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                  <text>8 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mat:eh 19, 1973

Andrews giving up GOP post
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Republican State Chairman
John S. Andrews, 53, who ,has
headed the Ohio GOP party
sinct~.1965, is resigning to enter
private business.
Although Andrews had not
Intended to announce his
resignation until a news conference was held here today,
his resignation was made
known Sunday after Andrews
wrote letters to GOP state
conunlttee memhers.
Andrews said he had set no
retirement date and would stay
on the job "until a smooth and
orderly 1ransitioo could be achieved." He called for a state
GOP conunittee meeting April
5 to elect his successor. ·
"A splendid business opportunity has been offered me and
in deference to my age, 54 in
April, and my family responsi- '
bilities, I have decided to retire
as chairman at this time,"
Andrews wrote in his letter.
"Further, I want my successor
to have as much time as
possible to prepare for the vital
1974 elections."
Some political observors
viewed Andrews' resignation
as victory for Sen. Robert
Taft, R.Qhio, who reportedly
has been at odds with Andrews,
allhough both- Taft and Andrews have publicly denied
such opposition.
Taft defeated former Gov.

James A. Rhodes in Ohio's u.s.
senatorial primary election in
1970. Andrews supported
Rhodes" who has announced he .
wlll se~ tn becOme the GOP
gubernatorial candidate in
__
1974.
Taft is a Republican state
committee member and some
observors now feel a Taft-BUpporter will he boosted to replace Andrews.
Taft refused to spec"¥!te on
wbo Andrews' successor might
be, saying that decision was
''up tn the central committee."
"I'm sure we will aU work
tngether to try to have as effective and undisruptive a
transfer ~s we possibly can
work out," Taft said Sunday. ·
"I'm sure we will be able ID get
tngether and select a new
chairman who will pick up the
reins where John will leave
them."
Taft said be had "no prior

101
"Old you ever notice that

people who like to do what
they have to do always do II
be11er? ~' ..7

OJr " FRIENDLY ONES"
like
to
serve · our

customers, that's why our
service Is so friendly. fast
and efficient. TRY US YOU'LL LIKE US!

knowledge" of Anjjrews' declsion to retire .
"I had at times ~ed ~
Mrs. Andrews about hiS possl·
ble interest of getting mto indus1ry," he said. "I think all
his !~lends knew that he might
consider such a job eventually.
"Being state chairman isn't
a very good job in some ways,
in the puint of view of pay and
point of view ~I retirement and
so forth, and I can WJderstand
WhY he might make such a decision," Taft said.
Four PosslbWtles
Toledo attorney Robert Rowley, h~d of the Lucas County
Republican Party, suggested
four persons as ~~~ly candidates for Andrews JOb.
Rowley named Kent McGough of Lima; Bob Hughes,
the GOP Cuyahoga County
chairman of President Nixon's
re-election campaign, and Earl
Barnes, chairman of the Ham-

Mills·predicting
Phase III to fail
WASHINGTON (UP!) fuip. Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark.,
believes the administration
will have to replace its Phase
lli economic program with the
tougher con1rols of a Phase IV
if inflation is to be controlled.
Mills, the Influential chairman
or the House Ways and Means
Committee, said Sunday he
was "not satisfied" with Phase
III, which relies largely on
volWJtary wage
price
guidelines.
The Arkansas Democrat said
he was worried not only about
food prices but about prices in
other areas.
"I can see areas of products
sold in department stores
where there may be as much as
a 25 per cent increase over last
fall, " Mills said.
"I think we are going tO have
another phase program called,
I guess,·Phase IV that will be
more effective than Phase m
has so far proven to be. I am
not satisfied with the product."
Mills was interviewed on
NBC's "Meet the Press."
The Senate scheduled consideration today of a bill that
would extend lor one year
President Nixon's authority to
impose wage and price con1rols. The authority, included
in the Economic Stabilization
Act, expires April 30.
Critics of Nixon's Phase Ill
policies planned to offer tough
anti•inflation amendments.
Senate Democratic leader
Mike Mansfield predicted
many amendments would be
Introduced, most of them
seeking tighter con1rols than
exist under Phase III. Phase I

imposed a freeze on wages and
prices, while Phase II placed
strict controls on all increases.
One amendment was drafted
by Sen. George S. McGovern,
IJ.S.D. It would require the
President to control the prices
of any firm which benefits
from wage con1rols, and it
would aUow only price increases which reflect a net
increase in the cost of
production.
McGovern contends the
strict controls Wlder Phase I
and n "resulted In stagnant
real income for working people
and expanding profits for

business."

Market Report
. SALESREPORT
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Gallipolis, Ohio
.Saturday, March 17,1973
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 37.50
ID 38.35; 220 to 250 lbs, 38 to
39.25; Light 33 to 37 ; Fat Sows
29 to 33.75; Stags 28 Down ;
Boars 28 to 31; Pigs 20 to 32.50;
Shoats 27.50 to 37.50.
CATTLE - Steers 40 to
47.50; Heifers 38 to 47; Baby
Beef 49 to &amp;1 .50; Fat Cows 28 to
3S; Canners 38to 36.75; Bulls 3S
ID 42.50; Milk Cows 225 to 550.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 70.10
to 74; Seconds 65to 70; Medium
58.50 to 65; Com. &amp; Hvs. 55 to
70; Culls 50 down.
BABY CALVES - 40 to 100.
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Cattle : Choice Steers, 45.9046.80; Good 41 to 44.30.
Heivers - Choice Heifers

. : . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , . 43.50 to 46 ; Go&lt;1 40 to 42.85.
•
Cows - Good 37 to 40.20;
Utility 29.85 to 34; Canners and
Cutters 24.50 to 27.
Bulls - Commercial 40 to
44.60.
Stockers and Feeders Steer Calves 42 to 65; Heiler
Calves 38.50 to 60; Yearlings
40.50 to 48.50.
Veal Calves - Choice &amp;I to
69; Good 58.50 ID 61.50.
Hogs - 200-230, 38.85; No. I,
39.10; 230-240, 38.60; Sows 29.25
Get hardboiled about your
to 35.60; Bars 31.60. ·

Feather
your own
.nestfirst
nel!lteg~ .

Av oid d ist r action s
auch a s sure-fire, money-making scbemes and once-In-nlifetime opportunities.
Out of every week's pay , the
ftrst thing to do is make a deposit in a wide-awake bank
savings account. Because the
wide-awake bank hu s a fiscal
Illness pl a n you cnn t&lt;ount on .
So, in the fu ture, yo1,1 can
really enjoy yourself when
you take a ftyer .

'

BENTON DIES
NEW YORK (UP!)
Former Sen. William Benton,
D-Conn., who in his long career
had been a salesman, a
copywriter, a publisher and an
official In the Truman adminis1ration, died here Sunday. He was 72.
REVIVAL UNDERWAY
There is a revival underway
at 7:30 each evening through
Friday of this week at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ.

7/ze wide-01/IOke
savi11gs OCCOIII/f

I

OAPSE TO MEET
RACINE - The Southern
Local School District Chapter
of OAPSE will meet at 8
Tuesday evening at the
Syracuse Elementary School.
Election of officers will be held
and an oyster soup supper
served .

makes ttc:::;:.-.._::;
all so enS).\

•
6

Farmers Bank &amp;

Co.

POMEROY I OHIO
Member of Federa l Reserve System
On ·Fridays Our Drive -In Window is Open 9 a.m. to! p.m.
{Continuously) .
1

S20,'Goo Maximum In surance for Each Depositor

~ow

I

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
March 19-20
S DOLLARSS
&lt;Technlcolorl
rren Beatty , Goldie
IH•own . Gerl Forbe, Robert
IWi!bbE,., Scott Brady.
t R)
Colorcarfoons .
Show starts at 7 p.m.

ilion County GOP organization.
Andrews, In his reslgmtion
letter, said he made his decision with "mixed emotions."
"Republican politics has
been both my advocation and
vocation for 18 stimulating and
rewarding years at the county,
state and national level, although I hl!ve always intended
eventually to return to private
indus1ry," he said.
Andrews, born in Cincinnati,
was reared in Toledo and graduated In 11140 from the UniversitY of Toledo. After. serving In
the U. S. Army Air Corps during World War IT, he became
director of public relations for
Owens-Corning Fiberglass
Corp. in Toledo.
!Jr 1950 Andrews served as
northwest Ohio field representative lor the political campaign of the late Sen. Robert A.
Taft, Sr. Andrews was named
full time executive director of
the Lucas County Republican
Party in 1954 and became state
GOP chairman In 1965.

Sioux vow
to die on

m~ .. wx~bJ
t=::-=·-.c~&lt;«~=~
.
ood died on Sundav•
Garnett Frlley · :.: '. ..............~ ... "" \ Guy E. Kerw
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
·
·
· ters Mrs Eva BaM 'and
Fair
wllb
a
warming
WESTCOLUMBIA-GuyE.
died on Sunday trend. Highs In lbe upper 301 (Jimmy) Kerwood; 75, Wes~. Mrs. Beatrice Pickens; both of
SIS

Garnett E. Friley, 62; of 1716
Chester Road, Pomeroy, died
SWJday at the' Holier Medical
Center. Mrs. Friley was
preceded in de~th by her
parents , Jesse and Laura
Crump Eads ; a son, Kenneth
Grover, and two brothers, John
and Clifford Eads.
Amember of the Middleport
Pentecostal Church, Mrs.
Friley is survived by her .
husband, Charles E; Friley,
Sr., Pomeroy; three children,
Doris Swanson, Middleport;
Dottie Clll'tis, Racine; Helena
Riggs, Rutland; Paul Grover,
New Lexington ; Thomas
Morre, Johnny Morre, both of
Columbus; a stepson, Richard
Thomas Friley, Pomeroy ; a
stepdaughter, Kathryn YoWlg,
Akron; two brothers, James
Eads, Langsville, and Charles
Eads, Rutland ; two sisters,
Polly Lytle, North Carolina,
and Susie Taylor, Point
Pleasant; 19 grandchildren,
and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p. m. Wednesday at the
Ewing FWJeral Home with the
Rev . William Knittel officiating . Burial will be in the
Lone Oak Cemetery, Point
Pleasant. Friends may call at
the IWJeral home anytime.

I

reservation

Harry McGuffin

and 40s •Wedne•day and
upper 4es and .50s Friday.
Lows iD the upper 20s and

•

,

Columbia died SUnday mor- ColumblUll, and Mrs. ~na
ning at
Pleasant' Valley ' Lavery, Delaware,~ ;
Hospital where. he was taken . brother Norman K
•
by the Mason emergency Columbus; 17 g r : = ·· ·
squad. He was dead on arrival. and four greal-ir
·
Mr. Kerwood was retired
F\JIIeral services will be held
miner who.was born Feb. 21, at 2:30 .p.m. Tuesday ·at the
1898 the son of the late William Foglesong Funeral Home with
and' Lavena Elliott Kerwood. the Rev. LinsOn Stebbins~
Sur vi vlng are his · wife, Gallipol~ officiating·. B
Christina· Johnson Kerwood; ! will be m Graham Cemetery.
five daughters, Mrs. Gloria Friends may call at the funeral
Carpenter; Point Pleasant; home any time.
Mrs. Elmira Kaylor, Letart,
W. Va.; . Mrs. Leta Bland,
Clifton ; Mrs. Emogene Duncan, Washington, W. Va ., and
CLUB TO MEET
Mrs. Dixie Sines, Mason; three.
The
.Winding Trail Garden
sons, James, · Mt. Vernon,
Ohio; Jack, of Henderson, and Club will meet Wednesday at
William, Point Pleasant; three 7:30p.m. at the Meigs Inn.

s.

a

:::~:::::~:::~,:~::,":::'-::~!!!8W.1.&lt;::W.~W.:&lt;1&amp;r:8

Donald Manley
died Saturday

.

Donald Robert Manley, 54,
Middleport, died Saturday at
the Veterans Adminis1ration
Hospitalin Huntington, W.Va.,
following a lingering iUness.
Mr. Manley was horn on Jan.
29, 1919, in Meigs County, the
son of the late Riley S. and
Eleazady L. Frazier Manley.
Besides ·his parents, he was
also preceded in death by a
son, Ronald.
Mr. Manley was a veteran of
World War II, a member of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, in Middleport, and Chapter 53,
Disabled American Veterans
in Pomeroy .
Surviving are his wile,
Kathleen Hawley Manley; two
daughters, Mrs. Arthur
(Donna Jean) Hood, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Richara (Pamela Kay)
Roush, Middleport; a son,
Kenneth R. Manley of Chicago,
Ill.; a sister, Mrs. Clifford
(Neva) Bolyard, in Oklahoma,
and lour grandchildren.
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. Thestlay at the Silver RWl
Baptist Church with the Rev.
0 . H. Cart officiating. Burial
will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends
may call at the Rawlings-Coats
· Funeral Home any time until
12:30 p.m. Tuesday when .the
body will be taken to the
church.

New~.

•·• in

Subsidies

'

(Continued

'

Veterans .Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Leverett Roush, Middleport;
Carolyn Thompson, Racine ;
Allen Sayre, Mason ; George
Cummins, Racine ; Bernice
Dalton, Albany; Earl Phelps ,
Mason; Mary Bowman ,
Tuppers Plains and Paul
Hender~on , Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- David Reeves, Raymond
Hudson, Helen Bartels,
Charles Perry, Vonda Williams
and Harold Gibbs.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Tina Birchfield, Mason; Trina
Farrell, Syracuse ; Maria

Waldnig, Racine ; Judy
Musser, Pomeroy; Harley
Slack, Pomeroy; Kathryn
Laudermilt, Middleport;
Richard Gibbs, Middleport;
Mary Jane Smith, Pomeroy;
Ada Vickers, Pomeroy, and
Ava Gilkey, Harrisonville.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Blaine Taylor, Bernice Dalton,
Kathy Whitlatch, Leverett
Roush, John Hunnell and
Kenneth Barnett.

.

'

VOLXXIV N0."236

PO.~E~OY- MIDDLEPORJ,

·'l o

OH_IO

,:JU~SDAY,

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
Shop Weekdays 9:30 to 5 p.m.
Open Both Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 9 p.m.

The Performance Proven

LAWN·Bov·
with

SOLID·STATE
IGNITION .
Lawn-Boy introducod Solid State Ignition in '72. Raports indl·
cata Lawn-Boy Solid State Ignition has proven virtually 100%
free of starting problems. Tune-ups are virtually eliminlted. In
'73 Lawn-Boy teams 'solid State Ignition with exclusive features
thoughtfully engineered for safer mowing! New, unique safety
shield! Naw, unique safetv.contour and barl

'

STOP IN ...
LOOK AT THE
LAWN-BOY
LINE . ..

Choose

18"

19"
21"
Models
Now. At Elberfelds Methanic Street Wnhouse
\

Elberfelds in Pomeroy

south. Wednesday partly
. cloudy and . litUe change In
.temperature~ Highs in the 40s.

'

.

MARCH 20, 1973

'· PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

Snag hinted in Hanoi on last PO

rrom page Il

Pleasant VaUey Hospital
Disch~rges: Ebner Allen,
Manchester, 0. ; Mrs. George
Fisher , Gallipolis; Mrs.
Thurman Oiler, VInton; Addie
Cross, Langsville; Fulton
Spears, Henderson; Robert
Chattin, West Columbia; Mrs.
Lynn Bonecutter, Woodrow
Kapp, Enunett Grady and
samuel Holiday, all Point
Pleasant.

