mary

BI
T ennessee 59 Vanderbil t 53
Towson 51 101 Sal1sbur y 97
V 1r g 1n1a Tech 75 Mercer 65
Wak.e Forest 106 Appa lachian

60
M1dw es t
Akron 103 Brockport Sl 64
Belo it 71 L awrence 5!1
Brad l ey 94 M emphi S St 81
Calvm 87 Ad nan 70
Coe 84 R 1pon 75
Dayton 86 Xav •er 55
Evan sv ill e 109 Wa b ash 10 1
Grand Val l ey 92 Oak l and 75
I l linOI S 91 Iowa 84
lnd 1ana 73 M mn eso l a 55
K.;~laroazoo 61 Aqu,na s 44
Kansas St 90 Oklahoma 67
LOUISVI ll e 93 St LOUIS 85
Malone 106 Cedarv tll e 65
Marquette 61 Detr0 1t 53
MiChigan I l l P urdu e 84
MISSOU ri 72 Co loradO 68
Nebra ska 7 1 Okla hom a St 63
Not r e Dam e 108 W Va 80
Oh 10U 79 C M i ch 78
Tol edp 81 M1am1 (Oh iO ) 68
Whitewat er 63 P Ja ttl ev 111 e 62
Wllm•ngton 81 Urbana 79
W1scons ,n 68 Ohio s t 56
W1ttenberg 72 Man etta 51

MIAMI (UP!) - Spring training officially has started, or if you
want to put it another way, baseball already IS beginning to feel
the f~rst pmch of the energy criSIS
Sixteen major league clubs are using Flor1da for sprmg
trammg and the situation regarding those cars lining up for gas
here is the same as 1tis throughout most of the country
Bad.
Few, if any, are exempt from that long, tune-consummg wail
m !me.
It doesn't matter who you are. If you want gas, you wait.
Jun Palmer, the Baltimore Orioles' p1tchmg ace, was talking
about the gas shortage at lunch. Grant Jackson, also coming off a
good year, one m wh1ch he was ~ and had a 1.98 ERA, was
listemng.
Baltimore Celebrity
The other day in Baltunore, before commg down here, I waited
45 mmutes m line and that wasn't so bad except when I got to the
pump, the lady running the statwn told me there was no more
gas," said Palmer.
"A fnend of mme happened to know this lady about an hour
later and she filled me up. From the way she talked though, I
could tell she thought I was Marty Domres. She sa1d 'just keep
throwing those touchdown passes."
" 'Wa1t a minute,' I said, "my name is Jim Palmer. I play for
the Orioles, not the Colts, and we won more games in one week
than they did all year."'
Jim Palmer, the American League's Cy Young winner, MVP
runnerup and top-Balaried pitcher at $130,000, laughed tellmg the
story.
''Shows you how well known I am in Baltimore,'' he said.
Grant Jackson laughed too.
Remembers Martin
"Don't feel bad," he smd. "Before I signed with the Phillies in
1962, I never heard of any baseball players either. Where I came
from , Fostoria, Ohio, I never paid any attenlwn to baseball. I
used to love football. Jun Brown was my hero.
"I think Tony Taylor was the first baseball player who ever
stuck m my mind and that was because I met hun and liked him
when I first JOined the Phillies. But I never heard of fellows like
Warren Spahn or Duke Snider before I got into baseball."
"Four guys come to my mind when you ask me about my first
recollecllon of ballplayers," said Palmer, forgetting the gas
crunch temporarily.
"The first one 1s Billy Martin. I remember commg home from
school one day and watching him make that great catch against
the Dodgers on TV back in the "50's. I used to love the Yankees,
so the guys I remember best are the ones who used to beat them
Billy Pierce, Herb Score and Virgil Trucks."
"Virgil who•" asked Jackson.
"VIrgil Trucks," sa1d Pabner. "He p1tched two no-hitters once
m the same season. I think, he gave the Yankees a lot of trouble.
You know, being from New York, I used to be slightly prejudiced.
I always thought Clete Boyer was the best third baseman and
Sam Huff was the best linebacker ."
Bald Baseman
-"Huff was the best linebacker, wasn't he •" put in Jackson.
"He could've been," said Palmer, "but one of the thmgs I
remember is how this best friend of mine kept telling me how
Brooks Robinson was a much better third baseman than Clete
Boyer. This was in Scottsdale, Arizona, after my fam1ly moved
there . The Orioles used to train there and the only one my friend
bilked about all the time WliS Brooks Robinson. He said Brooks
was the best there was. I said 'Brooks who? ' That's the truth. I
never heard of him before. Then when I saw him for the f~rsl
time, I thought to myself who's this guy with no hair• How can he
be the best third baseman in baseball?"
In due time, Jim Palmer found out he was.
To this day , there are few things Brooks Robinson can 't do with
a glove.
One of them though is get gasolme.
POMEROY LANES

Southwe st
Ar •zona 122 U t ah 9'1
A r kansas en Bay lor 62
E T es St 88 Ange lo St 80
Houston 105 Centenary 89
Ok la C1 ty 94 Ga Te ch 71
SMU 96 T C U 60
SW t Texas 87 T exas A&amp; I 75
Su i Ross 91 Tarle ton 74
Tex as 88 Tex a s A&amp;M 81
Te x Lut hn 91 St Mary 'S 71
Texas Tech 85 R1ce 54
Tul sa 87 N Texa s 51 75
West
Ida St 75 Montana St 72
Mon ta n a 58 Bo1se St 56
Nev Las Vega s 85 Stt l 75
N ew M ex 1co 78 Wyom1ng 67
N Ar 1zona 63 Gonzaga 59
Oregon 72 Stanford 71
Oregon St 77 Ca l1f 73
S Cal 86 Wash Sf 57
UC L A f/9 Washmgton 65
Webe r Sf 77 Idaho 55

Teafor d

467 ,

Isabe ll e

Couch

464

Wedn esday Early B1rd
L ea gue
February 20, 1974
Won Lost
Helen 's Beauty Shop
60
12
Ben Tom Corp
58
14
Rawlmgs Auto Parts
28
44
Rou sh's L a nd1ng
24
48
Bertha s Grocery
24
.sa
Stewart H ardwa r e
22
50
Team H1gh Game - Helen's
Beau ty Shop 807
Team H1gt1 Se nes - Helen' s
Beauty Shop 2363
lnd H1gh Game - Max1ne
Dugan 199, Betty Wh i tlatch 193
lnd H 1gh Ser 1es - Max1ne
Dugan 555, Ftoss1e Maxson 5 13

SEOAL Standings
· All GAMES
T EAM
W l P
Sat urd ay Oh1o H1gh Schoo l
Ba sk e tball Scor-e s
By Un1fcd P ress lnt c rnaflo na t
Clas s AAA
{AtCo lumbu s l
Reyno l ds burg 75 Grove c 1t y 59
Wes terv 11f e 'i7 Grovepor t 56
70 w 1 1
Co l s Ea s tmoor
a nu
R1dge 68
Delawa r e 56 H1 l l1ard 35
1 A t To l cdol
Tot Cent r al 6&lt;1 Tol st Joh n ' s
57

Tot
59

Woodwa r d 70 To l

Rogers

(A t canton I

C an~on Glenwood 5 1 Jackson 38

AT JE GETS TITLE
HERENVEEN , The Netherlands 1UP!) - At)e KeulenDeelst ra of Holland, a 35-yearold mother, won the women's
world allround speedskatlng
lltle Sunday for the fourth time
m five years. Mrs. KeulenDeelstra won three of the four
contested events. Shella Young
of Detrmt won the other race
Oh1o College
Bask etbal l Re sults
By Un1t ed Pr ess InternatiOnal
Sunday
Lo yola { Ill J 94 Cl eve lan d Stat e
13
Saturdoily
W1scon s•n 68 01110 Stat e 56
Oh •o Un1 ver s1ty 79 Cen tra l
M1Ch 1g an 78 (otl
Western M1 Ch1 gan 85 Ke nt
State 50
Tol edo 81 M1am1 68
DavidSon 67 C1nc .nnat • 62
Dayton 86 Xav1er 55
Steu ben vil l e 53 Youngstown
State 50
A kron 103 Brockport ( N Y l 84
Gannon ( P a l 103 Ash land 74
Fa1rmo n t St
(W
Va ) 103
Cen t r al St 67
Wng llt Sta te 90 Rose H ulman
( lnd l 77
Bluffton 77 Goshen ( l n d l 75
Hanov er ( l nd l 87 Oettance 72
Tho mas More (Ky) 87 Fmd lay
70
'
Case Rese rv e...ll Bethany (W
Va 64
H1ram 94 Ca rneg1 e Mellon
( Pa l so
Th 1el (Pal 71 John Carroll 68
Malone 106 Cedarvill e 65
R to Grande 95 OhiO Dom 1ni ca n

16
15
14
14

3
A
5
5

12
11
10
10

1104
1303
121 1
1277
7 134 1

OP
976
1080
994
1057
1199

7 1209 1101
970
9 1142 1153
Rock Hoi I
8 10 1098 1.163
Iron ton
7c.:\l 1105 120 4
Jackson
5
11 14 1223
Me1gs
J 15 lOBI 1242
We ll s ton
1 15 624 J IBS
Saturday's results
GaH1p011s 78 Me1gs 66
Waverlv 6 5 Portsmou th W es t

B 1074

1'\

S?
Greenf1e ld 6A We ll ston 33
Wednesday 's games
Iro nton vs Sou th Pomt, a t
Coal Grove
Northwest vs Whe e l ersburg,
a t Lucas .n ll e
Thursday's games:
W ave rl y \IS Mmford , a t
L ucasv ille
Ga ll1 polls \IS Rock H d l at
Coal Grove

Fndav 's game s

Ch 1ll 1cothe vs Logan, a t R10
G r a nde
Sa turday 's games
Por tsmouth vs M1am1 Tr ace
Mar1etta wmner, a t R1o
Fmals of Class AA Sec
f 1onal s F o ur w mners advance
to R1o G r ande 01 slnct

TWO NEW RECORDS
VIITEL, France (UP!)
Em1le Puttemens of Belgian
bettered world records in two
events Sunday. Puttemen ran
&gt;,000 meters in 13 minutes, 30.8
seconds to eclipse the old
13:34.2 set by MlfUZ Yifter of
Ethop•a and en route to this
clocking hit a best of 13.05.2 for
three mlles. The old three-mile
mark
of 13:07.2 was
established by American
distance runner Tracy Smith.
for the fourth tune in five
years Mrs. KeulenDeelstra
won three of the four contested
events. Sheila Young of Detroit
won the other race.

Girls tip-off at 6
p.m. Wednesday

· The girls' basketball season
m Me1gs and Gallia Counhes
comes down to the w1re th1s
week as the Meigs Girls Invitational Basketball Tournament gets tmder way m the
Larry R Mornson Gymnasiwn.
The five-team tourney begms
Wednesday evemng at 6 when
the Eastern Eagles meet the
Southern Tornados.
The winner of that battle
then fa ces th e ru gged

Gallipolis Blue Angels at 6 p.m.
Fnday, followed by the MeigsKyger Creek clash at 7 p.m.
The losers of the two Friday
games wlll then meet a week
from today at 4 p.m. in the
consolatiOn game, w1th the
wmners of Friday's contests
meeting in the champwnsh1p
game at 6 p.m.
Adm1ss1on 1s 75 cents for
adults and 50 ce nts for
students.

Rio Grande College will face
Defiance College in an opemng
round NAJA Distnct 22
Tournament game at Defiance
Monday, March 4.
Th1s was assured followmg
the Redmen's 95-84 Mid.QhiO
Conference tnumph over
VISiting Ohio Dommican at
Lyne Center Saturday night
Coach Art Lanham's crew
OHIO DOMINICAN (841 wtll carry a 13-11 season mark
O ledal1 s, 3 1 7, Yu skewtch 5 (l
mto the post-season event. Rio 10 Gardner 7 9 23, Ess man 5
lo LlJm 4 19 , V1cko r y 011 .
fimshed th1rd m MOC play w1th uHopkin
S 3 0 6 , Krau tt er 3 3 9,
a 6-4 conference mark
Ehrber 0 2 2 , Rauch 2 1 s:
Defiance w1ll carry a 19-5 TtJmbdson 1 0 2 TOTALS 3318 84
season mark into the tourRIO GRANDE
{ 9SI
ese 1 24, Ha r t 511 1;
nament. In the other Distr1c t 22 Alban
Bollin ge r 50 10, L am bert 15 9
contest, Malone 21-&lt;i, w1ll host 39 , St ew a rt 3 0 6 . Noe 2 59 ,
Fausnaugh I I 3 . Sm• l h 1 0 2;
Central State , 13-1 3 The Sanders
2 3 7 , Rob1nso n 2 0 4
champ10nsh1p game w1ll be TOTAL S 37 -2 1-95
Scor e at half
played Wednesday, March 6, at
R10 47 00 29
the school which has the best
season mark after the playoffs
Wmner of the District 22
tournament will advance to
Kansas City, Mo , for the NAJA
tourney, slated March 11-16.
In Saturday's contest, Rio
bmlt up a comforable 47-29
DRY
halftime lead and coasted to an
easy win over the v1s1ting
CLEANING
• Panthers
Ron Lambert's 39 pomts led
Rw Grande . That f1gure tied
(ON REQUEST)
Lyne Center's single-game
h1gh effort by one individual.
Mark Todd had 39 in the 1971
Thanksgivmg Holiday Tournamenl.
The Panthers were led by
Chm Essman's 10 points and
14 rebounds
SE RVICE ON
Rio h1t 37 of 79 field goal

2 HR.

•

1 DAY

SHIRT
FINISHING

BROWN'S VICTORY
ADELAIDE, Austraha
(UPI) - Warwick Brown of
Australia scored a 3.5 second
beat over England's Peter
Gethen Sunday ln the fmal
event of the _8-race $150,000
Peter Stuyvesant motor racing
series. Gethen was the overall
champion Wlth 41 points in the
series.

DEVOE'

·

--~ .......

B

14
T eram No 1
26
16
Team No 2
24
New York Clothing Hou se
18
22
F nendly Tavern
10
30
Forest Run Block
10
30
Team H ig h Game - Team
No 2 47 7
T eam High Ser1es - Royal
Crown Bollling Co 131A
lnd H1gh Game - CarQiyn
Teaford 187 , Mary Voss 175 "
!nd H 1g h Series - Carolyn

Carolina Lumber and Supply
312 6th ST. PHONE 657-1160
· - - - -- ---

!

POINT PLEASANT

by 10, Out at 5

Robinson's
DRY CLEANING
LAUNDRY
992-5428 Pomeroy

N. W. COMPTON. 0. D.

-

OPTOMmiST

OI=FICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT c,T., ·
POMEROY.

•

us

Auxiliariesgiven recognition

Notes . ...
A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members

A time for gardeners

•

By Mrs. Dick Foley
Rutland Garden Club
Yes, spring is almost here. The groundhog has come out to
warn us of coming cold weather that will freeze and chill any
plant that tries to get a head start on others.
Now is the time for starting to force branches of early
shrubs. This is clean-up month. Make aJ:ood clean job of pruning
all swruner flowermg plants such as roses , altheas and crape
myrtle. This is a good time for dormant spraying of roses. Prune
about the rruddle of the month.
A!J soon as your plants are prnduclng their second or th1rd
pair ofleaves is a good time to put them ln individual con tamers.
Don't at any time let them dry out; keep moist at all times, but
not wet.
Garlic is corrung into use again. Some people put 1t around in
lheir flower beds "" aphids don't like it. Onions do the same
lhing.
Now IS the lime to check house plants for mealy bugs and
spider mites.
Gardening gives us a zest for living.
Many people have trouble with their seedlings damping off.
' Dampmg off is a fungus disease at soil surface that causes seed' lings to lie over and die. To control, use a sterile or pasteurized
· starting medium, or drench the soU with a special liquid soil
• drench fungicide . Provide seedlings with gond light and rur
circulation.
Pyrex casseroles and plastic refr1gerator dishes with lids are
; perfect for sowing tiny dust size seeds like those of petunias, wax
' begonias and lobelia,
WHAT'S IN A SEED? Seeds are such fascmatmg things.
There are dust-like seeds, seeds as big as coconuts and all sizes
between. There are black seeds, white seeds, and a vast assortment of colors. They may be round, oblong, three-Bided, thin, fat,
iimooth, rough. Some have soft shells, others are hard, some are
: ~elicately carved. We find them enclosed in hulls, pods, scales,
• surrounded by pulp or exposed nakedly to the elements.
! Good seeds have one tiling m common - life . This is evident
: when we plant the seed. Vie can ptant a stone or a grain of ~nd in
: exactly the same way we plant a seed . These cannot grow
• because they do not conblin the spark of life.
• • Every viable seed, even the tiniest, has already w1thin 11, a
', miniature plant.
:
Follow bulbs with annuals. Spring bulbs, such as showy "Red
, Emperor" tulips in a narrow•bed along a fence or side of the
: qouse, may be followed by small flowering annuals. Sow seed or
• ..,t out seedlings of such shallow rooting kinds as dwarf
, inarigolds, ageratum, lobelia, annual phlox, portulaca, sweet
' li!yssum, nasturtiums, California poppies and nemesia.
Agarden is many things to many people. Who is to say that a
_tangle of daisies and black-eyed susans along a sunny highway is
·less a garden than a carefully tended formal plot? Or that a
=scraggle of marigolda nursed by a child is less magic than a
: sprlng hill-Bide of trilliwn and unfolding ferns? The beauty of a
: garden is in the eye of the bebolder.
:
But the gardener is something else agaln. He is both the
• dreamer who thumbs tllrough catalogs in January, and the
~ begrimed builder who labors on a retaining wall in August.
Surely, gardeners come close to being the most selfless and
imaginative of human beings. Their monuments are temporary
~nd their successes die with the seasons. Yet they start each new
year w1th bope and aspiration. Never is this more apparent than
during their annual bouts with cataloga.
' Let's feed the birds. The starlings like a piece of suet. Some
pf the birds are seed eaters; some are meat eaters. The starlings
·have a beak that goes deep after grubs in our yards. Moles will
inJlabit a lawn where grubs are, then mice get in the burrows and
eat the small bulbs which we planted in the fall to make early
flowers.
I am looking for the first robin .
1 have been looking at seed cabllogues until I am excited
~bout the babny days of spring. Use the best seed, always. Poor
seed: a poor garden.
If you will buy a magazine "Family Circle," at Kroger or
A.&amp;P. store you will find a packet of tomato seeds. So get your
free seeds and plant them early.

..

Mrs. Harry Davis, Mrs . County Council w1th Mrs
Catherine Welsh and M1ss Robert Riley, department first
Cheryl Lehew, of the American vice president, giVIng the
Legion Auxiliary , Drew response. District presidents,
Webster Post 39, and Mrs. department officers, and past
Allen Hampton of Lewis departme nt officers were
Manley Post 263 Auxiliary, mtroduced.
were in Colwnbus over the
Greetings were given by
weekend for the midwinter M1ss Wendy Spoerl, departconference of the Department ment Jwuor pres1dent; Mrs.
of Ohw, America n Legion Donald Miller, national
Auxiliary, held at the Ne1l executive committee woman ,
House.
Mrs. Melvm Junge, natwnal
They were JOined by Debra communications chamnan ;
Lehew and Charlotte Lehew of Mrs Arthur Hrabak, Area D
Columbus,
both
jumor educahon and sc holarship
members of Umt 39, Pomeroy. cha1rman; Mrs . Raymond
On Fnday evening the group Sloan,
ce ntral diVISIOn
attended a mock meeting of legislation chairman ; and Mrs
~~ Everybody's Umt 00" conJames Warner, Sp1r1t of '76
ducted by the department
Saturday afternoon a sk1t
president, Mrs. George Sallot,
and the department secretary,
MISS Ann Eschelman A SOCial
hour was held followmg the
tramlng session.
Al the Saturday morning
meeting conducted by Mrs.
Sallot, awards were presented
mcludmg f1ve )uniOr pins and
four senior pins for members of
the Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Amencan Legwn Aux1liary,
for field service. Mrs. Lowell
Roush, director of field service, presented the pins to Mrs .
DaviS for the Middleport un1t
members. Illness prevented
attendance to the midwinter
conference by the Middleport
Auxiliary members
The mvocallon was g1ven by
Mrs. Glen Horton, department
chap lam; the pledge of
allegiance was led by Mrs.
Charles Williams, and Mrs.
V1rgil Courtney led m the
national anthem. Welcome was
ex tended by Mrs. Leroy Green,
president of the Franklin

Nobody else in the world can give
us what you can.A pint of your blood.
And your gift has never been
more important. Because
blood from healthy donors,
who freely donate their
blood, is 10 times less
likely to cause
infectious
hepatitis
in the
recipient than
is blood
from many ,,
commercial ·sources. Think
about that.
The need is urgen.t, and
continuous.
Help us. Join us. Today.

enl!tlcd "Wonderful World of
Charlie Brown" was presented
m costume by the 14 d!str1cl
presidents . There was also a
cavalcade of flags by the
departmen t Juniors under the
d1rechon of Mrs. Rober t
Parker.
Cheryl
Lehew
represented the Eighth DistriCt
and earned the Umt 39 banner
Mrs. Parker enterblmed w1th a
pizza party for the Juniors
followmg their part on the
program
Greetmgs were ex tended by
Dav1d Cropper, department
command er, and Roger
Mun son, natwnal exec utive
committeemen. M1ss Myrna
H1xon repor ted on the 1973
Freedom Foundation teachers'

senunar held at Valley Forge,
Pa
Saturday evening a reception
was held honormg Mrs. Nile
Fuller, nahonal vice president
of central division, followed by
a banquet.
On Sunday morning, Mrs.
DaviS and Cheryl Lehew attended the American Legwn
Aux1liary hospitBI volunteer
onentBtwn conducted by Mrs.
Raymond Sloan, and the
Auxiliary
field service
onenlatwn conducted by Mrs.
Lowell Roush.
The Auxliiary members
were
accompanied
to
Columbus by Harry Davis who
was the weekend guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Lehew.

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

Dessert as an entree ?

