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12- The Daily S.ntinel, Middleport-POIIjeroy, 0., .Feb. 16, 1971'

ews.:in Brie

Enemy Massing Troops, Firepower

.
'
SAIGON ( UPI)The U.S.
command reported today foW'
fresh divisions of North Vietna·
mese troops are being pumped
into the northern ,part of South
Vietnam at a rate which would
give the Communists greater
strength thal\,in 1968 when they
launched their great Tel , of.
fensive.
,
There have been widespread
preedictions U1e Communists
would launch a major offensive
timed to coincide with President Nixon's visit to Peking on
Monday and that the record
bombing campaign would go
on indefinitely to blunt it as
much as possible.
'

Underlining the seriousness
of the threat, military sources
said North Vietnamese infiltration·is double the rate of a
year ago, the Communists will
add 66,000 men to their forces
this year and heavy artillery is
moving southward ifUj)
western Quang Tri province.
MiUtary SOW'ces said most
indications were that the
Communists might begin an
offensive next Monday but that
they were uncertain of the
timing. Some captured documents indicated the big push
might be held of! until Sep- .
!ember when U.S. troop
strength in Vietnam will be

129 MILL STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

very low.
The

massive

american

bombing campaign against the
buildup slowed somewhat
today in the first hours after
the allied ~our cease-lire
called for Tel, the lunar new
year, but it was emphasized
the U.S. raids will continue
while a threat exists.

All.ied spokesmen said that
although the three Communist
attacks against. U.S. troops
during the truce which ended
at6p.m. ( 6 a.m. EST) Tuesday
matched two previous lows,
South Vietnamese troops , and
civilians suffered.
The Saigon government re•
ported 43 Viet Cong and North

Vietnamese . attacks against
the South Vietnamese during ·
the truce and 15 other assaults ·
since a unilateral four-day
Conununist cease-lire began at
1 a.m. (1 p.m. EST) Monday.
Vietnamese spokesmen said
in all, 'rl South Vietnamese
troops were kUied, 37 wounded
and 15 were missing.

Board Continues Policies
The Eastern Local School
District board of education
Tuesday night voted to continue iIs policy of supporting
with money the PTA and other
school oriented organizations
in their projects.
The board generally s~nds
up to $150 on projects of these
organizations, and with some
·groups, such as 'the band
boosters, the board allotment
is $300 on projects deemed
worthy of assistance . The
•lloard agreed to continue this
policy.
Plans were made to draw up
specifications on two new

school buses and the annual
trip of the senior class to
Washington, D. C, and New
York City was approved. An
invitation was extended to
attend the showing of a movie
"To Touch a Child" at a
meeting of the Chester PTA at
8:30 p.m. Monday at the
Chester Grade School.
Coaches were authorized to
attend the state basketball
tournament in Columbus on
March 24 and it was agreed to
write the State Department of
Education for excused absences for Jan. 28 and 31 when
the schools of the district were

closed due to bad weather.
Supt. John Riebel was
authorized to contact architectural firms for advice on
what additions could bEi made
lo the high school and keep the
cost within the limitations of
the tax structure of the district.
Four parents from Tuppers
Plains discussed an alleged
teacher-t;tudent problem at the
Tuppers Plains Elementary
School. Supt. Riebel was asked
to look into the matter.
Mrs . , Carla
Salser,
representing the Teachers
Assn . received several
recommendations to the board
by the teachers, one of which
was partial payment by the
board on insurance premiums.
None of these · recom.
mendations presented at an
earlier meeting was acted upon
Tuesday night.
Attending the meeting at the
high school were Supt. Riebel,
Principal Bob Ord , Clerk
Creston Newland, and board
Union, which has taken an ac- members I. 0. JcCoy, Roger
tive part in questioning the Epple, Oris Smith, Clyde Kuhn,
constitutionality of ,the and Howard Caldwell, Jr.
shootings, said in Columbus
ij""'
!i'"l;"
~
Tuesday night the appellate :-:•!•!o.o•'•'-'•'•'•'.
,o;.•,•~••• •••••••••••••
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court ruling was significant
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
because "it will present the
Ohio Extended Outlook first opportunity to call Ohio
through Sunday:
Friday
National Guardsmen to the
witness stand.''
Cloudy and chance of rain
or snow Friday. Partly
"I think It's quite important
that a federal court has beld
cloudy and colder Saturday
that when the armed forces of
with a chance of snow
the state are used in attemptflurries northeast, becoming
ing to disperse any public gathfair Sunday. Highs Friday In
ering, the guardsmen will be
the 30s north and 40s south,
subject to federal condropping to upper 20s and
stitutional standards ,"
low 30s north and 35 to 40
Wolman said.
south Saturday and Sunday.
The suit that brought about
Lows early Friday in upper
Tuesday's action was filed by
20s and low 30s, dropping to
Craig Morgan, student body
teens and 20s Saturday and
president at the time of the 1970 Sunday mornings.
shootings; Thorn Dickerson · ·:::·~·""'"""')!
.··'p::;::::::::m~~w&gt;;~,,~
.. . . . :-. ·~~x .;::.-:-.
and Willism Slocwn.
.•.• ... ··:~3~;:;:.
............•~•.....• ! ·»
•.·~·~·!·!·' .·!·!·!oY.·!·!·.·~·!O:·
The suit also charged the
guardsmen violated students'
Alfred
rights by. killing and wounding
them, and that sending the
Social Note.~
troops to the campus was·' 'premature." It asked the court to
Sunday school attendance on
declare unconstitutional the Feb. 13 was 34, the offering
Ohio law which grants 'immu- $13.06. Worship services were
nity from criminal prosecution held at 11, with the Rev. Lehfor the troops Involved in con- man speaking from Second
trolling the disorders on the Timothy, 2:1-21, "Skilled
campus.
, Workers for the Lord." AtThe three judges of the ap- tendance was 32.
pellste court refused to grant
.Worl~ Day of Prayer Ser·
those requests in the suits.
VJces w1ll be held at the church
here on Friday evening, March
3, beginning at 7:45 with all the
churches in tbe Ouster invited
to participate. Anyone is
welcome, from any church,
also. Mrs. June Stearna of the
Alfred Women's Society will be
the leader.
Saturday guests of the
Honacher-Cappel family were
Mr. and Mrs. John Honacher
Nothing has been said by and family of Columbus.
· either of us as yet to acknowl- Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost
edge the affair but I can tell
f
by the smiling ~yes, laughing and family o Sugar Grove, 0.,
at nQthin~. heavy breathing were ~day g~sts of Mrs.
and occaswnal sigh or catch· Genevieve Guthne and Mrs.
ing of the breath that the .Ella Yost. Mrs. Yost, who had
feelings are mutual. It has spent the past month at the
been a heavy strain on my Guthrie home, returned to
health. Can't eat, can't sleep, Sugar Grove with the Yost
,
can 't concen t ra t e, an d 1't famUy.
shows on me. Could this be
construed a s em 0 t i 0 n a 1 Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swartz
strain ?
and family of Marietta, 0.,
visited tbeir parents, Mr. and
Dear Reader- The r e are Mrs. Hobart Swartz, and Nina
an, awful lo~ of people who Robinson and Clara Follrod on
have ·new romances and new Sunda•.
,
mamages even after having
had heart attacks. There is
TWO AT HAYES
no question but what emo.
lions do affect the heart and Two men from Me1gs County
your observation that your were forwarded to Fo.rt Hay.es,
h
1 b
f
d
eart speeds up is perfectly Co urn us, or prem uclton
valid, It is an indication of physical examinations Moothe tncreased work of the day the Meigs County
heart and circulation .in re- Sele~tive Service reported.
sponse to emottonal sltmuia·
tion. Don't let· it bother you ,
THREE FINED
Lovemaking carried to its Fined by Middleport Mayor
ulllmate con c I us ion also John Zerkle Tuesday night
causes a, rise in blood pressure and heart rate and it were Harold Sa!llllly little, 36,
does in de e d increase the $100andcosts and three days in
work of the heart. This is jail, on conviction of driving
one reason why it is a good while intoxicated; James P.
1dea for individuals who are Grueser, 73, Middleport, $5 and
s(iii interested in life and costs, Improper backing, and
romance to stay in reasonably good physical condition. Norman 0 . Staats, 21, MidThat means maintaining a dleport, $10 and costs, running
proper sensible exercise pro- a red light.
gram and w e i g h t control.
Put plainly. it can have an
influence on one's love life.
It can be a lot more frustrating and damaging to a
person's total physical health
to love and be unloved . Don '!
"orget that the psychic 01· ' Auto Sales
"
emotwnal health ·is an im· 196J CHEVROLET Impala,
portant I actor in physical
aut~matlc lransmissio·n. air
health and a good satisfying
condltl?ne&lt;l. power steering,
healthy cmollonal relationgood tt~es , SJ95 . Phone 992271 8..
ship hetwc~n l"•o people is
2-16-Jtc
~ood . lnr the psychk· ht•allh .

d
c
. . ' uar smen an
G
1

·

Prices Good Today Thru Sat. Feb. 19th

While Quantities Last !

Civilian casualtieS totaled 10
killed, 13 wolmded and six
missing ,during the truce.
Nearly ail the civlllliil casualties came in a 11kound mortar
attack against Phu My district
town on the central coast. Ten
civilians were killed and 12
were injured.
The level of air raids was
down in the flrst.12 to 18 hours
after the trilce ended. The
Vietnamese air force which
had been flytng 100 strikes a
day flew none.
.
American jet fighterbombers which hit 242 targets
In the 12 hours leading up to the
truce Dew 46 raids in the 12
hours following it.
The B52s flytng both 5,00().
mile missions. from Guam in
the Pacific and shorter hauls
from Thailand struck seven'
times inSide South Vietnam in
the 18 bours after the end of the
truce. They had flown nine
such missions in the six hours
prior to the Tet cease-lire.
SUIT FILED
A suit for money has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Woodstream
Corp., Lititz, Pa., against
DecbrCorp., Middleport, in the
amount of $2,094.78 plus interest and costs.

RUGS
TWEED PATTERNS

eREG. 113.99

ALUMINUM

FOIL
el2"x25 FT.

INFANTS

TRAININ·G
PANTS

CINCINNATI (UPI) - A
federal appeals court has
opened the way for Ohio
National Guardsmen to
publicly testify for the first
time about the events of May 4,
1970, when four Kent State
.University students \ver~ shot
to death by troops. liut it also
said the guardsmen cannot be
prosecuted no matter what that
testimony reveals.
The U. S. Sixth Circuit Court
of Appeals, in reply to a suit
filed by three Kent State students, said Tuesday the
specific question of what kind
of training Guardsmen receive
·will be the subject of fW'ther
hearings in U.S. District Court
at Cleveland.
The court dismissed two other parts of the threei)ronged
suit.
The court said what needs to
be settled is whether there is q
pattern of training in the Ohio
National Guard which "require
or make inevitable the ll,!le of
fatal force in suppressing civilian disorders ... (even when)
the total circumstances at ,the
critical time are such that nonlethal force would suffice to restore order and the use of lethal
force is not reasonably necessary."

Benson Woimar., executive
director of the Ohio chapter of
the American CivU Liberties

00 . .

(Continued from 'page 1) 1
west r,epresentati;ve of the National Audubon Society, war~
today that pollution from oil !a becoming •1111Jor problem In
Ohio River. ''We grant that there are other forms ol pollutloD,
oil and saltwater Is a very serioua(llleln th~Ohlo River ValleJo~ ·
Franson said in a atatement iasued fromhlaalflcebefe.
"Anyone that feels that )hla is oot a problem should take
field survey," he added. "We have known about itfor a long
but because of public, political and Industrial fantasy
everything is OK, nobody i)MeS."

.

COLUMBUS -STATE DEMocRATIC &lt;hairmao .WUilaJD
A. Lavelle said today Democrats would"wln control Ql tbe Oh~
House by a 23-!leat margin In November and may even gain li
one-vote majority in the Senate.
_
;; .
Lavelle, who dlacussed politics at a breakfast news con:
lerence, said capturing cootrol of the 99-member ohio ~II! .
part of a ''1118jor offensive to win a majoritY In the ObiO.Generd!
Assembly." Republicans presently hold a majority in both
chambers of the General ASSembly. 'Jbe GOP has a04-45 edge I!J
the House and a 2D-13majority In the Senate.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Names of patients admitted
have been temporarily
dlacontinued for publication.
Discharges: Charles King,
.Stanford Powell, Clarence
Schurman and Tony Lewis.

PILLOW

Dear Or. Lamb-! enjoy
reading your column and I
had to make this comment
on the flat chest questions. I
have heard a saymg, "What
God has forgotten, you can
build with cotton ."

CASES
REG. 1.44
PR.

PLASTIC

"DRAPES
3 PC. SET

•fULLY LINED

PR.

NYLON
FLUFF TIP

MEIGS THEATRE
,.

BROOMS
REG. ggc

Dear Reader- [ am sure
that many people will get a
chuckle out of your letter. I
might add that it is also
safer than silicone injections,
cosmetic surgery and a lot
of other things .
Dear Dr. Lamb-My friend
has high blood pressure for
which medication is taken. I
have learned that an electro·
cardiogram was taken but
· do not know the res u Its .
From this 1 presume there
is a heart c 0 0 d it i 0 n.. My
question is how dangerous
is it to be c a r r yin g on a
romance in this condition in
an age bracket of :;o to Sa? I
know now wbat they mean
when they sar it is "an affair
of the heart ,' as mine I which
is normal) really beats too
fast lor comfort.

Tonight &amp; Thursday
February 16·17
NOT OPEN

Friday &amp; S~turdoy
February 18·19
THE ABOMINABLE
DR. PHIBES
(Techrilcolor)
Vincent Price

Joseph Cotton
Plus
THE DESERTER
(Technicolor)
Bekim Fehmiu
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
'

~

Devoted To The lntere.l8 Of The Meig&amp;-Mmon Area

· VOL. XXIV NO. 217

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Tbe U. S. Department of
Labor today announced approval of $377,120 in Federal
funds for continuation of two of
its Operation Mainstream
projecls in rural Ohio areas for
approximately one year. One Is
located in western Meigs
County.
The projects will provide
jobs and training for a total of
105 chronically unemployed
adults -a large percentage of
them persons over 55 years of
age ~ who will perform
community ·improvement

WARDROBES
BASE CABINOS
Heavy gauge steel- white,

av~do

and wood-

. .~
SERVICE &lt;Xl~ ,
presented to Richard Duckworth, left, by ·
State Representative ~!\telker Wednesday In recognition of Uuckworth's faithful service .
as clerk of Syracuse Village for 38 years. The certificate was from the Ohio House of
,~tdN~\1\i!tPoni.nblP.of ~seni.ative Welker. This is oniy the.~econd time ·
liil!t a"cettlfleate hat beenlslued in Melg&amp;COunty.

·toile finishe$.

22.50 20" Utility Cabinets .
Sale 18.00
29.95 24" Utility Cabinets .
Salt 24.00
34.00 30" Utility C._b)Aits ·
Salt~.~ .
22.50 20" Base Cabinets ..
Sale 18.00
32.50 24" Base Cabinets - .
Solo M.SO
34.00 30" Base Cabinets . .
Sole 21.00
24.00 22"'Wardrobes
Sale 19.00
29.95 :tO" WardrobeS
Sole 24.09
34.00 l6" Wardrobes
Sale 28.00
49.95 36" Wardrobes
Sale '40.00
59.95 42" Wardrobes
Sale 48.00
59.95 l6" Wardrobes
Sole 48.00
J9.00 42" Wudrobes
Sole ~.00
19.00 l6" Chine C.blnets . . . . . . Sale 12.00
59.oo 30" China Cabinots - .. - .. S.le 47.00
69.00 42" Chine C.blnets . . . . . - Sale ~.oo
69.00 24" Wood Top llllse Coblneb .. - Sale 49.00
101:oo 40" Chino Cobinats - ... - . Sale 88.00
54.00 l6" China Cabinets . . . . . - Sole 44.00

•

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•

ews.. ln Briefi
By Ualted Pressllllernllllonal
NASSAU, BAHAMAS- HOWARD HUGHES has abandoned
his Bahamian hotel suite where he has secluded himself for the
past year and a half, it was announced today. The whereabouts
Wld destination of the secretive billionaire were unknown.
A spokesman for the Brltalnnia Beach Hotel on Paradise
Island said Hughes left suddenly Tuesday afternoon and his staff
left a short time later .

Elberfeld• Annex
Middle Block

'))

'

'

'

r

··-

Sa-le!

West Bend's new Drum Filter
Humidifier automatically replaces
moisture that winter heating drains
from your home or office. Restores -..,~,
comfort level.
·

Committee

In Action

An informal meeting of the
Governor 's Traffic Safety
Committee was conducted by
Lt. Ernest Wigglesworth,
commander of the Gallipolis
Post, State Highway Patrol, at
the Meigs Inn at Pomeroy
Wednesday night.
Ed Durst was appointed to
WASH~GTON -CHICKEN AND TIJRKEY production will
rise this year but prices - which normally soften when attend a meeting in Columbus
production turns up - will go up too, Agriculture Department March 15 where he will learn
economists predicted today. Economists writing in a "Poultry more details about organizing
and Egg Situation" summary said that broiler and chicken a permanent local corrimittee.
Following the· Columbus
prices would be buoyed, despite higher production, by factors
session, Durst will schedule
including smaller supplies of pork, higher consumer incomes,
another local meeting when a
·and higher prices for red meats.
'
steering committee leading to
the Governor's Committee on
COLUMBUS -GOV. JOHN J. GILLIGAN says he will take Highway Safety will be apan active part in the legislative 'campaigns this year as pointed.
Democrala try to get a majority In at least one chamber of the
Attending last night were
Ohio General Assembly. "Uke the old line goes - I will come Sheriff Robert Hartenbach ,
Into our ~tes· districts If they want me, to endorse them or . James Bailey; superintendent
deno1111ce them, whatever does the 11101( good," GUllgan said · of the State Highway Departjokingly, In reference to unpopularity he has gained with some of ment in Meigs County;
his financial programs, such aa the state income tax.
Maurice Reed, Reedsville Fire
State Democratic Chairman Willism Lavelle has said the Dept.; Don Beegle, Veteran•
party could Win 61 of the 99 House seats. The RejlubllcBilll now Memorial Hospital; Frank
hold a 04-45 edge there. GUllgan said he does not believe the in· Cleland, Racine Postmaster;
come tax will hurt Democrats' chances In the 1972 election. "It is Rolland Crabtree, Meigs
evident to WI that the "people 1lf Ohio already have begun' to un- County Highway Department;
derstand that If we are to have adequate alate services, more David, Koblentz, president of
revenue is needed and the income tax is the most equitable the Meigs County Trustees
Assn., Jed Webster, Pomeroy
~hlcle," the .governor said.
''Thousanda of Ohioans were terrified at the prospect of an police chief; Gene Riggs, life
Income tax," be said. ''Now they find It does not hit them as hard insurance agent; Clarence
as they !eared, and we have to demonstrate that their money will Price, Agriculture
Stabilization and Conservation
be well apeot."
office; Prosecuting Attorney
Bernard Fultz, Ed Durst,
SPACE CENTER- AMERICA'S LAST PLANNED trip to
Citizens National Bank emtltemoon,Apollo 17, will leave earth at night Dec. 6, aiming for a ploye, and Lt. Wigglesworth.
craggy area of steep mountains where astronauts hope to find the
Ali interested persons should
oldCII rocks on the moon, the space agency announced Wedcontact Bernard Fultz.
nesday.
Emergency squad and fire
It will be the first lima an Apollo spaceship has a scheduled
department members are
launching In darkness. The liftoff time is 9:38 p. m. EST from
especially asked to participate
Cape Kemedy, Fla.
in the committee.
·

Bvtomatlc

HUMIDIFIERS

Controlled and filtered. moist air
prevents dry air damage. keeps you
comfortable with less heat and more
clean air . Automatic shut off and
refill indicator. Humidifies 2500 sq.

ft.

'Strip Mining Program Set

Also Small
Room Size Humidifiers

Meigs Countiana are invited
to a two-day program ~n strip
mining to be held at the First
United Methodist Church in
Athens Friday and Saturday.
Friday's session :will start at
7:341 p.m. and Saturday there
will be aften!Oon ·and evening
IM'ssions. Filma and slidei' on
~trip mining will be shown and
U. S. Congressman Ken
Hecltler of West Virginia' is
experted to dllcuas "Strip
· Mining in Appalachia." ,
There will he llv-. m!••'• by

Furniture Department
3rd Floor
•
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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'

.

•'

I

Weather

Utopia is a combination cfl.
the Greek · words "ou" (not)
and · "topos" (place), and
means ''nowhere." ·

PHONE 992-2156

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1972

tasks such as flood control and
road repair work.
Fifty-live will be enrolled in
a project operated by the
Leading Creek Conservancy
District, headquartered in
Rulland, which will receive
$209,000 for wages and other
costs (Project No. Ma-()558-37).
In lhe_one year period ending
last July 20, this project placed
135 of its enrollees on regular
jobs at an average weekly
wage of $9a.62. Since there
were about three persons
placed during the year for each

enrollment "slot," many more
than &gt;5 persons benefitted.
One of those placed received
a job at $324 a week. Five of the
persons receiving jobs were on
parole.
·
Work was performed on
streams and bridges in the
conservancy district. Some of
the enrolees learned skills as
assistant engineers and
assistant surveyors. Enrollees
who were not high school
graduates were encouraged lo
work for GED certificates.
The other Ohio project ap-

proved under Operation
Mainstream will provide aO
training opportunities at a
Federal cost of $168,120 in
Athens, Hocking and Perry
counties, under sponsorship of
the Tri-County Community
Action Program, headquar·
tered in Logan.
Enrollees in this project will
work a maximum of 35 hours a
week at $1.7a an hour on such
div erse tasks as clearing
brush,_ improving roads,
eliminating flood areas on
roads, and helping in hospitals .

Cloudy today, snow likely
southeast. Not so cold north.
Light snow likely tonight,
possibly beginning extreme
west portion before evening.
Low tonight in upper 20s and ·
low 30s. Friday cloudy and
chance of snow. High in 30s and
tow 408 ·
TEN CENTS

I Project No. M5-0559-37 ).

Operation Mainstream is a
Labor Department program
especially designed to help
ch roni ca lly unemployed
residenls of small towns and
rur• l areas by giving them
opportunities to work on
projects that benefit their own
and nearby communities.
Participants must be from
families with incomes below
the poverty level. Guidelines
call for a significant number to
be &gt;5 years or older.

UTILITY CABINETS

•
·.

Now You Know ·

On Sale At Elberfelds New Annex
In The

Old Maxim Solves
Older Problem
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

~-~

Check the Values of Area Stores Today!

Wearing Apparel For Your Fami~ a_
nd ·Furnishings
For Your Home

o:,O ' o ' o ' o ' O' o ' o' o "" 0.0 ... L ...

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POST GAME DANCE
RACINE - A dance will be
held at the Racine Junioc High
School Saturday following the ·
Southern
High
School
Where tides come twice :a
basketball game. Music wm be day, the interval between
by "Foxx". The dance is high and low water Is a little
sponsored by the senior claS:S. more than six hours.

DR.I.AWRENCE E.I.AMB

PRINTED

. More than 1.6 mlillon
'Americana are afflicted with
stroke, one of the major c.Wdiovascuiar diseases. Your
Heart Fund· contributions
support vital' programs Of
research and rehabilitation tO
control this major cause ~f
death and disability .

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·-·-..
·----·- ·. ·-..
- .. ·...........
.
.
.
......
----~--··-.,.-·~·-

Make Elberfelds In Pomeroy Your Shopping Center

Tell Kent Story

ROOM SIZE

• • •

r

••

PRICE JACKED UP
, the Morris' Brothers, Ivydale,
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)
w. Va.; Mike Sweeney, Henry Doberston was · ofCharleston ;
Art
Saxe, fered $1 by the city for a 25Millfield, Ohio; John Butler, of · foot piece of his property on
No~walk, and others.
which a sewer line would
run.
Doherston thought · the
DIVORCE ASKED
price was a bit stingy, 10 he ·
Pearlie F. Jewell, Rutland, went to ~ourt. ' Wednesday
has filed suit for divorce in Summit C~unty Court Judge
Meigs County Collllijon Pleas L. A. Lombardl ·ordered the
Co!lrl against Patricia Jewell, city to pay Doberston $18,600
Pomerqy, charging gross for the land.
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.
·.·:·.·&gt;:·.·.·.·.-:·.· ·•

•

Peking
By STEWART HENSLEY
WASHINGTON (UP!) Pli!lldent NixOn lleparts today
for Peking and unprecedented
talks with top cqinese officials.
·n marks the end of more than
20 years ·of bitter cold war
between· the two superpowers
and may offer hope for peace In
IW'buient Asia.
Before departure,
ceremonies were to be held on
the White House grounds .
Nixon, his wife Pat, and a
small group of top advisers,
were scheduled to spend
tonight and Friday in Hawaii,
Saturday in Guam and arrive
in Olin a Sunday.
The President's dramatic
20,395-mile pilgrimage, timed
and ~taged to make maximwn
use of television, Is being
watched with intense interest
throughout the world because
of the maJor implications that
might follow any real progress
towards ''normalizing" relations lietween the world's most
populous nation and the
world's
most
powerful
democracy.
Russia Is Concerned
Russia is concerned that the
United States and China may
decide to make common cause
against the Kremlin. Small
nations , in Asia, Communist
and anti-Conununist alike, are
.
over the polisibUity of
SinoAmerican agr.eements
which might jeopardize their
political futures. And in the
Middle East and Europe, there
is intense speculation as to
whether the Soviet Union's
increased preoccupation with
Asia will alter the Kreinlin's
policy and strategy on her
western and southern front.
For his part, Nixon said:
"I go to Peking without
illusions . But I go nevertheless
committed to the improvement
of relations between our two
countries, for the sake of our
two peoples and the people of
the world. The course we and
the Otinese have chosen has
(Continued on page 16)

FIVE MISHAPS
The Gallla-Melgs Post
State Highway Patrol Investigated five minor traffic
mishaps this morning
following the latest snowfall
of lhe winter.
Three accidents occurred
on Ingles Hill, southwest of
Gallipolis and two were in
Meigs County. One of the
Meigs County ,.. accidents
involved a Southern. Local
School bus. Lt. Ernest
Wigglesworth, post commander, said no one was
injured.

Gas Utilities Ordered
To Hedge for Shortage

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio Wedileaday granted
permission for natural gas
companies to refuse service to
new customers and ordered the
firms to quit seeking consumers because of a possible
~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::».::::::::::::8~~
gas shortage in Ohio this year.
LOCAL TEMPS
"Ohio natural gas companies
The temperature in down- were ord~red to cease all protown Pomeroy at II a. m. today motional activities designed to
was 38 degrees under snowy acquire new customers or increase sales to existing custoskies.

mers," said Henry W. Eckhart,
conunission chairman, ·
"Acommission invesligation
to determine the supply of natW'ai gas within the state of
Ohio revealed that an adequate
supply to meet the demands of
Ohio customers is not' aliSl!l"· '
ed," Eckhart said. "Restriclions upon new customers and
upon customers contemplating
substantial increases appear to
be justified.''
Eckhart said the ruling halt-

TIIROWME THE BALLCUZZ- Bill , Andy and Tony Vaughan, left to right, first cousins,
started one game for the Meigs Marauders this season and usually at least once an evening are
in action together. Tony, a senior, age 17, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Vautihan, Martin St.,
Pomeroy ; Andy, 1&amp;-year old junior, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Vaughan, Main St.,
Pomeroy, and Bill, !&amp;.year old junior, is the son of Mr . and Mrs. Richard W. Vaughan, So . Third
Ave., Middleport. Their cousin act likely isn't duplicated often in the nation 's high schools this
year, if at all.

ing promotional activities
would affect "all Ohio natural
gas · companies
·wblch
distribute more than t,eeo Mcf
per day." An Mcf Is 1,000 cubic
feet.
"Every Ohio natural gas compahy distributing more than
2,000 Mcf per day mul!l submit
detailed plans for new or in·
creased peaksaVing storage
faciUties, and monthly reports
providing data pertinent to the
previous calendar month," he
said.
Eckhart said the restrictions
do not include:
- Service calls to repair existing gas equipnent or recommendations to replace such
equipment.
- Advice directed to existing
customers as to how.they may
achieve best heating an~ safety
results with respect to existing
gas equipment.
- Contact with exiSting or
potential customers for the
purpose of encouraging the
installation of dual-fuel
equipment or individula
responses to inquiries received
by a gas company with out
prior solicitation.
. Speeiflc Language
The chairman said Wednesday's order contained specific
language for several com·
panies, which he summarized,
- Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.
and Ohio Valley Gas Co. may
refuse new service to any
applicant
other
than
residential type, and refuse
additional volumes of gas to
existing customers except an
applicant who received a
written commitment for
service prior to the date of the
order (Wednesday), or an
applicant who submits
satisfactory evidence that
prior to the date of this order,
he was obliged to purchase gas
utilization equipment or began
construction of a structure
which would use gas equip.
ment.
(Continued on page 16)

Search ·Goes on for Soldier's Grave
By BOB HOEfLICH
TUPPERS PLAiNS - Of·
coutse, you've heard of the
man without a country. But
how about the tombstone
without a grave? That 's the
situation in" Meigs County
where the search continues for
lhe resting place of John Still.
, At the home of Everett
Schultz in Tuppers Plains is a
tombstone for th• grave tof
Joh~ Still. No one knows the
location of tHe grave, and

consequently nothing has been
done in marking the burial spot
of the veteran of the War of
1812.
As near as can be determined, John Still died on Jan.
8, 1872, al the age of 101. He
lived in Olive Township, appare ntly in Tuppers Plains.
The' tombstone, stili in its
original wood shipping case, is
believed to have been rec~ived
f!·un• the gove rnment through

an npplication filed by Mrs,
Nettie Stewart of -Tuppers
Plains. long after Mr. Stili's
death. The late Mrs. Stewart
Was the mother of the late
Myrtle Frost, who owned the
properly where the tombstone
,is in its shipping case.
Accord ing to historical
records secured though the
efforts of Mrs. Agnes Hill,
Tuppers Plains historian, Still
volunlec recl in the young
republic's army under Cap!.
'

Thomas
Hopkins
at Meigs County as provided by
Harrisonburg, Rockingham, acts of Congress. Both were
County, Va ., about the third of received many years after ·his
July in 1813 for 1 term of six servjco:.
months. He was in active
In 1871, when he was 100
servicr in Jhe War of 1812 years old, Still was granted a
upward of five months and was veteran's pension.
honorably discharged at RichIt is believed that Still may
mond, Va., : Dec. 18, 1813,
have
been buried in Athens
because of illne•s.
County, but no one has been
Even though he had lost his able to locate a grave.
Hrmy discharge papers, Still Meantime , the tombstone
was gtven two land grants in . waits tn be placed .

I
l'

'"'"--

�•

r
2- 'J'!Ie DlilySentinei,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 17,1972

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Excess Anxiety
Explains Problem
By Lawrence Lamb, .M.D.

-.

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mechanism is contact with
ether people , but why you
Dear Dr. Lamb-! have a
d have t h i s type of
very embarrassing problem .
rob m requires a little
Every time I get rea
o n
arching t discover.
go out or do go out or ·us!
hen
re is the uestion of
have close friends or r
overco · g it. I eally woul\1
lives in for a visit, I am in recommen
g to a psy·
the bathroom with diarrhea. chiartist for help if you can
This happens almost every possibly do so. It m1ght not
time. I can't go shopping take too long or too much
without having to go home effort to be able to work
and use the bathroom . I am through your problem and to
only 27 years old and it is enable you to be less anxious
really wasting my Y o u n g about contacts with people.
years .
There are a few things
My poor husband has to go which add to the difficulty
places alone as I can't make and you might make sure
11. I have been to the doctor they are not a contributory
and had complete physicals factor. Many people cannot
and X rays and he says I am-· lalerate the lactose in milk
in .excellent health and that and milk products . This is a
1! IS my nerves. O.K., i real- straight chemical problem
1ze 11 IS my nerves, but I and the usual manifestation
don 't want to sit home the is diarrhea . Why don't you
rest of my hie.
stop using milk and all forms
I have two small children of any dairy products or any
a nd they like to go places, foods made with any milk
but we can't go anywhere. for a few weeks and see
My neighbors think I don 't what happens to yo ur diarIike them because I never go rhea?
You 'll know within · a few
to their house. I know where
every bathroom in town is . weeks whether this is a prob1 !bought maybe I could go Iem or no\ because you will
to a psychiatrist but really be remark~bly free of symp·
c~n'l afford one and I don't toms which sound like they
know if it could help me ~nd have been all too frequent
1t IS JUSt an embarrassmg If it isn't the answer then
problem: I am at my wits yo u won't have lost anything
end and 11 1s mak mg a wreck either. Of course, you should
of me. Please try to help me. avoid all the different foods
Dear Reader- It probably that ~ou know upset your
is your nerves, as you have digestive ~ys tem and you
stated, The most likely ex- should avmd coffee, I ho~e
planation for this type of some of these measures Will
problem is an excess amount help, and I wo~ld strongly
ol anxiety. The bowels easily recomm~nd trymg them, I
respond to anxiety and diar- ·really thmk you should make
rhea is a typical response. a b1g effort to ,see a psychiYou k n o w the triggering atrist, however .

George Wallace Big in Tennessee

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue BotteJ

NASHVILLE, Ten .. (UPI)Wilh busing the No. I issue and
'
A JOY FOREVER, OR A DRAG?
the Democratic party in
Dear SUe and Helen:
shambles, George Wallace
My girl is a knockout. Man, was I proud of her. But now I'm may einerge as the inan bf the
not so sure. She spends half her life on her "looks.'' Th.e makeup hour in Tennessee's first
she buys, plus clothes and hair appointments - well, I could live presidential primary.
on that money. And she's never ready to go out because she's· With the exception of the
doing her face, The old mirror Is the most used thing in her purse. landslide for Democrat Lyndon
When I kid her, she says, "A thing of beauty is a loY forever." I B. Johnson iri 1964, Teimessee
look at her and think "Yes," but! think of her, and wonder- )las gone Republlcan in e¥ery
presidential election since 1952.
SfAY OR LEAVE? .
Nixon has carried the state
+++
both
times he has run for the
DearS or L. :
Where's the "joy" when " A thing of beauty is a JOB nation's highest office, and
already has received the enforever"? Watch out for \hat kind! -SUE
dorsement this year of the
+++
State
GOP Executive CommitDear Stay or Leave :
... or you may discover, after marriage, that you've been tee.
Most political observers see
GYPPED forever - once the bills start coming ln. I vote for
Wallace as the front runner in
"LEAVE." - HELEN
the Democratic primary and
+++ ......,,
expect most of the state's 49
Dear Rap :
delegate votes to be divided
I'm almost 15 and so is Jerry . We're truly In love. But he says among him, Sen. Henry M.
he can't express in words the way he feels, and there's only one
way to "prove our love.'' I'm scared I'll get 1'8·
Besides, I don 't want to, I don't need him the way he needs
me,'cause for me just being in love is enough. But he's moody
and upsetandifldon~ act now I may lose him.
What do you do when a boy thinks the English language
doesn't ''prove" anything? - LOSf FOR WORDS
.

Soulh
·- North
·- - East
-·- ·n,

Pass 3 •
Pass 4N.T.
5t
Pass 5 N.T.
Pass
Pass
6t
Pass 6 •
Pass Pass
Pass
Open ing lead- + K

.

The Daily: Sentilli!l

·

crucial border sta.tes on the '

issues."
Former Sen. Albert , Gore,
one of four members of
Muskie's national advisory
committee, said "if it tui'ns out
to be a confrontation between
Wallace and Muskie and
nobody else much in it, it might
be very significant," .
Chances of any candidate

City Editor
PubliShed d•ily exc~pt
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
PtJblishi ng Com pany , Ill
Cou r t St ., Pomeroy, Ohio,

45769. ·Bu siness Office Phone
' '992·2156. Ed itorial Phone 992 l-157 .

Sec one!. class postagf pa id at
Po meroy, Ohio .
Natipnat advertisi -ng .
represen tative
Bo'ttinelli Gallagher , Inc ., 12 East o42nd
St ., New York City , New York .
Subsc ripti-on

livered

by

rates :

ca rr ie r

really the fun they anticipated.
But-and this is the worst ]Airt -sometimes they feel tied to 1
each other because they've ''proved everything."
It's hard breaking off a high school affair that has become
ton inl!nse too soon. Sometimes it ends In a much-regretted
marriage, And I DO mean "ends"! - HELEN
P.S.Jihe STILL doesn't listen, "Lost,'' he's thinking more of
himself than of you, and he isn 't the best bet for a boy friend, -

The Fabric Shop
In Pomeroy

Protein 21
SHAMPOO

Reg. 9r

service not

Some k i n d s of centul'y
plants flo.wer every .year,
others bloom less often, but
none blooms so rarely as
once in 100 years.

ONLY

available:

f.

Team 8 took 8 points rom

Team 14. Jack Schulfz was
high for Team 8 with 483 pins
and Pal. Fields and Girard
Fowler were high for Team 14
wlfh 406 pins each.
Team 9 took 6 points from·
Team 5. Helen Thomas (sub!
was high for Team 9 wlfh 479
pin• and Burl Cook was high
for Team 5 with 521 pins.
Team 12 look 6 po~nfs from
Team 10. Dave Holley was high
' "Team 12 wl!h 493 pins and
Helen Oseland was high for ·
Team 10 wl!h 455 pins.
High series for the ladles was ·
522 fatal pins, held by Ruth
Jane~ and for-the men 564 total
plns held by Marlo Bush.

and W. Va .• One vear $14 .00.
Six ··· mon th s $7.25. ,T.hrC!-e
, months $4 .50 . Su bscri-ption
price includes Su nday Tim'es Se nline l.

•

36 Tablets
Reg. 43e

VISINE

EYE DROPS
'hoz.
Reg. 1.50
ONLY

illette Right Gua \
ANTI-PERSPIRANT DEODORANT
5 oz.
Reg. 1.19

REGUlAR 1.49

20 oz.
ONLY

ONLY

Pepto-Bismol

VICKS FORMULA 44

REGULAR 1.09

EXTRA STRENGTH COUGH MIXTURE

Reg. 1.98

All Polyester Knits
All Corduroy$
************
lt

%

,)

OFF

1 Group

BONDED ACRYLICS
Now 2.98 yard

45" WIDE

·-· .·..·•,••, •·.· ·.·.·. :.·.·.·.··.· .·.•.• .....

...

..·.·.·.·-·.·.-...·...·.·, .-.·.·.·.· ·.·.·.·.·.·.•.·.. . ..

l THE FABR~~ .SHOP

yd.

I

SINGER SALES&amp; S~RVICE
McCALL'S&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

115 W. Second
.-.

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992-2284

. . : .. :. -:-:-:. :-:-:-:-·-·.-.-.. -.-.....·. ...

REXALL
*
i*Alka-Seltzer
FEVER
. .
'
REGUlAR 75'
tHERMOMETER
~
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ORAL, RECTAL OR
25
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STUB.
~
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REG.' l.95
e
*ltlt
ONLY
*
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Decongestant Tablets

Tablets
Reg. 2.59·

a7

'

FABRICS

DR ISTAN

POmeroy, o.
~ .· .... ·.. .·.-.-.·. ,•, .

ONLY

PRESCRIPTION
SERVICE

•

, 4 Registeqd
Pharmacists
lo' Sene You!

·o~EN GAILY 8:00 A.M. TO 10 P.M•• SUNDAY 10:30 U . 10 12:30 P.M. &amp; 5 m 9 P.M•
'

.

C011ntering the Logan attack
will f&gt;.9 junior. Jimmy Boggs
and 6-0 jimior Mike Sarre,
guards ; 6'6 senior Steve
Dunfee and either f&gt;.9 junior ·
Andy Vaughan or 6-4 junior.
Mark Werry, who star ted
against Wellston, forwards ,
and 6-2 senior Tony Vaughan,
center.
Dunfee is eighth in league
scoring with a 13,2 average

while T. Vaughan is second in (AP), South Point, is in that
rebounding with 12.3 retrieves sectional.
per game and Iifth in fr"
throw shooting, hilling at ,67
:TWO HEADS
pet.
Following Friday night 's
BETTER
game, the Marauders will go to
Willow Wood, Ohio, to play in
THAN ONE?
the sectional " AA " tour·
nament. Drawings will be held
this Sunday. The state's
number two ranked team

~RE

Sf , LOUIS (UPI)-Defenseman Gordon Kannegiesser was .
recalled by the st. Louis Blues
Wednesday for their Denver
fann club to replace the injured Andre DuPont.
Kannegiesser played three
games with the Blues in
November.

BALTIM•DRE (UP!) - The
Baltimore Orioles Wednesday
announced the signing of
·shortstop Mark Belanger and a
minor league infielder,
bringing to 13 the nwnber of
players who have Inked 1972
contracts.
Belanger captured his
secood "Golden Glove" trophy
in three years as the outstanding defensive shortstop in
the American League last
season.
Also signed was Junior
Kennedy, a first-round
selection in · the 1968 summer
draft, who played last season
at Dallas-Fl. Worth,

ST. LOUIS (UP!) - AI
Sanlorini and Santiago Guzman, both candidates to break
into the pitching rotation in
1972, have signed their contracts with lhe St. Louis
Cardinals, General Manager
Bing Devine announced
Wednesday,
Other players signed•
recenUy are pitchers Rudy
Arroyp and Jackie Stripting,
infielders Ed Crosby and Milt ·
Ramirez, arid catcher Skip
.Jutze,
NEW YORK (UP!) -- Tom
the real-life hero of bis
1
own ' Tom TenifiCu saga,
Wednesday became the highest
paid player in the history of
New York baseball when he

~aver,

MAXWELL SIGNS
· KNOXVILLE, ' Tenn .
(UPI)- Jim Maxwell, who led
TenneBBee to six straight
victories and a Liberty Bowl
win over Arkansas alter
stattlug last season as a
1111batltute quarterback, signed
~
contract with
the
Philadelphia Eagles on
WedneidiiY,
Muwell, who was not among
the 442 p)aywl drafted by the
. .pros, Aid he sltlned a "bargain
])Qement" contract,

~

.

on a
Covers engine, transmission, rear axle, brak~ system and
electrical system for 30 days or 2000 miles. And you get
special savings on all parts and labor for the first 24 months.

USED VEHCLE@)

Ohio Cottage Basko!ball Scores
By United-Press International
Western Michigan 75 Bowling
Green 74
.
Kent State 78 Miami 77
Cincinnati 76 Xavier 71
Youngstown Stole 79 Cleve.
Stale 62
Malone 95 Walsh 77
Ashland 121 Wilberforce 87
Baldwin-Wallace 88
. Point Pai'k (Pa.l65
Oe!roif 78 Dayton 70
Akron 66 Indiana Slate 58
Defiance 108 Bluff!on 100
Ohio Dominican 85 Wheeling 81
Marshall 95 Ohio U. 76

This Warranty is issu ctt by the undmioncd. nn autl10tizcd cr,cv.olct

N1mr

D c ~ l cr

(hcrcinllltN called the S~lt. nq

"'·-- - -

D~ ~lcq

ra :

---

Sut•- - - - - - - -- --

-

-

(hcrcin~ h et callc!'11hc Purclta\~r) m conWIL•rahon olrl'c rrurch.1&lt;;&lt;! o r 3
u~ll n1u!llr vehicle (hcH'Inalrer called tile V!!111C IC) d~icobed as follows :

Vur--- - -- --

M•••- - - - - -- -

Motor No, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Serial No

TrP• - - -- -- - -St ack No .. _ _ _ _ _ __

Mile.ge , ,own •Hr odomeur at delivtrV - - - - STATEMUIT OF WARRANTY
Subject to !he p ro~itioru ~nd conditions sl.llf!d below, in the ove11\ of
mechanical failure o l t11e Vel ticl~. the Selliog De aler agrees as followli:

(1 .} Fora Df!liod ol 30 dht. btginning
, 19_ ,
or 2,000 11111e5 after dehv~ry (wluchever occ urs f~rsl) . the Sell irtg Deat.-r
iliJit Os to rct•arr or replace the engme. transn us~ 1on "~·" aole br ake
5Vtlt1T' .. OI el tc tr i cll s ysllnl - "" il ~out char9e - to tho utent 11ece~~ilry
10 ketp lht \leh:cll! in Je rviceable condltlor. under norm al UliC,
PROVISION S
(I) Med1anical fail u re~ re1uhin.g Iron• collitiDn. lctid~nt. aLu1e or iJck
or ma1nten,1nee, are upreulv u cludetJ from Hr~ .:rbove co verage.
(b ) Repair$ me to be made in 1l1e Selllllg Oealtr 's Servin facoll ties.

\

(c) Such repair1.dn not qu~ l ify under arry new vehiclt warranty 1till
appi1Cdllle tu l11e Ve hicle ,
(2.) Uporr the e• pirat rnn of the warra~ ty pe1lod IPtc::ified in (1.) abova
&lt;tlld lor a p~rio ~ cndrng 24 months frorrt tht date the wJrranrv neriod
$pt dfre d •n [I.) &amp;bCI\Ie con unen c ~d . the Sellrng Dealer will allow a
d iscount ol _
off the n orm~l re~a i f t hargu lor p~!l$ and tahot
npm ne.:euary to kup 1he Vehicle in urtic ubla ~ondtuon under

4 PLY-POLYESTER

normal uu.

4 PLY. P&lt;)LYESTER
650X13 WHITE WALL ........;...;... ______ ,'17.75
700X13 WHITE .WALL_- ---·- ------·- · '17.75
700X13 BLACK WALL~.;.----------· '~6.50E78X14 WHITE WALLS ...-. ... _______ .;. '17.95

BELTED TIRES

GPLERW~

Addrtu - - - - - - - - -- - -

CitY- -- - - -- - - -

BLEMISHED ANO DISCONTINUED

GUARDIAN PREMIUM TIRES

DON JOHNSON, who had
the highest average of the
bowlers on the 1971 prolesslonal tour hut tlnlshed sec·
ond In earnings standings,
has jumped oft to a big
lead In m one y winnings
this year,

. ever

,,

•
Wildcats in a non-league
game.
Waterford took the first game
in the season opener for both
teams, 57-56,
The Tornado starting lineup
will be &amp;-7 sertior Brett Hart
and &amp;-10 senior Jerry Hubbard,
guards; 6-0 junior Nick !hie
and 6-2 junior Tim !hie, forwards, and- 6-2 senior Bruce
Hart, center.
Jim Hubbard, star senior
forward for the Tornadoes, is
out with a leg injury suffered in
the first quarter ag'ainsl
Eastern last Saturday night.
Jerry Hubbard is sixth in
SVAC scoring with a 15.3 mark
and Jim Hubbard was seventh
with a 15,0 mark. Bruce Har-t is
tenth with a 13.8 average.

Latest To Sign •••

HENRY AARON, tbe At·
lanla Brave slugger wbo Is
closing In on Babe Ruth's
aU-time career home run
record of 714, Is also eyeing another mark, a
$4100,001 contract covering
the next three seasons that
would make him the high·
est paid player In blstory,

nounc1

· saturday Night.-at-Ho:rtte Games .
Tornados conclude their and also Symmes Valley, ~2,
season with the Waterford
The Eagles, coached by Bill
Wildcats at Racine Saturday Phillips, are 14-2 overall and 9night.
2 in Southern Valley ConThe Eagles, who have the ference play. Miller is 13-1
best defensive team in the area overall and will complete its
permitting only 51 points per season with the Eagles.
game, took the Miller Falcpns Symmes Valley is also 9-2 in
in their first meeting, 57-53, the SV AC with Saturday's
winner taking second Place
behind league champion North
Gallia, 11-L ·
The starling lineup for the
Eagles will probably be f&gt;-9
junior Randy !loring and f&gt;.ll
signed his 1972 contract
the Mets lor an estimated senior Bob Caldwell, guards, 62 senior Randy Young and 6-1
$120,000.
Seaver, 27, also became the junior Alan DuvaU, forwards,
youngest man in all baseball and big 6-3 senior Deimis
history to receive that much Eichinger, center.
Eichinger, the area's
money for ·a single season.
fourth top scorer wiih a 21.1
average, needs 19 or more
CINCINNATI (UP!) Pitcher Jim Merritt, who lost points to win the SVAC
scoring crown against the ·
11 games in a row before
getting his lone victory last VIkings. Eichinger Is leading
year, has signed his 1972 with a 21.5 average, but
contract with the Cincinnati North Gallia 's Arthur Clark
Reds the club announced is rtgbt behind at 21.3 and ·
already having completed
today.
The 28-year-old lefty, his SVAC season.
The Tornados, coached by
bothered much of last season
by arm trouble, was the 26th Asa Bradbury, will be looking
player to come to terms with for their ninth win of the season
against nine losses against the
the Reds.

Both heads will tell you
t the most ;m loclrtant insurance for
driving is auto
res In· good driving
•rr&gt;ndltlon , Have your
checked now, at
Rizer's,

•

right: Toby Hel141", Don Gullion, Jolm Shoemaker, Larry
Swindler, Second row, left to.. right: Robin , Hand, Dusty
Mickey, Butch Workman, Dave Salyers, Lourens Steger, Bill
Maloy, Manager Tom Dunn. Third row, left to right : Asst.
Coach Todd Sautl!ll', Don Fairchild, Scott Yol!ll!l, Doug
Pfeifer, Mike Oyer, Charles Jenkins, Don Jenkins, Coach
Hawhee.

.~~ig~ . ~ 9~~--~ll?.j~~~a~~n

LISTERINE
ANTISEPTIC

DUPONT REPLACED

WILLIAMS RECALLED
NEW YORK (UPI)-Lefl
Wing Tom Williams was
recalled by the New York
Rangers Wednesday from the
Omaha Knights of the Central
Hockey League,
Williams, 21, wUI make his
National Hockey League debut
against the Los Angeles Kings
tonight

By KEITH WISECUP
The Eastern Eligles have a
tough final weekend of cage
play this Friday and Saturday
nights, taking on powerhouses
Miller Friday at .Miller and
Symmes Valley Saturday night
at home. The Southern Local

ONLY

'

wet in the SEOAL, Logari could
be looking lor a fine cage
season next year.
This year; the Chiefs are 4-13
overall and 2-11 in league
action. The Marauders,
coached by Carl Wolfe, are 7-10
overall and 5-8 in league action.
Me\gs is assured of a fifth place
finish in the league.
·

. GOODNEWS
WS ANGELES (UP!)Tackle Merlin Olsen of the Los ·
Angeles Rams, who hurt his'
left knee in the Pro Bowl game,
Jan. 23, will not require
surgery to repair the damage,
, it was announced Wednesday
by Dr. Danny Levinthal.

1972 SEOAL CAGE CHAMPIONS - Coach Carroll
Hawhee's powerful Waverly Tigers, ranked eighth In the
state in CIBBB AA circles, captured ·their second straight
Southeastern Ohio League basketball championship Tuesday
following an easy 74-54 victory over the third place Ironton
Tigers. WHS is now 15-2 overall, and 13-0 In SEOAL play. The
Tigers wU1 visit second place Ga!Upolis (14-3) in the final
game or the 1971-72 campaign Friday, Front row, left to

FRI. &amp; SAT., FEB. 18 &amp; 19

VAL TO 2.98 YD.

One

· month $1.75 . Bv mail in Ohio

Bayer Children's Aspirin

SAL~

points from Team 7. Ma ry

Team 11. Rufh Janey was high
for Team 4 wlfh 517 pins, and
Ralph Ferguson (sub) was
high for Team 11 wl!h .50'1 ins.

De ,

.

Daytime 30's
Regular 1.85

Oilly

BIRTHIMY

No.3 ·
38
18
No.4
36
20
No.8
36
20
No. 11
36
20
No. 2
32
24
No. 5
30
26
No. 1
28
28
No. 9
26
30
No. 10
26
30
No. 7
24
32
No. 6
22
34
No. 12
22
34
No. 13
20
36
No. 14
16
40
On Feb. 8, 1~72 Team 3 look 8

Team 4 took 6 points from

Ferguson, and Athens,
sophomore Mark Mace) Logan
has a sophomore· that is .in the
same class in Jin) Pierce, a i&gt;-9
guard with plenty of shooting
savvy.
Other probably starters are
6·2 junior , Ken Culbertson ,
center ; 6-2 5eilior George Shaw
and 6-2 junior 'Randy NOITis;
forwards, and' 5-8 senior Greg
·Smith at the other guard.
With three starters back and
a coach having gotten his feet

ava il llbl e':-50 cen t s per week ;

Won Lost

Al lman was high for Team 3
with 470 pins, and Mark Cheng
was high for Team 7 wlfh 501
pins.

The Meigs Marauders hope
to end their season on a winning note here Friday night
against •a greaUy improved
Logan Chieftain learn, also
playing ita final game.
Meigs didn't look all that
good against the Wellston
Golden Rocketll Tuesday nlghl
but were good enough to c~
_out on top 50-41, Maybe that's
all thl!t counts.
The Chieftains, losing again

to Athens Tuesday, 67..55, have
Now to set things straight,
been losing but scores have ·Meigs had a sticky lime
been . becpming lighter and whipplrig Coach Dick Taylor's
tighter.
Chiefs in the first round at
For instance. Logan and Logan, winning 66-S8. Although .
Ironton went 63-61\he last time the Maraudefs themselves
as compared to an earlier have improved over that
paste!ng by the Tigers, 72-55, previous meeting, the "Rock
Waverly's Tigers clippect the Springs" boys better be ready
Chiefs only 72-61 the second to mount an aU-out effort.
time around but blasted them
While three SEOAL teams
106-47 In the first round. This have
upcoming . stars
goes on with Gallipolis Jlnd (Gallipolis, sophomore Gil
A~ns .
Price; Ironton, freshman Mark

Where

PAMPERS

4 oz

w~ms

Local Bowling
Standings Week of February

By KEITH WISECUP

.

.