of ram
·
tonight. Lows in the
upper )Oa north to mid 301J,

en tine

a1

Bri~fs

hope.
dminis
"I doubt that we can pass a farm bill over a
1ration criticism unless we get some understanding from big .
city people," Poage said. He added, however, he was
"hopeful" about rounding up urban support in the House.
Poage said there have been some exhibitions of "solid
support" from consumers groups m recent House.votes on
spending cutbacks for rural programs. If that kind of
support continues, he said, it may be ·possible to push a
lam bill through the House dl!llpite administration opposition.

~~~hance
so~ly

DeVoted To The lntere8tl Of'l'heMeigi-MOMin ~rea

repudiation" of the current system of stabillzlng lam
prices and income, said prospects for extendmg
present programs were uncertain - but he saw one ray of

HOSPITAL NEWS

'

,.,1

(Continued from page 1)
:.
WASHINGTON -EMPLOYES In the Pentagon have stolen .
20 000 cafeteria plllce settings In jus! nine months -almost ooe ..
Jailie, fork and spoon for each person In the building, Pentagon ·
officials said today.
·
The Pentagon,ln its own language, distributed a circular last ·
week describing the problem:
'The continual removal of tableware, glassware and plastic
1rays from the Pentagon cafeterias ·and the failure to return
same has created inventory shortages which materailly affeCt
the concessionaire's abillly to operate during the service
periods," the circular said.

died on ·Monday

Miners can
study up for
Foreman job

•

Today, the first day ·of
spring, day and night each will
•be 12 h,ours long.
·

the

30

WOUNDED KNEE, S. D.
(UP!) - Leaders of the
American Indian Movement
present
their ~ " final
Harry M. McGuffin,. 48,
ultimatum" to government Railroad St., Middleport, died
olllcials today in yet another at his home early today. The
negotiating session aimed at Middleport emergency squad
ending fue siege of this historic • answered a call to the home at
hamlet.
2:26 a. m. However, Mr .
The Indian ultimatum comes McGuffin was dead upon the
amidst growing combativeness squad's urrival.
among Indiana occupying this
Born Dec. 16, 1924 at Point
historic hamlet, the scene of Pleasant, he was the son of the
the last clash betwe~n the U. S. late Fred and Mary Whaley
Cavalry and the Indians in 1890 McGuffin. He was also
in which between 200 and 300 preceded in death by twin
Indians died.
brothers and another brother,
A three-point government Paul.
plan to end the occupation of
Mr. McGuffin was a member
Wounded Knee met with booing of Heath United Methodist
from militant Indians as it was Church, Middleport, and of
read SWlday.
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM.
"It is clear that we are He was a machinist by trade,
surrounded and will probably employed by the Kaiser
be massacred, but if we do Aluminum Co. He was also
we'll go down lighting," said known for his work as a ring
Rocky Madrid, 26, San Luis, diver the past several years.
Colo ., an AIM supporter
Surviving are his wife,
wounded during an exchange Dorothy Ashley McGuffin; two
of gunfire between Indians and sons, Harry, Jr.. of Moundsgovernment forces Saturday ville, and Steven Lee , at
night. Madrid was carried on a home; a daughter, Debbie, at
stretcher to a meeting at the home; three sisters, Mrs. Nola
trading post where the Surbee, Flora Park , Long
government offer was read to Island, N. Y.: Mrs. George
about 20&lt;1'indian partisans.
(Florence) Giles, Alexandria,
AIM .Leader Russell Means va., and Mrs. Helen Blagg,
decried the government Springfield, Va.
·
proposal as a request for "total
FWleral services will be held
capitulation "
without at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
guarantee that arrested In- Rawlings-Coats FWleral Home
dians could be freed on bail. with the Rev. Raullin Moyer
"Our only recourse - the officiating. Burial will be in
only strength we have left- is Gravel Hill Cemetery at
our treaty rights," Means said. Cheshire. Friends may call at ·
today's "final ultimatwn" by the funeral home on Tuesday
the AIM leaders was 1D he from 3:30 to 9 p. m. and on
based on the 1868 Fort Laramie Wednesday until time of serTreaty, which confiscated vices.
most of the Sioux lands in the
Plains and required the Sioux
.to move to reservations, such
as Pine Ridge, on which
Wounded Knee is located.
The government proposal,
worked out in high level
meetings in Washington, called Southern Ohio Coal Co. will
for the occupiers of WoWJded conduct a class at No. I Meigs
Knee to lay down their Mine site to prepare exweapons and surrender perienced miners with five or
peacefully to arrest. It also more years underground
provided for meetings between mining experience to take the
Interior Department officials State of Ohio, Division of
and AIM leaders to be held at Mines , first class mine
Sioux Falls, followed by the foreman test. Classes will
arrest of the leaders and the begin Monday, March 26, and
most of the militants at will continue through June I,
Wounded Knee. Many Indians 1973.
vowed to remain and die rather
To enable men working shifts
than submit to arrest.
to attend, classes are
scheduled three times daily at
to 10:30 a.m.; 1:30 to 3:30
Weekend mishaps 8:30
p.m., and 4:30 to 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Thursday, and
Friday lor men who have never
were minor kind
been certified as mine
foremen
.
Classes
are
Pomeroy police investigated
two accidents on the weekend. scheduled at 8:30 to 10:30 a.m.
At 8:36p.m. Saturday on East and 1:30 to 3:30p.m. Monday
Main St., a car driven by and Wednesday lor men cerClaude Reitmlre, 31, Pomeroy, tified in other states. ·
Interested persons should
struck the rear of a car .driven
by Mrs . Ruth Ebersbach , contact John McGraw,
Pomeroy. Medium damage Southern Ohio Coal Company
was reported to both cars, and personnel office, Rutland,
Reitmire was cited to mayor's Ohio; or phone 74Ulll 8 a.m.
court on an assured clear to 4:30 p.m. by Thursday;
distance charge. Both vehicles March 22, 1973.
were f\J"aveling west. There
were no injuries.
,
VD INCREASES
At 3:30 p. m. SUnday on the
upPer parking lot, a car driven NEW YORK (UPf)
by James Parsons, 21, Venereal disease cases in the
Rutland, struck the parked United States have hit recilrd
vehicle of Otis McClintock of levels, with the highest rates in
Racine. Damages were minor. · Atlapta and Washington, D. C.,
There was no arrest and no according to the Amedcan
injuries .
Social Health Association.

•

'

Y4iuKnow

Art, essays
on display
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Cultural Arts night was en~oyed at the Middleport PTA meeting Monday evening when hundreds of pupils' entries were exhibited on walls of
the auditorium for easy viewing by parents and
children who came to receive ribbon awards for
their work.
Judging was completed Monday afternoon and
ribbons were placed on winning entries just prior to
the meeting. Mrs. William Sprague and Mrs. Ralph
Pratt, teachers in the Meigs Local Schools, judged
the essays and poetry, while Mrs. Margaret Ella
Lewis, art instructor at Meigs High School, judged
the visual arts.
· ·
The blue ribbon wfnners will be placed in county
competihion on April5 at the Bradbury School. First
place winners in each category in the divisions of
elementary, intermediate and junior high will then
be taken to Chesapeake for display at the District 16
spring conference. The county winners will not go
into competition there, but will be put into state
competition at the Ohio P. T.A. convention in the fall .

BLUE RIBBON WINNERS in the Cultural Arts Contest
pictured here holding their winning entries are, left to right,
Lynn Kloes, a third grader, fingerpaintlng; Angela Baker,
fourth grader, a collage; David Meadows, third grader, a
walercolor; Mindy Long, fourth grader, a sandpaper
drawing in miniature; and Jennifer Meadows, a first grader,
a collage.

Ohio queens ·may visit regatta
A request to invite Ohio
Festival Queens to the annual
Big Bend Regatta was made by
Leanne Sebo, 1972 Big Bend
Regatta Queen, of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce at the
Meigs Inn Monday following
luncheon .
IV(iss Sebo, a freshman at
Ohio University, said that as
the 1972 Regatta Qeen she. had
attended severai "Festivals in
Ohio and thought it would be a
"nice gesture" by the chamber
to invite other Ohio Queens to
the Meigs Regatta in June.
Miss sebo plans to attend the
Maple Festival at Chardon on
April 27. She will invite queens
there to Regatta Weekend

Mrs . Richard Vaughan,
YA'LL COME, NOW
culll!ral arts chairman, an- first; Zanda Vaughan, second;
A meeting for all innounced the winners at tile and Chris Burdette, th1rd.
terested
persons wlll be held
PTA meeting as follows:
'I Crayon drawings : Jimmy
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at
.
KINDERGARTEN
Farley, first, Chris Burdette,
Crayon drawings : Mrs. Beth second, and Joh~ Aiker, third. · the Community Hall , In
Letart Falls. RepresenLong, first; Stephen Crow,
Water Color : Melvm
tatives from the Social
second.
Mullens, first; Rodney Clonch,
Security
Division and the
Finger Painting : Lori second.
Meigs County Council on
Stewart,
first ;
Wayne
Finger Painting : John
Aging
will be present.
Shrimplin, second, and Jackie Powell, Gerte Terry, Dan
Refreshments will be serWalker, third.
Kuhn.
ved.
FIRST GRADE
Collage: Jenny Meadows,
(Continued on page 5)
Essay: Jennifer Meadows.

·Juveniles are
returned to
Meigs County
Two Franklin County 16-year
old youths who picked a lock at
the Meigs CoWlty jail to escape
from an upstairs ceil, Friday
night were apprehended in
Point Pleasant by pollee there
Monday afternoon.
The Department of Sheriff
Robert Hartenbach returned
the two youths to the Meigs jail
where they are lieing held for
Franklm CoWJty autharlties.
Point Patrobnan Jim Ashcroft apprehended the pair
loitering around . the bus
station. The youths were taken
· by agreement with Meigs
County to the West Virginia
entrance to the Pomeroy Bend
bridge, released, and directed
to walk to Ohio where Meigs
officers received them.

SAIGON (UPI) - The Viet added that ''we have a fixed b'oops In Vietnam must also
Cong pledged today to free all date .with the Americans" but (eave the coUntry by March 28.
U.S. war prisoners it holds by did not disclose it.
So far, 439 'America" JX"isonSunday, but a North VetMost of the Americans held ers have been released. All
namese official dampened by the Nortb Vietnamese are were freed In Hanoi except an
hopes
that
remaining 852 ainnen shot down during initial 27 released by the Viet
American prisoners held In the intense raids over the Cong at Loc Ninh, 75 miles
Hanoi aiso will go free by then. North last Dec. 18-30, Tin said. north of Saigon.
Lt. Nguyen Sinh, a Viet Cong
He said the U.S. POWswould
The Viet Cong official who
official with the Joint MWtary be released from Hanoi's Gia made today's announcement
Commission, said today the Lam Airport and added thai said it must still be decided by
Viet Cong will release all "as far as I know" 107 the JMC whether the 30
remaining U.S. POWs by Americans are still imprisoned Americans .will be freed In
&amp;mday-or 72 hours ahead of In the North VIetnamese North or South Vietnam.
the deadline set by•the Paris capital.
In a related development, a
cease-fire agreement.
The VietCong announcement JMC souree said today the
The release by Sunday of 30 came one day after the U.S. Conununists have rebuffed a
Al1terlcan prisoners still held delegation to the JMC, the U.S. attempt to bring the North
by the Viet Cong would leave · organization that arranges all Vietnamese and Viet Cong Into
107 U.S. servicemen in Hanoi POW releases, proposed ad- the search for persons missing
captivity and 10 known held in vancing the date for the last in Laos.
Laos.
scheduled
freeing
of
He said the issue was
In the three previous release Americans from next Wed- brought up at the JMC but that
operations, U.S. captives held nesday to Sunday. The the respoose from the Hanoi
by the Viet Cong were either proposal was based on an delegates "was that it had no
freed the same day or a day or earlier South Vietnamese authority to discuss POWs
two after those released by disclosure ~ confirmed by the reported by the Pathet Lao
North Vietnam.
Viet Cong official today-that (Laotian Conununlsts)."
However, Lt. Col. Bui Ttn; the Vietnamese POW exchange Proposal Not Yet Answered
spokesman lor the North will finish by then.
The source also said a U.S.
Vietnamese delegation to the
A Sunday release would proposal for all four JMC
JMC, told UPI today only that come three days ahead of the parties to set up searches for
the release of U.S. POWs held March 28 deadline for com- persons still missing or for
in Hanoi ;'will take place by the pletion of all POW exchanges bodies of known dead
termination date" set in the stipulated by the Jan. 27 Paris elsewhere in Indochina has not
Paris accords- March 28. Tin agreement. All remaining U.S. yet been answered. But he

here.
Dennis
Keney,
vice
president, and Carolyn
Thomas, secretary, presided in
the absence ol Jack Kerr,
president.
Mrs. Thomas had sevetal
requests for appearances at
the Regatta . One was from an
aerial circus ol Pittsburgh,
another from a Polka band of
Springfield, and a third from a

couple in Toledo interested in
entering the Regatta art show.
Bill Grueser and Jack
Carsey, c~hairman of this
year's Regatta, said details for
this year's program have not
been completed. Committee
will meet soon, and the
requests presented by Mrs.
Thomas will be answered as
soon as the programs are
outlined.
Mrs. Thomas suggested that
Auto skidded off "Welcome" baqners be purchased and placed throughout
County Road 26
the ·town during Regatta
weekend. The banners are
Sheriff Robert C. Harthree
feet by five feet and cost
lenbach's Dept. invesligaled a
single car accident Monday at
8:30 ·p.m. at the intersection of
County Roads 20 and 26 in
Bedford Township.
Laurence Schirtzinger, 35,
WOUNDED KNEE, S.D.
Westerville, traveling west on (UP!) - Leaders of the
Road 26 came to the in- American Indian Movement
lerseclion of Road 20, applied (AIM) lormaUy requested a
his brakes, skidded in gravel recall of their tribal chief
over an embankment. Schirt- Monday, a major dev.elopment
zinger had apparent injuries that could help resolve the
but was not immediately three-week armed occupation
treated.
of this tiny hamlet on the
There was medium damage sprawling Pine Ridge Indian
to the car. No citation was reservation.
issued.
One of two chief stumbling
blocks to the settlement has
been the demand by the AIM
that Dick Wilson, tribal chairman, and most of the other
elected officials on the
reservation be ousted.
AIM leaders issued their

$4.75 each. Chamber members
agreed that the banners would
add to the festivity.
Mrs. Thomas thanked the
chamber lor its support of the
recent appearance of Stan
Kenton. Kenton's appearance
was sponsored by the Meigs
Band Boosters. Mrs. Thomas
disclosed the boosters lost
approximately $400.
Chamber members were
asked to attend a citizens'
meeting today at Athens City
Building, Athens, at 7:30p.m.
to discuss action plans
detailing the organization to be
utilized and the processes to be ,

followed in the development of
Federal-Aid highway projects.
Bill Grueser reported on the
recent annual Gallipolis area
Chamber of Commerce
meeting held at Rio Grande
College. Wendell Hoover also
attended the meeting. An
account of the meeting was
published in this newspaper on
Friday; March 16.
C. E. Blakeslee said a
hearing in regard to subdivision regulations will be
held at the Meigs County
Courthouse Thursday at 9 a.m.
and asked all members who
(Continued on page 10)

Chief to stand at election

Implanted stimulator
keeps Dick Karr going .

"final ultimatum" Monday structured setup."
Wilson said If the signatures
after rejecting ·the government's 'final offer." Along are valld, an election could be
with the ultimatum, AIM held within the next 45 days. He
submitted a petition asking for left no doubts that he expected
a recaU election to onst Wilson to run agarn for tribal chairand establish a new system of man-and win.
Horace Webb, a Justice
1ribal gove~nment .
Department spokesman, said
The petition was accom- · the government had received
panied by 1,445 signatures, the Indian's latest proposal but
more than enough to Ioree an had "no comment." He said
the Indian petition deall with
election if all are valid.
''This is the legal structure one of two major problems
that we had set up for them to involved in reaching a setuse," said Wilson, who did not Uement. The otber problem,
protest the petition. "This is according to Webb, is how to
what they should have been deal with the Indians ocusing all the tlnne, the legally cupying the settlement.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Meigs CoWJty Conunissioner
Charles R. (Dick) Karr, Sr.,

has Jived the last two years implanted in the chest and
only through a complicated neck to stimulate two nerves on
heart opera lion at University either side of the neck.
Hospital in Columbus where an
When the carotid sinus
angistat carotid sinus nerve nerves are stimulated, a signal
stimulator was placed in his to the brain slows body funcbody.
lions and relieves heart pains,
Few Meigs County residents or angina pectoris.
who see Karr in his normally
An angina attack is cause~
active daily routines probably when arteries feeding oxygen
realize t)le in1ricate system of and nutrients to the heart
wiring which is attached inside thicken and become narrow
.and outside his body. Clothing inside. Mr. Karr had only one
covers the external wiring.
artery functioning when the
Karr and his wife, Leona, heart operation was percredit the operation with formed. When the heart's
keeping him alive the past two oxygen demand ·became
years. Karr was a palient at grealer than its supply, chest
University HosP,ital when there palo resulted.
seemed no way to save his life.
Elec1rlcal stimulation of the
" about by
However, a doctnr suggested neck nerves brought
the implanlation · of the the stimulator, which is ·not a
stimulator and Mr. and Mrs . . pacemaker, decreases the
Karr accepted it as a last blood 'pressure by reducing
resort. Dr. R. R. Pickens, the peripheral vascular resistance
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
couple's local physician, throughout the bndy, slowing
·Fair with moderating
DICK KARR .
arranged all of the details. . th~ heart rate, and reducing
temperature• Thursday and
Few re•ldeota probably Performing the surgery was the heart's pumping force , This
Frtdly followed by rain on
realize that Cbarleo R.
Dr. Charles Meckstroth.
roid~ces lhe heart'~ work and
Sa&amp;urday. HIJbS in lbe upper
(Dick) Karr, Meiss County
Mr. Karr was one of t)le first therefore itS need for oxygen.
481 to low 50s and iD lbe 5GB
comml1sl~ner, Is one· ,of the foui to undergo the operation
'I'll• ~celver and electrodes
Friday ~nd Sai\Jrday. LOws
few persons wh'o lives -this was ih June, 1911 - and · hhplanted in Karr's neck and
Ia tile. apper 211 and low 3h
througb an angl1tat carotid . only two of the fOur survived. ch_est are activated by an
early 1bmdly warJDiq to
sinus nerve stlmulaior Since then, the surgery has electrical transmitter and the
lbe low tel early Sa&amp;urday. · · Implanted at University become more common .
· antenna worn on the oulslde.
· H01pltal iD Columbas two
During the operation The antenna is fastened to the
:meuUJ :::m m: years aco.
receivers ~rtd electrodes were
· (6lnlinued .on-page 10)

· ~

\

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]j,
,,

'

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Gray
denies
pullout
WASHINGTON (UPI) - L.
Patrick Gray III has denied
through a spokesman that he
intends to withdraw his name
from Senate consideration as
the replacement for the late
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover.
"We have no intention of
quitting or asking that the
nomination be withdrawn," Ute
acting FBI director's executive
secretary, David Kenley, said
Monday. "We are in to stay."
Gray faced · inor~ · hostile
questioning today from the
Senate Judiciary Committee,
which is considering President
Nixon 's nomination of the
former Navy submarine offleer as permanent director of
the federal government's chief
investigative agency. Gray has
served as acting director since
Hoover's death last year.
Consideration
of
the
nomination has brought a
confrontation between the
Senate and Nixon over the
President's refusal to allow
White House aides to testify
before the committee.
The light has centered
aroWJd the FBI's handling of
the Investigation into last
year 's Watergate political
espionage case, which linked
participants in the burglary
and wiretapping of Democratic
National Headquarters to
members of the White House
stall.
On Monday, two senators,
BirGh Bayh, D-In d., and Lowell
P. Weicker, R-Conn., said they
were refused access to the
documents which Gray
originally Qflered to aU Senate
members to prove the FBI's
Watergate probe was complete
and free of White House interference.

,;-....;_ ~··

'· ••

Lukens sees

GOP change

\

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This complicated wiring and equipment, some inside and some outside his body has kept
Dick Karr alive the. pas! two
years.
.
.

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added the issue was on the
agenda for dlsclisslon later this
week by JMC chiefs.
In continuing post-truce
lighting, Saigon threatened
Monday to disregard the truce
and Counterattack unless the
Conununists Wt the siege of a
government base north of
Saigon. A Viet Cong officer
said if Saigon took offensive
action, it would react with
force.
A Saigon conunand spokesman said fighting at
beleaglJred Ton Le Chan base
50 miles north of the capital
threatened to erupt into a
major battle. He said the
Conununlsts hit the bilse with
more than 200 rounds of artillery, mortar ·and rocket fire
Monday.
The South Vietnam (X)IIl·
mand also reported 144
Communist cease-fire
violations during the 24 hours
ending at 6 a.m. today.

CINCINNATI (UPI) - State
Sen. Donald E. Lukens, RMiddletown, said Monday the
resignation by John Andrews
as state Rep~bllcan Chairman
may signal the beginning of
"The road back for the
Republicans In Ohio."
Lukens, at a news conference
, here, said Andrews was a "fine ·
technician" but said he had
"become a symbol of Jamet
Rhodes' COI&gt;trol" of the Ohio
GOP.
He also said major
Republican political candidates and office holders
should be contacted before the
choice of a new chairman is
made.
"Then the new chairman
could say, 'I assume I'm acceptable for you'," Lukens
said. "It may be the road hack
for the Republicans In Ohio."

�•

fDtrORIAL

BRUCE BIOSSAf

Helen Help

Democracy?

Us.

Saigon Kicks Out
Critical Reporters

By Helen Bottel

••

'Made in U.S.A.'
No Lure Nowadays
'

By RALPH NOVAK
QUESTIONNAIRE FOR PARENTS
OF TEENAGERS
AB announced last week, we have complied over 30questions
about situations most likely to di.starb, puzzle, challenge, defeat
or cheer present-day parents.
Because the survey IS not controlled (anyone can enter, and
WE HOPE YOU DO' ), we can't predict whether results will be
loaded toward the liberal or conservative, frightened or con·
fldent side, but we believe we should get a fairly representative
sampling. That depends on you readers' No matter how you view
parenthood, you can help yourselves - and us - by partiCipating
An analysiS of findings will appear m summer columns It
could prove startling as well as educational
FOR PARENTS ONLY
Age of Parents - , - - Sex of parents answermg questions -. (Both parents may answer together - or separately, by
sending for duplicate set of questiOns )
Is yours a two-parent home' Do both parents work
outside the home? - . Average yearly Income - - Do you
bve in: Suburbs - - ; City-- . Rural - Ages of children: Boys - - ; --;-~; Girls
-;--

Answer uYes" or uNo":
1 Do you have good give-and-take conununication With your
chUdren' -~
2 If you had 11 to do over agam, would you raise your
chUdrendifferently' - - II so, would you be Less strict?-·• More strict' - 3 Without showmg you are uptight, even if you suspect your
child IS personally mvolved, can you talk to hu:n (her) easily
about
Sex• - - ; Bu:th control' - - VD' -~.
Homosexuality' - - , Petting' - - ; Drug abuse' - - ,
Leaving home' - - ; InterraCial dating' - - .
4. Do you think your child wants to discuss these thmgs with
you' - S Do you want your daughter to remam a vlrgm untU she
marries • -~- How about your son' - - Do you think she
will' - - Do you think HE will' - - Were YOU a vu-gm
when you married' - 6 Have your attitudes on premarital sex changed m the last
ten ~ears? - - . Explam briefly how and why they have
changed

7 Do you think the majority of young people today are
sexually experienced before they reach age 211' Your estimated
percentage of non-virgins' - 8. Do you think your teenaged chUdren are virgins' - 9 Do you believe in the double standard' - - .
10 Do you condone long barr on boys' - - On your own

son?--.
1. Do you judge your children's friends by the way they dress

and wear their hair' - - .
12. Do you think religion has more influence on today's young
people than It had 25 years ago' - 13. Do you worry when your children act or react differently
than you did as a teenager' - - .
.,..,. 14. Do you love your5po1111e' - - Do your children know
.JO.!' love each other' - - Do you sho!._ ~~ti&lt;!_n lor ,"l!~~_!!th~r
'in-front of your clilldren' - 15. If one of your children moved out to Uve With a "steady,"
would you remain on friendly terms With them both' 16 Could you rationally discuss such an allan: with your
child' - - If your child seemed concerned, could you discuss
with him an affair YOU hare havmg' - 17. Do you think your child would tell you If he (she) contracted VD' --.Had an abortion' - - - Was raped' - 18. Would you feel disgraced if your daughter got pregnant'

--.

-

19. II your daughter's girl friend had an abortion would you
insist she break off then: friendship' - - .
211. II you discovered your child's friend had used drugs but
was trying to quit, would you mslst he (she) break off thmr
relationship' - 21. Have any of your unmarried daughters been pregnant' -.Had an abortion' - - Kept baby' - - Gave baby out
for adoption' - 22 Do you think marijuana should be legalized' - - If
not, then should penalties for possession and private use be
reduced (if no sales are made)'-- Have you e,ver tried
mariJuana' - - .
23 Are you in favor of lowermg the drinking age ro 18
nationally' - 24 Do you allow your teenagers moderate amounts of
alcoholic beverages In the home' - 25 (Check one or more): II you discovered illegal drugs m
your child's room, would you.
(a) Turn him or her over to the police '
(b) Seekhelpfromacounselor' (or drug-help house )'
(c) Try to work 11 out yourselves'
(d) Throw the stuff away and say nothing'
(e) Try 11 with your child (if It were pot or pills) In order to
understand why he uses It'
26. (Check one or more) II you strongly suspected your
teenaged daughter was having sex with her boy friend, and you
knew you couldn't change her attitude, would you
(a) Send her to your family doctor for The Pill or other brrth
control device - alter determlmng that she needed a contraceptive'
(b) Refer her to the Planned Parenthood Center m your
town'
(c) Ground h~•lndelmitely or send her away "until she came

to her senses"?
(d) Ignore the situstion'
(e) Feel relieved that you can now talk to her on an equal
"woman to woman" basis'
11. Do you think petting Is an acceptable substitute for
premarital mtercourse among teenagers? (Do NOT confuse
petting with "necking ") - -, '
28. What worries you most about ralsmg children' (Number
in order of u:nportance)
(a) The New Morality'
(b) RebelliOn agamst authority '
(c) Non-commumcatlon'
(d) Drugs'
•
(e) Fighting (among family members or With parents) •
(f) Disagreements With spouse on chUd raising'
,
('g) School problems'
•.
(\!) Other'
29 What PLEASES you most about raising teenagers?
30 Do you and your spouse (a) discuss moral and ethical
values with your children and listen to theu- views, or (b) do you
"lay down the law"' (Circle one) (Honest now)
31. Lookll1tl back to your teen days, would you desCTibe
yoursell as a ''wild kid"--. "good kid" - - , or "model
chUd" - 32 Would you v.antyourchUd to have a marriage like yours '

It 1s grat1fymg to see how well we accomplished our
stated goal of mamtam1ng a South VIetnamese government that respects freedom and honesty
The latest gesture of our erstwhile peace-and-Jusllce
lovmg allies I$ a crackdown on Amencan JOUrnalists who
have had the audacity to wpte uncomphmentary thm gs
about the Saigon government
The South VIetnamese have not yet lived up to their
threat to shoot American reporters who try to mterv1ew
North VIetnamese and VIet Cong representatives to the
Jomt Military CommiSSIOn But they have shown that they
have all the tools to carry out the threato hypersensitivity
to cnticism, brazen diSregard for the nght of people their own people as well as foreigners - to know the
truth about what Is happenmg m South VIetnam, a wiilmgness to bully the undefended and, of course , loads of
very effiCient Amencan weapons
~
Among the concrete acllons so far h've been the expellmg of Umted Press International bureau chief Donald
Davis and National Broadcastmg Company correspondent
Ron Nessen, plus a pack of thmly veiled threats to get
revenge agamst reporters from the Los Angeles Times,
New Yo1 k Times and Agence France-Presse
What these JOurnalists are accused of Is somethmg
South VIetnamese government spokesmen call "un-VIelnamese actiVIties " Smce those spokesmen never defme
Just exactly what an un-VIetnamese activity Is, they are
m the happy position of being able to apply the epithet
to any acllv1ty they don't hke, which most de!Imtely
mcludes American reporters revealmg how shoddy , unrepresenlallve and ulllmately corrupt their government
really IS
The theory went that the Umted States was m VIetnam
w make sure the VIetnamese people were able to have
a government that was, m Its respect for Its citizens and
responsiveness to their needs, as close as possible to our
admittedly Imperfect model
Instead, what we see IS a government that seems
msecure to the pomt of paranma m the face of this very
same "peace With honor" that our own government finds
so bhssful It IS a government that reacts to news stones
about Its tortunng pohllcal pnsoners or violating the
cease-fire not by d1sprovmg the stones or expla.nmg them
but by deceit and attacks on those who report the stones
Perhaps It Is true that Amencan JOurnalists m South
VIetnam at this pomt m history are meddling But 11
would seem that even though the Umted States has m01e
or less divorced Itself from the day-to-day life of South
VIetnam, we still retam certam VISitmg privileges
For howeve~ spunous our arguments were when we
talked about f1 ghtmg the war to save South VIetnam , we
have m a real sense committed our reputatiOn to the
Saigon government Part of the commitment mvolves
only our moral reputation which m the cosmic scheme
of mternatwnal politics IS probably not too Important But
another part mvolves our reputallon for bemg able to
discern who IS worthy of our support which forc es we
should, from a pracllcal standpomt, want on our side
Who the "wmners" and losers" are
And as we watch the shameful behaviOr of "our" people
m South VIetnam , we can hope that they are gomg
through some sort of cultural growmg pams Otherwise
we have wasted- most unforgivably wasted-our reputa
twn our money our hme, our hves

- - (Honest now )

+++
Send your completed questionnarre (signed or unsigned) to
Helen and Sue Hottel, GENERATION RAP, care of this newspaper
' II you want elltta ciJPII!s for youml~nds or'&lt;lth~t lnt!fflb~til 01
the faiDlly, please send us stamped, seU-11ddressed LONG envelope, md1cating the number of copies wanted- HELEN AND

By BRUCE BlpSSAT

WIN AT BRIDGE

Wrong Response Is Disaster
20

• 12
• A 73 2
+K Q 4

•AQ8G
WEST

EAST

¥QJ9

¥54

tA108G3

tJ97

,fol07

,foK 5 4 3

• A96

" If you are pure and up
nght, surely then he Will
South 1 ouse himself for you and
It
Pw
2NT reward you w1th a nghtful
habltatwn And though your
Pass
3t
Pass
'
begtnnmg was small, your
You South, hold
.KJ3 ¥KJ3 tKIOH .K96 latter days wtll be very
great -Job 8 6, 7.
The btddmg has been
Wesl
North East

:h~.:o ~;:. d:o~:~,

No

lead can hurt you and you want

heart call was cru:nmal oo try for mne tricks rather
South should have let North than for 11
play and make one no-trump
TOD'AY'S QUESTION
Why make a second bid Wllh Your partner contmues to
hiS balanced piece of JUnk' four no-trump Whal do you do
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN &gt;

Both vulnerable

I•

East South
Pass I•

4¥

Pass

tNT

Pass 2.

Pass
Openmg lead-·10

It's sprmg-deaning time at the television networks.
Few night-time changes are planned this late in the season,
but daytime 1VI8m fora new look. (This is very, vecy important
for the poor networks, because they make enormoua profits fmn
weekday soa~peras and qwz shows - and also from Saturday
morning kids' fare.)
At any rate, CBS, womed about a ratings droop, is goll1g to
kiss off "Where the Heart Is" (but the money isn't preswnably)
and "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing" (~ut not a profitable
one) Also due for the ax Is Vm Scully's afternoon talk show.
Replacing them m a blazing burst of unorlginailty, are two new
game shows, "The $10,1)00 Pyranud" and "Hollywood's Talking"
(which sounds suspiciously like "Hollywood Squares"), and yet
another soaper, "The Young and ResUess."

•1 I

now ?

.

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
South lost no hme gomg
down two tncks at his lourheart contract He let East's
king wm the club lead East
returned the three of spades
and South hopped up with his
kmg After that start the defen se had no trouble collecting three more tncks
South was even quicker to
blame his partner for the
debacle " Couldn't you have
Jet me play at two hearts' "
he asked " Smce when do
you rebid a m 1n 1m u m
hand'"
North said nothmg but did
tell us later on that he felt
that he almost deserved a
medal for not punchmg
South m the nose
We don 't ap~rove of mayhem at the bndee table but
certamly North was entitled
to some redress from South
North had a good 15 high
card pomts with lou ~ hearts
and a doubleton spade
South's two-heart rebid Improved North's hand a lot
and while he might have
merely bid three hearts we
can't really fault hiS Jump
to game As a matter of mterest, if you trade East's
king of clubs for West's 10 or
seven, South could actually
have made four hearts
South should h ave re·
sponded one heart, not one
spade That would have allowed North to raise to two
hearts and South would have
passed
The one spRde response
was an error but the two

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Television·Log

Rchslr lO 29 12 72 225 258
Prov 28 28 14 70 231 233
Sprgfld 18 341 16 52 249 312
N.H.
16 3.5 20 52 240 305
West
w 1 t pis gf ga
Clntl so i7 · s ' 1os. 323 19S
Hrsh 341 22 11 83 289 212
Y 31 21 16 1a 228 205
Rchmd 27 32 10 64 235 246
Jcksnvl 23 -10 9 55 244 304
Batt
14 44 11 3'1 1s1 297
Mondoy's RtSulls
Nova Scotia a Jacksonville 1
(Only game scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
Nova Scotia at l!altlmore
Tidewater at Boston
(Only games scheduled)

Buurma named Ohio's topAA player
COLUMBUS- (UPI)
Towering Mike Buurma, who
led Willard High School to a
season of "firsts," today was
namect the Class AA basketball
player of the year m balloting
conducted by United Press
International.
Buurma, who led his team to
an 1~ regular season record,
heads up the 1973 UPI Class AA
all.Ohio team, which averages
more than 6-foot-0 per man
Besides the 6-10 Buurma on'
the first team are 6-foot Dave
Smith of Claymont, last season's player of the year but
second to Buurma in the voting
this year, 6-0 Dan Hipsher of
Fostor111, 6-10 Mike Phillips of
Manchester, and 6-7 J1m Wood

va.

WHA Standings
By United Press lnlernoiionat
Eost
w. t. t. pts gf ga
New Eng 42 26 2 86 288 232
Cleve
J8 30 2 79 261 224
NY
33 39 2 68 289 312
Phil a
33 39 0 66 262 293
Ottawa 31 37 4 66 253 281
Quebec 29 37 5 63 248 285
West
w I. t. pts gf ga
Tueiday's Games
Wlnlpg 41 29 3 85 26S 233
Los Angeles at Atlanta
Los Ang 35 33 6 76 250 238
Buffalo at KC Omaha
Houston 36 32 4 76 261 241
Philadelphia at Clevelilnd
M1nn
35 33 3 73 232 243
Portland at Chicago
Alberta 34 35 2 70 246 237
Seattle at Golden State
Chicago 26 43 2 54 237 271
Houston vs Boston
Monday's Results
AI Providence
)j-lf!
Los Ang s Cleveland 5, ot
(Only games scheduled)
Houston s Philadelphia 1
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Bob
!Only games scheduled I
AHL Standongs
Haas, whose Willard High
Tuesday's Games
By United Press tnternationel
School
basketball team won
Los
Angeles
at
New
England
East
Minnesota
at
Alberta
many honors thiS season but
'
w. I. t pts gf ga
N.S
40 15 15 95 289 173 Cleveland at Quebec
not the one he wanted most,
Bostn 31 25 13 75 2341 233 !Only games scheduled I

Him Up 33
7 00 ~ What s My Line 8, Truth or Conseq 3 News B 10, Un
tamed World 13 , SoCiety 15 Eleclrrc Co 20. Beat The Clock

of Steubenville Catholic.
Buurma, who averaged 24
pomts pet game for the
Flashes of Bob Haas, paced
them to their first undefeated
season, their first appearance
in the top 10 ranked teams, and
the most victories in one
season- 18
"Mike isn't the big strong
center some colleges are lookmg lor," Haas said. "He 'II play
forward m college, But he can
shoot II."
Aokle !Djury
Smith, who bounced back
With another fine year despite
physical problems, scored at a
27.S per game clip for the
Mustangs. He injured an ankle
priOr to the district seiDI-finals

11 30 - Johnny Carson 3. 4. 15 Dick Cavel16, i3, Movres 'The
Old Man &amp; the Sea" s "Take Me to Town" 10
1 00 - Your Health 4 News 13
t
News 4

WEDNESDAY, MARCH21,1973
00 - Sunrise Semrnar 4, Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmtlme 10. English 3
6 20 - Farm Report 13
6 25- Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers B Urban League
Presents 10, The Story 13
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
6 55 - Take Five For L1fe 15
7 00 - Today3, 4, 15. News6,8 10, Filn1stones 13
7 30- Romper Room 6, Sleepy Jeffers 8 Rocky &amp; Builwmkle
13, Popeye 10
B00 - Capt Kangaroo 8, 10 New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame St 33,
6

Lassie 6

8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13, Romper Rooms. New Zoo Revue 6,
Loca I News 13
9 00 - Paul Drxon 4, Phil Oonahue 15, AM 3, Mr Roberts 6.
Capt. KangarooS. Friendly Junction 10 , Ben Casey 13
9 30- To Tell The Truth3, Jeopardy 6, HazelS
9 55 - Chuck Wh1le Reports 10
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4, Columbus Six Calling
6, Joker's Wild 8, 10 Dick Van Dyke 13
10 30 - Concentration 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4, Price Is Right 8, 10,
Split Second 13
11 00 - Saleolthe Century 3, 15 Love American Slyle6, Gambit
S, 10, Password 13. Elec Co 20
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, IS, Bewitched 6. 13. love of Life
8, 10. Sesame St 20
12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's SO SO Club 4, Local News 10,
13 , Contact s, Password 6
12 55 - NBC News 3, 15
1 00 - News, Weather, Sports 3, All My Children 6, 13, Green
Acres 10, French Chef 33, Secret Storm 8, Not For Women
Only 15
1 30- 3 On A Match 3, 4. 15 As The World Turns s. 10, Let's
Make A Deal 6, t3
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13 , Mike
Douglass 6, Guiding Lights. 10
2 30 - Dating Game 13; Edge of Nights, 10, Doctors 3, 4. ls
3 00 - Another World 3, 4, 15 General Hospltal6, 13, Ohio This
Week 20 Merv Griffin 8, Secret Storm 10
4 00 - Mister Cartoon 3, Somerset 15, Fllntstones 6, love
American Style 13 , Merv Griffin 4. Sesame St 33, Movie "No
Room for the Groom" 10
•1
4 30 - Dick Van Dyke 15, PeHicoot Junction 3, ABC AI
terschool Theatre 6, 13, Gllll~n 's Island a
le 13, Marshall Dillon 15,
5 00 - Elec Co 33, Gomer
Hodgepodge lodge 20 , I Love ucy 6, Beverly Hillbillies a
6 00- Nei'IS, Weather, Sports 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 , Truth or Conseq 6,
Sesame St 20, Around the Bend 33
6 30- Truth or Conseq 3, Beat the Clock 4. News 6, 10, What's
My Lines. Anything You Can Do 13, Elec Co 20, Know Your
Schools 33, Mayor's Report 15
_
7 30 - Episode Action 33 , The Judge 10, Lassie 15, Beat the
Clock 13, Pollee Surgeon 3, Billy Graham Crusade 6, Earthkeeping 20, Hal !the George Kirby Comedy Houri
8 00 - Paul Lynde6, 13; Adam 1215, Paul Lynde 6, 13, Sonny &amp;
Cher 8, 10, America '73 20, 33. Billy Graham Crusades '
8 30 - Banacek 3, 4,15, Movle"Toma" 6, 13
9 00 - Medlcol Centers, 10, Eye to Eye20, 33
9 30 - Turning Points 20. 33.
10 00 - Search 3, 4, 15, Conn011a. 10, C&gt;.ven Marsholl6, 13; News
20, Billy Graham Crusade 15
11·00- News3, 4, 6,8,10,13,15.
1
11 lO- Jol1nny Carson 3, 4, 15; Did Cavell 6, 13; Movie " The
Black Scorpion" 8; "Once More, My Darling" 10.
1 00 - News 4, 13

.
'

tbe Panthers to an

1~

record
against a schedule which included 10 AAA opponents
Wood, the other first team
member, led Sleubenvllle
Catholic to a 17-1 regular
season mark.
He averaged 211 points and IS
rebounds, hitting 63 per cent of
his shots from the floor and 73
per cent from the free throw
Une In two games against
cross-town nval Steubenville
Big Red, Wood had 53 points
and 29 reboulids as the Cru·
saders won twice over the Big
Red m one season for the first
time in hisolry.
Second Team
Boyd Breece of Rittman heads up the second

last year's C9hlmbus Ready
team which won the state
championship. Jones, 5-11,
averaged 20 3per 8llllle for tbe
Silver Knights this aeason.
Jolnl:ng Jones on lbe third
team were Dale Creaser ~
Patrick Henry, Riclt White of
Albany Alexander, Ken Hurst
of South Pomt, Stan McCoy of
I.Dveland and Mike Oyer of
Waverly McCoy and Oyer tied
lor the final third team post.
Creager, 6-3, averaged 211.8
per game during the season,
White, 11-4, averaged 24, Hurst,
6-2, hit for 23.3, Oyer, 6-3, 14 8,
and McCoy, a superb
playmaker for unbeaten Loveland, 13 I.

team with hu 34 pOints
per game average The
6-0 semor, whose low for the
year was 19 points, scored 622
while shooting 54 per cent from
the floor.
Other second team members
are Huron's 6-0 Lou Wargo,
who averaged 24.9 per game m
leading his team to an 1~
season, 6-7 Joe Stalma, a 16-1
scorer and rugged rebounder
lor Rossford, Don Boop, 6-3,
who averaged 25.21or Orrville,
and 5-10 Ouis Wnght of Meadowbrook, who burned the nets
late m the season and wound up
with a 30 S average
Named to the third team
were Jimmy Jones, only a
junior, although he starred for

Willard's Haas AA Coach-of-the Year
today was named the United
Press International Class AA
coach of the year
"You're absolutely right,"
Haas said when 11 was mentioned to hu:n that the big one
slipped away with the Flashes •
44-11 section loss to Lexington
"The one award aU high
school coaches want IS the one
you get when they hand out the
plaque m Columbus," he added
Despite his team's loss,
Haas, an OhiO State graduate
In his second year at Willard,IS
sold on the town and the
school's fubu:e
Fifth and Sll[th grades from
his feeder program play at
halftime of the reserve and

varsity high school games.
high schools, both m Clark
"We're looking for motiva- County, before coming to
tion," Haas sa1d m explaining Willard, IS a native of Bucyrus.
the halftime games. "I'm real HIS first Willard team posted a
high on Willard basketball for 14-6 mark
the next lew years."
"An honor like this wouldn't
Willard was led by 6-10 be forthco1Illll8 without 11 deplayer of the year Mike Buur- dicated kids and my dedicated
ma, who averaged 24 points per asSIStant, Jerry Stackhouse,"
gsme, but Haas said his squad he said.
was composed of "11 very
Haas, who loses three
dedicated kids "
starters from this year's team,
"Carried Us Through"
believes the Flashes will be
Even without the 6-10 Buur- "better than a lot of people
ma, Haas foresaw "m the think" next season, pomting
range of 12 to IS" v1ctorles for out Stackhouse's reserve team
his team, but admitted "Mike fmished with a 15-&gt;1 record.
carried us through the tough
Haas edged out former coach
ones"
of the year wimer Carroll
Hass, 32, who coached at Hawhee of Waverly, 13-12, m
Northeastern and Southeastern the votmg by 89 coaches,

sportscasters and sportswriters. Steubenvllle
Catholic's Jone Nese fmished
thu:d with 10 votes as 28 dif·
ferent coaches received at
least one vote
Others with more than two
votes were Pat Penn of Columbus Ready, Dough Lattimer of
Albany Ale111nder, Bernie Conley of Manchester, Jess Hagy
of Huron, Bob Guinta of Elyria
Catholic, Red Rigel of Barnesville, Steve Kick of Patrick
Henry, Ju:n Osborne of Galli·
polls, Rex Parker of Wyommg,
Charlie Harker of Loveland,
Joe Stalma of Rossford, John
Harmon of Claymont and Jerry
Fisher of T1pp City.

The best way to calabnlt
sprrns start oemetbllll pwill
-like flowers In your prden.
And start something solnJ, too
-with your AM Club's unoqut
motorist servrces
On v~tlons, you have tiM
fun and we take care of troubltsome details
Drive confidently around town
, . we provide the protectlonErnerrency Road Service, Ptr·
sonal Travel Accodlnt Insurance
and more.
Join your local AM Club today.

1972-73 'AA' All-Ohio Team
Dan J
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The Warren JFK,
1973 Unrted Press lnterna11onal Grothouse, Delphos St John's
Jom Hough, Spnngboro, Ron
Class AA All -Ohio Basketball
Team wllh he rgh1. grade and Hammye Genoa , larry Hall ,
Barnesvtlle Rufus Johnson,
scortng average
Orrville , Terry
Kittle.
FIRST TEAM

Harnson , Ted Lemmon, West
Muskrngum , Robin Long,
Bellefontaine , Tom McGinnis.
Ashtabula St Jo11n , Harley
Majors, Leav1ttsburg LaBrae,
Mark Males1ck, Mingo, Carl

Mtke Buurma, Wtllard , 6 10,

Sr , 24 D, Dave Smrth,
Claymont. 6 0, Sr , 27 5. Dan
Htpsher,

TEAM HONORED - 'l1le Sallabury baaketball squad was honored Saturday night with a
illnquet and presented a team trophy and Individual trophies. The team won the httle
"Marauder" basketbaD tourney Front row,l-r, Brian King, Steve Ohlinger, Brian Teaford,
Mike Smith, Billy Browning, and Dave Kennedy; back row, Chuck Kenne::ty, Don Icenhower,
Bob Seeling, Dave Blake, Frank Haggy ,Ed Nottingham, and Gary Basham..{'lQilQh of the team
was Keith Vanlnwagen. The banquet was held at the Salisbury School.

Fostoria, 6 6, Sr,

21 o, M1ke Phillips, Man
chester, 6 10, Jr , 33 0 J1m
Wood Steubenville Catholic, 6
7 Sr 21 0
.1&lt;
SECOND TEAM
Boyd Breece, Ritman, 6 6,
.Sr, 34 !}, LOU War~o1 Huron, 6
• ·5 ' SF . . 2·f.'i; Joe Slalma,
Rosslord, 6 7, Sr 16 1, Don
Boop Orrvrlle, 6 3, Sr , 25 2,
Chm Wnghl. Meadowbrook, 5
10, Sr 30 5
THIRD TEAM

Baseball managers elected

4

7 30 - Th•s Is Your Llfe3 Price Is Right a 10. Beat The Clock
13, RFD 20 Great Decisoons '73 33 Crrcus 4. B•lly Graham
We ought not to look back
Crusade 6 . People &amp; The Press IS
unless It IS to derive useful
-~h1o Thos Week 20 , Tempera1ures Rising 6, i3 , Book
lessons from past errors, 8 00Beat33
Maude8, 10. Movie• The Pollee Story" 3, 4 15
and for the purpose of 8 30 - Hawa11 F1ve 0 8, 10 Bill Moyer's Journal 20 33 Movie
profltmg by dear-bought ex' Beg, Borrow
Or Steal'' 6, 13
perience -George Washmg- 9 00 ~ Behmd the Lmes 20, 33
9 30 ~ Black Journal20, 33 , Movie ·Murdock's Gang' s, Tony
top
BenneH In Walk•kl10
10 00 - News 20, B1ography 33 Marcus Welby M D 6, 13 .
Amerrca 3, 4, Bolly Graham Crusade 15

at Steubenville and sat out
while hi$ team was eUmlnated.
Hipsher, a third team choice
last year as a junior, broke
most of his school's records
thiS season'while averaging 211
points and 211 rebounds per
game. Like Smith, Buurma
and Wood, Hipsher is being
sought by most of the big
schools m the country this
year.
Phillips, at 6-10, 240 pounds,
IS the only junior on the firSt
team, but already has the
college scouts slrea1Illll8 to his
door.
A starter smce his freshman
year, Phillips averaged 32 7
pomts and 24 rebounds per
game the past season, leading

Devils' Oshome Considered

20, Around the Bend 33

6 30- News 3, 4 6 8, 10, 15 I Dream of Jeann ine 1J Grow1ng

11 00 - News3, 4,8, 10, 13,15

BY JACK O'BRIAN
MONEY IS RELATIVE
TO A ROCKEFEIJ..ER
NEW YORK (KFS)- John D Rockefeller
on WOR's Martha Dean Show !ell into the Look
Who's Talkin' file: " The trouble with
Amencans today Is ·everyone's mterested m
makmg money. People are too materialistic" ..
Vmcent Sardi, Jr., owner of BdWY.'S premier
theatrical hangout, will be a grandpop m July,
courtesy daughter Tabalba . The Yale Bowl
where the football Giants transfer from obsolescent Yankee Stadium seats almost 20,1100
more. Moola, Moola ... Michel Kazan calls the
new Peterson-Kekich Yankee haU team wife·
switch "Yankee Pankee" .. Folk whiner Joan
Baez has such delicate taste : after several
married years she made the tender public
announcement she'd been a lesbUlll before __
Called 11 one of her ''most beauUiul alfmrs" __
Somehow we can't he convmced by her anti·
administration snarls tha_t she knows as much
about family life or geopolitics as Pres. NIXon,
even if he doesn't have a hit record .. Actor
David Doyle who plays the Irish papa m TV's
"Bridget Loves Bernie" can't be faulted for not
understanding religious Intermarriage: Dave's
an Irish Catholic, and he said at Weston's his
wife Anita's Jewish
Restaurateur Jerry Brody (The Rau:nbow
Room, Rambow Grill, Raffles, Gallagher's etc )
mtroduced his new partner, Eivind Urbyes, at
Raffles Elvind's the owner of The Rainbow m
Oslo, largest m Norway, seats 600. Features
continuous dancing and variety shows (many
American acts); It was patterned after the
Hambow Room atop Radio City . And the
Rainbow Room stlll Is the most beautiful
nightclub In the world
We met Bishop P1o or Samoa last year when
}le VISited N. Y. City on behall of The Foundation For the Peoples of the South Pactfic,
which deals with the plight of cruelly poor
Polynesians on South Sea ISles .. . Betty
Silverstein, wife of Maurice, retired president of
MGM International, lrought him to us along
With Mrs Mary Croudace -the genlle,literate,
digmlied original of what became the fictional

NBA Stondongs
By United Preos tnter..tlanal
Easlem_ Canltrence
Atloniic Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
' •-Boston
61 14 S13 New York
'fl 23 713 6'h
Buffalo
21 54 .280 40
Philadelphia 9 69 .115 53'h
Central Division
w. l pel. g.b.
Baltimore
49 27 645
Atlanta
,(l 33 .566 6
Cleveland
29 46 .3a7 191h
Houston
29 47 .382 20
Wastern Conference
Midwest Dovis1on
w. I. pet. 9.b.
Milwaukee
55 22 714 Chicago
49 28 6341 6
Detroft
35 42 455 21
KC Omaha
35 44 443 21
Pacific Division
w. t. pet. g.b
•-Los Angeles 56 20 737
GoldenSiate 45 31 592 11
Phoenix
34 43 442 22 1h
Seattle
26 51 33S 30112
Portland
19 58 247 371J,
x-Ctinchtd division title
Monday's Results
KC Omaha 106 Portland lOS
Milwaukee 11S Detroll99
(Only games scheduled)

TUESDAY, MARCH 20,1973

' '

rowdy Bloody Mary of "South Pacific" In the
book,onBdWY andm the mOVIes; yes, she runs
a hotel and bar on the lsland of Upolu In Western
Samoa, but the reflection stopped far short of
the true lady in question . And we were much
pleased when Pope Paul bestowed on Bishop
Pio the grandest tltie in hla power: he Is now
Cardinal Taofinu'u.
Burton Browne, boss of the Gaslight Clubs
told us he turned down an offer from Con·
solidated Edison to change the name of his
uproar dens to "Electric Light." llecause
Browne's place still Is cookmg with gas _ Leave
It to Mel Brooks to hoke up some wild names In
his "Black Bart" movie for Warner's. Harvey
Korman plays a character named Hedley
Lamarr ... Hedy's not quite m Ecstasy about it
. Quo Vadls spent $50,1100 refurbishing, and the
great gourmet spot looks just tbe same to us rich and tasteful as before.
Art gallery millionaire V1ctor Hanuner had
a stroke. He's off to Palm Beach shortly to
recuperate .. The Russian car (the Lada) will
make !Is Yankee debut at the Int'l Auto Show at
the Coliseum April 7. The Russkis were famous
for never even being able to make a Ford Model·
T and for lately getting Fiat to build cars and
trucks In Russia for them ... They've spent too
much on bombs and moon-missiles ever to have
kept up with the Fords and Agnellls . Ford
turned them down lor a truCk plant a bit back,
remember'
Mlckl Grlmt, who won a Grwnmy lor
writing "Don't Blame Me, I Can't Cope," just
got a double nomination for the BdWY. stage
Tonys .. . Dan DaUey geta his billing as "Mr
Dan Dailey" on Mitzi Gaynor's Mar. 28 TV
special A bit much. It all but ruined Paul Munl
when they tried thus to hyper-dignify that
protean actor ... Radio City Music Hall will
dedicate Its July sununer show to Mexico, It
would be spectacular to tty and get some of the
great Acapulco cliff divers to splash from high
up in the Music Hall's Wings Into a stage pool ...
A N Y. city maid service Is being Investigated
- lor supplying maida for much too domestic
services. Indeed they do change beds. Often.

Pro Standings

6 00- News3 4. B, 10, 13 15 Tru1h or Conseq 6, Sesame Street

1 JO -

.J92

Pass
Pass

BY PAUL CRABTREI:

Thoughts

.QIDS3

North

.

11 A I o b.,.t

SOUTH
.KJS4
¥ K 108 G
+ S2
West

0

WASHINGTON tNEAI
Amenca's pool of sc1entihc knowledge and 1ts brobald
base of technology are the envy of the world lncredl e
1t 1s then that only a moderate proporhon of 1ls econom
1c produdts today are Widely admu:ed and '.espected
That cunpus disparity IS the core of th1s country s lore1gn
trade dllhculhes and accounts m part lor crlluj,al eco
nomic problems on the mviting home front mar et
· A u s spec1ahst m foreign commercial promotion told
me re~e-ntly that he has a whole file of "horror stones"
on missed or bungled opportumlles for Amencan producers to sell m markets overseas
we used to have so great a cost and technological ad
vantage that 11 was almost no contest We dommated lh~
export markets without even trymg Evidently tha
+++
NBC
Is
plannmg
something
equally banal. "Concentration,"
G
spmled us rotten
Now that there 1s 'real competillon from West era show w1th a proven track record gomg back 1S years, will give
many Holland the other Western European countries
way to - guess what' - - a different game show called
and iapan, ou~ nearly automatic overseas outlets have
11
Baffle."
dimmished and m some cases vamshed
At least, they succeed m baffling me with a move such as
we were always the takers of raw materials and the
dispensers of (Imshed goods In certam crucial cases,
this
hke 011 and 1ron ore, our need to Import the raw stuff IS
+++
greater than ever-and growmg
Another CBS liard-tp-fathom move IS pia!" for a vanety
1
Yet m the mstance of Japan, our position IS m par
show, with perhaps a loosely-fashioned plot, centering around
rever~ed We are sellmg foodstuffs and such raw rna
life at a luxury hotel, with a semi-regular cast, apparenUy, plus
tenals as coal m large volume Japan's high-quahty,
sophisticated manufactured goods are selling h1g m
many "guests."
America often m spite of pnce disadvantage
II they'd look back over theu- shoulder about thirty years,
_ In this radically altered trade world, our response ha~
CBS would remember 11 once had a radio show with a resort hotel
generally been flat and unmspmng, when II was dno
theme, hosted by a then-unlamous comic named Cliff Arquette,
s1m 1 whmmg Amencans w1th good lies to un erdev~l~ped Africa say that, even With that contment s who's had fairly regular work ever smce In his reincarnation as
Charlie Weaver on the latiHilght beat and "Hollywood Squsres."
limited supplies of foreign exchange, 11 has been eager
for years to buy thmgs from us tailored to 1ts varymg
And speaking of "Hollywood Squsres," here's a progress
climatic and other conditions Our producers seem to
report on Peter LaCock, the baseball-playing son of Monty Hall,
have v1ewed the prospect as about as exc1bng as a
who grew up here In the Tri-state region and now hosts the NBC
scoreless lie m football
morrung program
sources I know who must of necessity buy certam
LaCock, alter domg well m AA baseball at Midland, Tex.,
specialized 1tems from U S manufacturers are often appalled at the maker's 1gnorance of the peculiar needs
last season, Is m sprmg traming with the Chicago Cubs, and
mvolved These producers have to have 11 spelled out
seems to have a good crack at stlckmg with the varsity, because
for them and the consequence usually 1s that they escathe Cubs are short of outfielders, and Pete Is young, strong, and
late by two or three times their ongmal cost estimates
hit 282 He can make a spot!or himsell as relief for old folks Billy
for the proJect
,
d h' h t
Markets abroad for Amenca s best-ta1 1ore , 1g es - Williams and Jose Cardenal if the Cubs go w1th six outfielders technology goods are lymg all over !he place ~ven m and there are only seven on the roster
ts where competitiOn from our aggressiVe nvals IS
(Pete 1s a very mce young guy, whom I VISited w1th last
~~~ keen we still can take a bigger piece of the ac~on sprmg and at the same lime totslly Ignored his more-famous
If we apply a blUe imagmaiiOn and come up with IS- father, whom, to be perfectly honest, I d1dn 'I recogmze )
tmctlve, novel, especially attractive products But mo~t
+++
of the time we don't seem to have an 1dea m a carloa
The devalued dollar and revalued yen probsbly Will add new
Nobody really has to tell this to the average American
bu er He can see 11 m his own retail stores More often steam to a movement already making big waves in the TV pond,
thin not the quality stuff with the twist of n~velty IS as well as the Pacific Ocean.
commg from abroad. The U S government can devalue
Briefly, the Japanese are commg ' The Japanese are
the dollar agam and agam, but domestic purchasers are
still gomg to shell out lor the overseas products they commgo
Among the heavy new advertisers on the tube in the past
deem better They're doing It right now, despite the
year, three Nipponese compames were m the top ten m mereased
latest 10 per cent slash m the dollar's value
In today 's near-boom cond11lons. naturally huge vol- spendmg .
umes of u s -made goods are selling m this country
The Datsun people, who were third; the Toyota folks, who
Detroit, still bmldmg those four-seated ocean }mers With
were
fifth; and Kawasaki motorcycles, which fuushed nmth m
wlieels never had It so good as this wmter
But 1t•s all relative There Isn't the confidence there total of new big-spenders on TV. !chi-ban, mdeed ( "Fu-st rate,"
used to be either here or abroad, m the Amencan trade m English, fans.)
mark on many products Neither the makers nor the
+++
mamtamers are consistently well regarded
,
ON TilE TV DIAL: Billy Graham Crusade, at 7 30 on WTVNWe're JUSt not putting out the effort And lets not
exempt anybody from that charge-the managers, the 1V . WTAP-1V's new public-alfau-s program features West
designers. the factory workers the clerks the selle,rs. Vu-gmia Atty. Gen. Chauncey Browning at the same hour And
and the repa 1r people That great b1g trade deficit we ve "Bill Moyers' Journal" looks Into the problems of American
Indians, 8 30, WOUB-TV
got' We're earnmg II

SUE

NORTH (DI

, 3-The DaUy Sentlnel,Middleport-Pcimeroy, 0., March 211,1973

Jimmy Jones, Columbus

BJShop Ready, 5 11 , Jr, 20 3,
Dale Creager, Patrick Henry,
6 3 Sr
20 6. Rock Whole,
Albany. Alexander, 6 4 Sr.,

Four managers were apJX'OVed and other preparations
for the oncommg summer
baseball program for boys
were completed Monday
evening by the Middleport
BPys League Assn. m a
meeting In the volunteer fire
department's new quarters.
Tony Way, president, presided.
Millard Hysell was appointed
manager of the Meta, Bob and
Danny Lewis will take over the
peewee Mustang club and
Dean Lutz w1D manage the
Pony A team, assisted by Jim
Mees
A continumg discussiOn on
problems m Oeldmg two pony
learns was concluded with the
understanding that, prOVIded
enough boys sign up (at least
30), two teams agam will he
sponsored, one bemg the team
of 13-year olds of last season
which will campaign this )'far
as a umt of 14-year olds.
The nucleus of live to m
returning 15-year olds on the A
learn wlll be augmented by
Incoming 13-year olds and
other boYs who, though eligible
by age last year did not choose
to play, but want to this year.

They cannot have passed theu- soon as possible The next
16th bu:thday before next Aug meetmg will be Monday at 7-30
p m. on 1Pril2 at the town hall.
1
Sign-up day lor all ages
(peewee through pony) when
msurance also should be paid, BOARD SPLIT
MADISON, WIS (UP!) Is Aprll 7 at the American
WISCOnsm basketball Coach
Legion hall on S Fourth St
Jolm
Powless' future may be a
Other business included .
subJect
of discussiOn when the
- Tentative acceptance of
Mike May, Perk Ault, Eli UW Athlellc Board meets
Ebersbach, and Steve Price as Friday
Powless, who has produced
Boys League umpu-es to be
only
one wmnlng team In live
paid $2 per game; and
agreement to have managers seasons here, was quoted
and umpires meet at least recently as saymg he thought
twice before scheduled play he would keep hiS JOb
The Badgers finished 11-13
begins to review the rule book,
this season and ninth m the Big
and held ground rules.
Ten
In live years under
- Aluminum bats will be
obtained at least lor practice to Powless they have a S4-06
reduce breakage , and the record and theu- only WIIUling
smaller peewee baD by those season came last year at 13-11
The board reportedly IS split
teams will be contmued
over
whether 11 should keep
- Installation of a sturdy
equipment box to be kept on the Powless He has one year left
field ; dressing up and repau: of on his current two-year conthe diamonds on the park, tract.
lncludmg the block dugouts,
College Basketball Results
and oiling the Infields of the By United Press tnlernahonal
small diamonds to reduce dust Natlonaltnvotalion Tournament
At New York Clly
were approved.
(First Round I
ATagDay-May5 - M)nn 68 Rutgers 59
chalrman will be selected as Ala S7 Manhattan B6
•

e

Holmes pleads mnocent
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI)
Pittsburgh
Steelers
defensive tackle Ernie Holmes
pleaded Innocent Monday to
three counts of assault w1th
intent to kill, filed In connection
with sniping Incidents In
northeastern Ohio last
weekend.
Holmes was freed on $45,1100
bond following his arraignment
in Mahoning County Court in
nearby Austintown. His attorney said the 6-3, 2SOilOUnd
footbaU player would be tsken
to a Pittsburgh hospital
''Where he will stay for an
lndellnlte time."
Holmes was arrested Friday
during • Je8I'Cb for the Jlii'IOil
who fired llplllllntcb • two
lntenlate bl&amp;hwiOa- lin.
Ohio Hlahway Pattolmafl

Larry Myers, pUoting a search
helicopter, said Holmes shot
him In the foot after he spotted
the suspect on the ground.
Myers ma1111ged to land safely.
Holmes also Is charged with
assault on two other law of.
ncers.
No date for a preliminary
bearing was set.
Hohnes reportedly told authorities who arrested him he
was In the process Qf getting a
divorce and was unller 90Vere
mental strain.
However, his father4n-law,
PIIIUip Williams, said at Ho118·
ton, Tex., Monday marital
JX'Oblems were not to blame.
W1Uiams llllld hla daughter,
&lt;lttaldlne, 21, \\&gt;hO married
HGimel June 11, 1970, had been

abandoned by him and she had
come back to live With her
parents
"I'm keeping her now and
their two children also are
living here," Williams said
"He hasn't lived with her smce
they've been married
"He spent a few nights with
her at my house and then they
moved Into an apartment. But
she worked at the post office
and paid the bills
"He's been Invisible," Williams said. "The sheriff
couldn't even catch up with
him to serve the dlvotce
papers.•'
The former Texas Southern
Unlvers~ty player and his wife
have two chUdten, Roderick, 4,
and Sexton, 2

t

~\

24.0; Ken Hurst, South Point, 6

2, Sr , 23.3, Stan McCoy,

Loveland, 6 2, Sr , 13 1, M•ke
Oyer, Waverly, 6-3, Sr, 14 a
SPECIAL MENTION
Steve Bell, Wyommg , Jeff
Curne, Dayton Jefferson,

M1ke Clme, West Holmes.
Mike Cobb, Youngstown
North , Randy Haefner, Con

cmnatt McNicholas, Stev&amp;

Inman . Morgan , Wayman

Lawrence, Big Walnut. Leon
Murray, North Coll~e Hrll.

Jtm Noe, Gallipolis, G1l Pnce,

Gallipolis; Russ Sherman,
Elyrra Catholic. Kelly Shy.
Portsmouth West Randy
Stewart, Rrver VIews , John
Shoemaker, Waverly, Ed
Thompson,

Waverly ;

Treece Wayne Trace

Ron
Jerry

Zuver, Archbold

HONORABLE MENTION
Garry Allison Wellsville .
Rrch Allwles, Tiffin Calvert,
Tom Bramlage, Bexley , Bill
Brandon,

Twmsburg

Cham

berlin , Tony Burris. Rrver
VIew Brad Bachtell , Wyn
ford B1ll Brosky, Ashtabula
St John , Mark Baron,
Loveland . R1th1e Babcock,
Ridgewood John Coleman ,
Ashlabula Harbor Larry
Down mg . Buckeye Valley, Art
Danrels Frrelands, Darrell
Ewart. Bellaire Mark Elston,
LOCKHART RECOVERING
NEW YORK (UP!)- Spider
Lockhart, the New York
Giants' free safety, 15 in st.
Vmcent's Hospital today
recovering from a tonsillectomy.
Lockhart, an eight-year NaIlona! Football League '
veteran, had his tonsils
removed Monday by Dr
Joseph R Rongetti

McDonald hot
:in Aero.'s win
By United Press IDternat.tonal
Brian McDonald's ·hot third
period last night put the
finishing touches on Houston's
VIctory over PhUadelphiS and
helped brmg the Aeros mto a
tie w1th Los Angeles, which
drew Wllh the Crusaders in
Cleveland, for second place m
the Western Division of the
World Hockey Association .
The Houston-Philadelphia
clash and the Cleveland-Los
Angeles game were the only
contests played m the league
last mght.
McDonald scored two goals
m the final period to cap the
Aero's 5-1 triUmph over the
Blazers and break a four-game
Houston losing streak His fu-st
goal was unassisted and came
at :49 of the third period. The
second was at 6:53 on an assist
by Gordon Labossiere.
Houston broke to a :W lead in
the fll"sl period on goals by
Duke HarriS and Frank Hughes. Ed Hoekstra made 11 3.() at
7:55 of the second period.
Phlladelph~a scored at 12:16
of the second period on a power
play shot by John McKenzie.
Los Angeles carne up witt.
lour goals in the !mal period to
pull mto the tie with Cleveland
and the two teams battled
without scormg m the overtime
period.
The tie clinched a secondplace finish for the Crusaders
m the Eastern Division of the
WHA and a playoff berth whUe
the Sharks share second place
m the Western Division.

' ' '

@

Me llwarn Pymatunrng Vallev
Pat Mack, Ellda
B•ll Maloy, Waverly; Gar)
Nelson, Upper Sandusky ,
Ert ne

••• A Great Idea
for over 70 Years

Pasqua lone, Geneva

Steve Stanford , Akron St
VIncent , Mock Sagester,
Brookville, Jerry Snodgrass,
Upper Sandusky. Tom Sowers,
Barnesville Greg Seay, Tlpp
C1ty, Bob Trudo, Brookfield ,
Frank Twardoskr , Martins
Ferry, John Weaver. Delta
Dave Wirick, Lexln9ton Dave

AUTO CLUB OF
SOUTHERN OHIO
33 Court St
Gallopolls
Phone 446 0699
Pomeroy Phone 992 2590

Wrtght, R1ver, Howte Wheeler,

C8d1t:

" After both teams sco•ed"'once
In the openmg period, the
Crusaders pushed four goals o
past Los Angeles goalie George
Gardner m the second period to
take a 5-1 lead mto the final 211
mmutes of action.
J P LeBlanc scored tw1ce in
the thu-d period, Joe Szura
added another and Fred Speck
sent the game into sudden
death overtime by knockmg In
a rebound With 1-53 left.
Ron Buchanan scored tw1ce
lor Cleveland, while Gerry
Pinder, Rich Pumple and Doug ,
Brindley scored once each

t

I

h

J. r(l

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHONE 992-2342

MIDDLEPORT,O.

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

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Financial problems come 1n all sozes So do our loans. We
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estate equity loans to $15,000. We also finance about
everything people buy-from TV sets to mobile homes
II your hours are different from ours, use lhe handy mail
request form below. We Will contacl you at your convenoence.
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This Week's Special

The Dilly Sentinel
DEVOTID TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,

City Editor

Publ1shed dallv except
Saturdav by Tht Ohio Valley
Publishln~

Court Sl,

Compony. 111

Pomeroy , Ohio

.S769 Buslnen Office Phone

992 2156. Edltorlol Phont 992
2157
Second clan po1tage paid at

Pomeroy, Ohio
National advertising
repreuntatlvt
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St. New York City, Htw York
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Phone 992·2171

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�•

fDtrORIAL

BRUCE BIOSSAf

Helen Help

Democracy?

Us.

Saigon Kicks Out
Critical Reporters

By Helen Bottel

••

'Made in U.S.A.'
No Lure Nowadays
'

By RALPH NOVAK
QUESTIONNAIRE FOR PARENTS
OF TEENAGERS
AB announced last week, we have complied over 30questions
about situations most likely to di.starb, puzzle, challenge, defeat
or cheer present-day parents.
Because the survey IS not controlled (anyone can enter, and
WE HOPE YOU DO' ), we can't predict whether results will be
loaded toward the liberal or conservative, frightened or con·
fldent side, but we believe we should get a fairly representative
sampling. That depends on you readers' No matter how you view
parenthood, you can help yourselves - and us - by partiCipating
An analysiS of findings will appear m summer columns It
could prove startling as well as educational
FOR PARENTS ONLY
Age of Parents - , - - Sex of parents answermg questions -. (Both parents may answer together - or separately, by
sending for duplicate set of questiOns )
Is yours a two-parent home' Do both parents work
outside the home? - . Average yearly Income - - Do you
bve in: Suburbs - - ; City-- . Rural - Ages of children: Boys - - ; --;-~; Girls
-;--

Answer uYes" or uNo":
1 Do you have good give-and-take conununication With your
chUdren' -~
2 If you had 11 to do over agam, would you raise your
chUdrendifferently' - - II so, would you be Less strict?-·• More strict' - 3 Without showmg you are uptight, even if you suspect your
child IS personally mvolved, can you talk to hu:n (her) easily
about
Sex• - - ; Bu:th control' - - VD' -~.
Homosexuality' - - , Petting' - - ; Drug abuse' - - ,
Leaving home' - - ; InterraCial dating' - - .
4. Do you think your child wants to discuss these thmgs with
you' - S Do you want your daughter to remam a vlrgm untU she
marries • -~- How about your son' - - Do you think she
will' - - Do you think HE will' - - Were YOU a vu-gm
when you married' - 6 Have your attitudes on premarital sex changed m the last
ten ~ears? - - . Explam briefly how and why they have
changed

7 Do you think the majority of young people today are
sexually experienced before they reach age 211' Your estimated
percentage of non-virgins' - 8. Do you think your teenaged chUdren are virgins' - 9 Do you believe in the double standard' - - .
10 Do you condone long barr on boys' - - On your own

son?--.
1. Do you judge your children's friends by the way they dress

and wear their hair' - - .
12. Do you think religion has more influence on today's young
people than It had 25 years ago' - 13. Do you worry when your children act or react differently
than you did as a teenager' - - .
.,..,. 14. Do you love your5po1111e' - - Do your children know
.JO.!' love each other' - - Do you sho!._ ~~ti&lt;!_n lor ,"l!~~_!!th~r
'in-front of your clilldren' - 15. If one of your children moved out to Uve With a "steady,"
would you remain on friendly terms With them both' 16 Could you rationally discuss such an allan: with your
child' - - If your child seemed concerned, could you discuss
with him an affair YOU hare havmg' - 17. Do you think your child would tell you If he (she) contracted VD' --.Had an abortion' - - - Was raped' - 18. Would you feel disgraced if your daughter got pregnant'

--.

