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Friendship, ,Peace Pie
By HELEN '1110MAS

- PEKING (UPI)- Prelideid Nholl mUtated btl
millloll ·10 Qlu today Wilb ID UBHbeduJed IIIJt
wllb Mao T~Huag llld Ill escbaqe of pabUe
ple4Bea wllb Cho11 ED-lillo wor11 toward reatorlq

ltleadMip between lbe two 88u0111 •
. Ill relpodH to a baqaet toal by Oloa, Ntton
declared: "Let 1111 jn:lbeae next five daya start a
lq lll8l'cll iotetber, Pol IIi locked Itt, 1Jat OD
dlffereat roada ·leadlac to lbe same goal •,:_ a goal
leadiDg to peace aad jlllllc!e IIi wblda 111 may llaad
togl!lber In peace aad dlgalty."
Of lbe ZO.year alleaalloa of 'lbe twO govem·
meats, the President said: "lbere II ao ~ for
Iii tO be enemies; Nellber ol111 ~eeb dcuDIMdon oi

the ojber. Neither of 111 , wanll to domlllllte the

other." '

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lo bll welcome, O.ou userted that "'11!e,pte of
contael'l!u beeu opened" aad wlced wiJiillpiss to
W.rk wll!t Nixon In establfsbllig normal 'etalioasblps betweea the two.

· · Cbou ud Nbi:OD held three dlscussiODs together

prior to the.•aquetlli lbe llb)'l'hllblan Great Han
of the Peeple IIi lbe C.ter of Peklag, some eight
hoW8 after the J!taldmt'urrlval. (]loa met him at
· lbe boUom of lbe 1'81DP to lbe Nb:oa jet bot the
amval was subdued ~ ·IJIIIllely .tteaded.
Nll!Aia said: "'11U.Is lbe liour, Ibis Is the day for
our two peoples to rise to lbe belgbll ol greatuess
wblcla cau 11atlda new aad.better wilrld. ~ l,a !bat
Splril, laak Ill of you preaeat·to Ioiii me IIi raising
~llf Kll;ses to O!atrmu ~. Prime Mlnlster
lllouaad tofrleadllblpof the ailanead A!nerlcan
; people wbleb
lead to ltleadsblp ollllthe peOple
In the world."
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lo Ugbler vein, the fl:elideat Praised lbe music
· played by a llrge llallle~e eaaemble wblcb at one
· polatreadered ''Home ontbe Rlnlle" aod struck up
"America the Beautllul" following Nixon's
· slatemenl.
Io eudonlng restoraUoa of normal relations,
llaou cited five spedffc points to be agreed llpon,
Including I!OIMigreulon, aoa-4nterfereace In the
Internal affaln ·of esda other's govenuneat.'
Wlille Nlxoa's toast was traasllted Into

caa

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Cblne~e,

Chou sat ·balf turned In bi&amp; chair, looking
toward the podi11111 wllere NIIon stood beneath two
huge A!nerlcaa aad Cblllese Rags.
, As be left the podium, Nlxoa accepted a glan of
wine from a walter, aod walked straight to the big
rolllld h!ble be shared. with Cbou ED-Ial. The two
raised their glalaes.
(llou thea turned to Mn. Nlxou and tbey raised
their glu~es Ia a toast u Nlxoa did tile 88Ule with
the more lhaa U other dlgallarles at the bead table.
Nlma tbeQ weal from table to table, taking a
small sip eacb ilme be railed bll glass Ill a toast
before returning to his table, where be again tossled
Cbou.
Io his remarks cllmaxlug au eveatful lint day
In Cblna, Nixon paraphrased both Abraham Uncoln
aild Mao. Cbou In turil quoted Nixon's receot
statement expressing oope tbat a aew chapter could
be opened In Chlnese-A!nerlcan relations.
Cbou cited Nlxoa's declaration that the United
Stales and Ulloa coufd have differences without
golog to war with each other.
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!JOY. 'fl.j~

Men comprise 52 per cent Qf
the popul$1ion of China,
· reflecting tlie. centuries-old
inferior position of· women.
This inequality of sexes has
now disappeared completely.

HOW I.ONG WIW..

iHi REPAIFi5 .
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Al-l DON'T I-IOLD

MAN'S P.ELIGIOI-l

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AG!NHIM-

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VOL. XXIV NO. 219

Guess.Who: ~s.
C(Jrninl 'to {Ji
TH!SGEI-JNULMAN IS

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LIKE WE 'ALLUS DO,

" WKEN Tl-1' WEATHER
GITSNIP~- _ . _...-

PEKING (UPI)-In an unex-· Cbou, said the meeting took
peeled departure from his place ·tn Mao's home.
annouilced schedule, President "They held a series of frank

diBcusslons," Zeigler said.
He said Henry A. Kissinger,
NixOn 'a national security advi·

-iefo·MIOse secret 'itlp t0 Pekbtg

last swnmer arranged Nb:on's
visit here, took part.
Ziegler declined to specify
what they discussed. "I'm not
prepared to give you any infonnatlon about the meeting at
this time," he said.

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ews•• in Briefi
BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
COLUMBUS -ROBERT CECH.E, Gov. John J. Gilligan's
aide for educational affairs, says a new legislative vehicle for the
controversial ''Ohio Plan" iB being readied for Introduction In the
Ohio General Assembly, The Ohio Plan requires ooUege students
to repay the slate for the coat of their education. It got nowhere
last year In the legiSlature. Gilligan, however, Is still convinced
the plan has merit and his staff Is reworking the legialation.
Cecile said he believes much of the confusion over the plan
would have been avoided If legislative leaders would have given
the bill bearings last year. "I met the other day with a grolip of
faculty people who were genuinely surprised when 1 mentioned
the primary goal in the plan II to allow everyone to go to college,
regardless of financial circumstances," Cecile said. The Gilligan
plan would require college gtaduales to repay their stole subsldies after their annual Income reached $7,000.
· Gilligan estimates the plan would save Cillo taxpayers about
f5 billion over the next 30 years.

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A~D TE:t..t.. U~
8UPDY~ We'l-L.. T~Y
BRAve~

POWN

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TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

ere nee
Nixon plunged Into a one:bour
talk today with O!lna's top two
olficlal,l - ~unl.t party
- ·~·tJt..nu•r -~ ~-'lnd
Premier Chou En-lat.
While House Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler, disclosing
the secret talks to reporters
who had been told only of an
lDiexpecled delay in Nixon's
scheduled first meeting with

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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1972

ao (!i·ns Nixon, Chou

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POMEROY·MIDOLEPORT, OHIO

., ME. AN' Fl'IPP'f'LL
61 fFl&gt; WIF TH' PleSS,

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CAPTAIN EASY

Cloudy tonight, chance of
showers changing to · snow
flurries north and becoming
mixed with snow central. Low
middle 30s south. Not as wann ·
Tuesday. High in.mid to lower ·
40s south .

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DeVoted To The liaterfl'b .Of The Meigs-MOMJn Area

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A METECP.OLDGISli
!'tiNS'/...

Weather

Now You Kn9w

COUP~E' OF
l:'!\'16 HAVE'
JjJiN II:UGGJ!D,

1AKE'7

DANCING CHINESE STYLE for the Thinking Day program were Sheila Buchanan, Judy
Holter, Debra Lewis, Susan Hannwn, Kay Balderson and Kim Reed of the Reedsville Junior
Troop 67,
(See account and other pictures on p~ge 4)

BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND- Bomb blasts caused
rush bour traffic chaos In downtown Belfast today~ In Londonderry British troops battled snipers cilring the night In what
the army caned the worst shooting violence since 13 cl:vllians
died there on "bloody Sunday." Two masked gunmen ~~tnt attendants Oeelng from a gasoline station in Chichester Street 200
yards from Belfast City Hall today and planted bombs that ·
wrecked the station and set one gallOiine pwnp ablaze, as lii'IIIY
spokesman said.
Two persons were hospitalized for shock, the spokesman
said. The esplosions came during the morning rush hour, with
downtown streets crowded with peo!)!e on their way to work. The
sudden blasts, screaming ambulance sirens and security cordons
thrown around the area caused traffic chaos.

Ziegler made only a barebonet:l announcement that the
meeting had occurred. He did
not say when or if Nixon and
Mao, the architect and father
of Cblnelle COIIlJIIulusm, wO\Ild
'meet again.
·
The two had been expected to
meet Tuesday, but before the
trip ·started, the White House
had refused to issue an
ininerary, saying only that
meetings would be arranged
after Nixon's arrival.
That arrival occurred at a
sparsely attended airport ceremony, where, except for the
Cblnese military men present,
American journalists outnum·
bered Chinese officialdom.
The President, all but
ignored by the city's 4 million
residents, drove with Chou
along ... almost unpopulated
· highways and streets. They
passed rows of orchards,
poplar trees, and factories
billowing smoke on their way
to the recently built villa where
Kissinger stayed when here
and which will serve as the
Peking residence of Nixon and
his wife Pat while they are in
Peking.
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In all, Nixon. held three
(Continued on Page 6)

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LAWYERS MEET - Among tbe lawyers attending a meeting of District 17 of the Ohio
State Bar Association Saturday afternoon and evening at the Meigs Inn, Pomeroy, were from
left, Bernard Fultz, Middleport, secretary of the Meigs County Bar Assn.; Neal Dillon, Logan ,
newly elected member of the Ohio State Bar Assn.'s Council of Delegates, term beginning
July I, 1972; Edward Robe, Athens, District 17 esecutive oonunlttceman, and Myron Ulrich,
Cleveland, president of the Ohio Slate Bar Assn. Ulrich, principal speaker of the evening,
outlined trends In the practice of law, recent changes and interpretations in the negligence law,
and general guidelines for the practicing lawyer . He also discussed steps being taken in the
metropolitan oourts to speed up disposition of cases.

' THE PRACfiCE OF LAW is a family affair for Mr. and
Mrs. Myron Ulrich, Cleveland, both lawyers. Attorney and
Mrs, Ulrich were In Pomeroy Saturday to attend a meeting of
District 17 of the Ohio State Bar Assn. Mr; Ulrich is state
president of the Ohio Bar Association. Counties represented
In the district are Athens, Meigs, Hocking, Morgan, Noble
and Washington.

Attacks Pressed In South
SAIGON (UP!) - Viet.
namese Communist forces
observed President Nfxon's
visit to Peking today with ·a
surge of at least 50 attacks
throughout South Vietnam that
left three Americans and 40
South Vietnamese dead since
sunrise .Sunday.
In addition, 69 Conununisls
were reported killed, and 12
Americans and St South
Vietnamese were wounded.
But allied officers said they did
not consider this the beginning
of a much-discussed Com.
munlst offensive supp05edly
timed for the Nixon visit.
Though the Vietnamese have
suffered at least $33 casuaiues
over the past four days - 116
killed and 117 wounded - A
South Vietnamese spokesman
sai~. today "The level of enemy

attacks indicates enemy ac·
livity is about nor.nal."
Lt. Gen. Ngo Dzu, military
commander in the Central
Highlands, where the main
weight of the attack was expected, told a press conference
today that thanks to allied
aerial· bombardments and
preparedneSs on the ground,
:''lllere is no.sign thd they are
going to start an attack now. It
has been delayed."

He said the timetable of the
offensive had been thrown off
by massive allied air strikes
and a number of "small
things" such as Communist
reconnaissance teams being
destroyed by mines'.
Dzu said the danger Is not
over since the Communists still
are building up supplies and
troops in the tri.Jlorder area of
Loa, Cambodia and South
Vietnam's Kontwn Province.

Chopsticks Fly

FIRST SERVICE
The first of the Union Serv·
Ices for Lent sponsored by
the Pomeroy Mlalslerlal
PEKING (UPI)-Pat and
Assn. will be held at Grace
Episcopal Church Wed· Richard Nixon wielded chop.sticks like old pros.toolght at a
nesday at 8 p. m.
The Rev. Arthur Lund, · banquet thrown by Chou En·
pastor of St. Paul's Lutheran Lai.
The American guests ate
Church, assisted by Rev.
Plattenburg will preseal a with obvious gusto, and the
trim Cbjhese waiters and
dialogue on the subject of
Judas' betrayal of Jesus. All waitresses were hard pressed
to keep the wine goblets fiUed,
persons are Invited.
so vigorously and frequently
did the Nlxons toast their hosts.
The dinner lasted almost
three hours. The supping was
TO MEET TONIGHT
leisurely, the sipping unrc·
The Southern High School strained.
Athletic Boosters will hold a
An ebullient Nixon.
special meeting this evening at after formally toasting Chou
the high school at 7:30p.m. to from the rostrwn in front of the
complete plans for a pancake immense Great Hall of the
supper to de held March 5.
People, stepped down and

Winchell Meets Last Deadline

SAIGON - '111E U. S., COl\IMANI) announced today II was
turning over its $59 million doUar airbase at Tuy Hos along the
central roast to the Vietnamese government for use as a civilian
airfield.
LOS ANGELES (UP!) .The command also disclosed the departure of another 4,100
"Good evening Mr. and Mrs.
America and all the ships at
Gla from VIetnam, ll'lnglng U. S. troop strength In thla country
sea. Let's go to press."
doWn to 127,100men. The total iB scheduled to ron to 69,000 r.;::n
Hill hat on his head,jlis right
by f!lay I under President Nixon's withcliawal program: The
hand triggering staccato beeps
stningth Is now the lowest since August, 1966, when there were
on
a no.semaker telegraph key
100,300 Gls bere.
AUTOS
DAMAGED
beside the microphone, his
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Two autos had medium breathless delivery rushing .
NEW YORK - NOAH DIETRICH, in ht., soon-to-be damage and· one driver was
published book about Howard Hughes, says he warned then Vice cited to Mayor's Court as the through big news and small
President Richard Nixon that scandal could result from Hughes' result of an accident on East go~ip,Waiter Winchell needed
no other identification. He
loan of t2l6,000 to Nixon's lrother, Donald.
Main St. at 1:45 p.m. Satlli'day, . trough\ Amerkans crowding
Nixon replied:· "I have
Ill)' relatives ahead o(my
Police said a car driven by .around radios from the era of.'
career," Dietrich wrote In the boOtc that recaila his many years Shelly Hall, 16, Cheshire, the Jazz Age througll the
aa ·the eccentric billionaire's lop aide.
struck .the rear of a car driven 1\:orean war, •
The loan went through, Qlettlcb wrote, but did not meet its . by Roger Barrett, 24, Mid•
A:! the voice of the l93Us and
purpose Of 111vlng Donald Nixon's faltering Whlitier, Calif., dleport, attempting to make a 40s, spilling in rapid bursts
restaurant from eventual conapse. The book titled, "Howard, le£1 turn. There were no in- from the cloth gril'~s of woodThe AmUing Mr. ~ugbes" and written by Dietrich and juri~. Miss Hall was cited to frame radio 5e!s, Winchell was
Aft!OC:tated Press report~!~' Bob 'Thomas, Is to be released next cour\ on im assured Clear an Ame~ican 'pre ;cnee, from
disl~nce diarg·e.
lplllth.
Damon R"nyon 's gau:!:

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Broadway to the debates of the
195Ql over Conununism. ,
His column, punctuated with
dots and dashes and sprinkled
wit)l the words be coined called
"Winchellisms," appeared at
one lime in almost 1,000
newspapers, lle was one of the
most powerful commentators
of his time.
Dies of Cancer
Winchell died of cancer
Sunday at the age of 74.
Winchell had been IJospita·
lized at the UCLA Medical
Center since Nov. 19. Relatives
said he had cancer of the
prostate.
He r~lired from his regulrut~lumn in 1969. after his only
son . Waller Win clwll .lr.,
commit ted ' ukide. A year

out a column on show business
doings and Broadway gossip
that appeared in Billboard and
Vaudeville News.
In 1924 he joined the New
York Graphic at $100 a week,
and four years later moved to
the New York Mirror, at about
the liaJlle time beginning his
radio broadcast
His base of operations was
the Stork Club, which he made
synonymous with his New
York, and where he 111\ each
night at Table 50, sipping
coffee and asking of the
famous, infamous and would·
.Jt'"rl
be·somebodies who dropped
by : "What's n'lW?"
Jump to Reporting
He made the jump from . Wine nell moved west in 1962,
song -amj-danrc Plan to writing his column from Los
11ev:spttper n·portcr by turning Angeles and &amp;'0\tsdale, Ariz.

later he announced his
''retirement from retirement"
to do three columns a week for
the New York Daily Mirror,
but retired again after less
than a year. His wife June, a
former Ziegfeld Follies girl,
died in 1970 of a heart oon·
dition.
Winchell dropped out of
school at 13 to go on stage in
1910 with the Gus Edwards
"Song Review" in a six-boy
singing group .hat included two
other ambitious youngstersEdd!e Canter and G ~ org e

meandered from table to table
among lesser officials, Ufting
his glass, clicking it, taking a
tiny nip, nodding his head
smartly, moving on to the next
guest. He appeared to miss no
one.
Olou was an exemplary host,
apparently conversing at times
in English with his American
guests at the big round table
where he sat between the
President and Mrs. Nixon.
Once, Chou served Mrs.
Nixon a bit of food from a dish,
Another time the tiny, slender
Olinese premier rose from his
seat and reaChed as far as he
could across the table to spear
with his chopsticks what appeared to he a shrimp ,
Aside from the serious, long
fonnal toasts by Olou and
Nixon, an air of jovialit)l
marked the meal.

B&amp;E At School
Investigated
The Meigs County sheriff's
dept . is investigating a
breaking and entering at the
Bradbury Elementary School
that occurred some time
Saturday. The incident was
reported by a teacher, Mrs .
Phyllis Hackett.
Mrs. Stewart, a cook at the
school, told investigators she
caught three boys in the
building early Saturday. She
talked to them, and they le£t .
Later in the day she returned to
th~ school and found seven
more boys in the school , who
ran. Found missing so far Is
$3.50.

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, Z- ~ Da!l1 SetXInel,Mkldleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 21,19'12
.

3-The O.Uy Sentinel, Mlddleport-&lt;'CAileiV!, 0 ., Feb. 21, 19'12 .

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·c hinese Manners
Are. Perfection

Eastern ,Clips Vikings, 69-66

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set foot on the Chinese
Retirement AlliiOIIIICed
Ori his lo.rtress island, mainland at 8:54a.m. Monday
Nationalist Chinese President local time , (7:54 p.m. EST
Chiang Kai-Mek ,84, anno1111ced Sunday) when his plane
his retirement next month, but stopped at Sbanglllli 's sleekly
left tbe door open to a draft for mQdem airport to refuel for the
reelection. His country's U.N. 'IO(knile flight to this ancient
seat lost to Peking, Chiang capital.
When the President's Boeing
lamented the "deteriorating
world situation" and said m, "Spirit of '76" landed at
Mainland China was In chaos Shanghai, the Nixon's were
welcomed by Deputy Foreign
as the result of purges. .
At the head of a motorcade of Minister Chiao Kuan-hua, who
black and green Chinese-made led the O!inese delegation to
aqtomoblles, the President the United Nations last fall.
The President spent 40
rode through fann fieldS, past
vast orchards and evenly mi'Wtes at the airport.
President Snicks
spaced poplar trees, then
Offered a meal, the
beside factories with tl!eir
stacks smoking in the dear- President snacked on wonton
crisp morning sunshine. He soup, jasmine tea and a
passed the Gate of Heavenly tangerine. Chiao climbed
Peace to his quariers in the aboard for tbe flight to Peking
Tiao Yu Tal guest bouse In the and conferred with Dr. Henry
western suburbs, beside a Kissinger and Secretary of
State William P. Rogers.
frozen lake.
There Nixon prepared for his Photographers aboard the
first lonna! contact with the plane were Invited to record
Chinese, talks which he said the occasion.
&lt;\ Chinese navigator joined
before leaving would seek "to
teers."
find a way to see that we can the flight, too. He sat to the
Airport Is Quiet
ba ve differences without being right of Col. Ralph Albertame,
the President's pilot, relaying
The huge Peking airport was enemies in war."
and
translating instructions·
eerUy quiet during the brief
Relatively few Chinese could
IIJ'eetlngs between the two be seen on the 18-mlle route from the control tower at
leaders. No large crowd which carried Nixon and Cbou, Peking Airport.
Nixon's arrival was reported
greeted. the President at the riding together In a black
by
the official New China News
start of' his one-week visit limousine which bore the Rags
which may revise the power of both their nations, to the Agency with a brief description
bloc politics that have shaped newly constructed compound for the outside world. Peking
the world's course since World which became Nixon's Chinese Radio was carrying a news
report when the President's
War II and since China, the residence.
plane touched down. The ...
world's most populous nation,
Pat with Mn. IJ
newscast
did not mention
embraced communism.
Mrs. Nl'xon rode with Mrs. U
Throuih satellite television, llslen-nien, wife of the vice Nixon's arrival.
Americani stayed awake to premier, and a male interprewatch the drama of Nixon's ter from the State Department.
WIN AT BRIDGE
llrst hCIIl'S In China while
The bufi brick guest ho~se,
dlplomall strained to evaluate an American Rag flying from
Ita Impact on world politics.
above its porch, was guarded
Moecow, Ita relatioos with by troops of the people's
China asunder, watched liberation army, some with
warily. So did Japan, the third automatic rifles tipped with a
IIJ'eat Pacific power, yearning gleaming bayonet.
NORTH
21
for China's market and
Nixon lllld sought this visit
.1075
America's nuclear umb'eUa. since taking the presidency.
¥105
Hanoi, dependent on China Early in 1969, still new to the
t AQ72
111d Moscow to wage war, White House, he had confided
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waited too. But the Communist to Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., and
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offlclail bad 111ticlpated in two leaders of the U.S. Senate,
tl096J
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VIetnam to coincide with that•: "I want to go to China."
"'74
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Musser makes the wheels as a hobby at his home. He has traveled extensively to study spinning
"'QJ96
wheels of rriany countries.
East~ West vulnerable
Letters of opiDloe 'ire welcomed. They aboald be leu
daa M wonllloaa (er bnabject to redllctloD by lbe editor) I West North F.a.-tl South
IN.T.
Musser has authored several textile machinery came into curator of the institution.
1 udmutbellpedwtlhlbellpee'uddren.Nameamaybe I Pas.~ 3 N.T. Pas.&lt; PaS&gt;&lt;
articles · on the subject for being a man named John
In the 18th and 19th cen1 wtlbbeld upoa pubUcalloa, however, on reqae1t. Lellen
Pass
magazines
including
"Workwheel for each of his five
Horner started collecting turies, almost every family in
BY BOB HOEFIJCH
1 lboald be In lood talle, addreulag i11aes, not penonallllea. I Open in~ lead-• K
bench"
and
receives
requests
spinning
wheels and began a America had at least . one
married
children.
"Spinning wheel's got to go
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for
information
from
readers.
Then, Musser started
museum in Belfast, Ireland. He spinning wheel. Most of these,
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Today's
spinning
by
researching
the
history
of
knew
U1at the mechanization except those owned by
And making sure it does is
automation
produces
about
:;o
Jim : "How about showing Russell Musser, former spinning. This became so
and automation meant the end collectors or those in
a few hands where the best
threads
per
inch
.
However,
of the spinning wheel being museums, have disappeared.
engrossing
that
he
and
his
wife
line of play fails to work . It Rutland resident, who is one of
does happen that way some· the few people in the world began traveling all over the ancient Incas usirig spinning used in the home. Musser, who However, a former Meigs
today who builds spinning world visiting ' niuseums, wheels did produce in some of has made several trips to the Countian is helping insure that
! times."
collectors and builders of their finest cloth 250 to 500 Belfast museum, corresponds the spinning wheel keeps going
Oswald : " A ~ood idea. We wheels.
Now, before it is too Late
might start With last Tues·
Born and reared in Meigs spinning wheels . . He has threads an inch. In 1851, when regularly with the present 'round.
day's hand . Leave the North County, Musser graduated become somewhat of an
Middleport, Ohio and South hands the same. from Rutland High School in authority on the subject and
February 21, 1972 but change East and West a 1925. He worked in the 'coal corresponds with people in
triHe ." ·
Dear Sir:
mines and then went to many parts of the world about
.
The lnfonnatlon below bas been made available through
Jim : "South starts out by Springfield, Ohio in 1928 where it.,
eome local ch11rches and, in the opinion of many, should be made winning the third lead of he resides at 537 Porlage Path .
He and Mrs. Musser have
p;blic.
hearts. Then he notes that
In 1928, Musser went lo work traveled to Spain, Portugal,
"Love-In" at the Loew's Americana Hotel here
he isn't going to make his at International Harvester in Morocco, Egypt , several
BY JACK O'BRIAN
"Are you interested in helping to keep morals high in our · conlract
if West holds the
had the fabulous U.S. fashion show of all time;
community, state and nation? It is the Christian duty of each of ace of clubs, but will make Springfield where he was counties in the Holy Land,
its chairmen, Jerry Silverman and Ahe
AND THEN THERE'S
us here, to take the time (yes, right now) to write a few lines to it if East holds the ace of employed on the assembly line Syria, Turkey, Greece,
Schrader (bit wheels in the chic rag-trade), got
QUIET IRELAND
CBS 'IV ChannelS at Charleston, W. Va. and CBS President Dr. clubs and either the spade until being oamed a foreman in England, Scotland, Ireland ,
finesse
works
or
diamonds
1942.
He
retired
in
1966
and
had
Newfoundland, Mexico and
NEW YORK (KFS) - Peter Sellers will together a slew of 7th Ave. designers (Norrell,
Frank Stanton, CBS Television Network, 51 W. 5?nd Street, New
break 3·3. He sees that he
York, N. Y. 10019, and protest tbe showing .of the film "The ran afford to test the dia- no special interest in wood- eight countries in South give up his Irish residency; calls the climate Trigere , Beene, Blass, Brooks, Cardin,
America.
"too soporific" ... Even the flies buzz slower Originala, De Ia Renta, etc.) lor the good cause
Damned." This is a mustlfwewant to keep morals high and help monds as a slarter so cashes working. Then it happened !
In
each
location,
Mr.
and
the high diamonds. East
Musser attended a foreman's
our children llllve a safer tomorrow.
over there ... FeUa who brought Perry Como's - many of whnni hadn't spoken to each other in
Mrs
.
Musser
visited
experts
on
''On February 28, 1972, Columbia Broadcasting System is shows out on t~e third lead picnic given by International
famulous Tequesta, Fla., home (it cost Perry seasons. Fashion folk are even more volatile
the
spinning
wheel.
They
took
planning to air the X-Rated film, "The Damned" on network so S 0 u t h goes after clubs. Harvester and met a man.there
about $750,000, and he didn't lose money in the than envious film stars.
pictures
of
some
of
the
wheels.
East
wins
and
shoots
back
a
who
had
made
a
spinning
Haitian distillery brews booze in virtually ·
television. It is being aimed specifically at Mr. and Mrs. Middlesale) is Joe Hrudka, brilliant Cleveland lad ol32
When
they
returned
home,
spade."
wheel
and
was
.
•
bowing
his
America. x~ated movies are already being shown to viewers on
who dropped out of school, fiddled around with Howard Johnson flavors - such as hibiscus,
Oswald : " Here is where . friends a picture of it. Musser Musser would duplicate them. drag.raciryg, got annoyed with his stock-car mango, coconut, cashew ... Our friend Glen
the coasts.
There are 60 types of spinexhaust gaskets. blowing out, so he pursued a Covington sometimes brings us a pineapple rwn
"The Damned ", a motion picture by Luchino Visconti the expert really gets burned. thought it might be fun to make
He can take the ace of spades one so he sent to a magazine lor ning wheels, but all must have
contains elements of transvestism, incest, homosexuality, child and cash a total of eight plans and proceeded to turn out a "flier" and "seven hooks.'' tiny notion he could make one of his own that from the Dominican Republlc that's the tastiest
molestation and nudity. An encore is hard to imagine .
trirks but that is the cow· his first spinning wheel. The Musser has made 21 different wouldn't, burn out, found an element used for ... Screen Gems &amp; Bell Records will try a TV
"Since Christian Crusade Weekly believes this is a trial ard's line of play· Ex Per 1 first one proved to be such a types of wheelS with about two . diesels and aircraft - and the Test is a happy series titled "Bobby Joe and the Big Apple
balloon, that is, CBS is trying to pull it ·off without a general South plays the queen of
fiscal finale : he's sold his "Mr. Gasket" firm to Goodtime Band." Naturally inspired by "Tbe
spades and winds up down success as a showpiece in the weeks required to create one of
outcry from Mid-America, we are suggesting the following ac· three."
Musser home that Mr. Musser the "weaving machines. " the W. R. Grace Co. lor $17 million ... And is Partridge Family " success ... Sad-gallant
tion :
thinking of retiring in three years - at 35!
gang: a teenage Alcoholics Anonymous -"
Jim : "Note Ihat the expert decided lo make a spinning However, he may work on two
"fl) Write irrunediately to C.B.S. President, and Charleston,
Ex-major
league,
no-hitpitcher.Bo
Belinsky
upwards from 12 years of age! ... "The Tokens" ,
or three at a time. Each wheel
line has suffered the maxiand protest vigorously. Inform C.B.S. officialdom you know what mum loss . A South player
has 37 parts which are mounted struck out again: his wile Jo Collins is divorcing is a rock-group without one gold record - hut. •.
UNDERGOES SURGERY
they are up to and don'tlike it. or course, if there is no protest, who did not attack diamonds
onto the frame. Five of the him; betimes Jo is picking up a few bob drov- don 't plan any benefits, they coin a fortune Sgt. ~· orrcst D. Bachtel
such films will become common with in the year. It's like a re-run first would never lose a diawheels built by Mr. Musser ping her clothes as a Playboy Mag "playmate" residual checks from Pan-Am ("Makes
underwent
an
appendectomy
mond
trick
and
would
only
of Genesis 11 :6.. .'now nothing will be restrained from them
were constructed of different centerfoldress ·... ''Sanford &amp; Son" series star Going Great") , Adams Gum, Nestles and
'which they have imagined to do.'
'
' be down two when lhe spade Saturday at the Luke Air wood for each part. Many of Redd Foxx is awfully glad his new TV show Eastern Airlines.
fin c s"' lost. On the olher Force Base Military Hospit"!2) Write or call - and object to the film. The local station hand our unlucky expert has
Tho she's now 70, Marlene Dietrich will .
al. His address is Luke '"" woods used are imported seems a hit: so is a Las Vegas casino.
can always air another JI'Ogram.
given himself the best play Air Force Base, Milit~ry and run from $3.50 to $8.50 per
Vanity, thy name is male : Lana '1\trner's totter off on another U. S. in-person tour ...
for his contract. which is the
square fool. Each wheel that he divorce from Ron Dante the other day revealed Streisand thinks Ryan O'Neal's The One, but so
"13) Insist from C.B.S. in New York the names of the
&lt;'XI'&lt;'rls arc supposed to Hospital, Ward 6, Phoenix, creates carries his name and his age i~ 52. He'd been saying 35 ... Onna White
national sponsors paying the way for the "The Damned." Ac· way
does his estranged wife, Leigh Taylor-Young.
Ariz . His mother, Mrs. Forrest
play ...
lhe
date
it
was
made
so
that
it
·
cording to our information, the airing and sponsorship of these
{ Nf.W~PAPER ENTUPRISE ASSN.,
l her "Oliver" film choreography was superb) Don't discount a reconciliation ... Actor, Dane
Bachtel, and his sister. Miss
cannot be sold as or claimed to . will dillo for "The ·Great Waltz" ... Concert
movies will be natiomil, not local. Write these sponsors and
Carul Bachtel, are vacationing
Clark will switch to the other .side . of the
be an antique.
protest vigorously .
' pianist Byron Janis cancelled all his concerts. footlights if he can find a play to produce ...
in Phoenix with Sgt. and Mrs.
Musser has sent his spinning Bursitis.
"U, for example, a particular oil company SP&lt;&gt;nsors the
Bachtel
Fran Jeffries (at the Rainbow Room)) can keep
'flu· hidclin.c: lm ~ ht•t•n·
wheels to people all over the
program, protest to the company's president. II no satisfaction is
Variety Clubs lnt'l commissioned master an eye on her husband, Steve Schaeffer, during
\\'t•s l• North
fo:ttsf
South VET ELECT OFFICERS '
cnun try and in addition to the
obtained tear up their credit cards and send them in with a letter
water
colorist Dong Kingman to paint the cover her singing act; if she looks around-steve's ·
PH~-COLUMBUS IUP!l - Dr. wheels turns out ornamental
explaining your al'lion.
It
Pas.-.
2+
., Charles W. Miller of Crestline candlesticks, old fashioned llil' their 45th annual yearbook. Dong will paint her drummer .
Pl tS~
!•Many statioos which ieel they can ignore you individually
Cornell grid star Ed Marinar~ took ho~~
was installed as P'esident of type cradles, lamps. restores "Tunes Square '72" and the original will be
Yuu, Smt1h. hnld :
know they caiVlot ignore their sponsors.
the Ohio Veterinary Medical anlique furniture, canes chairs charity-a~clioned ... Johnny Carson has a talent the Lou Li tile Award the other night. Only lady
"Our l.onl said that we are not to hide .our candle under a """1;5 •1¥AIIG t A:t2 .J .t A~sncialion at the ~roup's 88th
and recently created a special for destroying money. Moving to theW. Coast present was his mom, stashed alone In the far·
Wllotl du y u H dol nuw'.'
buM!el. F.dmund Burk at one lillie said th•t •II that is nl'&lt;'cssary
with his show, ,his United Nations Plaza pad up balcony ... ln Ed's acceptance speech, he
am,ual meeting lwr~ Sunday. chair for a disabled child.
A- Uid lwu '&lt;il)llllt•s. 'rhi.'i hi•l
·for evil to triwnph is that flOOd men and women do nothing. Let's
Miller SIKWCdcd Dr . Milton
Smne ul the articles, Mr. t $175.000) will he up for sale at the ~o-op glanced at thP balcony and said, "Before
u r ;• tu•w )&lt;,nil ,. u 11 t ·t n 11 L' !'. tlw
make C.H.S. wish it had ncvur dmllenged the morulity of Mr: and fmn•. /\1-.tl '\ uU lmn· furn·d \ '11111' Willen of Canton.
Mussel' creates are sold bul inarkel's bleakest ebb.
coming here tonight, my mom cautioned me,
Mrs. M.ld-luncrica .
tm rln•·•· 1u ·l,itl ht'llfl.\ , lh· 'nllt)
Taking over a :s virr must arc made just for the
The Henry Fo~das are shopping for a Rome "Ed, please don't say anything tonight.' " ... It ·
"C.:vples of the book, "X-Rated tofovics" - Hollyw~&lt;•l 's lint lmld fin· t•Jmls lht•rt•,
prt.•sident was Dr . Rt•nj:unine plcttSUre or COD19leting apartlnenl ·... The Israeli-Greek cafe Sirocco
drew a howl from the sports in-crowd ... He'd
Ton~ v-s 1111t:s·1·w~
Scheme to Corrupt AmL'I'ica," arc u~uiloblc from l'lll'isti:m
. S. Ht•nson of .Mar&gt;lichi. D1·. bcauliful pieces of furniture for s11•r s unt• flris San's group. Which was selected been quoted recently saying, "I'd like to play
Crullllde, Box '117, '1\tlsa, Oklahonm 74102."
Yn11 r p :tr lnt •J t'unl i tu•• -=' '" Haymond W. Sl.tt'kst ill u f
lht• apprt•dnliun or others.
personally by lrsael big-macher Moshe Dayan with the (New England) Patriots for a couple of
lhrt •t • l ll': ll 'h What du " !111 , I ,
l'har
g
t·in
...
:111~ will !'il'l'\'l'
..
fliU~&gt;•ugil
beginning
late
with
lo play al til~ 1fedcings of his two children. But years, then play pro football.'' Seems we have '
11'1\\
illlllt}WI' fl'l'lll .;IS S&lt;.'l' l'd:t ry ,
' Middlt•l•~~'l , &lt;H1in
his wnuflwnr•king inlert&gt;~ l. Mr. nol al Mushe's divorce
, \11 ~ \\1 ' 1' 'l'lJIIIHI' I' :t l\
Last weekend's anolher funny-quotable Yogi Berra In spots.
PEKlNG ( UPI) - President
Nixon broke two decades of
bostlllty and Isolation between
the· United Slates and China
today, arriving In this wintry
capital to a reception that was
proper and cordial and all but
Ignored by Peking's 4 million
f'l!ople.
In near freezing temperatures and brilliant sunshine, a courteous unsmiling
Premier Chou ~n-lai, 73,
welcomed Nixoo, his wife Pat
and his entourage of officials.
Carefully.briefed on Chinese
custom, the President &lt;lapped
.his hlnd:t a few times in
responae to the light applause
which greeted him. Mao Tsetung, 78, architect and father of
Ollna 's communism, was not
on hand. He and Nixon were
expected to meet '1\tesday;
Nixon was met by a 360-man
military contingent and went
down the line shaking hands. A
bend played "The Star Spangled Banner" and China's
anthem, "March of the Volun-

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TUPPERS PLAINs' - The .
Eastern Eagles clinched
second place in the Southern
Valley Conference near here
Saturday night, defeating the
S)'Jilllles V;llley Vikings 69-M
in the season finale for both
teams.
·
.Aian Duvall, 6-2 junior
forward,
and
Dennis
Eichinger, 6-3 senior center
combined for 47 points and 40
rebounds, almost a five-man
team total. ~vall hit a career
high for 25 and pulled down 14
retrieves while Eichinger had
22 markers and 26 grabs.
The Eagles look second place
In the SV AC with a 10-2 record
and are 16-2 overall. The
Vikings are 11·7 overall and
finished in third place with a 93 record.
Other than Eichinger's and
Duvall's tremendous scoring
punch was Randy Young with
12 while Bob Caldwell bad 10
rebounds. The Eagles had an
awesome total of 61 rebounds
for the night.
Phil Robinson was the
game's leading scorer with 'll
points on 12 field goals aild
three free throws. High-scoring
Danny Wilson had 18 and Gene

Meyers added 12 for the
Vikings.
Symmes Valley,losers of the
first game with the Eagles, 6&amp;62, shot out to a 20-12 first
·quarter lead and maintained
the lead, 311-28, at the half.
The Eagles, doing as they·
llllve all year, outscored their
opponents in the third periQd,
23-19, to take a 51-'49 advantage
Into the final eight minutes.