. Bv Molar Rou te where ta rr ier

'

'" ,_.,.,, ;w..·..,.~ ""' I..,.""~
' ,~. ·"o:c ~ !
IHEW"'"' '""'""'"' .,,.,_1 '11l'JZ~:
·- -lllscov.-liuiTi""'enwum.ers 81111.all&lt;~~~&amp;W~~eakin&amp;ll'OUIIO aren t

The bidding has been:
Wesl Norlh
Easl
South
Pass
2•
Dble
Pass
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby Dble Pass
PasS
'
You
,
South,
hold
:
An expert doesn 't need to
bother with the code word • 98654 ¥AQfi tA32.J4 H.
.\RCH . It is automatic for
What do you do now'?
him to Analyze the lead. Re- A-Bid two spades. Your pad ~
view the bidding. Count his ncr ha:; passed the buck to you.
"
win ners and losers and finalTODAY'S QUESTION
Nearly
100,0110
acres
of The first mail-order comly ask himself, "How can I
You bid two spad e~;. Your U.S. farmland is used in the pany in the United States
m a k e or defeat this con- partnel' bids three diamonds. raising of peppermint and was formed by Aaron Monttract'?"
What do you do now?
spearmint as commercial gomery Ward in 1872, in ChiOf COUI'Se , the last depends
Answer Tomorrow
crops .
· cago, with 'a capital of $2,400.
on whether or not he is declarer .
Soul h wins the diamond
lead and plays out his · ace
ond 'king or trumps. The
quee n doesn't drop so he
can 't claim seve n. As it is he
has to scramble for six .
How can he make the contract ? Easy 1 All he has to
do is top lay hearls and clubs
and if West has to follow long
enough South is rid of hi s
diamond losers.
If South stops his thinking
there, he goes after clubs.
West trumps the third cl ub
and South explains how un·
lucky· he is.
If South takes the trouble

8, 1972.
Team

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-M.SON AREA
-CI+ESTER L. TANNEHILL .. .
Exec . Ed.
ROBERl'HOEFLICH,

'

CHECK EACH fTEM
FOR SURE SAVINGS

heart ~~X..~I,!l')JJ!Y,:h,

KEITH ciOBLE FORD
BOWLING LEAGUE

iriterest, .
Jackson, who has visited the
Sl!lte far more than any of the
other candidates, vieWS the
TenneSsee primary' as "the .
first test of the thinking of

Improved Chie s at R:ock Springs Friday Night

.

.while,,..&lt;t!fl·~~ur~ ~~-: ~~...,~~ fil~;® ~~:

1.

wummg a clear-cut victory .
appear slim, _ _

+++

Key to Slam·, Loser Dt'scard

Wesl

Excepi

scheduled May 4 primary date,
the campaign has drawn IitUe

Sure Savings Friday and Saturday

Dear Lost :
Tell him love isn't just a warm bed - it's a warm heart. But
it takes a lot of understanding to make him believe it.
,.. You know, writing this column with Mom has made me
think beneath the surface . It also makes me feel very old
sometimes,
Like f'rinslance, I assumed along with my college-age
friends, that the stale phrase, "prove your love," was out of it. I
mean couples talk more !rankly these days.
But I forgot that for a glrljuat starting to date, lh!l8e ancient
words are brand new. She's never heard them before, and
maybe the boy has never said them before-&lt;~nd he's really
shook, not jusI trying to score ,
So ,. . you can 'I hand the girl a quip to brush him off with.
These
two KNOW they're terribly in love, and HE ligures sex
(NlWSPAPU. U.ITIRPRIU: ASSN.I
proves it because sex is adult and adults fall In love, not kids. But
SHE is still at the "romance is enough" stage.
WIN AT BRIDGE
What she must do is show him that if he talks her into
somethingshedoesn·t want, he'lllose her. And she can keep him
from trying if she doesn'tlet the necking get out of hand. !think
,,. - SUE
lo think the whole play out Dear Lost :
17
NORTH
he notes that he has no play
I'd snggest you work at learning how to talk with each other.
4 IO 7 52
for his contract unless West
¥ K Q 74
has al. least three hearts. H you can't, then maybe this isn't the great love you asswne. Tell
• 92
Then South starts on hearls. your boy friend you aren't ready, Make him .look at the possible
• A Q5
not clubs .
consequences : not just pregnancy, but guilt, parents' loss of
WEST
EAST
East shows out on the third faith, feeling trapped or used or owned.
•¥ 9Q96
•a
hearl so s 0 u th can cas h
a52
• 10 3
Often a boy is more intensely in love than the girl t K Q 83
• J 10 6 5
dummy 's fourth heart. Then espec~'allywhen it's his first big romance. When he says, "Let's
he works on clubs and gets
10
4
8
7
6
3
2
•
• J
rid of his last diamond loser proveourlove,"hereallymeans, "!want to keep you, and this is
0
l ~~~ ~~)
on the third club .
the surest way because it's kind of like marriage." He figures if
• AJ 6
Suppose hearts were 3-3. she goes the distance, she'sgot to mean it, -she'shis.
• A 74
Then South would go after
Whathedoesn'trealize-unUIIater - isthatpremaluresex
"'K 9
clubs and hope for the best .
.
. .
.

~ ' vlfine~'iiC't""

Jackson of Washington . and
Sen, Edmund Musltie of Maine.
"The people of Tennessee
have been good to me,"
Wallace said in an Interview
last wel)k, recalling lhat;,he
carried 47 of tbe state's 95
,counties in running· a strong
second to Niion here in 1968,
An · American Party candidate four years ago, WaUace
said he will definitely run as a
Democrat if he enters the
Tennessee pri!nary.
· Under state law, all "nationally recognize{!" candidates
will be liSted on tbe ballot The
only way a name can be
removed is lor the person listed
to file an affidavit with the
secretary of state that he is not
a candidate.
fn . the legislature,
where a hattie is raging over
the proposed changing of the

(1 ) ReDaiiS are to be made in It·~ Stirv ke lnc rilt&lt;el of the Se llmg De.1ler
or 11 11i e r partu::i pnuny . lr~n c h • S~d Cttev•olet D~o~ler at such Chevtolet
Oealer 'tregul.1t •eta•l pnce.

(b) h JHr•uly e•chJtled lrom Waor~nr~ co ~ e r a~r. Me damage hom collision . ~ cc idenl m aUYU . m normal ma•nte na11ce ae &lt;vtc es su ch as
lubr•cano11, 011 changes, tui\C· Uil. ere.
GENERAl CO NOITI ONS
Th11 W,u r Jn t ~ IS IIIIJI&lt;'I b~ lht S1lling De .1lcr ontv. a11d not by the
mJn ufiiC h.IJI!I ol tire Velucle .

lhi1 Warrtntv is txpr .. tly in lieu o f env o thtr werrenti u ,
t•prused o r implied , inc:ludi ng eny implotd werren t y o f metcllanubiht~ or f ilnut fo r 1 ptrlu:uler purpose , tn d tnv other
obll9 1t ion~ or liabilit ie s on the Stlf1ng o .. 1,e r '1111rt. and S111f ing
Dtller nlother usumet nor •tJthol illl 1rry other perso n t o
U1Um1 lor .it 1ny Olhlr liabili lr in conne c tion witM tht 1111 o!
the 1/thiclt.'
Th,s W.ln.lnlv nl!lst be av~iltblewi t h the Vrh ide n t lh~ t•mc of applic,1 tion

lor a n~ re11a•rs or a&lt;'IJUIII'I"IIIn l s, ~flll" not transler.Jblt 01 aurgnabl e,
l ' N~I o llm"'

l hit Warrantr is not v~lid unlcnJirtn( d bv the Selling Dcn l ~r·, outltoril cd
departmen t hc~d and lly til e P~ rtlrHc r. who i5 to retain a copv.
Del ler's Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Cilr- , -- - - - -

PROVI SIONS

State_ _ __

•• 10 , •• , ..,.., ,_ "'c.~.~.....,.,.

"'' '" '"""""

l

l nwi t n~~s (It all the abovll tond lt•O•II, we h ot~ u .1tta c~"" our Sl fl n~ l u r e s
li HS
Sign~t ur e

, 19_ .

dayof

of Oopartm@nt

H ~a d

_ _ __ _ _ __

Signature of P t J r e h i S " - - - - - -- - - -

,

G78X14 WHITE WALL•
G78X15 . WHITE WALL
F78X15 WHITE WALL a
H78X 14 W_HITI WALL.-~----------· •26.50
H78X14 · BLACK WALL------------· •23.50
L78X1.5 WHmwALL·------------- •28.75

Many Chevrolet dealers are
announcing the mos t complete
warranty ever put on a used car.
Count your blessings,
First, you're protected where
it counts most : on th-e major me.chanica! parts of the car you buy.
And that lasts a healthy 30 days or
2000 miles, whichever comes first.
Second, you get special savings on im y parts or labor you
need, Frnm the day you buy for

All Prices Plus Fie!. Excuse Tax, From Sl.76to $3.27
!!!!~~D FREE

24 months.
Third, the special savings are
good all across the country at most
Chevrolet dealers. Say you're on a
vacation trip and find you need
service. You just get in touch with
a participating Chevrolet dealer·
ship,
All you do is show an OK
warranty identification card you
receive when you buy your used
car.

Your Chevrolet ,dealers' new
OK warranty. It takes the guesswork out of used car buying. ·

. @)
A K II
•

'

.

lit} WAY 10 SO THE U.s.A.
I

I

�•

r
2- 'J'!Ie DlilySentinei,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 17,1972

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Excess Anxiety
Explains Problem
By Lawrence Lamb, .M.D.

-.

~

~
~

t

l•
;
~
•:

~-

':
~

~

~
~

,
1

:
:
;

t;
,.

i
,
·
'

mechanism is contact with
ether people , but why you
Dear Dr. Lamb-! have a
d have t h i s type of
very embarrassing problem .
rob m requires a little
Every time I get rea
o n
arching t discover.
go out or do go out or ·us!
hen
re is the uestion of
have close friends or r
overco · g it. I eally woul\1
lives in for a visit, I am in recommen
g to a psy·
the bathroom with diarrhea. chiartist for help if you can
This happens almost every possibly do so. It m1ght not
time. I can't go shopping take too long or too much
without having to go home effort to be able to work
and use the bathroom . I am through your problem and to
only 27 years old and it is enable you to be less anxious
really wasting my Y o u n g about contacts with people.
years .
There are a few things
My poor husband has to go which add to the difficulty
places alone as I can't make and you might make sure
11. I have been to the doctor they are not a contributory
and had complete physicals factor. Many people cannot
and X rays and he says I am-· lalerate the lactose in milk
in .excellent health and that and milk products . This is a
1! IS my nerves. O.K., i real- straight chemical problem
1ze 11 IS my nerves, but I and the usual manifestation
don 't want to sit home the is diarrhea . Why don't you
rest of my hie.
stop using milk and all forms
I have two small children of any dairy products or any
a nd they like to go places, foods made with any milk
but we can't go anywhere. for a few weeks and see
My neighbors think I don 't what happens to yo ur diarIike them because I never go rhea?
You 'll know within · a few
to their house. I know where
every bathroom in town is . weeks whether this is a prob1 !bought maybe I could go Iem or no\ because you will
to a psychiatrist but really be remark~bly free of symp·
c~n'l afford one and I don't toms which sound like they
know if it could help me ~nd have been all too frequent
1t IS JUSt an embarrassmg If it isn't the answer then
problem: I am at my wits yo u won't have lost anything
end and 11 1s mak mg a wreck either. Of course, you should
of me. Please try to help me. avoid all the different foods
Dear Reader- It probably that ~ou know upset your
is your nerves, as you have digestive ~ys tem and you
stated, The most likely ex- should avmd coffee, I ho~e
planation for this type of some of these measures Will
problem is an excess amount help, and I wo~ld strongly
ol anxiety. The bowels easily recomm~nd trymg them, I
respond to anxiety and diar- ·really thmk you should make
rhea is a typical response. a b1g effort to ,see a psychiYou k n o w the triggering atrist, however .

George Wallace Big in Tennessee

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue BotteJ

NASHVILLE, Ten .. (UPI)Wilh busing the No. I issue and
'
A JOY FOREVER, OR A DRAG?
the Democratic party in
Dear SUe and Helen:
shambles, George Wallace
My girl is a knockout. Man, was I proud of her. But now I'm may einerge as the inan bf the
not so sure. She spends half her life on her "looks.'' Th.e makeup hour in Tennessee's first
she buys, plus clothes and hair appointments - well, I could live presidential primary.
on that money. And she's never ready to go out because she's· With the exception of the
doing her face, The old mirror Is the most used thing in her purse. landslide for Democrat Lyndon
When I kid her, she says, "A thing of beauty is a loY forever." I B. Johnson iri 1964, Teimessee
look at her and think "Yes," but! think of her, and wonder- )las gone Republlcan in e¥ery
presidential election since 1952.
SfAY OR LEAVE? .
Nixon has carried the state
+++
both
times he has run for the
DearS or L. :
Where's the "joy" when " A thing of beauty is a JOB nation's highest office, and
already has received the enforever"? Watch out for \hat kind! -SUE
dorsement this year of the
+++
State
GOP Executive CommitDear Stay or Leave :
... or you may discover, after marriage, that you've been tee.
Most political observers see
GYPPED forever - once the bills start coming ln. I vote for
Wallace as the front runner in
"LEAVE." - HELEN
the Democratic primary and
+++ ......,,
expect most of the state's 49
Dear Rap :
delegate votes to be divided
I'm almost 15 and so is Jerry . We're truly In love. But he says among him, Sen. Henry M.
he can't express in words the way he feels, and there's only one
way to "prove our love.'' I'm scared I'll get 1'8·
Besides, I don 't want to, I don't need him the way he needs
me,'cause for me just being in love is enough. But he's moody
and upsetandifldon~ act now I may lose him.
What do you do when a boy thinks the English language
doesn't ''prove" anything? - LOSf FOR WORDS
.

Soulh
·- North
·- - East
-·- ·n,

Pass 3 •
Pass 4N.T.
5t
Pass 5 N.T.
Pass
Pass
6t
Pass 6 •
Pass Pass
Pass
Open ing lead- + K

.

The Daily: Sentilli!l

·

crucial border sta.tes on the '

issues."
Former Sen. Albert , Gore,
one of four members of
Muskie's national advisory
committee, said "if it tui'ns out
to be a confrontation between
Wallace and Muskie and
nobody else much in it, it might
be very significant," .
Chances of any candidate

City Editor
PubliShed d•ily exc~pt
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
PtJblishi ng Com pany , Ill
Cou r t St ., Pomeroy, Ohio,

45769. ·Bu siness Office Phone
' '992·2156. Ed itorial Phone 992 l-157 .

Sec one!. class postagf pa id at
Po meroy, Ohio .
Natipnat advertisi -ng .
represen tative
Bo'ttinelli Gallagher , Inc ., 12 East o42nd
St ., New York City , New York .
Subsc ripti-on

livered

by

rates :

ca rr ie r

really the fun they anticipated.
But-and this is the worst ]Airt -sometimes they feel tied to 1
each other because they've ''proved everything."
It's hard breaking off a high school affair that has become
ton inl!nse too soon. Sometimes it ends In a much-regretted
marriage, And I DO mean "ends"! - HELEN
P.S.Jihe STILL doesn't listen, "Lost,'' he's thinking more of
himself than of you, and he isn 't the best bet for a boy friend, -

The Fabric Shop
In Pomeroy

Protein 21
SHAMPOO

Reg. 9r

service not

Some k i n d s of centul'y
plants flo.wer every .year,
others bloom less often, but
none blooms so rarely as
once in 100 years.

ONLY

available:

f.

Team 8 took 8 points rom

Team 14. Jack Schulfz was
high for Team 8 with 483 pins
and Pal. Fields and Girard
Fowler were high for Team 14
wlfh 406 pins each.
Team 9 took 6 points from·
Team 5. Helen Thomas (sub!
was high for Team 9 wlfh 479
pin• and Burl Cook was high
for Team 5 with 521 pins.
Team 12 look 6 po~nfs from
Team 10. Dave Holley was high
' "Team 12 wl!h 493 pins and
Helen Oseland was high for ·
Team 10 wl!h 455 pins.
High series for the ladles was ·
522 fatal pins, held by Ruth
Jane~ and for-the men 564 total
plns held by Marlo Bush.

and W. Va .• One vear $14 .00.
Six ··· mon th s $7.25. ,T.hrC!-e
, months $4 .50 . Su bscri-ption
price includes Su nday Tim'es Se nline l.

•

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5 oz.
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REGULAR 1.09

EXTRA STRENGTH COUGH MIXTURE

Reg. 1.98

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lo' Sene You!

·o~EN GAILY 8:00 A.M. TO 10 P.M•• SUNDAY 10:30 U . 10 12:30 P.M. &amp; 5 m 9 P.M•
'

.

C011ntering the Logan attack
will f&gt;.9 junior. Jimmy Boggs
and 6-0 jimior Mike Sarre,
guards ; 6'6 senior Steve
Dunfee and either f&gt;.9 junior ·
Andy Vaughan or 6-4 junior.
Mark Werry, who star ted
against Wellston, forwards ,
and 6-2 senior Tony Vaughan,
center.
Dunfee is eighth in league
scoring with a 13,2 average

while T. Vaughan is second in (AP), South Point, is in that
rebounding with 12.3 retrieves sectional.
per game and Iifth in fr"
throw shooting, hilling at ,67
:TWO HEADS
pet.
Following Friday night 's
BETTER
game, the Marauders will go to
Willow Wood, Ohio, to play in
THAN ONE?
the sectional " AA " tour·
nament. Drawings will be held
this Sunday. The state's
number two ranked team

~RE

Sf , LOUIS (UPI)-Defenseman Gordon Kannegiesser was .
recalled by the st. Louis Blues
Wednesday for their Denver
fann club to replace the injured Andre DuPont.
Kannegiesser played three
games with the Blues in
November.

BALTIM•DRE (UP!) - The
Baltimore Orioles Wednesday
announced the signing of
·shortstop Mark Belanger and a
minor league infielder,
bringing to 13 the nwnber of
players who have Inked 1972
contracts.
Belanger captured his
secood "Golden Glove" trophy
in three years as the outstanding defensive shortstop in
the American League last
season.
Also signed was Junior
Kennedy, a first-round
selection in · the 1968 summer
draft, who played last season
at Dallas-Fl. Worth,

ST. LOUIS (UP!) - AI
Sanlorini and Santiago Guzman, both candidates to break
into the pitching rotation in
1972, have signed their contracts with lhe St. Louis
Cardinals, General Manager
Bing Devine announced
Wednesday,
Other players signed•
recenUy are pitchers Rudy
Arroyp and Jackie Stripting,
infielders Ed Crosby and Milt ·
Ramirez, arid catcher Skip
.Jutze,
NEW YORK (UP!) -- Tom
the real-life hero of bis
1
own ' Tom TenifiCu saga,
Wednesday became the highest
paid player in the history of
New York baseball when he

~aver,

MAXWELL SIGNS
· KNOXVILLE, ' Tenn .
(UPI)- Jim Maxwell, who led
TenneBBee to six straight
victories and a Liberty Bowl
win over Arkansas alter
stattlug last season as a
1111batltute quarterback, signed
~
contract with
the
Philadelphia Eagles on
WedneidiiY,
Muwell, who was not among
the 442 p)aywl drafted by the
. .pros, Aid he sltlned a "bargain
])Qement" contract,

~

.

on a
Covers engine, transmission, rear axle, brak~ system and
electrical system for 30 days or 2000 miles. And you get
special savings on all parts and labor for the first 24 months.

USED VEHCLE@)

Ohio Cottage Basko!ball Scores
By United-Press International
Western Michigan 75 Bowling
Green 74
.
Kent State 78 Miami 77
Cincinnati 76 Xavier 71
Youngstown Stole 79 Cleve.
Stale 62
Malone 95 Walsh 77
Ashland 121 Wilberforce 87
Baldwin-Wallace 88
. Point Pai'k (Pa.l65
Oe!roif 78 Dayton 70
Akron 66 Indiana Slate 58
Defiance 108 Bluff!on 100
Ohio Dominican 85 Wheeling 81
Marshall 95 Ohio U. 76

This Warranty is issu ctt by the undmioncd. nn autl10tizcd cr,cv.olct

N1mr

D c ~ l cr

(hcrcinllltN called the S~lt. nq

"'·-- - -

D~ ~lcq

ra :

---

Sut•- - - - - - - -- --

-

-

(hcrcin~ h et callc!'11hc Purclta\~r) m conWIL•rahon olrl'c rrurch.1&lt;;&lt;! o r 3
u~ll n1u!llr vehicle (hcH'Inalrer called tile V!!111C IC) d~icobed as follows :

Vur--- - -- --

M•••- - - - - -- -

Motor No, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Serial No

TrP• - - -- -- - -St ack No .. _ _ _ _ _ __

Mile.ge , ,own •Hr odomeur at delivtrV - - - - STATEMUIT OF WARRANTY
Subject to !he p ro~itioru ~nd conditions sl.llf!d below, in the ove11\ of
mechanical failure o l t11e Vel ticl~. the Selliog De aler agrees as followli:

(1 .} Fora Df!liod ol 30 dht. btginning
, 19_ ,
or 2,000 11111e5 after dehv~ry (wluchever occ urs f~rsl) . the Sell irtg Deat.-r
iliJit Os to rct•arr or replace the engme. transn us~ 1on "~·" aole br ake
5Vtlt1T' .. OI el tc tr i cll s ysllnl - "" il ~out char9e - to tho utent 11ece~~ilry
10 ketp lht \leh:cll! in Je rviceable condltlor. under norm al UliC,
PROVISION S
(I) Med1anical fail u re~ re1uhin.g Iron• collitiDn. lctid~nt. aLu1e or iJck
or ma1nten,1nee, are upreulv u cludetJ from Hr~ .:rbove co verage.
(b ) Repair$ me to be made in 1l1e Selllllg Oealtr 's Servin facoll ties.

\

(c) Such repair1.dn not qu~ l ify under arry new vehiclt warranty 1till
appi1Cdllle tu l11e Ve hicle ,
(2.) Uporr the e• pirat rnn of the warra~ ty pe1lod IPtc::ified in (1.) abova
&lt;tlld lor a p~rio ~ cndrng 24 months frorrt tht date the wJrranrv neriod
$pt dfre d •n [I.) &amp;bCI\Ie con unen c ~d . the Sellrng Dealer will allow a
d iscount ol _
off the n orm~l re~a i f t hargu lor p~!l$ and tahot
npm ne.:euary to kup 1he Vehicle in urtic ubla ~ondtuon under

4 PLY-POLYESTER

normal uu.

4 PLY. P&lt;)LYESTER
650X13 WHITE WALL ........;...;... ______ ,'17.75
700X13 WHITE .WALL_- ---·- ------·- · '17.75
700X13 BLACK WALL~.;.----------· '~6.50E78X14 WHITE WALLS ...-. ... _______ .;. '17.95

BELTED TIRES

GPLERW~

Addrtu - - - - - - - - -- - -

CitY- -- - - -- - - -

BLEMISHED ANO DISCONTINUED

GUARDIAN PREMIUM TIRES

DON JOHNSON, who had
the highest average of the
bowlers on the 1971 prolesslonal tour hut tlnlshed sec·
ond In earnings standings,
has jumped oft to a big
lead In m one y winnings
this year,

. ever

,,

•
Wildcats in a non-league
game.
Waterford took the first game
in the season opener for both
teams, 57-56,
The Tornado starting lineup
will be &amp;-7 sertior Brett Hart
and &amp;-10 senior Jerry Hubbard,
guards; 6-0 junior Nick !hie
and 6-2 junior Tim !hie, forwards, and- 6-2 senior Bruce
Hart, center.
Jim Hubbard, star senior
forward for the Tornadoes, is
out with a leg injury suffered in
the first quarter ag'ainsl
Eastern last Saturday night.
Jerry Hubbard is sixth in
SVAC scoring with a 15.3 mark
and Jim Hubbard was seventh
with a 15,0 mark. Bruce Har-t is
tenth with a 13.8 average.

Latest To Sign •••

HENRY AARON, tbe At·
lanla Brave slugger wbo Is
closing In on Babe Ruth's
aU-time career home run
record of 714, Is also eyeing another mark, a
$4100,001 contract covering
the next three seasons that
would make him the high·
est paid player In blstory,

nounc1

· saturday Night.-at-Ho:rtte Games .
Tornados conclude their and also Symmes Valley, ~2,
season with the Waterford
The Eagles, coached by Bill
Wildcats at Racine Saturday Phillips, are 14-2 overall and 9night.
2 in Southern Valley ConThe Eagles, who have the ference play. Miller is 13-1
best defensive team in the area overall and will complete its
permitting only 51 points per season with the Eagles.
game, took the Miller Falcpns Symmes Valley is also 9-2 in
in their first meeting, 57-53, the SV AC with Saturday's
winner taking second Place
behind league champion North
Gallia, 11-L ·
The starling lineup for the
Eagles will probably be f&gt;-9
junior Randy !loring and f&gt;.ll
signed his 1972 contract
the Mets lor an estimated senior Bob Caldwell, guards, 62 senior Randy Young and 6-1
$120,000.
Seaver, 27, also became the junior Alan DuvaU, forwards,
youngest man in all baseball and big 6-3 senior Deimis
history to receive that much Eichinger, center.
Eichinger, the area's
money for ·a single season.
fourth top scorer wiih a 21.1
average, needs 19 or more
CINCINNATI (UP!) Pitcher Jim Merritt, who lost points to win the SVAC
scoring crown against the ·
11 games in a row before
getting his lone victory last VIkings. Eichinger Is leading
year, has signed his 1972 with a 21.5 average, but
contract with the Cincinnati North Gallia 's Arthur Clark
Reds the club announced is rtgbt behind at 21.3 and ·
already having completed
today.
The 28-year-old lefty, his SVAC season.
The Tornados, coached by
bothered much of last season
by arm trouble, was the 26th Asa Bradbury, will be looking
player to come to terms with for their ninth win of the season
against nine losses against the
the Reds.

Both heads will tell you
t the most ;m loclrtant insurance for
driving is auto
res In· good driving
•rr&gt;ndltlon , Have your
checked now, at
Rizer's,

•

right: Toby Hel141", Don Gullion, Jolm Shoemaker, Larry
Swindler, Second row, left to.. right: Robin , Hand, Dusty
Mickey, Butch Workman, Dave Salyers, Lourens Steger, Bill
Maloy, Manager Tom Dunn. Third row, left to right : Asst.
Coach Todd Sautl!ll', Don Fairchild, Scott Yol!ll!l, Doug
Pfeifer, Mike Oyer, Charles Jenkins, Don Jenkins, Coach
Hawhee.

.~~ig~ . ~ 9~~--~ll?.j~~~a~~n

LISTERINE
ANTISEPTIC

DUPONT REPLACED

WILLIAMS RECALLED
NEW YORK (UPI)-Lefl
Wing Tom Williams was
recalled by the New York
Rangers Wednesday from the
Omaha Knights of the Central
Hockey League,
Williams, 21, wUI make his
National Hockey League debut
against the Los Angeles Kings
tonight

By KEITH WISECUP
The Eastern Eligles have a
tough final weekend of cage
play this Friday and Saturday
nights, taking on powerhouses
Miller Friday at .Miller and
Symmes Valley Saturday night
at home. The Southern Local

ONLY

'

wet in the SEOAL, Logari could
be looking lor a fine cage
season next year.
This year; the Chiefs are 4-13
overall and 2-11 in league
action. The Marauders,
coached by Carl Wolfe, are 7-10
overall and 5-8 in league action.
Me\gs is assured of a fifth place
finish in the league.
·

. GOODNEWS
WS ANGELES (UP!)Tackle Merlin Olsen of the Los ·
Angeles Rams, who hurt his'
left knee in the Pro Bowl game,
Jan. 23, will not require
surgery to repair the damage,
, it was announced Wednesday
by Dr. Danny Levinthal.

1972 SEOAL CAGE CHAMPIONS - Coach Carroll
Hawhee's powerful Waverly Tigers, ranked eighth In the
state in CIBBB AA circles, captured ·their second straight
Southeastern Ohio League basketball championship Tuesday
following an easy 74-54 victory over the third place Ironton
Tigers. WHS is now 15-2 overall, and 13-0 In SEOAL play. The
Tigers wU1 visit second place Ga!Upolis (14-3) in the final
game or the 1971-72 campaign Friday, Front row, left to

FRI. &amp; SAT., FEB. 18 &amp; 19

VAL TO 2.98 YD.

One

· month $1.75 . Bv mail in Ohio

Bayer Children's Aspirin

SAL~

points from Team 7. Ma ry

Team 11. Rufh Janey was high
for Team 4 wlfh 517 pins, and
Ralph Ferguson (sub) was
high for Team 11 wl!h .50'1 ins.

De ,

.

Daytime 30's
Regular 1.85

Oilly

BIRTHIMY

No.3 ·
38
18
No.4
36
20
No.8
36
20
No. 11
36
20
No. 2
32
24
No. 5
30
26
No. 1
28
28
No. 9
26
30
No. 10
26
30
No. 7
24
32
No. 6
22
34
No. 12
22
34
No. 13
20
36
No. 14
16
40
On Feb. 8, 1~72 Team 3 look 8

Team 4 took 6 points from

Ferguson, and Athens,
sophomore Mark Mace) Logan
has a sophomore· that is .in the
same class in Jin) Pierce, a i&gt;-9
guard with plenty of shooting
savvy.
Other probably starters are
6·2 junior , Ken Culbertson ,
center ; 6-2 5eilior George Shaw
and 6-2 junior 'Randy NOITis;
forwards, and' 5-8 senior Greg
·Smith at the other guard.
With three starters back and
a coach having gotten his feet

ava il llbl e':-50 cen t s per week ;

Won Lost

Al lman was high for Team 3
with 470 pins, and Mark Cheng
was high for Team 7 wlfh 501
pins.

The Meigs Marauders hope
to end their season on a winning note here Friday night
against •a greaUy improved
Logan Chieftain learn, also
playing ita final game.
Meigs didn't look all that
good against the Wellston
Golden Rocketll Tuesday nlghl
but were good enough to c~
_out on top 50-41, Maybe that's
all thl!t counts.
The Chieftains, losing again

to Athens Tuesday, 67..55, have
Now to set things straight,
been losing but scores have ·Meigs had a sticky lime
been . becpming lighter and whipplrig Coach Dick Taylor's
tighter.
Chiefs in the first round at
For instance. Logan and Logan, winning 66-S8. Although .
Ironton went 63-61\he last time the Maraudefs themselves
as compared to an earlier have improved over that
paste!ng by the Tigers, 72-55, previous meeting, the "Rock
Waverly's Tigers clippect the Springs" boys better be ready
Chiefs only 72-61 the second to mount an aU-out effort.
time around but blasted them
While three SEOAL teams
106-47 In the first round. This have
upcoming . stars
goes on with Gallipolis Jlnd (Gallipolis, sophomore Gil
A~ns .
Price; Ironton, freshman Mark

Where

PAMPERS

4 oz

w~ms

Local Bowling
Standings Week of February

By KEITH WISECUP

.

.

. Bv Molar Rou te where ta rr ier

'

'" ,_.,.,, ;w..·..,.~ ""' I..,.""~
' ,~. ·"o:c ~ !
IHEW"'"' '""'""'"' .,,.,_1 '11l'JZ~:
·- -lllscov.-liuiTi""'enwum.ers 81111.all&lt;~~~&amp;W~~eakin&amp;ll'OUIIO aren t

The bidding has been:
Wesl Norlh
Easl
South
Pass
2•
Dble
Pass
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby Dble Pass
PasS
'
You
,
South,
hold
:
An expert doesn 't need to
bother with the code word • 98654 ¥AQfi tA32.J4 H.
.\RCH . It is automatic for
What do you do now'?
him to Analyze the lead. Re- A-Bid two spades. Your pad ~
view the bidding. Count his ncr ha:; passed the buck to you.
"
win ners and losers and finalTODAY'S QUESTION
Nearly
100,0110
acres
of The first mail-order comly ask himself, "How can I
You bid two spad e~;. Your U.S. farmland is used in the pany in the United States
m a k e or defeat this con- partnel' bids three diamonds. raising of peppermint and was formed by Aaron Monttract'?"
What do you do now?
spearmint as commercial gomery Ward in 1872, in ChiOf COUI'Se , the last depends
Answer Tomorrow
crops .
· cago, with 'a capital of $2,400.
on whether or not he is declarer .
Soul h wins the diamond
lead and plays out his · ace
ond 'king or trumps. The
quee n doesn't drop so he
can 't claim seve n. As it is he
has to scramble for six .
How can he make the contract ? Easy 1 All he has to
do is top lay hearls and clubs
and if West has to follow long
enough South is rid of hi s
diamond losers.
If South stops his thinking
there, he goes after clubs.
West trumps the third cl ub
and South explains how un·
lucky· he is.
If South takes the trouble

8, 1972.
Team

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-M.SON AREA
-CI+ESTER L. TANNEHILL .. .
Exec . Ed.
ROBERl'HOEFLICH,

'

CHECK EACH fTEM
FOR SURE SAVINGS

heart ~~X..~I,!l')JJ!Y,:h,

KEITH ciOBLE FORD
BOWLING LEAGUE

iriterest, .
Jackson, who has visited the
Sl!lte far more than any of the
other candidates, vieWS the
TenneSsee primary' as "the .
first test of the thinking of

Improved Chie s at R:ock Springs Friday Night

.

.while,,..&lt;t!fl·~~ur~ ~~-: ~~...,~~ fil~;® ~~:

1.

wummg a clear-cut victory .
appear slim, _ _

+++

Key to Slam·, Loser Dt'scard

Wesl

Excepi

scheduled May 4 primary date,
the campaign has drawn IitUe

Sure Savings Friday and Saturday

Dear Lost :
Tell him love isn't just a warm bed - it's a warm heart. But
it takes a lot of understanding to make him believe it.
,.. You know, writing this column with Mom has made me
think beneath the surface . It also makes me feel very old
sometimes,
Like f'rinslance, I assumed along with my college-age
friends, that the stale phrase, "prove your love," was out of it. I
mean couples talk more !rankly these days.
But I forgot that for a glrljuat starting to date, lh!l8e ancient
words are brand new. She's never heard them before, and
maybe the boy has never said them before-&lt;~nd he's really
shook, not jusI trying to score ,
So ,. . you can 'I hand the girl a quip to brush him off with.
These
two KNOW they're terribly in love, and HE ligures sex
(NlWSPAPU. U.ITIRPRIU: ASSN.I
proves it because sex is adult and adults fall In love, not kids. But
SHE is still at the "romance is enough" stage.
WIN AT BRIDGE
What she must do is show him that if he talks her into
somethingshedoesn·t want, he'lllose her. And she can keep him
from trying if she doesn'tlet the necking get out of hand. !think
,,. - SUE
lo think the whole play out Dear Lost :
17
NORTH
he notes that he has no play
I'd snggest you work at learning how to talk with each other.
4 IO 7 52
for his contract unless West
¥ K Q 74
has al. least three hearts. H you can't, then maybe this isn't the great love you asswne. Tell
• 92
Then South starts on hearls. your boy friend you aren't ready, Make him .look at the possible
• A Q5
not clubs .
consequences : not just pregnancy, but guilt, parents' loss of
WEST
EAST
East shows out on the third faith, feeling trapped or used or owned.
•¥ 9Q96
•a
hearl so s 0 u th can cas h
a52
• 10 3
Often a boy is more intensely in love than the girl t K Q 83
• J 10 6 5
dummy 's fourth heart. Then espec~'allywhen it's his first big romance. When he says, "Let's
he works on clubs and gets
10
4
8
7
6
3
2
•
• J
rid of his last diamond loser proveourlove,"hereallymeans, "!want to keep you, and this is
0
l ~~~ ~~)
on the third club .
the surest way because it's kind of like marriage." He figures if
• AJ 6
Suppose hearts were 3-3. she goes the distance, she'sgot to mean it, -she'shis.
• A 74
Then South would go after
Whathedoesn'trealize-unUIIater - isthatpremaluresex
"'K 9
clubs and hope for the best .
.
. .
.

~ ' vlfine~'iiC't""

Jackson of Washington . and
Sen, Edmund Musltie of Maine.
"The people of Tennessee
have been good to me,"
Wallace said in an Interview
last wel)k, recalling lhat;,he
carried 47 of tbe state's 95
,counties in running· a strong
second to Niion here in 1968,
An · American Party candidate four years ago, WaUace
said he will definitely run as a
Democrat if he enters the
Tennessee pri!nary.
· Under state law, all "nationally recognize{!" candidates
will be liSted on tbe ballot The
only way a name can be
removed is lor the person listed
to file an affidavit with the
secretary of state that he is not
a candidate.
fn . the legislature,
where a hattie is raging over
the proposed changing of the

(1 ) ReDaiiS are to be made in It·~ Stirv ke lnc rilt&lt;el of the Se llmg De.1ler
or 11 11i e r partu::i pnuny . lr~n c h • S~d Cttev•olet D~o~ler at such Chevtolet
Oealer 'tregul.1t •eta•l pnce.

(b) h JHr•uly e•chJtled lrom Waor~nr~ co ~ e r a~r. Me damage hom collision . ~ cc idenl m aUYU . m normal ma•nte na11ce ae &lt;vtc es su ch as
lubr•cano11, 011 changes, tui\C· Uil. ere.
GENERAl CO NOITI ONS
Th11 W,u r Jn t ~ IS IIIIJI&lt;'I b~ lht S1lling De .1lcr ontv. a11d not by the
mJn ufiiC h.IJI!I ol tire Velucle .

lhi1 Warrtntv is txpr .. tly in lieu o f env o thtr werrenti u ,
t•prused o r implied , inc:ludi ng eny implotd werren t y o f metcllanubiht~ or f ilnut fo r 1 ptrlu:uler purpose , tn d tnv other
obll9 1t ion~ or liabilit ie s on the Stlf1ng o .. 1,e r '1111rt. and S111f ing
Dtller nlother usumet nor •tJthol illl 1rry other perso n t o
U1Um1 lor .it 1ny Olhlr liabili lr in conne c tion witM tht 1111 o!
the 1/thiclt.'
Th,s W.ln.lnlv nl!lst be av~iltblewi t h the Vrh ide n t lh~ t•mc of applic,1 tion

lor a n~ re11a•rs or a&lt;'IJUIII'I"IIIn l s, ~flll" not transler.Jblt 01 aurgnabl e,
l ' N~I o llm"'

l hit Warrantr is not v~lid unlcnJirtn( d bv the Selling Dcn l ~r·, outltoril cd
departmen t hc~d and lly til e P~ rtlrHc r. who i5 to retain a copv.
Del ler's Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Cilr- , -- - - - -

PROVI SIONS

State_ _ __

•• 10 , •• , ..,.., ,_ "'c.~.~.....,.,.

"'' '" '"""""

l

l nwi t n~~s (It all the abovll tond lt•O•II, we h ot~ u .1tta c~"" our Sl fl n~ l u r e s
li HS
Sign~t ur e

, 19_ .

dayof

of Oopartm@nt

H ~a d

_ _ __ _ _ __

Signature of P t J r e h i S " - - - - - -- - - -

,

G78X14 WHITE WALL•
G78X15 . WHITE WALL
F78X15 WHITE WALL a
H78X 14 W_HITI WALL.-~----------· •26.50
H78X14 · BLACK WALL------------· •23.50
L78X1.5 WHmwALL·------------- •28.75

Many Chevrolet dealers are
announcing the mos t complete
warranty ever put on a used car.
Count your blessings,
First, you're protected where
it counts most : on th-e major me.chanica! parts of the car you buy.
And that lasts a healthy 30 days or
2000 miles, whichever comes first.
Second, you get special savings on im y parts or labor you
need, Frnm the day you buy for

All Prices Plus Fie!. Excuse Tax, From Sl.76to $3.27
!!!!~~D FREE

24 months.
Third, the special savings are
good all across the country at most
Chevrolet dealers. Say you're on a
vacation trip and find you need
service. You just get in touch with
a participating Chevrolet dealer·
ship,
All you do is show an OK
warranty identification card you
receive when you buy your used
car.

Your Chevrolet ,dealers' new
OK warranty. It takes the guesswork out of used car buying. ·

. @)
A K II
•

'

.

lit} WAY 10 SO THE U.s.A.
I

I

�'

..

.

,. ,_. ,

. ...

..

I

~.

••
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 17ul972 ·•

0.,

•

Herd Thunders Pas~Bollcats

17' 1972

.."

MOORE'S .IN POMEROY
.

I

United Press Interoatlon!ll
l&lt;Jnight than we have all year."
The coach ·of Marshall 's· The 16th-ranked Herd, now
Thundering Herd said : "We 211-2, got 26 points from guard
were quicker than Ohio and TYrone Collins, .25 from forthat made a big difference ... . ward Russell lee and 21 from
Quite a . difference, ap- Randy Noll. Ohio was led by
parently, as Coach Carl Tacy's Tom Riccardi with 22.
West Virginians wiped out Ohio
"We had a good game from
U. in Athens 9!&gt;-76 Wedn esday Noll and the rest of the team
night.
just played super ," Tacy re"We got quick steals which marked.
we neede~," Tacy said. 111 Ohio U. Coach Jim Snyder,
think we did some things better whose Bobcats have turned out

some speCtacular upsets this
season even thought It doesn't
show in an 11-9 reoord, admitted : "We just dln 't have the
speed to play wiih them;"
"The turning point was some
key steals they made," Snyder
said . "They were really marged up tonight."
AII·Amerlca Matetlsl
Particularly taking note of
lee, Snyder said, "The last
time l saw Lee l said he was an

.

I

All-American a0d I still feef'the C...1eveland State 79-62; Ashland . terence,
~
same way."
romped 1over Wilberforce 121·
· Atdtlaod S..rlng 111gb
ln other games of the night, 87; ' Defiance outpointed
ALso in the MAC, Roger
Kent state pulled off a mild Bluffton 108-IUO; Baldwin- Evans scored two field goals
surprise by edging Miami 78- Wallace !ttsPosed of Pobit Park and F1oyd Jefferson added a
77; Dayton fell to Detroit78-70; (Pa . ) 88-65, and Ohio free throw, all in the last minBowling Green lost its bid for bomini~an edged Whl!\!ling ute, to give Kent its win over
an upset in the closing seconds, (W. Va.) ~1.
Miami. Kent is now 4-3 in the
losing to Western Mimigllh 7:&gt;In a coujlle of games between league, while Miami, the de74 ; and Akron won its :Hlh cross-to\;n rivalries, Cin· fending mampion, is 4-5.
home game in a row wit~ a 66- cinnali ~eated Xavier '16-71,
Dave Johnsclll scored half of
58 Win over Indiana State.
and in C~ton, Malone mwned his total 14 points late in the
Youngstown State whipped Walsh 115'77.
seco¢ half to help Cincinnati
DaYIA/n's record fell to 11-11 pull away from . XaVier. The
when seven.foot center Gerald Bearcats are 3-8 on the season.
Smith of, Detroit scored 32 Xavier feU to 9-12.
points and · grabbed 21
Ashland's 121 points was a
rebounds. The win made . seamblghfortheEagles, who
Detroit liM.
are now.l7-4. Freshman guard
Akron, ihe Ilith-ranked small Bllllligglns bad 31 points, the
college ttjam In tbe country, tbird g1111e in the last .four he
ran Its aeason mark to 193 with has scOred at least 30 points.
a balancect attack paced by Freshman guard Kirk Minteer
l..E)n Paul \vith ~ points.
added 25 points.
case or a tie for first place, Ernest Pettis hit a 25.foot • Jim UnderwQ9d's 20 points
each school involved will keep jumper ' ,with II seconds for Ohio Dominican plit him
U1e trophy for a proportional
remaining to give Western ·over the 2,000point markbf his
part of the year, with the order Michigan Its Win over BowUng college career.
of possession determined ,by Green. Sophomore Center
Dean Martin of BsldWinthe toss of a coin.
Brian Scal)lan was high for the Wallace scored 28 points in .
News releases will be issued losing Faloons with 28 points as leading the Yellow Jackets to
during the school year on the they feU to.3-16 overall and 1-e their llintb Win In 21 games.
point totals at that time prior to In the Mid-American ConDave Berry hit for 28 points
the final announcement in the
as Malone ~ded Walsh.
spring of. the winner and other
places.

WASHI
BIRTHDAY
It's the moment of truth you've been waiting for ••• our George
Washington's Birthday sale, wi_th rock-bottom .prices in e_very
department. it's a real bargam bonanza ,. .. super savmgs,

SEO Officials Complete Plans

.FRI. &amp; SAT., FEB. 18 &amp;19
ODDS and.ENDS

For All-Sports Trophy Award
•'

ATHENS - Final plans were
announced today for an annual
All -Sports Championship
Trophy which is to be
presented in the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League begin·
ning this year. Arrangements
for the award were worked out
recently ~etw e en representatives of the league and the
loop's sportswriter s and
broadcasters association, alter
eac h group had discussed
various proposals.
Points will be awarded for
five sports football ,
basketball, baseball, golf and

track. Additional sports may although the presentation of
be added later. The point the trophy won't be made until
strusture will be eight for a the following fall.
first-place finish, seven for
Except for the first year,
second, etc. In case of a tie for presentation of the trophy will
any place in the standings, the take place at the football game
teams involved will divide the between the previous winner
points (if two teams tie for and the new all-sports
second, they would divide the champion.
points for second and third,
A rotating trophy will he
etc.).
presented; to be retained by the
winning school for one year. In
Announcement of the allsports champion will be made
in the spring following completion of the last spring event
(baseball, tra ck or gol£ ),

Cage Statistics
1971 -72 Southeastern

TRI·YALLEY

Ohio Athletic League

Vinton Co. at Nelson.- York
Be lpre at Warren Loca l

Basketball Statistics
(AsoiFeb. Ill
TEAM STATISTICS

Others

Gallia County Tournament

Field Goal Percentage

Team
Ironton
Waver ly
Athens
Gall ipolis
Meigs
Jackson
Logan
Wellston

FGM.A Pet.
360-720 .500
354-763 .464
29H34 .461
292·647 .451
258·630 .410
240.653 .368
257-734 .351
269·777 .346

Fre e Throw Percentage

Team
Gallipol is
Waverly
Meigs
Ironton
Ja ckson
Athens
Wellston
·t ogan .

8:30p.m.

Eastern at Miller
Symmes Valley at Chesapeake
Glouster at Starr-Washington
Chapmansville at Pt. Pleasant

Waha ma at Spencer

Pet.
SATURDAY
· .656
SVAC
.637 Symmes Valley at Eastern
.622
TRt-YALLEY
.617 Belpre at Federal· Hocking
.60;
Others
.582 Gallla County Tourn:
.559
Champ., consolation games.
.529 Waterford at SoulheQl __ ••
. ''-J:i';;- J •• R.~~e,~':."s G A'· . Bisi1Qgf,Jiiuetat ViDI!lP-:t'ounty
~T
..::.:.,p. 4 vg. WiiiiArn&amp;tawn .al Warren LO&lt;:al
M~1gs
~89 12 40.8 Ale•ander at Lancaster Fisher
Gallipolis
478 12 39.8 Reemlin at Glouster -.
Athens
477 12 39.8 Lore City at

..m:

FTM·A
204·311
137·215
204-328
127·206
193-319
170.292
142-254
144-272

at Rio Grande
North Ga llia vs . Southwestern,
7 p.m.
Hannan-Tra ce vs Kyger Creek,

.

Waverl y

461

Ironton
Ja ckso n
Logan
Wellston

J2 38.4

Starr.Washington

428 12 35.7 Pl. Pleasant at Parkersburg
409 12 34.1 South (makeup!
396 12 33.0
. TUESDAY(Feb.22l
350 12 29.2 Pl. Pleasant at Hurricane

Personal Fouls

Team
Waverly
Meigs
Gallipol is
Ja ckson
Ironton
Athens
Wellston
Logan

No.
170
185
195
208
211
218
224
227

G
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12

Ravenswood at Wahama

Avg.
FRIDAY (Feb. 25}
14.2 Pl. Pleasant at Huntington
15.4 East
16.3 Wahama at Wlrt County
17.3
SATURDAY!Feb.26l
17.6 Pt. Pleasant at Ravenswood
18.2
18.7
18.9

Individual Leaders

College Scores

Field Goa I Percentage
Name, Team
FGM-A Pet.
Markin, Ironton
46· 80 .575
By United Press International
Price, Gallipolis 66-115 .574 St . Jos. Pa. 8t Geolwn , D.C. 70
Over, Waverlv
99-t78 .556 Hofstra 96 Kings Point 65
Hannan. Ironton 62·122 .508 Cincinnati 76 Xavier (0) 71
Green, Athens
54-107 .505 Bloomsbg 87 Millersvl68
Free Throw Percentage
Slippery Rock 78 Alliance 67
Name, Team
FTM·A Pet. Gettysburg 86 Dickinson 48
Snowden, Gall .
68· 92 .739 W. Mich . 75 Bowling Grn 74
Green . Athens
50- 73 .6.85 Marshall 95 Ohio U. 76
Settles, Wellston 40. 59 .678 Wes t Vir. 87 Wm .&amp;Mary 71
Noe. Gallipolis
54- 81 .667 Temple 89 Pittsburgh 74
T. Vaughan. Meigs 46· 69 .66 7 Adelphia 75 St. Anselm 's 67
Keller, Jack.
38- 57 .667 Oneonta t02 Oswego 59
--Reboun~o:

Name, Team

Nil.

G Avg.

Price. Gall.
t76 12 14.7
T. Vaughan,
Meigs
147 12 12.3
Oyer, Waverly
134 12 11.2
Keller. Jack .
131 12 10.9
Smith, Athens
127 12 10.6
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
FRIDAY
SEOAL
Wellston at Athens
Waverly at Galli polis
Ja Ckson at Ironton
Logan at Meiq s

SVAC Standings

Penn Sl. 86 Virginia 75
Dav is &amp; Elkins 85 Glenvl

76
Allegheny 80 Mercyhurst 79

NHL Standings
By United Press lnternalloaal
By United Press International
Three seconds. don't seem
East
like a very long lime but they
W
.
L.
T.
Pis
seemedUI\ethreehoursforthe
Boston
~ 1~ ; :'( Seattle SuPerSonics.
New York
Montreal
31 13 12 74 The Son\cs led Boston, lll·
Oelrait
24 24 9 57 110, with 27 seconds left to play
Toronto
Bulfalo
;~ ~~ ~~ ~ Wednesday night but failed to
Vancouver
15 35 s 35 get off a shot in the reqUired 24
West
seconds. The noisy crowd in
Chicago
~ ~· ~· ~s Seattle, hOwever, caused· tbe
Minnesota
31 18 9 71 officials to miss the 24-Becond
California
18 29 12 48 buzzer and the Sonics left tbe
~~i~od~~phia ;~ ~~ 1: ~ &lt;Xlurl with," victory. Or so they
Pittsburgh
17 31 9 43 thought.
Las Angeles
15 38 7 37 Boston Coam Tommy ReinWednesday's Results
sohn protested and the officials
· Thursday's Games
Pittsburgh 4 Toronto 2
br nnht th So ' b ck f th
Montreal 1 California 1
o_. e rues a or e
Virginia vs. Carolina
At Charlotte, N.C. Chicago 3 Philadelphia 3
last three seconds. Dave
{Only game scheduled)
Minnesot~ 4 Detroit 2
Cowens almost spoiled the
St. LouiS 3 Las Angeles1 Sonics' night with an easy
(Only games scheduled}
NBA Standings
Thursday's Games
layup .under the basket but,
By United
Press
International
New
York
at
Los
Angeles
following
a timeout, Dick
Eastern Conference
Allani'Q.(;II'If
' · .
Boston at Philadelphia
Snyder hit a desneratiQnllhot In
1
.t~•
o;r.' ·~t~!,l,o
·
Plttsbur.gh al Buffalo . ~" "" th 1. I l ' d~•!f."'·' ~~~~··
Ptt. ~
(Ontygamesscheduied)
. e ma ~n wgtv,e:&gt;ea, e
' Bos)on
44 20- ;;688 '~..
• • ' a 113-ll2' Victory.
,
·
New York
38 23 .623 4&gt;;2
AHL Standings
The lead thUs ctlanged hands
Philadelphia 24 38 .387 19
Buttalo
17 44 .279 2SIJ2 By United Press International three tim~S · in the last three
Central Division
Eas~. L. T. Pl.. seconds and 19 times during
W. L. Pel. vB
Balllmore
25 35 .417 ... Baston
32 17 8 72 the game. Cowens led the
Altanta
24 38 .387 2 Nova Scotia
~~ ~~
~~ Celtlcs with 29 points while
Cincinnati
18 42 .300 711'2 ~~~i~~~~
20 26 9 49 Spencer lfaywood had 26 to
17 46 ·270 9 '~2 Rochester
Cleveland
19
31 7 45 lead Seattle.
Western Conference
Midwest Division
Wes~
In o\1ler1 National Basketball
W.
L.
Pet.
GB
Cleveland
·
L.
T
.
Pl
s
Association
action, Phoenix
26 20 8 60
Milwaukee
SO 13 .794
Chicago
44 t8 .710 5v2 Ballimore
25 20 9 59 edged U:ts Angeles, 110-109,
Phoenix
39 25 .609 11'12 Cincinnati
23 24 10 S6 Phlladeilphia downed
Detroit
22 40 .355 27'12 ~r;~~eJ,d
~; ~~ ~ ~~ Cleveland, 126-116, Atlanta
Pacific Division
Tidewater
1~ 35 7 33 shaded Baltimore, 100.103, and
W
.
L.
Pet.
GB
Wednesday's
New Yor~ defeated Houston,
Los Angeles 51 9 .850 ... B 11 •
N Results
S .
2
1
Golden Stale 38 24 .613 14
a tmore
~va . co 1a 2
llll-100. ,
Seattle
38 25 .603 14'12 Cleveland 6 Spnngfleld·l
Wil Chamber! In
d his
Houston
24 39 .38! 28 v2 , {Only gamesschedutedl
t
a score
Portland
15 49 .234 38
Thursdoy's Games
30,000th career point but
Wednesday's Results
{No games scheduled l
committed a goaltendlng viola'
New York 110 Houston 100
lion with three seconds left
Atlanta 105 Baltimore 103
,
which enatlled Phoenix to beat
Philadelphia 126 Cleveland 116
rhe speaker .of the House the Lakers Chamberlain the
Phoenix 110 Los Angeles 109
of Representatives becomes
--.1 .
'
Seattle 113 Boston 112
leading SCQI'er m NBA history
(Only games scheduled)
head of the government if
.
1
Thursday's Games
both the president and vice- passed the 30,000 mark when
Milwaukee at Cincinnati
president of the U n i t e d Neal Walk was called for
New York at Chicago
States are incapacitated .
goaltendlng on his layup at(Only gamesscheduledl
tempt. But he batted away
ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Kentucky
48 12 .800 ...
Virginia
37 25 .597 12
New York
28 33 .459 20'12
Floridian s
24 37 .393 241J2
Carolina
24 37 .393 24 112
Pittsburgh
21 39 .350 27 .
West
W. l. Pet. GB
Utah
43 20 .683
Indiana
35 26 .574 7
Dallas
30 34 .469 13'h
Denver
24 37 .393 18
Memphis
23 37 .383 18 112
Wednesday's Results
Kentucky 129 Pittsburgh 105
Utah 119 New York 114
{Only games scheduled}

1

PAINT SALE

tempt illegally, giving the Suns
the lead.
Walk was high man for
Phoenix with · 30 points and
Jerry West and Jim McMillian
had 26 eam for the Lakers . .
Chamberlain 'finished with
19.