-

19. II your daughter's girl friend had an abortion would you
insist she break off then: friendship' - - .
211. II you discovered your child's friend had used drugs but
was trying to quit, would you mslst he (she) break off thmr
relationship' - 21. Have any of your unmarried daughters been pregnant' -.Had an abortion' - - Kept baby' - - Gave baby out
for adoption' - 22 Do you think marijuana should be legalized' - - If
not, then should penalties for possession and private use be
reduced (if no sales are made)'-- Have you e,ver tried
mariJuana' - - .
23 Are you in favor of lowermg the drinking age ro 18
nationally' - 24 Do you allow your teenagers moderate amounts of
alcoholic beverages In the home' - 25 (Check one or more): II you discovered illegal drugs m
your child's room, would you.
(a) Turn him or her over to the police '
(b) Seekhelpfromacounselor' (or drug-help house )'
(c) Try to work 11 out yourselves'
(d) Throw the stuff away and say nothing'
(e) Try 11 with your child (if It were pot or pills) In order to
understand why he uses It'
26. (Check one or more) II you strongly suspected your
teenaged daughter was having sex with her boy friend, and you
knew you couldn't change her attitude, would you
(a) Send her to your family doctor for The Pill or other brrth
control device - alter determlmng that she needed a contraceptive'
(b) Refer her to the Planned Parenthood Center m your
town'
(c) Ground h~•lndelmitely or send her away "until she came

to her senses"?
(d) Ignore the situstion'
(e) Feel relieved that you can now talk to her on an equal
"woman to woman" basis'
11. Do you think petting Is an acceptable substitute for
premarital mtercourse among teenagers? (Do NOT confuse
petting with "necking ") - -, '
28. What worries you most about ralsmg children' (Number
in order of u:nportance)
(a) The New Morality'
(b) RebelliOn agamst authority '
(c) Non-commumcatlon'
(d) Drugs'
•
(e) Fighting (among family members or With parents) •
(f) Disagreements With spouse on chUd raising'
,
('g) School problems'
•.
(\!) Other'
29 What PLEASES you most about raising teenagers?
30 Do you and your spouse (a) discuss moral and ethical
values with your children and listen to theu- views, or (b) do you
"lay down the law"' (Circle one) (Honest now)
31. Lookll1tl back to your teen days, would you desCTibe
yoursell as a ''wild kid"--. "good kid" - - , or "model
chUd" - 32 Would you v.antyourchUd to have a marriage like yours '

It 1s grat1fymg to see how well we accomplished our
stated goal of mamtam1ng a South VIetnamese government that respects freedom and honesty
The latest gesture of our erstwhile peace-and-Jusllce
lovmg allies I$ a crackdown on Amencan JOUrnalists who
have had the audacity to wpte uncomphmentary thm gs
about the Saigon government
The South VIetnamese have not yet lived up to their
threat to shoot American reporters who try to mterv1ew
North VIetnamese and VIet Cong representatives to the
Jomt Military CommiSSIOn But they have shown that they
have all the tools to carry out the threato hypersensitivity
to cnticism, brazen diSregard for the nght of people their own people as well as foreigners - to know the
truth about what Is happenmg m South VIetnam, a wiilmgness to bully the undefended and, of course , loads of
very effiCient Amencan weapons
~
Among the concrete acllons so far h've been the expellmg of Umted Press International bureau chief Donald
Davis and National Broadcastmg Company correspondent
Ron Nessen, plus a pack of thmly veiled threats to get
revenge agamst reporters from the Los Angeles Times,
New Yo1 k Times and Agence France-Presse
What these JOurnalists are accused of Is somethmg
South VIetnamese government spokesmen call "un-VIelnamese actiVIties " Smce those spokesmen never defme
Just exactly what an un-VIetnamese activity Is, they are
m the happy position of being able to apply the epithet
to any acllv1ty they don't hke, which most de!Imtely
mcludes American reporters revealmg how shoddy , unrepresenlallve and ulllmately corrupt their government
really IS
The theory went that the Umted States was m VIetnam
w make sure the VIetnamese people were able to have
a government that was, m Its respect for Its citizens and
responsiveness to their needs, as close as possible to our
admittedly Imperfect model
Instead, what we see IS a government that seems
msecure to the pomt of paranma m the face of this very
same "peace With honor" that our own government finds
so bhssful It IS a government that reacts to news stones
about Its tortunng pohllcal pnsoners or violating the
cease-fire not by d1sprovmg the stones or expla.nmg them
but by deceit and attacks on those who report the stones
Perhaps It Is true that Amencan JOurnalists m South
VIetnam at this pomt m history are meddling But 11
would seem that even though the Umted States has m01e
or less divorced Itself from the day-to-day life of South
VIetnam, we still retam certam VISitmg privileges
For howeve~ spunous our arguments were when we
talked about f1 ghtmg the war to save South VIetnam , we
have m a real sense committed our reputatiOn to the
Saigon government Part of the commitment mvolves
only our moral reputation which m the cosmic scheme
of mternatwnal politics IS probably not too Important But
another part mvolves our reputallon for bemg able to
discern who IS worthy of our support which forc es we
should, from a pracllcal standpomt, want on our side
Who the "wmners" and losers" are
And as we watch the shameful behaviOr of "our" people
m South VIetnam , we can hope that they are gomg
through some sort of cultural growmg pams Otherwise
we have wasted- most unforgivably wasted-our reputa
twn our money our hme, our hves

- - (Honest now )

+++
Send your completed questionnarre (signed or unsigned) to
Helen and Sue Hottel, GENERATION RAP, care of this newspaper
' II you want elltta ciJPII!s for youml~nds or'&lt;lth~t lnt!fflb~til 01
the faiDlly, please send us stamped, seU-11ddressed LONG envelope, md1cating the number of copies wanted- HELEN AND

By BRUCE BlpSSAT

WIN AT BRIDGE

Wrong Response Is Disaster
20

• 12
• A 73 2
+K Q 4

•AQ8G
WEST

EAST

¥QJ9

¥54

tA108G3

tJ97

,fol07

,foK 5 4 3

• A96

" If you are pure and up
nght, surely then he Will
South 1 ouse himself for you and
It
Pw
2NT reward you w1th a nghtful
habltatwn And though your
Pass
3t
Pass
'
begtnnmg was small, your
You South, hold
.KJ3 ¥KJ3 tKIOH .K96 latter days wtll be very
great -Job 8 6, 7.
The btddmg has been
Wesl
North East

:h~.:o ~;:. d:o~:~,

No

lead can hurt you and you want

heart call was cru:nmal oo try for mne tricks rather
South should have let North than for 11
play and make one no-trump
TOD'AY'S QUESTION
Why make a second bid Wllh Your partner contmues to
hiS balanced piece of JUnk' four no-trump Whal do you do
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN &gt;

Both vulnerable

I•

East South
Pass I•

4¥

Pass

tNT

Pass 2.

Pass
Openmg lead-·10

It's sprmg-deaning time at the television networks.
Few night-time changes are planned this late in the season,
but daytime 1VI8m fora new look. (This is very, vecy important
for the poor networks, because they make enormoua profits fmn
weekday soa~peras and qwz shows - and also from Saturday
morning kids' fare.)
At any rate, CBS, womed about a ratings droop, is goll1g to
kiss off "Where the Heart Is" (but the money isn't preswnably)
and "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing" (~ut not a profitable
one) Also due for the ax Is Vm Scully's afternoon talk show.
Replacing them m a blazing burst of unorlginailty, are two new
game shows, "The $10,1)00 Pyranud" and "Hollywood's Talking"
(which sounds suspiciously like "Hollywood Squares"), and yet
another soaper, "The Young and ResUess."

•1 I

now ?

.

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
South lost no hme gomg
down two tncks at his lourheart contract He let East's
king wm the club lead East
returned the three of spades
and South hopped up with his
kmg After that start the defen se had no trouble collecting three more tncks
South was even quicker to
blame his partner for the
debacle " Couldn't you have
Jet me play at two hearts' "
he asked " Smce when do
you rebid a m 1n 1m u m
hand'"
North said nothmg but did
tell us later on that he felt
that he almost deserved a
medal for not punchmg
South m the nose
We don 't ap~rove of mayhem at the bndee table but
certamly North was entitled
to some redress from South
North had a good 15 high
card pomts with lou ~ hearts
and a doubleton spade
South's two-heart rebid Improved North's hand a lot
and while he might have
merely bid three hearts we
can't really fault hiS Jump
to game As a matter of mterest, if you trade East's
king of clubs for West's 10 or
seven, South could actually
have made four hearts
South should h ave re·
sponded one heart, not one
spade That would have allowed North to raise to two
hearts and South would have
passed
The one spRde response
was an error but the two

~~~

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Television·Log

Rchslr lO 29 12 72 225 258
Prov 28 28 14 70 231 233
Sprgfld 18 341 16 52 249 312
N.H.
16 3.5 20 52 240 305
West
w 1 t pis gf ga
Clntl so i7 · s ' 1os. 323 19S
Hrsh 341 22 11 83 289 212
Y 31 21 16 1a 228 205
Rchmd 27 32 10 64 235 246
Jcksnvl 23 -10 9 55 244 304
Batt
14 44 11 3'1 1s1 297
Mondoy's RtSulls
Nova Scotia a Jacksonville 1
(Only game scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
Nova Scotia at l!altlmore
Tidewater at Boston
(Only games scheduled)

Buurma named Ohio's topAA player
COLUMBUS- (UPI)
Towering Mike Buurma, who
led Willard High School to a
season of "firsts," today was
namect the Class AA basketball
player of the year m balloting
conducted by United Press
International.
Buurma, who led his team to
an 1~ regular season record,
heads up the 1973 UPI Class AA
all.Ohio team, which averages
more than 6-foot-0 per man
Besides the 6-10 Buurma on'
the first team are 6-foot Dave
Smith of Claymont, last season's player of the year but
second to Buurma in the voting
this year, 6-0 Dan Hipsher of
Fostor111, 6-10 Mike Phillips of
Manchester, and 6-7 J1m Wood

va.

WHA Standings
By United Press lnlernoiionat
Eost
w. t. t. pts gf ga
New Eng 42 26 2 86 288 232
Cleve
J8 30 2 79 261 224
NY
33 39 2 68 289 312
Phil a
33 39 0 66 262 293
Ottawa 31 37 4 66 253 281
Quebec 29 37 5 63 248 285
West
w I. t. pts gf ga
Tueiday's Games
Wlnlpg 41 29 3 85 26S 233
Los Angeles at Atlanta
Los Ang 35 33 6 76 250 238
Buffalo at KC Omaha
Houston 36 32 4 76 261 241
Philadelphia at Clevelilnd
M1nn
35 33 3 73 232 243
Portland at Chicago
Alberta 34 35 2 70 246 237
Seattle at Golden State
Chicago 26 43 2 54 237 271
Houston vs Boston
Monday's Results
AI Providence
)j-lf!
Los Ang s Cleveland 5, ot
(Only games scheduled)
Houston s Philadelphia 1
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Bob
!Only games scheduled I
AHL Standongs
Haas, whose Willard High
Tuesday's Games
By United Press tnternationel
School
basketball team won
Los
Angeles
at
New
England
East
Minnesota
at
Alberta
many honors thiS season but
'
w. I. t pts gf ga
N.S
40 15 15 95 289 173 Cleveland at Quebec
not the one he wanted most,
Bostn 31 25 13 75 2341 233 !Only games scheduled I

Him Up 33
7 00 ~ What s My Line 8, Truth or Conseq 3 News B 10, Un
tamed World 13 , SoCiety 15 Eleclrrc Co 20. Beat The Clock

of Steubenville Catholic.
Buurma, who averaged 24
pomts pet game for the
Flashes of Bob Haas, paced
them to their first undefeated
season, their first appearance
in the top 10 ranked teams, and
the most victories in one
season- 18
"Mike isn't the big strong
center some colleges are lookmg lor," Haas said. "He 'II play
forward m college, But he can
shoot II."
Aokle !Djury
Smith, who bounced back
With another fine year despite
physical problems, scored at a
27.S per game clip for the
Mustangs. He injured an ankle
priOr to the district seiDI-finals

11 30 - Johnny Carson 3. 4. 15 Dick Cavel16, i3, Movres 'The
Old Man &amp; the Sea" s "Take Me to Town" 10
1 00 - Your Health 4 News 13
t
News 4

WEDNESDAY, MARCH21,1973
00 - Sunrise Semrnar 4, Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmtlme 10. English 3
6 20 - Farm Report 13
6 25- Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers B Urban League
Presents 10, The Story 13
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
6 55 - Take Five For L1fe 15
7 00 - Today3, 4, 15. News6,8 10, Filn1stones 13
7 30- Romper Room 6, Sleepy Jeffers 8 Rocky &amp; Builwmkle
13, Popeye 10
B00 - Capt Kangaroo 8, 10 New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame St 33,
6

Lassie 6

8 30 - Jack LaLanne 13, Romper Rooms. New Zoo Revue 6,
Loca I News 13
9 00 - Paul Drxon 4, Phil Oonahue 15, AM 3, Mr Roberts 6.
Capt. KangarooS. Friendly Junction 10 , Ben Casey 13
9 30- To Tell The Truth3, Jeopardy 6, HazelS
9 55 - Chuck Wh1le Reports 10
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4, Columbus Six Calling
6, Joker's Wild 8, 10 Dick Van Dyke 13
10 30 - Concentration 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4, Price Is Right 8, 10,
Split Second 13
11 00 - Saleolthe Century 3, 15 Love American Slyle6, Gambit
S, 10, Password 13. Elec Co 20
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, IS, Bewitched 6. 13. love of Life
8, 10. Sesame St 20
12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's SO SO Club 4, Local News 10,
13 , Contact s, Password 6
12 55 - NBC News 3, 15
1 00 - News, Weather, Sports 3, All My Children 6, 13, Green
Acres 10, French Chef 33, Secret Storm 8, Not For Women
Only 15
1 30- 3 On A Match 3, 4. 15 As The World Turns s. 10, Let's
Make A Deal 6, t3
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13 , Mike
Douglass 6, Guiding Lights. 10
2 30 - Dating Game 13; Edge of Nights, 10, Doctors 3, 4. ls
3 00 - Another World 3, 4, 15 General Hospltal6, 13, Ohio This
Week 20 Merv Griffin 8, Secret Storm 10
4 00 - Mister Cartoon 3, Somerset 15, Fllntstones 6, love
American Style 13 , Merv Griffin 4. Sesame St 33, Movie "No
Room for the Groom" 10
•1
4 30 - Dick Van Dyke 15, PeHicoot Junction 3, ABC AI
terschool Theatre 6, 13, Gllll~n 's Island a
le 13, Marshall Dillon 15,
5 00 - Elec Co 33, Gomer
Hodgepodge lodge 20 , I Love ucy 6, Beverly Hillbillies a
6 00- Nei'IS, Weather, Sports 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 , Truth or Conseq 6,
Sesame St 20, Around the Bend 33
6 30- Truth or Conseq 3, Beat the Clock 4. News 6, 10, What's
My Lines. Anything You Can Do 13, Elec Co 20, Know Your
Schools 33, Mayor's Report 15
_
7 30 - Episode Action 33 , The Judge 10, Lassie 15, Beat the
Clock 13, Pollee Surgeon 3, Billy Graham Crusade 6, Earthkeeping 20, Hal !the George Kirby Comedy Houri
8 00 - Paul Lynde6, 13; Adam 1215, Paul Lynde 6, 13, Sonny &amp;
Cher 8, 10, America '73 20, 33. Billy Graham Crusades '
8 30 - Banacek 3, 4,15, Movle"Toma" 6, 13
9 00 - Medlcol Centers, 10, Eye to Eye20, 33
9 30 - Turning Points 20. 33.
10 00 - Search 3, 4, 15, Conn011a. 10, C&gt;.ven Marsholl6, 13; News
20, Billy Graham Crusade 15
11·00- News3, 4, 6,8,10,13,15.
1
11 lO- Jol1nny Carson 3, 4, 15; Did Cavell 6, 13; Movie " The
Black Scorpion" 8; "Once More, My Darling" 10.
1 00 - News 4, 13

.
'

tbe Panthers to an

1~

record
against a schedule which included 10 AAA opponents
Wood, the other first team
member, led Sleubenvllle
Catholic to a 17-1 regular
season mark.
He averaged 211 points and IS
rebounds, hitting 63 per cent of
his shots from the floor and 73
per cent from the free throw
Une In two games against
cross-town nval Steubenville
Big Red, Wood had 53 points
and 29 reboulids as the Cru·
saders won twice over the Big
Red m one season for the first
time in hisolry.
Second Team
Boyd Breece of Rittman heads up the second

last year's C9hlmbus Ready
team which won the state
championship. Jones, 5-11,
averaged 20 3per 8llllle for tbe
Silver Knights this aeason.
Jolnl:ng Jones on lbe third
team were Dale Creaser ~
Patrick Henry, Riclt White of
Albany Alexander, Ken Hurst
of South Pomt, Stan McCoy of
I.Dveland and Mike Oyer of
Waverly McCoy and Oyer tied
lor the final third team post.
Creager, 6-3, averaged 211.8
per game during the season,
White, 11-4, averaged 24, Hurst,
6-2, hit for 23.3, Oyer, 6-3, 14 8,
and McCoy, a superb
playmaker for unbeaten Loveland, 13 I.

team with hu 34 pOints
per game average The
6-0 semor, whose low for the
year was 19 points, scored 622
while shooting 54 per cent from
the floor.
Other second team members
are Huron's 6-0 Lou Wargo,
who averaged 24.9 per game m
leading his team to an 1~
season, 6-7 Joe Stalma, a 16-1
scorer and rugged rebounder
lor Rossford, Don Boop, 6-3,
who averaged 25.21or Orrville,
and 5-10 Ouis Wnght of Meadowbrook, who burned the nets
late m the season and wound up
with a 30 S average
Named to the third team
were Jimmy Jones, only a
junior, although he starred for

Willard's Haas AA Coach-of-the Year
today was named the United
Press International Class AA
coach of the year
"You're absolutely right,"
Haas said when 11 was mentioned to hu:n that the big one
slipped away with the Flashes •
44-11 section loss to Lexington
"The one award aU high
school coaches want IS the one
you get when they hand out the
plaque m Columbus," he added
Despite his team's loss,
Haas, an OhiO State graduate
In his second year at Willard,IS
sold on the town and the
school's fubu:e
Fifth and Sll[th grades from
his feeder program play at
halftime of the reserve and

varsity high school games.
high schools, both m Clark
"We're looking for motiva- County, before coming to
tion," Haas sa1d m explaining Willard, IS a native of Bucyrus.
the halftime games. "I'm real HIS first Willard team posted a
high on Willard basketball for 14-6 mark
the next lew years."
"An honor like this wouldn't
Willard was led by 6-10 be forthco1Illll8 without 11 deplayer of the year Mike Buur- dicated kids and my dedicated
ma, who averaged 24 points per asSIStant, Jerry Stackhouse,"
gsme, but Haas said his squad he said.
was composed of "11 very
Haas, who loses three
dedicated kids "
starters from this year's team,
"Carried Us Through"
believes the Flashes will be
Even without the 6-10 Buur- "better than a lot of people
ma, Haas foresaw "m the think" next season, pomting
range of 12 to IS" v1ctorles for out Stackhouse's reserve team
his team, but admitted "Mike fmished with a 15-&gt;1 record.
carried us through the tough
Haas edged out former coach
ones"
of the year wimer Carroll
Hass, 32, who coached at Hawhee of Waverly, 13-12, m
Northeastern and Southeastern the votmg by 89 coaches,

sportscasters and sportswriters. Steubenvllle
Catholic's Jone Nese fmished
thu:d with 10 votes as 28 dif·
ferent coaches received at
least one vote
Others with more than two
votes were Pat Penn of Columbus Ready, Dough Lattimer of
Albany Ale111nder, Bernie Conley of Manchester, Jess Hagy
of Huron, Bob Guinta of Elyria
Catholic, Red Rigel of Barnesville, Steve Kick of Patrick
Henry, Ju:n Osborne of Galli·
polls, Rex Parker of Wyommg,
Charlie Harker of Loveland,
Joe Stalma of Rossford, John
Harmon of Claymont and Jerry
Fisher of T1pp City.

The best way to calabnlt
sprrns start oemetbllll pwill
-like flowers In your prden.
And start something solnJ, too
-with your AM Club's unoqut
motorist servrces
On v~tlons, you have tiM
fun and we take care of troubltsome details
Drive confidently around town
, . we provide the protectlonErnerrency Road Service, Ptr·
sonal Travel Accodlnt Insurance
and more.
Join your local AM Club today.

1972-73 'AA' All-Ohio Team
Dan J
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The Warren JFK,
1973 Unrted Press lnterna11onal Grothouse, Delphos St John's
Jom Hough, Spnngboro, Ron
Class AA All -Ohio Basketball
Team wllh he rgh1. grade and Hammye Genoa , larry Hall ,
Barnesvtlle Rufus Johnson,
scortng average
Orrville , Terry
Kittle.
FIRST TEAM

Harnson , Ted Lemmon, West
Muskrngum , Robin Long,
Bellefontaine , Tom McGinnis.
Ashtabula St Jo11n , Harley
Majors, Leav1ttsburg LaBrae,
Mark Males1ck, Mingo, Carl

Mtke Buurma, Wtllard , 6 10,

Sr , 24 D, Dave Smrth,
Claymont. 6 0, Sr , 27 5. Dan
Htpsher,

TEAM HONORED - 'l1le Sallabury baaketball squad was honored Saturday night with a
illnquet and presented a team trophy and Individual trophies. The team won the httle
"Marauder" basketbaD tourney Front row,l-r, Brian King, Steve Ohlinger, Brian Teaford,
Mike Smith, Billy Browning, and Dave Kennedy; back row, Chuck Kenne::ty, Don Icenhower,
Bob Seeling, Dave Blake, Frank Haggy ,Ed Nottingham, and Gary Basham..{'lQilQh of the team
was Keith Vanlnwagen. The banquet was held at the Salisbury School.

Fostoria, 6 6, Sr,

21 o, M1ke Phillips, Man
chester, 6 10, Jr , 33 0 J1m
Wood Steubenville Catholic, 6
7 Sr 21 0
.1&lt;
SECOND TEAM
Boyd Breece, Ritman, 6 6,
.Sr, 34 !}, LOU War~o1 Huron, 6
• ·5 ' SF . . 2·f.'i; Joe Slalma,
Rosslord, 6 7, Sr 16 1, Don
Boop Orrvrlle, 6 3, Sr , 25 2,
Chm Wnghl. Meadowbrook, 5
10, Sr 30 5
THIRD TEAM

Baseball managers elected

4

7 30 - Th•s Is Your Llfe3 Price Is Right a 10. Beat The Clock
13, RFD 20 Great Decisoons '73 33 Crrcus 4. B•lly Graham
We ought not to look back
Crusade 6 . People &amp; The Press IS
unless It IS to derive useful
-~h1o Thos Week 20 , Tempera1ures Rising 6, i3 , Book
lessons from past errors, 8 00Beat33
Maude8, 10. Movie• The Pollee Story" 3, 4 15
and for the purpose of 8 30 - Hawa11 F1ve 0 8, 10 Bill Moyer's Journal 20 33 Movie
profltmg by dear-bought ex' Beg, Borrow
Or Steal'' 6, 13
perience -George Washmg- 9 00 ~ Behmd the Lmes 20, 33
9 30 ~ Black Journal20, 33 , Movie ·Murdock's Gang' s, Tony
top
BenneH In Walk•kl10
10 00 - News 20, B1ography 33 Marcus Welby M D 6, 13 .
Amerrca 3, 4, Bolly Graham Crusade 15

at Steubenville and sat out
while hi$ team was eUmlnated.
Hipsher, a third team choice
last year as a junior, broke
most of his school's records
thiS season'while averaging 211
points and 211 rebounds per
game. Like Smith, Buurma
and Wood, Hipsher is being
sought by most of the big
schools m the country this
year.
Phillips, at 6-10, 240 pounds,
IS the only junior on the firSt
team, but already has the
college scouts slrea1Illll8 to his
door.
A starter smce his freshman
year, Phillips averaged 32 7
pomts and 24 rebounds per
game the past season, leading

Devils' Oshome Considered

20, Around the Bend 33

6 30- News 3, 4 6 8, 10, 15 I Dream of Jeann ine 1J Grow1ng

11 00 - News3, 4,8, 10, 13,15

BY JACK O'BRIAN
MONEY IS RELATIVE
TO A ROCKEFEIJ..ER
NEW YORK (KFS)- John D Rockefeller
on WOR's Martha Dean Show !ell into the Look
Who's Talkin' file: " The trouble with
Amencans today Is ·everyone's mterested m
makmg money. People are too materialistic" ..
Vmcent Sardi, Jr., owner of BdWY.'S premier
theatrical hangout, will be a grandpop m July,
courtesy daughter Tabalba . The Yale Bowl
where the football Giants transfer from obsolescent Yankee Stadium seats almost 20,1100
more. Moola, Moola ... Michel Kazan calls the
new Peterson-Kekich Yankee haU team wife·
switch "Yankee Pankee" .. Folk whiner Joan
Baez has such delicate taste : after several
married years she made the tender public
announcement she'd been a lesbUlll before __
Called 11 one of her ''most beauUiul alfmrs" __
Somehow we can't he convmced by her anti·
administration snarls tha_t she knows as much
about family life or geopolitics as Pres. NIXon,
even if he doesn't have a hit record .. Actor
David Doyle who plays the Irish papa m TV's
"Bridget Loves Bernie" can't be faulted for not
understanding religious Intermarriage: Dave's
an Irish Catholic, and he said at Weston's his
wife Anita's Jewish
Restaurateur Jerry Brody (The Rau:nbow
Room, Rambow Grill, Raffles, Gallagher's etc )
mtroduced his new partner, Eivind Urbyes, at
Raffles Elvind's the owner of The Rainbow m
Oslo, largest m Norway, seats 600. Features
continuous dancing and variety shows (many
American acts); It was patterned after the
Hambow Room atop Radio City . And the
Rainbow Room stlll Is the most beautiful
nightclub In the world
We met Bishop P1o or Samoa last year when
}le VISited N. Y. City on behall of The Foundation For the Peoples of the South Pactfic,
which deals with the plight of cruelly poor
Polynesians on South Sea ISles .. . Betty
Silverstein, wife of Maurice, retired president of
MGM International, lrought him to us along
With Mrs Mary Croudace -the genlle,literate,
digmlied original of what became the fictional

NBA Stondongs
By United Preos tnter..tlanal
Easlem_ Canltrence
Atloniic Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
' •-Boston
61 14 S13 New York
'fl 23 713 6'h
Buffalo
21 54 .280 40
Philadelphia 9 69 .115 53'h
Central Division
w. l pel. g.b.
Baltimore
49 27 645
Atlanta
,(l 33 .566 6
Cleveland
29 46 .3a7 191h
Houston
29 47 .382 20
Wastern Conference
Midwest Dovis1on
w. I. pet. 9.b.
Milwaukee
55 22 714 Chicago
49 28 6341 6
Detroft
35 42 455 21
KC Omaha
35 44 443 21
Pacific Division
w. t. pet. g.b
•-Los Angeles 56 20 737
GoldenSiate 45 31 592 11
Phoenix
34 43 442 22 1h
Seattle
26 51 33S 30112
Portland
19 58 247 371J,
x-Ctinchtd division title
Monday's Results
KC Omaha 106 Portland lOS
Milwaukee 11S Detroll99
(Only games scheduled)

TUESDAY, MARCH 20,1973

' '

rowdy Bloody Mary of "South Pacific" In the
book,onBdWY andm the mOVIes; yes, she runs
a hotel and bar on the lsland of Upolu In Western
Samoa, but the reflection stopped far short of
the true lady in question . And we were much
pleased when Pope Paul bestowed on Bishop
Pio the grandest tltie in hla power: he Is now
Cardinal Taofinu'u.
Burton Browne, boss of the Gaslight Clubs
told us he turned down an offer from Con·
solidated Edison to change the name of his
uproar dens to "Electric Light." llecause
Browne's place still Is cookmg with gas _ Leave
It to Mel Brooks to hoke up some wild names In
his "Black Bart" movie for Warner's. Harvey
Korman plays a character named Hedley
Lamarr ... Hedy's not quite m Ecstasy about it
. Quo Vadls spent $50,1100 refurbishing, and the
great gourmet spot looks just tbe same to us rich and tasteful as before.
Art gallery millionaire V1ctor Hanuner had
a stroke. He's off to Palm Beach shortly to
recuperate .. The Russian car (the Lada) will
make !Is Yankee debut at the Int'l Auto Show at
the Coliseum April 7. The Russkis were famous
for never even being able to make a Ford Model·
T and for lately getting Fiat to build cars and
trucks In Russia for them ... They've spent too
much on bombs and moon-missiles ever to have
kept up with the Fords and Agnellls . Ford
turned them down lor a truCk plant a bit back,
remember'
Mlckl Grlmt, who won a Grwnmy lor
writing "Don't Blame Me, I Can't Cope," just
got a double nomination for the BdWY. stage
Tonys .. . Dan DaUey geta his billing as "Mr
Dan Dailey" on Mitzi Gaynor's Mar. 28 TV
special A bit much. It all but ruined Paul Munl
when they tried thus to hyper-dignify that
protean actor ... Radio City Music Hall will
dedicate Its July sununer show to Mexico, It
would be spectacular to tty and get some of the
great Acapulco cliff divers to splash from high
up in the Music Hall's Wings Into a stage pool ...
A N Y. city maid service Is being Investigated
- lor supplying maida for much too domestic
services. Indeed they do change beds. Often.

Pro Standings

6 00- News3 4. B, 10, 13 15 Tru1h or Conseq 6, Sesame Street

1 JO -

.J92

Pass
Pass

BY PAUL CRABTREI:

Thoughts

.QIDS3

North

.

11 A I o b.,.t

SOUTH
.KJS4
¥ K 108 G
+ S2
West

0

WASHINGTON tNEAI
Amenca's pool of sc1entihc knowledge and 1ts brobald
base of technology are the envy of the world lncredl e
1t 1s then that only a moderate proporhon of 1ls econom
1c produdts today are Widely admu:ed and '.espected
That cunpus disparity IS the core of th1s country s lore1gn
trade dllhculhes and accounts m part lor crlluj,al eco
nomic problems on the mviting home front mar et
· A u s spec1ahst m foreign commercial promotion told
me re~e-ntly that he has a whole file of "horror stones"
on missed or bungled opportumlles for Amencan producers to sell m markets overseas
we used to have so great a cost and technological ad
vantage that 11 was almost no contest We dommated lh~
export markets without even trymg Evidently tha
+++
NBC
Is
plannmg
something
equally banal. "Concentration,"
G
spmled us rotten
Now that there 1s 'real competillon from West era show w1th a proven track record gomg back 1S years, will give
many Holland the other Western European countries
way to - guess what' - - a different game show called
and iapan, ou~ nearly automatic overseas outlets have
11
Baffle."
dimmished and m some cases vamshed
At least, they succeed m baffling me with a move such as
we were always the takers of raw materials and the
dispensers of (Imshed goods In certam crucial cases,
this
hke 011 and 1ron ore, our need to Import the raw stuff IS
+++
greater than ever-and growmg
Another CBS liard-tp-fathom move IS pia!" for a vanety
1
Yet m the mstance of Japan, our position IS m par
show, with perhaps a loosely-fashioned plot, centering around
rever~ed We are sellmg foodstuffs and such raw rna
life at a luxury hotel, with a semi-regular cast, apparenUy, plus
tenals as coal m large volume Japan's high-quahty,
sophisticated manufactured goods are selling h1g m
many "guests."
America often m spite of pnce disadvantage
II they'd look back over theu- shoulder about thirty years,
_ In this radically altered trade world, our response ha~
CBS would remember 11 once had a radio show with a resort hotel
generally been flat and unmspmng, when II was dno
theme, hosted by a then-unlamous comic named Cliff Arquette,
s1m 1 whmmg Amencans w1th good lies to un erdev~l~ped Africa say that, even With that contment s who's had fairly regular work ever smce In his reincarnation as
Charlie Weaver on the latiHilght beat and "Hollywood Squsres."
limited supplies of foreign exchange, 11 has been eager
for years to buy thmgs from us tailored to 1ts varymg
And speaking of "Hollywood Squsres," here's a progress
climatic and other conditions Our producers seem to
report on Peter LaCock, the baseball-playing son of Monty Hall,
have v1ewed the prospect as about as exc1bng as a
who grew up here In the Tri-state region and now hosts the NBC
scoreless lie m football
morrung program
sources I know who must of necessity buy certam
LaCock, alter domg well m AA baseball at Midland, Tex.,
specialized 1tems from U S manufacturers are often appalled at the maker's 1gnorance of the peculiar needs
last season, Is m sprmg traming with the Chicago Cubs, and
mvolved These producers have to have 11 spelled out
seems to have a good crack at stlckmg with the varsity, because
for them and the consequence usually 1s that they escathe Cubs are short of outfielders, and Pete Is young, strong, and
late by two or three times their ongmal cost estimates
hit 282 He can make a spot!or himsell as relief for old folks Billy
for the proJect
,
d h' h t
Markets abroad for Amenca s best-ta1 1ore , 1g es - Williams and Jose Cardenal if the Cubs go w1th six outfielders technology goods are lymg all over !he place ~ven m and there are only seven on the roster
ts where competitiOn from our aggressiVe nvals IS
(Pete 1s a very mce young guy, whom I VISited w1th last
~~~ keen we still can take a bigger piece of the ac~on sprmg and at the same lime totslly Ignored his more-famous
If we apply a blUe imagmaiiOn and come up with IS- father, whom, to be perfectly honest, I d1dn 'I recogmze )
tmctlve, novel, especially attractive products But mo~t
+++
of the time we don't seem to have an 1dea m a carloa
The devalued dollar and revalued yen probsbly Will add new
Nobody really has to tell this to the average American
bu er He can see 11 m his own retail stores More often steam to a movement already making big waves in the TV pond,
thin not the quality stuff with the twist of n~velty IS as well as the Pacific Ocean.
commg from abroad. The U S government can devalue
Briefly, the Japanese are commg ' The Japanese are
the dollar agam and agam, but domestic purchasers are
still gomg to shell out lor the overseas products they commgo
Among the heavy new advertisers on the tube in the past
deem better They're doing It right now, despite the
year, three Nipponese compames were m the top ten m mereased
latest 10 per cent slash m the dollar's value
In today 's near-boom cond11lons. naturally huge vol- spendmg .
umes of u s -made goods are selling m this country
The Datsun people, who were third; the Toyota folks, who
Detroit, still bmldmg those four-seated ocean }mers With
were
fifth; and Kawasaki motorcycles, which fuushed nmth m
wlieels never had It so good as this wmter
But 1t•s all relative There Isn't the confidence there total of new big-spenders on TV. !chi-ban, mdeed ( "Fu-st rate,"
used to be either here or abroad, m the Amencan trade m English, fans.)
mark on many products Neither the makers nor the
+++
mamtamers are consistently well regarded
,
ON TilE TV DIAL: Billy Graham Crusade, at 7 30 on WTVNWe're JUSt not putting out the effort And lets not
exempt anybody from that charge-the managers, the 1V . WTAP-1V's new public-alfau-s program features West
designers. the factory workers the clerks the selle,rs. Vu-gmia Atty. Gen. Chauncey Browning at the same hour And
and the repa 1r people That great b1g trade deficit we ve "Bill Moyers' Journal" looks Into the problems of American
Indians, 8 30, WOUB-TV
got' We're earnmg II

SUE

NORTH (DI

, 3-The DaUy Sentlnel,Middleport-Pcimeroy, 0., March 211,1973

Jimmy Jones, Columbus

BJShop Ready, 5 11 , Jr, 20 3,
Dale Creager, Patrick Henry,
6 3 Sr
20 6. Rock Whole,
Albany. Alexander, 6 4 Sr.,

Four managers were apJX'OVed and other preparations
for the oncommg summer
baseball program for boys
were completed Monday
evening by the Middleport
BPys League Assn. m a
meeting In the volunteer fire
department's new quarters.
Tony Way, president, presided.
Millard Hysell was appointed
manager of the Meta, Bob and
Danny Lewis will take over the
peewee Mustang club and
Dean Lutz w1D manage the
Pony A team, assisted by Jim
Mees
A continumg discussiOn on
problems m Oeldmg two pony
learns was concluded with the
understanding that, prOVIded
enough boys sign up (at least
30), two teams agam will he
sponsored, one bemg the team
of 13-year olds of last season
which will campaign this )'far
as a umt of 14-year olds.
The nucleus of live to m
returning 15-year olds on the A
learn wlll be augmented by
Incoming 13-year olds and
other boYs who, though eligible
by age last year did not choose
to play, but want to this year.

They cannot have passed theu- soon as possible The next
16th bu:thday before next Aug meetmg will be Monday at 7-30
p m. on 1Pril2 at the town hall.
1
Sign-up day lor all ages
(peewee through pony) when
msurance also should be paid, BOARD SPLIT
MADISON, WIS (UP!) Is Aprll 7 at the American
WISCOnsm basketball Coach
Legion hall on S Fourth St
Jolm
Powless' future may be a
Other business included .
subJect
of discussiOn when the
- Tentative acceptance of
Mike May, Perk Ault, Eli UW Athlellc Board meets
Ebersbach, and Steve Price as Friday
Powless, who has produced
Boys League umpu-es to be
only
one wmnlng team In live
paid $2 per game; and
agreement to have managers seasons here, was quoted
and umpires meet at least recently as saymg he thought
twice before scheduled play he would keep hiS JOb
The Badgers finished 11-13
begins to review the rule book,
this season and ninth m the Big
and held ground rules.
Ten
In live years under
- Aluminum bats will be
obtained at least lor practice to Powless they have a S4-06
reduce breakage , and the record and theu- only WIIUling
smaller peewee baD by those season came last year at 13-11
The board reportedly IS split
teams will be contmued
over
whether 11 should keep
- Installation of a sturdy
equipment box to be kept on the Powless He has one year left
field ; dressing up and repau: of on his current two-year conthe diamonds on the park, tract.
lncludmg the block dugouts,
College Basketball Results
and oiling the Infields of the By United Press tnlernahonal
small diamonds to reduce dust Natlonaltnvotalion Tournament
At New York Clly
were approved.
(First Round I
ATagDay-May5 - M)nn 68 Rutgers 59
chalrman will be selected as Ala S7 Manhattan B6
•

e

Holmes pleads mnocent
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI)
Pittsburgh
Steelers
defensive tackle Ernie Holmes
pleaded Innocent Monday to
three counts of assault w1th
intent to kill, filed In connection
with sniping Incidents In
northeastern Ohio last
weekend.
Holmes was freed on $45,1100
bond following his arraignment
in Mahoning County Court in
nearby Austintown. His attorney said the 6-3, 2SOilOUnd
footbaU player would be tsken
to a Pittsburgh hospital
''Where he will stay for an
lndellnlte time."
Holmes was arrested Friday
during • Je8I'Cb for the Jlii'IOil
who fired llplllllntcb • two
lntenlate bl&amp;hwiOa- lin.
Ohio Hlahway Pattolmafl

Larry Myers, pUoting a search
helicopter, said Holmes shot
him In the foot after he spotted
the suspect on the ground.
Myers ma1111ged to land safely.
Holmes also Is charged with
assault on two other law of.
ncers.
No date for a preliminary
bearing was set.
Hohnes reportedly told authorities who arrested him he
was In the process Qf getting a
divorce and was unller 90Vere
mental strain.
However, his father4n-law,
PIIIUip Williams, said at Ho118·
ton, Tex., Monday marital
JX'Oblems were not to blame.
W1Uiams llllld hla daughter,
&lt;lttaldlne, 21, \\&gt;hO married
HGimel June 11, 1970, had been

abandoned by him and she had
come back to live With her
parents
"I'm keeping her now and
their two children also are
living here," Williams said
"He hasn't lived with her smce
they've been married
"He spent a few nights with
her at my house and then they
moved Into an apartment. But
she worked at the post office
and paid the bills
"He's been Invisible," Williams said. "The sheriff
couldn't even catch up with
him to serve the dlvotce
papers.•'
The former Texas Southern
Unlvers~ty player and his wife
have two chUdten, Roderick, 4,
and Sexton, 2

t

~\

24.0; Ken Hurst, South Point, 6

2, Sr , 23.3, Stan McCoy,

Loveland, 6 2, Sr , 13 1, M•ke
Oyer, Waverly, 6-3, Sr, 14 a
SPECIAL MENTION
Steve Bell, Wyommg , Jeff
Curne, Dayton Jefferson,

M1ke Clme, West Holmes.
Mike Cobb, Youngstown
North , Randy Haefner, Con

cmnatt McNicholas, Stev&amp;

Inman . Morgan , Wayman

Lawrence, Big Walnut. Leon
Murray, North Coll~e Hrll.

Jtm Noe, Gallipolis, G1l Pnce,

Gallipolis; Russ Sherman,
Elyrra Catholic. Kelly Shy.
Portsmouth West Randy
Stewart, Rrver VIews , John
Shoemaker, Waverly, Ed
Thompson,

Waverly ;

Treece Wayne Trace

Ron
Jerry

Zuver, Archbold

HONORABLE MENTION
Garry Allison Wellsville .
Rrch Allwles, Tiffin Calvert,
Tom Bramlage, Bexley , Bill
Brandon,

Twmsburg

Cham

berlin , Tony Burris. Rrver
VIew Brad Bachtell , Wyn
ford B1ll Brosky, Ashtabula
St John , Mark Baron,
Loveland . R1th1e Babcock,
Ridgewood John Coleman ,
Ashlabula Harbor Larry
Down mg . Buckeye Valley, Art
Danrels Frrelands, Darrell
Ewart. Bellaire Mark Elston,
LOCKHART RECOVERING
NEW YORK (UP!)- Spider
Lockhart, the New York
Giants' free safety, 15 in st.
Vmcent's Hospital today
recovering from a tonsillectomy.
Lockhart, an eight-year NaIlona! Football League '
veteran, had his tonsils
removed Monday by Dr
Joseph R Rongetti

McDonald hot
:in Aero.'s win
By United Press IDternat.tonal
Brian McDonald's ·hot third
period last night put the
finishing touches on Houston's
VIctory over PhUadelphiS and
helped brmg the Aeros mto a
tie w1th Los Angeles, which
drew Wllh the Crusaders in
Cleveland, for second place m
the Western Division of the
World Hockey Association .
The Houston-Philadelphia
clash and the Cleveland-Los
Angeles game were the only
contests played m the league
last mght.
McDonald scored two goals
m the final period to cap the
Aero's 5-1 triUmph over the
Blazers and break a four-game
Houston losing streak His fu-st
goal was unassisted and came
at :49 of the third period. The
second was at 6:53 on an assist
by Gordon Labossiere.
Houston broke to a :W lead in
the fll"sl period on goals by
Duke HarriS and Frank Hughes. Ed Hoekstra made 11 3.() at
7:55 of the second period.
Phlladelph~a scored at 12:16
of the second period on a power
play shot by John McKenzie.
Los Angeles carne up witt.
lour goals in the !mal period to
pull mto the tie with Cleveland
and the two teams battled
without scormg m the overtime
period.
The tie clinched a secondplace finish for the Crusaders
m the Eastern Division of the
WHA and a playoff berth whUe
the Sharks share second place
m the Western Division.

' ' '

@

Me llwarn Pymatunrng Vallev
Pat Mack, Ellda
B•ll Maloy, Waverly; Gar)
Nelson, Upper Sandusky ,
Ert ne

••• A Great Idea
for over 70 Years

Pasqua lone, Geneva

Steve Stanford , Akron St
VIncent , Mock Sagester,
Brookville, Jerry Snodgrass,
Upper Sandusky. Tom Sowers,
Barnesville Greg Seay, Tlpp
C1ty, Bob Trudo, Brookfield ,
Frank Twardoskr , Martins
Ferry, John Weaver. Delta
Dave Wirick, Lexln9ton Dave

AUTO CLUB OF
SOUTHERN OHIO
33 Court St
Gallopolls
Phone 446 0699
Pomeroy Phone 992 2590

Wrtght, R1ver, Howte Wheeler,

C8d1t:

" After both teams sco•ed"'once
In the openmg period, the
Crusaders pushed four goals o
past Los Angeles goalie George
Gardner m the second period to
take a 5-1 lead mto the final 211
mmutes of action.
J P LeBlanc scored tw1ce in
the thu-d period, Joe Szura
added another and Fred Speck
sent the game into sudden
death overtime by knockmg In
a rebound With 1-53 left.
Ron Buchanan scored tw1ce
lor Cleveland, while Gerry
Pinder, Rich Pumple and Doug ,
Brindley scored once each

t

I

h

J. r(l

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHONE 992-2342

MIDDLEPORT,O.

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

Think of us as your

CASH RESERVE
for amounts up to $15,000
Financial problems come 1n all sozes So do our loans. We
offer quick, convenient Signature loans to $1000-regular
- loans to $2000-mtermediate loans to $5000 and real
estate equity loans to $15,000. We also finance about
everything people buy-from TV sets to mobile homes
II your hours are different from ours, use lhe handy mail
request form below. We Will contacl you at your convenoence.
Try us. You 'll like our prompt, courteous servoce

This Week's Special

The Dilly Sentinel
DEVOTID TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,

City Editor

Publ1shed dallv except
Saturdav by Tht Ohio Valley
Publishln~

Court Sl,

Compony. 111

Pomeroy , Ohio

.S769 Buslnen Office Phone

992 2156. Edltorlol Phont 992
2157
Second clan po1tage paid at

Pomeroy, Ohio
National advertising
repreuntatlvt
Botllnelll

Ganaahec, Inc. 12 east 42nd
St. New York City, Htw York
Subscription ro1t1 Dt

&amp; Savings Co.

V-8 motor, auto .
trans. , and power
steering

*1495

livered bv carrier where

Karr &amp;Van landt

service not available

"You'll Like Our QualitY,
Way of Doing Buslneu •
GMAC FINANCING
tH-5342
Parfttroy
Optn Evenings 'Tili:OO
Tll5 P.M $tl

available 50 tents per week,
By Motor Routt whtre carrier
One

monlh Sl 75 By moll In Ohio
end W 1/o , Ont y11r 114 00
six monlh• t7 25 Thrtt

months u 50 Sublcrlp'lon
price lncludH Sundav Times
Senllntl

City Loan &amp; Guaranty Co.

68 atEVEUE
2 DR. H.T.

* City Loan Co.