. I f:~
~1' ' SOCia
:-.·
*'
~~~ Ca Iend ar~
..,

:;:;

;~

;?.

MONDAy
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce at noon at Meigs
Inn.
OHIO AssociatiOn of Public
School Employes, Chapter 17,
7.30p.m. at Meigs Junior High
cafeteria.
RACINE Emergency Squad

will hold a ~pecial mlaeetinfg at 8
p m. to d1scuss P ns or a
rummage sale: ·All husbands
and WIVes are lfiV!ted.
TIJESDA Y
J
_HARRISONVILLE Senior
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs.
C!hzens will meet at 7' 30 p.m. Rose Carr was appointed
at the Harrisonville School. Ice chairwoman of Easter prOJect.&lt;;
cream and pie will be served. to be carried out by the Rose
Everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic Garden Club at Tuppers
,.3 F d A M
Plams, durmg a meeting held
Lodge ~
' . an . ., annua1 · a t th e horne of Mrs. Ul a Swan .
mspec ti on, 7:30 p.m. a t the
M 1 M
ded 1
Ml.ddleport Masomc Temp1e. th rs. na assar pres1 a
e sessiOn . w1th Mrs.
Leota
. 'ted
All Master Masons mvt
.
·
Massar g1vmg devotions, The
MIDDLEPORT • Pomeroy 12 members present answered
Area Branch, AmeriCan
.
.
ty roll call by nammg a favonte
. t·wn of Umvers1
Assocta
. H' h palnollc song. For the
Women ' 7..30 p.m., Melgs
lg
M Le
Bb k
School library. Speaker, Judy program, rs . ona a coc
. board to read an arllcle on houseplanls,
McDon ald . Execu tIve
meet preceding the meeting. Insects and how to control
RACINE American Legion them. Mrs. ~ema Stout gave
Auxiliary,
A potluck dinner was hJlld Walburn were appointed to the
7,30 p.m at the hall the secretary s report, and the
Thursday night at the Mid· committee to secure supplies Leora Young m charge of
dleport Church of Christ by the for the layettes which the refreshmenls.
Loyal Women's Class. Guesls women will make for an
PAST Matrons, Pomeroy
for the dinner were Mr. and African Mission project. Chapter, OES, 7:30p.m at the
Mrs. George Glaze, Clint and Several members were home of Mrs. Thomas Young,
reported ill.
l'rey, and Wilbur Theobald.
W. Main St. All past matrons
Program was by Mrs. invited.
The dinner committee was
DEXTER - A d1sp!ay of
composed of Miss Mildred Martha Childs who used the
PANCAKE SUPPER, Grace pictures pamted by Mrs . Anna
Hawley, Mrs. Beulah Roush, "Women of the Bible" theme Episcopal Church, servmg to Ogdln was a feature of the
and Mrs. Margaret Lallance. and spoke on Marian, the first begin at 6 p.m. Public supper recent meeting of the Star
MISS Frances Roush presided woman singer and sister of with no charge but donations to Garden Club at the Ogdm
at the brief business session Moses.
be accepted for the Bishop 's home.
Attending the dinner besides Fund for World Relief.
following the dinner. She
Members also exc hanged
diBtributed new yearbooks, and those named were Mrs. Wilbur
WEDNESDAY
valentine gifts during the
noted the World Day of Prayer Theobald, Mrs. Alice Robeson,
POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT meeting presided over by Mrs.
service to be held at the Mrs . Ida Childs, Mrs . Lions Club, Wednesday noon 1 Grace Tw-ner. Devotions were
Chester United Methodist Margaret Jones, Mrs. Helen Meigs Inn. Business meeting. given by the hostess with
Reynolds, Mrs. Carrie Smith,
Church at 2 p.m. Friday.
OHIO VALLEY Com- members joinmg in the creed
Miss
Nina
Russell,
Mrs.
Mary
mandery 24, Kmghls Templar, and collect. Response to roll
Quilting will be continued
each Wednesday at the church. Bailey, Mrs. Lula Mae Ashley, stated conclave, Wednesday, call was 11 nammg plants now 111
7:30 p.m., Pomeroy Masonic bloom. ''
.Miss Hawlty and Mrs. Mabel and Mrs. Pearl Reynolds .
Temple. Special preparation to
New fruits and vegetables,
be made for mspecl!on on the many varieties and therr
March 23.
·care was discussed by Miss
AMERICAN
Legion Hazel Henson . Mrs. Nellie
topic
was
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett Nelson 's
"Achimimes."
She
told
of
the
Post 128, 6:30 p.m. potluck
A dona lion of $50 to the· Winebrennej and Mrs. Freda dinner with legionneires as varieties available; the many
Middleport firemen for the Hood served a dessert course
colors, and the way to keep the
' emergency vehicle fund was to those named and Mrs. guests. Meeting at 7:30 p.m.
' made by the Busy Bee Class of EJecta Souders, Mrs. Ruth
· the Middleport First Baptist Johnson, Kathryn Werner,
....
1111111
' Church meehng Thursday Mrs . Nelle Werner, Mrs. Eva
7l.4 JN..--""'1 JW.
, nightatthehomeofMrs. Lettie Hartley, Mrs. Wilma Par' Roush.
malee, Mrs. Elizabeth Gard·
' The class song opened the ner, Mrs. Elizabeth •Slaven,
~ 1leJtg,..,.IIMMT
: meeting conducted by Mrs. Mrs . Fred Edwards, Mrs.
Rosemary Lyons, president. Gwinnle White, M("s. Edith
PACKAGE PdLICY:
' She also gave devotions using a Sauer, Mrs. Jessie Houdashelt,
TQTAL COVERAGE
• meditation from the Secret and Mrs. Ehtel Hughes.
, Place, and one from a church
Our
complete
comprehensive
, bulletin
entitled
"The
homeowners ~ policy covers loss due to
Masterpiece." New yearbooks
were distributed. Members
fire, theft, storm damage, more. One
BOOSTERS
TO
MEET
answered roll call w1th Bible
premium.
RACINE - The Southern
1 verses.
Mrs. Beulah White had the Local Band Boosters will meet
: program using a quiz on the Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m. at the
992-2143
: disciples of Jesus wilh Mrs. high school ln Racine. Plans
for
band
banquet
will
be
made.
Pomeroy,
102 W. Main
' Cora Pullen and Mrs. Leora
All
members
are
asked
to
992-7428
• Sigman wjnnlng the prizes.
please
attend.
~ Mrs. Roush, Mrs. Isabelle

what dessert they plan to eat
before ordenng the mam
course. This Austnan rice
pudding calls for apples, eggs
and Sw1ss cheese. Even Mary
Jane would find it bard to
reslsl.
AUSTRIAN RICE PUDDING
1 cup regular rlce
y, cup butter or margarine
1 quart milk
y, cup sugar
1 tablespoon vanilla
I cup grated Austrian Swiss

cheese
4 eggs
2 apples, peeled, cored
and sliced
¥• cup sugar
1teaopoon cbmamon
In a saucepan, cOmbln.e rice,
butter, milk and sugar. Slmmer over low heat until rice Is
tender, about 20 to 25 minutes.
Stir occasionally during
cooking. Add nnllla and
cheese and stir until cheese is
melted. Cool. Beat in eggs, one
at a time. Pour mixture into a
greased 9-inch square baking
pan. Top with apples and
sprinkle w1th sugar mixed with
treasurer's report was g1ven cinnamon.Bakeinapreheated
by Mrs. Grace Stout.
J51klegree oven for 3D minutes.
Serve
warm or cold with
Blue ribbons were awarded
to M M I G 'ff'th M
cream, if desired. Makes 6 to 8
rs
ere n 1 ' rs servings.
Stout, and Mrs. Swan for their
valentine arrangements Mrs
Helen Dorst won the travelmg
prizes.
A dessert course was served
BASEBALL MEETING
by the hostess to those named
The Syracuse • Minersville
and Mrs. DorOthy Stout, Mrs. Baseball Assn. will meet
Ethel Arbaugh, Mrs. Maude Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the new
Gray, and three guests, Mrs. municipal
building
In
Dor1s Koemg, Mrs . Elizabeth Syracuse. There will be an
Lyons, and MISS Soma Carr. election of officers. Since It Is
The March 20 meeting will be necessary that the association
at the home of Mrs. Rose Carr . learn the number of boys who
will be participating ln the
program this summer, all
mterested parents are urged to
attend .

pro1eCt
• chazrwoman
•
d
name

Monsoon Arens
While Southeast As1a is the
m o s t important monsoon
area, others include northern
Australia and the Gulf Coast
of the Umted States

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
Today 1s "Th1rsday" tomorrow's pay day.
Stop making cracks about
Amtrak - pretty soon it'll be
the only way to go.

$50 given to vehicle fund

l~lol.,ltllfo\-oto\IIWI""

W~IIflllll

INSURANCI

The w1fe saved seven cents
on a can of coffee w1th a
coupon - and spent $18 on a
purse to carry more coupons.
If you haven't read the
most recent best·seller don't lose any sleep about it.

If

'

.

NEW
"Steam Oeaning

Methoo"
Wo will como to yow and completely ciNn oil

ybur c..-pet tty IIIII llomethod.

Cal 992·2635
.Ingels Fumiture
Middleport

'

•

pve
a little
•

g1vea
you.

GRADUATE:
IF YOU'RE
WONDERING •••

be a big

ender.
•
Jve

You have a tough choice PICking
a career w1 th a good future- with
free tratn lng - fro m one of over
140 JObs Dectd~ng where to
go free durtng your 30 days
pa 1d vacat1on the ftrst year.
Knowmg that all your medical/ dental expenses are
taken care of, and that
your food, housing and
clothing are free Tak-

responslblflty Im-

mediately after trainIng 1n one of many
locations arollnd the

world . Yes, It's a

tough choice. You 'fl
love every m1nute of It

FIND YOURSELF IN
EUNITED STATES
A1R FORCE.

The American

•

}

•

CLEANING

Get ,your carpet
cleaned now by the

UHd. Roln ore ru-llle.

DALE C. WARNER INS. AGENCY ·

'

CARPET

tall Ingots
ond ""
"''' ••·
plolo
whr 11Nm
clelnl,.
Is
more lllltfoctorr. No _ ,

LODGE TO MEET
CHESTER - Shade River
Masonic Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
will hold its annual inspection
at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the
temple inChester.Work will be
m the master mason degree.
Refreshments will be served
and all master masons are
mvited.

Ing

In New Method

IIIW

Ogdin paintings displayed

plan Ls year after year.
The traveling prize donated
by Mrs Ogdin was awarded to
Mrs. Maggie Chaney. Commenls on planting a garden for
continuous bloom were given m
February tips for gardening.
Refreshments were served
durmg a soc1al hour

someone else. An opportunity
will pop up suddently.
LIBRA !Sept. ~t. :13) This
IS a good day for you to iron out
agreements with others that
wlll In some manner unprove
conditions that affect your
work.
SCORPIO (Oct. Z4-Nov. 22)
You're vecy creative today m
both the aestheti~ and pracllcal senses. This will reflect
favorable on your household
budget.
SAGIITARWS (Nov. :13-Dec.
21) There Is a cerblin glow
about you that you may not be
aware of but others will. It will
contribute to your popularity.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Your greatest pleasure today
will be through something
you 'II share in collectively with
your fam1ly . It comes unexpectedly.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Something can now be done
about a good idea you've been
toymg with. Don't wait too long
to get things started.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marcb 20)
Conditwns that relate to your
finances look very promising
today . Seize upon a situation
where another offers you
somethmg out of the ordinary .
YOUR
BIRTHDAY:
February 25, 1974- Important
contacts will be developed this
year, brmging with them
special advantages that will
advance your self-Interests. A
long trip you've been thinking
about may become a reality.

CLUB TO MEET
The Meigs County Ridmg
Club w1ll meet at 7·30 p.m.
Tuesday at the home of Eskey
Hill.

Austrian nee pudding includes apples and Swiss cheese.

By Aileen Claire
NEA Food Editor
When A. A. M1lne had Mary
Jane cry with all her m1ght and
main about "rice pudding
again," it's obvious she hadn't
sampled any of the tempting
nee puddmgs one enJoys in
Vienna. Austrians have a way
with rice puddmg that makes
even casual dessert eaters
thinkmg of seconds. In fact,
Austrians like th eir desserts so
much that 'they often thmk of

ARIES (Mar. 21-Aprll 19) For
best results today deal strictly
in accord with your highest
ideals regardless of how others
may act toward you.
TAURUS (Aprll 20-May 20) A
financial transaction you'll be
involved m must be handled
with finesse so that it doesn't
appear you want more than
your share .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Be
prepared to compromise today
and make concessions. Gond
intent on your behalf w11l
assure like treatment from
another.
CANCER (June 21· July 22)
You will wm the admiratiOn
and respect of others once they
see your arms are unselfish and
compassionate.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Act upon
any insplrallon that will benefit
one close to your heart if you
feel strongly about 11. Thmking
is not enough.
VIRGO I Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Expect some favorable activity regardmg a fmanc1al
interest you're mvolved m with

Holzer Medical Center
(Births)
Feb. 22 - a son to Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Clarkson, Oak Hill.
Feb 23 - A son, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Stover, Thurman.
Feb. 24 - A daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Waugh,
Northup ; a son, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Butts, Wellston; a
daughter, Mr and Mrs. Ralph
Hall, Middleport.

.x 1e: z m 1'!' ·x~.:::::::::~-::::::::~~

Women give dinner

(Join Us. Please.)

I)

In

'

\

Devoe
Ceiling WhHo -1
Flat Latex Paint
• easy apphcatron
• no solvent odors
• easy clea nup w1th water
• good hidmg and sheen
umform11y

Green Thumb

attempls for 4~ pet. At th~
foul c•rcles, RIO was 21 of 31 for
67 7 pet Rio had 37 rebounM.
Lambert pulled down 10.
Ohw h1l 33 of 84 fi eld goal
attempts for 39 pet and 18 of 28
free throws for 64 I pet The
VISi tors had 49 rebounds.
Dommican hmshed the year
w1th a 2-22 mark.
Box score :

W11mm g ton 81 Urbana 79
Mercvhur s t (Pal 93 Watst1 71
Oh1o conferenc e Tournament
North DIVISIOn
Oh10 Northern 65 Oberl1n 54
South DIVI SIOn
W1ttenberg 72 Manetta 51

Won Lost

1

Ga 1t1pOI1 s
W averly
Whee ler sburg
So uth Po in t
Logan
Portsm outh
Athens
Chesapeake

Rio whips OD
•
for 13th wzn

84

POMEROY LANES
Tuesday Allernoon League
February 19, 1974

32

(At Chagnn Fall s )
Warrensv tll e 54 Ch agr m Fal ls
51
Woodridge 93 o rang e 90
(AfEiyna l
Lor a 1n Ca thol1c 68 Brookstd e 63
C lover l eaf 70 E l yr 1a West 65
(AI Napol eon!
van We t 69 Bry an 58
h
dl
(AI Nort woo
Pe rry sburg 79 Otsego 53
Ross f ord 111 Swa nton 48
Class A
(A IGrov eporll
New A l bany 53 F a1rbanks 46
Cols Whrle 73 L1ckmg Hgts 70
(A tMt Vernon)
Hig hland 81 Ea~ t Knox 13
Fre d e r1 ck. tow n 6 1 Newark.
Ca tll 46
( At Lanca ste r-)

7
Mas ilion 6 9 C an I on L mco I n 6
cAt Copley)
Tallmadge 52 R 1vera 65
I A t Elida)
F.n d lay 55 Def•an ce 5 1
Berne Un1on 7B
Ama nda
(A I A shl an d )
Cl ea r cr ee k 66
(AtManonJ
b
Ashland 6 1 Ti ff in Co 1um lan 36
Pleasan t 79 Cardmgton 60
Mansf1e td Sr 78 Gal 1on 56
(At ctev elandl
M t G •l ead 52 Cols Academy 34
Cl eve E T ech 73
(At Dayton)
10 ( )
Arca n um 73 R uSSia 61
Cl eve Max H ayes
ot
BGreenv1ew 68 Tw1n Va l ley
Cl eve J Marsha ll 74
Cleveland Rllod es 57
Soutll 68
Cleveland John Adams 54
Wapakoneta Sr
Jose ph 79
Maple Heigh tS 46
L ima P err y 67
Cleve l and ca t hol iC Lat.n 70
M1am•sburg 73 Car r oll 00
Garf 1eld His 67
M 1am 1 Valley 112 M•ddle tn
(At Eucli d I
Ch r 1S t1an 65
Cleveland East 67 Eucl1d 62
!At Bryan )
Cl eve
G l env 111e 55 Cleve
Fayette 75 Edgerlon 60
Coll i nwood 51
,. Pett,svil l e 57 Montpe l 1e r 55
(At Ea st l ake )
( At Oeltan ce)
w 1noughby South 67 Lak.e Ayresville 70 Spencer Sharpl es
Cat h ol 1c 62
52
Eas tlak e North 55 Pensv l e
L 1berty Center 69 Northwood 56
R 1vers 1de _.., 3
{At Van W e rt )
C l ass AA
An tw er p 58 Del pho s Je ff erso n
45
( A t Col umbU S)
Colum bu!'. Watterson 57 London
Lmcolnv 1ew 113 Ot110 C1ty 53
(A!Ottawal
46
Co lu mbus Mohawk. 92 w
Pa tr n:k. Henry !17 L e 1pS1 c 74
Je ff erson 7 6
Mil l er C1 ty 61 Ka l1da 64
(AtMedma)
( AtM a nonJ
O lentan gy
60
Col u mbus
Keystone 78 Black R•ver 40
DeSales 55
Lu ther.:tn
Eas t
68
So uth
Buckeye Va l ley 44 Day ton
Amherst 56
Un 1on 43
( At R1v er- v 1ewJ
(At Newark)
tnd Val So uth 49
L•ckmg Valley 78 Fa 1r t 1eld
Newcomer sto wn 46 foi l
un 1on 70
( AtS m1thv1 l l e l
Hea tn 72 Reeme l m 45
Da lton 71 Smllh\llll e SOl
(At Grove C1fYl
(Oth ers )
Teays Va ll ey 57 M 1fftm 51
Lock land 106 Fayetfev1 l le 36
Dublm 67 Logan E lm 57
Zanesv il le 71 Wll eellng (W
( At Fr emont)
Va ) 62
Fostor 1a 78 Oak. Harbor 35
Macon Eastern 77 Fe l 1c 1ty 49
(At Canton)
G l en Este 73 C1nc Co untry Day
Tr1way 60 Tuslaw 48
56
(
Fa 1r less 60 canton Cent cat h
R1ver Loca l 74 Morgan 72 ot }
Vmton County 61 Belpre 39
55
(AtNapofco nl
P1ke Eastern 50 Port smo ut ll
Archbold 72 De ll a 60
Clay 54
(At Sa l em)
A r l 1nglon 63 North Ba lt 1mor e
Wcs t b r anct1
54
Cam pb ell
55
M emona t 44
Van Bu r en 69 L •b er t y Ben ton 50
Mme r va 63 F1e ld Loca l 55
(At Manetta )
Mays\ldle 74 M eadowb ro ok 63

27 11 , Bills 2470, Coca Cola 2399.Team H1gl1 Game - Burtons
920, Burtons, 918, Bill s 903
tnd1V1dual H1gh Ser1es John Grate 58 3, Roger Riebel
562, Harold Carson 562
IndiVIdual H 1gh Game Howard S1sk. 222, Bob Roush
220, Doug Mtller 218

Royal Crown Bottling Co

~~ ··

i

' '

.

'.

Red Cross.
TheCood
Neighbor.

..

�I

•

9 - The Datly Sentmel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Feb
THE AI MANAC
By United Press International
Today 1s Monday February
25th the 56th day of 1974 wtth
309 to folio\\
The moon IS between tis nc\\
phase and ftrst quarter
The mormng stars are
Mercur) Venus and Juptter
The ev emng stars are Mars
and Saturn
Those born on thiS date are
under the stgn of PISces

lh I'IIIL P&lt;\STORET
live torevet
" I d 1s 1 c..:onso hng thought
a ti e ail ght out on th e tow 1
What does thr s peeder do
wtth th(' 10 seco nds he saves
breakmg 111 the trafftc law s
gomg across the c1ty •
0 1 4,;

(

111 t

French pamter P1erre Renmr
(rehn wah l \\ as born February
25th 1841
On thts day m htstory
in 1901 J P Morgan formed
the Umted States Steel Corpora
lion m New Jersev It became
th e natiOns fir st
btlho~
dollar enterpnse
In 1919 Oregon became the
first state to put a tax on

gasoline

one per cent

1 o I elp keep to

tr) a snack of
t c~

~-------------,

1 Class1f1ed Ads

I

A thought for the day
Amertcan phtlosopher Wtlham
IS

I

brtng you
extra cash
f 0r
shopptng sprees

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

1
I
I

1

l
I

I

1
I

no more

rruse rable human bemg than
one m whom nothmg lS habttual
but mdeclSIOn

N THE CO URT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIG SCOU NTY OHIO
ROBERTA C 0 BRIEN
100 2 Court Street
Po m eroy Oh o 4S169
PLAINTIFF

vs

F N ANC IAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS

For

F se al

D ece mb e

31

Year

End ng

1973

Bedford

Townsh p M e gs County Route
2 Po m eroy

Oh o F eb :ZO

1974

I cert fy th e fo ow ng r epor

to be corr ect

G lenn Lee
Townsh p C er k.

SUMMARY OF CASH

BALANCE S RECEIPTS
AND EXPEND TURES

B a lanc e Jan
Gene ra Fund

973
2 63 .S6
Moto Ve h c e L cense
T a x Fund
2 728 13
&lt;l 339 27
Ga so ne T a x Fund
9 698 86
Tot a s
Total Rece ph
Gene r al Fund
7 266 09
Motor Veh c e L cense
Tax Fund
6 877 93
Gaso neTaxFund
44 0000
Rev Shar ng
J 621 00
Tot as
32 165 02
Tot a R ece pts &amp; Bal ances
Genera l Fund
9 897 55
Motor Ve h c e L cense
Tax Fund
9 606 06
8 7]9 17
Gaso t ne Tax Fund
Re¥ Shar ng
3 621 00
41 863 88
Total s
Expend lures
38 23
Gen e al Fund
Motor Veh c e L cense
Tax Fund
7 87 1 02
Gaso ne Tax. Fund
5 577 65
Re¥ Shar ng
3 621 00
Tot a s
27 260 98
Bal a nce Dec 31 1973
General F und
6 085 24
M oto Veh c le L ce nse
Tax Fund
735 04
Ga so n e Tax Fund
3 161 62
Tot a s
098 90
CASH BALANCE

RECEIPTS AND

EXPENDITURES

BY FUND

General Fund
1973
2 63 1 46
Rece1pts
General Property TaKRea Estate (Gross)
3 168 23
Tang b e Persona l Proper ty
Ta x(G r oss )
672
ntang be T ax
( Gross l
1 373 00
Loca l Govern men t
D str but on
2 699 38
C garette L cense Fees
and F nes Gros s
18 7S
To ta l Rece pts
7 266 08
Tot a Beg nn ng Ba ance
Plus Rece pts
9 897 55
Expend tures
Tot a Ex pend turesAdm n strat ve
3 601 21
Town Ha s Memor a
Bu d ng s and
211 10
Grounds
Tot a Expend t ure s Plus
B&amp; Dec 31 1973
3 81 2 31
Motor Veh cle L1cen se
Ta x Fund
Bal J an 1 1973
2 728 13
Rece pis
Motor Veh c e L cense
Ta x
3 352 34
Oth er
1 519 79
Other
701 68
Oth er
1 304 12
Total Rece pts
6 877 93
Tota l Beg nn ng Ba ance
Plus Rece pts
9 606 06
E Kpend tu r es
Tot a Expend turesM see laneou s
4 234 10
Ma ntenance
2 778 04
mprovemen
3 636 92
Grand Total E )( pend tur es
- Motor Veh c e L cen se
Tax F und
7 871 02
Gasoline Ta x Fund
Ba
Jan 1 1973
4 339 27
Rece pts
Gaso ne Tax
14 400 00
Total Rece pts
14 400 00
Total Beg nn ng Balance
Pus Rece pts
18 739 27
Expenditures
Tot a Expend turesM see I an eo us
6 387 98
Ma n tenan ce
9 189 69
Gr and Total Expend turesGasol ne Ta x F und