En~niel

8 Quart

Johnny Lightning

PLASTIC

CARS
2 fo~ '1

BUCKET
Special
On~ 49~

Now 9~

Pomeroy

i

Men's Sweaters !
: '4 '5 '6
i
!: Values
to 10.98 . . . . 4.00 :
Values to 1'2.98 . · . . . s.oo *

.

102 E. MAIN

I

.

POMEROY
'

4

...and we're having a housecleaning .

Reg.

.·. ·25¢,,.,.,,

R'IGHT GUARD

ANACIN

~,

~

Reg. s1 09

·

- I• I

Reg. $1.69

.__,,,, 1

.,

l 1 !&lt; •1

. I

9·1' e:· . . . ~ •
•

CREST
TOOTHPASTE
I

REG. 11.09

••

DRISTAN
·50's Reg. $259

49

$

COMBINATION

Outerwear Jacket

• Values to 16.95 • • . • 6.00 ~

PACQUIN
HAND LOTION

~

•
SUNMARK

REG. 18.98

Size XL · Belteve
.
ole Kerrn , it has
reen around too
ong.

~

MAALOX

4~

IR£t.i&amp;9'~1,;9
· · ,~ ,\
...

&amp;SATURDAY

1 Man's

$1.4949~

89e

$

•

SYRINGE

SKIN BRACER

PRV-1
HOT STEAM .

AFTER

Y2 PRICE

~eg.

$695

$

Y2 Price ·

350

SUN MARK
NO. 880

COOL MIST

Reg. 16.98 to
60.00. Sale prices
are 8.49 to 30.00.

Reg.

HEATING

VAPORIZER

~1.25

R~ $19,95 ·. $

Odd Lot Men's

99

$'

NO. 1060

SUN

(

Reg. s3.95

VAPORIZER

· ·~HAVE

1 Rack Men's.
Outerwear

Marguerite's Shoe Sh~p

Drexel 68 Ursinus 59

Reg.

CHAP STICK

~ ~~•a

Sizes. are broken. Reg. 49.50 to
60.00. Sale Rrices are 24.75 to
30.00.

'

Wes tern Mo. 61 Haverford 58

29~

100's
Reg. $1.59.

1 Rack Men's Sport Coats.

THE NEW OWNERSHIP OF

HAIR SPRAY

70%

PRO
TOOTHBRUSH

*********************
Mrs. Betty Ohlinger Is .. ,

Rubbing.Alcohol

I

'

39e

SUDDEN BEAUTY ~

McKESSON

s~ Reg. 69'

Reg. 3(1

It's the Truth • . Kerm Has Bargains!

*********************

Reg. 7CJ

~~·~

BATTERIES

.

FRIDAY

~

$1.50

GILLETTE
SUPER STAINLESS

EVEREADY

MOORE'S

300 SHEET

600 Pair. First Come
First Served
No Return or Exchange

.........

I

NOTEBOOK
FILLER

Reg.

c

Hot Wheels and

1

Amer ican U. 84 Delaware 68

s1.oo $1.29

19~ PAIR

5 'GR.'

SemiGloss

124 W. Main

Reg. 8CJ

'

Closeout! Discontinued Colors
Interior
All Star
latex

Regular Nylon Hose

,100
ASPIRI

g

Sl. Bon. 94 St. Fran . N.Y . 58
Tenn . St . 50 Bellarmine 45
Wake Forest 59 Clemson 51
Pa ce 72 Pratt lnst. 62
Clarion St. 75 Ednbro St. 72
Albr ight 91 Lycoming 79
Cheyney St . 125 Kulztwn 71
Syracuse 91 Bucknell 74
Citadel 99 Richmond 79
Catawba 77 Atlantic Chris 70
S. C. St . 98 Erskine 77
Fl orida A&amp;M 112 St . Lea 82
Kenl Sl. 78 Miam i (OJ 77

Villanova 102 Duquesne 81
Gannon 87 Lemoyne 82
SVAC STANDINGS
Colga te 78 Fairfield 71
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L Pis. Op. Middlebury 82 Clarkson 62
North Gallia 14 2 1336 880 St. Louis 88 North Tex . St. 75
Eastern
12 2 1027 753 Fairmont St . 85 Salem 58
Bluefield St. 122 Concord 74
Symmes Va lley
11 5. 1152 1064 VMI 68 W.V. Tech 59
Hannan Trace 8 8 908 919 Wiley 04 Tex. Southern 89
Soulhern
8 9 1109 1051 Rider 87 Lafayette 84
Kyger Creek 2 14 842 1115 Ken lucky Wesleyan 77 Shaw 66
Southwestern 0 15 558 1300 Marquett e 88 Jacksanvl 79
Evansville 106 DePauw 70 ,
New Hamp. 73 Connecticut 65
SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L P OP Wes t Chslr 97 Mansfld Sl. 86
North Galtia
II 1. 1044 631 Yngslwn St. 79 Cleve St. 62
Symmes Valley 9 2 868 674 Ash land 12 t Wilberforce 87
Eastern
9 2 733 554 Malon·e 95 Walsh 77
Southern
5 7 790 778 De troit 78 Dayton 70
Hannan Trace 5 7 695 721 Akron 66 Indiana St. 58
Defiance 103 Bluffton 100 .
Kyger Creek
2 10 650 842
Southwestern 0 12 414 994 Maryland 79 No. Car. 77 , at
TOTALS
4t 41 5194 5194 Navy 80 Rochester 62
Vanderbilt 89 Mississippi 83
Assumplian 103 Am . Inti 84
SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP Tufts 99 MIT 81
Eas tern
10 1 485 385 Davidson 74 Duke 72
North Gallia 10 2 556 376 St. Jos., .Ind. 84 Buller 73
Symmes Valley 7 4 520 426 Colo. Coli .' 9'1 Metro St. 80
Kyger Creek
6. 6 512 538 Sa. Car . 84 Nev. (L.V.} 81
Southern
5 7 500 518 August;. 105 Morris Brown 71
Hannan Trace 3 9 395 510 Hamilton 90 Hobart 81
Southwestern 0 12 376 591 Hope 101 Alma 97
TOTALS
41 41 3344 3344 Oakland 82 Saginaw Val. 80
Olivet 101 Adrian 59
This Week's Schedule:
Friday - Southwestern vs. Scranton 87 Wagner 85
North Gallla1 Hannan Trace Wesleyan 83 Coast Guard 60
vs . Kyger Creek In the Gallia
ctJunty Tournament.
Hear t and blood vessel
Waterford at Southern
diseases cost the American
Eastern af Miller
Saturday Night - Symmes economy ap estimated $17.3Valley at Eastern .
billion yearly and cause
Gallla Counly Consat.atlan
52,000,000
los t work da ys,
and Championship games, 7
·and 8: 15 p. m., Rio C:·ande according to . Your Heart
l.yne Cen ter .
,A:;socia lion.

25e. up ,

I

WRITE/RIGHT

MOUTHWASH &amp;
GARGLE

LIVELY lADY

'

,Choice ·

Connie Hawkins' layup at-

Bob Rule scored 31 points
and Billy Cunningham hit 30 as
Philadel(illa beat Cleveland,
snapping its own seven-game
losing streak and extending the
Cavaliers' skid to 10 games.

CHLORASEPTI(

BARGAIN TABLE

SotP,cs Win·Tilt
At Gun, 113-112

Pro Standings

astounding discounts ... nobody can top these val,ues, by George!
It's an all-American event ... .Thursday through Monday only.
Make it a shopping weekend. You can't afford to miss it.

.1

PAD
$ 95

•

Dress Shoes
1h price .
.

I

Sizes are broken.

.FAMOUS NAME BRANDS

:

Bargain Tables ~ ·$1 :to $6
ladies' and Children's. Values to 116

TABLE
Miscellaneous Items
I

49~

To

'2

Men's Handkerchiefs Limit 12 Per Customer ·

-

2~00

$1 LOT LA.DIES'

3.00 ~ .

i·

; BLOUSE$ . SLACKS_ VALUES TO 12.98 .
**t*******~
'*******************************
Kenn

NO PURQiASE NECESSARY.

vai. to 4.98. MOst never need ironing . Sizes 6 to

12.

Ax/

'

KERM'S KORNER .

New York Clothing House'

iiiiiiiiiiiiii

POMEROY OH
•I

u

BIKE. sso VAWE DURING ., .
McKESSON BEXEL Yz PRICE SALE

BOYS' JEANS ....................2.98:--

]JasA
Big

COUPON

FREEl
II
OOME IN AND REGISTER FOR AN ENGLISH

********************************************•

PURSES, HOSE, TENNIS SHOES,
CHILDREN'S SHOES, ETC.
iiiiiiiiiiiiii

8$ each

NAME---------~-­

:

.

ADDRESS~--,....-PHONE---....-

)#.~

VIcKS"

NyQuil.

KOTEX
12's

NIGHTTIME COLDS MEDICINE

Reg.

1.59

1

oniy 89 ~.·

REG.

55'

..

I '

II

. I

�'

..

.

,. ,_. ,

. ...

..

I

~.

••
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 17ul972 ·•

0.,

•

Herd Thunders Pas~Bollcats

17' 1972

.."

MOORE'S .IN POMEROY
.

I

United Press Interoatlon!ll
l&lt;Jnight than we have all year."
The coach ·of Marshall 's· The 16th-ranked Herd, now
Thundering Herd said : "We 211-2, got 26 points from guard
were quicker than Ohio and TYrone Collins, .25 from forthat made a big difference ... . ward Russell lee and 21 from
Quite a . difference, ap- Randy Noll. Ohio was led by
parently, as Coach Carl Tacy's Tom Riccardi with 22.
West Virginians wiped out Ohio
"We had a good game from
U. in Athens 9!&gt;-76 Wedn esday Noll and the rest of the team
night.
just played super ," Tacy re"We got quick steals which marked.
we neede~," Tacy said. 111 Ohio U. Coach Jim Snyder,
think we did some things better whose Bobcats have turned out

some speCtacular upsets this
season even thought It doesn't
show in an 11-9 reoord, admitted : "We just dln 't have the
speed to play wiih them;"
"The turning point was some
key steals they made," Snyder
said . "They were really marged up tonight."
AII·Amerlca Matetlsl
Particularly taking note of
lee, Snyder said, "The last
time l saw Lee l said he was an

.

I

All-American a0d I still feef'the C...1eveland State 79-62; Ashland . terence,
~
same way."
romped 1over Wilberforce 121·
· Atdtlaod S..rlng 111gb
ln other games of the night, 87; ' Defiance outpointed
ALso in the MAC, Roger
Kent state pulled off a mild Bluffton 108-IUO; Baldwin- Evans scored two field goals
surprise by edging Miami 78- Wallace !ttsPosed of Pobit Park and F1oyd Jefferson added a
77; Dayton fell to Detroit78-70; (Pa . ) 88-65, and Ohio free throw, all in the last minBowling Green lost its bid for bomini~an edged Whl!\!ling ute, to give Kent its win over
an upset in the closing seconds, (W. Va.) ~1.
Miami. Kent is now 4-3 in the
losing to Western Mimigllh 7:&gt;In a coujlle of games between league, while Miami, the de74 ; and Akron won its :Hlh cross-to\;n rivalries, Cin· fending mampion, is 4-5.
home game in a row wit~ a 66- cinnali ~eated Xavier '16-71,
Dave Johnsclll scored half of
58 Win over Indiana State.
and in C~ton, Malone mwned his total 14 points late in the
Youngstown State whipped Walsh 115'77.
seco¢ half to help Cincinnati
DaYIA/n's record fell to 11-11 pull away from . XaVier. The
when seven.foot center Gerald Bearcats are 3-8 on the season.
Smith of, Detroit scored 32 Xavier feU to 9-12.
points and · grabbed 21
Ashland's 121 points was a
rebounds. The win made . seamblghfortheEagles, who
Detroit liM.
are now.l7-4. Freshman guard
Akron, ihe Ilith-ranked small Bllllligglns bad 31 points, the
college ttjam In tbe country, tbird g1111e in the last .four he
ran Its aeason mark to 193 with has scOred at least 30 points.
a balancect attack paced by Freshman guard Kirk Minteer
l..E)n Paul \vith ~ points.
added 25 points.
case or a tie for first place, Ernest Pettis hit a 25.foot • Jim UnderwQ9d's 20 points
each school involved will keep jumper ' ,with II seconds for Ohio Dominican plit him
U1e trophy for a proportional
remaining to give Western ·over the 2,000point markbf his
part of the year, with the order Michigan Its Win over BowUng college career.
of possession determined ,by Green. Sophomore Center
Dean Martin of BsldWinthe toss of a coin.
Brian Scal)lan was high for the Wallace scored 28 points in .
News releases will be issued losing Faloons with 28 points as leading the Yellow Jackets to
during the school year on the they feU to.3-16 overall and 1-e their llintb Win In 21 games.
point totals at that time prior to In the Mid-American ConDave Berry hit for 28 points
the final announcement in the
as Malone ~ded Walsh.
spring of. the winner and other
places.

WASHI
BIRTHDAY
It's the moment of truth you've been waiting for ••• our George
Washington's Birthday sale, wi_th rock-bottom .prices in e_very
department. it's a real bargam bonanza ,. .. super savmgs,

SEO Officials Complete Plans

.FRI. &amp; SAT., FEB. 18 &amp;19
ODDS and.ENDS

For All-Sports Trophy Award
•'

ATHENS - Final plans were
announced today for an annual
All -Sports Championship
Trophy which is to be
presented in the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League begin·
ning this year. Arrangements
for the award were worked out
recently ~etw e en representatives of the league and the
loop's sportswriter s and
broadcasters association, alter
eac h group had discussed
various proposals.
Points will be awarded for
five sports football ,
basketball, baseball, golf and

track. Additional sports may although the presentation of
be added later. The point the trophy won't be made until
strusture will be eight for a the following fall.
first-place finish, seven for
Except for the first year,
second, etc. In case of a tie for presentation of the trophy will
any place in the standings, the take place at the football game
teams involved will divide the between the previous winner
points (if two teams tie for and the new all-sports
second, they would divide the champion.
points for second and third,
A rotating trophy will he
etc.).
presented; to be retained by the
winning school for one year. In
Announcement of the allsports champion will be made
in the spring following completion of the last spring event
(baseball, tra ck or gol£ ),

Cage Statistics
1971 -72 Southeastern

TRI·YALLEY

Ohio Athletic League

Vinton Co. at Nelson.- York
Be lpre at Warren Loca l

Basketball Statistics
(AsoiFeb. Ill
TEAM STATISTICS

Others

Gallia County Tournament

Field Goal Percentage

Team
Ironton
Waver ly
Athens
Gall ipolis
Meigs
Jackson
Logan
Wellston

FGM.A Pet.
360-720 .500
354-763 .464
29H34 .461
292·647 .451
258·630 .410
240.653 .368
257-734 .351
269·777 .346

Fre e Throw Percentage

Team
Gallipol is
Waverly
Meigs
Ironton
Ja ckson
Athens
Wellston
·t ogan .

8:30p.m.

Eastern at Miller
Symmes Valley at Chesapeake
Glouster at Starr-Washington
Chapmansville at Pt. Pleasant

Waha ma at Spencer

Pet.
SATURDAY
· .656
SVAC
.637 Symmes Valley at Eastern
.622
TRt-YALLEY
.617 Belpre at Federal· Hocking
.60;
Others
.582 Gallla County Tourn:
.559
Champ., consolation games.
.529 Waterford at SoulheQl __ ••
. ''-J:i';;- J •• R.~~e,~':."s G A'· . Bisi1Qgf,Jiiuetat ViDI!lP-:t'ounty
~T
..::.:.,p. 4 vg. WiiiiArn&amp;tawn .al Warren LO&lt;:al
M~1gs
~89 12 40.8 Ale•ander at Lancaster Fisher
Gallipolis
478 12 39.8 Reemlin at Glouster -.
Athens
477 12 39.8 Lore City at

..m:

FTM·A
204·311
137·215
204-328
127·206
193-319
170.292
142-254
144-272

at Rio Grande
North Ga llia vs . Southwestern,
7 p.m.
Hannan-Tra ce vs Kyger Creek,

.

Waverl y

461

Ironton
Ja ckso n
Logan
Wellston

J2 38.4

Starr.Washington

428 12 35.7 Pl. Pleasant at Parkersburg
409 12 34.1 South (makeup!
396 12 33.0
. TUESDAY(Feb.22l
350 12 29.2 Pl. Pleasant at Hurricane

Personal Fouls

Team
Waverly
Meigs
Gallipol is
Ja ckson
Ironton
Athens
Wellston
Logan

No.
170
185
195
208
211
218
224
227

G
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12

Ravenswood at Wahama

Avg.
FRIDAY (Feb. 25}
14.2 Pl. Pleasant at Huntington
15.4 East
16.3 Wahama at Wlrt County
17.3
SATURDAY!Feb.26l
17.6 Pt. Pleasant at Ravenswood
18.2
18.7
18.9

Individual Leaders

College Scores

Field Goa I Percentage
Name, Team
FGM-A Pet.
Markin, Ironton
46· 80 .575
By United Press International
Price, Gallipolis 66-115 .574 St . Jos. Pa. 8t Geolwn , D.C. 70
Over, Waverlv
99-t78 .556 Hofstra 96 Kings Point 65
Hannan. Ironton 62·122 .508 Cincinnati 76 Xavier (0) 71
Green, Athens
54-107 .505 Bloomsbg 87 Millersvl68
Free Throw Percentage
Slippery Rock 78 Alliance 67
Name, Team
FTM·A Pet. Gettysburg 86 Dickinson 48
Snowden, Gall .
68· 92 .739 W. Mich . 75 Bowling Grn 74
Green . Athens
50- 73 .6.85 Marshall 95 Ohio U. 76
Settles, Wellston 40. 59 .678 Wes t Vir. 87 Wm .&amp;Mary 71
Noe. Gallipolis
54- 81 .667 Temple 89 Pittsburgh 74
T. Vaughan. Meigs 46· 69 .66 7 Adelphia 75 St. Anselm 's 67
Keller, Jack.
38- 57 .667 Oneonta t02 Oswego 59
--Reboun~o:

Name, Team

Nil.

G Avg.

Price. Gall.
t76 12 14.7
T. Vaughan,
Meigs
147 12 12.3
Oyer, Waverly
134 12 11.2
Keller. Jack .
131 12 10.9
Smith, Athens
127 12 10.6
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
FRIDAY
SEOAL
Wellston at Athens
Waverly at Galli polis
Ja Ckson at Ironton
Logan at Meiq s

SVAC Standings

Penn Sl. 86 Virginia 75
Dav is &amp; Elkins 85 Glenvl

76
Allegheny 80 Mercyhurst 79

NHL Standings
By United Press lnternalloaal
By United Press International
Three seconds. don't seem
East
like a very long lime but they
W
.
L.
T.
Pis
seemedUI\ethreehoursforthe
Boston
~ 1~ ; :'( Seattle SuPerSonics.
New York
Montreal
31 13 12 74 The Son\cs led Boston, lll·
Oelrait
24 24 9 57 110, with 27 seconds left to play
Toronto
Bulfalo
;~ ~~ ~~ ~ Wednesday night but failed to
Vancouver
15 35 s 35 get off a shot in the reqUired 24
West
seconds. The noisy crowd in
Chicago
~ ~· ~· ~s Seattle, hOwever, caused· tbe
Minnesota
31 18 9 71 officials to miss the 24-Becond
California
18 29 12 48 buzzer and the Sonics left tbe
~~i~od~~phia ;~ ~~ 1: ~ &lt;Xlurl with," victory. Or so they
Pittsburgh
17 31 9 43 thought.
Las Angeles
15 38 7 37 Boston Coam Tommy ReinWednesday's Results
sohn protested and the officials
· Thursday's Games
Pittsburgh 4 Toronto 2
br nnht th So ' b ck f th
Montreal 1 California 1
o_. e rues a or e
Virginia vs. Carolina
At Charlotte, N.C. Chicago 3 Philadelphia 3
last three seconds. Dave
{Only game scheduled)
Minnesot~ 4 Detroit 2
Cowens almost spoiled the
St. LouiS 3 Las Angeles1 Sonics' night with an easy
(Only games scheduled}
NBA Standings
Thursday's Games
layup .under the basket but,
By United
Press
International
New
York
at
Los
Angeles
following
a timeout, Dick
Eastern Conference
Allani'Q.(;II'If
' · .
Boston at Philadelphia
Snyder hit a desneratiQnllhot In
1
.t~•
o;r.' ·~t~!,l,o
·
Plttsbur.gh al Buffalo . ~" "" th 1. I l ' d~•!f."'·' ~~~~··
Ptt. ~
(Ontygamesscheduied)
. e ma ~n wgtv,e:&gt;ea, e
' Bos)on
44 20- ;;688 '~..
• • ' a 113-ll2' Victory.
,
·
New York
38 23 .623 4&gt;;2
AHL Standings
The lead thUs ctlanged hands
Philadelphia 24 38 .387 19
Buttalo
17 44 .279 2SIJ2 By United Press International three tim~S · in the last three
Central Division
Eas~. L. T. Pl.. seconds and 19 times during
W. L. Pel. vB
Balllmore
25 35 .417 ... Baston
32 17 8 72 the game. Cowens led the
Altanta
24 38 .387 2 Nova Scotia
~~ ~~
~~ Celtlcs with 29 points while
Cincinnati
18 42 .300 711'2 ~~~i~~~~
20 26 9 49 Spencer lfaywood had 26 to
17 46 ·270 9 '~2 Rochester
Cleveland
19
31 7 45 lead Seattle.
Western Conference
Midwest Division
Wes~
In o\1ler1 National Basketball
W.
L.
Pet.
GB
Cleveland
·
L.
T
.
Pl
s
Association
action, Phoenix
26 20 8 60
Milwaukee
SO 13 .794
Chicago
44 t8 .710 5v2 Ballimore
25 20 9 59 edged U:ts Angeles, 110-109,
Phoenix
39 25 .609 11'12 Cincinnati
23 24 10 S6 Phlladeilphia downed
Detroit
22 40 .355 27'12 ~r;~~eJ,d
~; ~~ ~ ~~ Cleveland, 126-116, Atlanta
Pacific Division
Tidewater
1~ 35 7 33 shaded Baltimore, 100.103, and
W
.
L.
Pet.
GB
Wednesday's
New Yor~ defeated Houston,
Los Angeles 51 9 .850 ... B 11 •
N Results
S .
2
1
Golden Stale 38 24 .613 14
a tmore
~va . co 1a 2
llll-100. ,
Seattle
38 25 .603 14'12 Cleveland 6 Spnngfleld·l
Wil Chamber! In
d his
Houston
24 39 .38! 28 v2 , {Only gamesschedutedl
t
a score
Portland
15 49 .234 38
Thursdoy's Games
30,000th career point but
Wednesday's Results
{No games scheduled l
committed a goaltendlng viola'
New York 110 Houston 100
lion with three seconds left
Atlanta 105 Baltimore 103
,
which enatlled Phoenix to beat
Philadelphia 126 Cleveland 116
rhe speaker .of the House the Lakers Chamberlain the
Phoenix 110 Los Angeles 109
of Representatives becomes
--.1 .
'
Seattle 113 Boston 112
leading SCQI'er m NBA history
(Only games scheduled)
head of the government if
.
1
Thursday's Games
both the president and vice- passed the 30,000 mark when
Milwaukee at Cincinnati
president of the U n i t e d Neal Walk was called for
New York at Chicago
States are incapacitated .
goaltendlng on his layup at(Only gamesscheduledl
tempt. But he batted away
ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Kentucky
48 12 .800 ...
Virginia
37 25 .597 12
New York
28 33 .459 20'12
Floridian s
24 37 .393 241J2
Carolina
24 37 .393 24 112
Pittsburgh
21 39 .350 27 .
West
W. l. Pet. GB
Utah
43 20 .683
Indiana
35 26 .574 7
Dallas
30 34 .469 13'h
Denver
24 37 .393 18
Memphis
23 37 .383 18 112
Wednesday's Results
Kentucky 129 Pittsburgh 105
Utah 119 New York 114
{Only games scheduled}

1

PAINT SALE

tempt illegally, giving the Suns
the lead.
Walk was high man for
Phoenix with · 30 points and
Jerry West and Jim McMillian
had 26 eam for the Lakers . .
Chamberlain 'finished with
19.

En~niel

8 Quart

Johnny Lightning

PLASTIC

CARS
2 fo~ '1

BUCKET
Special
On~ 49~

Now 9~

Pomeroy

i

Men's Sweaters !
: '4 '5 '6
i
!: Values
to 10.98 . . . . 4.00 :
Values to 1'2.98 . · . . . s.oo *

.

102 E. MAIN

I

.

POMEROY
'

4

...and we're having a housecleaning .

Reg.

.·. ·25¢,,.,.,,

R'IGHT GUARD

ANACIN

~,

~

Reg. s1 09

·

- I• I

Reg. $1.69

.__,,,, 1

.,

l 1 !&lt; •1

. I

9·1' e:· . . . ~ •
•

CREST
TOOTHPASTE
I

REG. 11.09

••

DRISTAN
·50's Reg. $259

49

$

COMBINATION

Outerwear Jacket

• Values to 16.95 • • . • 6.00 ~

PACQUIN
HAND LOTION

~

•
SUNMARK

REG. 18.98

Size XL · Belteve
.
ole Kerrn , it has
reen around too
ong.

~

MAALOX

4~

IR£t.i&amp;9'~1,;9
· · ,~ ,\
...

&amp;SATURDAY

1 Man's

$1.4949~

89e

$

•

SYRINGE

SKIN BRACER

PRV-1
HOT STEAM .

AFTER

Y2 PRICE

~eg.

$695

$

Y2 Price ·

350

SUN MARK
NO. 880

COOL MIST

Reg. 16.98 to
60.00. Sale prices
are 8.49 to 30.00.

Reg.

HEATING

VAPORIZER

~1.25

R~ $19,95 ·. $

Odd Lot Men's

99

$'

NO. 1060

SUN

(

Reg. s3.95

VAPORIZER

· ·~HAVE

1 Rack Men's.
Outerwear

Marguerite's Shoe Sh~p

Drexel 68 Ursinus 59

Reg.

CHAP STICK

~ ~~•a

Sizes. are broken. Reg. 49.50 to
60.00. Sale Rrices are 24.75 to
30.00.

'

Wes tern Mo. 61 Haverford 58

29~

100's
Reg. $1.59.

1 Rack Men's Sport Coats.

THE NEW OWNERSHIP OF

HAIR SPRAY

70%

PRO
TOOTHBRUSH

*********************
Mrs. Betty Ohlinger Is .. ,

Rubbing.Alcohol

I

'

39e

SUDDEN BEAUTY ~

McKESSON

s~ Reg. 69'

Reg. 3(1

It's the Truth • . Kerm Has Bargains!

*********************

Reg. 7CJ

~~·~

BATTERIES

.

FRIDAY

~

$1.50

GILLETTE
SUPER STAINLESS

EVEREADY

MOORE'S

300 SHEET

600 Pair. First Come
First Served
No Return or Exchange

.........

I

NOTEBOOK
FILLER

Reg.

c

Hot Wheels and

1

Amer ican U. 84 Delaware 68

s1.oo $1.29

19~ PAIR

5 'GR.'

SemiGloss

124 W. Main

Reg. 8CJ

'

Closeout! Discontinued Colors
Interior
All Star
latex

Regular Nylon Hose

,100
ASPIRI

g

Sl. Bon. 94 St. Fran . N.Y . 58
Tenn . St . 50 Bellarmine 45
Wake Forest 59 Clemson 51
Pa ce 72 Pratt lnst. 62
Clarion St. 75 Ednbro St. 72
Albr ight 91 Lycoming 79
Cheyney St . 125 Kulztwn 71
Syracuse 91 Bucknell 74
Citadel 99 Richmond 79
Catawba 77 Atlantic Chris 70
S. C. St . 98 Erskine 77
Fl orida A&amp;M 112 St . Lea 82
Kenl Sl. 78 Miam i (OJ 77

Villanova 102 Duquesne 81
Gannon 87 Lemoyne 82
SVAC STANDINGS
Colga te 78 Fairfield 71
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L Pis. Op. Middlebury 82 Clarkson 62
North Gallia 14 2 1336 880 St. Louis 88 North Tex . St. 75
Eastern
12 2 1027 753 Fairmont St . 85 Salem 58
Bluefield St. 122 Concord 74
Symmes Va lley
11 5. 1152 1064 VMI 68 W.V. Tech 59
Hannan Trace 8 8 908 919 Wiley 04 Tex. Southern 89
Soulhern
8 9 1109 1051 Rider 87 Lafayette 84
Kyger Creek 2 14 842 1115 Ken lucky Wesleyan 77 Shaw 66
Southwestern 0 15 558 1300 Marquett e 88 Jacksanvl 79
Evansville 106 DePauw 70 ,
New Hamp. 73 Connecticut 65
SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L P OP Wes t Chslr 97 Mansfld Sl. 86
North Galtia
II 1. 1044 631 Yngslwn St. 79 Cleve St. 62
Symmes Valley 9 2 868 674 Ash land 12 t Wilberforce 87
Eastern
9 2 733 554 Malon·e 95 Walsh 77
Southern
5 7 790 778 De troit 78 Dayton 70
Hannan Trace 5 7 695 721 Akron 66 Indiana St. 58
Defiance 103 Bluffton 100 .
Kyger Creek
2 10 650 842
Southwestern 0 12 414 994 Maryland 79 No. Car. 77 , at
TOTALS
4t 41 5194 5194 Navy 80 Rochester 62
Vanderbilt 89 Mississippi 83
Assumplian 103 Am . Inti 84
SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP Tufts 99 MIT 81
Eas tern
10 1 485 385 Davidson 74 Duke 72
North Gallia 10 2 556 376 St. Jos., .Ind. 84 Buller 73
Symmes Valley 7 4 520 426 Colo. Coli .' 9'1 Metro St. 80
Kyger Creek
6. 6 512 538 Sa. Car . 84 Nev. (L.V.} 81
Southern
5 7 500 518 August;. 105 Morris Brown 71
Hannan Trace 3 9 395 510 Hamilton 90 Hobart 81
Southwestern 0 12 376 591 Hope 101 Alma 97
TOTALS
41 41 3344 3344 Oakland 82 Saginaw Val. 80
Olivet 101 Adrian 59
This Week's Schedule:
Friday - Southwestern vs. Scranton 87 Wagner 85
North Gallla1 Hannan Trace Wesleyan 83 Coast Guard 60
vs . Kyger Creek In the Gallia
ctJunty Tournament.
Hear t and blood vessel
Waterford at Southern
diseases cost the American
Eastern af Miller
Saturday Night - Symmes economy ap estimated $17.3Valley at Eastern .
billion yearly and cause
Gallla Counly Consat.atlan
52,000,000
los t work da ys,
and Championship games, 7
·and 8: 15 p. m., Rio C:·ande according to . Your Heart
l.yne Cen ter .
,A:;socia lion.

25e. up ,

I

WRITE/RIGHT

MOUTHWASH &amp;
GARGLE

LIVELY lADY

'

,Choice ·

Connie Hawkins' layup at-

Bob Rule scored 31 points
and Billy Cunningham hit 30 as
Philadel(illa beat Cleveland,
snapping its own seven-game
losing streak and extending the
Cavaliers' skid to 10 games.

CHLORASEPTI(

BARGAIN TABLE

SotP,cs Win·Tilt
At Gun, 113-112

Pro Standings

astounding discounts ... nobody can top these val,ues, by George!
It's an all-American event ... .Thursday through Monday only.
Make it a shopping weekend. You can't afford to miss it.

.1

PAD
$ 95

•

Dress Shoes
1h price .
.

I

Sizes are broken.

.FAMOUS NAME BRANDS

:

Bargain Tables ~ ·$1 :to $6
ladies' and Children's. Values to 116

TABLE
Miscellaneous Items
I

49~

To

'2

Men's Handkerchiefs Limit 12 Per Customer ·

-

2~00

$1 LOT LA.DIES'

3.00 ~ .

i·

; BLOUSE$ . SLACKS_ VALUES TO 12.98 .
**t*******~
'*******************************
Kenn

NO PURQiASE NECESSARY.

vai. to 4.98. MOst never need ironing . Sizes 6 to

12.

Ax/

'

KERM'S KORNER .

New York Clothing House'

iiiiiiiiiiiiii

POMEROY OH
•I

u

BIKE. sso VAWE DURING ., .
McKESSON BEXEL Yz PRICE SALE

BOYS' JEANS ....................2.98:--

]JasA
Big

COUPON

FREEl
II
OOME IN AND REGISTER FOR AN ENGLISH

********************************************•

PURSES, HOSE, TENNIS SHOES,
CHILDREN'S SHOES, ETC.
iiiiiiiiiiiiii

8$ each

NAME---------~-­

:

.

ADDRESS~--,....-PHONE---....-

)#.~

VIcKS"

NyQuil.

KOTEX
12's

NIGHTTIME COLDS MEDICINE

Reg.

1.59

1

oniy 89 ~.·

REG.

55'

..

I '

II

. I

�t-

The DallyS.ntlnei,Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 17,1972

Missionary Circles Meet .
Valentine pr&lt;tjects were
reviewed. when the circles o[
the B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Society met Tuesday night.
The Love Joy Circle met at
the home of Mrs. Lillian
McGhee and thank-you notes
were read from Mrs. Maude
Betz and Mrs. Lucinda Daines
for valentine cookies and from
Mrs. Ray\nond Saxton for her
birthday dinner: on Feb. 2.
Members were reminded of
the birthday of Mrs. Helen
Lewis who is recuperating
from a broken leg at the home
of her daughter, Mrs. William
Stewart, Athens, and a card
was signed for her.
Mrs. Dale Walburn read "As
You Go Through Life," and the
Jove gift of $19 was dedicated
by Mrs. Paul Smart who used
Psalm 90 for her scripture. An
Old Testament quiz conducted
by Mrs. Golda Mourning was
won by Mrs.
Isabelle
Winebrenner.
Mrs. Walburn read the Art of
Life and the Lord's Prayer was
given in unison. Refreshments
were served to those named

Calen.dar

l

30 min(•:es, then ferve
room temperature. Makei
about 1 cup.
1'If condensed so up li
used, add water called fol·
on lube).) ·

.-~~~-SH

. and Mrs. James li"uders, Mrs. David Darst.
Dana Hamm, Mrs. Elizabeth
Mrs. Richard Owen presided
taste , then dipped in sauce .
Gardner, Mrs. Manning Kloes, at the meeting opening with a
.
When all the meat and vege·
•
Mrs. Leora Sigman , and reading on February and the
tables
are
eaten,
a
d
d
the
THURSDAY
guests, Mrs. John Werner and devotional topic "Who Are the
DE;MOCRAT Committee
noodles to remaining hot
Mrs. Florence Rhodes.
Peacemakers" with scripture
broth and cook until tender,
·
meeUng,
7:30
tonight
in
Brown
At the Electa Circle meeting from Matlhew 5. Mrs. Kenneth
about 3 minutes ; serve in
. ,
Pomeroy .
held at the home of Mrs. Tony . Imboden gave the valentine buildin g ,
cups or small · soup bowls.
SAME. DAY
Fowler, an offering was taken project report. The program Preliminary candidate night
Makes 4 se~v!!'gs.
SERVICE
for the scholarsh ip fund . was presented by Mrs. E. L. l!{ld Jack Crisp and . Robert
. PONZU
In At9-0ut At 5
Whealey, Congress candidates
Thank-you notes were read Hughes .
ISoy and lemon sauce) ·
from shut-ins for valentine
Refreshments were served to and 35 district candidates for
Thoroughly
mix 'h cup soy
Use Our Free P~rking Lot .
remembrances, · and
a those named and Mrs. Willis presidential convention insauce, 1t, cup lemon juice, I
newsletter from a home Anthony, Mrs. Bert Bodimer, vited . Public welcome:
teaspoon instant m i n c e d
BRADBURY PTA , 7:30
missionary in Philadelphia Mrs. John Fultz, Mrs. Fred
onion, and I or 2 dashes ')'a·
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
basco. Let stand for about
was read.
Hoffman-;' Mrs. Charles Thursday , Founder 's Day
Mrs. Beulah White gave Searles, Mrs . Elizabeth observance, past presidents to
devotions entitled "Abounding Slaven, Mrs. Harold Hubbard, be honored. Children will
in Love," and refreshments and Mrs . Robert Schuck. Mrs. present the program.
WILLING WORKERS Class,
were served to Mrs. Fred Imboden will host the next
Enterprise United Methodist,
Lewis, Mrs. Robert Richard· meeting.
Church 7:30 Thursday at the
son, Mrs. Arland King and son,
home· ot Mrs. Beulah UtMichl,
Miss
Freddie
'
terback and Miss Frieda
Houdashelt, Mrs. Betty Denny,
Leiving .
Mrs. Harry Houdashelt, Mrs.
Pearl Hoffman, Mrs. White,
ROCK SPRINGS Better
and Miss Jerry Pullen.
Health Club, 1: 16 p.m. ThursArrangements for serving
day at the home of Mrs. Welby
refreshments at the March
Whaley. Mrs . George Skinner
Sanborn Society were made
HELP BUILD
The Salisbury PTA Tuesday to have the program, Mrs. W.
O .... O .. TUNITY
during the Dorcas Circle
night at the school voted to give A. Morgan, the contest.
meeting at the home of Mrs.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
an additional $100 for art
supplies .and.sports equipment ·7:30 p.m. _Thursday ·at
'
'
ana $25 to the Meigs County clubhouse, Racine; refreshShobu-Shobu features leo,.; meat and vegetables
ments.
Count
the
reasons
Council of Parents and
cooked in boiling broth.
FRIDAY
Teachers' scholarship fund.
BRICKLAYERS LOCAL 32,
During the meeting con.
you should
By AILEEN CLAIRE
broth*
dueled by Mrs. Ed Kennedy, it negotiating committee only,
NEA Food Editor
''• cup sherry
was also decided to assist with meeting at 7:30p.m. Friday at
shop at hon1e
Japanese meals character2 pounds tender boneless
the purchase of file cabinets Pomeroy American Legion
istically are simple and nu·
beef, thinly sliced
and flags for each room. Home.
'Jcx t lim e 1011 arc in
WINDING
TRAIL.
Garden
lritious.
Usually
th
ey
con
·
i
Bermuda
onion, sliced
Reporting at the meeting was a
hunlrer' tu. bumper" truffK
Club,
Friday,
7:30p.m.
home
sist
of
I
e
an
meat,
pork,
•
.
&gt;
head
Chinese
cabbage,
By POLLY .CRAMER
special committee appointed to
or
you tu·c in thc wrong, lune
of Mrs. Robert Lewis.
•hrimp or fish and f res h
cut In segments
determine needs of the school
and mis ~ u fn·e wa~· exit
1f,
new
1
bunch
watercress
(or
vegetables.
Those
with
DEAR POLLY - I want to tell Trudy who has trouble
on 1111 o ut-of- tow n !-. h nfirin~
OHIO VALLEY Com- fondue units will enjoy the
pound spinach)
and the assistance which the
with celery molding in her fridge I lind that when most
l rip ~· uu huvc the
mandery
24,
Knights
Ternco.nviviality
of
·
entertaining
•
;,
pound
fresh
mushrooms
,
PTA can give.
fr uits and vegetables are to be put in plastic bags they
e.'Cttll timc tu ask .I oursel f
to
guests
with
a
Japanese
fonsliced
plars,
special
meeting
Past presidents were
should first be wrapped in paper toweling to absorb any
·· Wu s t his trip reu\ 1.1
2 cups fine noodles,
honored and in lieu of in- confer degree on three can- cue party. Cooking Shabu·
excess moisture. I do not cut celery apart but just cut off
ncce!'i!i&gt;Uty ;•·
Each
uncooked
.
f b guest
f
the extra length and any brown spots- KAY
dividual gifts, the PTA made a didat es, F rt'day, 7:30 p.m., Shabuh' is easy.
Couut the rcu~m~ wh .1·
·
T
1
~ips
IS ptece o
e
e
or
Pour
broth and sherry into
$30 donation on the trophy case Pomeroy Masomc emp e.
vegetable
into
a
b
o
iIi
n
g
base
of
automatic
fondue
.
you shuuh.l sh op at home.
DEAR POLLY-Trudy should buy ·one of those marvelrepair.
The
Founder's
Day
First , every J oll ar spent at
SATURDAY
broth
.
Topping
off
the
meal
Position
tray
and
rack.
Plug
ous new celery containers . They are the best ever lor
offeri
ng
was
taken.
CHICKEN
Buffet,
Eastern
is
a
cup
of
fine
noodle
so
up
unit
into
outlet.
Bring
broth
h
om e is u vote for hct tcr
keeping celery crisp and fresh. I bought mine at the five.
Sl.:hci(J]s
, ~·om mun it .\
High
School,
Saturday,
5
to
7
·
made
with
the
remaining
·
to
a
boil.
Have
beef
and
John Lisle, principal,
and-ten. After buying celery I immediately cut off the
in\pn•VI.:Illl'tll'
. p:tr\.; ...
bottom ends so each stalk will be loose. trim the tops
reported on the right to read p.m. before Eastern..Symmes broth . There is little work vegetables arranged on a
artd
str
eets
and store in this container which is filled :y, -full of water.
program and announced a Valley basketball game. Junior for the hostess in prepara. platter, noodles heaped in a
Celery is ALWAYS crisp and ready to use on a moment's
bo.wl. To serve, beef and
, Secun~l. not ('l't·r~· une wunb
second session on lhe art of class sponsored , everyone lion or cleanup.
notice .-MRS. J . M. K.
\'our business like the
welcome.
SHABU-SHABU
•·egetables
are
dipped
into
story telling to be held on Feb.
•
ClipS
chlck•n
nr
h"ef
boiling
broth
and
COOked
to
j,eople
a t home . lsn\ it
DANCE, Racine Junior High
'
'
DEAR POLLY-Trudv wrote that she cleans her celery
23 at the Salisbury school. The
more fun to du husi n es,.
wtth a vegetable brush before storing it so perhaps she is
third grade won the attendance School, Saturday following
with people you kno\1
bruising the celery and bruised vegetables spoil fast er.
Southern ga me; Music by
award.
Wllnt .vOllr hu .s ine s.o;;.~
She might also try getting a new vegetable brush and
Brownies of the Salisbury ~·~~:.x"; sponsored by senior
sterilize it ever so often as there may be decay-causing
Troop sponsored by the PTA
bacteria on her old brush. The mold on the ends suggests
DANCE, Eastern High
pre
sen ted the program .
to me that the vegetable keeper might also need sterili·
Narrated by Mrs. Ned Swin- School, 10 to 11 :30 p.m. Friday
zing or the temperature is too high or even both.- HELEN
A review of "Hail to the Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F.
. dell, the girls presented a crazy following Eastern-Symmes Chief" by Ruth Montgomery Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson,
hat revue. Taking part were game, sponsored by FHA,
,· ... "•.:.
. · Polly's Problem ·&gt;~&lt;:·.,cr.t(f!-W:1'·
was presented by Miss Lucille and Richard M. Nixon. The
~
~
DANCE PARTY, Saturday, 8
Linda
Williams
In
a
gardener's
!J DEAR POLLY- The lady who irons for me ironed ·~
Smith when the Middleport author notes that her materials
hat, camille Swindell, a picnic to 11:30 p.m., Wahama High Literary Club mel Wednesday was taken from intimate
\ two pairs of ·~,Pensive double-knit polyester pants ,..
...
, bejpn~to my husband and bqth now .have shiny ~~ . hat; Carol Morris, ·· a'~hllitlth Sc.hooi,,Jays emceeing, school at the home of Mrs. C. M.''· as'sbCi~'!lonswi'th ihetinnesand
••
1
marks bn 'lhem. One pair is navy blue and the other ::
hat; Laura Ohlinger, a pizza I!J)onsored.
Hennesy .
·
people during- -h~r years in
SUNDAY
:, black so these marks really show , which is most dis·
hat; Jena Welker, a political
Mrs
.
Montgomery,
wellWashington,
D. C.
''l tressing. I do hope someone can tell me how to re·
SKATING PARTY, Sunday,
hat; Laura Smith, a table
kn own newspaper woman, in
In her book, the author
:.j move such marks .-MRS. A. S.
tennis hat; Kimberly Basham, 2to 5p.m. at Skate-A-Way Rink her book gave highlights in the described the prominent
::c/.--:~ , , ,. -~-:~rw,:L-n&lt;~t&gt;.'-~)
a sun bonnet; Cassie Sheets, a by Pomeroy Elementary lives of Presidents Franklin D. people she met while covering
DEAR POLLY- Mv two Pet Peeves just infuriate me
rainhat; Teresa Dorst, a School Safety Patrol to raise Roosevelt, Harry S. Truman, news events around the world.
even thinking about them. First, I am greatly annoyed by
pillbox; Rebecca Dorst, a funds for Washington, D. C.
The reviewer was introduced
those drivers who completely ignore directional arrows in
trip. Tickets at door or from
basketball
hat;
and
Cathy
parking lots . They also look at you as if to say "Where
by Mrs. James Euler, prugram
Parker, a football hal. The safety patrol member .
do you think you are going, Bub? " Second, there are the
chairman.
,
Member Federal Reserve
girls gave the Brownie promise
ANNUAL Winter band
stores and doctor's offices that answer your call and then
Mrs. Robert Fisher was
System
in Spanish, taught to them by concert, Southern High School,
put you on ."hold" and there you stay until you hang up
welcomed as a new member.
On Fridays Our Drive-In
m desperation, call· again and say "Remember me? "Ann Ohlinger, and then per- 2 p.m. Sunday, direction by
Mrs.
Lee
Davidson
was
a
MRS . B. W.
Window is Open 9 a.m. to 1
formed a Mexican hat dance in Mrs. Connie Romine. Group
guest.
Members
named
their
p,m., I Continuously).
costume.
and solo numbers by both
favorite
president
in
response
'
S20.000 Maximum Insurance
Devotions to open the junior high and high school
to
roll
call.
Mrs.
Richard
Owen
For Each Depositor
meeting were given by Mrs. band members.
presided at the meeting which
Wendell Hoover. Refreshments
MONDAY
ope~ed with the club collect.
of cake, punch, coffee and nuts
FILM, "To Touch a Child" at ·
were served by the executive 8:30 p.m. for public in concommittee.
junction with Chester PTA
meeting .at school Monday.
Meeting starts at 8 with
Call Lou Now For Your Free Estimate For Your Needs On
Tbe Almanac
By United Press International Founders' Day to be observed ·
SlORE IIIUIS:
The traditional Ash Wed- meditation was by the Rev. W.
Window Air Conditioning
Today is Thursday, Feb. 17, and past presidents honored.
MON. , TUIEI.,
nesday Lenton breakfast of H. Perrin and a prayer poem the 46th day of 1972.
WEO. &amp;IAT.
ONE DAY field trial, Meigs
t : OOI.S: OO
and
'frlnity Omrch was attended concluded the program.
THURSDAY
The moon is between its new County Foxhunters, Monday on
9: W TO HOOH
by 102 persons representing 16
Attending were members of phase and first quarter.
FRIDAY
Snow Ball Hill. Hounds will
Central Air Con.dltlonlng
t :IIGTO, :OO
churches of the county.
the Minersville Methodist
The morning stars are cast at 7 a.m.
-LOWFSI' PRICES OF TilE YEARTables for the breakfast Olurch, the Olester United Jupiter and Mercury.
were covered with white linen Methodist Church, St. John's
The evening stars are Venus, Jefferson in the electoral
and featured arrangements of Lutheran Cburch, St. Paul's Mars, Saturn and Mercury.
college, became vice president.
lUi~ and greenery flanked by Lutheran Church, the E~
Those born on this day are
In 1817 Baltimore became the
white styrofoam crosses and terprise United Methodist under the sign of Aquarius.
first American city to have
taU tapers.
Cburch, the Pomeroy Baptist
American novelist Dorothy street lights. They ·were illuPeter Marshall's prayer for &lt;llurch, the Grace Episcopal Canfield was born Feb. 17, 1878.
minated with gas.
more move was the thought for &lt;llurch, the Pomeroy United
On this day in history :
In 1906 Alice Roosevelt, oldest
the quiet hour. Mrs. W. H. · Methodist &lt;llurch, the MidIn 1801 the House of daughter of President Theodore
Perrin gave the welcome and dleport Baptist Church, the Representatives named Thomas
..
I
had the table grace. Recorded Naomi Baptist Church, the Jefferson as the third U.S. Roosevelt, was married in the
organ music by Mrs. Ben Forrest Run Baptist Cburch, president. Aaron Burr, who tied White House to Congressman
Nicholas Longworth o( Ohio.
Neutzling, '"Til Midnight on the Forrest Run Methodist
Olive's Brow " with the chimes Church, the Middleport
opened the program. A prayer Presbyterian, Heath United
The
was given in unison and the Methodist, and Mount Moriah
PRICE of the
group sang "In the Cross of Baptist &lt;llurch.
Olrist." Mrs. carl Kautz read
year
..•
The Happy Harvesters Class
Contributions of $5 each were Forbes told about the Holy
scripture from Mark IS, and of Trinity Cburch prepared and made to the Heart Fund and Passover and the Olristian
HAHD TIMES may be upon
Mrs. Marvin Burt sang " Were served
the
breakfast. the Red Cross, and $25 was Passover.
the
moVIe lndustrv but It
You There When they Crucified Programs for the affair were in given to the Navigator's
Mrs. Pugh will present the can't be as bad as Sophie
My Lord ". The Lenton the green and yellow colors. Crusade in the name of Roger program in March. A report on Loren's getup might indl·
Sayre when the Women's missionaries was given by cute. ,\ctually , the Italian
~·-,. ......,.__· · ·
Society of Christian Service Mrs. Brooks Sayre. Others star Is in costume lor her
met Wednesday afternoon at attending were Mrs. Lillie rt•le as Aldon7.a In the film
....
.... ....
version of "Man of La
the
Minersvllle
United Starcher, Mrs. Osiner Roush,
~~~~~
.
Mancha," the Don Quixote
Methodist Church .
Mrs. Fannie Phillips, Mrs. musical In which she
The meeting was held Stella Grueser, Mrs . Karl makes a slngln!( and dancfollowing a potluck dinner and Grueser, Mrs. Freda Mitch, ing debut.
before quilting was resumed and Mrs. Qladys Taylor. ·
.l

.

.

.

·fiNISHING. '

THURS., FRJ.,
SATURDAY
and SUNDAY
SINUTABS

.

PTA Will
Add $100

Regular

Unicap

.

Save now on

Unicap Chewable"

CHEWABLE
VITANUNS

POLLY'S POINTERS

..

~·

The Farmers Bank
·and Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO

Wedn~sday

Event

___
~
...___..

for the afternoon. Mrs. Elsie p------------~-----'11
Forbes
with prayer
by Mrs.presided
Sadie Brown,
and
scripiure from Matthew 26 by
Mrs. Bill Russell.
' •
Readings Include , "The
Meaning of Lent," and a
humorous .report on chw-ch
attendance by Mrs. Herbert
For Every Room ], Your House.
Pugh; "Uptight World" by
Mrs. Stella Grueser ; "Prayer
for a New Year" by Mrs.
Forbes; "The Gettysburg
Address" by Mrs, Ruby
GruesPr ; "The Fur Pieces" by
Mrs. Clifford Phillip~ ; an
original poem, "Long After"
w.va
Iby Mrs. Hazel Mc;-ullum . Mrs . .__ _ _ _ _ .,_~

CEILING LIG. HT
··fiXTUREs·

your

home 1 favor .•Prlco may vary slightly.

VNI EY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY 00.
m-21ot

MIDDLEPORT

=

BLADES
D.E. 5's
NO. 804
59~

!

------------·
I
I
The Multi·Pifrpose Product
Proven by Generotions ol u,.

.

,...,.,. .WMI c...r.tl . . . .-1 M- . !of911 k .. a~m....,_-~,.,
N..,. fll&lt; -~"'""on
1111 111 .....,IIIII\ ,. """""'"',. )"1111 _..... •
• COI!IPIIrl a.- ~ ~ llfltllloltr " ........ _.... elllriDit

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• 8~rt9 oolhl ~r .,O:,IIool """""t

1 IJ~ e......... lnllll~ lllon
• lhMI Plrtl ~ llliiiJhl DOMIIIon

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...!
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R~~:~27.988*

*'THIS LOW PRICE OOOD ONLY
UNTIL FEBRUARY 21, f872

.)

SAVE '30.00 TO '60.00
On Window Air CandiliatltiS

SAVE '10.00 TO '130.00
.
.On Cenb1l Air Conditiantn
,I

.

~

I - t

~

Clean And Natural

FDS

49
'

NIGHTTIME COLDS MEDICINE

......._
.. _
-·__
...
--.

FAMILY TUBE
Reg. 1.75

HOME PERMANENT

!TINGLING FLUFF

1.99

!' BATH

L

6 oz.

16 oz

REG.

1.29 '

66¢
.

dial

aa~

DIAPARENE.
OINTMENT

2 oz.
REG. 1.25
.

1:=;:::::::1

•

77~

FAMILY SIZE

Ben·Gay+-:-_R_E_G_u_LA_R_l_.o_,- - - - Pmh•tlng H11t

LOTION

. Mini-Mist

Ben-Gay

Penetrating Heat Lotion

.
REG.

/It

2 oz.
Reg. 1.09

~

6'

,

White Rain

sa~

oz.

PRIVINE
NASAL
51PRAY

. . . . .. , O!&gt;O RO

IIIII I A £TII

Colgate"'MFP

HAIR SPRAY
13 oz.
Reg. 1.49

Cover Girl
Liquid Makeup
Reg.
1.75

99e

Cover Girl
Tube Makeup
Reg .
1.15

Cover Girl
Pressed Powder

9"9~

Max Factor Color
.
Highlight Shampoo, Economy

Reg.
1.75

Size,

59~

REG.

1.35

99~ ·

1.95

Coty Emeraude Flacon Mist, special site
2.75
Jean Nate After Bath Lotio·n, 8 oz.
only 2.00
Shu lton Corn silk Compacts
· Vagisec Liquid douche, Reg. 3.50

AM
MENS.
•MEDICATED
POWDER
614

-~

89'

......... .,.. ,... ...'" ..., ........"'"

aa~

I

3 OZ. TUBE

LIQUID SHAMPOO
FAMILY SIZE
Regular

1.09

- ~

-----

Chap-ans Cream ·~-

REGULAR 1.59

PRELL·

.

1.88

•

REG. 2.29

. SKINNY DIP

'

-.

49~

Reg .
85c

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE

INSTANT DRY
SHAMPOO
14 OUNCE
Regular 2.75

...... ~:.::

MENNEN
PROTEIN 21
SHAMPoo ·.7 OUNCE

99
No. 5624

Head &amp; Shoulders

REGULAR 2.29

~~~m~~~~r

·1.29

2.95

BAND-AID PLASTIC STRIPS

QUARTS

53~

~egular

REG. 89'

,- ·~

REG.
' .
1.00

RAZOR SETS

STANBACK
POWDERS
24's
·sg~

LISTERINE

i

66e

REG. 1.19

1.59

REG. 1.89

TONI

5 OZ.

GIU.Ettr ~mac ,.,~ .