·125 E. Main, Pomeroy

Phone 992·2171

-----------------------.
MAIL REQUEST FOR SPECIAL MONEY SERVICE

I

INAME
I ADDRESS

I PHONE ME (lime)

I

•

CITY
PHONE NO

1----...---.. . --.. . ----~--------­
1AM INTERESTED IN LOAN OF$

FINANCING $
•

•

I
I

I

II

�,.
4- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddlepqrt;.Pomeroy, 0 ., March 20, 1973
'

Community Centers
193.5"1
r.uxlilary r.oencl•s 267.222.88
Operation of School
Plant
177,757 ..4.4
Sc:hool Plant
.
Your ftMd.t
·"' Know
Maintenance
.tO,t70.69
-'5'' 111
Capitol Outlay
37,065.32
Transfers
68,997.78
end be Informed of the func · OWE
12,517.43
lions of vour gpvernment are DPPF
8.000.00
tmboctled in "ubllc notices. rn
Tille I
35,000.00
that ~elf -government charges
Career
233.30
ell cltlzens to be Informed; .Basic
. 500.00
this newspep1 urges every Grand Total EKpenditures citizen to
end study these
General Fund
2,017.611.55
.notrees. We strongly advise
Bat
..
Dec . 31 , 1972
152,936.52
those crtltens, seeking further Total EKpenditures Plus
informetlbn, to exercise their
Bal ., Oec .31 1972 2,17015-48.07
right Of ·access to publ ic
Bond Retirement Fund
records and public meetrn9s. Bal. , Jan . 1, 1972
69,943.92
Reulpb- Revenue
General Property Tax Real Estate (Gross)
f'JNANCIAL REPORT
162,071.85
·oF THI IOARO
Tangible
Personal
Property
'
OF EDUCATION
1
Tax
(Gron
l
35,239.08
For .Fr,eaJ Y11r Ending
Total
Rev
.
Rece
ipts·
197,310.93
DectmDer 21st, 1972
Total Receipts (Revenue,
'Mtlll LOCII
Nonrevenue and
School District
Transfers)
197,310.93
M~ill County
Total
Beginning
Balance
Middleport, Ohio
Plus Receipts
267,254.85
Much u , 1t13
Expenditures
Bonds Maturing
10-4,000.00
I certlly tt'le following report Notes and Certificates
to be correct.
Maturing
59.639.38
L.W . McComas Other - Bond
Clerk , Treasurer of
Retirement Fund
6,303.78
the Board of Education . Total Expend itures- Bond
CASH RI!CONCIL14TION
Retirement Fund 169,934.16
TOII!I FUnd Balances,
Bal., Dec . ll, 1972
97.311.69
Dec. 31, 1972
s 348,754 .16 Total
Expenditures Pius Bal.
Depository Balances :
Dec . 31, 1972
267,254.85
Farmer's Bank &amp;
Lunchroom
Fund
Savings Co.
76,969 .93 Bal .. Jon . I, 1912
32,855.07
Pomeroy Nat. Bank
62,882 .58
Receipts-Income
Citizens Nat. sank
87,850 .87 Sale of Lunches
76,636.99
Total Depository.
227,703
.38
FeLduenra,hleSsubsidy
Balances
66,512.88
Investments:
Federal Subsidy Certificates of Deposit
3,901.04
Milk
150,000.00 Tclat
Receipts Totallnvestments
150,000.00
Income
147,050.91
Totel
377,703.38 Total
Receipts {Income
Outstanding Warrants, Dec .
and Tro~~nsfersl
lA7.050.91
31, 19721Deductl
28.949.22 Total
Beginning
Balance
Total - Clerk ;
Plus Receipts
179,905.98
Treasurer, Balance,
EKpenditures
Dec. 31, 1972
348.754.16 Personal Service·Manager ·
SUMMARY OF CASH
Sa laries &amp; wages
750.00
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
Personal
Service-Cooks.
AND EKPENDITURES
Salaries &amp; Wages
52,139.60
B1lance Jan. 1, 1912
Supplies and Food
105,847 .43
General Fund
84,717.40 Equipment
Bond Retirement
69,943 .92 Repairs to Equipment 12,984.45
646.56
lunchroom
32,855.07 Other- Lunchroom
Un iform School
Fund
3.088.98
Supplies
5.759.89 Total
Expenditures Trust
1,743.44
Lunchroom Fund 175,457.02
N.D.EA Title II
19,924.95 ~al.,
. Jl, 1972
4,448.96
N.O.E.A. TltleV
190.00 'Ictal Dec
EKpenditures
Plus
E.S.E.A. Title I
58,365.67
Bat .. Dec . 31. 1972 179,905.98
E.S.E.A. Title II
197.31
Uniform School
Adult Baste
3,070.95 \•
Fund
Project Interest
18,752.61 Bal. , Jan.Supplies
1. 1972
5,759.89
T&amp;i
29.47
Receipts-Income
OWE
265.98 Sale 01 workbooks
8,043.30
Adult Education
1.158 .26 Sale
of
Supplies
3,122.44
Head Start
1.103.68 Total Receipts OW4
1,678.99
Income
11,165.74
Breakfast Program
3,842.82
ADC
9.38 PurchaseExpenditures
of Workbooks 3,60 3.52
Total
303.609.79 F"urchase cf Supplies 3,282.31
Tot11 Receipts
Total Expenditures General
2,085,830.67
Uniform School
Bond Retirement
197,3 10.93
Supplies Fund
6,885.83
Lunchroom
147,050.91 Bat ., Dec . 31 , 1972
10,039.80
Uniform School
Total Expenditures Plus
Supplies
11.165.74
Bal.. Dec . 31. 1972
16.925.63
· Trust
1,138 .50
Trust Funds
N D.E.A. Title Ill
8,500 .68 Bal. , Jan . I, 1972
1,7 43.44
E.S.E.A. Til le I
165,211.85
Receipts
E.S.E A. Tille II
5,271.72 Interest on Inactive
DPPF
35,983.31
Funds
1.138.50
Adult Basic
4,566.87 Total Receipts
1,138.50
Pro~ect Interest .. ·
4,987 .37 Expenditures
879.80
ow
12,517.43 Bal .. Dec . 31,1972
2.b02.14
Career Orlen let ion
5,153.38 Total EKpendltures Plus
Head
Stard
39,000 .00
Bal, Dec . 31, 1972
2,881.94
OWA
12,747.05
N.D.E .A. Tille ill Fund
Total
2,73'6,433.41
(Include Appalachia) 1,289.q4
Total Receipts &amp; Balances
Bal., Jan . 1, 1972
19,924.95
General
2,170,548.07
Receipts
Bond Re.tlrement
267,254.85 Coordinator- Title
Lunchroom
179,905.98
Ill
8,500.68
Un iform School
Total
1!,500.68
Suppl ies
16,925.63 Total Beginn ing Balance
Trust
2,881.94
Plus Receipts
21!,425.63
N.D.E.A.Titlelli
28,425.63
Expenditures
N.D.E.A. Title V
190.00 401021059 B·6
7,289.94
7,289.q4
E . S.E~. Title I
223,577.52 ictal EKpenditures
E.S.E . . Title' II
51 4'69.03 Bal. , Dec 31, 1912
21,135.69
OPP IS le '~.• '4
Total Expenditures Plus
Adult
35,983,3
1
7,637.82
Bal .. Dec. 31. 1972
28.425.63
.Pro feet Interest
23,736.98
N.D.E.A. Title V Fund
T&amp;i
29.47 Bal., Jan . l , 1972
190.00
OWE
12,783.41 Bal .. Dec . 31, 1972
190.00
Adult EduCation
1,158.26
E.S.E.A. Tllke I Fund
Career Orientation
5,153.38 Bal., Jon 1, 1972
58,365.67
Head Start
40,103.68
Receipts
OWA
1&lt;11,426.04 Federal Subsidy Fund 130,211.85
Breakfast Program
3,842.82 TotAl
130,211 .85
ADC
9.38
A eceipts-Tran1fers
Total
3,()40,043.20 From Gen Fund
35,000.00
Expenditures
Total Transfers
35,000.00
General ,
2,017,611 .55 Total Receipts (Receipts
Bond Retlr~ment
169.943.16
Plvs Tran sfers
165,211. 85
Lunchroom
175,.457 .02 Total Beginning Balance
Un iform School
Plus Receipts
223.577.52
Supplies
6,885.83
Expenditures
Trust
879.80 A . 16 ·1
86,417.01
N.D.E.A. T-Itle Ill
7.289.94 F-5
10-985.05
E.S.E.A. Title 1
188,949.10 F.5a
579.78
E.S.E.A. Title II
4,998.79 A 2b
1;572.40
DPP F
23,953.93 B-2
8.00
Adult Baste
6,380.89 A·l4
6.981.99
Project Interest
19,.489.40 A-15
1,345.43
T&amp;l
29.47 E· 16-a
458.02
OWE
11 ,043.88 B-6
3,876.83
Adult Education
1,158 .26 E.19
130.00
Cereer Orientation
4,776.68 LR -2
215.54
Head Start
34,112.48 8-4
388.08
OWA . ,
14,426.04 A·23
808.82
Breakfast Program
3.842.82 A-27
840.00
Total
2,691,289.04 E-20
489.05
. Balance Dec. 31, 1972
Ret. to State
16,547 .38
General
.
152.936.52 Tota l Expenditures 131 ,643.38
Bond Retirement
97,311 .69
Transfers
Lunchroom
4,448.96 To Gen . Fund
51,305.72
Uniform School
Total
Transfers
57,305.72
Suppl ies
10,039.80 Total Expenditures
Trust
2.002.14 · In clud ing Transfers 188,949.10
N.D.E.A. Title Ill
21.135.69 Bal .. Dec. 31, 1972
3&lt;.628.42
N.D.E.A. Title V
190.00 Total Expenditures Plus
E.S.E.A. Title I
34,628.42
Bal ., Dec. 31. 1972 223,577 .52
E.S.E.A. Title II
470.24
DPPF
12.029.38
Adult Bulc
1.256.93
E.S.E.A. Title II Fund
Project Int erest
4,247 .58 Bal. , Jan . 1.1972
197.31
OWE
1,739.53
Receipts
Career Orientation
376.70 ' Federal Subsidy Fund 5,27 1.72
Head Start
5.931.20 Total
5,271.72
BADC
9.38 Total Transfers
5,27\.72
Total
348,15A . l6 Tot .!II Receipts (Receipts
CASH BALANCE,
Plus Transfers
5,469.03
RECEIPTS AND
Expenditures
4,998.79
EXPENDITURES
Total EKpendilures
IV FUND
Including Transfers 4.991!.79
Oene~al Fund
Bal., Dec . 31 , 1972
470.2-t
Bal .. Jan. l, 1972
84,117.40 Total EKpendltures Plus
Receipts- Revenue
Bal .. Dec . 31. 1972
5,469.03
General Property Tax DDPF Fund
Real Eltate (Gross )
Receipts
343.210.99 Sta te of Ohio 'tangible Personal Property
Other
27,983.31
Tax fGorossl
76,499 .29 Total Receipts
27 , 983 ~ 31
Foundat ion Fund
Tran1fers
{Gross)
1,483,007 .82 From Gen . Fund
8.000.00
State of Ohio Total Transfers
8.000.00
Vocat ional Educat ion 4,039.50 Total Receipts
Plus Transfers
35,983.31
State of Ohio School Bus PurC'tlases
Total Beginning Balance
17 ,155 .00
Plus Receipts
35,983 31
State of Ohio Expenditures
Other
50,669.58 A-21b
81463.00
Tuition - Parents
A-2b
312.28
and Patrons
5,043.52 B-4
258.93
~ental of School
B-6
9,330.43
PropertY
555.70 D-4
1,589.29
Other- Revenue
8,037.53 Transfer to General
Total Rev. Receipts 1,988,218.93
Fund
4,000.00
Receipts- Nonrevenue
Total EKpendltures
23,953.93
Adjustments and
Bal .• Dec. 31, 1972
12.029.38
Refunds
772.18 Total Expenditures Plus
Sa te of Non · Real
Bat .. Oec. 31. 1972
35,983.31
Property
1,101 .00
Adult Basic Fund
Other- Nonrevenue
17,,.24.20 Bat., Jan . 1, 1972
3,070.95
Total Nonrevenue
Receipts
Receipts
19,297 .38 Federal Subs idy
4,066.87
Receipts- Transfer
Total Receipts
4.066.87
From E.S.E .A. Title
Transfers
l Fund
57,305.72 From Gen. Fund
500 .00
DPPF
4,000.00 Total Transfers
500.00
OWA
4.218.45 Total Receipts Plus
Career Or ie ntation
4,686.78
Transfers
4,566 .87
Basic Adult
Total Beginning Bal.
Education
3,072.86
Plus Receipts
7,637.82
Breakfast Program
3,842 .82
Expenditures
Adult High School
B-6
730.30
Education
1,158.26 A-16·1
1.327.50
T&amp;l .
29.41 4 -21 -b
256.00
Total Transfers
78,314.36 E·l6·a
324.09
Total Receipts (Re venue.
E-19
45.54
Nonrevenue and
F-5
239.61
Transferal
2,085,830.67 F ·S·il
36.70
Total- Beginning Bat .
F-6
8.56
Plus Receipts
2.170,548.07 A . l4
62.50
Exptndlfures
A-15
100.00
Total Exptndltuns Returned to State
177.23
,. Adm lnlatratlon
66,051 .48 Transfer to
Instruction
1,151,930.88
Gentrat Fund
3,072.86
Llbrarlts
16,934 .59 Toto~~l Expenditures
6.380.89
Transportation .
Bol., Dec . 31 , 1972
1,256.93
of Pupils
191,286.98 Total EKpenditures Plus
- Piergrounds aud
Bal .. Dec . 31 , 1972
7,63).83

-PU.BUC NOT
. ICES

'••d

)

T1de

•

•

·

'
NEW YORK (UP!) - Bear
Bryant , Alabama's football
coach and athletic director,
postponed the 8tart of spring
football practice for two da)'ll
just so he could attend the
Crimson Tide's first-round
game with Manhattan in the
National Invitation Tournament -the first time
Alabama has been in postseason basketball action.
The Bear was rewarded for
his trip to New York when S.
foot-8 forward Glenn Garrett
sanka25-footshotatthebuzzer
to give the Tide an 87-86 victory
over Manhattan in the second
game of Monday night's
doubleheader. Minnesota toof
advantage of a mysterious
slowdown by Rutgers late in
the first half to defeat the
Scarlet Knights, 63-59, in the
first contest.
The quarter-final pairings
for tonight find Notre Dame
(lS-11) meeting Louisville (23-

Arrangements are judged

Gophers advance in NIT play
'

6) and Ma.esachuselts (20-6)

.
duled for better thingsnamely, the NCAA championships as the Big Ten tltllst but
the Gophers lost their last two
games to Iowa and Northwestern and let- Indiana slip by
them for the conference crown.
"I think we played a very
disciplined· game comP,.red to
our last two games, Minnesota
Coach Bill Musselman sald."We concentrated on defense
... with our size we have to

concentrate on defense. I'd be
very dissa!Wied if our club
wasn't dlsappolnted over not
going to tbe NCAA tournament.
Now they feel .they have a
chance; to redeem themselves.'
Mimesota abnost didn't get
that chance. Rutgers came out
running and took a 14-8 early in
the game, but a few minutes
later ·Rutgers Coach Dick
Uoyd ordered hiS players to

slow down the action. This was
a fatal deCision as the Gophers
ran off 12 straight points In
shutting out the Scarlet
Knights for nearly seven
minutes to. _take a 2!).18 lead,
from which Rutgers never
recovered.
"We felt Minnesota was
going 1Q be an awesome club,"
Uoyd said in explaining why he
ordered the stall. "I figured we
wouldn't be able to play with

them on the boards. We wanted
-to come out fast and then slow
it down and hoped they would
P.nic. We couldn't 1'1111 With
them for 40 minutes .
"But nothing about them.
surprued us," Lloyd added.
"They were playing volleyball
with the baslietbsll at one

facing 12th-ranked North
Carollna (23-7) . Thursday
night's qUarterfinal matchullfl
are Virginia Tech (19-6) and
. Fairfield (III-II) in the first
game, followed by the game
between Monday night winners
Minnesota, now 21-4, and
point.''
• Alabama, 21~.
That's why the Gophers are
·• "I could ten it was heading in
favored
to win the NlT, Dick._
the general direction of the
basket," Garrett said. "I
thought it would be close. I was
very surjrised and very glad."
·Alabama's Coach C. M.
Newton was glad that the Bear
showed up for the game. "He
was a good luck chann." And
Garrett added, "A guy like
Bryant lias to help." Newton .
hopes that the noted football
mentor can postpone the start
of pigskin practice to come to
Alabama's next game.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. hand for the announcement at old, propeller-driven DC7 ceremonies for Clemente and
Minnesota appeared in the (UP!) - Roberto Clemente a 12 noon EST news con- airplane in which they were five others natned to the Hall of
NIT for the first Ume, like always wanted to be remem- ference.
ferrying supplies from Puerto Fame earlier this yearAlabama. It had been sche- bered simply as a "player who
Officially, the purpose was to Rico to earthquake victims in Warren Spahn, Monte Irvin,
and oldUmers Mickey Welch,
gave hiS best."
announce the results of the Managua, Nicaragua.
George
"Highpockets" Kelly
The
plane,
delayed
several
The epitaph was gentle special yes-or-no Hall of Fame
Praject Interest Fund
liabilities :
Bat. , Jan. 1, 1972
18.752.61 Bond Indebtedness 1,297 ,000.00 enough, but hardly befitting a vote on Clemente's candidacy, times before takeoff, crashed and umpire Billy Evans- will
Receipts
Total Liabilities
l,297,0DO.OO star of Clemente's greatness. but the fact of his election was into the ocean near the San be held Aug. 6 at Cooperstown,
Interest - Ina ctive
Excess or Deficiency
Funds
4,984.37
of Assets
3,648,128 .16 Today, baseball officially not one of baseball's best-kept Juan Airport. Clemente's body N.Y.
Total Receipts
'4,984.37 Total ~
4,945,128.16 gives Clemente what is consid- secrets.
never has been recovered.
Tct.!lll Beginning Balance
SCHOOL DEBT
Clemente, who was 38 at his
Plus Receipts
23,736.98
ered a more deserving rep~em­
BONDS
Only the size of the vote hJd
Expenditures
Purpose For W.hich
death,
won four National
brance-election to the Hall of been in question.
Improvements
Bond Debt Was Created
Old Build ings
19,489.40 Salisbury .School
Fame, less than three months
Clemente becomes only the league batting titles-in 1961,
Total Ell:penditures
19,489.40
Construe.
after he died on a New Year's second player admiited to the 1964, 1965 and 1967. He
Bal .. Dec . 31. 1972
4.247.58 Outstanding Jan. 1,
Total Expenditures Plus
1972
30,000.00 Day mercy flight.
baseball shrine without the averaged .317 for his career,
Bal., Dec . 31 , 1972
23,736.98 Redeemed During Year
T&amp; I Fund
1972
5,000.00 Clemente's widow, Vera, customary five-year waiting won the gold glove for fielding
Bal. , Jan. 1, 1972
29.47 Bal., Outstanding
Make it a memor·
joined by Baseball Com- period, and the first since a excellence a dozen times, was
Expenditures
Dec . 31. 1972
25,000.00
able gift.
Transfer to General
Rate of lnt
3 missioner Bowie Kuhn and dying Lou Gehrig was elected the league's Most Valuable
Give him an
Fund
29.47 Date of Final Mat.
1977 officials of the Pittsburgh by acclamation in 1939.
Player
in
1966
and
the
outAccutron watch
Total Expend itures
29.47 Sat isbury .Schoot
by Bulova. So
Total EKpendltures Plus
sta!Hiing
player
in
the
1971
Pirates,
for
whom
Clemente
Construe .
Clemente died with four
precise that
Bal. Dec . 31 , 1972 .
29.47 Outstanding Jan.
OWE Fund
accuracy is
I. 1972
10,000.00 starred 18 seasons, were on other men in the crash of an World Series.
Bal. Jan . 1..1972
265.98 Redeemed During Year
His final regular sea!!On hit in
guaranteed
Rece ipfs- Transfers
1972
2,000.00
to within
1972 was his 3,000th. Only 10
From Gen. Fund
12,517 43 Bal. Outstanding
a minute
Total Transfers
12,517.-43
Dec . 31,1972
8,000.00
other players ever got that
a month. •
Total Receipts Plus
of Int.
3
many.
Transfers
12.517.&lt;13 Rate
See our full
Date of Final Mat .
1975
Total Beginning Balance
Middleport Elem . &amp; High
range of
Mrs. Clemente and CommlsPlus Receipts · 12,783.41
School Add. ·Construc .
Accutron
sioner Kuhn will present
Expenditures
Outstanding Jan . 1,
styleo.
A-16-1
11.043.88
1972
147 .ooo 00
another award today, too, an
From .
Total ElCpenditures
11,043.88 Redeemed During Year
Bal .. Dec. 31. 1972
1,739.53
$ll0.
honor newly named for Cle1972
16,000.00
Total Expend itures Plus
Bal Outstanding
mente to the ''player who best
Bal. , Dec . 31 , 1972
12,783 ..41
Dec . 31. 1972
131.000.00
Adult EducationRate of Int.
4lf2
exempllfies the game of ba~
f
High School Fund
Date of Final Mat.
1980 By United Press IntematiODal Williarns.
ball
on and off the field.''
Bal, Jan . L 1973
1, 158 00 F'omeroy Elem.
"Vida threw the hell out of
The
key
'to
Vida
Blue
seems
EKpendifures
construe .
the ball," Williams said, · Although the award was
to be green.
Transfer to General
Outstanding Jan .
Fund
1,158.26
1. 1972
259.000.00 roue, still holding out for despite tbe fact that he gave up instituted in 1971, it never
Total Expenditures
1.158.00 Redeemed During
previously had a name. Willie
Total Expenditures Plus
Year 1972
21,000.00 more money, made his first Milwaukee's wiming run on a
Bal., Dec. 31,1972
LI 5B.OO Bat . Oulstanding
Mays
won it the first year and
Career Orientation Fund
Dec 31, 1972
238,000 .00 pitching appearance yesterday single to Johnny Briggs a!HI a Brooks Robinson last year.
·
Receipts
Rate of tnt.
4 1f~ in
a 5-4 Oakland loss to double to Joe Lahoud in the
State of Ohio Date of Final Mal .
1983 Milwaukee and was swamped fifth iming. That gave the The formal induction
Other
4,920.08 Bedford Construction
Total Rece ipts
4,920.08 Outstanding Jan. 1,
with the usual questions about Brewers a ~2 lead.
Transfers
1972
10,000.00
But those were 'the only hits
when, where and if he would
From Gen . Fund
233.30 Redeemed During
Total Transfers
233.30
3,000.00 sign a 1973 contract.
Year 1972
and the only run scored against
Total Receipts Plus
Bal. Outstanding . ,
Blue, who pitched the middle
Transfers
5, 153.38
K
newsman
asked
him
if
he
Dec 31, an ·
7,000 .00
Expenditures
Rate of Int.
2.75 would play for the Texas three imings a!HI struck out
6th Anniversary
B-6
66.80 Date of Final Mat.
1974
B-6
8.60 Northwestern ·I m prov .
Rangers, to whom he is being two.
Transfer to Genera l
Outstanding Jan .
Rookie outfielder Gorman
Fund
4,686.78 1, 1972
Sale Values
63,000.00 rumored to be traded, a!HI roue
Total E)(penditures
41776.68 Redeemed During Year
responded "I don't care where Thomas hit a 400-foot homer in
Bat. Dec . 31. 1972
376.70
1972
9,000.00 I play. I'd play for you (the the opening inning off Ken
ALL THIS WEEK
Total Expenditures Plus
Bat. Outstand ing
Ba l., Dec 31, 1972
5,153.38 Dec. 31, 1972
54,000.00 newsman) if you had the Holtzman to give Milwaukee a
Save to 112 off &amp; more
Head Start Fund
Rate of tnt.
3.25
1-0 lead and capped a three-run
JEWELRY STORE
Bal , Jan . 1,1972
1.103.68 Date of Final Mat .
1978 money."
Receipts
Northwestern ·lmprov .
Court St., Pomeroy
third
iming
by
the
Brewers
Blue
said
he
"wasn't
trying
Federal Subsidy
39,000.00 Outstanding Jan . 1,
Total Rece ipts
39,000.00
1972
27.000.00 to impress anyone," but the 23- with a two-run single.
Ellpendltures
Redeemed During
Main at Sycamore, Pomeroy
Billy Conigliaro had a solo
1,667 .00
A· l4a
Year 1972
3,000 00 year.old left-bander did imA-16a.1
10.800.00 Bal. Outstanding
press his manager, Dick homer for the A's in the sixth.
A·2lb
1,625.00
Dec. 31, 1972
2A,000 .00
A·21a
1,450.00 Rate of Int.
3
A.1sa
272.00 Date of Final Mat .
1981
A-2
408.00 Meigs High Sc hool .
A-26
2,720.00
Construe .
A-27
478.00 Outstanding Jan . l,
B-1
13.28
1972
855,000 .00
B-6
992. 17 Redeemed During Year
LR -ta
2,448.00
1972
45,000 .00
LR -2
2,487 .05 Bal. Oulstand ing
E-12
5,595.00
Dec . 31, 1972
810,000 00
LR -5
101 .96 Rate of In t.
4.375
B . 1Q
69.85 Date ot Final Mat .
1990
A-35
1,4A2.25 Total - Outstanding
E-20
384.52
. even for those late, Iale calls. Like the STARLITE®telephone ... the
Jan . 1, 1972
1.401.000.00
E.l6a
340.23 Total - Redeemed
dainty high-sty le phone with a dial that glows. It' s idea l for her vanity or
F-3
114 75
During Year 1972 104 ,000.00
Return of Unused
night !able for after-dark dialing, or JUSt as a friendly soft night light (w ith
Total - Balance
71 Funds
763.42
Outstanding De c.
adjustable brightness). Bedroom or breakfast nook , kitche n or rump us
Total E~ependitures
34,172.48
31. 1972
1,297 ,000.00
Bal . Dec . 31. 1972
5.931 .20 13) 20, 1t
room ... every home should have a second phone, a step- a nd workTotal Expenditures Plus
Sat., Dec . 31, 1972
40,103.68
saver for your greater p leasure, convenience ,and security. Whe rever
OWA Fund
your need , whatever your taste or decor. there's a fasc in ating
Bal., Jan . 1, 1972
1,678.99
T
Receipts-Transfers ·
selection of slyles. colors and spec1al- purpose teleph ones
From Gen . Fund
12.747.05
1n General Telephone's Extension Extravaganza .
Total Transfers
12,747 .05
Total Receipts Plus
Transfers
12,747 ,05
Total Beginn ing Balance ,
Pius Rece ipts
14,426.04
Ex pendltures
A. J6.J
6,811 .99
A-35
2,043.20
E · 19
47.80
F-5
1,304.60
Transfer to
General Fund
4,218 ..45
(lf(
Total E~ependilures
14,-426.0-4
...
"'
:JJJi""'
'.
,.
Total EKpenditures Plus
Bal. , Dec . 31. 1972
14,.426.04
ADC Fund
Danny Sayre
Bal .. Jon . I. 1972
9.38
Bat , Dec . 31. 1972
9.38
The beaver has had more
Breakfast Program Fund
do with !he landscaping of
Bal .. Jan . 1, 1972
3,842.82
land than any other
Tnnsters
mal. He literally moves
Transfers to Gen .
Fund
3,842.82
ountalns, dams whole
Total Expenditures
3,842.82
systems. and by
Tohal Expenditures Plus
emming the natural
Bal .. Dec . 31. 1972
3,842.82
ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
of erosion, he
DECEMBER 31 , 1972
fertile
land. He allero
Assets:
ol
compoolllon
Depository Balances
vegelatl011 by changing the
(A cti lle and Inactive )
Deduct Outstanding
waler table - digging and
Warrants
198,738.16 dilchlng continually. We
ln11estments
150,000.00
mighl call the beaver a good
Inventory Suppl ies
lijl#l
and Materials
98,600.00 "Rebuilder of our natural
Lands (Cost) 1Building
6EOERALTELEPHOOE
resources .''
Sites, Playgrounds,
By
uolng
pure
soap
and
etc .)
624.060.00
refined water, you too, can
Buildings {COS,t)
{ALL School
help prolect our waler
CHESTPHONE .. a real man ·lype
Bulldlngo)
3.395,070.00 resources. You can use
decorator phone lor the living
Equipment (Cost)
Instead ol detergents
(All School Building
room , his special room. desk or
Equipment &gt;
-478,660.00 pollute our streams
table Modern styl ize d Instrumen t
S.TYLELINE•
lelephone
puis
the
works
Total Assets
-4,945,128.16 rivers You can have aentler
handsomely set in a blac&lt; lealher
righl in lhe palm of your hand ...
STYLELINE•
more effective cleani
chest
with walnut lrim . . . In
handset,
dial
and
recall
bulton.
Make
WALL PHONE
carved
walnut ... or even with a
Since the Garden of Edton I
call aller call without seUing down 1he
beautifu l, convenient
ssrdon~ stone hunting scene inphono. Comes in white, green, Ivory,
there's been nothing better. I
s1e.p-sa11er tor her
set on lhe lid I
k1!chen. laund ry room
yellow. pink. beige, or avocado.
It transforms ordinary
.
ror
any
place
water into a miracle
wr.ere it's hard 10 find
refreohmenl . Unploosan11
counler or table·tOt:l
taste• and most millnerals
space Comes in
•
choice ol eight del1·
removed .
For · · odc~rs.,l
c1ous colors.
delergenl residue, and
A Living Reminder of
good life Call 882-2525 .
Your Friendship a,pd

Flower- arrangements on
exhibit at a meeting of the Star
Garden Club held Thursday
. night at the home of Mrs. Anna
Ogdin were judged wiih Mrs.
Orion Nelson taking first, Mrs.
G. A: Radekin, second, and
Mrs. Ogdln, third.
What to plant in March was
discussed by Mrs. Blanche
Nelson with suggestions

Articles displayed

Late Roberto ·Clemente
named to Hall of Fame

Articles for the Crippled
Children's
Hospital
in
Columbus and the Burns Institute in Cincinnati were
displayed at a meeting of the
Twin City Shrinettes held
Thursday night at the home of
Mrs. Beulah Ewing.
Mrs. Clara Adams and Mrs.
Barbara Dugan showed eight
articles which can be purchased for the two hospitals by
.,.

Accutron·
by Bulova

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mound debut

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Middle ort

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REPEAT OF A
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Health club welcomes member ·,
'·

'
J

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Plans were made to serve the Blackston; "An Egg a Day
Red Cross Bloodmobile on Advisable for Older People" by
George
Skinner;
April 23 and Mrs. Richard Mrs .
"Migraine
Headaches"
by
Butcher,
formerly
of
Cleveland, was welcomed as a Mrs. 'William Folmer; "Is
new member when the .Rock · Eating Three Meals a Day
Sprlnga Better Health Clu~ met advisable for Older People" by
Thursday at the home of Mrs. Mrs. James. Conkle; "Is an
Operation Not Always AdClifford Leifheit.
Mrs. Scott Folmer presided visable"by Mrs. Scott Fnlmer;
at the meeUng which opened
with the pledge to the flag and
the Lord's Prayer. Devotions
from the · Uppar Room were
given by )ll.rs. William Grueser
who subaUtuted for Mrs. Welby
Whaley, confined by illness.
Mrs.
Fred
Goegleln
presented the ·program which
included "Spurs on the Heel"
by
William Radford;
"Loss of Memory'~ by
Mrs. W.
A. Morgan;
" ·Angina Pain" by Mra.
Opha Offutt· "What abool
·The Deflclencles in Our Older 1

and "Not So Small" by Mrs.
Louis Grueser.
The ·contest won by Mrs.
Ethel Grueser and Mrs. Butcher was conducted by Mrs.
William Folmer.
. Mrs, Leifheit served refreshmen~'! to those named and Mrs.
Amos leonard, ·Mrs. George
Skinner and' Stacie Butcher.

by Mrs. Harold

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•••

LADIES QUILT
An aU-day quilting : bee
was held by the Second
Tuesday Senior Citizens Club
recently at the home of Mrs.
Mary Pierce. The group had
a potluck dinner at noon with
Mrs. · Marie Swan giving
grace. The club was
organized two years ago.
Joining the group for the
afternoon
was
Mrs .
Margaret Amburger.
Attending were Mrs. Ella
Hannum; Mrs. Ada Bissell,
Mrs. Swan, Mrs. Garnett
Hensley, Mrs. Monad
Wilson, Mrs. Hilda White,
and Mrs. Alice Curtis.

HOIELITE®

lOLA'S

SAYRE
HARDWARE

(Continued from page I)
Tracy Hennann, and Charles
Davis.
SECOND GRADE
Essay : Suzanna Wise, first;
Cindy Crooks, second, and
Kimberly Roush, third.
20, 1828.
Poetry: Barbara Custer,
On this.day in history:
first; Karen Goggins, seco!HI.
ln 1852, Harriet Beecher
Crayon:, Charles Geary,
Stowe's book "Uncle Tom's
first; Suzanna Wise, second;
Cabin" -&lt;~bout slavery -was
Chuck McCloud, third.
published for the first time.
Collage :
Stephanie
In 1951, Argentine dictator
Hollchins,
first;
'Chris
Juan Peron seized control of
Snowden, second.
the opposition newspaper "La
Waterbase : Alan King, first;
Prensa."
Karen Goggins, second; Greg
In 1963, a volcano on the
Grimm, third.
island of Bali in the East Indies
Finger Painting: Chris
began erupting. The eventual
Snowden, first; Tanya Stobart,
GET THIS HANDY
death toll went over 1,000. .
second, and Cindy Parker,
CHAIN SAW
In 1968, lsraef launched
third.
heavy attacks upon terrorist
THIRD GRADE
DR. WJLroN BOWERS, PEDIATRICIAN at the Holzer
bases in Arab Jordan.
Poetry: Phyllis Davis, first ;
Medical Center, gave his views on school problems, physical
Helen Slack, second, and Pam
or emotional, in a talk Monday night at the Middleport
A thought for the day :
Crooks, third; with honorable
School
PTA.
He
was
introduced
by
Mrs.
Edward
Norwegian
writer Henrik Ibsen
Elementary
mentl&lt;r' to Tina 111~~ •~ _, crooks, program chab'rri8n. ·
~~ ,,,,.,h
:: :~" ":'-.'": .. : '. '-"·;it "
.s iriCiif, Wih 'ihd
,l ;)t,l i.l '
• I ,,], , -~ ·•.-' .~' y,..,~ j 'Jtlo . l ~~ 'i:.&gt;•IJ,A&lt;·, I
Roush, and Greg BUsh.
"
l
,. h
.... thejspmt.of.,lreeaom, J.Dey '!re ,
p;ssays: Cindy Perry, first ;
the pillars of society."
David Hoffman, second; and
John Cremeans, third, with
WHEN YOU BUY A NEW
backgrounds which lend to -RAY WST INDEFINITELY
honorable mention to Bobby Glass.
Oil: Tom Kelly, first; Bob discourage d ev~lopment and
Faulk, Robin Kitchen and Lori
CHICAGO (UP!) - Clifford
Fox, second.
the role which parent ex- Ray, a S-9 center, suffered a
Roush.
Water
Color :
Paul pectations play in the actual sprained knee in Chicago's
Drawing : Melissa Spencer,
intellectual development of a victory over the Detroit
first; Eedie Daniels, second; McElhaney.
Drawings
:
Paul
McElhaney,
child.
and Georgeann Knapp, third.
at the regular price.
Pistons Sunday a!HI will be lost
Behavior never hinges on one to the Bulls indefinitely.
Collages : Charles Collins, first; Verne Slaven, second,
factor, but is influenced by
first; Randy Murray, secpnd, and Tony Scott, third.
Ray1s loss won'tbe as hard to
Sandpaper Art: Mindy Long, many, the speaker · said. take as originally anticipated,
and Vangi Hart, third.
Problems cannot be solved however, since the Bulls'
Graphics: Randy Murray, first ; Steve Shaw, second.
Collages: Angela Baker, overnight, he said.
first; Melissa Spencer, second,
regular center, 6-11 Tom
first, Barbara Moyer, second,
During the business meeting Boerwinkle, will be reactivated
and Barbara Estep, third.
presided over by Mrs . for tonight's game against
String Pictures : ·James and Tony Scott, third .
String Pictures: Ricky Hall , Raymond Stewart, officers for Portland.
Carsey, first; Keith Slaven,
first;
Ruth Ann Blake, second, the 1973-74 year were elected.
second; and Jimmy Boyer,
Kathy Hess, third.
They are Mrs . Edwina Scott, NEW ASSISTANT
third.
Umiled time offer.
DOCTOR
SPEAKS
president;
Mrs.
Carolyn
EVANSTON,
Ill.
(UP!)
Tempera: David Meadows,
Guest speaker was Dr . Shrimplin, first vice president; Forrest Lile, an assistant
first; Berty Herald, second,
Wilson
Bowers, pediatrician at Mrs. Beverly Long, second football coach at Northwestern
and Melissa Spencer, third.
Finger Paintings: Lynn the Holzer Medical Center. vice president; Mrs. Betty for 10 years, Monday was . .A Gallia and
Kioes, first; Pam ·Crooks, Introduced. by Mrs. Edward McKinley, secretary; Mrs. named the school's assistant ·
Mason
Counties
athletic. director,
second, and Kathy Blake, Crooks, program chairman, Joyce Blake, treasurer.
Ph . 992-2181
The 47-year.old Lile will have
Dr . Bowers centered his
Delegates named to the
third .
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
comments on school ad- , Meigs County Council of chief responsibility of NorthFOURTH GRADE
western's
new
national
justment
and
the
interaction
Parent.!
and
Teachers
were
· Poetry: Nim~y Wallace,
Open Daily Unlit
recruiting
program
and
will
be
•
6:00P.M.
between
child
and
parent
for
Mrs.
Vaughan,
Mrs.
Kathy
Sheila
Horky,
second,
first;
chief
counsel
to
varsity
athhealthy
emotional
develop
Erwin,
Mrs.
Pauline
Reuter,
and Kimberly Glass, third,
Mrs. Sibley Slack, and Mrs. letes.
with honorable inentlon to men t.
·
He
said
when
school
Crooks.
The alternates elected
Lydia Johnson, Robin Herald,
problems arise parents tend to were Mrs. Lucy White, Mrs.
and Steve Shaw. ·
Essays : Paulette Sigman, look for medical rather than Jennifer Butcher, Mrs.
first; Robin Herald, second; emotional reasons, and that Jeanette Thomas, Mrs. Herand Larry Byer, third, with usually the problem is not nice May and Miss Mary
honorable mention to Verne medical . He described social Francis.
Slavin, Randy Hall and Kim 'and environmental

:;:::..~~=-. . ~=:~

=$30.00

GOESSLER'S

Dudley's florist

The Almanac
By United Press Inlernatlonal
Today is Tuesday, March 20,
the 79th day of 1973 with 286 to
follow.
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning stars are Venus,
Ma.. , Mercury and Jupiter.
The evening star is Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aries.
Henrik Ibsen, Norwegian poet
and dramatist, was born March

those members who do not sew.
Members were asked to purchase the items and take them
to the April 19 meeting so that
they can he sent to \!)~
hospitsis.
Members were reminded·
that any new candidates'
petitions must be received in
Columbus before April 'l:l. Next
meeting will he held at the
home of Mrs. Enuna Clatworthy and members were
asked to wear their own
~reation of an Easter bonnet
Attending the · meeting
besides those named were Mrs.
Cora Beegle, Mrs. Violet
Miller, Mrs. Agnes Brown,
Mrs. '{era Van Meter, Mrs.
Mary Baldwin, Mrs. Irma
Yoho, Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell,
Mrs. Connie Miller and Jimmie, Miss Shirley Beegle, and
Dixie Dugan.

valentines, favors and flowers Mrs. Ogdin will submit the
provided for the children. It Green Thumb Notes for May.
Plans were made for the club
was reported that the cookbooks are all sold . Mrs. G. A. to have members of the Good
Radekin was appointed Luck Garden Club as guests for
chairman of the committee to lhe April meeting at the home
decide what ·shrubs to plant in of Mrs. C. E. Stout.
Members named their
the civic planting this year.

•

ACCESSORY KIT

SPECIAl-, .

Best Wishes.

A POTTERY DISPLAY by third graders at the Middleport Elementary School was a
feature of the non-competitive work at the Cultural Arts Exhibit Monday night at the PTA
meeting. Admiring the work here are Kathy Blake, Keith Slaven, and David Reuter, left to
right.

.

Blue

FOLIAGE
'GARDENS
from •3.00

coming from other members of
the club. Mrs. Henry Turner
had a reading on the topic .
Miss Ruby Diehl reported on
arrangements which she had
made for her own church and
for her sister's church.
A letter was read from Mrs.
Ralph Harvey, matron of the
Meigs County Children's Home
thanking the club for the

favori'eherbinresponse to r••.
call .· The traveling prize
donated by Miss Diehl was won
by Mrs. G. A. Radekin. Mr!l.
Nellie Nelson won the hoeteu
gift.
Devotions · were given by
Mrs. Ogdin who used "Get Rid
of the Junk" U8ing scripture
from Col. 3. Ten members and
one visitor, Mrs. Stella Atkins
were present for the meeting.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess.

l.
,I

. r.