1.

Sovtl.
Fd.

And Ulllt nllll'gln was protected
by a ·few poirits during that
fourth quarter.
All-Ohio candidate Eichinger
became the SVAC scoring
· clu!mpion with his 22 point
production, bettering seconq
plaee Arthur Clark of North
Galjla. by four points.
Coach Bill Phillips' J:;agles
took 80 shots from the field and
made 30 for a 34 pet. average

Poin'1'

4.5" - 7:o o

.

a. Mc.i1$
~

and connected on 9 of 131rom
EASTERN !69)- Duvall11).
the foul line for 69 pet. The 1&gt;-25, Eichinger 10-2-22, Boring
Vikings had 24 field goals and . 1.0.2, Young 6.o.12, Caldwell 318 free throws.
2-8. Totals 3()..9.69.
In the preiiminary game, the
SYMMES VAIJ.EY (66) little Vikings handed Eastern Wilson 5·8-18; Roach 2-2-6,
its fifth loss of the !lliason Taylor 0-3-3, Meyers 1&gt;-2-12,
againstl3 wins, 47-43. The IOSii Rubinson 12-3-27. Totals 24-18lowered Coach Bob Ord's litUe 66.
Eagles to a first place tie with
BY QUARTERS ·
North Gallia, each with 111-2 Sym. Valley
20 10 19 17-M
slatea.
Eastern
12 16 23 1&amp;--69

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t:IS'

Meeting

Tourney Pairings
SYMMES VALEY
SECTIONAL
IClus AAl
Feb. 25: -South Point !18·01
vs. Meigs (8-10), 7 p.m .; Rock
Hili 17·111 ,vs. Coal Grove (12.
61. 8: 15 p. m.
.
Ftb. 26:- Ironton (11-71 vs.
Fair land (10·71, 7 p. m. ;
Chesapeake
110·71
vs.
Gallipolis (1~· ~1. 8:15 p. m.
Semi-final action will be held
on March I and 2, beginning at
7:30p.m. Flnaisara scheduled
March~. starting at 7:30p. m.,
with winner advancing to the
Rio Grande District.
ALBANY SECTIONAL
I Cia II AAl
Ftb. 25 : - Sheridan (16-21
vs. Warren Local 112-6), 7 p.
m.; Federai·Hocklng (7·111 vs .
Vinton County (3·15). 8: JO p. m.
Ftb. 26: - Wellston t~-141
vs. Belpre !12·6), 7 p: m.;
Neisonvllie . York (6-12) vs.
New Lexington (1HI. 8:30 p.
·m.
LUCASVILLE SECTIONAL
(CiatsMl
Ftb. 23 : - Northwest (7-10)
vs. Portsmouth . West ( 1~·4),
7:30 p. m.
Ftb. 24: - Dek Hili (6·12) vs.
Minford (l-15), 7:30 p: m.
Feb. 25 : - Greenfield (16-2)
vs. Hillsboro (7-11), 7:30p.m.
Ftb. 26:- Waverly 116-2) vs.
Wheelersburg (16·2), 7:30p. m.
RIO GRAN!)E SECTIONAL
(Clots AAAI
Ftb. 25: - Athens (12-61 vs.
Lancasler (9-9), 7
m. ;
Jackson (3·15) vs. Mar etta (3·
15),'&amp;:30 p. m.
Ftb. 29: - Chillicothe · (9·9) .
vs. Logan (4-W, 7 p. m. ;
Porlsmouth (10.!1 vs. Miami
irace ( 10·8), 8: JU p. m.

Wi/{ow

•. 1.,)
I

Anderson (Ind.) at Blullton
Wilmington at Cedarville
Findlay at Defiance
Mercyhurst !Pa.) at Walsh
Wednesday
Toledo at South Carolina
Bowling Green at Kent State
Xavier at Miami
Cleveland .51. at W. Michigan
Cincinnati at Louisville
Youngstown St.. at Gannon
Akron al Cent. Michigan
Baldwin-Wallace at Otterbein
Marietta al Denison
Aquinas (Mich .I at Heidelberg
Case Western at MI. Union
Wiltenberg at Musklngum
Central State at Steubenville
John Carroll at Bethany
Otlio Dominican al Maione
Tuesdoy
Goshen lind.) al Defiance
Friday
pionship game is March 4.
Ashland
al
N. Y.
The winner will advance to 5QuthwesternBrockport,
Louisiana
the Chillicothe District.
At Cln~innali
Saturdoy
MEIGS SECTIONAL
Otlio Stale at Northwestern
(CLASS Al
Otlio University at Toledo
FEB. 25 ; North Gailia 116.21 Bowling Green at Loyola, 111 .
vs. Southern (9.9) 7 p. m.; Virginia Tech at Kent. Stale
at West . Michigan
Hannan Trace (9-9) vs. Kyger Miami
Soulhwestern Louisiana at
Creek (J-15), 8:15 p. m.
, Dayton
FEB., 21: Ironton St. Joe (l· DePaul at Xavier
151 vs. Symmes Valley (11 -71, 7 Youngstown St. at St. Vincent
p. m.; Southwestern (0-181 vs. t;)eveland Slate at Akron
Eastern (i 6·2), 8' 15 p. m.• , 1, Wobster at Wittenberg: .
Kenyon at Capital
Otlio Wesleyan at Baldwin·
Wallace
Heidelberg at Marietta
Urbana at Muskln~um
Otterbein at Oberlin
Ashland at Gannon
Wilmington at Bluffton
Carnegie-Mellon at Case
Western
Groce (Ind.) at Cedarville
Cent. State at Tenn . State
Findlay at Otlio Dominican
Point Park (Pa.l at Malone
Wilberforce at Rio Grande
Steubenville at Alliance (Pa .l

Charnp s Are Top Seeded
·

North Gallia, ninth rated
team In last week's UP! Class
A ratings and winners of the
Southern Valley Athletic
Confrence and ,GaUia County
Tournament, was top«eded
Sunday in the Class ASectional
Tournament at Meigs High
School.
Coach Jim Foster's Pirates
are 16-2 overall and 14-2
against Class A competition.

Coach Bill Phillips' -Eastern
Eagles, winners of the 1971
Sectional tournament, were
second seeded. The Eagles also
own a 16-2 record and 14-2
mark against Class A opposiUon.
Action will begin Friday
night at 7 p. m. when North
Gallia meets Southern. Hannan
· Trace and Kyger Creek will

'

'

' ''.

'

collide in the · second game
Friday night.
Saturday night, Ironton St.
Joe will meet Symmes Valley
and Southwestern will play
Eastern. Each school was
allocated 250 iickets priced at
$1.25 each. Charles Cllllncey is
the tournament directOr.
The semi finals will be held
on March 3 al)d the cham-

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6.4

Findlay 82 Anderson (Ind.I 65
Oberlin 77 Ollio Wesleyan 71
. ClnclnnaH 97 Geo. Washington
19

Toledo 65 Bowling Green ~2
Kenyon 81 Ollio Dominican 76
Cap1tal 62 Wooster 56
Youngstown St. 86 Steubenville
61
Urbana 9~ Walsh 86
Muskingum 7,.

Baidwi.n-Wallace 68
Biulllon 104 Cedarville 88
Kentucky St . 109 Central St. 73
Akron 63 Kentucky Wes. 59
Defiance 97 Malone 94
Hiram 85 Allegheny 77
Wa&lt;hington &amp; Jefferson 75
Case Western Reserve 64

Dayton80 key Biscayne (Fla.I
77

'

TOWNSEND WINS
BOGOTA, Colombia (UPI)
- Britain's Peter Townsend,
firing a six-under-par 66
Sunday, won the ninth annual
International Open golf
tournament with a total of 2':'4,
five strokes lower than rwmerup Gene Borek of New York.

second In a Dodge. Jim Vandiver was third in a Dodge and
Benny Parsons was fourth in a
Mercury -both six Jape beck.
James Hylton was flflh In a
Ford nine laps back.

We have • l"&gt;lky for peup~
who lhink 1hey can'l . ·
afl'ord life insutll"""'

Cali the mon fn1m Nadonwiu

; ·: P'AY~tABtiE '.:'

TV BILLS AT
JIMMIE'S
Pastry Shop

· PH. 992-2318

307 Spring Avt.
Pomeroy, Ohio

llw rll.ul t'r .. nr "*:rlr"n"IJ.; •• ,.., \•rur ••J.:.

383 N. Second Ave.
Middleport
992-3555

Authorized Agent

February 15, 1912

7:60

~· Sflt1tr'1c' Y.r/1'?" //·7

" II. ..

Daytona 500 was still to be run,
but NASCAR's headliners were
packing up to go home.
"When they gave me the
'easy' sign I figured it had to be
(Richard) Petty," said Foyt
alter winning stock car
racing's premier event. "The
next time around they Rashed
'43 out.'"
Petty's Plymouth had
dropped a valve on the
backstretch after 200 miles.
With Nascar's all-time champion outofaction, it was almost
a casual "Sunday drive" from
there out for Foyt in bis
Mercury.
The three-time Indianapolis
500 champion, wbo has also
won at Le Mans, needed
Sunday's victory to fulfill a
dream and claim automobile
racing's Triple Crown.
"I'd won at Indy three times
and I'd won at Le Mans," said
the 37-year-old ·Texan. "I had
always wanted to win the
Daytona 500 because I feel this
is the IIJ'eatest stock car race in
the world. We didn't make It
last year and I was hoping like
hell we could come back."
Despite the apparent ease of
his two-lap victory, Foyt
refused to g9 alo_ng with anyone
downgrading !he competition.
"If you doo't think they're
goQd, you ought to get out there
and try to run against them,"
he said.
Foyt, who led 167 of the 200
laps, averaged a record 161.550
miles per hour in posting his
third victory here .
Charlie Glotzbach 1 finished

· Ohio Col'-to
BoskelfNIII Sc..-..
By United Pron lntomal'-t
Illinois u Olllo State 62
Miami 96 Cleveland St . S8
Kenl State 75 W. Michigan 69
Mt . Union 73 Heidelberg 65
Wlllenberg 69 Martella 62
Wayne Stale 87 Olllo Northern

3-IS"

f1~ ;-c.J.

Jf - 7:3~ I-

ANNOUNCEMENT

-

H

,.

Fco. iS • I:JS'
7.

"Y7•" C•••Jt 3-JS'

, 5ov7A.wvn•" 0-11
Felt..

t' -

Mr. ,.d. 3 ~ t:tS'

r-

Rizer Oil Co. Customers:
May we take this opportunity to thank you for your
patronage and say that we have enjoyed the many years
that we have supplied your gasoline and fuel oil
requirements.
·

t:/S'

Southern Finishes at .500

RACINE - The Southern Sclllldd added 10. Waterford
Local Tornados ended their won the first game, 57·51!.
regular season on ·a winning
Southern made 13 of 23 from
note here Saturday night with a the line for 57 pet. and 21 of 50
non-league victory over the from the field for 42 pet.
Waterford Wildcats, ~Waterford hit on 12 of 18 from
Coach Asa Bradbury's the foul line for 67 pet. and 18 of
Tornados, 9-9 overall and i&gt;-7 in 62 from the field for a cool 29
SVAC play, shot to a &lt;;am- pet. Waterford outrebounded
manding 18-51ead at the end of the Tornados, 43-31.
the first quarter and were
The Tornados will play next
comfortably out front 32-18 at Friday night at 7 in the Meigs
the half.
High School "A" sectional
Coach Don Mark's Wildcats, against number .one -~ed
who are H3 on the year, ripped North Gallia. The Pirates have
for 20 third period points while
Southern could manage only
eight to sink to a 38-38 ue. The
fourth quarter was all Southern
with the Tornadoes outscoring
RACINE ~ Southern Local
the Wildcats, 17-iO.
'
Reserves squeaked out a 44-4f
Jerry Hubbard, who paced win over the Waterford
the Tornados in their fourth reserves here Saturday night
period surge with 12 points, had on freshman Mitch·Nease's two
21 for the night. Bruce Hart free throws after time had
added 11 for the Tornados expired.
SMiTH COPS TITLE
while Nick lhie led Southern on
Big Norman Curfman led the
SALISBURY, Md. (UPI) Foiling his opponent's strategy the boards with 12 rebounds. little Tornadoes with 13 poirits
repeatedly Stan Smith of Mike Nease started in place of while Nease added 11, Randy
Pamdena, calif., Sunday won · the injured Jim Hubbard and Forbes 10, Bob.Miller nine, and
the $9,000 top prize In tbe third was credited by Bradbury with Vern Ord, one , Coach Duane
11. s. Men's Indoor Open tennis a fine performanCI). Hubbard Wolf~ P&lt;&gt;inted out Mill~r lor an
will be .'ready, although, for uutstandin~ fluor game. Needs
d1ampionships.
In turning back Romania's tournament play next Friday led Waterf!lrd wi!h 15 and
Wagner followed with 12.
llle ·Nastase, 5-7, 8-2; 6-3, 8-4, night.
Smith chalked up his ftrst win
Kim Stalnaker led the · Southern who finished with a
of the current season.
Wildcats with 14 while Bhuck ~-9 slate, n:Hdc an amazing 18·

r,·

Foyt Cops
Daytona 500

Urbana at Kenyon

r

The Meigs Marauder cage
team will play, wouldn't you
know It, the state's number two
ranlted team, ·South Point, in
the first game of the Symmes
Valley "AA" !llictlonal tournament this Fridsy night at 7.
The Pointers, who have
beaten Meigs 81-60 and 75-Slln
their two meetings this year,
are ranked numbers two according to last week's poll, but
should move up to number one
this week . Wellsville, the
state's number one "AA"
team, was beaten this
weekend, thus opening.the door
for the Poinfers tO advance a
posllion. '
The Marauders are 8-10 on
the year, and South Point Is 180. The Pointers play run and
gun and are as good as most
Jl'ep teams at it. But as Coach
carl Wolfe said, "They give the
oulside shot, and if we're hot,
things might be interesting."
The winner of the MarauderPointer tUt will pllly the winner
of the Fairland-Ironton winner
on the following Wednesday at
7:30. The championship game
will be played on Saturday,
March 4, at 7:30.
In the lower bracket, Rock
Hill takes on Coal Grove
following the Melgs.South
Point game and Chesapeake
battles number two seeded
Gallipolis following the
Ironton-Rock Hill game.

.OlJJ3ili'Y..W&lt;8$:-.-;,;$:;:;:;::~

By United Press lntern•tionai
Mon(\ay
Deyton at Davidson
Sleubenvllle at
California Stale (Pa.l
Tuesday
Loyola !iii.l.al Ohio U.

l. G.. IIi •liS

Pointers

lWif(/1/r~

C.••l (),. ..

(d.

; 8~

,This Week's
.Cage Games

_,. !J.«S"ca.pqoK«.

Meigs

Wf)}OJI'ia~%

DAYTONA BEACH,. Fla .
(UPI) - When A. J. Foyl
glanced at his pit, he saw the
crew Rash the "easy" sign .
He knew then he had beaten
the stock car specialists at
their own game.
More than .half of the

(l(~~~ I - 1:!0

tel.. Z.'

COLUMBUS tUPIJ -Ohio Hlgh .Scl!ool .Ublellc Commluloner Harold Meyor san ootbrloab of violence at
beskelllalllournameatgamea wUJ be dealt with h~nhly.
. The tournament cUmlnalloas are underway and will
conclude with the otate championship games at Coiumbus
March 25.
The warning follows college game outbreaks this aeason,
Including the brawl at Minnesota Involving Ohio State
playen.
"We will not condone this type of activity by high scbool
athletes and fans," Meyer said. "Any athlete Involved laces
possible suspension for tht rest of tbc tournaments."

defeated Southern in their
other meetings, 85-57 and 7~.
SOUTHERN (55)- T. lhle I·
0-2, Bruce Hart 34-11, Jerry
Hubbard 7-7-21, Brett Hart 1.0.
2, N. lhle 4-1·9, Jenkins :J-0.6,
Nease 2.o.4. Totals 21-13-50.
WATERFORD (481
Rutters 2·1-5, Hughes 2-3-7,
Bauerbach 1-3-5, Schadd 5.o.IO,
Stalnaker 6+14, Poptmeyer 2l.S. Totals 18-12-48.
BY QUARTERS
Waterford
s 18 3ll 48
Southern
18 32 3ll 55

Tornado Reserves wm·
of 22 lrorn the foul line for 82
pet. whil• WHterford dropped
four of eighl for 50 pet.
ByQuarten
Waterford
7 18 31 42
Southern
17 29 36 44
Officials: George Nesselroad
und Lulher Turket·.
SISTER DUEL
HAVERFORD. Pa. tUPit ,In a du•'i of sisters, Mrs. Lee
MJyer uf Pennington. N. J.,
w9n the U.S..Squash Racquets
championship Sundt!y, scoring
a 11&gt;-10, 18-16, 18-13 V1C\()ry over
Mrs . H~lsey Sp ·uancc 111
Wi\milt~ IO ~ . ll-:'1.
~

BOEING GETS CONTRACT
DAYTON (UPI) - The Air
Force's Aeronautical Systema
Division at nearby Wright Pat·
terson Air Force Base has a·
warded Boeing Co. of Seattle, ·
Wash., a $1.62 mU!ion contract
to test tbe Boeing 747 as a tanker aircraft.
The Air Force said the sixmonth study would collect dsta
on the feasibility of using large ·
aircraft !or aerial refueling.

- - ···---·-- - 1

The Daily Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTE.IST OF

MEIGS·MASON ARIA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
'Extc. Ed.

'

OOIERT HOEFLICH,

City Editor

Published dilly e~~:cept
Saturday by The Ohio Velley
~ublishlng Company, 111

Court St., Pom·eroy, Ohio,
_.5769 . Buslneu Office Phene

rl2·2156, Editorial Phono 992 2157.
Second class postage paid at
Pomtroy , Ohio .
Nation.al advertising
repr~Sef'!lative
Bottlntlli .
Golloghtr, Inc ., 12 Eut •2na

We are taking this method to announce to each of you
personally that we have decided to change our method of
business and as of March 1st, are transferring ownership
of all our delivery equipment ("on the farm tanks" I
basement tanks, skid tanks, underground tanks, pumps
and trucks) to Ashland Petroleum Company.
You will be pleased to know that this transfer was
arranged so as to be of the least possible inconvenience to
you, our faithful customers, by continuing your service
with the same drivers under the supervision of a former
RIZER OIL COMPANY employee of 8 years and now
manager of Ashland's Pomeroy distributorship, Cyril
Eugene Coleman. We are sure that you will continue to
receive the same prompt and courteous service that you
have become "used to" with the RIZER 01 L COMPANY.
This change will not affect our station operation at 700
. East Main Street, Earl Holman will continue to sell
gasoline _and lubricating oil by the can or case same as
before, you will soon see ·an improved operation at this
location.
We will also continue the sale and service of
GOODYEAR &amp; DAYTON tires with the same employees
of many years service. ..
.

'

.I

St ., Now York City , New York
'Subscription

ra1e1 :

liVered bV, carrltr

c&gt;e:

where
ave liable 50 cents· per week;
By Motor Route where carrier
service not hailable : One

month .SUS . By mail. in Ohio
a~d W. Va ., One year Sl.t.OO.
Stx months 17 .25 . Three

months $4 .50. Subscrir,tion

prltt lncluc:tts Sunday T mts .