15 577 65
Dec 31 1973
3 161 52
Ba
To ta l Expend tures Plus
Ba
Dec 31 1973
18 739 7
Township Debt- Bonds
Purpose For Wh ch Bond
Debt Wa s Created
Purchase of Grader
Outstand ng Jan l
1973
10 000 00
Redeemed Our ng
Year 1973
3 333 00
Balance Outstand n g
Oec 31 1973
6 667 00
Rate of tnt
6 P et
Date ofF na Mat
7 1 74
Bat

l

Jan

(2) 2S

VIV AN MORGAN ET AL
DEFENDAN TS
NO S 471
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
BY PUBLICATION
To Bern ce Mo den whose
as known addre :.s s Buckey e
Lak e Oh o and whose exact
address s unknown and canno t
w h easonab e d gence b e
ascer ta ned
To Conn e K Dutcher whose
address s unknown and cannot
w th reasonab e d gence be
ascerta ned
To Hermetta A nn N emeyer
whose eKac t n ame s unknown
and whose add r ess s unknown
and ca nnot w th reasonab e
d gence be ascerta ned
To Th e unknown h e r s and
dev sees ot Nann e HobbS
decea sed
To The unknown he r s and
dev sees o f Char es Hobbs
deceased and
To The unknown hers and
dev sees o f Neva G mo e
decea sed
You a e hereby not fed t hat
you have been n amed defen
dants n a eo a ac t on ent t ed
Roberta C 0 Br en p a nt ff vs
V van Morgan e r a
defen
dants Th s act on has been
ass gned Case No I S 471 n he
Com m on P leas Cou r t of Me gs
Coun t y Oh o Pomeroy Oh o
45769
The ob1ect of the comp ant s
to part ton and qu et t ti e to
r ea l es tat e s tuat ed n Rut and
Townsh p Me gs County Oh o
wh ch s desc r bed as ro ows
S tua ted n Rut and Town
Sh p Me gs County
Ot1 o
Se ct on 4
Beg nn ng north 3300 f eet
from the sou th east car ne of
sad Sect on 4 thence west 1709
tee to ce nter of publ c oad
thence a ong center of sa d road
north 17 degrees 05 west 687 s
t h ence east 914 to east ne of
sa d Sec on No A th en ce south
650 to place of beg nn ng
conta n ng 27 ac r es more or
ess
E"cept ng a n d reserv ng
three fourths of coa l o I oas
and other m nera l s und er y ng
the above descr bed prem ses
w lh r ght to m ne r emov e and
operate the same
Also beg nn ng north 3JOO
and west 2121 from southeast
corner of Sec t on 4 thence wes t
1335 5 then c e north 6SO thence
east 1312 th ence south 23 deg
JO east 120 t hence south 2 deg
20 east 78
th ence south 9
thence
degrees 15 west 145
south 2 deg 30 w es t 32 7 to the
pla ce of beg nn ng conta n ng
20 04 acres more or less
Except ng 1 53 acres sod off
eav ng 18 51 ac r es more or ess
A so the to low ng descr bed
real estat e beg nn ng 172 ods
12 nks west of the northeast
cor ner of Sec 3 Town 6 Range
14 th ence west 35 rods 13 nks
t hen ce south 80 rods then ce
east 94 rods S n ks to publ c
road th ence n a north wester y
d r ee f on a ong t he cen t er of
road to the place of beg nn ng
co nta n ng 31 2 acres more or

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

REGULATIONS

The Publ sher reserves th e
r ght to edt or re ec t any ad s
deemed
ob ect ona
The
publ s her w 1 not be r espon
s be for more than one n
correc t nse r t on
RATES
For Want Ad SerVICe
5 cents per word one nsert on
M n mum Cha r ge 51 00
4 cents , er word three
con sec ut ve nsert on s
26 cents per word s x con
secut ve nsert ons
2S Per Cent D scoun t on pa d
ads and ads pad w th n 0
days

CARD OF THANKS

m n
word

Jc

BLIND ADS
Add 1 on&amp; 2Sc Charge per
Advert sement
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m to s 00 p m Da y
8 JO a m
to 12 on fi. "'On
Saturday

27TH ANNUAL Hereford Sa e
24 bu s and 15 fern a es
Southeas t ern Oh o H er efo rd
As soc a on
A
c l ea n
ped gress both horned and
poled Sa turday Mar ch 16
97 4 Show 10 a m sa e p m
Rock Springs Fa r g r ounds
R t 33 three m les north of
Pomeroy Oh o For cata logs
wr te to Loyd Bla ckwood
sa e Mgr
Rt 3 Pomer oy
Oh o 45769
2 24 ltc
A

1973 CHEV NOVA

$2645
Custom Hatchback Cpe dark green f n s h I ke new
wh te wa ll t re s full whee cove s protec t v e s de mldgs
P B r ad 1o 6 c yl eng ne stand tr an s A very popul ar
model &amp; pr ced to go

1971 DODGE DEMON

a

340 V eng ne automat ic tra n s power stee r ng rad oJ....
I ke new w w I es b k v ny nter or red f n sh

1971 COUGAR

$2345

2 Dr H T M ed green t n sh a r cond
rad o E" t ra sh arp

A U CTION Th e fol ow n g
w 1 be so d at 435 R ch land
Ayenue
A th ens
Oh o
Saturday Mar ch 2 1974
p m
Curved G ass Ch na
Ca b net
wall te ephone
Cherry W nd sor Cha r Oak
k t chen cab net round tab e
walnut d n ng roo m t ab e
a nt que cherry c h est of
drawers
2 oak roc k e r s
map ~ ooss p stand walnut
chest of drawers ch erry bed
adar chest sm all camel back
trunk
oak buffet
p cture
frames ston e ars a r con
d toner
Ad m ra l
Refr gerator
quIt lop 100
years o d ant que glassware
depress on g ass cos tume
1ewe lry Sa l e cond ucte d by A
Fur n tu re and Auct on In c
C C ... Bradford Auct on eer
B I G over Mgr
2 24 ltc

R VERS DE Inn now open
under new management of
Fred (S ml M er Everyone
come and br ng your fr ends
2 24 6t p
W L L buy turn t ur e and m er
c hand se at Po ly s A uc t on
House Add son Phone 992
3509
2 20 7 c

co't.%'~hb0RS
STATE OF OHIO

DEPARTMNT OF

You are r eq u red to answer
the Comp l a nt w th n 28 days
after th e last publ ca t on of th s
no ce wh ch w II be published
once each wee~!. for s x con
secut Ye w ee k s
The la s
nub ca tion w I be made on
March 4 1974 and the 28 days
start on that
fo answer wl
date
In case of your fa I ure to
an swer or otherw se respond as
requ red by the Oh o Ru es of
Cv
Procedure IUdgment by
defau lt w 11 be rendered aga nst
vou for rehef demanded n l he
com pal nl

117 N Fourth Sf

M1dd leport Oh1o

FURNISHED
APARTMENT
One or 2 bedrooms
Phone 992 3863 unt11
3 ao p m
992 5844
after 6 00

Notice

Larr y E Spencer
Clerks of Court
Common Pleas Court
Meigs County Oh o
2) 4 11 18 2S (3l 4 6tc

B g capac ty
Maytag
AutomatiCS
2 speed oreration
Cho ce o
water
temps Auto water
level control L nt
F Iter or Power F n
Ag tator
Perma Pren

M~ag
HlfO
I eat
D

s

Surround
c lothes
wth gentle
e\4en
heat No hot spots
no overd ry ng F ne
Mesh L nt F ter
We Speclall1e .n
MAY TAG
Red Carpel
Serv1ce

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Arnold Grate

Rutland

Rev 8 17 73
(2

S975

18 25 2t c

IN THE COURT OF

COMMON PLEAS

MEIGSCOUNTY OHIO

BANNY BRANHAM
Pomeroy Ohio
Pia nllff

vs

JUDY BRANHAM
Address Unknown
D~lendant

NOTICE BY

RECYCLE your n ewspa pers for
s 40 per 100 pound your
brown
pasteboard
and
corru gated paper for S 40 per
100 pounds W e are a lso your
b est market for Wh te BM
Cards for 6c per pound We
buy scrap ron
cas t r on
sheet ron t n copper brass
auto rad ators auto ba tt er es
Our feel of trucks w II serv ce
anv ndu stry
Conserve
recycle and sel you r waste
mater als
we c ose each
Fr da y at noon tor ba ance o f
each week When you gel t a
together sell your s to The
Rosen b erg Recycl ng Co 79
Depo t Street A th ens Oh o
2 22 tfc

R IVE RSIDE Au to Wreck ng
w II pay SS for a I 1unk car s
Phone { l04) 882 5244 or 77 3
5890

No 15 487

PUBLICATION
To Judy Branham whose ast
known address was Lyth a
Spr ngs
Georg a
co Elmo
Underwood
You are hereby not fed that
you have been named Defen
dant n a ega I act on ent tied
Benny Branham vs
Judy
Branham Th s action has been
a~slgned Case No 15 487 pen
d ng n th e Court of Common
Pleas Me gs County Pomeroy
Oh o .45769
The oblect of the complaint is
for d vor ce and care custody
and co ntrol of the m nor
ch ldren of the parties You are
requ red to answer the com
pia nt w thin 28 days after the
last publ cat on Of th s not ce
wh ch w I be publ shed on ce
each week for s x cons ecut ve
weeks The last publ cut on w II
be made on Apr I 1 197 4 and the
28 days for an swer w I com
mence on that date

For sale
AM F M ste reo rad o 8 tra ck
tape player 4 speaker sound
svslem Balance SI09 J2 or
ter ms Call 992 396S
2 19 tfc
TWtN
NEEDLE
SEW NG
MACH N ES 1974 model n
wa nut stand
All features
bu It n to make fan cy des gns
and do stretch sew ng A so
buttonholes b nd hems etc
$43 35cashor t erms ava abe
Phone 992 2653
2 19 tf c
VACUUM CLEANERS E ectro
Hyg ene New Demonstrators
h as all cl ean ng attachments
plus the new Electro Suds for
shampoo ng ca rp e t
On y
S27 so
cas h
or
terms
availab e Phone 992 2653
2 19 tfc
EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
Ma n St Pomeroy All kinds
of sa lt water pel~ets wat er
nuggets block salt and own
Oh o R ver Sa I Phone 99 2

)891

6 5 tf(.

SA LT FOR ICE AND ~ NU\o
Rock sa t for township s
towns and bus r.esses In
bulks and bags for ce and
snow Excels or Salt Works
Phone 992 3891
11 11 tfc

-------

-

----

GOOD USED
REFRIGERATORS
( 2 Good Ones)
1- S1de by Stde
$150
1- 2 Door
(Top &amp; Bottom&gt; $125

Larry Spencer Clerk
Court of Common Pleas of
Meigs County
Pomeroy Oh o .45769

2) 25 (3) 4 II 18 25 (4) I 61c

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 9932

------------ROOMING HOU SE furnished

bed
S29 95
Pomeroy
Recovery 622 E Man Stree t
construct on
workers
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
welcome Phone 773 5975
I 29 26tc
New Haven w Va
../...._
------21
S tfc SMALL FARM gas wei Phone
742 6261
3 AND 4 ROOM furn Shed and
2 21 6tc
unfurnished
apartments
Phone 992 S43A
4 12 tfc 1963 PONT AC Bonnev lie For
parts or sale as s For more
PRIVATE meetmg room for
nformat on call 949 4561
any organ zatlon phone 99 2
2 25 9tc
)975

----

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

3 11 H e

- --- - -----HAY Phone 11927306

2 17 26tc

Wanted To Buy

S NGER sew ng mach nes 1972
196.4 AND OLDER s lv er WI
model
n beautiful walnut
pay S2 SO for 51 worth or t rade
cab net Makes design st t
an y type c ons for your s lver
ches zig zag buttonho es
Call or wr te Jack e A Warns
bl nd h em s etc Like new
ley Rt 1 M ddl epor t Phone
Only S89 95 Call Ravenswood
742 36S 1
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
12 7 ttc
2 25 6tc

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

6 00 - News 3 4 8 0 15 Sesame St 20 ABC N ew s 13 1-ler
sonal ty &amp; Behav ora l Developmen t 33
Truth or Con
sequences 6

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

6

3~ewsN6BC News J

the Clock 4 News 6 10 C reus 13 Readmg for the Class oom
Teacher 33 Ca l l of tti e West 5
7 30 - Bobby Goldsboro 3 Buck Owens 8 Lock Stoc k &amp; Barr el
20 Mun c pa l Court 10 Wacky World cf Jonathan Wmte r s 5
To Tell the Truth 6 Bea t t he Clock 13 Hollywood Squares 4
Ep sode Act 1on 33
8 00 - Rook es 13 Theater 10 Amer ca 20 Nat ona l Geograph c
6 Mag1c1an 3 4 5 Gun smoke 8 Hl Unqu1et Death of Ju us
and Ethel F'!osenburg 33
9 00 - Heres Lucy 8 10 Moves The Scalphunters J 15

cars
- GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094
On Most Amencan

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Hard Con lract 6 13 Col ege Basketball 4
9 ' - D ck Van Dyke 8 10 Book Beat 33

H.l 00 - Paul Nuch ms 33 Med ca I Center 8 10

Water Lmes and Power
Lmes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and sept1 c tank s tn

773 5554

For Sale

Real Estate For sale

GROCERY bus ness for sa le
Build ng for sa l e or ease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appo ntm ent
3 20 tfc

2 YEAR OLD 24x24 ce I ng
For
h ome Electr c heal
more nformat on ca I 773

5503

2 24 6tc
FOR SALE Large e\le o t on
New L rna Road Rut and A ll
ut t es ava abe Phone 742
308 3
2 1 tfc
HAY and straw for sa
949 5884 or 949 3839

e

Phone

2 22 Jtp

OLD ER home under SS 000 has
g reat fut ure
Ma1o
m
provemenfs ns de needs
pa nt ns de and out La d out
ke a new home
Full
basement and garage Phon e
992 5335
2 24 6t c

H O U SE HOLD tem s a t barga n S?AC IOU S b Level and sp I
pri ces som e ant ques Phone
le vel hom es are now un der
992 2662
construc tion on c ty water
2 22 3tc
and sewer
Many d e uxe
features nc uding a r con
STEREO
Walnut
AM FM
d toning
Best f nanc ng
Rad o 8 track tape com
ava lab e Other type homes
b nat on Ba an ce $110 73 or
n d fferent areas on F H
terms ava able Ph one 992
Adm f nan c ng w th no down
3965
payment Call col ect { 837
2 14 tf c
6540) or wr t e to M E I GS
D EVELOPMENT P 0 Box
33 M ddleport Oh o 45760
YOUNGS TOW N k tchen s nk
1 9 tfc
w th f a ucets Good cond ton
550 See at 256 So Fourth
Ave M dd eport
s X ROOM house w th bath
2 18 t fc
c ty water coal furnace 3
acres near the Pomero y Go lf
BOLEN S Husky 250 With 48
Cour se Phone 992 3944
in c h mow er and bade Ex
2 25 3t c
ce lent cond t on Phon e 949
5953
N E W 3 bedroom home good
water 6 acres 3 outbuildina s
and eel ar Ott Me gs County
2J INCH Adm ral
on W I am Sm th Road 3
Phone 992 5496
m les from Salem Center
2 24 ttc
1 27 26tp
H &amp; N day o d or st ar t ed
Leghorn pu lets Both f oor or
NEW 3 bedroom home lV1 bath
grown
ava tabl e
c age
garage basement on Grav el
Poultry
hous ng
and
H 1 M ddleport Natura gas
automat on Modern Poultr y
a ready
n
Phone Dale
399 W Ma n Pomeroy 992
Dutton 992 3369 even ngs
2164
992 2534
2 24 ltc
17 tf c

REDUCE safe &amp; fast w th
GoBese Tab ets &amp; E Vap
water p I s
Nel son Drug
2 25 ltc

---------------_
AC RE lots for sale Tuppers
Pia ns water Call 992 5248
be fore 3 992 3436 after 3 p m
2 20 61 c
2

OES RAt1LE two bedroom
house n M ddleport ready to
oc cupy Ca I 992 5310
1 31 26tc

REDUCE excess f uld w th
Flu dex - Lose we ght w th
Oex A 0 et
capsu es
at
Nel so n Drugs
2 24 3tc

COA L FOR SALE
CHESHIRE

5 OA Y S A

2 25 St c

Pets For Sale
AKC Toy Pood e pupp es $75
S am ese k ttens S15 Phone 1
256 6347
2 21 26tc
R ISH Setter
7.42 .4426

pupp es

Phone
2 24 3t c

Mobile Homes For Sale
PRE SPR NG SALE at B er r y
M 1 er Mobile Homes 705
Far son Street Be pre Oh o
phone A23 9531 Buy now take de Ivery n spr ng - tak e
advantage of w nter t me
pr ces on some outstand ng
used Mobles Home s
1971 - 2 bedroom - 60 x 12
Pr n cess wa s S6 495 00 sale
price SS 29S 00 (th s mob l e
ho me new cost $8 000 00)
1971 - 65x12 Champ on super
sate pr ce on y $4 995 00
1971
60x12 Buddy c lass c
was S5 495 00 now only
$4 795 00
1971 two 60x l 2 Champion
were 54 495 00 now only

SYRACUSE

Large 2 story

frame 7 room s 2 baths 4
BR
R ver
frontage
Ba sement New FA ga s
furnace
new
copper

plumbtng
Garage
$10 500 00
SYRACUSE-Lovely 2 yr
old hom e All new homes n
th s ar ea 3 n ce BR double
c lose t s Colored bath w
Beaut1ful k1tchen
shower
with cab1nets &amp; range

Utll ly R HW floors Some
carpeting Drapes Carport
w storage $19 900 00

TUPPERS PLAINS -

Phone (3041 SS3 6S07

2 24 1tc

REMODEL NOW
SAVE
MONEY W TH VEMCD
ADD A ROOMS FITS ANY
MOBILE HOME

ONE DAY

INSTALLAT ON FOR THAT

EXTRA

FAMILY

BEDROOM

ROOM

BATH

ETC SEE NOW AT YoungS
M H Sales Rt 7 &amp; 35 below
S lver Memorial
Bridge
Gall poll s
2 2.4 1tc

Real Estate For sale
5 ROOM home 2 bedroom 1 2
bath workshop gas for ced
a r furnace garage Lot 100
ft x 100ft Phone 992 3022 or

992 3298

1971

Mob le Home bought new n
72 12x 60 h acre ground

Carpeted 2 BR Bath L ke
new JUST S6 500 oo
77 ROUGH ACREs- Close
to Forked Run Lake C ty
water ava1lable Ideal for
hom e
or
tra ler
All
minerals
Full
prtce

$9 000 00
RAISE THE CURTAIN ON
A NEW TYPE OF LIFE BY
OWNING PROPERTY TO
BUY OR SELL SEE US
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259
If no answer 9922568

TEAFORD
\lit qd H

2
ACRES 12x60 tra ler n
Plnegrove
Sel
trade
or
rent 0 R chan:lson General
Delivery
Mann
W
Va

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display

6 35 -

Columbus Today 4

6 45 7 00 -

Farmt1me 10 Mo r n ng Report 3
Today 3 4 5 C B S News 8 10 P xanne 6

~

25- Jack Lalanne 13

9 00 -

Menager e

9 309 55 10 00 0 30II 00 -

II

55 - CBS News8 Dan !mel s World 10

12 00- Password 6 Jackpot 3 15
.\~ 45 Elec Co 33
X2 55 - News 3 15

Game 6 13

"2 JO - Doctors 3 4 15 Gorl n My L fe 6 13 Edge of N ght 8 10
~

00 -

Another World 3 4 15 Gneral Hospital 6 13

Roghl 8 10 Book Beat 20
:::J 30 One Lie to L ve 6 13 Phol Donahue 4 How to Su rv ve a
M arr 1age 3 15 Women 20 Match Game 8 10

4 00- M r Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Speed Racer
6

Sesame St 20

Tra1l s West 15

.. "c oeen
ca n ce ed?
Lost
your
operator s 1 cense Call 992
7428
6 15 tfc

Room 222 13
1 00 - What s My L no 8 Dusty s Troll 13 Elec Co 20 Truth

Stand Up &amp; Cheer 4
T eac her 33

"'

29 tic

C ONSTRUCTIO ~

I !·

'II•'

j), II•

P111ll•'ICY

'&gt;i 1 '

Oil!) '

't,'l

BRAND NEW- 3 bedrooms
1 h baths electn c heat Storm
doors and w ndows Garage
and nearly an acre $22 000

2 APARTMENTs-One up woth
1 br and 2 bedrooms down
Full basement Gas furnaces

$20 000 00
COUNTRY HOME - Modern 4
brs

all paneled home

large

bath large k !chen dining
Only a lew yrs old 518 000 00
NEAR GAVIN - 3 bedrooms
bath

gas furnace

•

Reasonable offer

pm

f

0EEMS

RE/&gt;-~ONI'-6LE
~-ro
LE~DEJ~:

matenal

11 Chevron

12 Dt lemma
13 Rescmd
14 Substde
15 Gtrl o
my heart
16 ChemiCal
suffix
17 Vtgor

knows what'
When I complam he says Would you rather have a drunk
for a husband' I d rather have a husband pertod Oh yes this
other man has a wife who Is JUSt as 1gnored as I am We suffered
through years of trymg to understand and help our alcohohc
mates and now they don t want us We suspect they want only
each other but are afraid to face 1t What to do' - ALONE
AGAIN

hy HI Nlll J\III\IOl [) ' " " ' 0011 I I f

U nscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to eaeh &amp;quare to
form four ordtnary words

CLUID

I I

I

9 30

Mov1e

8 10

Manhunter
6

Amer can Boy 3 4 15

13 Wash ng lon Slra ght Talk 33

Tomorrow 3 4
N ews 4

statement

ml&amp;&lt;:htef

28 Golf'"
structor
29 Chmese
dynasty
30 Crash
mto
33 Charm
35 Land

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Hete's how to work 11
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

I []

One letter stmply stands for an oth er In thts sample A is
used for the three L s X for the twa 0 s etc Smgle letters
apostrophes the length and formation of the words are all
hints Each day the code lette rs are dtiferent

r )I n

LAFTUR

I

Now arranwe the Circled (etten
to form the IUrpfJie answer Ill
~="I=:::':l,::;-~~~U~~~:__::•u:w~rested by lhe above cartoon
(An•wer• tomorrow)

3 Mov e

News 13

9 Press

measure

L_~~=~=•=a=~==·=-~ICIIIJCD

Day at N ght 3J News 20

11 00 - News3 4 6 8 10 IS 13 Janak 33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 A Cold N ght s Death 6
Ca nnon 8
A Ra s n 10 the Sun 10

Obispo
Call!
ZZ. Hatr-care
product
23 Muctlage
24 Grand
parental
25 Senator
from
Ilhnots
Z6 Bare
!7 Norse
god
of

~a lurda ¥~

Jumhl•• RURAL

MINCE

.\nswf'r /leadr~ear

fnr a lady pm t r A PICTURE HAT

I

PUSHER TURTLE

CRYPTOQUOTES
YM
TZC

UT T

CQR

FZLTA 0

ZM

GO

XRRA

U

U

LRQRULOUT -GXWXZFX

OCUJR
TZC

U

IZLR

OZGLPR

Saturdays Cryptoquote AN ENTERPRISE WHEN FAIRLY
ONCE BEGUN SHOULD NOT BE LEFT TILL ALL THAT
OUGHT IS WON - W SHAKESPEARE

~ElTSIN

H[ \1./0R.IE R !TftANGf

'J9764
8532

+

+

.10 5

lt.INGi 1)10 V" Glr " LOOM: Ill

8LAC:K HE"I\IU ON IT

H

C'al.l'f WHO Tl.tiCI TO K LiYD\1 AN TAKE T H
fi\R.) TliiiKWOOO "

POSS!SSION
HI! IS!'

GOLD W T't A

M.AP

SOUTH COl
• AQJ74
'A 10 3
+QlO

.Q42

..4.

North South vulnerable

West

North

East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass Pass
Opemng lead •K

10 4 tfc

South

Pass

o:;uRE EI'J OU6 H I FOUPJ O A CAVE
ONCE U ~ E O BY PR: MI T Ve MAN FUL.

TANKS

c eaned
Modern Sanltat on 992 3954 or

992 7349

Yeaterday s Answ••r "
11 Tableau
25 Rto de Ia
15 Glazter s
glass
Parana
18 Type of
estuary
thread
29 Flock
19 Petula or
31 Region
Dane
3% 1nhentors
20 Barge
of the
users
earth
2% Storm
3C Miss
rage
Rem1ck
23 MeXIcan
35 Play a
laborer
part

36 Types
kinds
37 Hllls of
Shrop

I [J

I

I I

8 JO -

Black Journal 33

(Fr )
U San-

4 Watch
5 Party
fot the
boys
6 Alder
tree
(Scot )
7 Unendmg
problem
(2 wds)
8 Rossellini a
film
classic
(2 wds )

sb1re

B 00 - Adam 12 J 4 15 Happy Days 6 13 Maude 8 10 B II

9 00 -

of earned~

%0 Queen

novtce
(3 wds)

Eng
38 Kaput
39 Furmture
wood

IWHARITI

EAST
.62

A96
" "" AKJ 976

SANITATION
662

OF F055 5 AN D WAL L. PA '-JT NG5

lly Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

10 23 tfc
Jtm

~ACKHOE Service CHARLES
R HATFIELD
Route 1
Rutland Ohio .45775 phone
742 6092 Water t nes footer,
and trench es 24 hours 1
days a week

must conSider all four sutts
Oswald Here lS one from
1hlS yea rS blue rtbbon ralrS.
South s four spade cal was
'&lt;lne of those btds that JUs!
"Should not be made He had
passed at two spades When
~e btd four he was trappmg