1

�,.
4- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddlepqrt;.Pomeroy, 0 ., March 20, 1973
'

Community Centers
193.5"1
r.uxlilary r.oencl•s 267.222.88
Operation of School
Plant
177,757 ..4.4
Sc:hool Plant
.
Your ftMd.t
·"' Know
Maintenance
.tO,t70.69
-'5'' 111
Capitol Outlay
37,065.32
Transfers
68,997.78
end be Informed of the func · OWE
12,517.43
lions of vour gpvernment are DPPF
8.000.00
tmboctled in "ubllc notices. rn
Tille I
35,000.00
that ~elf -government charges
Career
233.30
ell cltlzens to be Informed; .Basic
. 500.00
this newspep1 urges every Grand Total EKpenditures citizen to
end study these
General Fund
2,017.611.55
.notrees. We strongly advise
Bat
..
Dec . 31 , 1972
152,936.52
those crtltens, seeking further Total EKpenditures Plus
informetlbn, to exercise their
Bal ., Oec .31 1972 2,17015-48.07
right Of ·access to publ ic
Bond Retirement Fund
records and public meetrn9s. Bal. , Jan . 1, 1972
69,943.92
Reulpb- Revenue
General Property Tax Real Estate (Gross)
f'JNANCIAL REPORT
162,071.85
·oF THI IOARO
Tangible
Personal
Property
'
OF EDUCATION
1
Tax
(Gron
l
35,239.08
For .Fr,eaJ Y11r Ending
Total
Rev
.
Rece
ipts·
197,310.93
DectmDer 21st, 1972
Total Receipts (Revenue,
'Mtlll LOCII
Nonrevenue and
School District
Transfers)
197,310.93
M~ill County
Total
Beginning
Balance
Middleport, Ohio
Plus Receipts
267,254.85
Much u , 1t13
Expenditures
Bonds Maturing
10-4,000.00
I certlly tt'le following report Notes and Certificates
to be correct.
Maturing
59.639.38
L.W . McComas Other - Bond
Clerk , Treasurer of
Retirement Fund
6,303.78
the Board of Education . Total Expend itures- Bond
CASH RI!CONCIL14TION
Retirement Fund 169,934.16
TOII!I FUnd Balances,
Bal., Dec . ll, 1972
97.311.69
Dec. 31, 1972
s 348,754 .16 Total
Expenditures Pius Bal.
Depository Balances :
Dec . 31, 1972
267,254.85
Farmer's Bank &amp;
Lunchroom
Fund
Savings Co.
76,969 .93 Bal .. Jon . I, 1912
32,855.07
Pomeroy Nat. Bank
62,882 .58
Receipts-Income
Citizens Nat. sank
87,850 .87 Sale of Lunches
76,636.99
Total Depository.
227,703
.38
FeLduenra,hleSsubsidy
Balances
66,512.88
Investments:
Federal Subsidy Certificates of Deposit
3,901.04
Milk
150,000.00 Tclat
Receipts Totallnvestments
150,000.00
Income
147,050.91
Totel
377,703.38 Total
Receipts {Income
Outstanding Warrants, Dec .
and Tro~~nsfersl
lA7.050.91
31, 19721Deductl
28.949.22 Total
Beginning
Balance
Total - Clerk ;
Plus Receipts
179,905.98
Treasurer, Balance,
EKpenditures
Dec. 31, 1972
348.754.16 Personal Service·Manager ·
SUMMARY OF CASH
Sa laries &amp; wages
750.00
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
Personal
Service-Cooks.
AND EKPENDITURES
Salaries &amp; Wages
52,139.60
B1lance Jan. 1, 1912
Supplies and Food
105,847 .43
General Fund
84,717.40 Equipment
Bond Retirement
69,943 .92 Repairs to Equipment 12,984.45
646.56
lunchroom
32,855.07 Other- Lunchroom
Un iform School
Fund
3.088.98
Supplies
5.759.89 Total
Expenditures Trust
1,743.44
Lunchroom Fund 175,457.02
N.D.EA Title II
19,924.95 ~al.,
. Jl, 1972
4,448.96
N.O.E.A. TltleV
190.00 'Ictal Dec
EKpenditures
Plus
E.S.E.A. Title I
58,365.67
Bat .. Dec . 31. 1972 179,905.98
E.S.E.A. Title II
197.31
Uniform School
Adult Baste
3,070.95 \•
Fund
Project Interest
18,752.61 Bal. , Jan.Supplies
1. 1972
5,759.89
T&amp;i
29.47
Receipts-Income
OWE
265.98 Sale 01 workbooks
8,043.30
Adult Education
1.158 .26 Sale
of
Supplies
3,122.44
Head Start
1.103.68 Total Receipts OW4
1,678.99
Income
11,165.74
Breakfast Program
3,842.82
ADC
9.38 PurchaseExpenditures
of Workbooks 3,60 3.52
Total
303.609.79 F"urchase cf Supplies 3,282.31
Tot11 Receipts
Total Expenditures General
2,085,830.67
Uniform School
Bond Retirement
197,3 10.93
Supplies Fund
6,885.83
Lunchroom
147,050.91 Bat ., Dec . 31 , 1972
10,039.80
Uniform School
Total Expenditures Plus
Supplies
11.165.74
Bal.. Dec . 31. 1972
16.925.63
· Trust
1,138 .50
Trust Funds
N D.E.A. Title Ill
8,500 .68 Bal. , Jan . I, 1972
1,7 43.44
E.S.E.A. Til le I
165,211.85
Receipts
E.S.E A. Tille II
5,271.72 Interest on Inactive
DPPF
35,983.31
Funds
1.138.50
Adult Basic
4,566.87 Total Receipts
1,138.50
Pro~ect Interest .. ·
4,987 .37 Expenditures
879.80
ow
12,517.43 Bal .. Dec . 31,1972
2.b02.14
Career Orlen let ion
5,153.38 Total EKpendltures Plus
Head
Stard
39,000 .00
Bal, Dec . 31, 1972
2,881.94
OWA
12,747.05
N.D.E .A. Tille ill Fund
Total
2,73'6,433.41
(Include Appalachia) 1,289.q4
Total Receipts &amp; Balances
Bal., Jan . 1, 1972
19,924.95
General
2,170,548.07
Receipts
Bond Re.tlrement
267,254.85 Coordinator- Title
Lunchroom
179,905.98
Ill
8,500.68
Un iform School
Total
1!,500.68
Suppl ies
16,925.63 Total Beginn ing Balance
Trust
2,881.94
Plus Receipts
21!,425.63
N.D.E.A.Titlelli
28,425.63
Expenditures
N.D.E.A. Title V
190.00 401021059 B·6
7,289.94
7,289.q4
E . S.E~. Title I
223,577.52 ictal EKpenditures
E.S.E . . Title' II
51 4'69.03 Bal. , Dec 31, 1912
21,135.69
OPP IS le '~.• '4
Total Expenditures Plus
Adult
35,983,3
1
7,637.82
Bal .. Dec. 31. 1972
28.425.63
.Pro feet Interest
23,736.98
N.D.E.A. Title V Fund
T&amp;i
29.47 Bal., Jan . l , 1972
190.00
OWE
12,783.41 Bal .. Dec . 31, 1972
190.00
Adult EduCation
1,158.26
E.S.E.A. Tllke I Fund
Career Orientation
5,153.38 Bal., Jon 1, 1972
58,365.67
Head Start
40,103.68
Receipts
OWA
1&lt;11,426.04 Federal Subsidy Fund 130,211.85
Breakfast Program
3,842.82 TotAl
130,211 .85
ADC
9.38
A eceipts-Tran1fers
Total
3,()40,043.20 From Gen Fund
35,000.00
Expenditures
Total Transfers
35,000.00
General ,
2,017,611 .55 Total Receipts (Receipts
Bond Retlr~ment
169.943.16
Plvs Tran sfers
165,211. 85
Lunchroom
175,.457 .02 Total Beginning Balance
Un iform School
Plus Receipts
223.577.52
Supplies
6,885.83
Expenditures
Trust
879.80 A . 16 ·1
86,417.01
N.D.E.A. T-Itle Ill
7.289.94 F-5
10-985.05
E.S.E.A. Title 1
188,949.10 F.5a
579.78
E.S.E.A. Title II
4,998.79 A 2b
1;572.40
DPP F
23,953.93 B-2
8.00
Adult Baste
6,380.89 A·l4
6.981.99
Project Interest
19,.489.40 A-15
1,345.43
T&amp;l
29.47 E· 16-a
458.02
OWE
11 ,043.88 B-6
3,876.83
Adult Education
1,158 .26 E.19
130.00
Cereer Orientation
4,776.68 LR -2
215.54
Head Start
34,112.48 8-4
388.08
OWA . ,
14,426.04 A·23
808.82
Breakfast Program
3.842.82 A-27
840.00
Total
2,691,289.04 E-20
489.05
. Balance Dec. 31, 1972
Ret. to State
16,547 .38
General
.
152.936.52 Tota l Expenditures 131 ,643.38
Bond Retirement
97,311 .69
Transfers
Lunchroom
4,448.96 To Gen . Fund
51,305.72
Uniform School
Total
Transfers
57,305.72
Suppl ies
10,039.80 Total Expenditures
Trust
2.002.14 · In clud ing Transfers 188,949.10
N.D.E.A. Title Ill
21.135.69 Bal .. Dec. 31, 1972
3&lt;.628.42
N.D.E.A. Title V
190.00 Total Expenditures Plus
E.S.E.A. Title I
34,628.42
Bal ., Dec. 31. 1972 223,577 .52
E.S.E.A. Title II
470.24
DPPF
12.029.38
Adult Bulc
1.256.93
E.S.E.A. Title II Fund
Project Int erest
4,247 .58 Bal. , Jan . 1.1972
197.31
OWE
1,739.53
Receipts
Career Orientation
376.70 ' Federal Subsidy Fund 5,27 1.72
Head Start
5.931.20 Total
5,271.72
BADC
9.38 Total Transfers
5,27\.72
Total
348,15A . l6 Tot .!II Receipts (Receipts
CASH BALANCE,
Plus Transfers
5,469.03
RECEIPTS AND
Expenditures
4,998.79
EXPENDITURES
Total EKpendilures
IV FUND
Including Transfers 4.991!.79
Oene~al Fund
Bal., Dec . 31 , 1972
470.2-t
Bal .. Jan. l, 1972
84,117.40 Total EKpendltures Plus
Receipts- Revenue
Bal .. Dec . 31. 1972
5,469.03
General Property Tax DDPF Fund
Real Eltate (Gross )
Receipts
343.210.99 Sta te of Ohio 'tangible Personal Property
Other
27,983.31
Tax fGorossl
76,499 .29 Total Receipts
27 , 983 ~ 31
Foundat ion Fund
Tran1fers
{Gross)
1,483,007 .82 From Gen . Fund
8.000.00
State of Ohio Total Transfers
8.000.00
Vocat ional Educat ion 4,039.50 Total Receipts
Plus Transfers
35,983.31
State of Ohio School Bus PurC'tlases
Total Beginning Balance
17 ,155 .00
Plus Receipts
35,983 31
State of Ohio Expenditures
Other
50,669.58 A-21b
81463.00
Tuition - Parents
A-2b
312.28
and Patrons
5,043.52 B-4
258.93
~ental of School
B-6
9,330.43
PropertY
555.70 D-4
1,589.29
Other- Revenue
8,037.53 Transfer to General
Total Rev. Receipts 1,988,218.93
Fund
4,000.00
Receipts- Nonrevenue
Total EKpendltures
23,953.93
Adjustments and
Bal .• Dec. 31, 1972
12.029.38
Refunds
772.18 Total Expenditures Plus
Sa te of Non · Real
Bat .. Oec. 31. 1972
35,983.31
Property
1,101 .00
Adult Basic Fund
Other- Nonrevenue
17,,.24.20 Bat., Jan . 1, 1972
3,070.95
Total Nonrevenue
Receipts
Receipts
19,297 .38 Federal Subs idy
4,066.87
Receipts- Transfer
Total Receipts
4.066.87
From E.S.E .A. Title
Transfers
l Fund
57,305.72 From Gen. Fund
500 .00
DPPF
4,000.00 Total Transfers
500.00
OWA
4.218.45 Total Receipts Plus
Career Or ie ntation
4,686.78
Transfers
4,566 .87
Basic Adult
Total Beginning Bal.
Education
3,072.86
Plus Receipts
7,637.82
Breakfast Program
3,842 .82
Expenditures
Adult High School
B-6
730.30
Education
1,158.26 A-16·1
1.327.50
T&amp;l .
29.41 4 -21 -b
256.00
Total Transfers
78,314.36 E·l6·a
324.09
Total Receipts (Re venue.
E-19
45.54
Nonrevenue and
F-5
239.61
Transferal
2,085,830.67 F ·S·il
36.70
Total- Beginning Bat .
F-6
8.56
Plus Receipts
2.170,548.07 A . l4
62.50
Exptndlfures
A-15
100.00
Total Exptndltuns Returned to State
177.23
,. Adm lnlatratlon
66,051 .48 Transfer to
Instruction
1,151,930.88
Gentrat Fund
3,072.86
Llbrarlts
16,934 .59 Toto~~l Expenditures
6.380.89
Transportation .
Bol., Dec . 31 , 1972
1,256.93
of Pupils
191,286.98 Total EKpenditures Plus
- Piergrounds aud
Bal .. Dec . 31 , 1972
7,63).83

-PU.BUC NOT
. ICES

'••d

)

T1de

•

•

·

'
NEW YORK (UP!) - Bear
Bryant , Alabama's football
coach and athletic director,
postponed the 8tart of spring
football practice for two da)'ll
just so he could attend the
Crimson Tide's first-round
game with Manhattan in the
National Invitation Tournament -the first time
Alabama has been in postseason basketball action.
The Bear was rewarded for
his trip to New York when S.
foot-8 forward Glenn Garrett
sanka25-footshotatthebuzzer
to give the Tide an 87-86 victory
over Manhattan in the second
game of Monday night's
doubleheader. Minnesota toof
advantage of a mysterious
slowdown by Rutgers late in
the first half to defeat the
Scarlet Knights, 63-59, in the
first contest.
The quarter-final pairings
for tonight find Notre Dame
(lS-11) meeting Louisville (23-

Arrangements are judged

Gophers advance in NIT play
'

6) and Ma.esachuselts (20-6)

.
duled for better thingsnamely, the NCAA championships as the Big Ten tltllst but
the Gophers lost their last two
games to Iowa and Northwestern and let- Indiana slip by
them for the conference crown.
"I think we played a very
disciplined· game comP,.red to
our last two games, Minnesota
Coach Bill Musselman sald."We concentrated on defense
... with our size we have to

concentrate on defense. I'd be
very dissa!Wied if our club
wasn't dlsappolnted over not
going to tbe NCAA tournament.
Now they feel .they have a
chance; to redeem themselves.'
Mimesota abnost didn't get
that chance. Rutgers came out
running and took a 14-8 early in
the game, but a few minutes
later ·Rutgers Coach Dick
Uoyd ordered hiS players to

slow down the action. This was
a fatal deCision as the Gophers
ran off 12 straight points In
shutting out the Scarlet
Knights for nearly seven
minutes to. _take a 2!).18 lead,
from which Rutgers never
recovered.
"We felt Minnesota was
going 1Q be an awesome club,"
Uoyd said in explaining why he
ordered the stall. "I figured we
wouldn't be able to play with

them on the boards. We wanted
-to come out fast and then slow
it down and hoped they would
P.nic. We couldn't 1'1111 With
them for 40 minutes .
"But nothing about them.
surprued us," Lloyd added.
"They were playing volleyball
with the baslietbsll at one

facing 12th-ranked North
Carollna (23-7) . Thursday
night's qUarterfinal matchullfl
are Virginia Tech (19-6) and
. Fairfield (III-II) in the first
game, followed by the game
between Monday night winners
Minnesota, now 21-4, and
point.''
• Alabama, 21~.
That's why the Gophers are
·• "I could ten it was heading in
favored
to win the NlT, Dick._
the general direction of the
basket," Garrett said. "I
thought it would be close. I was
very surjrised and very glad."
·Alabama's Coach C. M.
Newton was glad that the Bear
showed up for the game. "He
was a good luck chann." And
Garrett added, "A guy like
Bryant lias to help." Newton .
hopes that the noted football
mentor can postpone the start
of pigskin practice to come to
Alabama's next game.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. hand for the announcement at old, propeller-driven DC7 ceremonies for Clemente and
Minnesota appeared in the (UP!) - Roberto Clemente a 12 noon EST news con- airplane in which they were five others natned to the Hall of
NIT for the first Ume, like always wanted to be remem- ference.
ferrying supplies from Puerto Fame earlier this yearAlabama. It had been sche- bered simply as a "player who
Officially, the purpose was to Rico to earthquake victims in Warren Spahn, Monte Irvin,
and oldUmers Mickey Welch,
gave hiS best."
announce the results of the Managua, Nicaragua.
George
"Highpockets" Kelly
The
plane,
delayed
several
The epitaph was gentle special yes-or-no Hall of Fame
Praject Interest Fund
liabilities :
Bat. , Jan. 1, 1972
18.752.61 Bond Indebtedness 1,297 ,000.00 enough, but hardly befitting a vote on Clemente's candidacy, times before takeoff, crashed and umpire Billy Evans- will
Receipts
Total Liabilities
l,297,0DO.OO star of Clemente's greatness. but the fact of his election was into the ocean near the San be held Aug. 6 at Cooperstown,
Interest - Ina ctive
Excess or Deficiency
Funds
4,984.37
of Assets
3,648,128 .16 Today, baseball officially not one of baseball's best-kept Juan Airport. Clemente's body N.Y.
Total Receipts
'4,984.37 Total ~
4,945,128.16 gives Clemente what is consid- secrets.
never has been recovered.
Tct.!lll Beginning Balance
SCHOOL DEBT
Clemente, who was 38 at his
Plus Receipts
23,736.98
ered a more deserving rep~em­
BONDS
Only the size of the vote hJd
Expenditures
Purpose For W.hich
death,
won four National
brance-election to the Hall of been in question.
Improvements
Bond Debt Was Created
Old Build ings
19,489.40 Salisbury .School
Fame, less than three months
Clemente becomes only the league batting titles-in 1961,
Total Ell:penditures
19,489.40
Construe.
after he died on a New Year's second player admiited to the 1964, 1965 and 1967. He
Bal .. Dec . 31. 1972
4.247.58 Outstanding Jan. 1,
Total Expenditures Plus
1972
30,000.00 Day mercy flight.
baseball shrine without the averaged .317 for his career,
Bal., Dec . 31 , 1972
23,736.98 Redeemed During Year
T&amp; I Fund
1972
5,000.00 Clemente's widow, Vera, customary five-year waiting won the gold glove for fielding
Bal. , Jan. 1, 1972
29.47 Bal., Outstanding
Make it a memor·
joined by Baseball Com- period, and the first since a excellence a dozen times, was
Expenditures
Dec . 31. 1972
25,000.00
able gift.
Transfer to General
Rate of lnt
3 missioner Bowie Kuhn and dying Lou Gehrig was elected the league's Most Valuable
Give him an
Fund
29.47 Date of Final Mat.
1977 officials of the Pittsburgh by acclamation in 1939.
Player
in
1966
and
the
outAccutron watch
Total Expend itures
29.47 Sat isbury .Schoot
by Bulova. So
Total EKpendltures Plus
sta!Hiing
player
in
the
1971
Pirates,
for
whom
Clemente
Construe .
Clemente died with four
precise that
Bal. Dec . 31 , 1972 .
29.47 Outstanding Jan.
OWE Fund
accuracy is
I. 1972
10,000.00 starred 18 seasons, were on other men in the crash of an World Series.
Bal. Jan . 1..1972
265.98 Redeemed During Year
His final regular sea!!On hit in
guaranteed
Rece ipfs- Transfers
1972
2,000.00
to within
1972 was his 3,000th. Only 10
From Gen. Fund
12,517 43 Bal. Outstanding
a minute
Total Transfers
12,517.-43
Dec . 31,1972
8,000.00
other players ever got that
a month. •
Total Receipts Plus
of Int.
3
many.
Transfers
12.517.&lt;13 Rate
See our full
Date of Final Mat .
1975
Total Beginning Balance
Middleport Elem . &amp; High
range of
Mrs. Clemente and CommlsPlus Receipts · 12,783.41
School Add. ·Construc .
Accutron
sioner Kuhn will present
Expenditures
Outstanding Jan . 1,
styleo.
A-16-1
11.043.88
1972
147 .ooo 00
another award today, too, an
From .
Total ElCpenditures
11,043.88 Redeemed During Year
Bal .. Dec. 31. 1972
1,739.53
$ll0.
honor newly named for Cle1972
16,000.00
Total Expend itures Plus
Bal Outstanding
mente to the ''player who best
Bal. , Dec . 31 , 1972
12,783 ..41
Dec . 31. 1972
131.000.00
Adult EducationRate of Int.
4lf2
exempllfies the game of ba~
f
High School Fund
Date of Final Mat.
1980 By United Press IntematiODal Williarns.
ball
on and off the field.''
Bal, Jan . L 1973
1, 158 00 F'omeroy Elem.
"Vida threw the hell out of
The
key
'to
Vida
Blue
seems
EKpendifures
construe .
the ball," Williams said, · Although the award was
to be green.
Transfer to General
Outstanding Jan .
Fund
1,158.26
1. 1972
259.000.00 roue, still holding out for despite tbe fact that he gave up instituted in 1971, it never
Total Expenditures
1.158.00 Redeemed During
previously had a name. Willie
Total Expenditures Plus
Year 1972
21,000.00 more money, made his first Milwaukee's wiming run on a
Bal., Dec. 31,1972
LI 5B.OO Bat . Oulstanding
Mays
won it the first year and
Career Orientation Fund
Dec 31, 1972
238,000 .00 pitching appearance yesterday single to Johnny Briggs a!HI a Brooks Robinson last year.
·
Receipts
Rate of tnt.
4 1f~ in
a 5-4 Oakland loss to double to Joe Lahoud in the
State of Ohio Date of Final Mal .
1983 Milwaukee and was swamped fifth iming. That gave the The formal induction
Other
4,920.08 Bedford Construction
Total Rece ipts
4,920.08 Outstanding Jan. 1,
with the usual questions about Brewers a ~2 lead.
Transfers
1972
10,000.00
But those were 'the only hits
when, where and if he would
From Gen . Fund
233.30 Redeemed During
Total Transfers
233.30
3,000.00 sign a 1973 contract.
Year 1972
and the only run scored against
Total Receipts Plus
Bal. Outstanding . ,
Blue, who pitched the middle
Transfers
5, 153.38
K
newsman
asked
him
if
he
Dec 31, an ·
7,000 .00
Expenditures
Rate of Int.
2.75 would play for the Texas three imings a!HI struck out
6th Anniversary
B-6
66.80 Date of Final Mat.
1974
B-6
8.60 Northwestern ·I m prov .
Rangers, to whom he is being two.
Transfer to Genera l
Outstanding Jan .
Rookie outfielder Gorman
Fund
4,686.78 1, 1972
Sale Values
63,000.00 rumored to be traded, a!HI roue
Total E)(penditures
41776.68 Redeemed During Year
responded "I don't care where Thomas hit a 400-foot homer in
Bat. Dec . 31. 1972
376.70
1972
9,000.00 I play. I'd play for you (the the opening inning off Ken
ALL THIS WEEK
Total Expenditures Plus
Bat. Outstand ing
Ba l., Dec 31, 1972
5,153.38 Dec. 31, 1972
54,000.00 newsman) if you had the Holtzman to give Milwaukee a
Save to 112 off &amp; more
Head Start Fund
Rate of tnt.
3.25
1-0 lead and capped a three-run
JEWELRY STORE
Bal , Jan . 1,1972
1.103.68 Date of Final Mat .
1978 money."
Receipts
Northwestern ·lmprov .
Court St., Pomeroy
third
iming
by
the
Brewers
Blue
said
he
"wasn't
trying
Federal Subsidy
39,000.00 Outstanding Jan . 1,
Total Rece ipts
39,000.00
1972
27.000.00 to impress anyone," but the 23- with a two-run single.
Ellpendltures
Redeemed During
Main at Sycamore, Pomeroy
Billy Conigliaro had a solo
1,667 .00
A· l4a
Year 1972
3,000 00 year.old left-bander did imA-16a.1
10.800.00 Bal. Outstanding
press his manager, Dick homer for the A's in the sixth.
A·2lb
1,625.00
Dec. 31, 1972
2A,000 .00
A·21a
1,450.00 Rate of Int.
3
A.1sa
272.00 Date of Final Mat .
1981
A-2
408.00 Meigs High Sc hool .
A-26
2,720.00
Construe .
A-27
478.00 Outstanding Jan . l,
B-1
13.28
1972
855,000 .00
B-6
992. 17 Redeemed During Year
LR -ta
2,448.00
1972
45,000 .00
LR -2
2,487 .05 Bal. Oulstand ing
E-12
5,595.00
Dec . 31, 1972
810,000 00
LR -5
101 .96 Rate of In t.
4.375
B . 1Q
69.85 Date ot Final Mat .
1990
A-35
1,4A2.25 Total - Outstanding
E-20
384.52
. even for those late, Iale calls. Like the STARLITE®telephone ... the
Jan . 1, 1972
1.401.000.00
E.l6a
340.23 Total - Redeemed
dainty high-sty le phone with a dial that glows. It' s idea l for her vanity or
F-3
114 75
During Year 1972 104 ,000.00
Return of Unused
night !able for after-dark dialing, or JUSt as a friendly soft night light (w ith
Total - Balance
71 Funds
763.42
Outstanding De c.
adjustable brightness). Bedroom or breakfast nook , kitche n or rump us
Total E~ependitures
34,172.48
31. 1972
1,297 ,000.00
Bal . Dec . 31. 1972
5.931 .20 13) 20, 1t
room ... every home should have a second phone, a step- a nd workTotal Expenditures Plus
Sat., Dec . 31, 1972
40,103.68
saver for your greater p leasure, convenience ,and security. Whe rever
OWA Fund
your need , whatever your taste or decor. there's a fasc in ating
Bal., Jan . 1, 1972
1,678.99
T
Receipts-Transfers ·
selection of slyles. colors and spec1al- purpose teleph ones
From Gen . Fund
12.747.05
1n General Telephone's Extension Extravaganza .
Total Transfers
12,747 .05
Total Receipts Plus
Transfers
12,747 ,05
Total Beginn ing Balance ,
Pius Rece ipts
14,426.04
Ex pendltures
A. J6.J
6,811 .99
A-35
2,043.20
E · 19
47.80
F-5
1,304.60
Transfer to
General Fund
4,218 ..45
(lf(
Total E~ependilures
14,-426.0-4
...
"'
:JJJi""'
'.
,.
Total EKpenditures Plus
Bal. , Dec . 31. 1972
14,.426.04
ADC Fund
Danny Sayre
Bal .. Jon . I. 1972
9.38
Bat , Dec . 31. 1972
9.38
The beaver has had more
Breakfast Program Fund
do with !he landscaping of
Bal .. Jan . 1, 1972
3,842.82
land than any other
Tnnsters
mal. He literally moves
Transfers to Gen .
Fund
3,842.82
ountalns, dams whole
Total Expenditures
3,842.82
systems. and by
Tohal Expenditures Plus
emming the natural
Bal .. Dec . 31. 1972
3,842.82
ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
of erosion, he
DECEMBER 31 , 1972
fertile
land. He allero
Assets:
ol
compoolllon
Depository Balances
vegelatl011 by changing the
(A cti lle and Inactive )
Deduct Outstanding
waler table - digging and
Warrants
198,738.16 dilchlng continually. We
ln11estments
150,000.00
mighl call the beaver a good
Inventory Suppl ies
lijl#l
and Materials
98,600.00 "Rebuilder of our natural
Lands (Cost) 1Building
6EOERALTELEPHOOE
resources .''
Sites, Playgrounds,
By
uolng
pure
soap
and
etc .)
624.060.00
refined water, you too, can
Buildings {COS,t)
{ALL School
help prolect our waler
CHESTPHONE .. a real man ·lype
Bulldlngo)
3.395,070.00 resources. You can use
decorator phone lor the living
Equipment (Cost)
Instead ol detergents
(All School Building
room , his special room. desk or
Equipment &gt;
-478,660.00 pollute our streams
table Modern styl ize d Instrumen t
S.TYLELINE•
lelephone
puis
the
works
Total Assets
-4,945,128.16 rivers You can have aentler
handsomely set in a blac&lt; lealher
righl in lhe palm of your hand ...
STYLELINE•
more effective cleani
chest
with walnut lrim . . . In
handset,
dial
and
recall
bulton.
Make
WALL PHONE
carved
walnut ... or even with a
Since the Garden of Edton I
call aller call without seUing down 1he
beautifu l, convenient
ssrdon~ stone hunting scene inphono. Comes in white, green, Ivory,
there's been nothing better. I
s1e.p-sa11er tor her
set on lhe lid I
k1!chen. laund ry room
yellow. pink. beige, or avocado.
It transforms ordinary
.
ror
any
place
water into a miracle
wr.ere it's hard 10 find
refreohmenl . Unploosan11
counler or table·tOt:l
taste• and most millnerals
space Comes in
•
choice ol eight del1·
removed .
For · · odc~rs.,l
c1ous colors.
delergenl residue, and
A Living Reminder of
good life Call 882-2525 .
Your Friendship a,pd

Flower- arrangements on
exhibit at a meeting of the Star
Garden Club held Thursday
. night at the home of Mrs. Anna
Ogdin were judged wiih Mrs.
Orion Nelson taking first, Mrs.
G. A: Radekin, second, and
Mrs. Ogdln, third.
What to plant in March was
discussed by Mrs. Blanche
Nelson with suggestions

Articles displayed

Late Roberto ·Clemente
named to Hall of Fame

Articles for the Crippled
Children's
Hospital
in
Columbus and the Burns Institute in Cincinnati were
displayed at a meeting of the
Twin City Shrinettes held
Thursday night at the home of
Mrs. Beulah Ewing.
Mrs. Clara Adams and Mrs.
Barbara Dugan showed eight
articles which can be purchased for the two hospitals by
.,.

Accutron·
by Bulova

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REPEAT OF A
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Health club welcomes member ·,
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Plans were made to serve the Blackston; "An Egg a Day
Red Cross Bloodmobile on Advisable for Older People" by
George
Skinner;
April 23 and Mrs. Richard Mrs .
"Migraine
Headaches"
by
Butcher,
formerly
of
Cleveland, was welcomed as a Mrs. 'William Folmer; "Is
new member when the .Rock · Eating Three Meals a Day
Sprlnga Better Health Clu~ met advisable for Older People" by
Thursday at the home of Mrs. Mrs. James. Conkle; "Is an
Operation Not Always AdClifford Leifheit.
Mrs. Scott Folmer presided visable"by Mrs. Scott Fnlmer;
at the meeUng which opened
with the pledge to the flag and
the Lord's Prayer. Devotions
from the · Uppar Room were
given by )ll.rs. William Grueser
who subaUtuted for Mrs. Welby
Whaley, confined by illness.
Mrs.
Fred
Goegleln
presented the ·program which
included "Spurs on the Heel"
by
William Radford;
"Loss of Memory'~ by
Mrs. W.
A. Morgan;
" ·Angina Pain" by Mra.
Opha Offutt· "What abool
·The Deflclencles in Our Older 1

and "Not So Small" by Mrs.
Louis Grueser.
The ·contest won by Mrs.
Ethel Grueser and Mrs. Butcher was conducted by Mrs.
William Folmer.
. Mrs, Leifheit served refreshmen~'! to those named and Mrs.
Amos leonard, ·Mrs. George
Skinner and' Stacie Butcher.

by Mrs. Harold

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•••

LADIES QUILT
An aU-day quilting : bee
was held by the Second
Tuesday Senior Citizens Club
recently at the home of Mrs.
Mary Pierce. The group had
a potluck dinner at noon with
Mrs. · Marie Swan giving
grace. The club was
organized two years ago.
Joining the group for the
afternoon
was
Mrs .
Margaret Amburger.
Attending were Mrs. Ella
Hannum; Mrs. Ada Bissell,
Mrs. Swan, Mrs. Garnett
Hensley, Mrs. Monad
Wilson, Mrs. Hilda White,
and Mrs. Alice Curtis.

HOIELITE®

lOLA'S

SAYRE
HARDWARE

(Continued from page I)
Tracy Hennann, and Charles
Davis.
SECOND GRADE
Essay : Suzanna Wise, first;
Cindy Crooks, second, and
Kimberly Roush, third.
20, 1828.
Poetry: Barbara Custer,
On this.day in history:
first; Karen Goggins, seco!HI.
ln 1852, Harriet Beecher
Crayon:, Charles Geary,
Stowe's book "Uncle Tom's
first; Suzanna Wise, second;
Cabin" -&lt;~bout slavery -was
Chuck McCloud, third.
published for the first time.
Collage :
Stephanie
In 1951, Argentine dictator
Hollchins,
first;
'Chris
Juan Peron seized control of
Snowden, second.
the opposition newspaper "La
Waterbase : Alan King, first;
Prensa."
Karen Goggins, second; Greg
In 1963, a volcano on the
Grimm, third.
island of Bali in the East Indies
Finger Painting: Chris
began erupting. The eventual
Snowden, first; Tanya Stobart,
GET THIS HANDY
death toll went over 1,000. .
second, and Cindy Parker,
CHAIN SAW
In 1968, lsraef launched
third.
heavy attacks upon terrorist
THIRD GRADE
DR. WJLroN BOWERS, PEDIATRICIAN at the Holzer
bases in Arab Jordan.
Poetry: Phyllis Davis, first ;
Medical Center, gave his views on school problems, physical
Helen Slack, second, and Pam
or emotional, in a talk Monday night at the Middleport
A thought for the day :
Crooks, third; with honorable
School
PTA.
He
was
introduced
by
Mrs.
Edward
Norwegian
writer Henrik Ibsen
Elementary
mentl&lt;r' to Tina 111~~ •~ _, crooks, program chab'rri8n. ·
~~ ,,,,.,h
:: :~" ":'-.'": .. : '. '-"·;it "
.s iriCiif, Wih 'ihd
,l ;)t,l i.l '
• I ,,], , -~ ·•.-' .~' y,..,~ j 'Jtlo . l ~~ 'i:.&gt;•IJ,A&lt;·, I
Roush, and Greg BUsh.
"
l
,. h
.... thejspmt.of.,lreeaom, J.Dey '!re ,
p;ssays: Cindy Perry, first ;
the pillars of society."
David Hoffman, second; and
John Cremeans, third, with
WHEN YOU BUY A NEW
backgrounds which lend to -RAY WST INDEFINITELY
honorable mention to Bobby Glass.
Oil: Tom Kelly, first; Bob discourage d ev~lopment and
Faulk, Robin Kitchen and Lori
CHICAGO (UP!) - Clifford
Fox, second.
the role which parent ex- Ray, a S-9 center, suffered a
Roush.
Water
Color :
Paul pectations play in the actual sprained knee in Chicago's
Drawing : Melissa Spencer,
intellectual development of a victory over the Detroit
first; Eedie Daniels, second; McElhaney.
Drawings
:
Paul
McElhaney,
child.
and Georgeann Knapp, third.
at the regular price.
Pistons Sunday a!HI will be lost
Behavior never hinges on one to the Bulls indefinitely.
Collages : Charles Collins, first; Verne Slaven, second,
factor, but is influenced by
first; Randy Murray, secpnd, and Tony Scott, third.
Ray1s loss won'tbe as hard to
Sandpaper Art: Mindy Long, many, the speaker · said. take as originally anticipated,
and Vangi Hart, third.
Problems cannot be solved however, since the Bulls'
Graphics: Randy Murray, first ; Steve Shaw, second.
Collages: Angela Baker, overnight, he said.
first; Melissa Spencer, second,
regular center, 6-11 Tom
first, Barbara Moyer, second,
During the business meeting Boerwinkle, will be reactivated
and Barbara Estep, third.
presided over by Mrs . for tonight's game against
String Pictures : ·James and Tony Scott, third .
String Pictures: Ricky Hall , Raymond Stewart, officers for Portland.
Carsey, first; Keith Slaven,
first;
Ruth Ann Blake, second, the 1973-74 year were elected.
second; and Jimmy Boyer,
Kathy Hess, third.
They are Mrs . Edwina Scott, NEW ASSISTANT
third.
Umiled time offer.
DOCTOR
SPEAKS
president;
Mrs.
Carolyn
EVANSTON,
Ill.
(UP!)
Tempera: David Meadows,
Guest speaker was Dr . Shrimplin, first vice president; Forrest Lile, an assistant
first; Berty Herald, second,
Wilson
Bowers, pediatrician at Mrs. Beverly Long, second football coach at Northwestern
and Melissa Spencer, third.
Finger Paintings: Lynn the Holzer Medical Center. vice president; Mrs. Betty for 10 years, Monday was . .A Gallia and
Kioes, first; Pam ·Crooks, Introduced. by Mrs. Edward McKinley, secretary; Mrs. named the school's assistant ·
Mason
Counties
athletic. director,
second, and Kathy Blake, Crooks, program chairman, Joyce Blake, treasurer.
Ph . 992-2181
The 47-year.old Lile will have
Dr . Bowers centered his
Delegates named to the
third .
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
comments on school ad- , Meigs County Council of chief responsibility of NorthFOURTH GRADE
western's
new
national
justment
and
the
interaction
Parent.!
and
Teachers
were
· Poetry: Nim~y Wallace,
Open Daily Unlit
recruiting
program
and
will
be
•
6:00P.M.
between
child
and
parent
for
Mrs.
Vaughan,
Mrs.
Kathy
Sheila
Horky,
second,
first;
chief
counsel
to
varsity
athhealthy
emotional
develop
Erwin,
Mrs.
Pauline
Reuter,
and Kimberly Glass, third,
Mrs. Sibley Slack, and Mrs. letes.
with honorable inentlon to men t.
·
He
said
when
school
Crooks.
The alternates elected
Lydia Johnson, Robin Herald,
problems arise parents tend to were Mrs. Lucy White, Mrs.
and Steve Shaw. ·
Essays : Paulette Sigman, look for medical rather than Jennifer Butcher, Mrs.
first; Robin Herald, second; emotional reasons, and that Jeanette Thomas, Mrs. Herand Larry Byer, third, with usually the problem is not nice May and Miss Mary
honorable mention to Verne medical . He described social Francis.
Slavin, Randy Hall and Kim 'and environmental

:;:::..~~=-. . ~=:~

=$30.00

GOESSLER'S

Dudley's florist

The Almanac
By United Press Inlernatlonal
Today is Tuesday, March 20,
the 79th day of 1973 with 286 to
follow.
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning stars are Venus,
Ma.. , Mercury and Jupiter.
The evening star is Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aries.
Henrik Ibsen, Norwegian poet
and dramatist, was born March

those members who do not sew.
Members were asked to purchase the items and take them
to the April 19 meeting so that
they can he sent to \!)~
hospitsis.
Members were reminded·
that any new candidates'
petitions must be received in
Columbus before April 'l:l. Next
meeting will he held at the
home of Mrs. Enuna Clatworthy and members were
asked to wear their own
~reation of an Easter bonnet
Attending the · meeting
besides those named were Mrs.
Cora Beegle, Mrs. Violet
Miller, Mrs. Agnes Brown,
Mrs. '{era Van Meter, Mrs.
Mary Baldwin, Mrs. Irma
Yoho, Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell,
Mrs. Connie Miller and Jimmie, Miss Shirley Beegle, and
Dixie Dugan.

valentines, favors and flowers Mrs. Ogdin will submit the
provided for the children. It Green Thumb Notes for May.
Plans were made for the club
was reported that the cookbooks are all sold . Mrs. G. A. to have members of the Good
Radekin was appointed Luck Garden Club as guests for
chairman of the committee to lhe April meeting at the home
decide what ·shrubs to plant in of Mrs. C. E. Stout.
Members named their
the civic planting this year.

•

ACCESSORY KIT

SPECIAl-, .

Best Wishes.

A POTTERY DISPLAY by third graders at the Middleport Elementary School was a
feature of the non-competitive work at the Cultural Arts Exhibit Monday night at the PTA
meeting. Admiring the work here are Kathy Blake, Keith Slaven, and David Reuter, left to
right.

.

Blue

FOLIAGE
'GARDENS
from •3.00

coming from other members of
the club. Mrs. Henry Turner
had a reading on the topic .
Miss Ruby Diehl reported on
arrangements which she had
made for her own church and
for her sister's church.
A letter was read from Mrs.
Ralph Harvey, matron of the
Meigs County Children's Home
thanking the club for the

favori'eherbinresponse to r••.
call .· The traveling prize
donated by Miss Diehl was won
by Mrs. G. A. Radekin. Mr!l.
Nellie Nelson won the hoeteu
gift.
Devotions · were given by
Mrs. Ogdin who used "Get Rid
of the Junk" U8ing scripture
from Col. 3. Ten members and
one visitor, Mrs. Stella Atkins
were present for the meeting.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess.

l.
,I

. r.

1

�..
1-Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middlepo!'I-Pomeroy, 0., March 20,197:'
.
~r;n ....in.
;:;u~.f!
w.

.
Soc1al Calendar . 1

Shower given Mrs. Grover

~M

· pink and blue were used on the
b;tssinet where the gifts were
placed. .
Cake, ice cream, chips,
mints and Kool-Atd were
served. Games were played
with prizes going to Mrs. Joyce
Grover, Mrs. Gerri Mowery,
Mrs. Lucille Lewis an4 Mrs.
Dorothy Kent, who also won
the door prize.
Attending the shower were
PARTIES GIVEN
those named and Mrs. Nonna
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Colmer Grover,MissMaryGates,Miss
entertained recently with a . Meta · Hudnall, Miss Gloria '
party in ohservanee of the Grover, Miss Lucille Grover,
birthday anniversaries of their Miss Colena Mowery, and Paul
· daughter, Shari, and Mrs. Kent. Others presenting gifts to
Colmer's sister, Tammy Mrs. Grover were Mrs. Leta
Snider . Games were played Hall,Mr.andMrs.H.Goodwin,
with prizes going to Anna Mrs. Cherry Cadel, · Mrs.
McKinney, Joyce Bing, and Barbara Phillips, Mrs. Susan
Cindy Faulk . Debbie Scha¢er Richmond, Mrs. Sue Lewis,
won the door prize. Ice cream, and Mrs. Nellie Grover.
cake, chips and soft drinks
FILM SCHEDULED
were served. Attending were
A
film
"Who Set the Stanthose named and Judy Hall,
Sandy Hamilton, Cindy Faulk, dard" will be shown at the Zion
Peggy Snyder, and Debbie Church of Christ on Sunday,
Spires. The cake was mad~ and March 25 at 7:30 p.m. The
decorated for the honored youth of the church will be in
guests by Sue Peterson of charge of the service. The
public is invited to attend.
Lincoln Hill.

DETROIT (UP!)""'· General of our .inions that we Join
Mark Twain is 'buried in
Motors '.·Corp. announced together in a reasonable and~ Woodlawn Cemete.ry, ElMonday it will nol increase the responslble approach to our mira, N.Y.
prices of Its 1973 model cars
.,.

~

RUTLAND - Mrs. Gloria
Grover, Rutland, was honored
recently wilh a layette shower
given by Mrs. Virginia Whaley
at her Darwin home.
Pink and blue bootie replicas
and the inscription, "Welcome
Utile Stranger" decorated the
cake. Streamers and bows in

,..,.

TUESDAY
omo Valley Commarxtry 24,
Knight Templar, special
conclave, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. to
confer the order of the temple.
Full form opening.
CHESTER COUNCIL 323, D.
of A., 7:30 p.m. at the hall.
PractiCe for receiving national
and state officers. Quarterly
birthdays to be observed,
poUuck refreshments. Grab
bag by miscellaneous com-

mittee. I
. FRIENDLY Circle,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
Pomeroy Trinity Church. Mrs.
Thomas Young, program
chairman, and hostesses, Mrs.
Phil Globokar and Miss Mary
E. Chapman.
OffiO ETA Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Middleport. Cultural program on
nature by Texanna Well and
Lynn Kitchen.
SOUTHERN LOCAL OAPSE
meeting Tuesday, 8 p.m. at the
SyraCUBe Elementary School.
Election of officers ; oyster
soup supper.
RACINE PTA, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday with cultural arts
entries to be on display.
SALISBURY PTA, 7:30p.m.
Tuesday. John Reece, public
relations coordinator, Ohio
Power Co., to show· slides on
mining operations in Meigs
County.
WEDNESDAY
BOSWORTH Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
stated assembly, Wednes~ay ,
7:30 p.m., Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
SYRACUSE Third Wednesday Homemakers Club
Wednesday at house at
Municipal park. Covered dish
dinner at noon. Easter baskets
to be made to take to local
nursing home. Members are
asked to make donations to
purchase fruit and candy for
baskets. Hostesses are Elva
Dalley and Margaret Bailey . .
PUBLIC meeting, Wed-

nesday, at Letart Falls community building, 7:30 p.m. on
social security and Council on
Aging; speaker, Norman Cupp,
Marietta social security office.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at
Meigs Inn.
TilE YOUNG WIVES' Club
Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at home
of Virginia Kirkhart, Tuppers
Plains.
TIIURSDAY
PRODUCTS PARTY Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at St. Paul's
United Methodist Church,
Tuppers Plains. Public ts Invited.
REVIVAL IN progress at
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church, Rt. 143, nightly at 7:30
p.m. Rev . O'Dell Manley
speaker. Public is invited.
JITNEY SUPPER Thursday, beginning at 3:30p.m. at
Rutland Elementary School.
Sponsored by Firemen's
Auxiliary.
WOMEN'S ASSN ., Middleport · First
United
Presbyterian Church. Mrs. J.
E.
Harley,
devotions;
dedication of sewing assignment; drama "Golden Rays
from Calvary's Hill." Members of Gcoup I will be the
hostesses.
REVIVAL each evening
through Friday, 7:30 p.m. at
Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Public Invited.
SOUTHERN
BAND
Boosters, 7 p,m. Thursday
night
at the
school.
Preparations to be made for
the annual band banquet. All
band boosters urged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation League, Thursday, 7:30p.m. home of Susie
Grueser. Annual guest night to
be observed. Party to carry out
a Mexican theme in costuming
and decorations. A while
elephant sale will be held.
FRIFAY
PAST
MATRONS,
Evangeline Chapter, 0 .E .S.
7:30 p.m. Friday, Masonic
Temple.

Third Friday club meets
Mrs. Mabel Wolfe hosted a
~Ill&amp; ..of the Third Friday
Club at her home Fr'lday night.
· Mrs .' Genevieve Meinhart
conducted lhe meeting which
opened with prayer. Mrs. Ben
Neutzllng gave an article "A
New Friend," and Mrs. Marie
Dalley and Mrs. Ruby Erb
were reported ill. The April
meeting will be held at lhe
home of Mrs. Freda Duffy,
Syracuse. A meditation from
the Upper Room read by Mrs.
Meinhart closed the business
aesslon.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Carrie
Meinhart, Mrs. Sybil Ebers-

bach, Mrs. Edna Reibel, and
Miss Erma Smith. Mrs. Wolfe
served a salad course to those
named and Mrs. Berlha Ebersbach and Mrs. Eva Dessauer.

FIRSTBORN IS SON
Mr . and Mrs . Michael
Borgan, Columbus, are announcing the birth of their first
child, a son, Dominic Berlingo,
on March 8 at St. Ann's
Hospital. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W.
Kennedy, Yellow Springs, and
Mrs. Nellie Borgan, Pomeroy
Route 4.

DON1 MISS
THESE •••

REV. HUSSELTON
Evangelistic services will
be held each evening at 7:30
at the Pomeroy Church of
the Nazarene Wednesday,
March 21, through Sunday,
· March 25.
The
Rev.
Parker
Husselton of Point Pleasant,
w. Va. will he the speaker.
Rev. Husselton Is a minister
of the Wesleyan Church and
at the present time is
.teaching atthe West Virginia
Bible College. The Rev.
Clyde v. Henderson Is the
pastor of the Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene.

to keep '73 pric~s

USDA CHOICE

,SUPER MA~KET . -.Open .D.aily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10

Center Cut

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
P~ONE: 992-3480 .

Sts. · Resei-ve The Right. 'i'o.Umit· Quantities".

GROUND
CHUCK

lb.

USDA CHOICE

USDA CHOICE BEEF

BAKER

SIRLOIN.
STEAK

· USDA CHOICE

ARM
CHUCK ROAST

La1.39

LB.

1&amp;89~

USDA·
.CHOICE

'

Pomeroy· . . . 1
:- ·:
~ Personal Notes tl

USDA CHOICE

BONELESS

USDA CHOICE

ENGLISH
ROAST

CHUCK
·ROAST

99¢

~

: :::

:-=-:

Sgt. David Kuhn, stationed at
Lsngley Air Force Base in
Virginia, is here for a several
days' visit with his parents, the
Rev. and Mrs. Robert Kuhn
and family.
Recent visitors at the home
of Mrs. Vona McKnight and
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Stansbury,
Rutland, were Mr. and Mrs.
Hollis Grate of Langsville, Mr.
and Mrs. G. E. Knight of
Massillon, and Mrs . Vere
Smith, Athens.
Michael Mulvey of California
has been here visiting his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Delmer A. Canaday . From
here he went to Washington,
D,C. to join a friend. He plans
to return to Colorado where he
works in construction later this
month.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Fisher
of New Philad~lphia and
Roland Fisher of Columbus
spent the weekend with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mason
Fisher and family, Minersville.
Mrs. Ernest Harris joined
them for dinner Sunday.
Sunday evening guests of Mr .
and Mrs. Orris Harris of
Minersville were Mr. and Mrs.
Burdell Dawson, New Haven;
Mr. and Mrs . Greg Roush and
daughters, Mrs . Ernest Harris,
and Mrs . Mason Fisher,
Minersville.