Sentlnet .

~~~~--------~--~--------~--~ ~·---~---~------~---------~·----------~---~

I

I

RIZER OIL CO., INC.

1

FRANKLIN M. RIZER

·' .

�•

, Z- ~ Da!l1 SetXInel,Mkldleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 21,19'12
.

3-The O.Uy Sentinel, Mlddleport-&lt;'CAileiV!, 0 ., Feb. 21, 19'12 .

.

.

·c hinese Manners
Are. Perfection

Eastern ,Clips Vikings, 69-66

'

set foot on the Chinese
Retirement AlliiOIIIICed
Ori his lo.rtress island, mainland at 8:54a.m. Monday
Nationalist Chinese President local time , (7:54 p.m. EST
Chiang Kai-Mek ,84, anno1111ced Sunday) when his plane
his retirement next month, but stopped at Sbanglllli 's sleekly
left tbe door open to a draft for mQdem airport to refuel for the
reelection. His country's U.N. 'IO(knile flight to this ancient
seat lost to Peking, Chiang capital.
When the President's Boeing
lamented the "deteriorating
world situation" and said m, "Spirit of '76" landed at
Mainland China was In chaos Shanghai, the Nixon's were
welcomed by Deputy Foreign
as the result of purges. .
At the head of a motorcade of Minister Chiao Kuan-hua, who
black and green Chinese-made led the O!inese delegation to
aqtomoblles, the President the United Nations last fall.
The President spent 40
rode through fann fieldS, past
vast orchards and evenly mi'Wtes at the airport.
President Snicks
spaced poplar trees, then
Offered a meal, the
beside factories with tl!eir
stacks smoking in the dear- President snacked on wonton
crisp morning sunshine. He soup, jasmine tea and a
passed the Gate of Heavenly tangerine. Chiao climbed
Peace to his quariers in the aboard for tbe flight to Peking
Tiao Yu Tal guest bouse In the and conferred with Dr. Henry
western suburbs, beside a Kissinger and Secretary of
State William P. Rogers.
frozen lake.
There Nixon prepared for his Photographers aboard the
first lonna! contact with the plane were Invited to record
Chinese, talks which he said the occasion.
&lt;\ Chinese navigator joined
before leaving would seek "to
teers."
find a way to see that we can the flight, too. He sat to the
Airport Is Quiet
ba ve differences without being right of Col. Ralph Albertame,
the President's pilot, relaying
The huge Peking airport was enemies in war."
and
translating instructions·
eerUy quiet during the brief
Relatively few Chinese could
IIJ'eetlngs between the two be seen on the 18-mlle route from the control tower at
leaders. No large crowd which carried Nixon and Cbou, Peking Airport.
Nixon's arrival was reported
greeted. the President at the riding together In a black
by
the official New China News
start of' his one-week visit limousine which bore the Rags
which may revise the power of both their nations, to the Agency with a brief description
bloc politics that have shaped newly constructed compound for the outside world. Peking
the world's course since World which became Nixon's Chinese Radio was carrying a news
report when the President's
War II and since China, the residence.
plane touched down. The ...
world's most populous nation,
Pat with Mn. IJ
newscast
did not mention
embraced communism.
Mrs. Nl'xon rode with Mrs. U
Throuih satellite television, llslen-nien, wife of the vice Nixon's arrival.
Americani stayed awake to premier, and a male interprewatch the drama of Nixon's ter from the State Department.
WIN AT BRIDGE
llrst hCIIl'S In China while
The bufi brick guest ho~se,
dlplomall strained to evaluate an American Rag flying from
Ita Impact on world politics.
above its porch, was guarded
Moecow, Ita relatioos with by troops of the people's
China asunder, watched liberation army, some with
warily. So did Japan, the third automatic rifles tipped with a
IIJ'eat Pacific power, yearning gleaming bayonet.
NORTH
21
for China's market and
Nixon lllld sought this visit
.1075
America's nuclear umb'eUa. since taking the presidency.
¥105
Hanoi, dependent on China Early in 1969, still new to the
t AQ72
111d Moscow to wage war, White House, he had confided
"'KI083
WEST
EAST
waited too. But the Communist to Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., and
•
K9
.186432
olfenlive which many u.s. Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., the
¥ KQJ94
¥76
offlclail bad 111ticlpated in two leaders of the U.S. Senate,
tl096J
.15
VIetnam to coincide with that•: "I want to go to China."
"'74
.AS2
N(fon's visit~ to materia- • lJe beca'lle, tbll ,(jr• ~erl­
11
SOUTH (D) ·
''. . p'
.
. ''f
"" '
' " ·' ···- .. "'•' .
··«
·· t.
11•.
""t'; ... '
•.
i
can
chief
tm:lliW'
in~dft~
to
.AQ
"ii
......
.• •
wheels representative 1!1 different countries and culture. An authority on spinning wheels, . ··
¥A832
t K84
Musser makes the wheels as a hobby at his home. He has traveled extensively to study spinning
"'QJ96
wheels of rriany countries.
East~ West vulnerable
Letters of opiDloe 'ire welcomed. They aboald be leu
daa M wonllloaa (er bnabject to redllctloD by lbe editor) I West North F.a.-tl South
IN.T.
Musser has authored several textile machinery came into curator of the institution.
1 udmutbellpedwtlhlbellpee'uddren.Nameamaybe I Pas.~ 3 N.T. Pas.&lt; PaS&gt;&lt;
articles · on the subject for being a man named John
In the 18th and 19th cen1 wtlbbeld upoa pubUcalloa, however, on reqae1t. Lellen
Pass
magazines
including
"Workwheel for each of his five
Horner started collecting turies, almost every family in
BY BOB HOEFIJCH
1 lboald be In lood talle, addreulag i11aes, not penonallllea. I Open in~ lead-• K
bench"
and
receives
requests
spinning
wheels and began a America had at least . one
married
children.
"Spinning wheel's got to go
I
I
for
information
from
readers.
Then, Musser started
museum in Belfast, Ireland. He spinning wheel. Most of these,
I
0
I Ry Oswald &amp; James Jacoby 'round."
Today's
spinning
by
researching
the
history
of
knew
U1at the mechanization except those owned by
And making sure it does is
automation
produces
about
:;o
Jim : "How about showing Russell Musser, former spinning. This became so
and automation meant the end collectors or those in
a few hands where the best
threads
per
inch
.
However,
of the spinning wheel being museums, have disappeared.
engrossing
that
he
and
his
wife
line of play fails to work . It Rutland resident, who is one of
does happen that way some· the few people in the world began traveling all over the ancient Incas usirig spinning used in the home. Musser, who However, a former Meigs
today who builds spinning world visiting ' niuseums, wheels did produce in some of has made several trips to the Countian is helping insure that
! times."
collectors and builders of their finest cloth 250 to 500 Belfast museum, corresponds the spinning wheel keeps going
Oswald : " A ~ood idea. We wheels.
Now, before it is too Late
might start With last Tues·
Born and reared in Meigs spinning wheels . . He has threads an inch. In 1851, when regularly with the present 'round.
day's hand . Leave the North County, Musser graduated become somewhat of an
Middleport, Ohio and South hands the same. from Rutland High School in authority on the subject and
February 21, 1972 but change East and West a 1925. He worked in the 'coal corresponds with people in
triHe ." ·
Dear Sir:
mines and then went to many parts of the world about
.
The lnfonnatlon below bas been made available through
Jim : "South starts out by Springfield, Ohio in 1928 where it.,
eome local ch11rches and, in the opinion of many, should be made winning the third lead of he resides at 537 Porlage Path .
He and Mrs. Musser have
p;blic.
hearts. Then he notes that
In 1928, Musser went lo work traveled to Spain, Portugal,
"Love-In" at the Loew's Americana Hotel here
he isn't going to make his at International Harvester in Morocco, Egypt , several
BY JACK O'BRIAN
"Are you interested in helping to keep morals high in our · conlract
if West holds the
had the fabulous U.S. fashion show of all time;
community, state and nation? It is the Christian duty of each of ace of clubs, but will make Springfield where he was counties in the Holy Land,
its chairmen, Jerry Silverman and Ahe
AND THEN THERE'S
us here, to take the time (yes, right now) to write a few lines to it if East holds the ace of employed on the assembly line Syria, Turkey, Greece,
Schrader (bit wheels in the chic rag-trade), got
QUIET IRELAND
CBS 'IV ChannelS at Charleston, W. Va. and CBS President Dr. clubs and either the spade until being oamed a foreman in England, Scotland, Ireland ,
finesse
works
or
diamonds
1942.
He
retired
in
1966
and
had
Newfoundland, Mexico and
NEW YORK (KFS) - Peter Sellers will together a slew of 7th Ave. designers (Norrell,
Frank Stanton, CBS Television Network, 51 W. 5?nd Street, New
break 3·3. He sees that he
York, N. Y. 10019, and protest tbe showing .of the film "The ran afford to test the dia- no special interest in wood- eight countries in South give up his Irish residency; calls the climate Trigere , Beene, Blass, Brooks, Cardin,
America.
"too soporific" ... Even the flies buzz slower Originala, De Ia Renta, etc.) lor the good cause
Damned." This is a mustlfwewant to keep morals high and help monds as a slarter so cashes working. Then it happened !
In
each
location,
Mr.
and
the high diamonds. East
Musser attended a foreman's
our children llllve a safer tomorrow.
over there ... FeUa who brought Perry Como's - many of whnni hadn't spoken to each other in
Mrs
.
Musser
visited
experts
on
''On February 28, 1972, Columbia Broadcasting System is shows out on t~e third lead picnic given by International
famulous Tequesta, Fla., home (it cost Perry seasons. Fashion folk are even more volatile
the
spinning
wheel.
They
took
planning to air the X-Rated film, "The Damned" on network so S 0 u t h goes after clubs. Harvester and met a man.there
about $750,000, and he didn't lose money in the than envious film stars.
pictures
of
some
of
the
wheels.
East
wins
and
shoots
back
a
who
had
made
a
spinning
Haitian distillery brews booze in virtually ·
television. It is being aimed specifically at Mr. and Mrs. Middlesale) is Joe Hrudka, brilliant Cleveland lad ol32
When
they
returned
home,
spade."
wheel
and
was
.
•
bowing
his
America. x~ated movies are already being shown to viewers on
who dropped out of school, fiddled around with Howard Johnson flavors - such as hibiscus,
Oswald : " Here is where . friends a picture of it. Musser Musser would duplicate them. drag.raciryg, got annoyed with his stock-car mango, coconut, cashew ... Our friend Glen
the coasts.
There are 60 types of spinexhaust gaskets. blowing out, so he pursued a Covington sometimes brings us a pineapple rwn
"The Damned ", a motion picture by Luchino Visconti the expert really gets burned. thought it might be fun to make
He can take the ace of spades one so he sent to a magazine lor ning wheels, but all must have
contains elements of transvestism, incest, homosexuality, child and cash a total of eight plans and proceeded to turn out a "flier" and "seven hooks.'' tiny notion he could make one of his own that from the Dominican Republlc that's the tastiest
molestation and nudity. An encore is hard to imagine .
trirks but that is the cow· his first spinning wheel. The Musser has made 21 different wouldn't, burn out, found an element used for ... Screen Gems &amp; Bell Records will try a TV
"Since Christian Crusade Weekly believes this is a trial ard's line of play· Ex Per 1 first one proved to be such a types of wheelS with about two . diesels and aircraft - and the Test is a happy series titled "Bobby Joe and the Big Apple
balloon, that is, CBS is trying to pull it ·off without a general South plays the queen of
fiscal finale : he's sold his "Mr. Gasket" firm to Goodtime Band." Naturally inspired by "Tbe
spades and winds up down success as a showpiece in the weeks required to create one of
outcry from Mid-America, we are suggesting the following ac· three."
Musser home that Mr. Musser the "weaving machines. " the W. R. Grace Co. lor $17 million ... And is Partridge Family " success ... Sad-gallant
tion :
thinking of retiring in three years - at 35!
gang: a teenage Alcoholics Anonymous -"
Jim : "Note Ihat the expert decided lo make a spinning However, he may work on two
"fl) Write irrunediately to C.B.S. President, and Charleston,
Ex-major
league,
no-hitpitcher.Bo
Belinsky
upwards from 12 years of age! ... "The Tokens" ,
or three at a time. Each wheel
line has suffered the maxiand protest vigorously. Inform C.B.S. officialdom you know what mum loss . A South player
has 37 parts which are mounted struck out again: his wile Jo Collins is divorcing is a rock-group without one gold record - hut. •.
UNDERGOES SURGERY
they are up to and don'tlike it. or course, if there is no protest, who did not attack diamonds
onto the frame. Five of the him; betimes Jo is picking up a few bob drov- don 't plan any benefits, they coin a fortune Sgt. ~· orrcst D. Bachtel
such films will become common with in the year. It's like a re-run first would never lose a diawheels built by Mr. Musser ping her clothes as a Playboy Mag "playmate" residual checks from Pan-Am ("Makes
underwent
an
appendectomy
mond
trick
and
would
only
of Genesis 11 :6.. .'now nothing will be restrained from them
were constructed of different centerfoldress ·... ''Sanford &amp; Son" series star Going Great") , Adams Gum, Nestles and
'which they have imagined to do.'
'
' be down two when lhe spade Saturday at the Luke Air wood for each part. Many of Redd Foxx is awfully glad his new TV show Eastern Airlines.
fin c s"' lost. On the olher Force Base Military Hospit"!2) Write or call - and object to the film. The local station hand our unlucky expert has
Tho she's now 70, Marlene Dietrich will .
al. His address is Luke '"" woods used are imported seems a hit: so is a Las Vegas casino.
can always air another JI'Ogram.
given himself the best play Air Force Base, Milit~ry and run from $3.50 to $8.50 per
Vanity, thy name is male : Lana '1\trner's totter off on another U. S. in-person tour ...
for his contract. which is the
square fool. Each wheel that he divorce from Ron Dante the other day revealed Streisand thinks Ryan O'Neal's The One, but so
"13) Insist from C.B.S. in New York the names of the
&lt;'XI'&lt;'rls arc supposed to Hospital, Ward 6, Phoenix, creates carries his name and his age i~ 52. He'd been saying 35 ... Onna White
national sponsors paying the way for the "The Damned." Ac· way
does his estranged wife, Leigh Taylor-Young.
Ariz . His mother, Mrs. Forrest
play ...
lhe
date
it
was
made
so
that
it
·
cording to our information, the airing and sponsorship of these
{ Nf.W~PAPER ENTUPRISE ASSN.,
l her "Oliver" film choreography was superb) Don't discount a reconciliation ... Actor, Dane
Bachtel, and his sister. Miss
cannot be sold as or claimed to . will dillo for "The ·Great Waltz" ... Concert
movies will be natiomil, not local. Write these sponsors and
Carul Bachtel, are vacationing
Clark will switch to the other .side . of the
be an antique.
protest vigorously .
' pianist Byron Janis cancelled all his concerts. footlights if he can find a play to produce ...
in Phoenix with Sgt. and Mrs.
Musser has sent his spinning Bursitis.
"U, for example, a particular oil company SP&lt;&gt;nsors the
Bachtel
Fran Jeffries (at the Rainbow Room)) can keep
'flu· hidclin.c: lm ~ ht•t•n·
wheels to people all over the
program, protest to the company's president. II no satisfaction is
Variety Clubs lnt'l commissioned master an eye on her husband, Steve Schaeffer, during
\\'t•s l• North
fo:ttsf
South VET ELECT OFFICERS '
cnun try and in addition to the
obtained tear up their credit cards and send them in with a letter
water
colorist Dong Kingman to paint the cover her singing act; if she looks around-steve's ·
PH~-COLUMBUS IUP!l - Dr. wheels turns out ornamental
explaining your al'lion.
It
Pas.-.
2+
., Charles W. Miller of Crestline candlesticks, old fashioned llil' their 45th annual yearbook. Dong will paint her drummer .
Pl tS~
!•Many statioos which ieel they can ignore you individually
Cornell grid star Ed Marinar~ took ho~~
was installed as P'esident of type cradles, lamps. restores "Tunes Square '72" and the original will be
Yuu, Smt1h. hnld :
know they caiVlot ignore their sponsors.
the Ohio Veterinary Medical anlique furniture, canes chairs charity-a~clioned ... Johnny Carson has a talent the Lou Li tile Award the other night. Only lady
"Our l.onl said that we are not to hide .our candle under a """1;5 •1¥AIIG t A:t2 .J .t A~sncialion at the ~roup's 88th
and recently created a special for destroying money. Moving to theW. Coast present was his mom, stashed alone In the far·
Wllotl du y u H dol nuw'.'
buM!el. F.dmund Burk at one lillie said th•t •II that is nl'&lt;'cssary
with his show, ,his United Nations Plaza pad up balcony ... ln Ed's acceptance speech, he
am,ual meeting lwr~ Sunday. chair for a disabled child.
A- Uid lwu '&lt;il)llllt•s. 'rhi.'i hi•l
·for evil to triwnph is that flOOd men and women do nothing. Let's
Miller SIKWCdcd Dr . Milton
Smne ul the articles, Mr. t $175.000) will he up for sale at the ~o-op glanced at thP balcony and said, "Before
u r ;• tu•w )&lt;,nil ,. u 11 t ·t n 11 L' !'. tlw
make C.H.S. wish it had ncvur dmllenged the morulity of Mr: and fmn•. /\1-.tl '\ uU lmn· furn·d \ '11111' Willen of Canton.
Mussel' creates are sold bul inarkel's bleakest ebb.
coming here tonight, my mom cautioned me,
Mrs. M.ld-luncrica .
tm rln•·•· 1u ·l,itl ht'llfl.\ , lh· 'nllt)
Taking over a :s virr must arc made just for the
The Henry Fo~das are shopping for a Rome "Ed, please don't say anything tonight.' " ... It ·
"C.:vples of the book, "X-Rated tofovics" - Hollyw~&lt;•l 's lint lmld fin· t•Jmls lht•rt•,
prt.•sident was Dr . Rt•nj:unine plcttSUre or COD19leting apartlnenl ·... The Israeli-Greek cafe Sirocco
drew a howl from the sports in-crowd ... He'd
Ton~ v-s 1111t:s·1·w~
Scheme to Corrupt AmL'I'ica," arc u~uiloblc from l'lll'isti:m
. S. Ht•nson of .Mar&gt;lichi. D1·. bcauliful pieces of furniture for s11•r s unt• flris San's group. Which was selected been quoted recently saying, "I'd like to play
Crullllde, Box '117, '1\tlsa, Oklahonm 74102."
Yn11 r p :tr lnt •J t'unl i tu•• -=' '" Haymond W. Sl.tt'kst ill u f
lht• apprt•dnliun or others.
personally by lrsael big-macher Moshe Dayan with the (New England) Patriots for a couple of
lhrt •t • l ll': ll 'h What du " !111 , I ,
l'har
g
t·in
...
:111~ will !'il'l'\'l'
..
fliU~&gt;•ugil
beginning
late
with
lo play al til~ 1fedcings of his two children. But years, then play pro football.'' Seems we have '
11'1\\
illlllt}WI' fl'l'lll .;IS S&lt;.'l' l'd:t ry ,
' Middlt•l•~~'l , &lt;H1in
his wnuflwnr•king inlert&gt;~ l. Mr. nol al Mushe's divorce
, \11 ~ \\1 ' 1' 'l'lJIIIHI' I' :t l\
Last weekend's anolher funny-quotable Yogi Berra In spots.
PEKlNG ( UPI) - President
Nixon broke two decades of
bostlllty and Isolation between
the· United Slates and China
today, arriving In this wintry
capital to a reception that was
proper and cordial and all but
Ignored by Peking's 4 million
f'l!ople.
In near freezing temperatures and brilliant sunshine, a courteous unsmiling
Premier Chou ~n-lai, 73,
welcomed Nixoo, his wife Pat
and his entourage of officials.
Carefully.briefed on Chinese
custom, the President &lt;lapped
.his hlnd:t a few times in
responae to the light applause
which greeted him. Mao Tsetung, 78, architect and father of
Ollna 's communism, was not
on hand. He and Nixon were
expected to meet '1\tesday;
Nixon was met by a 360-man
military contingent and went
down the line shaking hands. A
bend played "The Star Spangled Banner" and China's
anthem, "March of the Volun-

Best Play
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TUPPERS PLAINs' - The .
Eastern Eagles clinched
second place in the Southern
Valley Conference near here
Saturday night, defeating the
S)'Jilllles V;llley Vikings 69-M
in the season finale for both
teams.
·
.Aian Duvall, 6-2 junior
forward,
and
Dennis
Eichinger, 6-3 senior center
combined for 47 points and 40
rebounds, almost a five-man
team total. ~vall hit a career
high for 25 and pulled down 14
retrieves while Eichinger had
22 markers and 26 grabs.
The Eagles look second place
In the SV AC with a 10-2 record
and are 16-2 overall. The
Vikings are 11·7 overall and
finished in third place with a 93 record.
Other than Eichinger's and
Duvall's tremendous scoring
punch was Randy Young with
12 while Bob Caldwell bad 10
rebounds. The Eagles had an
awesome total of 61 rebounds
for the night.
Phil Robinson was the
game's leading scorer with 'll
points on 12 field goals aild
three free throws. High-scoring
Danny Wilson had 18 and Gene

Meyers added 12 for the
Vikings.
Symmes Valley,losers of the
first game with the Eagles, 6&amp;62, shot out to a 20-12 first
·quarter lead and maintained
the lead, 311-28, at the half.
The Eagles, doing as they·
llllve all year, outscored their
opponents in the third periQd,
23-19, to take a 51-'49 advantage
Into the final eight minutes.

1.

Sovtl.
Fd.

And Ulllt nllll'gln was protected
by a ·few poirits during that
fourth quarter.
All-Ohio candidate Eichinger
became the SVAC scoring
· clu!mpion with his 22 point
production, bettering seconq
plaee Arthur Clark of North
Galjla. by four points.
Coach Bill Phillips' J:;agles
took 80 shots from the field and
made 30 for a 34 pet. average

Poin'1'

4.5" - 7:o o

.

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~

and connected on 9 of 131rom
EASTERN !69)- Duvall11).
the foul line for 69 pet. The 1&gt;-25, Eichinger 10-2-22, Boring
Vikings had 24 field goals and . 1.0.2, Young 6.o.12, Caldwell 318 free throws.
2-8. Totals 3()..9.69.
In the preiiminary game, the
SYMMES VAIJ.EY (66) little Vikings handed Eastern Wilson 5·8-18; Roach 2-2-6,
its fifth loss of the !lliason Taylor 0-3-3, Meyers 1&gt;-2-12,
againstl3 wins, 47-43. The IOSii Rubinson 12-3-27. Totals 24-18lowered Coach Bob Ord's litUe 66.
Eagles to a first place tie with
BY QUARTERS ·
North Gallia, each with 111-2 Sym. Valley
20 10 19 17-M
slatea.
Eastern
12 16 23 1&amp;--69

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Meeting

Tourney Pairings
SYMMES VALEY
SECTIONAL
IClus AAl
Feb. 25: -South Point !18·01
vs. Meigs (8-10), 7 p.m .; Rock
Hili 17·111 ,vs. Coal Grove (12.
61. 8: 15 p. m.
.
Ftb. 26:- Ironton (11-71 vs.
Fair land (10·71, 7 p. m. ;
Chesapeake
110·71
vs.
Gallipolis (1~· ~1. 8:15 p. m.
Semi-final action will be held
on March I and 2, beginning at
7:30p.m. Flnaisara scheduled
March~. starting at 7:30p. m.,
with winner advancing to the
Rio Grande District.
ALBANY SECTIONAL
I Cia II AAl
Ftb. 25 : - Sheridan (16-21
vs. Warren Local 112-6), 7 p.
m.; Federai·Hocklng (7·111 vs .
Vinton County (3·15). 8: JO p. m.
Ftb. 26: - Wellston t~-141
vs. Belpre !12·6), 7 p: m.;
Neisonvllie . York (6-12) vs.
New Lexington (1HI. 8:30 p.
·m.
LUCASVILLE SECTIONAL
(CiatsMl
Ftb. 23 : - Northwest (7-10)
vs. Portsmouth . West ( 1~·4),
7:30 p. m.
Ftb. 24: - Dek Hili (6·12) vs.
Minford (l-15), 7:30 p: m.
Feb. 25 : - Greenfield (16-2)
vs. Hillsboro (7-11), 7:30p.m.
Ftb. 26:- Waverly 116-2) vs.
Wheelersburg (16·2), 7:30p. m.
RIO GRAN!)E SECTIONAL
(Clots AAAI
Ftb. 25: - Athens (12-61 vs.
Lancasler (9-9), 7
m. ;
Jackson (3·15) vs. Mar etta (3·
15),'&amp;:30 p. m.
Ftb. 29: - Chillicothe · (9·9) .
vs. Logan (4-W, 7 p. m. ;
Porlsmouth (10.!1 vs. Miami
irace ( 10·8), 8: JU p. m.

Wi/{ow

•. 1.,)
I

Anderson (Ind.) at Blullton
Wilmington at Cedarville
Findlay at Defiance
Mercyhurst !Pa.) at Walsh
Wednesday
Toledo at South Carolina
Bowling Green at Kent State
Xavier at Miami
Cleveland .51. at W. Michigan
Cincinnati at Louisville
Youngstown St.. at Gannon
Akron al Cent. Michigan
Baldwin-Wallace at Otterbein
Marietta al Denison
Aquinas (Mich .I at Heidelberg
Case Western at MI. Union
Wiltenberg at Musklngum
Central State at Steubenville
John Carroll at Bethany
Otlio Dominican al Maione
Tuesdoy
Goshen lind.) al Defiance
Friday
pionship game is March 4.
Ashland
al
N. Y.
The winner will advance to 5QuthwesternBrockport,
Louisiana
the Chillicothe District.
At Cln~innali
Saturdoy
MEIGS SECTIONAL
Otlio Stale at Northwestern
(CLASS Al
Otlio University at Toledo
FEB. 25 ; North Gailia 116.21 Bowling Green at Loyola, 111 .
vs. Southern (9.9) 7 p. m.; Virginia Tech at Kent. Stale
at West . Michigan
Hannan Trace (9-9) vs. Kyger Miami
Soulhwestern Louisiana at
Creek (J-15), 8:15 p. m.
, Dayton
FEB., 21: Ironton St. Joe (l· DePaul at Xavier
151 vs. Symmes Valley (11 -71, 7 Youngstown St. at St. Vincent
p. m.; Southwestern (0-181 vs. t;)eveland Slate at Akron
Eastern (i 6·2), 8' 15 p. m.• , 1, Wobster at Wittenberg: .
Kenyon at Capital
Otlio Wesleyan at Baldwin·
Wallace
Heidelberg at Marietta
Urbana at Muskln~um
Otterbein at Oberlin
Ashland at Gannon
Wilmington at Bluffton
Carnegie-Mellon at Case
Western
Groce (Ind.) at Cedarville
Cent. State at Tenn . State
Findlay at Otlio Dominican
Point Park (Pa.l at Malone
Wilberforce at Rio Grande
Steubenville at Alliance (Pa .l

Charnp s Are Top Seeded
·

North Gallia, ninth rated
team In last week's UP! Class
A ratings and winners of the
Southern Valley Athletic
Confrence and ,GaUia County
Tournament, was top«eded
Sunday in the Class ASectional
Tournament at Meigs High
School.
Coach Jim Foster's Pirates
are 16-2 overall and 14-2
against Class A competition.

Coach Bill Phillips' -Eastern
Eagles, winners of the 1971
Sectional tournament, were
second seeded. The Eagles also
own a 16-2 record and 14-2
mark against Class A opposiUon.
Action will begin Friday
night at 7 p. m. when North
Gallia meets Southern. Hannan
· Trace and Kyger Creek will

'

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' ''.

'

collide in the · second game
Friday night.
Saturday night, Ironton St.
Joe will meet Symmes Valley
and Southwestern will play
Eastern. Each school was
allocated 250 iickets priced at
$1.25 each. Charles Cllllncey is
the tournament directOr.
The semi finals will be held
on March 3 al)d the cham-

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Findlay 82 Anderson (Ind.I 65
Oberlin 77 Ollio Wesleyan 71
. ClnclnnaH 97 Geo. Washington
19

Toledo 65 Bowling Green ~2
Kenyon 81 Ollio Dominican 76
Cap1tal 62 Wooster 56
Youngstown St. 86 Steubenville
61
Urbana 9~ Walsh 86
Muskingum 7,.

Baidwi.n-Wallace 68
Biulllon 104 Cedarville 88
Kentucky St . 109 Central St. 73
Akron 63 Kentucky Wes. 59
Defiance 97 Malone 94
Hiram 85 Allegheny 77
Wa&lt;hington &amp; Jefferson 75
Case Western Reserve 64

Dayton80 key Biscayne (Fla.I
77

'

TOWNSEND WINS
BOGOTA, Colombia (UPI)
- Britain's Peter Townsend,
firing a six-under-par 66
Sunday, won the ninth annual
International Open golf
tournament with a total of 2':'4,
five strokes lower than rwmerup Gene Borek of New York.

second In a Dodge. Jim Vandiver was third in a Dodge and
Benny Parsons was fourth in a
Mercury -both six Jape beck.
James Hylton was flflh In a
Ford nine laps back.

We have • l"&gt;lky for peup~
who lhink 1hey can'l . ·
afl'ord life insutll"""'

Cali the mon fn1m Nadonwiu

; ·: P'AY~tABtiE '.:'

TV BILLS AT
JIMMIE'S
Pastry Shop

· PH. 992-2318

307 Spring Avt.
Pomeroy, Ohio

llw rll.ul t'r .. nr "*:rlr"n"IJ.; •• ,.., \•rur ••J.:.

383 N. Second Ave.
Middleport
992-3555

Authorized Agent

February 15, 1912

7:60

~· Sflt1tr'1c' Y.r/1'?" //·7

" II. ..

Daytona 500 was still to be run,
but NASCAR's headliners were
packing up to go home.
"When they gave me the
'easy' sign I figured it had to be
(Richard) Petty," said Foyt
alter winning stock car
racing's premier event. "The
next time around they Rashed
'43 out.'"
Petty's Plymouth had
dropped a valve on the
backstretch after 200 miles.
With Nascar's all-time champion outofaction, it was almost
a casual "Sunday drive" from
there out for Foyt in bis
Mercury.
The three-time Indianapolis
500 champion, wbo has also
won at Le Mans, needed
Sunday's victory to fulfill a
dream and claim automobile
racing's Triple Crown.
"I'd won at Indy three times
and I'd won at Le Mans," said
the 37-year-old ·Texan. "I had
always wanted to win the
Daytona 500 because I feel this
is the IIJ'eatest stock car race in
the world. We didn't make It
last year and I was hoping like
hell we could come back."
Despite the apparent ease of
his two-lap victory, Foyt
refused to g9 alo_ng with anyone
downgrading !he competition.
"If you doo't think they're
goQd, you ought to get out there
and try to run against them,"
he said.
Foyt, who led 167 of the 200
laps, averaged a record 161.550
miles per hour in posting his
third victory here .
Charlie Glotzbach 1 finished

· Ohio Col'-to
BoskelfNIII Sc..-..
By United Pron lntomal'-t
Illinois u Olllo State 62
Miami 96 Cleveland St . S8
Kenl State 75 W. Michigan 69
Mt . Union 73 Heidelberg 65
Wlllenberg 69 Martella 62
Wayne Stale 87 Olllo Northern

3-IS"

f1~ ;-c.J.

Jf - 7:3~ I-

ANNOUNCEMENT

-

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Fco. iS • I:JS'
7.

"Y7•" C•••Jt 3-JS'

, 5ov7A.wvn•" 0-11
Felt..

t' -

Mr. ,.d. 3 ~ t:tS'

r-

Rizer Oil Co. Customers:
May we take this opportunity to thank you for your
patronage and say that we have enjoyed the many years
that we have supplied your gasoline and fuel oil
requirements.
·

t:/S'

Southern Finishes at .500

RACINE - The Southern Sclllldd added 10. Waterford
Local Tornados ended their won the first game, 57·51!.
regular season on ·a winning
Southern made 13 of 23 from
note here Saturday night with a the line for 57 pet. and 21 of 50
non-league victory over the from the field for 42 pet.
Waterford Wildcats, ~Waterford hit on 12 of 18 from
Coach Asa Bradbury's the foul line for 67 pet. and 18 of
Tornados, 9-9 overall and i&gt;-7 in 62 from the field for a cool 29
SVAC play, shot to a &lt;;am- pet. Waterford outrebounded
manding 18-51ead at the end of the Tornados, 43-31.
the first quarter and were
The Tornados will play next
comfortably out front 32-18 at Friday night at 7 in the Meigs
the half.
High School "A" sectional
Coach Don Mark's Wildcats, against number .one -~ed
who are H3 on the year, ripped North Gallia. The Pirates have
for 20 third period points while
Southern could manage only
eight to sink to a 38-38 ue. The
fourth quarter was all Southern
with the Tornadoes outscoring
RACINE ~ Southern Local
the Wildcats, 17-iO.
'
Reserves squeaked out a 44-4f
Jerry Hubbard, who paced win over the Waterford
the Tornados in their fourth reserves here Saturday night
period surge with 12 points, had on freshman Mitch·Nease's two
21 for the night. Bruce Hart free throws after time had
added 11 for the Tornados expired.
SMiTH COPS TITLE
while Nick lhie led Southern on
Big Norman Curfman led the
SALISBURY, Md. (UPI) Foiling his opponent's strategy the boards with 12 rebounds. little Tornadoes with 13 poirits
repeatedly Stan Smith of Mike Nease started in place of while Nease added 11, Randy
Pamdena, calif., Sunday won · the injured Jim Hubbard and Forbes 10, Bob.Miller nine, and
the $9,000 top prize In tbe third was credited by Bradbury with Vern Ord, one , Coach Duane
11. s. Men's Indoor Open tennis a fine performanCI). Hubbard Wolf~ P&lt;&gt;inted out Mill~r lor an
will be .'ready, although, for uutstandin~ fluor game. Needs
d1ampionships.
In turning back Romania's tournament play next Friday led Waterf!lrd wi!h 15 and
Wagner followed with 12.
llle ·Nastase, 5-7, 8-2; 6-3, 8-4, night.
Smith chalked up his ftrst win
Kim Stalnaker led the · Southern who finished with a
of the current season.
Wildcats with 14 while Bhuck ~-9 slate, n:Hdc an amazing 18·

r,·

Foyt Cops
Daytona 500

Urbana at Kenyon

r

The Meigs Marauder cage
team will play, wouldn't you
know It, the state's number two
ranlted team, ·South Point, in
the first game of the Symmes
Valley "AA" !llictlonal tournament this Fridsy night at 7.
The Pointers, who have
beaten Meigs 81-60 and 75-Slln
their two meetings this year,
are ranked numbers two according to last week's poll, but
should move up to number one
this week . Wellsville, the
state's number one "AA"
team, was beaten this
weekend, thus opening.the door
for the Poinfers tO advance a
posllion. '
The Marauders are 8-10 on
the year, and South Point Is 180. The Pointers play run and
gun and are as good as most
Jl'ep teams at it. But as Coach
carl Wolfe said, "They give the
oulside shot, and if we're hot,
things might be interesting."
The winner of the MarauderPointer tUt will pllly the winner
of the Fairland-Ironton winner
on the following Wednesday at
7:30. The championship game
will be played on Saturday,
March 4, at 7:30.
In the lower bracket, Rock
Hill takes on Coal Grove
following the Melgs.South
Point game and Chesapeake
battles number two seeded
Gallipolis following the
Ironton-Rock Hill game.

.OlJJ3ili'Y..W&lt;8$:-.-;,;$:;:;:;::~

By United Press lntern•tionai
Mon(\ay
Deyton at Davidson
Sleubenvllle at
California Stale (Pa.l
Tuesday
Loyola !iii.l.al Ohio U.

l. G.. IIi •liS

Pointers

lWif(/1/r~

C.••l (),. ..

(d.

; 8~

,This Week's
.Cage Games

_,. !J.«S"ca.pqoK«.

Meigs

Wf)}OJI'ia~%

DAYTONA BEACH,. Fla .
(UPI) - When A. J. Foyl
glanced at his pit, he saw the
crew Rash the "easy" sign .
He knew then he had beaten
the stock car specialists at
their own game.
More than .half of the

(l(~~~ I - 1:!0

tel.. Z.'

COLUMBUS tUPIJ -Ohio Hlgh .Scl!ool .Ublellc Commluloner Harold Meyor san ootbrloab of violence at
beskelllalllournameatgamea wUJ be dealt with h~nhly.
. The tournament cUmlnalloas are underway and will
conclude with the otate championship games at Coiumbus
March 25.
The warning follows college game outbreaks this aeason,
Including the brawl at Minnesota Involving Ohio State
playen.
"We will not condone this type of activity by high scbool
athletes and fans," Meyer said. "Any athlete Involved laces
possible suspension for tht rest of tbc tournaments."

defeated Southern in their
other meetings, 85-57 and 7~.
SOUTHERN (55)- T. lhle I·
0-2, Bruce Hart 34-11, Jerry
Hubbard 7-7-21, Brett Hart 1.0.
2, N. lhle 4-1·9, Jenkins :J-0.6,
Nease 2.o.4. Totals 21-13-50.
WATERFORD (481
Rutters 2·1-5, Hughes 2-3-7,
Bauerbach 1-3-5, Schadd 5.o.IO,
Stalnaker 6+14, Poptmeyer 2l.S. Totals 18-12-48.
BY QUARTERS
Waterford
s 18 3ll 48
Southern
18 32 3ll 55

Tornado Reserves wm·
of 22 lrorn the foul line for 82
pet. whil• WHterford dropped
four of eighl for 50 pet.
ByQuarten
Waterford
7 18 31 42
Southern
17 29 36 44
Officials: George Nesselroad
und Lulher Turket·.
SISTER DUEL
HAVERFORD. Pa. tUPit ,In a du•'i of sisters, Mrs. Lee
MJyer uf Pennington. N. J.,
w9n the U.S..Squash Racquets
championship Sundt!y, scoring
a 11&gt;-10, 18-16, 18-13 V1C\()ry over
Mrs . H~lsey Sp ·uancc 111
Wi\milt~ IO ~ . ll-:'1.
~

BOEING GETS CONTRACT
DAYTON (UPI) - The Air
Force's Aeronautical Systema
Division at nearby Wright Pat·
terson Air Force Base has a·
warded Boeing Co. of Seattle, ·
Wash., a $1.62 mU!ion contract
to test tbe Boeing 747 as a tanker aircraft.
The Air Force said the sixmonth study would collect dsta
on the feasibility of using large ·
aircraft !or aerial refueling.

- - ···---·-- - 1

The Daily Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTE.IST OF

MEIGS·MASON ARIA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
'Extc. Ed.

'

OOIERT HOEFLICH,

City Editor

Published dilly e~~:cept
Saturday by The Ohio Velley
~ublishlng Company, 111

Court St., Pom·eroy, Ohio,
_.5769 . Buslneu Office Phene

rl2·2156, Editorial Phono 992 2157.
Second class postage paid at
Pomtroy , Ohio .
Nation.al advertising
repr~Sef'!lative
Bottlntlli .
Golloghtr, Inc ., 12 Eut •2na

We are taking this method to announce to each of you
personally that we have decided to change our method of
business and as of March 1st, are transferring ownership
of all our delivery equipment ("on the farm tanks" I
basement tanks, skid tanks, underground tanks, pumps
and trucks) to Ashland Petroleum Company.
You will be pleased to know that this transfer was
arranged so as to be of the least possible inconvenience to
you, our faithful customers, by continuing your service
with the same drivers under the supervision of a former
RIZER OIL COMPANY employee of 8 years and now
manager of Ashland's Pomeroy distributorship, Cyril
Eugene Coleman. We are sure that you will continue to
receive the same prompt and courteous service that you
have become "used to" with the RIZER 01 L COMPANY.
This change will not affect our station operation at 700
. East Main Street, Earl Holman will continue to sell
gasoline _and lubricating oil by the can or case same as
before, you will soon see ·an improved operation at this
location.
We will also continue the sale and service of
GOODYEAR &amp; DAYTON tires with the same employees
of many years service. ..
.

'

.I

St ., Now York City , New York
'Subscription

ra1e1 :

liVered bV, carrltr

c&gt;e:

where
ave liable 50 cents· per week;
By Motor Route where carrier
service not hailable : One

month .SUS . By mail. in Ohio
a~d W. Va ., One year Sl.t.OO.
Stx months 17 .25 . Three

months $4 .50. Subscrir,tion

prltt lncluc:tts Sunday T mts .

Sentlnet .

~~~~--------~--~--------~--~ ~·---~---~------~---------~·----------~---~

I

I

RIZER OIL CO., INC.

1

FRANKLIN M. RIZER

·' .

�r

.,.

1

•...:Tiie Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. o., Feb. 21, 1972

·capital
ips Wooster,
Needs Win. ForOC .- Title
it was. We had to prove we conference · and 8-14 · overall,
By GENE CADDES
wuld bounce back."
bUt the lArds have won three
UPI Spol18 Writer
Capital need$ only a win over
The fru.saders had lost two in a row for the first time this
Kenyon Saturday night to wrap of their last three games after season.
r
"ltseemsUkethat'swhen we
up the Ohio Conference title, winning 16 in a row, and a loss
but the Crus;lders will have to to Muskingum Tuesday night always catch a team,"
do it all over again in the con- had given Wooster temporary Chickerella said, "when
ference tournament if they possession of first place in the they 're hot."
Wooster, which was paced by
want to earn a ticket to the conference.
NCAA College Division tourIt was Mike Stumpf with 21 Mike Grenert with 18 points,
nament.
points, Scott Weakley with 17 Mike Stoll with 14 and Greg
Capital, ranked seventh in · and Don Kalb with 16 who led Bryan! with 12, has one conthe nation in the latest UPI the Crusaders. Stumpf scored - terence game remalriing with
ratings, handed Wooster a 6~ four points and Weakley two to Wittenberg and a win over the
loss Ssturday night in its battle break a 49-49 tie and gite Cap Tigers, coupled with a Kenyon
for top spot in the 13-team the lead for good.
lJ1lSel of Capital, could stiU get
conference. The victory was
"Mike (Stumpf) had an out- the Scots the championship.
Chickerella is not happy
the lath in 20 games for the · standing game," Chlckerella
Chlsaders and gave them a 9-1 said of his husky 6-foot-11 cen- about the prospects of having
OC record. Wooster was 9-2 in ter . "They wuldn't handle him to win the post-Beason tournament to get a NCAA berth.
the conference and 17-8overall. inside."
"That was a big win for as,"
Kenyon, the oni)'-Obstacle be" I'm ag-ainst the toursaid Cap Coach Vince Chicke- tween the Crusaders and the nament," he said. "I always
rella. "I can't tell you how big league title, is only 4-7 in the have been and I always will be.
It serves no useful purpose and
it could mean three months of
hard work shot to heck. I
helieve you can get a truer
By United Press International t:ast Cleveland Shaw 78
champion out of 12 games than
Claymont 66 Dover 55
Brush 64 you can out of a four-dav
Ridgewood 71 Philo 69
Cleveland His 87 Parma 56
tournament." ·
Indian Vallev S&lt;&gt;uth 59
Euclid 89 Garfield Hts 50
Meanwhile, Toledo took a
Zanesville Rosecrans SO Orange 83 Twinsburg 68
Columbus Watriut l&lt;tdge llij
As htabula 86 Ashtabula half game lead· in the MidDayton Roosevell71
Edgewood 4
Fairless 60 Canton South 50
Geneva 68 Pymatunlng Valley American Conference with a
M-42 victory over Bowling
Oakwood 6S Louisville 57
61
North CantQfl 70 Sandy Valley Ciearview 78 Elyria Catholic 68 Green, thanks to a 23-point
61
Western_Reserve Academy 58
Alliance 66 Louisville Aquinas
Pitlsburgh Shadyside 51
55
Sheridan 71 Licking Valley 64
Massillon 68 Youngstown South Granville 90 West Musklngum

High School Cage Scores

58

•

65

Marllngton 80 Jackson 67
East Canton 67 Canton C.C. 65
Akron Central Hower 60
Akron Buchtel 52
Cleveland Chane! 62
Cleveland Gilmour 39
Baptist
Chrl$tian
88
Mansfield Christian 87
Sandusky 58 Toledo Woodward
51
Maumee Valley 69 Hawken 64
Valley Forge 77 Lakewood .74
(ot)
Normandy 64 Shaker Heights

Cambridge 87 Barnesville 65
Zane Trace !Guernsey) 81
Fort Frye 69
Meadowbrook 99 Shenandoah
88
Patrick Henry 57 Ayersvllle 52
Continental 100 Hll top 53
Faye tie 92Morencl {Mich.) 77
Archbold 84 Ottawa Glandorf

By United .Press International

53

COMPTON, O~D~

GREGORY BRUCE
WANTS TO BE
PRESIDENT WHEN
HE GROWS UP.
_HE'LL NEVER
~IT WITHOUT

107.

Tourney Scoring

Who knows how many people neve r get achance to

develo ~ the talent they were bom

wi th.

Have we !ruled to tram stx people who might
· have discovered a cure lor cancer last year? Or three
men who could have brought peace to the world ?
Or the best president this country has ever known?
We're trying. We support 40 private, four-year
colleges that teach over 45.000 students to put their
talents to good use.
Most ol the youngsters we help amid never get
to college on their own. Because most come from families earning less than $5,000 a year. .
We can train more lobe whatever they can
be- with your help.
·
·
Send a check. Whalever you can handle. Tn
UNCF, Dept. C, 55 East 52nd Street, New York,
New York -10022.
V.&gt;Ur amtribulions are tax deductible.

..

Championship Game
HANNAN TRACE (~)
Swain 7-3-17 ; Halley 0-2-2;
Caldwell 7-1-15; WfiiS 4-1-9;
Ours 2-3-7; Dunfee 0-2-2;
Lusher 3-2-8. TOTALS 23-14-'0.
NORTH GALLIA (83) Justus 8-2- 18; Crosswhite 6-2·
14; Clark 7-2-16; Stout 8-5-21 ;
Brown 3-4-10; Robinson 1-0.2;
Justus 1-0-2. TOTALS 24-15-ll.
By Quarters :
Harinan Trace - 11 18 12 19---60
Nor th Gallia 22 18 23 20-83

e "' G-·- "'

College Results
Saturday
East
Gtenv 88 W.V. St. 80
Fordham 102 Rutgers 90

Prvdnce 104 Holy Cross 68

St.Jhn Fshr 90 Brklyn Pol 54
St. Peter's N.J. 77 Del. 63
No. Car . 99 Notre Dame 74
Bethany 87 Thiel 74
Wash. CoiL 74 Usinus 56
Lehigh 67 Delaware 66
Temple 60 St. Jos. Pa. 58
Manhattan 85 Army 80
C.W. Posl63 Adelphia 57
Butta to 85 Rochester 74
Syracuse 98 Conne~licut 69
SipryRock 78 CaL St., Pa 63
Princeton 9t' Brown 75
Sacred Heart 89 CCNY 66
Harvard 102 Clmbia 100, 2 ot
Bridgeport 76 Fairfield 70
Dartmouth 97 Cornell72
Biuefld St 115 W. V. Tech 69
Wheeling 71 West Liberty 65
St. Bonaventure 89 Ll U 69
Penn St. 68 Boston CoiL 64
Pennsylvania 71 Yale 62

Consolation Game
South
SOUTHWESTERN 146) N.C.
St
84
Wake
Forest 76
Lewis 3-2-8; Walker 4-0-8;
67 Clemson 57
Trowbridge 5-1-11 ; Wood 3-2-8; Maryland
Whitt 2-0-4; Hopkins 0-0-0; Vanderbilt 104 LSU 83
Kentucky 95 Florida 68
Carter 3-1-7. TOTALS 20-'-46. Tenn.
71 Georgia 68, ot
.
KYGER CREEK ltl) Ata
.-St
.
76
Tuskegee
lnst.
74
Thompson 11-5-27 ; Curry 5-1- Loyola, La. 89 Tulane 73 ·
11 ; Cremeans 2-2-6; Darst 2-15; Smith 2-0-4; Roush 0-0-0; Alabama 79 Auburn 78
86 Lambuth 81
McCarty 2-3-7; Hudson 5-1-11; Centre
Florida
108 Ga. Tech 50
Tabor 2-0-4; Stidham 1-6-8. Duke 86 St.
Virginia
76
TOTALS 32-19-ll.
RichMond
99
Wesf
Vir. 87
By Quarters :
Beckley
85
Salem
75
Southwestern 9 11 18 B-46 Ky. St. lo9 Central St. 73
Kyger Creek 10 29 20 24--83 Western ~Y - 93 Estrn KY - 88

GIVE TO THE
lilTED
COli R1 fUND.

NEW

.FURNilURE

'349.95
sJs:oo Down ··
11elance On
Convenient
Terms.

and Lb: lnlrrt'lit!Mn:.l Nf~IJII'r Ad¥f"f1isi!ll1 F'.J~a'UiliYl'lL

'

MASON
!,FURN IT_URE.
1

................................. ....... ..~. .. ,,___~
__s_o_n_,_~_._v~a~·~------------------------J
•

PHOENIX (UPI)- The play
Atlantic Division
of Texan Homero Blancas In
VI. L. Pd. G!l
the PhOenix Open golf touriloston
44 23 .657 •..
New York
~ 24 .625 2'17
nament .ranged from brilliant
Philadelphia 25 , 39 .391 17'12 to 5\11&gt;-par, including on the
.Buffalo
17 46 .270 25
first playoff hole when he
~ntral Oi tision
W. L. Pd. ' GB
claimed the $25,000 first prize
Baltimore
27 35 .435
Sunday.
.
..
Allanta
2~ &lt;10 ,375 4
After what l!e termed a
Cincinnati
20 44 • .313 8
"horrible second shot,"
Cleveland
19 47 .288 10
Western Conference
Blancas reached the green
~ Midwest Division
with a wedge over a tree and
W. L. Pd. GB
sank
a four-loot birdie putt to
Milwaukee 52 15 .776
' Chicago
46 20 .697 5'1&gt; defeat
youthful
Lanny
Phoeni x
41 25 .621 10 1/:z
Detroit
22 42 .344 28°/2 Wadkins.
Blancas had tied the Phoenix
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB . COuntry Club course rewrd of
Los Angeles 54 9 .857 ...
61 in Friday's second round to
Seattle
40 25 .615 15
Golden State 39 25 .609 15112 claim a shilre of the lead which
Houston
25 39 .391 29'17
Porlland
15 52 .224 41'12
.Eastern Conference

College Results

3 ROOMS

"""''""'"&lt;)l'*!•
o-dl&lt;""'""""~"''""'""''''"''n..M,m••nor ~@'•
c.,...:il

By United Prt,.lntWnlliOIIal .

he relinquished O!IIY briefly in
Sunday's round. On Saturday, ·
the Houston resident ballooned
to ~ two-over-par 73 and
allowed England's . Tony
Jacklin to Ue him after 54-holes
at nineunder-par 204.
"I've been · having trouble
With JllY woods the last .two
years,"mancassald. "luseda
wood on that llorrible second
shot that got me into the
trees."
Wadkins' second shot was
almost identical to the one by
ljlancas, but his w.edge shot to
the green was 14 feet past the
pln and his birdie attempt '
conilitg back was a foot short.
Runnerup in the Bob Hope
Desert classic, playing in his
12th tournament after leaving
Wake Forest and turning pro
only last spring, Wadkins
admitted indirectly he may
have felt the pressure.
"It was my first playoff," he
said, but promised, "I'll be
back." He sald he liad a bad
second shot on the extra hole
and the-third was just too ·long.
Both Wadkins and Blancas
had two-putted the. 18th green
in regulation play to force the
sudden death playoff. Blancas .
had a final round of 69, and
Wadkins, two strokes off . the
pace after 54-holes, shot a 66.
They tied at 'n-under 273 for 72
holes.
Veteran Marty Fleckman,
the only entry with four sub-70
rounds, won third-place money
of $8,850, finishing 69-68-69-611274.
Paul Moran, a !~year pro
but in only his second year on
the tour, made a run at the
leaders, then was knocked out
of contention when he got in the
water on the par-3 15th and

New junior Garden Club Planned

took a triple bogey. He flnQhed
In a four-way tie at m with
Jacklin, Jim Wiechert and
three-time, Phoenix winner ·
Gene Uttler.
At 271 were Hubert G"*n
and Hal Underwood.