hiS partner
Jtm Hts deCISIOn was a
llflOd one Four spades can t
be beaten What happened'
' Oswald West started wtth
ihree rounds of clubs South
had to ru ff the thtrd one m
dummy East diScarded a
lleart Then South led a d1a

BLOCKS bored and all repair.s.
on small engines Wilkinson
Sma I Eng ne Sales 399 w
Ma n St Phone 992 3D92
2 6 26tc

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

WILL tr m or c ut trees and
st'lrubbery Also clean out
basements attics etc Call
949 3221 or 742 4441
2 2 26tc

--- -- ------FOR YOUR new home

br
complete remodel nQ cont,ct
Greg Roush
R:oush Con
structton Phone 992 5039

2 24 ltc
NEW HOMES ROOFS ANP

mona to ms

REMODELING
For free
es timat es cal 992 606.4 or 992

6680

2 2Htp

19N RAMBLER Station Wagon
26 000 m es $1 &lt;495 Phone
Harry Brown 985 5833

2 22 31p

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

1966 VW 84 000 m lies Contact
Michael Burke 2 1'~ m tes
southeast of Hemlock Groye
on townsh lp road 82

, 20tp

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

ONE 1972 Kingwood Est,,!&amp;
Station Wagon 9 passenger ]
toea owner Phone Wayne
M lll'loan 992 5602

2 24 6tp

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

INFORMATION ABOUT.

The oppoSite of the

~mgle sutt play has to be the
11\1 sutt play where declarer

2 7 26tp

Mid«'hpart f'omerov -

2 20 6tc

" '15

JJW/Mill~®/kst «Jtawi/J ..-J ,..-

Moyer s Journa l 33 Move Alexander Nev sky 20
Ha wa F ve 0 !.1 Pol1ce Story 3 4 15 Move K I er
Bees 6 13 Thoma s A Ed1son The Old M an 33

problem
2 Unkempt
chap
3 Was no

champ

5 Rehsh
10 Potters

Dear Grateful
There s a qwp that goes I m at the awkward age too
young for Medtcare and too old for men-to-&lt;:are Thanks for
provmg 1t false 1 - H

+++

DOWN

1 Skm

DlCK TRACY

• 'K

STEWART OHIO PH

STIREO
92.1FM
WMPO

to
Pomeroy
Phone 992 52.48
before 3 p m 992 3436 after 3

ACROSS
1 Tenms

Dear Alone
Face 1t Brmg your susptctous out m the open Ask your
husband pomt blank about hts relal!onshtp w1th this man If
they re gay you have a right to know (and plan your future life
accordmgly) U they aren t THEY have a rtght to know that
others are susp1c1ous of theU" closeness - H

Dear Helen
I lost my husband to the bottle when he be~ame an alcoholic
Now I ve lost hlffi to the man who got him off hquor They re
lllSeparable They go everywhere together because as my
husband says they gtve each other strength to stay dry They
went on the wagon at the same time a year ago a nd smce then
I ve been lonelier than ever
On the few occas1ons we go out thiS man tags along Mostly
they go off on campmg trtps or play goH or cards Or heaven

~ ~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

+

.85 3

SEPT C TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

-------------HOUSE for sate
c ose

... .

~~

'Q852
KJ74
"" 8 3
WEST

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

All OF THESE ARE GOOD
BUYS COME IN AND HAVE
A LOOT

2 20 6tp

'

Dear Helen
Thanks for pulling me up short I felt like the wnter who
signed herseH For Mtd Ltb I was fmished at age 58
After readmg your answer I did some heavy reevaluation
and learned there was a good deal of life left m thlS shell I ve
JOlned a stngles dance group (I m a wtdow) started bowling
aga m I m planmng a crwse m Aprtl and I ve already got a mce
wtdower mterested enough to mv1te me out
How true 11 s your attttude not your age that counts GRATEFUL

10 00 - Marcus Welby MD

NORTH
u

WHY/

I

• K 109

9 1 tfc

bedrooms a 3 bedroom trailer
and a 1 bedroom tra1ler

One wolh 6

By Helen Hottel
e e e

+++

2 00

~ ~ By Roget Bollen

~

Dear Tempted
Keep m mmd that spolled unmature women vtew theU"
husbands as the born·flch see thell" bank accounts they only
become lffiportant when they re suddenly no longer there
Your wife has pretty well proved she cant or wont change
Don t smk for the thU"d tlffie - H

10 30 -

FUNNY BUSINESS

•

~
=~

Spoiled Brat a Marrtage Risk
Dear Helen
My wife treated me hke dirt I was crazy about her so I took
1t - for four years I worked 10 hours a day came home a nd
cleaned house did the cooking and gave her whatever she
wanted She sllll carped about everytlung Frnally she went out
on me - JUst for ktcks she satd
Don t get the 1dea I m a panty watst Our love hie was great
but she ftg ured that was enough to make up for all the other
lacks Even her mother admtts she sa spolled brat
Well I left her once She begged me to come back satd she
couldn t hve wtthout me I trted agam Same thmg She ran our
charge accounts up and me down
So I ve moved out sgam and now she calls every mght
crymg and promtsmg she ll be a different woman She lS very
persuastve and I m lonely
Please help me stay strong enough not to go back
TEMPTED

1 00 -

OOZE R and back hoe wor k!
ponds and sept c tanks dlt
chlng service top so I fill
dirt
imestone
B&amp;K Ex
cavat ng Phone 992 5367 or

JOB OPPORTUNITIES .-..
SOCIAL SECUAITY .,:
CONSUMER PROTECTION

RENTALS -

Read ng for t he Classroom

Put all four swts to work

123 tic

n1ce out

building wolh cellar and lot

Lasste 15

.WIN AT BRIDGE

Roof ng
spout ng
kitc hens
and bathrooms Complete
remodeling Phone 742 6273

Auto Sales

r

News 6 10 Marco Sportl t e

• 33 Hogh School TV Honor Soc ely 15
1 30 To Tell the Truth 6 New Pr ce os R ght 8 10 Beat th e
Clock 13 RFD 20 Hollywood Squares 3 Johnny Manns

Repa r

ser v ce all makes 992 228.4
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Au thor zed s nger Sa es and
SerY ce We Sharpen Scissors

SEPTIC

Hogan s Heroes 13

or Conseq 3 Beat the Clock 4

BECAUEI~ I. fiEUI:R
LIKED l&gt;IE FLUTE

"

6 00 - ABCNews 13 SesameSt 20 News3 4 Truth or Conseq
::~ 6 N e w s 8 10 15 L1ha s Yoga &amp; You 33
~ 30 - News 6 8 10 NBC News 3 4 15 Your Future s Noe 33

A li'! OMO'ffit:- -

3035

Lucy Show 8

My W fe s Best Fr end 10
~ 30 - G 1lhgan s Is 6 13 Green Acres 3 Bonanza 15 Jackpot
4 Ha ze l 8
"!\ 00 - Mr Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Gr ffln 4 Andy
Griffith 8 Mission impossible 6 Gomer Pyle USMC 1J
5 JO- Beverly H llbtlloes 8 Elec Co J3 Hodgepodge Lodge20

2 5 261c

LLER

Love Amerfcan Sy le 13

Move

w1th Ma1ar Hoople

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

1S

Pnce Is

,

HO U SES We I dr&amp;w prints
or
bu ld
to
your
spec if cat ons
Ne gler s
Bu ld ng Supp y
Racine
Ohio Cal 949 J604

M

Search for Tomorrow 8 10

1 00 - 3 On A Matc h 3 4 15 Lets Make A Dea l6 13 As the
World Turns 8 10
2 00 - Days of Our L ves J 4 15 Gu dong Ltghl 8 10 New lywed

12 19 tiC
NEIGLERS-FOR- BUILDING

992 3861

13

To Tell the Truth 3 Secret Storm 8
Chuck Wh to Reports 10
D nah Shore 3 15 Company 6 Jokers W ld 8 10
Jeopardy 3 4 IS $10 000 Pyram d 8 10
W zard of Odds 3 4 15 Gamb I 8 10 Mtke Douglas 6

Password 13

DOZER work land clearing by
th e acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w th over
20 years ex per ence Pullins
Excavat ng Pomeroy Oh o
Phone 992 2478

PRICE

Ph1l Donahu e

I I 30 - Brady Bunch 13 Holl ywoo d Squares 3 4 1S Love of L fe
8 10

EXCAVATING do1er loader
and ba ckhoe work
septic
tanks rnstalled dump trucks
and o boys for hir e w II haul
t 11 d rt top soil I mestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
J effe rs day phone 992 7089
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc

if, ; II ·,.

Br "~

6
News 13
Paul D1xon 4 Fnendly Junct on 10 AM J

15 Abbott&amp;Costello8 Wid WlldWesl6 Movoe TheGiass

C BRADFORD Auct oneer
Complete Se rvi ce
Phone 949 3821
Rae ne Ohio
cr tt Bradford
s 1 tfc

3

0 ck Van

&amp; 30 - Brady Bunch

-6 55 -

Xi'l

19 Imogene

8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Jeff s Coli e 6

OPEN Roge r Hysel s Garage
near Cr ossroads on St Route
124 8 30 to 6 p m Monday
through Saturday Phone 992
S682 or 992 7t 2l
2 22 26tC

SE WIN G MACHINES

L ve By 4

Dyke 13
7 30- Rocky t1. Bu!lw nkle 13 Ne w Zoo Revue6

" - - - - - -"-

1971 - 60x12 Elcona Custom
new prtce S7 295 00 sa te pr ce
55 795 00
1974 - three Detro ters - up to
S1 000 oo off
we HAVE many other s 1es
and var et es of Mobile
Homes on sate Our prices
nclude you r delivery and
compete set up don t walt
shop now you II be gtad you
d d
2 15 12tc

and

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

WEEK PHONE 992 5693

TRY
Sleepers
ton ght for
sate and restfu sleep on y 98c
at Nel son Drugs
2 24 lt c

Sun r se Se m nar 4 Sacred Hea rt 10
6 15 - Concern &amp; Commen t 10
6 20 - Farm Report 13
6 15 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - B ble Answers 8 N ews 6 F1ve M nutes to
Rev Cleophus Rob nson 13

REASONABLE rates Ph 4.46
4782 Gat ipolls John Russell
Owner and Operator
5 12 tfc

OPEN S AM

TILL 6 30 P M

'6 00 -

6 JO tic

COMPANY
THE
MEIGS &amp; GALLIA LINE
STA TE
ROUTE
7
AT

N0ws4

TUESDAY FEB 26 1974

READY MIX
CONCRETE
del vered r ght to
your
prolect Fast and easy Free
estimates ~hone 992 328~
Goegleln R:eady Mix Co
M ddleport Oh o

JAYMAR

COAL

992 2094
606 E Matn
Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
N1ghf 992 3525
or 992 5232

Mason W Va

i oo -

(

sta lied

MATERIALS CO

4 6 8 0 13 IS 20 Janak 33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 K1ss M e A nd D1e 6 13 Moves
Oes1gn ng Women 8
An Act o f Repr sa
10
I 00 - To morrow 3 4 N ews 13

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

DITCHING SERVICE

Us

4 15 CBS News 8 10 Room 222 13 ABC

7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3 What s My Lone 8 Elec Co 20 Beat

All work guaranteed

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

. ·
1

~.,.H-:::::::,·»e·..·· -'"""
e
%:='~-n
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,H
,,,,.,,,,&lt;,,,,,,,e
,,,,,,,,,,,l
,,,.,,"~p
,,,,.~&gt;.-.«~&lt;

11 00 - News 3

$3 99S 00

2 BEDROOM mob le home all
ut I t es paid No pets Robert UPHOL STERY fabr cs by the
vard 54 n c hes w de as low as
H
Rae ne Phone 949 3811
S1 95 per yard Ve vets as low
2 21 12tp
as S3 45 Imported velvets
S9 95 we also have nr on
FURNISHED apartments on
herculon
c otton
pr nts
Rt 33 in Mason One 3 room
v nyls remnants by the yard
apartment shower kitchen
or by the p ece Pomeroy
ca b n suitable for 2 old people
Re covery 622 E Man St
or 2 worker s ut 1 t es fur
Pomero y Phone 992 7554
n shed and garden f w anted
I 29 26tc
One 2 room apartment
bedroom and ki tchen bath
shower and k t ch en Both are FOAM to fill your o d couch and
cha r cush ons as low as
good apartments Reynolds
510 95 Upholsterv books on y
Apartments Phone 773 51&lt;17
soc
4 nch covered foam
2 19 6tp
mattresses for standard size

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

Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

Pomeroy

2 BLACK r d ng mares and I
sorre l geld ng gent e Ask a t
Rutland Furn ture Phone
742 42 11 after 5 cal 742 550 1
2 24 6tc

9 .. _
aid!

Pamtmg A Spectalty

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Wanted To Buy

0

lmcoln H1ll Pomer.oy

Bu1ll to Your Specs
Delivered to Job S1te

2 21 tfc
TRAILER 1 bedroom n ce for
coup e Phone 992 7479
2 5 ttc

Ph 992 2174

I

Help Wanted

UNFURN SH E D apartment 2
bedroom s
e lectr c heat
Hartford W Va Phon e 773

Ph 992 5271

SMITtt NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

,.,..-- s?s:z

Employment Wanted

APP L CAT ONS for a st reet
sup erv so r are now be ng
accepted by Pomeroy v tag e
off cas Appl cat on s may be
p eked up at V I age Hal
where th ey ar e to be sub
m tted
2 24 3t c

Gene's
Body Shop

From th e largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad ator to the
sma llest Heater Core
Nathan B1ggs
Radiator Spectahst

WOOD TRUSSES

DEEMS
Restaurant
and USED Gravely tractor and
attachments Phone 949 38 11
Grocery Rae n e Oh o Open
2 21 6tp
7 days 6 30 o 6 30 Ham
Ch cken Sausage and F sh 2 CAS H pad for at ma kes and
yegetables 51 50 and up
models of mob le homes
Sandw ches and Ch
Phone area code 614 423 95 31
2 22 31C
4 IJtfc
H AR R SO N S TV and Sery ce
OLD furn ure oak t ab l es
cal s Phone 992 2522
cocks ce boxes brass beds
2 22 26 tc
d shes des ks or compe te
households
Wr te M
D
M 1 er Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
ca ll 992 7760
s I J tf c
tXPER ENCE D pa nter
n
ter or and ex ter or Ca l Don
NO 1 copp er 70c rad a tor s
Van Meter Phone 985 395
32c red bra ss 3Sc batter es
2 3 29tp
$ 1 20 M A Ha
ReedsYI e
Oh 0 PhOnP J78 6249
1 27 tfc

For Rent

0 RECTOR

PB

RLY good small used chan
ANNOUNC NG new hours for FAsaw
Phone 949 2225
n com e tax serv ce Open only
2 20 6tc
on Monday Wednesday and
F r day
9
a m
to
5 ANT QUE quIts and tew e ry
p m
Even ngs by appt
A so
nter es t ed n turn tur e
Wanda Eb n Co Rd 22 off
and d s hes Call 992 52 62
Rou e 7 bypass Phon e 992
even ng s or morn ngs
2272
2 20 tfc
2 8 30ft

For Rent or Sale

J PH IL L P RICHLEY

P S

OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

Wanted

sa me

auto

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
Gray Manor Apts.

Not1ce

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

EXPERIENCED

1974

MONDAY FEB 25 1974

~ ---------,

TRANSPORTATION
Columbus Oh1o
February 8 1974
Contract Sales Legal Copv
No 74 6:l
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; W GS
Se a ed proposa s w 1 be
We hav e the product on hand
r ec:e yed at the office of th e
and we del Yer to you per
D rector of Oh o D epa rtment
sona IV Helen Jane Brown
99 2 51 13
of Tr ansportal on
Columbus
Oh o unt 1 10 00 A M Eastern
2 30 ti c
Dyl ght Say ng T me Athens
Gall a
Hock ng
Me gs
NEED LADY to help w th
Monroe Morgan Nobl e Vinton
spr n~ housec lean ng Phone
&amp; Wash ngton Count es Oh o
992 2677
2216tp
on Var ou s Sections of U 5
Route Nos 33 so A SOA Sla te
Route Nos 7 56 78 144 329 &amp;
690 n Arhens Coun ty
Sta te EXPER I ENCED manto repa r
\4end ng mach n es
A BC
Route Nos 7 55.4 &amp; 588 n Ga I a
Enterpr zes Mason W Va
County U S Route No 33
773 SS 43
State Routes Nos 56 78 93 328
2 21 tfc
&amp; 664 n Hock ng County U S
Rout e No 33 Sta te Route Nos 7
&amp; 124 n Me os County State
Rout e Nos 78 145 - 800 n
Monroe Coun tv
State Route
Nos 37 60 78 266 329 &amp; 376 n MAR R ED coupl e wan ts lo rent
Morgan County
State Route
farm or country home by
No s 78 145 1.47 &amp; 821 n Noble
Apr
Cal co llect 488 5342
County
U S Route No so
2 19 6tc
State Rout e Nos 56 &amp; 93 n
V nton County U S Route No
50A State Rout e Nos 60 145 821 n Wash1ngton c~unty by
her b c dal s praying for w eed CON COR 0 Trav el Tra l er n ce
and brush control
for couple Ca I 992 7479
Work Length - 494 77 M les
1 31 tfc
The date set for complet on
of th s work shall be as se t forth
in the b ddlng proposal
Each b dder sha be requ red
to file w th h is bid a cert fed
~
check or cash er s check for an SMA L L bus ness bu I ding
ess
m le north of Pomeroy on St
Also beg nn ng 95 rods 8 nk s amount equal to f1ve per cent of
Rt 33 Can be l eased and
north 59 rods and 23 t nks west hu btd but n no event more
converted nto small apart
of lh e south east corner of the than fifty thousand dollars or a
ment Also empty ots 50 100
bond for tttn per cent of h s b d
northeast quarter Sect on J
or
150 w de Ph 992 5786
payable
to
the
D
rector
Town 6 Rang e 14 th ence west
2 24 6tc
B dders must app y on the
21 rods 8 lin ks then ce north 2
proper form s for qua if cat on
deg west 22 rod s 14 links
at least twn days prior to the SLEEPIN G room s c lean and
thence east 22 rods 3 nks
pr vate w th k t c hen Phone
date
se t for open ng b ds In
then ce south 22 rod s 14 I nks to
77 3 5580
accordance
w
th
Chapter
5525
place of beg inn ng conta n ng 3
2 24 lt c
Oh
o
R
eY
se
d
Code
acres mor e or less
Plans and spec f cat ons are
Except ng from above par
TWO small r ooms furn shed
ce s and reserv ng one ha f of on fl e n the Department of
Spr ing Avenue coupl es on y
coa l o gas and other m nerals Transportal on and the off ce of
Ca
I Sunday or even ngs 992
the
D1str
c
t
Deputy
Director
underl y ing th e above d escr bed
3429
The D rector reserves t he
prem ses w th the r ght tom ne
2 24 6t p
r emove and operate fo r th e r ghl to re eel any and al b ds

ltc

742 4211

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 PM Day Betd e Publ cat 01
Monday Dead I ne 9 a m
Cance l at on Corr ect ons
w be accep ted unt I 9 a m for
Day of Pub cat on

&amp; OBITUARY
52 00 for SO wo d
mum Ea c h add 1 ona

l

There

)OU d c t
sauerkraut and

1 he world mav end tumor
row - and IRS will btll you
for "our share of damage

In 1967 Amencan warshtps I
began shelhng Vtelnam
I
1
In 1970 a record $1 300 00 was
patd for a Vmcen t Van Gog h
(vahn goh) pamtmg m Ne\\ I
I
York Ctty

James said

ctcam

Television Log

Classifieds Get Results! I_ B
_u-- ,-s_iness Services

BARBS

2.)

j

qu~t!ll

TilE BORN WSER

UP lO

ONNS "THIS PUCE

ll&lt;AT o RL !WILLY

Si~

N 30

f'OWDS A

W&amp;EI&lt;S

~K

WORI'.7 HARD

n ~~' w uu

H~

LaW
DSAI'l'tAI2.

CCI\\PLETWI

,

e

ind led the sutt back South
'Won wtth hts 10 Cashed hiS
ace oftrumJ?S Led a trump to
ttbmmy s kmg and tned to
diScard ht, 10 and trey of
hea rts on the good dtamonds
As he explamed later he was
very unlucky smce West held
the long trum~ ahd East the
io n~ dtamond
Jtm The bad luck was
~Nat South forgot all about
the fourth sutt He could have
'laid down hiS ace of hearts
:Mfore play mg ace and kmg
of trumps The smgleton kmg
would have dropped South
could have drawn all the
lrumps entered dummy Wlth
~e queen of hearts to make
hiS last heart d1scard on the
'K1ng of dtamond s and
clatmed hts contract
r

OJ ~t5 CIH 'DU Uw lD5f

&gt;OU KNOW' EVEN

1HC1Uo!5H HER iiDTHER

'
ALLEY OOP

r,;::s'-- J A H ALLUS

T WON "T TAKE ME

S LAU6H TFKE D

ONG

T P CK ANOTHER HANDFUL
~ E RE Y A~E BIG FEL A.

PEO PL E FD A
GOOL&gt;

RECASON
FO MCIHE"t

11

CNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

The btddmg has been
Norlh East
West

25

HOW MUCH DID
'IE lOSE PLA'IIN
CHECKERS Wt F
CALEB PAW "

THUTTY
TWO CENTS
CASH AI'J

A TWO OOLLER
CHECKER BOARD

1•

Pass
Pass
Pass ?
Pass
5+
You Soulh hold
UK 7 6 'A K 7 6 t3 2 .K 10 3

.

"

What do you do now?

A-Bid five hellrts to show
control of that suit Your
partner i1 ln&amp;ern&amp;ed. in slam

125
I

I

�I

•

9 - The Datly Sentmel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Feb
THE AI MANAC
By United Press International
Today 1s Monday February
25th the 56th day of 1974 wtth
309 to folio\\
The moon IS between tis nc\\
phase and ftrst quarter
The mormng stars are
Mercur) Venus and Juptter
The ev emng stars are Mars
and Saturn
Those born on thiS date are
under the stgn of PISces

lh I'IIIL P&lt;\STORET
live torevet
" I d 1s 1 c..:onso hng thought
a ti e ail ght out on th e tow 1
What does thr s peeder do
wtth th(' 10 seco nds he saves
breakmg 111 the trafftc law s
gomg across the c1ty •
0 1 4,;

(

111 t

French pamter P1erre Renmr
(rehn wah l \\ as born February
25th 1841
On thts day m htstory
in 1901 J P Morgan formed
the Umted States Steel Corpora
lion m New Jersev It became
th e natiOns fir st
btlho~
dollar enterpnse
In 1919 Oregon became the
first state to put a tax on

gasoline

one per cent

1 o I elp keep to

tr) a snack of
t c~

~-------------,

1 Class1f1ed Ads

I

A thought for the day
Amertcan phtlosopher Wtlham
IS

I

brtng you
extra cash
f 0r
shopptng sprees

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

1
I
I

1

l
I

I

1
I

no more

rruse rable human bemg than
one m whom nothmg lS habttual
but mdeclSIOn

N THE CO URT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIG SCOU NTY OHIO
ROBERTA C 0 BRIEN
100 2 Court Street
Po m eroy Oh o 4S169
PLAINTIFF

vs

F N ANC IAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS

For

F se al

D ece mb e

31

Year

End ng

1973

Bedford

Townsh p M e gs County Route
2 Po m eroy

Oh o F eb :ZO

1974

I cert fy th e fo ow ng r epor

to be corr ect

G lenn Lee
Townsh p C er k.

SUMMARY OF CASH

BALANCE S RECEIPTS
AND EXPEND TURES

B a lanc e Jan
Gene ra Fund

973
2 63 .S6
Moto Ve h c e L cense
T a x Fund
2 728 13
&lt;l 339 27
Ga so ne T a x Fund
9 698 86
Tot a s
Total Rece ph
Gene r al Fund
7 266 09
Motor Veh c e L cense
Tax Fund
6 877 93
Gaso neTaxFund
44 0000
Rev Shar ng
J 621 00
Tot as
32 165 02
Tot a R ece pts &amp; Bal ances
Genera l Fund
9 897 55
Motor Ve h c e L cense
Tax Fund
9 606 06
8 7]9 17
Gaso t ne Tax Fund
Re¥ Shar ng
3 621 00
41 863 88
Total s
Expend lures
38 23