METAL
LAWN RAKES

-

PRtCES IN EFFECT NOW!

SPRING SKIRTS

Junior Size S To 13

.¢
88.

Quart

METAl CLOTHES PROPS
84" Regular 79t

colors and new looks. Time for a
change!

$ 94

3" - 3¥2'' . 4"

A $1.00 Value!

:.PAINT
BRUSHES

SHOPPING
REMINDER

Values to Sl.99. Wide
brushes for big paint

NEW ARRIVALS DAILY •••
If you don't see It today •••
We may have it tomorrow!

jobs.

,

"AI;~chor

8 TRACK STEREO TAPES

One side cork, other
state.
Handy
for
messages to the family

or yourself.

Size C or D

Johnny Cash, BeaHtes, carpenters.
Charlie Pride, Donny Osmond, 3 Dog
Night, Neil

Diamond,

Lynn

METAL
FLASHLIGHT.
BATTERIES

An-

derson , Tammy Wynetle, Glen
Campbell and many other artist~:

FOR

$

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING!

CANDY
JARS

I

Prescut or Wexford
crystal cut. Covered of
course. Values to S1 .79.

Every
Day
Low
Price!

DR. PEPPER

11

' WITH 15 FT. CORD!

~!~~~v b~!~e c~~:e:

for when you naed

light.

!ach

COWHIDE

All Steel

BALL
LOVE

HOSE
HANGER

Red. Blue, Tan
Green and Two- Tone

This YearBe Organized!

PLASTIC
FISHING
WORMS
Rig Your OWn

•

... and Save!

$ 94

99¢

UP

Gold or Avocado

Everyday Low Price!
"GLOBAL"

Early Bird Buy!
ARTIFICIAL

TRANS·ISTOR
BATTERIES

CEMETERY
SPRAYS

Compare - Anywher.e

Many Kinds!

SEAj.T~~T

ICE CREAM

100% POLYESTER'"

AREA
RUG
·•PINK
~GOLD
•AVOCADO eBLUE .
eLILAC

,ALUMINUM HOT POT
·Idea I For Home, Office, Travel

BANQUET

·BUFFET

FOR

each$119
SUPPERS....~~!t. ..

3
~TV DINNERS..................... ~~~!...

· BANQUET

.

EACH

Sxlxl Webbi

,.~

TIDE

3
•1
COFFEE WHITENER.........

;MEADOW RI':H

Heat ar prepare food right
at Ill&lt;! table. Complete with
cord.

LB.

89¢

89¢

99¢

I&amp;

THURSDAY ONLY

RC COLA
,; , ·, -n •• . lfiH.!'-; ll,,n':•t

· a~ ·79e

.

.

Giant Size

QTS.
FOR

20~

WHITE GRAPEFRUIT·

OEPARTMtNT STOll .

Save! Regular 69c

Save! Small Size

Duncan Hines
BROWNIE MIX

e

FAMILY SIZE

ENGLISH
WALNUTS
~

1-LB.
BAG

- - - - - - MARK VCOUPON - -- - -

OFF

PALMOLIVE
LIQUID
DETERGENT

oz.

'

OPEN .
. EVERY

Save! Special ww Price!

CUPS

BOXES FOR

32.

Green and White Web

• arms, still at aur last
ye~r's low price.

LB.

SWISS STEAK

CRTS

FAVORITE
BREAD
LVS.
00

6 (:OLORS!
Size 27X4S

A UISCOUNT

Shoulder Round

Save! Save! Scot Lad

Everyday Low Price!

carton

LAWN CHAIR

$

79¢

CHUCK
. STEAK

CANS

Y2 gallon

97~

Tubular aluminum
body , waterfall

LB.

USDA CHOICE

FRUIT
CORN OIL Mrs. Filbert's
COCKTAIL MARGARINE MARGARINE
8 oz.
15 oz.
00
1-LB.
00
00

Heavy Duty!

EACH

79¢

Huntls Brand
)

$ 99

SALAD

CHEESE
SPREAD

USDA CHOICE

HOME MADE

.

Our Famous "Gay" Line!

POMEROY

HAM

LR

ON .SALE
ALL WEEK LONG

TROUBLE
LIGHT

.

MOORE'S

~

PAK

/ A •3.99 VALUEI

bot

Doubles as round
cloth, 52"x80" .

SLICED
BACON

LB.}.09

DOUBLE COLA
,&lt; 8. PAK

ON SALE ALL WEEK

35 FEET
EXTENSION
CORD

CANNISTER
SET

FIT-ALL VINYL ,PONCHOS

HOME MADE

LB.

Hocking

Your Money Saving Value Continues!

Styrene Plastic
8 PIECE

Reg. 79'

Pyramid Brand

'Skooter or "Bike" ·styles. Permanent press fabrics in severa I

Well Made

TRANSMISSION FLUID

PH. ft2·2848

.

I

1~1~.:

',t.:

"IT'S TRUE"··-

.:.&gt;"-'•'•'·"'~..
.,...................., .....;.........•,•,•,•,o,.....,.
':'f''"•'"•'&lt;'...'o'o~o0o'i.Wih'o'o "•'• oYil'o'•'•'•''•'•'•'.l•'

~

BIG A
Reg. sug
GRASS SEED 4 lb.

KENDALL MULTI-DUTY
2 &amp; 4 Cycle
MOTOR OIL
, Engine Oil

'

and trucks
''Unlessevents."
forced to by ·'i
. ,.----~-----.4·',';,.~---.;..,
·major
economic
GM, · recognized as the industry trendsetter, was the
·first of the "Big Four" auto
companies to announce 'such
plans. Since· President Nixon
started Phase III of his
economic program, the other
firms have indicated they
would eventually raise prices.
The GM announcement,
made by Board .Chairman
Richard C. Gerstenberg at a
news conference preceding a
luncheon appearance before
the Economic Club of Detroit,
also contained a message for
the contract-conscious United
Auto Workers.
Gerstenberg said GM's
decision•to freeze prices was an
"act of reasonable responsibility .... that can carry us all
FURNITURE
closer to a return to economic
freedom.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
"I would now like to extend
an invitation to the leadership

At MOORE'S

For all transmissions requiring type A.

bargaining so that 1973 oan
mark a new milestone tn the ·
history of our relatioilahlp."

SAVE 9lr

WHE.N YOU BUY A
·

10 ·oz. lar. of

INSTANT FOLGER'S
COFFEE CRYSTALS

.INSTANT

Sl'fCIAL PRICE

WffH THIS COUPON

gg~ ··

¢

IiiiiI

With This Coupon Whim
You Buy A 10 Oz . Jar Of
·

MAXWELL HOUSE~coFFEE
AT MARK VSUPER MKT. -

10 OZ. JAR ONLY

BOT.

99~ :J1~"

'

5~69~

NIGHT/
TILL

RED RADISHES

9 PM

FRESH KALE

· bag

1o~ ·

r- - - - ---VALUABLE COUPON - - - - - - - ·
I
• Vo !ll where res h lcled . • , For 21 + yra .

i
I

1

MUSTARD GREENS
COLLARD GREENS

I
I
I
l

I·

t~M

349

40'
~~~~
_OFF
coupon)
Good only at MARK V_ Good Until 3/24/73
Limlto ne perlamlty
m.n:R CIGAR£........

Warning, Tho Surgeon General Has Determined
T~l Cigarette Smoking .ls Dangerous 10 Your Health.

I King: 19 mg."tar," 1.4 mg. nicotirw: Super K1ng119 mg. "tal,"
I 15 mg nitobn~ av·pet cigare tte ' FTCRepon [Aug.'721.
l~lollrnl
~ t ' "tr1 •'1""-"'•~!~"'
'' (f&lt;19011'0 "I
1 ' '

4 OZ.
JAR

I 00

. .NESCAFE
WITH

. COUPON

MARK VSTORE
EXPIRES SATURDAY

INSTANT

CO~FEE
Ol.JAR

----------------------~---

'

I

1..

)

"\

- ~

wiTH

9 9. COUPON

�..
1-Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middlepo!'I-Pomeroy, 0., March 20,197:'
.
~r;n ....in.
;:;u~.f!
w.

.
Soc1al Calendar . 1

Shower given Mrs. Grover

~M

· pink and blue were used on the
b;tssinet where the gifts were
placed. .
Cake, ice cream, chips,
mints and Kool-Atd were
served. Games were played
with prizes going to Mrs. Joyce
Grover, Mrs. Gerri Mowery,
Mrs. Lucille Lewis an4 Mrs.
Dorothy Kent, who also won
the door prize.
Attending the shower were
PARTIES GIVEN
those named and Mrs. Nonna
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Colmer Grover,MissMaryGates,Miss
entertained recently with a . Meta · Hudnall, Miss Gloria '
party in ohservanee of the Grover, Miss Lucille Grover,
birthday anniversaries of their Miss Colena Mowery, and Paul
· daughter, Shari, and Mrs. Kent. Others presenting gifts to
Colmer's sister, Tammy Mrs. Grover were Mrs. Leta
Snider . Games were played Hall,Mr.andMrs.H.Goodwin,
with prizes going to Anna Mrs. Cherry Cadel, · Mrs.
McKinney, Joyce Bing, and Barbara Phillips, Mrs. Susan
Cindy Faulk . Debbie Scha¢er Richmond, Mrs. Sue Lewis,
won the door prize. Ice cream, and Mrs. Nellie Grover.
cake, chips and soft drinks
FILM SCHEDULED
were served. Attending were
A
film
"Who Set the Stanthose named and Judy Hall,
Sandy Hamilton, Cindy Faulk, dard" will be shown at the Zion
Peggy Snyder, and Debbie Church of Christ on Sunday,
Spires. The cake was mad~ and March 25 at 7:30 p.m. The
decorated for the honored youth of the church will be in
guests by Sue Peterson of charge of the service. The
public is invited to attend.
Lincoln Hill.

DETROIT (UP!)""'· General of our .inions that we Join
Mark Twain is 'buried in
Motors '.·Corp. announced together in a reasonable and~ Woodlawn Cemete.ry, ElMonday it will nol increase the responslble approach to our mira, N.Y.
prices of Its 1973 model cars
.,.

~

RUTLAND - Mrs. Gloria
Grover, Rutland, was honored
recently wilh a layette shower
given by Mrs. Virginia Whaley
at her Darwin home.
Pink and blue bootie replicas
and the inscription, "Welcome
Utile Stranger" decorated the
cake. Streamers and bows in

,..,.

TUESDAY
omo Valley Commarxtry 24,
Knight Templar, special
conclave, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. to
confer the order of the temple.
Full form opening.
CHESTER COUNCIL 323, D.
of A., 7:30 p.m. at the hall.
PractiCe for receiving national
and state officers. Quarterly
birthdays to be observed,
poUuck refreshments. Grab
bag by miscellaneous com-

mittee. I
. FRIENDLY Circle,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
Pomeroy Trinity Church. Mrs.
Thomas Young, program
chairman, and hostesses, Mrs.
Phil Globokar and Miss Mary
E. Chapman.
OffiO ETA Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Middleport. Cultural program on
nature by Texanna Well and
Lynn Kitchen.
SOUTHERN LOCAL OAPSE
meeting Tuesday, 8 p.m. at the
SyraCUBe Elementary School.
Election of officers ; oyster
soup supper.
RACINE PTA, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday with cultural arts
entries to be on display.
SALISBURY PTA, 7:30p.m.
Tuesday. John Reece, public
relations coordinator, Ohio
Power Co., to show· slides on
mining operations in Meigs
County.
WEDNESDAY
BOSWORTH Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
stated assembly, Wednes~ay ,
7:30 p.m., Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
SYRACUSE Third Wednesday Homemakers Club
Wednesday at house at
Municipal park. Covered dish
dinner at noon. Easter baskets
to be made to take to local
nursing home. Members are
asked to make donations to
purchase fruit and candy for
baskets. Hostesses are Elva
Dalley and Margaret Bailey . .
PUBLIC meeting, Wed-

nesday, at Letart Falls community building, 7:30 p.m. on
social security and Council on
Aging; speaker, Norman Cupp,
Marietta social security office.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at
Meigs Inn.
TilE YOUNG WIVES' Club
Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at home
of Virginia Kirkhart, Tuppers
Plains.
TIIURSDAY
PRODUCTS PARTY Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at St. Paul's
United Methodist Church,
Tuppers Plains. Public ts Invited.
REVIVAL IN progress at
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church, Rt. 143, nightly at 7:30
p.m. Rev . O'Dell Manley
speaker. Public is invited.
JITNEY SUPPER Thursday, beginning at 3:30p.m. at
Rutland Elementary School.
Sponsored by Firemen's
Auxiliary.
WOMEN'S ASSN ., Middleport · First
United
Presbyterian Church. Mrs. J.
E.
Harley,
devotions;
dedication of sewing assignment; drama "Golden Rays
from Calvary's Hill." Members of Gcoup I will be the
hostesses.
REVIVAL each evening
through Friday, 7:30 p.m. at
Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Public Invited.
SOUTHERN
BAND
Boosters, 7 p,m. Thursday
night
at the
school.
Preparations to be made for
the annual band banquet. All
band boosters urged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation League, Thursday, 7:30p.m. home of Susie
Grueser. Annual guest night to
be observed. Party to carry out
a Mexican theme in costuming
and decorations. A while
elephant sale will be held.
FRIFAY
PAST
MATRONS,
Evangeline Chapter, 0 .E .S.
7:30 p.m. Friday, Masonic
Temple.

Third Friday club meets
Mrs. Mabel Wolfe hosted a
~Ill&amp; ..of the Third Friday
Club at her home Fr'lday night.
· Mrs .' Genevieve Meinhart
conducted lhe meeting which
opened with prayer. Mrs. Ben
Neutzllng gave an article "A
New Friend," and Mrs. Marie
Dalley and Mrs. Ruby Erb
were reported ill. The April
meeting will be held at lhe
home of Mrs. Freda Duffy,
Syracuse. A meditation from
the Upper Room read by Mrs.
Meinhart closed the business
aesslon.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Carrie
Meinhart, Mrs. Sybil Ebers-

bach, Mrs. Edna Reibel, and
Miss Erma Smith. Mrs. Wolfe
served a salad course to those
named and Mrs. Berlha Ebersbach and Mrs. Eva Dessauer.

FIRSTBORN IS SON
Mr . and Mrs . Michael
Borgan, Columbus, are announcing the birth of their first
child, a son, Dominic Berlingo,
on March 8 at St. Ann's
Hospital. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W.
Kennedy, Yellow Springs, and
Mrs. Nellie Borgan, Pomeroy
Route 4.

DON1 MISS
THESE •••

REV. HUSSELTON
Evangelistic services will
be held each evening at 7:30
at the Pomeroy Church of
the Nazarene Wednesday,
March 21, through Sunday,
· March 25.
The
Rev.
Parker
Husselton of Point Pleasant,
w. Va. will he the speaker.
Rev. Husselton Is a minister
of the Wesleyan Church and
at the present time is
.teaching atthe West Virginia
Bible College. The Rev.
Clyde v. Henderson Is the
pastor of the Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene.

to keep '73 pric~s

USDA CHOICE

,SUPER MA~KET . -.Open .D.aily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10

Center Cut

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
P~ONE: 992-3480 .

Sts. · Resei-ve The Right. 'i'o.Umit· Quantities".

GROUND
CHUCK

lb.

USDA CHOICE

USDA CHOICE BEEF

BAKER

SIRLOIN.
STEAK

· USDA CHOICE

ARM
CHUCK ROAST

La1.39

LB.

1&amp;89~

USDA·
.CHOICE

'

Pomeroy· . . . 1
:- ·:
~ Personal Notes tl

USDA CHOICE

BONELESS

USDA CHOICE

ENGLISH
ROAST

CHUCK
·ROAST

99¢

~

: :::

:-=-:

Sgt. David Kuhn, stationed at
Lsngley Air Force Base in
Virginia, is here for a several
days' visit with his parents, the
Rev. and Mrs. Robert Kuhn
and family.
Recent visitors at the home
of Mrs. Vona McKnight and
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Stansbury,
Rutland, were Mr. and Mrs.
Hollis Grate of Langsville, Mr.
and Mrs. G. E. Knight of
Massillon, and Mrs . Vere
Smith, Athens.
Michael Mulvey of California
has been here visiting his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Delmer A. Canaday . From
here he went to Washington,
D,C. to join a friend. He plans
to return to Colorado where he
works in construction later this
month.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Fisher
of New Philad~lphia and
Roland Fisher of Columbus
spent the weekend with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mason
Fisher and family, Minersville.
Mrs. Ernest Harris joined
them for dinner Sunday.
Sunday evening guests of Mr .
and Mrs. Orris Harris of
Minersville were Mr. and Mrs.
Burdell Dawson, New Haven;
Mr. and Mrs . Greg Roush and
daughters, Mrs . Ernest Harris,
and Mrs . Mason Fisher,
Minersville.

METAL
LAWN RAKES

-

PRtCES IN EFFECT NOW!

SPRING SKIRTS

Junior Size S To 13

.¢
88.

Quart

METAl CLOTHES PROPS
84" Regular 79t

colors and new looks. Time for a
change!

$ 94

3" - 3¥2'' . 4"

A $1.00 Value!

:.PAINT
BRUSHES

SHOPPING
REMINDER

Values to Sl.99. Wide
brushes for big paint

NEW ARRIVALS DAILY •••
If you don't see It today •••
We may have it tomorrow!

jobs.

,

"AI;~chor

8 TRACK STEREO TAPES

One side cork, other
state.
Handy
for
messages to the family

or yourself.

Size C or D

Johnny Cash, BeaHtes, carpenters.
Charlie Pride, Donny Osmond, 3 Dog
Night, Neil

Diamond,

Lynn

METAL
FLASHLIGHT.
BATTERIES

An-

derson , Tammy Wynetle, Glen
Campbell and many other artist~:

FOR

$

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING!

CANDY
JARS

I

Prescut or Wexford
crystal cut. Covered of
course. Values to S1 .79.

Every
Day
Low
Price!

DR. PEPPER

11

' WITH 15 FT. CORD!

~!~~~v b~!~e c~~:e:

for when you naed

light.

!ach

COWHIDE

All Steel

BALL
LOVE

HOSE
HANGER

Red. Blue, Tan
Green and Two- Tone

This YearBe Organized!

PLASTIC
FISHING
WORMS
Rig Your OWn

•

... and Save!

$ 94

99¢

UP

Gold or Avocado

Everyday Low Price!
"GLOBAL"

Early Bird Buy!
ARTIFICIAL

TRANS·ISTOR
BATTERIES

CEMETERY
SPRAYS

Compare - Anywher.e

Many Kinds!

SEAj.T~~T

ICE CREAM

100% POLYESTER'"

AREA
RUG
·•PINK
~GOLD
•AVOCADO eBLUE .
eLILAC

,ALUMINUM HOT POT
·Idea I For Home, Office, Travel

BANQUET

·BUFFET

FOR

each$119
SUPPERS....~~!t. ..

3
~TV DINNERS..................... ~~~!...

· BANQUET

.

EACH

Sxlxl Webbi

,.~

TIDE

3
•1
COFFEE WHITENER.........

;MEADOW RI':H

Heat ar prepare food right
at Ill&lt;! table. Complete with
cord.

LB.

89¢

89¢

99¢

I&amp;

THURSDAY ONLY

RC COLA
,; , ·, -n •• . lfiH.!'-; ll,,n':•t

· a~ ·79e

.

.

Giant Size

QTS.
FOR

20~

WHITE GRAPEFRUIT·

OEPARTMtNT STOll .

Save! Regular 69c

Save! Small Size

Duncan Hines
BROWNIE MIX

e

FAMILY SIZE

ENGLISH
WALNUTS
~

1-LB.
BAG

- - - - - - MARK VCOUPON - -- - -

OFF

PALMOLIVE
LIQUID
DETERGENT

oz.

'

OPEN .
. EVERY

Save! Special ww Price!

CUPS

BOXES FOR

32.

Green and White Web

• arms, still at aur last
ye~r's low price.

LB.

SWISS STEAK

CRTS

FAVORITE
BREAD
LVS.
00

6 (:OLORS!
Size 27X4S

A UISCOUNT

Shoulder Round

Save! Save! Scot Lad

Everyday Low Price!

carton

LAWN CHAIR

$

79¢

CHUCK
. STEAK

CANS

Y2 gallon

97~

Tubular aluminum
body , waterfall

LB.

USDA CHOICE

FRUIT
CORN OIL Mrs. Filbert's
COCKTAIL MARGARINE MARGARINE
8 oz.
15 oz.
00
1-LB.
00
00

Heavy Duty!

EACH

79¢

Huntls Brand
)

$ 99

SALAD

CHEESE
SPREAD

USDA CHOICE

HOME MADE

.

Our Famous "Gay" Line!

POMEROY

HAM

LR

ON .SALE
ALL WEEK LONG

TROUBLE
LIGHT

.

MOORE'S

~

PAK

/ A •3.99 VALUEI

bot

Doubles as round
cloth, 52"x80" .

SLICED
BACON

LB.}.09

DOUBLE COLA
,&lt; 8. PAK

ON SALE ALL WEEK

35 FEET
EXTENSION
CORD

CANNISTER
SET

FIT-ALL VINYL ,PONCHOS

HOME MADE

LB.

Hocking

Your Money Saving Value Continues!

Styrene Plastic
8 PIECE

Reg. 79'

Pyramid Brand

'Skooter or "Bike" ·styles. Permanent press fabrics in severa I

Well Made

TRANSMISSION FLUID

PH. ft2·2848

.

I

1~1~.:

',t.:

"IT'S TRUE"··-

.:.&gt;"-'•'•'·"'~..
.,...................., .....;.........•,•,•,•,o,.....,.
':'f''"•'"•'&lt;'...'o'o~o0o'i.Wih'o'o "•'• oYil'o'•'•'•''•'•'•'.l•'

~

BIG A
Reg. sug
GRASS SEED 4 lb.

KENDALL MULTI-DUTY
2 &amp; 4 Cycle
MOTOR OIL
, Engine Oil

'

and trucks
''Unlessevents."
forced to by ·'i
. ,.----~-----.4·',';,.~---.;..,
·major
economic
GM, · recognized as the industry trendsetter, was the
·first of the "Big Four" auto
companies to announce 'such
plans. Since· President Nixon
started Phase III of his
economic program, the other
firms have indicated they
would eventually raise prices.
The GM announcement,
made by Board .Chairman
Richard C. Gerstenberg at a
news conference preceding a
luncheon appearance before
the Economic Club of Detroit,
also contained a message for
the contract-conscious United
Auto Workers.
Gerstenberg said GM's
decision•to freeze prices was an
"act of reasonable responsibility .... that can carry us all
FURNITURE
closer to a return to economic
freedom.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
"I would now like to extend
an invitation to the leadership

At MOORE'S

For all transmissions requiring type A.

bargaining so that 1973 oan
mark a new milestone tn the ·
history of our relatioilahlp."

SAVE 9lr

WHE.N YOU BUY A
·

10 ·oz. lar. of

INSTANT FOLGER'S
COFFEE CRYSTALS

.INSTANT

Sl'fCIAL PRICE

WffH THIS COUPON

gg~ ··

¢

IiiiiI

With This Coupon Whim
You Buy A 10 Oz . Jar Of
·

MAXWELL HOUSE~coFFEE
AT MARK VSUPER MKT. -

10 OZ. JAR ONLY

BOT.

99~ :J1~"

'

5~69~

NIGHT/
TILL

RED RADISHES

9 PM

FRESH KALE

· bag

1o~ ·

r- - - - ---VALUABLE COUPON - - - - - - - ·
I
• Vo !ll where res h lcled . • , For 21 + yra .

i
I

1

MUSTARD GREENS
COLLARD GREENS

I
I
I
l

I·

t~M

349

40'
~~~~
_OFF
coupon)
Good only at MARK V_ Good Until 3/24/73
Limlto ne perlamlty
m.n:R CIGAR£........

Warning, Tho Surgeon General Has Determined
T~l Cigarette Smoking .ls Dangerous 10 Your Health.

I King: 19 mg."tar," 1.4 mg. nicotirw: Super K1ng119 mg. "tal,"
I 15 mg nitobn~ av·pet cigare tte ' FTCRepon [Aug.'721.
l~lollrnl
~ t ' "tr1 •'1""-"'•~!~"'
'' (f&lt;19011'0 "I
1 ' '

4 OZ.
JAR

I 00

. .NESCAFE
WITH

. COUPON

MARK VSTORE
EXPIRES SATURDAY

INSTANT

CO~FEE
Ol.JAR

----------------------~---

'

I

1..

)

"\

- ~

wiTH

9 9. COUPON

�''

1 1X&gt;IJT SEE

8- 'l'he ~Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Marcb 20, 19't o

I'M At=EERED

..

Seritinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds
IN~g~T'ti;N

~P.M ofye.:::;r.N~~~IIcotlon @)~
·

..

Monday Deaanne ·9 a.m .

Concell~tlon.- corrections

Will beac~pted un.t il9 '1 ,m. tCr
' . ' 0rl'~~'u"LufW8~~n

2 SIGNS
Of
QU'liJY
"

Wanted' To :Buy

Pomeroy

WANTED -

MO.. fOr· (O•

Ttfe Publisher reserves the

.•right to edit ot,.elect ariy ad!

;·deemed . ob"j~lttlonal. . Thf
, publistler will not be responslbff
,tor ..-more than o• lncdr:rec1

.Insertion.

•

,

RATES
: For Wa'-t Ad Servlt;:tr

:
, S &lt;...;onts per Word one lnsertiO(

Mlnl111•1m Charge 1sr-·

•·

• _12 ten~ per word .1tn. ,
' consecutfve 11'\strtlons.
~
;r \8 cents per word Sill cbn
, '1ecutive insertions.
• 25 Per Certt Discount on. paltt
' ads and ada paid within '10 da~s
'
CA.RD OF THANKS '
&amp; OBITUARY

1970

PONTIAC

12395

BLIND ADS

1

·

Add11 1onal 2Sc Char'~e 4 "K~r
~dvert ! sement .
. "r
OFFICE HOURS .
8:30a .m . tO 5:00p .m . Oelly,
; 1:30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
. Saturday .

.

:-:-:-::-:-:cc-::-=-:c::-=-- .,...,.

LARGE metal building. Phone
JUST taken in 1973 zi g zag
742-3182.
machine ,
this
3-20-3fc sewing

11695

V-8 motor , auto . trans., P.S., and w-w t ires, radio ni ce
yellow finish with vin yl Interior .

'

t~rnlture.

organs, dishes, clocks, brass
beds or complete hou seholds.

Wrile M. D. Miller, Rt. ·4,
Pomeroy. Ohio. · Phone 991
6271.

1-7-tf: l2l PAINT DAMAGE . 1972 Zig -

Pomeroy Motor Co.

.

Gmseng $60 lb. ; M. A. Hall.
Reedsville, 378-6249 .
3-9-flc
_ _ _ __ _ _ _....:._:

Built to Your 'Specs'

ROORNG AND
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE~ 992-2550

HOGG &amp; ZUSPA~
MATER.IALS CO.
Mason, W. Va.
773-5554

FDR intimate
· with

1.,

Local Bowling

s3.51 HOUR

MR. VANCE.

.

'r
:

~\\~BILE "OM~~~
'

'

''
'
'•'

-

Antique and ·
Collectible Items
Auction

We falk to vou
.like a person.

B&amp;G AUCTION

'

197 w. State St .. Athens

ON YOUR DIAL
,I

l

Watch this column for
complete listing on Friday.
Conslgn'?'enls accepted.

·WMP0/1390

'

'

i

Phone nl-5035
Auctioneers:

.

Bill Wade A Crlt Bradford

.

'

)

NEED someone to cut grass.
trim _grapes and

flowers;

write Box 729-E, c-o The Daily
Sentinel , Pomeroy, 0 .
·
3-18-6lc

Wanted

Our:.
. ..,.

DEAD Stock horses, catlte,
sheep .

Reasonabl e

charge. Call 245·5514.
2-28-3otc

WANTED
Licensed Ohio
Property &amp; Casually
Insurance Agent
An Independent insuran ce
agency in Pomeroy, needs
someone with li cen se as
junior partner and future
sale to right party. If you
want to own an In surance
giving
write ,
agency ,
resume to Box 666, Pomeroy,

0 . 45769.

.'I'

..

AKIDNAPI~,

DIFFE~Et\11"

t=OUR l&lt;Of!BERIEO:....

111REE

EVER 1-W'PEII!S.

I

~eel

AliPment .

'5.55

·From the largest
'Bulldozer . Radiator
l~st Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs ·

on Mo•i Americon C.rs'
-GUARANTE-E!)..
Ph(!ne 992-2094

R!diator Specialist

'OW WI~L 'YOU
SPEND· '&gt;'OUR.
FIRST DA'I IN
LDNDOJ,StR516HT5EEING '?

Pomeroy Hofile &amp; Au10 ·

SMJTH NELSON
MOTORS, IHC.
,;Omara

~'Re
OBSei&lt;VIN~

I·

~!

FlRSTSTOPMALL!! Tf-11'. GL.OOMII'-ST,' ·

TOO 'TOURIST'/. AH •
THINK AH'LL TAKE

WOST FORBIDDING CASTLE
IN Al-l.. El-lGLAND - 50
SETTLE BACK FOR A
&lt;.lOLL'I GOOD TIME!!

.ANAP-

oPenaTIIS
Monday thru Saturday

· 997-1174 ·
a
,_;.__ _ _ _ _ _-'-'
· J.

6~~~~!",•_roy,O.

1 • .

EXCAVATING. Dozers, large EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
and small; Backhoes and . and backhoe work; septic
Loaders on track and tires;
tanks Installed; dump trucks •
Dump trucks - Lo-boy ' and lo-boys for hire; will haul
Service; Septic tanks in - fll,l dirt, top soli, limestone .
stalled;
George
(Bill) andgravel;caiiBoborRoger
Pullins; phone 992-2478.
. Jeffers, day phone 992-7089;
2-9-tfcl night phone 992-3525 or 992- - - -- - - -5232.
HARRISON'S TV Service and _ _ _ _ __ _.:_2·.:.:.11·lfC
Service Calls; phone \192-2522.
CONCRETE
2-9-tfc READY -MIX
delivered right to 'lOur .
~ELNA ana White Sewrn
~ro/ect . Fast and eo.•y. Free
Machine s .. . serv 1ce on all.
g est mates, Phone 992- 328~,
makes . Reasonable rates . Goegleln Ready -MI• Co .,
The Sewing · Center, Mid- Mlddl~port, Ohio.
6-JO.Hc
dleport, Ohio.
11 -16-Hc
SEPTIC TANKS CLiiANED
SEPTIC TANKS AROB11.: REASONABLE rates. Ph . .u6SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN- 4782, Gall! polls, John Russell.
Owner &amp; Operator.
EO, REPAIRED. MILLER
5-12-H&lt;
SANITATION, STEWART,
OHIO. PHONE 662-3035.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
10-4-tf&lt;
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
SEWING. MACHINES. Kepa•
Racine, Ohio
service, all makes. 992-2284: •
· Crltt Bradjgr~ ·
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales andl
S-1-t(c

QUIT STAU.l!:f~. SVLVESTE~!

THIS 16 TH' ""'"VA
PROMISED -r• ~OOK
FE~ A .JOB~

WINKLE
I'LL 6E ROOTINC3
fOR 'lOU , HAL.
GOOD LUCK!

- - - - - --

......

,_,,'" ......
''" "' "·' """"'

Service . We Sharpen Scissors~1 ·, "'C.-:-.--------

3-29-ttc
,-_ _ _ __ __ ::..::.:
PAINTINu, ...,,a sonry work ;
fr ee ~stimate ,· call 773·5580.
3-7-30fp

DOZER and back hoe Wlll'k,
ponds and septic tanks, dlt· r
chlng service; top soli, fill .
dirt, llmestone i B&amp;K Ex-t
cava!lng. Phone 992-5367,:
D1ck K'tr, Jr.
1
9-l ~tfc ,

WILL tr im or cut trees, clean

··=---- - - .- ----,

. out basements, attics, etc.
Phone 949-3221.
~EE US FOR:' Awnings, li;;."ft~
3-11 -30tc. ' doors and Windows, corparts•.
· -=-=-~------ -·
"'i
marquees, aluminum aiding
.AUTOMOBILE Insurance been · and rolling. A. Jacob, aelel
cancell~d?
Lost
your · representative. For fretJ
operators license? Call 992- estimates, phone ChariN
2966.
Lisle, Syracu .. , Y. V. r
1
.----=-~=...:_6_::
·
15-tfc.
Johnson
and Son, Inc.
-•
3-2-Hc .

._.

I'M &amp;C1(E
lt&gt;I~E'

f.J-L 'DJR
MONEY 1

llEAT the rusht Get your
tawnmower and filler tuned·
2 NEWlbedroom homes; 1 with
up now ; Small Engine Rop~~lr
basement, 1 without ; 2 car
Shop on Third St.. Mason, W.
garages, 1 acre lots; located
Va .
·
at Rock Springs behind Meigs
3-6-Jotc
Co. Fairground . Will trade or
help finance ; also 5 good
building lots, water and O' DELL WHEEL alignment'
located at Crossroads, Rl. 1:1-1,
disposal Installed ; Charles H.
complete front end service,
Cornell. Athens, 593-7034 or
tune up and brake service.
593-5667 or 992-7613.
Wheels balanced elec2-1 1-tlc
All
work'
tronically.
Reasonable
70 ACRE farm with timber; S guaranteed.
rates . Phone 992-3213 or 742bedroom paneled home with
3232.
modern kitchen and bath;
2-18-tfc
phone 992-6947.
3-18-6tc
1.3 ACRE , trai ler setup, 200 fl .

ACROSS
1. Hindu
prince
5. Obliterate
11. Esau's
fatherin-law
12. "Silas

Real Estate For Sale

frontage , on State Road,

water tap paid, pond, other
extra s; phone 992-7051.

.---:--,-----.:__:3.....:·
•B-3tp
'HOUSE In Long Boltom, phiine
985-3529.
•
6-11 -Hd

';·-: :-==;:::-=~·~·===~~

~

i'

/cLELAND~
6DB E . Main

'-_.Pomeroy .

~

Close to shopping . Also nice
apartment for additional
Income. 518,500.00.
INCOME PROPERTY
Pomeroy. Nice 2 bedroom
apartment,

basement,

garage.

liv ing.

10

sleeping rooms for income.

Ca ll tor an appointment
today .
2 YEARS OLD
Mi.ddleport. Beautiful 3
home.

13. Pallid
14. Wiseman
15. Russian
river
16.Summer
(Fr.)

.Ill' '

EXCELLENT LOCATION

bedroom.

_. .

DICK TRACY

.. Pomeroy, Ohio

About 1 acre . 9 room frame .
4 bedrooms , bath , porches .

For

Virgil B.
Teaford, St.
Broker
110 Mechanic Street

REALTY

Lovely

ME

MI&gt;.KE IT f'fi~/&lt;&amp;E TO

Ot&lt;A~,

THHJ WRIT&amp;' M~
AC.Hlia&lt; FOR $100 ~

ALLMirtor

IS ~!

AtSE~ ~ . '.su~llf-lE \

HO~EST'

"

-~----

Real Estate For Sale

BARGAIN 3 APARTMENTS - all utilities
- 2 apartments rented.
Locatedooon. Mulberry Ave. Onlu
$10,000.
•
SPACIOUS i'&lt;fW HOME .
4 BEDROON.S - Garage,
large corner loi, all electric,
large beautiful kitchen, l'h
baths, one wltn sliding glaos ·
doors. Only $21,00.00.
2 CORNER LOTS
RUTLAND - 2 bedroom•, nice
bath. _garage, and uHIIty
building . ASKING
lust
57,500.00.
VERY LARGE
CORN-ER LOT - 4 Bedroom•,
living about 38x16. Nice kit-

kitchen, dining R., utility R.,
bath, carpeted . Patio,
basement .. Level lot 100xl20. .chen, basement, 2 modern
baths. Front and back porches.
COLLECTORS Item , Moun Real Estate for ~!e
$23.000.00.
Want
only $21.900.00.
taineer Lady and John Henry
RUTLAND AREA
HOUSE
by
owner;
3
or
4
OHIO
RIVER LAND
bottle . Phone 992-7138.
,.
4 years old. 4 bedrooms,
bedr:ooms , large rec. room,
:U'1 X23 1 'X.009
3
ACRES
PLUS
- 1972 mobile
_ __ _ _ __ __:_
3·.::20-6tc
large patio, modern kitchen, closets, kitchen has loads of
llome
65x12
.
Screened
patio
fully carpeted; call 992-5248 cabinets and range, dining
16x20.
llf2
baths,
air
conSAVE 20 pet . invento~y
until 3 p.m. or 992-3436 alter 3 area , bath. Storm windows&amp; '
' p.m.;
clearance sale now 10
ditioning.
18'
fiberglass
boat
No Sunday Calls.
doors . 111:1 acres. Just
progress. 20 pet. discount on
with 120 H.P. motor and
3-14-6fc
$16.900.00.
most of your grocery needs.
trailer
. All this for&lt;$21,500.00.
NEW1'h YEARS
This means you can save 20
USED OFFSET PLATES
SPLIT LEVEL
3 BEDROOM home, living room 3 lovely bedrooms. bath.
pet. on your grocery bill. Get
HAVE
4
BEDROOMS
- All electric
.
and dining room carpefed .
the full details today at the
utility R., beautiful kitchen.
MANY ·USES
home,
w,
baths,
bosement,
New forced air furnace .
Bright Star Market next to
Dining area , hardwood
nice
kitchen
with
dining
orea. 7
Lincoln
Hill.
Pomeroy,
phone
Drive- In Theafre, Mason, W.
·.
floors . Some carpe-ting .
992-2071.
acres
of
land
near
town.
Va .
·carport with storage room .
3-20-16fc
$30.000.00.
- - = - - - -- - .:.3-6.:..·12fc Lot 100x100 In new addition.
8 for 11.00
'
COUNTRY HOME
•
GROCERY busfneos for sate.
8 ACRES. Good building site or $21.500.00.
2
YEARS
OLD - 3 nice slzo
OLDER
BRICK
Building for sale or Iease. •
trailer lots. On Rt. 143. Phone
bedrooms
with large closet&gt;.•2 or 3 bedrooms, bat~. new
Phone 773-5618 from 8: 30 p.m.
992-3640 alter 5:30 p. m,
.
.
Large
living,
nice kitchen with
to 10 p.m. for appoint ment.
3-15-6tc forced air furnace. Storm dining, all carpeted. Utility and
3-20-ltc
doors&amp;wlndOvls. Fenced lot .
two garages. 125,0110.00.
'KOUSE Fut&lt; SALE, ll4 Brick • Garage. $8,500.00.
HOUSE and 2 trailer lots. Phone
••"Street, Pomeroy, Ohio: brick' TIME IS GOING BY',
991·5693.
house, 3 bedrooms. excellent . PRICES ARE RISING, A FREE ATLAS IS YOURS AT
Court
Pomeroy
location, close to school and WHY PUT OFF ? BUY NOW. THE OFFICE.. DROP IN AND
3-20-4tc
' . city ; contact
Lou Osborne or·
•
• M. M. 335 Trae tor wItn InTO SELL LIST WITH US. PICK IT UP.
11 99d898.
HELEN L TEAFORD
n
be
dependent
Jive
power,
s
.
ca
.
·
CARPETS and life too ca
GORDON
I. TI!AFORD
beautiful if you use Blue
speeds, 2 speed torque, new · ---.--,.....~----1.:.1·::26-tfc r
HENRY E. CLELAND
rubber, 2- 14" bottom plows
•
ASSOCtA
TI!S
Lustre .
Rent
elec trlc
BROKER
3 pt., 6' Dunham tandem disc: LOTS on Wright St., phone 742--:
shampooer;.sl. Nelson's Drug
NO
~UNDAY
StfOWtNGS
992-2259
$1,450; phone 992-2307.
6630.
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio . •
992-»25'
II
no
an•wer
991-2561
·
3-18-3fp
,,
3-16-12fc L.,__ ___;_
3-20-2tc
992-3615
· ...;...._....!
'

"

"

)stop In and See
· . :Floor Display.

Excelsior

o.

For Sale
Aluminum
.Sheets

CO/AP5TITION

'lllATS 11-lE 11WUE!L.E
WllH 11·115 JOB. f\O!HIN&lt;&amp;

FIVE CAR 1HE:f'l'51

~lOCif...FIRE

EXPERT

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Help wanted

\,?l·oc.~~ JU~ I ~IG

111E.RES A RIOT'
AT 11-iE HIGH

,fORNiiURE

•

Lost

"'

eves

and ·

UP FOR Ti1E L.tV5·

NOT AT ALLJ
THEY'RE OBVIOUSLY
.VERY OtSCfRNIN\1 .
GENTLE MEt&lt;~

01'1'
loiS

'&gt;t&gt;ti1RE JIST' 6ACK FRCW.
flt.'TROL. WHAT's IT LIKE
OI.IT 'THERE I
TOPA~ 7

.,

H!ATING &amp;
COOLING

---

MEN CAN'T

SEeM TO TAI(f THEI,~\

OFFICE SUPPLIES
"

•

••HEll''

446-0677

'"'----

'-

.

ALL WEAlHER .