'

FIRST-ROUND GAME
second half performance by
NEW .YORK
. (UPI) -Rudy
Tom Kozelko, the conference's
leading ,'scorer.
Tomjanovich of the Houston
Kozelko, who finished with 2li
Rockets defeated Bob lAve of
points, was held to ~o in the
the Chicago Bulls;: 20-12,
first half &amp;nd the Rockets held
·Sunday in a flrst-roWid g~ !If
only a 28-24 margin at interthe $50,fi00 Natijlllal Ballketball
mission.
AssoclaUon one-on-one lc!ur· Toledo, however, outscored
nament.
,
the Falcons lf&gt;-7 in the first
The pre-\aped · SCI'lllljnltl!e
seven minutes of the second
was televised at balftlnje of the
half to take a 43-31 lead and
Chicago-Milwaukee , ~!'.ck~
rolled on to its 16th win in 20
Sunday's Results
~me. To~janovich wUI- next
Milwaukee
103 Chicago 100
games, upping its MAC record
fa~ lhe·Wlmllli1·0f the Garfield
Phoenix 121 Detroll 107
to ~2;
Cleveland 111 New York 109
Smith-John Q. Tra!IP ~·­
Amer. U. 91 Hofstra 76
Bowling Green , now ~17 Cincinnati 101 Atlanta 92
Wm. &amp; Mary 67 East Car . 64
overaU and l-7 In the con- Los Angeles 132 Boston 113
HOME APPEARANCE
Furman 80 Citadel 75 ·•. •
109 Portland 105
Geo. Southern 103 Geo . .st. 55
NEW ORLEANS . (t)pt)
ference, w113 paced by Brian Seattle
!Onlygamesscheduled) ·
Mississippi 65 Miss. St. 6.4
SCiinian with nine points.
The New Orleans Sailtts BD·
Monday's Games
Marshaii89UNC-Chartotte69
Philadelphia
at
Baltimore
Toledo's victory moved the
Midwes1
nouneed Sunday their
19~
(Onlyga,escheduiedl
Louisville 69 Wichita St. 60
Roc!tets a half-game ahead of
home appearance will be a
illinois 64 Ohio St. 62
idle Ohio University, f&gt;-2, but
preseason game. with the
ABA Standings
Purdue 92 Michigan St. 68
Kent State, with a come-from- By United Press International
Buffalo Bills on Aug. 12.
Indiana 86 Iowa 79
East
Eau
Claire
69
No.
Mich
.
58
behind 75-69 decision over
LDuisisna U011s (1uba wUI
W. L. Pet. GB Nebraska 99 Kansas 78
Western Michigan, moved into Kentucky
receive a portion of· the
51 12 .810 ...
DePaul 90 Lewis 82
a challenging position with a f&gt;- VIrgin ia
38 26 .594 13'17 Akron 63 Ky . Wesleyan 59
)l'oceeds for their efforts 0!'
1
New York
28 35 .444 23
3 MAC mark.
SUos
..
Ind.
120
DePauw
94
behalf of crippled and hal!diFloridians
26 38 .406 25 11&gt;
Valparaiso 99 Butter 77
The
Flashes,
getting Carolina
capped
children.
·
·
25 39 .391 26'1&gt; . Hanover 99 Taylor 75
balailced scoring from Floyd Pittsburgh 22 40 .355 28'12 No. Iowa 89 South Dakota 77 .
West
Jefferson, Roger Evans,
Marquelle 70 Creighton 61
W. L. Pel. GB Miami, Ohio 96 Cleve. St. 58
Dwight Kenner and Ruben Utah
43 20 .683 ...
Kent St. 75 Western Mich . 69
Vance, ran off 14 straight Indiana
36 27 .571 7
Kansas St. 68 Iowa St. 54
31 34 .477 13
points in the closing minutes to Dallas
Cine! 97 Geo. Washington 79
Denver
25 37 .403 11•12
Missouri 59 Colorado 52
overcome a sixpoint deficit and
Memphis
23 40 .365 20
Bradley 71 North Tex. St. 54
take a 69-61 lead with 2:56
Sunday's Results
Ill. St. 75 Central Mich. 60
Denver 146 Pittsburgh 123
remalliing.
Chicago 62 Lake Forest 35
Floridians 111 New York 105
Toiedo65 Bowling Green 42
Kentucky 134 Carolina 113
Memphis St. 73 St. Louis 70
Ind. 131 Memphis 127, 2 ots
Minn. 76 Wisconsin 73
I Oniygamesscheduledl
Evansvl 102 Ind. St. 87
Monday's Games
Mich. 81 Northwestern 75
Dallas at New York, aft.
SouthWest
Pittsburgh-at Utah
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Houston 95 S&lt;&gt;uth Car. 85
(Oniygamesscheduledl
N.M. St. 105 Corpus Christi 73
Phonem-5421
Texas A&amp;M 75 TCU 67
NHL Standings .
S. F. Austin 73 Hwd Payne 70
By United Press tnternati9nat
Lamar U. 87 Ark. St. 71
East '
Baylor 79 Rice 72
W.
L.
T.
pts
Angelo
St. 81 East Tex. St. 72
West sparked a ~ surge that
Boston
438995 Dklahoma9001&lt;ia. St. 73
put the game out of reach. Gall New York
38 II 10 86 Arkansas 88 SMU 74
33 13 12 78 Tulsa 84 Drake 82
Goodrich added 30 points for Montreal
Detroit
25 25 9 59 Tex .. El Paso 65 N. Me x. 42
the Lakers while John
CALL P OI N T V I EW: 992 · 2505
Toronto
24 26 II 59 ~ Jxas Coil . 96 Wylie 80
Havlicek led Boston With 27. Vancouver
16 36 5 37 Oral Rbrls 114 W. Te x. St. 84
A new .series called
A show which won't be
Bobby Smith's two foul shots Buffalo
II 35 14 36
Texas Tech 81 Texas 76
"Observing
Eye,"
which
seen
was scheduled for 8
West
West
and Rick Roberson's tip-in
seems
to
be
aimed
at
p.m.,
Ch. 11. It was Woody
W. L. T. PI$ Long Beach St. 86 Paclflc62
provided Cleveland with its c'h icago
stimulating
the kids'
Alien In a biting pOlitical
38 14 7 83 Air Force 60 Portland 53
scientific interest, appears
satire that was parflcutarly
first victory iJi nine games with Minnesota
32 19 9 73 UCLA 100 Washington 83
for the first time this evening
rough on President Nixon.·
18 29 14 50 Brigham Young 79 Utah 66
the Knicks. The Cavaliers, who California
on Ch. 11 , at 6 p.m.
Resull : PBS squelched It,
St.
Louis
·
20
32
9 49 Colo St. 87 Arizona 67
trailed at one point, 32-13, went Philadelphia
+++
and It was canceled, u of
18 30 11 47 Hawaii 109 Okla. City 95
ahead with 58 seconds left in Piltsburg h
"It Takes a Thiel" wasn't
this writing, at least.
18 JJ 9 4.5 Oregon St. 74 Calif. 68
my favorite when it was
+++
16 39 · 7 39 Wstn Wash . 77 Estn Ore. 65
the game on Butch Beard's Los Angeles
fresh,
and
isn't
my
favorite
A
biting
satire on racial
Sunday's
Results
Adams
St.
90
Colo.
Mines
84
basket and booSted·the advan- Boston 3 Chicago 1
Wyoming 67 Ariz. St. 65
in reruns. But tonight. the
preludice starrlnH one of' our
tage to 111-105 on the points ·by Mlnnesota2 PlttsburghO
show has a rock group, the . rea favoriles w I be Hill,
Regis 101 Western N.M. B6
-Sth Dimension; In a show .. , h""'ever,• ll~s Bill C'l\lllvJ-\nJI
San Fran. 66 Loyola, Cal. 65
&amp;nith and Roberson. AuStin California 4 St. Louis 4
New York ~ Detroit 3
s.,·uthrn Cal 73 Wash. St. 65 '
.that I recall as pretty ·"' ~~·apif?. !f..t:it: ,' Ch'~ 11 -~ ~
Carr led .Cleveland with 25 Montreal
doggone good, 5 p.m., Ch. 4.
of Americas funniest •men,
Stanford 91 Oregon 79
4 Buffalo 0
points and Beard had 21. Dave Philadelphia 3 Toronto 1
+++
beyond a doubt, I think.
Sou. Utah 80 Fort Lewis 72
(Only games scheduled!
S. Diego St. 80 . San· Jose St. 73
De Bussehere was !he Knicks'
Danny Kaye, a timeless
+++
Seattle101
Nevada-L
V
87
favorite,
stars
in
a
Hans
MOVIES
: "Man from
Monday's
Ge~mes
high scorer with 28.
Sunday
Christian Andersen classic,
Diner's Club.'' Danny Kaye,
(No games scheduled)
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
Duquesne 81 LaSalle 69
"The Emperor's New
4 p.m., and "Between Time
AIIL ·standings
S&lt;Xlred 44 points as Milwaukee
Gannon 64 Cent. Conn. 60
Clothes." at 8 p.m.. Ch. 6.
and Eternity.'' 11 :30 p.m .,
both Ch. 10.
·
Can isius64 Baltimore62
held off a late rally to beat the By United Press International
East
Geotwn, DC 109 Hotstra 97
Bulls .. Jabbar's free throw with
W. L. T. Pfs
28 seconds left insured the Basion
33 17 9 75
31 16 12 74
victory for the Bucks and gave Nova Scot ia
Springtield
23 22 i3 59
them a 5'4-game lead over the Providence
21 27 9 51
.
IJ $
~..,,.~
~
• ·· ..,,.r.._.,"
"' ' ''''"'~ ''''
"'' ""&lt; """
secondplace Bulls in the Rochester
"' ,,..,.,.,
ol'4 ,.,'""""""""
.. ,.,,,,.. *'"' '"'
19 31 7 45
West
Midwest Division. Bob lAve,
w_ L. T. Pts
returnipg after missing three Baltimore
26 20 10 62
games because of the flu, led Cleveland
26 22 8 60
Hershey
24 29 9 57
Chicsgo with 19.
Cincinnati
23
24 11 57
Tom Van Arsdale's 30 points Richmond
22 26 10 54
led Cincinnati over Atlanta and Tidewater
13 36 8 34
Sdunday"s Results
brother Dick Van Arsdale's 25
Rochester at Batt., ppd
points lifted the Suns past the Richmond
4 Tidewater 1
Pistons.
Cincinnati 3 Boston 3

By United Press International

Jerry West S&lt;Xlred 16 of his 39
points in the third period to
break opin a close game and
lead the Lakers past Boston;

AN EDUCADDN.

NIIA Staodiogs'

McDaniels Makes
Debut For Sonics

Jim McDaniels made it ofAntwerp 82 North Central 78 ficial Sunday night.
Stryker 56 Hicksville 44
The 7-foot rookie from
Otsego 75 Llberly Center 62
Western Kentucky completed
Barberton 79 Norton 46 ·
55
Manchester 65 Lake 58
the jump from the American
Chagrin Falls 73 Aurora 47
Hillsdale 62 Loudonville 55
Basketball Association to the
Solon 49 Kenston 46
Orange 83 Chamberlin 68
National
when he played for
Ashtabula Harbor 95
Wincham 76 Waterloo 58
Jefferson 80 Celina IC 72
Seattle in the SuperSonics' 11$Lorain Adm. King 75 SouthMlsslsslnawa Valley 58 105 victory over the Portland
-view 61
Paudllng 63 Ohio City 56
North west 85 Can . Brun- Day. Wright 78 Sidney Lehman Trail Blazers:
nerdale 41
67
McDaniels, who jumped
Carrollton 52 New Phlla. 49
Versailles 74 Ft. Recovery 54 from the Carolina Cougars of
Barberton 79 Norton 46
Sidney 75 Troy 68
the ABA last week after a
Indian Valley South 59 West Liberty Salem 53
Zanesville Rosecrans 50
S&lt;&gt;utheastern Clark 67 contract dispute and signed
Middletown Fenwick so Day. • Cotijm• Weinut &lt;Ridge' Bt
_with .I the ..-Sooics, .. who;. thad
Carroll 63
Oa't&lt;foni1bmsevelt 71 ..dfafted him .on the, second
•
;
•
•
1Preble Shawnee 57
_
Colu"""" Ready 79
'·
Middletown Madoson 54
Cincinnati Purcell63 round last season, was inserted
Fairmont West 81 Miamisburg Steubenville Central 60
in the game with 1:30 left to
52
·
Wellsville 51 play. He took one shot, a short
Chardon 58 West Geauga 57 · Lancaster ~ Worthington 41
Conneat 59 Ashtabula St. John Alexander 102 Lancaster hook, and missed but wm48
Fisher 78
pleted the move which may .
~arrensville 69 Wickliffe 43
precipitate player raids in both
leagues by simply appearing in
the game. .
· Player coach lenny Wilkens
and
Dick Snyder combined fo-r
OPTOMETRIST .
53 points to boost the Sonics
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
over
Portland. &amp;lyder had 28
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
points, Wilkens 25 · and
P MER Y.
Haywood added 24. Sidney
Wicks was high man for the
mazers with 24.
Elsewhere, LDs Angeles
routed Boston ,
132-113,
Cleveland downed New York,
111-109, Milwaukee edged
Chicago , 103-100, Cincinnati
beat Atlanta, 101-92, and
. Phoenix clubbed Detroit, ·121-

N~ W~

Blancas Wins Phoenix ·~n

·Pro Standings

International
·Air Marked In
..
·; ·scouts,_Activity

fb:lt

2-HOUR

'

CLEANING.

t

_R.OBI ,.-SON'S
CLEANERS'

I

..,""' '•• ' "' ......,
~ eo..~

League Overoll

WL WL
6 2 16 4

17

League Overall
WL W L
Capital
9 1 18 2
9 2 17 6
Wooster
Wittenberg
8 2 12 8
Otterbein
7 3 14 6
Ohio Wesleyan
6 4 10 10
Muskingum
6 5 10 9
Mount Union
5 7 11 10
Baldwin-Wallace 4 6 9 13
Oberlin
4 6 9 10
Kenyon
4 7 8 14
Denison
3 8 6 11
Marietta
2 7 6 14
Heidelberg
I 10
1 17
Big Ten
League Overall
WL W L
Minnesota
8 2 14 5
Michigan
7 2 12 7
Ohio State
7 3 15 5
Purdue
4 4 10 8
lo1diana
4 4 12 6
Michigan State
4 5 11 8
Illinois
3 5 11 61
Wisconsin
3 5 10 8
Iowa
3 7 911
Northwestern
2 8 4 15
Others
W L
20

Def!3nce

Ashland
Urbana

Youngstown State
Case Western .

Findlay

Cincinnati
Hiram
Rio Grande

Wilmington

Dayton
. Ohio Northern
Sleubenviile
Malone

Btuftton
Xavier

John Carrol! .•

l

' Ohio Dominican
Cleveland State
CentralS tale
Cedarville.
W"lsh

1

20 3
18 4
22 5
18 ·5
11 . 6

14
14
13
13
10
12
10
11
11
10
9
6
8
8

6
5

3

A thought for today : Ameri can politician Wendell Wilkie
said , . "Our sovereignty is not
something to be hoarded but
somethi ng to be used."

WINTER
SALE

Mr. F.riencty

Shop The Friendly One~ .

25" ll: 33"
RIG .

~ 6.99

518 .

8
8.
8

10

8
11

••

Prayers to Advance the New Crusade

W. S~akespeare

Life wou ld be pretty dull if pe;,ple
couldn 't dream. Take thai boat you're
always dreaming about. Just thinking about it makes you fed pretty
good. But you won't just have to
drea m if you buy U.S. Savings Bonds.
Because Bonds can make your dream
boat a rea lity.
·
Now Bonds matu re in less than six
yea rs. Which mean~ maybe it won't
take forever for your ship to come in.
. ~ust knowing you've got the safety
ani! ~ul'ity of U.S. Savings Bonds
Workmg for you can make dreaming
for anythmg a lot more fun. Because,
w1th Bonds, the good times nnd the
good thirig• can rea lly happen.

Davis-Warner Ins.

So, don:! give up dreaming. ·dust

QUALITY •••

keep, l&gt;uymg U.S. Savings Bonds-'t hey re the stuff dreams are made of.

:~: 444

J39

..

I
I

J99

Tale
stock
in
America.
· ·. Now Bonds niRtur~ in less than ~ix years. .

•
•

Pruen.ted As A P.ublic Seniice by The O.ity Sonlintt

•
•

. I

.

•
••

l. •

..

BAKER'S

LOOking for a
tailor·who11
suit
you?
,

POMEROY CEMENT

Yellow
Pages

99$

WALNUT

h24

J19 0.24

40 INCH •
WAU ·
MIRROR
SALE
PRIC£

IEnEIHOMES&amp;
GARDENS

KITCHEN
PLANNING L:.fo.JI ,~N.I!VIS

IIEAD'I'·TO-FINISH

CANNON CRAFT 7" x 20"
INSERT PANEL REG. 1.79
SHUTTERS
ltn Fabr ic;

VAPOR-ALL

HUMIDIFIER
•

C/ H

1

FOR LESS.

14

NATURAL

-

BUT.

10
i2
13
12
10
-14
16
16
17
19

INSURANCE
COSTS

WAL~UT f-!1--~~~l

17" X 25"

.
. preSidents, with Mrs . . Gail
RIVERVIEW
GARDEN l:.~~~:~~:~i
,
· •
..
'
,,
· -1. ·'
· · • ·• .
·
.-:Price in ..chai'ge. .. ':.: '"'': ,...CLUB" wilL &lt;.meetc ·' ~tirsday :,
I ~~~~ts 'ai ~m-l#:llj(lla, ...... ·~ · cifECKING'LAS1'\liillute de!a~DI \b~lJI~a{l\lflijf~ing Dayobfkt .Ja.ke ~llfi!t m~. -~ .!:,,: . ·TuESDAY ! :~'-! c evening, Feb. ' !!4, a't the
, 'M,_xl~p, a~d·, switzerland.
' Middleport'Elernentary SChool Sunday are fdrs. Keith Riggs; progr~ accompanist; Mrs: Boli
AMERICAN LEGION Williams-Balderson home,
Mrs. Keith Riggs was at the
Hoeflich, general chairmiln, and Mrs. William Ohlinger, Big Bend NeighbOrhood chairman.
Auxiliary, Drew-Webster Post with Mrs. Donald Putmar as
piano for group singing of
39, 7:30 Tuesday at the hall. co-hostess. Members are 'o
"Anierica" as the girl scouts
Mrs . Arnold Richard will be bring coupons . An auction sale
moved into a horseshoe for the
Mrs. Henry Hunter's Junior
the guest speaker.
will be held.
pledge to the American flag led Troop 204 of ,Chester presented
FRIENDLY NEIGHBORS
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 7:30
by Barbara White of Chester England. They (ecited the byClub, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.,home Thursday, Columbus and
Troop 204, the Brownie laws of English . Girl Guides
of Mrs. Willard Hines.
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
SUPER-CEDAR
Promise led by Jayne Hoeflich and demonstrated a ball
RACINE AMERICAN Membe~s to taKe bottie caps
CLOSET
of Pomeroy Brownie !71, and game . Representing the
Legion Auxiliary, Tuesday, for redemption.
LINING
the Scout Promise led by United States, PQmeroy
7;30 p.m. at post home.
lEG. 6.95
Jennifer Wise of Middleport Brownie Troop 171 whose
FELLOWCRAFT Degree on
4FT.
IUNDlE
Junior Troop 39. Mrs. Bob ;eaders are Mrs . Wiione candidate Tuesday, 7:30
Hoeflich, chairman, presided liam Sheridan and Mrs.
p.m., when Middleport LDdge
at the afternoon program.
Wayne Swisher, did a
363, F&amp;AM, meets at the
The 24 girls of Troop 39 of Virginia Reel type dance. A
temple. All Master Masons
Middleport under the direction game of Ireland was shown by
AS LOW AS
invited.
of Mrs. Ernie Fraser presented the girls of the ·Salisbury
214 PEl SQ. FT.
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, :
IROWH CO.
a stick dance of India as others Cadette Troop and Mrs. Bruce
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
made up a choral group for a Zirkle's Pomeroy Junior Troop
Tuesday, 7:1&gt; p.m. at the
son1. native to that country. 247 representing Gem;_any did
·Columbia Gas Co. office . Betty
Mrs. Ro'!Coe Wise and Mrs. a dance.
Newton to be the guest
The Brownie promise In
John Krawsczyn are the
demonstrator.
leaders.
Spanish and a Mexican hat
In attractive costuming, dance were presented by ·the
Ytur
, Pomeroy Brownies of Troop 66 Salisbury Brownie Troop 220.
llldlpli ~.,.
WEDNESDAY
directad by Mrs. Thomas · The leaders are Mrs. Walter
ln-IIICI·
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
Gi-ueser and Mrs. Jack Hanley Morris, Mr&amp;. Sharon SwindeD,
(
7:30 Wednesday at home of
O.leWarMr
danced. the can-can. The and Mrs. stiaron Welker.
U•OY.tQ.f iNISH
Mrs . Karl Grueser ; each
Reedsville Junior Troop 67
The variety of finger foods
CANNON CRAR 7" x 2.0"
member to take a bird feeder
LOUVERED REG. 1.79
recited a translation of the brought by the scout leaders
she has made.
Chinese girl seout pledge, sang was sampled by the scouts,
SOUP SUPPER Wednesday
CHESTER JVNIOR SCOUT BarbMa White led the over
~~.~!~~
a Chinese New .Year's song, their parents and other guests
beginning
al 4:30 at Racine
100 Meigs County girl swuts participating in the Thinking
"
and performed a traditional attending the Thinking Day
Wesleyan United Methodist
Day program Sunday in the pledge to the flag. Lilya lty to God
dance of that land. Mrs. Lyle program. Grace was sung by
Sandwiches, bean and
Church.
· ~d Country is taught in the girl scout program.
Ba14erson, Mrs. Roy Hannum, Pomeroy Brownie Troop 171.
vegetable soup will be served.
are determined AFTER the
HUMIDIFIER
and Mrs . Harold Holter, Huge flowers in mod colors
loss,
not
before.
Remove
the
·
WATER
POMEROY WCTU, 2 p.m.
leaders, were _introduced.
centered 'the table.
TREATMENT 1-===
Wednesday, Pomeroy ·United ~~~;~~:c~~l•al sting with in RETURNED HOME
\
. .. :
I:
geared to present
-~
Thomas Bowen has returned Methodist Church.
~
from Florida where he was
OHIO VALLEY Com:
Stop In Today
called by the · death of his mandery 24, Knights Templar,
~~
father, John W. Bowen, on Feb. 7:30 p.m. Masonic Temple,
~;::-.:.:=
Daily prayer services are Posey, Clifton, W. Va .
with Mrs. Robert Rinehart as lo . Funeral se rvices were Wednesd!ly. Potluck dinner at
.,
lEG. 2.99
being held in private homes to
Wednesday, 2 p. m, home of hostess; 7 p. m. home of Miss conducted at II a.m. on Feb . 17
Phone992-2966
STEtu.o PRoo.
R hS h
6:30p.m . for Sir Knights, their
ADDITIONAL OR -----.-,{.t
advance the ·Middleport Mrs. Letolia Cassell, corner of F
ranees ous , out Fifth St., by
the Rev. Cline
L. W. George
at the ~la~d~ie=s~a~n=d~fam
=i=lie=s~.--------~11~4~C~ou~rt~St~.~~~Po~m~er~o~y~ t.::lLS:EW~tTHOUT couPOI'I 2.49
Evange\lsUc Crusade which Hudson and Rutland Sts ., Middleport.
Griffith
Bradenton
will beg\n next Sunday night in Middleport; First Baptist
Friday, 7p. m. home of Mrs. · Cha pel. Burial was in the
the Middleport Elemeniaty Church, 7:30 p. m.
Sibley Slack, North Third Ave., Manasota Memorial Park at •
School auditorium. Mrs. L; W.
Oneco, Fla .
Thursday, 2 p. m ., home of Middleport
McComa,, prayer chairman, Mr . and Mrs. L. W. McComas
announces ·,\he following services :
LANTERN with
WATSON VISITED
Monday, 7 p. m., home of
BATTERY
RACINE - Owen Watson,
Mrs. Genev.a Yates, 619 Page
Racine, i s in satisfactory
St., Middleport.
condition at the Pleasant
IS NOT OUR PROPERTY ALONE!
Tuesday, 7 p. m.,. home of
Valley Hospital where he
Mr. and Mrs. Manning Kloos,
unaerwent s~rgery Friday. His
Second Ave., Middleport, and
daughter, Mrs. Robert Roush
I I
home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
of Columbus, has been here
with him for the past week, and
YOU'LL NEVER BUY QUALITY
will remain·another week. Her
TO SELL RUMMAGE
A rummage sale was husband anp daughter, r\ancy,
planned March 3 and 4 at the came for the weekend to be
SALE PIICI
Fry building in Middleport with Mrs. Watson, who Is
8reo~·re\lslal\l !looting lantern
when the Tuppers Plains recuP.raling from a shoulder
t
switch.
THAN
YOU
DO
AT
Communtt)l Club met recentlY fracture . Returning to Sterling
at the home of Mrs. Doris Helghls, Mich., today after
Koenig. Rlllnmage for the sal' cOilling for lh~ weekend to see
Is.to be left at the home of Mrs. his parenls were Ivan Watson
·
Dorothy Stout. Q,ther fund and his wife.
,
raising projecl.l discussed
Furniture
The
pet
population
of
the
The Oep,.lmtnl Store
included the sale of rail!
United States outnumbers
of Building Since 1915
OHIO
bOnnets and calendars. Mrs. lh~ human population threr
-1
Merle ' GriHith wiU host the to one. according to a surMarch ameeting.
vey.
•

.

9
14
14

Ohio Conference

A~ron

awarding blue ribbons to Mrs.
Aaron Kelton for a mantel
arrangement, and Mrs. Lewis
for il table arrangement. Mrs.
Cora Beegle will be hostess for
the March meeting at which
time plans will be completed
for an open meeting in March ..
Devotions to " open the
meeting were by Mrs. lewis
who read "We Thank Thee
Lord" . Mrs . Charles Hayes
gave the secretary 's report,
and Mrs. Moore gave the
treasurer's report. Members
answe red roll call by telling
"'.Vhat I Do for the Japs".
The traveling prize donated
by Mrs. Don Thomas was won
by Mrs. Lewis.
The hostess served a dessert
cou rse. 1\ttend ing besides
those named were Mrs. John
Terrell, Mrs. Earl Thoma ,
Mrs. Beegle and Mrs. Clarence
Heaton.

....

Mid·American Conference

3 5
1 7

MONDAY
FEENEY-Bennett Post 128,
FILM, "To Touch a Child" at American Legion, 8 p.m.
8:30 p.m. for public in con- Wednesday, post everlastinc
junction with Chester PTA ceremony in memory of
meeting at school Monday . · departed members. Members
Meeting starts at 8 with of immediate families Invited.
Founders' Day to be observed · Business meeting 7:30 p.m.
and past presidents honored. Refreshments following the
ONE DAY field trial , Meigs ceremony.
County Foxhunters, Monday on
AMERICAN LEGION
Snow Ball Hill . Hounds will Auxiliary , Feeney-Bennett
Post
128,
7:30
p.m.
cast at 7 a.m.
INITIATORY WORK 'IVhen Americanism program to be
Meigs Chapter' Order . of presented by the Junior
DeMolay, . meets at 7:30 Auxiliary members whose
Monday evening at the meeting on-Tuesday night has
Masonic Temple in Middleport. been cancelled .
All DeMolay members · and
THURSDAY
Masons Invited. Mothers Club
MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
in basement also at 7:30. .
Uoll$ Club, special Ladies
RACINE Elementary PTA Night observance, 6:30p.m. at
7:30 p.m. Mond~y at school. the Pomeroy United Methodist
Founders Day to lie observed. Church. Entertainment to
Program honoring past follow the meeting.
·

[

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL RECOROS
United Pre5s tnternallo~ I

11
6
6
J

.'

t
r'

_(Upon Request)

Monday's Game-s

5 2
5 3

'! •

Costuming, finger foods,
games, songs and dances gave
an lli~ational flavor to the
annual . Think)ng Day observance SIJnday afternoon in
r
the. Mi~dleport Elementary
· School auditorluni as more
than 100 Meigs County Girl
Scouts performed for their
parents and scouting officials.
The observance, marked the
46th anniversary of the fouriding•ol 'l'hin1\ing Day - the girl
scout way of bridging language
and cus""'! barriers toward
building friendships around the
worid.
Each · of the eight participating troops contributed to
·the Juliette Low World
. Friendship Fund established in
1928 as a living memorial to
Juliette Gordon Low, founder
of Girl Scouting ir\ the United
States. The money contributed
wiU go for the support of international friendship projects
and events of the , Worlcj
·· Association of Girl Guides and
I

(No games scheduled)

Ken t Slate
Miami
Bowling Green

lawns.
For the program s ,. Mrs.
Moore
reviewed
Lloyd
"Japanese Beetles are Raising
Cain" by Richard Miller of the
Columbus Dispatch . The
bee Ue, he reports , was first
discovered in the United Stales
in 1916 in New Jersey. The
adult feeds on about 300 different kinds of trees, shrubs,
'and flowers from June through
August. Most of the beetle's life
is spent in the soil and as cold
weather approaches the grubs
burrow deep to winter over.
They begin emerging from the
soil in June .
In his article, Miller suggests
Seven,
Malathion
and
Methoxychlor as effective
insecticides. Several applications are necessary to
protect valuable planls and
fruits, he says, Mrs. Moore
said thai grub proofin g \he soil
can be done in August or
September with an application
of chlordane.
of
\he
The
theme
arrangement of the month was
"In Uving Color ." Mrs. Moore
judged · the arrangements

I

(On Iy games scheduled)

Ohio Universitv

revised rules in the summer
issue.
Seed catelogs were on
display and extra copies given
to members. Mrs. Thompson
presented each member with
Nigella seeds, self-sowrng
plant.
The garden calendar was
ready by Mrs. lewis Shields
who noted that now is the time
to prune shade and fruit trees,
shrubs and hedges, to spray
trees, shrubs and evergreens
on days when the temperature
is above 40, anytime from now
un til the buds set on. She noted
that this is Important to control
scale insects and kill the eggs
of other insecta.
She suggested, the use of
miscible oil on plants near the
house and dormant lime
sulphur elsewhere. A preemergence
control
for
era bgrass which kills off the
seedlings as they begin to
sprout, can he applied anytime
this month. Brands containing
lead arsenate or calcium arsenate are recommended along
with chlordane. Mrs. Shields
said that the latter part of
February is a good time to
apply fertilizer and to sow
grass seed on established

I

Nova Scotia 3 Hershey 2
Providence 7 Cleveland 2

Toledo

INTERNATIONAL THINKING DAY -Costuming of the
oyer 100 girl ~wuts participating in the Thinking Day
)l'ograrn Sundsy at the Middleport Elementary School
auditorium carried out the intemalionallheme of the observance. Pictured here, left to right, are Jayne Hoeflich
represenling the Unite(! States of Pomeroy Browning Troop
171; Vicky .Hood, Gennany, Pomeroy Junior Troop 247;
Mary Ann Carswell, Ireland, Salisbury Cadette Troop 208;
S!errie Starcher, England, Chester Junior Troop 204; Terri
McDaniel, India, Middleport Junior Troop 29; Kay
· Balderson, China , Reedsville Troop 67; Camille Swindell,
Mexico, Salisbury Brownie Troop· 220, and Kelly Griffith,
Pomeroy BroWnie Troop 66.

A new junior garden club will
he• organized' by \he Winding
Trail Garden Club in the near
future , according to plans
proposed at the Friday night
meeting of the dub at the home
of Mrs, 1\ohert lewis.
Details of the club membership and organiza tional
date wiD be announced later.
Mrs , Robert Thompson
presided a\ the meeting during
which time the beautification
project at the Meigs County
Horne was d.iscussed. New
posts have been placed at each
corner of the lawn to prevent
autos from driving onto it.
Proceeds from a recent
nunmage sale will be used to
make additional plantings of
spring flowers, to paint the
benches, . and to buy. white
gravel for the area around the
benches. Signs will be erected
soon denoting that the improvement is a project of the
club.
Green Thumb Notes for April
7will be prepared by Mrs. Cora
Beegle. A letter from Mrs.
Edward Mizicko
urged
members to enter the slide
contest. She noted that tl!e
schedule is in the the fall 1971
issue of the Garden Path with

BLOCK 00.

SALE PRICE

4995

Au tomatic humldlstot ond shutoff. rehll light. 6 room copodt~.

�r

.,.

1

•...:Tiie Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. o., Feb. 21, 1972

·capital
ips Wooster,
Needs Win. ForOC .- Title
it was. We had to prove we conference · and 8-14 · overall,
By GENE CADDES
wuld bounce back."
bUt the lArds have won three
UPI Spol18 Writer
Capital need$ only a win over
The fru.saders had lost two in a row for the first time this
Kenyon Saturday night to wrap of their last three games after season.
r
"ltseemsUkethat'swhen we
up the Ohio Conference title, winning 16 in a row, and a loss
but the Crus;lders will have to to Muskingum Tuesday night always catch a team,"
do it all over again in the con- had given Wooster temporary Chickerella said, "when
ference tournament if they possession of first place in the they 're hot."
Wooster, which was paced by
want to earn a ticket to the conference.
NCAA College Division tourIt was Mike Stumpf with 21 Mike Grenert with 18 points,
nament.
points, Scott Weakley with 17 Mike Stoll with 14 and Greg
Capital, ranked seventh in · and Don Kalb with 16 who led Bryan! with 12, has one conthe nation in the latest UPI the Crusaders. Stumpf scored - terence game remalriing with
ratings, handed Wooster a 6~ four points and Weakley two to Wittenberg and a win over the
loss Ssturday night in its battle break a 49-49 tie and gite Cap Tigers, coupled with a Kenyon
for top spot in the 13-team the lead for good.
lJ1lSel of Capital, could stiU get
conference. The victory was
"Mike (Stumpf) had an out- the Scots the championship.
Chickerella is not happy
the lath in 20 games for the · standing game," Chlckerella
Chlsaders and gave them a 9-1 said of his husky 6-foot-11 cen- about the prospects of having
OC record. Wooster was 9-2 in ter . "They wuldn't handle him to win the post-Beason tournament to get a NCAA berth.
the conference and 17-8overall. inside."
"That was a big win for as,"
Kenyon, the oni)'-Obstacle be" I'm ag-ainst the toursaid Cap Coach Vince Chicke- tween the Crusaders and the nament," he said. "I always
rella. "I can't tell you how big league title, is only 4-7 in the have been and I always will be.
It serves no useful purpose and
it could mean three months of
hard work shot to heck. I
helieve you can get a truer
By United Press International t:ast Cleveland Shaw 78
champion out of 12 games than
Claymont 66 Dover 55
Brush 64 you can out of a four-dav
Ridgewood 71 Philo 69
Cleveland His 87 Parma 56
tournament." ·
Indian Vallev S&lt;&gt;uth 59
Euclid 89 Garfield Hts 50
Meanwhile, Toledo took a
Zanesville Rosecrans SO Orange 83 Twinsburg 68
Columbus Watriut l&lt;tdge llij
As htabula 86 Ashtabula half game lead· in the MidDayton Roosevell71
Edgewood 4
Fairless 60 Canton South 50
Geneva 68 Pymatunlng Valley American Conference with a
M-42 victory over Bowling
Oakwood 6S Louisville 57
61
North CantQfl 70 Sandy Valley Ciearview 78 Elyria Catholic 68 Green, thanks to a 23-point
61
Western_Reserve Academy 58
Alliance 66 Louisville Aquinas
Pitlsburgh Shadyside 51
55
Sheridan 71 Licking Valley 64
Massillon 68 Youngstown South Granville 90 West Musklngum

High School Cage Scores

58

•

65

Marllngton 80 Jackson 67
East Canton 67 Canton C.C. 65
Akron Central Hower 60
Akron Buchtel 52
Cleveland Chane! 62
Cleveland Gilmour 39
Baptist
Chrl$tian
88
Mansfield Christian 87
Sandusky 58 Toledo Woodward
51
Maumee Valley 69 Hawken 64
Valley Forge 77 Lakewood .74
(ot)
Normandy 64 Shaker Heights

Cambridge 87 Barnesville 65
Zane Trace !Guernsey) 81
Fort Frye 69
Meadowbrook 99 Shenandoah
88
Patrick Henry 57 Ayersvllle 52
Continental 100 Hll top 53
Faye tie 92Morencl {Mich.) 77
Archbold 84 Ottawa Glandorf

By United .Press International

53

COMPTON, O~D~

GREGORY BRUCE
WANTS TO BE
PRESIDENT WHEN
HE GROWS UP.
_HE'LL NEVER
~IT WITHOUT

107.