REG.l
2.39 I

14 oz.

~ BEADS

49~

GILLEnE
FOAMY

18 Ol

.JERGENS

t'

Keeps Heir Looking

10 oz.

,,,.-.

I

WITCH
HAZEL

NyQuil

1.65.

:~

I

Ant~Perspirant

lh"xlO yards

¢ r;_::::::::;::-~-:-:RE:G:.' 1.19 69~

.REG.
1.15

DICKINSON'S

VICKS

•

BII·CIJIIciiJ, 23,000 BTU, Ill -1 qulctdJ old
r.-¥• up Ill 172 pinta of nter dolfJ

RIGHT GUARD

LARGE TUBE

c......""T'

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Reg. 6Sc

------------·

.· REGULAR 2.50

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.

:JOHNSON

7

WITCH HAZEL

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1.99
'

Reg.l99
2.95
·1

4~~lls49~

·? DICKINSONS

3.11

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1.33

200's
TAQ,S

BABY SHAMPOO

TOILET TISSUE

14 OUNCE

I

REG.

"'"""--- ·--·
·-......
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to completely "'rm llo-proolthe overego 3-bolt-oom,home! .
S.v11 you over $tOO oompared to tho cost of colllriiJ In o
proflll'-1 oxltrmlnator. Buy Arab and do both you and

SCHICK PWS PLATINUM

JOH'NiSc)N' S

ANACIN

16 oz.
Reg. 1.98

3 OUNCES

IIBIII

~ ·r~ .. ~.

PEPTO·
BISMOL

109 l-:::•: ': 'fi: :-TSA-:U: -I: AN: D~A: Al:-: O: AS=:; -'

100
WITH 24 FREE

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Slt.tfbuys l.gollon of Arab Tormlto Control Concentroto.
Affd on Ar'eb h01Hnd sproy APIIllcotor. and you're rHdy

NO. 394
REG. 1.79

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24 FREE
when you
BUY 100.

lOO's
Reg. 1.17

10's

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---

AND SAVI '100 OR MOll

BANDS

:[stus )

Contributions Made

till "'I)

Pledge

102 from Churches ·

At

f"ti.LUH

REG. 89'

Given Literary

~

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WITH 24 FREE

To Storing Celery

Review

INSTAMATIC

~·

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when you
BUY 100

100

There Is a Trick

INSTAMATIC

30's1.29

2.50

BAYER

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2.00 ,

1.99

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REG. S1.50

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....
,I \

.· .

�t-

The DallyS.ntlnei,Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 17,1972

Missionary Circles Meet .
Valentine pr&lt;tjects were
reviewed. when the circles o[
the B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Society met Tuesday night.
The Love Joy Circle met at
the home of Mrs. Lillian
McGhee and thank-you notes
were read from Mrs. Maude
Betz and Mrs. Lucinda Daines
for valentine cookies and from
Mrs. Ray\nond Saxton for her
birthday dinner: on Feb. 2.
Members were reminded of
the birthday of Mrs. Helen
Lewis who is recuperating
from a broken leg at the home
of her daughter, Mrs. William
Stewart, Athens, and a card
was signed for her.
Mrs. Dale Walburn read "As
You Go Through Life," and the
Jove gift of $19 was dedicated
by Mrs. Paul Smart who used
Psalm 90 for her scripture. An
Old Testament quiz conducted
by Mrs. Golda Mourning was
won by Mrs.
Isabelle
Winebrenner.
Mrs. Walburn read the Art of
Life and the Lord's Prayer was
given in unison. Refreshments
were served to those named

Calen.dar

l

30 min(•:es, then ferve
room temperature. Makei
about 1 cup.
1'If condensed so up li
used, add water called fol·
on lube).) ·

.-~~~-SH

. and Mrs. James li"uders, Mrs. David Darst.
Dana Hamm, Mrs. Elizabeth
Mrs. Richard Owen presided
taste , then dipped in sauce .
Gardner, Mrs. Manning Kloes, at the meeting opening with a
.
When all the meat and vege·
•
Mrs. Leora Sigman , and reading on February and the
tables
are
eaten,
a
d
d
the
THURSDAY
guests, Mrs. John Werner and devotional topic "Who Are the
DE;MOCRAT Committee
noodles to remaining hot
Mrs. Florence Rhodes.
Peacemakers" with scripture
broth and cook until tender,
·
meeUng,
7:30
tonight
in
Brown
At the Electa Circle meeting from Matlhew 5. Mrs. Kenneth
about 3 minutes ; serve in
. ,
Pomeroy .
held at the home of Mrs. Tony . Imboden gave the valentine buildin g ,
cups or small · soup bowls.
SAME. DAY
Fowler, an offering was taken project report. The program Preliminary candidate night
Makes 4 se~v!!'gs.
SERVICE
for the scholarsh ip fund . was presented by Mrs. E. L. l!{ld Jack Crisp and . Robert
. PONZU
In At9-0ut At 5
Whealey, Congress candidates
Thank-you notes were read Hughes .
ISoy and lemon sauce) ·
from shut-ins for valentine
Refreshments were served to and 35 district candidates for
Thoroughly
mix 'h cup soy
Use Our Free P~rking Lot .
remembrances, · and
a those named and Mrs. Willis presidential convention insauce, 1t, cup lemon juice, I
newsletter from a home Anthony, Mrs. Bert Bodimer, vited . Public welcome:
teaspoon instant m i n c e d
BRADBURY PTA , 7:30
missionary in Philadelphia Mrs. John Fultz, Mrs. Fred
onion, and I or 2 dashes ')'a·
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
basco. Let stand for about
was read.
Hoffman-;' Mrs. Charles Thursday , Founder 's Day
Mrs. Beulah White gave Searles, Mrs . Elizabeth observance, past presidents to
devotions entitled "Abounding Slaven, Mrs. Harold Hubbard, be honored. Children will
in Love," and refreshments and Mrs . Robert Schuck. Mrs. present the program.
WILLING WORKERS Class,
were served to Mrs. Fred Imboden will host the next
Enterprise United Methodist,
Lewis, Mrs. Robert Richard· meeting.
Church 7:30 Thursday at the
son, Mrs. Arland King and son,
home· ot Mrs. Beulah UtMichl,
Miss
Freddie
'
terback and Miss Frieda
Houdashelt, Mrs. Betty Denny,
Leiving .
Mrs. Harry Houdashelt, Mrs.
Pearl Hoffman, Mrs. White,
ROCK SPRINGS Better
and Miss Jerry Pullen.
Health Club, 1: 16 p.m. ThursArrangements for serving
day at the home of Mrs. Welby
refreshments at the March
Whaley. Mrs . George Skinner
Sanborn Society were made
HELP BUILD
The Salisbury PTA Tuesday to have the program, Mrs. W.
O .... O .. TUNITY
during the Dorcas Circle
night at the school voted to give A. Morgan, the contest.
meeting at the home of Mrs.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
an additional $100 for art
supplies .and.sports equipment ·7:30 p.m. _Thursday ·at
'
'
ana $25 to the Meigs County clubhouse, Racine; refreshShobu-Shobu features leo,.; meat and vegetables
ments.
Count
the
reasons
Council of Parents and
cooked in boiling broth.
FRIDAY
Teachers' scholarship fund.
BRICKLAYERS LOCAL 32,
During the meeting con.
you should
By AILEEN CLAIRE
broth*
dueled by Mrs. Ed Kennedy, it negotiating committee only,
NEA Food Editor
''• cup sherry
was also decided to assist with meeting at 7:30p.m. Friday at
shop at hon1e
Japanese meals character2 pounds tender boneless
the purchase of file cabinets Pomeroy American Legion
istically are simple and nu·
beef, thinly sliced
and flags for each room. Home.
'Jcx t lim e 1011 arc in
WINDING
TRAIL.
Garden
lritious.
Usually
th
ey
con
·
i
Bermuda
onion, sliced
Reporting at the meeting was a
hunlrer' tu. bumper" truffK
Club,
Friday,
7:30p.m.
home
sist
of
I
e
an
meat,
pork,
•
.
&gt;
head
Chinese
cabbage,
By POLLY .CRAMER
special committee appointed to
or
you tu·c in thc wrong, lune
of Mrs. Robert Lewis.
•hrimp or fish and f res h
cut In segments
determine needs of the school
and mis ~ u fn·e wa~· exit
1f,
new
1
bunch
watercress
(or
vegetables.
Those
with
DEAR POLLY - I want to tell Trudy who has trouble
on 1111 o ut-of- tow n !-. h nfirin~
OHIO VALLEY Com- fondue units will enjoy the
pound spinach)
and the assistance which the
with celery molding in her fridge I lind that when most
l rip ~· uu huvc the
mandery
24,
Knights
Ternco.nviviality
of
·
entertaining
•
;,
pound
fresh
mushrooms
,
PTA can give.
fr uits and vegetables are to be put in plastic bags they
e.'Cttll timc tu ask .I oursel f
to
guests
with
a
Japanese
fonsliced
plars,
special
meeting
Past presidents were
should first be wrapped in paper toweling to absorb any
·· Wu s t his trip reu\ 1.1
2 cups fine noodles,
honored and in lieu of in- confer degree on three can- cue party. Cooking Shabu·
excess moisture. I do not cut celery apart but just cut off
ncce!'i!i&gt;Uty ;•·
Each
uncooked
.
f b guest
f
the extra length and any brown spots- KAY
dividual gifts, the PTA made a didat es, F rt'day, 7:30 p.m., Shabuh' is easy.
Couut the rcu~m~ wh .1·
·
T
1
~ips
IS ptece o
e
e
or
Pour
broth and sherry into
$30 donation on the trophy case Pomeroy Masomc emp e.
vegetable
into
a
b
o
iIi
n
g
base
of
automatic
fondue
.
you shuuh.l sh op at home.
DEAR POLLY-Trudy should buy ·one of those marvelrepair.
The
Founder's
Day
First , every J oll ar spent at
SATURDAY
broth
.
Topping
off
the
meal
Position
tray
and
rack.
Plug
ous new celery containers . They are the best ever lor
offeri
ng
was
taken.
CHICKEN
Buffet,
Eastern
is
a
cup
of
fine
noodle
so
up
unit
into
outlet.
Bring
broth
h
om e is u vote for hct tcr
keeping celery crisp and fresh. I bought mine at the five.
Sl.:hci(J]s
, ~·om mun it .\
High
School,
Saturday,
5
to
7
·
made
with
the
remaining
·
to
a
boil.
Have
beef
and
John Lisle, principal,
and-ten. After buying celery I immediately cut off the
in\pn•VI.:Illl'tll'
. p:tr\.; ...
bottom ends so each stalk will be loose. trim the tops
reported on the right to read p.m. before Eastern..Symmes broth . There is little work vegetables arranged on a
artd
str
eets
and store in this container which is filled :y, -full of water.
program and announced a Valley basketball game. Junior for the hostess in prepara. platter, noodles heaped in a
Celery is ALWAYS crisp and ready to use on a moment's
bo.wl. To serve, beef and
, Secun~l. not ('l't·r~· une wunb
second session on lhe art of class sponsored , everyone lion or cleanup.
notice .-MRS. J . M. K.
\'our business like the
welcome.
SHABU-SHABU
•·egetables
are
dipped
into
story telling to be held on Feb.
•
ClipS
chlck•n
nr
h"ef
boiling
broth
and
COOked
to
j,eople
a t home . lsn\ it
DANCE, Racine Junior High
'
'
DEAR POLLY-Trudv wrote that she cleans her celery
23 at the Salisbury school. The
more fun to du husi n es,.
wtth a vegetable brush before storing it so perhaps she is
third grade won the attendance School, Saturday following
with people you kno\1
bruising the celery and bruised vegetables spoil fast er.
Southern ga me; Music by
award.
Wllnt .vOllr hu .s ine s.o;;.~
She might also try getting a new vegetable brush and
Brownies of the Salisbury ~·~~:.x"; sponsored by senior
sterilize it ever so often as there may be decay-causing
Troop sponsored by the PTA
bacteria on her old brush. The mold on the ends suggests
DANCE, Eastern High
pre
sen ted the program .
to me that the vegetable keeper might also need sterili·
Narrated by Mrs. Ned Swin- School, 10 to 11 :30 p.m. Friday
zing or the temperature is too high or even both.- HELEN
A review of "Hail to the Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F.
. dell, the girls presented a crazy following Eastern-Symmes Chief" by Ruth Montgomery Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson,
hat revue. Taking part were game, sponsored by FHA,
,· ... "•.:.
. · Polly's Problem ·&gt;~&lt;:·.,cr.t(f!-W:1'·
was presented by Miss Lucille and Richard M. Nixon. The
~
~
DANCE PARTY, Saturday, 8
Linda
Williams
In
a
gardener's
!J DEAR POLLY- The lady who irons for me ironed ·~
Smith when the Middleport author notes that her materials
hat, camille Swindell, a picnic to 11:30 p.m., Wahama High Literary Club mel Wednesday was taken from intimate
\ two pairs of ·~,Pensive double-knit polyester pants ,..
...
, bejpn~to my husband and bqth now .have shiny ~~ . hat; Carol Morris, ·· a'~hllitlth Sc.hooi,,Jays emceeing, school at the home of Mrs. C. M.''· as'sbCi~'!lonswi'th ihetinnesand
••
1
marks bn 'lhem. One pair is navy blue and the other ::
hat; Laura Ohlinger, a pizza I!J)onsored.
Hennesy .
·
people during- -h~r years in
SUNDAY
:, black so these marks really show , which is most dis·
hat; Jena Welker, a political
Mrs
.
Montgomery,
wellWashington,
D. C.
''l tressing. I do hope someone can tell me how to re·
SKATING PARTY, Sunday,
hat; Laura Smith, a table
kn own newspaper woman, in
In her book, the author
:.j move such marks .-MRS. A. S.
tennis hat; Kimberly Basham, 2to 5p.m. at Skate-A-Way Rink her book gave highlights in the described the prominent
::c/.--:~ , , ,. -~-:~rw,:L-n&lt;~t&gt;.'-~)
a sun bonnet; Cassie Sheets, a by Pomeroy Elementary lives of Presidents Franklin D. people she met while covering
DEAR POLLY- Mv two Pet Peeves just infuriate me
rainhat; Teresa Dorst, a School Safety Patrol to raise Roosevelt, Harry S. Truman, news events around the world.
even thinking about them. First, I am greatly annoyed by
pillbox; Rebecca Dorst, a funds for Washington, D. C.
The reviewer was introduced
those drivers who completely ignore directional arrows in
trip. Tickets at door or from
basketball
hat;
and
Cathy
parking lots . They also look at you as if to say "Where
by Mrs. James Euler, prugram
Parker, a football hal. The safety patrol member .
do you think you are going, Bub? " Second, there are the
chairman.
,
Member Federal Reserve
girls gave the Brownie promise
ANNUAL Winter band
stores and doctor's offices that answer your call and then
Mrs. Robert Fisher was
System
in Spanish, taught to them by concert, Southern High School,
put you on ."hold" and there you stay until you hang up
welcomed as a new member.
On Fridays Our Drive-In
m desperation, call· again and say "Remember me? "Ann Ohlinger, and then per- 2 p.m. Sunday, direction by
Mrs.
Lee
Davidson
was
a
MRS . B. W.
Window is Open 9 a.m. to 1
formed a Mexican hat dance in Mrs. Connie Romine. Group
guest.
Members
named
their
p,m., I Continuously).
costume.
and solo numbers by both
favorite
president
in
response
'
S20.000 Maximum Insurance
Devotions to open the junior high and high school
to
roll
call.
Mrs.
Richard
Owen
For Each Depositor
meeting were given by Mrs. band members.
presided at the meeting which
Wendell Hoover. Refreshments
MONDAY
ope~ed with the club collect.
of cake, punch, coffee and nuts
FILM, "To Touch a Child" at ·
were served by the executive 8:30 p.m. for public in concommittee.
junction with Chester PTA
meeting .at school Monday.
Meeting starts at 8 with
Call Lou Now For Your Free Estimate For Your Needs On
Tbe Almanac
By United Press International Founders' Day to be observed ·
SlORE IIIUIS:
The traditional Ash Wed- meditation was by the Rev. W.
Window Air Conditioning
Today is Thursday, Feb. 17, and past presidents honored.
MON. , TUIEI.,
nesday Lenton breakfast of H. Perrin and a prayer poem the 46th day of 1972.
WEO. &amp;IAT.
ONE DAY field trial, Meigs
t : OOI.S: OO
and
'frlnity Omrch was attended concluded the program.
THURSDAY
The moon is between its new County Foxhunters, Monday on
9: W TO HOOH
by 102 persons representing 16
Attending were members of phase and first quarter.
FRIDAY
Snow Ball Hill. Hounds will
Central Air Con.dltlonlng
t :IIGTO, :OO
churches of the county.
the Minersville Methodist
The morning stars are cast at 7 a.m.
-LOWFSI' PRICES OF TilE YEARTables for the breakfast Olurch, the Olester United Jupiter and Mercury.
were covered with white linen Methodist Church, St. John's
The evening stars are Venus, Jefferson in the electoral
and featured arrangements of Lutheran Cburch, St. Paul's Mars, Saturn and Mercury.
college, became vice president.
lUi~ and greenery flanked by Lutheran Church, the E~
Those born on this day are
In 1817 Baltimore became the
white styrofoam crosses and terprise United Methodist under the sign of Aquarius.
first American city to have
taU tapers.
Cburch, the Pomeroy Baptist
American novelist Dorothy street lights. They ·were illuPeter Marshall's prayer for &lt;llurch, the Grace Episcopal Canfield was born Feb. 17, 1878.
minated with gas.
more move was the thought for &lt;llurch, the Pomeroy United
On this day in history :
In 1906 Alice Roosevelt, oldest
the quiet hour. Mrs. W. H. · Methodist &lt;llurch, the MidIn 1801 the House of daughter of President Theodore
Perrin gave the welcome and dleport Baptist Church, the Representatives named Thomas
..
I
had the table grace. Recorded Naomi Baptist Church, the Jefferson as the third U.S. Roosevelt, was married in the
organ music by Mrs. Ben Forrest Run Baptist Cburch, president. Aaron Burr, who tied White House to Congressman
Nicholas Longworth o( Ohio.
Neutzling, '"Til Midnight on the Forrest Run Methodist
Olive's Brow " with the chimes Church, the Middleport
opened the program. A prayer Presbyterian, Heath United
The
was given in unison and the Methodist, and Mount Moriah
PRICE of the
group sang "In the Cross of Baptist &lt;llurch.
Olrist." Mrs. carl Kautz read
year
..•
The Happy Harvesters Class
Contributions of $5 each were Forbes told about the Holy
scripture from Mark IS, and of Trinity Cburch prepared and made to the Heart Fund and Passover and the Olristian
HAHD TIMES may be upon
Mrs. Marvin Burt sang " Were served
the
breakfast. the Red Cross, and $25 was Passover.
the
moVIe lndustrv but It
You There When they Crucified Programs for the affair were in given to the Navigator's
Mrs. Pugh will present the can't be as bad as Sophie
My Lord ". The Lenton the green and yellow colors. Crusade in the name of Roger program in March. A report on Loren's getup might indl·
Sayre when the Women's missionaries was given by cute. ,\ctually , the Italian
~·-,. ......,.__· · ·
Society of Christian Service Mrs. Brooks Sayre. Others star Is in costume lor her
met Wednesday afternoon at attending were Mrs. Lillie rt•le as Aldon7.a In the film
....
.... ....
version of "Man of La
the
Minersvllle
United Starcher, Mrs. Osiner Roush,
~~~~~
.
Mancha," the Don Quixote
Methodist Church .
Mrs. Fannie Phillips, Mrs. musical In which she
The meeting was held Stella Grueser, Mrs . Karl makes a slngln!( and dancfollowing a potluck dinner and Grueser, Mrs. Freda Mitch, ing debut.
before quilting was resumed and Mrs. Qladys Taylor. ·
.l

.

.

.

·fiNISHING. '

THURS., FRJ.,
SATURDAY
and SUNDAY
SINUTABS

.

PTA Will
Add $100

Regular

Unicap

.

Save now on

Unicap Chewable"

CHEWABLE
VITANUNS

POLLY'S POINTERS

..

~·

The Farmers Bank
·and Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO

Wedn~sday

Event

___
~
...___..

for the afternoon. Mrs. Elsie p------------~-----'11
Forbes
with prayer
by Mrs.presided
Sadie Brown,
and
scripiure from Matthew 26 by
Mrs. Bill Russell.
' •
Readings Include , "The
Meaning of Lent," and a
humorous .report on chw-ch
attendance by Mrs. Herbert
For Every Room ], Your House.
Pugh; "Uptight World" by
Mrs. Stella Grueser ; "Prayer
for a New Year" by Mrs.
Forbes; "The Gettysburg
Address" by Mrs, Ruby
GruesPr ; "The Fur Pieces" by
Mrs. Clifford Phillip~ ; an
original poem, "Long After"
w.va
Iby Mrs. Hazel Mc;-ullum . Mrs . .__ _ _ _ _ .,_~

CEILING LIG. HT
··fiXTUREs·

your

home 1 favor .•Prlco may vary slightly.

VNI EY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY 00.
m-21ot

MIDDLEPORT

=

BLADES
D.E. 5's
NO. 804
59~

!

------------·
I
I
The Multi·Pifrpose Product
Proven by Generotions ol u,.

.

,...,.,. .WMI c...r.tl . . . .-1 M- . !of911 k .. a~m....,_-~,.,
N..,. fll&lt; -~"'""on
1111 111 .....,IIIII\ ,. """""'"',. )"1111 _..... •
• COI!IPIIrl a.- ~ ~ llfltllloltr " ........ _.... elllriDit

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1 ~*'&lt;led olr ~ ~ .o.111
• 8~rt9 oolhl ~r .,O:,IIool """""t

1 IJ~ e......... lnllll~ lllon
• lhMI Plrtl ~ llliiiJhl DOMIIIon

'.
i:
...!
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SAVE '60

R~~:~27.988*

*'THIS LOW PRICE OOOD ONLY
UNTIL FEBRUARY 21, f872

.)

SAVE '30.00 TO '60.00
On Window Air CandiliatltiS

SAVE '10.00 TO '130.00
.
.On Cenb1l Air Conditiantn
,I

.

~

I - t

~

Clean And Natural

FDS

49
'

NIGHTTIME COLDS MEDICINE

......._
.. _
-·__
...
--.

FAMILY TUBE
Reg. 1.75

HOME PERMANENT

!TINGLING FLUFF

1.99

!' BATH

L

6 oz.

16 oz

REG.

1.29 '

66¢
.

dial

aa~

DIAPARENE.
OINTMENT

2 oz.
REG. 1.25
.

1:=;:::::::1

•

77~

FAMILY SIZE

Ben·Gay+-:-_R_E_G_u_LA_R_l_.o_,- - - - Pmh•tlng H11t

LOTION

. Mini-Mist

Ben-Gay

Penetrating Heat Lotion

.
REG.

/It

2 oz.
Reg. 1.09

~

6'

,

White Rain

sa~

oz.

PRIVINE
NASAL
51PRAY

. . . . .. , O!&gt;O RO

IIIII I A £TII

Colgate"'MFP

HAIR SPRAY
13 oz.
Reg. 1.49

Cover Girl
Liquid Makeup
Reg.
1.75

99e

Cover Girl
Tube Makeup
Reg .
1.15

Cover Girl
Pressed Powder

9"9~

Max Factor Color
.
Highlight Shampoo, Economy

Reg.
1.75

Size,

59~

REG.

1.35

99~ ·

1.95

Coty Emeraude Flacon Mist, special site
2.75
Jean Nate After Bath Lotio·n, 8 oz.
only 2.00
Shu lton Corn silk Compacts
· Vagisec Liquid douche, Reg. 3.50

AM
MENS.
•MEDICATED
POWDER
614

-~

89'

......... .,.. ,... ...'" ..., ........"'"

aa~

I

3 OZ. TUBE

LIQUID SHAMPOO
FAMILY SIZE
Regular

1.09

- ~

-----

Chap-ans Cream ·~-

REGULAR 1.59

PRELL·

.

1.88

•

REG. 2.29

. SKINNY DIP

'

-.

49~

Reg .
85c

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE

INSTANT DRY
SHAMPOO
14 OUNCE
Regular 2.75

...... ~:.::

MENNEN
PROTEIN 21
SHAMPoo ·.7 OUNCE

99
No. 5624

Head &amp; Shoulders

REGULAR 2.29

~~~m~~~~r

·1.29

2.95

BAND-AID PLASTIC STRIPS

QUARTS

53~

~egular

REG. 89'

,- ·~

REG.
' .
1.00

RAZOR SETS

STANBACK
POWDERS
24's
·sg~

LISTERINE

i

66e

REG. 1.19

1.59

REG. 1.89

TONI

5 OZ.

GIU.Ettr ~mac ,.,~ .

REG.l
2.39 I

14 oz.

~ BEADS

49~

GILLEnE
FOAMY

18 Ol

.JERGENS

t'

Keeps Heir Looking

10 oz.

,,,.-.

I

WITCH
HAZEL

NyQuil

1.65.

:~

I

Ant~Perspirant

lh"xlO yards

¢ r;_::::::::;::-~-:-:RE:G:.' 1.19 69~

.REG.
1.15

DICKINSON'S

VICKS

•

BII·CIJIIciiJ, 23,000 BTU, Ill -1 qulctdJ old
r.-¥• up Ill 172 pinta of nter dolfJ

RIGHT GUARD

LARGE TUBE

c......""T'

:Re'

..

Brylcreem
Reg. 6Sc

------------·

.· REGULAR 2.50

88'

Reg. 1.29

WHITE CLOUD

BEST SELLING
HAIRDRESSING
IN THE WORLD

•
0
01
Cher~E

~ COUGH SYRUP
~~r~. · (UUNCE . -

REGARD

oz .

n oz.

.

:JOHNSON

7

WITCH HAZEL

.Cheracol D

1.99
'

Reg.l99
2.95
·1

4~~lls49~

·? DICKINSONS

3.11

'

1.33

200's
TAQ,S

BABY SHAMPOO

TOILET TISSUE

14 OUNCE

I

REG.

"'"""--- ·--·
·-......
-"-··

to completely "'rm llo-proolthe overego 3-bolt-oom,home! .
S.v11 you over $tOO oompared to tho cost of colllriiJ In o
proflll'-1 oxltrmlnator. Buy Arab and do both you and

SCHICK PWS PLATINUM

JOH'NiSc)N' S

ANACIN

16 oz.
Reg. 1.98

3 OUNCES

IIBIII

~ ·r~ .. ~.

PEPTO·
BISMOL

109 l-:::•: ': 'fi: :-TSA-:U: -I: AN: D~A: Al:-: O: AS=:; -'

100
WITH 24 FREE

_.,..

Slt.tfbuys l.gollon of Arab Tormlto Control Concentroto.
Affd on Ar'eb h01Hnd sproy APIIllcotor. and you're rHdy

NO. 394
REG. 1.79

VITAMINS

24 FREE
when you
BUY 100.

lOO's
Reg. 1.17

10's

Unicap .

---

AND SAVI '100 OR MOll

BANDS

:[stus )

Contributions Made

till "'I)

Pledge

102 from Churches ·

At

f"ti.LUH

REG. 89'

Given Literary

~

.llll .JliS liHH (

WITH 24 FREE

To Storing Celery

Review

INSTAMATIC

~·

ADJUSTABL£

2:4 FREE
when you
BUY 100

100

There Is a Trick

INSTAMATIC

30's1.29

2.50

BAYER

SCHICK

2.00 ,

1.99

VISINE
REG. S1.50

as~·,

....
,I \

.· .

�'

FASHION

.

Bridal
fashions Keep in Tim:e
.

·.By Chillicothe .SOlon

Are Solicited

variety. But now , with the
1·eturn to feminine , preltJ
fashions , b rid a 1 gowns for
· the spring bride are a com·
NEW YORK - INEA) binahon of the traditional
Bridal fa shions keep abreast with high fashion touches. ·
of the times. And so when
They are indeed lovely and
kooky fashion s .were in, it
it
seems that more designer s
naturally followed that a
kooky bridal outfit - such as than ever before are now ply·
Hot Pan t s and long veil ing their trade in wedding
w o u I d make an occasional finery.
appearance.
This time around six of the
nation's best bridal designers
In last season's love affair have put their top creation s
with the gypsy, tnany bridal together in one collection so
gowns w,ere of the peasant that brides can choose from

by Exquisite Brida ls.
both sleeves. Stately
with delicate veni ce
ivory. These fa shions

a wide ?rray of handsome
s t~l es . It s called the Dream
Bnde Collection and 11 1s
betng featured at shops all
around the country.

ed. r i b b 0 it 's and soft, full
sleeves . And graceful detachable trains can lk'&gt;removed
to make dancing at the wed·
ding reception a pleasant
rather than cumbersome ex·
The look is romantic and perience.
fres h. There is a complete
range of mood and designs The 1972 spring/ summer
but all are in the romantic bride will be radiant and
vein .
beautiful when she walks
down the aisle in· a soft,
Fabrics run the g a m u t dreamy froth of white.
from organza to lace to chif.
fon. Trim is in lace, crystal
and pearls. and silhouettes ,;:--,
are flowing, fragile and very

Organizailons to co-sponsor
Meigs High School girls to
Buckeye Girls' State are being
solicited. Cost of sending a girl
for a week to Girls' State at
Capital University, Colwnbus,
is $70. Church or civic
organizations interested in cosponsoring a girl are asked to
contact either Mrs. Dale
Mouming, Middleport, or Mrs.
Kenneth Harris, Pomeroy,
American Legion Auxiliary
chairmen.
Sometime in early March a
meeting will be set up by Mrs.
Mourning and Mrs. Harris for
screening of the girls who
qualify to attend. Candidates
will be asked to attend the
screening session along with
three representatives of
sponsoring organizations.

ON DEAN'S LIST
Miss Glenna Sprague, 780
High, Middleport, a student at
Capital
University
in
Columbus, has been named to
the dean's list for the fall
semester. Miss Sprague, a
freshman at Capital, is
majoring in music. To be
eligible for the dean's list, a
student must be enrolled fulltime at the university and earn
at least a 3.4 average.

''

INFANT
THRU

CINDERELLA &amp;
•
NANNffiE

SIZE

By STEWART HENSLEY Peking and opening up the

DRESSES

12

SHORTS, SLACKS,
.SHIRTS
BY CARTERS &amp;

RIC.RARD. M&lt;CLosD:y

D of A Unit
Met Tuesday
CHESTER - A past coun.lor'~ ca·rd was presented to
rs. Jean Summerfield a~ the
~esday night meeting of
Chester Council323, Daughters
of America, at the hall.
Mrs. Erma Cleland, deputy
state councilor , made the
presentation to Mrs . Summerfield after she had been
escorted to the altar by the
flagbearers. Honored with
cards from Mrs. Cleland were
Mrs. Mabel Van Meter and
Mrs. Alice Curtis, both with
birthdays this month.
It was reported.. that Mrs.
Sadie Trussell, Mrs . Inzy
Newell and Mrs. Dorothy
Lawson are ill, and that Mrs.
Marie Koblentz, and Mrs.
Marcia Keller are home from
the hospital. Also noted was the
birth of a great.granddaughter
to Mrs. Eulah Swan .
The good of the order
committee announced a silent
auction at the March 21
meeting. Refreshments were
served . Others attending were
Mrs. Helen Wolf, Mrs. Ada
Neutzling ,' Mrs. Hattie
Frederick , Mrs . Margaret
TutUe, Mrs. Goldie Frederick,
Mrs. Mary K. Holter, Mrs.
Zona Biggs, Mrs. Ada Van
Meter, Mrs. Ethel Orr, Mrs.
Dorothy Myers, Mrs. Mary Jo
Pooler, Mrs. Ada Morris, Mrs .
Betty Roush, Mrs. Doris
Koenig, Mrs. Thelma White,
and Mrs. Opal Hollon.

~

85TH OBSERVED!
The 85th birthday anniversary of Mrs. Sadie
Brown was observed Sunday
evening with a party at her
Minersville home.
Numero s gifts were
p~eswt :1f.s. ~O,)VD 11'd
she received nowel'1l from
Dr. and Mrs. Robert Brown,
a grandson, of Dayton; and
Mr. and Mrs. George

Billy th~ Kid
PANTS

0

We have a
Lay-away Plan fnr
Your Convenience

Voic.e along Br'Way

THE
KIDDIE SHOPPE

BY JACK O'BRIAN

ancient "Hellzapoppin" gimmick in the first
place, will have blunted the resuscitated
IF HIS PATIENCE BUCKLED,
original's marvelously impudent point ... One
HE'D BELT
thing's certain : Alex Cohen has the chutzpah to
NEW YORK (KFS) -Stan Freeman's blurt out-wallop any other impertinent program on
after finishing an engagement with singer Aliza TV.
Kaahi: "First gal I ever wanted to belt" ... Top
Lee Marvin snooted a . $50,000 TV comneman Ed Wilcox lost his voice.!Jox to cancer mercial - for a deodorant. Took it as personJll
at Memorial Hospital and typed this tragically criticism ... Asked how all his publicity flood has
mu'te warning: "Recent studies show a defmite affected him, Henry Kissinger said at a capital
Unk between heavy drinking and throat can- party : "Think how happy it makes my mother
cer." ... Lenore Lemmon, glamor-bead lined - she's the envy of all the Jewish mothers
yesteryear playgirl, now · tolls weekends as bragging about their sons." ... The little C!llif.
barmaid at the PoPular Yesterday's $11 ... town of Verba Buena was renamed just 125
Olria Krlendler, son of Mack of the "21" clan, years ago - it's now the most civilized U. S.
became a poppa in Santa Fe.
city: San Francisco ... Hope Hampton just
Claudette Colbert and Joe Cotten are jumped on the pantswagon: .denim jeans searchlllg for BdWy. vehicles (the way they've · studded with "diamond sequins" ... Every,time
been flopping, the o~y dependable Bdwy. we've seen Hope over .her sequined and bugle-.
vehicle faa bus) ... F. &amp;naira Jr. isn't HhiP off beadfd decades, we've always wondered: "How
the old cork: at the Bahamas' Kings Inn, Jr'.s · does she turn them off?" · '
strongest liquid was cqffee; no booze for him ...
Protean performer Caterina Valente's
Liza Mlnnelli's IIW'i1lg with Des! Arnaz Jr. is imminent husband Roy Budd (she divorced .
rigbt out in the open: the extra suite she ordered Eric Von Aro after 18 years) goes right·into her
while playing the Miami Beach Eden Roc act: he's a jaZ2;pianist ... Actress Elaine Swann
contains all Jr' .s luggage ... The teenage hailed a taxi outside Yestenjay's and forgot her
magazine "Go," went.
$150 new mink hat :when she debarked. Four
David Merrick's "SUgar" musical got these days later, tbe cabbie got the fur skinuner back
sweet Washington PoSt quotes from critic Dick to Elaine, explaining sheepishly: ''My daugbter
Coe: "Puts Robert Morse in the cl8SB of the was getting married and my wife wore it to the
great comica"; and : " 'Sugar' Ia likely to be the wedding ."
year's smash musical" ... The Stage Deily's
Old featherweight contender Freddie Russo
· coUecUng .men's clothes (must ·be decently (40s) is at work ~n a novel titled "Being God ·
wearable) for the tragic imnates of Willowbrook Isn't Easy," and knowle~eablemutual pals tell
t mlllli!i bolpital. C~ llfrv*in AI the us It's "~d,good" ... J!lJlt.'\d Anne Meara
ij Stafi';"they'U pick 'em up ... Abel Baer (wrote Stillet (talented kida) have. ~ fiddler on '
"My. Mother's Eyes," "I Miss My Swiss," the premises: their &amp;-year-Gld Benjy. That's
"June'Nlght," "Lucky!Jndy,"etc.) is ailing too how Yehudi M. started.
seriously ... Mrs. Dong Kingman's getting the
Got this straight from a veteran "Late
Today show's Barbara Walters' calling carda Slow" staffer': when the late~ate TV flicks
trinted in Olinese - for Barbara's NiJ:on- would run past his (and others) time to catch
Peking junket.
the commuter milk train, they'd just fade reeia
Oitic Ra Reed and producer Alex Cohen into each other irrelevantly and scoot for home
, hadn't spoken in sea!IOns (since Rex blasted ...Wonder if that's what happened ·too other
several Cohen shows), but this week Alex signed a.m. when "Lifeboat" ended a~ruptly con~ ·
· Rex for a role in his TV "Hellzapoppin" ... siderably before the !ibn's proper finale .
Wonder if "Laugh-Ul," which expropriated the

On The' T In Middleport
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,...,....~

WASHINGTON'S
BIRTHDAY

FRI., SAT., MON. and TUES.
FEB. 18, 19, 21 and 22

Massar'

a

nephew

I

or

Columbus.
Mrs . Cllfford Phillips
baked the birthday cake
which was topped with the
numerals "85". Attending
the party were Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Brown, Dr. Harold
Brown, Miss Beverly Price,
Mrs. Agnes Brown, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Massar, Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Phillips
and Mrs. Fannie Phillips.

-Happiness is •••••••••••

Slides of Holy

Come As You Are
Eat in the car

l,.prlfl to b~ Seen., *'-It
-~

I.,J

.,...._

• sandwiches • short
' ,... ..:orders
., ..
• biggest beefburgers in town

• /t-1

'

'sYRACUSE - The Rev: 0.
G. McKinney, Charleston, W.
Va. will speak and show sliiles
of the Holy Land at 7:30 p. m.
Friday at the Syracuse Olurch
of the Nazarene. The public is
invited.
Also on Sunday there will be
a baptismal service at 2 p. m.
at the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church with members of the
Syracuse church to be included. Pastor of the Syracuse
church i8 the Rev. M. C.
Larimore.

• milk shakes • sundies
• cones • sodas • etc.

(r
... ..

"· "

''

':t.

·

PANTY HOSE

e

REG.

1.69

1

McCLURE'S
992-5248

LETART FALUl - The Ohio
Valley Grange 2612 of Letart
Falls met at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Roush
Thursday evening with worthy
master, Herbert Shields in the
chair.
The Grange discussed work
now being done on the Letart
Falls Community Hall. The
grange will meet at the hall ·
when heat is installed and
repairs completed. The Grange
also decided to help pay the
fuel bills.
A literary program was
given by Lecturer. Mrs. Mabel
Shields: "My va;entine" by
Doris Sayre; "Angels with
RUTLAND - A valentine Long Hair" by .Erma Wilson;
party was staged Monday for "February" by Mrs. Herbert
the children of the Meigs Housh; "Borrowed Toots" by
Community Class at Rutland Herbert Roush; a reading by
by the Middl eport Child Florence Smith; "Grandma 's
Kitchen" by Bertha 'Robinson;
Conservation League.
Favors were paper hearts games to guess, by Doris
and heart shaped suckers. The Sayre, and valentines by each
club presented ea_ch of the girls member.
The next meeting will be at
with a hairbrush and the boys
with hammers and nails. Two llie home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
irons and two sets of dishes Donahew on March 9.
were also donated to the class. Refreshments of fruit salad,
Mrs. Walter Morris, Mrs. cookies, cooffce, potato chips,
Lou Osborne, Mrs, Clifford punch and ice tea.were served.
~nnedy and Mrs. Pat Duffy
served ice cr.eam, cupcakes
and punch . to the children.
A'ITEND BREAKFAST
League
members . are
Mrs. Freda Mitch, Mrs.
reminded of the hockey game Herbert Pugh , Mrs . Ruby
Saturday night in Athens. Grueser, Mrs. Mary Russell,
'nckeiB c8n be picked up at the Mrs. Mildred Phillips, Mrs.
box office.
Doris Grueser, and Mrs. Stella
Grueser of the Minersville
United Methodisl Church at.
Q-The,e,lver 18 the roung tended the Len ton Breakfast
ot what (mtmal?
·
Wednesday morning at Trinity
A- The eel.
Church. ·

BOOKS

GOLF BALLS

ss~

4 For

Valentine Party

$} 77

~~--2·-~~PR_.~··•__1_00-·~---11

00
2
$3
r---·--~~-·-·-·~~--·--1
16

Girls Double Knit Shorts • . . 1.99
Girls Double Knit Jamaicas ... 1.99
2.99

LADIES'

BLOUSES
Reg. 7.00 SALE '500

'3"
SALE '3"
SALE ,

REG.

PANT SUITS.......... l2.95
BLOUSES .............. 5.95
PANTS ................ 5.50
SKIRTS ................ 5.95
DRESSES ............. 11.95 ·

SALE

'7.95

'4.00
'4.00

'4.00
'7.95

ALL LADIES' SHOES

SALE

REG. 5.95 to 8.95 ·
'

SALE $]99 to s5aa

2,.

NEW! SEE THRU

14.99

1

ON AU

.2 0% ·oFF ON "R NO SHOES
ALL SHAW
MEN'S SHOES

BUBBLE UMBRELlAS

OFF

ON ALL

BATIERy OPERATED
CORDLESS

·woRK SHOES

SHOE SHINE
KIT. '3 99

DURING THIS
SALE
SHOE
ONLY

•

KIPS

'

20%
OFF

REG.

for

MATERNITY SALE

I

STORE

/ IN MIDPLEPOIT
'

l.

.

.I

••
•

------1:

FLANNEL SHIRTS
)

Reg. 6.00

All RUBBER
FOOTWEAR

Boys'

f~zi~ru

20%

OFF

(Siig~t lrr.)

Girls Short Ails · . - . · . . 1.99

Girls Peter Max Jeans - ..

SAVE '500

PANTY HOSE

SALE $299
SALE $}99

99

$14

LADIES'

PAJAMAS &amp;
GOWNS

SALE

,.

99

15 PAIR
MEN'S RAND
TRUJUNS .

2 For •100

GIRLS'

REG.

.--...'300

Reg. $1 .00

EA.

SUEDE LACED TO lHE TOP
CREPE SOLE

TO

Butts, Alva L. Devault, Mrs.
George E. Bush and daughter,
Charles W. Foley, Mrs. John A.
Cecil Duncan, Saul R. Welch, Nibert and son, Michael D.
Geneve R. Sorrell, Mrs. Ruth Vance, Wanda M. Workman,
M. Nichols, Dennis D. Miller, Christopher Harrison and
Mary L. Perkins, Charles A. Forrest R. MoSS'.

HOSPITAL. NEWS

MEN'S. .HI TOP

2!1) TO •5
VALUES

ACTIVITY
BOOKS

Reg, $1.30

Reg. 49c

Children Given

PR.

1 99

$125
WILSON K28

SOCKS

4 DAYS ONLY!

Middleport, 0.

RTHDAY

COLORING

REG. 11.19

.. 75$

HOUSE SHOES

WASH IN

CANVAS
SH.
Q
,
E
S
.
~. '~1 'Ol~
4 DAYS
.
$ 99
ONLY '·•··~

1

Grange Will
Use Repaired
Community Hall

WOMEN'S and CHILDREN'S

Jl .