Delivered to Job Site

F RI

'
,,
.
•'

.

ror Sale

B~ass, 18c lb.; Batteries, 70c ;

hogs,

:...._

•

'

Salt . Works, E. Main Sf.,
m_onograms. and bll.nd hem
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891. · ·
st&lt;fch.
Full
cash
price
$38.50
Notice
Notice
·
4-12-tfc
or
budget
plan
available.
,IN MEMORY of Lyle E.
.
01'
en
Electro
Hygiene
Co.
Phone
Chapman who passed away 1
· 2 PIECE traditional living room .
2
PIECE
traditional
living
roorr
992-7755.
year ago March ~0 .
· suite with 90" sofa and extra 3 AND 4 ROOM lurnlshed and·
3-14-6fc
suite with 90" sofa and extra
Not now, but in the coming
hi~h back Mr. Chair; special
unfurnished . apartments . - - -- -- - - high back Mr. Chair; special
year s/
this
week only $139.50, casli
Phone
992-5434.
(3)
VACUUM
cleaners
new
1972
fh1s
week only 5139.95, cash
,It may be in a better land.
and
carry ;
Pomeroy
and
carry;
Pomeroy
4-12-ff&lt;
model
.
Complete
with
all
We' ll read the meaning of our
Recovery, 622 E. Main St ..
Recovery, 622 E. Main St.,
cleaning
tools.
Small
paint
tears .
Pomeroy. phone 992-7554.
Pomeroy, phone 992-7554.
Brow n' s Traile1
damage in shipping . Will take
· And there , somet ime, we ' ll
3-16-6tp ·rRAILER,
3-16-6fp
Park ; phone \192-3324.
$27 cash or budget plan
understand.
2-13-tfc available . Phone 992-7755,
Sadly missed by his wife.
BEGINNING Arril 1, 1973 ,
Electro Hygiene Co.
Emma , children and grand NEW FOAM to fill your old
Showalter's We Pet Shop will 2 BEDROOM mobile home ;
Furnace- Controls
children.
3-14-6fc
cush ions, standard s1ze suite ,
be open 4 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. completely furnished ; ca ll - - - - -- -- 3-20-lfp
only $9.95.
Pomeroy
HUMIDIFIER$
daily , all day Saturday,
992-2441
after
5:30p.m.
Recovery,
622
E.
Main
St.
Sunday and Holidays.
BARGAINS ARE OUR 'M,ID3-8-30tp
2-7-!fc
Hot Water Heater~·
3c18-121p
DLE NAME!! Shopping
Plumbing
U
~
N~
F~U~R~N~I~S~H-E~D---3---r-oom
around now so that your UPHOLSTERY
materials ,
LOST OR STOLEN - English
KOSCOT KOSMETICS AND
apartment, 408 Spring Ave.,
INCOME TAX REFUNO
Electrical Work
regularly $3.95 only $1.95.
Springer Spaniel. liver and
CHECK wil l stretch further
WIGS. SPECIALS MONTH- Pomeroy .
Also remnants. Pomeroy
white, "Corky" on Kingsbur y
this year? Come on out to
LY .
BROWN'S
INDE 3 11
Rd ., Reward . Harold H.
Recovery, 622 E. Main St.
PENDENT DISTRJBU · - -- - - - -- -2- c KUHL'S BARGAIN CENTER
Smith, Phone 992-6656.
3-8-30fp
TOR,
MIDDLEPORT . 2 BEDROOM mobile home, air· &amp; see for yourself that you
_ _ __ __ _ __:_
3·_
20-41p
PAY LESS &amp; GET MORE, U·PHOLSTERY materials;
PHONE 992-5113.
condit ioned ; in Racine area;
2·2J-Ifc
whether you're shopping for
phone 992-6329.
Nylon prints, cotton prints,
Found
NEW fur niture. USED fur3-16-lfc
992-2448
velvets of all kinds. Pomeroy
;::=======~
niture or GUARANTEED,
- - ---Recovery, 622 E. Ma&lt;n3 8St.Jotp
AT POMEROY Elementary
Come and Cel ebrate
Pomeroy,
USED applian ces . NEW
2
BEDROOM
tra
iler.
close
to
School , small brown and
Lan
dmark's
40th
Anniv
ersarv
--....1
FURN ITURE:
Couches, ~--------·-·_
mine site on Rt. 325 , by week
white dog, part Basenji, 6 to 8
I
WILL
not
be
responsible
for
malchin9
chairs.
set
$149.95 UPHOLSTER your own fur or
month
,
utilities
paid
;
months old . Phone 593-8040 or
SPRING
children
playing
and
getting
up
(quality
nylon
or
herculon
phone
742-5980.
niture. Foam cushions; any
992-2710.
3-20-61p coverings even in lowest price
si ze. Cotton , burlap , swivel
3-20-3tc hurl on my properfy. James
OPEN HOUSE
B. Ph illips, 18 Cave St ..
range) ; 4 pc . maple bedroom :
bases , zipper , webbing , welt.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
dresser, mirror, chest, book.ONE bedroom apartmenfs ;
Pomeroy Recovery , 622 E.
3-20-3tp
ideal for couples ; phone 992- case headboard bed. $100;
MARCH 21-24
Main St.
=-:------maple chest of drawers, 45248 or 992-3436.
3-8 -301~
PUREBRED sale - 6th annual
3-14-6fc
drawer $25, 5-drawer $30 ; J
Free
Refreshments
W. Va . Polled Hereford
pc . coffee, step-fable sets
.
Come in Register For
Spring Show and Sale March
$16.95; patchwork, print or · Auto Sales
~issy'
UNFURNISHED
apartment,
24. 1973 at Jackson Mi lis State
solid swivel rockers $69.95 ;
FREE PRIZES
newly remodeled, no children,
- 4-H'Camp. Selling 34 bulls and
vinyl recliners, black, tan and 1972 HONDA &gt;00 motorcy cle , 4
18 heifers . .For Information,
cylinder, many extras, like
green $69.95 ; cl oth sofa beds
.
POMEROY
phone 992-3901.
wrile : Jim Westfall , Rt . 2,
new ; phone 985-3828.
$72.95
(one
in
gold
-gr
een
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
3-16-Gic
Box 115, Spencer, W. Va . or
. floral brocade); 7 pc. chrome _ _ __ _ __ _,::3-~9-ffc
Phone
992
·2181
NEW YORK (UPI) - Presi·
ca ll 927-2104.
dinettes $88. KUHL'S stock of
'
3'20-41c ~iOOD'S AQUARIUMS
dent Franklin D. Roosevelt and
·USED
fur niture includes : 8 196S MERCURY . good. 390
; fish' 2 BEDROOM mobile home ,
engine and transmission.
pet
.
wooden
dining room
his secretary, Marguerite
and supplies ; new location.
located in Salem Township,
Body damages, $)50 . See
Employment Wanted
Ash Street. Middleport near Meigs co. near Ohio Power, suites $125 ; chests, dressers,
"Missy" LeHand, had an in·
owner
in trailer across from
beds ; bookcases ; desk ;
M ine No. I. ca1t G. C. 0 iler ,
park ; phone 992-5443.
Bradbury School.
chrome
di
nettes;
TV
's
,
timate relationship Utat was EXPER IEN CED painter, in 1-7-lfc Columbus. Ohio 235-1227 or
3-20-3fp
ter ior and exterior . Phone
record players, rad ios. ALL
accepted by his family and his
.
--wr ite· 880 Ela ine Rd ..
Q8S -39S I.
major applian ces hav e 30-day
wife, Eleanor, the late presi· _ _ _ _ _ _ _3_·2,._
0-JOtp Business Opportunities
Columbus. Ohio.
GUARANTEES :
refr ig- 1968 VOLKSWAGEN station
3-18-31p
erators
$25
up ;
chest,
dent's son said Sunday.
wagon . See at 105 Union Ave.,
BABYSITTING in my home, S
upright
freezers
from
$65;
Pomeroy . Call 992-3293.
lor
In Ute second of a Ladies
PRIVATE
meeting
room
days a week, 7:30a.m . lo 5:30
auto. washers S45; gas or
3-20-61c
any
organ
ization
;
phone
992p.m. dai ly. Cal l 992-7828 after
Home Journal condensed
$MONEY$
el ect. dryers $35; 30", 36" gas
3975.
S: 30 p.m.
elect. ranges; 1 port . dish serJes from a forthcoming
3-11 -lfc or
FORD Ranger I ton F-350;
3-20-Sic
washer. KUHL'S BARGAIN 1969
with or wifhout new 12 ft.
book, Elliott Roosevelt said
12 MEN NEEDED FURNISHED trailer; v. mile CENTER . St . Rt. 7 " at
factory stake body, 390
"because we bad seen the
cautio n I ighf ," Tuppers
"from Pomeroy Corp . on Rt.
engine , long wheel base,
Plains , Ohio. Open to 6 p.m .
hostility between our parents,
33; phone 992-2941.
power
power
MONDAYS ONLY . steer ing, brakes,
3-18-7ft Closed
rough
tires,
airit was no great shock to
Phone 667-3858.
condit ioned, 47 ,300 mites;
discover that Missy shared a
Thursday Night
3·18-7tc
12 x 60, 2 BEDROOM mo bile
Harold Brewer , Long Bottom .
Industrial
League
completely familial
home ; across from Bradb ury
phone
985 -3554.
BOAT, 14 ft. fiberglas, con - .,
Standings
School
;
call
992-5308
or
see
3-4-ttc
:relationship wiUt FaUter.
March 15, 1973
vertib le canvas top . 40 h.p.
Char les Lewis, 2nd ho use
W. L.
FULL OR
Mercur y motor and frailer ;
: "What did surprise us, later Team
soufh from Bradbury School.
'66 FORD Galaxie 500,
58 30
$350; phone 992-3791 .
PART TIME
Pets welcome .
•on, was Ute knowledge that K&amp;C Jewelers
sa 30
3-18-3tc automat i c transmi ssion ,
Team No. 4
3-18-J!c
power steering and rad io ; '64
· Mother knew, too, and ac- Midwest Steel
56 32
Chevrolet BelAir. 4 door. V-8,
42 46
cepted the fact like the rest of Landmark
DUPLEX wal l to wall c~r - HAY. second cutting, alfalfa
standard
transmIssion, radio;
Mil hone Sohlo
26 62
and
clover,
90c
per
bale
;
Paul
Expanding company
geting, 2 bedrooms ; 2
us."
call
992-6645
after s p.m.
14 64
Karr, 1 mile North of Chester ,
Superior
edroom house ; phone 992needs
twelve
men
to
3-18-3fp
The book, "An Untold Story:
MidTeam High Ser i es
0.
2780
or
992-3432.
.
,
-work in Gallipolis and
3-18-3fp
The Roosevelts of Hyde Park," west Steel 2399.
3-13'-tic
1963 OLDSMOB ILE 98. power
Team High Game - Midwest
Point
Pleasant
areas.
has provoked a statement from Steel 863.
steering , power brakes,
SMALL private aparlme nl ; CORN ; phone 985-4211.
experience
No
power windows, power seats,
Elliott Roosevelt's Utree brothInd. High Series - Blaine
3-9-12tc automati c transm ission , good
men
only;
complet e Iy
necessary,
must
have
Carter
543
;
Joe
Sission
511
;
ers and his sister "disasseparate from house ; uti lit ies
cond it ion , $325. George
Clarence Boyles 495.
car.
Call
Monday
or
furni
shed; call 992-3881 be· 031 STIHL chain saw, rracHackett, Jr .. phone 992-2444
sociating" Utemselves from its
Ind. High Game - Joe
tica
lly
new.
$185
;
I se 14"
tween 4 p.m . and 5 p.m . or 992·
Tuesday
9
til
5.
after
5 p.m .
Sission 203 ; Mike Tittle 192;
contents.
Ferguson 3-point hitch plo+;s,
3134 after 6 p.m.
3- 18-31p
Owens
190.
Richard
When
Roosevelt
was
3-13-6fp $1 40 ; I sma ll AMC counter top
deep freeze, $95 . N. E.
governor of New York from
Vanaman, Rutland. Ohio , Mobile Homes For Sale
1929 to 1932, Miss LeHand
Pets
For
Sale
phone 742-5322.
Wedne•day Late Mixed
occupied a bedroom con18-31C 1969 GREGQRY mobile home ,
REGISTERED
Toy
FOX _ _ __ __ _ _ _3:_·_:
League
2-bedroom, front kitchen, ·88
necting Roosevelt's while Mrs.
Terners ; 2 males ; 8 week s
March 14, 1973
ft. by 200 ft., lot, Vine Sf
OWN
your own business ; 4 to 6
old; $35; phone 742-5625.
ONE Registered Charolais bull ,
Standings
Roosevelt took a back
hou r s daily ; small investment
Racine, utility building . Ca~
3 years old. Phone 992-3640
Pts.
3-18-61c
Team
be seen after 4; 30 p.m. Asking
buys necessary inventory ;
bedroom, an arrangement she Holter -Ra\,o/l ings
after 5:30 p. m.
52
-$7.000. Contact Gene Hudson
call 1-614-962-5397.
·
50
3-1S-6tc
considered "perfectly suita· Fultz-Bentley
or phone 949-3334.
-10fc
3-11
48
Rosenbaum-Meadows
For Sale
3-19-3tc
ble."
Blakeslee-Hoyt
32
Walnut
Console,
AM\\ODERN
"It was not wtusual to enter McDonald-Drenner
20
BUILDING lots for sa le at Rock FM radio, 4 speed automafi c
BU.SJNESS
14
Springs. Ohio. Close to Meigs changer, 4 speaker sound
his swtny, corner room and Moore -Morrow
OPPORTUNITY
High
Individual
Game
High School with Tuppers system , separate controls.
' 'Air ConditiOner!
find Missy there in her Men , Dan Meadows 204 ;
Plain
water . Size 1f2 acre and
Balance 178 .50 . Use our
MAN
OR
WOMAN
•Awnings
nightgown, " wrote Ute late women, Delores Tyree 171.
larger . 992-2789.
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
Rel
iabl
e
person
from
this
Second
High
Ind.
Game
2-2l-30fp
· ··Underpinninq
president's second oldest son.
3-1S-61 c
area to servi ce and collect
Men , Rich Rawl ings 201 ;
"There was no attempt to women, Lois Rosenbaum 156;
from automatic dispensers.
ALUMINUM Car lop boats, 10, MAPLE stereo-rad io com- i .Complete mqblle nQme :
Na experience needed · we
conceal their relationship. third. men , Chuck Blakeslee
· 12 and 13 fl. Kingsbury Rd., binalion, AM-FM radio, 4 . ~IJ·'eirvlce ~ plus gigantic. "
establ ish accounts for you .
; women , Ina Meadows 155.
Car , references , and S995 .00
speakers, 4 speed changer, · 1 1
f
bll h
Co. Rd . 18, Phone 992-6256 dual
Everyone within Ute famUy 198High
Series - Men, Dan
volume control. Balance · . spay. o mo e omes .
to $1,995 . 00 cash capital
after
S
p.
m.
bad come to accept the fact Meadows 579 ; women, Delores
necessary , 4 to 12 hours
3-8-30fc $81.19. Use our budget terms. always avallable.at ...
weekly could net good part
Utat Missy was a special part of Tyree 458.
Call 992-7085.
:MILLER ·.
time Income . Fu ll time
Second High Series - Men ,
1
7
year
old
Palomino
mare,
1
3-15-6f c
our family."
more . For local Interview,
Rich Rawlings S42 ; women ,
- year old Palomino stalli on - - - - - -- - - - i
wr i t e, in c lud e telephone
E!Uott Roosevelt, in a state- Hope Moore 413 ; third, men ,
3weanedagecolts.
Phone742: ·siNGER automatic sewing
numb
er
:
1h0 Wuhingtooi Blvd.
ment appended to the article, Chuck Blakeslee 5.41 ; worrten ,
5251.
machine; l lke new in walnut
Becky Drenner -lna Me&lt;tdows
EAGLE
4~~-7521
BELPRE, 0.
_
__
__
__
..:.
3·
.
:.::
20-6fc
cabinet.
Makes
design
slitsaid some people may feel he 4D8 .
'
INDUSTRIES
.
ches,
zig-zags,
buttonholes.
~¥ts said too much about his
Team High G~me
SIAMESE
and
Balinese
kittens;
blind
hem_
s.
overcasts.
etc.,
Department BV
paid for all makes and
parents' private life. But, he Rosenbaum . Meadows 660.
excell ent qua lily ; perfectly · ~- Call R_avenswood , 27J· "CASH
3938 Meadowbrook Road
Team
High Series
models
of mobile homes.
trained ; cal1614-446-4416 after 9521 or 273-9893.
St . Louis Park , Minnesota
said, the truUt i!; better told Rosenbaum - Meadows 1843.
Phone
area
code 614-423-9531.
t-11 -lfc
2 p.m. at Gall ipolis.
55426
Utan alluded to "in veiled
~ -13-tfc
3-16-6fc

LIKE "REAL AMERICANS"
CHICAGO
(UPI)
PLEADS INNOCENT
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP!) Returning POW Robert Ray
, - Ernie Holmes, defensive Helle, 24, of Toledo, Ohio, told
tackle for the Pittsburgh Steel· well-wishers who greeted him
ers, entered innocent pleas here Monday, "You've made
Monday.to Utree charges of as· us feel, wlUt your welcome, like
sault wiUt intent to ldll and was real Americans." The Marine
released on $45,000 bond. sergeant, a prisoner for nearly
, Holmes was arrested last Fri· five years, will undergo
: ' day following shooting in· processing at nearby Great
Lakes Naval Base Hospital.
; cld•nt&lt; in this area.

'".i
•

Custom Builders. Our
.
c1rpenters have 20 yean
992-2094
buildlnr
experience · In
· , 1606 E. Main Pomeroy·
homes in Meigs County.

:1'~ .

OaSIS!

TtiiS MONTH

..

........

IJOT

I LOST·FOUR
POUNDS

'

Zag Sewing Machines. Still In

copper . 45c lb. :
Radiators, clean, 28c lb.,

, In Memorv

sentences."

.

~11 . Jo;r lF.Asr 1-\f'S
H~IAJ~ AAJ IIXIJrrtY

I

FOUNDTHEM
FOUR POUNDS
'IE LOST,
ELVifllEY

POMEROY
HOME&amp; AUTO

I

Have your hame buill by:

. ., 'i

..
'

WOOD TRUSSES

orig inal cartons . No at tachments needed as our
confrols are built-ln . Sews
.
!"
.
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew on buttons,. ·coAL, Limesto11e,

C~EAN

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

says Ellion

Services:
'-

PRE-FABRICATED

model. Will sell for small
balance of $36.50 or pay $5 per
month. Cal l 992-5331 .
3-14-6fc

oak tables.

·~

ASK US ABOUT

'console. Take over payments
of $7.50 per month or pay
balance of $78.60. Call 9925331.
3-14-6fc

machine is a dress maker

OLtJ

"' ')

I

OOWN-ATTH'
FeED STORE.
LDWEEZ'I, AN'

•f

.

..... - .

'

8 track stereo in ni ce Walnut

1969 CHEVELLE
$1795
Ma_libu Cpe .. local1 owner car. dark grn. finish . like new

1968 CAMARO CONV.

1
•

want: on Chester water ;

Paying sto each, First floor phone 992-5248 till 3 p.m. or '
only. Write giving directions. 992-3436 after 3 p.m.
Pianos, P. 0 . Box 188, Sardis. .
3-14-6fc '·' I
Oh io 43946.
3-18-6fp. MUST sell due to transfer . 1973

Get Results!

~Business

lots or buy what you

Fir ebird Esprit. Local 1 owner car, 350 V-8 engine, P.
stee ring &amp; automaf ic trans., AM-FM radio, like new white
lettered fires, dark brown fini sh, bucket seat &amp; blk v inyl
fr im. A sharp one. Really loaded.
·

wh1te lettered tires, .307 V-B, power steering &amp; hrakes,
.
· radio, clean Int.

··
·

Any· condition .

3°S~C~E~;

.

I

100 RAILROAD Ties, fair to
good condition . Phone 7426825.
- -- -- - - -·_3-_1S_·
61p

suo ,,. 50 word mlnlmvm
Each addltion'l!ll word ·2r

PIANOS .

OLD . UPRIGHT

.

.I JEST WEIGHED

~Uti

AlWAIS HAVE TO DO ~AT
YOU GV'IS 1/JAAFT TO bo .

..,L_ __ _ _

-

.-

·

20~

.

The
Daily Sentinel
St.

-

MAKING A MESS. fa

MAKING MUSTARD.

U.Border
18. Blanched
20. Boundary
(comb.
form)
21. Hacks
22. Fortitude
23. Netherlands
Antilles
ialand
24. Rank;
class
J.U 25. Trust
25. Palm leaf
2'1. Indian
reign
"· Fruit tree
30. Japanese
atatesman
u. Emmet
32. Consume
35. Winy
37. Precise
38. Unwilling
39. Bugbear
40. Pearson
41. On what

DOWN
1. Interpret
2. Ukewise
3. U.S. naval
hero (3 wds.)
4. Some
5. Ham it up
6. Made out
7. Monk
8, U.S. Navy
song (2 wds.)
9.Speen
10. Hermit
18. Parsifal's
Mrs.
19. Actress
Dalton
21. Imaginative

JllJ]JM[!3~®~ *'"·'IJ .-~ ,_.
hyiHI\II II hHNI&gt;IIJ

Unscramble the•• four Jumblts,

one letter to eaeh square, to
form four ordinary words.

Yelllorday's Aaswer
22. Festive
23. Coming
24. Egyptian
Christian
28. Hiatus
29. Goose
genus

ail. Land

measure
34. Adolescent
36. Scrap
37. Immedi·
ately

I'RVSN

[]

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·I

tJ

I
1 I III

,..,

tUJ&gt;I.EDD

IDACROWI

WH'I HE COULDN'T GET

OFF THE !'SUS.

Now UTUIIt the circled lttlen
to form the IUrpriH tll'llwer, u
( ]
~==:::::===~-.L-J ouneated br the abon cartoon.

I I

1,.. ..- -... ln WAS "(I I I XI X)"
;

l'eelerd•r'•

(Aalwen

.

• j

I
·I.

lDIIIOfrOW'

Jumbloo• COMI_T VIRUS DIPUTY jURAT!
Antwert What one .lwl u•m erime• ltart 1 -A IACI

PFANl I'S

occasion?

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work

OCH, NO i l'P MERJ;C'/
~lt&lt;E TO HfRii VOIJ

COMe eACK TO
\SCOTLAND WITH

11)

ME ...

It:~~~~§~~~~
L

AXYDLBAAXR
.1• LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, et&lt;. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all r;::::;;r:~';:t~F-----~-, ,------~----..,
hints. Each day· the &lt;ode letters ore different.
I'
'{0\) JU5T THINK '(OU'RE
CRYPTOQUOTES
CUTE BECAUSE '(()U'RE CU'fE!
LYT, \VB BYER OVDJO AWB BWJT,
JB

WCGWVB , YD

HAR

BJTR

GAJOA

AWB HAR SRBH PYYHSWCC OYWOA . ARV
Yeoterday'a
GYYT Cryploqaote:
S QY X D A WONDERFUL DISCOVERYPSYCHOANALYSIS.:MAKESQUITESIMPLEPEOPLEFEEL

~~~~~~~~~m ~~~~~~~~~

THEY'RE COMPLEX.-SAllUEL N. BEHRMAN
. CC 1979 Xinc Featurea SYndicate, InG.)

---

..

'"&lt;111111\ I IJ

•

•

�''

1 1X&gt;IJT SEE

8- 'l'he ~Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Marcb 20, 19't o

I'M At=EERED

..

Seritinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds
IN~g~T'ti;N

~P.M ofye.:::;r.N~~~IIcotlon @)~
·

..

Monday Deaanne ·9 a.m .

Concell~tlon.- corrections

Will beac~pted un.t il9 '1 ,m. tCr
' . ' 0rl'~~'u"LufW8~~n

2 SIGNS
Of
QU'liJY
"

Wanted' To :Buy

Pomeroy

WANTED -

MO.. fOr· (O•

Ttfe Publisher reserves the

.•right to edit ot,.elect ariy ad!

;·deemed . ob"j~lttlonal. . Thf
, publistler will not be responslbff
,tor ..-more than o• lncdr:rec1

.Insertion.

•

,

RATES
: For Wa'-t Ad Servlt;:tr

:
, S &lt;...;onts per Word one lnsertiO(

Mlnl111•1m Charge 1sr-·

•·

• _12 ten~ per word .1tn. ,
' consecutfve 11'\strtlons.
~
;r \8 cents per word Sill cbn
, '1ecutive insertions.
• 25 Per Certt Discount on. paltt
' ads and ada paid within '10 da~s
'
CA.RD OF THANKS '
&amp; OBITUARY

1970

PONTIAC

12395

BLIND ADS

1

·

Add11 1onal 2Sc Char'~e 4 "K~r
~dvert ! sement .
. "r
OFFICE HOURS .
8:30a .m . tO 5:00p .m . Oelly,
; 1:30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
. Saturday .

.

:-:-:-::-:-:cc-::-=-:c::-=-- .,...,.

LARGE metal building. Phone
JUST taken in 1973 zi g zag
742-3182.
machine ,
this
3-20-3fc sewing

11695

V-8 motor , auto . trans., P.S., and w-w t ires, radio ni ce
yellow finish with vin yl Interior .

'

t~rnlture.

organs, dishes, clocks, brass
beds or complete hou seholds.

Wrile M. D. Miller, Rt. ·4,
Pomeroy. Ohio. · Phone 991
6271.

1-7-tf: l2l PAINT DAMAGE . 1972 Zig -

Pomeroy Motor Co.

.

Gmseng $60 lb. ; M. A. Hall.
Reedsville, 378-6249 .
3-9-flc
_ _ _ __ _ _ _....:._:

Built to Your 'Specs'

ROORNG AND
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE~ 992-2550

HOGG &amp; ZUSPA~
MATER.IALS CO.
Mason, W. Va.
773-5554

FDR intimate
· with

1.,

Local Bowling

s3.51 HOUR

MR. VANCE.

.

'r
:

~\\~BILE "OM~~~
'

'

''
'
'•'

-

Antique and ·
Collectible Items
Auction

We falk to vou
.like a person.

B&amp;G AUCTION

'

197 w. State St .. Athens

ON YOUR DIAL
,I

l

Watch this column for
complete listing on Friday.
Conslgn'?'enls accepted.

·WMP0/1390

'

'

i

Phone nl-5035
Auctioneers:

.

Bill Wade A Crlt Bradford

.

'

)

NEED someone to cut grass.
trim _grapes and

flowers;

write Box 729-E, c-o The Daily
Sentinel , Pomeroy, 0 .
·
3-18-6lc

Wanted

Our:.
. ..,.

DEAD Stock horses, catlte,
sheep .

Reasonabl e

charge. Call 245·5514.
2-28-3otc

WANTED
Licensed Ohio
Property &amp; Casually
Insurance Agent
An Independent insuran ce
agency in Pomeroy, needs
someone with li cen se as
junior partner and future
sale to right party. If you
want to own an In surance
giving
write ,
agency ,
resume to Box 666, Pomeroy,

0 . 45769.

.'I'

..

AKIDNAPI~,

DIFFE~Et\11"

t=OUR l&lt;Of!BERIEO:....

111REE

EVER 1-W'PEII!S.

I

~eel

AliPment .

'5.55

·From the largest
'Bulldozer . Radiator
l~st Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs ·

on Mo•i Americon C.rs'
-GUARANTE-E!)..
Ph(!ne 992-2094

R!diator Specialist

'OW WI~L 'YOU
SPEND· '&gt;'OUR.
FIRST DA'I IN
LDNDOJ,StR516HT5EEING '?

Pomeroy Hofile &amp; Au10 ·

SMJTH NELSON
MOTORS, IHC.
,;Omara

~'Re
OBSei&lt;VIN~

I·

~!

FlRSTSTOPMALL!! Tf-11'. GL.OOMII'-ST,' ·

TOO 'TOURIST'/. AH •
THINK AH'LL TAKE

WOST FORBIDDING CASTLE
IN Al-l.. El-lGLAND - 50
SETTLE BACK FOR A
&lt;.lOLL'I GOOD TIME!!

.ANAP-

oPenaTIIS
Monday thru Saturday

· 997-1174 ·
a
,_;.__ _ _ _ _ _-'-'
· J.

6~~~~!",•_roy,O.

1 • .

EXCAVATING. Dozers, large EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
and small; Backhoes and . and backhoe work; septic
Loaders on track and tires;
tanks Installed; dump trucks •
Dump trucks - Lo-boy ' and lo-boys for hire; will haul
Service; Septic tanks in - fll,l dirt, top soli, limestone .
stalled;
George
(Bill) andgravel;caiiBoborRoger
Pullins; phone 992-2478.
. Jeffers, day phone 992-7089;
2-9-tfcl night phone 992-3525 or 992- - - -- - - -5232.
HARRISON'S TV Service and _ _ _ _ __ _.:_2·.:.:.11·lfC
Service Calls; phone \192-2522.
CONCRETE
2-9-tfc READY -MIX
delivered right to 'lOur .
~ELNA ana White Sewrn
~ro/ect . Fast and eo.•y. Free
Machine s .. . serv 1ce on all.
g est mates, Phone 992- 328~,
makes . Reasonable rates . Goegleln Ready -MI• Co .,
The Sewing · Center, Mid- Mlddl~port, Ohio.
6-JO.Hc
dleport, Ohio.
11 -16-Hc
SEPTIC TANKS CLiiANED
SEPTIC TANKS AROB11.: REASONABLE rates. Ph . .u6SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN- 4782, Gall! polls, John Russell.
Owner &amp; Operator.
EO, REPAIRED. MILLER
5-12-H&lt;
SANITATION, STEWART,
OHIO. PHONE 662-3035.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
10-4-tf&lt;
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
SEWING. MACHINES. Kepa•
Racine, Ohio
service, all makes. 992-2284: •
· Crltt Bradjgr~ ·
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales andl
S-1-t(c

QUIT STAU.l!:f~. SVLVESTE~!

THIS 16 TH' ""'"VA
PROMISED -r• ~OOK
FE~ A .JOB~

WINKLE
I'LL 6E ROOTINC3
fOR 'lOU , HAL.
GOOD LUCK!

- - - - - --

......

,_,,'" ......
''" "' "·' """"'

Service . We Sharpen Scissors~1 ·, "'C.-:-.--------

3-29-ttc
,-_ _ _ __ __ ::..::.:
PAINTINu, ...,,a sonry work ;
fr ee ~stimate ,· call 773·5580.
3-7-30fp

DOZER and back hoe Wlll'k,
ponds and septic tanks, dlt· r
chlng service; top soli, fill .
dirt, llmestone i B&amp;K Ex-t
cava!lng. Phone 992-5367,:
D1ck K'tr, Jr.
1
9-l ~tfc ,

WILL tr im or cut trees, clean

··=---- - - .- ----,

. out basements, attics, etc.
Phone 949-3221.
~EE US FOR:' Awnings, li;;."ft~
3-11 -30tc. ' doors and Windows, corparts•.
· -=-=-~------ -·
"'i
marquees, aluminum aiding
.AUTOMOBILE Insurance been · and rolling. A. Jacob, aelel
cancell~d?
Lost
your · representative. For fretJ
operators license? Call 992- estimates, phone ChariN
2966.
Lisle, Syracu .. , Y. V. r
1
.----=-~=...:_6_::
·
15-tfc.
Johnson
and Son, Inc.
-•
3-2-Hc .

._.

I'M &amp;C1(E
lt&gt;I~E'

f.J-L 'DJR
MONEY 1

llEAT the rusht Get your
tawnmower and filler tuned·
2 NEWlbedroom homes; 1 with
up now ; Small Engine Rop~~lr
basement, 1 without ; 2 car
Shop on Third St.. Mason, W.
garages, 1 acre lots; located
Va .
·
at Rock Springs behind Meigs
3-6-Jotc
Co. Fairground . Will trade or
help finance ; also 5 good
building lots, water and O' DELL WHEEL alignment'
located at Crossroads, Rl. 1:1-1,
disposal Installed ; Charles H.
complete front end service,
Cornell. Athens, 593-7034 or
tune up and brake service.
593-5667 or 992-7613.
Wheels balanced elec2-1 1-tlc
All
work'
tronically.
Reasonable
70 ACRE farm with timber; S guaranteed.
rates . Phone 992-3213 or 742bedroom paneled home with
3232.
modern kitchen and bath;
2-18-tfc
phone 992-6947.
3-18-6tc
1.3 ACRE , trai ler setup, 200 fl .

ACROSS
1. Hindu
prince
5. Obliterate
11. Esau's
fatherin-law
12. "Silas

Real Estate For Sale

frontage , on State Road,

water tap paid, pond, other
extra s; phone 992-7051.

.---:--,-----.:__:3.....:·
•B-3tp
'HOUSE In Long Boltom, phiine
985-3529.
•
6-11 -Hd

';·-: :-==;:::-=~·~·===~~

~

i'

/cLELAND~
6DB E . Main

'-_.Pomeroy .

~

Close to shopping . Also nice
apartment for additional
Income. 518,500.00.
INCOME PROPERTY
Pomeroy. Nice 2 bedroom
apartment,

basement,

garage.

liv ing.

10

sleeping rooms for income.

Ca ll tor an appointment
today .
2 YEARS OLD
Mi.ddleport. Beautiful 3
home.

13. Pallid
14. Wiseman
15. Russian
river
16.Summer
(Fr.)

.Ill' '

EXCELLENT LOCATION

bedroom.

_. .

DICK TRACY

.. Pomeroy, Ohio

About 1 acre . 9 room frame .
4 bedrooms , bath , porches .

For

Virgil B.
Teaford, St.
Broker
110 Mechanic Street

REALTY

Lovely

ME

MI&gt;.KE IT f'fi~/&lt;&amp;E TO

Ot&lt;A~,

THHJ WRIT&amp;' M~
AC.Hlia&lt; FOR $100 ~

ALLMirtor

IS ~!

AtSE~ ~ . '.su~llf-lE \

HO~EST'

"

-~----

Real Estate For Sale

BARGAIN 3 APARTMENTS - all utilities
- 2 apartments rented.
Locatedooon. Mulberry Ave. Onlu
$10,000.
•
SPACIOUS i'&lt;fW HOME .
4 BEDROON.S - Garage,
large corner loi, all electric,
large beautiful kitchen, l'h
baths, one wltn sliding glaos ·
doors. Only $21,00.00.
2 CORNER LOTS
RUTLAND - 2 bedroom•, nice
bath. _garage, and uHIIty
building . ASKING
lust
57,500.00.
VERY LARGE
CORN-ER LOT - 4 Bedroom•,
living about 38x16. Nice kit-

kitchen, dining R., utility R.,
bath, carpeted . Patio,
basement .. Level lot 100xl20. .chen, basement, 2 modern
baths. Front and back porches.
COLLECTORS Item , Moun Real Estate for ~!e
$23.000.00.
Want
only $21.900.00.
taineer Lady and John Henry
RUTLAND AREA
HOUSE
by
owner;
3
or
4
OHIO
RIVER LAND
bottle . Phone 992-7138.
,.
4 years old. 4 bedrooms,
bedr:ooms , large rec. room,
:U'1 X23 1 'X.009
3
ACRES
PLUS
- 1972 mobile
_ __ _ _ __ __:_
3·.::20-6tc
large patio, modern kitchen, closets, kitchen has loads of
llome
65x12
.
Screened
patio
fully carpeted; call 992-5248 cabinets and range, dining
16x20.
llf2
baths,
air
conSAVE 20 pet . invento~y
until 3 p.m. or 992-3436 alter 3 area , bath. Storm windows&amp; '
' p.m.;
clearance sale now 10
ditioning.
18'
fiberglass
boat
No Sunday Calls.
doors . 111:1 acres. Just
progress. 20 pet. discount on
with 120 H.P. motor and
3-14-6fc
$16.900.00.
most of your grocery needs.
trailer
. All this for&lt;$21,500.00.
NEW1'h YEARS
This means you can save 20
USED OFFSET PLATES
SPLIT LEVEL
3 BEDROOM home, living room 3 lovely bedrooms. bath.
pet. on your grocery bill. Get
HAVE
4
BEDROOMS
- All electric
.
and dining room carpefed .
the full details today at the
utility R., beautiful kitchen.
MANY ·USES
home,
w,
baths,
bosement,
New forced air furnace .
Bright Star Market next to
Dining area , hardwood
nice
kitchen
with
dining
orea. 7
Lincoln
Hill.
Pomeroy,
phone
Drive- In Theafre, Mason, W.
·.
floors . Some carpe-ting .
992-2071.
acres
of
land
near
town.
Va .
·carport with storage room .
3-20-16fc
$30.000.00.
- - = - - - -- - .:.3-6.:..·12fc Lot 100x100 In new addition.
8 for 11.00
'
COUNTRY HOME
•
GROCERY busfneos for sate.
8 ACRES. Good building site or $21.500.00.
2
YEARS
OLD - 3 nice slzo
OLDER
BRICK
Building for sale or Iease. •
trailer lots. On Rt. 143. Phone
bedrooms
with large closet&gt;.•2 or 3 bedrooms, bat~. new
Phone 773-5618 from 8: 30 p.m.
992-3640 alter 5:30 p. m,
.
.
Large
living,
nice kitchen with
to 10 p.m. for appoint ment.
3-15-6tc forced air furnace. Storm dining, all carpeted. Utility and
3-20-ltc
doors&amp;wlndOvls. Fenced lot .
two garages. 125,0110.00.
'KOUSE Fut&lt; SALE, ll4 Brick • Garage. $8,500.00.
HOUSE and 2 trailer lots. Phone
••"Street, Pomeroy, Ohio: brick' TIME IS GOING BY',
991·5693.
house, 3 bedrooms. excellent . PRICES ARE RISING, A FREE ATLAS IS YOURS AT
Court
Pomeroy
location, close to school and WHY PUT OFF ? BUY NOW. THE OFFICE.. DROP IN AND
3-20-4tc
' . city ; contact
Lou Osborne or·
•
• M. M. 335 Trae tor wItn InTO SELL LIST WITH US. PICK IT UP.
11 99d898.
HELEN L TEAFORD
n
be
dependent
Jive
power,
s
.
ca
.
·
CARPETS and life too ca
GORDON
I. TI!AFORD
beautiful if you use Blue
speeds, 2 speed torque, new · ---.--,.....~----1.:.1·::26-tfc r
HENRY E. CLELAND
rubber, 2- 14" bottom plows
•
ASSOCtA
TI!S
Lustre .
Rent
elec trlc
BROKER
3 pt., 6' Dunham tandem disc: LOTS on Wright St., phone 742--:
shampooer;.sl. Nelson's Drug
NO
~UNDAY
StfOWtNGS
992-2259
$1,450; phone 992-2307.
6630.
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio . •
992-»25'
II
no
an•wer
991-2561
·
3-18-3fp
,,
3-16-12fc L.,__ ___;_
3-20-2tc
992-3615
· ...;...._....!
'

"

"

)stop In and See
· . :Floor Display.

Excelsior

o.

For Sale
Aluminum
.Sheets

CO/AP5TITION

'lllATS 11-lE 11WUE!L.E
WllH 11·115 JOB. f\O!HIN&lt;&amp;

FIVE CAR 1HE:f'l'51

~lOCif...FIRE

EXPERT

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Help wanted

\,?l·oc.~~ JU~ I ~IG

111E.RES A RIOT'
AT 11-iE HIGH

,fORNiiURE

•

Lost

"'

eves

and ·

UP FOR Ti1E L.tV5·

NOT AT ALLJ
THEY'RE OBVIOUSLY
.VERY OtSCfRNIN\1 .
GENTLE MEt&lt;~

01'1'
loiS

'&gt;t&gt;ti1RE JIST' 6ACK FRCW.
flt.'TROL. WHAT's IT LIKE
OI.IT 'THERE I
TOPA~ 7

.,

H!ATING &amp;
COOLING

---

MEN CAN'T

SEeM TO TAI(f THEI,~\

OFFICE SUPPLIES
"

•

••HEll''

446-0677

'"'----

'-

.

ALL WEAlHER .

Delivered to Job Site

F RI

'
,,
.
•'

.

ror Sale

B~ass, 18c lb.; Batteries, 70c ;

hogs,

:...._

•

'

Salt . Works, E. Main Sf.,
m_onograms. and bll.nd hem
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891. · ·
st&lt;fch.
Full
cash
price
$38.50
Notice
Notice
·
4-12-tfc
or
budget
plan
available.
,IN MEMORY of Lyle E.
.
01'
en
Electro
Hygiene
Co.
Phone
Chapman who passed away 1
· 2 PIECE traditional living room .
2
PIECE
traditional
living
roorr
992-7755.
year ago March ~0 .
· suite with 90" sofa and extra 3 AND 4 ROOM lurnlshed and·
3-14-6fc
suite with 90" sofa and extra
Not now, but in the coming
hi~h back Mr. Chair; special
unfurnished . apartments . - - -- -- - - high back Mr. Chair; special
year s/
this
week only $139.50, casli
Phone
992-5434.
(3)
VACUUM
cleaners
new
1972
fh1s
week only 5139.95, cash
,It may be in a better land.
and
carry ;
Pomeroy
and
carry;
Pomeroy
4-12-ff&lt;
model
.
Complete
with
all
We' ll read the meaning of our
Recovery, 622 E. Main St ..
Recovery, 622 E. Main St.,
cleaning
tools.
Small
paint
tears .
Pomeroy. phone 992-7554.
Pomeroy, phone 992-7554.
Brow n' s Traile1
damage in shipping . Will take
· And there , somet ime, we ' ll
3-16-6tp ·rRAILER,
3-16-6fp
Park ; phone \192-3324.
$27 cash or budget plan
understand.
2-13-tfc available . Phone 992-7755,
Sadly missed by his wife.
BEGINNING Arril 1, 1973 ,
Electro Hygiene Co.
Emma , children and grand NEW FOAM to fill your old
Showalter's We Pet Shop will 2 BEDROOM mobile home ;
Furnace- Controls
children.
3-14-6fc
cush ions, standard s1ze suite ,
be open 4 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. completely furnished ; ca ll - - - - -- -- 3-20-lfp
only $9.95.
Pomeroy
HUMIDIFIER$
daily , all day Saturday,
992-2441
after
5:30p.m.
Recovery,
622
E.
Main
St.
Sunday and Holidays.
BARGAINS ARE OUR 'M,ID3-8-30tp
2-7-!fc
Hot Water Heater~·
3c18-121p
DLE NAME!! Shopping
Plumbing
U
~
N~
F~U~R~N~I~S~H-E~D---3---r-oom
around now so that your UPHOLSTERY
materials ,
LOST OR STOLEN - English
KOSCOT KOSMETICS AND
apartment, 408 Spring Ave.,
INCOME TAX REFUNO
Electrical Work
regularly $3.95 only $1.95.
Springer Spaniel. liver and
CHECK wil l stretch further
WIGS. SPECIALS MONTH- Pomeroy .
Also remnants. Pomeroy
white, "Corky" on Kingsbur y
this year? Come on out to
LY .
BROWN'S
INDE 3 11
Rd ., Reward . Harold H.
Recovery, 622 E. Main St.
PENDENT DISTRJBU · - -- - - - -- -2- c KUHL'S BARGAIN CENTER
Smith, Phone 992-6656.
3-8-30fp
TOR,
MIDDLEPORT . 2 BEDROOM mobile home, air· &amp; see for yourself that you
_ _ __ __ _ __:_
3·_
20-41p
PAY LESS &amp; GET MORE, U·PHOLSTERY materials;
PHONE 992-5113.
condit ioned ; in Racine area;
2·2J-Ifc
whether you're shopping for
phone 992-6329.
Nylon prints, cotton prints,
Found
NEW fur niture. USED fur3-16-lfc
992-2448
velvets of all kinds. Pomeroy
;::=======~
niture or GUARANTEED,
- - ---Recovery, 622 E. Ma&lt;n3 8St.Jotp
AT POMEROY Elementary
Come and Cel ebrate
Pomeroy,
USED applian ces . NEW
2
BEDROOM
tra
iler.
close
to
School , small brown and
Lan
dmark's
40th
Anniv
ersarv
--....1
FURN ITURE:
Couches, ~--------·-·_
mine site on Rt. 325 , by week
white dog, part Basenji, 6 to 8
I
WILL
not
be
responsible
for
malchin9
chairs.
set
$149.95 UPHOLSTER your own fur or
month
,
utilities
paid
;
months old . Phone 593-8040 or
SPRING
children
playing
and
getting
up
(quality
nylon
or
herculon
phone
742-5980.
niture. Foam cushions; any
992-2710.
3-20-61p coverings even in lowest price
si ze. Cotton , burlap , swivel
3-20-3tc hurl on my properfy. James
OPEN HOUSE
B. Ph illips, 18 Cave St ..
range) ; 4 pc . maple bedroom :
bases , zipper , webbing , welt.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
dresser, mirror, chest, book.ONE bedroom apartmenfs ;
Pomeroy Recovery , 622 E.
3-20-3tp
ideal for couples ; phone 992- case headboard bed. $100;
MARCH 21-24
Main St.
=-:------maple chest of drawers, 45248 or 992-3436.
3-8 -301~
PUREBRED sale - 6th annual
3-14-6fc
drawer $25, 5-drawer $30 ; J
Free
Refreshments
W. Va . Polled Hereford
pc . coffee, step-fable sets
.
Come in Register For
Spring Show and Sale March
$16.95; patchwork, print or · Auto Sales
~issy'
UNFURNISHED
apartment,
24. 1973 at Jackson Mi lis State
solid swivel rockers $69.95 ;
FREE PRIZES
newly remodeled, no children,
- 4-H'Camp. Selling 34 bulls and
vinyl recliners, black, tan and 1972 HONDA &gt;00 motorcy cle , 4
18 heifers . .For Information,
cylinder, many extras, like
green $69.95 ; cl oth sofa beds
.
POMEROY
phone 992-3901.
wrile : Jim Westfall , Rt . 2,
new ; phone 985-3828.
$72.95
(one
in
gold
-gr
een
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
3-16-Gic
Box 115, Spencer, W. Va . or
. floral brocade); 7 pc. chrome _ _ __ _ __ _,::3-~9-ffc
Phone
992
·2181
NEW YORK (UPI) - Presi·
ca ll 927-2104.
dinettes $88. KUHL'S stock of
'
3'20-41c ~iOOD'S AQUARIUMS
dent Franklin D. Roosevelt and
·USED
fur niture includes : 8 196S MERCURY . good. 390
; fish' 2 BEDROOM mobile home ,
engine and transmission.
pet
.
wooden
dining room
his secretary, Marguerite
and supplies ; new location.
located in Salem Township,
Body damages, $)50 . See
Employment Wanted
Ash Street. Middleport near Meigs co. near Ohio Power, suites $125 ; chests, dressers,
"Missy" LeHand, had an in·
owner
in trailer across from
beds ; bookcases ; desk ;
M ine No. I. ca1t G. C. 0 iler ,
park ; phone 992-5443.
Bradbury School.
chrome
di
nettes;
TV
's
,
timate relationship Utat was EXPER IEN CED painter, in 1-7-lfc Columbus. Ohio 235-1227 or
3-20-3fp
ter ior and exterior . Phone
record players, rad ios. ALL
accepted by his family and his
.
--wr ite· 880 Ela ine Rd ..
Q8S -39S I.
major applian ces hav e 30-day
wife, Eleanor, the late presi· _ _ _ _ _ _ _3_·2,._
0-JOtp Business Opportunities
Columbus. Ohio.
GUARANTEES :
refr ig- 1968 VOLKSWAGEN station
3-18-31p
erators
$25
up ;
chest,
dent's son said Sunday.
wagon . See at 105 Union Ave.,
BABYSITTING in my home, S
upright
freezers
from
$65;
Pomeroy . Call 992-3293.
lor
In Ute second of a Ladies
PRIVATE
meeting
room
days a week, 7:30a.m . lo 5:30
auto. washers S45; gas or
3-20-61c
any
organ
ization
;
phone
992p.m. dai ly. Cal l 992-7828 after
Home Journal condensed
$MONEY$
el ect. dryers $35; 30", 36" gas
3975.
S: 30 p.m.
elect. ranges; 1 port . dish serJes from a forthcoming
3-11 -lfc or
FORD Ranger I ton F-350;
3-20-Sic
washer. KUHL'S BARGAIN 1969
with or wifhout new 12 ft.
book, Elliott Roosevelt said
12 MEN NEEDED FURNISHED trailer; v. mile CENTER . St . Rt. 7 " at
factory stake body, 390
"because we bad seen the
cautio n I ighf ," Tuppers
"from Pomeroy Corp . on Rt.
engine , long wheel base,
Plains , Ohio. Open to 6 p.m .
hostility between our parents,
33; phone 992-2941.
power
power
MONDAYS ONLY . steer ing, brakes,
3-18-7ft Closed
rough
tires,
airit was no great shock to
Phone 667-3858.
condit ioned, 47 ,300 mites;
discover that Missy shared a
Thursday Night
3·18-7tc
12 x 60, 2 BEDROOM mo bile
Harold Brewer , Long Bottom .
Industrial
League
completely familial
home ; across from Bradb ury
phone
985 -3554.
BOAT, 14 ft. fiberglas, con - .,
Standings
School
;
call
992-5308
or
see
3-4-ttc
:relationship wiUt FaUter.
March 15, 1973
vertib le canvas top . 40 h.p.
Char les Lewis, 2nd ho use
W. L.
FULL OR
Mercur y motor and frailer ;
: "What did surprise us, later Team
soufh from Bradbury School.
'66 FORD Galaxie 500,
58 30
$350; phone 992-3791 .
PART TIME
Pets welcome .
•on, was Ute knowledge that K&amp;C Jewelers
sa 30
3-18-3tc automat i c transmi ssion ,
Team No. 4
3-18-J!c
power steering and rad io ; '64
· Mother knew, too, and ac- Midwest Steel
56 32
Chevrolet BelAir. 4 door. V-8,
42 46
cepted the fact like the rest of Landmark
DUPLEX wal l to wall c~r - HAY. second cutting, alfalfa
standard
transmIssion, radio;
Mil hone Sohlo
26 62
and
clover,
90c
per
bale
;
Paul
Expanding company
geting, 2 bedrooms ; 2
us."
call
992-6645
after s p.m.
14 64
Karr, 1 mile North of Chester ,
Superior
edroom house ; phone 992needs
twelve
men
to
3-18-3fp
The book, "An Untold Story:
MidTeam High Ser i es
0.
2780
or
992-3432.
.
,
-work in Gallipolis and
3-18-3fp
The Roosevelts of Hyde Park," west Steel 2399.
3-13'-tic
1963 OLDSMOB ILE 98. power
Team High Game - Midwest
Point
Pleasant
areas.
has provoked a statement from Steel 863.
steering , power brakes,
SMALL private aparlme nl ; CORN ; phone 985-4211.
experience
No
power windows, power seats,
Elliott Roosevelt's Utree brothInd. High Series - Blaine
3-9-12tc automati c transm ission , good
men
only;
complet e Iy
necessary,
must
have
Carter
543
;
Joe
Sission
511
;
ers and his sister "disasseparate from house ; uti lit ies
cond it ion , $325. George
Clarence Boyles 495.
car.
Call
Monday
or
furni
shed; call 992-3881 be· 031 STIHL chain saw, rracHackett, Jr .. phone 992-2444
sociating" Utemselves from its
Ind. High Game - Joe
tica
lly
new.
$185
;
I se 14"
tween 4 p.m . and 5 p.m . or 992·
Tuesday
9
til
5.
after
5 p.m .
Sission 203 ; Mike Tittle 192;
contents.
Ferguson 3-point hitch plo+;s,
3134 after 6 p.m.
3- 18-31p
Owens
190.
Richard
When
Roosevelt
was
3-13-6fp $1 40 ; I sma ll AMC counter top
deep freeze, $95 . N. E.
governor of New York from
Vanaman, Rutland. Ohio , Mobile Homes For Sale
1929 to 1932, Miss LeHand
Pets
For
Sale
phone 742-5322.
Wedne•day Late Mixed
occupied a bedroom con18-31C 1969 GREGQRY mobile home ,
REGISTERED
Toy
FOX _ _ __ __ _ _ _3:_·_:
League
2-bedroom, front kitchen, ·88
necting Roosevelt's while Mrs.
Terners ; 2 males ; 8 week s
March 14, 1973
ft. by 200 ft., lot, Vine Sf
OWN
your own business ; 4 to 6
old; $35; phone 742-5625.
ONE Registered Charolais bull ,
Standings
Roosevelt took a back
hou r s daily ; small investment
Racine, utility building . Ca~
3 years old. Phone 992-3640
Pts.
3-18-61c
Team
be seen after 4; 30 p.m. Asking
buys necessary inventory ;
bedroom, an arrangement she Holter -Ra\,o/l ings
after 5:30 p. m.
52
-$7.000. Contact Gene Hudson
call 1-614-962-5397.
·
50
3-1S-6tc
considered "perfectly suita· Fultz-Bentley
or phone 949-3334.
-10fc
3-11
48
Rosenbaum-Meadows
For Sale
3-19-3tc
ble."
Blakeslee-Hoyt
32
Walnut
Console,
AM\\ODERN
"It was not wtusual to enter McDonald-Drenner
20
BUILDING lots for sa le at Rock FM radio, 4 speed automafi c
BU.SJNESS
14
Springs. Ohio. Close to Meigs changer, 4 speaker sound
his swtny, corner room and Moore -Morrow
OPPORTUNITY
High
Individual
Game
High School with Tuppers system , separate controls.
' 'Air ConditiOner!
find Missy there in her Men , Dan Meadows 204 ;
Plain
water . Size 1f2 acre and
Balance 178 .50 . Use our
MAN
OR
WOMAN
•Awnings
nightgown, " wrote Ute late women, Delores Tyree 171.
larger . 992-2789.
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
Rel
iabl
e
person
from
this
Second
High
Ind.
Game
2-2l-30fp
· ··Underpinninq
president's second oldest son.
3-1S-61 c
area to servi ce and collect
Men , Rich Rawl ings 201 ;
"There was no attempt to women, Lois Rosenbaum 156;
from automatic dispensers.
ALUMINUM Car lop boats, 10, MAPLE stereo-rad io com- i .Complete mqblle nQme :
Na experience needed · we
conceal their relationship. third. men , Chuck Blakeslee
· 12 and 13 fl. Kingsbury Rd., binalion, AM-FM radio, 4 . ~IJ·'eirvlce ~ plus gigantic. "
establ ish accounts for you .
; women , Ina Meadows 155.
Car , references , and S995 .00
speakers, 4 speed changer, · 1 1
f
bll h
Co. Rd . 18, Phone 992-6256 dual
Everyone within Ute famUy 198High
Series - Men, Dan
volume control. Balance · . spay. o mo e omes .
to $1,995 . 00 cash capital
after
S
p.
m.
bad come to accept the fact Meadows 579 ; women, Delores
necessary , 4 to 12 hours
3-8-30fc $81.19. Use our budget terms. always avallable.at ...
weekly could net good part
Utat Missy was a special part of Tyree 458.
Call 992-7085.
:MILLER ·.
time Income . Fu ll time
Second High Series - Men ,
1
7
year
old
Palomino
mare,
1
3-15-6f c
our family."
more . For local Interview,
Rich Rawlings S42 ; women ,
- year old Palomino stalli on - - - - - -- - - - i
wr i t e, in c lud e telephone
E!Uott Roosevelt, in a state- Hope Moore 413 ; third, men ,
3weanedagecolts.
Phone742: ·siNGER automatic sewing
numb
er
:
1h0 Wuhingtooi Blvd.
ment appended to the article, Chuck Blakeslee 5.41 ; worrten ,
5251.
machine; l lke new in walnut
Becky Drenner -lna Me&lt;tdows
EAGLE
4~~-7521
BELPRE, 0.
_
__
__
__
..:.
3·
.
:.::
20-6fc
cabinet.
Makes
design
slitsaid some people may feel he 4D8 .
'
INDUSTRIES
.
ches,
zig-zags,
buttonholes.
~¥ts said too much about his
Team High G~me
SIAMESE
and
Balinese
kittens;
blind
hem_
s.
overcasts.
etc.,
Department BV
paid for all makes and
parents' private life. But, he Rosenbaum . Meadows 660.
excell ent qua lily ; perfectly · ~- Call R_avenswood , 27J· "CASH
3938 Meadowbrook Road
Team
High Series
models
of mobile homes.
trained ; cal1614-446-4416 after 9521 or 273-9893.
St . Louis Park , Minnesota
said, the truUt i!; better told Rosenbaum - Meadows 1843.
Phone
area
code 614-423-9531.
t-11 -lfc
2 p.m. at Gall ipolis.
55426
Utan alluded to "in veiled
~ -13-tfc
3-16-6fc

LIKE "REAL AMERICANS"
CHICAGO
(UPI)
PLEADS INNOCENT
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP!) Returning POW Robert Ray
, - Ernie Holmes, defensive Helle, 24, of Toledo, Ohio, told
tackle for the Pittsburgh Steel· well-wishers who greeted him
ers, entered innocent pleas here Monday, "You've made
Monday.to Utree charges of as· us feel, wlUt your welcome, like
sault wiUt intent to ldll and was real Americans." The Marine
released on $45,000 bond. sergeant, a prisoner for nearly
, Holmes was arrested last Fri· five years, will undergo
: ' day following shooting in· processing at nearby Great
Lakes Naval Base Hospital.
; cld•nt&lt; in this area.

'".i
•

Custom Builders. Our
.
c1rpenters have 20 yean
992-2094
buildlnr
experience · In
· , 1606 E. Main Pomeroy·
homes in Meigs County.

:1'~ .

OaSIS!

TtiiS MONTH

..

........

IJOT

I LOST·FOUR
POUNDS

'

Zag Sewing Machines. Still In

copper . 45c lb. :
Radiators, clean, 28c lb.,

, In Memorv

sentences."

.

~11 . Jo;r lF.Asr 1-\f'S
H~IAJ~ AAJ IIXIJrrtY

I

FOUNDTHEM
FOUR POUNDS
'IE LOST,
ELVifllEY

POMEROY
HOME&amp; AUTO

I

Have your hame buill by:

. ., 'i

..
'

WOOD TRUSSES

orig inal cartons . No at tachments needed as our
confrols are built-ln . Sews
.
!"
.
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew on buttons,. ·coAL, Limesto11e,

C~EAN

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

says Ellion

Services:
'-

PRE-FABRICATED

model. Will sell for small
balance of $36.50 or pay $5 per
month. Cal l 992-5331 .
3-14-6fc

oak tables.

·~

ASK US ABOUT

'console. Take over payments
of $7.50 per month or pay
balance of $78.60. Call 9925331.
3-14-6fc

machine is a dress maker

OLtJ

"' ')

I

OOWN-ATTH'
FeED STORE.
LDWEEZ'I, AN'

•f

.

..... - .

'

8 track stereo in ni ce Walnut

1969 CHEVELLE
$1795
Ma_libu Cpe .. local1 owner car. dark grn. finish . like new

1968 CAMARO CONV.

1
•

want: on Chester water ;

Paying sto each, First floor phone 992-5248 till 3 p.m. or '
only. Write giving directions. 992-3436 after 3 p.m.
Pianos, P. 0 . Box 188, Sardis. .
3-14-6fc '·' I
Oh io 43946.
3-18-6fp. MUST sell due to transfer . 1973

Get Results!

~Business

lots or buy what you

Fir ebird Esprit. Local 1 owner car, 350 V-8 engine, P.
stee ring &amp; automaf ic trans., AM-FM radio, like new white
lettered fires, dark brown fini sh, bucket seat &amp; blk v inyl
fr im. A sharp one. Really loaded.
·

wh1te lettered tires, .307 V-B, power steering &amp; hrakes,
.
· radio, clean Int.

··
·

Any· condition .

3°S~C~E~;

.

I

100 RAILROAD Ties, fair to
good condition . Phone 7426825.
- -- -- - - -·_3-_1S_·
61p

suo ,,. 50 word mlnlmvm
Each addltion'l!ll word ·2r

PIANOS .

OLD . UPRIGHT

.

.I JEST WEIGHED

~Uti

AlWAIS HAVE TO DO ~AT
YOU GV'IS 1/JAAFT TO bo .

..,L_ __ _ _

-

.-

·

20~

.

The
Daily Sentinel
St.

-

MAKING A MESS. fa

MAKING MUSTARD.

U.Border
18. Blanched
20. Boundary
(comb.
form)
21. Hacks
22. Fortitude
23. Netherlands
Antilles
ialand
24. Rank;
class
J.U 25. Trust
25. Palm leaf
2'1. Indian
reign
"· Fruit tree
30. Japanese
atatesman
u. Emmet
32. Consume
35. Winy
37. Precise
38. Unwilling
39. Bugbear
40. Pearson
41. On what

DOWN
1. Interpret
2. Ukewise
3. U.S. naval
hero (3 wds.)
4. Some
5. Ham it up
6. Made out
7. Monk
8, U.S. Navy
song (2 wds.)
9.Speen
10. Hermit
18. Parsifal's
Mrs.
19. Actress
Dalton
21. Imaginative

JllJ]JM[!3~®~ *'"·'IJ .-~ ,_.
hyiHI\II II hHNI&gt;IIJ

Unscramble the•• four Jumblts,

one letter to eaeh square, to
form four ordinary words.

Yelllorday's Aaswer
22. Festive
23. Coming
24. Egyptian
Christian
28. Hiatus
29. Goose
genus

ail. Land

measure
34. Adolescent
36. Scrap
37. Immedi·
ately

I'RVSN

[]

~

·I

tJ

I
1 I III

,..,

tUJ&gt;I.EDD

IDACROWI

WH'I HE COULDN'T GET

OFF THE !'SUS.

Now UTUIIt the circled lttlen
to form the IUrpriH tll'llwer, u
( ]
~==:::::===~-.L-J ouneated br the abon cartoon.

I I

1,.. ..- -... ln WAS "(I I I XI X)"
;

l'eelerd•r'•

(Aalwen

.

• j

I
·I.

lDIIIOfrOW'

Jumbloo• COMI_T VIRUS DIPUTY jURAT!
Antwert What one .lwl u•m erime• ltart 1 -A IACI

PFANl I'S

occasion?

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work

OCH, NO i l'P MERJ;C'/
~lt&lt;E TO HfRii VOIJ

COMe eACK TO
\SCOTLAND WITH

11)

ME ...

It:~~~~§~~~~
L

AXYDLBAAXR
.1• LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, et&lt;. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all r;::::;;r:~';:t~F-----~-, ,------~----..,
hints. Each day· the &lt;ode letters ore different.
I'
'{0\) JU5T THINK '(OU'RE
CRYPTOQUOTES
CUTE BECAUSE '(()U'RE CU'fE!
LYT, \VB BYER OVDJO AWB BWJT,
JB

WCGWVB , YD

HAR

BJTR

GAJOA

AWB HAR SRBH PYYHSWCC OYWOA . ARV
Yeoterday'a
GYYT Cryploqaote:
S QY X D A WONDERFUL DISCOVERYPSYCHOANALYSIS.:MAKESQUITESIMPLEPEOPLEFEEL