Tourney Scoring

Who knows how many people neve r get achance to

develo ~ the talent they were bom

wi th.

Have we !ruled to tram stx people who might
· have discovered a cure lor cancer last year? Or three
men who could have brought peace to the world ?
Or the best president this country has ever known?
We're trying. We support 40 private, four-year
colleges that teach over 45.000 students to put their
talents to good use.
Most ol the youngsters we help amid never get
to college on their own. Because most come from families earning less than $5,000 a year. .
We can train more lobe whatever they can
be- with your help.
·
·
Send a check. Whalever you can handle. Tn
UNCF, Dept. C, 55 East 52nd Street, New York,
New York -10022.
V.&gt;Ur amtribulions are tax deductible.

..

Championship Game
HANNAN TRACE (~)
Swain 7-3-17 ; Halley 0-2-2;
Caldwell 7-1-15; WfiiS 4-1-9;
Ours 2-3-7; Dunfee 0-2-2;
Lusher 3-2-8. TOTALS 23-14-'0.
NORTH GALLIA (83) Justus 8-2- 18; Crosswhite 6-2·
14; Clark 7-2-16; Stout 8-5-21 ;
Brown 3-4-10; Robinson 1-0.2;
Justus 1-0-2. TOTALS 24-15-ll.
By Quarters :
Harinan Trace - 11 18 12 19---60
Nor th Gallia 22 18 23 20-83

e "' G-·- "'

College Results
Saturday
East
Gtenv 88 W.V. St. 80
Fordham 102 Rutgers 90

Prvdnce 104 Holy Cross 68

St.Jhn Fshr 90 Brklyn Pol 54
St. Peter's N.J. 77 Del. 63
No. Car . 99 Notre Dame 74
Bethany 87 Thiel 74
Wash. CoiL 74 Usinus 56
Lehigh 67 Delaware 66
Temple 60 St. Jos. Pa. 58
Manhattan 85 Army 80
C.W. Posl63 Adelphia 57
Butta to 85 Rochester 74
Syracuse 98 Conne~licut 69
SipryRock 78 CaL St., Pa 63
Princeton 9t' Brown 75
Sacred Heart 89 CCNY 66
Harvard 102 Clmbia 100, 2 ot
Bridgeport 76 Fairfield 70
Dartmouth 97 Cornell72
Biuefld St 115 W. V. Tech 69
Wheeling 71 West Liberty 65
St. Bonaventure 89 Ll U 69
Penn St. 68 Boston CoiL 64
Pennsylvania 71 Yale 62

Consolation Game
South
SOUTHWESTERN 146) N.C.
St
84
Wake
Forest 76
Lewis 3-2-8; Walker 4-0-8;
67 Clemson 57
Trowbridge 5-1-11 ; Wood 3-2-8; Maryland
Whitt 2-0-4; Hopkins 0-0-0; Vanderbilt 104 LSU 83
Kentucky 95 Florida 68
Carter 3-1-7. TOTALS 20-'-46. Tenn.
71 Georgia 68, ot
.
KYGER CREEK ltl) Ata
.-St
.
76
Tuskegee
lnst.
74
Thompson 11-5-27 ; Curry 5-1- Loyola, La. 89 Tulane 73 ·
11 ; Cremeans 2-2-6; Darst 2-15; Smith 2-0-4; Roush 0-0-0; Alabama 79 Auburn 78
86 Lambuth 81
McCarty 2-3-7; Hudson 5-1-11; Centre
Florida
108 Ga. Tech 50
Tabor 2-0-4; Stidham 1-6-8. Duke 86 St.
Virginia
76
TOTALS 32-19-ll.
RichMond
99
Wesf
Vir. 87
By Quarters :
Beckley
85
Salem
75
Southwestern 9 11 18 B-46 Ky. St. lo9 Central St. 73
Kyger Creek 10 29 20 24--83 Western ~Y - 93 Estrn KY - 88

GIVE TO THE
lilTED
COli R1 fUND.

NEW

.FURNilURE

'349.95
sJs:oo Down ··
11elance On
Convenient
Terms.

and Lb: lnlrrt'lit!Mn:.l Nf~IJII'r Ad¥f"f1isi!ll1 F'.J~a'UiliYl'lL

'

MASON
!,FURN IT_URE.
1

................................. ....... ..~. .. ,,___~
__s_o_n_,_~_._v~a~·~------------------------J
•

PHOENIX (UPI)- The play
Atlantic Division
of Texan Homero Blancas In
VI. L. Pd. G!l
the PhOenix Open golf touriloston
44 23 .657 •..
New York
~ 24 .625 2'17
nament .ranged from brilliant
Philadelphia 25 , 39 .391 17'12 to 5\11&gt;-par, including on the
.Buffalo
17 46 .270 25
first playoff hole when he
~ntral Oi tision
W. L. Pd. ' GB
claimed the $25,000 first prize
Baltimore
27 35 .435
Sunday.
.
..
Allanta
2~ &lt;10 ,375 4
After what l!e termed a
Cincinnati
20 44 • .313 8
"horrible second shot,"
Cleveland
19 47 .288 10
Western Conference
Blancas reached the green
~ Midwest Division
with a wedge over a tree and
W. L. Pd. GB
sank
a four-loot birdie putt to
Milwaukee 52 15 .776
' Chicago
46 20 .697 5'1&gt; defeat
youthful
Lanny
Phoeni x
41 25 .621 10 1/:z
Detroit
22 42 .344 28°/2 Wadkins.
Blancas had tied the Phoenix
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB . COuntry Club course rewrd of
Los Angeles 54 9 .857 ...
61 in Friday's second round to
Seattle
40 25 .615 15
Golden State 39 25 .609 15112 claim a shilre of the lead which
Houston
25 39 .391 29'17
Porlland
15 52 .224 41'12
.Eastern Conference

College Results

3 ROOMS

"""''""'"&lt;)l'*!•
o-dl&lt;""'""""~"''""'""''''"''n..M,m••nor ~@'•
c.,...:il

By United Prt,.lntWnlliOIIal .

he relinquished O!IIY briefly in
Sunday's round. On Saturday, ·
the Houston resident ballooned
to ~ two-over-par 73 and
allowed England's . Tony
Jacklin to Ue him after 54-holes
at nineunder-par 204.
"I've been · having trouble
With JllY woods the last .two
years,"mancassald. "luseda
wood on that llorrible second
shot that got me into the
trees."
Wadkins' second shot was
almost identical to the one by
ljlancas, but his w.edge shot to
the green was 14 feet past the
pln and his birdie attempt '
conilitg back was a foot short.
Runnerup in the Bob Hope
Desert classic, playing in his
12th tournament after leaving
Wake Forest and turning pro
only last spring, Wadkins
admitted indirectly he may
have felt the pressure.
"It was my first playoff," he
said, but promised, "I'll be
back." He sald he liad a bad
second shot on the extra hole
and the-third was just too ·long.
Both Wadkins and Blancas
had two-putted the. 18th green
in regulation play to force the
sudden death playoff. Blancas .
had a final round of 69, and
Wadkins, two strokes off . the
pace after 54-holes, shot a 66.
They tied at 'n-under 273 for 72
holes.
Veteran Marty Fleckman,
the only entry with four sub-70
rounds, won third-place money
of $8,850, finishing 69-68-69-611274.
Paul Moran, a !~year pro
but in only his second year on
the tour, made a run at the
leaders, then was knocked out
of contention when he got in the
water on the par-3 15th and

New junior Garden Club Planned

took a triple bogey. He flnQhed
In a four-way tie at m with
Jacklin, Jim Wiechert and
three-time, Phoenix winner ·
Gene Uttler.
At 271 were Hubert G"*n
and Hal Underwood.

'

FIRST-ROUND GAME
second half performance by
NEW .YORK
. (UPI) -Rudy
Tom Kozelko, the conference's
leading ,'scorer.
Tomjanovich of the Houston
Kozelko, who finished with 2li
Rockets defeated Bob lAve of
points, was held to ~o in the
the Chicago Bulls;: 20-12,
first half &amp;nd the Rockets held
·Sunday in a flrst-roWid g~ !If
only a 28-24 margin at interthe $50,fi00 Natijlllal Ballketball
mission.
AssoclaUon one-on-one lc!ur· Toledo, however, outscored
nament.
,
the Falcons lf&gt;-7 in the first
The pre-\aped · SCI'lllljnltl!e
seven minutes of the second
was televised at balftlnje of the
half to take a 43-31 lead and
Chicago-Milwaukee , ~!'.ck~
rolled on to its 16th win in 20
Sunday's Results
~me. To~janovich wUI- next
Milwaukee
103 Chicago 100
games, upping its MAC record
fa~ lhe·Wlmllli1·0f the Garfield
Phoenix 121 Detroll 107
to ~2;
Cleveland 111 New York 109
Smith-John Q. Tra!IP ~·­
Amer. U. 91 Hofstra 76
Bowling Green , now ~17 Cincinnati 101 Atlanta 92
Wm. &amp; Mary 67 East Car . 64
overaU and l-7 In the con- Los Angeles 132 Boston 113
HOME APPEARANCE
Furman 80 Citadel 75 ·•. •
109 Portland 105
Geo. Southern 103 Geo . .st. 55
NEW ORLEANS . (t)pt)
ference, w113 paced by Brian Seattle
!Onlygamesscheduled) ·
Mississippi 65 Miss. St. 6.4
SCiinian with nine points.
The New Orleans Sailtts BD·
Monday's Games
Marshaii89UNC-Chartotte69
Philadelphia
at
Baltimore
Toledo's victory moved the
Midwes1
nouneed Sunday their
19~
(Onlyga,escheduiedl
Louisville 69 Wichita St. 60
Roc!tets a half-game ahead of
home appearance will be a
illinois 64 Ohio St. 62
idle Ohio University, f&gt;-2, but
preseason game. with the
ABA Standings
Purdue 92 Michigan St. 68
Kent State, with a come-from- By United Press International
Buffalo Bills on Aug. 12.
Indiana 86 Iowa 79
East
Eau
Claire
69
No.
Mich
.
58
behind 75-69 decision over
LDuisisna U011s (1uba wUI
W. L. Pet. GB Nebraska 99 Kansas 78
Western Michigan, moved into Kentucky
receive a portion of· the
51 12 .810 ...
DePaul 90 Lewis 82
a challenging position with a f&gt;- VIrgin ia
38 26 .594 13'17 Akron 63 Ky . Wesleyan 59
)l'oceeds for their efforts 0!'
1
New York
28 35 .444 23
3 MAC mark.
SUos
..
Ind.
120
DePauw
94
behalf of crippled and hal!diFloridians
26 38 .406 25 11&gt;
Valparaiso 99 Butter 77
The
Flashes,
getting Carolina
capped
children.
·
·
25 39 .391 26'1&gt; . Hanover 99 Taylor 75
balailced scoring from Floyd Pittsburgh 22 40 .355 28'12 No. Iowa 89 South Dakota 77 .
West
Jefferson, Roger Evans,
Marquelle 70 Creighton 61
W. L. Pel. GB Miami, Ohio 96 Cleve. St. 58
Dwight Kenner and Ruben Utah
43 20 .683 ...
Kent St. 75 Western Mich . 69
Vance, ran off 14 straight Indiana
36 27 .571 7
Kansas St. 68 Iowa St. 54
31 34 .477 13
points in the closing minutes to Dallas
Cine! 97 Geo. Washington 79
Denver
25 37 .403 11•12
Missouri 59 Colorado 52
overcome a sixpoint deficit and
Memphis
23 40 .365 20
Bradley 71 North Tex. St. 54
take a 69-61 lead with 2:56
Sunday's Results
Ill. St. 75 Central Mich. 60
Denver 146 Pittsburgh 123
remalliing.
Chicago 62 Lake Forest 35
Floridians 111 New York 105
Toiedo65 Bowling Green 42
Kentucky 134 Carolina 113
Memphis St. 73 St. Louis 70
Ind. 131 Memphis 127, 2 ots
Minn. 76 Wisconsin 73
I Oniygamesscheduledl
Evansvl 102 Ind. St. 87
Monday's Games
Mich. 81 Northwestern 75
Dallas at New York, aft.
SouthWest
Pittsburgh-at Utah
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Houston 95 S&lt;&gt;uth Car. 85
(Oniygamesscheduledl
N.M. St. 105 Corpus Christi 73
Phonem-5421
Texas A&amp;M 75 TCU 67
NHL Standings .
S. F. Austin 73 Hwd Payne 70
By United Press tnternati9nat
Lamar U. 87 Ark. St. 71
East '
Baylor 79 Rice 72
W.
L.
T.
pts
Angelo
St. 81 East Tex. St. 72
West sparked a ~ surge that
Boston
438995 Dklahoma9001&lt;ia. St. 73
put the game out of reach. Gall New York
38 II 10 86 Arkansas 88 SMU 74
33 13 12 78 Tulsa 84 Drake 82
Goodrich added 30 points for Montreal
Detroit
25 25 9 59 Tex .. El Paso 65 N. Me x. 42
the Lakers while John
CALL P OI N T V I EW: 992 · 2505
Toronto
24 26 II 59 ~ Jxas Coil . 96 Wylie 80
Havlicek led Boston With 27. Vancouver
16 36 5 37 Oral Rbrls 114 W. Te x. St. 84
A new .series called
A show which won't be
Bobby Smith's two foul shots Buffalo
II 35 14 36
Texas Tech 81 Texas 76
"Observing
Eye,"
which
seen
was scheduled for 8
West
West
and Rick Roberson's tip-in
seems
to
be
aimed
at
p.m.,
Ch. 11. It was Woody
W. L. T. PI$ Long Beach St. 86 Paclflc62
provided Cleveland with its c'h icago
stimulating
the kids'
Alien In a biting pOlitical
38 14 7 83 Air Force 60 Portland 53
scientific interest, appears
satire that was parflcutarly
first victory iJi nine games with Minnesota
32 19 9 73 UCLA 100 Washington 83
for the first time this evening
rough on President Nixon.·
18 29 14 50 Brigham Young 79 Utah 66
the Knicks. The Cavaliers, who California
on Ch. 11 , at 6 p.m.
Resull : PBS squelched It,
St.
Louis
·
20
32
9 49 Colo St. 87 Arizona 67
trailed at one point, 32-13, went Philadelphia
+++
and It was canceled, u of
18 30 11 47 Hawaii 109 Okla. City 95
ahead with 58 seconds left in Piltsburg h
"It Takes a Thiel" wasn't
this writing, at least.
18 JJ 9 4.5 Oregon St. 74 Calif. 68
my favorite when it was
+++
16 39 · 7 39 Wstn Wash . 77 Estn Ore. 65
the game on Butch Beard's Los Angeles
fresh,
and
isn't
my
favorite
A
biting
satire on racial
Sunday's
Results
Adams
St.
90
Colo.
Mines
84
basket and booSted·the advan- Boston 3 Chicago 1
Wyoming 67 Ariz. St. 65
in reruns. But tonight. the
preludice starrlnH one of' our
tage to 111-105 on the points ·by Mlnnesota2 PlttsburghO
show has a rock group, the . rea favoriles w I be Hill,
Regis 101 Western N.M. B6
-Sth Dimension; In a show .. , h""'ever,• ll~s Bill C'l\lllvJ-\nJI
San Fran. 66 Loyola, Cal. 65
&amp;nith and Roberson. AuStin California 4 St. Louis 4
New York ~ Detroit 3
s.,·uthrn Cal 73 Wash. St. 65 '
.that I recall as pretty ·"' ~~·apif?. !f..t:it: ,' Ch'~ 11 -~ ~
Carr led .Cleveland with 25 Montreal
doggone good, 5 p.m., Ch. 4.
of Americas funniest •men,
Stanford 91 Oregon 79
4 Buffalo 0
points and Beard had 21. Dave Philadelphia 3 Toronto 1
+++
beyond a doubt, I think.
Sou. Utah 80 Fort Lewis 72
(Only games scheduled!
S. Diego St. 80 . San· Jose St. 73
De Bussehere was !he Knicks'
Danny Kaye, a timeless
+++
Seattle101
Nevada-L
V
87
favorite,
stars
in
a
Hans
MOVIES
: "Man from
Monday's
Ge~mes
high scorer with 28.
Sunday
Christian Andersen classic,
Diner's Club.'' Danny Kaye,
(No games scheduled)
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
Duquesne 81 LaSalle 69
"The Emperor's New
4 p.m., and "Between Time
AIIL ·standings
S&lt;Xlred 44 points as Milwaukee
Gannon 64 Cent. Conn. 60
Clothes." at 8 p.m.. Ch. 6.
and Eternity.'' 11 :30 p.m .,
both Ch. 10.
·
Can isius64 Baltimore62
held off a late rally to beat the By United Press International
East
Geotwn, DC 109 Hotstra 97
Bulls .. Jabbar's free throw with
W. L. T. Pfs
28 seconds left insured the Basion
33 17 9 75
31 16 12 74
victory for the Bucks and gave Nova Scot ia
Springtield
23 22 i3 59
them a 5'4-game lead over the Providence
21 27 9 51
.
IJ $
~..,,.~
~
• ·· ..,,.r.._.,"
"' ' ''''"'~ ''''
"'' ""&lt; """
secondplace Bulls in the Rochester
"' ,,..,.,.,
ol'4 ,.,'""""""""
.. ,.,,,,.. *'"' '"'
19 31 7 45
West
Midwest Division. Bob lAve,
w_ L. T. Pts
returnipg after missing three Baltimore
26 20 10 62
games because of the flu, led Cleveland
26 22 8 60
Hershey
24 29 9 57
Chicsgo with 19.
Cincinnati
23
24 11 57
Tom Van Arsdale's 30 points Richmond
22 26 10 54
led Cincinnati over Atlanta and Tidewater
13 36 8 34
Sdunday"s Results
brother Dick Van Arsdale's 25
Rochester at Batt., ppd
points lifted the Suns past the Richmond
4 Tidewater 1
Pistons.
Cincinnati 3 Boston 3

By United Press International

Jerry West S&lt;Xlred 16 of his 39
points in the third period to
break opin a close game and
lead the Lakers past Boston;

AN EDUCADDN.

NIIA Staodiogs'

McDaniels Makes
Debut For Sonics

Jim McDaniels made it ofAntwerp 82 North Central 78 ficial Sunday night.
Stryker 56 Hicksville 44
The 7-foot rookie from
Otsego 75 Llberly Center 62
Western Kentucky completed
Barberton 79 Norton 46 ·
55
Manchester 65 Lake 58
the jump from the American
Chagrin Falls 73 Aurora 47
Hillsdale 62 Loudonville 55
Basketball Association to the
Solon 49 Kenston 46
Orange 83 Chamberlin 68
National
when he played for
Ashtabula Harbor 95
Wincham 76 Waterloo 58
Jefferson 80 Celina IC 72
Seattle in the SuperSonics' 11$Lorain Adm. King 75 SouthMlsslsslnawa Valley 58 105 victory over the Portland
-view 61
Paudllng 63 Ohio City 56
North west 85 Can . Brun- Day. Wright 78 Sidney Lehman Trail Blazers:
nerdale 41
67
McDaniels, who jumped
Carrollton 52 New Phlla. 49
Versailles 74 Ft. Recovery 54 from the Carolina Cougars of
Barberton 79 Norton 46
Sidney 75 Troy 68
the ABA last week after a
Indian Valley South 59 West Liberty Salem 53
Zanesville Rosecrans 50
S&lt;&gt;utheastern Clark 67 contract dispute and signed
Middletown Fenwick so Day. • Cotijm• Weinut &lt;Ridge' Bt
_with .I the ..-Sooics, .. who;. thad
Carroll 63
Oa't&lt;foni1bmsevelt 71 ..dfafted him .on the, second
•
;
•
•
1Preble Shawnee 57
_
Colu"""" Ready 79
'·
Middletown Madoson 54
Cincinnati Purcell63 round last season, was inserted
Fairmont West 81 Miamisburg Steubenville Central 60
in the game with 1:30 left to
52
·
Wellsville 51 play. He took one shot, a short
Chardon 58 West Geauga 57 · Lancaster ~ Worthington 41
Conneat 59 Ashtabula St. John Alexander 102 Lancaster hook, and missed but wm48
Fisher 78
pleted the move which may .
~arrensville 69 Wickliffe 43
precipitate player raids in both
leagues by simply appearing in
the game. .
· Player coach lenny Wilkens
and
Dick Snyder combined fo-r
OPTOMETRIST .
53 points to boost the Sonics
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
over
Portland. &amp;lyder had 28
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
points, Wilkens 25 · and
P MER Y.
Haywood added 24. Sidney
Wicks was high man for the
mazers with 24.
Elsewhere, LDs Angeles
routed Boston ,
132-113,
Cleveland downed New York,
111-109, Milwaukee edged
Chicago , 103-100, Cincinnati
beat Atlanta, 101-92, and
. Phoenix clubbed Detroit, ·121-

N~ W~

Blancas Wins Phoenix ·~n

·Pro Standings

International
·Air Marked In
..
·; ·scouts,_Activity

fb:lt

2-HOUR

'

CLEANING.

t

_R.OBI ,.-SON'S
CLEANERS'

I

..,""' '•• ' "' ......,
~ eo..~

League Overoll

WL WL
6 2 16 4

17

League Overall
WL W L
Capital
9 1 18 2
9 2 17 6
Wooster
Wittenberg
8 2 12 8
Otterbein
7 3 14 6
Ohio Wesleyan
6 4 10 10
Muskingum
6 5 10 9
Mount Union
5 7 11 10
Baldwin-Wallace 4 6 9 13
Oberlin
4 6 9 10
Kenyon
4 7 8 14
Denison
3 8 6 11
Marietta
2 7 6 14
Heidelberg
I 10
1 17
Big Ten
League Overall
WL W L
Minnesota
8 2 14 5
Michigan
7 2 12 7
Ohio State
7 3 15 5
Purdue
4 4 10 8
lo1diana
4 4 12 6
Michigan State
4 5 11 8
Illinois
3 5 11 61
Wisconsin
3 5 10 8
Iowa
3 7 911
Northwestern
2 8 4 15
Others
W L
20

Def!3nce

Ashland
Urbana

Youngstown State
Case Western .

Findlay

Cincinnati
Hiram
Rio Grande

Wilmington

Dayton
. Ohio Northern
Sleubenviile
Malone

Btuftton
Xavier

John Carrol! .•

l

' Ohio Dominican
Cleveland State
CentralS tale
Cedarville.
W"lsh

1

20 3
18 4
22 5
18 ·5
11 . 6

14
14
13
13
10
12
10
11
11
10
9
6
8
8

6
5

3

A thought for today : Ameri can politician Wendell Wilkie
said , . "Our sovereignty is not
something to be hoarded but
somethi ng to be used."

WINTER
SALE

Mr. F.riencty

Shop The Friendly One~ .

25" ll: 33"
RIG .

~ 6.99

518 .

8
8.
8

10

8
11

••

Prayers to Advance the New Crusade

W. S~akespeare

Life wou ld be pretty dull if pe;,ple
couldn 't dream. Take thai boat you're
always dreaming about. Just thinking about it makes you fed pretty
good. But you won't just have to
drea m if you buy U.S. Savings Bonds.
Because Bonds can make your dream
boat a rea lity.
·
Now Bonds matu re in less than six
yea rs. Which mean~ maybe it won't
take forever for your ship to come in.
. ~ust knowing you've got the safety
ani! ~ul'ity of U.S. Savings Bonds
Workmg for you can make dreaming
for anythmg a lot more fun. Because,
w1th Bonds, the good times nnd the
good thirig• can rea lly happen.

Davis-Warner Ins.

So, don:! give up dreaming. ·dust

QUALITY •••

keep, l&gt;uymg U.S. Savings Bonds-'t hey re the stuff dreams are made of.

:~: 444

J39

..

I
I

J99

Tale
stock
in
America.
· ·. Now Bonds niRtur~ in less than ~ix years. .

•
•

Pruen.ted As A P.ublic Seniice by The O.ity Sonlintt

•
•

. I

.

•
••

l. •

..

BAKER'S

LOOking for a
tailor·who11
suit
you?
,

POMEROY CEMENT

Yellow
Pages

99$

WALNUT

h24

J19 0.24

40 INCH •
WAU ·
MIRROR
SALE
PRIC£

IEnEIHOMES&amp;
GARDENS

KITCHEN
PLANNING L:.fo.JI ,~N.I!VIS

IIEAD'I'·TO-FINISH

CANNON CRAFT 7" x 20"
INSERT PANEL REG. 1.79
SHUTTERS
ltn Fabr ic;

VAPOR-ALL

HUMIDIFIER
•

C/ H

1

FOR LESS.

14

NATURAL

-

BUT.

10
i2
13
12
10
-14
16
16
17
19

INSURANCE
COSTS

WAL~UT f-!1--~~~l

17" X 25"

.
. preSidents, with Mrs . . Gail
RIVERVIEW
GARDEN l:.~~~:~~:~i
,
· •
..
'
,,
· -1. ·'
· · • ·• .
·
.-:Price in ..chai'ge. .. ':.: '"'': ,...CLUB" wilL &lt;.meetc ·' ~tirsday :,
I ~~~~ts 'ai ~m-l#:llj(lla, ...... ·~ · cifECKING'LAS1'\liillute de!a~DI \b~lJI~a{l\lflijf~ing Dayobfkt .Ja.ke ~llfi!t m~. -~ .!:,,: . ·TuESDAY ! :~'-! c evening, Feb. ' !!4, a't the
, 'M,_xl~p, a~d·, switzerland.
' Middleport'Elernentary SChool Sunday are fdrs. Keith Riggs; progr~ accompanist; Mrs: Boli
AMERICAN LEGION Williams-Balderson home,
Mrs. Keith Riggs was at the
Hoeflich, general chairmiln, and Mrs. William Ohlinger, Big Bend NeighbOrhood chairman.
Auxiliary, Drew-Webster Post with Mrs. Donald Putmar as
piano for group singing of
39, 7:30 Tuesday at the hall. co-hostess. Members are 'o
"Anierica" as the girl scouts
Mrs . Arnold Richard will be bring coupons . An auction sale
moved into a horseshoe for the
Mrs. Henry Hunter's Junior
the guest speaker.
will be held.
pledge to the American flag led Troop 204 of ,Chester presented
FRIENDLY NEIGHBORS
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 7:30
by Barbara White of Chester England. They (ecited the byClub, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.,home Thursday, Columbus and
Troop 204, the Brownie laws of English . Girl Guides
of Mrs. Willard Hines.
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
SUPER-CEDAR
Promise led by Jayne Hoeflich and demonstrated a ball
RACINE AMERICAN Membe~s to taKe bottie caps
CLOSET
of Pomeroy Brownie !71, and game . Representing the
Legion Auxiliary, Tuesday, for redemption.
LINING
the Scout Promise led by United States, PQmeroy
7;30 p.m. at post home.
lEG. 6.95
Jennifer Wise of Middleport Brownie Troop 171 whose
FELLOWCRAFT Degree on
4FT.
IUNDlE
Junior Troop 39. Mrs. Bob ;eaders are Mrs . Wiione candidate Tuesday, 7:30
Hoeflich, chairman, presided liam Sheridan and Mrs.
p.m., when Middleport LDdge
at the afternoon program.
Wayne Swisher, did a
363, F&amp;AM, meets at the
The 24 girls of Troop 39 of Virginia Reel type dance. A
temple. All Master Masons
Middleport under the direction game of Ireland was shown by
AS LOW AS
invited.
of Mrs. Ernie Fraser presented the girls of the ·Salisbury
214 PEl SQ. FT.
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, :
IROWH CO.
a stick dance of India as others Cadette Troop and Mrs. Bruce
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
made up a choral group for a Zirkle's Pomeroy Junior Troop
Tuesday, 7:1&gt; p.m. at the
son1. native to that country. 247 representing Gem;_any did
·Columbia Gas Co. office . Betty
Mrs. Ro'!Coe Wise and Mrs. a dance.
Newton to be the guest
The Brownie promise In
John Krawsczyn are the
demonstrator.
leaders.
Spanish and a Mexican hat
In attractive costuming, dance were presented by ·the
Ytur
, Pomeroy Brownies of Troop 66 Salisbury Brownie Troop 220.
llldlpli ~.,.
WEDNESDAY
directad by Mrs. Thomas · The leaders are Mrs. Walter
ln-IIICI·
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
Gi-ueser and Mrs. Jack Hanley Morris, Mr&amp;. Sharon SwindeD,
(
7:30 Wednesday at home of
O.leWarMr
danced. the can-can. The and Mrs. stiaron Welker.
U•OY.tQ.f iNISH
Mrs . Karl Grueser ; each
Reedsville Junior Troop 67
The variety of finger foods
CANNON CRAR 7" x 2.0"
member to take a bird feeder
LOUVERED REG. 1.79
recited a translation of the brought by the scout leaders
she has made.
Chinese girl seout pledge, sang was sampled by the scouts,
SOUP SUPPER Wednesday
CHESTER JVNIOR SCOUT BarbMa White led the over
~~.~!~~
a Chinese New .Year's song, their parents and other guests
beginning
al 4:30 at Racine
100 Meigs County girl swuts participating in the Thinking
"
and performed a traditional attending the Thinking Day
Wesleyan United Methodist
Day program Sunday in the pledge to the flag. Lilya lty to God
dance of that land. Mrs. Lyle program. Grace was sung by
Sandwiches, bean and
Church.
· ~d Country is taught in the girl scout program.
Ba14erson, Mrs. Roy Hannum, Pomeroy Brownie Troop 171.
vegetable soup will be served.
are determined AFTER the
HUMIDIFIER
and Mrs . Harold Holter, Huge flowers in mod colors
loss,
not
before.
Remove
the
·
WATER
POMEROY WCTU, 2 p.m.
leaders, were _introduced.
centered 'the table.
TREATMENT 1-===
Wednesday, Pomeroy ·United ~~~;~~:c~~l•al sting with in RETURNED HOME
\
. .. :
I:
geared to present
-~
Thomas Bowen has returned Methodist Church.
~
from Florida where he was
OHIO VALLEY Com:
Stop In Today
called by the · death of his mandery 24, Knights Templar,
~~
father, John W. Bowen, on Feb. 7:30 p.m. Masonic Temple,
~;::-.:.:=
Daily prayer services are Posey, Clifton, W. Va .
with Mrs. Robert Rinehart as lo . Funeral se rvices were Wednesd!ly. Potluck dinner at
.,
lEG. 2.99
being held in private homes to
Wednesday, 2 p. m, home of hostess; 7 p. m. home of Miss conducted at II a.m. on Feb . 17
Phone992-2966
STEtu.o PRoo.
R hS h
6:30p.m . for Sir Knights, their
ADDITIONAL OR -----.-,{.t
advance the ·Middleport Mrs. Letolia Cassell, corner of F
ranees ous , out Fifth St., by
the Rev. Cline
L. W. George
at the ~la~d~ie=s~a~n=d~fam
=i=lie=s~.--------~11~4~C~ou~rt~St~.~~~Po~m~er~o~y~ t.::lLS:EW~tTHOUT couPOI'I 2.49
Evange\lsUc Crusade which Hudson and Rutland Sts ., Middleport.
Griffith
Bradenton
will beg\n next Sunday night in Middleport; First Baptist
Friday, 7p. m. home of Mrs. · Cha pel. Burial was in the
the Middleport Elemeniaty Church, 7:30 p. m.
Sibley Slack, North Third Ave., Manasota Memorial Park at •
School auditorium. Mrs. L; W.
Oneco, Fla .
Thursday, 2 p. m ., home of Middleport
McComa,, prayer chairman, Mr . and Mrs. L. W. McComas
announces ·,\he following services :
LANTERN with
WATSON VISITED
Monday, 7 p. m., home of
BATTERY
RACINE - Owen Watson,
Mrs. Genev.a Yates, 619 Page
Racine, i s in satisfactory
St., Middleport.
condition at the Pleasant
IS NOT OUR PROPERTY ALONE!
Tuesday, 7 p. m.,. home of
Valley Hospital where he
Mr. and Mrs. Manning Kloos,
unaerwent s~rgery Friday. His
Second Ave., Middleport, and
daughter, Mrs. Robert Roush
I I
home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
of Columbus, has been here
with him for the past week, and
YOU'LL NEVER BUY QUALITY
will remain·another week. Her
TO SELL RUMMAGE
A rummage sale was husband anp daughter, r\ancy,
planned March 3 and 4 at the came for the weekend to be
SALE PIICI
Fry building in Middleport with Mrs. Watson, who Is
8reo~·re\lslal\l !looting lantern
when the Tuppers Plains recuP.raling from a shoulder
t
switch.
THAN
YOU
DO
AT
Communtt)l Club met recentlY fracture . Returning to Sterling
at the home of Mrs. Doris Helghls, Mich., today after
Koenig. Rlllnmage for the sal' cOilling for lh~ weekend to see
Is.to be left at the home of Mrs. his parenls were Ivan Watson
·
Dorothy Stout. Q,ther fund and his wife.
,
raising projecl.l discussed
Furniture
The
pet
population
of
the
The Oep,.lmtnl Store
included the sale of rail!
United States outnumbers
of Building Since 1915
OHIO
bOnnets and calendars. Mrs. lh~ human population threr
-1
Merle ' GriHith wiU host the to one. according to a surMarch ameeting.
vey.
•

.

9
14
14

Ohio Conference

A~ron

awarding blue ribbons to Mrs.
Aaron Kelton for a mantel
arrangement, and Mrs. Lewis
for il table arrangement. Mrs.
Cora Beegle will be hostess for
the March meeting at which
time plans will be completed
for an open meeting in March ..
Devotions to " open the
meeting were by Mrs. lewis
who read "We Thank Thee
Lord" . Mrs . Charles Hayes
gave the secretary 's report,
and Mrs. Moore gave the
treasurer's report. Members
answe red roll call by telling
"'.Vhat I Do for the Japs".
The traveling prize donated
by Mrs. Don Thomas was won
by Mrs. Lewis.
The hostess served a dessert
cou rse. 1\ttend ing besides
those named were Mrs. John
Terrell, Mrs. Earl Thoma ,
Mrs. Beegle and Mrs. Clarence
Heaton.

....