Gen e al Fund
Motor Veh c e L cense
Tax Fund
7 87 1 02
Gaso ne Tax. Fund
5 577 65
Re¥ Shar ng
3 621 00
Tot a s
27 260 98
Bal a nce Dec 31 1973
General F und
6 085 24
M oto Veh c le L ce nse
Tax Fund
735 04
Ga so n e Tax Fund
3 161 62
Tot a s
098 90
CASH BALANCE

RECEIPTS AND

EXPENDITURES

BY FUND

General Fund
1973
2 63 1 46
Rece1pts
General Property TaKRea Estate (Gross)
3 168 23
Tang b e Persona l Proper ty
Ta x(G r oss )
672
ntang be T ax
( Gross l
1 373 00
Loca l Govern men t
D str but on
2 699 38
C garette L cense Fees
and F nes Gros s
18 7S
To ta l Rece pts
7 266 08
Tot a Beg nn ng Ba ance
Plus Rece pts
9 897 55
Expend tures
Tot a Ex pend turesAdm n strat ve
3 601 21
Town Ha s Memor a
Bu d ng s and
211 10
Grounds
Tot a Expend t ure s Plus
B&amp; Dec 31 1973
3 81 2 31
Motor Veh cle L1cen se
Ta x Fund
Bal J an 1 1973
2 728 13
Rece pis
Motor Veh c e L cense
Ta x
3 352 34
Oth er
1 519 79
Other
701 68
Oth er
1 304 12
Total Rece pts
6 877 93
Tota l Beg nn ng Ba ance
Plus Rece pts
9 606 06
E Kpend tu r es
Tot a Expend turesM see laneou s
4 234 10
Ma ntenance
2 778 04
mprovemen
3 636 92
Grand Total E )( pend tur es
- Motor Veh c e L cen se
Tax F und
7 871 02
Gasoline Ta x Fund
Ba
Jan 1 1973
4 339 27
Rece pts
Gaso ne Tax
14 400 00
Total Rece pts
14 400 00
Total Beg nn ng Balance
Pus Rece pts
18 739 27
Expenditures
Tot a Expend turesM see I an eo us
6 387 98
Ma n tenan ce
9 189 69
Gr and Total Expend turesGasol ne Ta x F und
15 577 65
Dec 31 1973
3 161 52
Ba
To ta l Expend tures Plus
Ba
Dec 31 1973
18 739 7
Township Debt- Bonds
Purpose For Wh ch Bond
Debt Wa s Created
Purchase of Grader
Outstand ng Jan l
1973
10 000 00
Redeemed Our ng
Year 1973
3 333 00
Balance Outstand n g
Oec 31 1973
6 667 00
Rate of tnt
6 P et
Date ofF na Mat
7 1 74
Bat

l

Jan

(2) 2S

VIV AN MORGAN ET AL
DEFENDAN TS
NO S 471
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
BY PUBLICATION
To Bern ce Mo den whose
as known addre :.s s Buckey e
Lak e Oh o and whose exact
address s unknown and canno t
w h easonab e d gence b e
ascer ta ned
To Conn e K Dutcher whose
address s unknown and cannot
w th reasonab e d gence be
ascerta ned
To Hermetta A nn N emeyer
whose eKac t n ame s unknown
and whose add r ess s unknown
and ca nnot w th reasonab e
d gence be ascerta ned
To Th e unknown h e r s and
dev sees ot Nann e HobbS
decea sed
To The unknown he r s and
dev sees o f Char es Hobbs
deceased and
To The unknown hers and
dev sees o f Neva G mo e
decea sed
You a e hereby not fed t hat
you have been n amed defen
dants n a eo a ac t on ent t ed
Roberta C 0 Br en p a nt ff vs
V van Morgan e r a
defen
dants Th s act on has been
ass gned Case No I S 471 n he
Com m on P leas Cou r t of Me gs
Coun t y Oh o Pomeroy Oh o
45769
The ob1ect of the comp ant s
to part ton and qu et t ti e to
r ea l es tat e s tuat ed n Rut and
Townsh p Me gs County Oh o
wh ch s desc r bed as ro ows
S tua ted n Rut and Town
Sh p Me gs County
Ot1 o
Se ct on 4
Beg nn ng north 3300 f eet
from the sou th east car ne of
sad Sect on 4 thence west 1709
tee to ce nter of publ c oad
thence a ong center of sa d road
north 17 degrees 05 west 687 s
t h ence east 914 to east ne of
sa d Sec on No A th en ce south
650 to place of beg nn ng
conta n ng 27 ac r es more or
ess
E"cept ng a n d reserv ng
three fourths of coa l o I oas
and other m nera l s und er y ng
the above descr bed prem ses
w lh r ght to m ne r emov e and
operate the same
Also beg nn ng north 3JOO
and west 2121 from southeast
corner of Sec t on 4 thence wes t
1335 5 then c e north 6SO thence
east 1312 th ence south 23 deg
JO east 120 t hence south 2 deg
20 east 78
th ence south 9
thence
degrees 15 west 145
south 2 deg 30 w es t 32 7 to the
pla ce of beg nn ng conta n ng
20 04 acres more or less
Except ng 1 53 acres sod off
eav ng 18 51 ac r es more or ess
A so the to low ng descr bed
real estat e beg nn ng 172 ods
12 nks west of the northeast
cor ner of Sec 3 Town 6 Range
14 th ence west 35 rods 13 nks
t hen ce south 80 rods then ce
east 94 rods S n ks to publ c
road th ence n a north wester y
d r ee f on a ong t he cen t er of
road to the place of beg nn ng
co nta n ng 31 2 acres more or

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

REGULATIONS

The Publ sher reserves th e
r ght to edt or re ec t any ad s
deemed
ob ect ona
The
publ s her w 1 not be r espon
s be for more than one n
correc t nse r t on
RATES
For Want Ad SerVICe
5 cents per word one nsert on
M n mum Cha r ge 51 00
4 cents , er word three
con sec ut ve nsert on s
26 cents per word s x con
secut ve nsert ons
2S Per Cent D scoun t on pa d
ads and ads pad w th n 0
days

CARD OF THANKS

m n
word

Jc

BLIND ADS
Add 1 on&amp; 2Sc Charge per
Advert sement
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m to s 00 p m Da y
8 JO a m
to 12 on fi. "'On
Saturday

27TH ANNUAL Hereford Sa e
24 bu s and 15 fern a es
Southeas t ern Oh o H er efo rd
As soc a on
A
c l ea n
ped gress both horned and
poled Sa turday Mar ch 16
97 4 Show 10 a m sa e p m
Rock Springs Fa r g r ounds
R t 33 three m les north of
Pomeroy Oh o For cata logs
wr te to Loyd Bla ckwood
sa e Mgr
Rt 3 Pomer oy
Oh o 45769
2 24 ltc
A

1973 CHEV NOVA

$2645
Custom Hatchback Cpe dark green f n s h I ke new
wh te wa ll t re s full whee cove s protec t v e s de mldgs
P B r ad 1o 6 c yl eng ne stand tr an s A very popul ar
model &amp; pr ced to go

1971 DODGE DEMON

a

340 V eng ne automat ic tra n s power stee r ng rad oJ....
I ke new w w I es b k v ny nter or red f n sh

1971 COUGAR

$2345

2 Dr H T M ed green t n sh a r cond
rad o E" t ra sh arp

A U CTION Th e fol ow n g
w 1 be so d at 435 R ch land
Ayenue
A th ens
Oh o
Saturday Mar ch 2 1974
p m
Curved G ass Ch na
Ca b net
wall te ephone
Cherry W nd sor Cha r Oak
k t chen cab net round tab e
walnut d n ng roo m t ab e
a nt que cherry c h est of
drawers
2 oak roc k e r s
map ~ ooss p stand walnut
chest of drawers ch erry bed
adar chest sm all camel back
trunk
oak buffet
p cture
frames ston e ars a r con
d toner
Ad m ra l
Refr gerator
quIt lop 100
years o d ant que glassware
depress on g ass cos tume
1ewe lry Sa l e cond ucte d by A
Fur n tu re and Auct on In c
C C ... Bradford Auct on eer
B I G over Mgr
2 24 ltc

R VERS DE Inn now open
under new management of
Fred (S ml M er Everyone
come and br ng your fr ends
2 24 6t p
W L L buy turn t ur e and m er
c hand se at Po ly s A uc t on
House Add son Phone 992
3509
2 20 7 c

co't.%'~hb0RS
STATE OF OHIO

DEPARTMNT OF

You are r eq u red to answer
the Comp l a nt w th n 28 days
after th e last publ ca t on of th s
no ce wh ch w II be published
once each wee~!. for s x con
secut Ye w ee k s
The la s
nub ca tion w I be made on
March 4 1974 and the 28 days
start on that
fo answer wl
date
In case of your fa I ure to
an swer or otherw se respond as
requ red by the Oh o Ru es of
Cv
Procedure IUdgment by
defau lt w 11 be rendered aga nst
vou for rehef demanded n l he
com pal nl

117 N Fourth Sf

M1dd leport Oh1o

FURNISHED
APARTMENT
One or 2 bedrooms
Phone 992 3863 unt11
3 ao p m
992 5844
after 6 00

Notice

Larr y E Spencer
Clerks of Court
Common Pleas Court
Meigs County Oh o
2) 4 11 18 2S (3l 4 6tc

B g capac ty
Maytag
AutomatiCS
2 speed oreration
Cho ce o
water
temps Auto water
level control L nt
F Iter or Power F n
Ag tator
Perma Pren

M~ag
HlfO
I eat
D

s

Surround
c lothes
wth gentle
e\4en
heat No hot spots
no overd ry ng F ne
Mesh L nt F ter
We Speclall1e .n
MAY TAG
Red Carpel
Serv1ce

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Arnold Grate

Rutland

Rev 8 17 73
(2

S975

18 25 2t c

IN THE COURT OF

COMMON PLEAS

MEIGSCOUNTY OHIO

BANNY BRANHAM
Pomeroy Ohio
Pia nllff

vs

JUDY BRANHAM
Address Unknown
D~lendant

NOTICE BY

RECYCLE your n ewspa pers for
s 40 per 100 pound your
brown
pasteboard
and
corru gated paper for S 40 per
100 pounds W e are a lso your
b est market for Wh te BM
Cards for 6c per pound We
buy scrap ron
cas t r on
sheet ron t n copper brass
auto rad ators auto ba tt er es
Our feel of trucks w II serv ce
anv ndu stry
Conserve
recycle and sel you r waste
mater als
we c ose each
Fr da y at noon tor ba ance o f
each week When you gel t a
together sell your s to The
Rosen b erg Recycl ng Co 79
Depo t Street A th ens Oh o
2 22 tfc

R IVE RSIDE Au to Wreck ng
w II pay SS for a I 1unk car s
Phone { l04) 882 5244 or 77 3
5890

No 15 487

PUBLICATION
To Judy Branham whose ast
known address was Lyth a
Spr ngs
Georg a
co Elmo
Underwood
You are hereby not fed that
you have been named Defen
dant n a ega I act on ent tied
Benny Branham vs
Judy
Branham Th s action has been
a~slgned Case No 15 487 pen
d ng n th e Court of Common
Pleas Me gs County Pomeroy
Oh o .45769
The oblect of the complaint is
for d vor ce and care custody
and co ntrol of the m nor
ch ldren of the parties You are
requ red to answer the com
pia nt w thin 28 days after the
last publ cat on Of th s not ce
wh ch w I be publ shed on ce
each week for s x cons ecut ve
weeks The last publ cut on w II
be made on Apr I 1 197 4 and the
28 days for an swer w I com
mence on that date

For sale
AM F M ste reo rad o 8 tra ck
tape player 4 speaker sound
svslem Balance SI09 J2 or
ter ms Call 992 396S
2 19 tfc
TWtN
NEEDLE
SEW NG
MACH N ES 1974 model n
wa nut stand
All features
bu It n to make fan cy des gns
and do stretch sew ng A so
buttonholes b nd hems etc
$43 35cashor t erms ava abe
Phone 992 2653
2 19 tf c
VACUUM CLEANERS E ectro
Hyg ene New Demonstrators
h as all cl ean ng attachments
plus the new Electro Suds for
shampoo ng ca rp e t
On y
S27 so
cas h
or
terms
availab e Phone 992 2653
2 19 tfc
EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
Ma n St Pomeroy All kinds
of sa lt water pel~ets wat er
nuggets block salt and own
Oh o R ver Sa I Phone 99 2

)891

6 5 tf(.

SA LT FOR ICE AND ~ NU\o
Rock sa t for township s
towns and bus r.esses In
bulks and bags for ce and
snow Excels or Salt Works
Phone 992 3891
11 11 tfc

-------

-

----

GOOD USED
REFRIGERATORS
( 2 Good Ones)
1- S1de by Stde
$150
1- 2 Door
(Top &amp; Bottom&gt; $125

Larry Spencer Clerk
Court of Common Pleas of
Meigs County
Pomeroy Oh o .45769

2) 25 (3) 4 II 18 25 (4) I 61c

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 9932

------------ROOMING HOU SE furnished

bed
S29 95
Pomeroy
Recovery 622 E Man Stree t
construct on
workers
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
welcome Phone 773 5975
I 29 26tc
New Haven w Va
../...._
------21
S tfc SMALL FARM gas wei Phone
742 6261
3 AND 4 ROOM furn Shed and
2 21 6tc
unfurnished
apartments
Phone 992 S43A
4 12 tfc 1963 PONT AC Bonnev lie For
parts or sale as s For more
PRIVATE meetmg room for
nformat on call 949 4561
any organ zatlon phone 99 2
2 25 9tc
)975

----

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

3 11 H e

- --- - -----HAY Phone 11927306

2 17 26tc

Wanted To Buy

S NGER sew ng mach nes 1972
196.4 AND OLDER s lv er WI
model
n beautiful walnut
pay S2 SO for 51 worth or t rade
cab net Makes design st t
an y type c ons for your s lver
ches zig zag buttonho es
Call or wr te Jack e A Warns
bl nd h em s etc Like new
ley Rt 1 M ddl epor t Phone
Only S89 95 Call Ravenswood
742 36S 1
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
12 7 ttc
2 25 6tc

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

6 00 - News 3 4 8 0 15 Sesame St 20 ABC N ew s 13 1-ler
sonal ty &amp; Behav ora l Developmen t 33
Truth or Con
sequences 6

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

6

3~ewsN6BC News J

the Clock 4 News 6 10 C reus 13 Readmg for the Class oom
Teacher 33 Ca l l of tti e West 5
7 30 - Bobby Goldsboro 3 Buck Owens 8 Lock Stoc k &amp; Barr el
20 Mun c pa l Court 10 Wacky World cf Jonathan Wmte r s 5
To Tell the Truth 6 Bea t t he Clock 13 Hollywood Squares 4
Ep sode Act 1on 33
8 00 - Rook es 13 Theater 10 Amer ca 20 Nat ona l Geograph c
6 Mag1c1an 3 4 5 Gun smoke 8 Hl Unqu1et Death of Ju us
and Ethel F'!osenburg 33
9 00 - Heres Lucy 8 10 Moves The Scalphunters J 15

cars
- GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094
On Most Amencan

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Hard Con lract 6 13 Col ege Basketball 4
9 ' - D ck Van Dyke 8 10 Book Beat 33

H.l 00 - Paul Nuch ms 33 Med ca I Center 8 10

Water Lmes and Power
Lmes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and sept1 c tank s tn

773 5554

For Sale

Real Estate For sale

GROCERY bus ness for sa le
Build ng for sa l e or ease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appo ntm ent
3 20 tfc

2 YEAR OLD 24x24 ce I ng
For
h ome Electr c heal
more nformat on ca I 773

5503

2 24 6tc
FOR SALE Large e\le o t on
New L rna Road Rut and A ll
ut t es ava abe Phone 742
308 3
2 1 tfc
HAY and straw for sa
949 5884 or 949 3839

e

Phone

2 22 Jtp

OLD ER home under SS 000 has
g reat fut ure
Ma1o
m
provemenfs ns de needs
pa nt ns de and out La d out
ke a new home
Full
basement and garage Phon e
992 5335
2 24 6t c

H O U SE HOLD tem s a t barga n S?AC IOU S b Level and sp I
pri ces som e ant ques Phone
le vel hom es are now un der
992 2662
construc tion on c ty water
2 22 3tc
and sewer
Many d e uxe
features nc uding a r con
STEREO
Walnut
AM FM
d toning
Best f nanc ng
Rad o 8 track tape com
ava lab e Other type homes
b nat on Ba an ce $110 73 or
n d fferent areas on F H
terms ava able Ph one 992
Adm f nan c ng w th no down
3965
payment Call col ect { 837
2 14 tf c
6540) or wr t e to M E I GS
D EVELOPMENT P 0 Box
33 M ddleport Oh o 45760
YOUNGS TOW N k tchen s nk
1 9 tfc
w th f a ucets Good cond ton
550 See at 256 So Fourth
Ave M dd eport
s X ROOM house w th bath
2 18 t fc
c ty water coal furnace 3
acres near the Pomero y Go lf
BOLEN S Husky 250 With 48
Cour se Phone 992 3944
in c h mow er and bade Ex
2 25 3t c
ce lent cond t on Phon e 949
5953
N E W 3 bedroom home good
water 6 acres 3 outbuildina s
and eel ar Ott Me gs County
2J INCH Adm ral
on W I am Sm th Road 3
Phone 992 5496
m les from Salem Center
2 24 ttc
1 27 26tp
H &amp; N day o d or st ar t ed
Leghorn pu lets Both f oor or
NEW 3 bedroom home lV1 bath
grown
ava tabl e
c age
garage basement on Grav el
Poultry
hous ng
and
H 1 M ddleport Natura gas
automat on Modern Poultr y
a ready
n
Phone Dale
399 W Ma n Pomeroy 992
Dutton 992 3369 even ngs
2164
992 2534
2 24 ltc
17 tf c

REDUCE safe &amp; fast w th
GoBese Tab ets &amp; E Vap
water p I s
Nel son Drug
2 25 ltc

---------------_
AC RE lots for sale Tuppers
Pia ns water Call 992 5248
be fore 3 992 3436 after 3 p m
2 20 61 c
2

OES RAt1LE two bedroom
house n M ddleport ready to
oc cupy Ca I 992 5310
1 31 26tc

REDUCE excess f uld w th
Flu dex - Lose we ght w th
Oex A 0 et
capsu es
at
Nel so n Drugs
2 24 3tc

COA L FOR SALE
CHESHIRE

5 OA Y S A

2 25 St c

Pets For Sale
AKC Toy Pood e pupp es $75
S am ese k ttens S15 Phone 1
256 6347
2 21 26tc
R ISH Setter
7.42 .4426

pupp es

Phone
2 24 3t c

Mobile Homes For Sale
PRE SPR NG SALE at B er r y
M 1 er Mobile Homes 705
Far son Street Be pre Oh o
phone A23 9531 Buy now take de Ivery n spr ng - tak e
advantage of w nter t me
pr ces on some outstand ng
used Mobles Home s
1971 - 2 bedroom - 60 x 12
Pr n cess wa s S6 495 00 sale
price SS 29S 00 (th s mob l e
ho me new cost $8 000 00)
1971 - 65x12 Champ on super
sate pr ce on y $4 995 00
1971
60x12 Buddy c lass c
was S5 495 00 now only
$4 795 00
1971 two 60x l 2 Champion
were 54 495 00 now only

SYRACUSE

Large 2 story

frame 7 room s 2 baths 4
BR
R ver
frontage
Ba sement New FA ga s
furnace
new
copper

plumbtng
Garage
$10 500 00
SYRACUSE-Lovely 2 yr
old hom e All new homes n
th s ar ea 3 n ce BR double
c lose t s Colored bath w
Beaut1ful k1tchen
shower
with cab1nets &amp; range

Utll ly R HW floors Some
carpeting Drapes Carport
w storage $19 900 00

TUPPERS PLAINS -

Phone (3041 SS3 6S07

2 24 1tc

REMODEL NOW
SAVE
MONEY W TH VEMCD
ADD A ROOMS FITS ANY
MOBILE HOME

ONE DAY

INSTALLAT ON FOR THAT

EXTRA

FAMILY

BEDROOM

ROOM

BATH

ETC SEE NOW AT YoungS
M H Sales Rt 7 &amp; 35 below
S lver Memorial
Bridge
Gall poll s
2 2.4 1tc

Real Estate For sale
5 ROOM home 2 bedroom 1 2
bath workshop gas for ced
a r furnace garage Lot 100
ft x 100ft Phone 992 3022 or

992 3298

1971

Mob le Home bought new n
72 12x 60 h acre ground

Carpeted 2 BR Bath L ke
new JUST S6 500 oo
77 ROUGH ACREs- Close
to Forked Run Lake C ty
water ava1lable Ideal for
hom e
or
tra ler
All
minerals
Full
prtce

$9 000 00
RAISE THE CURTAIN ON
A NEW TYPE OF LIFE BY
OWNING PROPERTY TO
BUY OR SELL SEE US
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259
If no answer 9922568

TEAFORD
\lit qd H

2
ACRES 12x60 tra ler n
Plnegrove
Sel
trade
or
rent 0 R chan:lson General
Delivery
Mann
W
Va

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display

6 35 -

Columbus Today 4

6 45 7 00 -

Farmt1me 10 Mo r n ng Report 3
Today 3 4 5 C B S News 8 10 P xanne 6

~

25- Jack Lalanne 13

9 00 -

Menager e

9 309 55 10 00 0 30II 00 -

II

55 - CBS News8 Dan !mel s World 10

12 00- Password 6 Jackpot 3 15
.\~ 45 Elec Co 33
X2 55 - News 3 15

Game 6 13

"2 JO - Doctors 3 4 15 Gorl n My L fe 6 13 Edge of N ght 8 10
~

00 -

Another World 3 4 15 Gneral Hospital 6 13

Roghl 8 10 Book Beat 20
:::J 30 One Lie to L ve 6 13 Phol Donahue 4 How to Su rv ve a
M arr 1age 3 15 Women 20 Match Game 8 10

4 00- M r Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Speed Racer
6

Sesame St 20

Tra1l s West 15

.. "c oeen
ca n ce ed?
Lost
your
operator s 1 cense Call 992
7428
6 15 tfc

Room 222 13
1 00 - What s My L no 8 Dusty s Troll 13 Elec Co 20 Truth

Stand Up &amp; Cheer 4
T eac her 33

"'

29 tic

C ONSTRUCTIO ~

I !·

'II•'

j), II•

P111ll•'ICY

'&gt;i 1 '

Oil!) '

't,'l

BRAND NEW- 3 bedrooms
1 h baths electn c heat Storm
doors and w ndows Garage
and nearly an acre $22 000

2 APARTMENTs-One up woth
1 br and 2 bedrooms down
Full basement Gas furnaces

$20 000 00
COUNTRY HOME - Modern 4
brs

all paneled home

large

bath large k !chen dining
Only a lew yrs old 518 000 00
NEAR GAVIN - 3 bedrooms
bath

gas furnace

•

Reasonable offer

pm

f

0EEMS

RE/&gt;-~ONI'-6LE
~-ro
LE~DEJ~:

matenal

11 Chevron

12 Dt lemma
13 Rescmd
14 Substde
15 Gtrl o
my heart
16 ChemiCal
suffix
17 Vtgor

knows what'
When I complam he says Would you rather have a drunk
for a husband' I d rather have a husband pertod Oh yes this
other man has a wife who Is JUSt as 1gnored as I am We suffered
through years of trymg to understand and help our alcohohc
mates and now they don t want us We suspect they want only
each other but are afraid to face 1t What to do' - ALONE
AGAIN

hy HI Nlll J\III\IOl [) ' " " ' 0011 I I f

U nscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to eaeh &amp;quare to
form four ordtnary words

CLUID

I I

I

9 30

Mov1e

8 10

Manhunter
6

Amer can Boy 3 4 15

13 Wash ng lon Slra ght Talk 33

Tomorrow 3 4
N ews 4

statement

ml&amp;&lt;:htef

28 Golf'"
structor
29 Chmese
dynasty
30 Crash
mto
33 Charm
35 Land

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Hete's how to work 11
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

I []

One letter stmply stands for an oth er In thts sample A is
used for the three L s X for the twa 0 s etc Smgle letters
apostrophes the length and formation of the words are all
hints Each day the code lette rs are dtiferent

r )I n

LAFTUR

I

Now arranwe the Circled (etten
to form the IUrpfJie answer Ill
~="I=:::':l,::;-~~~U~~~:__::•u:w~rested by lhe above cartoon
(An•wer• tomorrow)

3 Mov e

News 13

9 Press

measure

L_~~=~=•=a=~==·=-~ICIIIJCD

Day at N ght 3J News 20

11 00 - News3 4 6 8 10 IS 13 Janak 33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 A Cold N ght s Death 6
Ca nnon 8
A Ra s n 10 the Sun 10

Obispo
Call!
ZZ. Hatr-care
product
23 Muctlage
24 Grand
parental
25 Senator
from
Ilhnots
Z6 Bare
!7 Norse
god
of

~a lurda ¥~

Jumhl•• RURAL

MINCE

.\nswf'r /leadr~ear

fnr a lady pm t r A PICTURE HAT

I

PUSHER TURTLE

CRYPTOQUOTES
YM
TZC

UT T

CQR

FZLTA 0

ZM

GO

XRRA

U

U

LRQRULOUT -GXWXZFX

OCUJR
TZC

U

IZLR

OZGLPR

Saturdays Cryptoquote AN ENTERPRISE WHEN FAIRLY
ONCE BEGUN SHOULD NOT BE LEFT TILL ALL THAT
OUGHT IS WON - W SHAKESPEARE

~ElTSIN

H[ \1./0R.IE R !TftANGf

'J9764
8532

+

+

.10 5

lt.INGi 1)10 V" Glr " LOOM: Ill

8LAC:K HE"I\IU ON IT

H

C'al.l'f WHO Tl.tiCI TO K LiYD\1 AN TAKE T H
fi\R.) TliiiKWOOO "

POSS!SSION