~~~~~~~~~m ~~~~~~~~~

THEY'RE COMPLEX.-SAllUEL N. BEHRMAN
. CC 1979 Xinc Featurea SYndicate, InG.)

---

..

'"&lt;111111\ I IJ

•

•

�.tO-The Daily Sentinel ; Middleport-Pomeroy, o-., March 20; 197'

·· ·--~':::'''~'' ' ' '"'''' ' ' '' ' '''&gt;., ~,,.,..,~~~~ ·

ews .. in nriefsl
By Untied Press International

,,

:

SPRING WAS USHERED IN TODAY WITII RAIN
·~ading across the nation's interior. Rain fell from extreme
.·Mmem Kansas across the middle Mississippi Valley to the Ohio
~nd TeMessee valley·s. Showers and a few thundershowers. OC·
'"'Tt'd over the lower Mississippi Valley and spread east mto

·"•rnnna.

.

Hain also fell from Washington to south-central California.
1,ifo\ht •now contjnued to fall in sectio~ of the northern Ap.
t&gt;~la.·hians . However, the flrst day of spnng had fall' skies from
th••t;n•at I"kes to the South AUantlc coastal states, and from the
S.'utl••nt Plateau to' the Western Plains states.
1\II.UMBU!j- WITHOUT DISSENT, the state Controlling
1~1;11'11 Mttnday approved the expenditure of $140,000 in Ohio State
\ t11in•r$ity funds for the purchase of a house for OSU President
H:~r.•ld ~~narson . The ex~nditure had been criticized by several
&gt;t:~h· t.-~i$lators who felt the campus residence used by past
umwr~itY presidents was adequate. ·
l\"\1·,,ffidals defended the purchase, emphasizing it was to
;,. (itt:Uk't'&lt;i by private donations, not state funds. The board also
'l't'r''"''t rdease of $6,593,921 to the Hamilton County com"""-"•'11t'r for Millcreek Waste Water Treatment Plant, and
l\,1;,&lt;.,q,t&gt;ll for sewage treatment facilities for the cit~ of Parma.
)ltiNTr.OMERY, ALA. -GOV. GEORGE C. Wallace un,k•rw••nt his second aeupuncture treatment Monday, but aides
&lt;.ihl tllt're was litUe change in his condition. Dr. Ling Sun-chu
IWf,,rmed the needle .treatment, as he did last Monday, in an
.&lt;th•mpt to reduce Wallace's pain.
The 53-vear-&lt;&gt;ld Wallace turned to acupuncture after un·k·r~·ting si~ operations since being shot May 15, 1972. He was
·~traii'Zed
. from the waist down alter the assassination attempt,
.ut&lt;l Iefl the University of Alabama Medical Center at Blrmingham last month after a prostate gland operation.

.

.

Bait 'n switch·artists
conning careless buyer
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
Commerce Director Dennis
Shaul said today his department and other state agencies
have started a crackdown on
"bait and switch" freezer meat
suppliers.
Shaul )S81d some meat sup.
pliers promise "fabulous
savings" on bulk meat for

Students will be
in writing test
RACINE - Mrs. Helen
Hayes, Great Bend, Meigs
County Ohioana Library
Chairman, has announced that
the Southern Local School
District will be participating in
the creative writing contest
sponsored by Batelle Institute
in conjunction with Ohioana.
Mrs. Elizabeth · Hobbs,
faculty member at Southern
High School, Racine, and two
sludents have been authorized
to attend a workshop and
luncheon on April 7 at Batelle
in Columbus.

home freezers, but the bargainpriced meat turns out to be old
and fatty. Salesmen then try to
get customers to switch to.
higher priced beef by showing
them a lean and freshly cut
carcass, according to Shaul.
Many consumers ba ve
complained that by the time
the more expensive meat was
cut and trimmed, they were
paying up to $3 per pound.
Shaul said customers also
have complained of "shortweighting'' by the suwller,
sometimes by as much as 100
pounds, and failure of dealers
to give advertised "free
bonus" packages such as
chicken, pork chops and bacon.
"Anyone with a complaint
about 'bait and switch' com,panles should contact the
Department of Commerce
Consumer ProtecUon Division
hoUine : 1-aoo-282-1960," Shaul
said, adding, '"The state
Department of Agriculture is
drafting legislation against
unscrupulous freezer meat
dealers."

HOSPiTAL NEWS

Two couples in British pull

in eXtremists

divorce court
Two suits for. divorce have
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court and three
final decrees were granled.
Asking divorce were Eugene
Hudson Racine vs Drema
Hudso~, Racin'e, and Ina
VanMeter Reedsville vs Gary
VanMete; Portland each
charging g;oss neglect~ duty
and extreme crueltY, Decrees
were entered for Roger Theiss
from Betty TheisS, Shirley
Schultz from Carl Schult:z, Jr.,
and David Hindy · from Jan
Hindy.

They want no

nwre of that
guy's bombs
PHNOM PENH (UP!)- U.
S.-made antiaircraft guns were
placed · today around the
presidential palace, the scene
of a weekend bombing raid by
a hijacked warplane that killed
47 persons and wounded at
least 50.
"We aren't laking any
chances," a palace source Said
of the installation of new antiaircraft guns in the palace
grounds. "So Potra still has the
plane and he could come back
and try again."
He referred to ex-Royal
Cambodian Air Force pilot .So
Potra, son-in-law of deposed
Prince Norodom Sihanouk,
who was identified by the
government as the renegade
pilot who stole a single-engine
T28 bomber from nearby
Poch~ntong
Airport and
dropped two ·250-pound bombs
on the palace compound.
So Potra flew off unchallenged after the bombing,
which President Lon No! said
was an assassination attempt
on him. Government sources
said they think the pilot landed
the plane at a Communist-held
rubber plantation near the
South Vietnam border.

Implanted.

Otamher,

(Continued from page I)
could to attend.
Blakeslee observed that the
BELFAST (UP!) - The
British Army arresled 25 ex- Ohio 1'\o~eer and' Historical
tremists today and moved Society plan to have ''!Jeritage
troop reinforcements Into Day" again during Regatta
Belfaststreetsto.guard against weekend.
an eruptiQil of viOlence on the
Fred Crow, past grand
release by Britain of its white croaker of the Ohio Soceity for
the Promotion of Bull Frogs,
paper on Northern Ireland.
The White Paper an- reported that "several sur·
nounce'."e?l in London , slated prises" are in store at the 1973
that Br1tam would continue to Regatta .Frog Jlunps.
wield direct rule of the
lt was alllo brought out that
province but would set up an the facilities at the Pomeroy
80-member Northern Ireland Junior High School auditorium
provincial assembly to be will be available for use during
elected u~der pr.oportional Regatta weekend.
representahon. Th1s was exGrueser relliyed a request
pected to give the minority from Ralph Conti, Chagrin
Roman Catholics in the Falls, Ohio, who is interesled in
province a greater share in displaying fireworks at a cost
government.
of $100 and up. Crow agreed .to
write for additional inLOCAL TEMPS
formation.
Temperature in downtown
Attending were Kenney,
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m.
Mrs. Thomas, Hoover, Ralph
was 44 degrees, under cloudy
Graves, Crow, .Earl Ingels,
skies.

(Continued from page 1) ·
chest over the · Implanted
receiver. The battery poweA\1
transmitter Is worn on a belt ot
cal'ried In a shirt pocket.
U Mr. Karr prepa~ for
strenuOUI activity, or if heart.
patna occur uneiqlectedly, he
switches on llle transmitter for
a maximum of 60 seconds to ·
avoid or relieve pain.
Patients receiving llle lm·
plantation and elec(!'odes SUCh
as Mr. Karr wait 30 days after.
llle operation to begin using llle
transmitter.
The implantation is resorled
to only In exlre!Jlely . serious
heart cases.

growing
at ·Tri-Co clinics
.

•

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

CHARLESTON LINE- Making up the "Charleston" line in a Variety Show to be staged
Friday !lil!ht at 7:30p. m. at Syracuse Elementary School are (1-r) Julie Thorn, Jody Grueser,
Paula Barnett, Darlene Priddy and Tina Gibbs. Absent was Donna Hubbard. The show is under
the direction of Miss Beverly Price; the.pianist, Rlith ~earns, and tile master of ceremonies,
Bub Patterson. Other numbers to be presenled are : "On With the Show", first and second
graders; "California Here I Come", mixed chorus; "Lullaby of Broadway," by John Evans:
Tiny Tim, starring Debbie Brown; "Pretty Baby", boys chorus backed by a girls' dance line;
"Bye Bye Blackbird", third grade quartet; "Tea for Two," by Bub Patterson and Lorna
Grindley; dance and baton number, by Cindy Patterson; "Army Life" by carrie Guinter and
Vicki Cund!H; "Ma, He's Making~~ Me," sixth grade girls; the Beatles, sixth grade
boys; "Give My Regards to BroadWay," song and dance by a mixed chorus from the fifth
grade, and the entire cast singing, "ll'sA Grand Old Flag,"

SALE! RED HEART KNITTING YARN
,,~A SKEIN

Now You .Know

oz.

...

' W~

VOL XXIV

NO. 237

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Supreme Court ruled constitutional today the · use of
local property b!xes to fipance
public sol!oo.b ,.The Couft split
~ to 4 In lhe decision.
In a Texas case, the court
had been asked to decide that
the system that tends to ignore
differences between rich and
poor school district violated the
Constitution's guarantee of
"eqUal protection of the laws."

FREE LECTURE SERIES

Speaking for the five-man
majority, Justice Lewis F.
Powell Jr. said the system is
concededly imperfect, but said
it bears~ 'rational relationship
to a legitimate slate purpose.

Powell said that while
assuring basic education fur
every child in the state, It
permitted and encouraged
participation in and significant
control of each district's school

MONDAYS, MARCH 26, APRIL 2 &amp; 9 • 8 P.M.
HOLIDAY INN, GALLIPOLIS

CLEANING

(Upon Request)

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THIS WEEK ONLY

The series will be conducted by the Brokerage Firm of Singer,
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The lectures cover many aspects of investing, from fundamentals to
advanced techniques .

fEDERAl DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORAIIOH

Since 'way batk when, we've been providing !be people
A question and answer period will follow each lecture.

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~

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

STREET------------------~--­

RALL'S
BEN FRANKLIN
992-3481

MIDDLEPORT, OtJIO
Member hd.:ral Depolll IIIIIU"IIDce Corporalloa

Middleport, 0.
Open 9 Til5 Weekdays
9 Til9 Sat.

CITY - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - STATE-- - . . - - - - - - - ZIP________
PHONE-----------------~--~

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Members of New York Stock Exch•"''• lnc.
and olhu !l'incipaJ securit7 exchanges
Fl"n HUNTiptQTON NATIONAL BANK ARCADE

HUNTINGTON, W . VA. 25720
TECKPHONI (304) e22·731B

&lt;

of Middleport and the Racine
Home National Bank were
awarded bids for active accoun t.s according to Howard
Frank,
Meigs
County
Treasurer.
The Commissioners, in other
business, voted to advertise for
bids for bituminous and
aggregate materials for the
Meigs County Highway

QUEEN AND RUNNERUP- Chosen "FFA Queen" at
the annual parent-son banquet Saturday night by FFA
members of the Southern High School chapter was Carol
Michael, sealed, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Michael,
Syracuse. Runnerup was Rhonda Ash, standing, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. ·Edwin Ash, Minersville. The girls were
presented trophies and corsages.

Department.
Bids
for
bituminous material may be
submitted until 9:30 a. m. on
April 10 and aggregate bids
until 9:30 a. m. on April 24.
Gasoline and ihesel fuel bids

enttne

Devoted To The Interests Of .The Weigs-Mason Area
WEDNESDAY, MARCH £1, 1973

will also be accepted by 9a. m.
on April 3.
Attending were Charles R.
Karr , Robert Clark, and
Warden Ours, commissioners,
and Martha Chambers, clerk.

Weather

•

at y
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

year of operation. The first
year's operating funds were
from the county commissioners of the three
counties, with the state sup.
porting 75 pel. of the total cost.
Other business of the board
as approved for next year's
comml!llity plan, July, 1973, to
June, 1974 and final approval
was made t\, an application to
be submitted for federal funds
for a comprehensive mental
health center to serve the three
counties. The group approved
Mrs. Mary Martin of Meigs
(Continued on Page 14)

Banks selected
Depositories for county funds
were selected by the Meigs
County Commissioners
Tuesday morning.
The Pomeroy National Bank
was awarded the bid for
inactive funds and The Fanners Bank and Savings
Company the bid for interim
tuhds.
In addition, those two banks,
and the Citizens National Bank

..
.
.,
•••••
.

.

Variable cloudiness and cool
today . Highs in the 40s. ParUy
cloudy and cool again tonight
lows near 20 north to 30 south.
Mostly sunny and a lltUe
warmer Thursday. Higha In the
40s to low 50s.

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

Court upholds tax system for schools
IProfiles •••
-~

ELBERFELDS IN POM£ROY.

Everything you've
always wanted to know

Jackson completes the goals of
the menial health hoard with
clinics operating in the three
counties. The other clinics are
located at Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy and at 16
Slate St. in Gallipolis where the
board also has its administrative offices.
The funding of the clinics is
made 'i&gt;OSSible by a mental
health levy passed last May in
the three counties. The Ohio
Department of Mental Hygiene
funds 75 pet. of ·the operating
costs of th'e program.
This is the board's second

•

The first commercial movie
produced in Hollywood . was
"The Count of Monle Cristo,"
which was begun in Chicago
but finished on the West Coast
ln 1908.

MEIGS THEATRE

..--------t
2HOUR

Incr.eased, professional
psychatric service is forthcoming in the three mental
health clinics serving Me~s,
Gallia and Jackson Counties
. due to long waiting lines, it was ·
annOI\Ilced Monday night at the
monthly meeting of the three
COunties COmml!llity mental
health board.
dinner at the Colonial
Res urant in
Jackson
· preced the business meetiJlg
at the
ard's new mental
health clio located at 239
Water St., Ja son.
Malcolm
rebaugh,
chainnan of the board, slated
that
the
professional
psychiatrist will be increasing
his number of days at the three
clinics due to the number of
patients on waiting lists to be
seen. The clinics are staffed by
mental health teams which
include a child psychiatrist,
psychologist, social worker,
and mental health technicians.
The cost to the patient is
based on a fee schedule, but no
one is refused service. The
patients are referred from
doctors, schools, courts, other
agencies, and self referrals.
The opening of the clinic in

Richard Chambers, Tom
Cassell, Blll Grueser, Ted
Reed, Jack Carsey, Blakeslee,
Virgll Teaford, Bob Jacobs,
Marge Hoffner, Beulah Jones
and Katie Crow.

and daughter, Eloda Webb,
Holzer Medical Center
Jessie
West,
Margaret
!Discharges)
WOODLAND, WASH - FBI AGENTS have resumed the
Glenna Roush, Andrew Williams, Leona Willis,
hunt lor parachuting hijacker "D. B. Cooper" in this !ann area VanMeter, Foreman Stevens, Michael Wickline, Vivian
~· here he disappeared 18 months ago, the Portland (Ore.)
Roger Rippeth, Juanita Boggs, Trowbridge, Rex Roberts,
RED HEART
Journal said Monday.
Iva Whaley, Wanda Cooper, Cecil Miles, Pauline Miller,
A man who signed the flight manifest as "Cooper" hijacked a Stephan Burns, Frances White, Oscar Maynard, Christy
St'attle-hound jetliner on Thanksgiving Eve of 1971 and obtained Tracy Waugh, Ora Waugh, Koenig, Ora Hively, Bessie
a $'200,000 ranson!. He parachuted from the back door of the 727 Agnes Walker,
Your choice of
Robert Fife, Mary Davis, Clyde Davis,
without leaving a trace. Authorities have searched this area Steinebrunner, Ollve DeShawn Caldwell, Mittie
·Red Heart Wintuk
across the Columbia River from Oregon se~eraltimes in ~e past Stapleton, Jack Moore, Ronald Crace, Vernon Blevins, KenOrion Yarn or the
without success.
Robinson, Carl Kloes, Mrs. neth Black, Ann Yeager, Mrs.
popular
Red
Floyd Clary, Jr. and daughter, Keith Grueser and son,
Heart Kn ltting
Clarence Carter, Donald Thomas Doer fer, Wayne
Worsted. Ready
Burchett and Thurman Bor- Stafford, Robert Jewell, Mrs.
David Ondera and son, Lycy
PLy to _knit pull out
WASHINGTON (UP! )- The in increments of lJ, or% point. den.
4
4
Amsbery, Mrs. Jay Osborne
(Birth)
skems.
Go\'ernment Monday sumAthur F. Burns, chairman of
and
daughter,
Donald
Boggess,
Mrs.
Jerry
Jacks,
a
son,
Rutmoned six of the nation's the Federal Reserve Board and
Six "Tangle-Proof" Pull-Out Skeins in a Box
John David, Joanna Polcyn,
largest banks to appear here ...... also head of the ~ommittee on land.
Mrs. William Nance and son,
Thursday and explain' their Interest and D1v1dends, wh1ch
Big selection of
Mrs. Darrell Smith and
Holzer Medical Center
raising of interest rates for is part of the government's
daughter, Clara Richmond,
1Discharges Mar. 1'-17-18)
solid
colors,
prime business loans.
wag e-pri ce control system,
Marjorie Carpenter, Wanda Ellen Reynolds, Mrs. Larry
heathertone and
Led by the Manufacturers quickly challenged the In·
Petrie
and
daughter,
Charles
Williams
,
Joseph
Nagle,
variegated colors.
Hover Trust co. of New York, creases, saying it was not clear
Perroud,
Patricia
Mills,
Mrs.
Georgia
Greene,
Marjorie
the banks announced increases they complied with govern. in the, prime interest rate men! criteria set last month. Rhea, Richard Davis, Davi« Melvin Massie and son, Mark
Caslor, Carolyn Fitchpatrick, Howard, Mildred Frazier,
· :llonday from 6'1• to 6%. Past
Adele Nonnan, Mary Warren, Jeffrey Ferrell, Norma CanE-R SQUAD
increases have normally been
The Pomeroy E-R squad Susan Veith, Iva Shinn, Mrs. terbury, Elizaheth Carman,
answered a call at II p.m. Michael Rose and son, Mrs. Lecta Bush.
OPEN EACH WEEKDAY 9:30 AM TO 5 PM
. SALE DAY SET
(Births Mar. 15-17-18)
Monday to 534 West Main St., Nelson Porterfield and son,
Mrs. Vincent Laudermilt, The WSCS of the Forest Run
lor Leora Zwilling, who was Virgie Montgomery, Melissa
OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 AM TO 9 PM
Tonight, March 20
taken to Veterans Memorial Nance, Vera Miles, James son, Mason; Mrs . Charles Uniled Methndist Church will
Hospital where she was ad- Marcum, Deidre Lyons, Richard Tucker, son, Point hold a bake sale Friday at the
I DOLLARS I
{Technicolor)
mitted as a medical patient. Kathryn Logan, Gertrude Pleasant; Mrs. Gilbert Davis-Warner Insurance ofWarren Beatty
Kloes , Dorothy Kitchen, Milliron, daughter, Gallipolis; flee, corner of Court and
Goldie Hawn
Thomas Justice, Kevin Mrs. Charles Masters, son, Second Sts., beginning at 9
tRJ
Gilman, Shannon Houck, Gallipolis; Mrs. Ivan Beaver, a.m.
Co lore a rloon
SORORITY TO MEET
Show starts 7 p.m.
The XI Gamma Mu Sorority Teresa Hill, Lowell Harrison, daughter, Gallipolis; Mrs .
Grace,
Donna Michael W. Austin, son, Point
will meet Thursday at 7:45 George
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Gaultney,
Martha
Fulton,
Julie Pleasant; Mrs. William
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Nellie
March 21 -22
Brown with Mrs. Vera Crow Evans, Joseph Edwards, Collins, daughter, Radcliff;
NOT OPEN
William Chamberlain, Delsie Mrs. Ronnie Blazer, son,
the co-hostess.
Burgess, Charles Broyles, Gallipolis and Mrs. Flem
Wilda Kincaid, Nial Minton, Meade, daughter, Gallipolis.
Fred McComb, Anna Roach,
Lillian Bumgardner, Blondiena Holley, Albert Kihn,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
James Ridgeway, Doris
ADMITTED - Crystal RichSimpson, Timothy Bartlett,
CO-ENDORSED BY
Connie Hysell, Eleanor mond, Pomeroy; Elizabeth
Withers, Shawn Green, Gladys Findley, Racine; Flora Kinsch,
Croy, Mrs. Glenn Young and Pomeroy; Donald Hendricks,
THE POMEROY, GALLIPOLIS &amp; PT. PLEASANT
daughter, Mrs. Roy Sprague Syracuse; Sherry Jewell, Rutland; Winona Hoffman,
CHAMBERS OF COMMERCE
Pomeroy; Ora Weddle, Middleport;
Robert Shook,
Pomeroy; Goldie Basham,
' why invest
•
Coolville ; Laura Hill, Red
House,W.Va.;MaryLawhorn,
• types of securities
Mason; James Eblin, Rutland;
• the New York Stock Exchange
John Brogan, Rutland; Selwyn
•- mutual funds
Evans, Kermit, w. Va., and
t research
Leora Zwilling, Pomeroy.
• portfolio management
DISCHARGED - Nellie
,. tax-free municipal bonds
- -- ·
Price, Earl Phelps, William
• the over-the-counter market
McKnight, Anna Legg,
1 Catherine
Laudermirt
and
Pom.r.y \ .
210 E. 2nd
.
. . R1chard Gtbbs.
.:
Phone 992-5428
As a service to area residents, the Pomeroy, Gallipolis &amp; Pt .
&lt;
Pleasant Chambers of Commerce offers • a free, three· part In ·
vestment discussion on stocks, bonds and the stock market.
.

Richest banks are called in

Servic~s

•

WASHINGTON (UPJl - The cost of
living, led by a record 2.4 per cent Increase in
· food prices, soared 0.8 per cent in Februarythe largest monthly i-lse in 22 years after
seasonal adjustment. The Labor Department's Bureau or Labor Statistics, in making
the report today, said food prices in supermarkets went up 2.4 per cent last month,
surpassing the previous record advances of 2
per cent in January and March of 1958.
The BLS said most or the sharp rise in food
prices came from meat, poultry and fish,
which went up 5 per cent In February after
seasonal adjustment, . the largest increase
since June, 1965.
__

at the local level.
Critics of the system argued
that school districts with
valuable property can provide
a high-quality education at a
low tax rate, while those with
low-value properly must get
along with inferior schools
even though the tax rate is
higher.
Dissenters in the decision
were Justices William 0.
Douglas, William J . Brennan
Jr., Byron R. White and
Thurgood Marshall.
Texas fi~ances its public
schools through both slate and
local partl~ ipatiorr. The state
provides about half the funds
and each district supplements
them through a property tax .
The Texas case was initiated
In 1968 by 15 parents and
children who protesled use of
the property lax for financing
schools in San Antonio's

Edgewood Independent School
District, a Mexican-American
community. A special threejudge federal court which ruled
in their favor was reversed by
the Powell opinion.
A similar ruling was handed
down by the California
Supreme Court in 1971 in a case
which went back to Los
Angeles and was reeently tried
there.
The Texas panel found that
wealth
was
''suspect''
classification, as race had been
found by the Supreme Court to
be suspect when constitutional
rights it deems "fundamental" .
have been denied.
Powell held, however, that
the Texas system did not
disadvantage any "suspect"
class of people. He said it had
not been shown to discriminate
aga inst any definable class of
poor .

Work resumed

.=-m~:~~::=:-~::::::::::::::~=~~rr .. w·:om~-~~

ews•. in Briefs;·
.•.

By UDlled Presolnternattonal
SAIGON -SAIGON REPORTED MORE Communist truce
violations today, among them the bombardment of a besieged
government base where 12 ·~uth Vietnamese rangers were
reported killed and 68 wounded ln a week of fighting, Despite the
attack and other scattered fighting across the country, Saigon
command spokesman Lt. Col, Le Trung Hlen said the exchange
of prisoners between the two Vletnams would end by Sunday,
three days ahead of the Parla cease.ftre agreement schedule.
By Sunday, 28,722 Communist prisoners will have heen exchanged for 4,753 South Vietnamese troops. In another
development, Brlj!. Gen. John A. Wickham told the chiefs of the
Joint Military · Commission that the United States has
photographs of Communist tanks, arUllery and vehicles entering
South Vietnam in violation of the Jan. 28 cease-fire agreement.

CHESHIRE- Work resumed this morning at Ohio Electric
Company's $488 million James M. Gavin Plant here following
ratification late Tuesday night of a one-year contract for the
idied workers of Local577 of the Plumbers and Steam Fitters of
America.
Plant construction had been delayed since March 8. The wage
agreement calls for a 48-cent per hour pay hike across the board .
Union members meeting Tuesday in Portsmouth accepted the
proposal by a vote of 159-28.
Construction at the plant carne to a halt when ~me 2,000
workers walked off their jobs in sympathy with the pipefitters.
Local 577 had allegedly been "lockerl out" of their jobs two days
earlier when the workers failed to accept a 38 cent per hour raise.

:::::::::::::=:=:=:=:~:= :::::::::::::::i:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::!:!:=:=:.·::::::::::::::::~:::=:::::::::::~~:::~::::!:::!..Y.!::::::::::::=:-":!::s*:::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::z:::::::::::::::::::::::?:'::::::::::::::::-::~&amp;!:::

~::

:i:i

in coal
BY JOHN REECE
The complexities of life are oft
.... times compounded by one individual
:::: attempting to do too many 'things.
This may be exemplified best by W.
Paul Graves, a man literally "of three

:§:
::::

hats."
Many folks have trouble trying to
~r~~.~~~~on

three: a target-shooter's campaign
hat, a farmer's straw hat, and a coal
@ miner's hard hat. Although his
...
i!~ campaign hat hasn't been put on for
~:; some time, the other two are worn
:·~ nearly every day.

~ ~:~:hi:r~;~i: ~~:~rc':~':~~
at

::_.:i··
.·'
: ....·':...'•

:
..

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',:'.::'·=,'.::

;

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:·.i~\

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!~

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'

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~)

~~

Man of three hats
already has a start on raising beef

:;.l

~~

will-be-boys ' room."

~~~~ ~: 12r!f~~rl:lale~~a~~:r ~oi~!l ~~;~~sl~!~~
\17i~e~~is1Tkhedre tahree adlso
two!
V19a4.3)Gt~~;:
l~ct~!~ltGhb:f~~~
g~~~!~o~~~
ve a ways 1 e
1 ea o
o en is
e Navy. He served

responstb e or a
mechamca .
maintenance inside and outside of the
mine. This is the job the Swiss, W.Va .
native accepled in June 1972. Prior to
· this assignment, he spent 24 years in
Union Carbide's Mining and Melals
Division, starting out as an electrician's helper and working his way
up to m•intenance supervisor.
The straw hat gets a workout
when Paul is not at the mine. The
Graves bought a farm at Route I ,

1n

being a farmer," he said, "and we've
aboard the U, S: Taussig and attained
always had a pretty big garden." The
the rank of 1st Class machinist. While
"we" refers to his wife, the former
in the Navy, he completed his ·high
Connie Dunbar, and two sons, William · school education and completed the
Paul II, age 9, and St'an, age 7. Both
Naval Machinist's Male course at the
boysattendSalemCenter Elementary
University of Minnesota. After servSchool where Mrs. Graves volunteers
ice, he completed a course offered by
as a teacher's aide .
Nashv ill e (Tenn .) Refrige ration
"I plan to raise hay and corn to School and attended Coyne Electrical
help feed my stock" the master School in Chi cago.
mechanic slated. "Also, living out on
"Oh, I guess I've always just liked

COlll'llliDI __..

t

::·:
.....
::::

i il

ij
"·
l'!
!~

::::
::::
;:;:

J:
:;::

lt;,,:,:,:,:::,,:::::~,,::,:,~ : ,:~ :,~: :,~::~~x::::;:;: ~;:;:,:,:~::;: : , ,: , : ,:,:,:,~::~:,,::,,:::.~;~s;:~ :;:,~8~~::::~,,:,:, ,::::,,,: ,:, , , :,:,: : : : : : : : : : : : j1J

WASHINGTON- THE WHITE HOUSE and the Senate
Judiciary Committee are at an Impasse over the nomination of L.
Patrick Gray nr to be pennanent FBI director, ~nd it could stall.
his approval indefinitely,,
·
"It doean 't look good for Mr .. Gray," a committee spokesman
said. "There are some other people the comintttee would like to
bear, but they are in no hurry to actortovole."
WASHINGTON -THE SENATE HAS VOTED 19 give
President Nixon broad powers to control the economy for
anolheryear,butonly if rent controls are part of the package. In
an ~2 vote Tuesday;nlght, the Senate approved and sent to the
Hauae a bill that would extel)d for 12 montha the President's
authority to QIJpoae wage and price controls. That authorit!
expires April 30.
.
The action cime during acontinuing o;ontroversy over the rate
ot Inflation. Under the admlniltratlon's Phase Ill economic
prol!l'am, wblcb uaee Jargmy voll!lltary controls, prices ~ particularly those for food -have shown t.,rge Increases. There was
~to be more of thla bad news today when the government
illlled Ill Consumer Price Inde1 (CPI) for February. ~te ·
RepubUcan Wblp Robert P. Griflln, R-Mlch., hinted strongly at
111 conlalt Tuaday when he Aid it "Ia not going to be en'·

II

1

. ~EORGE NESSE;LROAD, Pomeroy Route S, left, World War II veteran, ~nd Lawrence
Smith, Pomeroy Route 2, World War I veteran, shared "Legionnaire of the Year" honors at the
annual birthday party of Drew Webste~ P011t 39, American Legion, in Pomeroy Tuesday night.
Leonard Jewell, center, chairman of the selection committee, exhibits the trophy on whicb the
names of Nesselroad and Smith, who Ued for the honor, have been engraved. Commander
Kenneth E. Harris also presented awards to members who ~ere active in securing memberships the past year.
·
·

.

MRS. GRACE PRA'IT, president, presented Kennelh 8. Harris, commander of Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legion, the auxiliary's gift to the post Tuesday night when the
annual post birthday party was held. Looking on la Robl!rt Waddell, eighth district commander
of LithOpolis. The fioral centerpiece on the table was a gift of Mrs. Tom CrOlf, Pomeroy, in
memory of her brother, the late Drew Webater,.World War I veteran for whom the local post la
named. Group singing and a skit by lhe junior auxiliary highlighted the program at the post
home.
·

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