Mid·American Conference

3 5
1 7

MONDAY
FEENEY-Bennett Post 128,
FILM, "To Touch a Child" at American Legion, 8 p.m.
8:30 p.m. for public in con- Wednesday, post everlastinc
junction with Chester PTA ceremony in memory of
meeting at school Monday . · departed members. Members
Meeting starts at 8 with of immediate families Invited.
Founders' Day to be observed · Business meeting 7:30 p.m.
and past presidents honored. Refreshments following the
ONE DAY field trial , Meigs ceremony.
County Foxhunters, Monday on
AMERICAN LEGION
Snow Ball Hill . Hounds will Auxiliary , Feeney-Bennett
Post
128,
7:30
p.m.
cast at 7 a.m.
INITIATORY WORK 'IVhen Americanism program to be
Meigs Chapter' Order . of presented by the Junior
DeMolay, . meets at 7:30 Auxiliary members whose
Monday evening at the meeting on-Tuesday night has
Masonic Temple in Middleport. been cancelled .
All DeMolay members · and
THURSDAY
Masons Invited. Mothers Club
MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
in basement also at 7:30. .
Uoll$ Club, special Ladies
RACINE Elementary PTA Night observance, 6:30p.m. at
7:30 p.m. Mond~y at school. the Pomeroy United Methodist
Founders Day to lie observed. Church. Entertainment to
Program honoring past follow the meeting.
·

[

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL RECOROS
United Pre5s tnternallo~ I

11
6
6
J

.'

t
r'

_(Upon Request)

Monday's Game-s

5 2
5 3

'! •

Costuming, finger foods,
games, songs and dances gave
an lli~ational flavor to the
annual . Think)ng Day observance SIJnday afternoon in
r
the. Mi~dleport Elementary
· School auditorluni as more
than 100 Meigs County Girl
Scouts performed for their
parents and scouting officials.
The observance, marked the
46th anniversary of the fouriding•ol 'l'hin1\ing Day - the girl
scout way of bridging language
and cus""'! barriers toward
building friendships around the
worid.
Each · of the eight participating troops contributed to
·the Juliette Low World
. Friendship Fund established in
1928 as a living memorial to
Juliette Gordon Low, founder
of Girl Scouting ir\ the United
States. The money contributed
wiU go for the support of international friendship projects
and events of the , Worlcj
·· Association of Girl Guides and
I

(No games scheduled)

Ken t Slate
Miami
Bowling Green

lawns.
For the program s ,. Mrs.
Moore
reviewed
Lloyd
"Japanese Beetles are Raising
Cain" by Richard Miller of the
Columbus Dispatch . The
bee Ue, he reports , was first
discovered in the United Stales
in 1916 in New Jersey. The
adult feeds on about 300 different kinds of trees, shrubs,
'and flowers from June through
August. Most of the beetle's life
is spent in the soil and as cold
weather approaches the grubs
burrow deep to winter over.
They begin emerging from the
soil in June .
In his article, Miller suggests
Seven,
Malathion
and
Methoxychlor as effective
insecticides. Several applications are necessary to
protect valuable planls and
fruits, he says, Mrs. Moore
said thai grub proofin g \he soil
can be done in August or
September with an application
of chlordane.
of
\he
The
theme
arrangement of the month was
"In Uving Color ." Mrs. Moore
judged · the arrangements

I

(On Iy games scheduled)

Ohio Universitv

revised rules in the summer
issue.
Seed catelogs were on
display and extra copies given
to members. Mrs. Thompson
presented each member with
Nigella seeds, self-sowrng
plant.
The garden calendar was
ready by Mrs. lewis Shields
who noted that now is the time
to prune shade and fruit trees,
shrubs and hedges, to spray
trees, shrubs and evergreens
on days when the temperature
is above 40, anytime from now
un til the buds set on. She noted
that this is Important to control
scale insects and kill the eggs
of other insecta.
She suggested, the use of
miscible oil on plants near the
house and dormant lime
sulphur elsewhere. A preemergence
control
for
era bgrass which kills off the
seedlings as they begin to
sprout, can he applied anytime
this month. Brands containing
lead arsenate or calcium arsenate are recommended along
with chlordane. Mrs. Shields
said that the latter part of
February is a good time to
apply fertilizer and to sow
grass seed on established

I

Nova Scotia 3 Hershey 2
Providence 7 Cleveland 2

Toledo

INTERNATIONAL THINKING DAY -Costuming of the
oyer 100 girl ~wuts participating in the Thinking Day
)l'ograrn Sundsy at the Middleport Elementary School
auditorium carried out the intemalionallheme of the observance. Pictured here, left to right, are Jayne Hoeflich
represenling the Unite(! States of Pomeroy Browning Troop
171; Vicky .Hood, Gennany, Pomeroy Junior Troop 247;
Mary Ann Carswell, Ireland, Salisbury Cadette Troop 208;
S!errie Starcher, England, Chester Junior Troop 204; Terri
McDaniel, India, Middleport Junior Troop 29; Kay
· Balderson, China , Reedsville Troop 67; Camille Swindell,
Mexico, Salisbury Brownie Troop· 220, and Kelly Griffith,
Pomeroy BroWnie Troop 66.

A new junior garden club will
he• organized' by \he Winding
Trail Garden Club in the near
future , according to plans
proposed at the Friday night
meeting of the dub at the home
of Mrs, 1\ohert lewis.
Details of the club membership and organiza tional
date wiD be announced later.
Mrs , Robert Thompson
presided a\ the meeting during
which time the beautification
project at the Meigs County
Horne was d.iscussed. New
posts have been placed at each
corner of the lawn to prevent
autos from driving onto it.
Proceeds from a recent
nunmage sale will be used to
make additional plantings of
spring flowers, to paint the
benches, . and to buy. white
gravel for the area around the
benches. Signs will be erected
soon denoting that the improvement is a project of the
club.
Green Thumb Notes for April
7will be prepared by Mrs. Cora
Beegle. A letter from Mrs.
Edward Mizicko
urged
members to enter the slide
contest. She noted that tl!e
schedule is in the the fall 1971
issue of the Garden Path with

BLOCK 00.

SALE PRICE

4995

Au tomatic humldlstot ond shutoff. rehll light. 6 room copodt~.

�1

'

~ - TheDailySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy , O. , Feb. 21,1972

.

..~entinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
.

.

Long Bottom

Social Notes
Riley Pigott received word of
the death of his brother, Blaine
Pigott, at the home of his son,
Dexter Pigott, San Clara,
Calif.
Several attended funeral
servic~ for Alice K, Branstrom, nother of David A.
Smith, at Odgin Funeral Home
at Parkersburg.
Alice Curtis and Mary Pierce
were visiting Mr. and Mrs .
Russell Van Meter, PorUand .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cline
and sons, Moundsville, were
visiUng Mr . and Mrs. Russell
Cline.
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Smith
spent several days with Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Young,
Paden City, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Curtis
were dinner guests of Mary
Pierce. Other visitors were Mr .
and Mrn. Johnnie Newell and
sons, Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Newell and family of
Chester, Donna Wyatt of
Parkersburg and Rodney
Chevalier.
·
VIsiting Ernestine Hayman
were Mr. and Mrs. Jim Walls
and son, Columbus, Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Ridenour and son ,
Chester, Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Hayman and sons and Mr . and
Mrs . Tom Hayman and
daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Larkins
were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Weber, Tuppers

Factory air condit ioning, V·8 eng ine, auto. trans .. P.S.,
P. B ., good W· S· W tires, many more ex tras . A low price
now!

v.a engine . automatic trans ., p . steerin,g , factory air
conditioned , good w-w tires, radio, dark gr~ n fini sh with
spotless interior.
1967 CHEVELLE MALIBU HT CPE.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Ph. 614-992-2156
BABYSITTER In my home 1:30
p.m. to 1:30 a .m.. Monday
thru Friday . in Middleport.
Phone 991·201 2 before 1 p.m.
2· 1S-6k

Interior and extenor . Call

Don VanMeter 985·3951.
2·16·121p

Notice
FREE puppies . Phone

949. ~07 .

2·20·31p
A~
:BO
: cU
-::T:-:-Y:-:OccU-::-R--:c
W:::E-:-:
1GHT ...
overweight ladies, teens and
men Interested in a Weight

Watchers

I R I Class

Pomeroy

write :

In

Weight

Watchers IRL 1863 Sect ion
Rd .. Cincinnati, Olllo 45237 .
10·3·tfc

- -- - - - - - ,

SAVE up to one half . Bring your
sick TV io Chuck's TV shop,
151 Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy.

ll·21 .tfc
WANT WORK at home ad·
dressing and sluffing en ·
velopes7 Rush self.stamped
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36.
Albany, Olllo, 45710.
1·6·1fC
7w"'t"'L7L-:D"'O,.-;-boo--,-k;-ke_e_p,ln-g-. ta.
services in the privacy of my
tlome . Evelyn C. Young ,

phone 949·3741, Racine.
2·21 ·12lc

YARD AND rummage sale. all
week , starts Tuesday, 9 a.m.
to 6 p.m. Used furniture .
antiques, assortment of Avon
bottles. SOO ft . of 2x4. 2x6, 2x8,
two guitars, dishes, etc. 341

Park St .. Middleport.

2·21·Sic
For Rent
NEW, 12x60, two bedroom
mobile

home across

from

Bradbury School. Call 992·
S308or see Charles Lewis, 2nd
house south from Bradbury
School. Pets welcome.
2·21 ·1fc

Apple Grove News, Events
'

Mr.'a:rid Mrs. Herbert'Roush
spent Saturday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis at
Clifton, W. Va.
Mrs. Sarah Neigler is. a
surgical patient at University
Hospital in Columbus. Her
room number is 807.
Friends were sorry to hear of
the death of Mr . Robert Wofe
Sr . at Veterans Memorial
Hospital Sunday.
Mrs. Dorothy Greathouse
was returned to her home at
Racine Saturday after being
confined to Veterans Memorial
Hospllal for two weeks with
pnewnonia .
Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Mrs . Erma Wilson were
shopping In Middleport1Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. BiU Arnott of
Clarksburg spenta weekend at
their home.
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Anderson
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs, Arnold Anderson
and family at Keno Ridge.

Cn•No. 20UO

Estate of Cec il Bolin Oecened .
N ot~ c e is nereby giwen that
Joe M
Bolin of Langsv ille ,
Ohio, hes been duly appo inted
Adm inistrator of ttle Estate ol

Ce-cil Bol in, decused . late , or
Me ios County , Oh io.
Cred itors are requ ired to t il e
the ir clai ms w ith sa id fidu ciary
w it h in fo ur monthS .
Da t ed thi s.., 171h day of
February 1972.
JOhn C. Ba con
Judge

16th

da y

ot

Mrs. Zelpha Boggess called Fe ruary 197 2·
·
·
Joh n C. Bacon
Sunday on :.Irs. Junior Spaun
Act ing Probale Jvdg e
and :llrs: Jessie Jarrell.
I 131 ,21 . 28 13J ' · 3~: la i d Covnl y

- - ·--....4

',...., ; .

Business Services

original

carlons . No at needed as our
controls are built in . Sews
with 1 or · 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
monograms, and blind hem

tachment~

j

l

U
)ALLL
( -====::--:::::---:=========:;-;::=====:::=::;
WEAniER ROOFING
EXPERT
POMEROY

'

-

Maintenance Service the year

around. No matter what your
need. Complete roof .or
spouting repair. Interior or
exterior carpentry : Ceiling
tile and Paneling and Siding.
Complete
Plumbing
a.
Heating.
Day Number 992-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.
,

992-5803 -742-3947
9?2-3898 -742-4741
We are fully insured.

Wh!!!i••ianment
N'&amp;''
'5.55

., 11n" T:~"'•

... . h i

n.., ~

...

HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094

E. Main

606

-GUARANTEED-

SEN, REMEMSER THAT GURU
WHO DENOUNCED
MATERIAL GOODS ?

Pomeroy

OmCE SUPPLIES

Phone 992-2094

WORTHLESS

S'TOL.ENI

?

and

Ho · &amp; Aut

Pomeroy
me
0·
Open Hi I 5
Monday thru Saturday
,._. pomeroy, o •
606 E• main,

HE JU6T CALL!:D TO
COMPLAIN 'THAT H16
ROLL.S-RO'&gt;CE WA6

WAG HE '!HE ONE
WHO TOLD STUDE.NT6
P066E$610N6 ARE

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
'Floor Display.

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING·AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary .of IS,OOO.OQ and three children. 7'1• Pet. onnual
percentage rate.

H~'S~

'10M ':l~ZE.!!

H:O'LL loiEVfA
MISS OHI.
PAIR.!!

SMITH NELSON
MOtORS. INC.

COLONIAL
AUTO BODY

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.

ONE OF 'liM'

COIN, /lJol '1'1&lt;'
SA'ftN', "IF

The

~? 1 1\41\5N,.

WI-O'...ER...

Orchid Room

AWM1! IWA~

~110M ,1'/HY

[)(.) 'IOU A51&lt; i'

PRIMPING!

WINNIE': Mtw eE FOOuNGHCRS~~ M 5HE:'e NOT

FOOLI""" MEl 'TH~
A NEWMAN IN

- -- - - -

'
GASOIJNE AlLEY

_____

Feel 'er nose!
~ee if it's cold!

or

FERTILIZE II

- -- - --

- - -- - -

cc::_.·-

- - -- - -

UTI'LE ORPHAN

ANNIE
'!liD' ~ ~E;,YA Qf .S !!!L~CH
(J~
'~!rg/
!!lL ----!£.

l!)RAWKBY
THE ROAR

- - -- --

for any informa ti on , Brown 's.

- -- - --

2·8·1tc

Buy

WANTED
CHIPWOOD
Poles ·

DELIVERED

Salurday, Sunday, Monday,
good disco.un ts on most stock

......_..

WE ·WANT lo buy a used
Rotoli ll er . Phone Fred Miller

241·211 2.

' ·18·31c

RE~PON S IBL E p£rsr,n

tr; w r.. r k

and manag e · r v.:1e. Pick·up
and
dE: Iivery .
A. B.C.
&lt;:;lea n er ~ . Ma sr..n. W. Va .

Wahama High School. M:ay be

and all day Saturday and
Sunday .
John
Lyons
Property.
2·20·61c

FORD Tractor , J new tires, new
· pa inl , good cond ition - $650 ;

121 • 14' • 24' • WiDE

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd.
Belpro, Ohio

1---------;...-l.

phone 992·6048 . ·

2·13·71c Real Estate For Sale
30 ACRE farm, 3 bedroom
home, eleclric heat, vinyl
POODLE puppies, Si lver Toy ,
siding , TP&amp;C water district, 3
S·IS.tfc

For Sale
36" X 23" X .009

Aluminum
Sheets
USFD OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20~
8 lor s 1.00

The
Daily ·Sentinel
111 Cou!·t St.
Pomeroy, Ohio .

2 a.·fc

miles south of Tuppers Plains .

on County Road 28 - 518,000 ;
phone 667·3336.
2.2Q.71p

- - -- - 4 BEDROOM, bath .

&amp;

half,

utility room , builf.in kitchen, '

wall lo wall carpet &amp; garage.
Located "' mile north of
Eastern Hiqh School. House Is
almost finiShed and others
being built. Call 985·3598.
1·21·301c
H0 JSE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
C' ll Danny Thompson. 992.
' 2196.
7·18·1fc
1

NICE 2·story home with lull
basement, 2 lots, new forced
air f!Jrnace . Near Pomeroy .

Elemenlary School.
992-7384 to see.

Phone

11 .7.tfc
3 BEDROOM ranch typ.; h'J•~f~

Arbaugh Addition. Tuppers
Plain1. All new with total

electric and central air
conditioning, Odth and ...... fully
carpeted, full ba"ement,
garage in basement. ~ee by

appointment, phone 992·11Y6

or 992·3585. Danny Thompson .
Financ ing availabl e.

12·30·ttc

tere~ ; in your favorite style.

I

I!OUS~.

AN Hit
EXPLORES

DOWN
ACROSS
.
11.
Moroccan
1. Large
mountain
quantity
range
6. Attire
2. Commot. Dialect
tiou
11. Strange
3. Small
language
fruit
12. U S. State
4.
CiceronDept.
ian
(slang)
attire
U. Operatic
5. Intellect
selection
6. Step in
15. Spanish 1 '?. Excrucia·
queen
1
tion
16.- ·
8. City
premium
in
(scarce)
ltalia
18, Vessel;
10."pwage.
Breckinway
ridge"
2l.lnfatuated

cause is set tor hearing at 10 :00
a.m . on the 18th day of March

Dav1d Hooker, Rt. 2, Albany,
Ollio 45710 !Pagetown).

1R2.

'

Roy A . Rousn , Petitioner
J. B. O'Br ien, Attorney
tor Petilloner

over hardwood floors ; builf.in
2·6·30tc
kifchen; air conditioned; on -----~--­
in Lyons sub·division below

FOR SALE : movi ng sale,

S443.

On Old Rl 33
Phone 992-2689
Pome .Ohio

Phone 949·4892 or 992·5272 .
1·10.Ifc

- - - -- -

Park view Kennels , Phone992-

OHIO
PALLET CO.

Owner leaving state .

3 bedroom

ranch style home with garage
and patio; wall to wall carpet

seen after 5 p.m . week days

2·18·3tc

$6.00 Per Ton

Beautiful

SYRACUSE Drive In lor sale .
Phone 992·2088.
2·18·31c

in shop . 191 Mill St.. , Mid·

End

l:~cation .

setup .

corner lot 150' • 160' ; located

on

Largest

pletely

Falls, Ohio, Phone 247·2142
2·18.3tc

dteport . New loca t ion will be
498 Loc ust St. , Middleport ,
former I y Chase Hardware
Buil ding , M . Marcum .

Maximum
Diameter

10"

Big Dutchman a utomatic
f'='eder , twelve automatic
brooders, gas, 20 automatic
waterer s, 40 one gallon
w&lt;~terers . Harry Hill , Letart

aluminum skirting, com . TOTAL electric,

Cleland
Realty
OFF ICE 992·2259 Tl LL 4:00
EVENINGS&amp;
SUN0AYSmii)68
BABY FARNI,-6JiCRES
HARRISONVILLE - 1 slory
frame , 5 roams, bath, nice

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED 11131 ,( 2) 7, 14. 21,28 131 !61
REASONABLE rates. Ph .. 446·
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell; •

.

Ow-ner &amp; Operator.

5·12·1fc
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992·2522.
6. to-tt&lt;
SEPTIC tanks cleanea·.- Miller
Sanitation. Stewart, Olllo. Ph.
662·3035.
2·12·tfC

t

~ G£T YOUR .MN1 W1'1'H A

We talk to JOU
like a persorL

'

.,'

kilc hen,
COMPLETELY
RENOVATED , garage

l', - ·i

I

--&lt;'

'

'

6 rooms , 3 bedroom s with
closets, bath, cabinets in
kitchen; porches, basf'ment.

.

IF ltl!J t'AVE flM'IliHGERING t&gt;Out~
TO HOW OOHVINCIMG diR St!IISTITUT!:
CtflfFS C1' STATE ARE, THIS SHOULP

,I..

~

.:

I' ·..!·•
~

:·

..
•
'

CLOSE IN . $6.500.00.
WHY CLIMB STAIRS
POMEROY - 1 story frame, 2
bedrooms,

TttEll.

ATTENTION! ... ACr A5
IF YQJ WE~ ALRfAI'Y
IJHIIfR THE fY'ES Of
AMBITIOIIS OR JfAIOIIS
511~HATI!,... tlf61N!

llfHOCAL
Jl.lj!A CHIEF, Tiff

00o¥MIS5AR
HIS

~LE'10

ENACT A NEAR

fA5T

'~IT

CONFEf!Efj(:E!

f;
•:
l·

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r

I I

river

28. Elizabethan31. Harlan
Fiske
32. Backslide

33. ·wise
35. Coup
d'-

37. Fix
39. School for
priests
(abbr.)
40. Botanist
Gray
U.Kook
42. Golf
gadget

............

lllf'EC

[ MIL1'1

D

'C , .. , ... ...

~

. .... ._
.._ .....

~

III

II

.50UNDS LIKE A
CRIME IN CHINA,

lea

/tJfJ tN .TliE l\IH"' OF Tllf I.IIP0510Rs, THE$'11SOf!\15T~u:5T
~y

llff CIRAGON LAI7Y HA'If

HA~

TIME 10 R&gt;INKLE.

(Aiwwen t • ....,...• ,

SO. Eternally
Sl. Lists
of
candi·
dates
H. Pro vote
35. Flight
hr.
18.-spirit
SI.Army

Jumhl.,, LAUGH PYLON RELISH
S••u.rd•y'•
Ant w.,.rt

Holt a

lldl~r pmdic~•

fLAUNt

pltilantltropy-

SPARINGLT

PI \'\1(

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~006HASNO

Ri6t!T 10 WA•K OFF
AND LEAVE t(OU,
CHARLIE llROWN!

~OV FEED HIM,AND!()() 61VE HIM
A HOME ... IN RETU~N. IT'S HIS ..00
TO 611ARD 't'OIIR ~ffl. AAO tlC
I/OVR FRIEND!T~E TI'.:!V&amp;.E WITH
t(OU 1,; 't'Otl DON'T KN~ HOW TO
i.
RAISE A 006, CHAA"E ~!

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A'iYDLIAAXR
Ia LctNGFELLOW

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lot u·. ... "''

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", .• and please help Daddy find

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ft

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~lurday'a •C,.plcHc11Die: TilE ATI!ENIANS DO NOT MIND
A MAN BEING CLEVER AS LON&lt;;' AS m: KF:F.PS IT TO
IIIMSEl.F.-PI.ATO
.
, 4.(&gt;· l!l·;:! t\ it•.: Fo•:o l !"'''~ ~ ,o' tttl ic·\tp , ln r , l

parkitig place!"

'

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Y.-e..a.,.•, A•wer

l

One letter simp)y stands for another. In this sample A is
uaed for the three L's; X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters.
IJ)Oitrophea, •tho length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each dloy tho ' code !etten are ditroront.
.
.I
CltYPTOQUOTES

- - --

'
lh2t .ttc

/\!I,,

~~~~C~e~~ U.Kind
of

1

HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
985·3529.

Ohio. phone 137·4334.

" ' Nil

-DAILY CII!YPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

JUST $8,900.00
HENRY CLELAND.
REALtOR
2·16·61c

Wadsworth Drive. Columbus

,

Un1&lt;ramble theae four Jumblet,
one letter to each !Mjuart, to·
form four ordinary warda.

U . Goose
genus
44. Follow
45. Abound'
t8. Appoint· 1
ment

large storage bui Iding, 2 story
home , -4 bedrooms. bath,
glassed In side porch, front
. porch, fuet -oll forced air heat ,

Sl·"ROOM hou,e, 133 BviiHnut
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137

I

. man

OR~S

,.

bath, ba sement,

IN EXCELLENT CON .
· DITION. large lot. $7,900.00.
WE HAVE BU~ERS , SO CALL
CLELAND'S FOR FAST
ACTION .
DEXTER - Lot 150 x 100, barn,

·

J&amp;wru~~-=!!:'~= ,

(jump
ship)
'
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. 2B.Designale

by Gill Fox .,
?,.
- ,.

-

11. Detest
13. Soft
drink
l&amp;.ln time
past
17. Hebrew
letter
18. Time of
life
20. Setat22. Greek
river
25. Shred ·
26. Vine
27. Scottish

U.Go-

ON YOUR DIAL

SIDE GLANCES

$10,950.00.
REAL ESTATE IS
CLIMBING DAILY
POMEROY - 111• story frame ,

~~~
:li:

i~

~Want Ada

utility room and cold roam:
small out . buildings .

.

WMP0/1390

..... . "'" . . ..

Of CYCLES
RACII!G
PAST HER

F01

OLD FURNI TU RE , Round Dak
N0 T Ic E 0 F
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
APPOINTMENT
clocks , and -or comp!ete
cue No. 20 m
households
. Write M. D.
E•1au of cnarle• w. wn ;1.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
t ington Deceasea .
Call 992·6271.
NoHce is. hereby given that
~ . 1] . /fc
Jenn ie M. Wh ll! inglon 01
Pomeroy, Onlo, h•• been dvly r, c,e,o u5-e: d ch airs , pre: te-~
appo inted Aelm inlstretr ix o1 tne
wooden. Call 992·9972.
E"•'• o1 cnar1.. w. wn11.
fington , Clece-ased, late of Me igs -------~2·_:16 ·6t p
County , Ohio .
Cred itors ere req uired to file
the ir claims w ith 5a id fi duc iar y Help Wantid
wl~i n four months .
th is

BEAUTIFUL MODERN
Walnut Stereo ·radio .com ·
binallon. 4 speaker sound
system, 4 speed changer,
separa Ie con Ir:oIs. ·Bal.nee
$68.56. Use our budget terms.
Call 992-7085.
2-16·61c
- - - : --:---::PAINT DAMAGE. 1971 Zfg.zag
sewing machines. Still in

- - - -- -

121 21. 28 Ill ' · Jl

ted

in Pomeroy .

- - - -- -

TO
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

-

l:~ 1

WANT 1\DS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
welder, will travel. Local
5 P. M.
Day
Before HAVE
welder wants welding jobs.
stilch. f;ull cash price, $38.50
Publication
Phone
992·5271
.
or budget plan available.
Monday Deadline 9 a.m .
2-20·61c
Phone 992·5641.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
--2-16·61c
Will be accep1ed unlll9 a.m. for
·
Day of Publication
Wanted To Rent
VACUUM cleaner new 1971
REGULATIONS ·
model. Complete with all From the largest
The Publisher reserves the TRAILER space out ot high
Bulldozer Radiator to the
cleanin~ tools. Small paint
right to edit or reject any ads
water in Middleport
.
Smallest
Heater Core.
&lt;lamage
on
shipping.
Will
take
deemed objectional. The
Pomeroy area . Local couple,
127
cash
or
budget
plan
Nathan
Biggs
publisher will not be
one child. Good references .
available.
Phone
992-5641.
·
Radiator
Speciilist
responsible for more than one
Local employment. Will
2·16·61c
Incorrect insertion .
consider purchase if suitable - - -- - - RATES
lol . Phone 992-3855.
CALL
125 BAL.ES straw ; 1 - 2 gang
For Want Ad Service
2·20·31c
81
LL
NELSON,
??2-3657
HILTON WOLFE, 949-3211
plow; 1- 3gang plow; 1-3
5 cents per Word one lnsertlon
TOM
CROW,
992·2510
DALE DUTTON, 992-1534
gang,
3
point
hitch
;
1
2'1,
Minimum Charge7Sc
Ph. 992-2174
ton
truck,
P.
M.
Cowdery,
12 cents per word three For Rent or Sale
Long Bottom, Ohio.
consecutive insertions .
18 cents per word six con · 3· BEDROOM Vindale mobile
2·20·3tc Real Estate For Sale
home, 1112 baths, sllualed on -2_H
secutive Insertions.
_O_U_S_E_T-RA_I_L_E_R-S,.:._1_0_x 50 ,.-----.,.......,-:....:.....,...-,
choice rental lot ; call after 6
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
and 8 x 35, also I Chevrolet
p.m. weekdays or any time on
ads and ads paid within 10
school bus. Phone 367·7533 .
weekend 992.5570, Herman
days.
2·20·31p
Bolinger .
537 High St.
CARD OF THANKS
Make reservations for your
2·16-6tp
&amp; OBITUARY
Middleport,
Ohio
private parties, banquets, · '
MS 135 gas tractor used 50
$1.50 for SO word minimum . - -- - -Complete
body
repairs
special occasions.
hours,
S
fl.
bush
hog;
Black
Each additional word 2c.
Broker
Ideal tor meeting place Hawk
corn
Dlanter;
3
at.
BLIND ADS
and paintings, glass
110 Mechanic St.
For Rent
hitch;
automatic
water
with
or without kitchen 1
Additional 25c Charge per
Pomeroy, 0., 45769
·
installation,
free
Advertisement .
FURNISHED and unfurnished softener; phone 367·7534.
privileges.
loaner
cars
and
WE NEED ACREAGE
OFFICE HOURS
Individual Catering
apartments. Close to school. __ _ __ _ __ _2 ·~20 · 31c
ANYWHERE lN MEIGS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
Phone 992·5434.
Will seat up to 150 people . .
estimates, also
8:30 a.m . to 12 :00 Noon
COUNTY.
10·18.1fc TROPICAL FISH, fancy
mechanLcal repairs.
Saturday .
RUTLAND
Phone
guppies, angelS and breeders,
Phone 992-3793
3
BEDROOMSBath.
nice
992-397S
992-5786
Bellas
and
supplies.
Phone
LOTS 100 x 180 and 33 x 90;
kitchen . Large lot near
Notice
992-5443.
Warehouses 32 x 75, 25 )( 50,
schools. Only 16.000.00.
12·30·1fc
and 23 x 48. Call 992·7178. to
DRY WALL finisher contractor. TRIM trees ; clean out attics, .
UPHOLSTERING SERVIC~ .
LAND CONTRACT
lease any or all of above at 610
R. I. ·Dubbeld, phone 742-5825.
cellar s, basements, very ·
complete selection of fabrics
SISOO.OO DOWN- $53 .42 a
E. Main St.
·
2·21·51c
reasonable.
Phone 949 ·3221. ·,
and vinyl to choose from . Pick
month. 6 rooms. good well,
2·16-6tc Auto Sales
2·15·61C"
up and delivery . Slater
spring, and outbuildings. 3
INTERIOR
&amp; exterior painting .
-·Upholstering, Rt. J, Pomeroy, 2 BEDROOM mobile home in '57 CHEVY '4·1on pickup, exacres.
R. I. Dubbeld, phone 742-5825. ALLSIDE Builders &amp; Con ·
phone 992·3617.
Racine area . Phone 992·6329 . cellent condition. Almost new
POMEROY
2·21 ·Sic
struction Co. W• specialize In
2·3·30tp
2·16·1fC
engine. Phone 992-2967 alter 5 2 BEDROOMS-Bath,
...:._
alum inurn, vinyl and steel
p.m.
natural oak floors. One floor O'DELL WHEEL allghment
siding ; fiberglas. brick and
2·20·31c plan . Basement, front porch .
Now's Time To
stone;
complete I ine of .
located
at
Crossroads.
Rt.
124.
For Sale
Trade
----,- - - , - - All utilities. Only 16500.00.
and commercial
residential
Complete
front
end
service,
ORDER
TUPPERS PLAINS
1968 TEMPEST, 2 door 1965 PLYMOUTH Signet, V8, A
rpof
ing
;
remodeling ,
up
and
brake
service.
tune
speed transmission, new
2 BEDROOMS- Modern
automaiic. Phone 992·6547 .
building,
suspended
ceilings,
Wheels
balanced
elec.
tires, good condition. Phone
kitchen
and
bath.
'
Plains
fiELD SEEDS
2·18·1fc 742·5042
interior
and
exterior
painlroolcally
.
All
work
.
- - ---water . 4 acres for future
ling ; complete line of
guaranteed.
Reasonable
1967-0PEL Wagon, 1964 Ford, 4 --,,-1-r-'·'' ~-----2·_
18. 3tc
building. Only $10,500.00:
M~sonry , wbr:.k. A\ ~ work
rates. Phone 992-3213.- "
door automatic. Phone 992· -NEW HOUSE
1·27.1fc · guaranteed to cuslomer
6547 .
1970. CORVET 4SA 4·Speed NEW
satisfaction. We are fully
LISTING-3
SEED CORN
2·18·11c convertible . Good condition . bedrooms, nice bath with
insured for your protection . 32
c . BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Phone 675.3340.
N. Second. ph. 992·3918.
Complete
Ser¥1ce
shower. Natural gas furOr,der Now &amp; Save!
2·17·61c nace . Large closets in
Phone 949·3821
2·15·30tc
AFGHANS - 150 &amp; $45 ; Quills
Racine. Ohio
bedrooms.
Carport
.
Lot
- ISO ; Quill tops - $15 ; phone '64 DODGE pickup, 318 engine,
Crill Bradford
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
75x291 . Price $20,000.00.
992·2686 .
service, all makes. 992-2284.
5-l·lfC
S-6 ply tires, 2 reg ., 3 mud·
SPLIT-LEVE·L
2·11 ·10tp snow ; '63 Olds 98, 2 door.
The
Fobrlc Shop, Pomeroy.
4 BEDROOMS-Mod,rn all
Authorized Singer Soles and
Ernest Ward, Jr. 742·4289.
READY·MIX
CONCRETE
de·
electric,
PI&gt;
baths .
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
ll•ered right to your project.
2·20)1p
LOSE weight with New Shape TEMPO mobile home, 50x10,
Basement. 4 acres near
3·29·1fc .
excellen
t
cond
ition
.
Phone
Fast and
easy .
Free
Tablets, 10 days supply only
Middleport. $27.500.00.
247·2161.
estimates
.
Phone
992.3284
.
11.49 al Nelson Drugs.
' 6A VOLKSWAGEN, 2 dr. sedan,
Goegleln Ready· Mix Co .. AUTOMOBILE insurance been
2-20·61c
gray with matching interior ,
2·21 ·3tp
NOT SATISFIED WITH
Middleport, Ohio.
cancelled?
Lost
your
good condi ti on, $.450. Phone
YOUR PRESENT HOME,
bike. Phone 992·2044 or
operotor's license? Call ·'192·
6·30·Ifc.
I WILL have a vacancy March 1 MINI
992·6048.
CALL US AND LIST NOW.
see Harold Brinker .
2966.
for elderly lady . l have 14
2·13-7tc NO CHARGE IF NO SALE.
2·20·31c
6·15·1fc
Why
buy
new
furniture?
Have
years experience . Would
that old made new by Sylvia 's
prefer private person . Phone - - -- -FOR THE BEST deal In a new
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Upholstering Shop , Mrs .
843·2600 .fortland.
GOOD mixed hay . Phone or used mobile home, try
Lt;GAL NOTICE
ASSOCIATE
Woodrow T. Zwilling, Prop.,
2·18·31c
Wilkesville 669·4777 .
DANNY ELWOOD BOWER S,
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
992-3325
992-2378
Syracuse, ,Ohio.
whose last known place ot
2-20·61C
Kanauga, Ohio.
2-10-JOtp ·residence is 352 East Main
--12·17·90tc
LEVEL lot, 180' frontage,
INSTRUCTION in organ and
Street, Pomeroy , Oh io, Is
piano, Gerald Hoffner, phone ALLIS·CHALMERS B tractor - -- - -- - - , localed on Main Street , BACKHOE AND DOZER work. hereby notified that on the 2•Uh .
of January, 1972 ROY A.
992·3825.
with side mower . Oscar
Mason; excellent opportunity
Septic tanks Installed. George day
ROUSH
filed his petit ion in the
Mobile
Homes
Sale
1
Weber
2
12
miles
east
of
2·8·121 c
tor business . While Realty,
!Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478. Probate Court
of Meigs County ,
Chester on Sla te Rt . 248.
- - - -call Vera Eblen, Associate
~
25
tf
~'
.
c
Ohio to adopt ROBERT
60X12,
2·bedroom.
all·electric,
KOSCOT KOSMETICS. They're
2·18·31p
Realior 992·3020.
::-::=-:-::::---:-----=::::.:::: EUGENE SOWERS and for
air conditioned. 8x20 ft . Porch
Great : over 10 specials this - - - -- 2·20.61c SIGNS, posters, mall boxes and change of name of nid child to
and
aluminum awning,
monlh . Please call 992·5113 ONE bulk tank with auger. one
favorite saying ; hand let. Robert Eugene Roush ; said

Wanted To
MEETING HELD
HYSELL RUN- Mrs. Lloyd
Dugan was hostess for the
February meeting of the Hysell
Run Women 's Missionary
Society. The devolional period
consisted of prayers, songs and
readings. Eight members ·
answered the roll call. World
Day of Prayer plans were
discussed. The group was
dismissed with prayer and the
hostess served refreshments.
The next rneeting will be at the
home or Mrs . Ada Keesee,
March 21 at 7:30 p. m.

I

ONE.

.

2-16·61c
&amp; CONSTRUCTION &amp;
COLONIAL Early American
.
Stereo, AM·FM radio comPLUMBING CO;
binal ion, 4 speed changer, A
St.
240 Lincoln
speaker sound system .
.
Balance $79.32 . Use our
Middleport,Ohio
budget lerms. Call ~~~~~t5c We ~.:•:ocn:_:~';;,bi~me

Employment Wanted
EXPERIENCED painter .

OP!N I!YI!S. 1:00 P.M.
fj)M!IOY, OHIO

- -----

Keith.