HI! IS!'

GOLD W T't A

M.AP

SOUTH COl
• AQJ74
'A 10 3
+QlO

.Q42

..4.

North South vulnerable

West

North

East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass Pass
Opemng lead •K

10 4 tfc

South

Pass

o:;uRE EI'J OU6 H I FOUPJ O A CAVE
ONCE U ~ E O BY PR: MI T Ve MAN FUL.

TANKS

c eaned
Modern Sanltat on 992 3954 or

992 7349

Yeaterday s Answ••r "
11 Tableau
25 Rto de Ia
15 Glazter s
glass
Parana
18 Type of
estuary
thread
29 Flock
19 Petula or
31 Region
Dane
3% 1nhentors
20 Barge
of the
users
earth
2% Storm
3C Miss
rage
Rem1ck
23 MeXIcan
35 Play a
laborer
part

36 Types
kinds
37 Hllls of
Shrop

I [J

I

I I

8 JO -

Black Journal 33

(Fr )
U San-

4 Watch
5 Party
fot the
boys
6 Alder
tree
(Scot )
7 Unendmg
problem
(2 wds)
8 Rossellini a
film
classic
(2 wds )

sb1re

B 00 - Adam 12 J 4 15 Happy Days 6 13 Maude 8 10 B II

9 00 -

of earned~

%0 Queen

novtce
(3 wds)

Eng
38 Kaput
39 Furmture
wood

IWHARITI

EAST
.62

A96
" "" AKJ 976

SANITATION
662

OF F055 5 AN D WAL L. PA '-JT NG5

lly Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

10 23 tfc
Jtm

~ACKHOE Service CHARLES
R HATFIELD
Route 1
Rutland Ohio .45775 phone
742 6092 Water t nes footer,
and trench es 24 hours 1
days a week

must conSider all four sutts
Oswald Here lS one from
1hlS yea rS blue rtbbon ralrS.
South s four spade cal was
'&lt;lne of those btds that JUs!
"Should not be made He had
passed at two spades When
~e btd four he was trappmg
hiS partner
Jtm Hts deCISIOn was a
llflOd one Four spades can t
be beaten What happened'
' Oswald West started wtth
ihree rounds of clubs South
had to ru ff the thtrd one m
dummy East diScarded a
lleart Then South led a d1a

BLOCKS bored and all repair.s.
on small engines Wilkinson
Sma I Eng ne Sales 399 w
Ma n St Phone 992 3D92
2 6 26tc

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

WILL tr m or c ut trees and
st'lrubbery Also clean out
basements attics etc Call
949 3221 or 742 4441
2 2 26tc

--- -- ------FOR YOUR new home

br
complete remodel nQ cont,ct
Greg Roush
R:oush Con
structton Phone 992 5039

2 24 ltc
NEW HOMES ROOFS ANP

mona to ms

REMODELING
For free
es timat es cal 992 606.4 or 992

6680

2 2Htp

19N RAMBLER Station Wagon
26 000 m es $1 &lt;495 Phone
Harry Brown 985 5833

2 22 31p

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

1966 VW 84 000 m lies Contact
Michael Burke 2 1'~ m tes
southeast of Hemlock Groye
on townsh lp road 82

, 20tp

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

ONE 1972 Kingwood Est,,!&amp;
Station Wagon 9 passenger ]
toea owner Phone Wayne
M lll'loan 992 5602

2 24 6tp

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

INFORMATION ABOUT.

The oppoSite of the

~mgle sutt play has to be the
11\1 sutt play where declarer

2 7 26tp

Mid«'hpart f'omerov -

2 20 6tc

" '15

JJW/Mill~®/kst «Jtawi/J ..-J ,..-

Moyer s Journa l 33 Move Alexander Nev sky 20
Ha wa F ve 0 !.1 Pol1ce Story 3 4 15 Move K I er
Bees 6 13 Thoma s A Ed1son The Old M an 33

problem
2 Unkempt
chap
3 Was no

champ

5 Rehsh
10 Potters

Dear Grateful
There s a qwp that goes I m at the awkward age too
young for Medtcare and too old for men-to-&lt;:are Thanks for
provmg 1t false 1 - H

+++

DOWN

1 Skm

DlCK TRACY

• 'K

STEWART OHIO PH

STIREO
92.1FM
WMPO

to
Pomeroy
Phone 992 52.48
before 3 p m 992 3436 after 3

ACROSS
1 Tenms

Dear Alone
Face 1t Brmg your susptctous out m the open Ask your
husband pomt blank about hts relal!onshtp w1th this man If
they re gay you have a right to know (and plan your future life
accordmgly) U they aren t THEY have a rtght to know that
others are susp1c1ous of theU" closeness - H

Dear Helen
I lost my husband to the bottle when he be~ame an alcoholic
Now I ve lost hlffi to the man who got him off hquor They re
lllSeparable They go everywhere together because as my
husband says they gtve each other strength to stay dry They
went on the wagon at the same time a year ago a nd smce then
I ve been lonelier than ever
On the few occas1ons we go out thiS man tags along Mostly
they go off on campmg trtps or play goH or cards Or heaven

~ ~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

+

.85 3

SEPT C TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

-------------HOUSE for sate
c ose

... .

~~

'Q852
KJ74
"" 8 3
WEST

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

All OF THESE ARE GOOD
BUYS COME IN AND HAVE
A LOOT

2 20 6tp

'

Dear Helen
Thanks for pulling me up short I felt like the wnter who
signed herseH For Mtd Ltb I was fmished at age 58
After readmg your answer I did some heavy reevaluation
and learned there was a good deal of life left m thlS shell I ve
JOlned a stngles dance group (I m a wtdow) started bowling
aga m I m planmng a crwse m Aprtl and I ve already got a mce
wtdower mterested enough to mv1te me out
How true 11 s your attttude not your age that counts GRATEFUL

10 00 - Marcus Welby MD

NORTH
u

WHY/

I

• K 109

9 1 tfc

bedrooms a 3 bedroom trailer
and a 1 bedroom tra1ler

One wolh 6

By Helen Hottel
e e e

+++

2 00

~ ~ By Roget Bollen

~

Dear Tempted
Keep m mmd that spolled unmature women vtew theU"
husbands as the born·flch see thell" bank accounts they only
become lffiportant when they re suddenly no longer there
Your wife has pretty well proved she cant or wont change
Don t smk for the thU"d tlffie - H

10 30 -

FUNNY BUSINESS

•

~
=~

Spoiled Brat a Marrtage Risk
Dear Helen
My wife treated me hke dirt I was crazy about her so I took
1t - for four years I worked 10 hours a day came home a nd
cleaned house did the cooking and gave her whatever she
wanted She sllll carped about everytlung Frnally she went out
on me - JUst for ktcks she satd
Don t get the 1dea I m a panty watst Our love hie was great
but she ftg ured that was enough to make up for all the other
lacks Even her mother admtts she sa spolled brat
Well I left her once She begged me to come back satd she
couldn t hve wtthout me I trted agam Same thmg She ran our
charge accounts up and me down
So I ve moved out sgam and now she calls every mght
crymg and promtsmg she ll be a different woman She lS very
persuastve and I m lonely
Please help me stay strong enough not to go back
TEMPTED

1 00 -

OOZE R and back hoe wor k!
ponds and sept c tanks dlt
chlng service top so I fill
dirt
imestone
B&amp;K Ex
cavat ng Phone 992 5367 or

JOB OPPORTUNITIES .-..
SOCIAL SECUAITY .,:
CONSUMER PROTECTION

RENTALS -

Read ng for t he Classroom

Put all four swts to work

123 tic

n1ce out

building wolh cellar and lot

Lasste 15

.WIN AT BRIDGE

Roof ng
spout ng
kitc hens
and bathrooms Complete
remodeling Phone 742 6273

Auto Sales

r

News 6 10 Marco Sportl t e

• 33 Hogh School TV Honor Soc ely 15
1 30 To Tell the Truth 6 New Pr ce os R ght 8 10 Beat th e
Clock 13 RFD 20 Hollywood Squares 3 Johnny Manns

Repa r

ser v ce all makes 992 228.4
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Au thor zed s nger Sa es and
SerY ce We Sharpen Scissors

SEPTIC

Hogan s Heroes 13

or Conseq 3 Beat the Clock 4

BECAUEI~ I. fiEUI:R
LIKED l&gt;IE FLUTE

"

6 00 - ABCNews 13 SesameSt 20 News3 4 Truth or Conseq
::~ 6 N e w s 8 10 15 L1ha s Yoga &amp; You 33
~ 30 - News 6 8 10 NBC News 3 4 15 Your Future s Noe 33

A li'! OMO'ffit:- -

3035

Lucy Show 8

My W fe s Best Fr end 10
~ 30 - G 1lhgan s Is 6 13 Green Acres 3 Bonanza 15 Jackpot
4 Ha ze l 8
"!\ 00 - Mr Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Gr ffln 4 Andy
Griffith 8 Mission impossible 6 Gomer Pyle USMC 1J
5 JO- Beverly H llbtlloes 8 Elec Co J3 Hodgepodge Lodge20

2 5 261c

LLER

Love Amerfcan Sy le 13

Move

w1th Ma1ar Hoople

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

1S

Pnce Is

,

HO U SES We I dr&amp;w prints
or
bu ld
to
your
spec if cat ons
Ne gler s
Bu ld ng Supp y
Racine
Ohio Cal 949 J604

M

Search for Tomorrow 8 10

1 00 - 3 On A Matc h 3 4 15 Lets Make A Dea l6 13 As the
World Turns 8 10
2 00 - Days of Our L ves J 4 15 Gu dong Ltghl 8 10 New lywed

12 19 tiC
NEIGLERS-FOR- BUILDING

992 3861

13

To Tell the Truth 3 Secret Storm 8
Chuck Wh to Reports 10
D nah Shore 3 15 Company 6 Jokers W ld 8 10
Jeopardy 3 4 IS $10 000 Pyram d 8 10
W zard of Odds 3 4 15 Gamb I 8 10 Mtke Douglas 6

Password 13

DOZER work land clearing by
th e acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w th over
20 years ex per ence Pullins
Excavat ng Pomeroy Oh o
Phone 992 2478

PRICE

Ph1l Donahu e

I I 30 - Brady Bunch 13 Holl ywoo d Squares 3 4 1S Love of L fe
8 10

EXCAVATING do1er loader
and ba ckhoe work
septic
tanks rnstalled dump trucks
and o boys for hir e w II haul
t 11 d rt top soil I mestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
J effe rs day phone 992 7089
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc

if, ; II ·,.

Br "~

6
News 13
Paul D1xon 4 Fnendly Junct on 10 AM J

15 Abbott&amp;Costello8 Wid WlldWesl6 Movoe TheGiass

C BRADFORD Auct oneer
Complete Se rvi ce
Phone 949 3821
Rae ne Ohio
cr tt Bradford
s 1 tfc

3

0 ck Van

&amp; 30 - Brady Bunch

-6 55 -

Xi'l

19 Imogene

8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Jeff s Coli e 6

OPEN Roge r Hysel s Garage
near Cr ossroads on St Route
124 8 30 to 6 p m Monday
through Saturday Phone 992
S682 or 992 7t 2l
2 22 26tC

SE WIN G MACHINES

L ve By 4

Dyke 13
7 30- Rocky t1. Bu!lw nkle 13 Ne w Zoo Revue6

" - - - - - -"-

1971 - 60x12 Elcona Custom
new prtce S7 295 00 sa te pr ce
55 795 00
1974 - three Detro ters - up to
S1 000 oo off
we HAVE many other s 1es
and var et es of Mobile
Homes on sate Our prices
nclude you r delivery and
compete set up don t walt
shop now you II be gtad you
d d
2 15 12tc

and

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

WEEK PHONE 992 5693

TRY
Sleepers
ton ght for
sate and restfu sleep on y 98c
at Nel son Drugs
2 24 lt c

Sun r se Se m nar 4 Sacred Hea rt 10
6 15 - Concern &amp; Commen t 10
6 20 - Farm Report 13
6 15 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - B ble Answers 8 N ews 6 F1ve M nutes to
Rev Cleophus Rob nson 13

REASONABLE rates Ph 4.46
4782 Gat ipolls John Russell
Owner and Operator
5 12 tfc

OPEN S AM

TILL 6 30 P M

'6 00 -

6 JO tic

COMPANY
THE
MEIGS &amp; GALLIA LINE
STA TE
ROUTE
7
AT

N0ws4

TUESDAY FEB 26 1974

READY MIX
CONCRETE
del vered r ght to
your
prolect Fast and easy Free
estimates ~hone 992 328~
Goegleln R:eady Mix Co
M ddleport Oh o

JAYMAR

COAL

992 2094
606 E Matn
Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
N1ghf 992 3525
or 992 5232

Mason W Va

i oo -

(

sta lied

MATERIALS CO

4 6 8 0 13 IS 20 Janak 33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 K1ss M e A nd D1e 6 13 Moves
Oes1gn ng Women 8
An Act o f Repr sa
10
I 00 - To morrow 3 4 N ews 13

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

DITCHING SERVICE

Us

4 15 CBS News 8 10 Room 222 13 ABC

7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3 What s My Lone 8 Elec Co 20 Beat

All work guaranteed

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

. ·
1

~.,.H-:::::::,·»e·..·· -'"""
e
%:='~-n
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,H
,,,,.,,,,&lt;,,,,,,,e
,,,,,,,,,,,l
,,,.,,"~p
,,,,.~&gt;.-.«~&lt;

11 00 - News 3

$3 99S 00

2 BEDROOM mob le home all
ut I t es paid No pets Robert UPHOL STERY fabr cs by the
vard 54 n c hes w de as low as
H
Rae ne Phone 949 3811
S1 95 per yard Ve vets as low
2 21 12tp
as S3 45 Imported velvets
S9 95 we also have nr on
FURNISHED apartments on
herculon
c otton
pr nts
Rt 33 in Mason One 3 room
v nyls remnants by the yard
apartment shower kitchen
or by the p ece Pomeroy
ca b n suitable for 2 old people
Re covery 622 E Man St
or 2 worker s ut 1 t es fur
Pomero y Phone 992 7554
n shed and garden f w anted
I 29 26tc
One 2 room apartment
bedroom and ki tchen bath
shower and k t ch en Both are FOAM to fill your o d couch and
cha r cush ons as low as
good apartments Reynolds
510 95 Upholsterv books on y
Apartments Phone 773 51&lt;17
soc
4 nch covered foam
2 19 6tp
mattresses for standard size

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

Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

Pomeroy

2 BLACK r d ng mares and I
sorre l geld ng gent e Ask a t
Rutland Furn ture Phone
742 42 11 after 5 cal 742 550 1
2 24 6tc

9 .. _
aid!

Pamtmg A Spectalty

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Wanted To Buy

0

lmcoln H1ll Pomer.oy

Bu1ll to Your Specs
Delivered to Job S1te

2 21 tfc
TRAILER 1 bedroom n ce for
coup e Phone 992 7479
2 5 ttc

Ph 992 2174

I

Help Wanted

UNFURN SH E D apartment 2
bedroom s
e lectr c heat
Hartford W Va Phon e 773

Ph 992 5271

SMITtt NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

,.,..-- s?s:z

Employment Wanted

APP L CAT ONS for a st reet
sup erv so r are now be ng
accepted by Pomeroy v tag e
off cas Appl cat on s may be
p eked up at V I age Hal
where th ey ar e to be sub
m tted
2 24 3t c

Gene's
Body Shop

From th e largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad ator to the
sma llest Heater Core
Nathan B1ggs
Radiator Spectahst

WOOD TRUSSES

DEEMS
Restaurant
and USED Gravely tractor and
attachments Phone 949 38 11
Grocery Rae n e Oh o Open
2 21 6tp
7 days 6 30 o 6 30 Ham
Ch cken Sausage and F sh 2 CAS H pad for at ma kes and
yegetables 51 50 and up
models of mob le homes
Sandw ches and Ch
Phone area code 614 423 95 31
2 22 31C
4 IJtfc
H AR R SO N S TV and Sery ce
OLD furn ure oak t ab l es
cal s Phone 992 2522
cocks ce boxes brass beds
2 22 26 tc
d shes des ks or compe te
households
Wr te M
D
M 1 er Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
ca ll 992 7760
s I J tf c
tXPER ENCE D pa nter
n
ter or and ex ter or Ca l Don
NO 1 copp er 70c rad a tor s
Van Meter Phone 985 395
32c red bra ss 3Sc batter es
2 3 29tp
$ 1 20 M A Ha
ReedsYI e
Oh 0 PhOnP J78 6249
1 27 tfc

For Rent

0 RECTOR

PB

RLY good small used chan
ANNOUNC NG new hours for FAsaw
Phone 949 2225
n com e tax serv ce Open only
2 20 6tc
on Monday Wednesday and
F r day
9
a m
to
5 ANT QUE quIts and tew e ry
p m
Even ngs by appt
A so
nter es t ed n turn tur e
Wanda Eb n Co Rd 22 off
and d s hes Call 992 52 62
Rou e 7 bypass Phon e 992
even ng s or morn ngs
2272
2 20 tfc
2 8 30ft

For Rent or Sale

J PH IL L P RICHLEY

P S

OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

Wanted

sa me

auto

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
Gray Manor Apts.

Not1ce

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

EXPERIENCED

1974

MONDAY FEB 25 1974

~ ---------,

TRANSPORTATION
Columbus Oh1o
February 8 1974
Contract Sales Legal Copv
No 74 6:l
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; W GS
Se a ed proposa s w 1 be
We hav e the product on hand
r ec:e yed at the office of th e
and we del Yer to you per
D rector of Oh o D epa rtment
sona IV Helen Jane Brown
99 2 51 13
of Tr ansportal on
Columbus
Oh o unt 1 10 00 A M Eastern
2 30 ti c
Dyl ght Say ng T me Athens
Gall a
Hock ng
Me gs
NEED LADY to help w th
Monroe Morgan Nobl e Vinton
spr n~ housec lean ng Phone
&amp; Wash ngton Count es Oh o
992 2677
2216tp
on Var ou s Sections of U 5
Route Nos 33 so A SOA Sla te
Route Nos 7 56 78 144 329 &amp;
690 n Arhens Coun ty
Sta te EXPER I ENCED manto repa r
\4end ng mach n es
A BC
Route Nos 7 55.4 &amp; 588 n Ga I a
Enterpr zes Mason W Va
County U S Route No 33
773 SS 43
State Routes Nos 56 78 93 328
2 21 tfc
&amp; 664 n Hock ng County U S
Rout e No 33 Sta te Route Nos 7
&amp; 124 n Me os County State
Rout e Nos 78 145 - 800 n
Monroe Coun tv
State Route
Nos 37 60 78 266 329 &amp; 376 n MAR R ED coupl e wan ts lo rent
Morgan County
State Route
farm or country home by
No s 78 145 1.47 &amp; 821 n Noble
Apr
Cal co llect 488 5342
County
U S Route No so
2 19 6tc
State Rout e Nos 56 &amp; 93 n
V nton County U S Route No
50A State Rout e Nos 60 145 821 n Wash1ngton c~unty by
her b c dal s praying for w eed CON COR 0 Trav el Tra l er n ce
and brush control
for couple Ca I 992 7479
Work Length - 494 77 M les
1 31 tfc
The date set for complet on
of th s work shall be as se t forth
in the b ddlng proposal
Each b dder sha be requ red
to file w th h is bid a cert fed
~
check or cash er s check for an SMA L L bus ness bu I ding
ess
m le north of Pomeroy on St
Also beg nn ng 95 rods 8 nk s amount equal to f1ve per cent of
Rt 33 Can be l eased and
north 59 rods and 23 t nks west hu btd but n no event more
converted nto small apart
of lh e south east corner of the than fifty thousand dollars or a
ment Also empty ots 50 100
bond for tttn per cent of h s b d
northeast quarter Sect on J
or
150 w de Ph 992 5786
payable
to
the
D
rector
Town 6 Rang e 14 th ence west
2 24 6tc
B dders must app y on the
21 rods 8 lin ks then ce north 2
proper form s for qua if cat on
deg west 22 rod s 14 links
at least twn days prior to the SLEEPIN G room s c lean and
thence east 22 rods 3 nks
pr vate w th k t c hen Phone
date
se t for open ng b ds In
then ce south 22 rod s 14 I nks to
77 3 5580
accordance
w
th
Chapter
5525
place of beg inn ng conta n ng 3
2 24 lt c
Oh
o
R
eY
se
d
Code
acres mor e or less
Plans and spec f cat ons are
Except ng from above par
TWO small r ooms furn shed
ce s and reserv ng one ha f of on fl e n the Department of
Spr ing Avenue coupl es on y
coa l o gas and other m nerals Transportal on and the off ce of
Ca
I Sunday or even ngs 992
the
D1str
c
t
Deputy
Director
underl y ing th e above d escr bed
3429
The D rector reserves t he
prem ses w th the r ght tom ne
2 24 6t p
r emove and operate fo r th e r ghl to re eel any and al b ds

ltc

742 4211

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 PM Day Betd e Publ cat 01
Monday Dead I ne 9 a m
Cance l at on Corr ect ons
w be accep ted unt I 9 a m for
Day of Pub cat on

&amp; OBITUARY
52 00 for SO wo d
mum Ea c h add 1 ona

l

There

)OU d c t
sauerkraut and

1 he world mav end tumor
row - and IRS will btll you
for "our share of damage

In 1967 Amencan warshtps I
began shelhng Vtelnam
I
1
In 1970 a record $1 300 00 was
patd for a Vmcen t Van Gog h
(vahn goh) pamtmg m Ne\\ I
I
York Ctty

James said

ctcam

Television Log

Classifieds Get Results! I_ B
_u-- ,-s_iness Services

BARBS

2.)

j

qu~t!ll

TilE BORN WSER

UP lO

ONNS "THIS PUCE

ll&lt;AT o RL !WILLY

Si~

N 30

f'OWDS A

W&amp;EI&lt;S

~K

WORI'.7 HARD

n ~~' w uu

H~

LaW
DSAI'l'tAI2.

CCI\\PLETWI

,

e

ind led the sutt back South
'Won wtth hts 10 Cashed hiS
ace oftrumJ?S Led a trump to
ttbmmy s kmg and tned to
diScard ht, 10 and trey of
hea rts on the good dtamonds
As he explamed later he was
very unlucky smce West held
the long trum~ ahd East the
io n~ dtamond
Jtm The bad luck was
~Nat South forgot all about
the fourth sutt He could have
'laid down hiS ace of hearts
:Mfore play mg ace and kmg
of trumps The smgleton kmg
would have dropped South
could have drawn all the
lrumps entered dummy Wlth
~e queen of hearts to make
hiS last heart d1scard on the
'K1ng of dtamond s and
clatmed hts contract
r

OJ ~t5 CIH 'DU Uw lD5f

&gt;OU KNOW' EVEN

1HC1Uo!5H HER iiDTHER

'
ALLEY OOP

r,;::s'-- J A H ALLUS

T WON "T TAKE ME

S LAU6H TFKE D

ONG

T P CK ANOTHER HANDFUL
~ E RE Y A~E BIG FEL A.

PEO PL E FD A
GOOL&gt;

RECASON
FO MCIHE"t

11

CNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

The btddmg has been
Norlh East
West

25

HOW MUCH DID
'IE lOSE PLA'IIN
CHECKERS Wt F
CALEB PAW "

THUTTY
TWO CENTS
CASH AI'J

A TWO OOLLER
CHECKER BOARD

1•

Pass
Pass
Pass ?
Pass
5+
You Soulh hold
UK 7 6 'A K 7 6 t3 2 .K 10 3

.

"

What do you do now?

A-Bid five hellrts to show
control of that suit Your
partner i1 ln&amp;ern&amp;ed. in slam

125
I

I

�10 _ The Datly Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0. Monday, Feb 25,1974

Virginia Grimm
died Saturday

All silent on Patty Hearst fate
SAN FRANCISCO (UP]) Symbtonese Ltberatton Army
terrortsts today entered thetr
fourth day of stlence on the fate
6f 2(l.year.old hostage Patrtcta
Hearst
':There's been no response
No mdtcatlon of anythmg, '
FBI spectal agent Charles
Bates satd late Sunday 'We
are JUSt havmg to watt aod fmd
out the next development."
Mtss Hearst, daughter of
Randolph A Hearst, prestden t
and edt tor of the San Ft anctsco
Exammer, was alxlucted from

-'

her Berkeley apa rtment safe release
exactly three 1\ccks ago
The taped SLA message had
Adeadlme set by the SLA for warned tha t commumcattons