HOMER GALFORD

1'HREE PROMOTED - Three Columbus men have recently received promotions at
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Company. Richard P. Andrews has been promoted to
. AIBistant SupervisOr, System Dispatching Division, Homer Galford i8 ibe new Safety Super·vllfor for the Columbus Oivlsion, Distribution Operation Department, and Richard J. McclorJkey has been appointed Supervisor, System Dispatching Division. All are veteran C&amp;soE
men, having risen through the ranks.

~~~----_H-~!:!~::.~~--·

~~.Q..qw."""

RICHARD ANDREWS
..

f&lt;•minine.

There are scalloped col· ·
Iars , lace appliques. thread·

•
t
Road ·to Peking Summi
Took Diverse Routings
·

'

Martin Q.oted that thls brings
the endowment lund lor' th.e
National Jewish Hospital to
$570. She spoke on activities at
the hospital and the role played
by Eight and Forty in further
treatment,.and research.
The . Salon contributes t.o
medicine, band work for the
children, holiday . gifts,
maintenance parties, birthday
dimes., )wd cystic fibrosis
camps. Mrs. -Martin noted that
)1) dale the child welfare fund
totals, $80 ; the cystic fibrosis
research fund, $134.50;_ the
tuberculosis fund, $68; the all
partners proiect. $62.50; the
nurses scholarship, $298 ; and
the Ohio medicine fund, $24.

"
.
Holzer Medical Genter, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hmlrs 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Brady F.
Gilbert, Cheshire, a son; Mr.
artd Mrs. Gerald D. Wisecup,
Oak HID, a daugh~r ; M'r. and
Mrs. Kenneth D. Jordan, Leon,
a son and Mr. and Mrs. James
R. Biabet, Pt. Pleasant, a
daughter .
Discharges
Mrs . Yvonne S. Lanier,
William E. Darst, Janet Hogg,
Nora LoOmis, Robert C. Roush,
Georg('• A. Rairden, John
Priddy, Mrs. Evelyn Danbury,

.

•

. CHARGES DI.SMISSED
LEVITTOWN, Pa. (UPI)-A
magistrate here has clismiaaed
charges agafnsl an 1'-year-Gld
)'Outh for reckless driving on a
horae.
·
Anthony V. Aliante of Levittown was cited In November
for violation of the state's
motor vehicle code after the
horse he .was riding ran into a
car.

FIRST PERFECI' SCOim
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)--A
17-year~ld high IChool senior
has compiled the first perfect
1100re on a section of the
National Scholastic Aptitude
Achievement Test. ,
Rosa Gonzales, a straight
"A" IIUdent at Million High
School, scOred a perfect 800 on
tbe ~anlsh test.
.
The 'feat required not only
bltelllgence of the highest rank
but a complete lmowlldge of
the field, according to a
spokesman for Educational
Testing Service, which
f'I'Oduces the tats.

Q-Who invented the ••x·
ophone?
A--Adolphe Sax, a Belgian
instrument maker, about

1~.
' I

.'

UPI Diplomatic Reporter
WASHINGTON ( UPI).When President Nixon and
Chinese leaders meet next
week, they will have reach~d
the swnmit by .vastly different
routes, each side motivated by
its own particular interests.
The vision of the "promised
land" Nixon hopes ·to see undoubtedly differs considerably
from the vision of Chairman
Mao T~ung and Premier
Chou En-lai.
However, the fact that
Peking and Washington have
finally agreed to try to
liquidate .their bitter 26-yearold cold war is more important
to a war•weary and apprehensive world than the
geopolitical considerations
which led them to this point.
Nixon views his success in
arranging the meeting as a
triumph for his policy-put in)l)
effect almost the day he took
office-to make a beginning in
burying the hatchet with

possibility of stabilizing Asia.
The President's strategy was
well .executed, part of it being
carried out ·through secret
emissaries and part of it advanced by public announcements and actions.
Chou En-lai, for his part, has
made It clear that he considers
that fact that Nixon took the
initiative and asked to be invi.ted to Peking as evidence of
the wisdom and effect;iv.eness
of the policies China has. been
pursuing since Chiang Kaishek's nationalists were drl ven
off the mainlarid in 1949. •
Nixon is well aware that it
was not any particular affection for Americans that led
Chou and Mao to agree to the
meeting. Chou .has made it
clear his willingness to entertain the idea of ''nonnalizing"
relations with the United States
stems in large part from
Peking's fear of the Jiussians.
Chou also has spoken of his
concern over the possibility of

FOUN.D GUlLTY
YAKIMA, Wash . (UPI)The wife of Goldendale Mayor
H. G. Rowley was found guilty
of possession of marijuana
after a jury deliberated nearly

seven hours Tuesday.
Ruth Rowley faces a possible .
six months maximum sentence
under newly revised WaShington laws which make first-time
possession a misdemeanor.
'

FOR
THE
BOYs -

WASHIMGl~~

BIRTHDAY

resurgent Japan e s e
militarism .
Chou is equally aware that
Nixori, one of the most militant
of the anti-Peking crusaders
during the Eisenhower ad.
ministration, has not altered
his view on communism,
although Nixon may have
become less convinced that ·
Peking has "aggressive" intentions toward 1111 Asia.
However, Chdu knows
Nixon's desire for friendship
with China is based in large
part on a feeling that SinoAmerican understanding may
iX'Ovlde diplomatic framework
and political atmosphere to
eventually settle not only the
Vietnam War bot eliminate
some of the other peril points in
Asia .

,1so .
'300
'400

LOAFERS

Sizes 3-6
VALUES TO '11.99

OXFORDS

•soo

Mostly
. Pedwin
VALUES TO '12.99
'

4 BUCKLE
AMCTICS

Q- Across which river of
Virginia did George Wa sh·
ington traditionally throw a
silver dollar?
A- T h e Rappahannock.
The coin was probably a
Spanish piece of eight.

'4''

THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes are Sensibly Pnced
MIDDLEPORT,O.

2 DAYS ONLY -FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

WASHINGTON'S · BIBTHD.AY
., ·''"'"'""'&lt;·~.......... .

'*()'

/

.

.....0

,~
'#

We celebrate /
-George's Birthday with a great :.,
array of honest
values
everything for
Beffer · Living ...
come get your/
share!
George Has· Flipped His Lid

With This Big

forQualily·Service
Depentla!Jilily

FEDDERS
Price Chupperl
NORGE
FROST-FREE

•'

•
•

'

Washington Window

'

.

Co-Sponsors

Float down the aisle in serene eleg;nce in the breathtaking gown (left) designed
It's sat in organza trimmed with cotton Gu ipere lace from neck to hem and down
emp~re A ·li ne gown (right) designed by Bridal Creat ions IS in satin-faced organza
lace and r~bbon t ri m. The · ribbon trim con be in pink or blue os well os white or
are from the Dream Bride Collection.

•

Mrs. Martin Honored~-~--~......
''Pullin' on the Dog for
Mary'' was the theme of the
30th anniversary observance of
Ross County Salon, Eight and
Forty, Tuesday night with Mrs.
Mary Martin, Pomeroy, Eight
and Forty Departemental
Chapeau, as honored guest.
Mrs . Martin was ac- ·
companied to Chillicothe for
the observance by 1\irs. Mrytle
Walker, her le secretairecassiere. Both were presented
gifts.
Mrs. Carrie Anderson,
capeau, presented a check for
$57 to Mrs. Martin for the
Denver bed endowment. Mrs.

~:.s.~::».-:;:;:;.-:::::::~*"X::::::::..~~..":!

"'

r

a- The Dally Sentlnol,Mktdleport-Pomeroy, O., Feb. 17, 1m

By HELEN HENNESSY

-. . . .

your ·

AIR.OONDITIONER SALE!
2 Day Pre-Season Prices

REFRIGERATOR

4,000 BTU

ONLY$29995

6,000 BTU

phar~acist

is

0\\ \)\\\'i ~\

23" ZENITH
COLOR TV

'9995
'18995
'29995

18,000 BTU

~\ "\\tt\es~

Price Chopper!

$499

Console
Walnut
Cabinet

.

CARPET BONANZA!

501
NYLON CARPET .

Price Chopper!

· lARGE VINYL

'7e99

RECLINERS
Enjoy Our Man1 Senices:
•
•
·•
•
•
•
.•

Pay Your Telephone Bills Here.
Ladies &amp; Children's Rest Room.
Money Orders.·
Cold Water Drinking Fountain.
Outstan~ing Stock of Veterinary Supplies.
Free U.se of Crutches (no charge).
Free Par~ing in Rear.

We have the largest d: .. iJI.ay of records
and tapes in this area. ·

..~----~~~~--~----~

Green and Brown

ONLY $4995

SQUARE
YARD

fREE 1-oa~ndRubber
Free

~aa~~::t
Now Only

Pad

$2 g·
Reg.

$4'19

Installation

Available in green, red, orange
and gold.

WE'RE OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS

.INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

•

MIDDLEPORT
·I .

�'

FASHION

.

Bridal
fashions Keep in Tim:e
.

·.By Chillicothe .SOlon

Are Solicited

variety. But now , with the
1·eturn to feminine , preltJ
fashions , b rid a 1 gowns for
· the spring bride are a com·
NEW YORK - INEA) binahon of the traditional
Bridal fa shions keep abreast with high fashion touches. ·
of the times. And so when
They are indeed lovely and
kooky fashion s .were in, it
it
seems that more designer s
naturally followed that a
kooky bridal outfit - such as than ever before are now ply·
Hot Pan t s and long veil ing their trade in wedding
w o u I d make an occasional finery.
appearance.
This time around six of the
nation's best bridal designers
In last season's love affair have put their top creation s
with the gypsy, tnany bridal together in one collection so
gowns w,ere of the peasant that brides can choose from

by Exquisite Brida ls.
both sleeves. Stately
with delicate veni ce
ivory. These fa shions

a wide ?rray of handsome
s t~l es . It s called the Dream
Bnde Collection and 11 1s
betng featured at shops all
around the country.

ed. r i b b 0 it 's and soft, full
sleeves . And graceful detachable trains can lk'&gt;removed
to make dancing at the wed·
ding reception a pleasant
rather than cumbersome ex·
The look is romantic and perience.
fres h. There is a complete
range of mood and designs The 1972 spring/ summer
but all are in the romantic bride will be radiant and
vein .
beautiful when she walks
down the aisle in· a soft,
Fabrics run the g a m u t dreamy froth of white.
from organza to lace to chif.
fon. Trim is in lace, crystal
and pearls. and silhouettes ,;:--,
are flowing, fragile and very

Organizailons to co-sponsor
Meigs High School girls to
Buckeye Girls' State are being
solicited. Cost of sending a girl
for a week to Girls' State at
Capital University, Colwnbus,
is $70. Church or civic
organizations interested in cosponsoring a girl are asked to
contact either Mrs. Dale
Mouming, Middleport, or Mrs.
Kenneth Harris, Pomeroy,
American Legion Auxiliary
chairmen.
Sometime in early March a
meeting will be set up by Mrs.
Mourning and Mrs. Harris for
screening of the girls who
qualify to attend. Candidates
will be asked to attend the
screening session along with
three representatives of
sponsoring organizations.

ON DEAN'S LIST
Miss Glenna Sprague, 780
High, Middleport, a student at
Capital
University
in
Columbus, has been named to
the dean's list for the fall
semester. Miss Sprague, a
freshman at Capital, is
majoring in music. To be
eligible for the dean's list, a
student must be enrolled fulltime at the university and earn
at least a 3.4 average.

''

INFANT
THRU

CINDERELLA &amp;
•
NANNffiE

SIZE

By STEWART HENSLEY Peking and opening up the

DRESSES

12

SHORTS, SLACKS,
.SHIRTS
BY CARTERS &amp;

RIC.RARD. M&lt;CLosD:y

D of A Unit
Met Tuesday
CHESTER - A past coun.lor'~ ca·rd was presented to
rs. Jean Summerfield a~ the
~esday night meeting of
Chester Council323, Daughters
of America, at the hall.
Mrs. Erma Cleland, deputy
state councilor , made the
presentation to Mrs . Summerfield after she had been
escorted to the altar by the
flagbearers. Honored with
cards from Mrs. Cleland were
Mrs. Mabel Van Meter and
Mrs. Alice Curtis, both with
birthdays this month.
It was reported.. that Mrs.
Sadie Trussell, Mrs . Inzy
Newell and Mrs. Dorothy
Lawson are ill, and that Mrs.
Marie Koblentz, and Mrs.
Marcia Keller are home from
the hospital. Also noted was the
birth of a great.granddaughter
to Mrs. Eulah Swan .
The good of the order
committee announced a silent
auction at the March 21
meeting. Refreshments were
served . Others attending were
Mrs. Helen Wolf, Mrs. Ada
Neutzling ,' Mrs. Hattie
Frederick , Mrs . Margaret
TutUe, Mrs. Goldie Frederick,
Mrs. Mary K. Holter, Mrs.
Zona Biggs, Mrs. Ada Van
Meter, Mrs. Ethel Orr, Mrs.
Dorothy Myers, Mrs. Mary Jo
Pooler, Mrs. Ada Morris, Mrs .
Betty Roush, Mrs. Doris
Koenig, Mrs. Thelma White,
and Mrs. Opal Hollon.

~

85TH OBSERVED!
The 85th birthday anniversary of Mrs. Sadie
Brown was observed Sunday
evening with a party at her
Minersville home.
Numero s gifts were
p~eswt :1f.s. ~O,)VD 11'd
she received nowel'1l from
Dr. and Mrs. Robert Brown,
a grandson, of Dayton; and
Mr. and Mrs. George

Billy th~ Kid
PANTS

0

We have a
Lay-away Plan fnr
Your Convenience

Voic.e along Br'Way

THE
KIDDIE SHOPPE

BY JACK O'BRIAN

ancient "Hellzapoppin" gimmick in the first
place, will have blunted the resuscitated
IF HIS PATIENCE BUCKLED,
original's marvelously impudent point ... One
HE'D BELT
thing's certain : Alex Cohen has the chutzpah to
NEW YORK (KFS) -Stan Freeman's blurt out-wallop any other impertinent program on
after finishing an engagement with singer Aliza TV.
Kaahi: "First gal I ever wanted to belt" ... Top
Lee Marvin snooted a . $50,000 TV comneman Ed Wilcox lost his voice.!Jox to cancer mercial - for a deodorant. Took it as personJll
at Memorial Hospital and typed this tragically criticism ... Asked how all his publicity flood has
mu'te warning: "Recent studies show a defmite affected him, Henry Kissinger said at a capital
Unk between heavy drinking and throat can- party : "Think how happy it makes my mother
cer." ... Lenore Lemmon, glamor-bead lined - she's the envy of all the Jewish mothers
yesteryear playgirl, now · tolls weekends as bragging about their sons." ... The little C!llif.
barmaid at the PoPular Yesterday's $11 ... town of Verba Buena was renamed just 125
Olria Krlendler, son of Mack of the "21" clan, years ago - it's now the most civilized U. S.
became a poppa in Santa Fe.
city: San Francisco ... Hope Hampton just
Claudette Colbert and Joe Cotten are jumped on the pantswagon: .denim jeans searchlllg for BdWy. vehicles (the way they've · studded with "diamond sequins" ... Every,time
been flopping, the o~y dependable Bdwy. we've seen Hope over .her sequined and bugle-.
vehicle faa bus) ... F. &amp;naira Jr. isn't HhiP off beadfd decades, we've always wondered: "How
the old cork: at the Bahamas' Kings Inn, Jr'.s · does she turn them off?" · '
strongest liquid was cqffee; no booze for him ...
Protean performer Caterina Valente's
Liza Mlnnelli's IIW'i1lg with Des! Arnaz Jr. is imminent husband Roy Budd (she divorced .
rigbt out in the open: the extra suite she ordered Eric Von Aro after 18 years) goes right·into her
while playing the Miami Beach Eden Roc act: he's a jaZ2;pianist ... Actress Elaine Swann
contains all Jr' .s luggage ... The teenage hailed a taxi outside Yestenjay's and forgot her
magazine "Go," went.
$150 new mink hat :when she debarked. Four
David Merrick's "SUgar" musical got these days later, tbe cabbie got the fur skinuner back
sweet Washington PoSt quotes from critic Dick to Elaine, explaining sheepishly: ''My daugbter
Coe: "Puts Robert Morse in the cl8SB of the was getting married and my wife wore it to the
great comica"; and : " 'Sugar' Ia likely to be the wedding ."
year's smash musical" ... The Stage Deily's
Old featherweight contender Freddie Russo
· coUecUng .men's clothes (must ·be decently (40s) is at work ~n a novel titled "Being God ·
wearable) for the tragic imnates of Willowbrook Isn't Easy," and knowle~eablemutual pals tell
t mlllli!i bolpital. C~ llfrv*in AI the us It's "~d,good" ... J!lJlt.'\d Anne Meara
ij Stafi';"they'U pick 'em up ... Abel Baer (wrote Stillet (talented kida) have. ~ fiddler on '
"My. Mother's Eyes," "I Miss My Swiss," the premises: their &amp;-year-Gld Benjy. That's
"June'Nlght," "Lucky!Jndy,"etc.) is ailing too how Yehudi M. started.
seriously ... Mrs. Dong Kingman's getting the
Got this straight from a veteran "Late
Today show's Barbara Walters' calling carda Slow" staffer': when the late~ate TV flicks
trinted in Olinese - for Barbara's NiJ:on- would run past his (and others) time to catch
Peking junket.
the commuter milk train, they'd just fade reeia
Oitic Ra Reed and producer Alex Cohen into each other irrelevantly and scoot for home
, hadn't spoken in sea!IOns (since Rex blasted ...Wonder if that's what happened ·too other
several Cohen shows), but this week Alex signed a.m. when "Lifeboat" ended a~ruptly con~ ·
· Rex for a role in his TV "Hellzapoppin" ... siderably before the !ibn's proper finale .
Wonder if "Laugh-Ul," which expropriated the

On The' T In Middleport
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,...,....~

WASHINGTON'S
BIRTHDAY

FRI., SAT., MON. and TUES.
FEB. 18, 19, 21 and 22

Massar'

a

nephew

I

or

Columbus.
Mrs . Cllfford Phillips
baked the birthday cake
which was topped with the
numerals "85". Attending
the party were Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Brown, Dr. Harold
Brown, Miss Beverly Price,
Mrs. Agnes Brown, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Massar, Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Phillips
and Mrs. Fannie Phillips.

-Happiness is •••••••••••

Slides of Holy

Come As You Are
Eat in the car

l,.prlfl to b~ Seen., *'-It
-~

I.,J

.,...._

• sandwiches • short
' ,... ..:orders
., ..
• biggest beefburgers in town

• /t-1

'

'sYRACUSE - The Rev: 0.
G. McKinney, Charleston, W.
Va. will speak and show sliiles
of the Holy Land at 7:30 p. m.
Friday at the Syracuse Olurch
of the Nazarene. The public is
invited.
Also on Sunday there will be
a baptismal service at 2 p. m.
at the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church with members of the
Syracuse church to be included. Pastor of the Syracuse
church i8 the Rev. M. C.
Larimore.

• milk shakes • sundies
• cones • sodas • etc.

(r
... ..

"· "

''

':t.

·

PANTY HOSE

e

REG.

1.69

1

McCLURE'S
992-5248

LETART FALUl - The Ohio
Valley Grange 2612 of Letart
Falls met at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Roush
Thursday evening with worthy
master, Herbert Shields in the
chair.
The Grange discussed work
now being done on the Letart
Falls Community Hall. The
grange will meet at the hall ·
when heat is installed and
repairs completed. The Grange
also decided to help pay the
fuel bills.
A literary program was
given by Lecturer. Mrs. Mabel
Shields: "My va;entine" by
Doris Sayre; "Angels with
RUTLAND - A valentine Long Hair" by .Erma Wilson;
party was staged Monday for "February" by Mrs. Herbert
the children of the Meigs Housh; "Borrowed Toots" by
Community Class at Rutland Herbert Roush; a reading by
by the Middl eport Child Florence Smith; "Grandma 's
Kitchen" by Bertha 'Robinson;
Conservation League.
Favors were paper hearts games to guess, by Doris
and heart shaped suckers. The Sayre, and valentines by each
club presented ea_ch of the girls member.
The next meeting will be at
with a hairbrush and the boys
with hammers and nails. Two llie home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
irons and two sets of dishes Donahew on March 9.
were also donated to the class. Refreshments of fruit salad,
Mrs. Walter Morris, Mrs. cookies, cooffce, potato chips,
Lou Osborne, Mrs, Clifford punch and ice tea.were served.
~nnedy and Mrs. Pat Duffy
served ice cr.eam, cupcakes
and punch . to the children.
A'ITEND BREAKFAST
League
members . are
Mrs. Freda Mitch, Mrs.
reminded of the hockey game Herbert Pugh , Mrs . Ruby
Saturday night in Athens. Grueser, Mrs. Mary Russell,
'nckeiB c8n be picked up at the Mrs. Mildred Phillips, Mrs.
box office.
Doris Grueser, and Mrs. Stella
Grueser of the Minersville
United Methodisl Church at.
Q-The,e,lver 18 the roung tended the Len ton Breakfast
ot what (mtmal?
·
Wednesday morning at Trinity
A- The eel.
Church. ·

BOOKS

GOLF BALLS

ss~

4 For

Valentine Party

$} 77

~~--2·-~~PR_.~··•__1_00-·~---11

00
2
$3
r---·--~~-·-·-·~~--·--1
16

Girls Double Knit Shorts • . . 1.99
Girls Double Knit Jamaicas ... 1.99
2.99

LADIES'

BLOUSES
Reg. 7.00 SALE '500

'3"
SALE '3"
SALE ,

REG.

PANT SUITS.......... l2.95
BLOUSES .............. 5.95
PANTS ................ 5.50
SKIRTS ................ 5.95
DRESSES ............. 11.95 ·

SALE

'7.95

'4.00
'4.00

'4.00
'7.95

ALL LADIES' SHOES

SALE

REG. 5.95 to 8.95 ·
'

SALE $]99 to s5aa

2,.

NEW! SEE THRU

14.99

1

ON AU

.2 0% ·oFF ON "R NO SHOES
ALL SHAW
MEN'S SHOES

BUBBLE UMBRELlAS

OFF

ON ALL

BATIERy OPERATED
CORDLESS

·woRK SHOES

SHOE SHINE
KIT. '3 99

DURING THIS
SALE
SHOE
ONLY

•

KIPS

'

20%
OFF

REG.

for

MATERNITY SALE

I

STORE

/ IN MIDPLEPOIT
'

l.

.

.I

••
•

------1:

FLANNEL SHIRTS
)

Reg. 6.00

All RUBBER
FOOTWEAR

Boys'

f~zi~ru

20%

OFF

(Siig~t lrr.)

Girls Short Ails · . - . · . . 1.99

Girls Peter Max Jeans - ..

SAVE '500

PANTY HOSE

SALE $299
SALE $}99

99

$14

LADIES'

PAJAMAS &amp;
GOWNS

SALE

,.

99

15 PAIR
MEN'S RAND
TRUJUNS .

2 For •100

GIRLS'

REG.

.--...'300

Reg. $1 .00

EA.

SUEDE LACED TO lHE TOP
CREPE SOLE

TO

Butts, Alva L. Devault, Mrs.
George E. Bush and daughter,
Charles W. Foley, Mrs. John A.
Cecil Duncan, Saul R. Welch, Nibert and son, Michael D.
Geneve R. Sorrell, Mrs. Ruth Vance, Wanda M. Workman,
M. Nichols, Dennis D. Miller, Christopher Harrison and
Mary L. Perkins, Charles A. Forrest R. MoSS'.

HOSPITAL. NEWS

MEN'S. .HI TOP

2!1) TO •5
VALUES

ACTIVITY
BOOKS

Reg, $1.30

Reg. 49c

Children Given

PR.

1 99

$125
WILSON K28

SOCKS

4 DAYS ONLY!

Middleport, 0.

RTHDAY

COLORING

REG. 11.19

.. 75$

HOUSE SHOES

WASH IN

CANVAS
SH.
Q
,
E
S
.
~. '~1 'Ol~
4 DAYS
.
$ 99
ONLY '·•··~

1

Grange Will
Use Repaired
Community Hall

WOMEN'S and CHILDREN'S

Jl .

HOMER GALFORD

1'HREE PROMOTED - Three Columbus men have recently received promotions at
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Company. Richard P. Andrews has been promoted to
. AIBistant SupervisOr, System Dispatching Division, Homer Galford i8 ibe new Safety Super·vllfor for the Columbus Oivlsion, Distribution Operation Department, and Richard J. McclorJkey has been appointed Supervisor, System Dispatching Division. All are veteran C&amp;soE
men, having risen through the ranks.

~~~----_H-~!:!~::.~~--·

~~.Q..qw."""

RICHARD ANDREWS
..

f&lt;•minine.

There are scalloped col· ·
Iars , lace appliques. thread·

•
t
Road ·to Peking Summi
Took Diverse Routings
·

'

Martin Q.oted that thls brings
the endowment lund lor' th.e
National Jewish Hospital to
$570. She spoke on activities at
the hospital and the role played
by Eight and Forty in further
treatment,.and research.
The . Salon contributes t.o
medicine, band work for the
children, holiday . gifts,
maintenance parties, birthday
dimes., )wd cystic fibrosis
camps. Mrs. -Martin noted that
)1) dale the child welfare fund
totals, $80 ; the cystic fibrosis
research fund, $134.50;_ the
tuberculosis fund, $68; the all
partners proiect. $62.50; the
nurses scholarship, $298 ; and
the Ohio medicine fund, $24.

"
.
Holzer Medical Genter, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hmlrs 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Brady F.
Gilbert, Cheshire, a son; Mr.
artd Mrs. Gerald D. Wisecup,
Oak HID, a daugh~r ; M'r. and
Mrs. Kenneth D. Jordan, Leon,
a son and Mr. and Mrs. James
R. Biabet, Pt. Pleasant, a
daughter .
Discharges
Mrs . Yvonne S. Lanier,
William E. Darst, Janet Hogg,
Nora LoOmis, Robert C. Roush,
Georg('• A. Rairden, John
Priddy, Mrs. Evelyn Danbury,

.

•

. CHARGES DI.SMISSED
LEVITTOWN, Pa. (UPI)-A
magistrate here has clismiaaed
charges agafnsl an 1'-year-Gld
)'Outh for reckless driving on a
horae.
·
Anthony V. Aliante of Levittown was cited In November
for violation of the state's
motor vehicle code after the
horse he .was riding ran into a
car.

FIRST PERFECI' SCOim
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)--A
17-year~ld high IChool senior
has compiled the first perfect
1100re on a section of the
National Scholastic Aptitude
Achievement Test. ,
Rosa Gonzales, a straight
"A" IIUdent at Million High
School, scOred a perfect 800 on
tbe ~anlsh test.
.
The 'feat required not only
bltelllgence of the highest rank
but a complete lmowlldge of
the field, according to a
spokesman for Educational
Testing Service, which
f'I'Oduces the tats.

Q-Who invented the ••x·
ophone?
A--Adolphe Sax, a Belgian
instrument maker, about

1~.
' I

.'

UPI Diplomatic Reporter
WASHINGTON ( UPI).When President Nixon and
Chinese leaders meet next
week, they will have reach~d
the swnmit by .vastly different
routes, each side motivated by
its own particular interests.
The vision of the "promised
land" Nixon hopes ·to see undoubtedly differs considerably
from the vision of Chairman
Mao T~ung and Premier
Chou En-lai.
However, the fact that
Peking and Washington have
finally agreed to try to
liquidate .their bitter 26-yearold cold war is more important
to a war•weary and apprehensive world than the
geopolitical considerations
which led them to this point.
Nixon views his success in
arranging the meeting as a
triumph for his policy-put in)l)
effect almost the day he took
office-to make a beginning in
burying the hatchet with

possibility of stabilizing Asia.
The President's strategy was
well .executed, part of it being
carried out ·through secret
emissaries and part of it advanced by public announcements and actions.
Chou En-lai, for his part, has
made It clear that he considers
that fact that Nixon took the
initiative and asked to be invi.ted to Peking as evidence of
the wisdom and effect;iv.eness
of the policies China has. been
pursuing since Chiang Kaishek's nationalists were drl ven
off the mainlarid in 1949. •
Nixon is well aware that it
was not any particular affection for Americans that led
Chou and Mao to agree to the
meeting. Chou .has made it
clear his willingness to entertain the idea of ''nonnalizing"
relations with the United States
stems in large part from
Peking's fear of the Jiussians.
Chou also has spoken of his
concern over the possibility of

FOUN.D GUlLTY
YAKIMA, Wash . (UPI)The wife of Goldendale Mayor
H. G. Rowley was found guilty
of possession of marijuana
after a jury deliberated nearly

seven hours Tuesday.
Ruth Rowley faces a possible .
six months maximum sentence
under newly revised WaShington laws which make first-time
possession a misdemeanor.
'

FOR
THE
BOYs -

WASHIMGl~~

BIRTHDAY

resurgent Japan e s e
militarism .
Chou is equally aware that
Nixori, one of the most militant
of the anti-Peking crusaders
during the Eisenhower ad.
ministration, has not altered
his view on communism,
although Nixon may have
become less convinced that ·
Peking has "aggressive" intentions toward 1111 Asia.
However, Chdu knows
Nixon's desire for friendship
with China is based in large
part on a feeling that SinoAmerican understanding may
iX'Ovlde diplomatic framework
and political atmosphere to
eventually settle not only the
Vietnam War bot eliminate
some of the other peril points in
Asia .

,1so .
'300
'400

LOAFERS

Sizes 3-6
VALUES TO '11.99

OXFORDS

•soo

Mostly
. Pedwin
VALUES TO '12.99
'

4 BUCKLE
AMCTICS

Q- Across which river of
Virginia did George Wa sh·
ington traditionally throw a
silver dollar?
A- T h e Rappahannock.
The coin was probably a
Spanish piece of eight.

'4''

THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes are Sensibly Pnced
MIDDLEPORT,O.

2 DAYS ONLY -FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

WASHINGTON'S · BIBTHD.AY
., ·''"'"'""'&lt;·~.......... .

'*()'

/

.

.....0

,~
'#

We celebrate /
-George's Birthday with a great :.,
array of honest
values
everything for
Beffer · Living ...
come get your/
share!
George Has· Flipped His Lid

With This Big

forQualily·Service
Depentla!Jilily

FEDDERS
Price Chupperl
NORGE
FROST-FREE

•'

•
•

'

Washington Window

'

.

Co-Sponsors

Float down the aisle in serene eleg;nce in the breathtaking gown (left) designed
It's sat in organza trimmed with cotton Gu ipere lace from neck to hem and down
emp~re A ·li ne gown (right) designed by Bridal Creat ions IS in satin-faced organza
lace and r~bbon t ri m. The · ribbon trim con be in pink or blue os well os white or
are from the Dream Bride Collection.

•

Mrs. Martin Honored~-~--~......
''Pullin' on the Dog for
Mary'' was the theme of the
30th anniversary observance of
Ross County Salon, Eight and
Forty, Tuesday night with Mrs.
Mary Martin, Pomeroy, Eight
and Forty Departemental
Chapeau, as honored guest.
Mrs . Martin was ac- ·
companied to Chillicothe for
the observance by 1\irs. Mrytle
Walker, her le secretairecassiere. Both were presented
gifts.
Mrs. Carrie Anderson,
capeau, presented a check for
$57 to Mrs. Martin for the
Denver bed endowment. Mrs.

~:.s.~::».-:;:;:;.-:::::::~*"X::::::::..~~..":!

"'

r

a- The Dally Sentlnol,Mktdleport-Pomeroy, O., Feb. 17, 1m

By HELEN HENNESSY

-. . . .

your ·

AIR.OONDITIONER SALE!
2 Day Pre-Season Prices

REFRIGERATOR

4,000 BTU

ONLY$29995

6,000 BTU

phar~acist

is

0\\ \)\\\'i ~\

23" ZENITH
COLOR TV

'9995
'18995
'29995

18,000 BTU

~\ "\\tt\es~

Price Chopper!

$499

Console
Walnut
Cabinet

.

CARPET BONANZA!

501
NYLON CARPET .

Price Chopper!

· lARGE VINYL

'7e99

RECLINERS
Enjoy Our Man1 Senices:
•
•
·•
•
•
•
.•

Pay Your Telephone Bills Here.
Ladies &amp; Children's Rest Room.
Money Orders.·
Cold Water Drinking Fountain.
Outstan~ing Stock of Veterinary Supplies.
Free U.se of Crutches (no charge).
Free Par~ing in Rear.

We have the largest d: .. iJI.ay of records
and tapes in this area. ·

..~----~~~~--~----~

Green and Brown

ONLY $4995

SQUARE
YARD

fREE 1-oa~ndRubber
Free

~aa~~::t
Now Only

Pad

$2 g·
Reg.

$4'19

Installation

Available in green, red, orange
and gold.

WE'RE OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS

.INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

•

MIDDLEPORT
·I .

�. ..
r
j

'
.

.

•

largeat a!lll newell,~ !be

I

Belfast, a, Dying City, Accepts Death in ·its··D aily· Portion
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
(UPI)4ln the waU of a city
COOletery an unknown hand
has scrawled Belfast's
message of despair.
"Is there a life before
death?'' It asks.
Belfast is a dying city thst
hss come to accept death as Its
dally portion. Slowly and
pl{fufuUy it's life is being torn
from It. The ' abnormal has
become the commonplace,
phyll!cal suffering the routine,
economic disaster the inevitable.
It is a city that has
embraced fear . . . fear of
the ordinary ... the bulging
b:ief case ... the forgotten
parcel in the bus ... the sudden
backfire of an automoblle ...
eacll brings its moment of
panic.
Each new inconvenience Is
accepted with a shrug of the
shoulders; the pubs that close
early for fear of being bombed;
the buses that won't run
because of hijacking gangs on
the prowl; the sudden
clearance of shopping centers
by gunfire.
The city has become drab
and weary. Royal Avenue,
once its shopping showpiece,
no longer cares. It has been
bombed and burned into an
acceptance of seediness.
Ugly hardboard · covers
blasted windows and damaged
doorways; Ustless shop owners
slap "bomb damage" sale
signs across them and hope for
the best. Customers hurry in
and out, unnoticing.
There Ia a feeling things are
going to get worse.
"This whole street may go up
one of these nights," said one
shop owner. "There's not much
point in sprucing up for the
bombers."
All the trappings of military
occupali~Jn have become part
of the city's everyday Ufe. The
sq~ corrugated Iron observation posts perclled atop
churches, scllools and sho~.
The ceaseless army convoys
trundling along the streets. The
battle-equipped soldiers
crouclllng at street corners,
eyes on rooftops, fingers on
!riggers.
At night the city center is
practically deserted. The side
streets are dark and dangerous
pltf&lt;Y..lJ'hen one ventures at
rif.' P.II!IJic 1tghting has been
smashed, either shot out by
army patrols or stoned by local
residents.
The footpaths have been torn
and clliseled apart to provide
riot anununition. Block after
block of small shops, candy
stores, groceries and pubs
have been burned out and
boarded up.
Empty lots are covered with
the relics of street battles,
charred and rusting buses and
autos set afire by street mobs.
The "Peace Line" erected by
the army In 1969 still divides
the warring Protestant and
Roman Catholic communities,
but Its inunediacy bas gone.
Both communities have
withdrawn deep into their
ghettos leaving behind their
empty homes, buffer zones of
ghost streets.
The ,"economics of destruction" as waged by the outlawed
Irish Republican Army (IRA)
knows no sectarian or communal divides. Pubs and
business premises in Roman
Catholic areas have shared a
common fate with other areas
of the city.

out at aU. "
Inside the Catholic areas, the
arm)' posts and police stations
resemble battlefield conditions
including heavy camouflage
nets. Sloping galvenished
sheets lean against the walls so
that bombs will roll away,
street ram~ force traffic to
lllrch slowly over them as a
ll'ecaution against hit-and.,.un
gelignite attacks.

The busiest shop in the street
is usually the druggist . Most of
the residents in·the strife areas
are on transquilisers. The
tl'and most favored in Ardoyne, a batUe«arred Roman
Catholic area, is marketed on a
scale of one to 10, depending on
the strength required.
''!lie's not too bad, she's on
five," is a comment often
heard along the street, or

"She's getting it rough, the
doctor put her on 10."
The Protestant streets have
been spared much of the day,
Way violence as the army
and the IRA struggle for
supremacy in the Catholic
areas. But unease and fear
stalk the Protestant sections of
the city. Crude street barriers
are pulled into place when
darkness comes and vigilantes,

many with clubs, stand guard
over Protestant .. homes.
Strangers are not welcome.
Strangers are not welcome.
Unless they can prove
legitimate, urgent business ln
the area they are turned away.
The .army tolerates the
vigilantes, but !tee~ a wary
eye to see the club does not
transform itself into a gun.
The routine griM of the

military operation affects the
romm~~lllfe of the city.
Frequent road searches for
arms or' wanted men cause
massive traffic snarls in the
city. By their very nature they
.are IIUCiden llltd une.xpected, at
a tbne when the city Ia least
prepareq, such as !be peak
traffic hour.
The army seals off all rut one
traffic lane with Its annored

bnpact of the v1o1e1tce on
vlallora to the' dtJ. 'l1lfl !IOtel
1tsilf Iii cordoMd (Jf wltb lteel

barrlf1"8. A aectl'ltf l!ut Ia

CANAPE TRAYS
2 '" 29~

Wilt 1:1.,1

~die

:.

'

"