$1395

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

Mr. al1ll Mrs. Donald Polley
and family of Columbus were
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Prince.
Mr. and Mrs. David Dailey
were visiting Mr. anct Mrs. Jr.
liauber.
Pat Smith, Columbus, and
David Smith, Marietta spent a
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
David Smith and DeeDee.
Mr . and Mrs. Hank Holter
were dinner guests of Mrs.
Hanson Holter, Forest Run.
-Violet Smith

•
Rodney Neigler of Racine
spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Smith and Joe
Deourin.
Mrs. Dallas Hill and Mrs.
Dolly Wolfe called on Mrs. Carl
Wolfe Jr. and new baby at
Holzer
Medical Center
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill and
son, Dean, Mrs . Marshall
Roush and Joey, Mrs. Dolly
Wolfe spent Sunday afternoon
with Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wolfe
Jr . and new daugh ter at
Gallipolis Route I.
Mr . and Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson
of New Haven spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs . Homer
Warner.
Mr . and Mrs. Dorset Wilson
and son of Charleston spent a
weekend with Mrs . Erma
Wilson .
Mrs. Ma: Ue Maxwell and
friend or Ripley were Sunday
guests of Mr . and Mrs. Butch
Wilson.
Mrs. Zeipha Boggess and
Wayne Roseberry attended the
wedding of Miss Nola Parsons,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Ray
Parsons, to Robert Spawn, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Junior Spawn ,
.Saturday al the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Junior Spawn.
Marriage vows were read by
the Rev . Don Combs of
Chester.
Mr . and Mrs . Claren ce
Hepler of Wampum, Pa., were
overnight guests ot'Mrs. Ferne
B. Hayman Wednesday
enrou le to their home in
Pennsylvania after a vacati on
in Florida .
Mrs. Benny Boggess, Wayne
Roseberry and :\orma Jean
Jarrell were dinner guesls
Sunday of Mr . and Mrs. Jess
Anderson .
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jewell
and children of Letart, W. Va.,
Route were Wedne sday
evening guests of the latter's
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman and Keith . Mr. and
Mrs. Jel!'ell left Friday for a
tv&gt;o weeks vacation In Florida .
Brice Hart of Racine was a
" 'eekend guest of Keitp
Hayman .
Mrs. Edna Roush or .Racine
Is a me d ica I patient at
Ve~rans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. AliCe Baise r and son,
Carroll, of Mansfield spent the
weekend with · Mr. and :Ylrs.
Jack Ables and famii)·.
Wallie Stover and son, AJvin ,
called Thursday 'on ~r . and
Mrs. Gerald Ha,\'tnan and

$20?5

~~~ 1 74~~.~~t

and
.HARTFORD
The Dai~ Sentinel

'

THIS DRIIVK ...

I '
••

HOUSE &amp; build0:in--g--,-lo2-20-7tp
-:ts- on

MASON

-- ALL.Sl)T

Sale

FARMALL H Drag Disc, plows
- $550; lent camper ~ $250;
phone ·667·3336.
·

Carriers For

$23?5

1?69 CHEV. IMPALA CPE.

For

WANTED!

Motor Co.

1?70 DODGE POLAR A

Plains~

~tf~'M'if: HerbertRousb

Help Want&amp;d

Pom~roy

2 SICMS
Of
QUAliTY

.

.

HERE'S 10 'THE ti-JORLD,
IUITHOUT \Vf\ONI .. .

I·

~·

r

I

'

'

•I

•

�1

'

~ - TheDailySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy , O. , Feb. 21,1972

.

..~entinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
.

.

Long Bottom

Social Notes
Riley Pigott received word of
the death of his brother, Blaine
Pigott, at the home of his son,
Dexter Pigott, San Clara,
Calif.
Several attended funeral
servic~ for Alice K, Branstrom, nother of David A.
Smith, at Odgin Funeral Home
at Parkersburg.
Alice Curtis and Mary Pierce
were visiting Mr. and Mrs .
Russell Van Meter, PorUand .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cline
and sons, Moundsville, were
visiUng Mr . and Mrs. Russell
Cline.
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Smith
spent several days with Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Young,
Paden City, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Curtis
were dinner guests of Mary
Pierce. Other visitors were Mr .
and Mrn. Johnnie Newell and
sons, Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Newell and family of
Chester, Donna Wyatt of
Parkersburg and Rodney
Chevalier.
·
VIsiting Ernestine Hayman
were Mr. and Mrs. Jim Walls
and son, Columbus, Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Ridenour and son ,
Chester, Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Hayman and sons and Mr . and
Mrs . Tom Hayman and
daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Larkins
were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Weber, Tuppers

Factory air condit ioning, V·8 eng ine, auto. trans .. P.S.,
P. B ., good W· S· W tires, many more ex tras . A low price
now!

v.a engine . automatic trans ., p . steerin,g , factory air
conditioned , good w-w tires, radio, dark gr~ n fini sh with
spotless interior.
1967 CHEVELLE MALIBU HT CPE.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Ph. 614-992-2156
BABYSITTER In my home 1:30
p.m. to 1:30 a .m.. Monday
thru Friday . in Middleport.
Phone 991·201 2 before 1 p.m.
2· 1S-6k

Interior and extenor . Call

Don VanMeter 985·3951.
2·16·121p

Notice
FREE puppies . Phone

949. ~07 .

2·20·31p
A~
:BO
: cU
-::T:-:-Y:-:OccU-::-R--:c
W:::E-:-:
1GHT ...
overweight ladies, teens and
men Interested in a Weight

Watchers

I R I Class

Pomeroy

write :

In

Weight

Watchers IRL 1863 Sect ion
Rd .. Cincinnati, Olllo 45237 .
10·3·tfc

- -- - - - - - ,

SAVE up to one half . Bring your
sick TV io Chuck's TV shop,
151 Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy.

ll·21 .tfc
WANT WORK at home ad·
dressing and sluffing en ·
velopes7 Rush self.stamped
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36.
Albany, Olllo, 45710.
1·6·1fC
7w"'t"'L7L-:D"'O,.-;-boo--,-k;-ke_e_p,ln-g-. ta.
services in the privacy of my
tlome . Evelyn C. Young ,

phone 949·3741, Racine.
2·21 ·12lc

YARD AND rummage sale. all
week , starts Tuesday, 9 a.m.
to 6 p.m. Used furniture .
antiques, assortment of Avon
bottles. SOO ft . of 2x4. 2x6, 2x8,
two guitars, dishes, etc. 341

Park St .. Middleport.

2·21·Sic
For Rent
NEW, 12x60, two bedroom
mobile

home across

from

Bradbury School. Call 992·
S308or see Charles Lewis, 2nd
house south from Bradbury
School. Pets welcome.
2·21 ·1fc

Apple Grove News, Events
'

Mr.'a:rid Mrs. Herbert'Roush
spent Saturday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis at
Clifton, W. Va.
Mrs. Sarah Neigler is. a
surgical patient at University
Hospital in Columbus. Her
room number is 807.
Friends were sorry to hear of
the death of Mr . Robert Wofe
Sr . at Veterans Memorial
Hospital Sunday.
Mrs. Dorothy Greathouse
was returned to her home at
Racine Saturday after being
confined to Veterans Memorial
Hospllal for two weeks with
pnewnonia .
Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Mrs . Erma Wilson were
shopping In Middleport1Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. BiU Arnott of
Clarksburg spenta weekend at
their home.
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Anderson
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs, Arnold Anderson
and family at Keno Ridge.

Cn•No. 20UO

Estate of Cec il Bolin Oecened .
N ot~ c e is nereby giwen that
Joe M
Bolin of Langsv ille ,
Ohio, hes been duly appo inted
Adm inistrator of ttle Estate ol

Ce-cil Bol in, decused . late , or
Me ios County , Oh io.
Cred itors are requ ired to t il e
the ir clai ms w ith sa id fidu ciary
w it h in fo ur monthS .
Da t ed thi s.., 171h day of
February 1972.
JOhn C. Ba con
Judge

16th

da y

ot

Mrs. Zelpha Boggess called Fe ruary 197 2·
·
·
Joh n C. Bacon
Sunday on :.Irs. Junior Spaun
Act ing Probale Jvdg e
and :llrs: Jessie Jarrell.
I 131 ,21 . 28 13J ' · 3~: la i d Covnl y

- - ·--....4

',...., ; .

Business Services

original

carlons . No at needed as our
controls are built in . Sews
with 1 or · 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
monograms, and blind hem

tachment~

j

l

U
)ALLL
( -====::--:::::---:=========:;-;::=====:::=::;
WEAniER ROOFING
EXPERT
POMEROY

'

-

Maintenance Service the year

around. No matter what your
need. Complete roof .or
spouting repair. Interior or
exterior carpentry : Ceiling
tile and Paneling and Siding.
Complete
Plumbing
a.
Heating.
Day Number 992-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.
,

992-5803 -742-3947
9?2-3898 -742-4741
We are fully insured.

Wh!!!i••ianment
N'&amp;''
'5.55

., 11n" T:~"'•

... . h i

n.., ~

...

HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094

E. Main

606

-GUARANTEED-

SEN, REMEMSER THAT GURU
WHO DENOUNCED
MATERIAL GOODS ?

Pomeroy

OmCE SUPPLIES

Phone 992-2094

WORTHLESS

S'TOL.ENI

?

and

Ho · &amp; Aut

Pomeroy
me
0·
Open Hi I 5
Monday thru Saturday
,._. pomeroy, o •
606 E• main,

HE JU6T CALL!:D TO
COMPLAIN 'THAT H16
ROLL.S-RO'&gt;CE WA6

WAG HE '!HE ONE
WHO TOLD STUDE.NT6
P066E$610N6 ARE

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
'Floor Display.

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING·AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary .of IS,OOO.OQ and three children. 7'1• Pet. onnual
percentage rate.

H~'S~

'10M ':l~ZE.!!

H:O'LL loiEVfA
MISS OHI.
PAIR.!!

SMITH NELSON
MOtORS. INC.

COLONIAL
AUTO BODY

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.

ONE OF 'liM'

COIN, /lJol '1'1&lt;'
SA'ftN', "IF

The

~? 1 1\41\5N,.

WI-O'...ER...

Orchid Room

AWM1! IWA~

~110M ,1'/HY

[)(.) 'IOU A51&lt; i'

PRIMPING!

WINNIE': Mtw eE FOOuNGHCRS~~ M 5HE:'e NOT

FOOLI""" MEl 'TH~
A NEWMAN IN

- -- - - -

'
GASOIJNE AlLEY

_____

Feel 'er nose!
~ee if it's cold!

or

FERTILIZE II

- -- - --

- - -- - -

cc::_.·-

- - -- - -

UTI'LE ORPHAN

ANNIE
'!liD' ~ ~E;,YA Qf .S !!!L~CH
(J~
'~!rg/
!!lL ----!£.

l!)RAWKBY
THE ROAR

- - -- --

for any informa ti on , Brown 's.

- -- - --

2·8·1tc

Buy

WANTED
CHIPWOOD
Poles ·

DELIVERED

Salurday, Sunday, Monday,
good disco.un ts on most stock

......_..

WE ·WANT lo buy a used
Rotoli ll er . Phone Fred Miller

241·211 2.

' ·18·31c

RE~PON S IBL E p£rsr,n

tr; w r.. r k

and manag e · r v.:1e. Pick·up
and
dE: Iivery .
A. B.C.
&lt;:;lea n er ~ . Ma sr..n. W. Va .

Wahama High School. M:ay be

and all day Saturday and
Sunday .
John
Lyons
Property.
2·20·61c

FORD Tractor , J new tires, new
· pa inl , good cond ition - $650 ;

121 • 14' • 24' • WiDE

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd.
Belpro, Ohio

1---------;...-l.

phone 992·6048 . ·

2·13·71c Real Estate For Sale
30 ACRE farm, 3 bedroom
home, eleclric heat, vinyl
POODLE puppies, Si lver Toy ,
siding , TP&amp;C water district, 3
S·IS.tfc

For Sale
36" X 23" X .009

Aluminum
Sheets
USFD OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20~
8 lor s 1.00

The
Daily ·Sentinel
111 Cou!·t St.
Pomeroy, Ohio .

2 a.·fc

miles south of Tuppers Plains .

on County Road 28 - 518,000 ;
phone 667·3336.
2.2Q.71p

- - -- - 4 BEDROOM, bath .

&amp;

half,

utility room , builf.in kitchen, '

wall lo wall carpet &amp; garage.
Located "' mile north of
Eastern Hiqh School. House Is
almost finiShed and others
being built. Call 985·3598.
1·21·301c
H0 JSE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
C' ll Danny Thompson. 992.
' 2196.
7·18·1fc
1

NICE 2·story home with lull
basement, 2 lots, new forced
air f!Jrnace . Near Pomeroy .

Elemenlary School.
992-7384 to see.

Phone

11 .7.tfc
3 BEDROOM ranch typ.; h'J•~f~

Arbaugh Addition. Tuppers
Plain1. All new with total

electric and central air
conditioning, Odth and ...... fully
carpeted, full ba"ement,
garage in basement. ~ee by

appointment, phone 992·11Y6

or 992·3585. Danny Thompson .
Financ ing availabl e.

12·30·ttc

tere~ ; in your favorite style.

I

I!OUS~.

AN Hit
EXPLORES

DOWN
ACROSS
.
11.
Moroccan
1. Large
mountain
quantity
range
6. Attire
2. Commot. Dialect
tiou
11. Strange
3. Small
language
fruit
12. U S. State
4.
CiceronDept.
ian
(slang)
attire
U. Operatic
5. Intellect
selection
6. Step in
15. Spanish 1 '?. Excrucia·
queen
1
tion
16.- ·
8. City
premium
in
(scarce)
ltalia
18, Vessel;
10."pwage.
Breckinway
ridge"
2l.lnfatuated

cause is set tor hearing at 10 :00
a.m . on the 18th day of March

Dav1d Hooker, Rt. 2, Albany,
Ollio 45710 !Pagetown).

1R2.

'

Roy A . Rousn , Petitioner
J. B. O'Br ien, Attorney
tor Petilloner

over hardwood floors ; builf.in
2·6·30tc
kifchen; air conditioned; on -----~--­
in Lyons sub·division below

FOR SALE : movi ng sale,

S443.

On Old Rl 33
Phone 992-2689
Pome .Ohio

Phone 949·4892 or 992·5272 .
1·10.Ifc

- - - -- -

Park view Kennels , Phone992-

OHIO
PALLET CO.

Owner leaving state .

3 bedroom

ranch style home with garage
and patio; wall to wall carpet

seen after 5 p.m . week days

2·18·3tc

$6.00 Per Ton

Beautiful

SYRACUSE Drive In lor sale .
Phone 992·2088.
2·18·31c

in shop . 191 Mill St.. , Mid·

End

l:~cation .

setup .

corner lot 150' • 160' ; located

on

Largest

pletely

Falls, Ohio, Phone 247·2142
2·18.3tc

dteport . New loca t ion will be
498 Loc ust St. , Middleport ,
former I y Chase Hardware
Buil ding , M . Marcum .

Maximum
Diameter

10"

Big Dutchman a utomatic
f'='eder , twelve automatic
brooders, gas, 20 automatic
waterer s, 40 one gallon
w&lt;~terers . Harry Hill , Letart

aluminum skirting, com . TOTAL electric,

Cleland
Realty
OFF ICE 992·2259 Tl LL 4:00
EVENINGS&amp;
SUN0AYSmii)68
BABY FARNI,-6JiCRES
HARRISONVILLE - 1 slory
frame , 5 roams, bath, nice

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED 11131 ,( 2) 7, 14. 21,28 131 !61
REASONABLE rates. Ph .. 446·
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell; •

.

Ow-ner &amp; Operator.

5·12·1fc
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992·2522.
6. to-tt&lt;
SEPTIC tanks cleanea·.- Miller
Sanitation. Stewart, Olllo. Ph.
662·3035.
2·12·tfC

t

~ G£T YOUR .MN1 W1'1'H A

We talk to JOU
like a persorL

'

.,'

kilc hen,
COMPLETELY
RENOVATED , garage

l', - ·i

I

--&lt;'

'

'

6 rooms , 3 bedroom s with
closets, bath, cabinets in
kitchen; porches, basf'ment.

.

IF ltl!J t'AVE flM'IliHGERING t&gt;Out~
TO HOW OOHVINCIMG diR St!IISTITUT!:
CtflfFS C1' STATE ARE, THIS SHOULP

,I..

~

.:

I' ·..!·•
~

:·

..
•
'

CLOSE IN . $6.500.00.
WHY CLIMB STAIRS
POMEROY - 1 story frame, 2
bedrooms,

TttEll.

ATTENTION! ... ACr A5
IF YQJ WE~ ALRfAI'Y
IJHIIfR THE fY'ES Of
AMBITIOIIS OR JfAIOIIS
511~HATI!,... tlf61N!

llfHOCAL
Jl.lj!A CHIEF, Tiff

00o¥MIS5AR
HIS

~LE'10

ENACT A NEAR

fA5T

'~IT

CONFEf!Efj(:E!

f;
•:
l·

H

r

I I

river

28. Elizabethan31. Harlan
Fiske
32. Backslide

33. ·wise
35. Coup
d'-

37. Fix
39. School for
priests
(abbr.)
40. Botanist
Gray
U.Kook
42. Golf
gadget

............

lllf'EC

[ MIL1'1

D

'C , .. , ... ...

~

. .... ._
.._ .....

~

III

II

.50UNDS LIKE A
CRIME IN CHINA,

lea

/tJfJ tN .TliE l\IH"' OF Tllf I.IIP0510Rs, THE$'11SOf!\15T~u:5T
~y

llff CIRAGON LAI7Y HA'If

HA~

TIME 10 R&gt;INKLE.

(Aiwwen t • ....,...• ,

SO. Eternally
Sl. Lists
of
candi·
dates
H. Pro vote
35. Flight
hr.
18.-spirit
SI.Army

Jumhl.,, LAUGH PYLON RELISH
S••u.rd•y'•
Ant w.,.rt

Holt a

lldl~r pmdic~•

fLAUNt

pltilantltropy-

SPARINGLT

PI \'\1(

I~

~006HASNO

Ri6t!T 10 WA•K OFF
AND LEAVE t(OU,
CHARLIE llROWN!

~OV FEED HIM,AND!()() 61VE HIM
A HOME ... IN RETU~N. IT'S HIS ..00
TO 611ARD 't'OIIR ~ffl. AAO tlC
I/OVR FRIEND!T~E TI'.:!V&amp;.E WITH
t(OU 1,; 't'Otl DON'T KN~ HOW TO
i.
RAISE A 006, CHAA"E ~!

..

A'iYDLIAAXR
Ia LctNGFELLOW

'

I

1·28·Hc

)IG

XFPD

FV

N

LV

KGJD

IDFXSFAX

TG .T GJ.J

KGADC

r

KNESFAD . - XDGJXD

II ,;

.• '

E B N JR.
I

·J
J

II

MSD ~ABC M~FAX MSNM EGAMFkLDV

••

1
' " " " ' •· , ., • ,.,.

lot u·. ... "''

,

", .• and please help Daddy find

:t·l( ,
ft

'

~lurday'a •C,.plcHc11Die: TilE ATI!ENIANS DO NOT MIND
A MAN BEING CLEVER AS LON&lt;;' AS m: KF:F.PS IT TO
IIIMSEl.F.-PI.ATO
.
, 4.(&gt;· l!l·;:! t\ it•.: Fo•:o l !"'''~ ~ ,o' tttl ic·\tp , ln r , l

parkitig place!"

'

I

Y.-e..a.,.•, A•wer

l

One letter simp)y stands for another. In this sample A is
uaed for the three L's; X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters.
IJ)Oitrophea, •tho length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each dloy tho ' code !etten are ditroront.
.
.I
CltYPTOQUOTES

- - --

'
lh2t .ttc

/\!I,,

~~~~C~e~~ U.Kind
of

1

HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
985·3529.

Ohio. phone 137·4334.

" ' Nil

-DAILY CII!YPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

JUST $8,900.00
HENRY CLELAND.
REALtOR
2·16·61c

Wadsworth Drive. Columbus

,

Un1&lt;ramble theae four Jumblet,
one letter to each !Mjuart, to·
form four ordinary warda.

U . Goose
genus
44. Follow
45. Abound'
t8. Appoint· 1
ment

large storage bui Iding, 2 story
home , -4 bedrooms. bath,
glassed In side porch, front
. porch, fuet -oll forced air heat ,

Sl·"ROOM hou,e, 133 BviiHnut
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137

I

. man

OR~S

,.

bath, ba sement,

IN EXCELLENT CON .
· DITION. large lot. $7,900.00.
WE HAVE BU~ERS , SO CALL
CLELAND'S FOR FAST
ACTION .
DEXTER - Lot 150 x 100, barn,

·

J&amp;wru~~-=!!:'~= ,

(jump
ship)
'
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. 2B.Designale

by Gill Fox .,
?,.
- ,.

-

11. Detest
13. Soft
drink
l&amp;.ln time
past
17. Hebrew
letter
18. Time of
life
20. Setat22. Greek
river
25. Shred ·
26. Vine
27. Scottish

U.Go-

ON YOUR DIAL

SIDE GLANCES

$10,950.00.
REAL ESTATE IS
CLIMBING DAILY
POMEROY - 111• story frame ,

~~~
:li:

i~

~Want Ada

utility room and cold roam:
small out . buildings .

.

WMP0/1390

..... . "'" . . ..

Of CYCLES
RACII!G
PAST HER

F01

OLD FURNI TU RE , Round Dak
N0 T Ic E 0 F
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
APPOINTMENT
clocks , and -or comp!ete
cue No. 20 m
households
. Write M. D.
E•1au of cnarle• w. wn ;1.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
t ington Deceasea .
Call 992·6271.
NoHce is. hereby given that
~ . 1] . /fc
Jenn ie M. Wh ll! inglon 01
Pomeroy, Onlo, h•• been dvly r, c,e,o u5-e: d ch airs , pre: te-~
appo inted Aelm inlstretr ix o1 tne
wooden. Call 992·9972.
E"•'• o1 cnar1.. w. wn11.
fington , Clece-ased, late of Me igs -------~2·_:16 ·6t p
County , Ohio .
Cred itors ere req uired to file
the ir claims w ith 5a id fi duc iar y Help Wantid
wl~i n four months .
th is

BEAUTIFUL MODERN
Walnut Stereo ·radio .com ·
binallon. 4 speaker sound
system, 4 speed changer,
separa Ie con Ir:oIs. ·Bal.nee
$68.56. Use our budget terms.
Call 992-7085.
2-16·61c
- - - : --:---::PAINT DAMAGE. 1971 Zfg.zag
sewing machines. Still in

- - - -- -

121 21. 28 Ill ' · Jl

ted

in Pomeroy .

- - - -- -

TO
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

-

l:~ 1

WANT 1\DS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
welder, will travel. Local
5 P. M.
Day
Before HAVE
welder wants welding jobs.
stilch. f;ull cash price, $38.50
Publication
Phone
992·5271
.
or budget plan available.
Monday Deadline 9 a.m .
2-20·61c
Phone 992·5641.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
--2-16·61c
Will be accep1ed unlll9 a.m. for
·
Day of Publication
Wanted To Rent
VACUUM cleaner new 1971
REGULATIONS ·
model. Complete with all From the largest
The Publisher reserves the TRAILER space out ot high
Bulldozer Radiator to the
cleanin~ tools. Small paint
right to edit or reject any ads
water in Middleport
.
Smallest
Heater Core.
&lt;lamage
on
shipping.
Will
take
deemed objectional. The
Pomeroy area . Local couple,
127
cash
or
budget
plan
Nathan
Biggs
publisher will not be
one child. Good references .
available.
Phone
992-5641.
·
Radiator
Speciilist
responsible for more than one
Local employment. Will
2·16·61c
Incorrect insertion .
consider purchase if suitable - - -- - - RATES
lol . Phone 992-3855.
CALL
125 BAL.ES straw ; 1 - 2 gang
For Want Ad Service
2·20·31c
81
LL
NELSON,
??2-3657
HILTON WOLFE, 949-3211
plow; 1- 3gang plow; 1-3
5 cents per Word one lnsertlon
TOM
CROW,
992·2510
DALE DUTTON, 992-1534
gang,
3
point
hitch
;
1
2'1,
Minimum Charge7Sc
Ph. 992-2174
ton
truck,
P.
M.
Cowdery,
12 cents per word three For Rent or Sale
Long Bottom, Ohio.
consecutive insertions .
18 cents per word six con · 3· BEDROOM Vindale mobile
2·20·3tc Real Estate For Sale
home, 1112 baths, sllualed on -2_H
secutive Insertions.
_O_U_S_E_T-RA_I_L_E_R-S,.:._1_0_x 50 ,.-----.,.......,-:....:.....,...-,
choice rental lot ; call after 6
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
and 8 x 35, also I Chevrolet
p.m. weekdays or any time on
ads and ads paid within 10
school bus. Phone 367·7533 .
weekend 992.5570, Herman
days.
2·20·31p
Bolinger .
537 High St.
CARD OF THANKS
Make reservations for your
2·16-6tp
&amp; OBITUARY
Middleport,
Ohio
private parties, banquets, · '
MS 135 gas tractor used 50
$1.50 for SO word minimum . - -- - -Complete
body
repairs
special occasions.
hours,
S
fl.
bush
hog;
Black
Each additional word 2c.
Broker
Ideal tor meeting place Hawk
corn
Dlanter;
3
at.
BLIND ADS
and paintings, glass
110 Mechanic St.
For Rent
hitch;
automatic
water
with
or without kitchen 1
Additional 25c Charge per
Pomeroy, 0., 45769
·
installation,
free
Advertisement .
FURNISHED and unfurnished softener; phone 367·7534.
privileges.
loaner
cars
and
WE NEED ACREAGE
OFFICE HOURS
Individual Catering
apartments. Close to school. __ _ __ _ __ _2 ·~20 · 31c
ANYWHERE lN MEIGS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
Phone 992·5434.
Will seat up to 150 people . .
estimates, also
8:30 a.m . to 12 :00 Noon
COUNTY.
10·18.1fc TROPICAL FISH, fancy
mechanLcal repairs.
Saturday .
RUTLAND
Phone
guppies, angelS and breeders,
Phone 992-3793
3
BEDROOMSBath.
nice
992-397S
992-5786
Bellas
and
supplies.
Phone
LOTS 100 x 180 and 33 x 90;
kitchen . Large lot near
Notice
992-5443.
Warehouses 32 x 75, 25 )( 50,
schools. Only 16.000.00.
12·30·1fc
and 23 x 48. Call 992·7178. to
DRY WALL finisher contractor. TRIM trees ; clean out attics, .
UPHOLSTERING SERVIC~ .
LAND CONTRACT
lease any or all of above at 610
R. I. ·Dubbeld, phone 742-5825.
cellar s, basements, very ·
complete selection of fabrics
SISOO.OO DOWN- $53 .42 a
E. Main St.
·
2·21·51c
reasonable.
Phone 949 ·3221. ·,
and vinyl to choose from . Pick
month. 6 rooms. good well,
2·16-6tc Auto Sales
2·15·61C"
up and delivery . Slater
spring, and outbuildings. 3
INTERIOR
&amp; exterior painting .
-·Upholstering, Rt. J, Pomeroy, 2 BEDROOM mobile home in '57 CHEVY '4·1on pickup, exacres.
R. I. Dubbeld, phone 742-5825. ALLSIDE Builders &amp; Con ·
phone 992·3617.
Racine area . Phone 992·6329 . cellent condition. Almost new
POMEROY
2·21 ·Sic
struction Co. W• specialize In
2·3·30tp
2·16·1fC
engine. Phone 992-2967 alter 5 2 BEDROOMS-Bath,
...:._
alum inurn, vinyl and steel
p.m.
natural oak floors. One floor O'DELL WHEEL allghment
siding ; fiberglas. brick and
2·20·31c plan . Basement, front porch .
Now's Time To
stone;
complete I ine of .
located
at
Crossroads.
Rt.
124.
For Sale
Trade
----,- - - , - - All utilities. Only 16500.00.
and commercial
residential
Complete
front
end
service,
ORDER
TUPPERS PLAINS
1968 TEMPEST, 2 door 1965 PLYMOUTH Signet, V8, A
rpof
ing
;
remodeling ,
up
and
brake
service.
tune
speed transmission, new
2 BEDROOMS- Modern
automaiic. Phone 992·6547 .
building,
suspended
ceilings,
Wheels
balanced
elec.
tires, good condition. Phone
kitchen
and
bath.
'
Plains
fiELD SEEDS
2·18·1fc 742·5042
interior
and
exterior
painlroolcally
.
All
work
.
- - ---water . 4 acres for future
ling ; complete line of
guaranteed.
Reasonable
1967-0PEL Wagon, 1964 Ford, 4 --,,-1-r-'·'' ~-----2·_
18. 3tc
building. Only $10,500.00:
M~sonry , wbr:.k. A\ ~ work
rates. Phone 992-3213.- "
door automatic. Phone 992· -NEW HOUSE
1·27.1fc · guaranteed to cuslomer
6547 .
1970. CORVET 4SA 4·Speed NEW
satisfaction. We are fully
LISTING-3
SEED CORN
2·18·11c convertible . Good condition . bedrooms, nice bath with
insured for your protection . 32
c . BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Phone 675.3340.
N. Second. ph. 992·3918.
Complete
Ser¥1ce
shower. Natural gas furOr,der Now &amp; Save!
2·17·61c nace . Large closets in
Phone 949·3821
2·15·30tc
AFGHANS - 150 &amp; $45 ; Quills
Racine. Ohio
bedrooms.
Carport
.
Lot
- ISO ; Quill tops - $15 ; phone '64 DODGE pickup, 318 engine,
Crill Bradford
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
75x291 . Price $20,000.00.
992·2686 .
service, all makes. 992-2284.
5-l·lfC
S-6 ply tires, 2 reg ., 3 mud·
SPLIT-LEVE·L
2·11 ·10tp snow ; '63 Olds 98, 2 door.
The
Fobrlc Shop, Pomeroy.
4 BEDROOMS-Mod,rn all
Authorized Singer Soles and
Ernest Ward, Jr. 742·4289.
READY·MIX
CONCRETE
de·
electric,
PI&gt;
baths .
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
ll•ered right to your project.
2·20)1p
LOSE weight with New Shape TEMPO mobile home, 50x10,
Basement. 4 acres near
3·29·1fc .
excellen
t
cond
ition
.
Phone
Fast and
easy .
Free
Tablets, 10 days supply only
Middleport. $27.500.00.
247·2161.
estimates
.
Phone
992.3284
.
11.49 al Nelson Drugs.
' 6A VOLKSWAGEN, 2 dr. sedan,
Goegleln Ready· Mix Co .. AUTOMOBILE insurance been
2-20·61c
gray with matching interior ,
2·21 ·3tp
NOT SATISFIED WITH
Middleport, Ohio.
cancelled?
Lost
your
good condi ti on, $.450. Phone
YOUR PRESENT HOME,
bike. Phone 992·2044 or
operotor's license? Call ·'192·
6·30·Ifc.
I WILL have a vacancy March 1 MINI
992·6048.
CALL US AND LIST NOW.
see Harold Brinker .
2966.
for elderly lady . l have 14
2·13-7tc NO CHARGE IF NO SALE.
2·20·31c
6·15·1fc
Why
buy
new
furniture?
Have
years experience . Would
that old made new by Sylvia 's
prefer private person . Phone - - -- -FOR THE BEST deal In a new
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Upholstering Shop , Mrs .
843·2600 .fortland.
GOOD mixed hay . Phone or used mobile home, try
Lt;GAL NOTICE
ASSOCIATE
Woodrow T. Zwilling, Prop.,
2·18·31c
Wilkesville 669·4777 .
DANNY ELWOOD BOWER S,
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
992-3325
992-2378
Syracuse, ,Ohio.
whose last known place ot
2-20·61C
Kanauga, Ohio.
2-10-JOtp ·residence is 352 East Main
--12·17·90tc
LEVEL lot, 180' frontage,
INSTRUCTION in organ and
Street, Pomeroy , Oh io, Is
piano, Gerald Hoffner, phone ALLIS·CHALMERS B tractor - -- - -- - - , localed on Main Street , BACKHOE AND DOZER work. hereby notified that on the 2•Uh .
of January, 1972 ROY A.
992·3825.
with side mower . Oscar
Mason; excellent opportunity
Septic tanks Installed. George day
ROUSH
filed his petit ion in the
Mobile
Homes
Sale
1
Weber
2
12
miles
east
of
2·8·121 c
tor business . While Realty,
!Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478. Probate Court
of Meigs County ,
Chester on Sla te Rt . 248.
- - - -call Vera Eblen, Associate
~
25
tf
~'
.
c
Ohio to adopt ROBERT
60X12,
2·bedroom.
all·electric,
KOSCOT KOSMETICS. They're
2·18·31p
Realior 992·3020.
::-::=-:-::::---:-----=::::.:::: EUGENE SOWERS and for
air conditioned. 8x20 ft . Porch
Great : over 10 specials this - - - -- 2·20.61c SIGNS, posters, mall boxes and change of name of nid child to
and
aluminum awning,
monlh . Please call 992·5113 ONE bulk tank with auger. one
favorite saying ; hand let. Robert Eugene Roush ; said

Wanted To
MEETING HELD
HYSELL RUN- Mrs. Lloyd
Dugan was hostess for the
February meeting of the Hysell
Run Women 's Missionary
Society. The devolional period
consisted of prayers, songs and
readings. Eight members ·
answered the roll call. World
Day of Prayer plans were
discussed. The group was
dismissed with prayer and the
hostess served refreshments.
The next rneeting will be at the
home or Mrs . Ada Keesee,
March 21 at 7:30 p. m.

I

ONE.

.

2-16·61c
&amp; CONSTRUCTION &amp;
COLONIAL Early American
.
Stereo, AM·FM radio comPLUMBING CO;
binal ion, 4 speed changer, A
St.
240 Lincoln
speaker sound system .
.
Balance $79.32 . Use our
Middleport,Ohio
budget lerms. Call ~~~~~t5c We ~.:•:ocn:_:~';;,bi~me

Employment Wanted
EXPERIENCED painter .

OP!N I!YI!S. 1:00 P.M.
fj)M!IOY, OHIO

- -----

Keith.

$1395

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

Mr. al1ll Mrs. Donald Polley
and family of Columbus were
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Prince.
Mr. and Mrs. David Dailey
were visiting Mr. anct Mrs. Jr.
liauber.
Pat Smith, Columbus, and
David Smith, Marietta spent a
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
David Smith and DeeDee.
Mr . and Mrs. Hank Holter
were dinner guests of Mrs.
Hanson Holter, Forest Run.
-Violet Smith

•
Rodney Neigler of Racine
spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Smith and Joe
Deourin.
Mrs. Dallas Hill and Mrs.
Dolly Wolfe called on Mrs. Carl
Wolfe Jr. and new baby at
Holzer
Medical Center
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill and
son, Dean, Mrs . Marshall
Roush and Joey, Mrs. Dolly
Wolfe spent Sunday afternoon
with Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wolfe
Jr . and new daugh ter at
Gallipolis Route I.
Mr . and Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson
of New Haven spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs . Homer
Warner.
Mr . and Mrs. Dorset Wilson
and son of Charleston spent a
weekend with Mrs . Erma
Wilson .
Mrs. Ma: Ue Maxwell and
friend or Ripley were Sunday
guests of Mr . and Mrs. Butch
Wilson.
Mrs. Zeipha Boggess and
Wayne Roseberry attended the
wedding of Miss Nola Parsons,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Ray
Parsons, to Robert Spawn, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Junior Spawn ,
.Saturday al the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Junior Spawn.
Marriage vows were read by
the Rev . Don Combs of
Chester.
Mr . and Mrs . Claren ce
Hepler of Wampum, Pa., were
overnight guests ot'Mrs. Ferne
B. Hayman Wednesday
enrou le to their home in
Pennsylvania after a vacati on
in Florida .
Mrs. Benny Boggess, Wayne
Roseberry and :\orma Jean
Jarrell were dinner guesls
Sunday of Mr . and Mrs. Jess
Anderson .
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jewell
and children of Letart, W. Va.,
Route were Wedne sday
evening guests of the latter's
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman and Keith . Mr. and
Mrs. Jel!'ell left Friday for a
tv&gt;o weeks vacation In Florida .
Brice Hart of Racine was a
" 'eekend guest of Keitp
Hayman .
Mrs. Edna Roush or .Racine
Is a me d ica I patient at
Ve~rans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. AliCe Baise r and son,
Carroll, of Mansfield spent the
weekend with · Mr. and :Ylrs.
Jack Ables and famii)·.
Wallie Stover and son, AJvin ,
called Thursday 'on ~r . and
Mrs. Gerald Ha,\'tnan and

$20?5

~~~ 1 74~~.~~t

and
.HARTFORD
The Dai~ Sentinel

'

THIS DRIIVK ...

I '
••

HOUSE &amp; build0:in--g--,-lo2-20-7tp
-:ts- on

MASON

-- ALL.Sl)T

Sale

FARMALL H Drag Disc, plows
- $550; lent camper ~ $250;
phone ·667·3336.
·

Carriers For

$23?5

1?69 CHEV. IMPALA CPE.

For

WANTED!

Motor Co.

1?70 DODGE POLAR A

Plains~

~tf~'M'if: HerbertRousb

Help Want&amp;d

Pom~roy

2 SICMS
Of
QUAliTY

.

.

HERE'S 10 'THE ti-JORLD,
IUITHOUT \Vf\ONI .. .