a response to thetr latest would be broken off and Patty
demand that Hearst personally held mdefmt tely as a "prtsoner
pledge an addthonal $4 rmlhon of war" unless the demand was
to a $2 mt lho~ food gJVeaway met wtthm 4 hours She would
be kept as a hostage for two
program passed Sa turday
Hea r s t sa1d the demand SLA members detamed m San
made m an SLA commumque Quentm pr,tson on murder
Thursday was "far beyond my charges, the tape recetved
fmancta l capabthty" but the Thursday satd
Hea rst Corp , agreed to add the
The two members referred
requested amoun t to th e to , Joseph Remtro, 27, and
People m Need food program Rtchard Ltttle, 26 were to be
contmgent on Miss Hearst's at raagned m Alameda Supenor

Court today on charges of
assassmatmg Oakland School
Supenntendent Marcus Foster
last November
A Ludlow Kramer, th e
Washmgton Secretary of State
m charge of disbursmg free
food as demanded by the
kidnapers, has promtsed that
the chaos orlast dtsbursmg wtll
be remedted
He satd food would henceforth be dehvered m advance
of the Tuesday, Thursday and
Saturday dtstrtbution days at
Ute four t-enters named b) the

SLA
The ftrst day of the handout
on Frtday resulted in mobs that
blocked trafftc, attacked foo d
tru cks and tossed bundles
freely There were ftst fights
and four arrests as 9,000
persons received packages
meant for 20,000
In the ftrst letter followmg
Mtss Hearst's abduction, the
SLA made a food demand that
would have cost nearly $400
mtlhon Hearst responded wtth
a $2 mtllton program that the
SLA satd Thursday had to be
tnpled

Bilked taxidermist identified Williams
ATLANTA (UP! ) - A Mtarm
"f m glad he could pmpmnt
talUderrmst who was bilked out the man," Murphy swd of
of $6,000 m a phony fuel otl deal Becker "I thmk he was one of
proVIded the clue that tden- th e people who led mtifled the alleged ktdnapers of veshgators to the house."
Atlan ta Constttutton Edttor
Becker satd he telephoned
Reg Murphy, tt was dtsclosed the Mtamt FBI when he read
Sunday
that Murphy was lured from
Murphy, who was released his home last Wednesday mght
unharmed Frtday mght after by a man who wanted the
his newspaper paid $700,000 edttor of Georgia's largest
ransom, satd he called W mornmg newspaper to arrange
Charles ·Buddy" Becker to for the donatwn of 300,000
thank htm for the ttp to the ga llons of fuel ml to chart ty
FBI
Becker satd he was ar&gt;Ftve hours after Murphy, 40, proached m Mtamt last
was freed m a motel parkmg December by a man he tdenlot, FBI agents arrested Wtl- ttfted as Wtlliams, who claimed
ham A H Willtams, 33, and his to be a general contractor wtth
wife, Betty Ruth, 26, at thetr 300,000 gallons of fuel otl to sell.
home m suburban Lilburn. The Becker satd he met the man
ransom money was recovered when he mounted a ftsh for him
mtact.
and agreed to buy the fuel otl

15 guns, ammo
stolen Sunday
Ftfteen guns and an undctermmed amount of ammumtton was taken m a
en tertng
brea ktn g and
Saturday mght at Bob Saunders ' Quaker State Servtce
Center
The burglary was dtscovered
at 8 59 a m Sunday by
Galhpohs Ctty Pohceman Joe
Owens. Entry was made by
breaking a large wmdow glass
and gomg through the lube
room Taken were ptstols,
nOes and shotguns, and $50 m
cash A complete mventory ts
bemg taken today
Meanwhtle, Galha County
Shertff's depultes Sunday
mvestlgated the theft of $2,000
worth of bus accessortes taken
from !be Galhpohs Bus Garage
located at Green Elementary
School.
Charles Carter, Rt 2,
Galhpohs, dtscovered the
break-m Agam, entry was

made by breakmg a wmdow
Mtssmg \\ere numerous
wrenches, dnlls, four weldmg
hoses, oxygen and acetylene
gauges, a pamt gun, socket
sets, four ftre extmgutshers,
four wreckmg bars, 20 wmdshteld wtpers, anlt freeze and
other Items
Depuhes also mvesttgated
acts of vandahsm reported by
Faye Cas to of Rt l, Galhpo hs,
and Dr Mel St mon of
Galhpohs
Mrs Casto satd someone
used a shotgun and blasted a
large hole m the alummum
door at her home
Dr S1mon satd someone
threw rocks breakmg glasses
m a home near h1s chmc on
Jackson Ptke
Wtlham Philhps of Cottrell's
Grocery tn Porter satd
someone had abandoned a 1971
Plymouth m front of hts store

~-

MEMBER

fEDERAL

DEPOSIT

INSURANCE

CORPORATION

"because my busmess depends
on boats havmg d1esel otl '
Becker srud the deal was for 23
cents a ga llon and he and a
partner gave the man a check
for $6,000 as a down payment
The taxtdermtsl satd the
man flew back to Atlanta and
called later to say the 011 soon
would be on tts way Becker
satd that's the last he heard
and he wrote the deal off as a
bad busmess venture when
U S and state authonttes sa td
his only recourse was a CIVIl
swt.
The Atlanta FBI conftrmed
that tt had recetved a ttp

Donald Oesterle
'
57. is dead

'
RUTLAND
Funeral
servtces for Donald J
Oesterle, 57, who dted Saturday
at ht s Langsvtlle Route I
restdence as the result of self·
mfhcted gunshot wounds, have
been set for 10 am Thursday
at the Walker Funeral Home
here
At the scene to mvestigate
the etrcumstances were Shenff
Robert C Hartenbach and
Coun ty Coroner R R Ptckens,

Frtday from "a cthzen m
Mtarm" regardmg Wtlhams
Spcctal FBI agent m charge
Leo Conroy sa1d the bureau
had reached " no defmtte
concluston" whether the
Wtlhamses acted alone or were
part of what Murphy's ktd-

napers cla tm ed was the
"Amencan RevolutiOnary
Army " Indtcattons were,
however, that the FBI doubted
the " army" ex is ted and
beheves the ktdnapmg was
"stnctly for money "
Willtams, a sheetrock subcontractor, and hts wife, who
To po otect the pm tty of I he has three small children by a
bt ~e d of Its famo us cows preVIous marriage, were bemg
th e Channel Island of Jersey held under a total of $1 5
allows no olher co llie on the rmlhon bond on ktdnap and
Island
extortion charges

the state wres tbng tourney at m last Saturday's opening
Columbus.
round of the Lancaster
Mtckey Lyons at !OIIbs , 176 Dtstrtct
lb Bill Slack, 188 lb John
Slack, Lehew and Hal~ were
Lehew and heavywetght Mtke seeded I, 2 and 3 respechvely
Haley all advanced to semi- tn thetr respective wei ght
fmal action followmg vtctortes classes, while the other seeded
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~­ Marauder ,
148 lb
AI
McLaughlm was defeated m
hts opemng round battle
The Marauders , as a team,
are far out of the runmng for
the dtstrtct crown, as Belpre
leads wtth 26 pomts, followed
Four Metgs Marauder
wrestlers, wmmng first round
matches, have moved mto next
Sat urda y's Dtstrict Wrestbng
Tournam ent semt-fmals at
Lancaster, wtth posstble
chance&lt; of earmng berths m

BEARY'S WORLD

Alta Eastman

D 0

Mr Oesterle was born Aprtl
2ti, 1916, m Detrmt, Mtch , the
son of the late J ohn and Emma
Thalhammer Oesterle. He was
marned to Mary Jean Wmans
on Sept 3, 1937 Mr Oesterle
was employed as an electrtcal
engmeer wtth General Motors
m Mtchtgan 15 years before
bemg strtcken by tll health He
was th en employed wtth
Vanety Linens Service In
M1ch1gan fo r nme years, and
had restded m Metgs Count)
only about a year
SurvlVlng m addtlton to h1s
wtfe are two daughters, Mrs
Rtchard (Donna Jean ) Helmling of Fayettesvtlle, N C, and
Mrs Glenn (Dowame Sybtl )
Ganzevoort of Wyommg,
•
Mtch , three brothers, Sumner
@ 1974 by NEA In&lt;: ~
and Ralph, both of Chelsea,
Mtch , and Maynard of Skokte,
Ill , and two granddaughters,
Were hop1ng he II graduate from college when anLana Elmuftt, Fayettesvtlle,
other new pro football league comes along to outbid
the NFL , AFL and WFL "
and Tanya Ge nzavoort,
Wyommg, Mtch
Mr Oesterle was a member
of the Lutheran Church.
Veterans Memorial Hospital PROSTITUTION RISING
Offtciatmg at the Tuesday
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
COLUMBUS (UP!) _ In atmormng servtce wtll be the
.
Velva
Amburger,
Syracuse
,
tempt
to halt an increase m
Re v Wtlltam Mtddleworth
Nell
Deweese,
Middleport,
prostttution
in !be ctty, ColumBurtal will be m the Coy Htll
Maqone Sayre, Racine
bus pohcewomen are wallnng
Cemetery at Danvtlle
SATURDAY DISCHARGES along downtown streets and ar- Clara La vendar, Lilhan resting persons who solictt
Moore, Samuel McKmney , them Sgt Charles Edwards
Clara Grueser, Holtis Rupe , said Sunday that durmg the
Tresa Holland, Joseph Wttson ftrst two days of the crackdown
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - by the vtce squad, four men
Mtchael Steven Raymond , were arrested for offermg
Albany; Brenda Osborne, money which was not solicited
New Styles
Mtddleport; Eva McKmney, by the pohcewoman "Once
At
Rutland , Howard Burrts, New ' woman told us she was
Haven; Freddte Weaver, New proposttioned thr•e different
Haven; Ehzabeth Potter , times one day fast week while
Guysvtlle
standing at a bus stop " EdSUNDA
Y
DISCHARGES
wards said
'
" Your Thom MeAn Store"
Moddleporl, 0 .
Tracy McKmney, Charles
Klem

...acomplex, reliable and
accurate bookkeeping and
record-keeping system ...

FOR INFANTS

heritage house

at no cost to you *
Carrymg a checkmg account wuh
us - paymg all b1lls by check automatically keeps your fm anCJal
affa1rs accurately recorded It's a
btg help ro hilve bank r ecords at
tax-paymg u me, and even more
helpful 3[ tax-audn ume
•With a nry moduale
a"en.1e accou11t b:llla11ce

'

The Farmers· Bank
and Savings Co.

--~~~--

HO£R.A.L

.

--

-

Df r OSIT

-

Your Rugs Are
Worn- Your
Living Room Suite
Is Faded, and
Torn- The
Lamps Are Dingy

And the Stove

MEIGS THEATRE

Won't Cook.

Tomght thru Tuesday
Feb 24·26

"THAT DARN CAT"

SEE BAKER'S IN MIDDLEPORT

$20,000 00 Max1mum Insurance For
Each Depos1tor

M{M8£J(

Is Lumpy-

KENT PROBE
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
federal grand jury mvestigatmg !be 1970 Kent State
shootings wtll resume tts
hearings today after a twoweek recess. According to J.
Stanley Potting•r, head of the
U S Jusllce Department's
Civtl Rights DIVISion, the jury
will determine the number and
tdenhty of the witnesses yet to
testify depending on what was
done dunng the recess. The
JUry has called some 100 witnesses smce the probe began
Dec. 18

Walt Disney 's

POMEROY, OHIO

--

If your Mattress

(Technicolor)
Hal ey Mills
Dean Jones
Also
b1sney Cartoon
GOOFY ' S GliDER

FOR THAT BRAND NEW LOOK!

Sii?)Y slarb 7 p.m.

~--~~~-

JNSURANCf

CO RPORATIO N
-----

!

'

..

died on Sunday
Alta Elnora Eastman, 83,
Harnsonville, dted Sunday at
the Syracuse Nursmg Home
Mrs Eastman was preceded m
death by her parents, Wtlltam
and Samana Story Rice, and
one brother, Homer Rtce
She ts survtved by her
husband, Clarence Eastman;
two ststers, Belva Willard and
Mma Hart, both of Pomeroy,
Rt 2, one brother, W A Rice ,
Reedsville, and 10 meces and
nephews
Funeral servtces wtll be held
Tuesday at I p m at Ewing
Funeral Home with George
Glaze offtciatmg. Burtal wtll be
m Carleton Cemetery Fnends
may call at the funeral home
anytune.

Grace Hewitt
dies in Denver
Mrs Grace E Black Hewntt,
59, formerly of Mtddleport,

died Feb 18 m Denver, Colo.
Mrs Hewttt was born m
Mtddleport, Dec. 23, 1914 She
graduated from !be Mtddleport
Htgh School and a school of
cosmetology m Columbus She
resided In Denver for the past
25 years where she was employed by the Gates Rubber Co
23 years. She was the wife of
Alvm S Hewtlt who dted Nov
9, 197:! m Denver Mrs Hewttt
was a member of the Order of
Eastern Star .
Survtvmg are her mother,
Mrs. Roma Black of Denver; a
mece, Betty Wolfe, Columbus;
four grand-nteces, Dianna,
Manann, Ehzabeth and Jantce
Wolfe, and a grand-nephew,
Thomas John Wolfe, all of
Columbus.
Services were held m Denver
Wednesday with Mr. George
Akkerman officiating. Burtal
was in Chapel Hill Memory
Gardens m Ltttleton, Colo
MISSIONARIES HOME
ALLIANCE, Ohio (UP!) -A
group of 32 American and Canadian missionaries, most
from !be Church of God in
Alli.ance, Ohio, returned safely
to thetr homes late Sunday
after being detamed m Cuba
for 24 hours over the weekend
on a flight home from Jamaica.
Claude Ferguson, 36, Alli.ance,
leader of !be group, satd they
were treated exceptionally
well by the Cubans. The plane
was ordered to land after
straymg mto Cuban air space.
GRIMMER WINS RACE
FALUN, Sweden (UP!)
Gerhard Grimmer of East
Germany won the men's 50
kilometer cross country race in
the world nordic skt Championships Sunday with a time of two
hours, 19 rmnutes, 45.26 minutes.

• •

in Briefs

Middleport to protest C&amp;O pullout

(Continued from page I)
In a vaguely worded statement made public Sunday, the
Umted States and tts Latin Amertcan allies agreed on "a new
dialogue of the Americas" aimed at calmly discussmg the
reg ion's most controversial problems.
GUERNEVILLE, CALIF. - WILLIAM F. KNOWL~D,
newspaper publisher and former Republican U S senator, died
of a self-mflicted gunshot wound to the head, an autopsy showed
Sunday. ''The body was recovered at the water's edge, partially
m the water " Undersheriff Robert Hayes satd after the autopsy.
"The w;.pon a 32-&lt;:aliber automatic pistol, was recovered
by a diver about' two feet under the water, by the body. The
evtdence found as fll'st stated, mdtcated a self-inflicted gunshot
wound " Knowiand, 65, publisher of the Oakland Tribune, died
Saturday as he stood on the muddy dock of his $100,000 redwood
summer home along the Russtan Rtver 75 rmles north of San
FranciSco. No suiCide note was found and there were no clues to
mdtcate what prompted hun to take his life
FORT LAUDERDALE, FLA - A PLANE returrung to the
Umted States With nusslonanes may have been Hymg below Its
asstgned altitude because of cabm pressure problems when it
was forced to land m Cuba by MIG ftghters. Jun
Frazter, Hollywood, Fla , local FAA coordinator for Southeast
Florida said it was his understanding that they had recetved
approv~ from tbe Cuban government to make the flight over
Cuba.
The 32 misstonaries and three plane crew members were
released Sunday and landed at Fort Lauderdale after their
sponsormg agency, Project Partner, Wtchita, Kan., arranged to
pay $6,!150 to the Cuban government through !be SwiSS Embassy
m Havana The payment covered the cost of forcmg the plane
down, mamtenance on the rurcraft, and expenses of caring for Its
passengers and crew, according to the State Department, which
handled the fund transfer for the sponsors

Four wrestlers win 1st rounds

POLL PAROTT

At your service

NEW HAVEN - Mrs
Vlrgmia Roush Grurun, 84,
East Ltverpool, died Saturday
m a convalescent home there
Mrs Grtmm was born Feb 6,
1890 m Mason County, the
daughter of the late Wtlham
and Jane Zerkle Roush Her
husband , George Alto Gnmm,
dted m 1970
Surv1vmg are three sons,
Wtlham of Leetoma, Ohto,
Leonard of Letart, W Va , and
Homer of Anna, Ill ; two
daughter s,
Mrs
Dean
(Rebecca) Talkmgton of East
Ltver pool, and Mrs Alan
(Leoda) Folger, Brunswtck,
Ohto, two ststers, Mrs Walter
Skidmore, East Liverpool, and
Mrs
Lesley Roush of
Steubenvtlle, and 17 grandchtldren
Funeral servtces wtll be held
at 2 p m Wednesday at the
Unton Untied Methodtst
Church, two mtles back of New
Haven, wtth the Rev Robert
Bumgarner of Middleport
offtctahng Frtends may call at
the Foglesong Funeal Home
from 7 to 9 p m Tuesday The
body wtll be taken to the
church where tt wtll hem state
one hour prtor to the servtce.
Burtal wtll be tn Unton
Cemetery.

News.

Ex-aide

(Continued from page 1)
fenses, not crinnnal offenses;
of abuse of power or pertmtting
by Warren 22 1h, Hillsboro 15, power he delegated to be
Ironton 12, Shertdan 12, abused; offenses, as I say, of
Chesapeake 9¥., Fall'land 9, negligence or derelection m
Nelsonvtlle 8, Metgs 7, Glouster seemg that the laws are fatth3 and Wellston 0.
fully executed.
Lyons opened the com"I think he has abused his
peti lion for Meigs by pmnlng trust in a very sertous way.
Dance of Htllsboro, while Slack And tf he himself ts not willmg,
pinned Sbertdan 's Taylor, as he does not seem to be, to
Lehew dectstoned Helgesen of make a fresh start, to own up to
Belpre and Haley pmned these things tn detail rather
Shertdan's VanSickle
than with merely the pro
Saturday, Lyons wtll face forma, almost contemptuous
Hall of Warren m the 101 lb apologies that he's gtven on
semt..flnals, while Slack faces occasion, then I think that
Warren's Beebe, Lehew battles measures need to be taken
Warren's Short and Haley wtthm the system as the
takes on Barber of Nelsonville. Congress ts taking them, to
Marauders who didn't fare hold him to account," he satd
qw te as well in the opemng
round were 108lb Rick George
who was dcctstoned by Fortney
of Warren, 115lb Butch Roush Hall, and Steve Brtckles, at
who was pmned by Spencer of lbs., pmned by Ironton's Scior
Warren, I221b Joe Rosenballffi All are still m the runnmg
who was pmned by White of third place fimshes.
Thts Saturday 's
Sheridan, 129 lb Duane
McLaughlin who was pmned by begins WIth the s:~:;::~
Sanders of Ironton, 135 lb. Jeff followed by the c
Musser dcctStoned by ,Marks of semis and consolatton finals,
Warren, AI McLaughlm who wt th the champiOnship fmals
was dcctstoned by Warren's roundmg out !be day's activity.

Elbertelds In Pomeroy
Shop Weekdays 9:30 to 5 pm

HOW TO
LOOK LIKE
9AM

ATSPM

j

Mtddleport wtll ftle a protes t
wtth the Publtc Utthltes
Commtsston of Ohto agamst
the reported proposal to
dtscontmue servtce by the
Chesapeake and Ohto ratlroad
m southeastern Ohto It was
reported m The Datly Sentmel
Monday that the ra tlroad has
app hed for the rtgh t to
dtscontmue serviCe and that a
pubhc hearmg wtll be held m
Columbus March 4
Meetmg m regular sesswn
Monday mght counctlagreed to
have sohcttor Bernard Fultz
ft ie a protest agamst discontinuance of service

Vtllage offtctals planned to
atlend a pubhc meetmg on
March 6 at the Rutland
E lementary School when th e
modermzatton of State Route
124 m Metgs County wtll be
diScussed The meettng has
been announced In conformance wtth the Ohto
Department of Transporta hon
Achon Plan Deputy Dtrector
Max R Farley has stated that
depa rtmen t of transporta tion
personnel of Dtstnct 10 \\Ill
conduct the meetmg Maps of
the plans for the htghway
changes are posted tn the post
offtces of Mtddleport, Pomeroy

Weather

If you're too tired to go out "t the end

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that. Just wear Supp-hose Panty Hose,
and you'll look and feel terrific. They
give you that 9AM feeling at SPM.
You'll love the many colors in the many
Supp-hose Panty Hose styles ... a support
fashion for everyone. Wear them all the
time-and be ready to go-anytime!

$4.95-$5.95

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

The ord mance reqUires that
residents tea rang down a
bmldmg w1 th a sewer must
secure a permit from Mayor
Zerkle Cost of the permit ts $2
per butldmg, accordmg to the
ord mance, wh tch also reqmrcs
that the butldmg mspector be
nottfted \\hen the butldmg ts
razed and any old sewers
capped so that the ca ppmg can
be mspected
If old sewers are found Incorrectly capped, the restdent
has seven days to correc t the
satuatton
Accord mg to the oi dtnance, a
resident has two month~ In l r~r

down a butldmg and cap the
sewer after securmg a permit
A lhi ee-mon th extensiOn can
be granted by the mayot The
ordmance Is not applicable as
far as ca ppmg old sewers ts
concerned 1f the sewers are to
be used by a replacement
structure However, the sewe1 s
must be used wt thtn a 60-&lt;iay
penod after the bmldmg ts
razed, or be capped Vwlators
of the ord mance ma) be ftned
$25 a day
Tentative plans of offtctals to
mvoke a hcense fee for cm n
operated amusement
machmes m busmess places

•

Fatr tomght and Wednesday
Lows tomght m the teens
except m the 20s tn the southwest portwn Warmer Wednesday wtth htghs tn the 30s m
the north and the 40s m the
south

were revtewed It was fe lt that
a $50 hce nse fee for machmes
wh1eh take a quarter 01 more
mtghl be fatr , 1\tth the fee to
dect ease for machmes takmg
smaller cows All council
members "ere asked to study
the matter and come up wtth
dehmte recommendations for
the new license program
Counc tl dtscussed at length
makmg a contrtbu!ton of $1.000
to the Mtddleport Ftre Dept
toward the purchase of tis ne"
eme r gency ambu l ance
Counctl Prestdent Fred Hoffman moved that the vtllage
make the contrtbutton to the

fund for th e emergency Audttor'sOfftce who told Grate
vehtcle He said he felt the the vtllage canno t legally make
vtllage should parhctpate