j.

~~~·
n :olloh9~
t

COIIIltrl 0.COIII•&gt;I

YOUR CHOICE

AN~JFOR99~

SUPPLIES

11-QT. PAllS

STOVE MATS

3'"99~
handy

roo

~o~•·1~0u l

n~Mif

NIBBlE

C•lllfllt Bttb

itn~

Co1m1

l ·on IQuar• 01 round mtlt l

E.eh 8 1 ro 11 -on

'"~UbUIM

&amp;ltu n• IO•tOtor OIQH

boo~ 1'111

.Bonrb Attacks

Pin t le hol&gt;l, II"V bK.
Choocte&gt;l color&amp; l•l· rn

...

,Are Eased Off
' (UPI)-U.S. jets
SAIGON
. ended a.29-hour attack against
new lonil.,.ange artillery sites
In North Vietnam today and a
apikeiiiUin said they damaged
or ileatroyed five of the Sovietbuilt 13Chun cannons.
The U.S. command said Air
Force and Navy jets made at
·least 110 strikes against the
artillery emplacements. The
atW;U endecl j\llt five hours
. belare Prisident Nixon left for
· the start of hla P~lng trip.
: The" command said U.S.
. aircraft . drew heavy .anti.aircraft Ore and one F4
. Phantom was shot down. The
: two crewmen were listed

FLORAL
Ruoijot&lt;l ~ll ',~rh~~ ~ ~~n ~ · q ~ ' ' tll
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l~ail~ • r&gt;O ' C&lt;J..,p ,flt ,. ,11\ • n d~ • loiOt•s 1 ~£0 .orO
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ST~TIOIIER~

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'"OM~

2,.,;.29t

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' Futl t -bushtl SoU Slurd~ . rmmd pl asl1~ bas ket
W•ltlllUtll·•n Mndle! Choo(e o l COIOf$

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You Qt1 ptckage ol 80 cups

a'

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DAY-IN AND DAY-OUT BARGAINS! .,

plele w111'1 on de• lotde •s lOC I..
be •Qe m ~ •o c a(lr. •••tl OoJ Qraon1

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p l ct ~ .. · ~Uk

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Ttflon®Coate~
Stttl Fty Pan
10·1n. 1lllltet or h ll~ ·d ut y stMI ... madt ta tmQ
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CflLOPHAIIE
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ELMER'S.flll

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Nflurll .,ooa ll" n ! rn 1 1~ . H~r~Q
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Comp lete l'(lur M mtt wo•" t lla p .. ,rtfllltl al4 .
wo rn·OUI 10011 . W t hiYI I CO!'IIPIItl SI!I CIIOII Ol
thl · ht !Ptr yo u 1111d.

· killed for a total of 133,344. He
said 1,105 Cmrununists were
reported killed for a total of
732,828 since Jan. I, 1961.
Wtth 'the allied Tel truce
over, but the guerrilla truce
stlll in force untu I a.m.
· Friday, the South VIetnamese
command announced a rota! of
tlve guerrilla-initiated Incidents over !be past 24 hours.

..

WASTEIASICITS
I ,

d'

U · !!~ flit 7 M 5"""t'Of!ICNI'I \lot~ .... lttiM~ti
•nQ P-g ot IJ "-9 Me lill411 IA¥ 1 Sl •1

1/11.

MANY MORE SPECIALS
SHOWN 'HERE
ASK FOR A· SALE BILL

Make Pomeroy
,
Your
Center

.

.

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f l ,.
,

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t2·Pe. MIIIIIIH Dl•••rw•
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bowlt, lnd Dllllll; Colorful
~llrnl. Ol!iglltlt.il

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w~ 1a Mt WI lnlorrnal ltblll

BEnFRANK .
FIHON E
·202 _E.!11! Mllln St:
992·3498
.
POMEROY, o: '•
OP!M.

."•

.

M.IGIITS TlL:t ',\

Market.
Parliament has been asked
ID ratify a treaty Heath signed
Jan. 22 to bring Britain lnto Ute .
economic community.
If ratification is refused,
Heath said,·he will resign and
his ruling Conservative
govenunent will fall. That
would mean Britain would be
thrown into a national eleclion_. move pollUcal experts

leaving 2 nilllion unemployed.
There already were I million
jobless workers in Britain.
The power cuts have left
homes, offices and public
facilities without light or heat
and weathermen warned a cold
front was on the way. StatMUn
railrqads cut back train services by 40 per cent.
Picketing miners also
blocked aa._attempt to bolster

the 'dwindling coal supply with
fuel oil. Miners and sympathetic railroad union
members refused ID allow the
rail transport of oil from two of
the ; country's
largest
refineries.
Food production companies,
al.so bit by the lack of power,
said their supplies were getting
thin and dairies warned of a
possible milk shortage.

said could be the end of nile for ~~--------....,-------....
the Qlnservatives and a major
victory for the opposition
Labor party.
The country's coal miners,
demanding a 47 per cent pay
... • (J '
hike, have abnost brought the
country to a standstill.
Factories have cut back
ACC ESSORIES
drasUcally, throwing millions
on a three-day work week and

GARDNER•

.
.
~ *·*
§afax!J ·;

LOS ANGELES (UPI)Howard Hughes and his en·
tourage have abandoned !be
mysterious billionaire's
gUarded bQtel suite In the
Bahamas, a spokesman for
Hughes said today.
There is no Indication of
where they went; the spokesman said.
He denied reports that
Hughes and hls staff had
vanished because !be Hughes
aides were ordered off the
island
by · Bahamian
authorities for working without
the II'Oper permits.
"I can confirm that Hughes
andhis staff have left the hotel
where they were - checked
out", said Dick Hannah.
."They were not asked to
leave. I don't kn:iw where they
have gone and I don't want to
speculate about it."
Of the report that iliunigration aulbol'lties had ordered
Hughes' staff to leave, Harmah
said "It's riot true. No one was
asked to leave."

Hannah is an account executive with the public relations
firm of Carl Byoir Associates,
assigned to the Hughes account, and has been functioning as Hughes' chief public
spo~esrnan throughout the
controversy over Hughes'
purported aulD biography. U
was Hannah who arranged the
famous telephone news conference with which Hughes
broke his 15-year seclusion ID
answer questions by newsmen
in lDs Angeles over a telephone
connection to the Babamas.

A.sunburst of silver nailheads orbit across Mystic Cowhide
- in this sma shing ensemble. High voltage fa shion in

today ·colors.
"Tri-Partite" French Purse .. .... .. . ........ $6.00
KEY GARD 0

for Keys .. .. .. ..... $3.00
Matching pieces from $3.50
. ..

Case

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
POMEROY

COURT ST.

Washington's Birthday Sale!
.

.

FRIDAY
SATURDAY
MONDAY

Today's Sport Parade
,

Mmn·eso·ta.Brawl
St-= 11 D: · ' d

,l,idc_IW(Nj$,' _"'\!I

,

'·'

~-,~~S~J!S~t; .~ 1"'

: planes were do'lihed ·and "a •
·
.
l
ber f U.S pilots" ca~
NEW YORK (UP!) - He like many coaclles alao, he
0
·:
.
•
coaches a major college sometimes plasters inspiring
: A ' keaman ·said the new .basketball te8m.
slogans In,. the team dressing
wblcll have a range of
It Is one of the better teams room to fire up hls players.
· 16 mil ''
1 ted just in the Midwest, and when he Musselman came to Minnesota
'' rthofth
es, were
ocalied Zone was asked whether he 'd be from ""
·-bland eon ege were
h
Demil't
1
: ~MZ) · e
ar
willing to iliscuss the Mlnn~- his teams also ·figured in two
, the 'command also said ta.Qllo State affair he said brawls.
,
' plan~ made 10 "protective sure, why not, every coach in
Of course Bill Musselman
,
tl " strikes against the Midwest ":as still has to share part of the blame.
:~~~aft and aurfac!HO.alr discussing it. He'd go even
But certalnly "?more or le~
m1as11 (SAM) sites in North further than that. Every,;:oach than others at Minnesota, Ohio
; Vi tn e
In the country was still talking State or any ·other school for
· e am.
.
about it."
that matter H what they are
o!mC:.~!~::~ "I think," said Ibis par- doing ta. putting winning above ·
American oblervatlon plane on tlcular .coach ~bout !be ~an. everythmg else ..
patr 13S mileS south of Plmom 25th Minneapolis brawl, 'the
Why blame Bill Musselman
~
Incident was horrible. Anytbne entirely? He only did what he
On~ of the crewmen ejected .youletathinglikethatbappen, was hired to do, tried to win.
safely but the second . crew alotofpeoplehave to share the 1Uttle else really matters these
member was believed ldlled. , blame. You wonder about the days. Not many people seem to
An SOIHnan American pollee protection. How did they care how you play the game
gro~md combat battaUon wai ever let those fans get on the anymore. AU anybody cares
ordered deactivated, Ute first fl,oor?Thenyouhaveto~onder about is the score. If you lo~, .
such
standown
since about the officials. They re the you're sh~ed, almost as . H•
deploymeni of u.s. flglitlng ones . ~ho really control the you had rontra~ed some social
tioops Will IIUipellded four game.
disease. There s treatment for
·weeks. 'I1!alleavesjust 1oauch
What-about the coaclles?
that. What can you do for a
battalions' in Vietnam com- , Tens About Caacbes
loser?
pared to Jl2 at the height of the
"I'll ' tell you about the
McCarthy Remembered
coaches," said this one. "If
In that regard I can't help
w~. Americans were killed what happened to that Min- remember the way Joe MeIn VIetnam last week, !be nesota coacll happened ID me, earthy used to manage the
III!Okearnan said, for an ll-year my ,boss not only would hold me yankees.
total of 4S,t148. But 380 South rompfetely responsible, he'd
"If you're a Yankee, act like
,VIetnamese ·soldiers were fire me right on the spot. I a Yankee " he'd tell his
think he'd be perfectly right. I players, th.;, make sure they
teacll my kids there Ia no way did.
ID t:etallate from that sort of
What was a Yankee? Nobody
!bing on the basketball floor· If really created differently than
they get .buste&lt;l,ln the mouth, any other ballplayers but
they back off. That's the way McCarthy made it seem
they've been taught." .
something special by fostering
II Is difficult now, if not this quality h1a players wanted
ilpposslble, to decide precisely to exemplify themselves. Pride
&gt; Hiukills a(e in dozwho was right and who was would be another word for that.
wrong on the night of Jan. 25 in
Once when one of his players
ens of fielda ... and Minneapolis,
I have to go along forgot for a moment and
hundreds of ,s pt- with one eyewitness who says stretched hbnself out while
"II was a brawl and thl'!'e sitting in the dugout, McCarthy
: cialtlea -lncludinl!l weren't
many angels on !be snapped at hbn :
1
floor that night."
"Sit up straignt and pull your
· hard-to-find ones.
For those who weren't at the feet in. Where do you think you
I
.
game, and they include me, the are, in a row boat?"
TV cameras clearly show how ·There Is nothing wrong with
The G.l. Bill can pro·
one
Minnesota
player the Minnesota basketball team
delivered
a
knee
~o
the
groin
of ·trying to win- a ball game.
vide monthly allowan Oh(o State nval while of·
There is ·something wrong
' .Cinces· !O supplement
ferlng hls hand presumably to when any team places sucll a
··his wages while he's in
help pick hbn off the floor.
prernl\1111 on winning that all
Later, the Minnesota player other human values become
,.. an approved on-thewho did that said the Ohio State completely subordinate.
job training program.
play" had first spit at hbn.
. But the trouble of rourse PRICE.ADJUSTMENT
, For informotion on hirgoes much deeper than that.
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)-Henry
1
ing Vets.call your local
Arno111 Tboae Blamed
Doberston was offered $1 by
Among
thoae
being
blamed
the
city for a 25-foot piece of his ·
. s't ate Employment
by some for what llapP,Ilned Is !I'Operty where a sewer Une
Service office. Contacl
BID Musselman, the Minnesota ·would run.
.
the V.A. for training inroacll. Musaebnal! did what he · Doberston thought !be price
rould
to try and ltop the brawl. a bit stingy, so he went to court.
forrllotion.
Naturally, he feela badly over
Wednesday Summit County
What happened.
. Court Judge L. A. wn:bar,(ll
He Ia a m8n who believes in ordered the city to pay
wlmlng, like all coaches, .and Doberston $18,600 for the land.

. ~eg~l~r an4.Mod

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sii~C:~K~PA, NT~JACK ETS

1

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Men's, Women's, Boys' and Girls'

:

Another Great Clothing Sale ! I
ENTI RE

STOCK
OFF
OUR REGUlAR LOW,
LOW PRICE

Yes, we have jeans, all kinds; regular, mod,
button front, flares, brushed denim,

THE
VET:

.,,.....,~-·""'

Ltlllft·ltut•

Indignant housewives in the
Leeson Street area awoke one
morning recently to find their
small, whltwashed homes had
·turned a dirty, tacky black
overnight.
The army claimed the
Catholics had been whitewashing homes and walls so that
army patrols would stand out
against them and become
easter targets for waiting
snipers. .
Most of the small, terraced
· homes have stockpiled tin
gooda, beans, peas, beef and
"We don't like shopping at
lillY time," said Mrs. Joan
Campbell,
a
Cathollc
housewife in Balaclava Street.
"And we never knOw when the
mllltary may slap a curfew on
111 and we won't be able to get

~9t.

·' '" "''M o" na~dt

Army patrols have saturated
Roman Catholic areas. Search
and arrest operations are a
daily routine. The Army
cordons off a selected area.
The troops move In, house by
house. Everything is searched.
Floorboards prised up, garbage cans inspected, outdoor
toiletS, attics, nothing is taken
for granted,

•

Hughes is Gone

'cam:

.

12 1 ~&gt; 1 01~'1 - •n

.

r

LONDON ((1Pl) - The
steadlly worsening power
cr1sts pushed unempl~yment to
·the 3 million mark today and
Prime Minister Edward Heath
said his Conaeriatlve govern-.
ment could topple In a dispute
over Britain's entry into the
European Common Market.
Electricity cuts were ordered in, up to II per cent of the
country at one tbne to try to
save power. The crisis developed 'fhen Britain's coal
miners went on strike and cut
off fuel supplies to most of the
country's power producing
plants.
'
,
Heath, already fighting off
attacks becailse of the power
crisis, faced a crucial vote in
parliament tonight on Brltllin's
entry into the Common

..

.

2 lor 29~ 2 ,., 29~ 2 ~:o 29~

5tu• oh OIUI•&lt; ~a rt~., ,,~

'

ACOUPLE THAT COULD stand some cheering up are Mr.
and Mrs. Ira Zickefoose.
Mrs. ZickefOose bas been a patient at Holzer Medical Center,
~ 228, First and Cedar Streets, for the past slx weeks. Friday
her husband entered !be hospital and his room nwnber is 107,
Ho~ Medical Center, Fourth 1111d Sy~ore Streets.
·· ..4:ooklng after the rouple have been their aood neighbors, Mr.
. an~ •Mrs. Roy Mayer, Mr. and Mrs. Don Mayer and Mr. and Mrs.
i'" Bob. Burton. ·
·

1 ~ • 13-on

OFFICE

,

. How would you like to bave your birth !late cllanged?
. ...1 don't beUeve many, of as would be too fond of the Idea.
However, the federal government muat feel Utat such cllanges
ere quite aU right. But I peraonaUy don't agree.
.~ !lhla MonclaY Is a national holiday. We will be celebrating
Alir!iham Uncoln and George Washington's birthdays. But
~0114-Y/ la not the correct date for .either.
.
]Jnc!oln Will born on Feb. 12 and Washington on Feb. 22. The
go~rnment combined the two btrlb dates and we are to
celebrate .them ll9tb on Monday, feb. 21.
, Thla Ia not the only date the government has seen fit to
clliil)ge,~ What about Nov. 11? Thla was called Armistice Day
since tile day It occurred, but more recenUy it.was d!anged to
Veterans bay, and not being ~tlsfied with the name cllange, the
date alBo was changed!
· It111nk tliiim'&amp;n~~lng of dates of important events in history is
very unCon&amp;tltuUonal Ill. well as In poor taste:
· . I protest to these changes, no matter wb,at the reason given. I
certainly hope they don't attempt to cltange the date of our
Savior's birth.

,.
1"1').

For Clnt pu or uu n

Choo" ol

colors

.'

Heath about to Topple

'

By_ Katie Crow

, ...,.,-

The aim is ID bring the
British-ruled six counties of
Northern Ireland ID its knee!
economically; to bomb It into
unity with the Roman Catholic
Republic iii the south.

milk.

I

Valaes to JSt SA VEl
.' ~

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.

; Katie's Korner

cars wblle foot patrols search mounted at the lillY eDitlilc:e.
auiA&gt;mobllea and question the All persons and bagqe,
Including handbaga and Jllll'lfll
occupants. ·
'Eronomically, there Is little .are aearcbed each lime ~e
doubt the .clty bas been badly viBitor enters the hotel. ·rne
hit. Commerce Minlater Roy hotel whlcll can cater lor 400 or
Bradford said as inucllln a pre- ·more guestS has been reported
Christmas' speech . which to be losing money Iince It
• • v' I
Premier Brian Faulkner felt opened .
But the fact It Ia 111111 ltan· ·
~cessary to tone down a few
ding; Ia an adllev'em~t In the
. days later.
The .Europ~~ Hotel, the city's. Belfast of today. F'l"··· ' .

NKLIIN

..

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{

. Hanrly freryday Items YOCIIIt~d .' ,

2 ,., 29~

~

11- 'nleDIUy Seaunel, Middleport.Pwueroy, 0., Feb. J7,1972
.
.

10- The DallySentlnei,Mlddleport-i&gt;cxneroy,O., Feb. l7, 1972

... . . -

.

· OON1

.' HIRE
THE YET!
'
I I

I

permanent press. Plains, stripes, designs.

•

Heavy jackets, thin jackets, big jackets and
F~~-- little jackets and insulated vests.

Don't Miss This Sale!
. Your Clott._lng dollar goes
farther cit 'Lanclmarkl

SAVE!

Yes! Alterations Are Available!

40% OFF
Our Endicott-Johnson

MEN'S

DRESS SHOES

POMEROY LANDMARK

Jack. W. en,, MwcPh. •2-2111
SerYing Meigs, Gallia and MISOII Colmlles
sa. Open Mon.-s.t. n 6, Station Open 24 llollrs
You Can luy
Lonchnark-lveryone Canl

at.I

..

I

\o

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�. ..
r
j

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largeat a!lll newell,~ !be

I

Belfast, a, Dying City, Accepts Death in ·its··D aily· Portion
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
(UPI)4ln the waU of a city
COOletery an unknown hand
has scrawled Belfast's
message of despair.
"Is there a life before
death?'' It asks.
Belfast is a dying city thst
hss come to accept death as Its
dally portion. Slowly and
pl{fufuUy it's life is being torn
from It. The ' abnormal has
become the commonplace,
phyll!cal suffering the routine,
economic disaster the inevitable.
It is a city that has
embraced fear . . . fear of
the ordinary ... the bulging
b:ief case ... the forgotten
parcel in the bus ... the sudden
backfire of an automoblle ...
eacll brings its moment of
panic.
Each new inconvenience Is
accepted with a shrug of the
shoulders; the pubs that close
early for fear of being bombed;
the buses that won't run
because of hijacking gangs on
the prowl; the sudden
clearance of shopping centers
by gunfire.
The city has become drab
and weary. Royal Avenue,
once its shopping showpiece,
no longer cares. It has been
bombed and burned into an
acceptance of seediness.
Ugly hardboard · covers
blasted windows and damaged
doorways; Ustless shop owners
slap "bomb damage" sale
signs across them and hope for
the best. Customers hurry in
and out, unnoticing.
There Ia a feeling things are
going to get worse.
"This whole street may go up
one of these nights," said one
shop owner. "There's not much
point in sprucing up for the
bombers."
All the trappings of military
occupali~Jn have become part
of the city's everyday Ufe. The
sq~ corrugated Iron observation posts perclled atop
churches, scllools and sho~.
The ceaseless army convoys
trundling along the streets. The
battle-equipped soldiers
crouclllng at street corners,
eyes on rooftops, fingers on
!riggers.
At night the city center is
practically deserted. The side
streets are dark and dangerous
pltf&lt;Y..lJ'hen one ventures at
rif.' P.II!IJic 1tghting has been
smashed, either shot out by
army patrols or stoned by local
residents.
The footpaths have been torn
and clliseled apart to provide
riot anununition. Block after
block of small shops, candy
stores, groceries and pubs
have been burned out and
boarded up.
Empty lots are covered with
the relics of street battles,
charred and rusting buses and
autos set afire by street mobs.
The "Peace Line" erected by
the army In 1969 still divides
the warring Protestant and
Roman Catholic communities,
but Its inunediacy bas gone.
Both communities have
withdrawn deep into their
ghettos leaving behind their
empty homes, buffer zones of
ghost streets.
The ,"economics of destruction" as waged by the outlawed
Irish Republican Army (IRA)
knows no sectarian or communal divides. Pubs and
business premises in Roman
Catholic areas have shared a
common fate with other areas
of the city.

out at aU. "
Inside the Catholic areas, the
arm)' posts and police stations
resemble battlefield conditions
including heavy camouflage
nets. Sloping galvenished
sheets lean against the walls so
that bombs will roll away,
street ram~ force traffic to
lllrch slowly over them as a
ll'ecaution against hit-and.,.un
gelignite attacks.

The busiest shop in the street
is usually the druggist . Most of
the residents in·the strife areas
are on transquilisers. The
tl'and most favored in Ardoyne, a batUe«arred Roman
Catholic area, is marketed on a
scale of one to 10, depending on
the strength required.
''!lie's not too bad, she's on
five," is a comment often
heard along the street, or

"She's getting it rough, the
doctor put her on 10."
The Protestant streets have
been spared much of the day,
Way violence as the army
and the IRA struggle for
supremacy in the Catholic
areas. But unease and fear
stalk the Protestant sections of
the city. Crude street barriers
are pulled into place when
darkness comes and vigilantes,

many with clubs, stand guard
over Protestant .. homes.
Strangers are not welcome.
Strangers are not welcome.
Unless they can prove
legitimate, urgent business ln
the area they are turned away.
The .army tolerates the
vigilantes, but !tee~ a wary
eye to see the club does not
transform itself into a gun.
The routine griM of the

military operation affects the
romm~~lllfe of the city.
Frequent road searches for
arms or' wanted men cause
massive traffic snarls in the
city. By their very nature they
.are IIUCiden llltd une.xpected, at
a tbne when the city Ia least
prepareq, such as !be peak
traffic hour.
The army seals off all rut one
traffic lane with Its annored

bnpact of the v1o1e1tce on
vlallora to the' dtJ. 'l1lfl !IOtel
1tsilf Iii cordoMd (Jf wltb lteel

barrlf1"8. A aectl'ltf l!ut Ia

CANAPE TRAYS
2 '" 29~

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Pin t le hol&gt;l, II"V bK.
Choocte&gt;l color&amp; l•l· rn

...

,Are Eased Off
' (UPI)-U.S. jets
SAIGON
. ended a.29-hour attack against
new lonil.,.ange artillery sites
In North Vietnam today and a
apikeiiiUin said they damaged
or ileatroyed five of the Sovietbuilt 13Chun cannons.
The U.S. command said Air
Force and Navy jets made at
·least 110 strikes against the
artillery emplacements. The
atW;U endecl j\llt five hours
. belare Prisident Nixon left for
· the start of hla P~lng trip.
: The" command said U.S.
. aircraft . drew heavy .anti.aircraft Ore and one F4
. Phantom was shot down. The
: two crewmen were listed

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· killed for a total of 133,344. He
said 1,105 Cmrununists were
reported killed for a total of
732,828 since Jan. I, 1961.
Wtth 'the allied Tel truce
over, but the guerrilla truce
stlll in force untu I a.m.
· Friday, the South VIetnamese
command announced a rota! of
tlve guerrilla-initiated Incidents over !be past 24 hours.

..

WASTEIASICITS
I ,

d'

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1/11.

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SHOWN 'HERE
ASK FOR A· SALE BILL

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992·3498
.
POMEROY, o: '•
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."•

.

M.IGIITS TlL:t ',\

Market.
Parliament has been asked
ID ratify a treaty Heath signed
Jan. 22 to bring Britain lnto Ute .
economic community.
If ratification is refused,
Heath said,·he will resign and
his ruling Conservative
govenunent will fall. That
would mean Britain would be
thrown into a national eleclion_. move pollUcal experts

leaving 2 nilllion unemployed.
There already were I million
jobless workers in Britain.
The power cuts have left
homes, offices and public
facilities without light or heat
and weathermen warned a cold
front was on the way. StatMUn
railrqads cut back train services by 40 per cent.
Picketing miners also
blocked aa._attempt to bolster

the 'dwindling coal supply with
fuel oil. Miners and sympathetic railroad union
members refused ID allow the
rail transport of oil from two of
the ; country's
largest
refineries.
Food production companies,
al.so bit by the lack of power,
said their supplies were getting
thin and dairies warned of a
possible milk shortage.

said could be the end of nile for ~~--------....,-------....
the Qlnservatives and a major
victory for the opposition
Labor party.
The country's coal miners,
demanding a 47 per cent pay
... • (J '
hike, have abnost brought the
country to a standstill.
Factories have cut back
ACC ESSORIES
drasUcally, throwing millions
on a three-day work week and

GARDNER•

.
.
~ *·*
§afax!J ·;

LOS ANGELES (UPI)Howard Hughes and his en·
tourage have abandoned !be
mysterious billionaire's
gUarded bQtel suite In the
Bahamas, a spokesman for
Hughes said today.
There is no Indication of
where they went; the spokesman said.
He denied reports that
Hughes and hls staff had
vanished because !be Hughes
aides were ordered off the
island
by · Bahamian
authorities for working without
the II'Oper permits.
"I can confirm that Hughes
andhis staff have left the hotel
where they were - checked
out", said Dick Hannah.
."They were not asked to
leave. I don't kn:iw where they
have gone and I don't want to
speculate about it."
Of the report that iliunigration aulbol'lties had ordered
Hughes' staff to leave, Harmah
said "It's riot true. No one was
asked to leave."

Hannah is an account executive with the public relations
firm of Carl Byoir Associates,
assigned to the Hughes account, and has been functioning as Hughes' chief public
spo~esrnan throughout the
controversy over Hughes'
purported aulD biography. U
was Hannah who arranged the
famous telephone news conference with which Hughes
broke his 15-year seclusion ID
answer questions by newsmen
in lDs Angeles over a telephone
connection to the Babamas.

A.sunburst of silver nailheads orbit across Mystic Cowhide
- in this sma shing ensemble. High voltage fa shion in

today ·colors.
"Tri-Partite" French Purse .. .... .. . ........ $6.00
KEY GARD 0

for Keys .. .. .. ..... $3.00
Matching pieces from $3.50
. ..

Case

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
POMEROY

COURT ST.

Washington's Birthday Sale!
.

.

FRIDAY
SATURDAY
MONDAY

Today's Sport Parade
,

Mmn·eso·ta.Brawl
St-= 11 D: · ' d

,l,idc_IW(Nj$,' _"'\!I

,

'·'

~-,~~S~J!S~t; .~ 1"'

: planes were do'lihed ·and "a •
·
.
l
ber f U.S pilots" ca~
NEW YORK (UP!) - He like many coaclles alao, he
0
·:
.
•
coaches a major college sometimes plasters inspiring
: A ' keaman ·said the new .basketball te8m.
slogans In,. the team dressing
wblcll have a range of
It Is one of the better teams room to fire up hls players.
· 16 mil ''
1 ted just in the Midwest, and when he Musselman came to Minnesota
'' rthofth
es, were
ocalied Zone was asked whether he 'd be from ""
·-bland eon ege were
h
Demil't
1
: ~MZ) · e
ar
willing to iliscuss the Mlnn~- his teams also ·figured in two
, the 'command also said ta.Qllo State affair he said brawls.
,
' plan~ made 10 "protective sure, why not, every coach in
Of course Bill Musselman
,
tl " strikes against the Midwest ":as still has to share part of the blame.
:~~~aft and aurfac!HO.alr discussing it. He'd go even
But certalnly "?more or le~
m1as11 (SAM) sites in North further than that. Every,;:oach than others at Minnesota, Ohio
; Vi tn e
In the country was still talking State or any ·other school for
· e am.
.
about it."
that matter H what they are
o!mC:.~!~::~ "I think," said Ibis par- doing ta. putting winning above ·
American oblervatlon plane on tlcular .coach ~bout !be ~an. everythmg else ..
patr 13S mileS south of Plmom 25th Minneapolis brawl, 'the
Why blame Bill Musselman
~
Incident was horrible. Anytbne entirely? He only did what he
On~ of the crewmen ejected .youletathinglikethatbappen, was hired to do, tried to win.
safely but the second . crew alotofpeoplehave to share the 1Uttle else really matters these
member was believed ldlled. , blame. You wonder about the days. Not many people seem to
An SOIHnan American pollee protection. How did they care how you play the game
gro~md combat battaUon wai ever let those fans get on the anymore. AU anybody cares
ordered deactivated, Ute first fl,oor?Thenyouhaveto~onder about is the score. If you lo~, .
such
standown
since about the officials. They re the you're sh~ed, almost as . H•
deploymeni of u.s. flglitlng ones . ~ho really control the you had rontra~ed some social
tioops Will IIUipellded four game.
disease. There s treatment for
·weeks. 'I1!alleavesjust 1oauch
What-about the coaclles?
that. What can you do for a
battalions' in Vietnam com- , Tens About Caacbes
loser?
pared to Jl2 at the height of the
"I'll ' tell you about the
McCarthy Remembered
coaches," said this one. "If
In that regard I can't help
w~. Americans were killed what happened to that Min- remember the way Joe MeIn VIetnam last week, !be nesota coacll happened ID me, earthy used to manage the
III!Okearnan said, for an ll-year my ,boss not only would hold me yankees.
total of 4S,t148. But 380 South rompfetely responsible, he'd
"If you're a Yankee, act like
,VIetnamese ·soldiers were fire me right on the spot. I a Yankee " he'd tell his
think he'd be perfectly right. I players, th.;, make sure they
teacll my kids there Ia no way did.
ID t:etallate from that sort of
What was a Yankee? Nobody
!bing on the basketball floor· If really created differently than
they get .buste&lt;l,ln the mouth, any other ballplayers but
they back off. That's the way McCarthy made it seem
they've been taught." .
something special by fostering
II Is difficult now, if not this quality h1a players wanted
ilpposslble, to decide precisely to exemplify themselves. Pride
&gt; Hiukills a(e in dozwho was right and who was would be another word for that.
wrong on the night of Jan. 25 in
Once when one of his players
ens of fielda ... and Minneapolis,
I have to go along forgot for a moment and
hundreds of ,s pt- with one eyewitness who says stretched hbnself out while
"II was a brawl and thl'!'e sitting in the dugout, McCarthy
: cialtlea -lncludinl!l weren't
many angels on !be snapped at hbn :
1
floor that night."
"Sit up straignt and pull your
· hard-to-find ones.
For those who weren't at the feet in. Where do you think you
I
.
game, and they include me, the are, in a row boat?"
TV cameras clearly show how ·There Is nothing wrong with
The G.l. Bill can pro·
one
Minnesota
player the Minnesota basketball team
delivered
a
knee
~o
the
groin
of ·trying to win- a ball game.
vide monthly allowan Oh(o State nval while of·
There is ·something wrong
' .Cinces· !O supplement
ferlng hls hand presumably to when any team places sucll a
··his wages while he's in
help pick hbn off the floor.
prernl\1111 on winning that all
Later, the Minnesota player other human values become
,.. an approved on-thewho did that said the Ohio State completely subordinate.
job training program.
play" had first spit at hbn.
. But the trouble of rourse PRICE.ADJUSTMENT
, For informotion on hirgoes much deeper than that.
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)-Henry
1
ing Vets.call your local
Arno111 Tboae Blamed
Doberston was offered $1 by
Among
thoae
being
blamed
the
city for a 25-foot piece of his ·
. s't ate Employment
by some for what llapP,Ilned Is !I'Operty where a sewer Une
Service office. Contacl
BID Musselman, the Minnesota ·would run.
.
the V.A. for training inroacll. Musaebnal! did what he · Doberston thought !be price
rould
to try and ltop the brawl. a bit stingy, so he went to court.
forrllotion.
Naturally, he feela badly over
Wednesday Summit County
What happened.
. Court Judge L. A. wn:bar,(ll
He Ia a m8n who believes in ordered the city to pay
wlmlng, like all coaches, .and Doberston $18,600 for the land.

. ~eg~l~r an4.Mod

,. .

. .,

. . ,

; :. .

.

. ,.. . .

sii~C:~K~PA, NT~JACK ETS

1

.

Men's, Women's, Boys' and Girls'

:

Another Great Clothing Sale ! I
ENTI RE

STOCK
OFF
OUR REGUlAR LOW,
LOW PRICE

Yes, we have jeans, all kinds; regular, mod,
button front, flares, brushed denim,

THE
VET:

.,,.....,~-·""'

Ltlllft·ltut•

Indignant housewives in the
Leeson Street area awoke one
morning recently to find their
small, whltwashed homes had
·turned a dirty, tacky black
overnight.
The army claimed the
Catholics had been whitewashing homes and walls so that
army patrols would stand out
against them and become
easter targets for waiting
snipers. .
Most of the small, terraced
· homes have stockpiled tin
gooda, beans, peas, beef and
"We don't like shopping at
lillY time," said Mrs. Joan
Campbell,
a
Cathollc
housewife in Balaclava Street.
"And we never knOw when the
mllltary may slap a curfew on
111 and we won't be able to get

~9t.

·' '" "''M o" na~dt

Army patrols have saturated
Roman Catholic areas. Search
and arrest operations are a
daily routine. The Army
cordons off a selected area.
The troops move In, house by
house. Everything is searched.
Floorboards prised up, garbage cans inspected, outdoor
toiletS, attics, nothing is taken
for granted,

•

Hughes is Gone

'cam:

.

12 1 ~&gt; 1 01~'1 - •n

.

r

LONDON ((1Pl) - The
steadlly worsening power
cr1sts pushed unempl~yment to
·the 3 million mark today and
Prime Minister Edward Heath
said his Conaeriatlve govern-.
ment could topple In a dispute
over Britain's entry into the
European Common Market.
Electricity cuts were ordered in, up to II per cent of the
country at one tbne to try to
save power. The crisis developed 'fhen Britain's coal
miners went on strike and cut
off fuel supplies to most of the
country's power producing
plants.
'
,
Heath, already fighting off
attacks becailse of the power
crisis, faced a crucial vote in
parliament tonight on Brltllin's
entry into the Common

..

.

2 lor 29~ 2 ,., 29~ 2 ~:o 29~

5tu• oh OIUI•&lt; ~a rt~., ,,~

'

ACOUPLE THAT COULD stand some cheering up are Mr.
and Mrs. Ira Zickefoose.
Mrs. ZickefOose bas been a patient at Holzer Medical Center,
~ 228, First and Cedar Streets, for the past slx weeks. Friday
her husband entered !be hospital and his room nwnber is 107,
Ho~ Medical Center, Fourth 1111d Sy~ore Streets.
·· ..4:ooklng after the rouple have been their aood neighbors, Mr.
. an~ •Mrs. Roy Mayer, Mr. and Mrs. Don Mayer and Mr. and Mrs.
i'" Bob. Burton. ·
·

1 ~ • 13-on

OFFICE

,

. How would you like to bave your birth !late cllanged?
. ...1 don't beUeve many, of as would be too fond of the Idea.
However, the federal government muat feel Utat such cllanges
ere quite aU right. But I peraonaUy don't agree.
.~ !lhla MonclaY Is a national holiday. We will be celebrating
Alir!iham Uncoln and George Washington's birthdays. But
~0114-Y/ la not the correct date for .either.
.
]Jnc!oln Will born on Feb. 12 and Washington on Feb. 22. The
go~rnment combined the two btrlb dates and we are to
celebrate .them ll9tb on Monday, feb. 21.
, Thla Ia not the only date the government has seen fit to
clliil)ge,~ What about Nov. 11? Thla was called Armistice Day
since tile day It occurred, but more recenUy it.was d!anged to
Veterans bay, and not being ~tlsfied with the name cllange, the
date alBo was changed!
· It111nk tliiim'&amp;n~~lng of dates of important events in history is
very unCon&amp;tltuUonal Ill. well as In poor taste:
· . I protest to these changes, no matter wb,at the reason given. I
certainly hope they don't attempt to cltange the date of our
Savior's birth.

,.
1"1').

For Clnt pu or uu n

Choo" ol

colors

.'

Heath about to Topple

'

By_ Katie Crow

, ...,.,-

The aim is ID bring the
British-ruled six counties of
Northern Ireland ID its knee!
economically; to bomb It into
unity with the Roman Catholic
Republic iii the south.

milk.

I

Valaes to JSt SA VEl
.' ~

""

.

; Katie's Korner

cars wblle foot patrols search mounted at the lillY eDitlilc:e.
auiA&gt;mobllea and question the All persons and bagqe,
Including handbaga and Jllll'lfll
occupants. ·
'Eronomically, there Is little .are aearcbed each lime ~e
doubt the .clty bas been badly viBitor enters the hotel. ·rne
hit. Commerce Minlater Roy hotel whlcll can cater lor 400 or
Bradford said as inucllln a pre- ·more guestS has been reported
Christmas' speech . which to be losing money Iince It
• • v' I
Premier Brian Faulkner felt opened .
But the fact It Ia 111111 ltan· ·
~cessary to tone down a few
ding; Ia an adllev'em~t In the
. days later.
The .Europ~~ Hotel, the city's. Belfast of today. F'l"··· ' .

NKLIIN

..

. .

{

. Hanrly freryday Items YOCIIIt~d .' ,

2 ,., 29~

~

11- 'nleDIUy Seaunel, Middleport.Pwueroy, 0., Feb. J7,1972
.
.

10- The DallySentlnei,Mlddleport-i&gt;cxneroy,O., Feb. l7, 1972

... . . -

.

· OON1

.' HIRE
THE YET!
'
I I

I

permanent press. Plains, stripes, designs.

•

Heavy jackets, thin jackets, big jackets and
F~~-- little jackets and insulated vests.

Don't Miss This Sale!
. Your Clott._lng dollar goes
farther cit 'Lanclmarkl

SAVE!

Yes! Alterations Are Available!

40% OFF
Our Endicott-Johnson

MEN'S

DRESS SHOES

POMEROY LANDMARK

Jack. W. en,, MwcPh. •2-2111
SerYing Meigs, Gallia and MISOII Colmlles
sa. Open Mon.-s.t. n 6, Station Open 24 llollrs
You Can luy
Lonchnark-lveryone Canl

at.I

..

I

\o

.

. (

�,, .

•
. J

.

f

;

--

12 :.._ The Daily llo;ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 17, 1972 .

'

BARNEY
HIS !\lAME
OUGHT TO BE
CHANE;ED TO

LOOI&lt;Y. PAW!!
"Ot.: SNORT'S"

''OL: ZIP::.

ON Tlof' RAMPAGE
AG'IN!!

r

'

~Oiol'T LET ME STOi&gt;
'I()U,.,SiR. \IOU see,
I'M ~ WORK·STupy
ST~DENT

T11E CI1Y COUNCILMEN
ARE 'IHINKING OF \OTING
TI1EM5ELVE6 A FOtJR-t!ll'f
AN~. !'VE SEEN

UICKV ·

1l-4AT WOULD eE 'IHREE W.'I'G
MORE 'THAN 1HEV V«lRK NOW .

WOUIP, CHIEF

'tMJRK WEEK I SGT. 8L01'ASR.

'" ;OI'I~IOE.

ENOUGH TO HAVE MV
WORK SC~EI)ULE A&gt;IO
M\1 C!,ASS si:~'EI&gt;ULE .•

1 WISH~

MIDDLEMAN .

THiS HOLIR

!

MEIGS JUNIOR HIGH 7-A BASKETBALL SQUAD - Front row, 1-r, Ronnie Wood,
manager, Bobby McClure, Steven Randolph, Kevin Fields, Mark Haggerty, Gene Humphrey
and Dick Owen , ma nager; back row: Coach Charles Downie, Tom Bing, Brenley Seth, Gregory
Browning, Lonnie Taylor and Bryan Hamilton.

POMEROY ELEMENTARY FIFTH AND SIXTH GRADE A basketball squad ended the
season with a perfect record, 4-0. Team members are, front row, 1-r, Troy Griffith , David
Dillard, Jeff English, Steve utile, Jimmer Soulsby, Jeff Couch, Mark Caston, Wesley Smith
and Homer Smith ; back row, Coach Frank Seth, Raymond Andrews, Doug Browning, Chuck
Follrod, Dwayne Qualls, Alan Seth and Todd Rawlings.

AH C::,OT SIX OLDI".R

Bf!DTHE.RS . EACH GtTS
A PAl R 0' PANTS HANDED
DO'#N ON HIS B IRTH CIA'/.

BE. SEVEN, NEX'
AH'D
WEEK- BuT '10' SHOULD LOAN
6E£ TH' CORN·DISHUN
'10'
. MAH StX.TH e.ROTHER';
MINE.,
PANTS IS IN.'! -,--- -\ PMJTLESS·HOPEI.£1$ !!

, - BUT THE'I'S MAH O..ai."f )
ONES, AN' E.F AH lJID MAH
FOLKS MIGHT NOTICE !:' 1

- :y-- ----'
i1,-.;\k(;\ .

.

'' '.)'

FRI · SAI

THE MANUAL of arms never looked so good as when
pr,esented by gracious Cumberland College cheerleader
Dreams Rankin. "I don't believe you want me to present
arms!" quoted the lovely coed. Dreama is a freshman at
Cumberland, majoring in math. Sbe is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Uoyd Rankin of Cheshire.

FEB. 18 &amp;19

=-

'-r-::::;J/'-W-' \. c"i'\' -

1 · I 'I

yOU MEAN&amp;Hf

DIDN'T

TELL

TELL ME

WM'!7;

YOU 1'

Debts Add Up
MEIGS JUNIOR HIGH 7-B basketball squad - Front row, 1-r, Danny Miller, manager,
Tony Eblin , Randy George, Scott May, David Miller, Bruce Bumga rdner, and Ricky George;
back row, Coach Charles Downie, Tom Walters, Tim Scites, Mack Williams, Ronald Coats,
Danny Buffington and Tim Rawlings. Absent was Jeff Beaver. Their record was 3-ii.

To $11 Million

AKRON (UP! ) - Investors
in 18 states, Canada and Aus·
trailia and more than $11 million in debts were listed in fed·
, era! Bankruptcy Court Wednesday by an Akfon attorney
·' who for seven years promised
~· 1• "" to 30 per cent interest on
\
I"TT
'
. Short term investments.
The list of 1,434 investors and
$11,260,745 in debts was filed
for attorney D. Don Lowers by
his counsel, Thomas Palecek.
Lowers, 42, has been hospital·
ized since last December with
undulant fever.
His application for reorganization of his high return investment operation under federal
bankruptcy statutes specified
he is no longer able to pay his
debts.
Investors in Lowers' one' man operation included doctors, lawyers and university
officials
who
invested
thousands of dollars as well as
others who invested only a few
FIFTH AND SIXTH GRADE "B" basketball squad at Pomeroy Elementary are, front
hundred.
•
row, 1-r, Kevin McLaughlin , Jim Rosenbaum, Buddy McAngus, Todd Smith, Steve Schneider
The $11,260,745 in debts was
and Mark Mitch; back ro w, Jeff Grueser, Tony Van Meter, David Harris, Scott Williams,
separate from other business
Blaine Qualls, Brett Jones, Timmy Coats arid Randy Roach . They ended their se&amp;son with a 1-3
debts totaling $145,000 listed
with the court by Palecke on
record. Coaches are Tom Grueser and Gene Mitch.
Tuesday .
Bought Tennis Shoes
grandchildren and IS greatLowers started his in·
grandchildren.
vestment business seven years
Preceding him in death were ago by borrowing $5,000 to buy
SYRACUSE - Thurman Syracuse; Mrs. Elma Im- ; his parents, Joseph and Mary 10,000 pairs of tennis shoes he
' Marlin, 83, Syracuse , died baden, Minersville ; Mrs. Ann Linscott Martin; his wife, fo und unclaimed in an Akron
Wednesday at Veterans Roush, St. Petersburg, Fla .; Laura ; two daughters, Shirley terminal. He sold the shoes to a
Imboden . and Hilda , and three grand- Cincinnati discount store for
Mrs.
Myrtle
Memorial Hospital.
Surviving are these children , Columbus; Mrs. Mary Cox. children.
$10,000.
Funeral services will be held
Mrs. Garnet Potts, Mrs . Gallipolis; Mrs. Betty Wicks,
He told investors their
Bernice Winebrenn er, Mrs. Lancasler; Mrs . Margaret at I p. m. Saturday at the money was being used
buy
Ora Bass, Thurman, Jr ., all of Cline of Bever ly, and 40 Syrac use Churc h of the salvaged and unclaimed
Nazarene with the Rev. M. C. freight, heavy machine ry· and
Larimore officiating. Burial other merchandise which
will be in Carmel Cemetery. would then be sold for a profit.
Friends may call at the Ewing Many investers received the
Funeral Home until 11 a. m. promised 8 to 30 per cent in·
Saturday
when the body will be teres! on their 30 to 9&lt;klay
Cha rles E. Cla rk , 84, Mid- parents, he was preceded in
dleport Route I, died unex- death by a son, a brother and a l&lt;iken to the church.
investments, which were made
pectedly at his home late sister.
Wedn esday morning. Mr .
Surv i ving ar e hi s wife ,
Clark was dead upon the Garne t Werner Clark; a son,
arrival of the Middleport E-R William Ernest, at home; a
unil.
brother, Sam, of Middlepor t
A veteran of World War I, Route 1, and several nieces,
Mr . Clark had been a member nephews and cousins.
CALL POINTVIEW: 992·2SO!i
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Funeral services will be held
Ameri can Legion , the past 40 at 2 p. m. Saturday at the
The oid halt ·hoor black- Biography," which · lan tght
years. He worked 17 years Rawli ngs-Coats Funeral Home
features the French female
and -w h ite
version
ot
during hts career wilh the Paaf wi th Ihe Rev. 0 . H. Cart ofnovelis t Co lette, ,and her
" Gu nsmoke" wa sn' t j ust
and Smi th Gravel Co. in ficiating. Feeney.Bennett Post
rath e r
sca ndalo us
good - it was great . With
autobiography
.
Dennis Weaver and a much
Charl eston and he had worked will conduct milii&lt;Iry rites at
We'
ve
noticed
that pu bli c
as a moMrman in coal mines. the grave. Buri al wi ll be in · yo unger Ma tt , Kilty and
televis ion doesn' t pull any
Doe, these r er un s of " Born Feb. II , 1888 at Win- Gravel Hill Cemetery at
punche s in dealing wi th
Mar sha l Dill on" are apfield, W. Va .. he was the son of Cheshire . Friends may ca ll at
sensiti ve themes. and thi s
pea r ing ni ghtl y at 5:JO p.m .
on Ch . 7.
' ser ies is no except io n,
the late 'William and Nancy the fune ral home after 10 a. m.
especially when dea ling with'
+++
Roac h Clark . Besides his Friday .
hislor lea lty -aulhen ti cabl e
If you mi ssed the Peter
materials. Ch. 11 . 8: 30 p.m.
t err e film horror classic.
++ +
.
'' M" wh en it showed on Ch .
MDV
IE
5•
"
Casa
nova
's
11 rece ntly, yo u can catch it
BOND FORFEITED
RING FOUND
tonigh t at 9:30 p.m., Ch. 9. Big Night," wilh Bob Ho pe's
James Pettit, 22, Pomeroy,
Aman 's ring which has been
big nose. 4 p.m.. and " All the
+++
Fine Young Can,nibats",
forfeited a $25 bond in the court found at the Meigs County
·We don't know if it 's a pa id
Nata lie Wood, Robert
po
li
ti
ca
l
ad
or
wha
t,
but
of Pomeroy Mayor William Court House may be claimed
Wagner. 11 :30 p.m., both Ch .
for
m
er
Sen.
Eugene
Mc
Bar on ick Wednesday night by calling the Probate Court
10.
Car thy has sc hedu led time
posl&lt;!d against a charge of and providing a · descriplion. on Ch 4 all I•30 p.m. tonighl ,
"- ++
FRIDAY : " It's Your bet"
l.ailure to yield the right of way.
for a bri ef announcement on
isn' t m uch different from
som ething .
Fined $5 and costs on conlots at other TV game shows,
. ++ +
viction Of running a red light
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Probably lhe best ,bel pf hu t It 's an addit ion, l1 a.m .,
Wednesday night was Richard
DISCHARGED - Louella
(h . 6.
the dav is " NFT Pla yhouse
King .
Warner, 19, Pomeroy.

JANICE?

VA N,Yl-1 TE1ATE X INT ERI0R

PAINT

;,.,AT 5HE GOT A
WHY SH0u LD &gt;HE
VA LENTIN: CARD
TELL ME A SILLY
I
FROM
111tNG LIKE
......,. "THAT?

.

lHESE ARC Tl-1' )(I NDA VINES
I WAS LOOI&lt;ING FOI&gt;,l()I(Q, AN'

A BONAFIDE OFFER!

in the form of personal loans.
N~W
IMPROVED
In 1970, according to one
VANYL - I TE - an
out .
standing letex paint source, Lowers handled some
made with a new Acrylic $8 million in and out of Akron
Viny l Late x Polymer .
ADAPTABLE for all
area banks. The source said
ty pes of inter ior walls and
there were no indications Low·
ceilings- ECONOMICAL
- One' coat covers most
ers ever paid any firm for
surfaces, u ~ ·t ap -water for
IE;,\ s:y T Q ,t
m~~ch~n4i~~ .~r. that anyou"i, _ t.f'l i rm IIi g;
APPLY - ~ br uSh, roll ei-, ·
paid hinl foif gOOds.
- · ' • or
sp ray
OR 1ES
" It just looks like investors'
RAPIDLY ,In lhirty
mi nutes leav ing no un .
cash went 1 in and investors'
pleasant odor - CL EA N
cash came back out again," the
EASILY - wa sh eQuip ment in wa rm , soapy water
source said.
S UPERIOR
Preliminary assets of about
WASHABILITY - dir t and
finger pr i n ts wa sh off
$750,000 including cash in 12
easily because the new
checking accounts at fourbanks
Vany l -ite has unsurpassed
wa.ter
were listed by Lowers.
.·. resistance.
Heavtly Mortgaged
Friends of Lowers described
him as a responsible businessman who had no time for the
luxuries his apparent wealth
could provide.
However, documents filed in
the Bankruptcy Court showed
another picture.

Save $1.00

11-41S'l.L PO FOR A HAND~ /

.Otarles Oark Died Wednesday

, I

l COULD
ANDONE .1

Listen to those
The4're like a oio,ed
cl~ed

L ln;un;

.

'

-· ...

'I

'

l · I?

IT JM'i IIrnilltST V0J 10

l40N 1\lAT M1 'MFE IS'
5TN(;111'- 1111\l~T ~­
WA~ ~I~D '()u &gt;Mill fo,
ld)N NIJf:D .,.,
., ' '«:X.!i: ~D, I

/

SO I

Ebersbach-· ·Hardware

UTTLE

ORP~

~ST

'jl.JV .. o/1

ANNIE

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE''

110 W. MAIN

POMEROY
%. Rental

ACROSS

sign
3. Swamp

1. Fruneol

mind
s. BJ.nk
look
11. Milrep·
resent
11. Nunely
II. Unfllr

Timnnan Martin Died WedneSday

w

'NH~

GASQUNE ALLEY

REGULAR 5.85 GAL
ON SALE
2 bAts
ONLY

YEP. AN' 'IO.J SAID
""' KNEW .. P\.A£E

5 Pc. Dinette ..................... ~

44

00

ALMOST
L.l KE TI-lE

-A'D MIRAL-

G!RTU!'s

9'' Admiral TV ............ ~ ..........f6gm
18" Admiral Color TV.............'29912.1 cu. ft. Refri

3 Pc. Bedroom Suite.........··99
. 00
2 Pc. Living Room Suites12900 la' Electric Range............ 266

st. Jose's

t.--- - - - - - -------,_.;....=.~~--t With Self-clean Oven ·

11

·Set 0f 3 Ta·ble5 K•D...............,.475 FDe~lu=xe::_.:.M:~od=el-::-:-------'
HOOVER
.W d K't h Ch . .
S500
oo 1c. en · a1rs.... ... .. .. .. ...
Ca " 1'ster Set5:............................$ 119
·
.

·Miniature Oil Lam s................ 39~
Carpet Samples.......................

soc

~ Polisher ..................... :.'18•.
Canister Cleaner................... s34oo

;

TERRY

2 pc. Gold Living Room Suite
Reg. s3.-19 ..-... ......... 1 Oll·J1v Sale '2.18··
Round Cheny D. R. Table
and 4 ChaifS REG_, S299.oo

Flexsteel Furniture_

Sale '99 ·

Many More Values Not Listed

Come
See For Yourself
. .

15.2 Frmt Proof .............

Reg. s419 Rehigerator

$389
· . .·

FURNITURE
Middleport, Ohio
J.

Hrr

tell

tt.Noah'a
youneest
••· Shinto
temple
f%. And
not

IZ. Team

race

as. Brine
joy
to

IUDl"

II. Tutelen
fort
U. Certain
honeshoe
S5.Puha't
headwear
SS.Baelrtalt
SS.OldBore·
Dine TV
Mrler
tS. ~·Butter·

• :::.e.=.-

TUINY

1

SOYSIF

I

I KJ

rFrrR
I

1

KJ ~ . ~~
,_,

III
Now ..,...... tile clrded lett4n
to
form lht IUlJWiw __., 11
1
._.... bJ . . . . . em-.

r]

l'rlltl Sid AIIISWIIII!n

I [IJttllXJ
an 1
"IIACY

(AM

YnleN.af •

J........, GUILT DIMON

Vltii.U

, •••• -

AMwer-z How rAe rood ~"« entertaiud' llae
driwro - IT DIVIIITING THIM

crett

-FRIGIDAIRE30'~ Range
Reg. '299.00

Unoenmltlet'-fctur Jambleo, .
- letter to tKh ~quare, to
form four ordlnar7 wonlo.

8eld 8"

1 On~

Deluxe !)ishwasher .............. :.'199

1---.......:....:...:::..;=

u.~~anese

clJ&amp;~~;~t:::::...Jc

author
M.Halley
novel
u. Debbie
Re)'lloldt'
role •
U.Mountaln
DOWN

$229

Special Prices On All

tree

. 4. ~~Ode­
Night·
irlgale"
5. Come a
cropper
ll
Fashion
~t;
?.
Garb
IWindle
for
15. Under·
Ovid
sized
IS. Wlnsllke B. Mllkflsh
9. Outer
part
edge
1?. Tnmp
It, Summer
zt. Buddy
In
ZS. Proa·
Marsellle
pector'a
lt. Draw
eear
towards
zt; "Your
Majesty" 11.--the·
minute
IS- G;rrene
(fuhlon.
zt.Overand
able)
above

lt. Burmese
!mile
zt. Slapstick
prop
%1. Rllnbow
U. Nether·
lmda
river
zt, StumblingH. Girder
block
worker's
u. Rice·
item
course
35. Cllltivate
clreult
!6. GuidOn· fJ.Howard
or Ernie
ian
note
31. Wtttlriatn
st. Oriental
Z?.Snake

1. Flat-

w,.__ .

bottomed
OO.t

.

CAP!'AIN EASY

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It::. - - - - - - - - - - , ,
.. ,-...-----.......--.,
AX Y D L I A A XI
I DtDN'T LIKE IT, THOV6H,
1: THAi MAKES IN/

Ia L 0 N G I' B L L 0 1f
6ECAli~E THE AUTHOR NEVER
One letter limply standt for another. In thil nmple A Ia ~TION
,,., ~.~.~N
~OfTON
used for the three L's, X for the two O'o, etc. Slnlle lttten, "" &gt;&lt; .,.._,.""" """ 1
apootrophea, .the lenllh and formation of the words are tll .NTERESTEI1IN~fil16111~6TON
hints. Each day the code Ietten an clllrerent.
~ ·-~
_

01

A Cryplo.,_ Qwllltloa

AGNHJXBFX
VZEGFU
'

CR

SWSOV. · CIV

WIV:VEGF

DNZG

QNKXU

CR

(

HEUBNK

QNKXU

VZEGFU I VNFXVZXO .-

l'eo&amp;eniQ'o C~!Mie: WHISKEY IS THE liOST POPU·
l·.'R PF AI,L THE REMEDIES ':r'!IAT WON'T ptJU A COLli •
...,.'l&gt;.lUlY VAT~
·

'

•C. ,. ~

HEAD HURT ·

('•
;; ·

;1
,,

i SAEGF

KNOOEUNG

S.

,

I'

,.,
•

4J

~

I ~ .,·

�,, .

•
. J

.

f

;

--

12 :.._ The Daily llo;ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 17, 1972 .

'

BARNEY
HIS !\lAME
OUGHT TO BE
CHANE;ED TO

LOOI&lt;Y. PAW!!
"Ot.: SNORT'S"

''OL: ZIP::.

ON Tlof' RAMPAGE
AG'IN!!

r

'

~Oiol'T LET ME STOi&gt;
'I()U,.,SiR. \IOU see,
I'M ~ WORK·STupy
ST~DENT

T11E CI1Y COUNCILMEN
ARE 'IHINKING OF \OTING
TI1EM5ELVE6 A FOtJR-t!ll'f
AN~. !'VE SEEN

UICKV ·

1l-4AT WOULD eE 'IHREE W.'I'G
MORE 'THAN 1HEV V«lRK NOW .

WOUIP, CHIEF

'tMJRK WEEK I SGT. 8L01'ASR.

'" ;OI'I~IOE.

ENOUGH TO HAVE MV
WORK SC~EI)ULE A&gt;IO
M\1 C!,ASS si:~'EI&gt;ULE .•

1 WISH~

MIDDLEMAN .

THiS HOLIR

!

MEIGS JUNIOR HIGH 7-A BASKETBALL SQUAD - Front row, 1-r, Ronnie Wood,
manager, Bobby McClure, Steven Randolph, Kevin Fields, Mark Haggerty, Gene Humphrey
and Dick Owen , ma nager; back row: Coach Charles Downie, Tom Bing, Brenley Seth, Gregory
Browning, Lonnie Taylor and Bryan Hamilton.

POMEROY ELEMENTARY FIFTH AND SIXTH GRADE A basketball squad ended the
season with a perfect record, 4-0. Team members are, front row, 1-r, Troy Griffith , David
Dillard, Jeff English, Steve utile, Jimmer Soulsby, Jeff Couch, Mark Caston, Wesley Smith
and Homer Smith ; back row, Coach Frank Seth, Raymond Andrews, Doug Browning, Chuck
Follrod, Dwayne Qualls, Alan Seth and Todd Rawlings.

AH C::,OT SIX OLDI".R

Bf!DTHE.RS . EACH GtTS
A PAl R 0' PANTS HANDED
DO'#N ON HIS B IRTH CIA'/.

BE. SEVEN, NEX'
AH'D
WEEK- BuT '10' SHOULD LOAN
6E£ TH' CORN·DISHUN
'10'
. MAH StX.TH e.ROTHER';
MINE.,
PANTS IS IN.'! -,--- -\ PMJTLESS·HOPEI.£1$ !!

, - BUT THE'I'S MAH O..ai."f )
ONES, AN' E.F AH lJID MAH
FOLKS MIGHT NOTICE !:' 1

- :y-- ----'
i1,-.;\k(;\ .

.

'' '.)'

FRI · SAI

THE MANUAL of arms never looked so good as when
pr,esented by gracious Cumberland College cheerleader
Dreams Rankin. "I don't believe you want me to present
arms!" quoted the lovely coed. Dreama is a freshman at
Cumberland, majoring in math. Sbe is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Uoyd Rankin of Cheshire.

FEB. 18 &amp;19

=-

'-r-::::;J/'-W-' \. c"i'\' -

1 · I 'I

yOU MEAN&amp;Hf

DIDN'T

TELL

TELL ME

WM'!7;

YOU 1'

Debts Add Up
MEIGS JUNIOR HIGH 7-B basketball squad - Front row, 1-r, Danny Miller, manager,
Tony Eblin , Randy George, Scott May, David Miller, Bruce Bumga rdner, and Ricky George;
back row, Coach Charles Downie, Tom Walters, Tim Scites, Mack Williams, Ronald Coats,
Danny Buffington and Tim Rawlings. Absent was Jeff Beaver. Their record was 3-ii.

To $11 Million

AKRON (UP! ) - Investors
in 18 states, Canada and Aus·
trailia and more than $11 million in debts were listed in fed·
, era! Bankruptcy Court Wednesday by an Akfon attorney
·' who for seven years promised
~· 1• "" to 30 per cent interest on
\
I"TT
'
. Short term investments.
The list of 1,434 investors and
$11,260,745 in debts was filed
for attorney D. Don Lowers by
his counsel, Thomas Palecek.
Lowers, 42, has been hospital·
ized since last December with
undulant fever.
His application for reorganization of his high return investment operation under federal
bankruptcy statutes specified
he is no longer able to pay his
debts.
Investors in Lowers' one' man operation included doctors, lawyers and university
officials
who
invested
thousands of dollars as well as
others who invested only a few
FIFTH AND SIXTH GRADE "B" basketball squad at Pomeroy Elementary are, front
hundred.
•
row, 1-r, Kevin McLaughlin , Jim Rosenbaum, Buddy McAngus, Todd Smith, Steve Schneider
The $11,260,745 in debts was
and Mark Mitch; back ro w, Jeff Grueser, Tony Van Meter, David Harris, Scott Williams,
separate from other business
Blaine Qualls, Brett Jones, Timmy Coats arid Randy Roach . They ended their se&amp;son with a 1-3
debts totaling $145,000 listed
with the court by Palecke on
record. Coaches are Tom Grueser and Gene Mitch.
Tuesday .
Bought Tennis Shoes
grandchildren and IS greatLowers started his in·
grandchildren.
vestment business seven years
Preceding him in death were ago by borrowing $5,000 to buy
SYRACUSE - Thurman Syracuse; Mrs. Elma Im- ; his parents, Joseph and Mary 10,000 pairs of tennis shoes he
' Marlin, 83, Syracuse , died baden, Minersville ; Mrs. Ann Linscott Martin; his wife, fo und unclaimed in an Akron
Wednesday at Veterans Roush, St. Petersburg, Fla .; Laura ; two daughters, Shirley terminal. He sold the shoes to a
Imboden . and Hilda , and three grand- Cincinnati discount store for
Mrs.
Myrtle
Memorial Hospital.
Surviving are these children , Columbus; Mrs. Mary Cox. children.
$10,000.
Funeral services will be held
Mrs. Garnet Potts, Mrs . Gallipolis; Mrs. Betty Wicks,
He told investors their
Bernice Winebrenn er, Mrs. Lancasler; Mrs . Margaret at I p. m. Saturday at the money was being used
buy
Ora Bass, Thurman, Jr ., all of Cline of Bever ly, and 40 Syrac use Churc h of the salvaged and unclaimed
Nazarene with the Rev. M. C. freight, heavy machine ry· and
Larimore officiating. Burial other merchandise which
will be in Carmel Cemetery. would then be sold for a profit.
Friends may call at the Ewing Many investers received the
Funeral Home until 11 a. m. promised 8 to 30 per cent in·
Saturday
when the body will be teres! on their 30 to 9&lt;klay
Cha rles E. Cla rk , 84, Mid- parents, he was preceded in
dleport Route I, died unex- death by a son, a brother and a l&lt;iken to the church.
investments, which were made
pectedly at his home late sister.
Wedn esday morning. Mr .
Surv i ving ar e hi s wife ,
Clark was dead upon the Garne t Werner Clark; a son,
arrival of the Middleport E-R William Ernest, at home; a
unil.
brother, Sam, of Middlepor t
A veteran of World War I, Route 1, and several nieces,
Mr . Clark had been a member nephews and cousins.
CALL POINTVIEW: 992·2SO!i
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Funeral services will be held
Ameri can Legion , the past 40 at 2 p. m. Saturday at the
The oid halt ·hoor black- Biography," which · lan tght
years. He worked 17 years Rawli ngs-Coats Funeral Home
features the French female
and -w h ite
version
ot
during hts career wilh the Paaf wi th Ihe Rev. 0 . H. Cart ofnovelis t Co lette, ,and her
" Gu nsmoke" wa sn' t j ust
and Smi th Gravel Co. in ficiating. Feeney.Bennett Post
rath e r
sca ndalo us
good - it was great . With
autobiography
.
Dennis Weaver and a much
Charl eston and he had worked will conduct milii&lt;Iry rites at
We'
ve
noticed
that pu bli c
as a moMrman in coal mines. the grave. Buri al wi ll be in · yo unger Ma tt , Kilty and
televis ion doesn' t pull any
Doe, these r er un s of " Born Feb. II , 1888 at Win- Gravel Hill Cemetery at
punche s in dealing wi th
Mar sha l Dill on" are apfield, W. Va .. he was the son of Cheshire . Friends may ca ll at
sensiti ve themes. and thi s
pea r ing ni ghtl y at 5:JO p.m .
on Ch . 7.
' ser ies is no except io n,
the late 'William and Nancy the fune ral home after 10 a. m.
especially when dea ling with'
+++
Roac h Clark . Besides his Friday .
hislor lea lty -aulhen ti cabl e
If you mi ssed the Peter
materials. Ch. 11 . 8: 30 p.m.
t err e film horror classic.
++ +
.
'' M" wh en it showed on Ch .
MDV
IE
5•
"
Casa
nova
's
11 rece ntly, yo u can catch it
BOND FORFEITED
RING FOUND
tonigh t at 9:30 p.m., Ch. 9. Big Night," wilh Bob Ho pe's
James Pettit, 22, Pomeroy,
Aman 's ring which has been
big nose. 4 p.m.. and " All the
+++
Fine Young Can,nibats",
forfeited a $25 bond in the court found at the Meigs County
·We don't know if it 's a pa id
Nata lie Wood, Robert
po
li
ti
ca
l
ad
or
wha
t,
but
of Pomeroy Mayor William Court House may be claimed
Wagner. 11 :30 p.m., both Ch .
for
m
er
Sen.
Eugene
Mc
Bar on ick Wednesday night by calling the Probate Court
10.
Car thy has sc hedu led time
posl&lt;!d against a charge of and providing a · descriplion. on Ch 4 all I•30 p.m. tonighl ,
"- ++
FRIDAY : " It's Your bet"
l.ailure to yield the right of way.
for a bri ef announcement on
isn' t m uch different from
som ething .
Fined $5 and costs on conlots at other TV game shows,
. ++ +
viction Of running a red light
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Probably lhe best ,bel pf hu t It 's an addit ion, l1 a.m .,
Wednesday night was Richard
DISCHARGED - Louella
(h . 6.
the dav is " NFT Pla yhouse
King .
Warner, 19, Pomeroy.

JANICE?

VA N,Yl-1 TE1ATE X INT ERI0R

PAINT

;,.,AT 5HE GOT A
WHY SH0u LD &gt;HE
VA LENTIN: CARD
TELL ME A SILLY
I
FROM
111tNG LIKE
......,. "THAT?

.

lHESE ARC Tl-1' )(I NDA VINES
I WAS LOOI&lt;ING FOI&gt;,l()I(Q, AN'

A BONAFIDE OFFER!

in the form of personal loans.
N~W
IMPROVED
In 1970, according to one
VANYL - I TE - an
out .
standing letex paint source, Lowers handled some
made with a new Acrylic $8 million in and out of Akron
Viny l Late x Polymer .
ADAPTABLE for all
area banks. The source said
ty pes of inter ior walls and
there were no indications Low·
ceilings- ECONOMICAL
- One' coat covers most
ers ever paid any firm for
surfaces, u ~ ·t ap -water for
IE;,\ s:y T Q ,t
m~~ch~n4i~~ .~r. that anyou"i, _ t.f'l i rm IIi g;
APPLY - ~ br uSh, roll ei-, ·
paid hinl foif gOOds.
- · ' • or
sp ray
OR 1ES
" It just looks like investors'
RAPIDLY ,In lhirty
mi nutes leav ing no un .
cash went 1 in and investors'
pleasant odor - CL EA N
cash came back out again," the
EASILY - wa sh eQuip ment in wa rm , soapy water
source said.
S UPERIOR
Preliminary assets of about
WASHABILITY - dir t and
finger pr i n ts wa sh off
$750,000 including cash in 12
easily because the new
checking accounts at fourbanks
Vany l -ite has unsurpassed
wa.ter
were listed by Lowers.
.·. resistance.
Heavtly Mortgaged
Friends of Lowers described
him as a responsible businessman who had no time for the
luxuries his apparent wealth
could provide.
However, documents filed in
the Bankruptcy Court showed
another picture.

Save $1.00

11-41S'l.L PO FOR A HAND~ /

.Otarles Oark Died Wednesday

, I

l COULD
ANDONE .1

Listen to those
The4're like a oio,ed
cl~ed

L ln;un;

.

'

-· ...

'I

'

l · I?

IT JM'i IIrnilltST V0J 10

l40N 1\lAT M1 'MFE IS'
5TN(;111'- 1111\l~T ~­
WA~ ~I~D '()u &gt;Mill fo,
ld)N NIJf:D .,.,
., ' '«:X.!i: ~D, I

/

SO I

Ebersbach-· ·Hardware

UTTLE

ORP~

~ST

'jl.JV .. o/1

ANNIE

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE''

110 W. MAIN

POMEROY
%. Rental

ACROSS

sign
3. Swamp

1. Fruneol

mind
s. BJ.nk
look
11. Milrep·
resent
11. Nunely
II. Unfllr

Timnnan Martin Died WedneSday

w

'NH~

GASQUNE ALLEY

REGULAR 5.85 GAL
ON SALE
2 bAts
ONLY

YEP. AN' 'IO.J SAID
""' KNEW .. P\.A£E

5 Pc. Dinette ..................... ~

44

00

ALMOST
L.l KE TI-lE

-A'D MIRAL-

G!RTU!'s

9'' Admiral TV ............ ~ ..........f6gm
18" Admiral Color TV.............'29912.1 cu. ft. Refri

3 Pc. Bedroom Suite.........··99
. 00
2 Pc. Living Room Suites12900 la' Electric Range............ 266

st. Jose's

t.--- - - - - - -------,_.;....=.~~--t With Self-clean Oven ·

11

·Set 0f 3 Ta·ble5 K•D...............,.475 FDe~lu=xe::_.:.M:~od=el-::-:-------'
HOOVER
.W d K't h Ch . .
S500
oo 1c. en · a1rs.... ... .. .. .. ...
Ca " 1'ster Set5:............................$ 119
·
.

·Miniature Oil Lam s................ 39~
Carpet Samples.......................

soc

~ Polisher ..................... :.'18•.
Canister Cleaner................... s34oo

;

TERRY

2 pc. Gold Living Room Suite
Reg. s3.-19 ..-... ......... 1 Oll·J1v Sale '2.18··
Round Cheny D. R. Table
and 4 ChaifS REG_, S299.oo

Flexsteel Furniture_

Sale '99 ·

Many More Values Not Listed

Come
See For Yourself
. .

15.2 Frmt Proof .............

Reg. s419 Rehigerator

$389
· . .·

FURNITURE
Middleport, Ohio
J.

Hrr

tell

tt.Noah'a
youneest
••· Shinto
temple
f%. And
not

IZ. Team

race

as. Brine
joy
to

IUDl"

II. Tutelen
fort
U. Certain
honeshoe
S5.Puha't
headwear
SS.Baelrtalt
SS.OldBore·
Dine TV
Mrler
tS. ~·Butter·

• :::.e.=.-

TUINY

1

SOYSIF

I

I KJ

rFrrR
I

1

KJ ~ . ~~
,_,

III
Now ..,...... tile clrded lett4n
to
form lht IUlJWiw __., 11
1
._.... bJ . . . . . em-.

r]

l'rlltl Sid AIIISWIIII!n

I [IJttllXJ
an 1
"IIACY

(AM

YnleN.af •

J........, GUILT DIMON

Vltii.U

, •••• -

AMwer-z How rAe rood ~"« entertaiud' llae
driwro - IT DIVIIITING THIM

crett

-FRIGIDAIRE30'~ Range
Reg. '299.00

Unoenmltlet'-fctur Jambleo, .
- letter to tKh ~quare, to
form four ordlnar7 wonlo.

8eld 8"

1 On~

Deluxe !)ishwasher .............. :.'199

1---.......:....:...:::..;=

u.~~anese

clJ&amp;~~;~t:::::...Jc

author
M.Halley
novel
u. Debbie
Re)'lloldt'
role •
U.Mountaln
DOWN

$229

Special Prices On All

tree

. 4. ~~Ode­
Night·
irlgale"
5. Come a
cropper
ll
Fashion
~t;
?.
Garb
IWindle
for
15. Under·
Ovid
sized
IS. Wlnsllke B. Mllkflsh
9. Outer
part
edge
1?. Tnmp
It, Summer
zt. Buddy
In
ZS. Proa·
Marsellle
pector'a
lt. Draw
eear
towards
zt; "Your
Majesty" 11.--the·
minute
IS- G;rrene
(fuhlon.
zt.Overand
able)
above

lt. Burmese
!mile
zt. Slapstick
prop
%1. Rllnbow
U. Nether·
lmda
river
zt, StumblingH. Girder
block
worker's
u. Rice·
item
course
35. Cllltivate
clreult
!6. GuidOn· fJ.Howard
or Ernie
ian
note
31. Wtttlriatn
st. Oriental
Z?.Snake

1. Flat-

w,.__ .

bottomed
OO.t

.

CAP!'AIN EASY

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It::. - - - - - - - - - - , ,
.. ,-...-----.......--.,
AX Y D L I A A XI
I DtDN'T LIKE IT, THOV6H,
1: THAi MAKES IN/

Ia L 0 N G I' B L L 0 1f
6ECAli~E THE AUTHOR NEVER
One letter limply standt for another. In thil nmple A Ia ~TION
,,., ~.~.~N
~OfTON
used for the three L's, X for the two O'o, etc. Slnlle lttten, "" &gt;&lt; .,.._,.""" """ 1
apootrophea, .the lenllh and formation of the words are tll .NTERESTEI1IN~fil16111~6TON
hints. Each day the code Ietten an clllrerent.
~ ·-~
_

01

A Cryplo.,_ Qwllltloa

AGNHJXBFX
VZEGFU
'

CR

SWSOV. · CIV

WIV:VEGF

DNZG

QNKXU

CR

(

HEUBNK

QNKXU

VZEGFU I VNFXVZXO .-

l'eo&amp;eniQ'o C~!Mie: WHISKEY IS THE liOST POPU·
l·.'R PF AI,L THE REMEDIES ':r'!IAT WON'T ptJU A COLli •
...,.'l&gt;.lUlY VAT~
·

'

•C. ,. ~

HEAD HURT ·

('•
;; ·

;1
,,

i SAEGF

KNOOEUNG

S.

,

I'

,.,
•

4J

~

I ~ .,·

�,

.... r

'

. ... "

j

r l ,. ( I f I # ( I (

(

r'

I ( (

•

15- Tile Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Punaoy, 0., Feb. 17!1912
14 - The Daily Senlinel,.Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 17, 1m

.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get·Results!
WM!T ADS
Notice
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
P.M.
Day
Belore UPHOLSTE RING

5

Monday DeadllnQ 9 a.m.

Can cellat ion &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m . for

Day of Publication ,

phon e 992-3617.

-

REGULATIONS .
The Publ isher reserves the
deemed ob jeclional. The
publ is her
will
not
be
responsi bl e for more tha n one
N'lcorrect inserlion.

2·3·30tp

2·16·31p

Balance $79.32 . Use our
budget ter ms. Call 99n085.
2·16·61c

For Want Ad Service

5 cen-ts per Word one· insertion Help Wanted
Minimum Cha rge 75c
OFF ICE GIRL receptionist.
12 cents per word three
ty p ing, report s, li mited

25 Per Cent Di sc ount on paid
- ads and ads paid within 10

Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio.

2-17-3tc

days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$1.50 tor 50 word m inimum .
Each additional word 2c .

WANTED!

Additiona l 25c Charge pe r
Advertise ment.

Carriers For

BLIND ADS

:&gt;FFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. lo 5:00p.m . D• ily ,
8: 30 a.m. to 12 :00 Noo n

bars and many fri ends for fhe
fl owers, food and all who sent
cards wi th lov ing express ions
of sym pathy after the loss of

deli•ery .

my

Illness . Feb . 10 Jesus took him
home to a place ca lled
Heaven, where there wi ll be
no more sickness or dea th .
Not even an unkind word will
ever be spoken there and
when my journey here is aver,
I' ll mee t him ther e.

home 1:30
1·1Htc

For Rent or Sale
3-BEDROOM Vindale mobile
home, 11h baths, situated on
choice rental lot ; call after 6
· p.m . weekdays or any time on

weekend 992.5570, Herman
Bolinger.
2·16·61p

Mrs. Harley Cunn ingham
Mrs. Marcella Barte ls
nntp

THE FAMILY of Ernest Bahr
would like lo lhank the stall at
Holzer Hospital, Ewing 's
Funeral Home, Rev . Lehman
and our friends and neighbors
.for their thoughtfulness and
kindness during our recent
bereavement.

For Rent
I

BEDROOM frailer · apart·
ments, id ea l for couples.

Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992.5248 or 992·3436.
2·3·121c

Notice

night 8:30 to 12 noon at the
Legi on Ha l l a t Ru tlan d.
Sponsored by the Amer ic an ,
Leg ion.

Racine area . Phone 9921329.' 'allnceted . • ...,.,. . t .. J: ·., .:~ ..::1
"
, John c . Bacon
.
~~~tk
ACTING PROBATE JUDGE
121 10. 17, 24, Jt

Female Help Wanted

A Lu zier Cosm etics and
NOTICE OF
2·17·21p BEWigs
APPOINTMENT
Consultant in your spare
No. l0,,06
STILL target shoot. Sunday, time . No territory restri c- E state Of MARYCase
H . HEINE S,
tions.
Highest
commissions.
Feb. 20, 1 p. m. All hand
Deceased.
·
Phone 773-5480.
choked gun s will be han Noti ce is hereby giv en that
2.11
.6tc
dicapped . Rutland Gun Club
Eva L. Robson . of Pomeroy ,
. Ohio , has been duly appointed
on New Lima Rd.
1·11·3fc

GUN SHOOT. Sunday, Feb. 20, 1
p. m. Mile Hill Road . 20 lb.
steak , hams, bacons. span·
sored by Racine Fire Dept .

2·17.31c

THE

MEIGS

Cou nty
Fox hunter s will hold a one
da y fie ld tri al. Monday, Feb.
11 on Sno w Ba ll HilL The
hounds will be cast at 7 a.m .
Her schel Roush is president .

2·15·3fc

- - - · --

INSTRUCTION in organ and

pian o, Gera ld Hoffn er , ~hon e

992·3825.