I·

~·

r

I

'

'

•I

•

�~ ..;. The

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 21, 1972

&lt;lay Cook, •88 Died on Monday ·.
Clay Cook, 88, Pine Grove,
,died Monday morning at
Veterans Memor'c l Hospital.
Mr. Cook was preceded in
deal~ by his parents, Lum and
Melissa Sargent Cook ; his
wife , Erma ; a daughter,
Garnet, a brother, and a sister.
Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs. Leonard Hess, Jr .,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. George
Waller, Lancaster ; a granddaughter. Mrs. George (Ann )
Van Horn, a nd a grea tgranddaughter, Angela Lynn
Van Horn.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home where

INFANT HELPED
The 'Pomeroy E-R unit answered a call at 6 p. m.
Saturday to the Worley Haley
residence on the Happy Hollow
Road for Eric Walker, threemonths-old, who was having
convulsions. The infant was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital before being trans.
ferred to Holzer Medical
Center.
The girls' basketball squad
at Meigs High School made its
season record 6-2 Saturday by
dumping Wahama 32 to 12.
For the winners, Lee Sebo
and Deb Ohlinger each had 6,
Sharon Cogar&gt;, Sherry King 4,
Pat Harris 3, Mary Weyersmiller, Joy White, Jane
Thomas and Chris Miller, 2
each. For Wahama, Lieving
had 6, M. Jones and Paugh, 2
each.
Meigs will play at Kyger
Creek this evening at 6.
... : .·:· .... .

friends may call any time.
Burial will be in the Pine Grove
Cemetery.
'

Two Honored

By Freedoms
Foundation
Two area residents were
among 93 Ohioans and O~io
organizations cited today by
the Freedoms Foundation at
Valley Forge, Pa. Each winner
was presented a special
citizenship award.
A-IC Pamela A. Moore,
United States Air Force,
daugh.ter of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Moore, Rt. I, Cheshire,
a 1970 graduate of Kyger Creek
High School, was the Gallia
County honoree.
Miss Moore entered the Air
Corps in 1970. She is stationed
at Lackland AFB, Texas.
Sgt. Forrest D. Bachtel of
Middleport, also a member of
the United States Air Force,
was the other local award
winner . Sgt. Bachtel is
stationed at Luke Air Force
Base in Phoenix, Ariz.

Kenneth Young

Died Saturday

Kenneth R. Young, 68,
Tuppers Plains, died Saturday
afternoon at the Riverside
Methodist · Hospital
in
Columbus following a two year
illness.
Mr. Young was a member of
Carpenters
Local
200,
Columbus, and the Fraternal
Order of Eagles in Columbus.
He was a veteran of World War
CONFINED TO JAIL
1!, serving as a carpenter's
Paul Kuhn, 24, Pomeroy, has mate in the South Pacific three
been arrested by the Pomeroy years.
Police Dept. on a charge of
Surviving are his wife, Lucy
statutory rape upon a minor. Summerfield Young; a sister,
Police said that Kuhn is con- Mrs. Gordon (Helen) Caldwell,
fined to the county jail Tuppers Plains; two l!rothers,
following his arrest Sunday, Clifford of Columbus, and Olen,
Bond, set at $&gt;,000, has not of Reedsville; a niece, and
been furnished.
five nephews. Preceding him in
death were his parents,
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Clarence M. and Nettie
The Middleport E-R squad Chevalier Young.
answered a call at I: 10 a. m.
Funeral services will be held
Monday for Ill-month-old Mike at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the White
Harris at 169 Second Ave. The Funeral Home in Coolville with
infant, having difficulty fn Evan~~!ist Joseph B. Hoskins
Hospital before being trans- officiating. Burial will be In the
ferred to Holzer Medical Success Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
Center.
any time.

... . .

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
February 21 -22
I NEVER SANG
FOR MY FATHER

( Technicolor)

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Monday at 11 a.m.
was 38 degrees under cloudy
skies.

Pat Makes Like a .Tourist

Gene Hackman

" GP"

Plus
SUMMER TREE
(Technico lor )

Jack Warden
Michael Douglas

" GP"
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Mary Ford, Melody Roberts,
Douglas
Johnson,
Rex
Argabrite, Steven Scharliger.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Will
Turnbull,
Everett
Thomas, Mildred Turner.

"I can't he six
places at ·once!"

Saturday at 83

PEKING (UPJ)- Pat Nixon sipped jasmine
tea and turned a shopper's eye on SO!Jle of tbe
local tourist goods in her first few hours in
Olina today, but had almost no contact with the
people in the street.
Dressed in a flaming red coal _, shade
called " American Beauty" - and ,wearing
black gloves but no hat in the crisp winter
sunshine, Mrs. Nixon was whisked from
Shanghai to Peking and then across the city
with her hus!Jand after the brief welcome
ceremony at the airport outside the ancient
imperial city .
.
HerJirst real chance to mingle with Chinese
below the official level probably would come at
a banquet in the Great Hall of the People in the
center of Peking later today .
'
During a brief layover at the airport out&amp;ide
Shanghai, Mrs. ·Nixon stepped inside the ter·
minal where she was served a cup of jasmine
lea with a pale yeilow jasmine bloom floating in
il.

An&lt;) inside the Sllanghal teryninal, wJth its
·larger-than·litt portraits of Mao Tse-tung and
James W. Whittington , ,83,
By Helen Bottel
Lenin, the First Lady found a showcase filled Depot St., · Rutland, · dted
with Chinese artifacts and gifts .
· Saturday evening at Veterans
"look at all the things to buy " she said like • Memortal Hospital. . ·M~ ·
' . Wh'~lUng
· to n re t'tr ed from hts
TWO MORE REALLY A CROWD
· hunter. '
any other souvenir
•
nur·mg U.e greeling at peki ng .Ai,rport .she with
dulles 111 bndge construction Dear Helen:
.
.
h ,
the New York Central
.
My
wife's
mother
and
father
are
dlvo~.
I
now
see
w
Y.
followed her hu8band down the protocol line, Ra'ir d ·
·
1963
Wben
her
dad
became.
ill,
we
took
h~
Ul. He recuperated
shaking hands with Premiel' Olou En-lai and
; oa lmg a~e his . wUe ·
oot, heing 70, be stayed on with ua, and !lungs, ran !lllloo~y as
the oth~r officials, some in Ma&lt;Htyle jackets, Ma~~~:v ·~wo sons, Leo,
he stayed to himself and wasn't demanillng. We have a big, old
others m We~lern topco~ts.
Rutland , and Carroll, of
.
She then jomed her offtctal hostess, Madame Buffalo w. Va. · two sisters, house with plenty of bedrooms.
.
Titen,
along
carne
Mama.
She
told
us
she
couldn't
Jive
alone
Li Hsien-flien, wife of the. vice premier of Mrs ·'Rose Ann Martin ,
Olina, for a quick ride across Peking to a guest · Syr~cuse, and Mrs. Bess any more though she seems bealthy. I believe she ~ot her n~se
house near a frozen lake on the other side of tbe Harris, Columbus; nfne out of joint because Dad see~ed the favorite. So she moved Ill,
capital.
grandchildren and 11 great.
too! we put them at opposite sid.es of the house, but It
still
Mrs. Nixon's day-by-day sclledule has not grandchildren.
been revealed by Chinese officials, but she was
Funeral services will he held war from the start. Mother picks, nags, bosses, and crtllclzes.
known to be planning a visit to a children's at 2 p.m. Tuesd~y at the Cross Dadyeils "Shut up Woman!" and goes down to the corner bar 'to
buddies. Once home, he's imbibed enough
hospiial, a school, a commune and a glass Creek United Methodist get drunk with
factory .
Church at Buffalo. The Rev. hottled courage to give· her what.for. Which he does - all
.
Lloyd Grimm will officiate and even~.
When·
he
isn't
there
she
starts
on
our
children
and my wife,.
burial will be in the · Cross
Creek Cemetery. Frienda may teD~ them what's wr~ng with whatever they're ~ing. We've
call at the Marlin Funeral got an armed camp he&lt;"e, and if someth~ doesn~ g~ve soon, I'D
Scheduled Peking Tube Coverage
.
.
Home in Rutland anytime on move out!
1Continued from page I)
NEW YORK (UPI) -ne television networks have
My wife feels she "owes" her parents a hon;t,e, and. she lS a
Monday, until 11 a. m.
announced the followlug times for scheduled coverage of
conversations with China's Tuesday, and at the church in nonflghter, so she thinks we should just 'take It, lgnormg what ·
leaders durin~ his first day on Buffalo from I p. m. until lime we can. She doesn't feel we should put either of these two out. I .
President Nixon In Peking (ail times subject to change
Chinese soil.
as events warrant):
of services.
say they could easily take care of themselves in a senior citizens'
- With Chou, 73, described in
ABC -Monday, 20 to 30 minutes of tbe Dick Cavett
village. Titey aren't broke!
a jovial mood, for 20 minutes
Show; which is on from 11:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. Tuesday
What do you say? - MAN AT ARMS
abdut
"generalities"
alter
7:3&amp;-8 a.m.
Dear Man:
their arrival at the Nixon guest
CBS -Monday 11:30 p.m.to midnight. Tuesday not
·
1 say go shopping for the best senior citizens' village
Pleasant Vallev Hosollal
house. Kissinger and Secretary
avaUable.
tomorrow!
Correction: find TWO such apartment complexes Names of patients · admitted
of
State
William
P.
Rogers
NBC- Monday 11:30 p.m. to midnight. Tuesday,
·
have been temporarily at opposite sides of town.
participated.
part of the Today Show, which is on from 7·9 a.m.; 11:30
When parents are financially and physically able )'&gt; live • ·
-With Mao, 78, at his home, discontinued for publication.
p.m. to midnight.
alone,
only a totaily browbeaten daughter would insist that she
Discharges: Mrs. Bernard
for. an hour.
Wallace, Pomeroy; Barbara "owes" them a home.lt's time she threw off the yoke and started ·
~~ilif:~ffi~~~~;rum~;~~~~*=~~~~~~lml~l~l~~~m~]mm.~~~~;~~~;l~ll~~;~~~~~m~mm;~~;~*~~f:l~$~1l*~l1ili1~ml*~~; th;
:t~ 0~~~
~a~ Wheeler, Thomas McNeeley, thinking of her husband and children! - H.
FLOOR LEASED
+++
massive building in downtown Point Pleasant ; Donald
Dear
Helen:
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Vantrunene,
Wheeling,
Mich.;
Peking which was to serve
first floor of McGraw-Hill's
People against ~ailed trial marriages, say tbey're im·
later in the day as the site of a · Mrs. William Blaine, Jr.,
new headquarters building
Mrs.
Phillip
Werry,
daughter;
moral
and dangerous, especiaily for the woman. Those in favor
huge banquet honoring Nixon
under construction on 6th
ai1d the officials accompanying Pomeroy; Walter Donohue, say they're the only way to discover.whether it will be "real" and
Avenue in Manhattan has ~een
Renege Kiser, Point Pleasant; last~.
him.
leased - to the Irving Trust
Has a survey ever been made to determine how many
The 90-minute delay in the Warren Stewart, Leon; Paul
Co.
meeting at the Great Hall Poar, Henderson; Mrs. Paul nonmarrlages end with weddings and how many of these couples
. raised questions which, of Glover, Milton; Ernest go their separate ways?
course, disappeared with. Zle· Rickard, Leon Putz, Point
And do nonmarried people feel less like failures when the
Yeag~r
REEDSVILLE - U.S. Air gler's announcement about the Pleasant; Thomas William, trial fizzles? - WONDERING
Force Master Sergeant John unexpected meeting with Mao. New Haven; Barbara Herd· Dear Won.: ·
man, Letart.
M. Crary, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Guest List Unknown ·
Have heard of no surveys, oot II one in every three or four
Births: Feb. 20, a son to Mr.
Reed B. Crary of Reedsville,
'J'he guest list at the banquet
Mrs. Anna Foss Yeager, 84, participated in a recent U. S. was not known . The hall seats and Mrs. Roger Legue, MI. marriages ends in divorce, it's JRttY safe to assume that llveCole St., Middleport, died Readiness Command joint &gt;,000, but not that many were Alto, and Feb. 20, a son to Mr. togethers make It legal much less often. It's easier and cheaper
Monday morning at Veterans service training,exercise at Ft. expeded.
and Mrs. Robert Brown, Point to walk away when you have only verbal ties- on a trial basis:
(But I'll bet the feeling of failure is still very much there.)
Memorial Hospital.
Stewart, Ga . The exercise Among the invited guests Pleasant.
Getting back to surveys, I've often wondered how many
Mrs. Yeager was born Dec. involving more than 7,000 Air were those who accompanied
married
people might check the "yes" box on this question:
25, '!887 in Pomeroy , the Force, Army, ' Air National Nixon to China- newsmen,
Honest now, would you have married your spouse, had you
daughter of the late Charles Guard and Air Force Reserve communications technicians,
SLIDES
OF
ROAD
lived with him or her two years before the wedding?
and Frances Campbell Foss. personnel - tested the transportation specialists and
The
Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Ask it of yourselves, readers, but don't insist on a truthful
She was also preceded in death mobility and flexibility of the the baggage handlers.
Dept.
reporting
a
minor
ac·
answer from your mate! - H. ·
'
by her husband, William E. newly crea(ed REDCOM which
The delay in the start of the
cident
Saturday
at
11:58
p.m.
Yeager; two lrothers, and a replaced the U.S. Strike talks was announced to Ameri·
+++
on
SR
681,
said
Anne
Regina
Dear
Helen
:
.
sister. Surviving are several Command Jan . 1.
·
can journalists In late af·
nieces and nephews.
Action at Ft. Stewart in- lernoon as they awaited Gellert, 19, Edmonds, Wash., "' DtJring 0111' ~~ ~~ of.P.UII:fll\~~· ,lp1, I!Jielli!nd hlld SOV~F~~~
Funeral services will be held eluded paradrop operations, Nixon's arrival. A Olinese traveling south, skidded off the affairs. Finally be left me for a girl of-21 who iiail money fi\OU8b
at 2 p.m . Wednesday at the assault landings, close air spokesman. came out, said the road on the left Into a ditch in a to support his drinking and gambling. She even paid his way out
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home support and an Army assault talks would be delayed an hour 90-degree turn. There were no of jail a couple of times.
with the Rev. Charles Simons on a mythical aggressor force and invited the newsmen in for injuries, and no citation was
Now, two years later, he shows up, says he's changed and
issued.
officiating. Burial will be in in control of a simulated allied a cup of tea.
begs me to take him back. But he says he can~ dump the girl "all
Riverview Cemetery.
forward operating base .
,
at once," because he owes her so much. He Clllltlnuesllvlng With
Mrs. Yeager was a member
her, but sees me and hia children sew~ times. a week. Wben
cr.ary is an ai~craft
of the Pomeroy First Baptist Sergeant
support equtpmenl repatrman
f U
he's over lll!re too much, she caDs and demands that he come
Church. ' Friends may call at with the Tactical Air Com"home." And he goes! He says "Have patience." Should I?the funeral home after 10 a.m. mand 's 33rd Tactical Fighter
C.F.
Tuesday.
Wing at Eglin AFB, Fla.
Pear C.:
.
The sergean I, who has
· No! Teil him to do you a favor and stay with the girl who
,served in Southeast Asia, is a
bought him. Takers only "change" when they see another chance
19ii7 graduate of Chester High
NEW HAVEN
An Christ to the area will be to take. -H.
School. His wife is the former
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
enriching, rewarding and chaired by the following:
HOGS - 2()1).230, 26 ; No. I, Gloria F. Miller.
unforgettable experience is in Prayer, Rev. Bernice Winkler;
IN HOLZER
CLASS TO MEET
26.25 ; 23().240, 25.75; 24().250,
store for the people of Meigs Ushering and Finance, Harold
Charles Larkins is a patient
The Loyal Women's Cass of
25.25, 26().280, 24.50; 19().200,
and Mason Counties when the Bumgarnder; Telephone and the Middleport Church of in the Holzer Medical Center.
25.50; 18().!90, 24.60:· Sows Billy Graham Evangelistic Transportation, Rev. Frank Christ will meet at 7:30 p. m. Cards may be sent to him at
300-425, 22.5().23; 43o.:5&gt;0, 24.60SUPPER PLANNED
movies come to this area. Cheesebrew; Rev. Gerald Thursday at the home of Mrs. room 37~.
soup
supper
will
be
held
Movies
as a medium wi~ Sayre and Stella Randolph;
A
25.10. Boars- 19 · 21.60 ;
OsCar Roush.
4
30
Stock Hugs - 22-24.10. Pigs by Wednesday beginning a1 ' p. become alive when five leading Promotion and Publicity, Rev.
m. at the annex of the Racine . films are shown at the New Robert Card and Mrs. Ray
Head - 12.50 to 17.
CA TILE- 482 Head. Choice Wesleyan United Methodist Haven Theatre Sunday, March Fox; Church Sc~ool, Ruth
Steers, 34.90-36.50; Good, 32.3&amp;- Church . The menu will include 19, through March 23, at 7 p.m. Pickens and Wendall Hoover;
When the five great dramatic Evangelism chairman, and
33.60; Choice Heifers, 32..'i(). soup, pie, sandwiches and
33.90; Good Cows, 24.ii0·25.8&gt; ; coffee.
films, "The Restless Ones," Follow Up, Rev. Oris Smith
Utility, 22·23.40; Canners and
"The Hearl Is a Rebel ," and Rev'., Parker Hinzman;
Cutters, 111-19.75; Bulls, 27.1().
" Lucia," "Shadow of The Personal Workers, Rev.
WILL MEET ALLDAY
28.7&gt; ; Heavy Feeders Steers,
SYRACU§E - The Ladies Boomerang," and "His Land" Robert Bumgarner, Rev.
28 .25-32.40 ; Heavy Calves Auxiliary of the Syracuse Fire are shown, a univ.ersal appeal Achsah Miller; Location and
Steers, 35.50·43.&gt;0 ; Heavy Dept. will hold an all day will aid in clearly presenting Facilities, Rev . William
Calves Heifers, 26.&gt;().3&gt;; Cows meeting Tuesday beginning at the claims of Christ to the DeMoss; Nursery, Barbara
and Calves by Head, 237-325. 9:30a. m. at the hea~quarters. en\ire Bend Area and Zerkle ; Concession, LaVera
VEAL CALVES - Choice The group will work on eggs surrounding communities.
Yeager and Louise Radford ;
52.75-» .75; Good 46 .2&gt; ; and Easter basi&lt;• ts in the
Committee chairmen and Evangelism, Rev . Parker
Medium 40. Baby Calves By morning with a business members, in preparation for Hinzman, Rev. Oris Smith and
Head , ~meeting at I p. m. following this great event mel at Rev. Jake Lehman.
LAMBS - 26.2:i-31.
Pomeroy United Methodist
Progress , Evaluation and
potluck dinner at noon.
'
Church Thursday evening. Facilities Committees will
You'll
recognize
Rev . Oris Smith, Long Bottom, ·; meet at New Haven United
this well known
Ohio is general chairman and MethodistChurch, Feb. 24, 7:30
quality brand by
Rev. Parker Hinzman, Mason, p.m.
the "W" on the
W. Va ., is the minister co"But grow in grace, and in
pocket.
ordinator.
the knowledge of our Lord and
An intensive campaign to Savior, Jesus Christ." 2 Peter
Blue denim • .
clearly present the claims of 3:'16.
'
black.
brown,
green , white, light
blue. · navy• wheat .

Us.

••

M-Sgt. Crary

POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drlve·ln Window Is
open t a.m. to 7 p.m., (Continuously).
$21,1101 Maximum Insurance
For Each Depoallor

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

:::t

:::;e

AF Exercises

Anna

Dies Monday

GIV'/1ham Movtes Will
Come to New Haven

Elberfelds In .Pomeroy
Special .Purchase

INGELS FOR THE BEST

CARPET BUYS
Largest Supplr In Stock
In The Big Bend Area

Shop Ingels before
you buy. Buy today,
installed
tomorrow
by Ingels' expert
craftsmen

501 NYLON
.

I

$48stRE
·YARD

Ingels Furniture
H2-2635

• MIDDLEPORT

Garden Club Met

''Little Things that Mean a
Lot" was the program topic
used by Mrs. Hubal Caldwell at
the Wednesday night meeting
of the Rose Garden Club of
Tuppers Plains held at the
home of Mrs. Ina Massar.
Mrs. Caldwell emphasized
the value of following planting
directions, proper selection of
plant materials and suitable
planting sites in relation to
amount of required sunlight.
Special arrangement at the
meeting was a crescent design
uf red carnations using a
valentine angel figurine by
Mrs. Charles Massar. Mrs.
Helen Dorst gave the ~&lt;erse of
the month and · timely gardening lips were presented by
Mrs. Niese! Weatherman .
" ~'aith's Gardt:n " wa. tlie

· devotional reading by Mrs.
Clarence Headley. Members
gave the Lordls p~ayer in
unison. Household hints were
given by the members iri
response 1\) roll call. Several
arrangements at the meeting
carried out the valentine
theme.
Mrs . Rose Carr, vice
prrsident, conducted the
meeting in the absence of the
president,
and
Mrs.
Weatherman was the actil]S
secretary. Mrs. Wea1herm8it
will oo .the. hostess for tHe
March meeting. Th~ traveling
prize donated by Mrs. Vercia
Stout was won by Mrs. Ina
)lh.ssar . Mrs . Weathe_rman
won lhe door prize. Refresh·
ments were served by the
. hostess .

I • ,

\

SIZES 5/6 TO 20
REG. 15.00

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
'(

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENTS

Hosed, Swept Weekly
· Plans to clean .up Pomeroy were made Monday night by
village council.
Mayor W'll!iam Baronick, presiding at the regular meeting in
town hall, said he intends to meet With the street committee to
complete plans to sweep and clean village streets !!II soon as
weather permits.
The mayor said the streets would he hosed down as well as
swept each week.
Councilman Jim Mees reported that employes of the GalliaMelgs Community Action Program will be available to the
village to clean from under the bridge bypass, up West Main, to
the old C&amp;O depot.

E.AS'n!:R- SEAL TELETHON operators who. wlll .be on duty at the Pomeroy Motor ·Com·
pany Wring the 20-hour Telethon March Z-28 are (ront-row; left to right, Renee Burke and Jill
Warner, Southern High School students; Cathy Yates, Meigs High; back row, Coool~ Warner
and Delra West of Southern High School. others not pictured who will be assisting in the
teletbonareSualeSoulsby, Carla Kuhn, Dealt Lutz, Danny Thompson, Mrs. Lucien·Poulin, Eva
Frances, and Bob Sylvester. The theme of this year's national Easter Seal telethon iS "If you
don't h:ave a crippled child, will you help one of.ours." 'lbia ls.the first riatlonal Easter Seal
Teleth.on with Metga County being among the fir~ to participate, The operators Will handle aU
callsandperfonn clerical work during ~e 20 hours telethon,

.
.
G
.
C
. tJJ•Iosity · rowmg
Peki:Rg Crowds
Wann Up Well

To Americans

•

ews•• zn
BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
MOSCOW- THE SOVIET UNION TODAY said Luna 20
safely soft~anded on a rugged lunar mountainside within yards
of where another unmanned Sovl~t moon pr,obe vanished five
months ago. The Tass news agency said the unmanned Luna 20
touched down a.t 10:19R.m. (2:19p.m. EST) Monday on the ex.treme ealllem shli: of the moon lis 'Viewed from eartiY.
Coordinates given by Tass put the landing site in the lofty
Apollonius Mountains and within a quarter-mlle of where Luna 18
vanished during a soft-landing attempt Sept. 11. Tass made no
mention of a moonmoblle or moonscoopeJ: aboard Luna 20,
launclted eight days ago. Western space experts speculated it
might carry a new.version of the Lunokhod 1 robot which lor 10
months explored the lunar sea of rains.

PEKING (UPI)-ln high
Spirits, President Nixon and
Premier Olou En-lal conferred
b.;_, lielrty , _ boura- lllday
While Pelilng'a people lined up
to bay newsP&amp;pers and ·clustered around wall posters
carrying accounts · of their
American guest's activities In
Olina.
The crowds in downtown
department stores, almost as if
by signal, warmed noticeably
to the 300 Americans . who
SAIGON -AU. S. AIR FORCE F4 Phantom jet shot down a
accernpanled Nixon to Peking. Soviet-built MIG21 in a dogfight over Laos Monday and other U.
The atmosphere was much S. jets st!'lJCk five times Into North Vietnam Monday and today,
more friendly, and Chou, 73,
(Cmtlnued on page 10)
the
old
Communist
revolutionary, appeared
relaxed.and less severe in the
company of his capitalist
guest,
Wall posterS carrying ac• .
cOunts of the Nixon meetinge
with Olou and Mao T~g.
78, · . ~.· father ·figure of all
O!ina, drew crowds along the
streets on the second day of
Nllron's eight-day mission to
Otlna. The day was chilly but
·bright until the afternoon
smoke caused by industrial
smoke settled in once again.
After a working session that,
lasted three hours and 50
minutes, White House Press
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler
declined to tell report~rs
IK!ythlng about the substance
of the talk. But his !road smile
left the impression that he felt
TWO MEMBERS OF this clarinet quartet from the
things were going swinuningly.
Meigs High School will be making thelr"fourth consecutive
The President and his wife
appearance at solo and ensemble festivals of the Ohio Music
Pat had time for just a brief
Education AIIOctatlori In Athl!lll Saturday. They are Jo Ellen
diru!er in their guest house in
'
west Peking before retW'lling
to Downtown Peking for a night
at theoperaanda performance
of the revolutionary ballet,
"The Red Detachment of
Women," a Communist
village's struggle .against the
Japanese during the war of the
19308.
Olou Ill at Nixon's side at
the opEl'&amp; boose with an in·
terpreter sitting between the
Nllrollll to explain the action on
The. people of Peking were

Shop weekdays 9: 30 to 5. Open both Friday
and· Saturday 9:30 to 9 p.m.

TUESOAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1972

Chance of snow flurries
norijleaat, partial clearing
west and IC!Uth. Clearing and
colder tonight. Low 5 to 15
north and 10 to 10 lOUth. In·
creasillfl cloudlneu and not
quite as cold Wednesday. High
in the 308.

Pomeroy Mayor, Council
ExpectSueemw be

the stage.

WHILE THEY LAST

enttne

Weather

Clean Up Plans ·Pushed

his'

In Readiness

Yo u can be paying the butcher, the baker.
the land lord, and all the others, all at
the same time ... by paying with CHECKS.
. We'd like to sta rt an account for you.

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

NO. 220

~~

CBE

Oh Yes You Can!

VOL XXIV

•

Devoted To The lnteresll Uf The Meip-MQIOn Area

oi

Women's Jeans

-··

·1;$00' mile-long delenslv.e
fortlllcatioll buDt woUQCI the
4th century B.C. to .keep out
.Huna, Ia considered the
!ll'tltest lidldlng enterprise
.ever undertaken ~Y man. ·

Mao Joins

Market Report

Melvin Douglas

.., \lltlled Preu ..........
111e Great wan ot 011na, •

Helen .Help

.Of Rutland Dies

•

Now You Know

Mr. Whittington

lined up for two blocks at
newsstands waiting to get
copies of the six-page
"Peoples' Daily," which
devoted seftll photographs and
text covering 2~ pages w
Nllron and his meeting with the
top level of Otina's Communist
oHiclalcklm. The paper went on
sale during the second formal
meeting ~ between Chou
and Nixon.
Cboll'a Toist PrtDied
Tite paper printed the text of
Olou's toast at Monday's big
banquet, perhap1 the friend·
!lest speech he ever has
'delivered about America.
Olou's pn11111 aide said he
• (COntinued on page !0)

Mees showed to council a list
of the streets in the village that
do not have street signs. He
also noted that several areas in
town are becoJlling garbage
dumps.
Council agreed, and directed
Pomeroy Chief of Police Jed
Webster to see that the dump
areas are cleaned up. It was
also noted by council that the
signs at the intersection of Nye
Ave. and East Main St. be
takim down and cleaned.
Mees, reporting on the recent
meeting with Meigs COunty
School Board, said the board
advised council that the old
Pomeroy Junior and Senior
HighSchool buildings, in.which
the village is interested in
using as a city building, would
not be available until at least
1973. Mees said it was pointed
out by the board that an in·
crease in student enrollinent is
expected within !lie next three
years of from 1,600 to 2,200
pupils.
Baronick reported that he
will attend a m~etlng Tuesday
·in Marietta on sewage, water,
and construction. of municipal
buildings.
It was announced that the
Meigs County Committee on
Alcoholism will meet Thursday at St. Paul's Lutheran
Church on drug abuse with
John Yates principal speaker.
Two bids for a police cruiser
were read and submitted for
further study. Submitting bids
were Pomeroy Motor Company

in the a moun I of $3,739 minus a
$1,000 trade-in, and R. H.
Rawlings Sons Company, in the
amount of $3,797.90 minus a
trade-in of $1,447.90.
.Council gave Webster permission to purchase no
smoking signs to be placed in
city hall.
Council voted to purchase 100
rebuilt parking meters for the
parking lot wall at a cost of
$12.95 each providing the firm
will
accept . quarterly
payments.
A letter was read from
Syracuse Mayor Herman
. thaI' Mayor
London askmg
Baronick, a committee from
Pomeroy Council, and the
(Continued on page 10) .

':(~:':f.::::::.:::::::::==~=:~=~~;.».=~==~:::::&gt;.-.~»~
TICKETS ON SALE
Admission tickets for both
adults and students for tbe
first round of play of the
Class
AA
Sectional
Baskelbail TournlUilenl at
Symmes Vailey High Sckool
are on sale at the office of
Meigs Hlgb School.
Principal James Diehl
said there Is a chance of a
sellout for the openlug round
on Feb. 25 when Meigs High
plays and therefore no
tickets will be sold at the
door. Tickets for the opening
night will he on sale at $1.25
each at tbe high school office
until Thursday evening.

Diehl and Irene Bamea, from left, who were with groupa who
received the highest grade (superior) aD three previous
years, and Rosemary Rice, and Lynne Baker.

,,

DEMOLAY SWEETHEART -Miss Sherry King, center, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
William King, Middleport Route I, was named District 11 DeMolay Sweetheart Sunday af.
ternoon in Chillicothe. With Miss. King are left, Erin A. Anderson, Chillicothe, Great Seal
Olapter Sweetheart, and right, Becky Mlngua, Athens Chapter Sweetheart. Miss King
;resented a baton routine in the talent segment of the competition. She Is head majorette of the
Meigs High School marching band. Miss Anderson ;resented a dance and Miss Mingus a plano
solo. Miss King, a·senlor at Meigs High School, will take part in state competition next summer. Jolm Purdum of Great Seal Olapter, president of the district association, and Don Dick,
chalnnan of contest arrangements, presided over Sunday's event. Several members of the
Meigs Chapter attended.

Teachers

pose
Action by Board
·

·

Action by the Meigs Local
School District's Board of
Education requesting the
resignation of head band
director, David Bowen, was
"unfair and unethical," ac ~
cording to a resolution
presented to the boacd in
recessed session Monday
night.
Approximately 40 parents
and teachers were at the
meeting held at the junior high
school in Middleport when Mrs.
Rita Slavin, president of the
teachers' association of the
district,
presented
the
resolution to the board on
behalf of the association .
According to rei&gt;orts, Bowen
was advised verbally last
Wednesday by Supt. George
Hargraves that the board of
education had requested his
resignation. The request is
helieved to have derived from
a board of education meeting
held last Monday.
Bowen was present for last

night's recessed session when
Mrs. Slavin presented the
resolution which had been
adopted by the executive
committee of the Meigs Local
Teachers Assn. at a special
meeting earlier yesterday.
The resolution reads :
"Be it resolved that the
Meigs
Local
Teachers
Association Is opposed to the
action of the Meigs Local
Board of Education in their
request for the resignation of
Mr . David Bowen. The
Association considers this
action unfair and unethical for
the following reasons: .
"!. Mr. Bowen was given just
two days . to submit his
resignation.
"2. The Board of Education
did not give Mr. Bowen any
reasons for the request, and did
not offer Mr. Bowen the chance
to answer any charges that
might have I?een made against
him.
"3. The request was made

Council on Aging
To be Organized
Sunday at Heath

Chou, Nixon Swap

A Meigs County Council on
Aging is expected to be
organized at a meeting to be
held at 2 p.m. Sunday at
Middleport 's Heath United
Methodist Church.
Senior citizens, civic leaders,
businessmen and other interested residents are invited
to attend Sunday's session
which combines two separate
endeavors to form senior
citizens groups in Meigs
County. Federal 'funds to
provide programs for senior
citizens are available to
counties which have official
committees.
The Meigs County effort will ·
be teamed with that in Vinton,
Jackson, and Gallia Counties
and Sunday it is expected that
three delegates will be named
to the district council on aging,
THIS BRASS sextet from . to be made up of residents of
the Meigs High School In·
the ' four counties. The Rev . '
struntenlal music depart- . Robert R. Card and the Rev.
A record number of in- working afier school this week and Jenny Chapman, flute trio; ment will be one of II of the
Arthur Lund have been active
strumental music groups from rehearsing with their in- Sharon Bing, Carol Lewis, school's entries In the Ohio
in attempts to organize a
the Meigs High School will be structors David Bowen and Vicky Clelland, and Debbie · Music Education Association
council
on aging in Meigs
in Athens Saturday where they Lewis Shields preparing for ~iddy, clarinet quartet; Jo Solo and Ensemble Festival
will participate In the Ohio their Saturday appearances. Ellen Diehl, Rosemary Rice, In Athens Saturday, ~rom County.
Music Education Association
Making up the groups are : Lynne Baker and Irene Bar· the left are Connie Grueser,
JAYCEES TO MEET
Solo and Ensemble Festival at
Barbara Fultz, Babs Witte nes, clarinet quartet; Edith Connie Radford, Fred Jones,
The
Meigs County Jaycees
Ohio University .
and Joy Hayes, flute trio; Mees, Julia Hutct.ison, Terry Nathan Robinette, Melanie
wiii meet a t 8 tonight at
Participating students tire Becky Wright, Donna Francis, ' (Continued ~n page 10)
Burt 'and Melanie Harkett. · Pomeroy village hall .
'I

10 Combos In Competition

just a week before the participation of some sb.ldents in
the contest at Ohio University
and only three weeks before
the band participates In the
district band contest. This
could definitely have a
demoralizing effect on the
students involved in the tontest.
"4. Mr. Bowen's contract Is
not up until June, 1972, and new
contracts will not be offered
until the last of March, 1972.
There is a question as to the
ethics involved in asking for a
resignation this early.
"5. Mr. Bowen has not been
incompetent in his posi!ion. He
has performed his duties under
many
hardships
and
regulations over which he had
no control.
"6. Only in one instance
during the past football season
was Mr. Bowen given any
indication by the administration that the marching
!Continued on page 10)

Pandas, Musk Ox
PEKING (UP! ) - Premier
Chou En-lai is trading
President Nixon two giant
black and white pandas lor two
San Francisro musk oxen.
Pat Nixon disclosed · that
Chou offered the two pandas
during a banquet in the Nixon's
honor Monday night at
Peking's Great Hall of the
People.
"You've given us oxen. We'll
load up the plane with pandas,"· she quoted Chou as
saying.
Three U. S. zoos , in
Washington, D. C., Detroit and
St. Louis, already have bid for
the native Asian pandas.
At present there are only two
pandas In captivity outside
China - a female named "Chi·

Chi" in London and a male
called "An-An" in Moscow.
In 1966, Chi-Chi was sent to
Moscow for a three-month
rendezvous with An-An. The
most passionate moment between the two came when Chi·
Chi gave An·An a sound slap on
the jaw.
· Officials said both now are
too old to mate.
The President contacted the
San Francisco Zoo before his
trip to Peking to clear the musk
oxen for a swap. Musk oxen,
native of the North American
Arctic regions, are huge,
shaggy beasts with long curled
b.lsks - and an over-whelming
musky smeil.

I
TAKEN TO HOLZER
The Middleport E·R unit
answered a call for Mrs.
Martha Searles at her home on
Route 7 belol'( Hobson at 1:18 .
p.m. M~nday. Mrs. Searles,
suffering head pains , was
taken to the Holzer Medical
Center.

HURT BY TREE
The Pomeroy E·R squad was
called to LangsviUe at 2:11
p.m. Monday for Clayton Smith
who suffered a back injury
when struck by a limb from a
tree. He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was reported in satisfactory
condition.

'

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