any contnbutJOn, so no further
The motton, seconded by action ts expected
Councilman Davtd Jenkms,
However, all vtllage offtctals
was left standmg when the commended the ftre departdtscussiOn became com- ment on 1ts work durmg the
phcated about the legaltty of diSCUSSIOn
The posstbthty of gtvmg the
such a contnbutaon and It was
ftre
department a contr tbuhon
agreed to contact the state
audttor's offtce m regard to the on the new emugency vehtcle
ma tter after a check had been from the revenue sharmg funds
made wtth sohct tor Bernard of the community also was
Fultz who recomme nded discussed However, 1t was
dtsclosed that fed eral revenue
further study.
Followmg the meeting, Clerk shar mg funds cannot be mtxed
- Treasurer Gene Grate called wt th other moneys In other
(Continued on page 8)
Harry Evans of the State

•

at

Now You Know

enttne

Although th ere are apprxmmately 1,600 spectes of
cockroaches known, only 62
spectes occur m North
Arnenca

Devoted To The lntere&amp;ts Of The Meigs-Mwon Area

VOL XXV NO 221

POMEROY MIOOLEPORl , OHIO

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1974

TENCENTS

PHONE 992 2156

President unmoveable on Watergate
. .,. .· · · · , . . . .
ews•. in Briefsf
-¥~
&lt;·~~=;·=·=·=·=·&gt;=·=-w:=:=:t
,.,.
.... . . . ........ ····· . '·=·······
. ···=·=·=·=.·=-:::&lt;·=·=·=···=·
.
:;:;

By Umted Press International
WASHINGTON - CONTINUING ITS SEVEN-MONTH
attempt to get Prestdent Ntxon 's tapes, the Senate Watergate
commtttee says they "would prove of urunense, perhaps
declSlve, value m deterrmnmg the extent of malfeasance m the
executtve branch " The commtttee ftled a 4().page brtef m the U
S Court of Appeals Monday, argwng for a reversal of a rulmg by
District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell, who refused to order Ntxon to
yteld the tapes
"The commtttee has recetved confltctmg evtdence as to the
extent of wrongdomg at the pmnacle of gove rnment, much of tl
through testunony authorized by the Prestdent hunself As our
statement demonstrates, there has been sertous, potenttall)
credtble evtdence presented to the C&lt;Jmrmttee tendmg to show
that the Chtef Executtve hunself was engaged m wrongdomg,"
the brtef swd
" . Thts eVIdence, whtch bears dll'ectly on matters m dispute
and appears the best evtdence m that regard, would prove of
urunense, perhaps dectstve value m deterrmnmg the extent of
malfeasance m the executtve branch "
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON and his energy
chtef, William E Sunon, say the Shah of Iran ts wrong m
claunmg Arab otlts secretly entermg the Uruted States . Simon
Monday called the Shah's statement "trresponstble and JUS!
plam ndiculous " Ntxon, at his news conference, carefully
avotded such strong langWlge, but he swd the Shah's mformatwn
is "different from ours."
"We are getttng substanttally less from the 011 producmg
countries m the Middle East than we were gettmg before the
embargo," NIXon swd The Shah satd on televlSlon Sunday (CBS.
TV ) "60 Minutes" that tankers carrymg Arab oU to other parts
of the world have been changmg destmattons and bringmg the
Urnted States "more otlthan any t une m the past "
CINCINNATI - VOTERS IN OHIO'S FIRST Congresstonal
Dtstrtct, thetr ballots vtewed as "Wate rgste yardsttcks," go to
the polls one week from today wtth natwnal pohltcal observers
ready to measure sentunent toward Prestdent Ntxon
Democrat Tom Luken and Republican Wilhs Gradison both
plan a flurry. of rmal week campatgmng m thetr quest for the
CongresSional seat gtven up by Republtcan Wtlltam Keatmg, now
prestdent of the Cincmnatt Enqwrer
COLUMBUS - PROFESSIONAL SANCTIONS were leVIed
against the Southwest Local School Distnct m Hamtlton County
Monday by the Ohto Educatton Assoctallon
The sancttons, destgned to "warn prospecttve teachers about
condthons m the district, " came after negotiations between the
dislrtct school board and teachers broke down Teachers began a
work stoppage m the dispute Frtday and contmued it Monday,
settmg up ptckets at all 11 school bmldings wtthin the district
The Southwest Local Classroom Teachers Assoctatwn charged
that teachers m recent years have been dismtssed for no ar&gt;parent reason, mcludmg two past prestdents of th e teachers'
association
WNDON- SECRETARY OF STATE Henry A Kissmger,
conftdent Syrta ts Wlllmg to begm talks With Israel, called on
Brtltsh leaders today before flymg on to the Middle East for his
fourth peace mtssion to the rcgwn
Kissmger was scheduled to meet thts mormng wtth Brttlsh
Foretgn Secretary Sir Alec Douglas-Home, energy chief Lord
Carrmgton and former Prune Mtn1ster Harold W1lson, leader of
the opposttton Labor party

SUPP·HOSE®
PANTYHOSE

and Rutland and at the off tee of
th e Metgs Cou nty Commasswners fo r v1ewmg and
onentatwn p110r to the
meeting
Mayor John Zerkle pomted
out that Middleport should
make plans to ~ec ure funds
for general street upgrading
so that the community may
grow Personnel of the Gavin
Plant were lost to Athens.
Gallipolis and other comtnunities. the mayor satd
Coun ctl gave the second of
three readmgs to a new ordmance deahng wtlh the razmg
of butldmgs m the commumty

SAN FRANCISCO - THE LACK of communtcatton from the
kidnapers of Patrtcta Hearst ts takmg tts toll on the emotions of
her parents For the ftrst tune smce negottaltons by tape
recording and televtsed news conference got started, the Symbionese Libera !ton Army has gone more than three days without
responding to pubhsher Randolph A Hearst's efforts to wm his
daughter's release
Hearst and his wtfe Catherme, desert bed by thetr children as
"Just dried out, but hopmg," mamlamed !hell' own silence at the
family estate m suburban Hillsborough. They no lifted the press
they would have no further statements "until there ts a major
development "

Gas costlier to
Pomeroy patrons
Columbta Gas of Ohto
customers m Pomeroy wtll
begin paymg more per month
for natural gas begmmng Aprtl
I , 11 was reported today The
adJustment, one and 95 onehundredths cents per 1,000
cubtc feet, reflects an mcrease
m the cost of gas to Columbta
Gas of Ohio from tts suppher It
wtll result m the mcrease of
about 29 cents a month for the
average customer who heats
wtth gas.
Rates of 316 Ohio communtties are bemg adjusted
under ,provtstons of thetr
contracts wttb the utility.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Cloudy Thursday with a
chance of rain or snow north
portion t' rlday and ram In
the south ending on Saturday. Highs In the 40s in the
north and the 50s In the south
on Thursday. Lows In !he
30s. Highs by Saturday In the
30s .and lows In the 20s.

YOUTH DIES
Mtchael Clark, 16-year.old
son of Gene and Evelyn Cook
Clark dted Monday mght at
Chtldren's Hospttal, Columbus.
Funeral a{rangements wtll be
an nounced by Ewing Funeral
Home

Instead Ntxon satd he offered
to meet personally wtth Spec tal
Prosecutor Leon Jaworski or to
answer written questions But
he satd Jaworskt "dtd not want
to proceed that way "
Rebable sources swd the
unpre cedented req ues t for
Ntxon to testtfy came on
"direct mstruchons" from the
gran d Jury which offered to
meet the Prestdent at the
Whtt e House or th e U S
Distnct Court House
In a prevtew of a hrtef hts
la\\yers wtll ft le wtth the House
Judtctary Commtttee, Ntxon
narrowly defmed the ground
for Impeachment as a
"cruntnal offense on th e part of
the prestdent "
Won't Resign
His vtew clashes wtth a study
by the comrmttee's legal staff
that a prestdent can be unpeached for fwlmg to fulfill his
co nstttuhon al duttes and
VIolatmg hts oath of offi ce
" It ts my behef that the
House, after tt conducts tts
( tmpeachment) mquiry, will
not reach that determrnat10n, "
he satd. "I do not expect to be
unpeached "
Ntxon hedged on whether he
wtll cooperate wtth the House
JudiCiary Commtltee's request
Although sc hools of the for Whtte House mformatton
Metgs Local School Dtstrtct He satd he would do nothmg to
were closed Monday, hopefully
to break the back of the near
eptdemtc of apparent flu·
rela led tllnesses among puptls,
absenteetsm across the dtstnct
sttll stood at 26 5 per cent
today
Supt George Hargraves satd
today attendance at six schools
had tmproved Tuesday but that
three had worsened
No tnjurtes were reported
Fnday, when tl was dectded
to close the dtstrtct's schools and no ctlahons were Issued m
Monday, absenteetsm stood at four trafftc acctd ents across
29 8 percent Hardest htl the county Monday
The shertff's Dept satd that
Tuesday was the Pomeroy
Elementary School wt!h 44 8 at 12 15 p m Monday Anthony
absent, or 176 out of 393 E Cardtllo, 17, Rt I, Langsstudents Harnsonvtlle School vtlle, was headed east on SR
had mcreased to a 37 8 ( 46 out 124 in Rutland when he crossed
of 127), and Rutland ha s ratlroad tracks whtch caused
worsened, gomg to 38 9 percent his left front ttre to blo" out.
Cardillo's auto went out of
(88 out of 226)
Some sc hools had tmproved control , crossed to the left stde
over the weekend and the of the road where t! htt an
Monday break For example , embankment, and stopped on
the Bradbury School had 44 the lawn of Mr and Mrs R
students out on Fnday but Pterce Damage was heavy to
today had dropped to 22 absent the auto's nght front fender ,
On Frtday the Sallsbury School front bumper and left and nght
had 81 abse nt whtch today had doors
Juamta J Roush, 47, Rl I,
dropped to 51
Mea nttme, the Sahsbury Shade, was slopped on SR 7
PTA which had earher post- bypass to make a left hand turn
poned a meetmg to honor past onto SR 124 when a followm g
prestdents
and
had auto, dnv en by Alta E
rescheduled tt for thts evemng, Murray , 56, Rt 2, Pomeroy.
dcctded to cancel the meetmg ran in to the rear of the Roush
altogether and not meet un!tl auto , ca usmg moderate
damage to both vehtcles The
March
The death of one Metgs Htgh acctdent occ urred at apScho ol student who had proxtmately 2 20 p m
Della M Cross, 17, of Racme,
become til Saturday was
was drtvmg on SR 124 m
reported
Hargraves satd that he wtll Racine when she stopped for a
be keepmg a watchful eye ca r stopped m front of her
tomorrow on the attendance when a lhtrd car drtven by
record to see whtch way the Constance L. Roush , 17, also of
Racme, ran mto the rear of the
tllness jS movmg
Cross auto Moderate damage
was reported to both vehicles
By HELEN THOMAS
WASHINGTON iUPI)
Prestdent Ntxon aga m Monday
mght took a tough Watergate
stand-narrowly defmmg the
gro unds fot unpeachment and
declarmg · "! do not expect to
be tmpeached "
It was th e Prestdent's ftrst
televised news conference
smce last October He ar&gt;peared confident, bul grun at
times durmg the 411-mmute
news conference, durmg which
he dtscussed hts future m offace, his taxes, the energy
crt sts, and hts party 's
prospects m vtew of
Watergate
The Prestdent reveaied that
he )lad been asked to testtfy
before a federa l grand Jury
mvesttgstmg the Watergate
scandals but swd he had
"respectfully de chned" on
constttuttonal grounds

Illness
showing
tiny drop

Bad tire
put auto
on lawn

JURY CALLED
Metgs County Common Pleas
Court Judge John C Bacon has
ca tied a sesston of the grand
Jury for March 4, 1974 begmmng at 9 a.m

CLOTHING OFFERED
Free Clothmg day wtll be held
at the Salvatton Army Home,
Butternut Ave., Thursday fr om
10 a m until noon. All area
residents are welcome

At12 55pm Monday Roy C.
Chevaher,62, Rl I, Reedsvtlle,
hadparkedhtsautom the Reed.
Brothers Store parkmg lot on
SR 124 when an untdenbfted
car backed mto the left stde of
hts vehtcle Mmor damage was
caused to Chevaher's auto

weaken th e presidency , to
compromtse th e nghts of
Watergate defendants or to
unpatr the spec1al prosecutor's
case In short, he mdicated that
the ktnd of cooperatton the
panel ts seekmg wtll not be
forthcommg wtthout a fight
On the pohttcal front, Ntxon
repeated that he wtll not restgn
even tf the Repubhcans meet
" dtsastrous defeat" m th e
November congressional elccttons "I wa nt my party to

succeed," he explamed, "but
more unportant I want the
prestdency to survive "
'We have a lot of work left to
do, more than three years left
to do It, and I am go mg to stay
here unttl I get tt done "
Recells Trutnan Win
He tssued an tmphctt call to
GOP candtdates to stay m his
camp even tf they have to run
aga tnst Democrats callmg for
Nixon's unpeachment or restgnatto n He satd he wanted

"deservtng " Republtcan
candtdates to wm, and he
recalled that when the GOP
made Prestdent Trllffian the
tssue m 1948 after Sen J
Wtlltam Fulbnght, D-Ark ,
for
Truman's
called
restgnatton, the party "took a
very bad hckmg "
"I think tt will be a very good
year for those candtdates who
stand for the admmtstratton,"
he satd
Ntxon told reporters that he

had no knowledge that his
personal lawyer, Herbert W
Kalmbach Jr , offered an
ambassadorship to J Ftfe
Symmgton Jr , of Lutervtlle,
Md , m exchange for a $100,000
campatgn contrtbutton m 1970
Kalmbach pleaded gutlty
earlter Monday to two VIolabans of elcctton laws, mcludmg
th e offer of the ambassadorship to Symmgton
I Continued on page 8)

He's Superintendent Ohlinger now
Terry Ohhnger, Phtlo, formerly of sc tence degree at Ohw Umverstty m 1966
Pomeroy and Mtddleport and a former and hts Master's Degree m school ademplo) e of the Metgs Loca l School mmtstra!ton from 0 U m 1970
Dtstrtct, has been named superintendent
Ohhnger comments that he has enof the Frankhn Loca l School Dtslrtet ef- JOyed hts past asstgnment m the Frankhn
fecbvc next Aug l
School Dtstnct and ts lookmg forward to
Ohhnger, the son of Mr and Mrs
hts new role He expressed a destre to
Herm an Oh ltn ger 112 Condor St , contmue progress the school system has
Pomeroy, ts the husband of the former been makmg over the past year
Coleen Wtlson of Mtddleport They have
Don Patsley, Frankhn Local Board of
two sons, Jay Wtlson, 5, and Jon Wayne, 2
The Frankhn Local District takes tn Educatton Prestdent, in makmg the anan area of 50 square m1Ies and has an nouncement of Ohlinger's promotton said
enrollmen t of approximately 2,800 the board of educatton feels that Ohlmger
students, kmdergarten through 12 There hold s the personal and professional
are seven bmldmgs m the dtstrtct - four qualtties the board deems tmportant to the
elementa ry , two JUnt or htgh butldmgs and dtstrict
Ohhnger holds professwnal memPhtlo Htgh School
bershtp
m the Ohto Secondary Prmctpals
Formerly a lugh school teacher and
Assn
,
the
Duncan Falls-Phtlo Lions Club,
federal program coordmator m the Metgs
Local Sc hool Dtslrtct, Ohhnger wen t to the ts acttve m the Fellowship of Chrtsban
Franklin Local Distract as ass ista nt Athletes and ts a member of the North
pnncapal and then was named assistant Terrace Church of Chrtst m Zanesvtlle.
The two older brothers of Ohlinger,
prtnctpal at Phtlo Htgh School
A 1962 graduate of Pomeroy Htgh Phtlhp and Wilham, restde m the Pomeroy
Sc hool, Ohlmger recetved ht s bachelor of area

\
)

TERRY OHLINGER

Night watchman needed
Pollee Chtef Jed Webster told
the Pomeroy Chamb er of
th e
Commerce Monday
busmess comm umty badly
needs a mght watchman to cut
down crtme
The veteran offtcer spoke
followmg the noon lun cheon at
the Metgs Inn He sa td ftve
"front door" B&amp;Es have occurred m the past ft ve weeks m
the vtllage
Webster satd he would help
the chamber many way when a
mgh t watchman ts htred He
also satd he beheved tne
merchants want a mght wa tchman on duly. Webster offered
to asstst m mtervtewmg apphcants and sa td he would
"bend over backwards " to
help
The chamber for several
weeks has been accept mg
apphcahons for the [Ob The
salary would depend entirely
upon the local merchants'
collections
Webster satd tl would be
necessary for the watchman to
attend school as requtred by
law He would hav~ne year to
take the reqwred tratrtmg The
watchman would be allowed to
rtde 1n the pollee crutser but
would not be allowed to operate
tt smce he would not be patd by

the vtilage
Earl Ingels, prestdent, mvtted persons mterested 1n the
JOb to place thetr apphcations
wtth Mrs Carolyn Thomas,
secretary The chamber office
IS l&lt;x:ated on the ground floor of
the courthouse
In other busmess, Ingels
announced that the excursiOn
boat, "Chaperone" had been
cha rte red for a four hour
crutse on the Ohto May 18,
ieavmg Pomeroy at 9 a.m
Ttckets are $6 per person or
$10 a couple and may be purchased at the cham ber offtce
Mustc wtll be provtded by
Armand at the organ Refreshments wtll also be avatlabie
There are only 400 ttckets
ava ilable for the cruase
Ingels also reported that he
has been mformed that Mtddleport Mer chants are In terested m a stdewalk sale
dunng Regatta weekend He
has had no response from
Pomeroy merchants Ingels
suggested that tf Pomeroy
merchants wtsh to form a
merchants assocta!ton to call
the chamber office
The chambe r agreed to
support a clean-up campatgn
tmltated by Mrs Margaret
Follrod and wtll dtrecl a letter
.

Drug law abuse char.·u;ed
~·

Robert Alexander, Rt 2,
Albany, has been charged '"
Metgs County Court wtlh three
counts related to vtolatton of
drug laws stemmmg from a
February 8 ratd on hts house by
the Metgs County Shenff's
Dept. whtch resulted 1n the
LOCAL TEMP
conflsca hon of $15,000 worth of
The temperature m down- drugs and manjuana
town Pomeroy at II a m
Alexander ha s been charged
Tuesday was 27 degrees under w1th not bemg a manufacturer,
sunny sktes
w~olesaler, ,practitiOner ,

to Pomeroy Vtllage Counctl 1n
regard to 1ts support.
fngels also satd a theme for
thts year's Regatta ts needed
The board of dtrectors wtll
meet Monday, March 4 at noon
at the Metgs Inn
Ralph Welker, who IS a
State
ca ndtdate
for
Representattve m the May
Pnmary met wtth the
chambe r Welker will be

Mrs. Parker dies
RUTLAND - Mrs Betty
Jean Parker, 45, Salem Sl ,
Rutland, dted Monday at the
Holzer Medical Center
She was born July 11, 1928, in
Rutland, to Roy F and Reva
Smder Snowden She was
marrted to Homer Parker, who
survtves , March 17, 1947
Mrs Parker was a member
of the Rutland Fr iendly
Gardeners and officer of
Reg ton lT Ohio Assoctahon of
Garden Clubs She was an
offtcer m the Leadmg Creek
Conservancy Distrtct, past
officer of Metgs County TB and
Health Assoctalton and was
active m many school and
communtty events
In addthon to her hilllband
and parents, she ts survtved by
one daughter, Mrs. James

Veterans Memorial Hospital
pharmacist or owner of a
ADMISSIONS - Doro thy
pharmacy or other person
Shambhn,
Dexter, Barbara
authonzed to admtmster or
Prat
t,
Syracuse;
Edward
dtspense nar cotic drugs ,
Athens,
Edtth
McCoy,
Batley,
havmg m hts possess1on, w1th
mtent
to
produce Syracuse
DISCHARGES- Roy Tracy,
hallucmattons or tllusions,
Smtih, Ina Massar,
Carroll
martjuana, and possessmg for
Jean
Smtih,
Pearl Hoffman,
sale an hallucmogen
Alexander has been bound James Hemsley, Georgta
over to the grand Jury on the Oller, Delbert Teaford, Steven
charges ftled by Metgs County Ra ymond, Glenna Little,
Shertff Robert C Hartenhach Worley Haley
I

WlOpposed m May Weiker
stated that "if everyone works
together" hts elechon can
become a reahty
Others attendmg Monday's
meeting were John Weeks,
Rtchard Chambers, f\ichard
Poulm, Nor bet Compton, Vtrgil
Teaford, Wendell Hoover,
Ralph Graves, Bob Jacobs,
Jack Kerr, Mrs Thomas,
Beulah Jones and Kahe Crow

(Linda Sue) Carpenter , Reedsville, two brothers, Leland,
Pamesvtlle, and Caroll,
Galltpolis, two ststers, Mrs
Bruce (Joan) May, Rutland,
and Mrs. Charles (Phy IllS )
Stmpkms, Columbus; one
grandson, Jaymes Carpenter,
Reedsville, and several meces
and nephews
She attended the Rutland
Church of Chrtst where servtces will be conducted Thurs·
day at 2 p.m by the Rev. Floyd
E. Grunm Burtal wtll follow m
the Metgs Memory Gardens
Frtends may call anytune
after 1a m Wednesday until12
noon Thursday at !be Walker
Funeral Home, Rutland The
body wtll lie m state at the
church prior to the funeral
RECORD SALES
DAYTON,Ohio (UPI)- The
Dayco Corp
announced
Monday record ftrst.&lt;Juarter
sales of $101 88 millton for !be
ftrst quarter of 1973, a 14 per
cent mcrease over the ftrst
three months of last year Net
proftts, after taxes, were $1.65
mtlhon, up 4 per cent from the
same 1973 ,pertod. Prtmary
earmngs per' share for the ftrst
quarter were 50 cents, compared wt~ 48 cents Ia~ year.

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