1·8-11tc

------

KOSCOT KOS METI CS . The y'r e

Exec utrix of the Estete of Mary
H . Heines, dece ased, late of
igs County , Ohio.
RUMMAGE and ya rd sale , MeCred
are required to file
Fri day and Saturday , 341 the ir claitors
ims with said fiduc iary
Park St., Middleport, 9 a. m. within fou r months .
to 6 p. m . Over 1000 it ems for
Dated this 31st day of January
sal e.
1972 .
John C. Ba con
2-17-2tc
Judge
Court
of
Common
Pl
eas .
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pel Shop,
Pro
bat
e
Division
Ches ter, Ohio. Phone 985-3356.
121 3, 10, 17 , Jt
Tropica l fi sh 15 cents and up

For Sale

through Sunday, Feb. 20th.
2·17 ·31p

Mobile Homes For Sale

HOLSTE IN cow, with 2 day old -60X12, 2·bedroom , a ll·elec.tric,
air conditioned, 8x20 ft. Porch
and
alu minum
awning,
aluminum skirting , co m .

ca lf. 3 Hereford cows to
soon,
seve ral
fres hen
year! ings and 2 year old
Hereford heifers . Phone 985·

3805.

pletely

2·8·1fc

- - - -- - -

ABOUT YOU k WE ll&gt;h,

...

overweighi' ladies, teens and
men interested in a We ight

Watche r s

I R)

Pomeroy

w r i t e:

Cla ss

in

Weight

Wotchers I R), 1663 Sect ion
Rd ., Cincinnati , Ohio 45237 .

·

SAVE up to one

10·3·1fc

h~ lf .

Br ing your

fur nace; 2 wheels for
G.M . ve hi cle; electric heater ;

1217.

11 ·2J .tfc

- - -. '

WANT WOR" at nome ad·
dr essi ng and st uffing en -

99~ ·

12' • 14' • 24' - WiDE

"Fo=R"D""T""r-ac_,t-or- ,73-ne-w-eli~r.-s-,new
pain t , good conditi on - $650 ;

MILLER

2·1Htc

MOBILE HOMES

ALLI S CHALMERS tracto r
with disk , plow, c ulti 11a tor,
sick l e ba r'; electr i c gui tar
with amplifi er . b fta t clari net
wi th case. Phone 992-3278.

1770 Washington Blvd.
Be Ipre, Ohio

GUN SHOOT, also rifle matches

2-1J.61c

- open sites onl y, Fork ed
· Run Sport sman Club, Sunday,

RCA 21" television , console.
good cond ition . Phon e 992 -

2·16·31c

Now's Time To

ORDER
-.:IELD SEEDS
FERTILIZER
SEED CORN
Order Now &amp; Save t

2-13-ltc

FOR T.HE BEST deal In a new
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,

Kanauga, Ohio.

Co., Athens, Oh io now serving

J2. J7.90tc

lhe Tri.County Area . Call.

Vera
Eblen,
Associate '
. ~ealtor , 99~-3029: ,~, .... _
• " ,.
.. . ..,, ' ' 2' 1'f6tc; '
•

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD, SR.

·1

Rtal

For Sale

r~tate

,..,;
51 X ROOM house, 133 Butfernut
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
Ohio, phone 23/.4334.
11 ·2 J.tfc
•

Broker

4 BEDROOM, bath . &amp; halt.
110 Mechanic Sf.
ulility room, bulll·in kitchen,
Pomeroy, 0. , 45769
wall to wall carpet &amp; garage.
Located ~' mile north of
2 APARTMENTS
Eastern High Schoof. House is
11 ROOMS-5 with bath, up,
almost finished and others
6 wi th bath, down . Large
being built. Call 985·3598.
porch . 2 lots in Middleport.
1·21 ·301c
Nea r stores.
-nulJ~I:
.. -. • .......L Ln1 ... um Heights.
79ACRES
Call
Danny
Thompson, 992·
FREE GAS- With oil in.
2196.
come, 6 room house, bath, 3
7·18·lfc
bedroom s, barn, garden,
young fru it .

7ACRES
On Rt. 7 · 33. All utilities
avai lable. Asking S1500.00.
LETART
5 room house. Side porch.
sma ll basement. Large lot on

336. $5,500.00.
35 ACRES

For Housing development.
Chester waler. 2 electric
compan ies availabl e.

46 ACRES

..~

.

~

OFFICE SU~PLIES
and

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
'FI_o or Display.

'-::=========;
I'"

OOLONIAL
AUTO BODY
537 High St.
Middleport, Ohio
Complete body repairs
and paintings, glass
installation,
free
loaner
cars
and
estimates,
also
mechanical
repairs.
Phone 992-3793

ESTIMATE
Point Pleasant &amp; Mason
AUTO_GLA_ss
AI Conard, Mgr.
Phone 304·773.5710
Route 33
Mason, W. Va .

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph.99.H l74

SIGNS, posters, mail boxes and
favorite saying; hand let.
tered; In your favorite style.
David Hooker, Rt. 2, Albany,
Ohio 45710 ( Pagetownl.
2·6·301c
BACKHOE AND DIJZER work. SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Milter
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Sepfic tanks Installed. George
661·3035.
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·2478.
2·12·11&lt;
4·25·tfc

1·28·11c

--

NILt: :t:· Slv1 'I nomt! wrrn full

priv ileges.
Ind ividual Catering
Will seat up fo 150 people.

~n97s· ~.?!);~;992:5786

Dryers
Surround ciolhel · ·
'With gentle, even
heat. No hot spots,
., o overdrylng .
·Fine ~tlh Lint

Fitter.

· We llttdatluln

MAYTAG
Rod corpot
Servlct

.RUTLANOJURNJJIJRE ,,., oc:
'),

and

central

ai r

conditioning, bafh and ' ti fully
carpeted , full basement ;
garage In base ment. See by

appointment, phone 992·2196
or 992·3585. Danny Thompson
Financing available.

·

•

,\.; , 'te)V)

"

•

Rufl&amp;:nd, 0

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

'

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

GEORGY PORGY PRI
See how low our car prices will
go! That's the truth. Great buys
on early and late models. Top
performance guaranteed from
all. Come on in and drive out
smiling .

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto
Open STill
Monday thru S•turday
606 E. Main~ Pomeroy, 0 .

cellars, basemen t s, very
reasonable. Phone 949·3221 .

2·1Htc

-------

resldentlai and commercial
roofing ;
remod e l i ng ,
building, suspended ceilings,
interior and • ex1erior pain·
ting ; compl ete line of

Maso nry .work . All work
guaranteed to .customer
sa ti sfaction . We are fully
insured for your pro feet ion. 32

N. Second, ph. 99H 918.
1·15·30tc

12·30·1fc

1971 Volkswagen Sq. Back Sedan $2495
Local 1 owner, new ~.:ar trad ~ In, lJ,IJlN mlles, automatic
trans .• luggage rack, radio , chrome. wheel covers, blUe
color, blk . vinyl interior.

1970 Chevelle SS396 Cpe. ____ }2295
Green finish, blk. vinyl roof, green vinyl interior, new
wide oval t ires, 4 speed trans ., power steering, radio. A

sweethe•rt of a buy .

Factory air condition ing, V·B ~ngine, auto. trans ., P.S.,
P. B., good w-s·w tires. many more extras. A low price
now!

1969 Ch~. Impala Cpe. ----- '2095
automatic trans .• p. steering , factory air

This Franchise ctoes not require a large In ·
vestment . Program is designed to furnish
Agent with a rea dy market. pre-sold
c ustom e rs and immediate commissions.

~
ttoke ; thence eas1165feet to the

------

POODLE puppies, Si lver Toy,
Park view Kennels, Phon e 992-

Sharp black tlnlsh.
l

1967 Chevrolet Impala------· $1295 ·
2 Dr. H. T. Cpe. loc•l owner, sharp Interior, fact . air, good
W· W fires, radio &amp; healer, gold finish.

\

1967 Dodge Charger ... '1195

1964 Ford ,Galaxie 500-------·$395
H.T. Coupe, V·8 mofor, outo. trans., p. steering and
brokes.
'

1967 Chev. El Camino

v.s engine, auto. trans., p. steering, radio, good W· W
fires, red finish . Anice on.e. Cover for body.

2Dr. H.T., V.8, console automatic shift, p.·st .• p.·br .. very

'1695

mce.

8.1s.flc
Everything is made available from store
fixtures, display material and . Catalogs to
your training with capable and trained
assistance. You will retain a favorable per ·
centag e of the profits.

The Station
'.l'hat Listens

Write toda y, giving your name, address and
t e le phone
number
with
complete
qualifications to :
Agency Development Department, 4-1

To You

WMP0/1390

Montgomery Ward &amp; Company, Inc .
100 South Monroe Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21232

OPEN· UNTIL 8:00P.M. each evening

except Saturday &amp; Sunday.
See Emerson Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallace .,Amberger, Dick Rawlings.

R·A w· Ll.NGS

Po~eroy.

Motor Co.

Your Chevy Dealer
992-2126 ·
Open Eves r~ 8

.

4

DEP£NDAB,L£ CITY

'

'

••

I

back·UP lights

oil filter
heavy duty shock absorbers

eir conditioner
calibrated spe edom eter end
police package options and
transferring radio , sire n ,
flashing signals, f ire ex .
tingu i shers and protec ti ve
shield from present car to new
cer.
2. For sale by the Village of
Pomeroy Its 1971 Chevrole t four
door a cylinder sedan without
radio. equipment, f ire ex .
t!nOU tSher , Siren , f la Shing
a.1ona1s and protective shle,ld,
Th~ b idder may state ei ther
what he wl\1 give for the 19 71
C~evrolet or what amount he
Wtll allow as a trade -In for ·the
new police cruiser descri b ~ d
above .
,
. Each bidder may bid fo r
etther the purchese of th e 1971
Chevrolet or for the sa le to t he
VIllage of Pomeroy of a new
pol ice cr uiser descri bed above
or both . Each bid must conta in
the full name Qf every person or
comP.any Interested in the
same, and the bid must be
accompan ied bV a check or
bond in the sum of SIOO.DO to the
satlsf~ctlon of the V j ltag e
Council as a guaranty that If the
bid Is accepted, contra ~t will be
entered Into and 1fs per .
formance property secured .
These checks or bonds will be
returned at once to all excelJt
the successful b idd er . Hi s
checks or bond wilt be hel d unt il
the contr ac t or bid is properly
ex_!cutied by him.
The right is re se rved to r ejec t
any and all bids .
Jane Watton, Clerk
V~~LAGE
OF POMERO Y
121 10

•:

.,

directional sig nal s
spot light on left hand side
heater and defroster

the centerline of 124 ; th,nce
west 165 teet to the po int of
t:teginnlng, crossing a stake at
11.2 feet · for reference, con .
telnlng 10,890 square feet , or
lUS acre, more or leS$, ex ·
Cftptlng all tegal rights of way .
r Parcel No.2: Situate In Olive
township , Meigs County , State
Qf Ohio and being in Lot 104,
· s·ectlon 3 and 9, Town 4 North,
Range 11 West of · the Otllo
Company's purchase and !Jelng
descrlbtd ·-follows : Btglnn lng ·
It a point South 2 degrtrts OO'
e:aat 66 fett from the southwest
&lt;!Orner of a lot owned by John R,
Waters adloinlng the VI liege of
Qeeds~llle , said point of
beginning being marked by a
~take and being tht southwest
Ciorner of the Church Lot above
described · thence south 2
4eoree5 do'• east 74 feet to I
!I lake · thence east '165 feet 10 the
~enter nne of Route 12A, crossing
i stake at l.t3 .8 teet· for
•eference ; thenc.e north 2
4egrees 00.' west 66 feet along
tile centerline of Route 12.4 ;
ltlence wtst 165 fttt to the point
6f beginning. containing 10,890
~uare feet oro 25'ecre, more or
t~ss , excepting 8111egal rights of
way.
t. ~eid
petition wilt be for
tlearlng on the 2•th day of
·"tbruary, 1972 , at the Common
.:leas Courtroom at Pomeroy ,
#1o
•
t ·
Edwerd Blake
~~
Darla Hoffman , Sr .
tj
. Ben Bucktty
'•
Charles Henstev
Harold Brannon
l'il 27 , 13 1 3, 10, 17, AI

I•

I

live black tir es
fo•m rubber front seat

of . Stote Route 124
erosslng a1take at 143.8 feet for
""terence ; then ¢• North 7
~egreos OO' west 66 feet atong

t·

~----------___j ..._...
992-·2151 OR 992-2152 MIDDLEPORT

I

•
NO MATTER HOW MUCH YOU ADVERTISE,
THERE ARE ALWAYS A FEW YOU WON'T REACH
•

But di~ .'fou ever stop to realize what would happen if you
didn't advertise at all? Newspaper advertising creates buyer

the office of th~ Village Clerk.
Pomeroy , Oh io, until 12 o'c lo ck a 1 on g with the name
noon on February 21 , 1972, on " 'orange water' - for that
any of the following proposa l s. is what they are."
1. For· the purchas e by the
Vlll•ge of Pomeroy ol a new A spok~sman at the Food
1972 tour door f ive passenger and Drug Administration

and spri~gs on front and rear
positive traction rear axle
automatic tran sm iss ion
eight cylinder motor
vinyl upholstery

~nterline

2 Dr. H.T., V.8, torquefllte. p..st., 11.000 miles. ,

'h Ton Pickup, slant six, 3 speed, low mileage.

11

interest, builds store traffic and produces buyers.
No matter what size your business, you too can profit from

Porctl No. t : Sltuoteln Olive sedan with the followin g addod said they're interesting
ideas , and he wished he'd
heard them earlier. The
FDA proposals were an-

y:i lle ; said point of beginning
~elng marked by a stake and
lng 2 teet south of the present
eed fence line ; thence south 2
grees 00' east 66 feet to a

New ring iob, clean Interior, good tires, radio, heater.

1969 Podge D1QO ........ •1895

0 \

~

~joining the Village of Reeds -

327 engine, 4 speed trans., clean interior &amp; good tires.
Med . grn. finish. Nice.

Cu'stom 4 door, 318 V·8, air cond ., p.. st., p.·br., 24,000
miles.

whichever he likes) - not
less than 10 per cent.
Orange-flavored drinknot Jess than 2 per cent.
.
It would seem to be a considerable advance for the
ct on stuhmed~'ffwho coubldtwat least
e
e 1 erence e een a
~ per cent beverage ~nd one
that s 70. per cent J u I c e,
under th.IS .a ~~~?gement.
' CommlS~IO'ne~. 'My e·r:~{IR, .
however , says these gener·
ic names are, in fact, mis·
nomers. It is absurd to allow
the two wo~ds 'orange juice'
to be used m the name of a
produ~t that couj~ be alm.o8t
two-thirds water - referrmg
to "orange juice drink," 35
per cent genuine juice re·
quired.
As for the most wide!
sold type of orange drink_:
which ·would be 1 a b e 1 e d
" orange drink" under the
new standards - the com·
missioner insists it's not
very orangey when it's "allowed to contain as litue as
10 per cent orange juice.
That means up to 90 per cent
of it could be water sugar
citric acid, gum arabic pre:
servatives or other ~hem·
0 range JWCe rm - no icals! ,,
hurch, being the successors
d Interest to Marion less than 35J?er cent.
·
.
.
olemon , J, D. Ratrden , Wesley
Orange drmk, or orange·
Her c~~nterprop~sal ,IS to
.0S~~~~ka~~~~~~u~~:i~f~~~ ade (the maker can call it label as orang~ .dllute any
·· ·
beverage contammg 50 to 99
rsonage property in Reeds·
ille Circuit of the Unlled
per cent juice, and drinks
ethodlst Church, have flted
LEGAL NOTICE
containing 49 to 5 per cent
eir pelltlc)n In the common
Sealed bids will be re ce ived In J·uice w 0 0 l·d have to get

the southwest corner of a tot
tlvned bV John R. waters,

1967 Chevelle Malibu HT Cpe.-;$1395

1971 Dodge Swinger ... •2695

By CARLTON SMITH
.
·,
The quality of llfe.m derdog consumer, S~es
America must be impro~mg charged the FDA With rewhen people who get mtc warding manufacturers and
arguments begin slinging. processors who p a l m off
.not mud, but orange juice. · chemicals and water as
A former Miss. ·America orange juice drinks." Thde
h
d
d f t bed reference 1s to content an
~: F~:'anttr~n Ad~kis. labeling standards which the
••ation a juicy bfow in the FDA has proposed, and
"ye over ..the,
· Ice . waicl) Commissi~ner Myer·
r~!t goes-=Vr"Jif~JI.Dslre .*sott'~llyS""ill'e a !Issue of ab"
j;'mplains - In t -o orange surdities.
beverages. People at the
The casus be l! i in the
fDA say· they're g 1 ad to great ·orange juice war is
bear trom her. People who the label on th~ ,bottle, or
ink orange beverages may can. At present 1t s unregu.
onclude the whole thing's lated. Anyone can run u~ a
nough to drive one to drmk. batch ol bev.e rage by adding
.
flavoring, sweeteners and a
Bess.Myerson,, a wmner at few drops of orange juice to
e Miss Amenca pageant the w a t e r , and call it
orne Y e !Irs b,ack, is n~w " or an g e ad e," "orange
ayor Lindsay s Comm.ts- drink," or anything else he
~loner of Cona~er Affall's likes.
.
New York Ctty, and B
Regulations proposed severce cham ion of the un· era! months ago by the FDA
lEGAL NOTICE
w o u I d set · standards o!
.i
or'!-nge-jul~e content - re;
NOTICE
qumng drmks to be labeled
K Notice ls hereby g lven tha t
dward Bloke, R. o ., Reeds. as f oJl ~ws\ s~ys a consumer
111e, Ohio ; Dana Hottmon , Sr.. spec1ahst m the agency:
. D., Reedsville, Ohio ; Ben
Blended orange drmk- not
uckley, Reedsville, Oh io, os le~s than 70 per cent pure
~"."J:~l~~: ~~e~~~~r~~~~~d:~; Jutce.
. . d . k
t

l
~

spotless interior.

Custom Wagon, air cond., torquefllte, p.. st., p .. br.: less
.!han 5,000 miles.
.

I

Great
.~ Orange Juice .W ar

ownshlp, Meigs County, State equ ipment.
f Ohio end being In Lot 104,
AOO cubtc inch engine
!ectlons 3 and 9, Town .4 North ,
2 speed electric windshield
ange 11 West of the Dh lo wipers
ompanv's Purchase and being
windsh ie ld wa sher
escrlbed as follows : Beginn ing
power steering

conditioned, good w~ w tires, radio, dark green finish with

1971 D~ge Coronet .... •3595

attendance durin~ the silver
dollar "lock·up,' Commis! ioner Kinsey noted that
since the first announcement of the proposed release of these coins last
y e a r, countless inquiries
have been received by the
GSA, indicating that the
average citizen has joined
with the coin collectors in
eagerly awaiting the day
when they are made avail·
able to the public.
Ariyone who has followed
this story from the day the
Carson City dollars were discovered to · their commitmeryt to the depqsitory, rec·
ogmzes how aware the Ceneral Services Administration
is of the problems involved
in releasing so large a .quantity of coins under such un·
usual circumstances.
Note: Pari · II of Carson
City Silver Dollars will list
the dates and quantity of
each being held in the de·
pository and describe the
manner in which they will
be sold on a first-come, first.
served basts.

The

lees Court alleging that the
!lowing descr ibed real estate
no longer needed for church
rposes and question author ity
tO sell said real estate , which
j:aid real r~ol estote Is
(t'scribec;t as follows , to -wit :

1970 Dodge Polara _____:___ !2395

v.s engine ,

ab.le. for display , and con.
lamm~ a brie! synopsis of
the history of..,the Carson
City silver dollars. About
91,000 coins, some slightly
ctrculated and some from
other . mints and of other
dates, will also he sold.
It took almost all of No·
vember to transfer the 2.9
million coins in seven semi·
trailer trucks under heavy
armed guard from Washington to the ·Silver Bullion De·
pository at West Point. Each
truck was insured for $15
million, and together · they
contained 3,000 bags of the
Carson 'City dollars.
"The numismatic value of
these coins is slaggering,"
remarked Kinsey, "with an
estimated average value of
t h i i' t y times their . face
value." To a collector, they
are valued even more for
the link they ·provide with
history. They were struck
at the short-lived, troubled
Carson City, Nev., Mint in
the turbulent last three dec·
ades of the 1800s.
In his remarks to those in

~

.

$5.55

basement, 2 lots, new forced ALLSIDE Builders &amp; Con ·
struction Co. We specialize in
Elementary SchooL Phone
alum inum, vinyl and steel
99-2·7384 to see.
siding ; fiberglas, brick and
stone ; complete line of

electric

,

~&lt;rnold brate

742-421t

cc

PERSONAL .FINANCE

Automatics
2 speed operation.
Choice of water
temps.
Auto.
water
levtl
control. · Linl ,
Filter or' Power
Fin Agitator . ,.
.
F"e'rmi: Pr"en

Make reservations for your
private parties, banquets,
specia l occasions.
Ideal for meeting ' place with or withOut kitchen

air furnace. Near Pomeroy .

3 BEDkOOM ranch type home,
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
Plains. All new with total

:estimated collectors' · value
;or higher. If orders exceed
the inventory in a P.articular
category, coins will be de·
livered to the highest bidder.
The,• coins, mostly uncir·
culated, were minted at the
now closed Carson C i t y,
Nev., mint between 1878 to
1885, 1890 and 1891. Each
coin is to be placed in a
handsome plastic case . suit·

Big C:opocily
Moyth

Orchid Room

L. TEAFORD,
ASSOC.
9!7-2378

Montgomery Ward is looking for Sales Agents .
Husband-Wife te am on a full -time basis.
Experienced in Sales and Manageme nt. •

2·16-Jtc

ON YOUR DIAL

repa~~~E

'

Moytog
Holoof Hoot

1970 Dodge Coronef.. :.•2695

5345 .

5443.

Glass. Small home repairs .
screens . storm windows

HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone TRIM trees : clean out a1tlcs,
965·3529.

,c

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiafor to the
.Smallesf Heater Core.
Nafhan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

The

sa le.

992.3325

We specialize in auto glass ·

on the spot installation.
Mirrors . Table Tops . Piate

t

We are now takmg listings
for the spring rush . Would
you like to put your property
on our li st . No charge, If no

HELEN

CALL
HILTON WOLFE, 949-3211
DALE DUTTON, 992·2534

ALL KINOS OF
GLASS
For Every Purpose

"

.

Available.

Large Established Company
Century Old Catalog Business

limestone. E xce l sior
SHOOT IN G Malch, Sat.urday, COAL.
Sa
It
Works,
E. Ma in St..
Feb. 19, at the Racine Plan ing
Pomeroy . Phone 992-389 1.
Mill at 6 p.m. Factory choke
4-9·1fC

Fire Depl.

992-6048.

or used mobile home, try

I HAVE cash buyers for homes
and farms. John White Really

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

-~~----

guns only . Assorted meat .
Sponsored by the Syracuse

- - - - -- -

gray wi th matching interior,
good conditi on, $450 . Phone

;Xmsey of the Propertf Man:'llgement and Disposa Servjlce satd a program is being
, worked out that will give
;every American citizen a fair
' chapce, to obtain at least one
:of these rare silver dollars.
1
The dollars will be sold at
' their numismatic value as
: prdered by the Congress 'and
I persons desirin$ a coin: will
f·b e required to bid it in at the

1966 Volkswagen Sq. Back Sedan $1095

phone 247-2161.

116-3lc

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy ·

'

I

. We are fully insured.

· POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

~

1;. ,Commissioner Dougl~s K.

BILL NELSON, 992.J657
TOM CROW, 997-7580

992-5803 - 742·3947
992-3898 -742.4761

2-13·61 c

velopes? Rush self.stamped
envelope lo F. Uribe, Box J6, AFG,HANS - $50 &amp; $45 : Quilts
Albany, Ohio, 45710.
ISO ; Qu ilt tops - $15 ; phone
· J.6.ffc -991-1686.
1·11 ·10tp
1 WILL NOT be responsible fo,
any deb t s co n t ra cted by
anyone other th an myself. DOUBLE barrel1 2gauge, set of
ca ttle r acks for Ford pickup,
Signed: James A. Fullz .
man's 21 jewel Bulova watch,
1·16·31p

Feb . 20. 12 noon.

double back patio. Phone 881·
2993.
2·11·6fp

with fireplace . 2 barns. small
pond. Mineral s.
We Have 2 Businesses and 3
Bu s i tless
Locations

1·11 -6tc
phone 992-6048 ..

garage, breeze·way, attached
slorage space •. front porch &amp;

'.

·

engine. Phone 992-2967 after 5

is
paneled,
carpeted p.m.
bedrooms, living room, hall. _ __ _ _____
2·_15·31c
Two balhs, kitchen, dining
r.-om. full basement, double '64VOLKSWAGEN, 2 dr. sedan ,

..

percentage rate.

service.

cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992·

bedroom bri ck house. House

heat . Full base ment, den

HOUSE trusses made to your
speci f icat io ns . Phone

- - -- AUTOMOBILE Insurance been

util i l y room and cold room :
sma ll ouf · build .ings . Why buy new furni ture? Have

Mod ern 3 bedroom home,
bath, nice kitchen, forced air

new G 70 15" Goodyear tire;
phone 992-5510.
2·11 -51c

sick TV to Chuck 's TV shop,
151 Butternut Ave ., Pome roy .

Beaut if ul

Phone 949-4892 or 992-5272.
1.JO.tfc

·mon lh. Please call 991·5113 FLOO R
for any inform ation, Brown 's.

setup .

bcation . OWner leaving state.

1-17 -31c

Great : over 10 spec ials th is

need . Complete roof or
spouting repair. Interior or
exterior carpentry . Ceiling

. ··

Tile General Service Ad·
. minlst.i'ation has outlined
: plana .to sell 2.9 million Car.
': · son City _silver dollars dating
r· back to 1878. All are collecJ· tors' items.
'
, As a first step, the coins
1 were tral)Sferreq recently by
1 armored ·car &lt;!rom the U.S.
, Treasury in Washington
'1 D,C.
to the Silver Bullion
Depository in West Point
N.Y., where the process of
\ sorting and packaging will
: take place prior to public
1 sale. GSA officials estimate
-,.the first of these coins will be
j~~~. ~~ (he first quarter of

FOURNEY( HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PC'i'. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedrool)l $16,900.00 hol)'1e con be purchased with a
mont~ly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary ot $5,000.00 and three children. 7~. P~t. annual

(. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
tile .and Paneling and Siding.
Complete Service
Complete
Plumbing
&amp;
Phone 949·3821
Heating.
Racine, Ohio
' Day Number 992-2sso
Crltt Bradford
We
have 24 hr. emergency
5. J.1fc

Cleland
Realty

in

Pearl
Jordan
Fischer ,
Executrix of the Estate of Dan
C. Fischer, deceased, late of 612
Randolph Stre et. Charl eston ,
West Virg inia , filed in this co urt
FURNI SHED and unfurnished under Docket L No . 19 1 an
apartments . Close to school . authenti cated co p y of letters of
21711p
adm inistration iss ued to her by
Phone 992·5434.
the County Court of Kanawha
10-18.tfc County , West VIrginia. No tice is
given that all creditors
~L-:O::T::S-:-:10~0-x---:18:0--a_n_d,--,.33;.. ~x 90; offurther
sa id estate who desire to
GUN' SHOOT, Sunday , Feb. 20, 1 Wareho uses 32 x 75, 25 x 50, assert
their liens on the real
p. m. Factory choked guns
and 23 x 48. Call 991-7178. to estate Of said decedent located
on ly . Second place shooters • lease any or all of above at610 In th is state shall present their
cl aim s, duly sworn to, to th is
ge t free shot in next match.
E. Main St.
court within six mon ths after
Assor ted meats. Racine Gun
2·16·61C the filing of StiiQ letters in thi s
Club .
,
-court, or their said lien s sh'att
2.J7.31c 1 .BEpROOM mobile home I · ~Iorev,
er be deemed barred and

. SQUARE dan ce e•ery Saturday

Reasonable

thai old made new by Sylvia's
$1D.950.00 ..
Uph ols ler ing Shop, Mrs .
REAL ESTATE IS
oodrow T. Zwilling, Prop.,
W
CLIMBING DAILY
2·16.6tc POMEROY
- Jl!, story frame, Syracuse, Ohio.
2·10·301p
6 rooms, 3 bedrooms with
TROPICAL FISH , fancy
c losets , bath, ca binets in
guppies, angel.$. and breeders,
kitchen, porches, base ment, Auto Sales
Bellas and supplies. Phone
CLOSE IN . $6,500.00.
991·5443.
1963 CHEVROLET Impala,
WHY CLIMB STAIRS
J2.30·1fc POMEROY - 1 story frame, 2 automatic transmission, air
bedrooms. balh, basement, conditioned , power steering,
IN EXCELLENT CON . ·good fires, $395. Phone 992.
DITION, large lot. $7,900.00. 2718.
LEGAL NOTICE
2·16·3fc
WE HAVE BUI'ERS, SO CALL
IN THE COMMON
~2fi~~ND'S FOR FAST 1970 CORVET 454 4·speed
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
DEXTER - Lot 150 x 100, barn, converllble. Good condition.
PROBATE OtVtStON
large slorage building, 2 slory Phone 675·3340.
2·1Htc
home, 4 bedrooms, bath ,
tN THE MATTER OF THE
glassed
in
side
porch,
front
ESTATE
OF
DAN
C.
FISCHER,
.
porch, fUel -oil forced 'air heat 1963 FORD 1h- ton , 6-cylinder,
DE CEASE D
JUST $8,900.00
' long bed, 6·ply tires, radio.
No. 20625
HENRY CLELAND,
Phone 741·3223.
NOTICE
2·15·31c
REALTOR
TO WHOM tT MAY CO N.
2·16.6tc
CE RN :
'57 CHEVY 'I• ton pickup, ex·
Notice IS hereby given that on
NEW
HAVEN
_
Modern
.
the 7th day of February 1972,
3 cellenfcondition . Almost new

p.m . to 1: 30 a.m ., Monday
lhru Friday in Middl eport.
Phone 992·2012 before 1 p.m.

my

gua.ranteed .

$27 cash or budget plan
ava ilable. Phone 991-5641.

A. B.C.

hu sband dur ing hi s lo ng

Call

Real Estate For Sale

damage in shipping. Will take

a .tfc

BABYSITTER in

• inter .

We have a complete Home

elec· Maintfmance Servlc~ the year
·work around. No matter what your

Don VanMeter 985·3951.
rates. Phone 992·3213.
2·16·12tp _ _ _ _ _ __ _ 7·::.
27·HC

model. Complete with all
cleaning tool s. Small pai nt

Cleane r s, Ma son, W. Va .

Rev . Zavi lz for his consoling
words, the comforting prayer
of Malar Glenna Rummel, to
Anna May Terr ell far her
faith ful ness and loving care
she Qdve Mr . Cunningham
and to my Lord who ga ve me

Still

Wheels balanced
Ironically .
All

OFF ICE 992·2259 TILL 4:00
2966.
--'1
· 6-15-lfc
EVENINGS&amp;
slitch. Full cash price, 138.50
SUNDAYS 992·2568
..
.
or budget plan available .
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
BABY
FARM-6
ACRES
Phone 992·5641.
~ 1 slory REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
1·1Hic HARRISONVILLE
4782, Gallipolis. John Russe ll;
frame, 5 rooms , bath , ni ce
Owner &amp; Operator ,
kit
chen,
COMPLETELY
VACU UM cleaner new 1971
5·J2.tfc
RENOVATED, garag e

and manage r out e. Pick -u p

and

machines.

f

lnlerior and exterior.

tac hmenfs needed as our
controls are bu ilt in . Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew on· buttons,
monogra ms, and blind hem

RESPONSIBLE person to work

thanks lo the Ewing Chapel
and a special lhanks to the

care for

sewi ng

Ph. 614-992·2156

our hu sband and fa ther. Also

2·16·61c

EXPERIENCED

240 Lincoln St.
Middlepor,f, Ohio
Dba A~thony Plumbing

tune up and brake service .

Emoloyment Wanted

original cartons. No at.

HARTFORD
The Daily Sentinel

Wf. WISH lo lhank our neigh.

&amp;CONSTRUCTION &amp;1
PLUMBING CO.

O' DELL WHEEL allghmenf
loco ted at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
1·16·6fp
Complete fronf end service,

wooden . Call 992·9972.

PAINT DAMAGE . 1971 Zig.zag

and

Card of Thanks

to

Call 992-7085.

MASON

Saturday .

MODERN

Walnu t Ste reo .radio com ·
bina tion, 4 speaker sound
sys tem, 4 speed i::hanger,
separate con trols. Balance
$68 .56. Use our .budget terms .

Box R, c-o The Dally Sentinel ,

secutiv e insertions.

stre ngth

BEA UTI F UL

bookkeeping . Pl easing per ·
sonality. Refe rences. Write to

18 cents per word six con-

AU WEATHER ROOFING

bina tion, 4 speed changer , 4 --:--::-_ _ _ __:.:..:;~
speaker
sound system. GOOD used chairs, prefer

RATES

consecutive in sert ion !&gt;.

.B·u siness Services

------

V. F . W. Gun shoot , noon, Sun day, Feb. 20, Broad Run Gun
Cl ub, New Haven, sponsored
by Post 9926, Mason, W. Va .

right to edit or· re ject any ads

Business Services

Wanted To Buy

MIXED hay. Virgil Windon, BOAR hog, 100 to 150 lbs. HARRI SON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992-2521.
phone 985-3846.
Phone 247·2161.
·
6·10.Ifc
2·16.Jtp
2- J3.6Jc
HOUSE &amp; building lots on OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak READY·MIX COKCRETE de·
livered right to your project.
Wr ight Street In Pomeroy .
fables, Brass beds, dishes,
Fast
, and
easy . Free
Phone 741·5937 : ·
clocks, and ·or complete
••timates. Phone 992·3284.
1·16-6\c households. Write M. D.
Goeglein Re•dy ·Mix Co.,
--------Miller, RL 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Middleport, Ohio.
COLONIAL Early American Call 99H271.
..
6.JO.ftc.
Slereo, AM·FM radio com ·
-· -~·JI. tfc

SE RVI C ~ .

comp lete select ion of fabrics
and vinyl to c hoose from . Pi ck
up and d el iver y . S lat e r
Upholstering, Rt . 3, Pomeroy,

Publication

'

For Sale

Carson City
·:Silver Dollars
,I. ---Part I

'

' 21

regular advertising. ·---------------------- So you don't

nounced several months ago

and the public's comments
'invited, with a Dec . 8 (last
) d dl '

reach everyone ... think of the ones you will.

year ea me.
The whole trouble see!JlS

to be that the wrong ~eople

are proposing names or the

labels. Who'd want to drink
-anything called " orange dilute? " Let the bartenders
think up the names, "Orange ·

blossom'' and "screwdriver"
- now. there are names that
sell &lt;,&gt;range juice!

CALL 992-2156

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT

FOR INFORMATION

The State of Ohio, Melu
County . Probate Court.
To the E&gt;&lt;ecutor of the estate;
to such of the following a$ are
re si dents of the State of Ohio,
viZ : - th e surviving spouse, the ,
next of kin, th e beneficiar ies
und er the will; and to the at to rn ey
or
attorn ey s
the
rep r esenting an v. of
aforementioned persons :
Mary H . Heines, Deceesed,
Pome roy , Ohio, Sal isbury
Town ship, No, 20606.
You are hereby notified that
t.h e
Inventory
and
Ap ·
praisement Of the estate of th e
aforementioned , -deceased , late
of Sllid County , wa s fi led in this
Co url . Sai d inventory and
Appraisement •will be tor
hear ing before th is Court on the
6th day of March, 1972, at 10 :00
o'clock A .M .
1
Any perso n des iring to file.
exceptions there to must file
them at least five days prior to
the da'te set for he~trlng . .
Given under my hand and
seal of sai d Court , this ' lAth day
of February 1972.
John C. Bacon
Judge and e1 ·0fficio Clerk
ot said Court

ON AN ADVERTISING
PROGRAM TAILOR ED
TO YOUR NEEDS.

The Daily Sentinel

By Ani) B. Watson

121 11. 7•', 21

Oeputy Clerk

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r l ,. ( I f I # ( I (

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15- Tile Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Punaoy, 0., Feb. 17!1912
14 - The Daily Senlinel,.Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 17, 1m

.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get·Results!
WM!T ADS
Notice
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
P.M.
Day
Belore UPHOLSTE RING

5

Monday DeadllnQ 9 a.m.

Can cellat ion &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m . for

Day of Publication ,

phon e 992-3617.

-

REGULATIONS .
The Publ isher reserves the
deemed ob jeclional. The
publ is her
will
not
be
responsi bl e for more tha n one
N'lcorrect inserlion.

2·3·30tp

2·16·31p

Balance $79.32 . Use our
budget ter ms. Call 99n085.
2·16·61c

For Want Ad Service

5 cen-ts per Word one· insertion Help Wanted
Minimum Cha rge 75c
OFF ICE GIRL receptionist.
12 cents per word three
ty p ing, report s, li mited

25 Per Cent Di sc ount on paid
- ads and ads paid within 10

Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio.

2-17-3tc

days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$1.50 tor 50 word m inimum .
Each additional word 2c .

WANTED!

Additiona l 25c Charge pe r
Advertise ment.

Carriers For

BLIND ADS

:&gt;FFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. lo 5:00p.m . D• ily ,
8: 30 a.m. to 12 :00 Noo n

bars and many fri ends for fhe
fl owers, food and all who sent
cards wi th lov ing express ions
of sym pathy after the loss of

deli•ery .

my

Illness . Feb . 10 Jesus took him
home to a place ca lled
Heaven, where there wi ll be
no more sickness or dea th .
Not even an unkind word will
ever be spoken there and
when my journey here is aver,
I' ll mee t him ther e.

home 1:30
1·1Htc

For Rent or Sale
3-BEDROOM Vindale mobile
home, 11h baths, situated on
choice rental lot ; call after 6
· p.m . weekdays or any time on

weekend 992.5570, Herman
Bolinger.
2·16·61p

Mrs. Harley Cunn ingham
Mrs. Marcella Barte ls
nntp

THE FAMILY of Ernest Bahr
would like lo lhank the stall at
Holzer Hospital, Ewing 's
Funeral Home, Rev . Lehman
and our friends and neighbors
.for their thoughtfulness and
kindness during our recent
bereavement.

For Rent
I

BEDROOM frailer · apart·
ments, id ea l for couples.

Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992.5248 or 992·3436.
2·3·121c

Notice

night 8:30 to 12 noon at the
Legi on Ha l l a t Ru tlan d.
Sponsored by the Amer ic an ,
Leg ion.

Racine area . Phone 9921329.' 'allnceted . • ...,.,. . t .. J: ·., .:~ ..::1
"
, John c . Bacon
.
~~~tk
ACTING PROBATE JUDGE
121 10. 17, 24, Jt

Female Help Wanted

A Lu zier Cosm etics and
NOTICE OF
2·17·21p BEWigs
APPOINTMENT
Consultant in your spare
No. l0,,06
STILL target shoot. Sunday, time . No territory restri c- E state Of MARYCase
H . HEINE S,
tions.
Highest
commissions.
Feb. 20, 1 p. m. All hand
Deceased.
·
Phone 773-5480.
choked gun s will be han Noti ce is hereby giv en that
2.11
.6tc
dicapped . Rutland Gun Club
Eva L. Robson . of Pomeroy ,
. Ohio , has been duly appointed
on New Lima Rd.
1·11·3fc

GUN SHOOT. Sunday, Feb. 20, 1
p. m. Mile Hill Road . 20 lb.
steak , hams, bacons. span·
sored by Racine Fire Dept .

2·17.31c

THE

MEIGS

Cou nty
Fox hunter s will hold a one
da y fie ld tri al. Monday, Feb.
11 on Sno w Ba ll HilL The
hounds will be cast at 7 a.m .
Her schel Roush is president .

2·15·3fc

- - - · --

INSTRUCTION in organ and

pian o, Gera ld Hoffn er , ~hon e

992·3825.

1·8-11tc

------

KOSCOT KOS METI CS . The y'r e

Exec utrix of the Estete of Mary
H . Heines, dece ased, late of
igs County , Ohio.
RUMMAGE and ya rd sale , MeCred
are required to file
Fri day and Saturday , 341 the ir claitors
ims with said fiduc iary
Park St., Middleport, 9 a. m. within fou r months .
to 6 p. m . Over 1000 it ems for
Dated this 31st day of January
sal e.
1972 .
John C. Ba con
2-17-2tc
Judge
Court
of
Common
Pl
eas .
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pel Shop,
Pro
bat
e
Division
Ches ter, Ohio. Phone 985-3356.
121 3, 10, 17 , Jt
Tropica l fi sh 15 cents and up

For Sale

through Sunday, Feb. 20th.
2·17 ·31p

Mobile Homes For Sale

HOLSTE IN cow, with 2 day old -60X12, 2·bedroom , a ll·elec.tric,
air conditioned, 8x20 ft. Porch
and
alu minum
awning,
aluminum skirting , co m .

ca lf. 3 Hereford cows to
soon,
seve ral
fres hen
year! ings and 2 year old
Hereford heifers . Phone 985·

3805.

pletely

2·8·1fc

- - - -- - -

ABOUT YOU k WE ll&gt;h,

...

overweighi' ladies, teens and
men interested in a We ight

Watche r s

I R)

Pomeroy

w r i t e:

Cla ss

in

Weight

Wotchers I R), 1663 Sect ion
Rd ., Cincinnati , Ohio 45237 .

·

SAVE up to one

10·3·1fc

h~ lf .

Br ing your

fur nace; 2 wheels for
G.M . ve hi cle; electric heater ;

1217.

11 ·2J .tfc

- - -. '

WANT WOR" at nome ad·
dr essi ng and st uffing en -

99~ ·

12' • 14' • 24' - WiDE

"Fo=R"D""T""r-ac_,t-or- ,73-ne-w-eli~r.-s-,new
pain t , good conditi on - $650 ;

MILLER

2·1Htc

MOBILE HOMES

ALLI S CHALMERS tracto r
with disk , plow, c ulti 11a tor,
sick l e ba r'; electr i c gui tar
with amplifi er . b fta t clari net
wi th case. Phone 992-3278.

1770 Washington Blvd.
Be Ipre, Ohio

GUN SHOOT, also rifle matches

2-1J.61c

- open sites onl y, Fork ed
· Run Sport sman Club, Sunday,

RCA 21" television , console.
good cond ition . Phon e 992 -

2·16·31c

Now's Time To

ORDER
-.:IELD SEEDS
FERTILIZER
SEED CORN
Order Now &amp; Save t

2-13-ltc

FOR T.HE BEST deal In a new
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,

Kanauga, Ohio.

Co., Athens, Oh io now serving

J2. J7.90tc

lhe Tri.County Area . Call.

Vera
Eblen,
Associate '
. ~ealtor , 99~-3029: ,~, .... _
• " ,.
.. . ..,, ' ' 2' 1'f6tc; '
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VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD, SR.

·1

Rtal

For Sale

r~tate

,..,;
51 X ROOM house, 133 Butfernut
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
Ohio, phone 23/.4334.
11 ·2 J.tfc
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Broker

4 BEDROOM, bath . &amp; halt.
110 Mechanic Sf.
ulility room, bulll·in kitchen,
Pomeroy, 0. , 45769
wall to wall carpet &amp; garage.
Located ~' mile north of
2 APARTMENTS
Eastern High Schoof. House is
11 ROOMS-5 with bath, up,
almost finished and others
6 wi th bath, down . Large
being built. Call 985·3598.
porch . 2 lots in Middleport.
1·21 ·301c
Nea r stores.
-nulJ~I:
.. -. • .......L Ln1 ... um Heights.
79ACRES
Call
Danny
Thompson, 992·
FREE GAS- With oil in.
2196.
come, 6 room house, bath, 3
7·18·lfc
bedroom s, barn, garden,
young fru it .

7ACRES
On Rt. 7 · 33. All utilities
avai lable. Asking S1500.00.
LETART
5 room house. Side porch.
sma ll basement. Large lot on

336. $5,500.00.
35 ACRES

For Housing development.
Chester waler. 2 electric
compan ies availabl e.

46 ACRES

..~

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OFFICE SU~PLIES
and

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
'FI_o or Display.

'-::=========;
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OOLONIAL
AUTO BODY
537 High St.
Middleport, Ohio
Complete body repairs
and paintings, glass
installation,
free
loaner
cars
and
estimates,
also
mechanical
repairs.
Phone 992-3793

ESTIMATE
Point Pleasant &amp; Mason
AUTO_GLA_ss
AI Conard, Mgr.
Phone 304·773.5710
Route 33
Mason, W. Va .

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph.99.H l74

SIGNS, posters, mail boxes and
favorite saying; hand let.
tered; In your favorite style.
David Hooker, Rt. 2, Albany,
Ohio 45710 ( Pagetownl.
2·6·301c
BACKHOE AND DIJZER work. SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Milter
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Sepfic tanks Installed. George
661·3035.
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·2478.
2·12·11&lt;
4·25·tfc

1·28·11c

--

NILt: :t:· Slv1 'I nomt! wrrn full

priv ileges.
Ind ividual Catering
Will seat up fo 150 people.

~n97s· ~.?!);~;992:5786

Dryers
Surround ciolhel · ·
'With gentle, even
heat. No hot spots,
., o overdrylng .
·Fine ~tlh Lint

Fitter.

· We llttdatluln

MAYTAG
Rod corpot
Servlct

.RUTLANOJURNJJIJRE ,,., oc:
'),

and

central

ai r

conditioning, bafh and ' ti fully
carpeted , full basement ;
garage In base ment. See by

appointment, phone 992·2196
or 992·3585. Danny Thompson
Financing available.

·

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,\.; , 'te)V)

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Rufl&amp;:nd, 0

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

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-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

GEORGY PORGY PRI
See how low our car prices will
go! That's the truth. Great buys
on early and late models. Top
performance guaranteed from
all. Come on in and drive out
smiling .

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto
Open STill
Monday thru S•turday
606 E. Main~ Pomeroy, 0 .

cellars, basemen t s, very
reasonable. Phone 949·3221 .

2·1Htc

-------

resldentlai and commercial
roofing ;
remod e l i ng ,
building, suspended ceilings,
interior and • ex1erior pain·
ting ; compl ete line of

Maso nry .work . All work
guaranteed to .customer
sa ti sfaction . We are fully
insured for your pro feet ion. 32

N. Second, ph. 99H 918.
1·15·30tc

12·30·1fc

1971 Volkswagen Sq. Back Sedan $2495
Local 1 owner, new ~.:ar trad ~ In, lJ,IJlN mlles, automatic
trans .• luggage rack, radio , chrome. wheel covers, blUe
color, blk . vinyl interior.

1970 Chevelle SS396 Cpe. ____ }2295
Green finish, blk. vinyl roof, green vinyl interior, new
wide oval t ires, 4 speed trans ., power steering, radio. A

sweethe•rt of a buy .

Factory air condition ing, V·B ~ngine, auto. trans ., P.S.,
P. B., good w-s·w tires. many more extras. A low price
now!

1969 Ch~. Impala Cpe. ----- '2095
automatic trans .• p. steering , factory air

This Franchise ctoes not require a large In ·
vestment . Program is designed to furnish
Agent with a rea dy market. pre-sold
c ustom e rs and immediate commissions.

~
ttoke ; thence eas1165feet to the

------

POODLE puppies, Si lver Toy,
Park view Kennels, Phon e 992-

Sharp black tlnlsh.
l

1967 Chevrolet Impala------· $1295 ·
2 Dr. H. T. Cpe. loc•l owner, sharp Interior, fact . air, good
W· W fires, radio &amp; healer, gold finish.

\

1967 Dodge Charger ... '1195

1964 Ford ,Galaxie 500-------·$395
H.T. Coupe, V·8 mofor, outo. trans., p. steering and
brokes.
'

1967 Chev. El Camino

v.s engine, auto. trans., p. steering, radio, good W· W
fires, red finish . Anice on.e. Cover for body.

2Dr. H.T., V.8, console automatic shift, p.·st .• p.·br .. very

'1695

mce.

8.1s.flc
Everything is made available from store
fixtures, display material and . Catalogs to
your training with capable and trained
assistance. You will retain a favorable per ·
centag e of the profits.

The Station
'.l'hat Listens

Write toda y, giving your name, address and
t e le phone
number
with
complete
qualifications to :
Agency Development Department, 4-1

To You

WMP0/1390

Montgomery Ward &amp; Company, Inc .
100 South Monroe Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21232

OPEN· UNTIL 8:00P.M. each evening

except Saturday &amp; Sunday.
See Emerson Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallace .,Amberger, Dick Rawlings.

R·A w· Ll.NGS

Po~eroy.

Motor Co.

Your Chevy Dealer
992-2126 ·
Open Eves r~ 8

.

4

DEP£NDAB,L£ CITY

'

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••

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back·UP lights

oil filter
heavy duty shock absorbers

eir conditioner
calibrated spe edom eter end
police package options and
transferring radio , sire n ,
flashing signals, f ire ex .
tingu i shers and protec ti ve
shield from present car to new
cer.
2. For sale by the Village of
Pomeroy Its 1971 Chevrole t four
door a cylinder sedan without
radio. equipment, f ire ex .
t!nOU tSher , Siren , f la Shing
a.1ona1s and protective shle,ld,
Th~ b idder may state ei ther
what he wl\1 give for the 19 71
C~evrolet or what amount he
Wtll allow as a trade -In for ·the
new police cruiser descri b ~ d
above .
,
. Each bidder may bid fo r
etther the purchese of th e 1971
Chevrolet or for the sa le to t he
VIllage of Pomeroy of a new
pol ice cr uiser descri bed above
or both . Each bid must conta in
the full name Qf every person or
comP.any Interested in the
same, and the bid must be
accompan ied bV a check or
bond in the sum of SIOO.DO to the
satlsf~ctlon of the V j ltag e
Council as a guaranty that If the
bid Is accepted, contra ~t will be
entered Into and 1fs per .
formance property secured .
These checks or bonds will be
returned at once to all excelJt
the successful b idd er . Hi s
checks or bond wilt be hel d unt il
the contr ac t or bid is properly
ex_!cutied by him.
The right is re se rved to r ejec t
any and all bids .
Jane Watton, Clerk
V~~LAGE
OF POMERO Y
121 10

•:

.,

directional sig nal s
spot light on left hand side
heater and defroster

the centerline of 124 ; th,nce
west 165 teet to the po int of
t:teginnlng, crossing a stake at
11.2 feet · for reference, con .
telnlng 10,890 square feet , or
lUS acre, more or leS$, ex ·
Cftptlng all tegal rights of way .
r Parcel No.2: Situate In Olive
township , Meigs County , State
Qf Ohio and being in Lot 104,
· s·ectlon 3 and 9, Town 4 North,
Range 11 West of · the Otllo
Company's purchase and !Jelng
descrlbtd ·-follows : Btglnn lng ·
It a point South 2 degrtrts OO'
e:aat 66 fett from the southwest
&lt;!Orner of a lot owned by John R,
Waters adloinlng the VI liege of
Qeeds~llle , said point of
beginning being marked by a
~take and being tht southwest
Ciorner of the Church Lot above
described · thence south 2
4eoree5 do'• east 74 feet to I
!I lake · thence east '165 feet 10 the
~enter nne of Route 12A, crossing
i stake at l.t3 .8 teet· for
•eference ; thenc.e north 2
4egrees 00.' west 66 feet along
tile centerline of Route 12.4 ;
ltlence wtst 165 fttt to the point
6f beginning. containing 10,890
~uare feet oro 25'ecre, more or
t~ss , excepting 8111egal rights of
way.
t. ~eid
petition wilt be for
tlearlng on the 2•th day of
·"tbruary, 1972 , at the Common
.:leas Courtroom at Pomeroy ,
#1o
•
t ·
Edwerd Blake
~~
Darla Hoffman , Sr .
tj
. Ben Bucktty
'•
Charles Henstev
Harold Brannon
l'il 27 , 13 1 3, 10, 17, AI

I•

I

live black tir es
fo•m rubber front seat

of . Stote Route 124
erosslng a1take at 143.8 feet for
""terence ; then ¢• North 7
~egreos OO' west 66 feet atong

t·

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992-·2151 OR 992-2152 MIDDLEPORT

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NO MATTER HOW MUCH YOU ADVERTISE,
THERE ARE ALWAYS A FEW YOU WON'T REACH
•

But di~ .'fou ever stop to realize what would happen if you
didn't advertise at all? Newspaper advertising creates buyer

the office of th~ Village Clerk.
Pomeroy , Oh io, until 12 o'c lo ck a 1 on g with the name
noon on February 21 , 1972, on " 'orange water' - for that
any of the following proposa l s. is what they are."
1. For· the purchas e by the
Vlll•ge of Pomeroy ol a new A spok~sman at the Food
1972 tour door f ive passenger and Drug Administration

and spri~gs on front and rear
positive traction rear axle
automatic tran sm iss ion
eight cylinder motor
vinyl upholstery

~nterline

2 Dr. H.T., V.8, torquefllte. p..st., 11.000 miles. ,

'h Ton Pickup, slant six, 3 speed, low mileage.

11

interest, builds store traffic and produces buyers.
No matter what size your business, you too can profit from

Porctl No. t : Sltuoteln Olive sedan with the followin g addod said they're interesting
ideas , and he wished he'd
heard them earlier. The
FDA proposals were an-

y:i lle ; said point of beginning
~elng marked by a stake and
lng 2 teet south of the present
eed fence line ; thence south 2
grees 00' east 66 feet to a

New ring iob, clean Interior, good tires, radio, heater.

1969 Podge D1QO ........ •1895

0 \

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~joining the Village of Reeds -

327 engine, 4 speed trans., clean interior &amp; good tires.
Med . grn. finish. Nice.

Cu'stom 4 door, 318 V·8, air cond ., p.. st., p.·br., 24,000
miles.

whichever he likes) - not
less than 10 per cent.
Orange-flavored drinknot Jess than 2 per cent.
.
It would seem to be a considerable advance for the
ct on stuhmed~'ffwho coubldtwat least
e
e 1 erence e een a
~ per cent beverage ~nd one
that s 70. per cent J u I c e,
under th.IS .a ~~~?gement.
' CommlS~IO'ne~. 'My e·r:~{IR, .
however , says these gener·
ic names are, in fact, mis·
nomers. It is absurd to allow
the two wo~ds 'orange juice'
to be used m the name of a
produ~t that couj~ be alm.o8t
two-thirds water - referrmg
to "orange juice drink," 35
per cent genuine juice re·
quired.
As for the most wide!
sold type of orange drink_:
which ·would be 1 a b e 1 e d
" orange drink" under the
new standards - the com·
missioner insists it's not
very orangey when it's "allowed to contain as litue as
10 per cent orange juice.
That means up to 90 per cent
of it could be water sugar
citric acid, gum arabic pre:
servatives or other ~hem·
0 range JWCe rm - no icals! ,,
hurch, being the successors
d Interest to Marion less than 35J?er cent.
·
.
.
olemon , J, D. Ratrden , Wesley
Orange drmk, or orange·
Her c~~nterprop~sal ,IS to
.0S~~~~ka~~~~~~u~~:i~f~~~ ade (the maker can call it label as orang~ .dllute any
·· ·
beverage contammg 50 to 99
rsonage property in Reeds·
ille Circuit of the Unlled
per cent juice, and drinks
ethodlst Church, have flted
LEGAL NOTICE
containing 49 to 5 per cent
eir pelltlc)n In the common
Sealed bids will be re ce ived In J·uice w 0 0 l·d have to get

the southwest corner of a tot
tlvned bV John R. waters,

1967 Chevelle Malibu HT Cpe.-;$1395

1971 Dodge Swinger ... •2695

By CARLTON SMITH
.
·,
The quality of llfe.m derdog consumer, S~es
America must be impro~mg charged the FDA With rewhen people who get mtc warding manufacturers and
arguments begin slinging. processors who p a l m off
.not mud, but orange juice. · chemicals and water as
A former Miss. ·America orange juice drinks." Thde
h
d
d f t bed reference 1s to content an
~: F~:'anttr~n Ad~kis. labeling standards which the
••ation a juicy bfow in the FDA has proposed, and
"ye over ..the,
· Ice . waicl) Commissi~ner Myer·
r~!t goes-=Vr"Jif~JI.Dslre .*sott'~llyS""ill'e a !Issue of ab"
j;'mplains - In t -o orange surdities.
beverages. People at the
The casus be l! i in the
fDA say· they're g 1 ad to great ·orange juice war is
bear trom her. People who the label on th~ ,bottle, or
ink orange beverages may can. At present 1t s unregu.
onclude the whole thing's lated. Anyone can run u~ a
nough to drive one to drmk. batch ol bev.e rage by adding
.
flavoring, sweeteners and a
Bess.Myerson,, a wmner at few drops of orange juice to
e Miss Amenca pageant the w a t e r , and call it
orne Y e !Irs b,ack, is n~w " or an g e ad e," "orange
ayor Lindsay s Comm.ts- drink," or anything else he
~loner of Cona~er Affall's likes.
.
New York Ctty, and B
Regulations proposed severce cham ion of the un· era! months ago by the FDA
lEGAL NOTICE
w o u I d set · standards o!
.i
or'!-nge-jul~e content - re;
NOTICE
qumng drmks to be labeled
K Notice ls hereby g lven tha t
dward Bloke, R. o ., Reeds. as f oJl ~ws\ s~ys a consumer
111e, Ohio ; Dana Hottmon , Sr.. spec1ahst m the agency:
. D., Reedsville, Ohio ; Ben
Blended orange drmk- not
uckley, Reedsville, Oh io, os le~s than 70 per cent pure
~"."J:~l~~: ~~e~~~~r~~~~~d:~; Jutce.
. . d . k
t

l
~

spotless interior.

Custom Wagon, air cond., torquefllte, p.. st., p .. br.: less
.!han 5,000 miles.
.

I

Great
.~ Orange Juice .W ar

ownshlp, Meigs County, State equ ipment.
f Ohio end being In Lot 104,
AOO cubtc inch engine
!ectlons 3 and 9, Town .4 North ,
2 speed electric windshield
ange 11 West of the Dh lo wipers
ompanv's Purchase and being
windsh ie ld wa sher
escrlbed as follows : Beginn ing
power steering

conditioned, good w~ w tires, radio, dark green finish with

1971 D~ge Coronet .... •3595

attendance durin~ the silver
dollar "lock·up,' Commis! ioner Kinsey noted that
since the first announcement of the proposed release of these coins last
y e a r, countless inquiries
have been received by the
GSA, indicating that the
average citizen has joined
with the coin collectors in
eagerly awaiting the day
when they are made avail·
able to the public.
Ariyone who has followed
this story from the day the
Carson City dollars were discovered to · their commitmeryt to the depqsitory, rec·
ogmzes how aware the Ceneral Services Administration
is of the problems involved
in releasing so large a .quantity of coins under such un·
usual circumstances.
Note: Pari · II of Carson
City Silver Dollars will list
the dates and quantity of
each being held in the de·
pository and describe the
manner in which they will
be sold on a first-come, first.
served basts.

The

lees Court alleging that the
!lowing descr ibed real estate
no longer needed for church
rposes and question author ity
tO sell said real estate , which
j:aid real r~ol estote Is
(t'scribec;t as follows , to -wit :

1970 Dodge Polara _____:___ !2395

v.s engine ,

ab.le. for display , and con.
lamm~ a brie! synopsis of
the history of..,the Carson
City silver dollars. About
91,000 coins, some slightly
ctrculated and some from
other . mints and of other
dates, will also he sold.
It took almost all of No·
vember to transfer the 2.9
million coins in seven semi·
trailer trucks under heavy
armed guard from Washington to the ·Silver Bullion De·
pository at West Point. Each
truck was insured for $15
million, and together · they
contained 3,000 bags of the
Carson 'City dollars.
"The numismatic value of
these coins is slaggering,"
remarked Kinsey, "with an
estimated average value of
t h i i' t y times their . face
value." To a collector, they
are valued even more for
the link they ·provide with
history. They were struck
at the short-lived, troubled
Carson City, Nev., Mint in
the turbulent last three dec·
ades of the 1800s.
In his remarks to those in

~

.

$5.55

basement, 2 lots, new forced ALLSIDE Builders &amp; Con ·
struction Co. We specialize in
Elementary SchooL Phone
alum inum, vinyl and steel
99-2·7384 to see.
siding ; fiberglas, brick and
stone ; complete line of

electric

,

~&lt;rnold brate

742-421t

cc

PERSONAL .FINANCE

Automatics
2 speed operation.
Choice of water
temps.
Auto.
water
levtl
control. · Linl ,
Filter or' Power
Fin Agitator . ,.
.
F"e'rmi: Pr"en

Make reservations for your
private parties, banquets,
specia l occasions.
Ideal for meeting ' place with or withOut kitchen

air furnace. Near Pomeroy .

3 BEDkOOM ranch type home,
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
Plains. All new with total

:estimated collectors' · value
;or higher. If orders exceed
the inventory in a P.articular
category, coins will be de·
livered to the highest bidder.
The,• coins, mostly uncir·
culated, were minted at the
now closed Carson C i t y,
Nev., mint between 1878 to
1885, 1890 and 1891. Each
coin is to be placed in a
handsome plastic case . suit·

Big C:opocily
Moyth

Orchid Room

L. TEAFORD,
ASSOC.
9!7-2378

Montgomery Ward is looking for Sales Agents .
Husband-Wife te am on a full -time basis.
Experienced in Sales and Manageme nt. •

2·16-Jtc

ON YOUR DIAL

repa~~~E

'

Moytog
Holoof Hoot

1970 Dodge Coronef.. :.•2695

5345 .

5443.

Glass. Small home repairs .
screens . storm windows

HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone TRIM trees : clean out a1tlcs,
965·3529.

,c

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiafor to the
.Smallesf Heater Core.
Nafhan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

The

sa le.

992.3325

We specialize in auto glass ·

on the spot installation.
Mirrors . Table Tops . Piate

t

We are now takmg listings
for the spring rush . Would
you like to put your property
on our li st . No charge, If no

HELEN

CALL
HILTON WOLFE, 949-3211
DALE DUTTON, 992·2534

ALL KINOS OF
GLASS
For Every Purpose

"

.

Available.

Large Established Company
Century Old Catalog Business

limestone. E xce l sior
SHOOT IN G Malch, Sat.urday, COAL.
Sa
It
Works,
E. Ma in St..
Feb. 19, at the Racine Plan ing
Pomeroy . Phone 992-389 1.
Mill at 6 p.m. Factory choke
4-9·1fC

Fire Depl.

992-6048.

or used mobile home, try

I HAVE cash buyers for homes
and farms. John White Really

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

-~~----

guns only . Assorted meat .
Sponsored by the Syracuse

- - - - -- -

gray wi th matching interior,
good conditi on, $450 . Phone

;Xmsey of the Propertf Man:'llgement and Disposa Servjlce satd a program is being
, worked out that will give
;every American citizen a fair
' chapce, to obtain at least one
:of these rare silver dollars.
1
The dollars will be sold at
' their numismatic value as
: prdered by the Congress 'and
I persons desirin$ a coin: will
f·b e required to bid it in at the

1966 Volkswagen Sq. Back Sedan $1095

phone 247-2161.

116-3lc

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy ·

'

I

. We are fully insured.

· POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

~

1;. ,Commissioner Dougl~s K.

BILL NELSON, 992.J657
TOM CROW, 997-7580

992-5803 - 742·3947
992-3898 -742.4761

2-13·61 c

velopes? Rush self.stamped
envelope lo F. Uribe, Box J6, AFG,HANS - $50 &amp; $45 : Quilts
Albany, Ohio, 45710.
ISO ; Qu ilt tops - $15 ; phone
· J.6.ffc -991-1686.
1·11 ·10tp
1 WILL NOT be responsible fo,
any deb t s co n t ra cted by
anyone other th an myself. DOUBLE barrel1 2gauge, set of
ca ttle r acks for Ford pickup,
Signed: James A. Fullz .
man's 21 jewel Bulova watch,
1·16·31p

Feb . 20. 12 noon.

double back patio. Phone 881·
2993.
2·11·6fp

with fireplace . 2 barns. small
pond. Mineral s.
We Have 2 Businesses and 3
Bu s i tless
Locations

1·11 -6tc
phone 992-6048 ..

garage, breeze·way, attached
slorage space •. front porch &amp;

'.

·

engine. Phone 992-2967 after 5

is
paneled,
carpeted p.m.
bedrooms, living room, hall. _ __ _ _____
2·_15·31c
Two balhs, kitchen, dining
r.-om. full basement, double '64VOLKSWAGEN, 2 dr. sedan ,

..

percentage rate.

service.

cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992·

bedroom bri ck house. House

heat . Full base ment, den

HOUSE trusses made to your
speci f icat io ns . Phone

- - -- AUTOMOBILE Insurance been

util i l y room and cold room :
sma ll ouf · build .ings . Why buy new furni ture? Have

Mod ern 3 bedroom home,
bath, nice kitchen, forced air

new G 70 15" Goodyear tire;
phone 992-5510.
2·11 -51c

sick TV to Chuck 's TV shop,
151 Butternut Ave ., Pome roy .

Beaut if ul

Phone 949-4892 or 992-5272.
1.JO.tfc

·mon lh. Please call 991·5113 FLOO R
for any inform ation, Brown 's.

setup .

bcation . OWner leaving state.

1-17 -31c

Great : over 10 spec ials th is

need . Complete roof or
spouting repair. Interior or
exterior carpentry . Ceiling

. ··

Tile General Service Ad·
. minlst.i'ation has outlined
: plana .to sell 2.9 million Car.
': · son City _silver dollars dating
r· back to 1878. All are collecJ· tors' items.
'
, As a first step, the coins
1 were tral)Sferreq recently by
1 armored ·car &lt;!rom the U.S.
, Treasury in Washington
'1 D,C.
to the Silver Bullion
Depository in West Point
N.Y., where the process of
\ sorting and packaging will
: take place prior to public
1 sale. GSA officials estimate
-,.the first of these coins will be
j~~~. ~~ (he first quarter of

FOURNEY( HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PC'i'. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedrool)l $16,900.00 hol)'1e con be purchased with a
mont~ly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary ot $5,000.00 and three children. 7~. P~t. annual

(. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
tile .and Paneling and Siding.
Complete Service
Complete
Plumbing
&amp;
Phone 949·3821
Heating.
Racine, Ohio
' Day Number 992-2sso
Crltt Bradford
We
have 24 hr. emergency
5. J.1fc

Cleland
Realty

in

Pearl
Jordan
Fischer ,
Executrix of the Estate of Dan
C. Fischer, deceased, late of 612
Randolph Stre et. Charl eston ,
West Virg inia , filed in this co urt
FURNI SHED and unfurnished under Docket L No . 19 1 an
apartments . Close to school . authenti cated co p y of letters of
21711p
adm inistration iss ued to her by
Phone 992·5434.
the County Court of Kanawha
10-18.tfc County , West VIrginia. No tice is
given that all creditors
~L-:O::T::S-:-:10~0-x---:18:0--a_n_d,--,.33;.. ~x 90; offurther
sa id estate who desire to
GUN' SHOOT, Sunday , Feb. 20, 1 Wareho uses 32 x 75, 25 x 50, assert
their liens on the real
p. m. Factory choked guns
and 23 x 48. Call 991-7178. to estate Of said decedent located
on ly . Second place shooters • lease any or all of above at610 In th is state shall present their
cl aim s, duly sworn to, to th is
ge t free shot in next match.
E. Main St.
court within six mon ths after
Assor ted meats. Racine Gun
2·16·61C the filing of StiiQ letters in thi s
Club .
,
-court, or their said lien s sh'att
2.J7.31c 1 .BEpROOM mobile home I · ~Iorev,
er be deemed barred and

. SQUARE dan ce e•ery Saturday

Reasonable

thai old made new by Sylvia's
$1D.950.00 ..
Uph ols ler ing Shop, Mrs .
REAL ESTATE IS
oodrow T. Zwilling, Prop.,
W
CLIMBING DAILY
2·16.6tc POMEROY
- Jl!, story frame, Syracuse, Ohio.
2·10·301p
6 rooms, 3 bedrooms with
TROPICAL FISH , fancy
c losets , bath, ca binets in
guppies, angel.$. and breeders,
kitchen, porches, base ment, Auto Sales
Bellas and supplies. Phone
CLOSE IN . $6,500.00.
991·5443.
1963 CHEVROLET Impala,
WHY CLIMB STAIRS
J2.30·1fc POMEROY - 1 story frame, 2 automatic transmission, air
bedrooms. balh, basement, conditioned , power steering,
IN EXCELLENT CON . ·good fires, $395. Phone 992.
DITION, large lot. $7,900.00. 2718.
LEGAL NOTICE
2·16·3fc
WE HAVE BUI'ERS, SO CALL
IN THE COMMON
~2fi~~ND'S FOR FAST 1970 CORVET 454 4·speed
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
DEXTER - Lot 150 x 100, barn, converllble. Good condition.
PROBATE OtVtStON
large slorage building, 2 slory Phone 675·3340.
2·1Htc
home, 4 bedrooms, bath ,
tN THE MATTER OF THE
glassed
in
side
porch,
front
ESTATE
OF
DAN
C.
FISCHER,
.
porch, fUel -oil forced 'air heat 1963 FORD 1h- ton , 6-cylinder,
DE CEASE D
JUST $8,900.00
' long bed, 6·ply tires, radio.
No. 20625
HENRY CLELAND,
Phone 741·3223.
NOTICE
2·15·31c
REALTOR
TO WHOM tT MAY CO N.
2·16.6tc
CE RN :
'57 CHEVY 'I• ton pickup, ex·
Notice IS hereby given that on
NEW
HAVEN
_
Modern
.
the 7th day of February 1972,
3 cellenfcondition . Almost new

p.m . to 1: 30 a.m ., Monday
lhru Friday in Middl eport.
Phone 992·2012 before 1 p.m.

my

gua.ranteed .

$27 cash or budget plan
ava ilable. Phone 991-5641.

A. B.C.

hu sband dur ing hi s lo ng

Call

Real Estate For Sale

damage in shipping. Will take

a .tfc

BABYSITTER in

• inter .

We have a complete Home

elec· Maintfmance Servlc~ the year
·work around. No matter what your

Don VanMeter 985·3951.
rates. Phone 992·3213.
2·16·12tp _ _ _ _ _ __ _ 7·::.
27·HC

model. Complete with all
cleaning tool s. Small pai nt

Cleane r s, Ma son, W. Va .

Rev . Zavi lz for his consoling
words, the comforting prayer
of Malar Glenna Rummel, to
Anna May Terr ell far her
faith ful ness and loving care
she Qdve Mr . Cunningham
and to my Lord who ga ve me

Still

Wheels balanced
Ironically .
All

OFF ICE 992·2259 TILL 4:00
2966.
--'1
· 6-15-lfc
EVENINGS&amp;
slitch. Full cash price, 138.50
SUNDAYS 992·2568
..
.
or budget plan available .
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
BABY
FARM-6
ACRES
Phone 992·5641.
~ 1 slory REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
1·1Hic HARRISONVILLE
4782, Gallipolis. John Russe ll;
frame, 5 rooms , bath , ni ce
Owner &amp; Operator ,
kit
chen,
COMPLETELY
VACU UM cleaner new 1971
5·J2.tfc
RENOVATED, garag e

and manage r out e. Pick -u p

and

machines.

f

lnlerior and exterior.

tac hmenfs needed as our
controls are bu ilt in . Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew on· buttons,
monogra ms, and blind hem

RESPONSIBLE person to work

thanks lo the Ewing Chapel
and a special lhanks to the

care for

sewi ng

Ph. 614-992·2156

our hu sband and fa ther. Also

2·16·61c

EXPERIENCED

240 Lincoln St.
Middlepor,f, Ohio
Dba A~thony Plumbing

tune up and brake service .

Emoloyment Wanted

original cartons. No at.

HARTFORD
The Daily Sentinel

Wf. WISH lo lhank our neigh.

&amp;CONSTRUCTION &amp;1
PLUMBING CO.

O' DELL WHEEL allghmenf
loco ted at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
1·16·6fp
Complete fronf end service,

wooden . Call 992·9972.

PAINT DAMAGE . 1971 Zig.zag

and

Card of Thanks

to

Call 992-7085.

MASON

Saturday .

MODERN

Walnu t Ste reo .radio com ·
bina tion, 4 speaker sound
sys tem, 4 speed i::hanger,
separate con trols. Balance
$68 .56. Use our .budget terms .

Box R, c-o The Dally Sentinel ,

secutiv e insertions.

stre ngth

BEA UTI F UL

bookkeeping . Pl easing per ·
sonality. Refe rences. Write to

18 cents per word six con-

AU WEATHER ROOFING

bina tion, 4 speed changer , 4 --:--::-_ _ _ __:.:..:;~
speaker
sound system. GOOD used chairs, prefer

RATES

consecutive in sert ion !&gt;.

.B·u siness Services

------

V. F . W. Gun shoot , noon, Sun day, Feb. 20, Broad Run Gun
Cl ub, New Haven, sponsored
by Post 9926, Mason, W. Va .

right to edit or· re ject any ads

Business Services

Wanted To Buy

MIXED hay. Virgil Windon, BOAR hog, 100 to 150 lbs. HARRI SON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992-2521.
phone 985-3846.
Phone 247·2161.
·
6·10.Ifc
2·16.Jtp
2- J3.6Jc
HOUSE &amp; building lots on OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak READY·MIX COKCRETE de·
livered right to your project.
Wr ight Street In Pomeroy .
fables, Brass beds, dishes,
Fast
, and
easy . Free
Phone 741·5937 : ·
clocks, and ·or complete
••timates. Phone 992·3284.
1·16-6\c households. Write M. D.
Goeglein Re•dy ·Mix Co.,
--------Miller, RL 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Middleport, Ohio.
COLONIAL Early American Call 99H271.
..
6.JO.ftc.
Slereo, AM·FM radio com ·
-· -~·JI. tfc

SE RVI C ~ .

comp lete select ion of fabrics
and vinyl to c hoose from . Pi ck
up and d el iver y . S lat e r
Upholstering, Rt . 3, Pomeroy,

Publication

'

For Sale

Carson City
·:Silver Dollars
,I. ---Part I

'

' 21

regular advertising. ·---------------------- So you don't

nounced several months ago

and the public's comments
'invited, with a Dec . 8 (last
) d dl '

reach everyone ... think of the ones you will.

year ea me.
The whole trouble see!JlS

to be that the wrong ~eople

are proposing names or the

labels. Who'd want to drink
-anything called " orange dilute? " Let the bartenders
think up the names, "Orange ·

blossom'' and "screwdriver"
- now. there are names that
sell &lt;,&gt;range juice!

CALL 992-2156

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT

FOR INFORMATION

The State of Ohio, Melu
County . Probate Court.
To the E&gt;&lt;ecutor of the estate;
to such of the following a$ are
re si dents of the State of Ohio,
viZ : - th e surviving spouse, the ,
next of kin, th e beneficiar ies
und er the will; and to the at to rn ey
or
attorn ey s
the
rep r esenting an v. of
aforementioned persons :
Mary H . Heines, Deceesed,
Pome roy , Ohio, Sal isbury
Town ship, No, 20606.
You are hereby notified that
t.h e
Inventory
and
Ap ·
praisement Of the estate of th e
aforementioned , -deceased , late
of Sllid County , wa s fi led in this
Co url . Sai d inventory and
Appraisement •will be tor
hear ing before th is Court on the
6th day of March, 1972, at 10 :00
o'clock A .M .
1
Any perso n des iring to file.
exceptions there to must file
them at least five days prior to
the da'te set for he~trlng . .
Given under my hand and
seal of sai d Court , this ' lAth day
of February 1972.
John C. Bacon
Judge and e1 ·0fficio Clerk
ot said Court

ON AN ADVERTISING
PROGRAM TAILOR ED
TO YOUR NEEDS.

The Daily Sentinel

By Ani) B. Watson

121 11. 7•', 21

Oeputy Clerk

I

'

.'

�'
16- The Dally Senti""' 111lddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 17, 1572

Peking
· (Continued from page I)
been produced by conviction,
not by personalities or the
·· prospect of tactical gains."
''We are talking at hist,"
Nixon added. "We are meeting
as equals."
It will be Monday 'morning in
Peking when Nixon's blue and
white jet touches down in the
imperial city-10:30 p.m. EST
Sunday in America.

r

r
. .

Utility
(Continued from page 1)
- The Dayton Power and
Light Co. was given authority
to impose a complete freeze
and deferral of all new gas
loads, including residential,
beyond corrunitments of Oct.
31. 1972.

riday and Saturday at

LETART FALLS - Heavy
. damages were reported in a
car-truck accident Wednesday
at 10 a. m. on SR 338 in Letart
Falls. The Meigs Count y
Sheriff's Dept. said Carroll
· Henry White, 31, Racine, Rt. 2,
was traveling south on 338
when he collided in a curve
with a truck driven by Herman
Harry Will, 63, Pomeroy, Rt. 2.
The truck, loaded with gravel,
belonged to the Meigs County
Highway Department.
Both men suffered onl y
· minor injuries and were not
immediately treated. There
were no arrests. White's car
was demolished, and the truck
had heavy damage.

E-R Unit Busy
The Middleport E-R squad
answering a call at 3:41p.m.
Wednesday to the Emma
Pullins home on Brownell Ave.,
removed her to the office of Dr.
R. R. Pickens, then to Veterans
Memorial Hospital,. where she
died.
At 10:07 p. m. Wednesday,
the squad was called to deliver
oxygen to the Kyger Creek
Power Plant where an employe
had become ill on a boat.
However, the patient h'ad been
removed by the Point Pleasant
squad when the Middleport
unit arrived .
At 8:45 a. m. Thursday, the
squad went to the home of Mrs.
E;mma Brickies, Broadway St.
in Middleport. Mrs. Brickles,
who suffered a possible broken
hip in a fall, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

CLOSINGS MONDAY
Closing Monday in ob·
servance of President's Day
will be The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., The Pomeroy
National Bank and its Rutland
Branch, the C[fizens National
Bank, and offices of the Meigs
County Courthouse. Rural and
city mail deliveries will not be
made in ei !her Pomeroy or
Middleport as well as from
other third and fourth class
post offices. Box patrons wiH
receive mail in their boxes and
mail will be received and
dispatched.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Saturday through Monday :
Cold Saturday and war·
mlng trend Sunday through
Monday. Highs Saturday In
the mid ZOs to mid 30s, ·rising
to the 40s by Monday. lows
Saturday and Sunday
mornings in teen• and low ·
20s and Monday morning to
20 to JO •.Variable cloudiness
Saturday and Sunday and a
chance of rain or snow
Monday.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, Feb. 11
NOT OPEN

Outstanding values .in womens wash dresses and
dusters included in this sale. Our regular stock.
all washable cotton prints . Misses iJnd half sizes .

STRINGS
Regular 2.39 and
2.95 Strings
While they last .

Popular toys - very well made. Will last .
for years-including :
Music Box Clock Radios
- Cameras
Music Box T.V.'s
Harry Hppper
· Milk Wagons
Three Men In Tub
Frisky Frogs
Lacing Shoes
Roly-Poly Chime Balls
Chubby Cubs
Mini Copters
Queen Buzzy Bees
Rock-a-Stack
Milk Carriers
Play Family
Play Family Farm
Tip Toe Turtles
Birthday Pocket Radios
Tool Work Benches
Play Family Fire Engines

MISSES SIZES 6 TO 20
AND HALF SIZES

12lh TO 24lh

PYREX WARE SPECIALS
CRYSTAl GLASS OVENWARE

IN MEMORY of Pearl W.

Plus

ITechnicoiorl
Beki m Fehmlu
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Williams who lef l us 5 years
ago Feb . 17. 1967 . Sadl y
missed by wife, childr en and
grandchi ldren .
2-17 -llc

You will see the most
beautiful selection of
Women's New Spring
Dresses at Elberfelds - in
the busy Ready To Wear
Department on the second
floor.

I
/

Come in and choose
se veral we have
styles and sizes for
everyone. 2 pc. suits,
dress and coat en·
sembles · 4 pc. week·
ender sets · dressy
dresses
tailored
shirtwaist styles . pants
s uits . All washable
fabrics includiniJ 100
percent polyester knits ·
ac rylics · dacrons and
cottons · linens - -all
styled by top name
brands.

YOUR CHOICE

Toni Todd lurns on th e dazzl e' with lo w torso'd g eomef.
rics, bursting into so lid flippy pleats. Marvelo us mix , in

polyeSter doubleknil. Wonderfull y woshobie loo.
'

---......---.._
' SATURDAY NIGHT9 TIL 1:00
-·

....

In The Heart of Middleport

styles. Not every size
in every color and
style. All sizes for
men and boys.

HALF-PR
Mens and Boys

LONG SI.EEVE
SPORT SHIRTS

Rug and Lid Cover. Rayon
and Nylon Blend . Fringed

WORK UNIFORMS
Regular $5.95 Trousers and $4.95 Matching
Shirts .

5.00

A Suit
SHIRTS

4.00

17 .

a ll arou nd
was hable

ma chin e
m ac hine

dryable. ,
Beau'tiful colors ....... Blue ,
Melon, Avocado, Rose ,

I
I

\

Boys No· Iro n Jeans

Lee Unionalis
Boot Cut Lee Riders

FLOCKED
65% Datron •
Polyester135% Cotton

JEANS
Buy a · pair of ou'r Lady
Wrangler Jeans and we'll help
you express yourself with sew·
on appliques or nail heads . l!tis
weekend only , we'll give you a
$1 Wrangler Applique FREE
with each pair of Lady
' Wrangler Jeans.

45" wide. Wash and Wear .

Pneshrun k. Orip-Ory .
Lillie or no Ironing . .
Beautiful selection colorslight . dark . pastels.

99~

CANNON

MEN'S AND BOYS' FlARE JEANS AND SlACKS

BATH TOWELS
New shipment of
jacquards, solids,
stripes. (Irregulars) .

Boys s!zes 8 to 18 in slims and regulars. Young
!"lens s;zes 28 to 38 waist . dressy style flares and
1ean !YPe flares in a ' big new selection.
Stop ;n on the 1st floor . Select yours ·now for
dres~. ~ ~ hool or sports wear .

· SALE 1.39

Visit Elberfelds Sewing Dept.- Second Floor

See The New

100% Polyester Double Knit
. .Mult~Yam Dyed
100% Polyester Double Knit Solids
Jacquards • Brocades • TapesiiJ . Crepes

FURNITURE

For Pants · Shirts · Suits · Cresses, etc. The Now Look In the
new spr,ing colors and patterns. Fashion smart colors !hat
are machine washable. 54" and 58 .60 .,

DEPARTMENT

3RD .

3.99
3~~

Many special mattress buys now on
Famous Simmons
·
89.95 Golden Value Super FirmSale
· Simmons Mattresses
Sale

66.00
55 oo
•

Twin Bed Sizes or Full Beq Sizes.
Matching Box Springs- Same Sale Prices.

5.49

MUSLIN
Excellent quality. 40
inch · unbleached .

..

SPECIAL

l ._.yd. 1.00

5.99

Two Days Only
$2.89 "~ntage"

.AMERICAN HOME

100%

ACRILAN

ACRYLIC FABRIC
Bonded to 100 percent
Ace1ate· Tricot. 54" wide · ,
machine washable. Plaids ·
stripes . checks . solids.
Beautiful spring colors.
Outstanding S.to Price

1.88 YARD

I I

Teen-Ager
In Pageant

WASHINGTON · (UPI)
Braving Washington's biggest
snow storm of the year, more
than 3,000 motorists from
Virginia paraded through the
capital Thursday to protest a
court ' order
.directing
widespread busing and consolidation of Richmond area

Welsh Needing
$10,000 for
Village Center

Maur ee n Hennessy,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas
W.
Hennes'sy, .
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, has
been r~gilt~ ~,z.ept~nt ... ·-OAK-·H1LL, Ohio tUPI) ·- ·
Pomeroy in the annual Miss Reoldenls of this Jackson
Ohio Teenager Pageant to be County community have
held on July 15 at the Sheraton lalmched a drive to raise
Dayton Hotel In Dayton.
$10 lHJ() to purchase a 104·
A freshman at Meigs High ye~r-old church and convert
School, Miss Hennessy is an It Into a Welsh cultural
honor roll student, a center.
cheerleader, student council
The Welsh-American
member, and president of her Her 1 tag e Museum
class. She is a member of the organization announced
Pep Club, the Girls Athletic Thursday It had raised $4,lHJ()
Assn. , and is an office )o date.
assistant. She is a member of
The church was built in
the Big Bend Minstrel Assn., 1868 as
the
Welsh
the Junior Auxiliary of the Congregational Church, but
American Legion, plays the · It was sold to Baptists In 1941
church organ and has been a when the •Welsh group
Bible school assistant teacher. disbanded. The Baptists
Winner of the state pageant announced plans last year to
will represent Ohio at the tear down the church and
national finals to be held at build a new one.
Atlanta , Ga., In August.

BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
KANEOHE MARINE Am STATION, Oahu, Hawaii - Pat
Nixon, her heavy clothes packed in ber suitcase alld a blu(Hlyed
"lady-\11-walting" along to do her hair, was busy honing up on her
homework today for what sbe called her husband's "greatest
·
achievement" as President.
Mrf. Nixon may be more in the public eye at tinies than her
husband next week on Nixon's historic trip to China . ~e will
have a busy schedule of visiting bospitals, factories, sd!ools and
orphanages while the !?resident meets privately with 'Chinese
leaders. The First Lady spent most of the Hl·hour flight from
WBshington to Hawail Thursday, the first led of the long trip to
Peking, studying on China.
COLUMBUS- HARRY DENT, special counsel-to President
Nixon, said Thursday night his boss' 1972 campaign strategy has
not been formulated yet, but predicted it would include an "all·
out" attempt to woo black voters.
"There's going to be an all out effort made to win the black
vote," Dent said here. Dent said Nixon was not writing off the
South'S White Vote, but was responding to signs that more
tolerant racial attitudes are growing.
LONDON - mE GOVERNMENT, reprieved by a
parliamentary vote of confidence on British entry into the
Common Market, today summoned coal union and management
leaders to a meeting it hoped will lead to peace in Britain's in·
dustrlal crisis.
·
The get-together was called by Employment Secretary
&amp;bert Carr to hear the findings of a three-man court of inquiry
Into the six weeks-old mineworkers' strike.· Leaders of the 10
miUion member Trades Union Congress (TUC) and tbe Con·
. lederation of British Industry, whid! repreS~f!tS 20,000 in·
dustriaUsts,' al110 Wet'l! asked to attend.
TOLEDO- A FREIGIIT TRAIN carl-ying 250 new Cadillacs

and other luXury automobiles, re-i'outed at the last minute to
tracks with low~!~' bridge overpasses
the original tine, failed
to clear an understructure Thursday, causing a massive wreck,
explosions and fires .
.
·
Abrut SO Cadillacs, Buicks, Pointiacs and other autos were
Jelllroyedand another SOheavUy damaged. Most of the other 150
cars were damaged by smoke and lieat. Railroad'officials said
dama~ could read! '1 miiUon . Only one injury was reported. A
railroad employe dislocated h\8 shoulder when he slipped down
.an embankment to the tracl\8 following the wreck.

u,,m

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9

EL8ERFELDS IN POME

and lobbyist for the big coal
concerns.
.
Tostenson denied he entered
the race because he· is a lobbY·
· ist for Consolidation Coal Co.
and opposes Speck's bill.
"I favQr strong reclamation
laws and so do my clj~t. the
coal companies, but we differ
on some of the features of what
is good reclamation and how it
sho!Qd be done," said Tostenson.
"Coal is one of the blessings
we h~ve here in southeastern
Ohio and we sbouldn 't drive the
industry out," he said.
·scripps Howard said
although few will talk about it
for the record there is plenQ: of
quiet ·talk in political ciryles

yard

Be Sure to See the New Styles

SIMMONS MATTRESS SALE

78 .00 Golden Value Firm
Simmons Mattresses

SALE 9f BAG

Lady Wrangter

FLOOR

Lined overa ll Jackets
Unlined overal l jackets
Lee: Denim Wes tern Jackets

New · Wa5hable
Hundreds of uses .
Ideal
for
filling
Pillows. ' Cushions ,
Toys.

Express Yourself In

Ready for your selection - including regul ar bib
overalls · carpenters ovP.rails · dungarees · lined
dungarees · blanket lin ed overall jacket s and
coats · quilt lin ed jackets and coats · qu_ilt lined
coveralls · Scherpa lined jackets and costs ·
blanket lined or quilt lined snap·on hoods . '

Dungarees
Bib overalls
Carpenters overall s
Pa inter s overalls
Lee work caps
Denim work Dun.garees

100% Pure
POLYESTER

Housewares

Gold .

4.99 SET

MISS HENNESSY

White goose feathers.
Blue or pink striped
100 per cent colton
covering .

Realistic polyeth~ene spring flowers.

MISSES AND

BATHMAT SETS

Mens Permanent Press

TROUSERS

PHONE 992-2156

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1972

..
'

y
(.
.,

that money is available for a
campaign to defeat Speck.
Don Goddard, a former Republican representative from
Bartlett in Washington County,
admitted "thEl,. powers that be
UP aro!Dld Cambridge" tried -to
get him to run against Speck.
Uoddard, the newspaper
said, identified the einissacy of
ihe Cambridge wwers as being
Taliesen E. Evans and those
interested in opposing Speck
are the coal and power inter·
ests.
Evans is closely aligned with
U.S. Sep. John M. Ashbrook R·
Ohio, and also played a big
hand in the recent election of
Cambridge Republican Mayor
&amp;bert Scott, the only public

official in this area to attack
the Speck bill.
"Scott was speaking for him·
self and not the party at that
&amp;tary Oub lund! and I don't
think anybody paid much attention to him," said Roy L.
Morris, Guernsey County GOP
d!airtnan.
"Anyway I wish the mayor
could meet one of my farm clients whose cattle can't drink
frbm the streams on his farm
because of the strip mine poison in the water," Morris said.
Morris said he thinks Speck
has done "an outstanding job"
although he doesn't agree with
everything the Muskingum
College professor does.
He also said he did not know

TEN CENTS

if the party committee will endorse Speck.
He is being opposed in the
primary by Rid!ard Vergari,
2~, an elementary school
tead!er in Cambridge.
Vergari is making Speck's
vote for the state income tax
the main issue in his campaign.
Scripps Howard said Speck is
in trouble with his own party
because he voted for the state
income tax and has been accused by some Republican
leaders of making a deal with
Gov. John J. Gilligan to support the income tax in exchange for the Democratic
apportioilment board giving
him a favorable district. Speck
has denied this. ·

3,000 Autos In Protest

"Em·

BED PILLOWS

ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS

SIZES INCLUDE

REGULAR JUNIORS,

Sleepcrafl
press"

99~

·.

I

SWEATERS

51 i pover a net coat

....

·---·----.._..--...,...._...._....
The Martin Restaurant
'

MEN'S AND BOYS .

$1 .29 Poly-fil

HALF SIZES.

'

Visit the mens and boys department on the 1st
floor . See the fine quality Lee work and western
wear .

John Kalleel, on sax
John Lynch. drums
Sk ip Stew•rl, bass
,.
,...__.__-

The'y

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The coal
industry is attempting to un·
seat State Rep. Sam Speck, RNewark, the ~iJ)Ie mover of a
tough strip ·rb.irle control bill
now in the Ohio Senate, it was
reported today.
.Scripps Howai-d Newspapers
said if Speck gets by the May 2
Republican primary he will
probably face Neil s. Tostenson, Cambridge, 37, a lawyer

HALF-PRICE

Fine new group just received. Arranged
for. your easy selection. Musical Bunnies
and Chicks · Cuddly Dolls · Ducks ·
Lam

JUNIOR PETITES,

LEE WORK CLOTHES
AND WESTERN WEAR

. Roberto Clendennen, voca list

green or gold.
Friday and Saturday

men and boys.
For this sole
Your Choice
While They Last

PLUSH TOYS

Complete Selection

The Martin presents ...

or

sewn shirts. All sizes for

1.29 2 quart square cake dishes
1.59 2 quart oblong baking dishes
1.29 2 quart loaf dishes
1.39 1 quart ~overed casseroles
1.19 4 cup' measuring cups

TONI
TODD

CARHARTT BROWN DUCK WORK CLOTHES

THE DESERT ER

Blue denim

servlcea~le twill In olive

Including knit shirts and

9.00

Area

Sizes 4 fo 12 in regulars and

slims.

permanent press cut and

This
Sale

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXIV NO. 218

Meigi·MtJM~n

knees .'

And many others. Stop in. See these fine
Fisher Price Toys.

Complete Selection

Vincent Pr ic:e

Hoste.s s
glassware
styled for Lipby . .
Regular $3.20, $3.25
and $3.50 sets , Gift
Boxed.
While They Last

Sale!
Last

FISHER PRICE TOYS

16.50 to 49.50

to

tTechnicolor)

3.00
SETS
SALE 188
•
Reg. 2:oo
SETS _ SALE 1,28

Another New Selection

Frost is Dead

THE ABOMINABLE
DR. PHIBES

Devoted To The lntert!$13 Of The

Occasional snow likely
mixed with rain southeast
portion . Ooudy and colder with
snow flurries likely tonight.
Low 20 to 25. Saturday variable
cloudiness and chance of snow
nurries, mostly east. High in
upper 20s and low 30s.

Fomous Lee Prest Jeans
that never need Ironing. SO
per cent Polyester · 5o per
cent cotton fabric · double

Reg ,

2.00

Mrs. Audrey A.

Friday &amp; Sa1urday
February 18-19

Bra and.
J JOJ• Sets
.
B"k"

FRUIT AND VEGETABlE

See our outstanding
selection of womens
new spring
coats.
i erseys
Bonded
washable
polyester
knits
tweeds,
tapestrys, rayon and
wool ~ blends. Many
styles to choose from.
Full length coats and
pants coats . double and
single breasted. All ·top
name brands.

''

enttne

Curlew originated in the
Middle Ages as a warning to
towh inhabitants to cover up
ll!eir fires since·most dwellings
w~re made of wood.

TUMBLER SETS ..

Weather ·

2.00 ASET
(----~A:=RT~IF=ICI~AL~~~T~w·-o~oa~ys~o~n~ly--~,N~~~~~RONJ~S

Well known mak'e. Trousers sizes 29 t o 50 wa ist in Cha r coa l
grey . na vy blue . Forest green. Shi r ts to match in sizes 14lf2

Joseph Cotton

WASH DRESSES AND DUSTERS
SALE 3.00

~

•

NC&gt;w YGU· Know

8 PC. GlASS

A Group of ·Womens Cotton

Mixed media

HARRY WOLFE DIES
Harry Wolfe, Racine, died
Thursday morning at Veterans
Memorial Ho s pital.
Arrangements are being
completed by the Rawlings·
Coats Funeral Home.

berfelds In Pome
Sale!

.

Mrs. · Audrey A. Frost, 64,
South Fourth Ave., Middleport,
died early Thursday morning
at Holzer Medical Center. Born
March 25, 1907, in Gailla
Coun ty, she was the daughter
of the late Pearl and Maude
Barnett Graves. She was also
preceded in death by two
brolllers, and her husband,
Dwight.
Surviving are tl"o daughters,
Mrs. Harold (Janet) Hinkle,
Chesapeake, and Mrs. Randy
(Na rsa) Van Meter, Middleport; a brother, Ralph
Graves, or Pomeroy; a sister,
Mrs. Mabel Walburn of Mid·
dleport, and two grandchildren.
Mrs. Frost, a member of the
Middleport Church of Christ,
was active with the ·Philathea
Society and the Loyal Pals
Sunday School Class of that
church.
Funeral services will be held
at 4 p.m. Saturday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Ra ullin Moyer
officiating. Burial will be in the
Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at
the fun eral home arter 10 a.m.
Friday.

'

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9

Come. to Elberfelds
Mrs. Emma Busy Ready to Wear
Auto, Truck Pu11ins Dies Department . . .
.In Collision
Mrs. Emma Marie Pullins,
58, BrowneJI Ave., Middleport,
died Wednesday evening at
Veterans· Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Pullins was born in
Bradbury, Feb. 23, 1913, the
daughter of the late Milton and
Helen Authorson Russell. She
was also preceded in death by
her fir st husband, Ross
Stobart,. and a sister.
Surviving are her husband,
Hubert Pullins; four sons,
Charles Ray Stobart, Ann
Arbor, Mich.; Rossland Ed·
ward Stobart, Middleport;
William M. Stobart, Columbus,
and Paul Russell Pullins, at
home ; two daughters, Mrs.
Harley (Helen
Louise 1
Mossman, Wilmington , Ill .,
and Mrs. Charles (Janet)
Jordan , Ripley, W. Va. ; lwo
stepsons, Char les Pullins,
Parkersburg , and Fred
Pullins, Pomeroy ; a sister,
Mrs . Howard (Frances)
Stover , Chi llico the; two
br others ,· Truman Russell,
Pomeroy, and Thomas Russell,
Grove City; 16 grandchildren,
one step-grandchild, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held .
at 10 a.m. Saturday at the
Bradbury Church of Christ of
which she was a member.
Officiating will be Mr. Roy
Carter, pastor. Burial will be in
Middleport Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
after 10 a.m. Friday.

'

•. I

schools.
Fighting tralfic jams, the
white protesters drove past .the
White House and the Capitol
and sent teams of lobbyists to
confer with dozens of congressmen. There is a drive under
way in Congress for a constitutional amendment banning busing.
A spokesman for the demon·
strators said 3,261 cars made
the 1oo.mile trip from Richmond to Washington. Most of
the cars were marked with a
placard portraying a little red
sclfool house with the words
"Help Save Freedom."
·A-few,displayed other ·siglll!l,
including one which said, "If
Richard Nixon won't stop

busing, George Wallace will." it. II
A yellow school bus bearing
U.S. District Court in · Rich1
"White Power" and 'nas the mond ordered consolidation of
Race Mixers" signs and school districts in Richmond
swastika insignia joined one and neighboring Henrico and
section of the motorcade on Chesterfield counties and delntersta~ 95 between Rich- creed there should be widemolld and Washington. Inside spread busing to mix the pupils
were a half-dozen men wearing in the predominantly black
riot betmets, brown uniforms Richmond districts with the
and swastika armbands, while puplls ul the predominantly white outlying districts.
symbolic of the Nazi party.
It was the first time a court
A spokesman for tbe Richmond demonstrators called the had ordered the consolidation
men in tbe bus "standard Nazi of school districts in order to
mlx the races in different
party troublemakers."
"I know them," he said. school jurisdictions. An ap"They were in Richmond peals court has granted a stay
·trying · to ·see ·the jooge in of ~~~~ . ordel'"ilntll'tJUslng 0~
federal court yesterday. 1·95 is ponents can appeal the district
a public road and they got on court order.

Hughes Big in Managua
MANAGUA ; Nicaragua scheduled to return to
(UPI) - The arrival of the Managua Sunday.
elusive Howard Hughes in
The shy, 66-year-old billionManagua Thursday was one of aire abandoned his hideaway
the most 'exciting things to in the Bahamas Tuesday nigbt
happen in this Central or Wednesday morning wben
American country since the the island's government
U.S. Marines marched out in deported four of his aides for
1933. But the publicity-ehy improper inunigration status.
American billionaire was un- He had secluded·himself in the
seen and unbeard today.
. hotel for the past year and a
The government said Hugbes half.
was in Nicaragua to talk with
A spokesman for tbe Hughes
President Anastasio Somoza on · Tool Co. In Los Angeles said
business deals, but no one · Hughes had "abandoned any
could say where he was . plans for investment in the
Somoza himself was on an Bahamas" but had "definite
island off the Panama coast on ideas about investments in
a four-day state visit with Nicaragua."
Panamanian strongman Brig.
Sumoza, 44, issued a stateGen. Omar Torrijos. He was ment welcoming .Hugbes "in
view of the business talks
which we have been holding for
PAPERS FILED
some lime with the Hughes
Non-profit articles of in- Tool Co."
corporation have been filed in
A local radio station comColumbus with Secretary of mented:
State Ted W. Brown by the
"This will really put us on the
Rilck Springs United Methodist map. This is as important as
Church, George Sisson, Arlee Nixon's trip to China;"
Abbott and Rollin Radford,
A Hughes spokesman in Los
trustees, with William · Rad- Angeles .said he "felt it was
ford, Pomeroy Route 3, as ridiculous" that the Bshamaagent.
nian· government ousted his

aides. Hugbes deals face..toface with only about six personal aides.
He new by private plane to
Miami, Fla., then on to
Nicaragua, Central America's
·biggest agricultural and gold
mlning republic of 1.7 mlllion
inhabitants, the spokesman
said.
A chartered C46 transport
plane brought his furniture an4
belongings from tbe Bahamas,
which lnclooed beds, chairs,
stores of boiled water and a
. hospital bed with a blood
plasma stand.
In 1927, 600 U.S. marines
were sent to Nicaragua to
protect U.S. interests. They
withdrew in 1933.

JAYCEES TO TRAVEL
Meigs County Jaycees are
remlnded of a District 24
president's council Sunday at
the American Legion home in
Belpre. Ail Jaycees planning to
attend are asked to notify
Ralph Werry by noon on
Sunday.

. SPECIAUirrS SPEAK - Two Ohio Extension Service specialists were ln Meigs County
Thursday afternoon to speak at a meeting spon.!Ored by the county garden clubs and extension
service. At left is James L. CaldweU, extension floriculturist, who spoke on the topic, selection
and care of shrubs, and Dr. James Utzinger, rlgbt, borticulurist, who discussed growmg home
fruits. With them is Mrs. Robert Kuhn, Pomeroy, coWtty contact chairman of the garden clubs.
The meeting was held at Trinity Oturch in Pomeroy.

Four Nominated
To Legion Honor
Four members have been
nominated as "legionnaire of
the year" of Drew Webster
Post 39 of the American
Legion, Pomeroy. ' .. " ...., ·
A nominating committee
said Paul Casci, brought in the
names of George Nesselroad,
Roy R~ uter , Robert Vaughan
and Donald Whaley for the
honor . Selection will be by
secret ballots. Results will be
announced March 18 at the
annual birthday dinner.
An
American
Legion
baseball team meeting held in
Akron recently was attended ·
by Don Hunnel, Mike Werry ,
George Nesselroad and Norman VanMatre.
Jim Gilmore, Post Chaplain,
was complimented for his fine
work on the recent Four
Chaplains Day . Members
:::~::?/.:?;.:;;::~W.Q.-?;.8~

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook · Sunday through Tuesday:
Partly cloudy Sunday and
Monday. Cloudy with a
chanee o! rain or snow on
Tuesday. Temperatures
averaging near normal with
daytime highs from mid 30!i
to mid 40s. Early morning
lows from the upper teens to
the mld 20s Sunday and
Monday and In the 30s
Tuesday morning.
CLOSED MONDAY
The Racine Home-National
Bank and the Meigs County
Branch of the Athens County
Savings and Loan Co. will be
closed all day Monday in observance of Presidents' Day.

'

reported ill were Richard
Neutzling, Guy Reuter and
Jack Warner .
Committee members for the'
annual" birtlidlly· dinner are
asked to meet with members of
the Ladles Auxiliary on

""

Dr. Millett
Will Retire
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Dr.
John D. Millett today announced his retirement as
chancellor of the Ohio Board of
Regents, effective Sept. I.
Millett, who will be 60 next
month, has served as the
board's only chancellor ever
since its inception In 1964.
He has been an administrator of publlc higher
education in Ohio for 19 years
and was president of Miami
University before becoming
d!ancellor.
Millett's request for retirement was submitted in a letter
dated Feb. 15 and read to the
board at its regular monthly
meeting by President John
Marshall Briley.
The board unanimously
adopted a resolution accepting
Millett 's retirement with
"great regret" and com·
mending him '!or work as
d!ancellor.
In his letter, Mlllett said that
he was retiring ''for entirely
personal reasons" and noted

New Teacher Pay· Schedule ·Explained
schedules in effect on January 1 and July 1, 1972,
BY GEORGE IJARGRAVES, SUPT.
' respectively or the district will not receive state ·
Meigs Local Sdlool District
school foundation funds. This is the law.
During the past six weeks you have read about
An additional feature of HB 475 was a mandatory
the adoption of two new salary schedules for teachers
increase
of 20 cents per hour for aU non-certificated
in the Meigs Local School District. I would like to
school employees. This was adopted by our board
explain why two schedules have been ad(Jpted and
effective January 1, 1972, as required by the new law.
what they represent. .
No increases have been paid under this provision as
· The new education bill, House Bill 475,
yet. Again, the approval of the Federal Pay Board Is
· established a new state minimum salary schedule to
needed.
These new minimum salary schedules have been
Speaking of Schools
established by HB 475. To receive state sd!ool funds a
district has to have at least the new schedules in
take effect on January 1, 1972. This schedule was
effect on the dates mentioned above. This is the
·adopted in January by our board as required by the
reason that you have been reading about new salary
law. No increased salaries have been paid under this ·schedules frequently in the last half dozen weeks. We
schedule. Final approval for its implementation
are following the requirements of the new law , HB
presently rests with tbe Fedl!ral Pay Board.
475. Full implementation of the new salary schedules
The .same education bill, HB ~7~, mandates an 'and the 20 cents per hour is dependent upon action by
additional revision in the salary schedule to be'ef· the Federal Pay Board.
fective on July 1, 1972. The schedule adopted this
l would like to point out that the new salary
week by our board i&amp;,this schedule ~nd it was adopted
sch~ule effective January 1, 1972, represents the
to be in effect on July 1, 1972, pending Pay Board first teacher salary schedule increase in Meigs Local
approval.
.
since September of 1967. This is a period of 52 100nths.
Both of these salary schedules and the dates of
.
OTHEI\ CIIAri!GES
their effectiveness are contained. ln the IRw. Ever::
There are several other ~igni fi ca nt provisions in
district in the state must have at least these new HB 475 that will cause con sidera~le &lt;:hange in the

Tuesday.
In other business a request
was made for more members
to assist with the weekly
games ; and the propQsed
purchase of new barbecue
racks was discussed.

financial support of education in Ohio . An attempt
wlll be made to toud! on these additional provisions
as the opportunity presents itself in future columris.
On the national scene, tremendously significant
and far-reaching movements are beginning to take
place in school financing . In several states the coarts
have ruled against the use of local real estate taxes as
llle basis for school support. The cases have pointed
out the wide variation ln tax valuation per pupil from
district to district. Meigs ·Local is a good example of
this. We have about $7,:i00in taxable Jroperty behind
each student in our district. The state average is
more than double tbat amount. We'll watch this
movement with considerable interest.
NEWS AND NOTES - It was good to have Mr.
Morrison back in Meigs County last weekend. He is
now being treated as an out-patient of University
Hospital - We are stUI looking for a welding
lr9cher . The key requlreinents for certification are a
high sd!ool diploma and seven years of experience We are finding considerablelrustration. in our fight
for funds for the mining program - Ton!Rht finds
Logan here for our final regular sea110n basketball
game - we are experiencing a def:Oite ln~se in
the nl!lllber of applicants for tead!lng positlona over
what we have had in past years. This is particularly
·
true at the elementary level.

that60istherettrementagefor
state officials.
Millett said he was grateful
for the support he has received
from Gov. John J. Gilligan and
former Gov. James A. Rhodes
as well as from corrunittee
chairmen in the General
Assembly .'
"I think considerable accomplishments have been realized
in higher education during the
psst eight years," Millett said.
Briley said Millett's retirement was accepted with "deep
regret and only after every effort has been made to get him
to d!ange his mind."
Briley's resolution made
Millett a chancellor emeritus
of the boatd for life.
Presidents of the various
state univerSities attending the
meeting immediately arose
· one by one and delivered a
variety of tributes to Millett.

13 More

in Contests
The Meigs County Heart
Assn . today announced seven
more contestanls in its Queen
of Hearts Contest and six more
in the Princess Division.
New contestants from Meigs
High School a re Brenda
Donohue, Sonja Ohlinger, Leta
Floyd, Redenith Blevins, Anita
King and Mila Powell. Mary
Biggs of Southern Hig h School
has entered.
Entering·the princ"ess contest
from Meigs Junior High School
are Katrina Batey, Fae Reibel,
lmojen Blevins and Debbie
Bailey while Melinda Evans
and Denise Talbott have entered from the Eastern School
District.
Contestants are placing
containers in area stores to
receive contributions towards
the title. 'llhe contest is on the
basis of a penny a vote with the
girls raising the most contributions named winners. All
proceeds go to the ·Meigs
County Heart AliSn.

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